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                    <text>VOL. 4 ·NO. 21

MARCH 1, 1973

E~
U/B Inte~ds·Clinicai .Area Lease,
Formal·Ties with Buffalo General
aenera1

,_

The Bulfalo
Ha&amp;pital Tuesday received a. fetter
from U/ B President'Robert L.
Ketter .stating the University's
intent to lease a substantial
amount of -ce to be cleaigned
and construeted ~Y fo r
: U&gt;e Univeiilit:Y as· p&amp;rt or the
: hoepital's · planned _.,..ion
and modernization p~
In addition, Ketter Jlaul, "the
University anticipaiOII the development of a fonnulii and a
contractual arrangement to relieve the Hospital of some portion of the cost or ila clinical
operations directll' attributable
to the Uruversity s presence in
the Hospital, including the
I e a s e d University dedicated
space."
He also proposed a formal
affiliation agreement.
The letter of intent, addressed to Harlan J . Swift. cbair_..._
man of the Board of Trustees
of Buftalo General, was read

'R .
E·uu( s iv.1w"t.J,er oses .·
r.:nL.':....-tn·
.L IIKU
ca,l crz..ftu-llenges
.... Elllln •

'l:...::. '

r:A I. ;..-1

By SHARON EDELMAN
· -Stolt

I have I&lt;JBII!d .

··
the ·/ivirlf lobster, the crob, the
oy•ter" ·the whelk, and
..-.:. _the; P1'fiMJ'!; IUI4l ~ ~ .and
~~· · •-"'" r.n my. •···" -''•, ~•-' my
~
"'lowel.
· -~""""''"
~~ """diaoWe in the /iifltt of dDwn.
. •
• · •
.
These lines from the T.S.
Eliet play "Murder in the C'-at.bedral" may be routine stuff
in the Enli\lsh Deparment but
they represent a classic enigma
for aqtors. The ~pts are too
abstract for. li~ . treatment,
and cannot be "acted" as such·
on the other hand, the imagerY
is concrete to the point of neartangibility, and a loose interpretation might diminish its
sensual impact. "'Ibe problem,''
explains Dr. Saul Ellcin of 't he
Tbeatre Department, who is
directing the play echeduled
for March 2-6, "is to find actions to suit the words without
responding to language in the
usual 'Way." ·

In one_ •senee. history bas

and secure ihe execution of- of physician. and otller '-lth
such documents."
· • care pereonnel, tbe diacovery
He said be bas di.xeCtid :or; ilnd implementation of uew
Clyde L. Randall, vice pn!ia- • techniques and procedW'f!ll in
dent for health sciences, and tbe traatment or
and
Jobn D . Telfer, vice presiden
advances in the care of sick
for facilities planning, and their and injured patients can occur
staffs at the' University, to which will be oL benefit .not
work with Dr. Jacobs and his only to Bu1falo, but throughout
staff to develop the .programs; the world."
plans, specifications and legal htlent Sbttlstlca
documents
to accomMr. Swift and Dr. Jacobs replish these objectives. "Tbese poried that the number of adult
documents collectively w iII patients admitted to Buflalo
then constitute the basis on General during the past fisCal
which we can build for the fu- year was 21,078, an increase of
ture."
628 , over 1971, but that the
Dr. !tetter said the Univer- number of adult patient days
sity "looks forward 1.o a long decreased from 229,751 1.o 217,·
and continuing affiliation with 694, due to the "continuing reThe Bulfalo General Hospital duction" in the average length
in th.e accomplishment of our of stay. The average length or
mutual goal-the creation or a stay at Bu1falo General last
Center at which the develop- year was 10.3 days, compared
men! of innovative and Signif- to 11.4 days in 1971, 12.4 in
icant programs for the training !Continued on paf• 5, coL 1)

ru-se.

n_,

:he!"em!.:ri:!tin~::;-D~~ Law's Futur_e Is Promi.si'ng,

Albert Somit, U/.B executive
vice president. Although the

~·j=o~::t~~S::ts::ld

Present is Good, Bar Says

''this indication of University
The u B F cu1
come to the rescue. . The play support will be an important
I
a ty of Law
That report compared the
hal! traditional!Y been. perform- factor in detemlining the feas- and Jurisprudence bas "one of Faculty favorably l.o most other
ed in,CanteJbury Cathedral on ibility of the Hospital's build- the most promising futures or · law schools in the country. An
thees~':"~ ~L-~·~ dS'!'"t!' ing program."
BOY law school in the United unusually hopeful future was
Jaro
. lyt., .~\~~ ~: ~ . Mr. ,Swift and hospital pres- States,'' according to a recent attributed to current potential,
c . - - _ ..... - • IJ!&amp; ~
resolution of .the Council of the fact that the Faculty is the
1den• 'Dr Theod e T J cobs
dtictio · in the iJiinn.ln&amp; •
" ·
·"' ,
ore_ ·• a
• the
.Bar Aaoociati!in'JI Qnlv law · acbQol in the State
n .
.
.--...
reponea
meeting
--&gt;
'
Presbyte?.&amp;n
Chttrch
· at-s ,.,......- also
nuH the
numberatoftlie
patients
iii1: Sec11·GIO -• -··• EdllCaliion......
syste111,
an4 ·•--·•·..,.. .....,oppjlrtunpbony Ciicl_e._bath,Ior PW1JOSBS illitted -to -Buftalo General ·m- A_dmisaions to ~;Battity for dramatic ·e ctucatRihalaor au!"-tictty. and for the creased_ last year for ihti seconll
·In a statement issued Feb- pansion offered by the iminlacoustical envuonrnent. The
ruary 14, the Council described nent move l.o the North Camchurch's s~ctural capacity for ~!';t3!'~~w!;,': :!du':'J"}~ the Faculty as a "well-estab- · pus, scheduled for this summer.
reverberating sound ~gested the third consecutive year. The lishe:l and educationally sound
Occupation of the new law
an a~roach to _the acting prob- Board of Trustees re-&lt;!lected law school" operating in com· and junsprudence facilities will
orlemstbem~~t m the language Mr. Swift, Dr. Jacobs and other pliance with the standards of convert · the Faculty from one
p....,.
the Bar. In addition, th&amp; Coun- of the worst-housed law schoals
Tho Aural V~luo of Wonls ·
other officers of the Board.
cil issued resoluticfns commend- in the country· to one ·. of the
As a reeult, the _cast began Historic ~ration Clt..r
ing the Faculty for its "crea· best, the report noted. Law
to experiment with the vocal
In his letter to Mr. Swift, Dr. tive, competent administration" Professor Wade J . Newhouee
aspects of .t he work, presenting Ketter cited the historic coop- and "able faculty" and prais- was singled out for his major
difficult lines for their aural as eration between the University ing the .University adrninistra- contributions to planning and ·
much as their cognitive valu,e. and the Hospital. He said : tion for its "strong past sup- design of a building of "tuncAccon!.ingly, much of the dra- "More than 100 years ago The port."
tional beauty."
matic effect has been developed Buffalo General Hospital and
"Whether the Faculty of
The evaluating team indithrough extended or exaggerat- The University ... formed the . Law and Jurisprudence of the cated that the building might,
ed speect., . poe t.i c .forms of first working partnership . . . State University of New York among more usual functions,
!liUSic wliich employ · Eliot's between the .University and a becomes a great law school or help provide the Faculty with
comple:r allitemtive, aasonant, hospital to work cooperatively whether its potential is more the heightened self-&lt;XInfidence
and rhythmic techniques. ·
toward the mutual goals of restrictively realized depends that it both needs and deserves.
There are other significant teaching, clinical service, re- in large part on continued
The current Faculty adrnin(Continued on paR• 5. col. 3)
search, the training of physi- strong support from the Univer- istration has "enthusiastic"
clans and surgeons, advanced sity administration,'' the Coun- support, the report not.eil. In
professional and spec i a I is t cit noted.
. . asaessing the administrative
training, and the expansion of
The resolutions f o II o w e d structUre, the team exp.-d
medical knowledge. . . . This consideration by the Council concern over the lack of a fullrelationship "'has continued to of the report -prepared by a time placement office for gradgrow until today: The Buflalo three-man joint inspection team uat.es. Such an operation is
· General HOspital provides a of the Bar Asaociation and the necessary to give graduates an
-major clinical baae and bas Association of American Law equal opportunity in todey's
continued to be one of the prin- Schaois that visited the Facul- competitive job rnarlcet. the
cipal teaching bospitals of the ty for three days last Fall.
(Conliruud on 2, _coL 5)

AmerE'

-Former 'rexas Medical-Dean
In Line for llealth VP Post

~~~~n~i ~~ ~d! ~-------~~----~----------------------------~

chanfes in and e:rpanded its
pliysiail plant to provide a
proper dinlc:al baae and the
_llllpl'intive facilities .to impleAs a means ·ef fostering campus communication, the
ment and carry 0 ut mufual PIOReporter bas agreed to cooperate with the OJiice or Forgrmns." , .
eign -student Affairs (OFSA) and the Foreip1 Student .
. &lt; The·Hollpital bas teoently beJUII a _new espahaion of ila
Coordinating Council in devotine, on an e:rperimeiltal
pbyaical •facilitif!i. Dr. Ketter
l!uio, Clll8 or twQ. pqea in our lint issue of .-:h ol the
aot.ed; "IUid ' the Hoepital and
• three remaining 'IIIOIItbs or lhill academic year to - .
lbe -Uni?enii)o have continued
and feature-opinion artideo ClOIIIll!l!linl
.to __. dle'1111tme or the prothe Un!-.ity'a inUnatlonal OOIIIIDUDity.
.
IJ&amp;II!S .lmloJ.e.t IUid,.. lbe'e:rtent
:Ibla ..iR!ormaliaa Will be compiled by the editorial
· ofllie ~a'ciamrnitmelit
staff of U/ B lllkmatiDn6l, the foreipl student .-letter,
.... the Jll'ovfslcja d the ·.
•. and the OFSA. •
Beca~a today'a - . . or the RqJOIUT mincldes with
State tJai-.it1 ~ le!lalthe Cli1III:UIGil ol-tba ~ lnterDatioaal Week, lybe boaDd mltiJ u.diUaliaa .
are -miDIIIt UIB I~ IUid our OWil plloto~
- -h
· . .IIPPIOI'riate
. . . . duly
gnophic . , . . . . ol the oobful l1divities ol the Week
-=uted by
State- lllriciU."· but aaid . .._
into a opectal . . .-pap ~ aalpte to. the Uni-- ~tDeQt8riJ'I!&gt;IIIII'I!tia·
sity'e ~500 beiP .tudente and fecUlty.
tl... _ ~ io finalize

International Insert

............__Ia

..

~~=:::r ~the

�~~
-~

,

_2

FEAS Is-Giving Priority
To Recruiting of Students
'lboi Fw:uJti·of EnciJ&gt;oierinc
and Applied Scieuoee (FEAS)
is currently OIIIPII'd In' a hilb
J&gt;tiority ~ to attz'act
more and · better students,· Provoat William N. Gill aaid this

..

-

'

.

..u-mr

wendar.

,r

°

Health VP-

:d

'!"

t!:J.. .

=

U:.,

~m·
~~ themedii!cme~""tem·praCoctiiSl
·~
_...,.
··
He .......S aa III!IIOciate pro-

cana. Tau.

' - ol medicine at The
llahl*ll8lllt Medical· Coll~e
and HOIPital of Philadelphia .
from 191b-6l, moving to the
t:Jnivasi~ ofT- Southwest-"
ern NedicaJ School in Dallas
.......:.... -t _._ ...._
and
• - - .,_., •u• JraDts

::1
~~ J:
San·Anloniopoat. He was also

~f~,\Sn;!fijl= ~~

bard-hit as many schools by
federal fun~ cutbacks. "For
us, it will be mconvenient, not
disastrous,h be said. The reason, be pointed out, is a "conservatiV.. and ·-'---·'"leh ap_ _... to the,_..........,
-

J::;' Also, wtJl!" ~

. • • ·

Some_lnstitutions-Jl8!tic:!laaailltaiat prot_,. of internal larly pnvate ""--have paid
medlciDe at DaJiaa.
"'! to 66 per """t of faculty aalDr. PenUJ ia a diplomate of anesthis baafrom· re8liarch funds, but
tbe National Board of Medical ·
never been the caae
Esam!MN.
.
and a teiJow of the ~t ~~te;;,~
•--'-'-- ,....,,_
· - - - .• .._
.....
faciJia a ·-demoNiizlna
............... ......_., of. Pbysl- are dans.
..~ wblcb illn't nolliil
TAX MDI' _
bere, Gill laid.
Jill ,
Tile Olllce for CNdlt F- ,.,..,...,... ,,cc::e!~ ~':..~.:;::
:.,;;~~= available f.o 81111 JNdaate
dents wbo
.-iwld '::
~ Tl.w -..-y, 1&gt;enda from ted.ir.t - ' ~~1!::.;.."';:.':
Gill aaid, too ·t~~,t"!;"'"- -

=

:.:;:

tall " " - tax pro)llllml or IRS

~~-430~

for

sonally Clppl.e the action and
vote no on tbe ~ h
What ill ,.....,~ to be the outol the~
come
•
There ill ''Do evidi..c..,n Fisk
aaya, that the bMic poature of
• lhoee wbo CJPPC*d the SUFI'
meraer Nleraldum iD the first
place baa~ In r8iafd to
the ".ubetantlve i a au e a" involved. "One CUI apect that
the gnoduate omtera. the beatth
sc:iencea ..,..... and a few of
the four-yeu col.lepa will re~h be -indicated
Ia that lhoee ad:
,_... through . this
...., a skirmish.
larpr
tt1e still remains
)9 be fouii&gt;L" .
· Readts Ol the referendum
will be tallied on April 6." Hesuits will be broken down by individual campuses aDd accord_ing to •faculty and NTP votes.
/

r.
School..:.aw
•

(Continued from- · 1, coL 5)
team felt. The need for more
administrative ataff in the areas
of admissions and continuing
legal education was also noted.
Alth
h the
strong, 0~ team f felt u
improved faculty-student ratio

J!i 1:;

was desirable to develop such
innomallvative Faculty programs as
s
sections for fiJst-year students, clinical programs, various · unde~uate programs,
and cooperative teaching and
~~ ventures with other

't.e;~~~
025f~tu~:;tSc=1'Y
to one.

The addition of some 100,000
volumes of already, -published
works would help push lhe Law
Library from its cur,.,nt Satis·
' to
ta~-•
•ac ry s rus to front-rank, the
team suggested. Almost fifty
per cent of the new building is
earmarked for library use, it
was noted.
A sound professional core of
traditional law co u r s e s was
found by ·t he investigators who
took special note of the un;..ual
· tY of el ectives, interdiscivane
plinary programs \ including
JOint degree programs), and ·
clinical programs offered by the
faculty. More required writmg courses and a reqnired moot
court program would strenrlh·
en the prorram, the team recommend1ed, noting also that the
"activist" nature of man of
the clihlcat Prostama
create a public relations risk.

rna/

.:t:tus
~"':""~en up"b;. ~ :;::;:,s~:rU:
~== ~U::tsin:~~~r~
SPA . Executive Board at Its ever, the spokesman ~ted, it _ , . g the Faculty's student
:t'J=i
March 9 an&lt;! 10, the was agreed "to JU&amp;ranteeh body. Although approximately
The real~ 88ld.
.
that lheee matters will
60 per Cllllt of the tote,~ en·
·.
. questi?n concernmg before the first ..-tinf,ot"":i: rollrDent cummtly ,...._ from
this """""!ttee. Fisk sai~, is the Delegate J\aaemhly of SUNY- W~ N- York, a ~

=

amounta of otheee funds ha~
been ..,.._;n•. herea·ta timeof
·~
nati.,.;j";.r"ump "we haven't
bad. as much of' this type -"
..
fund,!nJ aa other achooiB have
bad.

~- ~~1,1913
.
.

SPA Does.'About Face' {)n Merger;
.Balloting Slated during U!B Recess

ED,ineering Council f&lt;&gt;&lt; ProfesIn wbat was described .by a Out M..c11 I
sional Development (ECPD) Senate frol-"&gt;nal Association
Aa a ..Wt Of the SPA Repwhich provides enaJneering ao- (SPA)' apokMman in . Alhonv -tative Cojmcil'a action last
creditation. ECPD makes dia- as a "Stunnint tum~ · weebnd, a "yea-no" ballot on
tinctiona in acaeditation, Gill the SPA Representative Coun- III8IJ'I'!" with SUFI' will now l?e
explained, by the length of time cil . laat 1!oltwday voted 51-15- · IDJiled to ·the SPA mim&gt;benhip
:week.
1or which a liven Prostam is ac- to submit the-question of SPA's · on March ~ ~th a deadline of
The reason: employment op- . " credited. Sis years a110, ECPD proposed meraer with the State · !o(8rch 30 fot; retuma.
po.tunltiee in the field are - i pve two-year accreditatlana (of UniversityFe.ieration of Teach- •. ACCDJDpanyiJII the -b&amp;llot as
the IIP&amp;winl. "W~re havinr to a maximum of six years) to all ers \SUFI') to the SPA mem- "baclwound pieces fO&lt; making
~ with a time ~bat- • !lut one of. the engiMerinJ pro- bersbip for an advisory refer- a dedilion on -the meraerh !'i11
t en- . grams; tliis put fall, all pro- endum.
·
be: 1. The p.opc.d constituling the lmap of
_job praapects which grams but one received six yeer
In Bullalo, Dr. Robert S. tion and by-laws f&lt;&gt;&lt; a new orwaa -true a couple of years iccreditations. The other re- Fisk, leading prof_,. of edu· pnization to be c:alled SUNYqo,• Gill ea14.
. ·
. ., ceived a two-yeer sanction.
cation and a member of the United lhrouKh which. the merTo elate. be indicated, FEAS
However, Gill noted, accredi- .SPA Representative Council, ger will be e«ected; 2. The aobaa l*ltered ita recruitment ef- tatian is a one-way street, not an opponent of the action, wal agreement of meraer befO&lt;ta IU'OIIIId both maiJ.inp to very useful in atllactinJ stu- ailled the tllJ'Il of events "a tween SPA and SUFI'; and 3.
~ve atudents and lacul- dents; If_you aren't accredited, ~Y planni!d· fineeae" on ~proposed ll&gt;l!lller implement&amp;ty vi8118 with students and be 881d, It can be a disadvan- the part of the SPA State ad- tion
- COilllllelora in high achools and tage. but it you have· it, "so ministration.
·
The SPA ~tative
junior collepe. N am eJ1 of. what."
Two weeks earlier, the Rep- Council will tonsider the ref.
some 5,000 students with the a..,.. In Ed....tlon
resentative Council had voted erendum results- on April 14
potential and cbaracteriatics
The • ld of
.
.
ed 31-26 not to send the SUFI' and make necessary conatituwhich FEAS is seeking have
. 1"' .
~eenng
· merger question to the member- tiona! amendments to e«ect the
also been obtained from the . ucation, qi~ 88ld, ha&amp; und~- ship. Instead, the Council set merger, if that is the oulcome
COllege Entrance Examination gone a striking change from Its up a committee "to investigate of the . balloling, the SPA-AlBoard; be said.
pre-~prld W~ U "nuts 8-!'d . . . merger or affiliation with bany spokesman said.
• A special push for women ~Its 8!DPhaais. Now,)le 88ld, SUFI', AAUP, CSEA and other
Under the propoeed meraer
students. is planned, Gill said, vwe have~ v~~Y abstrac.t. possible groups. . . ."( Reporter, timetable,_local combined chaptbroupl uae of a aeries of radio
ery mathematical an~ this February 15)
ters of S.t'A and SUFI' would
recnntment s p 0 t announce- !'as ca~ a ~~ Wlf:h the Two-Sided A~ment
elect ollicera!delejl!lles to the
ments patterned after a pro- mdustnes which hire engmeerAt that time, representatives new SUNY -Uruted Delegate
11ram developed at Pennsylvan- m11 ~d~tes. In~~. he of U/ B, other SUNY graduate Assembly between AJ&gt;ril-17- and
18 State University. '1'1\ere are
":"'d, cant .cope with. Wizard- .centers, health sciences centers May 1. The Assembly would
C\lm!lltly only approximately like lheoretu:~lly • 0 1 e n ted ana some four-year colleges had meet no later than May 15. to
25,000-50,000 women among graduate engm"!'rs.
T h u ~· led oposition to lhe proposal. elect new State officers and an
the nation's one million enJin· the latest trend 18 "? get .b'!"'- They objected, they said, not to executive board.
eers, he estimated.
ness more '!'volved m . gwding merger with SUFI' per se but
Fisk noted that the merger
Sound -...1c Position ·
the acadeuu~ !'~ m order to certain features or a · pro- balloting will be conducted durFEAS is in a sound position to reduce difficulties between posed new constitution. They ing U/ B's spring recess. "The
academically Gill said The academe and the "real world." also wanted SPA to look closely local membership should be
American c:,.,.,;l on Educa- Alth~:'gb l!e ~esc:ribes himself at the possible alternative af- alerted to this and should not
let it interfere with their votlion rraduate ratinJS covering as a theoriS.t. g_m grants J.!&gt;at filiations. :
.the middle to late 1960's, he p~rhaps engm_eer"\g education
Opponents of the merger ref- ing," he said. "A large vote
• iildicat84;•fated U / B's engin- . did~o too_Iar m this reg~.
_e!"ndum i,nqica.ted that their from this campus is desirable."
G1ll estimated that "not too VICtory of two weeks-ago 'll8emeil . Moln Ob._.._ 1
.
.
eering programs about 40tli in
the nation out of 125 institu- many" of UI!J's engineering to indicate a: credibility gap beS!'A G;'"AJ'b.my interprets the
tions ranked. Indicative of con- graduates remam in the Buffalo tween the Representative Coun- earher Representative Council
tinued ·improvement. he said area because the type or indus- cil and SPA officers. State Pres,...,.,
f
was the outcome of last Call'~ try_ c;!ustered here is not look- ident Robert Gtan:l'lr-who was re_,..,.won
the SUFI' merger
·
f h"""'
· ed
plari as centering around three
·liccreditation visit by the Mid- • mg or I...,.y ·t rain rrsduate reported to be ba "ng immedi- main ob)i!ctions: 1. the terms
die States ASsociation and the enFtt':"-t However, hedpointed .arte mergei wfi~,_~UFI'-asked of the otficers for the proposed
ou
·some 250 stu ents at or a 1eave o .......,nee immedi- SUNY_-United,· 2. '-ck of prothe grsduate level are part-time ately after the vote.
rli
"'
Merger p r o pone t s aaid po ona1 representation f o r
.
. students who work in local in·
:(Conli&gt;uud "tri;,;. ,X.,"e- 1-; coL 2)
-dustry The "F cUlt •
ll AA:I:IP
d CSEA"
NTPs on . the executive board
Pannill's background as both t, .he :d a. I yds e:b:: • ... ~
allil"1 ~re not of the new organization; and
an educator and administrator 7'&amp;} under::.du:."~u
~ S~A, report'~bich ~gp;:~ ~U~~t"'(grano~:chte cetypentersof
as well as a health care prac- 600 gr:aduate students.
ents disputed. Those favoring f
ll
•
titioner will be of immeasurable
U/ B's grsduate engineering the SUFI' merger also said opour-year co eges, etc. ) will be
value in helping us to reach students come from all over the position to it was an attempt guaranteed representation on
· .this goal.".
-·
.
-ruiti.·on and the- world, be said, by -larger SUNY units to take the SUNY-United Executive
D r. Pannill , 51, served as while · the undergraduate popu- over control of SPA which rep- present
Board asSPA
is the
case with
the
Executive
Board.
founding dean and professor of lation is predominantly from resents all facul ty and non. The SPA negotiating team
medicine at the San Antonio Ca- New York State Cabout 50 teachillg_ professionals through- which had worked on the terms
cility from 1965 to 1972. Born per cent from the Western New out SUNY.
of the merger with SUFI' took
in Rosemont, Pennsylvania, he York!"""' ).
Now SPA in Alb&amp;nr says these concerns back to SUFI'
received the B.A. in Spanish ROMord1 Funds
that the proposed committee to
· from Yale in 1942 and an M.D.
Sponsored research end train- explof!! all merger P&lt;ll'8ibil.ities, representatives following the
from Yale University School of ing grants in FEAS almost of ":hich Dr. Zebulon Tamtor, SPA Representative Council's
Medicine in 1945. ·
· led •-~
president of the Buffalo Health rejection. 11le propoeed constitrip
....,, year from $800,·
.
tution and by-laWB of SUNY
After COMP,leting his intern- . 000 14 some $2.2 million Wish- ~1ences SPA Chapte:;. 18 pres-· u ·ted
ld t be chan
.
co~~
ahip and re&amp;lden..:'if in Houston, ing that the Nison administra- I~ent pro lem, faces . "'!DBtitu- in:;:,rpo;:'~
l:r t-=~ "eo~:'ie~ ~: tion were more sympatlietic to r~ prob~ems :
ff, ~ts SPA Albany spokesman said
icine, con tinning there as assistant professor of medicine until 1954. Fmm 1954-60, be was

-

Uni:ed for -"'dera"- of__ ..otantial ----:.... is from
~
...... -~ d
,....,.... """
stitutimiat amendments relatinJ
ownatate .and out "ol state, e
to them. These Jll&amp;r&amp;nteas, the ~ticd&gt;anp from the formapobaman said, seemed lo'be er ocal llilture ol the School,
instrumental in c:hanDna the the teem obeerwd. . An imReP,_.,tative Council'• -mind PlOYed J&gt;IOINDI for attracting
on the merjer referendum. The more firat-ralle studmts WllB
aaid~H;:;:, i:.,""J:~ actual merger · a r r - t em- auueated.
tive Board reacts to h_inding the boclieo the "JUBranteea."
se..,ty.;z. _per Cllllt of the
corriniittee will iefleCt on the. ·~ · His c;t...;...,
U/8 law~- wbo took
Board's baaic a-edibilif FiSk
In ·Fisk's ,..;.__:__t. ..._____ the bar '!'*D m .July, 1971,
aaid.
. · y, .
"nolhinJ ~-;' ~· pesaed, olipltly below tbe avIt the .Committee is funded tally ....____. • · ....... the
• ezqe for i!Htate law achools,
Fisk "Indicated, it aiuld .epori PD8I!d _ _ . m - t
pro- a statiatic tbe teem attributed
to · the · SPA. Rep.....,;_"tetive
~~and
by-laws to tbe Je. •~Waciaiy b.r...,.
Council wide _..,.,_.,_
are.
• to Jbca earlier view ~a..n.bfe locally
..n.m &lt;11;1
r ouuuawun poa. P~ta.
- ....._and C!&gt;lltain the. D...-L-~
........tiea at .ltie same .._tini ra
•.., ~ 1 P ~
::..
: - : : : f o r itself
.~ on merge r"':JJ: ~ .ttar the
= . t o 82 per-- "llrobllblY
by-laws are accepted -.uning
!he School w8ll above
. . ~t referendum is not bindare."
•
. averap m thia CRteaorY-Qllll1111 ll!ldei" ~ ol ,the.J&gt;~t
F i a It's II80Cibd ·
·
Plll8ble ~ bar eam ...Uta in
SPA.coaatitution. 'It will, .ol aaid,~.iathatlfeel~ ~~~~~national. law
fact that It was autborizad by ·
the Repre;;entative Council and
~t,_~LI?,e ShoPAiclsPresident, ~
~UUUUI.Y ~ • ~t constitu_ tionalau~~- 'ltiBiike.Con
.•
gn!8S appomling a CDIDIII1S8IOD
when ooty _the Presiden,t, bas
.
the - t i
,.._,_

~~~~.COil·

u-

.m:a.!:
=a:n..:

&amp;:"ru1y";n~ ~

~ future empi,.la ben on :::;,"~ t:":: ~ ~=!'!..J"%orfl! In commenting on the ;..,n
::=~;:= .said.:;t"~A C:Yis :=:::!; advanta,:s ~ .d~ty of:- ~t·! -=~ ~ J:::!;
=~~~?:at~ :!:i~but we've IOta long way

=..,

'

�El~ctron Microscope Used to Study _Coimty Air Poliution
The University's recently'
Scanning Electron
Microscope' (SEM) is being
used in a research project
aimed ; t ow a r d developing a
"fingerprinting" t y p e technique 'to identify (and thus
/ help eliminate) the pollution
sources in Erie County.
Drs. Subbiah Ramalingam,
associate professor, mechanical
engineering, and . Gerald P.
Francis, associate professor and
chajrinan · of · -the ·Dep&amp;rtmen\,
acknowledge the ~ty's recent announcement that, in the
last five years, it has reduced
air: po\hition .... 6P per cent ana
'indica~ ~ uth;fe-::iS "£ ;;o·· rea,8o,n
acquiied

·10 ·doiilif'i:lie claim."· ·:

·"

-However, with the pollution
level going down, 'and with the
.I

former ,major sources obviously

. engaged in control programs, it
becomes doubly important to
find who and what are responsible tor ·the pollution - levels
we are still getting.
This means, the mechanical
engineering professors say,
eventually collecting samples
from the 'various sources in the
·area and analyzing the shape,
size and chemistry of any particles contained in the samples.
Once that unique data is determined for each source, they exJ&gt;!all!, if will be possible to
1dentify the origin or pollutinn in· gross air samples,
County Air Sompleo

Alre&amp;ay, the SEM is being
used in studies or gross samples
coHected by· .the Erie County
Air Pollution. Control agency,

under the direction of Dr. W.J.
Mitchell.
'l'hese samples are collected
daily at County monitoring sta'-tions throughout the area. ·Collections are taken on glass fiber
mats which are placed in va&lt;;uum cleaner-like machines. The
machines suck in atmospheric
air through the mats.
After a: 24-hour period, the
formerly clean white mats are

f:.:f.":c; ob~~~~-o~~_ti~

nilk&lt;!d eye. For example, the
mat representing Amherst air
collections is a light grey; the
'l'onawlinda-- 'sampie, slilibtly·greyer; and the one from f:.ackawanna, a definite clay-brown.
When the mats are phoiogral!hed Cat 6,000 magnifications ) through the SEM, boWever, the results are even more
dramatic-downright appalling,
many would say. ( See accomn.. dMn fla..r rMt •• ...,
panymg photographs.)
with the gi'088 samples.
. The message is clear: AJ. X-Roy .Miaoprobe.
though. County pollution-levels
At present, -the · University's
have been reduced, there's still SEM does not have the X-ray
microprobe capability necesa long way to go.
The next stage in the long- sary to complete .the pollution
range study and control pro- studies. However, plans are
giam, Drs. Ramalingam and being made to acquire this $20,Francis say, will be X-ray an- 000-$2&amp;;000 attachment for the
alyses of each. or the particles basic instrument.
The studies being discussed
appearing in the SEM magnification pictures so that each can· here, Drs. Ramal ingam and
be positively id~t.ified. Now, _ Francis say, deal only with
only educahti guesses can be solid pollutants. Auto emismade.
sions, a major pollution source
Finally, g I ass fiber mat in the gaseous ' range, can be
samples will 'be taken at other detected by the SEM only if
conceivable pollution sources, samples are taken from indiand these will - be compared vidual automobiles.. Thus, the

.try the SDI.

·County is attacking automobile
pollution by zerofug in on autos
with visibly smoking exhausts.
The SEM, one of the first
instruments of its kind to be
Used in the BuJfalo_ area, was
acquired by the _University
through a grant from the New
York State Science and Technolo)!y FoundaHon. It is located in the ~t of

~=~~¥.~~~in the
An amazingly versa.tile interdiscipliruuy research tool, it is
currently being used by U/B
scientists on such projects as
studies of: red blood ceUs and
of morphology of the brain,
soil stabilization, the development of new low-cost. steel alloys, and dynamic deformation.

�4

\/

•..m ·z.

: ~ ·.·

1973

'

. C 11 d A German Vzew of Tragedy
Drug Use on Assembly~ Lme a e At the Olympiad in Munich
Al~ing in Study -WB!£&gt;~~~ .-;~
Dr:
~GviEWPoiNTS
· •.uit or not,cl truly

· "'*
GeMnJl Moton wilh every
fibtr, in my body. llt:c .au•_"

cmalive nature of. ~ while
another worker_ ~ tbat
drupw_....,_a
CXJPIIlB ...,....,. •

IrvinJI 81. _ - . vice p,....
of the United Auto Work·

a-i.l:..t

Jl6=

report OD
!hul
Ladany's appearance on Fe!;&gt;.
14 (Reporur Feb. 22) on this
campus and bis eye w i - acqJUnt of -tbe terrorist attack GD

n. 11opa1tor liape.- - Iat.emational U!lion, and.
to . , . - a farum for the ex·
-tt plajnly
- ·
•• _.......:.......... social
- . . . of .., a nr1e1y
_,,re~pie Thiy ~- Tbe.-.Itof'tfiisboredomia Dr.~..........,.,.,
lhei.sraeli0lympicf:e8Dt~ a f l h e - ...... l h e - l c
~,.. :."'T'~(fon;t care. 'worker alienation ; a at:D88 of.
ci~ Univenlity anolber clqoe-by wttDeas. this communlt,.W........,.both
They ~~ don't can ollout 'pOWel'l~ ~ch leads . to of MicbiPD, studies w'hieh time alllic:ted with a " German position p a p e n - - . . as
1o put

..,_

"!'~--~'=~C, :'::~~ace:;=

""'-'that ~.;the.work is
the program, aays NPR's Bat- deeply
'ij!
~...J:.I
of worltera.
Tiley want you w do a joll for baraera!N~- who ~
ao """'l lrDun, pul ao many mon.... prep&amp;IUII
'The study reciently dnne by the·
_ , . 111 ar, oo _,,o~,ou., or ~~· of Ms. New- Duke University Medic!" 1
~~~£..'!"..,.~--"' ~~ :man's report,~!ten called "Blue School on .factors of ~ongev•.ty
.':""'J
uun:Jl• -~
Y-"" Collar Blues" was also the sub- found out . . . that job satisit. If ;you • ~.a";;;;
ject of a ,..,.,.;,.tly relesaed high· !~ctk&gt;n was the '!ingle best pre~it 10 'MJb..~the in- level ' study which was COl!- dict.Or of l~Vlty, even 'j;b
• ll1ill llu;y it • But I ...,.. ducted for the Department of than genetic factors and hea
~ ~,;{don't want k&gt; pay $6,1100 He8lth, Education and Welfare. history.
who ·
tsntl '
or a car lltat'l put IDfd}oer 'The study names assembly line
"A person
18 cons
Y
f•~u-.d
lie lao- wilh work as the worst kind. of job ,OOred a.evelops, .p emaps even
111
~';;.
•
in the country and indicates uncon&amp;Clouldy, a deep sense of
· "Tiwre 1o d r ,. • a11uoe in that the boring nature of !"" power~ and a ne.;&lt;~ . to
1
IMre, ya.- I sa it. :And then'• aembly line work oflell has m- assert h1msel!. If there s no
__..... _ in ~. ye.. rue oeen ,jurioua effects on the mental avenue fo~ constructiveness,
~~h.o. 1 don't kiiOUJ i/ it's and physical health~ work~'1· ~hat o~ m•ght call that \"'·
tl(ltlinot
low "'&gt;' ( it) lhllt
''The reason why mcreasmg, hved hie ~es something
roe omolr.ed. The111 jolla ~ llor- numbers of .assembly li,ne wo~- whic;h stim~tes a person to
U... SoTu jollo aN terribly llor- en; are tsking ~ lS an m- destroy. . . .
.
U.,·lbey reaJl;)l are
There'• teresting question, ' say Ms.
Bluestone, con s•dere d by
~ down there ii,;.i had the Newman. ''The assembly line many to be the leading intel....... joll for 20 yean dOinB the has not changed. u anything, lectual or the labor movement.
work for 20' yean. I work there is easier than in the emphasizes the need to res~ccouldn't taJre t!IIJI I really past. But .along with the in- ture . the work place, · ststing
couldn't"
'
creased ease is also an in- that the !in;t step may be to
..:.A OM , _ , . ,,. u.. w..creased simplification of jobii. · give line workers an opportun•
•
•
And coupling this with the ity for more input in ..their i&lt;!ba
The alarming extent of drUg growing numbers of young and more use of their creative
uae to combat 6oredom and de- worliers, the result has been an abilities.
1nnnanizi1!i working conditions unhappy situation. Young - Bluestone admits that no one
oa American ll!lllellibly lines is workers have greater education is sure of how to restructure
indicative of die need to recon- and higher aspirations than work. He points with hope to
&amp;tnl# )he w!lrk place, acrord- !heir ·fathers and grandfathers the current experiment at the
ing io · ~ blue gllllai:. ··on tho! line. \'l'bey'Wea! brj)ught · ¥ollo'cl'-plarit. in. Sweden,- where
~ and union leaden; up in a freer society. Resl!areh· worken; assemble cars in teams
whoae &lt;JPinjons will he' pre- en;..say if one characteristic ex- off the 'line,
aeDted during a 30-minute Na- plains them then it is anti"At the presenl time there
tioaaf l'ublic Radio doeumen- authoritarianism. They do not is;muclj.unoertainty about how
tary; "A D8y is like a Waelt: accept the banih authoril:f .of to humanize work," aays Ms.
Alloaatlaa 011 Jbe ·~ ''the liDe fOftiiiiiiD u workers did N""""""'. "0 n e GM official
Line,"
he 'btoadeast on in the pasl"
·
says if 'assembly lines were
WBPO at 2:30 p.m., Friday,
The pay for assembly line abolished it would cost the conu_....._
2.
·
rk · ,..... ....,__
Gen
""""""
.
•wo 18 g..,.... • ..., average
-. sumer $15,000 to buy a car.
"ft ~ also ,a p.toblem which _eral_. Moto.n&amp;· assembly - line .-• Others ·· say ·that if worken;
umaa; ......,ageinent &amp;nd iOvem- worker makes about·$12,000 per were satisfied with their work,
meut have been loathe to pub-" -year. Yet many line workers turnover rates and sabotsge
llcize, the plogram charges.
·feel that pay is a Seci&gt;ndary would decrease, thereby lower" A lot of drug usage in the consideration to job satia!ac- ing true costs and improving
plani is related to the kind of fion. At this 'time, however, quality."
work penple do," says Carl workers are not prepared to
Wqner, who directed a study strike over the issue of dehu- G~nvnY.t
, .r&gt;
!or the United Auto Workers manlzing work conditions.
1 c-c. ll.U '"'which the OAW has .-er re- "People are.:eonditioned to exleaaed. Wagner's study found pect from a strike either·monethat 35 per cent of assembly tsry gain or fringe benefit gain.
line worltera under 30 uae hash- They don't normally think of
ish. marijuana, amphetamines acbievin'g a better condition as T.S
or b&amp;lbittirates-many on the far as. dehumanizing of the job 1~
job-and that 92 per cent of is concerned.'' according to an
worbrs interviewed have ac- assembly line worker. ''The Changes in time seale related
- COM to dmp which are readily only posslbjlity for creativity to SPA Step 1 Grievanoe Proavailable at their plant.
on the assembly line is a net.r ce&lt;lures were announced this
.lim Wrilbt, who prepared an way to BBhotage can;. Where -week by President Robert L.
.Jao as :v.et unrele&amp;sea repOrt else on ouriob is there an op- Ketter;
for the White House on drug portunity to think up some1. As before, the hearing
010 JUDOng blue collar Workers, thing JII!!W?" says another auto panel aball bold its fust II8)'S during the propain that
worker, descnbing what many ing to begin grievance review
- a&amp;'11111DY as 10 par oenl of work: assembly line .workers oonsider within seven days of th£ Presen
.....~ dmp - - than job.
a ·couunon oecunenoe on the 1'den t's reoe1p
· t 1
·
oalywbo
o a ~1evanoe;
011 -job "aamppy t o with ~ work". but Vlewpalnta
2. The .hearing Panel iibaU
· not during their free ilme. "A'
Durii1g the pro'grsm, Ms. now have 21 days in · which it
day is 1ik8 a ....,... is hciw one Newman also interviews lead- is to callect evidence, hear witaaBombly line worker .descr!bed ing intellectuals involved with - . and transmit to the
the repetitive, boring and un- by_ing to solve ,!he problema of Pnlsident its·. written report,
including reCommendations;
3. Upon receipt of that' report, -the President, -tben """ 7

~ i/ il'o lrDJiway

w_,

decent. • . .

"'7:!

dlsaatiaf:.:.::5tti':.

U:ve1

'= "W...:

the

e
Time ChatJge
Announced

::.,i'!" ~~:.!ifn"'f,;
writing .tb the,pievant.

•
~B4hcr ...
A. Wan.&amp;r ROWLAND

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

..........-.. ._

JtOa&amp;IH""

r. lldUTT
~

IORII A.. CI.DUTIU

,

.

• •rA~A. IP'.utD

··~

~1:fdiJe:!:~= · ___....-.
__....,._.:____

some things straiahl
ment was simply uncooperatlve.
To my knowledge, the Israeli J'relident Sadat of Egypt did
govemment· did refuse special . not even consider enming to the
security 'ineasWes for its Olym- pbonewben·he was called up by
pic team, which was offered ChanceHor Willy Brandt.
prior to the Games. 'The IsraeIt is true that 1he German
lis wanted to provide' their own police were. not p~ for

~ty~i~~/~ro~: ·=i!.t~h~u!i:'~u,t~
action was in the planning.
The German government did
ill"
but the
not otter $1 m 10n
ra r
all unlimited amount of money.
The compsrison of the Munich and Bangkok incidents is
unfair.· In the case of the 88 ngkok incident the Egyptian Ambassador personally pia~ political pressure on the tlirror-f
ists whereas in the case o
Mumch· the Egyptian govem-·

Germans tbouBht it would "not
he wOrth loairut their ijves" for
those
CC:Jell _,___ •
."
peop
.....,.., m my
ppinlon a flagrant disrespect for
the sacrifices on the German
~:· ~edGe!:j' :V~;d 0 ~~

wounded during the ~ attempt. - --&lt;lEORGE DE:Uii:E
Graduate Student

U/B Has-""'l/25th of c1•ty 's

Gebl'lgical Scienoe

cn·mes m· 7 MaJ·or Areas

One twenty-fifth of the City's
The question of invitstion of
criminal activity in seven major persons or groups writing posicategories last year occurred on tion papers was discussed with
campus, according to inform&amp;- the decision being made to
tion received from Buffalo au- acknowledge receipt of papers
thorities by Lee Griffin, assis- snd invite writers to call Subtsnt director of Campus Secur- committee memben; if they
. ity, and reported at the Febru- wish to attend a meeting and
ary 9 meeting of the Subeom- · expand further on their posimittee of Internal Security on tion.
Selective Arming.
Chairman McAllister Hull,
According to Griffin's fig- · peon of the Graduate S!;:hool,
ures, the campus experienced indieated .that to date respc;&gt;nse
663 crimes durmg.the year, not from the University co\nmuriity
including disorderly conduct,
..
harassment and incidents in in regard to poslllon papers
been very
which no cbarges were pressed . and
poor, co~ts
but, he said,has
" perhaps
this
The Sub'Committee also con- wasduetothe!actthatthelast
sidered the possibility of a fu- minutes weren't printed in lull,
annringm
· ognothencammaptuster' with the questions indicated."
tureseolecpenti'vheae
01
onoe the following documents
Fred Cazar, Graduate Stuare obtsined: 1. Rules of Stste dent Association representstive,
Polioe and other available conveyed a responSe from the
groups on when to draw weap- GSA. The group is evenly dions; 2. Procedures and rei!Uia- vided on the question of- anntions involving anning of se- ing, he said. Two motions, one
eurity olticen; on selected cam- pro and one con, were defeated
puses where security officers .· at a recent GSA meeting. Cazar
have been anned; 3. Survey of said he had received suggescampuses wbo have one armed tions on the type of arms that
person per shift, if any, and 4. might he uaed, e.g., bean hag
List of COU1'11El6, duration and guns, rubber bullets. This has
brief description, mquired. of already been ewveyed, the
security officers.
Subcommittee leamed, and no
Committee members received weapons ba~ been ~iscov~
for a review: a memo from Grit- which are no!Hethal m all eu- .
fin responding to questions 'cwnstanoea. However, the
raised on arming and use of flDllD asked Griffin to supply
dogs; a letter from Debbie Ben- it -.;;rdi New York City Police
son, presiaent of 1he Stuaent JlepartmeoH-tu-d i e s on soAssociation, indicating .-.Its called non-lj!thal weapons for
of
referendum
held concern- ~,;
.. ---.
·
inga-~~·in which ~
__........,
•
8
from-lQi;:r Cimt .of tile student
Members of-the ~tpopulation sbQwed 1,112 op- tee p - a t the ·meet.'ng
posed anii 250 in favor· and two - were·: Hull, Cazar. G~
position·pajiera from ~ ''Uni- J~· Claar, Tom cleMartino,
versitv of Butralo s .. u au s William Gren- and Pete GulClub." ·
"'
ley.

f-SI
, n·lVIS
. ~··on ·
,-. . : oppy
..

·,

·-

-.:
·Addit.ionaiiy, Keue,.. k;a, it ·Reporter failed tO check its ioa. divialor! last
is "~t to remember that.
..,. lOt llic!PPf. with the old devil clecimal poi!lt and, rethe alloYe· time 'icele. caD he
: porlild · that .·Iliad&lt; ...-. make up .en par oent of the
waived by mutual ...-.;&gt;ant"-· , faiculty. wbi!D the--' fi&amp;Ure lbnuld have been .7 per oenl
AUQ. he 'indicated, '.'we
'Aelailll)!, blacli women~ up oal.Y .6 por coat of
obouJd ......-1 accoalinl• to
tbe tacnlt;y,:.-dialto more ~ filures ~ to us
tbe-abcNe for Pfll1iitd of· tuDe
ti.Y OBO Director Barbara M. Sima since the orilinal
to - lhtifficwae8.anae, 111111 · · ·lii'dde .....,._ Nine black women eurre~~tiy hold aca! 8 ' - if -----"--'~· ' · • , deililc 'raDii: 011 fuU-time Stste lineo. Six others have quali~ J:"'~~ --1ild ~ tida
KeUif ailld tbt-...... ~
• • Aa of Februar;y 12. Personnel reported a total faculty
. beiDa -millie fallcJirlq' .,.__ ,,ftcure oll412.
.. . .u"'iih
SPA,
ll!e
~
....._,......_of~..._,__,
- .._
~· are hued on the prin~ dialriliuted ..11r the
• ..........,..._
.... ..,..,... ._...
~· Department, ~· Sims ~
aloi and
8t.lf

'ib.-

a

Seaoite.

1bJ

-

·

.... -

�M.rdt1,1973 .

Faculty Leaders Hear
Uride:rgrad Grade Plan
cil wilt . oonsider the Commit.Gountee
's s.u g ge s tion of a joint
·
ell'- J!!xecutive Committee
at its next Coun-

cii"'. :meeting.
&lt;"'au;ruttee-

Tbe following tentative
agenda was approved' for the
Senate's full meeting Marolt 6:
1. Approval of the Minutes
· of February 6. ·
•
2. Report of the President
3. Report of the Chairman:
Actvi~ and Creative
5. By-laws Changes.
6. Grading Evaluation.
'1. Academic Planning.
8. Other Business. .

DUSStqry
'Premature'

�t"

.r.l' ,·,._ .•a
Jlan:ltl, 1913 '

6

v

Intensive Care: ·A Way
To SaveNewbomLives
By PATRICIA WARD
. IUR~~ Amoac the ~t l&lt;iln statistiea ol Ameriam Malth is tl\at
... liD bohiDd hence and Ire~ • well behind 8leltl·
pluy 'S ~ e d-e n-jn &lt;lbeonatal

c:ountey's ability to limit ~

natal fatalitiee to ~o per 11000
live birthS, regiOIIIllimt&gt;oli ol
neonatal intensive care nurseries was endorlled In 1971 by

!:e::"c!n

~0::

't1.d?cal
which lahelled the concept "a
mortality. For every J,OOO live proven life-sa~ing mechanism
• btrtha in tbl8 c:ountey, 18 new- for infants at rMk:''
.
• boma die. SinCe today'&amp; babies
In Western New York, the
are increasingly wanted chil- recognized regional intensive ·
dnm. lbese UDeiiiOtional nee&gt;- • care facility for newborns l the
only one allow~ accept
transported bsbies) IS at the
Children's Hospital, where Dr.
,families for Y"""'Conwntional wiedom attrib- Sumner J. Yalfe, U/ B profesuta our WJdistinguisbed record sor of pedil\trics and IJS&amp;Oeiate
. to an elevated mortality rate cliaimian of the Children's
I!JDOIII blacks, other minOrities Pediatrics Department, and Dr.
and the poor, poups who are George Giacoia, assistant prodenied access .to the presnma- fes&amp;Or of pediatrics and director
bly superior maternal. and in- of newborn service . at Chiltalked recently about
~t ~ av~~.;tow~ mi~ dren's,
the regional nursery and its
.
non-white poor continue to lo6e programs. .
more newborns than the gen'!be availability of in~ive
eral population, that picture is care for that four and one 'half
beginning to change. From 1970 per cent of all newborns who
to 1971 the mortality rates for require it is the most important
non-whites in Western New ' development in pediatrics in
York decretned from 24.3 to years, ssys Dr. Yaffe, support21.6 per 1,000 for neonates ing his statement with a nost
l babies.from birth to 28 days ) of ststistics ftom other cities
and 30.4 lo 28.3 for infants that have instituted simila'r
(under a year). During the nurseries. In nearby Toronto,
same period.. the rate for whites
for example, the ·neonatal morrose from 12.9 to 15.2 for new- tality rate has dropped from
borns and from 15.2 to 19.6 for 20 to 12.111,000 live births since
infants:
special nurseries have been in
The . disparity along racial operation. In Vermont, between
lines remains shocking, but also 1966-e!l, the mortality rate for
disturbing is the precipitolls premature babies born in a sperise in the figure for non·rninor- cially-equipped medical center ·
ity bsbies~ \vby' this trend and was almost balf that' for 'the
why the persistently high na- rest of the state -even more
tional figure in a countey with
, D&lt;.
D&lt;. Yaffo
excellent medical education =:i~~us.;. ~is~~po~
• (whatever its laults) and a tiona'te number ol extremely pating in .the study.
The p&amp;Uents here will stay ceivable. Transport is essential
high degree ol sophisUcation in sick babies. •
- ~,
Chilslren's ~·~Core Nursery
anywhere from a day to three because' ayproxim8tely 40 per
health technology?
Decreaseq mortality is only
Currently the intensive tare months; the average stay is six cent of al neonatal compliciiAccess to Care Is lmportont
balf the good news. Increased nursery on the fourth floor of days. Their care during this lions are not predictable before
The answer is a complicated morbidity is ooj.. inevitably. as- Children's Maternity Building time is Pl!rbaps the most costly delivery, Giacoia explains.
When the beby cannot come
one but a key is accesito liealth socisted with·lthe •Jowered mor- is 'Under renovation. When all in th&lt;r Hospital. The nursery
·care services. Analysts of ihe tality rate of ·bebies_who under- stages are completed, the nur- represents an investnient of .Vltoathea r~t.ntltheY·I·urunsta
. tlgedoeshtoothimlm.'e
~~
ll
local statistics think the de- go intensive care.- Recently, sery, divided i n_t-o intensive about $10,000/ bed. An ancillary
crease ilL the still tragically high studies indicate that more than care, intermediate and con vales· c a r d i a c catheteriz.ation ~unit consultation service. Pediatri·
figure for blaCk infants may be 85 per cent of low birtl) weight cent sections, will be adequate costs $200,000. X-ray equip- cisns and general practitioners
due to the concentration of the Jlewborns will suffer no merttal to meet projected r e g i o n a I ment adds another $20,000. Op- anywhere in the region can call
black population · in the City, - or neurologic damage. Similar- needs based on a current an- eration is also predictably cost- the nursery at anytime at 874- ·
where the County Health De- )y, thanks to modem methods nual rate of 28,400 live births ly. For example, very sick beb- 7574. Also installed and in opportment's maternal and infant .. of newborn resuscitatiop, the in the area. Teh to 15 beds will ies require a continuous nurse- eration at the . nursery is an
care project is most active. Tbe majority of infants-asphYxiated be provided in the first stage. patient ratio of I to 1.5. When outlet of a new telephone leeSeriously ill newborns are C'.anadian obstetricians and lure network that serves some
urban population also has at birth will also ~ver norgreater access to specialized fa- malty. Early, often intravenous already being cared for, while pediatricians collaborated re- 40 area hospitals, a project of
cilities for the care of newborns. feeding is another technique the remodeling takes place cebtly on a ''white psper" on the lakes Area Regional MedOutside the City limits, such that shows promise of reducing across the hall. The bebies, the subject of I'J'productive care, ical Pro~&lt;&amp;ID.
special facilities are a long '8111· morbidity and has replaced the most of them thiy, lie under they estimated the average cost
An o t be r recently-initiated
bulance ride away. As a result, forme r practice ot delayed infra-red heaters, with gauze of intensive care at $3,200 per outreach {&gt;IO~&lt;&amp;ID by the ourfeeding of premature t&gt;abl'"'. pstdles to protect their retinas. baby. If that seems steep, they sery is a travelling neonatal
!"'~!lie health analysts increasmgly recognize the rural pop)J· long-term followup: remairis to As in compsrable adnlt units, also pointed out that lifetime workshop, stalfed by Dr. Giadone, and is one pf the':Ob' monitoring is an important part care for an individnal severely coia; Dr. Tai Soon Cho~ the
":!,C::J:e.~ :::.'k.~: be
jectives of the Children's unit. of the nursery routine. Respire- brain-damaged at birth averag- assistant director of newborn
' Even a shiny ·new suburban But studies in similar nurseries tion, heart rate, blood oxygen es about $500,000.
•
service; head maternity and
hospital, with sunlit rooms and elllewhere indicate normal de- level, blood pressure and ~y
The nursery's . medical staJJ nurserj nurses, and other pedia gourmet menu for the new velopment for the majority of temperature can all be · mom- consists ol twa full-time neone- atri~special~ts. as required A
mother, may be ill-equipped to treated children after a period tored constantly and automat- tologists, including Dr. Giacoia, neonatologist/nurse teem visits
plOYide the specialized Iii~ of three years - long enouJih ically by nursery machines. an&lt;! four hm!ae stalf. Because each of the participating hascomprehensive pitals periodi~ly 1 p,_tiniJ a
C!UI', a newborn m for gross damage to be lJWli· Some of the ' bebieo lie on' spe- · Child
fest. · ,
cial-apnea.matresses that' sound - pedis
, ~1uJJ
s •
workshop curricwum tb'at mDeath~ the only grim .''We fine!'. that, in many-_. an alarm if YeSPinition stops. trum }if Jl!!jl' ,
·
· ties eludeS newborn n!IIUIIcitation,
proopect· that has lladitionally once maladaptions to the new Three different types of respir- from ' ~tr1c anes siolOSY oxygen adi!&gt;inistration, temper.
faced the ten. per cent ol all non4etal envirOnment can be · ators are available. Several of 'to radiology are on call nearbY. abrre Control, recofiJlition ,of
newborns whose entey into' the corrected, lbese are good Mal- the bsbies are in special venti- iiDd able· to contribute 'to' ~ neonatal disorders, and other
world is ClllllPIIcaled by low thy habii!s," -Dr.. Giaco1a com- lators designed to treat hyaline newborns' care. 'rWo additional r1! c en i developments in the
birth weil!ht, illntBi, or onnaeni· ments.
.
membnme. diaeBae by provid- Ja.:ilities, the B i r t h- Defacts · field. T hi a ~ · too, Ia
tal anomalies. Until recentlY.,
Reseerd1 on ways to further ing constant ainqy - . Clinic and the Rebabilitation 8pODfiOI8d by tbe IAibs Area
for -pie, a · IWWbom w)&gt;o reduce the trauma ol a neonatal Twenty fouo hours a day-:;&amp;even Center, alao can provide spec&gt; Resionaf Medieal Proenun. Qy
wellblcl leas ~ 1500 lfJIDI!' diaOrder is ' 'COII&amp;taiitly "under- clays,-.Jl ~ staff neonatolO: . ialjzed servi91'1&lt; unique· in the • aluqing tlieir ezper!iae with all
1a "pnmature" baby), If be -way. Reoentiy,a study wa8 com- l!isbi bave ·aa:eos to .the ·Hospi- Weslelit Ne-W Yilrlr. are&amp;..
the bolip.itlils in !lie area, -tbe
at all, waa tboucht pJetad in the nurtleQ' in Which · tal's microc:l!emistr and blood · A ~101 ~. . . , ·_ . - _. • ; ~. 1K!Pe to .avoid the, aituato 'atand a, 30 to 70 . - eent u;.,· body sul'f.ces ol loW biitl:t . gasa1 !all: ..BhOuld· a • cardiaC
· ''The: unit is part, of. a heoilth lion w~ a newborn. diaonler
chance, ol suffering severe neu- weilll!t_ba'bies were stroked. occur, a baby'size care pt.im · lO• provi&lt;le ~~ ==lected!JI!til,-'!rilb
~
iilcluiling ~U!"'mt~I;= ~~o~;;l: ~fa; an· the_new'-ns m ityareu!.~~=.t.t~
TwD D . I !P '•ots Olllr W., 0.. chlatry fouDil
.'lllrQioed hab- ~";,~tare odmllar~
~~
~ educiltion cootinues ill howe
Two dramatic - t ' davel- &lt;U. repined. their birth weia!Jt
ID thia· opec:W, Lilli-..WW~ well.:in w.kly' llUrl!i"' ,_,:_
•
. .:
ID the unit ,by am- enosa. for eample.
·
os-18.
ill -.bam after faster than UMIIobd on-. putiaa ......td.
a wq out ol this miuma. Tbe With clinical pediatrics prole&amp;~ oF til Dill 1i'!''J~Cliiey b u Ian c e, ~ a
Tlie 'inu.ry aJao 1nnct1ons aa
' finl'la the ~t Of the _. -David L Weintnw6, Sol, ~ae, · 'Where iiw8lill ~ llie ~ nune.
ol a te.ching
for
'
-'at
Jc..is currentl,-la8tialr.the hy...,.._ .iu trickY buaiand ·--.....,_.. .......
~that low hir1h weicht
,; imporl8iit ,'IIOt . 1111*
-~In thia Gimata,
~ sulfer cJe1eterioao i d 'habiill but lor lhl sinos .t aaperature can be a er1t- dents, • one 111JP11Ct o1 Chilas a ._.tt ol aatli~-vlaaal
" Gilaila jlmDIIi out. iCal · factor ill aavln&amp;
In dren'a dlliatlou with the.. Uni~waticin In die Nlatiw.ly... . . , . ...... noed to ... that the ,....,. the unit brJpilr to
vendty.
.
lltiJnulatia&amp; w or I d . ol the In, they . .. part ol wbat •'"' ~·lpi!Cidy eqaliJDiid van; u...,.. Willi ot liblo:loww
Ia d. AIIDiher abjeelhe' olthe m.
- . i t -.eoee ol the - - eubetur. 'hie sound of the d!Jinf~ We--n,. bolh whidl ~ he •.tdid by ·a
•
.., nPoualiiatiou. Bcw- JDDtla'a beutl.at ia one ol ......., ..-. they ·to ~ nuue pnctiliaber.
~.....,. 1a 1o ...
...... ,._ 8weden, where It ia four liiUDda beJnl iRPed into vialt;• 10 1lllllb up and taudt GfWa the dlltaaoi ID lie OOV·
llliiiJIIl with
obthaulbt to be . auciool to lhat ,the iocuba- olliolileS putici- their hablea." •
ond,.helkoptea are not incon- (~ • 1,

::! :::=ba':~i

=
·=

..umwa

...t.::"'U::

I;-*!

mlelulhe ..,. ..,.. :::.:..,--:..~~
- ~=-~='~~
&amp;".-.I

¥'-' ·

:=.,
::=

alci:

C-;*

ra::t,

=de~ts poa.....'L~

n-.

·=

:.T:,J .

�~
•

Two Noted American Poets
Will Read Here Next Week
Two noted AD.erican poets,
La w r e n c e Ferlinghetti and
Gwendolyn Blooks, will appear
on campus during the coming
week under the auspices of the
UUAB Literary Arts Committee and the Ol6oe of Cultural

Alfaim. .

ferlinlhetti will read. from
his 'wodt on Moaday1 ¥arch 6.
Ms. Brooks is acbedwea to read
from ·her coUi&gt;ction of
next Thursday, March
events will be belii in the Fillmore Room, Norton, at 8 p.m.
Fer!inghetti, perhaps too
much the poet to bot.her aeri·
ousl with biotlraPhical data,
has yBU lied this haclqround
inform&amp;~ on himself (appsr.
ently in the "if this isn't the
way it happened, it sbould have
been" vein of tbe c:urient Paul
N e w m a n movie. "Life · and
Times of .Judai Roy Bean"):
"Lawrence Ferlinghetti: probably born 1919 or 20 in Yonk-

tapioca pudding ( undercooked
!"1'1 called. Cat's Eyes by u..;
mmates) m an orphansae in
ChsJ?PIIqus, New Yodt. He then
spent many yean in a mansion
of a branch of the Lawrence
family which fouiuled Sarah
Lawrence College in Bronxville
N.Y., where much-beloved
ily left him after -serving as a
~ J!vemess in that fam. ·

Em:

~

J

•.

Intensive Care for Newborns:-_;__ _ _ _ _ __
(C""""-d from 6, coL 'i;j
stetric:ians ao that pregnant

~~::!i':C"hlfC~

Fetal Intensive Can&gt; Unit for
carefully monitored labor and
delivery. Sizty per cent of all
neonatal pralllems ocau after
pregnancies Diarked by an iden·
tifiable risk
32 per cent
of all p~ccording to
the Canadian ''w 'te paper") ·
Certain obvious oonditions
iden~ the high-risk mother :
she IB over 35 or under 17,
~ ~tic. .has.a history: of

&lt;some

el for action in vipoua coD·
Sllllierism. As RD. lAing uraed
on campus recently, women
must refuse to be put through
the "&amp;a1J&amp;Ill8-machine" of heavily drugged, highly routinized
reproductive """· They and the

fathela of their chiJdrea - dernUMI Qliality care for my
children tbey chooae to haw.
E'ven at the cost ol delkwlal
more memorable than the Ulloonscious o n e s our mott.n
settled for.
·

Weeldy eo
·
•
e---------mmUDiqU

(Contilwed from 8, coL 6)
PoiLu Miztw-eo, Prof. Leonard
Stiel, Departmenl of Chemical
Encineering, North-tern Uni·
veraity, 104 Parlter ·Encineering,
4 p.m.

aion cbarp. A wann and al!ectionste otudy
of a cliwrwo, oomewbat •traand
aweot~~--~.YS~ topthe10
.rr
~ ~ M~
lint-rate here; Robart P..-

ter~~ ~ ~C ;::~hi~erJe&amp;bhablood'~ ~ co~';~t, :~~~::,~•oourae ::':por::,,x.u~~.,:!..~~x..u...t
r.;:; !tf·~tral
unknown to LF.... As a poet, bleed'
d~
preaaure, in a buainess--oriented computer EXHIBITS

mg urmg Precn&amp;n~ or language, 4238 Ridse· Lea, Rm.
10, 7 p.m.
Children s 18 ~usual. m that 1t UCTUH'
has an obstetric aerv1ce closely
En&lt;rBY and th• Environment:
coof!Iinsted with its l_&gt;ediatric A Look to th• Futur•, Dr. TheaToo,
servtce. Among the things un· :~ BU:o~~'c ::,rr:t,tigntch:
.The poet lists these works: patural that· the Flexner ~port
7
P~etw-es of the Gone World, A and . ~ent· emphasiS on espn.;,..;~~ the Student Affili.
Coney ls/J:JT&amp;d of the Mind Her, speciahzation seem to ~ve ~- ·ates of the American Chemical
Unfair Ar1um.ents wi.lh Exist- gendered Ia ": lo'!i:sten::t rift Society (SAACS) .
ence (plays), Routinu (plays), be~ pedial:r\"!'1"" an ~ WEDNESDAY NIGHT DOUIU flATUlE'
·T he Secret MeanU., of Things ste~!CIBDB. Tradltiormlly,.ped•- . Footlitht Porod• (Bacon, 1~).
Tyrann.us Nix?, Mexican Night: atr~cl&amp;IlS are not present m the mcluQes aome ezcellent Busby
Back(Roods to Far Places and dehvery room, even when chan- Barkeley dance numboro tar ·
·The IUustrated Wilfred Funk. cesare. bet"!r than average that James Cagney, Joan Bloh~ell ~
Ms. Brooks, billed as " the th~ ~d wlll have so~ CO!"· Ruby KI!Oler, 140 Capon, 7 p.m.
N~
Sn~u:~
been uncovered, some of it by Poet Laureate of "IUinois" is a phcation. Pregnancy, b1rth; m- Tomb of LiB•a. (Corman, 1965),
bimsell. His mother was Clem- Pulitzer Prize winner ~d a f~t an~ child ~ !ll'f! a con- a mature study 11n horror starring
ence Monsanto, and he was her former National Book Award tl!'!'um m real. life; m the tra- ~th"nJ1 !.ri';;., ~reeCapen, 9 p.m.
d1t1onal l?raC?ti.ce of D?~.cine
fifth and last son. She was en- nominee.
in Topeka and educat- they are mdiVI.dusJ baili~l!'ks. COPERNICAN LECTUIE'
closed in an asylum shortly ed.Born
in Chicago, she is author of
When ~c;tian obstetil~
A New Look at the Universe
after his birth which was itself
preceded by t1ie sudden death A Street in Bronzeville Annie and pedl4triCUUli pu t the 1 r ~n~~~ro:!:.li~i~:frea~~~~~
of his father. His father was an Allen, Maud Martho {novel), heads together on these l.'rob- my/ relativity, NASA, Conference
Itelian auctioneer in Brooklyn Bronze ville ·Boys and Gu/.s !ems, they called for a national Theatre, Norton, 8 p.m.
/ B.
who must have arrived WOP The Bean Eaters, Selected pQ_ re-e~alua.tion of mother-infant WoFmolleno~,ingunthecillecwiltulre,othsteaUre
Co
II
(With Out Papers) from Lom- ems, In the Mecca, a book- ~rvtces. m terms of the ~nbardy about the tum of the length poem, Family Pictures hal uruty of the reproductive ception in 234 Norton.
_century. The faoilly name was and Jump Bad, an anthology process. S~cally, they '!"ged FILM'
Th•y Wore Expendable (Ford,
shortened to ·Ferling but re- of the new Chicago writings. the estebhshment of regiOnal
She is editor of a new maga- reproductive ~ centers and 1945). 140 Capon, s p.m. Free.
stored· by LF when of age.
CONCERT*
zine,
The
Black
Position,
and
s_tepped-up
tr8Jlllng
.
of
a
r~la­
There was a French 'aunt' who
Creative Associates Recital VI
took LF to France in swaddling has won plaudits for her "verse tively new rep~uchv~ specialclothes where they rernsined journalism" 0 n Birmin ham IBt - the permstologiBt..They
for an uncertain number of Alabama w h i c h ap~ ;,; a I s o encouraged obstetrtClans Hall, 8:30 p.m. Free and open
the Au~ 1971 issue of Ebony and neonatologists to ~pend six to the public.
years. Her ruime was Emily magazine
months or so studymg each
Monsanto; descended from that
Mr. Kahle will be assi&gt;t.d by
A libra'ry at the Afro-Ameri~ other's s~lties--an obvious memben
s a m e Sephardic . Portuguese
of the Center of the
can
Arts
Center
at
Western
but rev~lu.tionary proposal.
Creative and Performing Arts.
Mende a-Monsanto who emiNo s•m!Jar repor~ has been Works to be perform~ include
grated to the Virgin Islands in Illinois University in Macomb
bears
her
name
and.
she
has
produced
m
the
U!ll"!&lt;f
Stetes,
a Danish Crown Colony expedi.
~dG::!:
!ion after the Spanish Inquisi- been honored by the lllack com- wJ:lere stron¥ speciilties are a ~:,e,T::
Presented by the U/ B n..
tion and was there·knighted by munity of writers/poets in To ll)IXed blessmg of the profes- er.
partment of Music.
the King of Denmark. LF's first Gwen With Love a tribute an- ~to'!· ~tea~ of wasting energy
m mdignat10n . at· t,be AMAmemory of America is eating thology published in 1971.
reform of which IS probably
THURSDAY~
better left to its own tesk forces
and the Jeneration of physi- OPEN IEHEAIS.IJ.**
The
Cl•veland Quart•t. 101
cians commg up - individuals
dissatisfied w i t h the general Baird, noon.
The open rehearsal is primar~
state of reproductive c a r e in
ily for. music students; however,
By SHARON EDELMAN
The decentralization concept, this country have a useful mod- students
enrolled in other disci~
Su/.1
modeled after the Swiss federal
plines at U/ B are
to at"Even · if England were to system, also resembles the Am·
tend. The Quartet will perfornt
pull out of Northern Ireland in erican Constitution in that it
works by Beethoven.
Two
sub-committees
of
the
the morning, the Irish would provides for a system of checks
Development Com- HIUIL CLASS*
sthetiJLhahandsve
a .~1~ problem on SBd balances, including a struc· Professional
Introduction to Judaism 310
of the Professional Staff Foster,
ture similar to the United mittee
"
2 p.m.
· '
Si!nate
(PSS)
have been apFrank McManus, one of Stetes Supreme Court.
UCTUIE/ DIMONSTIATION*
pointed
and
are
beginning
to
three Catholic anti-unionists in
"So you'see," said McManus,
0
meet
to
carry
out
their
charges,
Parliament, during an appear- ''here you have the 'violent
Ac~:d~,::;:'Guy fa::-~nci~
PSS has announced.
ance on campus last week dis- ones' proposing the best pos.. theThey
Baird, 3:30 p.m.
. ' ·
are:
cuaaed the cummt state of the sible plan for peace in Northern
Mr. KluOIMiek haa written aevSub-Committee on Imple- eral
worb for the a&lt;:e9rdion. Hil
Ulster confiict and presented Ireland, and the 'rational ones' mentetion
of
the
Professional
talk will deal with tho problema
what he and other anti-union· encouraging bloodshed by their
Steff Job Eyaluation and Rank· of tnmacription u well u ori&amp;inal
isla coilsider to be the best so- delays."
·
ing Plan-Robert J . Wagner, music for the ac::c:ordion.
lotion because it is based on
'The question and answer i&gt;er· chairman;
Praoented by tho U/B Depart.
M a r i o n Dickson,
"justice." .
. iod revealed the audience to he
ment .of Music aild tho Center of
Charles Jeffrey, Charles Moll.
-· '-H~r1 " noted McManus, mostlylrish-Americansroncem-tho
Creative and Porfo~ Arto.
Sub-Committee on Profe&amp;economtc mdependenoe from ed with unitin themselves in
Steff Career Mob.illty- PHYSICS COUOQUIUM.
England is going to be difficult s u p p o r t of ~ anti-unionist sional
Some Phonon-Induced MGin•tHelen
Wyant,
chairman;
Leonto achieve, ,;ven the fact that movement. "U we can't come ard Snyder, Eugene ~ ic Eff..r., Cbao-Yuen Hu.ons.
Ireland has been under British together in a very amaJl part . Joseph
Nechasek, Ed G r a y, p"'r-r, . Cue Weotem .R.erw
rule for over 800 y811111. Never· of Northern I r e·l and," Me&gt;- -Hilda Komer, Tom Gutteridae, U61wraity, · 111 Hoc:botettar, 4
. ·t:beleat," be maintained, ''inde- Manus commented, ·~re isn't and Steve Mandel.
p.m.
otetter
at 8:30 p.in.in 112 Hoch' J&gt;I!Ddence must p.-le any de- much hoPe for 20 million Irish·
Each of these.sub-committees
termination of relationships Americans."
· ~ to complete its reports by WIIIWl
IN - - CULIUII
CIVIUZATION•
~~. ~or: otherHe suggested, ~d.!:,! the end of the current eemester. AND
Tl)c Uniaic Cliweii-Devclop-each member of the a ·
A third Sub-Committee on ,..nt-lkltioi!I-Praent Stale,
Retirement .Policies is also b&amp;- Rt. . Rev. M.r. Peul Iwacbiw.
ing planned. Any Dl8lllbei of ~~MIOr. St. Nichola Ukrainian
8bould be a British declaration bases in North ~!ina. "'lbeze the n·On-~ pmf0118ional catholic Church. Bu4olo, 206·
of "Intait to ~" He is· a strong ~ility." Me&gt;- old interested m ll8l'Vinc ori Dieleadorf, 7 p.m.
.
. finds Britain's cummt pailition, Manus contended, "that Ameri· this aub-oammlttee ill wpd to
~-would IIPJIIOWI -=!&gt; a · csns are teac:hii!J' the British
.J)y......UC. of H - Sezuality:
.
-.... aaJ.y with the . . _ . t the arts of war ttiey learned in
P~icaf AIDecr. of H""""'
of· the maJority of NOrlbem · Vietnsm, Which will, in tom; (!flll!!!!lt Committee, ext. 43111.
SeJcua~UY. 288 N'crim. 1:30 p.m.
I r I 1 h.- "altiraly indefenalble. ·be used aPinst th8 people of
.POiftY IIADINO•
.
~.1. McMama conteaded. .. Ulster."
~ Brobb will ·. .
JI!IP-·
'
'la not a democnlcy."
Many of tbose present toOk The Pltrsonnel omc. lnclk:M8t frwa ber' wwk, FIDmore Room.
1fij aolutlaa ainaiats of a
isaue with this point as a frivo- one NTP ~ II open for lptha
Literoeotral ~t for Ireland, 1ous depart:we from the centml pllcltlons on cempuo tbls . ~laced ~ would be isaue .of home rule. With' M&lt;&gt;- T.he ~ .. .ol , ~nt uy Arto ~ aild the Of.
80o
of
CWlmal
~
to
the
chlllmlln.
C
e
p
e
of
P•
on loCal CDIItrol of in- Manus standing b;y in si18nce,
stitutiona. Four ~ aov· the audience tiPiintered and Philosoph):, .PR-1 • • Detalll .,. UUAI .....
./IU!iDr Bonner (P~
~ be Mid, would be argued until 'aomeone adjourn· poot8d on the ....,.. , bulletln
.
Coaf.....,. Theatre, Nortooo:
~brollal·dallrn into CXIUJl- ed the ..-ting due to the bollnls.
cbecli-lbowcooe for llmeo. Mllolo., ad ~ty counci1a. I a - of the hour.

:'ih

Ferlinghetti describes himaeU
as an Unblinking Eye. . He is
now engaged in a long prose
Work-in-Progress, one part of
which is tentetively called, Her

~ n~ of other~ti""!'.

Yb'CU.

~?:!':.1/!n?~~~ ~rl· k:cit!i

K:f.te

'Justice' Urged for the Irish

welcome

PSS Committees

--to·

t!~~ ·:r~ ~~~p:;:,test !':'~

~'=~.!!r'*~

--·

L

.NC,!J'i:

UUAB

AIT IXHIIIT•

P•n and Ink Drowinl• bl. Wut-

t;., OJ::••&lt;j;

~~

£1 GJt::;

h o u u: ~onday-Friday noon-6
p.m.; Swiday, 1-6 ,p.m.; W-dsy and Friday eveninp, 7:30-10
p.m.
UUAI. lXHIItt•

Ab1tract PaintinB• by Jeffrey

Woch•t.r, Gallery 219, Norton,
Mareh 5 th!.'Ough March 9.
PHOTOGIAPHIC EXHiatt•

Photosraphl by Danny FOrman.

Hayes Hall Lobby clioplay .,._,
throush March 26. Pre..nted by
the Office of Culture! Al!aira in

cooperation with Univenity Publications Services.
·
ALIRIGHT-KHOX AIT EXHIIIf•

de~~~c~iJN'fO:tlulB:/C::r~:::J:
!!:dp:~;~rra~~Pt'f~:t!;w8':.

lery, Albright-Knox Art Gallery,

1285 Elmwood Avenue, through
I. Gallery houn: TuesdayFriday, 10 a.m.·S p.m.; Saturday,
1-4 p.m.; Sunday, 2-5 p.m. Closed
Mondays.

April

COPERNICAN EXHIIITION•

The exhibit, presented as part
of the University's celebration of
the SOOth anniversary of the birth
of ~icolaus Copernicus, will be
on
in Lockwood Memorial
Library through April 27.

d1splay

INTERVIEWS
Throughout the semester oninterviews will be ' conducted for students interested in
attending graduate schools or ob·
taining ~mployment To arrange
an appomtment. contact the University Placement and Cazeer
Guidance Office, Hayes C, Rm. 6,
ext. 4414. The following agenciee
will be interviewing thi.a week:
THURSDAY-I: lroquoi&gt; Gao
Corporation: M edina Central
School.
FRIDAY-2: Arthur Andersen

C'ampus

~~fr~~e'J~'¥:.~:m&amp;.~
NOTlCES

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open ... public;
•"Open ... "' 1M 1-..tr.
•Open only ... --.~ - I n 1M IOIIIjact
CGnl8ct N a n c y - . 831-2221, for llotlnp.

'tHURSDAY-1 -

~~::~·of

~J?e~::,~~

ester,
p.m.

l~arker

Eftaineerio&amp;, 4
f

II,• Pound COFPB HOUI•
(W•ilht , Thai I•J. 232 Norton,
Open to the
204 Townnooa-1 p.m. ·
The•object of this workihop is
· to bolp M&lt;h perticiP!IIIt cieYelop • tiori. ~
his or ber own pei"'I!ial program fACULn CL&amp;. WINI fiSTIVAI.
. for weicht reductioD &amp;ad control
wi,.., .,..,;, porty, Faculty
Club, 4 p.m.
PIYatOt.OOT M....U.. Gild th&lt; UndnorondA sW.tantial d.i.Jcount on purU., o/ s-t.,._ in CorwuaolioM, chases will be in elreel Opon only
to meuibeio of the Facufty Club.

lfi't :J:.~n

Hirbortt~~:;~~

~ty.,4280

Rldle lAa, Rm.

C-81, l:S p.m.
. .
Bpouored by the U / B Department of Pay~.
•
.
HliW. CLASS•

Inrrodadiim. to JudtU.Im , SlO
- Foater, 2 p.m.

__,_.

~B"Cti~~=;~

PIOfUSIONAl Sit"' SINATI

Albert Somit on the Senate'• re·

f.:blic,

s':n~ A~

Uff WOIIRHQP•

Art. and Polifia, 232 Norton,
4 p.m. (Register in 228 Norton.)
UCTUII'

,

lndiro'• lndi&lt;J, Jameo Michaela,
editor of Forbr•. 231 Norton. 4 :30
p.m.
· Preoented by the Bulralo Council on WOrld Affairs aDd the U/B
Council o.; lotemal\onal Studies.
HILW s.UiATH DINNII•

'

Dinner at 6 p.m.; Sabbath eerv-

!!~·· !~oOne:,b§JJ%:~
~~ !~ &amp;J:f.,?.:i!~,'~~.m~- !~~
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.

PIITSICS COLLOQUIUM.

The Continuinl My•tuy of
Holium, Thomu Carver, profeeeor Princeton UniverSu~rfwid

f.!!l,.!.!!,~~~tteH;,J:~r~

3:80 p.m.

AMINAa IN wcaAINlAH C&amp;.I.TWI
AND CIVILIZATtoN*

l!oc•nl u•roin•-Tho Economic
SitUDtion~ Dr. Nieholu Chirovlky, chairman, Department of
Economico, Seton Hall, 206 Die!eodorf, 7 p.m.
Ufl

wOIICSiiOP-

Dynamu:t of Human Sexuality :
R•loud Heclfh Probu,., 233
Norton, 7:80 p.m. (Register in
223 Norton.)
COPBNtCAN LICT.S*

Kroltow and Coper~u.. Dr.
Karol FAtreicher, profeuor of art
b.iatory and mUMUm director, Ja-

J~-:na!truo:i:: ~~8
&amp;:· P!liabrece~oa:r:fl~u:!

the lecture.
P...,nted by the U / B Copernicus Committee in cooperation
with the Oftice of Cultural Affaim.
The event is free and open to the
public.
UUAI MILOS FOllMAN
fiLM nsnv.u..

8/.cu:.k Peter, Conference- Theatre, N ;)rt&lt;Jn, check ahawcase for

~:~~fu:t ~~ witft

a aeventeen-yea.r-old C2ech who is
intent upon both eel! cliacowry
and ridding himself of a tireeome

virlinity.

bert H. Clarlt; ~r, Depart-

=.:ty, ~-Jii.TP t!..~·
C-31, 12:30-2:80 p.m.
8poa-.d by the U/B Depart-

ment of PayebolOCY:

·

POII'IY IIADINO*

.

s...., Grathwohl will _,j from

her collection olpoema, Tlie My•-

toria of

N~.

.

382 Nortoll, 2

•

.

....~~3.2-=-?:":::;.
.

deota.

MONDAY-5
PAINTING WOII:SHOP*

w~:ru::dnc&amp;Jb 1J:~~W.

more Room. Norton, 11 a.m.-5
p.m.

F£mv.u••

Loue• of a Blon d~. Conference
Theatre., Norton, cbect showcase
for times. Admi.ssion charge.
A shy young factory worker
dreams of an exciting romance
and fal ls for a pianist who later
shuns her.

~~~J:~JW:&amp;ecf~ ~!:"r~a:ac-

CONCERT•

~'W'~~ ':! 9~~ ~i~.u:

-:n;;t
=~~both~~!t :ri~
plot; this film builds to an incred-

COMJ'UTU SCIENCE COU¥UtUM•

Petri NeU an.d A~nchron.ou.s
Control Networlu, M. Yoeli, visiting professor, Uni raity of
Waterloo, 4226 Ridge Lea, Rm.
41, 3:30 p.m.

HIUif. CLASS*

The PharUee6: History and
Legacy; Hillel House, 40 Capen
Blvd., 4 p.m.
•

ing first hour, 1 Diefendorf An-

Gradual~ R ecital by Martin
Bommer, piano student of Frina
ArBChanska Bold~ Beird Recital
H a ll, 8: 30 p.m.

ne:r:, 8 p.m. .

iHEAni PUSIENTATION*

UUAI MILOS FOllMAN
fti.M FISIIYAl.••

Friday listing for de tails.

COBOL, an introductory coune
in a business-oriented computer
language, 4238 Ridge Lea, Rm.
10, 7 p.m.

UU.U COFREHOUSIE•

COMPutiNG CENIII SEMINAA#

INTHHATIONA1 fOUt: DANCING•

Instruction in basic steps dur-

Murd~r

Fir~

m a n.'• Ball, Conference
Theatre, Norton. check ahowcaae
for times. Admiuion charge.
THE.A.TH PltESEHTATtoN•

'f. S. Eliot's Murder in the
Cathedral, Firat Presbyterian
Church, Symphony Circle, 8 :30
p.m. Free tickets are available at
the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
Buses will leave Norton at 7:45

p.m.

f.1!~. ti;i t.~·o~

/{;_

atre, is director; he will also play
the role of Thomas a Becket. Set
design is by Ralpb W. Fetterly,
Jr., ass.istant professor in theatre ;
costume d e a i g n ia by Esther

!~·a:~~~(~~~

by Paul R Brown, instructor in
theatre. Medieval musical aelec.tions will be provided by the U/ B
Department of Music.
Th"l,ugh 'l)Jesday, Marcb 6.

Featuring Bill Staines and Fox
Wa tson, l.st floor cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.

'-&lt;ea. Rm.

Guys and Dolls, Goodyear Cafeteria, 9 :30 p .m. Free tickets are
a vailable a t the Norton Hall Ticket Office or at the Inter-residence·
Council Office, Tower Hall.

cb!ne:n:~. rN: ':~:i~e:~

UUAI MILOS FOIEMAN

flLM FIESTIVAL••

FILMS*

Taking Off, Cooference Thetimes. Admieaion cha..rge.

:::A

=

~·

Talmud, Hillel Houee library,
40 &lt;;:apen Blvd., 7 p.m.
Llf£ WOIIKSHOf•

Akoholiam Gild Alcohol Ab...,
334 Norton, 7:80 p.m.
Tbis worbhop will include tripo
to various· alcohol-related qen.
ciee in Buffalo. (Register in 228
Norton.)

Bulfalo Folk Feotival

fror:'"~~~"'..,~
Nort:ou, 8 p.m.
~

tee

•l=:

MUSicAL lliNoVAfK!IIS . .

·

HIUE&amp;. a.ASS•

POO'IY lEADING*

Murthr in the Cathedral,

~~~~ ~:S~;'!c c~!::l't\:!~ :1:

IIAIIII'::";c=-CUIOC::--...,-M-0-'
. .~IIIIDf-..
. F•turinc KIRid Honld~ principaltnunpo( ~ Donillli _Sym.
pboay, BUd · Buildina. Millen-

21 (Richter, 1921);
Symphonie Di44oMk (E-ling,
1921-24); Filmo I and Fi!mo 11
(Fiscbinger, }929); 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. Broken Bloaonu
(Griffith. 1919), 147 Diefendorf,
7 :45 p.m. Free.

atre, Norton. check shOWcase for

Guy• Gild DoU., Goodyeer Cafe- Friday listing for detaila.
teria; 9:30 p.m. Fme ticket. are UUM .coMCUT•
availeble at the Norton Hall TickEeaturinc Mance Upocomb ~
et ~ or at the ~tv-r.idence -Bi&amp; Momma 'Thomton. ·Fillinore
~cil:;. T:-;n!:~ by · ~ Norton; 9 P;"'- ,
.·
Judy Krayitz and dinocted by
Ticketa are available a\ ~~?&lt;&gt;
Pegy Sparr. Panie Theatre is 8 Norton !UJ.l Ticket Olllce: PD·
U/ B student o....UZ.tlon.
~~·
~~~~:

A'TIJRD• ay
S~
"' ~

Rhythmu.~~

CONCm•

PANIC TMiAm PIISENTATtoN•

chMp • n a c k • · No .a..iiaion
charjpe. Apt. .-.A, -lO p.m.

=.!~t ~\:r:c:'n=J.~r:

the peace conference following the
1521 armistice between the Teutonic Knights (who had been continuously raiding Poland) and the
Kin« of Poland.

SUNDAY-4

•

l'eaturid- ill viduooo - -

tiGtc!.~ ~~-fJ~

Preeented by th8 UUAB Lit.rary ArlO Committee aad the Of!
flee of CUltural Allain.,
CONCDT•

_H!!~~~~~r~~:i..
~t&amp;;P~!m.

,

Free aad open

Tbe Choir will perform worb

v~=-~te!i
by t)&gt;e U/B De....-t of Muoi&lt;i.

-.--·'IIOH·=..drol. -

7 u;: F~~ '1:.

JWDtly auiptant prof...:;;r
. _ aad miucl media at the Univenity of Waahington. WADVFM, 10:011 . _

=-:,"':!.

8 p.m. - .
• . ~v-'=:~
M~ Wllltz ( W - )
UDUAal teC:Imjqu. bo -*'ya
loCO c.-; 7:45 &amp;ad 9:45 ~ for pia~ tile. ~
ibe
TlcDto at 16 .,..Ia an 'available uoo of t.ec:bniquM by ,.,...
at the Norton HaD Ticket 0111ca. ~ruy -

...a

TUESDAY-6

-IIU&amp;QAJI'

EullWftiiJry H•brftll, 21112 No.-.

loll, ........

(~~~~ l T~~ i J.), o~he.J:,-P,':;

2-8

p.~

INniHATfONAL SYMPOSIUM:
THE GJ1MAH LAIOI MOYEMINT
llfOII HITLEI:*
The Lt:Wor Mo~nunt in U
s~cond Reich-Socialism w . A I

tocroc:y, Dr. John A. MMeS. se1
ior lecturer, University of Queen
land. Australia, and Tho L4b.

~~=~~~:,_ th!.w~::~~ep;:

H8lll Mommsen, Rur Univenil
of Bocbum, W. Germany, end tl
lootitute for Advanoed S t u d .

P¥b':~n, 23~~o::;;,~~·i

the U/9~partment of Histo1
and the Undergraduate Counc
of Hiatory Students.
PHYStcS COUOQUIUM#

p:r~~:, ~~~~':-u':u!'!:i~

IJJ:~~~~ :.~~~:!:l;,..~

in 112 Hochatetter at 3:30 p_.
PHILHARMONIC CONCR1'**

MahUr -

Kritzat•ih ( KnithU · of th~
Black Crou), Conference Tbeetre,
Nortm, 7 p.m. Free.
This feature-lengtb film (in
English) il presented as part of
the Univeraity's Copernican cele-

charge. Apl 490-A. 10 p.m.

THUTII NIHHTATtON•

·

12, 7 p.m.

FILM* .

AU.ENHUIST COFFIEIEHOUSIE*

ton, 9 p.m.

UUAI COFfUHOUSI*

FORTRAN IV, a comprebens ive introduction to the language
und ita applications, 4238 Midge

PANIC THEATRE PU:SENTATipN•

Featuring Bill Stainee and Fox
Wataon, lat 8oor cafeteria, Nor-

p.m.
Tickets are available at the
Norton Hall Ticket Oftice: gen.
era! admisaion, $1.50; faculty,
staff and U/B ·alumni, $1; atudenta, 50 centa. P.-nted by the
U/ B Department of Muoic.

COWUT1NG CENTIEI SIEMINAI.#

in the Cath edral, see

U{ B Symphony Band, Williamaville South High School Audi.
torium. 8:80 p.m. Free and open
to the public..
The concert will feature guest
eoloist Knud Hovald~ principal
t r u m pet, Royal Danish Sym.
phony, and guest compoeer-oon-·
duetor Robert Mob, &amp;.litiii)Cjate
prO!eeeor of music and director of
undergraduate music studies at
U/ B.
.
The concert ia a pre.entation ot:
the U/ B Department of Muaic.

~;.m=R!i~.DS~

How We ACquire lnformtJt.Wn
from Sentmca in Con.lexr. Her-

FII.M

Norton Hall Ticket Office.
A macabre movie about an ex-

Orson Trilogy Ill, an all-Bech

PSYCftOLOGY UCTUa:•

p.m.

Waltz (Wendkoe), 140

CONCUT*

FRIDAY-2

u!e:~r:fc. ~f~':.~~..~

the La tin counterpart of preLenten Mardi-Gras celebrations,
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
UUAI MilOS FOllMAN

CAC CINEMA*
M~phifto

Llll WOIICIHOfN .

UAZIUA.N Q.UI C.UNrYAl*
8

.

./cwiM EtAia, 28'C!Wby, 2 p.m.

The Man and H

.!:0:·
~hl~::r:th es=~
JOeinhans Music Hall, 8: 30 p.11
Memben of the Univenity con

:r~?'ct!d !ffi!o~ i?ho~:

the Buffalo Phllbannonic Orcbe
tra for this free concert A limite
number of tickets are available o
a first come, tint aerve basis 1
the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
THEATRE N.IESIENTATION*

F~~lia~ t1:r ~~~l,
WEDNESDAY- 7

BE

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Hotel Said
Likely on
UBFLand
'Jbe U/8 Alumni NM ,..
ported . this WMk that • major .
hotel c:bain has indicated ita
desire to develop • bote! 81111
oonference center .., laDd at

C"-tnut- Ridp 81111 s-t
Home Roaclll;

8CI'088

from the

Amherst Campus lite.
'Jbe laDd, donated to the
U/ B Foundation by the Baird
FOUDdation, had preyiouoly
been desienatad for an Alumail

Faculty Center.
The AIUIDJ!i News indicated
that thia . . - . by the hotel
concern maJies a potential .-,
survey~.

Spock~ays

t:D

'Jbe U/ B Alumni Aaaociation
will 80011 am&gt;d -ticmnairea
to m-.peyina members, other

Western N- Ym:k alumni 81111

ST~TE UNI~ERSI~ _/I,T ~FfAl.O. V'?L 4 · NO. 20

to specific poups of prole&amp;.
FEBRUARY 22, 1973 sional people, to IUICI!rtain:
(1) U they are in-ted in
the Alumni/Faculty Center,
( 2 ) What f. i: il i ti 81 they
would like to have,
(3) What facilities they cicnsider _ahoolutaly essential, 81111
(4 ) How. much they wOuld
By SHARON EDELMAN
be willing to pay for their pref-SUit
erences.
Dr. Benjamin Si&gt;9ck made a
There must be adequate inpolitical houae :can · here last
dividual support to make the
week, but h.is btld!Dde .maimer
Alumni/ Faculty Center possiwasli
:cai
· II!'Ythihl !&gt;U.t: ~ehe
. : ~'Poble, the U/ BAN article llflYS.
ti
'
e&gt;:flrny profit from commercial
plained, "has made: ·Jll4!' onedevelopment will flow hack
sided arid ~ : rm · .no
longer cautiOus -a. C:ooservatiye, . The University's Den t a I ' There will be a· new empha- priorities means that our stu- through the Universit}' at Butdent
clinical
experiences
must
falo Foundation, which owns
and I can't · he botliered with School should, over the ·neit sis on prevention of disease,
land, i.o the Center. But
wrong- ideas."• ·:
.
'decade, become the "Mayo he predicted. It has been esti- chan ge from the individual epi- the
this will not be enoush to to&amp;pod:; a:ttzibule&lt;t his change · Clinic" of dentistry for West- mated, he noted, that "it would sodic care program, .to a flun· tally suhsicfue the Center.
attitude :to: ·his: -ilinent · :em 'New ·York, Dr.. RiChard A. cost .elloVeit billion doliars just ily-oriented conti.nuilig care
to' end · ·~an· lhideirillil6 lhinis ·PoWell; associlite deaD of the to take care of all the dental program. Families should be Sharwd F - l
that are wro?[' in the world. School, uried in the fifth in a · cav..ities that exist right now." assigned to faculty members . On !he other hand, if a ~tel
"FenCe-a~~ • .he contended, series -of· ~'University -Reports,"
The govemlnenk however, is who, with a .cadre of assigDed IS built .on ~. ~9-aa:e alta,
"don't aiiiiiunt 10'&gt; .,.·'hill -of Weru-lay iit lhe Norton Con- "not going to stockpile millions students will have the overall soma of !Ia_facilities "!'llht he
and billions of .d4&gt;11ara to
· . re&amp;l"'nsibility fot' beana.~ · 'l'h!&gt; a~ was ferenceTheatra.
.
Ji~\'! m&amp;lkthe Alumaill'IICUl"'l'hird, ........mt and devel- ~ty ...,..tiC ~ .- • ·duly-wamed that any~
Dr. ~ looked back -1en the ravages of .a disease~
which included the words, "on years " to review a time of that CO)lld.have been prev..med opment of more e«ective pre- . But, -~ .article aya,_ a ..,.._
arate fai!ility lor alumru, lac:uithe other llan!l." were guaran- outstanding growth~ ·in the · in 1973. They are simply ventive procedures.
"Fourth, dental s c h o o Is ty ~d the!&lt; guests is still IIIOilt
teed tn. eliCit a ."II8BIIY rerqad&lt;." School and looked ahead to going to blow the whistle and
v~ j;,; :c:a.iu.ip - . - . . . - _"miljcir . cbBnaelf taking: ·place
811y-prevent tkntol - ~ ." should l'rovide courses in. oral i!_esirablf: if tl\8 ll)8IIIbers .Ill!'
health
education for all
Willing to p&amp;y for the pri~:
Tltis
means,
he
suggested,
an
Tracing his own wlitical e&gt;:- within d8J!te1 educat;ion and
The survey, which will he
perien&lt;:es as Jl "sneoifcy" way to the profesmon that will great- increasing emphasis on re- laureate majors in education.
search
and
on
education
at
all
.
.
.
The
fundamentals
of
good
.
P!"J!8"ed
by the AllliJ:!ni ~
radicalize his ·audience, Spock ly ali"!'! the ¥,ure·" .
admitted that ohe . was hom a
Noting _the old C~_ pro­ levels- "from the dental aca- health care and prevention CIStion and the Uruver&amp;lt~a
must, by necessity he tekeb Survey ~ Center, will
Repuhlican and, in the 1924 verb, . 'to prophesy IS difficult, demician to the family."
over by the el~tery and ask alumni ii they want a dinPresidential election voted for especially WJth regard to the Futuro f'nlsromo
ing room, bar, maatins ""'!""&gt;
How will this affect future secondary teachers."
Coolidce. 'Lcould.n.;..er under- fu~' " Powell nonetheless .
card and game rooms, swunstand," he ; '!Bid... ' 'how anyone enVJStoned "a completely new educational programs in dentis- Numbers o Hu.ord
Even
with
s
u
c
h
increaJied
ming pool, locker and shower
try?
eepecially coJJmre-ed.icated
look." .
First, Dr. Powell said, there_ preventive emphasis, Pow e II facilities, sauna, tennis courts,
pie, could ·be SOcialists or even
:r'he unpetus for c!w'Be. .he
DemOc:rais:" . ·
.·
S81d, results from "!!JCl"BS!"g must be a realignment in the predicted, "the projected needs space for squash. handball, padDuring his yasrs at yale costs of dental care, mcreasmg educational and paychological for more dentists during the die. ball and paddle tennis, a
Spack said he argued endlessly niJ!libers of Americans who are priorities of all faculty and decade ahead far outstrip' our Uruversal gym, 8J!d eo on.
Respondents wil.l than be
with more liberal friends a!- gomg to Clemand more com- students: "Namely, that the capabilities to provide them."
though he never yielded a ~Jete ~th care of which d~n­ mission of the dental profes- He expreesed hope';-however, asked-.to show their strongest
point. Only when a friend con- tistry. will be a . part, an . m- sion is (first) to prevent di- that U/ B will not "play the preferences, and finally, to be
vinced him that true believera "!""'""'B ~t!on. Urbaniza. sease and secondarily, to re- numbers game. . . . I would frank about wh,st they would
never need to argue did he re- tion, and mcreasmg awareness store function and health in hate to see this School destroy pa:y: in Y'!"!'lf ~ts pluil
consider his ·p olitical ideas of the 't'Oie dentistry ylays in mouths in which disease was a quality program for sheer a smgle 1n1tiation fes.
numbers."
Last fall, the N- York City
~ ~~ Spock aald, ~
~t of to ta health not prevented.
(9ontinuft on ~ 2, _col. 4) _
"SecoJ!!f, thijl_realignment o( (Continrud .o_n IX!f• 2, &lt;;&lt;&gt;L _I)
- - partM:ipated aa- New DaaJ. pto: ·-- - --- ..pama, and in the 1950's joined

Hels-Ngw
'Arrogant'

in.EPORTER:,

'!vfayo (]l~nic Type' Role ErwiBioned
For U/B Dent School Within Decade

con&amp;CJ!IUIID... ...

'*

hacea-

pea:

!':...

~~~:-:=

Staff Senate Cites-Ways to Attack Problems

The Univeraitrs Professional
More significantly, in the of views of Professional Staff tiona on cbanglnr conditions
In~~·- ~ "'r-'pai~ Staff ~te ..(PSS), in .'1"8 o(. vi""' of"''!D" PSS ~bera. .the -~)1-i!re&amp;ents ~ COl!: and
davalopml!llts. . .•

children.

..

Ln:'"':~ ~~ -~
Ptesidant -·'d _., the VJ'et"""' """
nam war. '"'brae· months after
the election," he said, "Johnson
did just the opposite; the Tonkin Gulf Raaolution was a preplanned; fraudulent way to con

eon..-

and the American

the major actioDs in its six-.
amonndthf history, hasto. ~den
-tedt
orwarded
c ,_
Robert L Ketter a · collllliittee
"'P&lt;!rt suggestinB approaches
tow8rda solution of problema
identified by the &amp;!If.Study
prepared for the Middle States
evaluation last fall.
•
'Jbe action was taken at the
PSS. meatin( last Thursday.
'Jbe ._rt-in response to a

paop1a i n t o BUpportinr the
Spoc:k said fh:at this ezpenance caused him "great
~" 81111 ~.his faith in ''i-equest lor such ...._tiona
estehliabment politics.
which the Praaident Issued to ..
1- . _
University constituent - bodies
His 1968lndictuwlt for "con- -emphasizes: "cbanps (imspiracy to colmsel, aid and abet · provementa) which would ~
reli8tance to the draft" ended mit par(orming more efticienUy
in acquittal, hut, he aald, he 81111 alrectivaly In support or the
laamed that the . ~ .-r Universit(a many complex
WM "oaly the ~ N'cont e&gt;:- miaaians.
ample o1 American ~ - ·D rafted by a committee
in the last 11i0 yaara.
hmded by Nafi Goen. Uni-8pQclt aaid that be finds do- iity budpt control ofticar, the
maatic all'airs aa unjuiot aa in- report is believed to he the
ternaliollal .._; h.is d.iailluolan- first ol Its kind forwarded to
Dl&amp;lll .....Wted in his 1972 can- the President by ~ &gt;tlalver(Cilllllirwcd on z. col. 3) sity lfiOIIP.

WUC:

:J.

Sta# Se~'s ~ve Com- clusions,JIDIDe embodying spec- . · "N
ormity 01 the ·: - mittee has pledged to reconr .. . irJC .recommendations:
damic year with the ~ Jives
mend to the full Senate a{ ~ I. lludpt ,_
·
riaa to a variety of pnlblaila.
March l .. oieetblr 'alternative
·"Budptary and financial acf.' "In brief, the ataffiDr. facillllea,
ways ofrProceedinr to develop· • ministration remains . minlled 81111 Giber ..a-ta ol plumlll(
specific , prop&lt;ll!ll)s ~ for . aCtion. . in a iny•tique tlitlt 'ap,.an-IIDI lor aceilemic ~ IIIIIA he
based on the 'ri!port;:-Propoeals to be cu ""'U :co-ordi~Jat~ witA accomJiljabed larJely in antic!iwhich the PSS l:an eDdorse and IM lrUUion(•J .of tk Unbid- patian of . - r y fuadinc
push toward ·~tetion. . oily ... it ..U,ht be. DiffereDt of- since man,y or u- IICtiona
This pledge was made at fices appaar to have rillpoaal- IIIWit be COII8idenod prior to
'l'bunlday'a s-ession by PSS bility lor apecifle upecta of oftlcialiiJIPIOW) ol..,..... bud-'.
Ptesident A II ti n K ( Bud) the budpt ixmstruction 81111 ila (8111. A allllb' ibould ·he .mede
Kuntz- in lt'JII'OII80 to procldiq iuiplemantaticm tltat lll'W only to laolale sp8dfic ....-.... llil4
from Senators Donald . Brut- -- lot»ely ·IUJII ~ly cOp-e: to IXIIIIIideo' ~ to ...._ cw
van, Contiituin( ·Education, ~ /atM. 'Jbe builftt· aa a eliminate ,a. a«ecta ol ll!f
81111 JCMe~&gt;h N~ Health COIDIIIOQ denomfnatot 8lld, IUIIIIIIaly. .••
Related ProfeSsions. Brutvan suminr it - ' a the basic cri"Aecountablllty for 1111m1n1a.
.wanted to !mow, ''Is this just teria of b8inr a 'refkii:tion of tratfve actioaa fDIJM=~
a nice emn:iae or what? What tk ~ ,..,.,.,_ In levela ol ~ In
happensd&gt;ow?" He .......steel fiecal tenu,' caald better- tioD t.o deleDlled u
••••
that the report be
aa a aa a maaM or
MaD;y (staff maabera1 •
''lawlcbinr pad for a I}'OOd deal plannina 81111 ODDbol.•
~
-*ol c1@!f! l
of WOiiL" N""":.-:
the
"nleni -m., the JWpCid ....
olllilal, ..
Idea of specific
1lpCII DOtes. "a two-fold .-1 for (1)
11• ..........,_. ..........
the Senate laaders. Ollwwiae, broad 81111 e&amp;cltoe Jli~
"Men a1lliallaiQy for SUNY
he lhougbt, the report would trainiDJ illcludlll( tbe IIDdpt wllhiD the State 1tnM:tuN fa
be filed 81111 foqrotten.
...t rm.a- ~
(I) .,..._.,._ ~ . ,
'Jbe report - a «mpilation doar 81111 eunet ............... ( W - i, 01111. IJ•
.
1. ..

-u.a·

-.......-n.

!!f:'!

..a

.=.!!.
..---J-•

*

�Fa-y 22, 1973

(~ , _ _ , , . . , _ 4)
'lbe 0 b v i 0 u. altemative,
a. "io redefiDe the
ft!lllllll8ibiltiel of all IDI!IIIibela
'"-tal
..__,th ~- ...,__
of the
....,..;:. of~~
..... to deatal alliecl J.alth
~ will free the dontillt of 111a117 time,cxmsuminarepetitiw tub ao that • will
be able to provide a more camp.........-ve .-viee to all petieala."
Becau. the future dentist
wW be a a.a&amp;er of a total
J.alth care team, Dr Powell
Mid of hia education
abould be with hia medical oolPawell aid,

blacb inio the dental proh:
a - , lhiB IXIIIIIIIi1UJe
baa beaa - - . l y badappecL
by, lim, t h e =
DOOl
l ol
ucatioaally
•
IIQidaata·
aDd, MCODd,'
the
flmda to IIIIPPOlt . . wbo
do qualify. Other oc:ilooJ. beYe
beaa able to oliM fiDIIDelal inceDti..,. wbich "" coald not
m.t. The acbool baa n!CIIived
an HEW 8peciaJ Project Giant
wbich baa helped to alleviate
the fUI8DCial ~" .
~ baa pown from
PlO,OOO ia--1982 to $1,700,000
in 1978. Dr. p~ IBid

aioa:

ecs:.
llhortqe;;;

"Perl01111811Ce m_IDIIII)' areas
can be _ . m dollara or
otber statistics. However, ~re

fseulty, alaff.....t fadlil:ieL -Purlhar _........ of thea&amp; YitallyMedecl
'
will reqiaira
add.itional""Z::.:IIQIIJCirl by
the Uni...;ty. We baw a
unique oPPortunity 4o be the
tint denlil1 acbool in the - try to proWde ~· ....
ricbment p r o 1 i a m i wbich
would eventually 1-.1 to lecitimate cer:tification. It will be
the Univ..-.ity'a, the Scbool's
and the profeaaion's 10118 if we
let lhia coocept slip ~our
fincers tluou&amp;h lack of support
at this cr iti cal atace just

abeed"

Tile Cllnlc:o
'Ibe School ot Dentistry bas
alao provided "a vitally-needed
are _ , areas. equally lDl· health aervice that bas grown
portat to our 8cademiC pel'- steadily in both numbers of
fOftllllll&lt;le, wbich cannot be patients treated and aophiatiltla Sudla bulldlnc would be meuured ao _easily. ~ cation of treatment altered,"
obaoJete belore It wat 00111- to humanitarian Meds 18 dlffi. Dr. Powell pointed out •
pWed f411:, lndeecl. ita day bas cult to JDMSUre liut hiatori!"'i"In 196L~ there were 23,alrMdY puaed. 'l(ucb of the ly, whenever the need arose, 411 patient visits in the dental
cliniail tnininc will take place our f~culty ~ rendered out- clinics while .in 1971-72, -43,650
in oat patient depsrtmenta in stsn~iin;c servtce. A cood ( ex- patient visits werP .fnade.
bolpitala lbrousbout the City. ample 18 the faculty's respoll8e
"Important as this care is,
Sludent ~ practis:e wW "be to the extremely urgent need another point should be cona multi;feoeled oae with the for . den!al care following the - sidered. No other unit of the
primary e111pbasis 011 p-oup Attica no~ when lifteen mem- University_ bas as mudt conrather than . tbe solo practice bera, working on a crash ~- tact with the community-atconcept_ 'Ibe Univeriity baaed ule, fD&lt;!k care of bet....en 40 to 11uge as the School of . DenQP&amp;rlltions would be~ 50 patients wbo. had !ost re- tistry. To many people, we are
principally of specialty ~.:linics movable prosthetic appliances." the only direct oontact they
J to bandle more ditficult cases,
. ln..l967-$1, ~ School:s cur- bave ever had with the Univerreferrala, •oonsultatio118 and re- r1culum was ~rectad mto a sity. The level of care they
-.dl, as well as postgraduate Pf?gram whIch, pr. Pow~ hav_e received and the confiand oontinuina education.
. said. makes ~ patient cenliil dence they have in this care
''I envision this as the pri- to the educational P~have built a reservoir of cood
mary diagnostic, consultation
In 1971-72, a specific course will for the School and Univerand treatment center-the hub in Preventive Dentistry in the sity that can never be fully
of the oral heallh-care·prognun, first y~ gave students the op- measured. ..."
with spokes radiatina out to the portunity to a~ aPP!Y
:Vet. Dr. PoweU said, "in
· recionsl- or satellite operations kn~ledge to patie~ care '!'t- spite of this long history of
within hospitals and - related ustions a~ the . esrl1est pomt positive interaction with the
ambUlatory care centen;. In ever_ provtded m the dental oommunity, and their proven
·other words, the University curnculum.
·
. · . -: gdod · will :in · retum; it · ia my
baaed dental operations should
These and other changes opinion that the UniVersity ia
offer the ultimate in "available should produce a more lll!lfu!" missing an opportunity to
care in terms ol cl.i3gnosis, con- ._ s~~ Pn&amp; -~ ,fqund!ld _m broaden its. contact .with : these ·
-sultalion and 1&gt;-eatmes\t of dif- b1!'~ ooncep~ne whOse people: We bert! them into
ficult _a1888-rif you will,, the m18810l) IS , to preve!'t ~ corridors, call out names
'"'*Yo' CliniC,. of ·dentistrY ' for ratl_oo!~ than treet •ts. conse- in typical ins11tutional fashion; WJ!irtem New 'York." .-,
QU_"!',oea, ~, .PQWI!U .!""d. _
often make them wait on hard
n. Pat
POotiloctorai Procroms
chairs and treat 1hem with an
Turning to the past and giv''In the "spring' of 1972," the impersonality that is degrading
ing full credit for pro~ to ~raJ· ~~~... ~~~ · lUlm-~~,_,~.,_unnfd- ~"l'_2:,·J;I_owlf
formet' Dean •:JJimeS ··Eiiglisb, ...... to
programs m or... pa...""'-' ""'-~r r uur ...,wen"'
Dr. Powell noted that in 1962, ol_ogy, o~on~ca, ..J!edodon- we mad~ their visits to our
the Sc:bool of Dentistry .was a -tic s, penodonl:ia!, removable School more pleasant and comsmalLdinically-oriented acbool pnisthoc;lonl:ia! and fixed pros- fo~le, gave them '! more permainlr serving the . WestenL ~ontipl, bad fllllx .1"'-'t . na- _ ~ tr e a t men t? H?W
New Yod&lt; . , . and enjoying tional standards lind recruved ~ucb better for the Uruvers1ty
wide regional support AI- full approval from the Council if we had interesting exlrlbits
though it was stJOng
the clin- "'\. Dental ~ucation. 0 ~ !'-1 from the various acbools and
ical underpad118te are a, he Surgery continued to recruve departments to make these
said, it lacked IIDY padusta and prov!sional approval and endo-- thousan~ of peop!e aware of
poet-dpctoral PI'OifBID8 in the dontics condJttonal approval
~ entire Umv...-..ty and "11·
majonlieciillinea with the oae
"After such a sipillicant · ooursgfo'd . ·their pride and supaaeption ol-orthodolltia. Since growth, however, it 18 pars- port in au-.. activities-and goa1s.
1962, there baa been a dra- ~cal- ~t- tlris Vfl?'_ 111J0C!'S5 · It~
be' said tha~ every
maliC ~ in tNery 18 prec:~pllating a crJSI8 which day_· IS Open House' m the
. , . of tbe Scbool's prognun could result in phasing out the School' of DentiStry. I sincereIt 110 1oncer w~ (&gt;I'Oirllm8. As the Council on ly wish we had the support and
New York alone but is now a pent&amp;! Educat;!on _pointed out flll!ds ~ capitali_ze on our
major health . proteaaional m !fieir aocreditation report of urn"!"' :Pterface With the comacbool ~ all the State. sp~g. ~972, the lack of direct muruty.
'lbrooqb
the outstsndinir
work •ously
!Jru""'!"ty
~ bas so aerof the fseulty,
it baa aCbieved
jeopardized the
ro"'-' _ ____,_ __
nat1aaaJ atature in aiQy areas. . , that_ unleea · IIIIPPOlt 18 , (o&lt;th-- ( Cin}imua.i_ .._;,. :.;....; I, co' I)
the Sd&gt;ool's educa- COIIliJijr and adequate niunbers
_
~~ ...--.~
tioDaJ Jirolnan and reaeercb ef. of faculty are made available, .didacy · for Pnisiclent on the
forts place peat ~ on it wW be · DeCil888ly for the People's· Party ticket.
CIUaJltv Dr. Powell indicated COuncil to withdraw •approval."
.Despite hia decisive loss · at
"we
now attmctinc
Tuming to continuing edu- · ~ ~Is
.November, ~
donta of a mucb hilber aca- ?-tioo. 1-'.owell prediciecl, ''It asiil that be and t!&gt;e P-eople's
·demic caJ1ber
18 simply a matter of time b&amp;Party are still umted -behind
"'ar full time faculty baa fare New YOrk wW require par- its platfonn: "'ur .main- empown from :114 to li9 while ticipation of .all ~ dent- phasis," be said, "is Oil the idea
there baa beaa allllhetalitfsl in- ista in-appr-oved Clllltlnuina eel- of loca! or. oommunity CODIIol"
reae in put-time faculty In ucation propams. For this . ¢ police, economy, factories,
1962, 88 students • ac- Je11!10D. tbe ldlool baa wodred educa~ and '!eaJth faciliti&lt;:s
oepted to the eotermc elMs, cJo8ely with leaders of die Erie
and ~- This, Spock conin 1972, 87 ...c.n.t aDd 119 re- County Dctal Society, the eluded, 18 the people's ~
ceived lbeir D.D:S. . . . _ 88 Eiablh Dillrict Dental Society to bureaucracy. We -~ ""
COIIIDIINd with 48 awinlecf in the Dental- Alumni Aaao- can help fiDd a good rue for the
1982. P'aadoebtll oenifieataa eiation in the ~ of American peopil!."
~from 6 to 17.
a _... ol ~ pro._........
.
......... -a.llnoon~Gns:eu ELS:TIONI
The CMI &amp;ervice Em"'- Also~ Is .ecepti,_ nomiMtiona
"ln 1111, :::
liD
8DI1 lhe- ntu,.,d ad- We hope to haft 8DIICiallY-&lt;Ie- for CSEA - . . . . . to the Univw'11111 ,.., 111 ~ aiped facilitieo ..], i c b- will lily -.nb1J th~ 5 p.m.,
anda-~- - - .
-•a-Jarlemdalr.,_ 2. J!elloti,_ wiU be hold
~~N-=-~ baa. .ta lot ~ den flats Mardi 8 In the FIICUIIY Club F - .
1111, 6 IIOCIIIIIIId ~ ~ We 1 te r D New fnlm 4-6:30 p.m., ...-..,. the
annuel _ , _ til the U/8 CSEA

-..._
.
"l eavlalon the dental acbool
of the future DOt • a lara&amp;
IIIOIIIIIllhic IIIIUctuN wbich will
COillalll all the ~ facl).

m

tr:'IY

l?rocrams SI'VV&gt;k

s--

stu:

aft.

:wrt

1.. d:""'J..':

=

-w-Ja

1171. 'lbe 0 . . . . . . Bqad

~1~~::

l7-a..,.._.1,...,r,i,.._ •idacceaahalla

=---==

A meager .07 ·per oent: of the U/8 f8iulty are black
women, acoordiitg to employment ataliatics revealed at a
recent meetina 9f the'U/8 Woman's Council. Moreover,
bet....en 197().71 and 1971-72 the number of black women
employed at U/8 dropped in all but oae employment
category, resulting . in- fewer lJ!ad&lt; ~ in· clerical,
tecbnical and mainteilanoelservace poflltions.·
"Sj&gt;ocking," Council President Marpret B. Nevin
called these and other figmes culled from the annual
report of the campus Oftice of Equal Opportuoity by Ms.
Lenora Cole, issistsnt to the vice premclent for student
affain;.

·- As revealed in the OEO report, black women have
been employed at the University in the following numbers
(full-time, _8tate 1~ only):
_
117071

Facutty

'Die . . . -

dlmiiDcl b
a

·!kfha-

to .__

Tobl

iE.mp~Qo·

20

ment
1,017

Total

Total 1.1 71· ~- Total
TGUI
"**t Wom.n IUKb

Tebl

W..... -.cb
1!5
'51

prvfes&amp;lonlll 25'

TKhnfcal

7

Secretarial/
52
c lerical
Maintena nce/
aervtce
6

431
165

...
610

n

152
51

.

035

53

41

117

47

4

Admlnlst,.tl~

I
30

14

985

126

59

402 132

151

61

613

...

•

37 -

110

42

.a

'The figure for black female facuity is broken down
by rarik as follows : _
;._
lllock
- 191'071

Full professor
Associate
Anlstant
Othe•

.,lo"::,.
r=I 1971·
Faculty . _ )
n

5
14

10
20
54
!51

_3 •

6 ·
14
21

.

.::::.a

~=~

20
49
47

19
31

FacultJ WCH'Mn)
10
• 3

As Ms. Cole explained to the W!lfiM!ll's CounCil, these
figures are for full-time employees on State lines only.
Additional pe""'ns may bold positions on temparary lines
or through research grants. However, according to the
Buffalo ares cenSus of· 1970, 49,779 .black """!lien _reside
in the Buffalo community. This sug(ests" that a .lar11e
pool of potential black ..female employees.does:exist and
is being under-utilized in spite of • the University's ~x­
pressed commitment to recruitment of minorities and
wo~n.
.
Acoording to campus· OEO Director Barbara M . Sims,
not a single black woman holds a full professorship any- ·where· in the SUNY system. Last .year 17. women were
full professors ·on· the U /-8 faculty .. Eleven .. per .cent of
·
the total faculty are women.
- · · - Al:oording to .the unofticial figures for 1 972-73 (oompiled I..Om a print-out· froin the 'Per.iollnel "0tlice), the
current total of full-time . black female faculty is 12;
broken ' dbWn ' as fOllows :

·

~

·· ·'

···./

:h:.

FuJI professor 2 (English, Social Policy and
. :··. ·. ·.€ommunity Services) ·
4 (Adult Health, Social Policy,
Assistant
Theatre, Black Studies)
5 (Leaming.Center (4), Le.w
Lecturer
and J urisPrudenee)
'Instructor
1 (Occupational 'lberi.i&gt;y l
One black woman is tenured.
· •
Ms. Sims termed black women the single n'&gt;OSt under-represented group on . the faculty. Thi&gt; inequity is particularly· apparent, she said, when one recalls 'that black
women outnumber black men in ll!nhi· -o~: live birlbs.
· Moreover, black ~n have traditionally 'participated
more fUlly in education than black. men, she ·laid, adding
that she did not wimt to see the situation eorrecllld at
the expense of black males.
Associate

Hotel on UBF L a n d - - - - ( Continued from PDI&lt; I . coL 6)

certified public accountant firm
of Le.venthol, Krekstein, Horwath- &amp; Horwath pertomieci a
market study whicb indicated
that constru~tion and operation
of a University-related motor
inn as part of an l!lumni·faculty complex adjacent to the , _

between alumni and faculty, he •
pointed out.
'Ibe , U/8 Foundation and
the Alumni Aasociation look
forward to a hish perceiltage of
returns to the user survey, so
that the nest step in develop.·
ment of a , _ Alumni/Faculty
Center may be taken.

=~:~=-

In be eooOther input from alumni is
·
also. welcome, the U/BAN ar'Ibe Baiid land runs aouth ticle saya.
and west from the intersection
of Sweet Home and ChestnutServmg on- £be ASsociation's
Ridge roads.
. Alumni/Faculty Center Committee are: Robert E . Lipp,
cbainnan; Edmond J. Gicewicz.
Commun~mpua Mo!" than a year ago, when Albert Randaocio and Howard
the gift of 19 acres was still Me,ver.
new, the community and camUni_:..-ty faculty are still
pus relations 'aspect of ·such a
to also assure
Center was emphasized. .John considering
Carter, """CUtive direCtor of the broad-hued ~ty planning
in
the
project,
Faculty
Club
Alumni All80ciatioo, dafiDed
possib~ uses such as llOl\linuiftl BOUrOIIII indicate._
education prop-ams, Univ..-.ity-affiliated confereocoe imd WillE -FDT1VAL •
!"'f~ ......_,for wbk;b no-· A- Sprlna Wina f'elitioi.l , for meminstitutional •faciiitlao- are . pro- · b8rs of the F~ Club will be
~ It could 8lsb be. cipea to - holcl in the Club Glf"Frlda)l, Ml!rch

........
§E=.l: Anllllll....,- ':t~':; . CJ.:b..~ :7:
:!I..__

-· .....,........u...UlDI --~~
11

~T/1£ Rea~ MinOrity'

Rotary : - ~~•.=;.-::: ;::~

as
Tbe. ~JOuld also ollflt - f o r - wlna ~party,
;;_ a ~orrllnformal CODiacta• Club olliclals IIIli~ .

a mall bel~

�Pe~:J&lt;wry

~

22, 1913 ,

ffealth 'VP, ·Admi_ssions Policies,
·ri~_ing ·Co:Q."cern:Med Faculty

Smith Submits Resignntion
.As Head of College SJstem

Collegiate Assembly Director
Wayland P . Smith last Friday
su)&gt;mitted his resigDation from
that post to Dr. Bernard Gel~~in..!fiJ!. ~: :=r'w!"'A,t'i5~lkoatf ~.:!:"~ !i:&amp;:,~~eb,!; baum,
viCe presidenl
~on of facilities point¢ out, the ~ion pro- ing ·the basic science · d~ Smithacademic
said be intends to replanning in tJhe basic sciences cedWII! could be made less 'l'llll- ments together on the Main- linquish the position at the end
were major concerns of the dom by employing multiple. i'e- Bailey campus and in- lissocia- . of the current academic year.
Medical Faciilty Council at its gression analyses, a &amp;\lggestion ' tion with the Veterans Admin"Tilis is a decision that I
January ineeting..
taken under' advisement by the istmtion Hospital, which does have been considerinG seriously
Tbe &lt;:ouncil . beard that a Committee.
offer milCh in the way of near- for several weeks and not one
former medical dean .at a majot'
Some members of the Coun- by clinical facilities.
.
that bas been made in baste or
university was invited bad&lt; to cil Sllllllested the possibility
The vice president said sym- because of any single incident,"
tbe campus for a secOnd· visit that the ceiling on class size is pathy and understanding are _Smith said in a letter to mem,
late in January as a prime an arbitrary one, particularly due those still anguishing over bers of the Collegiate Assemprospect for the vice presi- in lip.t of the numbers of ·non- the frustmtions of where the bly.
dency.
•
· medical students who are able Medical School should be lo"Rather,'' he indicated, " it
~ the Admiasfons to enroU in coimlo:t1. Laboratory cated, particularly since it was
is the result of a whole series
PolicY Committee, Dr. M. Lu- space and the EOQlreseed need not the Faculty's fault the of events that have occurred
tber MUMebnan listed amo111 to limit the size of certain clin- School bad been led down at over the past eight months. As
- . . · of concern: deciding ical experiencee were cited as least two blind alleys in the
of you have said, the Di·
.mom to iDterview and .how to key limiti!ll factors by others. last few years. on the other many
rector's j o b is impossible,
eboooe 200 lltudanlll from 5,200 On the other band, .it was band, · be felt tl)at there was ca11ght between ·the conflicting
app(icanta; promoting minority noted, the student body was virtually no chance of getting pressures of administmtion, facrecruibDent; poesible student abruptly expanded in recent anything near the $8G-90 mil- . ulty arid colleges_ EventUally,
rep_,tation on the Admis- years witbout(, mu&amp; . consulta- lion it would cost to ieproduce
aioDs Policy Committee; ad- tion or planninc'and the School --&lt;&gt;djacent · to any one of the
~2mm=mitting PbD.'s; possible limit- survived. A good study is hospitsl&amp;-the apace that was letting you know at this time
iJ11 ol foreip studenta; and called for, it was .apeed.
being rnsde available to the rather than waiting until .the
what to
about a number of
In related disc!Jssion, it was .Health Sciences on the Main- last minute, hoping that we can
studenta previously denied ad- suuested that foreign students Bailey campus, nor would there work through a smooth tmnsimission who toot Cour&amp;es in the be limited to less than 10 per be much happiness during the tion together."
Medical Sc:bOOl and have asked cent of the class. A six-year years it would take to move the
Smith said be believes three
to be admillted on tbe basis curriculum from hip. school basic science departments to a crucial steps need to be taken
of their Bl&lt;Cellent po!!'formance. was d.iscllssed negative!~. The location adjacent to one of the to keep the collegiate idea surviving and growing:
:::
noted that the
" 1.. We need to get more facon the Admissions P\)licy C9m- aoceptante of applicarils with rnstter bad .been d is cuss e d ulty involvement in the indimitt.ee,- accordibc to -C&lt;jmcil advanced degrees. ·
neither in the Faculty Coun- vidual coll"'e programs.
Sec:retaey Zebu1o'n TaiDio&lt;. Tbe llaolc: Plannlnc
cil, any of its standing com"2. We need to make it-posdesirabilitY· · of ·~tation
Dr. Clyde L. Randall, vice mi ttees, or by the ·Executive sible for residential colleges to
by COIIIIUIIIer8 of bMlth·aervices president for beslth sciences, Board. It would be desirable to obtain resources that integrate
was raised by Dr. Norrnsn Sol- commented at length on tbe have such disc:ussions occur- housing, operations and syskoff who 'was informed that question of facilities planning ring in more open forum, he ·tems, student atfairs, and acathat Committee would ...-.it in tbe basic sciences. Some said.
demic atfairs.
with 4beaL .
members of the faculty bad
'The resignation of Dr. Wil• Tuinl problems _in. tbe ·ad- .asked whether ·permanent&gt; .aep- lard Elliott -as bead of Health·
missions. proc:edure reniain; the . · aration of -the beBic sciences Sciences Shops and Executive
previi&gt;us chairman of tbe Com- from ¢be clinical departments Board approval of Pbarmscolmittee, Dr. John G. Robinson, was desirable in the lo111 haul. ogy's .name-change · to .the .De- .
A teSolution cohdelimiDg all'
l'J!ported. H.ia. Ver.Y, diffic:plt lo Dr.•Ke~ learned-of-this, Ran- partment of Pharmacology' and companies which produce antiget bladr. students, Robinson dall 881d, and called in some Therapeutics were also an- pel'&gt;lOnnel . ~ns wes pasaed
IBid, .,.._ fiorD New Yorlt of the-ccmcemed faculty 'to in- nounced by Dr. Randall
at the Graduate Stuileiit AssoSCitte which contributes the dicote that be was OIIPDSed to
.. cilltion (GSA ) meeting Februlargest number of tolsl appli- cbangilll plans once again. Dr.
ary 12.
cants to the national pool. Tbe Randall felt that it was underThe resolution followed the
0/B minority j)ebl"is-nbt' larg--" standable that tbe advent of
AlliscultY, stliff 'and StUzlerits ' appl!llrance befote ·t!ie ' body of :
er, Musselman explained, · be- facilities planning bad given who are -i nterested in tbe Afri- Walter Simpsi&gt;n, a -graduate
cause otber medical schools rise to ~ a movement. It can Studies and Research Pro- student in philosophy, repreare able to provide financing was also uriderstandable, be gram are invited to attend an . senti!ll the "Hcineyv(ell Campeater than the 30 to' 45 per said, that people would want a organizational meeting Wed- paign" in Bulfalo. Tbe ''Honeywell Campaign" is ~ a natioiW.·
cent of Calculated n8ed offered beslth sciences oomplex with
bere. Additional funds could basic sciences and clinical de- ~T!:...,rw;:;r ~~t 4 p.m movement to apply pressure for
change
be solicited to bocet this per- parlments under one roof.
on the Honeywell Corp'Ibe past Program chairman,
centage, possibly ·from organ- Some feel that it is irrespons.- . Dr. S . .0. Mezu, bas retuined oration, a leading- manufacturer
izations jnJerestec! in higher ed- ible in tbe lonj! run to accept· to . Nigeria A new chairman of anti-personnel devices si1Ch
UCIItion fot blacb, Dr. Taintor any other .ba$is (or planning, will be selected
as liand-grenades which "kill
suggeeted, • Dr. Robinson ex: be noted.
.
Those - intarested in partic,i- and maim and have no stmtepc
pressed hOpe, ·that current ,reThe ·b asic4&gt;oice, be said. ap- pati.Dg in this committee liut military purpose." Supporters
crui-.t, procedures 1 i.v inc ~ tQ be· eilhM having the unable io attend ·the meeting, of the campaign are urged to
sp7eclal u.tment to minoritY basic sciences stay··on the cam- aholild call Mrs. Fryar (831- buy Honeywell stock and to
and women candid-ates can be pus (as decided last year) or 4941) at the Couilcil. on In- express their opposition to the
coiitinued.
developing an alternative that ternational Studies, so that company's policy at stockhold.._, "" might take decades to accom- their names can be placed on ers' meetings in Minneapoli8.
.Supporters are also asked ~
~y 5,000 applicanta
plish in which basic sciences the maililll lisl
have to be turned down to' ac- would move to one of the .afcept 200, which UIIUally -..Ita filiated hospitals, probably the
(because of dllPlicate appli- county hospital. Dr. Randall
catiCIIIS) ·in a class of 135. As noted that the State is now
Dr. Richard Ameat pointed reponed planniDg to 'roVide
out, nationally the toCal num- for not less than 27,o&amp;; full- ·
ber oh&amp;pplicanta to acceptances time equivalent students .. et
is about three to one_ Limiting Amherst and that approximafb.
the number of ,applications per ly 900,000 square feet of space·
atudeDt might alleviate this sit.. will be available fQr the Health
uation, but no aui:b step iB Sciences at the Main· Sln!et
being taken nationally.. Tbe (South) Cainpus. Duplication
eYenllial .-1 to employ a lot- . of such facilities e Is e w he r e
tery for interview and a lottery would cost, according to Presifor acceptance of white male dent Ketter's estirns~ $80-90
applicanta was raised by Dr. million. Dr. Randall pointed
RObinaoa.
out tbet a focus of preclinical
Tbe desirability or- 1enerat- depart;ments ,_. one of the
• 8dmiaaiona policies ·which community · hospitals w o u I d
:f.te .ccoptances to ooeds lor not altar the School's need to
apecial medical services was' dependllPDD others of the axnraiaed by Dr. Ament, who mllDit.y hosp!tals for teecbina.
pointed to a nation&amp;! precedent especially with laraerHe
enroll
__ ,,;8IDOIII surpons. UsiJII such a mente in the School.
_,..
"f"lem, allied beallh prole&amp;- he hoped to avoid repetition of
siouaJa, for eample, aln!&amp;dy the dissatiafactiono o f t b e
· Uained in a hiJ.h' priority fM!Id, 1930's and 40'-s. wberr the
. basic
• A 8~ ~te for the'

=

terview poorly and· are not cor- ence departments among the

vice

I:it

ao

fa~~~w:::

~ ~ro::~r~ h~:.~amtor

g:

.!.d'i ::

-

"3. We need to concentrate
on doiJII fewer things better."
Smith said that be bas made
a "contiouilll attempt'' to alert
members of the Assembly "to
the realities of our present sit..
uation and to suggest a feasible
course of action. AlthOugh we
are making aome . prorr- toward needed changes and improvements, we need to keep
moving."

He indicated that he hopes
to maintain a continuilll relationship with the Collesiate
System after be resigns. "Of
course," be added, "the form
that might take is fuzzy as are
all of my future plans at this
moment, 'Ibe last eight months
has been a powerful experience
for me,' one that I do not regret."

GSA Scolds Weapon Mak~rs

African Studies

~be~ted~ththepectation. that they 'wOuld COl!-

scimces~dhemad~

~ the ~; Ge!&gt;e'!'l 1lo&amp;- tinue-bUbat-fie1cLafler .medi- pital, · a Sllwltjoo .iohich •·hm
cal sObool Tbe. PIObl- of~ " - ' found ~ .to-the.
&lt;trainiJig .·mbdi Medecl phyoi- professional atalb 91.the CCJIII!ty
c1a111r fot" .rural areas was also hospital and o&amp;.. commumty
cansldered in this contert.-Slu- hospitals. dents from .rural areas· telld to
· Dr. Randall indicated . that
return home to practice- a-- another altemati-. - ..dlv_idiDI
ev.........,U appliamta ~in- . the. persoprioil- ofltb&gt;~-

hoycoU Honeywell- - recruiters
on campus.
'The. IDI!i9.rity of GSA Sen&amp;..
tors spoke out ,!llainst '1- boycott but did express dissppiOvaf '
of all firms who make ' sllCh
wee pons.

in oilier"' business, u.e A:B.c&gt;-·.:

ci.ation:
·
• chose graduate student
.representatives to the Uni-sity .As&amp;elnbly from each ol· six •
faculties.
• agieed to join the National Student Lobby .for one year.
NSL i8 a Waabington-bued

s:r

r:c.~ ~ 1':8=

ber student associations.

• recognized four new grad-

uate student clllhs, includinlr
Microbiology (Roswell) and
Anatomy and two special-intarest Kf!IUPB·

�4
Professional Staff &amp;mare Report;.-..-....;_-~_

__:._~---:"". -..~~----:--~
· ·-:::- :--:
, ::::-. -:-:-~

(C~ ' " ' " ' - I, col.. 5) · fuDction with the ame freedom No ~ oriented toUJard from 11 /aclt of ruuleroltUidinil of majority , of Btudenla are left
......,.... kod ,.,.,t necaialily as privately endowed iDatitu- •imply 'houJ t11 reDil or fiU oul · roles lllJ.d: ~as~ to .to. shift for ~-- ! : •
follow tltal &lt;Wtonomr acquired tiOD&amp;l ~ departments 11 particu/Dr form' ;, worthy of the specific ·iJoals of the Unl- • • "'lbif swtem could be' ""tab-·
by SUNY 111M1Mr It be vitJ 11 and similar departments in the ~~~~~~~e."
versity. We conclude_tltal tf!ere · liabed; the report lllliii!Bta,
Co"'titutional chtui{Je or other state institutions; namely
Non-leilcbing professionals il a need for trouiUII and " · thJ:oulb staff real.liDmtiiit in
S UN Y • 1 re-&lt;:relltio11 C.. 1111 prudent buaineaa practices with are ni&gt;t adequately aware of the much deeper N!Uielll lind ~ eaCh of several departm.,t&gt;;
'AMIIIDrity.'"
poet audit systems.
ovelall opera Win of the Univer- •IIUidinil of the CICGdemu: lind dealing with atuclenta and the
Fiscal, propam and opera;'2. R a iae all apeoditwe sity, the report contends. "AI- adminiltrotive oriJGIIiztltio"-"
,.,.asignment of individuals to
tiOD&amp;! autonomy mllBt particu- limits, for eDmple from $500 tbouch tecbnically competent
It is not 8\ll'P~. the re- a Team. Centzal olficea could
lady be achieved, the report to $5,000, for .a single item to in their fields, tbeir dally re- port admits, "that;' in an inati• then "be reliewed of a good deal
contends. ''Ovoll regulation reo be processed via the Procure- BPOD&amp;ibilitiea do not provide tution . as lar'e as SUNY~. of tl)eir student contact time
aults in counter-productivity ment #41 form route. Reatric- them with awareness of the ac- there JS CODBlderable duplica• and could then function with a
and dupllcetions ·of elforl In- tiona baaed on early 1900 dol- tivftiea and problems in other tion of elfort combined with a reduced staff. It would be necc:entiYI!III to impiOYe ..,.. needed. lar lo!vela do not reflect the aieaa of University operations, lack of clarity about 'who does eaa&amp;rY to maintain frequent
Elaunplea of negatiw impacts spirit of the New York s - significantly leaeening t be i r whal' It is (nonetbeleaa) eli&amp;- contact between the team memare clearly oulliQed in the Self- Finance Law.
ability to contribute to the concerting to realize that stu- bers and' their home offices in
Study. Tbe notion persists
"3. Allow educational insti- total enterprise.
dents, faculty and staff all too · order to facilitate communicathat: 'You got al0111 on •
tutiona to purcbaae from the
"To reduce '.tunnel vision,' to often get lost in the ·I DilfA! when tion of information in both ditberefore you .-I leas.' Tbe EducatiOD&amp;! and InetitutiOD&amp;! instill a deeper sense of reapon- they seek assistance. ..." . .
reotione. . . . One might add
Polley
that this approach could. allow
frustrations upon the Se...e of 1 Co-op lEICl or any other sibility end purpose, and to v.
PurJ&gt;OO" of every employee at 110urce prouid£4 an equal or bet- broaden- the views&gt; of the Proand Enrolla smoother tranaiW&gt;n to the
all levels mllBt be reduced. . . ." let item can be purcbaaed for feasional Staff, eJ[p&lt;l8Ure to the
''Tbe non-teaching profea- Amberat Campus.• One of the
Detalla are offered in three less or ·at an equal price, re- operations of other areas of the sionala are concemed tlwllrod- real problems that must be
operational "problem" areas:
gardless of State Contracts.
University by regularly coo- lUIIe lind undograduak admil- · faced is bow to provide stu"Phylical Focililia. Physi-"4~ ~le source items ade- dueled • workahops aboul~ be sitmo policieo may ROt adequate- dents who live on the North
cal facilities development pro- quately justified should be par~ &lt;?f an overall Profe&amp;SJo~ ly co111ider the immediate_ 1111- Campus with the services which
• viclea an example of the inef- eJ&lt;eml!t from lengthy bidding Training Program of the Uru- tiona! Reeds or the educlltwlllll may still be housed on the
f.icienciea generated by the prooe88es when such processes versity.
,..,.po,.,ibilitiel tlllll11 public ill- Main Street CamPus. The
existing bureaucracy. Tbe in- serve no justifiable enda
, "Concurrent with profession- stitutitm is 1181lumed til meet."
Tea.m approach would allow
teraction among SUNYAB,
" Publiclltio111 (J&gt;rocuremelll. al l:raiJ;Unl both Faculty_ an_d
Tbe University, the report the Teams to move to Amherst
SUNY Central Office of Cam- New York 'State lias complu Profe881onal Staff evaluation 18 says, should consider admis- as students do and insure that
pus Development, the State procedures about publications. suggested.. , .
sion by "major" to a greater IH!OI!98Ili'Y &amp;ei'Vices are in fact
University Construction Fund, All units must follow the same
"Stagnation can be avaided extent "Most freshmen have av&lt;lilable to students."
tbe Division of the Budget, purchasing procedures. Con- by providing a larger conte:&lt;t not d~ upon a major and VII. Community and Unlwnlty/
conaultanta, architects, engin- tracts, purcbaae orders, vouch- for individnal job Ciesignationa. very· human problema result
Contlnul111 Education
ee~ and con~ctors is unneces- ers, proofs, art work, mus~ be This _might ~ _accom~Jis!&gt;ed by
when a student discovers that
"'lbe image of the University
aari,IY complicafed: and frus- filed by the ?""PUS "'!d the ro~ting_ po61tiona ~t!ili' the be or abe cannot be accepted is critical to our acceptance in
trating for all parties. . . .
vendor for reVJew and pnor ap- Uruvemty, by redefining ancl as a psychology major for u- the commlmity but it appea
''Tbe Staff Senate . recom- proval by the Bureau of. Stand- updating job_ designations, and ample, because the ~llment 110t til be adequately commun't.
mends (that). the President of ard and Purcbaaes. ~ m~t by ~rtunity to de v e I'! P is too large." Uncoordinated cated eue11 within the institu!!UNY-AB ~ to the au.:n- be done for any publication b~der mterea~ ~ev!"'t to m - cutbacks in graduate .admis- tioll itself.
..
.
tion of ~"!!ible ~rs of over $300 and for 11ny serUiceo, diY!d_ual career =tislill:e. St.aff sions, the report also charges,
"Evening Division edtication
State Uruwnuty and, if_ neces- such as photograph~ regard- 1!'"!-""'.g should allow_ for ~- have resulted in under enroll- and Continuini" Education is
aery, to the State ~!=" less o! the costs. . . .
"
~~1pation m coopera~ve activmenta in a number of advanced ROt IIC~uing ;u potential. Its
that there have been ~tiona
It,.JS also noted ~t . red 1ties that currently el&lt;ISt on and degree progranJS. While notob- priorit within the / llead ·
from the recommendations of tape delays make pubhcabona off the campus.
jecting to admissions quotas p/41111 /{.g process requires ~;::_
the 'Task Force R&lt;;PD&lt;t' _(the f""9uently out of date u~n
for minorities and students sellment if we wilh til madif
oyerall plan__for this Uruwr- d_eJ!very and . th.a t excess\ye
from the I o c a I community, the institutio11•8 contribution?,
Slty's_phys•cal. dev~opment . · ng~d ~tan~rdiza~on makes m"there is . concern .that going this
f
unity
·
~iled by a CODlllllltee ap- novation unposSible. For utoo f'ar in trjing to be all things . : : ~- ! .&lt;».~ ,
serVJce.
pomted by the Cbancellor and ample, pap e r b a c k catalogs
to everyone will erode the
"Continuing education and
ftheorwarcledcle
. JQ the Trualeell) .to . wo~.d be ch'!&amp;per. and IJlO~ . ef"Particularly for those · en- . stated goal of~ a fi_mt extension pro~ for nontriment of SUNYAB.
fective but they are not ap.
ed . o- - ~ ·
d A
rate graduate center --~•ess aw
red '~ · -L-uld · _.....,_-'ded b
"~urc~
· P~ur... .. . . proved. '
,
gag . m "':"'."ces. an
cawu• •· - - c
•• """
•
-.-.•
y
'The ·
re,u1atlona-'O! " ~ Pro!elisional''Staff Se _ ·demic · Administration, oppor- cell!l""';! of. stu~ta admi~ted a~ factor and such prothe State. of ~ Yopc apply ate ' reconimenda· r eview ~f tuni!-ies to i inleqlct with the · ·. · 18 .not COIISCIO!"'iY Jll'(en , gnOnsbe~deiligned to
to all agencies; although some existing publicati~ns purchasing Elmwood Offices should be u - ~ we•ght ,m the· _policy-maJdng !"""I the' needs, of individuals
'Authorities' (N.Y. State Tbru- procedures to eliminate costly plo_red. ~ersona ~ployed !'Jld process.
. m ~ ~uruty releyant to
wayl are uempt, ~ qien\!!U! delays 'l'l!l , !,111D~-ext.em- tra1p~ ,ll' the b\ISID'lS" offl&lt;'!I'S
p.e .. "!'.P.O~ r"'l!"'~ . /1-, • theu.vocation and.certainly not
~ 1 by edtlclitionhl' instifu-' · al re~iew; ihat tlie '&lt;16lliu liiili:' ·· have oo.:n _ofle"!"' ·DPPD':tunities " U~v~tY-wide · Cheel(-p:o ~ !' t · be ~tricted to those of 'college
· tiona! purchasing departments lations pertaining to the 'Bid' as administrative ass1stants w1eldmg overall responsibility age. . ..
is unique when compared to process be increased to a more within _the academic complexes. for graduate ..enro~~ It
.
is SUIIJI!Sted that '! sigo~ State agencies. 'J'11e in- realistic amount, certainly not Such m-house ~ers ;have ~otes ~ the rea~ !'Jld .nif1cant porf:ion ~ the _enating
dividuala moat .' seriqUlliy, . af. less_ fh1!n .$3,(!00;._ apd t bat been _highly- ,benefiCial to the
~ear roles of UruverSity- cap~pus, whjch !"• ""puily befected by excessiVe lapsed time speCial rev1ew Of services ·such facul ties and the schools.
wtd_e d":"""&gt; and the lack of a C011llllg cential oty m the Bufue the facul·t y engaged in as photography and art work
''The reverse could be ad- U'\1vers!ty poature on the re- falo area, be -specifically degraduate teaching m;earcb, be applied with a $1 000 limi- vantageous to the University. lationsbips of the co 11 e g e S. voted to an expanded Continand service ahd U.:.ir students tation."
'
~ools, departments and facul- uing Education pr'ogram and
whose educatiOD&amp;! careers may
In their cover letter to Pres- · ·•-The inherent mutual under- ties. .
that the conceptAf a Center for
~ delayed or in fact jeopar- , ident Ketter, the PSS notes standing that could develop VI. ~ to S~
. Conlin~ EdllC'!-tion be fo.,ndiz.ed.
that recommendations for al- might welLsmooth relationships
,.._
·
ally·considered With full aware''Identical delays in other leviating frustrations with the with other State Agencies and
'"I'be report l'0001IIIIMllld tlie ness p( the em8rjing concept of .
State Agencies would produce State are ''perhaps illusionary" more clearly demonstrate that 'Full Service Concepr and the _regionalism and ita implicaamaller personal inconvenienoe. but are inCluded ''in the hope 'Elmwood Avenue' baa prob- consideration of 'Stu.dellt Ser- tiona."
Tbe moat elfective purchasing that some improvement is pos- lems, too, is not ' 'paasihg-tbe- uice Teams' as a means of aerv-' VIII.
of Eldolln!l
for UniW!rsity Centers is one as sible."
buck,' and is not an extension ing the student body on a •.....,..
.............. T cloae to the user of the items
of 'Albany' . . .. The .current stop' premile. A review of each
"Where te~&gt;lacement or new
111
as P!""'ible; namely local pur• Profealonal Staff Tralnllllf
situation baa resulted in a loas wut tlllll oerviceo stu.de11ta ill position peiaa,nel are needed
chasing deflart!nents. . . .
Middle Ma_._t
of confidence in the business termo of ita missionlllld uniqiU!- such talenl is often 80118ht ~
''InstitutiOD&amp;! purchasing
"Although SUNY at Butialo operations as the peroeption is: IIeBI is ouggeoted. . . •
wi~t, laraelY because no 'inmethods mandated by the State baa many highly trained and 'Tbey' fil!ht more for 'Albany'
"Students should be. able to vento.iJr' of uisting talent is
of New York ~ inellici- competent persona, theN! ill 110 than the University.
. find. -out, ~ should be .-told - a~. . A RqWry of Emency-dlrougb d~tion of ef. ::::JyToop~d Mtma~e-e
''I~ is ~ed that the when they first arrive, wbere pwyee Tillellt;, recoirullended.
fort and utensi¥e delays (up
.
,~ 1:" frtull .tlllll physical location of. Personnel, to go for help, DOt only for Too Often, peraoaa are unto 6 mon!ha. or more in some onellla indiuitlu&lt;JU to tJie pur- ' Budget, ·Aooounting -Grant·s counaeling_or adviaement, but cballenged after meetering
cases) built mto the P~
pooe_llnd miBBitm(a) oft~ U.ni-· and Contracts, Ptud.asing and for the ~tire gii!DUI of student tb8ir eziating function and
. ~ recommendationa for uenlty 111 a tlltol elllerpriss be- Payroll, so crucial to the sup- needs. Moat of us, having been have proficienciea beyond their
1IDprOVJIIg the procurement pro~i.n.Rinl with the philoeophy of port of the entire enterprise
a student, know the frustration .c urrent duW... Too often one
~ for _!;JUNY ..,.. _olfered: •
her · etluctllio11 Ill Bil/flllo. be on campus
' of going fro!D ..ofti&lt;!e to offiCe to mllBt 1eaw the University in
1, Inatitutlone wttb purMiddle Stateo' report
''Tbe Prof..;.uonal Staff Sen- resolve a fairly mmor problem. order to be iecopimd for uncbasing ~ a h o u I d N!COmmends such a program. ate recommeilda (also) the ea- W_ith proliferating student al- used ability. 'lbere is a wealth
tablisbment of a Professional fairs offices, coupled with an of expertDeea Withiit the UniTraining Program and that the !"J&gt;&amp;Dded Ul!iv~ty with built- versity t b a t rep.-Is undevelopment, c o n ten t and m geographic dispersion, this tapped resources that could be
orientaW&gt;n be addressed to the P'?,blerD can only expand._ •
focused. on specific Uniwrsity
J1e!!da of those responsible for
Alm~t every office 18 m· problema. However, without a
.t he everyday operation of the vo;Ived m ·Student Services. It means of iden~ compeA __,_ - - - ' t p .......... ,.,..,_, --* ~ flY dw DftoWon ol Vnf.
Unlversity: TlJe Professional =lh~ prove to be a worthwbile tence, only the moSt viaible per~ ........_ s,... u~ o1 , . . rn .,. • .,.,, u.ss 11.-.s.., .,.•.
SWf Senate Will assist thl! exe~ for those offices that sonalities are utilWd
If. r. iGJ4. ........, ol&amp;. ~ ._ a - JU, 250 ......._. A . r,..._ JJ%7J.
•
IJlannina. implementation, and COnBld&lt;;r tbemselYI!III so involW!d IX. ~
ihe evafliation of the utensive to define their mission and
''Tbe 110lion of U ·
'"'
•
training prograni envisioned."
clarify why and bow their aerid
a ~ra-J... W'DI'ur' llOIPLotlftf
vices are unique and not d li- , w ~ ~~~· N!~tllt~ of
·- -..a.w
IV.
Adl•lllllaballw
·
Orpnlzatlon
cative
of
other
offices
~t
..U
indiuidual
co,.,utuencieB, 18
JfOaD2" r. M.&amp;Jtl.B1'T
"'!he . llrJ&lt;&gt;nimtioll
t he would appear similar
"
~pled Ill " ......,., ~~u,.iti.;b _,_
of "
muniotltio"' lind brellftdow,., ill ialize m &amp;881Sting students to.
In addition to C b a i r m ·an.
I'A.TalCU .a1UtD •mDaiUIAN
the_ ct&gt;.""""IIIICe of University overcome the "system," the ..- ' Goen, ~ Repqrt Col!lD'lttee
-"--'~~-,-,
port notes, would be similar to included; KathY Kubala. -Un·
....-- til thou N!lpo,.,ibk for
fthe type of service proVided. . dergraduate 'Studiea• Cliff Willl..r:F &amp; C.t!!fJ)4R•"'
illeir impiementlltio11 liN! IIWII- or foreign and minoritY a1u- · 11011, Raidence Jiaua: ·Jack
wur UI'OilrP, ~- .,_.,_
d_en~ and duriog Summer SeaCompute&lt; &amp;rvioes, '
COlfTJU,!J72'flfO .utnn'' -~ /11. '
up......_,., of fUn C t i 0 n SIOIJI&lt; ~ .. JO"!Uld 'remedy the aDd l&gt;at Col-~ Sociaf Jilci-------.-~------...,-..,.--.,;,_,...,.·..,,ril · ezial Many of these reouU P"'!!llllfs3itw!9on m which the encea and ~t.iol!a

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F * - 7 :.1:.1, 1973

=t~y!u;~~=ch~e:~ . ~c;;~~~~~~that

. By PATRICIA WARD·
acter." People "think Germans felt strongly
lerrorist-eup. ...Kb tt&gt;e Federal sowmment the University's Network and
·BIEDERMAN
are·e!fieient," ~ aaid, but porting nations such as Libya to virtually double the capacity Fed8rai Medline is ~
··t hey ale DOl ·~ ale an and EIYPt. wliic:h welcomed of a nationwide computer med- the same.
Red the 8ft!lla in Munich order-obeying nation, be aaid, the sur v i vi n g terrorists ..S ical information system .-1
By "oonversing" with either
no~ a.ppeaed before TV cam· JDUCb 1!&gt;- the c:ballrin of an aud· beroea, abould be barred from by 1'1!81!!Uc:hem in the United the computer in Albany or
eras, with .Pla.Y-by-play by
ience 81!118itized by history and furlbec international athletic States and abroad.
Betheadti via a typewriter-like
Wide ,Wcrld Of Sf!O!t¥. own Jim aocioiOCY COI1l808 Co the cJan.. ' co~gpetit:ion.
Chancellor Emest L Boyer terminal, CODI*lted tluouch
MacKaY,tbeymightbavebeen gera of stereotypina. ·T o ill..,..
A Donald Pleasance look- said this week thet under Wephone lines, a pbyaician,
·t he
ol a l!fllde.B movie. ~te, he told blact, humorous alike, Ladany applauded the terms of a $240,o00-a-year con· medicsl librarian, medical atu·
The Twmlieth Olympiad was storieo involvin&amp; the riJidil:y ol · re!Uement of Avery ·Bnmdage, tract with the National Library dent or other health prdr- ·
taking place in Munich, Ger• the guanis. A· whole platoon a "racist'' and an ~·antt-Sem- of Medicine, the University's
'anal · abl to retrieve almollt
IDIUI,)', Only a abort ride from
was aaaiiJied to guard the sur· ite," "even if he is a fellow computer headquartem -in AI·
menm0es to the
Dac:haiL The lime happeDed . viving membem of the team as walker."
bany will become. the aeoond latest joumal uticla in his
to he ,t1Je .Jewish High Holy tbey pacbd. But the guerda
What did the world learn center in the largest bibli· area of interesl In a matter
Days, an iraoy that apparently watc:hed only the front doors, from the Ismeli team's traflt&lt;!y, ograpbic retrieval service of ita ~~~tondsthetheloca~of~..~
escaped' Uae Olympic Commit- and1101De011e wandered over Uae live and in color from Mwiicb? type in the world.
,..,.,..,..
~
..tee allioplber. And IBltil 8ep- lawn and into 1he Ismelis' Not much, thought Iad&amp;ny. By
Initially, the Univemity's articles in bis own or member
tember 6-ud this is the real rooms through the unguariled the next day, the wOrldwide TV central computer is expanding libraries. The prooeos elimi·
Stanley Kramer to u c h-Uae rear' glaas doors, asking dirac- audience bad already begun to the service and capability of a nates manual aearcbes wblch
Olympics' principal hMdJine. tions. ShletriUI was lA&lt;iany's forget, caught up as it was in Federal system, cslled Med· in the past have consumed
grabber had beml cocky, 11111&amp;- won!.
the coverage of the remaining line, wbich permits physicians houm and IIOIDetimes days. A
tachioed, .Jewish Mark Spitz.
competitions. Lad any, wbo and researchers throughout the comparable manual -.dl is
On September 5, as Chris
The German rescue team brought with bim to the Games United ·states, including Alas- more costly .as well as more
Scbenkel .......Jd tell the world, failed to . count' the terrorists memories of being an eight- ka, and in Canada and France, t:izne.&lt;:onsuming. A mac:hine
rnemtJ:em. of an . Areh terrorist as they ~t the Olympic Vii- · year-&lt;&gt;ld in Bergen-Belsen, was to "searc:h" instantaneously a searc:h am be completed for
orpmzation ominously named !age and ~Y othis essential in· buttonholed not long after- list of 400,000 titles indexed appro:rimaWy one-fourth the
Black Sept..mber, invaded the formation to the ambush squad wards by a N- Yorker 11Vho from 1,200 major medical 'jour- cost of a manna! searcb. ·
'Olympic Village and broke into at the aifporl Whjle, in fact, didn't ~o~ that ~ bad been nals, particularly those of im·
The Biomedicsl ayalem of.
rooms where members of the there _,., eight terroriata the at. Muruch. 'Weren t the Qlym- portance in clin.ical medicine.
fem the option of searchlna by
Isreeli 01~~ team slept, ambushenl expected four. Only pies terrible?,'' the ~ericsn
As part of the total system, author, subject and title of ar'Ibe terronsts ldlJed one Israeli five marksmen were B88igned asked. ladimy was curious to the Universoty computer acti· ~icle, and Medline by author
at once and took ten others as for the ambush and &lt;these were know what so d~tressed him va!ed on February 1~ 40 in· an~~~
hostages. By the n~ day all not properly equipped to fire ~bout ·t he Games. 'When ~ q.wry lines through ~ !ded· Continued El&lt;poten dead.
·
at nigbt. At the airport, lad· Judg!"' took away. the Amen· hne. users. _can retnev~ inf~·
The University will continue
· ~ murdered athletes had any conjectured, wben the Ger- cans gold !"edal m booske~ mati~n Vl8 a typewnter-~ike to expand and provide concur·
OCCUP!~ ~ 1 and 3 of ~ man marksmen, one . of whom and ~!'ve It to the RUBB18D8 ~rminal at a me~r mec;h?l rent service to &lt;the 2( major
Ismeli s section of ~ Olymp!" was killed, realized that the .. . ., he began.
hbrary. Th~ a!" m addition medicsl centem using lts Biodorm. In,Room 2. llll&lt;. of .their Areh force was much larger
•
to the 50 lines '".use at the medical Network, wbich prothe at- than they bad or i gin a II y
~'\I
Federal computer m Bethesda, 'vides on-line access to a base
colleagues .slept
~d a __ _,_force
tho':'ght, .theY. we!" unable to
(.(l,J
·
Mi rei'
to C K. H
of 1.7 million journal articles
rmanAmoa-:;:-_, ~_. dev.1 8te. !""'l'matively from
d.
Irfi. U / BH lth~: published in 2,300 medical
third
. .noar.
ng ... .., .,._..~ their anginal plan. An Israeli,
lfeC r .o
e
"":
joumals in many Janguag...
Israelis. wh&lt;? !ater e 8 c a P e.d trained, as modem Germans
l.U •
en_ces ~brary • a MedJi.ne ~r:
Chancellor Boyer . pointed
.., ~ a slidmg glassSbadul~r-~ ~re not, in dealing with terror'P S El' t' ' "M··u ·... :th
m~ .'it, ~ng:pe·~i\f,rary
· In· . ou~tbat 1he implicatiOlis-of tbe
. _ r. ~ :"'88 Dr.·
......... · 1818, · would' have 'realizOO · the
· · ~!' -~ · . .uuer m e · s
.
e
combined service to the medi·
any. Speaking on ClliDPil!' Feb- ~- s~tegy was to rush -the Csthed~ bighhghts a sc:hed· whe!" libfll!Y. staff ale com· csl profession extends far bemary 14! Ladany attribuled enemy with full force.
ule of five Theatre Department pletinl, "; ~g coume f?.r ,the . . yond the · libl'aries and mAior
the MUI).ich tragedy to 8 bad
German' niarlWDen didn't pe.({ofm'lll&lt;e&amp; fpr lste ·.wmter system s use. The l:lb~ aJ. medicsl centemwhere .MediiDii
,_,.,., - 'i:\!W~pooJf)' ' exec:ul!'d·· ~thOse cfutY""Jews" or "even and spr.mg.
"
fe!ldY houses three BIIDll!'r ter· and Biomed terminals ale DOW
He.also
for the elld.USlon tbcJ!ii J"'!'Bo" . ill!~.' they fod de- . ()peq.ing Mart:!l, 2•. Munier., ~ pf tt&gt;e. Sl!NY B1omed, located:
. ,
..
•·
~a. .~.....t,any olber- · cide , "thOSe peoplAi'' were not ID· the ' &lt;;4tbed~ · will be p...,. icsl CommUDICIM;il'l\B.. JII~tworlt.. _ AB''tbe ' Medline 'services ex· ··
"!'~on&amp; that barb;or the sur· worth losing their lives for, ~ted m the Fimt Presby~r· Ave-Second ResponM
pand and become inc;reasingly
VIvmg .Areh ~rroriala from ~ Ladany hypothesized. You liUl Church on ~ymp&amp;ony Cir·
At peak periods the ex· more available to meinbers of
future ip!emational a.t h 1., tJ c . Cll!l't ,..Uy, b!-. ~ h~ . cle !"'der the ~""?tjon · of SsiJI .. · .. "eel'
" "'•s'-""' . will __ hnimi••• ......... ..... practi~
·
competition.
:
added
'
• '
Elkin ·Who· Will • afso · j&gt;hy . pbaan.,. . the,,,~,b~ili.•tyJ_. ......
of " fi. '"·· i;""·~ ·- ~~,;cell · ~. ·-•--' _.......,
"I .d
Thomas II Becket. Performan
ve
caps
ve- P YBIC18D8, ......, "'""" or lllll
The State of ....... re,.....~
on't aocuse the Ger· tim
.
.
btl
ce
second
response
to
requests
for
the
value
of the system in terms
8 30
the terrorists' llemands as mans." said ladany, who aci:M~
rug y, information by flO simnltane- of ' locsi patient care will be
blsc:Smail .and 'l1!ffl!r f~ a mo- knowledged
Israel thought
AIug
th schedule
.
ous users.
.
strengthened aocordingly.
0
~~'releaalng_ Areh the Germans b':"'gled the res~ "Cal'guls" d~ . ~ i40 me'dicsl libraries·
Until -then practicing physi.
Pn.IIO'*'I m eiichange for tbe cue a n d officially· expressed b
de
in ina)Or cities throughout the cians in wban and rural areas
ten, Ladany said. Capitulation. thanks to the German govern·
r
un r aw;.. country have terminal access can telephone the library of
even to save· ten lives '.' very, ment only because it was poli- t~d of~"¥ hTheatre to the Medline system service. the medicsl center in their
very dear. to ' ':'"o"' woWa; ''?JllY • tic to ~o 80. •
.•
•
:
eat r e Four participating medicsl li· area and request -.c:hes of in·
lead li&gt; . incniaaed terronsm: ~ The information relayed over Studio, April 6-S, 8 · ~ ~·"!;
braries in France and Canada fonnation in a partieu1a.r field.
Look wbat bappen'ed after air· Americari ' television ths't ·1s. The Fauswa ProJ!!Ct s , Ser- use the system.
Eventually the Medline in·
line 8118 law officem 'mef the raeli military advisors were ·on ~~ fo~osepj' .~te~ "?d
Under terms of the contract fonnation retrieval potential to
demands pf the firSt U.S . sky- _,the scene was hot true,' he said
r, ..
. In e •
ou re with the National Library of the eii't ire U.S. medical com·
jaclter, be illuatnited. · ·
"Representatives of the dipW. Dea~. April 7•10 .at an ~de- Medicine Stste University will mun.ity will be as cloee as ita
. n.- 0p11ans ·•
"'?'ic corps were in. contact te';!"'.ned off-campus location. also piay' a major role in fur- telephone, Boyer predicts.
Given that Isr8el would never w:Jth the reecue operation. The
Field Dances and Outdoor ther expansion development
agree to an esChange, three op- Israeli •government, however, Pieces," directed by Cristyne and impro~t of the Med·
'
tiona remained opim to German did approve the German deci- lawson and presented by the line network. It is expected
officials. 'llley ·could try to sian to attempt a forcible res- Department of Theatre, on that the information 8 y-.,
Ben.iors and juniom froin 143
·
campus, May 1; at 1 Mill' will gredually eXpand to a cap. high sc:hools in Western New
ransom the boetages. In' fact, cue.
$1 mil1ioll was allegedly of.
In ladany's view, acts of P~, May 2; and at the AJ. ability of providing service to York wbo ale COillliderina ca·
fered for release of the ath· Areh terrorism outside of Is- bnght-Knox, May 3. Perform· 250 medical centers and other reers in ~ have been
letes. Ladany conjectured that rael -are on the increase, be- ances will be staged at noon.
users, suc:h as hospitals and invited to visit the 8c:ieDce and
the oller Was simply not Iuera· cause Israel hils dealt 80 effec- ·
An adaptation of· Shake&amp;- clinics· in the United States E~ Library's videolive enough. A gift of five timeS 'tively with the problem at pesre's poem, ''Venus · and and overs.&amp;.
tape JIIOiriUD8 and campus enthat amount was recently made home. ''We ale strong," he' said, Adonis,'' clif&lt;!Cted by Gordon
Dr. Bpyer said State Univer- ~ faciiitiea in poops
to Bladt September by the and the enemy-reguiap! and Rogoff, Harriman Thea·tre sitywas~tobacltupand of eigh'-&gt;, ._.na Robert
presideut of Libya as a reward ~ ~rai,d to attack Studio, May 9-13, 8:30 p.m.
hei.P espan,&lt;~ the Federal sya- Ting, BEL librarian.
for tbe ~ mam8Cre. with}n the nations borders.
tem heCiluse of its seven Y81QB
...__ ·-"~ ..__._ · 'th
all
German oftieials mil!ht al8o During. the last three yeam,
of ezperience and """"""" with I •.., v ....ts --~ .., an •
have tried to bargain for release casualties as a result of ter- .
ita own "icmeerinJ Biomedical :""""'pe
• ~~ta~ ~
ol tbe lioatages by inaking .cieRr rorism have. become a rarity.
.
CommW&gt;icatioD8 Networl&lt;.
.......... to the kidnappers diat their :ren times.!"' many Israel.is .die
'IbeDoctoraVDivisional ComComputer tec:hniqum·uaed in = a t theand
~
~
own lives were in danler. Tbis m auto ~=dents "'! are victims rn.ittee ol the Faculty of Educa· biomedical .bibliolraPhic ,... by a -lima~""hmcbean.
strategy was .-1 811ClC1!118fnlly of terra~ he l!ltimated.·
tiona! Studies bas established trieval were initially _.meet
___,..
- 3
not 10111 aso by the Tbai gov
'Ps~l Vldory'
a regulation that any doctorel and developed by SUNY al:a1t- berAnia~rtybyn;:::
ernment when Areb terroris~
Israel . should have left at student in educati~ wbo bas ing !'! 1966. By ~1161!- its Bit&gt;- vast W~ G. to ait with
took boataps from the Ismeli least one pemon in Munich to ~yet comple~ bis degree•re- mediCal ~~ N!'t- _...._ ~•p .:.. •..:-- ._ ..... to __ _
embaMy ill Bangkok. "Areb represent the ~gic team at the qw""'!""ts but mtends to sred· wofk: began
~..... 1w....~
~
terroriala aren't Japanese kam· closing ceremonies, thought uate m June or September"" to eight users, incl
Bllf.. ewer questioaa and t o =
ikuepilota,"Ledanysaid'Ibe ladany, wbo wore both an .mu&amp;tmdief!tehis'intenli!'nto falo,from~
By. ::eur'Ibe~·u-led
Genna rescue force rejected Olympic pin~ a green Olym· ~ Committee by . ~ 11, ....,..._ Following a move to by the ame faculty a-mer 011
this option because it would pic tie for bis campus appear-- ll8lllll a etandard petition form, Albany and a cblm&amp;e in. 80ft. a tour of .....u-m. facllllSea
have JMant a nationally em· ance ' The flag of Israel abould 'signed by bis major advUior wilre. the Network DOW at.._...__ m
· the_...._ __
barn!Ming. publiC show of mili· have. flown in the f'mal parade. and the Chairman of the de- 2( major medical centars in
......,.
.,.,_,_
tary forCe and
babl the The Areba wanted to force bis partmenl
M..-:buMtta, Min.-, and
The first poup, from Hutch
pos~t otp'ibe d~ nation' out of international oom·
In the petition, the student other atatea as ..U u New Tech, vial:ted camjlua oa :W"JJ-·
aocordiag to Ladariy.
petition he saia, and by volun- sl}ould indicate what the re- York. UlB is tbe beavlest nesday, February 14. Giaupa
· "...;"~-;., wbo walked 50 kil· iari1y b.avins Munich; Israel maining requirements are.·
, _ , (in terms ol COIIIIIIeled from oil.- hich ec:hoola wiD fol~to a wodd's record allowed the terrorists a "pay·
For .June graduation, all 8Mid&gt;ee) ol this 24--'i ..,.. low within the~~ IDOiliiiL
during the
IAamed the c:hologicsl victory."
•
· work must be completed by iem. Ooe 1o 3,000 -....m- Beca~ ol limited lllilaitiDriac

-no

T:..la!i:n...,:,.

More...........

.=fj

!'::;,,r

Eliot R''
Qpens M,.,..
2

th!

c::;'

u....,;,.

_that

u.r:

l .m.
C.:
Rob:rt r.odast, •

VlSits Jrwited

Degree Deadl'me

Pet·"-" " "' -"" --- .

a..-

faililre of the Getman plan to

graduation,
would participate. in . ·futun! all Work must be completed by
· Gerinan c:baf. .OIYJDP!e Games. ' ,8Ml~ AUliUII 15.

::"::.~~~f'b:.:
nature lind "

Is!:l~=f ':':~:::~ M?~11Septemher

::i5that~..~ ~·=-~=~~

be
H1111111.pndicta.
PMa a - ' • 1J!1int ol ......

the library at the~ tuM.
Ting ~,......

�6

F~22,J9U ·

~

Faculty Senate·Lists .
Committee Member8
11&gt;e followinll are .the presOIItiy-c:onstituteil alandini ilommUteM of the Fao:ulty Senate:
-

bert Reiamann, Eleclrical EngineerinJ, 106 Parker ,..,....._
Roberta Siael. ~'iLi!
Scieoce, 3-C 'q38 Rldp Lea;
MadeliDe Stem, Univemity Libmies, Lockwood AnDel&lt;; IAe

eerins:

,_-

....... - t y

Byl'flll Kodlwelo, ChairniDII,
German 1: Slavic, 240 Ctosb)o
~ Berdabl,F~--

Teitelbaum, Law, 77 W. Eagle
Stzeet; John Welte, Graduate
Student Asaociatiori, 205 Norton Hall.
Scieocea.
137 ~
; f'lninral BemJey ~ Pbiloeopby,
RichtJrd Koehl, ChDlrniDII,
6-F 4244 Rldp Lea; ~ Philoeophy, 10 4244 Ridge !Ae;
~ Univemity Libraries,
Robert L Brown, Medicine,
123 J - t t Parkway; Oli- P. 153 Capen Hall; Paul Edwards,
Jaaea, Anatomy, 218 Capen Social Policy and Community
Hall; AI Katz, LaW, 77 W. Servioao, -127 Foster .Hall;
Bqle Stn(et; Francea s . - , .David Barmak, Student As.&gt;AIIatomy, :tm Sherman Hall; ciation, 205 Norton Hall.
JahD Simoa, French, 221-B
UlnoyCzooby; JahD Greenwood,
·LoweU Schoenfeld, CluJir-

t!.e.liOII, 16 ..,....,. ~
HicJ&gt;el:
Eclwud Buehler, Geo •

1--

g:t.rr~t. ~lion, ~'e~~=-~n; ~

~
SIGIIIe)' Cramer, ChairniiJII,

tor)', 221 Diefeodorf Hall; John
Elli8on, Infonnation and Library Studies, 6 !fares AmC; Marriane Goldstem, Univ~­
sity Libraries, Lockwood Li-

~tlonal Sludlea, 205 Foster

:!f!:f[rk~Hallu,.m.nJ.N~

znU' Hoeletter; Admialiona .;!
D---a..

brary.i..Ronald Hauser, German
and ~SU~vic, 240 Ctosb)o Hall;
Alme l'a)'ne. EnPiah. 15 Annm&lt; Georce Hourani, Pbiloeophy
~ ~ Caban, StudeDt A-. 3-C 4244 Riclce !Ae; J._,h
CJ&amp;tion, 205 Norton Hall; Ron- Laufer, Law, 77 W. Eagle
aJd J~ Graduate Student · SI!Mt; C bar I e a PaganelJi,
A-omatiool, 205 Norloft Hall.
P!&gt;)'siolo«Y, 19 Sherman Hall;
~
.
Ba!bua "Putnam, Counaelor
.JOifla H o 111 e 11, Chairman, Education, 29 Footer Annex;
Counaelor .Education, 35 Foster William Walbeaaer Electrical
Annm&lt;; F. Peter Field, Pb)'si- ~ 26-B 4232 Ridge
oioo'. 23 She~ Hall; Mil- ' Lea; HenrY Buda, Graduate
~W~eep. PhYsical ~. Student Association, 205 Nor"'"
. _ r Avenue; Millan to Hall
Pleaur His1ory, 217. Dief~ ~
·•-··---- M' •z CL-'Hall; How&lt;&amp;rd Tieckelmann
Cbemislly; '252 Aet-on HaJJ-.
~"'"· ICM : . """"!""•
Howard Faiwl, Sh·..._t •--': English, 11 ~ A; B. 'Rich=
· - - . lfa)'88 Ailnm&lt; B; F.

-IInn -··--IY-·
.,.,._.------tiro . . .._
~,,_A.

Poison Prevention
Week

-

-

of the -

...

........

pnocl8lmod- 1-10 " - ......
In - · Thirty momborl of the U/8 Choplw

Amortcin " " ' , _ , _ .............. -

.,.__

(left) ond - . . . , Schltlc (rilht), coanl.,_ choir·
man of the _..m, NSpedlvely. - . .,. t h i r d - -

-

the School of PhormKY.

C~eeley Will Read in Norton to Aid WBFO
InternatiOnally-known poe t
Robert Creeley will present a
public reading of his works tonigbt at 8:00 p.m. in tPe. Fill·

more Room of Norton Union.
This is Mr. Creeley's first reading in Buffalo this year and is
being co-sponsored }&gt;y, WBF:O.
the U .
'ty' -·'-Ji
~'-

Ms. Katbleea Cassia! has

Union Activities Board. Tbe
readi!U!: is a beneilt perlohnance
for wBFO. Admiasioo is ·free
and donations for WBFO will'
be a~ at the door.
Mr.
ley has read and lec-

ao~Ma~-~~rtanG'':'ihndua~Stu
~A~=d~~
. • .
- • station,ru=the"'ll~ Art;;
....,.
.... ~. ra
~ - Finnegan, Medicinal CbeDiis- Day Care Leader Committee of the University
dent Association,· 205 Norton try, 356 Acheaon Hall· Cheater
~
•
Glomold. A' nato my, ~A
.._
Ca
Hall
John H..Utead ·-ch&lt;lirm&lt;i·11 - ·
pen
; Frank Hodcea. So- • •
•
cia1 Policy and Community
History, 317 Diefendorf Hall; Services, 105 Foster Hall

1 ·
~·Hall: g~"""Illie;

~CommBI. ~~.J'~~••.

Cbem:

Chanlc:ti Eniu-r;ng, 2
leal ~; . Salvatore
Abbate, Graduate S~t Asaociation, 205 N 0 r t'o n Hall·
David N - Student ~
dation, 205 Norton Hall
.
·
Joma Schindler Chairman
Operations An a 1 y8 i a, 33SJi
Crosby Hall· IAe Bemardis,
MediciDe,
J . Meyer• Hospltal, 462 Grid« Stzeet· Berhera Bunker Paychology' B-11I.ee.: He; man
A 4230
Falsetti, Medicine, 'E. J. Meyer
Hoopital, . 462 · Grider Stzeet·
Robert Fisk. Educational Stud:
ies, 4230 Rldp Lea; David
Koebery, Lew 77 W Eagle
Stzeet; Robert' o-m..,· SociolCIIY. 240-J Capen Hall; John
Val, Univemity Libraries, 308
Lookwoocl Library· Dorothy
IU.e1, Gdduate Siadent As.&gt;ciatloa,. 206 NarloD Hall.
£duc8llolal ......_ -,
Carmelo PriviWa, ChairniiJII,
•
HMlth Scienci!s;
J
History, 317
; Barbara
Howll, ~. 116 m-.
Dim HaD; Al1ell Kuntz, Stu. dOIIt A«aar8. Harriman Libnuy; Joel- RaYDOr, l'lycbol~24-C 4230 Ridae L~o&amp;:

E:

Ridie

ReMan:h ond Creotive

ActNity . ;. : an&lt;t -.SCl.~l'!'i~Y ~i'?'l" lJa;s

Emanuel Parum, CluJirJian;
Statistics.. A-34 4230 Rid 1 e
~; Robrn Bannerman, M~C1IU!, Bufl'alo General Ho"'"tal ~
Higb Street; Carl Pegels,
agement, 312-B Crosby Hall·
Herman Rahn, Physiology 120
Sherman Hall; Gordon &amp;goff,
Theatre, 28-N Harriman Library; John Sullivan, Arts and
Letters, Old Faculty C I u b·
J?avid Kosiur, Student
tion, 205 Norton Hall; David
Blasczak, Graduate Stud en t
Association, 205 Norton Hall.

Man:

Aaaocia:

Sluclont Allolra

.

•

Jlac HIRIIIMIId.

c~.

~~

llcleoM.;
eelor Educaliaa, 27 Foster An.-; Thmdole Hullar, Mediem.t~.S56~

:t:~Rida;,e.~·

~
ltallm~
.....,.,__...,....
Spmil6.

~ 219-C &lt;::I'Giby Hall.

Boloa ·~ ~
o..l ~. 41510 MaiD
~..-....
:Phll8 4lf4 Rf¥ ~

-...r.

o.-.
'

.

Ke1111eth Ros,..,_n ChairSpanish, Italian~ Portugueae, 3 Crosby; H a r I e y
Flack, Health Related Profeasions, 19 Diefendorf Annm&lt;; J&lt;&gt;seph H u gar, Undergraduate
Studies, 109 Diefendorf Hall·
Charles No'-, Ci'vil ~
~~. 27-A Parker EDcineer111C; Jacqueline T b om p 1 on,
Child Health, 143-A Health
Sciences; R o b e r t Convieaar,
Student Association, 205 Norton Hall; Robert G r a b a m, ·
Graduate Student ~tion,
· 205 Norton Hall; Judith S.
moo, Graduate Student Asaoc:iation, 205 Norton Hall.
.
.
171011,

WffiR to Hold

. !..~.~~· POlitical-Debate
~40 Annm&lt; A; Laurence

been 1ll11tled full-time coo
. rdin
.· _
to f
the U 1B ,.,_..,_
a r or ·
~Ative
Day Care Center, Dean Silerman Merle of Social Policy

announceo. •
· ·- • · · • ~~'1il~yE~~!fttlisHe~:·
Ms. Cassiol !&gt;as had f?W" been a member of the U/ B
years_ of professional tea~g Englisb faculty since 1966. Preeapenence, holds a bachelors viously, he taugbt at B I a c k
desr'!e .in elementary education Mountain Colle¥" in N 0 l't h
and 'ISm a master's degree pro- Carolina, the Uruversity of New
gram in early childhood educa- Mexico in Albuquerque, the
tion. ·:~n ~~.. says ~ University of Britisb Columbia
M~le, she IS highly qualified,
in Vancouver, and was a lecturan assessment which is widely er in creative writing, a t San
supported by those who have Francisoo s tate College. He
already worked wi~ her."
also served a year with the
As coordinator of the Day American Field Service in InCare Center, Ms. Cassiol car- dia and Burmit during World
ries out the operating policy War n
estabi¥'ed by the Steering
Mr. Creeley's boob of poetry
Committee of the Center, su- include: For Love: Poems 1950pervises other staff and volun- 1960, Words, Pieces, St. Mar~. oversees ~y-to-day-opertins, and A Doy Book. He has
ationa, and 18 the contact also written a novel entitled
Jl!!rBOn fo~ units in the Univer- The Island, and a oollection of
B1t~. -~~ to arrange oboer- short stories called The Gold
vational VlSlts. She also' carries Diggers.
responsibility for dealing with
His latest· book of poetry A
the Sta~. ~~ ~uthorities Doy Book (Scribner's, N:Y.,
and Faci)1ties Planning.
· · Dec. 1972) , contains a 9equence

of prose passages and poems
wliich are a daily record of human transactiona and experiences. Other recent publicatioos
inclUde:· Listen ( Black Spar-_
row Press, LA., Dec. 1972!, a
radio play; A &amp;liSe of Meoawe (Calder .and Boyan Ltd.,
~on, Feb. ;!J3) , ,'!hich''?""and an~u~t.f~·
Poems by Whitman (Penguin,
Feb. 1973).
.. •.•

-

Acting Head
For French

Dr. Silviano San~.._ 11881&gt;ciate professor of .,........, has
been appointed acti."' chalnnan
of the d - - t elfei:liwt imn.e Peraonnel Office indicates that the follOwinc Nonmediat.ely, replacing Dr. JahD
T~. Professional Staff positions are open at State
K. Sip&gt;oo who is on leaw for
Uruvemty at Bulfalo:
the aprinc semester.
ABBilltont to !he Dean, Office fo; Credit-Free Programs,
Born in Bnizi1 in 1936, Dr
Continuing Education, PR-L
Santiago · graduated from .
For. additional info~tion concerning .these jobs and
University of Minas Gerais,
f'!r detaila of NTP.'operunga throughout the State Uniwr- .
Brazil. He lel:leived his Ph.D.
aity system, consult bulletin boards at these loCations·
from the Uni-.ity of Paris in
- • . 1, Bell Facility betweim D152 and D153; 2. Ride~ Lea,
1968. Before. joinmg the U/B
B~ ~ Mit to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Buildinc
faculty in 1969, he held t.eecb4230, m corridor Mit to C-1; 4. Health Sciences Building
inc posts at 'the University of
~ opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the
New Mexico, Rutgers UmYI!r~ R.oc?m 141 and the ~y; 6. Lockwood, ground
sity, and the University ofT&lt;&gt;~oor ~ corridor Mit to vending machines; 7. Hayes Hall,
ronto. In 1972 he WM a visitinc
· m .mam 011trance foyer, acroes from Public Infonnation Ofprofesaor at Pmtlflcia UniYI!rfice; 8. ~Hall, ·i n corridor betwean Rooms 112 and
sid8de Catolica in,ftio de•:Jan- 113; 9. Parker~. in oorridof Mit to Rooin 15·
eiro, -Brazil.' "
, ... •····
10. ~HaD. 1st floc!r, Housing Office area; n . La...;
.~ Dr. Santiago'ia:the authOr of
8d&gt;oal. firilt floor senem1 infonnation basad ~ Rooms
,""""!"~ articles· and boob in,
1~u1~; 12. 1807 Elmwood, Personnel Department; 13
~. '::'oe~iioi!Yt..• Braail:a
__:;' ~ ·
- ~ r·
l9119,
....' """" mon, Director's otrJCe, Room 225· 14 Diefendorf

NTP Job Operiings

u.,;

corrido; .

N

ell~B(l=:..~:_·v_·_·--;~-.,.-J - -::,
~1~;- ~ f!..
~·
poems, 8Gll&lt;&gt; (1970) .
....

--;Mit· _to_Room
___
l9fk
__
L-Hall,--in:-corridor--·

�p__,.

~~

22, 1913

GHIGHER
GEI)UCATION
GNOTES
More C)llll88rVIltive, more cOo·
oemecl 8bout academic work,

-=';;.t disci~
.~

•

ia1ly

:r:ted
these are 1101118 of the eharacteristics that distinguish this
year's collep freohmen from
their p.m-.
For the moat part, however,
the differeD&lt;~~~ are tdight, accordiul to the latest annual
survey of freohmen by ~ American CouDcil em Education.

...

" ' - " P. Cound bn .........
" dlputJ _ ... •• fur .........
oducdon "' tile u.s. Olllc8 of

Educdon.. . -16,
- Mr.
-·
toalc
o11ect an Fellnilll)'
c-1111 Ntumed to . . . poo1t1an • of tile Uftl..
ven1tJ of Mlchlpn's c.ntsr fur
tho

...
.

StudJ of HIIMr

~-

-Yale University ·has ~
a W011!8J1. .Joni EYiins Barnett,
as its "new director of physical
··
education.
One cf tile ..-t _ . . , -.....
•• tho u~ of • - this

year

celled "The World

Is 1 MW -

of WIMs." to&amp;ilht by a~
wh- ambltlon"ls to ralsl - •
tostes•'fnlrili:olcl---bas• lord of w l - _,ou;lnc hl&amp;her."

7

Sffi.{Y-SPA Statement onPR Ranking Appeal
State University and the
Senate Profl!lllsional Aaoociation
this week- iaoued the following
join(. statement 011 the appeal
of Pro!a.ional Rank assignments U&gt; all members ol the
prola.ional atdf: ·
Repreeentatives of the SUNY
Office of Personnel and .Employee Relations and the Senate Professionlil- -Associ4tion
have met to consider apparent
misunderstandings concerning
the process of appeals of initial
ranking under the newly establiahed Professional Rank 8Y8tem. ·Followinl the meeting, it
was felt that a joint statement
clarifying procedures and expressing support for the ap~- process under Article
XXXIV would be appropriate.
By virtue ol this memorandum, applications for appeal of
initial rank will be accep~
the campUR Promption Review
Panel -until March 12, 1973.
Within these time limits, any
prola.ionlil employee seeking
aasignment to \8. different professional rank may do so by initiating the appeal procedure.
A complete outline of the appeal procedure follows :
- a ) Any professional employee who, believing he has
grounds, decides to appeal his
professioiial ran)&lt; assignment
may obtain an Appeal of Professional Rank Assignmen t
Form from the campus Personnel Office or from members of
the Promotion Review Panel.
b ) The completed form must
be submitted to the Promotion

Review Panel ·on or be(.,..,
March 12, 1!113. 1be lqipellant

may submit additional inform&amp;•.

tion if he chooaes.
NOTE: The form iN:Iudft
two oection&amp;. Quutiort I providu the appelltuot wi.llo an
op_fKNtuni.ly to pruertt hU juatif=tion for oppmlinf the initial rank tutll#/nment. lrt
spornlinl to thU quution, the
appelltmt nuJy· pn!lertt any inform&lt;Jbon he deerru appropriate. quutioM 2-8 ore-O&amp;med at
identifyinl the dutia and r&lt;!·
sponsibilitia inherent "in the
appealed position. Theoe dolo
ore internl&gt;d to """""' the
PronuJtion Review Panel to
emmine the ocope and complerity of the job and to formulate it. recommetuf4tiort. It
slwul4 be poip!ed out, odditionally, that ·in makint il8
analysis, the Division of the
Budget will require these datil
whe~uer the University Beview Board recommends tlwt a
position be assitned a different
Professional Rank.
c) Upon receipt of an appeal, the Promotion Review
Panel should forward a copy
of the Appeal of Professional
Rank Assignment Form; together wilh the Supervisor's
·Comment Sheet, to the appel. !ant's immediate supervioor for
completion.
"Copies of all evaluative commentary by the immediate supervisor will be forwarded to
. the appellant.
d ) The Promotion Review
Panel may also request addi-

re-

ea'!!li..a~nib::ttyotrg!e~~ Health Plan Rules Liste d
.
fn ~~ff~~~~ .- For··D ependents' .Coverage

bml~ among the state's
p~bl~ inatitu.ticms,-has U!mporDependent unmarried .chil·
arJiy !&gt;&amp;lt;edrtl&gt;e · ~on of . drim ate cbvereii" ubder ·em•. ~ sc!&gt;ool at East Caro- ployee health insurance conhna u~"!"'ty.~
~IS only "until. ~ 1~
C.llfornla Ronald - - b_~day and there 1S no noli'
ftcation when they are no
gan • $1.1 billion hl&amp;her ed~on lonw.."'?,l«!~i :- t!te ,gerso!lD'11 .
budpt fur tile camtnc year recom- Office reinindeil faCUlty and
mencts-4ar the liNt tl.,.........,.
t.aff this eek.
operatlnc . . _ fur tile C.llfomla s How,.:; State em loyees
Stoll U~.- College 1JS- who have Statewide or
intern . fur, Unlvenlty of surance automatically maiJJts.in
C.litomla. 'nie and coverage for unmarried dependcol'&amp;WI $408 ml~, entsfrom 19 to 25 who are full.
0 16.9 per ....t ower the time students at accredited seccun-ent ~r; ~ wltll ·$399· ondary or -preparatory schools
million, or. an "11.11 per Cllllt - . , or colleges. There is no addilor tho UlilvwsiiJ o!Callfomla.
tional cost and · no action has
-. •
•
•
to he taken by the employee.
President Marcom Moos has . MelJ!!red State employees
announced a temporary freeze (indivtduals here prior to
on hiring at the UJliversity of 1962) who elected to keep "the
Minnesota end an extensive old UB insurance" may conbudgeli!ig review plan. Presi- tinue_ to have. coverag&lt;: for undent Moos said the freeze was marned dependent c h 1l d r en
neoesaary to "insure flexibility" from ages 19 to ~ who are full.
in planning in light of declin· time atuden~if the. employee
ing undergraduate enrollments, makes specific application to
declining Federal funding, and cover them. Employees in this
the prospects of a stabilized category are asked to contact
state appropriation for the Uni- the Personnel Office when the
versity.
- dependent child reeches age 1!!.
•
•
•
The addition&amp;) cost is appro:n·
A pilot at Ohio State mately $.~ bt-weekly by payUnMrsitJ . . . fur of
roll deduction.
100 hilh stuo1on1s a year
The dependent children of
eorller - · __
dlplo: Research Foundation employ"'"· The will
ees are covered in the some
regular - . . , In ....at cur- manner as regUlar State em-

dHI

-1 .

ricula.
•

•

· •

..been!k~ti:!&gt;'a!.."ts~~
flunked for turning in

::.~~..:C; ':

dfenaeuced._sradeo for...lhe same of-

• •

The t,.
llnMnii.J
"' _.,........
~
Irvine,
........ .,
&amp;1ft of $1 iillllan to 11nanwtlle ............... ofa

"*'

........................
Pfllloct .. ~ . ....... acholon ................ _

.......... tile ........... "' tile

W71ttlli _ . ., . . . . . . ...

11........_ _., . . . . ..........
~------fnllii
a. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.....,..,.,

..

and -..........,

-·"'~•IJ:

8, col. 6)

~-~is~ ~~~;P;iji~a~ ~

lecture.
Presented by the U/ B Coperni-

....
'

'

.-come,
A limited
numboir
of the
ti&lt;:UIB
are Uniall
avan.ble
em • flnt.
first aerve
beois in
Norioa
TiebtO...

t.'.cand Surety; H . J. Heiu; Mooc,
WEDNESDAY-28: Continen-

tal Can Co.; Jewel Homeohoppiq
Service; Prudential Insurance Co.
of America.

THURSDAY-I: Iroquois Gu

cus Committee in coop ~ ration
with the Office of Cultural Aft'ain,
the event is free and open to the

Corporation.

public.

NOTICES

UUAI MILOS FOllMAN
FILM FEniVAL..

ACTION INTfiVIIWS

ti":."~~:S~':t =g~~

a

· Tt.e

. .

pel//&lt;

at!~Jorf:~~rci.~k'~h~~:.;~~; th:;~ J~~r.;p~~J..:

John S Volkert 54 coordina tor for the oocu~cy serVices
section in the Facilities Planning Office, died Tuesday, February 13, in the v~ Administration H~_ital.
.
Mr. Volkert )Omed U/ 8 m
1966 and became scheduling director in 1970. In that capacity,
he was responsible for scheduling the University's 8,000
courses each semester and oupervisinJ space inventory.
- A native of Bulfalo, Mr. Volkert_ w~ a graduate ol Benne~ Hi~ ~I and of the
~ruve~1ty. His wor~ t!J:P!'f·
1ence mcluded seryt_"'! Wlth
Spencer-Kellogg I?•v-ISlon of
TeXt r 0 n Inc., Ptvot. Punch
Corp., the former Wood I&lt;
Brooks Co. of Buffalo and Old
Dutch Foods Inc. of Blasdell.
Acti~e in ~ . First Church
of Chris_t Scientist, '!" WilS'
former first readerand,eli~_:_~
a summer camp,
.~
ol the adult CODlllll~ ol _a
youth group. At ~ tirne of his
death, he was chairman of the
.board of the Church.

Members of the University community are invited ·
to be the guests of Michael Tilson 'Thomas end the
Bulfalo-Philharmonic On:bestn. for a free, limi!"'i audi. y, March 6, at 8:30 p.m., m Kleinence event on Tueeda
hana Music Hall.
·
event is called "Mahler~The Man A Ria ~uaic"
and is- being especially prepared for the academic cammunity.
1be oonoert will feature an exeminatiali in~ by
Mr. Thoma&amp; oi the Mahler Ni;Dtb 8y!npbaa.y. . , . camposition will be "taken apart, ~1 :r'~ ~
agliin in a unique end unusual
........
')

(Continued from

Faculty Club Dining Room, 8

John S • Volkert . AJ.aalo'r'~!V'~. £1.~!

1

review, will render • deciaioa,
ol which will be fur.
·
to the Preaident, tbe
Promotion Review Panel end
the appellenl 1be Board's eotion 8haU be final, provided,
howe-, that f1!811ignment to
a diff.....,t profa.ional rank
ahaJI be subject to approval ol
the Division of tbe Budgel
h ) A fi41 of tbe documeniB
referred to above will be available at the 0111ce of Penonnel
and Employee Releticml in
Central Adminllltn.tion for the
examination of the ap_pelllnt
or his properly d - I e d
agenl
.
.
•) Documents llf!ed m the
ap~ p~ure will he kept
conftdential, available only to
the ~ppellant end thoee per80D8
required to proceao the appeal.
The. University is p.--ntly
engaged in a comprehensive ,....
view ol all NTP positions within SUNY. It is expected that
position descriptions will be
deV..Iopecl University-wide. It is
our mutual belief that such a
review is importanl . . .

:;!:{

Weekly Communique-----

w.ith
a seventeen-year-old Czech who is
ployees. FSA or U / B Fdunda- intent UJ&gt;9D . both self diacQVery
lion staff members are coveted and nddmg hiiiuelf o! a tiresome
in the same manner as mer- virginity.
~ered -~te emp\?Y&amp;es with EXHIBITS . .
old UB msurance.
~

RfUUt.Uffft
z..:n:. ~-onic Concert

harmollic reports.

tiona! informatioft for ita revi- as provided in the Memorandum ol Undenitandina.
e) Copies· of the recommendation• ol the Promotion Review Panel, and the reasons for •
the .recommendation will be forwarded to tile appellant and to
the President upon the conelusion of the Panal's delibera~ona. The P"'C"'I's ~~·on to the Prestdent will aleo .
include 11:te forma completed by
11:te applicant and the superVl&amp;Of)r. ....__ Pres"d t will ·mak
.. ..,
• en
.
e
whatever recon;unendal\on he
deema appropnate. HlS recommendation, together with the
Panel's recommendation, and
the completed forma, will he
sent to ihe University Review
Board. A copy of the President's recommendation, if any,
will be forwarded to the Promotion Review Panel and the
appellanl
g) The University Review
Board ahaJI review the recommendations of the President
and the Promotion Review
Panel and, upon concluding its .

V'IS~%'2M ~~~::,;;~ua":.:
:::!t

~dfvifuai:te~:Jd~cot:~
the Univeraity Placement and Career Guidance Office, esl "1(,
!or an appoin-t.

. COUfOf

H OLICTIONS

\

An election lor the !hree-~ber College H Executive CounCil

~ - .. - . will-be ~~~

~Y•. F~bru-, _

qn

ary' 27, fto~m · 3 : 30-9 p.m. B8Jlola will be available for Collep H
ti: •·
membera during the polling houn
~ghf-kno:'1rt Gall~:oo at Rm. 2, _Maaloaald BaoemenL
ElmwQOC\ Avenue.
·
: , ~ mee~ for all Collop . H
•
meinbero will follow tbe eloctioJI
A"J.e":"~":Jlnk Drawinfl• by Well: (9 p.m.) .
ley Otm.ted Gallery 219, Nor- COUNHUNO SHVICI
ton, through March 2. Gallery
Prof..,iooal, personal and lamhour o: ~onclay-Friclay, noon-5 ily c:ounoeW., is ovailable at HiJ.
p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.: Wedneo- ~eplpoH:,~~&amp;""~~ ~:,:
day tpd Friday everunp, 7:30-!0 A. Cohen. call 836-4540.
fXHtiiT

•

.

. •

Hru:u Ho/nuum : The R&lt;Tifll&lt;
S•r
':J:"trac~ 'J,!'.,'1,~' 0 ru;'

p.m.
PNOTOOIIAPNIC EXHIIIT"

fiDRAI. SBVlCI IINftANCI IXAM

Photofi:C"! ~:r DtJl!I'Y Forman, .. The_ Fedarol_ Service E n l:,•yeo h Ma~. =~ E,:&amp;~ ~~d /::' ~:
th~ of Cultural Affairs in ~ndorf ~· 28 and 'ilfJ' at 9 a.m.
cooperation with University Publndividuala intereoled in - , .
licaliono Seniqeo.
the eum con obtain applicotion
.u&amp;IIONT-«NOX AIT OXHIIIT•
rorms·on Monday, Feb. 28. in the
Selected Wor.U b:r Art sw- Univeroity ~t and Caner
dmto, SUNY at Buffo/D, includ- Guiduce 081ce, Hayeo C.
iq paintinp, oculptura chawinp
and pbotocnopba, Mi.d.en• a.I- .WOAL , . , . _ Feb
all
I~ Albricht-Knox Art o.Jiery, .,:UtT!,~rua~ in
~pril ~-~ry t=·~ the Vete....,. Adminlatration RosFriday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Satunlay
pita! ~ lola will be towed
l-4 p.m.; Sunday, u p.m. Cl;;:.i away ot the ownor'o er;pe...._
Mondayo. .
OWCJ.4IP IIXAII • MAtH
Tbo ~~ ol Mau-tINTERVIEWS
ico .bn odledaJed tile ~
6uJ - i n - for~1'hroucboqt tbe - · OD· leT'o .M..u-tics 141 --for
compuo intemewo will be oon~~"l:te~·i!'a!..""l:;

::'.:

42
" Ridp Lea CampdL
~~..m:r~~:
taininc ~L~~ ~~~
~:£'..~J~s..""':"':.andc, ~ ~,:me.the~';

at.will ube1•
...
--~~

~L•,•

~-

THUR8DAY - 22: Matarial
~N~~
~;
Ccapllak

~ IDe.

FRIDAY _ 2l: ~ &amp;ooudl, IDe.;.._., Kodak &lt;'AI.;

~;
MONDAY -

r,..Corp,:

Bu.

=

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

- t h e taeedo and......-. of
tbe ClllmDIIIlity IIi cm1or to and .,.,.,. ~ __ .
01and
IIUCb
• coalrol.
...-ntel
_,...._

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

and abo- n1erra1. a u--.·
lit)&gt; for l'lamled ~

~-= :'.:00~

ba11aia- haw- 11ooDeel by a .......... of the Dalw_al__l.y

-.lRJr'
..

=~'":..~.,.:!
u:!r{"OU:.:w.. ~ :
t -!'
---;·. .. a........,_~~X;:_ : ::::. .
~·/::
'i'Lma'ISA'lf..._,
_ ~-~
(
•

r. .•

•

.

•

E ,;:rl •

�p~22,1973

Le/IGCY. Hillel HOUM, 40 Capon
Bhd., 4 p.m.

_FORTRAN
, _ C:uo'ra
··
IV, a eamp--

-·

lli-fe introdaclion to the l.oquqe
and ito applic:G!ma. 4238 _Ridce

Leo., Rm. 12. 7 p.m.

.

Science Friction (Vande"-1&lt;.
1958-65) , Skuilduu&lt;ry (Vander·
beek, 1960) B~ (Vanderl&gt;eek, 1964), 147 Diefendorf,
7 p.m. Flee.

11

"¥'-~.s·Hillel

Houoe, 40 .Ca-

-·

pen Blvd., 7 p.m.

G/oooto Before.Breolrfaol (Rich·

ter, 1927), The S&lt;MMU and the
Clergyman (Dulac, 1928) , Un
Chien Andalou (Bwmuel, 1929) .
Lu Myaura .W Cloakau dit De
(Ray, 1929), 147 Diefendorf, 7: 30

....

p.m. Free.

.

T lo e MtJ171ificmt A,.,.,....,.

(W.U., UH2), 147 Diefendorf,
9
'
on h.!ianapolia
family at the end of the 19th
century. Richly oricinaJ in oound
and i.m.qinative uee of the camera.

~ ::C,~r'c;r

CAC CINEMA*

D~,.'J!,//:1:. r4ot~~· 7?~/!:j

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

9:45 p.m. TickeD at 75 cents can

be obtained at the Norton Hall
Ticlcet Office.
This is an adaptation of the

of

•Opon to public;
••Opon tD nwnboro
the University;
•Opon only t o - - a ~I Interest In the subject
Coni8Ct Nancy Cardarelli, 831·2228, for llotlnp. -

No admission charge.
Co-sponsored by th_e UUAB
Literary Arlo CoDUDlttee and
WBFO radio (88.7 FM) .

THURSDAY-22
INTIIHAT10NA1 WHK EXHIIIT*

Chin.eH cloy carving de!f1-0n-

atration by John Chan, Chinese
Student Aalociation member,
Haai Lclllllp, Norton. through

Friday, Feb. 23.
In ,.ddition to Mr. Chan'• p_re·
11011tation, . exhibits tepreoenting
other cultuna participating in
International Week activities will
be on display. 'lbe event. are
aponoon&gt;d by the International
Affain division of the Student
Alaociation.

wrQ.u IICTUII SHIH•·.
· A118lo-Icelalulic

Fuhery

(~~ ~o~ePri:efo~Li~:"t!'~}

which outlines the events of one
day in the life of a Siberian labor
camp prisoner during the Stalin
regime. Ivan's bleak, dehumanizing ezi.!ltence is vividly portrayed
by Tom Courtenay.

.

Du-

HIWL SAIIATH SERVICE•

FRIDAY-23

Torah study session and Oneg
Shsbbat, Hillel House, 40 Capen
Blvd., 8 p.m.

MANAG~ WOmaHOP#

Bookkeepins and the Minority
Businessman, Bleu Poyntt Supper Club, 616 Michigan Ave., 9
a.m.-5 p.m.

INTEINAtiONAL FOLK DANCING •

Instruction in baaic step8 during first hour, 1 Die!endorf An·
nex, 8 p.m.

uJ'U,B~~~

::f IM"!::~e~
MinQrjty Management Asawtance

LATIN AMDICAN NIGHT•

Featuring Latin dancing and
music and ref-reshments ; no dmission charge, Fillmore Room,

Program.
WOMEN'S COUNCIL MlUING ..

N;.tc·!,f;":'~ presented by the
WO~~~ 'ri~hl: ~~~~~~': {~! Latin
American Club as part of

~~-=dJJ~~'Ji.6i3'5d~~ ~"!.~l33s~~~ :~:.wited

f._ar, University of Wisconsin
School of Law, 77 W . Eagle St.,
1

~-:;.,nted

of Law.

by the

~/ B

School

lfCTUif·

Carnegie-Mellon University, 332
Norton: 2 p.m.
. The lecture. presented by the
Graduate Student Association, is
free and open to the public.

CONCEIT*

Graduale R e c i t a l, Winifred

~F~vi. B~!iz:J~~~~

Barbara Warren on piano; Robert
on viola daJ.amba; Jo

Don~n

~rinea!':U~~~~·a:t::J

Recital Hall, 8 :30 p.m.
The T'8Cital will include' worb

Wo~":s~s.~ve~d ~=:

0

Presented by the U/ B Department~~ ~~c.

HIU£L GUAUI PAITY*

SUNDAY-25

WEDNESDAY-28

VARSITY HOCKEY•

U I B vo. Oswego, Twin Rinb,
Cheektowaga. 2 p.m.
HILW. COfflE HOua•

Featurinf Rabbi · Herman L.

~llro~o o~Tf!e ::.:l~tl. ;:,.~

Works by PoliBh Composen,
featuring pianist Roger Shields,

be~~F:~wwsat.Afau ~.::

~~e·~orrt!~~~~ cthl~ ~~

ish generals and lung disease.
Also atarring Robert Taylor and
Lionel Barrymore.

Refreshments will be served,
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.,

COPEINtcUS
COMMEMOIAtiON CONCEIT•

miT~ :~1e:·tu.,;-length film in
which the Chinese communists

!fi~~r:te~dr,!!ii~=~~ x:k~

8 : 30 p.m.

a .chilly RU88ian spy who fall.a in
love ')With Count Leon , Dalga
(Melvyn Douglas).

CHINESE FILM*

UUAI GAllO )JLM FESTIVAL••

Camilk (Cukor, 1936) , Conference T h e a t r e, Norton. check
showcase for timea. Acb:niuion
charge.
As Dumas~ tragic heroine in

International Week activities.

ligr~~.:~h~~:::":li. ~: o~

The East is Red, 147 Diefendorf, 3, 7 and 9:30 p.m. No ad-

TUESDAY-27

UUAI GADO FILM FESTIVAL••

Ninotchko ( Lubitsch, 1939) ,
Conference The at r e, Norton,
check showcase for times. Admission charge.

New DireclioM in Theatre: A
Participatory L e c t u r e. Andy
Wolk, Department of Theatre,

-

Denioovitch, 140 Capen, 7:46 ud
9:40 p.m. Ticlcets e.t 76 cents can
be obtained at the Norton Hall
Ticlcet Office.

The Student Polish Culture
1

:ronda;:n ~~~3 :;!_el House,
PresentA!d by the Hille Grad

Dr. Larry B. Chun:h, aooiatant
professor, U/B ~nt of

g~:;:;o~ A~ ~~i~
p.m. Coffee at 3: 45 p.m.
WATU IHOUICII iiMINA.I#

w~::'i:::~; ~~.=:

Club.

din, Uniwroity of Florida, 32

UUAI GAllO FUM fESTIVAl*•

p~ :~~

~;btheil c~:!J. The~~n f~~"~h; eo~f:r:n~reT~ i~~7"N~=l:

Chinese with subtitles) . Produced

· in China in 1965, the film is based

FOSIU CoUOQUiiiM.

•ur-:-

eeries

check showcase for times. AdmisaiM charp. _
. Tolstoy's tragic lo~ chronicle
is an excellent vehicle for Garbo,
who here deals with the attentions of three adorinll men: her
husband (Basil "Rathbone), her
laver (Fn&gt;dericlc March), and her
son (Freddie Bartholomew) .

of aeminan dealina with the pro·
cel8el that in11uenoe water IIIO'Ie·
ment and water .quality. -I'Iaent-.
ed by the U/B Center for Inland
Water Reeource..
COMPUtiNG CENI'II IIMIN.U••
FORTRAN IV, a eamprebensive introdudion to the .l.aDpage
8Dd ito applications, 4238 Ridp
. Leo., Rm. 12., 7 p.m.

CONan• -

. WEDNESDAY NIGHf DOUIU

on a huge pageant staged in the
Great--Hall of the People-ill- Peking in 1964. Dif[erent episodes
of the Chinese Revolution are
dramatized; music and choreography include both the Chinese traditional art form and Western

concert at $2.50 for gelleral admission and $1 {or a_tudente are...availahle at the Norton Hall Ticket
Office.

styl es.

INTEINAnoNAl· WEU:

ENGINERINO SCIENCE: SEMINAl#

lcyoung, Conference Theatre, Nor-

Chang, assiatant profeuor, U/ B
Department of Civil Engineering,

dent Auociation

t!:,~
fla~~;viM~:
~b;.;n~the
sha Haoaett,
ceUo, and David Wit- Ro
__ -· i~t~memo~rabGle.
_

VAHrTY fENCING•

ten, piano, Baird Recital Hall, roloo.

SATURDAY-24

P.resented by the Chinese Stu- · ·DEMONOTIATION•
dent Associabon as part of .InKaNJte -demonatration ·~ blaclc· ·
temational Week activities.
belts Lee Wanjo and Kim Jae-

a!!: ~i~~r:'t::~. obr.l'if.irjf

to~~~tJb"y

Parker.

U/B va.
of
Technology, Clark Hall, 1:30 p.m.

\

•

VA:ft'II :•r-;:t:,c;:.a, Clark

~.

Life, D • a t lo and Language:

Hall,

2 p.m.

~-D~":':i~'"a. '7-..!r.~~~ · INlHNATJONAL "fiESTA•

of

SIIIIIINAa•
~o:;;.,.::::~of~~=:';: ~J!o~'t,Z Gi!ta at $1 for
State Uniwnoity of Iowa 8cbool atudents and $2.60 for pneral
of ModiciDe, G-22_ Capeo, 4

su;-,:r"'"TIC!'I'
Union

of

p.m: admiaaioa are

(~ ~rad),

p-led by

available at the
Noo1on Hall Ticlcet 08ke.

dae Soviet v.uiorr _,.~ · ·

~•

~tb,N~~~

..,_:.

.......

.

~_'f&amp;g• ;!';,!"

·
Rinb,

CAC CINIMA* -

O... ·,Dpy

in #a&lt;

8

9

1

' ~!'-::,';ncert will include works ~~t"1r ~~rpe

~k~~-. ~~~J"n&amp;~,t

Presented by the U/ B Department of Music.

•

Grene, Uniwrwity
Califonua at .
FeaturiDg a cultural variety
Da · 4244 RidP. ~ Rm. 16 ahow with 110np, danoeo, panto3: ~
~-' mime. aod other presentations by
U / B 1tudenta from outside the
~
United States, followed by a oamPeculi4ritia of Fotty Acid Me- · i&gt;.IID&amp;"lina" of ethnic fooda, Fillmore

1, . _ , _ -

fiAT'Uiil•

Public Enemy (Wellman, 1931) ,
140 Capen, 7 p.m. Little c-r.
~

Rochester Institute

~tr!S:~S::n:_:;e:fioo~Pi;;

PHILOSOPHY LICTUII.

the Korean Stu-

S enior Recital, Linda Hanley,
violin student of Peter Salalf; 88·

Lif• -of IIXm

MONDAY-26

CoUep,

Clark Hall, 8 :30 p.m.

THURSDAY-I
HIUEL ClASS* .

Introduction

Foeter, 2 p.m.

to

Judaism , 310

SEMINAl IN UUAINIAN CULTWI
AND CrviUZATJON•

Recenl U•raine-The Economic

Situation, Dr. Nicholas Chirov-

~~n~bi.'f~
endoif, _7 p.m.

,

•COfiiHICAN ~·

.:

•

1rra4ow and Copernicuo, Dr.

·Karol Eatzeicher, profe.or of art .
history and muoeum dino:tnr. Jagiellonian University, ~ow,
and . (Continued on 7, ~ 4)

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

ril tab place duriDI. ~ .... with tint a - beainniDI
~: Upper floom ap-..fitiam duriDc euiy, 1973 . pear &amp;m-t .-ely for fumiturer
ad ... - " Ill' locill - - wjWe - - ......... atill -~­
tnldara . . . piOlridecl - - lelecl with COIIIItnldion appanl-

BY JOHN 'I'HtJRBl'CiN
,_--

V - ' H winter ..a11er ·In

=-~~ ~~=..,~aooo

Equal Employment Action Plan
To Benefit Women and Minorities-

be
In Amhent.
·· Q'Brian Hall contains ·a moot
Aa ~ Clllltmt- up- · courtroom, aamed for Carlos
ward, inward ·aDd onward at C. Alden. larae lecture balls,
various ~~tape,- the U/8 Office olficoa, claasrOoms aDd space
An affirmative action recruit- and Women will provide inforof Facilltiee l'laJmlnt ._ au~&gt;- tor inOie than aoo.ooo volumes ina procedwe which will asoist mation relative to prospective
mitled · a tarpt data of late In the Cba.rias B. Saara law li- U/B "in provid.inJ equal em- candidates. Department. are
111'11 • the ballwa.y comple- brary.
.
·
ployment opportunities" was urged to caU upon the ruources
tion point of the Deir ·
'11M! Governors Re8idepce 8JIDOUJICed by President Rob- of thue llDO Committee~ in
Structwea farthest akin~ ..in 'Hall complex bas been Almost ert L. · Ketter aDd became ef- their ncruitment effort..
clevelopmeot-~~~W~. .Ihe Gowmon entirely' furnished aDd. Will be feclive this week.
Step 5: When a suit&amp;ble canRelideiM» Hall~ lolm relldy for OoCupeucy. this
""-- roced
.
·
altema didate has been identified for
18
Lord O'Brian HaJI.=-Ihe lAw ap'riilg. Ail - dul'&gt;liCale of
• '' '' P
we
an
· the position in question, the de--~ •·~ ~ a """"'
-'--•~ ""
-· m
· ,.,;.
tive toconcept
a ~
"incentive
....
,_. at ...
....," . pool"
for lmprovinJ
OJ&gt;- partmental chairman will pl!D-.!lila
·
,J-.pb El- ' 81111.-.(J ' wrsity iJoDeie at p(.rtunities for. appointments of plete the ~ Procedwe Rellcott Oollete ~ Ellll!iPt ~ the coloplei,-- de- minorities 8nd woiDI!h at the port and forward it to tbe Pn&gt;for ' nlllllliDin&amp; ·briek~WOI'k - siped-by LM. Pei, will- bous&amp; University which was ruled il- vost or Healtb Sclomce -Dean.
oa the Collep-Gomiilez. ....a. 800 students in dOuble ·rGOIIIIL lepl in Albeny last month.
Step 6 : . The Office ol the
on these 8lructlires bas inoved 1M structure consiSts of four
Albany s o u r c e s indicated, Provost or Health S c i e n c e
to ·the interior.
quadrangles' surrounding a cen- Ketter said, "in no uncertain Dean will forward the Search
Oocupency of O'Brian Hall (Corrt.inued on 8, col. I)
terms" that an incentive pool P rocedure Report (if aJ&gt;would be not only questionable proved ) to the President's
but against ·the law.
n.e ruling, however, t h e
President emphasized, "did not
remove the responsibility from
this University to act in a posi·
tive fashion witb regard to aggressively providing equal employment opportunities."
SubeequenUy, he indicated,
several meetings were held witb
The Representstive Council
various individuals, including of the Senate Professional Asrepresentatives from the Presi- sociation (SPA) , meeting in
~~m:~~;~~n ~ Albany last Saturday, voted 31Women and Minority Faculty 26 not to recognize and send to
and St&amp;ff Recruitment, to worl&lt; the general membership for an
out a more suitable procedure.
advisory referendum a propoeed
'That procedure "reviewed constitution and by-hws for
and modified," is:
SUNY/ United which w o u 1 d
Step 1: To initiate the re- have had the purpose of mergcruitment for a specil'IC JJoculty ing SPA witb the Stste Univerposition, either "new'' or "turn- sity • Federation of Teedlers
over," 'the dep&amp;Jtmental Chair- CAFL-CIO) -provided SUFI'
man muat complete . an Auth- had also ratified the document.
orization to Recruit form, pvInstead, the Council paaoed
ing detailed information !IS re- a motion under the ·terms of
queeted.
.
which the Council itself elected
Step 2: n.e Authorization to a COIDJDittee of ten members
Recruit form muat then be for- (five 8CIIdMnics aDd five DODwaided for approval by the de- te&amp;chili, ~) "110 inpe.rtmentai Chairman to the Vl!lltipte the coets . alld bep&amp;.
Provost or Healtb Science filii ol....,.... or aftiliatian·witb
Dean, and by them · in 'tum to SUFI', AAUP, ·~ ..and
tbe appri:lpriate VU:e Pnoddent, other poaslble lfCIIIP8 aDd r&amp;befoJe recruitin&amp; may begin.
port ita flftdlnp to the May
s 3: u!P&lt;I!' a~l'OY8l' roval ay
by ~of
the CouDciL
w.
. TaiD~-.
tbe. lep
appropriate Vice Preaideut,
..,, _._
,..._
tliey will .then forward 8p- dent of the UI B Health Sci-

Panel for the Review of Search

Procedun!e, in care of

the Pres-

ident's Office.
Step 7: The Pres i'dent ' 8
Panel for the Review of Search
Procedures will then l!lllliDine
tbe March procedure employed
for each proposed offer of employment It should be well understood that the review liven
by this Panel.-is 10laly for tbe
purpa of reviewina the ...m
procedan!B foliowed, ad ia not
concerned with the andidata
selected or their qualifications.
This . review panel will att&amp;ch
its recommendations to the
( Contimud on

ptll/0

2, coL 3)

SPA at Turning Point;
Merger Plan Rejected

=

to~~ f'!:. At!~) f.:""~~~

gsining agent for -the 16,000
rnem.bel's of the SUNY professional staff, aays Dr. Robert S.
Fiak, U/B professor of educational studies and a member of
the Representative Council and
the Stste Eucutive Board, who
has been active in SPA alf.airs
· since its e8tahlisbmenL
SPA's nesotiatiorlS witb the
State for the economic terms·
of employment for the third
year o{ the cummt-.- will
Presumably' continue, F i 8 k
·aays. He JUdaee
apparent
witliin tbet
the the
organization may not 8trentthen SPA
at the barJainiDa table this
y - but will atreRithen the or- tion in the Jo.., nm
providinJ
pation ad a broader
of
membenbip.
CIYni:8 ID .....,_
FiSk feels that altbouih tbe
Saturda actions mirror • rift
witbin
pnieent SPA orpnization, tbey alao provide a
"chance ·to ......,.; ad .....
group" in order lo bUild •
stronger orpriization with more
membership -one whieh will,
hopefully, be better able to
represent tbe needs of the
SUNY professional slllff in the
next tbree-Y.ear contract witb
the State.
.
Rejection of tbe proposed
new constitution was not a rejection of SUFI', Fisk said, but
was a challenge. to ·!¥. process
by Whicli the constitUtion was
formulated - a process whicb.

=

more~­

g_;

the iuitiatinJ daparlinent; ( b) . ~~~ ~~
. the llpp!:"\)ilate l' r o v o 8 t or - - · - ·-"' owuuw....._
Health Sc:ieOOe Dean; (c) the
At the OODCiuoion of-the Sat. Oftice .of the Recruitment Com· Urdioy ~SPA State J'reomittees, ·Box · 26, 192 Hayes ident Robert GraJlpr a.lted to
Hall; ( d) tho! Oft'ICe of Eqwil · be relieved of .hia _dutia tor •
Opportunity; and. &lt;el the Di- three-week ~ Alan WDIrector of Personnel, for post- aey of the Slate University Colm,.
•
lege at eortl&amp;nd will be. actmg
Step ~ Upon
ail _ presidenL
•
approved Authorization 110 Re- .
The events of the -...keod
cruit fonn, the ~ Presidential conatJtnte a klrllinl -point for
Commiu.&amp; on the Recnlitment the lhree-year.old orpnlzation
and Promotion of Minorities which aervee aa collect!w hal' . (Conlinud on -

._.villi

"!, col.

I) .

�,.......,. 15, 1973

v

2

SPAatTUnUDcPmni--~--~-----------(~ froa -

1, col. I)

l'llk boldo, WIIB in
' 1•1
with lbe direcliollo ol the SPA
n.-tatiwo CouDdl jut fall
..._ lbe matter WIIB finlt CUD-

~tative-Coundlleameil

Oil

~in a leUer flam

Peter E.

. P r . . I d e nl,

Council of
led a.ptma,
Amerioen ABiclatfao o1 Uni-

atiOD with StJFt per .e. aaid
. Simply stated, Fisk
•
the majority of the Repreeenta· tive Cciuncil felt thai lbe COD·
atitutioo document """ not defeaaible and therefore should
not 110 to lbe pnma.l member·
ship. Mercer propooeniB may
'ariue that t£..i oppoaiti~
un:
~--ti'cally in dlis inatance.
_.......G
Fisk says, .b ut be reject&amp; that
&amp;rJUIDI!Dl
•
. In fact, be notes, tbe Rep!"'
aentative Council's' Executive
Committee noted also that tbe
the
situation imposed by
pro-M
new constitution waa
r.;.::;:'~ -and . ambiguous. The
-.
. ti' 18
.
new (proposed) coostitu on
not a merger agreemenl U the
constitution is a component in
a bilatetal agreement with
SUFI' u- the full agreement
is w~t should be submitted
for approval."

Job Outlook Better for·
-Engineers, ;lccozmtants

u-,. _._

varsity p,.,_,.., State UniBy SUSAN A. CAMARoo
stays of the Weatern New York
veraity of New Yolk, that
area, opportuniliea for jobs in
BoUdz::"there are no-barriers to alfiliaCo"-e ·studen.ta _gradua.tinl -tala and cbemicals are imSPA ~
to •- tion. . f and lbe other ~rewith ~ m eDglDMfiDI or pro~ on lbe Niapra Fron:"e
aentativea ot suN Y-AA
aocountinl this year should'¥
thathet
1110 ~ that tbla WIIB
would be pleased to ..-t WI
an exp8lldinl job market m
........,
"''"
.... representative&amp; of SPA to disN
" ... but thoee there will be peater openings
Western ew .or..,
in lbe acieocea and mathe-dOGe, 111* 111Y11. '"11wa. u,., cuaa in specific. detail an alfilia·
nal illue Ia that of an o«icer- tioo."
.
.
graduate&amp; interested in teach- matico, althoucb the a c t u a I
~te!_arpnizatioa."VL a
From W••'-' _ _._, Woodley
mg bad better be prepared for number of jobs will still remain
~-Y demOcraCY
.......,.._.,
u
a continued sbortaae of jobs, re1a ··-•- small
n---ta allbe -utlltion . B. Oabome, director of co ecaccording to Eugene J . Mar!!&gt;ll.
u.....,
•
~
Included live mp""""""tion and associdirector of the U/B Placement
Drake aeea a particular de~~::0:.'.- ·._... U/B ate counsel, AAUP, wrote
and Career Guidance OIIICe. uiand in the field of computer
- ,,...._..,..,_ ...,..
B
that ..
discusaed
acienoe u~ ,._,. howe
that
dlaplemalSPA. Joeepb.Drew,
rown
···we
Martell and lArry &gt;R. Dmke.
· • .,.. """"'
ver,
..._ meipr with SPA before SPA's
........;•tedirector, this week dis- within. the nezt two or three
in
JIIOII&amp;IIIIDir ·
""' dec:iPin to alfiliate with NY8~the employment picture yeou:~~ there will be no real imData ~
ter, coo,.. TA. And
· after SPA's
~........,..
provement in the number of
dlnaled ..rorta to defeat the
,......._ the~UP's Council
on the Niapra Frontier in jobs related to research acti-.
•-.......
SUNY
terms of a recent atudy con- viliea.
_ ~ 'WIIf' "'IJJiiiiil!'' '1IIF-cllf Milialed Chapter&amp; at
dueled by. the Colletle Placenew comtitutian, Fillk
e;ns~i'a.~"'::;
ment Council which reported ·em~=~.::W,:t!;~: ~
. cated, may cbarp that Oppole
,..__,_,_8
l Tb
the current employment trenda much to ,,__, -~ graduates
··
i
ve by lbe ro aa _..........., agen
eoe
on tbe national scene.
·
....,.,.,.. ~ ~
~ ~ ~SUNY to plat overture&amp; were rebuffed.
According to the national as to graduate&amp; with technical
SPA. but, Jle· aid,
yolir iri&lt;JuitY
the fira~
study, a 16 per cent increase ~If"'&lt;e ~ ~~~oppOsition ~ came flam ~18to'=
that !he' Na- (Contituud from ,.,.. 1, coL 6) in hiring in all disciplines at !'t!........ the "'{J;;:Y'"g
cu t
- _. .Jeaa&amp;. t!uee Of tbe four-year ti'onal AA'P'!' and the AAUP Search Procedure · Report . and all de~ Je~ is anticipated ~ ......~
.
s, an sug-"
of the twl&gt;-:1'1!8f
~UP'&gt;!
by b'72 responding employers. . ~8~t thabe tf-~to aria .madJOalrs
~~.:::'the Coli
of Fo,.. SUNY ·I.:OUDCU would be hap- forward copies within 72 hours Drake pointed out that· tbe ......,. .
~-?&gt;ns• er ~
ep u:- py to inuilediately enter into to (a} the appropriate Vice Western 'New y 0 r k employ- tematives '!"ch. aa governmental
~. 88 well 88 from if"!
· detailed diacuaaiona s h o u I d President; and (b) the Office ment market, however, has not ~rlt or a job m !.\Je aal"'! field,
vemty and 'bealth iiCiences there be subetantial interest on of Equal Opportunity.
improved aa rapidly as tbe mar: 8llloe that market 18 operung up
shi~ .r.ar' of the SPA leaderStep 8: Specific approval to ket in the rest of the nation, or and welcomea people from varJ·
-·~-~ of
~p:
offer employment muat then be even in the nortbeasl He l:ited ous ba~ds. He added that
SPA ~ '!"me ......,
Thus, aaid Fisk, tbere was a . granted by tbe appropriate Vice several reasons for this ilitua- tbere 18 stil! a great d~d for
~oralfiliati'!"~ta question of tbe credibility of President prior to any CIJIDDlit- lion: "'The Western New York ~duateo m '!ccounting1 a~d
With o~ orpruzations,, Fisk the tearo which worked out the ment being made to an itl.divid- area suffers • from 8 lack of di- thinka that ~hi!' demana w1ll
feels, becauae at ~ 1t has new constitution and the pro- IJill applicant. Neither tbe Vice veraity. Althoti1: there is a last at leaat until 1980.
only. 3,000 d.-.JM!YUII mem- posed merger with S U FT. President for Academic .AJJairs
·
ti
--.... 1 . . _ _ .
~out of a potential member- Members ·onfiat group, in ad- nor the Vice President for fairly aubstan
concentra on - • m,..~.~ ..
ship of 16,000. Between 5•000 dition to Granger were Will- Health Sciences will approve of
industry here, industry Th........ the . and 7,000 ~are,__ sey, Herman Doh,'Piattsburgh, such action until he receives a is no onger moving into ~
In general, Drake and Mar·
area and few large. comparues tell see tbe total employment
aary for a financial and mem
bershi baae which will ~ and Gayle Hotal!ng, De I h 1. Search Procedure Repol't from have corporate 0 f f 1 c e s I:J;ere. picture in tbe Western New
pte
tati'
of the There 18 no ev1dence, Fisk the Review Panel or tbe 72 Th_us, graduates who want jobs York area as steadily improvadequa
. represen on
again emphasized, that the hours bave passed.
·
1&lt;H&gt;ffice J J ha
prof-.onal staff, . be says. tearo even looked at affiliation
Step 9: After making his de- on a corpora
eve
ve ing. Drake remarked, " As of
SUFI' ~ an estimated 600 . w.ith organizations other than tenninatiqn, the Vice President to "!"~e a~yU:d employmr!'t now, there are no indications
members m SUNY, and m&amp;J1'"· SUFI' .
will "" inform, by copy -c;&gt;f tbe statistics. ,or
area "'!'Y 8g that there will be an unprecewould PI!I8UlDIIbiY bave m.
·
Search Procedure Report, the ~ · ~- ~tioiUd· dgiuea
dented' dov.'ntum. 'Unless a nacreesed SPA membersh_ip. Other~
appropriate ProvO!!t or Health b~l . · . . .
.
.
tion,widll es:oriom!c catastrophe
Some within SPA (those op. Other objections to the "mer· ·· • d
Enit-m.a l'rqope!;ll ~ ·
~there aho.lild be a steady
posing the- ~ coDlltitu-' ger" constitutiop, as stated in Science Dean, the lDIIiating ,.. ··The haticinAJ studY. l'ePdrla ini!&gt;ro11emimt t h r o u g h the
tiOD) feel, hoWever, that ·.the an !'Opposition Position" paper
~,2!~·~ ~ that pfosp.icta·api&gt;ear bfightes~ 1970's." .'. _
'
. :
way to na1 growth is to fonn · were that it would remove the Office of Equal Opportunity . for student&amp; majoring in omJiHow do 'these fill""'"! aftect
The member~ hiP ot\be neerinJ, where hiring on· all de- the typl, of COI1l!8"1ing that tbe
a col.lecUve bar~ coali- limit of two terms which an
ti011 open &lt;to all, poaaibly in- o(ficer may 'serve . un~er the Search Procedures. Review giee -Jeviilii .is' ezpected· to im- Pfabement Oftice gives students?
eluding AAUP and CSEA. p - t - SPA constitution and Panelcalledforin' thenewpro- prove by 26 per oent ' in ·1973: Drake aaid that be would not
CSEA; ' fc)r example, presently reduce the terms of office of cedure has not yet been named Altholllih the U/B Placement discouraae a student from fields
has on liB rolls 1,500 members the executive board from two by the President's Office.
Otlice cfoes not yet bave enough that looked bad for emploYu&gt;ent
pr the SUNY professional staff, years to one year Ia SPA condata on ·..,.meerina joba to in the .near future, but that he
preeumably becauae of the -low- stitutional aroendment this past
c.0
compute iiB own:paroenta&amp;e for would make the atudent aware
cast.inauranoe'planavailable.to year had raiaed·the terms-froi:n
1•
W•temNewYork,Drakedoea of lbe situation and let him
iiBmemberS. AJso,aincethe&lt;ll'- . one year to ·two). Mqreover,
see a noti.-ble !Jn~t make his own ~io'!- . "We
lginal SUNY election to select both officers and e :x e cut i v e
in the market for enpneera and bave a strona reopon&amp;ibility to
a. ~ agent, AAUP na- board memben; would be alA 16-week Pediatric Nurse technical people.
make atudoniB aware of what
~ ~ forcefully endorsed lowed 'unlimited succession.
Associate program to p._..,
"Becauile of the decree8e in is waitinl in aoc:lety for them
collective barpining. There
The opposition paper, signed
· tered uraes for expanded the nUlllbef of people 110inl in- ..._ they graduate. There are
may, thus, be strong support by Fisk, Brown, Drew, Conin
health care of chil- to eDgiMerina iii the laat few a· multipllcity of waya of enterflam AAUP fOr a SUNY coali- stantine Yeracaris, president, dren is being launched by the years, due largely to the accant inl difterent fields, and we will
tion. At any rate, the panel Buftalo Center Chapter, SPA, School of Nursing in coopers- on the humanities and lbe tillht- alwaya try to alert studeniB to
eatahliabed by lbe SPA Repre- and representatives from Stony lion with Children's Hoepital. neos"of the~ maiket the alternatiwiL"
aentatiwo Council last weekend Brook, Fredonia, Stooy Brook
Eight registered nurses are in in 197~71, there very well may
Martell a d d e d that gel&gt;will "!DPioo:8 all tbeae oPtions." Health Sciences Center, Bing- the first program, aooording 1o be a shortage of engiDeera by ~
lbe key to
Tbia 18 the aame exploration hamton, and Upstate Medical Miss Norma O'Hara, associate 197-4 or 1975. The filuree in the
tinl
; die possiof all options which was tbe Center, also stated ''We believe profes80r of nursi,ng and chair- national study..r.. ~. m11151
illty of fJndin&amp;
::=.:..r~~
aenae of the original SPA Rep- that this (proposed constitu- man of ·t he Deparlinent of Child be qualified. u.ere will prob- be waniB is peatly
if
,_tative CoUncif resolution tion) would, potentially, if not . Health at the School of Nurs- ably be a peat improvement in a student ;. Wll1inc 1o relocate.
·laat fall Under the terms of inevitably, result in a strong ing, who is project d~r.
entry into the engmeering 8eld,
A~~
that reaolutioo, SPA Preaident offi&lt;:er cadre which will domThe fi.rat class will f!Bduate but there may not - m y
~r,eu
Gruaer set up a De~~Dtiations inate SPA imil - uWmately June 1. Graduate&amp; will serve be-mobility within the induatry,
'
committee to inveotipte pair· lead to one man tule." Further, in comprebenaive care clinica, since people w,ltl!. ~ e:xperiUT.eapon
slble SPA affilleQona Accord- the opposition argued. . guaran- well-baby Clinica .and pediatric enoe or a speciali:zation haw a
r~•
III!M 15'
~n~ ·to p:..a. that _ _ ,.._ ·~ . tee. of......._,_;..,..,_ on the board
·"'- Ano'"- class·' 13 ...~ higher aa1ary range, and thus a
"'·--- .,___.... .....__ ar
~i;' G....p;,-.,i.;;d-;.; to oer~~ constitu- ~
will b:,gin 'tl!; hardertheir•-~... finding joba on ~ ;:;"~&amp;lr.J~
alternatfwos, other than the re- enciea would bave been re- program in September.
..,..,.
man 'Ibunday af1emooo (Febv'-1 -atution Which would moirea, .and NTPa Wlllild bo,ve
The program received a threeAocordfug to · the College ruary 8) and charpd him with
bawl set up the merpr with loat all but tokeu repreaenta- . year gran[ of ~1 430 flam the Plaoemen Council atudy, em- po...aaa ala c1anpnua .-pSUFI'. 11ae QPeB!II to have tioa on~ -tive ·bosrd. . . Bureau of ' Heillm
Manl,&gt;OWI!r ployer .~ f~ th.e oo.
' - ....,._.t within !hoi
"¥erger,". -.he Oppo8itiol!' Eduelltion, National Inatitutea , moat mgniflcant mcreaaeo this
J!ftl. J, ....,_ al526 Hum~"' CouDdl ..- to SP&lt;ilresmeD aald; "seems to· be of Health.'
year !"" aeroapaoe, metals, and . boldt ..l'UittNy Bulralo, aJJegwbiiiber oi not CSEA and tbe ,__ to model ua after
· chem~cala.
-edly had a 11; c:allblr Colt
AAUP · inlereated in an· other- uhions, inanY 'of. which
zn· ,.,_ .... _.J_
Martell noted that Western
tomatic plato1 in bla ~
alfiliatfao with SPA. Yet, have become notonoui! for domVUIIUUU
New York would not be greatly : . , ..... . ba was inwlftd in
-members of SPA ba,;, let- ination by the few. We believe
State University'of New York aftecled by the ~ in the an auto ~ in froiat of
tea Which indicate intenaat on hilbet edi,IC8tion sb001d de- has announced a Canadian aerospace fleld, smoe. Bell ~ Hayes Hall ebout S:lli p.m.
lbe p.rt ol both tbeae orpni- velaR il&amp; own co~ve bar- Studies Program in Montreal Calspan !"" the ~Y industries Payne reportedly c1rbpped the
zatlooa.
. gaining models and should for the fourth consecutive year. undertaking any kind of larae- ~ to the pouDCI. _wilile
CIEA AIIUr w.nc
' a..,id ioutboritarian struclurel!. Applications are -currently be- acale aeronautical '!'Irk in
looJdD&amp; for .his ~tor'a licenae
In a letter to members of the ... Our PJiriwy objeCtion . . . ins acCepted from all interested !"""- H'! also ~ BP:UlBt and Whicle reptratfoo.
RepNeeotatiwo Coulldl, Tbec&gt;- ,is that the meqer ~ is SUNY undergraduate&amp;.
mterpre~ statilitica too U~He was c:bUaed 1JDder secden Wenzl, president of not IIIIIIPIY a merpr but rather
Coilt of tbe program is ap-· ally, ~mtinf out that tbe,. m- lion 265.06-10 oldie N..WYork
CSBA, aid, "We are bopefu) - 1 8 a radical change in prOximately tbe same as a .y ear !"""""'· m tbe nlll!'her of Jobs State Penal Code which p~
that you '!'8f consider the poa- tbe orpnizational atnlcture and at a SUNY unil
m tbe aeroapaoe industry, for iiB the ~ of lbeaims on
~ ol JDVitiq us to an procesaeo. We are receptive to
Deadline for applications 'for exam~;&gt;le, may not be that ~t. the n ..........tv of an educational
OpSHIId diacusaion coooepdng matitutional and organizational fall 1973 or the 1973-1974 aca- but amce. the number of jObs inatl"b;t:O;;;;nthout the written
die .-lftDtapa of a merger be- change that beDetits pur D181D- •demic year is April 1. Persons had previously beep so--amall, permission of the chief e:xecu_. oipnlzatiOIIS. I feel berabi11 and SUNY but to in- intereated in' receiving more in- tbe peroent:ase of 1 ncr ease tive ollicer of that inatitution.
that "" bawl a peat djoal to terpret lbe p;;;p,;.;i ~e in formatioo and application forms would be high.
The ilrreoiing officers· were
otrer...•" ·
that 1l8in is moat difficull
should write to: Center for In- -Is oncl Chemlcols lmprovl,.
Campus Inveatip.toN Gerald
Dr. Mllft'IIY ·Brown of the
'l'he •group wu tiii!Pbatic that ternatiONII Studies, Hawkina.
Drake aaid that aince steel, Denny and John Baxter. Payne,
UIB Bcooomies Departmenf iiB opposition wei baaed on 155, State Univeisity- Collei:e,_ autonillbile, and chemical man- aB-~al/B jumu'or, ~~ct_ aa1t
aadal8oamemberof:theSPA- theaegrounds·andnot' on.aftiU- Plattsburlh. New York 12901. ufacturing are induatrial meinuu
Poll08 %"""'' 16

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Cool Milftancy_Domjnates.

Woinen'sPsychology P~el

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At Harvard, abe was.told 1hat ment, raisEd their IQ's from 10

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does not know them for sure. attend.)
to 20 points. · ..
•
Any such differences, she said,
"Power," Seiden said, "of
The Milgram Obedience ex- are trivial compared to the any kind is _,tial to womperiments were the most fsm- enormous influence of the So- an's self-esteem." There abould
ous of Weisotein's examples. In cia! context. Uutil this con- also be real-life role-models, as
,these studies, subjeclarwere in- text -and its resultant expects- well as an all-encomps.ssing'
fonned 1hat they would be paid tions. are changed, she con- guidipg 'mytbolocr for women,
whether or mit they completed tended, all "scientific" answers similar to the mai8 child's adulthe experiment WMit ordered will re~ the expectations of ation of Superman. Sbe cit.&amp;to deliver what the subjects be- the resean:her.
Chesler's example of the Amalieved to be an electric shock of TOUih Act to F zon/woman le1end as one
lethal voltage to a person in
"How can I show my face which translates ideology into
"ll!'ther room, a full 62.5 per here?'' asked Seiden, introduc- idealism.
cent did as · tOld. None of the ing herseU as a psychiatrist and
Yet, abe said, women mUBt
subjects' individual or ~nal implying that Weis&amp;tein's was adjust their seU-conoepts to fit
differences could help the po;y- a tough act to follow. She social reality. The chief service
chologisla to predict who would agreed with Weisslein that the of the womea's movement, Seiand who would not deliver the history of po;ychology has not den maintained, has been to
shocks.
dealt with women as people, a provide a sense of continuity
. J19Wever, stooges were placed flaw which requires the re-eval- for women,- a foot on the pound
il!·eadl room, :warningothe sub- Jlftlion and rewriting of all psy· outBide of the l)'8tem.
~ts ·that their actions would
chological principles; ·NevertheSeiden nolad ·the danaenl
c&amp;w.e: pain or·delith /Q. another less, she maintained, psycho- which -Chesler described. u in·
"HoW
~ t;;;.~ta ' ..n..J; ..Hnr..i1 J ~!i'~) airi'l ' illfut- pe!son~ · {ljypealing• to' the 1iliJ&gt;. therany_ ·has
. been know'n -to. be berent 1 in 'p sychotherapy as a
KUbei;."'ti ~;:']!" ~ jbjl ·~'l;but are ie&lt;its' moral cbnscieilces. After effective . m . numerous e&amp;Bel. means to seU-maatery. '!be ._.
~ ~telnis ·mamtbte."::floOO~of
mod;~ rijely ,testjld , by . sy~tij: the ~terferenoe by the stooge, Achievement of a sense of self- down!doclor-pstlent relation- methods.
only 10 per •cent of ~ sub- mastery, said-Seiden, hlis aided ship, she said, is similar to duK
em psyc:boJ!IiY: ..Sg..;., · ~
'?'I ba~· '"oo~
't .the jects who, had o!igfua!JY. ulled many women who have felt of•rnsniage. If a patient l.ibs
she notad, \ paycl;ol...;;ota have
. ' ~ which ~
tbe lever- did so ' aiain. ~ overwbelmed·by sexiat'ciiacriin= ber thera ist, she said, there ie
1 attempted IIi "prove"""'ibe emo- ; l a d," sill d 7Weisstein; exPeriments are gtinerally futer; ination.
·
the
danger that abe will '
tiona! aDd i{ttellectual.'inferiol'- "81111 1 1hat includes inpntion, preted to mesn that even a ·
Seiden noted several meth- try to align her values with -the
•
of
A
lad
l1lllilcim IIUDibel8, and divine · slight change in the social sit- ods which psychiatrists believe therapist's own. 'l'berapy can
~~
~t revelation. Anything , can .be uatipn S'8ll ,sisnif'ICII!IUY alter will help a wollian in atlainin1 also undermine the patient, and
in the field of mathematical bi- proved or disProved if it ·is betaaYior; ·even · of the most self-inastery, althou'gh 'aile can ·question her intaNIIIII ' md
ology, Welsstein then pro- tested properly. Yet moet ex- dangerous kind.
agreed with Phyllis Che8ler motivations just as ,panmtal
.
c':eeded to attack theee theories periments are based on dats
Weisstein concluded with the .that hallucination of thil! qual- pressures would.
There are ways to prevent
as hmdamentally ~mteslad and which returns the researcher to observation that although there ity is often the only answer.
therefore "pseud!Hicientific."
his original bias." Sbe then may be poss.ible iniDiutsble dif- (Chesler, author of the best.- this from happeninJ, Seiden Weisstein's coolly systematic cited ileveral noted experiments Jerences in tbe behavior, nature. seller Women and Madneu, .BUIJeated. Therepislll are curmililancy dominated Friday's which implied 1hat behavior anii potential of m e n and was scheduled to particiJI!!te' in renUy being llainad to be .mo.e
symposium of the ''TowardS a could not be predicted accord- w omen, JDOCiiem psychology the pone! but was too ill to responsive and ....Wtiw to the
.-Is of women. Refenal sya.
Feminist I'Bychology" weekend. lnc. to innate characteristics,.
·
lema ·also help to protect "COD_ Her confrontation with another and.. wldch emphasized the 1m. sumera" · of ~cholosleaJ ser- .
panelist, Dr. Ann Selden, psy- P&lt;!rlance of social envilol)ment
viceo, by IUidlllg . patients to
c:hiatriat' at-tbe Univeraity of to' hwnaia development
lliinois and Michael Reeee lio&amp;- ~The ~
.-those moat able to help. ·"Therapy," abe c:oocluded, "is worth
pital , in Chicsgo1 illuminated
Clinical psychologists a -try." .
the complex issues which-must themselves the subject of the
be faced by womeo who seek · first of theee studies. They
The~,_
aid and COJI!lort, and often an 'were required to . identifY the
·n.e third panelist, Dr. Car·
identity, in jJsycbotberapy.
authors '9f a number of sMrt
- roll Smith ~lo m.c.-ed
Seiden enc1o,_t the ooncept atoriea as male, female, hetaro"'lbe ~ Pemala In the
of self~, a sense of posi- ~ •bomosexual, • neurotlc,
19th Century." An ht.torian of
tive identity, as a uy factor in psycbolic, ' etc. n.e Ie8Ulta
.-yCbioloo. • b e malntalDid.
- women's survival in a sexist so- were similar . to di.- which
that tbe compla IIYIIQitaml of
. c:iety. A sensitive therapist can would have .been derived ·by
hyNria ideDtifMd in a.. - be a valuable resource in at- chance. For example, a ·normal
an of 100 yeano qo - a r e taininl dJia attitude, abe main- female author waa deacribed as
ope,na, to tbe prtelmaa
tau.!: .
"male paranoid. schimoiJ
.
and diacrimlnatory praclica'
- . . 0111 - - -r.-..
.
!ith latat 'which exist lodq.
.
Wei8alein attadrad Seiden's eucieL• (~.re•
oli .Ja.·
tenDed modem
viMra 811 "tbe IOOd old' Ameri: tent, )Jut DOt so aooct ... overt,"
~ tbe McbiJd
tile
can posilive-thbldnJ llhit W~ ,caimnented.) The
19th Cllllwy b,yatarfeal which has a! way a been ame teat administered !alar to
an." Jlbllna•lbat tbe ...C.dl~ to opp.-1 minOri- the eubjects producad
has 'been re-cle-illerl ..
tieL" No mnount of self-fDIISto- otrikinJiy dlffeient but aJao ID"Dibulatory achbopluada• by
- individual pride. CB'
•
ooneet .
c:llnielaDI; lt I a - ~
~ diplty, - UJUed,
ADo~~!. aperimellt _ . to
a~~~falauachomp the fact that ... dilprove the a-,. that -...
rem!Wid Oedipal CXJIIIIIiB.
•
CXIIIrimdy beinJ depaded lind havior Ia baed .., a fbal ..t
'Die...,
byatarieal GllOO
uplolted. Onr jlll)y slreniiD of traits, lind equally .. . .
,...,.
...
..-.117
.....
can be a colleclive social porlaDt, that tbi. Ie8111111 In !l
t,poid ...... ott. ~
•
social situation coinCide wtlli
ad piOVOCaliw, anable to
~e:i..tem illustrated her ODD- . the ~ Ill . a slu!lf
-mtaJn stable nllatioalblpa,
tanl:ion with- penonal exper- conducted by a -~
11811 of limited ~ty for-iaiCe. Sbe • r ad u ate d from named ~IIUIIbn
ual
fiiii!ICim8. Sbe a dllldl
Welhoaley Colleae a Phi Beta ~~~~~~plinJ of chfldren were ldenJrith 'an lmmilau., de.Ka!&gt;Pao lind was fint in her tifieil to their eJ e me D ta r y
a
t
inlalile
~Phl&gt;. Krsduatina class at Hal'- school lelldl!!rs .. aving inW'nle diNMe ____. a
vard.' \'et abe Wei unable to 1ectual ~ far_above'DOI'c:t..lcally female ..... tbe ...
find a teaching position. at a . mal. 'l1&gt;oae identified mit ol p8nW'8eoGr ~
time when UDiwrsilies were treated as audl by tbe ~
"~ with them. Nor oould and tiy tbe end of the achoal
she break Into !lie maJe.ori- year bad, em tbe basis of thll
(C........, 0. _ . I, eoL J)
ented field of - . d l ~ expectatiaiHI~ien~ed ~mvliaioBy SHARON EDELMAN
·
S!oll
her aoaJa and her ;nt..ma.....,..
PByc:boloPt Erik Eriboll violated her "lnle na~aDd
once made tbe miatab· of ..,.._ 1bat · abe .,.. cf e n y i n ' her
. clerinJ m print, bow a ........., . "proper feminine role of joyful
c:ould _,..,., a peiiiOD81 ideo- .nu.turinl aDd altruism." In re·tity before abe met the man aponae to Seiden, , Weisstein
abe would marry • . BeiCer be aaiil, . ''I .,.. oozint self-111118abould ...,_ aw ..-.eel tary; l laiew. I was iood. and
himaelf: mudl of a _..,•s posaibly the best in my field.
self-coacept, be aid, is baaed But nooe of 1hat-. meant anyon her attractiv- lind her thiDa IDitil I aot a job.n
selectivity in her ..n:b for the
Weisstein recalled ; profound
m&amp;n by wi&gt;Diil abe wisbM to be annoyanCe a£' beinj informed
&amp;OIIIIhl
of her "'nne nature by a male
Terming this theory ti CIOII8 academician. Nobody, she
between ''J!"!cboaemal rib!al maintained, kno:w_s anything
incantation and an MAjax com- about the nature of women, esmercial,'' Dr. Naomi Welsstein piclally conventional psycho!aPJ-!ed to the pz-.DDed fem- · Qlista. Theories . which claim
~ t •• _.~~ ;~IIIDl-~-- iliat ~ f~ .iptell!lcl- is
_
....,.
• .,,
nately · inflllior to the male'~!,
dine· 'PsYc:llOioiY' · CodlereDcls. ~ Jl8,id. are . based on U...

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1'*-Y 15, 1973

4

Keynoters Cite Issues
At Racism Conference ~,
5

By SHAR-ONEDE
~ LMAN
Harvanl.Anydeparlmlimwbic:b
awardl atipeada 1111111&amp; clilduct
The isue, ultimately, ba4 the hq1da from ita "ocbolanbip
litlle to do with whether or quota." Awards-to black .,...tuJifl institutiooa are racist, -for ate students are cbaracteri8tias Charles Billinp pointed out, ·cally higher, lbeJeby reducina
the tenn "inst.itutioaal racism" the _number of IJI'84uate stuis redundarit. What matters, dents any d_..tment can af.
said Wilbur Ttammell, is the ford. To 'reject a blllcik appli. -~ to which individual per- cant; Pett.igrew said, is to save
sons can be held 8CCOIUltable money.
for this state of allain.
Pett.igrew and c:onc:emed colThe Conference on lnat.itu- le&amp;iUe&amp; presented an alternational Raclam opened last Wed- tive idea which has since beneaday_with keynote ad~ · come Harvard pcilicy for miby Dr. Thomas Pettigrew, nority recruitment of both •tunoted racial expert and pro- dents and faculty. Theae leifeasor of social psychology at IOWIIbips and aalaries are aim~. and Dr:. ~harlea. Bil- ply "taken oft the top" of .a
lings of the Political Science special fund · set aside for this
Department at New York. Uni- specific
Now, he aaid, ·
veraity. A responae panel was there is
a penalty to
composed of Jeae Nash,. forfor
mer director of the M o d e I
Cities Prof.r&amp;m and lecturer in .
Social, Philosophical, and His- oqe who practices
torical F.oundations at UIB, raoism ~ in fact, a racist, and
and attorney Wilbur Trammell, must be confronted as such. "U
former City Court Judge and a they don't know wha( they are,''
declared candidate for the Buf-. he said, "we must make them
!alo mayoralty.
aware. ,
Pettigrew, who discussed "A
''Blacks " he argued, uare the
Social Science Ana!Jrsis of Ra- moral hOOrt of America. We
cism," was
ful to distin- have the moral responsibility
guish betweeile&amp;f:.titutional and to deal with all types of inindividual practices. The for- justice."
mer, he said, is the central core
'Af"the problem; yet tl:e country Billings Straddled Both Views
chooses to focus on individual
Billings straddled both views
racism because it is easier 'to in his own keynote talk. Like
blame a complex sil\lation on a Pett.igrew, he is an academistereotyped villain.
clan; like Trammell he is black.
~'It is irrelevant," Pett.igrew
His main conoem, he said, was
continued, ''whether or not the with the establishment of a
individuals associated with a legitimate, political power base
racist institution are · in fact for blacks. ·
'
racists in their Own right. Insti~·Any social institut.ion," he
tutional 111.cism," he aaid, "is contended, "can be altered by
often an unwitt.ing policy which the existence of. a . black presexists separately from itii iii' . enOe, includiQ.g 'token' blacks.''
dividual members." Most pften, The history "of ethnic groups in
he added; such p&lt;ilicies are not : this country, added Billings.
initiated In racial tenns, but • has demonstrated that ~ is
for the benefit of ·tbe institu- tr'ue; lhilt. the minority pres'
tioa· .. a whole.
ence, e ven by sllent' bonfronta- .
EDmplos fTom Horvard
tion, has served as a catalyst
Pettigrew iUustrated this con- for social change.
tention with_ an .ex&amp;JI!Ple from
'lbe current us age of tbe ,
Harvard. Umvenllty ~tqry.. In epithet "nlggei&gt;" to symliblize
the" late ~930's, he· &amp;ald, liar- all oppressed peoples is an ex~ Presiden~ Conan ~,_«!n- ample· of tliis,. ~ aaid. ''The
~a solution .to the idi'!t black presence is universal, not
UJ:o..Z..~L.')ri_~
~problcriemticalwhifchtohe .coDSJthe· eu;iusive. We can stiike re- 1¥.11
V
.,. 't:)
,
YY I '11'a;f W~
~"
~.a
ac r · m
'!P"nsive chorda iti a11 the opUJ:
T.
'Ill.
U
. '
declininl quality · or Harvant pressed peoples of the. world."
1Y.1UC
~.::r~toe!":::'' Billings sta_ted that : blacks
•
V
who were intellectually"unfit to~" !"!" bold J?OW!"' ~pi~ whi~
By i'A'l'RIClA WARD
another hour, and stiU finiabed cidal.'' A white woman nearby
·IMDIIP - the family businesS,- ~trol .of ,1D8tjtutio!'", 'aitd •can ·
.BIEDERMAN
up on tbe same high plane," whispered at one · point that,
-encouraged by their hl!lp .whit,e Americana leam
. ' -..-.&amp;.-t.
.
commented, James lf, Ryan, -penonally, she'd pve up the
powaful families to enter the that a .majority status does not
An early afternoOn workshop associate director of the Offipl vote before she'd give up conacademic life.·
·
make t:hem 1he government. on "Racism, the Media and En- of Uri&gt;an A1fairs, who helped' traception.
·
To combat thia trend, Colllplt "Bla~ !&gt;ave instiga_ted· a_ n;; terlainmenl.'~ was still going lead a session on "Racism and
Warren T. Batbour,_ acting
deviaed more stringent require- exammation of Amencan life, strong in tbe eonre-ce Tbe- Housing."
director of the campus Black
meniB for hia faculty, baaed on '!e. aaid. •'The clasSrooms are atre· after participants for a 4
M!UIY of the se8siona were Studies Proaram and aaaistsnt
of publication. A«&gt;. liYJ.Dg rooms. ,and. the teacbel'S p.m. ..,..;on on ''The Realities heated. An apparently deeply p r of e s so r of antlul&gt;pology,
to Petticrew. thia er: ~ blaclt.':
.
. .
of Genocide'~ had '!'rived. Su' offended black woman stalked opened the worbbop on ''The
ruled out the' biriDg
Nash's ._.was leas opti- perfl.y was tbe subject on the . out. of a sessiOn on ''Race and Realities of Genocide" with a
.of black faculty,, mainly misti~ He was, be said," leas ' floor, and the brothers. sisters Intelligence"· in which two status report on black studies.
'-'-e b I a c k 8CIIdrmici•na willing to believe' that racial re- and mi•cellaD!'Oua white lace!! white psychologists and a pedi- Black atudiea ~ were
ware fJI!!IUired to teach; &amp;ve or lations were impnM11g· rather · 'present were reluctant to let go atriai pr:ofesaor, a Is o white, hom out of- political action on
ais -u.,. in an underataired · he af1III'!!CI "persistent 'b I a c k of a dialogue that IJ4d touched summarized the contrcwersial the campuses, Bubirur recalled.
Soulllem black university, and p_..., ·fur change has .hard- on racism-rela~ issuea as eli- material'!" racial differences in Toclay, they stand in a precar·
· • ..:h too · busy to pub- ened the r a cia t att.itudea of verse ~ ~~on of. blacks · LQ. published by Jensen, Ey- ious position, in part because of
Iiiii.
. many whites.
from film mduatry umons to aenck, Sbocldey and others, the. multiple ezpectations imPe&amp;tisrew &amp;rJUed ibat while
"We _,,." said Nash, "pro- -~ Silperfly Ia a desirable views the moderators clearly posed on them. At piesent, only
lbe requirementa -'in- vide ...;";;:;. own ~ • role Diode) for an eight-year- disagreed with. At the sesaion 22 American universities offer
taMied anJ,y to DPIJ'IIde · the the rae.. overwbelming
old black drlld.
on ''The Realities of Genocide," post-graduate '!"01'1&lt; in black
Harward laculty, their ultimate tutional and individual racismAs WO""!!OP leader Frank whites, who a few minutes be- studies and only one offers a
elfect waa racist. 'Ibe fact that Malcolm X tOld us t b a t ~ Fost.(r, assiStant. professor of\ fore had been adding their own Ph.D he reported

'lll.an''\1 Attendina RaclS·m
Re'rvlrl
There
. rraS.eJUSt 11Oo
h to Sav and neaT

:.:::d

=

'*

U.S:

=:.o:;

~:..:::fl..,~
Jl'.i ::!'-':"".-Our.,.:'{;~.;, V: ~um~;: ~";;jfyVi~so: ~:~~!,;.~{:;a~~=: ' be~J/:"to8
1Mb hia ediaaa Je. dam- li¥&amp; by and he waa rilht.
wnter Earl Rob11180n), reluc- er's remark ·that Jews bad been resoun:e ~ with

-

alial. but limply

more dllllcUlt

to ClllllbU. ~ • lbe 1!8"'
.......... ptOvided .--t un~ he added, lbe inlllilldloG Nlliated ... c:hange.
PeUi~Nfi! eiteot ~ example&amp; DDtmg dlai lbae ,. Utlie chance of~tiDI
c:t.Dp ..me. ·
altematn._c:u be ~taL 'Ibe""""
in 8lllllt ~~ ~ DOted.
ia mch lllat nicil&amp; praclioes &amp;Je
aelually,lbouch _,.,_;ooe~y,
~
•
ODe I!II8IIIPie. 8&amp;1d Pettigrew,
is lbe BY*m by wblcb~ate fellooroblpa are a
at

"The'whole poiDt," Nasb con - · tantly ~pped up .the aesaion,
eluded, "'s to IW'vive with dig: he sugges!ed ~ the ~P

q" .
-

•

:-

·

·Minority Program.,
~aDd the M1no~on" will be
the ~·
01 a wodalbop Friday,
28, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. at tta8
J&gt;.17Dtt Supper &lt;lab, 816 Mic:hipn Anue. 'l'be -.talilop is b8lna
~tad by tile ~in or·U y

save. athletica. lDU&amp;lc, televiaion,
and the other unexplored areas
for tliscuasioli encompassed by
~ ~rbbop's title for another

time.
, 'Too Much ID, Soy and HNr'
Too much to111ly and hear in
an · ~ and a half was the
eval!"!tioa of )DBDY'ieaders and
parlicq&gt;ants in the 15 workahopo that made up ~after-

noon PIIIJl'llll!

ot:

the um!er-

~t Aalistance · Pro. enoe on Inatitutional Raclam
School' of
Wem-day (February 7). "We

llftllll of the

ment.

iiaJii&amp;e-

could have ·go11e on !or at least

largely responsible for Hilll&gt;r's
ge~dal. program during the
Third Re1ch. It was a n a
moment, although the
later clarified his belief' t all
oppressed p eo pIe (Gettnan
Jews of the '30s or blacks today) wbopaasivelyallowthem:
selves to be exploited commit a
kind of genocidal suicide. Also
hard for some of the session's
white minority to understand
was{be.generalc:haracterizstion
o.f contraception and o~tions with population-limiting
goals like Zero Populati-on
Growth as s6rister and "g~

interdisciplinaJ:y o11er1np in African,
Caribbean, and Aho-American
studies. It should be a program
.in whidFthe atlident can learn
something a!lout hia beritsge,
about Africa. Africa p~Y
has more in common With white
society than with blaclt, he.added. As a result, the black who
goes to Africa must adjust to
another culture, just as ~bour did when 1!1' left Amencs
to study iti'Meldoo.
tor
ctar
Barbour o6mmented that. the
pountial for genocide in this
(Continued o n - 5. ':"1. 4)

ae.-

�--

v

~

Pebniary 15, 1973

Peace Corps 8;t VISTA : Rep6rton. February 20-24 to·Be
To Recruit Campus The cozu:ges 'International Week' .,

on

~

•
·
~tatives
o f the p eace
Corps IUid VISTA will be on

·-"'"took ber to
, ...--,
where her prinialy uty was the
o~ion .of a- f'!""-bu~
~. indi~ willing oooperative m "'! 1J!D"f oty
to share s,ltills and knowledge area. That was a 'llainful pr&lt;&gt;with peopl8 wbQ need and want cess," she recalls, because the ·
help.
.
C?"OP. had to prove to be effec1'be two apnCles are com- tive m order to get people to
pcmenta of ACTION, an amal- join and, of course, "you need
gam of all . federal volunteer a larg!' n~r ?,f members to
{&gt;..........,.'Which has 26,000 YO!- make 1t eftective. She was sueunleel8 at work in each of the oessful, h o w e v e '"- She alao
50 atatea, in U.S. territories and worked in teaching EngliSh as
in 26 foreian countries. As in a second langua~to
members
.the put, Peace Corps volun- ~~Gary's ~e
. . ~leers serw overseas and VISTA mg populat!on
m the fields
members, in the U.S.
of tenant nghta and consumer
Headinc the campus teenrit- education.
ment drive will be Marti LindeMs. G~ a math graduman. a former ACTION wi&gt;rk- ate ol Michigan State, taught
er, and Nancy Gallant, who math IUid ~ in !' seco~dserved in the. Peace Corps in ary school m Malays~&amp; durmg
Malaysia.
her peace Corps toUr, but alao
became involved in heslth ed·~ ~~tress that both !"'"'tion and . agricultural J?r&lt;&gt;agenaies are primarily inter- JllCta. She Cites the eftective·-~ ,_ __,__.. individ- ness of the Peace qorps' "!!n........_.
"' _,....._
ceD:trated lanJiuage mstructlon
uais. "Age is en asset," ssys which
her to get a)ong
Mti
_tles. ofLinandeman.ACTI
- ~~ very well With the Malay8181lB.

CIUIIP!"' Feb~ _2(}.22 ~g

er18b¥

ment brochure.
·
Faculty and staff members.
are ""P"C!aC!Y welcome ~ drop
by recrwtment tables m !he
Norton Center Loun~e durmg .
the three-day ?""P"'gn.. Stud!'Dts, tc;&gt;o. While !onnal mterv1ews wll! be _held m ~ Placement O!f•ce, informal IP"":an~take will be the emphasis m
Norton. .
.
According to Ms. Lindeman,
inature people with a variety ol
skills are at a premium in the
ACTION effOrt "'--'·'ly in
. ~th
business
dernand are those WI
degrees and experience who een

~ ~ ~ an!"

811!ist m""tbe !'J8tting-"Up of c;redit

uruons both .m thla country end
abroad. Aisil needed are skiiiJ!d
trades people - heavy eqwpment OJM!rators, meclr8nics, &lt;:ar·
penler&amp;-and individuals with
agricul~ esperienoe. Secretarisl okills and leeching beckgrounds are alao uaefl!l_The point is, Ms. Lindeman
says, that many faculty, staff
8D!i oldeJ: ~ts have acqUired okills _qwte aJ?O-ft ~m
their academic purswta which
fit in nicely with ACTIO~ requirementa. T h e s e s kt II s,
coupled with the individualB'
maturity and pneral education, make them prime cendidates for ACTION . positions.
Both Peace Corps and VISTA
have found, she said. that tboee
who are being aaked to "risk"
tryina DeW ways of doin( thinp
respond better to people who
know "from aperleoce," rather
than from tbeoretkal kDowledge, lhst ~t oomething DeW
will
r1t.
AcnON" welc:ion- married
couples where both husbend
and wife- haw sldlls but, Ms.
.Lindeman ~ ·bying to COl;"'
with ~ children m
either pJOir&amp;lll ia ''roulh-"
The p..,., Corps ;, a twoyear tour of duty and VISTA,
one yaM, the pan of teenrlteJ:s
point out. 'lbare are appronmtiely 7,700 Peace Corps memhers at _preliellt end 4,000 VISTA YO!untaets. The . P:ac~
CoiPI' current~~ :!rtt~:.. and rural
powzty areas on such projects
as credit unions, self-help hou&amp;ing health care, family planIUid propams for the mentally retaJded.
Both apncies send volunteen onlY where they are · requeatecL The volunteers actually wort.- for the host country or'
the local community. ·

The Futurwf

Pesce Corps and VISTA
were merged into ACTION in
1971 and the official government word is that both are
growing_ in terms of number
and vanety o~ programs..
Both Ms. Lindeman an~ Ms.
Gall"::lt admit that there IS . uncertainty about future v•tality in the wake of the new
Naon budget, but,.. the.y sar,
ACTION con be effective m
helpina people help themselves
at o:tiiilmum cost to 1he federai
· t. T h 1·
tO
gov~
.s ~
m¢1 With the )'l\X(&gt;nl&amp;D outloo~
,
- "ACTION volun!eers, een t
-d\aii~ the whole world, they
agree, 'bpt they can-:-and dohelp cbailge the lives cf some.
ol the people in the world." ·
And that's a plus in anybody's book.
·

F

• • p

I

eiDlDISt .ane -

(Continued from

pGI&lt;

3, col 6)

known human ill for every part
·of the" body, Rosenberg said.
The most common were nausea,
pain, wild taughing and crying,
convulsions, paralyais, and loss
of voice or bearing. Symptoms
could appear spontaneously, or
as a result ,of fear, shock, or.
trauma. 'lbere . was raielr a
physiological &lt;&gt;&lt; anatomical ·
basis for the symptoms, although the -trouble frequenUy
originated in the uterine area.
0 8 en berg attributed the
cause of the en- to conflicting eocietal p -. The 19th
century female, abe said. waa
~ to be ....U and subDll-Mive. Yet as a mother, ebe
was •required to serve all the
functions and responsibilities of
the leader, physician, moral advisor, teoichel, and
spOkeswoman for her
and children. UDBble to deal·
with this dichotomy ebe became hysterical, as b.;r beckground did not p.-.,.re her for
her rolee of sllenltbCumm.Uy, Roeenberg said,
women's roles are changing to

a

Due Apnl20

The Collegiate System-sub-

ject of a heated session of the

Collegiate Assembly January
25-was the ·major issue before
the Faculty Senate Executive
Commi"ttee at ..its February 7
meeting For an hour and a
half, U..:, pros and cons of the
colleges were discussed with a
group of invited guests that
included Collegiate Asaembly
Director- Wayland p Smith:
Charlee H v Ebert,· "dean oi
the Divisioo of -Underl[l1lduate
Studies; Carmelo A. Privitera,
chairman of the Senate's Educations! Policy and P~g
Committee, and John P . Helstead chairman of the Senate's
Sub-CoDiiitittee on the Colleges.
President Robert L. Ketter was
also present ·
Hslstead reported on the status of his Sub-Committee's up- .
coming collegiate evaluation.
The charge is currenUy 'being
draWII up, Hslstead said, and
the evaluation will get underway sholtly. Each college will
be studied by a three-per!iOn
team with two members named
by t.be Sub-Commit tee and -a
third appointed by the college
itaelf Tbe Sub-Com m i t tee
planS to complete its report before April 20. A tesm from outside the University will be
asked to evaluste the report in
the Fall.
In other business test week
the Senate leaders accepted ~
·
r posed odif r
senes o pro
m
lea lOns
91 the ~te by-taws that
would p_roVI~e for faculty representation m the reoenUy-apUniversity Assembly.
ures for choosing 40 faculty representatives to the .AJ;sembly will be forwarded with
Committee approval to the full
Senate
· · · .
·
.
The question was raised
whether ~ Senate would resolve t,o str•.ve f_or a goal of 50
per cent "!ll'Of!ty. and women

C

~'ftn;: ::;.:!"tZ'u~U:i

Chancellor Boyer has expressed
firm opposition to the concept
of an incentive pool in hiring
and, presumably, in the context
of Senate representation as
well. ·

Librarians'
New Officers

The Associstion of Librarians
at SUNYAB has recenUy elected a liew slate of ofliosrs.
'lbey are: Margaret Gilee, assistant librarian, Science and
Engineering library, pruident;
Eric Carpenter, vice pruident;
Susanne lCahle, assistant librarian, Science and "Engineering
Library, II#!CTdary; and Charlee
Popovitdl, treamrer.
The new slate replaces these
olficers: Mary Lee Xanco, aasociate librarian, Lockwood Annex, pruident; Eugene Mitchell assistant librarian, LockwoOd, vice president; Jerry
Drost, associate librarian, Lockwood, II#!CTetory; and Krishan
;:nr~tha~m:!'
their traaitionsl lot in life. Al- Goel, assistant librarian, Lockwood Annex, ~though their socialization has
'lbe main objectives of ALleft them unprepared to deal
with DeW~ililiea, wom- SUNYAB are to advance the
prof..Wnsl
principlesand
en are
• y finding ways to
adjust.
moet l!"~e ol standards for the Libraries end
Librarians
at
SUNYAB, to co- ·
these eftorta, sbe aaid, IS !be
women's ~ bx ~ operate with similar organizon
local,
state end naations
women are. a~ to bu!Jd
a power base from which to m- tiooal levels;·end to be continually
inYO!ved
with
furthering
fluence a sezist aociety.
the individual a n d ·colleclive
rofeasiorial
development
ol ita
HOLIDAY
011
.
~~is a gmduate . Monday,MOftDAY
F.ebnulry 19, W01hington'o ~ 'lbe Aslociation ClOD·
cams
itself.
with
seminals,
guest
of the University ol North Car- Birthdoy, will be 1 full Uoiwrolty
olina at Greawboro with a ma- holldoy. C - will be not In ,.... lecturers and other ac:ti.vities
which
wquld
contribute
to
itS
jor in historY IUid political sci- olon ond ell will be cloled. objectives.
ence. He.- VISTA assigi!DieDt

u.s.

_ runi

b=

:u;

An Internationsl Week of munists speak for themselws
fiestas, films, exhibits and other about the Peo11le's Republic of
activities representing a dozen Cl\ina; in Chinese with subworld cultureS will be held Feb- tiUes, sponsored by the Chinese
ruary :zG-24 under the ~ponsor­ Student Association, 147 Diefship- of the Student Associs- endorf, 4, 7 and 9:30 p.m.
tion's division of International "Slide Impressions of the 8&lt;&gt;Affairs.
viet Union (Moscow IIJid LenHighlight of the program will ingrad ) " by Herbert Morgenbe an Intemationsl Fiesta Sat- roth, 232 Norton, 7 p.m.
urday, February 24, in the FillSaturday, Februmy 24: Kamore Room, Norton Union. The rate demonstration by blackevening will begin at 7 p.m. belts Lee Wanjo and Kim Jaekwith a cultural variety show, young, sponsored by the K&lt;&gt;with songs, dances, pantomime rean Student Associstion, Conand other presentations by U/ B ference Theatre, Nol:)on,. 1:30
student&amp; from outside the p.m.
United States. A sampling of
"Shsmmed," a film sponsored
ethnic foods will follow.
by the India Student AssociaDaniel Kij, a Buffalo attor- tion, will also be shown during
ney who hesds the Polish Un- the international program, at a
ion of America, will serve as time not yet scheduled.
the evening's master of cereCoordinator for lnternationsl
monies.
Week activities is Helem ElTickets for the "Fiesta are $2 Gabri, international studeJlt af($1 for students) .
fairs coordinator for the StuOn Friday night, February dent Association.
23, the Latin American Club is
sponsoring a Latin American

~~~~~;;;,!ti:L,an~~~

Room, beginning at 8 p.m. Ad-

Career Seminar
For Mirwrities

mission (and beer) is free.
The University Placement
Throughout the week an ex- Office and the Minority Manhibit by ~cipating cultures agement Assistance Program in
will be diSplayed in the Hsas the School of Mana1ement will
Lounge of Norton. John Chan present a Career Seminar for
of the Chinese Student Associa- Minority Students on Wednestion wiU demonstrate Chinese day, February 21. The seminar
clay carving daily in the ex- will be held in the Millard Fillhibit area. The Ukrainian Stu- more Room in Norton Union
dent Club is sponsoring a dem- from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
onstration of Ukrainian Easter
All minority students are
egg designing at 7 p.m., Febru- urged to attend. The event is
ary 21.
Other activities during Interto..:Ud:':tsaN'-~=~
national Week will include:
revels, graduate as well as unTuesday, Februmy 20: "A dergraduate.
Trip through Northern Ger0
noany ,'' a slide presentation by
froC.,.
~:e~ ~reJ'=~~';:
Gennan exchange student will be in attendance. The par(management) Herbert Mor- ticipentll will speak about opgenroth, 234 Norton, 7 p.m.
portunities for minority stuWednesday, February 21: dents in 110vemment, ~­
" The Tribal Cultures of China," eering, manufacturing, benlcing,
a slide presentation sponsored universities and colleges, and
br the Chinese StudeJit Ass&lt;&gt;- self employment, among others.
cl8tion, and uNorthwestem
Each company repreientatiw
France," a slide presentation will live a brief p.-rtation
by Luci Testa of the French about his particular occupaClub, 337 Norton, 7 p.m.
tions! ares and then student&amp;
FridtJy, Februmy 23: ''The will have en opportunity to talk
East is Red," a feature-length to the representatives informalfilm in which the Chinese com- ly.

0\i:.'!.

all

Racism Workshops:-----pGI&lt; 4, coL IS)
country is clear. As for the
reoUly, ·i t is not present in the
university, altboulh it is present in the prisons. The . reality
ol genocide is much closer in
other part8 of the world, as evidenced by the mass murder ol
proteoting students in Mezico
in 1968, be said.
Tbe stance of A m e r i c a n
blacks has to be "protective,"

. (Continued from

Barbour hypothesized, particu-

Iarly in light of the inCieaaed
potential in reciiiit years f&lt;&gt;&lt; a
revolution from the right, where
the country's wealth and political power .is currenUy concentrated ("what if the Azmy became more political?" be wondered aloud) .
• ·
Barbour alao expressed ooncem over Black Capitalism end
other officially senctiolll!!l programs that ostensibly encour-

remarks. ''We are not ai1 black
Manista .. . of course, ypu're
not going to find any oiad&lt;
John Birchers, either."
The aecond half of the pnocide pJOir&amp;lll was devoted to a
showing of an Emmy-winning
documentary oa the Attiea rebellion made for ABC-TV by
Ridwd Watkina. W at kt D a
commentea thlit hla flb;n w....
traleo that "pnocide la here.•
Other wo~ concemed w i t b "lW:ial-Edmic
Mytbe end s-typee," "Eelucation in Miud Etbnjo.Bac:iel
c~ and ~"
"IADPaae and CoaimunlcaliaD

Amo1i, k~aci·al ofM~~=

"The Ply
._,
"Racism and
Health Sciences," "Racism end the WeJ:.
fare System," "Raciam a n d
Employmci," "The Polit.icl ol
Raciam," "Jlaciom and the I.e-

bf:c:"~~~~- ~:a:f.'~~

black' banb do what white . Caste Society."
banb don't want to do," be
All .-ions o1 the Coafelsaid, "such as malrlng high-risk ence were taped. 'lbe tnm&amp;mortgage 1 -. What would be cript will be made.avallab&amp;e in
the off"ICial respclMe to a black 801118 fOIUI in the fUture, Coohank that wanted to make cap- fen!llee orplliar8 report. ·
ita! investments in the EuroTbe CoafereDce oa lmtitnpeen Common Market, or in Qooal Racism · w a a organized
African economies? be aabd.
by: Roweaa Ad am a, Huel
All -- - ·
•'Not
''We
must_imp.upo!J nonblscks that there is as much
diversity in the black community as in the white COIIID11JDity,"
Barhoui said in prefacing hla

Clement('
Allie Freeman,
"MD
Hicks, Charles
Klepak, Ruth
Kom, Hilda Komer, Debonlb
Moorman, Linda Nanni, ~
velt RhodeB, Lum &amp;nith. Norman Solkoff and Henry Stark.

!

·t

�.GD~n

6

, _ , 15, 19~3

- - ~~:~

.

.

Nati~nal Stud~ Panel Urge$ 'Tenun{ fo:r

EDITOR~ NOTE: TIN (oliDwinl u a f!n_,;., of 1M rqot:t
of a · ~
011

~- Ia · ~a~oa . ~ D. OdMa ari8e flom die mi&amp;liom upwanl10fll0 p. c.st of taJrm belief lbat ~ .t·
• d....e Ulldllr c....!d lltiae tbe llllidelilleo ill tbe'
AcadciiUc Taare ,.,_, 1111t a awarded ..,._ ia ~~= UNO Slate-Ill of PriN:iP1a
10-~ re,;., of te~~~~n co,.. · two per ~ of
would in i181111 -'e u ....,_
diiCII:tl UN971-7l! IIIith a $ll!6,- lflllltell leame to 1111 faculty tift tawe p1u. 'lbe Ccmmiio000 , . . , f,.,. tile Fonl. FOUII- aanben CXlDiidend for 1eame 11ioG ia COD..u-1 that tbe dedDliDn. Tlte .tully ,.... co-..- in that year.
.
ficioaciee in -.Jemie tenwe
«HWl by fie Americalo Aaoci5. I&gt;uriq tbe 1980s cbe qe wbich ba¥11 t-IID08t criticized
at1Dn of COllqa alltf tiN Am- at wbich Iemire wae awaided are remediable by reforms in
erican Aaoeiatioll of Univer- dropped tdpiliamCiy. In 19811 iDalitutioaal policy aDd praclily Prof_.. Tenud the IIMliytwo-thinlaoftbe~ tice aDd in pro(lio8ional standacGdemie COiliiiUUiity'a fint U., faculty ......, liO 9r }'OWIIllr; of ards aDd priorities. Our recomdqtla . ~ to tile_ mowat- tbe total faculty ihme-fourtha mimdations are inteDded to prolllf cr~Uc&amp;~m of tenure "' r«ent ......, ~ aud )'OUIIIel'.
mote such reform8.
,....,., !IN full report, atiJI · in . 6. Very few inatitutioao - - . TIN corollmy to tllu conclu,._,_ " ~ ts !Je I1Ub- ~Y about 6 ~cant, ID08dy aion;. tb4t ~to tenliMed by .I&lt;Wey-&amp;a "' about pnvate 4-year col eve aet any ~ llicll
f
1
IIDo ~- _TIIf- f!nl. lcoi at limits to tbe pJOpOrtion of tbe M&amp;Ciabkw~..:::;:me'!t
the Co~ • f~ and faculty wbo are or wbo obould u 1M ,_t widu~ _ are

.

..._to

c•---.

ann!'! .·facul...be7~~we.
· of tenured
~ what 't

~at~

_ _..__ of AAC ltut tnt&gt;nlh

:;--•

•

•

IN tut ,_ ......U .availab!e
to_ tiN ~ by SlwMU!

FU~MgG~J, ,..,.utent of the U I B

clltlp'!" of AAUP.

By WILLIAM R. KEAST

~~~~

u-olr-l.,.._

In this preview o tbe report'
of tbe Cnmmi•inn, I would
!i!&lt;e first to ~t a few sal-181lt facts about the CWTeDt operation of the tenure aystem;
second, to indic!ate tbe central
tendency of tbe Commission's

fil!d-inP IUid ~·till'!";

~ to outlliie tbe Commi&amp;-

810!' s !eJ!Orl and iJIIIStrate some

of •Is lilajor concerns; and finally to present in somewbat
greater detail one of the Cnm~~?.:•_
recommendabe ~~ that
18 ......., .to
.of special interest to this audience.
T8nurw Tild8y .
~ followmg are among the
most '!"portent features _of ~e
operation of tbe tenure system
tOday:
.
1. So"!" . fonn of tenure 18
characteristic of tbe faculty
personnel policy of moet. insti-·
tutions of higher education in
the United State&amp;--of 1111 publie and private universities, all
public 4-year colleges. 94 per
cent of- private 4-year colleges,
and 1p0re than two-thil)ls of tbe
2-year colleges. Approximately
94 per cent of all faculty are
serving in·· institutions which
confer tenure.
'
.
2. Tbougb most institutions
which IJ1Ult tenure adhere in
some degree to tbe ,..;delines
of tbe UNO Statement of Prillciplea on Academic Freedom
and TeiiUN! adopted by AAUP
and tbe American Aasociiltion
of Oolleges. .t here ia enormous
diversity.in evel)!"_aspect of interpretation, poHcy, and procedure. There is, in" fact, no
!"""' ~as a .tenure "~"m American bigber education,
with the ~ of uniformity
that tenn UnpJjes.
3. In moat Institutions, about
half tbe faculty bold tenure ap~; !Jut tbe range of
~lions here Ia ~ rep&gt;ar!&lt;able. In 1D&amp;IIy lnstibitloris the
tenured faculty eonstituta less
!be 25 per cent &lt;&gt;! ~ total;
m lllllDY tbe proportion 18 above
80 per cent. 'l)e tendency ia in

~

t..e~cOOfem!d
18

very

•1
,., ..,._,. 18
was m tbe early 1960&amp;--rolqhly liO per 90Df.. Bu~ future prospeels are very different. ~
relative youth !"' most f~a
means that retilements will &lt;»

=

~a;!="ratnn!lth~

mJ:. 'r:f

. I..., 1
";' moret sliliend
co iii ~ '?"
~w..: tenure ~me':"~
tenure stsffs Will be
,__

80 ~oe
as to poee grave budgetary
problems and to ~ tbe p~
peels for promotion or ~t-

ment_ of younger faculty mcreas!"gly meager. The etrm;t
to ~nn1 more women ~d lnln!'nty ll'OUP members mto the
higher faculo/ nll)ks may be
f~t_ra~- several of li!" Com·:'Cons ~~~":et
rob
WI
o
P
ems.
After careful eumination of
tbe ai'JWDents for and apinst
ten~, and of tbe operation of
!"n'!"' ~d non-ten'!"' plans in
mstitutio~ ~f , van,~ kinds,
t'!e C~m,....wn s mtr]Or concluswn u that &lt;JC&lt;Ukmit: tenure
slwuld·continue to be tile characte.UtU: form for organizing
professional teaclling and sclwlarly seruU:e in Amuican ~hu
eduaJti(ln. We believe tliat its
value in protecting academic
freedom is paiamount. Academic freedom ia so central to the
integritf of our educational in"stitutions,and"totbeiretrectiveness in tbe discovery of new
knowledge, in CDnlierVation of
the values and wisdom of tbe
past, and in promotion of "the
_critical inquiry essential to self.
renewal. ihat academic ·tenure,
in tbe' Commission's view,
should be retained as our most
tested and reliable instrument
for inoorpontting "a cad em i c
freedom into the heart of our
institutions.
There can be no doubt that .
there are very serio118 .weakne:sses in tbe operation of tenwe poticies in our colleges and .
universities. But it ia tbe Cnmmiaaian's ~ thst these
~ anse !lOt from any
inherent c!efect in die print;iple
of tenure ttaelf but from senous
deficiencies in its application
and_ adl;nin!stration in individua1 institutions .. ~ of these
atem from cbanges mbigber education during tlie ezpanaionlst
decades follooriq World War

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

An . . ............

......,..

JfAJICF &amp; Cl"fM!''

an;

not, in tiN CoJ1!muaion's iUfll:
ment, the 110luliml 19 the difficuJtia 110 many of our U..tuutiona face. The c:enbal question
for tbe Commiaaiim was this:
Is there a sotid beaii f« recommending to institutions now using faculty tenure plans tbe
adoption instead of a contract
system without tenure? The

·

. GtTTl:'tll~TI\.Yre'
•
. - Y .lL YY C Vll, .l ,:,

n.

lllpaiW . _ ..,

II*.,...

to . , . - • bum far
u:- , . of .., ,... ~
of 1118 -

-.

c 0 m m u n 1t J.

'"t,. -

w. ........._ -.

poo1t1on p • per • -

-

pannltL

-

•

Cominlssion's answer ia clear:
We have found no evidence to
.
warrant tbe belief thst any contract system now in use, or any
thst has been proposed, will in
fact eliminate the deficiencies
thst have been identified in-the

~:a!rn ::!t~v':,.~n!~s~

ser•'ous p. roblems of other kinds,
and that can' be relied upon· to
protect academic freedom JDc1
the integrity of institutions of
higher education.
The _Commission's detailed
recdmmendations-&lt;lver 40 in
all-are aimed at the reform
and strengthening of · tenure
policy and practioe. Our focus
is primarily upon tbe individuaJ institution, because it is
here that improvement is most
needed, it is here thst substantive policy reflecting the special
traditions and objectives of the
institUtion must give meaning
to the general standards in the
194() joiot AAC-AAUP Statement of Principles.
Rec:ommondalllona

The Commission's recommendations begin with a section on tbe specific responsibilities of the several components in each institution for
making tenure work. There follow five groupa of recommendations. There ia a section on ten-

.=.,t.andi&gt;eJ::!~eonalbelievdevelop-e
. "-·t
.....,

many of tbe problems supposedly linked- to tenure are actulllly larger problems of faculty dev~t, growth, and
:!::'t':t ~!::' =::~
fresbment aud n.tooling abifls
in ~Is, decline in 'energy
and zest, aDd tbe like. The
Commiaa•on believes that institutions should undertalte more
systematic and imaginative careerdevelopmentprograms,
perhaps along the lines sugleated by Kenneth Eble in his
report"" Ctllftr Dwdopment
of the E(fict~ Colkge Teocll0 ·

·

· Next; a section on neglected

elements of u effective tenure

plan: · Prominent &amp;111001 these
in tbe Commission's j~
are a more ClffJfu1 and reliable
-..e of teecbint ellectiV&amp;W as
a
for profDotjan and
tbe awanl of tenure; an ezpliclt

critenan

and tom.! 10ie tor lltuderita in
tBe - t of ~ effecli-; ~ developmoiit of
f8Cillty oode8 of co n d u c t

Tenure Principle

lbiilulh which facuUieo C\Ul--

eotimated about emollment
oept aDd fulfill~ COIIJ(Idte · _.budpt aDd' other ,_,.,.,.·
relpaaslbility for die iallepll;y_ prollaiD~ aad11vailabu:
of tbe prore.ioa aDd of die in- ~IY" of ~- 1111 ~
siKulion in wbich tbeY - ; lD ':"!&amp;lion ·to tbe s - - t oomaDd a new attlenlioD -to atalf P&lt;Btian of the faculty and the
• pJanninl-to wbich I will re- .-Ia of tbe m.tituaon as a
tum at tbe end of my nmad&lt;s. whole. •
The next CrouP of II!ICOIDThe ~ of Proper

mendatiDilB ia c:oncemed ·with ~-~· which ia a sertbe detailed operation of inat:i- ;..._.,._ Jl8llected element of
tutional tenu:,J:!!""· The ~~.to tbe eftec.
Commisoion a
great im- tive ~?on- of_ a tenuie sysportsnce to tbe develoPment oJ tem 18 obvicuL Smce ~lire ioa full and fonnal policy state- volW8 Joac--term comnubnents
ment on faculty personnel pol- it .intzoduc:ee riliditiea in oper:
icy. ·It believes that tenure de- atiODS which J11!1!1t be reduced
cisions must always reat on ex- by careful P,lamiing. Tbe cribiplicit judgment and never on cal~ to~ ~lved by
the mere pa~~~~~ge of time in
'!l&amp;ff Planning include the
gra~e. It lieliev.!"' that the pro- o~&lt;
.
betio!lll'r Per • o d ~ be
readt,ofto a8BU!" a reasonable
taken wtth a new senousneos ap
.,.,_ m each faculty
and lh!'t a development and ·_ unit,_80 that ~Is oceur
evaluation program abould be at a rate wlrich ID1IllDlizes ..,.
a regular feature of tbe probe.- plaoement problems in t h e
tionary period. · The ~ abort n;m .~ pennits the gradsion notes diet many institu- ual assimilation of new faculty;
tio'!" use re~tively sbolt proSecood, to assure thst posibstionary penods before tenure tioos for jllllio&lt; appoiotmen ts
decisions are mad&amp;-,2, 3, or 4 .- are available at a steady rate
years. It ~ our iudl!"""~ !hat and that reasonable opportuntbe probationary penod, if 1t Is ities exist !or tbe achievement
to have tbe senousness that of tenure·
its crucial place in the tenure
.
' .
process demands, should nonnThin!, to "!"ure that the tenally not be less than 5 Y.ear&amp;. ~ faculty ts. not so. large as
The Cominission supportS tbe to · unpose an tmpos~ubl~ b~d­
giviog of reasons for nonreap- gelary burden on tbe. msti_tuhon
poinbnent or -the denial of ten- or to _prevent tbe infusion of
ure, and suggests criteria for n~ vigor and fresh pomts of
"P&lt;lnnissible" reasons. In the VJew
tbe recruitmen t
conviction thst Jaculty self-dis- of new fa ty;
cipline has often been paraFourth- and of increasing
lyzed because dismissal is the urgency today-to insure that
only sanction oontemplated un- opportunities are open for the
der standard procedures we ad- recruitment of more women
vocate the development hy each and minority ll'OUP faculty, and
institution of sanctions abort of their advancement to tenu"'
disrrUssal thst may be applied status;
io cases of demonstrated irreFifth, to give the institution
sponsibility or professionill mis- flexibility in responding to 5 t
conduct
·
u. · . .
dent interes_fl!, to expand or
This section JB follow~ by a contract ';""Is. .and to meet
ll'OUP of recommendations on other .contingencies. .
.
~pecial- problems. Included here
SerioiiS staff planning d•d not
"! a bnef treatment of early re- """"! to be _necessary or e_ven
~ent, . of ·tenure for part- pos81bl~ dunng tbe expansiOn~ serv_1oe, of .tenure and '!d- 1St per1_od !'f !he 50s and 60s.
m!ID"?"ative '!ffi"!'o an~ of !Jl· • ~Y mstitutions, desperat~ly
stitutu~nal ~hey m copmg W!th trymJ to respond to ever-Infinanc;~ e_x&gt;gency. Collective creasmg_ demands, apparently
bargauun~ •s of CO!""" a rapid- assumed that growth woul~ be
ly emergml! '!l""'ial problem. . permanent and lh!'t no seno~s
The ~n ~ -thought need be gtven to a dJ!thst collective ~amm1 not ferent tomorrow. The bab1ts
extend to academic freedom and and_ expectations de v e I op ed
tenure and related faculty per- durut~ those decades plague us
sonnel .matte_rs, a,nd that griev- f?day, when many _institutions
mvolvmg l8SUes of free- ~ tbemselv_es ~ully becomom an~ ·tenure be referred to mg tenured-m, With tenured
academic Prooedlll'e!l . outside ~ties.w large an~ so young,
tbe collective barg&amp;nmg pro- w1th r&lt;;tiremenls 80 infrequent,
cess.
aDd Wl.tb faculty mobility so
. The recommendatio118 in tbe ~ly red~, that opportunfinal section of our report, 011 lties for recrwtment and proneeded information and re- motion are gravely diminished.
· search, are aimed ·at reducing ~uch of the p , _ , to modour collective ~ranee about ify or aboliah tbe tenure system
personnel practices in Ameri- .arises from this kind of situscan higher . eduj:~ition aud at tion. The Commission believes
provid~ to iristitutions, on a . that it WOUld be bad policy to
systematic and con tin u in 1 abandon tenure when the real
basis, the information the
Problem ties hi ataH planning.
~ in reviewing and s~ ~e ha~ "!' ~ for f:be
enmg their own policies and difficulties m which many mprocedures.
lllitutlons now find themselves,
Sl8ff 1'18nnlnc
but we 1ecammend tbe prompt
In closing, I would like tore- ~~ ~staffinpect.o~
tum f!lr 8 few moments to staff pas_t .Jlellect azid to _prevent fuplanning, one of tbe neglected tun. l'eCilrNDCe8. Tbeae plans.
elements ~ an effective .tenure tbe Commiaslon lie 1i eves,
plan to which the Commisaion's should provide ezplicitly for a
~rt devo~ oonsiderable at- substanti8l mo-, in Virtualtention. I 8lllgle thia topic out ly -1111 inatitulioas, · tbe tennot only beca~ it ia important we CCII!!POl*lt of
and
!'l"f controversial, but because membei8 of minority
•t PreseJ!ts. problems on which
In desi · a~­
~"""""""~such as tbe AAC fing plan,
institution will
:.,:::.,:r 'l:'ti~~ to provid!' its bsve to face tbe question of the
ed ti
ons aDd higher proper ratio of tbe taured to
11"!' on . I en e _r a II Y with Jhe nontenured faculty. ' The
~ "!"'181ance '!' tbe Conn of Commiasioc _....,mends thst
po~?.i;:;"'"cal help, and each jnatitu~ sbculd develop
By ataff p'•;,-'-a policy an drls ~ tJ:~at 15
simply to tbe- P
...._.,- tefer
to 1111 pert:icular
deperbnentaJ .r o-:won. &lt;I!' a
aDd ita ~
wide baaia--of-::-anct inati~
. 11!IIOurCOJ8, with ePecial atmenta of tbe ~:"!-noqwre- tention to tbe ap. i8nk. and
tuture 'od
for a tenure ~ of ita pres)'Ml8. :'"the' ~- five to ten
eat faddti, tbe Institution's
known
........, of what Ia ilrowlh pnllipeCII, iiB program
or can be 11!8liatioally - (CooitboioH 011 1, coL 4)

foi'::!

tbroc':ft:

d""'"

..::t..,.,.,

'::f.

:EIOPriate

�-~

Reports, Fair Emp/dyment Actions Area Language InStitute ~­
High)ight SUNY Senate's UIB 0VISit To·~QOI Campus Resomc~
the C0111iJia ~- (See Reporter, February 8.)
,._.allopoot ,
ChaDCellor Boyer's repod was .

&amp;,.MARVIN I. FELDMAN
·

8UIR'-

. 'Ole SUNY $enate held iiB
~=-Meei!Df
,;.....~ ~.. Bull'aloSatur-

. ~~
011 A.,_, ......
:!· .,;~t, ~

fo~ by a report from SUNY Senate Preaident, Joe
a. aDd the IIUil ....,.....
_._,_.__ .....,.....
Norton. He noted that the law
~-~ suit Jor 11011-paytDMlt of 1ep1
Jy, s-tar Bobett Stern wei- r- involviq a sizeable DWDber
~ the ~~-~t .~ of p - t aDd-past SUNY Senwa... aof-.u~~~ """" ..., at.on was clc.e ·to a settlemeDL
..,.
ov_eaDIIICIIIII to too _ He a1ao tnuuJnlitled a requoat
llllll:b amliibt. The clanpr from the statilwide student Of'

~ The ,,.:~

- t l y adapted .., our .,....
Campua would be quite coo-

1~ -

with

I(DidelinM

miJht

~ ~

aDd,

m.t.c~, one

suspect that the State

committee was inapired. by our

example.
.
.
The Ooatina Sanate - w iII
~ve on nezt to ~onia.. who
will host the Sprma Meetinl.

The Wlltem N- York CODaoftium of IIIII- Education
baa establiDid a RePc&gt;nU LuIW'III lutitute•to be conducted
this 8UIIIIIIet' in an attempt to
make the lanauaae I'OIIOUI'Cel of
the
N- Yodl a.more,.ty
, a .
e to the commun-

W=

p~yti~~ coinlvol•'::: ~
....- .....
· universities in the area. Ita
main thrust is reJfonal cooper-

the IDa&amp;itute will be pdded by

a Policy Board ~ ·til
one ft!P,_,.tatiw from .m
partic:ipatiJII inlititution. 'lbla
Policy Board will offer.......tiona, analyoe reaulla, aDd make
recommendationa about the Institute. Dr. Thomas Kawnauah is U/B's nu&gt;.-tatiYe.

hW1iA~~-rtoofiS~-~-

., """""'
._.
sions at · U/B, the clinocmm of
summer sessiona at local col-

~~~~~ :;t;.;=.,.~.=
- Gr~nStamps i!o:~.:.m::u;~=::a::r
~~!~-:===:..~
lution -'"-- • ,__,,.., __ ..
most of the psrticipatiJ14 col- of summer as a time to pay

. . . . _ . _ - .... ......_ .,.. - . - It a aood tryl
.
• As c~ the first .
a,.. to a i'eport by
CbulceBar iloyer.. Finlt be
o"4DDl ••lll!d upon_ bia reactions .
to ~ llaUn m ~ to
pnMOiann,.;_of~-~~.~

orr-

..... ..,.._. ......vanODI-· - ._,u
_.......,_..
-L"-- .....,.,
.-.Into..........,
~be ~rabl

J!8Diftl.

wu ~ ..vo
Y -~
towards &amp;'- ~utions. . H_e
~ the ~tic J!Oie!Kialities ·for ft!8ell!d1 inherent m our
~ biomedlcal ne~k
which 3~. compu,ter pnntout&amp; of "!"8'~
on
"; worl~ basis. ~- t~ of
library ne~dl serv1ce 18 likely
to be developed for many._.
of acbolarly research. In a .different yein related to libraries,
he thoUght that some kind of
fo~ would ~ useful to
B;chieve a more rational allocation of funds for li!&gt;rary purchaSes, but be believed that
cannot always be apformulas
plied automatically--&lt;!8pecially
in periods of ti""t bud •·
,.... . 1e~.
Fioir
In reprd to resolutions on
Fair. Employmen_t, he favors-the

reter:ences

Em..,.,_.

Can Aid CAC

student~~~ ' ;·
Board of
end a1ao
on local camPus t..rds. Pres'
ident Norton a1ao took note of IDITOII:
the me( that the Calendar Com- · Community' Action Corps is
mittee ia still wortdns on plans a student volunteer a 1 en c y
fur a IIChedule callina. for four which ·annlially attract&amp; approx- - L moc1u1ea __ ..
eek · tel 2,()()()
.
tuden~ ...__
8
sixteen
Y rationale
mo- aemeelenl which woUld
be~eel
'uni- Jma
tivsting
for~-the•""
orpnJorm throughout the systeln. ization is that the · Uiiiveraity
TI&gt;elle plans, however remain must not be iSolated from the
1n the same tentative si.ate they community; and t h a t the
have occupied for over a year. proper utilization of University
Finally, the Ezecutive Commit- skilla can iiynamically· alleviate
tee of the Senate is slated to many of the symptoms (if not
meet with the Board of Trust- the causes) of our many aocial
on Mardi 28 for an in- ills. 'lhrouJh our projeds, stuformal meeting; hence Presi- dents are llYeD a chance to exdent Norton requested that pro- pand their classroom learnin1
!lp!!Ctive discussion -items for experiences throuah positive acthis meeting be sent io 'him tion and service. · Our varied
no later than Msrcil 5
repertoire of projects includes:
.....,_ ......,. ·
Tutorial and Recreation, Day
S..uol o.tent.tlan
Care, Health Care, 01118 Re'lbe meeting produced very lated, Social Services and AclitUe action as only a few com- tion Programs.
miu- submitted resolutions
Within the COUI1ie of our acf~r CODBI'deration.
·
Two reso1u- tivoties,
· ·
we have found the need
tions, ~owever, were passed to provide adequate transporconcerrung fair employment; tation service to both our volone pertainin1 to leave for unleers and those we serve. In
preiJ:W!cy, the otheT to expand the fall of '71, we procured for
the l&amp;nguafe on illegal discrim- -the organization a van. In the

"""

ees_

leges, but the program will Ia- special attention to ~cilitate the coordination, plan- tetion in 1anauaae instruction
and joint announcement and r e g i o n a 1 coordination.
'!f ~ course and prognLm BlackhW1it added, '"The Reoffenngs for summer, 1973, at gional Language Institute ia an
the ·various member schools. ideal way to make the lail- _
·Approximately 20 languages guage resources of the local
will be available this summer colleges and universities availunder the' ypoces
·
0 f the Ins
ti- a ble to many more people-not
tute.
only student&amp;, but alao busi'IMmas A. Clark, assistant to · nessmen, -travellers, professionthe director of Summer Sea- all! older people, anyone in the
sions, U/ B, is serving as di- area who would like to study
rector of the Institute this sum- a language." Earl Bo1gan, exmer.
ecutive vice p res i den t of
The prolr&amp;m planners hope D'Youville Collele. headed the
that li&gt;!gional coordination can committee which proposed the
imprdve lansuale study, especi- establishment of the Regional
ally on- campuses unable to Language Institute to the Consupport a wide variety of lan- sortium of Higher Education
gua1e programs.
last fall.
Sin;,., the accent of the lnsti'b~the information can be
o tamed from the Ottice of
tute is on regional cooperation Summer Sessions or by callin,1
and Plannins. the activities of 831-2411.
.

nin&amp;,

Tenure Study Report -------(Continu•d from JXJI• 6, coL 6)

plans, and its resource allocation policies.
Ratios Not E.,.y

· The establishment and main-

'" "fi,!?"..:f·:.~=pus~ 0~ -~~~~~r:':.'t e~ ~1:"~ ~rt!'!on~ysi~/~~ ~=u::!d~~:.~ ~U":otanb!
•Yillpathetic to the aims of
equal employment opportunities. While such officials should
be hired after consultation with
. women and minority repre- _
l!entatives, he would not interpret the Sanate resolution to
imply a veto power over the
hirina of suc1t officials. The
SUNY system has taken a Io111
time to establish the machinery
to implement afiinnative actiOn, but .we should now have
reached a point where substantial increases in recruitment of
women aDd minorities are possible.
Later, in reBJIODf ' to further
questions on fair , 'lj)loyment
practioes, be said that the new
SUNY guidelines will contain
lanauaae 011 affirmative action
that is as forceful as the Federal
, guidelineL He would not, however, mvor the kind of incentive
pool llppiOIICh which baa t-n
no
w w by our local Senate. Premmably, affirmatiw
action' plea must avoid any
implication of a quota system.
Chanaellor Boyer reported
that a
tina had taken place
' * -11188
a SUNY Sanate Commitlee aDd 4be SUNY Presidenta iD wbid! . . , _ , t was ..-:bed tbat Campua By-Lawa,
once adiJpted. must become operatiYe. A formal statement of
this principle will be made at
the SpriDa Meetins of tbe Senate. 'lbe implimtion of this
. _ t ia that an adJnini&amp;.
tratii!B t..da of the By-Laws
~ .,..md8 for jp'ievanOe.
Fiully, CUnceUor Boyer
·.,.__. to implement the
reaohation callina tor a reo~oration of a Faculty Sc:bolar •.....___ - - - 'lbla --'··b,ijj:c;_{"...-- -fell ..;.,'ti';'t,
the ~~ curtailmmt. It 1a a iDodeat but 1mpor:tant Jn1ram as it n.pr.
_.. • llep to adUeve 'c-ter
oabellvww within the SUNY
system.

Cbacellor Boyer then
turned to the budpt end related a-da in ~ for

would call for. a change in the
Policies of the .Board of Trust-

capped women to- meetings
where they can discuss 'their
mutual p rob I ems; it has
tions arisin1 from childbirth to bi'OIIIht groups of inner-&lt;:ity
be treated ·t he same as other children to museums; it has
i.lln,esses and to chan1e the lan- literally saved lives by serving
guage in such..a. w&amp;Y aa to. pre- as an ambulance for those who
elude arbitrary: administrative have over-dosed on drugs; it
action in srantin1 mate~ty has transported books to our
leave.
tutorial projects in aid of those
The Senate endorsed a reso- who are deprived of reading
lution by the Library Com- skills; and it has brought tears
mittee calling for a concept of of joy to the eyes of hundreds
open aocess to all SUNY li- of youngsters· by 1&gt; ringing
brary collections for all SUNY clowns and magicianS to our
W:ulty imd stud en t a. This annual carnival. Truly; the opwould include direct borrowin1 porlu!tities and uses to which
privileses. This privilege is of . a van can be applied ~re limitcourse now often grantea but less.
the rmolution mildlt help to
On January 19 1973 the
eliminate red tape for a visitor. van which had ~ l.,..;,a to
Finally the Committee on C~C was recalled without any
Graduate Education in takins proor notice. 'lbe loss ·0 r this
note of declinin1 Federal sup- van has caused the curlailment
port for Jl'llduate trainins pre- of vital volunteer services.
sented a ,_,lution to increase
To alle~te the transport&amp;the number of Jl'llduate sti- tion problem and continue serpends aupported by State funds vioes, CAC needs a van NOW!!
aDd to keep the level of sup- We have contacted the S&amp;:H
port sufficiently high in onter Green Stamps Co. They have
to maintain both .quarrtity and informed us that a van may be
quality of paduate education pwdwled with· 1,795 boob of
in !be SUNY System. It should stamps. If you can belp · us,
be noted that this resol~ please donate any S&amp;:H Green
was mainly for the beuefit of S~ you have_to: CAC Van
the Univemity Centers end D
Room 220 Norton Hall
similar resolutions advancin1
nve, ·
•
•
paduate trainins often en- SU-Ny
at Bu«alo, Bulfalo,
14214
counter considerable opposi- N .Y.
.
.
· .
tion. This time, however, the
Thank you -for your 88818resolution was aupported with tance,
no diacemible m-.L
=:;~, CAC
_..
Ordinarily ·tbere is little to lll.
AT-- -.1
say about committee .reports ;.y~easer J.:VUff-t,ef..l,
which are not yet -.ty for aotion. The Senate. however; receivid an importBDt, document
from the P~
Georse I. M - . publiaber
Committee, chaired by Profes- of the AIIIA&lt;nt ll« aDd other
sor Sara Cil:an!lli, -which will ._....,baa '-'~ted
come up for ·aotioD at the to the Council of the Uiliwnity
SpriiJI Meetina. The _mport by Governor Nel8oa A:. RodledMla with taure aDd promo- feller.
tioa polidea. It tUa a lllud
. . _ ......... William I.
apinat the imposition of II!'&gt;- Coaners
pablilber of the
ure quotas. It alao caalainl Bullalo Coaliir-8.--, wbca
broad IUidelinea for proced- IAinll baa~ "-'•lanll
urea dealiDr- with t1111ure aDd eDda llity 1. 1881.

"l'S to include the complica-

To U!B Council

m.

easy; clli campuses which are
beginning .to mce up to this
problem, misllnderstandin1 and
controversy have marked the
effort. Older faculty members
who began their academic careers before World War n are
familiar with tenure ratios ana
quotes and with d~ntal
tables of oriranization which .
specified the number of positions at each rank; they grew
up with them. These contraints were commonplace in
virtually all institutions, and
faculty expectations were adjusted to the limits set by institutioruils ta fH n 1 patterns.
But these practices were abandoned durin1 the expanfion
period of the late 50s and 60s,
. !"'d t!&gt;" facul~y who predominate m Amencan colleaee aDd
universities today reprd the
imposition of tenure ratios or
the limitation. on numbers at
!"'ch rank as a_~eel aDd
unproper restriction_on facultr.
adv"""""'1e!'t. . "NeWfana!ed 1t
assuredly . IS nOt. . A•ttention to
the balancie be~ tenure end
nonten~ · pomt\Ons and to an
approp_nal!&gt; m • x of ~ty
ranks 18 '!""l!b' !he nMval of
atandardunder
-~~of~

.............,.
stability which doeeJy
lei those' in which Jbe pnct1oe
arose. But the- attoDtloa to
ratios, quotas, 8Dd faculty ' mix
may l'fllllllt in inequltlee uil'institutions prOceed canfuiiy

~ad~~
·~ _,-

"""

stalf'1111 plaDs. Sudaia ·
ti011 of quotas ~ aperat.

UD-

faldyt;_._~~~.!Y~

-:·~~~ --~... ~

• ,........,.
their apectati911L llud erieal rali08 will _ .

"'tla

~to~~..:::..~
..
1D1 ...,~ .._..........!:.-.:=,_

well
~ -·- -lllelllbaa, upaa dltlll I W of
differalt . . . aur...t ...
88

-.-ltion.

.

'lbe

l)wmnlia!ce

lllan6lnl

~ llladtutlaal to .....-

"'

their decisions as to the ratio
of tenured and nontenured faculty as ranges or limits rather
than as fixed percenta1es. And
we recommend that the chosen
ratios be applied with sufficient
Oenbility to different instructional units of the institution
t departments, divisions, sepa·
rate schools, etc. ) to take account of si1nificant differences
among them in size, current
variations in age composition
and tenure mix, varying re- •• •
search and teschin 1
nsi-

bilities.~

~

The Commission b e I i e v e s
that it is probably dangerous
for an institution to allow more
thin one-half to wo-thirds of
its faculty to be on tenure appointments. This caveat is
likely to be especially important durin1 the decade of the
19708, in view of the relatiw
youth of most W:ulties and of
stabilizing trends in faculty
size and fllliUicial .......,....__
'lbe Commission believee that
a li.rger proportion of tenured
faculty is likel to curtail
portunitiea for
appoinm::t
and retention of )'OIIIllel' facul-·
ty, with lindeelrable e11ects on
institutional vitality; to impede
the deYelopment of pro.
srams a n d interdlaciplinary
work, for which faculty
will be needed; end to diminish
opportuniU. for the naultment aDd promoCioa of increuecl llUII1ban of aDd
~of miDarity ........
Same ~Wadi ...

the

==ct.- ~

~ in
III8DY inatitntiona. 'lbla A.ociallaD aDd oiMD which .-ve
the htcbw educatiaa ity am J*(anD a ftluable vice by briubur ta.e llludlea
to the a&amp;teatiaa-of lll8lllblr inatilulioaa aDd by __,m, a
braader ~ of the
crud.d importance of 1111111
~ to tha health of our
collepa aDd Ulll-ati&amp;
Ill ~ 'let me * apia the Cominl........ ~
,.
- d•tion: ""' acarleJoUc
fnlft ,_ . _ , . _ .

cb»; mono ia

"",..,.~¥Tlilh­
er .........lti;rllfiiM
lilt4eltai.J~­

--~ .....
OlfiOIII---.......,
........
effona Ill

.

_, ;;:;;;;;.

�8
Good Weather Spurs Amherst Work---:----~.
(ConliluuJd (roa -

1,

col-

tra1 Court and dininl unit.

t)

~

Remaining brick worl&lt; on
- o f the ezterior units ot the
Ellicott Complex continues this
winter thi'OIIIb -the """ of "oocoons" or temporary enclo&amp;-.
urea which allow the structures
to be heatedt n.e maasi¥e ·
complex is located on the north
sbore of Lake LaSalle, the 60acre campus lake. ·
To bouse a number of the
"""'-es at UIB, the livina~ unilll in the Ellicott
Complex will contain dormitory
and d i n i n g facilities, claaorooms, aiJ: mini -libraries, ofriCe&amp;; a boobiDre 'and worl&lt;abop
: 'The 38 buildinp are
connected via a multi-level COl'
ridor or academic core.
Varied tower beiahta, odd•h•,._, windows and specially
;-~ bricks that are beinl
, _ f for the first time in construction, all contribute to the
overall innovative appeanlll!l8

:!...tlfeet""';f..~=J!::

uled for mid-1973 completion
-.Mth nmaining units ready a
year later.
Alao to be completed prior to
1975 are the Ralph Hocbstetter
and Walter Platt Cooke Health
and Natural ScieDce Towers,
oo which brick enci0BU18 baa
begun. 'The two towers, located
Wlllt of O'Brian Hall, will
bouse the School of Pharmacy
and Department of Biology.
Adding versatility 1o t h e
module-Shaped 1owers is the

:

'if.!':~:tXI:!:d':=

·--- ....... _..._

tween -·•·· floors and provide ~for electrical and
"During the remainder of
mechanical systems and BliPCurrent construction in prog- this year1 10 to 12 additional
ply storage.
of these
ress or already completed at construction
contracts toteling
spaces, which are almost as
the Nmth Campus is valued about $50 million will be awardlarge as the f8lll)ar floors, eJec.
.,...... - .
,._ at approximately $150 million, ed. This depends of course on
trical and mechanical upkeep -liore of Tonawanda to begin Physics building, baa alao be- according to Dr. John A. Neal, · favorable action by the Legisand maintenance can be con- foundation work.
1\lll preliminary work at the• assistant vice president for fa- Jature on the Governor's Budducted without· disruption to
The Education structure is new campus.
cilities planning.
get," Dr. Neal said.
felll)ar.floors.
phaSe two of development of a
The Physics building is phaee
At p...,t, only the shells tri-faculty, sub-campus area to one in the development of the
of the toWers are under con- be known as the Social Science- Natural Sciences and Mathe_atruction contracl 'Interior Educatio~Law are a. It will matics sub-campus area.
" f.orl&lt; will be condw:teif under a be co~ to O'Brian Hall
_.ate contract and the envia several above ground corri- R~rknd..:rtd:ntinues at a R.e
.
t
. o
tire structure sbould be ready don..,
Mi li
also steady pace on road and parkby mid-1975.
been awar~.::J"a ~n~ for ing facilities and utilitY distriBy KEN SERVICE
include the possibility of pro- no.,. Addlllionol llulldlnp
construction of the Industrial bution at the new campus.
u-.;,, '"'~""" ......_
viding free parking for students
During December and Janu- Engineering building which will
Transportation in and around
A report on the University's and faculty through the use of
ary, conlzlicta for three addi- accommodate the Department the 1,200 acre site will be pro- reaction 1o student demands CCC Iunde, and the establishtiaaal bulldinKa were awarded. of Industrial Engineering as vided via •.hierarchy of. roads, and an attempt to organize a ment of a cafeteria for the stu'lbey are the Education-l'bilo&amp;- well as some facilities for the . some of which ~e now m ~ student government wen! the dents.
l'tl,yaia. and Industrial SChool of Information and Li- ~t tJ?e present time, attention subjects of · a student body
Mr. Thompson also reported
buildinp. All are iJrary Studies and Department JS bemg fc;&gt;CIJ8ed on ~ roa~ meeting at the Cooperative Col- that Dr. Gelbaum will conault
sebeduled
mid to ·late 1975 of Engineering Science.
and parking areas whic!&gt; will lege Center, Thureday, Febru- with the director of University
ccwnp!etlm
Tbe four-etory structure will serve the Govemo~ R:e&amp;idence ary 8. Approzimately 150 CCC Libraries about the poaail:iili!r
of CCC stUdents using U/B liWarl&lt; baa atreiody becun on be pbaae one of the Engineering Hall complex an~ 0 Br1an Hall, students attended.
and
Applied Sciences 'sub-cam- s • n c e they will be tJ?e first
'The previous day, four vet- brary facilities, and that Dr.
theE d uca tion- Pbiloaophy
structures to be occupted.
erans Who attend the Coopers- Somit will continue his e1forts
structure tha:t will bouse the pus developmenl
'The Siegfried Construction
Power for the total electric tive College Center met with to resolve the problem of who
Faculty of Educational Studies
Company 1Dc. of Amherst, campusisbeingsupplied .byan . Dr. Albert Somit; executive · is responsible for the overpaywhich lias been awarded the electric sub-station which was vice president, Dr, Bernard ment of veterans benafite.
Followin« his ftiPOrt. Mr.
haft allowed C!GIItr8clor J. Mil- coa.tract for CDIIStruction of the ollic:ially activated in early De- Gelbaum, vice president for
~
aca\iemic a1!airs, Dr. Richard Thompeon urged the-students
Siggelkow, vice president for ·"to demand a JepOrt
student alrai.rs, Dr. Khairy on lheae isauee from tbe AdKawi, assistant to the execu- ministration within the next
tive vice president, and Dr. two weeks." He also made an
Heruy Ricbarda, assistant vice appeal for student unity, aaypresident for academic a1!airs, ing that "the DI08t ,_...;c.,..._.
to discuss student demands.
and
......--·
Gerald Thompeon, one of the
DI08t immediate problem
students who participated in facing lis is keeping this achool
the Wedneeday - meeting, re- open, and we will not be able
ported ol9 the CCC students on to accomP.lish thill aim urnthe resuJte. He confirmed the we all urute behind our student
fact that the CCC baa been re- govemmenl"
certified as an approved insti'The remainder of the lMettution for the education of vet- ing was· devoted to an attempt
erans. He further reported that to qrganize the student ~
Dr. Richards will check with ment, which would appomt stulocal Veterans Administra- dent representatives to partiotion Office to see whether it baa ipate in meetings of Yllrious
been notified of. the re-certifi- CCC &amp;;lministrative u n i t s.
cation.
.
There was a great deal of disDr. Ricliards will also ask cuasion concemini the nature
Earle lacey, acting director of of the govemuient and pOasipJe
the .CCC, to work with faculty cl)oices for officers, but no ac• members in exploring the pos- cord was reached.
Bible .re-institution of credit
'The
a Stata agency for
coumes in the social sciences, providiQI programs to Ollllble
team teaching, and a flexible the educationally diaadvanttu1orial program. Thompaon re- aged to achieve enrollment in
ported.
regular institutions of higher
Other areea ·to be in\oesti- learning is administered b
gated bJio Dr. Richards, be aaiil, U/B. '
.
y

s-uae

CCC Student Body Hears
actions Its Demands

:::...~~~

occ;

�F~15,l91:J

\./.

~

Regents' Panel on Doctoral Study
Urg-es Concentration ofReso\rrces
The State should concentrate
i t s - to foeter high quality and -.led JIIOil'8IDS o~ doetOral edQcatioD,- while phaeing
out~ DDt ~Meting tbeae

Sewei..

ity and the most allicient and
economical uae of limited- retion, the Commiasion found sources. ·n - two characterthat higher education in New istia! are generally found in inYork Stele, as well as nation- stitutinns which have a major
hiJ!h standards.
ally, "is suffering frooii severe commitment to doctoral educa'rbat was the - c e of a set finan!;ial ehorteges - and that tion and which have substential
of .....,.,..._..tions releaaed the ·rugh cost of proliferating programs in related fields, the
this week by hixh-level Com- d~ral education programs 'iS' report says.
miasion appointecfhY the Board an important factor in this situBasic to tbeae two recomof Repalll to study doctoral ation." -.For example, the Com- mendations is a third which
mission estimated. that in the ~~ aupo '!__1hedocRt!~lnptoroB"'ra~:
education in New York Stele.
Financial support would be major doctoral producinj! insti- ,.... u II1 1""
- ~
,_
restricted to thoae public and tutions, doctoral education oo- at b.oth . the pub. lie &lt;UJd private
private institutions meet i n 1 counts for about 30 per cent of mstltutwns as constltutm/I t.ostendards establlabed by the institutional budgets, while in- 11ether an interrelnted system
Regents after examining Indi- volving only about 11 per cent for doctora( education. FollowvidUal prosrams. Although sup- of the student body. To educate in~ on this concept the Comport' for approved doctoral pro- .one !loctoral student annually nussion calk!d for greatly ingrams ..oiild increase, overall costs more than five times what creased efforts for Stele-wide
costs Would be contained to the it costs for each bachelor's de- coordination of planning at the
enent of a reduction in the Jre.l! candidate, ~the Commission Stete leveL
number of J&gt;I'Oill'lllllS.
mdicated.
Financially, the Commission
The Board of , Regents ap- The Commission also con- called for increased support for
pointed its~ on Doc- cludl[d that-the Stele now ap- both publw and private doctorFlocal Crillo
As a result of iis- investiga-

a

1

ci

-

Int~ting Dikmrruz Faces

The CoUeges, ,Smith Says

An intereating dilemma f.iceo
tbe ~te System,· Collejpalon\SIIIIIIIbly Director W~­
land P. (Pat) Smith noted this
week: 1. How many experimental couraes can colleces .offer
and still be tolerated as part
of tbe Univereity?; and 2. How

such

COIIllll!

per lllr!ll) le M

imporlallt , _ Gild ..........
ent• wit/a eollq_,. ob~

It is the only~ col.... .
have that Ddemlc ~
ments do not have. It llhould be
su-e-! on tbe olhw haad doat
con.,..,. do not offer~ do
· not Olfer tenure .....,tina ._.,
pointments, do not ncelve •
to q:::Jrfy as a college and is souroes at a lewll ~
assimilated into tbe mainstream ~most disadvantapd deputment.
of academic departments?
"2. The proportion of 'aperiSmith posed the questions in
the context of a stetistical study · mental' .courses Ia quite low.
of experimental !JOurses which Only 14 per cent of tbe total of
was circulated to the colleges. 311 courees/sectiona schedUled
These courses are receiving this semester are ._uneatal.'
"3. Ten colleaes have ...,
"increasing critical attention by
the Administration, the Divis-- 'experimental' OOIUM8 this ion of Graduate Studies, the ester. Are they too 1111ttled In
Faculty Senate, and indi~idual their ways?
faculty members," he saia.
"4. College E oilers 68 per
Based on his tebulation of cent of all •experimental' COUI'fl. , ':.,..
b o t h experimentel and · PCA es but this is very consiste!Jt ,
(Pending Cour s e Approval) with its peripatetic theme.
classes currently being offered
"5. Even when the 54 couraM

:':be=:-~~fo~'ft"".,.,:

~~. =:";:"WJ~ n.:,:i~~ ~
~o~tveu!.d~u'::!:="J"'~ ~cfi~t't::;.-h,:t t'h:!i. 0i':..~i:~: ~:'th a.:d~lh'~":,t.e~a~~~;
!orates that IWill he required in lions rrn!eling the qwlity and

thatare ( PCA ) ~ing~

approval are lwriped with the
" 1. The 'experimental' option 44 'experimental' courses, they
ing policy to ~Met p - t needs · the coming decade.
need standards.
account for only 31 r;_r cent
and to gUide the. future devel- _ As a .~t. a -17Uljor recomFor publw institutions, the (i.e. the ability to offer a course
pment of doctoral education rrn!ndatwn IS that the Regents Commission urges that 5nancial for credit once only, subject to ~~d~:;a~_number o cou"'!" ,
college
approval
only,
students
in the Stele." R""'- W. Flem- . esllib.lish special committees to support for doctoral programs
"Interesting?," Smith asked.
ing P""'idenl of the University review the qwlity of and need be increased to adequate levels limited to a maximum of one
of Michigan, headed the Com- for doct.oral programs in select- · and be given on a selective
mission. Other membersinclude ed dosc1plmes.. Only those pro- basis. It urges the Go ver110r
NUMBER OF COLLEGE COURSE~ECTIONS (2/2/73)
two university presidents, lac- ~~~:ams me e t 1 n g stendards of and Legis/Qture to authorize
ulty members from Wjscon$in, h1gh qual1ty or need would then pul&gt;lw funds "only in support
Credit
Cross· Col'- -..log Expert·
Ulled Approved Courw mentol Tatol
Colleges
Hours
Yale, and MIT, and a member rece1ve State support. The eva!- of programs ident~d by the
Approvol
of the New YorK. financial com- uation teams appointed by the arRege_,'!ts as meeting high stand30
54
0
15
9
l. . E
.. 2205
d•5
munity. The report has now . Regents would consist primar5
14
3
4
2. H
304
2
been submitted to the Regents ily _of out-of-stet.: peers in the Other Recommendollono
0
9
6
3
... 272
0
for consideration and action. vanous fields bemg evaluated,
For . private institutions, the 3. A
15
7
I
272
I
6
The Regents said that in light sel~ fro~ the academic, "'!'d Commission calls for sharply 4. International
'
2
4.
2
14
5.
Social
Sciences
287
6
of its far-reaching consequences Qon-~cademlc sectors and m- increased Bundy aid- the main
I
0
10
4
I~
6. z
. 238
they · are, in turn, !"'l"!'"ing it cludm~ o:ecent graduates. The source of Stet.. support for pri0
18
4
I
13
7. Math Scij!:nces
753
immedistely to pres1dents of all CommlSSJ.on also strongly rec- vale institutions which is based
5
0
2
I
institutiona in the Stete1 asking ommended self-evaluation and on number of -degroies awarded. 8. Rachel Carson 6n
8 10
I
1-1
0
0.
34ll
them to. respond before final !'cti?!l '!" the part of individual Aid, now computed at $2,400 9. C. P. Snow
'2
o·
2
0
0
action is taken.
.
1nstitutions.
. .
for e'II'!;Y doctor a I degree 10. Communications N.A.
&gt;..
Accotding to a Board of Re·Among criteria to be consid" . awarded, would be doubled to 11. New College0
10
0
0
10
Modem Ed. .. .. 490
gents !i.t&amp;l!!ment: . three factors e!¢ 'in the J&gt;roPQ!!erl evalua- $4,800 but limited lo those de12 ~
0
0
0
12
. 207
convinced the·'B·o·a r d of the ' tians 'llre the ' qu!ility of stu- grees - granted from programs 12. F
21
13
26
1344
3
63
need for an overall stud,Y of dents, scholarly achievement of meeting the stendards of the 13. B
I
3
4
0
doctoral educatiQn : "One ·was faculty, .availability ' of· laboi'a' Regents. 0 the r recommenda- 14. (l. C. -Fum as . . 150
15.
Women's
...
12i3·
21
2
0
23
the serious financial plight fac- tory .and libl'lll}' facilities, sue- tions of the Commission are:
81
8
4
0
0
12
ing higher edlleation generally c;ess m graduating enrolled stu( 1 ) The'Regents should stim- 16. Vico . ..... ... .
o
0
0
0
0
0
Anqther was the prospect, ai dents, 5nancial support, a n d ulate increased cooperation and 17. Legal Studies
151
44
TOTAL .........
.14429
62
54
311 ... ..
least in certain fields of a de- the need for each program and coordination in doctoral educa·
100
.,
I!ER
CENT
•
20
17
14
veloping s\uplus of doctorates ' its approp~iat.;ness for students'. tion among all inst~tions in
caused by a decrease in re- career aspll8.tions. The concept the Stele.
search and development expen- of need is extensive, ranging
( 2) The Stele should ensure
ditures by business industry from the heed to advance and that doctoral education at all
·
and government. and a stow- disseminate kno~tedge .., .the institutions is acceosibte.., all
· down 4&gt; the expomsion of uni- need to solve soc1etel problems qualified New York students.
versitieo traditionally tbe and supply manpower.
shoEcoulnodorube·c aneliminad
!"'ituratted.~o~
largest employers of doctorates. "-"ts Would ~ino
.,.,
Finally, there is tbe general
Baseo;1 on the ~ of the mer would largely be accompWBFO-FM, the U/ 8 radio and ~ on . the air 18 hours a
disaffection of society with in- evaluation comnuttees, the Re- lisbed by a new system of.finan- eerY~ is conducting a fund- day, eeven daya a week. 'lbe
ts would determine which cia! grants tO students recog• • • drive during D..._, • ._, steti'on broadc:aats . more -~
tel,........ o:- and the ·
~ how
~~ should. be sustaino;d. nizing the difference in' tuition ~er to continue ..i;,";;;{fr larly scheduled jazz,
ucation best serves society or 'ptaoed on probation or de-regl&amp;- between public and private in- diversity in p~.
classical, folk, and eleclronlc
~~:_
of .,..._ __ ti''on tert·second_' but ,..;lated, rec_and based on student ::,.:v;:r
~
partWBofro haef~~ mthe~~~~ =-~_!&gt;
..............,,_.
.,........,
In additi"on, the Commission'
•
.....eduled
- - _.....,.
,_......
Ewald B.. Nyquist declared a ommendatw!' of the Com-nus· programs. Jim (:amp- bell Public affain JIIOI:"'Illltemporary, moratorium on the sion report !' that the ReBento recommends that sex and mi- bell, general lJliiDIIII!r, says that ming....,... from J'IIIU)ar lboon
creation of DeW doctoral pro- adopt a pol¢y of OO'JC"nln!tmg nelimina'!rio/gtedroasu.t.:'~...:;..t: many of tbeae 8J!8Cial events featUring intervien li'Uh pams in tbe fall of 1971 pend- pro/Iroms at a relatuJel)! !brutare va{uable in tbemsolves, be- makers or ~ torum. ill
mg a more detailed sttuly of ed number . of Ulllti.tutwns to ment in doctoral programs for ing indicative of the ldnd of whieb "*~~ben of the OIIIIIIIIUDthe situatioiL
a c h i e v e both highest qual- qualified students.
contributioils WBFO makes to ity can aW.e eia'-111, to 1M
( 3) 'lbe Regents should..,_ the community.
_ortaped-.of...:b_..

recooiunend8ti0ns "for develop-

·J ,-

..

WBFO Launches Fund-Rais'
. mg Drive
To Assure Future Program Variety

d=:t

=lions,

·NTPJob Openings
'lbe PIIIIICIIIDel Office indicates that the following NonTM&lt;bina Prole.ional Staff poaitiona are open at ~te
Uni&gt;WIIfty at Bulfalo:
•
-Teclutit:oJ BpecilJlist, Removable Prostbodontia!Scbool of Deadalry,· PR-1.
.
Aaaitalt to tile Detm, Office for Credit-Free Programs,
ContiDuiua Edualtion, PR-1.
Far addll1oaal lmormation oonceming d:!ese jobs .and
f&lt;W deiBIIa of NTP openings tbrouibout tbe Sla!e Umver-·
aity ~ CXIIIIIUlt ballelin boards at u- locationll:
L lWJ FadJity beC:ween D~52 and Dl5S; 1~~~·
B1lildlq 4288, ..n to cafeteria; 3. ~
D.-"t.a:-~
4230 in corridor .-t to 'C-1; 4. Health ~ ............,rriclo,
in~ opposite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, m tbe co
r
~ Roc!m loll~ tbe ~· 8,- ~~
floor m canidclt .-t to vending m~,Info
.,_ Of
in maip ....._ 1oyet ..,._ from .-........
rmawuu
lice; 8! Am.oo Hall, in con:ldm' ~~:weal Roams 112 ~
113; 9. Pubr Engineering, m ~r ..U to Room 15,
10 Goocbear Hall, tat noor HOUSU\I Olfioe area; IL. Law
sd.ooJ, flist floor pnerat mfonnetion board beC:ween Rooma
108 111111109· 12. 11107 Elmwood, Persotllll!l Depertment; 13.
Nortoa
Director's Office, Room 225; J.-l. Diefendorf
Hall, in corridor orin to Room 106. .
•
-

'*'

um:...

oiMft.

c!r~
~ ~!" :;t !-. fealu!'ed 'part of ~ fundress repOrt, all doctoral grant.. rti.ISllll drive Will be a live po-

ing institutiona be required to
review their doctoral programs.
(4) The Commissioner of
Education should end tbe moratorium on DeW doctoral programs when n!lldy to ~t
criteria and prooedure8 that
will ensure that any DeW pro- - fully - • rJgorQus
~ ol ;:;iity and .-I.

etry reading ~ 22 by
Robert ~~· a U/8 11!0r-&gt;rof
~
durinl the month wilf be ID.w:
- - ' -.ilh fund-~ ~~p,

.-11 rr- local eelebiitleoi ouch

as Melvin SIIQaw of the Buffalo Philhannonlc and _,_
bera of the BuftaJo SabreL
In 8ddition to the opoicia1

~~......::

: :
cert. On ___,_.._, WBJO a1za
23 houra -;;--~
sipied for the bJAick ADd ·

iiiHpMkina _ , . . , . ,

Campbell oap !'!I WBJO,
"We 117 !Mit to diiPJiala.~
.w.dY beiDc dane C. r8dio In u attempt to offer u
al"--"~~e

to tblile-'- In

~.. who .,. ~for

EcclesHonored
~-==
.,.....,__ _,,_..,_
oua
J18rta ol the City, hold om e-u~~at~
_. JI!R-

.!&gt;"·

JobJ1, C • ......._ ~:·

II to- offer ADd
educa~ with •
DIIIIIY
~ A
dthe
will eil8ble aa to con
lila
&amp;bal8ra for 197S-14:'
marathons - ....... m boun ~bu. -belle be-. .........
The Viaitm, Sc:bolan travel during wb1cb 1epW J!l'OPIUD- to ci1er oar a...u.- m 1be
throullbout the Cllllllb): '!! opead miDI will be !IJiipalllllll ADd oammunlty two Of three da.YII "!lh ubder- apecia1 abow1, u..i lntervlewa, Ices."
.
gfl!duates at unlvereitiea and and__..__~, __..__,.., __....__,

open booM at tlie studio ill
prof~ 9l Jllly8ioloey Nortoa Ul!ion, 111111 1lftiiiDoe
and blopb,yak:a, W 0118 of teD • more live music llhowa Orillaat..., and Womeia who have been ing In' the studio. QmipbeU
d - . 1'hi Beta Kappa Viait!Da a1ao bopea to ha~~e - . 1 iDlnl-

paM

gliiabed

collepS with Phi Beta ~
chapters. .At oiec:h of 11!11 institu-

,..............., •ann........... · WBJIO.JPM llnllldcuta CJD
EMMliobed • UtB'a etudeat 88:'l Clll file PM dial ~

=...o:~~~- :::c::.v::=a..~ ~~tion-'at '7"

1owMpeople.

'

' Ilion of Conthtulng Education

tbe BulraJo - -

•

�~tirrimg Centet..Otfers Assistan~e

In CommUnication Skills &amp; Math

ri

tra.inina and r cooniiDatioft
teacbing efforts in BOP. In
summer, 1971, tbe instructiaDal
componenls of EOP remaved administnllively aud
physically from 1be E;9P- structure, and tbe ~ Cenll!r
was foniied as a ...,...-ate entity, with Dr. Edwarda as 118
director. Although ._ , . ll&amp;udenla at tbe Cent«
niferred
there ,by EOP, Dr. Edwards
alleoees lilat tbe ~ Center is open to. ""Y Uni_,;ty
student who .-cia help in basic
communication elrilla or mat.hemaW...

m

Where t~ Faculty Studied
U/B- is tbe larpst suppl}er of adVBIIC8d ..,..- lPl'
members of ita own faculty, a report compiled by the
O!llce of InatitutiooaJ. ~ reveals..
. . Columbia, Harvard aDd tbe Univen!ity of California
are next. though far behind, with over 60 l!l'l'duatea eac:h
on tbe faculty. Both the Univasity of Michipn and
.Yale have more than 40 repreaentativea.
The complete breakdown follows:
.
FACULTY .1972·73-FALL SEll~

-

tNmTIITIOitS WHICH CONFERRED THE ADVANCED DEGREES

No. lot

Tatol No.

- 169
-74o..r-

SUNY at Bulllllo
Columbia University'
HaMid University
University of Callfomlo
University of Mlchipn
Yale Unive1111ty
Cornell University
Uniwl'llty of Illinois
UniversitY of Wlsc:onsin
·'"'UniWiSity of Chlciao. · •.Unive1111ty of Minrieiota
' ..
lndiane· un.~tty: · ·•
. .
Johns'· H'?Pl&lt;lns • UntYerslty •
. &lt; Nort~ro 'Unjvei'itty . ., •. ·

D oc.-

Incl.
In Total•
73

12
22

64
63

2
9
5
4
5
1

41

47
3B
37
34

6 .•

31 .
31
23
23 '
19
19
· Univei'Sity of - · · •
Ohio State' Unlvel'ltty· •
18
• •New;·:rro~~c univel'llty ·
17
PnnC:eton University '
17
Syrocuse University
17
University of Iowa
16
Mouachuseltl Institute of Tech. 16
Purilue University •
16
University of Pennsytvam.
IS
University· of · Wnhington
IS
Unlvel'llty of P!ltsbu'1ft
14
14
Stanford University
Iowa Stoia Unlve111ity ·
12
ea...
11
Wayne Stato University
11
SUCet10
Univel'lily of ToXH
10

. 3
4
3
1
2
1

3
5
I

I
I
3

6
3
4

w-...-....

Booton University •
Camoaie·Mollon tnstttut.
Dulle Unlvel'llty
Unh,.l'llty of Maryland
Brown Unlvel'llty
'
Lehigh University
Rut&amp;o111 University ' ,
Catholtc-Unlvel'llty
• Mlclripn State University
Univel'llty of Colorado •
Goorvo Woohington University
University. o1. Kanus
Unive111ity of North Carolina
Olhor U.S. InstitutiOns'
'

4
10
I
I

9

-=

9
8

8
7

7
7

2

6
6
5
5

2

TOTAL~

5
170
1206

2Q

·~..-.:D.D.S-. D..lti.D., D .V..

J.D., lL.JJ., lti.B.A.., Jl.D., M.S.W..

_s

41

M.L.S.
ll~H.~ iJ3. 1,.,..,._
- ~ 214 _fll!l--!

u..s. ~Mtitatlon.

FACULTY 1972·73 -FALL IDIEliTEJt
FOREtQM lfiSTI1'U1l!)NS WHICH CONFUIII£D

THE ADVAN?£0 DEGIIEES
~

University of London

Tokyo Unlvel'llty;
Unlvel'llty of Toronto
University of Ylonno
'Unlvel'llty of
Cambrldp University

Po"'

· ~,.:.u~ un~vers~~y
"' -~~~·
KyotO
-UaiWnity
~
Polish- Acadomy of Sclonca
otberf&lt;&gt;....,.lnstltutlona'
ToTAL•
Tatar' U.S. .... Fonfp ~

T-

No.

-·Doc.l7 8 .
7

6_
5
4
4
.. 3
3·

a
3

115

178
1314

�F~

n

15; 191:J

Alumni Association. Seeks
Nominees for Its Awards
NCIIIIIDetions for the Walter
Cooke. Samuel P. Caperi
a.Mi Dlatin1uisbed Alumni
awards are beiDa sought by 'the
U/B Alumni Aasociation.
'The awerda will be presented
May 18 at the /vmual Meeting
of the Aasociatiiln.
'The Samuel P. Capen Award
is ~ted annually · to .an
alumnus who has made notable
and meritorious OODtributions
~ the growt.b and improvement of the University
imd stimulating otlwr alumni
to give active interest aDd material111Q111Clrt Ill U/8. 'The award
is named for Dr. Capen, the
AI
• Olllce aaya, "becauae it
is~
the recipients will have
,...,_. ted the aame ~
~
c:barac:terizal his administration as chanoelkir (1922" 1950) "
Past recipients have included
University Council, fa c u U y
and stsJr members as well as
graduates in other fields.
Only non-alumni are eligible
foi'" the Walter P . Cooke Award,
which is not given each year.
It honor&amp; non:alumni· for outstanding aervioe to the University, its faculty, students and
alumni-.vioe continued over
a number of years in a parti•
cular area of activity, aervioe
performed in many such areas,
p

or a series of services of such
magnitude that they clearly call
for outs~ recognition.
Tbe award 18 named for the
late Walter P. Cooke, a nonalumnus who gave two decades
of aervioe to the Vniven&lt;ity.
Mr. Cooke, an acting cbanCE'llor
in 1921, was chairman of the ·
most suocessful f u ii d raising
campaign in the history of the
private University of Bu1falo.
Tbe Distinguiabed Alumni
Award program reoognizes people who ba ve distinl[uisbed
themselves in their profession,
in their support of and servioe
to oommuruty in all aspects,
and for extmordinary achievements which might not be easily
claasified under occupational
and community servioe beadings.
An Awards Committee, headed by Dr. Frank L GrszianQ.
School of Dentistzy, who is
president-elect of ' the General
Alumni Board. will'begin oonsidering candidates soon. Members of the University oommunity are asked to submit names
of people deserving of oonsideration.
In 'order to assist the Awards
Committee in its selection, the
Association requests thet nom.inations, together with supporting materials, be received at
123 Jewett Pkwy. by March 1.

-'HIGHER
Mana~eme~t-Confidential
GEDUCATION Expl~~~.K~~~~:
PBRB. attarCl\..liQTES
:Emp~·:!tial"
su1~ suw.
meanin1
-

-~ ,,

Pnlllident Nimn sent Cona $268.7 billion i&gt;udaet

greos

~'i!'i!?te ~-~t ofpropoeesed··~' to
....,....,...
~on.

health,, housina and manpower
programs and to abolish the
Office of Economic Opportunity. Some programs, notably in
higher education and beelth,
would be dropped entirely.
Others woull:l be replaoed by
four spec i a I revenue-sharing
proposals in the areas of elementery - seoondary - vocationa! education, law enforcement,

this
"In 1971
noceiYed answen1 .... _
defined ...
tions ze~ the
of SPA Barplnlnl Unit by~
u- desipJatians.
fyina the titles wblc:b ...
In a memorandum to tboae be ucluded from the Unit and
ooncemed, President Robert L
deemed tboee titles to be . _
Ketler cited definitions from agerial.' All academic Uld _ .
the Taylor Law· (Chapter 504- academic pn&gt;feaional emploJ•
1971) : "A MONJieT is
per- ees. wboea till• not on
son who: a. has resporunbility that list were, tlaefan. for the formulation of policy; bers of the
or b. may reascinably be re· (the list appeara a
quired on behalf of the public A in the SPA ~t).
employer ( I) to assist m the · ''RAM:eritly, PERB~
preparation for and oonduct of several non-t.eacbiD&amp; profiollonoollective negotiations; or (ii) to a! titles to be addecf to the...,..
have a major role in the admin- agement or coalldentia1 JIIOUP.
istration of negotiated agree- These are in addition to ~
ments or in personnel admin- titles originall~ 80 dM!pa-

I&gt;iacovery of an ~

gradee of "'-nplete" bas led
to inception of a D8W fonn
which requires the
and printed D1IIIIM of "both .instruclllla aDd ~t chair-

m-turee

men.

·~~l ,.!i

in
in pcJGu..
Tbe budget calls for phasing nature and requires the exercise previouSly dee~ted a IIWlout the following programs of of independent judgment. A agement or oonlldential ha..
interest to higher education: in- con(ithntilll employee is any been, and will oontinue to be, ,.,
terest subsidies on academic fa- person who assists and acts in oovered by the Polit:ia of 1M
cilities and ooUege housing a oonfidential capacity to a Board of Truatea. Similarly,
~oans; oollege teacber fellow- managerial e m p I o y e e who those of you whoea positiona
shipa; aid to colleJe, school and meets the criteria in b. above." have recently been ~ted '
public libraries; langUage and
While u- definitions mar rnatll!gement or confldelitlalare
,_.:__.
area studies; university com- not appear to _precisely fit Un1- no longer oovered by the promunity services; supplemental versity titles, Ketter said, " they visions of the SPA contract, "'!t , .
opportunity grants (formerly are, nevertheless, the guides rather by the terms and oondicalled educational opportunity State agencies are required to tiona or provisions in the POU.
grants); new capital oontribu- adhere to.''
'c~s of the Boord of Truatea.n
tions to the National D irect
·Student Loan fund ; undergraduate teaching equipment; aid to (Co ntinued from pa/le 12, col. 5)
aioniml paintinp, throuab Fobland-grant oolleges; environ·
ruary 25. Paul Wiucn/el4: Paintmental education; social work . ~~~wJf·be1~~!~ gin Pi~ CaBopenth ing1, worlal oituated toward tha
training programs; Hill-Burton ~
poetic, romantic e6d of tha current realist oc:ale, throuab Febb ospl'tal CO nstruct'100 gnmts ; re- Free.
ruary 18. Alb"'•ht-Knox Art Gal·
gional medical and oommuni·t y LKTI*'
Elm·• ooc1 A
mental bealth center programs;
The Church Today, Dr. Har· lery, 1285
w
...,....
training grants of National Jn. :~~~\f~~=t~/t~ AIT EXHIIIT'
stitu!eS of Health and National
arth Roo
u · ·ty P b
~e:t&gt;=::.v:.;::,~t9~~~.;:,~
Institute of Mental Health;
Ch~, M'.J:~d N::;.~ February 19 throuab March 2.
capitation grants to I&lt;Cbools for Fallo Blvd., 8 p.m.
Gallery bows: Mooday-~.
Perry, dean, Health Related veterinarians, op to me trists, SCHOOL OF I'I!AaMACY
nooWednn·5 p.m.
Y ~-~UDdaF~Y·y
Professions, for ''Health Sci- podiatrists, pharmacists, and CONTINUING liiUCATIONII
eoda ~ rid&amp;
"!"""' Ed~tion and Evalua- nurses; and institutional supInternal OTC Product. 11, a 7:30-10 p .m.
tion Center; and $63,581 from port for schools for public nine-week oontinuint: education
There will be ""openinJ - NIH alao to Dr. l!cbenk '!f Sur- health and allied health.
couroe on intemally-Uied non-pre·
lion for the artilt on Mcmday,
gery . :for .'~CS "!!.
Also, the budget contains no scription drup ta""ht by Arthur February 19, 8-10 p.m.
··
Applled to Surgical Problems.
funds for general support to in- H. Martm, .....,.te profeasor. EXHIIIT'
Listed as recipients of new stitutions of higher education, .. U/ B Seh~l of BPr:,_rmacy, 244 Hap!:...
otoBroP'!! ~~ D"f!!'~Y
Fo~,
gnmts are: C. M . Allen, Elec-. · wliich w
tboriZed · the. Health Scienoeo ...... 8 p.m.
,, Hall Lobby ....,
_
trical Engineering $1 ()()() from
mnib "hlghau ed
· m Ia
For infonnatlon on cou...., con· February 19 throuab .
26
ONR for " 1973 inu;,.,.tional 0
us
er
ucation w tent and registration, contact the Presented by the Oillco of Cultur:
Multi 1 Valued enacted last year. It does oon- School of Pharmacy 831 -2546.
aJ Aftain in cooperation with
.
SYII1.~'¥_f ~ T P \" Med'
tain $622 million this year and YAISITY LUICETIAir '
.Univenity Publieatlona Be....U.. ,..
~c;
· · Ollllll!'._.,; I· $959 million in the next fiscal
U/ B w. St. Francil "'a.), Clark
Cine, $21,476 from !"llt for year to launch the new program
"'
NOTICES
8
30
"Secretory Otit;is Med!";" B.W. of Basic Opportunity Grants to _Ha11.
___'_ _P_=
_ _ _ _ __
Papermaster, Biochemical Pbar- post-seoond&amp;ry students a I s o
THURSDAY-22
maoology, $32,QOO fr&lt;!m N.Y. authorized by the 1972law.
Canoer Research Institute for
•
•
•
"Evaluation of Potential Tumor
The fot.tr documents spolll"l out
Suppreaeina P r o P e r t i e s of details of the Administration's
MIF;" J . .M. Greenberg, Math- 1974 budpt also rwllect • , _
ematics, $9,500 from NSF for sales policy of the GcMtmment
"Nonlinear Conaervation Laws Printl"l otlico,- T- prleft are
of HYPeri1olic Type;" R: T . lllt8cl for each publication; one If
knvironmental Analysis,
rehuecl bJ
11 nc1 School of Management; a $11,- ::::_ price If =~a.,.... U..:
()()() S.. Grant for ''Post-Relat- counter ot one of the GPO'o 20 PHYSICS COlLOQUIUM.
ed Activities and Metropolitan boollltoreo around the country.
Erperimental Studiu of IM SD ln.Uraction in Metallic D
Economic Growth;" and S. Mil·
•
•
•
iaauskas. Anthropology, $4,100
Remember when it was lash- SUllu, Prof. John Gardner, The
from NSF for "Analysis of ionable for critics to state that
Data FJom an Early Neolithic ---' if not all, of the problems
.
in 112 Hoehltetter, 3:30 p.m.
Site jn Poland."
;;{higher education oould be
solved if colleges and universities--&lt;md the
who administer them - would adopt
the practices and ,Prooedure of
business organizations in order
to bring "elficiency" into the
q.e new form and additional operation?
Well, 'in the future, IarKe or"ProCedural steps, Ebert said,
was "the uoessive number of ganizatioDS- public ana pri- EXHIBITS
'inoompletes' given by some vate, commercial or political,
or whatever-will have to be - - - - - - - - - faculty members.
run more like univemitiM aDd AU - - _ .
"Some instructors· give 'in- the - l e Who "run" them ByL~JNlf!.M and
completes' in the most inappro- will have to acquire the akilla p-led ~Oftiee of Cultur-priate .f ashion, i.e., inatead of
and have -the abilities of the ~L~..Diop
u.i-Plal! -F~.;••~yeo.
failing grades, instead of report- successful
university ad,minis- ~ _ , tl1loqll - · - •
ina 'no attendanoe.' and often trator.
~VIEWS
simply 'on request.' We bad one
At least, that is-a central tb&amp;faculty ID8II1Ia this p a s t - sis of The FUlun Er«Uliue: A
ter who aaslgned 30 per oant GuUh for TomDITOUio MIJliiJ'incomplete&amp;' to his students." gero, a new book by Harlan
''Incomplete&amp;" should be given Cleveland, . president of the
''only if a student has a pa&amp;&amp;- University of Hawaii (~
inl average in his work and can and Row, $5.9&amp;).
be fully expected to actually
oomplete his work," Ebert said.
Y• Will· admit men - ·loo ·

Weekly Commum"qu.e--------

.

;rian

';!.!;=-.:

er-:

.

~=~ ·~ ::."'If.!~~

-le·

Signature Forgeries Prompt Use of
A New 'Incomplete' Removal Form
niiDlbel' of ilipature_ toraMes
on tbe forma 1med to remove

neaotia,=.:r.:

~ tr;e~~~~ urban \!~:'~f~~~~~:'::f.r~

Research Giant Totals
Up $1 Million in January
University faculty received
23 grants. and co'!.t racts totaling $1,313,523 durmg January,
aocordinf to Robert C. Fitzpatrick, acting vioe president for
research.
· 'The January total was m&lt;ire
than $1 million above Decem·
her's $305,065, Fitzpatrick's figures indicate.
,
January alao saw llllbmission
of 88 proposals amounting to
$5,920,614, FitzpaUick said.
Tbe DIOIIth's largest tolals
were renewal grants: $394,062
froni NIH to N.R. Roee, Microbiology, for "Autoimmune Responses to Normal and Malignant Tiasuea;" $100,642 from
NIH to T.B. Tomasi, Medicine,
for ''The I .G.A. Globulins of
S e r u m and External Secretions;" $99,997 from AEC to G.
Breit, Pb.Yaic:s. for ''Theories of
Nucleoo-NuciSon Interactions."
and $9),596 from USOE for the
Upward Bound prognun.
·
Major' continuina grants
were: $225,114 from NIH to
W.G. Sdalk, Surgery, for ''Sequenoe of Organ Failuzee Following Trauma;" $94,352 fn&gt;m
the Kelloa FCIIIIIdation to J.W.

anr.

Dr. a.riea H.V. Ebert, dean
of the Dl¥illon of Undlqraduate Studiea, aid in a memo to
teachinl faadty this week that
"As of - · DO 'iDcompletes'
can be .-..ect by usina the
old white form. All requests for
removal of 'bicompletes' must
be 1ll1lxnjited oo the new yellow
form (1-73-lOM) ." Tbe forms
do not have to be sent Ill the
oftioee of tbe Univeraity-widjl
K££1' IN 10UCH
deans, Ebert aaid, but, as in
the put, are to be sent directly Dial (831}-4343 for the. Uni..,r·
to the Ollice of Admissions and ~· O.lly Rejlort. Important In·
Recorde, Hayes Annex B. · · • fonnatlon O.lly.
Another factor in adopting

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&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
THURSD~-15
AS~TIS

MANAGUIINf

PIOOIAM•

Fu'todtJmcntolo · of ACCOIUitin.f
Oltd Filu&gt;na for Non-F~itJl

--··

MGIIIJ(Ien, Norton, 8:80 a.m.-5
p.m.

The Ckoclaml Qlltlrld, 101
llaiJd,io primarily lor muolc otudoDta;

n..--

il!ad!mta
.....aw
in
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cllocipiiDoio
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PIO..IIIOIMI. nui IINAft

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_ ,4.pDoJa ID be uiJooaDoed. 148
DiilfeudoJf, ll p.m.

SUNDAY-18
c~

F-val p - t a AI
Green, Kleinhus Muoic Hall, 7
and 10:80 p.m.
Ticketo at $6, $6 and U ""'

available at the Nortoft Hall Tick·
et Otlice.
WA&amp;fU••

&amp;yond the Valley of 1M DoU.
(Meyer), Conference Theatre,
Norton, check obow.,_ for timeL
Admiosion

SATURBAY-17

eharae-

MUSICAL tMNOVAtiOMI

tl..J~~l'r.t:..""'..!f!eJ~

MAGIC SHOW•

H~t tl. ~~- p~:.!:
~:: ~~~~lo~!'~
1
~d!::r!! P;:,f
will

r.-:-.

be donated to the Planned Parent.
hood Center, 210 Franklin St
CHINESE LAHTUN fESTIVAL•

·E astman . of U/B'a SEM En·
semble, WADV-FM, 10: 05 p.m.

MONDAY-19
COMPUrtNG CIHTEI SEMINAl••

FORTRAN IV, a comprehensive introduction to the language
and its applications, 4238 Ridge
Lea, Rm. 12, 7 p.m.

The festival, which will include
dinner, is open to the public. HILLil CLASS•
Ticketa at $1.50 for student. and
Talmud, Hillel House, 40 Ca$3 for I"Jleral admiaoion are avail- pen Blvd, 7 p.m.
able at the Norton Hall Ticket
filMS•
Office. Ridge Lea Cafeteria, 6 p.m.
My Life, My Timu (LiJ!Ion) ,
Presented IJt the U/B Chinese
Student Auociatioil. ..
.:.
..
U/B w..U.S. Military Academy,
Bulfalo Memorial Auditorium, 7
p.m.
. CAC CINEMA•

.

The Heon io a LoMly Hunter,
140 Capen, 7: 10 and 9:26 p.m.
Ticket. at 76 centa are available
at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
VAIIStn' _ . , .

_U/B ... Ithaca eou-, TWin
Rinb, ~- 7 : 30p.m.

UUAifiiM,••

-

&amp;yond the Valley of t1ie DOU.
(Meyer), COnference Theatre,
No"!mt check obowcaoe for tiJMo.
Admiloion charae.

•
The lint andlut of the mammary rock llhoclunw bom aMeyer.

UICIUB•

~

Melhi&gt;d. for l&lt;knti-

c,_.ca~~ur.
of T~. I. Peter
~t of Paychol.

.IYUI6 Yatio6lea"""

az Sl.dia
Demnt.

oo. tlniwnity of W-m Oft.
tario, Loadcuo. CaDada, 289 Hayeo,
2-4 p.m.
.
~ bJ U/B l&gt;el&gt;utment
...-_;~ of Linluiotb and the ~

CONCIIT•

.

The Center of t~~e 'Creolive and

Performing Arlo of the U/B Depariment of .Muoic will collaborate
wilb'- the R..idn&amp;t Donee Compolly of
at Brockport in a
p.-&amp;Atioo of the BaLlo , .
-Slucloat Aaoodatioa.
_ ___
.. .meof worb by ,~~rton
Gzooq, I ~: F - of
mala and Lejarell ruuer, Uptoq
11w Galazlo., Diotriblaion of the ' Hall,
at Bulfalo, 8 :80 p.m,
Gai&lt;Wa, ~r;-· Red. SIU(t
.Tickets at $1 for ~tudenta "'!'f
and 1M E
·
and $2 for l"neral admiooioll are avail-

sue

/eld.

sue

Tile

7
•

u,_,_

u,..,_..
booe

Suroeyed

..,.t ~ Library' 3-li 1!-D&gt;(Tbia
will h· re-ted
for &lt;lnlup II ou Tu .oday, Feb.
to.)
•

-a..

- - . r n liMINAl#

able at the Norton Hall Ticket
.Oflic&lt; or at QP- Hall Dll the
everung of the _perfo.........,.
GSA IOCIA'.

r

IVINtNG••

"'·

$1 admiuioo for- p.duate otudent and 11181t -will. ~r l&gt;ever·
- (beer or pop) • Filllii9N ROom,
None., ll P.JD.·1 a.m.
•

lllltibition of Template Depend.,., Polymeroua witll TIUolated
l'ril}'llUCleolilla, Tbomu Bardoo, . UUAa COffl!llt!IUSI•
&gt; ••
U/B ~ of
Heleo Schlleyer, Norman K.,...
Chemiotrl&lt;. 8c1tool ol neely, lint &amp;or cafeteria, Nortoa..
·'
• 0-22 ~ 4 jJ.a. .
9 p.m. ~ .-.,.,

e

"Russ Meyer promised to make the wildeSt. CI3Ziest. fUillliest, the farthest
out Musical-Horror-Sex-comedy ever released. He~ succeeded."
-

~"?d~~i. ·Pii"t.nMQ':!"'&lt;J;~

YAISITY IASICITU.U•

FRIDAY-is

THE FIRST OF THE SHOCK ROCK!
lft~MFM(.-

Heure1 (Cavalcanli), Emak Bokia
(Ray), 7:80 p.m. Metropolio
"(Lang) , 9 : 15 p.m. All films will
be shown in 147 Diefendorf. Free.
UUAI filM••

&amp;yond the "Valley of 1M DoU.
(Meyer), Conference Theatre,
Norton,. c:heck ahowcue for times.
Admiloion

eharae.

=

·cONCar

Creative A.Nociate Recital V,
featurinf.!i•nry Rubin on violin,
uaioted
Stephen

Manas,lria,.':i
K:jd~:,_=:::nil..in!
Hall, 8:80 p.m.

Ko

Recital
The performance will include
worb by Raw!, Crumb, Gihoon
and Audrix. Presented by tlre
U/B De~ of Muoic. Tbe
=~ 11 bee and open· to the

VAUlTY MJICI'I'MU.*

U/.B w. Uniwnity of Tenna.

... (Chatt&amp;Doop), Clark Hall,

8 :80p.m.

-

TUESDAY-20

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JOHIILA lNl I II:IL\Elln.006£Tl I DA't'll 6URWI I C..'""'i~i EOY 'MUIAIIS
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>FacultyOkays-Planning'Collegium'
A$ Ketter Reports on Library Goals
1

3-Feminists to Discuss
'Women &amp; Psyc;hology'
'

"Coniemporary - p.y logy
claims to describe the 'true'
nature' of woman in a . way thst
fits suspiciously . well with her
current powerlessness, exploit&amp;tion and enforoed self-hate.
~h social norms thst psychologtSts help to create and
through psychotherapy itself,
women leerri thilt if they are
restless, discontent or frustrated
with the lives -t hey lead, the
problem lies in their psyches,
their childhoods or their misfunctioning genitals."
Tbe assessment iS thst of
EUen DuBois, assistant professor of - history and American
studies and an organizer ·of
"Towarda a Feminist Psycho' logy," a symposium on psychology and women to be beld on
campus Friday and Saturday,
February 9 and 10.
Speakers at the sympoeium l'nlcr8m Schedute
will'be peycbologists Dr. Phy~is
.T he three guest speekers will:
C"!"der an~ l&gt;i, Naomi WeJS- · offer a panel discussion Fristem and histonan Dr. Carroll day, February s, at 2 p.m. in
Smith Rosenberg. All three are the Fillmore Room of Norton
active feminists.
Union. Dr. Chesler will ..,..,.),
The symposium, presented on "Womeri and Madness ~rn;:
6y American Studies, is being Weifstein on "Psycbolog). Re&gt;SpoDSOred by the Faculty of constructs the Female." and
Arts and ' Letters and the Fac- pr. Rosenberg on "'The Hyst&amp;=
ulty of Socilil Sciences and rica! Woman in the ' 19th CenAdorM&gt;istn.tion.
tury,"
.
·•we have organized ~!Us ~ym.
Chesler and' WeiastAln
IJ(lllium," ~ exp~. "to Will ' offer woibhope ·on ~
present a cntical perspective on symposium t o p i c s in Norton
what oontemporary psychology trnicm Saturday•. February 101
tells women about themselves
Both the panel and
and to ..., , . the outlines of
free and open to
a new femmist paycbology thst
"
·
'
truly helps ....men to understand their livee and change

nns.

t;Mn_

"As feminists, we reject an
analysis that t e lis that all's
right wKh women except their
beads: We un-derstand that
aoci8J eontext and seXual politb aoe 1be critical faolors in
delennlnlDi what women ...,
KEEP IN TOUCH
r
Dial (831)-4343 for the U - r·
slty'o Dally Report. Important lnfonnatlon Dolly.

~t

of an academic
p']iuming IeSOlut:ion ,that calls
fOI'' lbe· creation of a facul·t y
:'9QIIecium" to develop "a proopecba' for the academic d.irect¥in )md climate of this Uni~ was the principel ac6aoftalalli 1tt the Faculty Senaii'll"~-6 meeting. How""'more than an hour of the
Seo\a~ :sesmon was devoted to
• dt!tjliled ' report from Presi- denl' Robert L Ketter on the
U/B I,ibrary lituation. both
pre&amp;I!Jlt'and projected.
The """"ution_l&gt;ll academic
pla'n ning (see full text, story on
Faculty Senate Ezecutive ColllmiUee eleewbere in this issue)
paEed . by-- the' faculty liOdy
citeS ·t he Board of Trustees' exelicit instruction that faculty
lDvoivement in "initiation, d&amp;. velopment, and implementation
of the educational program" is
oblip.tory. Tile resolution also
lisbl as criteria for the genen·t:ion of a "valid" academic plan
significant participation by the
entire faculty, hick of undue
time pressure, . and final endorsement by the Senate, as
the representative body of the
faculty.
.
Tile resolution calls further
for administzative support for
a five-person "co 11 e g i u m,"
elected from open nominations
by the Executive CoJ!l!nittee.
Tbe collegium, which grew out
of an earlier proposal for a
oounciJ of uthree wise men," is
cbarpd wi t h developing an
IIICI!demic
·~"
and what women nugbt become. lfppirentiyp""-or
inilependent of thst
We need to project a feminist now being fonnulated by the"
iJSychology t b a t makes those University's Academic Council.
connections between personal
During debate on the resolu'problems' and the political tion, supporters of the ucolleg.
reality of women's lives, and ium" idea were asked what
thst looks to radical change in puzpose it would serve, given
the latter as a solution for the that faculty input in academic
former," DuBois said.
planning is assured at the deOf all the academic disci· level. Backers of
plines, psychology is the one paitmental
the proposal indicated the need
with the moet pervasive impact for
a philoeophical, non-parocbon women's lives, DuBois said.
"Psychology in oontemporary
society plays much the same
role in determining normative
feminine behavior thst theology
played in tpe early nineteenth
oentury. And 'it's almcet as difflcult to subject.the 'intellectual
- assumptions behind psychology
to criticism as it was to subject
~logy , to scientific tests," she
added.

.

.ia1 iaculty view, rising above
special deparbnental interesla
and· considering the academic
futwe of the entire Univenlity.
lAnllhJ Ubrory "-tt
.
Tile Senate meeting opened
with a lengthy President.ial report on status and prospects of
'the 'Pnivenrity Libraries. In a
new format thst brought. both
Eldred Smi'th, the Libraries'
new director, and John D. Telfer, vice president for facilities
planning, to the ..,..;on, Ketter
detailed the current situation
and . what can be expected as
the Univ~rsity moves to Am-

herst, with extensive documentation &lt;&gt;f boldinp, budpta and
space allocatione (figures ...,
on file in the Senate oftice, be ·
noted).
Tile current combinad budat
for the ten scattered library lacilities CUITentiy in ,_ is $3.7
million, Ketter said, whlch repre&amp;Mlla.a-lllie'of 6JIIWditwe of
$188.39 per FI'E (full-tin&gt;e
equivalent) student. ' An ~ating allocation of $4,470,000
has been regueated for fiacal
1973-74, with increases projected in aD areas inclu!fing ac(Cont~d on -

6, col I)

Budget to be Responsive,
Boyer Tells SUNY Senate
There is hope that this year's
State budget will be " reasonably responsive" to SUNY
needs, thanks to an enormous
discretionary fund, Chanoellor
Ernest L Boyer told the SUNY
Senate in his "State of the University" report at its meeting
here last Friday.
U the propoeed budget is approved, Boyer aaid, the SUNY
central adminiatration· will be
allocated a lump sum of $7
million to distribute to branch
campuses in several areas as
needed. Tile Chanoellor labelled the proposal "remarka-

~P~i.~
would"t'3P to ...a..... jnequitijos
which resulted fnim prior "inationaT fundinJ(' of SUNY cempuses. About $3.5 million would
be immediately applied to
building repairs. Boyer said.
Campus budgets for the next
academic year will -reflect an
overall reduction Qf 'h to two
per cent in facultv - student
ratio, the Chancellor notedHowever, -library support will
·r emain approximately equal to

this year's ·budget, and mainteshaw a general improvement.
Money is not the only resource· which
uiree redistribution, Boyer ~ed. "The limited growth of SUNY over the
past few years has required an
unprecedented saies ol decisions," be said, " relating to
management of limited rather
than maseive growth." Although this year the number
of applications for acceptance
to SUNY campuses is equal tQ
nance service will

~=~""J:...~:C:

and scieoces coli- for example, haw 17 paz: . . .t fewer__
appjicatiqoa than l a at year,
wlrile the-agricultural and technical schools are running 28
per cent above 1972-'73 totale.
Boyer noted that SUNY has
reached a "plateau" of growth
with only 7,500 additional
places available each year until
1980. However, be forecast a
future reduced IIIJPlicaticm rate, ·
because of shifting consumer
attitudes, most notably the in(Continued on 3, col 4)

�w-

I

IIOCiation fOI' the Advancement
of Science, the Women's Action
Alliance, and the Aaaociation
fat the Abolition of Involuntary
Mental Hoapltalization.
Dr. Weiaatein is the author
of ~Kinchir Kuc:be, Kircbe as
ScientiJic t..iw: Psychology
~the Femal!'t" one of

=-to ...:~r of~~m:.;
movemenl Dr. Weisstein, &lt;a Phi
Beta Kappa paduate of Wellesley Collep, receiwd a PhD.
from Harvard University in two
and a half years, held a Na·
tiona) Scienco Foundation P"!'tdoctoral fellOOIIIIIhip in mathematical biology and is an associate professor of psychology
at Lo)'Oia Univenity. She Js
c:um!lltly a visiting ..........:her
at Bell Laboratories in Murray

~ ~"Na~:r·=te "':r

=

Mental Heelth granl Her re-.cb includes work in cogni·
tion, memory, information '-'ro-

. ;:mr.:s.::,

l:~d't

ad fmrunistmowmMmtsince

::c.rw::~ =..~rc

tion llfOUps in ihe country and
contributed to the first women's
liberation journal in the United
States, Voice of Women's Liboulion.
Dr. Rosenberg is an assistant
prof-.r of history and psychiatry at the University . of
Pennsylvania, where she teaches
courses in women's history,
gender role aocislization and

~~~~- ~:c&amp;~":

/

University an'/ is ·the author of
Religion and IM Rise of IM
A~Mriazn,. City (Cornell ·Univarsity Press) .

---

According to DuBois, the
three ._)ters have very different methodologicd approaches

~ Oent.r, -=-ad~·· -wee

..,.,~~orpn-

-·s

iald by a poup involwd in
A-an and
studies
indudlq atudenta. faculty ;;;;]
ClOIIIIIlUIIity - . Members
of tbe QIDIICIIIium commi...., ..... ·u..uMy. cam..
tiDe Gnbl,
Walbr,

:=

~~~

=--~~~~
......

s:a.Inlld. Elaine Prostak, ad
~.

--

By SHARON EDELMAN
You may be one of the mil·
lions of .Americans who aaon·
izes over every Nixon spaecb,
seekinJ aignillcance in llllihicuity, facts in ftgurea. u so, imagine your frustration "tenfold:
aupiJOO&lt;!"the government should
mate reference to .-n:h
·which you youraelf have done,
months of your diligent work
~ youtall~denly can't recogruze a
.
This perverse sort of deja vu
is a bizaJ:re recurrenoe in the .
life of Robert Katz. As an
honors student in the Politicd
Science Department, Katz was
appointed to the- Wasbiniton
intemobip program for the
spring - t e r of last year.
Weeks of waiting and a rigorous -=ity cbeck finally resulted in rh.l&amp; appointment as
the first in~ to work for the
House Crime Committee, researching prison aJJaira and
trends throughout the
. Crime
country.
Tile nature of Katz's. worli:
accounts for the gap between
his findings and the versions
which are ultimately presented
to 4he 1&gt;ublic. Tile committee's
report on prison riots in Attica programs or funding which bad
and elsewhere was released late accomplished this in the first
last year under the tiUe, An place.
As if this weren't enough to
AmD"iam Tragedy. Katz found
much of his own contribution spark hope in the criminal
near!y unrecognizable; the re- breast, there was also President
port, he feels, significanUy un- . Nixon's personal Kafkaesque
deratates important information assurance that the crime rate,
be had derived from his corres- although increasing, was doing
pondence with inmates across· so at a decreasing rate. Katz's
the country. · ·
own research refuted this, arid
Tile """""ional brutality of his continued investigation fithe guards, Katz discovered, is nally led. him to the F .B.I.
less tbreitening to the inmates crime rate statistics for 1967-70.
than some of the routine prison
According to this data, Nixprocedwes. Barbed cages, in on's statement held true only
which a man can neither stand for the cities. The total crime
nor &amp;:it. are eommon fixtures in rate, however, increased t an
many prisons. Katz also alarming rate, merely shifting
leam\'d,.abo!lt the "strip search- with the population to the subes" conducted by the · guards urbs. Katz was fonnally rebefore the inmates can take quested to keep his findings to
their daily 1&amp;-minute exercise bimseU at the risk of embarperiod. Tile searches are often rassing the LEAA.
punctuated by beatings and Dlsturtlinc lnfontuotion Concealed
sexual attacks. by the guards; ·. · Katz Can cite nwilerous other
they can end witli the prisoners occasions on ·which important
forced to exercise naked in the but disturbing information was
coldest weather.
kept from the American people.
Edltinc Out
Often, be contends, professional
, Katz contends that the Com- researchers will w-&gt;rk for weeks
mittee report was ready for on a single proposal to be prepublication at least six months sented to Congreaa, only to
prior to its actual release date. have it scrubbed at the committee stage as too controversial.
'The en.. time, be believes,
was probably devoted to editing
Yet, be notes,
out information "for which the and Senators rely heavily on
public was 110t prepared." An· their staffs. Katz bas observed
Qtber report on the subject was numerous roll-call votes during.
submitted bf Katz only to be which elected ollicials have ·
suppresa!d m its entirety be- turned to their aides at the last
ca.- of the Committee's fear moment to ask bow they should
that ita content would disturb vote. He maintains that Conthe "politicd stability" of the gress operates much as 6aJpb
country.
Nader says it does in his unSimilar incidents occurred in llattering portrait published
the courae of Katz's crime in- last year.
veatiptions. While charting
Despite these experienoao and
crime trends of the put three his commitment to political ef.
years fOI' 25 major American fectivenesa, Katz is nooe"""'-a
citiell (the paph bas since· became IJ'Mlftllllllllt _...., ma- ~thein~=
terial). Katz IIOUibt infOI'm&amp;· systeaL Like any ou..f'group,
tion from tbe 1.- En!CII'CI&amp;- . be contends, Congressmen are
ment Aaaistance Admlniatra- primarily interested in their
otioa, a lhlnk tank Mabllabed own survival, as demonstrated
UDder tbe 1868 Crime Coalrol by the peraislence of the -..
Act to i n . . U . t a - - of iority syali!m. Beca.- leaisla·
crime OIIDtnll ad dlatributa tors aenerallY : . • them·
fanda~.
ae!Yes .. ~te,
deml~ Katz belie,.. that their
..,., lBAA. it - . Cillllducllal lllmn.r - . d l ,
lies in tb8• ad . . -mood, just prior . . . of the chasm between their
II;) Kats'a inaalrY, that it bad own world and the daily Hves
n.e gameS
effectively ....a..ce.t crime in 52 of the
and power struggles which have·
become 8)'11011ymous • with
~.m:=--tioaKa,:
~. cmJ.y to ...... that the Wasbinston, be maintalna, -are
rarely malicious; the -'fare of
U5AA J.f.JIO ~ bula
~ts is simply ....,and
to the inatinct to.survive.
-lllblunt fat Ita mulli-mJIHoD . 'Durlna his intemsbip~ Katz
clilllar - apenditurea; Dllihr - .granted all the privileaes
could it prow that It wu IBM of the 1J10ft!eaiaaa1 atalf; the

w==·

!:!i'ttea o~...:::.n
stein, who bas worked extensively in developing mathematicd methods of psychological
- ; ~ts a critique
of the current psychological assumptions about women. Rosenberg looks at psychological
phenomena from a historical
per8peelive. Chesler, who bas
-.irea~,.,U:ueDced by Foucault imd
baSes much of
her work on clinicd aperience.
·Both~. in her work on
the nine-.th century bystericd female, and Chesler, in her
study of conlemJ&gt;0\'8fY female
"madneaa," are interested in
the licbt that definitions of
cloiviUioe throw on the normative feminine role, DuBois eJ:·
plained, and both point to path. Oloclad components in the
IIIDIDI&amp;tive role.
.
Orpnben of the symposium
hope to attr&amp;~:t a wide ranae of
JI87Cbololy prof.-iollala
and...,...-....- .. -u
.. cUenta of ps';yc:ilolosical ....... Far tbla tbe II)'IIIII08ium • beinl public:ited in CD11111111111~
llll:b .. PluDed
loc.l load ~ the Suicide

~8,1973

U/B ·congr~ssional Intern Charges·· 6Profs -Wzn:::_:
. torts
C:t:~me
. D· a ta · ._For
SUNY Grants
·Govemment DIS
_
r~mng

(~ fro• I. col. Z)
council of 4he Aaaociation for
in Plyc:bolotiY. the AB-

•

-~

v

2
Feminists-

ec;ngreasmen

.cv:.

ineffectivene.s

-"'tiooL

=:!;

· ~~C:.~'IJ:=

Six U/B faculty u&gt;enib.irs are
111110111 57 prof__,. on 25 State
University ClliiJPUii6s Who have
......ved newly ,..,.ted pants
designed to stimulate escellellce
in undergraduat9 lel!cbing.
· Tile siJ: are: Willi8m S. Allen,
prof_,.., history; Stefan Fleischer, .IIBIIOciata professor, English; Robert H. Gum-, assistant prof_,.., pharmaceutics;
Peter Heller, prof_,.., Germanic a n.d Slavic; David ·a.
Richards, assistant professor
Germanic and SIIIYic; and ~

~~~:=pro-

..,., . giant&gt;~ ........ "cn.ted last
year, and the first 57 recipients
were among .518 faculty members who' suhinitted project proposals.

:I" he

•

program · complements

two olher' new Urliversity pro~ , 'n-

are, the DiStinguisi!OO "e"cbinJ Professorships to be aWarded by the Univeiaill&gt;'a Board of ~tees and
the C&amp;ance)ior's Awards for Excellence lri Teaching, both
aimed at giving aPeciai recognitiop to fa"'!Jty. member8 who
aie outs~ teachers. The
ftrit recipieOts of these awards
Crime Commi- allocated him will be designated later this
an otlice, a secretary, ai&gt;ifsev:·y ear. -----· · -era! research assistants. He was
An awards committee made
occasionally permitted to at- up of University faculty memtend eJ:eCUtive sessions pt the hera and students and represenCommittee, at which policy de- tatives of the Central Adminiscisiona are made, -and to eJ:· tration selected the undergraduamine . files opened only by ate. fA!aching improvru;nent BrB!' t
executive order. He was addi- reCJptents. 1'be conmuttee chairtionally . selected. to repJ;eSent man is·Dr. ~.rt s_. Ge~ prothe Cnme "Committee ' last fessor of politic81 !!ctMce at the
spring at the McKay ComJni&amp;. College at Brockix&gt;rt.
sion hearings on the Attica reThe grants range from $800
hellion. His understanding of to $2,000 for each rrojecl 'The
the politicd system was be initial 1&gt;rojects wil be funded
feels, direcUy proportionate to by $90,000 in awards sponsored
his responsibility.
joinUy by State Unfversity and
Desptte his reservations, Katz the Research Foundation, which
is convinced that there is still derives its support from federal
hope, and· that as -the· older and · private sources and other
Congressmen die out, power foundations.
will be assumed by younJ lawSUNY Chancellor E r nest
yers or anyone else waiting to Boyer said the grants mark the
become invo\yed As for him- beginning of an "elfort to inself, Katz plans to attend law crease continuaHy 4he quality
school or take a graduate de- of instruction to benefit a broad
gree in criminology. After that? spectrum of -students."
Politics.
Katz was awarded 16 academic hours for his participati~n in the Waahiitgto" internTile foHowing o11icers were
ship program. In addition to
his job, which. he secured by unanimously efected by the
India
Students Aaaociation at
bimaeU, he was required to attend formal couraes, lectures the 25th Republic Day of India
and seminars given by goveqt· celebration, January 26:
Piesident, M a b o b a r La!
ment olliciais and other WashChawla; vice president, Pankaj
ington activists.
Tile progr&amp;ll) is sponsored by Daiya; secretary, Virendm KuSUNY and .administered on mar; treasurer, Sat Pal Babl;
campus by the Dep&amp;rtment of eucutive member&amp;: Suman
Political Science. An average C bon a; Rqbunatban lyer;
of four interns are selected each ~~Vanna; Bachubbai
semester from ,VIB.

Indian Officers

NTPJobo
· . s
.
-.
'[Je1UTlg.

·tba't the fouowinc

Office

.The Pemonnel
.iDdicatea
NonT"'!cbln.g Prof~ ~ PQ!litions.:...,. ·oPen at Slate .
Uruve""~ a_t,BU!falo.:
,: . .
.. . .
..
,

· Tecfinu:a( ·s'*'ialiil, · Re..;oyable ~­

Scbool of Dentistry,' PR-1.

·

·

·

. -

· -

�,~

GD..-.~.,.:.

8,1913

. ~.~1:~

6&amp;December:-Canipus C~mes Lift
Year's Total to943-106Arrests
The December, 1972, report
of Cam
Security lists 66 ..,.
port!!d ~ orr C81J.!PUS during
the month, with a total of silt
lirrests milde.' The cumulative
total of ~ for · tbe 1972
calendar year was 943 with 101!
arrests mtide;
~ of the Decembe•
-=unty blo.t ter include: the
capture of an escaped mental
patient; the arnoat of a nonstudent for alleaedJy · attacl&lt;ing
a student with a tire iron; a:
student anested for poailession
of . stolen property·: the &amp;nest
of a student for ;;J;,iy reportina an inCidmt, a .false fire
alarm, and the arnoat of a .nonstudent for public intozication.
1217172. Campus Security
Oftlcer James Little reported
• the arnoat of one . J'eftrey Alan
Brown, student, chargina him
with ~ of stolen property_ Mr. Brown was o!Merved
Nort&lt;m Union allegedly carrying a slide im&gt;jector, which 1uu1 prevjouoly been
up in ·
141t lliefeDdol1 Hall by the
Instructional CommuniCation
Centes-. The ...... is pending
action in City Court.
.12110172. Campus Security
Oftlcer Gary- Kali82
rted
the anest of Bradley
feld, studenl The subject was
charged with falsely reportirig
an incident, allepdlv pulling a
file alarm in Cooke HalL There
was DO file at the time. Sub.i ect
was given an aopearance ticket.
Case pending in City Court.
12115172. .Campus Security
Officers Daniel Wa\gate and
Gary Kalisz :were· c·a I I.e d to
Tawer Hall to investigate a
suspicious· person. After atopping the subject and inquiring
as il'!t¥1 iclltnli»'• it.wfi!,learned
that lie was an escaped mental
patient lrom Manhattan Ste~
Hospital in New York City.
The subject was taken to Buffalo State Hospital, and was
espected to be returned to Manhattan.
12119172. A student residing
in South Goodyear H a II re.ported that he was assaulted

Doe.
'71
Totol
0

.•

1
4

1
76

..
1

1
1
0

14
1
03
2
71

0
·2

0

6
1

5

••

•

8
27

1
15
19
53
324
62

..
8

18

23
173

0
1

2

25
1

0

3
1

0
1
1
1

•
•

"E::.

I
2
0

12

26
0
0
0

0
0
0

0

493
10
1

7

6
7

0

..

•

13,128

0

0

· 8
15
1

o·

14
0

•

0

38

0
2
0
4
30

0

0
2

0
0
I
0
2
0
0
0

1
1

set

0
2

0
0 •
I
0

19
10
6
3
18

u.

=:::~:ti~aa~M:~

0

2
3
0
2

0
1,672
0
0
3
0

0

0
0

•

20
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0

670
3
0
1
0

0

383

•

503
92

..

25

0
1
0,

60
0

21

0
0
0
4

0
0
0

0

Tower HalL On 121lZ1172, Inveetiptor ~cz reported
that Ernest Smith, non-6tudent,
surreudered himself at 196
Winspear Ave. Upon being
takan into custody, Smit!&gt; was
transferred tO PreCinct · "#11,
Buftalo Police Department.
12122172. - 'Campui - SeciuitY
Oftlcer · Way n .e Robinsoii ,...: ·
P.Oried the arrest of one James
J . Gettings, charJrinlr him with
public ihtoxicailiOn. ·'rile ·arrest
was .the 18U!t of a telephone
call from Capen H_!!! 1 where the
caller, a Millard l'iwnore Col1ep otudent, reported that be
was being IIIII&gt;Oyed and bar"-'-~---•by•~-~1011
~

exploding tba.prevailing notion
that man's ·planet occupied the
center of the universe.
All a beginning to the commemorative events, .the Department of Physics and Astronomy
will open its Observatory in
Hochstetter to the public from
8 1(1"12 everY _eV.ening, February
16 ~ 20. · - ·
_ . _ . c:om..A !Ugh point of the Copernican cielebration will be the.~rformance on Tuesday, April 24,
of a new work entitled "Capernicus." Commissioned for the
Copernican year by the Smithsonian" lnstitution and the National Academy of .8cienoes, ·

Hoyle.
The concert will begin at 8:30
p.m. in But I e r Auditorium,
Capen Hall. Tickets are $3 ($1
for students) , available at the
Norton Union Ticket office:
Fobruory

eor-rt

An earlier concert of works
by Polish composers is scheduled for Friday, February 23.
The concert will feature pianist
Roger 'Shields, acoompanied by

~~~~~~~ ~~o~~~hJ::~ ~ftp=~~Jf.%~u

host a reception following the
ooncert, to he held in Baird
Recital Hall at 8:30 p.m. Admission is· $2.50 C$1 for students )Two lectures on Copernican
themes are currenUy on the
calendar. Dr. Karol Estreicher,
prof""""r of art history and directOr of the museum at Kral&lt;Ow's Jagiellonian Universil}:'
where Copernicus studied, ;uJ
sPMk Thursda.r, Ma!dt 1, on
"Krakow and Copernicus." Dr.
Estraicber's lecture w i II be
held in the Faculty Cluli dinina
begimzingArts
"
C-luba~ 8 p.m. 'l;'he
ro
. om.P
_ olisb

18 spo.-nng

a ,_,tion. (No admission·
·~ '!Cc!P8mic:us".iil a~tre charp.)
~ to Ca · ~ Of · pieoe .for.
inslrumen- .._ 8t the~
fleer . Robin.K., ~ 'Ge~ . ta1ists Uti nurator with -music
On Wem-tay March 7, Dr.
tincB. ~ ·1.~ W"~. Aven1111- by U/B ·~ Loa Smit and - Nancy' Boman, d,;;; of 88troo~~ lata charpd with libretto by Fred Hoyle, DOted omy/relativity for NASA, will
~ ~tion. Case.peitdBritish- astiooomer and writer. diacl8i "A N- U&gt;ok at the
1111 in City Court.
Smit will -.duct and Hoyle Uru-" in the 'NorloD Union
1213il72 Campus Security will n8rrate till! wad&lt; wliidt will Confennce Tbeatze at 8 p.m.
omcBra Wa~ Robinson, Wil- be perf~ h8re t'M! dafa (Nq admialiaD charae-l
llamSurafandDanielW~ af.ter illl ~ld preauere m
An lllhlblt ol ~

a-

=._the~"{ J.:"": w~ :u

Protlr&amp;DI will

wanant trom:.Jbe Bu«aJo Po- . abo .tnclude a ae1ectlaD of
Chopin played by Smit aDd a

llee Department for oontanpt
of.court.
_ .

co~

6)

histication of high
st:l:ts.
and the end of
the military drafl The decline

of the student market may ..,.
quire· that SUNY lower its admission standards, especially at
the graduate level, he said.
Another SUNY-related iasue,
Boyer noted, is the ~ of
Amendment 1202 of the Higher
Education Act, ·which requires
that commissions he established
in every state. Each state in
tum, mll8t submit post-fi«:ondary education plans to the U.S.
Department of Education.
The Chancellor said that the
bill has caused a "major furor"
among colleges and universities
across the country. Whereas,
the land-grant schools see
law as a violation of their traditions, Boyer predicts a clash
in New York between the new
commission and the existing ooordinating body, the Board of
Regents. Their functions, he
said, are for the JDOBt part
"wholly duplicate."
D r. Marvin Feldman, a
SUNY Senator from U / B, questioned Chancellor Boyer about
his Stand on minority recruitment policy. Do the new SUNY
guidelines distinguish between
action wtrich is affirmative and
that Which is simply non-discriminatory? · ·
·
"Yes," answered Boyer, but
he espressed opposition to Feld-

the

c

·

The 500th anru"veraary of the
birth of "the man who stopped
the sun"-Nicolaus Copernicus
-w iII 'be oommemorated on
campus with a" series of concerts, lectures, films, e:dtibits,
and other activities throughout
February, March and April.
Cooernicus, who was born
Mikolaj Kopemik on February
'19, .1473, m Torun, Poland,
revolutionized human thought

y......

(Continued from _ . 1,

C1'e88«&lt;
school

•

3-Month Celebration Will Honor opermcus

Hospital. A warrant was issued
on 12/ 20172 cltarging Roosevelt
Jolmson of Berkshire Avenue,
Buffalo, with a"""ult, 2nd degree.
12119172. Campus Security
SP!!cialist John Baxter reported
th&amp;t he was effecting a w&amp;rrant
of arrest on one Ernest Smith,
alias JellY. Roll, for criminal
trespass_ Upon being infonned
that he was under arrest, Smith

._:!"""uWIIB
...........,.,_._

Boyer------------

brief .talk em ~by

~"':.....~O::.U:.&lt;Jd

April Mll' in.Norilm 219.
Free films related to the Oopa'llican IIBDe will be lboom

throughout the· day March 5 in
the Norton Union Conference
Theatre.
The U/ B Copernicus Committee includes: Dr. Stanislaw
Mr&lt;YLDWslri (physics), Dr. B.R.
Bugelski (psychology), and
Dean George S. Bobinaki (information and library studies).
Coordinator is Ms. Esther
Swartz, Oflioe of Cultural Affairs, 831-Z735.

man's proposal that a ceriain
number of positions remain
open each year for minoritv r&amp;cruitmenl "The posi~t. be
contended, "is indefensible boUt
legally and prof-wnatly. To
unoonditionally guarantee~
positions as such mezely blurs
the fundamental ....... without
chancinll them."

sh~Jter::.n: ~

an active recruitment pol!o/..
the
rightness and accountability of which will . not "came
back to haunt us."

About that SEM .
EDrro•:

With respect to the letter by
Dr. Vyhnal that appeared in
the Reporter of February 1,
1973, concerning your earlier
story on the Scanning Electron
Microecope, I would like to call
the attention of your readers to
the following.
Just about a year ago, in
Spring 1972, a Bell engineer

:r.=~ ob~~

Electron Micrograp~ of some
particulate samples. These samples of propellants, aluntinum
powder and crystalline boron,
are still in our laboratories. I
riatitriilly assumed "ttiat Bell did
not have a Scanner.
I had verified the abEnce of
a Scanner at leading scientific
establishments in the Weoitem
New York 1ll'M. My statement
regarding the Scanner Installation at SUNY/ B was made on
this basis. I gladly concede
precedence in Scanner installation to Bell.
Sincerely yours,
DR. 8. IIAJIAUNG.UI

Associate Professor,
Mechanical EngiMering
P .S. We would be happy to
turn over the Bell samplee to
them, anytime they send someone to claim them.

Academic Calindar ,
The calendar for the UnfwraitYs 1973-74 --..Jc
year, approved this week, calls for 9int a-te.- ~
to begin Wednesday, September 5, providss for only a
one-week 'spring - . and rolls ~ tba eDd ·of dJ!I
=,t:,.•ter by one week.
' Registzetion Day Millard Fillmore Collep ......:.....................W. Alii- 29
Graduate and Und«cratfuate ----·-·----·---------·T- Sept. 4
Instruction Begins ........................................::......
8epl5
Columbus Day-~ Holiday ..................M. Ocl 8
Veterans Day - ~ Holiday ------·-·---·---M- Ocl 22
. Thanbgiving Recals -

w.

cw-Bt~~~-~-:::::::::~::::::~::::::::: ~:: ~
a - ................Th. Dec. 18

Jnstruction Elida at Cloee of

a..-. Elauninatioas ......................
8. Dec. 15-8. Dec. 22'
._..._
RePIIration DaY-

Mi1lanl Fi1lmon Collep ...................:..........w. Jan. 9
Gnduate and UnderJraduate ......................T. Jan. 15

=~-=-~--~ ·::::t::~
Mld-8oiDMier B...

ca"t~~-~-~-~-::::.~::::.·.~·-·-~::::.li
::
Jnstruction
ED at Cloee ot a - __________________ w_
Mq~
8
Final Bllam!Datioas .......... --------·-·--P: ~~ ~17

'1M te

co~~s-liiii-iObiiliii·~---:w..;.

�\./

4

.

&lt;iREPORTER,
A _,... ~ _...,;.. ~ -..ell n...l.q by U. Oiri.ion o1 UnJ....,., .......... S,.,_ U~ vi N . . Yod- et Bull.», 34JS 111.;,. St., Buffalo,
~r,!;. ~~~~~ Bditorilll ollb. . . localed in Room 2U, 2JO ,.....,_ A_,_

..,__,;
A. WB:Srt.al" ROWLAND

--

Art.-~

JOBNA. ClD~

.PA.rlliCU W.AIUJ aaDmiiUJf

.. capn•nr,
r •MIC"'
•-~­

....

�5

Ptlb&lt;u6r7 8, 1913

One Holiday,
One 'Floater'
In february

Faculty Sena~
(Co,.,.,_, ,;.,,. -

· 1, coL 6)

quisitions and rate of eq&gt;enditwe per studmt.
Tbe appointment of a PlOfelllional Lil?rary dizec:tor in
Smith saliaf&gt;eS ooe of tbe
~ofthe

~e States evaluating team.
Ketter said. adding !hat thete
has "been coosiderable activity
in tbe Libraries since the new
director has arrived. Tbe ~
ident also indicated that Smith
as direc:IOr was respoosibl.e for
the University's entire Li·
braries syMan. .
Tbe Uniwrsity e:rpecl8 to receive a report on tbe Libraries
froiD tbe J111111118'!1D'Dt ()I)D8U}t,.
ing finn of Becker aDd Hayai,
Ketler BBid. •
8

One observed and one "floating'' February holiday for University employees have been
announced by the Peraonnel
Department.
.
· Monday, February 19, Washington's B~. will be a full
University holiday with no
claases in sesaion and all officeo
closed. Essential service Civil
Servios employees who are required to work on dlat day
sball receive holiday pay or
compensatory time off based
on their ·prior election. Prof....oional Servios employees required to work on that day
shall receive compensatory time

-~ ......

Moving to the situation 011
the North Campus, .Ketter dJa.
.,._. tbe CUlT8llt 1imetable f&lt;X
Library COIIIItruction in Amherst. Tbe first of tbe new fa.
cilitiea, the Law Library, U. expected to within the Law
and Jurisprudence Building in
the fall of this year. Nan to
be cooatructed will .be tbe six
college "mini-libraries," "on
line" -for tbe fall of 197•. Tbe
(',entral Library, ~ would
h~ the ,..;or widennaduate
collection, caused t..dlines recently when Albany failed to
sllocate construction funds as
scheduled. It is hoped that this
can be ironed out, Ketter indicated, and that wmk on the
foundation can begin nan Jan·
uary .. Both the Social ScienoeSArts and Letters Joint l.dbrary,
the subject of a recent Senate
resolution, and the library facility for the fine and perfonning arts have projected completion dates·of fall, 1977. A sixth
facility, ·a .Science and Engin-•
eering Librar:Y, ;,; desired but
has not been programmed because construction would take
the new campus over its $650
million eq&gt;enditwe c e iJi n g.
The combined collections of
these facilities approlrimste the
two million-volume mitximum
allowed University centers by
the Trustees, Ketter noted.
The delay between Boanl
approval of a building coocept
and getting out bids ;,; currently six to eight years, Ketter
said. Any attempt to cbange_a
plan }'h.eady in the works can
delaY the project as much as
-three years, be added, alluding
to the Senate's expnl!IEII!d concern over tbe apparent ins~
quacy Of the Jpint Library.
South j : a - PlaM
To alleviate more immediate
Ubrary problems, Ketter reported, balf of Diefendorf Annex is being readied for use by
the UndMgrsduate Library
&lt;UGL), with surplus equipment to ~~ to the UGL as the
old Law Library is vacated; the
planned iDillion dollar renovation project in Tower is hoped
to reHeve tbe situation in the
Health Scienoos Library; and
in Lockwood, aiMxmditioning
for the Poetry Room and im·

pinvedtbelish~onp~fol­
lowed, aeveral. previously exp..-1 oancems were ftlised
once more. Prof_,r William
S. Allen protested "all that .jazz
about formulu and architects,"
and conimented that faculty
just neecf the boob 1ri teach Che
studenls. Allen alluded to the
discrepancy between the two
million volume ceiling and the
Regents' lonnula by which this
University should have at least
three milHon . 'VOlumes.
COUE81UM -!NATIONS
The Fcicutty Executiwl Com·
mittee aolca tNt noml...tlona to
the ~ collollum to
develop an ..,..,Jc prospeCtus
be subm._ In wrllfiW Feb""'IY 14. All ITICIITibtrs of 1M lac·
ulty .,. Invited to submit IIICMS
for conslder8tl6n• ..-,. of nom·
inotion 11'11)' be 1.tt In the Faculty

Senn. - . 135

Hayes

Han.

1- .

Corwict'Histories, Worksongs, Ethnic Tapes
All Part of Archive of Folklore and History
'The harrowing personal history of a young convict ''punk,"
the voices of gangs of Texas
prisoners at work, and the recorded feelings of poor people
and civil rights activists riding
the bus into "Resurrection
City" are all part of the oollection of •the University's new Archive of Folklore, Oral History
and Traditional Music.
Under the directomhip of
Bruce Jackson, professor of
English, the Archive is the nucleus of a campus center for the
studv of American culture, operatlD.g under the aegis of the
Institute of the Faeulty of Arts
and Letters
Presently. located in Room 20
Annex A, the Archive houses a
large collection of Americans,
including some 1200 tapes.
Among the materials are:
• one of the iarirest collections of black traditional music
in tile country·
f m the
• ta
0
500 Fo~ti:,n, inN_;':feFolk

eluding complete tapes of all
but two of the Newport Folk
Festivals and a iarge collection
of traditional music
Am..-ican ethnic groups·
• ma ·
ling to "Resurrection City,'' including oral
history tapes made on ·t he buses
going into the tent city;
o contemporary poli~ical
materials, .including material
relating to the Cuban missile
crisis and to the 1968 PresidentiaJ election;
• extensive interviews with
criminals in and out of prison.
Tbese were the basis for Jackson's The T!Uef'• Primer (released recently m psperback as
OUloi&lt;k the Law) and a more
recent book, In ~he. Life: VersioriJl of the Criminal Experien«;
• a large oollection of blac;k
prison worksongs gathered m
ArkaDsas and Texas (tbe basis
for Jackson's Wake Up, Dead
Man ) ;
• a collection of Western
New York oiateriaJs, gathered
by U/B s~·-'-...., with an emphasis &lt;Ill";~ and OClCUJIII·
tiona! materials (induding the
folldore of local ~dars,
tui-drivers and instrUmentmakers).
.
Tbe Archive was founded,
Jackson said. to provide a 1!!11'manent home for an enormous

~.::..!!.t
~ =~
wort ;';;";.;fu-;.., aDd sociolotJy,

and to facilitate use of tt-8
and related materials (such as

photographs) by interested faculty and students.
Long-Range Plans
Eventually, tbe center will
have an outside advisory board
made up of individuals in the
fields of traditional mumc folklore and oral history, J ackson
said. The board will assist in
attracting f u n d s {or ethnographic studies and in coordinating projected non-research activities including s em in a, s,
symposia and concerts.

dents ·i nterested in . doing re"""!'ch m these related areas at
a tune when SUNY "? .longer
can, or ts no _longer willing, ~
sponsor •the ~md of research tt
was supporting several years
ago-the Jqnd of support many
of us were ~ , when . we
came here. Tius JSn t palticu!arly SUNY's fa~t. It's endemiC w uniVersities across the
country. Those of us who want
to do this kind of research have
w set up structwes to get
funds from other so~." .
"The c e ·n t e r will serve,"
Jackson bad onginaJ!y m Jackson said, "as a clearing tended. to lflve part of hi!' own
house or consol'tium for - - collection of taped materials .to
the Library of Congress for ita
Archive of Fo!k Song. · ~u\
!"uch of the national collection
is s~red improperly, he f&lt;?und,
and ~rreplacesble m a ten a I s
ha~e ~n damaged_. The ArTen U/ B medical students ch,,ive m Ann~x A lS cro~
were honored for their academ- ( the roo~ iS already .fu!l,
ic excellence at the annual Jackson sa•d ) • but the bwlding
School of Medicine Convoca- is air-conditioned and is located
tion in Butler Auditorium, Feb- conveniently for student and
i~:~u~0,;,e= :u;;~o= faculty use.
ary society, Alphs Omega AI- One of the WOf'St
pba.
''This is one of .the worst uniJai'IU!s A. Gibson and Wayne versities I know for archiving
J. Atwell Anatomic&lt;Jl Award anything,'' Jackson b~ "I
(for highest record in anatomy got ·lhe Newport materials beduring first year ) Elliot Fan- cause space for storage bad
kuchen.
been promised -to me. Tben I
Roche Laborawries Award was offered an overheated room
(for highest ranking student on Elmwood where the tapes
during first and secood years) would hsve disintegrated. ElmBarry Kilbourne.
wood's too far for studenla anyPfizer Award (for three years way. Then I was told I could
~~ af;~excellence) Mich- ~e ~~
Children's Hospi.lal Priu (for would have rotted."
ability to understand children's
The E n g I ish Department
disesse ) James Marks.
came through with the _.xt in
Dr. John Watson Prize (for Annex A, he said. ·
excellence in medicine) Steven
The specialized busineai of
Smiles.
cataloging a collection dlat is
Farny R . Wurlitzer Award largely on tape is familiar to
(for outsiandi.ng work in psy- Jackson, who worked as a _grad·
chiatry) Diane Matuszak.
uaFotelk studenandPrimit
!n-:tbeti.veArchiM··"'~ ~
PhysioloBY Award (for out- ·
slanding performance in phy&amp;- Indiana University. Materials
iology) Ralph ~are being aoceasioned and in. Ernest Wikbaky Memorial dexed· here on the basis of_proAward ( for out:stancling per- ~= ~
formance in miczobiolotly) John ban folklore collection.
Manzella. ·
~ J-...__
Kornel L. Trrpltua Award (for · ~lly staffed v;r ..........,
demonstration Of best bowl- and two graduate IJiullentil, Che
pathOlogy during_,. ~~":~~':
A'~~ ~~n'A':!w ia1s and become
"""'M
wived· in !-..rcbive-•
(for· outstanding ~ the dizec:tor oald.
.
.
during the third year) William
In. addition, five LP illiiiiiJ»
~lllef&lt;l
(honor- have alrM4Y ' - ' - '
ary
...,....;;;;.,ty)
Acker- teriale in 4he . ~ 'lbe

10 Med Students
Recel"ve Honors

"!::"'::':=

'Y::S:

:r.of

Nancy LiebenDan, Robert
Penn, Melvin~. Michael
Savona. Richard Spector, Den·
nis Stempien.

IIUU!.

US-Canada
(Contituud from PGII&lt; 4, eoL 6)

versity in Toronto, the city he
describes as being on the edge
of American history, almost
like Tolkien's Riveqdell, safe
from the ragings of the archaic
cJarkness. But ThOinpson has
reservations about his place of
refuge. Whether one can live
permanently in Rivendell is a
question, he says, which ''I ask
myself· daily," and when I last
heard of ThOinpson he bad not
found the answer. But that does
not keep this Torontonian sleepleas at night, I might add.
'The second is the testimony
of Edgar Z. Friedenburg who
left the University of Bullalo
for Delbousie University in
Halifax and
b this time
be pronouncing~ ~ as Zed, or
then again may not. Frieden-

~finJ!:~ca!~

the Western system of 80Cial
restraint, aufticiently unc:nJWded
that minda innocent and quiet.
such as many Canadians pos- . .!""¥ take it for a hermitage. 1JuCbt Canadians take that
for a compU...nt? Not quite.
For Friedenbura has his reIICIIVIltiom, too. "What I miao
moet from having emipated to
.Canadll,"
jail break

be=·

clarion.

"the
of '
thru
tbecry
~

-

~-"

- wt.l IUIID8Ity arri-, as . I
feel it llUl8ly 1111111, ......,. of
-lhMe ezilea will leave 118 for
tbair bome. ADd tbey will leave
behind a lepcy more valuable
in Canada tben Alltol*lt 011
8Jiy - . tben lillY pollution
pact 011 any larml, tben 8Jiy de- ...
fenae~J*ltat

_a ny price. 'lbey have taDibt 118
Canadians nya of looldn&amp;
at thinp, '-'ina thinp, faef.
~and thinkina about
have left behind
them, or
have done 10, a
helcbtened
of polltlc:al
..........._ a abarper- ~in,juatice. wbich I _
belilll'e - would have .,_,
preparationanotber
of .... othel;s
..,_ . of ...__- ~l...S... lnciiPable ol achleviDr 011 our
own. Heplwas richt- hilltory
~
..., Aldllve, &lt;
ia CIJII1liltlln bar ways.
'
....._

activelL.!:

A'"""
wrnr.;;;;

off. Since classes will be in session on Monday, February 12,
Lincoln's Birthday, all offices
will remain open. However, the
same holiday pay or compensatory time proVisions . apply as
for Washington's Birthday.
Personnel notes . that Civil
Service employees (other than
Security personnel) now observe Lincoln's Birthday as a
"Rooting b'oliday." Tbe emploree niay select his floating
holiday for any day during the
year (including February 12).
However, if he is required to
work on the seleoted day and
has previously eleoted holiday
pay, he must receive holiday
pay. If too many employees request the same floating holiday,
Personnel says, the supervisor
.is to use seniority in State servjce to detennine preference.
The floating holiday must be
used prior to Linooln's Birthday 1974. •

Clll,....

"!

~

:t.;

�6

Staff Appeal

ProcedUre
Is Outlined

Febn&gt;My 8, 1!113

�~

F~B,lfl13

76 Fac~ty Get $127,101 in SUNY Gran~

4nGHER
GEDl.JGATION
GNOTES
The natfoa'e blah acbools will
paduate 2.8 millio;n Mlliors this
~ of 66,912 or
2.4 per cent, OYf!Jt: lest year, it
was elltimated this week. The
. forecast ..... made. in the 31st
annual · ~ Eatimala of
Scltool SlatUttca, 1972-73 prepared by the Nalional Educa- otion 'AaloeiatlonThe report eatimaiee tbat
tola1
in eleoi&gt;entary
and llllC)C)Dciary acbools in the
fall was 46.8 miJJioD, down 65,952 from la8t year. Tbe tote!
included a drop of 297,211 or
1.1 per cant, at the ~
level, and liD iDcftue of 231,-. 259, or 1.2 per .-.t, at the _,_

yeer, an

........um..t

ondary lewll Tbe percentage
increase in bich ecbool lf&amp;duates will -be tba 8lll8l1est in

three years, but 61.9 per eent
more tium ~ 1962,63.. :
. Tbe report .also estbilates;
that the tote! iD&amp;truct.ional stalf
in the nation's acbools will lie
2.3 million, up 17,801 from a
year ago, and that the average
annual salary of d&gt;e .instructional staff is $10,643, up 4.2
per cent from a year ago.

•

•

•

t

...- . . -ned-

A study comm- bJ o
opec:lal - - ~ the C.IHoml.o

the&lt;e ... ........... ~er8tion ~ . the ~Uta's thrM
systoms ~ . public ....,..,. eduao-

tlon,
-

erN!public
- -- -lnoti·
ond privoto

tutlons In the· - -Tho • siud,,'
mode bJ the _ , , for Eduao·
tioN1 ~ ukl the Son
Franc:loco c:on-tlum
the ontr
m u l t i - . _ , . _ am,...
maot . - . . . lnltltutlono, from
eoch of the public systomo.

Is

The report -

... that ""'"'

co-

--"""Is_...,.-nontredltionelformsof-

Is

Alquint
, _ "there
- ond
becauu
not 1o1111

to bo _..., ,_,., to enable

BKh lnolltutlon to do evety~~Una
it wants to do on Its own."

A six-year campus development plan .involving the construction of ·m pew buildings
at a cost of $40 million has

been annowtOed -by the-University of Tenneaoee medical units
in MemPhis. The buildin will
indude a dentel clinical 'bu'iiding, a new library that will also
bouse the College of Nursing,
!""' a laboratory animal buildmg.

Seventy-ei&gt;: U/B .faculty
members have ftlDOiwld fellowships and pants-in-aid to4alina
$127,101 UDder the 1973 Stale
University Research Awards
Program,
-

WeekJy Commliniq\le, __________
,!l:L

!:'.f~ ~':::;~l:~~c ~~

=~e ~:::.. ~-~':"hro-

two couraea at any one time.

fall -

=

~~~jk~ l.eoder-

s~·

~ 111; ' Appllc8nla

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

,111108pt
...._,for

'

..

~=-:.:.e.:--=:
T...,.. ......................~. .

--

the ............ _ _ fll
~

Un1were1tJ

for tll-ree

t:i:O

r!:fbyC:':ianao::-':fuby ~~

~ ~J'.CW:i:!'.~~~~

Riciiard /JL_!'!].

held

Dr. Keith F. Otterbein, Anthro-

:.~·J'~y '~~.,~~

AnalyolS of Simple Arithmetic,

Quartet, 101
Baird, noon. The open rebeuul

:;,r:;o':_f s;~=·

other ditciplineo at U!B are wei-

= -y=

~;gyc.!"'W.~~
~bnLo~ =~UDAL••
P~ Paychology, Temporal
TM C/eueltmd
v~p~-

~:. p~~~~~~

!::f~ ~·or; ~r. vr~ to~

meetina of "the Pro-

·Staft Senate will be
.
16 ~ 3 p.m. in

1.S D:lefaDdorf. .
•
~ also be a SeDate
-,,Mafdt '1.
The·.,.ma for tbe .February

~~=~c::

feM!omf DewJlopment ' Committee Report, Etectiono Com-

::~!

~M~

o!!r'/M

1

YIDIOTAPI

NOOaAil••

if::'s::::

Wiener Spoce, $1,456; Dr. AuE:i,.~~f
brey B. Poore Jr., Mathematics, The ym.... w:-.... and D-~'•
Bifun:ation PbeDamena in Chem- tronom -~~~ M;n-WW:bical Reactioo Problemo, $1,456; ~u4 EDP-.U..ilky Way,
Dr. Brian T. Ratchford, MllDSIP- 8-6 p.m. (Thill _;'_!.UbrarYwill
bo'
ment, 'The Demand for Au-.
(o
-~
bil• in the u.s., A New Ap- ;'r~) or Group n 011 _Friday,
PHYSICS - U M ·

matical Mod~::ft:eterogeilIANro FIUUm and PhJ'M
eous Polymerisation, $2.912; Dr. Moobe i.abin. Uaiwnity at -~
Jo~lhA;n t_~'),.= cbeoler, l1l Hocholetter, 4 p.m.
Mqnetic .__.....
~lo in 112 H - - .
ol l"o110 in Liquid H . _ $2,886; at 8:80 p.m.

~16
. rary

,.mtee~

t.:~~ ~ril:~:~~

~;~:

Creative Sculpture, $2,912; Dr.

Dr. Dale M.

~ ~.
'

~.

- Dr. Ra1pb Robert Ropn, E1111lisb, 'The~ ol Metapbo,rl $1,456; Dr. J . Peter s..tler, Mec:bui&lt;al ~'The
I.umped ~ Mncle[" ol a
Boom in 8patW MocioD. .1.456;
Dr. ~G. s-beg, Paliti..l
ScieDOe. "-*" . _
W'atb Finite- Al-.ne
$1,456; Dr, Willial-M. .......
a-iotno, Steaoaaelec:tiw BFD·
tboaio V'aa a.3-BU and -Ana......... 12,467; Dr. J - A. Political~ ....._

-

... - - CULnlll

&amp;- ·

U............ N~~
1·_,_.,_
M
~
,_,..,._....

- -.

""'·

l::::;,
~u.£
...my, 206
- _ If, 7 n·- •
•

~

......
_lllyra BrecTtilorid,e (S..),
~
beatre, N - ,

s.a. - . ......._far~ Admio-

s-.

[

=~- "k"!:"ho= ~'t

~=n;r·~~~nd~~i.: ~~r-"B"::l:f:, i~5~,n $~56Cold a~""f'~e"'tr o~o~~
8

-..-..--...-... ·.·-·
......
......,.
.
....,
........
·s
to - - ....._. .-

::..
--.:
.!-·--Car'
.
.... tbolr
...........
_......,"..........,
.

"bthe

=.

. ~ ~0~~\'u?-ft':S.~ ~~~~

•
•
Idea ::'f:.rean~~iator, $1,"Fronts. Authrc!Tbo hJ laaiue ......... crltl- 456; Dr. .
c:lad In ,_.. for - , . · =ogy, · Hili ry of ~n 0
-untll mloh\pll ID tbolr J o' ~
n,
(
tlono"

ByLit~n'::me~,..B'~'!::

1

'fl

Its-----

COIIIiJ). &amp;y1llem. Ul&gt;tl« . - , _
policy, They will be limitecf"~'

~ip'j·.:=d v~.;. P~~::::

t7, t;!

33

~~vi~nc!'~!f:S·Pe~!e~: are

•

...-!If 1be UBi~ of Wi&amp;-

Murial~

v-.

mite Weathering Sequence, $1,456; Dr. Leo C. Curran. Claosics,
Literary and Paychological ·Study
of Peroooal Identity in Ovid. $1,456; Dr. Thomas W. Cuoick,
Tbo~~- - Mathematics. Diophantine Approximation dl Linear Forma,
Collopo .... - - - t h e - S410;
Dr. Chalieo H . V. Ebert,
votlons It - - ... - - - ~hy, Icelandic Climate
.as ReOected in Paleoabout
,tic:lpotlna
In_ the fKultr ~
Latenta, $641; Dr. Robert R
~-of the Am- lj:dwarda, Enclioh. The Montecu=-..~~~ eino Puaion and P~ of
Medieorai Drama, !_1.456; Dr.
Roymood Federman, nencn, The
W"t800DIIin's .U.or •'citizens ~ D,isappearonCe of Characters in
will be allowed to lit. jn ... Modem Fiction, $1,456; Dr. Frederic J . Floron, Jr., Pt&gt;litic.I Sci~- -- of .......... at ~

•

:,=:~
=

$1,183; Dr. Gerald Lee Full.,. ~ the Stnactwe o1 Pt&gt;1itic.I
Dr. MariaD E. Wblllt, Aatluoton, ~rmanic 4 Slavic Lanauan, Belief Syo-. $1,456; Dr. Dew
Histonc:al Germanic Vert. Morph- A. Tamari. Mathematico Hler- ~l'g .An Arotr
ologyc.. $1,547; Dr. Newtoo Gar- arelUeo and Complueo C:, Well
Maale.
ia
ver, l"hil..ophy, Forms of D&amp;- - Formed Fonnulae. $1456· Dr
Academia, 12,888: Dr. K - 8blb
humanization, $1,~; Dr.. Rob- J - E. Tavareo, Bioi~, Mem: Y. Wu, Bioph,yaical 8 c i • D c e.,
J. Good, Chemical Engmeer- brane Stateo-Po.ible Action o[ EauatioJW ol A-pberic " 'Iluee types of awards are ~rt
mg, Surface Potentiala of Liv- Plant Hormoneo $1456· Dr Ste- ool Particle Sioo I&gt;ioiZiiJatbl. 11,provided: faculty -""""'1'Cb fel- ing Cello, $1.227: Dr. James M. ven R Tulkin Psy;;\;;d.;..;; Eariy 8!0;
Dr. Clifton K. Yeuley Hlrilowsbipe of $1,456; C181lts-in- Glinreenberg, Ma!lJematics, Non- Experiences ~d I;tell~ctual story, London, Parlo 4 N- YOlk,
aid for purchase of equipment
ear Coruoel"'(ation Laws of Hy- Functioning at Age 5 $2 48()· Dr
182G-1839: A Compua- HloperboHalllic ~pe. $1,456; Dr. Bert J . Grego'}' Vermeych~. Ch..;ucai · tory1 $2,457; Dr. Shuen
~ r&amp;earch-reiated - S.
, History, Gennan Tech- Engineenng Suboptimal Feed- MaUMm:tatiCI, o.Ioil Theory aDd
UI amounts up to $1,456; and
combinations of felJowallipe and nology m the ~ter -Middle Ages, back ·&amp;un:lary Control of Dia- Galois CohomoiOI)' for ~
Dr. William S. Hamil-' tributed Systems $2 821· Dr
able Fieldo, .1,466; Dr. WilllmD
grent&amp;-in-aid not to """-' $2,- $2,275;
912. All three propams are ton, Jro!:;"rmanic 4 Slavic Lan- Claude E. Welch', Jr.: Pciliticai R Zame, Mathematics, Complaon Compact Suliaelo ol
adminislered by the State Uni- ~~ si!'vi~JoZ ~J: ~~~~· ,r~ Political MObil- aAnalyoio
Stein Spaco, .1,466.
Part 2, $!,517; Dr. Perry 0 . Han'
' ·
versity Researob. Fotmdatoon.
Geography, The Spatial DiaForty-one local faculty re- son,
- of Crime in Bulralo
ceived fellowabipe for a tote! tributionSusan
E. Hanson Gec&gt;gro:
o[ $59,696, seven received $1,556;
~&gt;_hr. The Structure of the Work
pants-in-aid t.otalina $6,670, Tr1p in lntraurban Travel Be- (Continued from f104e- 8, coL 6) bu Re• Reed turn into ~uel
and ·28 received a rombination hav•or, $1,456.
ale profeoaor, U/ B Departme~t of ~'1:!·
•tarring Mae
oot
of a fellow&amp;hip and a grant-inD~. Michael J . Hartley, Eoo- History, Dr. Tai s: Kang, associaid for a total of $60,735.
noiDICII, Lagged EndogeQous Vari- ate professor, U/ B ~rtment of
A Univemitr-wide Awards abies in :'utoregreaive Modelo, Sociology, and film cntic Dwight EXHIBITS
COmmittee revtews and ranks ~~.!0t.:il~t ~"l:~nA:o~~ t:.:.:onald, viaiting Engjjoh pro- -U UAI--IXM-IIIT-.------applications from full-time facPresented by the Oflice 0 [ CuiVideo Environme11t'FGaile r y
ulty members on Stole Univer- Crea_tive Development, $2,912· Dr.
sity campuaes. 1liis year 1,079 :;;~Efecl.H~1esc~~o~,; tucal Alfairs.
~~i~rto~;!';"'~~~;
proposals were sullmitted and Memot:_y Consolidation $2321· FILMS•
·
noon-6 p.m.; SUDday. 1-6 p.m.;
486 faculty membets acroes Che Dr._ F . Allan Hills, GeoloC,, Tee:
Bit! Mouth (Lewis, 1967). 7 Wedneoday and Fri&lt;~ay eveninp,
Stille received awarils.
toruc Framework ·of Precambrian f~~·~ f.•~-=
7:30-10 p.m.
The stipends enable faculty Continental Crust, $1,456; Dr. will be shown in 140 Capen and All -AITMINT IXMIIIT•
members to carry out research
free.
projects, creative endeavors and
pend.iture or Tax Multiplier, $1,- VAUlTY SWIMMING•
ted
~Cui
scholarly and technical studies. 456;
Dr. George F. Hourani PhilU/ B vs. Fredonia, Clarlt Hall, preoen
~0
tur. The U / B awards recipients O&amp;Ophy, Ethical Philooopby Ill 7:30 p.m.
al Alfairs. iaplay cueo, Hayoo
are:
.
Hall lobby, t.broqh February 16.
Medieval Ia I am, $1,158; Dr. UCT~M•
Dr. Sidney Addelman, Statio- E~e M. Hull. Psychology, 01·
Cu~ Co~nu in Economic ALMIOHT-«HHX
tics, Multiple R&lt;!aponse Factorial faction and Crowding-Reproduc- Policy, Dr. Lee Preoton, Baker MT OAURY IXMIIITI•
Plana for Three-Level Facton
tion, Efrecta on Offspring, $2,366· Profeooor of American Enterprise ;.!'.MbypA~~-teAIDMbeerb;!' !'.,aint-on. $1,456; Dr. Cbarleo F. Altieri; D~. Richanl Stephen Humphrey.: at U/ B, Holzwarth Room, Uni- -•
- - H -·· HIStory, A Political Analyoio of
.ty Preobyte .
Ch
h
sembsbownle •oorf geo~trit-c"'~m
-~
the Aor.'bid E~ire in Sr.ria. $1,Sl and N..:;!. F.U.u~~:
•
the ~ ~
seph A. Alutto, Management,
8
p.m.
Decisional Participation in a
Health Care Setting, $1,456; Dr. tive Ethics, $1,456; Dr. James R COHCHT•
..
~oelUIIIIl"!"&lt; ~~· abo'~ up~_Georp S!•-aiey, tenor, Metro~tinao wuvuah F Alan R Andreasen, Management, Lafountain, Jr., Biology, An UIDyoamies of -Ghetto Busineos
Structures-An Empirical Stucly,
D
y
Chan
works
Gluck,
Faure,
~Y.
-tic,
romantic
end of the cur$1,456; Dr. Kenneth F . Barber,
r. _ ungg Lee, Phyoiao, Dupan:, Berlio&amp;, Ravel, M,_net, rent realist ooa1e throuah FebPhilooophy, The Problem of In, $ ,602,·inDrM~~ Hondel, Purcell, and Rachmanin- ruary 18. Albrichi-Kno• Art Geldividuation, $1,4(16; Dr. Robert ~diatiSnate!:..rocesses
D. Be reman, Chemistry, Species, wa::f
Madden, Philoe0p~: olf, Baird. Recital Hall, 8:110 p.m. lery, 1286 Elmwood A..,..;.e_
A Novel Dithiolate Ligand, $924; Nonlogic:al Neceosity $1456· Dr
Mr. Shirley appeared m 17 per- UUAII IXMIIIT•
Dr. Irving Biederman, Psychol- lrving J. Maasey, E.is!ish, Meta: formaoceo at the \lfet !his oeaoon,
8/Qck Studiu Week Erhibit
ogy. Perceptual Recognition of morphosis in ·Literature $1547· and wu guest artist wtth the De(tentative), Gallery 219, Norton,
Real-World Scenes, $2,575; Dr. Dr. Jerome L . MlllWlro ' Eni!ish' ~ troit Symphony, the KenDedy hFebn"';A'Yo1n2dathyro-Frida!'4hY18'. nGallenry
P . E. Bigazzi, Immunology, Sur- Robert LoweD-Our N.;., Augus: Center, the Philadelphia Orches00 n: M
00
5
face Potentiala of Living CeU., tan, $1,456; Dr. James W. Me- tra, the N~ Yorlt Phiihannonic, p.m.; Sunday, 1-5 p.m.; Wedna$1,227; Donald R Blumberg, Art, Kinnon. Music. Jew. Greek and an~ m rea tala throughout the day ·and Friday eY81linp, . 7: 30.
Abstract Color Photography, $1,- Christian-An E y· in Musical ~ruled States and_ Canada. Amer10 p.m.
456; Dr. James H . Bunn, English, Tho~ht, $1,456;188Dr. Curtis S. ·~·born and entirely AmencanThe CasUe of Relativiam-A His- Mettlin, Social Sciences, A Criti- tramed, be holda a B.S. degree NOTICES
tory of Mnemonic Poetry, $1,- cal Analysis of Wisob and Re. m mUSic _educ;:ation {rpm Wayne - - - - - - - - - - - 456.
lated lrutnunenla, $1,4 56 ; Dr. Stale Uruven~ty.
Dr. Parker E. Calkin, Geological Sciences, Pleiotocene Strati- t:;~n D.toMi~w':te~~~~ th;;~~!t,:"({.li ~~c!~
Gunboat Policy, $2,- general admission, $:!: faculty,
~:ty SL~56~o~.w~~es NR American
104; Dr. Josephine M. MitcheU, staff and U! B alumn1, $2; otuCannan, Art History, Cigoli'o
0
[i!,~d'!!f~~~~c
oi!: t';!:~~n~~M~~y the U/ B
CN, $1,4511; Dr. Clarlt A. MurChou. Mathematics, On Almoot · dock, Political Science, Analysis
THURSDAY-15
Convergent Functioruo and W.A.P. of Debate Over the Nature of the
Functions, $1,456; Dr. Charles V.
g~~:\_ ~':'lo~~t!:Y~~ MAHAOIMINT ASSOCIATIS HOOIAM•

-

.........
Thill lllm beam 1 M - ll8e

• - 1M book 0... ViiW) wllida
eoalda't bo . . . . . l l - ' t . What
- . . 1o a ....._ oldde wWc:b

INTERVIEWS

-

�--~
- - fOUl

, . _ . , 8, l9J3

DANCING·

incInas::t::.:-"1 ~=- ~:
IMIX.,

8 •-p.m.

Confeaiono
uu.u
- · of a Poli« Coptoin,
Conference T h e a t r e, Norton.
check llhowcaoe for timeo. Aclmlallion charge.

uu.u

CONCRI*•

The Chii:Gtfo Wo,..n'• Lib&lt;rotion Roc/c Band; ~re Room,
Norton, 8:30 and 11: 30 p.m. Free.

tHIATIE PiuENYAnON•

n!ub~~:..:. F~-~~=
Studio, 4 Harriman

~rary,

8:30

p.m.~ Tickebl at 50 oenti are available at the Norton Hall Ticket
Ollloe.

SATURDAY-10
VARSitY IASkfTIAU.•

.

U/B w. Stony Brook. Cladt
Hall, 2 p.m.
,
IEWISH CENTII. SAIIATH PIOGIAM*

JewUh Youth~ A Jewith Co•
com, The Meltin8 Pot, Dr. David

t..~~.ftedl.r:~rj!{l

Center of Greater · Buffalo, 787

~";rot";;. 3~

to

atteo4

INDIAN FUM•

Awara .( with English subtitleo),
147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. Admiuion:
memb&lt;rs, $1; non-members, $L50.
Presented b the India Asaocia·tion of Buf.Jo.
VAUltY HOCICfY*

G\VEEKLV COMMUNIQUE

to--

&lt;tt

U/B vo. American Internationa! College, Twin Rinb, Cheektowage.. 7 : 90 p.m.

••Open to members of the Unlwrolty;
a . , . - 1 1 . . - l n the subject
Contact Nancy Cardarelli, 831·2228, for llstlnp. .

THURSDAY-S

9

~~~~YD~e=nS':n~l!:

Conference

~=:=h!:~h~t t;:~

=

rwo

Three PtJTtick Sca.tterinf Cal.
culalioRI {or Charged Partida.
John Nuttall, Tbe University of
Weatem Ontario, London, Canada, 111 Hochstetler, 4 p.m. Reheobments in 112 Hochstetter,
3:30 P.Jil.

••n ci!~~imJ!:i~r~ .S{r~:!;
STAnSTICS COU.OQUIUM#

ErfOdic and A.ymptotically Stationory, Monique Becker, univer-

~~ ~e.."':'R!~-4l4":.::

Cotree in Rm. A-15 at 3: 30 p.m.
COMPUTING aNTH: SEMIN.U..

KRONOS Conirol LansUO/Ie,
4238 Ridge Lea. Rm. 10, 7 p.m.
SEMINAl IN UICIAINIAN CULTUIIE
&amp; ~s:*~ ·of Ukrainian
NotioJWJli.tm: Th~ Kozak State,
Dr.-Orest Subtelny, Harvard Univeraity, 205 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.UU.U fiLM•• .

Con/usioT&amp;J of a Police Captain,
Conference The at r e. Norton,
check showCase for times. Admio•io,nr~
pia- a f-··tra· t-

RUUtin""Balsam

.;,- ......
~ 1~jobcop newbobecaca~:~-of_":
.....

D.Ja

0

dl

..._.

"""

THEAHE PWEHTATION•

ASTaOGro":pMYiVI:;!!:!g~IO'£,~:.

Studio, Harriman Library, 8 : 30
p.m. Tickets at 50 cents are available at the NortOn Hall Ticket

N

Ollloe.

and PI

Th

n!ub~!:.O~ F~~j~'r''T~..f~

As

oiZ,'"'Meteors :::::i M:teori':;.~
Com•ts, and The Sun, Scienoe
:.:.
/¥'~'::~nin~i~be ~~
peated for Group II on Monday,

n!ub~{,.{';. F~.P-,\':'!.::!

ti!'rary,

FRIDAy--9

Featuri~

J'fJW'.f'•

probJems of metaphysics.

Glycoprotein S y n t h e 8 is and
Structure: CeU Adhuion, Dr. H .
Brw:e Boamann, Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, 'University of
Rochester, G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.

LECTUitE•

-;

~

.

agl'dditio~

information about

the workshop can be obtained
!rom !'ielson K Upton, adi:ninis·

UUAI filM..

in

Without Apparent Motive (Labro), Conference Theatre, Nor!\~eck bashowcase for times.

I and II) (Eisenstein), 147 Diefendorf. 8:30 p.m. The films are
free.
,
fACULTY COUOOUIUM#

r

ul

Elg

10
f'i£::

TiCkelli at $1 for students and HIWl a.us•
Gallery memb&lt;n and $2 for genEkmenlllry ' H•brew, 262 NorearaltthaedmisaN
.ortoionn Dl&amp;Y beTickpurcbaaedet
~-- ton, noon.
Hall
""'""
or at the door on the evening of MASTEl a.us•
~ !iiio'E:"~rtm.~n~uai"%.
George Shirley, lea~ tenor,
~~tro~~-4
Baird. Re-

..

.s.= t:::: :;r~

fi:'. -~.Dr...,.-- 1!~
...-. s~:/Z:.

h~:~ G{&amp;_~~)~i4~~~:

edge gaps of non-financial man-

~ednllb·-s~JmitiSmS-hFact obarchFicHtioilln?' dorf 7 p.m Retour a Ia ,Raison

U/~~"oa:est

ia Karl Gay,

The Erotic Aduenturu of Zorro, ~r~ ~~~~:
140 Capen, 7: 45 · and 9:45 p.m. FM, 10: 05 p.Di.
worb by Beetbovi!n, Bech and Tidlet
. thetaNa!.J..~ _oenHallta .a1!Let&amp;I(&amp;J!:,NA•
I:lebu.y. ~ted by the U/B 8
~
'""' ~ 00
MOND-A Y 12
.
~t of Muaic.
A qaidt- , !ifbt ato
of
•
~ OMthe opp1.~ ol
VIDlOfAPI NOGRAM••
- ,._.,.
..B&lt;m-Ario m 19th coiltwy SouthGroup l ~: Xhe Sun'•
T - a 4 F•rrainW p~, em California aJ&gt;!! the heroif At...,.phe~. On,ino of tho Solor'
puel c1ioc:aMioD, ~"' RoOm. . ~(*leo of the lllioubd ~z:-System, D~ to eli. S,_,..,
Nol'lml: 2 p.m. ·
~ ,of coune, With llldn. and Jlotioru of IIIIo Stani, Scii!DCe
Dr. Pbyllil Cbeolar• ..-at . . Tblo -_ 1he llrst movie to be: .~"'iMe~ ~"lZ· 3-6 'p.m.
p - r ol 1'1}'~,_ Rid&gt;- ~
for. G.::;"'R~n ...,_;~~ ::-=.,~~~~ ---'IIIIIIVICI· , '
• . · -;.·
13.&gt;
..
cowma ICIINCI - ' - •
-BhiL. 8 p.m.
"" MtM:I!W Dait/n ,aild C o - -

z. .

~~::'U::~Coebe~!e

.

Hold Me While rm Naked

trator for continuing education
Manage~ent, 831-3401.

. A~NOMY/IDEOfAPE I'IOG~··

s~ara":'IJ.ia.u

:f"S=: ~

Cluaters, and Globular Clusters,
Scienoe and Engineering Library,
~ p.m. (This scree~ will be
repeated for Qroup ll on Thunday. Feb. 15.)
PATHOLOGY SEMINAl ..

· S~oloy· oNf':"tf,;';':'·0:t!~t.uro!PL=-

1

~

PIOm.mG, Dr. Jerome Jacot.. Department of PatboJocY, Univeroity
of M8.1188Chueettl taedical School. ·
148. Capen, S:SO p.m.
FOml COUOOUIUM SIIIU•

0

va. Wayne State, Clark

'I.:

Ozu's masterpieces.

--~

~~~ ~=dre,;'f br'/;." ';,!,~ ~kih~'bis l'l:.~nts~M'Z. wlff· 5e~~·ct::;:
will deliver the fourth adilrea of •
&amp;~ %h:':n.by Donald _Ell&gt; and
1i.JESDAY-13
:!" t!oo,::;= 5Se~~

V-RY SWIMMING·

. .

FilMS•

theTbUe/BwoSchrksoohop,ofapoM~'!!,_bnyt
1

and the Division of Continuing
Education, are geared in subject

Carlos Alsina's RendezvoU8; as

P·';;,., lectwe, wbicli" wi1i be delivered in Germali, ia presented
by the' ~t of Germanic
and Slavic: Re!reshmenta will be
oerved after the lecture in 237
Croeby.

~•
~o= · ~~

IAGE• BRUNCH•
a discussion on Black

:;}"~~~~~a,:!~

tranSforms the banalities of the
~~!; ':jd:',ta~~~
film. End of Summer describes
the disintegration of a cloee-knit
family ; this film is considered to
be one of

IOn c rge.
CONcm•
T{/:::.et~lisJiic~•ruuuan
• n. ofce:Tt
Evenings · for New · MU8ic Ill.
m:
per!o::OOAl~Y. ~eKnCreative As· tfetce~f Stan,
Fletcher.
18
J.2ss
t~ ox Art 8Galcf~
.R:Jr ~ ngliah, Fac-30
8
;.~
mw
Ave .. '
co~•
m. p.m.
The concert will feature guest
.
artist Stuart Dempster on tromGraduate · R~ci.tol, David Witbon~; works performed will in- ten, piano, Baird Recital Hall,
elude the wo rid pretriiere of _8 :30p.m.
Voicu and Instruments, composed
The performance will include
by ~orton Feldman, and the works by Haydn, Schubert,- Bar-'

IIOCHEMimY SEMINAl#

y_,.. • -

Fundame_ntols of Aecountin1
and Filumc• for Non-Filumcial

Tokyo Story is about the pp

Ho~, .:r&amp;;n B~~. 12 ,3o ~;.I (Ray) , Bazht Mecanique (Ray).
f~~~= }~?he 1~~~/:l~e(i~

PHILOSOPHY lECTURE#
The Perils of Physicalism, Jo.
se['yh
z,.·m/ile ~nia::O
~_m:
ge
· m. ' :
This is the fit!lt of 'four phi losophy papers to be· presented
this semester on the nature and

~~octit&lt;#
f ~ WS~~- ~~.-::.~.m.
~.'
0

&amp;

MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATES NOGIAM*

~ ra:ne:e =~oo:u~ ~~':.! !!O:r:;.':.t ~J:,.:ci~~:­

UNDAY-11

Feb: 12.)

U/~

0

S

HIUR LOX

WEDNESDAY-Iii

0

Ticket Office. Presented by
Offioe ol Cultural Affain

A1ao starring Dominique San-

~S:r~'!.tU:!i=~r~ :~~

of Arta and Letters and ~ Fa~::!i%.~~ial Sciences an A -

0

well.

~tepbane Audran and Erich

tape barMucracy. However, at the
Neue Oesterreichische Autoren
l::.r
C:rr!;tio"::,'""a¢~o!" ~~ &gt; (New Austrian Authors), Hubert
in the oxot-· il im~e.
~!=.~ul!'.';~~~~ lifla=
l'IIIAIII l'llllafAnotl•
and the fine arta, 119 Crosby, 4

Studin, Harriman
8 :1!0
p.m.
Ti&lt;bta at· 50 centa am availal&gt;le
at the Norton Hall Ticket Ollioe. -

88

FilMS IY ozu•

su'Z:::.;~~g· p~P·BolM~
will be abown in the Conference
:!!iia~e ~ tb; N ~t'!~ H~
the

° 8~

8 111

editing technique

Roott of lhe Americon Cinema,
Robert Breer, aculptor and filmmaker, 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.
Mr. Breer'a aliort filma empbaaiu his experimental work with .
animation and hicb·speed m~­
ment. Sponsored~ the U/B Department of En · and the Center for Media tudy.
·

KRONOS Control L4nlua«e.

4238 Ridle Lea. Rm. 10• 7 p.m.
Hwa ClASS•
Talmud, Hillel House, 40 CaP!'ll Blvd., 7 p.m.

this situation. but applies to the

The panel discussion and the
workshops are 'free and open to
the public. P."""'nted by the U / B

SCIHNING/D&amp;SCUSSION•

COMPUIINO CINTII SEMtN.AJ.•

~~-~~- o~!':· w~e:psS:~ :C::n:m=~.fhePJU! :ef
:e~=i~ ~~~in Norton

atre, Norton.. Tickets are available at the Norton Hall Ticket
Offioe.
'
See Monday's listing for datails
on the films.

liMINAl**

Lea. Rm. 12. 7 pr. '

at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.
UUAS FILM••
Without Apparent Motiv&lt; (Labro) ,
Theatre, Norton, check showcase for times.
Admission charge.
This film bas Jean-Louis Trin0

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM#

End of S,.,..r., 7 . p.m. Tokyo

:0~;,!% ~~~~~

::d ?btr::::&amp;t:ti.!:..~~

The Erotic Adventures of ZOrro,

enberg, assistant professor of histo
8nd J&gt;BYchiatry at the Uni
w!i'ity of Penn8ylvania, will s~
on The Hy•terical Woman in the

TWO fiUU 1Y ODI"

FORTRAN IV, a oomprehen-

-h~~':':"7i'.!ta~re ~~-'f.;

aearcber at Bell Laboratoriea; in
Murray Hill, N.J., will discuss

c:anu

COMPUJINO

CAC CINEMA*

•Open to public;
•Open only

tion for ~i.mti/ic. Co!"puto:tiorh
Bruce Shri~r, Onivel"'lty of Aar·
~:: 4226 Ridge Lea, Rm. 41, 8_:30
·

-y

p.m. Coffee at 3 ,45 p.m.
_
Clli.tucAllliloiNI!IioH - •
Diff...Wn in Ordu-~ Al-'/gys, Louis A. Girifalco, School
o( .Metallurgy and Materiala Sci-

enoe, The Uniwroity of Pennoyi-

c:::,_ra.
vania, 104 Parkd ~rina. 4
....s:::r~ the ULB ~rt- ~;:__ CINTII AMDiAr•

VIDlOf:.J. - ··
F.ORTRAN lV, a.'~G - l ~: The ];jght ~f.!":~. to t h e . . , _
of 1M Stari, Atmtfophn-u of lhe • _ Rm. p~tioaa,p.m. • 4238
SU&gt;n, _Int&lt;ri.oro oJ~ Btaro, ·aDd --.__
'
Variof&gt;k Sian, Sc:ioiaco """ En- ~ cana ~;;.cineerjn&amp; LibrarY, 3-6 P-!D- (Tbia'
KRO![OB COitln&gt;l ~.
will bit. - t e d for 4288 ~ Lea. l:mL 10, 'f ·J&gt;io.
G~!' !I on W~y; Feb. • _ ODI fU!r..- DIICIIIIioN.14.) ..
.
To.,_, Story ~ 'nli-·
' '
.'
atre, Norton, 7 1.'-'!'- 11oo pue1
LG Ni&gt;IU (AntOmoai, 1961), ' 6 ~ Iii liMiD at 9: Ill p.m.,
P"ll- Gf'!"i _IU...U, (RQoir,
ind~wlet.~~
-- ~cbalr--· •
li37), 8:1 o - Botli 6hDo will :;;;.;u/8-~of~ :
be obown ln. 140 Capan
. po1ocy; Dr. Dinld Aliiiacb.
~~- · .
• ~
.
· (~ "" Jlfl6e 1, coL 4) -1l"i"'

_,-

f!idia

=.!Ia

~are

...,a.-·-

�</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>�2

--01'-..
'
-. --.
-- -== -_
T- -a == -

\./

ROckefeller Is As~g
$564 Million for SUNY "'=
&lt;»-- Nelaon ·A. RockeWier ill' b18 1.978-74 budaet re. - 110 tbe State Lecillatwe
tee ., ., •"'eel a -lolal ol.
t&amp;M llliiiiOil for State UDi....,._
11iQ' ~ill tbe fillcal ;pear

Ulka. In addltioD. Rocllateller
DOled, "powtb will be permitted at matwe UDi'NI8ity cam. . . - .o tilat ai1111Da ....., aDd
a t a f f - ~be- fll.

118lllllilllaD.)
'lbe toiU reqiiMt Ia an Ill,
ol .S.2 mlllloa. or 8.3
JIBI' l*lt tbe 1972-'13 IIIloaatioD.
"iJUNY'a ~Rock.r.u. Blid,
$77.8
miJIIall ol tbe
llli1llaD reQUired. doWil flO mlll1oD from
.. P-t ;pear. 'l1le buclaet
- . . IIIIMI two floclora lor

creued at tbe ~ oallepa, RocbfeiJer aald "rffllectlila tbe· cUmc:ulty 11.- poo11U1B baw experieaap ill MtNctilla quali&amp;cl l&amp;udlmiB.•
SUNY poerally, Rocltefeller
DOted. "bu beeli provided wifh
addltlonal support 110 accommodata llolh omollmeD~ ~
aDd tbe deliWI«y ol ~
authorbed --u·years qo.

·. :=::::t1m:·:·J:!:..T~

~-==-~

.:=~

8M9Ice for Ita CIPI~
liM IDcNued.
tbe 'l92-milllaD ill SUNY iDOome avan.ble
ill 1972-'13 iDcluded anHime
aa.fer payllleDt8 from a llWDber ol - - "'DDe D8t re.Wt,• RocbfeiJer 11BYB. ''Is that
the State'•· support ol UDi_..
aity coata will- u.cr- at a
..-ter rata than tbe poas UDi_:oeraity -wroPriatiau.• 'lbe
~ State share of
SUNY's' coata for 1973-74 is
$57.4· million hilbel: than 1972-

...a

wea~~wy,· ~a&amp;m.

~:n:m'· -~:

::S"!:..
~and""'!.m':
by which lhia support is com-

puled baWl " - ' moderately reduced, be said. while maintenanoe allocatioos baw '-n inc:reaa8d. ;n.e latter rellects
"both tbe~
ol
UDi...iraity Suildillaa
tbe
need for more comprehensive
maintenance after several austerity years."
Under ''significant SUNY
program changes," Rockefeller

..:f

listed:

"E%paJISion is to be continued at Stony Brook Health
Sciences Center, tbe College of
"tbe SUNY budget recommen- Optometzy, and tbe colleges at
dationa for 1973-74 are hued Old Westbury and Purchase. A
on a aeries of poliCY. diacuaaiona significant increase in enrollsbapocl by tli'e ntSl to main· ment is proposed for the Collain a strong UDiversity ayatem lege at Rome-Utica, a5 well as
and overcome some of tbe prob- a $15 million capital approprilema accumulated during tbe ation. Tlie new enrollment will
·recent period of fiscal atringen- be at the junior and senior
ey.•
level Empire State College I
~
· will cOntinue to eipand and a
Enrollment fi~ projected fifth learning center is proposed
are consistent With the Master -probably to be located in the
Plan ao-} of addilll 7500 FrE mid-Hudson valley. 'lbe Asriatudenta annually, but the m= cultural and Techllical Col.,._ Ia below that or n&gt;eent leges are expanding programs
yeus, tbe Governor said. 110 offer a yeer of techDical
Recommended growth will peo- training to persons ·who bave
mit aipificant ezpanaion or completed one year of general·
Empire State Collet!e
of education at the oommunit&lt;Y
tbe developina C8JIIPUIII!8 at Old colleges. An appropriation baa

'13.

According to tbe Governor,

and.

&gt;

srm~

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end For.lf'J'

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mation of .the existinl wban
centers and cooperative coHege

oen&gt;ters into new EducatiOIIal
Opportunity Centers. 'Ibis con-

solidation abould n:take substantial admilliatrative oavinp
possible,· the Go""mor lllilcl
Journalism programs will be
started at both Albany
Morriaville and Albany's overseas education program will be
expanded to include a program
in Israel.
Other major programs such
as educational innovation,
equipment inventory and replacement. library acquisitions
and graduate fellowships bave
'-n recommended as University-wide pri&gt;grams.

and

16

2S

+2

By_ categoriell, funding requests for tbeee SUNY-wide
programs are as follows: BuHd-

ing repairs, $3.5. million; SUNY
SCI&gt;Oia1'llhipa ·$ 2.1 million (up
$900,000); ·Univeraity Press,
$50,000; faculty training and
development, $50,000; n e w
building openinga, $5.1!92 mil-

lion; g r a d u a t e fellowships,
$700,000; educational improve-

ment and innovation fund, $3.9
million; equipment inventory
replacement, $1 million; cen·tralized library purchase, $1.3
million.
The accompanying c h a r t s
provide data on in&lt;!Jvidual unit
operating budgets, personnel
and enrollment.

SUMMARY Of ENROLLMENT CHAHQ£S-UNIVERSITY WIDE
Annual
n ... ~lent . . . . . . .
1112-73 •nd 1973-74

A...._. , ..

_..._.,

-

. 1972·73

Total :·
Uni..,..Rlty Centers .
Albllny

•..••. ....•

·····-·······-145,597
........... 47.245
·---···- 11,929

.:~:~ ... :.~- ::::::·:::::~:~:::~ .~
•stony Brook

-·---·---·

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....

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.. _________.. ___

Col- · · ---·· ---·-

9.927

4 ,927

=

-

Ruc::ociWiWidcd

1 173-74

153,~

49.520

12.265
7.930
1B.B25
10.500

5.309

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1.900

65;oD6

611.513

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-$3.444

+51

$3.113

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1.645
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+70

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been recommendocl to help
SUNY obtain Federal 'Sea
Grant' 1deeignation, with a con~t u.cr- in 8I81lt income."
-Grant ...........
Under Federal legislation en- ·
acted in 1966, a number of collegee may be named Sea Grant
institutions, a concept roWihJ.y
analogous to the land 8I81lt colleges establisbed in tbe 19th
century. Like land 8I81lt institutions, Sea Grant oalleges will
be responsible for a balanced
program of teaching, lllfilOIIl'Ch.
and extension. SUNY and Cornell, in consortium, bave re-ceived Federal funding but not
official designation as a Sea
Grant college. Such designation
would mean continued Federal
funding for researeh and atension programs of immocliate importan&lt;:e to the State's marinebased industries, much in the
same way tbat · Cornell's ·land
8I81lt program benefits New
York State farmers. Slate University reports that specific
Staie support is required in order to obtain tbe designation.
This budaet accordingly recommends a Smte appropriatibn of
$100,000 for this pfOitnim.
During the coming budget
year, there will be an amalga-

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''''i7.4il

Requisitions Due Monday

�~

FebtuMy 1, 1913

3

Health Care Too Speciali?ed, Doctor-Says •
America's "major

bl&amp;Pilals h

bave become 1be world's best
for the care ol life-threatenmc
m-ae" but "primary t-l4h
care forthe bulk of our populatioD t.a t-1 -.lily deterior...,__ " a Harvard --''·'-'-'-;;;;.;;...._
.---~
Tbe situa"- is
_...., be -e~
an unf..- co~ ol
·the Fluuer Report of 1910
wbicb provided the basis for
modem, speci8llzed medical
training- co._uence wbicb
baa been reinforced by the
more reamt Federal policy of
providillg support monies primariJy for medical ~
It is a · situation whicb; be
says, can· and must be cbaDaed.
Dr. Charles A. Janeway,
'Ibomaa Morpn Rot.c:b profea..
eor of pediatrics, Harvard Medical Scliool, IIJ)M)rlng at the
U / B Medical ·Sc:boof·s Alpha
Ozqega Alpha Lecture -i n January Identified four "festering
p;:;.blems of our ·medi9'i caie
system:"
..
1 The shortage of perBQill1l!!
to ;,..,.,t what .the public con·
aider&amp; ita beelth DaM~&amp;. .
2. 'l'be bigh coe1s of medical
care, which bave unquestionably 6een pushed up by the
parado:Dcal ellect of the major
voluntary heelth insurance aystem (Blue Cross-Blue Shield) .
This .system encourages admisslon to the ho&amp;pital, which is
pa id for, rather ·t han ambula·
tory care, which in general is
not, because it is cheaper for
-- .
,

~tiaot and easier lllld ..,._
,_~..., foe 1be pbyaician
-"despite the fact 1hat it casts
90Ciety more. •
3. Tbe diflerencea in ta.llh
and medical .rvices available
to the more am.-t - t of
our oociety as Ollllll'8sted wid&gt;
tbooe aYililable 1o the urban and
rural poor, wboee hMlth needs
are greeter, and
4. 'Ibe general unwillingneoa
of the inedical prof.-ion to aceept consumer..puticipation in
the plamrlng and organization
of medical care. ·
Tbeae problema, Dr. Janeway
said, have · aroused increasing
public conoem, and created
pieeswes fot" changes in medi·
cal education to emphasiz.e the
training of ·family PhYsicians
. and a better diiotribUtion of
health peraonnel and facilities.
"Even .tha't procrustean and
conservative organization, ·t he
American Medical "-&gt;ciation,
bas begun not only to give
ground but also to lif;tempt to
participate more elfeCt:ivel1y in
change."
·
l'riiMIY Helltlt Care the Anower
Tbe ultimate answer, be pro~. is a primary health care
system manned by groups of
·p hysicians. "Whether such
groups should consist of proi&gt;erly trained family physicians,
teams consisting of internists
and pediatricians or a combination of all three can only be
determined b
trial." The
groups must ~ make use of

Insti•tuti·onal.Raci·Smc..·-· - - - - - - -

(Contin!U!d from page 1, col. 4)
equally useful 'for his own

ends."

·

Rqlonal Rlldsm

.

Racism baa a stronR regional
coq~ponent, ai:cording to Opler.
..Racism often sUffaces region·
ally 'wherever there ,is a suita!&gt;ly. large or visible minority for
the exploiters to persecute.
Stereotyping is always present,
although the same stereotypes
are applied to different groups,
depending on the ethnic mix
of .the reltion. On the West
Coast, the victims were - and
are - Chicanos and JapaneseAmericans. In Oklahoma, the
same stereotypes have been
used against Indians. As documented so powerfully in Upton
Sinclair's The Jurntle. recent
middle - European immigrants
were once the victims. In New
York's l!llfl[le[lt district, a succession of Jews, Italians. and
lately Puerto Ricans have been
exploited. And throushout t:lie
United States. wherever they.
are, blacks are treated inde·
.
oantly.
"Ruth Tuck. in her book,
Not With the First. conducted
an experiment among upper·
class lrish-Amer'icans in San
Bernardino, California. Using
vulgar stereotypes from old
Boston newspapers about the
so-called shanty Irish, she
asked ber respondents who
ll1t!n theee people wbo were
lazy and ahiflleea, breeding l.ilre
rabbits, often dnnik, and gen.
erally ~ and improvident. Predictably, their answers polarized around the ehicano ·and, to a loaer edent,
the Japanese-American. When
the book was finally publisbed,
the j&gt;illara of San Bernardino
80Ciety found tbenmelves uaing
the II8Dl8 lltareotypea against
another minority that bad been
.-.! against ~ own llllCI!8ton in the Northeast."

........
~~
Opler was involvl!d in a local

New York area, enjoying high·
er annual incomes than many
· Buffalo Irish, for example, and
freely attending public schools.
But with rapid industrialization
in the second half of the century - and particularly with
the rise of trade unions and
their discriminatory policies local blacks were increasingly
ghetfoized and, indeed, were
forcibly segregated in all-black
schools.
_Equal opportunity and af.
fording every individual the
basic mnditions of existence
are the best insurance aRainst
racism, Opler hypothesizes.
''That's not exactly front-page
news," he admits, -'but it's true
nonetheless.
"Benedict speaks eloquently
to this question of how to cope
with racism. She writes, 'The
cure for . .. all minority conflicts (lies) in the extension to
all men of fuU citizenship rights
and of fuU opportunity to make
good in any field. . . . It is not
·enough to legislate human
rip.ta for the minorities. The
ma~ritiea also . . . must have
solid baSes for confidence . in
their own opportunity tq.live in
securily and deoency. Otherwise, whatever · the guarantees,
they will find out a victiin and
t,~d' ~ ~a scapegoa~ to
Dr. ~baa written edensively on race and related issuas. He Will' a principal investiptor in the Midtown Man-.
batten Study undertaken bY
Comell Medical Colleae and
baa done field 'llo'Ol"k among Ute
and Apache Indians. .Puerto
Ricans, .and Italian-, Irish- and
J . _ - Americans, among
otbers.

..

P'ARTICIPATION DICOUitA8ED

-nt

President Robolt 'L ~r- 11U Is·
sued a momorsndum .ID C8mpuo'
administrators , and
offl·
cars ancoul'llllna

·-widest

po&amp;·

inVJ!istiption of minority condi- slble pertlcl~"· In the lnstl·
ticme as a member ol the tJ-a. tutlonal Radom Conte-.bV fK·
eommittee of IAurenoa Gluco, ulty. staff and oJudenta. "It Is lm·
now a history prof-.r at the portant ... become kriowt·
· Univenity of Pittaburgh. By ' odpoble about the myth and -1·
atud,ying Buffalo census re~&gt;­
lty of the c:ailoclouo and UnoOn·
ord&amp;; Glasco found that freed
blacb pai1ici ted ClOIDPOii- -m"
relationS, ~'
tively during
1850's in t!i8 ' mr uki.
,
economic llle of the Western

:f:

----lnpwhlch
1-

other beeltb --'--'---·'- be

advised.

,.•. . . _ _

Whatever its final make-up,

howevw, the fielcl of primary

!bet than for total
~
:., IICIIdemiC -~
prise,_' - bad .., ar1ificia1 uobalaDcina ellect. . . . This meant that' only one of the triad
of obligations of the clinical
"'--·-ts ... __ .. ,_, ......._ __ ,_

~,__I.• ,)
"'The a6Ml ~ ol h

E~t talllll mlmitli. ol_.
-~
~ Ia -.&amp; tD

John
. • • ...
hMlth care, Dr. J . _ y aaid,
~Metfnt opem with _ . . _ .
must become a apeciaky in its
cbantfnt, 'with ·JIUIIo.' h own rilh~ -'·'ty devoted
ciety's motto, wliicb _.... ol
to 1-.tth pro~ identifi- ;;;:.-'~ad~"'~""'~ foui written NlipclmM it t.a "
· -'·'cationearly
of individuals at .....,._.
---'-' It ,_
'-- also ·
be _...,
--'"' to a are
receiwd
fromentirety:
Mr. Buth. ' " in their
·~
detection of eerious subtle devaluation of the lm. •1"'- Well,-··
d,iaease, the management of portance of teaching or clinical
•-...
!'CUte emergencies, and the abil- activities.
" 'Sure I Y • • • coacl-.
1ty to render continuing care to
In the post World War n M~':jt:... t on.'
chronically ill patients. Above period, Dr. Janeway said, there
.. ......0:: "'-~ety are ~ · all.• be urged, the practitioner in were efforts to make the mecli- lowd:'...., """"
....,. ~
!his field IDIISt "be a specialist cal student aware of the patient "Then it's on to _..._~ ........
m ~le, rather than in a as an individual, .....,. than as
-~ .,...
· apecif1c di.aeese or therapeutic the victim of an episode of di· ness. sort· of. Tbe Society II,..
modality.
sease' to be dialllloeed and a~ for 'exoallenco in Beth"To -thus expand and iln- treated. Comprehensive clinics ~::h.x,&lt;f"
~!,~_a
prove our medical care system w~re developed, and a few ex- so'&amp;: who preeented one..._of
••-.
"!' it blends acientific sophia- perimenta in fundamental ..,.
.,...
.tication with intelligent and . visions of the medical curricu. B a r t h's bawdier worb aa a
humane concern seems to me to lum were undertaken. "But few play, and who was immediataly
be the I!Mt challenge ol the of the6e have been aimed at the fired.
seventies for those of us in the fundamental failure of Ameri''The gro'::/l s e lis bumperhealth professions and partie- can medical education to meet stickers rea ing: John Barth
ularly in medical education."
the needs of the public for pri· fo~.,Z.~~~~iety .,._ ~-'8
Fluner " - "
mary health and medical care."
""""
· - """"
More recently, ho-ver, he blea in politics. In 1970, it enThe Flemer Report of 1910, said, public preaa~have ..,. dorsed a c a n d i d a t e for the
Dr, Janeway recalle;d, led t? a suited in a series of new medi- Mary Ian d legislature wbo
ser~es .of . reforms ~ medical cal schools, mainly State &amp;pon· promised that 'onoa safely electeducst!&lt;&gt;n . the establishment of so red, some of them incorpor- ed,' he would introduoa a bill
e?ucational s~; eD!Pha· ating community bo&amp;pitsls as to create an oftlcial John Barth
~?!J ~e "'iientif•c
of the base for their clinical teach- ~
indicated that
mclini.'_'
uca . on; emp IB on ing programs, thus increasing John n.~... ,_, ___ 11 ''fin.._ all
""! . teac:hing und~r close .the output of physicians. The this adula'tion"""""a·~"" ...
s~pervlSlon m ~ ·t eaching hos- use f uxiliary
ll!l8l .
,_.
p1tal mntroUed by the faculty; health
being~~vely .::.. light' to him and · wife; the
";"d development of a full'very witty' meeting minutee
~ system f~r. those respon- f:~d~·...:.iif:':!/'::f~~~ 'just break us up,' he says."
~•ble for. ~~g the teach- sity affiliated neighborhood
•ng of chmcal subjects.
• health centers in rural and ur- Tru
u~
These reforms, Dr. Janeway ban poverty areas. Minimal said, while raising standards, Congressional funds have also
also lie behind some of the dif. authorized programs to create (Continued from - · 1, coL 6)
·ficult problems in the delivery departments or programs of obligation to their country and
of medical care which are pos. family practice within medical we remember dloee with equal
ing challenges •today.
schools, and the shortening and murage who refuaed to _...,
The Flexner reforms resulted loosening of the medical cur· and sought the status of OODin the closing of ·a number of riculum has been going on scientious objector or fled the
poor medical ·schools; the sur- apace.
·
country in the name of justice
vivora produced markedly fewand peace.
er physicians and became in· The Result of VIsion
"Help us to learn a , _ waY
creasingly isolated from the
"All of this change baa come as we remember the teacbins,
"community" and ita. ~cal 8.9" the result of the vision of a de m o.n s t r a t i 0 n s, protest
number of educational leaders, marches, and . moratorluma in .
needs.
of student concern ·to improve which we i!J:pteaaed our ru-.t :
Strengtheuing the scientific the quality of life ·for all our within the freedom of our nabase and increasing emphasis people and of pressure from the tion. . . ,
on biomedical research had two deprived sections of our popu"Help us to learn a , _ way
additional consequences: con· lation for their rights lP a so- as we recall the propaganda,
centration of clinical instruc- ciety 'dedicated to the propoai. the distortion of truth, the halflion in the teaching hospital tion ·that all men are created truth, and the open Ue by which
and an accelerating trend to- equal • "
h
__ ,..._
ward specialization. This gives
.
t .e government ~...ut to conthe student "a very biased view ti.Jl'~~i'~·f ~~~J'h:i :ro\t.~~=p:m~
of the mntent of medical prac· may sound Utopian," Dr. Jane- thev IIOUght. •••
tice," Dr. Janeway conteltds.
way said, "but I believe it is
''Forgive us, 0 God, all of us,
Another effect on the student, achievable. For the forces nee· for our willinpeM &lt;to oecrifloa
he said, is "that moat of his essary .to make it a reality, in life and truth.
mntacts are with physicians the profesaiol), in the commun- · •wo Are Gl'81eful'
11But we are arateful for tbla
whose commitment is, qu ite ity, and in ·the government,
properly, principally to re· have already been set in mo- truce and for thole Je.den
search and to the care of pa· tion. Ther. must not destroy whose IIOI'Otiatlona and clecltienta in a narrow field. . . . · the magnificent achievements 81·
b-· .... t
to ..._,_ .a.Thus, it is smaU wonder that, of medical education and ..,.
~~ •v...., us
...,. ....,,
until very recently, ·the greet search resulting from the longWe are grateful h t people
majority of medical graduates -term impact of the FJemer Reo , will no lonpr wffer h t.nw
in this country he:ve elected to port, but rather (must) ampU- and death of lml- 111111 llaY·.
train themselves in a clinical fy ita strength and ---"'-·
ita oneta, buUeta and rodreta, cli.o
3
specialty, while a steadily di- unforeseen. ~ s 0 follanta, napUn and B-U'L •••
mi.nishing p ropo rti on have that our system of medi;;&amp;l edu·
"We are paWnl tt.t _..,.
chosen ·to enter family pmctioa, cation can not only provide fot" 80ill'OII8 of our DalioD 110 . . _
a clinical activity which clear- · expert treatment and ultimate will be OOIIWIIled 1D ... ell.
ly has mceived -little academic conquest of many of our life- · tructlon of a COUJIIIIOIII ~
recognition by the majority of threatening ru-, but a110 tbet we may u a udall biiiJd
medical -faculties in the United guarantee equaljty of hMlth and plant lipiD; that - 1111!1',
Stetea."
protection . . . to all our clti- If we will. tum to oar ·,._
-Funds
zena."
lqea IIDil cltlal to ~
Tbe infusion of public funds
tMb .W IIDdaaa ID ........
into medical acbools in the past
.luatb and ~ "' 25 years, Dr. Janeway oaid, bea
OWil ~
led, l.ilre the Fiemer Report.
__:'}!!_-will e"::W...::*~
"to some unfortunate, as well
.........,
as good, ~" Reo
President Robelt L Ketter and oar ~ ol ..
8Midl activities have t.en baa been aPPointed to a - - • be .-..a .to 1M qala . . . _
peaiJy atrengtbened, foaterinc man State ·Committee on ~· us with tta. 1llali _ . ....,.;:
medical
and providing 1ric Power a-nD cbarpd
"We palafal lor - .
the basis~more elfectlve with ~ tilt m- true. ht 11M lnulbt a - .
medical practice. "'n the other · vlronzneot.Nlatad power .,...... fire ID VieiDuD.
·
band, there have been unde&amp;ir- •tina PIOillemL
"Gnnt .to a., 0 God, a ...
able ellecta. A medical echool
Governor NeJ.m A. Bocb- . . _ 1o thla ....,_ ~
mWit provide MrVice to patienla feller aalred 1be Commkllee to with tt. Gl'laMil ol U..:
to demiJD81zate the blat of betlln immediately to "llllde , . ... ~!~rift - tD . . . . . .
in ita dialcal c.dllDc pao- the dev..,_t •• • ol 'a pao- wodt
m, to Iliad"' •
pama,· &amp;Jld it llllllt __..,. gram of -.cb elmed at lid- natlaa'• - - - . to lor
C008tailt ~ and re- v8J!Clnl electric power ~ blm wbD aB haft-..... . .
M&amp;rCb. •• ·• 'lbla criad • . Ia tacbnolol)' in of IPidll bat&amp;llo and lor ............
~~--~ in=tbe- importance .to meeein1 •
hla0111bmttD4o.Uwlllda.......,.
... v&lt; the -a-De
Btate'a electric power - - . _ . , . lllllldildlla a )1111&amp;-..
elciaD. Yet, the inflow ol
••• wiila minimUm ol.mvlroa- J.am. ·......_
~ted lor
oaly, mmtallntnlaiaa."
and Wllll..U DiiiiiiiliiLI•

t.!=

t',.'!'

Hj,1:;:;1

c!r., ls

ce-

OC:

Ketter Named to
NY Po.wer Panel .

·

w-

-rm

�~

4

Pfll&gt;zv.y l , 1973

· Lyndon Baines Johnson: The Flawed White Southerner
By ~LBB L BLAND

M~,
lo!ameof to write
8lld U.. -North to dell- ·
cribe b 8oulb to...._ (an
.OCCIII&gt;ation which ·can be · vmy
teatete.ly done i n - eepable
lumdo). Munay recently
pra;.,d Jobnaon aa a . . _ ·
oJd cnder" who waa on tlie
aide of .t he N_epo. He thought
that Jobuon waa inclinecl- to
advance Nepo rishts a-U..
of his SoutbBm origins 8lld waa
able to accompliab wbat he did
because he knew Southerners
and they knew him:

who

s..w""=..-.::c"- s:-'S.::....

On June ·•• 1965, LyDdoa
Jobnoaa, an American Presicleat 8lld Soutbem man, his
mind ~ but his
down home twan, painfully
naJr.ed 8lld ~ Blood
up before ru.audiance at Howani Uniwnity 8lld Cold tliem
"you do DOt wipe away the
acan of .-turieo
aayinJ:
~ you are free,'
aa Lincoin had told the slaW!. "You
do take a pen1011 who for
The# White foU.. doum hen.
Y""!" hal been bobbled by Boy don't you ~- forret they
dlaina . ·.. Uld U.. say 'You alwayo bun the key to ~ueryare fret! . • . 8lld still justly thing 10 far "' IDe concerned.
believeibat
have been oom- So whet lftWe it away to me"""
pletely fair. '
them. And when he lltlid the
Sadl,y, III8Dy people ctaoae to time u here to do 10methinl/
notice the acceDt 8lld iplore the · .. didn't nobody hlwe to ull
......_· Tbe liat of the speech, them whet thot meant be0£UJ6e
wblch I haw the temeritY to h&amp;- they olreody knew he was one
liew ·waa oue of the ...,._ of them and if they made him
staliemellta in American history mad he was subject to do some
II_P!IIl the subject of human of thot old rowdy cnu:ker cussn,ht., was that the two major iJig right bock · at them, and
pieces of civil dgbts lesislati&lt;m ""'Y~ 110me o{'that old cowbor
' Johnson already had achieved stuff to boot.•
only the instrument&amp; of ~ The -ellon TrHition
. ~- Much more imTo Ellison, Johnoon evoked
portant waa tlie evideuoe thst . the qwility of a character in
be peraoaaUr had gained an AriBtotelian tragedy, "a man
elaborate inlllght into the enor: not Preeminently virtuous and
mous oomplexity of the ques. just" but flawed to self.reeliza.
tion of racial inequality and tion by circumstances not of his
= d .!:~
U.O:..,_· ~'iU..,
j~:;'! ":u,~~~:. here by an
t!cuiar and_ ef!'ective _,..,.;ng of old o/pve-bom myth .. . secret
n,hta an«! pnvileges for the in- and questioning
f the
dividual Blsck man. 'f'o rea]. floUJed white S~uihe.;,.,~ who
ize those rijjbta ·and privilegi;s while true to hi8 Southern roota
waa an objective be set lor his ""' confronted the injustices of
administration. Indeed, by the the pcut and been re&lt;k~med
Autumn of 1965, Jolinson had S1fCh ·a man, the myth holds;
~ ...__ such a vt'go
"dht thing...L.....,.,
rous hold on will do the ·..,
~ .wwever
the civil righta movement and great the cost, whether he l.ike8
had oo infused his aduiinistra- • NeBroes or •not-tu)4· wiU move
tion with a "csn-do" spirit, that with tragk vulrterability toward
many Negro leader&amp; feared he the brooder ideo!. of American
might uswp their own author- de~~ and Ellis&lt;m uC,
1ty~_:..:..., foreaightful clair- connecting ·Johnoon · to a-b.m.
•-vor•.n
- .atone of .........,
..... --. ,· pei'8J)leDt
•-'·
...,.,~-~
te1ian wrou-'-t
"" in. the """"
trodition, -carried him
pattieo O!D Wolle (not the to ·

!'K

z::w.

S:

U., the organic fabriC of Ens·: ner. strains, 9tzeooeo. ~
land.
.
• : the ~ ~-&lt;:Oilf!CIOI.IIIDS98 ,
It is a persuasiVe &amp;rj(IIID8llt. • of. a bigbly, differentiated "!"f
but oue with which I ~ · complex oociety," one. wb!d&gt;
I joig C. 'vann Woodward 1n . prompts the "self~tion
his rejoinder that to call even which is the heginn:ing, if not
the old South unitary- 110 · Of.wisdom, thenat~tbearis
apply a too !&gt;road generality 110 ~of literature.''" It was this ph&amp;a few particularo.' If .tbet iB nomenon, Tate believe&amp;,' which
&lt;true, there is no OU.,le heritage produced the literary renaisto.inform a modem ID8ll of the sa00e in the South which h&amp;South in his senaibilitieo. It is gan aiOund 1920. There is ree·
intereotm, that EUioon's argu- son to suspect that a newfound
ment is oomewhat akin to that awareness aloo could impinge
of Allen 'Tate in his Agrarian upon other profeeoions, for ex·
argument. Actually, Tate him- ample, politics and Lyndon
sell was recently revealed to Johnoon. Given the less imhave told his friend Dooald mediately. fulfilling nature of
Davidson that .t heir Agrarian
manifesto would have to do
"less with ·t he actus! old South
than upon ita prototype-the
~
historical, social and religious The ~ ' - on this pop ·
acbeme of Europe."'
.
to provide • forum tor the exAnd Murroy, hall he lmOWIJ, ..,..,... a1 vtewo on • nrlety
his Agrarians better, would have a1 the • - fKinc the K*lomlc
known that Robert, Penn War- com m u n f t 'I· We welcome ren, the Agrorisn ' who wrote position p 0 p • r a -.. a
about the racial question epee- • opoi:e penn11a. . • •
.
ifically in l'U ·Take My Stond - ··_- - - -·- - - - - though he defended 'segregatiorf •
..
. · ·.
because he thought the Negro political action, ~ was only a
was not yet prepared for inte- matter of time until a Southern·
gration whicli would not do vi- er lilre Lyndon Johnson would
olenoo to the wholeness of SO- come forth.
ciety which ·t he Agrarians were An Otrenslve Assessment!
cel&lt;0brating, . and defended it
Johnson's particular strengths
agam less v1gorously a quarter and weaknesses of chsracter
~~century later ~ his little csn be seen in oortain Faulkner
called Segregatwn, would charocters - Flem S nope s
:~~~,renounce the idea 88 Thomas Sutpen !'rid Joe Chris~
s0
mas come to mmd-&lt;lS well aa
a~· · Whn'&gt;!1 1 utf_oerners, Black
George Posey in Mr. Tate's
· e, UICludlllp 1 ~ The Fathers. The OOrllmon trait
w;:;:r ~v~neb!,r;:" b':. o( th&lt;:"" men was an uproot.:&lt;f
guiled by t'le hope thot the d.isuniill tyhichof chsracter,_ energetic
s. outh•. on 1ts
· own respo118ibil. . w
w
operated ' meds~~
rather
than ·m· ~usfain
~effort,
1ty m111ht lear to deal 101'th 1he
"
N."
· · .n ·
violent but depthless psssians
Thrt'a:!: ·:::::"th-.1":ru:'f:~· and a disreg'!"a, of 'the. ~
in the face of the polilical
and con.ventions of t!'e~r Cuiitiu ... was a 'fopd &lt;klus(on. ~ t~~e~ (that 'I'·• good
Whot
'l theae/Sput~rners ' -did blindly but witt?· ~lfJH1d
1
do WO:..~.t.olre
look, at
the pose
to make
egro
• .,.,.... Ill a the
great
f 0 rde
.. the ~
Northern citiu, and see there
lD
wm:ld. 'J'!Iere is

GV'JEWPQTNTS
.

'f:u"""fl/e,

..:J:

'N

~~!~~:~\=:: ~.:.,: i:~. ~~~rS: lf:~t"ll~pe of the -future in

other era. It was a unity 88•
sumed by Jack Cash in his
Mind of Jhe South and ideal~..by the Agzarian poets and
cntics who handed together in
1930 to publish 12 essays in a
boo~ called l'U Take My Stand.
It IS a tradition which is
grounded in the rhetorical or
Aristotelian mode, in which
firot principles were 8l!l!umed
and were handed down through
11enerations. Thoee principfes
1n llle esse of the South were
a surrender tQ, the -instruction
of nature, culture, religion and
?adition. Supposedly, a man
informed by these assumed
principles could make apProf!o...,~et
his~---t DOW Priate judgements about right
''
.......,..,....
and wren~. What is ·&amp;uggested
stands. Ralph Ellisan. .-:rib· then, is dlat Johnson, in movfng the How a r d University m, to redreeo Nepo inequality,
~ said "~t apel1ed out the was leeo concerned with justioo
IM&amp;IIint of full inteRra!Oon for than with the preservation of
Nepoas in a way dlat no one the lleamlessness of his oociety
· · . .baa ever done before. 1bere ~t would be the s&amp;me im:
::"0::.~ in it, 110 escape pulse that compelled Edmund
I am _...,_, __,v ... __ to Burke to oppose the p6licies of
,_._.......
UI1IWI1
King Geor'Jie m . -.rd tlie
~~~~
Ell•Aiaonlb elllldrt
oAmeric;an
Colonies: the tear
.....,..... .............,.
thst the ,., __ was thus ruptur
he would no doubt have been
the object of greet raillery by
men who would have reminded
him about .recent ewnta in .the
South: white sheeta in tlie
moo~ghl, burning croeses, exploding Nepo churches, signs
reading ''Kennedy Wanted
Dead or Alive," and some of
Johnson's fellow Southerner&amp;
who were making names for
themselves, men like GeoiJte
Wallace. Besides, they would
want to know, if Johnson waa
a cowboy-Southerner, wby waa
be in Washington aDd not back
?" the range getting little doag"'" along.
.
.

--';""----------,----~-"'.::__

Ft S

the

·

A Reflex A&amp;•lnst

Ju~~ •!"~ Chonp
~ 18 not .to say that Cash
?r ~ Agranans were wrong

lll' ~yml! there waa such a senm th~ Old South, or
t •t continues &gt;to effect
!'l&lt;&gt;utheme~
today, or even that
90100
m
of Its forms it is a good
sens!~i.¥2'· But in th~ South,
partku!"rly m questions of
ra~, It . ~ been a reflex
agamst JUStice and positive
chang&lt;:. Wherever it raises ita
~d IS rev e a _I e d the grin.
nmg face ?f r&amp;CISDl. Indeed, it
~ force in deciding
eo:'ed
to fight for the
thederacy,
although "he
1oa . slaverr
and opposed
8001!SSlon. - It IS what caused
Southerner&amp; to defend slavery
!'nd ~ deaf and blind to ita
' utonmorality. I do . not .h esitate
asy ·that, au:r&gt;ed into the
ill~ today, •t _PIOpoees an
litical . conserva~ on a poin a process ~~ IS gro!"'ded
abash~ traditiOn. _It IS un(T t . Y ''Phila
~orm
o~ reaction
a e.
ooophically we
~ the whole bog of reon. ) · As Caroon McCul~ !"''gesta•. it is '!" infan~
...,_
~1181ble f11!1vete which
ask QUeStions or seek ·

~~

Q!" ':aJ

__;·;___:__· :::;::t

t:'

.....:i,.!:;

m;:y~t =~n~TI1~

the bastard of his wife, unable
to el\ioy or know how to enjoy
his possessions, wsiting· for hiB
"?USin Mink to .CQme and kill
him. There is Sutpen horrify.
·ing his wife by wrestling naked
with his slaves and disrupting
Yoknapatawpha County by his
intrusive presence There is Joe
Christmas whose name is
fiction in ' itself, struggling ~
know whether he is While or
Black, cohabiting with a weman 88 rootless as he And
there is Posey, placin · cash
value on land which isg priceless to others, and too practical
to resist profits from the slave
trade&gt; though he professes to
heag!'instslavery.
.This 8BSeSSII)ent o( Johnson
IDiatit at first seem olfensi
and to poltray a brash and ve
rogant man to be feared
arhiips pitied. But. that
'\ecessary. For in this aliena.
t1on from his roota lies the flaw
!hat .Mr. Ellison detected and
1t IDigbt have been Johnson's
Strength. ln order to argue it
that ~Y. the esse has to be
made m ' tenns of M ~ •
insight that tro~'l.t:
breeds an expanded aw
Tom Weot put it well,~
v!!roely, by ssying ·that alienation from one's roots fragment-

i; ':i

anrdo"'"not see how Johnson's :r~~into parte,
d'!8rbeaded 8lld inaigbt(W oom- ination. of those
an·""""'·
IDlbnent to the righta ·of Ne- stractionist terms parisU.: :;
rroes oould i'!'"!'
from a- are isolated ~ '--'-·"
~"":i.'fuO!'gms· I would corrected." Eric Hoii:r""~
It waa a ~ of . has sugiJeBted. 1hat on1 a man
llplUil(

.. _ _
.._

, ltJI!II-~
A. . CUicmD

, . , _ • .o&amp;D _ _

.._er-..;....._

, . . . . . &amp; CjPN-cu.f
. , . , .....,.., - - . . . . . .

f

Jolmoon ~ a man like this
T_om from~ TOOt&amp; and unfor~
£lven by ~ people, he was
flee ~- ~ the nature of
the. injUstjc:eo to the Negro
whid1 :were woven into the '
cial fl!bric. Armed with~
edge, with will 8lld the instru:
menta to act, he did oo with the
larger than life enthusiasm
which malkeil aU his endeavoro. He ilied -t hinking the enormous wrong of Vietnam would
obecure· the 1JOOd be did. Ma
God grant rest to his troubl.ij
spirit.

:.,:mal
~ormation ot
hiB r .
waa
by

fci:::! up in awrought
SoUth
....:lli'::" 8lld ~ ,

wboee 0

aDd

~

is aware that he ~ not an
mtegral part of the univ.erse
but an e~mal stranger Whlcb
PfOVObs 1ts wrath,. can ~p ·

lliiouch~- . ~bilhi~~m:.=:.
=.:&lt;!lll'==Y
~
inll
:l:'taa':.ew=:::-.
ca.=. !f::.
uurrors
dislntep&amp;W

f'ro:!i::;t!:tco!:pe_&lt;!e puze
roots
~ long years he ' a way which · :fl~ in
Tbls is world aa it ia aJI!I not 88 it~ - ·
Tate cradita will)
:n~
of'pbyai.

Bell Researcher
Says Stqry Wrong
EDlTOB:

I ani writing· iii an i.ffort to
oorrect an erroneous impression

which may ~have lieen conveyed
~Y an article in the January 18
of the Reparter. The ar·
ticle on U/ B's scsnning electron microscope ( SEM } emp~ized that it waa the "only
microscope . . . (witli } scanning ability . . . at any institution between Rochester and
Cleveland . . ." (ED. NOTE :
~ was a quote from Dr. S.
Ramalingam, associate professor of mechanical engineering.}
However, at Bell Aerospace
we have had a similar instrument in operstion for the past
~ years, durinJ which time
1t has proven mvaluable in
supporting our efforts in materials research, failure analysis
and qulll.ity control. While our
SEM unif is not set up to con·
duct the in-situ metal-cutting
experiment&amp; described in the
~cle; it can routinely provide
high· 9uali~, high· reoolution
sEM un&amp;glllg on bulk samples.
FurfhennOre, by .virtue of its
!"~ microprobe accessories,
!tIS cspeble of performing qual·
1tative and quantitative com·
positional analysis on both
known and unknown materials.
This enables us to study not
only the surface structure of a
specimen, but also ita chemical
composition, inhomogeneities,
~d contaminants aa weU.
0n occaaion,' industrial COn·
cerQS in the Bulfalo ares have
contracted for the use of our
electron Jn!ci.oeoo
facilities
in the solution or their own
specific problems. In fact, Prolessor Cadenhead at U/B first
examined samples of lunar rock
in our SEM. While the level
or our internal workload dissuades us from •ctiwly aeeking
outaide Work of this type, we
are conoemed that your readers
be made aware thet such a facil •
.exists locaUy and csn..)&gt;e
utilized. . . . .
.
ISSue

it&gt;:

su-relY )'Oip.
DLLF.VYHNAL

.Ad~

Mal8ria!B
s-rch
Mall Zone C84
Bell Aeraepece_

�5

PtlbnMry J, 1913

Sl:JNYS~te

Horton
. Gives
.

To Hear Bey_er.
AtU/BMeet
- J •

Journal Set
TotheUGL

~

'

A virtually complete 8l1t o1
the Americon Hutorical Re-

The SfJNY 8eoatil will holil
ita midyait """!tins on thSU/B
• campus ~ 2 and 3. .
CbaDoellor, Ernest
Boyer
regulariy apm111 the mee\ing by
J:ePC&gt;rliiDII 011. the Btalus of Sen' atio reocilutions paSsed at the ·
previouS meeting. He will l.Jao
deli- a stale 'o f the Uhi-mty

uiew for the years 1929 duouah
.1972 1)811 been donated to .dOe

r...

report:.

Undergraduate Ubrary (UGL)
by lli. Jobn T . . Hor:ton, professor of history, UGL cfuector
Y.orsm Szekely announced. ·
"We are extremely lll8l&gt;efuJ
for Dr. J{orton's gift," Szebly
said "The Americon H. toricol
Reuiew is a · very m;o~
journal, the basic ~
journal in American hi&amp;lory
The Library would be lm8ble
purchase such a set with ita
own funds, he indicated..
.Dr. ~orion's gift, given to tbe
Libranea 'for the UGL, COI18il1l8
of 43 volumes of the quarterly
journal.
·
"Our budget is limited, and
we would welrome similar Jlifts
from faculty and others of archival journals, basic books and
similar matarisls of value "
Szekely said
'
Such~ are tax deductibl

.

Also on the qenda are re-

porta to be delivered by seventam Senate
iDcluding per&amp;OIIII8i .policiell, fair em-

oommi-,
riBbta ana ._,_

to

plo~rac:tices, ...-rch,

p.w ·

sibilities, aovemanoe. teacher
education, economic at at us,
University tiudget, 'University
planning, undergraduate program, lraduata program, international studies and world ·atfain;, .._..rung educatiohal op,
partunity, · student
health scienCes, library resourc&gt;es and Uni-.ity&gt;facUlty pro:.

affairs;

grams.

.

·n.e Bena.te. rompr~ of one
to three representatives froni
eacb of.the .SUNY units, meets
three times a year. Meetings
ai:e rotated among the SUNY
campuses.
.
_ J:Ile ~ions will open at 10
a.m. Fi'1day on the lOth floor
of Goodyear Hall. Closing is
scheduled for noon Saturday.

eed
C 0 11"deges
N
}"
.
lll• e• mo·s
· ' ':&lt;!, ' .
G~
e
f
ays"
K . ' tte
• ,., ·;: S
,._._ . -~ • .
""YY\iellB.x~~'i~illoi'IO -. . '

~ih the.ciues6on of s~

President Robert L Ketter f.oid
a Collegial,; AsSe.pbly mee1ing
January , _ The
experi25
mental colleges
have17failed to
set clear-&lt;:ut guidelines for determining who · is qualjfied to
leach coureea, Ketler said, indicating that competence as

... -

-·.

In Magician's Hat, ~iologist to Conjure up ~~j~~ &amp;;epau=ee:.~i
Loqal Planned Parenthood Cent er Funds ov;.'S,~Lv~~~~~
A U/B fund-raising . group
ptans Jo use magic to raiSe
money for ·tbe local Ptanned
Parenthood Cen•4
Li'-rall
~
y.
..,r.
The group of some 100 ·men
~
w""!"'n "!'80"iated' with ihe
Uruv4-ty
ll
af
~··
SJ?OnBDr ~ ternoon of 'Magic by K1pp,''
Saturday, February 17. The ,
~ has a. d!'ai i&gt;U!P"""• acthto
•. "!.ho
uupe
· to--~ money for ·
the __Center , llJ;ld. to iJ.lustrate
!!feii 1!173 ~P."i-gn's tpeme·of

":"

~rdl,\lhoi ~I'! o~g~

~g.~·&lt;I#.Ut~.o! lifetfuough
·~·fL~I --

.

· '!-"'.,.,..ow Will be beld in ihe
au&lt;!!tqnlll!' ~f tbe Eggert Road
ElemenUu'y .. Sc;boi&gt;l,, 1360 . Eg,
gert Road, at 2 p.m. Tickets are
$1 and may be purchased in
advance by calling Jan Herreid
~66~)the
Tdickets will also
so a
oor.

The campaign is being cap- the International Brotherhood at the Bell plant awaiting tbe
tained by Mrs. Beatrice Silber,
fM · · • · 1
opening of an undergraduate Uwith Mrs. Genevieve Gross and f., :r-•c•ans active ocal chap- brary facility. " Forty-five per
M
M .
r, mg 12 (which recently cent of these are ..;.,_ " Sze1.4'rs.
ArUlll Madden serving opened its membership
to
tained
ou·-.
~
as co-captains.
women magi ·
11
exp
·
The U/ B group ho.pes to
C18Il8 as we
""
"We are exelCISmg certalD
·
men ).
stan~--'- · bull"'.;~ the ' I
rruse $3,000 for the Center this
Able to praCtice his avoca- I .""'!:"' m . . ,-oa
COyear.
lion mostly at Christmastime action, _he Sllld. 'To dale most
The magician Kipp is also Herreid is joined. on stage by hio~~!!f,',"ty~ve been
,
of very
known as Dr. Clyde F . Her· hi d
hie Kimbe 1
,... "~
J'l'id, ..II, associate professor of Gkl,
Although .1he
has DO
biology at U / B. '
·
·
· and son' Ky, 7, who is billed as perman"":t quartem, 1t now has
Dr. Herreid discovered m&amp;.~ic "The World's Youngest Escape· .two full-time Pro.fe881onal staff,
~Y '!.ccidenl As a school child Artist .. Ky made his debut at Szekely and bibliographer Mrs.
m,~ Angeles, he picked ,up ·a 4, reP..rt:s .. Mrs. Herreid, who ~=~~uil·dwhoS~4~'~
cereal box mal!lc .book that had recently JOined.ber husband onon
er, ~ ~ ·
beeii dropped on tbe ·sidewalk. sta¥.'1 as magician's ass· tant
l:aler he studied .the magic Chil;t'ren particularly
t&lt;i
: 8
S ' .
books in his schoot library. and see magiclllnS their own age
eventually was able to . tlS4! with - whom they . can ·identify,
magic to help 'pay undergradu· she says.
Dr Om BahJ
t
· f ·
ale expenses at Colorado ColAll money ra~ will go to biochenustry m;
lege.
the local PJanned Parenthood Indian Prim~ Minister
Dr. Her_reid is '! member of Center at 210 Franklin Street. Ghandi as one of a hBndfuJ of• ,

.:'3: ~ }1:-Ra~YE~J!.}:
1J:'e

UG~

Jndi Hail BahJ
For. Work.on· HCG .
t!::; b
IncUr!'

:!K~~~res~:::~: U
. rB Drug Center Fills Crucial Need $~~/~!~~ ·

quality of some of the colleges
The University of Chicago
longer accept&amp; U/ B college
courses for credit in evaluating
student reCords, Ketler • said.
Students fiom tbe colleges
"oouldn't cut the mustard" in
some .JP'IIduate-level' courses
there, Ketler Said.
·
Co_llegiale grading practices,
.too. are inconsistent and dem·
onstrale a lack of standards
Ketler said. ·
·
'
The Presideilt urlied ttiat the
review of the collt!lleS ailled ·
for iii 1.\&gt;e ColleJriata Prospectus
be undertakeD and that such a
review include evaluatinK tbe
units in terms of University
gnals as set forth .in test year's
self- study.· The accrediting
taam on C8lDPUS last semester
also nicommended reviewing
tbe colletles . in terms of the
"'!mpetlbility of their go8ls
WI~ those of the UniversitY, he
PDUlted Out.
.P
Ketter asked eadl of the colleges. to p,_.t a statement "of
wbere it ia now and wbere it is
'-ded in the future" along
with ita ~t·requests for the
1973-74 fiacld ,_.-,
•
The Faealtv 'Sliiiata Commit.lee mi the CoJ1eoa is currenUy
~ a review, Colleges
Director Wayland P. (Pat) .
Smitb noted. .

no ,

·

?()().Enrolled

By HAROLD REISS

high fever, severe beadaches,
clUBters of lesions on his face
It is nearly ·midnight. A and scalp, and painful sores in
sleek, silver jet touches down his mouth. In addition, he was
on the runway at the Erie, also extremely lethargic and
Pa:, airport. Aboard is a small somnolent.
but important package• which
Adding to the seriousness of
the plane has flown in from the patie-nt's oondition was his
the West Coasl
medical history-two heart atMoments after tbe landing, tacks, an incident of cardiac ara car streaks through 1he air- rest. and diabetes.
port gates, traveling swiftly toHis present illness was diagward a destimltion a few miles nosedas herpes encephalitis, an
away.
·
ailment with a high mortality
The destination is City Hos- rste.
pital in nearby Meadville. The
What worried the physician
caJ:go is the small package from was his patient's failure to rethe airplane-a quantity of an spond to treatment. lnslead of
anti-viral drug which has been showing' improvement after a
undergoing clinical tasting at a few ·days in the hospital, he
'pharmaceutical c o m-p a n y in was growing sleadily worse.
San Diego, Califomia.
~
One day, while the patient's
Inside tbe hosPital, a f&gt;bYsi- physician was chatting with tbe
cian ;s standing by, waiting to hosPital phannacist in the bo&amp;administer tbe drug to !1 &amp;el'- pital's coffee shop, tbe pharmiously ill patienl Within an · S:cist told him about an anhour of the drug's arrival from nouncement made a few days
California, it is administered. previous during a continuing
And in the morning the're is education talk over tbe ·leiemarked improvement in the pa-· phOne. lecture network Of tbe
tient's condition.· His recovery · takes Area Regional Medical
-&lt;&gt;nee gravely in doubt.--=Pro- Pro~ The lliiDOI1DCeiDelt
caeds .rapidly. Not 1ong' alter- was ' that tbe U/B School of
wards, he is dJ.scharged from Pharmacy had. just opened ita
the hospital and sent home.
Drug Information Center, and
Actuai·E - . ·
' • ·
was inviting inquiries on drugs
' This episode, wmch sounds and drug•tberapy from pharma- like a tried-and-true plot line ciBts, physicians- and other
for an old-time, cliff-bangihg health J!mctitioners.
·

sa-• ., P~oannocy

-=~-=~ ~~~8 ..,;...
actu.l~Y

The Stale University of New
happened in tbe·spring
York repotta tbat more eben of f972 whim a phyllicisn in •
?OO studeobo- are enrolled · MeadYille admitted a k!ng-Gme
..,__ -"'-~--~
tien't of Ilia to Citylf-=-itat
......,._..,,..,...,.. pa
......
degree PIOIJ'1IliiS "OD
The patient, a man in his
five~
sixties, was suftering fr&lt;lm a

~

tion, the pbyelc:ian contacted
the - U/B fadlity to inquire
about drugs lor 'herp5 encephalitis. ..... _ .. ,_~.,., ... __..,_
,.., wno&lt;Mft' r,...., ..,.,.._
tar, SUNYAB '1188ist8nt prof""'!l"r. ol_ ~ Robert

nouncement was made during
Pearson, told tbe doctor about India's 25th . Anniversary for
some clinical experiments being Independence-&lt;: e I e brat ion,
conducted on the sYstemic use Thursday, January 25.
of the drug idoxuridine. AJDr. Bahl was bailed for his
though presently on the market ~ isolation and analyfor treating herpes conditions SlB of II hormone from human
of the eye, the drug did DOt pregnancy IJ!ine. Known as the
have official FDA approval for human chorionic gonadotropin,
use in treating systemic herpes or HCG, it is tbe.lbat """'-oonditions.
of such complmdty wboee comThe Meadville physkiari, plele structuJJ! is understood
acting on information from the His .-.arch may not only
U/ B Center, was dkected to toward a better means of fertilthe Calbiochem company in ity conll'Ol but 'also ~
San Diego. He ti11kecJ with those that are now available
their research clinicians, ex- ( tbe pill, etc.)·
ptained Iris p&amp;tient's situation.
HCG is produced by tbe pia'That afternoon, .tiJe Calbio- cents during pragDancy It is
chem people put a package of responSible for the mainbmance
the anti-viral d~ aboard a of pregnancy and eiuly growth
plane at the San D•eco airport. of tbe embryo.
In the package were
S!WI Dr. Bahl. a native ol
formulations of tbe drug that lnd}a """"' was educalecl at tbe
could be used systemically and Uru-..ty of ~ "Not .
topically.
·
only can "!" now eepuale tbe '
Besides being administered two aubunita of lhlri JDGiecule
doses of. the drug . inlemally (ita 231 amino aclda and 66
the patient was also treated . sugars_) but ""' can recombine
W\th a IIP'!ci!illY prepared oint.- ~.!f.,.. laborafulltory as well.
ment for his face and ecalp bow this .;,;.,..,: undemand
1~, and with a rinse for nezi ..., _ _. -~Ia
~ ·~
bis mouth 1111re11
...-"' ._.....
... ~

help

m-ae

ttv:_

:m-

Recovery ....8 ~ 'fbe. l!.'dln~
metaboliC 8lepe
J!,~..t!!everdisa~~-~
ita
. ........,._!!!.~of,:!_
...., ..,.
_,......, - - - sions and ~ vaniabSd, and ~
~ ~~
be regained Ilia . . - - -t ~
·
..
......
While III08t ol the actiViliee r·-··

the Drug Information Ser- ~ 1l'om
Pwula&amp;lon
vice are·
tulel
1
Cbe evee
1!!_
1
Meadville as a~ a- __ A__.__ .....~
of tbe
_,_ £L.... • - ·....-.-...,. ....-....
........_.,
•
, _ ..... to ate 11 pUbUabed mthe

of

~tb~atic,
of~';~=
;:a:·::Oi::l:'*tb% ~

~
4

4

~~~-·
. '-':
....,
-•

-

CIU'8 in tbe

·

--- -

~
~--R-'eia
~
--·----- .

J'ellt - - of D o : - L - 1 - 0
.............__,
- -

�1'"'--Y I, 1973

$J Million Contract Let

For Engineering Building
'lbe J. MiPiore Coostruction
CompanY, Inc. of T01111wanda
hae .,_, · -arded a $3 million
CliiDinct to bl;oild an lndualrial
FmP-inl building on the
.Noith Campus in Ambersl
'lbia 18 1be second contract
-med by the State Univer.ruv Construction Fund to the
M"l'.uore firm.
" 'The contract award marb
the beginning of development
an the fourth main sub-campus
ara in Amhersl Other sul&gt;campus areas now under conlllnlction are Natural Sciences,
Social Science-Education-Law
and Phannacv,Bioloi!V.
As the first phase of the Enlineering ,..00 Applied Sciences
sub-campus area, t b e Industrial Engineering stnicture will
bouse the Department of Induatrial Engineering and aome
facilities for the School of Information and Library Studies
and the Dep&amp;rtjoent of Engineering Science.
Tbe four-&lt;&gt;tory building is desiilned by Architect Marcel
Breuer and Asaociates of New
York. Tbe Cannon Partnership

More Amherst Facilities Named
Eleven individuals important
in ·the history of the University and the explorer LaSalle
are honored in names for roadways and other facilities -on the
Amherlt campus approved by
the ·State Uruversit)(. Board of
Trua- last week. (See accompanyins map.)

~;runt":'! co~;
Flint, Hamilton, and Lee entrances for three of the seven
physiciaris who founded . tl&gt;e
Univemty in 1846. Dr. ·Austin
Flint, professor of principles
and practice of medicine, gained
·-· fame br. estsbl.ishing that typhoid ever is a water-borne
disease· Dr Frank K Hamilton, pmf....Or of surgery', performed the first suooesstUJ skin
graft, and Dr. Charles A. Lee
was U / B's first · professor of
pathology and materia medica.
A fourth entrance connector
will be known as the Rensch
entrance. It continues the existing Rensch &amp;ad onto the
campus.
Three of six distributor-roadways will recall_!!ther prominl1nt
University fllures. Auppurger
Road is named for Owen B.
A\IIISPIIfliW, attorneybalumnus,
fanner- of the Diversity
at Bulfalo · Foundation, and
.-ber of the University
Council (1.9158'-1962) . Hadley
Road will amy the name of
Dr. Georp Hadley, profesaor
of chemistry and another of
1be University's saven foundlill pbysiclans, who discovered
lbil ~ ol c:bmlsinl starch
lnlo . . _ . Btill another of
the bmden. Dr. Jamsa Platt
White, ia the II8JIIIIIieb for
White Road. Dr. White in~
ciiM*l dlnleal midwifery into
the collell8 currleulum ln the
United Stata
. 11 . ,.._ ott. cllsl:rlbutor ._..
. . , . .,_, ~ted J.l'i'Gatier,
Servlae Center and "Stinner&amp;-

viiiiiii'IIMI.
'!'hr. ..._ ..a.- me
. - 1 for ~m
U~ PMt. Gme
,..._ wiD....._ B. ...,..__

tbe

Blair Moody, the first woman
graduate of the University, who
received her M.D. in 1876. She
was the first woman admitted
to the Erie County Me(lical Society. Newcomb Terrsce is
named for Kate Pelham Newmmb, a 1917 Medical School
graduate who practiced for 25
years in the northern woods of
Wisconsin. She was recipient
of a poethumous "Citation for
her humanitarian service" at
the U/ B Alumni Weekend in
1956.
A central campus esplanade
was designated Putnam Way
after James 0. Putnam, chancellor of the University from
1895-1902. Prominent in law
and politics, Putnam also
served as U.S. Minister. to BraziL

Another former chancellor,
Orsamus H. Marshall, is the
namesake of Marshall Court
within the Joseph Ellicott Collegiate Complex.. A lawyer and
historian, Marshall was head
of the University · from 18821884.
The campus lake will be
Lake LaSalle in honor of Rene
Robert Cavelier, Sieur De La
Salle, one of the most famous
explorers of North America.
Among his memorable exploits
waS the ~lora"tion of the Mississippi Rtver to the Gulf of
Mexico in 1682. He sailed the
first ship into Buffalo's harbor.
The Trustees also designated
the new campus' major connec.
tor loop road as North Campus
Boulevard.

Director Sought for Israel Program
Tbe SUNY-wide Conaortium
for Programs in Israel is seeking applications for the poeition
of residen~ director for the undergraduate program at Hebrew
and Tel Aviv universities for
the period J.uly 1, 1973-August
1,1974.
The selected candidate will
rem8in on the payroll of his
campus; that institution will receive funds for the selectee's
replacement
Vitae must be received no
later than February 19 in the
Office of Overseas Academic
Prosrams, 107 Townsend Hall.
'lbe Consortium will make the
~~tment by - March 15,

=.=:

Tbe "major duties ol the poet
include:
L Participation in a stateside orientation (2-3 days in

Is': ~"J=

Bible ollciala on SUNY aun~ to _ ,. a basic undoir-

•ta;tl'!:..~~~· and

6. Supervision or arranging
for supervision of independent
study p1;0jects.
7. Supervision or facilitation
of the submission of transcripts
from the Hebrew University to
the SUNY center at Albany,
the sponsoring campus, at the
end of the U}pan and the end
of each semester.
8. Administration of program
evaluations as requeeted by tbe·
SUNY supporting campus, the
Consortium Committee or the
Central Administration or the
Office of International Programs.
.
9. Submission of interim and
final reporiB.
10. Assisting the SUNY sponIIOI"ins campus.
Qualifications being aought
include:
'
·
1. DemonStrated ability to
work with and ~ undergraduata students on a one-to0

2. ~~=:t-

fic:ienttor::t:"a~·~
~m 11ne1,
.
poinm-t to
Uni4. Llaiaan with the Hebrew venity wbetber or not such an
Univweity and University of_ appointment is actually lllllde.
Tel Aviv an bebalf of the
3. Administrative - a -

-·
1*!"""'1 Cllllll8lllinl
ol 8tudents

~·.·~!:.~tbe~-&amp;;
- ~~==:.. ~~::~
· lllllar'•
a. - to of a _.. of ~ momitles aoc:ial IICiences:
"';tJo t;_~~ ==-~ ::.:=:: 4. Previous ~ in a
. . . . . . far h .a.Ddlm'a Aiel ·..Aapat, Seiltailber and 01» ~ COIIIItly, ~y . .

=! . -.

.\.

Area College Students Will Receive
Free Copies of Biblical.Best Selier
The weeks• of February 5 to
14 have been designated "Bible
Emphasis Weeks," as some
31,000 college students on 11
Buffalo area aimpuses will receive free QOpies of America's
all time best seller, Good News
for Modern Man.
Sponsored· by the Buffalo
Niagara Campus Ministries
(BNCM ), the mass distribution ecumenical project is part
of a world wide United Nations
sponaored celebration of 1973
as the "Year of the Book."
Area campus ministries have
joined efforts to distribute tbe
modem English 1970's version
cif the New Testament during
the period. Heniy Abbink, executive director of Operation
Campus, a ministry of the Free
Bible Literature Society, is directing the distribution. in the .
Niagara Frontier.
Good N-• for Modern Man,
which is a1eo known as Today'•
E"'llish Version '(TEV),.bas a
current cir&lt;:ulation of more than
36 million. Book sales .ratings
show that the TEV -has continued to aeU more copies annually
than such boob as Valley of
the Dou., Rc.emtii"Y'• &amp;by,
Aitpprt, and · L o o" S t·o r y.
Last year, its total cir&lt;:ulation
llllJ"Illl8lll the previous all tiiDe
U/8~

Bible distribution 8t U/B will take
place Februel)l 5 thn&gt;utlh 7, 8t tho
to1-.c ploces: Norton Centar
~Tower Main Lounp; Good-r/Cioment .,..n dlnl1111 aru;

..,..main -

lobby; -

best seller, Baby and Child
Care, by Dr. Benjamin Spack.
Sister Mary Jude, secretary
of BNCM and a member of the
distribution committee at U/ B,
explained that the New Testaments would be available strictly on .a volunteer basis. "No
attempt at any mass conversion
to any particular religinus denomination will be made during
this project," abe said.
The TEV translation is written 1n modern English and has
as its aim simplicity and clarity
of expression. Dr. Robert
BratA:ber, chief translator of the
TEV, commented thet his pbilosophy of translation was an
attempt to express in ~
the tneeflllle of the original Biblical writers, as naturally and
simply as poesible.

Cheng Gets Grant
Dr. Ralph T. Cbeq, ......,;..ate profesaor of mechaniaol ..,.
gineering, bas .,_, awarded a
$66,000 grant to Olllllluct a
fundameutal and applied study
ol fresh 1110und water _ .
ment.
.
.
Funded by the Oftic8 "'
Water Resources R.Mrdl of
the United States ~
of Interior, the study will focus
on the intrusion oi water
into fresh ground water ...,:
plies along ~ cities.
Dr. Cheng says the atudy is·
fundaDaltal, in
the liDbe l q a to learn DDU!d
a1eo be applled to ott. water
8ludiea, ......... deep well di&amp;JIOillll) and water pllllutiaa man-

tbet

.
fiiSt floor - • Diefoftdoof ....-.L
- · field
IUid trip8,
the .......
C'nii!HJ' ... &lt;:blldnm. ....
apeMsa.
•
5.~ ""'1118iniiiiM2 &lt;*liar rotunda; Capan citnt,.. an· . Dr• .a-..'• grant il one of
........ . . Sliiallb'• canl8ctB with. llirMll atudeata the
83'111ambuild· 58 awarded to vuioua univer- .
trance; Rldp L8a . . . tiiNaa ta 11111. Moody ' ' and famiUea, eultuNl -Ia,
6. Coa!peta&gt;ce in 1be If&amp;. 1... 4224 Rldp l8L
llity peramnel and individual
....... wBI -n Dr. Mary and voluntear WGk.
: brew lang1-. Pl"llfene!l
-.eben the nation.
. . . . . 8Qcllty far . . PJ.

-&lt;1.- ........ cl

.

:.,~a:!ct~is~ ~:
ao provide mechanical engineers for ·.fhe project.
Containing a net square footage of 38,500, the structure will
accommodate approximately
270 students. The first level
· will bouse offices, laboratories
and a demonstration library for
the School of Information and
Library Studies.
The second, or mezzanine
level,- will contain offices, research areas . and special research offices which will allow
for individual projects. Faculty
offices, classrooms and special
project rooms will be located
on the .third leveL
Most of the space on the

fourth level will be devoted to
Man-Mad&gt;ine Systems and
Human Factor activities, currently a major part of •
H&gt;dusbial ~ curriculum.
According to an impact report prepared by the Ol6ce of
Facilities Planning, _ .inslruotional units to be bafoecl-in die
new structure are preaenlly.
housed in lees than a quarter of
the space TeQUired "'l'be Jek&gt;.
cation will allow for refiSIIignment of 111!\'ef&amp;l u.o..and net
square feet on the South (Main
St.) ~us and a reduction
of crowding within the relocated departmi!nla," the report adds.
Dr. John A. Nesl, assistant
vice president for facilities
planning, says that the structure's exterior will appear somewhat different from DI08t of the
academic buildings on the new
campus. This is due to use of
precast concrete panels rather
than brick.
He added that work will
probably not begin until spring
and that the structure should
be completed by the fall of
1975.
The new building will be located due north of the Education-Philosophy building, which
is also under contract to Migliore. Unusna! recent winter conditions have allowed for an
earlier than anticipated start
on construction of the Education-Philosophy building.
Dr. William N. Gill, provqst
of the Faculty of Engineering
and Applied Sciences, says that
the new facility will have a ·significant positive impact on the
national visibility of the Industrial Engineering Depjlrtmenl "It will provide research
facilities which will enable us
to attract outstanding students
a nd faculty," he added.

�~

.Profs Probe Perils-of
GEDUCATION Psycho-Literary Quest
GHIGHER
GN()'I'ES

·

By SHARON EDELMAN
-

falls~ .are any n~ of pit-

'Ibe UB. Ol6ce of Education
.m. weok . . . distribution of
.il&amp;"aJIIIIE ~ of co11eps
and um-.ities. "i\,8 1972-73
diniCiory ooiJecled 118111ft1 data
in the of ·1972 and incladea 1971 CI{!I'CIIJmellt fi1ures.
'lbe ....,. liBtina l!lboooa a 1o1a1
of 2,688 ...U.. aDd unhw&amp;i,.., tiee in the UA and 4111riCories,
a pin of fl) owr 1971·72. Of
. Cbe toW IIUIIIb« of institutions,
1,193 .,. public and 1,493 are
privMe.
'l'be ....,. edftb1 of the direofilly Jiats, lor Cbe fi111t time, 1111detwnduate tuition and reCllliJed feM 1ar
insliiiJtion.
·1' i U e d BducatiDII Directory
. 1972-73: H i 6 he r BducatiDft

.m

(Btoc:lt

Number-17~1110),

it is available lor $6.00 fn1m Cbe
Superintendent of Iloc:unalts,
U. S. Govaumant PriDting Of.
6oe, Wlllhingtlaa, D
•
•
; ·
The ~ -.

c

-- '*for-• -

•-

m a p&amp;ychoiOII'cal ..,.
proach to literature,· the most
common beint tbe tendency to
confuse tbe oovelist's llgure on
tbe carpet witb tbe psychistrist's llgure on tbe a&gt;UCh. All
such interdisciplinaey endeav018 share tbe copacity to distort; , in tbis case, it is aH too
""'!&gt;'• f_or there are few available
guidelines or precedents for direction of sum study.
In a ~ bere last Friday,
Dr. Frederick Wyatt, director
of tbe l'sycbololdcal Clinic at
tbe U~ty of Michigan, addresaed his comments to p...,.
c:isely tbis problem. --His lecture
and tbe panel discussion which
fo~ atteinp~ to anal)'Ze
venous modes of mfer!lction between psycboloJl:' a6d literature. 'The pad;iopantS finally
concurred tbat tbe realities of
tbe couch are "never as neat"
as tbeir literary depiction.
U ~ final product is overSIJDplified, tbe process is nol
writing itself, noted Wyatt,
IS ~Y a complex act of
eopmg, a means of ordering
fantasies into a coberent perIIOIJ!ll statement The psychological study of litera~ gaugtbe success of tbis coping
process, analyzing works according to bow well tbe autbor's
ego bas rnanaiecJ to resolve
"'!f''licts or apress fantasi,..
~tbintbelinguisticcontextof
his book.
'Ewty Act lo Adlptiwe'
This COIUlept. was termed a
function of ~ 'post-Freudian
"adaptive h~tbesis" by Dr
Norman Holland, of tbe Eng:
1isb ~Department, a pahicipant
in. tbe program. Acoonfinll to
tbis theory, eveey human act is
adaptive, an atiempt to .reconcile tbe unconscious witb tbe
ego. A writer who is unable to
il!tegrate tbese forces will find
himself in one of several ar·
tistic ·predicaments.
'
'The simplest to. n!&amp;Olve is
tbat which is never recognized·
Wyatt found it most
in books he classified as ''bad."
This is tbe "Walter Mitty
PrinciPle," another Wyatt
term which denotes abrupt literary shifts from tbe other to
tbe self, from rational discowae
to dreaming.
Such wor1&lt;Wyatt
is in-·
ept
and inep:usable,

.

tlfY
.....,.... Slm M. ....,__
The 10
- . 1o _..,. ...,

:n&gt;e

- . . tram
oullold!t "::: ~

.....1 1 1110
•

:-;r.2- "':....,'"'*:......--:::-..:::
,..
ol _....,. •

ol

the -

~-.- "::
·--•

:..

celwcl $fi5,000 In the ~ A ..,..

: - - • ·tobeMfiMIII..,._
·
·
0
Accordiu to The Chronic~
of H ' ho 'E&lt;ltu:atU&gt;
ties j! Britain .....; :: ~""!!:
Student
·
tarBets ~
198 ha -~on t back
1
85 ()()()
ve.t
tsflU
student
ha;,., t:..:"~
tbe s1idf.
student ti
...__,,__ t .
ra ~ .............. !'
about 1 to 8--is to women m .
tbe decade to 1 to 10. M~·
~"'...:::..: ~
~ um·-......,.
.
•
•
•
A - . . . . , _ .., . , .

·

t:;

:

-

-

1ft

ha - - ........

. - . . , . nat 10 .,.. to tlwl - - 10 - .

-

ol "':"

~. -

......._ ~- ..__, a . ..._~·
•uc..,.......... ~......,
~
pmfit _.m.tion in which
collope and univaaitiee CBII

~~
.
- ..., -=':'J:::t-~m·
_...
,.......
ll8lll!la .m. lllllllth. 'lbe fund
-

"""""iohed Jn .July, 1971,
pam from tbe
Ford Foundation, and ...., lislB
256 ~ ~ and

with the aid of a

llriYale eclailo --c .its !J11!m-

L.a.

0

0

.. • - - ....,._ .,.. . . . . _ ._ _ . , .
........... _ _ . , ,
Rip. £A ~ ..,_ ,. Ia _ . - - • . .
~- LMar ~ ol
1111 ...,_
If
ID
- . .......
1•• a

~

el....~

-

•

=._

-+· -

•

~::-=.(}a!:-~~
~

=

,,_,. ............... a - . " ' - -

- · - -.,_-- ~
... of ......a.~ and
. . _ atloletic ....,....,. a
~ ar colle ;e -

~~of
---

~
-

111&amp; in ....... and 18 Jn - ......._~ ,of the faoiiJml
- ....... IIIII m of a.- in ._.
be lar fnlllimm
and ........ with Cbe- to
.. to •..
-.. and 11111*"
~

...._. -w
•

•

•

·

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

prevalent

maintained, iii tbab it .......W,
tbe writer's inability to cope
witb literature as a mmns of
wish ·fulfillDalt, and his total
submission to the gratification
demal from fanlllsy rather
tban from life. A writer wbo is
too aplicit and direct' in tbis
._..t. Wyatt· aid. can only
spoil h i s " " " - .
·
'lbe priiMry artiotic crisis is
ooe wbicll OIIIM!ris .Cbe piM&amp;11181 of fantaaio&amp; into guill AIthoulh tbe impulae and desires.
domllnd gratifialtion, tbe
• per its
.::,;
.ua-1 to unify fantMii., tn
........,. of
o-.Niohinc
r - lbomordolr.
• a
.......

adaptive~

Wyatt 'CIIIIIImded tbat tbe inaisleDce of tbe literary mind
that tbere be. 'liarkin« "topic:"
--~of this med.

-

c

u• n

~ fartbm .......,U..!bw at
this point in tbe ~ have
t - lll&gt;liad by .U~
writers who have _,.,....t
tbeir-imcoeat 'IIMaqadic
inlleradion 8l!lllim&amp; ..,.,. hecame amaciaaB tbat tbeir fan..
t.aies l..t -~ ,_..
ranpd tbe ~ 11J111118
of 'atnred IDIIIDDIY; • fllna.iea
are, ..,..,..tina to Wyatt, .....

- - ol , _ , . _

and ...w

_,.

.___ ,.... · ..... writers . . . . . . " ' Clllllfalbo ............ lbom ........ .. ... . . ..... . . . inllo;rale diem into _ , . _
t1r • ...., ......... · pa80nal
Ratbor,
~ It
what tbey . . - I , tbey louDd

ata_.,

T..... .........

~·

could not ·be easily comprebended. '!bey were tbus oonhad and unse):tled by tbe ,in.
temal demands witb which tbey
were required to cope.
Such conflict is tbe classic
buman development crisis, Wyatt noted. He compared it to
tbe Oedipal paradigm, tbe perennial theme of fantasy and
literature, in which conflict is
reoc;&gt;lved . through guiil Dr.
Heinz Lichtenstein, a PB'fcho. analyst and ..-.ciate clinical
prof-.r of psychiatry added
tbot tbis is ~ even for those
who merely . . , _ a perform.
ance of (Hdipus Ru. 'lbere is
. a. stirr:ins• a recognition of
aometbing unchanpd in tbe
human condition, he said
which is IM!.-:1, and d.istwbing
and rarely ~m:&amp;tood.
Wyatt mamtained~ however
tbat !'Si~ ~m its powertuj
adaptive instincts, tbe writer's
ego bas another defenae against
tbe effects of tbis conflict He
found evidence in tbe frequency witb which most writers repeat tbemselv,.., however d isguised, as if each repetition
"!ere another try a~ interpret&amp;tion of. tbe unconsoous.
All tbis action is not 106t on
tbe reader, tbe panel concurred.
W~tt contended tbat interprelation precedes all other re8P011S0 to literature, and tbat
tbe reader shifts endlessly between enjoyment and understanding. This interpretive pro.
.cess is initiated witb tbe
suspension of disbelief as tbe
~r ac.:ep~ and identifies
WJtb tbe illUSlons _a nd quests
of tbe work; tbe interpretation
must end, . however, witb tbe
"?nfronta?on by ~ reader of
his """!' umer realities,• and as
su_ch. IS no ID&lt;&gt;.re oomp!ete in
~reader tban m tbe wnter.
-inc lo PriYitl and Adlpliw'
· !folb!nd. el!d&gt;Qrated on tbis
pomt, noting tbat readiiJi is a
private act, "!' well lis an exln!meiy adaptive one. 'The read'er. generally approaches a text
WJ_tb tbe COII8ClOU8 or UDCOD·
8ClOU8 motive of n!&amp;Olving bis
own oonflicts, he said, and U8eS
tbe book as raw material on
which to impose himself. As
sucb,b a reader is never deceived
Y a novel, but rather, inoor~tea it ~ his own psychological reality.
.
symbolism,devi
• and
o .~li·
..- ~ terary
oes iden-

'

Weekly Communique--·- - - (c~ (ToM- /1, col. 6)

~'

..z:Nuttall;
~ BcoiU~
~niwnity 01

~D lr =y~tant

profMM&gt;r, and Herman Schwartz,
prof..,r, U/ B Faculty of Law
and Juriaprudence, 233 Norton,
4 p.m.

orCbeiiiBilltaDDeof~-

0U.

=
~

~

c6to&amp;.cAm

Studies; Rooo,evelt Rbodeo,
director, Minority S tude n t M faira, all of U/ B, Conference Theatre, Norton 4 p.m..

CONFBENC!:

lACE AND INTEWGENC!•

Seymour Axelrod. professor of

poychological reoearch, U/ 8 De-

p a r t m e n _t of Psychiatry, and

F. Sibley, professor, U/ B
Department
of Pediatrics, 231
~ph

Norton, 4 p.m.

CONFRfNCib

I'IAYS"'

u.[ti:J:ar~.!.~.,::.;, ~tte~cZ

t~ Birlh of BIDck Ju.lice coaut!&gt;ored by Iasac Dilliad • and
Emily Freeman, will be performed

by E•p..,..ions in Black, ConferenceTbeatreNorton, 6:30p.m.
sa ~ft;j',~ f!:~':u'::'n!'JR.::::!
Co
. nfereoce. E~reuions m
· B'--k
local
-~

=

~d women~'!!:, C::./~:::".!1

W1th everyday emtenoe in the

ghetto.
COMPUTING CfNTEI SEMJN.U••

. FORTRAN IV, 8 compreben.
8lVO !Dtroduction to the lanl_Wlge
ada •to applications, 4238 .Hidge
Lea, Rm. 10, 7 p.m.
COMPUIJNG canu SEMIHAI"
Library Under KRONOS 4238
Ridge Lea. Rm. 10, 7 p.m. •
ALMS•
Mr. Arluutin (Welleo, 1955) , 7
p.m. Jo_h nlly GwiDr, 9 p.m. Both
films will be shown in 140 Capen
lllld are free.

=

tfCTW£•
DrT. M&amp;cularn.
RobeSUkrt of

":f
a

llu!ttorSH~!·

Ke
~
warth ~ Uniwnity Pn.l,y.
~ Blvd.,~!,_aad Ni-

TNEAra -.Anooo•

id

==

~ - t """'~t o1 Theatre, ...0

U/B

Tbe

,1.,..- m October! 1B7L

tbe....::;:::;: '!:

::C:, ~

plore proclacliaia aad _ , _
alyleo - - - - - . - . .
1o ~fa&lt; • ..n.ty o f - .
aad II! pmride ..,..

~ ~ ol tbeall'e
~;f"~·-• . . "'!-- Wlolle
iAc ~ ·

•

lor:..=:
-

..u.ctod..,..

the maltiplicity of wwtdo in
'lila SUNY SC......W.
wbil:h people ' liwld - - - - o.o..illa - tba Arto ... - . l y CDUld be .........
lof'u.

_...__BUiet:t

tbrouah ........ and ..... ""'oiloorplaJW ...... ......
print:lpls. his Wildt -mec1 .::_oiul7 April After tba ~
...tinisbal. It 'i s &lt;lilly ~an
~will be s--W •
mv-teil warlci, ~ ~ 8 • . ._
Bolf.
ClllllieDded, · inwbil:h~
BUiet:tlof'u.will...m-•
.,........ with _,tbini, anil ........ .......,. F....
nadto in allltiame lndh.
10.
'
All ...... be aaacladed, the
i*ic:llolaeiml
of literTHURSDAY.,..a
wili ---~it
oiJaald ~ tbat it the

-v-

literm7. _.. •

can -

8tood.

~

it

be~ una.-

""""

EXHIBITS

FranCIIOO Pabon, director, Puerto

~can

...... plaJa. ~ . . .

....,.u.;.,. -

~~:'1'"~;T·J,=.:::

8 :30 p.m.

THE .1£AU11U Of GlHOCIDE•

~ _....., . - . . . .
indeed inBnllatetl. and tbat - Tbe F - ProJoet - . .,;.

mnvinned tbat

Weotem O..torio, I..oadoB, 0...-

C0Nflllltlf1

Warren T. Boroour, aoaialant
profeeoor, Department of AnthropolOCY; CariODe Polite, aaoociate
prof-.,r, De~nt of Englia"b;

F-.,. t.)

John

SOCIETY•

eqilomticlll ... d -

.itself. -AllbDuch Fnud -

.., FrioM7,

Sidney M. Wi.llhelm, aaoociate
profeoaor, U/B Department of
SociolOCY, 337 Norton, 4 p.m.

yais. AllbDuch the incidents in
a DIM!ll ...., ~ tn form ~•
an
inla'"'*"'"""'&gt;d
he tbe •
........
tbat this .. in t.a,' in&gt;poMible
to tbe
of psycbaana)ytica

G.oup

PKYIICS - - •

CON-Cf,

tbe

One.naely ............ tbe Ilia·
DilicaDa! of dn!ama « t h e mpy · unreJated incidmts of a
lifetime, a aid Lich-a.,
without tbe penpec:lift of time,

~ IIDd ~

Libra!)', 3-6 JU1L ' ('l1ot I a Bl a
C'W
will be ~ted 10

6, 4 p.m. Qolfeo at 3:46
P.~ponoored by tbe U/B Deportment of Cbemiol:r)'.

ti!Y.tbe quest in tenDs of~- ,!ub~-::.:::. F~.:a_-.r\':'!,~
wstic strudures, Wyatt said. Studio, HaniDwt • "--·. 8 . 30·
He added tbat much of tbe
-~~
~~,
~tic ma~ ~ in a p.m. •......., •t 60 coota are avoiJ.
fictional worl&lt; IS -.aily de- ~at
Nortcm Hall Tidiiet
ri-.ed ~ dreams, altbou!!b tbeTbe F a - Project, ..., - CIID!ent • often ~
Mmble ol 11CtiDa
..,.,._..,_ T - ,
cloDII UDder the directioa of

I&amp;-..-

1Ju71,

AcJ_,.,

NOTICES

-

�-~

8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
the Cordon

p.,m.

TliURSDAY-1
COONmVI PSYCHOLOGY &amp;K1'UII*

loo/Dble Suboyounu, Micbaol
profaaoor, Depar!Diellt of
P.YCDOJOCY, University of Orelon.
423o Ridp 1M.. Rm. C-31, I p.m.
~ted by the Cognit i ve
:::::.r~~~,B DeP~r(

-

. - t s AWAIDI

CONYOCA_.

.

c=:w&amp;. in~,: oH.!.i..;!

~~~k~:·
Butler Auditorium. Ca- S: 30

•

P~-latioD of awuda will follow Dr. Plimpkm'o -

-~ ·_.,-COMPANY -INA&amp;*
1

Inoeroe ApproGCI&amp; in

D~ .

ConU&gt;ur Wall S h.9A I ,L!_itfuur,
Tab-leb YIIIIJ, P"!,_rN)epart.
JDODt ol Mecbanic81 EqiDaeriDg,
a - University, 104 ·Parker
EnciDNriDg, 4 p.m. Colfaa at 3:30

P.m.

•

• ..

.

B - r e d by the U/B Department of Mecbanical EQCinaeriDg.

COMPUnNO

eana

liMINAl.

KRONOB"Seminar Berieo, The

~~~lt.:f..,.:~423/J

m...

1he minisca-~ ilaughca-. Her father ta.l'ght-her about God.
The gypsy taught her about Heaven. .

e:Jea:r.J:. ~':&gt;'&amp;am:
Norton, 9:30 a.m.

R..taurant, 7

CONRIENCi• THE EFF£Cn Of IACISM
l:IN 1'111 POliTICAl. SYSlii&amp;-UIIAN

For further information and deta.ila on reeervationa, contact Mrs.
Cba:rlotte Farley, U/ B Department of LiJicuiatics.

rouncs•

VAulTY IIOCIIIY*

CONFHENCE: IIACTION 10
kEYNOTE SPEAKRS•

J - ·E. Nash. lecturer, U/B
Department of Social. Pbilooophical and Historical FowtdatioDI,
Fillmore Room, Norton, 10:30
a.m.
.

CAC QNEMA•

The Virlin ond the Gypsy, 1-10
Capen, 7:46 and -9 :46p.m. Tick·
eta at 75 centa aie available atthe NortOn Hall Ticket Oftice.
Sa-' on the D.H. Lawrence
novella, thia otory cbaracterizao,
the con11ict between buddilit&lt; oexual COlliCioUIDeu and orthodox
poet.Victorian eocial c o d e a. A
-u- young girl, otiSed by itrict
oocial morality, fantasizes about
a gypey and eventually acts upon
her impuloel. Starnng JOBDDB

CONFEIENCE1 IACIAl.oiTHNIC MYniS

AN&amp;:~~~r, . . . .tant professor, and Ralph WatkinS, in-

t,~;Jl:~~t~:t::,:
I p.m.

CONFiluta, EDUCAilON IN MIXED
ETHH~CIAL

Shimkus.

Piece• (Rafet.on),
Conference The at r e, Norton,
check oboweue for timeo. AdmisIlion charp.

William C. Fiacher,

nex._8 p.m.

~~ N~,:.~w?tl:

eonp perfo::::::.I by Tammy Wynette.

\

profeeaar, U / B DeparlmeDt of
Counselor Education, 233 Norton.
I p.m.- .

UUAI filM ..

Fwe Etuy Pucu (Rafebon).
Conference Theatre, No r ton,
~~we:""' for times. Admis·

CONFEIENCE: LANGUAGE AND
COMMUNICATJON AMONG IACW

MINOimES•

Mervyn C. Alleyne, visiting aoeociate profesaor1 U / B Department of Linguistics, and Helbert
L: Foster, 8880Ciate profeseor and
dinoctor, U / B Teacher Education
Office, 231 Norton, I p.m.
cONFIIINCI:

AOimdri Dr Grunwald l""""'tion .
..
JOO&lt;NA SHIMKUS
,
~
FRAN:D NERO
, __
·.o.IU.t.WRENCES "THEVIRGINANDlliEGYPSY"HONORBU\CKMAN
-.,. .. -~~
MARKBURNHAYCOMP!ON·MAI.JRKE DENHAM""'"""' "-'r-.

a;:.... ..... c.;. ...... ,..,....
Ji!L! · - &lt;:::....,.
·~""""'"""''""'""'c..-c:.,-.. IRI
fM~i,};~ :~ :~~ R:e ·IJ~~.~ -

n\~ ~~r:Th:S

ber11. Tbe Creative AuoCiatea will
HIWI.
peg:,~red by ~ U/ B Depart- WINE
&amp;. CHEESE TASTING PAm•
ment of Music.
Hillel House, -10 Capeo Blvd.,
---~---- 8:30 p.m.

SATURDAY-3

~t

~r:::r·...!l'~~..f"i:M!.:.

In..truction in basic steps dur-

ing lint hOur, I Diefendorf AD·

WOrb by Feld.m.Bil which are .

CLASSIOOMS AND

DIPAITMEHTS•

INTBNATIONAl FOLK DANCING•

0

uuriw~::.,

~

Charles Billi.nga, profeaoor; POl·
itica, New York Univeni.ty, :till.
more Room, Norton, 10 a.m.

U / B .._ OhiO University, Twin
RiDb, Cheektowaga; 7: 30 p.m.

Rid If
UUAI DANCE PaOGIAM'
BASIC ia 'an ~taiy com~
.New York Danu C~UectWe,
puter programming 1 an J u a 10
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8. 30 p.m.
ouited to ool_vinc_ nllldenc pro~ ·
Ticketo are . available at . the
lmoa. GoldbeJ11, iDotn~otGr..- NortoD_ Hall Tieket Oftice: general aclmiooion, $2; faculty, atalf and
1::"~~ CUlftlll
U / B al"';"ni, .1.60; otudanto, .1.
Kieuan..Rua' tuad the Form.tltiDn R11 LICTUIE•
of 1M Etulem Sltw Nationo, Dr.
Morton Feldman, viaiting Slee
· Zenon Saban. profeaor of his. profeuor of music, will deliver the
tory, Niagara Univenity, 205 second o£"1liii &amp;ea&amp;On'a Slee Lee.
· Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
·
~ ~-=-· Baird Recital Hall,

qenciao iDdude the S~t A.oeociati.on and the Committee for
the Formation of an Inotitute on
Raoe Relationa. Tbe lint iooue to.
be explom in thiO one-day con- terence is:
~A Social Scunceo Anolyoio of
Racism, Tbomu F. ~·

UUAI COFFEEHOUSE•

BiUy Vanaver, with Joy and
Lynn Unger, 1st floor cafeteria,
Norton, 9 p.m.
Tickets are available at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office: general admislion, $1.25; faculty, stalf
and U / B alumni, $1; atudenbl, 75
cents.

SUNDAY--4
HILLEL GlAD CLUI UUNCH••

{.:;;;:.\

._:. ___ ~ . ~

The CAC Movie, Frld•y'7enci-Satunlay.

Measurement , Alan Purvis, prolessor ol Engliob and ~r o!
Engliib te"acber-traini~, University of illinois at Urbana. 233
Norton, 7:30 p.m.
WIEmiNG•

U/ B va. Genesee Community
College, (J.V.), Clark Hall, 7 : 30
p.m.
FILMS•

THI HYCMOLOGY Of U.CIIM•

f.!.~u~ ~~~ta:rtc:o=

cbology, and Audrey M. Wor;:Jl,
clinical 818ialaDt profeaoor, U/ B
Department of Psychiatry, 330
Norton, 1 p .m.
CoNFiuNCt: ~
IACISM AND THE HEALTH SCIENCU•

Cbar.lea L Anderson, U/B
fourth year' medical"atw!Oitt, and
Roaald Davia, U / B - . 1 year

s:::!k":'
t r%t1:'!.f~=~
ation) ,
Norton... i p.m. .
~

CONFEHNCE: RACISM.

THE MEDIA AND EHT£1TAINMfHT•

Frank Foster, a.asi.stant profesBOr, U/B Department of Black
Studies, Conference Theatre,
)'lorton, 2 : 30 p.m.
CONFERENCE;

Intimate Journals (Stewart,
1966), 7 p.m. Free Form (Stewart, 1968). 7:15 p.m. Both filml
will be shown in 147 Diefendorf
and are free.

L

FILMS.

What is Chauidism?, Rabbi
Noson Gurary, Hillel House, -10
Ca~Blvd., noon.
to graduate students and
sin e faculty.
.

Fuvre (Delluc, 1921), and The
Smilint Madame Beudet (Dulac,
1922), 147 Diefendorf, 7: 30 p.m.
Cabinet of Dr. CaliBari (Wiene,
1920), 147 Diefendorf, 8: 46 p.m.
Free.

UUAI FILM..

FACULTY COUOQUIUM•

FWe Easy Pieces (Rafelson) •
The Engli8h Renai.aance: A
Conference The a t r e, NAoc!mis~' Thepretical Discussion, Structure
check showcase for times.
- of an Ef.itaph, Angus Fletcher.
sion charge.
• U/ B proteaaor of Engliob, Faculty
MONDAy-5 . - Club Red Room. 8 p.m.

TUESDAY---6
HILL£1 CLASS•

Elementary Hebrew, 262 Norton, noon.
ASTIONOMY VIDEOTAPE PIOGIAM ..

Group I screening: Time, The

;,a:::r;!~!:~:!#~~c!~
Engineering Lib r ·a r y, 3-5 p.m.
(The same screening will be rell:~~e~r';1") U on Wednea-

,

. RACISM AND THE WB.FAIE SYSTEM•

Allie H: Freeman, clinical

81·

:e~~~p~!=~ry~~d ~!ct~

Prim. Project AWARE, and
chairman, Buffalo Rigbto Action
Group, 337 Norton, 2:30 p.m.
CONRUNCE.
IACISM .AND EMPI.OYMENT•

Will J. Brown, 818iatant to the
vice president, U / B Minority Fae•u!ty and Btalf Recruitment; NormaJI Goldlarb, Board of Directoro,
CitizeDB Council on Human ftela.
tiqns, and Bernice L . Pou, aslillaDt to the provost, U/B Faculty of Arlo and Lettero, 330 Norton, . ~: 30 p.m.
CONFUEHCE:

'"Lee~;~e~.~.=~~ a~c

affairs. Erie Community College;

J.F. HendelBOn, au:istant profeeBOr, U/B· Department of Political
Science; .John Leto118, praidettt,
U/ B Foundation, Inc., and Robert

~:~~~r~oti:;:~

233 Norton, 2: 30 p.m. _

CONfEUNCE: IACiui AND HOUSING• .

B~"k!..t" ~fkJ::·J'~C.~·

and president, HOME~ Iantha

!Po:::'~~· t:!J'..~d~r~
=to~~;!!~:::~=

ate director, U/B Office of Urben
A_l!nira, 231 NorloD, 2: 30 p.m.

ASTIONoMY VIDEOTAPf

PiloOat.Moo

Group I ocreenin«: The 'Moon,
Our Noorut Neillhbor; The Sur/au of the Mooli; Tide o ond
t'l!::~~.= B&gt;:tUm,
3-5 P.l!l- (The aame ~~
be reJ!1!8ti&gt;d Group II ort Tburo- .
dey; F~ry 8.)
•

to

POSTU C0U0GU1UM lUllS•

'Dr. Antho11y M . ~o. Bell
Tel e p'h o D e Labonttorieo, wiD
' ·~ on a topic to be IUlDOUDCOd.
(Continued on 7, .coJ...#j

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·ROckefeller AskS $68.961 Million.
-' For U/B Funding in Fiscal '73-74 ~
Governor Nelson A. Rock&amp;- the current figure in thiS area cates, " we will be developing
feller's 1973-74 .Executive Bud- in its original propoaals to the propoaals to add to our Labrarpt request for State Univer- State.
,
•es' aoquisitions budget by atiar,
sity at Buffalo rerommends lumpSumltemo
in ln this fund." But, he DOled,
tll8,961,000 for sslaries a nd
Among lump sum SUNY •l't_t __ throughout the entire
-tina
during the budget items in which U/ B will SUNY systam, the $1.3 millloo
a-1 year betlinning April 1.
share, Doty cited:
'
total
not oller hopes of
N= Facilitid, $5.9 million. major increaaes for any o n e
In addition, U/B will share
in certain lump sum appropria- This is money for stalling and campus.
Eduauioll4l 1mp_roV&lt;!ment l
ticma to the State University operating new buildihp as they
wntral administration which are turned over to the Univer- lfl'll&lt;&gt;vation Fund, $3.9 million.
are to be distributed to units sity by the State University Again, "We are in the proceos
'lhrouibPut the Stat&amp;-wide sys- . Construction Fund. U/B has of developing llli"Cillc requaats
requesteil '$1.5 million of the for a portion of a- funds,"
.tam.
Tbe Covemor's request for total SUNY' amount in this as are all other SUNY units.
cate,ory,
Doty says, and if this
CooperatiVf! Collqe Centera
U/B operations is $1.882 millinn 1ibove the total appro- portion of the budget is ap- and U r b a n CenteNJ, $11.686
proved
as
requested
there
is
million.
Tbe Bulfalo Cooperapriated during the' fiscal year
ending t h i s March 31. Tbe reason to believe uwe will re- tive College Center budpt ls
ceive
all
or
a
significant
porincluded
in this recommenda• Llargest portion qf .IJ:iis. increaae
tion.
($1.120 million) is allocated tiOn of thiS r · est:"
University
ide Gradoote
Building Repaira, $8.5 milto instructional use.
Fellows, $700,000. This is a new lion. The amount to be received
Leclllatl.. Approval
program, . Doty explains, and locally depends again on SUNY
Tbe reqi.lest is subject to -Leg. "we don't know the formula for Central approval of speci8c re:islative ·approval and could be distribution but ;t will have' to quests from each campus.
changed before final enactment. do with the numbMi of gradu'
In addition, requests for ad- ate studeitts." ·
EDITOR'S NOTE: Tbe Reditional fundinJ could conceivCentralized Library Acquisi- po_rter next week will p_,t
ably be authorized in the sup- tions, $1.3 million. "In competi- information concerning the Govplementary State budpt which tion with all_otlljl_r campuses ernor's SUNY-wide budpt reis usually enacted after t h e throughout SlJNY,' ~Doty indi- commendations.
basic budget takes ellect on
April1.
When Jean:. IAJc-Godard was would have written a better
Acbordiilg to information reon campusJast semester, some- book.
ceiv_ecJ from Albany by E . W.
obeenne askaddoln.,...~passwhat.tbe ~=-~· : Alt. or pop art ~r ~t you Doty, vice 'preSident for opel)la ~ ~·
will, · The·· God f o the r was tiona and. syslemll, the Rock&amp;America, :W~ ~ ~ bf ~t' c:Oup_ie&lt;h thQUgb tenuoUsly, ~th feller .budget proposal recoinGo!lard ~ adiiiDg .... ,....,.-;.~r .Mall~'s. Faus~ mimda a to~ Univeraitv stall
be &lt;bail' al8o iime 't o see Tile i:r~~lilit ui a Uieoretical .of. ~1~- fiill-tiine ~aljnit
.G'!!Ifalher. ·~.- -~to - ~ leld l&gt;y J?i· ~ (Fl!&amp;)" employeea,'
In a move aimed at strength- ated by P,., 'l'rulllalia.
know :what ao many millinns of Fleldier, :U! B profeseor Of Eng- ofl&lt;f2, Twenly-eight of the new ~ening and stabilizing the role COmpleX Paollan
-Americans ibought worth ·see- lish.
FI'E's are earmarked for fac- of the college president, State.
In announcing the 1I8W poping.~ - ·
.P.uzo 11f1!1 MaJiCMe
ulty positions, 12 for Library University of New York is re- cies, Mrs. Maurine T .- Moere,
Out only a year, The God"Dr. Fletd&gt;er, who is conduct.. 'pceitions, and two for the area placing the indefinite terms of the Boiu-d Chairman, aaid:
{ather has already made more ing six colloquia on tbe Renais- of General Institutional Sup- its college presidents and tbe
'"l'he -office of the college
money than any movie in his- sance -t his semester, decided to port (which includes such acti- Chancellor with five-year ap- president iB one of the most
!Dry, toppling GWTW after pair Puzo with Marlowe while vities as University-community pointments.
• complex administrative Poeimore thaJi t1uee decades of as- reading The Godfather J = l relations, mail.service and comThe University's Board of tions in the country today. Tbe
cendency. It is tbe movie that . an accouni of the fi.IJDiD of ~- puler facilitit111'l .
Trustees v o t e d unanimously president must shape ed~­
brought Bnmdo,- tbougbt peat movie . version by Ira ~uckerTotal faculty and stall recom- yesterdsy (Jan. 24 ) to intra- tionsl policies, manage vast firedemption after Mutin-y an the man, an assistant- to -the di- mended for the coming year, by duce periodic reviews of the nancial resources and develop
Bounty and The CO/Uiku from rector. "No Tom Wolfe," Zuck- University functions, are: In- quality of administrative lead- good relations between 1be camHo,., Ko"', back into the crit.. erman is New J o urn aJ is t struction and Departmental Re- ership in Albany and at the 29 pus and the community. Moreover, ·the job is becoming inics' liOOd IP:J!!l08. And if. it is enough to co~t.on the pro~~n:.:/ ~ State-Operated campuses.
The move was urged by State creasingly demanding as the
Academi Su
not ihe cultUi'al projeCtive test ducer's Gucct slip-ons, tho! P~ lie Se . •
aome claim. (Scarlett and aeK in duction :s e c r .e t a r y·' s ·white
I'Vl"!'• 31i
. c . p- University presidents and rec- pace of academic c:hanae aothe SoutH aold Jonp&lt; and ,_... phone, :-,md the llioenil ciJd-· . port Servine &lt;i!&gt;cl'!dinit Lib~­ olllllleDded by Cbanoellor Em- · celerates and tbe ""1"1 tp "!"
ly as well 811 Mafia, violence fuaion· thAt.resultecl: from· ~~ · ""' and. Organizat:jonaJ A«&lt;tiVJ- est L. Boyer. .
design education becomes more
after all), it has maile an in- do's iilsiaterioe
ltiihking:' ties), 369; Student· ~upport
Fpr the finot time, presidents urpnt. It is therefore imperadelible marl&lt; on American life. Zuckerman a1ao records the Services and Student Aid, 302; at these campuses wiU be evaf- tive that State University at..
'--- for emmp
· · 1e• ~rod uce~-'s . ~ .....,.
•'-~ tbe Institutional Support' Services
Can anyone ._..,
(incl...,'""'.,.___ ,_, Plant, Gen- uated by the Trustees and tract and retain truly outstandto bar "' made him an offer film, wbicb had to be ready by _ 1 ~0
General ChanCellor, with appropriate ing_ peraons to administer its
be~couldn't refuse" oae .m ore Deceniber 15 for felease in Wne ~... .
.
."•
campus consultation, each five · colleges."
time?
,
•
foiOhrislznaS, was "already-be- Inst!~tional Servu;:esl. ~; years after their initilll appoint..
Chancallor Boyer Mid be
The Godfather'..:h•rly ahlt, hind scbeduJe" aome time in A~ Enterprtses (l'e61· ment by the 'Trustees. Tbe liked the arrangement "penonbut is &gt;t art? .Autljor _Mario March. .
_
.
. ~talhalls~ a ro- Trustees will determine wbeth- ally." He aalled it~"
Chancellor Boyer added:
Puzo ~t thirik .,, DOt out
In . 'a cimJ!ar .~~. this
riations · . auiKliviiled byPP•._ er reappointment should b8 of.
"The role of tile Pftl8ident in.
loud_~- He has said apol- , gol Fletd.er t:hinkinil about P
:func:ti~ . ·
f""~. i:, fere&lt;l.
opticaUy thAt if be tiad knovm deadlines,' about the ·problem of sanle •
ons as ~··
This Board action was com. American hilber edUcation hu
it would be such a _s mub, be (C~ 'on-6, col5l
=~~::'~::. plemented by tWo related _de- hem ~ 1ont ipored. M a ..,.
sult, ibe leJIIIh of .-vice hu
ized Researcb. $351,000; Exten- cisions:
• Tbe Chancellor was auth- dropped • ha -rp I y in ....t
sion and Public Service, $506,orized
to
name
CIIIIIJ&gt;U8
preaiyears.
000; A!i"demic Support. $5.427
CODYinoed the time
· million; Student SuPP?ft &amp;.:v- dents to the Uiiiver81ty faculJ;y
in
their
f'leld
of
academic
11p91&gt;
•
has
110 c 1 a r i I y 8.1111
ices and Student Aid, $8.836
ializatinrL
U
a
~
does
~
the profeaaional
. million; Institutional Support
SeJvices, $15.'ll93 million; Auxi- oot CliDtimM 811 the chief lid- IIIII... of oallep ~ A
liary. Entarpriso8, $2.085 mil- ministnoto&lt;, be' -will retain - - , fi-year ~ 'ter-m
demic nuik and may a-:b at a will, add dlpity
lion.
_campus within the Univemlty and lltablilib' .t.;l the jab. B . ,
Tbe
system, al1houih DOt will 1PW the J)relidmt oulllily the &lt;me at wbic:h be cieat lime to elllablilh .,U.
_preaideot.
.
~ hla ltyle ol ........
• ·Periodic atudy 1e a v ea · mip, aDd build a f8COid ol hla
......,Wwc! for the preai- .
dan1ll for the ~ J1111J1C1118
~the cbW .aof enabllat .... 110 pl_n ...... tiaiW
......... ct.
.....,.,.... .......... tbelr ad- oaUep liiWIIidlat lllllll ....
iDiall&amp;ratiw18- ~ to lleoame ~ ....
,..__, Praeldeala w1ll be fRibed 8.1111 ..., Ill .... willa
~for. a~.a.t:r
_......._ A...-aol
..... ~ the thhd .,.. ol paiOdlc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~ ail a - ~ tlilldW tD . . Jab_
etudy leaVII at h .ad ol
++- \llllj

aoes

':'W

,._..ry

...

'GOdfather' on ·Thooretical:
Double Bill with -~Faustus'

SUNY Sets Fi~e- Year
Terms for Presidents

an.in"""""'

=

qp:;n

uw,.•,.

--.uc

"'fl:

~~..:
!eaz:
inllamba ~-- ~
.

..

~-=

=::::ani=.::
.. .

'(IIIIL

~~u:~ol~
.Jibo wiD. ba _...
.

---=
'1

.......,._ (~

.

.........

.. I"W'! J, .,., IJ .

�2

Ukrainian
Study.Course
Now Offered ·-

/-..ry 25, 1973

Black Plays
Added-to
Conference.

�V'

.~

]...,.;:; 25, 1973

'Rapport' &amp; Slow Lorili~ ·Offer·

Science Library to Snow
41 Astronomy Videotapes

Outlets for:~T4/alo~ . Youn&amp;:foets:

A series of 41 videoteped programs on astronomy, entiUed
''Eye on the Uni~,'' will be
shown to interested members of
the University oommunity, February &amp;-20, the Science and Engineering L i b r a r y baa announced.
The te
will be Shown at
two sim::f:.eous daily screenings. Group I will see the first
set on February 5 a n d the
Group U screenings begin February 6.
Four tbirty..minute tepes will
be shown to each· group each
day "between 3 and 5 p.m.

By SHARON EDELMAN
-SUi/1

Let us now nwurn

Thoma~~

EdiM&gt;n, who d4rkened his mind

thiu &lt;JI}aenfMight see.
~

bwn "T'- CJaotm"'

.Wben ·~t~~
Rapport I was pub-

'

lished lsst ring, it -c:arriea an
interesting "ewe apologia. C&lt;&gt;editDrs 'l'lm Burke and U/B
grad sludent Tony Petrosky,
&amp;oth poets in their own right,
were confronting their ambivalence toward their choice of beooming aometbing other than
poets, their cboioe of the "lower
J:Qad." Tbey asked tbemselvea
if "living" . and "gi:vin(' were

~=~ :~~·;:..e·

bu~~':"~tilli':u~~

Group I and 6 in Group U . •
The Group "I .iJclleilule.follows
(NOTE : The Gioup U screening program is the same1 but
each set of. iour "tspes will be
shown to this group one· day
Isler, except as noted below) .
February 5 : The Universe in
Perspeotive, The Plsnet Called
Earth, Rotetion of the Earth,
Revolution of the Earth.
February 6: 'I'ime, The CaJ.
endar, Procession of the Equinox. Instruroents.
February 7: The Moon, Our

...:

production" would diminish ·
their capecity for "procreation."
'They finally decided that the
answe&lt; was no, -but- aomebow
they protested too much.
·
Despite· all these 'd o·li b t 8',
Rapport" I was an eztremely
III1CCeiiSfu1 literary rna gazine,
moet likely because it was limited to the work of four eDl8!Jent
U/B poets: P.hilip Dow, Roberi
Hass, William Jungels, and
Jobn Logan. Rapport 2 lo: 3,
published this ran under the
co-editorial
'dance of Petro.sky and ~Swigart, is pri·
marily noteble for its radical
change of attitude; this issue
· reflects a new ambition and
confidence, and consciously 80.
Perhape the editors suddenly
found a new meaning for the
word "rapport" which could
make their work oome alive for
them. Whatever tbe caae, and ·
. even though Rapport. may ·fall •
victim to the problems' inherent
in any : ·new fllligarine ·of . its
kind, this latest· .effort estabblishes both an identity, !U!d a
philosotJby - __. '
- -'We Pubbsli
Wa

"WIJit

The Bulls' Blackmore Just
-Keeps on Setting Records
By DICK BALDWIN
Sp«t• lnJorm. tion

•• . •

8.:0... In' •

''Editing Rapport 1s no lonjlei
a simple Ji'roces&amp; of · collection.
and selection," says Petroeky,
reflecting on tlie development
of his maga;jne. ''Now we feel
that we need publish only tl)Olle
poems and poets that we believe
in. Our cboioe or poems · is our
personal stetement of integrity
and character. We are saying,
in effect, 'We exist. We are
giving you wbat we believe in.' "
What is a1ao important, Petrosky believes, is a reciprocity
of ~ among the -editora

~%:!!:a"": ~rlc~

In Mamoty

of-

• Along this · &amp;:e, -Rapport· I
drew · its material exclusively
from Buffalo poets, who also
contributed balf of the work in
Rapport2 t. 3. 'The fourth issue,
due for release nen month, is
again entirely devoted to local
poetry, and JS dedicated to the
memory of Ed Budowski, a
prime mover in promoting local
literary activities, who for years
operated the only good book· ·
store in town.
However, before and since
the start of Rapport, a good
deal of local poetry baa &amp;een
published on broadsides under

"brotherhood" of poets, wbo
lend support to eech o t h e r
throw!h readinp Ot important
of
introductions; in this way, mag·
azinee such 88 R a p.p or t are ~-Like ~lbgical ~
made kpown to tblal wqG mig\lt . sake, the Press iB slow and lsty~
its oci:aBIOnal · publications,

tti,~~

~ted,~.:r~ ~~

and a wbole new clbnesu!ion· ~
added toihe 'M&gt;Iitinl oonoept or

''raJ::-~~ Swigart,

:"'..:. ..::n"::,., t:tc:l
frai'nework of the MJrd

88

a

- medium' with .an intellectua1
and -..1 impact for which

the· editors· and. poets aasume
respousibillty. This idea, OCND·
bined with the editDrs' interest
in film, has Jed to plans to OOD·
vert future iasues of .&amp;pport to
a mapzine
poatry and 111m.
''We lnlly believe tbatthe written imaae ~ the visuJI imaae

or

~="in-;a:~

t' ~,:'ei!

broadsides (there are a b o u t
twenty,'to date ) is also on per,
manent displsy in the Poetry
Center in San Francisco, · and
on the walls of tbe horne of poet
Wright, who finds them "beautiful."
1,000 Copies Printed
Rapport, which is distributed
nationally by the Tenth Muse
Bookstore in California, runs
an edition of 1.000 copies. Two
hundred of these are sold locally, at $1.00 esch, although the
press remains in debt. The cost
for the broadsides and Rapport
I was paid by the editOrs .them1
d each
se ves, an
edition since

There's really nothing new
about 6-6 center Curt Blackmore on the oourt at U / B.
· Blackmore !IS a ~nior this sea·
son is just rebounding his way
to more records.
The husky pivot is shy 13
points of tslring over No. 2 in
career scoring, too. It's been
Curtis' play at both ends of the
floor which has propelled the
Bulls to a string of six strai,ht
following a ·four-game losmg
spell at season's stsrt.
Here are the facts. CB is 920
rebounds for 56 games, prior to
Wednesday's. Ivy date at Cor·
nell and Saturday at horne. with
Brown. As a sophomore, Curt'
oollected 345 and a 15.7 average. H is junior campeign ad·
ded 403, a season record, for a
16.8.
In ten games this season, he
baa 172 grabe for a sky-high
17.2, an elite figure among the
national leaders.
There's a I s o Blaclan01e's

~'If t':k ~c~iio~
f;~::n::.tif!enF:J~e~ ':~:!'~

ordinat:mg ·eouncll of Literary
Magazines,, 88 well as · to the
=~- !Zl~~~:~: National .":t:nd~t .or. th!!
set· on ·•-~•- slleets,". distributed A:rts, Jot ll federal grant. Tbe
........,..
.:L
press, hoWever baa' no official
free for iudon1i" as ..,.,y lilst. ·
stetus at tb8 University;- an&lt;! Ia
· 'I'bes8 SloW Loris' broadsides a Iegal)y registered partnerShip
are notable for a number of. between Petroeky and Swigart.
reaaons. One-is format. A poem
Although individual poets
by a weii..Jmown poet is pub- maintein copyright privileges
lished and releeaed together. on the broadsides, Slow Loris·
with a work by a lesser known
·ghts the work which is
poet. Thus, the Slow Loris Hall ~ri::,d in Rap p or 1. 'The
of Fame includes ' the Jibs of broadside aeries prints worl&lt;'by
Logan, James Wright, Louis !nvitetioil only, but Petrostr
Simpson. 'David lgnatDw, Wil· and his starr aooept approXJ·
liam Stafford, Robert Bly, and mately 20 manuscripts per week
Cid Corman; youJl8W poets in- for oonsideration for publica- .
elude Has&amp;, winner of the 1972 tion in the magazine.
Yale
Poets Awar..d,
Petrosky, a poet, filmmabr,
Philip Dow; and Peter Lavitt, and IIaduate -student in the

v......,.,.

· =-==~~~ ;~g)::..~~f.:(!A:•,
y..,,

way .., can define owselvea."
Nt1111
Q-w:!y, Clle~
Petrosky ·considers Buffalo a pblet. . '
The broadsides are published · Review and Epoel&amp;. He ·_..
-;or center for young poets,
and throu8h &amp;pporl, baa at- in editiooa ols~':J which. the ales a&amp;ow · Loria from
first 25 are ·
and ~ Room 4, AIJMK.A, of tbeEnc·
tanpted to · ilamJiNnlcate wliat
• is haiiPenina .... "There Ia rio bered by·the Poet; of ~ the liah ~t, ad may be
partiGWat. cia.lfication for · the first three nwilblon are retum8d 0011tac;ted, 1bere by II.- wbo
Work which Ia beloi done IIIIW; to the pre&amp; Carl· Gay, curatm wish to submit ~ to
the thrust Ia 1111t 'Uiack Mounthe UnMn~ty Poelr:Y Rocm; ~ ltapporl'• • c»«titDr
""'ft DOl' . olbar 'acbool.' In~
the ·un1,.
~... well• inc,....
-aty, are elinply the locale, bepn pab1ilbing in 1970, and
the occaaiaual home for many the first'_ . . lweiYe - - and EI10Ch. ' - INdualad fnlm
l!lbibit last yMr In . . Lllary this tfnlve~~~Uy and .__
YQIIIII poats wbo ~ an
t?f ~ 'Ibe ~ of at San
State Callela.
audleDoe."

- u.:1o.

Nearest NeiJbbo!i. ~ ~
of the Moao, ·1iaM and ,Eclipses, The Solar 8yslal!•
February 8: The Law ol Gravitetion, Mercury and V Mars, Jupiter and S.tum.
February 9 : u~=
tune and Pluto; The
MeteOrs &amp; Meteorites; Comela.
The Sun.
February 12: The Sun'a Atmosphere. Origins or the Solar
Sys tem, Distanceo to the 8tarl,
Motions or the Stua.
February IS: The Uabt ol
the Stars, Atmor;pherell Of the
Stars, Interior&amp; of the Stars,
Variable Stsra
February 14: ~ Stan,
Mass of Stars, Galactic Clusters, Globular Clusten.
February 15: Gas and Duet,
The Evolution of the Stars, The
Milky wllY.1,Radio Aslnlaonly
and tbe Miu&lt;y Way.
February 16: Feature&amp; or the
Galaxies, Distribution of Galuies, The Quasars, Red Shift
and the Expanding U n l The Universe Surveyed.
Group U . will aee the F~
ruary 16 programs on Februaly /
20.
•

or

:rmoo:=.~=-..::

. ~-~
.r-

scoring. Through lsst Satur·
day's '86-81 victory OVer ~­
ford at Clark Hall, tbe pro
prospect baa 1,053 points, in·
eluding 445 as a aoph, 449 as a
junior and 159 this season, !0£
a 15.9 average. With IS m&lt;ire
games he is sure to surpeas
second-ranked Hal Kuhn (1,065 ) on the career chart. Jim
Home '55 owns the tDp nma
of that ladder with 1,48.'1 (plus
a frosh year af 374) for a fOur.
year tots! of 1,857.
At a time · when impreosi-ye
reoolindirig · figures are
these are Blsckmore's credehtials-vs. S y racuse 15, at Dlinois State 11, at Northern Dlinois 21, at Nqrtheastem 16, vs.
Georgia Stete 17, lafayette at
Gem City 12, Gannon at ~
City 12, at Fairleigh-Dickinaon
15, vs. Akron 24 and vs. Sam·
ford 29.
Thst 29 at Samford equals a
record, his own aet bist year at
Stony Brook.
Blsckmore and rebounding.
Tbey gO ~tber.

·.are.

�--q ·

} lliUitry ·25, 19-T:J

· - ~---IEit:;"""'"'·

-4

Senate Btidy on SecUrity Analyzes Arming, Related ~ues
problema, &amp;lid thewill&amp;Ddllll- terrelated.inavarietyofw~, c:ampusadminisllll~isworl&lt;= wbolly · endorae the ~estion
clition to a.......,. aolutious. 8lld the JX'III!&amp;emj ol :authMity • ing toward a solation· of diiaee , of both the Ptesident imd the
The ~~ lben!iore, .., 8lld perception ovedap to a prOOedural 8lld authOrity pre!&gt;- Hull Committee that a greater
well u the obliption, to work Caoaidenhle ateot. At the !ems, and we would eDCOill'8l" !"&amp;Die oJ. conlacta and flow of
toward a aec:urity an:anpment aame time, .m bas certain its eftorls in tbia &lt;reprci. We information be~ the Securthat avoids tbe distance 8lld unique a_.:ta, 8lld tberefore bope that ~ and ity Force 8lld all ~ts of
hostility often ezistin1 between menta brief apeeific comment.
clarified aulbority for the Cam- the _campus community be es~- po1·
fo
...... .....
·
pus Fora! _.,, further reduce tabliabed on a ...,war basis ·
u."""
lee
rces !""' ...., . R - . The ~ of the need .;~ to outside
Specificalty, for tbe Facuity
~ula!"'. -~ this laraer the Campus Security Qepart- polke olfibers. 8lld benlle re- Senate we J8001D1118nd·
~~WO'm.!.':r~ ~: . :!kua!'~ mcon~:"'::.'i~ mm;1t are o~ three ~: per- duce tbe pcllliiiibilities for eec&amp;I= - ( 1) 'TiiGl _a
effort
raJ of action on lhe-controvem- tiona if we can; ~t a min- ~ ~be defi"::t ation 8lld bVer~ so Ire-: be made to.~ the Camial recommendation with re- imum-to avoid makiJ1c bad
~aDd both
.
q"'!!ltl.y -and tiqicaJI.y- oil-' f'IU Secru:"Y
orce
_llllo the
spect to the policy .of selective si~ woJM. We view the 88 to QU&amp;Dw•3 •
quali'!'l"'l&gt;- aeiYilll:•
• - .
1e~ life of lhe campus,
a1'11lins·
·
Hull Committee's activity the mont 8lld ~~J?.
Community Perceptwn. 'lbe •pecifia;Jlly to int;lude the aca·
f •'-- "--"--t'
~our well We ..........,....Y
problem" of commuruty percep- demU: ,..,.,.,.,. of the Uni.verIn VJeW
o ...., ,..._....... 8 an- . ·-"""'modest'--::::;::-'.._=..
. the ~nwulation of the Hull ..,_ as we see " involves mu- fitv (aome detailed poesibilities
nouncementthattheonlyaelec- own
.
- - u
Committee that · tbe " - · · _.......,
•.,
f 'this. •-tion
tive 8flllinl' to be instituted at step&amp; in an · evolutionary pro- S
.t
beadquarten
~ tusl .lmowledJe 8lld reepect on
or
m..,.~
are listed
p - would be· in coonection ....., one !hal- will hopefully ~r Y8 ,_lnl locatioil the part of both - the Security belqow) ;
with the bandlinc of Jarte lead to a more secure atatus- (the basement of Harriman?) . Foroe 8lld ~ entire Uni""!'"
. (2) T~ there. be etta?&gt;amounts of J110118Y, and in view -both in fact aJII) in mind-for 8lld «hat _.._,.te equi~t sity commuruty. We take tbia lUMd a /OW •tanding commu~-- ~
·
to be"President ~s ..-n- tu of the Foculty Sen&lt;m and
of ..__ ..~&amp;~.- antic:i··pa•-' '-~ore 811 members 01. : l:lie University f
any....,,..
coiaanmity . . :' :
. .
!" ...........,..., c:omm~- ing wben l&gt;e identified "the the Prof~ Stoff Senate,
concerninc implementation are II. Ao8IJIII ,• . •
tion lllroudlout. the secunty image of Campua Security" as and to include atudenl memreceived from Dean Hull's
Wllbout -tifti in detail syatem. 8Dtf pbysi~t "one of the co~" of tbe ben, thDfletl UlitA the continuCammittee, ibis deferral of ac- the.::WPrk of the~ Hull Commit..
~~
entire campus ~ty problem, !Ill o~~~ of camp~~~ aecurtion ·~ appropriate. At . tee arid other ·bodiea. we have "tions. be provided as quic:kly as 8lld we qree ~th him.
ity "!'~"'!"' .and problems.
....the aame time. it is clear that , ~ .to .-er three poasible. It seema to ua ·that
The pef!"'J'tion Of the CamCoJ:&gt;tinpnt upon implementhe ptoblem_of campu1 aec:urity - questions_;_-,'- • • •· •
the requirement of in~erenllO- pus Security "Force ~tly teti&lt;&gt;n· of tbeBe two re.commen. arid tbe role of the Campua Se1. What is the- :appropriate free communication within the held by the local. ~ty, dations, 8lld 'feCOIIIIizing that
!"'rity Fo~ will be a continu- role for. the Campus Security aec:urity sya1em is probably of the campus COIIIIIIUD1ty, and se!lOUB .aec:urity problems do
mg one. Sinal the bulk of our Fon:e; and what status 8lld the highest priority
the meuibers of the Force ~- • anae &lt;in campus and cannot be
repo[!: like that of the original functicins are -..ociated with
·
•
selves are apparently" in sen- wished-away by all of our best
Hull Committee, was devoted that role?
.·
.
'lbe staff of the Campus_Seintentions, we further reromto this larger isaue-of which
2. What problems. does the curity now -&lt;liiiiSists of 63 permend:
the · selective arming policy ia Security . F9n:e ~t!Y en- son,s. incl~g the di,rect.or 8lld
(3 ) That the Faculty Senate
only a amall, bllt .n'?t mmor, counl!'r m performmg Its .ap- ~tan~ ~•. five supererulDrae w recominendation of
P8rt--:we are aubmitting bere- propnate role?
Vl80f8, five specia1ista. 8lld 50 n. ......- ...... 1111 .the Hull Committee with rewi_th the ~ of our report, with
3. What. aolutions c a n b e olficem. Eight. members of the to . , . - a fanin far a. a- specl to the &amp;elective arming of
· ~r deletions, for co~- suggested .!P resp_onse to. these staff are !&gt;lack and four are m.,. i1f- 1111 • llldl ~ appropriaUly trained offU:ers
tion by tbe .campus commuruty problems; and. m particular, women. Sixteen are J:eCent re- of a. fK1n1 a. and investigators of the Cam
as a wbole.
r·
what contribution could the cruits. Wben one considers that com m u n 1t j. We-.. - . pus SecurUy Foree
IU!sp@ctfully submitted :
faculty make IQ such solutions? campus seclirity is a 24 hour-a- · poo111on p • para •
M
f th
·,,__
-aoiEJrr B. PLEIIING
Rok. With respect to the . day affair (there are 21 eight,.
p8l'l11lta.
8.l1l!' 0
e Ow= rec:om• KlJJUIAY LEVINE
role, mission and responsibili· hour days-i e., more than four - m~tions of t!'e Hull . ComCHARLE!I a. PLANCK
ties of the Security Fon:e, the 40-ho~ weeks-in a :U.hour,
nuttee are of ~YIOUS ment, and
DAVID • · TRIGGLE
Hull Committee has provided a seven-day week ), that mo st ous conflict, and
sub- S!'me of the 1deas and suggesBOL WELLER
satisfactory preliminary state- campus security work requires ject to internal mconsiatency lions presented below speak to
LEE E. PRESTON, Chairman
ment, and the Presiden~ has de- two-man shifts. and that ·t he as well. For example1 the city them . . ~r as_pects of that
•
•
•
clared ·his ·interttion· to isSue a Univ~fl!ity" o(l!!rafeS iP,•lWo ma- · polite· and ' col,!lts appareptly · ~tiel'-~, ~port .are ~- ~e-.
I. S.c:k&amp;rouncl
more delailed statement in the jor and sevenil minor loca6 ons; have · si&gt;me' generill• impression tailed ·,to pernut app~ or
Our committee · was estab- near future. We share the Hull soon to fuclude the' new .c am- tluit the campus should ·tate comment on '!l1f ~- l:l~ev~r,
lished by the Faculty Senate Committee's concern that these pus, the inadequate size of the care 'Of its bw'n seiiunty" prob- we -l'!Ould J¥'te.bere ~~~~r ilif:
"'-"' Exe&lt;:!Itive Committee at its responsibilities irlay not have C anlpils ' Secllrity• Fol'Ce' '8eems ·.' tams;·&gt; includin(- &amp;ppi'ehefu!J.ni fe~ !!&lt;l~'i'l'1o~ .I:!Jill.G9a!, ,
meelini of Ot!tober 25 with !lie ' been well -formulated or under- obvious: lt ·is· also'.obvious tlillt'•- and p,_tin8·"otrenilei8.'~At ' dnu~- - &amp;P!&gt;it ~~,, ~. l'ws•-.,
charge "to respond to the Pres- stood in the 'P&amp;St. that a sui- any expansion in the authority ·t he same· time, as .noted above,· ent s respo~ !'\"'t causeil wr
ident's Report on Security." ficiently broad spectrum of and responsibility .of the Cam- there are doubts about the cam- some concern.•
· We. were instructed to look. at opinion with respect to the de- PU$ Secunty Fon:e will neces- · PU$ oft'icer's au t.h o :r-i t y· and
The Hull Comniiftee Ri!Pori.
the total report; not simply at · tailed implementation of these sila te a -romparable expansion s tatus in the local courts. Sim- like our dWn arialysis; takes a
one specific part, and to "exam- responsibilities may not have in training- activity and an in- ilarly, among the campus pop- holistic view of the campus seine the conclusions · contained been solicited, and that failure crease in skill requirements for ulation. there is both a desire curity situation; 8lld the philin all three recommendations,· to discharge some of these re- the personnel themselves.
for mlhimal interference with osophy of " measured response"
. •. talk with members of the sponsibilities-including the reAut/writy. The problem of informal social behavior and a on the pert of Campus Security
committee and others . . . sponsibility to exercise ~t authority ~ two dimensions
simultaneous desire fo; vigor- Ofticers is set forth in the Hull
(and.J propose other alterna- :-"'3Y have occurred in some One is &gt;the legal authority 0 ( ous. and eft~~e protection Report!"' an important. means
tives . . . .
mstances. We are not aware of the campus aec:urity officers in agamst real criminal menacea. toward unproved authoncy and
We should say at the outset any major disagreement as ·to relation to outside police and Campus officers are criticized image for the Security Force,
that, as the Hull Committe!! the basic purposes of the Cam- the local ·courts The other is for failing to eurcise normal and bence toward geneml imalso noted, lh&lt;: problem of cam- pus Secu_rity Fon:e among "!'Y the authority that members of ~ce surveillance over auspi- provt;men~ in the campus lleCI!'·
pus 88CIIl1ty IS a pert of the_ of the unportant groups m - the fon:e are able to exercise in CIOUS persons, incidents, etc., 1ty Sltuation. . Indeed, the dis·
larger '!"up o.f p~letns .aseoci- volved. ~&lt;?W"':'er, we .no~ ll?at deaJ.ing with problems on the 8lld simultaneously criticized if cussi~n of"measw'ed.response"
ated with crune, mcome and the participation of mmonty campus Tile two are intimate- they attempt to do so. Little and Its unplementation looms
employment opportu'!iHe.s, st'!den~ven ~en solicited ly rebted. Under the New · wonder in this contel:t that the as the large&amp;~ aingle element i?
weapon,s. drugs ~ r&amp;C}Slll m -m ~ dl9CUS81on of campus York State Education Law, Security Fon:e itaelf has devel- the Hepoit-itaelf. '11&gt;!&gt; Preslour ~ety..'The UruvefSlty can sec:unty. p_roblems ~ date has Campus Security officers are oped a certain inaec:urity as to ~ent's CO"!"'!"'ts make !!" men·
contribute m . many ways to- ~ -~ This_ ~ck . of formally designated as "peace i ts. status and a corresponding tion of ~ unportan~ conoopt.
ward the 9'?lution of these prob- partiCl~tion seems mdic:ati~e officers" having the p6wer of ~ecline in morale. The· behav- The !"""'"'On '!'BY be only an
lema, but 1t can solve ~ of of a -~'clack of ~t which_ IS police officers · wben on duty. 1oral results appear to lie two- ~t, . but .•t may also re-tbem. ~or can ~Y SJM&gt;C?fi!' act ,a cnt_ical ~~t- m the enf;ire This status is not, however, fold: first; a search for a clear fleet!' !f"l}Or discrepancy in the
or policy decision. eliminate secun.t y Sltuation, 8lld which clearly sPecified under the "police" identity in ttie form Of definition of the problem at
their ~'!"" im_llaCt on. our lll!'Y. ~ to other IP'Ol!P6 Code of Criniinar Procedure, uniforms. squad caiR, etc.,_and.-- banil. · 'The"p~lem ia not, '!"
"!"""'_uruty life. :I'be UDM!r- Within the campus commuruty wbicb 'is the primary governing second, an unwiJlingDeos Iii en- far aa we· can diacover, a -crisis
Slty. IS plagued by J&gt;l'Cll&gt;!ems as well.
.
legislation -in police activity· ter into situati&lt;ins u.· which of crin\e. and violence on the
- typical of ~Y wban en""'!"'Problems. W1th respect to and -this lack of claritv has~ their status· may be challenged campus; it is, rather a lack of
!"""!, But if we are like a a.ty the probl!""" -enc:o'!"tered l;rY come the · basis for challen
or undermined.
confidence and ~
m this n;spect. at least we are the Secur!ty Fon:e ~- ~ dis- and delays in the prooecuJ:
It appears that relations be- !"'~ tbe campus c:ommuna amall city, more~ · cha,rge_of •II! respon&amp;lbihties, '!"e of campus offenders in &gt;the local tween the Security Fon:e and 1ty and the peracii1Jiel wbo have
than most, and With eoasider- ' have idali:Uled • three m a 1n courts. Although this situation at least some of the black stu- been Ellllllaed for ita protection.
able local aut.onomy. We haw, &amp;reB!'' ( 1) JSOili'Ce8, (2) ~u- appears to be changing slowly dents on campbs are not at all A policy of "measured re~re8Ulllably, msourcea of thonty,, and (3) comm~ on tbe basis of experience, 8lld good. Both sides DO doubt share 8poll8e" will prcibebly c:ontribtime and knowledle to apply to .perception. The three are m- perhaps eYentually on the basis portions of respon&amp;loility for ute more to genuine long-term
of legislation (the latter ap- this situation. Past instances of impiOYelllent than the estabparently-deJa.ved by the search over-reaction by Security Offi- lishment of committees. the
for uniform SUNY-wide stand- cers color present perceptions, change of uniforms, or the purards), it appears to be SOin&lt;i- even if the aouroes of such be- chase of :weapons.
thing that will not .vanish in havior have been eliminated.
Jratificalion. SInce the
the-immediate future. This unTo summarize: The pmblems recommendatiOD with-respect to
certainty with respect to out- of resources, authority and im- arming bas proved "to be the
~~=.:-..:e:.~-:~~~~~
~authority bas direct impact age are mutually eDDelbating. . moat c:ontroveraial - al~•
....... Jd'J.
,..
..,...
on •tbe campus.. Campus of- Improvement in the contribu- we belieYe, DDt «ha moat Slgf~ may question tile -legal tion of the Security Force to niru:an~ of the Hull He.
authority of Security Force of- campus life reqnires attention port, it is neceasary for us to
fleers;_
8lld ~ time _ . t in to all of them at once.
present soine fllibetantial jtisti..:=:;.~=.m
.
...bandling campus olfencler prob.
•
f"ICiltion for its eDdonlemeDt.
lema in ,the locaJ courts . ·is Ill. "-nii1W1Ctstk.n.
,
·GiveD t&amp;e wijle range of ac~"-greatly aztended lhroolb proAa nated above,. we qree. tivitiea tbet tbe Campus Secur~ural dela~ -...suiting in a with President Ketter that mu- ity Force milbt be callecr upon
~
...,~
significant drain. on lb..- acarce tu8l recognition, undenlt&amp;Dding, to undertake- ranging from
p_ersontlel time available. and. respect of the Campus-&amp;- routine trallfie and Waidiman
.MICF' .. c•pne•au
Hl!ncle, the problem of formal curity ForeSe and the Univer- functi0118 to deaJ.ing with rela~ aulbority ~tes addi- sity community as nrbole COil- - ti::r...,.~catad criminal
tionaJ.- ~ of unage ~ ~tute the cornerstone&amp; Of any p
whether of on-cam..e f t - - diacuseed ~- !"'Provemelit in Campus l!ecuJ'- pus or off-campUs oritin- - - . . ; . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - , - - - -· We understand that tbe local 1ty operatloni. We therefore (ContiluJecl
1, coL I)
·
Introductory Note: Last
week's Reportu auried a , _ .
story reporting the adoption by
the Faculty Senate of t-wo
reoomme11dations from' the Ad
Hoe Committee on Campus 8e'
eurity, adoption of a third
..... "'--recomme ndation from .. ~..,....,...
utt.e Cominittee ~or s-

_....wnw;,.

p_, .._,_...

_t:

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t,

...........:=.t:.'&amp;ns

J:

=

'ic:!:

G\TIEWP()JNTS ·

pemape

·-----·,._., ... - =.......
~PORTER,

_-__
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_,

_,

.

on-

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115,- 1913 -

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.,

'

, _ . , 25, ~913_

'6

'GOdfather'-

Ketter Talks
·About Role·of
Faculty Senate
f

Faculty Senate leaders met
with U/ B President Robert L.
Ketter January 17 for a general
. discussion of the roles of the
adminis~tiOf and the Se"!'te,
ways to unprove commurueation between the two, and related matters.
The President, wbQ indicated
a ''new faith" in the Senate,
also stated that problems had
arisen as a result of some recent Senate legislation, notably
. the possible delay in the construction of the Joint Library
as a result of Senate protests
about the inadequacy of the
current Library plan and po&amp;siblnnisunderstanding over the
Senate's omissi&lt;llt of an explicit
~ mention of the regional admis... sioos quota.
.
Ketter indicated that the following matters are appropriate
for Senate action~
·
1. Articulation of a clear ron• cept ·of what the baccalaureate
..degree represents.
2. Implications ok the 4rourse load.
3. Examination of grading'
practices.
4. Development of interdisciplinary programs.
5. Elimination of duplication
and overlap in academic pro:
_grams/ courses.
·
•
6. Faculty support of Summer Seasion/ MFC.
7. Assessment/evaluation of
current program&amp;. ·
8. MonitOring graduate admissions. 9. Improving faculty quality
and prpductivity.
10. Faculty role in advisement and relationship to ICC.
11. Examination of the timeshortened degree.
12. Examination of the ex. ternal degree roncept.
13. Regula~governing
independent study. . · · ·· ·
· 14. Distritiutiori rilqtii:ie- '
ments for the baccalaureate degree.
71 15.. P~grams for _credit by
exammation. .
.. .
.
16. 'The MFC-proposed· Human ScienceS BA program.
17. "The .development of a
classic81 college,'' as called for
in the SUNY Master Plan.
18. Combining the s e n i o r
high school year"with the ~'
man college year (in SUNY
Master Plan) .
19. Policies to asseas and ~ ­
design programs 'for the future.
20. Policies to improve
teaching/ research, etc.
.
21. lmplications/oppo.r tunities of regional educational efforts.
22. Establishment of ,. pri-vale research corporation by
U/B faculty lllel$ers.
28. 'The role of "disadvlintiged/minority" programs in
the undergraduate educational

(Contimu!d from PGB• 1, coL 2)

having 90mething to do and •
not enough time to do it, about
'the relation of what 81ould be
to.ymat can be. These, be n!Blized, are "Faustian ~"

can be read sa · a
"drama of . deadline," with a
't ra¥ic deadline-the hour at
which Fallstus must give up his
immortal soul as hia end of a
bad bargain with 1be devil----.
the principal dramatic action
toward which the play builds.
FaUAtas

Marlowe, who was murdend
young, 11¢erstood othe problem
of deadliiJes, of .time and its

=r~~~

Hartford Was Here

But Glen Campbolj w..n•t and' ~rbe that

-- the -~.

_,.m

A former cuttar man for Campbell • 1V vocals,. Jobn Hartford
opei1ec1 the UUAB Coffeehouse Concert
for the ~
In NOrton Friday. Said a local reviewer. His ployinc
wn fine, but the slnclnc could · have _ , ~ unsunc. •

the distinction of impregnating
English poetry with metaphysics. Marlowe seemed to
apprehend that there wasn't
time for a.ny.tbinl[ else. Alluding
to Johnson's claim that the
prospect of being hanged clears
the laculties, Fletcher suggests
that- MV!owe's sense of deadline made the incorporation of ·
metaphysics into ·ms "mighty
line" necesSity.

· ,

-a

SQc:ial Bandit

· Fletcher talked about an
earlier play by Marlowe, Tambur!aine, and that brought him
back once more ·to TM Godfather. Tamburlaine is representative of a heroic type, the
social bandit. The social bandit is a culture-bearer in only a
and one each in Music and- limited sense, a ruler who
Classics. One student's major brings order through the law of
force, never the lorce of law.
field was unknown.
Other totals, by faculties or Like Romulus, or the Godschools, were: Health Sciences, father, he creates the conditions
12,-5 in Nursing, 2 in Com- of order by committing a crime
munity Nursing, and 1 each in (" the ,c ity,founding crime" ) .
Microbiology, Biophysical Sci· ·Puzo is aware of the mythic
ence and Health ScienceS Edu- quality· of · his ·hero,· 'Fietmer
cation; Natural Sciences and notes, citing Book I's opening
Balzac ("Behind
Mathematics, 14--'0 in Com- lines from fomuie
there is a
puter Science,_ 6 in Ma~ every gieat
. .. "Corleone" is not· a
matics, and. one each.. in ·Ststis, crime")
name
'Without
·heroic
overtoDN
tics and Biology; School of
Management, 10; Engineering either. ·
and Applied Sciepces; 5--3 in
People are so f,ascinated by
Library Science and one each the idea of structure that "they
'in Engineering Science and are even willing to read TIJ,
Mechanical Engin_eerll!g:
Godfath?," Fletcher needled,
Colleges,end uruvelSlties rep- acknowledging with a laugh
resented included: Alfred Col- ' that the book does have "a kind
lege, 1; Alfred Unive.aity, 2; ot relentless low-level power."
'Brock, 3; Canisiua, 23; D'You·
ville, 5; Empire; 1; Erie ComFletcher .touched on the immunity College, 29; Genesee portance of -t iming in the dramCommunity College, 5; Griffith, a tic art, on the deadline defined
3; Hilbert, 3; Houghton, 1; Ith- by the curtain going up, on the
aca, 2; Jamestown, 4; Medaille, way deadlines define authority
. 5; McMaster, 2 Mohawk, 1; and force Writers to become
Monroe ec, 1; Niagam · Col- authors, on winning (or taklege, 3; Niagara CC; 20; Ni- ing) the iliitialiYe, 'on competiagara University, 9; Onondaga, tion and the neceSsity for eJo:.
2; R.I.T., 1; Rosary Hill, 14; quence, and a number of reSUC Brockport, 12; SUC Buf- . la.ted .theoretical jgsues, His
falo, 55; sue Fredonia, 10; audience,. which filled the utersuc Geneseo, 1; SUe PotS- ine- confines of the Faculty
dam, 2; St. Bonsvartuie, 2; St. Club's Red Room, got there
John Fisher, 1; Trocaire, ·s; only after ' one of ' lhll English
Windsor, 1; Villa Maria, 5; faculty picked the lock of the
Wells; 1; York; 1; Brookdale, Facu.!tx Club, a small crime in
1; Mercyhurst, 1; ~ 1..
a· ~t city-founding traditicJo.

251 Gr.ad Students Work at Other Cplleges
Two hundred and fifty-one
employees of other colleges and
universities were enrolled in
U/ B graduate courses last semester, a Graduate School ·survey indicates.
The Faculty of Educational
Studies had the largest contingent of these students'--124.
Thirty-five were enrolled in the
Depar.tment of Instruction, 21
in Curriculum Development,
. 21 in Highet Education, 14 in
Elementilry · Education, 7 in
Social and Philosophical Foundations, 6 · in Educational Ac;lministration, 5 in Counselor
Education and 15 in other edu-

cation fie!~.
The Faculty of Social Sciences cAnd- Administration had
the second highest total of students from other ·i nstitutions52. Thirteen were enrolled in
Speech ·Communication, 10 in
His!&lt;ley, 8 in Sociology, 4 jn
Philosophy, 4 in Anthropology,
3 in Economics, 3 in Linguistics, 3 in Psychology, and one
each in Social Scien&lt;;es, Social
WeUare, Geography and Political' Science.
'
Thirty-three were enrolled In
Arts and ·Letters : .14 in English,
8 in Gennan, 4 in French, 2 in
Spanish, 2 in the Humanities,

Campus &amp; City Indian Groups Plan.
Republic Day Observance on Friday

Believing with Indian Presi- (Jari. 26 ) in the Fillmore
dent V. V. Giri that "the at- Room of Norton.
.The event begins at 7:30p.m.
tsinment of India's freedom in
1947,"· Was an event of major with an address by N . P. Jain,
significance, "was the begin- deputy permanent representaning of the end of colonial rule tive of India to the United Nain different ·parts of the world," tions, and will be followed by
the U/ B Indilr Association and a cultural program.
Mr. Jain's t opic will be
the India Association of Buffalo will celebrate "Republic "Twenty-five Years of New In,
Day of India" tomorrow night · dia," the anniversary of which
was celebrated last August 11.
At that time, President Giri
noted that the event of 25 years
''was . unique in· .world
Foi the first time in:history~ before
and . .. had no ~­
the 'University will publish its hiatory
lei· in the political annala of
advanCe Summer Sessions any
1
country,
ancient or mod·
course listings and registration
A mighty empire had
T.
infoimation 8s an advertising em.
bowed
down
to
the indomitable
.L , uO
'/)el'U1'1gS
si&gt;~. Executive eo.:.muttee supplement
in a local newswill of an llll8l1ll9d nati.on
'
.
also ~ upon the following paper. I .
whoee 90le strength .Jay in the
Tbe..J'erscinnel Office indicatea:that the following NonleDlative agenda for the SenThe 16-p&amp;ge Insert ~ apfaith of her people, in
Teaching Professional· Staff positions are open at Slate
ate's nasi full session February pear this Satunlay, January . abiding
the power· of the spirit and of.
University at Bulfalo: ·
·
2:1, in' The Buffalo. Evening peaceful persuasion. Truth and
Director of Physical PliJnt, Maintenance AdministmAcademic Planning.
NeWB.
non-violence, the Father of our
tion, PR-4 ..
2. Committee on Resean:h &amp;
According to James H . Black- Nation had insisted, were
Facilities PliJnning Coorditwlor, Facilities Planning,
Creative Activity. ·
·
hurst, dir8ctor of Summer Ses- strong and sufficient weapons
PR-3.
.
s. Llorary Report.
sions, ''The supplement is a for a backward, poor and unAssociate Director, Laboratory Animal Facilities, PR-3.
1
1
4. Gradina~way of m.akini .Bummer Ses- organized'(g,le to win them
Assiiltant to Chairman, Computer Sciences, PR-1.
5. Minority-iiirliij(.'"
sions courses available to more their ' b'
·
of ·freedom,
For additional .infoniiation concerning .these jobs and
liti
and
·
for details ·of. NTP openings throughout the State UniVer~~"the Western New both
• po
ecoDOllllC.
sity system, consult bulletin: boards at these locations:
Tbe Office of FinsDcial Aid
Tbe Summer Seesions Office ~or?J:'::f-~~~
J. Bell Facility between D152 and Dl53; 2. Ridae Lea,
is JJmi distributing J finaDcial reports tbat appiOI:imstely hard wo&lt;k so' that India may '
Building 4236, ~ -to cafeteria; 3. Ridge Lea, Building
asslstsnce -applications for 9,000 copies of the-wpplement re-diarover .her greatness and
4280, in I)Orridor nezt to C1;-4. Health Sciences Building,
1978-74.
'
will· be ·available on campus- ID8ldt towards her- manifest
in corridor oppqsite HS 131; 5. Capen Hall, in the corridor
8tudentA
obtain forms at residence balls, at the Nor- destiny of a peacaful, prosperbetween Room 141 and the Lobby; 6. Lockwoocl, grouD&lt;i
at the Olfice,
in 218' ton aDd H aye:a- .Infomiation ous and progressive ezistence in
Door in CDl'l'idcit next to wmclina macbiQes; 7. Hay"" Hall,
deib,- in Adniis8ioDs aDd Re- the comity .of- natioils. We
Harriman.
..
in main elitrauce, ~oyer; acroas from Public Information OfCo m p I e ted appllcatloall C!Orils. and in the Mil~ Fill- can claiin, in all hinnillty, !hat, ' fioe; ·s. AciMam Hall, in ~rridor bet!nen Rooms 112 aDd
(Form U.B.) -are to be1'8tumed ~13; 9. P'!Jbr Encineering, in COiridor ll8llt to 'Room 15;
Co1lep and Summer Ses- despite peTiods of 'extreme
not later than Maid&gt; 1. 1978. sions ollices.· __. ' '
'
slleils and •strain, we h a v-e
10. ~ear Hall, 1st floOr, Hlllllling Offiq! &amp;real 11. Law
Pinancial sts~ will be .....
Scbilol, fiist floor pneral inlollll6tion board•' * 'l'be Summer Sessious' cats" emersed today as a afllble, wellqulred in all - . aDd 11.-·
108. ~ lOQ; 12. 1807 ~ Pe'i'ilonnel ~; 13.
with COID'IIil descriptions aDd knit and self-nHant nation."
Tbe story of 4bat ·emerpoce
Norton UpJon, Director-s Oftic8, Room 225; 14. Diefendorf
to Co11ep
be ~aDd
...t , _ detsiled information about
. " " are
to 1be
Ser~tlon will .
later will be the· topic of Mr. Jain's ·
Hall, in corridor ll8llt to Room 106.
vice not late. than
1. thia &amp;print; ' ' ' llJP8l' '( '-----:----:,...-.;...._~
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Summer Listings

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25,1913

Senate ~ty Repo
.
couciiiiooa._:_{_l_)_the
__

peat
_ __ bulk
___
believe
__-tbl&amp;--iaaue---lo~ber-cme-.;.tba-t_v_ine_)_;_2._Soc_i_ai_I'Bycboloo&lt;
_ _ _ _; _residenoe
_ _--hall"--cw-N-ortall-....
-

(ContiltiMd '""" -

4, col. 6)

:s
·

wide vm.ty ol 8lnJclures and . of campus .Prol&gt;lems are 1111*1· should be •ttled strictly em lbe
able to solution by such a force; basia of
attitudes as
and (2 ) outaide aaaiatanoa is • reflected ill
. . At lbe
available, riloponsive, aDd fli- same time, ""
urce -ap!active. A glance at the cwrent PIOPriate campus conatiluanA - The tzadi6ooal reports of aecurity activity fRill- ciea to poU their members and
gest that the first condition to report the results -1o the Ad~ functicm With
an ......., 011 pacification does not hold on OUl' campus; ministration aDd to lbe campus
and
given recent-e&gt;pprience aDd oommunity at 1arte as reneeand lbe __.,jn..: outside current
attitudes, the second tive of attitudes meriting con' help if . . - r y .
operatprobably
does not eitber. AI- sijieration in the planning and
ine effectl- of such a system depaDda upon two critical though one could imagine a implementation of sec uri t y
local police sub-station eatab- policy. We view" the adoption
T.,.-1-nren~t·
lishecl adjacent 1o the aiinpus ol recommendatiooa propose&lt;!
.IJ u,e~ c.o
under contract, the espenmon berein as such an exp""""on of
of local police operations on opinion on the part ol the
the campus 011 a regular basia elected representatives of the
does not seem to -be a particu- faculty.
'
.
. · "'" "b
larly deairatile alteinative.
Finally, 'With specific referBy JILL RADLER
Model B - A campus force enoe to the issue of selective
of po_lice otfioe!s, with as much arrnm., we confess that we be11,_ trainins as poesible' aDd with P,
"thhs endeavor as a company
'lbe powinl campus interest arni8 snd equipment suitable to of skeptics. Some ol us initialin film as an Important art form their training and duties. 'Ibis ly expressed outright opj&gt;oei. is. rerteeted tbia semester both is the .IIIOdel implied by the tion to tbe proposal, and the
in an increaalne variety ol · pr:opooe&lt;! "eelective anning" of others were aimp).y doubtful.
COIItBM aDd in lbe ezcel1enoe ol Campti'SSecurity Officers. 'lbe We -have come to our present
. fwilmill be-=.~.,_~Iars
who details ol.fuis proposed syatein conclusion after lbe pthering
....,..._
nimain to be ' wonq,d· oul ' It of considerable additional
Villi.ting iuslructor!l include may be that either tb1&gt;'-arms or knowledge concerning the camfilmmakers Peter J$:ubellu!. the arm&amp;-QUalilied personnel pus security problem, and after
HoUis Frampton, Stail Brali:- will be treated as a reserve, extensive d18CU88ions among
hale aDd Ed Emahwiller, all primarily out of sight and ourselves. Our confidence in
associated with the New Amer- availablt~ on caU-. Or, on the the present leadership of the
ican Cinema. Film scholar contrary, ·it msy be that such Campus Security Force has
Vladimir Petrie, recently, a -vis- personnel· will .be scattered oontnbuted importantly to the
itingterproolfe8801'V'~-~S~at among regular campus duties as modification of our initial view_...
availability and problems re- points. '!be establishment of
Harvard UniYersity aDd a par- quire.
the proposed joint' committee
ticipent in the 1972 Summer
Lt is appsrently a fact that will provide · some assurance
.Film Institute, btu! returned as armed persons---both intruders that this confidence will cona visiting profeeaor of Endish. aDd members of the University tinue to be merited through in"Filmmaking," being olfered community -= are enoountered evitable changes in personnel
for the ' firaC time at U / B, is wid( some frequency in routine over time.
being taught by Michael Stew- security operations. Sometimes
Integration with the Campu;;
srt, sn ezperimental film .artist ' the presence of arms is known Community. The Hull Report
from California. His award- or suspected when a caU for oorrectly stresses the importwinning films include The Grey security assistance. is received. snce ol clearer and more comU n n a me a b I e, Feet Form, At other times arms are simply plete formulation of the role of
Dream• Thema .and .•lntimate encoun~red in the .process of the Campus Security Force,
JournabJ.
routine patrolling and oorrec- and the need for greater inforKubelka, Frampto:n aDd tive activity. In this situation mation ·shout the extent and
Brakhage, will ach visit Jor a --where· siptificsnt 'nwnber of character of the campus securpe!iod of five ; :weeks during- arms are on campus; where ser- ity problem. We fully endorse
wliim lbey-.wlll&gt;be--cising,two .ious crimes possibly involving these general viewpoints, ana
courses. In '"'bree Film Aes- the use ol arms do occur; and we would extend them in some
thetics," each filmmaker will · where _ ~ incres.singly well- specific directions. It seems
screen snd cloeely analyze his educated and well-trained Se- that Campus Security-pressed
own films, diacuss the process curity Force is charged with in- by other duties and uncer-tain
of. their making, and comment tervening. in such instances-it of its own status-bas underon the development of.his own seems unrealistic snd unfair to standably neglected the pro!&gt;film &amp;e~~thetic.
.
.·
expect the force to function en- lems of "explaining itselr' to
"Roots of the .New American -tirely without the P!J08ibility of the campus community. The
Cinema," also taught by this "Calling · armed men. - 'Ibis is es- community hss been equally
trio, is ~gned to explore on pecially so whei'e the altema- negligent in failing to ask for
the graduate level the master tiv~resort• to -local police to explanstions, particularly ex~orks ol the personal film -art
handle serious situations- is planations ih advance of the
m the U.S. ·and to prepare stu- neither practical nor desirable. occurrence of specific and emodents for research in the ezper'lbe argument for selective tion-charged events. The publiimental film medium. During arming -of the security Force cation of the monthly security
the - r . f.rte,D filmmskem rests on the belief that the abil- reports in the Reporter is a
will be invited to participate in ity and willingness of officers partial step -toward a clarificathe course by ..,._.mg and dis- to enter into situations in which tion of problems here. However,
cussing their worlc with the stu- arms are or msy lie present much further activity is needed.
dents. Public screeliings/di&amp;- will'be greatly increased jf they Campus Security representscusaions will be held by the ar- themselves are allowed to bear tives should be conspicuously
tists on 'Iburadsy evenings.
arms. On balance we have included in all types of new· Emsbwiller, cme of America's come to accept the l')litimscy of comer orientation to lbe camleading film artists, is teacliipg this view. .We n - the report pus, including·•freshmen, EOP
" N- Fonils in COnt.!mponiry that 215
342 institUtions re- summer program students, new
Cinema" with Dr. G era I d sponding to the 1972 Intema- faculty and staf!, and new
O'Grady, &amp;MDciate professor of tionsl ASaociation ol CoUege dormitory residents. In all such
English. 'lbe latest develop- and Universitj Security diniO- contacts the status and role ol
menta aDd new directions ol tory questionnaire rep or ted ltbe Campus Security Officem
the peraonal cinema of this cen· · ·that tlieir aecurity forces were should be clearly explained,
tury are heine ezplored
authorized to use firearms (Re- and the basis for dialogue and
Professor Petrie, a member porter, November 2, 1972). We · communication with ~ to
ol the Aaldimy of n-tre, also note sn apj'iarent willing- evolving problems -liliabed.
Radio, Film and Television in ness of substantial portions of With particular reference to tbe
Be1crade, YuP&amp;via, aDd . the the University community on-auupus residents, the conauthor oileD 6oob on film and particularly students resident nection ' - - ' the. Security
t.eJeviaioao is tl!tlchinl couraes in on campus-to accept, and Force and the student guards
"Film AnaJ,Yais" aDd "Euro- even to· iiemand, a eomewbat .should be\ both more fully exEzpai.mental C i n e m a hisber level of security -protec- plained and ~tly strength(192o-1940)". In "Film Analy- tion. Although the student ened. In addition, interaction
sis", he will fOrmally sna.lyze guard program aDd other 1111p- betweel! · Security Officers aDdsome ol lbe main cinematic plementary activities may con- oounaelora, advisors, and other

funcliDD8 for lbe Campus Sec:urib' FOIIDe cauld be imagined.
We ilistiniUllb two significant

~

Film G •
·Still
TYJWlnD

Cen

of

Organizational Behavior; Inter- tiona in ~ to ~
vention Method a; (Hunt, problem ailuationa ~
Bunker) ; 3. Psychology of vio- lutel.v essential. Jt may be tbal lence · (Solkoff); 4. Dr u e s the limited ataf! aDd IIIUidple
(Gale, Gahagan ). 5. Crlaia In- problems confronted by CUI- -·
tervention (Tullrin, Hoff) .
pus Security hawo ..Weed Ia
B. Sociolo~JY : 1. Criminology sn overempbaeia em routine apo
snd Deviance (Ford); 2. Law erations rather~ .., the and Society (Levine and luticin ol known. cbroolc prabFord).
·
lema so Ions as time~ do
C. Policy ,Sciences CoMOrt- not arise.
'
ium (Tho m as, Bunke r,
'lbe presence of - _ • Zweig) .
the campus aDd in h ,._ .
D. Community P sych(atry dence halls is apparently ..U
(Zusman).
known to Cam~ Seeurlty OfE. Social Welfare S c.h o o I fice'm and is a very real 8CIUIW
(·Bloom, Alcabes).
of danger to campus radcllatL
F . Law School (Her in an This situation continues delplee
Schwartz, Richard Schwartz) .
a very explicit state law wlilcb
-G. Office of Urban Affairs prohibits the preeence ol fire.
(Frank Corbett).
arms on campus aDd p,_.a,.
H. Engwuing Applied to criminal sanctions for vlolaSocial Problems (NSF P ro- thtioensA.dminis~e.~y--~-~
ject).
.........,.. auu . . . .,..
I. Education (Herbert Fos- curity Force caU· the au.ntkla
ter ).
of the campus to the flrarml
J . The Colkges (College Z, law snd other rules problbitiq
Law and Society College).
weapons; that they lliiDOIID08 a
K. School of Nursing (Psy- policyofvisorousenfo-t;
chiatric NUnJing Program, Get- and o!hst they use their beat
ty).
- efforts to do just !hal
L. Political Science (HalperWe also sugsest that the CUI'in, Zais) .
rent monthly campus security
These groups share common •report ·be supplemented widl a
intereeta related to security notation rewoaline the number
problems, and oould involve the of total incidents of.all ~
Campus Security Foroe in some in which the pn!llellCe of clulaspect of their teaching and re- gerous weapons was ol.erwd.
oearch programs. Membem of The current report !isla "poathe Hull Committee msy be session of liiearms aDd ~
able to identify still others, and ons" whan such is the cmly ofshould be helpful in identifying fense, whereas the ~ of
vehicles through which Campus weapons is priJ:!Iari}y &amp;MDciated
Security can ~ invol~ed in wi~ other'lioieurity problems.
teaching and research programs It would assist the Uniwonity
throughout the University.
oommunity at understandlne
The recommended joint com- the extent of the wea=robmittee of the Faculty Senate lem if it were
caUy
snd &lt;the Professions! Staff Sen- enumerated in lbe report.
aU! can also make an important
oontribution to mutual understanding between the Security
B, col. 6)
Force and -the campus oommun- (Contimud from ity. Such a joint oommittee inBI by AUIIUtc Herbin, an oncan provide a permanent bssis oemble
of oeometrlc painliDp
fo r;. contact between these bod- abown for tlie first time in an
ies snd the Campus Security American mwoeum, th""''h F..._ .
Office. The committee should ruary 18. Hat~~~ Ho/mtUUl: The
be charged to maintain a oontinuous overview of the secur- ruary 25. Pau'f'W:.,.ntel:f Poimity problem on the campus snd ing•. wqrb 1ituated toward the
the various attempts to deal -tic, romantic end of the earwith it, and should report peri- rent realiat acale, throudl Fobodicslly on the success of var- ruary 18. Albright-Knox Art Golious approaches .that may have lery, ·1285 Elmwood AWDue.
been attempted. We do not
suggest, of course, that the com- NOTICES
mittee would attempt to manage or interfere in any direct
way with Campus Security operations. However, the committee would serve both as sn interprerer of security activity to
its constituents and the campus
at large, snd conversely as a
reflection of campus opinion
for the benefit and information
of the Security Office.
Specific Aspects of a Resithntial CampUJJ. '!'be presence
of a large group ol student residents on tbe campus, aDd the
intrusion ol visitora and outsidem into this society on an
irregular basis, presents certain
critical snd distinct problems.
'We feel that the use of student
guards_and of other dormitory
monitoring devices has been
fruitful, and we hope, as noted
above, that these activities will
be extended and strengtheoed.
Ai. ·the same time, it .._.,.
that there msy be certain types
of problems that are · not well
met by
m:pedient. Therefore, "" would urce a somewhat

Communique- .

~~= =~· ~~ ~·

this

=:.:.::..~ ~; ~~this~W:,S::: =/=,.,:,::u~:!: =-=~

~ ~ Cinema
(1~19io)• Petiic aDd his

:.-'::

tlltion ol tile beaic camjlus force to-one' basis· sbould be m:- dance hall oecurity. One obviwill oocur in the Mar future. P&amp;Dded. We vlsuslize the estal&gt;- ous suneatioo ia the cr.tion
atudenCa will trace the main Hence,. proposals to inerease liahment of he.. for infonnal (with Wbatev. delree of b- ·
avut-prde tnflds in EuropMD the effectl- ol the ~t aDd direct OOillaCt &amp;MUll these mality) ol a .-~act poap ol
aDd AiDeriam cinema.
force seem worthy of COilllidel'- per!IOil8, not simply lbe distri· ~ ball ollcen who
All these COWIIe8 are being ation.
·
bution ol ,_,.nda aDd re- milbt 'he a8leolecl aDd tnm.l
4hroueh the Deparlment
It has been qpatad In a - poria. .•
.in order to provide 1IUdcuJuty
ol BDciWL
number ol qusrtira -that relet-·
With particular reapect to sympathetic boot e6ctiwl aaD~ n-tre aDd Film," enda be held ClDilCIIIDiDe sny' lbe faculty, _olfer below a tro1 of~ hall ~.
taUiht by Dr. 'lbomas K.v- ~ ;;change in '.University policiea~ putjal U. ol -semlc 'IIIIi~ ~tiaa of ba8a Jlliaar..
~ ..x:lata tJ!Of-.or of with resPect to the ~ 8e- and individuals work I D I m · ,fty puupe aDd ill llldl
Frax:b, will coaaider theatre curity Force, aDd particulady c:bely mlalilld to major a cadre ~ ...,......_
aDd film a tWo dlffenmt media the policy of aelacllwo arminj. prahlemo aDd aalivitielo ol tile ly clemllble.
•
aDd «apare ocmmoo tlwmtlc ·We do not eadorae· tile notioD · Campus Securi!;y l!'orce.
In adclitiae to. or • put ol
e!ema1tJi aDd their treatmeat in that tile Ac!mlam..tiaa apoa- . A. l'~: 1. OommuD- .ueh a poap, lbe 811 hilc .taeach medium.
sor such ........ gar do, lft . ~ty I'Qi:holoO 1'ropmD (I.- ' lioalnl ot; a8laln ID ~

.n-

�works by Bach, Schubert; Bralima,
Faure and "Copland. Presented by
the U/ B "Department ot Music.
UUAI fJLM••

The Red Sun (Young), Conference Theatre. ·Norton, check
Ybowcase for times. Adm.iuion
charge.

-~
Y~ITY

. --·-·""'!&gt;'' .

IASKEtiALL• ·

- U/B vo. Ni.apnl, Erie Com- munity College, s:·so p.m.
COHCHT•

Creative Auociata · RecittJl W ;
A.mrod Cbodoo on clar-

featuring

:~ilnn1:.!fJ L~~~~

Dr. Jobn P. Sullivan, U/ B provos.t for the Faculty of Arts and
Letters. will discuss women and
minority recnritment and ...the Fac-

aid Sotrer, trumpet; "Stephen ·
Manes, piano; Suzanne Thomas,
harp; I&gt;emUo Kahle, percuuion,
Baini' Reci.t al HaU;- 8:30 p.m.
The bee concert will include
works by Stiller, Martino, Smith,

FM,' i0:05 p.m.

of Music. -

U/ 1 AITS FOIUM

:JtlY~tni*!~G!:srtZ W:~v_
MONDAY-29

Tf

...

=~· ~ur.r., '¥11sB~
·
,

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                    <text>·~~~~~~~~=:~~~Faculty Senate Defers
S·elective Arms Stand~
'The issue of~security,

&amp;&gt;mmlttee with . _ t to the

--.-------~~~~~--~~------~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~ - ~~
~pu ~ ~ria~~e~~~Foroe, advocated in a i'llPOrt on· vestiptors of the Campua Beinternal security accepted by
PR!O!ident Robert L Ketter in
October, preoocupied the Faculty Senate at a continuation of
its December meeting, January
16. After more than an hour of
debate, the bQdy overwhelmingly endorsed establishment of a
joint standing committee on
security, among o the.- proposals, but deferred a stand on
othe principle of selective anning until more information is
pthered by the so-called Hull
Subcommittee on S.el e c t i v e
Arming.

curity Force."
A further recommendation
calling for sicnificant i""""""'8
and improvement ("on the order of doubling") in the personnel, facilities and equipment
o( the Camp1111 a.curil¥ J.l'ooDe
was added to the reaolution.
'The recommendations were
hasedby
theon"~-~~~sven-ownpageAdreport
.,.,....~
I Hoc
Committee on the Campua Becurity Report, chaired by Prolessor Lee E . Preston (Management) .
Debate on the IIICIIrity 11180lution centered on the arming
issue.
Professor George Hoc:bfield
(English) tried UlliiiCCeEfully
to substitute for the arming
psragrspb a reaolution calling
on President Ketter to rid the
campus of all· "illepllf beld
weapons." He-~. aqued that
campus police are a well-orpnir.ed, long established p~
group on this campus wbo bave
been demandin' arms for )!ears.
Under _the previOUS administrslion, Hochfield . said, the campus atmosphere was such that
arming was unthinkable. But
times bave changed, be said,
and anning at this time ia a
way to Jt!l the campus poliCe
"off the President's back" without significantly disturbins
other campus groups. More file
power is a cheap answer to the
res! key issue of campus aecurity, be . said. He also exP"'ll""'d. Cl&gt;ncem tbat no aecurily report which baa a~
on caml'}ll ao far bas produced
any evtdence that anning will
~~ in sreater-IIICIIrity. 'The
~ ieiiiKiO ·foo: ~· II Ill

Before the Senate was the
following resolution endorsed
by the Executive Committee:
"WHEREAS, OUI urban
campus is inevitably subject to
continuing problems of crime
and violence; and,
"WHEREAS, there are serious problems of communicalion, confidence and mutual understanding between the severa! elements of othe campus
community and the Security
Force . . .
• "THEREFORE, Be It Resolved:
1. 'That the Faculty Senate
recommends that a muimum
elfort be made to integrate the
Campus SecUiity Force into the
general life of the campus, specifically to include the academic
program of the University.
2. 'That the Faculty Senate
that ti&gt;ere be es~~~~bt a . ' Di: :Eli Sliefter, asaociate pro- ciate professor of geological recommends
tablished a joint standing comelectl'Oa mi""*"'P' f_,. of pharmaceutics, is aciences, and Dr. Carel J. Van mittee of the Faculty Senate
capelileo of. 120,000 ~- studying medicatio!"' which are Oss, professor of microbio\OJY. IIJII;I .Ib&lt;l Professional Staff-sen:
lions. eompiete' with ita own ued to~~~ ~ ~ IJl!IDY of lb&lt;l Vni- ate, and to include student
~- themlero,
_" · &lt;!~ :•··,•. , .• •,:~· · • · ·. vliniity'~ d t sctpHnes have members, charged with the con-;;
-..::::-·lila'il its iirut.to
·H..O,. laSt a particul!ir medi- viewechome of ~ videotaped . linuins overvi- of the camJi;
··
~·•• &lt;llllillf.l-..ii!U.Jilllf-~~ ~~~of the JDic!to'• Pus oe·c u-~'1 ty~ &lt;..--.o
robiems.
· · ....., .:&amp;.ii
ot't&amp; 1acur1ty
~~~~ eiif' Uj&gt;OD i'UCb.:taCfofi iiUiie ~~tiona.• - ·•·
""f'!-~~ .otl&amp;!r ~of. the.pru.br tab- ·
tb~ the igk:fo- r43:"Thhlt""CIIntitlaent liPOD'~ .JO.a!;._l&amp;E._a.liiiliiiliir-·~·"'.
~ .,jppained that al- lel Tbe .nucioecope provides SCOPe were ·approp,rj a t ed implementation of each of -the is also likely to ft!IIU!t"fn ~
tbouch there ..., ...,..,..a) eJec. a detailed look at tboee coat- · through tbe New Yon State foregoing~recommeDdations, the sure for Jleneral arming, Hoob.tron ~ in this ..:..... ings. ·
.
.
Science and Tecluiology Foun- · Faculty Senate endorse the f~eld said, citing the . - . t ex- ·
the .,_bare ·ia unique bOUuae
-Other UIB acieptists current- iliobon and a ~r&amp;BI from the recommendation of the Hull (Conlimud on 2, coL ·6) .
of itlli......,.;., ability. "lt·is the ly uins tbe microscope include Foro Motor Company.

UIB's Powerful Electfdn~Mii:roscope
-Is First offts Kind i'! Buffalo Area

- ... ·~:~ : .. ~; ;~;~~;.:;~~i~~ii~~::!~~~~~,~-~~, asso::UU.,.

~

Gilly

·uurm:oraw

ouch....,._

et any-in-

!ltilalion
be.tweeu
~
imd Clewland
__...._
of examfnins bulk ~ - '

"R o u t i n e examination of
specimens up to ODe cubic inCh,
with little or no special prepsrations, at' ~ JDIII!lification,

=.::t;'t~;
pbyaiail and natural science re-

Ketter -&amp; _Review Board
OK 149of182Actions

'The President and the ~i- _ was later Withdrawn by the dedent's Board 011 F8CIIIty Ap- partment and Faculty. 'The
SOartl and the President ilgreed
A-toAIIDioc:ipiiMo '
· Tentira · appro\&gt;ed 149 of 182 tch :eject 17 cases at the asaoAvailable for uae by all disci- . actions recominended Jjy Facul- ciate professor level; they displines ilt lhe University, the "- du:'/' 1971 72 Both tbe •~reed on dY with the Presi•
supplies mechanical Board~
Presid-ent
' ___. cto ~
~
informatioq re""'~ dent approving three acl:ions _
defOnnaaon, frac- ~~.; ~.:'':tlti~ ~~
tru!"~ =:ed.retnre and 0 t be r mech8iiical th ,___,_~ '-+:nw ,
.
.•
totsl of •n acti"ons at ·~- .
~ of-Yarious materials.
&amp;z.t'h:;j~.!:;j le:;Lof prof~ were appro~
One ezpojdment inwiW!S cut- and overriding fOUI that the by tbe Board and the Presiting _ . within the micro- Board bad rejecte&lt;J. ' ·
. dent, wbile eight were rejected
ecope. While the cuttins is vi&amp;'The Jarsest nuinber of aC: J&gt;y ~both, with one being apible C1ll a television screen. it is tiona was taken. at - the associ- prQYed by the Board and rebeinf reconled aimulteneoulily ate profeasor level, including: jecteil by the President and anon Wdeotape.
seven appointments with ten- other reJected by the Board and 1be behavior of the- metsl ure; 69 promotions 'P!ilh ten- approved by the PresidenL
CIID th1111 be cilleenecl both dur- ure; one promotion without ten, Tbe Board and the President
ins the acWal cutting process ure and -the lr&amp;Biins. of tenure agreed on: the greJlting of one
and ........., to classes.at a later to 18 wbo were already associ-. distinguished profilciaorship; the ·
data.
ate prolessors. • One tabled caae. granting of one diBtingnisbed
Dr. Ramallupm aaid that, in
aervice professorship; the namrelated f~X~J8rimeots, drips fmm
'
'-ing of fOUI prof190r11 emeritus; .
·a machined pieoe of meta1 are
the appointment of six visitins ·
obaerved to evaluate the elfec&amp;
professom; two promotioua widi
t l - - of certain ~ .
Governor, Nelson Rockefel- tenuie .to aasiatant ~
1~. ''Uee"ilf ~ lub- ler's reeorcf$8.88 billion budget .ships; and t&amp; srantins of tan. riciUltll will ..Wt m Cleaner • propolal f&lt;&gt;&lt; fiscal ~74 pre- ure to llix 8lliiiJCiata libmrians
"ancl.aharper chip~ and -ted .tcrthe ~-TW,;: and..one aasistant librarian:
becala of the biih poooer of day includes $12.361 "million
'The six-member Boeril io admqnlflcatloo, !hC!ile .~- for '_.tiona and $66.6 · mil- . viaoly to tbe Preaident and ~~p­
ialb· are eaily distingulah' lion for aalaries at UIB; ·bcith .:C~"':!..!f..tbim from 81aties·
able,• be aaid.
•
_
up slisbUy from last yiar. ·
by the F...wty
In addition to iiB VJdeotape
. R""""'nwvled f&lt;&gt;&lt; conatnac- Senate Eucutive Committee.
abllitiee, the "easy to ~ · tion Is 19".2 JniUion ti&gt; start four The- Board reviawo oaly- e...
~ Is ~
~ · addltioaal projecla on the Am- .cases wbich inwl¥e the. _lriiDt- •
imqe or tt....e m...........,_ bent ~
.m,. of 11mue or J11....cioD or
.......,&amp;lil1, ~ "Dr. RaMiaafna Is a , ~ for "'!pPofntnwrt to the fall .....,_. .
a.linpm adiJa, u ~ ~ fuudinli lor the main libmry - : ~ 'l1lelr ...... and
tine.•
~
~ to Cll8t S28.7 I
' + laljon to thi .....
--;
., dent tHe ...............
Olllllr ~ - - ...
· 'lbe ,.,..,.,.,. wlll~1D . abd ,.
- h!lm lit tha ...
u.n..tv- ......... the ~ flill . . . . .-1 ....... putaad8lad ~-"

aeareh. Dr.

Ra

n

·-

ma ngsm

881"d

•

po~ts, PromotiOiis a ii d

==:"with
pnlins-""'

n!:ib:'t'ii:

·Rocky's Bud.,.et·

::::=.

"

-_clsming-up Chrjatnws

-- ..

...
.._... a..J, .............. "' .. - Clull"' .....
~_..a,... Cliolllil.--"' 1M ..................
uta

C........_,.._.._....,..........,.....,

...................
......to&amp;' ..................
- .... ,.., .....
--~

.... 7.·.. . ., 10,111111---

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

�1~ " 18, ~913

Fourteen

Graduations
Scheduled

�v

~

J - , 18,)973

Sigriifi:¢261! DrQp it). Ori~e Noted , Fewer SUNY Grad Centers
Iri Security IWP&lt;?~ ~~ N~~~mb~r ., -~~~~~t;~v~?u':!~?! &lt;- ~

~run,. Investigation continu: ' perpetrator (s ) left 'a note ading-jnto tlie poosible appreben- vising, "lock your door." Finsion ofotheni-involved.
gerprint analysis of the note
111~./72. Campi,s Security has provided Campus Security
reported the arrest of 'Robert with latent fingerprints, and 1t
B. Jbnes, student,. 1002 Tower is hoped that a successful conHail, on a charge of criminal elusion to this esse will be
possession of· stolen property. forthcoming. Investigation conTbe charges were placed af~r tinuing. .
a search warrant was executed
11/30172. CampUl! Security
on tbe premises of Mr. Jones' Specialist Gerald Denny reroom in Tower Hail. The ar- ported tbe arrest of Margaret
rest result-ed in the recovery of Clark, non-student, 338 Bryant
approlimately $1200 in report- · street, Buffalo, N .Y., on the
ed stolen property. Mr. Jones, charge of forgery, 2nd degree.
when arrested by Campus Se- Invest i g a t i o n by Specialcurity, was found to have in ist Denny revealed that the
his possession a suspected dan- defendant aiiegedly obtained a
gerous drug. Additional charge fraudulent SUNY/ Buffalo idenof possession of a dangerous tification card and used same
drug was layed. Case closed, to open a checking account at
judicial processing ~ding.
the ?)farine Midland Bank,
1112217?-. _ Campus ·Security Elmwood Office. The fra.uduOfficers William Suraf and Don- lent checks were aiiegedly
·aid Jaeger reported the arrest . passed here at the Bookstore
of Haywood Thompson, non- and at other establishments.
student, 229 Fergusop Street, Case closed, judicial processing
Bu1falo,~.Y., on tbe charge of ~d~g.
.·
.
.
un&amp;)lthorized •.use :of- a m_otor
J?urin~ :~ '!'On~ !lf .N~vem~~-. : -¥tei', "'!':"11 : ~~: .ber_• var1o~ - md1V1d~.· had
he ,.:fo~ ~)n~on; · their ·. purses .and/or · ~$
of "'~ted -~; ~ stolen; For tl_le niont1;&gt;· of- No#I addi~~ 'ChSrge· of, Cfl'!'-" .veniber, 15 ~mid mc1dents
irial possesslon of- a ~gerous of purse or wallet tbefts, w1tp
drug was pfaced_ a~t Mr. a cash value of $455.06, were
Thompson. The md1V1dual at- recorded. Also reported were
temp~ to avoid apprehension 2 incidents o! theft of d~tal
!'I'd his.attempt to flee feS!1lted treatment eqwpment, !?tal valm a property damage a~de~t ue. $263.50; an electriC type.
on "!""PUS. The vehicle m wr1ter valued at $180; and a
question . had not yet beeu..Jll!- Rolex watch valued at $300.
j'lorte'd stolen and investigation Investigations into all of these
b;y ,f.l!is.JJ!!partment result.:&lt;~ in matteJ"Swi!J be_ continued. Camthe laWful return to the nght- pus Secunty, m an attempt to
ful owner. Case closed, judicial solve this problem, has inprocessing pending.
creased foot patrols ~th uniII/26~7?,. A student re&gt;!!iding
formed· arid ·non·- 'unif'?rm¢•
in' ;t:lei)len~ · u~n '.re'p&lt;irted: tbe Students have also beeli uSed
~ -:'""'""......, 'a;e.~.,.; ~vif91· no&amp;~~b1e entrY. &lt;?f in an '!ttempt to curf:ail what
deloljl!_
i.t M:.Rlhllf,., bal£
l
~, IUlll.lh!l~t:~s!,vlll'l: %J:)'e~~edj,lo ~ ,a~~'P'11i ,!ll,.!!

Campus crime during November 1972· dropPed significantly from November- 1971,
th€ Campus Security Office re..
po....
·
According to Security, there
were 70 crimes and five arrests
this November compared to
143 crimes and 11 arrests· in
1971.
·
Selected blotter reports follow:
II/1172. A female non-student ·reported that sbe was accosted by a male in the Quarry
Lot and that the male exposed
himself. Investigation into this
incident resulted in the appreh¥1sion of a non-student by
Campus Security Officer James
Little. However, tbe comptsinant refused to prosecute after i~
became known that the individuaJ involved in the incident was
presently being treated by the
psychiatry unit at Veterans
Hospi!al. The individual, a.
Vietnam .reteran, repo~ly
!'as severe problems and 18 ~
mg ~ted at ~e~ Hosp1~- His PBYch!a~t, was ·advised of ~ UICldent. e&amp;se
closed, foiiow-up to be made.
1~18172. Tbeni Wll!' an expiOSlon of a bomb outsid~ S~rman Hail Annex. Investigation
is ~ conducted by &lt;;:ampus
Security, the. State Poli!"', tbe
~I and the ~alo rolice Department. Initially, 1t was 1;&gt;elieved that two bombs were mvolv.eduin ,the·incidel&gt;t and tluit
ona..,w....,.aafd¥- ~l'&amp;teil-:t;&gt;.Y:
the,~ulJalo Poli\1!" Department
Bomb Squad at tl'ie scene. However,. further investigation has
revealed that the .device was
n- -•'-r !ban, .....o

.-h·""'

~

ct.) ~' ::Pr.eBeD.uy,:--Qu8,'~'~At~8to1),a.4tl.

the ' FBI I !1!1&lt;1J!Y,·' Wasltinll-.
!Qn, D.C., is coniluctlng
tho-.
rough and exact laboratory examinapol) ~Qf tbe undetonated
device ahd various eviderice
picked up at the scene. Investigation into this incident is continumg.
.
II/12172. A student residing.
in Clement Hail reported that
at approximately 12:30 a.m., he
was assaulted in tbe elevator of
Clement Hail by two unknown
males who beat him about the
bead, face and hack causing not
only black apd . biM marks but

a_

'·'

·

0
2
3
0

. 0

~

1

2
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1
2

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12
26
l

0
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0

0
11

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3
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9
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19

7
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32
9

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294
62
66
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19
155

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Office Shifted

1
13
19

.26

1
0

1,672
0
0

The. Olllce of Inslitutioaal
Research. incJudillg Assistant
Vice PreSident Charles Jelfr.ey,
ita directpr, has been trans- .
ferred liOIII the Oftice, of• the
Vice J&gt;residllilt (Qf Aca,dimi!i
Alfairs to 1he ~ .ot the. Executive Vice President . •.
·'

•

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1

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12,635

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0

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4

2

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5
0

6
25
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'·~ .

Dr. ·Albert

·-n.e

ve ·

,

24

omcen

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72
28
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individual aiiegedly hit - u.e
second student over tho! 'head
With a wine bottle -causing a
rather severe head laceration
req).liring slitct-, wli e n:. he
went to tbe aid ol. the flrllt student. Invealip.tioo into :this
incident resulted in the arrest
. a few days later of Ronald
Woods, student, Clement Hall,
who was cbarpd with .-ult,
2nd degrM. A 8Mrdl incidental
to the a.-t by 'Calnpus Security
~ KliCker and
Michael Luockino resulted in
an additional cbarie of crimi1181 possession ol. a dangerous
drug. Relative to Mr. Woods,
case cbed, judicial processing

I;

'..

Oct.
Cumu'-tive '72
Total•
Total
22
8

Nov.

'72
Total
11
0
2
12

s=~ · ,;" · tt~et'.fifili.
Boor of :clement. - Ar1 iml1noWn

Somit, emcutive vice preaidept,
cbs int,erplay .b!&gt;t,.een
tbe Olllce of Institutional ReSMrdl and ·tbe Olllce of Mant Informati
:=".!nit
desirableontbat '

' . · · ·.

.,....rb'

. ~on of Actlvltl•

=

two~ war~togeib!'r_

,-ndiVic!'U&amp;ih.

C.,._: SUNY/auFFALO, lllonth: NOVDIIIEJI, Academic Y•r. 1172·13
Recove111d: $12'1l0. Stolen C.rw bcovered: 1 •

V~lue

con~ f!Il~~f,~.'.~
' c~"'fiilli•

.to

r-e~

UNIVERSITY SECURITY
MONTHLY CONSOUDATEO, CUMULAnYE REPORT

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only one or two •graduate centell! in the future, Executive
Vice President Albert Sorilit
told the Professional Staff Sen· ate (PSS). at its meeting January 4.
.
But, said Somit, who was
appearing before the group in
place of President Robert L.
Ketter, tbe best evidence of tile
State's commitment to graduate education at U / B is its
promise of the new $650 million campus in Amherst.
Tbat campus, Somit said,
should be completed by late
1979 or 1980, witn a major portion slated for occupancy by
1976-77.
The Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence will move to Amherst by. September of this.
year, Somit ssid, with the first
complex of dormitories also
slated to open at tliat time.
U/ B's bud~et request for
1973-74, So=t indicated, ineludeS no new program increases, only. a workload increase of about five per cent.
The new budget, Somit said,
will begin to restore previous
budget reductions.
So mit introduced E. W.
Doty, vice president for operations and systems who outlined
for Senators the background of
the establishment of PR ranks
for non-teaching professional
(NTP) employees and the various mechanisms for appeal of

arate statement this issue).
According to Doty, the State
Division of tbe Budget has said
that it will not review for final
decision reclaasificatlon of
NTP positionS until a SUNYwide system of job claasification is adopted. As ·a result, a
point-factor comparison systern has been developed in
SUNY, and approved with
some modifications by tbe Division of the Budget on an experimental basis for one year.
In order for the President to
have information on which to
make a .!:!'OOf!lllleRdation on a
reclassification appeal, it is
necessary that job descriptions
be completed by tile NTP staff.
Docy wiii present a schedule of
completion dates for deacriptions at the next SPA meeting
with the President. Doty noted
that SUNY Central is also
working on a schedule for tbe
completion of generic job descriptions, and that the U / B
schedule should be compatible
with theirs.
· In other business, PSS Chairman Allen Kuntz announced
that classification of an NTP
in the category of management
confidential does not a1fect the
staff person's membership in
the Senate organization and
that a number of vice presidents...will- be asked to attend
future PSS meetings to discuss
developments in tbeir areas
·

Pettigrew; Billings_Wil! . _. .. ...
open RaCism Conference
_

· Harvard social ~chologist ' sponsored jointly by the Stu•
Thomas·:P,'Pettilir.,., ·ana Nevi dent ·AssociatiOn, t])e ' UniverYork Uitiversity · politics pro- sity, and the Committee for tbe
• fessor
Charles Billings will key- Fonnation of an Institute oii
note the University-wide Con- Race Relations.
ference on Institutional Racism,
Conference FacilitatorS are:
to be held in Norton on Febru- James Bowman, Counselor Edary 7.
u c a t ion Graduate StUdent;
Professor Pettigrew will pre- Philip Brogadir, Department of
Psychiatry; Thelma Brown,
=~;·i,~.~f:O~fi: Counselor
Education Graduate
ings will discuss '"'l&gt;e Effects Student; B a .r bar a 'Benedict
of Racism on the Political Sys- Bunker, Department of Psy- .
tem: Urban Politics." Follow- chology; Ronald Bll!TOW8, Ray- ·
ing the keynote addresses, reac- mond DYe, Faith Hiller, Jim
tion will be provided by Arthur James, Peter Lebenhaum, Jim
0 . Eve, State Assen!blyman MacKenzie, Gerry • Thorner,
from Bulfalo'6 143rd Assembly Student Counseling Center;
District, and Jesse Er. Nash, ~ore Mills, professor'-SoU/B lecturer in social, philo- Clology; AhmaJ Shareef, J..m111
sophical and historical founda- Counselor; VA Hospital; Martio~(education). ilyn Tap p, Psychology GradUruversitx. PreSident ~ uate Student; Loretta Williams,
.L. Ketter will ·o~· the Confer- Graduate Student, SocioiOiYence with ""'looming remarks
at 9 :15 ·a .m: The ·opening:key,
note session is scheduled for
the Fillmore Room:
Fifteen indivjdual worbhope

·=:, ':,"'J:.,~.,;!':,~
conduct
on the
will
workshops
foiiowing · topics:

· {1-2:30 p.m.) Ra~-Ethnic
Myths and Ster-eotypes, Conference Tbeatre; EducatiOn in
Miseil Ethnic - Racial Classrooms an4 'Depar1menta; 233
Norton; Languqe 11Ji111 Communication Among Racial Minoritii!o, !?31 Norton; The Psychology of Racism, 330 Norton;
Racism and the Health Sci- '
enceo, 337 Norton.
(2:30-4 p.m.) Racism, the
Media and Entertainment, Conference Tb.tre, Norton; RaCism and the Welfare System,
337 Norton; Racism and Em~~~t, 330 Nodo!!i The
J?oiitiau&gt;f Racism, 233 NOrUIII;
Racism aDd Houaing, 231 Norton.
(U:30
Racism and
the Legal
233 N""!&gt;5
:I'be Ecobomii:s. ~ _,
Norton; Our Colar-C.Mte...Bo-daty, 337 Nortoo; The Realitiea ol. Genocide, Cjlnference
'Ibeatre, Norton; Race and In-

sm.)

~
231.~·11"•"-""'-L
'":
4 'fie....~ ~
~

Library Faculty ·
Laud.Bobinski
-.n,.; faeulty ol. tbe Ual-.ity

Libraries have expr-.1 tllefr
eateem for tbe perfarm..

-''hilh

ance of Or.

Georae Bo6faald •

acting director o1. u~
Libnalies" by
ap..
proving the followiJII
:
"Tbat tbe faeu)ty ol.
sity Llbrariea OOIII1DIIId ....
ezpNM ita gratitude to Dr.
George Bobinldd far
acting director of tbe
sity Librariee In addltioo to his
other asslcnmants.
"Furthk. . that it be DOled
that Dr. 'BObinald'a ..W. curred during a ·time ol. ~
staff I"!Wtb 111111 r
'pn•t .
which i-ec!ulrecl ~
effort by hlm.
-•
'Turtber, that approval ol.
this motion 1!11 001111DUDicatilll
to, President KetW and tile
- o f the University Qwnmun:.
ity by laUe.- and throulh ....
Unn,.nfty madia.•
-•
Dr. . BoltiDiti, deu ol . .
8choDl of Informlftioa .... Library Studlae. ......... IICtiD&amp;

"D8!1""'::t.

um--

....a. ..
unn..

diJeC:tor ., tilirariee , _

~

.,~ ~~~

�~~ 18,1973

~

4·

School Law Clliric Helps Protect ·Five Staff Mem~ Named
To PromotU}n Rf!l)iew Panel
Impo~t Area of Minors' Rights
status
~-~ mC
...011!!111

8 17 PATRICIA WARD
~ IU8pl!llded f " " - than tive Educational Services. City
BIEDERMAN
live ac:hool &lt;Mya be pven c:bikben have DO IIUCh B@!DCY·
hMriDg ~ iDfnldioas
- · Many diacipilne problemS can
to - t court ~ from. ru:.ming ~
~ be llaoed to learning disabili.
childre ba
•
I
hair students "- D--&gt;-- suspects. and
.................
~ ':"";rotec:tior!' f.,: ~~ Without i;.U..,"~ Such children
brutal ~ tbe right to tbe required hMriDga. Wl:al simply dropped ouL
tbeir birtlld1ly money hom such ..,_ were broulh~«&gt; lbe
Pueata often come to .tbe
pandparenta, and tbe lilbt to Clinic, it advisOO tbe ..,boola Clinic with problems related
obtain - - t for VD with- involved of d&gt;e students' rights to compulaory aebool attendout parental permiaaioa.
and hear in g.s _ , held. ·anc:e. State law requires only
One ....,_ of tbia inc!eas~ tbe Clinic baa been
that parents provide lbeir chiliniiY important field of-chil- receivillg more cases with oub-· dren w it h a "suhatantially
dren's n.hts Is acbool law. To stantive iJDplicatiOos. "L o n g equivalen~ program" to the
.n.. Mailenl8 pracdl:al exper- hair and dreea are pretty much public acbools. This allows parre...,. in the lair relalinlto pub- dead ~" .Rc.enherg aays, eats CODSiderable freedom of
lie ~ U/B ataffa a but free speech cases involvillg cboice, including home tutoring
Sdlaol Law Clinic as part of underground
still under certain circumstsncee.
lbe.........., ewricuhnn of tbe come up ~ sa- Ralenberg personally reprePaaull;y of Law and Jurisprud- lulea and locke&lt; aearcbes have seated parents who chose to
-.
, al8o fisured in recent decisions. send the i r children to tbe
DBvilled primaril)o aa· an in- Edilcati!m law is changing 1111&gt;- BUILD Freedom School in
struclional deviee, tbe Clinic idly in~ areas as new cJe. their recent, ultimately sucal8o perfonns a ~ty ciiuons tile beiDg made, Rosen- cesaful struggle with tbe Bufsemca function. It aervea aa an - berg
According to re- falo Board of Education. Failln~t lepl aid apncy cent
·
by the State Com- ure to provide an alternative
for
"vidual&amp; with J8pl piob- miaaioner of EdUcation:
pnigram weekens tbe legal P&lt;&gt;. _ relalinl to lbe public
• a student may~ tbe sition of those parents who
ad&gt;oola, ezplains directl;lr Nor- option not to sidiite tbe- flag. siniply k e e p lbeir ·children
man 8. Rmenherg, a lectwer in However, be doea bOt haV.. the home from ·schOol to avoid
law and jurisprudence.
right to remain ,_ted durin
racial integratioo, Rosenberg
Laat year, tbe CliniC handled the pledge; he must eitber
says. A number of cQes against
aome 100 acbool-related prob- silently or leave the room.
such parents have recently been
lema broulht to it by students, ,
• ·a principal may search a thrown out of BulJalo Courts
parents, and teechera. Each student's loCker if he has rea- on technicalities, but tbe educase waa Jiwn to 0111! of tbe son to believe it contains illegal cation law is explicit on the
15 students enrolled in the . drugs.
matter.
courae. Tbe student conducted
•-110 student is required to
The use of physical foroe by
the initial interview with the follow any dress code. The teachers al8o ·brings parents to
client and saw the case throiJl!h Commissioner bad aIr e ad y the Clinic. "We don't try to
to ita cpnclusioo, although m ruled against school-iJppoeed impose our values on our eli_ thoile c8ses involving court ac- dress codes-that universal fea- ents," Rosenberg ssys, "and
tion students were DOt able to lure of growing up docile in we don't try to encoursge litimake tbe actual courtroom ap- the '50&amp;-but he recently ex- gation. We try to fiod out what
~
,
· ;,.·:·• . ,·., tend~, ¥ ¥,si9n..to include . !he parents~~ want. Often
. Servioell of the Clinic are a studiml'promulgaied ares s 10 these cases It IS an apology
available to any individual-who code (a landmark case of co- from the school."
baa a legal problem with tbe optation at least) . No one- TOld..;...' Rights
W~ New Yorlr._ P .u hUc pee... ·ofwincipal+,&lt;lllllt&lt;eep.a. •'·'TeACherlJ baV.. ·t~•·ts, ltro,
achi:lols who CIUli10t afford to re- student from wearing jeans to Rosenbe
dds
Clini'
tsin ·an 1-attomey. Most. Of·. ita; · school, ifheorshe .wishes.
rg a
·
e
c
clients come from the City of Special Rl&amp;hts to.. Special Children
':~.::l...::ruun~~
BulJalo, hut a substantial 25 to
Special children have special cwnstances in which their con30 per cent who seek legal ad- rights under the State educa· ti na1 ·gh
peared
vice have a complaint against lion law, and the Clinic handles stitu 0
n ts ap
to
a suhwbiin school. A number many cases iilvolving them. Ac- he violated. The law pertaining
of a- subwban cases are · cordiiig to. Rosenberg, some 1o- to these cases was clarified 1aat
"1·-..,
cases in which sub- cal school districts have failed month when the U.S. Supreme
-3
Court upheld the reinstatement
-~ve constitutional issues, to provide tbe PrQgramS specif- of Quaker teacher Charles
IIUCh aa free speech, are raised. ically required by law for chil- James, who was fired by a New
AJ! innel'-city child more often dren who are _physically handi- York City school for wearing
aei!b help because be has been cap~, emotionally disl:utb&lt;d, a black .armband during the
~ s;usPeD&lt;Ied, say, for !&gt;ram~~ or have lesm- V ietnam morstorium. The
disrupting his class.
·
Ill¥ disabilities. When. a parent Clinic typically takes only civil
.....,.._ ~ ~
b~ such ~ complaint I'! the liberties cases involvillg tesch:n,. Clinic was first P!D- ~c, the first reco\lllle IS to • era. Teachers' rights in general
poeed by Rosenberg, wtv.e m- bring pressure to hear on tbe are monitored clOsely by their
tl!nlt in acbool law lllossomed school board involved When a union.
·
as_ a U/B law student. ~ his ~ has such a severe !'mn- · Ralenberg has ·brought stuthird year, be enrolled m a mg problem that he reqwres a dents from the School of Soci8l
d ,.,_..:;._ • ·
Se.
aanlnar on tbe subject taught residential school, the Clinic p 0 li
bY Prof-.r -Wade NewtiQuse. may recOminend that the par- . cy an ,~UDJty , rNewbouae. an authorilf. on in- eats apply for a reaidential Vlce8 onto )!&gt;e &lt;;~c;. slaff ~
tamational and constitutional placement fDI' the child either hopes to IOU~ tbe '!'·
law wboee own interest in in. or out-«-&amp;ate. Section 4403 vo!'vement of aocial workers m
ac:hool law was piqued by a ilf tbe Education Law· provides this aapect of the law.
term on a subudiui a c h o o I filr re-imlla.-nent t o t h e ' "In the past, lawyers, like
Qrd, helped pt tbe Clinic County of half tbe cost of tbia ~ and other profesatarted 1111111 Cl1lliinuel! to make speciallllilnolillg.
~~ have been very narrow
his apertile available to iL
Rosenberg is ~psrticulady in- m their approach. More than
Tbe Clinic chaDaed its tereated in makiDg u.e;r full legal expertise is needed wheoIIIIQIIIMia in the two years aince rights under tbe law available ever we are dealina: with a
its ~ lbM1berg to children with learning .ily&amp;. child. Often tbe child who has
At finlt lie biiped to atlllck the f1inctiali. Parents of suburban trouble with tbe school needs
JII'Qbllm of 8UIDIIIU)' - - dUidren with leariling problems ClOU1Meling and follow~!:""
....._ N- York !Male Edilal- are often helped . through be has adjustment
.
~ Law providea that a atu- BOCBS, tbe Board of Coopen. "Eapedally if we lose tbe
case,.. lloaenberg adda.

Ac&amp;toniiu.

::'!N::S·

::f

/

!'i!

____ .....·-. . ·-----,.,;.,.,..,
-_
_
_.,
.......,_
- GREPORTER;, -

.::..!;,= ____ ,._au. _ _ .......
_
_.._r•~---

__
-----...........

~~

.... _..
.__

_.,..~

.. IIAIIC' &amp; ,...,..,.,,

economic
as may be
by the E&gt;a:utive Com·• &lt; To- follqw with periodic
repons to the Exalutive Committee, tbe promotion, claasilico.tion, and evaluation Procedures aa these
beoonie
aL~
. operation.
5. To submit regular reports
on itlr activities to the Senate
through tbe E&gt;a:utive Committee, including an annual report
in May.

Five members of
sional stslf have been )!lected
to the newly-formed, ·campus
Promotion Review l'lin8l
The elections were conducted
by the Universio/.s Profeaoiooal
Stall Senate With tbe concurrence of the Senate Prof&lt;Biooal
Association. Establishment of
the Paiiel and tbe requirement
that each campus i&gt;res!dent cJe.
sigo and implement prOcedures
for elections to tbe panel -are
required by Article 34 o£ the
contract between t he Senate
Professional Association a n d
tbe State of New York.
Those elected- to tbe Panel
are: Nancy P. Broderick, assist,
ant provos~ Faculty of Educational Studies; Larry R. Drake,
associate director of University
Placement and Career . Guidance; Dr. Andrew W. Holt, associate dean, Grsduate School;
Dr. J . Norman Hostetter, associate director, Admissions
and ReoQrds1 and Dr. Marjorie
C. Mix, SSSlStant dean of the
Law
.Duties of 'the&gt;
Senate
Committee on J&gt;rofessional De- ._
velopment shall he.: ,. ·
•
1. To conduct a regular review of the general University
P.Olicies concerning ·the welfare
of tbe stslf including salaries,
housing, tuition remission and
other fringe benefits and to report upon these, making such
recommendations as it deems

Schoo!-

mittee.

Spectrum Story
Said Inaccurate
mnoa:
A column '"I1uough tbe Looking Glasa" printed in a recent
issue of The Spectrum contains
inaQcuratedatare~gthe

dillerenoes in admiaaions credentials between those students
selected from the 8th Judicial
District and those from the re.
mainder of the applicants. The
following fads are made to set
the record straight.
~y ~ementsry resear ch
would show that the 8th Judicial -District and "Bullalo" are
not one and tbe same. The 8th
Judicial District is made up of
eight COIIJ!ties (Niagara, Erie,
Chautauqua, ~~ugus, Genesee, Wyomillg, Orleans, and
Allegany) with a 1972-73 school
enrollment of 365,000 plus. The
imJ1lie&amp;tion that .one half the
fre$hman c:1¥s
from the
IililfiilD C\tY. !\l#oiS',irlstead of
ihe eight' ootlnty area is very
misleading.
It is al8o stated that students
from uBuffalo" need averages

•

stair .

oomes

'::'o':f~~·E!;.;&amp;: c!;,:i~·

tee. These recommendations
may include recommendations
for changes in present policies
or tbe development of new poli-

ci2': To c8rry out~ continuous
1iajljo · ·th the J;;
ti· v·

ot 86 par ~t tQ, a'7 J&gt;!lr cent
fo'r.' ent:raiia! .- wl'iile" slhdents

'Presigen
vice· ~a-&amp;:t £:r.
Operations and Systems and

!..- tl!ll fi:..W y~ peed
"a'Q eaif'· 90 per ' cent· to gain

entrance. Again, very elementary research would have shown
that such is not the case. The
aversge high school average
for the 8th Judicial District for
tbe class · entering September
1972 was 91.28 ana the average
for tbe remainder of the applicants was 90.85.
I hope that the remainder of
the column is based upon more
aocurste data than the data
used for the comments about
.admission.
Sincerely yours,

other appropriate administrative officers of this University
on matters that involve imd
affect the economic status of
stslf. The committee shall coordinate itS activities with other
standing or special committees
of the Senate, other committees
of the University such as the
University Budget Committee,

X'fJPU:d'J':.u~~!u~s~

us Committee of the Faculty

Senate of SUNY and such negotiating agency as tbe stslf
may select.
.
3. To carry out such specific
studies or investigati\)DS regard-

- J . NODIAN H08I'BTI'ER

Associate Director of

.

•

PlmUied Parents'
Driv_e ~

Minority
Shifts Set.

I!Dlrolt:

adminis'trative sb:ucture of campus miuority programs haYe been announced by P.-esident Robert L
Kelt&amp;¥. Effective Jan~ 1,
• The EducatiOD$1 Opportunity Program (EOP, fornlm-

'lbe Um-aity · team for
l'lann8d
Parenthood of Buffalo
fwld-raising drive
JIIDUS!y 17, a week after tbe
staJt of the dri... in the metropolitan Bullalo - . With an
-...... ... on quality of life, the
~ty taam will try . to
nlldl aU....-ts l!l the acaclemX: CXJiiiiiii&amp;lilj. Fa m il y
~~:..~· of the

" " · - - 10
.
..,__
vua-~
...,

18

:;r ~

dent·

1,:.t

becan ita

"Vt:' ~

• 'uP'Minl BOund rePorts to
the Office of the Vice President

for Student Affairs;
• The Office of Minority
St:wfent ~ repqna to the
V~ce President for Student Af.,
fairs.
Tbe Cooperative College
Center retsina 'ita reporting relationship to the Office of the
Academic Vice PresidenL
In~ the .oom&amp;.' tiona; Dr. Ketter inlllcated that
the C:hanps had ieDoiwlif ibe
"nearly Wlluiimaa•l airemDent"
of ·111Pf!'8"Qtatives- of the ·pro-

lDlDOrity PJD11SD18 Pn&gt;pared under tbe chalrmanBhip
of• Professor Frank COrbett,-

U/~

~~~~C...:.:.
~----'- 1

.,...a,.-..

~~ cracWIY ~
/We ~the ~:
muni~ to pve .......,aJy to
suppOrt the lundenwd!l!ly imjXll'taDt ervioes of Pl8nned
Parenthood, as it did last year.
· 'I'b8 Uni-aty ' team .-Is
IIIIOrken! U you want «&gt; help
wi.lh. d&gt;e drive, or if you want
to make a ~ and
haYII DOt .-a CODladed· by
February 1,--please .dill any one
of fhe 1IDIIeniped.
·

f: J!voi~C::;:pt~r

a report "!' waya to stren,then 1

C(llllpus

Admisainns and Records

'

Si":&gt;'D&amp;ftiCZ .......
&gt; '•

9liJ r

~

co.pta1n 682-6636

Kill. _ . GIIOSS,

la-ud
~ 837-«96
~ - .
.
lliADDBN.
. '""'~~-

�5

Summer Pay :
Rules Set ·
For Research
Possible ex.:ept'i ons to the
Univmsity's su.mmet -..:b
compensation limits for faculty
were ouilined by Preeident Robert L Ketter this week in- a
memorandum to vice pres:i.
dents, provosts, deans and department chairmen.
The Ketter memorandum follows:
1/!lth Umlt

"Many faculty manbers ...

.

sume research respoll8ibilities
under contracts or pants durini

---·

'

'

the summer monilia which are
in addition to their academic ·
year obligations (normally the
first day of registration throush
Commencement Day). It bas
been our policy and practice at
SUNYAB to limit compensaat the North Campus, funiiture tion for summer research activis being moved into the Gover- ities to two months pay at a
nors Residence Halls Complex rate of U9th of the acsdemic
as jt becomes ready for occu- year &lt;salary per month. This
pancy. John Lord O'Brian will remain in effect for the
Hall, the Lsw and Jurisprud- summer of 1973.
ence Building, is nesring com"This practice msy be expletion as finishing procedures cepted, subject to the approval
.have been stsrted on upper of SUNY, if a sPonsor i n ·g
levels.
agency requires greater efforts
Brick ll!ying is continuing on ~~~J,; o : ' : a~~~
the Walter.. Platt Cooke and the research objective and
Ralph .Hochstetler Phaimacy~_ "( 1) An official of' the spand B 101
tow
thro"ff'"'
an
ogy
ers,
..,... soring agency who is authorized
the use of endosed scsffolding. to commit funds directs in writProgress ?n the 38-structure ing .that three (3 ) months efJosep!&gt; Elhcott Co!"pl~. which fort be put· forth on.,the project
contst~ the. n:s•dentull &lt;:&lt;&gt;1- with full compensation;
leges, 1s contmwng at varymg
"1 2 ) The project director
degrees.
demonstrates that funds are
Preliminary foundation work available for the effort without
has also begun on the Educs- undesirable reduction of suption and PhilO!IOPhY buildiiQI. · port to other personnel, or other
1
'
categories; and
" (3 ) Tbe faculty member
lJ
•
sti ulates.jn wri~ jhat be
will be '!n csmpus or actively
".
.
engaged m the project full-time
which Mr. Hsrrunan performed for the period of employment
for the University were chair- April DeadiiM .
·
~hip or the. Finan~ Com."If the conditions above are
.

Education, Physics Buildings under Contrac_t
~ activities at the
Amberst Campus continued to
""""' foJward during the aemester break with the a,W,ard of
cont:rlll!la for two additional
buildinga· and finishing and
other work on sevetal o~

of students espected 8!t !hi. Amberst Campus will have opportunities for partiCipation in
new and exciting programs."
J!I'Ojecl
,
Tbe building will . contain
'lbe 75,000 squsre.foot build-.• offiQes, a _.-ch -library .and
ing, whlch will bouse' only the 5,00 ; stationa iri .research •and
'
~t : ·of. "'-·-'~ . Will instnjctional.• laboratories. Instructures. .
Tbe J. Migliore CoDstlu~ j;;M'~- reJi,;ft;;;;', tbe clu~ are a ~;lumber of gradCompany Inc. of . Tona~ space lilortsge whiCh the De- nate sl:u!lent resesrch, labs for
bascon= r:,~a:~~!,mllliof.:~ partment is experiencing in individual projects. InstrucEd u c at ion and Philosophy Hochstetter Hall oo tbe South tion and reseerdt will be con.
(Main St.) Campus.
·
ducted in the fields of tbeoretiBuilding. .
cal, high energy, low temperaAs phase two of a tri-faculty,' New .....,.....,.
ture and solid stste -'-ysics.
BUIH:ampus area to be known
Di-.. George H. Nancollas.
.,..
as the Social• Scienoe-Educs-· provost of the Faculty of NaDr. Neal of Facilities Plantion-Lsw area. the Educstionl twa! Sciences ·and Mathe- ning noted that work on the
Pbi!OIJPP.by building_.will bouoe matics, says that "the Univer- building also ' probably would
till!' Fiji'toltj' '-~-E!Iu tiona! sey_ Jooks forwani ·to 'bi!in'g · not begin before spring. The
s~~ ~!i()&lt;ne~t ·· 'of able to' develap ita programs in targeted completion-occupancy
Pliiloeophy.
iibysics, particularly experi- date is fall, 1975.
Designed by Architect Harry mental physics, at this time, Other Projecb
Wooie and Associates of Chi- so that the increatli11g numbers
In other construction projects
rs of the nearl
·...: · · · ... '
·
· · "" ·

~·

IT·
~-

-,., r:iinJ '01~'

iii1!iP.

"

l}uild-

't!llLlll!..t..illf .

due · east Of
law building
and will be connected to it via
several above-ground level cor-

proximately 500 f u\1 1-t i me
equivalent studehta. Millstein,
Wittek, 'Davis and Associates
are 88IIOciate arcbitects for the

_

•

•

rr:n.
l :.Rr;JYS:,L'11-:b
vvl!/1C'£
,,,_ U te
!The ' · -? ·• ' ' . ·

t0 Le
. G
- -WZS
· • nam,m,an '
.

•

·

Council of the Uwversity at its January 8 meeting
paased. ~ following memorial

New York contnbuted measurably and in countless ways to
the. dev~opment of our great

in the sister atructure. The at Buffalo records with deep
ground-level covered arcade of sorrow the dea_th on Jan"'!"Y 7,
the law buildin will exteud · 1973, of Lewis G. Harriman,
throughtothen!. -building.
Sr., a Council member from
.
1946 to 1962, and
An open:"":• lar!dscaped cen- .
WHEREAS, Mr. Harriman
~r u:'1;;~dingto thawt{~ in his lifetime of outstanding
lisbinenta
business
,
be featured in tbe .new struc- aandccoml.' . lead ~ a "'
ture, '!" an OJM!Il an court of
ClVlC
er m nestem
three li!vels. .
. .._
- .. . • ·:
Another' feature of the multi• ICHEDUUE' •·
story, 98,870 square foo.t strucOWN moaT -1111£ L£A
ture will be a hill" ''!0~=~.,:.
MON~:~~~'?R~DA~·
ference theater. · This .cm:war
•
tiered conference room will
=~ '
have a· -ting cspacity of 350.
1
In addition to .iristructional,
''"" am ~~ '"" am ( ~~l
reoeardl and ollice facilities, the
f~
l&gt;iiilding will a1ao include a
a,oo
''""
2.-oo
1aboratozy n
school 8nd
'""'
""'"
ad. . •
oufd::: layground
~
(
~

part by his ,being awarded ~e
Chan~Uor's Medal by this

'do

;~= fo".!m~ ~~~ ~:EM). The Council of u:':E::~ ~ contribu- :;it\:;:~=~~~~; :::edU.:t!~J~b=:; r.:::
ing are continued or included Stste University of New York tions were acknowledged in ~~ththe merge{ib!mg'!lg U / B sonnelAppointmentForm

=':,:"m ·

:;:g

fo~A.~

assistant
vice p!'O!Iident for facilities
Plannin&amp;. notes that work on
the buildinc will likely not begin before .,.mg. ae adc!ed

!'.'!t~r:t~

f 1975
o 'lbe ~--"' _,, -~-'- .
.......,ty w ... p""'..., mtructional _.,., for· acsdemic
uni~ting approximate2,660 students, ·one of the
. ~arpet. wairld.d elements of'
the Uru-atty. Tbe move to
~ wDl alloW for reesSianmeut of both' Fosti!O Hall
~Poster
on ~ '
""'- ~ "~·-"UIB ~-.a \....•w•••na,;-..
C&lt;mpm.y of Qulfalo .bas 'been
awarded a • 7 mlllian contnct
for cDaalnJetioD of-a- pbya-·
ics builalng
The ~- structure. d&amp;signed by An:hitact Armand
Bartos and A81ciates of New
York, will he pba8e one in the
~ Of the Natural
~ and 'MathBmati&lt;:s sub_.,.- .
CIIII!IK»-.. ...wt. ......
ap-

~

:Attnom

(

(~ "10

''"
10'""

3.-oo
3.-os

:s:J8

'U..,

:

2 5
"'

lDoOO

(

(l~

~~

:s;:g . (J~ . =:=pu...-=...u:~
::::2 ·nalaliollyed'
'o ~~ ~~Healaoof
·( '""'
p
a """ m u"'
·•o35
other organimtions,
uding
tlX ··n;r. . :~ National Gypsum ' and the
( ,,OOJ (
fOlllll!l' Corne II AerODautical

(lC.OO)
1.,..
11 ,..

Merit Money
:n.e University-wide Committee tm

.,.. .....
.,.. (11ioo)
( '""" 11 ,15
''1s 11o20

n..s

(l/;13,
1lo35

11 ,00)

1UD

~~

'"" 11'55
15,..,.
5
~
1:3g, J~

112:552:..

,,..

~~~

U"""' oml

(:=

,.,.

.•

( lo10)

,•!:21 .,.

"""

-

=~=-·
•. _ -- - _
_.,.,
,... ""' ""' F-J - --

'

--:::oc:.,...~'J;."'"rf=c--~~~~~E ONE

~~to':

7:21 -:

.,..
t:i.:n.: 1 ~-1:~
;•1:20 ..,11 •"9:215

WAY IS

APPIIOlOIIATEl.Y 11 MINUTES. •
~
--·--· • ·•" ' " .. -.
•.

.

In order to better the ...w..n ol feeult;y ad
' professional std. the Committee Ia iDvitial all Cllllllilmlil
and~ to be IRibmitled tD it during 'the -a ........
by letter, telephone. or in . . - ,
·

nine incorporaton of the U/B
FOundation. Inc., the private

"'""

,.,..

for·P\'OCB(Iures to be used in .futuno merit' IIICIIl8y aJ!ocetjrww

- ln 1962, h e - named one of

=
-tho . ,..

u:~ .

(

Mait Money II
preparing ita report on the 'distribution ol merit IIICIIl8y .Jut
June. It will atao malre .recomnwwletiolls -to the Pnaldent

~-Laboratory·

"'Il -

1..s
•.,..,. · .1;20 -~ • •~v ~eoutf~.: ~~
tn -

-

Semce·Named
•

t~ i~ . ~:! ited
~~'t~F..J
~n;sH=~Bt ~\_~i97~...r.:
with being · the moving degree from Caniaius (May, ~ dunng the '!WI"""" of
l1'r force -in the bank's growth into 1969) . ,
1973.
:g;r.
::
.,.,.
one of the State's major finan.
ng, :~
~;r.
ciaJ institutions. under ru.

r~

,.=......,

·

= '"

t-r.l :Jll

:;:g

1,.;

;;,m

e

·

Council and the Walter P.
Cooke A~ by_~e General
A I u m n 1 Assoctation; now,
therefore, be it
RESOLVED: That we hereby acknowledge with great ap· ti' the
t
·
and
P'C"""' on 1 ~"Hamg~
Unive;,.;ty of
Bulfalo
to the Stste Uni~Or New York' at BufLilo·
and .lie it further
- . '
RESOL'VED Tha ·
do
t we · .
llel$y express to Mnl.. Harriman and to the family "'!'
deepest sympethy upon thetr
great loss. •
Mr. ,Harriman was bead of
Bulfalo s Manufaeturem . a n d

=

8 tste

mvers1ty sys- ( ~?rm P J ,_ withsts~nts_Prov1ding ~ info~tion reqwred,
to the V1ce Pres1dent for Re~ - via his Department
Chairman, Desn or Provost,
Kenneth P. Service bas been and Vice President The Vice
appointed news editor ,for the ~ident fo~ Research~ verDepartment of Infoanation Ser- 1fy the requuement, rev1ew the
vices. The -appointment was material with the Preeident, remade by University President quest the required ·approval
Robert L Ketter. Mr. ServiCe from SUNY, and IISIIIliJliN all
suoceeds Susan Robinson King approvals, forward the appointwho served as news editor from ment form to the Personnel Of.
February through November, fice for IIPI.'ropriate action. If
197,2.
..
the request.lS not approved, the
,As news editor Mr. Service is Vice President for Research
responsible for tbe disoemina- will return the request to the
tion of infonnation about the Vice Preeident concemed with
University to the news media. an appropriate ezplanation.
' Prior positions Mr. SerWle
"l\11 aippoinm-t forms and
has held include public rela- aup~rting information abould
tions director at Rosary Hill be m the Office of the Vice
:::m

.

tbe iic.ptB ~

. of.the
_.___
~
............
beOame the ¥ounfini&amp; cbairmmL ,
. Buller tbat,.,ar, he~

hance_

~tica"•

a-.

~

UtB'sblshM&amp;..-rd. Che
~·MaW,
..... ,_..of
~- to the hlltitilliaa.. At
that - . he-~.

:."a.:r-=--:'1:
~Clilford C ~
• ,
~ the other Jbdill

~ conllict one of the lollowini no W.,:&amp;.l J uary 25:

=

8ralb' ~ ...... _. .....:....lAicboad Llary lili61
Nancy Broderlek ............... ------ - - , _ _ IIU'l

Mary

weo~ey

Carter ....................._.. c;~ •

==
:·.:~::~:::f:::::-.:~-=
J8811118tte Spero, 121 Health llc:IIIMa Bid,.
Claude Welch ..............___..

~

_aau

2!110

Ia 7-Jall

�~-

6

Linguistics' Henry Lee .S mith,.Jr._:. S~B_ets Two~·
'He Was Passionately Concerned'·.· T~ If~~o/?-Cfood Te~hing·
0n December 13, 1972. Dr.
Heruy Lee Simlh, Jr.,_pJOfessor of linguistics and English
an ci an internationally renow&amp;d linguist, died of a
heert attack at the Haortbstone Manor having just com·
pleted a popular lecture on a
favorite subject of his, "Whele
/ Are You From?"
It was D r S m i t h w h o
brought~ to the then
UB and the Niagara Frontier
when be became the fllllt chair·
man of the Department of An·
tbropology (and Unguistics)
in 19&amp;6.
served in that capacity until 1966 and later was
the acting director of the Pro(I'8DI in Linguistics ( now the
Department of Lin1uistics)
froo;n 1967 to 1968.
He came to the Univemity
from' the U.S. Department of
State wbere in 1946 he founded
aod ~ the first director
of the ,&amp;.boo! of Languaae and
. Linguistics at the Foreign Ser·
vice lnstltute. He later (195556) s e r ~ e d as dean of the

·a..

~rot,~we .ln

- . y L M - J •.

He inspired a personal devotiruf,~t was perilaps best
descnoea by Mrs. Charlotte
Farley, his secretary, student,
and assistant (and coordinator
pf student profram&amp; for the Department of Linguistics) at the
memorial meeting. She said,

in·~' We~

,
'
State ; Unioeraitx. of, N e.- '
~ ~usted. .... He spent York h!IS &lt;;reated ~ ~ prob:imself-m· eo proflipte a WilY grams designed to p•e n!cog·
&lt;that too """:" the account was nition to fa~ty members ~bo
overdra~
are outstanding teecbers at the
"He 881d to me onoe, wben undergraduate level
.
I 'fl as COillliderin&amp; resicD!ni
Tbe first program establisbes
during a particularly tr:Yinl a new rank. the DiBtin~
period, 'You -can't do that&gt;--1 Tes~ Professorship. Tbeae
need you to help me wi1h my designations will be continuing
work for the 'res! of my life.' profeaaorships, will be regarded
I consider this the big'-! com- as promotions, and will include
pliment. It was a task that sal.aryincreasesofupto$2,500.
ended too soon."
Appointments will be made by
•
•
·
the University's Board of
The Department has decided Trustees. The Trustees . will '
tQ continue Dr. Smi1h's re- designate up to 10 recipients at
sesrcb seminar in semology as a the Stste-&lt;&gt;perated campuses in
student-cooperative effort, in 1973.
part toward preparing his notes
The second program author·
lor .publication.
izes annual Chancellor's
A. Henry lee Smith, Jr., Awards for Excellence in
Meinorial Symposium, spon- Teaching. The awards will be
sored by the University and or- granted to approximately 100
·Banized and chaired by Profes- faculty members ,at 1he Statesor George L Trager, is being operated campuses plus the
planned for sometime this year. statutory colleges and COIP·
Some of Dr. Smith's friends munity colleges within the Uniin the University and tbe com- versity system. Recipients of
munity have .propoeed that e. these awards, alao to begin in
scbolarahip fund be aet up in 1973, will teoeive $500 in each

:S~ts"es~~':~ Y"(k~~= ~~ted,;wards ~~~.;,!!l'fe~J::=

1he
some rather
State Department, Dr. &amp;ni1h difficult experiences in those will be available. at a later date.
had been a major in the ·u.s. ten years (of association) and
For further informati011, conArmy during World War U, finally achieved the kind of · tact the Department of Ungui&amp;one of his priudpal assiin- wordless communice.tion that ~R';'.;.,..., ,_ ;,~.,. N..,.,,..,.
menta being officer in charge, comes when the same stimulus 1-_, l973J
,,
Language Section, Information trig,ers the same mental assoand Education Division, ASF, ciation and the same reaction
and bead of the Language Sec- in two people.. . . So I was

~ ~~-Anny Scbools·Cen· · f'!""~~t!r~t4:~ 'h!'\!:

. Dr. Smith received his B.A.,
summa cum laude, Phi Beta
~. fn&gt;m f,rjncetoQJn ~
!Us ~.A. in 1937, e.nd his . · .
m Oriental languages and liter·
ature .in 1938.-· lie taj:t- e.t

pretended to be something be
wasn't; be was unmistakably
_wl;lat he was, and did not trim
rua. ~nviotiOIIII &lt;to,.tbe ~of,
fashion or warp them to the
~ or the CO!DPanY.. )M

Ridge Lea Tickets
Elfuctiv~

this week, 'traffic'
summonses will be issued to .
motorists entering the exit area
on the Ridge Lea Campus.
~ffl.ipg:f:o . ~'!l !&gt;- _BIIcop, ,
aSslS
( v1ce p~'ll!t ,.for
bus~ affairs, t;i~ts will.Bl'so

will' be recommended to the
Olancellor by factilty, undergraduate students and administrators at each campus.

·

tusted · by the crash of clialk
against blackboard, that was
gram over ·station WOR and his way of expressing concern
the Mutual Network entitled for 1he ideas that mattered
"Where Are You From?" He most to him. And they didn't
alao p._....t and presented all "aee 'him in the moments
(1958) .a aeries of programs for when be stood with his feet
the National Eduaotional Tele- planted wide, his hands clasped
vision Network under the title behind his back, staring out the
".Le.nguage aod Linguist:icsn. window, confronting his frustra·
This aeries has enjoyed a wide tions and his fallibility. To me
national &amp;bowing for the pest this was one of his ·m ost enaevera1 _years on educational dearing and admirable treitelevision stations. He also the ability to admit his uris-"~-- ..
''M
n1
......,
appeerences
eet· af
takes. I He might
do this
y
..,_
....__.___
" 'Tve on
Got a Se_.__
. o e.r·
...., .-,_.,r,
ter ong and .,.....ustmg
c:ret," "What's My Line?" and gument, but when be did, it
'"l'o. Tell the .Truth." For a was grudgin~ or niggardnumber of years, be hosted the ly, but generouS arid sweeping,
University racHo 'J&gt; r o 1 ram 8lld with an a'nger and he'
"SpMking of Ideas on station wilderment at hiQl\lelf. becailae
· WGR, Bulfalo. , .•
he bad not ~ Iii!' an·
Be bad lectuied at ooer 75 swers earlier.
''In a world of opportunism
oallelee, universit:iea and goY·
~ qancies. bad been vi&amp;- aod compromise, where the
i q Pftlf__. at several insti· words 'conacieoce', 'duty', . 'in·
tutloall ad bad .am:ved 88 con- !"Jftty', aod 'morality' have a
llliltant for 111111&gt;,Y NDEA read· faintly antique ring, Heruy Lee
ing ud language arts insti· Slriilh, Jr., was peri&gt;apa a . kind
tute.
Of~ for these wonla
..,. _ _ Dr. Smith's -·"'"-· -.L-.:~ the ,...;~: be
~An ~ of B~ . lived by. In a world_
the
liM 8lructul'e (joint.ly with young~ especially ~
~ L TlqV), 1.961· .Lifl.. urpmtJi about hecominc in~
and tlte Ttoelo- uoWed, be was totally involoed.
II/ ~,.,- 1956; The Lin- He was paaiiollateiy COIICOI'Ded
Readem, 196.'1:e7; -n.e with the discipline of which be
ol tbe Morpbopbone," was 80 haaic: a pert, aod wi1h
Ltln6uaile. March 1967; ud the academic world be had
~liM Jlorphophonia: lmpli.. lived in for 80 long. His e.gonies
..,_for tM 'tfJIIICI&amp;inB of Lit- arose &amp;Om the · acbisms 8Dd
_ , , lll68. He- deeply... fiGm wbat be 88 the pwlllled in lingul8llc .-di, vanions of. theee worlds. Hi&amp;
~ in the of !Jia.. pride lay in fulfilling his ob1ilaric8lllDiulstb ad ~ , plioaa, p&amp;ltiCularlt:...,~~~menta
(4be ra1atioaahip of II)'IIIKtlc wbo, • · pat~iema to -mn&amp;&gt; at the truly • MCIIIIIIIY to his life •
dale ol bia death.
bane aod blood. Oae of tbe
....,_. Smith'• ac:boluahlp thiniB he was ~ of did llllt erbaullt bls lliplfl-. the lact that, ID all ' his yearll
4o tba COIIIIIamil;y. As Dr. of teecbing, be Mlfmilliled only
Pal L GarviD, cilainDua of two ~ for any , _
. . ~ol ~ wha-. And I think be
__.. eia
J118it1a1 011 micbt 8J1U8 about that~
n.-at- 19, he .111!1 ~ may.be It - only ..,. cU..
ecmt" *a
11J11111111C And ....,_ alae ~ that
............ tb&amp;~ 4be IIIIIBiinB bia ~ -'DDt a

..._

--..w

a.

U. . .,bia~Jda ,cll;yi

... .- ~~..a-uro •a Ji.,

will be

::!,~ screening

d b
;:::,.,T
,1,,:.

posed of equal numbers of un-

dergraduate students, teaching
faculty and lidministrators, then
.Recommendations for -t he the campus president, and ultiprofessorships and awards ere mately the Chancellor and an
to be baaed on selected criteria ·Advisory Committee on Dis-

~~'1"~~ons\rii{!d~ :J~=~"!'ffi:~=of 1eaching techniqUes ariil nex- · For the flrloryeort; ie;s~

ible response to student needs,
interests, and problems.
~ .Continuing scbolarship in
a field ,,· · ~ "' .... . . ·, _, .
• n,;,. ;,.,tab~'or hlp,
' stand&amp;lds for ltudel¥s~1811d•.a
students attsin academiC ex·
cellJ!I!C8.
.•
• A ~""'! to serve as
an . academ1&lt;: ad\1180r and be
easily a()Ce88lble to students.

operated campus may nominate one faculty tnember foc
a Distinguisbed ' Tescbing Pro;
fessorshiv.· ·!l'be·• -C!:haooellllr's
Awards wiiH-.divided illft!Jng

~~C8l!!JI-J OI&gt;~ b~Jiij.;tQ(
!!"~ta, ~ o- "

Nominations for both awards
and 4232 and exiting onto
are to be submitted by nerl
Ridge Lea via the entranoe
May 1, and recipients ere ex·
area east of Buildings 4250 and
pected to be · announced · by
4248 and/or proceeding in a
early September.
nol'!herly direction (toward
Ridge Lea Road).
L
Town of 'Ambers! tickets •Will
be issued and will "undoubtedly result jn a two-point mark on
·
Lea Bull
the violator's license," Bacon
Tbe Personnel Offioe indi- teria; 3. Ridge
,
. ding
said.
cates that the following Non- 4230, in corridor next to C-1;
The traffic pattern at the Teaching Professional Staff 4. Health Sciences Building, in
Ridge Lea Camp= .he said, positions are open at State . coCampen
'J!or op,po81m
· -~~ ~1dor31;be-5.
de e1
"'
University at Buffalo:
Hall.
...., _ ...
was
v. oped
after Careful
COil·
D U'ec~r
· •- of p•
,_,' rPiaI't • . ~·- Room 1"and
the Lobby,·
'd
b
_,,
_.
_
_._
enyalC&lt;U
•w~
Sl eration
y aevenu .....,_.~ Maintensnee ' A:iliDiDiatiriltion, ,. '. Lockwood."'",gioimd floor in
menta at U/ B. ~the oljp- PR'--4. '&lt;
0. ' , ' m1• 1"" ·' , !iOmdllr. neXt to vending ma·
nal plan ~All ctim.J!leted: &amp;eVijal
•Foc,ilitit.1'~
· · ''€obrdinll· · ~: .7. Hayes ~ in main
suggested ·i:h&amp;n&lt;-' hav;! ~ .~".· "'"o'lities ' p· · · · ,'• PR '"·. ~-'o..C..--'- • •
"-considered. aDci" -:-&amp;Oitie .lillPJ&amp;. ~r ..,.,
"'
~· ,oyer, a c r 0 s s '"""'
mei).ted..' ·'' '
'
'
''·" ;,ls~:~~'?!i:- ~In!~/:"'~;t!
For at ieJ!st thiee years, the ~3
._
tween Rooms 112 aod 113; 9.
traffic psttem has been Oowina
Aaistant kl ChairmaA, Com· Parker EDBiMerin&amp; in corridor
in a clockwise direction witn puter Scieol&amp;. PR-1.
next to Room 15;.10.,C~·ear
the enb'ance adjaoent to 4250
For additional information Hall,
floor nDOIJiin&amp;
~
aod the exit near 4230. Signs CDDcerning these jobs aod for ara; ~lAw ~ first floor
have been Posted in acconlaDce details of NTP open in I! s pmera1 infonnation board bewith the rules aod regulations throughout the State University tween Rooms 1011 ' 8Jid 109; 12.
of the Department of Transpor- system, consult bulletin boardS 1807 Elmwood, Penonnel n...
tation.
at these locations:
~t 13 N~- U ·
Over tbe y-Ba~
-'"
· ROom
~- 225·
IUOil,
-~
~
1. Bell Facility between
s; Offioe.
14
many baye persisted in contin- 1}152 aod· Dl53- 2. Ridge Lea
Dia!!llldorf Hall, in co~rido;
ually Ullllll tbe entrance 88 B"""'-· 4236, ' to -•,..' -~to Room 1011
both entrance aod exit, aod the
-...
·-·
"''"
..,.,.
·
exit in like maDIII!I'. As a r&amp;•
snit, there baoe been -.a~
aooideots, although. fortunate- .
'
ly, no one has been 8el1oualy. inDr. Robert R.-1 of the U/B biopbyajca) aciences aod Uliajured. SwveY.!J- have indicated Center for 'lbeoretical BiolotrY, tant . u - r of the Center for
that driving ojlpoaite the tra1lic one of a handful of scbolaralri Theoretical BicilotiY). 'Rc.m
pe.tterli has increaoied, Bacon his field, baa been appointed an has aeroed 88' priDclpal inveali·
IIJiid, and for the safety of all liJIIIOCiiate felloW of the Centar sator aodlor c:o-inwetipa 011
.........ned, aame action must be.. for the Study of Democratic In- .United States ~ Health
tabn.
stitutians, Santa Barl!e.ra, Calif. aod NASA projeclli~
Ip anotha- Ridce Lea vebicu-·
Appointed at the asme time with mau-tallllll •
1ar mallter, starting immediate- ......, Gunnar Myrdal, diatin- b~ orpD!r.alba He
ly, in order to facilitate """"!: guisbed political economlllt, publishad ovei liO pepen ...0
removal, CIVei'DIBht paiJdng will aod Alva Reimel Myrdal. a,e. major -teView articla 011 YU'lbe reetricted to toJo 8ftl88. Oae den's minister of Disarmament oua kinda of modelkur ~
ia in the PlllkiDit: lot adjacent and Church.
'
~
Ienis, and ~ boob, OptimDIlio "Buildhip 421iO imd 4282,
Rdeen complat8d his doctor- ity ·Principle. in Bio/Diy, Dy.
aod the other ia in the Jot· ate at the University of Chi· M1llical Sy~ Tlliory in ll&gt;bouDded by ~ 4236, cago, the only Institution in the o/ofy, and ia editor of a multi·
4238 aod -42«1. In bo&amp;b COUDb'y O!ferinl an advm-d volume textbook 011 blomathecars llboWd be parted beiM!en degree in hia BJeL He ....od\ly matico. He"'s a--oor of the
the 11i1J11 designating ovemight completed a year 88 a Study ~of
editors, Illlemalimtal
~ 'Slid 4lbould not block Center ViaitinB Fellow (011
of 8 ~ ~ aod
-'~~onethetal'la ......_or~ to leaw from U/B when! be ia
•
widely ~ ill
~ _,.,
· • .~ .....-: bul1dinp.
- · JIIOieaar &gt;Gt• n.tllematiaa«lllld Europe aod· the Soviet u~,

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

sam-

{aiwaf
on the roadways between 4230

""'d-da";.;

Critaria

~~~llege..,~:m"· hil!..@tl!d9n~•-.11!1!1i~
~' ~. ~.•!i/,,WO~ts,~;.
0
ta!i-:-r~ !'!"' .. ·' ::irby ~~0Wing; ·~
l;;in'1i/&lt;11! );e.. no:4~~: constriic~oe- ~~~ \a.;~
During the years 1939 to
1941 he conducted e. radio pro,

Nominees muat J8ll1lufy
teecb at least """ lllllllqraduate clas Mcb lleiDellller.
'lbe ~ T-ming .
~pe are lnteuded for
faculty """' b a v e damaostrated great ebillty over a COiltinuing period. ClmdldMes
must have atta!Ded the nm1t of
associate pJOfesai&gt;r or-prof_,r
and must have completed atleast three years of teaching on
the campus that"""" -ds
them.
'lbe Chancellor's Awani for
Excellence in Teaching is designed to be within reach of all
faculty members, wbetbeo: new
or long-term tea c be r s and
whetber high or low in aca- ·
demic rank. It can be awanied
after ·t he faculty member · has
completed only one year of
full-time teaming at a Unioer·
si!y campus.
The nominating prooedUre
will begin on each campo.is with
recommendations made by two
separate nominating commit·tees, one made up entirely ol
undergraduate students and the

r·-

NTP Position Openings~

:.

_...,

Rosen Named Study Center Assoc1'ate

�1~

111,1!113

Views·on\.
Amiing
Sought
The

!J_SUNYAnswers ·QUestions About PR RankiniJ«
..w..
...-.t..,
e
••a:e•
ED~TOR'S NOTE: TM foilow- Prlartll'llml

Selective Amring · Sub-

committee of the Univemity's
JWemal Security J'anel bas isodd a ·list -of queries to the

U/B ~ Foroe and others
in !hi. University community
on ioafters pertaining to the use
·of force by Campus Security
peraonnel. The questions, intended to elicit campus epinion,

include:
Wb&amp;t
including
type and extent, will be required of tho8e members of the
Secwity Foroe to be armed?
2) What mode of amling is
appropriate?
.3) What training will be required of members of the Security Faroe handling dogs; and
, what trai(Ung of the d o g s
should be required~
4) What situations · call far·
the intervention of am1ed personnl!l? .
5 )l What situations call for
the intmvention of personnel
c;!!!ltrolling dOgs? . &lt; • '.
6) In what ways .c an armed
personnel and dogs ,be,·used to
gain the advantages .eaCh presents and minimize the ciJsB.dvantages?
7) In what situation should
armed personnel and/ or dogs
not be pres:ent
Tbe Subcommittee, wh i eli.
met for the first time ·December 13;--bas,aBbd. ·the--Security
Foroe ,...,. ogrQIIP!Io fresPilnd' to
• ~008 and to'COIIUilellt
on any other matters relevant

tl..inins.

i&gt;

l?.:~~~l=•~f'::
F:~~::''';;;~~

~ P!'Pen&lt;&gt; QIII~
tions-IIWiiillflll!!Wntlt'~i!!l'il!

the list from members of ·the
campus community as we II.
The Subcommittee may publish such··papers or summaries
of them for comment: Papers
may lie anonymous.
A survey of the response of
other comparable campuses to
the issues before the selective
arming· body is also being undertalien as a first order of
biiSiness.

'

Tbe Subcommittee bas anthat Pl!rsons wishing
to be heard an ihe security issue will be in\iitea .to
i"'ith'
the p8neJ. gpi!p ~p-\.nn
be conduc!e!! at ~lerv$;_ · 1
The bodY' on selectiv!l \%]'
ins is headed by Dr.' MCAi"'-ter
H. Hull, Jr., deaD of !lie G'iad'
no~

1111 '" a ""'IIIOIUIIdam on "Quatio,. R a i • d by SPA and
1ndioidJMJl Emp/eyees Regard~
U., tM Initial Ranltinf under
the New ProfeBBional Rank
System," iss~JM -December 20
by the Offil&gt;e of the SUNY
V il&gt;e C hllncellor. for Personnel
"llnd Employee RelatiO,..
Recently, many campUBeS
have received ~tions frOm
SPA and from mdividual ·employees regarding the initial
ranking under the new Professional Rank System established
in acco!dance with the recently
p ass e d amendments to the
Trustees Policies and the,Memorandum of Understanding with
the Senate Professional Asoociation.
·
Th'l"" questions often ask
what data and what criteria
were used to rank initially NonTeaching Professional positions
-inti:J·the four professional .ranks.
Additionally, requests for other
suliStantive data "such as the
ranking of other positions within the campus and within the
University .as a whole have been
re_ceivOII. This .n;&gt;emorandum is
intended . ll!i a .respo~ to all
those _requests and ·$auld reoeive_ wide8p-~d distribution.
Under the memorandum of
understanding and under the
r e c en t amendments to the
Trustees Policies, it is the responsibility of the University
Review Board to initiall rank
each Non-Teaching P..:;fessional position in..the Professional Servjces ·Negotiating
UNt 'iii'to' one' of 'the four professional ranks.
Specifically, the memorandum of understanding states:
Ill System pf Promotion
-A . Pro(essioMl Ranks --;. ·: .•
· Th:e University shllU establish, four«-polf11Jll1nc!lrfPJIM.f¥r.
ritfrtated ljcHI,~Hl and•·:liv.' "' .,
·B. U.Ubersi.ty ·Review· Board
TM University JJhall establish-.a Umversity Review -Board
to: ,
·
·
1) assign by June 30, 1972,
or as soon thereafter as practic&lt;ib/e, (NTP) positions in the
Professiorw.l"Services NegotiatU., Unit to one of the four professioMl ranks, subject to approval by the Division of the
BrU/fet;
The University, with the approval of the Division of the
Budget created four professional ranks ·as. follows:
1

that position by peer ilistituPrior to 1970, almost all NTP tions and o t h e r employers.
positions were allocated to one Often missing from this rooess
of 38 U grades (U was an ab- was input by the incumCt of
breviatlon for UnclaBsified a posi~an who, by this time,
as distinguished from the Clas- had . prObably left or~ prosified Service). Tbe sa I a ry moted to a dilferent position.
ranm.1ge IEdorueaca'!:ongraLadewwanasdfixedonce
In 1972, the t:1 grades were
the
w
the maximum salary for the deleted f r o m the Education
grade had been reached, a Law since they represented an
salary increase could be granted admininstrative complication
only upon a reallocation of the which was unnecessary to the
position to a higher U grade, classification proceSs. This left
with the approval of the Divi- -the ASP grades intact but there
sion of the Budget. Such a sys- still was I a c k i.n g an efficient
tern proved to be relatively ih- mechanism under' which an inflexible. arid made it difficult to cumbent NTP might question
accommodate growth within a his classification. Consequently,
po8ition as a result of the ac- two appeal provisions were decrual of duties and responsibili- veloped.
ties. of greater scope and complelrity Within the position. In 90-Doy Appeol
1968, the University and the . The first, or 90-day appeal
Division of the Budget retained system, was intended to provide
a private consulting firm to per- the employee and the Univerform a complete study of the sity with an opportunity to reUniversity's NTP salsry struc- view the appropriateness of the
ture· and to recommend a com- ori&amp;inal ASP grading. The "90
pensation system which might day" appeal should ascertain
provide the necessary tlelribi- whether the position js in a
lity. The Administra tiye Salsry rank which can a ccOmmodate .
Plan was a cOnsequence of, the tl]e salary of the incumbent as
study. That pian · consisted of well as providing far a realistic
eight grades, having wide salary maximum salary appropriate to
ran¥es, in t o which all NTP the position.
p6s1tions were placed. The -plan
was designed to allow salary
In reviewing the initial rankadjustment for the incumbent ing, the staB of the University
of any individua l position up Revi~w ~rd coul~ review the
to the ordinary maximum of descnP.t!o'\ of duties and rethat grade with the-'!Pprov~.~~s offered by the
of the-campus president, witt)- ~""'!'~nt, desk ~ud1t the ~i­
in available funds. The ord1- tion if 1t deems It !'PPropnate
nary maximum could only be (?do- so, and ~"\!&gt;:"!"the duexceeded with the approval of toes and responsiblhties of that
the Chancellor. Further the position to others both within
ASP~ for a specific 'posi- and without ~he University.
tion
be raised only with Comparison With other Univet&lt;
Bud g t approval-'Positions1 sity' title$ Sliould &lt;t'eslllti in proJ'
h6wevei-: · t:Ontmue(f 'lo IJe ltllO- per internal salary relationships
cated
appropria_te U-grades ~ong positions ii! the Unive~­
within the ASP. range. Conse- . s1ty system. Outs1de cqmpancii\e'ritly: ·Irom i97!l_until ) 972; sons_-in~i_cate- &gt;yhether. the Unimost NTP's held' ~itions as- versity IS meetmg market place
signed to U-grad!'S l:fut graded sa~ cqmpeti~on.
in a range under the AdminisIt 1s recognized that many
trstive Salary Plan.
NTJ' pos!t!ons do n~t _have ofIt should be pOinted e&gt;ut, at ficial position descriptions apthis point, that the ihitial .rank- prov&lt;!d. by ~ campus, Cen~I
~ of each~
· 'tian was 'llccom- ~dnliiUStration and the DlVlplished as ollows. c e r t a in s1on of . ti;&gt;~ Budget, ~r.
"benchmar • positions were w'!ere ~Ition descript~O{'I! ~o
selected by the consultant, the enst, duties and respo'\"'b1htles
University and the Division of !""Y J_&gt;ave changed smce the
u,.; Budget as being represents- mcepbon of the ASP.
tive of functions and levels of
Consequently, each NTP
responsibility that were common to most col!ege,j and universities. Salaries paid to per'

u;

$MM~~ :~J"af'~r:~~'::':~ jh.;
';1 i!~~~
'!8!Y. ,,uiujipum,.· .$14~; , p:: ooils!ittim'tS ' 'Oie-,~ts of those

uate~.

.Macdonald Here·

a

Mamanald literazy
political· C:,tumnist,
ilm cntic and author, will be
a visitm, proftisaor in the Eng!ish ~ during the

MiiJ!Jn\Uil,.,. Sl(),00075Q,,;~

m~;n,_m:,:'riJumYi!&gt;~_-$ 1• 7.-750,..~m:.
nary
:::J,_;::.::

romi!N'

o! ,

~aliJriri" with·. con-

s1aera!i:?b! State Uni\li~itY.
salaries and the duties of 'the
Minimum, : $14.200, ' oruiuii'ry inCumbents · "t.ld to·. establish. maximum, $19,1;25, extraordi- ment of u,.; ASP .~de for the
nary maximum, $21,300; IV:' benphmark p081tions. •_Once
those. involved felt

==·
nary

:f.Z~'

.:=r =~~ =g~
re~tively

maximum; $27,200.

.

These four ranks are~
cations of the. former .
~des I -IV . wtth a~p_ropnate
adjustments m the mmnna and
muima to refiec.t the recent

accurate in ·the uCof the level
of duties, responsibilities and
quali6catioQ8 and that'the positian· could be 6lled and mainspn.., - - ..
tained at a rialary within the
MMdonald's lillerary career ace"iv!t~ ;:!'~!! grade to which it was assigned,
betan at F~ where be was · Fional Services Negotiating all other NTP positions were
a 8lalf ~- &amp;.;lm 1~1936. Unit Tbe ordinary maximum =~
~':,~
An ~le . editor wtth . the may be exceeded only for ex- positions on the basis of their
Parti«uo Re"""-11 0937:1948), ceptional performance, subject du.._ -·"-ilitiesandqua)-.
be bas been a staff wnfler on to prior written approval of the iflcB""'fu.:.s~ process, then,
TM New Ylrier siDce 1951. Chancellor and notification to resulted in tbe oriP.nai .AaP
He was both a · mOvie critic the·Director of the Budget
lll8ding for each ~tion in the
(19110-1966) imll a political
Unim
~
col)DIInist (-UI87-l969) fat Jt:•- . oWN ~- - a : - OWICD •
-.ity.
.
..
qwre
· •
.u
- 'l1le further accuracy ol tboee
A '1928 -"-,:·- te · ol Yale, .....,. .:::.*"
gradings was generally wrifled
'
_,.,..
·
- , _ by tbe relative dilllculty o r '
Utbor of aev- . CoaT..:' ,.v ~ • ., .,. -m. recnu""•w 'or ,.....__
... _ _
era)
•
: T.liw:R
'_"!!' . oo.t
~.. ·~ ~· t~ -a:w AM wt'thin"'-':"'!..!:~poat~....,.
' Wit:~ ASP II
'" M!DI: A
Cnuqw !&gt;(,
!1\00 ,
" .- o;20
,.,., ' &gt; ran
Further if it became • MC!l%Um . (1953),• A.foinlt ~
io&lt;Io . ,. , IQ;20 .-, , 1o,oo • • : t o retain' incumllantaat a
Americim G.raita: &amp;.ay_~.on the ~~ ,;..
~~~ il ~~;..,. 8 alar y . available w;ilhin tbe
Effeet of • - c~
1-.,. •.. ;- 1,.., ~' 1:10 •
~the
tbe
Du!iiJI,t M~ on Mooia
1~
-.it.Y 8011Kh~ob1ain
(l988), lllld Polilica Pa.t.
•
u• . . •"~
val o1 the Divi1imt. ol tile Bud-

3::

'!::" •-.....,.

~

.

&lt;1962&gt;; -'

Wbilil -at

ms.

Macdonald .

will laldl liDdeqrraduate and
llftlduate cOu... in two •

be -.... .... CIOIIG8fti8CI
lbii
• ~
-

• ...a

A:,;,p

if~ -··~ u ••

"tic:jlv·~~

·~

i:l :· ,·.
w
4:45

ana

. -.=

..,. -·

a:1o

-- .

. -

. -· _

.. U 0 7 -

~ _,..._~

lhe ..........._ ..;

IIBt ... .............
...........
ASP .-.: ~ ·

==-~=_..,. .J a bicb8r

~ -~r-"'J:-

u·
ew::-

,.. ~

ol tlda - - pro-

u.u-.i&amp;Y
MLL IE..,--- -._,the
t
dati'~
aaJarieB

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

to Budpt
. competitive

-.ld ...
the
paid for

wbo
to-- ..
bia initial .....tlq wlllf*....
to complete a ba
should proylde a CliiDilll&amp;
picture ol tbe ....... ..... .
plexit.Y of bia DCdlaa. 'l'lllt
information wllllle.-lewed11,r
the camPus and then by
University Revleow Baard. Additional input will be obiU!IId
from the supervisor and OChln
such as the Promotion Revilllr
Panel. If the. revi- subataatlates the request, tbe·- -u~on
will be rea8Slgned to a dllrareat
rank upon approval of Budlet:

Th1i University Review Baud
is continuinc to review the Initial rankin(.
Other"-1

The seeond type of appeal
will normaiJy ·occur followina ,
the 90 day period ~ibei!
above. Rete, an individual may
seek relief on the grounda that
there has been a permanent .;g.
nificxmt increase in the &lt;1uties
and responsibilities ·of his position since the time of his initial
ranking which warrant either
(1) a change in rank or (2) a
change in title, or hoth.

bu~~ ~f:1;,o;;~ti~~=

Panel on each campus will be
to screen these applications to
ascertain whether m fact there
appears to be the type ·of permanent · significant increase in
d u-t-i·e·s and ' responsibilities
which warrant further prooes- •
sing of the application.
·
The types of question that
have been rais8ll assume that
some type of dl!$k audit was

~~~· t' ~u~~ ·

t h e initial rankin(. As explained above, tile initial ranl&lt;mg in 1972 was .a form of-.oupr&gt;
sorting based· priniarily upllll
the incumbent's salary and tbli ·
ability of the rank to accommodate it. If the incumbent 11&amp;Iieves his duties and n!8p0118ibilities warrant a dilferent aalary range, be may have bia pomtian revi-ed by ~ a
re&lt;p~Mt therefor on tbe appfl)pnate forms whiCh should be

:O~Ieor'":18::..ca:~

f r o m -the Promotion Review
Panel·'an each campus,

...

Weekly Communiq'U t&amp;---......
---,_,

(Continue'd from fXII• 8, coL. 6)
and oection for which be
~tared; therefore, he. will

COUrBe

hao

:::.;Lb!~~~~will'' !::,::

officihl authOii&lt;l!tion 10' attend
claoses 'pendiJig ihe School's .sub=~~orma to AC!miaoiono
All
· will he clooed to
atuden:": attempt to reciater
" throucb Admiooiono and Reeordo.
u",:t';'!~~:'=tic Society
ia now aoliciting pepen for preoentation at their fourth annual
conference, to he held on SatUr11iiy, February 3. The theme of
this year's confereneo ia U..,W.-·

"'::!

~ ~ r:lit"fC !'~~~

linniatico to edu&lt;a~ oociol
and peycholocical problems, incluc!inc new anolytic.J CODOOp!o
and methodo relevant to the 110-

=n~fe:::,r:&gt;lemo.~

- obould oend the title and a obort
&gt;f t

~~';.k 011~; ~
F~Depa.-t of Linauia,._
~-"
--.
· - . - ......_

u--

�TUESDAY.,.-23 ·
U/1 WOMIWI CUM MIIJING•• ~

A diocaolion .of P"'-"&lt;i COil·
otitulional reyisiilns, N"ew Bulfalo
Bank, 3980. Sheridan
DriWI, 9_;3 0 -

Sa~

STAniTICS LICIUII* .

StatioticGl lnfe,...oce and ito

OCipen"'
public;
••Opon to· ~ of the UnMrwlty.
•Opon~lo"-WIIIIJ~·-Intheoubject

~..:!"'f. ~..£'11::fw!~oo~
Ea.z, "'""'""" Rm. A-49 4230
Ridge ~a.m. and 4 p.m.

THlJRSDAV~18--··

of

ContiCt lc.nq Carclaroll, 831·2228. for lilllnp.
The recital 'ia dodicated to lhe mamoey o~ Victor Babiu. and Will
include woib by Feldman, Babin,
uc:na•
,
Pouleac and Bartok. Ticketo are
, The Student Aoooclation Speak. available at lhe Norton Hall Ticken' Bureeu will preoent Wilma et Ollice:· general admiasion, $1.50;
Scott Heide p,_ident, National faculty, staff and U/ B alumni, $1:
~tioft ror .W&lt;&gt;IMII (NOW),
atudento. 50 oento.
231 Noitoli; 8:30_p.m.
uli.U''~:
I'IIYSICS - · ·
_
'John Hartford, lot Floor Cafe, AIINIIic &amp;am Experiments on teria, Norton, 9 p.m. Admission
Metaoli&gt;ble· Boiium Alomo, Dt. chari&lt;!. . j

f~u%~~'/b;:

. ~:~If:.U~~

SA'rURDAY-20

8

~~,.!=~
~
infec:

':oo

m-

lioao
Ria Y'Oit ia apon·
-aored by' the Univemity chapter
· of A.O.A., national- bonoro society
in ~
.

centa.~ . ~-\:' 'v ,.·
~ • . :--~ .• •

CAC IILM "•

•

Klute, 140.Ca.-.J :J5.an"'- 9:30
p.m._
.
·
Tickato at 76 cento are available
at t1!e l':Jor\on Hall 'l'icket Office.•
HIUB. PARTY•

-H
n---'··'""'M. ~ · Felafel
Israeliand
·otyle
party
wilhHouse
(rae
""""'.,..,..
_ _,., ~
~•wine
Hillel
•

~-~ ~0 ~~

40 Capen Blvd. S:30 p.m.

Uplted Stat. (SIECUS), Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:80 p.m.

VAnnY

~AKEnAU•

•.

U/B w, Samford, C!!uk Hall.
~ hJ: the Stullent· Aa-8
c~=30:.:...:pc.:.m.:::._ _ _ _ _ __
aclcialion Spabro' Bnnaau.
-

· SUNDA¥-21

FilMS• - - -

Throne of Blood (Kuroaawa),
7. p.;n.. _P.oli~-~Eiaanoteinl. ,9
P-11\-. Bolh.IIIDis Win tie 1~ .iii
14Q,_t;:apen.JU&gt;d

JlPO.u.e.

-

nmnNFJSD'A:Y..::.:u
•. _....

be?,;J'~~~o =.::~~

aport 'in

Sta~ti.;!-

a.us•
Elementary Hebrew,.of&gt;eil to all
intereoted- iDd,ividuabo, 262 Norton, DOOn.
HIUa

CHEMic:Ai. EHOINEHING .JEMINAiu

-CO,-NCHT--.--'--------

3: 30 p.m.
. ~.%o'::~ ~~~~~~·~J,ff~
Jane Fond8 and LibraJ:y A'l!litorium, 3 p.m. Frae
Donald Sutherland, 140 Capen, and open to the~c.
7:1A and 9:30 p:m.
·Ticblo at 75 oento are available Olcbeoba. eo.:ilponoored by · the
at the Norton Hall '!ickeklffice. U/B Department of Music lh
AlfttA OMIOA AlPHA
Bulfalo PhiiiWmonic Orch.;,.tra~
I.IC1'UII/SYMPOSIUM••
~
and the G1'08Yenor Society.
.
lm~ D&lt;ficiency Disease, - INDIAN mM•
. Dr.~ •AJ Ju.Way, profeo-•.
Mere Abne (English subtitles),
aor of pediatrics, ~ M¢· 5 Acbeaon, 7 p.m. Tbis is the
leo! Sclio;ol and _pb}'SIQ8Jl-m-cbief, Hindi version .of the Bengali film
Cbildnm • Medical Canto;r of Boa- A bolo Jan. Admiaaion: general
ton, 233 Sherman, ·8 p.m.
'' t
'pUblie, 75: cento; ot u J1 e n ta, 50

c:..k:,•otarring

Sponsored by the Statistical
Labor&amp;!&lt;&gt;')' and _the Deparim&lt;mt

James Villwock, Enjay Chemical Corp., !&lt;&gt;pic to be anoounced,
104 Parker Engineering, 4 p.m.

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

On (T:RijiAppointment Issue

..

JP.Ys.' . ' .

----ldd-·to-undlrhla-.
Wclollllqo; """ -

............. . tile -

.. but the

DeIa· . , _ .... • pa.ytul
...,... .............. wlilcli ........... the ....... of
::_;ada ldlco For ott.r'
~ pl8yful, if

...... ,.,.;~s~ •••

M. . -

.,,trtv---. ..,.,.

-

....... -

. . . . . . 3.

·~

The subititution of· a Pnsi- - was UIIIICCePiaJ.Ie to him. All
dentially-appointed University originally approved, tbe URB
ReView BoaM (URB) for. a was lo be a alliDdllia CXJIIIIIIiU8e
88hiiies by rank, to proWde a Faculty Senat&amp;-118111ed. b o.d y of tbe faculty wiib memberbilae incoaie for all ~g was the pljncipal amendment ship appointed· by tile Eacu8111! ·NTP .ranb. SP:\ is asking to tbe pre,viowily appiOWd !lao- tive Committee. Rationale for
that acb emplo_yee. be moved ument . on personnel policies such a body .... that It prothis year _to tbe, minimllm even and proceclu,.,. to eam Senate vided peer evaluation and ac~u:"t exceeds a 10 per cent approval at its I;leaembe.- Ul countability. Pnsident Kelter
meeting.
voioed a number Of objecticmo
2) A cost of living escalator .
The controversial d&gt;ange in to this prooedure .(- Reporte,
clawie to be ellective Janum;y 1. who should name JDel!&gt;hers· of September 28) .
•
1974... This woufd . come ·m to · 1he Uni...U.ty panei ·on ·t enure - - fnxn Senetio
.elled if tbe rate of inflation for and promotions was one 'of a
Acmrding to the ' &amp;melldi!d
tbe July-January period ex- series of modificatiOns ap- procedures, the President will
ceeds one per cent and would proved by tbe Senate. . Tbe fill vacancies on tile URB from
amendments to the policies and s~ of three names for each

.· BIJick.Med Stiidlirit$ Protest Policies
·

' • :..-.•, • •&gt;. • '

~~;&lt;A

~

·•

•- : : ·

rri.J.~

• :·

••

-

•

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V~ Ja~~.ID1£.S ~K.~ "J,.Y ,J01':lfJY

'·~~-

-'C•

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, t , ',._ ..·.,,.,~ ·. _ .~· -

-. '

~1:~=~:5 EJ:t:~~
of negotiatioliS undedaken with
President Robert. L: Ketter by
the EUCu~..,- ~ and

·--~=~t!~~==-~-!"'~

" Some 25 bliiS ~ .;.,.;.
In~ response to
three eligible 'students a
-;,f ·30 ident. mdicated Ibis summer
depts· p~ ·•.fDiaucial aid;" grievapces,· a statement was re- -per cent of demonstrated n!!ed, that the d~ 88 ra~
cilmculaniliil.Jilinority'reenlit.- Jeased"by.Di'. RimdaJl and Dr. "minority stuilents .ellectively
~- , .
· meft:t Jl(llides Monday m0ming 'Illomas G. Cwnmiskey, assis- receive twice 88 much financial
at the &amp;!boo! of'M~
tant d!!an for student and aca- aid as do IIIOIIt non-minority
At ~llll.Y 7:30 a.m., demlc aBairs. (See full text, students," if the student 'takes
two daaaroom dOors in ~ f~ this article.)
advantage of State and Ameri:
Hall, the Medieal'Scbool build- . :~ financial aid, the I'&amp;Jl .'M~c81 ~tion guaring, were found ch8ined so ··t bet R8ntWI-Cummiskey .statement aiiteed 108118:
• ·
theycouldllOtbolopened.Cam, explained tha.t_aotually, . be'In 8.llSW&lt;lJ: to the multiple
pus ~ . r e '!' o v e $1 tbe . cauoe of a minority student lui- cbai\ge grieVance, the statement
chains ahoU1 .8:15 a.m.
tion waiver as well 88 a unani- cited promotion bo8rd prooedAboiit 8:30 S!m., .tbe students mous decision by the ,-manclal ures and the recent decrease in
entenid
Capen Ha!J., fh!o Ailf Commii!tee .to allow all (Conti&gt;wcd on JXJIJ• 2, col. I)
otrice
ViCe Pnisident ·tor . ,. .-. • - ~ , -"'.. .

=to
ances'!ft!l
9

u....d.

die

b.,.;;,

·s·t.atE;t:v
..:.. 'C \E'· n;f\t ·n;..ru··,_
·c· h e. .
.~ ses
apge

:o..~n·.de
. ~:. :

'

~
lii"· Matt~rmtyl~ave
RUles•
students
·
·
·

aome choioe 11111011g candidates
~table to tbe Senate. The
~t ·ar.o b8ra ".....

appointment of IMividuals not
(Con~

Oft -

12•. .,_ 1)
• . ·.

�~14.1912

.

' Blaek Medieal ~ta .

. . . . . . . . . I&amp;~ ,_ -

'· arL 3)
paiated

=

Dent G~t
~ ~-~ rno
Benefit
.1.
....-I ....W--*
Minon"ties
"'liJed" cluriDa ...
J::: .
',

ad ... iDaome flam ...

till-

..... flllld .U..C.Ied for lbU

aat lila~ of tbe.........., -JI'IIIICI&amp; l'w'tbe ........... year
........................ . Jli71-72. ....
attllio,.......of.....,.or• students dlilfeNd in lbe
~of. u.uc.~Scboal Siilaol·of MedleiDe. 'lbilllliiD-

Gy 0118 ollbe lallowilll-... .........
.
a:) u-.fitiamJ pramotioa;
b.)~ ~t ...
•til&amp;dmy completton of
........., -m in tbe COUllle
lofteD cluriulr tbe IIDIIJIIer);
c.) 'Ibat tbe aludeDt repeat
a portion of the yeu:;
d.) 'Ibal tbe student"""""
thee.....
)~-

~

·

.:

na...

·

JWdl to iD- -

_,._ ..!':_.--:;:-_:::::::';::::;:::
I
-- - - . . --~
for •
ClDIIIW
fiN&amp; :
~.., ...., - lbU liD ber Cllllltitaaod 17 pel' &lt;*lt of
- - · . . . tbml
-.....&amp; wbo .... dlilloaatraled the atudont ~..... consid~wad&lt;
.... ~ --~it . .;.__ ~ ol ~
' - 111m ~ eNd ..u,ilia8 for ' financial aid
~ ·- - . ....
·-.,.........
._
·w ·..w,.
or
tbrGqb llllhedity uurces.
~ became obvious lbat ;;l;ctPt~8peciel 73
.W.R
·, . . · •
WJijle Clllllltitutilll oaly 17 per
~ tbe ~'!: ject Gnnt flam lbe UA De. . . _ JII'Oiell!id mo lbe cant of lbU poop, tbe;Y were
~ ......,., tbey ....- pertmeat of Health, Bducation
IICIIJcy ol lbe lilectieal Sdlool the n!Cipienlll of appromnately
recommendations are fYllll tbe ·..,...w com ~ ADd Welfare.
•
.
Wblcb ...,._ .....,... to do 27 JI'M' &lt;*lt of the - ' support ~ to the Eseculive olnf lbe ll8COIIOI smnestor •of~
Prdject ~ .ia Dr. J .
.-l.ia1 Wildt dlll:illl ... -up- available.
Committee whidl makes the
~ OWlY
.... na-~.. ~ ____._ .............
Clllllllal iDler
111 beeU fol' • Beai,_ lullda foi student final decisiCIIl.
.
.me lltudatl8 fouDd it ~
.... - - . . Ia ,..__r
did not
,._,
sible ·to ~ oomplete of "'lbe
dentistry.
... ............
__, ....,.
•
the have not :-vpace • In 1966 Dr~las _Burp- ___ _. ~- ~·- ..___
~- of...__ -ftt 18
.
-~IPIIdestbllnlem- .wt
iDerealie m lltudeot DOr in ·his
to the ........,.. --......
..-......., ..-... "n.Y IBfdae are more enroUment and in ' ...,.,..Utioo AM.\ accreditation quMtion- _,..tatiDI additicmai remed- to . _ ~t in the
bla ......... In tbla catepoy . of ~ to make student naire, stated that Ibis school ial .....m m the 8UIIllll8r. Never- ~tal &amp;bool olll&amp;udaa18 fftlll1
tbml .._are wbila aluden!L
moreAid
tbe Fi- 'had one of the ru,beet &amp;Uri. ~ lba lblnl pte\'·
Committee deter- ticm rates in tbe country A - - - . . . - ...~- .,.,._ ..~- """'
. _ in )(r_bivid's lettai, the mined !bet it was DO ~ COIIIIllittee was appointed to aHeondiy;~·~ -~~~!tim.. ~-~~..R ~.~~R81adall-e-lllley lllatement ~ to follow a policy inY&amp;~Iipte tbe reasons for such,
...., """ """""" , _
.....- ...._
urc ~
Nllned t6 tbe Um-.ity's can- which, m fad, led to reveille and, as a result of tbeir recom·
As a ..wt of the aperience aid He sUI that liW of the
timal uss Of tbe ~ ~- discrimination, It -~ !"' mendstions, remedial changes dllfina the acsdemic year 19'10- ~-~·'Jf.~ ~
DOrity Applicant Rei.iatrY in illl noted lbat this OOIIIDUttee m· were aBected which haw cut 71, the faculty ADd admiDi!ltra- ·
year~
· · ·...
.
IWIUitmoat .of miDDrity stu- eluded a black student who is the attrition rate dramaticslly tion have determiried that it ia "'"
s tva e;n ta: Of
dents.
~tly ih his ·third year, and Students who had been
undesirable to 8llCOUI8ce or... ~
~ schools
~aM~= ~the
ted by the SNMA as oessful in sstisfactorily com- quire a student to~:- ~. ~ -~~ -, ""~
DIIOil . .llllllltlnr with
. ·member of ~t · 1""!1' who pleting a course during the reg- the .additiQCiaf .burden ~ ~'!)- _ •
~~-~
tatiwls of the llluljents involved, 18 W. '!"f"e .as iiaiac?n w1th -the ular semester were, in general, medial work while ~ a - ._ of "'f ~...... ...-:~
........,~
Dr. RaDdall 8DIICIUJI&lt;led ,~ a.cluiiJ!!sti'Jlt!on of this school for given the opportunity to do re- ~ COUfl!8 l..u;i. !1 ezcep- ·-ft--' ~fa ~by • 197
6
em fanning a oomnnttes !man~ md. ~. comm1.ttee medial work. during the summer tions to that
are • .......,_. .........,
- to bear. student e·---~
....;-·~ if UII&lt;J1JU7IOUB":J1.b·
di!Cided
that 8II1Ce vacati'on pen'od rather "--· · d one' so
"Motivation
~
funds
I
w..,.. · made, it· 18
at -the ·. Eiclt 88id
. _.:_:..._.
_.,, be _to _,_.
llludents are.able to document
av
e amounted to being dropped or required to student's petiticm, ADd usuUJy come • ........
apeclflc camptaints.
only 30 per cent of _computed repeat an entire year. There- occasioned by his -felir that ha ~ but ......... · .~'The following is the slate- student need, each eligible stu- quiJ&lt;lment that Nations! Boards will -DOt graduate in tha tra- tions an~ den~ aptitude test
mmt releued by Dr. Randall, dent, re,ardlas 9{ e(hni&lt;: back- be successfully completed far ditionatlour year perio1l U ADd 8C01e8 will continue to be evalvice president, haslth sciences, ground, sbould "'"'"Ye a base the purpose, of promotion and wben other changes in lbe usted.
ADd Dr. Cummiskey, assistant of 30 per cent o!-his demo!J· ultimate graduation was "academic structure" of lhe
"We~ also b:e . abl~ to &lt;I?
Medical Sdlool clesn for stu- stmte:&lt;f need. This, then, ~ill dropped, since the accredila· medical school have occwred, ~ .actiw ~ting m uru. dent alfairs, in
to Mr. esplsin ,the statement which tion team commented that "un- they have in every instaDce, ver&amp;lties ADd high schools of
Roaald David's letter of Nov. Mr. Dav1d has made.
due emphasis appeared to be been in · fk form of tutorial students ~teresled in a denial
29. Each of his three points is
His remark does not, how- · placed on othese e:mminsuons." courses offered by the various c:sreer. Since 1968, the Denial
coasidered in the order origin- ever, lake into consideration
Mr. David also slates in ·item departments and run concur- School ~ conc!ucted a yearly
allyp-led, bfhim. ·
the.factthatvi&lt;tuallyev&lt;;rl'mi- 2 that " Many changes are co- nmtlywithregularcoursework.. ~ onenlal:!on !'•Y for
- Aiel
n~":ty stu_dent ~ receJved. a incident with tbe influx of A student may be required to JWUOr and &amp;elllOr high school
1) 'Ibe matter of ruiancial tuiti~n wwver w~d! au~ti~- greater numbers of minority a t tend tutorials if he bas been •!Uden~- '~hi'! ~ be conaid to students has been an-ob- ally ~ his ~cia!; .w d :stu4e!'ts.'' and I would assume identified as bavillg sigl\i!i~t . ~ued, . Dr. E•ck-881d.
ject of ...,.t COIIC&lt;!m not only package by a ~um · of · that1&gt;e allua.S to the lact that academic probl~-:.-. ;.•-:.&lt; · · ·" "We .have -also ~ -a .·
to studlints in this ADd other $1600• . ThiJ;S.
nun~rJty s~- a relatively high percentage of . In ~ we ao not be- spec:ial tutorial . slaff in the
achoola, but to lbe faculty and · dents effec?vely_ """';'Ve twice_ such students have been re- lieve that the~ has been any penial Schoo! to help students
administra..._, at every level as much ~ aJd as do quired to complete remedial significant cho!nge _
criteria if they need !l Facul\Y memof Ibis 88 well • all other uni- most non·!""'!'"ty students work for the purpose of promG- for academic suocess which ad· ben are seeyu~~ bD-,a IIIJIII'iewnities. Mr. David states that .Added to~~ virtually all stu- ·t ion into the 'subsequent year. versely affec!l! -either minority mental basis to ·act. as coordinminority, studenlll are being den~.. J~ on~ exhic!chuded) This, it must be frankly slated, students or students in general atol8 ' in · three basic '11Cience
Uiloed to "llu1ve on finsnci8l are ......,~ e ~r osns w
are ~uld come as no surprise This School believes it has the areas. 1bey wiD be aisisted by
aid wJUc:h IIJIIOIIIIts. tO 30 per gua_ranteed ruti:M!r through th.e since it is an open secret
obligation to see that DO stu. _ other faculty members, graduRofl "l;!t.~t r. ~¥-: :~~·~tes~the ~~ :: many of the mipority students . dent wtiQ.has demonstrated less ·• a'le students.: and denial stu. t ain fie staled categor~ d t
.'a:•• himselfon. s · a c c e p ted have educations! than aaeiptate proficiency be denla who will serve .as tutors
that this is not the case, tvien -av~..,
add $3000of
these backgrounds which are not either promoted or gradusted. and facilitators. Freshmen wllo
who
. o sources msy
.
to completely comperable to those When changes haVe occurred it f&lt;!el that they need additional
~~._!,or
lllWD year.
of the non-minority sludents ac- has been as 8 result of """'''lli· ·review •and preperation will be
. y, ......,
,average
.~ ~ 'I'I!e Schc&gt;&lt;~r .of Medi· tion of this ~ility.
giv~ the opportunity of atnonty ~t will, wilifO&lt;!t • cme makes fM following state- Minority ~
tending a 8lll: to eight week.
)
F
much difficWty, find appron- ment in the current register
the
summer
introductory program
3
mstely $811~!.-~le ~~ &lt;and ~ made the .me slate- Office ':,( Mc:dl:.rAI!'i:i lbe . New tesching techniques wui
. on . .., ann
~ a ua~c ment m the calalogs published has extensive) used the "M':: be esplored- especially tboee
whi;!'
~ ~e- for _many Yestll): "It is the ex- ioal Minority ~plicant ~ oriented ·t oward 'peraon-&lt;lenh t students are
JN!\'Iation of .the ~ty that try &lt;MED-MAR)" in its re- tered teaming.' This utilizes
to -:take loans which
esdt. student adJD!tted to the cruibnent of minority students. 8111811 group , and Pk8DDal·
•
, carry an mechcal school will complete
Additionall
t Ibis
••
growth techniques to enhance
mt.erest rate of 7 per cent per his work sstisfactorily and will Rud 1
· ~· a
. wnting, the learning pi'OCI!88
&amp;nnlJ!II. we ~- unfortunately graduate.
is .the aim of the the ~~ w~;:" ~~ to • ''We are confiaomt !bet Ibis ·
DOt m a -tion to 'assume faculho to assist the ~...
·
.._..,
of Medicine,
demi --•tbeir full financial bwd
~-:y
-..uent m has emberk.ed on a ..r.a-t dsy scs
c .......w- JllOIIl8.lll
en.
reachirut: Ibis goal, Student ac- trip to redominantl
.
ADd our recruitment elrorts will
Mlllllplo ~
~mp~_t is judged from northern ~lieges and ~wbi~ . J&gt;IOYi~ · more· dentists flam mi·
2) Mr. Davids statement his scholastic record and from ties and Predominsntl
nonty ADd · disadvantaJed
~ "~ultiple ~ ~·deof positive ~e Soutbern colleges -ADd ~versi . - groups ADd · htJpafplly · produile
m il'!' academic structure of the a
for a prof-onal ca- ties in an elfort to
. ' t .: a more adequate IJI8tlthidloD of
Medicai School especially with reer. It
the n!SpOII8ibility of DOnU::.,tudents .
IDl: . · denl.iata •in tit&amp;· i1at1on." Dr
repr:d to criteria for ~ the faculty after ' the close of . the
l of =~
Eicli: said... : . · . ,c • • · : : . • "·.•
~ ~ ballles this re- each school Y!""' to promote all hoped that his recruitment will .
· ·
· ··
· - •.. · ,. ·· · ... ·
smce ~ on to who are ~ When! .per· increase the number of'
Jici. .:....J·....::.J' .
there 18 "No doubt !o"!""""' m ~ subjects tions fft1111 qualified . . : . . .
•
'Wi:UU.~
of ti*B changes are ~•cates tbe necessitY for fur.
It may be inferred flam tlie ·
. · · - • · - · ·~stud,.=~ ~tingthat ~ ~ act.ively re; .
w
· -s
work. durinc ttie 8UIIJIIIer and to """t
mmonty students to
.
·
show &lt;Mdence of •tisfactory 8 PP Y to lhe ScbcJ:o1 of Meili- ·
·
cme, we are ~ of tbe
Dr. Jenlily' D. Filia. IIIIIIOciperionnance before being
moted." Implicit in .that
!"'"de of !&gt;eaJ.th care delivery &amp;tl! Plofeaor m~t
ment is · tl&gt;at no student en- m the Uruted States. We can- of Educational
, has
rolled is gu&amp;lanteed that he will ut· 8J&gt;S!lk fbuor ~ rest of tbe been awarded .•
- for
graduate in.Jour yeers.
r ruYel'Sity, t 1t would appear 19'73-74 at tbe InterDatioilal
'Ibe academic year 19119-70 · romde our records that we haye Association for 'the Eftlustion
.,_. "'-'"-ft
ms
every elfort to _,_,ft
of Educational Aebiewm&lt;int.
the '!"" ...........-..t num- rather than •--•--te, ·~ U •
•wr of
"ty of ..............__,_ ·
ber
DDDOrity students en- s~ ... -~ ....L... _ba.......,
ru-.o . llpOiliiCIJed
~
_., _ _. ...__ _.__
.......,...., wuu
ve. been.......,
ac- fellowohip,
by 'lbe
tbe

_"JIIbaii;J

!!!!..

n-

:in
=~

,__.,_

equi~

~ ~ ~~ =~Y~
-

:!ii

unsuc:

=flcaml . . '

p"':l;le

w... .__...

,_nse

m

1

1

that

tJ!

=.., i""'!:,

'!II·

'b.:b:

u

?'-

l'3:k

rec:rw

tl .·

Flllll
• '-. A ..;.:

Fe-n: o· 'hip
- ·.. -

.J:::.

~~~;-'~.::f ~led by the School of Medi- ·Spaooer Foundalioit, ia purled
year were-----ot
c cme. 'Ibe dste at hand irufi. to tlllCOill'qe !lludY- of- educa· ·

work.-= J: :"0:

·medial
ing 8UIIIII&gt;er
had
•
·""---~--to ally IMien ch..
~=
class enmDed for tbe
- demic yeu--J.970.71 had
eca. ly';lnaeased number o f • =
ity. ~ in il8 _,__....... .

':.se.

~i~liiit:,j~~~i~~~~~

dtose students-::::::.:'!...
c1emic
A reliotiW!ly
dlffieU1ty
-high~the
--;;
flr8t
;
•
~. ADd were informed of
l8 ..._ this' by lbe dean's oftice. 'Ibe
1ll8;y make ' mlilarlty . ~ tbemlelves

caf4! that only three .of the mi·
~ sludents admitted to tile
of ~et!icine have left.
was dismissed bees- of
poor academic perf0111181Ji:e and
the other two for penionsl !"''·'

One

80118

•

•

tiona! pi'OC88II\e ADd ' products
on a cross-national basis uSing
dsla from 23 countries.·
Dr. Finn is the oilly American IUIIOilg lout n!Cipienls. of
the awarde tb.ia ~· · He haS
been doing resean:h 011 the im-

NO "!" VjCAHCIES
· .!'Jf!llls.
..
' •
· As the _. .....,_ went to
pact
Dr. of
Finn
eduCational~rid his
environB.A. .
there were no campUS NTP pcis!:· · f19111 Syracuse aM hi8 M.A.
tion openings resisterod with the and Ph.D. from the 'UniYezsity
Personnel 01fice.
,
. _ of Chicago. He joined U / B in

r&gt;&lt;eH

1966.

.

�-

~

_Handciu{ted WOOden.TO,ys.
A~ F'l!J4mqi{'s.Spelinlty·· .

:.·-. . .·.
•

..

••

,.· .. -

.·~

'

&lt;;..:~

.

•

'· .8 ;l'A'ilUru ·.·. : ·.: 1n ·f8i:t.. W..Wel's ~.be ihe.

[::w.Aab D"""EftMAN' .

~ ............... · lojll uoUDa, Not_

-.lf-

/

•

~
~ ~=
- &amp;li!liooldly_ quiet;
'Mil(e ' . ~'il ': ~t ~ all1be ·
' · a16Y vehiclee . •type c the Swiflower Electric
"
· • ~nipri!ian ·
·,·aflif!n·PIIl' · took-sii hours. But sometimes
d8Uv_sY.j"' . ·:
. · .' - . I~ ~lib~-~ Eleo- fiDdina just the· right curve
en'llilneB Qd
curliDI . lric, · a lr8e ·i DWpretation of tabofbouri: four hours for the
8IPilea. IIi a · · ·lllllll; !bi&gt; the· Delnilt EleCtric,' a car that eniplatic smile of the SUnnowdrill pn!88 is tbe .rillii8:inder· ol . ran oil Jead-cell 'b atteries) ·
er frog. one of the Workshop's
a pile d 5,000 Individual WOpd- · Making toys seemed like a best-sellers
en. parts. When :Pioperly" as-' reasOnable alternative to · a
·
sembled, ·these will become 50 straight' job for Flaxman, who
EliCh of the Sunflower's desets of trains.
,
has Wo,odworking skills, as well signs is simple; safe and ingenFiuman is 95· per cent ·or as a U/B masf.er's in social io\1$. Like the frog pulltoy that
Sunflower Worklliop. He , de- work.
aeeeccenrnstrto
.c bop .asHardit
mowoodvesodown
~
1 axle
signs and handcrafts the sbilp's
''The artist designs the toys at
wooden' toys, toys made with- his workbench, never working els and pegs join parts toout any- metal parts and with out ideas in detsil on paper gether. Even the cords on the
non-tozic pue. .
but building prototypes, modi- pulltoys are pegged firmly in
Jbe Workshop senerates.· fying as be
along. Some place.
"clean uioney" for the co1lec&gt;- toys seem almost to build them·
With holiday orders to fill,
tiWJ to which F1Uman belanp. aelWJS. From coocept to proto- Sunflower is making toys long

~ · • •·

roes

hours every day.
wagons, rope •
steamer cars (a
the Stanley and

__ ___
,..

Cradles, pullAll of the toys are unvartsiled mice, nished.
,
composite of I "I'm crazy for wood" Flaz.
White steam- man cont......., elq,lainin, that

=J. ~ti.:! trs.:;.,tors~= ::.!i:'tu=..'!'; ::St!:
everywhere, 8ome lacking only
a finishing deb\illike the crowd
of frogs waiting to have round
brown eyes silk-screened in
place.

Fifty sets of trains require
100,000 individual operations,
some only a second or two, but
they add up, Fluman BSys.
..And rou could go crazy
hand-ruttjng four hUndred pairs
of eyes." ·

pine l09ks, feels, and smells. .
Resident toy-tester fm Sunflower is Bradley{ who is two
today. Singular y ·. fortunate
among small boys by virtue of
living in a toy factory, Bradley
takes his frog' to bed.
sunn.,.,..,r Workshop is located at 243 Leroy in Bu,ffalo
(call 833-3175 or stop OWJr) •
The toys are also available at
Clayton's and the Whole Elu1h
Store on Hertel
""""~II'I'IO"ll

establishment is basically insecure. "Women always felt
that male security ~
on an abill~ 'to do thlnfs.' but
now' it -eeema thM security lies
in GI.....Jv pn!WIDW., others
from~."
'

SPA-

�~ 350 inembers .of the Unlwrslty community tumod
( aut for the """*&gt;'• Club'a- onnuol &amp;cholorahiJ&gt; BoO In lho

"--

Aooro

Hilton, Soturdoy nlcflt. PlctvNCI
recelvtnc Hno and o vteW of the - - .

lollrwm of lho -

are the

Kellen'

'

. Project Urban Buffa1o Needs Aid from Faculty

Targeled lor completion at
~ject Ulbm Buftalo, a feet in presenting propoM)s, a di~ to file a complaint other possible project for the the end of November, 1974, the
CAC Action Committee ven- grMt deal of information is This would be similar to New volunteers, if, as Sosnick says, l:ontmct also calls for construc- . .-Is people eepecially necessary."
York City's ~t of " We can find eome faculty with tion of parking areas adjlicent
faculty;-Wbo are aoquainled
It is obvious, be says, " that Consumer Aftairs. What we knowledge of 1""!7 to fO about to tbe John Lord O'Brian Law
wilh the CitY of Bu1falo -and them are a great number of need are members of the fac. getting federal funds.'
and Ju,risprudenOI! Building
. bawo apertiae in · the ·aocial _faculty wjth_knowledge of the ulty. who have knowledge of
In addition to helping direot- and the Physics and Engineersc:imcee.
. .
PrOtilems we
tzYing .to find this field, perticul&amp;rly of legis- ly, professors who teach urben- ing Complexes. Parking areas
Accorcling to JeH Sosnick, di- solutions for....,.faculty who can lation."
.
relaled rourees rould let their for the O'Brian Building will
. - o1. the •PJ!Iject which l!elP· us raise tbe. right ques- . · Project Ulbm -Bulfalo wants students undertake class pro- be complete in tinie for occuwmb out a( the olfioe of City_ . tions and find the right an- aleo to probe the delivery of jects and activities as pert of pancy nest September.
fu'"C'l-n HOrace C. Jobn- . ·s.wers.". . , ,
:
~sucbas.polioeand fi,re
Project UJ:b!ut ~uftalo 1 ~
.., oU be.Masten District, the .. • Whatitre some of•thoee prob- piOtsctioD, to the imler :aty: says: · ·
·
•·
· ,- · -The ~ - uti-li-t y
"alfers an ellll8IJent op- .lem areas? _
''In refereoce to tbe police. how
" If the resources of 'the Uni- work· irii:liJdi!d 'in the rontmct
partunity for aolviq· the prot&gt;- _ 0., Core
can they be better utilized in versity rould be applied to will be for-the· Natural Sciences
lema o1. tbe city.
- _
.
" For irl8tance, last year we the prevention of crime and the these Masten District prob- and Ma~tii:i and tbe En·"'lbrouuh-tbe offiar of .Ooun- __ atlempted to set up a day care apprehension of criminals to lema," be says, '' tben maybe gineei:ins'.Ull 'Ajij;ilieil'Sciehees
cihmn J~ :w.e as -.,... facilitY. in one of ~o's bigb make the slnlets of the city we in CAC rould begin to break ·areiui ill 1hoi11.,.,. .~ : ·'
hers of tbe University 'h ave an scbools, East Hid&gt;. Tbe idee safe? Sol)&gt;e professor may have · down the barriers which bave · Other
" ·
tl
_.tunity to have ,our idees _ . was sound but there was not already Studied the problem. been hampering us for so long.
• wono. ~ Y
· ·-..idered;~ '89mii:k -saYs. enough daf!t 'to support the es- Tbe·answers -Y be there, but - If we can solve some of tbe in- underway- at Amberst includes
· !'· n., wv'lt w...t.ris tllat.Pro-· ;-tablisbment of-ithe · br.•to · what tood iue· they 'if they' are ner' city 'probltimS, we'll be a the eouth_weet ~t of loop
jliilt: ~ driiK' prOpOeals counter 8J11111DeDts against_ it. simply fileil away?''
long way toward solving tbe Road~ willroads
cirdecirdeand·the camkinfor' .-lad inner city progiBms It. was do!{eeled on the pmnds
Vest pocket parks are an- ills of all the city.''
~-~nor, ,. ___ par _g
and 'dvities. 'nleee are for- 1hat if a day care facility was
ouuuuu the UUYaDUI'B Resiwarded 'to• 4be Bu1falo Gity_ esfablisbell for unwed 'molhers
'"o•n~ ~,IYVl denee Halls, ~ rOiul work
CoomcD, , tbe -BOard ·of· Educa- between., the ages of· 14 · and
.I. I 'Y" oJVV. VUV
walks and parking around the
. t1on,; or· jloaDbly · fedei-al, State 16, that il W&lt;&gt;uld.act: BIJ."a catil· Fall enrollment at the 72 compared '!(, last year's growth Joseph Ellicott College Com. 111111 -~te -80WCes for. lund- lystlor ~ girls. to 'get them- campuses · of State University rate of 9.2 pe. oeot and a full- plex and a few Faculty EniDa and~ :
- selv.es pregDant. ·we need peo- exceeds 360,000, ibe Univer- time student growth rate of 14.9 tmnOI! Roads.
H..wewr, Sosnick points out, ple who have bad experience sity's Office of Institutional Re- per cent for 1970.
"'m--ordei- to 'have a positive ef- with tbe establishment of day seerch bas reported.
Full-time enrollment this fall
. ·
~
care facilities and their opereFull-Wile enrollment is 234,- is up M90 over last year and
nun
_
= t fawcili!''ti~esandtofunlmowding~ 392 and pert-time, 127,501, for part-time . bas increesed l:iy
"e""ot:::'
necessary.w •
~~ a Univers,ity total of 361,893, a 2,469. -!be increase includes
· ,
,
preliminary r e p o r t showed. an enroument of 764 students
A PIOiram for &amp;4VIlllced
Tbe day , .:are project will ·While both ~ constitute at tbe University's new " - " Tbe 08iee of Financial Aid
~-?.,m,.:~ ~~ have number orie priority dur- records, tbe rate of growth bas without a campus," ~
.........._,
~ of ~ ing ·t he next semester, Sosnick slowed. This year's full-time State CoUege. Empire State ex- is now distributing financial
assistance ·· applications for
l:f.!:f~tof
- ~tberpriority.elfortwillbe student gain is 3.8 per cent, 'pects·1,600nerl"!'ring.
·

are

r
' o
..
a
·d . ., .

.:.._

'-

'

.,

SUNY-wide EnroUment

.=
. Col

Aid Requests

"'-_Study

For 1973-74

~'1'!- ~is openwill~"dadoo-- to rally local citizens to work
...,. amdldalli&amp; and wil ""
apinst • repeal of tbe State's
'llliDIIIIInd by U/B for all four ljlleralized aborijon law. That
· 8lJNll INIIuate centerS. Dr. repeal Is on tbe agenda for tbe
Ditwid G: • Riclianls, assistant ·coming session of the State

. •· ......._of Germanic and Slav- · Legislature. Keeping tbe abor.J. k, II the propam's ' dilector tion law as is is a vital roncem
tbil ,ear.
'
for -ll)e inner City community,.
8&amp;udaliB
at the Uni- Sosnick feels. Repeal would
.IWIIiW-« Colope and"}}altici~ cause widespread and undue
s-t1t 1D lbe ume lectures and bardsbipa. Project Ulban Buf......... u ·tbelr Garman CDun- fa1o ' - to launch an educa-~
81so·Uiald tion-iDlormatiOn camDAiom· to
. ..... IIi .ttie·'Unlvaaity. of urge citizens to write~­
- Blal, a llfiill:t tnin"ride away, · isl!otors. sign petitions and Jo6.,
011&amp; •
•
.
by in otber waye acai!lat repeal,
Aa iDfllllpal part of tho! pro- A · cimfez!mce _on -tt&gt;e subject
......, clevlilopeil· by pest lllrilo- may be bli1d ~ attemJ&gt;IB will
._ II il ~um .........., ar- be made to ·enlist facaJg- and
~~-=~:=~=- ..:.r..:"'- of student 'lll!lunteas for a _sjJeek-

.eruon

'l'bey-

_at--n:;..:-~~ ~~
~~b:.t-=- ant bu-n 8ervioe:

.

c1UI1I4 Biclllid ~ Bamo

.

intemlt
die project; ~ says,

~

18 .

~,.;:~al·~- :=:~~ -:b: :

-

BllilitS.~ -

Vallier

:==.- ~:=::,'/!1'.::.:-;

.i .
..
- -....._.

t
t -

•

coaummit~' to liaVe their. richlll

~ til__. oldelt ~It Ia !!!It aafficieDt to
i!"T".:: -

a-,.wbidi.actaonlyancom. . . . ,,. Wliat • . .-~a~,· IJ

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

9 ' .,. ....-,: ,.,... -.JI
adllllt'CIIB.Gfand 1101"'"'
• ..........., l'lo-' ~ Clal!iumer frauds be-·'
Billl.- ·. •
It ja ~ b an in-

.. . . .

!he

-

.

:

ci'-

19'73-74.

- "''

·at si..den~:
~~ ~ forms
ti_le-'~ . ~in 216
Harr:imJin.... "'l ~

• 1-o.

••

• ·.,

. ' C'o-m -l .,; t~ d','~cations

(Fomitl.B.) .,;_to lie retUrned

not later 1h!U&gt;

lWdi 1. 1973.

Financial statements' will be reeu., .and ihese
are . to 6e ~ted and sent

. qirlmd in all

to tbe COilep' ScbOlaJBbip Servioe not later than February 1,
. 1973.
- .
lnsbucti&lt;IQs Nlalive to Tiling
will be fouDd _..w to tbe
application pacbt.

Named Fellow

Dr. Stuart L Fii1cbman. profeasor .of oml medicine. bas

t-Il awarded a fellowship in
th'.! ·A'meriain College of Dentists. Dr. Fiacbman bas been

invited Co liecome a feUow in
~tion of bio contn'butions
to tbe adVIIDOI!IiieDt. ol humanity and tbe dent81 profession.

· 'l1.e --.~ College of
Dentists OlJI8!Ilzed in 1920.
.liB ~ lni:lude .seminars
and -ahop8; ailiiJ~.aleo ronduets 8tudlee in&lt;careas of interast .to dentistry and-illl services
to.'tbe publie.. ' .. . '.

��&amp;

-~

-

.

.

Gelbaun1's Academic Plari--V~~\\7ed
··

· ;r

·

A ....J· n~::...:,-g

·

~
~~
'•
•,
~: ~ ··

~".

•

••

~-' ~
""•li

·

·

•

....tlor.....aleaii~DuDJ-baa
re-

fictional
888W11Ption&amp;nlw!M!tismo.reat

tho.u13,!

:which ~•!herela!"""8·

..

·-~~-~~:"~ =-~tlle

:::Z·:::.: ~ -,:nOC: ::t'do aot;~tute lor~=Ia~~'
.-of.Bd~ti!'il~~.!_~liottamtbehu"! '

.....

Cenlllr

~

==~
Univanity sentmarriqeofconwnieDceof
----'-·-·~t tbe lan- · hllll ·
and behavior'iam, a
,.._...,
•
IIJIII!IUSIIl • is perbap&amp;-one
..,_
~
t!
~
::i"i:::r
W::a1
aipifieance.
::";rom DIIIDY ~ of pow- B. F. ·Bidnner, behavio~~

• er Ita importance

may lie, fi.

n8ny, more in our aitiall,.-1188
Of it as an tllllllllp)e of how'o;ur
aociBty is .beiJ11 administered
than in tbe -tual ~t,.
......, modlficalion, or .~ejection
o! tbe -plan per .,_
.
.
Dr Gelbeum's U n1 ver~~·ty
comb'iu. tbe vlrtu8s of high
moral purpose and PfllllllltiC
ll"'lf-inta.t: "aervice~ is an
ideal in wbich tbe uiJOO(i~ aud
the impedlen~ are ~ conjoiue'd.-Evidently tbe IIOClety in
which we exist is dedicated. tO
'tbe eradication of its ~
for it offers to reilliburae those
wbo can rMO!ve OIIP- problems.
· Somehow, the society Which !&amp;
~at tbe baae of tbe prilblems. ur
looked at trustin,Jy as b rationa! ,and, benevolent source
for improvement. In such a society, of course, tbe Univeiaity
is not troubled by_moral clilem-

ta~t

~

tbe· eintire UniYersity. •A
Jiox of "behaYioral objectives
'aocwDulated, teacbera were to
. desip cl8ases in
as many
Of these 8Qiils as p(JI!Sible coUld
hich prieat, leYeJs an attack, m be leamed. Students were reBeyoiul Fnedi&gt;m a1Ul .Ditnit)'. quired_ to spend .....
".
on the premises of tbe Chris- · week .m a bibora-3 ouliii·IIB'
tian-humanist tiadition-::... that Bii!J11!""'fl! in propamrned~~
man is somehow an alllimo- or ~ and/0&lt; '"!'""""II
inous agent, who lllllke$ mo~ · taped procedures. While;. ~
choices and earns Iris digruty P!"~ WI!" se&amp;ft!d !? 'indithrolllh his own earnest efforts, vcdiiSJized lDSt:l'u!:ti_on, what
his suffering. For Skinner, such this meant in practice was that
notions are pre-scientific illu- we tea~er;s prod~ed each !'h'·
&amp;ions which-obstnict-the design ~ent t._,diVIdua!Jy mto fun_otionof environments that would mg Wi thin this pre-fabncated
elicit behavior in 'the interestg system. The lo'!g-tenn· ~.
of our culture's · survivlll, as beyond that of SliDpl;r ~Jpmg
Pllinlesslv as POSSible.
these students to sumve m the
Skinner's environmen~ University, we_re to sa Iva g ~
cannot, however, be .taken at 118
·
own word: the environment is
for Jiehaviorism ~lely a ~
of shap~ behaVIOr. Defects m
.
8)'811!ms. are defects ~ ~
T~ ~r ~on- .
·.the cha~;~f ,til!&gt; .~yi_d"!'' •. to ' provide • forum '"'&gt;~;
to function satisfactorily Within chonp of views on • vorlety
the uncontested terms and lim- of IIIII flclnc the Kademlc
its of tbe mating society. 'The community. We Wllk:ome .both

w!)i~

~.,~

GVIEWPQI

NTS

...-o
.,..

~t~~yi:~-= :,:;:!,ua1~ ::vt'J &lt;:a~

~ ~-IB ~uma:::~~

vi~

me

't!.,~;~":fumnd~
1

l

aown,

·

~-~· to -~ytholo- r~~~

";tmia~~
a beliaviorlltlcL~-.·dObuman-

·

,.__.,...::::.,;
,__ ·

other balld,'iiilbl!l" rates fw int of· creuecl ~lap, whkh
took into 8omaDt tbe environ•

'!n ti!" ~in

week,- re- ·mentaJ' ClCIID,

this article

~'::"~leldalatioo.

~utbontiei

incimtiw

WbuJd

provide an

~,.__, .._power.

~ 7!'!t~.~ ~~

IDlS&amp;lOn """" ,,.._.....,

PowerAutbority,~ed~a
fl!llllator:Y autbonty m·

h
t _e

.J:.::.:ler =~
·
tbe
~Pfi.. r..:r
~~tbority'wod&lt;edtothe

State-;-the
over .its.
users. and

petito;.a1111111n:::''li-ti.em tes
!'1....,.
you'd probiobly stili'"b:
~ beer out of tin cans
caseAlcoa 8lld Reynolds ra

reg- 811d' there'd be 1M. need for Ill:
uminuni -811d
.redetriment of'the
in tbe actor on .Lalre Ontario; 1'8l8lng
allocation of _!he electritbeStacalteen,
ergy """""""" of
.
'()Ill
•
,
'This dual rilgulatmy autbo~ c:.ri We~ ·~ Dlllerent?
itY also pertains tO the questi&lt; n .
cii
of
of
p o.'!"e!
,4etermme
the Public Service CoiDIIWIBlon ·policy 111 . tbeir day;-~ adapproye Yll'lriY
·aridbus
' . •these
Niapra Mohaw
.
• declSlOns• •.,...,....
messinJ tbe Power Autbori~ to corporate mentality. of tbe ~eli­
maintain the same low m~us- vidual Trustees. The question
trilll rates it has . bad ~ of hiJber ra~ tba~ include ~n­
1955_? 'The
lies agam m vironmental costs IS '!- qu~bon
Section 1014 which leaves the which should be publicly wred.
PSC powerless to regulate !he The question of subsidizing,
rates of the P~r J\utbonty. through low rates, an·energy !np ASNY is effectively
~ive. industry .and energy m·
from political pressure and !'I IA!nsive productS, such as Iliumfree to determine policy as tt inurn and tbe question of the
sees .fit within the bo~ of aiJ~tion of power in major
the Law of 1931. Its policy has overload situations are policy
a decided industrial bias. ~or questions of major importance
instance, the Power Autbonty to the people of the State; they
could sell power to its indus- should be addressed as issues
trial users for a bit IOOf!' and by ·t he people of the State, and
it could sell power to N~&amp;gara the Board of Trustees. But even
.Mohawk for .a . bit . 1~ ~r if this were ~. w,ol!ld we ex--.the supulation··!bAt ~ 'pecl' a . clikerent de:Ci&amp;on from
Mohawk retail •t to us for a Board of Trustees that ina bit Jess. It could do this, .b ut cluded a vice-president of a
instead, with industzy receiv- bank, a ~er gf a stock

peopl~

elec~ ra~ .Why.~

tbatt ~

.tbe-=.:w..~ti::Ois

~~
~~ ~·
~

raktewbile~ ~ti"!_~sitbeOIIB

answe:

insula¥

~ :v:.;~~sS'f~=~ :~,_ .f~C~"~::

:;:onpe,:rs •nd - , . .
cal point in 1:he 'engineering of ·
society'., good While· for ·hu• · manpowet; to modify the beveniity Can both be altruistic · nianism the indiWiual is auton- havior of the students in ways
and llll!fli ita own immediste omous, and,ya]ueo are can~ wnich· would make th!lm' funo.
intenilltli;•", : , iihel'l!'is ·~~g within him, and for behav1_or- tiona! in a system which nearly
for IIOibini' and 'tbe Umver&amp;}ty ism there is only tbe relation aU the people 'working in the
..U, do ~ woU by do1111 be~ the ~ _behaVllll program seemed to accept as
moet .60t?d·
Gelballll!) j)el90ll: and .his envll'Olllllellt, somebow clearly the source of
"~~ is
len!! .ll1. · for bqth .~. ~ e,nd ~- •the original "dysfUnctions."
wJiidi '
. •'Utility . acter Of;the mdividuai.IS.c;rucial· ,. 'While we were creatinJ an
ins!fw:tiomil en
on men t
.·!be. v '::n.w.tes the v&amp;!lll!ll of which was attemptinJ to cor~uinanist into 06tensibly n;cl p~lems caused
by the ~
valueless terms ("good" and cial envuonment, 0~ ~Phas!&amp;
''bad~ become " 'live" and was ~Y on tbe indiVIduals
''ne alive~ "a.!::bmy" be- ~Vlor. The .'!&amp;ture and detast. co!es ".:..U.llllll&gt;llii!Dler)
lllgntha
have, 1 with tbe effeCt ·of ~
t -.,.-indis::-:t&gt;.
,;_~..._~ 1't
~==~~f:":~;\: • their .o•n~
• aud l'8lllllVinJ their came
...... ~ e:
was
the realm of dis- as if the left-hand side of an
, ~':'"""Conscience is not 1o- elementary school reJi&gt;Ort card
eated ~ihin individuals, but is "!'d sulieumed the rillbt-band
iilstead projected out into an mde; and when we asked oureffa:ced Jandscai?e delicately ~ves whether_ a student hed
be guided 'by a ,beDevoleniJy im- ~to wnte ~-';l'm::::
..,..._•.,.;,.;.: ~ watchman. Behavior- lll!ll--, we were ~Y
• 18111 18 tbe prop&amp;mmatizatioo
~be~~~Wasbe
8lld PrOlomaltioo Of liumariism, ~ to his lri"!ftd and not
DDt fta ·extiiiction ~ a rarefa&lt;&gt;. ~tch!nl tbe machilie~ To the
, tiooof~culturewbich_,.to =ty~• .:!~;l%
ha~ br&lt;Un
verge on beln, tbe moat cilaiAs Skbmer pombr out later plete of "ideDti!ications • t h
li
in an-aitlde ealled "Hmnaniim their ·
., 'Tbli..:!....:,
And. Bebavlcriilm" (The Hu- to be ~r.;.,. thoit ,-...
'ia•Siv·idli.U,~ ......u.t ..July!A'uiust, 1972). •
(beside&amp; 'Is 'fl08IiNe
f11lPertbe fictilaia of ham8niatic cu1: ;::., ..._ __ ..2_). 18
. ~tme are its owia -l!lll!llliia.
~...,..
• - · .so
praCtically.and fu: tbe problems
of ciVilizatiorullence'.tbe .Uni-

~i:::ic~~~-tbo&amp;te .

:~~ow
· Ibis ct.a_p, ~power in
. _
•. order to~Profi1a. On the

y.......

~ ~~-tbe.~lic~w ~~
::"'~Umorisive
comduaJ
..
For .
Je . the
t:,

j'";.~=of

"' Ale
Is What's,.~ !or: -- JJa
·Good fpf]Ji£ lfeOple,_',fop.2 :

Durint: tbe pzwVIolia aca- tbe Public
Law ol ·
i
1931. we~~'~tlyt Sec-pre- . would ..........Cert.tn enet'IY intion 1014, w~ .,.....~
• ...bisboir than

• as.ialla:
_. .......t 1 w· ~o be of . -.... ~~~-- dOiilic y~ ~a;..•
_,..,. · JiiiwMW U.. aud ·Pbil~Joqihieal .,.........,.... -~
t_at_.._ '
•
'('liDd
ini
•.a J1111P.1!1D
daWn belOw~)'
~ prioriU.S ·ID&gt;·to ,proyjde , ......edi8J echi'ilatlj;q
in~ ~~~~~ -~liml u- IDUIItieaCXJ~~Jeindeadlaat) . • · u{buic cnnmml~)lldJJB
~ -~· ,aide ' tlie -~ it'U rc.l,_ ~
to 'diaa!lvamapchtwienij;"'lbe
p1a. '1,_ &amp;:lll!iDP•iaiiB muat
The contdilictiGa between P!_'011811' is an _atten&gt;pt
ileal
be Jllllde.-"-t u 1111 are to · b enviromnent 111111 cbaracter ,with one of thcl.deareat our
deal -"'.¥
~in Dr. Gelba!Jm'a .~land- aocial Dla llii!l ~
~
. - • •_. . . . Gl-!fThe Wod&lt; U.,ol~~-=~t~ ::""~~lim ia.DDW
- or_ a fait --..li.'-!azd Iatbe · - witli refilren&lt;e. ID

wlth-'f:d.C::

~14, 1972

B •••

_:...,_ dear that tbe

~ofmilld.~eo ~~tbe

•.

Dr.~wwt:llltdbcu- &lt; c:rilbl811d~

~a B'1lmber- ~

-r

.. • •. " .

Bro
. . -x~er
au Social·.fssues.

-

the revenues, and with the
Power Authority being a tax
exempt cocporation, the people
. are keepinJ the rates low for
industry. This is the reverse intent of the S~te Legislature_of
1931, I'! proVIde..power f?r mdustry m order to Jll!fiillt domestic and rural use at the lowest possible rates."

tive all well-!0-do RePublican
aW:,intees•
.
'The snn"ple fact is that by
the method of apJ!Oinlment itsell we oolain a Boim:J-that represents business. and not necessarily'tbe people of tbe State.
It -is almost unposoible for a
resident of the State to have a
more cfuect input into the seDirect. Connection with EcokJo
Jection
The .TrustThe electrical rates have a · ees are sel~ m relative sedirect connection with ecology crecy. According Ill Senator
since lower rates imply greater Warren And-. ~-Sen­
use which implies greater eco- ate Finance Committee mte~­
logical damage. Hydroelectric views piOIIpeCtiw Trustees pnprojects, per se, are not the eco- or to confinnatiOD by
Senlogical offender, but in order ate, "all material ~ r'to
to keep up with the increased interviews of tbe """"""'o s
demand the Power Authority l1lllllinees ;. CODfidential,~ and
is building the FilzPatrick Nu- "no stenosraphic IIICIIJrd is kept
clear Power. Project which will (of ·tbe . IDterview~ ."'
pump 360,000 gallons of bot the law of 1931 · . . . _ • ownerwater per minute into t.ke On- ship .-;- . · . Ud- CODI:Iol in - the
tario. It will not be. aooi1 fOI'- , 'peGpl8 af:tbe-8ta~ apparently
the lake, ·lbouch n cionforms.to · •,the -~ - ~ ......,...• wbo
tbe inad~ Stite•standanls ; .admiillatin'lllllr1'1ilo&amp;r0aif0rus. ··
lor thermal •cliacbarps. Other • .JUit•llbe,~l of c
reactors for tbe Power Aul:blir-&gt; · -·conllict' of ~1..--dllficult ' ·
i~Lm=:: Con Edison~· als6 _ to •-a,-. ·:~~!:.~ _.)
P
- for t.ke. On1ario. A!'ll ~ve:~
after Like Ontario, wbere Will . •iDdualriea ....... . .
regthe next nuclear plant be Jo- , ulabl...&amp;lllh.._ ~ ·ixlllltitute
cated, "with its · 200-foot hich·· Cllllfllcf of ialeN.t?'C1ood luck.
cooling ~. w 1,000-acle SeCreiary of , . . . 1Giiiei1m is
cooq pond? Near your bome? "una- of ~
of
In a wiJdemla area?
· · linr ~ ·tbe
by tbe
Who~ rates I~. greater ~.GIJ'ASNY

proced~.

~

A!tbough

fJ!

a..,...

~"[,.=~~ =I'=':.=~;

declive in dealinJr With aocial .
P~ but - ~· tbe. view ' bee au a e electiicity ;. ··anif Senatiir ~lilly&amp; that
izeil' Di.!IL '~it
·
di&amp;~ 111
~.per unit coat, to pro. "'· WIIIIIda't-waat ~ 'my
~~'•
- ~- eatte aoCial dia8aitea withiJi tbe VIde m-bulk. HIIWI!Yer, the mte. " liii!IDIIIY -• Ito wbMbar . there
IIIey; ~
doiDI so .1t
•
.
•
structure makes no from apedfic . . . _ Ito tbe
· IIIIMli ~·- dlniCtiY -~ ~ llf our social ~tims an ecologicaJ point of view· stock OW!IIinbii&gt; in tbe ,_, of
~ tli!Ji!ila,'thatJidi!!D W.. ~aboUDdtofail,ortoCDillpouDd which Would take into-wnt ·. llli,Y -partiealar ~".·HowtoJ.be d8map to our
-.
: ·:--.~ aP:Did ~
tioo 81 '::,.tioD~t, aal- to thermal pollution, .Tbne , of state's
8ectioo 74 of
--7~
·~- ~ ~ 8 few
needa to be some .COIItrol -over -- tbe PUblic
• Law, . the

~-~.

!

,

:t"

-~~~~~siti~.adlil

... -

l:• ~ ~~ 1:::

Jabt'due~

~tbe·SecnlllrY

._.,-z_ , ~n~Qcmtbelrftito':f. d:~~~ . ' ft::.:~~=

..

ba; =::t..~
ty; lU
, •- ·
•

IB
'Gial
WoiUiiaa
~ - . be

T.l;ie

1

~ &lt;;eater, aa an

Pricecharledby wbolaale llBiftof
Bll8fJY
tbe Poww Aut!ait:v
Cand, of coo-. al8o tetall-

-~lhaa
a o
~:mter.t
~~
f......_~ .ttota1J&amp;l
tbe PJMw Aulbaftt..y, ..._tes.
wwoou

toliZ~ 'fii...!!...a:!.~=.t· · sumers). ~Jiru•at rate.o:I ~~ ~~ rthat
lilat!llllr-

.

....::i;

,-:,;.C::.,.;t

.

•~tbe,

. . . . ..
Iii

f

= '::-.: =..-=..=

' ~~
IOCial ~ PIOvides liD incenthe lbile Ia. ooalllct· of .interest.
... cWiaed by utWty,
:
. "" ~ 8, eo1.
tioo wliich take advanta;e of-, ~ .... ,..._ 8, eo1. aJ

fJ:,. ~~a;e

��. \./

~
8
PhD~~----------~-- Alcoa-

w-··

(~,...,...

1, eoL 6)

........ from

~U; JJ72i

~ti~~mnwimmun-.--~--------

-...amy to (COIIlilwMl 'from ,... 6, eoL 6) ( Continued /rom ~ 6, eoL . 6)

"*' daa't

bllve $10,000 In- '!'D!"'J'l from tboee ~
-.lor lndua- ing tidee of puty Jlll8llion and
lriee -that -the Puww Authority prejudice. IJet uo
1101 ..,vy
auppliea. Tbe islue :i&amp; import- our neigbiMa but be caateDted
ant,
though.
Do
the
people
with
and
improve
Our
Own
CODhladtute and caatinue to 'IOIJd&lt; synlbellia. · o ecanomize at the
have a right to know ai:Jout the dition and lead peaceeble and
'*-'&gt;" with faculty and IIIII- eq-. of piDJooopby ia lalae Truateeii
wbo
replate
an
en-'
quiet
lives
In
8}1
goclluand
deota In the ~~ of economy and muat eYI!Dtually
J...iJ11Uiatic: Tbia sprinc Kab- . impoveriab other "PI- of re- ersy nB&gt;UrOe &lt;MDed by the honesty." In 1861, ·George
Brown, a Scottish-born Uberal,
Kyuq Cbo ia to t.eadl a course sean:b, education ilnd life. - people?
~T-~~ ~
.one · of tlie fatbere of CooI think thet our ~ of
~~.~a:=
v. DlpaltnWit and
u• · federation, said that what survivsl bllve :;iYml ... a special
• .,._..:......,.:____.. ther tech.....,
And then, obould the ~le Americsns prized In their chil- . kind of llftOtllllllle, too. 'lbe kind m ~- ...... 0
'lbe authoritative survey con- have e light to IDDft! directly dn!n was Independence. sauci- of muted aelf-&lt;lOIIgrlltulatians
naloiicol discipllnee.
dueled by the American Coun11! ~rt, ~ are not _many ciJ of Education shows thet the chooee the Trulo- wbo· ft!llll- ness, owagger, inetead of docili- that are - contained In tt.e
cliacipliDes ~ ln~ern~ho":al Philoeophy Department bas im- late an energy n!8CJIIlCe ."COD- ty, , humility and prudence: lines . from a poem by a Marlby the ~" a 8oerd ''It bas become a matter of . timer named Fred ~:
poupe of this Umver&amp;~ty wtth • preeaive national stand i.n g. trolled
that decides public policy? Do ( American) national faith that Not 80ft t~ aoUIDMre
tooi
wbkbt do~ln&lt;!!_~ ~ With a rating of "good," our
. ~t'cono trothel there ia _,.,thing contemptiroot ,.,ther
"*'
-· --· m '!'!- department bas a hiiller rating ~P._leownhaveli~-rif'
....,..·
•...
_ble
iii
submitting
to
rule
and
It
fMJJ
not
gilmtll
but
1M
portant ways, and many social than such notable departments
lma_4ine. if you can, that the true pceitioo. of mnnstunted alronl ·
"!~!'* and pJOblems u:e the ac- · as Ohio State, Boston Univer- question.
a repreoentative Boer d of kind ia ·one of entire lndepen- TOUf~Md by IIUlll and bleak
~ of nanbers of our sity, University of Colorado, Trustees that included a Black denoe of ·his neighbor." In 1905,
IDUJlry wetJlher
IlL r-..a - the ~ of
Pennsyl~ania Sta~, Tulane, welfare mother, a Bronx · con- Wilfrid laurier, a French Can- To 8TOfD up •'- and to endiiTf!
.._.,......
· Vanderbilt and Syracuse Our structioo man whose air condi- adian Prime Minister of Canafor W,.,
· ·
_
' Not on1 does J&gt;hiloeopby
department also bas a bigh tioner was turned off on a da, said "We live by- the side We~ not gaiMd to imy.•.
· J.\ amine
foundation&amp;
ACE rating relative to other sweltering day last summer, of the nation for which I have
- breGdth or k111th·
,.__
thlntlng concern itaelf with &lt;i&lt;;pa_rtments at Bu11alo so that and pemaps a conservationist the greatest admiration but And· oil our beauty " our •~ ~
pubUc airairs and
with wt!hln the Faculty of Social to represent our lakeo. and . whose example I would not take
atUii'boni ~~~~~h.
• other
fessions
disci
Sciences oruy one department streams. t imagine that. the In everything. Wbenlcompare
• ',-'--::c.-~ - ~ •. s-:.c:;
Jl(ln.·
a1ao - ! : t o ·1nU.: . ( P~chology) enjoys a higher Bronx resident would raise the the st&amp;te of the two natilllil.. :r:f;..{J:::O.: ••.;;...
•· ~ ·.:
grate ' thought Students "" · rating. In short, the ACE sur- rates to Alcoa· during the sum- when I think upon their futUre; ~ ~· ·•
poeed to the
knowledg • vey shows that PhilosoPhy is mer mootha fo~g them to !"'t whe!&gt;. I ~"'!' the condition
(ConfWWl1rom 6, col. 3)
rovided by • • lines
die one of the highest' rated depart.. do~ on ~ectri~ consumption of civil SOCiety m each o! ~. sents a· model for the future
P
•
P
"!' - ments at SUNY/ B
m this manaiement of the University.
~~-·literature,~.
The quality of ·the depart.. dunng this penod. A;Jcoe could and wben I
·~........,, ma_tbematics, and . ment and the unusual diversity then ~tore up alllll1llll!"' over counl!&gt;' a total abeence of A University whose priorities
the Winter for ~ dur- · lynchinp and an .almost total are to 'those depertments conf-=
of the program offered here have lag the summer, or It could re- ahsenoe of divorce and murders, cemed with behavior and attithis knowledge, and ~11)'!1 regularly attracted gnduate cycle a '!action of ~ . 7 billion for -my part ~ thimk heaven that tudes is bent on the production
ia b.t
to bel .
studen~· of ~p'lional ability
.
-,.Pm
from uruvers1ties abroad as well all alummum cans II produces we are livmg In a country of social engineers wbo not
;;.,.____ w~ . the Y"llDDI are taull!&gt;t oruy design edUCiltional instim~f!&lt;m.
no.wle~ge~ as from distinguiabed . titu- ------~
qui!ed m- a apec:ial SCience JB ti
· this
ms
G1.TTU1.ll~Tll.PT'C'
&lt;?&gt;ri&amp;tian ~ and Chris- tutionll as character molders,
not relevant to a student's life
ons m
country. For .,.. - Y .l.lJYY CVU.. .1.;::) tian morals. • Each of ~ but, further, see the entire.,...
ur11ees it can be brought . to ample, two of our new gradumen was_trying to frame his cia! enviromnent as extensions
a
J:ebeaaive and ~t ate studeJ.lts this fall in philosoof ~ good life and the of this prooesa. Society becomes
set~ and vslues. Hence phy of SCI~ce are from Ozford. each year, either poeeibility idea
aood 80Ciety. What tbeoe sta~ " environment," a means to the
the relevance and etJectiveneas 'lbe qual!ty . of. these graduate be i n g economically feasible. menta show, wben we strip transformation of the behavior
of the teaching In other disci- s~~ts lB Indicated -by their And while Alcoa did some eco- away-the dated rhetoric, is the of citizens.
plines ia to some extent de- ~ two Woodburn fe!low- logical good by recycling cans, continuing Canadian yeeming
·
~tJ11¥1Dinlegrative teachP8 loc;ally and such national the Bronx resident would have for s~ility, for social cohesion
ln such a future institution
• ~
.
fellowships . as Danforth IUid more. pawer to run his air .con-. for · oec:Urity:- lf-: the. -'Uruted it seems•unlikely-thet-behavior;
~~18
· . ..,1 ~; 4
Fulbright · Also ·iiidiaitiw of ditioner. The poor Black Truat- States is about life, .liberty and ist. assumptions will penelrate
d .d
csnDOI m-&lt;~ently the exceptional ability of the ee would want her electrical the pursuit of happlneai, Cana- all or ~en moot ,departo;Jen~.
~ ~
~tudentsPh.Diso~ ~ In _plac- rates lower, so I guess she might da, In the onlv phrase that . Many will pJObably languish ID
that is, without first clarifying "!'~ our
· s m a.cademic po- rai,se the Industrial rates a 1006t Canadians7
recall ·r rom benign neglec\, lndifferenUy.Jil&amp;'
and lntepating their moot fun- &amp;lions. Las~ year we were more li~e. She might reason that ~ British-North· America Act; CI;U"' '!litl;lin;~ ~,~4-~
dammltal val.- and beliefs. ~ m. placement than hel\Tata; have gone up for the oJs about peace, order and good · pigeon-bo"!"'.. Tbeir dilicipliiies
As Socrata; made dramatically such distinguished departments past 17 yeaJS, so why not Al- government.
may remam unmune, but the
clear for all time, it is the as Cornell and Brown.
coa's? The conservationist sturdJ, ConMrv.- &amp; Cold
range of their significance will
epedal' falll&lt; ' of philosophy to YJ. ' SUmm.\y ·"
might have something to say
~ distinctiye, highly con- !&gt;" COD:~~&gt;'· if imP!Jl'OOPtf011ter aelf-lmowtedge.
Tbe Philosophy Department about that nuclear reactor on servative, Canadl811 social and ibly, diminished.- The role of
political values have severely ·~ . Uni~ersity as "-..ant"
constricted us ment.ally . w•!hln this conterl borders on
o{ !hfe, .rodent, body and of. in- the ACE rating, the quality of on the question of ·rationing They've given Canjldian life being thought-policemen and
~vidual students. We have ac- graauate students attracted electrical , power, and slowing a kind Qf claustrophobic 'quali- mo~ tutors.. Reorganizing the
ti~y J:eCrl!ited minority grad- and our ability to place ~ the growth rate of electrical ty because they deal with sur- enVJronment JB a subtle way of
uate studerits and have recog- PhD.'s) and is making import- consumption.
viva!, and preoccupation with returning ·t he responsibility for
n1zed their special interests In ·ant contributions: (a) research
When we begin to talk about survival tends rather drastical- the problems of civilization to
social philoaophy. Berldey Ed- and teaching In the 1006t oen- people controlling their en- ly to cut down one's options. I Individuals qua individuals
- dins bas '-&gt; especially active tral area of human thoud&gt;t, vironment, the air ·t hey breathe think that, to a much greater ("Don't throw trash, you make
In encowaglng and guiding (b ) clarification .and evsfua- the water they drink, when w~ extent than the United States, pollution") and absolves, even
tl*8 students In their t.eadllng lion of concepts, beliefs and begin to talk about people con- Canada is a country of regioo- adulates, the ·society by which
and. Jellellrch; be also develops values fundamental to aJI.other trolling their energy resouroes, alisms, a country of Particular- they are organized
collaboration between 01,1r de- disciplines, (c) underatanding ~I the people, not just special isms. Our politics is concerned
"Service,.. or servitude?
parlment and Black Studies. .
and Interpretation of the In- mterest groups such as Indus- with the acx:ommodlltion of all
Yours truly,
In 1969-70 the Department's tellectual hjstory of humanity try, and when we begin to talk or many collectivities in an un-RONALD IIII..KOWBKJ
Curriculum Committee under- (d ) international and lnterd~ abou~ people, such as the re- easy relatiOnship with each
. · Tee.chlng Assistant,
took a complete · overhaul of ciplinary research and teaching · co~tituted Boa_rc:l of Trustees,
No matter bow much
. Deper-.t of English
_'
our curriculum In the light of and (e ) integration of ~ havmg the pohtical power to other.
ditJuse and generalized good
dlanging needs. Faculty and and vslues to foster aelf-knowl- ~ntrol decisions over their own will Americsns may profflll8 to- T Tr.",..,_._.,ln li.T--..J
atadents 'IOIJd&lt;ed .jointly for 8ev- edJe and make knowledge ac- lives, then I 1hinlt we're talking wards us, America's presence V1~ 0t~ lYt;;t:U
enJI monthe; poDs were taken quired In other disciplines ~~ IIOCialism. "Wow, social_
i · CI~ .'.i ·
lllld 1118Df ~tinp were held. meaningful in the lives of stu- ISDJ. And all I wanted was as a large, powerful, vigoroUS: Q-&lt;'t/ .m.
Tbe curriculum tbua collective- dents.
cleaner air." This concllision is
• ly IICilieWid baa, we believe ·- The Philoaophy Department coupl!"f to a decided anti-ln- one element or another of our semester
111 .~.:""'~
JI!IIdlll*it, and we are cobtin: believes that ·t his quality and dustrial bias al)d susj&gt;icion rve
own precarious halance. U it's Charles ~V. m.;;t;~ ~
IWII to diiyelop it as we dis- ~lion justifies an In- deve~oped .-ov!" the .course of any
consolation,
I
should
perUndersradiaate
St d·
·
oovwt",...- Bludeot needs.
creese m budgetary silpport for the mvestiption. It JB hard to
IV, ..........., - "EEll::oncj"
the Ilepartment's programs , ha\le. g_ood feelinp abol,tt a haps point out that Canadians minds that all ~s..::
suspect
each
other,
too
not
jUst
deni!J
wisbina:
to
taJr:e
paduate
1
UDilb moot prof~ 'and over the next several years 1n specialmterest poup that JB re.aillalifiC cliaciplinM, philoeo- every discipline, at least o..;, of lentlesaly grabbmg for the ener- the Uni~ States. Periodically, cou.rseS&lt; for ~te
one section or another of Can- ·credit ust
··
JIIIJ doel QDt ' - ' -81p0111Jiw the four university centers 1n IIY resources of the State, at · ada
will announce In what ·prem
petition
'!ftice.
ad, IIDiib many -the state sbould have e truly !'l""'ial rates, with special priv- elSe way it bas redefined its
Forma
and
instnlctioas
acianoes it does not .-1 outstanding ~t. N 0 i["J!e&amp;, . whose OJI}y reasOn for
apeditions or ma.ssive SUNY unit presently bas such bemg JB money. It's hard for alienation. from everybody else. available both at tile ~
We think of oursel""" as Office, 278 •H ayes, and at the
arc'bives. 'lbe a~ofpbilosophy,but . !De "C&gt;' to have good feel- sturdy
northerners, but life In otJ'ICI!B of the Diviakm cl · Un~ ol ita demands oft
since - are now by far the mgs.
such self'JJJh!less. be- . the cold climate is a precarious dergraduate Studieo Academic
teifal NUts .from . strooaest'phi·lOI!OPhY ~ ...,_the contnuy_to the mtent of busioess. 'lbe people of Otlawa · Advisen.
8 tate Legislature and the
tt. Dai8nt cl fta-Wb· • dee- "*'t In the system. as· alibwn
take a kind of melandtoly ~ • .
crJbed ..,.._ ~ draws by the AGE rat1np, we beHeve ~ Authority, I .can't be- in
fact that of all the eapiPeJ'IIUIIIIJOD to .taJr:e a pad
upaa eridaa..Jreadv Jirovld8d we sbOuld · be ,;-. this 8ddl- lieve _~t what is good _for talsthe
of the world Moecow He!- course for underilraduate aedit
b.J 1be of the special tionaliJUIIIIOI'l
~ tB necessarily good .for sioki, .s~ you ....;..., it, must be obtained not~ III8J!
there JB oruy one with a higher two weeks after the '*Pmlnli
~1, a lower annual- ofCoureestbe ~ Ebert -.l!_lc[
Winter temperature than Otla•wuach are tabn With- ~
.wa. What ia it? ' Ulan Bator
~t ·!&gt;avmg first ~ J181'. £ _._ _
_ _.l_
, _ _ .. .l ._ , .~_ In Millard Fillmore Colleg
. ""~
~
the capital• of Outer MODJOwL lDJ88!on to do 80 will "'!! c;arry
Perhaps there's another fact credit toward the ~
'
~
::::..~! ~"'! ~~,_ ~
Galley Award, ""' hicbest you milht take home and-trees- degree.
,_ ~
of the United States As- ure and think.of. 'lbe last ~
"' wish to ufge the facu1
.
.&amp;. . : ; ; ; : ;. =...z.
.
socla~ of Evening !Jhidenllb weelai of November and the last and chairmen to 'tab tt.e ty
She • ,-t president of the two weeks of ~ - In -titi0118 . ver.y aerioualy I n : , :
Aalciation ·aDd pest vice ,preswotds, just before the ~ the repu1atian ·
Ident of the ·MFC Student As- other
. (
full o"!ii't of win~. and just at
· Integrity c1 their and
IIOCiaticm.
. '
/
the pomt wben Winter which is grams," ~ ald.
PrD:-

Colllle Band
Studiea mecliGiDe to blatory, CGIIop. Four ll8llbeal cl our tbat are 1101 fully utllboed UDtll
..._.._I partiCipated In the the ..Uta baYe '-&gt; aubjeclofd
bilhiY....:..-tul Liquiatico to ~jew! criticiom and

~ In the 48

-u -

. QtalltJ"'"'"

we

-of.:;

tJ1

Pj:'

;.,.A_,..
-.-;r·

C

= m::_,;'k"!

omerve

"':!.,'1'!';

VO::.t!:..!i=

{I~~~":"n:t

ean

t= ~.!:ti~~~~ l;:

~t ~n~~~ p~1;c(~~

=en! ::S~tW:usa!:'1!

=

\)

F...,._,..'Y
~

me-

GDn~ri ·

•

c~~~m2~~seilior

=-

bu'-&gt;awardedthe~

;'4;,!

";:

:!no.

':-G.'' ·
.!:';;;;..~ ~~

�[)ectlatb« 14, 1912

9

Only 1 of

446Phnsls
Unemployed
By

SU~

A. CAMARDO

U~I......._...._

Onljr one of tbe 448 llludmta
who padualiad with Pb.D• ._
~ from U/8 in tbe J..t two

yean is cunentl.Y. ~

acconlinll to a survey coliduilled.

by the Graduala &amp;bool
Tbe survey, IIDderlallmD by
Dr. McAllister H. Hull, diu .
of the School, 111111 paduala
assistant Art Levine, DOia that
the one unemployed individual
gives U/ 8 "doc:linl reclpimta
an unemployment rate ol cme
fourth of one per C*1t, a 8pra
well below the D&amp;tioul rala ol four per c:ent ~t
for graduates with dooloralaa.
423~

C.mpuo vto1tor Dr. nne Chine domonstrated the onctent Chinort of ocupuncture before on owerflow . . . - In Diefendorf
Frldoy nljht. Pnulne ,_leo Into "life _
.. control points,
he copped them with mou~ll&lt;o m-r whlcf1 he 11t oncl let
omoulclor, ollowlne the hoot to
the ocupuncture
paint. "lt'o • mlrKio or moalc," he uld. "But It _
..
on ollments raftCine from colds to poralyolo.

....-.w

Tbe statistics, gathered from reports of department dJalr..
men, reveal that" ~ of tbe
Ph.D.'s (96 per ......t)' are employed in poaitioba ·~
coiJlJDeiiSIIiilt with the "-nne
received." ~indudeo tiDe
graduates in !~"
poaiti0118 who are involved In·
research projects rather lbui
teaching. According to Levine,
almost all of tbea8 graduatee
are employed in their own field
of study or in a cloeely allied

area.

Sen~te

Another 21 are not currently seeking _jobs (and are, tliUa,
not coDSldered ''unemplo_yed")
because they are otherwi8e involved in such altuatiolll as
"!ilitary service, i II n e a a,_«
family reaponsibilitiea. 'lbla
category also includes individuals whose current job atatua
is not known by the department
awarding. theu de..- 111111
~ currently piii1IUina fulltime degree P""""'""'·
In
-r.;,om..,tiaD far
the survey, Levine alao ...._
departments to !"PPrt on . _
soon after graduation etudmta
bad cquired iobe. ~

Leaders Recommend·Security Policies

Resoluti0118 ~ Cllllll- ly trained officers and investi- the faculty's consideration,
strainta on the development of
1
pus security and minonty re- gators of ·t he Campus Security
"And the Senate asaerta that an academic plan imposed on
cruibnent were pa-t 111111 Force."
the generation of a valid aca- and by the administration are
othera on· .acadealieo;.planning . Aaaistant to the Vice P·resi- demic plan must meet the fol- arbitrary and dangerous to
propoaed at tbe Paculty Senate dent Will Brown addiesaed the lowing Criteria:
thoughtful and dynamic cre1) The entire faculty must ativity,
Executive Committee's Decem- Ezecutive Committee on a preber 6 ..-ing. _
~Y &lt;;i~ted ~ out- pa_r~cipate significanUy in ita
"Be it resolved that the Fao'The 'seCuritY ft!8oluti6n fol• liiiing m 1 nor 1 t Y recrwtment 1111tial development, by wbich
looved ·a tej;Ort Of 'Seaate Seco prqblems. . ~ Commi!;tee re- is understood that planning ulty Senate Executive Commiturity Committee !Jll!lllbers R&lt;Jb- sponded with t,he foH~ mo- shall, originite at . the 'graas tee create an ad hoc Academic
ert Fleming lind·· Charles tion, passed without dissent:
roots level, that 1t abaU be Planning Committee of three
Planck, who · empbaaUied · the
" . . :-given&gt;the ·lladitional· re- ·carried out expeditiously, but members rep""""'ting the three
controversial queotion of ael,_ sponsibility of the faculty for that sufficient time sbaU be al- great jiivisions of knowledge,
tive arming Tbe concmn that formulation of academic policy, lowed to permit substantial and Humanities, S o c i a I Science, per cent received jobs within
and Natural Science, to deselective ani:un, migbt eacalala . . . the Faculty Senate Execu- unhurried consideration.
velop the philoeophical princi- six months of p a d u a =
to general anning was ex- tive Committee endorses the
2 ) Plans and ideas sbaU be
ples
and not a resource alloca- one per cent emp
pressed by Seaate leaden. Tbe concept of an incentive pool integrated and coordinated in
"
tioo pattern for an academic within one year ol gradua
Executive Committee agreed and other measures to be taken a steP..Wiae process -through the plan.'
For 19 ~ cent· of the lndu-·
(11 yea, 5 no, 1 Jlbatention) to
~ enhance . ~ !Jurober of in- !rle~es of ~d~c organalas, Ibis infonnatiOG was 110t
forward the following Security digenous mmonties and woroen 1zatioo of the Un.JVersoty to the
In discussion of the ~ known.
.
•
Committee rM)IutiaD to· the - holding academic positions in highest level. In Ibis process resolutions, S ega I
Aooording to Dr. Hull, tbe
full Senate with ito apprOval:
Ibis University."
~!inc admin.isCmti~e '!rgan- that he regarded the l"M)lu- figures prove that "if quality
"WHERE
128tions can be e1fective m fa. tions as compatible and with- of educatiOG ilaalf is llllffidentJY
• . ~ our u! ban - l c Pl8nnlne
cilitating the process, but at drew his motion. Hammond, higb, students are independent
~-18 -~~ s::r~ to
Tbe academic planning issue, each hierarchical academic who felt the p~ substan- of tba job marlret."1ie8dli8d
~- and,
cnme wbich """ been taken up at level (for example, the oeveral tively different, withdrew his that tbe lltllaM ol tbe U/8
an VJO..,.....;
, each of the Committee's recent Faculties) it abaU be _primar- resolution as well.
graduatee provideo an '-t"WHEREAS, there are ser- meetings, elicited two separate ily commitlaes and assemblages
tiw to "bep tbe repulatbl. ol
ious problemo of communica- resolutions from the Commit- of the Faculty wbicb abaU bear
tbe Uniwr81ty up, 1!11P11Ci1111Y
tioo, oooficlence 111111 mutual un- tee. Harold Segal (Natural the responsibility lor ooordin-J
In other busineea, the Exec- to make sure that educatioul
derstanding ~ ~ aev- Sciences and Mathematics) ation and integration.
prognun1i are of hilh quality."
utive
Committee:
.
era! ~ o1 · tbe campus moved, seconded by George
3) Final adoption of an acaEd.D.'oF...
demic plan sbaU consist ol ita
oommunity 111111 tbe Security Hochfield ( Arts and Letters) :
• decided to iasue invila•
Tbe aurvey filurea. finlt camForoe; and, '.,
· -. , ,
"Whereas the Policies of the acceptance by the Senate, as tions to area legislators to at- piled In .June, 1972, 111111=
·~ ~t Ket- Board of Truslaeo state (Arthe representative body ·of the tend one of ita meetinp.. .
daliad In October, lndude
ter llome 'liiiie aio 'aiiPoinllid"a tide X, Section 4), "lbe Facul- Faculty. Recognizing that tbe
• bMrd frOm Esacutiw¥ice tbaee otudmto paduatlq wi
Commi~ on lnfaDal 8ecurty of each College Sball bave President and the members of
ity l1lld8t the Cbainnansbip of the obl.igation to participate his administration are valued Preaident.AlbertSomit, appear- ~ ~ ~-~
ing
for President Robert L " fro111f tbe Schoola~
Dr. Mc:AII1ai&gt;ar Hull, and bas significanUy in the initiation, SOUIUS of leadership and .,..
Ketter, that a reorganization ol Don....._· ~ t.w «
recentlY r&amp;ieiY.ed "the l'llj)llrt o1 development and impleroenta- perience in academic aBairs, campus
minority p~ ·
-•J'•
'
•
that ClOIIIIIIittee and reeplllllled tion of the educational pro- the Senate and the Faculty will likel . Somit
alao said that
tbaee reoeivinl. Bd.D. dell-.
to it; noor, "
gram,'
expect and welcome their -.4~tion
would
meet
in"
~
Fllculty
ol
~
"THEREFORE' Be It Re'"''and Whereas Ibis Institu- vice, counsel, and reoommendano...-;
to Dr.
solved: - · '
'·
tion is currently engaged in the tions and will be strongly in- Albany Ibis week to ~ tbe·
p~ T ow e r &lt;XIIlWIIIillll. Stlnley er- IICf;!lillll'OWIIl ·
L '!bat 4he Paculty Senala def'mitioo of ita academic plan Oueoce&lt;! by them."
· A~ ~te f!&gt;ttbe '-lib olBciUeatiaaal~-- -""'" nwwla that a maximum (by which we understand a set A Sec:oncl ~
""""""' w:e preoidency h a 1 ploymmt rata far
Ill
elrort be "made to ililagrate· the of academic goals toward wbich
bllb- Of
Campuo Security Force into the University is currently
Secretary Mac Hammond beeo inlarviewed. Somit also education ilo
told
tbe
Committee.
96
wbo
gradua.ed
from
Ilia
wthe f!DI!'_allife of. 4he campus, strivii!J, subject to oonstant re- moved (-.mded by J - P.
ulty ol Educ:atloul 8laol* Ill
speci&amp;aJly to Include tbe ...,. llll8llllllineo and improvement), Nolan of Health Sc:ieDcee):
19'12 with Bd.D. 111111 'Pb.D. . . danic P1'Cicram o1 4he Uni...."Therefore the Seaate en"Whereas, aooording to the
aity.
.·
dorsea tbe. development of -an . Policies of tbe Board ol Truat~aab'-ilonot.~
W+uata with bla ...... 2. That .lba ..__.ty Senate academic plan for ll!iii Inatitu- - . the obtigatiaD of tbe Fao&gt; "' 'l1lree Bu&amp;lo otudmto
........
tba " .
ulty is to paoticipatehaw bem named iealpiatto ol 1iaa," be IDd. Dr. C ra met
.....,,.....,. that
there be eo- tion 111111 asserts- t Ita "!"'· -·tly m· tbe
polntad
aut that aal .......
tablisbecl a-- JctiDt lilaDdlna CDD- ., Stant UIBH rrent and liD· ..._..
_ ___,
tbe laaac W au 1 h Memorial
mittae o1 die FacultY Senala prowmimt . abould be · an on- opment 81J!1 implemealatiaD ol Scbolanhip f« 1972-73 at U/8. atudentl In the Fllculti - .. and tbe ~ Staff Sen- _going activity,
.
the educatiooal propam,
Recipients include: Gilberto
ate,1 ad to ~ "lltUdl!llt
"And the Senate i1J1!ist1 UPCIIl
"And -...me-· in. ito PBdii- Diu, ol 140 7th Benet, and
IIIO!IIIba, c:bupd wltb 4he COD· strict adherence to tbe leliter mentary IIIIII'CIIIIIIIIitlae hletor- Ricberd A. Sbel!mdld81 MidA.....:~_;_£ A T - .....I ~
tinulnc ovw'lfliw o1 campus ae- 111111 spirit of tbe abowH!uoted · ieo since ito N!JIIIIIIli&amp;atiaa in 1111111 Awnue; bOth~ of Bu1raJo. ~&amp;e. .L~UI'Ir.t:U
~liciae
problema. PolicY ol the Board 01 Trust-- 1967, tbe· Fllculty &amp;mate "-" and Danlel .J. Walah, ol 8'11
Ral.d .J. ~ "{1.._,

catberini

:":a':'-c81!..t~~-

=.

f:.mcated

""'d

Other-

-."'-1

u:

--una

1111
.. . . , _ . , _ _ "

3WinAwards

a:t:!
-

=~-~- :

aDd

c:.atu:r..::;::

. 3.
. ..
f~ I *
•
w11 ... tbe
Faculty 8enata eac1one tbe
...............Miaa ol tbe Hull
Cocnmllitae with reapect to tbe
aeleetiw Bllllinl o1 aPProPrlalil-

=:=·:;.V::
..-t the 11111t of aipllflcant fac.
ulty particjpation in it,r initial
~t; GII!"'F. aa a 1181"
sona1 "'-1 wmch any li1dividUal- mfPt wish..., make far

~tbe~~

~ plana ~4
COUI8e

'-1. mi1dllled

pbn, atl floe mQor;
- . t o1 •
CGUeaeol 1
"And ........., tile f;iu. oail-

Moore AWIIU8,

-

Kam1cn.

,liodlad In 19811 " ' . _ a d -

I

· bem II&amp;IPGialllll ........ ClaMh

The, W&amp;Uih PUIId _ . . . , .

lliltouliltaDdllrc--- .......

ol

~" IIQdllr . .. tm-'11.
~ .......

-~Ill
w . .-

field of . . . . . . . ~........ lnllla1 ~ .
-(18-'10).

Willa tba
'

.

�"
December 14,

1~72

�f)«;eeftber

u.

~

1912

Motherhood Can Be Mind_less.Trrip., Peck S'a.xs

--=--

By PATRICIA WARD

poteatlill wben it 11m a population o11oo,ooo,ooo: &amp;a-here
. . . . the way 1D~ 200,000,000

BJBDERMAN

. •'Wbat «N

yiru'r AN

you a

8lllll8thint
- !oat." Peck - - After cli8miaaina with a laulh

""""""'ar a IDIIIIIIII,Y?"

EJien Ped&lt;, ~lecl. _,_
age advice colUJDDillt, VOICe of
•
CJG a wld8li distribautbority. pitdl fcir Ckilruil,
uted
of ){ON, the

a

)'llUIII

man'a

~ Clll

the

eupaiC implications of her ~
pam. Peck cut off the~
of a mamber of a local J.'I'O"

The City U..n..llo7 f/1_.
York t.a ...._.,_, ........_
ll*lt at Baruch ~ 41f&gt;•
~~anti-~
~ · of
Natiou.al
.C.U.
b tlli
W:tion81 ~tiou. of Non'"""' ..... apparan'"" wan
Collectlve
Bup~
Parents. tbiDb tbe four-yeardivert tbe JMeibla 1D a fonml cellor Robert 3. KiiJiiee
old girl wbo aoke!l ber tboee
~ott- thinga, the de- the C&amp;llter t.a ~,..... "'Ii
questions is a ~ pnxiuct
t of foaion ·
p.tla- iDf-*lala .. . . .-. .
of a pronatalist biD in our cul"Go dra101 your own CIOWd," . _ aDd fut-pow1J11 ~
ture that Ioeiia ....- ~ in the audience com- · ma. to do -rm a~
into a ~ bad&lt; eucllns in
plained.
ala, aDd 1D pi'OYide _.........
tberbood.
aDd
Ms. Peck was a.aked by the and traiDini ..W. a MmiD. m...,
• ...·mbappi~ na.......
~--• quality.
amodecline
audienoe's lone black if the de- istrators ~
leadln t .
of life.
·
• cision to have no children volved ·in
111111 •
Looki!lllib a .....,., wiCb
wouldn't be d i s a s t r o u s for ministerina
collealiw
long bloDde l!air .aDd
suede
young black oouples seeking 1D barpinina ~·
,
wedgies, Ms. PJ!i:l&lt; _. Clll cam,
broaden their political base.
.. Clyde J. Winlfleld. ~
pus last 'lb!Uada.Y (D,ec!ember
Political ...__...._ isn't simply of the oolletle. oaid tJie - a
7) attacldnil tbe matetilali!IYB••• .,....~
will be "nat!OOal in ·
Cama question of numbers, Ms.
rebensi
• ~ ·d
tique and ad~ djildbee
Peck ~red '!"'~ pointed &lt;?Ut Pscbolarl veandmob'-"-- In~
(not drildlesli) marnace.
that Shirley Chishotrn, marned
.
Y
.-~•v
·-·
"Why~~~ YlllllB
22 years and half of NON's
pom~"
·
after I Wrote T~·_BIIIty, '!'_rap
1971
Childfree
Couple
of
the
~
of
the"!'"'*~-am I still I!ZPiaiiiliur?" Ms.
Year, bad clone more to extend Maunce C. 8eMwitz, a
Peck~ rerernn, 1o her ~Jeat:.
the political power of her peo- sor ~f "!''nomics wbo
~
selling' book on IIH! clarlt" side
p~ than anyone ·else she could ~
of adminiatdof mothed&gt;ood (she is also tbe
think of.
The ol6cials said the C&amp;llla ,
author of an earlier book c:alled
If I were a black wo~ Ms. will BpoiiiiDr worbhope aDd proHow w Catch a Teenage
P'!"k added, I wouldn t want fesaional oonferences, povvide
Boy) . Her answer Is that 1101&gt;D1c_k G~gory or anybod:( else consultants and training proulation continues 1D pow, cJe&amp;.
tellmg me how many children grama in various aspects of colpite misleading Madlines. in
I sbould have.
lective bargaining, as well as
The New York Times, aDd because overpopulation-telated
perform research mto tbe ecoproblems like ecology ClOIItinue
nomic, social and ~tical elto worsen.
f~. of !!cui~~=
Although more and more
young couples are opting for
of itiai- 8ducamarriage w i t h o u t biological
tion.
parenthood, the majority of
Bernard Baruch Collep Ia .
With only the barest margin locsted at 17 ~ AAmericans still think happiness
of faculty assent, the new sys- nue, New York, N .y. 10010. .
is babies and fail . "to link up"
•
•
•
tem of University-wide goverthe declining quality•of natio~' ·
nanoe bas been adopted.
Senior dtiJIOno wiR be liD
al life with the relentlesa birtliPresident Robert L. Ketter onler tho Cit)' U~ of rate. Unemployment, c ·rJ me, are - as offensive to NON as teenagers often meets young
Stepinfetcbit
to
blacks,
she
shrinking n a t u r a I · reoources,
· girls who want to be parents endorsed the proposal on be- York under lldmlalons, half of the administmtion last coniine to • MW ....... ......,...
"isn't the real issue·ovwpopula- adds. Commercials also push because they love "babies."
parenthood along with deter"It:S not so romantic to be Thursday as the final step in a bJ tho Boord of HJalw ~
tion?" Ms. Peck llsks.
NON goes further than Zero gent and Polaroid cameras, she the mother of a ten-year-&lt;&gt;ld or planning process which began Sbntlnc wllll tho IP'Inc 1173 _,.
an adolescent."
in March, 1971.
ester, YCMtt C i t ) ' - who
Populafion Growth and similar argues.
Recent studies indicate that
groups. "I consider Zero Popu- ·
NON argues that the right
The faculty vote of 2l.2 for to•re!,Sroll•":!~~ .:childfree
·couples
are
in
fact
to
choose
parenthood
or
nonand
2JJ7
against
was
made
pub-·
--~lation Growth a pronatalist organization," uplalna Peck, "al- happier than fecund ones and parenthood, unpressured by so- lie juat prior to the President's. uol8 c:redlt-bMIInl - - et ..,
untt of CUNY on • .-cea " '!
though I cooperate with il ZPG that non-parentS are less likely ciety, would result in bet ter, action. .
Aocof!Iing .to the procedures · CUNY ~ 11D11M J.
encourages cbild-bearing. · Its to be lonely than parents wbo happier parents.
have
invested
all
of
themselves
motto 'Stop at two' is a little
''It might lje a 'ood test of for tatilication of ~ n~w !;~~~To:.:.:like saying 'Have two.'" Im- .into raising cbildren, Peck says. a person's suitability for par- sys~, ..u:Jt of 10 Umvemty - · -·•
,
• .
plementation of ZPG opolicies
"Non-parents are not wait- entbood (to determine ) if be oonstituenCJes had to .approve
would defer stabilization of ing to live until after their chil- or she were willing to adopt or
proposal. A ~-::::e d~
About 14 per C&amp;llt of tbe napopulatiim for 70 years, NON dren are grown. They are liv- aive foster care, to see if you
Y any. one wo
.
ti ,
--~ __ ,_ _ _ , . , _
11 _
on s co._...
.............,...,_
argues.
ing now." The empty-nest gyn- ~ love a child who doesn't feal:ed 1t.. However, _oonstitustudeu.ta ~~
drome causes more unhappi- ·look like you," Peck suggests. . enc~es whic:h beld no ~erenda
Soop Opera - the
,
.
among their membership were ;n~ 1D~b;;,d"';m a _ .
ness than infertility, she goesw-~
:ft
counted as endoraing the pro- ;'Y of h'A;;:.ncan CouDdJ CJG
Women'siDIII&amp;ZiDes aDd tele- ·
NON bases its case against reproduced, get a mirror," she ~ to Dr. Marjorie C. Ed!MBtiou.'1 Hilber Ed!MBtlaa
vision are two of the most po- parenthood in part on projected advises. ''That's ego, not love Mix, chairman of the Univer- Panel Moat of tbe It u de D t
tent P~ for matem- growth statistics. But the oppor- ~t-of children." .
.
sity oommittee which prosx-J board memben are at IIUIJiic
ity, aooording 1D Peck. Ilaytime tunity for greater personal fulLove of children JS one of the the system, these were the ac- four-year colleps aDd uni-a.
soap opet8&amp; are the worst . of- fillment that cbildfreeness of- few good reasons NON can tions taken by individual seg- ties. The atudy ...._. Clll
f!"'ders. _For .B;,ftiCiflllt Times'!'"" fers is the reason many NON !Jtink of lor having a ~d. And menta of the aunpua common- an 88 per ·C&amp;Ilt """'iCiClIll tram
hcle entitled ~ '1 Have 7 Chil- members give for ch0011ing mar- 1t a~vocstes expressmg that ity:
411 inlltitutiom ~ . tbe I'IIMl
dren,' Sbe Said ·w Wild AP.- , nage· without cbildren. Because love . m ways other .than ~.roPresident Ketter, aftinnative; The data tabulated 111111
plause," Ms. P!'!'l&lt; I!Dalyzed .
the
burden duction--by ad?Pting, il~ claaiified
employees, etrirma- wi!illhted 1D res--t -tile - ·
the
"lot ........~.
·' . •'bW. ~bear. ~ter
foster care, sending needy dill- tive (by.a vote ot 550-42) ; den- tire :w.ttiou. of m.tillltlaM
P~' &amp;i':"~ .
. .. 8 . of ~ m .most
themes .,....,.._ , ,.
.
• • • tures, childfree marnage means dren to camp or ooUege.
. tal students, alllnnative: fac:ul- ~-!.,..on.: ~!i:=
11
· twet · Of~o ·~ii'!\L!._'!ff
, greater freedom for women par- Non.f'oNnts He... ty, affirmative (212-2JJ7): grad~
a--n....L.tds~ .......:!"'::"~,_. ticularly. Natalism and sexism
AIIhougb a trend 1Dward uate students, affirmative (65~~
''The ~ v
- ~· .are related, Peck says. NON non-parenthood is shaping up, 52) ; law students, abstention; American CouDdJ Clll ~
""'"';'1'18 Clll
.••
hopes to e&gt;q&gt;]ore this common childfree couples are often bar- medical students, abstention; .._ One ......~ .........._ W_.
TV ~ 'to rival tbat of· tiil groupd further in an upcoming assed and discriminated against Milll'rd Fillmore Collece stu- ........
..._.. ~......
America, _ sho; ftiP)rta. '!4o~t natioDY ~erenoe.
by people with children.
dents, abetentiolt: professional ingtoa, D.~. ~.
·
'!V P.~
.an The •ar.cty Bunch' lcfrll
"Why is it soc:ialiy -accept- stall, etrlrmative (~12): imd
- - ........_. Jalln ~ m . YUII
'"l'be idealized version of able to ask, 'Wby don't you liJ!derlraduate students, ~ Word ._ - • •
'
J
.
.
.
llllleS, llhDlciaDii aDd other cbildboOd (epitomized by '"l'be
- - __,.,. lie ......, •
people wbo"iliould !mow better, s-~ Bunch" and widelY ac- have cbildren?' and unacoept- ative (88!-172);
'Ibe ~tive vote on tbe t,. n • fe ra 1n 1174:711._, . . .
are unpbumed ("KDDwledge of
nouY •
_,__to shle- to ask 'Why do you have
contraceptioa react- a.p op- oepted ~ our culture) wo~ .
children?' " Peck, who bas been proposal J&gt;IOV!des !or establish- - - be ..._.. 11o . . . . . ,
eras very sloWly")
·
the detriment of both clti!dren asked the question many times; ment of a Umversity ~ mM ..._In the f811Jf1171. T....
'"llae are DOt s. i. m p l e
_
~d parents, Peck belif~d· wonders. As much as NON of 87 members which will CO.l· ......,_. et ........ . _ . .
.
but ,
liiPJe ~
Fifty-thousand cases o """
nH.mbers object 1D these social skier all - - f!lyol'!!nf D&gt;OIJI .., . . . . . . . . . . . the .......
nancies, • " · lri611mwoloing abuse annuallr. in the U.S. ar, pressuies. they 8re even more than ~-Unlvmaity ~a-- 1,21110 .. 1,1110.
pre~ ~8cit JIOi!lta oul ~ tbat family life is some- indignant at lb!&lt;' tu: and in: cy. n.e DIIW AaaembiY Will DOt
~
• • • •
•
A lllliiC:Ilnia8e Clll daytime TV ... :.:.. 0 the than an uninter- sur:ance inequities aDd ·.iob diJ&gt;. replace ~billfria...J 8ID- . Anmmual~bya..t.wl
often results in institutionaliza- ~i:cf ·d ru .,.,.,;
of
crimination
exper
ienced
by
dellt,
faculty
or ataff ~ G. Puller of_~ ~ f11 ,
tion for .tbe -~ non- · :pin,'Jps, Chr~
~ non-parents, including singles. mental bodies ~ will bridle • Ciuelnnati ......_. t1111 ~
mother.
~taliSt ~ and visJts from the tooth iairy. eMs. Peck admitted to tbe pre-. "&lt;the I!8P amonot them. ~ tb at ~:m
·
sage of the 1!011J16 18 that haYUII (NON co-founder Shllly Radl · doniinantly
- s i ':£~~~ aUdiellce to Dr. Mix. It will act ID an ,ltudluta, a ._.... cit
a babnrill belp a WOJD!Ul keep explores these less widely pub.
that
NON's
marlllhiaory
cauaclty
"!.
~te
~
.&amp;N
Ill
;or .let--her Dill!' aDd. t;hat licized aspecllr of· parenthood in
ri&amp;ge renects· ber
aDd Stallil UniveraltY
--~
cluld!i!D.. are a shield aiainst ber forthcoming book, MothU•· ienoe
'asamatriecl'~
l
leaD~
liDd
uads~
lonelinesa.~'N'ot true; says l'eCk. . Day ra·Over a volume that Ms. NON's progJalll incluilee Job. matlers .
tbe U~ dUa fall . ·
.
who caleulateoi tfiat the nel' · Peck S!!Y8 m'akes ber own Baby&lt; bying-tor
:removal of tax incaD~orb ow,e
NON aDd ii!n· . Trap i-ead · like the Ladia' tives " for · bearin!J
:
- ~ -a
Dr.'Klltter'lllllildllliliiamof'" 'nle _..~ilf
·
'
&gt;lar o~~OI!II. 18,200' mm- • Home JtiurntJl.) '
·
·
in the tax ..... that tbe 00..-- CamliiiiB 1D ~~
Jar.w,t.
utes ol eqUil ~ for last
' ""- ··~-;:...u
tber is the cllaQe
wou1a benefit
aiL~ ~
tar ~ ~
Year's -taliat ahowa alone.
,. - ,...........,.. !flO. "
· includinl
Ulllll8lrieds. ~ ~ . - _
:.; tDII the
• J1liiD In • to
The st.ereotypoe of botb mother· . mo~whoof .an:~
''This country -l!ad· ~ - tbli .._, ;;;;._ · lle'f · . ·
Ia
'lli'll ,_.,
and non..mcither favoled by TV P.....,
m
. r

-f!

.,_ue

ma

&amp;..;

Governance
Plan Passes

::r'!':ucture

..'::l'T: _,
•....:

·f:'"

....

bea~lu':"::es~r

=

:i::

cui-

Go-•·•
frooi'iiilber.. .. . _

:,"'Probable

lild:!:f,

._

'Die

own-- tratlons=::--o-CIIl

em ·. on'

Z?G.

=

Ua.P.:

uty. .

.

* ..•..,.....

,

·

:rc o.-

.,

.•

�COHQ:ft• :

CoJk6iu,. Ma.iaim,

diJeded by Rolieri Donincti&gt;n.
Baird Recital Hall, -8: 30 p.m.
An all baroque J!iocnun OjlODoored by tbe. U/B ~t of
Music.
-

EXIDBITS

Senate Yields on URB---~----'------(Continuft from 1, coL 5)
recammellded by lhe Executive

Commltfee_ - Another approved

amendment relating to .• the U R' B
called on the President to make
an arinual "statistical swnmary" of the , actions ot.the
~ to the Senate. When eoncern was expreaaed that a statiatical report would ..not meet
die Senate's cle8ire lor a meaniDiful account of the boaid'sac- tiona, Executive Vice President
Albeit Somit, represenhno the
President, aaid tbat-the p;;j,t ia
~-

--..cbaD8es came

Before the
to a_
Senate vote, Somit iDdicated
&amp;bat tbe l'leaident ls willinl to
IICCIPt tbe proeedurea a8
........W. He urpd tbat a timetable for implorDeptins the var. ioual..,~ out1iDed in the
~

....

be~He

.... Ul'lll'd tbe Senaie to pro,
vide _for a ~ of formal- re-'
'lbe

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Institutianal Racism
Conference Seeks to
Quash S6cial~ MYtl$
A dll,i-10111 Univ.sity-Wide
1 l To delae lbe _ _ . t of
confenmc:e on IDstltulioDal ......, in both a biatoncaf lllld
Racism is being pWmed for cGiitomporuy r - t L
campus,~February 7, Dr. Nor- • l!) To IIJiilplelely familiariie
man 8ollwlf, profeoloor of pay- · tlie Univmaitj with aD 11111*'111
cboiOI)' 'in the ~' of of JilatitutioMlraeilp- tbeir
Payehlally lllld informal diUr- -elfecta on all AlllllftcaDL
man of the event, aJUlOWIIled
8) To cleacribe lbe nature
Ibis week.
lllld, where paible, eqjlon the
Tbe conf"""""' is 6eina fllrid_ ca,_ of inter-I'IICial conflicta
ed by the Student Asaociatlon; &lt;m our cam(l\18.
Solkofl. said, lllld bas the full
. 4) To develop action pro~~~~the University' ail- . =:~~~
While an initial propooal' to ,lenn solutions to many of
au&amp;pend all
fOr the day c:onlllcla.
haa not - . . accepted, SolkOft
5) To· establish pnidactiife
.indicaq.i _there is a ~ty ·lllld lro neat communication
-that a niq\lelit will "be iaaue!l to IUIIOill students, farulty, ataJf
-facility not to acbedide exams lllld administrators.
· ·o n_thp.date, to facilitate student '
6 ) To demonstrate the need
• attendima!.
for more infens!ve study of the
Two mornins keYnc&gt;te-over- problem of 1118titutional racisin.
view addresses in l'lorton's Fill7 ) To prepare for the creamore Hoom will open the event, tion of a researdt institute on
with some 15 individual work- racism to be funded, in part or
shop sessions planned for the completely, by some asency of
aiternoon across the campus. the federal sovernment.
One of the major spee.kers will
8 ) To develop · the first in
be Dr. 'l'homas F. Pett1srew, a what hopefully will become a
member of the faculty of .Har- - series of monosraphs on racism.
vard and author of Profile of ·
Members of the University
the . A'!"''~? Nefro, y&lt;hose community involved in plantopic w!-JI be - A _Soc~ Sc1ences nins the event are: Solkoft',
Hazeltine ·Clements, associate
Analys_lS of RaCISm.
_Pres1dent ~ L. Ketter professor, School of.Social Polwill present mtroductory re- icy and Community Services;
marks.
.
.
Allie Freeman, clinical assis. Workshop sess1ons ~.ill C?n- tent professor, social work-paySider such top1cs 81&lt; Racial- chiatry · Lum Smi~ counselor
c.n·pt cea.- fnNn ..,.._.,..
Ethnic My!ft!:." ..Rae~.~ the EOP; Earl Sinclair, assistani

DD:
U::.,

a-

-...c~c

. ,_

cr..._,.. c:hellenlllrw.

,_

You

Play a Mean Pinball and
~;'!:i
aa~·g~::Ra~~~ . ~~~~~:~u:~~~;i::;:
C-ampus Regulars Sure
.
.
. the Health
chiatnst, student personnel
... Bulanda liM a~~.
&amp;comapart of the mDChine.
Feelin« aJltM bumpe;:.

-~1ences,

•

But I 'just handed
My pinboU crown to him.

center. ·
Bob. a fifth year sraduate
- 1 - PINBALL WIZARD,
~tudent in the. SOCial scie~ces,
"'-·a.nlnv;u ctam.'
f !';"? '";.-.:-"Tommy •:.ll' a resular. P!nball machines,
. ~~_, '""'T" ":,. -· :
·., ..
- .
=tie says, have dift'erent "person-~ He P~• b)' !'!!~n,
. _ By~ P.(TRICIA WARD
alities,"-dependin.f on their dif~.dijllCOUiiiDs fiill.
BIEDERMAN
ficulty. For ser1ous players,
Thaf deof dumb and blind
SMJt
th_ere is oni:,:, one rnschi.~e at
kid
-Ridse Lea bas'-them and the R1dge Lea : Stock Car. To
·-- Sure p/Dyll-&lt;l mean pinball!
Main campus dOesn't. In Nor- play "Stock Car,'' you lift it up
... He.&lt;Unt fllil11D .U.tractions
ton you can bowl, shoot pool, a. maneu,ver . that, do_ne
Can't hetJr Jhoae buzzen and play a soccer-team version of smoothly, won_t tr1gger
_pm· bella,
·
knock-hoCkey, but one . sreat b;aJler's ne~lS, the machine)
Don't aee lights a flaBhin'
American past.lme is benned by tilt mechanism.
Plllys by oense of smeU.
loail ordinance. .You can't play
"Y0\1 can't get over 30,000 on
Alwayo has a rep/IJy
pinbell.
:stock Car' unless you move
To play campus pinball you II," Bob warns.
"
'n' never tilt. at aJl _'. .
•- .,_, d b ---' .
have to trel&lt;to 4236 Ridjle Lea.
Bob knows all of Stock
T ~/_,
_.., um """ blind
Tbe action there is provided by Car's" vagaries. Its tendency
S """ •-·
inball
nine Gottlieb ma'c:lli.- that to creep to
left:-its !reacher_ w-e p~_,s a mean I!
· . line one wall of ,the • hybrid ous nine and ten spots, where
--1-thought 1 UJGI
poolroom liliiri c arcade that with sreater than random freThe Bally table king.
&amp;eriB8 as Ridge Lea's recreation
(Continued on pGI&lt; 2, coL I)

the

the

~/~&amp;'ci!.,.the..1J''ti;.'We~::,;

services; __~!!ll RhodeJ,
System,'' "Racism and Em Joy- k":;:hr, rnm~~~dent aft'&amp;rs,
men!,'" "Politics and Ra=•• assistan~%nihe
~=
"Housifts,"· "EconOmics of Ra- . . Ann
cism .. ''Our Coi~-Caate Socie- ms.
"""""'' ~t directy .. '''The Realities of Geno-~dent activtties.
,
cide " "A Non-Citizen's View of
GOVERNANCE REPORT
Racism in the United Stall's,"
ana "Racism and -Entertain- The University Governance Comment - Music and the Media." mittee will meet at 1 p.m. today
Accord ins to Solkoft', the con- (Thumlay, December 7), Choinnan
ference is beifts presented "in Marjorie Mix said. •t Reportar
response to the increaainsly deadline. At that time. tho aroup
strident .inter-mcial conllicts will' report to the PrMidont on the
permeating most of our institu- results of referenda on the pro·
lions and interpersonal rela- posed articles of goverMnce for
tions, which, more often than a University-· Assembly. At press
not, are dominated by racial t ime, no constituent group w.s
socjal and economic m tha." ~ known to h•ve defeJted tha proThe event is ~ 81&lt; an posal. A. hesv)-' Faculty Sonote reeducational service to the Uni- turn had not y~ been Ulbuloted,
versity community and haa however.
these objectives:
.J

.di:

.urec':r "''-L- •

.

Presidential Coininentary-

Ptanm,g for aBett(!r &amp; Mo~e Effective University at Buffaw
EDJ'l'()R'S NOTE: In 1M fol-. identify lllld iBofate for consid- visitation?
~ D.-tiDn a~¢ _ .
eraq,oa, immediate problems A. There have ·been both in~• ..PraiUJil llobet:t, whicll inhibit our attainment of ternal .&amp;nd edeinal factors inL. Ketter ad~~-. tu-lf· ta ' these soaJa_
volved. For inslance,':.Jl self1M iuue of.tlnlub.ity-,;ltuuting 'The ten-Y.~ review is more study was required by Midale
c:urriiatly Ulllkr diacuailm on historical and_ is a positive States. Tbe thorouslmess and
......,..._
slatement of real progn!ss. al- brutal frankneal of qur study,
• _ • • •
tbouch even here. we have DOt however WJis 1he 'result of deo-otian: 1hiia Iii', J!IU "' ipored 'the· problems identified cisions iJ.al
made intern- .
.,..t ....,.._ IIi bi' lbe aelf-llludy. Alad.' the re- 'a lly, ·"""' .at Buft'alo. .
,.;ur
view Ia Jl• ft!poeitoiy 'for -valu- As for the ten-year review, that
........... - ......,._ I a - _ able .data that- llenlliofoJe 'WaS. wa8 plirt of an Annual. ftePoot
• ........, In ~
acatweil ~ numerons which we are .required by law
A~~Rw· Yea. Our ~aim baa' report. and liJea. Both docli- . to submil Apin. tbe 8COil" 9f
be!m to"ead tbill ac:ademic year -18 - NqUin!d academic and it went far beyond the stlindard
ba~ COIIQIIeled -four bUic staff. admlnis!ialllln to ,Jive !' fonnat. ·
·
lllld 'iDier-allaled' docomwrta ~ ~-t of review A . master plan is requira.i ol
'I1Iille are: an jmOjhm;..J aelf- to tbiir ~ State University by law,_u is
allldy, a lieq-year
our 'Ibie .....__.;plan, c:urraildy -:Rue
inatitutiooa 'of m.bar
PI'Oiftlt!l aa a 81atio ~ beina pn!ll8led, ~Ia lbe llllu.cttion- in· lbe Stete of Re..v
alllllllter plan, lllld an acailemic fiJst abip • ~ lll8kiD&amp; Jm ~ :Yoik: Aa a unit within lhe
plan. We- 'have .beal...and alilllm lilalitY
lbe~ Ud State University, - 81ao have
- ~ to-..,.ate ~ aa ~ tdadifle4 iD lbe · to eubaili -.a loe8l P.la!L While .
·aot aa iac&gt;- aelf-tlludy.'lbia-.lleabro.l- -: aw- plan· "fii" iDto- ltie
IUed s+- q•w
•
.• Jy:;t&amp;ted :~.._l!.l"!!(~ oveniJ1 8t,!al8 UniVBIIi(y Ilia!&gt;,

were

- ,._.a·
•••lliitilllluu .., -.,,

,__of
..ml..........,

0:-· . ... . . . . ._
....... -~

ofil l

of

~~liflld.J!..~~-- -~todlie :wlll...m

mach-., lli8c:a.tw!R'

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

A:?- .........,; wbidi.-CD- ba

-

111m(-

each of them tbon&gt;uihiY lllld
well-that -we mus~extend ourselves. Also, I should point out
that much of the work required
for the first three documents
would have had to haw been
done if we were workins only
on an isolated aCademic plan. ·
Q:

T-

....., ......, ID

doco-.ts-tho -

u. _.....,.._.
e. pnldi!I*L •

t. tho ~ . . - . .

plonol
· ·
A: Well( as I Jiave aJreaily
pointed out, one· will be brolld· ly • stated wbile
olber is.
m6re apecifie. Tbe .....aier-plan
is required bx law .and by lbe
Reg~mta to .be ~ CIIICe '
every four yeuii; lllld lllllll clefine -the ..,_,_. l*iodTbe State Univmai(}' c.tnol" tollil blltitlilioD; Jt!_.........
administration aT ready baa il ....... ~ iPealflc;
~a compreheDain phikwJphlc d.a apep=~
- ._.,_..,_ •-tiaalil; aDd .,....._ b illl

the

--.5 &amp;-

ltcw!d£:...~ ~....:.:..·~ ...
.._~
............... 1111:9 ·of
~to·:;+t~...- : .... =:.::.~

of

be"...n:.dwailll!lllllimiL-'allr.· -.and
..bdeatloD tj) ~ - - Stete ~ • --- ~

ofJI!l!;CIIlcw.-':..,=ii"~
"'~~~-=i"
~~r-~
~
i!IID~l -~ ~ ... - • ~m

tion,-=---.•....,.. .,.the~·~·=:.-....c• ·
.......
-~~
=.-:r...*~·
r·\1iiiii~
....
~
...,::rr:=-;--.
=:e~-....
::!£'it"';;;: Q:-c...._-.,.,_...... , .,-~ - ~ ..~::-m.........
.-.........
_......
....:-..
sra=_ c~.~~w
ill

_.

-

"'

-

.

•

to

_..._Jalbal---do

....... ..--......,. . . . . . . . .
'
I -~ ~ .
.
_t;' : ....~

•"'-

.-

•

.:.,.. • •

• •

10

· lodofiiale.BdeiJI .... ._ (~,a...,&amp;eioi.IJ
...

•

•

...

•

.:.

.

-

-:

�--7.1972

- -,,
'A Mao. PinbaU' .....;..---:.:............_:....__:~---.~~---:-.....:-~---= ·Evaluation

_Said 'Not
-Vollintary'

-r~,_;.,.,.i.i:,,-'i:
the .u- mu 11 wm.- ,
quail:)'

=.a':t~J#

illf.;.!;~;'~

cbiDe.tbeIt'a
_.
aiaettbe
d&gt;allealiq. "l'be
olbeD ue barilla: ID~ ~

-!:r'.!rm.-r:..~=

. ~l"!:J:t:·.;., ·st.Jd.~

II lui!ty tO' let 17,000. VQ.!!'!'
tbe JDiddbe -· ~~m. ~
tbe ftialrd - 88,000- belilf«
---

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

s.m

":;t-

;-u;;yto

.. IJ'beldl- ~ fQr
Car" II wiitlllllin mMic Ill .Clll tbe bllddJaard alioYe
ftelce.loaldDI driven~ lllld wav•

l:-.!...-tr...ll:t=...~

at 1.,&amp;8'7,880. It waa aet by Dr._
B, a m.time U/B facul!.Y iDem._ who baa aone aa to aDOihl!!":
cunpus lllld Other lllllchiDea .bUt

:;:":. =
.....__,.w.,..aa.

-

COmpeiiiM ~
Dr. · B. "a natuml eYe-hand
for wham the ......W.

alhlete~

':~ :'~

short history of pinball and a
memoir of powiilJ up hunched

on in several &amp;pOts on the board
and you i:an earn extra halls.
over a ~ machine written ''Stodr. Car" alsO gives a free
by a mmister's son_ 1be minis- ball for earning 30,000 and 60,.__ held ____,_ 011
ter's sooi. mav be overdoing it 000 points.
·
...,
"""""""
~ .when be c1aims that the maMost people, including Bob
:~
chines of his ~thpicked up don't play with the obeessio;;;l
llilbt rllbt 011.tbe llipper. You metaphysical
cies .and intensity of the Pinball Wizard,
1aoa ~ playiDa pinball that the hours
subtle inter- ilut they do . play hard. Tag- bUt B Could
-a CoJie or 8 play with plunger, flippers, team play, where two people
c1prette while be held the ball lilbts and ·silver halls. honed take turns playing successive
lllld !beD. 110 beck p!u." .
him for the adult pleasures his balla in a single game, is a low1be game that earDed ·B im- - father warned him againsl But P~ diversion from the inuiortality took ,6'At hours and what catches the eye Of the real tense com p e t i t i o n against
CQ8t ,aae,.tbin clime.
devotee in Playboy's pinball oserneself
chtearraWI~tther izdiffie~!'_
_ us enthacount
10
-~'He, p)ayed .until 1Ridp Lea
wrapup and makes the price of
~ Hi.Jiail. 11'11 ,.. baJ1a the -iasuo!..'II!Orthwhile is .a dia- cult machine. There's even an
-011 the inadw.e, .....nt.bOaie to
~that reveals the .. ~¥!'- 6oCu,J&gt;8.tiorial ·liazard in -this
bed 8Dd sm.bed the game in and placement of• the anti-tilt -gimie. B develo~ pinliall Cal. tlie lllllnliu?'
devices in a rontemporary ma- Iuses from pressing his f~ers
"~ ."Car~ .
I8COI'ds '
~~lil~· ~ ~;· ~~C:~~ ~~He l.i fi 1 n g
~ -.UP. to 99~:--~lay_era
. . , "' . • liidden th
p·
who arore oft the """"' tally ~ ouway&amp; ·
ere
inb811'~ great to watch, but
their poibta:bY !ininl eoins'llp, ao¥wberec!eeph\themachine, etiquette -requires you to give
aloni the Side cif the machine · never seen, never fully under' the Jhayers room to manuever.
B used i&gt;enltiesJw each 100 : stood. The PIDyboy -di!lgriun Boys learn this young.
OQO,-replaCiijl·tl)!'a! wi~nic;lieiS his 't he Joice' of ·a .~t'ailal,Omy
''When you we r'e a litUe
.. the score spiraled up.
lesson. . 'l)lere, never agam, a kid, you always got too close
What drives
perfecUy re- mystery, '!' the plumb bob near and people told you to move
apectable Ph.D. to 8 pinball the left ftipper. Knowledge; as away. When you got to be older,
someone who knew the ma- you told the younger kids to
machine?
·
•
~Psycbotoglcally,- a : pinball ' chines once Sl!id, is~. · · move' back," Bob remembers.
macbioe is 8 variable-interval
Bob bad read the Playboy Keeping your distance is not
randam reinforcer,'' Bob ex-' pi~ and had pir)ball ~-- just a q_l&amp;tler of rourtesy. An
plains. Paychol&lt;igicall)', those of .his own, He trav~. as a unprogrammed bump can tilt
are precisely the conditions that child, grow.ng up mainly m the the machine, which means miniIeee[ to the ' most resistance to South where bingo ma~ in mally the loss of the -ball in
' eUinctiaa.of activity Once you languorous q!'if..- Coast towns play and often a penalty ball
~ it's bard 'to atOp.
like Biloxi spiuecl up to 200 free aa well And the player needs
1be clunk-tbe sounci made balls and 1be house paid off a clear field of vision.
by tbe solenoid when it ·ilia- ~ the bar at the rate ?f a
people who watch and
Jl8MM Jl free-ball , _.... _ is rucl!el a ball. Those machines don t play are a nuisance at
· the reel reiDf0rcer; Boifthinb. had ~ fli.PP""! and '!"' asaocia- Ridge Lea apd the regulars
• . Take away that immensely sat.- ted m his mind With punch- label the worst of them with
- illtYlDa eound aild pIa y e r s boards and the, othe!: not quite unkind nicknames. "Oblivious
wciulciD't ·aet tbe aame sense of legal gambling games &lt;Jf places ping-pong players who go unbelnl rewarded even if they "where the _local or!l•napqes d~ the machines are another
aliQ receiwcJ the free ball, be _,.., often m a state of flUL"
distraction," Bob says.
·
~
.
When ~ was a boy, free- I......,;..._.....
-Goad play_.. "'-r" how well • game .machines were in vogpe, . Tilt mechaDiSm8 are the dislhll.r are clailil- In *,pou c;U', ~: :::.;;tb!l~!;; tribulor'al}ncom.e-protectors,~ tUe~eye
llijlll!Jl. diDie tro.iJ ...,.!'~·
machine . BOb ezp!ams. A&lt;,liustment of the
.CIU em ........- !"'Itch the. num~ •.:..:J~profi
· up •table,
~ron trois turnover
18
ben ~ - m tbe •IICiJ!ebox .
,
811! . '!"a. machine. 1be dis~tor
i'n"':.:.£.w~U:tz;
Som8J&gt;~aceatbeywouJd.put'
l:';:""U.::!t.to~
the tilt too
L-.01
•
.....,----'
tapecwwtbefree.
window
-.,
Bob
.... .
~ In bUt
atDl
P."'!'
• cautions, there is .:notion of
--=-.::.:~::::
pla.Yed~thep= .
~=ni'!.!a,ir game.
atbuoore: Rilp. you"-·"
· , ..
high.Peo!&gt;le will ~ -set to_o
fal·
Will aometbiuis · E'inball: lll(rjl!iiiY ill entin.ly . out ola inachine."
the shit
..0 . . . . liCole wben tbe ~ macblnHpeCi8C. As the ball
n;e fair
·
·
11 hot.
·
down tbe ~ aurface, ve1ops . •
~ncept !Ia~~ta-.the that ton':... 8 game.·~~

llkely
88 U/B ~
.._ He ·.waa, Bob eu1otDza
"!1 iDo8t competitive motlwr. ·

. pinball wizard

:u::::".,!it..' :
haw

to

8

l!!:

..,IY. .

a

'f!&gt;e

u.:;e-rule-·

-..

:: -

It abould not be implied
that ~lion in the Teacher Evaluation ~ject now undtmnly Oil C8J1!PU8 ia eolely on
a voluntary buis, Dr. Charles
»- Jelhey, .-Jatant vice president for acadenJic alfairs, notified departmeot chairmen this
week.
'""':--?
a.~Y ol voluntary -~ J)r. Jeffrey
aaid, ~..
the policy
aa adoPted by lhe University
faculty, on May 9, 1972."
Jelhey aaid that "a possible
miaundemtandbq(' o n t h i s
point mili!'t ~ve rewlted from
last weelt'a Reporler story on
the I!VIIluation. (ED. NOTE:
Copy for tile article was supplied by the Survey Research
Center on il!&gt;balf of Dr. Jeffrey's oflice.)
According to Jeffrey, Item 3
in the Senate reeolution on evaluation staiea that "the project
will be carried out for a twoyear trial basis beginning Fall
1972 and ci&gt;ncludes by stating
'Every class each -ester will
participate in providing ·reports
~~ effectiveness assess-

U;

Ji":.

=-=...,...use, as

.......... , : the=·-

u:-

wizardry with the filppen1 talk
about the machines with . an
honest appreciation of their addictive properties.
· "The machines can chew up
your whole day. And you can
get into a reel psychological
thing with them. It can be
very bad. They are very frustrating. You can rome back
from a game really wiped oul
How well you handle it depend&amp; on your failure mechanism. For a while if I were
losfug I'd keep playing, thinking that it would chang&amp;-the
gam!&gt;ler's fallacy. Now I just
leaveifl'm _~vingabadday.~

The campus machines are
owned and serviced (not par-

ti"'!iar.ln~. the

ezperts

aay)

by Empire Smokes, .Inc., who
rent them for 50 per cent of
the profitS. Acrording .to the
recreation desk, pinball is currenUy bringing in a , total of.
about $30() 'a week, ' si&gt;lit 50-50
with Empire Smokes. The best
receipts to date were $1,700 for
one five-week month.
·
Bob has never seen gamb"R~
on a campus machine, but b;;'{
~ plenty of intense competi:tion.
Men usually . play pinball.
PIDyboy makes much of the ·a nalogy between sex and p 1...,R~
the machin..., going 80 ~~
to rombine the activities in
fantasy involving a woman, a
pinball mechanic, and 8 mach'
called .. ,
M"''-me
.-our
...,....
B.C." A few women play the
Rii~eJ:.s
took
1
8
turn -at "Stodr. Car." Handa
gn'pp;ne the 81-_._ f .
Ia ~
_....., Inger s
P .ced on the flippsr bUtl!ma,.a
swift pull on the plunger. 'lben
~.!\d~ayan.&lt;;'pi:.~..~
angle flush right out of tha
game.
.

In carry~ out the responsibility for. this project. Jeffrey
said, his office rerogitizes the
difficulty in rea~ every

'f:.

~le8 d:=ond~mJ,.,

strument. "However, it should
not be implied that the ~ovem­
ing prinCiple for participationis !!ZJlSCted to, b!&gt; voluntary in
na'iure. SUCh· a fotmat would
likely produce i.risufficient data
to satisfy, the c;oncems exprel!Se!i'·as ~ guiding principles uliderlyi.til the ·university
F8culty Senate ·adoption·of the
resolution."

Balkin on- Leave

Mr.

Charles Balkin, rontroller and asaistant vice president
for business affairs, is on
leave from December 1, 1972,
through May 31; lfl73, E . W.
Doty, vice president for operationa and systeins, has announoed.
~Balkin's absence, his
· 'ties aa rontroller
'aaaistant vice ~t and
alao aa 6acal .o-;~ for the
RMun:h
will be
-.JDed by Thomas J . Schillo.
All of thoee - l e and func. ·
tiona currently reponing to Balkin, with tbe """'!1tion of the
Budaet ~ will, report to
Sc:hillo. 'lbe Budaet Caatrol
Olllcw, Neil M . Gaen, and the
lk!daet OIICe Will report directly to Doty.
Leaaard F: . Snyder will aslllllllll SchDlo'a niapaasibilitiea
ua~atant ~ pnaident f'!'
awdliary~durinlthis
Almost 60 per
t of the li ,_ psdod and
fwactiaaa curing alumni of U/:"811!
rend,y ~to SdWlo, with
of the Weatern_N_ York..,. tbe aoeptiaa of tile Olllce of
A_report re1eaaed by tha Ual: ~~! toA .;::; -~- ~
vennty at Bulfalo Foundatioa; _........,.
• • .., ..,....,
Inc., revealS that 58.9 per 01111t · ~ Student Account&amp; will rono( U/B's 51,691 s;urvl~alUm-'
r-~il:WMr-

a

Fouiiaa-;

':l::;,

.iJi.:

Where Alums Live ..

reeiden:'

an

==

io~-..:=--"'L~~.,.:mr~ ~~:~~~- ~r~~::-~
..-. ~-~~
b,~J.jla~...- will~ ball. · - . ~ 'Nof~~- ~ !hat 17.111!5 or 34:7 per ceot liw ' ant~ '*::n:" will
a.:~=:::~ · ~~.~:.:. r::-u;,~tlle~~ · ~.,.~1~~rr:~~E~"1 could
~
- &amp;o.. Dol&amp;'. ·'"Ibis
~-......_ tbll-., ,.. ¥~iJAev~IJl~J;v." EWrY. tbia ~ ....,_ lllld "malt- CountY, 'outalda tlie 'Clt;-.
~ ll8 a. {uture pa~

.........,.....,
llllidJbir 1iM .
, ii._..!It_..
I.;~ ct::.::::S.

dIrect. fluoh
aae · _i!&gt;d :vour.

aa!YerAllt·

)1liJr 8lally " · .
The State of New York 11' for~ lndivlduala in 1¥'
.. IIIey etap up to·.- · home for 39,698 Or 71~-peraint' P8NiiDal =~~

inr ,..vlty Je.

• ....::,.-:a"t'-ta~=- ._.,_
... .a:e
· --ld-, "'.. ~~~failura_'
~lbe~..:-an~; ~-.hlaaiiPBCijlcjob~
Gaellllb'
-,:"Tb.~.-,enc~-..,;.. ~ 'uhlvereltl~~
flam~

- - . . . . . . . 1illinold ·

-•. •
-:*'ft::C'ilbir
- -

0

·bulbi

-l,..

as -

-

'-"'fjqjj

I

.~

~·

IIIIi&amp;·-

,tlll

=":;. Jr

p!IJt Gl tile P&amp;J'olf..

Aflil' Ill. . 'I,_ tile Glnialt Gl
-...... - .......

......... f1w tbe ~
who 11J0 walddq." .

c..· .. .' ~

playas. Bob

0

1

=--.

boDI8t not oalT

alai&amp;

Ia .Miiaa II · "Card ' ~ mart.B· it· 88 an alataa.
- " ·· ·
.. • . .
' .Sewm hundred lind

;::of~~~ ~-- :

---..=r.:..~-=
. "DNA·~~ .........~. !1::-ar:.'i~
~.
61~ ~ .. .... "W~ -~
'Pria'witb·niDe': it.-·
. . . '

· JIOIIIDO t» t b e -

qw,~...,

...

u·

Bill*~

~ ~

11118-

oem, n.lde '-n-fl.lliOOIJr!ll. nothing
•
•
.
•
-abaatdlk-tucid811llc•
~ '::!''e'tqe,af li VIa . . . . . . .. bat tbil II DOt-Tt(..

Yodt !!JIIIIIIF, ...--..
tbe - tr::!' "_!~aat.rn
- 2 ...N0111&amp; llam . .a.dlialfii.Jbe
tbe •
. . . . . _ _ a.lluJii at Bii!al"

• ....... Jl!l ~~...._. ~ - bia..e ..-~~am Oilier th~. , ...,._
~-;-per 0111&amp; m-1.970,
.lbowl; _,.
,

in;

HapelulJ;y

. · . to a~ G{~ w1ue.

•

�~1,191:l

Phpluing.for.a Better Uni~ty _

:::::::'tZt::

D.

·

J~v.. ,_T. _;.:.,._j

· -:n...-.~L·. ..£,

':..t--· the - ~ Oil- quality ra~ ~ ~acu'1:'.Y ~ers _I.Xl,f;f(, . A: ll'int, , ,.,.. -:'to .._ =t~· I ~·t• T :rn'L &amp; B
~. ···
time liinitetioaa in mind The ~outset that':.:'~ l.J\.:7.
ettf!l!··Li'·L.
vrnrv
.~·

1, coL 6) . : . : ....

um-.~t,.. Its~

of the
f - will
~- .abeaid; •t ~ be-

be"'!~ y~

~ .;
•
• Oil¥ J ..
Support for tbe \\lnc~erpat~u. is deliCribea in tbe Committee's
ate Library and ooncem about no1ee as ua viiQIOU8 dJacus.
~ to ~ ~ f!mdbil·
the adequacy of lilbhel'llt Ji. sioft~ """"'- the' Dammittee
. 1ty and -~ .a built-_m pro- ha~ contributed to tbe_ !'C:S· • CIU&amp;i!ty, but because their sup- brary plans were volc:ed at the 8ild invitel:l 111-'a Aeademic
ol ~ nmew. It demic plan ·ihliD-I)o Jbe tmtial .portma reoources are IliOn! ur- Faculty Senate E:recutive Com- y-..,p Preaideftt ·s..
will be an ·mtamal document in d~t !If
:Piarl,. ~- ......til' ie 9 '!ired elsewhere. .•mittee's November 29 meeting.
and ~~Ice ~wblclh we plot the · paths we · ever, 1t • ant1cljJeted lliilt thiS· · Some programs may remain at •
•
•
·
·
.. ._
wllb to take to adlieve _our· ~ ·draft ~ die_.- , plan: ~ ·c:Utre.it levels of opera.
The Co~!ttee veted ,to seruj &gt;~ent Al"';rt ~ , . • '?'
· goals. 'lbe plan I'!'IJI'I!8I!Ilbi 'the will be submitted to tbe leader- tion, while · improving - tbeir ·the follow~ ...,)uUona to the
, Dr. Gelbaum l1!poried ~ a
final stap of .....rp..g our ..... ship of eam University con- quality, Still others will be al· full Senate with 1tB approval:
suljcommittee of tbe ~
piratiOas with our operatiODS.
atitueno;Y. for comments and' lowed to realize significant in- . "'That the Faculty .Senate Afl'alrs ~ . is in, tbe J&gt;!!&gt;:•
' BUigaltiona.
.,...,..., lf- p~ will also endor&amp;eS 'tbe previous actiODI cess Ol
an mt.ecraied
Q: Do • .-1!1 IMM .-.r ~y. students, fa c uJ t y; develop. In otber Warda, ..., in- of its E:recutive Committee and d~t
on. individual
And .. It ~ for the maalllr aild Blil!f abould_ be involved jn . tend to have the best and high: its Committee on clnfonnation '-"~J"'bmi
by .a&amp; f8cUitiM
pion ill ~ • ......,. ....,., 8Cidemic Plannina at the de- . est quality · programs ...,. can · arid Library Resources with r&amp;- &amp;rurlhe School of ~l
A: Ye., "" do 1ll!l!il tbom. 'lbe ~ ~tal· anil Fiocult&gt;o levels with tbe """"'"""' available to gard to the Undergraduate Li· This document will be pr&amp;eurnmt and anticipated ftnanc. and tbroucb the cooiunittee us. 'lbe major s~tion is brary,'
.
• .
sented to the Council for fur.
ing for bieber educittion both atructure of tbe Faculty S...te. that these exist within a unified
• r
•
•
- ••
ther diacuasion. Dr. Gelbauni
in this Slate and ilatioDallY ~ abould be able to concept of..ijlis University'.
~"ct7:u,~':&amp; ~ported ~t ,be baa IIUbmltted '
malre it ~ti!" that- be- the ,_.~~~~:s.Uy ~ 91Mo~y. a l!""'t manr ~ versity and the ~or~ tobistheownPresi"!dielratedt.
·-~t­
come pnonll-oriented as an
H .
,
._
taff ,_...te. mterests are involved 111 these the ·state u ·
.
.
en """"'''""" to
.,
inatitution. Consequentl
..., I also want· -t.i&gt; ~int &lt;&gt;nt that deciSions, and for thiS· re&amp;so
• -.
ruvel'Slty to proceed Dr. Somit, the Gelbaum docu...t to .......a. on~er~:• ·and , tbe ~ Piau' w!Jl . endon!e one cannot expect the · resul::; :~
:ms
ea-ty ment. and the Provoats' plans
0
planniJi8. AJao ..., ·and ealabliSh. the f&gt;IUIClple that to repreoent a consensus judge- thro
.
a. a
are !" agreement on about
...t to ~ve
definite a:,.nt.:g ~~ty a~ · !"eftt. (QUite frankly, -~ a . of bo~ ::;P:.,":r~:= ~= olp!f:ir
=~~our~ ~ ~.j~:Jll~W: ~"i!,i,':::,'~~ sum budget being in addition Master Plan;,.., separate,
getb8r will provide for us.
· the rolea of tbe various constit- institution must be plaosd be- to the normal hbrary budget.
~!nit emphasized. It is unreal·
\Vbetber or mt the mllster plan tatt bodies in this proceas. We fore any ve8ted .interest, and
"That the Faculty Senate 1stic to expect an academic plan
abOWd precede tbe academic look forward to 88 much input'&lt; · Ultimately the President must recommends that the first ball by ~anuary, or even perhaps by
plan, tbe fact ia that it is pre- 88 ~ from many peraons. maJr.e ~ distinctions.
of ,this facility be opened no April. So!!Ut said
ceding it. U ..., were not re·
later than the end of August
In other busineas, the Comquired to submit a master plan • Q: Tho• . . . . . _ ....,. drllfted bJ Q: Do you ........ four Mrial 1973 and the full facility no mittee:
at this time, then .J tbinJr. any VIce ~ Gelbllum hM .docunwlts will &lt;Nnp the Unlver- later than the beginning of Jan• agreed that an emminalll:ademic plan we. developed · - - KICiomlc: arty?
·
nary 1974. · · ·"
tion of issues such 88 faculty
would have to amtain an in- pr..-. _ _ ,
A: 'lbey .will provide a con&amp;And . . .
status raised in connection with
troductory rationale -baaed on J.: 'lbe word to be emphasized uing coherence whim this Uni·
the Cooperative College Center
much ol the material that will ho!re is dilicuasion; ani! it will versity, to a large extent, bas reco~.!- UU;., f:.,c;feqt;,..teSenacap-te should be wadertaJr.erl by the
be in the master plan.
help to clarify the present sit- laclr.ed. Tiley will provide specBy-laws Committee.
- ·
nation if we a;&gt;nsider tbe back· ific goals and specific methods acities of I i bra r i e s being
• beard clarification on tbe
Q. AN for . ground of this document In f
chi .
those osls
planned . for Amherst and, in
. f the M • Raise
pl-.?
,
,
the early Fall ..of 1971, I 'sent Y~ua ma~~ thafin .;.y in- particular, the Joint Library,
~~ ('Then~~~!;
A: Yea. For the master· plan, le~ t:D ~ Vic:e Presidents, augural address, I emphasized
'"That in view of these cir- devised by br. Cbarl8.t Jefbey,
a fin!t draft is required by .Jan-. Umvermty-wide Deans, and the p~ .nature -of tbe Uni- cumstances the Faculty Sen- assistant vic:e president for aca·
uary (;. · 'lbe filial~. draft 'aiilst ~t .:Ghairmeil, 'aSitibg' vel'Slty's · teaching responsibil- ale urges the PreSident of the . deinic al!airs, after QU&lt;&amp;tions
be submitted by · March 16: ~ t,!ley iluhmit eval'!Ations of ity. Furtber, I pointed .o ut the University, ·the Chancellor of were raised on tbe equity o1
'I'b!ore ~ Ji!&gt; _fbad da~~ tiJe!r Cllfn!llt operations and importance of researeb and ser- the State University, and ·the merit allocation procedures. A
' ~~
-" :!f.fi&lt;&gt;P",;of.c,. ~ve"--"" ..,5,~ l!~.iect tl)eir aoa!s· a)XI .!"~lira·, vic:e, and sugaested thaf ·these· Director of the Budget to m&amp;Jr.e number of deparl:menbo • indievi!I'L• .., ....,_ .,.,..; ~ for •tbe •futiifa 'nieee re'- should be pW,BUed 88 true com- such provisions or alterations cated their destre for a vehicle .
,e.'tbil ' ...., ·~ have ·· "· sppJ180!!1 wm ~ over,' after plementil io:our teaching. The of,tlre l'lans for the Amherst li· fof arriving at an appraisal, Dr.
before' tbe end Of tlii8 aca~ sti1d,y m the P1'1!181dent's Ofti&lt;e, ~roadly stated goals in the sell- braries a8 will enable them to Jeffrey turned the ICbeme over
y~, In that-~ I have to to Dr. Gelbainn and the Aca· study retain t 1J is emphasis: hold the materials destined for to the Provosts who tben asJr.ed
pomt out that completion of ~ - :A«airS Council. This that our reason .for eristence them for a Pllri!&gt;d .o{ fromJO to some· ot :the chairmen to re- ·
such a plan will ma1re it easier poop W!'" ~ , I? use this as a University is the education 20 years after occupancy as- spo'rui.: The
~ wili .
to write future budgetary pro- information m drafting an aca· of studenboj that we must con- suming the rate of acquisition be referred to the Faculty Tenpoaais which are diiected to- demic plan. 'Il_&gt;e groilp_also bas tinue to strive for preeminence; remains p.t its prese~~t level, and ure and Privilege:Committee. )
ward '!P8Cif'&gt;e goaJa. In fact, this ~ access to info~tion com- and that we must not be afraid that these provisions be ac• rejected the Chairman'&amp;
is_ a primary purJ~CMe the plan · piled for tbe 9!ill-&lt;llildy and the to dieCard the old or to.atlenlpt complisbed wiJh s u f f i c i en t proposal that an o4 hoc comwill aerve.
. -~ '
ten-year ~rt, and. to the the Dew. r expect the master speed So U..t the expec_ted com- mittee on procedures for the
.
many evaluations available m plan and the academic plan to pletion dates will be Biibstan- Senate be fonned
Q: Ita .., -.niC ...... the Graduate School. In ·order continue in this tradition.
tially adhered to.. . ."
·
thiS IJnl. "! P~ a f~ basis .of
The Committee voted to send
..-.ltJ?
"
, discussion (f!ll!l this volumm- D
copies of both resolutions to
A: NOt in tbe
"!'!'' ~a.-nd from .the Conn- r
the President and the Ctumcelthat ""lin! talJr.ing about today cils own ~rations- Dr.
·
I
A
of the' I tie
Individual academic ofticeni Gelballl" draf~ tbe discussion
.:;t to Ul::ysUNY Di'r..Jo~
and groups
at times in ~ - ~ bas ·now ap..
.
.
the Budget as well.
.lU1
tbe ,.... drawn -plans for their peared m pnnl We can conA one-page QUestionnatre ~Acade . Ianning
also
.
-..t::i::. areas Ol ~ihil· elude fJp~D tbe reaction that it asJr.ing for the international
mu;..&amp;:
. was . · RecenUy completed negotiain genera~· plans of .has achieved its purpooe: ' dis. qualifications, experiences and on the age
· Cb;sin;nan Gil· tions with the Department of
~ ture
not '·
'd
cussion. At pre&amp;ent, several interests of both faculty and bert D. M~re distributed . a Health, Education and Wei~ i!"'an iiJl...,.~ of other plans have been Bllhm!t- !'dministrators, wh!m appears ~,.:ppmgt~f:""~
';]: fare have resulted in new indi0
tbe impact of tbeae tvnooo of ted ThMe are on!Y partial m the September I88Ue Of. tbe ~ · P~
rect 008t rates to _be applicable
plan,nin&amp; docwiienls; prl~ plans, ~er; ~ tbey are 'not . SUNY Faculty Bulle_tin, is "a ~ P
·mj~· ~ immediately to all propoea1e for
_ hirilit W8i tiveit' to tbe
~~ve.
·
"!""""'tratecl , and ClliDPrebo;n· · Chainnan "':' ~t ~ ~ 8J!d applii:able educas· Q: wi.o wm ~ ~ -~ s1ve at~ to a_sc e! ta ~ n I. Ketter whim-adVises, in tbe tiona! -.y1c:e ~ts, RoIIepartmiint in ttie early
88 a ..ult ol ._ auc:h pro- , . _
_._. •• •,
u• •.·~ SUNY'9 ~ in ~ Jln!l!, name of· the "'-·-·"'-- ,...,_,__,. ~.C. Fitzpatrick, acting vice
.t be OffiCe of, Owmoeas Acadelri..,._~ MHD'Wv c : ; t for -...a. said
.
•
·
•
A: 'lbe coaaoliilation 'will tab · · Prog!iuna
·· ··
tee and the Educational Plan,
, _....,
•
Oc:tiob. 28, 1JI66, President place in the. President's Office. IC
. . •· "'!-'8.
. .
,). ning atuJ PolicY ~ •
• .
'
Fumas ~ to· CBDtnil 'lbe
tiOnnaire ' .._._.... !Jiat 1) an academic i&gt;J8n
n - new rates are • fol~·a reqUest for a Q: - the pion the
~
'!'......._ should not be cte.elopei) under Iowa: On ~ a-n:h.
~ - -•cmiipua plan~; bat::~ wa8 -..lcpllnbll' ~-.:'
•.iJmrt!'i;ng
the c.ummt time~; 2}. 5U, !"" ·ol alulea 6
• not ,ll!..........UC pl8il m tbe -c
·
.
.,.... Y_!: .. _ _.,.,... t.l o o ~ an ·overarcbiDg Edltcational _,.., Oft. &lt;:amp,. ~
....e:m Wbldl""
~: I · tbinJr. 'tbe beat deacription , ;;;...~ :;n"""'
of~~- PlaJiniDi Coimi1iasi0ri, - wltlf 42.4 ~ call ol -..-..· &amp;
erilll It today.
Would be to mil 1MB .......tta&gt;- nitiooitl educa~lt will be Facul
.lCIIlty Senate ~P be _,..,On Cu!pal ~
""' ·
· tive cloc:u....ta. JJotb will r&amp;- made '.
·
fomiid to de¥elop a plan tO be Servlce..96.6~-.tef..._.. .
Qo-HIIIf ~.,... - . ......,, quire a ,._t ~t ol. Oillfwidely a~ lo ·.all implim'entedbolioterlban'l;lep- •...-;and ·O.~JMa. .'
•
'
sultatiOD IIIIIDDj·ID8JIY penans. !"!"....,..and
teinber 1973; a) no plan a.,.. caticinal ae,Yiel, 76 111r .at ef
But-1 believe their ,.,. nature
renUy j,.,i;;c:
includ· salariea • ......
'
.
~ .
lSI
prohibita tbeln from~ beinj! · ~~~repJil- ing a Combination plaJ!, l!e.,. · 'lbe indlnlct ca.t. Nlalild 111
Prilflaor ·-)aim· ~ Rca.. a viewed or.•dra!"_ ,as j;ouerlliJ~- jecta, ~ joJD~
cop~ il8 U~_·p o li c'&gt;&lt; "tbe .Uan..lly'a -.c6 .....,; .
jinimlioeDt ~ - Uniallt ~ - ., •. · ·, - - ~- --~ ~· 'Witliouttbe4&gt;C1c;a, •t.ortbe .,_,,.,.,.. beaa ·Nducad ,._,
and calleqae ' ol Na.m :ChaD&gt;• --'Ci . . ' • ~·m. llludiea 'and far.. Soaate; 4) ' . ~ --· ~. wl)lle . . . . . . . . .
more

acb;edule lor the . maater · ~ - urul!lwillbedectedmorethan

~ .,.....~. • wbicb hM bei!ll. ~

lm·
otbers. In ~ ilome programs
pcad, Ia YaY tight. Iri fact,. a .: may be !"'nouiily reduced-not
greater n~ of peraaas will """"'!'""rY because of their

_ At. tl!e. """"' time, 1t m~ ~

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ulty S
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coinmunll;y ... 8lllrillcl to'ftllllm op8railciD llliulht for llif.(iltUie; ~a~Wlniti; lliaC8 ~ .
tbe~.;.tana; ......
5) •the can.t att.np\_oltm auppanola--.willa

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~

~It,

American Council Group Offers
Far,~Reaching Adwt·Ed:~lan

~

7, 1972

·~

AttemiitiVi!"Suggestedfor·
Getbawn ~ ·ltW:tity Method

•
•
•
EDITOR: ·
to financial and ·intellectuaJ re.
...eJf lor -adul~ atudeius. 1be .uap; Aoaociation and !hi, Am·
I would liJ!,e .to submit ' the ~ available to our UniCommittee recoo" wu1ec1 that erican Chemical Society to followini letter ti&gt; the Vi-- wmuty. Lern. suggest an al
· ........,;. o£ ......_ u co11epo; uahasllills olnid uni-· • study the needs of. a diverse points section of the Reporte. temate ayalem for the
Sou. ddlcal. and far-reach· ve.raity IJIIIaa8 CIJDduct a ...,... clientel'e,' including adult and
I agree with Vice P&lt;esident !iahment ol prloritiell, still":;th.
m, ·rec&gt;lll1lllelld from the vey of tbelr- ~t student pan.iime studenb!, and recom- Gelbaum's orientation towards m the ~k of · ·
.Committee ' on Higher Adult dienb!le,. bacluding all .adult mend program modificstions to excellence in service in his drait Every ~pline. can .::;::ce~
Education ot the American studenta, · and .u-inate !lie _...., quality. '
of an academic plan for our conwbitrlbuch !;ion to our society
Council on Education bave re- infllrlllldioa .to cbe community.
9. ,FACULTY AND ADIIlNISTIIA· University; however, his methcan ~dily be inter.
. Cl!lltly been, directed to collegi! · In adc!llbl. nni~ '!):rUe- TOII8. The Committee here od of establishing areas of pri- preted aa &amp;eryJC8. However, to
administnltors and faculty and • tuiios should be niviewed and maile several important recom- ority is highly arbitrary and place an a fJI'UJn greater service
, to 11.- oulllide the institutions modif'Jed .wbere cbey do not fit mendations: that standards and · superficial. Why does chemistry value on . one discipline versus
wbaae decislana 81fect · public the needs ol adult otudents.
rewards for . faculty engaged in deserve a priority over biology another is. fal,lac;ious. Rather let
and private 8UJ&gt;PCII:1. _
3. ClJIIIIICULlJK. The Com- adult education be commensu· at a time when the fight to COD· us at penodic mtervals evaluTbe Committee's itatement, mittee sa-d •unconventional ·
quer cancer is one of the na- ate each School, department,
which· includes an analysis of . forme of inab:uction for adults ~ _
. . _ .., ~ tion's foremost domestic priori- program and !:jf.line accord12 llilnificant iaoluM m. the . and iclentiftcatioD .ol .fl!e real "~ .....-- · uties? Why is history given a mg. ~ the
ence of its
field, was ' endomed by ~ ..eda · ol adult atudentll. It . .., IJftiOIId!t • forum far the a· relatively low order of priority? actiVJiieB and base our prior
OouDcil'a Commission on Aca- recOmmeuded ihat higher adult ....... Of .., • voMty U~oubtedly, if we wou!d be ties on this. An ·excellent p.,::
demic Affaira and the Board or ecfucatoruiid their
. tiona af tho - . . tho -lc: more informeo;J abou~ history gram -therelore gains greater
Directors this fall
.
~ 1Deche•dsms~!tuca- c .'! m.m unIt J. We - . , . both ana our preVIO"'! fail"""! .we support than a weaker pro am
B followed, the recommends- tionalluidance for adults' and: ~ p~pero--. 11 woulc;l be be~ter m co~ducting . Of_co""!"· there must be ~ri:
tiona could cause a great liilvoca_ted· a. grester Owbility ·.'pemiltL
our mternatlonal alfaus. The odic reVJeW to provide for mo.
~ in -higbe' adult educa- in- curricula ~ inlltnJctional
•• , •
low order of prjority ·given to bility Ill'· programs change in
lion m cbe yearls to come. .
. methOds.
· ·
. • · ra.te. witli those of faculty in Philosophy is utterly pede- their degres ol excellence I~
ID. the st.atemen'i .which was
.~. IIDi!J'Ap:o'NAL n·~ouJtq:s, • oihe_r !'i'Silemic· proi!":""'; that strisn. How can we maintain sure . '9ere would be a·
1
published 88 an A.C.E. Speci41 Thi! Committee recommended ·Colleges and uruver8Jties, spon, our values in this country if we amount of pplemic 88 to ~w
Report entitlad "Higher Educa- that'higher adult educiatOrs ae,. 's'or,in-aemce training progra'ms are unwiling to ·study and un- one can quantify excellence as
tion imd the. Adult Student," sign' and · establiah coop'erative for adult educa~on faculty ; derstand their philosophical my propo6a) would require
three traditional .assumptions activitieil ' that woUld .POOl in- . !"'d. thaf adult edu"'!tio~ organ- basis? These are just a f~ ~- Howeyer, I believe trying ~
from the p'aat were set aSide:
formation and resources and lZ&amp;tions develop gwdelines for amples o( the absurd · pr~onty quantify ·excellence 88 a basi•
1) That college students ale give &amp;dult students acceSs to selectin,g and rewarding com- system suggested by Dr. Gel- of a priority system is to be
~oung and · financially de-' theSe resources. In additioJ&gt;, munity people who may serve baum. One could give many p~erred .to . a completely arl
_
experimental programs should as adjunct faculty members for more eJC8!Dples. .
b1trary l!nonty system.
2) That there is a funds. be established to make it easier adult education programs.
I am no~ ~ Il81Ve to s_uggest
-EIINiliT HAUSMANN
.-tal~ between what for studeri1s to inove among in10., 11E5EABCH. The Commit- that no pr~ontr system IS ~ec:D.M.D., Ph n'
ill· learnad · in residence and stitutions and to make the best tee recommended that adult ed- essary, There IS an upperlimit
Professor of Oral Biol~gy
wbat is leamed in extension possible educational use of ap- ucation leaders and their 8SS().
COUJ'8eB or illdepmdently,
. p!OJ&gt;riate work experience.
ciations work to improve pro3) :rbat tba' ideal :~e
5. nx:HNOLOI:Y. JWoommen- cedures ol collection &lt;&gt;f national
serves an -tially
• e dations were maae ·to higher dllt.a concerning adult students,
c:laas clientele and bas 110 im- adult educators to devei&lt;&gt;Jl im- and that research workers unpodajlt ·,reapanoihilities to .dis- . aginative ways of using tech- dertake basic studies of the
adYeat&amp;led urban and ru!1ll nology as an element in edu- nature and processes of adult
-.latioaL
. .
;• • ·. , .. cstioilal pro~ and to' de- education.
Professional Staff Sen- cori&lt;:emS, bas no ted these
· lD setting aside these as- - velop guidelines f;,. the prepa11. COin'S. The Committee a'teThe
this week raised · sever8.1 '"points:" · •
aumptions, . it was •·recognized ration of- ~logy-based in- ~ded that non-conven- "questions and concerns" re1. That '(the · new procedthat many students in inslitu- structional materials.
tioJU!( programs and part-time
garding new posting procedures urea) will , no~.achieve compli.
tiaao· of. hitlb!or leaming ,today . 6. CllElliT AND ni!IGJIBI!iJ. The · students receive funding on a .for
vacancies
occurring
in
non·
ance.
· . · ...,. over the age of iell8l ma- Committee heie stressed equal- par with conventional programs
Tliii.t 'mpuf' is being rejority and carey full adult re-- ity of degree-granting status and full-time students. It advo- tea,ching professional staff posJtiollS
on
campus.
The
system
quested
after the · procedures
-n&gt;ilities. The term stu. recojPJilellding• that . eoll~es' cated a ·reexamination of "the
tknl ocwers not only. 1S-year- and universities give b o t h assumptions that the person was explained in the November have been announced.
16
issue
of
the
Reporter.
!J.
That
st.a:tistical data on
olds ~~ l'l'tering coll~n but young and adult students. equal who bas at some point dropped
U!Jder the procedures, infor- employee profiles need to be
· also persons dropped out and access to degrees and certifies- out and thereby deviated from
mation.
concerning
NTP
job
lll8de
available
.
.-tared, those registered for tion. In keeping with the new ~ usual pattern (direct from
OCIUI85 but not derr-, those
openness to altema'tive formats high -school to college, direct openings will be posted on 14 . 4. That screening of applicampus
bulletin
boards.
Sumcants
(by
Personnel)
is imtaldni refreohei- courses, those . ol learning, the Committee also from college to g r a d u a t e
enrolled in co..._..tence recommended that there be an school) must thereafter pay the maries will be publisbed in the proper. Reporter.
.
The
Executive
Committee
_ . . _ and ' so on. The Com- appropriate balance between full costs of his education if be
The intent, according to Har- autborired Kuntz to add ress
·mitti!e believes· that tbe lllliD- adult credit-free and credit pro- is to reenter; that education for
ben of audi 11011:b'aditional stu- 'grams in the allocation of in- adults must be self-supporting ry W. Poppey, director of per- these iasues to -Personnel and
dent&amp; will incri.aae substantial- stitutional resources
and that scholarships and fel: sonnel, is " to provide employ- to note also that the PSS Proly in tbll decades, and that.
7. ACCREDrfA110N ,AND UCEN· lowships should be reserved for ment opportunity information fessional Development Com·
hilher .edw.tion must respond 8UliE. The , Committee recom- full-time students. These as- on a wide basis" and to "est.ab- mittee is willing to participate
!0 ,~ lblft ill the charac:ter· mended CSOse cooperation be- sum~tio~ affect not only fi. lish . a ~ through in any way that might be helpimcB of the student population. tween adult education prograJIII; nancial aid to students, but also w h 1 c h qualified individuals ful.
Ita ,...,....mend•tions, deal and accrediting and licensing administrative support for adult m&amp;,\' !I~ ~ir C8Jldidacy for . Personnel baa ide n t if i e d
with each ol 1:beae 12 issues:
lli'IJICies, where6r higher adult programs and the salaries of positions Within the University. these 14 bulletin hoards whicll
1. ooKKJTMDOt. The Com- education 88SOCJ8tions would faculty engaged in such pro- and elsewhere w i t h i n the will· be tbe locations of deS~ .system:'~
tailed information on NTP job
mittee .~ that'. col- "!'Plain to the accrediting agen- grams."
Positions will be advertised vacancieB in the future:
!epa aDd llniwmuties develop CJes the nature of non-b'adi12. ADULT EDUCA110N ORGAN
'1.
FaCility b e t w e e n
a PolicY~of livinl ~te arid tional· programs so . that they IZA110NS. The Committee rec: for two !Weeks before interviews
iadei*I!IWJ~ att.a&gt;tion . to the could be evalualfd on their own OlllDlel\ded the formation by can begm. The system became D162 and D16S· 2 Ridge Lea
Buildinc· 4236, '~ · to cal.,:
ll8llcl8 of edult-~ well 88 young terms.
..
adult education organizations effective December 1.
However, PSS Chairman AJ. teria; 3. RidP. Lea, Building
llludeala, and tb1tt they """"""'
8. QUAUTY. Recosnizing the of a slri!!Jg national body to
their Cllllllllitlnel dearlr '~ tb;e !""~Slant neeil.to alter and mod- represent them in the pos~­ len H. Kuntz says, "Many stall 4230, ill corridor next to C-1;
.m.l operadon. ol t!'elr inst!· · ify .s~ !If ~ty with a ondary educational community. !Jeed to "'!derst.and why a thing 4. Health 8cieaCes Building, in
tulb&amp; Tbe ~ltee alsb rap1&lt;1ly chaiigi.n.g clientele, !he It aiiYO'cated· financial support IS hap~g ~well SS&gt;Wbat is ~-~te HS 131; 5.
~
Capen Hall, main e n t r a n c e
1
w W ~ CD1leps and Committee ~ded that of this body and a mechanism happerung, . . .
~a memo .to Poppey, Kuntz foyer hom P.UirlJig lot; 6. I.ock~ devise PJ01181118 . ad!!~~ .ei!uc;al!on leaders and · for ~mmunication·with general
pl'!IVidfl ~t ~ .thiir 8880Cl81ions develop pro- IISSOC18tions such as the Ameri- S8ld that December 1, if not wood, gJ'(I)IOd floor. in corridor
bo"'!d by conb'act or le_gal com- . to wading machines; 7.
. tD JiiMe the ----~· of · cedures fDr evaluating ,existing C8Jl Council on Education.
· U. ........_
"
modelS ~ for new models as
'IbroughouWbe
rt,
PulsiOnJ which seems to be the Hayes BaD, iJt main entrance
.. - - ' l 1 l i l·tnaitijill- · · cbey ..... planned.,The Commit- ~
laced repo "!"·
18
da
"?
unreasonable
ef.
foyer,
·hom Public In. : . ........ ad 1llliveiilltj,....,. ..... alao clift!cted a .-men- ing p :was p . ~ rec:ogruz.
ve
te. ' 'f'!le ·entire pro- formatiOD Ollice; 8. Acheson
-: . . . 4lliNDed for , _ .,fall; · ' dation to~ aasoCia- edui:a==~ ~~ ~ure, Kuntz S8ld, would hen- HaD, in co rr l do r between
tilDe~ baft Dl;lt ~ tii!i1a '!lld&gt; '88 cbe ~odem Um- and as ' - I Y 88 traditional e!•t ~Uy from "80111&lt;! etrec- Rooms 112 and 113: 9. Parker
ti.ve Internal communication, ~ill conidor next to
' ·
programs ol ~r edllCB •
and on providing ~ given ano~r mlintb,"
Room 16; 10. GoodYP.&amp;r Hall,
funds and reSources to realize
Kuntz 88Jd that -under the 1at floor, llouairiJf Office ares;
tbe ~ of. these programs, ~ P~vedures Peraonne! ·will 11. Law School, first Ooor, gen·
EqJ8nment.atioD . w a s advo!'B "haVU., a eral infonaatloo boaid between
perce1
=.and support for eRperi- stronger "!&gt;Jd" m filling avaiJ!. ~ ' 1(18 aad. 109: 12. 1807
the ~"':'" ' was urged by able . ~ and that fully ·ElmWood, ~ ·Depart·
qualified "in house" candidates ....t; 13 Norton Union Director'a Otrice, Room 225: 14.
Wi!!!t would happen if these mav feel ~ ..m be hurt..
~"!"'dation&amp; were fol- 0~~ to th\1 ""!'JJloying Diefendorf Hall, in corridor
-"""'1'· 18 anybody'a ..-...at · who "a....!... ~..,~vidualS MZt to Room 106.
.,_...,.,.. to Perthe ~ leUt, there would be _ _1
a llldicsl ~ in .. , .....__
adult~and~
the priorities and • · m ~by Personnel will ll¥'8t
'l'tie City Gf Bvanaton. llli·
hi,&amp;er edllCBtion .
ol
1ance," ~ ~ type 1'1!11ia- nois, fa
annual
.!!&gt;" 1111181. it,ooald to a
. . '"""'clel\.
sao
"tuu6aii
to be as·
.open llll;lversity" system, po~~y, a """-!~ · - . 1 ~0.000 atudeJi -wbo~­
.... 'IWJiiti edllCStian. Would da~ tn ~for all CSDd.i- .leDd biPer education ins!itu·
~ be available to everybody officers,... ap,..._.. emp~ tloail ID tile OIXDIIl1Jl1ity. The
~ poilit in lbeir li-, will be·~~ P - . . 1 Wlitutlaaa, wbleb would be re______....,....,~;;,..;..:...--;...:.;.-__,..__ _..;_ ~ i~tev.er fo~ cbey
'l'be PS8V:..=:ti~tz aaJ;d.· QUired to· eoDect the taz from
tee after ~--Commit- atudantl, ... apposing the un·
'
~- KUDtz's UIIU8l. plaa.

By i"!!!,CE-~NZI,E

-

ta;

NTP Job Posting $ites Set
A~ PSS Questions System
2:

sen

£:&gt;•

r~

=:t
'i!..t to!!

~ ~~~

Tuition Tax

Bi

.:!.t

;

�~

~1.1912

So~thern Auth&lt;&gt;l'$ Seem to Know Little

-- -By

CHARi.Es

BLA'ND.

-ol~ ........l . . . .
. ila winlll of . . . . . .. . .........

.........., - ,.. Jll.t. ~

a-t bY .... MleiJillnt ~

~.,_.,.
u you belleWI
aa I do, tbat
the abailhteat path ' to lnlth •
throulh flctian, you wili rejoice
at the Jataat work of Ms. CarOlyn HeiJbnm, -. lady liberatiaaliit, wbD oflera liB a femhlillt

_ . , . . . above our - But 'WilllnlbBDa

~

:=.,es:,~-=

en whleh is to try to -a a
.... otRoee:
.
.
. . . . Rooe IIIJd a flllldiuneiiiGI . and cl&amp;nmil: difficulty in .ayillf

~.J.:~~
f!=.:Uerly

ab,ou't the

w _,..

. no to any male lnd . ..
no morel imbecile /1'018 ToNeco Road and no 11ympllo--.,
and 110 bitch eitMr. . . .

W~"inAm­

eriam fictiaa. Ms. HeiJimm
wrote ... .,...;Deut alticle about

Lionel ~ and Jamee .

~~~abe=

Wl!llnl off MuddJ . , _
Just as Faulkner, lhrouch
Benjy an'd Quentin (.JIaMW his women a bell of a 1c1t

mla to a eexiat traditloil in American litaralure. '

'lbat abe ebould attiid&lt; TriJ.
~- GiveD
the combinalian of their
IJ'8Phic proximity imd·Mr.
linc'e '-'il!!!lble IIIPUiatian,
the penetration of whleh would
reQ!lire powerful thrusts complllbed one ~ ... the
olber, a climber liU'Ms. HeiJ.
bnm bad to atrib fat ·and
bud.
'
.
But -bar choice of " ' - •
Diclray is aDOiber m a tt e r. ·
,. a Southern man,
Deu-a-, which Ms.

linl is

.f:it

-.-aaapointofde-

--"""-_.,.
• pic:ked up from FaUlkner and
ae ~ at what is Caldwell bUt "never mind. Any
obviously the Willincbam home Southerner with an Uncle John
of 1936, until abe is slipping or Couein S8lly knows that in
into bed '!rith 12-year-old C8Jd. the South tbe inClBStuous reJa.
er (who in this semi-aulobio- tibnsb.ip is more tancible than
....,hical story is ·called Bud- j&gt;Sf_cbo-analytic) , abe proceeds
dy•) • After tellinc him about delightfully to s e d u c e him.
)Jar love for his father and ber 'lbat lakes one-tbil;d of the
own incestuous daiJ8htel'-father book and the remainder of the
~tionahips (this PJ'IHlCCUPil· story details further such ez.
. t!.on
,. 'II&gt;~ m~t have
. been . perieooos· as .Rose _expands ber

c:!;, ~ -~u!!'~ .berob)e. bas Do -.ner eettled

in 'the tradition of Moby Did.,
Loa of 1M Mollit:tuu, and the
- kind of novels often writlen bJ:
men like LoDdoa, ~
and Maller. In isolatinc dWi
........, of lilenlture and sUbject..
lillit "' a feminist critique, Ms.
Heilbrun is COYel'iug in a new
and delectable way, IIJ'OIIIIIi al• ready covered by D. H. Lawrenee in his classic book on
Ameriam lilenlture written 50
years qo and by-_Leslie Fiedler.• Ms. Heilbrun's concentra·
tion,'.on, DickeY.'s , little be-man

m

.w t

--~~J:-J~~'rti':i
the American novel has been

dqU,inated by the male point of
view. 1be article bears the ·pal'ametric l!Yidence of something
born of a doctoral disseitation.
It -would have hem considerably enJvmaed bad sbe• COD·
trasted Dickey with some of biB
Southern 'literary kin.
..
Southern novelists, men like
Faulkner, Caldwell jiDd Calder EDITOR'S NOTE: This piece
Will.inabam. and women such by Marvin ReanilrOff of Phyoiu
as Ellen Gliuwow, Margaret iB beU., printed 'in two pciiU.
Mitcbell, Katherine Porter, Eu· Today, tM aWhor deals with
dora Welty, Cal80il McCullers tM biu:ltground of 1M Stute
and Flannery O'Connor, have Power Authority and 1M quawoven both the feminine point tim&amp; of c u • t o m e r prioritia.
of view and Pow-erful ·women Nezl week: electrical rutu and
cbaracters into the American ·a clo«r ·look at IM operutiona
literary -rience. I do not of tM Authority Board.
see bow ·c a d d y Con&gt;pson,
Temple Drake, Eulah Snos-,

.:. : ':. :;.

~

about Women .

=

betlar), eoucbt to envelop Caddy in protective aDd aplanatory eDdilarmenta and - t ments apinst eztema1 lntrutoions on ber virtue, a telldeDc:y .
that never aat well wilb Caddy,
' so Willliudwn nofuses to let
his Rose be what abe is and
wants desperately to ba. What
is more, ba caeta hla mother ae
Rose's stauncbeet defender,
tboucb abe ftiCOCIIbed Roee
sooner than the men in the
story and juet "looked away," a
Southern male tendency if ever
there was one.
Tbia kniahtly Conventioa,
8eD8UOUII adventures to the comwhicb
intrudes on the reeder'o
munity at Jarce and baa men
off
. hanginjr around the bo1111e like sensibility, call it
male dogs in ruttinc season.
Rose is in short what in polite
Southern parlance, and any Crowe Ransom suneeted ita
Southern woman would recoc· virtue in an . . .y, "'FO'I'!M and
which came out in
nize ber, is called a slut. 'lbat Citizens,'"
is just fine beca1111e such a 1938: A supposedly beigbtened
woman can have as mucb or awarene6s of one's beloved, a
woman in this c a 1 e,
more strength of .c11aracter1 ,in white
ides the man in his Cxmduct.
fiction or reality; as any white ~ing
a gentleman, be· does not
seize the woman directly but
rather ''J)e must approach ber
with ceremony and !i:"Y ber a
fastidious courtship.
Desire
does not diminish but is enriched by the circuitousness of
the approach. 'l'hf: result is an
"AesthetiC" and -. 'ricbei ObjeCt"
and a lusfful experience is

:'V,.lnc

=~~Mr.1J:

( Continu&lt;d on

...

Willliudwn's I:.aurie Mae Lytle
f10111 'EtemGl Fire and . DOW
Miss Rose. can be tholl8ht to be
8Jiything but~ and .,0
developed forces in ~ stol'ies. 1be flaw in all theee
Women is found in a passing
remark by a man in oJie of Ms.
O'Connor's stories: ''l.edY.," be
.aays, "a man 1s· dividea into
twO parts, body and spirit."·
'lbat is the trouble with all the
. msle-wroucht wOmen characters
of the Southern n o v e I . 1be
Southern male novelist is liD·
able to reconcile the divided
SQuthern consciousness~ by
tranai:endhur Jll'ba~ Wilbur Cash
called the 1'foto.Dorian' Convmtion, which in . n~&amp;jor Part
hll_8 to do with mUing wbite
wOmanhood the inviolate ~­
petuator of the maeter nice.;/
.Uncle

)olin-_ eouoin S.IIJ

•

' ~:f:il!l~~!~

·, ~ ~=.:ty.;-;;¥-iD

~ or. ae ·..,ad in etyle and
~t· aa hie
Fire
and Well flaJoor .the leWII of
·Faulkner, II ueeful -ln lllultaat-

E,..,.,.,

!:~~- =~

--

pGI&lt;

6, coL 3)

�.Deoomber 7, 1972

6
The PoJi~ ofEcology~.......,._~-=-;.~:---~--::------::--"""~,
,~ , _ .,_ 6. coL 6} . . wblcb ..m bu1i.t ;_ ,.;. ~ oil ti.e _.._ 1n ~ un- :=;~~!aft'.~
........._ ....._. r.... the aow.nita « - - a __....__ lidl- libly -that -the New YC!'k •- - -'--t • ...........;.., of ..__

=

· -....... ..,
with the~ of the

•

i"- --(..,) ·~ the" Power Pool Ill- Rl! _ . . .

~

::-===· ._

.....

..-·--

...,

,;;;;., .-- "' nn~·• .. ..,.. Oil lbe .......- ~ ·..... tbi&amp; is. The PSC, ..t up 110
~
....ue
- . " ftlliJi,"s · ~
P-. A~ty. ~
of1he ..__ Aulbori... admiD- ~ tbL.I.w oflllllll to lliiD tbe ~:'ower Aulborit)'. li1ID- . - - · _ . . _ •t
t

:.=-,:-a::;t

a.-~e.

&lt;L.,

~~ wflh ,.... . ply cu111 itaelf oil fl&lt;!a' the rest
to DUC1IIii poW., IUIIIlaad •
of the Pool "'!
1t. Cllll 01!"·
~ .... ~ the D*dc;--. either by de- tl.,ue 110 _,..., liB ~
.... aad ..W.:: 'lbe jab lip «......., . _ 1111 laat- CUIIiOIDoiL J u 8 ~ one CII"CIIIt
....,. a bit bumdnuD,. but the er CIIIIBideiJod ~ a . .._.... doea the, jab. uiJ. ~
Baud 1o1 ~ baa- ' - a "; ADd ilimllarl,y 1he lol 110 ftllllatory body to ¥' 1t
.. tluloulb
ita admbliataliva. de- Power Aathbrlty ' \m;: 0~
..,..._ itdetarlliila-'~Jor -·pnillllla pc.- awb11Di ciJ:
~ ..-t bla!mt eumple
~ Aulbority-:-;tibm jecli\wMIIDtaalytt..Wbldi of tbi&amp; ~ m ~when
the bouDdl of the U. ofl981. ... }lril!luily "far the ~t the ..,tire ~ Jrid became
'
Ia tPite of,.«~ "be- of the;JJ8cde of the State 88 a .-hie; the Slla~ proof; 1111 imparlmlce, ..... whole, achllllticalatly tlrio .... ject c:iit itilelf off from....., l8lt
IIIIDIJie' of the 'State -oy ~ . meatlc ad namJ _ . . , ol the .Pool, 81\d let the ..,tire
littlit « 1111 amkal. in ~ ·but .-,
wblcb "bMt oap- N~ blackoul The IPwer
.,_ the Ponr Aulbbrity. We •port ad ..m.z. the eoaaaiiQ' Authority ·.,... a contributory
elect the Gown~« uiJ .....,_ of New York State."
factor to the blackoul ~ !' w
bell of the s..te,·who in mi-D .._
peDP.Ie lmow, for IJOOd ~~
d . - the 'l'ruMea That ia 1111
Tbia -prefeNatial tnatmmlt ~t when their ~
indirect amkal, at. beat, but 1or lndullry U.O ma1rea ~.!...,~ ~....~ lilurMll,y, liD ClCIIltrol m practioa ·&amp;om · a lluli.- -n•...,-rt •"!'z-.u;:rt ~the ftid&lt;er
aipce !ft. do not elect a Gover- penpecliwe_ U ~ ia 110
The situation is
nqr 011 the hulol of who he ·(« build a new
m Mae- •L-t •L• _ ,_ of the
abe) ~~-- ~- they. have 110 be .......,. S:te
~.';;d;,;;;;;.,w.Tbell8 ~ta ~~ t-r a depaJdable IIJIIPiy of- insuftlcient to meet the needs
~. . . D political..___ /;, ~a ~ofth~- of competing in-1&amp; ~t
-.._, _ _.!'Oiltlcalof
..._ ::~~ ,.,
..., where the lawa allow certain
.._
"'!' ...,._..,,, Au
ty aDd lliCD • 4G:year inteieats, the wholeaale indust- •~~lea ~ contract. It'a liD meN _coind- rial' Ull8nJ of the Power Auyean ·- e.
lite. ...... .: .._ that the Reynolda plant
·_
« ~
..wyer .uiJ a -:::I in M . - ""'P"'"''*' proWell-to-do
pollti- ductiOII in 19li9 the """"' clay
the policy the ......,..tors .;, the Sl law'
clan. Aa we
of,the Power Aut!K&gt;rity rellecla renee project bepn 110 tum.
(Con&lt;Wud from _ . 5, coL 6)
thia type ofiPPOIDiee.
The } ' - . Authority ap- transformed into· romance. 'The
An impor-tant pUt of the PMf8 to be following the intent · fallacy in this QU&amp;int abstracPublic Autlnitiea "Uw of 1931 of the 1931 law; in keeping up tion is that Southern men, like
ia Sectioa 1014 Which atatea the demand with hish load fao. many others, rarely practice it
that thil Puh1ic Bervlce Com- IIOr induatrial users such 88 aDd often do not even believe in
miasiaD (PSC) abaJJ not in any Reynolda, it allows Niapra -it. As we have seen; Mr. Wil·
wai ftllllate the -..lee, aervicell Mohawk to buy power at con- l.ingham's heroine reverses the
-aDd~ Of the Powei Au- · tinuing low rates. But as a process by seizing direcUy the
thority. We're all .familiar with consequeace of the many long- object of her desire (young
the ftllllatory practlcea of the term contracla the Power Auth- Calder). Besides, the ConvenPSC with reprd tq our tete- ority baa si(118&lt;1 over &lt;the yean~, tion shields Southern women
pbaoe, pa and electrical rataa a iaJp portioa of the power from realization of what Ms.
aDd aervic8, « lack of u-i, (now 45 per cent) that- go- Heilbrun calls " the Androgyn·
• but ·the
'tly""rendenl ing to be aold to us, the "prefer- oUB Ideal":
the PSC
· _ to· regulate ence cuatomera", at low ra!ea,
PASNY.
F - . Aull!f&gt;li_ty· h88 now been contracted away.
· · · An ide4l which allows
.-1 appi,al-tD ;,o b1iber autb- It mai ll8elll ri4icuioua to aay, full humanity to a human heir~~~
ority for a rate hike; it seta its but, eo What if the power is willwW.. confining him within
IM conventional ezpectatio1111
0 -.,. n 1ataa 8ft« : a~te. c;heap if you can't buy lilly. The
harinp.
·
·
original -intent of the Law of of hu aez · · · the AndroC
· ()Qy, but what doea any of 1931 in defining primary and ~ ~inafw/:Jfme~h of his
this baw to do with the ~ secondary uaera baa now been uniqiUJ destmy and also a less
.abartqe aDd ecology?
,e're '!riSted '!DtireiY out of propor- violent (ulw'e (or thU world.
III8Wnl 110 thal The __
t lion.
.•
,
'
polidea aDd pioactiooa of ' the
This mis-allocation Of the en- · Rather, the Southern male
Authority have ClCIIltributed to ergy reaowcea of tlieStale, cru- novelist bolds his women to
theaa problema aDd have come ciai during the annual summer tbelr female role in the Proto• 1ona ~ from the intent of P'?!"er shortage, becomes eapeo- Dorian Convention. It is esthe IJtatif ~twe of 1931. -i ally critical in major overload pecially in-ting to note the
IJJclu.try within 30 ·miles of the situations that· now occur with Sou thernness of men like
St. lawrence aDd ·Niapra pro- increasing frequency. In order Dickey, Willingham and Faulk;,eta ~tly receives 46 per to avoid a major blackout; as ner in light of Ms. Heilbrun's
cmt of ltl8 -v. aDd con- occurred in the Northeast in vision ola "less violent future."
tributea but 38 per cmt Of· the 1965, the Puh1ic Setvioe Com- For the Southern male, preoc.-...LMe.vbe more incred- mission now baa continceDcY cupation with the protection
Ible~ 1he fact that two-'lbitils P.iana which call for U!rqporar- aDd worship of white womanof the St. lawrence projecf ..,. ily cutting · oil- over 11000,000 hood is only the other aide of
8l'ID' fiii!IIIIO aaly two ClllliPom· citizens of New York City from the dark
· of
1·
iea ID·
·N.Y~ Alcoa tlie etectrical grid. WQ!Uldn't it tation of
!if{~;
uiJ Reynalda aluminum. make to cut off, .inatead, wli"ich 1he human spirit of the
'Dic!ulh the7 .apiOy aaly 1600 two induslrial uaera like Alcoa South and of the nation at
_ - . , .......,. ~ _,_ the and Remo1da. with 1600 em- 1up continues to pay a dear
eqa1VUiat "of lD C!lftl of piOyeeef MaYbe U&gt; you aDd price. (I waa.surpriaed to team
the .,._ ......V U&gt; N• Yod&lt; . _: but the law of 1931 ex- a lew ·years 810 that 1111 appar(lb-. ..,_.- fndustriM pur- - ~ ~-Ia the PSC from Ollt aedoodary aocia1 task of the
" ' - . . - at ~ ~ataa,
· ·ita hatida 011 the whole- Ku Klux Klan in my b o _ ,
IIIIIIDIIIidna 011 the a--ce. -110
lDdaalrilil uaera· of the
"--~ .lbllll our cbioiap. 1'-. Autlnity; the Law waa to """""' wayward white
ell·-mte d!(upd by N"l8JIIft!. atataa thet: tlie ·Public Service huabands.)
~ (b 400 bbl C«wmn!Mkm hM 1111 reculectory - - W• F•
• dlla.). '11111 ......._ rate wp • juriadictioa over the Pa-r
In ClCIIllmst, consider the free.
~....,..

.,

':.r~~

~t

s-

':r:::ir'r:.t.t.e.

f_a c i l i t y

":e

~

Polish:Prof
Is Vzsi,.;,'6.n
Bwchemzstry

off tbe _,. ,_,_ 1 -

••

IWW

A p~ Poliah acboJar
is cuirmtly a vlallin&amp; PtOfi!BIIOr
in tbe llllpartmmt ol Biocbemsible 110, the people
le. iatry. · He • Dr. WlOdzimierz
~ .u-..r ol the Inover to Alcoa. Tbia situatioa is· atitule of Medbl Biod&gt;emistry
the
le of aDd ~ of ljoc:l.niatry
highly unfair to
~
at the Medbl ACadomy at
!t\'Y=~l!,;;'1=::; Kralmw, in 8outban Poland
the .-.urces were _,m,ty He is berii for m montha on a
iuel:bauatible. . -~.!:'.!!.~!hip in the
118

•

A~~~~!;."!:::
•;
of tbe 8ta

:'!..:.:!i a:J:':i..,-:..:;:: ·

It .is clear that more
eqw'table 111T1JD81'1118Dt f« partheae fini

:!:d:
:'\,., devised"'~
l8fllllatory authority aet up by
Section 1014 of the Public
Authorities·law CODBtitutaa UD-

equal protection UDder the Jaw

for the ·people and should •be
tasted in the cour1a. p~....-- it
will be this coming y~
Borough Pn!sident Abmma baa
sewrai steJf JDellliMirs working
on the case. and I have handed
over what information I have to
them.

~Tbia ;. Dr. Ollrunki's aecond visit heN aa a -.mer.
In 1986. he -doed for four
montha with Dr. Brie Bamard,
prof-. uiJ dlalrman of Biochemilitry.
·
"'t's l'llftellhiDc to set into a
sbictly .-rdl eavironment
for -..1 mantha eo that I
Cllll CIOIICIIIItlallli only 011 my

~~="~~I·
;;';i;intereated in

the

z.~.­
-~....,.,

and· lJioiosical .role of human
Prof!tatic a c i d phosphatase.
Tbia waa the fftst ·-enzyme
wboae p.....,.., in the blood
serum .,... fouDd to have diagnoatic vlilue in detection of cancer in humans."
Mitcbell wasting a single page
In Poland, his duties are &lt;lion the Oedipal relationahip ofo • vided equa.J.Iy: 11111®1 leaching
Miss Scarlett's childhood to her reaean:h and adininiatration:
adult bi~? ;Indeed. I au&amp;- He """"- biochemiatry to 400
pect that M188 M1tcbeU created firat-year medical, dental and
the honey-dripping do-good, pharmacy students. 'lbere are
grasping litUe vixen Melanie 50 faculty uiJ staff members at
to mock the Southern male
the KrUDw Medical Academy
stereotype of women to the and more than 2000 students
end ot time. Anyway, ScarDr. o.trowoki baa kn~
lett was a -refreshing contrast. Dr. Barnard for about ten
Too lieroine. ill ~ Mc;Cul· years. "We con-espond regularlezs' '!efle~IJ?111l &amp;n a . GOlden ly. Since Dr. Barnard is highEye IS similarly unfettered. ly respected in Poland by his
The particular strength of Miss con.....- I aCC!!Pted with
Glasgow's early elegies on Vir- pleasute the' oppijltunity to reginis perhaps derives froin "her turD t-e flit sis ' months to
feminine insightfuiDesa into the work with him ap.in .. Dr Oscomic abawdity of the male- trowski aaya
'
·
do.J:D!nated Proto-Dorian ConDr. Os"~ waa born in
vention. 'The frowsy and ·neu- Sosnowiec: in West Poland in
roti~ women wbo populate the 1925. He received his MD. destones &lt;?f F'lan:nery O'Connor gree in 1951 from the OO(}.yearhad to fmd their_ way to grace old Jagiellonian University of
by . the complu 1111d · tortuoUB Krakow. In 1958 be joined the
path she p._.-ed for all ber faculty uiJ .in 1.969 be received
characters i:)ut they were com- his PhD. in biochemistry.
plete m tbemse!ves. In sum,
In 19li9, be spent aiJ: months
~V&lt;;n acknowledgmg the super- at the University of California
tonty of Caddy's creaiiOr over at Berkeley doing reaean:h on
Scarlett's, _they · are sisters un- a Rocl&lt;efeller Foundation grant.
der the skin but Caddy's desDr Oatzowsld will return to
tiny, like Rose's, had to be de- his Wife aJJd two - . who refined by ll'!' author or the male main in Nand, in ,J1111uary,
characters m the story whereas
·
Scarlett dominates ber story on
her own lenns, which is what
MAIN a'IM:ET CA11PVS--1tt1M1 LEA
Ms. Heilbrun is seeking for the
.lOR EXAMINATION PERIOD ONLY
American novel.
Fltl .. DEC. 11 • FRI .. DEC. %2, 1972
A book will be published in
_ _ . _ SAT. DEC. 10)
March resulting from Ms. HeilIWO!CA-a
-WITO
10 . . . LU
MAIN CAIIP'US
bnm'a work and that is all too
AM
.,..
_ AM
PM

Southern Men-------'-----

llaw=·

h".:...n::

w-.

-...,----------LE---

good. Hereafter, when the sub-

iect comes .up in cocktail caD'

veraation, we men. particululy
Southern men who lmow 1111tb- ·
ing about women, can avoid a
great deal of clumsy def&lt;DsiW!!"""' by aaying, "U you please,
Just read Ms.. Heilbrun's hook
on that aubjecl" Ml only~

.e:f".:t-~ ~~la~in- ~~~~ :,;'i.~y~~thia

- .C lieloweat
. .A_IIull· .......,~
- . writers ·o( the South. esaay. "We Dee, the "Fu,itiwi
_.,.fa llle .-try. . . ~
Ih llllecJ, 'SectloD 1014 of the Can you imagine Ma!pret ~y ~n;., 1/:r
~
n ~ - I!IIJIIidal 'that
l'llbllc Autlioritlea law seta up
m"-'- as •L- old Sou"" .... _ old
• 111e ilaoiiadlir7' •
· tn~ authority in
·
...,..
....,
...,
....,
· daltly, . - -:·:·;..~ ~
'dlel'oioW A"ulbority FilmmakingGrant 8 raiunina." - I 8U8pect that, •
of "the ..~.....
,' -wliiW" " - .
"m a..trial . . .
.
all -the ...t of ua, ~ .......
"the • ~'
the. ad
Pahlle. Serrioa ComMise Judith stewui,. aeotior a1so fleeing 8outbem .........,_
IUIIIIO:..
....._.,
~ 1i11111011- ttie ·piiople. Only in EDPiah· uiJ Aaian Studies, boodfrom
. , aoinll••• ~~__!!'!f_i~!·
- ..... ...... ........... . - . the .._. Aatbaiity 08D 'cut hU beOII awarded $1,905 by the ~ lu .............. ..........

.=.,.

-r-.. .

· tWit
JlatJt:Ja........,..
but' 110
it
......
el ... ~-- off
... Ita
.notblibtrlal--,
9lllanlatlly dam
~ of .tflit . . . . 1 II t ,_, do tide. OM~ ill
..ttheilfilla&amp;'~ ......... fiMiaW: tllli ·~ Aatlllw~. . . . J'IDINr Allillal'- llr' .... , _
~~ ...... ~ - - - - . . ~

• •.....:-:.::...... ::..

ll!.ilcilll......

=.=-~ ~outheth
•.

,...__

~II! in the Humanitiee pro-

:=.:~of~Aproject

l'ilm in

am- . . Pilot

lllrilctioa." .•Dr.

caa.tanJ.:

,.,.:.=-~~~~~-.:isle
Ill"'- of
-· . .
...,. Iii ~ w a.m.;., is a OIIIIIU!tant to .the

. •

-

.... - . 5.«. .t.r,

......

"

.

~--~·-t .~.;:· ~= Stew.rt will-make in-

I!8C y·Power
.......
- the l1liuctbW lima
~leaching
Pooi!J)' ad- a.- writlnp. ...

-

..,

Ideal.

·

~=

--

9:115 "

f'.JS

10:10
10:10.
10:10 11:10
11:20
11:10
11:10

=

trJ: . 7~

~ ~, ~

1:1&amp;

1:21
1:15
1:11

1:11

,._,.

:t:ll

1:10
10::10
lo:JO
10:10

J ,l&amp;

II :GO
11.:10
11:10
11:41
II:II

--

:t:2S
.:t:JII
2:11

-·-

.=
....
lc20

g~~

g;;~
1:15
1:35
1:45
1:55
%:15
2:35
2:45
2:55

3:15
U5
1:45

....

4:25
4:45

5:05
5:20
5:40
6:00
6:15
6:40
, n&amp;:55

�•

7

~- ­

~7.1912

7.
·DisadvO!JlagedWiU Bf!nefit
From Grant

Security Statistics &amp; Incidents for October
'

I

FollowiDI - aelected inci- 111111 two ~- projectors,
dent ftiiCII1a from lbe October valued .at $100 eacb, _,.,-tabu.

Security blatla:
1014172. A Clement Hall student reported .receivina malicioua ~ calls. Later
that -me, lbe wu visited by
an iDdiviiiUal wbom she believea .....se lbe calls. A Cams-it;y OC6cer apprehend
:fan ihdiYidaal in -this -inci:
dent, a flilldlr lltudent, ·111111 the
matter ia_.,....sm. atudent pro. .

oeasiJ11.

_

10110112. A Clement Hall
student ftiiiCiried bw 100111,
which .... 1IDiocbd, .... .,_
tered 111111 a ........ Clllltaluina
$10 in ..... ad various c:redlt
auda, ....._ 'lbe
10 IDCident
oooumd
p.m. ...
0111011
10/ 9/'12 D.......
S a.Jd.
0/72.
into this maUer
10110112. A~ Hall._........~._.._ ___ ,_._~
ident ,..,...._- .... ........,..,..
::i'$..:Sin
valued at-"·
talraL Total
•• .., value ol
10114172. A CampUs -Security Olllc8r ....,..., a · ,__.,_
dent em c:llar.- of theft of
serviceB, public ID"'::,tt:J
resistinJ arreot 111111 ' . . .
p ~~~~-~. dunrousydrugen-.
Tbe """a_....... unlinrfulloo
•--'
___ m'
""~m
. ._,~ • _ _.;;;:::::_.
an
..........,_ .,............, ......,
while beinll .Ureated, ofrilck,.
kiclred and bit lbe aqeatiq
Oftioers. - A ...m, inddeat&amp;l
to the arieot. produced a amall
quantity of ~ and'·an
additional cbar!l8 of JI08SIBiion
of a danproua · drug; Case
clooed, awaitina judic:ial pro-

·=

l;:'::,O:.=.

~
c:rm. * '

oeed.ingo.

-

•·

eamp.ia

10/14172. , 'A ·
Secur'ity Offioer 'arnoted a non-Btudent for .o1Js1nM:tin&amp; (lOvernmental aduiiiJilllpa~ The individ~l
;.. a~i:lraiJ · t&amp; ~
-· ·
' '-"e·· .""" was
' - a u'-=•· . .
W
rw
•wwpfinl to
place two other individualo
under -arrest and attempted to
strike him on the head with a
wine botUe. 'Ibe incident occurred at a conCert in' Clark
Gym. Case c:looed, ~ting
.,.iud icia!
' hrc_·~~~:--Securi
'1\.'-ty

101 14 72

_.,_
-.
-"'--

......LY ~TID, cu.IUITift IIEPOIII'

?.:";;.::"~~ ~ ~~":" Jtn-n
Oct.
Oct.
• '71
~
'71

the

PereonllltniUrJ

= =8;:::"
--. .

P~O.map

•s.

~J. ::J:..

AITMb by C.mpua Security

~=:

o, r i
• tl·
in
.._
a,l_

..."

0

1
2
2
1

.,.

lnclct.nt
Rrurm. and Wupom

,..........
=.:rveh~IH
...
.r.:t:t: "found
=~

Mlsslna Per.ons
MOM)' Escort
Obstruc:tlnc Govemrnent•l
Administration
Partdnc Matt*"
(lndudn Towl~
Public lntoxlc•tlon
Public Lewdnas &amp;. bpos;u,..

.....

Reekl"s End•ncerment
(Includes Property)
R"l sti~rrnt

Robbery

~~:r~:dlr\111
Sodomy (lneluc:tes Connnu•l}

-

~~ 1-r:,="~~"tt:."!e)

Suidde (Attempted)

~c::u:.="·
T,.ffk: Matters

(Sec:urtty Oept.}
Un•uthortzed Use of Vehicle

Tr~~lnln1

,.

m

the Kenmore
-trylq .:' ~
her
IDto a"::.,.~
'"-e-...... by lbe.- . __: ·

~~povM~=

"d.: ..... -~
Lot
_....

to
_....__

-n-

w._.. lbe -left. Her
Ia a anla'Jaom dlrectiaa. 'Ria ~hWit Ori,inal-

w

trieR

within the clonnitory
areas. Later IDve&amp;tigation revealed that ooe of lbe .iuwiiileo

..sao- JMu.arr t ; JJ72

- ·---=
ant.

!&gt;' repariad thliat.._ ~ ~ ~of!;

:;::..~

ed it

w

nZi- ~~J!

D Diatric:t

::t:J

=rs

ii:'ib:e.- pedticined.

·

00.:.,::""~ '":!:'ww:;'' inl:i-"-·'ft·.

-

';bi.n w~

......

-AI.~

f0/27172. · A- Clement HaiL ......-...:..

the

--wa.- Ju!lidal

pro-

1

0
0
0
0
0

1

0

1
1788
0
2
1
0

10,963
58
4
12
1

1
2
0

4
6
7

40
0
22

56

0
0

12
1
13
17
0
0
0

0
1562
5

.
0

-

4
0

51
4
10
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
1146

1
0

0
0
0
0

0
0

0

0

0

1

3

12
0
5

25
1
155

6
0
1

0

9t
0
0
7

the

. ......

'fbe·Scbool of l'barmaey'a recent rnmt of $8,463 from the
U .8. Department of · Haallll,
Kducation 6 Well.are to nm a
summer PI"OIIIIIll for ".u.dvantqed" hilh achool sra&lt;~uatea intereaced in becaminl'
pharmaciata will cantinile a
prQJei:t tJecun in lbe IAIIIIIMr ·
ol 19'10.
•
Tile local rnmt, ooe of 29
SJ&gt;e!:W Health Career Oppar-

=

~~=~ ~

lobe .
of lbe fedtnl
to . . . -:;:
proportion of minority
memben in lbe b.ith
siono. 'Ibe rnmta .,. to ._
uoed. for recruitiq etudlllt.
from eoonmrdcally dludvan-tapd Bituati0111 111111
· them for profMBiooal : : _ " '
In the Bulfalo
P -.,.
. "cliaadvantqed"
llludenta
recruited' from area bidl achool
graduafinl cW... and. 1be Cooperative Collep Center for enroUment in eight weeb of cJa.
room work, field tripe, 111111 anthe-job tzainin&amp;, 'Ibe cumlllt
grant will enable the 1973 program to take oix atudenta.
'Ibe grant money loeB for
oalarieo, field trip espenaeo, 111111
stipend&amp; for the otudento enrolled. The oal.arieo pay a part.
time minority recruiter em_ployed by the Scbool on a
year-round baaia, a oummersi011 inotructor at the Cooperative College Center, and a School of Pharmacy otudent aosiatanl
·
The recruiter' ;ob ia to
oearch for young people wbo
have desire and potential for
studying pharmacy. 'Ibey are
oelected on tha basis of their
scbolas_tit recorda, their ..........
_..
era' recommendations, and the
recruiter'a evaluationo from
perBObal interviews.·
Claoaroom work in the program ia devoted to mllep-level
cbemiatry and pn&gt;-&lt;:alculua.
. Fasie Jdocaltri~~~-~ ~
,......_....... ~
facturers, area wboJeea1en. 111111
the local FDA· olf'-. On-thejob training ili obtained in ,....
ious mmmunity and boolpltal
·
to whi....
p hannaaes,
.,. ..__
...., lltudents are asoigned 011 a rotatina

~.rnelfort

a

0
1
0
0
0
6
0

0

0

of the numerous break-ina, the
rooms wbere the machines are
kept are now being locked during the evening. and at various
times on the weekend&amp;. This
was a decision of the owners
(Swan COinomatic, Buflalo) .
Investigation into these break· ·
· ·
1ns 16 mntinumg.

Rahn c1•ted
~y Trustees

1

basis.

When the summer Pf'OIIUl ill
over, the student&amp; wbo 1JDter
mllep are kept ID clc.e toacD
'th the Scbool 0 f " ' - WI
• ~z

Dr. Hermann Rahn, profeo- tlu-ouch ~Uy adaluJeil
d chairman t the De- 'l.d.n-.t 8 n d CXlllllllelllni
-wa.. ThiB ill doae to . .
been named a distinguished oure lbeir taldDc the rilbtprofeosor by the State Univer- pharmacy COIJnM In theIr
'ty Board of Truoteeo. 'Ibe -freshman 111111 ~,__
"! hth u 1
be
They do not enter the l"buml'.!ored, ~ ~R':I:'" ~
~- c h o o I unl:iJ they ~
deocribed as one of lbe pioneers J1l!llOrB.
' the 8 tud 0 f the ..... _,__,_,
m
Y
"""'.........,.
· ..
of man and animalo u. relation
to different eilviroiUIWlla. tiU~
d.isward
' tinguisbeded
' to
L"Ol
1
e 11!" a
ou
.1'
~
ocholaro wbo have received in..-..... followbur ~ ........_
temational-recopition for their
· - d 1w . ~ .._..

~t of Physi~ogy, baa

.,.,::

===

-.di.Dr. Ralm-elected
to lbe National Ac.doa,y of
Sc:ienceo in 1968 111111 ... . _
ored with the lAIWa Mark

·s

Faculty Agenda
Dece
- mL:-r 12

==..~B.··
a:::.:•'- "-=
•

u ""-Y
for lbe

• nec...1a 12

-.t~na: : . . 1 . . •
,
r,:~~f~· L ~ . of abe ~
l'lwilclalla bi .
Be ia a flllhe1Md 21 ~ 111'11 ....Wiant for ~ Na&amp;iaDal ~r.:J:.n
Aeroaautialllllll ap.. AdmiD-.
• D..;......
i8.tratiaft aDcJ the Air_ ~'.a
._ ~_...
·
Scboal 01 Avlatiae MediCbae.
.. '-fnlm
nr
· .·..~......~- ...__ 'a _ , c:adiiaal
·a Polley

-

Ilia-.

-:-.:::.::;._~,.;- bet
.

doe!._

0

1
1

0

146
1
28
4
134
46
69
1
7
15

0

•g,

0

II
130
1
5
2
2

15
1
27
2
51
16'
2

0

3

6
25
1
0
0
2

0
63

1

0

2
1
1

0
5

•

....•

1

6
24

•

0
0

"'0

rtAr member•

mntinuing.
10128172. An Allenhurst resident reported that between 4
a.m. and 2 p.m. his room, whicb
was unfoeked at the time, was
unlawfully entered. Taken was
a otereo- tape player and 29
tapeo. Total value of the theft
·
1y $220. Inwas appro:ruoate
vestigatioo has revealed a suspect. However the BUBpeCt has
left the Unive:,.;ty and is now
in the BinJI\amton area. InYeBtigation oontinuing.
.
_ 10/31172. A st\ldent reported
that as _she was leaving the
Buroar's Office, where abe had
previouoly been verbally barassed, she 'was attacked by
another female and from the
attack sulfered lacerations of
the face and owelling about her
race 111111 mouth. A warrant for
the arrest of another student
has been issued. Caae clooed,
judi'c:al p' ....,.....,.,__ pend;M,
.~....
--

·

0

14

0
' 11

11
37
268
61
66

2

a.intallllll vandalilaD at the Bell
':"'the~~ Fw:ility oil Race . Stle!&gt;t in... 10/23/72. 'Ibe tine yautba . . - ! 111111 llUIIleiOUB reparto· --•·--' ha ,_......,, '"'--"- of blobn ~ due to-.odr.VII - . . . . , ,........, au-m, iuwtD1JM wire p--.·
arrestreconlalllllluaJ'I!IUltof In.-.-tbl;llllllinc:reMed8111"- ,
lhlo 111111 oo the ., .
.. tie- ,_:,~ __

!::..
m........

11

8

unkDown~~ - ~~~:.:
t"V:::~~.Zi
ID qUMticn had attempted en- other occurrenceo withili the

buildinc _ . _ . '

I

' -&lt;i"

'MisceflheOus lnvesti.,.tions

Ollicero arrested our IIIIIHitudenta for fe1ooicius ~
of a ~ d,rug. , The four
were a.....__,._ to . enter a
......_......
M a 1· n ten
an c e area. When
stopped for qumtioning by the
Campuo Sec!uity 08icero, tlie
'Ibe value _of the unit was
~"""'"""' ttie dnJc. - Caae ~ plaoed ~ $300-.' The unit itae!f
fudlcl;j ~ pending. ' ~ an au turbme oontrol umt
10116172: A ...,;;~.,... filed C!&gt;f dental use 111111 for all pra&lt;&gt;tic:al J&gt;UUIOII'!B can only be UBed that on 10/10',.,..
•.., --;--: ~~ 4248 by people engaged within the
Ridge J:.ea. WWlWIWly en- dental lleld.
tered. Tabu ; ( 1) Mieroslar lllic:roicope, valued at $734·
10124172. ~ o~t reporf:ed
(2) Cyc:lcptic ~ val: the 1oM of his periodontal mued at $61&amp;' 111111 (3) cydoptic Blnlmenta, valued ID CWle88 of
~·valued at $65(' (-at- $1111lha':..;,the lab located
tochmenta aim tabn). Total the ·
t of Capen Hall.
value ol theft: apiJrojdJDa~ 'Ibe crime occurred BOilletime
$2,000. In~ jnto this between 9/18172 111111 10/ 16/72.
inc:ideat ' - nMiilled 8 foacible ,JWnmuwvJatioos" beve been,
entry o.w a -....k-end -"--' or will .be .made ft\lative to the
lnveotiptiaft • cantin _,..,.~ oecuring of ouch inotrumenta in
10116172. :A ltudeat ~ a faobion which will deter furAlto c1ur1nc ~
that Bhe- ~by two tber lh[efta.
·
,
• aormitory 8N88 were the
--•- ......... .___..m.to L - 10124172. Three ~"·--·- Se.........._
,_ - "
.....,_
rted~
scene of a number of tbefta of
~ 1llll9 red Volbwa- c:urity ~ repo .
'!.,&amp;I&gt;' draperieB. At leaot four inci8

16

0

Property
Medical Emtirpncy

1

0
0

1
4
2

&amp;

0

3

••

..

0

5
3

0

5
30

3

Grand

..

2
11
7

•
•

3
0

H•r'IIMIMftt

• tn-hou. trainin~ ol 16

.
..•

0

R...._(Auto
Floods, other O.autars
Fires)

~~~~~~na.

•

0

1
5

37

1
71
1

I

~...,ntenance

-

0

11

0

=::: ~ri':sJc::_m.

2

0

7

0

...

11

0

11

CriminaiT......

ro=t

-

1

Criminal T......l'lnc

Larceny -

2
7

0

...

-~==: t="tf

0

3

="'one~.._

Dis-

·- ·- ·0
11

Attalmpt to Commit a Crime

~- -

·-~....
B·of thi.. .._
P81tment -..eel him with varioU8 trdic violatioos. Due to a
1'~-~of
.- ~
....~enOlllcen'~,..,
""""clamiermeitt .,... not -..eel on
the oubiect at this time but was
........t by Bulfalo Police Department in City Court at a
later date. Case clooed, judicial
Prooe!lllina pending.
10118172. A Clement Hall
reoideat advisor reported that
the pay P.bone 011 the fifth lloor
of Clem8Dt Hall was tom olf
the wiill by pen10n or ~·
llllknown. InveotiptiOO"'~
this incident, al0111 with IDveotiplonl from the Telephone
Company; baabeen inoonclusive
but because of the actiono of a
f
N
y: k
::'repl':ce theor Telephonebone~j!_l
iii tum. baa
~i.:':i
tile fifth 8oor of Clement' Hall
to obtain teiepbone oerviO. on
variouo other llooro.
·
' 10122172· .A Clement · Hall
atuileat -reported - the--entry to
bel- room and the 10oo of varioua
88BOrted jewelry, the total value
of which ia $21. The crime oc!'lilTed between 9 p.m. on
10/ 21/72 and 2 a .m . 011
10/ 22172.. The mmplainant
state&amp; thal ber door was locked.
10123172_ A C8pen Hall
· trument
.
,
dental lDB
repauman reported that oometime between
5/ 10172 111111 10/23172, a Starfllght oontrol uru"t, model JL2,
no
serial number,
unlawful-'
ly taken
from 146.,...
Capen
Hall.

--

11ac1 &amp; Forpd)
CrkniMI Mlechitf '
Cttmln.l ftaueuton of

~

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

I

V~)

Acddeinta (Mator

·pre:

~":':";

-

- -'Jh£~
-.y_.-, •

10/17172. A Campus Security· OC6cer ~ that at appr&lt;IEimaU.Jy .45 p.m~ be ....
attemp~
arrest a studallton a
for
Bulfalo-.
Police
oo a eboirp
of unau
use of a IIIC&gt;t«
vehicle. M
of Campus
Security had- the student's car ,_.. CoOire HaU
After b8ina stopped 111111
senfinl his · liC8118e 111111 l'eliall'ation, be 8ed the 111111
in the attempt to leave, tried to
nm down two Offioera. -'Ibe in!H~ua! latet- abandoned his
=y
into Precinct
Bulfalo Police
Department, and - reported his
vehicle BloJen. He-..... UIIJBted
there by the Bulfalo Police De-

ofd:' ~ 8ludF
8eatiaD of the lWiciid IMII-111181 ol,~ .._. ol

Bulle ••ll•oo

'T'I:?!! -,:;. the ..:.

........ _.

~ a..

t. . .._ . -,
....~._
~-~ ..
-~ :t":t=.-:-.J::
·~
...................
H
.
...
-~ ..
whle.
Ia
....
.
a.t'•
cahllll
'
10l'l2 at a
cidlldpt:;u:::::£1C
;I
• ·: -:,:
;;:1:"':".~3; t. -:z 'lw'""' ~a ftjialt ..., ~ ,
..!'t_ua _. .....

••
.:t, BUiI

w1ii1 re-

G'N, .......
putpd
the ...,..,_ Lo( Valul ol

~....._.

&amp;, of

.. . Of.

(#)

��c;D~

&amp;~I~

Theatre: Despite Neglect; the ·Shpw Goes on

FESSet:Sup
New Council
ToSeroeArea

�GJIDUCATION •

r

GNOTES:
Tb&amp; National EDdowmellt for
the Humanities bas a1P1IJ'Ciad ·
$400,000 to support -the American Council of b!imed 81&gt;c:ieties procram of~
fellowshipe in the humanities.
'The Endowment oaid a matchina grant of $400.000 by the
Ford Foundation wHl maloe a
total of $800,000 by July 1973.
' 'The ....., fuDdll are ~

•

.

._

-

,

=...::

to ~- .!"""'
approsimafii!IY'
83
, · .- fellawabipa
a

............, - •

Tn.istees Name Buitaings on the Nortlj~Campus · ·~£~7:t:c:mro:

'
•
• •
• ,
··
~of. live acllola'&lt;•
Eilbleml .,._ for bui1dinp practici,., atklnl8y· and ~ the OCICIIIIioo, for the Pn.ident
IOLl.\IID l'ILLiloD
eac:b, wi1h MCh oammi- ..,.
· or partiona of bui1dinp .., the educator for 61 y - be and Red Jldet are dellicted on. cil)~U~D~Aft alifta (~ fleeting disciplinary and 181&gt;'
...... North (Amberst) Campus .cndltedWithbeilllrthe"falber'' the medal aiiiiliiaC tliaf pq.e: Core of the"Davi&amp;-BroclY Cam- graphicalliivaaity. · bave bem a"'JOYeCI by the of the Commisalon C h a r t e' r 'Ibis event recallll the- flnt m- pleat) . ·
' · .
·
,·
~ •
•
•
State University, Board of adopted.by-Bu1falo in 1914.
pnizec1 atte~Wt 'of the 'Unilec}
Fillmore .... tile flnt llbulTnis-.
c.
,.. . ·
~
• ·t~tatea IO"eiiiment to 1mpro11e • Oellor of · ltii! UDI\Iersity and · .,.. put -·
'The ll8lDOII were n I e chid
ma ooviuroiiS naiD&amp;Nca the conditioD of the Indians. thirteenth Presideilt of . the • et tho - . . , of - , _
bom a · liat of suqesti01111 sub- (l:M. Pei Donnitones) .
Becau1e of ita hlstoriaol import-, United SIB...._ &amp; .....- liom .in oln'o - . The mitted to a specja) commiTbe four residence ba1la in ance, . a . replica of thia medal · C8YI!P Cowrty, studied law ~IIJ
of the U/B Council by mem- ·t his complex are named foi': bas t-n
by, the Bu1fa1o and . _ admitted to the bar ~ of .. tho - ·
berio.-or the public. and the Urii• ·JJEwrrr cmm&gt;N (1769- Historical Society ' to he p.,. in 1823.' He practiced Jaw for _ .. . . . . . . . . . . _ f a r - ...
· venlity community Tl)e CoWl- 1828)~Four times ......,..or of aented aDilll811y to a"""""' the twenty-four y...., chiefly in -...,.._of~_.
ci1 rec:ommeDded t1&gt;e ll8lDOII to NI!"' .Yo~ ~and builder of Society conajde,.,.diatmcirlabed Bullalo. FiJlmoie was ao .out- . - - mluton ttmeo. A the SUNY TNateea. __ 'tire Erie CauaJ: U.S. senator for , . _ civic achievement' or lll:iDdlDa leader in Bu1fa1o and ouch fKW!y, far - •
. "With the aception of the and mayor of New York City. service. It is known as "the Red wae dedicated to the life of II*&gt; -.dl. wll be put John Lord O'Briao ..Hall, the Nominated for the .~ Jacket Medal. Red Jacket's · coiinnunity.·
•
lion ._. ot tho Unlwerolty of CaloFaculty o( Law and Jprisprud- . of the United Stateo m 1812.
ashes are buried in Forest Lawn T -': ·'
_...-. _ . . . _ - . IIJ
ence Buililinl, the
'GBOVI:II CUCYBIAND (1837- Cemelety in Buftalo '8Dd a
• ' IIALPH HOCHBrEI'l'Eit HALL lfMb fnlm NIH'o DhMal of IIIIII81DOII are - tbl.e of
1908) - ·'IWenty.........nci and bronze atatue mounted on a ('The Biology Department).
' -rr:h - . . . . . .
pei80IIB, ....,., who pI aye d
twenty-fourth President of the matble hese mar1ts his grave.
Hoobatetter, a native of Buf•
•
•
~ roles in the histozy of the United States. Bom. in New
• . 8AllUaL ~N qu...,: falo, was ao oil producer,
'Thievery is the No. 1 eecurUnivenlity and others who are ~eney and admitted to the bar liANGL&amp;-Wilkeson ( 1781- henlter ~ philantluop!"\. He ity pft?blem on ""!"PUS~.
major figures in the history of m New York State; began the 1848 ). moved to Buffalo in was preBJdent of the Cliff Pet- accordjna to aecunty chiefs of
the Stale and the Bulfalo area. pnoctiee of law in Buftalo.
, In 1on 1 be
the first roleum Company · ahd was ~ 58 Eastern colleges and univer·
In 'the ' caae" of O'BriaD; the ' &amp;rved as mayor of Buftalo 'lilid ~81.._
.,.
was
·
tive in business in Bulfalo until sities who responded to a queaT!USteeo- Waived the ' iequlr&amp;. aovemor of lbi! Stale of N_ew · JIJI!ge of the ~ Pleas m his death in 1955. Under his tionnaire from the Bums Securment that the person for whom York prior to his Presidency of ~~~· ;;:' ~;.!y~~!{ will; the univenlities of Buf- ity lnatifute, .a nonprofit crime
a building ~ IIIIJD8!I he de- ~ United States. Sheriff of Buftalo.' He was chiefly ,..,. fa~? and· ~ter. we.re the ·~ orpnizatioo._ 'lbe_aecurity
.-eed. 0'8nan, 98, IS the old- . Ene County, · --- .· · .
, sponsihle for · roViding Bu&amp;lo chief. beoefiCI81'leB of his Yaat&lt; chiela 1'IUiked their. !&gt;•1'1 eat
est \iV~ alumnllll of the .U ni• •THOJIAS 1!:. DI:Wft. (1900- • with a barho:.in 1821 and for estate. 'They ~~-equally in prob!e- IUIJOllOWB! thefts;.~; ,.
v~
·
1971)....:aovemor of New York ·making tbat bartiOr the~ the bulk of his mvestmenb! poarking, U ; vandalism, 13; m-

..e-m

A-.

""'·-In-

me-n

:";I

-.tooy,--

•

1

IJO!,Uid

=

~: ~~~l;,'J:
. was
=-.created
~~JS:~~
;y'!!':. terminus
f ~ ~~C!mal•· "
during his admin·
• P ·BTER 8 · PORTD QUAl)..
1

J....,._,..
JoHN LORD -q)rRJAN HALL

low:'·""' ... -...;.,·-,

'

istration in 1948. Served as
U.S. attorney and 'district at~- ('The Facul~ of Law and Juris- to""'&gt;' of New Yo'!&lt; Coun~.
. prudebce ~uiJd1n8).
Special~p..-:utor m the m•
O'Brian bas .been a teecbef, vestii'ation of orpnized crime
atti&gt;niey, apealter, and states- in New York. He was twice the
man. -(i)ne of the natilm'a Qut- Republican candidate for the
ataod~ caastitutionalla~ers, Presidency of the U n i ted
be.,.. eJected to the Council of States.
the Univeiai~ of ,Buftalo in
• TIIEODORE R 0 0 8 E Y B L T
1903 and remilined a iDeJnher_ ( 1858-1919) -26th President of
until1929 .m,n.his o6:ial du- the United States. Took his
ties took him to Wllllhinlton. bath of office in Bulfalo in 1901.
He h81d~ts flom six · Bom i!l New-York City, eened
U.S. Pniililento. He was a in New York Stale Aaaemhly,
meDJber of the
ee- vice president under McKinley.
lection .of a ~ 'l!lhich .. Governor of New York State,
~t s.inuei'P. Capen ti&gt; he 1898-1900.
c:baiiCelfor &lt;li U/B in 1922. He ~ Compln
was a member of jbe Board of
JOIIBPH ELLIOOTI' COMPLEX
OVenleera of HarVi.rd Univer- (Davia-Brody College· Comllity flom 1939-1JM5 and eerved . plez).
·
as a marnhar of .the ao.M of
Joeeph Ellicott was 'the fir!it
Repota of tbe_ State of New resident qent of the -Holland
Yodt for e1MeD fMJ8.
'
'Land Compariy for wbom ;in
Ln -

commi-..,

iel't~~~

J:':.::

=7~~!.n=~

vanoement of medical science. 5; administrative apathy, 2;
'The estimated value of his be- racial tensions, 1; and intimquest to U/ B is currently $15 idation, 1.
~'&amp;Com
wa8 million.
.
•
. , )ved .. . ~~·th ,._ ___ _,_
• WALTEII PLA'IT COOKE HALL
The llllnalo ........... ha .,_
JDYO
m onoue W1 '-""""""-. ('The Scbool of Pharmacy) .
- - t h o - ha ........
He was a ~ of the New .
Cooke, a Buftalo attorney, a bll prowlclllw $350,000 for
York Co11111l188lon to BWVey li!" was -the fii'Bt chairman of the .,.a far - - "*'-turoute later used ·for the Erie Univenlity of Buffalo Council t1on11 _ ..... of hiCIW Canal. He was a U.S. mngreBB- upon its reorpnization in 1920. lion . . _ ltllnolo pullllc priman and eecretary of ~ '!"· He OrganiZed the Endowment veto ~ The wll
~ John -~· AdaqJB. A diatin- Fund Cempaip of 1920, which be . . . . , . _ 11J tho guisbed military_leeder,-be ""!"· at the end Of ten dAY'! ..Wted . -nr of ...,_. - . ~ .
!"""ded the Niagara Frontier in pop u I a r auhecn)ltiona of tho -._.~~~e ....,
m 1814 . ·
more tlia!l $5 niillior.-from more . • put- for • ..........,
• BLIIIIIIIGE GI!RIIY SPAULDING .than 26,000 peraons and was .._tho pullllc ......,._
QUADJlANGJ.&amp;--8pauldirig (1809- considered at the time without - - In _. II " 189f) was one of the leeding parallel in the aona1a of inati: _ , . "'"" tho 1111na1o lawyera, real estate developo;is tutions of hil)&gt;8 education. plan far hiCIW - . " n.'
and ri1!ini .politiciaoa of early Following the CIIJ!ipllicn, he an1J "puulllc ............. In
Bulralo, He was named to the aeived as acting di8noellor of tho act . . ID . . _ . . . . . . _ . .
first Cotinci1 of -the ·umveraily the Univenlity. ln 19291 be led· •. •• ID .,...... . , dlclont
on August 22, 1846. He serYed aii6ther campaign which oc- . . af ............. .,
BUCCeeBively as JDIU'OI', ........,. • curred in the !Didst of the pMt ..,-..... _...., af . hlyman,::-conJI"!sBman. &amp;:tate pani!: ·in lhe· sfoCit IIIIIIUt.. . t1on11 ....._,-.a.~
treasurer, 'stale· commitieemim. Neelly '33 000 peiaoaa. ciiatril&gt;, · ~ af ..__.. ........,.. ..
~ ~orter ccame . to
Black R;od&lt;
~0, f ~
IIANGLI!

tb!'

. .riucJ,

.,..Pnr..:..S-:t'7tJ~ =~~o~""S:'te~J!: ~f~~~~S~: ~~-~-$6. ·.
lnr'o Medal in 1940.

A(ler;;., ~:, ~-

of the earliest adYOCBieB of the tem and supported all ldnda of "
•":t
·
lion, 1:f four..Y,.. bw@uW..
Erie Canal: be has t_. .called utban ~t and -eduCaEI~.,..~
and 14' Pllh1i!: ~ oalthe. "founder ~of ~-"
t!&lt;&gt;na1 Jirojecta throuihout his_ ""'""'
. ,. : _lapo iD Mlcllipn ~ ........
1797,; be .IIPPOiDteil.diief .lifa
_,_
-: ..
,..
D'...-....lM
L'- ' · • an ~· a.t Will ·ellml•
&lt;&gt;! ·ourvey of the -Ro118Dd Com• •WII.tLUI G. PA*OO
.ouwu··
nale .inat.i~ ~iii
IIUY's. landa
Weotem New
· .
.
--·
. ' ...-.. ecbatiailaqab-.,
York. It is
t!iat he ~
BiMm· iiiilividua'J. ba.. t.,m., imd J.UU!!!IIie ~ 01
' Jii8deJ the
elected ·.to ... the .Eza:o- credit&amp; 'The c:reditll imiDhed
-'-'--- ·L-n. '
'
tive :BOard of the Ssnate PrO- will.be bi Enillab, O!!'IJII"'iition', ~tioq, Bu1fa1o aocial •
. nMma1 ~ --·
1 l-'oaal
Cena O&gt;&amp;Ptei'.
'
and-.m:l;e._ • ·
. 'n&gt;ey~are: -cJarence Ccilmei'.~
• • ·•
.
~ Dri\U; Ud - ~,, 1lle , ... ~ ....... "'
~ ..... prol8aoiioa81. .ataiJ . ...... - - . ... .........
. ~!!ti~i and Jlo,ljert IWI 'fl . for ...........
~,._........_ MonU.ue, -action- 111101111 -- . . o f
Jamiel S,c::liindW• •and Clauil8,l ... Cllr ..........., ........ ,.,...~
!~ 111( ~ ~ _ . . . , . . . . . ·CJf ~ . .-.

SPA

-'!":

.

emucrs . ;,.

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

w--, .

~~~~~~=~: :;r;;n~~=r.;tt::=:;::t' .

p

7

~·

•

~

''"

=.

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

.1!:: ~:
= .::..""::.-=.
-w:--. .
• •. • •. .. ,•

alao . •~:.,..... ._.,......., ......... . ,

-y~

~

vice . "GUannJj,"' the thine .

t

.... .

-. :::,.~~a:=.: ~-=· :1-aplllt:.... .
•

.

&lt;

~~~._u.,.n. ~~of~:wlll~~

.:,- =='~==~t.~'·~~~ ~-

�'·

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
. ~ITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

ros

\

FocultyofAnl-- .... ... .
Focul'Y of Educo- Sludlot · · •• •
FocultyofEniJ-tniAppllod......_ . . . . : .. : .. .
Foculty of Holldl ..,.._ .. : . . .. ·.
Focult¥ OIIIMw- JuritpruciOftco .• •
Scftool ql..._,_. ..... . : ... .
FIICUityOI---ond
-,

alii

alli«&lt;IJ.,..,. .,.,...,.

-

·rllllll

~~~----- '

·----

-·- EdL--

Facu~~~~ · · · · · · ··~ilillllli~illllliillliiill•;::r=c:::r

S10.40Q.OO
3.1100.00
4.800.00
37,700.00
2,800.00
1,600.00
. 10.800.00

... :...-.. , ...

OMiionoiiA....- -· .. •

GraclilOio- .... . . .. ..... ..

560.00

. OMiionofConllnul..

eon. ..... ..

Millord .. . . _
Univnlty l.lbroriol .••. : . ••. :-• •.
OffiCI of

the.......,.,-...

r

-~

-----·-

e.-VIoo'-• .. . ... . l~··•••!i~•lii"llilllil••l::r=:::J

-·lot... . :·-- l!i~ll!···~~········lllll!llJ
,. .......--.

oo;cO of Vloo - ·
Offica of Vloo

Opn--sv- .... ,, , .

-·--·lot
. .;. :..:..

Faculty_.~"" . .... :.. Offica of Vloo

----------

-:••••••l!!l•··~·lllll!l••c::r:=

U n - - - ..........
Office
Vial.........,t
OffiCI of Vial
Pnlldent fot
fQf'
Fecilitiel Plenning .. • . .• : . ••..
Office of Viol~ for

____

·····••1!1•••~·~·····
-:__-

,._rdl .

U.B. Foundltion. lncJAiumn·i Aff8ira .
Western -York N. . .r
..
-

ClniOr. · ··-· . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

-

•

'&lt;.f;:&amp;..; l~.

'··-

Lop:al NotioM, 011 April'Jl ad
22, 1978, at the Ballalo OaafN.

5,200.00

1:,h"m:::-....:

dtwiu!&lt;ah'

Main Stn;et
·
· '
The event;' in celebration

5,200.00
14.300.00
2,600.00
3.1100.00
1,300.00

.

• -.lslant pd-.r of

.

.:.:1

The Cleveland Quorut, Baird Recital HaD,
noon.
The open rehearsal -il primarily for music atudenta; however,
students enrolled in other diaciplin~ at U /B are welcome to
OPEN BE11EAR84L••:

1,300.00
700.00
1,200.00
520.00

attend. The quartet will perform
works by Mendeloaohn.

CBEATIVE CJWT CENTER•: L&lt;ather
Open Shop, 307 Norton, 1-5 p.m.

PSYCBO&gt;IAT: First ftoor cafeteria,
Norton, 3·6 p.m.

1331 or 881-1&amp;14.

COUNaLING SlaVIC&amp;.

..

Hillel il

and

~- For appointment. call 836-

FW&amp;NCB COU&amp;8ES IN ICNGLJBH. Con-

==~ ~~Yo:!n &lt;t,•'!b:
~:e~F~!~~=~r=~
the foUowiq cou.nea for t b e
•Prine 1973 oemeoter:

• French 122 - Freohman Seminar: M&amp;rl&lt;iom &amp; the N..W Left,
Tueo-Thuro., 1:1!0·2:50, Foenbeq.
French 369 - Artist &amp; Society .

~~~:: ~ri~~'tl~~F~.• ~ ·
11 ~ 50.

Mezu.
French 370 S - Romantic PoeW,~.J?~ting, Tueo.-Thur.. 9 :09French 370 W - Sludieo in
Cluoical &amp; Modem Tr .. edy,
'l'l!eo.-Thun.,,10:30·ll:50, Pacbet, ,
French 469 C :..... Experimental i
Fiction, Tues.-Thurs., 1:30-2:50,
Federman.

French 469 y - Europe&amp;~
Drama &amp; Film. Mon.-Fri., 1:802

tice · in the Fnacb Revolution,
Tu~~~~¥~4~:::..~
Uterature of -\'oyageo, Mon-Fri.,
12:00.1:20, Donato.

~~r ...,..rch, has an- =~-..::: :t.::'t'lft'=.~ =-~~tt.t:
During the month, 68 pro- cbaraclerixations by .P eter
malerid m
·
9
__
._ to•-"-- $4,575•:""'
• •• were and
Gleoda Jackaon - two - """""? ~.,.
limo of contemporary mala' ... .....U... to lhe fal!o-btc lllbodalo.
submitted to prospective spon· iam man.op to aave the 111m r.nDIII.a wbooe l8ot- ~
aors.
'
. ito . ever p - t " - " of cakl·
~8. . . . . . . 7; a.:-«,
Among new grants received ali..,.tb..
· • •
dwilig the ~ are: ~- w. COHCDr•: Univnoity ~ • ~~
~
Ferguson, Operative Dentistry, Baird Recital Hall. 8•30 P=·
,J-'"R, J::lacoaillft 1J; 8-Z; 0.: .
$197,896 front NIH for particiGonducted by ....;...., au.. ~ .....,., 18.
•
pation in Project ACORDE- bart, the CODCOrt will.,__
- - . . . . . . . , l8ot- .,._
a national elfort to develop cur- worb by. Moaart, Falla, c..upe.m. 111M· wllh: A--1, ~ 14;
riculum and trainiiii materials Ra'NI ad Meadelooobn. T.b8 CDD· ~ ~ 11; 8-Z, 0.
for dental auxiliaries; T.B. cert ia __...t b)r the tUB ~ ~ 1&amp; - •
Tomasi, Medicine, $30,676&amp;om. partineDt of ,..,_, .Uiil • bio ~-Wi!
the -American Cancer Society ad to J:l!f ~
- ~ Ia
for "Structural Studies on-Two 8IUI:Ift PILX!: Dodre of'Nat~ Yori IIJeo ~1B..~~==Anomalous lmmllDOtliobina A&amp;- (wn 8~) , 147 Jlie. . . . __....._
.at.JC'I,
~
sociated with M.ali1n:&amp;nt. fend!&gt;rf._IIP·11'""
•
• -. . . . . . . . . . . .
•
Lympbomasak;llL ~ap,.. - -=-~Of:.~--- ~
~· $76, . tram
. for _.
..•
,
&amp; •.., ... _..v.u nYa
aiU!IIea. of the "Role ol Oaoult ,
.
~
·
Myoau'dial Fliilwe in ~ EKHIBIT'S .
~
' • c:ilr.cgaw--. ~ ,,
Sbodt;" I .H. WaDI. . ~x.
•
• ..,. . . - · . . . . . . . . . .
88tica Laboratory, $1118,0i1 , uuA.~: -~~- =..=.,.~
fram NUl lor "Medluiiial o1 u 'I'.DI.IIDIIII ad llt'.&amp;Jr ••
~

t:"'

The Cbabad House ot.eJ-v.
- ances continue t h r o u 11 h the

i!

.-

:. :.".._.. _.
__. ...'-,.""',. . . ....
""'-..--.--.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
=. . . . .. -.. r-a'"l# : . - . .
-

farl&gt;reil~Sen will be belli, JasdPI
until clawo.
- ,.
Rabbi~ DOteS that-!J!B ·
•will -IUD a alate- . Chanukah 'h iili day, remiDda
·

~to (lbeo:bnar,-"the

P

&gt;

' ~.;,D~~~'n.eory. ~

Jo¥

tom of parents giving money to'
their children, Rabbi Nosen

!IV~ at ~ Senate IDIIIII-

lllg. -.

DOW

~ ·f~:o:::~:

- Research grants and con- Sunday (Schlesinger, 1971), CoJi. ~ io the ocboodu1e boluw.
tillcts totaling $935,359 were re- terence; Theatre, Norton, check · Iafonaation on lhe ~
ceived by U/ B faculty and ohowcU8 for timeo. Aclmiooion P~ "!!,!~ be banded to llloldoali&lt;
staff in November, Robert C. cbarp.
.
~'ti,;bl:f" in to pick up rom.
Fitzpatrick, acting vice presi·
A chic menage a troio, the ~r. ~1,~t!'::

the eighth -and final candle of
Cbanukah, will feature a Cbas-

:;:c~ts.Brooklyn

worbhop OMaiona; mid the ..,.
lire event will take place on the
Ridp Lea campuo. For further
iDformation, contaCt John COrcoran, U/B Philooopby Depart.
ment, 4244 Ridae Lea Rd., ' 831·

E!i:-:.'=:~:=i!
·""......m·
No_yember Research !:'«e~~~~r.:.;;~!oct;
112 Hochstetler at 3:1!0 p.m.
r 18, Sludentoabould
uuu PILJ(•• : Sundny, BltiOdy up. their ..,.Utra· ..,.

..-t today _ weekend with Sbabbos oervicas
~~waclayi ~ 7) .at (fOli......dbyameal) at5p,!D.,
~
~"to Saturday.
Friday, and apin at 10 am.,
sing! ala"--&amp; that will
Saturday' nilbt au
-'~- .
p.m. -a Chaasidic p~ oc. .
'-"IICU8 .....

Partlllel X -Roy Ttchnique for

Dental AuxiliarUa, Dr. Charlet
Upani, uoiotent profeoaor, U/8·
School of Dentistry, ~n Hall.
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Also on Friday, De·
cember 15.
.

n!,

acal~!~ ~tbedmftU of. an G u r a r y says tbet Rebbe
. eauc ..,... .,..
mWI" Schnsereon ...has lilso sent
mty at the ~ 12 ~- "Cbanukah galt" to all students
~ · m.eehn,, M8fl[ who sWcly.at cluibad House..

EnThegH~..,._ ~" ·

CONTINUING DENTAL J:DUC.lTION# :

..ntt'.!u":u{:;t.

- In addi"- Rabbi Menaoi chem
....... leader of the
Schneeraon,
·
·
"
~ Chabad • Lubavitch .movement,
Caucus D. raft
.. --e
ina '· has sent a letter. to J.ewisb Stu·
dents around the wbrld .which
University
" .•Plan "~be
given out at the celebration. After the Chanukah cus-

The Faeulty-Btaft. C
will
•
aucus

:J~~.,;.ol~
~ac!t~teia
~";:;:.:!,~cti:..: DO,!;ft ~

~~~- •, t'
....
~~"%t'i!l' ·.;.r~~!'i
the campaign; says. "We want Torch Drive on November 'J:T &amp;cksround of Ruuell'o L o 1 i c ,
to express our appreciation to with over one million dollars ~~ei~~~O:~'!¥:t,~~~
the hundreds of workers. who
have· Dfli'ticipated ' in tliis ·cam- more than was received in the Bertrand .RuueU Arehiveo, MeMuter Univenity, Rm. 14, 4244
ptign,' tiU.d·1o-111e mabytaculty 1971; campaign.
·The se~en-week ·campaign · Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.
and staff who have contributed
Thio will be a joint meeting
to the United Fund. II all who ra~ $9,303,819 or 99.7% of
:,~h~~U~~nt ·of Phil- ·
have not cont.ibutea woUld do its '$9,328,455 goal. .. ' "
A source of further funds will .
so, the University would ·b e
able to make its ¥oal and as- come from the sale in Erie THEOREriCA.L BIOLOGY BEM!N.U# :
sume its commuruty responsi- County of Pepsi-Cola, Teem, A report on the recent aympoeium
Squirt and Schweppes. Irwin ~.!~o~"$.:
bilities."
Contnl&gt;utions may be given PastQr, general manager of the rector, U/8 Center for Tbeoretito departmental leaders or sent Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., has cal Biology, Rm. 29: 4248 Ridge
to the Office of University ru.. pledged one-fourth cent for Lea, 4 p.m. Coffee at 3:1!0 p.m.
lations, 186 Hayes Hall.
Meanwhile, the United Fund each bottle pui'Chased during B~~csTh~~~!~~ie'!
ot Buffalo and Erie County of· ~=~ of Noveml)\'r and Smllll Mo~culu, Profeooor T. P.
fii:ially closed its 13th annual

Chanukah Festival Tonight
A Gala Chassidic
Festival will be h8id tonight at
8 p.m. at Chahad HOua., 3292

~~~

· ~~3:.-~~

1,300.00
3.1100.00

United Fund Driv.e Extended thru December
University··'U'Di te"d Fwid'
leaders announced this week
that the camP\IB ~ will .
continue until• !lie end ' Of D&amp;- ·4
cember i or · until' "the · soBF· 'of'~
$110,000 is reached.
·
The current report .of the
campaign shows tbet tbe Uni- ·
vers1ty has raised $99,408 or
approximately 93 per cent of
i!" objective:-·Ten . of 22 divi·
SIOns have reached or exceeded
their goals. ·
·
" .·,
''We would like to UI'Jie every
member of the faculty and stalf
to tum in their pledges to their
department campaign leaders
as soon as possible," Dr. 1\.
Westley Rowland, chairman of

IIUrPALO CO,._.. OK 'IIIII

THURSDAY-14

::::C:

--~- F"=·
~r~
brief~~ ~- r:~=:; ~•n:tca: &lt; :=.~a::;;~. ~ . 1:1; ~·~~...l:C; 1; ~
1
of~ lt,will iDdade UCI dlei eland far.

811lawa, be, hOoD NSF lor "ADaaiatie Silt

;'1 e-:ud~ ~

~=-=.t · :o!:'-=-=-:;:ru~ ~ ,,..,..,_

1;~":~ ~- ......._ ~-=

.!O:.:t:·:.a

8._
~J ~~
ohladelllll . . ilallaleL" :: ~- ..--IDIII&amp;add-* .......... BPib1~ ~~ :f:;.-..M.
.'l'be Cl!llillillflnt 'met llbqlit ~..,- ~-'d.. that .... -_il 000' faoliiii ~t\c;:B '~!~'.,.., ..
the -afler JMt &gt; ~, ~~~~~·~wft:h)llit(lldJtra, 6IUt ~u "'~
~hil
Sbealmlr·...,.. · •·
·~
· ·
'.
iDI ~ fll A1liiJS;
_ ,

.=:..

. . ..

~~~

-~--- : ~,.

P::::'»--sZ:l"HY-": -':lrtu;.L_•w.·.~

I(J

4t·· ~ ·=t

1-,,0..
Piftr......
~

•a :

~law

·'·~
=t;'
·

pY'I.B" ( -.S•b•l.:
IF

0&gt;'
4

. •.

·

�12
~by. Intenoled· . . .th prof-.
oioull .,. brrited to aund.

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

ClldAD BOU. IMMTR ....,..•:

_ 1-.

Tbe -Cbebed
- will
by
.......
abe-fonow.d
8292 Mala
St.,10LJD.

.........
_._cu.r .-..•: Bcim~

....... (tha Carihbeu). Hiotori·

THURSDAY.:_7
CII&amp;AT'tft

CUPT

~·:

Leotlael'

Opes Slwp, 807 Norton, 1,6 p.m.
PSYCHOLOGY ia:Tua•: TWo
aolOCJI, Rm. 14, 4244

¥:::
RidP 1:-,

2-4 p.m. •

.

tf:::.h'.!.!e.ioionm'.tl~~

P81'CBOIUY: Fint Door cafeteria,

Norton, U p.m.
UDCnJD•• : Pronatol»m and So-

cidy (lo MotMrlwod

Ooin6 Our

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

nro.

'J.f..~!!.Je!!~~-~ ~ oyn.

'-'- director NalioDal o..DiAfor Noo·PareDto, 281 Norton.
• 3:80p.m.
•
Ma Padt will ~ -'ety'o
over-huio on -tboocl in
-ral-formenandforwomen

b

's~~by~'n!)
~=
Aooociation.
PBJL080PHY

,

ac!::

~# :

.'
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM# : Dr. L.C.L
Yuan, Brookhaven National Lab--

j~J7~~He:O. j'"p.m.ann~
=~in ll2 Hocllltetter at S: SO
TJIIIORE'nC.U. CIOLOOY IIDm&lt;U# :

613, Commandmenro; Cbebed
~ 8292 Main St., 4 p.m.

~..... .....,. &lt;mnwa•: &amp;It [,...
1truclion, 7 Norton. 1 p.m.

CAC. •........ :

J!..IR=~B;!me....:f- H&amp;WCOilS&amp;I CXJCE!'&amp;IL Boua•:.lion a1ao apply ~ to !\t ~8'!e%..'-" ~W=

lldDICII&lt;AI. .,.....,...., IDm&lt;U# :

Ii;,.,

ow.o.

~BIOLOGY IDmfU#:

How Cello Self-hoembk into Tio•
and or,..., Dr. Malcolm s.

~·

· ~~T~U:-f~~~
c~~.

IN'I'ERNATIONAz. OOPJIE£ aoua• •:

students. faculty ' and staff.
Schoellkopf Lounge, 4-6 p.m.
CBABAD BOUSE

BOUSE CIL\NUKAH

CIUJW)

812tVJ(:E• :

1 N

d.n:U.aS

FES'I'J-

;[',!..~ Ckrs:_r.8- ~.:bad
VISITING 'IEIE·

YIBJON.UU:S•: Fe.ilturing Fred
Borzyk, WGBH, Booton, Haas
Lounge, Norto'l&gt; 8 p.m.
UUAB vn.M .. : Sweet Sweetbock'•
IJaDd081111 Son11 (Van Peebles,
1970), Conference Theatre. Nor· ton. check showcase for times.
Admission charge.
A clauic chase, white against
black, in which the parameters o!
:'h..f."io'!:o'!:. e¥J:':d
~
c:omentoneofVanPeebleo' media

rJ:. :l::

r:%~ =~~ ~~

Acu-

puncture, Dr. Ching Yuen Ting,
14
0
7

~~=~ ~). tJ!Student

18

AB-

IOCI8the
. • ~ n ScSpeakooleonf' MBedi"!'"'cm.ue. and
u
hool
Super Show, 140 Capen, 7 and 9 p.m. Ticketa at 75
cento are available at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office.
This film is the first of two in
CAC's Rode and RoU Weekend.
Super Show has everything from
jazz to blues and is sure to appeal to almoot eveeyone. Some o!
the groups and musicians to apCAC FILM • :

~he~~~~.rc- ~~t%n~~

Bruce, and the Modem J a z z
QworteL
·
AMERICAN

CONmMPOaA'aY

THE·

~;:"';~!! ~::::J.."'t'.!~·~':"~~

Van Peebles, Simon . Cbuckoter
and Hubert Scaleo.
leave Norton at 7: 15 p.m. AmeriDAHC:Z ra:&amp;aftA'l'ION•: Signaturu can Contemporaey Theatre, 1695
-in Space, Harriman Studio The- Elmwood Ave., 8 p.m.
atre, 8:80 p.m.
Tbio play will 11e performed
An infonaal ~ of dance, ~'Y Friday and Saturday evecbo _ _.._. --~ ~J0 -~ hy - rung th_rough December 16.
·~·-....._
" ~
CiuUtYDe
LaW80D•I nviroJUDeJ11-IHTI:RNATIONAL P 0 L K DANCING•:
al Cho.__hy c:laao. SpoDIOred Inotruction in basic iileps during
hy the U/B De.,.-t Qf The- &amp;rot hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
abe. Ticltoto at $1 for general ad-· 8 p.m.
miuion and 50 cents for students
...., available at tha Norton HaU UUAB rJL&gt;&lt;• • : Sweet S weetback's
Tidtet Olllce.
lladtiaooooa Song (Van Peebles,
1970), Conf~nce Theatre, Nor~n~~ for times. AdIIUI8 ' IIIZrBOVEN CYCU: COI&lt;CIIIT

VI": GliilrMri ' Slrillll Quarle(;

~~talofH~ 8~:J..'f ue: ·.

FRIDAY-8

emollad in othar cl1ac:ipliD.
lit UIB-... .....,_to attoiad.

&amp;M

OOIJI'I'II&lt;tJDIO lel'r.U. DUCATIOM#:

SJ.O.P.
and TM
Wonderful World o Occluoion,
11 Ca-Hall, 10 iulr. :80 p.m. .
Tbe -'bao will be ~~

1'aiJDiw

-~~ ~~
"~--'ol

to~~eck ~owcase

A

~-

· '· aaaO~ol

•

.

Ria

C-al. 4210 . . . 1:-, 10:

a.m.-

.12:80p.m.

. : -

-L·~~~~~~;,.~ ~
6aoaclc-la,Man)oD~

~

for

rge.

~

Admission charge.
Univenity Chorus,

CONCERT•:

the Chorus will perform a program
metanao!• wVoerksrd .,froPumCCI?rupe,reMs usb~

S

1

..:c:r::d :=e.r:h~~:~·is&lt;f~
and open to the public. Sponoored
by the U/ B Department of Music.

D.\NCE PRESENTATION•: Si~naturu

in. Space. Harriman Stud1o Thea-

tre, 8:30p.m. See ThunMiay, Dec.
7 listing, for details.
AMEIUCAN

CO&gt;m:MPORARY

TBE-

ATRE• :¥The Unnamable, see Friday listing for details.

t"'i

.

fl;u....-...u;;ar-.....;:_~--lai·-

CHABAD HOUSE MELAVA MALKA•:

· -

Chuaidic gatheririi until dawn.
~=~ ':.a:d,08~t!f:ateflo::.

·

UUAB COPnZBOUSE•:

Dave Van

Ronk, 1st floor cafeteria, Norton,
1
$1; !aculty, stalf and alumni, $1.25; gen-

9

';;:fm:~~: ~~ents,

eral public, $1.60.

SUNDAY

O

-I

CONCERT• : Muoic of Eaolem -Eurooean Compoun 11-South S/4v
.and RUIOian, Baird Recital Hall,
7: 30 p.m.
T h i a evening's performance,
fealuriilg Roger Shields on piano
and David Giboon, cello io the
..00nd in a aeries of
on

..,..;,.rio

~=~. I!..!l::~hyE":Q
~ et,lmic
·~ Cultural orpni.
non-profit
zationo at U/B aDd SUC/B. the

l:.w::"mo':! ~J::"':l.e ~.:..,i

!C::.:::::.'!!.."!':i:i!. ~U.:k~~~
ton Hall Ticket Olllce. Ticket will

-·-

~ "-'

___.,..

.w•

X

~
·

ft

~-

· ,.. UUAa """- - . - , • - • ·
Sponoored hy the Council ·of
Health Sei'Yiceo -.a..
-

NEWIAMaJCAB CllfKIUo• : {MeUo,
1-72'
on -•L- C'-··.
~ ....._ No•w•-.
Time and F o - Vietnan!.Newo-

oily
Gt B~~~.....w.oGl'fJtlu.oU'
·
Dr YcAJto
Jioter H Hull. J
a...tu'

LINCUJBTJCS uacrua• : Neu.rolin· · = n = - : n ~A~:~
1/uUUa, David G. Hays, U!B De- · Houae, 3282 Mala St., 7 p.m.
i&gt;artDient of Linguiatico, 381
llay81, 11 a.m.
WEDNESDAY-I3
A beginner'• account of a few
reoulto· from split-brain uperimenlo, evoked-potential atudieo, Lll&lt;GU18'1'1C8 I.-criJIIIO• : &amp;11~•
etc., that hint at the orpnization of LWui.ria: G..._ and lftditJ,
of' lancuace in the brain. •
Ronald"
A. Zirin,
U/B o....taimt
of CJa-ica.
831 Ha,y-., 1i LIIL
COMPIITD IICia&lt;CB !XILLOQUIUK# :
Tbe oricino of W'-m li,...;.
Ptyclw/oilicaf .Role of ~Y'!· tic:o contnuled with - t IDdia.
tnctJC Tre... Stephen Iaard. UmConoldera~-- of _,,_._ phil.
ven.i.ty. of Edi.nburlh. ScotlaDd.
wvu
•--...--.
and !Dstitute of Adftnced Study, _ ooot
hpe~-~
~t
~~~~
p · · to u ·
·ty Room 90 •
_..,.
...., - ~~ t.:"~'SO'p.m.
' · otndy,

™.

~ ........ :' TM Ulliwr-

cieu.'
;::.:.,~~~47 Die- ~~ eo..[;_ -n..tre:
CJW.TIVB CBArT a....-•: &amp;It [
Tbe -l:!"io·opan to tba Pa

otruclion, 7 Norton, 7-10 p.m.

11•

to. a iubaequent

aw.-rm:.....,. &lt;mnwa•: Mac""
,.. and: SmaU Loom w~
lMtnu:t.on, 807 NortoD; 7-10 p.m.

uuu ......... , Swut S.,;_etbod'•

fllltl'Jjcfjon, 807 Nortoli, 7:80-10

admii the bearer

•
-J

.MONDAY-II

3282 Main SL, 9 p.m.

....,. of the m1o........._ Spon-

~::1.,_~the

/B Department of

rec:"P tioD.

~)
. Con!: ~t!~~

·. .- · - ~. ,
. . ~· ~·-

era! public _., ~ - . tha UDi:
wnity C&lt;IIIIIIIWlity, aDd- Will be

~by • 'l..cioa-ad~

p.m.

.

•

,

"-~L

.........

•·

=-

4

--.'t

.JJOi..
(~

:Le, ~~lt!.,a:&amp;· · TUD•:ma~

*•;
'-' ~
;::;:rJ~ =·~~~ L26~
Riobud ~
·'
•

lOD

~o~~hiw
po='?ea~~
.. ~~
..
·--..
s:tle~anHil~n &lt;ii!C::c 8~~

.,...,;,.,
CLUI·~
·
la~ soua
•
a..Md
SID
~~80 p.m; • ·
.
•
f"
v..M.n ,__,., U/B .;_ &amp;,
COJ&lt;c.T•: UIB Porcuooion E,..
'-~ ' Clark-o-n
p•
.1WICB PllliiiDn'ATIOJ&lt;• : s~...
ton. check ohowcaoe for . timeo. oembk, Baird Recital Hall, 8 : 3!1 - . .
....... 7 . in Space, Harriman Studio Thea- Admiooion charge.
p.m.
,
.,. • ,
__
, , v.uarrr 81rDIJiiMG-:....tJ/B ... . st.
~= p.m.or~~.'!huiilday,.P!'c. co....,..•, Bulfalo Feotival pre- . DirectecLlW J.llli W'J!IIaJDo, the ~lure, ClaJk Baii -Swimfor-~
....,to CIU'Iio Mayfield aDd Tlie · eiiOMDble will peifozm woib bY ~ Pool.. 7 p.li.
..•
UUAB oo-oua~: ·Dave Van
O'Jayo, Kleinhano Muaic Hall, 8
~ .z.; h Cana0,
liJIIJI'r(
~
RDM. lot l!Oor cafeteria, Norton, Pn.=,1!t Pt:.' $6, aDd U ; ..,
1Cillm
9
1
Pfff'1!i~ •1 ' ,.;,. Pllililhle lit the Norton Hall · be ·.-~ The ~Ia· g.t,:·..''.!f'!..~ll!
•
: ihiiani.
Tic:lret Olllco. ., • ~and- to the Pllblit&amp;!la- 140
- : OOMCDT 0: UIB
&amp;,.,, oonid tha U/B
1Ciliaw
Mu- - •'
. ViDa Maria Colloige Anditoridm; Mnolc.
.•·
• YID.Anlle~BiiMI!la..
- ~: .SATURDAY-S
- 8:80p.m.
... lllid Jolua c..o..ru..:. II .. . .
~
.
CoDdaeted bY. Fruk J . Cipolla,
-tioMolniolcm ........ Ua at
~~i:":r: :;:....,..A~-::r IIUOt
-~
~/ Jielit:iM,StaiMr1JjJ.
camn ...... .CZJma!:Bdtl• v!DaDd~- .pg,.
~Lm...f&amp;:t..
~ Tbe ~ ·will ~- 807 N~ 1-5 p.m.
In Poilal.81ani, A._taw
oidii

-to;--....... . .

DonUd .IC

UUAB FILM•• : Sweet Sweetboclt'•
Bll4daoau So1111 . (Van Peebleo,
1970), Conference Theatre, Nor·

Amold Steinhardt, violin; John · accompliohmento o! variouo Eut
European peoples. Ticketo· at $3

. Dalley, 'l'iolin; Micllael Tree, viola,

- - - - - - - . . . . , - - - - - 1iDd D.vid Soyer, oello. Tbe conOPIIN nsu. . u••: GU4meri
cert io oold out; however, a wait101
Btrilll/ Quarter•
Baird,~~ · -U..=-liot ~ t~~
~-..'....... p.m. •OD t h e f Tbe
o ropoa
- rehoanalla p.;.._.__.
""""""Olllce

:1

Kleinhano

Ticketo at $6, S5, and U ate
TI~'Oma;!. the Norton Hall

b.!ba~'H~-: am M:,'l;; BaiJtrec~talbyH~..~~~ Ci!ono,

LECTURE/ DEMONSTRATION • :

vAL•: Feat:uriq a Chassidic band
VIDBOBPACZ "72 -

8ABBATH

~..:.~.....
~ ~~~f~l

cl:rge,
SL, 5 p.m.

Coffee at 3 :30 p.Di.

G-22 Capen.": P".m_ I&lt;&gt;-

Open. to all foreign and American

Center, Rm. 28, .4248 Ridge Lea,

Hall Tidtet 0111co. • •
•
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�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Towf!r·COrwersion,l¥iU-. Ease HS Library

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BUNY/Bulralo is that it must
develop .as the University ceDler Of SUNY. Although ua!l- ·
lence will be a aoal. it will be
.....uence of a particular kind,
IWIIIIIy e:roelleoce in ~~erui« to
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a8rviee &lt;GQI!eleaA.E; F; c. _P .
tead&gt;ini. paJticu1arly ~ eou.p ud Ma~tics
for thoee · wbo are. ~ en- ~}t;_ ~~:: .·..
gaged in the ·p ractice of elluca- •
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tration· Elementary f&amp;Dd Re""Af~hysics is the field medial' Education; Curriculum
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quire realistic selection of what. ties, the thrust of SUNY/Buf- urut f"!' a fOIJ! year ""'!od.
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make societal coDfributions .in imental areas, e.g., solid state, • scheme:· LaniUalea. Classics, ...,.. so
~- 88
P _uce
the present &amp;Dd neai future.
lj&gt;w temperature, for which tbe· Literature (including Compara- gnu!uales wtth a personalized
The plan set out below is provision of equipment aod fa- tiveLiteratute)&amp;DdLinJuistics; un,que ~duate backcouched in .terms of EMPHA- Cilities is relatively in6pensive. History; Music; Theater; Art grDIJ!IIl .and 8IIUiPP&lt;!d for proSES. Each of tbe&amp;e more or Although theoretical research is aod Photographic Studies; Phil- ducti~ mvolVI!ll*lt m a vanety
1.- naturaUy subsumes a nwn- not to be suppressed, tbe kincL osopby.
.
-...r SOCietally .~ ~vors.
ber of exisl:ini Departments, of theoretical research that ·is
Here the priority scheme rep- . 'l1!e three 'boru:o&lt;&gt;ta! "!'gsnPrograms, Scbools or Facultie&amp;. likely to have impact in the resents 80 attempt to recognize lZIItions of the U~v!"":'ty mterFurthermore, there are some foreseeable future is encour- both strength and relevance. ~t almost all disciplines aod,
situations, both of the "inter- aged.
The current preoccupations in m. 0'!8 respect &lt;!• ~oli!er, are
emphatic• &amp;Dd the . "intiaemThe importance of chemistry, the departments involved with pr10Cipally coordinative m charpbatic" kind, that are treated biology aod geology need hard- language are with 6oth practice a~-- a-~
s-•--l . th
separately. It is with these that ly be stressed. Currently the aod rellection. The iangualle&amp;
""' .....uate ..,..,., "!
e
most of the "newness" of the corresponding..departments are are tallf!ht as instruments to.be center for all nonprole&amp;Slonal
plan is found. Under the EM- respectively strong, potentially used with care .aod elegance; post-be.ocala.lll":"te dejrrees. No
PHASES themaelv~ there is strong &amp;Dd ama11 &amp;Dd weak. the literatures in thoee lang- great change IS _enVISaged for
::W,"'fd~or":bier~ some ~~ new 'The plan calls for substaotial uages serve as bases for philo- its ~ al~ it is to
lion:.
~~osuggested aggl~= improv"!'lee'l of each.
sophical aod critical reftecti0118
~!fm~
control
118
1. As a State supported in- ation of d_.unents.
'
Statistics, mathematics, aod on tbe authors, the cultures, the
.
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•
stitution, SUNY/Bulralo must
In the narrative below the · computer science wiU continue ~ ~ ~es· predomThe Dwwon '!I Urwkrgrcu!.u,.
ckponstrate ita _11!111P01isibilty present tense is used 80 that to be principally servaot&amp; rath- mate. Lin~ IS regarded ate Studoa continues to !"' reand of ....,titude by posi- the plan 88 given bas an aspect er than . leaders in. the applied as a stu!'Y
both cultural 8pDilsible .for recommendmg to
of reality aod immediacy. Ac- fields. ·The considerable per- aod ·social-tmpact. - · ·· · ·. ·
!be . . llresident . the · ~ · of
tive contribuiroD. to thoee
whom it draws its sustenance.
tua1 implementation wil,l. re- centage of ~ in s~tistics
~!""~. for the miDd aod the ~ wbo are to receave bowca2. As a community of echol- quire time about five years. aod mathematics f&lt;&gt;&lt; which,.P. spmt 18 .produced, cllact8ed; la~te :&lt;~-.- ~!"·
""' and individuals of hillh 'l1l&lt;ri will' be annual incre- plication is readily lou¢ .(is · an_d .,taugb~ i!! .~,of the,.!le- !M&gt;~ JY. ~ sb:ucture
IDDIIII SUNY/.Bda)o ments ,.,.. dealementa , lin , the encouraged. The program m partments mentioried. The func- the JJIVIBIOD of Undergraduate
-iDuot" """''nize that a unl-- neigllborbo(,d of 3 . per cent to mathematics is particularly di- tion they serve is important Studies is to regulate more rigsity is ahiiost unique among all 6-per cenl These, compounded rected: toward a p"""'~ ~ although. it is I"'CCplized ~ oJ1111!1ly ~ establishment and
institutions - for- providing dis- over. a A\'e-.Yjlllr . period, wru
.·
of the pure· aod the applied.- - as a lux_ury than _as a neoo!s;sily. C?Dtinualio!' of oouraes by _re.puoioaate aDd ·useflil-· semce produce 1118J0r changes while
Ad 3. In . the professional
.Multifocal umlB- Omitted y•ew of their ~r ~­
to !lie society in which it finds permit1;ing plan modifica!ion fields, · where . applications are · from the lists above are a nwn- -mg_contents aod the modes m
itself. Even if a university is from year to year.
'
central, the ' follOwing will be ber of curreilt activities as weU which they are taUiht, .
"ind~tly ~thy" · its E"""stressed. in the order given: En- as some yet to be developed
For purposes of pvmg II'!'
collective conscience aDd the · The plU con&lt;:em8'ttaeif with gineering; Architecture &amp;Dd En- (i.e., tbe "new") that do not Deans of the Graduate SchOOl
&lt;"m8' ien'"'l of its members
foilr EMPHASES in the fol- v~tal Deoigo, Manage- fit ·neatly into aoy other cate- aod tbe Division of Undergradsbould IIUide \t to serve.
- lowin(_p~ty order:
. ment; Lew (particularly law gories suggested. They can be ?ate Studies more line autbor·s. Tlie awesome and pre&amp;&amp;L Devel.opmellt Of "applica- aDd society); Education; Social listed under the foUowing 1ty, eacb is given "discretion- ing problems that now OODfront ble theory · and tecbniq.- in Policy &amp;Dd Community Serv- groupings: Policy Studies; Area ary" budgetary allocations with
our civilizaticll1 and tbe entire ·the social 8Ciencee.
·
ices; Information md Libnuy Studies; The Colleges; 'The which he can enrich departplanet cannot be iKnnred. It is · 2. Fundamental ~ in Sciences. ·
· - Graduate School; The Division !"""ts. programs, or Faculties
a ,_.. certalllty ihat mOiit of the
ac1encies 'aDd math&amp;-'
Notably ament from the of Undergraduate Studies; The \II ways COIISistent with the
the solutioos for tlae problems matioa.
.
'
·
above list is 1MIIit in the bealth Division of Continuing Educa- overall !'cademic P.!'m and conwill ~- from fundamental
S. Teaching &amp;Dd ......-n:h in sciences. Clearly the Faculty tion; Summer Session; Librar- sonaht with specific needs pe- .-rdl m tbe social, llltwal tbe prpfessional disci-"of Health Scieoces forms ao ies.
culiar to tbe doinaiJi of his
aDd
o...-.1'-4
scieDCea
in
tbe
uni,........_
---"-'"
" .,__
4. Teaching aod scbolanhip
easeotial aDd integral part of · Po licy Studies are currently ._,...._.....ty.
_
......,~~These diacip
.·· - - '"""" marts, letters, phlloaophy, .and SUNYIBulralo and its role as represeoted on the campus in
The DiuWon of Continuing
must act in .,.,.,...t; aDd be alert other bi1IJICM&amp; of tbe lfumani- well 88 the internal ordering of the Policy Studies Consortium, E~11 plays a vital role in
to tbe need for 6oth the purity ties.
its -priOJitiea must be proVided which could develop into a tbe oe-vi« tWioeTy ~ of
~.~~their &amp;&lt;Ill·
For most of tbe progains, by thoee l8lponsible for its op- major Btate-wide Center in ac. the University. This Division
.......,_....,_ SUNY/Buffalo ~y has tbe '!ratiolis.
cordance with the 1972 Maafir is &lt;the One eoplicit rneclvJQism
4. Ec!mamic. politiail, aDd . basic sll'engtha required: . In
In the 6elda of engineering Plan for SUNY. Within ouch for adUeving direct .mea in
mataiaf.realitiea aU speak most some inatsnces, thMe basic- aDd education; the individual a Center, theJi" is a· ·na~
'
tim to tbe adult commund!!ou'ly on tbe point that there ..._....._ need reo--~.-:.- ~Is ~"- priority place for tbe ' planned C
ity. ID oontJert with ibe Scbool
Ia "nothing fOr no~ anii
·~-...-uru-~-'tywill
- t and ftiCbmbination but the in- o
·
In management, al- for Moihematiml Metlwda ·
ofMallagement&amp;Ddwithtbelnthat ...,by ....,..:.--::::__. ---'. ~
·-U
111"8dients are "alreadyJresenl. thoUih the School is organized the Social, Bio/ogicol, tJIId strudlonal ComlinmicationCen_...,. ~ .,......
However; tbe scheme priori- by
their general Health Sciences and the ezist.. ter, tbe Division of Continuing
_....
•
tie&amp; does imply tbe ~ out size aDd ' ~ of pur- ing Urban Affairs Council. Education will _.., become inTo &amp;llDDIIIPiisb the _ . pn- or diminntion f1( a IIIIIDbi!r of pose call 'for no lll!ttilla of pri- Clearly, policy studies involve volwd in recianal education via
erally ct....ibed al:lcM, the plan · edatina propams or tlleir con- orities.· For similar reasons tbe themselves with. at least tbe the media of radio aDd televi_.,..._ prioritiee for tbe solidatlaD into mare "'-ct other fields recjuire no depart- first three categories given aion. ~ill~ wl1b
aupport' of -..rioua ecadomii: abd emcioDt unita. l'be 4iltails ll*ltal priorities. AU orderings above aod in some nire in- the de¥
,Empire Sla~
unita. These prioritiea in part ot 'nrplllzational ~t are CICCIISiODed by present qual- staoces with the fourth as well
Collep. the
viaioa of Caoi-·
ity and potential future quality
On the other band, An!G tinuing Edi,IC&amp;tion will pnw.ide
ariae. from ~lion of~ · aod -pbasis follow; ·,
~ ilabmiaainns l!l8de
Ad 1. To adJiev&lt;j -atren,tb as well as by present aDd future Studies embraces Amerioao , _ educational ~
in tbe fall fll 1971. in reapoaae aDd JIIOPaB in tbe aoCial aci- n8eda.
•
·
·
Studies, Puerto Rican s~ to. ~lit 91 tl)e PoPulation to the Pniiideat'a iequeat for " -encalbefoll.owingdepa'rtments
F!i&lt;. eDJineerinl tbe priority Black Studies, . International heri&gt;tofOni Ulllltile tO~­
~'t:a..ala'-18 · of Cllmlldly .oa the ~pe foil. order JS: a.emiCal EnaiMering; Studies, as well as a number , V8lltllp til fhe..moie traditional
.-18.
elc.
: ::- bnd·ei'!;,:Z.,';:,cnwoing tbelr Civil· ~; ~ of other ethnocentric programs anan:;em...ts. '
·.
trW~~aDd~~ ~ tJiem " ~ve'j:; ~...~: that might develop.
.·
~ UJli:.'ersity-operates !'""'
1ar SUNY!Balfalo is not, ·,_
n dieii&lt;XIIltribution can be"'--'-":"".....,.~g.
'1'1!e _ColleRes regarded as ~ the~ SlliMI6 s-i_ou
-'--·'-' - be. ~
ill
"'-"'--t ..,;.,...__,_
........-nag.
prov1ding alternatives to Ira
m the Urutea States. A Iarae
........... 11
_.. •
· """!" • .......,.... : - ~-"-""""""gy;
1liere is some -t.ion about ditional mod08 of ""--'-·• fraction of the itUderits who get
~ts at tbe Di-~ frOSocinlosY; Economics· Anthro- the viability of tbe
·
.
un-a·-~ .-..~SUNY s--•-•of -equal &amp;Ddhlah cjull1ity theY •• poiocy· Geopapby·...-' Polit.icsl . - .
.
. pro..ru:::: m ate education. As an ·_.,;. """" ~ at
. I ~
milbt yet fail •
,8ciflnC&amp;.
•
'.
·
:":,'lli,.!"'toCol!eliate Sy&amp;Bn
~ -tlal ~ .
'lh8 theme that binds a- partment · · such ~-.
.
I!IIJOY support ap- ,__
• •
-"
•
for the ~lil' ~ ~ is lbe stud of human 80
·l8 , .
as . propnste to ao ~t. · In _,... · fraction of . "" ~
here~ "Heilce, ill add!- bibniClr at tha Yindividual
opportuility for
a ~ immediate future, · evalua- JD!!Ilts-.for .tecP- &amp;re-I!"~
lion to allocatiall P.O- . tlaaD poap llltioalil aDd inter:
~~-~nit tha~ can ti~n of tbe experu,.,tal .,.u!ts' ~- Summer- s-ion . m-~
. ..:...a..
..........._ ...._
"-~• t.:.!... ...._,_ ve .,.........,.. ...., ...rui mter- will begth and by J
30 strudiOiL In elfect. the Summer
~U~
·
~
_,.to
,......_
.....,._
.&amp;~
IJI!POrlanoe
8ctiooio
wtth the community.
1974
"-~- of' SiiiiiiioJl• provides {or the •equivrriatUif -a-le
of -!hill lllucly anaM ·flam the
In ieid_.._
· ..,_
the ' a si-'A--•
,............ .,.,._......,
of
is aa well m
· need to dilocovw fUndamental
J!"Oll- are
·evaJuative Process will be ~__pf ~-~tioll- .
' llliide,qf
---~ tbet ......... 1!0- .:l..-..1 ol
~ "l(etA!.
SUNY/~. 'lbla dort 18
• .stab&lt; bela '&lt;,_JruJ&gt;- •·· .• r-·11&lt;-'J "" .•I - nlt:J lo
- ··
""t: ,..
.cal.l~mayi!I!IJ'OQJied &lt;~"" ,__,,, &lt;t&gt;L.AJ of ~ can produce a UDivenity wedded to scholarship ·
md tead&gt;in,g, yet constaotly
aware of and devoted to the
-notion that it must aDd can

:r=

!&gt;aving

mx.;

..

natunil

'!

•w....,._

·......--....

..,_Is,

an:

lndWrtrw

~ ~-·

&amp;.:'1!:-f~~~

::=~:.CJ:'Ie

_ha,.

structured_......,

adlVi-:: .=;.

•

,

.,...,

-

.

..

• ~• h:l.11.t: stU w l .b!r..t

'- '·

�~

-November 30, 191:1

~c.~,.,.,.,._l,eol.l)

-~ be provided,. in

at SUNY. More
tiii8Cifii:ally Uld in anticipation
~ . tile lebeduled- implemeata-

~01

apocition~

-c.

A. ~. Pnaident
SUNY/8 CbaJ&gt;ter of the .
SPA of SUNY

u- procoduree·on our

::"""Joc:ai
~til;..,ll!7..!:
ceiWid m.tzu.:t.ioD&amp; from SUNY

..-Dial Cbe · allocatiab of
AI!W .,... Uld tbeir lzlmsfer

-ao.DaT J. GllAN'I.'IiAM,
Vice Pn!aident

· to PR lll'8daL Tbe olber "deals ·
with t&amp; IIIIIIOI.IIicel that
wai Ol Oct.ober 'J/3' a nUmber
of ciw staff are. ~ted ..,
. . . . . . . . - amfideatiill Uld
lbarefOie are 110 Joaar ~
IBDted by SPA lllllf may no
......... bold IIIOIIIbonhip in
SPA.
.
.
.
In both instances SUNY Cen. tnd baa followed • unilateral
proced\ue Uld in 80 doing baa
violated the teim8 of the Aireemml :l.epJ COilDMI baa already beaD enppd.

....

......_~

Profeaaional staH "accorded"
such otatus are urged t6 dia"''ilrd these DO~· SPACential "is d&gt;allen • · thiS 88 a
violation of theJlllllelma of the
Agreement and baa retaiiied
coUnsel to take appropriate ..,.
tiOn. Membenl are urged to continue pi!rf(!r'ming their functions
as members of SPA which
their representative bargaining
qency.
.
2. ASI'-PR· Under ·lhli Memorandum of
UndertKanding the initial slotting of ~rsons into four ranks
was properly to have been ·done
by .central Administmtion. UGrades were to have been abolished through legislation effective July 1., 1972. 'Ibis has been
done. ASP ~dea Wl!f&lt;! to haVe
become obaolete upon the implementation of the Promotion
Proceciure, and upon - initial
slotting.- Tbe 'Central AdJDinis:.,
llation was .committed to pusbmg' tor- ~· .rev~ew with' the
DIYis'illit·of '®fBUdiet, of'pOiltions in the NTP ranks, and

u

:!'=di:b:~IB ~

Initial slotting was aocomlished in almost all instances
Cy 'moving ASP grades onethrough-four directly acroe!f 'to
P.R gradl!!l one-through-four.
Tbeni_ is no evidence of a review of the positions V&lt;'ith the
Division of the Budget, the
positions' requirements, or their

"d~l:.,~~ted with an
attorney, wbo has been dlrectal
to promed with" action to obtai!), Jrom Central .Administq~­
tion, tbeir ""- for alo'\tin:a:,
their criteri&amp;; and their·appeeJs
r.:~.:..l ~~sUch~
·Central Administration will be
viewed 88 . bad failh.U&gt;d an improper ~tice ·for wliich we
wiH aee1t relief. FaiJills in ~
lief through regular adminisllatiw Proce8888 of 'PERB .would aeek, under Article 78
prooeedinp, to require the
State .-to aot "~,Gin in alotliJII.
We are p._,-ed for full and
ezhlluetive appMis of aU _.J,.

We

re~Mdia.

Tbe following advice is offered lor .your aotivities on cam-

:-

~:

L When your alotlillla are
8rinouDced, proceed in accordance ·witli the· iuidelinee utiliz-

ing all appee)s indicated. ·'Ibis
llliDeraJly . me8Di any apPeal
that an,Y person may wish to

make.

.

' 2. . In order to . . _ ) intelli-

aeiitly, you must know the
,... for the initial ·slotliJII. R&amp;such a stAtement in writ~of th8 chief .administrative
of the campus. or his

..:lt:

~

a.

.

Requmt, inorderme:.s.,rop-

:.=:;:=in-~
'tiona apinst criteria be re:kinwrltlnl.
. .._' Requ.t,in order tq.p!Opeoly appMl, that the standard
__._._ ;which)

~ lor
.

-~

the

·-

initiAl •.Jot..

-·

~

wriliJII.

Thill - y o u abould demaDd

HS Library-·
(Continlud fro,. PGI/0 1, coL 1)
.P..oe.". Adequate for the Lilnary's immediate needs, Huang emptiasizea. It will- also

U/lfPlans
Tea~hing _
Evaluation

3
-To~

Conversion,_______

(~ fro• J, col. 6)
Food S e r v i c e. Tbe cafeteria
areas could be con-tad to LibrarY ...ter stations. A -**
bar might be opened 110111&amp;wllere in the bullaing to the new ofticee.
• Aaeijnment of Di'efendorf

A Universit)':-wide Analysis of · Annex to the Undergraduate

Couraea and Teeching (ACT) Library. 'Ibis would be faciliquestioonaire will be adminis- tated by Health Related Protered between. December 4 and lesions' moving oul An ob141 the Office of Academic Af- stacle remains "in that no ref8JJ'8 has lli1IIOUDCed.
placement has yet been found

ftoora awn-!&gt; t h. Nqllirementa h&gt; r tJeuiD1 8llicb c l - are · the baJlwa,y 8oan.
bunt to aupport up to 100
pounda per equare fQot. FIIJed
stac:b would aceed that limit

u-.

.

by ~ to lb.'Ibll basemeat of Capen also found to be m.dequate b
stac:b since the. bulJdlnc doel
not sit on .pade but Ill bUilt on

posts.

In Toiler, the JP'(IIIDd lloor•ia
on lf8de and coUld be ..t tor
Tbe ~-"~n•;- a~rding for the' large lecture .balls in the book slorqe. Tbe f1nlt and
..- -.... ~
Annex.
higher n~ provide
mean. a considerably J&gt;leisanter to Dr. Charles Jeffrey, aaaistant
reader stationa, Oftilllt
other
Library where indiviauaJ tunc- vice president for academic at• In a related m&lt;ive, non-stack _.,..
·
tiona can be assigned their own fairs, is a modified version of Michael
which provides
-ce. 'Il&gt;at means a much the one developed by the Uni- some 50 Hall,
dorm spaoee. might ·~~·
larger main reading room, se~ versity of California at Davis.
Given the ..-1 for -.lemic
be converted entirely to
arate refefe11Ce room, indexes Determination of which courses also
non-residence use and assigned space on the ~ and the
and ehellacta -room, current and teachers are to be evalu- to the .University Health Ser- decreaaed in~t in , Univerperiodlcal reading area, audio- ated and how the results are vice.
sity houainJ, Tower.was a "kllvisual room, history of medl- diaaerninated will be rnede by
ical" choice b .the Ubrary,
cine room, group reading rooms, each Faculty baSed upon dia_,All these ·assignment propos- Tell~ said. Conl/ei'Sioa of the
typin&amp; rooms, browsing room, cussions ~tween provosts and als are tentative, Telfer empha- rest of Tower to academic uae
seminar room, conference ·room, department chairmen.
sizes.
would allow units such 88 Nursand shipping and storage room.
Each department will distribing and Health Related ProfesMore working space will also ute copies of the questionnaire Wort&lt; Would Becin In Jyne
sions to bring their aCiltered
be provided for the deparbnents to instructors who are asked to
Rehabilitation of To w·e r sta!I and facilities toll!ther in
of Circuliltion; Reserv.e, Inter- administer them during regular would not begin until May 29 . single locations. Any such move
library Loan. SUNY Biomedical class time, to collect them upon or June 1, 1973, so as not to would have a "domino etfect,"
Network, MEDLINE, ·Informa- completion, and return them to displace the 400 residents cur- in Telfer's phrase, touching off
tion Dissemination 8ervice, Ser- the departmental . secretary. rently living in the dorm. a number of secondary moves
, ials and Bindery, Cataloging, Since the questionnaire will be Presently there are some 200 · into vacated space.
Aoquisitions, and Library Ad- ElJ1SWti-ed on rnechine scorable vacancies in University hous..We are so over-utilized' on
minisllation. The 40,000 vol- sheet$, students are asked to i ng. Three hundred to !100 va- this campus that this can't be .
umes at Bell will remain there. have a #2 pencil available.
cancies are projected for next called expansion but rathf•r
Tbe Library administrative
The questionnaire d istribu-· semester. Students who elect easing the apace problem until
atalf visibly appreciates the fact tion stems from · a May 9, 1972, University housing could still the move of most departments
that the University acted so Faculty Senate action approv- be accommodated in Clement to the North Campus is gradqui&lt;;lrly once the - space crisis ing trial adoption on a Univer-. or Goodyear Halls. According ually completed,'' Telfer notes.
was recognized. But the solu- sity-wide basis of a plan for to TeUer, the first Pei dorms
Plans for use of the space
tion is a stopgap one. Tbe col- . s tudent evaluation of teaching on the North Campus will also that
will be vaca!M in Capen
lection alone grows at a rate of performance, to begin this fall. be available for occupancy next and other buildings are not yet
10,000 volumes a year. Accord- Dr. Jeffrey is directing the semester, with more units open- complete.
ing to the Library input to the project and has commissioned · ing up in the Davis-Brody Col~-~tetor !'~:. theto 50fa,000
cilitysquarewill the Survey- Research Center to ~~ ~tJ'~trequy"!ta ~
""""
~
1 distzibute,. collect, and proc:eea
feet if it is to remain adequate the ACT questionnaires.
rooms and availability of North
( Contiluud from PGI/0 2, col 6)
through the end o( the ·d-de:
.An)lone with a quesllionabout ~C !~~~~noY'::,v,:: supported• and · t!llpallded 88
For-'4;he 1980's ' it · will reqUire the ev a I u·a t i on procedure, -new when ita contract for the plant and facilities pennit.
some 7l,OOO ·square feet. I
should call either Dr. Bruce Allenhurst Apar
· tmenta runs out
Spec:e-ihe M. . . . , _ f.1llJancis or Mr. Alan D . ~enster
· 'lbe Libraries oontinue to re- 'Siialle_is lhe {.tbrBJj'-a major. ~- ihe·survo;y Reeearch Cente-. t!:\iS ~:
· • ceive aa much. support aa can
problem, Huang emj;JiiiuiiZeS; ~- "" -- ·--- · .. ' , .._ ·r. '-'"' qr•l( SUNY~ .:nd ·tbe -S.....U ·al • be.pmend far tbml. ~.
managemenl is not. Tbe Lithe Budget approw the Tower the aoqujsitlonapro-i8'1111J..
brary ·i s providing . a good and
plan, necessary administrative ored to the pneraJ direction of
e%P8Dding range of services,
' '
• ·· ·
.
' · " Wor-k, -including. p~ point- the overall academic plin.
Huang says, thanks largely to a
ing toward the eventuat- let- There is' increastng emphaU&lt;QD
bard -working, se&lt;Yice- oriented
ting of contracts, ~ befin at - the provision of CUl'l'l!llt iilforstalf.
once. If construction begms as rnetion,in whatever form,rather
Huang gives a long list of
An electronic book detection soon as students vacate the than in the establishment of
examples: the Library performs system, designed to cut down dorms at the end of May1 con- collections having principally
the highest number of comput- on pilfering from the. Health version rney be complerea dur- bibliophilic importance.
erized bibliographical searches Sciences Library, is scheduled ing the Fall of 1973, TeUer inThe Deportment of Speech
-over 21,000 last year-&lt;&gt;( the for installation in that facility dicatea.
Communil:ation is split in rec22 members of the SUNY Bio- in the near future, Health SciAlerted to the crisis aitua- ognition
ita manifest dual
medical · Communication Net- ences Librarian C. K. Huang tion in Capen, the University role. Theofspeech
pathologists,
work. Computerized Services has announced.
mobilized to find a solution as audiologists and speech
scienwill exPand dramatically in the
The system will be the only quickly as possible, Telfer says.
tists are afliliated' with the
•
the
Library
one
of
its
kind
in
use
at
the
Many
alternatives
were
·
oonDear future SlD
~
sidered, including building a Health Sciepces; the ~
apecialiata are
~i.!:;.'i ~=~ ~; ~~ ~nr:::~!~i.ee~tJ:'t!fted ~~: new facility , an additinn to communication
alliliated with appropriately secal network MEDLINE (MED- jor academic libraries through- Capen, expending_ the Library lected
departments in categofies ·
LARS ON LINE ) recently ea- out the country.
into other Gapen space, and
•
tablished
the National Li
The system requires installa- moving to another on-aunpue 1. and 4.
.brary of Medicine.
- tion of either a gate or tum- building. Expansion w i thin - ! : - - *
T h r o IJ II h the Information stile through which library traf- wasCapenfOundwas tba.rejectedt
the wbuild~n. it
To derive full benefit from
Disaemnlation Service (which fie passes. If an individual atDWJOmg the academic ~ and orpniis funded by the Lakes Area tempts to carry an improperly w a s conalnlcted to minimal zation above, thio Unlvmsi!f is
RegionaL. Medical Program), checked-()llt book through the standards.· None of Capen's to develop a system
liDiMln
tkuica for eatabllahiDa It 88
library serVic:ea are extended exit, an electronically-activated
IM
Center
to
which
the
cltivia. a telephone communication alarmOversotheundepas
. t two y-- volsystem 'to hmlth personnel in
-·
rens, the community, the State,
etc., ... ..._ they . . - help.·
in
=:':!me.,:ro.=!
Amonc the devicee are the
ares, 80 this is an essential· "!'heequerit/Y !o~ by Circula- · Wairen T. Badlour, aMistant foiJowini:
service, Huaitg points oul
tion to be Dli88Pll and appar- ·prof....., of anthniiiOiotrY,_baa
1. A IP8Clllc PJb1ic alfaln
ently stolen. Tbe actual dimen- .been appointed aetin, ·dh'ec:tor -&lt;JIIIIIpal_lll ...... manY Jlllllla.
-In-bouae . aervioee are _also sion of the. theft prOblem \0 the of the Bladt Studies ~
2. Tbe ......"""'-" of •
20CJCl HIJ!Ill! ""Y•· For_example, Health ~ Library .18 DOt _He TeJ&gt;Iac:ee Mrs. Joan Stamper liaison ...,., that will 'brlnlr.....
Litmlry users can have meter- known, SIIICe a "'!"'Piete mven- ' and will, .serve until Auguat, gether U... outside tbe Uni'ials from lhe co)Jection dupli- ~- wotf~~~temporary 1973. He' baa been inwiWid in versity wbo . . - help and u...
0
inaide the University wbo can _
cated free of charge. Tbls' free
~ t;;..t'f..' onlypart · theUlB~m,""" ~he aune to offer
it.
copy
service costa aome $30,000
-...,. rv
a OrpnlzaWm&amp; such .., the
a· year~mabe poeaible min-. of . the probl"!"•. Mr; Huang
.A native· of ~ Philadelphia,
imaJ
• tion of the collec- pomta. oul Ml881Dg bOob Uld Barllour did his lllldeqradUate UBC~
tinn
j&gt;robahl)' pnlventa a ~and~~
--rk at PeanayiVIinla State ~ Tbe tbem8 and the
good deal of vandalism and pi!. ~ uaera, wbo are
University. He rec;ei'V8!' his ia to lie on the tk/Wety of __,.
by the Un.ivwliity aDil Dot
fe~ move to T~r will~ wait weeks Until a ,.,placement M.A. lrou! the Um~ty ~­ ica
on fund-raisina. Support isthat the current level Of!II!I'Yiee, can
':t'U:i greatest ..._ it is
which 'HWIIII characterizes 88
.,.., BY~r ~inetftution. BarbOur, wt.c.e pro.. and it is n-t likely 'to be
close to. ellllellent,
be main- 3-M Corporation, will be 1-.1 feaaioDal intereeta i D c I u de
tained
•
at a monthly coet ~·•• - ~American ardalloiY Uld lt can CDIIII; are aware of 'What
H~ adequata To-r will be mately $300, with an
to. U1bmiam, -..pent
811111they haw recelwd. caa teee1w
three or four yean from now is l'Ulchase. Tbe de
IIY&amp;- mere aa a -.ch, UliiWit and will
from the UDIanother~ :As one or·the · tem sells for $10,872,
. with an arc:heolacicaJ project in wnltY. In .adltioa to
'librarians Mid.. in the ·iafonna- .. It ia hoped ibat the !'fi6T ...,.. • 'MaicD, Uld is currently waik- ~ tO the State or· Ntion !llorqe 'lijiil dioaeminalion • teace of the .,._._will
a inc oil -..1 articiM on hia Yorl&lt;ae.~• ....~ I'You have to Jr.aep 'paycbolotlicaJ · ellect ad deter - 8ndinlll then.
,
.. to be prov1decl to the .,..,...
. IUIIJiillg •
to_-.•.n-'J'OU · poleDtiala.. ~ Mr. Hu- ,-s.bou ill a .--.~ fellOw ...W- ~~.
are.~
.
..., aan'
"'" •Ol Qift'Gnl FllrDM CaiJete. rotllfiAty 811!11 .tale. ' . . ~

ana

Gelbaum-

B 00
· k .Theft
AI arm ommg

c •

0

by

~:"!;;:~~the o~

=

~

!.-.Jn··
-fi

can

or

Black Stu dies
Head Named

~~-~.~byYered.the ~M.

==

eeverar·

emPi-;.

llpoll--

--..._those from=
**ve

.me. '

haw

c.

'

'

~

�~

4

Ail~n Oomments on Academic Plan

irom-

( C&lt;&gt;ntilwed
1, coL 2)
~t. feature of the
newly..,..,.ted positions, , and SUNY~ sjzueture."
e:rlsting positions which be- ~........ at •.............,_
come vacant. ·
Assesalng the plan, .the local
Thus "it is contemplated P_SS COmmittee found that "it
aicinal fields, "'--'~-'ne goes . that all professional positions gtv.es e v.e r y a~--ce" of
"
~
...
~!""'
eventually
will
be
evaluated
in
.-...-~
meo wbo
EDITOR'S NOTE: The follow- cultural
of I,a~. Ed""'!tion, . ~d terms of the new plan," but bemJ an IDIProvm&gt;ent over the
U.. ia o .,-ch ,wen before the have '-'&gt; impatient with pure ahead
Library
Se'rvJces,
~
W!~
the
eventual
may
6e
some
time
.
P.re'!IOUS
job
~n
·"slot11'-"ly &amp;llllk 011 Nov. 21, fl!8l!lflJ'Cb beeauae it to
the ~tegorY . 'Educalio!'o
in arriving the PSS report im- ting" procedure. 'The-plan may
laCk "practicality."
.
- lm. .
the-study
of
Social
and
Philoplies
'
..
also
"malte
it
possible
for
re'
But
such
meo
have
usually
U I -.ectly understand· the
qu_ests for recJa.aaification to re1'WP'* or the Sel)ate's ''Open sat on the ~ of poM!r sophical Foundations' is at the Pol · Factora
VerY
bottom
of
the
priority
list.
Unt
d
the
posal
•
ts
ceiVe
more
eenoua
and
careful
or
wealth
and
I
find
it
insidl&gt;isCialon" period; it.is to perAnd with crushing consistency
n er
pro
, pom
consideration," the group said.
mit a abarilll of reflectinns on ious that ...., should now hMr. when we come to the Human: are to '?" assigned to jolls on
However,. the Committee
matters not up 1m immediate thoei! arguments coming from ities (the lowest of the area the basiS of se~ .facto"!, as noted, ainm the point factor
fanllal actioa. At this timl! within the Univenrity itaeU. priorities) . w e find that the last fo.E,ows: .~· Education req~ ; ratins system and the problem
. Some or us. and I hope that
all within that is Phil090phy, 2. Exp_erlence; 3. Co!"!plex~ty of salary and W&amp;Je admiiiistraby any Deed
for - not pr-.1.decision
and will inClude a majority of the of
ranked .~ust below Art and Pho- of. duties; ... Supervl810n re- tion are intimately linked. "we
therefore can raiae fuodamental Senate, must constantly reiter- tographic Studies.
ce~ved ; 5. Consequ~ of er- would feel more comfortable if
ate- that knowledge and culture
- . . ; pilil....,.jcel rors; 6. Contacts WJth others; the assOciation het,oeen them
- if you ...W; Dll...n:binl if are wluee in themselves, that
What are we to think of a 7. Access to confidential data. were specifically clarified.''
you pre(er. 'lbat is ~ the Univenrity as a coterie of University in which Phil090phy
According to the PSS report,
'The· group noted that "unly appropriate in a uni-aty, independent adlolars is justi- is the last of the last? 'The doc- ''Each of the· factors is graded
of .,.,.._, for 'IIbera elae in our fied in being iteeU and serves ument itself -tells us-it says: in terms of four or five degrees less a .very large number of
society are basic reflectiooa on society best that way, that .If " Food· for the mind and spirit from high to low. 'The factors jolls are I'IH!Valuated under the
fundamental matters to be dis- good worlcs now from the ad- (what a metaphor! ) ... is rec- are also weighted such tliat fac- new plan in the near future "
vancement of human knowl- ognized more as a luxury than tors 3 (Complexity of duties)• it will be difficult to detel'llli.ie
CUEed?
receives 1I18X1111um weight; fee- that any particular job had
And I think it is particularly edge, ~ is a laudable by-pro- as a necessity." (p. 6 )
tors 1 and 2 receive. an equal ' - " properly rated. Hence, the
suited to the subject It;i....,t to duct but not the basic reaeon
I suggest that the concept of secondarY importance; factors commendable c au t ion with
add.- today (the :tni . draft
"service" used in this document 4, 5 and 6 are at a third level; which the new system is to be
o£ the Academic Pliu.) tiecause
that is conoemed with the_vecy Gl:~ll~INTS has the same connotations that and factor · 7 is fiven the least introduoed raises some special
it does in stockbreeding. Fol- weight. The prec18e point scales problems of judgment and
aoOl or our Univenrity. -Soul- - Y ~ YY CV
Io'\' the logic of this Academic to be attached to the factors- equity.
searching is further in oro,.r be&lt;Plan
and the University will which involves both the specThe_
lelpcloW
- on
.. • '
faNm
far- t),.- ....
cause, as I am going to sug- Ill
''The &lt;&gt;Yerall impact of the
lose its reflective soul. Eventgest, we appMr to be planning c:herWt a t - on • nrlety ually i.t will lose its mind, too, ifiC weights and the gradations proposed plan," the Committee
between 'low' and 'high' val- said, " will depend entirely on
to
the soul of the Univerthe manner in which it is imc o m m u n i i J . W . - - bea&gt;mmg a thoughtless servi- ues-have not '-n finally deailif.
tor, If my a ttitude seems an termined as yet.
plemented. All parties con'The document I refer to is ¢.o1t1on p e p e r a - - •
"ivory tower•• one, then let me
"A detailed statement des- cemed must he on g u a r d
-titled "An Academic Plan,"
say that I · prefer that ·to the cribing each of the grade levels against aimply reconfirming the
is dated Aug. a1, 19'12. eman"service s tation" rationale.
for eacl( of the factors is now status quo on ·the basis of new
a .... trom the Oltice of the Aea- demic Vice President, and to pwsue knowledge. In a word, Arfocont So&lt;UI EnglnMrlne
in draft form. This document terminology.'"
is marked "Confidentiai......Ois- this plan 1!eeks to define the
Finally, I ask you to note was used by a group of. personPatricia Hollander and Lee
-c:usaion Draft." (I got my verY soul of the University and that the very way that the plan nel people to rate about 150 Preston, both School of Man·
XeroJ: copy of it from lJr. Dan- does it in such a way as to came into aistence smacks of 'benchmark' jobs, SUNY-wide, agement, are co-d18.irmen o(
•pervert
ita
basic
nature.
iel Ellsberg during his recent
the. art?g~t social engineering in order to get some idea of the PSS Professional DevelopBut there is also the prob- which u; 1ts Le1tmotW. It was the initial distribution of the ment Committee which also invisit to tbja cam,Pus. but so
many of my oolleaiUBS have lem o( how the term "service"' not the product of free disci1&amp;- numerical ratings ~q~d their · eludes Neil Goen, Margaret
made specific refenmce tO as- is defined in 'this plan. Do uni- sion among scholars but was correspondence to the aisting O'Brien, Tho
.
mas Schillo, RobPB!'I&amp;, of this -plan )bat l11811;WD&lt;' versities really · serve society handed down from on high ASP grade struCture. The idea ert w
and M
best by concentrating . on, pub- :aflier:f&gt;eing deyeJopOO. ,iii iiecret. is to estabfish the poijlt ·nwn- son. agner,
arian Dickmost of YDII..bave-seen it.)
Since it is a ,.discussion ting their resources' at the diS- Admittedly it is juSt a
bets and 'WeightS in the .evillua•
draft" I do not propose to at- posal of immediate govern- and presumably we
· tion plan so that numerical totad&lt; pUticulars in it but rather mental, ecoriOmic, and societal F.iictllty ' Senate· will
~te~or=~~"~ ,-!'@
by becoming instruments
.~· ~ ..IIJ&gt;irit w_hictij:f:t ·
.to . 41Se . an .odiOWil:viilUes, cw
"" ' .......d
_.., jI 'iL O'n~~'LI"9!palme
l][; . ~ · ~n!WJeeril\g.. ('~ou have,
"input." But by then i ts majo;
rucu 'Wit me oeoo
..,.
tis
what
kind
or
hardware
1
-~t ~t""isW:.r tanh'
theme will have become fixed the central points of reference
in the "Preamble" which de- you want and we'll .design it as.individ.. - ' d
to
the
PR
.
gt'l!de
This
....,. ..,p~rrtmen t ·s task ·is 'currehtly·J;Y~tem.
in 1•18. -f'
~ -•
- clares that ~ Uni
' tv • to
. •• .':) .? $&lt;&gt;me may, lhi!tJI t h·t
Thoi 'School of
Policy
IIIlU
" bhlilg t.oo tiarsh !&gt;';~ ~fll!Dhle for' '!J!eir particularis- s tages.
"/~Mk.'Uoellence,'but~f:..,., 1
and Community Services has
tic mterests Within terms preof a particular kind, namely in- though the plan expliciUy calls set
initiated a new procedure for
in
the
standards
of
the
plan
Con1141guences of Disqreement
for the University to be "dellt!pJice" and .,.Plains why: 1)
registration which begins with
All of us who have studied dip: Undur
We . - it to tJ"- wbo pay us, voted to the notion that it can lo~cy
know the advantage of
. "When the. final job evalua- the 1973 Spring Semester, Dean
2) Our conscienoe 'should hid and must make societal contri- wnting . the ~t, and, as 1 tion system IS adopted indi- She111l811' Merle haS announced
us' .to serve, 3) Our serviCe is . butions." (p."2) ,
ha.ve tr1ed to stress, it is not vidual point ratings will' be as- ~gistration for undergraduau;
.-led, and 4) We will benethis ' or that particular in the tablished by two or three evalu- and graduate students will take
fit economiallly, politically, · IIGt J u s t plan
which is repulsive but the a!&lt;&gt;rs. !Deluding the line super- place from 9 a.m. to noon and
and materially hy. servie&amp;-we
Nor is this just introductocy VerY spirit
it-a spirit which VISOrs mvolved and a represent- 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., December 4-5
"will do most U&gt;eU hy doing rhetoric, for that. ~ per- should be of
foreign to scholars ative of the Personnel Office. and 11-12 at the School's offices
most.rood·"
vades the actual ,pnority allo- and academics. This is top- 'These individuals will attempt
in F&lt;iater'Hall
~ ~
ca.tioll&amp; throolsh&lt;&gt;ut the docu- down deciaion-niaking with a to establish an overall total
Highliibts of the new prON- I find this wbole set of Dient: Thus of the &lt;&amp; major areas vengeance, especially s i n c e JX!~t ra~ for the job. TheSe oedure are:
Bf11U1111!1DIB
t to bepn of teeching and acholarshi
A
Dalting · by every student
though. this is a Five Year
ratings will then be reviewed
with and
in i ts .un- what is rel.igated \o the
(and I - find that significant, at the SUNY level before being with his advisor on• the School
plleatians. BVa1 leaving aside tom is the categorY of- "Arts, too)
of
Social
Policy and Cominuni, it c:ould well s&amp;ape 1he forwarded to the Division of
the definition of "service" (to b!tters, Philoi!OPhy, and the
~- ~rvices faculty will be the
. which I will 'return) . 'The no- Humanities." · And within eech entire ft,lture of our University. the !3udgel ('The co.-quenoes lllltial
step.
At this Da!ting
Now lest this Plan be thought of .dl&amp;agreement at any stage in
tiOD. that a unl-aty is up for · category - the same prejudice
_,_ _ _ . clthis process are at present un- student and advisor Will
oaJe to tlie hlcbeat bidder as a . appliea: in the Social Sciences, or• as some momen•·~·
the student's · c:ourae schedule
- J """'""
to us. )
MrVice inl\titutiol&gt;--.d that is GeOpapby takes preoeden&lt;le tion, let me cite a second docu''It is 110 t intended that there for tba amiester. After that
..taiD!y implied-is,. after all, over Political Science; m the ment, again frOm lh&lt;i Office or be any correspondence between step, ft!listratiOD becomes a
a revolutiaaary. - t in the category or Natural Sciences This
the Academic Vice "'-·'dent.
""""
point ratings under the job purely adminislrati
history or Wallem civilization, and Matherne~ Sfatistics is
one came out just "last evaluation plan and ~Y scales. Counle aDd section
thou8h I lldmlt that it has also · plaoed above Mathematics and week, was addressed to all Det tha
~
'
and con- '!""'8~
ex"!'p
t. theany
pay particular
level as- he set by tba School in such a
lieen a Ioaa«udini tempta- it is further stated that "Al- partment ""-=-~
v~u.ocu,
With
l¥1!-Y that Cia. aize!l will remain
tion, There baWl always '-n ·though theoretical reseaich is cerns iteeU with rating us all job will have· to be c:onaistent fairly eWlll, Dean.Merle aays.
meowboba.Wlatlacbdtheidea not to be ~.-1 ( !) the for merit increments. In it the with the limits of the PR _.._
Acoord.in&amp; to the dean, "this
ol lr:Doorledp for liB own sake, kind of tbeoaiticaii'flllllBJ'd{ that ~ are· invited.. to pro- in which that job is claasiii;;d- ~ 8hould result in the
DBI who baWl . ~. unah~ to is libly to have .impact in the
Yide m ~ . eatesories a Pay levels within PR gra~ eliminatiOD or &amp;..pMt deal of
- bt every 811C1Bty-'""""""' . fD..-hle future is encour- number for. ...00 Faculty Mem- however, will continue to V&amp;fY student · inconvemtmee in the
h•kt• W.t repoaitoriel of ita aced." .(p. 4) In the prole&amp;- ber on a 1-10 ocaJe (such as on the basis of longevity and regiatntiOb . . . - because it
6.2 or &lt;&amp;. 7) · which, when aver- other factors' and thus not nee- will all ba done· at 'one· time
aged, is to rep.,..,..t his net
in c:orrespandence with wifh VBfY little traveling from
~ue. In a h o r t, qualitative numencal job ratings.
one huildiilg th iinother. Stu.-&lt;"judgments are' to be trans"It 18
·
·
·
will he. mrtain about the
Iated ·intO absurd quantitative . . : contemplateld that the . dents
ci&gt;ur8M they will be
• tared
expression&amp; which' will then · entire iob evaluation system'
take
and probBhly even the~·~ for in the 8choo1 of·s:fa'l Polon a life of their OWD--4! po.int ratiiiP of indi_,,·d
...._
icy arid Community Services
useful step towanla the ultimill
........ when they tiave' completed their
ate
or human- of
w general
eventually
becomeBfter
matters
• ~-.....:-Win
_...,.....,._
knowledge
registration in the School's of1ty. The Uni...Uty, you ·see, proval by higher authori,..; "ap- fices."
has already OO,UO to serve so'The PSS ta
=~
... .li'DI'UJ' ~
ciety by pointinl the way to.
s tement indicated
lrive new world
pre-=rr~~
Gentlemen, I Mad uy no Budget and SUNY~N~ ·
Se c ia r it y Officer
• more. I invite you, when the ber 1, 1972. '"lllere will be sub- James A. Litlle has been electAcldeinie ·Plan CI1ID08 up for sequenlt · discussions at the t ed unit cbainiwt of l&lt;ocal1792
debate' on the llooi' ol this Sen- ~vel, with camptiij adminislra- for COuncil 82, AmeriCIID FedPAJ'IIICU ........ ~ate (and I hope . it will ;m. !Ions. etc., over wbate\w ~ , eratidn of · Slate,· Cquilty and
mediately) to remember: it is It takes to fiWIIize a 11P8Cific • ~unicipal ~~
~­
a. CDDfPP'' , _
!he ~ &lt;I the Uniwaity that ·Plan for introduction," the re- ' 'The Iocai. -wblita represents
_~ at slUe.
·~ ·
port said. "'t. is contemplated . Campua SeeurlliY ~ at
. ~-~~ ~ !!ian ~ ba Ut.B, a1ao appointed w~
__..;....:.::::=:::..=:.:;.;.....:.~;::..:!~~~.:...;J'-.:..!a!!l:!'!.!.ll!!l!:~ - •. -.· . ........~~rY
bolll&gt;r&amp;·. .
~~~~qqn
..EPcutive
·a , Boer!~ of
-a&lt;n .. 1

·And_'the Soul of tbe _University'
-..urea.

._._t

..

atthe--.the-

,..u

_........_

n.,

Social Policy'&amp;,...,
New Registration
Socw

·..m

=c.

pw;

t&gt;J.:

chart

ear

lim'i:::i'i

essarilr

·
__

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

~a

·
!!:.':t..tu.e~~P~-;

Little.Elected
c.unp;,

.AJ«:r

one

year

·"i:!::.t.:or
\.

..

�•.

Seriate ·Endorses Plan
ForU/B-VvideAssembly_
,

In a roll-all voie the FaCul- AdmiAions Report
ty SeDate III0¥8d at ita ad- · 'The Senate also passed the
.-tina November 21 report of the Admissions Com-

jOumed

:=~~~=
:!u"":d:\'!:"~that!, cur~- Earlier in the plied to individuals seeking.::

sity

,_;an the Senate voted over-

u1ar freshman admission for
wbelminiiY to submit the arti- 1973. Under the current policy,
c1a1 ·to .a·.-eferendum ol the YOt- 45 per oent of the regularly adiDa faculty. -'lbe mOtion to 1!11- mitled freshman class is chosen
dor8e the artidea ! - ' 36 to on' the basis of high school per:
22. Tbe article&amp; bad previously centqe. raDk; 50 .pet oent 011·
received the Senate :E-:uUV.. high' ochool ..verace and standCommittee's eodot..-t in a ·ardized ,test scores, and 5 per
::...vole brolulll by tbll Chairnumerical rank in high

:t'!,f

Senate Cbainnan Gilbert D.
Moore sUd. that votina faculty
would recemt referendum ballota by November 7:1 and would
be~ to relum the ballots
before the lJeoember 1 deadline
set !&gt;Y the Uni.......Oty Governanoe Committee. · HoiVever,
Dr. Marjorie C. Mix. chairman
of the Govemanoe Committee,
IIIIIR1I'I!d the SeDate that the
Committee would wait for ..,.
suits of the faculty .referendum
before preparing ita · ~rt to
the .President. scheil'!led for
~ 7. Tbe Govemanoe
Committee had previously indicaled that failure to fepoit
referendum results by December 1 would be interpreted 8s

Dropped from the recommendations was a proposed requirement that !ieshmen whose residences are more than 50 miles
from Bulfalo accept University'
housing.
·
'The Committee also did not
recommend continuation of this
year's requirement that 50 per
cent of the freshman class be
reauited from the Western
New York area.
Enc;lorsed as· part of the Admissions report was continuation of the EP~ (EOP) program at its current level of some
340 freshmen.
.'The Senate defeated a resolution proposed by tbe Executive Committee (though speci-

posed articlal of govemanoe are
classi-

each Faculty 25 freshman slots
to fill according to whatever criteria it deemed appropriate.
Gontinuation of such a special
admisaions program involving
100 freilhinen in the Faculty
of Natural Scienoes and Mathematics was endorsed by the
II-~ ~IB Noye~Jilier 7 meet-

~erendaonthepro- =~&gt;noJ...zrowo~eng,~eb~::

beiDa conducted · among

fied employees, graduate students, Millard Fillmore College
stodents; professional stslf, and
undergr_aduate students. ,
MR: IIMalutlon

'lbe Senate also approved reviaed recommendations by the
Senate's Suboommittee on Con-

!::i'-11!·

btMr - -

.

~t'~= -~~~ l.~~in§ . ip 'J~)&gt;uSmeiis,

1. 1be Dean of the Division
of Continuing Education, acting
upon the advioe of. a Millard
Fillmore Coll&lt;&gt;Je Faculty Committee for Optional Degree Requirements, be empowered to
reoammend to the Faculty Senate and the President that baccataureate degrees be conferred
upon students completing degree requirements through Millard Fillmore College in options
other than de~tal ma-

•

the SenAte
heard · a status report on tbe
Security Committee from member"ROOert B. Fleming ~Law).
'The Committee, headed by Lee
E . Preston (Manageinent), is
considering all aspects of the
Campus Security report, ineluding the controversial ·~
of arming Security' personnel.
'The Committee will present a
report at the Senate's Deoember
meeting.
Chairman Moore,lllso

'Ws!;;

CACCamival

C

ollegiate Director Projects Budget Hike

Budget was a major topic of
discussion at the meeting of
the Collegiate Assembly, November 15. In his director's
report, Dr. Wayland P . Sritith
told the Assembly that next
year the budget for the colleges

b~dget account, rather than re- ' funded properly if it is to contain the present system under tioue as an effective experi-

which all oollegiate moniea are
included in a cen~ , account.
Dr. Smith explained that with
this new method, the Collegiate
System would lose flexibility in
its budgeting, l'&gt;ut ·each college
would gain accountability for
its. own fuiancial. aftairs.

mental system.
'The Aasembly also heard &amp;eYera! status reports from-.committeee. Jonathan Ketchum of
College B reported the procrof the grievancie' •· Cotnmitlee
studyU., a complaint ap.inst
Social Scienees College, Benja-

'The Assembly also ~ consideralile ;_.:r,;;,tion and fJla chance ·m \&gt;udgeting .procedures. At the COlleges Council
meeting November 8, collegiate ' team. Tbe team decided, he
units unanimously voted to said, that the Collegiate System
give each college a separate is a good idea, but needs to be

1ep announood ,that the _,_

lieliD~~J'!d~~ti=
~f!lw~inwli'i~~l¥f~;;:::,~

;

.tell&amp;noe;uand ,,operatioas . and ·
temporary personnel servioes.

~d,~(e~'-~~~

of~~a~

if~~- ~~~-=tati~ :r.::.etea~t.~=
tinued because of lack of in'feiest and participation on the
Part of the .colleges.

'

Social Work Job Mart 'Fair to Good'
Job 'opportunities for social

unable to predict future -needs."

life education are developing

~S
· bll="'".:
. .of u«.:'~..:.t ~udtoge~..!_a~~hebodyld
Non /beB's =ooy=~""fro!:: ~~te~ t:s~tu= o~ff= ~~': ar~ survey a.J8o indicated an
~u....
ovem r good" in terms of expansion, a most optimistic about future increase in the use .of parapro2. Tbe:U.Stitution 'of
• - 10 in Albmy .~see· .Reporter-, U/B survey sbows. Su&lt;veying growth, 1be. 8Ul'Vey states. 1be fesaionala and that those wilh
Jar ~ Jeading :'C; Novembei'. l6}·. ' · · ..: ·
'·
211 social servioe employers, areas of .P'!Ychiatric social work masters degrees in iocial work

degrees apd' the establishment
o! criteria for students enrolled
in such propam&amp;· shall be subject' to approval by the Millard
. Fillmore~ Faculty Com- .
miltae for Optional Degree ReQiliranentL The Committee
shall ,also advise on ..-ns for
the supervisiao of students who
enroll in such programs, includina tboee who take individual
special majors;

3. Tbe Millard Fillmore Col-

1--

..._ __ ,ty

Commi"- "--

Minutes before 'the meeting
was scheduled to adjourn, William S. Allen ( History) blsated
the SQ-QIJled Gelbaum academic
ptan (for the ~ of .Allen's
comments see this IIIIUe, p. 4) .
~eral ~ of the Executive Commi~ who -ha~ been
&lt;&gt;?noemed With acadenuc planIWII over lh&lt;! last months expressed the VJeW that the ptan
was a "dead horse." "An ucJy
horse and YOU may """'t to
beat it but a dead ' - - " aaid
one -Executive c.om,;;r~
ber. Conoem ·was voiced that
the plan bad naoetheleoio set an
undesUable tone and had amtributed to an atmoaphe"' of
haste and secrecy in which academic ..J&gt;buming is .now being
cog4~ It_was, pro,poaea
from the floor that the Reporter 1&gt;uhl.l8h the drafl
Pol'-'--· Prol!issor Allen's
railling~ofh --.me ptanl)ing qt!e8tion, Sbonnie H. Finnepn (Libraries} objected that
Dlllior issuo!8 are DOt aettinlr 011
the Senate .-.... In the-eli&amp;-

the Placement and Career Guidanoe Depaztment received a usable 88111Pie of 48 agencies, em·
ploying from 1 to 600 persons.
_ 'The survey shows that tbe
...,.,foyment picture has reconstant sinoe 1969
with half of the agencies seekina from one to three prof....
sionals for their staffs each
ear Projections for 1975 and
· {980 show the a encies JIJltici-

mined

,;nw

larKer ~ :~-

pa....,.
s
-...--·
'The report reveals that "tboee
agencies most dependent upon
the Feileral and State governmenta for ~ fundina, listed
tbe ~ty of tboee ~
as their IIIB1I1 reason !or beiDa

and social work p I a n n i n g ( MSW's) h o I d superviaory
showed the highest future pos- positions. Advancement in the
sibilities. Social servioe research field ia dependent upon aecurfell into a ."tight employment , ina an MSW and tboee with
market range" though reapcind- ~ bachelor degrees bold positions
ents indicated that geriatrics, "alonpicle the ~
family develop~t and family al," tlie lllr!8Y- IDdiC&amp;ted.

President Names Seven to-.
.Panel o~ Selective.Arming

President Robert L: · Ketter or dop, or bolb ·
'
has appointed ·a seven-member · • - The,
individuals
committee to recommend ~ must complete to qliallty for
time ...ar. of each F8culty
lines for the selective l1rt111Jll of arming; and the School of Management
Campus Security pereonnel and
• Tboee individuals who, by
tha~~ 1hrouih Milthe use of dop.
virtue of ~. should be the
lard . Fillmore Co~ such
Dr. McAllister H. Hull, dean only .,._ 4nned.
.
.
.._.,., , to.. • ba ,deaiguted
ed
__.
of the Gniduate ljchool and
Dr. Ketler did not set a delldlhiPulh tbelr ~lie FaculJ'
chai1111811 of the Committee on line •or _.._,_,on .or ..,__, · '
ties;- and (2) an 'eQual .number
·JnterDal Security wliich recom,, ......
of . -"era or, ·MFC faculty
Two university olllciala ba've mended selective l11'l1!inc earlier reoommendatioaa by the aul&gt;~tina a di.......Oty of curbeen named to plllcee in the this monlb, will aeM. as chair- committee because, .he aaid, be .
'11111Jl·of the 11111&gt;-aiittee.
wiahM "to ba'!B .•• fulleaf-l'icull!r
selected in a
l!lationalum·:_,.;~~·~
Dr. Ketter asked the IIJb. sidllftltion and thoushl 011 Ibis
11181U1er .CIIIIIIislellt with the By·~-- auu
Lawa, ~ted by the~
Collepoi CNAS~). Dr. ~ committee to I1Lid.- il8elf to ,mac::;;- -·"'---·~ - -·
The~of-.tbe.Committae
Westley ~ . _ sn-- the following iliuM;
.
""'"""""'• Gnidel1nee wbid1 8baald .ban
WUliam a. Gre~Mrt
sbaiJ be the Dean or his dedent for UmYI!IIIIty relaliaal.
siiDIIe; . UDJa. otbiorwise pro• .
•
. _ been ieelected c:bainnp of esist IOWIIDing lhoi use and a.ociate pnMIIIt, Faculty of
vidiad in tbe By-lawa. . ·.
CUMICID that - . 1 , l t - 8lljl- the - NA$ULGC • Colmcll 011
o1 8nned ollicen and/ Law and J~; PNd
4. Before the iiM of the gesled tha~' IJiannlzur and olla University Relatkllla and a ..--011
ea.r, 1raduate ~
~
T h o.m a a DeNartiDo, .....,_ _
tbial
· Of •
tioD of de- oootrovenial - - - are befnc m l! m b e r of the SI!Date of or clop
I'Division, , sbipln!&amp;ted by tbe t:"-~ .N~ULGC. E.· W. J?oty. vice Ia; ~
craduate .tudaol; Mrs. .Jou
tbe Seaila Educ:atbW Policy
as ~
· preaidl!llt for. operatica imd N~ and the relidential elaar, f~ 8 .tud~Dtcounand Plal;minc Committee ahall are '!"t being ' :lected to the ay8lema, . baa ' - ' elcted a facililiee·
.
seiJor; 'Ibomilo .r. Gallo. il
OOI1duci a review lbereof and acru!Sf of tlie !J-ate-&amp;larae. -mer of lbe~.Com­
'
. . . . . . baD direclor, ~
• Patnlle;
- . .
'
. . . l l OriiiD, ........ di- .
shall report .., tbe Senate with . The ~ will mi~ of ill! COuai:ll for Bull• Sltualioa...whlcb me,y ~.. . redi!K..II.~W. - ·. ~
such- - -.-.da~1 -1Cit 011 Decauber- ~~~ ~~· ~
ve!ap~.c:all~~al!!!!'--·-~~~- '~· d - ~o~_Jo ln~r-~ 1 •. ~~~- ,f.,'i,JI;.,., ," , "., ·-. . , ..
. .v
'

~~Dep-ee ~';
shall CDII8i8t of: (1) ime full-

in......,

,_,_

N am

t.rainlnc

Officers
'··· -

=

an.:

=-r:.

:=::;

.

�~~

·

N~ 30,1912

~.:::::::.:::~~~---::::~~ ·Sena~l. eade~ HearAllO~t T~nure,_

Dlscuss -F:~culty-Wide Major ~dea _·
'A

~ national reo

"1. That' the Vice President
for Academic Alfairs instruct
the Dean of Undergraduate
tion was the subject of the Pres- Sludies to work with the Pro.....,t's report to the Faculty . viisls of the' Facufties in-order
SeDate Elmcutive Committee to establish specific definitions
November 15. The report dOes of Faculty Majom.
"2. That each Faculty Major
ilot fi!!'OIIllllend abolishing ten. ure, Presjdent Robert L Kel~ plan musl subsequently be apadvisid the Senate leadership, ·proved by the appropriate Facbut it does urge withholding ~ty and either DUS or Contenure until an -individual· hils tinuing Education.
"3. That the target date for
had four or fiVe years of ex. ·p erience in' the institution. The the announcement of Faculty
study recommends· agai~Js~; 'ap- Major plans will be no latet
. plying .experience in non-com- )ban the beginning of the fall
semester, 1973.
panible institutions.
" Many undergraduates seek
According -to the tenure report, the prevalent "up-or-out" an educational experience of
policy should apply after ,. ten - greyter breadth.. than that provided by a Departmental Mayears and not before seven.
An institution with 50 or 60 jor, or Joint Major. Still their
per cent· of its faculty tenured interests fall within the comis "in trouble," ihe report ad- mon. intellectual base which
vises. Ketter Said tenure at characterizes a given Faculty
U / B approaches that percent- and these interests have differage.
·
ent foci which can be identified
The current weakeqed posi- ·i n contrast to the individualis·tion of tenure vis-a-vis unionism tic makeup of the special or
was also noted in lfie sludy, ad hoc maJOr.
.
which will be published early
"The essence of any given
next year.
FaCulty's common denominaFaculty-Wide M•jor
tors plus the foci .of common
An open meeting to consider interests within the Faculty prothe Faculty-wide major fol- vide the basis for 'Faculty Malowed the Presiden-t's report. jors.'
'
The following resolution was
"The former will be expressed
presented to the Committee by through a · core program of
Cannelo Pr ivitera, cbaiiman of courses which musl be taken by
the Educational Policy and all students. These ·core courses
Planning Committee, and Mar- migb~ consist of metboils, staian White, chairman of the Sub- tistics, and general philosophiCommittee on Baccalaureate cal concepts. In addition, one
Deg"'" Requirements:
or more foci of special_interests
" Resolved,
will provide options consisting
port DD..tilliure sponsored by the

MUP:.and -tho! Ford Founda-

Senior O...rd - -Y~n Is captain of- 1972-73 - boU Bulls who · - r ........ 11plnst SJJ*UM, Saturday
(11:30 p.m.) 81 ECC-ftarth. IHinols St8le, Northern Illinois and
Noott--.. .--..o on the road. The Bulls return home
Doc.' 22 to ~ o.oqla 5 - In Clarll Hall.

·...

•(

.... ·

-~

!~los ~ve~t

Ope
: ns Today

·=a

of selected couraes dnnm fiOm
the offerings Of ~... or more .
'Social
ScienceFci?
F)CIIlty
.
Departments.
in Ulben Problems' lililbt er
an option oonsiatini' of urban
sociology, urbaD ail~,
wban geosrapey, comparative
wbanism, and inilu,try: ud society' in addition to' a
program. Options c:oulif .be developed to meet - either epeaial
neeils or · broad· educational
goalS identified with a .F.aculty."
Several members of tile Executive Conuirittee ~res&amp;ed concern :about adVJaeDWJt of
students iand the resolution was
amended to plaCe primary ...,.
sponsibility for adviaement in
the Faculty poncerned rather
than with the Division of OndergradW!te Studies.
·An attempt' to table the motion failed, and · the amended
resolution carried. It will be
presented to the full Sena-t e
in December.

eori

Other Business ·

.

In other business, the Executive Committee:
• was advised by President
Kelter that candidates for the
vice presidency of Health Sciences are CJUrent:ly being interviewed. Indications from Albany are that enrollment will
expand, the President also reported.
-·
• discussed the merit rating
scheme of the Academic Coun- .
cil.
• selected and ranked names
for the President's Universitywide Judiciary Committee.

·original Golj~~e !{eport :Offers ·Per:$p~c#-v~:.~;,:

ElJJT.OR'S~NGTE:-·This :;,.t?

tlleA umldgy"iillve: ''we'''D'lillil Jation or Univ;isi~· pia'nnu,g, cisl&lt;'&gt;ns "from Campus ~irS:·
connective tissue, skin and a which if approved by the .BOard tions. For this reason we reneuro-endpcrine JiYStem for the of Regents and the . Governor, commend that the '"UniYersitY'
• ''Scii'JXll! lmd DiaJecti.cs: -A ~uerf!41!Ce'• is• lUll- hi!rt ·as ·-a eo,Pus of the University. ' · gUides and deteniririeS u;e de-" system" under .discussion be a
~t ApprOach to the 'Ibe- ~rspectwe o~ whal a UniuerPerhaps the other most fun- velopment of the University. In direct outgrowth of, if not a
ory of Knowledge" is the: theme suy-wide IIQ.uernance a II e n c Y damental question to be faced such Jonnulation the Trustees. part of, the prevailing systems
- ol the Third Annual TeW. Con- ought. to ·do tJII1l be. Dr. Donald is the type of governance- ~ust, by . ~ of ~\r isola- . of governance oJI' CamP."'!·
!~~-~a~J-~(·~~~ Renn~e, Physwlogy, c~n authoritative or non-authorita- tion~and lim1~ capaCities, rely
. We -regret that-detailed stuof the Taak Force, felt 1t rmght live. The word "govern" has upon !lie adv1ce and recom,. dies WJdertaken by the Task
ber 3):__
'
·
be helpful '!'. thf&gt;se trying to ·two explicit meanings which "'!"'.datio~ -of their centml ad- Force on Govefll8.1lcie on . t h i s
n..; Conference is sponsored ma~ ~ t~v m1nds on the &amp;B- carry quite different connota- lllliUStrative staff. It would ap- system of governance are far
by TeW., a publication of grad- lllU! w~h -lB now bemg .voted tions. This fact is .conimonly pear that .the mosl im6ortant from complete; indeed; in aome
uate students in 'the Depart- . o!' by seve~ U I B conalltrren- overlooked, or the meanings purpose . of CamJ?US-wide ~v- a"'!'S they ~ve hardly begun.
ment of PbillJIIOPhy.
CleS. . .. •. ,,
blurted, leading to serious mis- . !""""C.: 18 to provide ~ISU8Jll_ve 'n\!s. fact po~ts out the comEveniB-scbi!duled for the Con•
•• •
conceptions of what a system of influence by way of our Chief pleiity of the job and the~
f......., include:·
The first ~...;.;on to be faced University Governance can and E~"'! ·Oftice to. cenb:&amp;l ad- fo~ a different timefable if any~
..~·cannot do. . To quote - from a miniatration. Only m .t his way thing other than an exchange of
3 ·p.m. ·J - Hansen, "Sci- · in connection with a · Univer-· standard English dictionary: can we bope to alrect our o9m . papers is ezpecte(l to occw'. In
ence of Ideo~." ·
sity-wide -system of governance "Govern: 1. .t o rule by. right of ~ture. The system of Univer- addition td the usual' complexi. 7:~~c:t Howard, ''Di· is the purpose for which it authority . .. 2. to exercise a di- Sity governance, P&gt;eretore, ties there are two other ' signi. ~ . A,na~Ysis as ~-"
·=db':'i~g·~~.!.,=r. recting or relffi'itining influence should ·~_gthen,_ I)Ot ~ ticallt factors involving Ciunpus
over; guide. . ." The r.rst mean- U.., PJannini1 deCJSl'!n-making, goy~ that must alrect our
11 a.m. Susan Buck-Moras, with a Faculty Senate, six-Facing puggests rule, as by a· sov- aiiil mansgerial functions of the· thinl&amp;ing: (1) a fundariJental
editor ill: Adorno's collected ulties, three Divisions, r.ve ereign; the seCoild"suggests per- President's 'olllce, whicb is,' or · chanfe lh Faculty goyemance
wodls, "''be Dialectic of T . W. .Heilth 8citince Schools a Col~ · aUIJBion anp cam~ cpnaem. - ought to be, ,the ':'"""'fiDWJt !&gt;f creaf:!n!! a represen~tive Sena~
Adorno."
·
legiate Assemlily, a ~e...non- . Within the State U • ·ity the total Umvenuty Campus m and JOIDt Faculty-Student pol3,30 p.m. Andrew Arata, ~a!
S~, andtio., saUix major Stw;fent
.
ru.vers
the eyes of the 'l'rusta. . 'I'be icy-lellOIDIDeDdinl commiltees· .
"Tbi! Neo-Kantian Dialectic"
.
. ~
operatng ofNew~o_r!&lt;botJimearungsap- system should be able· ~ prO- and (2) the
ofacol:
7:30 pm. Albi8Cbt W~ WI • their separate ~""· L&lt;&gt;- ply, and 1 ~ '!'one of our,cengal vide the Chief EllllCUtive. Of- lective ~ t t h t
....... .
the N ' .,~~-• • cal mterests, and to aome ex- problems m governance to rec- ficer with recommendations .·
... _..... apn
a
"'"'.~~..:.....
~"""""'a
, ~ • tent ~:,era! interests· lhiough ogni%e
to Whom one meaping
. .
~ m .a r. • -........ statutory 8U- 8ocial
._,.,. ......
,, ·~ lies and
.o.~
th 0 -the presenting the broadest poan- thority, assume lJ18II,Y of the
niember of the FranJdUit School the . acuity Senate. are well app ·
to· w.._~m · e
r ble interests of the University functions formerly exmdaed ·b
..._ .,~_,.., _ _._ -•eta•L-- ·· t:,';~ for. iQbviousl.Y what. is meanmg ' 8 !'~~.. lnsof~ as · u · a whole supported by :.. ...~ Faculty .,._. ad~
·
Y
...,. ......,.. · - '"' ......,.
Jtice to bind tlie first .,_mn... of "-vern" •
'
.
__. ·
. ""'~.
poops, .
reliill FoqDdations Of ·8ocial
• · 8IIJI mo
is ~Arllcle 8 '&amp;ction· quate data aft!lper!IUIISJve argo- The ~licatioas
pedJaps
1
ScieDCe:• '·
. . · -: : ~.:"!:r~ giA~ ·35S'ofthe New York Education ments. AJ.!d t f!hou!d be -pre. operai;Q,g of-'&gt; ol theae fac:
- ........., ·
•
•
. .
p - they· no more rep-t · taw oedves any doubt. . To ~to ~!':"'Uh him '!lid not to'!' !""Y ,have to be. ~
, 11 a.mof•. ~ -~
· -~ · a University than
. isolated or- quote therefrom' "1 The State ~!-~ m - l i n g re- s'erioUaly .m the.Jonimlatiliiu&gt;f.,
•essor
PhYsiai: .. ,
li
-Uni
·~ sbali b,
emed oo.......,......tio'"! to ~Trustees. any Jina1 """""""'ntia111i-coiJ..
DickiDson v~,
~ = t~· av=~:
corporate
ex· The ''l!ni~ty Sfs1em" ~ • cemed -'with 'the subataDce or
Ileparturea m Nlllli,iDMf Re- wide
t
'
of
erciaed
~
a&lt;
&amp;ani
of
Trust.
ferred l.!&gt;.m the OJlellUll phratie form of a system of aovemance
8 8
MBrdL"
· ·
.
sY
m . gove1'118DCe ees. .." Tbeae'fifteen Trustees,.. Jle!'d: not ~ a direct ·part . of for the Campus· as ~ wbole.
_
, "
_
'
3
M
~ ed Ollllht to be to gJve such ~ appointed by the "----r 'or existing amts of Campus
. . gov[ace to the Report of the ong1-

nal Presidemwl Task Forr:e on

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

•·-•

e-·

0

'· -' .,;,

:ers

an/.:i'lt..

G•

•.

itor,~~~caintrillli~ - ~~f=
ten-year~ ~: .;J.---!'mance.Itcoul&lt;!cotiiemt;&lt;&gt;be. yn-ObChaimian
~ andd Dftileoce rulinglxid for.the'Uiil
. :- IJ)g'asanEllllCUtiveCOunciJ,.for
.

to P..., ~ Scarei.l:l' '~-~.

.

--r:~ a l'llllcJeliP.bY
·

Spmt:" •

·

·

of thti

~·30 p.m. ~ ~·

~t qm ~ ;,,...,.;..;,." de- .MI· else {tlie ~.!i example, appointad by either
cision8 an4 ~ ~,..~- 'fiis EXecutive St:lilf;' tl1e Pres!-· the Presi~t or the Chancellor
the WtiOJe
PIJ&gt;- dent 'lmd .hil EDc:utiV..· Staff . and drawptg upon·the l'eiii1UlU!8
::viroa,mentar:::::
Stiifr
students)

=

r;:::- ; -

=-

• Dr._Wayne L:, .J~ 1&gt;'!,8 .
been named ~ &lt;1 t!iO
of ~~-01&gt;-

~t

~~~~~;~~.:::::
"FaCulty.
~
~ty~u::ft':.S:!"':.] ;:_, ~~~~::t'gbji.'
~~·"~&amp;torY
aild-~~utte
~
"k
'&amp;
=~
ir" ~~of·tencethis.alt.~!r-Tbe ren:s. HoSpital, -eff~ . in
.....
·
.. iidl--Ui!lm tbe oentral Jld::" ~-iU!e. ·n.e- to
. •..a :van-~ .
~- ~.·
,
·

.

· ......,
·•
· llllniilnatiaa ana !tie Baud ot ' oui ~ ~ ·is, an
native 18 the inmJediacy of 1ts
11 a.m: .,.... MQDtQo· ~· WblCii idciDoibai the ~ - !&gt;l Caznplit.~·
~~ta~!'- 'I' he ~
&lt;o (&gt;~ -'!Warldl.il .
to j118n and 1i1ape
emance 18 --.Utbori~Btf""-"'- -• .w..-...;;~ofm..~ l&gt;J!'!t!.'l'~
~-· - · . . · •·
·
future:" ud to
lhlll ~o/ - ' ~- the IDI18t ililportant ~t:"" ~ ~u-

ca.. aufharlty

clo·iJ!

io/-

our

·

· Di JohnsoiJ has 'been a PI0-

,_,;at the~ University

M~ aiDce 11J!i9. .
was on 1l1e a~

.:ScbooiHe
alsoof

_

=.:=.r=,.~.-::.~"~~~~
~~-iatJ&gt;e= -~-===
..=;.~~-.-All '1· . _, ·..:=::;:.t..i:'*
.:·-= =:-:·~ -~
. -4'01!~ . 'ff;.,.theiao1a~l:.~.-:~ t~
. (Pun~
.• ,.

;t

• .,._ . " .

~

.

. .

.

-~
~

- ;\ .

..._ .t&amp;!l him
~-

~

fur!llld:.bia - ~

. ]..,..,

.

..

Geneia!HcilpttaL , ,
-. . .

,

..

�N~JO,

1912

-..nnw•: Foo&amp;l&amp;
Btrobolm, 1922), 147
9 p.m.,,.__

w~"; ~

Die~

Thlo film'• qab,-lial ' l.ieo ia ito ~t PIOCiucliaoL
UUAB ru.w•• : Harold and Mouth
(Aoblw, 1972) , Conferuce 'Theatre, Norto·n, cbeck abowcue •for
tma. ~ion cbarp.
~

POll . HEW liiUIIC/OON·

~ n• : 'Feat.uriag the Creatiw
Aooociata. Albricb~KnoK Art
Gallery Auditorium, 8 :80 p.m.

c--

tbe~~--~~~

Ain /or FronJ. fYHnra'• A:ftiel, .
_a new work by Luku F-, ccH!i- •
rector, Center for tbe
ud Perfol'IDinc Arto. Ticbto at
·~ mr otudento ud Gallery mom- . ud 12 for pnerol-admiaolon; may be t&gt;urcbuecl at tbe

Norton lbll Ticket Office, or

at the door. 8-nod by the
. U/B DoparimeDt of Muoic ud
Tbe Center for the c - ud
Performiar Arto.
u/a ARIII· POllUX: Gordon Rogoff

~'g,n J{'~~~

for teachinc theatre. E at b e r
Swim, -iotant to tbe preoident
for cultural affaire, ia boet.
WADV-FM, 10:06 p.m.
·

MONDAY-4
I.-cTUU• : Quechua
Wolf- WoJclr. U/B nepen:
J:.iDcuiotico, 331 Hayeo,

LINGUIBTJCS

ment of
11 a.m.

· A obtcb of a prominent South
American Jancua&amp;e.

�'WEEKLY ~OMftWNIQUE
BUPPALO ...~ nsrrvAL• :

THURSDAY:----'30

Aln.Mnt Senior Citizeu Square
DancU.., Hau l.oW~p, Nortoo.

4: 15 p.m.

IUft'ALO IZHAIBS.\NCZ fESTIVAL•:

Y _ . . Ta/H!mack Choir, lot

a~.~-::av~.::~~ ~

Eut Buftalo choir, r&amp;nlin« in qe
from 6-25.
.

BUP'PALO II&amp;NAIBSANCE n:sTIVAL •;
U~roily Orchutra, Bo.ird .Hall,

7 p.m.
An open rebeanal of Moun,
Mendelooobn OU&gt;d Ravel, fealllriq
• special d r u m .eUibition by
~=! A!":~:~ Conducted by
PlliLOBOPHY OOLLOQUJIJ)(# ;

_. . cac_,_•-·

TM

I terotive Con«ption of S e t a.
Haney Friedman, prof-.r, U/B
Depa..-at of Mathematics, OU&gt;d
profMOOr, Depa..-nt of Philo-by, Slulford UDiftroity, Rm.
7, 4244 Ridp Lea, 7 p.m.
BUP'PALO aafAJB&amp;U(.CZ I'ESTIVAL• :

:o:rw~is cron,:y t!~ -:o.:~

Voie, craduale atudent, U/ B 1)8.
partment of Medicinar Chemistry,
2« Health SciellC08, 2 p.m.

leave Norto;. at 7: 1~p.m. -

-

can Contanpontry Tbeabe, 11195

Elmwood A.,., 8 p.m.
BUFFALO JW&lt;.wJSAHCB ............. :
This J&gt;laY will l;e performed
Buffalo Fir• D&lt;Partm&lt;nt D&lt;mon- "!"TY Frida;v OU&gt;d S.buday ...,_
Blralion , Norton P'arkinc Lot, 2 ~ nlllg throueh Deceaiher 16.
~U::e.:b1:C:~ 'Cl!~
p.m.
BUPP.U.O BNAISSAMCI: I'WIITIYAL* :
Featuring rope -climbing, olid-. Uniueroity O~ra Worbhop, FiiJ.
BUPF.U.O &amp;EN'A188ANCE FESTIVAL 9p.m.
PORUM*: D~. Howinlf, and
~=~i~~~~
super.
mo~~~.:;,ni-8/~ to
aocsr:'t~e~
a~'::'t
As.
Powrty. Alton Bowens, Erie
County legialator, oecond ftoor, IUJ'P,U..O RENAlSSANCE FESTIVAL• :
BPA MEBTIN~ : A discussion of the give students the opportunity to
Norton. 7 p.m.
riorities
in
.
.
the
upcomilll
col.
perform operatic repertoire in
German Singing and Dancing,
Fillmore Room. Norton, 9 p.m.
80VIft CJNDU. • : A Paa to Life
..;,.;.ty
(Road to Li(&lt;) (Ekk, 1931) , 147
Paaatieri and "Riders to the Sea"
Ch~~orrol:· t~~~
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. Free.
I
p':!...,~t negotiation by Ralph Vaughn-Williams.
T h i a is a lellli-documentary Social Club dancers, directed by
Peter Korack:e. The G e r m a n BUPFALO BENAISSA.NCB J'ESTIVAL•:
L YIUK UND PllOSA WOaicsHop• :
Boston Kazoo Band, H888 X~,&amp;u~~)~n P';::uc~ ~~;n ~~
!-r~es~&lt;!e:'~ g!ab!;'\li:. North
into ~et society.
Lounge, Norton. 3 p.m.
terbichler.
schreiber, Peter Heller, professor,
COMPUT'I:NG CENT£11 USEil SERVJCZS
P 0 W £ i AND THE ENVIRONio:NT - U/ B Department of Germanic
IIDON.U# : MAPS, A MuU~k BUFFALO RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL•:
and SlaYic, 244 Crosby, 8 p.m.

Edward St. Colk1ium, lot Boor
cafeteria, Nortoo, 7 p.m.
.
With 8uta amd recorders, five
muaiciana perform m e d i e v a J
music and eonp.
·

placement for a straw bat eaten
on his weddi.nc day.
LIX.TUBE•: A.J&amp;8elo Dauill will dia-

laJt .

r.R:IR..o~m. c'J:.o~tipo.:: =~.:~~~~Pl:';
te!. '::i''::'

~!a ~:n:•br::·th~

,t::il::
~':J::::' ~!=l~r RJ!~
10, 4238 Ricl&amp;e Lea, 7-9 p.m.

tical computati.ollll involved in
data analysis in · the behavioral
aciencee.
·
AFB CLUB JO:ETJ:Nc•: Refkctioru
on tM AFS (American. Field
Service) Erperience. 262 Norton,
7-9: 30 p.m.
COMPUTING CZNTEa USEK SERVICES
SBMJN.U# : Buic PLO'ITER Op-

eration, Rm. 12, 4238 Ridge Lea,
7-9 p.m.
Rudimentary knowledge of
FORTRAN is necessary.

W.N.Y. CURR.ICULUM Dl:va.oPMENT

MEE'J'ING •:

Volue.s-/,foiivation-

~~~=\{~ Dining
The purpooe of lhil meel:iDg of
the Western New York Auocia-

~r:u!ob!:fa;::::!~nis" :im~
student motivation and discipline

~~e ~~c~ :~~:o~
o~n

to the' general public. Mem.
benhip in the Association is open
to any person who is actively
engaged •n efforts to improve the
leaching-learning process ($5.00
annual dues) .
J.BCTUU•: L4 Poesie -Occidenl4le

a Ia Veili. de Ia Gue"" de 1914,

r=c,~~n&amp;::=:~t V:~~~~~~~

CONTINuiNG MEDICAL EDUCATiON
CONPERENCE#: Community Plan-

;~~n!M.!t~~: It!:#!~~!

~=':.1:; nor:=d~f ~og·

Rm. 29, 4248 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m:
Coffee at 3: 30 p.m.
InduetUm of Glucuronidase in MoUH
Kidney Testosterone, Dr. R · T .
Swank, associate cancer research
scientist, Department of Molecula~ Biolozy, Roswell Park Memorial lru!titute; G-22 Capen, 4
p.m.
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAB# :

~ u~~~~:F!~!~u~~;ron::i

8

Western New York, Inc., the
W.N.Y: COmprehensive Health
Planning Council, and the ·Lakes
Area Regioual Medical Prognun.
For further infonnation and
rP.Se.rvationa. contact the Continu.
ing Medical Education office, 2211
Main Street, 831-5526.
.

BUPPALO

BUFFALO BENAIB8ANCE FEBTIV.u.•:
Tony DeCor«~ professional balla-

Vn.o-

Ttw Honorable Johnnie M. Wal-

INSTITUTE ~N f"':DEaAL TAXATION
LUNCHEON# : Guest IP'&amp;Icer is

~AISSANCE

PESTIVJ.L• :

~"::(~i=ce A~~ o~ 0S,:,~et4
p.m.

UNGUISTICS LIX.'TUitE•:
French·
based Creoles. Mervyn C. Alleyne,
U/ B Deputment of Linguistics,
331 Hayes, U a.m.
··optimum .. or " minimum.. _
grammars? French-based Creoles
are mutually intelligible in spite of being geographically separate
and out of contact with each
other. An analysis will be given
of their common core of grammar.

deer and troubad6ur, Conference
Theatre, Norton. 11:30 a.m.

SPACB "72•: Shirley Clarke, video
·artist from Cb. i3, New York.
Media Study Worbhop, 3325
Bailey AftDue, 8 p.m.

THEORETICAL BIOLOGY SEMJNAB# :

N•w C&lt;lu From 0/d-Fu(n),U
Variation~ on a Tlieme, Dr. Bryce

and· Legi8Jation for H eall.h Care
Statler Hilton H o t e J , through
Saturday, Dec. 2.
The conference is designed to
s timulate greater understanding
of the legislative p roceu in rela·
tion to community health care
needs. It is co-sponsored by the

Red Room, Faculty Club, 8 p.in.
. The lecture, to he g i v. D in
French, is aponsored by 'the U/ B
Department of French.
VISITING 1'tLCVIBIONAIDB -

U/B Depa..-nt of Engineering
Science, 104 Parker Engineering,
4 p .Dl:' Social hour in Rm. 107
Parker Engineering at 3: 30 p.m.
Sponoored by· the ,Graduate Engineering Science Club.

FRIDAY-1

of computer programs designed to

y:r~~nsm:.o~y ~f~~~

=~~~ ~~-erfr.via;'B~heRet:':~~

~:~~~~rt.erfo':to~~ 1~te;.~~st

MAPS is an integrated ayalem

This group of 1.f..17 year old
dancers from Tonawanda and
Williamsville .will perform claaaical and abstract dances.
INTERNATIONAL

OOFPEE

BOUB• • :

Open to aU foreign and American
8 tude n t 8, faculty and staff.
Schoellki&gt;pf Lounge, U p.m.
B~ALO

RENAJ88ANCE PBSTIVAL• :

lnduut Dancing, 1st floor cafeteria, NortOn, 5 p.m.

Hole~

12': 15 p.m.

uf=~b~~~~~~. ~~

A8Mociatioil of Eri, County, and
the Buffalo area ·Chapter ot the
New York State-Society of &lt;lertifled Public AC&lt;OUDtaDIII.
........,..... aw&gt;r cmnao•: &amp;II InMtruction . ~~orion. 1 p.m. BUPP.UO a:NAIB&amp;AHCZ I'DTIV.u.• :

Pow&lt;r of Sold Roclr Band, Confe.m.renc;e '9-tre, Norton, 1: 30
P
BUWAUI RarollaUfCO: PIIITIVAL

are available at the Norton Hall
Ticket Oflice.
The fint of all Mar:r. Brotbenl
films centers on Groucho'• atlempb to sell some dubious Flori-

_JIPPO&amp;iarice in se...n of their films
is often referred to M the fifth
Man: Brother.
Bun'Aw REH.usS.uicz fESTIVAL* ·
· ~!L.f :.::.klic f"'"P·. 231, Nor'
Directed by Arthur PeU.r, this
grou.tp L~f_~
. bodjoyy'Y?_'t.~..,
will.,.
· _"!~
hibit &amp;ana~·... - . .
auw
~.
.
.w
, {
Bun'ALO IIEH.wJSAHCB PIIIITIVAL* :
Cra(u Ezhibit"· and D•monslra.
lion, Fillmore Room, Norton, 7.
10

P~

.

•

Local Culture :, It. BUI'PALO IIENAJ8BAHCZ PSI'I'IVAL• ·
loci ,
~in sw:-r.&amp;rid, eon:
U{B
Tbia
band
~ fallt dance .._tly won the Cuadian Na, lad lloor, Nor- liollal Edlihili&lt;&gt;ll ' ~bip
toa. 2 P~
' DiNcted by . William ....wick. .
POaUM':

~~ ~.::-==~

f~r,

~t Of~

-.U. ,. . ._,.
fll:!t!:j

lmOIIM#:

A~ " - ' i· 1M

~~ ~. JU. ~

r~.F~=~n!or~s:e~::~

ton. check showcase for times.
Admission charge.
SLEE BEETHOVEN CYCLE CONCEKT

JV• : The JuiUiard QU&lt;JrUI, Baird
Recital- Hall, 1!: 30 p.m.
Members oL the quartet are:
Robert ' M8.JU)., violin; Earl Carlyss, violin; Samuel Rhodes, viola,
and Claus Adam, cello. The COD·
cert is sold out; however, a waiting list for returned tickets will

C!n~~ 6:~ a!ntbthe
ning of the performance. Spon.·
sored by the U/B Department of
Music.

?e':!:!

~:fyf: C,::.

S::

ti:l1°

BUFFALO IENAJ8SANCE FICSTIVAL •:

.Empire State Boll.et, Conference
Theatre, Norton, 9 p.m.
·
Barbara Striesel will direct excerpts from "Carmen," "Orchid

~·;;,:·~h:: .!:~.. ~

ALLENHURST OOP711ZHOUSE• •:

IUPPALO UN'AIIIBANCZ fETIVAL•:

TM Hunky Family, performing
Fillmore Room,

it::m.

~':=n.

BUFFALO RBNA.IBII.Uia: .-.;...&amp;•:A(ro-Lotin DGIIC&lt; Group, Confer.
ence Tbeabe, Norton, -...
A dance and -

· p.._ta.

(' ~.!':;~:Rican~~
Ma. llarriOo.

' -

(ZNfta•: &amp;.ua~
nU., &amp;ll lnatruclion, 307 Nortoo,
noon-4 pan.
VAilflrrY """""a• : U/B, ~
Co
12.moU
30 p.m.and Obedin, a.'ik ~
CII&amp;\TJYB C&amp;ArT

lbaf~m~_.:
Ballrtut,~. lot floor_ dJfe. .
teri.li, Aortoo, f p.m. ·
•
Folk cla...e ...t h - iilor~ ~ lo~ ol the

BUPPALO

=.!."

BIIPPALO _ , . _ _

$1-;a-rai~a.a...

.I'DftJ.It.o&lt;

~~~::u "-ta•.281

PNf-a..J · ~ -.Je'&amp;ll
~d."!._="- Jllllllilt .
M8d'-n..

Alll.alpAN ~ ,...._

..,...., TM U -. atudoDio,

Fea.

turing Burt Stutchin end Michek ~mith , free admission. cheap
snacb, ApL 490-A, 9 p.m.-1_a.m.

~A;:~~:. ~~k~:· 1~?c:b;

~·J;!~~"T'!:t~n~!n,In~= ~TI::t,~~~~;

tier Hilton

IN'IDNATIONAL POLK DANCING• :

InstructiOn in basic stepa durin&amp;'
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.

IIIDI'.IL!I - -

.-nv.u.•:

(~. -~ .~·_-1)

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

.

.

Fiscal OutloOk Better; Governance,Deadline Nears
MixS~ys

No Vote
Means OK

.

..,

Superstar ~aing Fails
To ·Ttim~on
Crowd ·

�{-~

End, s~~m,

South's Pn\)gres8 Tops
~~ S:"'::.S... War&amp;RaC~ North's,StrOdeSays
~~
~'!be
Women .Urg
"' _
:::.= ~
ao--t

~amaanM~~---------------

tbe
tbe ~ .......
tic1e11 of
Uni\WIIity

=::,

=.

Fw:ulty .....
..__ ;...._.... dl8llea&amp;e the
auch ilaue
By SHARON· EDELMAN
...t- ia
-,
2. li!I'J raised, « "'"'- tbe ~ft
"We don't want to hurt men.
............
t.ormined
CommiU. ia iettinl tbe ...... said "~ Michot CebU~"'cba1tU:~ ~ da fiJI! tbe University ~ly Joe. We...Uy want to .end
WDUJd meet tbe ajJprOYa1 of tbe meelinl_..
and osiam and raasm.
~
of ' - ' :
only Want to chanle the-world.
University caoiununity, 80 it
dlooe to fint aak eaCh of the
,,. .............. llr
Ma. Ceballos ia the Eaatem
L-~•- _._,....
~,__._
v~ftD or' YariOUI' regional
•
..... - r of• "NOW
" - of'•
eilht --•ft•
-.&amp;ked t.l! sene 88 apncle8
~:Ld-~ pnsiden- the Na~ ~;;;;bw,t
few tbe CCilllltil::"~-"";i ~-could be con- :=,~.U:. ml967, abe 1.~-~be
- - atitiifed through recom.·nwv1e- __ ,_.. 801118 :~....-;ft demy_, wuwu ~todoeu·
~
of tbe trni•
ty AMan- .,.,......_.
.....-·duct refenDda .after
tions
vem
U . onst;rations: the recent "strike
,_,t waaln a Final Draft. 'llle bly ~~ J:eP04on m· for equality," a takeovw of the
PreoiideDt was uUd to,illdicale . W!llllty
--.
Statue of Libertyl and a m.hia IIJ)IliOY81 "" diaaDPIOYal of 12. M - _....,. ........,._, for the repoee 01 the aoul of
tbe 1fna1 Draft · at ·ibis &lt;time
No. Each ilaue will be stud- male suprerilacy in front of SL
00
- allo
ied and reported
by tullwc Patrick's Ca~ In New
S. A,. .. ei. IM . . . , _
cammi~ COIJIIt.!tuted by the York.
.......... ea - . c t ll1e
EDcutive Committee.
Apparently, however, even
...........,
11- - . the
u- militant credentials were
...SewD ...-1- 'lbe ~ty . Unlverlltr - l i l y ~7
not &lt;!llOUih to draw a crowd for
It can recommend actions to Ms. Ceballos' talk on campUB
SeD ate .sDeutiw Committee
--'--' that ilD in::t:ltation . the l'r.eliident, the Council. the last week. Only ten people were
~,-~
____..__
it im- -~~--"or
' • •L=
Board of 1'rus- m
· a"-~--- 88 she described
of
- P~~'-IIIIII&lt;IOU
""'
,_...........
poaDbl8
to promise a reftnlld· . tees and tbe~- ~ !"""· the deYelopment both of her
um of facufty in advance. 'llle , pus sovemance 18 adV180ry to owil COilSCiOWIDOIIB, a n d the
Faeuity SeDate bas tbe quM- the President under Board of women's movement, over the
lion of a niferendum on its Trustees policy.
paat few yefliS.
qenda for November 21.
C11aifnW1
1.._ WhJ 1o the 4. Wll _.,.m ID ealldiiC:t a
of the EDcutiW
of Humanlom
,. ., · - the UnMnily Auemblyl
" Feminism equais humanism,
•'!101-1. 11r the - 7
'llle University Governance and women's rights are human
No. Separate ~ts Committee decided to try a rights," said Ms. Ceballos. ''Our
haft been made by the CSEA system that would include the demands are consistent with
for daasified emplo~ GSA. President during its dehbera- those of any other oppressed
MFCSA, Professional Staff tions and to make _it p068ible human beings." Nevertheless,
to work with him dwinl the · she noted, women are reluctant
Senate.
process. Its rationale for this
parti · te · the movement
5. u - ~n the o~ M~ .._.i"';-.:.-.
was based on the possibility of to
opa m
·
•
persuasion during the decision
f~t.~rJeuunf=:.;
'llle ArW:1es -of Governance making process aince it could However she cautioned, "womwill to lnto~.if ~·~Y it not see . the adv!llltsse in an ~!l cann~t expect to raise the
ni&gt;ne of thi! .,qbt .....,....~or adver'SarY,-~Uo~::~n- .m&amp;le'co4.;;.::;Wi~ut4U'st
the President report a ~ ve a recommendinsiv~ a awakeriirig·
.. lves.
vote by 'Decombm 1, 197
or a , Bq~"'!''~jn,I..ou\BW&gt;a.
a. --"'lit~»~ ~ . chie(adm~ti~e
~tionship.m JWhich.,.~Jl?tee- 'Ms. -- ~ 08 · once a~ted
~
tdent's Otlice merely informed her early frusiratiODS to the
'!be Governance Committee the Assembly of its actions or particular circumstances of a
oonsi&lt;!~ all of the vari&lt;?UB reasons for such actions. It '\'as Catholic in the deep South.
""""""" pI an s to determine also hoped that the Executive . However once she arrived in
their constituents' views. In Committee would be available New Y~rk ·to train for the
March 1972 it released a First to consult with and advise the opera she found herself the
Draft and asked for comments, President on matters of Univ~r- "pro~y" of her agents voice
criticiams or suggestions. Com- sity ooncem prior to full con- teachers and the othe; men
municatiODS with each ~ sideration by the University associaud with her career; uland tbe First Draft indicated Assembly. There is no such tinlStely she manied moved to
that a Final Draft would ·be .University advisory group at South America and ~ four
approved at .some point in time present.
children.
'
by the Committee which would 15. will ..-tinp be then set tbe time limit f&lt;&gt;&lt; re1be minimum number of Feminine Mystlq..
oeipt of referenda ·results. In meetinp of the University As- · Once her children were grown,
Septembei, after all suaeeted aembly is determined in the Ms. CeballOB apin attempted
chanps were considered and Articles and such meetinp will to begin a career, forming a
were incorporated into the be called by. its Chairman. '!be small South American opera
Final Draft, the committee vot- EDcutive Committee can he co m p a n y. Her sucoees was
~ unanimously to present the called b,v the Chairinan of the pes.ter than abe had hoped,
· Final Draft on October 1, and Univennty Assembly or the and although abe found her
to 'ask ~ · to report by President.
work fulfilling, her husband obDeoeaiber 1. 1972.
1 6 . - major objections !0 the jected to her time outside the
7-• •
~ are
Asumbly haft _ , home. 'Jbese -1 i m it at ions,

~

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few tbe

:~ m':::!r

i~

W

u.- ..,..

. . .,. _ . . . . .

_. .

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

comm-

80 mudl
tbe Soulb, that rm
...
tbe ;tiortb," Mta. Velma McEwen Strode.
Equal
Employment Opportunity far
the u.s. Departmellt of ~·
aaid dwinl a campus visit
~Mra. .McEwen ·wasn't
- " ·· bel'e to talk about tbe
'""""'
..___ ..._ abe added
Solit.h--&lt;M!D
....,.....
that abe ~L...I
oouJd pt a
little of
Southern ''cammlin touch" up here.
, .
·S he was bere to talk about
............. ,ft..tinn-"We Olllht to
j;"'.;rt;;;;;~ P~ tbet
-don't haft lime for iL"
She was bel'e a1ao to talk

director~

u:t'

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.

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~

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:.l:a:':f.., ~~~-

1

State Univenity of New York,
which- tbe largest Spaniah-&lt;JpMitins community in the
Eastern United States, might
well develop a aimiiar plan,
M 18 Strode ~
•
"You either ve an aftirma.
tive action ~~ with viable
r·~·- 1es,
soals a n d· time-tab " she
said,pa.per.·:or you haft a piece o!

Mrs. Strode, a former senior
community relations specialist
for the J US tiC e Department,
emphasized, however, that it is
not ber job to look at colleges
and universitiee for affirmative
action oomplian&lt;:e. '!be Equal
Employment Opportunity commission bas jurisdiction over
Laws Not tbe seneraJ labqr force, she
But, she said, if we operated noted
"
. ·
this country according to its
That ag~cy. ~ ..._d , looks
underlying Christian ethic, we for three thinp m a v18ble af.
wouldn't n«d any laws. And finnative action l!rogrem. '~:'he
~ro~~..~o
- -' ~.. ~~VlO
.\ wr_e, ~~ ~ to _ ~~eft~ =-=b~
"" u• ..-....ua
•
- .DIV." .,.&gt;:-'tl;6ti ¥n'J ··r ~
d
toMWrsaahin
. ~todgtoe, •~~~ -tAiD&lt;wom
.. :'!,~lD.~'?.... nmen
'-df_.· ' i it8e
.' 1t_nO!
&gt;II nvw .....-""""' me
"'envuv
in Cleveland (she's home eftrY these, she ·88ld, ~ selection
other weekend ) , is dil:ector ol process seems the. b;ggest probthe Department of Labor's in- !em.
temal affirmative action pro- Hesitancy to Hire
gram. Other individUals and
"There is a hesitancy on the
other agencies within the de- part ~f ·n;Wes." for ~pie,
parbnent are concerned with " to 11ve job opportunities to
equal employment compliance women." Some think that the
elsewhere.
laws are intended to take .io~
Selectedfromamons38appli- away from males, but this . !5
cants abe ,bas to see to it that not so. '!be key word IS
a p..;lf'BIII" Of recruitment, up- "equal," Mrs. Strode emphsward mobility, career develop- sized. .
ment and human relations is
'!be most important part of
carried out amons Labor's 12,- any equal employment pro000 employees-to make "'"' gram. she aaid, is "commitment
that women and minority group from the ~" This is a comrepreeentstivee are hired and mitment whidJ everyone in the
brousht along through the first organization bas to be aware
eighteen civil service grades.
of, bas to be ieminded of, has
Before her office waa cnoated, to be p.-red to follow, if
she said, labor was doing the necessary.
.
best jOb of any govermnent
And abe added, the &lt;dee o!
qency but it wanted to do
'equal~ atends to the employ-

m1b'~

~~~P~

she "rejects" tbe .
standard pf li"'ft•, added to her char tha
'!her the . , _
t:-..:- 110t to ~·.......:-=-·te
·--..
t Del nor the """""'
..,... ......
~~of,
iru&amp;Vations; however,
in 1966, tary geof Labor
Nixon apinst,
or take sdnntsge
:,:i !!....!!:)llJl_~Marc~ =~~~:.~~ !!he found a copy of Betty administration ia concerned tbe superyiaor. "He's an em1972,t.,-..::.teinber, 1.972,_ to and ~...!..~ action .;"~_- FriedanSbe.
bas'sbeenFei7UilUiea.
mill
.. . tanMtysfemmtiqffO: about the high rate of minority ployee, . too."
•
~tu
~.......
unemployment.
Mm. Strode's feeling about
beer from ":L."!:
- vanous .......,.. - sity-wide ooncems; it h8s too ist ever since.
'
Shortcominp which do exist the entire situation is ooe of
eacieL It incorporated into tbe many student repreeentstives;
Ma. Ceballos noted that since
· •
,bylawa ,lllll8lldmeDt procedures it has too few student repre. .
.
aren't the fault of government's optimiam.
and a - , _ . trial periold'with aentat1ves; it bas loci many fac- she JOined the liberation '!""""" lack of commitment and elf~
"'f you believe enOush in
- a~ review of tbe Uni- ulty ~-tstivee; it has too ment, · NOW ~ established she implied
·
wbat you're dolns. you can al·
. _ _ . . . . &amp;-~- If •t ·
•
·-r
,.· local chapters m nearly every • In fact, abe -ind.ieated, one ways find tbe DhYalcal strength
~~ ~
:W.!!,.;e::;"'.=~~· campus and 11'!'nail town;
New non-government area more vul- to pt itdooe,'"..fibe said, speak30
miDed tim it~_. far tbe ti9e&amp;; it bas too feW stall ft9- Yewk .lllll!"" Y bouts
such nerable to criticism ia the edu- ing'bolh of her peraonallife and
vote. in Cll'dllr 111 belln tbe .,._ .-itatives: ·
..
orpmzatic;ms: "''be ~ of '!"' cational eetablislmalt.
of the nation's drift for full
..., -s cban&amp;e it later If. it 1 7 . - . . . . _ If a -""" ;n:t:m~
~ot l!llOUih universities are fiFty.
-.plable 8llOUih to_ conIa - · "and
'-L-e,"!" ~
. • tskins advantap of the oppor~ B.l&amp; i1 DDt wmptwble,
, 'llle UiliversitY ao-nance
our n......_..
tunity to break down racial and
l&amp;n aC .
it .an be weted down.
Colnmittee will'
t f1na1 every day· With .this kind of sex stereotypes, she aaict Th1111,
T1le MUiard Fi1l!nore Collese
L 11aw .......... lie ......,. · report to tbe ~ t!.ncat- -~"'!'. can ~Y change !he universities are ~Y belp- Studellt AaooclatiOil has enea .. ........., ,...,...,
ins tbet the U~u:a ~
.
IDS to &lt;Mat 118 out ol ~ doraed tbe ." Propo!!al for DeBMbp-.pwllldlic:Weblt- b1y Propou1 baa
. to-. ·
talent-- are looklns fcir."
~tins 8tatua far MFC
llelf bar1r it tilll t. "'r !del 1L- lie Uo4•olt)ATHI.£TIC IUDGET PASSED
Can 8a Dana
I
m tbe form advmilad by David
I •· ..__.. • ..._ • nllell
the..._..
Tha Student Aoumbly MoM.y
Universitiescouldandsbduld J . Can-," Jack Buntinl, MFC_... ........., ,....... t.ll7
.
oorerwhalmlftlly ~ a $246,- do &amp;eYeral thinss. abe 8111- SA presideut,
annOunced_......,
It'• up to the ·Preaident to 757-.. for the'Ath' latlc seated 'lbeY could move to
'Ibe~iilootbeqenda
A .....,_ 111Q raile tbe Jr.. iliiliala furtla- e11orta Ill estab- Depal'tl1*1t, -urtna continuation promote e q u a I opportunity of the 'F.CuitY Seaate meetinl,
- • tbe . _ ar' lldzodaoe it 1ilb Uniwnity ~
cit-lnt..mu ..l, - • and In-~ within their own l!lllpioyment . 'I'IliBiay, N..v.nber 21. (For a
...._..a. Bacallft c.-1~ · H . - - til~~ ,_. -lllldl ac:tMtiM. Prior to ranlat; they could provide more full ~ - the ReportiL A.~ of UJ7 caD• -at .......,.;t .,...r
~·-., J - w.re, motiva~ for all llludentll to tu, Nov.. 2 , - 4,) .
·
. ~ llolb' IIIQ_...._ tbe
'lbeBoudof~DOIJcy, -- h a d llla· ~"f..led to do their best; and Jhey could
''IbeMFCSAB-=oltiftCom·
..... • a. ~ ._ • Artlde X,IDdk:alea that lacWty -. 'all ouc11 Ktlvttlh _,lei haw do more few their communities. .• ~has a11o voted to present
1lli!IIIIIIJ ~
Ommnit- 1n1t1a11t r-alty ~ y-1 a w • &amp;11!11 ' 11r the Dapertment.
For example, tbe· Federal e tlleiUni\WIIity Gowmanoe pro..._.,_
...,. ildlo- haft-a iilleln..,._tiooalplmi- They had baan ~"on faith" government &amp;as a 16-polnt af- .vPIIIlalr to ita-student body m a
..__,..._.
1111&gt;1 far tbe Neir' Yorlt State tor the pei["-rel rftontt.o.
~tift action propam 'for lelenndwn, with a~. ....- . . Ullllliolllll. ........, • . Billiaatiall law.
. • .
~ peopleL 'llle dation far Approval
·

.

•

'Ibe.committee tried throudl
llll!llllas
throudl
tDe
.ita, d.
( and ..._
WBPO

'u

Some have suaested that it
may' become too powerful and
·-·~ p-tivee -of COIIBtitu-

L---·
........., 18

e're wast;.
~~..talent throulh eli&amp;And she waa bere to talk
about what tbe sovemment is
'do;na to elimina
' te thet waste
,.,,.
.
within its own ranks and_ m
the private sector.
'd
N'
she 'd, ..
.
Presi ent lXOD,
881
committed to the realization of
eqi&gt;.al employmellt opportunity.
Much Prosres&amp; has been made,
particuiarly within government.
But, of cowae, more must be
dODPThe Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 is a reelistic, workable document,_. abe
said. And we will have equal
employment opportunity one
day, ·she is convinced.
'

!:,

- .. ......,. ...-r

about peop1ebeing productift.

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PartelFffW}!s:PewAnSwers.
·Quebec-Question
. .
The Quebec' Question remained unanswered after Mon-

daY nilbt's "Vive Le o.-&gt;Libre" panel discussion"iitt;;;

Conference 'lbestre.·~
In fact, the panel of Pierre
Aubery, Hubert Aquin, Arthur
Bowler, Go.dson Msdubuike
and Francois .Pare succeeded
only in I8ising queStions, the
answers to most of which were
far from unanimous.
There are, no .genel8ily accepted perhaJl6. .
.
For example, moderator Aubery, U/B profesaor of French, .
asked about the current mood
in Quibec.
.
Pare, a U t.B graduate studeht, said political apathy bas
Predoalinateil since the wave
of FLQN terrorism in October
of 1970. Quebec today wants a
stable JOVemment, one which
will fight for jobs and against
-rty. StudenlB are pesceful,
~ tbeir ,interest in in. ~ to talk. They are
not sure' about violence. Yet
IN!Y implicitly. believe that independence will and m u s.t
ex&gt;rne. The qut,stion is, Pare
aaid, whether ''we have to accelerate our efforts before it is
too late." He noted that the
Freneb population of Montreal
is declining, that -the French.
if they wait, may beex&gt;rne a minority even in Quebec.
Madubuike, a UIB lecturer
in Black Studies whose background is in French ex&gt;lonial
Africa, s u g g e s t l! d that the
~rel~Cbrua
. i!'' peop
' in ,Qes,
, ~rea
· ;y~- ~~

Ketter Names
New Director
Of libraries
Eldnld R. Smith, .-aaee
UniversiJ' 1ibnriu at the Ulli-

=~=..~!(

University-. Ubrariea at UIB,
effective January 1. The ~
pointrnent was made by President Robert L Ketter.
Mr. Smith, who served as
ai:ting University hlll'8rian at
Berkeley durina 1911-72, replaces Dr. Myles Slatin wbo
resigned September

1:

o..-

CF---.. . -.. ---

, ..

~..,

Mandubuike, however, re- in Ottawa? Aubery asked. Does . feat in their attempts at indecalled that when in Quebec, be the loss of Trudeau's majority pendence?," another audience
aaw "frowns" if be said be was mean that English Canada member asked. What-good•did
not Catholic ano "smiles" if be finds the prime minister too it do them? Why adtl 'this 'naaaid be was. Religion was an pro-Quebec. Will his renunci- tionalistic ·feeling to' the culture
arm of ' English assimilation in a tion have an effect on t.)ie Que- of ·French · Canadians? You
Quebec, be aaid. Protestant bee situation?
don't have the military or ecochurches and schools were built
The election proves Canada nomic power to bring it off.
in French Canada following is divided, Pare said. The re"You could ask English CanEnglish conquest ia 1763. But maining Liberal seals are pri- ada the same -thing," Aquin
!he Fre~ refused ~em, cling- marily in Quebec, so if Tru- co~ntered.
"'¥ !'&gt; ~ ~ rehg10n, ~- deal ex&gt;ntinues in power, Eng~hat wiU happen if Quebec
tainmg inf~r10r schools of theu · !ish Canada will not be repre- dec1des to separate?," another
own, be 881d.
sented . If, however, the Con- mquired.
Bowler contef!ded, thou~!!&gt;. oorvauves form a government,
. Bowler speculated that "Engthat the Cathohc Church m Quebec will have no represents- hsh Canada wouldn't slop it."
Quebec has for a long time been tion.
They will concede "ahnost anycontrolled by the. English an:.:· All this has no great impact thing" to k&lt;;ep it from happen"
o w uuvw way. The. English took this on Quebec, Aquin felt. The mg; they m•§hl even offer "asof£ the yoke of English imper- ~tep, be 881d, when ther real- government of Quebec is more soctate state status ~ Quebec
ialism-a note which found lit- ized they_ could not unpose important than the one sitting to keep "?nfederation- but
tle support among French Can- Protestant.i.sm. No, he S&amp;ld, the in Ottawa. Queh&lt;!cei'B regard . ~hey _ would~ t ,II'!, to Ul&lt;lT. , _ • •
adian members of the panel.
real difference is simply o~ o£ the ~
- .. t · · • Fi~Mh members of the n•n•J
. Even bisto"•nn nUhA '' fee/i•• ." -1' ;., ,•!8Ji , emc)•~ .
' ..,.,I&amp;Wa- -go~et-runen 'Bl!· a
.
. ~R-~r', ". ·-;, ·~"":·•• -;.~ ''e"'n·z:.- thing___... -"~~·,:;:,nch eana'&gt;•--- parasite aS do individuals in .made no response on this pomt.
.,tf. ~ ~ • ~:~&lt;.; ~·
-~
Tne rre
""""'
othe~ provinces B)lch 1!8 nn.
The., 1"\"'ll ~as l&gt;8!'t _ol. a
denied, ~- .can8dilin ~confed- , iijQ ;nOt,.,disigree. ;__ '•- ·... , -• ' fli " ""anli B' it'sh
TJOii'' '1bi _..,,. -~l&lt;"long·l!liiii!S'bf'l~'m\d
1
• ezauon W'i!i'bi-ougbt on by a ; : £nCush £mCJ!ti9ul, Tqo
.. no ·
~-."
urn. ta.
films cobceming ~the "literary
lonialism. It came about in
Aquin did say, however, that
No fault was found w•th the culture and political conscience
1867, he said, in response to English Canadians are as emo- Ottawa government's treatment of Quebec
fear of assimilation and per- tiona! about ex&gt;n!ederation as of French-speaking citizens,
·
haps even annexation by the the French are about separat- however. Aquin noted that
US ·
ted b Fr ch ·
Th
tatus
· posed French..earuidians are perhaps
~d~~U! IesJ'r of~o
the eE~glish
~me over-represented in the bi-linevila. Several· of tbe panelists sacred to them, he suggested. gual national government, alll
noted that,· in fact, confedera- ''If a Frenchman attacks the though !Tl81!Y of these civil sertion bad even been promoted system, an Englishman feels vants are from the Maritime
by the Catholic Church which personally attacked."
provinces and not from Quebec.
feared it would lose its reex&gt;gIs Quebec becoming more or
It is odd, Bowler suggested,
nized status in the event of less French?, AuberY asked.
that the independence moveDr. Karl E . Weick, professor
U .S. annexation.
Pare felt the answer is less. men! is getting s tronger philo- of psychology and organizau.s. Not • F He noted that there are now sophically at a time when the uonal behavior at Cornell UniTOday however vi 8 it in g a ball million Italian irnmi- national government is doing versity, will be the featured
French Cana.w.n' n 0 v e 1 i 8 t grants in the City o£ Montreal more for French Canada than speaker today at 3:00 in the
Aqllin aaid, l&lt;'rencb CaDada is ;-and more commg. 'l}te Ita!- alany time since confederation first of a series ot for)liDB sponno longer fearful of being swal- l8DS choose to become Canad- - in terms of jobs, in recogniz- sored by the FacultY- of Social
lowed up by, the U.S . That fear ianized,'' be !"lid, by learning to ing the language, and in grant- Sciences a n d lidminisbation
exists now only in English Can- speak Ef!glish, not ~- ing power to the Quebec gov- &lt;FSSA).
· ,
ada be aaid. Pare agreed as- Mandubuike agreed, no t 1 n g ernment.
Tbe meeting ·will be held in
serting that "the U.S. ·d~n't tbBt when a French Canadian Exercise In Futility
Room 14 al -~ Ri., Lea
even enter" the independence talks about Montreal, be gives
"It's all an exercise in futility and is open t6 ~If and
discUssion.
the impression that the city anyway," an a udience member faculty. Dr Weick's pi-eaentaAubery led the discussion to some day will " belong" to the suggested. How can a French t.ion is on "lmp~
why Quebec wanllj.to sepanite, English. Aquin, however,. sees Quebec endure in North Am- ?.&amp;tiona! Theory and
•' "
why it is "different."
a trend ~ani ~~ mflu- erica?
.
It will be discwiiled by a PBDel
A,quin cited cultural and lin- ence, particularly m jobs. New
"Like a Spanish Mexico," of experts from UIB:
L
guistic difference&amp;-differences immigrants who choose to learn Aquin answered.
Vaughn Blankenship of Politiwbich create a real " frontier" English, he aaid, fmd that they
"What about the history of cal Science,- Dr. RaYmona G.
at the boundaries of Quebec. cannot find job opportunities in the so-called national groups Hunt of Psychology, Dr. John
The fact that French Can- Quebec and end up leaving.
within 'a larger nation who have M. Thomas of the School of
adians aie ex&gt;U&lt;imtrated in this
Aubery suggl!lted that per- met bloodshed and crushing de- Management, and Dr. Mark
one · p~ IIIUIOUIIded by haps the pc;inns ~ ex&gt;nvan de Vall of Sociolj&gt;gy, aU of
~ people, ex&gt;m- trol. Altbougb 85"-Per cent of
'i:,~ bafiielved.~ften estenoi~y
poUnd&amp; the J!!Ohtem. And the the populati~n .of Quebec is
•ituation is unique to Quebec F~ ~ 15 l!"r ,
.
The pmvo8t of the Facufty,
and perhapS to a m iII i·o n · cent Eiullisb~g. be 881d,
The
d' . .
·f Dr.. Edwin P . l;fcillander, will
FreDch Canadians in Ontario the Engfisb coiltrol 85 per cent
newcomers, IVISion !' chair. the ....,una. He ...,.
"near the frontier." Quebec in- of the economy. Ian't the sepU~Ba::~~n~~lu~ ~ . that;
the, a.,Pve in~
dependence would have little ara~ movemen~ ~ly_ a pro- Governor's RoOm of the Statler of FSSA s Policy Commiu..e,
0
adverse
aftect.on
~~
....
~'::"J~~-~
•
_
.the
'Hilton
Hotel
at
7
p.m.
on
'0&amp;a~-~
:~_:..~~• Canadians elsewhere in the r"""""' ...,.......... ,_...... em·
""""! __ .._..,.....,. ~
~
.Jill.
~
I!
t d, pllaili-'. "Quebeoers are reluo- cember 9 ·
are. bei111 pluned for tbil - f.&amp;they'bon, !!!_!f' "!"' ilan~~ ';.
taut to - them.lves as co1ooThe Dulich-treat event -.;ill domic yar."
·. .
·
re .....,..y aaun . ""'·
ized proletarians."
precede the . Women's ClUb
Prof_,. Weick jD!Ded'~tbe
.. ~~tendedfeel:f1Yen:: "' BeaideB. . s-tei noted the ~p -IWI~that Jaculty at ~ . this~
ouw..,r con
•
majority, within Quebec faWI'S evenmc at 8:80 .p.m. m the. after BIIV8l ,Y8U'8 at -Minneilola
&lt;cause they ~ve spent ~ .last colifederation. At least, be said ·.hotel's Golden IW!room. Mrs. where ..he directed the JAbor.
100 years ~ to !l~ diff...,.,t '"'• is the conc1 ·
tn
Dorothy Smith, chairman of alory ·for B8learcb in · 8acia1
.;-economically, rellpously an&lt;! ..hrin_ from the ma~ of the- the N - s Club, - tbat Relaliima from U8ll to 19'12.
mother ways. ~ ' . .
· CUrrrent n......_ , National Aa- · special 1liblm will be eet up fot He 11M aleo~t at Pwilue
,'IS Quebec's Cathohasm the _..... ::'=.'i:' ...::.. ..___ l'II!Willimers at the ball
111111 lbe
u~
difference. then?
~
~ · · ~~--- ..,..,.,...,
.
..
#..
•
...
'
Both Aquin • a'nd Pare an- that -, _ eledioaa """ ached- . The N~ Club aleo H» lioaP 1Dchiile T.W 8oeiol
.-red that "religion. is PAt an uled in. a year-pr • ; at wbidl · ~ aeVeral ...enfa~for llm. ~ tl/ ~.
" The ~ 1time he feels the lndepenll&lt;in!,-" indudiJII,a ..U.tutmc __......
'l1lae willllh. recepliallfal=ty~ Sun.ta~ . ist ~ · ia llk_aly 14&gt; .-;n in Qle "-!ty, Ciuban.l~ loorinll the ..tine at .boat 5
noted '-Jbe Jeanlta are:-hanlt- -lilrenlth. ~.. . . '- .;
~ a JPei!ruarY l'l, - f l Y ' - ' p.m. !Jl ~- 15, 4214 ~
ruplj·~ convenla, empty," ~~..::-.1.~
~. tri"'-~a~_!D ~~~~
Aquin~
.
.. ..... - •
...., ......,....., .........
.
.
· wn-.
' .
.

UI

b':'

Wei.Ck Js
Speaker cor
FSSA Forum

'!::::.

Mr. Smith holds bachelo.'s
and master's degJees in En,lisb
from Berkeley and a Master of
Science in Library Science from
the University of Soutbem California School of Library Science. From 1900-1910, be bel.d
the positions of bibliograp!&gt;ert
head of the Search Division imo
head of the -Lo8ri Department
at Berb!ley.' In 197g, be was
appointed associate uriiveraity
librarian. He is presently a member of
the Academic Status Committee of tbe Association of Colleges and Research Libraries of
the American Library Association (ALA ) . He has been a
member of the ALA Standards
Committee since 1969. He 18 a
member and past president of
the College, University and Research Libraries Division of the
California Library Association
and a member and past president of tbe Librarians' Association of the University of California. He bas served on several ·•.otber I;Oilllffitteeii -of ' 'tile
ALA ana ui any 'Univeisitywide and ·campus committees at
Berkeley.
.
Artiela't.eftt.......,...,

.._ ~ , .

,.J r • .u

Mr. Smiti\ has pUblished article!i iri a variety of publicatiGriS on academic libraries and
their administration. In 1969,
be received a fellowabip from
the Council on Library R-....
""" and the .-..It of his .....
search, a book on the opecialist
librarian in an academic
library,- will be published abdrt-ly.
.
The appoill tment ol Mr.
Smith was recommended by a
search committee appointed by
President Ketter on July 10.
The Committee's .....mmmenda-

~W:eaCU:

...

t::i::

Personnel ·Committee of the
UI B Uruversity Libraries. ·

'!!!·

Cocktail Hour

l:ii!

18

"Wi!h

18

t..:

:"'

u

.

,

.,..

-

•

.c;..

"'

Storm Victim Aid._
Use ol addltionlol ' CoUep
Work-Study ~ for llludeniL_
affected by t r o p i c a I fiVIrrr
~ 11M t-1 autborizied by '
the UIB Office of
iDdicit.ed apia .

eo....:::=Aid·
...

-lhe--

To be eJiljble, the litadeDt
and liio familyby the ........
the
-affected

:.=':.:-fa!..:.=

a......,.. .

IIICinD aad ........
doallllllltlliave......,..
......
8ll'd be aniJ8d lor
of 12 cillfdi&amp; lain. -

IndividuaJa
may lie

*""......: ...-.

elfPble ........ ..
tbe ll'luaciU. A¥-.of-

CDIItact
fice; 218 llantmmL

�.'~

-4

· UFOsDc;wave~~
· · ~~ ,_,.1-'. ~ ' A bi......tbly lioiBetin' aJao
::;:~of~

:;=:!Dfonila!Jonoo.-t
• . . -- ·
A aj)eabr at ·a ·Baltlman!
A
of .u&gt;RQ Dr SympoaiiDD 8UIDIDed Up tbe
RaMIOD-Herrel!o, wbiJe ~ APRO poaition ' oo m:plaua-..~ably Jee1Y
tbe "IU118tic tious: "Riaht now, I believe
f~"
fl&lt;rin• aucery and· we're not ready for theories,
to ~- aaociation but we abouJd, ~
: i t , is ~ wi11in1 ha"" 8 apecialist wbo is G111Dand ready to talk about tbe ininJ tbe types of theories."
a~or t h 0 a.e wbo are
Prof. Rendon-Herrero con...-&amp;. "I don't want to pro- curs, adding that there is no
vide ...lertainment," he empha- scientific way to come UP· with
8b8.
a concluaion-not at present,

-mer

of

of

""fi:r.;_., tbe U/ B engineer
points out, lli!Y!'l8l conjectural

~Wd~uMnne: ~

an ~ student at tbe
Oarban Collep of Techno!lilY· He talked to literally hun-

explanations eDst which invite
!'t least further consideration.
One is that the intelligence
responsible for UFOs has been
--=iudin&amp; that at least fi"" studying Earth at a distance
par cent of them were respon- for thousands of years. Referllible, educated p eo p 1 e wbo ences from l"'ve drawings; old
''must" m,..., seen something. documents · and the Bible have
('lbat five par cent non-hoex f~dy been cited. 'The ScifiJu~re is about the same enlific Amuicdn, more litetalAPRO finils in . - i n g the minded than the Bible, to be .
tbous8nds of reports it combs sure, has included in its pages,
lllrouii1' each year. And five particutsr~ in the 19tb century,
P.Bf cent o( this sirleahle raw periodic escriptions of inexnumber co~tutes a consider- plicable phenomena. Although
able body of reliable documen- these are open to classification
tation, Dr; Rendon-Herrero as "some natural phenomena
feels.)
wboee cbarscteristics are only
AmoJII reports which he him- vaguely known by 20th censidC looked into and found cied- tury science," they are at least
ible was that of a corporation "curious."
lawyer in northern New York
This line of conjecture goes
wJ&gt;&lt;.e automobile was followed on to speculate that reports
by a foreign, hovering craft of sighting&amp; became more frewhile be, his wife and two quent and widespread after
daugb,ters were driving .through 1947 (turned into "Haps" as
ArUooa in 1950.
ufologists refer to a rash of reApparently valid reports by ports) because man's first
reliahle public figures include, atomic explosions sent radio
be aays, a "documented" sight- signals into spsce--&amp;gnals reing by Claire Luce, and another ceived and reacted to by · these
"detailed description" by the "beings." Now, these are inaslroDomer Clyde, ~. illiam, tellig~ who, piesumahly,
Tlambmgh, cllacoverer· of the ·, "have. been · there," who know
plaDet PlUto.
the consOquences to erology,' to
Not to mention the "strange environment, to life, even,
1iabt" sightings deocribed by whicli an "atomic age" can set
U.S. astmnaut Jim McDivitt of in motion. As a result, the reaGemini 4 and by members of soning is, they have be en
the crew of Apollo 12 which watchi111 us more "closely"
was "apparently followed by since our "coming of age" in
UFOs." APRO claims to have galaxial terms.
radio recordings of detailed
Studies of ostensibly unrejpOUIId command.flp&amp;ce capsule Is ted sighting reports on a
convl!lBiltiOJis regarding these given day have shown them to
Bi1htinP which, not so inci- follow an intelligent pattern,
dentally, heve been largely Dr. Rendon-Herrero says A
ignored by the P"""!· ~ven the French mathematician, Aimie
Condon Report mamtsins that Micbel, found that sightings in
"the - .. unexplained sighting&amp; his country, when plotted on a
by IDe astronauts poee a cbal- map, formed a perfect grid pat.Iea,e to the analyst."
tern of squares. Other lines
Its ''hard to discount'' such connectin_g the same sightings
reopoaoible evidence, Dr. ~Ren- were sb'aight and converged at
don-Herrero concludes.
ooe point ( as spOkes into a
Yet that in a is what bub). Moreover, Rendon-HerAPRO• aets about to do, he rero notes, many, many sight.· a,ya. Documented reports on ings have been reported Mar
,qbtinp from ovec the world power plants, militaJy reservadreds of people wbo claimed to
have made sightinp
UFOs,

of

:::...::":0
~ :....=w~
Fed to APRO '-dquarters in-

:::-a.~ru:"U:·no~
~:-Interest.
~~_~nq su;w,.r
•

TlaaD, they are IICl'eeDed and
. - t·-.!oq to ...no.. com...U.. with aperli8e in pbo-

Another important ..._,, he
says, is that UFOs
be

-;;'i;

~..,1...~· ._!',!!,~
---

"geophysical survey" perties
sent out by a nucleer-powered
~ tbe infonnalioo, pas- civilization which has depleted
.U..
judpDeuL Ninety-five per its resources. 'The many desert
-.t
are ~ _ sichtings, for example, suuest
Dr. BeLduirlfeuao eo,ya. this kiJid..of eq&gt;lorati!m,-a ·.....
~ •
•
·
for · ·
·
..._. •L*If.v are puticu- pmg
llliDlDC ~
lmV ~ for evideaces
U tbeae imvelers aie
=.a't:'""!.~::e":..:t:· ~ .CIIDO&amp;Ded with

,_.

' That direclah ~!Jon·

~:~/'('~~My.toia of the Ptul), subject
8 ~ faYOl&amp;ble docu-

of

mentazy oo CDC teJev;sioo last

.....,_ Beyood the Bible and
the 8aDakirt texts describing
-ce joumeys, this work-olfem
"divine~ liP"!"' visitor intenention theories for human evolution, for the bBftling pyramid
building f e a t s, for ancient
"maps" of Antarctica, lor tbe
Plain
Nazca in Peru (with
its "airlieid" markings distinJnlisbable only from 30,000
leet), for a 20,000-ton monolith
diacoft.,d in Peru, for the ancient, Mayan El CllBtillo at
Chicben Itza, Mexico (with its
S65 Steps and highly sophisticated astronomical calculations) , 'e tc., etc.
"A very Poor I Y written
book," Dr. Rendon-Herrero
says. An entertainment. But
rife witb important questions.
How did these ancient civilizations build temples t h a t
would be impossible to build
today? 'The engineering considerations lioggle the mind.
Even if you accept the theory
that masses of individuals
somehow dragged these huge·
stones to the building sites,
how could they have produced
rope or ropes with the required
tensile strength?
How did they develop matbematics and accurate calendars?
How do you explain the cave
drawings of "spacemen" and
other artifacts?
Other Belnp, Other Wortdo
Astronomer Carl Sagan and
otber reputable scientists in the
past several years have come
to theconclusionthatitisego- ,
tistical for man to think lie is
ai?!Je in. \he lJI)iVef91'. .Dr. Rendon-'Hetrero pomt:S 6ut. Con'troversial sightings of physical
manifestations aside, he notes
that both philosophy and stat.istical probability lend eredence to the existence of other
beings and otber worlds.
The Presidential Address
given to the Eastern DiviSion
of the Am~rican Philosophical
Associ a t i on in 1970 by
Dr. Lewis 'Beck. ill, professor
of philosophy at the University
of Rochester and former dean
of the Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences there, dealt,--in
fact, with the subject of extraterrestisl intelligence. "Scientific developments during the
tsst one or two decades are reestablishing the belief in extraterrestisl life and intelligence,''
Dr. Beck said.
Even government isn't completely laughing off the notion,
Dr. Rendon-Herrero says.
'The real conclusion o( tbe
Condon Report, he feels, can
be simply stated as: "UFOs do
exist, but we don't have to wor-

of

~="them.
· · · Read it for
'The proof that government

takes the phenomenon seriously, be coo•--~· lies in: the
~
amount of f\mcl.ing for the Condon-"RepOrt (a $300,000 project) ; the fact that THE defin· iti"" bibliography or UFOs was
compiled and printed by the
•--·
~ ; \1'1{ · ~ or ~ U.S. Government Printing Of_.._....,..~ adladatan'a - IIDDous to cipooC uj. an ilitet- fice (and is availahle tro tbe
111
...... ""''
'
stellar'1Dineral lzade (prsum- Suparintendent Of Documents,
· ADaCIIoE Gqllllbalioo, NI- . ably -lMY are too-advanced to W•·"'-'"'"'CAP (the NatiuMl ln.-lila- . be war-lilre), \"liY has no of-.......;..., D.C.), and the
duaCnn-nittee for.-Aedlll I'll&amp;- ·-ficial 'ixliilactt-l.JIIIIde?
. exiateDce of Project Blue Book
._..._
_,...,
.and other Air Force project
~) .-~- • - - - · Dr. BeadcJii..Seuao feel. a studies iii the field.
•
~ puaible C8D .he found
D - ' - - " - - L.. . IL
......... "'a....,
'
inJDOCiem iullluopiollad the._...., ..... ........
.....
- - APBO ILd NIOAP de- ory. BocW .cientk1a; he·-.,., : .
....... ...,. .._... &lt;II ariPD8 ha- CIILCiuded from eDOUUnt- are real, Dr. Reailoo-Herrero
CIU!I!ial!l"ww Ul'OII?
~ ..,with~ tribell that U.,.S. tbey abould make a con. _ Gilltbo- ·Both w that quantiDD JUIDil8 1n Dllturai o~ee«ort to @.t tbethe rao
·~
"'lJD ·edlt' tiLt llllllr IDler-- . ~ an· lllfcleftaalln&amp;.
Aa CamUie 1'1ammarioa,""""'·

of _.

of "-- ""'*"'•

~

u::,"';:!.%w'";"'J:'l~

-~.........., .Al'BU8-Jiel · Iio atdltieao

liB,..;._..,

-

an

Fr&amp;ll:b estruaomec, pionee~
~thololliet and afoloPt

- ....... - PIIJI!if tD - - ~ WQ!IIId ~
. . . . . . sA , . lliwlti :·..,.... - - -... ~ .... .of tbe late 19ih ·and eu(y .b l
.......... 'DIII'e ,... .A!'IIO-- - - ~af~ In- · .........
it,
'unknown

~=--=- .=~~~-· :!..~ru..~.ofloalor---~=~

flfUJO..,.s '•• 1 . -

g:.·.:..,• ......ctt.: :~s.....:·~~
~ ....... ~. -

wbattbetndhia. .

.

.

'

.• , _ 16,· 1972

D.r. · Nol~Is~.
· entof
~.1;!-L
Medical Faculty Council
.1.

'
Dr. J..,.... Nolan, prof-..
and cbairman of tbe Depart..
ment
MediciDe. is the , _
president
the Faculty Council of the School of Medicioe
which is DOW operatinJ under 8
governance charter adopted 'i n
AUIIJSl;.
Under the new by-laws, the
fin;t for Medicine· ..me,. 1960,
the Faculty Council will initiate, develop lind implement
educational programs with respect to policies and proced- '
ures governing: curric:ulum, admissions, student academic progress, faculty appointment, promotion and tenure, grievances,
and organizational-structure.
'The "officisl organization . ..
through which consultation between the Dean and the faculty
shall be achieved," the Council
will bold its next meeting,
Tuesday, November 21, at 4
p.m. in G-22 Capen.
Other officers, elected in October, are Dr. Herold Brody,
professor and chairman, Department of Anatomy president-elect; and Dr. Zebulon
Taintor, 8880Ciate professor,
psychiatry, secretaJy. Dr. Fred
M . Snell, professor, biophysicsi
sciences, is parliamentarian.
Serving on tbe organization's
steering committee, along with
Drs. Nolan, Brody and Taintor,
are Dr. Alexander Brownie,
professor of biochemistry, Dr.
0 . P . Jones, distinguished prolessor of anatomy, and Dr.
Leonard Katz, 8880Ciate professor, medicine. Dr. Brownie and
Dr. Joseph Merrick, professor,
microbiology,representthe
basic sciences on the.COuncil's
Executive Bol\rd and Dr. Murray .· Andersen, . professor, surgery, and Dr. Victor Panard,
clinical .associate profeosor, radiology, represent clinical departments.
Elected representatives on
the Council include: ·
ANATOMY: E . Rus sell
Hayes; Oliver P . Jones.
ANESTHESIOLOGY: Richard Ament; James R. Collins;
Robert J . Schuder; Robert
Weis, Jr.
BIOCHEMISTRY: Alexander Brownie; Rapier H . Me- .
Menamy; Robert W. Nobel, Jr.
B I 0 PHYSICAL SCIENCES: Fred M . Snell; Richard C. Zobel.
DERMATOLOGY: Henry
F . Kipping; Thomas T . Provost.

of

of

FAMILY MEDICINE: Em-

est R. Haynee; James R. Nunn·

•
•
GYNEC'OLOGY &amp;: OB~CS : Vincent J . Cspraro; ~Deim R. Goplerud; MY&lt;Oslaw. Hreahcbysb;yn; Jaclt Lippet!; Charles J. Woeppel.
MB,DICINE: William
Breen; Norman Chasain; James
R. Kanski; Leonard A. Katz·
Edwanl J . Marine; James
~"/::,;inAndrew Pisut; Morris
Edward~

p:

MICROBIOLOGY: Thomas
D. F1anagan; Reginald M .
Lambert; J011eph Merrick.
NEUROLOGY: William
Kinl&lt;el; Bernard Smith.
A. ~OSURGERY: George
OPHTHALMOLOGY : louis
J . Antonucci; Edward W. Hohensee; Donald J . Yung.
ORTHOPEDICS : James M .
Cole; Steven T . Joyce; Richard
L. Weiss.
·
OTOLARYNGOLOGY: Daniel Fahey; Hartzel Rotenber g~
PATHOLOGY: Charles F.
Becker; Anand P . Chaudhry ;
Stsnley Cohen.
PEDIATRICS: Bernard Eis·
enberg; lome Garrettson; Edward Lambert; James Markello; Erwin Neter; Theodore Putnam; Jacob Steinhart.
PHARMACOLOGY: Alan
M. ReyDard. PHYSIOLOGY: R • cb ard
Srebro; Hugh D. Van Liew.
P:SYCHIATRY : Harold
Graser; John Robinson; Sohdana Salaban; Norman Solkoff;
Zebulon Taintor.
''' RADtotoGY ~ . Ge(&gt;rg~ J .
~Jer8la Kuhn;. V~ctor A.
REHABILITATION MEDICINE : Joseph R. O'Connor.
SOCIAL AND PREVENTIVE MEDICINE : Harr y
Sultz; Donald 'Thomas.
SURGERY: Richard Adler;
G. S. Alfano; M., N . Andersen ;
Andrew Gage; Philip Wels; E.

K Wesp.

UROLOGY: Thomas F . Kaiser; lmre V. Magoes.
All department c h a i r m e n
serve as ex-&lt;&gt;fficio members.
Each department' alao bas one
or more alternate representatives.

Spring Registration
Undergraduate students sbould pick Up their registration materisl for Spring 1973 stlirting December 4, according to the schedule below. (Note: 'The· time a student picks
up and returns materisl wiJl htwe 110 l1«&lt;rin6 011 the ~
of regiatratwn.)
Accurate data is essentisl for a trouble free registration.
The I!Orrect listing of a student's major and claM can mean
the difference between a good schedule and a diaasUouB one.
Information on the registnotion process will be handed
to students as they cume in to piclt Up formS in' Diefendorf
Reception Area.
--~Your-a..

SENIORS wl..- last nsme hellns with:
A-L
Decemher- 4
M-Z
6
JUNIORS wJ&gt;&lt;.e nsme begins with: .
A-I
· Deoemb8r -&amp;

,

J-R
S-Z

.

SOPHOMORES wt&gt;&lt;.e . A-I
J-R

S-Z

.

7
8

· begins with:
December 11
12

-

18

FRESHMEN wt&gt;&lt;.e nsme begins With:
A-I
D8cembec 14
J-R
'
16'-

.

S-Z

·

18

.

All E .O:P. students,~gfwhere. they are advised, will picl[ Up registno!Jon ' .
in Townaend Hall.
according to the. above
'

..,.

�•

ADA.-bffers Stipends'for
Dental Research Studies
1be American Dental A.~&gt;ciation is sponsoring tbe ninth
annual Program in Dental Re-search for College Students i.tnder a grant from the National
Institute of Dental Reeest-ch.

......

-

subdued, used in service of tbe
biological process, not allowed
to persecute our tissues.
The tragedy of tbe newborn
brought Laing to a broader
oonsiderstion of tbe ways - m
which our senses become atrophied in a world where to see
(or use any of tbe senses) is
to suffer and where we learn,
as self-protection, not to sense
fully.
"U we are g~ing 't o l!lke back
tbe world . . . this beautiful
and delightful planet that we
have allowed to become filled
with junk· then we have to suffer tbe pain of becoming sentient. Otherwise we abandon it,"
Laing oounseled.
When Laing threw tbe meeting open to questions, tbe first
was whether he was against
abortion.
"Yes, I'm against it," he
said. "But I wouldn't put anybody in prison for having one."
I left before tbe women in
~ audience bad stop,p·ed
hissing:
'
-'
'

oriented toward medicine aDd
dentistry. '
·
A stipend of $1,000 18 pro.
vided to Ill!! student' for hia
maintenance during a period of
10 weeks in the lllllllln«. Air
I
travel will be ~ to the
This program enables se- student's assigned mstitution,
lected Pl'e-'baccalaureate oollege to a meeting site of a conferstudents to spend 10 weeks in ence beld in late August, and
the laboratory of a senior den- back to tbe student's home or
tal scientist who is working in school. Total -value of the ten
tbe field of the student's career · week period is $1,200--$1,400,
interesl The overall ob]ec1ive depending upon distanoe trav- _
is to identify exceptional stu- eled. The conference is comdents and to furnish insight, posed of all student trainees
through a direct experience, to and an opportunity is given for
the challenges that aist in oral the presentation of individual
biology and l'!'lated research. rese'llrch reports.
The program is open to stuDeadline for application is
dents . planning to work toward February 15, 1973. Information
advanced degrees in- the bio- and application kits are availlogical, physical and behavioral• able from: Miss Karen Ziolsciences 88 well 88 to those kowski, 143 Capen.

Playwright Competition
U there is a Pinter or an AIFaculty and student entries
bee among us, SUNY iB hoping will be judged in separate cateto discover him by spollllOriJ)g gories.
Deadline for entries is Jaria University-wide playwright..
ing competition.
usry 15, 1973. Winners will be
The competition is open to
all students, faculty and stall announced June 1. The vol!ln"'
of the University during the of winning plays will be ~re1972-73 academic year.
pared over tbe summer.
Plays on any theme and of
MatiiiSCripts should be subany length will be oonsidered . . mitted with an entry form and
Musical plays may be submit- self-addressed stomped envelted but they will be judged on ope to: University-wide Playtext- only, not score. The only wrighting Competition, Theat.e
restrictions ,are 1hat all entries Department, State University
must be in En~lish, legibly watayB,inB!(mhamgbamton,tonV,esNtalew PYarko~:
typed, and the onginal work of
&lt;1
a current SUNY affiliate. Plays 13901.
must alao be unproduced, al- tJo~a~~"if:l.~;
11
99 Washington Avenue. AJ.
diaqualify_an 'entry.
·
bany, 12201 (51&amp;-474-4962).

~£:s =o:~r ~

,.._.

~ .... ~ .. ~JJ

..... u Jl~·

•1\;olt

Umted FUlUi Now at 83 Per Cent oft~ GiJal
The University United Fund
Drive. this week reached 83 per
cent, or $91,150.99, of its goal
of $110,000.
Contributions are still being
received and .the campaign will
oontinue until -the goal is
reached, committee members
said. All faculty and stall who

have not 88 yet contributed are an~ Jurisprudence, Division at
urged to return their money Continuing Education a n d card and pledf!es tD their de- M.F .C., University !4b111l'i-,
Partment aolie1tors or directly University Relations, Facilitt..
to 186 Hayes Hall
Planning, U/B Foundation aDd
Divisions which have made
or exceeded their
Fac- Alumni, Nuclear Science and
ulty of Engineenng' and Ap- ' Technology Facility, and tbe
plied Sciences, Faculty of Law School of Manag..Denl

,oe.1 are:

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISI~AL PROGRESS

____

S10AOO.OO

,
--------

~

- - - ---

-~

3.1100.00

4,8110.00
v •3J,700.00
•''-2,_.00
1~.00
10,811000

18AOO.OO
2,100:00
X'"'!'..
j

110.00

' . 1;300.00.

- ~.00
~

5,200.00

�- ~-

6

From E.ite&gt;acy tO Mediacy -&amp;Back:
F)lm ~~u~y Ble~ds Wqr~,lriiages

EDITOR'S NOTE: Tlo~ i$"tM and technique as ·he makes JUs ing a media cuniculum, he has
~ of two articks on film films; he is aware. of the .OCiai · attempted to baae the academic,
and tMdiiJ studks.
·
lind psychic effects· of his-Died- interpretive approach to film
'
'ium, ·and as · an artist, accepts on an understanding of the oon·
~ By SHARON EDE!.MAN ·
nispOi,sibllity for the · COIUie- . -ventfonal, agreed-upon codes-by
-siMI
quenceo. But-the' creative act, whid). the viewer can approach
Mifube dies' slowly, violently, the experiential .means of leam- the individual vision . of the
furiously at. the end of ''Throne· ing, continues unhindered .. In filmmaker and decode his mesof Blood." One reacts iriimedi- · the ideal situation, the knowl- sage ·in terms of communication
a,tel~to the horror of the scene
edge and -the act exist -simul- theory.
but .also t&lt;i 'its rhythm, its
' tan~y. · • .
, ·. Thus, contends O'Grady,
etica, its tactile qualities. KuroTune"'! a non-linear f!'ctor in while one cannot be too' anaaawa has ~ted in each frame the creative act has been fur. lytic in-~ the purpose is not .
.
·
1o - a dnunatic work of art, an in- ther explo_red by Ed Emabwil- to establish the truth or ,iuter- _..
· · o
o
·
crediblY rich audiO"visnal sur- ler,. the notable · independent pretatio of an · d' 'dual
..J
,fPJUll..,.._......,..
face. 8\lt . Mifune is, after all, filmmaker currently in . resi- "film. ~tead, ~e ~rk
01
K.ll, l
a Japanese MaCbeth, and his dence-on campus. In an address (which includes the screening
'
·
'
death is the death Of a king- ·last ·month, , Emshwiller dis- of !ilmsl iS focused upo!' the cnnJ.o,~ e&gt; W
dom; perhaps, then, one can- cussed this concept in relation ennchment of the expenence, rtt Jl I I I~
n&lt;lt truly experienQe· the film to the ongoing process of his and the criteria for bow to unt ' f his•
lids
be
without paying Sliakespe8re his own work:.
derstand ii in terms of the diBy ~
movemeplaysn
eye
as
due.
. "You have a · heightened con- rector's ctua1 intentio
SUSAN ROBINSON KING
·
The relative epistemological sCiousness Of the present, past,
a
'
ns.
Unlroni&lt;y lnl~Uoa ....._
Body ........_
•
a]
of
rda and film
d f ture ( f th
k ) What Crucbol Feodbock
"Can you read -it or not?"
Yes, Thomas is a · master of
~--~~wo 0 nl .
bas an u fi~ e_wor ·cied b ·
Although the film is removed
Michael Tilsotv' Thomas, Ix\dy ianguage. He uses the
""""
Y m originates
this oon- you
ng are
IS gw
Y from the ~
D~rience, •Lere
will VISiting
· ··
-• moti'on of his arms, the tum of
tury, · ~~ut
problem
that are
which you
aware of
..,
a dj unct ·professor "'with file ancient PlatoniC di- having already shot and. where be crucial feedback in the form music, better known as music his- head and the_ g u t t e r a I
chotomY. between art and real- that, combined with present ac- of the actual presence of the director and conductor of ,tile sounds of his voice to explain
ity. AcCording to this tradition, tions, may lead. Although you c_re~~tive artist, as an active par- Buffalo Philharmonic Orches- music grammar. His vitality as
art imitatee ,.Uty, and is have a theme, a direction, a ticipant m the program. The tra and principal guest conduc- a teacher actually defies notetherefore funclamentany un- concept, you have to become a Eye•Con ouoCopia program, tor of the Boston Symphony, taking, demands realizing he
true;. wtiereas its content is es- dancer, alert-to and respoitsi've which has ~rought various· in· sits cross-legged before SO stu- and the muaic he .presen1s are
oential, its form is merely ac- to the flux of the out.:f world, dependent filmmakers to . cam· dents in his class, ''DiJJerent an experience, something to be
c:e&amp;l!!llY- Modem theories ap- reading its possibiliti&lt;lll, tzying PUS to show and discuss their Ways of Hearing."
felt.
pro&amp;cb art as expressive rather to harmonize .internal "isions work, has &lt;&gt;~&gt;&lt;;rated for nearly
" Can you read it or not?," is
He is a performer. There is
than mimetic, but Susan Son- with external realities of lenses, three years, ~1th gl'llRt success,_ the question he asks and ex- no doubt that the class, comtag argues in "Against Inter- actors, dollars, time. . . . It is E:luaUy as_ nnportant, says pects students .to be abl'l to posed almost half of music mapretation" that oontent is still a dance where one both leads 0 Grady, w~ll be the authonty answer. Not "read" in the vis- jors and half of non-music rnaof primary amcem to the critic. and follows, where one·responds of the ¥edm Studi~ pro11ram ual senae but in the audio jors, is present to hear and see
The process of interpretation, to multiple simultaneous pres- to appomt the creative ~t to sense. After he plays a partie- the man as well as to earn
she maintains, takes the aen- sures and 'opportunities, to temporary fa cuI t Y _I&gt;OSI.tions ularly difficult piece of elec- credit. His style is unique,
sory experience of the work for sudden luck, to shape, fiiially, here. These appomtments, tronic music, most students re- combiuing the naivete of an engrante&lt;l, and aa such is never a new form, a new variation of COU!Jled_ ~ith close attention to spond tentatively· about their' thusias£ic chiJdC!O!fth.tbat.of.the
consunimated; an a p p roach the origin81 theme."
the mdiv1dual re&amp;PQnses of the ability to under s tan d. But self:confident · ~ormer. · His
such aa this. serves to dull the No Wonls for • Lot of It
students . to . ~ films under Thomas refuses to accept this. dl!sue to teach, to convey
~faculties and· deni~ !;he
As an artist experienced in study, wili,· It IS hoped, allow His enthusiasm is oo.tching,
meaning, is strong. When bali
ae8tlietic rileellsJ-ofl1 c6n~j\Or-'' · both the creative nrocess and for a program which is sensitive
Thomas prods _a st:ud&lt;int to the class responds , negatively
ary culture. •
•
· exi&gt;erimental inedi&amp;;'''E'niSnwl.l' to ~ ~ ·developments-- and read and.~•. Af,ter he vezbal- to an- untraditional, electronic
T_.,. nm
~
ler tias confronted the issue of trends m ·t he art. ·· ., " o·
ly d.!si:rilleS ll:ie 'stiuctdre hid~ · co~tion, he..ASka f!Jiijire(y,
· 'Ibe"~ ~'-!~,- .. film interpretation wile miJ!ed
.O'Grady is curren~ under den in . the electronis_ !',tnUns, "H~ .1"811. I \-.get yQII in.!!&gt;~ that
!arly "Berimtive as· it ma'tei! to feelings. ''T\\e're are ao w ordS·'· contrm:t to· Ute Xerox· Corpi&gt;r- ' paces' it out Witll' the movement •' sense ,&lt;;&gt;f J191i,metered . H .m e?
the teaching-of. film . .How does as ye~for· a lot· of :what's being ation for .a .book on film. to he of· his hands, •explains tempo ' You can't superimpose your
one attempt to teach the ere- done today... . Teachers and published next year. Comprised -through his own sounds and - own expectations on the music.
ative aspects of filmmaking? writers . . . have to learn to of fifteen essays dealing with gestures, and pours his own re- You have to listen and let it
How far showd the 811lllytic see the non-narrative forms and three films by each of fifteen sponse to !be piece across the happen.
'
"'The class is f.inished. Thank
process remove the work from then use that verbal ability to directors, the book taps the re- si!Jge to each of the individuals
Its original audio-visnal exper- show others the way into other sources of some of the leading grouped before him, _the stu- you for putting up with a very
ience? Dr. Gerald O'Grady, realms,'' he aaid Emshwiller, film . critics of this country, ,Pre- dents respond positively. They tired-instrUctor,'' he says standtbrougb the Media Studitj; pro- who once ~ed that mere senting such diverse approaches nod .and murmur understand- · ing straight, his hands by his
gram currently developing on exposure to various kinds of as those of the 11rt historian, the ing.
side. The formal class comthis campus, has attempted to · films would open people to en- acholar of comparative litera- A Born Tucher
plete, students file out as in
He seems a Iiom teacher any class, others rush up -t o him
deal with these problema; the joying them, now maintains ture. and -the media lheoretvarious projects be has already .t hat "people, conditioned ' as ician. O'Grady hopes _that the Certainly his fame as a conduc: I? follow up a particular quesproposed and! or implemented they are. need to be told what book, designed for uae by ad- · tor bas ballooned partially be- tion.
sugcest a multifaceted ap- to look at in order to be able vanced undergraduate aiid cause of his ability to communMusic. Class #215. One of
proech which be hopes will pro- to see. They have to learn to graduate film students, will' icate with an audience, through d!JZe!IS 1JI, the :Qepa.rtment of
vide the siiid&lt;iDt Of film With appreciate. I don't Yke it but provide a model of bow to think both music and warda. In Buf. MUSic. Its more --than a class
~ to that iielicate balance riD afraid it'lt true.
about film, especially in the falo, he gave p~ talks however. As one student exbetWeen the: ~ve - and the
'"lbe word is powerful . . . . lack of a tutorial tradition.
last season which proved 80 sue- · plained, "I ilon't . . _ which is
interpretive, ~
·
·
· that's ·why we need aome good·
Perhape the multiple scan of cesaful that he is repeating mo!" va!uable, the.~ maO'Gnldy says that_his goal is word men. There's something books ,Jjke this will · provide them this year. And the New - teJ:ial or the expenencmg of
to. Jlllld!ate. to ~op ' ~Pi&lt;~· to ~ .aaid,~'. be , ad¥•.., ';tqr some comfort to thnse who find York Philharmonic Orchestra Michael Tilaon 'Ibomaa."
. ;:"-"' '!; the· entire Cldture· :f"'P!"g , "" .. m!&lt;&gt; -~· . an- film interpretation a threat to bas choeen Thomas .t o be conVUII jected1be ~of,~
. ~! ;@!!.~I': RI'ftiiiB l8bels on the art. McLuhan has labelled ductor illld director of its
ahis
· filaniepar!menk~"~= i#~'
:, .~~~JP o~r ·f!! gi':" · ~e word the medium of a dy- Young J:.&gt;eople's educational .
ill ''P!IP:e-t'' ' •·
tiiili · elf· ,
...,......., to ' find their ' mg culture, and he is right· Concerts.
.
T~"~ ·.
way_' to . ~~ . !'ew , but until this culture fades
Meeting -his U/B claas twice
me~sts?
a ~ .
'IY 'p!O- foli!IS and expn!lllllona. "
· tany into the sunset, the ere- a week for an bour and a half;
~'
a ,ilbldei!t · Much .ilf O'Grady's interpre. ative artist will fmd his inter- ~'?mas provides a lecture com- Elll'l'OR~.
ted -in ·the hmDanistic tive work at this University preter of great value if not for bining t h &lt;;or y, ,,JI&lt;rionnance .__ From. lme po
. mt of view the
tradition and the beliavioral has been ' diredeil along pre- himself then fur tw: audience and,
. reco,, rdmgs. Meter" and Um'--'ty may be seen as 8
acieqriea, ..u well aa inUoduced cisely these-lines. "II you don't The ~ for such work to ~ 'ti
the
·~til the 9Arious cyp. of creative believe it, you don't 8e!! it," be done with regard to the D~rime are
two worda ·t hat congeries of special · interest
action "thin ...__
~-~"'..,..._._ ad.. ,__ ..... ~
Je
-~
connect today's I~ a col- -~ It' is -""'e to specu•
'11'1
...., new........., .
..... ~ -~ Jlll'!P
mental, independent film has ~ge of exp
_ lanations, _d........_
~ about ....~ _ •L-t some
.ldeaiiYw -lben. 1be student - W i l l - a .iihYsioJociCal been VOIOOd by artists such aa t
Ia
_,.,_ -..-"'
..., ...,.. ""'
filmmabr is eonscious 'of the respQII8e to film wbetlier or not Emshwiller: . "I hope m 0 r e ·''?OS, P ymgs, reco.-ump and - of thoee iutenoet groups should
tradition ...~. -·-"· :..........:_ "--· Uitderstand . In "---•
!Dllnltable Thomas~. Want-• be .alloWed to ~-t with
"""--.ve _........,., "~"
. it.
........op- • acholars lllid critico reach out mg to. convey one 111mp~ m""'
~N-1 _...:..... · •-~·•ty par•.
·
• •·.
into these lesser-known . film ca1
~
~-~ - . .
""""
.
forma 80 . that their writings
Id;·~ does1 It with ticipatioll. it ma:i oot be conmay lead others to ·appreciate """!".
most comp "" com- Yinciuc to diianiss the idea on
._
~D -...
a wider spectrum of film ex- ~tiolll!· ·
.
the baSis of principle.
C~J. L.l.'-.:)
perience than they do now. It
. xpene'!mng music through
The~ principle may be
'
"-·
·
w,on't be eaay."
Michael ~lson Thomas is easy, that univerBal ideological tests
,. --- ~ ~ - ~ I&gt;, ;,.. ,.,.._ .o1 u.._
for he himaelf exudes music, for faculty are bljd. Certainly
.........., u~ -.1-lf.;. r- "' ....,..., 3435 .,.., sL: -.,.,
u} Fi
meter and mythm, sound and one would not want to bear that
~
~··
glires color.
an entire facultY had taken the
' •
· -- - . . , . . · " ·
•
.....__ F'·" ,;;.;:.,, __ t report f ~en he !"'Plains the term· s8me loYaltY: oatb; any more
. '.L .~ _ , _ , . ,
....
"" ~uuuwaa
errnatta, which describes held ~ one would want to hear
provides a .faculty-by.faculty notes, the tone ofbis voice and that an -en'tire fatplty )lad been
·breakdown of day division total , the. shrug ~f his shc:&gt;ulders flX· selected on ,the baSis of a sex
teet, 8 complexion test, or for
enroHment: · Arts and ' Letters P1am and ~ve mearu_ng.
. . 2,128; Edueationai· Studies
When)&gt;e plays a piece ~n the any u n i f..o r mit y. We have
• "'.:'&gt; 09?; Engineering imd 'Ai&gt;!i!ied h~nd . Pup!o, the _focal pomt_ of learned, to acoept' a sex test or
Sciences,, 1;322; Health . SciIS ecture, musiC and feelmg .a compt~!lli teat · foi some
el~C!"'&gt; 3,065; La"! and Juris- pervade the room. _
, ,
faculty ' positions. Perhaps we
Pruaence, 600; 'Natural Sci,. anWhd.~ he f!Pe&amp;}Csa( of tlftlmg can learn ti&gt; live with -ideologiences
and
Matheiilatica,
2:054·
"""
nuances
tem
·
cal
·
SociiJ Sciences aftd .AdJrrln;,: pe0 nrung· string' f
po m
tests,.1or&lt;-facu1ty posl••"'-"'~ ' 110
d
a
o notes, he , ti"!!!!i1l - .• •
w....uu, "•
: ·
·of Manoes not merely ve~ 'the . 1;!\e 'fact may be. th;.t some
~ '..&amp;gement, 1,132; and no major !"''O"P_t. H~ conv~ys· It '!v play- . ,BilelliiU, interest groups on cam----.;...-~:......:;;.,;;,:~..,.--,_~-i'.::~,:,...-.,....,....;;,...;~~- 1,M7. •.
.,.. · •
' ing the Pian,o and With the (Continued em P'll.• 10, coL 5)

kin:

c . .iu.UC
: tor o,hi[e
. 'l1
u
'

wruc
eaclUng
. -'
°

D 0 Faculty'
Need

u.:

rr:L.,.tliroucl&gt;

a

.. 1=: - -.,., --- ..- · ..,·':&gt;&lt;;'- .._

F
- ac ty .

2:

S
- chool

ri

1

�Frescoes, Other_ Recent Works

by Susan Pops Exhibited

the principles of working in
At the Academy, students life. The length of time needed Bruce Garver, Bulfalo's urban
fresro in the 14th century in built up · painting surfaces by to complete the fresco depends design coordinator. The bouse's
his II Libre cki'Arte. That was layering mortar over a backing on the humidity, but the ses- original brick has been exposed
the ~gned text at the Acad- of bamboo. At home Ms. Pops sion typically takes five hours on the third floor wbere recent
emy m Bologna.
experimented with plaster of or so.
water colors, oils, and pencil
Te&lt;clmical problems plagued Paris under the mortar layers.
It's hard to imagine Ms. Pops' drawings by the artist are h~.
the . early pamters of. frescoes. The comp!eted fresro was hung. subjects sitting stili that long.
Throughout the bouse ongmBes1des the more obv10us ones Someone m the house slammed
, ·
,
.
al and contemporary elements
of . w o,r king accurately ";"d a door and the intonaco slipped ~hey~ h,~Y -~~ei have been juxta~. Bright
quickly, the palette was a trial. from the non-adhesive plaster
embemg
d ~·
h
colors glow on the second-floor
Only colors of a certain pH backing.
rem
r my . og
mg er waUs. The top floor is a bricltinteract properly with u,.; lime
Since that single mishap, Ms. around the studio. But there are lined expanse with skylight and
of the inlonaco, the mortar Pops builds a "canvas" by cov- always 8 ~e"':, moments wben el&lt;PQSe!i c,o P.P,,e .r. , Ri~ .;~,-painting surface. According to ering screening with meW lath they are stili.
. , ,
. ~ -~ Owtli!!- . P)8il&amp; ULreiil! tfie""boUie
legend, Michelangelo found a and jjna11,y rnwtal\ This•,tech- .• Sbe . p~ lor lhoee·- few' . after Uie exrubit do!-·
.
vein;&gt;f ~~ly · the earth rot: ': nique produces a painting sur- moments for several weeks by
The show continua this
~·edk'-~'~-~t t&amp;be- ~ ~j_,hil'~.; orf 'be :·'!ee.t!.d bY , spading in .
~ Cl!';' ,lie,hung o~ bolted m I'.J1,~'t! g, . ~1 .• p~,, .. wdtl!L~ ~ \-6,~p~'l
or . ~ ~ - . ~p ,"""!, w e - ~ Vaticwn .prdeiL Modern ' to the wall In tne .same way 88 ' skeu:nes Of UJe Sltt.er.
. ay ,.- &amp;iiidiY: "NOrUi ear
the mortllr -1ll ~ ·'ADil-a Second · f....,;, Painters stili uae' earth • a canvas ·despite tlie tin'usual
lh the t:Um!nt shOW, the fres- IS ·a one-way sl:rei&gt;t. 'If you are
coat of paint w!'l not interact colors. Applied darkly to the weight of the fresco:
coes are on easels placed in the dri~g . down Main hom the
properly and ·will _flake.
plaster, they dry a lighter, more
In order to catch a certain. _. u_pper rooms of a downtown du- ~ru""""ty,. the bMt apprtlOICb
Asked to free associate to the subtle shade.
flash, Ms. Pops paints from plex recently restored by owner lB to !urn nght at North.
word "fresco," most of us think

By PATRICIA WARD
BIEDERMAN
_ , _ s..,,.
"Someone ODCe said that life
is like the painting of a fresro
because you can't-trO back and
change any thing you've ever
done."
,
Susan Read PoPeS who paints
r escoes · wa&amp; • '"""-,1...~ &amp;bout the
r . • '~"' · ·
umqlle aspc!Cl!J' ~ting "!'
plrubasteckr. Onde 18
~. Y~'L~ .~
go
an cofT!lcl miS.......,..
The wet plaster m~racts cbern•cslly WI~ the pigments aP:'

1

face

=u';l}~;~~ - StiNY ~Senate Criticizes Libraries' ,Funding

interpreted epically. Since the
days of Minoa and the caves of
State University's "failure to five per cent or less of the unAjanta, .frescoes have been define an adequate_and depend- it's -total. For the contract collardgescale.r-tlvin-life both in theme able method for funding libl1!rY leges, the figure is 5.2 per cent.
a0
aoquisitions continues to be a
Susan Pops' frescoes are in- . major unsolved problem of vital ~'TbeEflectimmedia
. te _,.__. of this
timate. ~ on =lay m her .__
conoem
all faculty
" ......toSUNY
Facul"'·memSe
trend," the Sel\ate""""''
·resolution
current one-woman
at 176 ~-. ....,
·~
n- charJS~· .. ~ to curtail sharply
North Pearl Stft!et are, with . ate said ~a resolution- _en- the Jibrary"s support of existone eueption, porlzl!its of chil- · ~at.-&gt;18 October meeting. ing academic progranJS. Tbe cudren, A lovely blonde child of . _The r-.lution, one of a eer- mulative impoverishment of theperhaps nine dressed for riding ies piiMed by the Senate on the resources ava:ilable for the
in sweater .and jodphurs. A red- recommendation of its Library teaching and research progranJS
haired boy holding an unlikely I ~uroes Committee, headed of the University tbat results
hunting bird. A cherubic bu~ by U/B librarian Dr. Mary B. from this downward curve is
serious toddler ~ formally Cassata, asserted "that strong especially alarming wben one
in diapers. An intense young and dependable BUpport of li- considers. the publishing explO&amp;girl in ber long white night- braries is a basic need of aca- ion, -the increasing use of nongown.
;
dernic institutions, vitally · af- textbook materials for learning
Thechildrenlookstraightout feeling teaching-..xcellenoe."
and the emphasis in recent
from tbe;r portniits, as if into
Tbe Senate noted that the Master Plans on more varied
a camera eye. ·
University Master Plan "un- progranJS and methods of learnMs. Pops discovered fresco e&lt;JU!&gt;:ocally afllrms the central ing and the offering of learning
at its IIOIII'Ce-::in Ita!¥: It was po81tion_ of exce~~er!t library "",; opportunities to a '!rider pubthe ·work of Siplorelli · Or- sources m the learning process.
lie."
vieto aa 'abe ~ tbat
Yet, the reaolutl?!' ssid, "EvThe effective budgetary defirst Interested Ia in the medi- idence from fundiDg patterns terminallt stili seems to be FTE
urn. Then wlille studyiag etch- between 1966 and 197~ demon-· student enroUment, the Senate
ing with .Giorgio Monmdi •in strates tbat nearly every ~- contended, but this ahould be
BOlogna :..Dil a Fulbright, abe pus library baa been faced With "only one ol many factors tbat
was ahli to· elect Jresc!&gt; as a a steadil)' falling percentage must be accounted for in the minor She also became fluent curve of library budget as com- determination of the BUpport
in Italian which abe teaches at pared to the unit's total oper- needed by the . . . . library."
Ut !J, CUD!IIltly in Millard Fill- sting budpt.".
.
Qthers should .include: size of
roo , ....__.
For ' the uruvers1tv centers, facul~,- number and complexre .,.....,..,_
~
'
Cennirio
, __,_,
t d
this ~tage has dipped
hom ity o , programs; development
'-""WW "" · own
12.4 iii 1966 to 8.1 in 197Q. At- of ""'l!- ~; comrmtment
U/B, the dgufe waa 6.6 per of the University to serve a
--n.;.; .n D~rt
cent in 1966 and 5.5 per cent wider public; responsibility for
L ' t tA6 .1. a,cpu
in 1970, although 'total Library ~tive aoquisition; flexibil•
budget here has doubled in the ....itY to support independent and
Dr. Albert Wertheimer, as- period from ! 1.752 million to eXperimental I earning proSistant profesaot Of pharmacy $3 343 millio)L
&lt;
gJ;81DS' inftUX Of lear:iling·-rnaWtibona}is "~~v,e0, WIH
.thealththe SerNathe University
teriais' iii formats. other than
viO.,.., ~ ';.,.a Devel~ ters are reiatively well-oil ~- ~; and-retrospective~ .
61~
mentl W~ D .C., is au- . cen~wise. the Ll"br!lrY Cool.- ~~h:.:an.
thor of aa "Econi&gt;rnic-Aaalysis rilittee report in support of the "'
u n ..W.
of Selected Factors in J:)roq.· -resolution iildica~: All_-other~ "lillY ~ ~'~t
a ..,........,...
Delivery " ..;;"•"'e from• ttiii' ....._of SUNY uruts, With the constan..,.
Naticmai'T~Iniormafllill : ~:;j;tion, 9f cootract ~ ~ ol ita~- to acqUlrService, springfield, Virginia.· . have libroi'JY._bwlaeiB which~ Ull .c:urrdlt publications 1o up-

However

cen-'

ally accessible to u-. at 8IIY
location in the State. It sbould
:rt ~be[.:;f the~=
lty
.
The Senate urged the Central student to be able to determine
Administra.tion .to movead _toward ~~
~~ aallsingla
-~~phicala-~"J the ....,_,... .....
dev~opmg and
1optin__g an able tO him at lea8t 011 his own
eqw~le _method ~ -~ ,
reprdleas of their pby.fundmg With the tle:l&lt;ibility to· :f'rormat." To-implement
account for all of tMee ~n. this, the Senate I'IIIIOlved to en"Meanwhile, if a.aimple rule . 00.. the mllli!pt that prope&lt;
of thumb muSt be . . '!!' a ;..artic:ulat.ion 81110111 the CBltnl
stopgap lJli!8Bilre, &lt;ipr beBt ....,. 1 Educa~ Re.lurce8 Library
gestion for the moment is ad( 'loc81 ~ I!!JI-tional1 com:
berence to the Ainerican ,U- . munication .
a a d aaabrary Aasociatiiiri staridard of demic Ubnrle8 1DUit- be main-·
long duration: that every ..well' . tainecl, aad that lbe Cbmcellor
establisbed acadelilic library earcile hia "iDS- to enmust be supported bY not "l - aure~ that the _ . y comthan 5 per cent of the collete's munication a .a d artlculalioa
total operatinl budpl Libnr- take place."
ies which are ~iag or
·ou- Uh
~
changil)g theU emphasis will,
IVY
:
of course require COIIlllleDIDr·
• _...gwu~er~ tD CeDiral
ately Jarier-allocations."
Adminlatration that 1lbrariaa.
_
::"'~~~
On •nntber tronl; the Senate melit of abued .....,_ aad
nnted 'ih&amp;t at the ~t time for the -w,. ~with
:::;_t ---'-'c libraries collect · b""'..._...,,_ ,_.___tion star·~ ........,....
...........,... _.,._
"non-book m-e d i a" and tbat age and retrieval.
J
4j
each campus ed~
oupported~the ..........,
munica~ CBlter "!~~ ol · of .the Slate U~ Blamedsame kind ·ot-media, some
icsl Network to the aational
......
_,·.a.
·
collected in_a _,
_ tnJ and m· ~-'-'--'
w"""'
~•-""""" •-~
..,.. and- ,
place and some of~ 18 dis- q\Usition of acceoaihility to JIA· ~
Per-l ~t a CIIIDJ"'lL tiona! networks In-oilier laldl,
Meanwhile, fh!i 1972 SUNY and
~..!!!.!'lanf ~ ~.::• l'8COIIIIIIeuded to the ChiD·~t o a ceo~...
CeaiDr
~ ~n~"a.-JI.!~- oellorAdmi-'~u!: ~ SPA to
antiCipates
. •Y-""'•3 work
the lll8ed.Y reio,of ma~ such as
lu.. - ol ......_ l.llniiaaa -,.._
~~
~ :
ii:oup. the full badUplicatkm Ia cibriow1, the Sen- plementetion ol: the~
tit
·d. ~ ,.adellDIIi- ol academic npdt ·..,..aCcorded
t o - them il) 1968 &amp;nd a...-stated ia,
•'-· "'all •--T..:.
......._.._
"'- ..... Polic;•• of t•· n ....... of
~~,-;._~ .;;;:.;.:: ~tea.';'"" """"' · •
u~-, '
date its support of all existing
progranJS (a very teiUng item
boardsfor
eval
) -~tion by accrediting

J:"no!::/:.,ldinp. ·

omtenr

"':!;

•

18.

V:O...r

--I!! a---

t:::.:.ss

.,.;:i:i:...·

�.,_
N - - 16, 1912

�-~J6,WI2

-~ -

~-uIB_
·Sets_Ne\\'Policy for'P&lt;&gt;Sting
Non~Teaching -Profes8ional Jobs
•

..._. - . . .... on tonn.

Brick Work Now Underway
For Campus Science Towers
Tbe 9teel skeletons for the ments will contain the shared
Health and Natural -Sciences library, Pharmacy administratowers on the Amherst CampUB, tion offices, some Biology Inslated for occupancy In 1975, . struction space and the anima)
are now in plaa&gt; and l!&gt;'terior lab facilities. Each tower will
brick•work is underway.
. also contain a 160-seat lecture
Designed by Ardlitects Hell- haJJ at the first leveL
Various Instructional and remuth, Obata and Kasaabaum of
St. Louis, the $14.7 million seathe~-labsnd towillfou~ holevusedelsanond
complex will aocommodate 1,~
••w•
500 students and.taculty mem- • the fifllr· levels will be used pribers f~ ScbOoh&gt;f Phannmarily for the Phsnnaceutics
acy and Department o£ Biology.. · Deporrtment Th8'top levels will
Relocstion of these disciplines aCcommodate Biology reaeercb,
lo Amherst will allow for ex- Instruction and office space.
pansion of other health science
The Science towers are loprograms on the Main Street cated at whst will be the BOuth· Campus.
west comer of the academic
Unique ahout the design of core of the new $650 million
the towers is the use of clear campus. They will be bordered
span interstitial spaces. Above on the north by the Physics
every floor, there will be such complex, for which bids were
a space contain-ing large clear recently advertised, and on the
spanning trusses and exten- east by the nearly completed
sive horizontal mechanical dis- Law and Jurisprudence buildtributors.
ing.
These distributors, such as
exhaust and supply ducts Cor
ventilstion and air conditioning, as well as electrical and
'lbe UUAB Literary Arts
other mechanical systems, can Committee Is sponsoring a
be repaired, mOdified or re- poetry competition open to
placed without disruption to U/ B students and staff, with a
the floors above or below.
top prize of $100 and the opMUimum FlulbllltJ
portunity for a public read-ing.
Acrord-ing to an architectAccording to Ed McQueeney
prepared master plan for the of the Committee, UUAB hopes
two -ers, "Jiven the build-ing to make the competition annual
code, mechanical and stJUctural and of national reputation. Fuconstraints, the ~ _,. ture plans Include advertisemodule and interstitial space ments in national poeby jourcombine to achieve maximum nals and magazines. Next year,
feasible flexibility of -ce ...,;, the event may be open to the
snd reuae."
.
community at large.
The six-ry s t r u c t u r e,
This year's competition is a
which will appear .as a 10«ory "start-small" t e s t run, MebuilOO., because of these Inter- Queeney says.
Rules follow:
floor _,.,.,_contains 140,000
net square feet. It will provide
A muimum of three poems
i_nstructioaal; - . c h and of- may be !JUbmittad by any one

Poetry Contest

=ts~~~= (!It~entrant's full~. ad-

Chemlstr.y, ~.
~ and Bioloi!Y. In
adclliioa, the lltluctwal WllJ accommodate animal laboratory
SUJ)port facilltiM and a abared
reaearcb llbnoy. Plana also
call for ·a 8IJPIIC)rtinc peenhouse project for Biology:
At """""'t, only the structure and architectural shell are
under oontrac:t. Interior designs
....
are In adftiiCll!d lllai!&lt;B of ...,.

dress and telephone number
mtmt appear on each pese Submitted; all entries must be
typed or legibly printed with no
two poems on the aame &amp;beet;
all entries must be submitted
by noon, Monday, December
11._~~2, at Room 261 Norton.
-l'inai judging decisioll8 will
be made by a panel of four
members of the English Depart;ment ---·"'· Pc.ns will be·

a

UIB is initiating new policy regarding ·the posting of
Non--Teaching Professional
(NTP) positions, Harry W.
Poppey, director of Pemonnel,
has announced.
·
'lbe policy, Poppey says, results from "our commitment to ·
prov-ide employment opportunity infotm¥.tion on a wide basis, and will establish a mechanism through which qualified
individuals may declare their
cand-idacy for positions with-io
the University and elsewhere
with-io the SUNY system."
Under the policy, U / B will
post all NTP positions which
are to he filled exoept for those
positions known or expected to
be of temporary duration, or
those specifically excluded by
the President_ These position
openings will he posted in designated areas on campus as
well as published in the Reporter. Such positions will be
announced for not less tban tvr'tl,
weeks, and no appointment ·
msy be made until two weeks
after the end of the reqnired
posting period. Positions available elsewhere in the SUNY
system will also be posted
whenever possible.
The prooedures implementing this posting policy, which
will be coordinated by the Personnel Office, are as follows:
Positions to Be Posted
in "s6'N~~~~-TP( ~i~~cl':

and community groups by send- the employee aalected and •
!ng ·them notices or the open. lain . . . - . - t 011 - the c1et.n.
mg.
of the tnnsfer date, anct lillY
• Post job vacancy an- opecial or tnneitional UNJ1118nouncements for two weelui.
D*lts, etc.
·
• Recruit and screen cand-i• Notify the employee 'wbo ·
dates from internal responses has been aelacted and coaftrm
to P o s t i n g, newspapet and the lllTilDpDieii,IB for tt., traD&amp;journal advertis-ing, community fer.
'
groups or agencies, aad resumes
Mske certain the . . _ .
0
on file. 'lbe resumes of cand-i- ful cand-idate undentenda the
dates meeting job specificatioll8 title responaibilltlea, auperv;.
will be referred to the selecting or's ..........
-.o-~
supervisor.
_.,_.._ tio_
..., .,.__,....
• Adv-ise applicants who!ie salary, and ou- conditions
re s umes are not forwarded. the position.
These resumes will be filed in
• Return resumes of all unemployee's personnel folder.
suocessful cand-idatea to Per• For employee cand-idates, sonnet
Personnel will contact previous
• Initiate "Pentagon."
employers or other references, C.nclldote . . _ ,
upon request.
• Perform background veri• Customarily, four weeb
fication for non-employee can- from the time of claasification
didateS.
approval should be adequate for
Interested Condldotas Should:
the posting, resume receipt, re. • Send resumes, and any ad- view and iptarview prooeos. Ofditionsl supporting Information fers of employment, exoopt on
they feel is desirable, ·to the an Interim basis, may not be
Director of Employment, Per- committed until at least four
sonnel Department, along with weeks from the date of poeting.
a letter of transmittal stating
• All employees who regiathe position for which consider- ter their candidacy. will be conation is requested.
sidered for the poeition.
• Not contact the selecting
• Responsibility for selectsupervisor or department direct- ing successful candidates rests
ly, but ra ther through Person- with the appointing supervisor,
nel as outlined above.
with the assistance and counsel
• lnforrn their supervisor of of the Personnel Department.
their intended candidacy and Candidale8, from all aources,
review their peraonsl qualifica- wduilel abettenevti~onuatotedthoseequasellyectiw_i thn
tions and requirements of the
11
criteria considered significanl
position may be filled until two position.
• Register candidacy sepa- by the appo-inting supervisor.
weeks after the posting period
rately for each position of In- Employees, to be active cand-ihas concluded. )
terest. For exam~le, _an ~- dates, !DUSt ~lay the, ~
eiS:w~=~fu;
~6W.;~~
shoul&lt;\. not ~lCBje.: his •· expertsae; train-ing and a history
. as advisecFt)y SUNY Central '"pi'U'll'l
aviiilaliUity" for' an 'PR-3 po- of satisfactory per£ormance_ ·
Administration.
sitions thst may develop in the
• Important peraonal traits,
Positions That NMd Not Be p~
•intelliaence, oonfideoce, and pofuture.
0 NTP positions known or
•
Send
resumes
to
the
Ditentiaf,
the all important "fit"
expected to be of a temporary rector of Employment before for the job should be' conaidduration.
the end of the posting period. ered.
'
• Positions specifically ex• S e n d resumes for non• In an emersency, when a
eluded by the President.
SUNY/ Buffalo vacancies and several week vacancy would
NOTE : Filled positions, re- supporting information to the cause significant work ]068 to
classified to a higher profession- campus specified in the posting the University, an employee or
a1 grade, are not considered notice.
an outs-ide candidate may be
"vacancies."
The Supervisor of the Vocont
offered the position on an InThe Approvol Process
Position (Selector) Will:
terim basis. U the position iB
• Vacant (to-be-filled ) NTP
• Receive and review res- filled on a pennanent basis by
positions must be reported to umes of ·both internal and ex- another pemon, the interim emand approved by the appropri- tarnal cand-idates! as forwarded ployee will return to his previate Provost and Vice President by the Personne Department ous position without I os s of
using the "Standard Profession• Follow-up on cand-idates benefits. The outs-ide cand-idate
a1 Service Requisition for Em- felt to be the best prospects, in w i I I be terminated from the
ployment" form.
one or more of the following temporary employment.
• Upon approval, the Vice ways: interview cand-idates, as
While the Intent ol our proPresident sends the orig-inal to !'PPropri!'te; obts.iJ! add-itional gram impliea a cood faith efthe Director of Employment, mformation from former supet- fort by each manager the ooPersonnel, and returns a copy visors in the University; obtain casional failun! to rOb,;; this
to the issning academic unit. o~ dats ~red (i.e_, ~erifi- policy will not Invalidate an
• Positions, when they be- cation _of preVIous ~ence, .. appomiDBlt to a vaeant pa8icome vacant, are subject to title education, etc. ) .
tiOn.
.
and classification review. New
. • With fl!" '! m pI o.Y e e's
Tbe
aetec:tecl'muat
position description and classi- Signed au,tbonzation, ...,...,.. an continue to be the be8t qualification approval may be re- employee s. P~ Depart- lied candidate ....._.._..,_ both
quired. Personnel will coordin- ment file, if desired.
from in~-• - . a n d
ate and expedite the . Process
• Acknowledge - receipt of
_,...
awith the appropriate authoriz- resumes directly to thooe can- temal NCI'Uitlnl.
ing agencies In Albany.
didates not interviewed. Copies
· • Vacancies will not be posted and will not be filled until
the line clearance and claasifi• Prior to making a position QOI1llniiDBlt, confbm his
cation process iJ complete.
evaluation tluouch his superThe ~ Will:
• Prepare, generally from
new duties d&lt;wrlptioas, and/or fi!:'~~by aPprOP~

,

c:andidat.

I!e.::Jf~ ~~:~

ven:

t:::f~t ~

Reporter. This will be a brief
statement· of title, salary -and
grade level, department and locatioo, and will refer Interested
caDdidates to bulletin t..rd an-

DIIUDileiDI!Iii.

• AdviSe the - IUporte of
vaeancies in olber SUNY units.
• ~ bulletiD lioard anno•mcea-l&gt;r to be postsd in a
nlllllbei of • campus Jocations.
Tbe
bulletin bo.rda
:trill _,_
lain pollitian
claacriPiliiii8
and
P-t: sts-18 ol
b
contmot yet -to be awarded. · · r.ist place; $100; .-...1 place, SUNYAB N'n&gt; • ~ .._
...._. ,...._
.
$50; third place, $26.
well • inrarmaticlll ..on OCher
Altlaqb the towon
_WIJIJlini ~ ~IB will 1!UNY ~-' . _'
tem.d to • 0118 .for ~cl reild from their aeJected wodt
· • Adviie ~ Cenlnll Of·and 0118 for BlalocY, _ . . ,, on Monday.~muary 29, 1978, - fk:e of~ poaitian for StatecilitiM for bolb clloiciPUn. ''Iiili •- at 8 -p.m. · In .the Conf...., . wide · ~- .
.•• -~
_
be laund. 1n ..,.,_ 'I'be beae- 'l'he!ltre.
_
-• Advise' WlriouB u.......ty

=

:::,.~

=...t:

-·3.

.

jud'lt':..:~-~

are·- '

0

~

fo&lt;mance. ~ ~

oolitacting an emplciyee's t":"!'- ·
ent or peat supervisor Wlttiin
the University.
• Prior to maJdna• the appoiniDBlt, but after liaviq an
aooeptance, noC:ify all .t he un8l1lllllllllful candidall!a ... 1 t h •
carbon copy "to the 1'..-nel
OIIJoo_

•

• Coordinate the details and
.__t
with the
ol
~tin 1'..-nel prior
Director'

~-jab~

n- -iDelude llae
....._, dMollcaticaef .....
vmiet7 SUNY·
=-=-!rt..~

ol
ad .
of tle.IJailpt policlee . . . . . .

=t;* ........ !Ida .atap
•

Notify the .......... ol

Tau Beta Pi Meet

�(C.-......l

"""!!" ,.;., •· eel. 6)

_

Po.- ~ -..e.llildi .- - . but .
co-tJY and aubtl,y. &amp;upp.e,
11117~ lbBt Ilia Department cl
Educational P-,yc:!,o.r.;.. required ila faeulty

.

to

m :a.e ide!IIDD of •
.-..w.,; -~ tbe
Dl!pa.-t be ~this
ideololdcid. •. but
oecretiY. withoutan acaclemk.~ ......W
betieve
tistlcal

a.-

u
intBrest group wants
to form aJOUDd a cammitll8lt
to a perticulai ideilliily, in Or·
di&gt;r to ezplore aDd to tMdt..tbe
. llcationa aDd rmiillicatioas
ilplcia1
- _ . . _ . DQttbat~~be
• • •.
•
to
lOyalty of ita faculty
'
• affiliates, 1&amp;-a· Jmae· Uni..-aity
~

:'U..t

· ·

,

WaddY!sw.n.:':i

-ue

·

Abbie Said He .H ad Nothing to Say-He Lied!
~ a..-"'

~~~~
~W~ ~

Ahllie

';:'=

be zled by a Just for power, bow· . _ , . the _,....,;...,
too.
.... ~ lo'lll)'lfll1JDOre to ..-, be ..........t lo tbe -center
Someone wbo bad ·driven in
"Agnew, ··tbe· Only ~ ment? Jl, indeed, tbe
lbe . . . , . . o( AmeriaL · •
aDd "'oot everybody's support." from"Toronto just for tbe obow, elecfed official wbo bas · ment . is doomed to ezpire. in
. ~.ilia ~ at tbe . Besides, be ssid, tbe Ameri· asked 'if Hoftman ba&lt;! any ad· looked -like a mill••- ilicts· stagnation and. ·stultification,
&amp;opa;. al'~A~~.&amp;U· ·can public is irrationkl. Half vice:for Canada.
tor," will be swept-l'nto the tbat is tbe '-m· ·the group
,. lllllit'•- "'Undlr- A&amp;tadl"' at JW- cl them~ "McGovern is a · "Sure. Watdt out for the White House for an eight-year inembers rie&lt;iil to learn.
.
Hill eo&amp;.1ast Tbunday ' ...d&gt;venuve .because tbe CIA Japanese!"
1iem .., prciYinc broke· into'·bis office."
.
Clarifying- this verbal c:eypto- stay' Hoftman bemoaned.
1bere ·ca~ be both Potential
il
As be entered tbe voting gm;;,:, he. added, ''You can aJ.
And America, which by then conflsgrations and self-limiting
- 8aillin&amp;. c:lowninc aDd wav· booth election dsy, Hollman ways tell which is the world's will finslly realize it has lost graas fires in the academic COJil.
·m.. ihe -b!Din cl the P1moer Bllid be was taken by the no- rising imperial power by keep. a war, will be looking for con· munity, and tbe watdlguards
CtiiJdnm, • be bas been~ tion tbat tbe only significant ins up with who's investing in venient scapegoats, like the of academic freedom have to
micbt ba9e been doing a Bland··· I!Ct tbat coUld be performed Cilnads." Tbe U.S. and J _ ,
distinguish tbe types. Academiup IIPOlcm· the -:l'...;ght" &amp;bow. there would be "either to jerk are likely to bave an economic
did after World War ciJins csimot afford to Jose their
· ·TJy as they midlt, a three- off or slit your wrists and bleed war-with Canada as the
characteristic senses of humor
student panel, incfuding U/B's all over tbe machine."
spoils, ·he ""id
''There are going to Jots of and perspective when !bey en·
Da"" SteiDwald. couldn't bad- What About ~fBack-tracking to activism, victims," Hollman ssid JDeS.. counter macabre happebings.
lfl8( him into what they could
be
Hollman lamented that doing sianicaJJy. "Ani! I'm going to
aaiept as a -x.us taipOII8e- mindBut W&amp;ltbe
·t a minumodte,
,..,. good has become "kind of com· be one oT them.
,
-PAUL R. LOHNIS
not even an obviOusly-caached
. ed
show's
erator. plicated these dsys."
..,___ Hill thMtre major, an· This was supposed to be a proEspecially when you're "fa.
. •· .... h;,;··~,e..._ ~f!ISSOr,
"I'm acared."
'Educational ·YsyCiiDJogy
gram for Canadian viewers. He
" H
'd he
· t
.otber,_of thea.. ~ti·c~~!'.!'
-·---' to be• d'18C118SlDg
.
mous.
e 881 .
was JUS
boonnl[ed
.........,.
..,uuvu_ was .........,.,.,.
casually walking down tbe
·~'it U..·lCIP·~ !be J1baw ~ why ,bot!&gt; .be '!!)&lt;~ his book are street during the May Day
00 .
IDIDUillqU
calliDi: ~ ''a '·"b1aiant '~;~·~~; •Jun~r " ~~0~.~ew ~orlc (Contillu•d from ~ 11, col. 6) sociation and UUAB ..S P.rt of
of. 111!!rilla· tbes·
was taping four shows
him,
yo;,;
•tie -'t&gt;bavin&amp; any of,it."'lbe ":' ~uflal!' . .Tbel! ~an~ .~'!ft· · oft into . an alley, beat.:;hell out . favotite •Hillel Houoe, ,40 2il' th..iugh 'December' 2. :Exhibit
more the panel pressed, tbe man and coiildn t get hihi mlo of him, breaking his nose.
Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
houn: Monday-Friday. 11 a.m.more he mugged
Once here, they also
..I didn't even know any of UUAB FILM ••: More (SChroeder, 5 p .m.
After all, be knows about did the man from the ~ the leaders of the May Day 1969), Conference Theatre, Nor· UUAB .urr EXHIBIT ': Art• Aui&lt;a•
baiting. He's the one wbo ,..,. ~gue and the draft, dOO,ger'\_ thing. And here they were giv- to~ ?&gt;eck showcase for times. Ad· Auburn, an exhibit of art work
~tl~ """t meekly up to CJarlc thing. But HE was why they ing me stitches just because I'm DUSSion charge.
produced behind prison walls or
Mac(ir&amp;gor in a crowd (with were here: Remember?
famous."
A sentiments! and romantic ganized by Cel-l-Help, a p...;r..:
TV cameras present), got his
"I agreed to sneak into CanFamous also means you· get film with pretensions toward sional art training program for
autopaph and then screamed; ads and do this show and then weird offers. Like -the time •h"!'k value, •I manageo. moot esprisoners. Gallery 219, Norton,
"Is .auB the signa tore tbat was sneak out;" he ssid. But, ¥ " Woodstock" WJiSD'~ doing well ~~ ~~"il:.,'~=~~to"if; =bM!~~~~~. ~"!'::i~
.., tbe ebec:t for the Watergate charged, the producers didn t at tbe box office m Berkeley sensuous and esoentislly empty 5 p.m.; Sundayo, 2-S p.m.
caper? Wbere's Martha Mit- have the coiuage to do it tbat snd Warner Broo;. cslled asking world.
d&gt;ell?"
way.
.
him to ·lead sop&gt;e kind of dem- . SILENT PILJo(' . Tho ltolum Strow . PBOTOGBAPmc .urr llixmBrr• : By
Even when one of tbe slo·
''I want to tolk about Can· onslration there tbat might sell Hot (Un C~poou th Poille D'- self-taught photographer Jiiou1arr
dents· in the audience got up to ads. Ask me wby I can't go tickets. Or when another pro- /talie) (Clair 1927) 147 Diefenof'E!;!;,~Bs.:e::
di!lner tbe '" put..down, "You to tbat 'libertarian. freedom- duction company offered .him dorf, 9 p.m. Free. '
ces. The exhibit, P""""'ted by tbe
8boald ba¥e' hei!n in the mov- lovit!J nation.'"
·
$50,000 just to"'Jet a film crew ' This is an adaptation of the Office of Univenlity Publialtions
iea," Holfmiin'11- response was
. "Qkay," followed the moder· follow him around for two dsys. popular 19th century faree about Servj~ will appear .in tbe dio._ ooily a tootby,c I'You wouldn't ator. WhY can't you cross tbe He rejf!Cted both. preferring a man who is foreecf to find are- play ' caoes, Hayes Hall Lobby,
bappm to be Otto Premin&amp;e&lt;?" bridge?
right now just to live in "the placement for a straw hat eaten ~ugh ~o~r 24.
j ..._
"Morill twpitude."
woods-on Long Island"
on his wedding day:
. But, despite tbe play-ecting,
. Wbat?
Speaking of show biz otters, BUWALO IIEHAIBBANCE minvAL': NOTicES
the is ......,. reolly. with''That's what this guy '!I tbe a member of tbe a u d i en c e Gennaro SingU., on d Doncing, ---'--~-....---.......:
.a Everythini has P~ Bridge told me. Moral asked, ''Is it· true you were Fillmore Room, Norton, 9 p.m.
saL o &gt;&lt; o CAIILIIBACB CIWfiJJUB
its Jl!li!ll ·' lbiB time t he ...... Turi&gt;iliide. I asked him wbat paid by tbe u.s. TV networks c:!o~.ngobyowthede Babyvananthe
· n~e_n:_•t CONCDT. Ticketo for tbe Decem.
c:illulY l ideliverinc' a TOU8ing . it 'oiesns, but he ssid tbat to disrupt tbe Chicago conven· Sociai·~Ciub
.
~
Uc ~---n, di-~by
~:.n':v'!li~t'~~thebyN~rtoen~
. "fuek llffl" 1o tbi!.Student Lilfl · waan'tbis dej&gt;ar1menll always lion?"
~
=~
'"Die MIJ'ft!ineDt is a -.x-1 tboilght it IDMJit looking up I' "Which network?". Hoffman Peter Koracke. The G e r man lliili Ticket 08ice .or Hillel Houoe,
...,..._," 'Holfman. told ita little
cbesses."
teesed..
. ·
!"fo%es~d\~ 'a&amp;!;'~ :...Ca!'r'Sjl~~~th..t'fj;:
-tatn.;'
' Steal This Book is also
Chicago, be ssid seriously, terl&gt;ichler. . _
cords, $1; free to memben of
Wb,y elae do all you "rah=-rah benneil in Canada, and in New means to him only tbal "ele-- BIJWALO IIENAIBBANCE mrriVAL' :
Hillel. Mail onlen will be IIC·
M""""""'t" types wbo s.re in a Yoi:J&lt; State, because of the mea&gt; phants never forgel" Maming P•ople Are PWclr Theoter, let cep ted il" accom~ed/IIY_ a
freazy of activity today wind ssge about property rights em- tbat -the Federal goverDIIII'!lt is ft
cal te ·
rto
•tamped,
oelf·addn!oeed envelope
up working for daddy in two bodied 'in its title. Tbe laws !Jauling "tbe. Chicago six or
oor . e na, 0 n, 10 p.m. and proper ft!lllittim&lt;oe.
yam? • , • ·- '.
e~rotect lhl! rich and eight or:ten or whatever" back
. JNTERVIE
. "'S
"You're ~ nillgious the
Ho«man charged. into couit there come January EXHIBITS
"'
iJMikoe.
.
.
Q&amp;ADtJ.lft 8CBOOL .......,_..
~......,_ . . _ , - do," a with tbe diagrams it co1itains . ''I just fciund oul this week," =~~-~ ~be~·==
YOIIIII -...ii p&amp;e.lied - '
· for Molotov Cocktails aDd other · Holfliu!n coinplained, setting tun in the ' Alb"l/ht-Krwr Xrt pus inleniewa for oludn~ illte"'Get a -.e, :WOik ·deviaB. .~ ·
tbe Btaae for .lurtber diacu&amp;- G !I
eoted in atle""'"• their ~
,oar.- 1ite." - .
No, be llllid "Anybow, a lot . &amp;ions of l:iis ~.
w~ Yr~ .!~K!oO:: ocboOio. Fwtlie---;t;ronaafion and ,~ 1he recebt U.S. eJeo.. Of thoae caliie from thinp J&gt;\&amp;
· Tbe Left; be &amp;;Jd. after sev· · collection in honor of tbe GaJ: appoilltmento for inleniewo .U.
lioa ~I:Uioidi!;"~ HaftmaD. lisbedby'tbeU.S.G9Vemment era! aairbie , COIDIIIellta from ~·· lOth . amsi'Verury · year. J&gt;e.ty~_._tliroua
'
.....~~-·•
wbD t.d . _ - ~ b
Prinlii!I-OIIIce.• - •·
beatded'U/B types iQ_ the aUd· ~ 'will iDclude' worb bY
~---t ...a L..... .._.
MeGooilm; aid• he liMl In a ~. b8 aait( be _is _,. ience, is-diseiiobimted with liliii =1-;,!f.::;i,~ ~~ ADOe Office ' Hayeo C, R-a 6
'M!I!88 Jill&amp; w. ldDdl e1 people a. pui ":~bat Molotov Coc:klail tiec:aUoe be's aJiYe. ,.
_,....,_ by "-'"'
- ·1 ~&lt;•ll4)wiU.
. Thebem
" ter:on'! wi.f.!'
Ill
. ........ .___._~, ....- . _ idaffln.'!'. ·
·
•
·_ ·
· ..,.;.....ore ~
· · -rm - -~..-....
·.ladd · IIDII ...;....L..
~
_ ~, .....
- - . . . _ ...,
··
......,..
~rloUD; aDd Ncent acquioi. -~a
- 111:r. a ,.._ wbo __
~
8pt in a~•. 'Tm,.DI!l" " · • --~ n- ell ba a . . - of-rk bY~ Andni and
~T.:.l&amp;: Duke·U;,;;.nity
b tlie--and!IIUe &amp;lilt a~
I'm not a ....,., HD«&lt;i&gt;&gt;m ·helo: , '"
•
·.
;:.
c:::Juyeoa- Will aJoo be OD diopla.y
Gradua•• "-'--·' of ...~-~
_...., _
_......_.~ ,~ ~ ' TJie b·Q.o,Ji·im't · ~ aay 'lbiwn't -IIUfteled ~J5Do, Ari ,Gallery,, l285 . ~~:u-s of
lliiJi _tlllillr a
- l o t " - it out. 1-WanJal~ enou.ti..,. Ho«n;;m "Daqed: ·~-"·-'-· "~.;_.~. LNcw.,· 17 Rocbeoter - "-~-·· ' of
. AJiiie ecq. lo.' to
.
TMi.ilioaicfboW iud. oulrer- -.....,.. ..........,. .-.
BuoiDea : ':"'-:-:'"
·• ~
• · ,
c.·
1he Point?,_::
· U... · '
·
, . · &lt; An illuolra'!"'
will pre.
il!Klle-..u.id a1iiJ1iia llliiablr~ "":; ·, .._..And tbeni'a- .to~
~:~~-oaF~t .- WEfXLT COMiiiiNIQUE
llciQDoaa. "ttlli ~· . "'DD ,_ Mt....a IJ!Iinler ~
~ -IWflni!Ji liu a -.....torJ'~ee ~~uyAJ:
'·COP\' DfADQIE .

aperi:

: i __.

rermans

·-.&gt;

_.__

·~~

W kly Co

~ttack"
c:anada.

cops~=~

dra~~::::.

•

m.i./~'~tr:;;:;~l:'~or';o~r · ~~~.r~f9Jie'N~~;

=f·

:!

girl's

:rz ~- ~

the~~n~gt, ~~--

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

11

1

..

bee--...,

·'a-;...'! . ·· · :
~
~

~

3

~::M'~~~·
~~P.Y'LU:..z...~ ~
~ --..~ ~ ~~·!J~r.;:.:~t:
,;..• lleCJcMiila ....... lllioe dUee .,.,;it ,
• In tt.1 b!cwin!wmiel year, .he ., ode of A""'rican ArJ.
.
iJillal • • ~·]!II ..-.

1.

. ,;

~

.,f ill: ...
•• convenience •nc1
~. ., M D!&lt;o' lo pulllk:illl- eil
tlklnc plac:e on .campus.

"' .~ . ~a·.- ~ ~...,. RE.
lo ba ""
' _,.
··
: ·
....... ......_., ._., ...:!1'14.· WJieiiJ.-...
a· .beai'ci;&lt;I- ~W. ~. - ~
·.'-t:het-: ~ t;" nanJT': . ""TG-- illfannatloli. ~ontact
~--- fl
~-- ao·......_., _ :0.
, • _' ~ofti:; 't.o J1e ~ BUt
, IG!ed.by a':'l!t~to!\'!1PA:; ::-Nancy Ci!!l!_a..ni, axt. 2228. . .

�-v
N - - 16,1912
•I

• ..,:

~~~~~~~-~-.Ud--'the -a-~-eot~--nm-----~~.,
~T~u~~-.
---."'---a
. -1~~--~-&lt;H--~---------------------------------.~
--~
~
__
nm
__

LMri with the-·-·-"'· othy
Dll.twe..e. Walden, aJoo-...::=--... _..,

•

TUESDAY-21

D_,.. Nota Gilds~ ·
Melu!a'' liJm diuy bam ~
OD New York od lWi
...,.ts to other plaooa in the Unit~t
: r d ~f the
~yean.
YJty urine

&lt;ZNftR~&amp;It InNo.-, 1-6 p.m.
7'uldw O'C/oc• High
(.Kiq, 1949), 1.f0 Capen, 3 aDd
9 p.m. Free.
Iron diocipUDe aDd penoDill authority in tbo peraon of Air Fo.rce

-.&lt;ftft atAft

nLK•:

.-nca

a...,_ U8a III!:RVICBB

Introduction to the
liat-pro._ing ~. SLIP,
Rm. 12, ~ RidP Leil, 7-9 p.m.
Familiarity with FORTRAN is
prerequisite.
·

o a ohot-up bomber IICiuadron
wbou miOoion u German-oocupied Europe. He otraightena them
out aud. we 10 0~ to win.
wOilXSBoP• ·

proctiaJI Alp«..., E~;;.

E!!?~~· Rm. 10, 4238 IUdge

.!'.:... will
the
dilferenc. , between theOOYesCoPE

FJ)!:
parlmll!lt. Rm. 2. Diefendorf Annu, 3-6 •
. This lo tbo llfth in a aarieo of
le'vell weeldy work:abo.- on program-ma-ba'-lthoerviceo
by the Council of
He.J.tb Se!YIC8 ReeeudJ..

This-

and KRONOS SUNY program li-

brary. ToP.ica will include program modi6cations and program
replacement.. SpoNIOred by tbe

·-rod

Computiac Center User Serviceo.
CRBA'!TVE curr CE:Nftll• : Macro.

,A=

~-

the
od

- o f blo OWR111111ic.- ...._
llicel t o - . , otyleo, on paltar,
recorder od pluG.

--

BM....,.&lt;Z

• ...._ ••• . , _
-...a. llal8l
ladla Olllua C...
od the~ R
Ill

tllboa hom -1M

~

._

r.r.:!J~ ~:::"'~ie"" Gild Hu ;:.;;.~
-AI.•·

Bond, Haas Lounp, No.-,

p.m.

Tu .lack of AU TrU:u M.,.k
S~•. Jack Alden, profMOioDill
~":':'\, J";.!:_rence 'l'Matre,

PDNCH

BUPPALO UNAISIWI&lt;Z n:&amp;TIVAL•·

BUPPALO BBNAISIWici: PlilmVAL 0 :

1M

LIIC1'UIII:• :

u

IIUWALO - -

7

Jf: old-time

music of kazoos

-•!

Tltc B1t4 of lite ..,... ~
Pltq, CoafereDoo ...,..,.,

a

""k·th~..;:..............,
..
tbo poaDd, ......... bJ'

Ro.......W·-

Social, Pierre A~,_1&gt;rof~

;y :i~!~r:;'.::nt o ' Frencb,

~-

Rodriguez Co"' b o, Confer-en~ Vahana, a mixed media claDoo
n-tre, Norton, 4:30p.m.
. and muaic praentation dincled
Mua1c of Latin America-1flli- by Jim Whitman, Fillmore Rooiil,
tan, OOD.fU bo~ timba1a and Norton, 6 p.m.
,
four tropical dance~
COMPU'TING c::cNTa. uaa IID'VIc.
BIJI!PALO UNAISIWICB PlilmVAL•:
IIIDUN. . #: Introduction, to the
Uro!oe~ily
Strint•. lit ftoor cafe- ~!5!~Ri~7}~
0
leViB _ a~.i'.;nt 30p&amp;-;"' c!aaical
F . . 'ty witli FORTRAN io
string p1eceo.
prerequisite.
BUPPALO aEM.us&amp;ANCI: PBSTIVAL• :
PBYCHOIUT: 232 Norion. 7·10 p.m.
Orr:luud. Par• KU..h Gild Kl4tttr BUPPALO UN.usaiNCB PI:IITIVAL•:
Bond, lat lloor cafeteria, Norton, T/u F••lint of Blccluua, Fill--

KRONOS BDONAB. 8E1UJ:S UDCTURE
IY# : Progra.nt Library Under

i.!,"'W',:C="'il~'ii:

8

•--......

BUPPALO BBNAISIWICZ

BB&gt;ON. . # :

~t~'t.!'":;raleHia..:;

8 _.AL'I'B

Jaii::~

&amp;:m•

COMPUTUIG

'

. not.ble
::f Sam
roe.

~

1 ttuction, f1IJ7

1950) 1

P~~-~melod;.._ wbld.

more Room, Norton, 7 p.m.

Wilocia.

P

&lt;Do\ftft CUPT

~·:

Bolli•

~:

z..,;,..

llrucrion, 7 No-. 1-6 JUL
&lt;DAftft CUPT

Open SN&gt;p, f1IJ7 No-. 1-6 p.a
aU p pALo ~ NiftY&amp;
· roaUK• : s.ru.
Rllll
a,.,..,., aaoond loor, No-.1:111

aa.nu

p":iambon of tbo AIIIMnt 8eDior
Ci- Canter wiD diocoM tMir
- - aDd ~
-··
BUI'P.U.O lmf~ PDnV&amp;•:
PamtllldBccltySiod, hlahl&lt;lbool
folbinpn, Fillmore-_ Narton, 2 : 80 p.m.
•

~.~~a{a;~ • 'f':.tr'::fw:":/!N~':. 7~~";:~ i;.:"=~;d:!'=· p;':,'; ~.:JE:~~~~- 5,r~~~~~
i
!fte~ae~ CII&amp;ATJYZ
B&lt;lt In&amp;eDior
Crary.
Mambon of the Bull'aJo Phil!.:hoJ.
· abortion, divorce aDd 1truct10n, 7 Norton, 7-10 p.m. Cra/tl Exhibit Gild D&lt;moMtro- Th&lt;ory, Henry Lee Smith,
Alpectual harmoRe--'~-~~-~•.."""'m::.~
other areu ol inte"'"l Leaar:
Jr
.._.._...,. ~ ~.... ~
CUPT ........,... ,

Cltizem.
BUFFALO BENAIB84NCE n:&amp;TIVAL•:

CUATM: CIW'T CEN"n:B CL.UlSES• ·

Whul Throwi11f, 7 Norton, 7-10
p.m.
- .
Procreeetve mstruction through
Wedneaday, Nov. 29.
CB&amp;A.TIVE CllAPT CENTER*: Batik
I
"'truction, 307 Norton, 7:30-10
p.m.

'l1le Rev. AJicj Nau.

ECONOllOC8 _ ,. . #: T/u Eval-

uation. of EtwironrMilkd Ruour.
cu, Dr. AnlhODy c. Fiaber, Reaou.rcea for the . Future, Inc.,
~ Rm. •• ' 224
n. · D·" ·•·
Ridge
l!i-30 p.m. ~. •
PENTON ux:.TUD saura•: Conacl4
Loou at US-An Exploration of
Canada'• Vi•w• of tlu United
Statu, with gueafopeaken: James
Eayn, profeuor of international

W~

ILLUS'l"RA'IZD ' Ul:CT~:

tion, Fillmore Room. Norton. 710 p.m.
.
FILM.•: The Birch ( Hitchcock,
1963) 140 Capen 7-p.m. Free
Rod Taylor and Tippi Hedren
sta~ along with a group of divebo b'
•••-·'Is
m mg --~ ·
CO~UTING CENTEit USER BEKVICES

Chicago

MAPS, A Mult~l&lt;
~rogram S ystem hor e10,"~238 Ri~•d•gnceeLeaRes•7~9p'.mRm
. .

Mural Movement. Mark Rogovi.n,
director, Chicago Public Ana
Workshop, 337 Norton, 7:30p.m.
S
red b th p
·
10
Stud'ies. e rogram

SEMINAR#:

1,rl&lt;l}&gt;:,;;

~~:.:.t=~t:l.f:~= AtJ!ri:
Abraham

Rotd:ein. editor of Can-

orMc!~u:ranp:;eJ:sU!dd!'i=

to P e r f o r m most of the data
handling functions and many of

TRANSCENDENTAL MmiTATION LECTua&amp;•: Rick Archer, regional TM

adian Forum and auociate pro-

UniYeni~of ~=~~· ~ $::U,s;, ~~cWry ~~ivedta~tid!la ~!J~~~ioi: l~;
~::e~: Jtnctn~&lt;f:!~ ~~~:{ 8LEE BaTBOVEN CYCLE m• : The behavioral sciences.

fessor of economics,

of National Defence, Conference
The1tre. Norton, 8 p.m.
The Fenton lecturers will es:imine
CaDildian
- ADierican
tions from
polibC::al,
econnm.icrelaand
·
ston·;.a1
U"T•
C] ....:l••:..l
h 1 ~ --' ...-"6
~ ~ · ·---'vt:a
1\.- .-.-..
discuiS10n .. ,.. .1 fo,ll0~ ~9d.glg,

LINOUI8TIC8 LIIC1'UIII:•:

U/B Department of Li.ncuitlicS:
331 Ha.yea, 7: 30 p.m.
Eum.tnation of the t:hfee-airat.
um upectual analytic frame of

reference-phonology, morpbology, aemology. Semology - how
ian
mak
diltin

~rom

.:.::..":co;-how u..;

aspectualist coes from con.aideralion of ltructur( to meaning.

or TBI: KIIVDIO.......,
• T/u Phol hot&lt; D
~Probtenv, Dr. ~r!kH:

CIIDOB11IY

f);rler, research aupervisor,
Hooker Chemical Corp., Grand
Island, N .Y., 5 Acheson. 7:30
P·Tru. il the
in a .eries
of ten lectures being preeented by

ninth

~ ofFU!:·a:ir~oth&amp;:sr:~

World Affairs.

WEDNESDAY-22

PSYCHOMAT: 232 Norton. 7-10 p.m.
ai:&amp;A.'IIYI: atAft -c::zrrna• : Bat~

I"'truction, 30'1 Norton,- 7:30-10
p.m. .
_
•
•

SUNDAY-26
ILLUllftADIJ Lllm'UD0

~::....."3!

:

Ricluud.-

:::::;.~~

York State Council on the Arta.
2917 Malia St.; 2 p.m.
This io' tbo laat of a oerieo of
four Joootw. !'f'ODOOred by --the
Scbool ol Ardlitactwe and En..u-...-tal DeoipL

l

Qua

Cy l

t'ck
~
1

~f

ill be •

·i'n

8t

Uti'

e~.e w
gm
p.m.
8::
B:i!!f~uthCC::~~Qfti:,
:

TUESDAY-28
BUFFALO RENAISSANCE FESTIVAL •:

;:~Th:a.O:~.~~~~~nferThis four-piece jazz band from
Kenmore opens a five-day exhibition of local music, crafts, dance
and theatre, sponsored by the
U/ B Student Association. The
purpose ol tbe series of cultural
events, entitled A Fu tival of Butfalo's P&lt;opl&lt;. is to bring the Univeraity and community together
to share the many thin~ that are
unique to Buffalo and 1ts people.
BUFFALO
UNAIBSANCE n:&amp;TIVAL
0

I'ORUll : Portrait of t/u Coordinator: Linda F&lt;IU, 234 Norton,
~~n-2 p.m.,_througb Friday, Dec.
A- portrait of ber wou- ., an
artist.
BUPPALO BEI&lt;A;JBBAN&lt;Z FISTIVAL• :
c_raftl ~mibll Gild D&lt;lriDnllra-

8

111&lt;~

Baroque.

HEALTH ~ Wc.KIBOP• :

A COit-Eff&lt;ctive,.., M..Ul for

~~on~~ceH,ealtliF--·•tyProo-BUII-:
·o,_
-~ f Buli
neu, McMaster Un.iYenity, Rm.

30~e!:r:~rfais~'a :::n:~
aeven

worbhool on pro-

weekly

gram evaluation in health eervica

ir~":e~ce~tbe~e i 1

of

•

1

~~fi.!.':'lfo'rto~;_.!: ~wS! f~,! :fi, ~lllic~~ car;~ ai&gt;d-:r!tP~

aJ]:"

=:. w~=~ f:..~:

~~;._.;~,
D-t-.i.-~- -

CilizeM Squtll'e

&amp;UPPAio BN.us&amp;ANCZ

nsnv.u.•:

YoiUI6'• Tob&lt;l'fiQCle Choir, lit -

tl~~~riay~~ ':i:
Eut Bulfa!o choir, rancing in aae
from 6-25.
SOVIft CJNDU 0

A ;....

:

tt&gt; Lit•

(Rood to Lit•) (Ekk. 1931). 147
Diefendorf, 7 p.m. Free.
Tbio io a oemi~·

=~:a ~""":'-::r!iu::!

into Soviet aociety.
aana , _ ...,._
aMJII'. . # : MAPS A .Multiple
Analyoit Profram. S)fltna for Behtwioral Bcimu:c Raeardt, Rm.
10, ~
8D ,~;!_.P,!!-._

COIIPIJTII&lt;O

=--P!.C.
R
_ i
• dp•

MArz:t

~~ .,.~

.t_"l.._._cleoi.::::;f..:
c-• • _""'! ~ ~~

co-..,_ -"' - - -

..,.. - - ' "
- - "'
ba tba bobaiaoal

-..a•:

~.!'~-~.;._,,i ~t;:- ":::':;~bUd
~ ............. ____.~.......__.... ,.
· -~
• New. 28.
_
....
. - . ·~
,...,
.
.
, _ - anMA•: ' (Me- §r• . = l " £ o n n - o l. tbo
ba,181U-70J.::.~J-•
2, ,Au.wtd
·
tt&gt; And
a~.u.o
-~. ...,...v,•:

N~ .a p.m.

a u r r A L O - - ...,.....

-·~ Nu'VioOoouU~

M_'M- • DoNia Gild Jerry, 281 No-."8 .

P~Bu&amp;Jo_,piehM..,.

at lldl ,..........., l1olidioao aDd the Eria COaaty hlr.

\

IIMic PLOTTBJl ()p-

~ Rm. 12. 4318 Rldp LoO..

~ knowlecl1• ol

Grillth.
_,..., .lJrw&amp; B ...... ..., .
• N
p
c
ty . - - r IOQilY DOtml.8 ru- Powrty, Alllaoi
owe at, Blit
POitUll : •w 0 " " ' 0 "'"""" ' , . . . , 1 Am a F,.itiw F,_ a CN~ .......,., ...... . _ ,
Fonler F'reea!an. coordinator of Cltain Gtm6 (LaRo}', 19821 , 7
• · - 7 !laf
_
ltrto&lt;.;:'T1::';~ aaoond lloor, p.m. TO&lt;Ido of Ellil (Welleo, J.9&amp;1), · IIUW.m -~ - - . • :
A~on onalternative 9 IJ.ID.
-&amp;u.rtt 81. eou.u... -llir .._
formo of Cbriotian exp.-ioa aDd
8lail will be . - , . ba 140 ~.-. '7 p&amp;
COIDDiunity baiJdinl.
~ aDd'
~
llld ............ h
·
~ aeclieY-al
~'!:.~ ~~~,:"'~ ~Da~N=r:;:, IIUI1ilc
S.-t Jlf'1, Coate,_ n-tre,
.
No.-, 2:30 p.m.
p.m.n.. Taaple. Beth-El Caodor ~.~ =•IJ:.",;
..VW.u.o -~ ...,...u.•: will ainl ~ 7 p.a.
_ _ ..,
-

~"::":,=tion.-.u."': 1.=eE!~w:.a'eo~~-

~

S~tUor

4:16 p.m.

·a

-ue--

K - 8eniDr eitizeM Bond,

-."

•UPPALO BDrAIIIIIAHQI: J'SI'nV~ •:

Analunt

Dancinl. 'Haas Louap, Norton,

~~dancing, from polka to :!J..~ T= ~8~0.:: - ~= !._'"'~:_,AL

atre,

.

.•'•.0

Jij.

BroitiMI .W. TINted l.wclry, 7

_.~.,

aDd

~:la~a;:Jlnd~ ~ do!la ~

11

147
7"1!lln.
Mabo recorda the ~t
Film Award .,_allan to Andy

.;

St

BUFFALO BBNAISIWI&lt;Z PI:IITIV_AL

Warlool

•·

t D
h
il P&lt;opl&lt; •• Dr. Jooeph Mandt,
ca. ree · ances are c oreo- superi.ni?'ndent, Bull"alo Pub 1 i e
graphed by Carole Welsh.
Seboola, .econd floor, Norton.
BUFFALo RENAIBSANCE PESTIV.AL• : 7:SO ·p.m.
Jerry Raven, ht tloor cafeteria, BUPPALO RENAI88ANCE PI:IITIVAL• :
Norton, 9 : 30 p.m.
Jon 1 leu c • of the Community
Co~h~~.~~:l~~g~rall:rn Mwic School. 1st floor cafeteria.
include old English and Scottish NT:,~:o::-un will give a ftes:murder ballads in his act.
ible and varied performance,
WEDNESDAY-29
ranging from Renaissance to Goapel music, including a take~ff on
LlNGUlBTJCS L £ c T u a z •: Deep
grand opera.
Structure and Lo1ical Form , John BUJI'II'ALO II:ENAIS8AHca rarrv.AL•:
Corcoran, U/ B Department of Chor/e• Maciver M•morial Pip&lt;
PhiiOBOphy, 33l.Hayes, 11 a.m.
Band, Fillmore -Room. Norton,
Continuation ol an ·earlier lee- 8 · 30 p.m.
ture. 1s Chomsky's deep structure
· Sword daJu:i!l4. the lficbla.nd
the same ., the I~CI8rl'o tradi- Fling, reelo ~ Jip.
tional notion of lopcal form?
BUJIPALO JIDf.AIIISANC&amp; nsnv.AL• :
BUPPALO 11BNAISIWI&lt;Z .....rrrvAL• :
T/u Caledonian Pip&lt; Bond of
Ta!Gs Rock &amp;uul, Fillmote Room. Bu(falD, Fillmore Room, No.-,
Norton, noon.
8 · 30 p.m.
BUPPALO IIENAISIWI&lt;Z Pl:lmVAi.• :
. Under the ~n ol Pipe
Saluatiort Army Gl&lt;• Club Gild
~!cUrr-AN&lt; Bond, Haas Lounge, Alm.y O~pb-;"'Major Robert
BUPPALO BMAISIWI&lt;Z l'll8i'IV.AL0 :
· Iiams, the glee dub program will T/u Court~ Theatv-, lit lloor

7 30

- . . . , . ---~ ........,_ ~
-Ukrainian- dying cJ-making, ~ ICUlptwe,' folkLINODiftD Lllm'UD• : . And u n · paintinp aDd otber uafta.
l.U,.!~iMia, WolfpncWold&lt;, U/B -.&lt;Tm: caAPT .....,.. , Belt. In~t of lJnluiatica, 331 ttrucrion, 30'1 Norton, 1-5 p.m.
JUYeo. 1~ -~-~- m
' •L- BUPPALO a i &lt; - &lt; Z l'll8i'IVAL•:
IndMm IJancinl, Fillmore Room,
- n,.· - - - IDOUill8iao ol 8auth America.
Norton. 2 p.m.
Cii&amp;\ftft CUPT &lt;ZNft8 ~·:
Iludna:, oiqing aDd drumming
' 7 No-. 3-6 \p.m. from tbo:Buftalo North American
lnotruction tbrouP&gt; Indian CUllure Center aDd tbo

~

MUIIC to Encourqe, Rathakeller,
Norton, 3 p.m.
Pieceo from tbe ReD.IiuaDco

BUFFALO BENA188A.NCE FESTIVAL• : ~d FM_~~~a~~i:
Hall, 8 : 30 p.m.
St. Joe's Coll&lt;g~ Btllld, lat Weotam New York Science For
The qua r t e t-in-residence of ftooAr mcaeledtelna,e
· Noror:t:?.~: 8 p.m
_roc.k um. Design~ !R~ middl' MA~
seU/nBta'stbDeepathirtmrdcoenntceofrtMas
.!I"Wpa
·. rtpreof- · .tunby B
1'--rothe
. &amp;DdrGabH- - ~
- teacliera;
u;e publi
18ctureo t are
.....,·• dia•ey
rect.ed
o' pen to
the general
t.
e a
- this year's Slee Beethoven String
e1 Milanese.
"""""'
_.

MONDAY-27

~-:::·c!w. ~·=
:_..

utfAB. ''

aUPP~ a:NA.ura..u..ca PDriYAL•:

Cleveland Quartet , Baird Recital

no
Md~~~~u~"f:!':e~; ·~u~:£~!~7~.;~ !;~,;aJ~r:1;;1~_2 J:!"Zwn~ ~'1,:o'!:Z
~~t-~h!i
o?M::=~t~::d ~:t~~ ~tz~:;~aisd !:,~;t Af~ P~e:::d:!n~C:,: :V:,ALO aENAJliSAHCZ nwrrv.U.•:
Hubert Aquin, visiting professor, out. but a waitinrrlist for returned dru.m.ming at ·their school on East PoeTM and PhotM from "'A City

U/ B Department of French.
The Fenton Lectures are presented each year by the James
FenWn·Lecture Foundation of the
University. This year's program
was a.rraneed by the Office of Cul-

predominantlY for 1trinp. SpoD-

ooNd by

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THURSDAY-30
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�WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
THURSDAY-16
OOCJ.[P.&amp;TIONAL TBI&amp;APY

o0JOWN·

MONDAY-20

li'Y OIBNT.t.TJOH DA.Y• : Featu.rinl'
- - demonitratioDo and films,
Fillmore Room. Norton, 9 a.m.-

,.....,,0.

JH!

which io free and
open _t!'~Uc. will _include'
pr.entatiorw on: comm.umty .-y.
cbi.8try. prevention, home care.
6

:e:.~~i!ti:!:

activities of daily livinJ, eoaluation and treatment principleo, ac-

=~ =~yp::'tL~fu'n~
·

-of occupational therapy.

:':.:"'i~~J~

~";~.
D~!';d
Oplop, Jr., Tbe WNJ&gt;t lboti~,

Boeltdi~. e.Jifo'rnla'; ~ C:.S1,

4230 ·Ridp Lea, 1 p.m.
a!EATM: ClW'I" CENDII 0

OJMn Slwp,

8()7

:

'

Leather

Norton, 1-5 p .m .

I.u. WORKBBoP• • : D~cUiom, D~­

cUWM, DecUWM: What Should
My Major &amp;?, 232 Norton, 3
p.m.
PACULTY OP SOCW. SCDI:NCES A
A.DJON181'1i1A.TION POIIUM• : lmprovinl Ortanizctional Theory and
PrtUtU:e. Karl E . Weick,
:!n.!j1

profes=::ueo•:!tC:

llity. Rm. 14. 42« Ridge -Lea. 3-5
p.m.
Partic:i.panta • the panel dia- . , inciMe ~ foii~U/B
faculty :· Dr. Edwin 1'. Hollander,

~FSSolA; Dr. L Vaughn
.._t of ~\i~:r~;.,~;

Rayuiobd G. Hunt, prof..ar, De~t of l'syc:hoiOcY; Dr. &lt;John
.M. 'l'boaulo, ~r, 8c:bool of

~JM.,aa;l R!:...~::

~ •- a~~.
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::J

AU- 8!;:~~t~n·s::=: U[.l:

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nu. is the tt·a«ic true-life story
of Jack Johnson, the black heavyweight boxer who wu champion
of the world, and the white &gt;'.merica which was unwilling to sanelion him. The film is an effective
indictment of the Jailure of the
Department to practice
j u at ice. . Starring James Earl
Jo""!'- .
,

"""tioe

OON&lt;DT

,

LINOUDinca. LIOCTIJU• : The Lcm-

0

:

Buftalo Feotival pre-

-Ia ~ W-inter, Kleinhans
M~ta at 8
$4.50 and "$4

J.tg;,

8alii6 ~ ol ~

~....,..__,..... Berth to

feW f!l the -

m tbio -

he doeo

work. '

YC~CB•: Attri6utiaft an4 P~rto-. U. the
&lt;lou ·Or-chem:a, Karl E . Weick,
prof- of llli&lt;bolc&gt;u ...a .or-

110CU.L PSYCBotoaY

_....._"' lilliaYior,C::or_!l;tll
~·
Rill. c..a;., G80 Hidae

the Norton Hall
"

POL&amp; Do\NCINQ 0 :
luatraction ilrbasic atepo cbu-inl
lint bbui, 30 Diefendorf An.-,
8 P_..m. ,
•
H1B PL&amp;CI: co~o~•: LiVe
muoic and a 8lm, The Son Wor~. 803 ToilawUda St (olf
Hltilel}, 8 p.m.
A l l - of the Univenib&lt;
OIIIIIIIIUnity .... mvit.ed to attend;
oftaNo\TIOl&lt;AL

w=.;

:=/.';"A':"'~ T~62

sts.!'~!~

listing

~o~

datails.

UNIVZIISITY OP!ZA STUDIO•:

L"Or•

mindo (Cavalli), Baird Recital
Hall, 8 : 3!1 p.m. .
~ 'Th~ listing for details.
D&amp;PAa'l'IIDfJ' ._ OP ~_;r!I&amp;A'IB ra&amp;Dt'·
TATIOH 0 : Sir, Sam Finkel

y..,.·,..

for &lt;loeeph
A%minoter, Theatno Studio, Harriman Hall 8: so· p.m.
~

Dead and The Service

See 'Thuaday listing for details. '
AU.

·AI..I.oENBURBT COPnZB008•;

~ulsF~~-f-~~

A~ 480-~.m.-1

frieD&amp;,
a.m.
SpoDOOred by" the- Allenhunt
HQUOe Council, . the Colfeohauae
~~anoc:heap

SUNDAY-19
CAC eu&gt;m'AL• : Featuring a day

C!r~..!:;
llli-V~t4'7Diof: ~~ 12 '
by' tbe Soeii1 pq:- :..::=~-8=~ ~:::::_=-.:r
Tbeatno, Norton, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
~~ · -ObaiP
\ ~le ~'.......,:
Life. •
.
:~
. All children of the Bulfalo com-

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111m cmmJa _,._,..;a:' ~ 331 Hayeo,.u a.m.
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f::~::•~!locr!,.~'r;::d
Sr. SL Hugh, Francis- · Andrew - A Play in Re..Um- BIOCREKI8TRY SEMlN.U# : Haptocan nun, born in Knockanure, b1"tl11«. For ticket information. f!:~~~ee~i~b~W:~':!':::,
County Kerri, Ireland, will be call 885-4187. FUnded through
speaking on the subject or__.tree,; Model Cities and New York Slate Studiu and Comparison~ w i t h
dom for all people, regardleu of Council on the Arts.
1-~~yg:h;-t,~~~-t!"~:
dent, U/ B Department of Biore~~~~~~~~~;!;~·by the uNiVERsiTY OPERA STUDIO•: L'Or- chemistry,
145 Capen, 3:30 p.m.
mindo (Cavalli) , Baird Recital
Student Association Speakers'
8
Bureau.
KUBIC LEC'I'URE/DEMON'BTKATION•:
H'll!;. T~=y listing for details. Featuring Kathy Berberian, .0.
aJ.OCH&amp;K18T&amp;Y RrVTWA&amp;# • Control
o~ TBIIA7!111 , _.
prano, Baird Recital HaiJ1 . 3: 30
of In!liatw1t
SViUhw leP.uinDINT
TATION• : Sir. :;cm7llild You',.
p.m.
·
UNlVDSlTY OI'DA STUD10°: L'Or- in E . coli. Dr. Charles Helmate~
Dead and Thelkr;pice for.&lt;lo«ppt
cou.a OF~ SCIDI'Minclo · (Cavalli), Baird Recital ter, Department of Bioloi!Y, Roowell
P
a
r
k
Memorial
Institute,
Axmin.Bt~r,
Theatre
StudiO*
Har·
czs
u:cTUR£•
:
Planning
and
AnHall, 8:30p.m. Through Sunday,
G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
9
Ji~=y3&lt;fu'ti:g lor details. alysia of Scientific Experiments.
N~ iuJiy-staged production of INTERNATIONAL COFFEE HOtJB• • :
the 17th century opera ia: directed Open to all foreign and American
ALLENHURST OOFPEEHOUSE• :
by Muriel Hebert Wolf. Musical s tude n t s, facul ty and staff.
~=~i'V1, f':~d'
~ Diefendorf, 4 p.m.
director and conductor is Harriet Schoelllwpf Lounge, 4-6· p.m.
Simom; score adaptations are by
Schenk an:rEric . Levine. Apt ~~'1f~~Tl0!&lt; ~# :
Robert Donington. Admission: Hn.u:L SABBATH SERVICES A DIN- 490-A, 9 p.m.-I a.m.
.
"7 m. ,
, 4238 • .._.Lea,
ge.neral _public. $1.50 faculty staff NER• : Dinner at 6 p.m., services
Sponsored _by the Allenhurot
~ io the final lecture of a
andll/B alumni, $1;; studen'ts, 50 at 8 p.m. , with Torah study sescents.
._
sion led by- Dr. Justin Hofmann, House Counci!. _the Coffeehouse five--~rt aeries ..on the simulation
hsa free admisonon and cheap , facilities at the U/ B Computing
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.
·
Center.
~~ir.o~~m;~et"~·'!~;
Reservations for dinner must be macks.
Dead and The Service for Joseph made by Thunday night, Nov. 16.
SATURDAY-18
Ar:mi.Mt~r. Theatre Studio, HarUUAB CONcmT!: An Evening of
riman Hall, 8 :30 p.in.
Jau with W eather Report and CREATIVE CRAFT CEN'J'E&amp;•: B~8in·
TbeiJe two one...act plays pre- special guest Mose AUiBon, Fill- ning Belt lrutruction, 307 Norton.
oen.t.ed hy the Department in as-. more Room. Norton, 7: 30 and noon-4 p.m.
oociation with the Center for Tbe- 10: 30 p.m.
CAC PILM 0 : The GreaJ WhiU Hope
~rch.th~; ~f~r::.- N~~:N' .fuke~n ~~t .~~ (Ritt), 140 Capen, 7: 46 and 9:46
18. Sir .io a 'ln:rleaque written by d~nta, - $2.50; faCulty 1 stalf and p.m. Tickets at 75 ce.nta are avail.
ab!e at the Norton Hall Ticket
Mortari Lichter and directed bY"" ahomtU. $2.75; general adnUssion, Office.
David Chamben, .hath uoiotant $5.
·
0
I}~~~ a~ud~{!~ CAC PILM : The Great White Hope UUAB PILM 0 • : The HoapitGl (lfi\,
d.irectea hy student Abby Raven. (Ritt), 140 Capen, 7:45 and 9:46
Gen....U aclmiooion is $1; students, p.m. Tickets at 75 oenta are avail·
50 ~Ia.
~~t the Norton Hall Ticket A~on .~ ·
2 p.m.

UICT'URE 0

~~~..tf. .
.... of Nauvl s,.u,.;Dr. 'l'bcm,
S"torer, U/B ~ 01

PaulL Garvin, U/B Department
of Linruistics, 331 Hayes, 11 a.m.

The trio includes: The Firot

University, 244

Scic:laled•·A ~will-r;,u_
. tn Rlii."16 at 6 p.m.
·
- - - . r : Pint 11oor ~eteria, mm ........ : .The .Naui#!tor
N""""' 3-!P.m. -~
. · _ ~~~-rfiad,ltpCria
.m. p, 1924. ) , 147
....~uu
Free
OOUXlfiUitJ)(# : Vortu:a
Two· rich y ouths accustomed to
_i»td '!fhttr _ERect• an .loacph«m. 6on1tant ~arvic:e fiDel themeelvea
.""""""""· T . A. Ful~ BeD alone ahaard a dioabled oceanI..boratn.,_, Murray Hill, N.J., liner. Tbeir (mis)iDterpretations
111 ~rH!J:.-:-u!wfieoh- of the meclumiao of -eveeyday n- I a .m 112
r, 3:80 - iateaoe form the. moat of the
p.m.
'~
otory. Starridc Buster Keaton.

M

LINGUI81'IC8 lBC'I"tJD• : Po~ .

a!UI!UilUft'm:ina•: , Belf]j,_

•tf'"IICiirNo, T NOi'tall;: l,&amp; p.m.

·

.

UUAB"ru.K••: ThePotpital(Hiller, fll'l2~~ n..tre.
.H~
,._for~

~ JDOVJM

lltii'PALII

,_ will

~~
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WGal&lt;·

ailor_•: A Blacli Tri&lt;&gt;, 1762"14ain
~ . 8:80

p,m.

_,...

.

:

munity are welcomo to lbe-feotiY~ indbile dawna,
and aamea.
Tb8re il no admiaion ebarce;
be on ·oale.

itieo, which

BILl&amp; DlllfCB•:

In

~zatiOD

wit!' tho ~:and P Cbal!ter of the

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

�~-

..W.,

I, coL 4}

(~,._ __

at~ · 6

a.m.··

tmdlni'tiuwe - - - '· 'WIIued - at ' approzimafeiY !':t~~..::::l
~ IJMistiption CXIfttinuiJII. •war.~ quil* ~ b.F
notice it

'lbe radio

IUIIl

9fl4tn, A IIOIHitudent , . ~ ·aecWtw~ EIUI!d: to . .
usaUitod bY' an preblmd the ~ It Ill
unknown mate" who. bl!lit" him; believed tba• ~ ~ lbe face, ClaUIUif~ ~-. ll!l8idbilln
Hall. JnwatlIDCh eqt abowl tile
l -eye .Ption iilto tbla matter ia oaaIUIIl J ..awo~~en
ad 11• linuili&amp;',
• .
bruloed f&amp;ce.. -He
medi- •. 9tdl72 A .wdmt .-idm,
eal ·tnatalent IUIIl • follow..up Ia .........._ ••·:.· __._. .... -~
~ .-Jed that lie
• .,..... nau ~-~~
W!IJI)d
~ liwful .try Into IWI.room and

.-ted beiq

aoa
reti.-1

.-act

·

'.mo-.
~ liD~
~ Caae
'

com-

l

-S/111'12, ii. 08DIPIII aecurit&gt;' ·
o6er
the 8ftelit of a
lliiiHtudint oil ...... of JICIId. a ,dmalarOiJs •~-.
.
&amp;t cleaver. ~
be 8lleaediY. replied. "'f I pt
jlllllpec( I'll' ,_ u 011 IID,)'body
tbat jump&amp; me, IUIIl rn oame
out 011 tnn," Caae c1.-1 pomd. .__..."':!:,,
•
1111 ,......_. ~·

.,.,rtod

=

m::

~ ....wd':.k. :':..:

91!9{72·;~~~

T.'f:::ent
of Tower Hall,. on
cbarp ol 'crimillal

~

~

'ollllakm p~ 011 a ........,t
iaaoed -in ~·- 1972; c:balJinl
lbe sluilalt 1nlh the ~
from ~ear
of a lllalea
Hall.
a...lUI
awai&lt;'ns
.....,.......
1
~
~

· 9119172,,CampusaecwityinYll8tiptod lhree bulletin board
fires In the Nortoo Union~
ment IUIIl first
areas. Jn.
vestiption revailed tbat per....._...._ ·~-tl started
~~-~~1m, In
'---'-t. As 80011
tba
........,..
as
t one

;:

aludoata .

.r:;;;;

a'*

u,!

.=:..:·==

1'8~~
~ tbeft.ot. tr!Utwatdlftlued

at t&amp;O·in the aame 1*ldeat.
~-)!dJa~t ~ ':'::.eateredln
__,_
.... ~-.. . wu llili8n. ID.....tip.li\111 oaa-

tin ·
~
:J:ft12. A _student ftlllidinl
In TOMir- Hall reported tfia.81try into· ru. room and lbe .dieft
of approxima.iely1i In aui1
plllli a ·.watch val
at $50. InYll8tiption leV
. a DOD~~
lble entry u it.
believed.
~the room , _Jaft_ ..un9128172, T.wo campus security otficers
rtod the &amp;m!et
of a DOD~t, In Norton
Union on criminal tzapso
cbaraes._· o u·r t p~
pending
9129t72, Two students residinB In Macdonald Hall reported
the unlawful entry into !heir
room aDd the theft of. approzimatel'y'$43· 1n~casb. Entry wail
~ through an unlocked
9130!72 A tud t
·.o:n.•
s en l'l!fll.....,.
In Clement Hall reported tbat
her room was unlawfully entered. Seventeen do II a r s In
forrthan.!'l'"l)
COilUilJI conce, • wo
·
f~~- peHrsonal psperslaw ere
;;',.;n
U:~ ter re·•·•. • .· • •
_ · . ·

Speakers' Bureau to Present Imng, Kozol

?.

British

::=.t.
~...,made~tive~'i::
tbeae lncidenlil but :lnvestlp.-•
tion is

and 8zperieoce as "mental ill-

~"

·~

L11iDB

is cuneDtly In private

BU!eau.

"
and later served aa directoc of
.LainB will spesk Monday the LanJI}wn 'Ciiliic In LOndon.
(November 13) at s p.m. In the From 1961-07 he UDdertoolt re'
·Fillmore .,__
Norton. A sellrcb Into ,families imd the
• ....,...,
role thev play
~·~"'" 8
dGefiniSA.'!e top1c has ':"'t ~talk.set. schizop~c heba~-........,
IS co-spo_nsortDJI ....,
. smce· 1965 • ·'-II has
. '---Kozol will appear Wednes- chairman of
Pbilaili!l~
Ajlsociation, a . climt;v .con·
Fillniore ROom at ·p.m.
IS
oemed ·w 'i th develcipmi apexpected to discuss free schools. t,~,n~es to problems ...._,..._ m
·
Laing, whoee Polilics of Ex· s view, are c:rea.;dbY'lie~u.n,ce 1\!ld Kf19tll '(a ~ '!f finpl_
g certain forma of hebavior

m

th:"'

~Y &lt;l'l.~.!628·~~~.
=

w'f: 17

treiDe ~ 'i n communication; fsmiliea, and the varielies of humiln ~His books also Include Self
and Olllera, T._ Dw
' '-'-d Self,
Sanity, Mad~ and
Fami.l
and TL?~
}!olilil:s of the
is best known for his
moVing &gt;personal account of lhe
deb
. ti
f
d
apd~n 1n° the &amp;,;"'::,~
schools, Death at an Early A•e.

~I

"the

""

d
.
i
• sa

. . ., Regents Ask'lricrease(lAid .for:'Piivaie s~hOOls

CXIftlinuinl .. .auapect.s

::....~

poems) were bolh """!f"!S bestsellers, · s tudied medicme
· . at
GiasJ!ow University, where he

::~~SA~; ~tl~ta-=~rnn! ~:.,.,:: .:.~Y:..::

~·~=~ ~and ~-~(ts

one either on the first
"•·r or m· .... '---'-t. ~..-:

Allllther

cbiatrist-poet R.D.

• •:n~ and
. JIBYeducational cn'tic'
J01111tban Kozol ~ 'appear on

-

9119172
BIUdeitt
lbe tbelt •ofA the
rear reported
bumper
from a ·1972 Voll&lt;swagen while
it :p,uUd m-the GOodYear
PBrkilui lol Looa approximately $60.~ . ,
.
· 9/Z2172, Two CIU!IPUS aecur.fty o1fieera ~rted !hi! anest
01 a llllli«udent on disorderly
coaduc:t c:baips. He wa8 arftlllted for ~ fil!iitinl!
with a tsnaJe ~t outside
the ac-t dormitmy 1 ·
Court prooeadiap PfllJdir&gt;l~
9/,23/72, A QIIDpU8 aecurity
...-_,
..__ -..J...:n
- - 011 ..... _ . v Of a
DDIHtudent, aie 14 anealed

--~

-

A. pro~~
'or ,·ncreased
a·- ••
State financial suppart of postsecondary . education for 197374 has been Called for by the
State Board of Repnts.
, Their recommendations,
which' must be ~deled by
the Governor- and the ~
lure, include increasecl fundj,nJI
of the·"Bundy'' approach to diroot flliancial .aid t.o non-public
colleges; an expanded ocbedule
.of scholar incentive awarclt..for

e~ar
- 1--~·-·uThus,. the .larpst · segment
of the financisl package involves a new and hiBher l!l'hed·

'l-e a~
·private institu~
tioiJs, 111111e •
ts BcboiAr. shi
.
. P8. a new Procran&gt; of tnmsIIDIHiudlmt, fOr JJimlic liiwd~ fer incentive .grants for grad, _ in tbat it ia .Uend·tbat h8 uates of community and junior
apoeed •
~- •
co~ restoration of full
date. ~
lundinB of the Einstein and
PI'CIC8IIibui
· Sohweitzer dlairs, and cootinu· 91261.'/f; A
Jlll!llibei' of a~ of• the Lehman fellowNan. UniOD npOrted tfiatlle- shipi for ~uate' sq,dy.
~ lbe bo1iDJ of 1 a.m. IUIIl
'The 118Ckaae, ilimed at mili. 8:3l) -.m, 011 9125/72, $476..86 . ins a cf e qua 't e financial 1&amp;·· ill auilwu tabli from lbe aale IIOIUCe8 available to both&lt;stuIn the R«nnation Alee of Nor- dents and· institutions, reprebi UniOil. ImiiiiltiptioiJ .m!O sents · a $61 million increase
flile !n~two c:UiiP\Is "!8' autborized current e.pen_...
ia~ ditures.
, .
""
.......
To meet the top pnon''ty of
. . . IUIIl u Ill ..........
~
.._...._,n_ and
~~ ~ ~
~ edtiaD .... noilehad.
•
• ·qUire~...,.!.. 10
~4ail· tbeButr.loi&gt;GUce State's
of pos~.

·J::de::t

.t.H

wiii"'b:.

ule of Rel!ents Bcbolar incentive
psymeiits for students attendin11 non-public Institutions. Tbe
new &amp;Cbedule ·would increaSe
the' ~um -payment from
the present $600 to $900 In the
first .year, wilh the total 006t
increasing from $27 million to
$M million. In lhe second
year,. the maximum award
would increase to $1,200 and
.... tote! ~t P&gt; $71 milli'on.
...,
In the third and sucoeedin11
years, the m a " i m u m award
would increase to $1,500 and
the total 006t to $104 million.
Individual awards are scaled
down by roUJihly ten per cent
for each $100 of net taxable Income, j.mtil the &lt;;U=~int of
$20,000 income is
. No
awards are to be made above
tbis level
In addition, private schools
enrollin11 Bcbow· ~live recipients Would 'be __ ,__, to
•..,..~~
eotshlisb
• p~-· of
_ ..... ,n~
student aidp;;;;;rd;ns
ships~ to·;,;,-.;:u;w of the
acbolar~ incentive payment received for esdi iltudent from a

.;;;,r;;:..

,-

d:-

ay-.n

•

•

years to compie te their bacca...., current year, some 5,laureate deJ!ree because of ill- 090 students are reoeivinll these
ness, poor academic prepara- services at a cost of $1;350 per
tion, reduced course load, trans- •\!ldent. For 197~74, the Refer from a community colleJ!e, gents recommend an increase
or other reasons.
,
In the,' support level to $1,500
In. another cbanl!e in scbolar for lower division students
incentives, the Regents recom- while ~etaining lhe $1,350 figmend dropping ·l he requirement ure at the upper division. They
lhst lhe initial $200 of ttiition project an enrollment of 6,300
be payable by students reoeiv- in the PI'Oif8JD.
ing lhese awards if lheir family •net taxable income is $3,000 qr
In a new proposal, the Reless. TKe deductible amount pnts recommend creating
would be reduced from $200 to transfer :n--"'ve a--'- for
$100 f
dents .
.....,.,...
wouue
or stu
with a net llfllduates of two-year colleJ~e&amp;.
taxable bslanoe between $3()()'1 'Jbeae awards woUld be In·
and $6000.
tended for . N- York State
'Bundy' l'ropam
·
·
residents holdinB an ·associate
The secOnd qest BeJIIDIDlt del!ree from either a ~·hHc or
of the overall package Involves pri'Y!lte Institution wftbi; the
incniased funding of the "Bun- · Stat.. and. aeelliDI to emoll In
dy" program of direct financial ~18 p!OIDIIIIII olfe!ed
aid to non-public Institutions, by•llllll-PIIblic lnatitutious. .
callin11 for roughly a 38 per
'lbe max1iJwm litipomd ....Wd
cent increase, l[iilh the larpat he. ~ for studenta wlih tampsrt allocatod to undel'JifBduate Uy D8t taxable Income of $2.·
degrees. The Rel!ents propose 000 ... lea Award&amp; ....Wd be
that ·the payment for escb bach- scaled down 88 1noome Inelor's dellfee be increased from ·~ wllh 1111 --'~ -nted
$400 to $800,· ·for ,....,_,
--'- ......,..,..
--~-'s -.
•·to -.__..,_
wi...•WIIRIII
...., 000
deJII'(le, from $400 to $600· IUIIl net~ ~ ~
for escb ·doctoral ~ ·from would he limltad to dJe two
$2,400. to -$3,000. In adilition, years IIOQ!I8IIy .-led to com·
·they would heJ!in a $300. psy. plata lbe ile,ree pJOp8ID. The
l. n • ' - -

~Ja.~~""te
~at!re..~~"t;!; ~Oci:~::...~: ::~, ~~~==to~!~
· ·
.
RepiJta.'"'lbeir .aaaJ. ia to bave also he n!qUi.red to.llinit.tuition W?u!d cost $43 million, or $12 also be limited to an IUDDIIIIt

inveaiiPtiaiL

an

• 9ZJ'IJG'ociri,;A
llluiJeat ~ ~
'
ceal ol all' 4il!b .aiOol

-

iDcnlaaes in' any ye8l to
IDilllon m !Ire · than · current tbiK ....wd DOt recJuoe net tuitliiltiDue . ·m· 8111118 amount
tied tO the rate of in- levels.
./'
l
tion -·-""'-'1.....1- ..._, t s~te
--~ of CX181:s per
• student at ·
"'-.a - - ' ...,__t •'-, _ _ - .... A "'
ol pOet r Ol'ldlury am-. ..,.__
• ...,. •D--ents
...,
- . -• ...., ,.., Uni__.._
~ tion by 1980 'Ibis
~ inRitutioba. ' .
ad~ ~- would eDable
.n.;'R:&amp;....ts ____ .. in·
.='..:.~·= ·
full-tiJM ~ ~lJ!I!IIr&amp;lbwill-...aue;.the . Pf!V.ate IIIStitutions
to majntain ~~ ihe ..:=7Re~
aUelJmaDt from 481'.!!00 in q,ition ~ between DOD -tuilevela.tion at, 0! 'doae to, jii'I!III!Dt atiiillri;'C o II e 1.e . Scbolanhips
- - . _ ........... . 1Jr/
.~.:a~u -~ ou.. in- Jll!lltic institutioaa an ... _ - '
_....._.. _..__.. .. ~ to equal 10
~
m~.........,"':oaJ.t band;illldSUNYand:GUNY -TheRege!lts~, :;.,-.;~ofhil!h
~~City u~. oa the olbw. 'Ibis aliould per. =:.:..,~~ of'tl!e lfillher' !diDOIINduata 'lbe tat "'!'·

·ua~aw~u~

;:.:-

___._. tbe

_._ ....._.....-'-- -

-

....
..
·, . . .-.-...-m.:.
_
.. . . .,.·-:a. rn:-;;::=·:.=: =
r.:::..r:=::.::
~
:-f;

....... . . .
_.. . !lift

= .e.,.

~ ~ fu"=~Of~ ~- ~~~~~==.to ~~.:

,IDIIIiillt.41
•
claita-•nptii•I!W"'d .
(lllins_a put 'of lbe 42.· to n.::..,aerved and In aid III8Dta'd Cr....a l8,IWO fte'~
' '-'l.....Wilb'"Ae'lllb!lta~- 000 YUUit '·UIJ!Ieilraduate ,._..._ ~- su-ilfa ip. ~~-•
4,·
. ·....111 1t •
1111 ~.-.. ~"lhe B4!iiata~~ • .. .......~ ~ bas JII'Orided aeo
-a tionaJ
1.913-74.
· ......,....,.
.
· · ......._. ,_ a..a -.. . ~n£::t/•.PD
1 -m ~= te!!tiJII.
-~:.a~_,mend•·
oil*:' T I IJJI!III!I
• .
lie
for
6 ~~~
fl.lfn&amp;.A~,........._.
!' ..._
dllila ' J
...___..___,.., . ~ bave "--~ -'-•- 1o ..::::.:'!

.olD........._. ._....

... ·

--~..:.- :cf!lll!'e ~.15• ~- =ta~ ~

Ja

~~
.. ~~~ ~~.• : "
01·"'

' l•-";~.1;'"- .
""'!'

-~

..__..
' " •

--~:.

'''"o

N~•. 'tA',j f' &lt;:&gt;

..,..

,_,.....,

,__

POSkecoadary.m-tioa.

S:ta· ~

·~

~ fo t1 ~

.n v-

I •'

•f'Lo

:J!J u:t'~ :")

�,·
.N.~

9, 1912

TV "Attack'
Show Taping
.
Here Today

�"!.......-. !1.

1912

c:o,ioon ..,._,
ILTON; Feb. 2. OIDO U.; Feb.
Feb. 7, at RIT;
Feb. 10, AIC; Feb. · 16, ITH·
ACA; Feb. 17, ITHACA; Feb.
24, OSWEGO; Feb. 25, OS.
WEGO; Mar. 3, ECAC II
Championships.
wust'LING. Nov. 17, .at East
Stroudsburg Open; Dec. 2, at
Oneonta State Quad; Dec. 6, at
Brockport; Dec. 1.3, at Oswego;
Dec. 16, LO.CK HAVEN
STATE; Dec. 28-29, Wilkes
Open,&lt;::. W. P08t .Toumament,
Midlands Tournament or Sunshine Open; Jan. 12, Geneseo;
Jan. 17, CLARION STATE;
Jan. 24, RIT; Jan. ·27, ATH·
LETES IN ACTlON a n d
ARMY; Jan. 30, BUFFALO
STATE and GUELPH; Feb.
3, at Cortland with Syracuse;
Feb. 7, at CII!Veland State; Feb.
10, at Califomia (Pa. ) State;
Feb. 16, 'lit Maryland with
Navy; Feb. 23-24, State Cham·
pionabipg at RIT or NCAA Re·
gional at Cincinnati; Mar. S-10,
NCAA Finals, SeatUe, Wash.

a, omo u.;

�during the ImagiNations Festival, which continues through
November 19, includinJ: "Red
Paalm" &lt;Hungary ) , wumer ol
the grand pP7.e for diteetion at
the"Cai\nes '1972 Festival; "Kovacs!" (U .S .)-; sketches by the
late Ernie Kovacs; · '"The Tar
Dealer," Denmark'i olf"J.cioil .,.._

~-:.w.,~~:

rector Satyajit Ray; "Memories
of Underdevelopment" ( Cuba),
banned until recently a!lfl ·
called by Vincent Canby "the
best Latin American film to be·
aeen.in N..,.Yort fn 12 y-~-.
and ''PuniShment i'art" ·' by ·
Peter Watkini.

wo~,!t ~cks~=%

special 8e88ions.
lmagiNationa is being-funlled
in part by the New York State
Council on the Arts. Ticketa
are available at the Norton tic-·
ket olfioo at a reduced rate before the Festival (students: ·
$1.20 b e.f ore Fridey; $1.50
thereafter) .

Kane Heads .
Publications

�6

~
- .. .

..

~

.Boye~ Seems Optimistic on Budget ·
At the suNY·Senate's
Ffdl Meeting
.
.
cern

By MARVIN FElDMAN.

.-

., -

.

~ ol ~ f:-a!ty,
It woul!l- tbat.thlft i(ltlime

-

SUifr -

.

cn-ia~"' ..,d- flmdamen~

a!-t IJOII8ible

-

in the

Pol.lcil;e d the Board ol 'l'niBtees. 'lbe Committee felt that
the Jllopeir view of by-laWII in

The Fall -ting · of the subetance to the ClODCinl: . &lt; o
SUNY Senate took place on
CbaDeeUor Boyer a.dli' it· the Jipt _or collectM! ll810tiaFmt.Y, October 20, on the cam- ~ that t!"!"e lliOUid. be no"' lion Ia 'dial by-laws should. be
· pus .ol the &amp;ate University Col- . _....,tenll aCtion 'by his alice - Cllll8iclered as infra: lepl doculeae at Broctport. Like all · on die m.atla!' ~
- wi~ menta. .T his lllellll8 that the
"""""""' in the State sys1em, out a pnor m
aid . ·~ of tbe by-laWII are
' other -than Bulfalo. it aeems to fuU debe~ by the .
8eD-c • to be ~by the .Ovemance
be in the IIDal phase ol an • ate. It Ia l'8ll88llrUII to hiler procedur88 at eei:h campus and
extensi.., buildil!l ptopam
that notbinlr will be done pre-. are not iubject to negotiation,
In bia:olM!Dinl ~ chan- cipitoualy; yet I mllat report but violations or by-laws are
ce1Jor Boyer a11o1re in a ...m that a careful reedhur ol his the proper subject of ~
that ooninuoted - oharpty with ~ suaests ~t t6e Cban-. Ullder the contnct.
the sJooaly view ol the put ceiJor .. UDeqWvocally opThe report ol the Committee
two yeua. A noie of caulioua · Ix.ed to l'Mtric:tions on ~- on Fair Emp~ ~
opfimiam W. aMDided.- In h\ ~-oonbatat or~ , produoecl a most JllliPW die. lilbt o1 iD&lt;reeaed ltiWliiUII6. the ... ...,_ ve &lt;OIDe ·-""" .lcir .cusoion. · There - iolld- -.up~ will once qain be a the establl8bment ol-ft!li&lt;!nal port for the ~ ·ol ~
pVwtb budpit albeit in nioaest ~ The 6haDcellot fi!s-· peraonnel to im{&gt;lemimt :_fair_
proportioaa. He.. ·ftnda 801il! ~ between two qwte employment practices and )llao
support.· for· the Uni-afty- in bediKenmt tnie'!- One type ~ to provide aaf~ to insunl
bodl the execuU... and t.ilislato es~lisb '! ,_...... .tbe hiring of pereaope1 symtive bralicbes o1 ..,..,....._t r- board, a kind .of DIIDl-~ or patbetic to the .-J8 of the
and die~ -..,.mat
~ would ~te . pi'Op'IIDL The senate
'!Pthe .Univenity, 80 much in eri-• ti
t ~thinofthe~ Ix.ed. ""--· ~lm"!C!!tion
delx. fD y~ ' !"'&gt;DO....._,..
"'UL'I
tha~ all or the
'
t;..,
to.bavelarply dillsipatsd. ·~. but with ~V::,.I:- p&amp;nlOIIDe) of this 'P"''NDD IIIU8t
Realrictionl on · out-ol-state atitutions_as well.
r
llawl and sabbatical leave have Boyer flatly ~ such a . - - - - - - - - - -

::t;::·

w...

~~~:.':! r.:;;;en~ ~~o:!,~
mainly to c1o with the optimal -ReiJOI!IU AdYJSOry • Ceuncila

uae of - .
·
In refereace. to the Master
Plan, Cbancellor Boyer said
that the respoiiSe 80 far .bas
t-n favorable,
seemed well
aware. " " - - · of the limitations of such plans, ~Y ·
for a •• .....:.· s•'"'·-.
next
-ac 'Q~
phase of_planning is for each
campus til develop its own
M.- Piau which should articurate with the oven111 p~
and provide details for imple"·- "'·-·tly the Chan
menIa _ .. ._....
·
cellor,
the Presidelit of.foe
the Norton
Selia~ and a studeut leader partiopatsd in a
discussion of the Master Plan
which was taped and filmed
and presumably copies were
ma~e availabJ!! to. each campus.
This should l'iovide an excelleut point of departure for understanding and discussion of
the Plan. (This tape .of tbe
Master Piau discussion is available for yiewing via our Instructiona! Communication Center
in Foster Annex_ )
o.- f o r T - ~~was a....., of
"! umasmess.aboiit the.
imposition of quotas
ten.urecl ranb. He nbtsd .
that· m...,,.......,..or Gould

He

comprised of the adminlatralors
!*'cb institution in a ' given
plllOI1. Three of these bave
&amp;lready ~ formed, and !heY

of

~ an !"'por?mt ooordmatmg _function With both comm'!"'ty. _colleges and private
uruvenutles.
The Chan 11 touched
ce or
. upou
a n~ of o_ther lop1cs, reempha,sizmg his support for
fair employment practices, for
by-laws on all campuses to
strengthen faculty ....U.vance
and
•· '
SUPport for discretionary
f~ \0 promote ·merit and
eqwty.
Pursuant to the interest of
o'!r own ~te Execu~ve Comm1ttee, I raised'! 9uestion about
!he current--position _o f_SUNY
m lendinlr legal JISSIStilnce to
staJf members wbo become embroiled in costly litigation aria~g out of their University- duties. '"!e Chancellor recognized
the &amp;eriOUSile98-_o f tbe problem,
but notsd that tbe State has
narrowl;.r circumscribed the
area of lts responsibility. .
·
~ ll8pcwts .
T1;&gt;e Fall -meeting of the Senate tends to produce fewer re.....
""""' -"'-- for ·-"on _ no
doubt beCause many commit~threathe"'=-'t" unde~ · tees are newly reci&gt;nstitutsd.
WI
.~u of the· Budget
The Governance Committee
to establi8h a SIJ.30.30.10 ByB- haS foc:used 011 the -tiori of
18m. at in other worda a limit the status of local campus by::t~ per cen_t on~ ranks. laWH. In a - number of SPA
•...., · - t ,_.,.. bad grievance cases at Step
the
much force, eopei:!ally as it State baa maintained that by~ duriDa a.l't'riod of rapid laM are O!iteide tbe purview~
faealty ,.,..._ and be does the SPA agreement· and therenot. _ . _ It to be !""ft!Dt fore are not grievabh,_ u sua,
llOiicr. N~ judging a view were to prevail, 'botii
~--til ~Dade by some campus
and SPA
·......,~~an ..._m,g that quota : grievance prooedures woUld t,.;
&amp;ylllema - . i iD eiree:t a't - - drastically Ulldermined. In ita
taln local C8IIQJU8I!8 and from 'r eport, the Committee pointsd
· IDiiltion of a IIBIIo eii'eulallecl · out_ that J'OWI!'IWlCle is I'!ICOII- ·
8!"0PP the SUNY ~ . · nlJled, ~ to. or al.fuded
._ ~ ~- '1""" "· to in theM.- Pia; ol1.972,

-

- - ...._-

'NIEWPOINTS .rDo,1-wo·a.
un. n1ninr- ZI.rrnpy_riour.
' ,
,
n~yK.J n~

groube.,.p.thermem
•womenbers.

or minority

n~

Try t·L....:
'Ot:Ceni lY.L
11,.._,_;~;'
IlK oulU C,U U

The report of the Senate
Happy Hour at tliil Tiffin
Committee on A..ibrary Re- Room will be '-·-'- il
"""""""' ~ by Mary Cas- a""id the ~-:s!i...=.t ... _,~~
sata from our cam"""' was re...,_,_.. _ ..,....._.S
oeived enthusiasticaily. In part - .. .......,y
ours, gin and
t 1
tbe
squirt, rum and coke and one
a east,
strong endorse- or two others
.
Jla•-..0 ·o n a little
ment stemmed from tbe higb card
~ tab..,..
level of .o rganization -o{. tbe....,.
at ea.n
le.

uc.....,.

·

Time to leave can be confusell

if

~ as w -t!Vell ·u you've had
0
Y one. The hassle here in·

volves getting die check. Whe&gt;;
only one waitress is on duty,
too bus
When
es ·
y.
· there
are two, each says the otber has
port, as well as from Ms. CasThe;""':"'~ are ·too. ~~ :and. it.:· • •
·. ·
'·
.
sata's very able oral P11!11enta- ra~r ~ty and tbe gin and
Beyond cocktails, the Tiffin
tion of the d---t. .,...__ sqUirt . iB a long way from a Room has food service until
length
rtcall~edf
'""' Salty Dog, or so a panel of about 7:30 p.m.• Monda y
therun
' Yg,repolibrary
-'!~.~m- oocktail
bour..vetenms
fro~
. ·t h = Fr1
' d!r.. A Ia carte
. of 1
•...,......_
R
staff
"
·
·
·
· a vanety of ways; e.g., 6palleporler
has 'cOiicl
;' ' · availa ilities' i ude a ·steak
sion ~f lib.~ nelwo!'ks like
However, you · may wi11b' -to SlllldWich ($1.35), &amp;brim):! ill the
the b!omediCaf network. COin- conduct YOU! ~ fest..'...be- basket 1$1.60) an ' 8 oz: ·strip
parative data were presentsd C8US!' the W81tres&amp; IS prone to steak with french fries ($2.25on the proportion of each unit's tbun*'~· ':Jt's ~ on oocktail mushroom wine sauce, $.25 ex·
budget allocatsd to the library. !'&lt;&gt;ur, if ;r?U dev.ate from the trytl, ~d a Reuben ($1.35). A
The ligureji · indicate that the 'fea~ Items.
dinner 18 offered aleo.
Buffalo Library has by far the ,._~1111 stood up to her,
The idea ·for a campwi Haplo'!""t c;legree of support among -~ you'll find that the reg: PY Hour gets four stars. The
uruvers1ty centers. In 1971-72 ular 86-cent Martini is ·robust exeCution aDd tbe screaminglytbe pereentage of our total bud• and pi8@S&amp;Ilt as is the Blade institutional atmosphere of tbe
get allocatsd to the library was .RU88Ulll (_95 cents) or a glass room (which tbe management
5.4 per cent compaled with 7.2 e( the Wulmer BurgUndY. (50 can't ·help) deserve something
per cent at Albany, 8.5 per cent cents) · Our panel hasn t yet less.
at Stony Brook. and 11.0 per ~eel its way 'to the 86-cent ·
At the very 18ast. though, it's
cent at Binghamton. The fig- S~ but_ that seems a bar- worth a try llllllletime.
ures for 1972-73 Jollow tbe ~-especially when Rusty The T _ . .
·
same
seqtlella&gt; but Buffalo has
-Harvey
Wallhangers
.,...__
-..
altema tives,
·
dropped
to
cent __ go ~or and
$1.26
.,.. 11.ea.-uy
'
~·
otbe than total ..... ·
pared witb B'
ton's drop
With the drinks. soacb are
r
......tinence, are
to 9.5 per cent.
_
available, but they'll cost you the 'l'urgeons.
,
EdUQtioMI OpportUnity
--liO centa for fried cliun ·strips,
At the Sign of the Steer, that
The Committee on · El&lt;palld- 50 cents for potato chips and enlerprising family offers a
ing Educational Opportunity dip or for oruon rinp. and 35 oocktall hour featuring half
expreseect ClOII06m about con- for french riies.
•
prioe on mo.t drinb (other
straints plaoed on recruiting of ~ m In
thaD. eal1 i t e 1!1 a - and ..some
students for special E .O.P . proTueeclaYS tluougb Th~ epecWtiee 8UCh as Marguergrams. ~ both educational there's a bonus; tbe ligbte are itaa), a1oac with what tbey call
and economic criteria are con- lowered aDd folk sinpr Nan " ' - lll1llldlial," a hunk of
~ it means that in prac- ~ provides a pleaunt ~ ad cblli. U you
tice a student of limitsd eoo- t&gt;acqround for llhiloiloDhlcal don'tmindacrowdnminiaceut
nomic means is penalized for ponderinp, goesip -and ofi-a&gt;!Or or the NCIItlm .main Door at
higb -adlievement in high stories.
ruab hour, Ibis la'wbere the barscllool Thus, tbe miJ&gt;orit)l stuAlthough tbe "Unwind at,+J... saina are.' Enlllrtainmeut is
deilt 1"Jt..! a higb llchieveineut ~~~Hour" menu leaturee7 P.fOYi.ded W Jf1IIU fellow reveirecord who requires fiDancial """"""' pro(eaaor in IDOl1aP- , era and thO~ bebiDd the bar.
aaoistanoe mliBt, of ni!ceosity,. board and lf&amp;dilatian. ,.,_, Beware the ~ for the
tJun. to private in&amp;Jitutions. The few prof---.....! cedainly ~ '"'- the. priQee change
. "' ' :· ·
Senate.~ the Committee's none in that getup-..ere to be at
Ud ~ ........., un-·
CD..... ·
~ution ~ in effect, founa. Moat or the clit!Dtele -uiad. The .Sieer. is a1eo a
·, · ; ..,.~~D - .
~d!;:ic~er range are students and the uniform good pl-. to stick &amp;IOUIId for
,
~
:&amp;: "!L"' .1.
.y.;:r _ .
.....uev""'!""t. of tbe day is jeans, Dalai.-n &lt;linner-ew!li•if .JOU've already
.. ~ ·
......,... - - ~ .,. .... ~..... ·.;,.._
'ty ~tion~Umver- f~. ~ys &amp;!" with cuya and lll!ed y~ TwPaa Buck from ,.
~ 101o; . : :. .
~ =:.,:"'*
_ -,.·~~~ ~
has .been Bllriooaly~ f.:d~d.= gul&amp;-if that's any ~~elte
~" - ann.
-.
•
- tlllled in the recent tight
· ·- -....-· m
. · · -. ' l l - - · ·
5'
l!"riod. Qi&gt;ce apin lt~iDobey the~-~lies o1 the IIIli
'lbe Library,
.._ warur _,..,.
a mocliiilt . Sdiolar
the ~ • ..,...,...ting ay~ oil&amp;hlal at cock: • ""· ~.
••
· PiOiram •
• room 18 warm wl*l you· ' tail time u.Jt doeoh tluougbout
tem
:after a
morning:
.
&gt; • fund to provide .honorariums. y~ wta.
~~~. ....,....-;~.....,.:.
- ....... tlpeCial_
-~.
. 1lbe Senate. aa'iloned the proTime
~""" am.wa.
- ..;.
•;.__ _ __...
•
_;v pGIIial. • •
. . .
Si
!0 ~ve ;. -co~.
UNI¥EIISm iiEPORT •
£;.~ .,_ ...,..._
\ · 110~ ~ will f'!i host ~~ ~!' ~tD~ The tbllil .ln. a ,..,...,.of monthly
• · .,_-.-....
_
-1'~ 2-3
meetinJ on ..· wta. they , were c:banad to "l.ln~ llilportl" will be si..n
·~
• •. ot' ~- 6:00, in COIUieetion wfth the by , . . _ l!k=hanl D. Schwartz.
·.
.• !!f the'
~~- Winter lla- 5-,lertainment. ~
not F~ of lAW aftd.Jurisprudence,
..,,f
··
,_,
~ ~-ta. we
lliiit ._...Happy Hour~ wac~-.. Novwnbor 15, at 10
~~
-Whim. 80- ..._ oil ClOUNe -" (which the menu indica~ a.m. In tile Nol1on Conference
------...,;;-~..--"":':'--,~~~;;:;,.!=-',;-.....;..,..._
u r fate 111st Febru- aooc1 to 5:30) are Ill!!'·~ ~ ~ The cim- community
1 - o....
ary
. . to 6, is not clea'r. • ~:
Ia lnvillld.
-

1967 ..,____,.

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

-

sb •

··9

n.

·rovemance

m

&amp;.a'-'

·

!'!"!: :W...,

""'..;;:&gt;

~

-wblc:h~~.:U-

.; -'iii

.

u:?a

-·t

=-

__._..

~.:,~u

~~ ud:-fDjo-~

�FibD Studies~---......;_.
~-

wad&lt; of_Stefan Fleischer of the
En,lish ~t. His coi1~, Holland and &gt;\Ian
Norman ~ and ~ Sill"'el, deal with film in terttl8
O'Grady, studies the history of its psychological content,
and raDIII.of \be Ewopean fea- character development, and
ture ~
• .
·
-- narrative tradition as a whole.
It at this time that lha He adds that these approach.
d~ ~to OOO!?"'!'te es, coupled with the c:ummt
more fullY Wlt.h. ~ exll!t!"' C01118e ofterings in film· inters~t ~{,.~addi~ pretation, make this University
to lfa nliuliUfy P
• senes, ope of the most balanced and
the ut:JAB ·ftlm commtttee pro- productive in the country In
vided t.lf the rental fees for terms of film.
tbo8e Jllms 1-cl foe English
lfiS main innovation, O'G~
claSaee, 111 ~ for an eJ:· mamtai.,., is fostering thia U"mtra lholriD&amp; a...ilable to the versity's attention to the
~~at_Jarp: T!&gt;!s prac- e1ous, .creative .activitY-'
tice
~ to 1ts cur- IJOOill ·111m lpday. • For the
rent
by .midJ free films ~-}'elli'S, in coopenitiOQ
are ...... ollhtJy to the pub- .the UUAB film committee.
lie, ~ - CIIl ~ for a has operated a Wedno!adaY e.,.,
small ,cliup to the UniYI!r&amp;ity . !JinJ. program which fe~~turee
COI11lliuJilb',.
leading artists who show and
. BII!._J:!, lhe fl1l:l of 1968, the discusii their work. Such nota-~ ~lc lnsute a ' bles as Jean-Luc Godard, Ivan
~
role for Passer, and Milos Forman have
filni' aa
Concerned · already visited the campua,
. faculty ..t with Eric Uurabee, with future .programs til teathen- I!IOWJIIt: of the Arts .and ture Resnais and Rosaellini.
I.e~~~ to - 011118ider ·~e're not ' particularly interthe _ . . . . . of- Cl'ell_ting a ested in the Hollywood direcseparale-~ 'dferins, a torS, u O'GradY notes, "becauae
full
~. his- they have so little control over
tory, ....
tioiJ. ~ their proceas abd their vision!'
MacArlbut 01 Arts and Letters
Instead, be chooses to teach
and ~GIIllly ·of ' En,liab were from the -films ·of the great
recn.ull!ld to -draw 1IP the' cur- contemporary directors, such as
riculum; their $1 ' miJ1ion. &amp;- Godard, who mainta:inll final
year :t:m~-. however, . control over the end product,
to Allieey, as and whose art apresaes his
never
~ . (.!ni~ty W88 ~ personal vision. Th118, in his
•.ts pnonties and tm;Jpbasizing, own teaching, O'Grady has
ms~ auch prevJousiy- n&amp;- abandoned the feature film for
~4""-- as Black Studies. ~J!!ll80Illl}.e.:perimentalwork;
.......~
h!a current . graduate course,
~ '""' lhllial attack. ~er, for example, studies the films
d1d DOt prevent the ezpaDSlon of Bailey Brakhase and Mikas
of the IJIOil8l!l through other · and freq~ently draws upon u..;
channels,~. m re~ ~P- presence of filmmaker Ed Empears to .be ~ poUlt. pt wpich· sChwiller; Currimtly in reiidence
film became one of thiS Umver- in the En,lish Department
sity's. greatest assets. O'~rady, ~ O'GNdy finds that BuJWo's
whose work bad been mainly m
t · te~ · film ··
the various film media, recalls curre':' m ·~· m- . . IS ·aphis ambivaleiiee• towiltd the p~pnate to 1ts tnidition as a
concept' of ftJin l~ts in ~ fi:~u!oU..,contempo~
g_~al, .as seU-rontained and artists ·such as -~.
~~~~ m scope. . Instead, he Barth, and Barthelme, the ac·
en~1oned a media C!'nter !'f- tive schedule of readings and
fer'!'i ~ ~ tl&gt;e entire lectures ani! the recepti.\111Ile8S
Uruvers1ty and area, ~- of tbe English De~t to
mg .departmental bo~. tbe e.:perimental VISion as evi~bee. Pfe!Ved sympathetic, dence that be's come to tbe
but as his sjltiere of inlluence right place
extended only to Arts and Let. ''This · · . bow Bulfal0 is
ters, ....:-unable to implement known " this'!' ·
hat
s tand
the idea..
. , ,
IS w
we
O'Grady of Co1118e has since for m the eyes of people o.utbecome the. prime ·~er in :;!f.~ ~~~~":,1
such worl! here and IS well which rve been proudest, es~~
tab~s. and extending.. this
Lubaneaqae media concepts tradition m terms· of film.
and -unentai film. Currently the clirec!tor' of the Instroctiona] Cclmmunlcations Center,
be has al8o iiewloped a media
studie!J curriculum under the
U
allSPices 01 - Yarious depart_
L:..l.

__

I, col. 4J •

-

_..:!!' ,;::rvey:da~of
:IW

Wun.u, -

P1!!3,-:.::::.

!"'rk'":"'M".;

:::: =-.'mm.
ti",ta.

11111! ~ -

EOP p aneI
Be"mg .r ormed

func?- • A cOmmittee is bolini formed
~ by President Robert L. Ketter

sound, as Wtl' as a continuing

~~"'-m·.L!"~~ featuring
~.......

..... .......
m.... 011r current state of
tecbnolo&amp;Y. O'GI&amp;dy maintains,
all-" 111m 8bould be aimed
in this dlrectiaa. "We're,_, at
a stqe.wbere 811-media ~ be.
recycled. into
otbaf," be
notes. ~ "~ ll1llde m
6lm !I1I1Y be abown on television, qtbinvuade on video
6e .kiDteeCaped and shown
on 111m. and, of CXIW88, One "":"

m

.m

to senoe in an advisory capacity
to the University's educational
opportunity propams aDd to
tbe President's Oftioe.
The group, which' will inelude ~tely 22 11111111-

~;:~.!!!f
.W!8ligatet
, ..__
~
...,

c=-t

and
801atibna: In
-additlaa, it will ·be fiiPIICII!Id to

u-nlnate propam' iDfonna-

tion to the const.ituenclea4t repand file an IUlll1J8l report wi~ the &amp;esideDt'a·Office.&lt;
P~the T_V: or 1I10V&gt;8
The committee will be
~ -ad ~. t.bo8l) by ''broadly representatiw,.. drairslidea .Cil' llllimatiOo mto mther inl ·~ ,__ the reoof !be~ tltnJc!ure8," What """'-datlans of~ amwe :n.ie4
a - . is a ~ j)llll ' and C1011111111Dity conatitusort d ..aiaf~c .ed- enciea. Di Theodore Priead,
ucatbl...-"}nr tbe'_visual prof- ai history, w i l l 88i&gt;!ICIB of llbii,.Wttb due lJIIPOI'• as chairman.
tanae 'P- tl) 811ptWimental
"
.

can

resents

-.:be

=-:~.-"~

~~~~

_ _._._ Ollllldbutlon tD ~
Tbe ' ~c

';,d;l'•

~J:t~~
rr-. the-rJ!
tradl-

witb!D.."'
tioa ~

~•. is the

BemerHonOred
.

tiuA:B'~ 'Act V' Campus TV Servire
Proves Video Is Not Entirely Dead
The onlY. surprises commercial TV has in store this sea·

~n are how many ethnic jokes
1t can ~ . and the number
of actors willing to play gum-

shoes. Even public television,
oilce the great black-and-white
~. has succumbed to the
" big sleep." ETV programming
this time . out. is heavily into
non-rontroversia:l culture. "'I'he
G~~_. Ameri.""!' . Dream Ma·
chine .and smular gadfly programnnng have gone the way
of tbe 'Golden ~e.
· ·•
But video is not altogether
dead:- Video equ:ipment is portable, easy to master, and much
less eJ:penaive than film.· For
these and other feasons, many
peop~ are turninlf to vilk!otape
to recprd .t he visual and aural
inlages around them. On camp118, UU AB includes a small
but active Video Committee.·
Among . the group's principal
activities is Act V, all-aunpus
television.
Monday through Thursday,
afternoon and eveniug, tbe images of the campus alternative
medium flicl&lt;er across three
monitors in Haas Lounge. Like
any other large TV audience,
tbe crowd is variously mdiffer·
ent, engrossed, bemused, asleep:
"AIJ-aunpus" is Dibre a wish
than a statement of fact. Right
now, cable connects Act V's
"studio" in"-Room 60 Norton
Cwbere the barbershop used to
be) with key Norton locations,
including Haas Lounge, Center
Lounge, Conference 1 Theatre, ·
Fillmore Room, 231·232. and
Gallery 219. If current negoti.afioaa with the Inter-Residence
Council are .lll1COI!88ful, d o r m
televlaion-viewing 1'00!118 will 10
on cable in.the ._. future.

ezptains. Other shows are produced by members of the Committee, who cover moot major
campus events, area concerts
and whatever else i n teres t s
them and time allows.
Programs are listed each
week in an • all-aunpus TV
guide, distributed in Norton
Tape is a fleJ:ible mediuin,
and Committee members have
fun ,with it. Even in retatjvely
straight news coverage, split
screen, multiple inlages, quick
cuts are used for editorial or
· artful effects. Devlin speaks of
repression, quick cut to the
young rent-a-cop at the Gym
dQOr. Images pulsate to ilie
.Ound of WisbtiOne Ash in 0111)· ·
cert.
·
.
A wllekly feature of Act V is
"Five &amp; Dime TV," a sound
and visual magazine. A recent
."issue" featured a · :nude comrriune disc:t!asing its problems,
Abbie Hoffinan discussinf our
problems, liomet.hing c a 'Jed
"Commercial Collage," and an
introduction to Transcendental
Meditation.
Yin'- .._ " - -

other continuing activities. On

Wedneedays at 3, the Committee holds portapak workshops
for tboae wiahing to leam to
operate tbe campus's
SONY equipment. Reg u I a r
editing workshops are held Fridays at 8. New tabs for advanced video students interested in doin1 creativ&lt;HXperimental work are scheduled for
Fridays at 6.
.
The Committee also co-sponsors "Vldeoapac·e 72," the
Thursday night Haas ~
prosram featuring such ''visiting .televisiooaries" as thia
week's Shirley Clarke. On tbe
more - mundane aide · VIdeo
Committee• provideo ihe over- ,
flow coverage for campus events

'n"

~w more ~ C81l'lcitY
Tbe Committee would l.ilre

::oor~ ~~tec~~ufr.

!eelS to -cover 8\'eDts, edit tape;
write progJ'IUDI. The mechanics of video are easy to leun,
be emphasizes, The IIUilCOI8 of
the medium as an art form depends on the indiVidual.
- Room 60 is usually open 1...(
weekdays. The Committee welconw!s feedback on Act V or
any of its activities.

Mellnik thinks Act V has an
important social-informational
function and would like to see
more University and local programming. He also tbinb the
creative potential of the nled- 1.
ium has ' barely belun tq be V ,
realized. Act V has an important enterl:sinn-.tlunctiqn, too,
Mellnik says. On this ~t, the
Committee recently obtained
.
·
some vintqe Lone Ranaer
An Olftce of-Vel.eralll' Affalra
tapes (1959-$)) .midJ will re- _ baa bjlm eWINU!bed On camPus
suit in an evening with the to tbla" -ma· ~
masked man -am. ..... of the UDi..nlty oaiiuiiunJty.
Act V liopM to briJ1r PrelidiDt RolJiK L.- KetiliK
"specials" to c a JllJ1 u a like hMIIIIIlOinted Claiaa P. ~&gt;ft.
"Millhouse," tbe "White Com- eart'llldl.f ..ocialit· dlnctor 01
edy" that brigbteaed electim 8ludeai .atralm, - ~­
week. Video . C.o m mit tee ol the Glllce. Be wiD be .re- ·
charpd a ainaJJ ·a d m i 1 11 o D IPOIIIIbll fnl' ..,...d•ttnc I1I1IL
" ' - &lt;U6l f« lliat 111m,aa- cootdillallll!l ....._. . . . . tape.
'
.
Clll ~ . . , . . . • • llllliiDD
. In .adition to Act
Video willi ............ ~
Committee UDdertabl·- a .........
~..
of ......

Tets Office

Established

R .......

v.

..... DJ-al.!l.
.. ........
to~ ............... .
beiOia 1be ' IIIII of e. ......,_

VietuaiJ oaiiiUct... 'Die unc.
wJil flmdlaD .......

=-~n~
llciill 1raldli:ii ':a';:

.. .

~-..

.t;'.:;.DJ-,PIIi....aoutiMt'1be
C/1 ........ at UIBiiM
_...., ..... claullled-- 1887

=.t-...

Olllal ofV..._, .

=.,.:;..~~
:.\:

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

Dnila~teofa,.__
.-.....~

flii.-s~~.::~

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~

/

Prof~on81 Staff~al~tiOD;.aiid cwee~ ~velopment

.. ,

I9'U, INIIIIIdively. Such notioe ~ A101 c..;..
(8) - - . , I:VALUA'DON.
~t fbe c:ampue ~t
record allll to~- indt- llhall be a--1 by ·the pediea leDt widt the ~ ·(a) Formal evalwtlioaa llhall ~ -ilelini "1lpllll JW
•
All·
uillual ~mp~oyee cop;. 11/. ""' to be .teqaale UDdow Article ployee'a ~ IIDd ~ be I:Jaaea 1q&gt;011 tile prore.iaaal tiaD1 in 1be final ewduatioD .,..
",UnetMial t;e,_,. T~ 8 - XXIX of the Apeaaent 116- lila; • . ..U ·• hlo rollt in employee's performance J.IIO- · port to caaform kl Dolb ~
f Nf!liJ Yorll.Gtul Tile &amp;nole ' - t h e State 8Dd SP..&amp; IIDd ~to the 0.. of the IIJ'8ID. modified u .~te " ' * - t a in the~ of DID- •
ro{-"'-l Aaociation;" the Article' ~ Title c, Sedlaa ~ u~ the 1mmedlale .up- to re6ect -d&gt;anced c:in:um8taD- ........._. of ~ ..,., eo! ••IlL
Reporter is nprinlU.. here the of the l'olil:ia of the BOenl of ervioar,
di8cUoUaa with ces.
.
(e) ~ ai;lian Oil a
r:Dirlplekta~o('tiDO"'JMifiOffll&gt;o Truatea
, #
thepcale.lanalemployee,llhall
(b) Theimmediateaupervi&amp;. final evalua~;ian report ,Dy •
thuM of ,.,_Ill" NliDeeft
(2) The immediate wper- de'leftDine lbe obJectiwll to be or llhall prepare a prelfminary CIIIIJIUII - - . , t , auoh report
IM SIGk allll SPA ~ fl1ilh vlaors of profeiiaional employees achieved duriDJ lbe' evaluatioD ~uatlon
diacua it llhall be ~ in the prcleaan eDOhlalion ..,.mm GNl a .,.._ in University aerviQo on 8!!p.;· . period. Approptiate c:ritaria lor; WJth the
•
employee. _aiona1 em~··~ file.
,_ proniolionGl p/IJia for ~ t ember 30, 1971, Gl:ludiJII evaluating the depee to wbidl Tbe report ~ include a sum_(10). Nolllri~ IIJIY·
feaiontiU wiUcla COIIIIituU At- u.c- employees havU&amp;i a De-' objectivs are met sball be ... mary cbaracterimtioD ol auoh .thing -.talned in Seeilon V,
lit:la 33 allll U of the colllracl. cember 15, 19'71, 0&lt; a March .1, termiiled in the -.ri.biOD. ~loyee'a ~ 81 "lllll;; the du~ 8Dd ._..a.nitlea
v....u- of ~~oae Gl"lkla ;,.- 19'72,DOticen!QUirementinthe AI theyorelate to the, partio. ~ ~... "unaaof.tisfactory. ~,',abe•~inpro-lbe
eluded ill the illitiiJl colllracl ewnt ol DOn-renewaJ.IIhall -.. u1ar type of dutieo, J'!IIPOII8i- · ~..... m ~ · ~ pam ~
•« ~ CGIJed for u~ suit with auch-~ ·with- bilitiea, imd objec~Ma wi·th may a1ao be identified. W11ere eva1uatioD PJ'IQM onl_y 8Dd
o/IU .., piDM. Thae proeed- in one month of the dale oo w h fC! h the p1'ofeMioaal aa- appropriate the - ~ aha II sba11 DO\ ~tute fair anr .
111ft ·lliill, of .,.,.,. H U..W which the evaluation • ayllem
pi~ ia CJO.I!C8l'll8ll the f&lt;ol- cxmtain 1'8C01iuiiendiotiam relet- c:laaa apecillcatioa « aay pomtulaf G~t-IIIU ~f.rovided herein ia -put into.ef- 1&lt;&gt;WiDJ cri~ ehould be 8IDIJII&amp;'; ing to: ~ « non-~ tioD"deacriptioD in Jllf8c:t ~ tu
·.
ect. or· as soon a-fter u ' u.c- 011 .whiCh a., ~ of t1!e professional ~a be dewlop8d.
..,.~ - •
Article 33
practicable, to initatelha .....r- ia baaed: ·
BPJIO-t; PJOIIIOtioll; merit VI. ~ lllloiiMot - - ••· ·
uation PI'Ocellli in- accardi:nce · • (a} Elrecti~ p, pedorm- salary increase; 0&lt; otber actiaal
A. H&gt; Tbe Coamiittee:--9n
I . E - PallcJ
with provisions Al Sect:iolr' V ana&gt;-aa demonatraled, .foi'ez. alJecting the eiJ!Ployment ltat- - ProfeesiOGaf..BYaluatiOG.·..,_
It ahall be the policy ol lbe below.
·.
ample, by fiUCOe88 in -carrying us of lbe J.llO!essional ""':ployee. lisblid JIUI:!IIllmt to SectioD IV,
- University to evaluate the perB . New Profeaswnal Em- out assigned duties and respon. (c ) ?"or to .CODC!~ tbe J'araar8P!i C, lbell \Jpm ~
~ ol all~=onal em- piDyeu .
.
.
sibilitiea, ellic:iency, productiv- diac;uaaion lbe immediate ,8UJ&gt;- ""~\-' Of· a . prll(-a.aJ ·aD~ lp lbe
.onal SerT h e immediate SUpei'YiliOnl ity and relationship With rol- emaor a n d tbe professional ploY.ee review a 1Jna1 evaJuatioD
- \llciM N....,tiating Unit as here- of prof~l employees bav- leaiues.
• employee ahall diacuaa a new repcin ~ 88, "un81tm.tler provided. • .
ing initial - appomtments in
(b) Mastery of specialization performance ' program w h ·ic:-h isfactorj-h ~ - ·
·
II. Dlllnlllona
University service which take - as demonstrated, for emJ!l- ~I become a ,P81"t' of a final,
~2)
review 9ban
A Till' following .terms llhall elf~ on or alter f:be date on pie, by degrees, lioenaea, bon- wr~.tten evaluation report &amp;n!f be addnloaed to, ~theprobe defined as provided in· Ar- which lbe e~aluation sysfem ors awards, and reputation-in which sball become lbe beaia cec1ure and sulie
of lbe
ticle m, Parqrapb A of the provided herein is put into e!- pro'fessional field.
· lor lbe next formal evaluation unSatialactoJy eval · n.
~t between the Stale feet ahall !"''!Suit with suCh em(c) Professional ability-es of the professional employee's
(3) AI part- ol ;~
·
the
of N- York 8Dd the Senate ployees wtlh!n '!ne. IDOilth of .lbe demonstraled, lor e&gt;amwle, by performance.
.
r~~;ttee. in its discretiOn,
Profeesicmal Aaiociation: "Uni• employ"''S' . 1n 1 t t.a I appomt- invention or innovation 111 pro. (d ) Baaed upon ~ evaluav e r o i t y," "profeesicmal em- men~ or as ~ _thereafter as feaaional, scientijjc. adminia- tion of. the J!rofe8!1'onal em(a}. Have access to all preployee," "campus president," pra!'ticable, to lll!tiate the eval- trative, or technical ·areas; i.e., ployee m relation to auch per- vious fO&lt;mal evaluations of the
"QUD~"
- ·
,
~tion P~ m &amp;ceo~ development ~or refinement of fo"""!'ce prolp'lllll, 8J!d baaed performance oilbe professional
B. 'ProfessionAl position," or w1th provJSJo~ of Section V programs, methdda, procedures, !'pon !nfoniJiltiOn :obtained dur- emplos:::roncemed;
"position" llhall mean a poai- below.
•
.
or apJ!8nitus. . IDI ~on "!?th ~ em(b )
· t !IJld ronsider any
tion in the Professional SerC. C.ampus Com'!J'lke on
(d ) Effectiveness in Univer- ployee m accordance. WJth _(b) additio
romments by either
vices Neiotiating Unit other P'!'J.euawnal Eoo~wn
·
sity service -ilB demoostraled, and ( ~ ) above, lbe ~te the immediate su
• r or the
than a position ol academic or . . .. campus Pre&amp;ldent shall for example, by such ' things as SU~I80r ~prepare a f¥, professional emp~
qualified ac&amp;demic rank.
m1tiate the devel?pment of a successful rommittee work, par- Wrltle!J evaluation report which
. (c ) Request other informaC. "Immediate supervisor" P~ure by which the PI'Q- ticipati'!n in focal campus and shall . mc)ude a summary char- tion pertinent to the review
llhall meen the peraon ao deaig- f""!'l~ !"!'P.Ioyees sball 9!'lect Uruvers~ty. governance, and in- acterizauon ol such "'!'Pioyee'a from secondary sources;.
naled bY lbe C8.JPpua president a Co~ttee on Profess~nal volv~t in CampUs- or Uni- pel'fo~, . ai!P.roP"!'te• rec-·
(d ) ,Notwithstanding (b) and
for the p~ herein.
Evaluatio'!· Such Comm1ttee versity-relaled student or com- omlneridations, arid. a new per- (c ) aboW, no peraon sba11 be
D. "Employment status" sball shall ronsJSt of five (5 } ~- munity activities.
formance propam. •
rompelled to appear or make
include but not be limitea to hers, ~ of whom shall .be
(e ) Continuing growth- as
(9) IIIBI'08ITION ' op l!l!'JAL a statement before this Comperaoonel ac:tiom.-involving ap- prof~"~nal !""Ployees "'!"'!"B demonstrated, for example, br J&lt;YALUATION IIBPOIIT.
"""' '
mittee.
re:intments, promotion, trans- ~tio~ 111 ~
' :g':.\'t'tmg ron)in~g edu"!'tii&gt;D, ~(a} The 'immediate ·-super- .
.B, Following its, review 'the •
er, reassignment, merit salary f 10
.'
ge . Y
pro- ~tion m profe!ss1onal o_rgaruza- visor sball provide the profea- Committee sball p_..,. •writ- ·
increase.
~ . emp1oyees m ~ ne- tions, enrollment in training sional employee with a dated ten recommendations. Where a
Ill. " " ' - af Evol""tlon
~~g se'i.:c~~Y ~ proThe~ and. ~ . ropy of the final evaluation re- final evaluation report does DOt
A. Tbe perfonnance of each
·
. ·
oregomg Cl'lterJ&amp; and port as soon after completion rontain recommenclatiOila al. professional &lt;l!mployee shall be · pus pl:;"'denl The Cwrumttee examples_ ~ereof are preaenled· of the evaluation process as fecting the employment status
evaluated in order to:
or
f:re=~r ~ for descrlp~e ~ exp~torr pracl:leable but at least fcirty- of lbe professiOnal employee,
·i/· (I} provide lbe campus pres- pl)lcticable, and shall carey 'out ~~~ndt!i{to be a1f' elm .no five ( 45) .cali!J!dar days prior tha . Co~ttee sball fofY!&amp;rd
ident with ·ronauJtation in mak- ·i t.s evaluation i:esponsil:iilities or to limit the immedia"mte USIV~ to the notification date for re- · rop1ea ol Its recommen~ti_?ns
ing his decision to renew or· described in Section V below
.
. . ._,_ d te . _superf newal or non-&gt;enewal ol a -term to such . employee 8Dd his IDl·
non-renew a professional em·
· VISOr · "\ ""' . e .rmmation o
appointment for a professional mediate supervieor. Where- a
ployee's appointment; .
·
V. Ev.,uotion Procedure
appropnate criterJ&amp; for evalua- · employee serving on such ap- final evaluation report rontains
(2) provide a base for perA. Evaluation is a rontinuing tio~S ) CONSULTATION W1TH SEC- pointment.. , ,
reco~tions alJ'!"'ini lbe
form&amp;Dce improvement;
~~mo~~ oe~a'iua~~~ ONDABY SOURCES. Alter discusA daled copy_ of the report J&gt;I:Ofe8S.Ional employee a emJ!Ioy~t!j:b ~e to re- should be the expression of this sion with lbe professional em- sball alao be sent to lbe evalu- • :::lJt to"tat.us, ~ ~ttee ~
_ e (of} provide lbe
pres- on•going process.
ployee, the immediate super- ator's _supervisor for his in- ommenda~ropaea of Its rec'-'--• 'th consul ·
(
·
visor shall.alao
.
ronsider the ex- formation.
.:-.te
. . · thf'!&gt;Uih -appro~ 8s to ~C:.: .?::d .;li.::::,~~~ha~t::, i~ tent to which secondary aourcea
.(bJ A professional employee
~trat_ive chumela
merit ..ary·increaseis. ,
sponsible. for evaluating the such as otber agencies, offices wbo mtenda to seek a review of as to tha ,:::f=~well
IY 1 lpleo '
perfortnaJJ&lt;le of professional em- 8f!d iz!divi&lt;!!lais will.be involved a ~ evaluation report .char- ancf· his iuimediate
.Yee
af Evoluatlon
ployees
work under his With the, performance of \such acterized
''unaatislaclory"
C Committee ~r.
As,;:;;,;,...;;iiGl emp/9yeu ill direction. such performance employee ,!llld will affect the must inform, in writing, his im- .
final ~~
Uniwnity aeruice on Sepkm- eValuations shall be ronducted ethemployee's ~ilil:)l to achieve m!"iiate superviac?r, the Com- report, totlether with disppsition
11er
l9'll
.
for the purposes &lt;!escribed in
~tated, objectives. The im- ~ttee on Profee81onal Evalua- of its ~ muat •
'1) ................. ~ ( 5} ....,....,__ Section
." m .above 8Dd_ at - ·- mediate 8U)Ierviaor, alter dis- tion, 8Dd lbe campus preaidaat be ~...........
~
~.........,. 1
tervala
•...,cuosion- ·with · lbe profesBional within five ( 5) businelis dova ol to .....
_,.. ~-~
~ followinc lbe d a t e on ar ,m
_as specified ·below. employee, sball. determine the · his receipt oflllldi __. /
.....
(JIIl6--..l.)
whidi the eValuation ~
( 2} Plll!lQUENcr. 'The performxtent to which
·....-- .· poovided berein is put into al- .ance of each profeeaional em- , e
such aecondary
In auch event,·the auperviaor diaya •prior to the elate 011 wliich
feet, the .immediate auperviaors'· ployee, without reg8rd to his sources shall be ~led 811 aball immediately provide lbe notice muat be siYen in lbe
of prof.monaJ
_•
emp'"-' ees
. m
·
employment stah•o s h a II be part of the evaluation process. C.o m mitt e e 011 Profesional event o1 non--.1.
....., by . his im- 'The
(G)results
PEIIPOIIJlANCE PIIOCliA.K
E .val ua tion WJ'th ~ dalecl copy ol VII. ~ 1o the ~
• service on~:tSeptem- f---"
~........y eva1 ualed
ol discueaioDa
her
1, 8Dd havi!JJ a _De- mediate supervisor. once each the J:lrOfeMional emplo eeWJin the final evaluation report. ~
A. Aelioo by,. ClllllpQI preai__.16, 19'71, ..-a March, 1, year during the· length ol the -~ with. provis~ of · (c) Unl-.a final evaluatioD dent ~D ,.,., .
-letioaa
1972, DOtice~t in lbe emploree'a appointment and aa _{3) .through (5)· above 8h811"'-~ '!'port -con~ _...,.,.,._a- whicb are -tained in a f1Da1
~of
non--.J
sball
.
e
val:
cbaniPJIII
conditions
wamml
red"--'
"" tiooa aft~-- a __.__,_, eval ..,_
---'
uate the )lllilermance• 01 8Ui:h
Nothing in this section shall
"'""' to writing by lbe im, __;--..
.,. _ _ _ , ·
1111- report .... wblch af8 emp~x-t lltatus
~c in ~ with PreoeDt an immediate auper.via- mediate. -iluperviaor and llhall eml!~:t'"'
feet a JliOfeliolonal employee's
~.iJrov-w.-, _. ..c ~-- V or from infonDal!y evalua"--, ronstitute the performance pro- ocr 18 to. be reviewed by the emplfiYDmt ltalul ehall be
. - - · - .... _,...,..
_
•
gram on .,meL formal eval\laomm_Itt~eonProfeMioba) . final, PIOridld. ........_,that
~...~~tehto}~ - OG~a~~~o...oi
·IIDID,(~,
tlonwillbehased.Dateilcopies ~valtheua~ 1t.sball~
~ 'a ~t
auch aetiollil by the~
-....-. --,........, w ,.,., ..--""""""" ol suCh ~ llhall be dis- m
... --onal emp
WhiCh la Claimed - . ,
, ell!:'~ inclUd8 a -.-. .
who
uDder his · tributed to the' nrofeMioba) em- peraoone) f i I e.
it the proleesiona) .....,._lkl be .
_,_ llriclad time
.)lDII the - direction.
.
. ployee, tbe
(lmmedi-· aba1! be .. .t. to tbe eamjJus arbitrary ........... ~ I .
8Dd Jbe evaln,.
.
8PPBI!Ied oaauoh . _ . b7 _.,
....... llllld
. _
_...._ . , ~
,_ ........._ · ator'e~.Adated'lOP)'
(d) Urue.·a 'finale\oaluatioD ~to the ~- wilh--....... --.""'"~"- - _ , llhall a1aD ~placed- in lbeiJr,&gt;. report-to tbe CUipUB .,.._ ' m tilli (10) buliMel ..... W.
_ , - PIUIIIIIDt to
• ~ 4 . (.l),lbe.-1- '-lanai employee'• ~ ident is !IJ-be revie1NiJ b:f the ' Joorinc auoh aclimw , "'
.
~- -~ lbell be ualiaa ,_.._...... llllin widt ftJe. .
•
· Com m 1 t tee on J&gt;roteoamal
B. 'lbea-lb- ar-.lili;dea- ·
diJI!ter,l._ l"ooiiww!ll ~ a ......._........_the 1m(7) IIIOIIDIC.&amp;'ftOII a. ,..._ Evaluation, tbe campus preai- i..- -aball aondact ' li!'ietJellf •
ad reriiiW, H ~ J11aU- m•llathilpln'._.jllld pafee. ~--.
dent llball lake ~ action •
8Dd Jaaue
flilal 'declaicioi In _.
1
....,....
· be cleema '8ppropriate with- .,.. theevent-.Jor---

I.:DITOR'S IJUI'B: For the

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1\i~'..._~ ~=--c£1b....-. ==:·:::t-.~~ ~toin~·.tiam-: alofaterm=.,111leatle~.: .'
=-=~ {b)·=·~r::
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... - =~lhalldel!i'.!..=. =~ bal-;n-.:
.... ...,.... ,....,.%.,
·(c)~.,.
~-'""-ioaal~~..:!:: ~t~~~

,IIMiti

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,..

'liiilir 1&amp;;

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·'i4,-...,.. •

1

a.

. P.lefed I t a - 8Dd eubmiUed ~

a.

•,..

.

the date .on

whldi~i;ti:

~~~~~ ~t of non--.1

ie,,r:e-

~- ~(J),tltrou.~
~to'inldate8Ddc. Coplaa o(. the~
..........
.
·
plete·a timely reviewlbell DOt . ·ahall be iaR'Ihriluth llppri)pri~

�N~ll, 19~:Z

cMim8la

to the 'campll8

mllke a ~ -faith eftori to Boud. A copy of.U:b comply wttb ~ of (a) mendatioo, if aay,lblllleiiD 'ployee's projected capabilities above. "'The '"-l!ure of any cam- - t ID the l'lolnotlml Bevllolr
to funetion at an increaaecllevel . Pll8 or of the Uniwraity, as ih!" Puel and ~ ~
....
of respoosibility shall also be case may be, to aJIIICIWlOO po&amp;l· · U the deciaiolliD JII'CIIIII!I8 •
oonsidered.
•
_
tion vaamciea or otherwise to beyond the diocretliiD f1l a.
a.cilliall
,;
, (b) Mastezyofspecialization follow procedures In (a) above, camp118 pnllidant, be . . . b..,_, ~ Npart or re&lt;&gt;
-as demonstrated, foe eumple, or the failure of individual pro- ward his I'IICIIIDmendaliM toOODtained thereby degrees liCI!Jliii!S, bonors, fessional employees to be made . gether with that o{ the CUJIIU8
in, oudt JDOdificatioas, Bll'approawards, ;;;;I reputation In pro- aware of such announcements Promotion Review Puel ID U.
~ ab8ll be made in the
fessional field. ··
.
or to file an application for vac- University- Review s-d. 4
prof~ , emplljyee's per::'
. (c) Professional ability ~ as ant positions as provided In (a} copy of the campus pnAienl'a
f()l'lllllllm procram which prodemonstrated, for example, by above shall not affect or ol'B""te 'recomniendation, if &amp;JIY, •8ball
gram shall be the besis for the
invention or innovation in pro- ID invalidate any promotion or . also be sent to the- Promodaa
next formal ewduation.
·fessib~ scientific, administra- aJlPOintment ID such vacant po- Review Panel aiid the applltive, of technicsl areas; i.e. de- s1tions nor shall anything con- cant.
VIII.
An ' eaapkiJoee llhal1 have the
velopment or refinement of pro- tained herein be construed "to
In mnsiderinl appeala from
right, in _..._, with Ar- .
srams. methods, procedures, or require a csmpus or the Uni- decisions of the campua PNII·
apparatus.
versity to make promotions or dent not tocf.::l" Which c~..'
ticJe
the A~reement
(d ) Effectiveness in Univer- appointments from among pro- cisions are
·
1o be ubib e - the State and SPA,
to file a .atUement in response
sity service-as demonstrated, fessio~ employees presently trary and caprli:loua, and In
for example; by such things as .-employed by the University.
considering promoticma wbld&gt;
to any u- ....,..ted by this
rocedure ad placed'"m his file
successful committee work, parFor the purpose of improving are beyond the diacretlon of the
~udillll :'fbe documents deticipation in local campus and the '!~ration of this Pr;ocedure, campus president, the Universcribing ·hla .-formanoe proUruversity governance, and in- the )Om~ study. committee de- sity Rev1ew Board or its deala·
gram pnp.n.a by his supervisvolvement in campus- o~ Uni- scr!be&lt;' m !3ection V may ex- bee shall: review recommendsversity-related student or com- am':"~ any mstance where such ~ tiona from the campus Promoor.
munity activities.
positiOn v a can ·c y announce- tion Review Panel and campll!l
IX..AJalnl
joint....,
Ullivanity
A com(e ) Continuing growth- as menta do not reach the em- president; examine the duties,
mittee COIIIiatini of six 6) perdemonstrated, for -example, by ployees.
responsibilities, scope and comsons, .....-ted by support
continuing education, participa( 2 ) PRESENT POSmON. An'! plexity of the posltiJin involved;
peniOIIIIel... . - . , . , shall be
tion in professional organiza- employee wbo meets the en- and determine by appropriate
· ~=-=tens defined in Paragraph E means 8 n d standarda, which
estsbliabed ID atudy the operati.ons, enrolimen t m
"~~·g
(1) may apply for promotions may include but not be limited
tion of the evalwition system
programs, and research.
of the type defined in Section to tests of intemal and external ·
estsbliabed herein. Three mem.
The
foregoing
criteria
and
II,
Parspaph C (2). Applies- consistency, desk ·audits 8 n d
bers of the committee shall be
examples thereof are presented tion for promotion m us t be other commonly accepted reappointed by the University
l or descriptive and explanatory made b'! completing f'!nns . to v~ew methods, whether promopurposes only and are in no be provided by the Uruver&amp;lty tion is warranted. T'be Boud's
~d ~E!':!!.~veap~tt!;:
way intended to be all inclus- and submitting ~m to ~ decision shall be final, providive.
' campus Promotion Rev1ew ed, bowever, that promotions
F. Metlwd of Promoticn.
Panel.
.
shall be subject to approval of
Article 34
( 1 ) vACANT POSITION. ProThe Panel shall review all the Division of the Budget.
I. Prornotloil Pallq
motions of the type, defined in applications for promotion. If
Applications for promotion
It shall be the policy of the
Sectfon II, Parsgrapb C ( 1 ) it determ~ ~t the increase which are ~pproved may not
University to give-consideration
shall be made as follows :
or change 111 duties and respon- be resubmitted for a period of
for promotioo to all profession(a) 1) CampU8e!j shall notify sibilities under considera?on siJ&lt; ( 6 ) months following such
al employees in the Profession- ·
the University Director of Acs- does ':!9.1( wanant pro':""tion, d188pproval.
aJ Services Negotiating Unit
demic Personnel of all p:..::&gt;.'"::t ~anel shall so I)Otif)' the IV.
and .t o permit ·the promotion of
or potential vacancies ·in'~ployee. ~ ~ppeal from
Notwithatanding anythin1
any such professional employee
tiona in the Professional Ser- such de~tion °! the 'CSIII· contained herein a camp u a
as hereinafter provided.
vices Negotiating Unit which phaluslProtmobetion ~ttedew Panel president 1""!Y' .
II. Doflnlllono
........,.
are intended to be filled. The 8
no
penm
:
(1) .ak. direct ,;n, by the
A. The following terms. shall prof-umaJ emplor,ees seeking Univennty shall announce poH. the Panel de~ ~t U niversil;x_ Review 8oud of
be defined as P.rovided in Ar- . assignment to a different rank 81
"ti
· · 1 hich •t has the mcrease or change m duties the "nitial • • - - t 0 { 8
·
ticle · m, Parag\'aph A of · thee and forwaid its recommendson vaCIIrlCU!S 0 .i:'aJ1 ~
and responsibilities under conlnt
ass..,.~
po&amp;l·
S
" ons •- .the --pus pres•·~·-t. been notified lind
P . !' sideration W11m1Dts promo"'"tion to ~ prof~ rank.
be
Agreement
tween ..., tate w
,..
~
uc.u
pro~ salary 1'8l1&amp;"'8. mini. shall t rward "ts
Sucb revJeW shall lie buldJed
0
1 ~of New York and the Senate
The campus president shall mum .qualifications, and brief •t . •
.
· by the Boam · in _......,.
Professional Aasoclation: "Uni- · forward the Panel's recommen· descriptions of the positions. datiol!s. ,to the C8lllPU8 Pl'!81· with appropriate pouv1a1aaa in '·
v e r sit y," "professional em- dation, together with whatever The
cements shall also dent. A copy of such recommen. ~ lii,..:Parqnq&gt;b D·
'!-"'"'"'
padent,'! recommendations be deems ap- specif~~ormation - ·' - ' ds,tion.shall ,be sent to the ap· (2) with__,. to the'.._
P loy-~
~
·-,.--Y
•
,
"'''~~ch plicanl
f.
· ·~~:~ In a • ..Y;~
"campus."
. .
propriate, to the University Re- fro'!'. appbcants •Or ea . "!'
U the decision to promote is o promotion .........,..
._......,.
B. "Professional position" or view Board. A copy of the cam- pos!tion and shall &lt;&gt;;&gt;ntain ·time within the discretion of -the U, Parqraph C (2), promote_
"position" shall ..-n a posi- pus president's recommends- lirruts for the. """"pt by the . cam us resident his decision or "\'CC""""nd for P"'!""'tion.
lion in the Professional Ser- tion, if any, shall also be sent to campus of appbcstlons. ~I pro- 8
be Pfinal, provided how- as. his scope of .autbontY pervices Negotiating Unit other the Promotion Review Panel fe881?nal_ empl_oyees whO file "!' ever, that a decision by the rmts..any professtonal employee
than a position of academic or and the-applicant.
appbcstion ~·lh: the BPP"?~n- campus president which is on his campus.
qualified academic nnik.
The University Review Board a_te ""'!'P~ ~•Ibm tb~ specif•~ claimed by the ap~licant to be V. J~~ Study_~.,._
C. "Promotion" shall mean · shall review recommendations time hmltstions shall_ !"' con arbitrary or cspnaous may be
A )Omt Uruvers1ty-SPA coman increase in 8 professional from the campus Promotion Sldered for the . pos!tion for appealed on such basis to the . mittee consisting of six periiOII8,
employee's basic annual salary Review Panel and the campus which they have apphed.
University . Review Board by BUJUl81lted by support perMX&gt;witbout a ~ in title by president. The Board or its de&amp;(a ) 2 ) The campus_may ~lect such person in accordance with net as nea!8811ry, shall be e&amp;"!ovement wtthin !""'&lt; or to a •gnee shall examine )he duties to conduct personal mterv1ews. appropriate provisions stated tablished to study the _...
h1gher rank, or wttb a change and responsibilities of the pres- In that event the campus may below. A copy of such appeal . tion of the promolioo system
il) title witliin rank or to a ent incumbent, and the" scope select from among all appli- shall also be &amp;eDt to·the campus dMcribed herein.
memhigber rank:.
· and complexity of the position cants for a pos\tion !J&gt;ose f?r president. In the event of such bers o{ the cOmmittee ~ be
( 1}_ ~ting from a permaninvolved and determine, by ap- whom personal mterv1ews will appeal the campus presidant appointed by- the Uruvanity •
ent s~t
crease or propriate means and standards, be arranged, In such cases, all may forward his recommenda- and tliree shall be appointed by
cha,n.R'!' m his duties and respon- which may include but not be applicants shall be notified tiona to the University Review the SPA Eaieutive ·Committee.
s1bilities as a ~ of limited to tests of internal and whether they have been select·
' '
movement &amp;om- J!081tion_to external OOns;stency dalk aud- ed for an interview. Applicants
another of
scope and - and 0 the
ch' common1
who are not. selected for perD. ·
S',_,.;,..l- J T ..:.-...Jcomplezi~ ~ flmCtioo . at the ~~ted 'rev~U metbodli,
sonaJ intervieWS will be advised £'
f:;f
~1) ·
same or ~ campll8; or
professional rank to which the that they will not receive fur.
( 2)_ft!!lul~ !rom a perman- present incumbent shall be as-· ther consideration for promon_ ...J ~
F'f
D •• J .;.~
ent signiflalnt 1 ncr e a 8 e or
.gned • The B"o a r d's action tion to the current vacant posi. L!JI
~
~ in bla duties and respon- ,
be final, provided, ho!": tion for which they applied.
•
• .•
s•bilitiea.aa a _...,..ce of a ever tbatreassignnwnttoadif- ·
(a ) 3) Prior to promoting -or
'1be penliateot quea&amp;ioD · f1l YOIII8'prop.-llar~d&amp;pe~ ~in the_ scope fe.....rt piofeMional rank as '! BJ)pointing 1-he ~uf jp-. · ~ « .:I!Dt 19.._ "'"'" d . ......,..t. K ....-.....- ~d .~ty of functiOn of resu-lt of the 'review prooe88 plicantthecamj&gt;uss&amp;allworm · {~tya o{ IIIIi ~ ........ lo the italllllle .....
his 'llollltii!D- •
. shall be stlbje;ct to approval by all
. . ~ ap: POiied .
•
. o{ ~ !nJiulll! of ........ aan.t~ cnta:i&amp; tO be used m the DiVisiOn of the Budl!'t.
iili=~n~ Jlliriselection. ~. far ;&lt;the- .
tY
· --lv- .et· for
considerlnc 1111 employee for
. . · , p tfitJtiO
The campus cleci8lon abiill be split 1be
nate ~ '1be Commltlee lbleaiJI. 1D . .
pi"OIIIOiiQn abell be those d&amp;E. Cr~ -!or. ro
n.
. final provided oo-ver, h t Committee at ita N~ 1 tum to ihe plaaiJII - . . ei
fined in.,__.,_ m,
The cnteria to-be used
•
.
•
. _ . . .. ~
- .
.......... .. .. tie . m•~ ................
E.
...,..._. . ..--"! in (1•)
considering. an employee ~or all promotion&amp; or ·appom
,.
. - u• ....,
'
.
•
tion shall be tide-whiCh shall be subject AD ~ in broba
Gm.t:D.
M ~
,- ·
Ill.
"'.....ailaft
.•
•
·
Prelai"IJIDOte ~the -...:cUJar tvno. ol accordance with Policia of the&gt; , Moon~, wbo "liDDitil the Wile In ·
_ .
-·
A. .,_,,.;_;_..:;.;. &amp;nils. The
~
~" ·; ~,
8oud of TrusteeS' and tbe Di- fa_. "o{ a• iiiiWAoU...
' al8o
fllltll.. ~
, ., , _ _ _
dntW. and ,_,..\M'!I !or
•·
_,. the a •..a-.. . &gt;
•
'
c-IMeevoW to~
Univen.ijy lbllll-.llllsh four ...b'idi tboi empl0)'88 is " being Vlii10il,..
._.......
.
'
'1be Com.mTUee al8o m- totlle&amp;matemrzl trr~
'to
prof~-a-..,n.,a~ I, COQSidered; for e~~~tnple:
(b ) U. in•t:beJudl!ln.entllf~ ..:~ 1111
·to ita the A""""'- 0 • 'n 1
II,BI_I.L~__,.:, &amp;IliaD BotJrd_ ~
(a) ~ in_-peaform- campusthe
-~~-:!
-Mtinn ID the s..t. "port (B~
demoastratad. for-- ~
_........~
.
... die
Ullbli that • .that -.Ia aJIDw
•
Tboi · ~· -ahaU· es........... ample, by""""""" in caJT)'ing ures&lt;lesc;ribed .~"!'-211 ,......_.. •..,.to lie
a llni'ISI'Iitx.~ 8oud
to: out &amp;llllignecl d~t.ioll and Jeiii1I!D:" . !":~~ ~Jeqiiiiii81D
L..! I~
inl ~~
• the Seaate
crltaia
,._
30
&lt;1&gt;-"!!IIIP by"'- • 19'72. aibilitleo, elllcilineY••-producti\'-· 8U&lt;Il ........ - - ""fiJied we. ~- arto~
.,.-.the haalltv.
ti~110:atC:~ ~ ~- ltyi and relationship witli_cOl- · =~~Y~IIII
the JlftiPl*ll ~
.
a ~ ~ ...... .
feseiooal aemc- ~...tiatlni ~e&amp;gues. m ,the """"of u...-.,: interim basis.
the pl!llitlnn 1a
111 alba-~
Cam- cbMIId ~ -- •• •
Jllilaed.
' Unit .I D - o{ the four profes- ~ ~~_:.. · filled oo a ~t a..Ja bY llli&amp;tee ~
tt.Q · -inJtie ..._
·
•
sional,rmib ~ to ePitrovil ..,__ . _, ~81 - - lUIOiher per8llll, IDCh -st~GY• 1111 haar lbi rale
'1118 ._.. lea'ile re _,.___;,
by ibe Divlabi o{ t h e W ~ ,... ~at bla shall aetum lo bla ~ a.ld Jllu in ...s.alc piaa, ..._.
All Bee ~
. &lt;2) . _.,.,, ~ lnilial plpyee: leVel of duties and' ...,. sition without to. f1l
niq. DiacmiiDG IIIIJIIlCI from
a
l'nlllllllllf
~t IR )lllllitlaa!lto the ~ilies shall bit COII&amp;id(ci Eachc....p..ortheUDf.. h "Geelleum p.a• to...-. ~wllb ·
- t.._
::0~
~=;;. eled. Addiu-Ily, ~ ..aity,as _tbie-ma,ybe,~ latlnn em the,.._... P. ~ ~atltablad.

ate

~

iaDedlate supervisor, and ~be~~;
a CliP)' llhi!ll. at.o·1M ..m
the~ ""'l@oyee's per-

~JI':"

~

;;:;.;....tfoos

xxm or

=

visions of Paragraph D below,
applications for reasaipnwnlr,
(3) review appeals ln.accordance with appropriate proviaions of~ F ( 2 ) below
from decialons of the campus
pres1dent not to make promotions of the type defined In
Section II. Paragraph C ( 2).
C. Campp.a Promotion Reuiew
PaneL Eadt .campus president
shall initiate the development
of a · procedure by which the
professional employees shall by
June~. 1972, or as soon thereafter 8s practicable, e 1 e c t a
campus Promotion Review
Panel. Such Panel shall consist
of not less than five ( 5 ) nor
more tb&amp;n seven (7) members
elected at large by all professional employees in the negotisting unit. T'be Panel shall : ,
(1) review appeals ill aoCI!rdance with appropriate provisions of Parapaph D below from
initial assignment of positions
to the professional ranks; and
(2) "review applications for
promotions of the type defined
in Section. II. Paragraph
(2)
and make deciSions and recommendations with respect to such
applications in accordance wiijt
appropriate provisions of Parspaph F (2).
D. Reuiew of lnituu Rank·!nf..U, witbin90 days following
irutial assignment of a position
to a .professional rank by the
Uriiversity Review Board, any
prolessional employee believes
be has grounds, which, if true,
would justify assignment to a
different rank, be may apply to
his campus Promotion Review
~afiel for reassignment.
The campus Promotion Review Panel shlill; following in:
itial ·a saignment of positions to
proplicafes&amp;IOtions
. nal--~tted
· revtoiew
_,.t abp-y

comments on 8llch evaluation
reprding the profeMional em-

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ac_ulty

u!

UltUrse \J'Overnance

:i.aJ1

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s,

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Larrabee Tells··How It Is tO Live
With~.a Frank Lloyd Wnght Desigp
By PATRICIA
pie modidar plan. Seen from . in "diilenmt Jiibi, throwing
WARD BIEDERMAN
· aboYe,thecruclfonnplanJorma
ln!o . ~
_.. • · ·a p;d. -lhinllike a Silotdt. Side. Wripu ~-:,:;!...
Eric~· ........ UtB ~~alidd&amp;: of inlen!Btinl rec;lanlular hprovaa pi ~ ~ Lotter&amp; and ' cidedJ · borizaatal ' Lilre other tUies for the bouse, lltted above
~==:~.:;!
bui.ldinp i.t nrust be far""' 8!"1 ~ for-&lt;tlectzici~ .
Arts, Jauncbed a .n.. 01. four ·walked around to be appre- · below,, just m case ~,;
illllllrated leclweaonAniOriean ciated.
•
- .A. · Lilbtinl proved to be a 'J!IIIIIIIDI
archDedure ~ (N_,.. ' "Mr. Wrlsht" die!jkec! fiocil!es fad. ·
ber 5) wilh a look at bill own with· "Queen Alme fron(a and
Wiigbt like the ~ of a
Pnull&lt; Iqd Wrilbt-deeipaed Ma!yanne behinds,N l.arrat- flnl at the heart of a bGme, and
Bull'aJo boale. .
commented, Cjll!)l:iq. the arclii- the LarnibeM' fiieplace is brk:k,
Lunbee, wli"' will devote teet.
·
.
emphatically borii.ontal·like the
snbaequent lectures to the
. To eiJII)basize the horizontal exterior of the hoo.ae, ~ nu.....,. and lll:biewmeats o1 · iinSs of the house, Wrilbt bad ' tar OOYered in fO}ii Jeef. As in
· Hany Robson Ricbanl8oa, · the borizoiital joints of the a - many other Wrilbt bous5; tbS
Loula H. 9uJilvaD, and Wrilbt, terior brickwo&lt;k. deeply rakacL bearth and stairs are related
apob tD a 1arae auclliince in the Tbe mortar at t be vertical- desiln elements.
.
I~ aUditorium. Gordon Bunshaft. joints W&amp;s dyed to matcll the
· Wrisht buildings bjtve been
- clemped far lbe Albrilht-Knox -' brick aDd applil¥!1hisb.
criticired for their low.c:eil.inlla.
ArtGellory. Rio talbare beiJur
Tbe bouse evidences the . Larrabee, _who at 5'8" is the
fiPIIIJ8CII'IIC by lbe UIB Sc:bool same meticulous attention to ·same height 88 Wright, reel Archiliectan! and 'Environ- detail that cbaracterjrles the counted tliat """""'ne once
llllilltaJ Daai8o.
~
much grander, more expensive 8Bked Wright if be would have
Tbe Larnibees' Summit Ave- Darwin Martin bouse, Larrabee desigiied difterently if be
- houaio - built in 1903 for aaid. For esample, the -houae taller.
the daulht8r and ...._In-Jaw of tapers, that is, it was corrected
"Yes," :wrlsht answered
Darwin Mu1iD, ~ ODIIIIIIis- lw perspective.
A Grut Trlumvlrote
lliaDed tbe - . , . .1.-tt Park- ~ .Another strong horizontal eJeIn introducing i be lecture three were "cbaracteristiCally
.,.y bouM, .,...,.,,Uwibe Ulli- ment is..a band of stained-glaas s.er i e a; l.arrabee aeid that American," larnbee said.
veraity. Orllfnall.y'·tlae lliDalJei;;,.~.WincJows. WijgbtdE8igned tbeee " Richardson, Sullivan imd
"Buftalo is virtually unique
booa CIIIIII8Ct.ed to the eo that acreens or storm win- Wright fonn one of the great in having works by all three
Mar1iD ~
dOws could be ineerted from triumvirates in Americiln an:hi- staniling," he pointed out .Unlarnbee aDd bill wile, an:hi- the inside.
·
tectore." Tbey also illustmte a fortunately, seVM8l buildings
. teet EJeenor Burow&amp; Doer- o..Jinl- 'CIImat8
logical piOceesion, one to the bere liilve t-n lost, including
Wright's Lorldn Building on
· mann (an_.:iate in theNWrilbt was wonderfully in Mxt. York &amp;riD of Wa...., Bums, vootive in finding ways to
While very difterent pereon- Seneca, 1om down in 1950 and
·
deecribed
by Larrabee .as the.
~ " Lunde) • diyide their with climate. Tbe Summit Ave- ally and in their work, -the
time betw.n the Wrlsht bouae nue bouae b&amp;B.a deep roof overaDd a New Y~ _.tmebl
hang whidl keeps the bouee
. )'tie Summit, A~ -~ cooler in' 'summer
the
$27,
'
18 'DOteuylil_~riJbt.away_... . - ~"awa
y''~-'- and
· the 'keeps
"-'-"'-"-

=..:.=

:l: wn.J

.....re

deei

~~~In 8D m~• ' ;b;, openedi:'wmt.er:'~WD

· v.- earlier With l':l&amp;DCY Tobin
Willla Ol tbe C""!""', be called

- "'t h8B been aaid of Wrisht
thet be rarely bad. an aeetbetic
that~ - ~ -. eolution-tbetdidll'tllrsthavea·
" ......._ · '
• tec:bi&gt;ical- solution," IBrrabee
"But lben you-~ _...,..., . said.· Cimtral• beating bad re~ .._, bow an mtelligen~ cently been- introduoed when
mind b8B IJeeo. at work here.
the Martin COii&gt;plex was being
- . . , _ liDr Anytlllng.U.
built, and a ~ floor plan
'"lbBQ!&gt;)ora.,tbeW~~,Y,tbewinwas 'poiiSible ·'u a resuJt ·'Tbe '
dCIIIPswOd:,' die '. ,.yihe1igbt dOWnstairs of the Larrabees'
~t epoils you for living house is virtually one room.
~· alae."
.
Tbe. Ilea! and lighting fixTbe bouae . w aa originally · tures throughout the house are
built at 11 ooat of $10,000. "''t not Tilfany-proper but stained
il what Wlight- lbougbt the • glass made for Wri~ by a ..
a~Anaicanoouplesbould . finn that also supplif!d Great
haW. Larrabee 'aeid
· Lakes steemilhips, n.B colored
Tbe bouae is built on a sim- . glaas in the windows cbiuiges

;"/ m

Ujm•t'ed Fund
'

,"

''9

''

:

..

'

•'j-

D
.
ri
•

•

'

ve

•

'

.__
beat building BulfaJo ever bad
or is likely .to have.
•
Larrabee said bill admiration
· for the pr:ofeeeion of an:hitectore borders on awe. Tbe an:hiteet, be said, oombinee alrllls
generally in conflict In deeignin a building, 'C!CODDmic, technof.;gical, aeetbetic, aocial and
( Contilwcd"" 11, coL ·II)

f a~oal

(XX) Short
.
0

O?-·' C• ""''

. Tbe Univemity is $27,000 fice ol the Vice PreeidSnt lor
short of i ts United Fund goal . Facilities- Planning,- 119. per
ol $110,000, Caml&gt;us Fund of- cent; Faculty oll:ncjneermg
ficiala ripozted ~ - wee!L . To · and ~~ -~~ '\Jer
date, lbe camp&amp;Jgn b8B raised cent; .DiWBion ol -Continuing
$83,000 or 75 pei,(lent of the Education lo MFC, 111 · per
~et fi gure. E very effort is cent; the University Librarlee,
~~ made to conci~Jd!o the
100 per ceDt; .University at BWdrive by ·next·Tul!lllayN &gt;Ut of- fa10 ·Foundation ' and Alumni,
fieials say the C$IDI)&amp;ign. ~ 100percent; ancf'tbeNucleer
continue beyond that date if Science and Tedmology Il'acil- ·
the goal is not rnad&gt;ed.
ity, 100 per 'CI!IIl•
•
L!ading all division&amp; or the
, .
- Ullivennty is the .scbQol of
Three otb. divisiona are apManagement which 'h&amp;B raised pioacbing' their Boals: lbe Of- 140 J?Bl 'cent of its go81. Other fice of t1ie ·Vice President for
divisJons which have reached University Relations, 9'1 ·per
or aceeded their goals aie: Of- ceDt; Uie Ol!ice ol the. Vice,.

NEW

'

'"C-'

,

,

President for Academic A1fairs,
91 per cent; and-the omc. o1
the Vice Preeident for_ -Researdl,-90 per..oent.. .
-:. . , ...
... _ _ , . 1 - • . , 1 ' ' ... ,. , ,
In the FaCulty of Heakh Sci- ences which is geneially lagging,' several su!HiivisiPDB have
exceeded or are .nearing their
goals : ~deputmentaof

PharmacPlOJY and GynecologyObstetrics . JD the Sdlool .. o1
M8dieinoi have -'both logged
llibre IbiD 100 per ceo~ lbe
!fcbool of Nursini is at lf't_i!"r
cent and the School of Reaitb
Related pro res s i 0 n s bas
!'Chieved 96 per cent

STATE UNIVERSITY OF
YORK AT itUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIQNAL PROGREsS.- .

·----

IDS . ~- 4C!ll-«&lt;ll · dllllll 111t1- F.culty of Ans ond Lonon • . . .....
Foc:ulty of Educotio&lt;iOI Studios •.•••
F.culty of Engineering and

·Applied$&lt;- .. ·. .. .. . . . . .
,_ F~tvof.Heeltf'l~ ••••.• . •
Faculty of Low end Jurilf'&lt;U(Ion&lt;» •• •

School of """"-"""1' . .. .. . =. . • .
'Fecull'/ of Noturol Sc;oncos end
,... Mlthen\ltics •.. . . . . . . . . : . ...
Foc:ultV;of Socr.l--. ond
'· ~nlnr.tion •
. .• . .. ~ . ..
.... Divilion of~

S\udiel ~ ..

,G....... ~ · ···· · · ·······•,
"' Diwi11on c&gt;t-Contti.J'tng Educ:otionMriom Flume,;.. Collett

UilvwlltV LlbroriOs • . •.• "
Olficoo of cbo Prwiclont ond··

. .... \

. . ... .

eXec:ult..' v~e~ p;'lllidlln .. . : • .

Olfioo oi' Vb , _ ,,

--

----

-----

-

1-

.-~---

s 10,otCIO,QO
. •.. 3.1100m· 4.800bo
37~700Jl!l
2.800Jl!l

. - 1A00:00

••"IJiijlilil.iilliilii:::::J:::=!==I::::::J
t·

-lo=-'.ao '

�N"""""-9, 1912

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

' An accreditation visit is .not
of the Sell--&amp;aolf, 'to d&amp;an investigation, Dr. R Lee termine if anYibiM ~
Hornbake, vice president for has been ..-!Oabd'ar .utlllld.
a!"'demic affairs at the U'nive~;:
The team OODft)led 1111 find,.
-.ty of Maryland, said Mon&amp;Y: ings to President Robert L
Rather, it is a verification by Ketter before leavitia. and will
peers of a universityJs' own as..
later produce • . writt.en docusessment of how well ifis meet- . ment which can iteelf be exing its stated objectives with amined and jucqed.
- '
the option, of course, fo~ both
Final decision Dn accredita. suggestions f 0 r improvement tion wm come from the Comand the spelling out of short- , mission on Higher Bclumtion
.. comings.
of the Middle Stat. ~Dr. Hornbake was chairman
of the 13-member evaluatiQill
team from the Middle States
Association of Colleges and
Secondary Schools which was
on campus this week.
The system has shortcomings
of its own, he observed, but no
one has yet come up with a
betl.er way of going about it.
. Asked if n is J&gt;OSS1ble to
JUdge an institution on the
basis of a &amp;U-Study and a
three-day visit, Dr. · Hombake
suggested that that's not the
point. ''1 doubt we are reallr
trying to judge the total institution," he said. ·
·S ketching in the process, Dr.
Hombake said that, aotually
most of the work is finished 00: ·
fore an evaluation team ever
arrives. Members of the group tion which will read and rehave studU.d the Self-Study view ,b oth reports.
provided them in advance along
An aocreditation visit is limwith other mal.erials. Some of ited to three days, Dr. Homthem, like Hombake himseU, bake explained, because in the
may have made a pre-visit. course of a ~onge'r evaluation
Thus, be says, the group does team members might "likely
not arrive de nouo but rather try to become 'expert' on the

•

Draeuta Lived! Bo_ston Scfwklfs :~ns~~io':.w~.::,e:wl'!t~t"'~ -~~~::a~r~o:i;z;
'h (. m_ ·th • Tra '1 .•
:A
S
~y~P;.~~;~~~ u! f::!·~.!'l~~u~ -a~~Va~- ~~£iiS!~- ~~~~~ ~trying ·to achieve.
Self-Study Good One'

-

R•-·

BIEDERMAN
Stolt

"We want blood," somebody
muttered, as the capacity crowd
gathered Sunday night in the
Fillmore Room, grew impatient
to hear the true story behind
the tale of Dracula, the most

called tt:
First drawn into the Dracula
business by the 1931 Bela Lugosi film, McNally was surprised to learn that Transylvania was not another "Ruritania" but a real place and that
the other place
in the

names

u ·
clearly authentic is Bram Stoker's ~hievement. His Dra'culn,
published in 1897, has never
been out of print in this country. It is his version of the
vampire story that is regarded
as "definitive." Stoker i&amp; responsible for selecting from a

voluntary effort, Dr. Ho
emphasized. ''We are here at

good one," Dr. Hombalce said. - ln the "Middle States N11foa
"Its crj!iques of University pro-- have ei1her been ao:reclited or
grams are well-written, clear aspire to it.
'
,
and pertinent."
Under 0 r d j nary ciroumMembers of the visiting stances, the process is con!.earn, he said, spent Monday, ducted at 10-year intervals. U
TueSday and Wednesday of this were the University's firat
this week trying to learn if accreditation, however, another

famous
vampire
of -them
all. map.
Stoker His
bookinterest
were also
on th;e~~(~C~o~nl~~~~d~on. .pGBi&lt;~2~co~L~1~'~~the~
ir judgments square with (Continnd on ptJ# 3, coL 3)
While the
audience
fidgeted,
led him
'
'
one of the evening's co-expetts, search historical documen.t s for
dressed in a long black cape, a real Dracula. He found a refchatted near the podium with erence -to Vlad in a 15th centhe local victim of a rabid bat. tury manuscript in Leningrad.
It was that )cind of night.
Linking up wj th Florescu, who
As the highlight of Norton's had discovered comparable
weeken&lt;! ol Halloween Horrors, German-language I e g e n d s in
the SA-GSA Sgeakers Bureau Switzerland, McNally obtained
invited Raymond JS:, McNally a Ftilbright ,t o continue work
anthedu_RaseadurcFlhof""C"or
D'rloacu
··spea
_ kTheo
. n on the subject in Romania,
.,
la.
- wh~re a "Dracula team" un·
pair are co-authors of a widely covered Vlad's castle and other
publicized, just_p\!bliShed book proofs of his existence.
on the historical hasis for ,Bram
"I •had visions of a Senator
Stoker's famous novel and on staniling up in Congress one
the w..,_lth of Transylvanian day and saying, 'Dracula refolklore that transformed · a search? What the hell are we
simple 15th century despot into doing with our · money?'" Mean undead ravager of ladies' Nally recalls.
•
necks.
_Any hope of keeping the reAffiliated with the Slavic and - search quiet was scotched by
East European Center of Bos- President Nixon's arrival in
ton College, both McNally Romania in 1969. Nixon asked
(Center director ) and Florescu what 'the !"'8"8rch pair were
argue that ttre "real" ,Dracula doing th~. "Pursuing Dracwas a Rornani8n ruler named ula," they replied, and the next
V1ad .Tepes, known in his life- day the papers were publicizing
&gt;time U431-1476) as Vlad Drac- a book that had not yet been
ula, an ancient Romanian word written, Florescu recalls.
meaning "devil," "son of the No More 'A Vampire U..n Hft6er
dev,il" or "dragon." V:lad was
Although Vlail Dracula was
-Its~·
·_·
murdeft!d a fit~ o his ~~~n s have P.tliared t 0 g e t h e r a
The first four women to be from nMI'Iy 200 appliCant~~ wbo ward c:baniiDI people's atti~tion during. a BlX-year wealth of teniloualy related ma- appointed to the 'Camfrua Se- answered -news pap fir help- tudes about pollee and ltiw eoretgl!; lnostly by nnpalement,
terial on this infiuitous Transyl- curity -force Were swoftl in ~ "18Dted ada, do ·more tDin ......0 fOilCell*lt, by ~ do ..._,
a form of t!XIlCiltion be favored~vlUI_ian, the area's vampiri! lore Friday afl.emoon along with 12 the· niunbere ol tbe force,-how- ' -with tbe •bal)y imqe,
-,ys,
to the point of feUahism.
Bra'in Stoker and jhe ~ male rookies. ever. Their Ulllfonn!y youthful
~.ub nabOdY'a idea ol
· Vlaa waa bom in Transyl- movies -based •on Stoker's best
The 16 additions oc- &amp;ppe1U811Ces_ and coUeae badt- a· "heavy; ' ML Oltlo nailelh&amp;vanla. the setting of Stoker's seller.- The New Yorit Gmpbic casioned, Securi"ty Director grounds Willao a ~v to- leM indica~ that llhe ad lite·
nowl and the 80W'08 of-a bodY SocietY-- publiahed their boOk Kenneth 1!. Glennon says, ' by wanl.dooinl"'the "u&amp;- - "-PP other oeciiiily f o r c e of vampire lore ~t ~1- NOVember 1. - Another _mare new facilities &amp;lid requests for whidt !requeall
tam lllu- -have
•c~&amp;vmlan peasiUllll still. belieVe:- . scbolar!Y
em ~the histor- mbre P8monnel- ~ UiB'e dell~ ~ relaticm-- feneive
lo learn wliat
n. a.tlc'l 1111 Up
• - '
iCal Dracula; ''wjlb aiLthe dcic&gt;- total Security manpc'lw'er to 89. lldpL
'
lactica to ... --....:Y·
"Vempirimt isn't lai.hllt •
1111111ittatlon~ •want," This fndudea~67 ~ four
the _,. _ _ . cme
Olbilor ~ lo · dat ._
••--'~
'---- ,.... ~"
:. &gt;· · •-- an '--"-tor---" 6 " " ' " taX au of 'lb.ra
the n i i D ' &amp; - .............. _ ,.......__......., _ ,_.___..__.,_ ,..._ ....._..._
1

-·::e~1'h~r~ha~\~u:-M~N;;n/~tt;i:~

Sectlri

ty

F
A •
oree PJ&gt;9~.

+-W
·:.rirst· .. OIJlel'lc~
a

=undeqaae

.a

·:iib'ibe"::;,;;;;;Fa.-.. ~p-atalab*dat.e, .~; ~Gtiftin; ..;_ etiO,aFnmch~h~ ;;u:-'w.a:..s-.a;-Ji.':i

, eacu Ulllalned- IM 'nli ODe '18
· taJdni -iloim ·the ~the
viJlaPe · "the
of

o!

Flo,_,.. said.
~
~~!.Security- direct-or; and PM,._ Slate UniWaity at
Amid beculatlonl"cm· GlianzMa._ ,
~. decided lo,tzy oat for
and ~ : The_.~ 11e_1 et~d . the -~ "l..,.lllld to wwli to-

whetheir .

e

~~~-..,.~ ~~
....... .....,.,
(~ _• ,... I, coL_4~

�~

~
.• ...
-·' -

•• /f.-2.1972

~.

SElcUrity Wom~.-._- - - - : - - - 215 Campuses (Co~- from- c:oi.
-~e ol and
An Guards makinl campus
with veterans . in lepl
.~OW
rounds. · _
Ma. RulouD:inmphl!•izes that
- . the olllcW-tiile ol iler new
rpo
Use Anns -job byPallc8nertT,.....
are- still ~ sition is """""" ollicer." That
J.
Febru,arC'~ "':
be ber· approach, A certi.
1,

6)

aif( paired

quired
procedures.• .·

law

.

po.

'Thoee who

will

I

Jl and .when the University given four weeks of trituung at fied ilccupational therapy assisarrives at a policy of selective the State Police Academy in tant, sbe has worked in vocaarmlng for members of the Alban
tional projects for the mentally
Campus Security force, it will
'l'lli'tentative description of retarded and pb,ysically handinot be alone.
that February training indi· "":Pped a~ Goodwill. Being
In fact, 215 of '342 institu· cates that all the · newcomers w1th· secunty, sbe f.:.els, simply
tions responding to ,,tbl: 1972 are provisional employees who provides another opportunity to
International Assoc1a·hon of must still take the civil service do something positive for peo.
College· and University Secur· emminstion required for their pie.
ity Directors' Directory ~ official job classification, cam· Different Unlfonns, Some Duties
tionnaire reported that theu pus secUrity officer·ll.
.
Althoullh their uniforms will
security forces are authorized
Alter the exam results-are m, be special-a feminized version
they must be "rea~le," that of their male counterparts' tw0 .
to use firearms.
The list of those using arms is, they must score high enough toned brown, the women in sei n c I u des: the University of among those passing the exam, curity will' have the same duties
Wisconsin (Madison), the Uni- for permanent appointment. U as other campus security ofversity of Chicago, Michigan not, they have to be replaced, ficers-ll.
These include:
State, MIT, Cornell, Yale, the Glennon indicates.
University of Cincinnati, the
Despite the presence of the
• protecting persons and
University of Pennsylvania and . four women in the rooltie group, property at on-&lt;:ampus facilth1rveinUeru.·v;:;"/ty~~~~~ujJ Glennon ssys that the security ities, grounds and dormitor ies
force does not have a quota for during patroip, both vehicular
compare U/ B to H a rv a rd, hiring females. "We simply and on foot;
~~;:!::fc;,:~~ot~~d!!ffu placed an ad emphasizing that
• responding to calls for asthe survey report.
the University is an equal op- sistance;
1\nd, the -report does not des· · portunity employer an&lt;! se• initiating investigations of
.
lected the 16 best applicants," law violations and making wril.cril&gt;e policies guiding use of he ssys. "If we'd had a quota, ten reports;
fis.:;:Y· respondents were 229 there would , be 51 per rent
• rna.k4lg arrests when neewomen in the group."
essary;
public and 111 private univerThe newcomer group also in• testilying in court;
sities, divided into these enroll· eludes at le4st three blackS.
• directing and _ regulatin g
ment categories: under 2,000, The Women 1
t raffic;
67 ; 5,0QO.lO,·
36; 2,()()().5•000•
In addition to Ms. Otto,
• eoforcing traiJic laws, is000, 100; 10,()()().15,900, 57; over members of the female COfttin· suing parlting tickets and traffic
15
~,&amp;'d8.ta-eliciting questions gent are: Carolyn Horice, who citations for moving violations;
and a summary of responses holds a B.S. in speech therapy
• arranging for medical atfollow:
f r 0 m Buffalo State; Donna tention and first aid for injured
Is the use of mace author· Kilsch, with a B.A. in theatre • persons;
ized? yes, 149; no, 191. U/ B and a minor in education from
• performing special duties
currently authorizes the ~ of Sienna Heights College, Ad- 'and assignments, as requi red,
(Contiluud /1'9,;. 'pose 1, col. 3) grams for the coming year;" mace.
risn, Michigan; and Janice which call for specially recog.
•-- 1
the d tails that that vampires are the the only
Is · riot control equipment Ruhling, who has an A.A.S. de- nized sliills and rapport in deal=p~have ~ unearthly beings who baye sex, available and have personnel gree from Erie llommunity Col- ing with certain areas and with
the vampire: a penchant for and that poppy seeds wi!' ala? undergone training in its use? lege.
the school population l e.g.,
.beautiful .yiiung llills, inability eerve to w&amp;J:d . o!f vampu:es if yes, 164, no, 171. U / B's reMs. Horice is !rank about her dormitory a rea coordination
to cast a obadowi , iir~"'t ·roam· . yo)l
out-of prlic, ,.
.SP.Onse. w~ yes. . . .; ;, . .
. ..easQns ·for wimtim! Uie ·l'i!si· ~d K-9, patrol) ; and
ing ·fear of ~
garlicThe movie's fmal sectiol)-a
To whom :does the security · tiOri: ''I' coUldn't 'r.lii!' ,: i jOb."
·" status' as' a :peace officer.
anJ the ultimate fear mlngJed film )listory,, of Drq&lt;i~ .fo..r:cl!' "lP!lrt? 'president, 30; ,vice She thi!lks campus · seCUrity 'Ih' aailition; the · women, as
With d&lt;isii-e for the stake.
marvelous cliP!' from No~ferlUu, president, 136; personnel deans, work will be a different thing," other members of the force,
According to McNally and the Burnau s_d ent class1c that 31; physics! plant director, 59; and this ties in with her life in- may : serve, on a rotating as·
Florescu, Stoker learned of the was off!cially condemned_ to business manager, 47; other, 34. terest of being involved in signment basis, as desk officer
)listoricsl Drscula from a con· destruction. Transylvaman- The U/ B director of security many types of situations. "I coordinating activities of fool
temporary Hungarian scholar. bo_m Bela Lugosi flickers on reports to the executive v_ice ·expect no trouble with stu- and mobile patrols and mainAn Irishman who was business bnefly, as does Carl Dreyer, president.
dents," Ms. Horice ssys. "I just taining records of sec u r i t y
manager for actor Henry Irv- ~tor of Vainwr. ~ut_ the
Are security policies or po- graduated from college and am force activities; be required lo
ing Stoker consulted a guide- history stops disappomtingly lice regulations published? yes, familiar with student prob- operate sophisticated electronic
~in the British Museum for short, with no mention of re- . 273; no, 60; U I B, ·yes.
lems." Her approach to the equipment and to interpret
details of life in Transylvania. oent fili;n versions, 1p( Ro"'!"'
Is the security force author· work, she indicates, will be computer print-outs; be re'The proximate source of the Po\an5ki's attempt at a vamrue ized ~mpound vehicles? ·yes, guided by just one rule: "Be quired to photograph and fin·
book, Stoker said, wai a night- satire or of Blacula. A so 193; no, 140; U / B, yes.
yourseU. Don't put on."
gerprint arrested suspects; and,
mare about a vampire after a strangely at-Ilt throughout the
Does the securjty office colA personal approach is what have police officer status.
late Blli!P'}l'. of dressed crab.
film !"'d COIJllD!!IllarY was any lect: vehicle registration and Ms. Kilsch thinks will best do
These are general job des'The ~tic audience men\ion of !lefi!aps _the moat parking fees? 53 yes; violations the job. She feels security of. criptionll, Seeuf.i ty Director
bad 00.. primed for the ·vam· remarkable medis eVJdenoe of fines? 18 yes; registration, park- ficers are here to provide a ser- Glennon says, and by no means
pire lecture by a shudder of the durability of . the vampire ing.and/ or violation fees? 107; vice to the campus community limit the officers to these par·
honor films shl&gt;wn on campus theine, the appearance on tele- none of ·t hese, 161. U / B's Se- and that that service is best of- ticular duties.
pver the ,.weekehd. ,Lugoei's vision of a ....,.,..rul. vampire curity Office collects no fees. .
fered on a one-to-one basis. Ms.
The male security recruits
!il!Jl, .~ by Todd Brown- SOjlp, Dark Shadows. .
What uniform .. is ,worn by Kilsch has taught for three are: Frederick Barkley, Francis
. ~g. Who--also ma4e Freako,-was Commem.llsrn ~flpnentf . .
security forces? traditional po- years in ' diocessn schools and X . Butler, David Chemega,
IICI'I!I!DOJd . Friclay. · nilb~ under
Eady in · the- presentation lice uniforms, 214; blazers, 28; lookS forward to ber new work Ochuii Ekebe, James Furdell,
Community AcUon Corps spon- Florescu complained about the civilian clothing, 14: combins- having less structure than the Glen: Gardner, Kenneth George,
eonhip.· CAC aleo brought The commercialism that lias marked tion of these, 85. 'The U/ B classroom situation . . Already, John Lewis, Cbeeter Menltiena,
COIIqUeTeT Worm, with Vincent this project, promulgated pri· force uses a combinstion, de- she indicates, "it involves more · Daviil Parobek, Michael Stump,
Price 88 the Witcbhunter Gen- marily lly the press, he said.
pending upon assignments.
than I thought," including a re- and Francis SzCzublewski.
era!. UUAB """""-1 a liiOrror
"I Consider myself 11. humble
Is there a published policy
triple-'-ler in the Confer- scho!ar. and a genuine scholar," regarding narcotics and drug
ence n-tre: !Jau81atera of Florescu explaine9, extending ab.- ; yes, 235; no, 95; U / B,
Dar/cnaa, looeely besed on the this deecription to his col· no.
Is there a published policy
life of 16th century Count.. · league. "I want to emphasize
· Elizabelb Bathory, who mur· the serious nature of the re- on campus demonatnotions?
deled' ..U:.U..
bathe in their aearch," he said.
yes, 260; no;-73; U/B, yes.
The Collegiate Ass em b 1 y E which was accepted by the
. blood,. l)r. JelryU. IJIIIl Sillier,
Howevej - serlous that may
The report alao notes -that pa~ a proposal to change Assembly, any grievance which
Hyde; and -Dr. Phiba Rilla be, the commercialism of the 177 of the responding institu- its voting practices at its meet- cannot be .resolved within the
~ ~th PNe and c:blller project isn't all a figment ol tiona charge faculty from $0 to
ing, October 25.
individual ool.legiate unit can
fawrille Peter Cuablnl.
1ownalistic imagination. Mo- $5 ,per year for a campus_parkThe proposal, presented by be b~t - to the Assembly,
_..C..
, _ Nally 'and Ftorescu have a~ ing permit; 31......,. up to .$10 Elliot Smith of the New Col- which will then set up a com·
'The prof~ too, bad a mid&lt;. Their film, with ita nude· per year; 22, up to $15' per lege of Mode r n Education, mittee to mediste the grievanc:efilm 88 put ol their aavellilig "virgin" on homeback and hat year; 21, up to $20; and 61, states that only the 17 oollegi· The- SJ1!lci!U grievance coiDIDlt-

. "ved'.----'----------Dracula Li
run:.

:;,d

Collegiate Assembly Okays PrOposal
To Change Its Procedure for Voting

·to

..,~B:. ~~haW; :;~?£:f~RL_Iill~:·\!;as ;n~'W:\Rs~Jeo~~ ~"~~ ~= ~
liJr.e their book.

n

8lalll Chriaflll a '60'1

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

·

!lliilopire-plo qulctle, The
B,..,.,..,~

ln ·&amp;are~&amp;

of, In · , ao~ar: Ia lbe first
mOvie aboid lbe Couat and bla
~ .......,.. ltbat em loealklll

E

educational film. The team alao
J.8.clay "Spollilbt 011
DNcula" tours . to RoauiDia,·
"an adventure in Transyl~"
wlth'&gt;Other vamp!re-iovem imdl
or llluileota ol lbe occull Bro.
dlllft!8 IIIIYI!l'tiaina -thMe Pan·
Am tours, 1986 round-trip, _ ,
..-

At 141 .or the 1D8titut1ons,

studerita must pay from $0-$5
per year for parking. Sixty-five
co~ ~e $10 for student
parking pJivileges; 39, up to
$15; 28, up $20; ana 49, over
.$20. U/B has no charge for
students, either.:

to

_..,1!'~=
·Corbett Is Named
_
_ . . dellcht, =:.at~ ~er
ClDaat.
s-eA of ~ at $8
a
db ed- CIII!T·.. .
·
P'ran\; J . Corbett, director of
tftiliJdlh · Blilldla, , _ .. . . . . . , . ca the·:U/8 Office of Urban AI·
~ . . . . . ~ . . ._ ,... .... a nr...la-. wbo fiiiD, .baa been elected to the
..._._.- ·a.~ . llella :raa. a1
baud ol direcUlrs of the Na. - Ia TialliA • ._ .. . - . . l/'11111' ..... a lltlle deeper tiaMl Committee for Public
................ . . . . . ...... ~- .:- .·
.. ~ l'lappil. ·

I

i-:_16-'"

,..__...,"'to

who had previously voted will
n~ act in !'11 advisory, non,
v'!tmg capac1ty. 'The Aasembly
will request that the Faculty
Senate amend the 'Collegiate
Proepectus to include this revision. 'The Senate must do 80
before the change is operative.

The Assembly
a1ao ~
P'?l"""'ls
to estab~
a formal

reoommenc~aJ.... but the final

poioer Ql judgment will rest in
.the Assembly.
.

'the Asaembly adaPted this
approadi rather than one pro~ Smith. of New Col·
ege. ~·- plan was to set up a
~grievance collliii!lt.ee-

l:;:t

Colleg~ate System. (.U the
p -- "-· ad •-- ~-•
·~·• _...,
""" ..........t- ·

the thirdtbe..Asse_m
' major action
of
theIn....w.g,
bly
fllm*i an ad:laOc ()()IIIIIlltf"'! to
tipte-a ~a~
a..:-~
·
The
...........·

poaal of John~~ Collep ·'

j..,

gnev"'!ce Procedure for the

lfi:'
~=-to":.A-mbiy.~-''-- ~~~~.:•:pro-

•w:.tumro-nm
~;&lt;;:
r;;:;; of c:;u;;p z.g; and
of

'olm ..._._.of

�Faculty L~aders Hear
·. Ruling on Legal Aid ~
- SUNY's recent decision on cently published CampuS Selegal aid for employaes, the curity report and the Presi· ,
Campus Security report and dent's reply to it, that the
faculty representation on the President plans to name · a
President's bodget committee panel to consider all issues inconcerned the Faculty Senate volved in the report's recom·
Executive Committee at ita mendation of limited arming of ·
October 25 meeting. ·
. Security personneL What is
Appearing for -t be President, imagined, Somit -said, emphaExecutive Vice President AI- sizing the extremely tentative
, bert Somit told the Committee nature of speculation •on the isthat SUNY's vice chailceilor sue, is the possible arming of
for _legal affairs has stated that: a supervisor who could respond_
if, in the' reasonable exercise to an · armed-man calL 'lbe
of his duties,. an employee, of possibility of publicizing
the University ~ines the 00. breaches of security was also
ject of ~ .civil suit, the State raised with Somit noting that
will defend the employee. How- this is an extremely sensitive
ever, if the employee is prose- community relations matter.
cuted on a criminal charge, be Also being explored, Somit
is "on his own."
said, are various ways to . cur~
The ruling answers several lai1 campus crime, such as bet·
policy/ questions J!&lt;&gt;Wing out ter security checks at doors of
of a shooting incident at the University buildings.
Coopenipve Co II e g e Center,
.The Executive Committee
Septem~ 11.
Dr. Charles agreed to place a d-iscussion of
Bailey, diiector of tbe Center, the report on Campus Security
is charged on two counts of and itS implications on the
first de_gree assault and illegal agenda for the upcoming Fac·
possesston of a dangerous ulty Senate meeting (Novem· (Conlilwed from JKll&lt; 1, col. 6)
weapon as a- result of. the inci, ber 7 ) . It also named a sub would follow within five years.
dent: In this particular· oase, group to report to it on the If there were to be a sudden
the· State had indicated that it document at its November 1 change in the institution's June"does not regard itseU as re- meeting.
tion, pwpose or scope, another
sponsible tor either Dr. Bailey's Buctawt
evaluation would also come bebail or legal defense," but it
On the question of the bud- fore a decade has passed,
had been believed that the in- get, the Committee aoted with .Options Avoiloble
cident which involved a disPute dispatch on the issue of faculty
An institution has accredi·ta·
with a dischari!ed former staff representation raised at the last tion options, Dr. Hornbake
member mil!ht cause Albany Senate meeting. Two slates of said. It may ask for a compre"to rethink its general policy." nominees were presented for hensive evaluation or for a
Security Report
membership on the President's special approach to a single,
Vice President Somit also budget committee. 'lbe Exec- significant development Then,
reported, in regard to the re- utive Committee had requested too, a college or university
and had received the Presi- doing an outstanding job may
dent's invitation to recommend be visited so that a case study
names for two faculty seats on of its work may be developed
that body. 'lbe faculty leader- for others.

Middle States' Visit--------....;_________

Papalia Is
Acting Head

While on campus., Dr; Horn·

bake said, members of !he accrediting team conduct both
Dr. Anthony Papalia has
formal and infonnal visits with
been appointed acting chairman
a maximum number of stuof the Department of Instruc·
dents, faculty and staff, paraitioh, succeeding Dr. Carlton R
lepng areas covered in the SeUMeyers, who ·will continue to
Study and perhaps going beteach
the department
yond them.
Dr. Papalia, an associate proAs an example of this methfessor of foreign language edu·
od, Dr. Kathryn Hopwood,
cation, will serve until August
chairman, Department of Coun·
31, 1973.
seling and Student DevelopA native of Italy, Dr. Papalia
ment, Hunter College, was ,...
joined U / B in 1969 after teachported to be table-hopping in
ing foreign languages iti'&amp;chools
Norton for informal chats with
in Lancaster and Salamanca.
· students.
N.Y. He received his B.A. and
Other members of the group
M.A. from St Bonaventure and
talked to leaders of the Facul·
his Ed.D. bere. He has also
ty Senate but also sought out
studied at the University of
faculty members within departGuadalajlya in Mexico and the
menta, spreading out after in·
University of Messina in Italy.
itisl contacts with administra·
· 'Dr. P!Jpalia is presently a
tors.
school 'hoard trustee for the
How team members operate
Depew School Districl He has
in a given situation is innualso · served as president of the
enced by whether or not other
Western New .York Council of
groups are on hand to evaluate
Foreign Language Supervisors
professional and other special
and oil the boaid of directors
schools, as was the case bere
for the New York State Feder·
this week:
ation of F o i e i g n l.anguage
In other business, the Senate
However, Dr. Hombake emTeachers, Herecently~ved leaders:
·
phasized, the Middle States Asthe Professional Leadership
• agreed that the Chairman
Award for outstanding services ·should ask the President to '
· to the foreign language teach· speak to the question of the Uning profession from the New
Library at the NoYork State Aasociation of For- dergraduate
vember 7 Senate meeting;
eign Language Teachers.
• discussed furtber the ad·
Everything anybody wanted
missions report ~prole as or to know about fall semester enMarvin-Feldman indicated that rollment was released this week
he felt the recommendations of in the form of a 26-page·statis, Joseph D . Drew, systems an- the AdmissionS Committee too tical renort from the Office of
aly;st"8t .ptB, !w ~ ~ . !i8V.erely limit.the admil8inn of Admissfons anll Records. · '."
sf8.fe treasurer of the Seriate transfer ·students from private
'lbe~rtelevatesthefinal
Professional Association institutions. Further discus- grand tOtal enrollment for the
(SPA) ,- the collectiye bargain- sion is on the November 1 semester from the 23,141 aning · representative for · SONY agenda.) ;
nounced earlier to 23;152-&lt;!till
professional staff.
• moved to transmit the some 1,200 short of last fall's
Mr. Drew joined UI B in 1965 proposed .resolutions relating to totals. The final figure includes
in the Office of Computer Ser- non-departmental degree op- 14,290 men and 8,862 women.
vices: He has had over 20 years' · tions in MFC (see Reporter, Totols
•
experience in accounting and October 26) to the Senate with. · Undergraduate l!nrollment is
oomputer-related' actiVity; in· the endorsement of the Exec- 16;~own 4.58 per cent
eluding five years as an instruc- utive Committee; and
from 17,218 in the fall of 1971.
tor at Erie Community College.
. • beard a motion - (by. Pro- Graduate enrollment is dOwn
He has served as a ·
· r ·l lessor IWbert B. Fleming) that 7.82 per cent, 5,278 this fall
of the SPA Grievance.
t- :,·the Eil!cutive Commiitee iec- and 5,726 last year. '~:be only'
tee here and baa held twO
., ommend the adoption of the overall. increase,. a alillht !'JI8,
as state t..easurer of the
ta ' articles of ~ for the . is .in tbe profeaaionaf area;University Proteaiorial ~ University Aaaembly. Action Dentistry, Law and Medicine'ciation (SUPA)
was ilelem.cl
•·
wblch ........,; a tJuoae.etudilt

m

o

ship ' made dear that the ap-

pi&gt;intees, when chosen, should
be present at some future Executive Colll!nittee meeting to
provide feedback and answer
questions on the budget
Chairman Gilbert Moore reported on further developments
in the matter of the academic
plan. He and the chairman of
the Educational Planning and
Policy Committee will be in·
VJthe.teiiA
. tocadaetmtend
_c Coallunmcil'!"tinw
' gseonf
h
1
academic planning is discussed,
he said. Major documents re·
lating to the plan bave been
distributed to members of the
Executive Committee and disCll8Sion of the SentJte's relation
to the academic plan has been
placed on the November 1
agenda.
The Chairman also reported
to the Committee on the Collegiste Assembly's proposal to
change its voting procedures
( see separate story -t his issue).
Any sucb change would require
Faculty Senate approval.

au-- ·

sociation neither requires this
nor advises institutions on what
they should do concerning in~
dividual unit accreditation. We
find it useful, be said, but it is
up to the institution; "our accreditation is not affected by
whether or not they do it."

themselves rather than credits.
The formal result of an accreditation visit is that an in·
stitution is accredited or it is
not.
'
ln-.

But there are some in-betweens. In the case of large in·
U/ B posed a particularly dif. stitutions, in particular, some
ficult assignment in terms of matters are likely to be found
dUSt getting around, Dr. Horn- which require 'furtber considerbake noted. Its multi-locations a lion. U something is especially
make it less "compact" than is tacking, a 'proP."!"' report may
tyPically the case. It is also be asked for Within two or tmee
more d_ifficult to review, he said, years. Or, apin, the aa:reditbecause tbe new mmpus con· ing agency mar ask for the !'P'
struction imposes a need to . portunity to vJSit apin within
look ten years ahead.
two· or tmee yeua. So lbore
Accreditation has been soing ..... ilradianto. ' .
oil,' Dr. Hombake said, ainc:e
U a previoualy accr8dited ininstitutions of higher learning stitution is found to be "really
have' been in existence. Govern- unaatisfactory," the 8MI of apment ·doesn't do it, he noted, proval is not simply withdrawn.
adding "and I hope it won't Before that ·happens, the colever do it, but that's a whole !ere or -univenu,t y in question
other topic." So the process hes . JS asked to "show caWJe why it
to be a peer system.
should not be removed from the
Accreditation, the n, simply acCredited lisl"
means that an institution is reTodayf Dr. Hombpke said,
garded by its peers as being a practical•y no institution comes
viable entity operating ·i n terms WJ~thuganh theabsoalccrediute
''O
'ting,prooe&amp;JMost
of its own objectives. And those
K.
objectives, Dr. Hombake re- are asked for some aort of ad·
peated, are supplied by the in- ~'This-ti~nal_ fo llowta-up inftormationm.
IDOII.t'
00
stitution. Nowadays, accreditthrea
ing agencies have no guidelines. caaes," be quic:kly -added.
"You state your goals, gather
At U / B, for examli'le, the
evidence and tell us about it." Middle States Aasoc:iation may
Of course, he said, some pri- ask for pro~ reports on bow
vate institutions mar be .... the Amherst project ia coming
quired to provide ev1dence of along, bow it is being incorfinancial viability.
pOrated into the overall funo.
What is not true about ac- tioning of the University.
creditation is that it makes
· This, however, is purely opeccredits transferable to another ulative on his part, Dr. Hominstitution. An accrediting aaen- bake cautioned.
·
cy cannot provi!!e for this, Dr.
And no more than that will
Hombake emphasized; in fact, lillely be said publidy by anythe Middle States Aasoc:iation one until the written ~ em
believes that its member inilti- U/B Ia submitted to the Mld,
tutions should ~uate students die Sts~ Aasoc:iation. / .
Difficult Assignment

0

'

0

18

Fall Enrollment Now ·rotaU; 23,152

SPA Treasurer

0

edge over 1971- 1,445 tJiis year Fillmore College number 1,1108
and 1,442 last year.
(1,4?9 men and 427 'IIIOIDBD).
' Total • day division enroll- , Put·Time
mentis 18,153 (down from 19,Part-time day emollment IJi.
291last year) and Millard Fill- cludas: 1044 underpadua4ea
mol'll €0UI!gi.-l:llis ";991'l!ilfolled '" ('518'DM!II ~ 626..__)~...._,
(comparedto5,095inl971).
ryma leaa than 12 ~
Full-nme
hours, a abarp u.c.- fram
F\111-time day enrollment is last year's 825, and 2,6«J...,S.
14,4e-8,857 . men and 5,612 uate otudents (1,524 men and
women. This includes 10,386 1,116 women) ClliT)'ing leaa
full-time Undergraduates ' (5,- than nine hours.
.
845 men and 4,541 women),
'lbere are 3,093 part.time
2,638 full-time grad · students S'tudents in Millard .Fillmore-(1,773 men; 865 women). and 1,912 men and 1,181 women.
1,«5 full-time professional stu· AMiyols of CluJ._
dents (1,239 men; 206 women ).
An analysis of enrollment
'lbe only incftla&amp;e in any cafe. changes by paduate division8
gory is a jump -of 68 women in indicates that Graduate Educathe prof-waal schools; 1be tion, which bas '-&gt; 'WOl'klna
"'!naa.fem.la brlakdowJJ for toward a NdudiaD In l!lllCI1"
u- ecboola Jut·year was 1,- ment, ia down by 21.92 per
3()4 men and 1 3 8 - .
oeal 'lbe Gndaata 8dlool
Full-time lltudeolli.ln Milljud abowa Cllll,y ullabt Clbanp.

�lf~2. ··l972

c:o~
"
-~I~

What Role for:MF;C?-:-A Message to Faci)ItY1S~a:te:M~l&gt;:ers
By DAVID~-~
- "adDiinistered by' the Division pri.mtuy focus andi:lientele of
The "-'lty a• end a for deYOI8d to their interests." - .
the DUS which currently holds
Far oome !line, tbe Division monopoly on Chis capebility.
staff baa IJOC)OgDized that ihe
•
judgment
a
~ .educatioilal needs of ·an in· Some Ret- , _ ,
wblch f!llb:~
P
,
~Y significant number
~ugbtful ~just consider"L That the dean 01 the Divis- Of ad~IB. {though-by D? .means ation of this proj&gt;ooal's tbnist
ioa at CantinaiDc Education act- a ma.JOnty )" are not ideally demands that at least one alU... apalllbe advice of a Minard suited to the traditional, more leged "truiam" and the potenFi)lmo.e C4"- Faculty Com- established departmental pat- tial oonsequences of both Benbe - r e d to· n!COID· terns. Coupled with projected ·ate endorsement and !J!iection
- " ' to ~ Faculty Senate and levelling of enrollments in the be aired .and .placed in \heir
to the Pnoident of SUNY at Bur- 17-22 year a:ge bracket, ob- pro~ perspective. ~alleged
t:"·..!:rrwc~boc:cala"'"':'~u ~ served .incresses in the adult "truism" ooncerns existing attic:oauilatina ~ requiremezita proportion of· total college en- tudes toward continuing educathroiqb !o1illaftl Fillmore Co11ege roUments, and a growing move- tion in general, and, speCificin . . , - otller thlua departmna- ment favoring recurrent, lifeally, Millard Fillmore College.
ltll -jon. (Autbor'o itali&lt;L]
long learning patterns, the Di~ Tbat the Senate's Educa- vision's administration perWhile few faculty members
tiaaal l'laainiDB and Policy COm- ceived that some internal ini- discount the importance of proml- llllalJ -oODduct an interim tiative was both timely and viding life-long learning oppor-

n-

TuMI&amp;y, November 7, 1972,
calla fO)r .._.ton" ·to

=-·

:l-: l!.Itbo.=,_o!t ~.!tea!(
:1 ="..:.,."'!."!"(Ri~po
· thert-rn.ut
, ,..!!._
•
• ""~

26, lli'I2.. P. II)

It -

•

to tbis writer that
de8crib'
.._,_ p~

the ~-r;:.:::_ _artiCle
_.,__

·~

_..a
-'&gt;
&amp;Dd _lbe · prop&lt;iilal's ·Pur·
_,...........,.

wwo

- -

aDd -)atiCIIlale requiree
acme' clar~ if .the pro.
poail is to ~receive ' thOulhtful
cansideraiicin by tbc.e
.,.,..sen&amp;te
......... ~
_,.
1111 . - - , . .
For a s - y · piclwed, • its
endo.-mimt app.&amp;ra not a bit
tbeopeaingof Pandora's

___. . ._ =·

=-

are

In fact, there
a number of
legiti_mate academici issues ex~t both in the ~ and
m the -expressed mtsntions of
the DivisiCIIl of Cantin · Education (DCE) adininisw::!tion.
The .aystematic exploration of
~- isaues and· intsntiolis and
tbeir reli.tlonsbip to SUNY /B
- ' " outlined m the Middle
States Self,:: ~~ Report
~~ J:;;:&gt;~ the ~

desirable.
Given the choice of submitting proposals for a full-scale
degree option for MFC fi.e.,
Bachelor ·of General Studies~
tlw. · more conserva tive ·an
. or or-manageable development 'of ""'
perimental "mini-programs"
which miiibt serve as sound
,bililding b1ocks upon which a
m 0 'r e effective ba,.-••ureate
~ !lie
P~~ could
. be moun!Ald,
DlYlsJOn, With the coll~~Bel of
several Faculty Senate sub'COJ!llllitleel!, opted for the latter.

:..:.,n1er~~ to~pel,Z

gfams, the DCE staff felt it
necessary to iiilek .limited de-

recommending capabilities.
Since the Division's principal
interests rest in administenng
the development of prognmlB
exclusively designed to meet
~ unique educational needs
of an· adult clientele not opting
for existing ·departmental programs, it was detennined that

giJ!e

day school, m.irler given tQe . Jlize-lbe ~ of . lhia role
above qJ18lification. · '
,; here at SWY/B, a fact driven
'l'bouib not of cfuect ~ocern ~ by:tbl'i~llll ~b-1
.
d, these real
lisbment of a biani:h of En •
!&lt;&gt;. ~ lliSUe at ban
• pire Stste Collese ln the Buf.
•.t ies mclude:
falo llli!B.. •
• .
• · A. Some guarantee of prior- . ~ assumptillll of such a
ity of registration in evening role bere at SUNY/ B would
classes for those MFC students ordain a relativi!ly autonomous
but higbl;l' intemctive adminis:
unable to atWI&lt;I days.
trative CE unit. In short, addi· • • ·
B . ' A clear commitment to tional life-IOJII learning options
schedule adequate numbers of could be made a 'vailabl e
evening courses. In too many through -the University rather
C8jleS, where merger of evening
than apart from iL Faculty
colleges and day ocbools bas members bave ~t choice ..
occurred; •the number · of eve- now.
ning courses bas steadily diAt the scholarly level it is
minisbed in accord with resident facul ty preferences for inoonceivable that ·t he 'State
daytime ·t eaching. Thus, empir- University, with i'..s richness in
profession81 e%P'!rtise and resources, does not offer the
greatest potential for the disit their hlgbest priority. ~re merger.
·
is 'little ~surprising or not.e!I,'(Jvery and riliorous assessment
worthy abotit these observa- · Projec;ted Conllj!Q...,_.
of new modes of learning. All
·l ions. ~Y aimply; acknowlImplicit in the above discus- that seems necessary .iS a suitedge that a ma)Onty
· · of U niver- sion are alternat1've co-~
~- able vehicle through which such
sity faculty 'impute higher pri- quences which may o b t a in experimenting research msy be
ority to otl!er, -equally signifi- should the Faculty. Senate fail effectively admiitistered, and
cant responsibilities. It is when to endorse the DCE proposal. the I~ existing unit, the
First, MFC may. retsln its DCE, IS presently · teast capa.
present lockstep, apparentlr ble of pursuing that role.
t:1.7TE"Clln:li"\TNTS
.
- V .lL VV C V.l
second-rate status, its qu&amp;m.autonomy, perpetuating what
1be llllpoiW ' - o n IIIIo- many view as nothing short of
ID pnJVicle • forum for tbo ex- . academic mediocrity. Second,
c:luinp
on • - no1ety r;'.:2.'s coutn~infuedtheinabtradiliitio
.trnalto

Wn'f:~ty"fa~~ ::::-gi~! lilifd~~a'f:~ro=~: 0~

of-

:'--"""'
o'::m~/;.c::
::..=::
p • p e rs •
-

pennlta.

0

modes and seek a role of its
own will likely produce one or
both of the following consequences:

one asks "why tbis is so" that
a problem surfaces. Granted
that academe's reward system
favors research and graduate
program activities over undergraduate teaching and com-

A. Incorporation of M F C
into the centralized operations
of the day school with ·the accompanying risk of diminished
services to evening s~ts. ..
B . A gradual shift of ihcreas~=..r:i:::u!.~~ :S~t~rviasce~.,t~t ~= ing proportions of.adult ellen..
. .".,1
:· ..,...
. ..
i"_1&gt;rOgiBJI!a
., \lli:Jtii'eRa
.. ..·.. coold
't ,· centers
......,;.... . of lo!)j
tele toj--'"'&amp;"O.PJl.9rtiinitl~
institutions·offering lifeNOTE:
DavU1
is a doc·- ,~-"·'- ,,' abou t · ~ :"'Y:"':
- in torol
otwknt
en J.t/uCarr
.De~•tment
or
.'!"'tus &lt;lllid • "reputation! · for
i.'ti ~ :!'lhe•&lt;tra ~ " f..Jiilth• ~
•L'~ --~9"'J#r..~_, ,c!epipts. experiniental program develoP'
~elR:e"
a.ttributed to even- o
e·
a:~' ·· ' cliUODid · ~~.&lt;:• . io!l. ~·~form
er
""'esoence of tliii .ae Jure pro- ment.····'·· ., ···' t. , . , . . • . ,. mg&lt;:oll
f&lt;?"'P.'' (i.o:-, Empire 'Stai;f!··GOl: · DUJu.·· . ; '/'!:~ ,lq
dean .
posal . . . .which asks, on the '
.
eges.
, '· terlegeial)· ,'(ze
·S.hOtbeill'dlsucbl
· lk,;,':.~~tb~t-· rrrti~~ ~
- "';J:;''u,'f8pat•~"fnat,iohne
1 fh,
face of things, a simple decenThus, apparent administm.Many day school faculty
euuuuu w...
il 1o )
tralization of degree reoom- live superficialities obscure Wlth whom the writer bas oon- Stste fiscal support would soon
lh&lt;DCA proposal
mending autboril'f currently the real intent of the proposal versed f d
lati 1 li tl
follow is ""tsnt. It seems ind liy the Division of Under- which is to develop and assess
· m re
ve Y t e to credible . "that the \]niveraity
hel
graduate.
Studii$ (DUS) . .And ~~ .experill&gt;e'!tal programs. say m support of . MFC. On facultY tiligbt deliberately retben. .lbe - t is limited to This mtsnt maniiests at least
w.!folb, fa~~ tt"~ the move the University
-..t6deJits not . enrolled in the two assumptions. First, that with MFC~' and t SJJ!lp Y 'live !entia! mainstream of ·
more traditional . departmental learning in adults may diller
·
· .·
ry to ignore it, education, bowevei remote its
fare. One;!'f'ailly asks "why from cbild and adolE!SCe!lt learn- hopmg •t will someday disap- possibility of actualization.
" . - . ·es that the ing
a thesiS' by no·' means
·
~- Qtbers
seek
to
d1vest
MFC of
its actively
remaining
..
quality of the degree.-.will be settled or even adeqwKely dealt autonomy by
rting' •
d
One should note ·t he incon- EDITOR:
impaired if.' 1191 in cOntrol of. with in the literature. Second ·
. .
.
suppo
ats.a - gruity•· of the above outcome
,
.
the. DUS. U ·". P"....._ of~L:. tJ:uat.lije4ong learning can ~ muustrative incorporation into with SUNY/ B goala.
I' sent the following letter to
shift
..,. -~ ....., v111
mod
C
the day school. ~ negative
~- Ketter and hope that you
the '"!I" ~Y administrative, diti.::::J{ hiJ: · . a.e.~n-tra- attitudes mirror a view that 1be Alta,...tlve ·
Will fipd room to publish it-in
._ansthesw.er...:..,.couldt!-..l,egi.,·tima
, .,t e.ly
,_. tillcti
· w
m • Jr dis- MFC offerings diller in quality
No~!fitbstsnding the above, the Reporter as a contribution
_
·~
· veness. !P&amp;Y. · 100re effec- from their day .school eotmter- a. potentially more .congruent to the debate 1111 . arming the
be ...
HOwewr,'OUtlined~the·IIUP' · ~=J'eet the_~ed'!C&amp;tional paits, and -ascribe tbis diller- Cm the long run) set of 'con-· campwi ,police,whicblthink is
=~~=~~~ trum of an .ever- _.enmg spec, ence largely to. the presence of ~ences may evolve .i f the of coqoem to aU of us.
_,_ ,_._ _.:,..........,
. ··-"'-~ .. it ·~~;':f~eofty.t_ b~e
•see"!_.__
~! tbosenot
· . pareett-datime faculty who d6 DCthESenaproposalte
B 1s endorsed by
•. . • ) •
uc , _ _ ,.._.,._..........,..
__,.,...... ·
·
· uouueo
.m
· y school ··resident
e
.
· .u t realization of
•
(see ' nanorandliln fo ....Y!J'II·'- seem.- an appropmate; aCtivity. Jacul
. ty. standards. ~ugh -'---L these oonsequen- de.p ends Dear Dr. Ketter:
.
J.e"·
Ex
for a U~v~rsity Center, partie•=•
1
~
·
ecutive Committee ·of the Fac- ularly if at can interact and at?tw;~tyes ""ty l;&gt;e justified in a
':"llely uP&lt;&gt;n pefueptive and
'The I!~ arming of the
)!!_If_ Sesaa~ April .21, 1972) . offer complementary · lise mmon o mstanoes, they fmn faculty 61ld administrative campus ·polijle fills me with
~ ~lmakes cl~ to less .estsbli¢led p=r0 . ·. overlook the very real and oom- lead~rsbiP,. Moreover, this lead- aJann and diSmay. I am oon·
" " " '""""" w
P.
institUtio
cb
'!'11 · plementsry oompetences that e~p must assume a progres- "!na!d that q,. prospect of real
~ -.._
·.: ..:thMt :· • -.
. .con- Stste eo'l\'eg!~
~'!:' non-resident faculty bring to s1ve rather than a repressive VIolence, - even the possibility
a then is a petition to !~· the. campus. Nonetheless, this nature. Sen a t e endorsement that one may see gun battles
~IDil)Or
.tbe. Dp"""""s
. It IS_oompar-y the .inistration 'of: ~e ~ attitude ~o. !'.~ inues to exist ' ?Ould_ be_ interpreted as a 9tep witbiii 'theUniversity, is there&gt;U
llkelv ~ic kine! of _academic
::fng Slgruficant · numbers of m thiS duecbon,
.· (' by greatl.l' ~creased. ~ func!J'lle. however, that adul~ even- tion ~cb IS neither practic- reck~';:'~ f~ty, ~ f~~t be Divisions of Continuin Ed
aftioterp o!,~ pohce.force should be,
1111 atudea.ts 11!81.. ""P.P the· able. m ,the -~noe ,of limited
WI • or .•t ....ters a
cation ma
. g u""• to promote peace and
~=r,.;t.'!Dii WJtb IiniatJ deeree .:i:ecommen'ding capabil- ~ .&lt;,&gt;f--do.,Wle •l:a!tdardB; Re- functions{ occupr a VJtal and onler!r'clmduct. No one among
er
" ......,;;!j if it ·u ity, nor t:OmpatJble with the info':"'"g this questionable per- filing the Urol~ ult'!'llltely bene- us is mte,rested 1n having one
~·---:::o,.~
.,··'::t~!:"~-~-..,;· ~:~'-:·~·c~:~-.~:_:.:_~~_:::::r
:c:::~.:.::::._:: a;ption
are MFC's
commun~
oflloOillums
in competition
(.a.e., allegedly
lower different
by day itY as well ruvers1~
as SOClety.
'111ey set
with.
anotho!r arid
I can only
school ,criteria) . a-'-·-~need not suffer the alternatives quote tin'ie •arid - • the
••-'--'~
.,..
uuwoowns
of
demise
o
nd
.
llfB!'! police
exs..,.......~. .ogether, these two and 'qualityr ~.... ;rate ststwi ample of the Br1tisb
. · ~ .......... they may ~n it OOIJIM to dealing effecperception,s afford some schol- be
ars~
, sufficient reason to took 91 J"'nruf tted and enoouraged to tJYely With infracfions of the
.,.MEC'!i&lt;a»'
ve .. or an ""cellence uni'JUI"' law. •As ~bod kno
the
,
1!1J1118li'a'£rob, a':;a
ly ,tbe1r_&lt;&gt;Wil·
eqWjl in r,..... 8rit.illl.)llillillB
. port movements wbii:b purport- to the quabtstJve ·expectiations they· are· a higt;ly disciplined
~Y seek to upgrade MFC. n.e · oommon to a Stste Uniyersicy roroe;.1ba{ do not use-their posi-~. ack'!ow ,lfidg'es thllt Ce11ter.l~ thro:st of the DCE tiCIIl to,¥1!111 aU their JD!Wlness
:C•te P&lt;IBS!.ble lla!l!ll in logic. ~~v ~ksty .thefa support or· and li~obaln¥ls-qn !hi! public.
. .ersJ ' culty in de- They-are !'N!ll trained for .deal·
concerns may be anticipat1
ed .110 'k?ng ·~ MFC l'On/inuu ~.eopmg
such·. a role for oon. - ingwiib~sijyatiOns'thatmsy
. to Prt&gt;Vide C!iiefl:(1 f:!U'bo.~J!Y ~l}llllJII ·~')("':ti.'l"' 1 "- •• ,
• •
oonfront:ttiem-ji&gt;.&amp; manner that
t rad1J 10 n.a !.Pay·.
~t such.:a functiOns! · 'clie. the public ·am"'!JJ_p~ve. ·lfbus, '
Wor liere
ofprogra'!'". ensts an!,l is in · increasin~ de- they~.::-tJWYJI..P!!bf:e and res. •. ·
eveo.mg mand can be seen · the ~
801!&amp;.~ It;do QQt ..think that a
P~ reD- upon..tlfe day -Plementp.ry ' but m ' • "!'DJ· !J~.~ ~ ~d have
~I faculty and, as such, port rein
·
8Up- . 8CIIl4·.tJie= W8¥ a ~us police.~~tel! ~Jatlef's"'Ue.it for Adult.Edu~ti':"~
'Mils \lid. ~JJy , ~ jssued
cjuality ~ 't
over program ~at SYracuse, and in the~ . a,w~!!!iB· ti
. eke~ to m:y Wife betsln
'!,.werethe ·no~ for f'"'· lie seclor, the Empire Sts
cause ...r , puking sticker was
,
-:"! •
re Could )le College' 0n1 the
. te not~ 11111ier aJT arid refused
little ~lion to· an · MFC- observ,U,t wo~d tail"':t non- to even lOot that- my wife was
tecog- _ (Continua on . 10, col. 5)

~
. ~r._.n.~:
_ '".1_~ ~~. ~,:M _'*~~~ijh,

·~
.
-~~·

~~-

·JR'

df:~';l"i:;:;_

fromhlJ: 'Let's Not

:!'Jk

bo~?.

-v...

Arm Police'

···

00

0

..

Tb:"

inn=--

-

1

·:·

~

Y~t

-~ lui~

--=;J'::::Iu:;

\"'parate ··

J':

..;.u..

�./

..,..,..,_

.,

, Women Attorneys Differ on Question of Sex Discrimination
mother of eight,, ~as the ~
~rt .on .combmmg a family
wtth ": career. It's not easy,
she ""!d, but she has _kept a
hand m ~ugh grading bar
emma w~ she can do !'t "'!r
own converuence, by filling Ill
at .her laVfYer-hushand's office
while. be JB out o~ town, by
haD(IJ.ing some pnvate cases
and by' tea~ J&gt;h!'rmacy law
on a part.-tUne beais. A.t Cornell law School, she aaid, she
found no ~~on ap!nst
women, !'nlY . .,actio\' a~t

!~king for a woman at the
came to her in a diVorce case, . noted that although
of
tune." I, Judge Denman feels saying that he preferred a the panelists are
~ to
women bring "an intuitive ap- woman attorney because his lawyers thia isn't roam f
proach" to legal work which wife was so beautiful she oould a wo~ to be ~
men lack. There are going to l'!"' any male lawyer against the field. "Just marry a man
be many more women. judges, him.
who thinks what you c1o is imahe said, because of a rising
As a black woman, Barbara portant," abe OOUillleled
tide of sentiment that women Si.rm has 1\ad to combat both
·
should be in the foreground. racism and sexism, the topic M - A-...,s
"And nowadays women in law of a course she tl!ach5 in the
Introduced as "a You n 1
no longer have to be above av- Law School in addition to her movement a t.to r n e l[," .len
erage to make it."
duties as the campus equal op- Goodman. a lively . .-n ~
"Women attorneys seem freer portunity olfioer She noted ber of the Center b Canatitllto move around," U/B law pro- that she had
invited to tiona! Rilhla,
York City,
feasor ~arjorie Gi,th comment. lea~e ,law practice and join, the ~ lhat If 87 Ia YOUIII.
Mary~S· f~apn~ ~ . I!"J~~~ ·"""""""'· &lt;i&gt;l-. ed,advJSinllthesroul!"notto WIO' . SChaolaa , l!.ro!e mOdel ' II'!"' r~Jb\ .oq, ,'ML ~­
va~" attlimey t ~e:en ~1Y, ~- '~ · •~&gt;~~'uate... 01!.1"' OO!t' P.P.Mt set ~igid career aoa1s hkermen." for YOUill blaclia: Mpre than. !'ft'd, in ~~t 'IIi t i
pomted a legal asaistalit to the ticinJ, ·however, abe·advioOO ibe Wh1le law schools are ·under 50 per cent of the cuelc!ed ·.Ia .idea lbal -..ue·tiefnao ..,._
Bulfalo Cjty Court judges, un- audience, ''neVer let the boas great preSsure to hire more Bulfalo courts invol- blolcb, CC&gt;In.l in,IO. 'Jaw IICIIdGIII·-~ ·
dei'8COred this diversity when kn~_you can type."
women faculty, she predicted she said, but there are only 15 de,y_s. Thla lllarled in 1988, ....
she infonned the auiiience she
La Meildola, an aasis- the field won't really become black attorneys practicing in llllid, " ' - beiDa m law ......,.
was "sick of beinll told I don't tant attorney genentl who is a wide open becauae of increased the City. You have to Juiep a DO ~-provided a draft alook like lady lawyer. What ~te for City Court judge, uae of ·t eaching mechanisms sense of humor as a member of !""Piion lVI' mm. 'l1le ~ fled
does a lady lawyer look like? a&amp;ld she turned to law. because and -a general cutback in spend- a minority group whether mto aempt r&gt;eldo and 11101!
Look at this paDeL" ·
she didn't like the smell of ing for education.
black or female or 'both, she women were ailml&amp;ted Moab' to
A glance t the
!bering fonnaldehyde in her pre-med . f'omocnlp/ly ond 1.--1
recommended, recalfing that . fill -IB and ~ mciney into
. proved her pot.t, just~ listen- classes. Believing .that she "can
Grace Ange, a private attor- one 'of her professors in ber la::de.l
~ ~" abe CODing did. All female lawyers do anything anybody elae can." ney who now specializes in Ia- freshman year at U / 8 asked ~- ·
oW.. that obe had
lfren't alike Some are middle she was later a partner in the bor and family law, found her if she would like to be his
a PMtY to navinJ .the Ned,
·
Some only femal~ lefU firm in the wholesale discrimination when maid.
o 8 tate Bar aams deeepesty~..:.:'rs )T&lt;IUDJ. Some City at .t hat time. "I had to she was in ciimina1 work.
Sex has nothing to do With Pte&lt;! (Women '"!" relegaleil
-..
~start with Plballe can cases." "Criminals don't like women working in the District Attor- to ;_.ate roomo becaue of~~=,!"~": she -noted, liut tliat wasn't dis- lawyers," she was told at one ney's office, Judy Manzalla, en ~d ~ ~ ~
l'l!llliltisoent of Jeen Kerr in · crimination, "that's the way all point. In a pornography case, '1188istant DA, said. In a de- abe said. aH
·
boya.") •
p~«z« Don't Eol 1M IJaWa
'!'wyers get tllejr ~-" .~ a judge blanched at the id"!' f"!""' situation, . she noted, a could be .._ ~._a~
·
•
.
·
limes, she mamtsined, 'being that she would look.at the ev1- client may not want a woman,
_.t ~:r .'...-...,-'
'll&gt;e program was billed as a female is 8n adVIUltalle." In dence. Her father "wasn't too but the State could care leM.
ten yean juat fiahtinlthe lawa
female asrl&amp;ult on the upper court, an opjlosing mafe attor- happy" about an incest case deAnne Srebro, the
female on the boob Which dlacrimlclass white male establishment, ney can't be ~ ~ ~th fense abe had prepared. But, "'!"istant U.S. attorney in the ..te a p i n H - . You doD't'
but that, tile:!• proved to be only you, becauae a .JUlY might think on the other hand, a man once history-of Western New Yod&lt;, ever hMr about o-ln ecbool.
a stereotypical came-on, per- ill of him.
·
abe c:barpd. ~. aome . . . .
hap&amp; to allure aome of the over- c:arpomo l.ft
' r
haw atatu1ea barrini .....,_
aUs and combat boot set. What
~ Quinn. a corporate
from IOinl into '-lliMI wilbemeraed from the ~ was attOrney who en t ere d Law
out the P8lmllllaa ol· their._.
en interMtin&amp;, aome- poig- School after she had hem out
· bend or of lha court." llnoohed
n&amp;Dt _,.,..rof · what it's like of lllldeqraduate ecbool for
An unusually extensive port--4 p.m.
at~ ill a mit l!raalbt by
to combine marriap, mother- some years, became inten!sled agenda will i!" taken ' up at a
8. EducatiOaal Plannlna and ~ at CahaDbia Uahality
hocid and a career; what it's like when she tried her own 'traffic two-part meeting of the Faculty Polic:y Conuiifttee Report for .-,y ~ willa jaitan,
to be a stranpr in a stranse caae in a Grand 1a1anc1 court Senate, beginning T u e s d a&gt;: , Continuing Education' - 4:8!1 Ma. Goodmu aid obe plaa to
land. For e-. if some of the and won. She bad a few c:bauv- November 7, at 2:30 p.m. m · p.m.
OJ!ell a feminiR law finn with
...,_, haven't seen diacrimin- inistic prof--. abe recalled, I48 Diefendo~ Hall.
9. Policies Procedure~, and fiw otber .....,_ Ia New Yolk
atiou, moat of tbem · have had but none who .;w,. aid anyIn IUIIlOWlCI1lll the agenda, Criti.ria for FM:;;ity Peraoanel qity. In 8lldillaD ~ otberit tough. And all of them have th!n4· Tbere ia definite dis- Senate Secretary Mac Ham- •Actiona. · ·
tivitlee, the finn ,.W'IIriDIIIIK
lllllde it easier for a new gen- crimmation within law firma, mond .~ted that "each of
10 ~ ae:...nty Report. · ~~ Jn.lllllb._... ~ eratioa of women to have ca- howeve!1• abe _8J'IIIed; f - of :"::d'~· b!==
u ·· F'uJotM
~ell-e. laW a
_.. in 'law.
them wiu ..-. consider making as quickly' as polllible." In order
12. OJ- ~
t --~ b: _..,. women full partners. (Jorporafe to allow tholOIJII&gt;'debate of the
·
•
\
~ • the fiMIIJUiilPat Hollander, a lecturer in , Ia!" is mud&gt; more open. abe agenda. a second half of the
~- Ad~
'
lat, aDOtber ..--t&amp;Danlll)o,
the• Scbool· of ~t,. said,.., IH i j (ufd • "v. , •l'l' u ' '"'"'... ~' ..-tiq· Joas·beM11CbedaJed for ti"~"~led. Wh'~• ~ -~--~_.\&amp;.
who · piac&amp;ed' for eilht years
·-~ only ~ UIIDIII ..., November 21 at.o ill 148 l&gt;il.l,
~ .in'd"'mlieiii!W;
· illii'"Diiiliiiiii
.._
in the field of labor-1J18!18.18- 12 jud.,. m Bu&amp;lo CitY fenCiorf at '2:30 .P.ID.
oaid.
~ ~ ~ lltniS dumb by aome ol what
ment law opened- the MEion Court, M. Delores 'Donmul
On the qonda are·
,_and DDt to inhibit cllba1a.
had ,.._ ......_
by pointbi, out that a roamed used to· be- a hilb ecbool Enl1 Approval ot the. Minutee
.
·
"' cu't believ. I a-rei ·
WOIDilll attorney often ·has the lish '"""'*-· ~. abe was ill of Ootciber 19'72.
i
of thle,"..,. .US.
·
problem of bavinl to move to UtB Law Sdlool; abe aald.
2. Report of the J!n!eident.
JDlm&amp;r e
.
- '.'W- baw to cban1•
a new state because her bus- there _.., op)y two ~ Ia
3. Report of the Chairman.
Inlensted in the ....._w lift thlnp. U lOll wat to find~band 'has c:banged jobs. In the her clua, but there are 47 .Ia
, ~ and wh)&lt;, - - laill:.
4 Introduction of Profea8or thia ~ 'l1le 'W
new locale, abe !1ften finds tl!&amp;t thia ~ ~~ Allen Kuntz,~ Prole&amp;-- Club is ..,...,dna a
The day-1 on1 ..,......._
she cannot continue to Prac:"' al:f - •
.:":Jd she sional Stair 8enale.
lrelplace Sale, featurinl utiliSe ~-ol~ by
without ~u!..:f.-· !!~by.._ of •
5. Grievance J'roce4uree- c:rMtiom ot local art1a1a, _Oil Stud.ta,_ tbe
er,.
G.~
hem professors who u.Jcl her lhat • Profes£ors ~c Hammond and Salurda,Y, November 11.
, _ Guidma
PI---s
~;!rq;;;t6 theil'lftlli"' ·.shi would have to be better UuirenceB
· ~'
.,__;.·
Doon will CJ1181from IIIICIII to c.m.r, tbe Dl9isiaa ol t1Ddlro
'ed
woman.
~"'"'""· than any man to get, ahMd.
6. ylawa"""""'ttee • ....,.... "10:00 p.m. An eatranoe cloaa- .,.._.. ~ tbe :r-a~t,y
ri J..:;lon Peteraori. llfi'88!' Admitting that abe woulj! DOt_ - University .Aa!mbly.;-3:30
tion .of 60 eonlll. ~ adl!it and oi' X.W ud J~
aistant to-the New Yorlt 8taie be on the ben~;!&gt; today .i f she p.m.
. ..
25 cents per dilld 1!1 beiDa re- lha ~ ~
-Board of Law EDminers and were not a WOI1""' ('!Jbey were
7. ~dmissiona Committee fte. · qlleated.
~tlon. •
·

-Disc;rimination, as I&gt;Muty, is
often m the eye of the beholder.
. .
Some of the practicmg at.tomeys ~m the ~ at !ast
Saturday s women s _symJXllllum
on law ~ claimed never
to have ·""!"' !l
.
Others mdi~ .that bein!
female can be a distinct "asset'
in .the legal ~rofession.
And a thini group tu1'ne!i
purple at tbe tboucht that their
"s!aters" oould even. aay such
things, Jet alone believe ~

:!

Jt-

oo;,.,

=-

a

Y:k

!:e

.

rust

Novem
·
ber
· 7 senate .Agend a

a..m-.

..

&gt;.

M' •

k tplace

,.=:

........,,_had

:S

I!:
um:aw
a
a

»

�c:D~n

.

6

l f - 2. 1972

-~~- ~ ~

.

Continuing Ed Offers ~ MusiJfo{ EasternFmopean ~m]XJl!elS'
a 2nd Concert SerieS
Conference Assistance~ Wzll Be F~ iii
Periortnoirs

A lleCIIIId annual aeries of
will include Uni- ~"Friday, Marc:b 23, BufCIIIICI!I18 featunna "Music of venity.mU8ic faculty, members falo Slate Caaipal• School
An iniliinational con-lion · pita! for WOibm_there, -is· de- Eastem E
Compoeers" of the Center of the Craalive AlJd!lorium. 8:30 p.m.i and the
-1mm:unotoay held ~ · si8niDa a aeriee of 1D1lJ1818111"1t beaino
at 8:30 _p.m. and Performina Arts, membara ~Com~~~..of
-other y;,ar UDder Univenity trainJna llllllliona for a prot.,.. with a prosram by Czecboolova- of the Cle¥eland String Quartet "'•~
, .,_,~ :;:~tal· Haireb.,._.ahip aDd au.nded by aiooal metalatmgineering group, !dan aDd Ukrainian CIJIIIjJ(IO.etl and special guests.
· - • 23 .,..... .....,.
1
more than 400 - l e is &lt;XIIIIing -and is preparing an on-auupus at the Campus School AUditor8 :30 p.m.
'
,.., h
for ita '1974 aemiDar dealinl with the reamt ium, Buffalo Stele (See Weelely
Followinl each- performance
Ticketa for each of the three
·
. •Noel _
_:",__ , _: _ of
. ,'u.S. Health and Safety Act at Com-.... ..";n ..., this ·i os u e for there will be a rereption athnit
~ · regular OIII;IOiwta are avaliable
•0....., ...__._.......,
the requMt of !Pe-Office of Re";i;~)
.
nationality hall of the e
c at $3 aDd $1 (for students) at
lbe -~; 1liiDb it -belonp in gional Administration, U.S. J?e- ~ 3---'~ ~ of t1uee group concerned, to which con- the Nor:bl Tlcbt 'Office and
the academlc aboo&amp;pbere rather partment of Labor.
concerts ,;;;:j a special event in cert tieiet 1\oldera 'IO(ill be ad{ also at the cbw. A aeries ticket
than in the Canfinee.of,a down- · In still anothar type of joint-,.,...,. of Q:!Pemi~ initiated mitted free of charge.
for the tluee is $'1. •
townhotel.
endeavor, ContinuingEduca- by the ' Officie of CUltural AfIn addition to this week's
Admlu' io:ottothePolish
For thesimi~~Chemlc:ala
group tion along with lbe Erie County fairs, ia actually an expansion series opener, these events are music special eoent is $2.50 for
Bar Asaociation and the Buffalo of what bepn last aeason as a slated: "Music of South Slav the fi'I'DI!ral pUblic and $1 for
Society con-.edthefl!l, ~ area chapter of the New York group of "high quality preaen- and RUBBian Compcaml," Sun- students.· ~
last 8IIIIIIDer at
C.P.A. society is ~ tetions of the serious music of day, Deceniber 10, Baird ReciSponsors of the series are
Dr. Gordoo M. lf!nris.·Lar-·- the 19th · Annual Institute on East Europe for - l e of the tal lWl, 7:30 p.m.; "Music of several U/B aDd ·Bulfalo State
tin~ of c:heaU&amp;trr..-...._'Federal Tuation at the Stetler ~ted heritages."
Polish and Hunprian Com- dube aDd ethnic groups.
A ....,...III'ODCif an 1'--.. HiltoD, Noveopber 30-Deoember . - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ : :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . _ - : - - - - - - ~ ~ ..... held here 1. The speallar will be Jolmnie
.
m 19'71 laturing a ~ Walters commissioner of InR. e g u' l
•

this"=

J'o-

campw

fnlll:l

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

. o!-

-..tion

L ·

~~:r~ B!nn: ~t,-~proaramspro-

. :;..,
ror;:-~
... ~~
v~
.
-~
,_

Dl!"'""v

tiaa aDd .....Wialit .mc.a.

-

vide up-dating of skills in an
intensive abort-term way for
u.._ professionala who can't
take regularly s c he d u Jed

-

. '""':.;~~;- -~t,Jy

m

or

HoiPtar ,__ , .

A particular• focal point .ia

=ta:-;':~5'!::!:r

·atlaal{-wuh ~·

Afthcxqh the Uniwnity is
1J!&gt;t having .a
~erenoe "!''ller With full f!Jcil1tie&amp; (banqUet_ and m e e t I n I
rooms. sleeping ~modatioao, etc.), the -~ can and
"'- Dialre tolal conf~ ar-

A

Conllnulnc- c.m.r

This very University, he
points out, lists development
of "an oulataiJding oontinuing
education division dedicated to
the coooept ol education as a
life-Jona pursui~ as one of the
~~(~ major aoaJs in i~ Self-Study
a "CXIIilmitment to quality") to :,"~=- ~~die States
finlllq,hloc:b oli'OOIIII for parNonnalfy, Csnfield empha~ at COI19alltmtly loCat- sizes, ~ ~ univenity with
- ed ~ Donn II*" ""'-Y 1l)ao such an objective provide&amp; ahe p!Oridld,~J,y clUJina oompreheaaive conference centhe ~ at
Clllllfer- tar paNel PbYsicaJiy to the at•
ol-prlntad talnment o(
is the
J:"'Z!::'\,:::''l:lllla~
at the Uni:_,;ty of Mary.
s.rt
ol~.,~
- ~for eumple, ~ !'t the
_~ ~ ,
,
t .· l1 .
Big Ten achoolil.
Here, thoucll, he 1ee1s.
...... friCIIItW alid".zw_ "eVf!~ , is catch as mtc;h
- - AJlaD ~ ~ ~ deeptte
flowery com... - diU .tar.........__._ edu Dlllmenl
~ dl ~"it:
For the future, IIOIIle hoPe is
INiif cillllilllt, lf-r a oi-l....!,
D . '~
oul :At JeUt til the
... ~ held
plana -for ,_ of the _ . t
upao the• U m--z a campus after Amherst facilities
~-. .
are fully developed was to conof etlber 00: both vert part of it to oontinuiril
are
• · a particular education ,_ - but that was
~ -~ wilb.··
- ' plana .
~ Bduca"'tlou
A ~-Pr&lt;irrPect" , at
~ llll ~ .......... thla pollit may. he the Jli'IIIIC-t
handicapped by

die-' - -

-; caae

... .

AocordinJ to Mrs. Barbara
M . s~ director1 the Office of
Equal Upportunity has been
designated by President Robert

compiled, she said, as part o•
this .....,.,...;bilty.
1be entire steff of the Office
Mrs. Sims indicated, is ''be~ -~ in the interrela~ between ~d the ap.
plication of the varrous provisions. Please feel free to consult
aD)&lt; of the following should you
have a -tion:"

N.Y.L DIVISION Of'

CWIL ltiCIHTI ACT

Opportunity for distribution to

UIB administrators.

FAIR

~

STANDAIIDI ACf 01" lUI

I. MAKES UN.LAWFUL DISCRIMINATION

IN EMPLOYMENT BASED ON:
s~ nc

equal wo111,
(1) Skill

In Llf*IUIII pay for

c:onskierinc:

(2) Effort
(3) R - b ility
(4 ) Similarity of wortc.lf11 conditions

up-&amp;~

;

'lblliJ b;
=:..ted~-~~· ··-' ~ '~ / :3~ ~tnn~'!"!!\jonai" I;'F;~
·

1. Ketti.r as U / B's affirmstiV&lt;
action. IIJI!DCY- 'lbe chart wru

prepared by the Office of Equal _

t

handled by the Univeni!f's
asrvice for conferenceo aDd mstitutes, within the Olllce of
Credit-Free l'roKrams. Division
ol Continuina Education.
The aavioe ezislB to aasist
community proleMioaaJ groups
and UniWnilty - l e
pian:
Ding worbhoPto and educational
- - . '"to serve educationa! needs for Univenity level
oonferencea, III'IJl'bhapa, semlnars and trainina .....,........,"
as a prolnotioiW _llyer _pula 1l

...wance-eo faculty..!&amp; staging

Others liave been as diverse
as an ~logical field trip
to Menco.
However, even 1f the pro~ e:vent has no .-1 . {or
programming assistance, Mrs.
Schmidt is ready to h a n d I e
physical ~ts as she
did for some 55 fuhctions last
year.
The entire effort - which
U.... involved in it feel is not
well understood on campus stems from a belief that part
.the emphaais of every univmsity is to be' interested in professional groups and in its ~ty members who are active
m~addi"=" Canfield
the whole notion ol
• ~ aDd re;-leaming ~ ""'!"'

at1o:

The chart reproduced here
com~ sewral Ja-. rules or
-regulatiCXll regarding campus
employment practicas and was

couraea.

:::::!mator· CoordinAC't:l
arransementi. - at are being

aws &amp;

_

HUMAN ltl8lfTS LAW

Ofi-

lMI

AMDIDED 1972

I. MAKES UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION
IN EMPLOYMENT, PROMOTION. £TC..

I. MAKES UNLAWFUL DISCRI MINATION,
EMPLOYMENT, PROMOTION, ETC ..
BASED ON:

lASED ON:

....
c.-

. . . (40-65) -

c-

MtkN* ori&amp;ln

··· ~

II. JUR ISOICTtO N: fEDERAL _

Ill. a. SPf:CIFICAUY PROTECTED
GROUPS:
1. All ~ women

Il l. a . SPECIFICALLY PROTECTED

GROUPS.:
1. AU women and
ptoviiJons In S.C. 1.

b. PROTECTED INDIVIDUALS:
1. All employed mala or tem.l•
whose c:omplalnt Is CGWNCI In Sec. 1 .

~

cov•red by

b. PROTECTED IN.OIVIOUALS:
1. fern.'- and males covued by
provf&lt;alons in Sec. 1.

IV. SELECTED UNIQUE .PROYISONS:
EQUAL PAY A,.ENDMENT-1965
Broadenld cowerap tD I~ ...,_,
occupatJons domlnaacl by ~ ,....
viously not covered by '1931 Act. but
ecluca.d 1 r o u p a lnctudecl in 1972

--

, .,......!f,..-.:; _

.!-""

-

=•':'.Z

'

am

::::'~"ra':::'::- =--~.:l'~

=

W'cdltllrp Wd ,... dill - - . facilitiea ... 19 ..,..,. of land
- - o r ttie leo I• . . k dioeaM adjrocent
the Amherst- cam-

._.!f'Jt:, lldter -~~

to- ....
,_

- -trY !-II&gt; UDder-

~.......a.ptiall

to
doaated-to the U/B

~a lite

a-Dellle...,...a........_
lillY ··......
.....
~..,...~~ ...,..._
--.m....-...................

~the~~-

~

--.

-

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

c.&amp;ld
_ . -- ---

and

-'

.-

;. ·

.:.=::-~ :;r::~ ~(=:)to.:om~

~.,JIIilralll~~ : ~~ ~t).

. ·' ..

..........
.............
z. ...,.

Maybeflltld.,~orlll:-

..., ....... 1ft pubic ...... •

"""""·

...

~

-- _,...
-

N....

VI. SANCTIONS:

.... - " '

,_.,_ _ _ _ __

:::~-- -- ·..

~

M tiled bJ OfPnlzation on

......, _.,......,...,0(.~7~

-

..

VI. ~
..:....~-~::::.·.::.,"'"

., _ _

....... - .. ·--... .. - oi ....,.
....... _ ... _....__ - ~ . . ..._...,. - ....

:-:_.~
........._ •110 hi . . , _

!!,zi-- ..... -,

· ~~~~ ~
:::.~nnina:~-=~

~.
• .._.,
..,.._.., ~ . - . , 11C

.,---

V: GRI~ANCirs:

.._,.

!'fico·~~to!.;!!
---.

_.... that

-

Y. GRIEVANCEs:

j&amp;.IIIQtr bolil dJaJn _ , - ...
'ally OIIMinlcl·lllld_OJ*!!Ie .......

~
-"
· a·--wJIIa~:!lrUDichitl ..:::r..,.~.,.: 'Willllty _........, education
abDat lbeir ............ or rWill!.!'!' ~ty~

!!-!...,.....,__.....

V. GlttEYMCES:

FciiindatioD bY the Baird &amp;undation. n.e ....... talk thet

~If" ~ ~-

LOCAi ENfoi!CtMOO -AGENCY, VII. lOCAL
!J.S. Dlpt. of Ubor W... £ ~ ~ N"'.S
• _,.
.
~ 111 W. HunJn 8t., Rm. 717•
• • Dfv:. ol ....._. ...... "

F),........_

~

hlrinc of em·

=
: ;. _ .
'--------::-----,,:--------.:---_;.IO()
_J_._·:tl'--:-y.::·:_~--=-----VII.

-

_N.Y."1....- . . . . . .

VII.

?..

ENFOIIC£MENT AGENCY'

1oue1 ~

~.:=..T~ .~= ·:-~-

OPPOrtuni ty Com·

~ ·'M...~~"-

�~-

, _ . , 2,1!172

7

T

Letters df~orton ~dCaperi ~ve .'We've.Come a Long Way'
.J.

Lib &amp; b e - who..........

"Vir~~*~" hi-'- educa-

. tiaa -

.

y U/B - ill a
bas ~-loaa

'

do!miciaDs
The fini aeries ia an

between

•

acb.nn
a..u.ceu.. .;cbarlea
P:

N - cl U/ 8 and Pn!eidant
Cbadee W. N-u..m of a-..,
WllllhinP&lt;m University in FeDruary ol1910. Tbe EODDCI ia a
lett« ClCIDClenling accreditation
received by Chancel~« Samuel
P, Cal*&gt; m 1924.
On Febtuary 8, 1910, Chancellor Norlon, led to .believe
that the City ' cl Buffalo was
~to'-- Upoil the Uni-.ity • siun of $75,000 per
year for a colleae of arts and
sciences ( a hope which paoved
qination of _,..,mton - and . false) ; ~Idled a note 4o the
.both _., q u o ted fnllll by Gecqe Wasbinstoo president
Pn!eidant Ral:lwt L K..uer •
casuslly ~ bow to. 110
"' "'""--~ the viaitiDc -~ttinl up iiUCb • facilitY:

· .,..,..
~ 1iDce &amp;be euly J.'lllllll Ol

t1i1i1 Ollltury. .
- Jaat bow poat a clistaD&lt;le this
, _ . . . . , trip coWnd ia
JJhalllated by - - ' letlera
.-thad Ia &amp;be University
- ~ tbil ..t. .
Pulled fnllll &amp;be moUnd of
U/B - a i l i a jolt • MiddleStataeftlaaUanarriwdcm
......... &amp;be two lets c l - ~ ba9e to do with ma~
teaa that milbt ·c:aplme &amp;be 1m-

.rout

-

"Firat, bow iil&amp;lly pmfeeBors pined, but to train the plain
and ~of the best c:ali- people (italics, Ollnl ) to beCome
' - Cllll - • • be obtained for~- better Americans, to be theia
$75,000 per Y8lli'?" and
friends. advara, teachers and
"Seaond, bow . many young leaders and with the belief that
men and ....,._. can such a this is the Lord's work. I want
number of- ptot_,.. and in- -men and women Who understructora educate thoroughly?" - stand and spring from the plain
Far the ......,..
people themMJyes." ·
- Esplained Noaton, in terms
. Advising President Needham
vaguely, aeminiscent of latter · that his - w o u l d be pubday charPs to search and teo- lished "in the Newspapers,"
ure aeview committees, "We Norton thanked him in advance.
need a presiilent and a whole
Two weeks later - and with
tescbinJ steff. We ·want young, lines or apologies for beinat late,
energetic, broad minded, ·sym- Needham responded boldly :
pathetic tescbers to do the work ·
"I suggest the following faoonughea&gt;-educ:ation in a great ulty, with salaries as named :
community which needs it. We
"Greek and lAtin. 1 Profeswant them to come, not because sor, $2,500. 1 Instructor, $1,000.
cl salary or ...,..&amp;ation to be French and Spanish.. 1 Profes-

.

; Conceining Discrimination
.
'

knold,:

Mrs. -Shirley
....ult..,
at diaector and campus Cllllid~ator c1
Affairs. .
Mr. A-m. Ollwocia, a&amp;istant to ihe director and ........

w-··

to the diaector and campus co~tor of Nat:M Ameriaut

.............
Tbe dl8rt is mesnt to highlight major ptoYisioD&amp; of aeli!o118 c!"'rdinator pi -BPaniah
ted .ru1ea, regulations, or law&amp;
peekins Alfalra.
.
aelating. to equal employment
. Mr. Patrldt Kong, aMi&amp;taa!t opportuDities, Mrs. SIIDB said.
irector ~or Equal EiDploymeait • It does not purport to be a sublpp0l1uiiil;y.
stitute for a careful reading of
Miss Vivian ~ assistant the tezts. OnUtted are _appli-

__

._

--~~--·-

intsm----

csble provisions of the Policies
of the SUNY Board of Trustees
and the SPA, or CSEA,contracts, which sbould be consulted, where appropriate.
Full texts of the laws and
aegulations are on file in the
Equal Opportunity Office, 307
Townsend H llll, for campliS use~
Tbe Office phone number is
831-3011.

l

cw · -DISCRIMINATION
c INMAKES
UNLAWFUL
EMP'LOYMENT, PROMOTION,
8AS£D ON: AGE (40-65)

eAS£D- oN:

Dlft.OYIIEICI' PL.UI

lol:f .

cw

4-1171

MAK£1 UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION
IN DIPLOYMENT. PROMOTION, ETC.;

SUNY ~AL

HtQHEit 'i:Duc:ATION

lol:f

AS . . . . . . , ll111--1117 .

11n

1172

I, MAKES UNLAWFUL"OISCRIMINATION
IN EDUCATJONAL OPPORTUNITY
BASED ON :

I. MAKE$ UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION
IN EMPLOYMENT, PROMOTION, ETC.,
BASED ON:
'

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

._

........

'""' '

-

colo&lt;
national orfcln

·-·

na~Oftaln

--_

L FEDOtAl.

FtDEIW.

.•. ~:,a~y M?TECTm'

Ill • · SPECJRcAu.Y PttonCTED

1. •II W'OtftM end men .cowNCI by
ovJsions In Sec.. 1:-

GROUPS:
1. AU Ktu.l or prospectiw empto,....

......

b . PROTECTED INDIVIDUALS

b. PIIOTECT£0 INDIVIDUALS:
1. .......... •nd fNI~ cowNd
ovlsiont in Sic. 1.

b1.

1. Atl ectu81

~A~;D£~,~~-~.;~~ .·~j~:~··~.:·''.:,::

II. FEDERAL

fl .

111. • · SPECIFICALLY PROTECTED
GROUP':

Ill. a . SP£CJFICA.LL V PROT£CTED
i GROUPS:
1. all women
2. minority men beNd on r.c:e. nationality, ,.upon
3. all tMn and women apeS 40-65
(amplo1"*"1: only)

b . PROTECTED INDIVIDUALS
1. 811 N~le 8nd male students

orp~~

cha,... -.. .

b . PROTECTED INDIVIDUALS:
1. all men lo wotMn
on •rounds atated in I.

c rt: ~natlon

IV. SELECTED UNIQUE PROVISIONS:

. SELECTED UNIQUE PROVISIONS:

IV. SD.£CnD UNIQUE fi'lltOYISIONS:

IY. SELECTED UNIQUE PROVISIONS:

--·

Th..... prohlbttl,. thcrtmlnetlon of
persona ..-.,. ernplo,..,.m. or of pllr·
SOfJJ emplo)oMI WhO aN MtwMn the
.... of 40-65 • rrwy be of particul8r
alplitlceftc4l to women Nturnlftc ta the

f.cler•IIY aulst:M education procrarns..
2 . Provisions rwrprdlrlll ltdmiQions
apply only to:

R~ulrn

wtttt.R

etftf'IM!tlve

8Ct1on

~rams for ~ with

$50,000 or
ort1 In Federal Funds and 50 or mora

Requl,_ ol Equel Opntunity ~ Dk'eoeor.

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and employment

1. Prohibita

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b) profasional
C) paduete

d) public uncM,.raduate institutions

.... _.,

DWII'T$1. priwta Uftderarad

3 . Institutions for military t,.lnl, .
4 . Institutions tradition.ally actmttti,.

.

Problbita ~.crimination .... .,. blind
st:udaftb--edmlssklns and other educ.atlonolMows female and ,_.. ....-..-

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eu. dl.crtmlnlltion In .U

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1. Upllndlnc and enhllnclrc rteruit·
ment •llorb of the Unlveralty, strivln&amp;
to m~~ke wfdel)'-known the news of staff
and .faculty w.candn.
2. writinc job ctncrtptlons wtth ~

1~ c:riterta, MMI t..u ct.rtr
~. and vaUdaad. tMihods of 6ft.
tarvtewhlll muR be pn)feMioMUI*I. In
cooperation wtttl o t h • r apptaptf.U

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Belfast Protestants, -Catliolics-·.
·M eet in Scotland to Talk, Train
young. "The young are the saying they had to- review rearms and the legs of the con- questa for money with , the~
flict," she •commented. Ten of boarda and the like.!
_
in Londouderr:ir this weekend the participants were under 20i During "proceasing," the
14,
under
25.
"have
nots"
discussed
at
great
a British soldier on patrol was
This "youth group" quickly length why they had been unkilled by a sniper. 'The bullet
frqmented and wounded a len- developed a coherent group able to mount a concerted eiJort
year.qld boy walking near the identity in the first days of against the "haves." Some augsoldier's Land Rovec. The meetings, w)len many of the gested that they implicitly bedeath, the first after a three- older participants were still lieved that the "haves" had a
.
.
day hiatus, )li8s Northern Ire- fearful. Meeting infonnally, the right to the money.
The "haves" / "have nots" aim·
. land's 620th war-related death - group detailed plans for a nonsince the current unrest began sectarian community center. In ulation is a ~tentially explothe face ol a Conference' "prac- sive game th&amp;t the training slltff
in 1969, according_ to UPI.
The killing in Northern Ire- tice event"-a simulat ion of the had not originally inlended to
land is said to ·be oyer religipn, bureaucratic hassles that such use at this Conference, Dr.
or inequity ~ on · religion, a coalition group . would prob- Bunker explained. But perhaps
although many critics would ably meet in actually trying to because the participants are so
agree with Bernadette Devlin get a community center started close to violence in their Jives,
that the source of Northern -the youth group began to they were anxioui; to avoid it
IrelaDd's troubles is- the ex- splinter. " Many of the adults during the Conference. After
ploitatibn of the working ma- at the Conference had put all the first tense days, it became
jority by the wealthy few. their hopes on the ~oung," Dr. clear that the sessions were
Whatever the ':truth," the' fact Buiiker said. "This broke the being self-monitored. The onlr
•
threat of violence was the po&amp;siis lluit,. in Northern Ireland, fantasy."
The yOung became aware bili ty, which never materialwbere~ou so to' churcb determines whether YO)! .are friend early in the Conference of the ized, of irlremist sympathizers
or foe. • Ploteatanta and C.thc&gt;- extent to which they are ex- coming up from Glasgow to
lics -live in ~r ol each other ploited in the Ulster conflict by " trash."
and, DOt infrequently, blow older people who, in effect, use Who Get~ the Jobs?
each otbef up.
them to fight their war, Dr.
In another .simulation, the
Last ~r a group of so- Btenunkdeder satoidmmun
. ~t.f~~ ~~J'.?~! staff _presented the following
cial pay~~. mostly ftom
~~ ~
hypothetical situation : A thouYale Univenoty, invited 66 Bel- differences." But by the end, sand new jobs were opening up
fast reoidenta,· 28 Catholic, 28 they had begun to acknowledge at the shipyards. Catholics
Protestant, to meet together in and examine their own preju- were to sit down at the negoti- .
a neutral ncin-political setting .dices, she said.
ating table with Protestants to
for a week ol aelf-amsc:ious inDr. Bunker has beard that persuade them that a high perteraction. 'lbe occasion was the the youth ,group and two or centage of the new jobs sbould "•
'"I'rain.ins Coaference for the three · others have met in Bel- go to Catholic workers. Durins
Belfast . Communities," spon- fast aince the Conference.
the simulation, roles were re,.Z.....,.. T.
sored by Yale and Belfast's
during the
Ql-... Univenity and held
~t ~S-28 in SterJins, Scot- Conference included meetings was an explosive session, Dr. IJisC ~~ UT~..Z..
ol small planning groups, group Bunker said, in which Cathc&gt;~ YYtx~
Orpo!IM 11J Yole
omervation, aDd practice events lies unloaded their sense of
Master . filmmaker Jean-Luc
The Coaference Was organGodard discuased bia recent
iJIIId by. 'iale'a ~ Doob, ?{.,
wbo.IIU " " - ' ---.vel.y Oil CUIIIIIqn of wllatJ~. ~ : sides revealeCl the atent to work laat Friday .evening after
the -licat.ic¥1 o{ ;PBYcholOflical during. the simulatioos and tbe , Wbicli"18elr "'iews of u,.; "other m~scree
"efenofdo"~
.
to J~:;
• 1Ull1Di.
1• 7
.-reb to Daalllct resolution implications of the participanta' are stereotyped, in terms much
n.
behavior. Dr. Bunker and the like racial s tereotypes hl&gt;ard in ·
With Godai-d, who wore the
-=:...~~~$.~ other trainers relied on the &lt;the United States.
usual tinted glasaes, was his
Barbara Beuedict Bunker, an Tavistock training model, a
Role-playing se s s i on s de- colleague and co-director, Jean
asaistant prof-.r of psychol- model for the study of proces- signed- to improve negotiating Pierre Gorin.
ogy, was 88ll'iate director of ses within and between both . and other middle-range power
''The nice -t hing about your
training for the meetinp, work- small and larger groups. In the skills 1which !ended to be lack- question is it's already an anTavilitock model, Dr. Bunker ing among participants) , dis- swer," Godard told a partici~wi~~Directpr Ed- explained,
the training staff cusaions of how participanta pent who opened the session
Army maps of Belfast divide has specific, very cleatly-&lt;le- might deal with differences with a long rhetorical question
the City-up into economic sub- fined roles. The staff member among groups at home, and ~~!_ Marxism and the uses of
. divisions indicated by colpr. never becomes a group member other. practical applications of ''""""Early in the ..e..non, Godard ·
Catholic workins-dass neiib- or •:friendly helper," as he or the working sessions were also
borbooda are shown in green; she might in a T -group. In- part of the program. Inter- indicated that lie wished to
Plotestant working-dass blocks stead, be D~Jintains a somewhat group skills were - emphasized. make political films that are
in orange. The shrinking inte- detached stance, commenting By American standards, there also personally true. Godard is
grated """"' are yellow, while on the group process wile1l be is an incredible amount of com- the llllUur of such modem r.J.m
mjddle..daal·
Protestant- feels such information is called munity organizing go i n g on classics as "Breathless,~ "MaSnei8bbod&gt;oods. areas in which for. Because the trainer as- within the Belfast neighbor- culine!Feminine," "S pathy
littfa ,.,~ Warft" violeDce bas sumes a role of inOuence and hoods, Dr. Bunker said. But the for the Devil," "La
authority, the Tavistock model emphasis is on intragrqup ac- and ''Weekend." · .
'
is pariicularly good for "pulling tivity and this often agtnivates
Gorin, who spoke freely for
aid, drew 110 per· cent of ita out the participants' feelings to- the unstable intergrou'p situa- his colleague, said Oatly that
puticipanta fnmi .Belfa8t'a vol- ward authority.
tion even more.
be and Godard would make no
atile working-daios Deigbbor'lbese feelings become - cru- Not EvetyOne w.. ,.._
more of the long "Walter Cronboocla, DOW~ ghetto- cial in a civil co ,n f li c t I~
Not everyone who attended kite'' political statements of the
bed: Political abemi8t
- Northern IrelaDd s. .BehaVIor was pleased with the Confer- type they made several years
toward au~rity _in Ulster: is enoe. "'Illis is the kind of ex- ago wben Godard was widely
lzalloaa, iDcludint the
mllitary poupe, were repre'= ol~ polarized, e1ther pas8lve perience wbere people learn quoted as aaying be would
-.ted, .. community ac- or Vl'!lenl .
differentially," Dr. Bunker make only Movement films.
tion groups lilre Women To. ~1ghta mto tlw; Wlljl ~par- '-llaid. "For some it was a very
Gorin indicated their present
aethllf, a coalition organization, t!CI~ bel;u&gt;ve m the11 real- exciting learning experience. interest in radical aesthetics.
and the BaDdy Row Commun- life mterac:tWns came largely For others, it pulled stuff out of "Aesthetics is politics," be said
ity Genter. R.ecruitinJ was done from P!"~ce '!"~ta.. In one them, they didfi't want t.o know. and urged the audience to talk
in llelfast 1!1 a ~unity controvenial simulation, Dr. For those~ it .was very stressful. not about "ourselves" but about
aDd -a teacher at ~ co II e" h d 50 Pence 'lbese I p e o p 1 e come out or "machines," that is, the cam~ NllliDed by the Yale ap~ fnml a group ol30 same chaos, and this is a training era, the t;Llm and ita mechaniC8.
partieipanta, AU the DIOIIeY style that doesn't make people
"I. don t ~ revolution .Jib
The~ etaff was not pven to half the group; happy "
_candies," Gonn told the aud...,._ wbo wauJd attend tmtil desiiJlllted the "haves." . '!lie
Dr -Bunker ~ con- · ience- polemicist when be acother half, the "have nota," cern ·that the Conference ma
cused the pair of failing to
bbar'Pid-witb-P.ttinc·a-fair, liave "tri~~Di.d·'People' fo•
provide an, explicit rev.olution~)
WON UDA (Ulster ~ abare of the DIOIIey for them- Culty" when they' return fo Bel- ary PI"OIIUI in their films. ·
selves. .
fast. In a nation where inter'"!fe have leam8d fnml the
pecUd, for amaple.· But the
-· Act l.lr8 · - ·
grilup interaction is popular!
Chinese to speak fnml where
en.. broke clolm ln tbit ..... · The
strategy devised by the called collabomti&lt;in this ~ we are rather than from where
IMifore the ~ and the "have nota" - t o 8elld a aerieo a reason&amp;hle 111'QnY. The organ- we are not,~ added- Godard. UDA toot 1o the ebeeta, dWI,- of ..... to the "haves'' to ~ izera will do.A followup u fundGorin said that be and- God0., the pia.,.
lll!llt ~~ for more equit- ins materializes.
'
ard had tried in "Tout Ve
. bob wbo ... ~ 'lrillina- ahly 41lstributin&amp;' the IIIOIIIIY· - Nights, after the working aes•
to - . Both the UDA The "have nata"·,_,t little away ~ Dr. Bunker said, the parand the~IRA wae from the "hava Much to the ticipomta danced, aa·n g and
cbagr!n ol the ......,"rkinl-daaa "displayed their tom\ntiai , ver- . Dr. lajaren A. Hiller propeoslle wbo .were ro~ bal caPacity" in traditional · feasor of. music aDd .;... .. ,·~'­
.......,,,,.,,,.
queilted to leave at "havee," they found thet they community fesla called· "bool- or the
home. . • actm much like the . liureeu-- ies." But the singing, like the
~ter
for the
tive/
0
cnta wbo. conbol ~ IDCIIIe)' Conference itself, was only an :'!Jed ~ ~ ~
Two-tbirds or· more of the at- home, Dr. ·
"'!idintedude in con~uiniJ stmg- Society of Composers Authors
IJUtkipomta were men, Dr. 'Jlplcally1 they- used.._ .W..vin" gle that shows no lllgll of being
d p b 1· h
'
_
any closer to an eud.
.
an
u
1s e r s (ASCAP)
buDkef said, aDd many 'were tactica Wtth the ''haveno~
award.
By PATRtCIA-WARD
BIEDERMAN
Retporcw Sufi

T-=ul~eventa
s::.~n

:.=: it:.

P::tsthanC:~li~r!_~.f\:
=~~o~j~g

Fi/m.,.,..

=

11

ciili'!ise "

~~~"i=;·

"=-

-ar

......

......... ___

~:~'·

dHfl.

ttl._.._

Award fior Hiller

':r"~ta, theY~~

1!1-··-flil-

a

Luc Godard
.
· -

f~ eJeOrlr

2

c..

&amp; Politics"

.

B" ,
CoJ:!'d::
and other recent work to f'md'
' 'the Oesh and blood reality". of
worket:s in France. ·
··
. Godaid apPMJ"ed under the
sponsorship of Student Association Speakers Bureau, UUAB,
and the Departments of Engl.isl! and French.

~~~~

Program Set.on
Heart &amp; Exercise

The benefits of exmciae for
prevention ind treatment of
heart disease will be the topic .....
of a program in continuing
medical educition, F r i d a y
through Sunday, November 3-5,
at the Statler Milton Hotel.
The program is aponson!d by
the New York State Heart A&amp;sembly, the State Health Department and. the U/B School
ol Medicine.
It has been~ b y physicians &amp;8110CU1led With the
Monter10re Hospital in ·New
York, DOled for work in the
rebabilita~ of bMrt petienta:

Dr. Raymond E. Philips, .......
ciae cardiolosist, aDd
len-

:or;

ore Zohman, director ol cardiac
rehabilitation, wbo bas IJ!Itional """''Jlition for ber
p - -rk in the field. Local
chairman is Dr. Robert Kalin,
clinical prof- of
Physiciano, DUI8M and pbyaical educators will aUend both
combined 8lld _...te -'aaa
durintthe three.-daY.ll.•~- .... ~ -U/8 faculty .., the ~
include: Dr., Leon E. l"arttl,
prof- of phy~. wbo

=-

will speak on ''Ncin-1DvaaiveMeesuremeilt of .Cardiac /Output;~

and

.

. Dr. Donald

w. ~

feasor of pbyaiol"P.', WllOI
topic will be "'lbe "Bioenergetics of Swimming."
..
Manufacturers ol teatins,
monitorina and exerci&amp;a equiP~
· demonstrate
~ infonnation can be
_,.,., from Continuing Medical Education, 2211 Main St.,
ext. 5526.

=

ais?

/

�lf~2,1J72 •·

9·

UrbanA!llhro Program'
Studies Sub-Cultures
and drug rehabilitation proU,.._.q lnlonnatioa ~
grams as seen from the point of
Is there a sul&gt;&lt;:uJture to view of the addicts .tt-.ae!Ye&amp;.
match every ethnic group in Dr. Tatje hopes· that eventualBuffalo? Is the very idea of ly the research wod&lt; will !SUit
an ethnic sub-cultwe a reality in a systematic surveying of
or a myth? U there are sub- cultural groupo in Buffalo.
cultures, how do they diller
Commwlity participation in'
from one another, and how do the urban anthropology provarious members within a par~ gram extends even to running
. ticular group differ?
it. A Selection and Advisory
Answers to these and other ComiDi ttee, which screens apurban cultural questions are plicants and monitors funding,
being sought by students major- .includes individuala from the
ing in urban , anthropology at Model City organization, the
U/ B. The new undergraduate mayor's oftioe, and citizens
degree program, which studi"' from the Model Neighborhood
complex urban social and cul- area.
tu"!l problems, was instituted
In addition to Dr. Tatje,
this summer by the Anthropol- members of the Anth~logy
ogy Department and is one ol Department faculty participatfew Of its kind in the country.
ing are: Professors David
According to Dr. Terrence Barika, Warren Barbour, Robert
..
..
. ..,~,... Tatje, assistant professor ol Dentan, Erwin Johnsoli, Ann
anthropology and program di- McElrqy, and ·Marvin Opler.
rector, the new major is based Dr. Tatje twp.,. that once the
on the idea that persona who program is well....,tablilbed,
have been involved with urban other departments or individproblems and thei.r solutions al- ual faculty members can be mBy PATRICIA WARD
recalled ·t hat when he came said. But gay people-every- ready know a sreat deal about listed to provide additional reBIEDERMAN
out years ago he didn't want one-&amp;hould he discreet.
urban social Phenomena. lated courses.
Dr. Tatje said the program
SUit
his car seen parked near a popEntrapment of homosexuals Courses will be offered in the
Two members of the. Matta- ular Butralo gay bar.
by police does occur in Bufialo methods and tl)eory of aocial is s t iII soliciting applicants
from
interested members of the
chine Society of the Niagara Don't Tell Everyone
although it is illegal, Dick said. and cultural anthropology llO
Frontier recounted their own
New freedom or not, both One of the
of Mattachine that students will be able to commwlity. Anyone who ia a
resident
of the Model City
experiences "corninl out" dur- speakers do not tell everypne IS the repea of repressive legis- translate what they implicitly
ing an informal discussion on whom they meet that they are lation affecting hornosenJals. know into more formal kinds of area and baa a high school
degree
or
.equivalency certifithe theme held Monday due- gay. Judy's estranged husband Mattachine wiU counsel any in- analysis.
cll'le is eligible to apply.
ing a weekend-long "Gay Sym- knows and doesn't like it. He dividual arrested on any of the Not Roaulor Students
posium of the Arts,'' sponsored thinks she is sick, and he is charges aimed at homosexuals.
Sin
the
by U/ B Gay Liberation Front- also concerned that their son &lt;Gay Law Students at U/ B
ce
program accents
ier.
:
·
Will have only gay models and have a similar serv1·ce.) The experiential knowledge, most
·1
o! the majors are not regular
Coming out, the speakers ex- W1 I become gay himself. Judv's Society won't bail you out, lull-time college .students. A
plained, is the term . used by children; who are 6 and 8, aiso however.
$34,000 grant from the Model
gays to express both· their 'own kriow. Although she doesn't enStraight society has a com- City Agency of Buffalo baa enrealization of ·their homosex- gage in .sex in front of them, pulsion to know "why gays are abled recruitment of membem
The School of Pbarmacy baa
uality and their willingness to anymore than she did as a prac- gay," Judy commented. "Of of the ·commwlity in order to . received $8 463 b&lt;lm tbe n.
be recognized as ho1I106exuals tieing heterosexual, she does "!'urse, 'then we ,can make .you increase the number pf P801!le -~• ot'Hal"'- .Bduoa"'by f·-"·'' friends or slieiety~ t-· want th
to know there .are w~IJ ' " Djck dded.
·
.,......., ""',..._
larg;~~&lt; Lv• &gt;·u " '" · ,, •.,,, .!\,. altletM~· 'tb be~ity :: · ::L~dOnot l~ ,..ey·,!~erf:;r_ . ~~--; ~~-~~~
~~7 ~
Both speakers •s.rid' ~Y'~'d· most of all, she :wanbi "ib avoid reasons, becauae it d,_,'t mato. pees:·vr. Tlltje ·iaid that .there u-,
{i; prolealional m~
come oiiftafe,' wlil!n close to 30: an•atfiiOsi&gt;liere. Ilke that of her ter," he said.
are now about 25 students subThe Special Health Career
Judy, who is the recentlr. sep- own childhood in which any
Judy met homosexuals for sidized by the grant, ·which pro- Opportunity ..,urt _,
araled mother of ·two children, form of sexual expression is re- the first time about a year ago vides for full tuition and a book 29 totaling ~ P-6 miiUaa
said she personally felt that her pressed.
in an informal group like this allowance; he hopes to add 10 awarded under a Federal
age was an advantage in c&amp;mJudy's parents live out of one. "Since then, looking back, more in January. Model City· clrort to raise tbe. _ . . . , .
ing to terms with her lesbian- state-a fact she admits made I see that every close, beauti- !unding is the only flOUl'Ce ol of minority group Diembers Ill
ism and ·w as glad she didn't it easier for her to come out. ful, sensitive exchange I've ever undergraduate tuition money in the health prola.iona. Sdloala
have to deal with the issue dur- She baa no intention of telling had with people was with a New York State available to and organizations in 18 woman. I've known a lot of part-time students, he said.
and the District ol Columbia
ing the turmoil of adolescence, them she is gay.
as did many oi,P..r g!!&gt;' friends.
The subject of parents struck men but for me it never really
Most of the funded· sillaents received the grants awarded by
Although the deciSion was a responsive chord in the pre- clicked. I can't receive as well work for cOmmunity service or thl!' Ollice of Health M""""""'
not simple, particularly in light dominantly gay group. Matta- emotionally or sexually with urban p~ groups su?&gt; ·as Opportunity under the Compreo! her marital status, Judy chi~_counsels_gay P&lt;!?Ple to_be men," she said.
the Model C1ty Agency ttaelf, hensive Heal .t ·h ~
said she was glad she made theJ sens1tive to timmg m telhng Gome-Pioylnc
l.'ommwlity Action Organiza- Training Act o/1971, a key •
choice she did. .,
their parents and warna ~!tat
Among her young married lion, and DART (Drug Abuse, ment of Pri!eidene' N i "on • a
"I feill.ike I'm 18 instead of parents may reject the child, friends, the game-pI a Yin g Research, and Treatment), a health strategy. The Oflioe was
30,'' she said, adding that ber a_t least temporarily. Judy men- turned her of!. Five years ago drug rounseling agency.
formed reoontly within tbe Burecogru1ion of her hom""""""'- tioned, how effectively parents she wanted to put down the
The program includes people reau of Health ~ - Ed­
ity was . only one facet of a sometimes . d~lude themselves advances of men she knew so- who have had .first-hand - - ucatlon;-a CC!IIJPOIII!iit oi-HEWo
brnader discovery of her poten- about a childs homosexual ac- cially, but only since she came ience with . urban problema, National ·Iniotltutea Of Health.
tial for self-expression on many tivity. ''That's their self-p_r·o- out has she "had the guts to such as former gansleaders and
Sb: traineei a 8111111D8!'will be
levels that . had taken place tection thing," she added. D1ck do it." She haskn foundtha sh~t drug addicts. Although there recruited b&lt;lm llf&amp;duailn« ciasin . the
ol the said his own parents are con- . some men who ow
t e IS are about a dozen full-tilpe ses of BuJialo hich llClhaalil and
w.,:,'s
vinced that "their Richard" is gay consider it '! challenge in- U / B students in the program, the Q~operatlve Colll!p c.Didn't Hne F
a 'lhining exception in a gen- - stead of a turn-off.
.
Dr. Tatje pointed out that it ter. The recruits will tUa put
Dick
carne out at erally depraved gay populaShe also fouod ~ame;&gt;laym_g is prjmarily tailored .to fit the in an eicbt-WMI&lt; JIIOIDIIIl fll28 wheri he realized he didn't tion and don't see that'-most among her new fnends. One IS needs ol the funded students.
eluding claaoea, oiHh&amp;-jab
have forever to express his sex- gays are pretty much like him. "how gay are you?" Those who
Dr. Tatje claimed several in- training and field tripe_
uality "I also d "dn't ~k i\
As part of its education pro- have ~nly recently come out are novative aspects for the prowas r;,;r to the ~men I was gnim, Mattachine sends speak- somettmes put down by women gram. "As U/B undergraduseeing" he "said
ers to mothers groupo and other who ha~e always ~own they ales, the students muat fu1fi11
In 'response "to a question non-ho~ oiJliUlizali&lt;&gt;,';"'· are Iesblllns, she said.
"
certain academic courae r&amp;from an avowed! strai ht man Mattachine tr1es to speak .to
Judr, ~ed abo~t the "!'d- quirements. · But have
at the lli!IISio
sai~"be was middle America,'' Judy said, nesses mvo!ved m '!&lt;or life- waived some courses uauaDy recapable of n, with women but "to show them that ga~ people style. She IS ·' Aor"!t w~ quired o( anthropolosy majors
did not
himself
bi- can be real people :""th real WOrks for a man Who IS una in order to put special emphasis
sexual since 75 to lOO per cent emotions, ~ keep jObs, that ware of h~r gayness, ~ho re- on independent study and field
of hia emotional
nse was it's not just one-nigh_t stands, fuses !? hire male flons)S be- work. A minimum requu.,.._t
directed toward
that gay people are capable of cause you know what ~ . o!, of 16 hours of independent
Acoo!ding.,to the U.S. Public deep emotional attachments.'_'
guy would want to be a flonst.. study is designed to~ take ad-,
Health Se - .Diak u.iP.~m
One -non:homosexual admit, ~ 0WOO amdarlx..I:INI&amp;es '-'ltia Yliataoge'&lt;it!4bel~ -ex- are some Dl~-m ted tlllt't..!''r!lllughf"llhaY"Si!r- gay JOk'eS. ~Siie'"'YaDtiiBiZeS aliOO1 perience of students inYolved
.
' .....:. ...,
wii activity mostly in .terms of COIJ!mg out to .her boss,."!' he and enable u-, to relate their
the N ~
"'"'nw~ a ,r e 8 ·
night stands. ''That's dis- pratBes her for a J'll&amp;lliificent work act&gt;vitieo-.to their fonDa!
9nJy a fractum of this nUmber 0 ne-. ,. he "d ddiilg thlii job of arrangipg flowers for a
work." be added. Formal
IS active in. the _gay 'S~ture, · r:"'~~lf didnotl'lke to sleep
$1,000 ~·
:jriiJ be idvan on the thettu~bl'a::!!l;u';d ' members w~th women "jwit for sex."
. Both speakers said ~t com- oiy 'of culturaf ' and .-=lal anof cert•;n Other minorities"""'· lmpoosible to Generalize
.
1ng ou~ had meant_l081ng,;::- thropoloo, IXJIDP8JIItiYe wt.n. LOCIIPOirt I'EIIFliiiiP~
-.-.-.. dlacrimiriation ays
Many gays d6 engage in fre- tact w11h some fnends. ·
t ism;tmd urban-anl!n'oPolii&amp;Y.. ,
The T8ylor ~. KMM Center,
expe~noe .
•
quel!~ casuai,..seXwil. . activity, change happens to all of ua,"
·
lockport. Ia ~ &amp;MridOn's
J:..n~~lllll!.d.~~judg- Dick ·said, !rut many do '!"t. Judy said, "and~- ~=::.:-.,rbetlin. " School for Scoondol for the nut
mentslllllabout bom&lt;isexuals who It is impossible to generaln:e. grow out of groupe.
...:....,.
do"
~~ niseudl in ihree: ..,....,., ~ 2-4,
refer ~ "t;y- 'llJJd never . More
.might· have cas,_
''The !"""!' out J;?U~":"'o .J~ J&gt;n such '\opko
the
-11, .,16-18, ... i:3o p.m.
:;..,.termali'f!''l•clo&amp;et~ pa!....,.if · yweremore. hon- therl'!pr;er~ate.,Didt~ role ol ~ realdellt 9curtain
tlr.ne. r - . -lloble '8t
he said. ' '
_ ti!&gt;tfi 1"'1 abou what .theY really October ~ with~panel on ~ aldell em tile BMt Bide. Norton, .,. $2.50. the - The new sexual fieedOI%''1'88 1""f.ted, he addO::.
rson isn't ''The Gay Revolt" A poetzy 'the evolution ol attitudea ol tlon of Thul'ld8y- nllht ~
1
made i~ eas!er for eY~~. to takin'!'B ~f:ge of"another or readinl{ and .Haih&gt;- aocial , bled&lt; teenager• Ill_ Bulfalo ticlo8tswidch ... $1.
deal witli his or .fler ..........;ty•
. ga
that'
1 " he also held
pnp Wllhln tbe lat fiw yean,
straight ~ gay, Piclf "'!_id-:_He usmg force,
s . coo •
were
·
.
·
:.o,
.
~
By SUSAN A. CAMARDO

...
Gay·s~e~ers Recall 'Coming Out'

,,.

foals

$8,000 Grant For Pharmacy

:=. .

m.=:.""'
w.f'i:"

ClruJ.sualThble

nrc..

co:ider

a

.:,::x' -

,

=

•Jun. .

stral;;-

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.
·~CA&gt;ffin Raps Nixon; Asks Aid of.GOd &amp; McGOve~ ·GVIEWPOINTS .
~

Let's No·t.....:...

When P-reoiden~ Nixon .
atanda before ttie television
comeras, making it "periectly
clear" that the O.S. is the most
compassionate of world power&amp;,
is committed to peace, he
proves himaelf "a fool, not a
HCOundrel."
At least in the eyes of Yale's
activist chaplain, the Rev. Willism Sloane Coffin, Jr.
· · The trouble is, €offin said
on campus this week, that the
President is the viCtim of il-

.::J:

representativesof~eAmerican

peace movement was responsible for the recent return of
-three prisoners of war to the
United States was slated to
speak "on his experiences" in
that effort. In addition,,· he
ranged acroas the entire . spec..
trum of the politics of war and
peace.
.
Coft'm "won't buy" Henry
Kissinger's protestations about
an "honest misunderstanding"
being1lt bottom of the disputes
concemina whether or not part
of the pending Vieloalri pesce
...,_,...t was that it had 4o
be aipled by October 31. Of
~ that was part ,of ihe
deal;, he contended. There is
~.,rv~tio':., loin!:
otherwiae. In fact. Coffin said,
the only possible explanation
confusion is
the part of the
tion:
It was also clear from ~ heginning- him-that General
Thieu was never supposed ·t o
he a aiplatory to the settlement. The current Washington
line that 'I)Ueu must sigli hefore Pe8'!" is aasured is just

~

~.: ~..m::::. 'i:. ~1

!bat lltllyiq in -the Wllf 18 the ·
only way to aaawe ll)e welfare
of .ax- imprisoned.
c · dI
.
cOL 6)
Nimn even went so far as ·to ! ontuaue • "'"' ""'! I,
pgbiicly '!"Y that "not all ~m:fnto"f.:...,
~
French pnsoners were ever re- It is small incidenbi like tMse
turned," Coffin said. A charge
'ch ·
the ·
auhoe&lt;juenU denied by t h e . whi 1Uustrate
petty meanFrench as
contends Nixon
that we have to . put up
kMw it would he. 'ry&gt;e denia!:
I Object to .the campus police
~ever, landed on ~e 20
being tied to the city police.
while the c;:harge was m ~nt Too often these police forces
page ~dimes. Also as ~lXon treat the members of the public
knew 1t would he. Coffin al- 1ike criminals 11ntil proved innocent - sometime&amp; in lengthy
leged.
The CIA
proceedings. Let us tiOt fo~t
The latest outrage concern- the problems we have Had Wlth
ing prisoners' packages, he said, outside police forces on campus:
was brought to his attention How can one have confidence
while in Hanoi.
in a police force whoee periorHe was shown, he revealed, mance is rated not by the manphotographs of radio receivers ner in which they may ptevent
encased in Colgate toothpaste serious illegalities, but by the
tubes which "someone" bad number of tickets they have ismailed to prisoners. He saw sued. At a time when city and
evidences of secret writing on state police could do with a
sticks of Wrigley gum, cakes of thorough reorganization and re- Ivory soap which had been hoi- orientation it is surely folly' to
lowed out to provide a hiding tie the campus police to them.
place for secret writing sup- To have them armed on top of
that can only put every member
plies.
The "someone" mailing Utis of the campus community in
contraband, he said, had to he jeopardy. Let us nof forget also
either the Pentagon or the CIA how an innocent golfer was rehecause the enclosed instruc- cenUy shot and killed in Buftions for secret writing were falo by an ex-police guard with
written in a periect military whom he got into an argument.
I sincerely hope that instead
jargon that 'no North Vietnamese could ever duplicste.
of giving them lethal arms we .
Nobody will ever believe the shall consider an orientation
CIA is involved, Coffiri lament- and training program for our
ed, even though every Ameri- campus police so as to make
can knows the CIA spies. For them effective in keeping the
the CIA, when csught red- peace rather than a source for
handed, always denies its in· harassment and an added involvement. And the people citement for violence.
Sincerely
who know they spy, believe the
K.N.LEIBOVJC
denials, using the reasoning,
Associate Professor
"T,hey spy. They don't lie."
Biophysical Sciences
That, to Coffin, is typical.

ments. The Pentagon purposely encouraged reI at i v e s of
MIA's to · send packages to
North Vietnam, he said, even
thou gh the accord on the mat•ter provided that only packages
for listed POW's would he accepted. The government wanted
the packages to he returned to
aggrieved relatives, he contended, so it ""'!ld "use" the
issue to convin&amp; the public

'i!i:

=

he

~':::u!:=te-~o:!e

can Dream." A Dream which
can't deal with the negative,
which makes a cult of realizing
the 1100&lt;1 by denyinJI the ha!f,
which makes Amencans the
"good guys" in Vietnam, there
only to shower '1lappine&amp;s."
"God save us from such im·
pregnable h i 11 h mindedness,"
Coffin ejaculated.
And if He won't. McGovern
will. the anti-war (Clergyman
suggested, j o i·n i n g\.&amp;n everlengthening line of c a m p u s
~ unable to contain their
devotion 4o the South Dakota
&amp;mator.
·
The U.S., Coffin said, can't
solve .the mrnad of problems
now clamonng for attention,
csn't end the war, can't conlrol
crime - let alone rehabilitate
criminals, can't stop pollution,
an hecsuse of this great deficiency in the national psyche.
And, aince we think we can
do only good, "evil creeps in
llniiOtioed."
Wisp of a c.Speaking to the merest wisp
of a crowd in Norton's Fillmore
Room. Monday afoternoon,. Coffm complained that this "Beriteley of ~ East" was "once
more alive."
He CDIIlCeded, hOwever, that
"even yale ia settins boring."
Coffin, who with two other

lf-2.1J72

Campus United Fund At Two- Thirds Mark
In report meetings this week,
University United Fund Campaign leaders announced that
U / B has exceeded two-thirds of
its goal of $110,000 with $75,000
in contributions having been
pledged.
All 22 division leaders are
working to achieve their goals
by November 14, but to do so,
campaigu workers point out, all
faculty and staff should tum in

their pledges as soon as possible
to their divisional representatives.
Leading all divisions to date
is the School of Management
which has raised 123 per cent
of its goal. Other leaders with
their percentages are; Offioe of
the Vice President for Facilities
Planning ( 119 per cent) ; Faculty of Engineering and Appli,ed Sciences ( 111 per cent);

the University Libraries ( 100
per oent) ; U/B Foundation and
Alumni ( 100 per cent) ; and
the Nuclear Sc1ence and Technology Facility (100 per cent ) .
Two other divisions have
nearly reached their goals: the
Office of the Vice President for
University Relations (95 per
cent), and the Office ol the
Vice PresiJlent for Research
( 90 per cent) ,

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS
100f5
10$

-

31111 ·-

-

-

s 10,400:00
3,1100.00

4,8oo.oo
37,700.00
2.800.00
1,500.00

Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence
Sc:h~ of M.Ngement . .... .. . . . ·.
F.culty of Nltural Sciences nd
Mlthematics
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administ,..tion

10.1100.00
16,400.00
2,6QO.OO

Division of Undtrgreduate Studies . ..

Graduate School . . . : .. . .. .. : . ·. .

I!BO.QO

-I. . war.

All·Out
As a further example of the
senseless, Coffin reported from
•''bis..'4oavel&amp; .... ~ w~
that "Hahoi iS the ~nly city
left." All else is reduced to ruhblel•&lt;ile said-hospitals · and
churcbeoo in particular.
'There are few military targets remaining, he reported,
only civilian ones. And yet the
"~elove" mentality of
"Don't just sit there, bomb
something!" prevails among our
military leaders. At least when
Jolplson bombed, he bad the
; intention
winning, Coffin
quoted Ramsey Clarit as
iq. "But N"UIDil just bombs.
Comn c:oiltelld'ed that "every
&amp;man Catholic church" in
• North Vlebuun hal "-&gt; hit in
. - apparent u.s. elfort to -

or.

8az-

1,300.00
3.1100.00

5.:zo0.oo

0

-----

.

,·

...

14,300.00
2,500.00

1.300.00
1.300.00
700.00
1,200.00
•520.00

�v

u

-~~

81~~.~dc!~.~~n.~~d~!t~CAC Two
~~
Rfay.'

you .d oll't ·clear up SUCh a aituation owimight," Executive Vice
Ptmident Albert Somit told
the Courier-Express this week
in amnection with a story,
besed on a State audit report
' charging "mismanagement,"
"forgeriee" "!'d "f!o.lsilications"
during the .first year of opera-

15 of' 1970, little more than a ments already made.
• Aid applications we r e
"No recovery of the over- · often incomplete, and no organpayments was made by the ized filing system was used.
CCC, the audit said
Auditors discovered f ~Ide r s
· "Tbeaudituncoveredfurther containing student aid applicairregularities in stipend pay- tions were placed haphaZardly
ments including the fact that in a large caniboard box.
•
80 s tipend checks and check
• inaccurate and incomplete
book stubs used for the pay. records at the CCC library re-

opened.
·
The State audit report noted
that a U / B internal audit revealed in July, -1971, that 21
student s tipend checks totaling $1,011 bore forged signstures and that six checks total- ·

~~-~cc~:"rative College ~is$4~ i..J:n~u~ uod e ~~ ::n~"";,ffi~~~

The CCC is a Stste facility
to prepare di!;ildvantaged students for college and is administiatively responsible to U / B.
· -Somit said tllllt a realistic
time span for full implement&amp;tion of improved management
prooOdures at the CCC would
be until tbe end of the cun:ent
academic year.
The cec was established in
1970 in "a rush," "Somit said.
This be .Uggested, was an "obvio~y important factor" in its
faulty initial o~tions. Somit ·
also said that staffin!! has been
a problem for the fac1lity which
has had three d irectors since
its inception.
U/ B was not requested to es-

Club Officers
For the record, this year's
Fa cui ty Club officers are as
pr esi d e nt, Howard
Strauss; vice president, Leslie
Barnett; s ecreta r y, Thomas
Schillo; -treasurer, Harriet Monta gue.
follows~

·

aees of both black and non-black

·

~ _ • _ -:_, ~ ' 1 • . J..

•

Black freshmen remained

more likely to ..y they -uld m• ·
jor In buslnoss, .the oodol oclonces,

oducotlon or hnlth. · fields; non·

,J · block- ti-eoto"'-nVremolftod- -

, ES
.
GNOT

.m•J&lt;JJs

likely to pion
In tho physl·
col oc1enceo 0&lt; onJIMerin&amp; the

-

$~':3! 1 i~6 ~~r olfu~me{!,~ y;;}:{ n':J:-f"~~=~

Weekly Commuru
·

collep freshmen rose somewhot.

CO'
DUC'rl'l..ll
A'T'.liQN
- I::t

eson, 7:30 p. m.
This is the seventh in a se ries
of ten lectu res being presented by
the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics as part of its
Western N ew York Science Forum. Designed fo r middle and high
school teachers, the lectureS are
open to lhe general public at no

~

~ .- .~\·~ , ~ \\\ )
THURSDAY-9

~

bloiCJIIcol sciences, ond •ericul·

CONTINUING DENTAL "'EDUCATiON#:

The American Association pf tu~ nonns present tWo kinds of
University .Profe s sor s has comparisons: one, among ~ack
called for a greater voi'?" for students, by sex, enrolled in dlf·
faculty in decisions. relatmg _to · ferent types of Institutions; the
appointment, retention and diS· other between black students and
missal of administrators !'t th_e non-black students, by sex. ennation's colleges and wuvers1· rolled In similar Institutions.
ties It has also called for new
The report, The Black Coll ege
and. more effective mechanisms Freshman: Characteristics and Re ·
for reviewing administrators' cent Trends, )s $3.00 from the
performance in office.
Publications 'Division, American
1n a report published in the Council on Educotlon, One Dupont
summer iasue of tbe AAUP Circle, Washlneton, D.C. 20036.
Bulletin, the A s sociation's
Committee on Cellege and
The 1970 census indicates
University Government stated that men equalled women in edthat facul.ty members ~uld ucational attainment for the
have a significant role m . the ·first time in recent decades.
selection of academic admlDlS- Tile information is contained
trators, including the president, in tbe Census Bureau's first
academic deans, and depart- major ·summary report based on
ment heeds.
, the 1970 enumeration. The ed"It is equally important,
ucational attainment of" both
tbe report continued, "that fac- men and women was 12.1 years,
ulty members contribute si~­ according to the datB.
icantly to judgment&amp; and_deci1n 1960, women 25 years and
sions regarding the retentio!' !'r over reported a median of 10.9
non-retention of tbe adminis- years of formal schooljpg while
trators whom tbey have helped . men had 10.3 years. Comparselect."
.
able 1950 figures were 9.6 for
women and 9.0 for men. The
~ obout block gap was narrower in 1940 when
freohnwl enrollod In colleps women bad a median of 8.7
ond .......,.._ In tho 11111 of 1971 years and men, 8.6.
•
11a-. aNIIplled In • tipedol reThe census also found a &amp;gPGit IUuod bj tho Amorlcitn Coun· nificant increese in education
dl on Educotlon'o. Olllce of lie- during 1940-70 among b~

PeriodOntal I nstrumentation ro r
Den tal H ygienists, D r. R ussell
Nisengard, assistant professor,
U/ B Departmen t of P eriodontics
and M icrobiology, and D r. Sebastian Ciancio, chai rman, U / B Depa rtment of Periodontics, Capen
Hall, 10 a.m .-5:30p.m.
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER•: Leath er
Open S hop, 307 Norton, 1-5 p.m.
LIFE WORKSHO.P• •: Dt!cisioM, Decisions, Decisions: W hat S hould
My Major Be? , 232 Norton, S
p.m.
I.IJI'E WORKSH OP ••: Student Organizations' Busineu Procedurt!&amp;,
332 Norto11, 3 p .m.

.

-rch.

"c tc qow

Jnformatlon from· students awp

tlclruuil.. et -

portld-

l....._.. Counc!r•
-rch~
Acluel .........,.. ..,.
pot1111 In the

tram 12,927 -

-

....uri&amp; en

~~
rop-

'..UmatH 97,684
bloc:b In the netlon8l _ . , . _
of........,........,_ IMt ,.ar.
All'lonl tho ftiidlnp:
.
of siU· • 'file rnaiOritY

d.~ears~::t0
ra~ Jl!l!dliJn
~'5l1T
10.0 in
1970. It also iiidica~ that
black men iltcreese!l their ·JD4!Cfian leVel of educational attainment slightly more than black
women, reaching 9.4 ~ears in
1970, compared to 6.4 m 1950.
Black women went from 7.1
years to- to:o years over tbe

'. . .,. . . -.. . . =t
~

20 ,.._
"'!!o! - ""':"'
........... -

.

1171, the

Y:::.,!

VIDilOSPACZ '72-VJSITINO ~

IONABIES •:

coma HOua• : Br i ng
your muaicaJ inatrument. or your
favorite
Hillel Houe. .CO
Capen B vd., 8 p.m.
UUAB ftu.r:• •: Tht! Prioott! Li/t! Of

BILLI:L

J:illll.

~B ~~n~fi~61~~3o

Diefendorf Annex, 3-6 p.m.
This is the fourth in a series of
seven weekly worbhe:ru on program evaluation in h
th services
1
ir.'!m',~~cesthe~::J:. c i of
PBYCBOMA.

~ Norton.
prnrai

p.m.

~

Featuring Shirle y

Clark, video artist from Channel
13, New York City, Haas Lounge,
Norton, 8 p.m.

HEALTH BmVICES WORKSHOP •: '
Eualuation and Emergency Med -

~J~.!,f•!;':. ~'f~:,OrN~~~

check showcase for ti.mel. Admiasion charge.
A careful and beautiful render-

~~the best

oor cafeteria.

of H?lmea'

~·

Robin Hood
(Dwan, 1922). 147 Diefea4orf, 9
p.m. Free.
The huge production, enormouo
oel and artistic - . , . employed
inakeo thia the moot opulent and
lwoh veraion ever of thia myth.

SWDn' P1LK•:

UA&gt;QUIUM# :

mt!nt of osmic &amp;ckgro
iaiion uuelo at In/rand
lenttho, M , Harvil, Comell
veraity, 111 Hochatetter_ 4 p .m.
Refreahmenta in 112 Hochatetter,
3: 30 p.m.
.
uo QUEIIIOC L1BBE UOCTUIIB•: Conocu nce Natiollllle •et Litterowre
Qrubecois, Renee Legris, PJ;Ofeeeor of French·Canadian literature.
Univeraity ulfofila1oboc&gt;l M•~.
Red Room, Faculty Uub, Jiarri.
man, A p.m.
Tbo loclure is apoDOOred by the
U/ B Dope.-nt of Freach. .
SOYIKT aNJI:IU• : A Pop to Life
(Road to Life) (Ekk. 1931), 1·17 . DiofeDdorf. 7 _p.m. F-. •
•Thit "io. ~-documelllaly
about- of""""-'- boyo and
~ elforta ...... to -l&gt;riDc . - .

Starring Douglas Fairbanb.

EXIIIBITS

..

-·=

Wllo Will " plated -~or~:,
1M
IW- pe_r QeDt .._ .llMKl ~'&lt;Ill ' • Oallop"7&lt;Macla n d - tlwi l!uee tllliel tbe- :-stallerHB._~~:ID
1940 IDtaL .
.

"'.:..~~2!N,:

introduce to . Bu(U&gt;niana oome
artist. wboooo work wu ·included
in laip European oxhibitiona thia
pa.ol summer. Tbo artist. NJ&gt;N·
oented are: William Allan, O..d•
Arnoldi, Robert Becihtle, Billy AI
Be-ton, Tolly IWrlant, Voja Cel-

~= ~~::07!

Nutl, Ed Ruocba. Wi11iem T .
Wiley and Tea Wadi. AlbrillhtKnox Art o.Jiery, 1286 .E1mwuocl

~~~~·Nov. 8 illlaaP

NOTICES

CJIABADBOU8~1108BII'.
Cbahed Roue ia ~ a

chartered buo , trip to U. .-..squartan iD. Broold.YD tbe ......_.
of N.....t.er 4. a..ldic ~
~--1! r:?.:o
.d ~!...._._--+
....., .·~
~
aN 11'1.
~
onaalliia, ..0 aaa.all4.
UONB QAJII - . Tbo Riwalde
Liono Qub is ~
·
a cbift
for cloaationo of old
...
be cliatributecl ~

UUAB Aat'- UJIDITft-:1- A r.t t.AfeicG• 1 t.t~ M
.
be available iD tbe ~ a.b
and at the No.- IntaaaatlaD '
-Coomter. Tloe dn,. ......... ~ N.,.. 1-16.
pr;-n_N=. . ~ ~=
OIQNO ~- ~

' Aid&gt;IU"Il;
'an eshibit of ad -rk
proc1uc.oc1 bobiDd I!~ walla, orgam-l by Ool-f· Holp, a proloiooW art tniDinc f.._,_ for

8111Jiii-period
.
- The report shows that 11.7 . the :~~~~
~•
I
milli pemcms. out of 110 million ~ and .over, bad oOm- COimNUING - . r , ~N

' '*:-::.:.:::,
~ ;-:-· ·
m..,
!*_,,..
lllec:b (J.J

Two
ct ~ be
tof
Tbelitre, in asaocia
with·tbe
Center for Tbeelre ~
November 15-18, in tbe Tbe8tre
Studio, Harriman Hall.

~resented"'J:';'the

located' by
records.
"Other deficiencies in CCC · a nd materials which were never ten by Morton Lichter, and
\ The stipends, which were in- operations cited in the report received. Action has been in- d irected by David Chambers,
tended to cover meals and bus included :
,
stituted to recover the over- both &amp;SSistant professors of
"farei, were paid to graduates
• . Students were given aid payment from the book com- theatre; and Til£ Service for
of the CCC program who bad soleiy because they were reg- pany involved, the audit said. Joseph Axminster, a vaudevilenrolled at private or public istered and not necessarily be- ·
• Bills for ~ u i t i o n, fees, !ian play directed by student
colleges, th e Courier s to r Y · cause they were economically books, and supplies for former Abby Raven.
stated.
and educatiQDally d isadvant- CCC students attending E rie
Curtain time will be at 8 :30
Tb~ aile~&lt;;&lt;! forgers have not aged. Two studen ts with fam- Commun ity College were paid p.m. each evening.
been Identified, the story S81d, ily ineomes of more than $14,· by the CCC without individual
General admission will be
but a fo~er CCC counselor . 000 annually ·were awarded fi- supporting vouchers."
$1; •!\'dents, 50 cents.
has been c1ted as a SllSpect.
"The Courier story continued:
"q
· U~------------------"The audi t report criticized
''"
other s tudent payments which
were made from an unauthor- (Continued from fXllle 12, col. 5)
ized private bank accoun t set (Cap ra. 1939) , 140 Capen, 9 p.m.
up with an $8,320 loan from
Both films are free.
the Faculty-Student -AssociaWNGUlsrics LECTURE•: Sociolintion at Erie Community Col- guistics,
Wolfgang Wolck,. U / B
lege.
Department of L inguistics, 331
"The report noted that 85 H ayes, 7:30p.m.
students received $104 each
CRAFT CENTER • :~ Ba tik
during an eight-week period to CREATIVE
nstruct ion, 307 Norton, 7:30-10
cover the cost - of meals, bus Ip.m.
fare and other .p ersonal exOF THE ENVIRONMENT
penses while attend ing classes CHEMISTRY
LECTuRE• : Actiuation Analysis
Ill Erie Communi ty College, and its Applicat-ion to EnuironHowever, 38 of these students mental Systems, Part / , Dr. La r ry
were la ter' found to be receiv- Church, assistant professor, U/ B
ing federal grants a nd were not Department of Chemistry, 5 Achavereee high school grade aver·

GfiiGHER

'S

DlOil'lh before it was actually

_.,
n-·.

..

~MOIIdays.Fridaya.lla.m.- :::.t~!!i;!~
"'"--'-'~

6 p.m.· .,._. __ 2-6 n.m.

• .............

..

PB~oolf-lmqht ~ -

.....,_,

By

c:;:::-,..rl'!'... ~- •

~
101111 1181-11111
"" ...~~· '11111D_._,

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':;'

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. ucll)'l•-~_;._
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s.m-,
lluio1qh

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iD tbe

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�-'
Navember 2; 1972
Prograoive inotroction

Thurada_Y, Nov. 9.

throalh

~ OP BIOLoalcAL ft8'IDGI

Cyclic A"mp. Protem

SIZIII!#:

••gp.. tD """tD--•
...-...-In

System, Paul Greencan!. Dei&gt;arlment of Pbiimacology. Yale Unlvenity, 70 Acheeon, 4 p .m. Coffee
and tea at 3 :30 "IP'&gt;-

of the UnMnlty;

•Open "' public;.

•01*1

~:!7°?-:~~n ~ rttee : : : : :

~ Nancy Ca-l. 831·2228. far -

the oubjact
....

gu~: A Swu of Mind?-, F_red·

THURSP,AY-::-.2
1

at&amp;AftfB aurr &lt;ZNTEB•: Lealher
Open. Shott. 3'11 Norton, 1-6. p.m.
LIJ'E woaxsaop•• : Student Orgcmi.zotiDru' BU:.ineu Procedures,
332 Norton, 3 p .m.
PBOf'DSIOHAL STAPF SENATE

~
A•p n
l&lt;&amp;S
da

cou.bz

~"'s~rube~!;i~S!~:
~ 1-!~~!,:e: iusiory of certain

"THE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY IS-BACKTHANKS TO WOODY ALLEN WHOSE
'TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN' IS THE
ULTIMATE HILARIOUS HOMAGE TO
ALL THE PRISON DRAM~ CHAIN GANG
EXPOSES AND TRUE CRIME MOVIES TO
DELIGHT THE BUFFS AND BREAK THE
FUNNY BONE. FOR ALLITS WIT AND
SATIRE, IT'S BASICALLY AN OLDFASHIONED RIB CRACKING
COMEDY-A RARITY IN "OUR TIME!"

issues in peycholinguistics as a

palSmrtd,~cfbothetomy•.mPine·~mtu· reratio.ofnalthe.

Th ........
mental-physical division, central-

~

!:s~':ritrb:~~~yred~ctir:~=

X::!.FoJ".~""p.:.ro-

to synonymy, and innate vs. learned argument. Characterizations of
language and language development in the licht of these prob-

un: w:fop• •: Decisioru, Dec;.ioru,
iliom: What Should
My· Ma " r Be1, 232 Norton, 3

I•!"'·

~lllAftlY UICMIRE#: ' Epidemi- ~c)~.~o;~~f-~: p~:1_t ln ~fc"' s':'::u!~~:~ l&lt;~~ SEMIN.U lN MEDICINAL CHEMIB-

Jer, p,ofeuor, eocial J!!Ychiatry,
U / B. School of Medicme, Meyer
Memorial Hoopital, K Annex, 3
diocuaion- of ~aspecto of
the evolution. of human culture
and its impact on . psy~l~~
atreu ayatems and upon indiVJd-

ftY#: Nucleoside Antibiotic.:
Syntlie.U of Gougerotin and Be::;:: ~~!",!t~·
SH:!'/0?'·~~:
ceo, 2 p.m.

:W

P·'A:

uala:

.,

•

cHi:MJC.U. ENGINEERING SEMINAR# :

:..:JUDITH CRIST, TODAY SHOW

B iaxial Viscoelastic Behavior and

fldor cafeteria, - E_ngm~g. Rensselaer Polytech·N:orton. 3-6 p.m.
n1c lnatitute, 5 Acheson, 2 p .m.
PiDLosoPHY OOLLOQUJUK# : ToENGINIZIUNG SEMINAR*: Present
won:l o Theory of Ruearch, Ger- and Alternative Sources of Power
ard Radnitsky, vWting professor, ~~~;;:: ~tr!:a~e~~n~k:;
SUNY/S~,.!,rook and chair· Engineering at 3 :30 p.m.
of
Various' fa cuHy members of the
Rm. 14, 4244 Ridce Lea, 3:30 p.m. Department of Engineering Sci·
PSYCBOJIUT: Firat

u=m.~

Diefendorf, 4 p.p&gt;.
•
This is the third in a aeries of
six lectures on general statistical
principles of scientili"c experiments. The lecture. center on the
ideas of randomization, replication and local control.
~
CREATIVE CRAFT

a:ND:R· CLABSEB* :

10 z 10 Enamel WaU Piecu, 7
Norton, 6-9 p.m.
Progressive cla18e8 continue on
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 8{1d Monday
and Tuesday, Nov. 13 and 14.
HILLEL CLASS •: 7'a lmud, in.structed by Dr. Jualin Hofmann, H"illel
House library, 40 Capen Blvd.,
·. 7 p .m.
COMPUTD

S(MULATION

8I:RIIS#:

PASS IV, Rm. 12, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7 p.m.

NEW AMF.JUCAN CINEMA •: (Brakhage, 1969-70 ), Scen'eM from
Under Childhood Seclwn 3 and
Scenes from Under Childhood
Seclion 4, 147 Diefendorf, 7 p .m.

Free.

-C~~ ~=c;:

M aerome aM Small Loom Weauing Instruction, 307 Norton, 7-10 p.m.
CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER*: Belt In &amp;truct.ion, 7 Norton. 7-10 p.m.
CREATIVE CR.AFT CEN'i'Ea *:

by~ U~Wi:.~~:r:,CP~ -- ~:::S :;:lcear~~i;:~~~yseth;
=P~f ~~~~~ PhiJooo..

~:r!.,me:;t Ze!ru· &amp;::~:=: u{f:

..atJ!'."'o'~
t3,~ =~~~! r~
the U/ B Computing Center.

Yield Criteria for Glassy Polyme~, S. _S. Stemst:ein, School of

·

OF MATIID£.U'I,C.U. BCI&amp;N-

LECTURE*: Plan.nifil. o.nd Analy&amp;is of Scientific Ex~rimenta,
CES

g.~uate Engin':'t'g Sci e nce

CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER CLASSICS • :

PHYSICS OOUDQUIUM# :
5

GalDctic

BIOCHZMIS'nlY SEMINAR# :

Wheel Throwing, 7 Norton, 7-10
p.m.
Progressive instruction through
Wednesday, Nov. 8.
UUAB CONCERT * : Jeff Beck, Tim

Stndies

a;~u U:i~:.· 1~i J~:!t ;::!e~~:t::Ff:e~c:?Jat~~'::
ter, 4 p.m. Refreshments in 112
Hocbstetter, 3 :30 p .m.
Alemn.der Nev•~Y (Eiseoatein ana Alenndrov,
1938), 147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.
Free.
.
'I'hU: ia the •tory of a medieval
war between the Russian people
and German invaden. Its propa-

· IIO'flft CINDU.•.;

c:n.::~·::::.c: ::-..::~~~~

of the atmosphere that Stalin de·
aired to create. A good study in
~ = t i o n, ~g and coo00:MPUTlNG C E N TIt R SEMJNA&amp;# :

~~~gag: n ~~~.~~t,~

Rm. 12, 4238 Ridge Lea. 7 .g p.m.
BILl.IL . COPftlt

HOUSE•:

Brin&amp;'

your musical instrument, or your

~~sf:d~: P~~el H~uae,

40

.......,._.... '7Z-VISITING 'l"EUMIIIONAIUBB *:

Featuring Rusa

Con ~

nor, New York State Council On
the ATts, Haaa. Lounge, Norton,
8 ·p.m.. .
•
LBC1'1JU••: , Gabriel Kolko, Univenity of Pennsylvania, will
• apeak on the ~ar1 under sponsorahip - o[ the ~tuQellt Association
S~ra· Bureau and the Co~U~cil
on International S t u d i e a and
World Alfaira, Fillmore " Room,
Norton, 8 p.m. _
UU.AB PILII 0 • : Cry Uncle (Ovildaen, 1971), Conference Theatre,
- ~3~~~wcase for timeo.
' A &amp;nely executed hip parody
- of the detective 61m genre.

dent, U/B Department of Biocbemistzy, G -22 Capen, 4 p.m.
INTD.NATIONAL

COFI'IZ

~o~er~~:V?:~ :%S~ei ~~~

HOUR* • :

Open to all foreign and American
at u dent a, faculty and staff.
Scboellkopf L9wige, 4-6 p.m.

Tickets are avaiJ8.bl., at the
No'rton Hall Ticket ()ffice: stu·
dents, $3.50; faculty, ataff and
a lumni, $4; general admission,
$4.50.

COMPUTING CENTER SEMINAR# :

~~~:~z,;u~~~"&amp;nt!fi::

structor. Rm: 10, 4238 Ridge Lea,
7-9 p .m.
This seminar is a comprehen-

:!:d
~U:;t::tio~_thTo~~
include: computation, branching,

looping, basic declarations, and
subroutines. Emphasis will be on
documentation, debugging techniques and readable outpul
CAC FILM.•: Take the Afoney and
Run (Allen), 140 C&lt;lpen, 7:45 and
9:45 p .m. Tickets at 75 cents al'e
available at the N o r to n Hall
Ticket Office .
AMD.ICAN

CONTEMPORARY

TII£A-

TRE•: The Unnamable. students,
$1, general a dmission, $2. Buses

~vec!::e~r:::S~ ~~~~-:.~~S

Elmwood Ave., 8 p .m.
HILLEL SABBATH SERVICES*: Professor Jacob M a ri nsky, U/ B Depart.rbent of Chemistry, will spea k
on Science in Israel, Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
Il(TERNATIONAL FOLK DANClNo• :

Instruction in basic ateps during
first
30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p .m.
.
UUAB FILM .. : Cry Uncle (Ovild·sen, 1971) , Con(erence Theatre,
Norton, .check showcase for times.
PO&amp;ftY - c •: L.E. Siuman
Admiaaion charge.
.will read from his worb, 231
MUSIC
OF EAB1'EiiN EUROPEAN COM·
Norton, 8:80p.m.
The .-mg, which is open to P08BRB siams•: Music of CzeCho0
!lie pub&amp; at 110 coot, is -naored ·.~"".SkUianC/ondB··a Ualkoi;CUICam
. ianp.E
••
un.
..- smpooos·,
cho
liy ibe U/B Department of Enc·
·lilh and the· Frianda of Lockwood Auditorium, 1300 Elmwood Ave.,
8:30 p.m.
·
Ubnuy.
Thia ~·· performance will
• .J,:n '.,..Qj:at , ..._,
IJILUIA .WOIIKA Blod Trio. 1762 Main ~e::,reSalafr~olin~d~~
entein, • i o 1 iJl; David Gibeon,
The Firot
Militant Milliner. Bkd Ritual:, ·!fi~ta"'!'!:~:;~~ ~:::
~h for 1M New Land, and
ton HaU Ticket Office: students,
Alidi;&lt;!!P - . A '..Ploy in Remem· f$ 1; general admiaaion. .$3.
"""""· - N o v. 2
tbrouab 6; .New. 10-.J2;. Nov. 17- AIUMIIUIIBT oo....mo1J81:.. : Fee18. Yo1 li&lt;:bt informatioD, call turiD&amp;" ljve ent.rlainmeut and
BIJ6.4187. FIIDded th...,...h; Model clwap macb. Apt "490·!b!h~j::!;·
Qtieo and New":York Stale Coun- 1
~~- ~ Allenhuntcil "" the Ada.,
--.....;;;.;;. ru.ii'a..; LetWa /rom- &amp;.- HOUM CloajidL
•

hour,

-=

~~includeo:

__ __ _

TUESDAY-7

...

The CAC Film, Friday and Saturday.

ning Belt lnstruclion. 307 Norton,
noon-4 p.m. , •
. CONCERTc : A .._Mozart Fesliual/
Concert I , Buffalo and Erie
ty -Public Library, 3 p.m.
P e rformers will ·include members of the Buffalo Philha rmonic
.Orchest ra a nd faculty of U/ B 's
Depa rtment of MuSic.
sored by the Grosvenor Society
of t he BufTa lo
Erie County
Public Library, the U / B Department o( M usic, a nd the Buffalo
Orchestra.
CONCERT I)' : BufTa lo Festival a nd

SUNDAY--.5

Coun-

R ichardson, Sulliuon and Wright. Eric
Larrabee, executive di recto r, New
York State CounciJ ·on the Arts,
Albrigh~Knox Art Gallery, -12&amp;5
Elmwood Ave., 2 p.m.
This is the fi ·:-st in a .series of
rour weekly lectures by the fonne r provost of U / B's Faculty of
Arts a nd Letters. The lecture
se ries is sponsored by the School
o( Architecture a nd Environmental Design.
ILLUSTKATED LECTURE •.;_

Co-spon-

and

Philharmonic

fto~:!~.s s~~~=~~: ~=n~n%rTI~~

uuAB FILM•• : Cry Uncle (Ovild-

Na-Nog, Kle inhans Music H a ll ,
7
~~k;:= ~ ~~So. $4.50 and $4
are available at the Norton Hall
Ticke~ Office.
CAC PJLM • : Take I he Money and
Run (A llen), 140 Capen , 7 :45 and
9 : 4~ p.m. Tickets
75 cents a re
TI~~=~IOffi:e_ the No rt on Hall _

at

AMERICAN

CONTEMPORARY

TIIEA-

~:g ~'::;~=·able. s_ee Fri~y

UUAB FILM**: Cry uncle (0vildsen, 1971) , Conference Theatre,
Norton, check showcase for times.
Ad.m.iuion charge.
CONCDT*:- -5)i«knl Compoun
::ital, Baird- Recital HaU, 8 =30

..
The performance will include
w~rb Jly Ra1_ph '"J ones, . Andrew

Stiller, Pe~r Gena, Martin Kalve,

~~g_&gt;~~~rtw~

N~~~~7~~cf'!h~~= r!~::
Admission charge.
U/ B Sy mphony Band,

CONCERT • :

Fi~h~r-;:rf~~u~;;to;il~: ~cr~~~

works by H . Owen Reed, Catel.
LoPresti Richard Strct.uss, and
Gabrieli.' Directed by Frank J . .
Cipolla.
U / 8 ARTS FOBUM: Guest Hubert
Aquin , French-Canadian author LINGUISTICS ~uu• : Ezperimenand visiting professor in U/ B 's tal ¥ethocU In PB)'chOlinauist~,
Department of French, will dis- EI"Wln Segal, U/ B Department of

:1~ tf:~;Es~e';S!~~. 'R,~~V~ . Psf:o•:~ss!m~~!~~n
FM, 106.5 mgz. , 10:05 p:m.

~

labo~atot¥ experiments, .uch
aa reaction time, to obtain knowledge about human p-mg ol

o(

~LI:::N:::c=v=um=cs--:-:ux:rum:-=_.::.=•:--:P:-a-,_p_ a.....:.to. lancuage.

~:'~'~ft~at!U~t. u~, ~part11

a.m.
gul8 ':'•
ayes,
Some semantic categories in a

· U\O_,Aztecan ian~.

• ·-

•

COLI.&amp;IGE 01' MA'I'BDUTICAL BC:aNCIII ~· : Ploilning ond An-

aly•'" of Scientifk Experimenu
Dr. Marvin Zelen, profeuor, U/B
Department of Statistica, H6
Diefendoif,. 4 p.m.
PsrCBOMAT : 232 Nori9n, 7-10 p.m.

CR&amp;ATIVE CRAFT CENnlll 0 : Batik
D.U&lt;ao•· Refn..hmenbfwill "}nstruc~on; 307 Norton, 2-5 p.m.
be aerved, Hillel Houae, 40 Ca. 8AM~Ja;'111oCKErr PIL&gt;&lt;B 0 : Waitutt g'1?~ e~~=~
pen Blvd., 8 : 30 P-"'"
for Go®t, Conference Theatre, Dui8n, Rm. 12, 4238 '"~-' r -'••
- 'Norton. 2 and 7 p.m. Film (with 7
.. ......,..., --.
_ . , .John K~r- . ~~~111!"' OOFPIPZHOUIII: : FeaSU.ter Keaton) , Eh loe and Th(.
p.m.
.
'
-';~~ ~Ddoyeri&gt;::!.ll-21), 1~7 UU.U
aDd .Joe Wtlc:m:, lot ·ftoor . tunnc. 1 1 v 0 entertainment 8!&gt;d.• Good, Conferl!bce Theatre, Nor· :I'hio is .the· thii.f.of a lhe-~.
•
•"tieo on the limulation facilitieo
Three
oioriao aboUt ..r.taria, Norton, 9 p.m Dona- cheap ~!:.t:'"A, 9 p.m:- ton, 4 and !). p.m. •
the dark oida ·of Jlfe.
licmo ~
· ·- .
'l a.m. Frw. _,
, •
S-red by the U / B Depart, at lila. tt/B Com~W.. Canler.
·
•UUd ~oU.• : .Jolut Koar- .meat of FreDdi: •
_ . , Mr. Dew Goa 10 Town
FRID;A-Y-3 SATURDAY~
.....,r .ad ~- ww-, -111 ·.~~oor CR&amp;ATM: cain ~ ·-•·. &lt;Cal&gt;ra. ~-&gt;. 147
1. p.m. .
'
•· •
.,__L_,:._ !.D--'- . ealeferia,
...__ _Nft"'..:::
_ --.. 9 P.m. Dona.
Stone Settina, ~·-'7 Norton, • Mr. SmitA
}- , Goa loo Wa.f'·'"'·LDIOUiftiCI YlmlD": ··~ ·,..aA'ftft ~ c::Difta• : - . - ~
3-5 p.m..' (Continued o n - I[. coL 3)

1iam Appleby, and Lee 11.valio.

II1LI&amp;

mte'.u.J

'}Jezela,

~

.

·~

,. .

c..-.

-"''8'"'n

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1382385">
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                    <text>K~tyDoes

EveJYthlng
But" Win
WilDe-. Riclt Wella trod

1¥ -~ --a, .

_.

'Wlwie JoAn · SU&gt;to and a:
Phi/bill. lwwe ·6l«&gt;tt,:

GREPORTER..,
VO

MD
·

l~E 4 ·• NU . ER 8

·: · · ·

·

·

. . ·

.

·

· ·

OCTOBER · 26, 1972

-

.

,m..;.;.,..,..:..,
'!~:.!"~~;:~~~~~~~Tf5,~4'4L~·--

~~

QkQ.-::.;~~=
-weua.
8tofa &amp;lid l'bilbin did

tiJe;r l8111!11in1&lt;111.Rolary Field,

while Ms. .Jcrdan· is canflnecl
piayiDII 1leldr "'-·-·
to tbe liy ~ ~
scribed
Clarkaniltbe11D111!D!&amp;-tbesite
of tbe ~-aftemoon intramural ooed
football league.
And while "rich &amp;lid Deming aent -their char&amp;es apin&amp;t
tbe Ball States liDd Boston U.'s
. of tbe ..,md, • "Katy'a Team"
does combat with hordes knoWn
as

I

.·

·

.

- ~...me- -fil•~·;~J.,w,;. t~ 4-L. ~ n;.;;n:~.n;Mit:t ~t

.

_1

Talk 50
Action 0,
Fritz ·S ays

But like tboae who went before. Katy.can: .
• throw the ·bomb (as she
did twice f 1
·

apin&amp;tS..:.

A'l!:~)~

• rip the defensive line for
aood..jardqe (she blasted over
lor a· toudidown in the same
~
. • head-up a ball-haw""-- d&amp;fensive -.~ary (she~tercepted a Team A aerial aitd retumed iffor go0c1 yaJda&amp;e);
• make a .,__,.., • ._tion
in a crowd .(~ ..,;a she
was out of botmda wben abe
did ao, but abe~ rum·out
of it);
• tackle viciously (evm
tboulh it was a touch pme.
cme of har "touches" aen( an
OIJII08ilion recei- Cl:8llhinll out
of 'bounds ind into the turf)
" • 11M&lt; arden 1ike an
c:oillpliabed tleld pnera1 (obe's

·. .-&gt;;

ic.

·

c::---~~-

For_
Uf&amp;sMi11a1ffSYaTi!ii-etJ(i:f111ltrofi
~ ~u~'-- ~
fV
.·
· ··
for an S/U
COUI8e known as accreditation,
in Which tbe entire University

Final aam

time
'

tation process 6,v..,
w'
us a chance
to look at ourselv..,,'' he says.
"At tbe same time, it gives us

~~~""="~~~ ~':. 0{,.0~~wt:; ~
w-~--~.............y,

N ember 1
ov
·
Probably because few universities are ever assigned U's, a
failure sends shoclt wav..,
throujlhout the academic world,
meanmg, among other incliini·

~ Knobs and ~ the ~ ':;!,t

~ N~ &amp;Dd .the' His and

•·r..-......

The tradia.-1 opiritual'o odmODition that"~- t1ib
about-oft.a a....a-btc ..... b U/B
fooiWt ~ ..... th8

==

~~':~~

SeU otudy.'"
.
Othe""'r~·~
·--·
Those others include, in addition to the Middle States
team, representatives of: the ..
~~""!.!"';.;'Ulj~f' at'fl:;;

that ot athletic ell- ·,
tbe AMA Council on M-~'-'
too much Iaiii: il-debW........., rector,
Ia~. "We've about beat thls
Education Board of Schools for ,._, __ to deeth. w
Medical Technology; to , . _ ~F:\tz COilCUlll with . Hemy

::m "l:~ =~gyu~':
= • "'-

Related Prof-·•·ons·, "~
we ,._,.
ciation of American Law
Schools, to evaluate the School
of Law; the Engineers' Council
for Professional Development
and the National Architectural

~=~g ·~~· 2~

Kissinger's idees about _,a
negotiation communiquM: too
m u c" prematwe epeculstlon
can queer many a dee!.
He's afraid that this may
have happened a1reec1y in ..,.
prd to football, especially for
next fall, Some student leaders

=!F.r:..:?.'il:'to
.
........
slill--

medical psychology program;
cOI"':r;j'Y
::Ubyt
are as gOQCi as barred from fur.
way of
•
The
lher stluftes els!&gt;where. 'l'bo9e
Alumni have said theY'll match
who pass remain citizens-init. n.e. administratljln baa
good-stancling· in Academe.
talked about il But•appanmtly
U/B's ezaminstion-ita first
~&amp;Ddbaar reactinl
beat too busy
full- ecale . accreclitstion test
to 11-.
since 1955 - will be adminis.
.
which -•~...: __
OOIJIIIIUIIiquM to'do much aloe,
tered by a 1.3-member· team of · !be Uru~emty bad .better .re""""""' ~~ ,._....... 'J'blire ie
an &amp;pee-tatives froiD tl)e Mid- !bin" any td!'ft of usmg_ extSt- this semester and with' faculty ment on a t:imet.ble for moltdie 8tsle!i A.oclation of Col- mg unoccup.'ed space m the olrtoeB. Until these rooms can inc tbe firm c1ec1a1o111 that
leges ana Secondaiy Schools dorms as library space, the be re-acheduled for library &gt;Me coUld ..wt in a· Rotuy Field ,._ •
beaded by Dr. R. Lee Hom: ~ of. the Faculty Sen· -and Dr. Scboerifeld aaYs nut 88I8DD nut fall. ·
·
·&gt;:-:,·
bake, vice president tor a!'ll- ate s Comnuttee on lnforma- fall· now looks like .a more likeIf .C!DIICrete action had ......,
demic aftairs, Univeniity of lion and Library Reeouroea .told ly target date than BUIIIIII8f- last sp_riDJ, 'Fritz a.ya,- cciuld
Maryland
•
the Reporter this week. Dorm the UGL rooms are bitrely pri- have -ba!l' .a low 1X06Je. aim
• Aecordii., to Dr. Cll!ude E. floors _were. built to support vale ""'?U?Ui for study~ 'Jl&amp;llt-~ prapU. wlth 8
• Puller profeseor emeritus of some~ like 45 pounds- per
Delays have extended &lt;to 'lhie .fiill .aibedule ~ eilht ......
........,;,;.,. &amp;lid chairman of aq':".!" _foot, while ~il~,st.acks furniture. 'Ibe area Is CWJeDt,. ~ ID'IJD.aat fall. .
UlB'aSeU-StudySteaiJii.Com- we..,.. mat approKJmlhaY 1
ly furnished With Librarieo'·
If ~ is ....., ....._
mittee · wbidt did eztensive ll(lllnds per aquare (pot, Dr. cas~. "Real, gelmine, Clllll- thai eail.cil"-1972, "we_, .UU
bcimewodi iii piepar&amp;tion .far toweD Schoenfeld ezplaiDecl
fortiible tumiture won't arm. bo&gt; able 10 .catch 4 or 6 pm-."
tbe apcreclitallon review, asDr. Schoenfeld. e:"presaed until • April" i&gt;r. Sdioenfald
U DOt, tbOil wre talldDi
- . . 1 8 to be made. will be ' concern over continumg dekys said.
' ··
· ·. ·' : 1974. ·
.
.
.
·
liaaeil on ..bow well tbe Univer. in the-&amp;llablishment of.a viable
H'· 'liM·"-&gt; £8r1J ~ ·' .
sitY · aCitieYi!a the olijectives , UDdergraduate Ubrary CUGL) • made on ...:...':.I~ hi ..td. . ''Prito ·admii. tmt
ti.l. ~- {
· wtiido it baa 88t . for itElf. ~ty, ~ lateet-~ tbe ad- ·A book aelectOI' Jar r,the 'UQL· ,W 6.,.... _ _ . t CIPIIm'-:.;.

DOrin Space N0 t SUl•tabl'e
For UGL
. ' Schoenfield Says
-"'fte
m
·

~

50

..uu.r

~c~~-;: =,~~iD~=
=-=:c:~
:::..~.:!.s=~
'ti =-;:;=~ 11:t·
ment Wliilih~ ol the doJ!!l u~tian can be ~ the
~ -tblaD. =n:: ....s ID
~ -l:a~~doeo~
-=~-~
~~- ~. ;.;.bt, ~~~~J:- l:t~ .:..,-:
~~ TliDD" di'OIIIIed an strilpctha;'
&amp;lid ~ m DiofeDdliif !A&amp;- the· .-ltiall ID tile ~- balillllll)' 1l6ve tltM "Dy llbld
18-lJ•IiMrlblelilier' to 'l'eam A ~ •
:an.M ,_ ""!8- ilat •llliile 11!!1 ~
ol Jto diDioe .001JIIIiiie,: ila' tbil olla!albiJl1j . . . _ . . _ _..
1aat ., _ for ._ito IIIICODd 'bo of· cancem .for ~ "UIIiwE- ._... :01 a UGL ·· 1 . ;
tbi8 ....,._ Alii tile~ e+li .Wieflen .,.. - •
in .&amp; row. But..aie Me. ,liiiUD :,: ~ ,(~, ~-.' ~L~::_....
:..;.........., tile oGI;, ja 118"!~~ -- "foGGW Ia • •
1
put it
a 81Dilini,~ . Dr~Nrer --·filM~ l!ioiJ( " ut-11-! •.:.Jtn
. :.JjjDIIO,·- - - · finD....,. ... ~. ~ ~
ceiwlr pto W&amp;tdted):

r

iD

1111-

-.-r,............,.

~~~...:~-= BtiidYie~·oh~U.: "buto~Jr.:: :
~ : --.ol~thi~,ra ~-tlild .a-lly 'IIDdeCioive.
_
81itutioll" ~ -.ciiliiliaa 1rhalblr 1118._ _ , - b e ~tleF........-:..cil....... · - ...... liD..._ loIn all w- ...,__ it Uld .lillanralrdld ID.tbe 'Middle .tenDed "'eadiDDJ _ . . 'l1le · (ideiJI.y fraa lifla. ~ ....._ tD all - . e d to .U baa to be

-........o~· that 'the .staliaeAwoeleliaa&amp;Dd.JW~

"Kiitr'• Teun
......
.a;;it by Teain

rc....- .... ;... 3, ~ •t

Ulllinllilllm well bi llllvancle ol
· tbe.-..vleiL~~

uaderpaduate. ......,. -

;;11111118,).... ~·al!!l" l•Z I dallili MIJ' :'Jiat•_,u,g, otf
flo ..--· . ~ .. ......... •
.

•

·~

�o.:to6or 26, "1972

2
Frimo.nFoo~~
: --~--~------~----~--­
(~ ,--,,. ;:... l, eoL 6) .,......, &lt;ertaiD iDdi!id&amp;W alum- . FritZ CDDienda, p&gt;WI tbe;p!OI&gt;But lluit ... before be .....,
dreemed that Ibis yoVS· inter_,......,_,_ ~- aDd ,_

~oporta..P!Oiram would

be micl-wy lbiOuKh October
atlll oparaW., "Oil wlh," with-·t a Inn bJi!llet.
":"'lbe call I« auch a meetinl
_ , . -~
. . , _...·.-·
, not in
...... wjth tbe fada.
ED• .NOTE·• A •-....-. in

~ Md Mead8 'haw '-&gt; ·ctnaiillt ........... Md interare likely to ...Jn
_ .,, -'.AJMtllinoe tbe IUIJ!IIIII&amp;:ol
. _ - . y at Ibis pamt
ia llllatively amal1, Alumni ean
~ came up with iL But
trdtz ·iii not 111118 thet they
oUiblto
be ulred for ual
a alice
!Jl
...~ ...........
bail.
""' -v• 0!1 Ul anD
. AfW - 11M aoiDI apiD, be
faela, it ,ouu!l .l&gt;e -

.ted

...a

--10-

er Je.d~
•
- - . . . . . llmel
...,._t, -;....;..... o1 .the .alum~ iame o1
tbJi loW-lewd lictivlty :.uddeDiy
feela • oa.tallic wp·for the turn ol .._ ~ Old -'··- ......

·U::i.o

..., •~

....,.~

Columbiao,
~ S,_..,
the
Bostoo ColleP&amp;.
.etc. .
He micht juot pt bis wish,
Fri'" ,_._
..
• ,
~

-

~~~-~ ~~u:..l:::.~
~~U:S..=8\~~
·for Nooember ·l """'· ~-:I_
aDd ticket purc:buM.
ity o1 a return to the bia time.
Frllz Oft. 7'uad6y of W. .
"How ean we ...... think
·about football a year from """'·
wbm we atlll don't know
(otber dian ~ "ball ~· til·
ure) what we're operatiq oo
Ibis ~•?," be ulred 1aat Fri,_

daY.

'

.

~

AI u m n I, · - ·

don't trust "the adminlstraticin'a
111a11ce oo the matter. While

Hayea Hall bU been receptive
to IDformal diacuasjon8. JJOihiDi
~
oJricia1 SM!o,.,.
- • ._ __ _811
......_ ~~· ,__ ...,..
1be attitude to be:
· it
be worked out, fine."
For Us pert, the adminiatrlltion bas equipmen1, a field aDd
..me coaChing talent that it
wilJilqr to make available. And altbougb new locker
room .............,.ta yrould bave
to be made (the ..old m-ini
r:ooms baving '-&gt; irreversibly
committed to service as equipment issue fac:ilities for intremural ud individual sports
activities), that seems at least
not impouib~ to accomplish.
And that's where ...matters
stand: stalemated until somebody makes the first money
move-preswnably students
.

am

Tbe reuoa for Ibis ia IIIIDple:
operationa al the _ . . . . baw
to be funded from llbldent feea.
a :T~State Univer&amp;ity ol
N- - Odt type of situation
that Fritz ·jut bas to~ witb.
At one Point. 11 cartain apec&gt;ified atbletic fee was .-eel.
By multipJyfna: that filwe by
tbe llUIIIber iii llbldents ..,.
roUed, Fritz could oompute
with ..me cm:Wnty what be
bad to work Wltb.
Now, . however, all student
fees so mto one pot and Athleticslwlto SO in ~t-in-band"
with Ul anmial funding requesL
Fritz submitted bis request for
this year laat March: It was
approved by tbe Student Ath- WhJ - . MoneJ!
letlc Revi- Board aDd 'is, thus,
Wb;y ain't the deal be com"sort of committed." but stu- pleted w; thou t additional
dent Assembly action is neces- funds? For two reasons. First,
sary before the money can be Fritz rules· out club football
released aDd· &amp;p&lt;lll · And that .which might be less expensive
action wasn't even scheduled to and, second, be can't see prunbe taken until yeaterday (Oct. ing UIY of the gains that bave
26) aDd -may not even bave boon made in the recreation·
•. come then.
athletics program since b i g
_, _
MoneJ • Muot '
time foolhall disappeared.

foo~·~ :-tb~f' 0t;; be~~~!:"'F~ -=rJ'1.

Rather be lh1Db eo--called m&amp;·
much ol
1t, will .....,rt to the level projected for -U/B.·

I"' ;;;ilep football,

or

'lbe money crisis in all of
higher edllaltion bas bad a serious in!pact on sports, Fritz
oays. Aheady, the N C A A
seems receptive to limitinl
grants-in-aid to a need, instead
of a strictly talent basis. This
will help to clooe ..ue of the
a•n b e - 11101 jor and minor

p.:;grams.

Eventually, Fritz -

just a

fsw Notre DamM (maybe 40 or

00) playing in a truly major

-·'-'dized footbell 1-~~ with
.....,.,.
-the great bulk of institutions
dill!:..~~:_• completely
1be big time baa reached the'
d f ... _ line, be _,,~
en
u..,
p...,...~-­

°

-u-

IB T Q H OSt

PR Councl·l
Developmen~ .of. a task foroe

::rrJ!e"o!.:::.tio!;"~.i~=

ment -function" will be the ma. r business before the Fall
10

~~~~ ~-~~~~'?}~

The'University$ Goals
" · J.. ~ te8eC:tioo of put Continuity, of p - t ~
and of aspirations for the __!.uture; u.e are the goala of
the State University at BWWo: .
-:
. .
. 1. Tbe University will C?D~ue 1ta. evolution to-

warda~ one of the nation a preemment graduate
profeaaiooal centers with a firm commitment to the
' advancement of knowledge through ~- ~d- re.-rcb in selected academic ud profeaaiooal disciplines .
2. The University will con~ue to ~ ~e obligation i.Dherent jn ita gradua~ center aapuati?~. of
creating both an -outstanding undelpaduate diYlllon,
with a rigorous academic orientatiOD which cballenges
the individual to teet the limit&amp; of IUa il;!~ ~d
penonal development, ... an outataDding contin~g
education division dedicated to the conoept of education

ana

cr

as a life-long pursuit.
·
3. In each of its major divisions 7' undergraduate,
graduate, profeaaional, and con~~ .education - ~e
University will act to maintain eDsting a cad em 1 c
strengtba, to strengthen areaa of promi8e, and to develop
neW areas which ~ indications of future importance

to the University and to society. .

.
.
4. The University will li!IJWll \Uleqwvocally committed to academic free!lom; it will ·aimul~y ·inaist
upon a commitment to academic ~'bility..
6. In ita a"Cademic prpgrams, 'JIO!jClll!lo and orgaru. .zation,. the University will be open to innovation ud
sensitive to the needs of faculty ud studenta•. both p~
sent and prospective; yet it will never lose m~t of tts
academic purposes and of the need to determine and
discriminate in favor of the most effective meth~ of
advancing and tranEillittilig knowledge, understanding,
and abilities significant ud valuable to mankind.
6. The University will recognize the importance -of ,
an environment conducive to learning, teaching, and re· !search· it will seek to provide the facilities, services, and
eumples which ~te ~«h an enviro~t.
7. The University will continue to recogruze a special relationship with the community and region, and it
will 8erve in-tbill .reJationsbip accor&lt;Png · to its academic
interests and abilities.
.
8. Tbe' Univei-aicy v.jll'tleveibe ~un!i ' t-0 ~ traditiorial foi:ma ' of '$gh~ ·'edui:a'tlon; it 1Vill' De willihg'_ to ,act
alone or co0pemtivety iD using its reeources t&lt;o,.create
new forms whiclt will.
the realization of its aspirations, parpolle&amp;, and goala.
· - · · ·: · . ·
.
-,
·9: The Uiliversity will iltnve to organjZe lllid govern
itself in such a manner as to make the most productive
use of those resources entrusted to it by society for the
achievement of these goals. _,rom u.. Mid.n. st.• s.JJ..Srudy.

persou;u

further

Relations Council scheduled
a poosible club set-up was dis- for Buffalo, OCtOber 31-Novemcussed. This is no-help, no eli- . beU~B :will be liOst . fo; tbe
gibility-rules :foothsll, blit· it is 'meeting' which IS
.
billed as "the
also a no-responsibility sport,
with a higb injury potential. most important gathering in the
Games are sometimes played history of the CQuncil" whose
on rough, !fangerously 11IIkempt membership includes public
f~elds; equipment and facilities and community relations offiare often inadequate; there are . cials f'r om throughout the
no NCAA guides and controls; SUNY system.
aDd clubs within a reasonable
According to Louis Herboig
traveling distance of U / B ..., of State University CoUege at (Contimud from _ . I, coL 4) Association which will then
few. All told, it seemed a bad Oswego, Pres i d e_n t of the the schools of Engineering and take app~riate action as to
idea, be says.
group, "the goal of the Confer· Architecture, respectively.
tbe accredited status of the
"We can't turn back" on such ence is to produce a thorough,
A · rep,_.,tative from the UniversitY..
·
new sports as soccer, on our detailed document which des- United States Office of Edllaln,.; membership. of the Mid·
fall program ffir spring sports, cribes the Public relations prob- tion will make a conc:ummt die States team includes, in
or on our expanded club lineup, leiiiB of SUNY, approaches to study to determine federal 84ilitioo tc;&gt; 'cbairms,n Hom·
Fritz maintains. Yet, that's those problems, ud tbe role funding elillibility aDd the bake:
·
\
·
wbat would bave to be done if of tbe Public Relations Council Brookings Institute which is
Frederico Aquino-Bermudez,
football were to be revived in solvins them."
conducting a study of the -ac- associate profeaaor aDd chairwithout· increased fund in g.
Conferen"ce sessions will be cred.itation process itself will nwi, Deparmalt of Puerto
"We should bave been doing beld at the Cbarter House Mo- also send an. obeerv
Rican Studies, Department of
these things anyway,'' be feels. -to.r Hotel and on the U / B cam- · In total, ~pprozi:';.tely 35 Urben and Ethnic Studies, City
Nor does be intend to down- pus. Wednesday evening, No- rep,_.,tatives will be oo cam- Co_!l..,. !Jf N- York; Elizabeth
grade hockey or do less for vember !,-President Robelt L. pus during .t be accreditation E.Billmin&amp;prof-llnd chairbasl&lt;elhall-as much as be'd Ketter will hold a reception for visit which opens with meetinls man, Department nf La1'iluaBe&amp;
· like to bave footbell.
the delegates.
at tbe Charter House Motor aDd Iitatture, Univerai"X of
1be . $20,000 budget Fritz
Hotel Sunday afternoon. Night Delawue; Howard W. Dillo~,
suggests would oot, ol course,
sessions will be held at the university librarian aDd 8880Clcover the who I e shot for
Charter House, Sunday, Moo- ate prof-.r of library science,
. referees, visiting ieam guarandey, and Tueeday1 aDd day. ~ State Univeraity,
- . cioacbes' re1ease time and
time meeliinl fac:ilities bave , 8prillllfield. Illlnoia; Edwanl v.
· travel; but combined with gate
been reserved in Hayes Hall Ellis, a....c1ate dean for cootin·
reoeipta, guarantees received
An enenaiooi of the State and Norton Union, Monday ·' uing edllaltioo, 1111110Ciate proaDd other income, it would bi Department of Education's through WednesdaY. 8pecial feiroor of public '-lib, Penn
eDIIIIIdl for an eigbt-g a m e moratorium 00 the approval of tripo to Ridge Lea, tbe Amherst' State; David R. Goddard, uni·
acbeclule, be feels.
new doctoral ~..,...._was an- (North) Campus and the BeU ver&amp;ity p""-&gt;r ·of biolo@'.
·liouiida F - ·
"
Tbe type progrsln be envis- nouncecl last Friday by Ewald Plant bave also been AITIIllpd.
Leidy Labor11lory UniWr&amp;lty
Alumni . . . , . _ , bave said ase8, whenever and if ever it B. Nyquiat, commissioner
A dinner in honor of tbe visi- of PennsYIYIUiia; •b on al d L.
that "if llludoala WilDt "football, .abcillt, woUld be • regu- ·
Tbe stop.ection
.was tors will be held in ~ear- Herdman._c~ean. CollmJU!~;
--'11 haw It," Md baWl iDdi- lar lntarcollelliate set-up within . first issued September :u 1971 · 10, Sunday. evening.. Also in- llaltil!ii; FairielP
· ·
·· ·called tilt "ww1"ve aa 110011 u ralee ol tbe Eastern Collep to espiie Bepleaiber 30' 1972 vi~ ~ the University's top Univlinlty; Katllryn L. Hop- p the. ......,.. to 1IIAidl what&lt; Atilletlc ~- Tbere are
Nyquiat liaid · the ~ administzative and academic wood, cba1rman, l)epaduw&gt;t of
iltlldcl8 put up; l:ll!l Wlll1ran more ~ 100 ecbools williin was ca...t by oOnditiooa. both echelon, -...p.......,tatiVes of tbe CounseUna: aDd stuaent Deveicampaa at.rwila .hoM hMrd OQII daT.• l!iia ride ol Bulfalo in N- York and naticiriwide ~cil and Board of Trustees, opmimt, llunter
Northat before; 'WI!eD bailie ......, th&amp;t haw this kind oiOiricially- with . _ t to tbe .-1 for doc- presidents of the vsrioua stu- mUI' J . Jom.ooi, ......,..te proatlaldmice -laDu in the •Jidlmed, DO' ~ ap- IOrallewdp_.,.whicbbave dent:I1880Ciilltions aDd ·membeni '-'r of urban alfain, Car·
lllid ll11Kr1, b Aliiimii bad a .pi'OIIdl, lie_sa;ys. .
notmataiallyc:hanpdoverthe of,theSeif-Sb!dy-SteerinaCom- lll!lili-Mellon Univinity; J .
without an increase in student
appropriations for athleticsAll ina-ease of rougbly. $20,QOO,
· Pritz figUres.
.
And there is at. present no
way this year's students, even
if they are so-minded, can ·
commit '$20,000 from 1973's fee
,pol . .
.
.
·Fritz doubta th·at schools
will scbedule U/B oo "good intentions" alone. Some eigbt
years' worth of such "good in·
tentiODB" scheduling went down
the drain with tbe dropping of
the major procram two years
aso. While 11Cheduling at tbe
level projected · now ian't as
long-nmge or uptigbt, none of
. these scbools want to be left
. -with · pps in their line-ups if
U/B sbould default ~
Maybe, suuests Fritz, there
could be -a relerendum of stu·
cleat intention which could be
binding. He's sure such1l PlOP:
osition would pu1 as all ath1et1c fee referendums bave. Or,
perbapa. the Student ASsociatioo ean revise its constitution
to ~ It to pled8e and commit~ ahead. At UIY mte,
it'• up to the-sludeo111, be feels.
And altbouch certain leadeni
IDle Jcmatban Dllndea
llnoled, tbe-"""'
'
:
who ean epeilli: for aDd. CCIIJI!!lit
tile lltudmt body?
•

.,::0::· ·

Final Exam------------'---

State Renews
New PhD Ban -

ontm

Collefe;

...._.
e -.a

' _·. ·

- =-=--~=
- -:-::~~~== ~;::.:r~~~ -= -- '
· =~=~
a a-Ddai ~· tbe Univaaity miaoiaa. op Doc1ian1 Bcbx.tion :. "J"o~ the vililt, !hf:h will Muafcal Siudle8; PriDceloil; J.

pallll ill4-t in lb8 ol
..._, W - &amp;ate. Ith- to , mab ...,..,.;....ttn- to ·
dlhw b'tlllO.- Collep. NOt to IIIIJDtioo · ~JaB,
plam l&amp;~t ita
-tD-Itlllllil!lllfttljJIIIft , ,._.......,.public;UIIIwaltlea ~ · eadYinlli73, . Nyquiat
· lila half~
A Gildea ~ ln cfAimilnlc u alb-,, ll&amp;id. "' 'liaUewo !bat the mara. Ball
Jede· &amp;1111· acidoalc, -_dum torium
doCIGnl pro~
iliiiiPGilll
wllb UIB.
'
.,._ lllaald -m in e1fec:t
_..... _ _ . lip i!V Ita
•
All allmdift aDd ~ . Un&amp;ll"tbe ~.luift IIICIIiwd
... ~ iarary_ Of .t.~a~e ai1uld be ammled. tbe~iafta~~mactioo.• .

FW •

"'t

ca:;;.

oo -

ibclud&amp; mtemewa aDd appoint. · Hany ami~ oiealdant. Essex
IDI!"IB around tbe c&amp;mpua, tbe CouJity eoue.e,: N~ N.J,;
Middle Statea tam - will d&amp;- HemyR.W"
. . . .,VJcepre&amp;l·
Ul oral ~ to Preaicleat for, academic~ PR

;

-~ ~ L." Ketter. ' later - t~Glzt"'• Rutaan;_lte
- z .... auballt a writll!o a. · - - J&amp;r. ilean, Gmdua
ol tbet ~will 8i:boa1 o1 Buoim-, U:niWr&amp;~ty

port A

-~&amp;led WI

tbeMiddle&amp;ata

otPitiiJburlh.

�.i

Larrabee
ToLer;tzire

�~211,1972 '

.SA Thrns~~ines8'-­
Mtef Set~li:*g. Fund .FUSs : "'re

niiiJI'y a 111111me that ..,; diacuMion to deUnaiDe the beat
mesne by wbidl atudeaD can
10 . . . . tbe:..tudent po.- bu
" f~ uPon the eecond aDd reopond to this -..., as a
third flooro of a eingle buDd- group."
ina." Student Aalocietioa I'Je&amp;. .• ADotber 8JIPI08Ch to tile COD·
ldmt Debbie BoniloD said this oopt of llludeoH s-r may also
"""*- '"There bao to .be more - be in the 'MJib. "We are -.ery
" than this boppening on cam- optimistic_ aboat the poaaibiJi.
.ties of SASU,"- COIIIIDOilted Ms.
pus.'•
Ms. Beoson was referring to Benson, "aDd witb the current
lbe recent budpt cootrover&amp;Y preoident livinl in Bu&amp;lo, stories whicli esiunined and ..... wiU be informed of aU develop.
l!lllD1ined at length the Student ments and activities." SASU,
· Aaaociation's linancial Prob- 'or the Student Aaaociation of
lems and ita obliptiona to cam- the State Uniwraity, bao repus organizations. Last week, ce~~Uy ·bem J'8COIIIized as a
with the latest financial atat&amp;- statewide organization. and bas
ment publisbed, and aU putiee met . with SUNY O&gt;ancellor
"satiafled " the Student Aaaoci- Boyer. .Started on lbe Oswego
ation be.ian to c:pnrem itaelf a n d Bingbamtoo C8IDpU8e&amp;,
SASU may eoon become the of.
with new businMB.
''When we elected last ficial banlaininr agent for stuspring," Ms. Benoon said, ''we dents· of ibe SONY system in
stralsed the Med for more stu- their relations with SUNY and
dent participation in academic its various institutions; Ms.
issues. With aU the concern Bc!fiaon says. •
over the budget we 'were un. able to do that until DDW. " •
Currently, SA olflllera · are
preaoing for more student representation on the committees
of the Division of Undergrad·
People would rather be sick
uate Studies: At ·present only than go to doctors, Lealie Fied'two student&amp; sit on -the ·DUB lei, prof- of English and
Policy Committee, ADd_ while · outapoken.soCial ~IJI; told the
there are flw on .tbe Cumcu- .· 'MidWest Fotum or{ AU~ at
lum Committee, only facult_y · ·, a 'meeting in tbe Statler Hilton
and administration are i&gt;e&lt;'· Hotel this week.
·
mitted to participete in pn&gt;Moat people, eapeciaUy the
ceedinga of the Scholastic youllg, mistruat · doctors whom
Standards and Detree .Require- they consider cold, heartless
menta penel, for ..___ of and iDbuman, .Fiedler said.
confidentiality."
'Quadm aDd gwua are preferThis explanation, ~ $urn, ' red by lbe -~. 'be said. 00another -"&gt;llitY for cause they-try to,MaJ the' whole
more ' student lDflaenee over , person, · something physicians
decil!ion-malrlng 'procedures. · &lt;a:Mw. ·. : ·
· ·
·
'The c:in:umst8nala UDder wbJcb
He urged · doctors to take off
student recorda. an! ~ or their white 1iooltB jlist as pto.
opened wiU alec)· be''&lt;iD'mlhea.' ·fi!II8C!rll ' &amp;nch:l'erp; have 'doffed
by the Student :Aaaociation this· • their robc!s ,and JOined the peayear. ~
'
} -p le.
• or,l"- '
•
·-··#·
'"The campus ....,.,..nty report · 'lbe American Medical AsJso.
wiU be a huge ~- Ms. Ben- . cistion.· is· widely looked upon
8on continUed. "Repreoentit~ as the status quo organization
tivea of various campu8 groups · that bas blocked reform, Fiedbave already held preliminary ler contended.
+

.

~

1relands Civil War Not ReligioiiB, '
- · Berhildette Devlin Says

Mns Mistrusted,
Fiedler Claims

.

Under the State Act, aaltators
'"The State and the Br,stem
are not denied trials as in the k i Ill! d those children, ' she
North, abe said, but civilians charged
The civil ,_,. -in_. Nllldan lire denied jUry. trials imd tried • Ms. Devlin · explained that
. Ireland is ~'DOt • reliPiiis ...... . instaild in "funny" ·: military ·abe and otben; in the 1rish J.ib.
but a eomplex. and complicated courta, ;without the right of era t ion movement first ap.
stniQie for natioaal indepeD- • ~lion and, on 6c- pealed peacef~ly to the govdeoqe " Irish rai1ica1 Le a d e r casion, without lmowing the in· emment for unrrovement of
Bernadette Devlin said 'dlll'inl dividuals wbo bring evidence Northern Ireland s chronic un' the last bows .of U IB's Aware- against them.
. ,
!""ployment ( up to .W per a;nt
._.. Week. October 17.
Accusing thoee in the current !"some areas ) and other social
~ befcire a capilcity . Republican~ of aeU- ills.
croWd inCI8rk.Gp&gt;,,Ma. Dev·. ing . out the ~-of 1916,
·
. •
. lin took,the IiUmJpboue follow- Ms. ' Devllil ' said to ' remember •Asldnc BI'IJUIII! ..........,. · ' ·
~ ..., 'impaaaioned apeecb by.
'we want nothing to do with
"Aaki.aa for justice, aU- got
.lriah
Army orpn· Jack L~s Irelan.d.
was more -repreosion. W&amp; uked
izer Sean K&lt;lony. Both apM1&lt;era Socldim Wonl8d
for more factories, mote bouaee,
an-t the , non-religious na.
"What w'e .are fighting for ii · · and aU - get are ·more prisons.
ture ol the confllcL AB Kenny not green, is not white or gold They spread like muabrooma."
said, "ContrarY to wliat Amer· or specifiCall liiab," Bbe said.
A form of govaniment that
icana are bearing, the 1'rotea- "We want a ~t ,..;public." must be &lt;lef&amp;nded &amp;ily by a
tants are not tearing the
The real struggle is "we, the military force of JOO,OOO is no~
Catholics aP!"t !'u.t of a l~v.e JWrkiDJ: claas,· against •the leas worth defendillg; Jlhe · Contendfor .reaua.w
than
cent wlio own the ed. "Let's sCnip it for one that's
Looking more like an Irish universe,'' ·Ms. Devlin said
easier to defend."
,
acboolgirl than the spiritual
Liberals raUy to her counMs. Devlin told the audience
aiste&lt; of Ireland's great revolu- try's cause, Ms. Devlin said, that they need not burry to Beltionary women (until abe began but they draw the line at the fast to fight "the glorious revto~) , Ms. Devlin explained
use of violence. "We don't like olution.
that the dissident ininopty in terrorism a -nd violence," abe
· "Your democracy is as rotten
the North' is 'not fighting for contended, nor did the IRA and or more rotten than ours. Your
union wjth a corrupt Irish Re- other extremist groups start it. freedoms are equally in peril.
public. Stressing the i!&gt;terna- "Tears are shed from nation to
" And your s o I u t i o n s are
~ nature . ~ the " cimflict,
nation wben a child die!; in the · equaUy long-term, e q_ u a II y
Ma. Devlin said the atruule is crossfire," or a British ·iloldier stark, and equally simple," Ms.
. not for . "an ~e of 'flop is ldlled, ,she said But. wliat of Devlin advised, urging aU thoee
or natiaaal anu-.'
, tbe.-cbildren-who die quietly of ·who oppose claas inequities and
Ms. IleYliii.'..wd in.Partia- '881bma.aD4• broill:bitiJ!.and the . political oppression to fi&amp;ht for
ment 1111 the youbaelt member, diaeaaea of-poverty in the bock- worldwide socialism-wherever
in modem Northern Irish his- streets of the Belfast slums?
they are.
toty and also served a priaon
.
sentence for ':!j~C: aclinn on
~.::'!:foot spending our •
.
youths, . our lives, our energy
Forty-three members of the Strauaa, RoOm 122, and Mar·
to light qainat the Special
Powoin Act in the North Only · UniversitY community serve as lene Liludiro, Room 115; Townnotaries public at campus and send HaU, Anna N . Fanone,
~tl;, ~U.:! oft-&lt;:ampus locations for the con· Room· 202; Troilqa and l09K
veni"""" qf faculty, stall and Annex, William Carnahan and
"""said.
students requiring notarization Norma Turner.
011 C.mpuo ~
· of doctiments.
Their services are available
BeU Facility, Hazel S. Blatt,
witboutcbarre .ifthedocuments D-103; Buffalo GeMTIJl Hospi. pertain to UniverSity busineaa-.,. tal, Ronald White, accounting;
fellowships, .aolary advanoes, Cooperati.Ue Colkfe Center
etc., ~ Balkin, 8asiatant Janet Mitcbell, personnel, 8DQ1
.vice PJ&amp;Iident, m.au- aJfairs, Jerry Lindner, accounting; 1803' ·
and oonlloller, soya.
Elmwood,- Etta Andrews and
By 100!-tiQil. the notaries are: MarilYn Fish. pwd&gt;aaing; 1807
On C8mpuo ,
Elmwood,- Marguerite Beddien
·

-

SWt

•

Ra
. publi
• can

ro -

SPA Grievance Panel
AU "Academic Employeee" (Faculty ) and "Professional Employeee" (Non-Teac:bing Prof~) wbo are
in the bergainins unit negotiated for_ by the SenatA _Pror-ional Aaaociation (SPA) '1Ue entitled· to the .aerrii.e.· of
the SPA grievance med&gt;enism
,·
· :tbe Bulfai9 .Cebter SPA Chapa bUllet up ·i.~ CCII!1mittae to process gri8YIIDOits a\''Step' I of the prcMBlure and
to maintain liaison with the ·GeneriJ SPA Jrieyance coordinator for the other three steps (see the SPA-Slate Agreement, Article Vlll) .
·
_
·
Persona with grievances stemmiag from t&amp;rma or conditions of emj&gt;loyment should aintact the """'ropriate CMD·
mittae · representative, as listed ' below. Or, if ooe prefers,
ha may get in touch With the appropriate. co-cbainnan, .......
with the president of the Bulfa1o Center SPA Gbapter, Dr.
~line A. Yeracaria &lt;Dei&gt;ar1ment of Sociology, 4224
Ridge Lee, Elct. 7-1635) .
·

43 N0 t anes
• s. erve .campus

:..."tl::

0:..,

IENATE . . . . . _ .......,..,_
....,ALD CUCTEII CHAI'1UI

. . . _ "' ·" ' " - .._..... mwmo

. CGOWIIIIEN'
1. FACULTY

u_k _

·Jioet;r fl41(JI!Id&amp; ~ ~

lial BWI.un,,Audrey X~-

or.
Allllmw"IIDit,_ .RoOm 280, ·s- . Bildelazd. .L ~Miller
aad ~'*!-Wamm. ~ 2811;.. ~-a£: J: Jl~o-H.

Letlila·

' BOcim. l~HIQia

n. ~

Boom. 9'74; LiMD School-P-·-'-,..

=~~il- .0::. · =-.~ \~i ~~-ell, It~ Room liOl; Hay~ HaU. 'Ridlert, ROclin, 740'; 451ii.M,w;.

IEit!J!'

. ....._- . ,.

~· ,:=..,;:
"""- ........ ..,.. """"
. ..un
~: =:, ~
H~

...s:;-.
-~-"· --·· · · --=---.=. .'
. ..·-:=;'-. . . . . .,. . .

and
Judith DIDiled&amp;Y, Room 159·

!

....
=

"""· , _ .,.,_,

-lF_...._,""::::::

X:·= · ret~~
Ty~ 1~~
~· Rcipm '' ~9,
P:O..anduuraK~

40I . .IOS,

.

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..

~!*i:'jij{_;JD~olili&lt;;.· 'i~~,J:J!H~

~:'!:;!:::,:;:~ .;

"'· """""' B""'"'• (to' NTP'o&gt; Ellt. Jall
"""· ........ lllchol Cto&lt; ,......_., Eld. ~ 11&lt;1'.

~.::..,.'t..
~-.....;".::::.... -

•
.

' 160 ~
. ' IJU~RI;L;;; ' - .

n.~ · ~..:=;.'"..=.~ ~ u-

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"'- ........,.. ,.., - - ~- ·

~sw·~'

. :·· .. '; ." ,: .... ~~~ -

rilooal 0-J,

' .

•

.,_._.

.ltoam'2Q2:

'.BdWaidLC: !~;' ~~·tlaaiD 8Je; JJ ·JI-.Jty_ ~' l5;J60 w~~.
a-a.!....BIIp~~ Doaaa c.- 8Dd ow. Mar-

-fi..,,

rr

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

·' .

.

.

·' ,.

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.. . . E:.....,_....,., lfL~-

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. ·. :~ ..~ ~
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-

401~

~~- ·~~~

•

•
'
~~ ·C.::..... ini '
-----------------~

�~26,

~ - ..

1972

liaw Students Assist- Art shaw
Judges in Senteneing-!::.slatedfor -~
By
SUSAN ROBINfiON KING

t~.e _

_le wbo ......
style of llfe, wbo aft!_ 10iDJ
tbroulb or baw tbrougb
801118 of the t..1e1, but
wbo lire makini cliffarebt deciaioll8 about .....
be

U.S. Causing Unrest;
Chilean Envoy·Claims

Macdonald

- "A1'i.tri.Cia

IUld ' - , " an
exbibiliaD of paintlnp ~
Erie . County Hall -Bullalo,
,.. Will be p-ledtbe
New York. 8 a.m. Judge Jo.....-.IB 8Dd fell..- of
aeph Mattina, County Court
Fumaa.
Sunday afterjudge of En,; County, ezplains aays.
1!1i0a, NOYember 12, _fmm 3 1o
~ ·'! pre-trial, eerly momStudents, U8U8ily in poupe -~.!~.. inHallthe J&gt;a-nt of MaclDII aemmar wbat sentences be of two, are aaai8ll8d a case by '-"""""
plana to live 4eferulanta wbo Profaaaor Adilfl. 'Theory and
Qmiroe. born in Istanbul" in
will atand before him in the interview akilla are p,_led in 1927, FreDch by natwalizaliClli,
oame courtroom in a few bounl. lecture. SludeniB are then a&amp;- and a reaident of Paris since .
Surroundina him are 18 atu- signed to complete a aeries of 1953, has ClMted ae-.1 doz1l!ll
deniB · of 0/B's "Community i!Mrviews with the defendant murals ~ Europe, ln
and the Administration of Jus- and those involved with him or fresco, cenumc, and stained
tice: Paraprof-woal Sldlls in her. An in-depth character glass as well as acuiptures in
Probetioo and Parole."
study -Is written and, after coo- metal and concrete. In the
George Adolf is a former pro- sultetioo with Profe11110r Adoff
Uniled States, be has been pribl!tioo officer and now a fel)ow is JI!!I88Dted to Judge Mattina: marily intersated..in the basioWith College Z at U/B as well 'The students' report&amp; attempt IP"&amp;IlbY of OrtbodOJ: "dwrd&gt;es.
as .an assistant profe11110r of to e z pI a in ·the defendant's - Of the campus showing, the
criminal 1ustice at the State needs, relationships and coo- arlist sa,ya, "Aithouch (it) . . .
College at Bullalo. With the cept of self.
,
, can bani!)" "be called an ezbibit,
assistance of ~ Mattina,
Most importent to the report considering iiB disPeraed charbe has involwd studeoiB in a is the final -.tion which out,. acter and the 8IDfl1l number of
unique manner in the proceas lines an alternative sentence. works shown, I take great
of sentencing.
.
Dealing with the defendant 88 pleasure in it, a pleasure shared
After a number of years with- a person, the student&amp; i&gt;ropcee by my friend, Profe11110r Lyle
in the court structure, Adoff a sentence. which will benefit Borst (master of Furnas CoJ.
• concluded there are .a number the individual defendant as lege), and I hope by all wbo
ell
.. · "cal
of, . cnli
d':."!::!..juocture w as society at large.
see it. It is essential for the
poiniB" in the · ·
justice
The report&amp; are not merelY artist to remain in touch with
system which need reform. One student ~- Before de- the public, particularly if the
of these · · te ' ·
H de- ferulan
1
•
r
·
lB sen ~e
ts are sentenced by peop e COD81Bt o young persons
veloj&gt;ed the course to fiiJ some Judge Mattina, be reads and camsucbpusas...thooe on a university
of the professional needs of thiS ezamines ' them. He also disprocess.
cusaes the report&amp; with the stu- . OminM bas been represented
"Judges baw to make de- deniB wbo prepared them clai-- m group ezhibitions in Paris,
cisions ·as to whether individ- ifyinf his reasons for ...,..;pting especially in that city's Moduals should go to ·p rison or not or rejecting sentence proposals. em Art Museum, and in other
inlijlhtoftheinformationthey
In 888e88ing the reports European capitals. He bas
receiVe about the individual's Judge Mattina is straightfor: given one-man shows in Paris
character," he ezplains.
ward and frank with the stu- London, Geneva, Sion and
A pre-sentence report bas dents. Realizing that the pro- Montreal.
traditionally been prepared by cess of reform Is slow, be feels
His murals, stained glass and
proba!i~ .olficeD\- _By._look.illg ,a jiJllge's involvement with stu, sculpture may be· viewed in
at the report, assessing who ·an deots ,ls particularly importent Nice, Cologne. Neully, Paris,
individual Is and predi_cting and -the . QOI,ll1le a small step · and Vaucresson in France and
wbaL his ·future bold&gt;!, a -lu!ige ·towaJ!I ~ aOai pi ier&lt;l!11'.
in Salonika and Athell8, .Greece.
~. hlu;a, or. flW!l_om :~ .~~~~ '~''' .,;-_,, . . • ,,,_ "··' .,._, .. ·.•· ·
probteqj !,!~!jay is. ~L,a .Jil'Pba· .•- ~Jy .. .durilag the &amp;em· Iro'n·~alfuig
·
tion officer is re8ponsilile for -:'!'Iter, students ranain after the· .
· :1.,1-.U."· .
many p - - ~'and fwo-l)our.-uoar.ror,the.mom: .
.
.- ···.
' .
because of increasinf·C8se-losds ' ing .o( •COIII't llt. which .Judge .
it is "" increasingly difficult Mattina .presid81. It .is not a
·
·' · '. ·

u---.. ...._

u-"

con...,

•• .· •

Parle'·y ·Set

mock

:,0

teJ · ·

· b.Jation

·

, ·

.

"VerY !l(1lla, the United

~tea ,md lla lup . corpora,.
tiona operate as a Gnll8 eotity," Orlando I.etelier, Chilean
ambe...tar to tbe united
Stateo, obaerwd in a camPNE JlOII{enmce .thla week. "It

Is the (ear · of thla combined
- r. And iiB atreDilebold on
the Chilean eeo110111y, whidl Is
reaponaible for much Of the
current unrest in my countty."
l&gt;urini his visit here fur part
of a symposium on "the Chilean Revolution of 1970," spoosored by the Committes on Inlemationa! S t u dies, btslier ·
presented a detailed background of Chile's p,_t prol&gt;lema and their potential impact
on the Allende liovemment,
d~ing report&amp; of. imminent also aware of the "intripe,"
civil war. H~ attri!&gt;uted the having published sevm-a1 doc:ucurrent turmoil, which began ts d tail"
•.. n...__. ITl' with a strike br truck owners men
e 1D11 - • unable to obtain replacement
';&lt;;&gt;H=
Cblle8n
P~!ft&amp;, to the fear that the U.S. "the go~t of Cbiie~
18
will take further retallstory ·
-r
measures against Chile in re- mg very bard to -~v~ld. a~s
to th
ti"0 nal" .
frontation over thla 1881M1.
_ponse
. e na
•~lion
Ambassador Letelier apof the ~ncan copper mdus- pointed by President Sal~ador
try there m 1971.
All ru1 • 1970 L . .
·--•
At the present time, the
e e m. . • ..... prevJ.......y
United States does not eztend !"'rv~ Chile "! ~eral admina lm
" e of c-~,·t to CL"e and all IBtrative_ cspsotieo for the In""'
un
te
D
1
tranasctions are negotiated in
ramencan
eve '? P men t
cs8h. 'The American financial Bank, and 88 ecoooouc adviaor
community bas imposed thla in the Chilean Department of
situation upon only two or ·Copper.
three other_ nations in the
world, he &amp;ald.
This inability to import T, T,
1,.,..,
needed goods, coupled with the
loss of 20 per cent of national
earnings through reduced cop- ~.!:t ~of

=

!!b.,

Newfub/icatw""n

.Ln .Lmmwwr.vs..r

==~u':'ctl'J:!;abo':i!::

CO~~UDunity. Acco-''- to Let.elier, the politicai.,..... -. -~
· -· .
o f " " ' " ' · -·8

con&amp;UI:t·
..,_,~ .-tia;D- :Qilmoerst&amp; •
an :num-

:.v::d t

p~ rapid~

of ~ljnal wodt 00 all ~
of lmmunalot!Y t... -)ua 'beill
published.
·••

'Itia~ial~'.

Co~
, __.._.. · ~
ber of: ·richt-wfnlr ~ ,_. 'The Center t.· -~u_,.
"have attemptec;l
.to. ~ ad- the School : : Medicioll.
81
·vantage .o L ~ 1:!-"ltioni, bow- · issues are" to be·-don..L....r .-.....
ever, ·he ·mamtained, .. every. . ,
~ ~
thin, is absolutely under con- • .Y~ editorial committes of
~,!;._ 0 Wor'
the publica~n i!Jdudea 11w1
Letelier . added that Ameri- f""!' the UOJV«mty, under
can corporatiOIUI were "obvious- chairman J?r-. N~ R. ~
ly involved" in instigating the profeasor of~~.crisis, and probably foreign un- heataotdprofof~Cenr
ofter~or
Immunand, ""
,,
dercover agen~ as well, al; ology. They are Dr. Pier L
though he bas no clear proof' Bigazz~ research aaso&lt;iate pro-·
I? su!!port the_ latter CO?,ten· f_,. of microbiology; Dr.
tl&lt;!n· ,. ~ l!ractical lel1Dil, .. be Stanley Cohen, prof-. of
&amp;aid, this "' almost .a war. .
pathology and aoliol ~ The
At the present time, Chile Center for Immunoloc· Dr
n e = = t hassucb~ Allan Grooebeq, ~
and Kenilicott Copper to deter- f'!"""'" f!( !Jllcrobiology, Dr. Mor. f .
tio
"
,
no Reictilin prof-.r ol. medl~me . au- compenss "n .or na- cine and ~ profeiaor of
~~/,if.,.:';"'~~ biocbemislry; Dr. C:areJ J . van
ing to pay for the comnAni.M' Oss. prof-. of ~­
assels and liabilities, wfthCi&amp;.
A 29-llll!lllber editorial ad¥18ductions for depreciation and !'7~ lndudea
~_..of tbe
m-~tiooally ......,.,_. de=~t, ~.find.
BMrd&gt;en In the lleld ofla'umm21 per ceo~~ olocY fmm tbe United S...
property, and over 50 per cent ~~~~ Aa
for Kenoicott, quite unreason- C~~-'-'- -~:.Zt'
'-1,
~ .... •
able," Letelier said.
'Ibe 1oi&gt;lml ill ·
by

= t .":'Ji:"'io~~ dram"!.. The dd.::..w:'~~
."Direct Reduction and Coke"
document instead of a report people with whom the students will.!;' cUC top•c of "the tbi~
that-humanizes the defendant," have interacted, w i t h whom ann
· · Furnas Memor
Adoff says. they have developed a certain ·Conference to be held on cam·
No lnolcht
.
relationship. Through the pus November 12-13. Spoo"Most judges have no. insight course, Adoff bas involved his sored by the U / B Center for
at all into the people they are studenls in a relationship of ~ Melellurgy_. the event
sentencing .. ezplains Judge involvement Jlhicb is the qual- IS de~ugned to prov•de a forum
Mattina who talks with obvious ity lacking m traditional pro- (o~ mlercbange among steel
concern to student&amp;. "It Is bation sentencing situstions.
null OP&lt;;r&amp;tors, researchers, and
hunian nature to go by ..,.,_
One lawyer, whose client's acsdeouc. representati~es . on
ommendations of a probation case bad been reviewed by the """'!&gt;ologlcal progress m Ironofficer" be says Many judges students in · Profe11110r Adofrs making.
are "'i.eini IDc:k8d in" to Sen- class, ezplained his feelings
A,ccording to co _n f e r en c e
tencing procedures before they about the student involvement. chairman Dr· J u!i&amp;n S~kely •
h a v e sul&amp;cient infomuition "I was very skeptical when p_rofessor !'f cbermcal engmeerabout IDe individual.
your Honor suggested thla pro- ?'I !'I'd d~r. of the Cen~r.
Judge Mattina became il)- cedure. I didn't kl:low what the • 'It IS O!Jf Intention. to ~me
volwd with the para-profes- aim or motivation of the stu- ~ broad range _o( ISSUes relatsiooal c:laas at iiB bellinninJB. dents would be. , 'They have '!'g to ·!be •tee! mdustry. Atte':'A judge at-32, be feels ~ reviewe!;l my client in a ligbt tion will be JIVeD to economic
that the Iepl system .
that shows their real concern aspects "!' well as to _ purely
"bomanizatioo." He feels that for him and his relation to so- · technological facto!"."
judges .-led to have commuo- ciety, It took me many months
'The conference IS funded
ity involvement and community to conclude some of the things through grants fro1_11 the A. E .
input. The Univeraity itself is that these people decided in a Anderson Foundatio~ and the
a community asaet aru1 re- few weelai...• For my client, New York StaJe Sc;•eoce and
source, be cplains
'
going to jail would be a trag- Technology Foundation.
The cOurse Is si:rudiu-ed to edy."
. KeynotespeakerwillbeWil- uo~ea:"~~~X:~
.n.., atadents theoretical back
ham T. Hogan, S.J., of Ford- Chilean -~'tuti·- __,_,..._. __
~.... but
~- -~•:
ham University, wbo will talk
~~w
- - wo....,. ~
,W.-1-n.·_ 1\_
r.
on "Coke and Economics." tsblisbes guidelinM for such
.-led to interview-~ ~
t:l u,-, -1. VI
Papers will·aJao be delivered~f de&amp;iings,~ be added. "We can
but the
-~- up Wlth a defendant
.
ln addition to fonn&amp;l pi'es- · - Fftlllr8llnc DlopuW
wbo :o"ll
before Judge
Dr. Frank L Graziano Is the entations, representatives hom
Lelelier said that his counMattina -d~ the ~ Of
Beltl)ebem. Inland, J~ and '-'a moat frustraW., .o•-'-·te is
the - " ' r m ·lerml! ol. mu- Ai'umruP!""i~1.,_tbeADeotal I.awdilin. aDd Uoifed States ;ith ·riT, wliicb be b.:""
found
1965 Sleel cciiporal:loos will present . is often "equaled with c6:lal
tual becqrounds and ~terests. _
Unique a.aup
.
· . r.::,.-te and .., .-.ciate pro- a panel disCussion on "Raw U.S. pojjcy." At tbe
Adolf has gathered a unique " "--'-~-·of epdodontial at ibe Materilila for tbe Blast Fur- time,
tbea 7.6
of atudeo...____..re-law C8Jl" .........,. of llentistey, -be. IIIII&gt; n8ce."
·'
. ·
cent ol. tbe •tire -__.__,
•
.......,.
caals Dr. Edward Kucio of
·
tes,-aOcial workers, W!lr!Qnc East Aurora. a 1957 pad.
'Ibe C. ·c. Furnas M111110iial
tiOna indUIIzy ol. Cblla;.and
pollcemen, and interested liberCollferllllal8 were initiAled in as the COI]IOratlaa bas ~
al ariB -~ ot "whom • ~- ...., ~ are: vice • 1970 'to· brini; ~ leildil!l ed all ndeio of iatermtignflbrinp an·lndividual Naiity to president, Dr. , . _ Guttuso, liCIIdemidane, plant ............ - operatiaa,... it ill DDt eallllecl to
his won.. By carefully mall:b- . a lllfi811!11duate and-an ....ci- - ~ ·Pd .-~ .to . _,._li!ID fmm.e. Cbllaaa
inc llludeniB with defmdanla in ate prote.or of operatiw .d!o&gt;t- .....,, ....... al8lala pro- - ~ Lllllilr ..W.
'
tenna -..\lildlpaaDd and life islry aJ;Ml mdodGDtic.;' ·· caoo~n~-·
&lt; .' •
•
• · · •
- ~"lTI')
·
bawt'
style, be his been able to sl:reillo · urer, Dr: AJvin:.w..y.Jbmburr, · Becila' Olllmlted r.dllU.,· ~ thla
•
. tbe aoclmlt idea of '!commuo-- N.Y., a 1937 aaduate; and 1!10- ...n..-'reliatratlca ~ lio : helD eodonad and n 1•
lty" · wlileh .....,. .an 1m- re'-'Y, , Dr. 1'IIIIIUo HaDc!oi:k, !&gt;(...........- J.. I'Drtha- lnfonna. ed by tbe: U:S. ......,.....S.•
ponmt part.of tbe crlmiDal ,.._ o.Iifield. N .Y-. a l9fi8 P*l" · tioo caJi"be iititained ·fmm Dr. natal Le·rat-l.ar,
· "•
tlca -..,.tem. "Watry to matdl - ~ 8ZI!Uiyi 881-'471B.: ·
"that tbe N• Yarlt ,~II

J:

:!.,

pro:

=c:

. .- · .

~

. . ___.. . n·

=. =..i:t':!
ap""""

G

-.

ame·

razUJTW

"':!:n..;f;.:ntber~.u.d u.; =te~~~~

6.s.

1:

=

·.

···---· • •'o•• - - ~ · ··~ ------ · ~ ........ - . . . ....... -

~~ - ... - -

rrr-- - ..-t

::=-"-

.~llekbr,IDc.,NewYan
~~~ - -

Nobel Laureate~
To :Lecture Here

Dr. Gealp Weld, ~
of bioloo" at ~ 111111 11187·
Nobel taw.te in -~
·
and medii:IJw; 11M ~ .-.. " ·
J&gt;iatinniobecl ~ ~
IbiD ~ tbe ho;alty ol. Natlal

.... -

8d8ncae anc~-waa.
later in..thla acidoalc - .
_,__,
~ to Dr. MldiMi

Ram. ~ 01 ~
P.-..r Weld will be 'IIIIIIIM
tbe um-.AV. .. • roll • .
Maida. 80, 11178, ad wiD ....
-* foar ...._ em -

thali..,....... =IMII!l
..._lair..___. •

the _ . . . .

.Par

'

·

~

wllb:

......., Dr. Baa .._ ,. ··

wiD - - ~:11 p..a.

.

, '.

�()cjoiJer

6
Etlmi¢, .&amp;_K;f£Q1V&amp;V~~J;;~I\e.l
f'Aialperiailaa of 'Neo-Buddhiall &amp;1111 BID'M~ Soutb
Asian Musllme' &amp;1111 Nonh American "Waspe," the bioli&gt;ry of
J - in Sballlhai end ~
ot' tile Slnicization of an -WI'
wllllnc peOple ('nbetanal . _ !oPial drawinl inler!llt
at ibe CollfereDce • on Elbnlc
RelatioDa In Asian . Countriee '
bold on CIIIIIPI* ·FridaJ and
Saturday.
~
l!l&gt;anl!&gt;red by the 'Asian
StUaJ. Committee olthe
COuDcil on
te,J" na tiona I
8ludieB and -by the . Stale of
New York, as Part- ol its ConveraationB In the DiaclplineB
p l'OIII8iD, the Conferei!C81G111hi~to review~ - ~ In
etluiie poup teliotiODB 1n ~
of s~ a '"slobal tbeciry"
on the suJ;Iject..
~
WbiJe a doainc .panel at-tempted io brina "everything
toptber," ilidlvif!ual papers foa.-1 on (jopecific areas of
etlmic~ probi8IDa.
...,.. ....,_. .., ........, UMw: (WI)
~~-.- _.._,._ dhism as an Indigenous religion
8ipra Boee JO!mson of Stale aids In Buddhist identification
~lfncZ..tC:;rsi!t.·:= as Indians. The, political JIIU"·
~-~ ~•u
· In
ticipation by B,uddhists In In·
""" .....a compara- dian aociety through the Re·tive study of "two religiODB of publican Party is another way
p~~ and Black Is- of eq&gt;reaslng Inilian ~-"
Jam .,., important movements
'lbe Black Muslims, unlike
In "India and the United Stoles, the Buddhists, Johoaon noted,
Jolmsan aaid. Arising out of a have strongly emphasized their
sense of deprivation In a caste- &amp;eparalism from the dominant
oriented aociety, bOth are at-- culture and did· so prior to the
tempts to redefine the stru&lt;&gt; · lleDd toward partial and voltural position of a group of untsry separstiam now so impeople in a ·aociety, •he aaid.
portant in American Black cui"Each is (alao) an attempt ture. A de-anphasis of politito lay the blame for the prEOiellt csl participation in the larger
degradati-on of ' thee group on aociety has been congruent with
(another) people and a dom· this aeparatist ideology; be said.
inaht religiOtt 'UntoUcbaliles 'lbus. Elijah Muhammad's role
see their plight as due to the as a leader has been confined
tyraruiy of the Hindu ideology primarily to the Muslim group
and'·its Brahmin elite. Black and be has held no institutional
Mw
.' ru'!"telimman
' • ~ \:~J. 1,_,,~-tian
~the_ leadership position -in ,the..cbn·
....., ....., .._,~~
inant society. Tbe sei&gt;anJtist
ity"
bent of Black ISlam, JolmSon
' Each group, · Johnson aaid, indicated, is 'aymbolized in·tbis
sees the aociety In which it restricted leadership role of
ljves .as essenPa!Jy a dual .c aste M~d. .
!"""the
'ety~ _percepthtiollf reflchectedd "W-" and Muslims
m
ongm my. o es an •
in their ideologies.
·
Theodore P . Wright, J r.,
"Both movements hear testi· State University at Albany,
moey to the human . effort to identified both South Asian
rebel against'. societal depriva- Muslims and North American
lion. The strength of the Neo- " Wasps" as " declining former
1
~=!..mo:=~~ eli::"~~ f~:: ~ =· out,
indicatiQII adding to the mount-- Wright said, exhibits, in the ·
lug evidence that the Untouch- early stag,.. of its decline, a
abl'"' . .. like~ Blacks in the tendency to think of itseU and
United St&amp;tf!s have not ac- its interests as identicsl with
cepted the high caste interpre- those of tbe wbole country.
tstion of their inferiority as Thus, as Peter Schrsg has writ-just and have used a variety of ten; '"Ibe foundation of the
nieans to better their position 'Wf!SP' dominance in natioual
· In society. The secular, this- politics and cu1rure rested on
worldly ideology · of both re- the supposition that Waspdom
ligions _have prov_!ded the ide- was the true America-no subolOIIical baddng for the ststus culture qr special group."
mo&amp;nitv aspirations of eech
Further, Wright suggested,
,..oup."'
·
"the ielf-image of 'dominance
- As a major difference be- and superiority, even after subthe movements, Johnson ordinates have ceased tO believe
stn.aed their relatiO!IS to the Jt, l'8l)ders the declining former
dominant secular , societY in elite peculiarly . 1a c k i n g 1n
which they are imbedded Neo- adaptability. . : . The British
' Buddhism. he said. affiftns its and North American 'Wasp'
ilklitilicatio11 trr the modem ia ' notoriously incapable of
lllate ol India In a Variety of Jeiamin1 fori!ign languages and
ways. -n.e· c0acept_ of Bud- complacent 'a bout his own cui-

plimt in the Book ol Jonsb that
arew' UP and b l - for only
one iiay, the.centUry Of Jewish
settlement &amp;mona··tbe over 700
miUinn Chineae wiU liave been
?DIY lin ~phenomenon
m ~-D~ hjstory of the
J ew-. ·peop..,_ . (___

C~Uno iM TBp,t
The relationship b e t w e e n
China and Tibet has evoked
major controversy throughout
the centuries, Frank Paul Le
V~ness of.St. Jolin'!' Q'hiversity
S811i. ~ claims to SOY·
ereignty over Tibet · date from
the seventeenth centwy, but
Tibetans 1ltill proclaim their
right to independence. In 1950
!he People's Republic of ChiM
supported its position by invadinJ.and easily defeating its relatively weak neighbor.

Ia

•

,

__ ,,

26, 1972

,;.... the ........

;.~ .e. .,.

ifthnt

ture." lndiali MuSlims alao
lagged behind Hindus ln' lesmlng English In the nineteenth
centwy, he noted.
The results of these characteristics can be troublesome, he
said.
The American s i t u a t i 0 n,
Wright no te d, is currently
·marked by a shift, after a generation of intense attempts a tassimilation on the part of
non-" Wasps." " to one of resislance and conflict. This reversal, he finds, "most visible with
the Black militants, but most
audible with Jewish inteUectuals " Havm
· g been admitted
to the ''Wasp" establishment,
the Ia~ bave. " turned upoq it
and appeilr to be trying to pry
apart the brittle masonry of
American nationality." "If,
Wright said~ " the · integrstion
and assimilation processes can
be reversed not only for Blacks,
Chicanos a nd Amerindians,
bu t also among the white,
Catholic, 'new migrstion,' by
deny ing the physicsl reali ty of
the 'melting pot,' -t hen the 'old
migrstion' may ·' indeed find
themselves in a numericsl minority and destined for subordinate status."
The best that old rulers can
hope for, Wright said, is "a
pluralistic society, (which offers ) a later opportunity -to recover their old status." A more
psinful outcome, he warned,
could be mass emigration either
voluntarily or by expulsion or
population change. "This solulion (explosion) for Indian
MuslimS has already been put
forward by some of the more
militant Hindus of India," he
noted.
·
Finally,

Wright

Cbarg'"' and counter-d\arges
have ab(&gt;unded since the occupation as the Chineae endeavored to integrate Tibet into
" the Motherland," Le Veness ..
For approximately a centwy, noted.
.
r
Dr. David Kranzler of~
borough CoUege pointed out.
"'The picture emerging inShanghai was -t he boiDe· of the cludes lack of J&gt;C?liticsl free" refugees end wanderers Pill" dom, wbo'-le ;VJolation of huexoellence, the Jews."
min rights. and religiou s
The earliest Jewish settlers, tbougli not natioual, genocide:
from Blidldad, came .In tbe The People's Liberation -Anny
wake -of ihe first settlement In
_ti~!t,.rejU.;;;,j~
Shanghai, about the' middle of
the nineteenth centwy. "A ization
represent setsmaU but quite successfu[ group b&amp;cks in the Chinese plan of
total
domination.
The subjuindi!n_manVJ
.dualy ~ osuchf
commerceas
"--'
·"""" gation of the Tibetans has been
soon, Hardoon and Kadoorie, continuous· tluiiugh_ the early
became part of the fabric of years, the rebellion of 1959 and
Shanghai's economic, soc i a I its aftermath, and the Cultural
· and politicsl life."
Revolutiori."
The Baghdadi Jews were followed at the· tum of the -cen- . A}tboug!l .fl!e.re. qas ~ untwy by the vanguaid of a much deniable progress in many areas
larger grouP -.from Rusaia. of Tibetan life, be said, the
has. been extremely high.
. These Jews.·.- K~ noted, price
differed · lll8IItedly ·frOiD the Le Veileois c ·o in• i 'd e 'ril' these
earlier settlers bolb in cultural worda of the Legal Inquiry
background and in the degree Committee of the International
·of su""""" they achieved in the CommisSion of J .u rists, written
· economic ; and - soC;ial 'spheres, i!J. ,_!:96Q,-.s till ~!Wlicabl&lt;: :''
'the'TbelargRusse
numisnbeJrews,of-Whias.teweUR~
"The overall picture is one
~
sian emi~, never achieved of increased production, imthedadipJroewsmme
_.. nee_ of the BaSh· proved communications, t h e
building of houses, hospitals
power stations, the aboliThe last and largest tllOUP of and
Jewish settlers in Sbangbei tion of feudal incidents and a
drive -t owards material
were the 9&amp;rman refugees wbo general
progress. 'lbe basic question is
came in 1938-39; victims of for
whom and for what, and
Hitler's racial policies. Their
process of acculturation faced the eccount of living conditions
far more cillficult conditions in Tibet indicates that the material progress in Tibet is being
than either of the two earlier absorbed
by . the Chinese, even
groups because of Ja~ ocat -t he oost of the previous Jivcupation.
·
·
·
Ing
standards
of ord4&gt;arY TibAt first, Kranzler' aaid Jap.
anese policy was favorabie but etans: Moreover, the p rice
paid
for
·the
d~opment of
it shifted to ·one of gbett:,iza.
lion and restriction, a1tbougb Tibet .has lnduded genocide
qainst.
the
Buddhist·
religious
without walla, barbed ..n- in-·
d.is£rimi!'ate kilJ!ng o;d;po.. groUp, and alib ihe larg&lt;HOcsle
violation
of
the
most
basic
hu·tation. -Economic sanctions

the ,Uiwllc
The.- of

a..-....:e

discussed

!be solution of physicsl geno-

cide, the likelihood of which
"seems to depend on the size,
distribution, allies and capacity for retaliation of the target
grouP-': - ParadoxicaUy, · be
noted, this may he more likely
with a relatively large and visible minority than with .a tiny
one which cannot be conceived
of as a three~

at

......... CoefeNftca.

SM...,.

u:m:::::::J:and

were

~.

hoWever.

::,"lf~~ At:fln~~

After the war, witb the ad- provemeats as have been
vent of Communist C h i n a, claimed in the !!C0111J111ic. social
Shanghai .J ews were aUDIOO!d and cultural lift!'-of Tibet."
choices of Soviet citizenahip
(which only a amsll peroenlqe
App~y 160 scholars
elected) or of ilsyhnn in the and other lnler!llted individuals
Western Hemiapbere or Iamet atiended the ~ confer·
'Ibere were 10,000 Jews In enoe 'l!'llich was coordinated by
Shanghai after the war, Kranz- Dr "'81· 8 ..-.~ n . -.........~t
ler pointed out; witbln six ·
· '
• ...._, .....-~·
Years. bowe¥er, 9,700 had left of Soc:ioJosy.
for Israel with the cooperation
Other papers included:
of the Communist~ which ''L.derahii&gt; in China's Minorconsidered t h'e m 'ststeleas." ity Natiooah"ties Autonomous
Today, only about a -dozen or RePons - ·Continuity and
so old Jews .,., left.
Change,• . by Lucie Cbeng Hir·
:'Sadl,Y
o u g b,•· Kranzler ata, -UCLA:; '"lbod{OI'e&amp;ll Mi·
81Uf!, "1t was only .durinl the noril}h in Japan and their. DiP!'riod of the CommuniSt . ..... lemma- of Cultural Identity,"
gune that the first true com- by Yon« Mol&lt; 'Klm; c81ifornia
munal -cooperstiOJ1. ~ :ri s ted State :tfnivemity, Los Angel'"';
tl:"'\,~~ factiR
..~ -~
.and
-. "'lboo Attitlidea' of the Japan·
.
- -Sup....... COurt Toward the
German Jews Pitched ' in· to- Koreans bi· Japan." by D Ro
~~~ to maintaiJi. tlie ra~Jdl. &amp;ui&gt;;'Baker Univeillity;-''Devel·
dwindlinJ! but unified :;; · ~t V....wed from the Pal·
COIIIIIIIJ!IitY.
''
ace: ' POlitical Sj:limtists Look
'-n.e time may qot be far Qlf at SoutlieMI AslaiJ Ethbic Poli·
when aU tbit Will nimain to tiel," by Cyqthla H. Enloe.
the ~tenoe of tlwi' J-- Clark Uili-ai'\y; ''Panlis and
Wen~tba ty of~ u J-ln ~·by R .'A. Seber.
as
China:. Will be IDertioin,
Western Reserve
grsvestatM.. Like the KikaYciP• _Unl\WBity. ~

en

:;a"

t""

ea.

�Prison Art
Scheduled

·For Norton ·BerriDir any Jut i;iinute

~

roadblock&amp; on the

put ol Cbe Stata Department of

Conectiaa. an exhibit of art
fram behiJid ~ waJls is
alatad to open m Norton's Gal'

1519,

I

Mcmday night.
"ART • ATTICA •
AUB
, ," the show, organ- ·
imd by eel-f-Hslp, " professioaal .art tminiDa
for
inmatao, will nm
N&lt;&gt;.....,._ -22. It. is ePm-ed by
the UUAB Arts Cemmittae_
At Reporm pieaa time, full
ioformatioft· on wbo and what
will be iDduded in the show
was DOt available. But data on
the orpnizina apncy. and ita
,_,tual aims was in aood supply. - '
Cel-f~elp was -fOIIIldj!d by
By SHARON EDELMAN
Hal Heuser, a pbp)ograpber for
WKBW-TV· ~ Knapp, a
"We uaed to emphasize
tacbnil:al
far Sylvania-GTE. ol Bats • and R. bealth mattars which were ol
Patridt '1Awry1 a
alum- lit.tle intarest to 8tudenta, and
nus. artist ana """"" of the ...,.tected the more important
ooes," cbmments Dr. Paul F.
ACS Art Gallery in Kenmore.
'lbe title of ·the orpnization Hoffman, director of University
i8 a play on words derived from Health Services. "But over the
the word "cell" and the idea past few years, the Health ~
.that . prisaael:a beftefit f
m lice has more and more tried
aomeltiins w h i c h encouragi!a to tailor its services to the requests and needs of the stu- .
tbem to i;!elp ~-dent body."

C::

Health Serviee ow Emphasizes Student Nee&amp;

--

ill-tor

WB

ro

TraUIMIIc-

•

As Lawry explains, ''People
Tbe number of free bealth
placed in aclosed penal society clinics now available on cammust Jiw with the traumatic pus attests to -this neW - n shock of confinement, regimen- aiveneas. Tbe Health Service
tation and dehuman,i zation. provides free treatment and
Cel-f-Help oft'ers an · esciting counseling for some of the most
profeasional creative arts . pro- critical public bealth problems
grani and the hope of poilaible ·which· exist• among students;
employment alld extra income 'yet, at least one and possibly
more,of illl activities may soon
for the oft'ender:"

fC..'Ifi~lf?l'ff~,. 1 ~·-~U~•. ·}~ ·,~~~·.,,..~?~~ 1~·

lack of .atudent response.
VD Clinic
,
"Students are not r e a 11 y
aware of the fact that there is
an excellent VD clinic right on
campus," says Dr. Hoffman.
''It is oft'ered in ccmjunction
with the Erie' County Health
Department, provides identical
aervice, and, in eeveral caaes,
the s a m e peysicians. However " be stresses, 'ttbe service
will ' on~?. remain availiib!e as
long as it is needed; if the students continue to use only the
downtown facilities, those physicians who work on campus
will find they can be of better
use elsewbere."
. The VD clinic, under the direction of Dr. Norbert Rausch.
oft'ers test8, treatment, and
counseling; all records are confidential, and maintained by

.~

,poypty_,

H"ffl.J4

~-

Wj);rt~~js:·IiiJt~·aroa]iSeeks EriJ:l.to ~ ,
Upper ·class White Male Domination
To accelemte change in a
field "dominated by upper class
white me11," . a women's symposium on law careers, getting
into law school and the law
school experience will be beld
oo campus Satunlay.

'lbe event, entitled "Women
on the Move: Careers in Law,"
iii opoasored by tbe Association
of Women Law StUdents, the
University Career Guidance
and Placemeilt Center, the
Division of Undergraduate
Studiee.· ,the Faculty of Law
and Jarisprudl!ace and the un~ta Student Associa-

.;..An~t ol p_:.,.;n';./
women

atlomeys

,.:ru~

"What Y"'!, Can Do 'W•\h a
Law Depee in the symp•numopening pana1 'diacuaaioo at
9:30 a.m. in the Norton ~f.....,. Tbeatze. · As PatriCI8
Hollander, a law depee holder
who ia a 1ectwer in the School
of Manqement, moderates, fiftam _ , are ala~ :to 1'!1&gt;vidoi a n e c d o t a I information
about how it is to be: · judge.
Private &amp;Uomey, facnlty mam-

ber, ' -

parate CllllllM1,

a~,
wonman

car-

s cam, . _ and aaaiatant
to a New Yarlt Slate Bar 'examU.. 'lbe tme:up. indudea: ~Delone DeamaD. . judp, Ci~
Court; BuffalO; Gmce Marie
" - Maryazm s. ~
&amp;DC{ Amle Y. 8Nbro, privata atlfDiiiiiJs; BaiJ:I8a 8imB. director,
~

~

U/B,

,Bqaal -·~~
~ C. · f:IUnoa. ' th
Df

r-~::r;.t..~

a~; RolleD.~

=:.,a = n 1

ment, not the Univemity,
Dr. Rausch also directs a dermatology clinic which treats
students with chronic, acute,
or VD-related akin problema.
Both this and the VD clinic are
open Monday and Thlll'llday
aftemooDS from 1-5 p.m.
Olhor Clinics

.

Several clinics which have
been in operation over the past
few years are otill available
through the Health Service. .Dr.
Marie Kunz .of the Univenrlty
staff directs an allergy clinic,
open by appointment daily except Monday, which testa for
and treats various allergy problems and reactions. Due to the ·
heavy demand for this service,
the clinic is available only to
students from out of town who
might otherwise remain untreated.
An UniDunization clinic oilers
immunization· for any reuon,
to ·apy &amp;tudeot. _(!)pen by ap-

~~t.:u..,the~ ~'u:J' rt!Sl

~~DA!"~·~c,"'l"'~=:;

TueSday morn in g appointments, provides obstetric/gynecologic services such as pap
smears and other rou~ tests;
pregnancy counseling is also
available, although· it is recommended that the stu~ent retain
complete obstetrical services as
well.
Counsell"'l

_

PSYchiatric counseling is
available at all times; the
Health Service employs two
lull-time and three .part-time
psyp.iatrists, a full-time PSYchiatric social worker, and a
total ol 38 available counaelora.
A dental clinic, open every
morning on the second Door ol
Michael Hall, oft'ers routine diagnosis and X-rays, proph,ylaDs and hygienist ~
and the simple cleaning ;;!
acaling
of teeth. Tbere is a re-.
.. ferral service
for other dental
needs; the clinic dentists p.fom~ no routine fillings,· extracClaudine Schweber Koren, pre- tions or eurgery, exCept · In
Appeals
BUffalo; Marjorie Girth, law law advisor, Division of Under·
profesSor U/B· Jan Goodtrian, graduate Studies, will follow erne~v. although indiattorney ' tent:.. for Constitu- with a discussion on her area, rectly ~ted to--tbe H.lth
tiona! Rights, New York City; and four women law studenBarbara Handachu, attorney, Buft'y Burke, Yvonne IJewia,
· Attica Defense CommittBe; Tricia Semmelbaclr and Sara
Marpret J . Quinn. corporate Steinhod&lt; - will a1ao contzib.
. coun8el• EUoeim Ougbteraon, ute. Clerking para 1epl instiief-.·I&lt;J- York Workmen's tutes and the i.i.A. in court adCompensation Boanl and Jean ministration as altarnatiVIII to
lUpton ·Peteraon, assistant to law school will be proftled by
the N- York State Boanl of Marylou Clark, a U/B laW atudant; Mr. Burlr.e ' and Ms.
"'Law. EsaJniners.
·
'
•·
poup d.i8cuisions Koren, reapectiwly.
-"Focusinn on • a ear-" · will. . F'inal 'toPic of th8 day will•be
follow at 11 a.m. with the vis- "Once You're There," a elise~»- '
ililig panelists divided into in- sion of What law school is lib,
ieieiot-cluilter&amp; fcir more !JHlepth dift'erenceli emciq law achoo1a
iofoimation esch&amp;n.le about ahd-'dift'erent' types ol ~
their carMtS and the JJI'Ofli'8Cts Panelists will .be Ms.- BUrloe,
, in t t - lleJda.
·
•
-cJm;_Lfiwio.

··· -/

-smauer

Oillr -

.

· Afterlunch.anhour's~
•
, "Kdmioaioo .to ·Law
~will feature tbe Cllliy

::::

~ tt~JU;

~; . tbeUnl_..ty~tOIIce.

StaiDboOI&lt;o

IWmneDwtk-•
•.

D.,y ~ ....- will .;e·pio.

viilod far. c:hi1dniil ol U... at.
tendinl. ~~be
at the 111ilni1D1 ~­
tiool. aet lar' Narlfali'a Pilbncite

made

Ro..~t9~

.

Service are a lamily planning
clinic and the Univenrlty'o Environmental H e a I t h Service.

~ Ji:.,.,~ isofen~~

the Commuility Action
CorPs and as such io studentoperated. Althouch the clinic,
which first opened '-at opring,
has not yet initiated this year's
program, plans include .u-nination of contraceptive methods and advice, as well as various medications.
and

Envt......-IHulllt

Tbe Environmental Health
Service, which worb in cooperation with the tlniversitY
Health Service, is actualJy a
function of, and is reoponsible
to, 'the Oft'ice of the Vice Presidant . for .()pera tiona and Sy,..
terns. This orpnlzatinn attempts to relieve problema related to the .peraoaal and Uni- .
veraity. enviroamoiiit, and pro-

~~0:."':.,""'~..apdw.Jie1:.

llaiaooi with 'tbe County. Health
Department. Tbe Mrvice will,
tor example, . inveatipte potaitiaf' aafehl 'a nd hM!th bUardo
which ezJ;n in University houa-

!:'t£ 'ft~ :tsa.cm.~

tive-level recommenda tiona
concerning ·such problema -as
parking and the physical con'
ditions at the Allenllurst apartnienta.
Additional Health Service f&amp;..
cilities include a 28-bed inpatient department on the first
floor of Michael Hall, And a
24-hour outpatient
which, with the ~~J.o.
cated in the Michael Hall basement.Tbe Health Service is open
to all students, whether or not
they IIUbacribe to s t u d e ·n t
bealth 1n1urance. S e r v I c e a
avliilable at all timM include
relerTa1a Iii opecia1lata, abortion ~and · nDrral,
PftiiiiiiDCY
and Cllllllllelinl. and tbe
ol tbe lltafl
inteiillata. Plutber lnfonnatlaa
and appoinm-18 may be ....
talDed by 'lliaitilll tbe out-

.u..,........,,

=~deputmom~

or

ca1llJII

����v
OdtJb« 26, 1912

__
-----

__ ....,.

th8 tllsk force's report Uld . Clf:r'. IIIIMnlt1 ·ol Yo r k
- t l y .... recommendation~ has """" ia- CIIMalllor ·lllli!ft J. ....
their ~ • sued by the Foundatioll wblch
p,.,.. • detailed report early Cooolli.a
ol
the
York
m 1973 to be publisbed by the _ . , . . . . , . . _ t h e _
11111, .1~ P. KauffDian of Columbia University Pia..
.olapt_. . lhail........
Higbliahta of the report's
Rhode blaDd Colleae. a n d
. 1 - Jtup 01-. of~ Wil- recomnw;cled plan are: a fomod
liam ~ (lallap of New · ac;bedule''.ol repayment followto CUNY ""'""'"" to
ins ~ 'that· would in- -In P1iJ
........
" - '· to
to· 1M" "
IJIII'Iidpotlnl
"~ pNidlmt of the crease in aocord witj:o the ex- CI,INY
Seattle instltutian ainCe 1958, pected powtli of the p-aduate's
relli.-l e&amp;diw September income; a .......,tee by the col- ~ -:..:-...::-.:
1973. "1 haft to the lirm lese or university to aLaoob any
It
oonciuaioll
ill my iiirn mind loos from insufficient repay- .lionelcity for-- . ChM-that it ia time to make pro- ment by students "'-e in- -10-~ 'u;pdtheJIIe.
vision for frellb Jeaderabip and comes fail to . . - in accord 1'1111:1 to . . _ t CUNY'o the applicallaD of freob con- with the plan'a·assumptions.
- - pollcr for .-.,..sucepta to the problema wblch lie
.
A u.s. ~ Court In Pedenol funds for coUe,e..
reai.-1 efOI*M ....
and uniYMiities u.cr-1. by
fective
\.!r913aiaoci~ Calllp (T-). did not - tile more tb6l $253 million, or eiaht
to..!"'on-;=
per OI!Olt, ill the 1971 flacaJ year,
"the c:haD8Ina role of
the preliidiDt ill die -evolvinc Mlr was too ..,._ The g to 6 c1e- the NatiODal Science Founda~ uphold ., Rillnl IIJ tion repor1a. 'The totll for the
• aaortludll . . _ year, IIMlly $3.5 billion, was a
the ......... hllr code record leYel up to that time.
Olsen cited .ete·aao.ns of ,..,. The - . . . plano to
Some $2.4 billion, or 69 pi,.
beslth of a leiDpcllaJj charllc- 11111 for • - . . ., the .....
com of e11 tbe monies allocated.
ter" for bia dldaloa:
• • •
went to 100 institution&amp;. 1be
Collective Barninirur Data: Massachusetts Institute of
A ol 1M nur1J 8,0® 1be faculty of 80pr Williams Technolotor led in the amount
College in Rhode Jaland has received ( $69 million) • with the
voted to name an affiliate of Up!yersity of Minnesota second
the National Education Asso- ($72 million) , and ·t he Univecfound tliot .....,. 1.2 .... LfJIOIIIIIIcJJM In 1M ,.. ., ,1172,
ciation as its collective bargainof Michigan tbird ($60
tho notlonol ,........... founUIIon
ongthe
· qenAt. aJf1beilia. tevoteandwas8 !!Oor fnoor
on ) .
•
._a. The lludJ- ....... on
NE
,,
New York colleges and uniI IUIW)' ol 152 t.lt barpining qenl ... 'The Amer- versi1ies achieved the following
l t - l n J..IIIIryto .... for ican Association of University rankings and received t he a e
Profeaaon was named collective dollar amounts: Columbia Unilou-~barpining qent for the facul- versity (10th),$62million; Corem~- • . •
ty of New York City's Hofstra nell University (17th). $41 milA tllsk force appointed by UniversitY after 314 of the Uni- lion; New York University
the Ford Foundation .sugge&amp;IB versity's 498 faculty memben
(18th), $40 million; University
that coli..,... and universities signed cards authorizing the of Rochester (30th), $25 milconsidet adoppan 'of mddified '. aisociation to bar - . in ,their lion; YfJBhivaUniversity (31st),
''pay-as-you-eainM (PAY E) be;bal(, . . . F : " memhen $24 million; Univi!I'J!i~ at Butplans tied to the Federal GuaP at TWoculum Collep In Ten- falo ( 63rd); $1&amp; million; New
anteed Student Loan Propam nellill!8~,21)..16 M!liMt col- . Yorl&lt; Medical Coliele ( 68th),
as a means··uhmpandJnCtotll ~ tectiV.. ~ 'The AiDeri-. $14 million; CUNY Mt. Sinai
financial aid available IP .stu- can Pederalioc! o( Teechero bail _Sdlool of Meilidue (87th); $11
million.
..
_
dents. A 16-jlille' ~ of-., ~t 'tO. ~.t ~
'lb.- oaiJep Uld uniYMiity

~baWl

·-••odllltotM- .......

. i.ouDaed

~~!; w.th.l-

....

~~who·

"-c.

:!

~

--,.,....Junior

•-.

':,!!'r::,

FE'~~::::

...

__ ....

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

:llli

In-...

United FUnd Diive Totai Passes $~,000

The UniYel'llity's U n i ted
Fund Campeign reached $63,219 of its $110,000 goal this
week.
.
Divisions which hive made
or .....-led their goals include
the Faculty. of Engineering and
A lied . 8cienoes, the School
ofPManqement. the Division

of Continuing Education-Millard Fillmore Coll"ie, and the
University Libraries.
Othem are the Office of the
Vice President for Facilities
Pl8nning, the University at
Buffalo Foundation, Inc., and
the U / B Alumni Association,
and the Nuclear Science and

TechnolOJY Facility.

Campa1gn leaders urge all
faculty and staff to complete
their pledges as soon as possible. ~ctory dinner of the
Buffalo and Erie C o u n t y
United Fund Appeal is scheduled for November 14. The
totll g~ is $9,328,000.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEWYORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED f.UND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS
1 $ 10,400.00
3,900.00

BllAZILI.4.K FILM n:BTIVAL •:

Macu-

naima (Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, 1970), Fillmore Room.
Norton, 8 p.m. Free.
The fint Brazilian " pop" folk
·muaical--etyl.ir.ed, surreal, a bit-

~=:tC":!d

rn:=

of

WEDNESDAY-!

EXHIBITS
UUAB AaT UWBIT•: Paintinc• by

LAMCC IIG..loKAN, Gallery 219, Norton; tluouah Oct. 27. Exhibit
hours: MODdaya-Fridayo, 11 a.m.·
6 P-111': Bw&gt;daya, 2-6 p.lit..
UU.t.B JJtT UllllllT• : Art• Attiea•

=~ '\!,~~t. ,of :!u:'.:!
pnU;ocl, b;r. Cel-l~ a PIOI•·

. ~ -art ~ ~..~....::.

~~H.,..,.... 22.

· EdilhU

1'1

JJoJ:f:ToDci.I.Yo-Frillaya,

a.m.-6 p:m.; 8Uild&amp;Ya, 2-6 p.m.
There will be an o~ reception in honor of Pat ""l.aYel")',

founder of Cel-l-Help, on Mon-

day, Oct SO, at 8:80 p.m. in GeJ.
lory 219.
PBOTOGLU'BJC AaT

a.BIItl'. : By

aelf-ta111ht photocrapher _ . .

="'.=r of'E=~~B&amp;J:

ces. The exhibit. p._..tacl by tho
Office of Univenity Puhlicationa
Servicel, will appear- in the clia--

f:~CU:~": ~

Lobby,

�OdOber '26, 1!172

MONDAY-30
LK'Tta•: Wkrc Are
You From I, Henry lAo Smith,
Jr., U/8 Depa..-t of J..iDcuio.

LINGUIBI!CI

ti~~~ !!.::; -

before World War D , IIWo ·
atration ~ a detailed laillwf.
edp of d1alect d i l l - in
America; it _.-lllON..-uit
u tbe population becoz.- more
mobile.

WEEKLY ~MMUNIQUE

---

oction M iehtuoiomo, E.T. Kaiaer,
, profeuor, Dopartmellt of ~
try, Uniwnily of Cbica&amp;o. 244
Health Sciencee, 2 p.m.
BIOC_,.Y IIUIINA&amp;• :

THURsDAY-26

H""""'

-Enzyme EzprcaiDn cuul LinktJie
Relationahipo in Man.-Mouoe C.U
Hybri&lt;U, Dr. Tbomaa Sbowa, Roowell Park Memorial Inatitute, G·
22 Capen. • p.m.
Pow &amp;a AND '!'HI: &amp;NVDtONIUN'I'
81D111Wi•:. Global TluriPI!&gt;dynom·
ico, Dr. Fred Snell, U/8 Depoirt.
ment of Biopi!Yaical Scienoea, 104

P&amp;.it:
~~::Cin~ ~ri.. of
aeminat.a OofPower and the

Environment. spon.ored by the
Graduate- EngjneerinJ" S c i e n c e
Club.

iN'DIJH.a.qoN.u. oona aoua••:
Open to all foreign and American
tu de n t a, facully and atalt.
Scboellkopf Lounp, ~ p.m.

1

•

I

·.1'1
r

•

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>1972-10-26</text>
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                <text>en-US</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>'REPORTER,

... CanNot
Rekindle
The Flame

�2

~~~--------------------~~~~~

IV. An EDcutive Commit- uate student, IPIIduate student,
(b) ~t ~ 1llaft failure to follow all the pre;:.
(C~ fro~« 1, col. 4) tee compriaiDa aubcammi- ~· stall. ""Such a Judiciary ClllllialiDI ofiiCivaDced atudellta cedurea hu tabn place. Some
ill the COIDIDIIIIibr of IIUdiiJ ....__:,_ --~ ~ .......... __....._
- - - - ' · the IDler- m· the Fliculty of law aDd .lur- of the CIIIDIIIiu.'s ~t
~if- did DDt haft ..._~..... _.....• ......._. ~~&amp;DdStudmt ,_..__ ud at least ooe reo
•-Mtiabaire~
HOCUrity probfemo aDd attempt &lt;II~
let ,ludlciary (,micb COD oal,y ~~
.membe&lt; from that F..,_ :mtha~-&amp;-'~~
to aolw them. The curnatfrom ita """ apDda. illvited COD- haDdle ~ otudalt u)ty • adviaer. n- perean- . --'li
Clllll1lllittii t . boaol"dled
-·"--ta --~ - ·...._t --'-'- -Iainta). Cleuly, all ~ nei to receiwt oampl•i~JIB, en- 18 WI, .....,.~
no ._.., diviDe ioopiratioo than ;:'.:i., i:"~"";it llhould be .....,._ted cin the awe due pr...-, ~ Ill"!" pcaiblllty, .. ....,
·
haw ita ~ ill the
ted . report to judicial - - ' • aDd equity (DDt ..,taliolla, act • ad~ m that ita ~tatioaa '-Y not
last '100 years.· n ~ ita :i..,iobad.,.,;.C_'
esecutiw ~
~ repreoenta- . ~ ~- .......ts, "!!" have elid.ted all abadea olllpiD.....,..,rpenc~alions wtth full real- committee has received IDII!rim tioa: bia!?Jr ....-ta that mare .-..t in hMrinP any ~ ion in the Univallity Clllimruniizalion of ita failure to acbleve ............, -~-' ....-... &amp;rat draft .,._ will mvofve UDdeqndu-· to disputes wbo may ask .....,... ty with niiJPflCt to the apected
amniaclence ill diac:laoiDI .., '0.,....r
the-. flnal""-=:..:"'ot the .,_. ate studenta than any -other to do ao. Tbeir aervices abould role of the Security Poroe: n
edlemlily CIIIIIPiu iDterac:lion
,..,.....ri..; ~ poup) 111 rep,_,talioll abould be 18111unerated from a taa on recommends thoref-, that
......... ~Ie havilll diverae ent commi-. ·
.
,__ ihl! -•.
the'"-.---·. a• G"• MFC, SP~A,
CSEA. the Pralident develop a clear
varied ,...._,.-_ . . _ . . ' of
the whole
hai debated
reviewad aDd
the ""
· - on~--~:!:"
"""·
·,_
atatemeD\
of be
that
-·· that the
illrevised
report,
Commiaaion
..,........_ ..,,_,. ......
ill proportiona
~""
deYelopment
~by
IDol the~~
modified ita contents aDd rati- derB is , dedic:a'!"f. to-~ by IJI!IIOiialion.
•
audl
this
_,.,.!:''.__
fled it. Only 15 of 22 commit- .,._ill a-very limited iuriadio(c) Thelepl eta«, on reClelV- puts
•
....-t aDd by
,.._.._.,.~
tteDded the last lion, the committee baa not ing a complaint, aelecta by lot the ~ta of a IIUrVe)' conIt iol our ~~ that
~!, ~: at- diacwlfled Ibis body 111 detail, 80 ad hoc bearina poup from ducted by our Survey Reaearch
many of the clillcultiea we _ tendance was 11 aod 12 ...,. but I"'CCOllmenda that i! a . via- the panel of judpa, eliCBI!t that Institute, aDd that the inatru~.~-from· apective1y (not includint the ble Univallity judlclar)l is set at least one ~tift of ..-t &lt;:A the survey be con~...,.......-.,.. ""
cbairman
up Bnd demonstraflll ita ability each group be
Coallid- atructad by the illatilute in COD·
poupa wbidl ue DDt conaol.i.~~oo
to haDdle illtemal eecurity eratioa may be ~_, to increaa- aultatioa with rn.emben or this
aut· .m._-altheother - • • • •
,.
problema, consideration be ·
the
1 by addinlr ooe committe~~~inl~tion,
- · viewpoillta aDd activities A ~or tM U"f'-'ity commun- given to ..tina the Truateea to
from the elected Uni.....;l&gt; ~
lltudent
:r:::.r-~
i.~Tbe coimnunity must be- include the juriadlclion of the judaea rep.-nlinl ..:h of the ~
of the Sepoupa aDd 81 many ill- come aware of the range of Cornmiaaion ill t!&gt;M of tl:ie ju- '.groups from wbieh the diaput.- curity Fonle must be
,
__..__
_.__ aerVicea aDd aaaistaooe pro- diciary.
,
80t&amp; come. .
~•--' •
.,__. __,_
• . - - - . . - . . . . . . , vided b the Security Force 88
2. As a mMll8 of ..-ling
(d) The Hearing Panel bears 1.i:,.,d";.;;""
....:::::::;,~
beeh
ao,
~'-ieconci}ea
~tbemtic.
• a coun
.. ~ to the ofteo ~rMSed. &lt;:WTent criticiarna or the Stu- the case with the ,wdaoce or
bu • •",.~
aDd __.,_._.
the ,..-;;.., .... 88 to ---'-·-· &amp;troniiY of~
Y every
.......,_,._
ba-'- on a
·- hostility or !""'.tempt. . o Ibis dent .1··~•-'-·
~3
"'~Ju
·
"ty
~"- , . ......., ...... - 10
• .~
pwpoae, nicormneDd
.
tha
_ t criticiarna of the University u- lnsui-aoce ·of due pr...-, etc., _.,.,.,.
ru..- com.... ,..__. - .,.....,..
· - the
media;
diciary atructured on ·tha aame . renders 1ta decision aod munity the committee has con·
...n-ts
from _ , . quarter.
aunpuo news1hos R. lllllD&amp;- modef, .tbe commi- I"'CCDD- .., penalties of the
already aulted, including members 80d
8
We belleve ~ tbe Uni- ly, J&gt;&lt;C'!!'5...!
---~- that .CODBideration be a·-"-'-'•- the m --~ Stu- ollicers of the Security Force
• ~porNter,
vallity GOIIIIIliiDitv Is aa dis- WBro, WU\1\, EPIS ew.- ....,......
• .......,.., ...,.
-~,. It . '---'"-1 tha
tinct, and 88 irlwlved lb ita ~tie, ~ Aid C!Wc_ New.- given to a ilillerent model for dent JJidiciary. As with 8ll)' '"""'"·
18 ............., e
t the
1oce1e -. _, Wuu.-v;Jie ~tte. "!"""""' -~u ~ the University .ludiciary. The other bearing body, Ibis ooe Security Force is expected to
with Erie County aDd Bdalo, . &lt;&gt;! Security operatiolll by ~- oomrnittee belieYea that, with may delen!line the appropriate- perform tasks 88 demanding or
Bulfalo with the Niepla Fnm- live comment 88 well aa cnti- CODCUll"eDOB of all parties to , _ of ita juriadlclion m 80Y ~ ~~~•"".,.-.
tier· aDd New York Stale, etc. ciam, We ~~· ho!'8ver, the 80y non - academic !!iaJ&gt;ute case, lind if It 8naa itself with- . - . ,......
Tbla IIJIIII8t&amp; lluot illtra-Uni- "'J"C!a! 80l181tiVI_ty or the com- among members of the Uruye.- out jurisdiCtion "!''f I"'CCDD- to perform tasks even more
versity problana.,.. beat aolved muruty to ~1ty rna~ aod sity community, all illteinal inend to the CXIIfllllaiDaot ap- ~ in areas of interiDt.emally, aDd that extra-Uni- stronpy enJOm the media to means or resolution of the dis- peal to mrtema1 J;&gt;roceedinp.
personal · mteraction, aod all
--''y 111 ~-..-- will ,_ e"""""" more than Ull1llli care. pule be exhausted before ex(e)
Appropnaie Appeals with a minimum or technical
;;;'~ 111 ";-~~than-U,;r: to ensure ~te and bal- temai means Ill:&lt;' mtroduced. It courbo aDd procedures abould trainillr aod IitUe or nothing
•
anced repo..n-e m these. cases.
is. urulers. tood . that, eapeciill_Y be ..__,......., to replace .lbooe bevond it. The committee notes
-::pnty·.~ ..,u'!!.,~ For ~I;:"'a senes of m: 1n ca.., m-:olvmg ~ VI&lt;&gt;- avaiW.i'eTcummt prac:tice.
wl'th dismay that the miniscule
.!&gt;on aod~ the obliption formation stories and inter- lenoe or aotioll8 which~
(f) The President or bia state 888istaoce previously pro'--de&lt; views could be prepared. The " ~ of the · UruYerlllty rep-tative must, by law aDd vided in training COWIIeS at &amp;
the
ibili
-of re8pO'I'P ty to
; report· "of Security actrvities ..........rpty, :~ ·will- ~ oe&gt; ·:custom, .,._ate 88 a final ap- bany has been elirni.rl8ted from
oammunlty. But the statutes
·
~iolll ~ the..oomplainaot peals court ror illtemal .,._, the cunent ~·s.budget!
-~ D?t -(o(o The community must become will no~ wish, or 1t would not but must render written opin- The cornrmttee recommends
theee. nepecta. ~ State
aware of the range of oer· be poo!Sible, to go through the ioo if he rnodi&amp;ea reoommenda- that appropriate technical trainc:atiaa Law DIIIDo the SUNY
vices and uaiotallce provided 1Jru~ersity judic;iary• • ~ !"'- tioaa; of lower courts; &lt;IBd ~ lag be given every new mernBuftelo CouDcil
1m '
b the Soc ·.., F 0 "
ClejltiOlll !!"'. noted m -ro- vide a prior .-~~laity for ber ot •the' sec\urity· Force -prior
"slwlaat ~"':"'(a';.'d the '
y
• un.,
~ •
pnate plAces ~low. The P"'!"" · ariumenta to be beard in such to his taking actl.,.e ·duty and
CouDc:il deleptes O(ler&amp;tional (the • "blotter"), now made ent lnter-Ilesidence Councils a case
that the training of all current
,_;bruty to the President available to the media but un- and Stud"!'t .ludicjarY '!PI!""'" C. F.o~ tM Seeurity li'orot!
members of the Force be
aDd bia deaigneea), but fai1a to used, should be prominently to be working well m a lirnlted
1. 'lbe role, mission and ...,. brought up to standard. The
8ll8Cifs1 ,the lirnlta or ita jUris- • published to show both . the way, but. do not have the concommittee apecta that unless
dletioO. The State Education magnitude or our oontiouing fidence or all undergraduate ' ' The role, mission "and re- Albany's ineaponsible default
law makes "---·· Security security problem 80d the ef- students, nor or the graduate
oponsibilities or the Security can be rectified the training
Force
ollicers, forts or the Security Force ill students, nor or all faculty 80d
Foree muot be more clearly
will be ftltablisbed
but fails to deliMate the scope providing aaaiatance.
staft.
defined."
r~th utilization, where
· of their """""'"''bilities. n is
e rurtber recommend that
The committee is not comappropriate, or established law
_tial that thoBe wtmta be
us organizations such 88 mitted to 80Y particular rorm sporiSibilitiftl · ol till!
enforcement acadernlea, courses
supplied, aDd we believe that the A, GSA, BSU, Puerto or ' University Judiciary;' but Force must be more clearly de- ill Police Science at SUC Bufwe cannot wait for a body of Ri
Students, OfliOO'oor Mi- wishes to note the respolllibili- fined than at ~t, 80d that falo, etc., but with apecial comCOIIIIIIOD law to develop: we
nori
Student" Allairs, Inter- . ty or the University Council, definition understood by the ponenta peculiar to the needs
do not have the two thouSand
i:lence Council, Legal Aid Administration; Students, Staft whole University community. or caoipua security added where
years of the Roman civilization
·c, MFC students, CSEA, and Faculty in developing a 'lbe committee will assume, on neoeaaary. Iii~. socio.. tha thoua8Dd yeais of Brit. SPA turn their attention to viable 80d f!l8P&lt;In&amp;ible judicial the basis of commenta by its logkil educalioll is necessary,
ain'a.
.understanding the problems of system ill which the University members and their OODStiu-ta, and the I8IIOUlOl8 of aunpus
The camrriittee has remarked, the Security operation 88 80 community can perticlpate aod i n sofa r 88 they have been peraonnel ahould be tapped for
M have other Ol&amp;r'vers or Other
O~illg activity rather than put ita trust 'nlere "is DO irn~ heard:
• . Ibis 1!UfP081!
oammunltiea, the schizoid atti· W&amp;Jting until an incident .pro- plied illtention that audl a
· (a) That the Security F&lt;lnlil
1be cao:rirnittee recoRnizes
tude ol the Univallity corpus: duces ari opportunity for criti- JUdiciary replace or supplant is expected to protect the that audl training is e&gt;qi8Diive
- wish to be prot.ected troui cism. 'Ibis could be aooom- gri..Vanoe mechanisms or SPA property aDd peraona of the but it does not believe it ;.;
inluonoea - fiDd threatening plisbed by joining the Force on or CSEA or or acaderllic griev- members or the University rational to expect the Security
do not niiJPflCt the rorce 1ta patrols, by inviting Security anoe procedures ~veloped un- community within tha confines Force to PBrfonD a complex
...._ ___ .L uld be
. hie d or the campus.
variety a( . clillcult rniaalons
........,..mie. lor proleclinl us. peraormel (aDd not ouly the
We wiob to aeWe our dilfer- ollicers) to participate in ' ' •ncno "" 0
a VIa
an
(b) That the Security Force without the ~ to _.rut
wilbili the · family, but panels or illrormation meetings,
~naible judicial aylltem is apected to protect the riflbta it to function oamlilrtably. In
cleepile the ln8lilutfoaa we have aDd by sending delegalions to
in which the Univ'enity com-. 'of all from illterfereboe aDd dis- fact, the cammfttee reoom·
~-up ~~H~ ~ visit lind observe operatiolll in
munity call ,ruticipate and · ruption ill their IBwful punuita mends that If a complete pro- . •..., _......., ,._.,. the Winapaar Madquar!ers. ~
put ita tnut.
and the rigbta of ~ ill- gram of ap(II'Opriate training
lore, u Rlpa toward irn·
2. The cornrnuruty must redividualil or groups to illatitute cannot be aff~ tben the
-m&amp; our lntemal aecurity sponsibly- aaaist ill maintaining der · direction or the FacultY peaceful ·modes of diMmlt.
role aDd l'l!llpolijlbilties of the
both
lnmue of dMerved aecurity:
·
Senate, GSA, SA, MFC nor
(c) That the Security Force Security Force be redefined to
, . . . - lor 1lae -n&amp;y f..ce
a) By reporting IJlOUPI or . that ita existence restricts the is ""P'Cted to protect members be ~te with the
81111 iDaeMed ~ on unkaown people rnovmg about rilbt of 80y complainant to go of the community from threat- training that ia pcaible.
a .-.clive Uni--'ty jadlei- tlie aunpus without dear p(lr- din!cUy to edema! ~- ening IDcursioos or individuals
3.
CXIIIIIai- I"'CCDD·
&amp;IY· -The ,...- '-Y haw to ·
·
"iilp. 'n.e commi- IIOpftl that or" ·groups from outside that mends lbet a planed lllftlft&amp;lll
be Mllllld at _,. .,_
b) By endorsing ror acfrnis. if formed, the 1udid8rY will commuruty wbo may come on ~t ~~~~
80
CIDIIIIIor and the elfecti- aion to a dormitory only per- eventually Jl8in ibe ClClllftdeoce campus.
tllilaclerDent be hiSiitutecf.
'-Y haft to be ~ted sona known pemonally to the of the Omveraity community
(d) That the Security Force
(a) Equlpma~t to allow
aDd be .-1 by pref"""""' by is expected to """'"Cise restraint clear chaoneJ communication
with ~ - . But the resident.
Cllllllllittee * -'not believB that
c) By reducing -t emptation it. To oonaider the possibility in ita ~ with members or be Plll'chaaed
·
• theto the~!~· 8JIP!IIll to -theft: lock rooms, · -..re . of fonnl_ng a Uni-.ity-wide · the University community .,..
(b J .AwroPriate wbicles be
/~ ~ valuablea, chain aDd . register .lud\CiarY, the committee ;,.,. pecially with~"' uri.use obtained to aupp~ ... re.... Uakweity- • delired by ~ etc.
ommends that a llludy panel or force. In ..,.,... of ita opecial place the vahldea in uae:
88
ia ..,... . . .
a
Y ~ ~ !"8'
~frOm. faculty,
aDd _..nvea, . too 1arp 1m our internal path....,. ef ap.,-.
~-,:. =~
appo{n;:dthby~ let
=~.:'if.: aome
The C11111111ittee ' - met • a
e) By ~
· •
~m·. . . . . _ --~ PreaideDt in the Fall or 1972, ·ita actions, never uae ita pre. '
The comiaittee notes that
•
~~~- DUDibera on
....... ....
8'Jd report to him ill due~ ~lives to inflict summary there is a request to add equip10 ...............- .
items, aDd wtth ~ r.. ~~ .·punialunent, or even appear to ment to record incominc calls
.-dial. a- nlJ!Dbera with by t6e U!!i~ oommumty. do ao.
ror certain .-.de of com·
L ~ ~t aDd the Security J.!'olce:-.
..
As a lllariiDI-poblt for dl8cu&amp;oo~: , The committee plaints. .It llfllllll caution 111 Ibis
Ighwwtjcin Jbr:beap
B. For 1M UIIUJt!nUy .lllllU:JDry llilln. the """-nlttee IIICDID-- notes wtth approval · the iaau- elfort u this 1e illatituted care
n. ~ 8ladY of 1. The )ll'llllllt 8ludeDt lu- IDiillldl COIMiideretllll of .the fol- anoe of 80 ()peratiom Manual muat be tabn to ~ the

:::::...-bu
.rt:

s•--

=

!:i

:=,

·

:k me:::

=..,-;!

:..::!.,.

::.:tt:

tborou¥t

t::i

..,.... "'"

...---.

,

F,

\

=-=

.u.....
Ei:
--"'Ie i-

J)8liiCillilel---p;;;.,.

Securii:Y

, but -

a

n.e _

. . . . . .;:;..·7..

!;:,.

.::.ity

rerrlnc

==but

r;[LPioaedales

aa

=

S:t ll8lli8tance. J.!

:r!"·s!:rl"'
=:I'a!'fn:n;t,;::

a.

at other
~idery~
~'!!; -~=of judpo to be ~~tr. Foroeillwbidl caiier theta -.tint Ia ~g
~ ~ l'loceclm.
lillY IIDIHlaldemic elected from the ~ llict with, thoBe ;:..::
oon- made. Othenriae the Security
... TlddD&amp; il(tbe SUNY/ dilputa UIOIII ......_..al the _. otudeDt ba!lY; ......... etudont :U notes with
thad»rpe. Force aDd Uni_..jty rna~
. aur.Jo 8ecaillr ,._
Um-.~ty poupe: UDdeqn!d- body, faculty aDd etd.
haft been U.S::: 111
::r.:.~ cherpe Wider

.:J:':

�)
~

•to ••

~

19,1912

4. The

~

committee _ . .

IIII!Dda that the tralllc aDd pail&lt;-

inl fuoctions of ' the Si!curity

Porce be tnmafened to the Offlee of Enviroumental Health
aDd Safety; Toptber with the
transfer of fuDctioi'l; the committee recommend• tz8Difer of
~ from~ to

~be:

-3

complained$'

............t But this ..is
the JMII'IIC* of ldininl: ·to aJ.
low accurate ftiOipllmM wi1hout
lenBthY CDIIIemplatlon. In addition,Hthe_.alCOIIIIDUIIity
UDderst8Dda the policy aDd the
~ to' IUpporl It, throulh
~ aDd coaffii'OIICOB
recnmmended elaewbere, u-

'the Uniwnity COIIIIDUIIity, aDd
II be is
"'t
lion ta_) is DOt a
anil
Force
are
enjoinedto.-istthecomplainant in effectilating (b) ifl&gt;e 80
desires. If the romp!aibant Ia
not a UniYerllity member, all
optloaa a~ly, al~the

Security

u-

lkYa Hall m

their
atjooperdy in situationa where othera are lllling
lbearms. Three pertlaJ ..-.lutiona to llllCb_ emsne problema

u.-

oocurtothecommittee:
U~OIIoploplion (t).
(a) The obvious aoe of call.Tbe allllllllttee
c.1a~D~y
ing_ in and deferring to ~lro- not of aoe mind 011 thi111111tler.
politan poli&lt;e.
One of ua felt that lll'llliDI II&amp;(b) The ann1ng of the olll- · lected memben of the force

II

~ l:'!i:.!:n: ~';" ~~ty ;:.~ ~ ~ro:~~~~g~ 3:: ~~

80ilDel
. per.
(a) '""- currently on the force Will· lie perceived 88 IIJh diciary 8UCII"81B thetopi!On (a) level mentioned above baa beeil
foroeUIIIIble .to-proftcieDcy propriat.e (if it Is) by the ma- will not be a-.. To impl• un""-ne) who will raopond
at fbe lepl pade for jority 9{ ot.erver&amp;.
ment this recommeodation, aDd to ;:1~ calls.
Ga!IIPU' Securl~ ollcara.
'
6. Security force (&gt;I!I*KIIIBI for the prolection of the &amp;(c) ,Tbe ._ of !rained dogs
(b) ~ c:Ummtly Oil the sbould· be IIUided. 88 - hope curity Force itaelf, the com- against Bnned persons.
r.... who, l!Y of "F.o other mem6era of the Unl-- mittee further recomiiii!Dda that
The community must be
lad!: of tnlinblc. et.:., may wilh sity COIIIIDUIIity will be, by the a ami be deveiOJ!ed to be of- aware of the situation that
til ll'anller (without 118 of principle of aeetint intemal ~-• by ·any~~- per- armed persoua dD COIIl8 to the
~ m ~) to . _ de- remedies as the lint .,.,.._ of .........,. 81
The campus and that in a few in1118J111in1 ....n. Tbe rommitfee lldion. When
re- ami is to carry the followinc stanoea peraonil identified 88
further ••
e""' that re- quile tbe Security OGicei- to be informa,.
~~l', ,_.._, .... ""'- ,.._ students have been ollserved to
0 .....,
p~ for the ~ ' the romplainant, be obould
_..,.. """' .....
"---- ....__ .,.....lam •
FCIICII be hind from the
- ' think first of the UriiWnity complainant;" a deocriptlon of ~ b,rtih.; ,:.;i;&amp;;.,-is J:_cant pooiDDWII¥IIIIable (
judiciary. But there' may be tbe opliooa lmlilable aDd a acure. ()pinioua, even among
er .., a -.~or..,.. ~· br inatanoea when this is inappro- 8lliDJJialY. of ~ to ~be taken experts, diller on tbe effectiveotbenrille ~ be a .matter priate: -mu&amp; crimea such 88 for ..:h opt;ion.
neaa of security forces carrying
for careful cl!&gt;tennlnation);-Uiith theft of major UniYerllity
On Silk '2, labelled "For the hand wea~n• American eneft- llflllfk k1 rft;ruil equipment, arson, public prop. defendant,~ (a) 8lliDJJI8lY of forcement ~ belie\oe them
' mblorily ~- ·
erty damaae. or -~ of 81- _ tbe "Miranda Wlll'llinp" and, to be deterrents · - but our
:R.............,tlcww .,....,.,.;,g gravated asaault where tbe 81- (b) ' infonnatlon 'conoemin&amp; violent crime rate is hil(her than
detalla of Security Force opera- grieyed -person is · unable to caml&gt;ua ~ and ~ .in Metropolitan Britain wbere
tlcww aJeo .-.It lram the com- brine a formal complaint and it ~ _ (e.,., Student A1faira the PC djle8 not carry firearms.
mittee'a dellbelations. While · is ju(lged -t hat tbe welfare of 011ice, LepiiUll Clinic) which We cannot argue a- aerioua
aome or moat of tbeae ~- be the community' may l1lqllire could aasiat .lbe delandanl
questions here, but wisb to .
implied by the' RecWa-. pn-=utlon in city ODUrta. The
8. Since 76 per &lt;Slt of re- point out advantages and dis~
- orma.
-..ta.._~~. ll!lll'lftlDD._ committee bellev-. for the sake ported crime oli campus Ia com- advan•·~ea of the suggested re...,,
..,
of guidance of the Force and
'tted by peraona
'th
""'
portanl
the furtherance of good reia'ty ~ bett; sponsea.
6. Tbe rommittee believes tiona be-n the l&lt;'oroe and ...::.,.ennof deny.ins the campus · ~g metropolitan -~~~
that the PtiDciJ&gt;Ie of ~ the community that the llat of to such undesizables are need- w . . firearma are ~-,...._ inuat De fostered . and crimea demanding this action · ed. Short of closins the campus, el~tes .t he ~ of
become aecood natwe to the be -formulated aDd publicized. which apP!"f'! to
. be impractl- ~n::tr'~~~e:
-se&lt;:urity Force. Aoconling to Tbe llat above is .intended to cal, the comnn~ aeea. DO easy Security Foroe aDd ielievea
provide ezamplea only. A fur- way to accomplish this. Beef the' teirible
ther charge to the recommend- ommeodatlon "1\.2. (b} was in- our f~. 0
.
rei i The principle of measi.red ed
atud,y peneJ for a University
tended to speak to&gt;~-of this spoua~. that ~fin&gt;.
fe&gt;porue m111t •• • become : Jsbould'ndieiaeybe, isDOimplledthat.bere,m' tbe
·lt ' prOblem,' but IJnly'a smaJI'Parl
~\:'~,_~
-..nd natUre to the Secur·
ted
As further possibilities the delayed · thiS
aDd the
ity Force."
opinion of a~.... on tbe com- committee recommends:
m
. caae.
f
mittee, the~Pie division ·of
(a ) , 'lblit Security Force one clear ~ where ew
' •·•
• - .o
•• '
· • - •
• _ _.!b!litieo by ca'-"'"
~' be· ~ to a '
tho! uae 91
' .1hi11 prJnClj&gt;le, the-8ecw_ity ·~ . of crime ,(mi..._,..,., felony, mote centn! lobation 011 ~ name~~,: ~.
fJe! aJIPI'O.OIIlhea .each .81tuation _ etc.) .is not appropriate: the .. Main Slzl!et. iliuliPus aa ~ 88 ..... v end trqicaJijr .befOre li84&gt;
w1th a ..;Jiiepued of ac!ual natwe of the ~ apeoe can be fDa!iil.
--.
·
methods of ~ it. aDd sian Jibelleved to be miire im(b) 'Ibat · more atensive ""::,;:ing aelected' omcen, &lt;~
uses· the least forceful method -portant in delermiuinr the ie. foot .petrols be -.mtl!d-.in Nor.
.
..,_ ~
18
·cifcumstances penriil In order
It is believed that if ton Union aDd the dormitoiies. ' tion [b]
.the ~solu ......... - of increaaed force, one may llat: ~iuversity judiciary acta
(c) 'Ibat the program for geated by the 'l&gt;irectlir of Se(1) dioc:laion - with ooe, I1!Spollsibly, the goal of main- student 8eCIJ!ity eidea be conb!&gt;th, or all parties ~t;
taining a suitable academic ell- tinued and improved, aDd that i i Arming oelect..l ofticen ;.
· (.2) cajolery-with .the person mate can be attained, with few the possibility of ,including fethi'oolution suggested .by tlie
or peraona who appear to be aw~tioua, by internal means. in8le ai~ be cobsidered.
f Sec · "
airr-&gt;n;
'
ifTtrdoes not, tbeo any system • The committee believes that
Director 0
unty.
• (3) wanting-of possible con- dependent'on treating .tbe Uni- the ~ "!sil&gt;ili~y -sUch
to tbe agsr-&gt;r of versity community by analogy patrols will pl'OVlde will serve curity.
is responsible !lOt
continued in'lranaigence;
With a villege breaks down, and the dual purpose of warning off only for the security of the
(4) restraint by interposition we may 88 well dispeuae with
potential thieves, assaultera, campus but ·also for tbe safety
-iti.Out djrectly apprehend- a - university Security Foroe rapists and of providing ex- o1 his own men. The number
ing ·any parties. simply stand and invite the metropolitan po- tensive opportuhity for ~ of campus incidents involving
between conteodeft; lice io deal' with our problems. contacts between the Sec•mtr guns haS convinced him of tbe
. (6) iaauance of appear8JICB While our judiciary Will not Force and members .of the Um- necessity of having a select
.. summons retuntable to. the uni- have the statua.of town courts, versity community as a means group on· whom be -&lt;laD call in
versity judiciary -on demand · it can have equal P"!'er inter- of increasing mutual good re- such emergencies. 'There aie
· of complainant or ·i n.response to ' ilallf if we join in inakinr it so. lations.
•
members-of the foroe who have
persistent harassment by 'de- In time if all segments of the
9. The committee noted that been FBI or State Police olll' fendant;
Unlyeraity community are in- police- type uuiforms for Se- cera; i.e., persoua whom aoci•
( 6 ) issuance of ~ce eluded in the jurisdiction of the curity Force personpel suggest ety bas entrusted with guns
summons returnable to city judiciary even ' parking viola- a role and conn6i:tion with before. Tbe1jlleStion is whether
court (when authority to do so tioua em{ be intemally treated. metropolitan police wliich is the danrent. to the community
is elitablisbed) - reluctantly,
7 While the coinmitj;ee be- Inappropriate to the mission- of from. 'the Jiosaib1e misuM of
aDd only after appeal against . liey;., that· the opPortunity for the intemal !o~ .aDd ':"CCm- guns by selected Security Foroe,
the ..,W., in """"'nae to """!· iiitern81 r8dreea sboWd be mends that distinctive uni{orlll;" oftioeis are gieatei' theu tbe
.-plainant .-nand aDd only if 6 ~ in all· situatioua, it in other b~ and cut ~ silll6t!- dangers from persons-' who, by
the ollicer beiW.V. the trans·
tuted 88 soon as po88lb!e. lt JS simply ~ J.UII'! on campeasion to-be' * ' violation of
pi~ to note that thi!' 'is al- pus, are already lll1liU8inr
the 1181111 code;
·
i i Complainant and defendant ready m-procreae. and will aoon
Tbe third altematlve ia .a
(1) lllNI&amp; if al'-1 demust be 8ppri-' of !heir be completed.
ll01IIible rompromiae. Tbe ~.a
- faldaDt will DOt ~ from a
rif!hta and opportonitieo."
, 10. Tbe' . committee """!m- 'by o111cen of trained dop ~
perilonal a~"': attildal the
rriends that u:,~~g . well ~- 1Um 88 Well ~ his

circu""""'"'"

.,_,w

U'

ro:...

tue:

::'.,d :-"""'

-noes

.He

"*"·

-.

::in ':.t":'.,:cre~;;

~~

r!.~Security Farce.

wiah to imply that

==

re- . !JDpedimmiB sbould be~
,._t ~ t!- olllcer for pur- · ~ :!.Jth ol ~01111
J!CBM&lt;il~outan-· otberwiad,
oaly relief
reoponee to a reitacmable

vm!::i
=~...::-~ ~be&amp;'':!,J:;u-:-:.:1
Ct""bia

~-

lialed In 7 ......

~

.

c-:;:.=f-.,",:;r:

= t ' C : r x : " : ' : : t o t ' aDd

Opporlunltiei.

r

ted, ·-

The Committee does not belleve-that this~ evea be
a~ until the le....t of

·mi-

:=to:'
.r.,r:;...~~
advaiitaP that milia « error
will not lead liD an1mltrievable
tragedy.~ \Yell-trained «!oo! re-

::n..= =t to~tlial":"'"m:t

thla

Securi~ =~-~

""rm£

...u.t..., •

' ..

wiabed to -"" the Force un- ·
umed aDd - N1111bw 1'- to
I1!BPDDd If they dlil - wlab· to
when armed ~ _ ,
reported. Several of ,.. did not
accept the amclualon of the
DUector of Security (while ..,.
cepting hlo report of arma.., .
campus) that. the c:arrylnj of
~....~ .~
~ would
•.,.._.,. ....
oa be poaed,
but would, at beat, provide 01111fldence to lhoee. caqyinJ them
and, at worst, llllll}!IY .f!.ve tbe
foroe a of identl&amp;ation
'th ther umed University
WI
·~ I
aDd - - ....,,_

:U..u::."
9ome";,-;:;!;;
lieved that the beat protaction

against IIIJil
•
intruden
or Universi~ io the
metropolitan_police. Others fear
the commumty to the
police wt.&gt;, as lilluaJly bappm call oo-..dio briDp
not only the oeiecWd patzol car
but umed ~ alllll _ .
. iaJ unit police s - of
, .,. ....., ~by tha· rationallty a( the ,_ Ql. .._ for
~ llatad above. OtMn
aDd fait ~ . . . . , .

··- a

....u.

-w~&gt;o, man ni*.lod lwicJDp
than ,...... Some litare4..,...
treQUent, II - . ~ ..,.
ciderita ..auld ...,.,a with ' !SOP
than~
Ud·that the appear~ of
U:t cn-*1 ..,.
tlOns of
ortoD Union m a

dorn;ritory ~ , _ mare
~ . _ . , _ ttian the Pf!81'8IIOe of' a Sei:urity olllcer

w1th a IIIJil.
•
Tbe adberenta to the II18,JOI'Jty opinion (8 of 12 ~t)
arrived at it reluctantly: they
accepted all the arguments
against their opinion but
weighed them dlfterently. Tbe
ezecullve committee of aoe student ·aaaociatlon au~ Ita
representative to aupporl tbe
majority. The repreaentatlof (our olhu student aaaociationa were "'-tl Two romrnitle!l mernbera ~t were
against the motion, aDd two
rMerved opinion.
HaviDJ ados&gt;tad. In principle,
the _ . , ol oelecleil .......
aa a aolutlon to the pnJblom
of llletraJly umed ~ em
campuii, the OlllllllliUee wiilbeo
to bedae thia ~.a of ....,. by
...,... with a~ of od&amp;guudo. To thla ead, the _,_
.. mittee f u r t be r ••
d•
'lblat:
.

(~O..:.o~bebe-=

aDd the ileleclled ._.liD ba...i
.......,_ OIIIIIPiele 8tatll ...
lloetnll!larm4iqahlaleat,l!l*&gt;

==-..

~==
to put

=

In .............

(b)..,. . . . . . . . .
:;:'
Giller 110
~
Ia - - - a an..IDaJ ~

t!':'...":'C..be '1':' t:
.n. .-.

=.. = ...,;:=

~~tball
tralDial
. apectdlillr-m
IDGIIeo
~-.
the tball ~ ......_ ~

AC8;J9- • ~-:'l.7'~...:;e.ID
~..
a -~'-t Ia' nol·a aiaDber of · cilrity .Farce
-

r::

.;-0:: ..._

:::t:c::m~~ ;.:~,::..~::: · =-=~be ~
theeituatlonto
lui IIIIIUIIf6' of..__ ~~
aDd to aelect .... appropna

stancee .m.e, .In bil Ollinlan...
their ~.a by Security .... called
for 80 few1 that be o imp I y

ill-

.initial ~ to ~ ei'IIJed C...~........
olotr.. with -:r zwe• ..,_
8ble boodllal.
thaD ._...._ UWIIIale If~ ...._
lllldld liD the
pa111 ....- 0111y 'be uied 1a alii: .,_., •
Ill...... .......
•
~ the
,

·

=:::..~::

atantlve eolutlma . to our pool&gt;.
lem1: eitmrthefCIICIIasaWbole
sbould be braulbt to a llate
of ldininlalld attitude ~tall
could be p_, IUJII, m 111011e
of them "'-!d. One of ,.. felt
that the ...,_ of IQIII 80
peat aDd tile """"'- of ID-

{b'.::~~~ =-tC:~i==-~ ::..~lao!:.!,"':J
=:..
le....t to
::::'"~ a ;:-,If. :.=t~

\ ~:...:=-~to~ ~ t":a-"'in';;; ~ Much ....., ~mportat t.,::: .u..P~,. :l: Jlllllil.-ed _ , t h e
. ~aDd . . . . . . : . be ...... ...... ~.at -=b.~ :.~~.!: ~ ~ =cit'":..::,;:.

ociaul ol the clanlor of ~ abooo!d ...moe Jbe CCMniU,_t,
ln8lctiar RmiDUY _pm':"'n*'t ~ •hlo ~ CDUI8M of ..,..
rather tlla eafaroiDI minimum &lt;tiall; Jllime!:t,
· .
~ -delmtiall 1n the beat o1 the ~u.!2..!!..
m the
- altonatica 'lllbil:h leads to 8 ............
• •
- a.e.oa~y_....ofac:Don.
~-.~~.....
.
m •Tbe ~ undentands ~ .........
·
.

any .,.._,

· Tlte CDI!IIIIittee, 011 llw ....,
of utellliue -~of
optiou, .....,__,. lAIII tile

drawiDI lfl* ...-.

(e) ..,_ . _ .....,. .......

ad._ ~~~~a wllh Ba6Jo
paiiDe 1111111 ....... palidwllh tlloR hailei Ia .at
1 -....s _ .. ealh

i:d,~...:"·~ ..........
=-f..~~
~.;--:::::-s-........ II
io NortaD 1hllali. a~.
.

-

(CaatUule4 •

.

, . . 4•

co!-

1)

to

�.

I

~Oc:mbor 19, 1912

••

1
~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~i.~~~~~~lm~m~r&amp;i
11~~~~~a~;~•~~~~~~~~~~m~~~~
President's ·Committee
' In: and other members of the Uril- Bursar's Ofllce, as well as the ,

t:The
~~~~
cammi&amp;ee Is aware that

tamal ~. Liaterved .i\llllpDellt an the
in the lbiaDCial lllpJMD! wbidl matter of aelective 8l!lliDI of
alfects&amp;l Ulli'!&lt;llllity operatioas . the campus Security force. My
of liB renrmnwvleliolls aeotimeDIB at the lima the matmay be viewed as impractical. ter was prMeDted were Yt!lY
Where is tbe funding to come close to those ezp..-1 by anfrom to purcbaae equip- other cammlttee JDM&gt;ber, and
ment, finance adequate train- then ~ehlly stated by_
ihg, hire Security penon- bim in his minority report.
nel? While fully cognizant of Hl""'ver, I was unwilling . to
011

veriity community ta. stimulate
open communication, and,
hopefully, eventual confidence
.e xchange _ by Initiating , the
preporotlon of an operations
•
f
manual for the Security orce
_ by giving Increased atlention
to the thorough and ·proper
training for oil members of the
Security force _ and by selling
in motion those activities neeessary for I h e purchase • of
equipment which w i 1r allow
clear communication channels.

transfer of the check-disbursing
function f1'9"' the Student Accounts Oflltll Ia the Office of
Financial Aids.
/
I ANa 2: liNt ....;blishment of

a Unlversit;Y·wicle Judiciary: I
fully endorse the &lt;X&gt;ncept of a
Unive~ity-wlde Judiciary and,
to this end, will be moving to
66 The majorit¥ could not ig· ~~ u:.=:.~ ::I:!Jan"'i':,ti::~~ =~
establish o pon~l-~hich would
nore the docllllleDied appear- tions must provide for the beat ezpressed by certain of the
make recommendation• to this
llliCe
armed penon. on Secuiity system it ain propose, committee members witbo\lt a
Office regarding its developcampus."
and apects its propam. to be much more careful considera·
ment. This panel must well
treated lib any otber· clj!mand tion of botb sides of the issue,
consider areas of jurisdiction;
w1a1..__._,~met witb an
armed
per- on
Univaraity
~·.,!!
did not think
In returning to the three pri- • relationships to existing judito ,_
his ~•n
propooals
are ra
......... , - n~
lt and
full .Icommittee
bad tbat
h e a the
rd
8011
finl. their ~ 8lqlljcts tbat steps will be taken enough to aay eittier yes or mary area• identified above, cia I baclies, 1uch as the Trus~ to poolioct their....,. Ji""" to implement tbem on a time no on this critical matter.
let me first address A'Na 1: 1he tees' mandated Heprlng Comor that of IIJIIIIIMw, and must abtableilltr.CX11111111!D811of
-·~andwitbova~~;
lm- of c:Gm- . Security, Ill mlttee on the Maintenance of
•
of sur"""' even
Arminga the
Security
r-·
always ~'-...., OOJIIIII8III'8
rionlies ·
Inallocating
tbem.
aelective
bl8is,Force,
is a operation and the
Ofo~rallon •of Pu·bl lc Order, th e Stu d ent Judi011
:.,m;n,:_.~aize
f:ot every ~tion ~·
change in policy on 0 the Unlv•nlty afllan. AI· clary, and the Inter-Residence
· ..._ ....._._._ tba' quires funds to implement whicb I feel the proponents though it is never formally Judiciary; the methads for seale.)· I t 18 ..., - - 80• it, and the committee does not ba the burden f
•
~ u- ~is
believe In aDy event that.simP,- I&gt;Y":t least a p~ articulated in the report· itself, lecting panels; the proportional
di8icult tbat lll8bs lbe com- 1y _.rung more II10DeY an evidence. I was n1llt ea!Dt6ed 1 am of_the opinion thi• area · compooltlon . of such ponel•;
• : J . t o~ security woUld produce the re- that this. bad t-1 d""" Even constitutes one of the corner- I h e I r operatior.&lt;&gt;l guideline•,
. the a.jority could not ;....,.e suit ir believes the University thougb I- have peat lt!fll)ect for •tones of the entire question etc. liopefully, we will be able
the docun8lted. ~ of
~!L_Bth&amp;ut, thethe the I!XJ,IOit ' opinion ol - · we are considering. Th,erefore, to move on this maHer with
armed perax18 em c:ampua With•ty,_
~ .. _: •ts · memberil
of the Committee, I 1 am supportive of the majority rea10nable..__
speed.
out~ a minimum capacommllDl
canna. ........., 1
thougbt the matter was one
billliY for ._....nng to it in apectstions fronl a force de- where the .Scotd1 law wrdict of the recommendations that
A.- 3: ,,.. arming of Secuthe i n - Of the University Died the training, tools and per- "not proved" could properly be the Committee has made In thl• .rlty penonnel: For obviou• reaCXIIIIIIlllnity as a whole.
~ to carry out the "lJched.
.
area. Specifically, I 'lm asking .On•, thi• Is the m011 trouble·
lL As a poadblt!-llllluctioD in •
aasigned.
•
My )&gt;osition ·~ not cbanged. the Security Ofllce to work with 10me area of the report, the
1
-The
• a u:--:ty . diiJ;tctmy :!':~"!.tliep
. -~
.. andveri· u11ndtvethrslty !~formation Semedrvicesia 1o_ne ihonwh.: a final determdi~ffia18 ,..... ,..,. "'"""
18
' CJJII8idaration be -'WID to rec1uc:
•
''
,....,...,
a
e varoous campus
oon
s
n persona y o .
.
......_ __...... ~··
. in !lie Report offezed Y one commit.- · wQIIId urge the - President not f&lt;!ward the full. reporting of cult. Initially, I shoul~ indicate
1111 ..., .....,
tee member.
to implement, this part of the
ch
h 1d
o....o...o
Buraar's OIJice ol
t ·""'
The issue of firearms for our · Committee report without a Security matt~rs. su as crime I at
eve."'&gt;""' .:ny response
ociuntS. U' cash JlllYII*liB are University Security Force, al- much more extensive ezplora- rates, to the University commu- not in an either/or fashion,
i ~ \~ti!:...few~ though only a relativetr, small tion of the. issues involved.
nity; 1 am asking the Security i.e., either accepting the in·
.. alerla CDal4 _ . mounted •!ben. compouent of the who e spec·OIJice, in conjunction with the , crep1141d ·uS!&gt; ·of dogs pr the seAt Gibe&lt; times, only cbecb or
~o:::.. ~
Office of University Relation•; leci'lve arming of Security perllliiiiiiY ~ Would be accept.- gret:table:
from my review, It appears to give further ·""!nlion Ia the oonnel. Rather, l'e!:Ognizlng that
ed.Cailideration aboUid ba.liwm ....!"
. ~-Y_JStyt ~ty ~"':::: that ,the_ thnnt ' ~f · the above deyelop_ment of programs for- ·action in this area is necessary,
to
· ·
the Student ""'' ..., .,.,......,
~--.
Com!!llf!.,.; report•IS directed In corni!'UJlity partklpotlon In Se- I OIT\ 1hqpeJul we ~uid obtain
-~
fnlm
the
role
ol
armed
or accomplish
not, will~Je~&gt;!t,ve
the throie-.qr'mo""
~
aame aDd
the same.
,.. "" ·, ..,...,., (a) ·the - curlty •actlvltl.., and for- pro- the &gt;beot of tWo -unalt&lt;octive
.
C"1;':=~ fa~ stu- In some cases, the Security image of Campu• Security, its grain• which will ossi•t in arti- alternativ... Consequently, 1
· '!1!- Forces will be a little more self~ operation, and the operation culating the Unive~ity cory~mu· would like to see a program
~le . _ to handle .this confident, but the arms' 1-.1 of other University offices; (b) nity's responsibilities In Secu· developed where we ·con maxi' ' a University-wide Judicial. Sys- roty
· matters. Furt her, ' 1 bel'oeve 'mIze .....
J;,_"7 ' cUe; and certainly not and. will nat be used and
me adv. a - - gained b y
UD1i1
"""-'881111111"8ted ::lf'b:.~!':t~ ~: tem; and (c) the arming of it Is desirable that the . role of the increa1141d use of dogs or
liN put into ellect if theY are
cases the preeence of arms, Campus Security personnel. for Campu• Security a g a I n be t~e very selective arming of
.,..clical, the 8ecurjty Force even though not .-!, might convenlen~, I have directed clearly articulated, and thi• Of, Security personnel by employ~~~~vli~~~ prove effective iri .realiiing ob-' my respon1es to each of the fice is curr~ntly engaged in the ing both which, at the same
~
~Ia ..-...
....._
jectivee
otherwise at._ _ , . """"""'
tempted not
or acoomplisbecl
In above three areas, but before preparation of such a slate- time would · mlnlmlze the dis12. Tbe. CXIIIDIIi- - . . . tndy aceptioaal c;aseo the turning to these, I think it i• men!. The question of training
I n h e r en 1 with
_..., tbat ftlll1llar CGIIfa&amp;l£&amp;1 ~ will in fact be .-!, witb important to note that certain rei:eived by Security personnel either, if" we were· to proceed
be .......... ....,_,_._,. COII8IjUeiiCe8 ll1l1llinl from: of the recommendation• ad- and the development of a pro- on only one front. To thi• end,
Ill tbe Sel:uriliY l'oroe and np- ~"~ed,~~: vanced by thi• Commitl.e e are .gram for equipiT\enl upgrading therefoce, I have determined
-atiwollllimbenal'tbaUni- ed and 1enctJ!y acrimonious in. the proceu of being imple- ' and replacement certainly that we will; very selectively,
o1 ~ ~lty~. ,;:, hindsight debates" to "persons mented or, in fact, have al- •hould be considered, and I am, arm Security personnel, and
...,..&amp; acu
lliaaJd be ecarad and. · ~Y. appre- ready been accomplished. For ·therefore, c11king Security to increase the use C!f dog 1 on
. . , . _ . , - . -""-'bonded, but albers thrilled witb
~
ll!" &lt;JPPOI'!unity for focusing example, actions have been prepore popers for thi• Ofllce campus for Security. purposes.
M points b
complaint discontent 00 an emotionally undertaken directed at increa•- which, (a) will outline existing To il'lplement this deci1ton, 1
~ ~ - - . _ • · dlarged 'i ssue."
..
ing· the University community's and desired training program,, ~ill proceed with the appoint·
. _ . , . ~ and,
The advantages of more self. · respect for Campus Security by as well o• how they might be ment of a sub&lt;ommitlee of the
baped, -mal cioalldaM:e a- confident Univaraity. Security (a) making-the Univerolty com- obtained, and (b) a planned original Internal Security Cam='=~ ~~~~~ munityCbefler aware of the program for equipment Up- mitlee, to make recommendatbe ~ ~~re' iiDt all Clile CIIII1POU1!d ceo City ' Poti
oervices and aSiiltdnce of Se- grading and replacement. With lions to my .Ofllce in greater
- . : tbe um-.H;y aDII1UIIity DOt
But Che ~ "::; curity; .and (b) by atlempting regard to the transfer of traf· detail on thla matter. Such reJtl 1mt Wllat It _ . of .jiB ~ u- advantages by to Insure thanhe campus com- fie arid. porking funCtions to commendations should consi-·
~ ...._ ......_. of the ~- (inoums.-eveD selec- munity shares respon•ibllity for I h e Office of Environ.,:,ental der the guidelines which must
~'f:.u..";'~~ mist!'t.,~~~~ . general Campus Security; - Health and Safety, I am asking exist governing the use and
........ ~ lacidoDts are armed, .or they "! not.
by the purcha•lng of approprl- the Security Office to develop presence of armed offiCers and
wbidl llllllt· 1mt be al- • · 'D1e Uni-.!ty Security ate vehlclel to either supple- a report which could give con· /or daga on cam·p~s. These
~ to aat:bme. Tbe ..,..._ l'lllaa ..ad, and · indeed de- ment or replace exlstil)g equip- sideration Ia the establishment guidelines mu.t , give .atlentlon
aaa.r;.~
~our , . _ t , our cooper- ment ....;. by to'ainlng and In- of o "traffic 'division" within to particular locations such a•
CllllldiiWe p a .._.. rau. atian and our ~ ....U slructlng Security members In .their existing operation. In con:' Norton Union and the dormi.1 Ill ---.I 1i'Q8t 8lld ....-..ac.
88 better l:noiniu,, baiter ~· the application o~ the principle
sidering record•, the Security · tori~, etc.; ·patrOls; . situation•
wlllch ... aQo,ecl.cm-odler ~
are of measured 1111ponse in. deal- Office cun;ently. maintains no which may develop that call
. .....,... l:lloona 110 IL
cihMP_. Gibas ~ ~ ing with Security mailers - by · fil.. on anyone that do not fa. for either artni or dogs, or
'
U.lltila PGiidiJi all tbe cal· iDe b, - " ! baOi1t jboir:..}IOI'- providing . complainants with late to some unlawful activity both 1 c:oMliler the training lnleallaa .adllliil ol Lab ••lb• ' =·~~~~ information regarding internal or some adminiStrative matter , divlduals m u at complete to
ca
~
iillll:b, and . it woUld be a and external opportunities for ' that requires iu&lt;!t o iUti io · ~!a · · qualify .,lor . arming; consider
. . _ llllllt be~ IIUb- .pllif iDdeed if Ibis iaaue woUld .-.dress, Cl.!' d Instructing S.. ~ept. In this orea, however; tt . those indlvidvals who, by vir~ and
"rben ~ to di8lzaet fnlm tbe curlty IM!"""nel to adhere to •s cies.trable II)~ .t he Universliy's tue of training, sl!c&gt;Uld be the
ol tile Um-.f~;y buic 8lld 'VIII)' ..... .-Is p(: the prlnclj&gt;les of due process - policies be re-articulated, and ' only ones a..-.11 etc. Finally,
•a
our ·Security Fan...
·• by }n.._l..g ·foal 'potrols In·,, this Office will prepare auch· ,a when th- recoo11men'd ations
·
......... liadltr - '·
'
• ' ,o , •
Noi1on Onion arid the dorm!- , statement. Finally, in· the
have, been. received and ac......_ 11f ~ Jor
'lbilr .-..1 minlirity ~ torles - by, contlnuing .and im- of ~rity'• Image, operation cepled; these guidellntis will be
-~~~-Ject.811d 1t1 ~frOm a letU!r di- proving the program of em• and the operatlclh ' of atlier will .di-mlnatad ta the· UniIIOou tslder'L If NCied 110 Dr. JlaD by 011e' of p"-"'- aludent
ity td
un·overs tty. offices,, I am asking venlty community
;
lltlltimMe
- f a r the Cauimilllie .....,_.,
-T"'V
..
secur
a es
in accord... CIDIIellllaD f1 odler .........
Rae. f!1 'lllf Jll&lt;lllliaed allli - by acquirong -~w and di•· Vice Presodents Ooty and Slg· once with the principles out11
br ... ............ - . . . lilllllb Clll.,..s milloiity
nctlve uniform.- by holding ~elkow to consider the .-.due- lfnad ln A.- 1 of this article.
.... tliit~ llblialcl alao. ,liaa em die final~ llle conferences bet,w..n Security loon of_ cash handling .at the
~T L KETTER

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�Acti~~~------------------~

(c:o.ui..-t

from ,;.. 1, coL 6)
- , arul Univ818ity an:hilecture. Supplemented by read' inp from his latesT book,. St.
Geor~e

·.

the Godfather,
Mailer IIDIIlyzeci the Presidential c:aJDp&amp;lgD, • cbaractarizing
Nixon's appeal to the elector·
ate aa the cultivation and un·
derstanding of tlie d)'I181nics of
"tlie Wad," or escretia, to
whidt be equates the common
man. A film c:oQtaining aeg- ·
menta of other Mailer films was
shown, and at tbe close of tbe
8eSIIion, cme Will! more eon- ·
vina!d than ever, tbet Mailer
remaiDi today as be's always
'-n: a political anomaly.
tmd

&amp;:' ti.e' •

l(g

.

_._...---

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

-.....

~

_....,.}4.,_.,.__
COin".,.llftiiO aDI7'0IIS&lt; -

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

.. -

-

_.;;..-

,...

s. - - -

AlM.,u c-il: M.
U/8 ~,.
BDCiatklll; l'byl&amp; B. Kelley,
U/8 Couadl.

Habert~

�Octobw 19, 1912

---

tbe applicants ·wbQ most reaembled
IIOiely for thoae reasons.
'
that lbould DOt be llabiiY bruohed
tbemaelves in appMrai1Ce, d r e s s,
"Yet there is-e118ii1Pie after eumple
lliide .. the prapny Ol radom. .
~ family, llDd community backof tbe concept of alllrmative action
'
The of the ~ lllhoground. We have also come to realize
programs to end discrimination being
c:atea ·of color ~ Ill -tially
that employnaa . ate not tbe
turned in)o programs -&lt;If racial quotas
a 118'ilamotiC 0118: Solely individual
impartial
inalnmleDI8 they onc:e -were
or preferential ~t . . .
millty llDd ~t, they arsue.
thought
to
'be.
Maat
of
tbem
sfill put
'"l'be way to break tbe lemg habit of
' DOt poap identity, m...C: detenniDe
an unwarranted 8llll&gt;basis on verbal
discrimination lies .not in a revival of
wbo Nell!.- wt..t NW8rds in i:be sofacility, at the of other aptiquots systems, this time iMued under
ciety. Tlil8y decry cli8c%imination Qll
tudes and akills that undereduc:ated
tbe false balmer of 'equal opportunity,'
lftlllllds of creM, c:laao, - . renonwhites are more lilrely to have.
but
in
providing
real
opportunity
"'
lilion. or ethnic oi;Jin. They l'l!llOI'liz.e.
Under these' c:imnnstal10"1, it is
compete equally through improved
that put. di8crimhiations h&amp;ve ....Wted
simplistic to &amp;riUi that tbe applicants
schools, special training, expansiem of
in existing 'inequiljee aDd imllalaDcea
can
be put into some indiaputabie rank
free higher edllc:ation for tbe qualilled
that should be rectified. ' They mainBy HARoLD FLEMING
order of qualillc:a'tiaa. In most cases,
but economically deprived, and tbe
tain, "-eWII', that put injusticeS must
tbere is room for much lecitimate flex.
abolishment of cli8c%iminatory _pra&lt;&gt;
not be remedied at the of
ibility of judgment in cboosing among
In the view of the Constitutices."
indivilfuals .... happed to belong to
a
group of applia!nta, all of whom may
ti911, in the eye of the law, there
favored ( or 1- fS.vOreci) groups.
Vlow EMil)' ~
- justifiably be reprded as " qualified."
Heaoe it is ac:mptable, even obligaIt sbould be pointed out in passing
is in this country no superior,
1f an employer or -admissions oftioer
tory, to provide extra education and
that tbe prominenc:e of JewislN!pokesdominant ruling claE of citithat ftexibility to help remedy
tJ:a4Ung {Of: one wbo baa been denied
men in this debate is easily under- · uses
zeDI. There is no caste system
racial imbalance ....Wting from past
...JIIlch _.runitiea in the past becau. . stood In New York City, for exexclusion,
he is not necessarily guilty
here. Our Constitution is colorof poap identity. But it is 'improper
ample, Jews are M&amp;vily concentrated
of discrimination in reverse. On the
blind, and neither knows nor
and unjust to pve preference at the
in tbe teaching profeasion-not from
contrary,
it
can be strongly argued
point of aeleolion to aucb an individutolerates clasaes among itB citiai.y monopolistic motives, but because •
'that he is fulJilling an ethic:al obligaal owr a better qualilled pencin from
in earlier years that prof~on .was
tion
to
reexamine
and modify selection
a more advalitagecl beckpound.
· open to tbem when others were not
criteria that are racist in effect, if not
~ the cilmenaions of the probBlack pressure for "community conin intent
So wrote U.S. Supreme Court
lem iJ a dilllcult ma
, As in tbe case . ·trol" and a larger share of tescbing
Juatlce .John Manball Harlan in biB
of acbooJ busioc. ona Mar8 a greet
,SocNol~
and administrative positions bas led
famoua cltaaent from tbe Court's ~
deal about inJuatice and hardship inThe .Uictly meritoc:ratic position
«&gt; confrol&gt;tations that awaken strong
ority decision of 1896 that enobrined
llict8d on innooent iDdi~, but
also neglects tbe question of social
III'OUP feelings. Controversy over tbe
tbe
but. equal" &lt;Joctrine as
solid evidenoe in 8UJiport of tbe oombenefit
A society such as ours· aspires
loc:atioo llDd scale of ac:atter-site houstbe law of tbe lmd. Hadim's was a
P~ is ~Y IICIUQ!. HQW
to be is in graY~&gt; danger if a large part
ing, as in Forest Hills, N .Y., bas ex- ..,...,._... llDd farsicbted staDd--«&gt;
- n v whilea in what situations have
of its population is denied social and
aoerbated aucb feelings. It must be
farsichloid. in fact, thet it remained
~ su1fend. from "diacriminatiaa
economic mobility. Rigid adherence
kept in mind, moreover, that all of this
a minority one until 195f, when tbe
in - ? ' ' Con~y. bow many
to traditional standards of credentislis occurring at a time of shrinking ·
Supreme Court finally held that aecn&gt;blacb have beae6tecJ from preferening and formal testlng will inevitably
ratber than expanding job opportuniption violated tbe 14tb Amendment_
tialln!atment? How many institutions
perpetuate
that kind of stagniltion of
ties.
to the Ccmstitution. At tbe time of
'bf ,higl)er ieamidg, have bad J;beir fedtbe bave-nots.
One's view of tbe arguments_ cited
that deciiion. it was ComiDonly aseiaf fundS cut off because tbey reMany
years
ago, ~ most prestigabove depends heavily . em what one
sumed that tbe etbic:al principle underfused to . pve otatistic:al evidenc:e of
ious Eaatem universitiea reco~
takes to be tbe proper definitiOI!. of
clrding
equal
was
lep)ly
that tbe reponal dilferentiala in secMUbllabed oace' aDd for all What
alllrmative action? How many govem"allirmative action." A U.S. Labor Deondary education were puchr!hat few
parjmen~· cfuective ·aays: "An aftitu!a·
renialned, it _ _ . ' Was tile alaument cont,racton bav~ ~ ~r
..:.
_,;-r--ouncompl. ••., job of
eel or debarn.d for failure to pve "'"tiv&amp;-eetion
program
ij1 a -set of&gt; opeciflc
8o)ltheq&gt;ers Ot , 0 t p ' ~ , :'pJ:1lVin!'ials"
ous uut monwy
lc:&amp;teO
ored lieatm8h't-to .min&lt;Jnty worb';;l?
and r e s u I Corienteil prooeciures . to
c:Ould be expected to ~ it tbrough
~~
into practice
1be likely answer to all of tbe8e
their admissions screen. Consequentwhich a contractor commits himaeU to
In retrospect, boweveJ', this view
questions is, Very lew. Yet there have
ly, tbey waived college-board examinapply eyery good-faith effort , . . .
,_......... One
nl
been """""' instsnc:es of alleged disations for tbe-..,..-Eastemers, Sl!bstiProcedures without effort to make
......... innocent ;._,.,
can
Y
crimination in reverse, at least ~
..tuting instead the criterion ofl-1lie
tbem work are meaningleas; and effort, '
wonder where John· Harlan would
y·-·
applicant's high school performanC~&gt;­
by specific and meaningful
Bland today amid the controversies
=..,a=.,:~";:; undirected
a &amp;tlaishtforward eumple Of "preferprocedures, is inadequale."
~-=~,:
basic priilciple of equal treatment is
ential treatment" that no one was
In terms of recruiiment, this means
nicn quotas," aDd "racial balance."
in jeopardy. A reoent article in Combeard to complain of.
that an employer must actively and
._,_..__
lor
•
menlGry magazine by Earl Raab desystematically seek to attract minorAt .that time, when the beneficiaries
Color ..........._ 1111• co
.......,.,.,...._
--''-- m
· '-''--t detail a p~
were overwbelrningly white, such sf.
is still tbe subject of tbe debate,_but
~......
......,.._..
-~
ity-IIIOUP applicants. Such an effort
tbe terms of re1erence are reYeJ'aed.
pceed plan of tbe San Francisco school
is essential, not in order to favor ooe
fiimative efforle to achieve a plural1be-.. are whetber the-federal govboard to "deseleot" a number of adIII'OUP over others, but in order to
istic ....Wt were considered laudably
emiDI!Ilt should II11IIPI!Dd payment of
ministrators, but to e&gt;r.e111pt racial midemocratic. The important point is
change a long-established pattern of
.___
- -L-noritiea from tbe prooeos. (Raab's indiscrimination to an eplitarian .one.
that tbeae universities """''Diz.e4 tbe
hmdo to a um-sity """"uae •t ...,....,.
dignation was less telling than it might
For generations, blacks were excluded
value to ~Yes as institut&gt;ons and
es to coaduct a racial census of its
have been if•'-- ·school board bad not
faeulty. whetber l1:bool systems may
~"'
from employment and 'highet educato their students of pluraliatic rather
juatiiiUIIy hire ew retain nonwhitas
·abandoned tbe plan in tbe fece of
tion not only by outright diac;riminathan elitist student bodies.· And since
while ~ aft or ~ tbe
aevere criticism.)
·
tion, but by .aucb indirect metbods as
education at one· of the prestipous
word-&lt;&gt;f-moutb recruitment, announceuniversitiea baa a decidedly favorable
I
more polemii:al
ments directed to a mainly white pubinftuence on ~career wiVIIII&lt;ll!lllent,
racial ldlmtillcation of applicants for
vein,· political scientist Paul Seabury
lic, McuJturally biased" testing, and a
· tbeae instltutioao may be &amp;aid to have
panl8 ar OU.. beae6-in each case,
bas denounc:ed tbe policieo and JllitC- ' variety of signals intended to disbad a "democratlzinl" e«ect em busitbe dedared objective• being greeter
tic:es of ' "gimlet.&lt;&gt;yed" HEW bure&amp;U:00111'81l8 black applicants or would-be
ness llDd profeBanal leadenhip and
equlty for dlMdvutacecl minorilies.
erato wbo demand that universities,
applicants. 'This p a .tt e r n can be
tbua to have beae6ted tbe _,jety as
'l'be -;. 1M&amp; tbat aucb issues can
as a coudition of obtainiq or retaincban8ed only by a conacious elfort to
a whole. The importaDce of including
be 8ip1ed esiauUy Ia testimony to
inc their federal . contrilcts, -establish . nMll:ae tbe.metbods llDd th8ir iiiequ;t;.
raPaf minorities in tbla ......... would
the 'VIIIaliliq of oar eoqiety•• Alllnnahiiinl '-"' beaed on
Ibid sex: • able · rsu~ts until 'B1Jcb time -lis tbe
-to jUstify simlluly alirmative
tift lldiliil ao a _..._.tal 00!1£10l)t
Soc:ioqist' Nathan GLazer bas also
bis;IOric:ai imbalanoe is redre!aed.
ai&gt;Proacb.
Ia ac:arcel,y mooe tban a decade old. It
sounded a restrained but gloomy warn- . ... Cilooolnl
. dale8 bMk lrD l'relddiDt Kamedy'a
ing apinst tbe of "spec:iaiSeeking applicants is one tbing;
Many ........ who will ... along
Eaoullft Order of 1961 requiring
. iota" wbo ....wd lead • toward an
choooing among tbem is quite anotber. .
with informal ............ from stand. . , . . _ . -an.clon to practice
ascriptlve BOCiety that diatributes benTo aslect a nonwhite applicant , _ a
ard .aolection criteria t.JI&lt; at tbe set~ eaPoi..-t.oppartanity. The ,
.•
Oil tbe baais of poUp identity
better quali6ed white, it is argued, is
ting of numeriaol pia, which tbey
thaallli that IUiiat ar aimiJarly disrather tben ~ acbievament
as odious a form of diacrimination as ·
regard as nothiDg ,_ leas than
... 2 ... ...-.wes mflbt be The - t i a l tiiOiis of tbeae anil
tbe reverse. But an insisteoce on pure
quotas. Can ..... in fact, distinguish
.. ..__ at tbe tllqleme of" .wbilel ' . u..minded baa been: crilply
merijocracy overlooks some important
be~ a ._t to be striven for and
w.ld ._ve '-s ........ tla&gt;. »ut
ll1lll1ll18rt.d by Beajamin R. E~
realitiea. Few ooe thine. it -.mea
a quota that is .., libeolute requiretoc1Q that cbup la •..toualy lllllile,_
natiaaal .eli.- of the Anti-Defamatbet- ~are precise metbods of
moiit? The federal .........-t. which
at !eat Ia ....... 8ltuatlaaL
-- tioa LMIIUe of B'nai B'ritb.. Writini
measiJi1l1g llDd Cl!l!'paring the quali&lt;equjreo
"pia llDd timetabloia" in ·&amp;eV·
............ .._ • • C ?2 I
in tbe ADJ. &amp;Uetill, he ....,._, 'ficatioao Of applicants. As every .,._
era! of il8 equal opportunity programs,
, _ who - - - arlil:alale Oil
-"Equal opportunity, ;..tice. llDd fak . i&gt;erienced employer or admisaioDs of.
insiata that there Ia aucb a distinction
tbe ._tift ...., fll Gala cllbal8 ire
INalualt ranain aur ~ J"""
floer knoors, tbis is DOt tbe caae. In '
and that it muilt be cDerved. Tbe
DOt tbe ~ ........_of -.aDd few 1111 Giber ·Amaiama. But tbe
. practice, tbe employer wbo is free to
guidelines of the Olllco of Federal
~ imd .... ..uJ lllatu8 quo. On
critaiaa ol iudividual merit remains
do 80 takes into DOt only
Contract Qwnpliance dec:laie that
&amp;he CD~tnry, tii8J' iDclade ~
aur aeecl
we CI11IDIIt be aileDt
"jlbjective" ....Wta, l:iut IDIIDY inaoala ~ DOt be rigid aiid inJielible
ad echpwdonel ertmh"'41 ... ., ...,..
• we bear lfCIWinl c:aJJa for prefertanpble !acton as well-biB percepQuotas that lll1l8t be mel" The line
....._ fll ...... - - ...... llDd
...... I l e a - llDd racial ~
tion of 1118.applic:ant'a cbaracter, peria
a llDe 0118 and, In more than one
jN
I
I
_......... ....,.__,
which - ¥lew - dlac:riminatiao ih
....ality, motivation, family ~
· inatance, baa '-s OYaatepped. Yet
.__._.,.............,aDd~
..Jt Ia -poecioely
we
........ ability to work Jarmonioualy
tbe fact that a policy Ill sometimes
a1 Ia,............_. lliDit, tbe ldild of
believe it Ia cllacrlminallor)' .t1o ber a
witb othon, aDd "'1. 011. In III!IHftl.
aiQed does DOt dl8credit the policy
tbeae facton have Wllrked w tbe disitaslf. New do aucb aho:wa as have
lldvmlqle of nonwhites, a i n c e tbe
occurred 8JIPMi' to ~ tlie degree
~. that._ - . . _ ~
aloo ~'to eslect_a !I'D. . wblte eelectors have lei1ded to prefer
.of alarm ~ Ia ~ quarters.

--

•

•

•

.._,.te

.u.r.:::::;.

:::.::

°

~_.,:::.,.'":n~.:!:e"'~

:;:e"..u.!

~-:;I•~

race.

.._

aDd .,

t

=:..~=:s=

--.

a-a-

:-ttcine!~J:'!'t...~':

..

a

�OcifJb« 19, 1912

becomes of ita lfllduatss. By doe token, if --are
about flndina
and using the methocis tbat will equality, in Jll'll(:l.ice, must bave
the .._,. to mMSUre tba relative ef.
fectiveness or ineftecti..,._ of our
efforts. That Is wbat rscial data collection is, or ehould be, aU about.

.nouo

bclai · I~-

A m o r e coinpticsted qtJ!!8tion is
wbetber it is permissible tci l'eqUire
racial or other poup identity at doe
applicant stage. 'lbe .&amp;riWJ*lta for
this practice are tbat 1t will ~le
tbe. employer or other selector to take
~rity-group 8 tat us a81nnatively
mto account and tbat it will proyide

GVIEWPOINTS ~
a basis for gauging tbe effects .of the
selection procees on screening minorities in or out. The contrary case is
tbat it will institutionalize a system
of compulsory self-labeling tbat can
be readily abused for discriminstory
PllfPOSeB-if not today, then tomorrow.
There is no consensus as yet on this

The injured parties in such cases are
fsr better eqwj,pe;d than blad1s have
been-to get redree8--tbrouc access to
public opinion, administrative review,
. or,~~~

litigation;;,-iio~ wiietber

"ihe'rPI*Wii~t is "oiOOjj,..

times misapplied, but whether the requirement itseU is necessary and cleferunble. Even a ·i:urso,Y review of
the hiatOftDt"i!qUIII opportunity programs demonsttatss' tb&amp;t it is. Experience with' nondiscrilnination I a w s,
state and federal, 1&gt;as invariably shown
tbat little or nothing happens so long
as the employer or institution is not
held accountable for !ll"'lllllf8bJe - ~
suits. . 'lbe fedenil contract comp)iance Pf01f81Do for example, yielded
more proteststions of good faith than
black employees until goals and timetables •e r e introduced. Similarly,
school clliaegregation in the' South was
mainly an eserci.se in tokenism until
target figures w e r e establisbed for
black pupils and f s c u l = old plaint, ''Vfe've ·
~we
JUSt can't .find any wbo are
,"
tends 'to ~ unJees some specific

'!'&gt;"

standard. of achievement -is applied.
Mellloclof-na~

calcitrance about inlllcting the '&amp;ore
of dats-pthering on their . subordinates. grantees, and contractors.
'lbe reasons for tbeiie -tive at.-

It foUows from this that an effective
equal opportunity program must include -80iiJe method• of ·meUurillil· r&amp;~~· ........,.... d·ari cD'ileCtloil ..;,
•suitst&gt;T"the object is 10 achleVe·-t.~eta!. ~-is . the COilvlcllcin ' tbat
.u~tion of minority ~ .llllch censuses lore. ~ .riilatsd
and talent, how is progress to be
to the violation of merit slandaida and
judged without ~eedback on the ef- - tl!e inu&gt;ollition of. quotas, .....-t or ·OI&gt;fects of the effort? It is this logic that
vert. Another is understandable rehas led the federal government (and
sentment of time-consuming red tape
in a few cases stste and local govemtbat diverts energy and attsuaon from
ments; to require racial censuses of
the primary mission of the entsrprise. '
public employees, of coUege fsculty
Yet another is the surviving fear of
and administrative personnel, and of
civil rights adherents, white and black,
employees of government contractors.
tbat racial dats will, in Che end, inevitably be used to perpetuate rather
The coUection of racial and ethnic
dats rankles administrators and dethan end discrimination.
fenders of the meritocratic viewpoint.
Each of these objections is justified
Many university oilicials and teachers
to some degree. Yet, when the altsrsee it as an intiusion on sacrosanct
native consequences· are considered, it
prooesaes of professional selection and
is di16cult to suStain the argument
• advancement, as weU as on peraonnel
aninat the coUection and analysis of
records tbat are regarded as inviolate ~data, at least at this stage of
in academe. Many employers see it
history. No business can be run suoas a burdensOme (and often embarcessfully without Che sell-evaluation
made poesible by the balance Sheet;
rassinQ_ imposition on management.
no UJ)iversity can 8liiiiDine its educaGo~ themselves tend
tive, procesees if it has no idea wbat
to be reluctant to . Che point 9f .,:

er

question in civil rights circles. 'lbe
-memory of past discriminstion apinst
individuals -required to desisnate.tbeir '
origins is stiU vivid; the fssr of new
forms of quotas also runs strongly.
'There are 11..- who feel tbat a compromise position is possible and d&amp;sirable--for example, a ·provision for
voluntarY
than compulsory raoial desicnation by the applieaat ao: a
ptOcedure tbat will . . _ the rscial

rather

. ~n csrefuJl.y -*-'t&amp; from
~~ ~ty. thus lllllkina !Pible• ......... ~~
. Given the ...U&amp;Iaa, a ·- n , . ao.

oepted solutian -.v not be poodole
'"' tbe IDOIDI!Dt. But thin' is flllllalh
middle poound to justify &lt;llllltlnull,.
discussion and deliberation. Circumstances aometimeo ~ lor the 1*- ,..
ter ratbw than· tbe 'lbe controva-ay in which · Ju.tioe
Harlan raised hiB prophetic voice 76
years •10 bound to continas perhaps it ehould Meanwhile, it
is worth reflecting on a apecu)ative
version of wbat the good Justice milbt
say in the context of today'a debate:
"Our Constitution is cotor-blind. But
until our 80Ciety translatss that ideal .
into evl!fYdaY. practice, tbe deciaioamsker wbo is color-blind is blind to
injustice."

Phi Beta Kappa Plans Selection Rules Study
to ~ - ica11y

A committee

new Pl'IICedorea for ~
III8IDiiem of U/B's OmicroiJ.
Chapter f/1 Pbi !;Jets Kappa
wiU soaa be MtabUsblid by 'Dr.
Claude E. w,..•..a. · Chapter

.

Ple8ideat. -·

_....,

-

"!!~&lt;eel
aUMeamilille,
II8Dbera Wtili!l
of thebas
Cbliptsr
and tbe cbairmen .ol departments·ln Arts and ~ Nat.unit ~ and Madaema'tial
arid Social Sciences . ana Adminialratllla to .-.t to
~ be basin
~
clwlges
~ to Weldi, ·· Omicron a-ter 111re most chaptars of Phi .&amp; .. ~ b8s
tradi~ llased WiCtian of
~ rimjrily Ill .
grade jiiibU
(U
anil lor etudeots
with- tban 112 hounl).
~ be says, "ss the
receot Self:atud, lor' the Middle..Stala AEoclatloD dnaDat--

-:eraJ

C:..W:

a-t.

in"\':

iUuatrates, a criterion. of

vanl&amp;ges both of equity (in
the Quality Point Average fs- terms of tbe contrasts among
vors underp-sduatss in the hu- Faculty grading) and of mainmanities over !bose in the sci- tsining an incomplete measure
- o r (to a~ edent) in of~ ad&gt;iewment as the
the - social ...,;-_• For s- sole crillerion.
--•·
the Spring 0 __,_.__
•
.....,.... in
. , . . _ - Allocstions might also be
1972.
departments
in
liHs
and
made
on
a departmental or
• Letters awarded 37 per oent Faculty basis, Welch says, with
A's, 24 per oent B's, and 5.6 P!'f the units DOQiinating the ...,.
. oent C's_while departments m ' demicaUy lltfODie8t atudenia
Natural, Sciences and Malhi&gt;- Tbis too be feels, bas drawaatiea ,.,.,..; out 10.3 per 1l!!Dt bac:b. nie roCedure would be
A,'s. 12:3 !;:,~oent. B's, and 11.7 ~and mitht inadperoent . a.
·
~t.ly omit ~ stu-Omicron t'21ap.ter cannot sel- denta.
.,
~
ect ""'"!' fhan oaiH8nth ol ~
As an o t h e 'r· altsrnative,
lflldualiDI - claao, Wale!&gt; says, Welch suaeata uainc pad&amp;
yet ~ ~t ~mitht re- - point a - u a &amp;cr...m,
suit m 8llle9ioa ol ..._ to a point ialher tban..a ~
quarter of Underpadualeo:
. clevioa. u............_._ llb0¥8
He sua-D -e..I posaibili"
certain ~~ beties for cbanp.
•
- - ~ for -benbk&gt;.
· For Carample, the minimii'm wlth.fiDal seleclioll~
Jillde point a-ae mitbt be Critaria _.,..as bnMilb
raised. a - , l&gt;i feels ouch of eclutatioll, '-lliY ,__
a move wDuld ha.. tbe dilad- ~.liDao. .q,ifiout · caatri-

a

Flood Victim
Aid· Q#.ered

butions to tbe csiDpua intelleo-•
tual cpmmunity, and tbe lika.
1.11
'lbe cpmmittee ... be IllUDed
to CODIIider
1«1 · ·~ · Caa.- bu. aatbadled to make its·
tiaaa ol «&lt;iilttaDal
Wedtbe
Study r-ill tor ....,.. wbD
bY the eDd of
--ar.
............_.
by T
~
tiWo rop ca
~
Clll tbe .
11
_

ctw,:!'£::.:.7:

Pass Key Po.•!·cy .

The ~t;y policy, aa 1'&amp;~ for «&lt;mmlliool. to 1odred
- - blioa - - . 1 by Burr
C. Palla, .-iRsat vice pna-

.-.&amp;~

CllltO-

dial ~ have ' - m.:
......-c1 t11at Cbs)' are not 4D

= t o Madt
~ to a
cir - .

._, tbelr

._..,a-. orIaams-!&amp;:;

..U. tbe

eou..

.. -.,:::

The llllldalt_.aDd
el.- ~ -

family_lllllltliw bi the -

1ectell by the 8oml and -

clell..w..Jb.
a~ ~;
2. The : . TD.- .....

;::..~ 8~~

DIUitbeall'OIJedfonmiDilaam
ol tweho (12) credit !Qua and
llllllt baWl a flnuclal - '
'-eel aa the eampJM«&lt; appll- -

catlaa.
,
IDcliYidullla . . . . . . . they
mar be eUclble. lhoald ..n ao:
ba.. ' - told ..., fila 1blr ~,._,.,.;,:_~
- ~ ~!1'
....,. line' - ' ~ Alii"'- ....... ......·ihat the~
.,.:t.a~~uy, 1D talk to-ol .,.
to to .,_ . . - llllalli tlli __... and oblaln a
...-..1
I p'• !1.• aJI:y

rille Jllaper lc!oriiti.Mm

ill_....

�~

JP, JP72

�(C..-,..

froia -

·l ;

col. 1)

voca~"boniin .-~act." Bond

Sllid

t the jip

loetWean

DB·

tioo&amp;l nlBlity 111111 the ideal of

what Aml!rial could be can

on!r

be nanowed by ~ poll.
tical activism 111111 Pllitical organizalioa. ·aemindinl that
~ -tnrill also be
filled this" ,._, be -u rpd the
election of "a
to
say no" to "Nimn'a family de-struction;::;: to the Vietnam

...,.._eo..-

: :· : . . : . . Oil•

~~ ~::

knock justice and benign neg-

lect.

-

•

"Elitist, aazist, a n d . racist
practicoa nm rampant in-Ameri·
ca's political 111111 private life,"
Bond oaid.
.

~ will

face serious "ene-ones,. Bond warned. T h e s e
"""'!'1M are not .the· blacks'
traditional ones - the boocled
~ and bigoted Soutbem ,
sherilf- but rather thooe peopie wbo aay that "politics is
,useless" and thooe wbo oaid a
few Y81UB ago that the election
of "Wallace would a good thing
because tben the contradictions
would "be heightened" and the
revolution hastened. Bond characterized the latter as the spirituaJ deecendenb! of those in
Germany in the '30's who urged
the election of Hitler. Students,
he oaid, can indulge in tbet
iind of thinking, but"it is hlac:ks

_French·S&lt;;ien.tist Joins
Physiology Department
.._--

·.....-r

~~
~4:e'1i.~==
FoundatiOn. ~ ~ National

-3

•~

r

,...,._,D......,.

Dr Hermann Rahn, chairman· of . the .Department of

Pbyaiology, notes that in preparation for surgery, people are
also"cooled"-tolowermetaholic
0 m

ll&lt;liiHibidenta ......, ...._

b).

InTwo
HlnTlg
.An;n
stall ~18 were

· "If you want thinp to be oa
the day after ~ the
same as they were on tbe day
before yesterday, don't do ·
'nuthin,' " Bond advised, addlna
that thinp were tben liable to
get wonoe.

"I like to think you are 10in1
to do what I co-der the riibt
thing to do," Bond aaid. "But
whatever you do, 'pleue don't
help dat bear.' "

!Uralted at 10:30 p.m.

was

"'t-

Ne.;·nlleoi .for u:nderpaduate have mcire dnallc ' Nleli' imtal!iill 1 r ad u at e .' ~"'PPD ui
&amp;om· the
"for iillliOir .......... or llide.•
'
BOnne! IleJ&gt;iutment: · Ol'oeeph E. ~te .cniliiB have
Unllerplod lltndeiita -~
· Li~ formerly _ m,ector
_ •
of bem .iasuad !»'. the. N- Y~ \ Jy ~
-pad~~ •
cl8ssilicaUon, is now· director State ~ Of EdUca- rece1ve
te c:nodlt, ·
of clasai.6cation and" employ- tion, Deon
H.
Ebert Ebert said, .. they earolled
ment apd MichaelS. Lewan- ~uate . Studies has with tbe permloslon ol tbe iD- •
student&amp;

reCently IUIJIOilili:ed:f:iY tb8 ~

ClOIIl808

Charles

ASII8

As

diiector o1 ciaaBification,
Lippert's duties entailed appropriate titling and grading of
Dr. ~ pointed. out that jobe within tbe University. He
~ ~ P~ 18 also of now-also will be responsible for
greet ~t.erel!t _m _.., pro- l!lDployment of all civil service
grams. Coolinl the astronauiB peraonnel and non-teaching prowould ~ ~Y helpful on feesionals, including recruit1'!"1 _.,.,. )OUI'IIey&amp;, as tbey ment. rererra1, placement. and
Would requue m~ 1""'! M&amp;t, coordination of training.
·
food 111111 oxysen, ~ 811d
A graduate of Canisius ColA nlltive ol Strashourf, lege Lippert came to U/B in
' France, Dr. Malan received his 1970 after ~ as _personnel
doctorate degree in Natural director of the Ene County D&amp;ScieDCos from the University ol partment of Health.
Strasbourg in -1967. He is curI..ewandowsl&lt;i, who is pterently a .-rc:h IIIIOciate at · ...ntly a student at · Millard
·the National Center 'fO. Bcien- Fillmore eon-. has i.o.bcf in
tific ,~ ~
personnel adD:ihiiatialioa.

9 Non-Studen~ Arrested on Campus
Nine

--~

N-ew Grad Comse.Policy
Two~ppointments Set for Underg[Jlduates . ·

:=.,
U:.":..:'~or'~
~has ~ .:~inted. ~
cooling process f r
thooe l:ir Lippert......,.,..

~ for ScieatifiC RaMrch lll8llllll8lt who underiO periodic
mWS~FlaDi:DCe..;,_L~ B. cooling."

orldnl ._.
~
Reeves, U/B '~te prof.,.:
BOr of pbyaiollisy, Dr. Malan
is studying bow certain Jll8lllma1s, IIIICb u the 8IIUiml or
ground chuck,~...;; their~
lempera!Ul'e to drop below normsl .for surVival duriDc winter
manths.
.
lnteroated in--.. respiratory·
habits o1 J1111D111181s for 88Wll8l
yeors, Dr. l.falaa i8 primarily
concerned ·with "IICid bue regulstion ol biODil dlirinl "bypc&gt;.
~ bod.y temPera·
ture is i.ab.IIOIID81. While ai
U/B he
, will ' try to . ~ ...,.
.
_ .

sponsive to ~·. ·"undeeclasa," Bond said He iupd ,
that blacb b '
to this - - the
support
t h a t cbaracterized tbe epic
s!':"f.gle for. civil .riibiB durinl
tbe 60's.

Perso1111£l M.akes

F'reDch ...,u-;..1...;.:_. ADdreJ. ol th8-'-'"'.:;.._,_,_,__ Deoes..._
'""'t.:;:::ro,the• ..,...__.._ ••,.., .•~~~
.
•

Malan
ment of PhyaicilotiY to ClOIIduct
research_on..tbe respiration of
hibernating ma !" m !'-Is. He
CO":""' "" .ibe Umvenllty as.Clpll!llt ol the' French-United

and the poor who must live ath,letes · who pubtfcly support
with the heightened contradic- President Nixon's . nH!Iection
lions.
abared Bond's disapprovaL
.
• Their presence indicates only
~~ repro~ certain black that competence in one azea,.
politiclllll!' who cluster around "doesn't mean you can do any·
the .~t like 11~ oa a tiling else at all," he oaid.
dog. Nmtl)er Republicans -nor
Democrats, they are members
"I can neither s i n g , nor
of the "I've Got Mine Party, dance, nor play football," Bond
the . Take-the-Money-and-Run said, ''but I can think."
Party;: Bond llll;id Carefully
acludmg responsible .black Re-- A CIMr ~
publi""'!" like Senator Brooke
from ~ group, Bond accuaed
Tbe election providee "a verr,
these ·black eupportera of the ..,_rious and very clear choice '
administration lhat pve the betoveen a demonstrated record
nation "~ell, ~rth, . of failure, including "crime in
and benign neglect'' of valuing the streeb! and in the suites,"
money more than racial pride. and a candidate and platform ·
The black entertainers and pledged to end the war and te-

=

v.

--:u~ ~t:; ·•

niey will become ellective

here ror

the iPrinc _ , - r ,
Under the new J&gt;Oii!:y, Ebert
oaid, all ~takeuate gradstu·
dents who wish. to
a
,
ClOUr!Ol for credit toward their
baccalaureate degree mUst pe-tition the Office of the Deon of
Undergraduate St~J&lt;!.ies. 278
lf!!Yes. '"'!&gt; appropnate ~
will be a~ there,
Tbe pnvilep "'! ~- li!couraes. Ebert said, ia limited
tostudeniB"Who:
1. Are juniors or ..UOm and
have, bem """""ted !n an ~demic
or, m an 111&gt;cepted
Major~2. Have · an overall IPilde
F.'t averap ol-3.0 which may
inch,Jde tranllfw ~IlL
3. Have ~ 8Jl -

=r

Search Group Set !ifY J~~e=

Dr..Emanuel p...., bas bem graduate cowae.
·
~ to bead a 8MI'Ch !*'~'
4. Heve a writlen ..,.....

latest l&gt;lviaion ol Undenlnlduate "Studies Bullelin, 1972197AH4.
~-th
_.,_
~
uate c~ for .
t,eo,
~ indicated; muat be petltioned lhrouah the Of6ce ol tbe
Deon of tbe Graduati! School.
•

WI .. -

B.reverman Givmg·
2 Art Exhib.·its .

- For · 811 artillt, a oae-man
sbcJo( ia an lmDortant, - l
Two OD&amp;-IIIIIIl . , _ p-. at
t b e - *'-AN almOat - -~ In * -· ol JlftiPUa•
tloli 111111 ~
'l'lildii, it iD Dill llride, bow- . ia Haney -s-n_

18 year-old lA!ollud HOOot of
ficera
October 14, 3656 Waldoin Ave., Lucaster.
c!w:hila l'Cido.--it In CJ8rl&lt; ~
tirpd WI~= . ol Civil EJIIineainl.
. Ber- the
'1118
Gym.
.
• .
mg ~
nant-R. ~- vice preo; ,...,..,m...tatlan..illliit-..,.
Arreatecl~tbeGynubout tion (N.Y.B. Penal Code dent -for --.me all&amp;ift; ~ · abow . an _.,;.,
9:30 p.m.
cbarled wltll 196.06).
anDOUIICIId.•
•
a
11114 ~ tor lbil
JI08IIeliiloa. ~ clrup
Aireoted at 1 a.m. 8nd
Committee mailbers are :gr.__,.,q.- .fo tab • tbe INdaal8
&lt;N.Y.S. l'i!Ml1lod8 Z!D.Q&amp;) . c:barpd with diaorderly CXIIl· Robert p " " - and 'Dr cowae. · 'lbla ~ 111111·
were:Gu:r~.l8,oi~13.I.a- duct (N,Y.S. ;peuJ, Code John v. ·Huddlllataa. ~ tbe ~ 8iplaluras· are ·

ft8ted

Campus Security of-

~.

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254 ~ A.._, Bullalo, dil'liB ·w' awii4"JIQinl till! ildcilaniad db··hft ol .me.
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��~19.191:1

UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

....

Edum-- . . .

IIIIis

I I

flcultyof_ .............. .. . .. .

·-------

• flcultyof
flculty of Entl~"!!.''.
Appllod- .... . . .. . .. .
foCuloy of-~~~- . .. . ... .

110,400.00
3,800.00

I
_of.._ _ _ __ __
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lrltoalof..._...,t ..... ... ... .
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_ ~- .. ~~··•••••.'iiii:I~t:=r:=c::J
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4,800.00
·- ,"17,700.00
2,800.00

Adrnin1111alion . . . .. . ' .. . ·~ .•.
OMolon of~-

11,400.00
. 2,800.00

-.

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10,800.00

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1560.00
I ,300.00
3.800.00

5.200,00
5.200.00
14,300.00
2.1100.00

EtJmolin.
IU&amp;#tia, Madeleine Mathiot. U ·
oociat.e prof-.or, U/B Deportment of Linauiltie~, 831 Hay•,

LlNGUJBnCB U~CTUK&amp;· :

3,800.00

7:30p.m.

·~-00

An introduction to lincuiltics
in anthropology; oopitiVe anthro.

1.300.00
700.00
1.200.00

Uniuertity Clu:uraMr
Orchutra, Baird Recital Hall,
8 :30p.m.
The orclieatra ia conducted by
Pamera Gearhart, and will fea-

polOIY.
CONCDT•:

KUBICAL lNNOVA.ftONB:

Campus United Fund Nears Halfway Mark
As the Repotkr went to goals are: Division of Conlin·
p.--, the Uruversity's United uing Education (105 per cent) ,
Fund Campaign bad raiEd Scbool of Management (100
$49,144 of ita $110,000 goal, or · pei cent) , , and the Western
44.5 s- cent.
·· ·
New -~York Nuclear Research
Center (100 per cent) .
Lo!adini.'all divisions was the
Office of the Vice President (or
Other divisions nearing their
Facilities Plannirig whiCh bad · quotaS are: the Fe.cult)o. of Enacbil!Yed'" 110"l&gt;Sr' Celit "61 · ita .. glnei!iing inc! ApPlied Scieocaf
goaL Other divisions ~- (98 per cent) and the Office of
have '!""'e or m:ceeded their the Vice President for Research .

190 per cent). The Office of
Admissions and Records, a BUI&gt;division of the Office of the
Vice President lor Academic
Affairs, bas also reached 100
per cent of ita goo.!.
The United Fund campaign
lor Buffalo and • Erie County
will continue until November
14., 'Ibe total goe.ll of the camp&amp;Jgn is $9,328,000 to support
68 community arencies.
1•:•

~

GHIGHER GEDUCATION GNOTES ·
At 1 - 11 state legislatures student&amp; can uae to charge
!lllllCied new laws this. books, athletic ticket&amp;, mealB,
year to pi'OYide fJ.IUIDcial aid to e.nd other items on the campus.
private· coiJefi'S or_ to student&amp;
at ~ independent instituTho Eutem Collep Athtetlc
tions. PrOgrams vary from atate ConfereMe • hao doclaNCI _ _ ,
to state, but most involve eUcible for all vanity lnt8n:atioll·
grants and scholarabipa to stu- -~Whilollle~
. dents.
prafws
p,.,...ms for man
In
17 atates have pn&gt;- --.ltfeaNdtltatrefusat
gnuns of institutional aid for toadmlt__,toatt~
rivate institutions, 11 prOvide mlcht be chaltoncad In court. The
a c II i t i e s CDD9truction aid
rulllll not """'ber cot·
(grant&amp; aDd loans) and 29 have 1.to . _ t _ _ , on11toir
authorized aid to st:udenta at ....,., but liMO them ....
priv.te institutious.
_ . . to do 10 If lhaJ - The
One lllllliiple is daat of /ConDt!Cticut .m..e lagialatUre baa tetic ~, . . . . auod•
paMed two bills 8Eisting pri- "' ...._. ..... atso ...
vate iDetltulions. 'The first al- low to portlclpol8 In lnllar·
lows d&gt;e to live eadl aucb
have

an:-

-rata

r

-..-·~-

~!::"'C:.~ ~

enrolled. 'The 8l!cond autborizes d&gt;e ()orwniMion on Hishe&lt;
Educatioli 10 contract with priv.te inslitutiaas for facilitiN.
· servic8 aDd 1J101r81DS.
Alxllll. aample is Florida
~ a . etudent asaiatance
gran\a bill provides foe award&amp;
of UP . to $1,200 per yee.r based

on,_._

..........

-.

increaSingly clear that most
st:udiea about higher education
support conclusions reached before the studies were started.

...

...,Ills

Mlchlpn State Unlvenlty hao
anntiUIICOd that, under
fn&gt;m
llleNatlonatl_of_

to $414,152 ,....,... period, It .... a pt0CJ11m of-~~~ -

a

'""" tllsadvantapd
mlnootly
-croun.
and tratnlnc-.,
ao _
,.

for people. ThlftJ fel.
-·--durinltho

firat
,..,
to_
dot!NO
_

an M.A.
of_wttt_

...

._.... tile
Ph.D. t1ot1N0 to
In ........... - . . .
be -

tho toot -

Donald Weilerotein on violin.
Robert
Donincton, viaitinc Birp-Cary
profeaor of muie and director
of the U/ B CoiJesium Muoicum,
cliscuuM the relationahip of the
ture

520.00

,..,. "' tho . . .

Muaicum with hia craduate eemi·
nar- in Baroque Performance
Practice. H o • t io Michael P.
B-urke, U / B Depa.rfment of
Music. WBCE-FM, 9: 06 p.m.

THURSDAY-26

EXHIBITS

�RIICITAL•: Jane Quy,
piano, Baird Recital Hall, s p.m.

STliDENT

The pianiot Will perform worb
by l!a&lt;h, Mozart, BraJJm.; .lwo
and Grilfeo.
UUAB FILM ••: Mon Onc/Jt._. (Tati,
1958), Conference Theatre, Norton, cheCk .boweue for timee.
Admiaaion cbarp.

•

.MONDAY-23

COKPU'I'ING C8N'I'•a

aadlrfa• :

COBOL, &lt;l&gt;ria SiderUio, U/B
ComiJutiaa Genter, iDitnactor.
Rm. 12, ·4238 Ridp .- I-.-'l.-11 p.IL
aum.iAx ~ .i.mYAL•: KilW
-the Fomily&lt;GIId Went to 1M Jl,.._
ia ! 6 - 19'10), and Bmmbou (Talbot; U171), Cooife,_
1'heatre, 4'iottoa. 8 p.m. .Fr..
IOU&amp; ui:rua• : A IaDVA V-ieD
&lt;&gt;( 1M New f ' a _ , , Rablii
Morrio A. Cobea, Hi1W H -•
.40 Capon Blwl.. 8 p.m.
- ' (•-

WEPNEBDAY-25' ~-

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·Ketter Deriies-U/B ~
Faculty:Qqota .System

s

jo-da)i

~t- .

#:

"'"""

!Ewry
~ bout

::.ipeo,

I State

State,

v~

Free.

. light

le for
.StarIWith

~

New

,Pth-

r, Pat
' Ann

"A facully quota system,
''So far;" ..0~ Kette&lt;: ;._
""'I or imllgiroed. does not now have '-". successful in ·foreexist on this campus,~ Presi- -stalling that happening; I candent Robert L. - Ketter said in not guarantee bow long that
a statement releised this w~ success will last:'
to the Universily eommunily.
. The Preeident lmplied,-'how~ in ,,response to an
ever, Uiat 'there is little chance
article which appeared Friday ' .that ·the system will be implein a campus newspaper, Ket- · ·~· on this' campus within
ter attempted to clarify the is- the next Jew years. And if in
sue, reviewing official SUNY · fact,'- the quotas are imposed,
policy and its potentia! impact Ketter contended thai the polon the University..
'
icy · ~ultimlltely bas to be a
The controvei'By is based _ ~~cia! one,'' resulting ~ the
upon a mandati! ol: the State h1?,ng l!f ~tter faculty.
_
University Central Administra&amp; similar syetem, w b 1&lt;; b
tion in Albany, and the DiYi- ~tly operates at such msion of the Budget, which stitu~?"!' .as ~a r v.'! r d and
states that i&gt;o more 1Jmn,60'per Yl#. .b!o exphlined, eventualcent of Unf'feraity .taculty- may ly penruts only ~ most capbe tenUred- at one time. The able faculty. app~~y- one
situation is complicated by an- out of f!Very four or fiVe hi~,
other quota oystem Sfipu!stitig to 9uali~y for tenure."·. At this
that full and lll!8Dciatli piofes- U";'vem_ty, bowev_er, the ma"'!rsbips sball each·comJ108&lt;! no JOnty are ten~ if J'e8!l9?,ably
more than 30 l"!r cent, 4 a co~pe~ .. 'Evelltua!'Y•. .he
combined. ·t otal . of 60 per cent "'!'-"'tsfued, a "!ore d!""nmmof 'the entil'!l faculty. T)lus, !'ting ~ure policy will, result
when the tenure ceiling is m an 1mproved fa&lt;;Ulty.
reached as is ' tlie case 011 this
In the hypothetical case of
campus: a promoted l:sculty -the promo~ l:sculty member
member .might, theoretically, who faces a filled tenure' quota,
' ~etter sugg~ted severs! poshave to· renounce his tenure.
S!ble remed1es. Although tenCurrently. bow ever, the ure appointment is p6Ssible at
quota system does not apply to the assistant professor level,
this campus, and .bas not been the practice is "strongly disimplemented in the past. Ac- couraged," and only a few such
cording to Ketter, "tbe Univer- 'isculty now teach on this &lt;;$DIsity centen. at Boftalo, Stony pus. However, Ketter proBrook, :Albany, and Bingbam- J)OSed. . · the University may
·ton have not been ·required thus hire 8n increased number of
far to meeL the conditions of assistant professors, with the
the (SUNY and Division of probability that these faculty
the Budget) agnoement. Other will be denied tenure and reunits of State University have main at -this institution only
been operating accoQiing lo its for the allotted seven -years.
provisions .since 1967-68."
There .maY also be elforts on
· H m.ntas are
·
the part of the administration
. to permit the tenure of qUall'he ..Jii; It will
- IC&lt;mtin""d on _ . 2, col. 3)
tb(, SUNY

5 :Years Predicted as Halfwa~_Point
For Occupancy
of Amherst Jtaciljties
.
.
.

~

E'!ii

-T

~~~ -

'ntYah!.of
7:30

CAMi:Us MAP'_oillii:ToRY

i• of
d by

A four-page campus lUkie (maps

r::
Imp
..
.....

•nd directory) Is. lnctudod n •n
inoort In today'• lloport8&lt;.

For-

at no

ectolx:iata
1t of

l p.in.
r dia-

ation
chao

iatica,
iolin. lan-

Ieete;

; lin-

=
' AND

.-n
• 114

mto
ia
~
luca-

-lilt,

,~

jane-

~:

-IJiam

"831-

H eil' u~

c

lbe.,
Ed-

iY-

~

l p_
~
L

·of

rooms.
which is an exact
dormitory in use
Fredonia, c o n s i s
buildings surrounding
courtyard and dining
Nllturol Sciences T The green steel skeletons of
the Natural Sciences to w e rs

are slop two oil the tour. The
psir of identical . towers designed by Hellmuth, Obsta .and

service floor between two resular 0ool'8. Building eqUipment
such as exhaust ducts will be
bo.used ·on these along with research supplies.
Tile $14.7 million sbello of
tbeae 140,000 net square · feet
towers are slated for mid,l973
_completion. Afte&lt; _this, inter~
iors will be finished under a
&amp;ef'!'l:'!;te contract, probably in
m~d-1974. The contract for this
interior work will be let sometime in early 1973.
c..._Conlplb

The Davia-Brody · delsi8Ded
complex, Coli-

A-F=are

next on the tour. This
• -learnina campla of 98
ingo -winds .U.llb 8J'OIIIId

one side ol the campus lall:e aDd
cunenlly rMelllblee a tumble
(ContU,Ued on 3, cuL l)

�~PORTE~
- ...
. ..
~

Closs List For Spring
IlueDec.l

o...r...: 12, 1972

·Media ReSources·Jbp~­
Of Octpber Co#e~nce .

·
Sol w-_.,_-ot tbe
ProfessorSchool of.,.....
.
Annenberg
CommumThe Sprinl s.m-ter . class cation, University of Peonay,ocbedule IS exPected to be avail- vania, will open a · a.ielHiay
able for distribution to· faculty National Conference on Teachand aiudents by early Decem·· ; na Resources of Film and
b8r acmrding to Robert Graves, M:"':.ciia on campus SaturdaY,
aaaiatant to tbe vice president, October 21, with a paJ&gt;&amp; on
bcilitiea-Pianning.
''The Uses of Film in EducaThis will enable students to tion and Communicatlon."
pian · for and participate in lhe
Worth .is described 88 ~
registration process for lhe sec- leading
dJeorist in ...,
ood semester, he said.
semiology of film and is tbe

·man·&amp; PoMD~e, &amp;m.~ay oiYening
~:.!.tm::: lirol_. J~ Leflda,
m•

F
ty'of l"inS"iut!l, om niversity, ~ - will discuss
ReaFlatl ClJIIlil after ils ecreening, 7 •p.m:, 'SMmda.1 night in
-147 Dielendod. Prot Leyda is
authOr 9f.1Jian-YU., (Electric

Shafilmdowsand)film,an.--~m· ofCL~
""""""'
.....,..
just publiobed by the M8B8au.s.
chusetD. lnstitut!&gt; of TeclmoloiY ~
.
"In order to provide timely author of a ford&gt;coming book.
U/B a O'Grady, wbo IS also
·
·
d,
· and aocurate infonnation for Navalw FilmrMkero:
president ol. Media ~Y InFi--~ler
students," Graves said. "manY
The Conference, which will . ~. the_-orpmzer of
~
'
.
.
-peOple have worked long hours bring tog"eth!!&lt; leading film and the' ewdt. • 'Ibe ~""'!'ce is
'
~
on tbe ocbedule since early Sep- video itrlists teachers and - !l1)()118()18Cj"by the Umvl!l'llity, by
..:.~
tember and the p_rocesa of de- scholars, 88
as archivists, the ' Nati&lt;!Dal "-&gt;aiation of
~
velopmeDt is not yet conclud- museum curators arid so-n- Media ~ a WashingTwO pM
hl beoin an- F'urioeO Poetry ·Prize and WBII ed."
ment policy-makem, wi~ b;e in to~ IJIOUP 'with a mem. ted )o ~vechairi lJ. graDied an aWard-by the N8He outlined the following ..,.;on from 9 a.m. to IIlldnight, bersbip· . of 6,000 , '!!'C!'Dda'Y
pom
the Deparl:mi!Dt o1 Balli&amp;hr
tion:al Institutll"of Ans and Let- production schedule which;. be October 21-23 with most events acbbol 111m tead&gt;enl, and by
•ohn S. Barth baa been tera in 1957 for "ezcelience in said, has been met so far: Sep- scheduled ror'140 Capen Hall. Media -. Study, Jn&lt;:.,. which is
~ tod&gt;e Edwanl K Butler creative writing." .
temher 11, initial course data All events wiU be &amp;ee and open supported bl( "4tle New York
~eiionhl of English LiteraSamuel I.. Clemens, better deadline date; September 13- to the public.
·
St84e Council on the Ans.
ture and
Lealie A. FiadJ.er . known as Mark. Twain, lived 26, keypunching and computer
In addition to Professor
'Ibe. arts ol film and video,
to ·the Samuel I.. Clamena En&gt;- in Bullalo in 1869 while~ p~g of llata; September Worth's presentation,. other O'~dy says, are proper!~ bef--";n in Enslish~E .put. owner of lhe Buffalo 26-0ctober 6, departmenfal re- opening day papers will touch commg parts of the cumcula
"ii""iWJer world~ rpreas.
view of infonnation; Oclober 6, on use of film scripts, slides · in tile schools. 'lbey have their
•
baa ·~· a pro(;..,r of
_Barth, one of America'sl..,d· second --course .:data · deadline and film extracts in lhe class- roots in d&gt;e 1ndividual creative
En.dish at the uni..,.;ty since ing novelists, Iias. bee!&gt; 8 pro- · date; October 6-10, keYP_Unch- room
vision, he notes, ''hence our
111M. He 1a abo serving as a lessor at the Umvenuty amce ing and computer P~ of
0~ of lhe special features of tribute to tbe independent jil.m
faculty member in Empire State 1966.
data; Ocfober 10- 30, · a&amp;SJgn- the Conference will be a aeries artists; -iheae ·llllJIIe arts, because
Coli- the non-msidantial col·
A holder of B.A. and M.A. ment of ciassrooniS and lec;ture of papers on film museums and- of the ease of their.distnbution '
Ieee of the State Univemity. of • degrees from Johnal{QI&gt;kin&amp;, he balls to i:ounieS and sections; _archives as teaching resources, and instantaneous transmission,
New Y.ort. Before cominJ to W86 on the facUlty of l'ermayl- October 30-November 6, key· Discussions in -this area will in- are also_imanational and globBu&amp;io-hewas-.memberofd&gt;e -vania State University from punching and computer P.ro- elude pepers by Willard Van al in their orientation, truly
Eng!isb· ])epa.-.t of Mon· 195$ to. 1965.-He is currentiy !' cessing of data; November 6- Dyke director of the Film De- universal 101111!1.
tana State Univenity for 20 • visiting professor at Boston Um· 10, final editing and check on pa~nt of lhe Museum of
"In all cultures," .he continye818 and ita chairman from versitr.
data accuracy; November 10- Modem Art· Sheldon Reanan, - ues, "the pel8!&gt;ll with the signs
l.9M to 1956.
. Chimua, his !&amp;teat no~el, baa 14, keypunching and_computer director of the Pacific Film Ar- of the apirit".is a met!Wm. The
Bom and educated in New- , Just. been _pnhlisbed. His pre- processmg of data; November chive at lhe University of Cal- teacher and the artist - and
ark, New Jersey, Fiadler re- vioua booliit--are: T"M Floai"''J 16-28, printing of final sch&lt;;&lt;l- ifornia, and Jonas Mekaa, di- each is both - are .mdill. All
ceived the.B.A. from New York Opera, TM End of I'M R~. ule; November 28,25,000 cop1es rector of Antho{ogy Film Ar- of the~ modes of human comUniwrsity. in 1938, the M.A. T h. e Sot-Weed FfJ!'Ior, Gila • available for- campus distribu- chives New York City.
munication, the powerful forms
from tbe University of Wis- Goat-Boy apd Lost "' 1M Fun.-- tion.
.
.
ln!Mpe~dent Alms
of film and television not the
consin in 1939 and tbe Ph.D. holule.
.
The class schedule IS pnnted
Mekas doubles as an inde- least among them, are medill.
from Wisconsin in 1941.
Professor ~ ""!' reoe&gt;~ed as a special edition of the Re- pendent filmmsker and will All. of our ~ groups-~P'iedler'a boola! include TM "!"'end .awards inclwf!ng a ata- " porl~r.
join film artists Tom DeWitt ulties, councils, sla118, IIJliiOaB.AmeriCan Nouel. An End to tlon ~ the Crealli"'!_ A r.t.s
d Ed Emsh -11
bOth of ·tions---&lt;md all of our physical
lllliOCe!ICe, E_,.. in Culture Commission ol Brandeis UmQUI'S an
·
"(! er,
· tituti0 ~Is,
and Politieo, T"M Last Jew in veniity -f&lt;&gt;&lt; notable achievement
whom are m-res&gt;dence at U/B
and tel ilri mu:::fi",
America, Being BUllied, and, in ~on, and. a grant from the
~ ~~=ning and ' -m:.:t:.te
That~
most recently, T"M Stronger in National Institute ol Arts and
~ Con!
· f ture really the enabling vision for
ShtJJtupeare.
:
Le~~-Ed---'
H . Butler ~
Trial-besis tours of lhe North will- be lhe vi.,.!!:'.!bf !!_..;_ o_ur ,attempt .to exp!ore this na-His wide literary accomplish..,.,
w~u
.nv·
,
•-"~
· 11 be
----~to
film
d
. ments have-won for him 8 num· fessorsl!ip of English Liter8ture Campus m ,.....;..._ w I
mental videotapes from three
~~ m
an
ber of recognitions and awards, was est8blished jn 1922 by the available &lt;to faculty, atudenls, major centers of produotion in .
ucation, understsJ;&gt;d·
includ\ng a Gugg~ Fel- late Edward K Butler and and &amp;taft on Sundays, October the U.S. - WGBH, . Boston; mg that wofd as the fostermg
lowabip (1970-71), a RoCkefel- Kate Robinson Bull.,... Mr. Butis __ ..,..,~ fu- ~el13, New York; aDd t1&gt;;e &lt;!{ ~tural ~le, ~"'\to ~ce
ler Fellowship, two Fulbright lee was editOr and publisher of ture tours will be ;rd'~.
National Center for Expen'!8·~
or ,. er
FGaellussowabiFlil"'~t&gt;,.Pd_a'tlhe~~ tbeBu/f!JloEveningNtwa.MN.·
Buses will leave .ftom two ~~on .. at KQED,
n:"~of"U:Con11
ello....u
Butler IS "!'='1 Y lhe ~ locations: tbe Band Building
A · ·
·. scheduled f
fenmce will be published by
In addition, he ' - won the paper's pres&gt;dentand publisher. on Millersport 1-Jigbway op- 10 p.~~. October
Media Study, Inc.
Q~"{l·
poaite Rensch Road on the in Uiefendorf Hall and will be .. ~lete ac:bedul;es o~ activNorth Campugat 2 p.m. and introduced by Ron Hay!'S, ar- -will be Oftr!ied !11 the
11
I.M "'-f'
.·
3 p.-: and the circular drive tist-in-reaidence at WGBH'a Wee~y Cp"""""""' m the
U
in front of Lockwood Memorial Mllllic-Imate Workllbop, ·
next I88Ue Of the Reporter.
0 nOVe
Ubrary on tbe Main Street . Talks on Sunday morDiDa,
Campus at 2:15p.m. and 3:15 Oc:tobe&lt; 22, will fcicua on the
Univepity. .ollicials are oon- University ol New York, Ketter p.m. Each bus will have a use of media in the primary
•mn.~
~~on ~inbasga callCityedCourtm
' •- said, bas read a transcript of narrator.
and secondary ecboola. Ms.
_
0""' .....,
._.....
wuocu
~ lhe case in cjilestion and "bas
1bere will be apace available Susan Rice ·of ·tbe Children's
queation,tbe power and authori- expressed lhe opinion that lhe on each bus for 49 people. Each Film '~beat« will deliv.,.. a
~
~w
ty ."!.......~.~tr..~t
DJudge's decision is no dimuni- penon must have a ticket and paper, "A Cbild's--Eye View..
~·.....,. ~ .-........... .....- tion ollhe authority of caiDPI!S ~ arefroma~-w~hUomu.t_ For the _ _. two bert I.. K.otter, C8III£UI security securily o8icera to malr.e an ar- ,._-~
...., ..,....., .,.
a·1 bas t;;;;:u J_,--. films...... "Science 4i. the 'Seventies,"
a16cera,,86 1...:&gt;8 ~ in the rest 'lbe Judse'a decision did '1/eraity RelatiODS, 186 ·Hayes.
ce
.acoanma
a __ JIIOINID hilbli~en- State of New York. .are author- not "re~~ect Qll that basic author- No telephone ~ will be for prt&gt;«booL and prilnuy -ti(ic - . d l .nd
· nat
--4-' to malr.e inveatlptiooa and ity, but mlher on the fact that accepted, Tidu!ls will be distri- :!:'~::f.~ U/B,. pMDiered Ibis wee!&lt; on
~ and do have full aulh- · tbere was no testimony on tbe buted on a firakome, fimt.. der a linmt from . the National Alllbetat Cable Vlalon (i:b. 5) .
oriw of police olliOBN while record that tbe security o11icer serve basis. One hundred and Endowment·of·the Ans to -the... Produced hy University IntheYtbe..!::'o-~1!. ~d··"~ inwlved bad pea&lt;e ollicer - . •ninety-ail&lt; persona can be ac- Center fpr UndenoiaQding Med- formation-&amp;nlcea, the 30-min,..... ·~ ... ....,. us. APParaltly, if lhe record commodated on '"'ch Sunday. ia. -Another IIWlll1bec o1 the ute Weeldy lliOia&gt;m fa boated
K8tter clarified Ibis iaoue last bad m8ile that dear, the J~
Center, Kit layboume, will by Dr. ~Je llodt, ~-of
Friday in .......... to a a111QJU8
haye supported
talk on "An Jntepated VIdeo ~ q
..uaiamy 8J!d
~ .rticle wbicb J1II'(Wt(Collliloued from - · 1, coL 2)
Studies Currieulwn for the See- · IIIMter ol the aiiiDrd Fu.m8s
ed that a Clt,~::!,/udp'o
To 81IGid all,)' future confu- fied asiatant p r o f - ea- oncJary 8choola." Mr. J:ay.
It Ia iieln Wem-iaY
deciaioll on
28 to- Ilion lfliiUdinl the~ authority ol pecially if many faculty will be bourne is- chalrinan • ol -die- at 1 p.m..
• diamiaa
aiainii a stu- UliiV8111it¥ aaCarlty ......_,Keto-. adveroely alfected -by promo- Media - ~ et Oonoonl . "8clebiie in· the ··a.-.ties"
deDt ......ted 011 lhla -- ter said,.. '&lt;an, identillcation cani tion.
.
·
. Academy m M......mwett. abel · is "clelllned for tlie average ~
-put ......_ coalained a rulina is beinl clev;.d fo&lt; .U o8icera
In any ...., Ketter noted
tbe author of a book, Doint tile • an lrilloduction to - ,
that I10CUrity o6len are not ~ to....,.. 'lbll cani will oUtline tbe question is· tlnalJy "out ui Media. Ron Sutton, 'dlrilctor tbe wide and ealtinl fields of
811lbariled tp arrest any indi- the authoril;y o1 U.. o8icera lb8 opoa," an advantap which ol. the NaGooal Aaaociaiion of • scieace .and ~a look into lhe
viduala.
· under- eamDt Slate r-." - ,
wiH au-. t1i1a Univenity to Media EclucMon, will reYiew conbibuta. 'liblda U /B ecien.'Ibe article noled tbat tbe
In ~ Citv Court
· ~ -'PrOPriateiy with tbe ja. boob on 8eCOII&lt;Iazy school tiala ~ DU;iq, to t.b o a e
rulina."handedclownbyJudp tbe u.u-.n;, T, ~ -lbiiiildltbecame.-ry. :::=-..~
~~~obn T.
William OltmooKi; made acleilr ~ aQd P*iWY ~ ·• ....,..
100 I:A~ ~
In addition to acreeninc inGueata .wfll --aJiy diac:uss
diatinctiaa be--.~ .._ Ilion to dlllna
,...m.t ~ Amitic8n studies and Un· ~ lllma, .the Confel.. isouea o1 8CiaiCe -wt.lCb are of
~ and""..arity '*-·"· _.. a-81Ui11m wbo ~ cllnied . . - will .....-..l • _,,. by ence W!ill ~ f!1m as an in- - concern tp the ~ public.
111C tbat ..arity I*' a--~ ca - . a Dr. ~r. N...._•l Unl- '-tianal cliacipline: Fiatu!e ""-~ -6 the
-"' be dei!lu~::;.c 'I1111lndlvldu.l W · a ~ VMIIr or·....,, at 1
films from owe, Yugoeiavla. ~"'"' ~ most
. Since tbe rallnc.
...... far .... ....... hat ~ . .,.,., OctDiilr 16, In · 335 Hungary, France, a-len
BUMta will have
films
b88 been a ..-t
o1
a.lldaln tllat aal!, Pail! I.. ..,._ Dr. ~r'a topic wtn be _!i_&gt;e_!l:ePublieDr
. !1-~.,will be .,.._ dwta to· .l llultmte their
111011 about lbe ~ - "'- ......... tbe ~ ol' miT .......... ~ rMIIca." - D .
" " " " " uGmdy,
~
..aril;y, bated 011 .W.. t - 011u:r . . . . , _ fll U7 11* toe '-Ia .JJIB Encliah ~ Wfl1
_,, -•- be
.,.. not they have tbe lllllllifll ~ iloidQutiQa lD Nilir far .....,_. rn
Com- deliver a elide ~ '"l'eacb•
PfOII8IIl ....., .....,
-- . . . , . , . under·Biate I.... Yodt . . . . .ttbadllbi iDIIltD- 1a11111o!ooL
tbeiDII
to be followe4 by
'lbe Utamey for tile BlUe ...... J t hd
..&lt;
-~ of 1ncmar llers- Cable_

-Barth
·
Endow.

Na_m_e to
hi
ProteSSOI'S pS

,.;.,u

0:.

Amherst T
Will B e Tried

:::d.;

amor:me':

.:...dl:,

22rtf!:...t-

:...U.

;J,

,
•
Campus Secu"rv

Leers A Trest Authon"ty

D

U:U:::

Bairs,t .Be
- •

u-··

=-"

S czence S'L., w

Quotas....-

eou-.

em-

. -

a-

--' -

p.;;;:;Mc.nc!.y

!hi.._..,

Cl~fl(t•a

# I

f

~

tllltlo

,. }

J

'"r"':.~.. d · ~·

.:n!'J'·.J{, \ 1,:

*

P~,'~

=:::~==·

,.c.w' .., .r~ ,r.t l? C,H~i!J\3.0- G .l.t. l,i(l l'••~

�.
\./

Cktober l'l, 1912 '

Amherst Campus(Co"""'-1 from · 1, coL 6)
on the $7.4 million unit this
of cbildren:s blocks casually December, aupeting and fumstal;:ked at varying !':'i§hta. In- ishings must be. moved in as
eluded in this "jumble' will be . well as special library equipdonni4Drjes with 3,200 beds,
menL Current plans .call for
various dining facilities which 'the I.aw School to move in over
will acrommodate ·1,850 at one the summer and begin classes
sitting, classrooms, small li- next faJJ.
braries, offices, a bookstore·and C.mpus . .
workshop space.
The lli!I!&gt;Pus Lake with a
. At the second level of all maximum
depth of ..20 feet and
buildinJS will be an open air ' two
of shoreline is probpedestnan mall. 'Ihis raised ably miles
the
most
noticed part of
park-walkway will be open
n..W campus. Currently
year-round posing u n i q u e the
tb"
ere
are
two
lakes but -the.~:
snow-plowing p r o b I e m s for will be joined when
Millersport
Maintenance. ·
Highway
is abandoned for a
_ In addition to this above- · new four-lane 40 mph highway
ground exercise area, students which will &lt;'ircle the campus.
in the College complex will be Designed by Sasaki, Dawson
able to use adjacent athletic and
the $3.8 million
fields for foothall , baseball and lake DeMay:
project was used to prosoccer.
vide over 1.1 mlllion c u b i J;
Total cost of this complex is yards
of fill for other campus
$50 million and the rust units construction. This vast amount
are slated for completion in of
· di~ual to about .5()
mid 1973 with the rest. becom- Hal1e9-.Halls-raised the gradeing ready a year later.
levels of some of the buildings
and - also .provided earthn for
laW·~ ~~~rilpnliienc. •.. The firial building; se&lt;iii · on contouring AO&amp;d .projects.. . "· ..
It is predicted that the lake awarded :.Ali r.e ~
o~{ 'for
the tour is 'the almost finished
I.ar 'and Jurisprudence build- will double as both an educa- bids is the first . pbase of . a
ing. Designed by H&gt;\.rry"Weese tional and a -n.creational facil- · Physics · compleX. A brick; .
Associates, it contains every- ity. An all-l:Jniversity commit;. four-story- P h y s i c s structure
thini essential for the Univer- tee will sbon be named to eval- will equal the size of building
sity's l.aw School, including a uate and decide exactly how it 4230 in the .ftidge Lea complex
Moot Courtroom, lounges, fac- will be used:
and wiU be part of the Natural
ul ty and student offices and Future Projocb •
Scienees· sub-area of the Am·
spaoe ·for a 314,000 wlume Ji.
These are the eXisting strucbrary.
.
tures, but soon contracts for
After ·c onstruction is finished three more buildings will be

---

d;

dustiial ' li;~~t"bli'ildfb6""
wiU be advertised later this
monlli. One ·thin! . the aiu OL.
the current Parker Engineering complex, the pre-a~St concrete .structure will be four
stories tall. ·

Rapid Rail Won't Look Like 'El'

Buftalo's proposed partially Thompson explained, yet other plaruHng to convert moet of
underground, partially aerial centers have surpassed New downtown i n t o a pedeetrian
rapid ~ransit system will " not York in efficiency and equip- mall with the underground rail
look like the Third Ave. El," ment. Chicago is a good exam- system being the only tnuial&gt;o&lt;two members of the Niagara pie of this, he said. They've tation in -the area. There will be
Frontier Transportation Au- tied their expressway develop- three downtown etaUons and
thority ( NFI'A) said on cam- ment to the grow t h· of rail other boarding l~ona along
pus last Thursday.transportation; many new super the r o u t e beyorid downtown,
In the first of a series of talks highways have a rail strip ending at the new North (Amherst) Campus. An average trip
current research in trans- down the center.
portation systems, 1he !'&gt;1ir gave
Philadelphia's system is also from the new campus 4o downa summary of 1he proposed outstanding, Thompson said. town will lake about 21 mindual rail system and its current · They currently have -the best utes. ,
status.
record for t 'i me performance
To aid oo...O:utera, _ _.
In the 1960's, ·they sa i d, and were the first to be partialparking loU! are planned
NITA was given the respon- ly automated. Computers run large
along the route with the largest
sibility by ·the State for rapid . altakl enthe ~~..:..~~~ th
Yeyycana hbeu- to be located at the Sberldan,
trwylit..'in this area. Afte&lt; sur·~ .. ~·b
Maple and Sweet Home elaveymg I o c a I conditions, the man conduotor.
.
•
agency decided two sleps were
The recently-&lt;&gt; pen e d Bay ti"!"'peeded to supply quick, cheap Area Rapid Transit !BART)
t.ransportation. F 1 r s t, they system in San Francisco adSPA'Mee~
"needed to a!lQUire the major vanced the' automation concept
bus systems in the area and run and is run completely by ·c omTbe -Senate Profeaalonal Aathese companies u-nder one puter with no human peiiiOilllel- sociation,
BUlfalo Center CbaP.name." However, ·the hulk of on the b'aiDs. 'Ihis ·ia a~usU., ter, will llold
a general memthe transpOrtation load, they problems, Thompeoil pointed bership meeting
on Wedmsfek, wOuld fall , on .the second out, and he &amp;eelll!'CI to fawr the day, October 18, 12:80 4o 2
pUt of al) overall ~ Pbiladelphia . hwnaJ! over-ride p .m., in the Rae! Room ol the
~
•
rail-rapid tranalt line along lhe method.
Main Street-Amherst jlOrridor
Thompson noletl that lhe aer- .Faculty Club.
with a ~Je oftsboot 4o Ton- ia1 oections · of Bullalo'a PI:OBoJh members and Dllll-II*D_,..ja. •
· •
·posed ayatem will be -theti- beni ""' urpld to attend ·u;
Moet of 1be hour lectwe' """' cally p~. 'l1le raised lnlck · hear report&amp; of tbe State ~'~a­
d e v o t e d to the 11 eDotinll will not dBupt lnftic and laad ident and Esecutive Dinlctor ol
North American r a il-r ~P i d undetn.th will be landecaped SPA, and to join in open _
di&amp;irabait ayatems. Buftalo'a plan for use aa a 1inmr -"" In Sen CUEion of the_ JIIO!.!Pr betWeml
Wa8 examined by Sldoey -~ei- . Francisco where ~ -ml NYSTA aDd U'IlNY. tbe poslhaft, an .,...m.r 'for ,J'lFT4. atructurs 'have . heal in place Bible , me111er of si.Jrr with
and .CitMt cities' ~ Ml'll for aeveral y - these pub SPA and llli Ullplicatioll8 for
evalueted by Georp -T!&gt;omP- - are used, be adliicL ·
SUNY, priorities for tbe upliDO, an wl&gt;an tnlDsporitaUon
BullaJolli 8)'8lan will belin &lt;XIIIIinc Dflllltiatlono behreea
planDer.
~ r.outbly in the SPA and Ill. Stalle ol H..
:I'fle world's largest rail !zan- ate&amp; m front of Main Place York, or other topicS PJ'CIPC-'
lit~ ·i ll in ~ew York City,
Mall. Ulban ooasullanta are by the -..beN.-

0

11

�4

---

.

.=:.

··

.Factilty

•

m ....POR' it!:.., - .
-~ ' J &amp;~

• •

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-~VYY1.1.16_ m

=:.::..-=-:."';!1;

EDI'!OR'sNoT~: r•~
~
"""""'""~

.,.... a1t11 liNl Unillenity'o ...., -~--.
--~
&amp;1/..Study
'!PI1rl"""" indiCat- ~ rigbla .... 11
ed. 1 IINl foiiDfllinc Gl'tick, ~ bilitieL .
- ,
""'mben of liNl ftii:Ulty o{.Weot -. .·
• ·

betweellebe

Other.....;.. of

cnst

•

'

• •

•

•

· Nw f!rllicy ·On

~ ·Appomtments

faculty

• .... edensive, · fall iDto three

.

'lbe 1971 contrt~cta
tended .to ~the~-

tial -~t for tboee employed by 4be Om-s;.ty on or
mation of collective barlaini'!l ~ :::.,-,:; _30. 1971, bas
and the obtaining of basic ~ ol the new IUidelines
"wants."
88W•
fOllon:
88lary P~.,_,_« unit
........;.........., ' r. Part-Tin&amp;i Pooititmo. All
f:OD!
.......,
.-w•- new appointmmta and- reap.
and similar facliors.
p o i n - to pjlt-timc&gt; posi.
By contft&amp;t, t h e r e was a liolls will b8 iatetorized as tem.
strong surge in ..Weral. areas of porary. In 11111118 ~ the
"the 1972 contracts. Governa.nce ~ duration may be deitems nefl1'l,r doubled. PreVious fined but such delinition should
concerns w1tb c1aaaes or promo&gt;- not be
making tbe
tioo, ·b'ailsfers, pemonnel files appointmmt a _''term" appoint·
and 80 on were auglilented by ment. {Ezrieption: lb.- NTP
sucb eonce'rns as
employees
had received
uling duties of certain admm- telUl · appointmanta prior to
istra.;,.., publiooti"!' rights and 9/ 30171 will cOiltinue to be eli881anes.
mble for term appointments.)
D·
•
change

.!:t==

~e~
~ presentapost.~?; l~ea...........,ve

Vu,ini4 U.u-.ity . IPMo{
rrtlllk aiiiWIIl
""" • remains IIIIC8l'tain. Ilepar.tmiDt
cbainnen 8Jid· middle IJivel
enon
tiNlir lalat IICI· admini8lzatorl ere ......ny --tiotull IIIU'uey fimlinlro:
duded froiD barpiDina . unit

mi._; the n.,..t
pen
conferences with 4be
preSident; 111!! right 1io meet auu
confer with tbe board ol ~
· -'
aaubenhlp . ~ ~-..., teas· aild, tbe right lio part.iCl·
By HAROLD L GOODWIN
more JiUbr' to be included in
in aiiy public ~ ~
and .JOHN 0 . ANDES
~contracts. SeveraJ con- tbe- co!iege budget. Unit Bus••
•
tracts include a clauae c:allinc
Moat contracls include-!'
At tbe tum ol
for the appropriate labor rela- combination of such faculty Uf\ll.
there"""'
, _ , . tions board lio c1etennine 4be • rigbta as: office apace; a
inclusion or exclusion of tbe • board for ollicial unit btJ.sine!ls;
m
chairman witb re- unit ..-ing apace; office eqwP;
bee
eel during 19!1 a¢ apect 11o faculty Unit member- ment; and,• the. use of the c:oJmore than doubled apm tbiJs · ship.
·Jese mail aerYJce, to mention
far in 1972.
Preoent contDcla
A. ClCJIItrad condition admin· only .a: "few items.
include
more than 180 m.titn- istratolll will find both i.nterest- . With increasing frequency, faC.
tioauritb .neliriy 80,000 facul!r · Uld disc:llncerting is the ep. ulty bargaining units have obmembers . Twml;y-llve addi- . ; : : _ of provisions -u;og . ~the right 11o the following
tional ClliiRacl:a are under ne- out administrator aalariea. 'lbe. 08iciaJ college 'documents: the
pltiatloa in institutioaa with JII!IOiiationezchangeisbetween ageodaandminutesofallboard
18,000 fooeulty. lt seems oafe to the faculty barilaii&gt;inl unit and meetings; 11o review any new or
coadude 'that colleolive bar- · the board unit, apparendy with- reviaed fonns used to carry out
JllliniDB ,liu errived in higher out consultation Witb tbe af- the 'terms of the- Agreement;
ed-tiaa.
. --.,.;
fected adininistrators.
and aimual financial· report&gt;;,
• -E'ven more critical to the ad- · audits and budgets.
Colleative .__,_,__ is mos. t mlnistrato.s .is ~ trend. to1 community warda defining the dut.ies of the stablliiJ
_,.........
preyaleat
S1n . cent of all department chairman in the
AlUlOugh faculty collective
per cent contn.ct. Another significant bargauung is sUll in its lill80CY
of 4be fnaticutlons with co11ec&gt; trend is
describe the process m rugner
eaucauon, Ute Closetive con.._ ere community for acbDiniatralior selection in- ness 0 1 Jts moc:tei to Ule antecoUeaea. Uld they &amp;ave only 36 eluding job poeting and faculty cedent public scnool !lil'i ~r
per cent of 4be _W W nUlllbec of
in tbe aelectio11 ~h·m:"':..J:".:"mt!ility ~
faculty covered. Not only are procees.'.Some contmclli callJof
-community colleges ,smaller 4Culty nomination and 4be HODJe COllfn!..ct content aress.
than stale Oolleges or univer- president. or-the board to select
One clea.r_ ·ex8Jilple of stasi.ties with collectiVe "&lt;iontracts, from the nominetions only. One bility is &lt;lie grJevance prooedunity liege contracts are contritot contains a procedure ure. Wnile it 18 correct tnat not
:Jj
inati.':.tional rather- than for removing a deparUDen!
au conuacts are. spelled out
Syatemy -'"-.
Institutional con- chairman at the fe!IUeBt of one· WJth the same degree of com·
_....,
or m 0 r- departme"nt ~culty
~t ~... detncta covar a sinile collete or
c
'"
pleteru!SS, · ~ mos •uuy
uriiveraity. NinitY-flve per cent members.
ve.oped ·m lll72 -do not ditfer
of all c:ontmcta·are of this type, Unit Rl&amp;hb
. from the best statemeJ!t of 19'11.
aliJlul '!( tltio

Pflli
~~eo~.

-~ ~

f~ttiali
!"ilted~-n:=

Oi:mbor 12, IP72
-..

Uricertain Directitn

~ caletJoriea: Repre«1llll·
tiDII. J.i'acWty uni48 .may have
oftlcial.~ on all collegeTbe rale"of tbe ~ · wide' atandi.ng .~ adto 1wc !:;aj~

~
~
~
p~~mom:
d~M:Ua

•

lnie lit creUed
militancy
tenure.
·•
.
g~• .· !"~" '11'
tiaa 'beallllll, CCIIdNct
- to lltrikeBr.....~
:
• • ·. . · ~
~ - - • ,..' • '
1
li'«UU:y~ilhtboo.lhF:::O~
-~-are..;......
of.
rapid
· Aaew...,;.;:fcll'lenn
.olin!n,biB, which are
.....~
-~

fllllior~f•con dioJ!"', ~itam,lenoiJeile.
.,._ .::::;;;::.; caadiliaas Uld 1n
·

••
•

:.:~~butto!i :,~P!'.:d!!ri'ce~ ~·r.ow
· . i~ Ef'ect

ol itaDa. 'lbls -

.Jut:Utlft of coli#Jcti«
u.to II i-, II r
ture ., lodid pro altll

e

••

~tin

~t

~.aa

~ ~-

~

DocWMn~: a~r

:...":..,.«~~ ~2

to
partici.patiaa

2. ll'ulJ.Ti/M Appointments
For 'Leu Tfom·One Year. These
appointments Will be considered
classroom environment and m - "tempo..,...Y." U the appointnovations in instruction. Find- ment- extends to nine .months,
ing their way into contracts are immediate COI18ideration must
8pecisl pro~. s ubstitute &amp;e given 11o· tbe expected length
faculty certification and a com- of the appointment. U the apmi~t to quality tesching.
pointment is eKpected 1io extend
Insurance benefits are increas- to one year or more, the ining. We found eight types !II dividual involved will be re1971 contracts and sixteen m categorized froiD temporary to
1972. Among the most widely tenn for the period detennined
distributed benefits are ~ and , so notified no later than
sheltered annuities, travel m- nine months and one week from
surance, legal insurance and . the time of his or ber appoint·
accidental desth.
·
ment. U .the BPJ?Ointmenbeft is
Collective bsrgaining bas expected to tennmate
ore
taken a quantum lesp into high- one year from initial appointer eduootion. There are those men!, the individual involved
who hold that the unionization will be notified of the date or
b ed
· tluo h 1 t&lt;;nnination no later than nine
of big er uca_tion ill ug co· months and one .week from the
lective bargairung w warp or time of his or her initisl apbreak the basic value structure
.•
upon which colleges and uni- pointment. ·
versities must rest if they are , ·a. FulJ.TiiM Appointments
to remain free ' and vibrant. Made
TonlJO!'C!!'Y. Ser~:ce

Academic contract itans more

than doubled. Among the
rapidly spreading one •

mo~:e
~

:'!u~.::nl;:ecolls~':::~
co~~·~::lyR~~'}Q~=
~~ ~;;;,~Y=~ ~:"~ :t;·~
eg~
ri~·and
1
the
.

P~r

tract spans all
an1
8
universiti.., govemeg by
e
board
ne
d"m
contrac. . • represent
proportionste per cen
e
total number of faculty ineluded in collectively bargained .
contracts.
.

wants,
conditions of
the faculty bargaining uni t.
About the .stl!&gt;ng&lt;;St. m&amp;naJI'·
ment ststement was a defenstve
statement reserving all t he i r
urights, powers, duties, authority and responsibilities."
Manasrement has' become
Membership Race .
more q,Jd pro quo oriented,
'lbe growth patterns of the spelling out more of tbeir own
They
now may or
reserve
National
and the Education
American Association
Federation terms.
the _!jght
to discipline
disof Teachers ( AFlrCIO ) , as de- charge for just ca~. and they
termined from our current study . rna, reserve the nght 11o lay ~ff
of 101 contracts, are revealing. statr_n;&gt;ernbers under .certain
NEA contracts negotiated dur- conditions. More specifically,
ing 1971 ihcluiled about 16,000 one contract reserves managefaculty to 3,900 for the AFI'. me~·~ right lio .determine the
For 1972 the figures are 37,000 "fac;ilitles, methods, means,
and 14,700, l'E6peCtiVely. By eqwpment, procedures and percomparison, the AAUP figures soonel reqwred to conduct the
aie 1,600 and 4,900. 'lbe mem- college program."
·
ber&amp;hlp drives of the NEA and
The most important change
the AFI' appear lio be sl!if~ occurs~ management.insis_ts
11o the major colleges, uruvers•' on the nght to re-negotiate m
ti.., and institutional systems, ~t contracts benefits
where one contract sweeps in pn!Vioualy ,won by the faculty.
many members.
Faculty bargaining agents
G.-th differences appear to strongly resist lll8D8:«ement's
be unrelated to the contracts. · aUempiB lio alter .preVIous -conThere 8J8 no major ditfenmces tract Copdltiaas when tbey see
in either Cbe. lrlndo of itans ehantee in terms of aome "renecotiated o.rtbe item oantant. ductolop." A management rights
Although any two NEA or AFl' stateu.lt that all OODtnlc:t concontracts may, Uld indeed do, ditioaa II18Y. be subject to reconlain differen&lt;ea, - find it negotiatioa may lead DOt only

~ J:;:lees.

.;Y":;1
°~ J:'.

~· -- ,.,.._ lr • .,. """
~=-.=.:-=:!=.!"'!~~~=.,:;=
~tnJ.

in the types and conditions of
lesve benetits. Only three minor
ones were added iri 197.2 to the
20 types found in 1971, and
they are not widely distributed
in .the t.otal pool of oontracts.

~-=--D

_..__
..., -

-

-

·-

o
~ .....,111" .llln'Oita.'-....
1 - a. -

--

~- ·-

.

=

probably be effected through a
"oae per COilt cut in every account:"

.

-

era! groups- have greatly overdrawn their approved funds,
lesving SA responsible.
In addition to over-spending
by clubs and activities, the student government suffered from
a " large decrease in summer
school revenues," Osinski explains.
•
Anticipated l'all income plus
strengthened bookkeepma will
prevent a real crisis, be believes. As a result, SA has
decided not 11o raise ita $67
annual fee to tbe legal limit of
$70.
.
·
·
SA is also JI'IIPPlinJ witb
problems caused by an invalid
constitutional" refereadum beld
on "September
•"-·-'- c29,
For tbe election ~~1ep1,

~

no~y
appo~_-

PR-3 raclutlinB /jbrarlflns) .
All such "PP"i!&gt;tmmta will be
for one year. 'lbe first resppointmant. will be for a oneY.!'8l lena. Further reappomtmeata ea..diDa: ' fJom one to
!hr. y1IAnl will be baed on departmanlal or anit .-Is, and

~·

. tbe

pertonnance.

• ..-...__; liliiU appointments
~~'u;; 0118 y.ear can be

_

undergraduates cast

on

c1omt.

·

the. Proposition 11o c11anp SA'o · 11. lllililli. ~ to
legi.Blative artaeiDbly from chlb PR'4 """ A6oDe: 'lbe term of
to
repreaentatioa. tbeae 8IIIIIIIDtmeaia will Ill' de-

wee~&lt;, SA's executive ~tal
!.t~..:'h~ri'f
Asaresult,SAis~witb ~cma-.by-caae_bs·
make the ~t "ffacally tbe old lonnat. To be Jl8ri ol • Iii. Noaa.JI.yt aucb appo~·
This

atziiaa." Osinslti uya.

Damed, be adda.

- . a. -

.,.~fViY· -r,a. o1 ,.,._ edu-

in H•lhttr Edwarion; Conu-=t eon..., 1972. MOT,_.,rnm,. W•r Vir,W.. Jf7.2.

~~)e~~~:'eraryfu
~
~upo

~~~~~~ ~ ~~':.,~~~~7:;
:W:'#!e !:.u':.I'!f:eYp;:f. ~
balloto
Included the Assembty,.aproipect;yerep-

=~·"~pro~

""""?

.,_ ..,

~.:':&gt;~::.' ~'1..';,!;=

c

The last few weeks have been
msrked by liscal and administrauve problems for Student
Association (SA) but the difli.
CU!ties with deficit spending
and student apatlly are being
wod&lt;ed out, SA ollicers report.
~ The Crisis over alleged large
deficits in SA's budget is solved,
SA treasurer Jell Osinski
claima. At various times during
the past three weeks, campus
news media have reported that
the student government bas a
defici~ from $25,000 to
$100,000. Osinalti charges " those
people didn't know what they
were talking .about;" and places
the acwal deficit figure at ap.
prm:imately $6,000.
R
·
in the red liD this

in tbe 'plan will be a "laying
· down · of- priorities wbich will
lri8icany outline the arau SA

-~-

fessionalize higher education.
In the contracts it is not yet
clesr whiph view will prevail.

Qsin
~k;c.. Says S'1/'1.
A Solvent, - .
u ~.
Student lY.l~
7t Kedirr U Tr»&gt;n T~T.rong
c..u- YYtt
V·YI

"

--

......,.

ares of stsbility is

$-tom

f=t
"2700" accoun. are
in nsture, ind ·
!hare
not to extend beyocl. a .'';
month period · If su
ments extend 1io nine monu~,
immediate consideration must
be given 11o the l!l&lt;peCted length
of the appointments. If the
appointments are expected to
extend 11o one year or more, the
individuals involved
will be recategorized
from temporary to
tenn for tbe period determined
and so notified no later than
ninemontbsUIIIOQ!!weekfrom
the time-· of tbeir initial ap.
pouitmeots. U tlie appointments
are l!l&lt;peCted to teJ:minate before one year from initial ap·
pointments, tbe individuals m·
volved will be notified of the
date of termination no later
than nine months and one week
· from tbe time of tbeii initial
appointmeats.
4. ~'!'/. P~-1 to

~-be

l'mprqved ·aocounq techniopa will
used and
8bldent 11f0UP1 will have their
~Ia shut oft if tbey ""'-'

reaentative must cet

=.:.,an~

be up 11o

~~ =t"'~~

giOUp" of 40
Petitioas are now a~ one
Joaaer, must be ap·.in tbe SA oGice, Norton 205, JI!OVed in"81Mpceliy tbePreswhere furtber questiona can· be ideal
·
.AD8WMed.
.. • •
. _.,......:,
· ...:.·--.,,....---_,.:
ilia first Aa_
1
late
lf:j in Have - hiilnl the DAILY RE·
SA public
:'or'::.::_~ for latest

·y.,:s:"

~~!"'ve

.bci;;i;;;--sb!u:;'
u:tormatiaa m::

. ~
_.........................:...._.._.._.....-:""...._..._":'!'!"...._.....,~¢.:.li'IJ.
...~;" •\J.lliF.~J'!,.~~JdiO!V: ,:_BIJ!!I., ,,, .,.&lt;

.

~will be ror""" year,

aisnaturao, tboulh lhieJ coald

~-J

w.

...u"'"' • •

' .

•' ce=YlM"" $

• ·t·• ·

�....

~

~

.

.

-

.

.

State Uai~·~ of-~w- YoU atBaffal~

..
•

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-

'. .

���__ ..,...Gill,___., Otliclf

---

.,o..........

.... ....

'121,......,. ....
tU.-..et~

""=="-- -

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

......_ ... u

... ~ $.)

............. ' - - I I O...,lc.- ~

1117 ... ...... .

--

111Jt-.....-.- '

c--..o.-.lllt ..... s-

....

BmGJ: .LEA

C.IUIPUS

All buifdinp on the Ridge lea C1mpus Jl't idtntilied by
11.1mbtf _.ic:h is P•n of ltlt strHt addrm- bnple:
C2C2 (tht building dHignatioiil is rynoymous with tht
areetlddms, C2C2 Ridgr lea Road.
Mministf1tiQD . ·- ...••
'AdminimMWt S'y1tftnl and
Progrtmming ..C2SO
Adult Advdemtnt Center
. , ..•C230
Anttuopoklgy .
• .(2C2
Art.Ntofogy
..• . •.•.C2C2
An . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .
. .. ,(240
An Stort her Bookstort- Ridfl: lu Brandl Ston)
. . . ..4234
BibphyKII Scitnces . . . . • • . .
Boobtort- Ri"' lta Brtnch Storr .
. . . ..4236
Campu1 Mlil Otpa~tment·
Ridgt ltaPOS10ffice

C-E
Cctn11uttr0Ptfttions
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O&lt;iloboo'- U, lf72

'5

SUNY's Trustees Air VJeWS in-Albany Newspaper .'Ibe Slate Uni..,.,.;ty Baud of the Stale 1brou1i&gt; the tru&amp;- anyone who wanw iL" 'Ibe oost
1 . IRNNOrr • •• born in
of Tnaotlie&amp; have-· eomeiimes tees." He added that the activi- for this, sbe said, should not Utica, he is 59 years old .••
been libDed- to the ' Wizud ol tifB ol. Slate University .abould have to he borne solely by the a graduate of the University
"OL"lbeir ooUectiwand not_carped_ State; ·_the federal government of Pennsylvania . .. he is Pre&amp;l·
ml!llls came With a feeliDa o1.
dent of the Bank of Utica ...
should· help.
.iO~ L. B. HOLLOIIAN, JR.._._ • •
director of WIBX, Inc., the
f1aahiDa lisbw an:ct billowi!ll
JOHN A . ~OOSiivm.'l' ... born
amoke aDd have a riDI ol.
born in Washington, D.C~ he is in Washington, D.C . ... he is Mohawk Hospital ~pment,
nipotence. And like the Wizard, . . . a graduate ol. v~ 56 yeatS old . . . he is the son Inc., ud the Utica Fire InsurIIIey tend to hide behind the Union University and Umver- of the liite President Fr&amp;nklin """"" Company . : . li- in
amoke screen aDd the big noise, sity of Michigan School of D . Roosevelt ... a gradWJte of Utica . . '· a trustee sin&lt;:e 1965.
~ invisible, insooessMedicine . _ - be has been a.e- H4rvard College . . . he is senIt is not Slate government's
ible aDd vaguely threatening, tive in private medical practice ior vice president and director responsibili~ to keep New
.at least in the minds of some.
since 1948 . . . lives m New in the investment and broker- York State s private school5This ....ek, !¥&gt;wever, several . York Ci~ . ~ . -a: tn1atoe sin&lt;:e age finn of Bache &amp; Co., Inc., alive, Mr. Sinnott ssid. ''The
' •
of the trustees came out to 1968.· -.
in New York City _ . . lives in well run private schools are
chat with Vicki Zeldin of the
''We· need tO contiliue tii pre- Hyde Park . . . a trustee sinoe ~ling along. . . . I think that
Albany Knickeboclter News in serve the high academic stand- 19
tf the private schools expect ·
a two-part· seri,.. on them- ards of achqlarship while beina:
:;. Roosevelt was not quoted the Slate to pay and take over
selv... and i.beir wad&lt;.
their financial burdens, they
responsive to the needs of ail in the article.
Miss Zeldin compiled these of our society,'' Dr. Holloman
might as well be a part of
OREN ROOT .• • born in New
thumbnail biographies and gar- said. ' 'We .must work closely York City, he is 61 years old State University."
nered the following ~a n d om with induslly 60 we ,.m not be . . . a graduate of Princeton
THOMAS VAN ABSDALE •• • bom
views fn~~n board members:
training people for non-existent University and -the law school in New York City . .. he is
BLIBAliETH LUCE JIOO&amp;E • • • jobs... . We need to produce
at the University of Virginia .48 years old . .. a graduate of
born in Chins, sbe is 69 yeatS more professionals at a more . . ·. he is president and director Rensselaer Polyteclmic InstiDr. Gentld O'Grady has been old .. . Wellesley College grad- rapid rate. . . _ There are many of Charter New York Corp., tute ... he is the business man·
named direc'tor of the 'Instruc- uate . . . president of the traditions in education that a bank holding company, and is ager of the International Brotional Communication Center. United Board of Christian many see as meaningless. We also a director of Irving Trust therhood of Electrical Workers
Currently 8Biciate professor Higher Education in Asia . . . must reappraise our tendencies Company . . _ lives in New Local 3 . .. . lives in Flushing
of English at U/B, he has been first woman chairman of the to cling to traditional educa- York City . . . a t~tee since . . . a trustee since 1972.
active in .bringing' leBding ftlm board of the· Institute for In- tional concepts and methods." 1964.
Mr. Van Arsdale was not
\. .
and videotape makers to the ternational Education ... lives
The basic judgments.. of the quoted in the article.
Dr. Holloman, a black, felt
campus. In his capacity as 'di- . in New York City ... trustee that there has not been enough
Board of Trustees" are "good
DON J , WICKHA)( • • • bom in
rector, he will be responsible since 1966. (Mrs. Moore is money to work with and that ones,'' Mr. Root said. He de- Hector, he is 69 years old · . ..
f o r coordinating instructional chairman of the Board of " the remedial and enrichment scribed the board as ua series • a graduate of the New York
media programs.
Trustees and ~ sister of the programs need bolstering." Our of people representing special Slate College of Agriculture at
'Ibe former director of the late Henry Lube, founder of society, he said, is eronomically interests" and felt their general
Media Center at the University the Time-Life empire.)
and socially classed and "there backgrounds were a great aid
of Sl 'Thomas, Houston, Texas,
Slate University of New i&amp; a differen"f in the opportun- 19 their developing policy .. On. lives in Hector . . . a lnl5tee
Dr. O'Grady has served as a . York was hit very hard by the ities offered.l It is impossible the possibility of adding stu· since 1964.
visiting professor at Columbia
''Too many kids are goin!
to educate citizens to tne basic dents or faculty to the board,
University's School of the Ar-ts, -~.:.nit:::d tolfd ~~ ~f.!: truths of humanity by simply he said, "We wouldn't have througho the full school lineup,
the New School for Social Re- uBut we were determined to be mouthing a lot of tenets that enough room." He also noted" Mr. Wickham said. ''The emsearch and New York Univer- good sports about it . . . the we don't hold."
"potential hszarda" in selecting phasis is on too many people
" the right students or profes- going to school without knowgovernor has been generous 60
HUGH R. JONES , . • born in
"1ie has beooine
national we tried to cut costs." Mrs. New
who could represent all ing what they're going to do
Hartford, he is 58 years sor"
figure iti media education and Moore said she hoped the bud. . . perhaps they should have
students or facui ty members.
old
.
.
.
a
graduate
of
Hamilis contracted with Xerox Col- get would not be cut again: ton College and Harvard Law
this kind of counseling before
GRETCHEN SIEGEL • • • born in
lege Publishing Company as "We can't serve tliis great num- School . . . he is a partner in Belle Plaine, Iowa, she is 59 they go to SUNY. 1 believe
people should have a job. 1
the editor of Urukrslmtding ber of students on a shoeyears
old
.
.
.
graduste
of
Meththe law firm of E vans, Burdick, odist Hospital School of Nuril- think we should have m or e
Film, a text for graduate and string."
Severn and Jones, and is cur- ing in Wisconsin she is a reg- technical schools. . . . One can
advanoed undergraduate cl.ss&amp;J AXES J. WARBEN • • • OOm
rently up for election to the istered nurse . .. currently she go to school and major in philes in film study.
in Albany, he is 60 . . . a gradCourt of Appeals . . . is a housewife . . . lives in osophy, but it is pretty hard
A graduate of Boston College uate of Vincentian Institute . .. State
lives in New Hartford . . a Plattsburgh . ·.. a trustee since for one to philosophize !or a
&lt;A.B. and MA in'-EnJiish) head..of t.he-plumbinJ- and heat- trustee s inoe -1969.
livjng."
1971.
•
•
and the University of WLBOOn- ing firm of James ·D . Warren
present constrained fisNot included in the ar.lfde
Ms. Siegel said of the finansin (Ph.D. ), Dr. O'Grady is a and Son ... lives in Alliany .. . calThe
situation,
Mr.
Jones
said,
wss
Robert R. Douglass, of New
cial
situation,
"Adversity
is
published scholar of medieval a trustee since 1957. (Mr. Wara lot of pain ... (but) sometimes a good- thing. . . . York City. Mr. Elouglass was
literature. He was' a Kemper ren is vice chairman of the "causes
it
is healthy. We must be con- We had to evaluate our pro- appointed to the board just
K . Knapp Fellow at Wisconsin board.)
tinuallY ingenious and imagin- grams . . .. You cannot take and last week. ·
and a Marshsll Scholar in Sl
''The State University's bigThe Trustees receive no sslabout providing a good take and think the well will
Anthony's College at Oxford gest task is to seek innovative ative
education in cheaper ways. . .. never go dry."
ary for their service.
University where he did post- methods to give education to as I don't see any of what I would
doctoral work.
marly people as possible at the
in expendi lures. . . A member of the Center for lowest possible rost," he said. call waste
is a turbulence in society
Understanding Media in New "I don't question that we've There
that
causes
some to tum on the
York City, Dr. O'Grady is the grown too fast . . . but we bad students s ay
i n g 'you're to
to grow that fast to meet the blame' . .. when they are mereneeds. . . . We bad a lot of ly pointing uf. society's ills,
can Film Institute, the Society catching up to do."
but some poop e don't want to
Thirty-six grants and conAdditional lunda and/or confor Film Study and a consulMANLY FLEISCHJ(ANN • . .
see the problems.... Some peo- tracts totaling $1,308,509 were tinuing grants of more than
tant for the United States Ofborn
in
Hamburg,
N.Y.,
he
is
$50,000
were received by J . F .
out
on
received
from
outside
sponsorpie
take
this
frustration
fie&lt;! of Education and the New
ing agencies by Univ~rsity per~ Danielli, . TheoretiCal Biology,
York State Office of Education. 63 . . . a graduate of Harvaril the university system."
College and the University of
CLIFI'ON w. PHALEN . .. born
sonnel during ~ptember, Ra- School of Pharmacy, $120,000
Bullalo Law School . .. he is a in Washington, D.C., he is 66 bert C. Fitzpatnck, acting vice from NASA for "StudifB of the
partner in the Bullalo law firm years old . . . a graduate of president for research, reports. Range of Esistence of Cells;"
During the same period, 49 A. C. Brownie, Pathology,
. 'Ibe B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun- of Jaeckle, Fleischmann. Kelly, Yale University . .. he ls chair- ·
dation will apoosor a Qne-Il&amp;y Swart and Augspnrger an~.Jil man of the executive committee proposals totaling $3,272,621 School of ·Medicine, $177,488
Institute on ''Israel's Social the New York City law firm of of Marine Midlsna Banks, Inc. were submitted to poteritial from Nlli for "Studies of Path. of Hypertension;" H.
Problems," Sunday, October 16 Webster, Sheffeld, Fleisch· . . . !onilerly president and sponsors.
Among new grants received ~"'S:t, Biology, Faculty ol.
· ...... u B ~"-' u .
mann Hitchcock and Brook- chairman of the board of New
m~ ~
field : .. lives in Bullalo .. . a YShelorkterTelslephodne. ..... alivtruses teeon were: D. c. Wobochall, Engi- Natural Sciena!S and Matheslsn
neering and Biophysical Sci- matics. $118,609 !rom NUl for
sion leader, will be Samuel trustee since 1965.
Segev, Wutiington ~n''I feel SUNY has over· since 1961.
ences, Faculty o( Engineering a study of '~~
dent for Moarlu, a leading Js.. built," Mr. Fleischmann said.
''There are a lot of people and Applied Sciences, $11,580 to Altered Endocrine Sta~;: 8.
raeli
M a..-. will ''There are enough, if not too -::who would do well in commun- from NIH for a memb,..,., im- Bruckeitatein, Cbemistly, nc~·
r . .,.,.....
many campuses. We must fin- ity colleges and not feel duty pticlanooi apparatus for immunc&gt;- ulty o1. Natural 8cialcM aDd
~ pat: problem~ of the ish .,:_ we · - COIDIIU'tted to bound
to get a four-year de- logical assay; S. Ramalinpm, MaU..tlco, S68,888 from
"Biadt Panthenl" ol. Iamel. ten-siODa w - the Aliblumazim aDd not start new ones. 'Ibe gree," Mr. Phalen said. ''In- Mecbanical ~ng. F8c- AFOSR for "Rotating Rinlr
(WI!IIIem J - ) UldCbe Sefar- state is not able to alford new stead, IIIey could step out and ulty ol EngiMerilig ud Ap- Disk Electrode. studies;:- ana
dim (Oriolilal JBWS), Rl&amp;ian construction, an.d it's not find ·what they want, aDd if
lied ScieDces, $15,600 from M. Zelen, Stau.tica, F.cuity ol
Jewilh l.aimlpmtB aDd their needed We must learn to man· they fmd they want more edu· ~SSI&lt;T for ..,quisitiqn of a Natural 8cia1cM ud JIU1he.
~ -aDd the oonllict age
n9IW'CI!8 better."
cation, we should Jl&lt;C&gt;Vide them elecbon mic:zoacope;
..... tbe IICiivitiee ol. Cbe Jewish
Among ways ol. doina that, with the oPPortunity to do 80." ~-...rd. Periodolltolotistical Servlca for Lung OinI:lelo!IMe ~.ape.
,
Mr. F1eiscbmaDn waa quoted as
IIA8GAUf '1'. QUACKBNMIIR foa.~"f..!l":~.,J~ cer Sludiea."
.
Mr.
a padllate o1. ~ increaaed . teaeber
. . years
. bornold
in .Rocbeaterl.m.e
ia
ol. .....,..
....,_.....,_
·..
ol.
......._...,..
••
'N Aviv Ol!iYMiity in Jaw aDd ~=many ~a::= 66
Coilele
....
obe
has
til
auc1
t~.;•
.1.""""""*-. He - a CXJmiiPOII- but not _..ny at the ..,_, active in cl · cultural, Olio, MicrGblolao', Sc:bool ol.
::-~~.::...~~ SuNY unit of their first choice. educational aDd
.f. Medicine, $14;110 from NIH
R.a1Bt . G. U11i m. been
lndudiDI ~ intemRtional bo~au#a~'3'y~ laliB in the Mohawk Valley for a study ol. "BBderi88 Sur- DBIIIed ...... ol. ftlllii;J - ·
and
contnl
New
'Yodt
..
'
u!
.
ViruleDCe
aDd
Pbqocy~
to Dr. Harry G.
~...,._in~ Asia~ old . .. a graduate o1. CaDIUua
Fritz. dinoclor ol. the DhiliaD
~ ol.
~baWl been utend· CoiJece .. . he .Js head of the ~Herkimer • •. a liu8toe aiDce =~ . ~
Ph.Y*al
Bdacation, ~
eel Ill Hillel" PIMP rot Cbe Ulli· , n-tt Real ~te Ann · · ·
"Society," .... Que+-bulh =&amp;:!t~:.:~ tillll Uad Adlllllita.
~ o1. RAic:boMer, Roc':beolter l~vea in Amherst • . . a trullee
Ubl-a....&amp;oi.CNW
ald. ~. ~ that the Care 'ol. ~Dl:" ad p
1i181itute of TecilnalaiY,· Brodt· IIIDCO 1971.
•
aDd ........ (16'1) far the
part 81Me,- McMa1tet Uni_.·
Mr. ~ ~ lbe r..~ba=~
'OoppMII;
•
• F.culty ai
olty Fredonia ~!fred ~ dutii8 as . .. to mind, became a part ol the wadt Natmal l!c:lmcoe aDd )lathe- Bulla . . . . ~·· Hia
~t iae&amp;diWI immed·
UniWn;ty, CcmWid
Sy· oveniile ud ~policy, for the
illtely.
Uni~ Buflalo
State Uni......,lr, · . . "UUtl- force. we
Hia wadt with the UIB CNW
aud Erie Cclmliuinity Collep. mately," he ~~ ':'~ ~
wtien
cl
the
IMtribatlaD
In
Sal~ticlll will belia at 11 ol. the !'"' ... r-:':'
wilL he "" a part-dme huia.
,.;,;,..._ __. Universty rS!8 m the-J!'IDPie hilher education will he , _ Ill fat. ~ ..

!.t..."r'mended

am-·

..

-

Dr. Q'Gra~y
New-ICC
Director-

~=' ~;t~e~:r b.;.;,::a~

~

U!B Receives $1,308,509
From Grants in September

li':""..:'::'~~::r =d~~

Hillel Ins.ti'tute

";,'d""ciiscus-

out

s-v ;.

v-.

"'--·-==
-:.=·

a__..,

c.

.-:utical

1a."t

=

:the~~ _ :~.r.::..r:r =~

,:u. .

.

.

a..

::...~~~us:

New Crew Coach.

�Octcb« 12, 1972

Greup Helps Tranefers
Every year app~ly
1000 students transfer to U/B.
At one point there were special
orientation sessiODS for ·!hem
but t:biB bas sloPped and tran&amp;fers· are now left to completely
feild · for themselves. At least
·t:biB is the oonclusion that two
undergraduate ,.omen came to
last year when they began ill·
vestigating ·the problems o.f
transfers.
One of the students. Susan
Cohen. came to U/ B after a
year at Ithaca College. She related h~r fu:st-hand .knowledfe
of the situation to Dume Rubm
!"hen they were ~ !"!"'Ued
m a claas called AdYlSmg 88
a Learning Process" last
sprihg. They decided to look
into transfer student concerns
88 a claas project and ~ tbeir
inStructors. DUS academic advisors Claudine Koren and
June Blatt. encouraged them.

-.1o.

.•• is tho - I n
could yau _ ....
. . Octobof thot .....
from Indian SUm,_ to _.......,to~f

- ........_but_ ..
~-IFox08UPt
of tho ffrwt

-

m,.d In out .of tho cold.

1:30 p.m. sod 2-3 p.m., and ·
Friday from 10:30 a.m.-12:30
p.in.
• They call tbemlelves the
Student Tmnsfer C'AJ-.mcil and
work hard at maidDa ~the life
of transfenl" eaSier. fticbt now
they ha~ a list of faculty momhers in ~---departmeilt wbo
are B)'III,P8theeic to tnmsfer
students and have promised tci
~th tt.n. They plan
to have informal '90f'ee hours
for new students to meet eadl
other. ,
·
"It's ·hard to came to U/B
88 a 1t01&gt;homore or junior," Ms.
Rubin points out· "By t:biB
tjmj, friendshipe are fiDD!y es- '
tablished sod it's difficult to
break into cliques." ;

-le-

There are problems on the
academic side, too. ''Some departments make· their standards higher for transfers. giving
NoOne Sees Them
them a shorter time to comThey researched the topic plete departmental entrance reand talk'ed to staff members of quirements." Ms. Cohen l!lt·
the Student Counseling ~nter plains. And, traditionally, stuand others on campus jVho dents who transfer in the scideal with transfers. Their con· ences take a longer time to
elusion was that there are very · graduate, she adds.
few programs specially tailored
Then there's a basic psychofor these students. "They logical problem. "When you're
- don't get housing information, a freshman it's okay to be dlimb
they don't have an orientation and make mistakes but when '
and no one from academic de- you're ·two years older, they
partments sees them," Ms. Co- think you already know the
hen laments.
ropes and it's hard to ask for
The pajr finally decided to
open a peer advising service help," Ms. Cohen notes.
The two are optimistic-about
for transfers to help t h em
"learn the ropes." They set up the ·future of the S t u d e n t
shop in the SA office in 205 Transfer Council and hope to
Norton and now have regular go to community colleges this
office hours. Transfers can drop spring to tell incoming students
in and talk to one of six peo- about U/ 8. They expect curple on the staff or phone in rent transfer students to join
questions. · Office hours are the Council as advisors when
Monday from 2-4 ~ p.m .• Tues- they, too, uleam the ropes:'
day from 10.12 noon and 2-4 This way, the Council will .be
p.m., Wednesday from • 11:30- a self-perpetuating service. ·

Housing Business Is·A· Nuclear Center Excee~ .United Fund Quota
Hassle, StudentS Find
The Western New York Nuclear Research Center ;,; leading dle 22 divisions or t h e
United Fund campaign, having
already achieved 101 per cent
of its quota.
.
Other leading divisions are:
Office of the Vice President for
Facilities Planning, 93 per cent,

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

$1,211; Office of the Vice President for Research, 89.5 per
cent. $626.80; School of Man·
agement, 70 per cent, $1,053.
A leading sub-division of the
Office of the Vice President for
Academic Affairs is Admissions
and Records wliich has attained
87 per cent of its goal.

The entire University h a d

raised $30,000 or 27 per cent of

its $110,000 goal as of October
6th.
The weekly -repo.rt meeting of
division leaders ,;.,nl be held
today (Thursday ) at 4 p.m: in
334 Hayes.

sion. SBI created a corporation
~R•- ""'
that broadly folloWed the HagThe age of campus unrest is gans/ Bryant guidelines. La st
being rapidly followed by the sppng, the group was formally
age of student business but the incorporated and a board of djworld of finance isn't quick to rectors elected. Officers include
respond to students' enthusiasm James Beall, chairman; Jenni·
and idealisllJ. A good case in fer Washburn, vice chairman;
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS
point is the recently established Anthony DePaolo, treasurer;
student-run, non-profit housing and Peter Dalton, secretary.
\"'rpoi'Btiori - Scholas,tic Hous- Also on the board' are local
Faculty of Arts ond Letters ..
mg.
businessmen and camp\1!1 oflic..
Incorporated this sum mer ials, including D. Gary Mun- Foculty of Educational Stud;es
under Sub Board I (SBI), son, Niagara Frontier .Housing; Fac:Uitv of eng;neor;ng ond
Scholastic Housing is currenUy Nelson Civello, Marine Mid-;.c~ Scionces . .. .•..
considering its first big pur- land-Western; John Latona, / FoaJitvot.-mSciences . .
chase. a Ia r g e multiple tmit U/ B Foundation, Inc., and
apartment complex.
James Ryan of U/ B's Oflice of foaJityoft.owondJur;sprudonco · · ·
Without a doubt, there is a Uiban Affairs.
•
Scllool of ~nont . . . . . . . . . . .
substantial need for housing in
Late this summer, the board Focultv of Notural Scioncos ond
Buftalo. The national vacancy began the arduous process of
Mothernot;a ... . . .. .. .... ..
rate average is three per oent looking at property that would
FoaJitv of Sociol ScMincos ond
but this city suffers under a be within quick commuting disrate of less than one per cent. tance of both the new No~
....ain;nmrotion · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Students pc)ur into the city ev- (Amherst) Campus a n d &lt;the D;vmon of Undorgnlduoto Stuefios ...
ery fall and run into landlords existing South (Main St.) CenG&lt;oduote School . : . .•..........
who ~ge and under man- ter. Other purchase criteria in·
D;viol
1 eon · · 8 Edu ' ond
age, student governmeut officers eluded a sound .pbysical slnlc- 1
on °
. ''"!''" cotoon
charge. Apartment managers on ture plus li&gt;w maintenance
MUI•d FUimono &lt;;ollogo .... . .. iiiiiE:I:=r:=r~i:=!=j~j=j~5
the corporation
living quartenl.
commissioned a local company
E•-tivo v;.. Pros;clont •.• . . . .
To help JeCOncile t'-e dif-' to begin a marl&lt;et sur.'eY ·o f Off"'- of v;C. ,.._,.
ferences, SBI created a housing m e t r o· Buftalo tO determine
ClOIDIIlittee last fall. The . group what students· want in housing
for ~c Alfo;n · · · · . · ..•.
h
if e dton
the consulting
firm of and
how mDCh 'lhey would pay.
of v;.. .._tfor
• J!I*;;:~;:;!=~=J;;:;i;;:;J::J~;J;;::J
Dray
Bryant Associ8tea
In additioil;
the firm is to eva!- Off"'· Opor~-onc~s.s.. . .....
•
I
of Pbil8delphia. After t1uee uate the ouitaJrility of .fiiMlJ8}
F-ltv-t~ .... . • . LI_·...I~-L~..L...---'-..J...-..L---'--L-..L.,........J
• months of study, Bryant, work- apartment complexes for ScholOffk:e of v;..,.
· ~~-ffor
m.
wUb astudent,
Wed arehi~
~Ji~s~.
~ • SbMI.nt~~
J!8duate
J. Michael E..nuol
..._
.' · · · ·. · · · · ...·. ~~II~IOC::c::r:=rc:I::JC::C::J
~

$ 10,4()0.00
3,900.00
4,900.00
37,7110.00
2,900.00
I ,500.00

•••••••llc::r=:r=I=I=I::::::J

::....~:n~"':. '!:\:';; cos~tly,

H8fPI18.
submilted
a report
Ul'IJilll creation
of a non-profit
Btudent housing corporation.
Tbe JHOP088l oilled fO&lt; t:biB
. ......., to I~ or purchaoe
~ and D18118J1e it co'--"-" I f
tudent
..,..,.-ve !Y or s
use.

The that
jLo uSBI
a I Jiwill'
I! corporation
hoPes
eYelltually

buY an esiating complez too
house more iban 200 studealll
at reQta in lb&amp; 160 to Slkl per
penon~· ~~er~W.,._
buril &lt;
..,...,.
she the b.igeet roblem

~~monlhsoflituil~:. 88 ~of 7,~unit&amp;.'
and IOIIIIIthn5 11tormy discus- (Contiluutl on · col. 1)

.-&gt;

---·---··••••••cc:j=J:=c:=l::::::J
,
_
·----

.. ...·.. .•••ll•••ir=:j:=:r=I=I=:r:=J

::::v~:.:':~;~~

~ -~I&lt;&gt;&lt;

Offico
. of VN:e - - ...
Olfk:o of vooo , _ , f&lt;&gt;&lt;

.. .. ·.. .

OO:,.OC::,.":::'!.;,;;. ~·
U.B. F -. lncJAiuiml AHaln

•

-~--

---

--.

-------

-.'::.."'!~......... l,_
lllilll•ili••••••llllllllllll
-

-.... .

10,900.00
18,400.00
• 2.1100.00
560.00
I

,3oo.oo

3.900.00
~

5,200.00
5,200.00

14,3QO.OO

2.8oo.oo

• 3;800.00

1.;100.00
100.00
1,200.00
520.00.

,

�7
..
. ~~~~
NTP's'I)iscuss· ~eekly Conrinumqule--_,..__.:''----'-------=--~----• · ,.
coi.
bed&lt;croulld
io~ l!~U:~·h ~-~~~"'W
. nevances
·nin6 DOOD_.
procrem·
G
·.co
~
·t• . BASa~ALL•·
W~
_,.,..u.• : The
c:::an.•:
r .tuffiO, lODS .
~ j.!d'!.t;!'::z·n· .De~n~of God.

(Coiubweil from .B•.
6) ' W...m.odoy
--:' Oet. 18.
•·
in Heln:ew
Belt lnotruction, . 307 Nor~
The three-day
·Niii -262 Norton, noon. Talm&lt;ul, Hillel
T~,10 a.m.
~
p.m. .
fealun! .tbe foUowmg opeakera: Houoe,
Capen Bl~. 7 p.m.
U/B
N'
Dr.
8. Kremer, pro(_,r 111tAZ1U.U1 P1LK
CB&amp;ATIU CllAfT
Leather
Open
Shop,
807
Norton,
1-5 p.m.
doubleheader, PeeUe"l.wd,
and the Dead (Guerra,
CIIIL&amp;.tN8YliP08JUM.
LD;TUD•
:
Prof~ staff -8 ..;,.,... PBOIIUIMB AND ~w.......a. BYM· ' braska (3cbool
D; ~~~ ~F':':e Theatre, Nor116
.
. gnand the P&lt;l6IUJo[ WOIU&lt;BHoP• : -·Miaiaippi. Gordon J . Chrio""';w;J,'l!f_,r
A tro 'cal weatem that.
promotiOil revJew
.•
- -Paot and Pruent, led
Juon and ~ha I r~an..
_· 'tative . litical ~ aa well. Caned~~ pt r;:J:t·ar"ih~;~ia'/!,f!o:~ Fo~
Midilltl, 811!~ ~y t~ Berryden• local repreoen~tive of Stu- DenD tiSTbotry, Uruve_ra~ty ~.Colorado; down of foreign neo-oolo~."- ;.1,:"" -ln.r.Httlment, T'~o do r e
topiCS
. a ~
·- t Vote Organu.ati.on ·in Washr.
maa Kirk o.i.ieton, Jr.,
I!8()CIJid
the newly or- mgton, 330 Norton, 6 p.m.
. f.l:'f'!'""r eftleribls :~ director, PBOIIUIMB AND AWAI!ENESS BYX- en~ny!d!~[ tJ.J::~
c;

_ _

.

·

';

ton.

_.:f""ri:.u.;,.; ·

by

8Jl!i
amonc meeting!"
garii=~=-1

CAC

Slalf Sen- ·
m.&gt;o:•: Winter Light (Berg- ve~;"
U:,~tu~ ~:
""';;_.,. ,__._.,;_ ·Dr All • =;..~~~pen, 7 and 9: 15p.m. . liam M . F.,q,.,;., dean,' U/ B

o/1ffin":'io

11 • 75 centa.
.,.,._ _......,._
·
en · •
H. Kuntz llllked, the group for PBOBLU&lt;B AND AWAIIENDS 8Ylol:
idM&amp;OO~theSenatewould POSIUM LEC~U&amp;E• : Featu~
baDdle ~of DOn-teach-. ~!ea. E~n•. mayor of Fayette,
inl p~ (NTP's). He M......IPP•· Fillmore Room. Nor~ estahli""-nt of a
ton. 8 p.m.
-

~ ·trom -which aela: paoei or

Z,....

~ch ea.,.._~~be"-"'~.
lor
~....._
AClCOl'diD&amp;. 4o Kuntz's -pro-

""""

~ all ~a-woulil be IPVEn
the Ol&gt;l&gt;(ll'tUnitrjo -=vi&gt; on the
v8Dce·poolbeca.-ell
_would
for DOmination
by

.
f:'
e~e bolly.
the

In addition;
every DJIDinee would --be . contacted 8Dd given a cbance to
decline. .
·
L~'-- _.'--"'·-'- it' ~
In 1 urwa:q: ~"
-

AMBBJCAN

coN~

m.&gt;o:• • : Cornol

CIIEA~ CIIAPT ~•: Baoic
CaotmB. 12 fee, 7 Norton, 6 p.m.
Through Thuraday, OcL 19·
PIIOliioU!B - AND AW""""""" BYM-

Know~

(Nichola, 1971) , Conference Theatre. Norton, check ahowcaae for
timea. Achniosion charge.
H1IU!L COF'I'IZBOUBE AND POI:nlY
KEADING• : Poetry reading&amp; by

Bruce Garber, Michael Patterson
Walter Baroch and Ken Rosen:
blatt. Michael Mesch will play
the guitar. Hillel Houae, .co CaBlvd. 8 30
deci!led ' to ~~ !DI!Iboda pen
' :
p.m.
used by the r~.7 Senate in CHABAD BZRVICES • : Malaua. Malka
hearing grievaDces anjl also to Pot Luck Night, Chehad House
3292
conside&lt; conftict of interest and
Main Street. 9 p.m.
'
challeng8d8uaes.
.
UUAB OQFPZZBOUSE•: Stefan
Senators also !JrieBy ~ Groaaman, 1st tloor cafeteria, Norarticle 34 of the Senate Pro- ton, 9 p.m. AckfiUsion charge.
fessional Association contract UUAB ltOCK CONC&gt;:RT': Wilhbone
which concems a ~ of A1/) and Blue Oyster Cult, Clark
promotion ·for prof....,onal em- Gym. 9 p.m.
PerAdvance tickets: students $2·
ployees, deciding that
formance Review .Panel would faculty, staff and alw:nni, $2.25:
be set uP to. consider this.
C!'neral admission. 12.50. Admio:
RegarBing lhe Self-Study 810!' at. the door: $2 50. Tickets
document prepared to. the'- are aVfi!J!ble at the Norton HaU
Middle
Asoociat:iOn's -._ru_ik_e_t-~Ofli-oe..c:.._ _ _ _ __:__

B y/fa/D1,- led by Steve PerreUo,
past sta.ff couneel. local ACW
330 Norton. 6 p.m. '
'
NEW Alofl:lliCAH C~ND&lt;A•: (Brakhage, ~1) Antici~•ion of the
N
' ht • W'-~---. 18
. u~ water,_.Baby MouUJI, Thillh Lur.e Lyre Trianlular
147 Diefendorf, 7- p.m. Free. '
Anticipation won the Bru.asela
International Film Fest-iva I
Award. It consists of a tlow of
col~rs !'I'd shapes which conatant..
I
trigu
th ·
b
them
~!:"i:e~dt Pt',:'":J:!
kn_own in a significant rel&amp;.tionship by metainorphioing one visual statement into another. The
· laab,.rth.ttwo filmB are about child.

a

s-

~s~!a:-1~~~~~

of the 23 issues Dlited in the
Self-Study as r-eqUiring· attention. SpeCi6cally how ~ SenaU! will approach tl-.. issues
will be discusaed at the next
meeting.
t
Beginning with that · n
meeting, which is echeduled' for
November 2. meetings will generally be, Ofll!il to ·,all members
of tbe profel..io!ui! st8ff. However, Senate spokesmen said,
some meetings may be cl._t.

ex

Housirig(Contimnd from ~ 6, col. 2)
Later this l!&gt;(lllth; abe and· other
corporation olllcers will travel ·
to the UniVersity of Michigan
at Ann Arbor l;o eee how their
housing COCIJI!l!l8ti\oe operateD.
Another apected cillliculty is
lh&lt;t aelec:tion'""Uf tenants. "It
woUld be -flice-to operate on- a
first come, lb8t serve baaia but
what about the.ch'ildnm of millioD&amp;itl!ll?," she asks. Since the
com~ will Pft)bably be run
cooperaliwly it's also imporlant
that tenan1a ·naJiz.e diiey must
cooperate to mU.e the
II\IIXll!8ul •
Wilh a functioning apartmiint
unit under ita belt, Scholastie
lf~-·ft·· 'bapea iiB "Crack rec~ be aood eDougb to
make it eligible for fed e r a I
buildinl' moaey. Cunently, tbe
group ,it! opaatina .. a:ln&amp;Dage• Ollllllillant to SBI on
lllllhlevi!l._...ot. Their
OI&gt;OI'81inl ca.la uxl .. down pay~ to. -the initial housing·
~ are put d a ~~rm first

venture

houaiDJ

~"'t~~

to SBI mq cmn,e • Cbe operalian .... ........ One plan
calla for Sc:iaal..&amp;ic Houainl to
bu i1 d a ~ CIIIIJIIlm:

UBinc HUD ~- Repr&amp;.atati- flam the :baud of
direction law i:l~met with
HUD c6:laJa
·. aDd in
w~-..., dl8cultl thia po&amp;-

aibility. . -

--.....~OC..IMQIIE

~ -CliP\'_..

FOr . ..,.._.. CDI1VIftlencl and
.-......; • 1'- to ~bllcla aH ·

_ . . plica on- campuo.
To 1-.1 ~. contact
No'!CY. ·Carda , eat. 2228:

-

SUNDAY-15

IIIU&amp;)J OPIZAnON GRBENUGBT:

~"!co~t!:~r~~ts:1::
of Hillel Houae, .CO Capen Blvd
1 p .m. ·

.•

BABEBAU-4 : U/B VB. Brockport
State, doubleheader, PeeUe Field,

unkn:..,

OOMPUnNG CENTER 8EMINAB#:

FORTRAN IV, Sidney McCarthy, U/ B Computer Services in·
structor. Rm. -10, 4238 Ridge
7
-?r~m~minar is a comprehen-

r.;;.;_

~d ~~;li~tio~.thTo!!'ic:uawfll

l..l')clude: computation, branching,
loopj.ng, basic declarations, and
subroutines. Emphasis will be on
d~entation, debugging techruques and readable output..
PBOB1£MB

AND

AWARENEBS 8YM-

P0811Jll u:crURE•: Guest speaker
is Daniel Ellaberg, currently on
trial for the release for publication of secret Pentagon docu.
"'llenta, Fillmore Room. Norton,
8 p.m.

I p.m.

TUESDAY....,...17

PROIJl&amp;MS

AND AWAKICNE88 SYM-

·::'?~~ -~tJ!"'j':"'f! ·'
lator, State Assemblyman ~r
Eve, and Moon Landrieu., mayor
of New Orleans, Fillmore Room,
Norton, 8 p.m.
UUAB PILM.'h: Carnal Knowledge
(Nichola, ~971) , Conference Theatre, Norton, check showcase for
times. Admission charge.

CII&amp;TIVE.

11
[:~·n3g Bj~ Wa"y!:ree~d
Montgomery Clift. who give great

H £A L T H SIZVICEB WOIUtSBOP•:

Models for Health Servicu Eool-

uation, James McCormick it n d

Wheel
TIt rowing, 7 Norton. 1 p.m.
Through Wedneaday, Oet. 18.
&lt;DA'I'Ift CltAPT &lt;ZNDZ·: &amp;tilt
ll"truction, $1.60 fee. 307 Norton. 2-6 p.m., a!ao Wedneaday,

at&amp;A'ft\'B C&amp;AFT &lt;ZNTD•:

7:3().10 p.m.
CDATn.

at4PT C&amp;Nt'IB•:

Norton,

Duign Concepta, 7
Through Thuraday,

&amp;uit:
3 p.m.

OcL 19.

"'~nal KM'!::::!i ~.!;..:.":....~:
fliefendorf Annex, 3-5 p.m.
·
This is the eecond in a eeriee
of seven weekly workshops on
program evaluation· in h e a 1 t h

:"'k":!:r'~:,_by~~cil
CHIL&amp;AN . 8Yl0'081Ulf PILil• :

Vol-

~. ~or!~'3 ~:.er;::

screening&amp;.

:T:~~P~0~~ ~ ~I!ROIIImd AND A";~ SYK·

inl of Sp«i/ic ToriM to Nerve
Membronu, Richard HODde._,
De~t of Molecular Biophyoi&lt;:s and Biochemiotry, Yale
lJniwraity 70 Acbe!lon. 4 p.m.
Coffee and tea at 8:80 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-18

~U¥ WOitKSHOP • w~~ cuut
~!i::i and Women • RIB~.
.
tb"""Ch tbe ,Women •
Studiea P~ featu~ . - I
-kera and diocusoion, 387 Norto..-; 3:80 p.m.

0

t::f~~~

~ ~partment

U B

of

~~ b~'w~J.~r-

ba1 ez~ 0\'.')ke love, hate,
and otbe' mterpe~nal feelinp.
UNIYIBSITY REPORT•: Pro~reu of

North Campus Con.tructwn, Dr.
John D . Telfer, U/ B Yice-president for facilities planning, Conferen~ .Ti!eatre. Norton, 2 p.m.
This ,. tbe oecond in a aeriea
of aeven monthly reports
tb
University, Dr. Telfer's
will be followed by a questionand-anaw~r period.

addrea:

CHil&amp;tN

BYKPOSIUM:

LlllCTUitl:. :

The U.S. and Chile and the Direction of U.S.-Latin American

~f"~oe~~ ~~~r:·Jnf~-:r~

at Livingston, 234 Norton, 2 p.m.
UPB WORKSHoP• * : Approach to
Learning, led by Dr. Dorothy
Adema, U/ B Counaeling Centar
232 Norton, ~ p:m .
'

Venceremos, Houses or Shit and ComCBIL&amp;AN SYMPOSIUM FILMS • :

lfb!~re, ~ir~~~~ 4 ~~
14Creeru.ngs.

CREATIVE C&amp;i.FT CENTER •: Glazing,

7 Norton, 7 p.m.
·
FILMS •: Dark PautJ4e. (Daves,

?rti

Norton, 3 p.m.

LIFE WORKSHOP• • : D«ition~ , De·
cisiona, Decision~ : What Should

My Major Be? , 232 Nor.ton, 3
p.m.
Student Or·
ganiz.a.tio~ Bauinul Procedu.ru,
332 Norton. 3 p.m.
PSYCHOIU.T: Fint floor cafeteria,
Norton. 8-6 p.m.
l..lNW PBOGILUrOIING LllC'I'UD# :
Dr. Stanley Zionta, professor of
management ecience, U/B, 146
Diefeadorf, 3:80 p.m. ·
PHYSIC&amp; OOLLOQUJtJK# : M olecultJr

LlFI: WOIUtBBOP• •:

:!eC~'F~E:::~;~ 1p1:~

loiynthuil, J . H. Wang, EU..tein
profeesor, U/~, 111 Hochstetler

4 p.m. Refreahments in 112 Hoch:

stetter, 3:80 p.m.

CINI:&gt;U. • :

SOVIft

Syrnphrmy of

~. f931t."14~E8~r.-.::~ 7&lt;~::!: -

Free.

Strangelove:

Dr.
Or
:,odw L,~a~~:d ~~!~op(~t!'b;fc~
1-10 Capen. 7 and 9: IS p.m. Admission : 75 centa.
This is tbe first of Stanley Kubrick's
of man aa a micro-coem of a violent society. It ia a
wildly comic story of an incipient
nuclear holocaust and tJ:.e at.
tempt a of the U.S. President
(Peter SeUera) and tbe Soviet
~remier to prevent it; abo atar.
rmg George C. ScotL This film
has won o v e r 60 international
a warda.
CAC FILM. • :

trilogy

COMPUTlNG C E N T &amp; B BCMINA&amp;# :

COBOL, Chrio Siderakio, U/B

~:f&gt;t.::::..~.;:.u~ ~g~ ~lf~~i:.a~~.t!:
7 p .m . Free. Adam'• Rib (~.
1949), 1-10 Capen. 9 p.m. -Free.
Judy Holliday makes her film
debut aa a dumb blonde who
tdloota her errant· apoUM. '!'he

CBAp. P£1''1'11l•,: Sanqal

1rutructwn, one belt class ie · P~:_e­
requisite, $2 fee plus materials,
7 Norton. 2 p.m~
VAB.BI'n" SOCCER•: U/B va. St.
John Fisher, Rotary Field, 3 p.m.
FILM•: ·8ed Riue• (Hawka, 1948),

performances in this, the best 'o f
all cattle drive films.. Here you'd
better look to your buddies 'cauae ·
women just can't be trusted. but,
of course, cattle buyers are honest
men.

MONDAY-16

tbe Brilisb Parliament and advocate of political rights for Nortb
em lrioh Catholics, Clark· G~
8p.m.·
.
------------

~:,~~~ ~w¥,;=~£; F~UIBT~~~:rirG~ Gaowys',

THEA-

'f!!:=_
~ Tfheor Ude111UU7l.'Jbtaila. ~. aee Friday
UUAB

School of Dentiolry.

~ma':~f!~":,:,~~

Mr. Hulol'a Ho~
day (Lea Vacance. De Monaiew
Hulot) (Tali, 1959), Conference
Thealnl, Norton. check. -

UUAB FILM••:

for times. Admiiaioa c::ha.qe.

huahand and wife defense/ proaecution team p f Katherine Hep- ~A.&lt;Z~l'IBli'INO~
burn -and penoei. Tracy chooae • ~~"!!!~~~~ "
the sides of the cue, appropriate p.m.
to a BOmetimel serious and aometimes comic treatment of the bat-- KILLII:L corn:&amp; aoua• : ~
tle of, the aes:es.

r:.!ri:uaicar m.mn:nit~O:O

Capen Br.:t":' p.m.
CONcaT•: Buffalo Festival preaents The . HoUiu. Kleinhana
Music Hall. 8 p.m.
Admiaion: $4.60. Tickets available at the Norton HaU TicUt
Office.
BII&amp;NT

nuo:• : Blind Hrubtmth

(von Strobeim, 1919), 147 Diotendorf, 9 p.m. Frae.
The otory of an Allltrim ollloer

=

!!~"":!: ~~':.-==
~-n..n::~:~ ~
moral otance of tbe film and tbe

by

claaic portrayal Of tbe hMoy
voa Slrobeim, u w ell u tbe
JDOUDtaintilp finale, aU contrih::,ta~tbetom:- .--.undine """"'!81

EXHIBITS

�Odlober J2, J!l72

8

Kindennann ShJw Casts
New Eye on 01d J:lhotos

Heh:nmo Kindermann likes to DO-J!On&amp;en&amp;e black ~ n d .~te ·
IICOUr antique stores and second- settings are fnl:med m brilliant
hand shops for those traditional and breath..wting blue.
pboto·atrd portraits of the
Kindennann- who bas stu1920's and 1930's and ·earlier. died in the .Art Dell81'1ment's
You know the ones: Aunt So- visual studies workshop in
phie at ·a g .two in' a long gown Rochester (a loft facility near
and a pose vaguely reminiscent Eastman House) and on the
of SiUing Bull; Grandmother R.idge Lea campus (under the
In a high collar with a cameo tutelage of Harvey Breverman)
- pin,_ risid as a C i g a r Store - - anives at his Blend of art
Indian.
.
. a n d photography via seveml
'!be cards are one of the ele- -technical avenues.
mente Klnilermann uses in tbe
Treating large canvases with
pwauit of a combination art photo emulsion to !bake them
. form which is the basis for his lil!ht sensitive, he actually de. YFI, depee In painting.
vetops a pbotogfapb on t b e
By way of fiutber explana- canvas. Paint is &amp;PI&gt;Iied to entiaa. be eays, ''I am wor~ to )lance and embelliBii the image
CliiiDbiDepbotopapbyand pamt- and achieve the synthesis.
ing ., that the final image will
In-anolber approach which is
hne the quality- of both a sort of the ftip side of the fust,
~ and pbo!Ograpbic BUr"
he uses photographic paper as
faCe, ., that the t1wo will he a painting and drawing surface.
IDiedoclred worlrlna together."
Another variation finds . him
R.W~i.r his ·effOrts to date applying color directly on black
wiU be on view In "Portmit," a and white pbotos1 again striving
.
.
tbesis obow at the Art De!lart- for the combination effeot.
which mu:es ~ de'"'!' ""!'. _ Gallely (&lt;4240 Ridge-Lea)
Unde,...cl ot Temple
denf:S and practicmg art:ists. m
_ Monday, October 16, through
Kindennann was attracted to , an informal. Workshop - g
Friday October 20. The exhi- photography as an undergradu- captured h 1 s mterest. There,
bition besins with a public re- ate pointing '.""ior at the Tyler ~de~ says, you don't get
ception, Monday night at 7 School of FIDe Ans, Temple il!olated ~ your. own ~rk to .
p.m.
University. The first encounter . the exclusiOn of everythin,f and
the can1o Coma in
came when be hsd to photo- everyone else. Everyone JS m, Basically, Kii\dennann says, graph his art work for publicity volved :- with each . other's
the pieces to be exhibited - 20 purposes, fjy the time he was w~, ~th lect)1re senes feapjlotognqlba and 121arge i&gt;llint- a senior, he was "more jnto ~mg big ~ ~pheJ1;1.
iDgs - constitute a contem- photography than painting," so with learnmg Prilr?"B tecbniporary look at .t he traditional he stsyed around Temple an- ~es far phof.c?graphic reprodUC?portraies of an earlier era. '!bat's other year a f t e r graduation, tloll('. Pole~ m'!""urn
wbere tl&gt;e photo cards come ln. - working on color techniques in ~rs and ~rt ltiJ!t!&gt;nans mmgle
!!be artist ,_the cards In a photograh;y as a basis f&lt;&gt;&lt; real- with fledglmg en tics and photonumber of ways, each of which istic painting.
graphic artists at all levels of
_will be represeuted in tbe show.
Photo emulsion preparations development
,
After re-photographing and suitsble lor use on amvas hsd
Palnti"'
printing olbem on canvas, he just been peifeoted at the time,
After a year in the program,
80IJ&gt;Otiuies CCllllbin. the basic he ssys. And he was at the however, Kindennaim decided
- poltraita with artwork, sections Cle8t of the wave in exploring he wanted to work with color
of ~ snapahota and vibnmt tbe J&gt;O!!Bibilities. .
·
that Would not necE681lrily be •'
color. He also malus use of a - Two yeilrs agn, be hade on&amp;- photographic color ~ so it
ei&gt;llage technique, blending eJe. man show at the old DOMUS was back to pointing'-« ralhlif
menta from a dozen or more facility on Elmwood Avenue. At to the combination of the two. the Misoiaoippi Art.Ala&gt;ciation,
-.tives to achie.., a composite that time be b!lcame acquainted
Klndennann wbo6e .work ill and has been represented In
portmil Now Aunt Sophie, In with some of the people in lfwl. represented by Light Gallezy of Colorprint USA, an e:o:hibit
fact, has the hMd of Sitiling local 8.1¢ department's photo#· New York City, has had two sponsored by Texas TO!Ch Uni~B \1 II· IIIIIJiling II!!#!! &amp;ptOUt . IIII'PhY prorra!D, which is bead- photoa publlahed · In the Ti1111!- "'Yei&amp;ity. ' ~
frOm tf,.; tbzoats. of 9ti1f forms. ed by Nathan Lyons, former Life Photography series. He te- ·
He appoara eve~ other Ji'riAn airplane U. either about to _ director of the internationally- ceJVed the purchase prize award day on Channel 7 s ''Morning
land atop or bomb Grand- known Eastman House mu- in "'!be Images on Paper Show, Show," h o 8 ted by Janeen
mother's risid beiJd. Auste"'! seum. The u n i q u e program a travelling national emibit of Maxwell, BMVing . as resident

c:um-

-to

p--

criijc-moderator for
tions aiiout the photOgraphic
scene in Buffalo, interviewing
local ~pbers, ~
tlieir work,·.etc.
•
'
Kindennaim, who plans to go
into college .teaching after ..,.
ceiving the M.F.A., also does
~ commercialm work.

&lt;WEEKLY poMMUNIQUE

CIU8AD

....,m ...,._.,

A

Shobboa" ~ 'will ........ ' a.
•m-.
a..t.cl H ou ae, 11192
M.m Bu.et, 9:80 a.m:
CI!M'Iml aLOft ~. lh~Ua­
(Co"!ilwec! e." ~ 7, ~ f)_

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                <text>1972-10-12</text>
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·jj

J

~

•

•

COmmunity Action.' COrps Needs Your Help ·.
)fl Collecting Books, C~&lt;Iren;; Playthings
Ilia~~"":!-'"'=

=..-scb!lol

C!PIB!-""'i-"' ' --.

and neisbboi'ar·e miDimal,
'lbe ·CAC projects .bave· a big
gap to fill All kinds of recreationlil-educatioDIIl t o y s and
equipment are necessary, in addition to bookS. and would be

Birice

hood -

greatly appreciated; especially

&amp;y ibe children,- the CAC trio
says.

-·Anyone · wi t b materials 'to
colilribute: should contact Mm.
Joyce Reicilert, .-:retary for
the CAC, at 831-3609. Don&amp;tions may; be dropped olf at the
CAC Oflice, 220 Norton, but
will. also be picked ,up at your
'home bY CAC volunteets, if you
preler. c&lt;iUecti'Oo8 officially begin -Moliday, October 9,. ,,
Tutorial-recreatimml projects
· cummtl:~&lt; Underway and the

�.Activists-

,~ ,__1; ~ 6) .

- Yaulh CCIIIIdlnalo&lt;, at 6 p.m. in"
.

180 Nanaa.
8~:' N-.. Mailer, at
8 ...... in !be ~ RGala
.......... ~11

.=

W~:~~

....... Prilailen' Bilbla." lad by
l.oomiy KaDf and,Dar-aflly Terl'lill ol
Chil Li,.
U!liaa. at p.m., bi 880

a..!.":?:

at~i...=-3=·
~orL~Roam. ·

Tlllnd8J, Odlallor

12

,__c:....~:::-a~

--

- ~--

--

..

.

.

~&amp;r:=a '$imple J~tiee: Not Simple;.A.wwm-Group

o1 Cbe American 8tud8 DeF.ive.........,..
booors remaiDs 80 ~- -~
P8l'lmel, aDd o-.dajpl
at the Amwal AIWDDi~- business that 'time tables sbould
O..I.Yaal. at 3:80p.m. in lion Women:S Day- Awanls nowbethelbpcal=--t
880 N......_,
l.AulcMon Tuesday beard that to 11-.. task loroe.
"8be
WcdrA.,P: "Coi:PoDie Re- simple justice is IIC!t always 80 proposed the goal of 1976,. the
'lbe· Honeywell simple. Keynote&lt; Viqpnis AI- 200th anniversary of the ·nation,
'Dow of the 70'~.· Jan, deputy assistant secrelery as the dele "for the elimination
by Rev. X.. flllel': of alate,for PUblic affairs, spoke of discrimination against ......,_
~ aDd ~ of the ,_{ to. "eliminate
dis- en."
.
-.
6 p.m.
crlminstion and bring Ms. l\llan assigned th~ee
·
. into the mainstteam of Ameri- tssks' to thOse present. She
880 N......_
~: J..., -1l'oada; Tom am life. 'Ibis is a matter of isked them to work for the
Haydep ol the C2Ucuo 8ewm- Simple justice," ·llhe esplained. ratification of the Equal Rights
and dlit Indodlina InlOnnatioo
She ,outlined major ~ of Amendment. To date, 21 states,
Project; a.,9pecial Forces 101- PreaidentRicban!Nixon's 'nlit including New York, have apdia- Georp Slilitb, held pri- Force on Women's Rights and proved. Next, sbe . . them
"' ..... for • · yean in . Rc-pcmsibilil;ies that ......, set to wort. agsinst "discrimination
NOI'tb Vietllam; folbinpr Hof- down in 1970 and told ol otbeiJ: ' in education." And, · finally,
ly Mier; time aDd piece to be implementation to date.
. she pushed for the "securing of
announced.
'"'lle Task Faroe Report," federal financial aseistance to
F.W.,, Odlallor IJ
sbe
"gave· a reeders the_ meet the needs of this nation
Worbhop· "McGOvern for cbil~dn..~_f,Ust class ~~· for the ci-eetion of a sufficient
.,__,_._t · n.:...~:-• ..:- and
_...,..,.~en~ C8J.11em. """". number of cbild care centers."
.c~ ;;- ~·~'"1f"
dom Of choiCe m life styles,
Ensctment of laws in tbeee
PohttcB',- · 3:30 p.= m ·233 .•eqUal eilucaliooal· and employ- three &amp;reliS will make signifi.. '
. .
.
ment opportunities, and of a ciant · progreiis · t.Owaid··eiimfua:Nol'lon.
Wm:~: Selective Seryice ~rldwide ~ '?'! !'uman. tion of discrimination, she ssid.
{::'·a~• ~~ nll!ts and respoosibiliti~. In After all, &amp;!&gt;" con?"'!ec!, it's "a
dral · - --~ ~business. · we, call .~ VlBIOD, matter of SUDJ&gt;Ie JW!tice."
~a;.... a 6 ":_~ ~n~aaem
.mit by•. ~jectiv'"'-'.
· ,.,,_ ~\;; • ·p,.:· .. • ·' :·
. . .. - ..-=-_«bigiu4h•Ube . ,...~
·,. -·'
. ·•
3ll'I' Norton: •
·SpeQAer: o.--:_, Clllr" at8 ~~~ ¥.-'d
. "'~~~fu.
Citation' 'wlii!!,ers we~ Rubr
0 ~· an ...,._"'..........., . r. · Butts, l ood couri8elor and nutri• ,.., __t_..,G
_.. 3
..,
p.m. m ,_..,..., ym.
reaching the desiie&lt;! md set tiorust; ' Sisler Mary "Mechtilde,
~ We must ~~"'! !'!1 '\ administrator, Kenmore Mercy
Hospital; · Dr:·,Elizabeth Pieice
0011!6" . of ·""""""P.ve -~.,aon. 11r
~ace .a futuri! of fnlsfriition, dis- Olmsted, Dphthalmblogist; DeillUSIO!llD~t end sh~Jttered ex- lis ROdriguez, assistant dipeotat:ions.
,
rector, Puerto Rican"· Cultural
Job .Rocru._t
/
Community House;-&amp;Dd· EmiJy
First, the Task Force, called H. Webster, re!l!!Dtiy retired
foi the ~J.islmlent of an .Qf- secretary 'of' the UIB Foundsfice of WOIIJjlll's Rights andRe- tiori, Inc.
Asaem)&gt;lyman sponsi~ilities which would reMs. Butts was haileil for
at 2 p.m. in port directly to the President. "service to neighborhood, com-.- ~ this -office was not or- munity~ stale and world .. . for
g~, Ms. Allan ssid, Nimn reaching out'' to others: '"'lle
did
Barbara Franldin organizations which have benen to recruit
~ top policy fitted as a "result of your leaderpositions.
118 ship and counsel represent most
!&gt;&amp;ve been
poas P&amp;Y.• ~of service. Your church,
mg $28,000
and up, sbe vanous charities; area "'-inoted. And
iban 1,000 tsls and, in psrticU)ar · ..,b;wil;.
otber
been pro- tative programs in n&gt;en'tsl health
mated
"middle and "&lt;1r1!!l .UBBge, the economically dissdvantsged, Buffalo
city government, young people,
and Y,Oilf business end prof..,_
sional 8880Ciates are benf&amp;iaries for 'having !mown you."
Siatet Mary Mechtilde received plaudits for two careers:
'"'lle fust to benellt were the
school cbildren you taught end
led. · Whon the call came to
help heal tbe.'mck, ~ """"""'·
of ed with the courage, determins' lioo aDd tslEilt which have
made ~ !1118 of Western New
York's aDd~ the nab's
_. - t skilled baapitsl adqlini&amp;-

.:...mvil!l

a.w

S

-..

:

"at

ssi~

11

s

~torS. Your asaoc:i8.tes ~ not only your acumen in boapi·.
tsleoilstructionalldadministration, but, with reverence, your
lif&amp;-time habit of I'I!IIChinJ out
to co-worbn and patients in
an attemPt to make their tasks
.easier."
Eftorts in bebalf of the blind
and"-•·blind--em-"--'·-'
-~v
_...,...
in the citation for Dr. Olmsted
who was alao called the "eye
doctor's eye doctor" because, of

~ved~!"'i:'
~- ==
.
...,
and ~,.._._

Federalioo ol WOmen's Clubs;
.Mrs. Marie K. Caloann, cbair-

man,aii!mbar,UIB. ~ty

Advisory~; Mrs. Marsha
G.-r, lrlli1iiq COordinator
!Jiabop's Committlie ~ ~
Jan . Home aDd Family; Mrs.
Herbert Knilbt, PllBlr~~Wernor
Zotits Int.Einaliooal,· -Mrs.
nice PQ.. U/.8 etaft coordinstor lor lbe recruitment of wom.., fliculty; and Mrs. Barbara
Sims, director., 0111ce of Equal
Opportuni
.. ty.
~-.

Ber:

Dental
Alums
.
.
p- -~-1
·on +-hn~. "our ·PI
·M
t•
,............,
~X·::'~~:!:~{ . an
ee
Ing
bnng great
. I!!
and . ~annual ...,._..,~ of
&lt;

~
b.!fped~.=.ber~=
BOCUltes: ........ts
Y181
'

:-:-:-!'

•'

-

them

••
to yout"commumty:. Dr. 0~sled. was alao P~ for .her
""'Y'ces to a fsvonle avocation,
11ying.

"

-~

•. · '' · · · ·-··.· ·

· ···~·...,uez was

·~. :-:.

ted f

Ms o...o-'-·

C1

~

"Oth

..., ,,
~-·t he U/B De,ntiil AIUIDDi ABsociation will be belil October
16-18 .at the Statler-Hilton Ho-

·-~Wl
-.th~ ··,~of

tdayei.
·

.......t

with · 1M

Dentistry will be the Eighth

f~..:U!'~ties..~~ Distri~ ~,.Erie

County,-denyou demuaatlated' '
til aocietleii:· • •· '" ·•-· ·•.
··
·
iJ!l ~~~ ··~&lt;The g,n~r-ot&lt;tbii' Family
~ and ~n!huY., scl!ools ~ Dentist in G•;""",; Y91ing·-Paas an "!'ecti'.'e '!'J'reBeD!I!ti"!' tNtn~ to a~ Arof SPanisli-sJ)ealdng Amen- iangement of the Devel •
cans;:~ ~honi •:y.pu have hejpoid Dentition" will be ~bg
· ·•• overcome ~cl'"' and en- Dr William S
at ~
abled . . . to assimilsle to a ao- 0~ . • • MondaY; Occiety which is f&lt;·eque·n tly toiler 16 "f:on Dr. ·~
8
~8 to them." ·
is prof..:.:,..
of
'Ibis was not the &amp;rst time the~ofP~
the University had ilaluted Miss Uni.versity of Nebraalra Webster who is a past recipient of Dentistzy. "Undeistsnding
o! the ~umni Associatiqn's and~ the Pedodontic
highest awani, the 8aJrruel P. Patient" will 6e his topic MonCai&gt;f1D Award. "On the occasion daY sftemoon.
.
o_f your retirenient," ber cite'l'ladlry, October 17 will
tion !""!d. "the alumni and com- -ture."New TC!CimiqUes'lind Phi~llDlty ' advisors of the Unive&lt;- loaophies in Restorative Denmty at ~ulfalo once again recall tistry" by. Dr. Gordon·J. Cliristhea!&gt; mil'"'ton"'!' iJ!JOUr Ellvi- ~ ~_,. 8l1d chairman,
able career: Biplifiamt per- Rehabilitstive Ilealiaby Unifomiance wbil~ ~ U/B in venity of Colorado. · '
trusted flnancial .positions, unA pbyaical fta- espen from
sel1l.sb lshor in estsblishiD, vi- Blinois will be the speaker on
tel al~ programs, sharing Wed n es d a~- (9 a.m.) . Dr.
your wuouuwasanelectedcoun- 'IbOmas Kidt CUreton, Jr proselor. to the University &amp;dmini- fa&amp;~r emeritae and diJeok. of
stlation, empathy for students the · ~ ~ Institute,
as ~ by your efforts in. Uni~ of l!linols, will~
schoianlbip and loen )lrOil'8DI8 on. ','Pb.y8iaal De1eriara1ion and
of the alumnse end the Univer- its Padlal· a-aai (alowing)
ity at Bliftalo Foundation, 8nd · by 1'tlyaiad Pia- Propuns."
notf the least, your staunCh deDr. William M. Fe a~
ense of alma meter when it dean of the U/B Dealal
needed it most."
.
Will be Cite main lll!8aila' "' ~
Members of the ir.warda com- Wedlado .luDcDian. At the
· mittes for the were Mrs. -Annual Aluami Ramlan DinIns .Alt,Jresident, Iriter-Ciub ner n-lav ev.ilal die 50CoanCiJ Weetent New YOlk; : , .cJa. (1922) llloDc with 10

K!..-

a':;dduiliman

tea-

~ _Stsnley·~ Pl'8lidad. 1rom m7~...!.:m' ~
onod.

�1../-

oi:tob,.r ~.-;1!1~ :_

�¥

._/"

"'

.;-

~,~

\./

4

.

u:.:~L.
·~ . s·
~r1UID

.

' .

(( (.'q

i'l~.r..a\.(1

~.-, ~$;11172

7
•

- It,

\.·

.

(''

..

' ~1;...1 . .
. C\~.;_,..,
~
Gooil.uUJJ..
.~.;'VJlY
of Co~·JobS;·
aysr.
D.:Wtems UlM
VGJ
•
·
•
.

CSerious' in Grad Ed evaDPI·
.. · B;!~e.!!~~
~~~~~"
oalt,ae
'Eleo•-•..-....,
0

~ bas c:alled "tb8

Educetlon
' an4The...=-: ~~
~
~~~
o A~ oftbepnoctice · hired three ~_,.aso by 74
at~ er at my la!lb, Cbe "depuimen- ::;:,.
little optimiam about -&lt;&gt;f Y&lt;otockpil!lllf". II)IIDpower re- acbool.~......., IIDd small,
~!be~ of aood lalization not cbara-a.tic of jOb~ties untillbe last . """"""" Osp8clally on the ad- ~slightly ~ ~ ~Y.
__,_..._ IIIVIel ........_" IIJlCl goc)d'F'Bduate ~ ~ 18 ball or the decade. EYen eben, vanced degree leYel, on tbe pert or d&gt;!m the number ~paled
~llloe to ae.
iiulla- that cleputmenWimlio which mo8t of !lie openings will·occur of '~ fum&amp;,
.
for eilber 1976 .or 1980, "There
· 4 tllll:a.=JIIJ...., Into - holds n,idly to m•eamined ·
·
•
and IDIIDilB"• Increasing emphll1!t s 0!' . appears to be viftual ~t
~1
pbiloaopbical pr~tiona, m ~
· .·
personality and work , ~n· that~tutureemp~p&gt;e,
_,..or_, while pulting fOrth iJ11 views ~ long-rSnge out.iook . is ence in .e mployee .selection t1!"" ID the,_,. of~ Stu·
line ~-a ~devel· · ·lis aoePellnltb or the last word bued on two emploYment sur· . rather tluUt on. the majOr.
d-, ~cal ~tion f o r
os-t of ~ lore, and , .., the DBUer. Few IDI!IIIben of verys of the ...., conducted by
• A trend m many ftnns to .m en, . nglish, IIUidance _and
............ PDaiDe t-Jedp.- the UniYI!rllity community will the University Placement and hire a bs~ureate ~ co~and~tar:Y"eduID a arieb' of 8eldll of _..... a&gt; deny, that these lbiDp Queer Guidance Office.
· holder who will ·then take &amp;peel- cstion appl!llt'tl to . J&gt;OQI', the
- ...._ y,
oftal, bow· • iiappea· they will ooly WilDt to Commerdal EmploJera fie graduate 00111'1108 ra~r than .1'11'!\':1!' fOifud '"!- areas f.or
"' ·lbe price
bl8 a-a dl!llY
a mom) that they do
From a ·survey of 146 rom- a graduate degree cimdidilte.
op~ were ~: ·IIPPC;isl
~ln...!- not on1,y a bllh it thomoolw&amp;. Sud&gt; ~ _of mercia! employers (inoluding
• A pre!~ for gzadullte educstion, PJ!Yai.cai education
. - . , ; at-.pecializadaa, DlllidDI paduate ltUdy, as o;iuJtwill his- 35 with more than 500 emplo:y- degree holders "!ito have had- ~ women. reading, DBth and
. .that information ~1M tory, ~ve literature, or _ ees), the Office found that m some work ezpenence between 8Cl"'!"!""• and _librarywork. less
. even to intellipDt ~ in lbe bialoiY of ~ ~r the 1972 period, 42 per cent of tHe undergraduate and graduate, traditional llf'P!'B SDCh as psy0 tb 8 r opecial!zed lloldl, hut,
sulfer from ""'*lect at th!s insti- respondents anticipate no open- · degree.
.
. .
cbo!ogy, vocstim:-J and occu.more llinister a concielled com· . tution; and 1hiS negl"'1't 18 ~ ings for roUege graduates, 40
• An emp~ on hi':"'J ""!· pati&lt;?nal ediJC!ltiOD, speechm i - to lciotinc at the world acteristic of the avenuon tp m- per oent apect' 1-5 available ployees who will be "immedi- media, and SOCIOioiY were seen
int of ~plinary o~;Udies whi ~ h positions, and only 3 per-cent ately.pft!&lt;iuctive." .
as "developing." '
.,... and dlia yleWp
may """'!'d torm an unportant_and anticipate hiring from &amp;-25 c1e- . • Anmterest~yseveralftnns
....n•be all too ·
&amp;om &amp;!sniflcsnt ~ ·of tbe 'Umvel'- gree holders.
· .
m both ~ve ~rk-.stu!ly
'-'U
.
,
..., lleld to 411e nest. ·
Stty rommumty. .
Tbe outlook improves in 1975 programs and JOumalism train-'to· 8C
A .-y--l*imP&amp; ·~·
In my opini~ this is -an . to oruy 9 per cent with no~- ing on 'the undergraduate level.
.
'";!"Jt,~ amount ~ this area of ~c endeavor to ing prospects, 43 per cent with Collep FKUity
·
.
'The Life Workshops....., sponU •
• . - . llllircY, &amp;!"'
1-5 ~ predicted, ~ 18
1n the ro~e fiei&lt;!; the,P.""t- • scning a ......kiy seminar which
_ . , . . illlD.smdaate tra!D· -m~
. -· TDn
·. :r-. ~ """.-cent Wlth - &amp;-25 pos~tioils. est general Ill"!"""" 18 PI"Ciic:t:ed ·Will "aplore the dynamics of
.. .... and itan1ie IIIJIIed lbat - .y ~yy .1. !IJ'd'l I;:) ~ improwment!s"!""'.bY for -the -leachinll, ~- Wlth students in the clasolooril." Led
a.e.............-ue-(1!8t1980wlth_1!Jper·C!!Dtindicsting ~t growth anticipef:ed mal- by Gerald Thorner staff mem-tinc 6eir lbue of the fiWta.
.
no new hlllDg, 29 per cent ex- hed healthlpsra-medical pro- ber.-of the·-SWdoDt' £,Qunselin
Bm.ij.C8Dlllltbe..,.....ODJIUs which a oollege ~ spe---, pecting- 1-5 :"""! ·hires and.27 g_rams.: """"'!"tionai. and_voca- center,. the t..O'hour class ;~
~~ton~:.f:te ' ( : ~~ytala="= · ::~~g.&amp;-25 alltic•· · · :..~~~~ open to faculty.
iacWty) level. 'There are, and Depsrtmentalism--&lt;&gt;r Ito intro1be Placement survey furth- Engineering and physical sci- . .ln a let~ -to all teachers on
'they_are 11A1'iouA.
•
duce an«&lt;lber Gallicism, "pro- er indicates that _engineering, ences are ~ as offering djpl- . campus, Thorner points out
Same. kbldSot interdiaciplin- taBiona! deformation" - can bu.siD.ss administration 1Uld ac- injshing oPIIOI'tunitieis.
th!ol; "tremendous changes have
ary studies onlbe sraduate lev· prove a serious obstacle to the counting are .the 6elds in whicb
•Two-y...u; -colleges will con- occurred in the atudent body
. .e1 .have .gaaec~ pmblems lbat . discovery or ,t~enuine inten:lis:- graduates will be in greatest tinue to require tbe minimmn:. on moat ·uniYersity' CIIJDIIWIPS"
- bawi..,DellliBOift!d fur-cbeput .- ~.q,iea, which are mar- demand,.acmunting.for 70 per . of ; the M .A. for acsdemjc Cap- . The · ~Pc!n of; atudents
a-or lola decadeo.l am- ~ submerged .under centdf.all pl'06!iectivejOO'Opeli- 'uley, ' while.· ·tel:tmiciiVJDi&gt;f.,... 'ims'diyeni~fwith:mo.eWlder­
~ to. ibe very llllllOP88ful the trUcldoads of Cacts -~- ings. Although only three per sionals will. oontinue to be re- srad~ates 'cOming from differ,__..... of· inlern!WiDil the . oasly . poured on lbe student eel&amp; of graduates desired ' by quired to r ba:ve ·a I!UPportivt! ent cultunil and eoanomic back~......_ em lbe.bUis of wboae-reill ~is in diacov· indllllley will be from Dll!th and ~d Of productive ex· · groUnds Different~ of
....
....,. • .., -.--.. ,a,.. bow ~fad~!
" l.')aipute!i'•'i&amp;ilc:iot' \iema:Dd ror pe~ce in.additijlp. w ·cbe·B.A. ........ent&amp; --, a~-. ·
he
-

·

-r=; ~,Ia !be BqarUr

4
a

JoymeDt in

Weot..:C.

%:-. ....";'!C -.,.!!=-.,.:'!be=
iziDI

twy of tbe

aome rollege' llaiJiin« fur .-....

· ~New v::f ~ tr:';~~l~

Z::V

--:n;;-- m

-a;;:

(to

from..,.-=·

I

,_·con-

-,.~- · Aiilmoil-~·m- ' ~iililivljluals·Wespected.to

~ ~ it.78f

...__

S.,;·dy of Students
0·pen F. ulty

e..,.,
ond

this 8oteq,rise 18 D!lt
Criticism.. 1 am -'-inc to the
: ~tic~ !'f hUf!'&amp;D pb&amp;-

· - . maDifiilltitll ~ves

first piace.

'

'

.-

--,JONATHAN KETCHUII

Aaaociate Master, College B
· ·

.

·

Good , ButWrongl •.

in time aDd ~ry•. and to the
critique at ~ &amp;ham- EDI'l'OB.: •
•
""'- from which these pbeIt was good to. see an. arti!"e
~ are ·undenllood ~ "'?oot one '!' . \be ~ruvennty
. ~te4 This study of YlPW· · Library publications m theRe·
. pOiDIB, wboae losical aspect is ~ (Sepl 28, 1972) . The
" - n aa Cbe study of "onto- •. BibliOilllPhY of Science . and
qical rommitment," .is not- Engineerinf Facul'ty Publics·
1lllly absent from 4be Americsn tions 1971' is a fine undertak·
~. but almo~t sup- inS.!'!'d 'deserves wideB~&gt;re&amp;d
preoied.- as though it Were publiCity.
. .
~ ~ of -threat to local . ~C?Wevi(. 1t 18 TUJt tn1f! ·~t
prejudice.
this 18 the fust sum publication
I do not !'&gt;ink. we '!-"" goinjl at _the Uni~ersity. _ The H!'8'th
to get 8ll&amp;lained intelligent crt· Scienoes L 1 b r a r y pqblished
'lique !){ the bwiUng social or "Health Sciences FaC)lity Bib~ issues of our day
liography" for 1968 and 1969,
I

em the undergmduate level until we develop a minimal Sensitivity_.. to .the importance of
world-views, and their associated phil-.phical and cultural
articulatiima,- on 4be graduate
• aDd laculty level To anyone
who iii acquainted with lbe in~ litera1ule · on the
· oub~ ' lbe deficiencies of the
AmeriCiUl univeisity in t h i s

..-are pakjmt. Our &amp;tn1cturing

-of tD6wledae is too dogmatic;
•••nittell to what we

:::!.::i::

and one ·Indian

•

•

•

and is in the process of oompilin:i.I~ab.!F0-1971 edition to be
pu ·
at the end of the
year. The: bibliography has
been iuxlepted with enthusiasm
by- the University community
in its earlier editions, and we
understand thst many ~
are awaitinJ the llf!W edition
eagerly. It 18 always a matter
of pride to be associated with
a 'Faculty which produces publicatiODBIof sod! quant;ty and
such quality.
_

whidl·.,.c~=~ .
~"

be rather high, becslise of the
smaU number of ihose enrolled
in ~ areas.
• '!~ arts gra&lt;!wMa; who .
antiCipate a 'Cilreer m business
and industry should note," the
· survey report says, "that tbeir
...., of greatest demand is retailing, with secon&amp;ry demand
in non-technical sales and serviais."
ln terms of degrees, the baccalaureate shows the greatest
demand (64 per cent) with the
associate degree also "surprisingly high" (19 per cent) .
,
Th.,., additional survey findings are ronsidered "worthy of
note" hy Placement oflicials:

~--a:r:Sciencea Librarian

{'.

Adli:&gt;ini8Ualive~will

rob,. •--- "'~ ·
... '
~~~~~

abl.y continue to be fil!edPWitli
thoSe already holding, or .who
are close to, the doclon&gt;te, Cbe
"'!""ey ~port ,roncl~es: . :
Several ·r ommumty roleges,
the report says, anticipate rapidly expanding facilities and
student bodies with a . rompanion gioowth in professional stalf
hiring. Other institUtions see
only a limited gi'OITo1h and thus
only a slight increase
•
"G,eneraUY
the report indicstes, "there ;,.;n continue to be aniD&lt;:reaae in employment in the . coUege fteld
with some adjustment in geographic preference on lbe part
of the candidate being nee-

sPeakinli"

·

VieaWD veterans now ~g
admitted. .
'
"' To explore
and
. the ''new le&amp;rning
ems of
the aeventiee,"
r will
"examine lhe lrlnd·of·problems
. 'loday's studen!s' ,...;..,nt to
~ty." The· pi! is tO "ileepen understandjng' of the new
students and be more effective
in teaching them.:'

these2

The first two-hour seminar
will be held TUeaday at 1 p.m. ·
ip Room 232 Nortoo. ·
F:or furlber information, call
11oomer at.at. 3717. .

�~

~iedler Ol)_ ~e Bard:· Offensive or Scholarly?

·' •

�~- :: 'if'•

6

I

The u.,;...,;ty GowmaDce ~
mlttee at ila ~ !iepleoDW 16,
1972, ·-ni""'''lly _.....t -1he fol.
-lowillll"'lm DmJt of Adidoe of~• ....,_ .... t1ie ~ Uni.,....ty
~y.
'
.
RetiblioD poocedweo ~­
CIPIIII in .,...Ju..ctiaa with tlie epndoe
named in Article vm of lbe Final
Dreft. Bedl apDc:y 'lirill ooaduct a
.-......tmn of i1a ID8IIbenrbip ad
aubmit a _.-t of ,thia refeleudum to 1be Uniwlnlity GowmaDce Cunmltlioe.
'lbe CaonmiMiee 8lleCted
Decemkr 1,1m, a _tbe dMdline fi!r
...ipoN of tbe .--tt. af u- ~­

bridp - tbe IPQie 1111111111 the .,._,t
PHWiUIIBIIt .tmab.ueB.
•
-L~

~
-

f. Sd&gt;ool of Medicine 8~ Pol-

ity _....-

Medical~ Student
;.:,::::::.... Millard Fillmore Col-

SeeliDn l. Terta
· .. Aa uaad In u- AJticlea af Gov-

lege ~ Staff Sel8te .... Pro- h. Plaftoraioaal
•
feaaional Bid. .
_ J. Student Aaaocia*inn for Under.. ~- n.e GovaDor af the
pad.- l!tudenD.
State ' of-New York.
.
l Beard of DireciDrB of tbe u~v:er­
b. "Board of 'l'nlste5". The Beard - ~ at s.iJfalo Alumni Aaaoc:iatiOn
af TrusteE af Btale.Univeraity of New ·
fOr Alumni.
: · of the
- York. .
• A.-li.lbe~
c. "Cbelioellor". 'lbe CbaDcellor of
Un~~
-.
tbe Slate .UDI¥8111ity of New York.
'The Conotituencies represented m
d. ''Uni...,..;ty Council". The Coun- the University AsrleDi&gt;ly alalll be:
cil of lhe Slate Univenjty af ~­
a. Alumni /
enda.lfno~,.,.,.,. .. ~
YOlk at Bldlalo as pnwlcied for by
b. Clasai&amp;ed Employees
~ r, Im.-llte.Arlicla
Section 356 of tbe New Yortr: Educa- - .
c. Deutal Stl!denla
of ao--lllill .,_;,.. ~«t.
QoD La
" d. Faculty
Same m8Jor .....,.. baw BUidad
· e. ·~t". The cbiel admlnia..: Graduate Students
tbla CaallnlUiie Iii ila eftarla' ... deailn
tmtive ol6cer ol the Slate Univmaity
f. Law 8tudEniB
a' ~ af Univa-alty..wlde so-nof New YOlk at Bulfalo.
g. Medical Students
- ~ 1111 SUNY et Buftelo. The
- f. "Uni'w!nity". The State Uni-h. Millard Fillmore Colleg~~ StuUnfverat,y ao.-nce Committee
oitY Ot New York at Buft'alo. •
dents
me.. to Ullislder illlelf eb arm of
g. "SeMte J!rof.,..;onaJ ~­
i. Profesaional 9talf
.
lbe Clllllllituaacieo wblc:b IIOIDinated
tion". The Senate ProfaraioDal Aarloc!·
• j . U~diBte Studeuls
I Ia D&amp;DbeD. k )8 lbe ..... of lbe - . atiOii Center Cbepta-'and Health Sci_
_Ill. Unrv-lty _...,
OammiUee ........... a .........Chapter af the State Uni.....aty
w b l c b mefntelnB 11811-debitioD of
Seclio 1
of New York at Bulfalo.
-~·-toY Clllllllibalt ,...,._ _
to
There"
ahaiJ be a University Aah. "Civil Service EmployeM Aa;;.;u;;;~r.e- priJMJy juriadicUoD of
aembly.
· .
ooc:iatiDD". 'The Civil Service Employof ~t,
Section 2. Membery~UP. of the Urnees Aaaociation &lt;l&gt;apte&lt; of tbe State
and to 1!ldllnd lbe •fruacbiae for 'Uniuersity
Auembly
•
_1,
University· of New York at B.ulfalo.
va-alty .......,;...&amp; ... iliclude atudenta
The ' membersh;p of fi!e. Asaemhly
St!Ciion 2. Memboahip of the Conud elalt A ~ PIIIJ'(a of lbe
shall CODSist of tbe foliCJWDIII: •.
ltitu.etu:ia
.
pl-opoeed Uniwlnlity ~ ill to
a. The Chan&lt;lellor and President
a_ C/aaified Employeu. All clasaibridp lbe . _ _ . lbe p - t
who shall serve e%-&lt;&gt;{ficio witbcut wte.
lled Employees of the State u.,;...,..;ty
atrilcturee.
' b. Fiw (6)- Claaai1lid Employees
af
y ode iot Buftolo.
~
.......... of
~
who sball be elected by: tbe Olaaoifled
b. DeJJt4l Students- All JDeiDbers of
llaDd ..-ly to with individuals
Employees.'
·
the School of Dentistry Student Aaor poupe to diacuao tbe Final Dmft
c. One (1) member ~who ahall be
ooc:iation
of
sUniversity
of New
at your request.
- a Dental Student elected by tbe Den-_.
York at Buffalo as - defined liy tbe
Mombelll are:· Mazy Brady, Uniconstitulion and/ or by-laws of the
tel Students.
·
•
...,;ty Libraries; Sua Marie Cic:arelli,
d. Forty ( 40)- members ollhe Vot.- •
Sd!ool of DeotisCzy Stl;tdent A.esociaFaculty of Health Sciena!lll; JQOel&gt;h
ing Faculty elected by 1he Faculty.
amL
.
CCimolly, Sd&gt;ool of Den~ Student
e. Eight ( 8 ) -JilEIDbeis who shall be
c. Focully. All members of lhe Vot.· Council; June Cmwford, Millard FiJIGraduate Studems elected by the
ipg Faculty of the Stete University
more Collep Student ABacciation;
Gradume Students.
·
of New York at Bullalo as defined by
Mic:hael Day,~ Emi&gt;l~y!""';
. f. One ( 1)
wbo shall be a
the by.-laws _of tbe Facu}ty Senate of
Ian DeWaal, Student Bar Aloociaticn;
Law Student elected by the I:aw Stuthe State University of New York at
- Raben c. Fitzpatrid&lt;, Administration;
·
dents_
CbuliJa M. ~ Administration; J:;
Slwlenla. All ""'!"bers
, 1. One (1) member who shall be a'
a-lo\_QiQI:Ili,~.AII~of the Gtacl.- Student ."-&gt;ciati(m .
Medical Student elected by llhe Med81 Studies; Marillii {;iles, Professiohal
of the State University of New York
ical Students.
Staff· Nicbclas Goodnwt, Faculty of
at Bullalo as defined by the constituh . Four ( 4 ) memben; who shall be
Na~ Sciences and Mathematics;
and/
or
by-laws
of
the
Graduate
·
tion
Millard
Fillmore College Students
George Kc.anovich, Gmd~ate Student
Student Association.
elected by Millard Fillmore College
e. LmD Studenla_ All members of
Students·
.
the Sc:bool of Law Student Bar Aai. Ten ( 10) members of the Prole&amp;Alumni; HOMU"CI Mann. Faculty of
. irocistion of the State Univen;ity of
sionai.Staft elected by lbe Prof.,..;onaJ
Law and Juriaprudence; Eugene MarNew York at Buffalo as defined by
Staff.
tell, Professional Staff; John Millipn,
• the constitution and/ or by-laws of the
j. Siloteen (16) memben; who sball
Faculty of Soc:iar Sciences and AdminSd!ool of Law Student Bar .Assocl!l· be Undergradllflte Students el'!¢.ed by
istmtion; Marjorie Mix, Professional
tion.
the
Undergraduate Students.
Staff; Gilbert Moore, Faculty Senate;
f. Medical . Slwlenla. All meoi&gt;ers
k. One (1) member who shall be
Edward O'Neill, Faculty of Engineerof
tbe
Scbool
of
Medicine
Student
a member of tbe University at Buffalo
ing and Applied ScieDces; J paeph
Polity of the State University of New
Alumni Association el~ by ' tbe
veromo, Graduate Student' AssociaYork at Buffalo- as deflneQ by · tbe
tion; G era I d Saltereli, SUNYAB
Alumni.
constitution
of
tbe
Scbool
of
Medicine
I. One ( 1) member who shalJ be a
Council; Jeannette Scbaefter, -CiassiStudent Polity.
lled ,EmployeM; and John P . Sullivan,
' member of tbe Senate ProfeEional
g. Millard FiUmore Collefe Stu"F.cU!ty of Arts and Lettent
Asaoc:iation, lll!leOO!d by tbe Senate
deniB_ All memben; of the Millard FillProfessional Asooc:iaticn Center_ChapThere will be committee aaaistance
more College Student Aaooc:iation of
awilable lo- ...,...,. to coaduct tbe .
ter who st.ll serve as an cboerwr
the
State University of New York at
. refereDda. The ~ Committee
without vote.
Bulfalo as defined by the oonstilliaon
m. One (1) member who shall be
will coordinate • u c b aaaistance in
and/or by-laws of lbe Millard Filla member of tbe Senate Professional
order to awdini... e«act and minimize
more College Sludent Aaaoc:iation.
Asooc:iation, aelected by lbe SenMe
Members af tbe SteeiiD&amp;
h. Profi!Wional SIIJff. All DaDben _ Profeaaional AsociC:iation Health SciConnn~t~ae
Marie Ciao_reUi.
of tbe Drofesoional. atel! as defined by
Nidlolaa ~ o-p Koaano.enoes Obapter who sball
as an
the by-laws of the Pmf....ional Stell
vidl ud Marjorie Mjz.
•
ohaet-ver without vote.
Senate ol the -state University of N..W •
Memboa of lbe 8laering Committee
. n. One (1) member who aball be
york at Bulfalo.
will ......... Committee IDI!IIIhara
a member of the Civil Service Em:
i. Underfrollut*- S t u d e n t a. All
ployees Aascc:ialion- selected by tbe
to et&amp;end lllliiltinp or to .U.CU. de"*"'-"
of- tbe Abulont Aaoocialion
Civil Service l?.mploy- Asooc:iation
..U. af_tbe ~ Nfenada at tbe
as
clefined
by
lbe~tion
andlor
who
aball serve as an "'-ver withl'lllljiiell of IIDY qeacy or p-aap.
by-lawa of tbe Student 4-riatim
out vote.
.
.
. . . _ CIIIDat Dr. Marjorie Mix,
•
j
.
Ur&amp;Werlity
Ill
Buffalo
,Alwniai.
All
Section 3. Offiml of the Uniueraily
862-48'72, to • ..,... delalls of lbe
memben of tbe University at BulJalo
"-mbly
0
........ to be oaaducted. •
·Alumni Aariociatioil as dellneil by tbe
~ .
. ~
There shall be a Cbrlim.n and a
by-olawa of tbe Uni\'I!Jnity ..t Bulfalo
8ecn!tary of tbe University .A.sobi,Y.
Alumni A...clatioD. -.
Section 4. FUifctioM of the Ur&amp;Wer~ AJticlea of a--nee
JIIO"'--'-- • ,. ....,..._
,-.__...._.;,:
tbe .....,_
~"
•. ••
, . D-.",._'
aily Aa.mbly
•Iii
leo of -. .. tJalwaiiF· CD
Fill' lbe Jlllli- 'of tt..i ' by~
IL The Univenrity Aasenlbly sball
In d'-'1 I' • e Uniwrtbe ta1Jowinc ..... lilllll Mt .., t..
~ at ila diacretion·adviae lbe Pn!oident,
.......
•
blilf of lbe
- clefined
lbe Council, lbe CbencoUor, tbe Bcani
of -~ and lbe GovsDoo: ... all .
iD Adicla I, Sac. 2; '
.... ......... ... -......,
1111..
CiYIISenbBmployeas
-·
_ , o f paaal"""'*"to tbe Uniaf . . v.n.......... ~~
....-.ty or .., -any ,....., wblc:b nie,y /
allecit men than one af ita Ollll8lifu- '
::s-·~
JtabD - ~~...~ .v.

wilaio 6tbonviole .....,m.a. tbe
faiJowiD&amp; aball . . - :

"'*,

each..--

u..:

member

B~~

~=tti':~:=~.;e.;.":'~:

t:o-

a.e s..;ra

-w

.

.W.-a-.......,

~

==-'='-=~ i'l..w...&amp;'!,

,!I•._

.......
·....'.. ..:zz:'!t
::s~
..
_

..

~-

I

~~

a. . - - . -. . . . . . . .Yatlni

altr.

. '

-

"-'

;:....., .. "CPIJf-~ . . . . . . , a::::::--~AA•_ac'rllr'~~:•• b
.....,.
'J !:u::::;,.:;atead --: . ._ lkllllal11f r.- 8ludiDi Biir .A.

:.~r:

.............-~.:.. ..........

J- ........

.......

--

b. ·The UDI\'I!JIBity .A-.riJly llhlrll .
at ita clilcntrian adviae ill OODIIitu- .

- - ... llllitaa of"""'*" l o than. one~• . -'
c. The Unn..ity ~ sball
. DOt ~ malter that .. wltb-

in 1he emusive . juriadjction &lt;!. one
·of its constituenciaa.
•.
d. The Uni-.dty AMsnbly trball,
at its discretion, .teeeiYI! npcrte and
propoiiiiiJj hom ila }lOIIIIIi~ l;&gt;odia~ or bom their CDIIIIIIialeaa. e. The University .A.anbly trball
be 1he judse of lbe a-edeDtiala of its

meuibera

_

Section 5. Meetintfa of tM Ur&amp;Wer.sily Aslembly
·
a_ The A.-bly s!Wl bold at least
lhree (3) ,..,sUJar lll8lltinl!i hom September drroolgb May. Eadl regular
meeting aball include a report from
-l be CbairD8n of tbe AMsnbly. ·
·- b. Written notice of regular meet~inp shall be aent to all members at
least ten (10) calendar days (emusive of official Universicy recesaes) before tbe meeting. The ~ttm notice
shall contein the aaenda for d&gt;at meetizlg and all Committee reports ached•
uled for presentation at tbe meeting.
·
Special meetings of tbe Uniwr- sity Asaembly may be caRed at any
. time by tbe Chairman of the University Assembly, by jhe Executive Com"mittee, or upon petition ol fifteen (16)
members ,of -the· Univei-sity Assembly
delivered to tbe Secretaey of tbe University Assembly. A petition,sball aet
forth the matters tc' be preeeoied at
tbe special ·.......U.C- '·Unl.....tbe peti"i.ion for a specialt illeoitin,&gt;stipulates
a later date, such si&gt;ecial meeting ilhall
not oix:ur later tben fifteen ( 16) calendar days (exclusive ol offic:ial"Univenrity recesses) after receipt by tbe
Secretary of the Univeraity Assembly.
Notice ol special meeting&amp; . may be
·given within loB 4bm ten ( 10) calendar days (exdusiw of oflic:ial University - &gt; 'before the meeting if
deemed 'necessary in tbe judgment of
the Executiw Committee or tbe Chairman of tbe University Assembly.
d. A majority of tbe voting members
of tbe University ~y shall constitute a quorum for any meeting of
the Uni...,..;ty Asaembly.
e. Constituenla of the University
~ ..,.y cblain h
privileges
of tbe flOor and af &amp;pMking on tbe
1Joor of lbe Univsaity AMsnbl)' without vote at any aliDOUDCed regular 01'
apecial IIIIIOitlai upclll nmpaltion by
tbe Chairman Gl tbe Uni..,.;ty Aaaombly, or by .-oludaa af lbe Uni...,..;ty A8r.nbl,y at lillY ..-ting.
f. The UniVMIIty "-''liy may
adePt BUdl ruJee for tbe tranaaction
ol ilB tJuainoa .. it a.)' deem aary. UnieE ctbenoiae- provided by

c.

-·--·-·-·
·-_
-.
·----

~D~NINO~YSTATEUI

""""""tb~V- '

,..,......()looOCll

..------

�Ar.tides~f .

~

~-may vote

Co consid!'r,
~ are •ecoounended to it for _ . .
oideration _by the Uniyemity Assem- ~
. bly, or wbicb are 1&gt;1acad before it by

p

eo· elect EDcutiw. Caaiunittee ,_,_
• bars and sball bave uiade pnJyiSioas

..

~::!": ~-~

· ,.

mvite

.be

an

~--

one

w

- b:

""&lt;Jm&gt;

"" cy~hllpa8tiaa;d.~
.Aiillmli!Y ·~of .... - -·
~aa~~.ct-o~:lbiU-

·- -=- ........................
~....
. "'--

----~----~------~

•eo&amp;o.ttbe..---. .ttllli ~
:!: ....., ..

~

iii

·

:a

~a.,.; of~

the Ptesidenl All ma1ters 110 Ol&gt;liilii!It sb&amp;ll be
1!'11!d shall be induded u, 4be E.cu;.{'~::.0~·~~
ave Conm:!ittee minutes, anct fiUCh
elected ~- of the Univemity As- .
maeters may· be· reviewmby d.e University ~y. Tbe ~""
aembly is ....... fnlm any · two (2j
- ~ shall """" copies of its
oonaecuave ~ or-lbe University
mmutes to all nanbers of the · UniABjleautiy or· lbree 13) mestings Bn
~ty~y.
. · year, witbOat ..Batiafaclilry explanation
· u. Tbe Eseeutive Committee and
of 8l1ch .-..,.,"1o die Obrlinnan of
.President may l'liquest ·infotination
~ University AMembly, be sb&amp;ll be
from any member of the Univeniity
~ aiJtoD!atically fnlm member- ·
siBJf or any ofudent, and may
sbip; and his~ sball· be
any person (s) to sit with it for the
n(!tified therof. ·
· PlllpOSe of consultation and advice.
VI. Amllndments
.
Commit~ and others who ""P'rt to
Section I . P_ropoaa[ of ArMndments
these by....., or
University Asthe Uruversity Assembly shall present
Any member of the University Assenibly the .latest edition of ROberts'
such reports to the Executi"" Comsembly may propose an amendment
Rules of Order, Reviai!d, applies.
mittee for transmitJtsl to the Assembly
A · proposed amendment 1!hall be subg. . 'The lllilmtes of -=b meeting of
with
tbe
recommendalions
of
the
Exmitted to olbe Cbaimian in writing
the UliM!rsitYo·. AEanbiy shall be
•
ecutive
Committee.
Tbe
E:rA.cuave
D&lt;Jit
l. . :than.Chirty (30) days befOre
made aVailable ro. pUblication in
~ shall cOmmunicate its
the ..-ing at which it is to be preUniversity publicatioaa.
VJews .to d&gt;e University Assembly at
&amp;eJ\ted for action by the University
~ - rv.-olthe
illl regular meetings and~
Assembly. U proposed by at least five
is! meetings as may be
(5) ~ cent of the memben!hip of
Section 1. E~ Comn.ittu
appropriate.
4be
University Assembly; it ·must be
a. 'Then shall bean Executive Comiii. The Execuave· Committee .mail
placed on the agenda of the next regmittee Of the Uni\'ersity Assembly.
plaa!
matters
on
.
t
he
agenda
of
the
ular meeting. No vote sbill be 1Bken
· b. · llemberohip of the Erecutiue ..
University Assembly.
on any proposed amendment unless ·
Commit~«.
iv. The E:recutive Committee shall
die. written notice of the meeting in'l1'&gt;e Em:uliw Committee csball be
serve as ·the comD.ittee on committees.
composed of 4be follooring;
eludes a copy thereof. A proposed
rrJtie~e:lin8• of the ErecutWe Com-amendment may be aoted upon at any
i. The Preaideat, "" officio, and votregular or special meeting of the Uniing .only in of. tie. .
The
Chsinnan
of
the
Execna..,
versity
ASsembly and requires a twou.
£1&gt; llll!lliber elected froln
Committee and the Chsinnan of -thethirds majority vote of the members
the UniYersity Allsemlily ri.p....S......
.
~niv~
Assembly
may
call
m.!etpresent for a"""!Xance.
aves of 4be Glassified Employees.
mp of the E:recutive Committee.
Section 2. A&lt;Wption of Amendments
iii. One (1) "-'her. of 4be Council
Section 2
An amendment accepted by the Unielected by the Council who shall serve
There sball be no standing comversity Assembly shall become elfepWithout YOte. .
mittees of the University Assembly · tive if approved by a two-thirds majiv. One (l) milinber elected by and
other thBn the .ExecUtive Committee.
ority of the constituency governing
from ~ UniverSity' Asl!einbly reprebodies as defined in Article n, Section
Section 3. Ad Hoc Corrtmittees
sentstives of the Dental, Law and
3 e.bove within 180 days of :... acTbe Assembly or Executive cOmMedical Studeula. ·
•w
mittee
may
establish
ad
1wc
COIIUDltv.' Four (4) members elected from · oeptsnce.
tees to · ~ reports on particular
the U.n ivemity , Assembly·· representaAttide VII. ·of the
isSues for die 4Uormation of the Unitives of 4be ~~
«
Articles of Governance
versity Al;sembly, or to 'recommend
vi. One (1) member of the GeDerai
'These
by-laws
shall
be reviewed two
policies on particular issues to the
AlUmni Boel!l. eleoted .'by 4be Geo&amp;al
!2) years after their adoption by a
Assembly.
l
Review Commilltee . - - . , e of
Alumni Board JMllY.ing ;~ vote.
~ V. Elecillons ~- Tenns ot .Ofllco·'.
tbe Constituencii;s as defined m"Arvii. One.,.(l .,l.m ...m- .electiiil:•from
of the Unlwrslty -..,bly
licle n above. Tbe Review Commiftee'
the Univeriity Aa!embly .representaSection
I
.
Elections
shall
be appointed by the· Executive
tives of the Graduate Students.
a. Elections to the University AsConunittee' Of ·the UniversitY. Assemviii. One (1) member elected from
bly. The &amp;!view Committee.shall-recsembly shall be condnoted by the
the University AsSembly rePresentaconstituency governing bodies as deommend to the University Assembly
tives of the· Millard Fillmore College
such changes as it shall deem necesfined iri Article I, Section 3.
Students.
sary.
b. 'The Chairman and the Secretoyy
ix. Two &lt;2) •members elected froln
shall be eleoted from the membership
VIII. the University Assembly ~­
The u ' vemity Go
Com
of the Univenlity Assembly by a majlives of 4be ProfessioDBl Sts1f.
ority
Wte
of
all
members
of
the
Unimittee
~. the follO:~ao~
x. One (i) · member . elected' from
procedures aoceptsbie.
.
versity Assembly on or before May 1
the University Aaoembly representai&gt;f each year.
1. (i) For the Central Administ:rotives of the Undersrl!duate Students.
lion, as in the memorandum of underc. Unle8s odlerwise provided herexi. The Cbainmm and the Secjmtszy
in, election of 'the members of the
stsnding of Ootober 21, 1971 to Presiof the University Assembly d'officio
. Executi\'e Committee of the Univerdent ·Robert L Ketter;
and without Y,Ote.
(ii ) For the c/JJssified employees,
sity Assenibly shall be .c onducted by
c. Officen of · the E~ Comas in the ~ from Mr. Edward Duthe governing bodies of· the respective
mitJee .
·
.
dek
of September 22, 1971;·
constitl,lencies
as
defined
by
Arl:icle
1:,
i. The Presidlint &amp;hail be Chsnman
(iii) For the dental students, tbat
Section 3 and aocording to IIUCh proof the ED!cuave Committee.
the School of J)entistzy Student Councedures as t h o s e governing bodies
ii. The ExecuQ.., ·vice President
cil conduot a referendum of its memiiball define.
aball serve as Cbaimmt of the -Execnbers;
.'
.
Sec_tion 2. TertrU of Office
uve Commitae in the " ' - - of the
(i v) For 4be faculty, as in 4be letter
a . Members of tbe Univemity AsPresident.
Sembly sball servel or two (2) years
from Profe!ISO&lt; William . Baumer of
d. p,_;.. and. Dutia of the ErecuOdober 5, .1971; .
in. 8lagpred t e r m !' in tbose cases
tive Collllllitt«
.
. · ·
.
where
a
·single
constituency
more
( v) For the Braduote strlilmU, lhe
i. Tbe Exiac:utM Committee sbiill
· t h a n ooe representative. Members
Gmduate Student A.-cialion will
wUb, COiiiUit wiiJi. aDil lldVise ·
condUct a referendum oi ita! membeaa;
sball assume Ollice. on May 1. Each
the President Oil any ma111ers of Uni--{ vi) For the taW atrlilmU, that tbe
oonstiluency shall determine whether
versity policy wbich 4be ED!cuave
School of Law Student Bar ABsocia0. not its rep""""'tatives sball be elilion
wiU conduct a refenmdum of its
. sib~!! for reelection. ~
Tbe et.irman and~ the Secretary
memberii;
' (vii) For .tbe rM11icof atudenta, that
of the Uni..W Aaanbly-shall serve .
rERSITV oF NEW YORK ~TII!Iff~O
. foi'.JIIIe (1) year, and shall not_..,
the School of MedidDe 8tudmit Polity
_,
for more· than two COIIIjllllllijve terms. will conduct • referendum of ita! .. .... r ..
c. Elecled ~of the Emcuti...
Committee shall &amp;erYe for one (1)
For the MiJJIJid Filllri9re Colyear.
leBe IIUiknlt, tbat the _MliJard Fillmore
c:::ol1ep
SbidiDt AW'Ciotion will
.&amp;ctioiJ 3. V-.cia
....duot.a ...,.,..,.._ otilll-..ben;
a. WlalaiDIIiilli'IWGithe Uniwnity .
(iz) For lba' pro(...a.l .,,. ..
~.~· conalituency
in tbe lilliter ol Dr- NOIIIIIIil HC~di&amp;ter
- - - hill~ tboll conalituency
shall ~ for the ~- of •
&lt;1/.. ~ 28, 1.87l;
....... of . . c !Niif&gt;'Pcy Co 811 out .
(xj For the Wllfe: I' IMie.,..,.,.,., r
tbe noiilllndiir of the tam. .
'
u.t&gt;4belltudlatA..Vetimwlllb. W'-. _.._of the BDoaliWI
·clld a • • "''"' ol ltii iillllilll!llaCoiDml- ..... ....... ~
1L 'I1Ia ....... tJIIIIl of

ile8_.foiQ;
As~bl!J.

w..isity Govoemmce . CaaiuniUee bi
(date to be delennlned):
m. Tbe Artldoa of~oc-n.nai will

~if=

in.:.!e:!a

c:

neplive vote by (date 1o be determiDed) .
·1" •.
-~
-~
L (i. ) 'I'IIe llll!iiiOrBndum of understanding, 0cloober 2l, 1971 to Preaident Ketter froln Cbainnan Miz, lllllf;.
ed ti&gt;at it is the CaaiuniUee's Ulldez9lailding "that the JII'CIIQed Nlillcalion procedwes are ilCXliiiJIIIble to yoU
(and); the ~ Commiltee
wiU expect 41o n!OIIive wriiCen ~· . lion or disapproval of 4be artiiilea of
governance from -:you after theY ate
submitted to the five cnn!!ltb"""ies
(by the ten .,..,;.) lllllll8d in the
proposed retibtion )IIOCedui'es.
U . The ~•. from Mr. Edward
Dudek, SepteqJer 22, 1971; liiM&amp;:
· "At a -ting !}1. lhe BOard of DIrectors of C.S.EA SUNY/ AB a.i&gt;,
ter, beld Monday; 8eplember 13, it
was·. the IDIIIimous decision .o f die
Board that we go on recon1 as wisbina
to ratify the Governance proposal by
a majority of the balloca n&gt;eeiYed.".
A Diemoiandum of nnderstanding,
Oclober 4, 1971 to C.S.E.A from Mix;
Chainnan, stales:
·
"We understsDd tbat ~it is die in. tention of C.S.E.A 1o provide an oppottunity to aH classilled employeeS,
even Chose who are not -.nembers of
C.S.E .A., to indicate -roval or disapproval of the proposed Articles ol'
Governance. The majority tha1 wiU
be of all of Chose voting."
IV 'The 1
·or n....•-"·
t!itter
vc...U.,.. 5, 1971,
for the Faculty Senate ExecutiveOlm-

mittee states:

"At its meeting of .22 September
1971, the Executi'(.e. Committee of tbe
Faculty Senate oonsidl!'l1!d the
. tion of rstiflcalion procedwea lor posed Articles of Governance for 4be

"'*"

"-lni~

Owmmmity, In~

-with ilils, 1tie Senilte Eiecutlve Oom- inittee viewed any 8l1ch Pzopoaals as
being essentislly, 110 flu as tbe faculty
is concerned, -pments t!) Iii!' ~c,,
laws of the voting lac:Ulty of 'li&gt;&amp; Unl· veraity. ~lly. lt is tbe ~
termination of tbe Eucutive Committee that the procedures specilled in
tbose Byla"" for the i • auwvl- .
shall be followed with _.a~ the
University Attic:les of Govemanoe.
Spec;ilically, .this means .t hat such Articles will be presented 1o the Senata
by a commiltee with such l't!COIDIIIO!Ddaaons as the committee deems appmpriate, and that if 4be a-u, allinnatively Oil the ProPoaaJ. it will
~tal go 4lo tbe entire votinl faculty
for mail ballot. U a ~ of tt.e
who ._,a Co lhe mail bellot ate
in favor of tha P~ it will be
considered .to ba\'e .-ed as far as
tba volina fllculty of lhe ·Um-.lty
are COIICOII'IIIId."
IX. Tbe IMler of Ocllabw 28,-1971
from Ik Notman Hmlellalr ,.... tha
~flEioa81 8td

Seaate 81ates: ..

_ "'lbi8 ia to lafonn )'Oil a.t-tbe 8ld
Senate ia ..nun,·Co caDdaot a ......_
...dum to~ If Cbli' OIIIIItilum- •
cy . _ of 4be .Atfida. 8udl a
~ 1iauld be OCIIIdDclud 1llllier
tbe foiJaoiinl ~:.
.
· l) ~ 1111..,.... ~ref8l8llda
cm.lll!bedule faa- Clllllb!cdDi
2
. to

J..=c::.:;.::
._loa-

a. '

lhe..Aiaeuilam -

-

- . . jlillllcy.

3) 'Illat d. ~ 8ld lail· ate ~'111M.,.._ tliDe lit pall

•

...,_ill

illl ......... ............ ..,. . .......
eMti Art~~~. ol ClOoiiMa- -

..... --

8illl iaill6illaB . . li . :

eebeduJed.
,
') ~ ......_ iC Millt •W
a • q~~a ~ ol .af
...__ol Iftbe Al4llcl. ........... of 1 stll
~ • • ....,..... ..... ' "
I '!'
I)'DIBtliii'I • In 1...-a- · ,
........ tit 4[
bIll---- ·~ ,aid
' •·~--;

;aftbl...,.__.._...
.• .,_ _
'1,
OlD ................... ol...

~ol ........ -........~ . . .

.......................... 0111-

..

.·

.

--

.

I

,

•·

au

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

·- ...

-t•

�~5, 1912

if

�f::t I Z &gt;..001,0
&lt;'Giaeobiir -$, f P12 '

I.

_Nuclear.Unit ·
·. Is Shifted: .
To University

�. ....GRE~-- ..
.

..

U/B Plans tol~~e Space ~ ,.
At . the
Children's Hospital ~
... -_,-

.

•

__

•

·

Cancer Detection~~
~ .a.vera.a..1.1 Scheduled
•. Clutching a ~ef
to his mouth and conghing fitfully, a Jniddle.aaed man 4Pproacbes the prescription coUnter in his neighborhood pharmacy. He ub the pbannacist
to reco~....
coiighlains

announcements ·" n broedcsst
media will also be uaed in the
ellort which is being cerried
out in conjynction w i t h the
Erie County Unit of the American Qmcer Society.
The pro~. to be held in
~ hl::,m~wab · G-22 CaJll!ll at !j ~.m., 1"\11
at nigbta for neer1y two months. include ' an informatlonM mb• An elderly man _ •.......,. tion pictUre and talks by Dr.
"ioome"-'-· ..__ _., to·-~ H . James Wallace, 'reeeen:h as~~.. -.......
put on ·
·
•

. Notini Isadora Duncan's re- ·
marlt that "110 long as little
ehildnm are allowed to Sidler,
there iS no .true lqve in this
world," President Robert L
Ketter helped dedicate .an addltion .t o·. Buftalo Children's
Hospital last week with news
that the University, · in ellect,
propoee! to beg:in, contributing
approximately $500,000 e a c h
yeer to the support of the Hoepits!.
·
The University intends, Ketter aei!l, "to enter into further
agreements . . . to lease - approXimately 45,000 net square
feet of . University dedicated
. apace . ·. :-specifically designed
and constructed to meet the unique educational requirements
of the University which. beceuse of its· proximity and ac• cess to the clinical prograiiis of
Children's Hoepital, has parti- .
cular educational and teaching
significance."
·
This adds a new dimension
'of legal·rei8tionsblp between the
two institutions,- the President
aeid, and also, Benefits both.
"The Hospital undoubtedly will
JlXlleri"'1"" some degree of bud-

i:r'.

the patientB hOspitalized. Hundreds of albers were "eDiiliJied
and n!leued. ''Evef,lt aviilable
· • • the boapillll .... f11led •Jiving roomnnd
fere,oce ilnd Claalrooms.
''l'be piOblem of what to do
with lbe IIIIIIIY ~ childreD who
needed extended aue wauolved
wben 'a prominent family made
available a l.arie indoOr tennis
court which waa traDsfonned
into a temPonu:Y. II!IDI!I: •• • ;
··'VOiuuteera came to aerve
JDMis and wash dlabm· busi~ ezecutivee came idib~~y to
.clean; eqtertainere came to]lel'form. ''The Department at Educetion broudlt sCboo1 to the
annex; the F i r e Department
b r o u gh t Hoepital-prepared
/ meels through the 8now on fire
trucks; the s c 0 u t s. brOught
scouting.
"The eommunity and Hoepi- ·
tal reoponse to the crisis was
total; and I believe the spiiit
fll · ts y0
ch
ti.
!.:d ~ice. T.:.
ing certeinly is 8n allirination
ant."

con: ·

(:')":.Ud-·

ASsembly Asks OK
~~~ty~i!·~~ni&amp;;~
·
with each of its schools . using For More Meml::lers

sistant profesa1ir of medicine, Hospital facilities; will- benefit
The eon...n•te • --'-ly has
and ~ Rose Ruth Ellison.· re- greatly from the availability of, passed mo~ .=n.m,g
searcl{ aasociate •professor of -new clilssroom a n d reeeen:h
medicine. Both are associated space. This is esPecially true that the Faculty Senate revise.
with the Roswell Park Memori- ;,_,view of the Universir,;::r;t ~:7u!;~~~
al Institute.
SJOil_ not t() build a ,
_g ganization of the.collegiate sys- There 18 no registration fee hoepitalonitsAmherstorMam tem) in - order - to • allow the
for the. program and pbarma- Street csmpuaes.
.
' SchoolDf Management, the Dicists- bav&lt;~obeen.invited to -b&lt;:ing
• ':For some Yl!!l!"'o--the U~"'&gt; -;vision of-Q"''tinlJing Educa~·
along non-profeesional perscin- • sltJ:' hasf-sbaredthe
~~taltru:_~-~--fa !anlf:ttii! Di~on·clf'StUdeiit Af- •
nel· if they wish. •.
saultion ~ be " I -""""':_,~ 'fairs to be admitled. as ri!pre· _ .
ty mem r,
tter 1!0..,.... iientativea
· ...._
~coldbim-:nU::;:=.n ~~
out. but !~ before.:~ it o,,Atter ~ .&amp;bate at-an
doesn't seem to want tO go •
'
-~
.....
-)_
~ . any.nisjlbiWbility. for •orpnimtiobalt Dieeling · Wild!
away, be says.
;
( Contillued from PGII• 1, col. 3)
lecturers in various programs, monetarythat~m~~nf : . ; for n~; Septem!Jer•p ;-ih'e· AJiJ
laqd High; Sy...-re Project, etc. '
spa~
18 u..
or ace- semb)y ~ prepanid a motion
by •i -:'. !~ a":":::-:..::::..":1~ a tee,n info~tion ~r, and
. A brochure with complete in- deJDlc purp&lt;lS&lt;!I!.
.
to·amend Its own organizational
' ._ tutonng secvice lor Jrlgh idlool · forinati'on iS available in the- 46-YMr, ~lpbylaws so that only the . .17
wants to know if•there iii any
thin abe
students and drop-outs taking CAC Office
Ketter reviewed the 46-year- c:ollege· units can have ·an AB-..
'aelf ~ ~no::!:t. to get ber- equivalency exams; Tonawande
At resent,
. there
.
.
old relationship between UIB .aemlily- vote. Under -~ ~
lndlltn Rellervation· project
P
are appro'!'- and Childnm's, noting that the posed amendMent, ~Because such scenes are all Rap (at five ~-throughout matel)'o 1.000 voiunteem regiS- University has been an integral iate repreeentativee woUld oave
in a dey's work for the prac- ·the City),. help for black high tered for . CAC pro~. 'The part otthe Hoepital since 1926, only iiF an advisory- ·capacity.
tieing PJWmacist and bi.cause scbool-youths ·wbo went to get goal, F" e d says, 18 to bave when pediatric instruction. was Now, ' noiHlOUesiate personnel
the symptcms deacribed could into college; Project TACT aid 2·000 by ·t he end of October. first offered there for UIB medl- such as rep.-tativee of the
be aiane of an ·early stage of to public offenders m
Ideas for new programs ,are also cal-atudents,:. - • .
•
eeven faculti!!a, deans, and repc:ancer, lbe Scboo1 of Pbarmacy ment, - housing, etc.; a u-tre- welco.med by the CAC's re- ·
"In t A_e years ahead," he .....,tativee from student asis oonducting a cancer detec- project, the Buftalo Program sea~ ~d deve!&lt;&gt;Pment group aeid, "tlle strengthened tela- sociations are voting members.
~
_
next Tueeday, Oc;" for the Perforininll' Arts· Vis- ~hich strives to lDlprove opera- tionsbip between the University · The Aseembly Will act on the
......,..
tee, a program ·of'Erie--County tielopons andt. exploree future de- and the. Hospital should gene. motion at its-next "-ling, DoEntitled '"I' he PliarmeClSt, Social Services in which stu- v
men
.
. rate even more of the medical Iober 25.
..
The Public " Cancer Detection dents serve as apprentice social
~ long-~e goal of. CAC,. adv&amp;ncee which have broucht
The "-nbly also. vOted to
· (What· Everyr P harm a cis t workers; the North Street Fned..says, IS to make &gt;t obeo- both national and international ratify eetablisbinent of: five ad
'SbouJd Know About Cancer YWCA; and assiStance pro- lete: to see the day when P~ attentioil to thia • community hoc COIIIIIIHteee on nlllidentia1
and· Why)," the p~ dlf: grams for the Girl Scouts, VoJ- , lie schoo!s will do their job an8 institution."
· consoltiums, the Millard' Fillfen ·from the osuaJ m that it unteers· of Americe, and the teach ehildre~ h?W 'to·.read inHe recounted a few of tboee more College· Proiram. unilerWil.l bave little cir nothing to County Welfare Rights Project. stead of leavmg It up to us; to advancea: tbl! )lDique develop- graduate teaching, adjlinct ,.P..
do with drup 6r chemotberlllly.
Day- care programa are con- see. tiM; c;laY .when poverty and ment o{' a tOtal program of pointments, and innPvation prolnslea~ ibe ~UNYAB Pbar- dueled at the Comerhouae Nur- social m)ustice are saen by doe mafemal and child heelth· the ]&gt;OIIIIla.•
·
;
macy Newsl8tter reports, sery,- Williamsville, Cradli!'Of goyernment and they do some- first open· hMrt SUlgmY ;,; · the
pbaaia ' Will be on the nature
B~ p~ Michig&amp;ll Ave- ·!bin~ about it, ~ Of l"f'V· United States-tOr the transpo&amp;!- .
the clisMae.and its - l y eymp- Cennue;tethetlie
· ~U
DayDay Care mg It .llP to":'-.
·_
••
tion of ,t;!&gt;e great v-Is on iJi:. m
u
tans.
. ·
r,
UtB n. Care Cenfants; liijiii6cant contribbtioas .1. 0
,.-,w,
• Oae of the . J&gt;!o'l'P0"'!8 is to ter, and the WaHs Memorial
_:::J
in research into polio and .epi•
.
~ 1&gt;i1anniocis1S on varipus_ Cultural Center, a headstart
am~
!ePSY; new knOwledge- fDl t1ie · ~- YIUl Melvii, '!"led.SoW
•IDI to look for when counael- program.
Dr Robert M ;-.:.......:_
unproved treatment of kidney phi1oeopber and -- · Will be
in&amp; pqou; another is to eetab- OIMr- Help ·
·
.
· '-""""" be- ailments in ~ and the. the~ of the Pbiloaopb.y :Dalillh· U.C. attendina as b!QwlIndividuals on- cempwi &lt;an ~ ·118S18m,_,t dean of the "Guthrie Teat" for the deteo- parlmeDt, Odober 21-28.
ed&amp;eable 8!'UJ'OII8 of c:ancer in- help CAC in .-her
.....p · ~I of~· ~rJ. ' tion of P .K.U.
- · .
Dr. Melvll. ~ ol Cbe Defoftnatioa m .the communitY.
"dilnating thelnaelvee"~ ~ ·. Dr. Cooper. an llii!IOClate proDr. -Ketter aeid that Chi!- -~ of the His6ory ol Fw. To ~. the latter; an·.. active par ·t in the six-phase ~~:,.::~ l;ieen. a ~~- of dren's Hoepital-.Juls nat ~ 81111 ~by--at Moa'cew '
.,..-wide Publicity effort will . overall program whidl eftelids . ct.c""""'_.,.. smce 1967, teacliing been a· commlinity lie&lt;rvant, bUt · ~la\8 Umvendty _!1D!1 a epeojial- .be ~ te foeus -ttentii&gt;n io: health ....., ac:tivitiee; such
::CU.Jhe .:::d"!.&lt;&gt;J.!'rofrodeealso a community Vl!!}ture.rlf!l _~~-ttAmerl~~· ia
on ......,~eo w.boee ~ as a V .D. Speakers' Bureau, a
P • ce
~...,'p
- noted the importance to - the ~......,., on a ,..,_..Jiloolh'fllur
hlmt. jiarticipateclJn the p_ro- nei~ storefront center \}cts.duH!i~ conhistinue his teach- Hoepital of .community-baaed' of . the ilited States to' tl&amp;8t
g r a m. P'bai:luciata ~r in A1JeDtown, and programa at . Ing
~ m.
new poet. .
volunteer groupe 8nd the 'tact: phil&lt;III_OIII&gt;ers bere-and to dlsouaoi
~7 will receive diaple.y. ~-for • area.boapitals· a social .mos.
As 81111istaDt dea'n, he will be that the Tanner BuildlJi, :9.1 with them the 1ateet tzenda in
" cucer 1iteralar8, ~ and p....., wbich pJVYi&amp;s WJ1uri.. ~for ~uate the-Hoepitai· was buill! throUI1i American pbDOeopby. ..,. - •
........U Window and !J&gt;-sbop Ceeis file - - - social - - Studeoit-alfairs, pnifiaDonal af- connnunity financial illlpport
Dr. , Melvll'o boeta 'at U/B
~'their JJbumoi- 9ice work in Erie Colmty; and ~ and '~ develoPment of · EpldeOIIIc ill •44
- will be Dr. Peter Hare, cm,ircie.as&lt;Ucer hif-tlon Cen- a dzua-related_ propem wbich clinical -cbinc _programo in
Tliel'loeeldent -gested that man of Cbe Pbiloeopll)' Depaitten. N~~W~~paper -.eo and .....U with Sunohine -~ &amp;mbWatory ~..laciltties.
IM!dlaD8 "the mo8t dramatic il- 1belU, am! Dr. Marvfn ~.
·
•
N~ People (an e&amp;eDCY on . At the time o( his appoint- lustratiOo of ~ital-cominu- an authoritY. on.J&gt;i!m..._OintiY
SUllY IINATE ·.
~ Slnlet), 'I"eriac;e ~t,--Dr. Cooper was &amp;erving nity inte~ occuiied andna~withwboiDDi.
_, 1J1e l&gt;UNY ~ will hold •111 ,.,I Ho1.e, eoa.p.. ~a~ .as IKlting chairman D1 Cbe De- in 1!H4, when , Western New Me I vII t.o con~- for
I ... Frld8y,~20,11tthe tennnoideDceflocility~~ dpadmenL.of ~- n - YorkeqwienowiadevilStating ~ei~'Whili M U/B,
8IMe U~ Co114te ~~t· a.-. ....,... lllld lllliar ....,..__
uties will be Monmecl tan- polio epedemic." .
•
, · ,.. •uw-"=~·
PIIILAnronewltll~orls1llealbeta ol the Unn..ity- ~ bi Dean Michu1 A.
At.tlaat . time[-&amp;, ~ -~~-"
in
..,.. "'.,. ....,.,. . _ ~ faadty lllld ~ and " " ' " ' •
~
· Jour-lflhl !If· !he bedim dd1
-_...,.....,.., w~.
fll . . U/8 SUNY.........., ::.:..=~~ ~
: IIl'. eoo,ei,a.·~ofc!eJi. itiiiial 'tbeHooopilal_lf_; =-U~t~l::Jri

=:''been

"ll;!oo!i

eeds Yon• Helft- , ,... ,,

CAC

. ,.

emilwY-

10

SovU?t
• Sclwlar - - ·.-

"':i

Vi•...;,_ .czere

C00per--=-N

::::i'

-

,... me-

=~=::-::
7 ..,..._..,_CiceNII.
....._ ~.,_.,-lor~: ·
-~--~

....,.....,.~alldlll8rjalle..._ :~~
.

&lt;.,_

,

. . . . .. to

~~· ,·

-rt;!.i:~ - fwolben:.
~~~~
;.,_~M
.....:.~.~o!_.~
.. ,
"": .,.........._......,..,_.

the U ~of Ca1ilomia
nintM In~ FJan-

=~
•

•

JMD~. 708_pbalthedia- ::':t'~'~J:"u:V.~~

:, ..... -"--~ o#POJi!t.'!~._!!!l!!le...@f_ l9ulia.at.8uD!tvo.
I

"

•

·-

~

,._ __ • •.

�~EP6RTEIG

Kettf!l:Begiru; 'Univ~ity___RePQrts' WBFO's 'Pre8ent.Tense'Is·
With Rundown-on the State~of U/B A_New Kind ofNews"Repoit
BarciiiD*It, Amherat and..,.
ereditlllioD - - o n _!'resideat

RGlJift lteUe.r'a-a&amp;iiildil lliSt
-* 1!'1 he deli-.1 the first

ET:'~::!."r.

'l'beatre. .
.
Ketlar'll report .will bo!· tol......,... by a - -- ol ll_&gt;Oillbly ·
pUiq: ~ b_f Uni_,;ty
8dniiDistntloll deailned to in--

•

fonllthe-~Di-.ni!'l'~

about a wide Wl!ialiY of ~
The Prtialdeat ' - t by IIOlDI
over. l!lll'CIIImml Cninde _and te,.-haliiiQc. ~ ' In olbe Annual
- 'Report . aDd Sell-Study &amp;cu-

llll!llt. (See R~ Septanber 14.)· He~ out the
small nlllllher ofSUNYout-of-State

otndo!nta ~- ayatem
and dl!'
~of
women

Jll'OUP

..-ben wbo are..,.. enrOlled
at. U/B. He aa,id U/B ia "oonsctouoly ~ ~ number
ol atudeala' admitted because
ol bud8ot ~- from AIbany. 1"hea8 ~~ are
Jellected in a decrellsiDg enrollmeDt in the '-'ltiea ofEduca-

tion and~ aa_well as·
- in -the 8cboci of Mimagement:
Graduate. emollment Ia a I lj,O
down, he aaid.
ln addition -to• a dec:reasing
student population, the nUIIIIM!r
ol 8llllf members is alao decllning, while faculty numbers are
rising.
The ~ noted -the 219
VIICIIIlCit!s in the .residence halla
and their _
e/led. on the bond
-

J)8YIIIe$l

the Uru...!rsity Ia te-

.· .. 'Noted tbot the report on

~ - to_ .eM ~ ~ State q,&amp;mpus ~ty· wodd be
~ Autbon~. 'If ~

:!"'de

public so. on and tbat
~system cant amy tts -;-some ~ Of tt are alreaily

::::.,
~}.-=~~
es," be lllid. Since the debt to

~~":!:.empve to
•lteYiewecl the sc:heduJe of
the Slate leplly ClDIIII!6 first, '_, Amheist coDStruction noting
this IDIIY meen ~before' that it's otillllDCle!1laln whether
the Faculties recimve operating the LM. Pei dormitories will .
fwlds, be added. - ·
be• J:elldy for ()()CUJiency next
Ketter nat reviewed plana .,.eater.
'
.
for the Middle Stat... Aceredi• • ~ ~ CODSiructstion vU!it later 1hia' mooth. ' tion bids for the Education and
"We're 8CCI-.I. by Albany of Phil'*'!IIIY building, the IJidusbj,;njr too bard
diem
trial BnliDeering struOtwe and
. aha 1 • --~\l•· the . . : the ~ building will be let
~ beiDa .top bard
during Odober.
.
US;" he,jokiilg1y COIDJI!I!Ilted
- - ~ Nl&gt;ted that .~~ and
about die SeWS~ docwnenl JUI'lSPntcl!mce ~dina l8 'baCk
That docwqent will"create the on ~ule" ~ !llriil.•be "aobaslli" for change at -U/B be ceptid In ~)i!,
.
explained;- and WlU be ·~ for
At the .~ &lt;?f his tal!&lt;.
-the develoPment of thiS Ulli- the President promised th t s
vemitv for the !leU five to ten Wotil&lt;! be uone ol ~ rare
y~
·
,
· OOC88lODB when a'! yon e can
....._.
•
come and fet-a direct answer
The .-....ident predicted tbat to a queation. " . And he
the~~
evaluati&lt;;m team and"willwill~ ~Y fielded ~ or~
m~.
. . .
quenes that came his
.
Y ~I&lt; at -the qatAslred about U/B's diamissal
_andlegiate~~~stu.B~ stanaards, be said lhat the Ulli""""'
es.
versity has none. He also added
The Pra!ident ..fsO:
.
thet when " 56 per cent of stu• Reyealed !bat -the name dents are ·on the Dean's List
ol the Hearing Ccmunlasion on _S&lt;llllelhing is wrong." Ha then
Campus Disruption has been plqed that "these things will
clt;tmJi!d -lo the Hearing Com- change."
mioston· for the Maintenance of
~also pledged there will
Public Order, the result of a be "some k i n d ol academic
State court ruling changing the plan" within the nelCt month or
name ' duoughout".Che SUNY twO. "It will be widely c.ircu·
system. ·
lated," he _added.
_

tJemi/:

"':n

war-

-

· ·n·d
talk
back to':' .ever~~.Walter ~te a ~?
When the III!WII Ia ciwr haYe
you really found -out ;it you
~ted .to .~? Well, WBFO
"!. now gJvmg YO!' a ~
nightly to talk directly Wlth
the -people~ make the~
and report •1, akhoupt n'!'tber
:-:::nor ~te will be.
The ·
.
has
changed ~
f ":'and •
1
ai .
news ':..ned
nng a program
•
ent Tense, each weekday rught
frorq 8 to 9 p.m. The broad-

F..!

=

~~utan:J...I':

at the same time 88 the J.biteuer ·
talks with rePorters about ~
day's events, hones newsmaltera and
the situation
'th ...._
nd
·
:ews"" :..dl'o er can a1ao join u; and jJbone
the ~ti
......_ ~........,
""' !"' Wl~
n..!!"i~ morelSto,:;mwo-• the

ciiacu!'...,

:te J::

.,....,..una.

- ·

uo. '"""' • • •

.,:=!£'"

hlllmllilal and
1"-t nm.
:PmMal&lt; ap1aiDa. "'111e
•
tioaal- JIIOidl!la ~,1-GU
wJth-~ a!11f.., lell1llll'
ahout"what the evalla ....,
she aaya.
~t T - will o&amp;r era! unique feetuft!8. 0ae will
be a set of "COIIllllUIIit;r ~era" - J11!0P1e lnlm thewho_ cell · m from 4ltelr
section of -.._ Another will .
be a aorl ol E\WJIDUl'• EriC
8evareid--a daily call-in commenlaly_supplied by local Naidents.
.
1n addition, an En+«-- _
tal Round Robin; a wealdy ala~ on the .,'l'iroalnmt
·
aJ!!tonehoolt-up811111111 - ·
B -'!1• ~ and Wuhlnaton, will
be aired. And . , .
joumalials will be called to dlaCll88 the .........
WBFO will
..,_ 1~

.

oon....ue .. res·
ular10
·50Mtoormng11
a.m.N"""' show~
•

Weekly CommuniqUe(Continued from fKIII• 12, col. 6)
Open Shop, 307 Norf.on, 1-6 p.m.

5 p.m., Sunday., 2-6 p.m.
.urr &amp;Bow• ; Collopapbo by .,pi
sUXMD. U/B ·alwlent, • DepUt-.

::~~:;,:,:; ~:S"hf.J.i :-~ ~ "J; 1?:.,.~aw"Ci

My Major Bel. 232 Norton, 3
p.m.
Slluknt OrtonizatioM Businuo l'ro&lt;:•duru,
332 Norton. 3 p.m.
PSYCHOMAT: .Finot floor cafeteria,
LIPI: WOilKSHOP• •:

u

N

AlfairsJ,will appear in the dilplay

- · nayeo Hall Lobby, tbroulh
October 20.
~--~------

NOTICES

----=-::---,-------:
All a.- inte-w

atEW ~

um~&lt;rFiilia:nrive·Passes
the'$24·,ooo Mark r.~~.:i...;~J:;
G~~i =~i:;=1l~e.
finlt'~rt -meetlng
~
~'!fp~rt~h~eh,peJ»'~
The

for

per oent; School

Manage-

Institute of Buftalo, the l.egal

to ,_.t

011

MODday, Oclaber

~~;a~~~~ :f::'!!t·~~3~~~ ~:Jc.ureauand thel'•YP&gt;j"tn.c. ~~~:J..'E:~-~ ~~';, ~~~ -

the 22 di~of· the· !Jniver-'
Bity bave nUaed ~tely

'l! cM.F.C!;" "'~3;"62.5 pe( Oerit;
U.B. Foundation/ AIIJI1llll, $671?,

pledge Clirda are jutt beinl ·distribUted to ~Is.
Lea.iling •diVUiions and their
~- as of the first report meeli!llr' were: Vice Pn!8-ideqt for-~ _$554, 79
per cent; 'Vtce PrESident· for
Facililiea Planning, $939, 72 -

In
Special ltttention ' in _b ealth related fiel&lt;il' Bi!tce
to·the importance &lt;If the Ullited 1966, Dr. A. WesUey ROwlaDd,
Fund and its agencies, c:ampus chairman ol the Ulliversity
United Fund .committee mem- United 'Fund Campaign, said.
bera pointed out that 826 UniFutum report meetings for
versity employees we~ served d ivisHaion leadera will be~ in
!est Ye&amp;! by the Family ~rv- 334 yes at 4 p.m. on • ._.urs-tee Society', the International days, October 5. 12 and 19. ·

.

: The Uni~ aEBlth Founda- LINSAII . PilOO&amp;.UDO!IG J:&amp;"[[JD# :
tion, a Um(ed Fond '!ll"""l:'• Dr. Stanley Zion to, profeMOf- of

IIIIUL l'liOO&amp;All8.

On-,oina pro-

~ at Hillel Houoo. ~ Cal*l

:.r~~
M~.=- ~ -~ :s~=:.r:=~~: research,
~r$iw~~~%fr.:.:
--&amp;7t::=~,~=,..ut~·"~f~.
aJ!o=~~~~~
preliminary report because $2,357 49 per cent. &gt;
fellowships, and grants
This is the fint of u.- con- BeU;yacM, led by Olear Stnm·

.

;..run;·

oecutive 'I_'huroday afte~n lee-

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inc techniques and the aeothetic:s

STATE \JNIVERSITY OF NEW,YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

of the New American CiDema.

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fall - t e r buildiDa boun for
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Every ·Tu-y at noon. Hillel

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�12

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

BABBBALi.•: U/B YO. R.LT.,
doubleheader, Peelle Field, 1 p.m.
CAC PU.K•: W'om.en in Love (Ru-~1 •. 1~ ~.J:""
9:15 p•.m.

...!t._and

UUAB

J'II.li'••:

SacCo and VG.nze'iti

(Montaldo, 1971) , Conference
Theatre, Norton, check ahowcaoe
for timeo. Admiuion cjuup.
This ia a detailed and econom·
ical period film about the two infamous immigrant anarehiata. One
of the nicest .and least objection- ~of the year'o crop of political

.~

0. H. LAWREHCE'S

"WOMEN IN LOVE"
lli1dedlif

_

KEN RUSSELt
. _ _., MaJaoo Maiko,
Ha&gt;Cialah oervice, Hebrew aincinc
refreohmenta. Hillel Howoe,
AO Capen IDvd., 8 P.D!:
~

...a

-~br
· ROY
BAIRD MARTIN
ROSEN

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>Equinnx Escapades
''To confront the ambivalence we feel at Autumn, . . • to
conlider, craet. confront, uperien-:e darkness ao a ....-y
fKt and as a poychk: _
.. Judith. K8nnan, sra-1uale ~
In EncUoh, and her Studlas dasa -niHcl this "par·
tldpato&lt;y celebration of the Equinox," atqed around Lockwood
Ubrary last Thursday ao oumrMr cave -y to falo. SUn -

wera playad with minora, ~ b l - and - r
omaU ounllcht toys; later, as the lllht ...,_, a
.. ~ _
..a tor
ot
I.Jtllt."
At--~-- to .....
~

the .,.... the
the--theunenlill•llaoled-"' :- ....--·
~ - ~r

H'""'-

.. ~.: : : ~: _,:.~~~ ~-~ ~ · :~:-.: : , · ~

¥REPORTER;. . W!en~··
·

.
Dilfe

·

Between. Ket
. fer &amp; Senate
• · R
T "t... ,,.;_,._;-,I,
f
f£'\1 ()1l
Cast LJ
•-rnnfV&gt;ca

1 f.::.-1

·

~

'

~Rules

u::fa ·t(.UI

'J

·

It took one year; three com- • 'The Executive Committee, ardization of appointment and
mitteea and two 81!118ions of the however, found large sections promotions!· procedures at the
Faculty Sen 11t e· to get that of the draft unacceptable and departmental and Fa c u It y
onzlnii.ation's recommendations routed it to their Faculty Ten- levels.
odt&gt;olicin, Procedures arid ure and Privilege Committee
• Limited role of the vice
Criteria for Faculty Pereannel (·FTP). A- revised document presidents for academic alfairs
ActioM psaaed but there's still was returned to the ElreCUtive and healtb ·sc:iencee plus · the
as much uncertainty over them Committee early in the second failure to provide"a rncommenas ever.
·
,
semester.
dsti,911, right to the dean of Un'lbe . uncertainty stems from
Because pomons of the FTP dergraduste Studies or the dean
~ts between Presi- draft -re ubclear, the Execu- of the Graduste ·Scbool.
dent Robert Ketter and the tive Committee then set up a
• The .role and membership
senate over details of the docu- special ad hoc group composed of the Presidential Review
ment. 'The President bas pre- of ·Baumer, Dr. Thomas Con- Board.
·
aented his position to the Sen- nolly and Dr. Solon Ellison.
• Additions! burdening of
ale and a~ Is their. reaction. 'lbese three reworked ~ ~ocu- the Board by having them con'lbe Senate a Executive Com- ment once more, submitting a aider all ,tne non-renewal cases
mittee, -~bas retumed final draft to the May Senate involving denial of continuing
the matter to its FBCulty Tenure meeting.
·
appoinbnenl
.
and Privilel)le Committee f o. r
This f o u rt h -revision was
• Failure of some sections
further diacussion before amv- passed in late May aftM shaJp of the procedures to be in comlngata--.
-· discuasionandtwoSenalemeet.- ·pliance with SUNY regulaTbis latest disagreement is • ings. At the time of passage, tionS.
nothing,_ for the personnel it was made clear thst there
Since receivini these stat&amp;policies document In fact, the were several areas in the pro- Anent&amp; from Ketter, the Faculty
long histoi:Y of Its p._..,tion posed procedures with which · Senate and its ElreCUtive Comis full ot dlllering opinions.
the President was not in accord. mittee have decided to desJ prilnltlal ~ ~
This summer, Ketter sent marily with the conllict over
1Mt fall, an initial se of two memorandums to new Sen- the PRB. 'Ibe.ElreC\ltive Comcriteria for facolty appojnbnent ale Chsinnan Gilbert Moore mittee has met twice to consider
and promotion, drafted ·by Dr. pointing out five areas be found it and the Senate has debated
William Baumer; fanner Fac- troubleaon:&gt;e. A first two-psge it once. •
nlty Senate ebainnan, and Dr.· nple merely listed his concerns.
'lbe conllict revolves esaenllemard Ge!Mum, vice presi- A second f...._..page lettM dealt tiaU.v arounil wbetber the P~
dent a -wn1c daln, was specifically with the Pn!aident's is a 1'1-esidential.committee reaubmitted to the Senate Eacu- t Review
oB"ill on Appoint.- spclll8ibJe to Ketter or a """"ty
tive Committee. ' At that 1ime, milnts, Promotious and Tennre group, selected by" and Ge1baum ubd that the docu- (PRB) .
•
sible to the &amp;!nate.
.
,_t be ~ to *- fuU _ . . Cancema
Ketter con...,._ tbat a UJii.
8eBUe bi late N....m.. • tt ·
'The concems '!'fUch the Presi- veraity·wide- committee ap.
oauld be in eftect fa&lt; *-._. dent voieed over the policies polnt8d by and · rMponsihle to
jority ol . tenure ·a appoint. -re:
·
.
him is - t i a l "to-... tba
ment .,._ last year.
• Failure to deal with IJtand. (Co.~ oa 3. ~ l)

s·

Hilda Komer bas been named
director of the President's Com-

work to _...t opportunjtieo
for women students,

~=tio"n ~w~'U:'!:.:;!. ~ao:rthd~~will~
fonned to carry out President
Robert Kette~s mandate thst
"U/ Bassumeaposition-ofleadership within the SUNY sy&amp;~ in es~blisbing an affirm.
ative action p~ogram for

develop mecbanisma for .tnllning and promotion ol clerical
and administrative sta«; establisbina: liailona with d_.t.mental chair !II en and unit
heads; clevelopina and melDwomen."
taining a vita IDe of qua)l&amp;d
Ms. Komer, who is currently women to lllllist in Placinc Cl!IDsupervisor of personnel serviees, didatea; helping to d:lance at.will begin ber duties October titudes on the -"illtl. Uld
19th.
roles of women and resolving
The post is a newly..,.....ted the PrOblems of women ...,.
one. Ms. Korner will report to played on lila otber than""tbe vice president for academic funded by the Slate.
allairs wiijl fi!IIPODSibility ·for
-Prior · to her ~t to
carrying · o.u t policies, pnio&amp;- · UIB'a P--.nol · ~
dures Uld projecla outlined by two y.,. qe.· ML Korner
the Committee. .
.
&lt;
worked with 1M 8liMial of. ArBecause sbe is the first bol&amp;r cbftecture Uld ~
of the office, Ms. Ko~ ''plsns- Deslp lhrough JI08TL She
to work with the Committee in pined ateDiive ~ • ·
.s~fically d!'fining my role.•" perience through mrniJ11 Uld
It IS expected thst ber pn- opentinf a
n ... If 4 a.y art
mary duties will involve el- IIIIIJery m San PIQd8co Uld
forts to incresse the total num- liad · iitveraJ of lllei'Cibmber of women faculty members · disina Uld adverti8IDa 'Milk in
and administrators, particularly both "New York City Uld 8en
in the higber ranks, as .wellas Fnmclaco.

DaiJyU___..

~~

�Septanbor 23, 1972

Study Series
Now Available

.

-

�-- ~28,~912 _

�·' 4
AreSenate -~

·'

.Just for Fuddie;~? ~
Recent espresoions of disdain
for Uaivetsity oammittee work

-t

red, white, and purple
Centnl Farumo

striPe•

ad ...,..U... as to why- I stood · . r am a plj8t, and I fiDd my
..... far-eectipa as _Secretaly sub._.. DOt just -in my o.n
af tbe Paclilty ,Seaate ~ '!rith teeU;;p and m "uatwe" but-tbe-lllljp lbat I abould have my everywhere, -even at tbe .,...._
! - ' e:~am~Ded-prompt Dll' to · roadS of bloiOSY a n d music.

and Titer~ are almost 110 forums at
tbe ..,..era~· .-1 for participa- thU llnivenity for ' i,. t u-&lt;lilltiao iD University oammitlee cip/illmy co ii to ct. We have
wadL
.
•
backed tbe College of Alta and
-r ~~aw !!!t t-~~ esamined 8cienceB mto t1uee, the CotIIIIIJiarly. 'With full awazeness leles pwsue either dePanmen- of tbe Univeraity-:pide. a!D)oa- tal subjecti or important straws
pben! of 'pj!nGI&gt;II) retreat iD a in the-wind-they. have not be~of retnmcbment and con- come tbe focus· o.(.in~p~- .
eolidation,- L nooethel- after IllY work as JliiBs once enVJ&amp;twu ,_.. ol my own' poUtical · i&lt;med. How many intenli.acideo!!pir and retreat; me- to - pUn&amp;IY meeling-grounds do we
enpie·aala·in ·a set-of ac!M- have like tbe Center for tbe
:ties Wblch ·-bad ~ lieen:-· PsYchological Stud :Y of tbe
ft!'llilnlilqj_and• sa'tiatyuii illld. Art 8? CJnivenily committees
~ badrbraucl!t~1o tbe .areourcentralinterdilclpliMI!y '
deftmd DIY

-man

;

~==~o.
:=J·~;::io;££i:/L!J1Yoli~About-tJs i1; Tarton;Gluup·r.·...!: ':t~ ~""'o'f ==-~:!:&lt;!&lt;-~~- Fr-om.Zaire OJmplainsDwing CampuS·Vzsit

=

- - with the three great
.U:~ lmowtbe
~-'~

H

· · .

~~'\~nl~ ":.,"t,bJi1:ntif"~

-- ·

the modified grading plan; the By STEPHEN C. D~ atto tberodage o!._~· In anttem~ AmeOnln.YcanOnemstiDo'de-feltlsbothBtuld thebe
tid hoc major, tbe four COurse
~· ~~~~ En41*1I~
P
uce wit: necessary engi·
ces, and the Natural Sciences. load, the prohibition. of fireWe )mow so much about neers end technicians the goy- adopte(J as the 8 o I u t i on to
- ~,f.:!;~~ ru:msoncampus.toallofwhich Amertc_a, and all,Y9u.Jmow f:h~es~~=fu': ~Y ~~-prob~~they
~·-~-', ~t!iiher a voice or abou~
~ Tarzan.
.
· •'--, ......,
.... 9Clences.
.
· romprebend
.
l - ..__.
• ...,.. I came to aI rontributed
vote. .
Thisus
_was
the -sentift!ent
a- creasmg
,....... .or
ro ul d not
101y
Bulralo in 1963, with our chap.
pressed on campus this -week The majority of the Zairians · tbe socio-pOlitical problems -of
ter ol AAUP. I met 1heril' and
It bas been remarked that bY a _young Jsw student from were in agreement with these such a vast and varied rountry
~ friendohips with only prof""""rs burnt out as Zaire one of a group ol ten · nolicies.
as the Un.ited States, Impr-essed
16culty -'&gt;en; f r om many teao;ber:s. and """?Iars take on ~ leeilers -curreritly touring A
of Mind
·
by Che cimdor of the American
Y.f'"""'!~,~Ueei bawork !'&gt; the ~nited States under dle
HOW&lt;!ver, their experience in people, they hi&gt;J&gt;!id that dleir
~ up ....,... .....,.s.
ve, m ausp1ces of the - Intemation&amp;l the United States bas now led . rontacts here had .increased muGt~li.~Tl\.TTC'
rune years here, o:eJdom""!""un- Vwtors ProJll1llii of the State · members of the group to -t be tual undel'lltaDiijng. The ~up
- Y .uJ YW:
.l .;, ~ such fwldie - duddies. I Department -.
.
. ·realization that such develop- _. planned to return to Zaire next
Tllp ......., ...... .., a. - "'!ve. !Bother, met and worked-- Zaire (fQ&lt;merly knoWn as the ment sbould perhaps be more week, some JoJiniah their stud• ...,._ • w e.· a- r. ~ ~·gotherous. men .and wwnen -coilioH s·loCa!A!CI'in:-tbe South- -.:ari!fully PI an-ne d1md. con-- ies, .others to take pisces in
· ' _ . , _ _ .. _ . . . . . . ,
~.....
tram..tion.
~~&lt;JUrofU""'!- centnl-paH;oftheAfrioanron-. trolled.
...'.:-- .- ..........,....t-BM:Yioe?' -- .•. ,
'ciiiiO- -._ a. ~ cen:.
on _p •......,.....
ru- ·• tineot and . is about- tbe same
T ~...
/'1_ 11-.l 'T\_:...£.-__'?
nu_,.w.~- ve_rmty ~- ba~lrans; !Jimllll~_~:UJ!ita!IS~tes
.
~:UC"-n;rcr
~ .l...IU\::UJl-· ·
~

-.

a.a,.

.ru.u--.

Should'

.c_.,,.-....

Be

·;ves-·-J.

~l!•.,.n _~"--~~~~.~.~.11(~
- ;~ ,
Ri-Yet.·
.
$
. } -i -~· - -~ &lt;c:~::J'::.~
· ,.., • .-...,
· - - ~ • ·.. le!l&lt;:lle&lt;
,....,._.........
.....,. ...... Zaire
nn8
I" H&amp;l~J&lt;
•' •
acbolaJ: ;and•-aJtiat;-;•
Ujini BeJBi • • .-.
iiid ..._..,_,. • •: . &lt; •
•
.
c.ID
.
-~o ~OND •
'
a _..mo::' of about 16 .@j: · ~ 8 Jfty_wi~e alUecl·c:IOo- ·ing of eamild :JaW deaiee8

-1!1111111L
•
. ,· '

on
· .~; and . then, having
· Profesoor of -Engllih
Uon. , 'lbe official language .is tor?
__
.. · .. - • lettabeada , and . eieewl)ere. In
lleoil.., ·Cilllllllitlleee-witbi·n
'-Secretazy, Faculty Senate French.• One oT the most 'eco- ti&gt; ~~JSSi.;yea,.CU,~ -the ~ -~ , uaac-e _was
'A&gt;\UP' ~ as Secretary for
nomiailly developed rountries the~~~
tof ~.-.ied. llpon bY"tbe cmnmuna-tenu,lenliered-tbeiDeny-JoU~1:,J_
in 81Jb:&amp;bara Af ·
·r· ' the
-l:aft!Pus-..,.....,ofEquaLOI&gt; •o/-ollawyea_
'
roomd of 1Jniwmity_ oammit- · .I. BJUVAi'V;
leading world
~ ~ty and a lswyer ~.;,eu. . ''F~·~~i!Dpki_.Ja;,.. ~b0Ut1:his
te.: 8l!lardl CommitleM · for
'J
'lbe Zairians spent ~ooo-days _ - :AU e r · duee Ye1U8 tn la1'( ~ includlil, memben'Cif tJre
O..irDWnobips_or l.i!Jiuiatics. T ;;...,,.joco. ~rnn
in Buftal.o, beginning&amp;eir'cam-- scbool.and a ~r'8 ~ lilw 8cllool8,!' esplains 'Mrs.
Aldallloclme, lllld English; -• a if(u ~
y.u"
-pus visit in -tlie Ileparlment of · a student -.a-J.D., a
S~ AB a lecturer in_ U/B's
Oomiaittee for Unclerlra&lt;;luate
Higher Education. They. touied toral ·alatwi· ~ Mm. BID18 ·L!&gt;w ScboOI; ~ (DOW Dr.)
'l'Mchina ol Natural · Sclence
'lbe list of University fall the campus and met informally -"!'ys, .hut until ~ n!lula- SlDlS hopes 1D .inform the public
· -(wbiob eventuated in an invita- holidays vanes again~ year, -~ President Ketter. ·..Mter"a tions !&gt;ad..~robibited ~ ._ of and "the profi!!IBion about the
tiollJo be a Member of the &lt;:en- de
_ p'ending
_•
upon .Whethet: -u visit ,1D tbe. Nuclear · ~
- r · -the tiUe.. &lt;!&lt;&gt;ctor" befOre &amp;e presently accepted rule.
lar lor ~~ - Bio!OSY....:a are a student·or an emploY;.,_ and· limch lll..tbe Faculty Cliib, .. lswyer'.s name. Some ·Mll!llt
=~G .8¥ II)~ 'Y Class holidays are·Coflimbus the~ attended a -lecture on . ~ st:;~~to ~ . U·L.:o~.~· f':t-11 ;,__,J
...., 110
radifti ( wavee Dey, Monday; Ol*lber 9; Vet- !'MDC&amp;li'Litendureand Coloni- _.......,..
WJQ
t't'C:JJA:::I' ~
fmm my·.ctioos'fhere: brought erans' Day, "MQil!!aY. •-october alism" pYeD by Dr. S.-O~:Mezu out. - :
•
·
.
• ._ ll1liiDallolY II&gt;~ &amp;bores of· "23;'·Thankslriviii£na'y[ 'lblirs- · of_the Frena!. DePutment. '
A'~ri&gt;blelp-~JI!OIIt . rzJ1:-~...._rrl,,..,
-tbehrch•CoaunitteeforCol- ~N ember· 2:f.ana 'Frida .
lswschoolii_cbaJiired~/'U«;;
" - ~); .the CounciJ·'of· November 24.
'
y,
'lbe Zairians, well ~ied dthe title of the prol-.onal18w
~; the Colleoriate ·e om.
with the .bislozy, institutions
egree from bachelor's to doo- EDITOR:
'
mitlioe; 8ecretJuy ofthe Facul- OctobeS'tate employee ·hohdays are and c u 1t u r e 'of the United "!n'te. 'Jb.er also allowed alum'lbe llltide "Which W
to
ty S..te; ~..r the PreSr 9, ~ .23, Novem- States, were shocked by Amer- . ~ to petiti'!n for a change in ·••-~- .
. .., "
. . ay
Ideal's Odrinet:.... a ' lllt!ITY-tll&gt;- ber23; .andEiectionDay, Tues- ican , ignonmce • of Africa
title of Pl'I!YlQUSly awanled d&amp;- _
'Rite., wh1cb apnlll)lill·
~W::t the' or-- -day, Novembe. 7. •
"Americans think we still Uv~ ~- ·' · .
I88Ue olm
~ber _7, 1972
~dJ!~ ,. Fridaf.. No-ber. 24, is__,not ~ j~~" ~plai~ theli~
unfair 8DII -~~"g
-.....~-~..,; - ~ ollicial »tate holiday.
· ~oughts~
~ to~ New York State Edu- ol_tbe !fti'!"; IDirarda the_un·
·=~tfiiJII~ _H_., aince !ft&amp;llY i:nffi- would_be -b.,tter~ tp· -:/:d::,r~~orkwas for- ~of::.:J.ruv~
.......- mat _ . . , knew viduals will be required to work spend its money sendmg Amer. ew •'
Slate ed tionall
•
•
~ a I a a, 1 did not on Eleetion Day when c1asaes icans to tour AfriCB. ,
_ Bar A s 8 o c t a t i .o n. In reY and economically
"-"); at the depth of will be ~ lll!88ion and ol1ices
The students were ttoubled sponse, a 8tsft attorney enclosed
vant8ged ~
CDIIIIllllltita, th.e _~t will be open, tbe -Pellloimel (i)f. by some of the things they bad tile Bar Asoociation's Cominit'A student entering tbe Uni. with ~ ~ ,bu=· :&amp;ce . ~gel!la _that the Friday , .!1oeJt du.tinJ ·the tDur.
felt ~~-g:'_ ~ E t h_i c s versity; ~--a IIP8C!al pro~ .wt~facal.ty ~ ~ TIIaJII&lt;sliving be taken 88 there,_w'as· a great 1ack of bu.' ':'"~ts · . 1'-"o'Awhich.olliciaJiy gram JS not illilaate !" "'!"'·
.__, 811111, Wlll1 ablillata of a OlnJpmM'lnry clay.
manitY in. tlie application of ._ of the tide doc- - parlspn to a 8b!lleDt entering
·--&lt; •
- American ·tec~utolo&amp;Y: -T b ·
~r for 811 those with.a p.,es- throuab the ~ _ciuumels of
found American cit f e 8 -.,~~ Y -~ional ~ in law. The opin. admiailion. If tbiJi student were
·
· ~ ·
·-- · '·-- ..
frightening 'and i~f~r }&lt;;m;- P8ri of 1he Code of PrOfes- · illiterate, we would be' admin·
· . -, CD
.__ ....PO!ITEJ{:;
.
-· .
with bwtiim needs.
~·onaJ. RespOnsjbility,-· became · ~.a t.sic .Adult EducaMany were concilmed for tbe " eftTheective ~ 1, 1970.
· · tioli .l'nlllram·inAaad ol an1i'oll- ~
\ ~,
· ·~ -time. about the affects 110
. opinion lll!'O permits listucationaf ~ .P.rotlfllii.
~r ~ and people of
· Any educator· oboulll - lmow ·
c1 """' ,.... c1 - . . . .
St. , aviWo,
~Pld indll9!rializatiim. •
. INSURANCE TIIANSFEII PERIOD
.that a difrenmt markin1 stand•· r. •-•· - " 2u, •so , . _ A Prior, to roming to tbe Unit- From Qctol!er I through ~mber ard for the students enrolled,in
3
1
1
9
- .,,.,, · ·
· ·
·
'
'
ed States, some· felt that their
h • ta!l~ !&lt;!employees enrolled ' in special programs is m a k i n g
centralized system which J.imit.. 1 8
"'--w. health inlllrance them more disadVIIIIIBpd and
.. ·
ed develOpment 8 b o u I d be plan may switch to the GHI plan destroying their cbaiicelrof be-·
~~
cbangediilfavm:oftheAmeri- ' ~;1 -;:e.t",..· The book.let, cominc BBinfJdly employed in
·
can model. ~ warited rapid
ea
'IIUI'!'nce for You aoid their d - . field.
developQ,ent, inilWitrililization -. Your_Dependents,; • which has liMn
~ of L
r de·- - , . , _
JOIUr L aounu
and urbanization. :Jhey favored d•stribu~ to all facultY and stall, bate I am ~lb'at all
~ .•--.. ::., " ....,.:
·~
tbe JllB88ive COIIIIbucUon If ' oLitlines · dotolls. Individuals WIOh· cioilii.med ~ rontact
'·
~ o~
· ;, ' :" r
rotda. .aud an lmniediati.-Jiar- - 108 to chllnp ·covel'e&amp;e- should me for a disculaioot of-this tc:anwmun110 .,n-oaa.
11. ..,.;...., - . s. -~ - ·MMioc el
Yllllt l!l1l!riY re-·· r'nt8ct..!~ Personnel Ollice for •
Jet ot !DIY ralated __._,:
_,_-- • ~-.
-taken tltiep&amp;--'1o
'lbeir .,_,.._bas
orm. ~·~nae
In c:ovtt!llge.Js not
- '"
"'facilitate 8llch IOYOII&lt;Jbla
for ,.Old uB" em~ • J1Lq ' b&lt; Rillpeolfully,

·L.lSt.

SO:::'.oi

_. _

...

.==
....

ifoc-_.

--T......-

_

._

j::a'!'

u;

t: s':.':.;!

&amp;'.,"t.,

:f:

W::

TheY

-.. _,-u-

• - - - - - ....._ .,.:on•,..••
- .,-u...

5

. _ ,.:= =.....o·

_I._

¥

Npid clnelapmeot by fun:ins
~~all civil .-me

·

who kept tha Privote instltutloil'l
health. Insurance plan. ,

npt!nlll34aom:r R. LYONS, BR.
"' IDiarim .Dinldor
EPIS~

�A&amp;&gt;pted ~nirersity Council

September,

(a)

197~

I'II£AIIIJI.£ '
A University, especially a State
University subject to constitutional
requireri,ents, must guarantee sfudents
the rights which the society and' its
laws protect. An American University
~ its students these rights
on a campus only by treating them
as citizens of a larger society.
U ni versi ty disciplinary processes
take appropriate action when student
conduct directly and significantly interferes with the University's primary
educational ._nsibility of iruiuring
all members of its community the opportunity ,t o attain their educational.
objectives in C01180118JKle with the institutioli's JDIII!date. 1bese regul.atjons
gov!!Dling stulent behavior have been
fonnulated to be teaSOnable and realistic for all llludents.
· When a student has been apprehended for the violation of a Jaw of
the CODDDunity, the state, or nation,
it is the University's position not to
request or apee to special consideration for the student because of his
student status. It sbould be understood that the University ·is not a law
enforcement agency. At the ssme time,
, the ·University does not conceive of
ifself as a "ssnctusry" for Jaw break-'
. ers. 1be University has always been
and should continue to be concerned
that whenever students are involved
in legal problems they be adequately
advised and represented by qualified
counsel.
Students who violate a local ordinance, or any law, risk the legal penalties prescribed by civil authorities.
However, violation of law for which
the student psys the penalty will not
n~·uy utvotve a v.io.lation of academic standards or rules of 1he University. The University or college
cannot he held responsible for offcampus activities of its individual students. However, in cases involving
violations of the law which occur on
campus, - tbe University may have ·t o
he concerned with the aspects, which
by their- nature, adversely affect tlie
University's educational role.
In any University disciplinary prooedure, one of the highest priorities
of the University is the ssfegusrd of
a student's Fourteenth Amendment
right to due process. Due process is
not an evasive legal concept but rather simply requires the rudimentary
elements of "fair play" in an adversary proceeding. To this end, all University disciplinary prooedures will at
least afford the defendant a clear
statement of the charges against him,
and the na~ of the evidence upol;"'
which the charges are based. Secondly, the defendant shall he given a fair
!learing, he allowed to confront and
cro!IIH!xamine 'witnesses, and present
his own position, evidence and explanation. lAstly, no disciplinary action
will be taken unless ihe charges are
proven beyond a reasonable doubl
1be ClDilftB have indicated that if these
minimal elements of "fair play" are
fulfilled, the defendiint will have been
a1forded due proceas under the Jaw.
cation Law. 1bey are empowered to
In summary, the University expects
enforce these regulations and all apand asks for its members no greater
plicable laws on . camplis and properor no Ieos freedom or liberty than ex- .
ties owned, rented, or leased ,by the
ista for oiMr per80II8 in society. 1be
University. Recent {egislatioHives
University's position, therefore, is not
campus
-:urity ol6cers the B8me aulo •request orf!lP"8 to special considthori~ 8s that of P&lt;lliceri&gt;en when the
eration lleoluMe of 'their status as stucampus security officer is actually in
dents. 1be Ulliveisity will not interperforinance of his dut&gt;es. Among their
fere with the law enforcement and
· added powers are the J&gt;OW!lr to exeeute
other agencies. As part of its educawBmlllts, the power to sti&gt;p, identify,
tional mandate, it will be concemed
and interrogate individuals and the
about student rehabilitation.
, power to issue appearance tickets.

AND.

RlGULATION/·
1972-1973

I.

QENEIW. JIUL£1 AND REGULAnDNS

1.00
'
1. All rules of the Board of Trustees
of SUNY, and all' laws of the City
of Buft'alo, Town of Amherst, State
of New York, and United States of
America including but not lliiritec! to
the New York State Penal l..aw. the
New York State Vehicle and :rraJIIc
U.., and the New York State .Educaltian Law oball apply 011 the campus
aod sbaJl be COII8idered pert of the
Student Rules and Reculations.
2. Campus II8Cilrity olllcer8 ara apPointed r-ce o8lcers under. the Edu-

1'.10

All rulell and regulations in theae
chapters sbaiJ be considered as supplementing and implementing the appropriate rules of 'the Board .of Tn!s- ,
tees. and city, state, and federal laws
.and sball apply to all students. .
In addition, lltudenla ara """""""
· a..,a. to obtain and familiarize them:sel- with the lollowiDc UniYinity
Regulati0118: Academic: and n..&gt;art. mental Reculations, Uni-.Ky ~otor ·
Vebicle Reculationa, Reaidence Hall
RecuJaliona, University Health and
Safety ~lions.

Wilfully;,...... ~ liiJai7

to any other 118-. . . . . . . tD
do ao for the purpc.e ol """"'''""
or inducing such other ~ to . .
frain from any act which be M8 a lawful right to do or to do any act whicb
be has a lawful right not to do.
(b) Ph.ysically restrain or detain
any other person, nor remove such
person from any place where be Is
authorized to remain.
· (c ) Wilfully damage or deelroy
property of the institution or under
its jurisdiction, · nor remove or use
such property without authorization.
(d ) Without permission, e%1&gt;'-' ·
or implied, enter into any private offi,ce of an administrative officer, .,_,_
ber of the faculty or staff member.
(e ) Enter upon and remain in any
building or facility for any PlliJICMe
other than its authorized uaes or in
such manner as to obstruct its authorized use by others.
( f) Without authorization, remain
in any building or facilitY after it is
nonnally cloeed.
(g) Refuse to leave any builditlg or
facility after being requiiJ!d ,to· -do 110
by' an authorized-administrative officer.
(h ) -.Obstruct the frell'inovement ' of
persons and vehicles in any place to
wLich these rules apply.
(i) Deliberately disrupt or prevent
the peaceful and orderly conduct of
classes, lectures and meetings or delit.erately intP.rfere with the freedom
of any person to express his views,
includin~' invited spealters.
( j ) Kt towingly have in his posaession upon any premises to which these
'r ules appl v, any rille, shotgun, pistol,
revolver, (r other fi.reatm or weapon
without th~ written au :borization of
the chief ac\ministrative officer whether or not a i icense to pot.SeSS the same
has been issued to such person.
( k ) Wilfully incite &lt;•thers to commit any of tl'te acts herein prohibited
with specific intent to procure them
to do so.
UNIVERSITY
· STUDENT~L£1 AND REGUlAnOMS
3.00 Dttrvptlon

A person is guilty of .. disruption
when he, by a~tion, by threat, or otherwise:
i. interferes with University activities; or
2. obstructs Uniyersity activities. .
University activities include but are
not limited to: teaching, reaearch, administration, public services, functions,
or other authorized activity programs
on University premises.
3.10 Theft
A person ;. guilty or theft when he
steals property.
3.20

1.20
Any offenses arising out of any of

the laws mentioned in . aectiOns · 1.00
and 1.1D above shall be considered
proper matters for adjudication before
,' the appropriate University--diaciplin.
_ary body.

.

1.30
1bere shall be no limit under tbeae
chapters· as to punishment to be imposed. Such 'punishment sbaiJ be at
· the discretion of -the judicial body aDd
. shall be limited only by the rules
governing the University diaciplinary
bodies. (For ·specifle sanction which
may be invoked, procedures of
specifk: University Diaoiplinary Body.
Copies of the procedures of the Hearing Commission 011 Campua·Di8Drder,
Student Judiciary, and lnlar-Re.ideoce . Judiciary are ~ in the
08lce of Btudmt A1raira, 201 'Harriman Library.)
.
suNY __, 0/F TIIUI1&amp; llaULATIOIII
. ·2.00 .
.
Prohibited c o· n d u c t. No pen1011,
either singly or in coacert with others
sball:

Unauthorized~

.,

No person shall l;!reak, into or illegally enter any Uni..,rsity building
or room nor shall any student enter
or remain in any private room or
office of any student, faculty member,
administrative officer or other person
on University P.roperty without the
express pennissiOn of the penon or .
persons authorized to use or live in
that room; ,_ ebalJ any nne1Mbodzed
person enter or remain in uy Uni-"ty buildiq or facility a&amp; a .tUM 'llbm
that faelllty DOnnell;v la"daeell'or..._
the ~ity ' - cloeelf becaalit
of special or IIDU8II8l ciremnolanaw
University facilities Include, but .
not limited to the followiDr. bulldiap,
parkiDg lola; athletic Wda,. 111111 all
aUnpuaarea.
t
3.30 ~ u.. el .,.,..,..,

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

A penon IIJ 'gullty .o l ~
use when be . - any UniWnity ~
cility or aervios without proper ..._.
. thorizatioli. .
3AO
Theft
"'...........,
1. No
perU~
8ball
take; Ileal,
bum,

destroy or othenriee clamaae any PftiP-

erty not his own, on lile Unl..aty
campus or on any Unillemity IJIGI*tY.
2. No in any wbai.IIDI!YIIr, obaiJ delace walla ol 810' ......,_
ture ol the Unhasity, ...._ Oil lile
inelde.or the oatlllde ol .... lllrlldarL

-nu. iDdudea lile - at. ...... ...
.. ._.lllldwloal' _ .. ....,.illllll&amp;'

--

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

such.,....,__

150 .........
A

~

...

.......

pera illpailty ol ....._.ol Ulli.

�~ty _w; and

.•

documenl8·. .,

aaJe to. any person' auolled in a unimingling with organized mee6ngs or
.. 8C8delnic'comimmity; ~ P. C.
versity, colletla. ac:ails:Dy, acbool or
he:
.
.
o&amp;Mr ...iemllliea · for the ~ 'of
-.-, fonDR a.-oor ahlle u.iwa'other educationBI institution within
~ 8 i DC~ this ·in.,..te&amp; tbe
aity of Buffalo, ....... _ . . _ .
l.foqeo,or
the State .of New Yodt any 111W1istance
.rishlll of ~ to IIS8I!IIIble and _the
for the lllldltiao tJI aaldomic frMCiillb
"2. alters, or ~
·in the p~ - . c h or writing
righls of spMkers to free expraaon.
3. . - witboUt authority, or
be ilnp'--lled clurinc his leadenhip
of a diaaerlatioo, theai&amp;; tenn paper
4. Picketing or demonstrating may .
of the University, said in 1935: ·
4. receives withouCaulhority, or
essay, report or other written
not obstruct or physicslly interfere
"Acceptance' by an inalitution of
5. _jJoeaesaes UniWIIIity -lies or
ment intended for 8llbmia!ion to such
with the inteirity of the classroom,
documents without authority. (Unithe principles of academic freedom
educational inslitution' in fulfltlment
lhe privacy of the residence halls, or
vl!lllity liupplial and documents inimplies that tMchers in that instituof the requirements for . a desree, di- the functioning of the physical plant.
clude but are ll&lt;&gt;t limital to tbiO fol.'
tiOn are r- to inwrigate any BUbploma, Certificate or ClOUIIIe of study.
4.20 LDbtlnc and r._-na on
lowing: supplieo, . equipment, keys,
ject, .no matter hoW much It may be
· 2. No per!KIIl-llhall sell or offer for
0 - . r t r - or In
records, files, documents, ·and other
hedged about &amp;y tabooS; that Ibex are
sale any disaertatioo, t h 8 a is, term
um.wltj Bullcllnp
materials.)
• ·
r-· to ' mab known the 'rsultB of
paper, eBSIIY, report or other written
1. Any person not a student, emtheir investigation aDd 'djeir .reflection
3.&amp;;1 .....-.-of
assignment to any person wi)o, aeHs or
ployee, a guest of a student or an
by word of mogth or in writing, before
oilers
fcir 1IBie any sum d&amp;ertation
employee or the parent&lt;&gt;&lt; legal guarditheir c:Jaases Qr ~; that they .
A J181:11011 ia IIUilty of violation of
an of ·a student in attendance at the
UniverSity policial When he violates
are r- as citimils to ~ part in
thesis, tenn pq&gt;er, - · repOrt
other written ~ to sy .pe1110n
Univl!lllity whb loiters in or about
Univenity pOJi(:ia, or regu)atioaa COD·
any public controversy outaide the in- .
eitroJied in a university, oollep, acadany' University building or any part
cemini 'registration of studelit orpnstitution; that no - i v e mmsureo,
emy, acbool or other educational inof Univenlity grounds without written
izatioas and
of facilities.
direct or indirect, Will be applied to
stitution wilbin the.Siate of New York
permission from the President, custhem no m8tter how IJI!POPU)ar they
3.70 · - - for submission to II!ICh eilucat:iomJ in.
of•u-...,-1
•
may become lhrqugb OPposing power- - todial or' other person in charge therestitution in fulfiJiment of the require.
fuJ intereals or' joetling ealablished
of, or in violation of . posted rules or
A pen1011 ia guilty of failure to commenta for a depee, diploma, certificate
ply when he Jails to comply with a
regulatioas ·governing the use lhereof,
prejudiceo, and no matter how miiiCaltor couiae of study.
•
raasonable
request
a University
ofen !bey may appear to 'be in the eyes
shall be -g\Hity of disorderly conduct.
3.75
....,.....
_of
_
__
A 'violation of the provisions of 't his
ficial in the performance of his duty.
(In accordance with Section 240.20 of
of members and friends of the institusection
shall
oonstitute
a
CJaas
B Mis.
the New York State Penal Law. )
tion; that their contlnulinoe in office'
demeanor. (EducatiDn · LDw, Sectwn
will be in all instances govetned' by
Regl,llstions on ·escb campus shall inA.~~-.I!PJI.Y of ph~ abuse
2136)
·and ...............t when:
lhe prevailing lules of tenure and tb8t
clude the manner by which campus
their academic advancement will be
vjsitations by non-students shall be
1 "" ' ~
ults s!rike!l.
5.10 Alcoholic - tru.T.'~
tlmi~.&amp;IJY
d
•
. •
Alcoholic beverages are sold in Nordevelopid . in aocordarice w i t b the
.
or !R .
,PeJ'I!On. . . dependent oii their scientific compe- ·
or
,.
~ •
•l •
tence and will be-in· no wise ' affected
Penal Law.
ton HaM by the University Food Serhe engases in •a course of conduct ·
.by the popu)aiity or IIIIPOPuJarity of
vice under a · license issued to the
2. Under Section 240.35, a person
or repeatedly commits acts which
their opinions or uttenmces; that stuis guilty of loitering when be loiters
Faculty-Student Association. Sale and
aJami or seriously annoy another perdents in tbe inslitutiOn are r-, inor -remains in or about a school, col. use in tlie building tmi governed by
son and which serve n6 legitimate
sofar as lhe requirements of the several
lege or University building or grounds,
the ·New Vorl&lt; State Alcoholic Beverpurpose; or
curricula peruiit, to inquire into any
not baYing any reason or relationship
age Law, the rules of 'lhe State Liquor
3. he Cleltles a condition which unsubject that intereals them, to organinvolving ~tody of or responsibility
Authority, and regulations established
necessarily endangers or threatens the
ize discusoion groups or study du!Je
for a PUPil or student or any specific,
by the Student Union Act i viti e s
health, aafety, or )lVell-being of other
for -the consideration of any subject,
legitimate reason for being there and
Board. (F&lt;&gt;&lt; specific rules governing
persons or of other property on Uniend to invite to address them any
not having written permission from
Norton Hall, see Secti~n IV.)
versity property.
speake. they may ~; that censorany person authorized to grant the
Possession and u8e are permittal in
3.811 F - "-Portinn
ship of student publications shall be
same.
the Residence. Halls under policy es·A person is gull~ of falsely reportbssed on precisely the same grounds
. 3. Under Section 140.05 person is
tablished by the I n t e r - Residence
ing an incident, when, knowing the inand shall extend no further than that
guilty of ¢minaJ trespassing in the
Council and regulations votal by the
fonnation reported, or circulatal to be
exercised by the Unital States Postal
Fourth Degree when he knowingly
residents of each ball. Residence dinfalse or baseless, be caUses such inauthorities."
enters or remains unlawfully in or
ing ball areas are under policies set
fonnation to be conveyed to any Uniupon
premises.
ThiS
is
a
"violation."
by
the Food Service Department.
4.05 Petltlono, lndlvlciU81
versity or community authority.
4. Under Section 140.10 a person is
Rules governing the use of alcoholic
Any student has the right and J?riv3.8$ Dryp and N8rcotlc:s
guilty of criminal trespss;; in the Thira
in Norton Hall and the
beverages
ilege to petition or disseminate inPosseit.on without prescription of
Degree when be knowingly ehters or
Residence Halls are filed with and
fonnation on aimpus. In the ifsid~
any- narrotic, be.rl&gt;iturate, dangerous
remains
unlawfully
in
8 building or
reviewed by the Alcohol Review Board
halls, those intending to circulate pe:.•
drug, or of most so-called "pep pills''
upon real property which is fenced
appointal by the President of the
titions must identify themselves to the
and "tranquilizers" is con~ to fedenclosed
ip a manner
or
otherwise
University. Permission for use of alapprpprial!&gt; H"''S" Gou!&gt;cil before any
eral ,.jllld(o~~!lt!llt-~W·. ~~ ..stv.d!lJl .
designated · \O;iexclude intruders. This
coholic beverages elsewhere on the
indiViaual' or group Petitioii -is ciltufound .to be in illeg&amp;l ~n, of
is
a"t:t~'B'
'l&gt;tiedemeanor:-'
·"'
campus"ma:Y"bi!
·granted -for spec:iaJ oclated. t
t •,
·,· •• ~a' .a.:
"'-: .. , ,,. ! '
drugs must be reported to the approIll. GENERAL POLICIES ·AND PROCEDcasions by the Alcohol Review Board,
(Note: The intent is not to deny
priate civil authoriities and may also
URES ·- STANDARDS Of STUDENT
201 Harriman Library.
the individual's right to petition. In
be subject to disciplinary action by
CONDUCT
5.20 . EnterPrise, the residence balls, however, personal
the University.
5.00 - m l c Dishonesty
~Any proposed enterprises by stuprivacy
must
also
be
respeCted
)
.3 .90 Donaen&gt;uo
and Ellploslws
The develOPment of intelligence and
d e n t s or organizations bearing the
4.10 Picketlne and Demonstrations
1. It is a violation of the New Vorl&lt;
strengthening of moral responsibility
name
of the University muat receive
State Law and University Regulations
In regard to on-eampus s tudent acare two of lhe most important aims of
the official approval of the appropri:or a person to po68l!88 .a rille, shottions and demonstrations that tend to
education. Fundamental to the acate University authority before angun, firearms, ammiJ!lition, firecracli.endanger Jit:e, public or private propcomplishment of these Pl!fP08e&amp; is the
nouncements are made of such enterers, or explosiyes in or upon tbe builderty or to violate local, state, or fedduty of the student to perform all of
prises. ApproVal may be received froln
'lliB or grOillll:l$ of tbe University witheral laws, each student will take the
his required work without illegal help.
the
Vice President for University Reout written authorization. This inconsequence of his own actions as an
'"I'be following actions constitute
lations, 186 Hayes Hall.
cludes roman amdles or similar comindividual before the law, as well as
major forms of examples of academic .
5.30 . _ . . , Use of
'&gt;ustibles or eqllosiv~ ·
being referred to the Student Court
dishonesty among students: (a ) subStudents' records ·are confidential, •
2. No persciil, either singly or in
or appropriate University disciplinary
mission, to satisfy academic require.
to be released only. to IIPPfOpriate fac:onceri with others, shall po68l!88 and
bodies. 'lbe cost , of any damage to
ments, of material previously submitulty and administrative officers. Re. .:any, on any grounds or in any buildpublic· or piivate property must be
ted in whole or in substantial ·part in
lease of such records to any other
.JII of tbe UniWIIIity, knife, dirk, stiborne by those legally responsible.
another oourse, without prior and excollege,
prospective,.employers, or govcetto, sabre, cudpl, bludgeon, club ' . All members of a University compressed consent of the instructor; (b )
ernmental agencieo,'-qccurs only with
·&gt;r other thing .adaPtable to the purmunity must share the responsibility
plagisrism: copying material from a
the
student's
knowledge and consent(
pose of a WI!8POD, including hiltons,
for maintaining a climate in which
souroe or sources and subMitting this
or upon subpoena, un1eea materia'f deIW'IIte sticb, canes or similar lll'licles,
diverse views can be exPressed freely
material as one's own without acmanded by """""""' is legaHy priviexdudina .only . o.r t hop e d i c aids,
and without harassmenL
knowledging the particular debta to
leged ~r otherwiae eDlllll&gt;t frOm the
athletic,.,........t;and priljectw·llODThe.State University of New Vorl&lt;
the source (quotatiqns, pars~
process. ('lbe OfBce of Admiaaions and
- lltnlalbi~~&lt;lllld toola·.on.JIIOI!( ,.:; at B\d1'81o bas 'tnfditionally aupportal
basic ideas), or otherwise represent. Records maintain&amp; this ·policy
')( a;PliJil• ~-&gt;Or, purp!Me: on-.·· · the right of its students, faculty, and
ing lhe work of another as one's own;
concerning the fe-lea•e ·or student
D-elay 1D ~ r,.;.t .• "J ·""H ) t '
stsll to peaceful protest. Always . iJn!
(c) • cl)eating: receiving information
grades.) 'lbe University aJao c1oea not
.3. -No peraail ilired fo~ pwposes of
plicit is the undeistanding that ........
from 1liiOtber studeitt or other unauthcompile membenbip lists of student
eafarcinr eecurit¥. whether in lieu of
onstrator&amp; will not· inlerfere with or
orized source or giving infonnation to
oftlllllimtiooa but the name of the
ar in addition to Campus Security Of, violate the ri8hts of others. It is the
another student with intenlion to de~dent
each group and the FaCllcem, may have in his ~ in
obligation of.all'=!i&gt; 8Mist in -maintain-·
ceive while completing an maunination
ultY
Advisor an. requbed for pwpoaes
, _ upon the IJuildinp.and grounds of
ing oi'IIM and to II8IIUle courteous reor individual asoignment; (d) falsifl.
of
uae
and
t i a o of UniWIIIity
of
any
campus
speaker
or
ception
the •Uni¥8111ity any
olbet
. cation of academic materials: fabricatfacilities. '
.
cleMiy ....,_ without . . . writvisitor.
·i ng -laboratory 11\aterials, notes or re5AO
lclaulllcdo
' c.n1
'lbe followine pertains to the can- eulborization ·fmm tbe UlliYBrsity
ports,
forsin&amp;
8J!, instructor's name or
A student identifkatiaD card (LD.
ollcial anpOwered to give such auduct of lhoae manbers or the u,;.
ini~ or sobmi~ a report, .paper,
Card) is p~ fOII-_ F&gt; student
lboriation.
Ylllllity COIIIIDWiity who' feel compelled
mat.;rials, or exanunation . (or any
at the Uniwiraity eadf"""m the fall
us......,... .... '
. to eqJft!llll Jheir ru-t·-tluOualh .N..!.. considerable
thereof) prepared
semester and ~ valida&amp;ed_aftar spring
No idbdaat '~ pmblo!· for money
etillli ana Olbei- 'fonlis Of ··~- · ' by anY person•part
ottier'thiU! tbe student
daD:··
.
registratioo, The •I.D. €ani .-vea as
or o&amp;Mr 'valuables on Uni-....sitt propresponsible for the IIS!Iignment; (e)
olllcial identiflcatiaD 81 a State Unierty or in aD,y UniYBrsity ~ty.
i. Picbting or clanoaitrating mnst
Procurement; distribution or acceptveraityofNewYQrkatBufWoatudent
be ordeity at all t:imea and obould ' ance of · examinations; laboratory reIL I'OUI:IEI IIDATED TO FREEDOII
in no way jeDperdjz8 public order or
""li entitles tbe to library privisults, or confidential academic materiOF~
legea. Upc111 paymmt of tee the valisafety or intqrfae with the Uni-als without Ptior and expresSed condatal
LD.
Card
will
permit
admilrdon
sity'a
pnlll8ma.
....
4..00 ~•
sent of the instructor "
to bome athletic ....,., and campus
~ty IIJIIIIOl1B the prin2. Picbting or·demanstrating must
li1l alletred aiaea, of academic die- •
cultural ewiiJIB, .putidpation 1n stuciple til ..-me freedom u a CIIIICIIII
not illterfere with tmlrancea to ·buildboal!iity life at .present handled by the
dent 8pCiiUiliNd acliritiM, and special
'iDirialic to the ~ 1111111 ining&amp; or the nonnal flow •ot. pedealrian
academic. areas cancerned.
off--campua ~ atUdeai c11aoounts. ID.
or 'Wihlo:ular tnofllc. .
.UtutolcJMI pia. Tbll ]lriDeiple !!!&gt;Unl8wlul of or..t.uano.
~ a tnllt in lll]e inllllrib' and ..,._
a. ' n - law!IWIII in pidret:inc or 5.0!!
Carda are NON-TRANSFERABLE.
l ' - ioicr Ttnn .._. .
....,.amty of the ~ tJI the
Carda .which are 1lll8d iDeplly will be
~ ~ not iJ!terfere by
1. No person ·aball
or offer for
~ "llbd ~ o.ar to the

assign:

--

.CIIpni-.s

0;

use

..

2:

a

w.._

or

fb•m"'"'.

aeu"

SEPTEMBER 28, 1972/-5T.lJDENT RULES AND ~EGULA TIONS/ Page 2

.I

�Ba!llll!lt Alfain. Sludeola acol.leDaiD&amp; their canis 1n othera
or usinlllllOiber'a aud will be broucht
before the Student Judiciary aDd
dlaJ'I8d with violating the appropriate
section of the student~ and RegulaadnB. LD. Cards sbould be carried at all times. (In case of !01111, a
student sbould obtain a new card from
AV Communications Center, Room 1,
FosteiHall. on days to be 8JIJIDIIDCed.) ,
A "$2.00 cbarp ia made for repllicemen~ ·
'
.
.

Office of

cused

5.50

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

1. Vebide Registration. Each stuc!ent who dri""" a motor vehicle on
campus must -ft!llis!er each · velricle.
Durinl cia. registration there are
severallocationa set up and appropriately identified for this purpose. After
dass registraU.., the vehicle -may be
registered at the Security Office or at
the -Office of Student Accounts. Each
student aba11 be- bound by the posted
and pQblillhed trdlc regulations. He
will be beld responsible for all tmffic
violations committed oil campus with
any car, motorcycle; or other aelfpropelled v-e h i c I e -registered in his

name.

.

2. A copy of -t he complete State
University of New ~rk at Bulfalo
vebicle R!!gulations must be Obtained
during c:laao registration or from the
Office of Student Accounts or the Campus Security Office.
3. Pennits. All students must obts.in
and alii&gt;: a permit for any vehicle
parked on campus. Possession of a
permit enti1Jea the holder to park only
if there ia available space in the allotted parking areas.
4. Special Pehnits. Students who
need special parking consideration for
health reasona, must apply for special
permission from the Security Office,
196 Winspedl' Avenue.
5. Parking Policy. Automobile parking on the campus is considered to be
. a privilege granted by the University.
The administration is aware that at
peak periods there is a critical shortage of parking space and is attempt,.
ing to keep up with the heavy demands of a growing student and faculty-1'QPUiation&gt;._efticiently""' finan- ·
ces and land permit. In order to iliake
parking as equitable as possible, an
effort is made to keep parking regulations reasonable and to enforce them
strictly. Each student is expected to
work out a schedule of arrival at the
campus whicl&gt;" will allow him time to
find a legal parking place. Ignorance
of regulations is not considered an
excuse for violation.
6. Parking is prohibited at all times
on the roadway (except as posted),
sidewalks, lawns, grounds, lanes, and
throughways of the parking areas. \f'be
University may tow away . vehicles illegally parlled aDd asaess a c:barge.
7. Parking Fines and Penalties. City
of Buftlllo i&gt;arking tickets are ·issued
on the Main Street Campus. On the
Ridge Lea Campus,.Town of Amherst
tickets are issued. Anyone wishing to
appeal a ticket must first contact Campus Security. 'If the ticket ia not rescinded by Security, they must arrange for aWeal tbloush ti&gt;e City of
Bulfalo Tnl8lc Court. University
chartea ~ be . - 1 for the towing ol illaPilY parbd vehicl&lt;B.
8. Uabillty. Tbe UnivssitY, accepts
no liabillt¥ for loaa 0&lt; damage to a

ua1t provide OOIIIIUitative aDd direct
aervicea to aludenta 111111 to in"""' all activities a IIUODI!8IIful completion withaut _.m injariee
erty damage as a .-.It ol negt;pmce

d-Md to ....Utute permiMion.

( Artick 8, Section IJJO, 2-B)
.f. No person Iicon-! to aell alce&gt;bolic· beYeragee aball suffer or Permit
any gambling "'t the liamaed premises, or suffer or permit such premlaes
to become. disorderly. (Artie~ 8, Section · 106, 6)

or_..

or error or Ollliaakm..
Departmental personnel also survey
on-go~activiti&lt;B. When ' - f ,
directives aDd recommendationa are
iSSued (l&gt;r c:hanges which may include
elimination, substitution or alteration·
of portions of an activity or cWinite
cessation of a total activity.
Assistance is offered and concern
is exercised in the areas of: student
asoembly, special activities, academic
programs, extra-&lt;=ricular activities,
housing, food service, tmBic regulationa, fire protection, eye safety, insect
control, accident investigation and
emergency practices t r a i n i n 11 programs. Rules and regulations are not rep.-! in a ·&amp;inl!le document; but, consist of policies and prooedures adapted by the EnYironmental Health and
Safety Commi~; rules of the
SUNYAB Executive Council; rules
p~gated by S.U.N.Y.; laws of fed&lt;lfll)., slate aDd governmental subdivisions and standards published by
professional a n d tecbnical societies
·which represent a consensus of nationwide, and often world-wide, opinion.
No person sball intentionally refuse
to observe health and safety procedures and regulations established for
the protection of persons or property
on the campus.
Advice d assistance on matters of
environmenl:al heaJth and safety are
available to all students from the
Department of Environmental HeaJth
and Safety, 204 Michael Hall, 8315341.
IV.

6.00

NORTON HALL HOUSE RUL£5
AND REGULATIONS
Advertlsinc

No advertising material or other
literature in any form may appear on
the exterior surface of Norton Hall,
including entry ways, or upon the
exterior surfaces of any . building
owned, operated, or leasedJ&gt;y the University except . in aJ1l8S oftioially des·
ignated fur same.
'D'.. T1· '
Any non-University person or organization wishing to advertise or sell any
merchandise. to students, faculty or
alumni, must receive advance permission from the Director, Associate Director's Office ·or Norton Hall and/or
from House Council.
I

'

6.10 • Alcoholic Beverops, Al-ollc
Beveroge Control Low

6.15

All provisions of the New York
State Alcohol Beverage Control Law
and rules of the State Liquor Authority apply to Norton Union and the
State University of New York at Buffalo. Special attention should be paid
to the following regulations:
1. Any person who · misrepresents
the age of a minor person under the
age of 18 years for the purpose of inducing tlie sale of any alcoholic beverage, as defined in the Alcoh&lt;;&gt;l Be~­
erage Control law, to such mmor, ts
guilty of an offense 8!iil upon ponviction thereof sbaiJ· be punished by a
fine of not more than $50, or by imprisonment for not more than 5 days,
or by both such fine and imprisonment. CABC Law, Artie~ 5, Section
65-A)
2. Any penoon under the-IJe· of 18
~tor ~O&lt;v:.:tmts.
years who presents or offers to any
licensee under the Alcohol Beverage
A IDOIIcli Vlllilde' llhall be damned to
Control Law, or to the agent or embe ~ If Wt for more than
ployee of such a licensee," any written
seven days In cme &amp;pOt. Tbe vehicle
evidence of age which is Jal.., fnmdushall be diapoeed. of
lent
or not actually his own, for the ·
with the laov. The last registered ownpurpose of pun:hasinll ·or:&gt;attempting ·
er of an llbeDdoaed vehicll! sball be
to purchase any alcoholic beverage,
liable to the Unlvssity · for the cOst
may be arrested or summoned aDd be
of removal,"atoJqe, etc.
examined by a magistrata bavina jur5.10 ·CMnp "' - isdiction on a charge ol i11aplly purEach atudo!int ia required to keep
chasing or attempting to illegally purAcimiMioaa aDd- Recorda' informed of
c!J!Ise any alcobolic !Jeven!le. (Article
his mailiDi ~ aDd any dwlgea
5,"'Section 65-B)
•
·
thereat
.
3. No ...t:llller aba11 permit or au!5.70' ~ ..... llfwl1
fer to appear as an .,lertainet';bn any
a.Jth Mated ~ ol the envlroaa.st aDd matters of peraooal aDd ( pren!iaes· iicenled for retail sale baleunder, any . pe.- Wider the ol
l!l!Diftl afet;y fuDct&gt;ons of the
18 JCeuB. Failure to .-tmin· IIICh a
~t ef)Bavirallmftltal Haith
persOn
from ... ._.m. _llhall be ..
. aDd s.fety . • Penaomal of rt~oel1ilpart- .

m. accordance

Page 3/STU;,ENT RULES _AND REGULATIONs/SE':EMBER 28, 197~

Alcahallc
--. Council~

-.

1. Only alcobolic beverages piu"""-1 from the licenaed F8A Food
Service at the State University of
New York at Bulfalo are permitted in
Norton Hall.
2. Beer will be sold in the Rathskeller only during ·the posted houra.
3. Alcoholic beverages maY be
served in the Tiffin. Room during its
hoUrs of _.yjce other than regular operating boura. PenDiasion to do so
must be..obtained from the Director of
Food Service.
4. Alcoholic beverages may be
· served in designated areas in Norton
Hall only at events catered by Food
Service.
5. Alcoholic beverages purchased in
the RB.thskeller, Tiffin Room, and
rooms for catered events, must .be consumed only within those rooms. •
6. The posaesaion or consumption of
alcoholic beverages in the bowling alleys and pool ·room is prohibited.
7. The posaesaion or consumption Of
alcoholic beverages in other than d.,._
ignated areas in Norton Union is prohibited.
6.20 Core and Uae of Facll1. In keeping with the policies and
regulations of the University .and
Trustees regarding the use of State
University property and facilities, the
primary purpose and intent of the use
of Norton Union facilities must be
for the educational, social, recreational
and cultural benefit of the University
communi ty.
2. Proper care and use of furniture,
equipment, and materials is required
a t all times. No article or equipment
belonging to Norton Hall, such as furniture or pictures, may be moved or
taken from the building, including ·to
the T~rrace, excepi by special permissiori'of the Director s Office. Furniture' ·
ii
may not be moved from one room to
another without specific pennission
from the Operations Office or the Associate Director's Office.
3. Animals are not permitted in lhe
b uilding at any time.
6.25 Checking ANas
Books, coats and parcels should be
checked in areas provided.
Norton Hall does not assume responsibility for lost articles. A lost
and found · service is provided at the
lnfonnation Counter.
6.30 Counter TaTables may be reserved only by
recognized student groups in the Center Lounge area. Exceptions to the
rule may be granted by Norton Hall
Council.
Amplification systems may not be
used on the first floor, or the basement except with special permission
granted by Norton
administrative staff and/or No!1qn. H'"""' .~
.cil.
.
s. •• !• .·i
6.35 . Decoratljlns
"
-.Plano for any room alterations
(such a8 wall fixtures, additional fut· niture, drai&gt;es, or curtains) sbould be
made in consultation with the office
of the Business Manager of Norton

Hall:

Hall.

-

, 1.10 Building howa poMed. lulDOWlCOIIIellla also Jlllllle prior to
closing. Remainint in the bulldlnl Ia
not allowed after cloeiDc howL
8pei:iaJ permission to nmaln in ti&gt;e
building after hours must be approved
by the Night Manager on duty, for
immediate emel'llenciee. or by the Aa-:
sistant Director for adVIU)Ce approval.
6.!15 U m - &lt; J I F The Coordinator of Student Activities (also the Director of N o r ton
· Hall ) with the approval of the Vice
President for Sludeot A1raln, has the
responsibility and authority for limiting any event taking place in Norton
Hall to students, staff alld' taculty of
the University because of traffic control, scheduling and related problema.
Only recognized groups are allowed
to reserve meeting rooma.
6.10

All posters, ann6Uncementa, signa,
etc., (or lhe bulletin board must be
submitted to the lnfonnation Counter
for approval and staff sip)ature. Material pOsted without approval is sul&gt;ject to . immediate removal and dia-

eaJd.

_. ,, . ,,

and .

.. ·.f;

Ride Board requests .
heIp .
wanted requests writteri or\ apProved•
cards ,and posted on the designated
bulletin boards do not require further
approvul. Material not on approved
cards iE subject to immediate removal
and dis.,.rd.
No J&gt;'lf!ters may bo nailed, taped,
glued, stenciled, psini.ed or stapled
to floors, walls, furniture, or glass inside or c.utside the building. Postet11
mav be thumbtacked to bulletin
boards on;v.
·
Materiru posted will be discarded
after the event unle&amp;ll bold is requested.
6.65

ROCOIIlltlon of ~

When a group is recognized, it has
the privileges and use of the facilities
which accompany recognition.
For a group to I&gt;• recognized, it
mlll!t officially regisler with the Coordinator of Student Activities, listing
the names ol. its current officers and
must subsequently subU)it a constitution to the appropriate student .government. It must also have an approved advisor who is either a fulltime professional staff member or faculty member. Final recognition can
be given only by the appropriate stu- .
dent government.
Norton Hall house privileges may
be granted for a six-week period by
the student government and the Norton House Committee while recognition steps are being taken.

li.ilo
--&amp;-~
Requests
for rooms and d i n i n g

rooms in Norton Hall sball be submitted to the Reaervailoas Office,
Room 223. All groupo escept students,
faculty, staff aDd alumni will be ...
sessed a special service charge.
Confe""""' rooma aDd other facilities sball be assip1ed in the order in
which requests are made with priority
given, where ~ to student
groups aDd student related IICiivitia.
Con8ideratioo&gt; la .p ... to the •llize oL ••
the 1Jroup .and· tbe&lt;"8ftllillile,r.nttiMI•• j ,
Cancellation · o~. ,.- ,m.a , ~~e . am.in the· RMervationa
advance as palble aDd In 110 c:Ue
lese thari 24 bows prior to ti&gt;e date
ol the-t.

,.
omc.•- •w •:ln s•h

6.10

~

No private CIIII1DI8I'Cial .,terJ&gt;rlsball be allowed to ~ on Slate
Uni-.1~ ~

Scotch tape may be usecl.Dnly to .
attach ml!terial to any &amp;laa surface.
Masking tape must be Uled on any
other surface in the building.
Decorations may not be nailed,
tape&lt;!, gl~Je!l, stmclled, painted, ell; or
otherwise -.:bed to 8oora, walla, or
furniture inside or outside ol the building, - t .. noll!d above.
Orpnlzationa must fumiab their
own auppliea aDd must remove decorations within 24 hDun after ail - t .
Orpnizatiaas will-be held ~
for this Ia&amp;
·

or iD the t.diiW. fumlllbed "by the Unlwai~ other
than lhme approVed tiy the Baud ol
Trus- reiulation ol May 12, ]8111.
The ,_ of COIIIDIIIIdal PIJihlMID41talllldli-llld!5
era for any. funcliall beld ln'tbe balld- ·
ing must be approved by 1be Roo.e
Council
.
'
All rules a l l d i e o f the
State U~ty· Nu Buf.
falo oball aPPlY
Nortm Hall. ·
Y. OfFICE OF miDIIIT ACCCIUin'l
7SIO ..,._ fll "F.-.. "-

Filii-time j!tudenla in plOd -s.nic partlclpali! In
..ct¥tia. '
'

l'ayualt Ia due by the elate lndleated In the 1Mb~ •
•• .,..
m, the lnvilice aDd lllould .. Jlllllle by

uo __..,..,_....
IIIIIDriiDI ari·eltJfble to

...

...........

�suie that it sijn repi.amts the wisbes
check or money onler payable to the
. full for all cbarges aBDDed at regia- · 98icoi. -~ and 88 ·posted m
of the majority of the l'lllliden'ts u. the
State University of New Yorlt at Buftralioa. Failure or:iDabilitY to attend
each residence- ball Studeuts sball
halb
falo. Pea101181 dlecb· aJoe. ~ •.•1 ~~..:,~·-,i!!h!J}1.;&lt;~not
·''~ ~IJDI&lt;I-,.;If&gt;e •.U.UI-..ity' ~ .
c. ProvisiollS must be IDlJde to be
RUbject to collection. Payments fiJi:
or n:u~on m .,..,..we .....,
,or any expense. oes .o r .........,.e re-.
sure that the rights of tboee individual
warded iu' mail sbould be addressed
d!ange the payment due or entitle
suiting from violation of sucli ordistudents wbo db not wish .to particilbe student to a MuDd.
·
n8nces, rules, regUlations or standards
to the State University of New Y.orlt
pate are not violated."
at Buffalo, Office of Students AcHoWever, if .a student fonnally re01' because of the negligence of the
counts, Hayes A, 3435, Main Stree(
signs, changes from full-time to P9ri:student. ·
time, or, on a part-time baSis reduces
8.05 ~nc
All federal, state, ana local laws
Buftalo, New York, 14214. The stugoverning the possession and CODIIWDpdent number sbould be used to identihis schedule by djrectly notifying the
In compliabce witb the New York
'fy each payment. The payment of ad. Office of AdmiSsions and · Records
State Multiple Dwelljng Laws, cooktion of alcoholic beverages will be in
ditional tuition incurred by a part. witbin tbe first four weeks of a regular
ing is not permitted in sleeping rooms.
effect at· all times. In additioh, the
time student as a result of adding a
regulations governing aloobolic con(not suminer) semester, he will_ reEnforcement of this statute is by tbe
...-..rse sm-pwnt to registration must
ceive a tuition credit. In such Cases,
Environmental Healtb and Safety Ofsumption 88 established by each resi- ·
be q&gt;ade 9n the date of the change
tuition only 'will be prorated. This
lice.
. dence hall and approved by the Uniof course. Additional fees may be ascredit can lie 11pplied on the payment
8.10 Drup
versity Alcohol Committee are:
sessed for late registration, late payof tUition and fees for-subsequent semillegal drugs sball not be possessed"
· Ckmem Hall-The consumption of
inent, and change of programs.
esters or refunded at tbe Office of StUor used in the University residence
alcoholic beverages will be permitted
in individual rooms, in floor lounges,
7.10 York f1111ints •nd/or
dent Accounts on request.
haUs. ( See also Section 3 .85)
5c:11o!1r , , _ . -rds ..... s 7.70 Mlltt.ry Rwfund
8.15 o.neerous Wupons
and the basement .television room.
It will not be permitted in the main
un!Wnlty - n h l p o
A student called to active . duty in
No weapons are -permitted in the
floor public lounges. .
H a student has a Power· of Atany branch of inilitary service during
-residence halls. (See also Section .
.. Coo~ Hall-The COIJSUDiption of
tomey on file at the Office of Student
a regular semester may receive a re3.90) .
4)cobolic beverages will be permitted
Accounts and has received his Refund upon presentation of his active
8.20 ~mbllnc
in individual rooms, in tbe television
gents . Examination Bl!d Scholarship
duty orders to the Office of Student
No gambling is permitted in tbe filSCenter Award Certificate on or before
Accounts.
idence haUs. (See also Section 3.95)
lounge and in the main lounge.
Goodyear HaU- The. consumption
the date ( U811ally about 2 weeks after
· 7.80 un..-ld U_nlverslty Accounts
.
8.25 Security of Residence Halls
of alcoholic beverages Will be permitcJasaes !&gt;egip) fudicated in-d&gt;e .finan- ;' . A student...,;:.,· an unpjP,d add pve,..
All IJl&amp;idence haUs will · be Jock!"~
cial infol:IN.tion -:sheet · that accom- .., ,' dbe ' lJniversity aCCbllnt will nat be
from 10:00 p-.m. to 6:00 a.m. or at
ted in individual rooms, in the .upstairs lounges, in tbe kitchenettes, in
-~ his &lt;invoice, I he. may 'deduct ~5/ ~RUt~ to ~is~.fos, ~'.following
otber h_ours. 88 joint!y determined by
adJUSted •award· llln&lt;&gt;Uftt· from his auf&gt;· ,• ~~r. nor w1ll· he'\e.entl~~ to retbe Uruvemty Housmg Office and the
the Chstterix&gt;:o: '(basement snack bar),
standing · halancie. H be received 'iJ
· ceive a s tatement or-transcript of his
Inter-Residence Council, to help safeand in ·tbe SQutb television lounge.
muimum Scholar Incentive Award
credits until his indebtedness iS setguard the residents. Ammgements are
Consumption will not be allow'ed in •
and fJ,led an application in the Office
. tied. The University does not act as
made so that residence hall students
tlie downstairs lounges, e:o:cept .i n ijte
of Student Accounts, he may deduct
a - collection agency for ci:&gt;mmercial
have easy and unrestricted access to
preceding case. Alcoholic beVerages
the S t a t e University Scholarship.
outside groups or individuals.
tb,e building after die time wben they
will be permitted in tbe Goodyear
Nore: The combined New York State
7.90 Peneltles
are locked.
·
Soutb Conference Room only if tbe
Scholarship may not exceed., the
No student is eligible to receive a
Security Aide Program-The Securproposed use is so indicated when the
limount of tuition charged, except for
degree, certificate of accomplishment,
ity Aide Program was institued ai the
room is reserved, the eyent is approved
Child of Veieran Awards.
or honorable dismiss a I until all
express desire of dormitory residents.
by tbe Goodyear House Council, and
7.20 University -rshlps· and Loans
charges due to ·tbe University or to
The prognun is under tbe auspices of
tbe event is registered witb the InterH. a student has approved Scholarany of its related divisions are paid in
IX&gt;th Campus Security and tbe HousResidence Council's Activities Counships and Loans -paid tbrough ·t he Unifull, and all University property has
ing Office. Aides, otbemselves, are stucil.
.
versity, he may defer. paying the
been returned in acceptable condition.
dents who usually live in the residence
Macdonald Hall-The ('Onsumption
amount ! usually one-hslf of tbe anThe University reserves the right
halls. Their funotion is to secure tbe
of alcoholic beverages will be permitnual award) from·his charges until the
to change or add to its fees a t any
haiJ _entrances~ to check an persons
ied in individual rooms, in tbe teletime. Official information concerning
seekmg entrance for valid identifiescheck is received. He is resoonsible
vision room and .in the kitchen. Con~
for applving the .check in payment of
tuition and fees and their paymen ts
tion and passes.
sumption will not be permitted in tbe
outstsnding charges.
should be obtained from tbe Office of
8.30 Guests of Resident Students
main lounge except upon decision of
7.30 Tuition •nd F- Cove"'d by
Sturlent Accounts (831-2041 ) .
All visitors to tbe residence hall
tbe Macdonald House Council; and
Walvllrs, Grants or Govemment.l ·
If a student is dismissed from tbe
must be guests o( residents or staff.
will never be permitted in the study
Apnclos . .,
University or any of its .related diGuest facilities for parents and chiiarea.
If a student files ' an approved notivisions for cause o_ther than·academic
dren under 16 years of age are not
Michael Hall-The consumption of
fication at tbe Oftice of Student Acdeficiency, all fees paid or to be paid
available. Overnight guests of resi·alcoholic beverages will be permitied
shall immediately becom_e due, and._ ·". den ts_m~~ ,be. in ~ion o( a Guest .
counts by ·tbe announced ~ate, be may
.in individual rooms, tbe third iloor
payable and shall be forfeited .·
Pass, whiCh IS availabfe through tbe
deduct this allowance from h i s
lounges, and in tbe kitchen. Col)charges. (Thition waivers do not covVI. UNIVERSITY HOUSING OFFICE
Resident Advisor of the sponsoring
sumption will not be permitted in tbe
er fees. ) Note: Credits for anticipated
RULES ANO REGULATIONS
s tudent. The host student assumes
h a I I w a y s, fourtb fioor lounges, enscholarships, loans, grants, etc., will
complete responsibility for guests and
trance· ways, or on the roof.
not appear pn the invoice. Deduct the
8 .00 Care and Use of Facilities
tbeir actions while in tbe residence
Sclwellkopf Hall-The consumption
amounts as indicated above.
- Proper care .and use of furniture,
hsll.
of alcoholic beverages will be permit7.40 Student Fequipment, materials, and tbe building
.Both non-students and non-resited in individual rooms and in the
The College Fee is a ~tate assessed
are required at 'llll times.
dence students who wish to visit a
lower area. Consumption will not he
mandatory fee. The Student · Activity
No article of equipment belonging
resident of the hslls ~t make ..ar·permitted in the main lounge except
Fee is a student assessed mandatory
to tbe University Housing Office, such
rangements for that J1"r&amp;O!l to- meet '
on special occasions specified by the
fee.
as furnishings, furniture, or television
them at the main entrance to the hall
Schoellkopf House Council. ·
7.50 Tuition and C~lt .Refunds
sets may be moved or taken from the
and they must be escorted by that
Allenhurst-The consumption of alWhen a student regiSters it is specbuilding, unless .J'pecial written perperson at all times while remaining fu
coholic beverages will be allowed in
ificslly unders~ that he will pay in
mission has been granted by the Dithe building.
tbe apartment COII!plexes and in all
full for all .charges as,swned at regisrector of Housing.
8.35 Pets
lounges, e:o:cept tbe stereo lounge and
tration. Failure or inability to attend
Animals are not permitted in the
By regulation of tbe State Univertbe bus lounge. All alcoholic beverclass does not change the payment
buildings at any time, except as specisity of New York at Buffalo, pets are
ages cai:ried on tbe bus must be in a
due or entitle tbe student to a refund.
lied in the section entitled "Pets"
not allowed in tbe residence halls.
bag and unopened.
Students who officially resign, change
below.
·
This is tbe result of safety and healtb
-Tower HaU-Tbe consumption of
from.. full-time to part-time, or on a
Registered occupants of each room
rules and for tbe welfare of tbe pels.
alcoholic beverages will be permitted
part.. time basis reduce · their scbedule
are financially responsible for keeping
The Office of Environmental Healtb
above the main fioor only. The conby directly notifying the Director of
tbeir room and its conteljts in good
and Safety has detennined that small
sumption of alcoholic beverages will
A!imission and R e co r d s, will be
order and free from damage botb by
"pets" which are normally kept in
be permitted in · tbe Tower Private
~'!Q••on.~ f~ .~~lves and by otbers. Room damcages or tanks, are the only excoption
Dining Room only
tbe proposed
'·
Wed&lt;uc· , .;Jl'lliiUN&lt;- ,.,, •·: Fees
ages will be assessed on actual labor
to tbis ·r ule. Things such as fish turuse is so indicated when the room is
lat-\Veelr i'l ..,.! 'o 0%'·&lt; , ... ·.. 0%
plus"lDaterial costs. Charges for damties ~d guinea pigs are allow:..t if
J:e8!'rved, the event· is approved by
2iid.W'eek
• . 0%
0%
ages to or defacement of any are&amp; in
both ro6mmates are agreeable. Resithe Tower House Council and tbe
3id Week
70%
common use such as bathroom, lounge,
dents and tbeir guests are not autbor100%
event is registered with the Inter4tb Week
100% _
recreation room, elevators, corridors,
i:zed to have larger pels sucli 88 cats,
100%
Residenoe CouDcil's Activities CounA stwkmt who is entitled to a rewill be assessed equally against . all
dogs, monkeys, etc., in the haUs
cil.
'
resi~g tbese........
•
8.40 "'-tton
.
fund baa .one year from the date of
8.50 Fire Alenn '
...
Any
student
found
"'·-·-'-g
uru·the over-pvment to request the ..,.
.
~-.....
. M en are · permitted to visit women
Fire alarms and fin&gt;.filhting equipfund, or it.ia forfeited. .
·
vemty · property .will be charged
m the first floor pub)jc lounges of
ment .are for protection m tbe resitbrough the Bursar's Oftice. Non-stueach hall until closing hours. Stwlentll'
A ~ ..~ _,_.. to active duty in
dence halla. Any tampering willt or
dents will be referred to the appropn·t
·
any branch of military servjces may
te c· il A thori
are. no penrutted in other than the
ntisqse of tbis "'JJIiPment ia proliibited.
receive a refund of tuition· ·a nd fees
a
IV
u
'ty.
·
mam lo!mie areas of residence halls
8.55 Sollcltdoril
, __...,,_
.
· The ut1e of sPace -in the residence
of s_tudents of the opposite sex - p t
Solicitation ~ building or on
DP-OD ...~te presentetion of his
haUs •is reserved for the sole use of
dUfi!1g a ~ed open house:-"'The
the grounds ia strictly prohibited.
active duty orders to the Office Or
occupants of the buildmg'. ·The fonns
m
Student .Accoanls, H}lyes A. In the
d roced
f
~t.
' regulation recommending
Rooms are for aaeigned studtmt resievent. the student has completed sufan P
Uft!8 or arranging reserva·0 P;"" house h~ !"' approved by the
dents only. No student is to use, or
ficient academic work to receive .a,:
~&lt;r&gt;.s of tbis ·space are available in the
Di~r of, Houamg and tbe Vicepennit his room to. be ..-1r for any
demic credit, no refund will be made
=.of .t he ~tar-Residence Council,
President for Studerit Affairs stetes
collllllelciai Plll'JI08e whatsover.
C!Uept in such instsnoes wbere leas
·
8UperVJBes 11111D8.
•
tbat:
8.&amp;0 Addltlonel -........
than .full credit ia given, in which case
Students in the reeidenoe area ""'
"Resideni:e haUs may have. open
a ~te refund will be . .de.
"-"J'J'Cted to abide by and "'-""' tbe
houses 11t any time 88 long 88 they
. · All -~
University regula~ appq ti;
_ Note: ·All
""'lllli- are ~
ordinances, rules, regulations and
meet the' following qualifications:
any student wbo reaidee m u~
· ject to· ehanp ·w iu-t notice at the
s.,'tdards of the Univemity' in
•:a. Open house bows must be eefacilities. For . ·dlecretloD ~the,UniYenity.
•
elf~ and 88 ~y- be issued from time
tabliabed through a hall-wide refmeninf~tion coaceming~ in
Nilan eo.,. _
to time. 'IbeY will also comply witb
dmn which ia toile Qmducted by-eadl
the
ft!ilidence
halla, consult tbe UniWbeo a student_....__ lt..ia ......._
. the limns and Clll)ditions of CICCUpllnCy ~-,· l)all~
•.
versity Housing ~ avaDable
,...,...._,a
~
~ use of the r.:n;tjes 88 stated be!Je, ·
b. ' The pOI,icy, once estab~
from !bat&gt;~. in' tbe '-enalt of · ific:ally underatood tbat, be will ~ in
pnnted m the Uiliversity Housing
must be revieMd each month to .,;
~vr
·

8.45---

·u

e-• ........,

,_and

7,.

!-sin&amp;

SEPTEMBER 28, 1972/STUDENTRULES AND REGULATIONSfPage \

�A HooSe
Isn't Always

AHoine
7

'lbe cGallaDalioo of oue'~ ex~ be as simple 88 a

~ll!!'!::!,;t :~ .~

;;;;a.-;i~c Proving

residaniJY:..=:-·

far """"

18 oltal -•
4Uk, and wilh ·

- - ' 40 Slate UDiversity tul;;;..u..,
qll8 wbkh milht -

welllie 'MJiib aiiOOd ciMl - .
'lbe lor this is •
sentially ~"':!;rl~

::::-t.iDD

by-=

'GJsta-paid
York State residents, aDd wiih
the riBilll co at a· of SUNY
educatioo,-tbe dlJfereaoe can be
()OII8iderable. 'D&gt;e matte r is

~.:!t %;'t-~ ~

wake of tbe 18-~-&lt;&gt;ld vote
have Clllll doubt upoo &amp;be true
nature of ~. and, con-

sequently, upoo the valid!ty. of
the distinctioo' drawn by llie

.

.

.

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

-Student Astronomer Stqll JoUrneyed
.
~= ~~ North to Canada for Solar Sighting
~~U~in thia .egan!.

~ti~~~~~.::::

~":umo":("~~...:
~';";'t:: :::::.·~::

=::.of.:=··.~~~

.
.
. fundlnl In 111&amp; Tho proloct, oponBy SU~ -tiREENWOOD .
but ertravagaDt by the i r s." call .to dinner or ·antiiiDOUIICe- -bJPIIIIotaKat!pa,the·~-....
·-s~o~t
Sin&lt;e"lt gets down to -al co -70 meot of a pruty. Stoll eajoyfld lean :aundl
Lu.11ed tbthaet~~~stials
';mlionalebave
While many students were degrees during winter, there can this more than our ·ramo eta- and the C..- on EdiF
r.--=::.....'t'i'.':"""'c:al--'~ _ ' soaking up sun at &amp;be beach be no wasted space in 1he house. lions.
- . , _...,.. ID " ' - the
been ,............,.
...,_ ~ this-summer, Ciilldrd Stoll was Walls are very tbidt and winThe long trek to die "perfect -.w'c.
the lur.onltloa In . .
strike an ~ be~. the obeerving a total solar ecli~ dows bave two or three spot" for the eclipse pl'OYild _ _ , octOOII bJ - .
burdeD =-~
~ in ·~ Inlet, ~- of _Can- of ,lass. Peri&gt;aps stmngoet of worthwhile, Stoll believes. Only ' Ina -,.~- .........._ 1D
~
..-:ers!'oc-',..·....
- '!! or .... _ ... ~ -~te·
ada s _..Northwest emton....
all 18 the need for a -double set OJie other scienlist was there ..... wltn them. ' .
""""""''I'M . ""';, .....,. """ 8
Going CO remote places for of doors separated by a short and die two were able to ·1et
·
•
•
•
fiBca! ~~ De 8 P .' t e -~ eveots fits we II hallway. After entering tbe first tbe ooly photOs of tbe event ~ tn lbe Weill Stnet
•8l'Ylllll .~ ~~ oei1h the rest of Stnll's diverse dcxw, you bave to close it ·be- ·taken in northern Ca....ta Yo'ellt JO&amp;fTI!Gl. collepe are Pl!nuina .
~ ~ "'·-!""" ~ ._nd bal;&gt;biea. , When .J'ore aoins t1uou1!.&gt; .the second of. Hudaon Bay. ·
of spdil e8aria tollne ·upmpre ·
states. ~.a.•.~ .J11811!~ be:S-DOt taking care of the ob- . This· quasi .aiMoi:k system is . -c-da...,.. d~Nibc-&amp;Dd only a part-iiJM jot,. fur IIIUdoftla ~ that SUNY ,pol.iCle8 ~ m- servaiOey on top of Hoc:bsletter, necessary, Stoll explaiDs, be- poup on a shipoin thii-Jiorthem year. Slulleat ~ ~ ­
- tact !""~ jlave . been Judicially he's wodtina on the Moog syn- ca.use the wiQteJ: wiDd chill .fac- Atlantic Jl o t ·p~ ·of the era ...,.,_ m o r e ......ave 88
~ oo a -. DU,IIlber&lt;Di.oc- , JDesiaer in .Baird lbllcw ia·at to~
- ,....,_ &lt;,250. ~ • .• - · ...mch.- N •.odeu... :• --~.-Ia....,.. qllllcasiona • . ' .-'-· .~, -·,t.
floie:Dd!a.~._~ the"-' •
. 'a-ata:r,•,hl;w;;vef;·t•· ~.Sd)U'~· :&gt;!i!b'"a· .pan8bl&amp;· mp.a,t_JnMiA...._ Slaa-··
For _.... ··~ the · stereo. ,
· •
pefaiWeB wa,r.m telescojJe louu!llliY··:O... DemUs ford ,W.. .._, lllullada · MCh
laws which ~,te· ~ • ~ lllldergnduak!aslronomy iiever below _3 0 and IDOIIt of ~ Malone of Eleclricsl Eilcinem- --.m '!I .drum up . ._ _ .
also, JIPP)y; to taitian. diffam!- · ma)Or '~ wbr)ring .on .the time, between otO aDd 50.
·inll- :With rour·· or. li!le' . . . . - ~- .loloaml IMt ,..ar,
tisls lbrouabout. Bl)NY. -Thus, .ecliP8!&gt;&lt;about ·a year "'Il· . He lleaultful ~
..
;
he ' was able to-1ret '"aboat '3D" lloo II =Ill '
1111 .eiJdento'.
a crilic:al de!brilion is found in and I:Bs mentor, Dr. Lyle Borst,
He found ..the....,.. beaotifuJ • ~ piciUres. I:luriJll~ lliltaJ • ~ ·jab .iDaame .ll&amp; per
Sectioli 151 of the. New York talkedaboutjt&amp;DdStollwodr.ed in.summer. 'Tbel'e·werelots-of edi.-•lempemturesdrilpped-to ooat to ~ · haed With
s- E I e ~ t i o a . law, 'Which _o ut the poiDt of opCimal obeer- · ~owers and ~ ~DO poilu- • liO _......,.,. and ~..,.me of the· a: liD ·.-~ in.
I!QUMM~ to a .:omman vation. -Aiong--a path Cbat.sf:&amp;:rtB . t.ion, . DO "!1"'1· aDd ·DO ~• CUl8lll8 maiJwdioned.. • .
~ .6ii WI. .....,. OiUV!"law "doaiicile," Le. a perman- in Japian, .,..._. the Bering The-land ·I LYe&gt;rY flat wtlh DO Tho-~
m_t)&lt;-added.iobelw~
ent abode, ora place co which Sea, cull! a band aCI'OII8 North- trees ''for -about- 400 miles."
'Ibe experiment Stnll ...., in- ~- • ei111111cts -with ~­
one intends tn retum. 'Ibe-term em Canada ·aDd eDds in the
Eskimos "coosider trees to be ter...ted in involved "the elfects ~
"domicile': is contrasted to the Northi.m Atlantic, tbe place extremely useless;" ·Stoll re- of minimum numbers of sun
•
Tbo ,.._ basic ~ of "reBidence," wilh the best .and longest ex- ports. but otherwise be fotmd spots on ·the sun's corona." He
whicb.may indicate mere pby- posure was Rankin Ih1et. It's tbem ·t o be "lots of fun, very showed there was liltle or DO _ . _. • ·...._
sica! presence. 'D&gt;e bunJeD of a town Stoll describes as an Lriendly, wann, ,good people." polarization of the corona I&amp; ID ...,_ .,..._._.....,.
proof is left in most ·cases(.fo Eskimo settleDJ!!llt of about , Communicalion with the peo- cause of ilhe ec!;pee aDd sun fW ~ ~ ind
the appliamt, aDd lepi RUilie- 400, no r t b of Hudson Bay. pie proved 1o be ·less of a bsssl&lt;i spots. He also had a theory &lt;that ,...._ . - ........ AnwlcilnL
lines by 'Wbidl the Uai~ty ''There's DO way in or !RJt -... !han -he ~ Most of the - the eclipse would a.ble-viewdet.ermn.a 1he velidi\y of-81ldl cept by ·an plii.DC-3 lhst iimpe Eskimos have·a high-regard· for · ""' to the Aunim BotNlis ..___ _ ,.._ I'J
d·
JVOO(.are Cllllline4 in l&gt;r. ReliC · in and OUt three Um... a..week." .t he white man: 'l'wenty years &lt;durin« the day. This proved in- · In ...... .,.. ......,_ thM
bao'slllemONDdum. '
Simply..Jiettinl~- was. a· ago ·when there wBB a.Iack·-of accurate becatl89 of .....ul!red llllociiL" 'IW- ...... -*'
1.ep1 . . . . . .
problem, A three-day n.le ~ _game, the ~dian gove!"- liRJ:lt slill aYIIilable dllrin1 the - ........ llr ......
Essenliall · one qualifies for . - r y in order to make con- men~ ~ m In provide echpse.
..
.
..........,. - - •
l'l!8idel)t, ._Y!,B;;, tuition f - ~ nec(iona ·wi~ till:· plane. He ~ imd f~ , . .
- S 4 oll en~ed his~ so _........
$78MII
if be is 811 IIJli!ID'IIICipted mi- stayed ovemidlt m a s m a II · . B1g· events '1ll Rankin Inlet much Chat he s now, lookiua for ..,. ID .......,.. CIIIIINI ~
nor &lt;iJ!ldar 21 yean of.q.) .lowll. .and tqc;k .a,''tundrs_trol- are tbe--.bi-weekly ~vie ·~ flUids to return to~ Ia~whose domiCile, tbe boml! of his · ley" Out to.~ auport fOr .the M~.a- ;P!ane ~~ ~hic!l . ~ next )IUIDlll8r.. I~s -di5cult, . _ _
~
is wflhin New York · .2-'bour plane nde -to the Inlet. brinp. fleel-.
. . •.
. ·tbouah. becsUBe .the•.-a liioa _ _ .
--:;::
of
This 1iJ!Y town was Stoii·("'~'s ilo ·televisiOn; but tbe no industry tmd there's no way lllllllllr Clllllilt 011 home for -a week in July. "tv' town lias what can ~ be de- be· could earn mooey few •- _...... _. . . . .
!:
D~~'ull""'olicall&gt;: couldn't
s~ just for the eclipse - scribed as ototally _pulilic radio. penses while there.
~ ~ 011 . . ........
becaulle of the airplane ached- To get' " on .tbe air," all 1hat'&amp; . His trip last summer was II- ~-n.~
ule:" He bunked at the bpme required is a
call to-the llanced by a $350 grant from - - . . . .
-;-oof 4he aasiatant manager o( the · radio
mWlic ' the- Student Association's Re-. ~ ~. PF ;I • I
eown's only store 'Ibe ~that
al- -.cb Council. 'Ibis paid for !1 a.-, .. .._ ....... ...
a .about half, be explains, aDd he . , _ _. tiUIO ..... ~
n iMC:IIl&amp;ble ~ was "small by .,;.,. stana.Jds
is IIOW. tlyiug in pol: out of the
Fe 1D aplll: 8 . . . . . .
bOle lor the' zest.
............... ......
UhBcto..'tiliiiketlii.NOrib- lpulrll If . . . _. ..._ .....
w...t'-Territories' JWSt iWnmlir, _
_._. ... ..........., fW
ston bopeeiq get to Mra.u. ....._... ~....., •el
. -.the edii!ee ·that Will be 411&gt;- .•
•
• ~ :
-8erwbla lliere. - •
.Followlu___..tJaaacll .
He cto..'t ilde his dlaJlcB that ltafe'•
• • - ell
of
•
...,..... ...__.... hilbw aducatioo 8Dd fil ~ ~vi;"~ .wtaal8, · 8oath, DalrDt&amp;'a Rewait b b.";t'Norlh Amari- ..,raofEilueildoo baveOI'diNd •
can total ~ 3124.
a larpculbldtiu ~ pe.
at die ..... public inCOIIIIECTION'
aliluliooa. 'I1le Relealil -

~!~}!~ Counael.~~~

of

of

The--

_,_, ....,

**"'

-uca- ..

. ·

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

==

_.,_Ill
:!:......,...,. ....

=---.. ...,..=.1
. .,. _

of,.....

, - Dr. Roym_oncl EMil . _ - k • artl!:le _,..Ina him•
contained 0 IMIII!ber
erron In

of
·'-'"" -~'-"~; _ __ ~ ~ -·· ~ ... -.1n

= r..:=:=. : ·=
~~~~one .,.-.error,

Chino.,.- tile.._,....~

lie of Chino nat Nalionllllt Chino.

=:-a·ll'fl·-.....,

=~

~

inc about
ada ~
'-doeee . . .80. - . n. Jidlaa
ro~owc~

I*

......,.,.,

ilaat all •

~
JIIOINIIlll ......
be 'irii::"c 40 lbe ~

~~

-'

�~:::::::;;;:====~~~~~iiiJ~ Trolit:S~~~-~~~- -~-

,WaterPOlfutlon:
Tnroot : ~
· ·:
dili.t-or

.ii8 origilli:mUe."' ·
' UptakeOfmercurym .lbe
muscle, brain. aod' J8us ol tile
Water i&gt;oUuted !&gt;Y - methyl eye prOceeiled at ·a m~ slow~ -threeleDII the -use -of er rate ~ tbeae_IJI'IIIII8 -~
protein from !bat w-lit e r for the pOU~~~~~i:
hwriiln and animal• COII8UIIIP- took 60 -,a or w...,..,_"!""
tion.
"'-- .
-- for ·ihe bram to·.NIICib~lim
Tbat!s wtiat a U/B..bial:ban- lel(els, the .Jeu!2 ' ! ' ! = :icai ir(~t.o&lt; ana 'eziiert on. ~:,.~a~
~·
water ~ulioo confirmed, fol- ___
.,_ .1_ P S. .
• -~~· .•
29(kl4y stWIY on raiD- -.....,...y,
mei'C!D')' IS a, precap.__ ...
iDg fai:.tor-fcir the~
Dr. EdWard ' Massaro calcU- ~ollD!i by =-lli~
1a4es that it WoUld take a raln- m ~
...._ • , _Iiai
. ....:.:• ..:..._
bow trout' more d1an 1000 ciiiYB
......t are .....,_HDP ~ "''
to loee hslf ol .the poll¥tant :t"~~-Jf.D~ ·
cany--over, fronh but a single
P ''no ·
has loo.:-~ at
doee of methyl mercury. But; 88'1'0,
one
"""
'ne Wained, 'tliis w®ld',be true ~ .effects _very low 1~veJs of
, only -if the fish nevm:f apin , dill~ toxic elements ;(sudt
-came ill coutai:t with.a mercury~ as - the ~ _ I~ '!1 the
polluted enviionm'eirt. · Oontin- fish )- 118-:e on liYJl!ll ~­
ued ci&gt;ntsot woUld mean Colltin! OJl ~vtOr, etC. High conoen- 1
ued COJitsininati&lt;m. tratiOIJI! would . 1;&gt;e led_lal, 11!-it
- About hslf J&gt;f. the .tots!' orijl- 1\(JW .m~ doee 1t ~ . to dj,sinal. mercury doae is ' stored m rupt bram lll!t~ Wliilt
the skeletal muscleli ( the edi- ""!' -the .}l!"'t- 01"'!"' that ~1)18 porl;ion)· ~f the fish {55 per u::'i,.:.,.~\8~ storage, m
cent of Its weigiit). Seventy ~
H . _ L.::...:., • !--~ 'th
-cent of the total mercury•ill the ·
~ IS ""'~uy- lD\'0 ..,...WI
.
fish was found ill its muscle studies of !"!"-level ~ ef.
tissue at 100 days. Only nine fects ~n braiD .meteboJ!sni and .
per cent of the iniqa!-dose"Was ~YlOr. of the mouse..
lost by the fish dnriD!f the last . Iri.vestiga~ons are ~ "!"'·
190'days of the expenment.
ren!fy underyvay on children "!·
Through isotopic l.sbelli!g, ton~ Wlfl! _lesd b_ut "'!til
Dr Mass a r o determined to sullicient expenment,.aon with _
~ tissues melCill'Y iS distrib- animals is concluded, "we can- .
-- uted 'm the fiSh as well as bow not have all of the IIIISW'!ril," 'he
long it is retained. The 1&gt;1~. ~d: "Another area we_would
gills spleen and liver· took up like to explore are the SYJ!er·
high concentrationS of methyl g!stic , effec~ of · a yariety~ of
mercury at the fastest rate, one different tone materials Ol) the
hour after' feeding, reaching its human."..
msnmum at seven days and .-· Concluded Dr. Mass a r o,
dropping "by day 100 to one- "p_retty much -~ ~ _kinds of
thiDIP' are _gomg on ID. other
·
spec1es , of fish as well as tile ·
,; "0~~_~.,. ~ ~~ Co:..l..~.J...l..;..J
rain!loW troUt. We ' must get
~ Ol,;lt::Ulllt:U '"going -on lfue ·prOblem Of water
pOllution and start working, ill
on
any

· -a

l:,"t.ut.

-n:o...........

· -

,

ByWomens Club _ :..:~~':.;;.~r.·

its_~

Cl~in~:'l;~ty4,C:..m~::;~ ·Blood S'nnp·}y

"!~~ ~g:~~~to :h.,~:
. - ~- .
~tplace ujxlated," Saturday, Unde~r sh,~7

Novilmbi!r 11, from noon to 10
p.m. at t.l&gt;jl Ridge Lea csfeterie.
' ·The Club's mini-marl&lt;etplace
bazaar will be· "a coming to:· gelber of skill'!ll- and creat~ve
cmftsmen offermg a collectijlll .
of, best 6uy~ and-.elegant piiices .•
to lfli¥t ~ )DOOd and hu!lll!!t." IICColding to Mrs. P.by_!lia, Pa-.

'----hlowllw_..,_to_
.. --,.,..,._apple

0..
MO feculiy - · nwnberi up·b IIi. ...,_..,~ ....... bJa, U/B~--1!1155.

. . - - ai I!I8Y · - ln_lildp.
Lu ~
Sunday
IWm__....,_
• - for.

(

genQ. , •

' W!"""' will iDclude -~

n.....:..e-..L·h
·-~-venows
· . IJ..L.l_lJ
1--.~ Deadline.
Octobe
.
~ .13·
.lFdlllUJ:L ).'~
L -

·L

&lt;.-l.IULI.:J

-. '

severe

A CX!IIliJIIter-aaiat8cl blliodmo.
bile J&gt;i!mnillg_model which can

~~~~~ ~oreca8t_'blobd inveutory 1eve1s

-

•.-"'
Danfoi-tb GDllluats Fellowabipe ofEered by the Danforth
F-.didiaa 111e ~ tti · men

. . .

A r'e sear p b group bi the
School of M8l1llfii!Jiient bppes
to alleviate -some of tlie
shortages ill the cOuntry's.blood
henb tluougb a pro.il!ot ·l lllPported by a grant&gt;from the-U.S.
Health SeMces and M
_ a lts1
Heelth' Adniin:istration.

·

.. oolors, imported Indian minia- : : ; &amp;1111 of the~~~
ture prints and art objects, an -_
·m odel will live' a )'ellliY
illtemati""!d fi!Od and IliA dis- · "~!revieW" fil the inveilllory.Jbat

Tb8

Evidence of ;, concern for ~ and should be '18ken on ~:
relation of. ethical or religious day, October 28, .1972. APP.~ ·play, and more..
• will be awiilable if a 'l'llliaaal
"
val.- to disciplines, the edu- ~tionsfortheGRE&amp;ieavailable
Proce.edswill beneftttbe trlood li&amp;Di-eudimies oolleo"~ ~~pJ; s'-'' ~ " t&gt;ltic~llllf prOcess," ilJld&lt;..to ace.- from Profaiaor'l~lia-. ·. ·
~Gn!ce..9al- Lo&amp;iiFund o1 ihe tioas ue1n1 an mMirjegtflle raw
;~.ll
.
~· ill ~ and social ftspc&gt;nSibility.
Pel110i1ai illtervieWB.by .a ' - " ~omen's Cluti which PIOYidee .~ uplaliia Dr: C. Carl
. :.c;n;~p
· 88 a ·career, . Tbe Graduate Record Elilm- ulty. aiileotion commilfleci wiD be · intsratt.free C!IDOrJency aiil to P.,.eJs, -principal grant inwsti·,'i tnd who plan
atuily' fof, a . ination· ( G_RE) in verbal. and held -for eem appliciant prior m.Iy studenbi..
l!lllol' and actiD1r cbairi1i1Ui of .
PhD. AppliCuda lilay hoi sin- quantitative abilities is required :to· NoVember 1, 1972.
·
, ~ . and ioiDt .~ lhe Doparlment of MaMp.
Ide cw umrled bur -.r not ·
'
_
•
-.( sPace IS still aYiliJable, ttie . Syata&amp;_ .
•·
•
' liaft UJidatabD .au,y ~
' • • 1
. • :,_ •
- • • • ,_, _
~o ~en's .C lub 8!lY8. -Willi a ~ 'Tbe ~ $lliO.OOO

tbeBi.._

«

~lltlld)' ~

=-._~w!'!u!:'T

ScU?:tll2-ElliJJl.U!e!7!1gBiblidgrcijJhy

Pant

pewoutola~~;year

....;.., __ _ ~:... ~k'
to' '·=
·
. •=. • Occilber 16' ~ ~'~ ..... ~...!'.;
- - · · 'UIO:I1lCJIDII• a ey
• •
• •---~. ..=,,:- ~ wuom M.-lecl _.
jOurnal' abbreviationo aDd .a u- · •. _m.........,.. m """'~ foi men ~- in a-lllllllber
thor, clepetWcintJjOilmioJ;·8ll!i . •lUll. ~ copJad Mrs. DoJ,- of blgod doftai.tion :~
ProlaBH-8oward lisbed a- · ·
of Sci- m~- indeile8&gt; · ~
' tie SoiJal, ~- ·
, '
~mostbloclilbmbd&amp;'114 ~ · Enci- 'ence 8nct En~nng Faculty '
The ~-··Iii&amp; · been
_·
• · "
.-"
,
,
•
~thait ti-J~""';.ro.
,_q ~ (831-aio.&gt; . _ Pulilications, 1S'11r ·
• ~
sent· to 500
·
ana.~llllifrom vo~unt.r~·~
- S&amp;udents willhinl to be ~
Noted by · Ubrar:ian· Robert veraities and is
· -U!!JIIJ•aa:a _
- collection has become · a fuDO.
lideled for nomination Ale re- N . 'l'iDa &gt;e. the·.fb1t liUCb pill&gt;- te1tboolt for a amaor : iiiiliOiij . .Appoinlm(mllt of a ·dcprt. tion ol cbance rather than~
to. submit ~ leUer of liciltion at the Unl-mty, the co"""' on -•oientiflc:-lilei'lil:tii'e _ll)l!llt
fu. P.byaiaduid an . ply )Old demaud needs.""'nie
~ brief bio- ' book is an.o8lcial record Of all - ll&lt;!llldt. •
,.. .., , - •
~- ~ ill Civil ~- U/B ftlf!l!lll'Cbem p'18111ct that
_ llftlllblcal iJala to P•ofessor publ~tiolls written ill 1971 bY
:11. _bihli01118Pb.Y-ot.19'12'~ ~ wer,e cuiJiounced this projeolions of the "l!Pected·
StzalJSS befort;.l!'dfloy, October full-tiille ~ 'of die Fac-', - licstions sboW&lt;f .be -ready .tiY ; !O'IIek , by Ple&amp;ident Robert L "~ · .siJpply" will lead to''
13, 1972.
ulty of ,EJi8iD8eriDa: and Ap- ,June . -of 11e11t yaar, :Mr. 'l'iDa Kette):.
systti'mati_c .PialmiDR of bow
In ~Danforth fel~ plied 8ciencies and the Faculty 8ays. ,
· .• '
Dr :oilbeit.O. B~ flll'la&lt;:ed · mw;h adititional blOod tO col·afleotjqnls- tothreelll8CIS: ·· of Natural ~and Math· ·
- ' .
:
Dr. M~ter H. .auu. ..Jr,~~ .in lect and wben.
•
ll) E~- of Intellectual . emalial.
·
.
•
Uliln:ED FUND·~ '&lt;- .the Pby81C8 post, eftectfve oepThe' study will ilJlalyze t&amp;,
~ llbieh llt-kible q :of
The bib'liograpby is--limited Mr. Sanford Mt ~• .-.ioiMt ~ L Dr. Hull acoepted'tlll . coUect;cin prili:iidura -and disWide ranae; ol acade;m'ie! _16 ~ which ac- -;,, lsdlvbional._......hfordi, appom-t on .J,une 15{&amp;11 tribntion PI8Ctlce. of tbrh
~ WJi1i:b Ia ,a thor- · tUa!Jy"apPeared - ill pi-bit '"Fa&gt; U - Fcll)d tllf;e lnilhe Si:11ao1 dean Of thofGnduat.e 8cboQL • bloodbellb.ibe American Red
-.ilulh ~ for aadtiiote w~ extent poMible." Mr. .• of~p en--r. .. Dr- -~•ge:C. L!le.w.-.11~ act.. ,C1'0118 BIOOct Benb in Bulfalo
f lllud¥. l-2&gt; Evldcmceof'peftlQII- 'l'iDa aays. u-enu;ea Pertsini"' -'-the !'IJI~dOivilElulinaera;JI!!!l. Roc:beeter and ·.the Jnde.·
8

tb' _ _.
... . . .
the
- _ _:...:_,_·:..
- ·
t8 aw..v
""a_,.,., to
......_.....
.-the
tediD the Foun=- community · the Science aDd.
'· ......_,by 1b UIB CaDisJua U- _· ~
- · · ' Library J.s iJUb-

·;;;:0111-.
- ·B._.-....

ChainnenNmned

=

"'!-4-

Ma,....,...

=-::.. .. ==-

t~~.m:=
~~=i.~W::.
teai!blni and' to constnlciiVII re- - lied
riiferenot' stsJf."
· September 14. . ·
latjoDslilpe with
.,

""'

otudenJs.

(3)

•'0111'

) lbe book is dlvidBd ,iDio five

...

.:· .....

•

·

.

r~t Jt"~of~~:· vj!IGped
=~~~~is~
-it' will be Cleated in all

~Y841' Jeave . from ~
....,. -nsibilitiea. •·
·

t1neC!

!"BBons- ' • r

·

�eiRE
....~ -

~2B,lf72
\../-

,_,.

United Fund Off tO Sucoossful.Start
Contributions of $19,086.80
in adYIUIIled 1 if t a ......, anIIOUDOed lit tbe kick-oil ..-ting
of tbe Univemity United Fund
Drive on ~- According to
Dr. A. w...UeyRowland, chair. man of the Univemity's drive,
this ac:counts for 17 per cent
of the University's quota of
$110;000.
- .
.
Leading all' divisions in the
preliminary report was the OfIke of the Vice Preaident for
Research with contributioos of
$554 or 79 Per cent .of its goal.
Other leadirig divisions were :
School of Management, $1,027
or -68 per cent; Office of Vice
Presidept for Faciliti'"' Plan-·'
Ding, $864 or 66 per ·c ent; Division of Continuing Education
and Millsrd FillmOre, $813 or
62.5 per cent; U/ B Foundation/
·Alumni, $676 or 56 per cent;'
Faculty of Engineering and Ap- ·
plied Science; $2,357 or 49 per
cent. .
Campus United Fund leaders
h a v e .developed a suggested
guide for computin' your University fair share gift. "If contributions are received on this
hasis," Dr. Rowland said, " the
University will be ahle to make

its ROBL" 'Ibis llllide· ia printed iDp will be beld~t
4
iD
in ibis week'a keP:Orfe for no- 201 ~- 011
29,
fereoce - . Report meet- October 8, 13 and
.
A

(Ill- --

&amp; . . - 1W* far Compull. . YOW'~ Felr ..... Qlft
aoat of

il...,._

Thla Ia • GUIDE for Unlv....tty &amp;lvtnc to maM our Ufthersltr

$110,000 for the UnltH Fund .
AnttUIII
21 Par PWtodl
Annual

a. .. ,.

4,000
4' 500
5,000 ·
5.500
6,000
6,500
7,000
7, 500
8,000
8 ,500

::; : .

10,000
11,000
12,000

~::=

=

{bl.....ecty)

$

.90
1.00
1.10
1.30
1.40
1.50
1.60
1.70
1.90
2.00

~::

$ 1.10
l.lO
lAO
·1.60
1.70
1.00
2.00
2.10

/

-.. . ::~',
119 .60
127.40
135.20
143.00
• 150.80
218.40
228.80
241.80
252.20
262.60
275.60
286.00
4:ff6 .40
306.80
319.80

COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSrrt
. William C. Baini (Chairman)
William J . Conners ill
Robert E . Rid&gt; (Vice Chairman)
Daniel J . Fahey
Seymour H . Knox ( Chmn. Emeritus) Phyllis E. Kelly
Edward A. Montgomery
Kevin J . Brinkworth
Gerald c. SaitaJ'eJli

President
ROBERT L KE'ITER........ ..................................2001, 108 Hayes
A~to,the, P,ruident
; ~•, •·. •- h &gt;
THOMAS K. CRAINE ...............................5021, 124 Hayes
RUTH F. EAST ........................................... 2001, 108 Hayes
HARRY R. JACKSON ..............................!.4923, 185 Hayes
BARBARA M. SIMS ............................5271, 309 T()WtlSend
ESTHER SWARTZ ......................................2735, 143 Hayes
Eucutiue Vice President
ALBERT SOMIT ............................................. 5234,5,6, 114 Hayes
Aaittant Eucutive Vice President
CHARLES M. FOGEL
. .......5021,2,3, 111 Hayes
Ass"flulta to the Eucutive Vice President
LAWHENCE A. CAPPIEU.O .................... 5234, 124 Hayes
KHAIRY A. KA WI .................................... 5335, 143 Hayes
Vice_President for Academic Affairs
BERNARD R. GELBA!JM ...............4646, 5255,6, 201F Hayes
1licePresidentforFat:i.li.msPUUining
JOHN D. TELFER ........................
..6353, 201A Hay'"'
Vice Presitknt for Health Sciences
CLYDE L. RANDALL ................. ~......................3711, 104 Capen
Vice President for Operatio11B and Syste1118
EDWARD W. OOTY ..........................................2005, 139 Hayes
Vice Pruidellt for Research
Ha
RAYMOND EWELL ......................................... .2506, 178
yes
Vice Praidmt for Student Affairs
RICHARD , A. SIGGELKOW ............................ ..4934, 1~2-Hayes
Vice Praident for UnWersity Relatio11B .
A. WE8'I{IEY ROWLAND : ................................4501, 186 Hay'"'
DwWon OfiUndergrtUiuate Studie.
.
CHARlES H. V. EBERT, Dean ........................351!, 278 Hay'"'
GrtUluate SciJool
.
McAU..ISTER H. HULL, JR., Dean ............5037, 230 Hayes
DiDiMtm fl# c~ Eduaztion
--ROBBRT J!'. BERNER, Dean ............................2206, 292 Hilyes

....._._

J:ANBS,R. BLACKHURST,

Diniclor ..., .....................:.......................2411, Old Faculty Club

Fot:¢11 of Am and Letkn
JOHN P. iroLuvAN

·
,l'rovlllt .:........._. ...:..:...........6306, _01d Faculty ~uh,
• Scltool fl# Ardtitecture and E1111uor11M11Wl Dal61&amp;

2nd~
·

.JOHN PAUL BBERHARD, Dean ......6481, 2917· Main St.

.6

44.10
4UO
52-110
54.60
56.70
10.00
1(5.10
11AO

77.70

M.OO

Ut.70
111.10

...

=·

1-2D

~

Jl
Jl
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1

III-2D
220.10
UI.OO

10-110
11.00
11.10
12.00
12.60
13.10
13.60
14.J.(;
14.70
1520

141.50
252.00
264.60
2715.10
215.60
2H.10
308.70
3.1.9.20

1.1
1.1
1.1
1.1

Weeldy

Communique-

School of Medicine
CLYDE L. RANDALL, Acting Dean ....... 5211, 155 Capen (Contituud from 1!"8' 8, coL 6)
School of Nursing
IIIIAZILW&lt;n:BTIVAL JOXBDIIT*: More
RUTH T . McGROREY,
than &lt;10 pooten ob»WinJ tbe conDean .....................................2533,4, 117 Health Sciences tribution of painten and printSchool of Pharmacy
maken t.o the Brazilian cinema,
MICHAEL A. SCHWARTZ,
,
including worlu! b1 Scliar, Blauoo,
Dean ..........., ............................ 2546, 1,).8 Health Sciences
~:.:d-~o.,~:
Faculty of Law and Juri8prudence (School of Law )
man.~ 219, Non-. Eibibi.t
RICHARD D. SCHWARTZ, Provost and Dean ............852-4372 hollftl: ' Monday-Fiiday, 9 a.m.. . - .,
-~ . - . _ '17 Walt Eagle St. and 28 Chwch St. 5 p.m., Sundaya, 2-6 p.m. Throuch
Ff:liult)i'otNailfral Sdtnces aitd'Malhematic8 ·
~~~·- ·•~ ' Oct.oiJK ~0"
::~·
GEORGE H. NANCOLLAS, Prov'?S~ ......._. ....... 5045, 1 Hayes C ~:w~~~~!t" B'.,~
Faculty of SacUl! Scwnces and Admun8trotum
• · ment of Art. The exhibit, oponEDWIN P. HOLLANDER, Prov09t ........ 1814, 4230 Ridge Lea aored by tbe Office of Cultural
School of Social Policy and Community Services
.
Alfai'"irwill afl:W'~
SHERMAN MERLE, Dean ....................... .2526, 101 Foster ~· ayeo
•
School of Management
RICHARD G. BRANDENBURG, Dean ........3533,4 103 Crosby NOTICES
GoUegiale Assembly
-,N-,-ORTO--N-JUU.--,-~B-O-,-UII8.-,--:'The=--olli-=-cial-:-:.
WAYLAND P. SMITH, Director ....................5545, 133 Crosby fall -~ buildiJur boun for
Admissio118 and Records - ·
Norton H811 are: Q on d a 1:; ·
ARTHUR L. KAISER, Director
..... 2100,1 1 Hayes B J!';.~~,;,_~ a...'!,:;"i;';=ya, ~
Campus S ecurity
a.m.-1 a.m.; Sundaya, noon-1 a.m.
KENNETH P. GLENNON, Director
....4711, 144 Hayes 8CBUSSMmB'IDB BKI a.ua, INC.
Educational Opportunity Program
AND IJ1mD8I'TY ,...... Winter
EMMI'IT .H. LYONS, SR.,
· ,..._(January 6-12) : 8 daya/7
Interim Director ........................ , ..... 5363,4,5,6, 104 T0W118elld ~! ~~i.ri~"':'lr~;. ~
Information Services
Grand .Junctioa, Colo.. via United
JAMES R. DeSANTIS, Director .....
.. .....4300, 142 Hayes Air!inajet,plaaboteia,buotnm.
Office of Computer Services .
.
fer aJ&gt;d ~ bomdlhlc- 8Gn
GORDON F. ULLY, Director ................1245, 4250 R~ge Lea ~ . ~ ~~
Offise of Equal Opportuni;ty
•
.
- · (M~ 10-24) :
BARBARA M. SIMS, Du-ector ........3011, 5271,2, 309 TOWIIIIO!IId Anuurdam 0~
Management Information Syste1118 .
. .-, · ,
,~•
Fallo ~J
:tr(1 jet.
CHARLES J . MOLL, Director ................5222, _3 -~llm , Rd- ·•
' ~i:iiJ
Physical Edu£atitm, Recreation and Athletito
' ,.,. ,;,,. •.
_,;
HARRY G. FRITZ, Director and Coordiostor,
: ·
· -..». 'c:UJqc ort c!biiuL ""'· ~
l'r&lt;!feesional HPER Program ................ 2935, 305 Clark Gym ..fti'J' llelillh iiiniii, iD Publicatio1111 Services
...
~~ Brlit CoaaQ&gt;
PAUL L. KANE, Director ................... .2126, 250 Winspear Ave.
a doe
UnWersity at Buffalo Alumni Association
.
~al .-a,._. lac
JOHN M. CARTER,. .
doe_.......
EDculive Din.ctoc .............................4121, 123 J......tt ~'l1oe C..

lea.... 1972-73)

;._

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"'D-

JOHN . ~TONA, Pnlalilent ................4124, 250 W~ Ave.
uniDenity
JOHN E. ' LEACH ...................................~854-2620, 290 MaiD ~
UniDenity Libraritfa '_
G~~ S. ~~SKI,
, _
.
Actiq Director ..................................... ~. 3836, I.oclgipqod
UnWersity PIDcemellt and Career GllidtJtl«
•
E. J . MARTELL, Director ----~-; --------~--------------4414; 6 Hayes c

.·

-~1!-,:
- t a1 llw.il
0o11-.
aate , . . .

w--.

OFFICERS OF THE FACULTY SENATE
Faclllq fl# E,.;-nn, and Applia Scient:a ~ ~ RO~ L KETl'ER, ~ of h Votinl ~ty
WILI..IAM N. GILL, Provost --:·--4624, 121!
· GIIBBRT D. MOORE, ~ of tbe s..te,
SciJooloflnfOimlltionandLibraryStudia
C
Vice~ Of tbe Votini ·Facuky .........2228, 136 Hays
GEORGE 8. BOBINSKI, Dean .................3835, 5 Hays
·. MAC H.UOIO!b&gt;, 8ecnlary ...........................5832, 40 A1m11E A
~t_H~v'tce Preaidellt .....:.......3711, 104 ~ NEWTO~ GARVER, Puliulent:arim ....1484, 4244 Ridp I..
Bcltool-6 n - . ;..- .
•
"' -~ ~B,j
OFFICERS OF 'l'lllLJ"R()PBON.U. SENA'm
~ M.
I . {
.28M.7» 2840, 148 c.p., ALLIIN H. KJJNTZ. a.ura- ...............,... .nrf. 818 llllrriDIIIII
J w.ARREN"J.EIUi\117 .... ........
BUOBNB J. MAR'l'BLt, VIae Chalmwt ---- 'Wt. 6 Hays C .
. Dian .................... ~:......4910. 6109, -~ DWaadarf AlmiiE ~ .J. WAGNBR, 8loeNtmy ------------~ 1 ~ C

a.w

........_,~

.
al

n.

·111e

=·:.....-~-:
ro...r ........._~,_.Mol! ~-- ...._

........,. -

u::=..~-

STANIBY H. CRAMER. Acting Provoat ......6447&gt; 205

PEAP

n .oo
......,

!\t.:T.eo·

ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES

=t~v.z= (_On

.
.
.....
....
.~.6
.6

3UO
31.70

....

l.VBAdininistrative Roster, 1972-73

.6

29AO

uo

59.80
67.00
72.80

..

%

' 21.10
21.30

2.50
2.60
2.70
2.00
3 .10
3 .40
3.70
4.00
5.70
6.10
IJIO

:;::

~~

2.30
2.60
2.80

15,000
4.60
16,000
.; 90
17.000
5.20
18,000
5.50
19,000
5.80
20.000
8.40
21 ,000
8.80
22,000
9 .30
23,000
9 .70
24,000
10.10
25,000
10.60
26,000
11.00
27.000
11 .40
28,000
11.80
29,000
12.30
30.000 a nd over 1.6 %

81ft
$ 23.40
'26.00
28.60
33.80
36.40
39.00
41 .60
44.20
49.40
52.00

.....

WIIIILY COIIIIiRm11
COPr
For _

iiiiAiitliit-

.. _....,.,. Mel

........... ._ ... tD ............ .U
...... .,._ • C8lllpUL

~~·~~=

250 Wlnlpeer ,..,.... .... 222&amp;
~be due lly ~ for

=--:: =.."':::=
Copy

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clillltllllllll ..

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�~2B,J9n

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
CBABAD BAIIII..im SDVIa8• : Simcbat Torah, the bapjlieat oboerv·
ance ol the Jewish year, will be
•
celebrated, Cb8bed Ho-, 3292
UUAB PILII• • : Ci.tt::o Pike, ConStniet, 7 p.m.
fe,_ 'I'bMml, Norton. Cbeck
' The conclusion ol the
~ for ~ AdDiioaion

THURSDAY-28_

Mam

OOH'ftNUINC JmfTAJ. BDUCA.ftON#:

c-

A Re/ralwr
in A""'omy,
PhyaioW.,. 8tod Oral Medicine
for the -Dental Auxiliary, Dn.
Alan J . Drinnan, prof-r of oral
medicine. and· Stuart Fiaclunan.
a.ociate' prol-.r ol oral modi·
cine. · U/B. Capen Hall, 10 a.m.5:30 p.m.
CII:&amp;ADft 42Aft c:aN"'D•: LeatMr
Oper&gt; Slu&gt;p, 307 Norton, 1-6 p.m.
In ..... to ~to in the

=. ~:::
,;:!'t:.-~:!1
~ maat pey: a

lllllll•U/ B

.~"":!:""'~

r:: b"Jr!::

dnota. A Uli lnembenhip fee will
be ..........! Diemben ol the Buf-

~ ~t!&gt;'·~ant!"t,.vid;
•incle

-·~·

the

'1: ia S20.

~~=n.::::tu-=:-":ill"t

accepted for any clau prio.r to

.wual
~ t:: 7o7i:=t ~ 8:!:n=

~c~tu="1ir o~eN;,!
York &lt;;,:,y, will be on band to join

~
~t&gt;:J~*::ZR~
sian tunes broucht in by , _ t

im!nigranta. · Lut year over 200
~· danced for five l.cNft.dur&gt;ne the propam, ovedlowinc Cbabacl Houe out into Main 9treet.
Tbia yeer, Rabbi Nooon Gurary
hopeo enouah people will be p - .
ent .to 6locJ[ riiJ the atreet.
U,UAB m.M••: Citco PiM, Confer-

~r:"· J!::toA",;m?!:!

cbaqe.
IN'!aNATJONAL FOLK DANCING• :

lllltnu:tion in baeic etepa duriq
fint hoiu, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
A.lii:RICAN

CONl'DlPORARY

111EA-

ta:•: Tlu! Ullll&lt;lm&lt;Jble, students,
Sl, general admission, $2. B111e1

~C:n"~';."~1~~~
~r'ih..~bof~: ~t== Elmwood
Ave., 8 p.m.
:n:n~~ti~ .!If;::.

8546.
v• • : A p.rocram of weekday
television. Haas Lounge, Norton.
Liatinp
day. Today'a
acbedulo: I p.m., Mirroro; 1:30
p.m., Politico 101% Student Government in Action; 2 p.m., The
New Loot City Rambloro; 3 p.m.,
Act

vary eoch

~~J~!:tlw~~
ity; 7: 80 p.m., ..Jerry Gucia in
Conoert; 8 p.m. Burea""""'Y.

- ....... IU.'ICB• :

Cou-. Clark
eoun.. a p.m.
PSYCJIOK&amp;T:

U/B va. GaJmorL_
Gym· Tennia

Pint .floor caleteria.

Norton, 8-6 p.m.

S t r i n g Quartet Cycle. Donald
Weilent.ein, violin; Peter Salaff,
violin; Marthe Stroncin Katz,
viola; and Paul Katz, cello. Baird
Recital Hall, 8 :30p.m. Admiaaion
charge.

Thi8 i.e the firs.!Bresentation of

~:t"lrida";ch~ ~~;~

Ding for six consecutive weekends

(throucb November 4) .
An extracurricular workshop in creative
writing; the discusaion at tonight'a· meeting will be on the
journal Lyriir Urtd Pro14, 244
Crooby, 8 p.m.

GI!ZlUN WOB.KBBOP• :

mua.

BIR'ilca •:

MONDAY-2
UNGUIB'nCS

atetter, 4 p.m. Reflesbmena in
112 Hocha-., 3:30 ,un.
'flmOaftC.U. BIOLOGY IIIDOlfA&amp;:'lt :

~~o~'k~~

Syotema, Dr. R. K . Miabza, ..prof-.or of biapbyaica and bioeDci·
noering, Abon UllMnity, Rin.
29, 4248 Ridp lAa, 4 p.m. Coffee
at 8:30p.m.
~~taT nL~D• : Mwlr of z,(,.,
(Niblo,
Diefendorf,
&amp;:::it.'t~ ~.m. Fzeo.UIJ), 147 Die-

1920.6;,;!,

9

~ a.n 11.a 8Bow• : Swi.Uerlond, by Mn. Helma Moebl,

384 Norton, 7 : 30 p.m.

FRIDAY-29

r.an.-

LINOUin!CB ...,....,... :

partment of Spanish, Italian and
Portugueoe, 331 Hares. 11 a.m.
True re6exives, mchoative re-

flexives, the imr.e_nonal conatruc-

~~~r:~~~h=obj~

S~tb .er- int ransitive . impersonal .. se" con-

vice. D L Juotin Hofmann will

~o:,.~~ &amp;::,~~t0~

at.ructiona. · 'nle analylia is done
withiD. the framework of transformational ~.

!OUow. IJillol Houao, 40 Capen ai&amp;\Ttft~CII.AJIT q&amp;N;JD• : Gla.zin.M,
Blvd., 8 p.m.
7 No~. 1-4 ll_.m.
• ·- .,..
Dr. John ~ c:a&amp;ATrVE aurr &lt;:z!ftD• : Batik
Ni8ht Tripper and Tlu! Phlor- lrutruction, $1.60 lee. 307 Norton,
escent L eech and Eddie, Clark 2-5 p .m. A I a o on Wednesday,
Gym, 8 p.m. and 11 p.m. Admia- 7 :30-10 p.m.
aion: Students, $2.50; faculty,
staff and alumni, $2. 76; all oth- VABSlTY GOLP• : U/ 8 va. Canisiua,
Beaver IaJand Golf Coune, Grand
ers, $3.
hland, 2 p.m.
CHDftBTay OP BIOLOGICAL 8YBftiiS
...,....,.. 1111:111111# : Mechaniorn of
9 p.m. Admioaion cbaqe_
Action o~in Coenzyrnu, Rob-

=

~t'"~~o~;~!!~:!,~~

~!i.~. l!~~J:!!~

SATURDAY-30
IWIIIATB 8RVlczs•: The
new cycle of readinp from tbe
Torah b o c in a, Chabod Houao,
CII.UW&gt;

3292 Main 'Street, 9 : 30a.m.

CUA.Trft

~~ ~:'ll:";:~,_4 p.m. Coffee and tea
._,.,.,... CRAPT Clll&lt;ftll• : &amp;lie
Meto.U, $2 foe. 7 Norton, 6-9 p.m.
A1ao 00 Tueoday.
PILM• : Qui.clt B~ (Baillie,
1971), 14'1 Diefendorf, 7 p.m.

&lt;&amp;\rr &lt;ZN'ID•: Brginni"'l Btlllnatruclion, 307 Norton,
noon-t p.m.
· Free.
CAC PILl(• : Tlu! Gold R!Uh (Cbaj&gt;- CIIKA'I'IYI: CRAPT Clll&lt;ftll• : Hand

~.:,i!!?on&lt;;"'%• Je":f:' ~ !n~:~J:.!:.I~/loo

available at the Norton Hall Tick• •.t Office.
.

TUESDAY---8

Foct4fi I~ in . Statleri"'/
Oecurrencc, N . E. W'-to, ~

,.._t...,~~

liao&gt;, 381 RIIYW. 11 a.m. .
8umm.uy of IIDdiap Oil locua
of ...,.,.,._ ol ablttorinc, crammatiad functiOD, and word uaap.
CIIKA'I'IYI: CRAPT cm11111•: Belt In~~~~~~~ 1-5 p.m.

'JIIOCiimomn. - -: Blood

~= ~
~"tt!
u. p~=.
'ty Collep
Canlilr, Waloa,"':.!'"'viaitiac . ~
te.or, mierobiolooY. UllMnity
~-

ol Geo..P., G-22 c.ipen, 4 p.m.

ll'filmiA'IIOIUL oorna aoua..·:

o.--•bwic!a and &amp;.lieu
atudenta, faealty and lltillr.
u

Lounp,
p:m.
c.ttJ'IDM• :' TioeGoldRIUh (Cbai&gt;~.::_~ 7 and 9 : ~ p.m.
• · - 76 centL Ticketa
IIVIIilaJIIe at doe Norton Hall-Tidt•
et

OI!Joo.

_

BIU&amp; 8RVJCOS•: Simcbat Torah
celebration, H a k a f o t h (Tomb

~.:=::.!i.~l ~. ~

Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
AIOalCAM

i:lOHftliO'ORAIIY

~· ~ r~:":fe':t._le· -

U/8 W0_-8 CLua NKWOO,.._
p...,..••: A DilrielaDd band will
provide muaie for

4ancinc:

·rea

fnahmenta aerwd. Admioaion: $6
per penon. To make reeervationa.
call 634-4727. Faculty Club, 8
p.m.
.

=
1'--

~o'=;i..~~.=;

9 p.m. Admiaaion cbarp.

SUNDAY-I

Thia 8Jm Ia .-dered by llliiDY •
to be doe beat o1 C2lad.
ula wo_.s a.ua He wrote, dinoctad, .III'Odliced. '1:114•• : Ope_to CIUiellt _ . . . . .
and -......! Ia lido otorj and
- r a , Fola 1-. ....,.._,and doe - · ulty Quit, 1-41 p.m.
111e be ~ mto ....., be otr11ra
:ru
.,.ad. A t~ac~-...a tale o1 IIDio-

0.:

fl'::: ... "' doe~~"' . .

~··•,tw~...-=..=.::1

W8llt ~ . . I

St::t:!h

UUAB OON~ •:

~~~~: :T~;P~~
~:to~':i..,~. wr-H~:

-~

UCTURE•:

WJ.t~· ~....!t:."W.;~~~

&amp;N4

b.r."

-

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

eodor: 0 B~::iwc, Committee
also re-afflnl*llta pclaiQoin ot •

. -..

eudonlinl t11e,.. tor an or.
Vice President for Aaldemic fica of OmbilclsmaD" om- such
llaallild~o6rilan&lt;lon •
•11731,326 ~ Alfail8 Bernard Gelbaum 8P- -an.olfice"e&amp;ctiwllYasiatathe
IIMic:W ......- aach • clrua . ~-~-~~-==· · nice~Wd-by ' Uni--'ty cluJ'. ~ before the _Ezecuthoe ~ of tJ:U . \Jni-.ity."
eilacatlliD and welaraDI' ,. ~II!Udlmti.ID'- - g · ~ :l,}r. _R•ymo,nd Committeei11ftiPOl'l&lt;~t~~- ; The "lmmaclicll8 ...,_lablish~ ~
.
"'"""'-" it&lt;-'&lt;- ......_.__-- BWeD. ..... ~ fur .... rent. _
status cif tbe .u.........., -· r ment ,of die ofticci tbrauaiL tbe .
- • Alraln, be lUI; will ~·- .........,. ~
,_.., l!D .-nvwl ·
acaclemic plao.. Afti!r months Of re-ellocatioD • ol lands aln!ad ·
ini~ ---... orienta- clc!ala In our- lillY - .
DuriDi the some pi!riOd .86 discueeiooe with the Ptovoste. allotteJI to tbe_UIIMm!ity" ~
tiaa J1ft!PM
Uniwr-:
-,.,&amp;~ prapoMi8 ~laling $;!.~ Gelbaum lllid, a lack of CC&gt;D- IJJ1I"Cl
· _
.
aity ~ lll!.lliat lfil!y cu be&amp;-. IMrniiii._&amp;Dd mu8l 1111 kmlar oubmitted -lD . pot.ential lieii8IIB was ~ ~ ,,._
ter .uildentaad:ibe oiimplaK , . be peniiitled to I8Cit their . _ 'ipoaBoal. a result, Gelbaulli drew up
,
. .
·
laliaalbi.. aDii tOt.lity of tbe .., iolalllDDiilct·hDuni:" . r ,
New ,118Dla.' received durin~ ~ J?lan ~y ~ ll!"''th
Befol'!' adjo-qrnment, the
proplun.
•
....... vice,_; ..~ ~.:. ~. fncludea: a $6,000 whi4:b IS D!&gt;W liciing
group -..,..cliacu-' the way a U/B
~
to: G: -1:..-0'Gracly, the' Presiderit abCi Ezecutive Pn!sic1eDt is appointed The
...,... reo~~ , _ lhili dlllniliila ol
~
-for tbe - . ·
-film ~ v·
~t~ Scimit. . official mimlles
• IntaMJJy, the vice ~t ~-.{or ibl!i~
~ NIJ{ c:iJPitatiaa
P~owstB
Cmaki!li JI!IJ· • iRuiJmuize the ·cli8cl&amp;ion
.....
ol ~fore&amp; wl!l f~~oormel- . . . . ~m
· _.,~ lloia1iJii . • 1!12-- jp!Stloasretl&amp;idinlr th€-~ _y : :'It ... POinted out that
II!' 8elablllbld •thin the Di- DIC!dil -. carefiiUY fimnul'a1ed: . .tci .Sdiool1?f N"""""; pl&amp;n_ aa well ~ Sellilte'a.lfod· nomirlllp0111,-. ~ f o1 previously
vil!!m to ODIIIider apeclfk: prob- eci1MBiional'~phifol~~;:r
l(ISifllllt':lo Nurs- ucaticmaf ·PJanning· IUMt&lt;l'olicyC been made ,bf · a - committee
leaialqld to ~ .mleNiepert- shoidcl be ~Y
·'
,-IP.rll&gt;l'"'-~ pqrimdor GOt!inilttee • CEP.ti') . is now' made up of laculty .. There is a
and IIIFof- aD1f committed li'l the Wellarci' 'pediatnc~a $'1;000 Gus- s~ying the Gelbaum plan as need to come to ·agreement with
"""'_.f~.- L " of IIIUdeftta, aensitiw to there:. taVIIS.i\. Pfeiffer MemoJi81 Re- well as. the indiVidual reports the Council about Presidential
ClOIICIID •u.- ......., · - .., act1ona of both students 11JJ&lt;i search F'liJowahip grant . from f r .o m ·d~ .c beinnen nominations. The- CbaiJman
the ~
stalf .....tiers around him, iibJe · the Ameri"!"! Foundati!'n for which were silbmitted'to K~ will bring a leiter from the Pro._._~ Jll • in eludeD! ~ re.ct wi~l being .,..,.,.. ~ticiil ~ E!Iucation. to a Y~ s,so. 'I}&gt;e E~lrP. ~- _voalll coDCll!fllins. t.bie mattA;r to
.:::E,'!,":'tJ:t AIFalrs' Je mvelydelentll"""andreasonably · E. Sli.ef.t.e ·r, pbiu-maceutics, · man, Dr. Carmelo PriYllela, the nmtt Emcuti"" Committee
...................
, "' · well acquainted with current "School' of &gt;Pbarmacy; a _$5,739 Sa,ys · his Committee -"!ill ~ · JlleC!tinlr aDii wili ·talk ·to the
on the ""'! c,mpus, d,rup; &amp;el:· • .Jiteratwe and-l'88eCil'cb rc&gt;Lttat- UHF l"!!!t for !'Screening for a report to the El&lt;ec:~Ulve Com- .. 'Preilidelit about::rit. ~ .
...Uty, racJSIIIt.
.
a~.~~~,~ . 'to the field.: (He sbouid .have HemogioliinoPilthies" toM. D. mittee next_weeli 8Dil" then-in- - . ,_~ _ _,,_~-';, ''p-"ousl ..
.emmeu ......_....,..._. ..,_ ieoiuved · ··.. ·
·fi ' 'f' Garriclt,' • pediafriCs, Scliool of co.rporate that g'roilp's. iecoln~uc _,.......,
·~··
Y
!o~ .will u~ a mode 1 pmlessional""'f:d=r:'="" .00~ Medicine;' $3!,850 from Food Iil!mdations · IM!rore _- Submitting suggests that a change w!"' alwbicb UIYO~ student-faculty· •--·-)· H
ust be
boih ani! Nufrition Services to H. A. a final report to the President. le~ to _have been made m f!&gt;e
staff cooperation.
It baa ewn e_appropriate
m
. Sui~·•. ~
-~"' and •Pre11entive
·
Some sort of academ1c
· p_,
'"" IS
. - ·-·+&lt;ve.
nonunatlon of. the cunent chief
. ..__
• ted;
to delepte
au- .,._. 1111111!8•vel ......,......,.. ....., thority to stalf IID&lt;i •
te medicine; for a study of- ''Ef.
·
· ~~w
dev dOl? I! la!!k ;:,or;:e them eftecti""ly in pl=:.':.d fe'ctiVenes&amp; of Home Meal Se"'
Asks
.
.
Po li c i u 0t the Board or
1.
Y an I bring m
&lt;&gt;- · decision making.
. •
vice to' Hi8h Risk Aged;" $70,, ~ . hOwever, di1f!'r with
• ~jUst
'This
what P e
''He Should strive to create . ooo from NSF to' J. H. Wang,
the vers1on of .the appomtment
• · that thewas
toonbe
·
a working Situation · in wliich chemistry, for a ·study of "Mo'
·
. PIPOI!88 ' outlined..in ' the Execupom 1
re seems
. a e&amp;ch ' 'rson. ~~ .ful&gt;t •lw\nt . I~ Mf!cbanism of Primary,
tive Committee" minufes. Acre!~ · to _even 1!JI'lDtion IUmse/(anl!p~~- wl\er.!~ Energy C&lt;lnv~rsion ·. ~ctions
cordingtotbatdOcumeni (1971,
probii!ID&amp;; J1088il&gt;:ly. w 111; the
exists I r' !he elf8.ie m~hotosyn'thesis ;" $2.000frmri
·
· · · . . . , -.
pag'e 10) , indiv'idlpll campus
hope tbs,t they w!,ll·all muacu- and foielings of~cf1indi~iltial' the ' SUNY "Reseaicli·'Founda'The University -&lt;:enter chap- preilicfJ!l\ts :'s hall . be appointed
lo~disapr""i.·ecti' must where each person feels that
lion ·10 J . P . "Corcoran, pbilos- ter of the Seiiate Professioual by the Board of Trustees, after
~~elopedo~ notvesonly 'or beiDllgs;. where people t'r \l.S .~ OJ?hy,n.r~· ~c~l . ~~~81': Association (SPA) , the pro- ~P,~-~-!~).~i!!"'~~tions
also
be
S
·· uev .
•·
each other; where stalf melnbei-s lions; _,.,, 02 from n•n to fessional staff" ba~ agent;" "' ....., ' - ' = o ' irid we col_tuden~.Affl!":", but forth'! en- can niaintain their intercity · c_ Yem cariS; sociology, for a is seelqng nominations of pee&gt;- . lege coll!lcif. . : .·Before making
ti~~'f.:"~~ wlieJi&gt; i~ 81'1(-dii-ecticm:_ s tlfd,r &lt;i!: "Me~1'9litan .M{lr.-, pie interested in serving cip its ,fJie,i -r ""!"'~1Jl!Deru:!ations the
aclmitted. tiave' been
t • rather than dependenti!, "iii -.~;a h t y Ollterent41Js;" $2,000 ·Executive ColDlriittee;• T ')i'e i e Chahclellor iiiM •ihe"co I e g e
--''-'-•- -•..;.,_ and ..
sought; wliere there ia free Bow !rom the ResearCh ·FoW!'flllion. are six vacancie&amp;--.lhree • repie- ~ shall eonault. with the
~·!'-·..,
of illeee;:.and' ~·a oense of .SUNY, cro "I': S . Kaiig,' S&amp;iol~ ~\&amp;t:ive8. of rion-!e8Ciiing'&lt; pro- &lt;!&lt;irliriitteecO'f the' Ci&gt;llege-facultaff 'Non the -S!U~I ~rs dUection- is- ootained by parti- ogy, for '-'MinoritY Relations in fess10nals and three' l'epresenta! 9'' desigl'lated for 'llucb ·Puipose
~J-s!Afr~J!!;';;~!i,t
cipalion-·in•~goa~ f"nn\llatidn: 1' Asi81) Counttjel!;'!i 565,'171'Hm m · tives of the faculty.
·
tiy the facUlty."
. •
the development of goals. The
NIH to C. , Pegels, manageThe six position8 are manStar( Council of central a"-'-- ·T\~-·
ment, f o.r 'Development - of ~teg ~~ Sl'~. guid!'\Uies which
.. · .• : .. ·. islt'illll!lr·Will · ~ • · ' Jeni__.~ · ~om '::o: ·• · ··: •&lt; ,- Bloodmobile' •PJanntng·· Pibciicf- · proV.ile for·· one representative
by a 'ta'sk force onsu~
di_- I Continued i rom P"'l• 1, coL 1) ure;" an~ $5,0iJ6 from the' Ford on the 'Executive Committee
JeCtions which ~ report to notes, "and makes residence foundation to the Gradua~ for every 50 dues-pa~ mem, .(Conlimud fro'r' fX18&lt; ~. coL I)
the entire Division fpr ultimate . halls !I'!' IBDger a ~"
. School for a doctoral feiiOW!'hlp ,hers. Currently, the Uruv.ersity rese~ for library use: If this
a~ cif' "'ttmtu811 d · ·
·
·
·
· ·
·
on behlilf of Mr. Barry White.. Center ·chapter bas :-~ such space is allocaled to the UGL,
allle'' oliieCti'ves.
· ll · I!SI¥- ''W~ =~~t&lt;&gt;'w"J:;'
·
·c ·
·
met'nb!!n~ out ·or ·a potential rebilhilita!ion"could-take place
_ln addition, "a broader baSe this firiancial problem
Cl~• .:-'membership total of 1,700.
over the sumiiier, she C!lCPlains.
w!ll he developed ""ncurrently . by the vacancies)· to Albany .. QU(Jtet
Each SPA member ·will be By .next lall, a 500-aeat, 9,000
:~ 1Fa?",.!r~~~.:=e:ri~ §cllllloBo fsays. Chancelipr J!:m.,;.t Joins
' •
~ receiving a list' of those eli~le ~umee,~~~~It' t ~ulposdn't
t.hroUJh a new I Y devel in
- yer eels ~trongly aboUt the
L'l
to serve .as repreaentetives.
-and espanded Sta1f
ft need (or restdence halls to op:::1!.-.~ must be ~ing · ~~~!Mf·nl·~·~~
In-ller\'ice 1ntining w iII .;,_ . etimaratetedm !bathe blacilliild bas "in- . Dr. Alexander 8. Yesenin. People m
' terested m
· sennno would"have a functional facilcei""
basis Si e1
t some type of bud- Volpin, intem&amp;tionally known
• - - 1'ty ..
kow
A
proiesJ!ai ge_t adj~tment lllllY. be made,'' matheniatician wbo was expel- on the ExeCutive Committee or
·
library will -be e&amp;tllbllahed in ~e •&gt;;Pia!~ U t.B IJ!-DOt_alpne ted friim, the Soviet Union in in nominating someone are
In preparation for the openaddition to formal Workshops, . m ~ Blttiation;_ Schill~ added. June, -arrived in BWfalo Mon-. asked to call Gordon· Harris, ii1r pf some kind 9f UGL either
· rep1ar divisional meetings, · ~tem. scbooareIs m,.~ - ~~ !l8Y to !letve 88 visiting lecturer chairman ofthe·Elections Com- here or ooi "the North (Am·
more U.U... with facultY., and . diffi-~-culti
repoowug . .
11( .fhe. Department of. Mathemittee, at~ .3932.
heli.!!J_E'pus,bas
' • ·1!._~-timebired
' . bib-to'
intenoialtation' DI'&lt;Wn'lrino, '
es. ·
• matics for . l97~73. , .- . .
At its tneeting last Wecfne&amp;.
-..-.....,.
.,.,.,..
Tbe Dlvisioft'wnililio ~'l'o tire problem, the /"A .,;.live -of 'RI188ia, Dr. Ye- day, ' the Exl!qutive Commi~ COJDpile a list of needed Y91·
tzalbe fUDctioas IID&lt;i decentm- U/B Housing..Office is actively . aenin.Volpin bad. ·been incar- decided to stop hOiclinJ month- umes. She is txJalparing the
lize ee!rvicee• so 'that ltudents recruitillJ :students for ~he cerateil. in mental hOspitals 11JJ&lt;i ~,;!'~~paU::. ~ ~=~~~~
~ leooi"" help with problems dormitones. Before this fall, a Siberian camp before his ex- stead
. _ , lite Committee is
_, !ermine wbat "_._.,.., __ , books
without belin shifted from of. • only undergraduates could oc- pulsion, repom.dly -because of. ·
open
......,.......,.
f"Kle to offioe: ''We will .lmmedi- cupy resicl!!oce hall rooms. This his- "human.ttfghtil activities.'!. mg its meetings to any · sPA are necessary .Ms ' Stem preaiel}' move to axJSider estab- 8U1DIIIer, hOWever, the Olfice 1&gt;e- His hliing . fciroed to lea.., the member wbo wishes to attend dietS tiook -~ will start
l.ishiDg a 8)'8le1i1 whereby lt is gan acmpting applications from counlq-m'e a n s 8 aeparation 'The next session is Sep~ber soon. ApproximatelY - $26,000
pcaitile to rotate staff 11111011g graduate, tnmafer an&lt;l . night fromruawife·anildaughterwho 27,atnoonintheP8J#rRoom waa .~ted 'this year for
~t unili; thus aeelc:inr to •· ~ students. ~ .plan .t o are etill· there.
. ,
.
of the Faculty Club. ,settinl up Jr ·CO!_fl~erence colCft!Clfe • 111ore e«ec:tive .-....I- ~tiniJe thiaS:licy ·m the fli:
F-"--'-~ his _:__,_,_n, he
New faculty and- s tafi men;. lection in the' UGL, she says.
1st: 'Ibis will •~..
twe by acti
--'-'" 11ew....,.....;":!.._· -...........
hers interested in liecoming' Finances, however, a r e the
._. to • •new
v
_,.....,. these
·to -to
·~
whefe·.he
_ rs of SPA sho··"'1d con-· "~t
=_.......,_»facing
planned ~ of temll to be people.
•
· /
tioaed
authoritieil
thatmenhis menibe
~
.,._......
distriliateil ~ on - ~ Housing Olfice is .a lso destinatiiin eventually would be lac~ Fran- Dietz at · ext. 4517. the coo · . tors of the project
the new CUlJIU8, amo111 the col- .mov1114 ,all students who re- Bu1talo. "nuoium his· academic Membership dues are figured whO are ezplorinir various ave- -.,..
feres. and : with certain ac:a- quest it llPtiJ::~= and r e s r c 'h work, he had on a slic!ing scale based on nui!s of funding such as an allo&amp;inic '-ltla Tbe primary, pus, thus ·
p.eonla oot maintained obDtacit w i t h Dr ·ODS per cent of an individual's cation from the Student Assoia to
the Varioaa MrV· in Allallmrst.
·roo
, John MybiU of the Ilepart:meni ~ salary, up ·to a lllliXimiun ciatiol\. or . contributiOQS from
' •
'vely Jto .to- there have · been five in an of Mathematial here.
dues payment of $200 IN'! year. I!'C&amp;I !)i:pnlzations. .
.
·
aiiU'ID*lt ~ l!ut ._. ~
Dr. Nicbolas D. Kaiariooti - -~=--------Tbe UGL St.&amp;c!!'in4· Commit...... tij, c..._..
~ll1JIII!Mtr18_~ .-....rto -chainnan of _ the , !lePBrtment:
UBRARY CANDIDATES
tee is alSO interviewmg. candi• '"-·
extendec[an m~tion to
The .Selection Conifl!iltM for Dir· dates. UGL directOr. _
~ofa~tor - Scblllo -ill also
to' to' BuJfaJO 'Through the come ector of Ubrepes, appointed by
_
to biUid nllalion81letlfilen Slu· "~" opemtlodll .wlth-·M·. Bllrahip
the Buffalo
President ~r in June, Is user
=:.:r~the C1C11Jea1-. ~..by .~ out ft!l!i· F\llleratibn his trip was made to receive any susseftions or ra·
£:1,.,~--.,.H~;...?
Juaaaa8lda our
....J~I:a:lclrmatiOJl wltti 110'- pcaiblei' "Fundi from the N
commendations of ~ible eandi·
~10 •
llnil
~~ tbe cep._ for tile ~ tioul ~ Founda ·
a- dates for the ' post The new dirUniversity community mem~--- aDd the~ ~- .1bif ~·-be J!aPea to · University at Bidfalo~ ector Will replace Dr. Myles SJ.otin ' bers W!&gt;o WQt peyc;!Jologic;al
-llf . . Jnldllll atal!lle1be ·lllh Uae ~ ~ ment allli 'the Martin Chair of who. resigned , September 1. In- collJI!I!!Iini can con:tact either
poAailill ......._of tbla flalil'- ......._ • Jllell as Matbomatica will support 'his diVIduals wishin~ CDalce .nomina.' - lhe University Haafth Service
!liN."
.
• c S. ~ -8111&amp; ......UV.- ~-fc!culty •J&gt;POiritment:
.ll'ons should contact the cheinntln ~1 Mental Health Section,
. . . . .._........ be
._a&amp;~ • • '
:A graduate. of the Steklov of the !'election Committee, Dr. 201 Michael
Hall, ext. 534J.;
out. ~
=~Gf&amp;"Jft' :
~
btitut'e,
Geof'M S. Bobinski, at the School the Stwlept Counseling Center,
i ~.ca.
~
tlllciepca, U S.S.R Dr of '.Information and ·Ubrery Stu· 7S S .· Hatriman 'Library' ext.
PICIIJ&lt;il11 :J!iill&gt; ' .-a
. WillaD at eit. Y....m-Vcllpilis ..:.., or·,• . dies, Ha~·_AQn8l&lt; .C~ •t Lock- 371-7· , or the Pm:hoJ~gical
_' ttii ~~ o£
-astc.
•
~is matheonMkal
wood _ubrery.
• '
_ cii.do, 4230 1Uc1p l.ea (Room
•
.
'
C-2) ,~ 1197.
_,.

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.

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ii\

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D.'aculty

(:'used

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•
said'
:"' :-..:::.!t

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WomenSl&gt;ay
·OCtober-a

�Sopeoa;be, 21, 1912

~_. PREPORtt~

4

-Ke~ O¢liiles His~-fBFaculcyACtigns' -·

fie.~

wm:

CmnpusMfi!J -

-.the.~........,_ .MJve'sAgainst
MJ" [A

aucb
trltbiD
of u.ticated in a a&gt;emorandum 'to
l\c.demlc Affaba and Studmt' Dr. Milia of Jul,y 5, 1972, that tal ,. . - .
MJaira;thalastheiiBIIilfortbe two_...,commi~Would etc:
• .'
'C1nrco
11-poinl ~pOrt to 1M Focu.lty ....W"""'-tofaformalofliooe boeabiblllhed Oneistollecon·
·.
·
~o
&amp;nate on ltJ8l y«U'a &amp;Illite· becomes ~to 8lepe will -bit.· ·_.....t with the BSSG/NSI" re- RESPONSE: Action on the~
In an attempt to teduce the
acJiDM on d 7Ua reaponaa to tUa&gt; to meet that ...t; and ...-cb fuDds, and tbe otber is lishment of 'these task , 'fonles • · - volume of "·"---'-'~" or
tMin. TM report """~ 1bat.Dr. J~ bu baeD clfl!; · jo foeJI!I on opecial funds. Both bu .been def'!"""!; in ~ of · -".....,..... ~
to 1M ~-s-u 1JI#t- '!fualed to-......., admiJUslra•. ' committees are. to be· c:baiJed two other. pnmary activities: DI1IIIIIDCe llllll-OftiPal mail, the
in6 (~ Reporte&lt;, &amp;p~raber liYe reopCJIIIiibility for the im- by the Dean of tbe Graduate namely, tbe fortb&lt;:omina ll&lt;&gt;- CamJII!S Mail Service is now
14). ' .
.
plementalion of the Senate res- · Sc:boo~ and will bave certain creditalion visit and tbe ~ ~ ....CJI!b' ~t intemsJ
~ -• ' •
"'• olutlcm.
•
·
membin iii ClDDUilOn. l'urtber, Iisbment of tbe search coaimit,.
w......, 18 m mlerdepart.
M:TlCIII: TIJe ·
'
each &lt;*IIIJlit..,."""' to bave ad- · tees for a Vice '.Pn!aillent of
~velopes or .*-rs a re- - 111 - ~ ACTIOit: TIJe t.-Gm diticmal
faculty representalives Health Sciences, and tbe Deaq
t1an:}I'! . . . . - fll the ~ fll .--'~tee nominated by ll)e Eseculive of tbe.Medical Scbool. ~ • _. . U.S. ~ addresoed to indi. - . . . - •II out ., .the , _ . , fll 1IOOod lhlt " ' - Jlelli!w- -Conmiittee of -the Faculty Sen.
.
viduals iDaide tbe Unfversity
~
ace, 88 well88 student repreaen- . ACTlON: A rwiled CcJIIIIIN , _ will; of cowae, continue to be
-. the fll the .,._ whl!:h. filii fll tliO talives. By memo· of Jul,y. 6, pectus - - ~ In April .bt handled 88 usual
.....,_ fll c:omp;.- Scleiicos SPA - .
. 1972, Dr: Mac Hull was ap- ·
-~will~ in'~e-rnal
the F8QIIIJ o1 E~W~-..
~
poiliieii .Cbairman of these two
·
• •
~
· 110 to a dead. letter
Appllod , t o - ., DBPONIIB: This- proposal WB8' ~CXI)IIIIIIitt.es, and Ijielieve their .RE!IPONSEl ' 'The re:~ised ' Pro- ' -=tion to be 1ie1d _for. two
- - -endonMid ,by tbe Senall!. and it • ealliblisluJieDt will .pioVide the S!li'ClUs. as lidoi&gt;ted,
~ and then &lt;testroyed.
.
is my understanding tbat the moet effective 'way to !leal with ai a guide fb~ the. _..aon of . ~t of the change
DBPONIIB: Both of these -~ ~pve Committee of tbe tbe lll!ii!Y ~ aixl questions tbe CoUegEiS. H..-wr, .I find m Jdicr"""' made b_y E. W.
....._ recoiwd approval and Faculty &amp;qate bas 888UDied re- that "haY&amp; bMn iaised 1-egard- that PiOspectus; .iniRd1iCient in ~• ....,., president Cor opera.
impleli.ented.
sponsibility for insuring that ing this ~tter, furl,her\' since certain areas, pirtlcu!ariy with ' tjPIII'IDII ~
•
these mechanisms are operative. these ~)DIIlittees wil prob- regard to review. 'The review . -~ ~ ' - " an increase
ACTION: 111 ...,,_...,.-.~apt. I merely wisb to indicate tbat I ably ·~t beCome fully opera- contemplated in tbe P._tus . m alippecbm, DOn-University
ed " _....,. '-'lty would be most plo!ased to re- · lional tintil January of 1973, I
indicates tbat it will be C81Tied ~ mall, Doty said, and
. . . . - . . - _·
• ·
ceive, and .seriously consider, • baye il&amp;ked that the interim per- out under tbe auspines of tbe "1t bu bemt our ezperience that
any grievance committee report iod be used for the transitional F8CI!lty Senate Committee on -·a . vmy larJe percentage of this
-="'namemorandwnof which is generate.d by Ibis pbaai;ig l&gt;f' rtsponsibility from tbe Colleges by .an emamuriil . ~.liD_ return address,~
A. .
th. 18, 1972, to,Dr. Moore IJI'OIIP. Obviously, however, no · eXisting areas to these·new com- review board, and that this _ ''The Campus Mail system "
(WI
CXII!ies to members of tbe advance commitment. can be mittees.
board sbal1 consist of no more be said, "is paid for by State
EDculiWt Committee of tbe made to carry ou't tbe -rei:om- .
than five members of national tax revenues anll · exists to
~ty Senate), J. replied to · mendatioils of every such re- ACTION: In ,..Y, with leM tluln prominence approved bjr 'the balilt1e University -busines s
• this aoriel of J'AC!R!IIIW&gt;dalions. port.
·
a quorum p;eient, the ' 5 en ate ·c-ollegiate ABaembly.
only. · It cannot -be used for
In 8IIIDIDilry, I streilaed certain
.
~ a proposal ._nlina the
Howe_ver, no ind!calion bas ~ actiyi~. for partisan po"'--er concern that were ACTIOII: Plocedllrn
deallna •· establish- of an U--.,.c!uata been g;ven regardipg w h a t lit•cal actiVIty, for lobbying acllouhleacime. 'e.g., no atleiltion ~- ·Kadomlc: dlohoiieoty Ubra;y on the Main.C.mpuo: standards are to be utilized for tivities, or for solicitation for
Pvm to tbe problem of abmd- """' ~ In
and
.
such a review. I think it is im- any cause that does not !lave
ardizalion of procedwes at tbe eumpln of...., ~. atone RIBPONSE: As you know, steps portent that tbe Senate move as tbe President's as.nction as Uni~tal .an&lt;! Faculty with a llfcl;t mocllflc8tlon In pro- "!Jve aJn:ady been fB:ken to be- soon as ' possible to give full
versity business."
.........; inauffiCIOilt l!llea for tbe c:8!kft, were edopCed bt the Sen· g~ the IDlp~talion of ~- , an.d thorough CDIISideratiori -to
While mall volume bas in·
Vice Preaidenta for Academic
April. .. ~
tain parts o~ Ibis report.• Etght Ibis area. In fact, tbe recent creased by approximately 40
A;ffaira and· He;aJth Sciences;
.
.
•
classrooms m the Diefendorf ~f-study indicates that Ibis per cent over the last three
~t With transfonning 1 RIBPONBE: In a letter of June
Annex were ~ out of the - aspect of our. operalions, not · years, Doty noted, "no addi·
tha1'RB into a faculty COIIIIIlit- • 13, 1972; with a copy to Dr. ·class acheduling_ pool and re- ol\ly in the Colle8es but in .tiona!· personnel have been ad·
tee; added burden for tbe I!RB Baumer, I indicated my accept- served_for use Ibis Fall as read- other areas of !be U'niveraity 88 ded to tbe Campus Mail Ser·
to '!~-all non:~ · ancie • of the examples of aca- · er-stations · to alleviate oertain wel.l, is in need of..examination. vice. During this same period
•
•
tbe Campus ).wi Service ~
but - . . - to tbe estabiUih- demic-dishonesty that bad been ~f tbe crowded cobditions with·- o f a _.ue panel to con-. of(~ .~. pr!'~e!'ures for m existing Library facililies. ACTION: In April, lite -llilapt- taken over tbe responsibilit
llider aucb ...... r e:ipreued dealinil '!'tli these problems - This. action is in -process,. with eel an . . - - . mojlcla _....,. for distribution .of paycheci&lt;%
ae.ctions were reviewed ex~~ by diflicult.ies in rebabilitalion and lnctepen;lent atodJ.
W&lt;!. tbeiefore bave to be
·
~~~'?'~ ,
~~"!Y~.;.::: equipment.J:urc~~ain• be,inK
'
~y, ihat· tbe ea.:.~~
88
first~ ' I &amp;sUd ihe ~tiv! sensus
resulted • - that ·
!l'&amp;nti~pa~ tltilim· · !'E"""Nt!E: fl.n!l .~ motion,
,M!UJ,i:"•Jlled oa}y•1or the pur&lt;Culimiit6.e•'to · " · · .. 'de
·n;v;~ inliiaitaa · U\lit'~L,..
.., .:~ll· ·~~~ -liy,,p~~!l,~to- •. -i.I.JI!l':ll.stand.,. su.Oioient.for ad- mtended because as with
•
give COIISI ra- be
~"' num· ....,r. ..._...,,tl¥. f bave asked dressmg tbe ma'Jority of credit ev
fhin&amp;
else 00 '
to,~ recom_menda )l8nei . cal~ revi~ and appealie-:eis theOffi~_ofFacii\lies}'!a.'!'\ing . bourj; Jll .k .ep .in• ~t
is~ 1 ~pus,
.., ~ fc?c; .the VllC8IICy . · ply'
proposaJ
!D. PIOvi&lt;;le.. me. With a -cratical .. study; Therefore, it. aha11 be · - • · · •
· or
"
.
•
many. How- path/action p r og r a m which .one of the rules govemm, tbe
.,
Further, in a -.ond memor- ~~J bave ~f"'uded ~t we woul~ ou~ tbeir perception academic program of tbe UniCl~l..~~l
8DIIum of tbe same date to tbe p~ures ':;.~~on - 0~
con~ dev~opp&gt;ent ~ty., However, I find it inOCllUUl
indi~ I. dei}n- that any reVisions and modi~
an J:""~3~ PeCts ~\!'~thea! as- nane
·· · 1
·=ns "t:!'t .app!"pnatel; be
V(hich we
dation to chanae tbe PRB.
o11
expene""" P;lned. affiliated -therewith.
most ftagrantly violated, i.e.,
. A team of four represents·
ACTION: In Februil~, the Senatil ·-tON
tbe student who enrolls -for an lives from tbe Liaiao
' n Commi.t·
........_.
·'
- •
: Enclonement of Unlver- extended numlii!r of hours 'by tee of tbe
ACTION: . TIJe . acap~ec~ • - - a 1outllnlna a , _ stty HOUIInc
Mlncitty Graduate w. ay of ind
_ ependent study p~
Association of Am·
the distribution of and Profea1ona1 Students.
jecta Whi1 tbe
·~ erican Medieal Colleges and
_ . to
- - a -OIIIce "' p.-ure
~-and to conInstitutional FaCI,'
e
motion permits three obaervers will conduct
It·
aculties,d_.-tmenlsandpro.. that~· reaccreditation
-- In-,-.~­
There was a sen'es of !'»&gt;PPthaNSE:
18 my understandgrams to aet additional regu• 't t
Sc:booI of Medicine,
w, a IUfVOJ on the lnsliucllonal RESPONSE:
•
ll1i
t Ibis Fall, . the Univer- lations for independent study Vl8l a
I
~gs held with ,regard to sicy Housing Office baa actively otfered under tbe'• auspl- 1 October 15-19, Dr. Robert L.
,.,
.
Ibis
matter
which
'"vol"ed
•-vI'
'ted
·
'ty
d
f
1
·
~
--.
B~
' 1e d e an. an·
III!BPONSE' .. e ,_
era! •
~ •
~
ao ICI
mmon gra uale and
ee . it impo
_ rt.nt this matter .nounoad·--- ~..
·ti.
- ~ m concur- · ·
mdividuals including the professiclnal students as can- recetve U
'ty 'de
'""' .....,.._
~~buof :3i~ : :~tiW,.ti~~ F~:UUU:: didates for on-ounpus bousing. deration. Th..":o,:' 1 w~d ~the jroup will be
!JIId,toDr~•lhil
!""f, bave replied dlacuasions, certain actions 'l'h:eY have contacted several ask the' Senate, at its earliest Keane
l!nrod. Ph.D., vice
. ...oore m ami!morandum were taken· it seemed
off;ces and many individuals convenience, to .reconsider Ibis ~r, medical and health
·of August2, 1972, outlining tbe . thit two ~jecli ~apll8l'l!l!t ~t tbe Un~versity, question.
scienceo, Florida State Univer~.tUa&gt; to date. ~tial- ~! (1 ) to ob:,
tbe names of mterested .
sity. David Babbott; M.D., Der EDITOR'S NOTE: TM fol-

,_,.,.-;. 1M compte~ tct of

lS- .

~Robert L. K~tter'a

::::W

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-ber

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tbeF..:l'ty'::..·~o~

:reas.
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.
u~"!'fY.88well~theproblems

_...,., ___

~1

Set

for

for

T-.,

nt~:t!t\:dt! r&lt;

. :b':J:.

!f,;,ilh..n:'~~:

:TrdJ:.: - ...

lion m tbe

di'!bursemen~ of ~~~~ ~:

sli&lt;:h funds which are derived ~~ thaf -ce reserved for
~'2)'.!fu=""le JI&lt;!U!ces; and mmonty ~duale stup1ens to establish a unifonn distincti
recognition of the . dents be shared With those at
~ teadler evaluation . ·fimds ~ pwposes of these · tbe gradua_te lev"!, tbe Housing
-illstrument• 'that, at Ibis .,__ _ - • - 888III'8IICe tba.Ltbe Olice believes IIley can ac.Jbe Nmlu.t:- about ~-::z ,..~ advanced: ~ the -eorilmodate minority 1f18duate
'. :«fa......can- .;;;:n'il: · ~ta of lhl! funding al!!n- and prof"!'"io'!ftl students with
'-plomonted by
dIn
aea. ~ no reduction to housing Bp&amp;ce
coor
a 1ng • To obtain these obJectives, J for minority unde;;grailuate stude ta
n ·
·
·

Jtlhey and Dr.

Al1ei.

Kun:

are beina aiOrdinatea mCWTent

f

.

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tr. r.
-

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AJlTIST&gt;

s - Af. B-~&lt;r

.

The . Self-Study Steering d8JU!, Sc:booJ·of ~edicine, Uni·
Comaut!"e must be commend- ve1'81ty of. VitJinia. and Ber·
ed for •II! ~ort in compiling nard Pilrani, M.D~ Department'
and publishilut thor reoe tl•
of Obatetri and G
· 1
leased S e I f-&amp;iid'y ~ . New Yorl&lt; 'i}nivei'Bi~ ogy,
However, I must object to tbe
The ....___ will be Mr.
m,·, discriminate use of tbe words
..._,._,
. lema)
Fran,k B. Dilley, IIIIIIOc:fale pro~r ~ .
organization" in VOlt for instruclion, University

==:

lim~~~~~/;"'tbem~ ~f'~P==~ ot Delriare; Mr Jacbon w.
to
~
InstruCtional Communica- ~re~c,:~
lion Center. 'lbeae words indi- State of N- York Educalion
Residen:!.Faciliuea, it~ ;:e~u:J~.== Ilepartment; and Thomas w.

=

the report bu Ill!"""
made ' by th&amp;
' "SeaatecCominiltee ·and ··
ty

"::rJer"""t.!l""

taiii ~ ~m cor!Mn. IJI'OWd ~to baVI!~

tbat inellc:ienei
•
M.!JU. MD., provoet for b.ith
within tbe departmenlesThiaexu;! · ~ State University at
not true! The dedication of the Albaey.
slaftandtbe~Uctivityofthe - - - - - - - - - -

- ~~ou~-

u-:,

av ·
meager re...ty in~ report available · an effective llervicea carry out
"
--..r.
The ICC ia
•' • •
· ACTION: Ill MMa,
....... ita ~ 'lbeae
.s.
.
. ~::E . b_eaJ ciocwJJeDted and correc• . . . . . __ ~ -· .,......... the - . _ . . ,
u....- ...... bave been .mo.
, _
posed,
-nhwaityoom-

.

A-

VI£WI'OIIm; A1m1fEf
.-.1 1111t...., to II)'
he illll8ed ''VIapol;iiL" So did

a- ha: .................
Report.-

"""" ·~e-m-

' - ~~

~~;:.,:~~~U=

tary. Oilier team members are

William R. D rucker, M.D.,

melldations nlade
me by tbe
President's Ad~ Council on

~:;'*toJ:

c:otrT1tlllfiTnM .Dif'OIIS. , _ .......... _ ,

COIU'RIBIIT/NC

!""'""'

An vup.;uuu.
f'\h:~-- 1

EDITOR:

,

- - In

the -

Such tnk,:fercei, were to deal with
1be 011anization of Heafth Scierl-

s·mcereJy,.

· J AM;ES A. _At-."DEBSgN

Acti~g D•.rector

'!l"'ffe

~- of

In the ...--ro
ll!e' Self-study,
we
Remam·
ber, the ......... Ia atuger
&lt; to Nn your PM!tlon iNie nts

didn't-,_,..._

Annuel

d
. me
an 1etteR as space permn:s. Feel

free.

~-----''------

�l"'· s J 1

!W 21,1912

SUNYOkaysG~frr-

.Instructi&lt;;&gt;nal_lmprovemmt
i.. - JIIGII'8DI ol l"'lculty tloe-.._IICtlal*
...................
Grant&amp; b tbe ~t Iii Instruction, urpd "by tbe
ol
SUNY Senate, baa beat liPproved foi this year by Cbo- .' A'liludi will 1111118 from ..,_
oellor Emeat Boyer.
$2,000 .,. pooject 111111 a.y be
According to JIUIIM E . Me&gt; llll8d b or a awnhini&amp;ion
. Connell, geogzapby, c:bairman ol IUCb ~ • tile proof tbe campus committee bud· vialoo ol . . . . . u- ,.. lbe
ling tbe matter, tbe PrDII8in is pantee by the .,.,_u ol a
"designed to ~ - ~ subatitute, ~ ol maleri- '
aupport .-reb 111111 -.,p. · ala, Uld/or .,.t.!c!lo&amp;ion ol tbe
ment of institutional techniques
~~
related to the applicant's per-

........,m.

-1'!':::1:.....- .,...._

C't:.,
PIO~

Student Wage
Level·&amp;duarl

.

·•

'

E_iWelliS s'uvpp
t-~mg·
. .Down- But·Not_

Some UDdergiaduate stu·
dents retumina to student asaistant jobs are- quickly learning about a recent Civil Service
~t ruling that re-im·
poses a $1200 academic year
maximum earning leYel,,-zatber ·
than the $3000 allenda"r· year
ceiling which was in elfect for a

:¥:::t:a..ta;t ~":h....c!~

:::=J! .

. Appllcalloll foaD8 111111 cedunis are beiDa~
a Ce!Jtral A....U.· Caminlttee,
and will be coonlillated here
by a campus committee formed
by tbe local Faculty Senate.
Accordlna to MeConuell, tbe
Central Aw&amp;rda Committee was
to IDMt yeataiday, It was u:peeled that tbey would set November "1 or 16 • tbe deadline
for aubmiW..,.applicatioDs.
'lbe.U/B qun~ committee, ··
McCoaDell
uraee izlterest.
ed faculty ~ foiiinllatinl

~n"':.

O
_- u t
caus- ·
na:!edoF:.;
mg problems as some students program will be• sent to each
ceived
the
President's
Medsl
return
to
find
their
projected
faculty
-'&gt;er
in
tbe .-r fu.
begun." 'lbere was no room for
earnings substantially reduoed lure. •
'
his doubting tbe reality of war f or M erit, the highest U.S. ci- 'The
person n e 1 Department
•
.
·
&amp;Ill lo!Jger, be u:plains.
vilian honor. President Roose- cannot give tbe u:act number
'lbe program IB· being coorserving as assistant chairman velt died before he could pre- of students who would have , ~ locally through tbe of.
of tbe Petroleum Warfare Sec- sent the award to Dr. Ewell earned more than $1200 this fice of Dr. Charles E. Jeffrey,
tion of tbe National Defense who still wears- the fad~ ~- academic year, but many peo- 201K ~"!' Hall. Af~ ·r eceipt
~ Cqmmittee, Dr. Ewell
roon cloth · medsl on his swt pie coulil be all'ected.
o! tbe IDltial JD!Iteriala, quellasaisted Dr. Clitford C. Furnas. lapel
'The $1200 maximum should tions may be directed to Dr.
who later became president of
Tbitty,one years old and be adequate to· provide bun Jellrey's olllce (3141) or to
UtB. 'The section's ti!Bk in the "sick,of the war," Ewell _.could dreds of students with ~ • JIII!Dibers of ~ com16
war effort was to discover "new
' .iol:!&amp;,· ~thl ~in, j~~~ee~ (2321)~ lU;
ways .to use petroleum and pet- C:::.tt e:!~'t.t.A/te~~= .Pmelstan
t. personne ~tor, Hutd&gt;inp -(ll631), Char lea
rOleum products as weapons." with Shell Oil in San Fran- 888
-"----~ •to move witll SIIYS.
H'!"!"""r, '1"N'ffDD
for !'.relatively
.,_,tb '2646) ... n•
P•t &lt;&gt;-1tb
After Furnas left the Commit- cisco • be """"""
fe.w po&amp;lt¥&gt;1)8
"ei,tber _.. ' ~
~ ' ... _, ......
recommend IMl.tM s- Uni.- . tee, Dr. Ewell- served as chair-- the - ·company to . New -Yolk .· &amp;peclal"tniinma 0 t
~
·. l3810) : '
·
uersily Board of- T..U.tm ap- man. He and his staff perfected City and began ,O.orlt with · weekly w 0 r 11.
'point Robert . C. Fitz~lr. -incendiary bomba and flame Stanford- Reaeucb lnlititute. $1200 lll8l&lt;iilruA&gt; may be iqou( . ··~&gt;'D:l.~ "R....n~
- ........,, ~ "vfee ·· ~nt " thrower-device~~ ·wblch · were Wbjle' tberer he'"be!Pm' his' en- · fi •
he add&amp;
'
• . ' .D.I.I!II;l:.LK'f5.L&lt;&gt;W.QWUU.
· and adjunct PN&gt;feuor·'llf'•reo- -P''IiloW"i!ft'Ottive-·ttwr linY'eZJ&gt;lo-"·-eyclopedia"'f-t~te"-ebemical in- ----~ - return ·ID die
~
bl
.
logiall acif!n&lt;:a, oa oc!inf vice sive or shell," be says. "'f'le dustry, ~ 1.-&amp;-leaf_ 17-vol- mum is bem. ~by
¥Yldu*is~!"
_,'aleth
praideftt for the· comu~~~ ymr. aJso de_yeloped .~pahn-:-!' · ~-- ·ume Cbemi?':' Eoo!to!n!c Hand· _ 'lbe ·P...-mal ~t .has ~ to •......,ter .._.. ...
Dr. Kette occepta 1M res- lied fonn ot pline." ·Orlgm&lt;· "oook. · Started· with · li : zatber · •tteo · .. eiaJ letters tO SUNY. -~ · Securi&amp;:ir·-196 · Wlnilnolion with "dup re~t.." ally najiillm w\ts made by dis- s)&lt;eptical $20,000 grant from -~tral-":, hardships it em- IIJI8!"'· ~
He .aid, " Dr. EweU's uncom· solving rubber in ~line, but the Institute, the ~clopedia poses 011 students &amp;lid programs -~!:.to
a
_
mo11 diificalion ' coupled wilh 'When the ,Ja~ mvaded .all_ "'!W. ,has anpusl sales pl. $2 alike, but hasn't- ,_.ved any .
·1 •
hU aJUlb oa a1irlt--rak acientiBt · the rubbl!'i' producmg countr~es, million.. ~
··
· · .
·
1ifB as et.
.· • .
r To recister.. IO to tbe Secud·
and broad ~e Of 1M re- J it was Ewell's Committee which
Tbe -·next number of years, repConldinyis boReful however • ty Ollice "".hid! is open~bours .
O«&lt;I'Ch field luJoe contributed had to fmd a suiJ!!titute. They !&gt;""!'ght Dr. Ew~lrto tJ:Ie l'l!il· that • tbe , fllliM - ·will be ...,: a day. 'lbe o6:er 011 duty will
.;pificantly to 1M tkvelop- did. Synthetic• ,napahn and 1ppmes and India. A stint With cinded
· r
give you tbe reclatzation lonn.
ment of this Uniuenily as a other petroleum weapo'!" "des- t!&gt;e Natio~ Science _Founda- - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
major Cflnte for at:tllhmic re- troyed almost every maJOr Jap- tio~ led logu;ally to a "'!':IIK!"th ~
oearr:A The impact of bU work anese city."
ass1gnment m the Philippmes
and lr~ wiU cdlotinue to Japil,_ Red "helping the gove~t ·decide
be feU at , thU institution for
Dr. Ewell began to work how much money ""'?uld be
many y~ to come."
closely with the Air F!&gt;roe when · JJ!It into reaearcb and . m what
•
•
•
it canie to the planning stsges. kinds of reaearcb." His report
•
By
.
of attecks on Japan. He pre- mY the Philippirie8 caught the
SUSAN ROBINSON KING
paled the Japanese· Red "Book, notice of tlie Ford Founcll!t!on
a volume conlaining ilata and and he was offered a poilltion
Dr. Raymond Ewell is retir- maps of each Japanese city in lndia, as an advisor Ori ininl, at least as vice president with ·an analysiS· of bombing dustrial econilmic development.
for -m&gt; at U/ B. 1n terms procedures. The book guid.ed On To Bullalo
_
of bia CJWD re8eardl and writing, decision -nutkers Ol).-Altack proThen it was Buffalo. Dr.
an entirely , _ .career may be .ceduli!S.
Clifford C. Fiimaa. his first
just belinning.
·
What is it like to be involved boss after leaving .Purdue, had
1n I' receDt twO-hour conver· in planning to !1knock off'' a taken the ·job as chancellor of •
sa&amp;ion with .Dr. Ewell, it was city and the people who live U/ B then a medium-aiied pri·
evident to this writer that his within its coofines? 'f'lith . no vate 'institution. Furnas wanted
ambitious future plstJB are a visible attempt at justification, Ewell to join him as vice chan·
natural outg!Owtb o( a · cbal- Dr. Ewell answered the ques- ceUor for research. "I accepted
:
• a __ ......_ man. pon: ':VI"-' can't un~d the job_ m a ,i n I y beCause I
.lengiJII. .paat.pU1
Dr. Ewell 18 .........,
the psycbolOf!Y"of a war iml~ ihci"f"t Furnas was a. good
1 DuriJ11 Wodd War n, be you've il!"''i_ I!' a war.• ~re lB . guy.'
.
_
.
worlred with tbe National De- • only one driYliiJ fo~ ~
But before · Buffalo, be" defenae ~ Committee. He war.. . - - EspeciallY
cided on' a aix-weel&lt; -m&gt;
had t-1 a young chemical en- lost tbe ....,. there would have tour of the U.S.S.R. He man~ profeaaor at Purdue been a real ~tatropbe. · · · If . ed to t a non-tourist viaa
w'- Dr. J - Conant, pres- ·-!""lose tbe Vwt.Jilam ~there
a dozen univerai·
ident til ~ alked him tA! IB no real cataab.=.... the ties, eicbt -m&gt; Uistitu&amp;iona
join file N
Defense He'
Dr.•Ewellto . and a number oll'actorii!s. Be&gt;aeardl Committee ~ ·be
~~tbe~F.J:: cawe btt bad tzaYelled at ~t
WU ~·
• •
ID - • - • to be
time lliCinl than any Amllricu
· Not puttinl any credibility .felt tbe ....,. was •""- .,._., tbrouibout tbe Soviet UaiOD,
in tbe jJrevalellt war talk. Dr. ~ anyway· But_ the ~.....,.. _he .... iable"to Pl!bllal!o a IIUIIIBMIU nltuctant to leave which .... ~the nu- . bet ol "artide&amp;Abilut, it Oil bia
hll.-.....mat.Purdue...,"::,: . ~~cut
· re~um. ,
· ' ·
~-~·i-':..m.m., in ~by :.aal)' one d8y."
Hla ~ iD Soria aDealilllblr ollNL Ha felt !.· "!M _*- 111711 (~) ~ ~
--~
..,_,
liiUed,
"To IIIII*
~:'D+the ~ftllia : - "'n February '46 ·- aot or- ~!-'~tire
."of a a;
Dille
•
Pearl din to fiw citiae.ol thole· tiaDI ~ dlilr . . ~
radio J on tbe llat Jo be deotroyed. • U : IMl with 8Dwl!t em.s ~
...-A.
tbe nuclear bomb worked tbey . t b e - 111111 hia ............
reported to ~ on ,....~y,
SOII)t!thin tO use it on." Dr. Bwell's opinion cbanpd.
!:' f8';':;'-,;."tj~g. 1t·i'i:!"~;·'t,.d Ar~ the war,gDr. Ji:well re-· (Conluw&lt;!d "" fHJ8C -?, col. 5)

.::!.tute. J.:

old- ·. ·. ·"' •• .· . · -,

Ws.

• ·

2::!!"

ftud..,._atoi!

u-,_ . . ._

=.t viai:'t

U:,

tt!'

~ earl~ ~
:nt-JL c:':e

1

="'t ,

Dr.~

=:..ur-

=·~.,.,..

.

�Se.....,_

~-

~1,

191'l

.,

... U......,"'....; ,.,.. 81 ........ ..

T ·_...z...

;··1/QsJital-.J..Aiu -~ .

.-1972. UNITED@IOTAS'
FUND CAMPAIGN ·
..

·~~- -~~~;t~;:';:]_
..

•

•

introduced at a major ~of
.bollpital- by the Schoo

p

•

••

. Faculty
of Natural Sciences &amp; ~matocs ..... ·········-···· 10,400
Faculty of Social Sciences &amp; Aclmo~ostration ···········-··;···· 16,AOO

~=
~hillh
.. :_ equi~
~.:=.0~18~~-~~--~:~:::::::::::::~:::::~:=::::::. 2,=·
• · at Millard .:PillmOre
of
1.300
Hos-

Division

Continuing Education &amp; M.F.C. ...................

~ will~tor the way pa- ,. ~:~tt!i~··a;·~-v~-' ~-~:=::: ~=

~oodto ~~-g;.,% ·

will euable ......yiicians ·to aet
c1osape and~ of beat· "meat baaed on individUal re-

~ 'is tbe

·

sci-

Office of Vice Prwsldent.for Academic Aflalrs •. :::.............. 5,200
- Office of Vice Presldeirt for Oper:ations) &amp; Syslams .: .....~ 14.300

Pre-i"'nt

·

- F•culty·Student -.uon .............................................. 2,60!1

Office of Vice
for ·Student Atfairs .... ........ ,.........
· Office .of Vice
for University Rei.UOno .. .. :......
Office of Vice President for FK(IIties Planni1111 ...............

3;900
1.300

1,300 ·

re~~mk.~
tbe=
E:_~~
,;. ~
-r ·:::I~j:~:::_:.:=:::;::=;:::::::: · l~olizes, and~ druci--Pro- • L_ __:;'--..:..._---'--~-'--'-"",":-;;_---;--;--.--...---'
......., tliat can_ vaxy greatly
f.rom one -Persml~ to another:

•
· ·-

...:.. •

•
_

.
••

•

.

:... :.-,~
- United FUnd KiCkoff Meet'
~
ific. .patieiit s!Umtion8,

~=
~~:u:
ence .tbe patielit'o drua re~·

• •
IU"der
direction -of Dr:
William Juako, assistant profesoor of pbarmaceutico, tbe new
iaboratory will bellin ill! operationa later this fa11, on a limited experimental basis at first
Initlauy, it will monitor juet'two druge for which tbe tber&amp;·
peutic doee is quite eloee lo tbe
toxic doee--&lt;ligoxin and digitoxin. 1be dOsages for these
Pour propam11 to a.ve
Tbe third
will be a compopnds are critical, .aDd if
Jewish atudeDts at UIB have Chuf lvri, 4 Helnew-epeaking not correctly adjueted, can rebeen aDJIIIIIDCed b)r Rabbi JUS'" ciJde. This· p1'0gtll1JI, Rabbi suit in to:ric accumulations of
tin . Hofmann, dinictor of tbe Hofmann notes, is. designed to the ·d ruge in the system, Dr..
Hillel FouDdatiab.
meet tbe expre&amp;eeci ·neec1 of a Juako says.
· A pJOfeMioaal coomeelljn1 II"C!Wini nwpber . of ~tudenls
Other drugs with similar poMrvice diil!cted by Rabbi Mor- who have llpent a yeet m .Israel tentlai toxicitiee will 'be inria A. cu-, a poyc:bolotlist and have aequired a mmsure eluded in the ·lab's monitoring
with 1bo Buflalo· Boerd of. Bd- of lfeb.--&lt;IPMkina . prcificlen- activities later on.
u&lt;:atKm. will be available IP iltii•
SiVeral Iaraeli ·students on
- dmta u4 ~..-~~ campue hue apeed ~ meet
eYIII&gt;iDp In the tSlWil ~ with tbia - Oil . Sunday
40 Capeoi Blvd. Rabbi Collen, afternoons in the Hillel Houae.

.u.e

Hillel Has~ NeW Programs
.For U/Bs Jewi$1 Students
Proiram

cy: ·

~·~:=~~~~:. r'A'' fourth'"~dj~~n ,.~ .be;-;·

bi, brings both a religious and
a ~ hackpound· to liis
· work, Rabbi Hofmann silys.
A -.:1 new program will
be a Y i d d i.a h Conversation
' -Group _to be called ''Yiddish ·
Without A ·Bellncbe." Tbe
~~ will be led bvby 1Mr 0&amp;Jewish F.;.;.uy
Servioe of 8idfalo and Ene
County. According to Rabbi
H...____ "Mr. Stromberg haa
a ~ illterest in tbe _perpetuation . ot the Yiddish 'Jan.
J111118 and a Y.Jddish culture
and Ia perticularly anziOus t6
make tbia rich treasure of tbe
':Jewlab
herit""e available to
YllW!I peop!L" He inlaid&amp; to
maii this IICtivity "as"'eaJorllble u poBble and to avoid
the ....U clnJdpri involwd in
1ear JJ 1 n 1 a Juauqe_". 'lbe
poup will · meet on Sunday .
....______ m· ...__ ~"'-' HouA

· ;;;;;stromberL

.,_

- ....,.

Judaism Information Center,
to

fi!e

ll!t • .,P·'On : t.be · finlt · n~~or ·

Moore Seeks

sen:ate·· . ' .....

. :- ... .lnp¢ .
?!!f::%,

-

-

'

-

-

·.:&gt;

-

.Is.SchOOuled for Toinorrow

.

.

·
· • Presiilent Robert "L. ' Ketter SCli~ Building. and 3 p.m.,
and Robert w. Ramsey, presi- Room 201, Hayes Hall; 1'uesdent, Unital Fund of Buftalo day, ~ September 26, 4 p.m.,
and Erie County and president, . Conference Room, 1807 ElmBuffalo Savings Bank, will be ·wood Avenue; and Weclnesdey,
main speakers at .tbe kick-..H September ZT, 10:30 a.m.,
f "·- U ·
·
Room 21, 4242 D:.o«e Lea
. u.:i~ i
cam~;'= ROad
·-:-row at 4 p.m. on the tenth .
Tboee working eloeely with
fioor of Goodyear Hall
Unitea Fund agencies apin
streee "What Your Dollars Do"
Alao on tbe program will be when you make a coatribution
William D: Hassett, Jr., gener- to the United Fund. A weekly
al cbainnan of tbe 1972 Tciroh ·pledge of 19 cents ~$10.00 per
Drive ani! .President of W. D . year) will buy a discussion on
· Haaaett, Inc., and ' tbe · Very common problems for women
Reverend James Demske, S.J., · -;";"~ olheir children aloo&amp;c:hainnan, schOOla and colleges ~~Y Service Society; 22
division and president of Can- cents'a week ($ll:o6 per _yeer}
isius College. ,
will buy one dily of care in a
Children' Aid SocietY foete
According to Dr. A. Weetley .. .....::~ f 1
•~"- ~ ...,~
Rowland, -vice · president for ........, ~ a peg..,,,,.,.. ......... ; .""
U niversity relations and chair- """ll!_.f Week_(~.00 ~ yeer),
man of the "Upivereity's cam- ~· braille•ma~~­
paign,- the kick'of/ meeting will ••"!""' mothere of ~ cbSI•
be attended by more than 100 ' c,lf"'! through the_BuffaiO AaeoUQ,i'l(ersity faculty and siaff CJ&amp;tion .for tbe Blind;_and '1-.93
who are serving aa C8inpalgn ($100 per yeer) will buy a
leaders in the 22 diVisions of tope record&lt;;r IJ!IOd for speech
the University drive lo raise .and languagp development for
$110,000.1
m::U~:t~ ~:~
To ~t eacb division in its tion for Retarcli!d Children. . ·
campaign, · the United Fund
. Report meetings on campus
committ,ee on campus haa es- for divieional leeders or -their
tabJished a quote_ for each. (See representatives are planned for ·
above. l
Room 201 Hayl!li..HaJl at 4 p.m.
Training seiiSions for United on September 29, Octobei- 6,
Fund workers will be con- Octoboir 13, an·d October 20.
ducted: Monday, September Additional report meetings will
25; 10 am., Room 244! Health be sCheduled '!!' neceeoary._

.F.:.J

.J.·

of Nor:ton. Pamphlets on a va- ~teM==
~
rietr. of subjects will be made
available. Included in the col- · rets or aurprisee, accordinc . to
lection . is a eeries. of publica- ~ GiJbert Mopre.
tions on every Jewish holiday,
Moore haa l11lllOUDCed thet
on ,prayer, on the eesential be- tbe Senate ... ac
"" tively ·-"''-«
liefs of Judaism, Oil the Jewish nominees .for ita · standing~~
at_titude toward divoroe, famil;v apecial committees. Under curplanning, evolution, and BCJ· rent prooedures, vacancies are
ence. Alao ~Jvailable will be a filled- bv · tbe Faculty Senate
aeries of paperbacks published Executi~ Committee from
bv tbe Hillel Fotmdation ipec- alatee prepared by tbe Nomiificall.v· for Jewish atudents. In- .nating Committee. This comcludecl is ~ Lewisohn's mittee is chaired. by C I a .u d e
WhatlaThU./ewish'Hm~a~~er, wBCJ.ence.elcb, prof-..
_
of political HQ•11KD D ••
Morris
Adler's -The World of
'1.Y.l.£i L' Ufu.t
The
Talmud,·
and . B e r n e. r d
Bamt!erler's The bible-A
Vacancies currenUy e:ri.st on · A "Fund\,_,.., __ and Friend
1o1.JHkrn ./ewyh ·Approach. 'n&gt;e several Senate committees, in·Judaism "Information C e n t e r eluding Academic Freedom and Raising': · c a m P a i g n was
will aleo- p~ .studeotll an Respoiuribility, and tbe Nomi- Ia~ this week !&gt;;v HOME
ilpportunity to raise QUMtions 11l1lting Committee.
·
'
&lt;Hoi18JJJg OpporJunities ~
about Judaiam.
·
·
·
Equal) - 'Tbe go a Is are to
AD.Y II1I1IDber of the Univer- double membership ·and ~~lise
sity wiabini~ recommend can- $10 000
d4latee for ·Senate committees ~ ' ·
sbould c a II Professor Welch
HOME, whose ~p
(eitension 1361) or tbe Senate includes many -from tbe Uruollloe, ¥ .oore ateted.
'
veraity community, .:urrenUy

t..

.

_..JDrwe" TT-.:..J_
THU.}'
UIU.H:~r YYt

Film Grant

offers
assi!Jlanoe
to people
ing holl)e&amp;
aa well
as .helpbuyOil

caaes of housing

discrimina:tinri.

·

·

·-

at 7:30 p.m. On S.~t
8 p.m.-;" a Monte"Carlo N ' t is
acbeduled lor the Empire
of the &amp;atler-Hilton. AdJnis..
sion is $2 and PJOvideo "$10 •
000"' in ............ M.n..
' '
.-...... --r-::
For furth·el' information
abopt tbe drive or about joinina
HOME, contact Peggy MaaoD
at 832-4679.

-'s-Club .·

'tilcmen
YYI·

.

Tbe .w..._•s Club of U/B
are· now manned by a volun- will begiD iJ;!I. 'nth yeer with
teer staH.
a membership ·tea on SundaY
With tbe $10,000 i., be · October 1• !n .t!'e
Cl.ub.:
-awarded to S e t h · Feldman, .
"
•
HOME I Tbe
OrganiZation •
Yl•
. tbe
graduate student in Endiah. raised m
campougn,
ties ocbedule
aleo
1'be grant is one · of fi ve hopes to hire s full-time s~ _Holiday Mini-Market Place ~
awarded by the. Inatitute this fo~ t"!' center. Several local m- November and . tbe Annuaf
yeer. ,
.
· stitutions b ave pledged to Scholarship Ball in n.-m',
... - - - ·
'J'be. stipend will eDable Mr. matdl money raised dtJrintctbis
New members of the {)lub
Feldman to visit Rtllsia While week's drive, ,Jim Ryan, ·mem- ·
~ tbe filme of DZiga ber of tbe HOME Boerd of Di- are invited to become ~vol'lled'·
"'Verl6Y, a leading theorist of rectm;s ani! U/B atalf member, in Neweomers Activities. Thfs
•
group offers events such as
Soviet Cona&amp;ruct:ivimnrlio in- explains.
troduced the~ conTbere will be two JuDd raia- ~taatm, and croes coungy
CIIIt' of Kino-Pravda . tbe ~ ·events ·Jater this week. On akiin paled to making - ·
.1910's. Mr. ¥eldman
£rlday, a Melting Pot SuJ&gt;per·'
'
- his - m t at the Mliaeum will be .J;eid at. tbe Unitarian ·-For f u:-r t h e r info.,.,.tion
ot Modern Art and Ant!iOJogy Clum:b at 695 ElmwiiOd This about the N11W01111Jer8, ooiitac:t • · •
Pll.a ArcbiWe in ·New..::Voli. ia tbe -;or ·membenJhip func.
. the v~ Jtunst- tiD!I and,. according to Ryan, Dorothy Smith at fllll ·8418 .of
In Vielma, and tbe everyone 18 !'fled to bring food Sandra ~lasa, d!a4man of
. . _ Film lnltitut.e.
'p cooDmitt.ee, at
and friends.· Tbe aupper starts
A $3,000 American ·FiJm In-

Its oflioes at 250 Delaware Ave.

r:IY

:!tu}f.l~: =~~

.Jli-pur-

fri~

=.z;te .

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GRE~
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7

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~~'0
118 Faculty
Me~
Get· Ptoinoti&lt;&gt;nS,·
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N.
' 1\.T:...-~..J 'D..'. f 'Il.-..c.
.
~lora
GEDUCATION J. wenty- me .lWll~.l r wl r IUleBSOI'S -::...-~~~~~a
m.v

6, col. I)
'"lbey (the Soviet People) are
stiff
to the UDillld

-01~

-GN'CYI'ES

·
~ viet Unlao. "In
opinlan .they
One hunched eigb-. tacul-·
,P.o\CULTr or .,ucutoNAL ft'll·
able
R. ope, in- . are Ul ...-lve, ...
•
ty pi'OIDOtilllls in ranks have DID: r...~, D. DeBacy', ... otrudor 110 .-....1 profeoOor, R. • ililperi~ pciiRir wl,tb a peat
• ....................-........,...........-.. _been 8I1JIOUDCed f!&gt;r academic oiotant pn&gt;fMIOr to ·- . t e p10- DeFraaco, .-....&amp;; 11101- 110 ' amount of IDdultrial pcJWir.
_
1972-73, including one~ r_,r; "- Pap.!ia,....-..t p10- ~ P - t ! T:· V,en:li, u- Commullilm ia aot the .....~.,. ·
l'leaidmt ~ W. · Heyna mem to diatingliisbed plofe1110r, (MOOr 110 -.:iate pn&gt;f_,r,
uatu.t 11""-&gt;r 110 PliO- lem. lt'a the Ruas:iao u&amp;;;i.
~ ~ --tbe~6 ODe to Jt!llldina pn&gt;fesaor aDd 2!1
P.o\CULTr OP NATUUL IICIKNCM - f~ ...,;.._,_, ;.,.,...,.., iam."
Ammclm
Oil
•
to lull profflllllll&lt;
~ro~
Heollh Science Educatioft &amp; E..,..
In 1967, ButlUo - l l l d a
tioD .-.ber ClOIIepa aDd uDiDr. Gemard ~ medicinal oociate prof-r; MGIMIIIOiia: luation: S. Wiloo11, inotrudor 110 cball""4«' to Ewell ''It W8.B Ul
vemitiee to '-&gt;e "Coopera~ Chemistry, Sc:hool of'Pbarmacy, • C. Chou, -tu.t profe.or tO U. uoiotant profe.or; Modicol·Tech- intereotinl PIOIII8Cl to deWIIop
iJ11 JDaiitut:laal"_-ill the ,1973-74 was D8IDed a dislinguiabec! pn&gt;- oOciale prof-r; M; Piocil. u- no/o,Y: ft.-Pub, inotrudor to a mediwia ~=!( Ill llile,
AAiodeiDic . ~ In- t 011110r while Dr. Marvin Zelen, oiotu.t profoooor to -.:iate PliO- . uoiotant prof..ar; ·a Murphy, Pn!Siite aDd .
~
temlblp p r 0 1 ram (AAIP). statistics, wa.s awarded the title . !MOOr; PAyoict: M. HaD;&gt;. aaooiot- -iotant prof01110r to -.:iate and hrilll it up In the bleraid!y
Preaideat lfeyDa ·hila uUd for leadinc pniti!IIIOr.
•
ant pn&gt;feooor to """'!""'te pro- prole.or.
pf uDivenlitleL" . .
110111iaeWww by Ocklber 11; of - . Named to fUll plofEIIIIIOI'IIbips ~eMOr; ¥ ·. ~ uoiotant pro- c ~P ~lcun:: Analo.,y:
I&gt;w:iJ11 Dr Ewell's flflem
·youuaer floallty aDd~ w'!o in academic~ are:
~~~o~..::=: • R " Uoociate.pio=~.V.:,~ · yearahere,toWdollar.._.n..
evidaDlle ~lor academic M. Brill, an:bitecture, Faculty Huefiier, auiOtant'Jil'Of._r to u-· K. Kuo, , uoiotant pn&gt;f...,r 110 tuNe In the flmded - . a b el-.
admini*atiaD. 'I1ie 40 - men of Arts and J.etters; .A_Nasci- oociate prof-.r.
·
. - t e profMOOr; C. AbeyowUi, fort have · iDcnued ellhtfold.
aDd emolled 4he pn&gt;- menlo,- Puerto Rican Studies,
fACULTY OF IICIDICII8 "
-~ - _,...... to -.:iate . His oftice baa reepoaaibDity fOr
gram this )'fill' bQna tile tote! Faculty of ·Arts aDd Letters; w . ADI&lt;INIIITit4TION : ·. Economia: K. prof...,r; T. Flanapn. aaiotant se8ldni out fimda for .-reb,
number of ACE F'ellinrs tq 313 Hatchett and D. Blumberg, a1t, ~~:io=~~~~ ~=~ino-=~
and he feels ~~ reaearch Ia
since 1.966. A recent CoUncil Faculty of Arts and Letters; C. aooiatont profeosor to -.:iate pro!011110r: Depan""'nt of Modi- both an . esaential aspect of a
study bKjica1ed that 85 ('&lt;!f . Garton, classics, Faculty 'of profeoaor; Geogrcqihy: J . McCon- cine: L. Katz, aooiatu.t_profe.or couniJi,( development and an cent of former AAIP partici- .A.ts and Letters; T. Razik, cur- nell, 888iatont profesoor to·,.__ to aaoociate pro!NOOr; R Noble, essential element in a uDiver- ·
pants now bold posts m aca- -riculum development ·and in- ciate profeosor; Huwry: J . Lar- auiatu.t prof"""'• to · aaociate sity's reputation. ''Reeesrch
demic adminiStratiaD. M.,o r e atructional media, Faculty of k!n- auistont profeooor tO ~- PI'O.feoaor; - L. Bel'IUlJ'di-, _clliUcal and public service are two aofhan ·60 per cent of these an: Educational StUdies; R. . Wei- cate profeuor; N. Balt~r. 801nst- " ...!'toni professor to clinical u - tivlties of a uDiversity that are
(
presUJenla, provooits;· vice pres- "rer: educational administration, ant professor to 8880Cl8"' pro- """!!'~ profeaor; S. W•tten~rg. determinsn'IB of its Pn!Stige.
idenla, deena. and directors. Faculty of Education&amp;J Studies; ~=~ toL. ~ie ';:,=.;"~: ~1!':.~-~~~~.~~ They
the visible ~
Thirty ACE Fellows have be- R. ~vin, instruction, Faculty Frueh, -.assistant .profeoaor to u- sistB.nt professor to research ... and ge~ .m. ~e newsps.~.
CQllle preai&amp;nbi.
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of Educational S t u d i e s; P . sociate professor; K. von Moltke; , oociale professor; ' C. Bentzel, as- Not mmmuzmg ' the teaching
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• · •Goldstein, Faculty of law and - assistant professor to associate sistant professor to assoCiate pro- function, he pointed out that it
The Fund. far Jurisj&gt;rudeJIICI!; S. Addelman, professor; Political Science : C. fesaor; Neurology : R Schlqen- is less tangible and· more diffi.
in How YOlk - lfllntl from statiStics Faeulty of Natural Pla,nck, BSSIBtont professor to as- ha'!ft assistant profeosor to as- cult to assess outside of an in~~OenblbF-~...h~....=' twothr Sciences ' and M!lthe':"8-tics;_ A. ~~~•. P!:;';~;';d:lr='i,;
~!J ~!=•~rolf.,.!:~~: stitution.
r~ - - - · - ...,.,_..
Monk, School ?f Soc.ial Pohcy, sociate professor; Sociology: T. ical associate professor; Pathol- Future Plano •
of Its 10CIIvllleL A $330.000 chol· Faculty of Social SCiences and
Kang, assistant profi!S80r to as- ogy: E. l.,otzova, instructor to aaA gourmet cook and author
lenp crant·fram Danforth will oup- Adm.inistration; J. Milligan, sociate professor; G. Gibson, as- sistant professor; Pediatrics: L . of two books on where to eat
port the U~ Conoortium tor history, Faculty of Social Soi- sistont l'_rofessor to ~te proMoso~ch. assistant professor to when out of town, Dr. Ewell
World o.der &amp;tudles. a pnlject ences and Administration; C. fessor;_ R O'Sh'!", ass1stant pro- ass&lt;&gt;&lt;;~ate professor; P . Ogra, re- has no plans to really retire.
brinp topttwr scholars from eo.~ Welcli po~itical . scien~, Fac- ~~;h~o=~io~:rT~Wh~~: ~~~ a;:r~rr'!F.I~: ~:: ~s fu~-include;s ~ntin~g
lumbi8, Hl!~rd, MIT, Prt~, '· ul~. o~ ~ial Sctences and ~d- lecturer to &amp;88istaht professor.
structor to assistant profeuor; his stud1es on So~et mdustrial
Berkeley, and Yale 1 D - on_,_ m~tratio!'; L. Blankenship,
IJNDERGRADUAn: STUDIES: Ph ysiPhortnllCology: F. Kaulfman, as- dev~?pment, national ~
top...- wOrtcl- and human pohtlcal BCI'lllce, Faculty of 8&lt;&gt;- cal Education - Men: E. Muto, sistant professor to associate pro- pohCies and world agncultural
rights. The"""'
of $75,000 cial.. Sci,enpes ,and ~dmiJUstra- 88!'istant professor . to . ~te lessor; Psy,:hjatry: Z. Taintor, aa- · development. He will consult
will o~ t h e - Or the Cent8r tion· D Rosenthal political sci- prolesoor.
sistant profeosor GFI' to aaoociate lor the United Nations, the
_ for Defer\18, 1~. a Fund en..;, 'Faculty ~(Soci!'J Sci- HeolthSciences
P:.:J\f!'''t' ~kA..!u':lman,u!"fi::i • Wo';_lli~~ta!4\.~\-. 1
for ...,_ ~ In Woshlnaton ences •and Admirustrabon; A.
. 1 • ms_"! . r . c
...
lind C0Dgre8810nill comm1-.
which ~~ · it&gt;e\!etenoe ~· Graziano, . psyc!mlogy, . Facul- en~:the Fac\llty of Health Sci- rrid:""~:~~·?,;,·;!'o.!:'(!~ He, ~ also continue to travel .
of thi U.S. the Funci ·{Or ....... ll&lt; of Social ' Sciences and Ad·
-sca'!{&gt;L ·oP~III'Jl':X ' Dente! clinical associate profjleiOr; J . ~1yely_ ~ he.,..;n .keo!P
estobl- 'ili '1967''li)j;poltS&lt;w&lt;..~- ministration~" am! ' E : Powell; MateritJts~~J:-Eiclt. 888i8tanl'jiro-· Butsch ·c!inical inotl'lll:lor,to ·ollb'- his'Dome m Buftalo. - He will '
ra'nie {ei.eicii' .S::.tW8ffM.'::£"k;i"fk s00i010if " Faeut£Yn ..of'"S6COO'J lessor to associa~. professor; Fued ical ~istant profeuor; J . Allen, also •~Jn.&gt;ttaildam : witbvl&gt;r. r.
education on a'! f e c 11 n 1 Sciences 'and Administration.
Prosthodontics: D . Olsen, instruc- &lt;:,lil!ical aaociate prof-..r to .u- Harold Segal -one bioI o 1 y
-P1Pmoted to 'full profei!sors tor to.JlloiotaJit _prri!IIIIIOr; J)pera, ~I&lt;! pro(~.9FI'; ~ .. Subm- counoe for _undergm&lt;IIJates.
peace.
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th health .. ., .. - c. · ·• ··:E ·• twe Denti8t fy &amp; Endodontico: P. D!&amp;IUOII, . &lt;Jiw¥ r~ •P«1&gt;1 His&lt;attempta&gt;10·Qbtalif111~ "
.0
Ametica's declining birthrate Gale, behavi:::dw~ted em==p:rs:tcf.~= I~~~~.:::'~~ f&lt;Jr
indicate that an ....
portends a dramatic decline in sciences, School of Dentistry; koWI)ci, instructor"' assistant pro- clinical assi8tant pn&gt;fesoor to clin- _!'Jrei.J' n~ """- may be OJ&gt;!"!•'
future enron-' at colleges P . Staple, oral biology, Sch09l !esilor; Oral Biolo.BY: M. R&lt;:ed. in- ical ~te .-profeeoor; R ~tt, ~N ~ aC~
and · oitive'rsfti8s. · &amp;ccord.it!g to of J?&lt;;ntistry; N. M&lt;?hl~. o~ ii:::ttp'at~~!"y: iolf'tsJ1~~: =~=~- prof..aor , "' 8SIOCI.Ote gust, ~here ·
"presented ·' :;·
Princeton Uliivenlity President medicme, School of Dent!S~ry •
r •
· te
seaooL or- PIIAH&gt;lACY: Medi; paper to· the American Institute
William G. Bowen, The out- S. FISChman, . 0 ~ m~cll!••
~=~~ 1!'Joo~~: ~n~l:· cinaj Chemistry: .It Co~um, ao- of Chemists, Dr. Ewell met
10
lool&lt; for the· nat : 'l5 years is ~ool of _D entistry, S. Cl811~ • clinical inslruf!or u.. clini&lt;:&amp;l as- sistont professor to 8SSOCI8te pro- with the three ambassadors to
that the rate of increase will penodontics, School. of ~ntist- sistant prof"""'!r.. Pmoc!ontiCB: H. lessor; W. Ande':"'D, 818istant the U.S. from Nation a I i J t
drop ofJ ahd a!'twill~ l&gt;ecome ry; c. VBI\ Oss, !'llcroblOIOf!Yo Benatov.ch, clinical IJI8tructor ~ professor to ·8880CI8"' _profeuor; China He is attemptin~ get
negative in the 1980s, &amp;¥en School of Med1cme; J . Kite, chrucalassistantprolessor;W.O - lmmllnology: P. B~g~~U~,reoearch
.· . to.
f
BBid in an intervieW in Prince- microbiology School of Med ~ Connor, clinical instructor to clin- assistant profe.or to reoearch u- P,"1'11ll81110n
~
.. or
ton's quarter 1 y _publication, cine; s. c ~hen, pathology, ical assistant ·professor; Remov- · SOCiate profeooor.
,1
~'ff. at ~10~~
Univenity. One· very practical School of Medicine; F. Albu,
..ri.en,~ was
~ Ia that, "~ num~r ~rque, pharmarology, School f"'~h.""' Co
_ ~
~
' with Its · agricultural developor'.inBUtutlons, especially pn- - o(Medicme; A, _~ge, surgery, ~c:u.J.Y'&lt;O
"'1:&gt;~
':_~.1&lt;3
- ment, Dr. Ewell hila cantinued
vale onea, are faclnJ battles f9r ~School of Medicme (prof"l'""r
1&lt;'.:~..4- •
to reaearch the 'poeaihllity of
survival, - because tbey· depend GFT) ; F . Glllll!''!er, surgery, T n,.,...,
.L:UUN\U-IVe
_ the "..-a -revolution." He hila
~ '! gtell~ ~ fhan pub-_
I of Medic!:'!"; . and J . ;uoJJC;;y
. -.r , , .
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just .returned tram Rome where
lie institutions on mcome from Spero, School of Nursmg.
The COoperative College day, ~r 11. .
· he p-llld &amp;J1111181' ODita pc&gt;•tuition,• he said
Other AdYanc:emento
.,..
Center, 465 Washington Street, ' .Dr. Charles F . ~ey.
tential to the ValicaD. ,
•
• • •
.· Aa compiled by the ifmver- re-&lt;&gt;pened Tuesday with Earle dll'8Ctor, charsed m the inciHe awaita furtlao· wont 011
Flftr •• - 01 1 oly ........,. 17 •sity Personnel-Office, other ad- M . I:.acey, aCademic dean, serv- d ent, hashis~ grantedt
toperB!IIIIIl-tbe Cblna,WI!_Ime but"' aiade
and
vancemenfs include:
..
ing as interim executive olfjcer. 1eave-at
reques . prepare. it quita dear 1 could pve tbem
ilaw ....,. .....,_ ·111 an
FACUI:TY or. A11T8 1oND LE'MUB:
The facility had· been closed a. defepse. Bailey '!' cbarpd informatiOn aDd advice 011 the - - ......,.... at the Unl· P~""'t' 0/fiCO: C. Tung, from since a shooting incident Mon- w1th two CO!-ID!s of~ rnoet llCODOIIIlc planninc of
......, of Mlc:lllpftl •the u- ua~Stont proj'01110r . to SIIOCI8te
assault and illegal ~ of .thel :...a........ "
pectatlan that _,.; of them will J&gt;rofessor; Puer!o Ru:an Stlf&lt;l•u:
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a .38 callher weepon. He ill AI&gt;
r "-~·
......,. ..........,_ at
22. The R O...daro, l~r to '!"!'istant
•
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ctised of shooting William -~
_
...~~ .. funcl. ~ro[esaor; C/oulCO: R :l!mn, av:- T:rJ:DDrl Hra1-.1;&lt;Thts
GOI....t'. a. fonner
1
~---... ·-·...tont J&gt;rofeooor to UIOCUlte pliOyy Dr v
'0 ""6'
_.,
•. __,bh'
, od ll,r- a ....,.., ~ of $1.4 !euor; En1lilh : H. _Wolf. aasistont
.
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,
. selor, abd Mrs. E IE&amp; et (Cofttinaed ,;,,;
8 • col. ISJ ·
G
1 Golde!£
.. • mlllaorfialll the Nallonal1- profeooor --4&lt;&gt; 8880CI8te profeosor;
of Haallh. 1111 pal of the _,am J . Dinp, asoistont pri&gt;f!'"""r to as~erC~me~
n
~Y wa.s appoinled, interiui -..:1008 Dll'nLO&lt;lftOII. 11e1in111111J
Is 111 .......,_ _ _ _ , _ , hlchly· sociate profell80r; G. O_G!8f~y, asY
· .,an
.
I" director last Friday by U/B MQD(Iay, September 26, tbil N-m~n...
In Ieos thon the sistont p_rof""""r. to 8SSOCI8"' pro- coverer_ of. a cancer contro. . President Rooert L. Ketter. IliaD Center will
lrodltlonal _......
.._
fesaor; lj. Schmitz, aa10tant pro- .drug· highlight '!he WBFO-~M U / B ..... administrative respon- inolnlction from 4-6:16
et
z-~
fesaor to ~iate prol....,r; A. progr&amp;ll! line-up for the commg sibDity"'""tor ,..._ State facllit.ty the Cantolicilln Ceutor,
M8la
•
Haskell a8818&amp;u.l prof....,r to as- week. .
""" . ~
St. AU c:bildnD of lll8lllbon of
. Flor!dB ~ nal Uniyer- . sociate profeooor; French: T . KaAt 10- p.m.; Sunday, Sept.em- ~ch prepares disadvanlaP,d the UDIWnity OOIIIIIIIIIIity s1ty, iJi the pianniD( stqe smce vanagb, 8881B&amp;onl--professor to-!'"·, , ber '1:1 Mr Clark will lead off hilh scbool ~ to enter we1came. 1"'MMe - - the N-19691 'lrill open ~ for a~;t sociate p~r; T. Klme, .....t-. a twe1·....,..we.a. series of "Ford coli~es and ~venlitleL
• c.t.r 'et SM-22117.
l'l'OZlllllltely 5,000 students this • ~~~,,.!. :s=-~ Jl'.';t HaH Fofum"1ectures on ~iCal • The 1 in~ : aeeative ,._~; . _ ~ Opa 110 '-lty,
fall.
assistant profesoor to associate issues by well-known pUblic fig- rector _.,.ved ID BiJIIalo. 1BH otolf ~. olllllimla. ~ Tower
rofesaor: E Metzger asaistant ures
?. - - • ·
week tQ.-ye •acadanic dMn -&lt;:efateria a . - - . . . . . , . . ,
·1111 tnt-~ - -- to be - ~rofesso&lt;' to ' aaoociate·'profesaot ;
Monday September25 Dr/ at .dll!:ccG. For !bit
IWICbaad~ from 7&lt;11! LllL
"' the Ropnto of Muoic: P. Gearhart. instructor to ' Emst T . Krebs Jr,, will
yeera, he baa,...'lll*tor of 110 e:ao ~ - ~Frida:rs­
Uniwnlt)'ofthe - o f How YOlk asoistont pro[..,r;S. M~. u- on . ''Vitamin il.t7 in Hmnan a U'Jiitar-~an UDi,...u.t - 1'!: ~na'ft.u ~the,t!
will be.,._-.., !iep18mlf&gt;t'_'Z1 , sistant pn&gt;feooor !&lt;&gt; aooociale .PliO- and Animal Nutrition," from
Chui'ch teilcher ~lion JIIO'" -~ ..
~ - · - • _...._:, in a Public Clll'elllllft1 In ~bally. feuor: M Hale. lnstruct.or to .....
. . • '-• J---r.-.. West IDdleL ~....... _
• __,
eD ._.,.., aF ·aistoni p.;,feoadr; J. Eastman, in· S-9 p.m. 'Jbi!,VItamin,.....,.... fh"'~ =:=:.,,_ been in llll ~ t._ 6;80.p.m. 110
___.~ In ....._ wiU be otructor to asaistont )&gt;rof...,r; as I.aetnlef can he used®~- _
•
="~~~'-11:80 p.lll.
-soanUJ&lt; rt&lt;ili4n &amp; Porlul-: trol C8IICIIII'; Dr. Km. con-· - - . . ., at ~ ·CBOIIV&amp;' , . Ublwr_ . . ID lncllwldu* """' How K. RaiMU..... aooiotaDt J&gt;.rof-r tends, He~ CllOOtU' iS iSI-t ~, oity a.m. 1e to aD Ualother ·to associate proi..Or; T'-tre: ' by vitamin deficiellcY aDd that
He bci1da a liaebelcn fftlin' ~,_.. uilatd .........._
Amaow- --.c the ..,_, J . Pardee. uoiotant profeooor to masaiile d.- G1J1 eoatro1 the- Wi1lmllniic State~ (Jal.
m - --..L The
......__ ......_ ftJdlod on II associate prof~; W. Chambero: diaeaae in _
,. - . 'I1IIi Jete (Coan.) ~ a iilalter't
will . _ IIIIIIOkY ...a
ealloe&gt; · .,. rniiiiMJ per_: inatnl&lt;;~Dr to ~~r-~ FDA and.: 'the AMA" dllpatilj~ from the Uaivenlity ,of
......unp at 140 Ca- - . ......,_,_, ...,._._, E. ~nc. , P. thla.
ilectieut.
• •
po1a, 7-t p.m.
.
·
l8achat aldaa. polic:enWI. _
IWOCIIIIe profeooor.
·
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.

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are:

annou..-

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8

China

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Celrter
_.·

Js Interim

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b..w.,

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Director

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~21,1972 _

8

~ty with •&amp;

cOftU. r.a- ·

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQ~

cafeTaD.!lllt9 lloor
p.m., iod·

In ·bor
aocialion of

:::!:i.:orfloD,
.

c:bmp.

•

A.

ci..e.

8~ ~ .. .
&amp;';!!""'"

ud

!=".~ ~ oociale
01 oral .-lloiDe,
~ ~r,.:~.:,.t:; ~.::- Hall,- 11! a.m.-6: 80
~ ...,.._ lUDdeci bY Carnecie. ,.,._ KA"ri:s" : U/B ..._a-nDanforth ud Y - · Collop, · Cart Gym Tenn~•

IHri&gt;:!', Cc!nfe!e11C8 'ThMb-e. Norton. ~ ..-_'for /
AdmiooioD c:blup.
y,.. D1k ill - r i l d by the Oou.rtll, 8 p.m.
M&amp;'tiNG POT ..m..•: HOME
l'roDdeD(a Committee on HeiR o u a in r Opportunitieo Made cruilment and~ ol Wom- PSYCBOJIAT: Fint lloor cafeteria,
Equal) ia._rin(abrin(-your·
enaq.J/B ud '!'fill. ~.onleP-1 ' N~~~o S-6 p.m.
own-fi&gt;od..nd'frieada dbmor at the remediM to diacriminalion aDd PIIYIDCI- ,.,,..,..UIUJI. · Dr N G
U ' ta ·
,...._ __._ 696 Elmwood, how the world ill cbanrinr for
• •·---~~~ Bell. T~·~-...:..~
::·. nir~ia i&gt;o 'admiaaion
................... ~
I'ILIII"":

-

7:;,

cbarre-"' .. "-.

:.:."':z -~ ~·= scuul&lt;li . ~:to~~; ~~~:

IIIIi&amp; ..8vtCBS•: .Sabbi.th ud · •IIUti'MCtion. one belt clua. ia pre· Sukkoth .service. Oner Sbabbat requioite; $2 fee plus materials.
and T-orab on. · Hillel H~. 3IYI Norto~5 p.m.
'
oiO Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
FILMS• : S/u Wore a YelloW RibINftiiHATIOIUL POLK ·DANCmG 0 :
bon . (Fo!dl_;. loCO ~pen.
Inatruction in bui~ nope during and 9 p.m. .W'!"""' S
lirat bour, 80 Die1endorl Annez, (SchGtten) (llobiaon. 1922) , loCO
8 p.m.
'
Capen. 7 p.m. Free.

:a.t::;

· SATlJRDAY:-,.-23
aurr a::NTISi•: &amp;gin.ninl Bdt lMtnu:lion, 807 Norton,

CIUTIVJ:

noon-4 p.m.

CREATIVE &lt;:B.U:r

atelier, 4 p.m. Re!.,.bmenla in
112 H~r. 8:80p.m.
.
P'ILIIll•: Mtll'fr'• .;J .Zt&gt;rro
(Niblo, 11120) ,-'147 Dieleiidorl, 9
p.m. Faith (Di;nbenko), 147 piefendorl, 7 p.m. Free.

BILBI&lt;T

PILl&lt;••:

c;- Pi«,

Confere.-

Tbeabe Norton. Cbeck

..-a..

CEII'I'i:a• : Bae In- • for~ Admilaion_cbarp_,

·

=.,d.\~~';:: bel!.,~ EXamlTS
$2 fee ph.S-mflteri$."807~onou, -~---~------.7-10 p.m.
:
BRAZtt.L\N P1LM PIS'I'IVAL •: Ganga

Zumbo (Carloe Diegueo, ' 1963),
H eitor doii·Prazeru (Antonio Carloe Fontoura) , Confeft!IICe Tbeatre, NortOn, 8 p.m. .. ·

WEDNESDAY-27

~p=~·.=..::;e.:J ~
~ IIUIWI XHOl"'U. ~219,

~~~~~:
11' a.m.-6 p.m., Mondays-Fridays.

· Run.o tbrourb September 22.
m0roc&amp;A.PBIC UIIIBlT•:· Some
Devils and Aneela Who Are
· Fmndl o( Mine, oiid Other Sub-

jects, Jobn Buerk, director of University Orientation, diaplay cases1
Hayes Hall ~y. Runs througli
September 29.
.

. BRAZILIAN PZBTIVAL UB.IBI'I'! ~ More

-con-

tban o10 poeten abowinr the
tribution of painten lind print-

=~towo% t;'ft:r;i'i:"'..!;

Rodripeo, Theresa SDDo., Ziraldo, Jaguar, and Rubens Gm:bman. September 26 - October 10,
Gallery 219, N o r to n . Eshibit
boun: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.5 )J.Dl., Sundays, 2-6 p.m. '

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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·A'. Decade of Progress _ _
' EDITOR'S NOTE: A Ten-Year Review ll1id is71-72 AniuuzlJleport of tluJ Pr.esident to tluJ Board of T,U.tees and
Chancellor, State University of New York; and tluJ Coll_liCil
and Faculty of State University of New York at Buffalo
was preBf!nted to tluJ Council thill week. TluJ ReporiA!r
presents luJre tluJ full text of the introductory overuiew and
hi;hliBhts of informtJtion .from tluJ remtJining, more ~tailed
portion of tluJ 41'poge 17I{JJIUBCript.
....

...

Ten years hllve passed since 4:45 p.m. on
August 31, 1962, when the University of Buflalo
changed its name and its future. At that moment, the Sec;ret.arY of the New York Board of
Regents oflic!allY-!lCknowledged receipt of a merger -agreement between the 6ne-hundred-andsixteell·Year-old private instituti~ and the State
University of New York. Th~ University of
Biiffalo was to' be knoWn theleafter u ,the St!t.te
Un1versity of:Ne\v .Y~· .o£~8ui*IO. . ,
.'
;~
- ~ ~Jhe,.: ~ i!! .lOrig: tim_e._ • i i!- and •
tlle' lDSti.tution--!8 Tefem'd to~ways ·
has
: lJB: Even the City pra!B llas ·fowiif
it difficult to make the prepoait.iOual swit.di from
the University of to the. Universifi ~- · 'And this
. ·foCal attachment .to 'a -hame is iildicative of the
strong base~ of suppc)rt which' the old University- ·
provided for its own evo1ution from an institution,
of modest reilouices to the preeminent UnivGty
~'&gt;--te ·
..._te system of
\A:U
r m the nati'on•s 1ft""'l!iest. s....
higher education. That evolution, in only ten years, has transformed the University. Yet the transfonnation
seems primarily to have been one of scope fttheithan ~- ' TeaChing; 'niseareh, and ~(:e
- have remained the basic
of this insti· •
·
• tution, ~ it has !been wi,thin the limits of theBe
plirpOiles that the University hll_s n:iade such
,startling progt:.ess.
,
.. • Dunng'! the decade·, total student enro
.
Ument .
_ has increased by 75 "Per cent; and at the graduate
and- professional levels the number of studenfa
has risen by 141 per
Rerlearch -.-l:tmea
.,...,.......
. have ·more than ~pled --~ 1962-s31 aDd the
faculty conducting this research. has aOubled in

fecUveness
aiuf service.
~
. _
• Gmdllllite student support.
c:iooe lo 10o iiicutt,,-otd and - ~ • ,.,.,.m.1
• Faculty qualitY and pro- - - ll&gt;undiJ . - In 1M Norton- - I n
... the 1 1 - ol ,the - l ·bl,mpic
dw;u~~ 'faculty role in stu~ ~ llwllch. .
•
"dent advisement.
• The academic and admin.istrative organization of the
Univemity.
• Governance and coUective
ne~oug:!_~~de hig~r eduoa- ·
tion planning and implement&amp;tion and autonomy of- individBy SUSAN GREENWOOD.'- ·a nd the recommendation - that ual units of SUNY.
•
~ SUit
the ReVi- Board be appl&gt;inted
• The entire set of bureau• Quotas, committees and bUd- by the Seliai... :
·
·cmtic complexities the Univerget wefe the three major topics
The President a1sQ asked the sity incurs as iisub-State agentb&amp;t stariA!d the 1972,academic Senate to re:_
ccinsider its pro- cy.
·
·
year for · the FacultY. Senate posed p~&gt;licy on independent
• Budget flexibility and penTuesday afternoon. 'l'be
study in reference to students alization of eflicient . managealso approved the appointment · taking large nUJ)lllers_ of inde- ~::!. I!Y recent _budget reducof Dr. N - Garver, Pbiloso- pendent si:!Jdy credits....- ..
,. . Ov
,
pby, 88 their new parliameiitar- . He pointed out ui;i the Ben;
•
er-attention to "del.lill or ian and revised the charge for
•8
-CoU s
U/B Opertltions by State Unitheir Committee on Athletics.
atemte ~-tioninclonuded OfllllanevtealuaY": _ vetaity, Division of the Budget, _
ed~th~~~ lion ·~ttee but faileirto -etc. ~
'
ter ~ 8 8WIIIDillY of give them evaluation criteria. ~F:,:!i..~ s~
size: ·
,.
.
- last yaa(a senate actions and "The Sell.:Stud.Y .showed that to 4bia Uaiverlllty and to' apon- This student and faculty reiieiucll grow!:h
his f!!8IIOII8as to them. On aev- other ~ of Che ·university, sorini .._;ea.· .
has been sup~....,..~ by an .nn.m.""-w·J.. •.I....._ th&amp;t
eial lilatlen liuCb 88 ~
not only the Colleges," are~'Jlhli· zetum pf large proI""..,..
~...--04&amp;06 uuuti"~
--. ......~ •• of..__ Scbool
of
fering from the ~ pioblem, partiono c1 overhead ftmda to
has nearly qtWlrupled; J&gt;y· a library wbicb baa
the~t 110
be aaid.
•
this U.u-.ity.
, .
- tripled the number
volumes it oontaiill; and
&gt;- diat be bad aln.dy-ims\)ement'l'be President -said be ac-•. tiona)
-· 'n.eCommJ:..ibrar!esti~ ~
by the addition of IJl()Je tb{IJl one-and.:a-'--1•_mil8d \the ,..,..,.,..,_,totiOna. In oepted the Senate's .recomJ11811·
wuca ons '-""....,.
,._..
lhet'
such
'roced
dations on academic bonesty -numbei cif staJf · _.usitions ·
lim ··glOIIB square feet of_-~ Jlboratiory,
.
~or - ~ ~!...~"U: -t ror students,:BJICI im ~~~~~~~ budaet,
utiliza; - ·and-«&lt;ice ( ; · Unfortunately, the 1-..11r 41 this
c-~
"r:;::..-~
for
r&amp;-YaiiiPUig the - allocatiall
tiCJ!l,
andadminl&amp;tratiQn.'
·
been
ted
~
___,_._
~
tem
1 -~~are
system for iDatilulioaal funds,
QUotlna-from the Sidf~ '
lle'Y ~
.reD
Ul·
•
. 1'be l!naidmt ~ lbat in _addition to the ~t ..~.· Kelilli' IIOiect'tbat
porary stzuctura1 deaigned to IIBl'V8 until •the
be foaD4 the Senate'• pe!80IID8! shift.
·· 1M! ~ _, ideut.f.
Um\'8l'lity occupies a new $660 milliOri ~
PIOC!IIIlanli lilddJII ill II8Yenll r AdcliQOoally, ,be ibdl~ated fled -as the pJiJ!cipel ,_
which is JM)W UDder".CODIIruction in AinberBt.
a1'lllia: the u-t~~c~ent .01es pn&gt;- _.tba~ be wiebed tu s:::,t illfo"" illllbe u~ what is-our
_Spa_(:e ~ this- North. Cam~will begin. to' be·
vided tor the viceand
pnlliden\
for mmBIOil8
111!1~ ~
- year'sllll·
I1Jid
admiJI.
a;-:la
_ L.I ..._for uae m· tbe
""
-.laDle
the vice
_,_..that fum
data was #n&gt;U!P
lstialiWI orpniuliaD;
wbaUiet-....._..
10 !:'!!!!!!!!!-- ~-r,

tum-

·Facult)T·.senat.e-~ ·

·w-ith Quo~ -and13udiet

roncems

*""'P

rent.

-

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of

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"iiiiided'-·-'-" lo the Pna;.

--

delit"a ~Baud a1 bavilil
to o.,..ldanaa-..,._.. ~

·

yet IDIBvailallle tbla .,.ey; in lhe . - 1lll!il1swea of.111'0J11111!. attain- . •
IIIIM8tat. He &amp;DticipatM bavinl · - be ckMII_!IIIed'. -.bat
!"""'
a ·nporHw tlli8 ~ .-1- aae a1 p ~~ r~m ..~
~ F11Cu,ltY IWData
~ Cllll.~ a.de iD lila-

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imd itB lbailabiHt;y will be1p alleviate the Ulli•...-.:..~• . _ _ . 1'lll
~
te of
· "~' ...,..._.~ .-y;.&amp;a .__.~ a~ .ra
'
~· . - ·
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• •u "'~-~ · · i:~:CU:.~ will aU::r:-~~~t!:: ~
•-_:r
~'; r:/'%:a ~..J: :;.::.~£::t:::l -l!ll!SlW.Oaeilldica-oftiljnaatbe-~~ .
the
- live ""'
IN+.ioa ol C!OIIIIilit- NiiPlaDJie -ttem· ol ~.ou~......
of Graduate Ptn-tuna" i8meil ' - tbe a _ ____, _ _,_

CAMPUS .....;.... ·

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~ ID tbil ~a

:;! lbe :'T!!I·II!Pid hmov~-

::=.,:.
...·-....:.~:-....:.~.::..=:;::
..=..:: ...:
:rt-e- ...
~·
ua:'wbelher
,.,...,_.m -·war, ..-.. a4 Ollltral
con-

lbe VIBCMm
1111 added fadlat.
ID cblilael8 fare. 1M
cpMiaD ol all
IJee:l
··llllllllaB,...eiiiiWeiDbellalal. Dliirdlldw
..,._• ..:~Uf~P~~a . . . . . • .a..U.ra6- 19'10 ._ ' - aalyr aartiallY ·
uetieybad
· ~-MJG~tIll U11U 1a1 IU. ira 4lloolr .... m ..,. .ieeJ miriOrlty attai&gt;Pied 1D po- .....-ad. 'lba fljJ - - fa at 8nt ~ aud ...metber
·,
. - dfllclpliDee iDalitullaal .ud JD. .a.tt.
. Ut.icim the aatioll'almtitution&amp; still .in ihl!........- of ~ tbe.-itloa 01 il8e COMeplll
• 1liia
'lba Uni-.ity at BU«alo of hilber eduoatioa. And the
The aitii:al problems of )lad aJwa,ya ' - u thoughtful
•· '1118
ciD paduate -: ball made a -.jGr elrort In ,. • taclics of prOtAoat ewlved ~ ly belns a!!'a 1D fuDcti!ln A!id ~deliberate u it
t have
edUcatJaa; Whlcb aooaida with epoDdiq ID . , _ dalna To- lbe 11011-violeot to the .~ also ID.atncat.e the Umversity ....,.,.._
lbe rale ~ ID tbil iDiti· day, the l:JniV818ity'a minority
The University at Buffalo from the quagmire of baa&amp;llity . ~ Q\..cioas became of
lutiaD by 811118 U~ty' baa earollmellt Is 9.1 per Clldt of ~ avoided serious disruption Un- into whicb University-&lt;lOIIIIDUD·· ~ __.., duriDg the
•a&amp;tladell liGIDe ol lbe aatioll's total Univasity enrollment; In til the years 1968 aud 19'10, 'lor. ity relations. had sunlt "'!""' DOt Ddo!mic ..,..,., 19'10-'n, for it
IIIOit ~ ........ tD 1~ it had been en llltimated . it hail imaginatively aaru-t the. only dileolma&amp; ' wbicb re- :bepn tD be obvious !bat state
the·faaallr, Alllll .lbelr Pa-- 2 per oeort. '.[be ~ of . many of the educational _issues quired solution in the 8IIIIIIDSr • . fuDding for bJiber education
1oM beao6lllid bolh 8l'8duafe IIDd wamen ' - liicreaasd from- 33 raised ' by students. Nllverthe- of 1970. The ~id · _.,sian had .-:bed a jJoint of little or
111111eqnoc1aat 111uaeata. 'lbeee per cent at the gnodp8ta li!Yel• leas, the University was unable -of the Univeislty had crMted no powth as a result of cenersi
IIUdelitrl ...,_ a11o t - the In 1969-70 ID 37 per cent in ' ·...- avoid attempts ID politicize problems of ,management, e&amp;- economic iliiiCultie8 a n a in" intMded beae8ciarilll fll the 1971-72; and, _at the profl&amp;ion- it durlns the late 1960s and peciillly in repro to effective creaaed ~for funding
Q!lique amdemic"._ruzation aJ level, from 6 to 10 per &lt;lent into the aprins .semeste·r of and eftigient use of resources. 8IDOIII nume~ouo!' social prioriwhldl tbe UahwaityundenNat In tbe ....._..ting period. 1970. These ,tump~B and the
.
In 1867 in an attempt to syn- . Additionally, I he University ;di&amp;ruptions were resisted, Y.et
lbul..e lbeory IIDd .Jil'lldic:8; to has tieen and is making deter- .. tliey
- ted imJDense internal
-m aka prafe-'onal ~tiall mined and """'-'ul eJI'orts to- and~ problelils for the
huiDane and inteUectual; ward the hlcruitment of minor- University,
·
111111 ID aild a of social ity and women faculty and stall.
Extemlllly, relatioha be-..
JIIII1D8 ID tbe traditiollal aca'Ibe,cbaniint: composition of the. Univenity and the comclemic di8clpllra. --As a tesult the student Locfy, both here an'd munity have probably never
ol lbeas atlillllrPia. eaioltlng ._ ._ !J&amp;tillna!IY. has been ,accompan- bBeD more stnlined · than · tbey
~ts ancf ~ we!( ied by a c:banpd role for the ·were during.1979, and this tenOrpnized inf!P _ . . Faculties student within' the Univamty. )lion was , giVen priority atten- ·
tbet haft ploridacl --.nc Hi~ ediication's old paUM.s , tiori by a new admiiristratidn
proparna, Cor lbe -tJniwnity's of 111 loco ,_m have given which assumed offioo in the
four JIUIJor coordlna!;ina clivi&amp;- •wa,y to lbe p~A!mmeot of gniater Siunmer of that year: A Preai.lon&amp;: tfndeqraduatec. Studies, re8ponsibility upon the individ- deDtial Task Fon:e on Univerlbe Graduate Scbool. tbe Di- ual sludent for the re,wation · sity-Community Relations was
- vialaa ol Oolltmuinl Educa~ of _,. IJe!wvlor. Also, the stu-~ . one of five task forces appointaDd tbe Division ol tbe Swn- deOt _..,.. In University de- . ed to study critical problemmer s-1aa. .
r
cis i o n-maidng processes baa areas and suggest amelforative • Also, esteamve cwricular re- . been increaseil.
actions. 'Through !hi! eJI'orts of ·
vision, particularly at the
But it has been a 'Dickensian thiS f"'up and of many individderpadiJI!te level, baa created · Clecade. too; J&gt;!&gt;th the best and uals m .t he oommuriity and Unia prosnun fleaibillty _ . , . the worat.of times. The upec- versity, relations between the
m
_
;i c h
.

=-

- for the recopition of indivldu- talions, gr'O!IVth, and new status University and oommunity have
aJ need. n- diverse academ- generated an atmospbere of eu- improved &gt;to a point where the
ic and psy_~cal need! have phoria, abd problequ; ~ere . ig- i~~ence .of the two is
.. been l'l!lxlgnimd, • too, thr2ulb nored -or unseen. Large institu- -v•ewed m an atmosphe!f of oo. the_ development ;of a· - : ool- · lions l;ecaioe larger, o&amp;Dd·iri.&gt;the : . operati&lt;ln rather than ·hOstility,
legiate sy~ ~to fur- process-~ )&gt;ureaucrati7,ec!
The names·of th&amp;oiher foui
ther an mlimacy of .mterasts and - lechnologized to a pomt . task forces are indicative of
8J!'OOII 81118l11101Jll8 "!- a~ts where many students felt them-. the internal problems which
, ...,.thin
!Up Umvar&amp;lty.
thraate"'!d
by anonYn&gt;-·
tbe University!
Uni- ,
8ul:b.the
tniDII.._Iiona
(BII!IOt- -• !ty·. Re.an:b.
be&lt;:ame
an end'&lt;... confronted
ven;jty 9ovem&amp;noo
University
. ~viewed as~ isolat- •· m itself .rather !han· a. tool. m.~ , Q~tion, UnivE.raity Goals\
-~ from - ' . ~ Bow· · !he ~ :~..Dd With- _ and Sense of a U.niv8&lt;8ity..,ComUII throiJibout.higher education m ,.the diSClphbes, W;llowledge munity. BasiCally, the -Univerfrom .1962 until 1972, R was a . both ezpsnded and ~ted. sjW, ,which had fuDctioned
dec;ade , of risint -'&gt;IIi"!'"- &amp;;ienoo and the methOds !'f · •througb a process of collegilility
_...ting enrollmenls, and m- , "'!'811"" """"'!"' paramount m and authority, had been chal~ ~~- and "!Bie fund- -, . high&lt;or ec!ucatioo; and as Henry lenged by forces . which viewed
JJII; and if tbeae thlnss were P!'vid A~ noted, the hUIJ!IlD- !&gt;01'\:er and violence as a comeuaerated. at BuBalo and in ·~ by apmg ~ methods of• mon. currency; and the most
N- Vorl&lt;, Jt was oolY be!:all8e BCJenoo, fwtheJ: alieoaled theln- pressing question which fac:ed
Stale fiDally had !*i&lt;!ed · selves f~ what ~uld have· this '\Jniversity~ (and.- for that
"'create a ~ve ~ ~ .the~&lt; essential ooooem · matter, all of hillber education
tem of higher -education which 'with the plaoo and problems in 1970) was whether a sysleJp
. · w o u I d ~e tbe educational · of value in a world of fact.'"
of collegiality and authority
-naf!ds of 118 YOUIJI - needs Students were the finlt tO call could be 'restored and order re· =~~not adeguafe!y been d &lt;am at i p attention oto d&gt;ese turned to the campus.
.-ore b)( or m, the ~minp in hipr educaOrder lias indeed-t"eturned,
SIAite.It
, lion. Their non-violent challen- . and there is no doubt that col'• ~ m which Jell. and prolelts in the early . l~l!il!lity and au1hority-are func!Usher education had. nevw eo- 1960s were oriented ·initially to · tiODJDg' c;oncepts w i thin the
joyed a -fer preefile_among_ d.- types of single education- • Univenrity. But authority baa
so IDBI!Y; aDd Mverllefore had al ·ifsues which could be ·re- beoome more codified and the
80 _ , - had _tbe opportunity
solved oo individual campuses. relationships be~ faculty
to partidpate m the 1Jdventure Also, students Were participat- and students and stall and ad-!'!~· A wave bf -u~- ·~g _ at that time' in tbe civil "!inistrsti!"' have
more
~ stlned by 11. foroelul aYil
nP!ts . movement and in · the CI!""JD"Cribed by an air of legrial* ~ IIWI!Pt ~ tbe b,eJinninia of the peaee move- alism. The introduction of fac=~:&amp;:.•v~I01llhouted._=
ment; _~.....-~ '!"fivities !'lty unjonism to the University
., e
•Y _,.,
CDJJa\ICieQ prjmarily away
·m 1970:.71 baa contributed sig

~~ves

~=:=::=:;:;:;::::::::;:::=====~========
-lfiEESAiam--

!!Je

become

aad
a l l~
y d :.c.:;!
ved,
~-otw
.._
. •~
ildrnijled 1D ..,. irrltitutiaal m

~~and )llacb

who DeJk 01 lbeas also
faaad lbe vl8lble lmt1ara iJl

from the
,:ampuses. ;::_.::.::,:.:=:.::::::::::_:~-~=============:::=======~
;n.en.,
"!' nation's
t1&gt;e ScmntOn
Report I
baa indicated, -this pat t e in
chanied ~th the student disUNDERGRADUATE -ENROUIENT BY LlYEL OF STUIEIJ mptions at Berltel~ in~ 1964 ·
the llrst to relate' )al!~Pus

W:

t~Hi:M.lllstoe£1
l!lY-...oT
13r---~------~~------.. .

'

J•

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

"LOWER DIVISION.,__.._.

.

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

�...='!: ........ - . . ........
1111

...

.... .t1! Jallllv it8

CXIIICNiie pll!li . -. .. · lllal-"10), ..... .,..ibct c r l - Thellllecrl'~crltbe eecond -c i..le·. _.... crl crl. .._Slate IJai.. clemiC NarpabdaD and iD- . North CllmpU. In Ambat ._ the State Uai9wlib'. The JIUI·

~

• . . . !l.lhe JiQllllc • _.,-. ~111 114"......

-'*'*'

bMl •• c!!jeqpointnw.t ... all,
and-aaou..,.crldlllillullonto - . in apile crl &amp;be

.do&amp; ill t:bla: Ill • tiJM crl .......
dal atrinpDcy, wbm • GpPNBWI dla.le crl .........
~act tt.at.........., J - so, 1m,
1a all -~oolllrel7 to.....-~!&gt;
mora tban $11ll mlllloa In COD- tile ciunpuo, t:bla Uni-wity-if
bad beeD let .- . . ! ita jt cbc cm can malre tbe .-t
oompletion. 'I'hiudmioilitration - ~ a period crl-ibe 11111af
ill 1IW8nl .tbat · rapid~ deYelop- profound educationel dwDp
uient of 't he Nollh CaMpus, and improvement which._ljOw &amp;bet ~ baa final. curred in the entire ru.tary of
oodari8c:hQollifartlauea1•• whili&gt;'Willbiilnvaluablain~ ~-til~~ uru=-- ly begun, must be amDIII ita the institution.
1c :r- Jll7ll..'nl
a Yidinc ii!Duate data em wnlcn\ v8nl~ ~Y and orpn- ' i)igbest priori~ for it 1mowa
Tbe buildini and ooc:upucy
Um..aib'....-...r..aud.Y prior~ admlllialratlve deciBiOiii c a n izatiOIIally · wbl1e m a U I) g it w e II l!llOUih the diunage to of the Amhen!t ~ will
to the fllft to ~ bot tiilaed lind in. devisinl' the 11111re lfl8PCIIIIIjve to the Ie,iti0 morale which reoulta from a. produce an unpara1Jeled l&gt;l'ln&amp;1'811 crl11&amp;nindl ad ~ DDit ellcient• and «ilnoinnca1 - • educatiiiDal.....eds ol stU· .· justifiable expectation J&gt;eing too
tail chanae in the ·Uniwiiafty.
and to cWnelnllitulional pur- ~ for. the productiOn o! · d - 8nd soc:iety.
• •
long delayed
•
Simqltaneously, we can ~~ Earlior; tile . l'laidelit · tbat. cWa. It wiU be a Ya&amp;.ble
Alfhoulb eaCh-period in this • Also, it would .be unrealistic inlltively devise new and 11111re
bad called for' a period crl ae-- ' tool,.""'· for ,_till&amp; tile public pUt dec8de is ilialinct, tfi"eY in today's climate of increased effective metboda of utilizing'
lediWI ~and" mquired ._ - ~- for MCDW~tability:· . each contain unifying elementa racial, ethniC: and sexual aware; our already substantial educa·
~~deem, JIIO- .
Geneially, the deCade just' which~ theevolution- •. ness' to ""1M'¢ tbat 'deliberate tion .-.urces ...... both phyelcal
wst1 W vic!e p·reaid1lll ta Pl8t can be &lt;ti¥ided lnto' thrile ar;y nature· of the University. shifta in the CompOsition of the and human; and we c!an~ uae
to IRJbmlt -m.tiDD8 of 'lbeir dialinot periods coincidinl with . Tbe .JDOBt ob9Jous. .of .tbeee is . student" body could .be accomp- this same quality of lmqina.
particular Jor ID d&amp;- the tDree admiJt!slrations Yibich "'-&lt; physical' powth and the liBbed without difticuloties. High-· tion to. e 1: P.l o r e· .additiOnal
·vising an -.lemlc develOp- have guided the University accommodation oftliat crowth&gt; ''.er- education is ItO dilferent .Ouroes of llOIHIIale llllPPDfL
ment p1u1 fer tbe Uni-.lty. ~uring this time. .'].be llmt, of, QOPmg with it as it -occurred from opcil!ty in thiS · respect~ Moreover, the -University: .an
Bodt a ~~boot-tenD ~t . theee wee a period of ,lnmllition ,and liuilding 'for What alreadY racial fricliona .do exist an cam- display the distipline . - r y
Plan and lbe llllf--etudy baw from RriVate to wl;&gt;tic' inStitu· - h&amp;d -occuhed as well as what pus, and the easing of 1liese • to establish and adbere to edu- ·
beeo .coaipleW 8111 are to be tion· uniler the leildenbip of was anticipated. Tbe North frictions is another priority con- cational prioritieil. And IIID8t
climibuteiliiDil adell~ dur- Cliftord C. Fumlis,' the f n 4 : Campus in •~ lias :been .cern of~ present adininistra- • importaot, the University .can
inllhe J9'72.78 .-leaiil: :plllllr. CbanceUor crl the old UB 8nd , central to' this liCCOIDiitodation,' ' tlon. ·
·
demonstrate tbe will to clioooe
IDaddidaam.......aOiblr , lhe .llrst Pn!aideitt'of'l!ie Slete and' planning lor .that campwr ._ Increasing' enrollmeitts, es- pro~. which deriotesChange
ellad8 ~ ·m obtain a · . Uni..mty of. N.e w Y.o rir.- at ha8 liccupied all 11uee-adJI!ii&gt;i&amp;.• " pecially among the disad•-an· · and iniprovement, rather than
~ tiftec!tive 1Me ·cr1 .S:. Bldlalo. The I8CDIId, UDder the tratlona. · 1, - • '
' taged, and the Univerililf'~ ita allemative, which ill atqna.
- ueatioltaf' .....ara., ~ Ual·- admlnlstzation of Madin MeyEach administration alao' has strenuous attempta to devise tion.
·
veillityt.talrl!m·a~JO!i! : ..-fntmehefallofl986until beenOIIIiCe!Ded"witli.ttJecb&amp;Dg.
pri&gt;grame and curricula which
This crisis ·of choice ill the
In deWIIoplng the'W-.. N- -till! ~of 1970 (EDcutive inl needa of otudenta and, III06t meet the individual needs of real crisis which 1acs higher
York co..Drtium crl lfillher V"lioe Ptfilli!Mt Peter ~ important, With the changing · all students, have contriliuted education. At tbe Univenity_at
Eclucatioll and ila.~ to .mng u ~ l'rellid8nt in . compoejtion of file o tude n t. , to problems ' involving. tbe in· Bulfalo, the choice ha8 .w.dy
. • ·
·~
'.
~ · •
•
' ·
body:• colice~ned; in other tegrity of tbe·.Universiey's ace-· '-t .made: have d - .
,,
' words, Jrith oUie IUlNal &amp;J&gt;Piial· demic staodardo. ~ Also, aome progreea. ..:. llOIIDT L. Xft'I'ZII
111111 MI1B
-,
tion of Stale University'e 11111t- laclr( of clarity ia. evident at the •
.• - • • ·
to, "Let EaCh Become A!!
:undergraduate ·le¥el 8a to 1!1:· .
HiP!illhta from tbe remain·
- Is CaPible Of BeJn,.''
1
actly what' achievement should der ol tbe report follow:
' EaCh ·administration has been .· be indicated by the bacCitlaure- ~ AIWn
'
1
detennined •to IIIDVe ·t he lnsti· ate degree. This administratioo
Ill tlie ~~y::a illl ~
tution cl011er til ita goal of be-' . is determined that the institu- lave been
in a ·proi-.o
cotJling-one of the nation'• out- · tion's acadimic ataodardo will of aaademic planniDi ~y
&amp;tanding- ~ten ' of PBIIuate -·remain ,·ricoroua; it ia dete... . throulh 1he, .,.._ of tbe vice
• education, ind to accomplioh J!rlned, too, that no atudoint will prSdent for -a-;., alllaln
this by ~ 1be meni- be done tbe diaael'vice wbidl l and vice ~ .for -.ttb
f~ contribution~~ the Univer- resulta from the existence and ~- 'fttla ~ h te, altY can malie to tbe individual '· tacit lliccep~ "!. a double · , mtka cr1 :"!191ik1b wiD be~
BDd tO eoclet-y throulh ' ta ·· standanl. ~j,"!'8muat liurl:ng :18'12-18, _41111 . _ _.
~ -.ch. and lliirvice. • bePn:J&gt;OW"to clearly- tlie tennine wblcb -aeadeallc'lm&gt;. Eadj ~tioG' IW been ;:~ tbil Univerility hu fl"8Jil8 are to be·nurtured, wlilch
....-riled. tOo; with the e«eet&amp; • !Jr_-Jejlld tD ......-par8ry mf. . G.JI es lillliniii.IMd. and .....,
of the Unheraity's 'tranllition derilraduale education.
, onM curtailed. "'!be obJective
from priWIIe to pliblic upoit ita
. Two Ylllll'8- ajo, 'in the -winter of tbe planning ~ to -cuklwrt.a
alumni . and upon the w...wn of 1970; ~ -,. ~n;um -talk existiJir
toanticl·
New York community, (or each · of the financial ·c:iials m liigber pate and d e v e 1 op .-led
has- been aware of tbe import-- education havil!r come finally ~m -~ ~ Uni-·aiice of Ita tiM -tO 1he peat and · to the .Stale Uruvemfty of ~ew o t ~ a .....,....'hll'&gt;tiel to the -.
to tbe c:Omin~;!!r.ily, tJie ~ yoil&lt;. "!"'!indeed ithitd i!' the P!li&gt; • wltlduuppbrtlit ~~
University's
·
s c o p e sense thlot future '!.late fuDding the etudenta Who . - it.
.
has enableait to beve,a greater was likely to 6e af' a m~
· Other acadanlc atlaln projimpact, both ecltketionally and slower rate of iricreaoe man in el:l8 . during· 1he peat _year in·
· economlc:lilly upon ito own lo- the' past--&lt;&gt;r that for 11 period eluded planning for a Canter
- celity Alao ' ita new preetige it miJht ix&gt;nceivahlv llbow no for Mafherne4iaol Melbods in
· has ..;eecteci upoit aH ito alum· - real 1llCrea8e at all. Without tbe S o c i lll, llioJollcal and
· ni· ' and ita own· reputation for denyirig the seri.,..,_ of that Health Sciencea and the IDle~ ac:bievement forms a situation, it nevoertbekiioo be- liJ'Ildon of ~Nuclear a-d&gt;
part of 1he- oommunib' repute- came ~ aJIII&amp;lS!t ih!'t the ~ C '! n te r wtth tile lhdwaity
tiOn.
·
for htglter education was DDt . .which ·. -.a- ~ of-EaCh administratiOn has beeR " just one of ci!:JPera. 'It alao wee an edacatiooal piOpam In tbe
equ8lly awaie t1tat p~, aJ. -;-and ~~iS Of- imaPna· · nuclear ......., ~.
ways will be 11CCOIDpanied lly tion and diacipline and wiD.
and tecbnclloiY.
-''--~-~
new prol&gt;lemo ·.me- IIUCCel8ful
n-e•.......- crl the crisis
EIIOIW aillo to-~
.-.Jy.tion will lead to further
·
.
D&amp;JalloK for ~ ~ the UniYer·
.
fi ~ ita (C~ on 4, ~ 1)
J&gt;IOil8ll and other prcbleml.
_....,
by the
ltle-af'~ · Bolh··tiJ~ ....... ...,._,. ~ -~
ltYitY=--•liMiitutilll~-- ~~ ....,...,... ....... ...... __
pWooolont ~
~ prioritle8
11ve. ............... ·t~~ar~B~ oaa 111e ...... ...,. .third ~
to
--1 ·
. - crl ediicatioail
od, ......_die pi,..eot ~
ua-.fty DDt _:.. the. area'a lnltitatiaaa crl hJP. tratiDa, . _ beeii ualil a
~
Jcc~&gt;;. er ed'ucatioD.
•
· ,
tiJM crl C!DIIIIOtidatio evalui·
~ impendl=-editailiiil
• The Um-mty alao c.aled tion,. Ud NftDoalant\'- an a a'
vi8it by the
SM~ A. an Olk:e. crl ~t-In' tjme, too, crl .pI ann In 1 for
eodaliDil crl
'llllid S.O. . • f....-tiaD 8 y .a t'e m 8 in 19'71 a di8crilniDet development de'

..Jib:

· ar
on. .,.._tfUi

w

....__.811111111

"*"

·-·taw

m·

.,_...and

�~~~ ~-, 1971·'12. -~ - ; 8Dd ~ ""'!''t8d ~ •~ lllllf•C!f cbe UlliftlaitT ~ COIIl· relat. ·a ... Iii the Tbiiaw Depart- propams WJth the SCbool -ol ~~ iii h iDteil-.ai
fin1t ~ '
- ,JIVBI ii:UOu&amp;b' aJi ~ ~the Sdlool of So- •.,~ . . . . . _, of.
lD .OIIIItlnue .;ben a ~a W,... ~~- =the I'Wfer ~ i'lmd ci81 !'olfcy and~ · ::...~· thi(U~s
hom the Jlllll _Ph.D:. to fiJI!l jobs in and to
they demc=r.:--b
m l'l!iloBidl
,j
arrangements tire ·beq - -tion at II_U8 ttDiwll_8it.y that the
liee ..,.. _......,ty IUIQ " . . . . . . , 8 """ ...................
~
!'!J
· ,...~u-. ""-•.:_,_._, with other tillite. student IS 1Jie ~ n!OBOn
~ •• ., nw !Is·
OIJIID· , .CanllnulnC ~ •• division b~K!m At$~- '"" conn;~ ol .N.itural Sci· lor the~ ol hilbe&lt; edu~- -=-wmforAEO.! baa'The~ -~ in re- =..-~me from~ ences and Ma~tics ha_s cation.~ • . ·
. ~ 8lld u.:r- co- cent .y&amp;ars with the Cimdaued, Fimd to• the 'lbeaW Depart- &lt; contributed heavily to Cbe Uru- F....., ·
. ordinaliaG. . . ."
•• . ~~
-~~~,~-ado(ult...~~ . ·mimt fm:' the Delllt fOUl' years \waity's ~ution .88 alncenterl9G2 : To keep p8ce with the rapid
,......
, •
...... ...., IIQWWUU
, . . . _ ......,.
foi a · variety of .-tmentiil . for pBfluate ~- - - •~.-1 erirollmeDt 8lld pmjralli Browtb
8llbmltted
.depadments: WBFO,the .UIIi- programs.
- ·
·
onlyru~tl'b.D. 8 -werelll"'l"!" of t1ie PMt decade, the Uni- • to the FaCulty Senate veraity'8. p 'u'blie -me.. .FM
The Faculty ·of Ec!':""'tio!&gt;&amp;' by ~ Faculty; ~ ~ m ven.ity ' - iDcriiMed the size
for two additional radio siMion; the a8ice · of- Studies bati placed mcte181J11 1972 wail 31!- Coopeta~ve Val· Of 'Ita faculty•from 770 to 1 """
illlllly optiolia for Ullderpadu- Utban &amp;tension ~ devel- ~ on: ~; .llri&gt;du· tures aremedilJ!'calmgendem~-~ ~ autlmzed full-4iaie equi....J;t
atM. The UaiYell!ity pn!88lltly- ope liaiaon w i t-h cOmmUnity ate stud.Y--i)lll'llicula at the tween
""""""· 10" 'poaitiaDs The number of au
alfers four: clepa.-1111, joint, leadelllhip grouP 8 to define d~ level; ~- ~; ebt;ists and may prove-. to .be lhorized · ~ for 1972-73
c1ou111e, and op8aial majora. The problems and issues which and the admittance of-full-time the key to future SCI~ is 1 67( which will be .a new
, _ aptioas would
a fa&lt;&gt;. JDii11it best ~ '!- nd e r s t o o d ~lll!lents.-A three-year P~ ~reakthroulbs- ·Of locaiP.QJ'Gcul8r - rugh in facuttY' employment at
aky major a ....U as a
~~)rough edooatiorial program- 18 Underway to reduce eruvu· rmporiance to the ·
oom- the UniversitY.
ly ~ plllgl'lllb
•
minJ; , and the Adult Advise- ment bf five P.lll' cent annuill).y · • munity is the Western N,e w
- . '•
·• ·
to proYide a - - ~- ment· Center .which provides a· to diminish a very liiJh stu-. York _Science .~d Technology -..:11
.
.
eace in a.entW core areas ~ service for. advisini . dent-facultY ratio. To strength- Forum, Organized iaat ¥""'·
In 1962, die -University re.milt ~~~lowing ibe sludent to men and women..on education, J!1t relations With elementary One of .the statljd aoala 18 to ll8lli'Cb expenditure 1uta1 was
a,.... the ~er o( his occupation and secvice~opP.,r- · and. -xmdary , schools in ~ d&lt;:m_o~te to area ~~ ~J. $5.1 million; .in 1971-~ $16.5
....,_ under auapicaa of the tunities.
; .
region, . a Bureau for lnstitu- pupils that careers m SCience millinn. •During 1971-'1'2, - 604
. U.........,.t'e Division.. · .
Summer ~
.
tiona! peve1op~ will~ !"'d technology~ ~tive and grant proposals -n, silJ,mitted
document on modi- , Summer sesstODB eDrollments . operational. this year to link mtellectually ~- .
· by faculty~ 'lbree hun&amp;atiall of .tile advisement sy&amp;- . have tnpJed OVe&lt; the decade pwe ............:h to crucW educa· .
0n the basis of student en- drid . and libty";eig~K awanls
tem -la ' beini Pr--1 as is a with Jl!Ore ~d more gradwrte tiODal_~ -'
rollment; number·. of faculty, w..-ereceiVed.ualinJ$19$72,Iilucly oo aciiloilniC sllmdards ol ~ bemg enroll"'!. The'-' • ~ the ~ty !"'En· and: n.~ ol degrees ~ 518!~ The diatn"butioo of retbe . . . . , . _ I o ad; · CW'I'8llt Umvet'Sity's caJendar h!is ·hem -~and ApPlliiil Sciences, Social 8ciences and &lt;\dminis- aearc:h apeociitures ·over the
methods o( handlitii incom- .,.oilified toward ina-eased~ •.the Uruversify is the o n .l y tration is the·Uaiversity's larg-. - decade baa di8npd &amp;iDee 1962
p1Mm, s/.u tn'adin&amp;, -drc!P- end ··mer operaiionii and now pro- · SUNY Ul)i.YersitY Celitec oll'er- _ est faculty. At Present. the ~ac- from 74 p1;r cent 'in the health
add .,._.we., .and ~d- . vide&amp; flle equivalent of a third' ing a cOmprehensive engineer- uJty_procfuces about half of all. sciences and 26 pet; cent in
eat .a&amp;Udlea. "'lbe CIIDG!!t'tl in lie me s t.e r.' Total number ·of. ing program. Here, _.-ch l!aocals'ureate de~ ii.wanled; other areas to a , ~g
thiae-..- is not io' alter the · weeks of UniVersity operatl'!ns and production of J&gt;h.D.'s has ·and 8Jllll'&lt;Dimately 30 per cent 'distributioo of '61 -and 33 per
'libendopportunitiesat.thisin- baaincreaseclfrom40to--46aild ' increased sliarply in tQe last of all masters and Ph.D. de- oen~ in 1971-72 0vea111 apshlulion for ~,' .under- one in six UniYe!"ity students S&lt;lveral· y~ _Ph.D.'s !;lave·- ~- The Faculty's Policy proximatet~ ·oo P.,. cerit ~f the
~ ediiCiltion, bu:t to pre- oow !"'mpletell:-his or her de- hem produced smce. 1968-69 Sciences- Brognun ..became on
University s resean:h suppmt is
. vent the abuse Of ! ' - OIIPOf; """ m the summer.
· and spoiUIOred research· :rose to ~r l of this year- the from •the federal goveriunent
tunities." .
' · The Div!csion or·s u.m mer mOre than $2 million -in the . Policy ·s ttU dies Consortium,
,
·
Sessiods is interested in im- past year. In line with societal which on an inter-d~ · Ubraries
_
At preoerit, the University is proving the a.round-the-clock needs, the Faculty ' is actively and inter-Faculty basis will
Despite considerable progress
hav4ig itS graduate pii&gt;gnuns ~ture of University oll'erings reCruiting .b i g hl y comp'etarit represent a "track" students in the face ol vastly increased
evalUated by ~de sperts, a 1lJ!d bas_enteral into agreement stall' in ""!"" "':'ch as environ- "!"Y. elect frO~, '!· variety of~ demands . for services (see
procedure which baa served as With Millan! Fillmo,r e College mental engmeermg, human fae- 'Clpliliary- afliliirbo.ns: The Fac- COIDp8JlylllJ chart), the Um·
a model for grad program_eval· to coordinate an -improved and tors, systems and".mechanicol • ulty ha9 bema inail&gt;t- respond· · versity Libraries have experiuations, throughout SUNY and eq&gt;anded late-afternoon, early- deaigo, t.ansport proCesses, and . ent to the needs 'of minority . enoea niany di,fliculties througb~ State._
'evening SlllllDle&lt; prognu:n in ; fluid and thermal, science!;.
students and is now reviewing · out the decade-.notably space
llbe Graduate 8cbool has also 1973.
'
Highly visible to _the com- its Black Studies Propam · and-'the budget freeze of recent
led in•atlempting to establiah The
mupity becawoe-of its bosi&gt;$l Which .is four years old-to de- . years.
· .
·
· a. ftimeworlt_ of cooperalive re. In Arta and .l.eliters, ~ .En~- alliliations, · the 'F_a cuI J..Y- Of . terorl!!e whether it libould be
The Uiriversity lias givOQ first
onal planning at the graduate lish program has gamed •1ugruf. Health Sciences has more than granted deplll'tment status·
· ·
the
•
Of
~ v e I in I!Jie
SUNY's ~
ov~ the ~:~_ec-th ~ub~ itsd. fuUd-timeln ftheaculty in n.e eon..·
·
~n theco~o!n,.
VIew&amp;~~08
•
a. •
m_g
e rune~
_....e_ past I!C8 e. .
'!"""'
Perhaps the most significant pus for ftscal year 1973-74
The ~ has reacted to highest ranked prognun m the penod, enrollments m Dentistry developments fo. the colleges This new
which will
cu.r ·rentnational complaints country. Improvementseanalso haveincreasedfrom248to345 in Che · past- year were the ap- e
tuall -~ce, tban ·350
abou~ .a doctoral - surplilS I:&gt;Y be d~ented _ in French, and in Medicine from~ to pointnl'ent·of a new director of r}}j' net y
'ire ·
•·
~unc!&gt;ing two surve~ DB·- ~lassies and Gennan and Slav- 486. Beyond these ~fesstOJ18l the Collegiate Assembly and occup'ed
. · 97
may · be
1 . '!'luare
tionWJde study .of the CWTent 1c . and new grotmd has been . schools, enrollment .is currently · the unanimous adOption _by the
m 1 6· . 0 r e
and projected iol! qwket for brokeninPuertoRi~ Indian 1,286attheimdergraduatelevel Facul'tf Senate of a
~tely, there will be . new
pad degree recipients and an and ·women's studies, the per-· and 516 'at the graduate level. .Collegtate ~ with ·t he · d~~ ·smaU~
mtemal .survey ~~for 'form~g arts and arcbi~eotuna. The Health Sciences also ac- understanding that the P&lt;;l'· ·Street,fourcollilgelib:::riesand
~led .for 67 per l'ellt .ol lhl! , fonmu_lCe of ~ colleges WJll an interim bio-pharmacy libriuy
-Uruv~rsity 8 sponsored ~ ·be revtewed Within !fie De1t tv.'&lt;\ at Aniherst in 1973-74 The
./
' ~tal m the past Y~- P&amp;ltM;- • years. The Collegtate system firat visible sign of the iyp., of
\
ularly noteworthy ,. the fact has JI'OWil from 149 courilell in new h'brary whicli Cbe u ·
that the SclioQI of Phatmecy 197G-'11_ *? 391 in 1971-72. En- sity will have will be the
!-Jed all schools of Jlh!u'nacy rollmerit m .1972 was 4,363 and ity in tlie La and J ·
d·m ~ ClOilliVy for-a number of 121 faculty tauJiit CXJUr8li8.
.
~w ezpecteil~be
y....... in the ainount of federal - st.-.a
-.
.
'Bel •
earl
' r ~ s,e a r c h graDt monies reOver the past de:ade. student ~3 m
Y summer
. Ceived."
'
numbers have
Clqmiat.ic- of 197 .
•. •
CompriSing_ the .only law ally, ~the gradu- . · The Lt~ have plaimed
~ in the State University ate ; level !IJKi. -i n· tenns of ini- I'! their fiv&amp;-year p_rognub to
sy:~ the F&amp;culw..ot Law and _. nority .sfiiderila...and w 0 m en request double their _present
JiliiBp.rudence bas increased its ( see~ c-harts) . ~- to moe~ the 1977-78
- faculty from 10 to-30 full-time . Opportumti88 for 8elf-tegqlatiml , . Of the. Amherst ,Campus,
"""!!.ben ov..- the past decade. ' have increased ·and the Uni- to inlnlduce new .&amp;erYJCes, and
F il'8t-~ -"''isb:ations have ·veraity ' - llltlelupted 'to a'88te to opemte a fully computerized
risen from 88 to 202 and minor- student serVices which pmvide libo8ry.
_!ty enroJ!.I!Ie!lt baa bem devel- cooperative JUidance and ad&amp;- F-.a
Oped to 71 from a total of ·m quate aliBistance ill all 8tudent ~- first· -~-- - ·
in. 1969-70. The Faculty- has C&lt;lDQl!nJS.
~-- "~
unite 1;heorY and P'!"'"
'':Qiese, asv1ces in
. oo the . _ t-ati!'IJl18 on
. curricular e_vollltion -of student life and
Narda 25, 1971, at the Law
and .Judalmtdaace. ·B uilding
whic:h wilfbe oci:apiecl in 1973.
Olber co.netruction which
abould be-....... ltllll73 indudes C;be~toriea and
~mnA-F:
.-..LIInw

·edllcetion

r::"";i;JaMor

IIIJI-

tile

~~ ~

the.~t-~ · ~Sci~~

~~ ~ ~~~-tbu

~,;:.:::; ~

an

'll!""DiVi8io.,

~:

~

a

liili71-'12

..w-

.e:::;!i

A_..

a.:·

E.....-

r.

.if!:

-

=:::

ITb'r::res

'1t

=·

revised

h.":J:

enc:e·

11;;

u.e

Fall-

al 197~

oaqjjmiedJelllf!F ..W. in the

OOliBtl ..... ~-tiuildinJ
ia tiiiP8Cied tD liave~on

-EcluaRtiaD lllid

• In·

dUIIrW
RaP.......
I ol .n.,.a_
.fa&gt;adi1141aa.

oifbt

~.,::;~=

i!F.~
c.-...

Chan one

... to the

~

thiS-

. . . . . .-..,rutalion

o( . . . . . . . . . . C6lr _ .. the
laislol1lll:m.P011111111111181aii~ iiiJWI 'bWtae com.mta.R ...... ~ o( the
Ulliwnfty at ~t

be OV9*

......

ad"

_

�r"Siiiliter-'o:i~~~- b

••

,_ - t

.;~-:-,,

(~
coL %) .
aeltiDI aide eilbt .... t 111M
iD DWendorf ~
Kett8r _ . . _ . . , . . . . .

about~ f a r - .
ben
of
ud
- - -.
ured fMul~
. . .-. ....__
\&amp;orofllle
-~·.
ruled iD 1ll67
.,.... .ad
be establiabed ~ m .llle

=u:: s:_ceo.:;r

wu-

-of~~

(-.,r, IIIIIOCiate ~. elc.
U/B
held " - t a ble" lew thia, bot DOW tile Stue
Budpt Olllce is CllllllideriDc m-•
forcemenl ' Since U/B m-t,Y
· baa more than it.' ...-eribed
numbers iD the bilhclr ..,..,._iee, Ketter DOled, tbla woUld
a moratorium
Pftlllli&gt;.
tiona. The adminimatiOD •
~=• 'and
tbla ruliui. be ....
GJI""'!I aame 811ft
of ftnal ..alution by mid-November• .
Nez&amp; .oo tbe qenda, tbe . _
Senate Chairman, Dr. Gilbert
Moore, told Senatore of .his
hope of lllldinB Senate .._tmp
by 5 o'clock rather than Jettinc
them ruii en to· s or 6:30 aa
\ they .did Jut year. Another
chance will be the eslabliabment of epecial open ..-liDp

011

~::..a;

-

=v:.weo.:.;

held onee a month ud will
focus on topics of apecial .jm.. .
portance to the lacull;y. The
.t•Cbainnan a1ao ubd the Sena-

.... -....-..............................--..-... ~-=~~.:R~
..:;

':,....,._ - - - - - - . ... - , . . : : - - arate etor:Y iD t.o&lt;My'a

...,.. _,.,_......,.--- ---~.....-· err

·•

Dr. -

-

... -

-

~.--..

• •

.

---~------------------------~------------~~--~~----------------------~
~ -----------

"Rnnirl.;~,...;ee·nte
·.._ \O:l.Ulllf5" ~
f"'

Aids
. _._ :CL.:l...J_..:.
- ·Iiuw-en . .

.

W
.
h
·
o

'

The Ollly na1 debate duriiW"

the
.. ~
lion ..man~
..an, tbe PrePieat
- to-

Ha:Ve.- Problems
·
=-c...:.m'
f::'=.-=
~~ :"'advile-=~ .:-

s"'·
· - Of immediate
.
. coucem to 'Mr. · tion.. The
· Center performed
·
.
· on budDt planalq ud ~
·
a leamiJ&gt;s. ·aldlla of the i. Cent8L tioa." :l'blli- _...... tD iD- . '
...._,.,_......._ _ •.. Kibby when be .toolt ~- the oimilar-·Mn'ice ·-for ·tbe · Urbua. intod ocal .....,.... _ , . .
The ability to resd com. - CeDter.,... the lonirwaiW.. liet , ~, aDil- iD t~~at·..-citY. tbe~~ -wiB benifiw EaeoliW o--mu.. will ·_
petenUy is UIIUally ~Uaa·. for of chilcb'elrnieedinJ help. Some ' al8o- p ve......, ·tnliJiin&amp;.to peo-. -He--0...-Pialis to-do .more--- •.-ply- ......W.ta. to. !be Sooale •
rru&gt;led. in a ~ wbere ao ebildlftl waited as loJqJ aa_iwo. pje ..,._ t.1 ~;· to . ..rdi. '-rhus far; -..... 98 wbic:b will - .,. ~ J!lal-. .
much informatiOn 18 relayed and-a- half years between beinl teach in their a_pere time. '
per cent ol our tiD. has beal lowiq Senate aclioa, a liA ol
throuab the printed word. But diagnoeed and ieceivini in- .
·
takim up with -&lt;tiallnoeiDir~and ......_, wiU .tie ..,&amp; to tile P-one peiiiOD who cbsn't 'make struction, a time apan that , . _ , AN.
.~
~- rd like 10 be able to idea&amp; lot 88leotioa. n-..
~t ~ is ~icbael made the original dis~ 'alThe. Readinr Center d, o e s do '!"''le ..........m ~~ ~ blou&amp;ht up lbe ·Kibby, ~of U/ B s Read- 11106t worthless. Mr. Kibby have 1ts problems. ''The work - lec:ting data on chiJdreo c:omint . tieD-of'- the Benata .........
inl Center, · wf.o ia COIII:emed eliminated the waiting- list by is very tinJe.axisuminc and we ttiloiJih the' Ceo&amp;elo ....t'eDJDo i~ commi- .....,.._ .Car- ·
_ with improvinJ the skills of having each teacher inst:ruct don't have enough grads teecb- inin1 various aspects of their rently, Moore -~ u ad
childlftl &lt;ano;l ..ne_ adults) two ~r three children, rather ing. And these' are part-time !""ding skills, intelligence, fam.. hoc committee ~ JII!D*
who have ma)Or reaclinJ prob- than JUSt one, so that over 120 studen-.n&amp;ny of them teach ily, hackpotmd."
•t o .the Elracutive Committee
lems. '
children went throUJh the -Cen- in other schools all clay, come
A native of · LansinJ, Micbi· wJ;Uch ~ IIPPCiiniB th8 comThe ReadiDJ Center, which ter last year.
·
here at night for a coiirae, and gan, Mr. Kibby received his rmttee niembera. The amendwas establisbed iD 1963, is opMr. Kibby remarked-that un- haven't the time to get really M.A. in lanJUage ud ·readinl ment iD qUMtiaq called limply
erated iD ,eonjunc:tion with der his direction, the Center involved witli ~ Center, H we instruction from the 'Bnivenity for the .....,_ and ,c:redantial8
_(raduate cclunlea offered by' the has become more diaJilostically had full-time students, we of Chicago, w!&gt;ere be is aleo · of blJ!IJet "':""'nittee ~
Depe.rtment of Elementary and oriented. "We do more diag- could do a lot more, especially .now wOrltinJ on his doctorate. to be eumined bY lbe cmtU.Remediat Education. Students ·noem, and &amp;eating now, Where- in JOiDg out into the · local While at the Universitr of Cbi- Senate, bot ..,. S..toniD the ~IJllle&amp; man the Center as in previ0118 years, the accent schools," ·Mr. Kiliby added.
cago, be served as 88818&amp;ant eli- iD favor of haorinl thia . , _
iD onler to 1et practical ezper- was on gettinJ to the teaching
This year, Mr. Kibby hopes. rector of the ReadinJ CliDic iD followed for all. SiDate _.... ·
ience iD ~ and treat- As. soon as possible. We , want to incorporate some. of the 1970.
tee IIOII!iMtione. Debate ao tile
inl readinJ )lloblems. The C... the ·teachers ·to know how to .
matter was ...-.!ve ud •
ter a1ao · prvvidee iraema. to . find the problem, to be-familiar
A -~.........;,:a ·
cued --dla ·~ betbe·ealmnanity,Ior- of 'the . with the Nidina procaa, and ~ ~
~.8CL1fi~
tweeD 1!--~ ~ 1IJid
cbiJdlen a tbe Cater have "' to rflalbeo what ..,.,. ao when ·14\,.:n,,..~
~-,., 1-~ ~.. Uni_..,.,._......., ...s GD
' bee relerred by- local school cbildftm-...1" .a·uuvn "15 ..:J~ ~ -.l'f~ ~ -ate. ..--..
educaton.
. No ~ •
•
Dr. Charlea.E. Bailey,
re- Golden' from !he ci:Jco'&amp; odd. are !I*'8IY faculty _ . _ . or
- Mr. Kibby, who became di· . In - . . , tbe J1!SU)ts kor cently appointed director of the Golden anct eiJht .,u,..._ faculty~
rector ol &amp;be Center iD 1971 • the chilciNn, Mr. Kibby com- SUNY Cooperative CoUese eelora had beal .u.m.ea l\uThe buMet motlaa ..._..._
ud ~ ~ ~ tbe OOWII08 ~ted, ·~ wo~b on Center &lt;CCC), was arraigned gust 31, repertedly ~ ol ~ Wllllll~ to tile~
ndated.to at, aplaimd the pro- just II.- slcills wath which be · T.-ky aft e rD o on· on twQ budcet cutl.cb. •
tive c-miliee far~­
cedure. uAt &amp;be end of the pad- needs &amp;be .....t !&gt;elJ&gt;. Althao&gt;8h· coantli of ~ assault
Police 1111¥ that durinl dla skleratlaa fll ~
uate student'• aeoiJDd ..Deater nearly evely, child Who-a&amp;teado . and illepl possession of a aJ'IUIDMt Bailey toOk a ...., ~ llut mr-l dlllde
iD dlqnoaio, be ia- aMiped a· the Cent.r iadiii 8C111ie 1M8&amp;ery ..._..... -pon (a .38 cal· from ,the deM: at Richud ~• ~~b ~
cbild with a readinJ problem.- of reedinl skills. there ia DO ~ revolver) &amp;t.!!mmini from Balllh. uoistant dbeclar of tile ~·
fll dla
He -.&amp;be child ooce a week . cuanmtea that be will come a sboOiiDI incident at &amp;be. COC. ~ to tbe &amp;.fflllo . ~~ . ....,..
far five or !liz weeb, d~ out readilal at his Jrade level" cloornt-D facility Monday E~ !J- adcoant, IWiey
liPtile JllGblem, ud doea aame
'Mr. Kibby !1111~ that aJtemoan. He _, releeMd oil shot ~ tatnlek • tbe
of ..WMcee Wlllllld
nomediaJ teoacbinl. He JIIII!Dda the Center strives for an indi- $1 000 bail.
,
bead by Mrs. Go~ ud Ibm
tile Clllllllllt'- "daler 1D
·the-Dim&amp;-. ~ the vidualized apprcach. •''We sub~~oap·: shot her,
-'.
'
the ~ or woald , . . _
child c1urinc three -'5 minute · jeCt the dlildren to a i!attery talized :--.-.. tical
BaUih had a permit ~ew the ~ e..te wtlb ~
·'-ioaa a .....-_"'Cbildren uiu- oJ - ao that we .caq know lowini ~~"
.
weapoD. ~ aaid. 'Daey oalil
d; to tile Center for ~ more about tJ.n ud better 1111,.._ ..,~........._ "-'...._ ...,
be- broulbt at to Ilia c.n.. _..__ ...~ __,_ .....,..
~ allb\llllb lome wboee -their resdlni siren,thl ud
. - ....._. ~ ,.,, MCIIIIIa¥ beaa1Me -be feazed -..- elillllll llllt,
~ are'more ..no.. may . _ . _ _ And - . . what- - WJ~ a~ IIIIUDil an ~bead. tnJuble ..altinc from 811
painWil .... ~
atay ........
. ~ teadaiJii metbod works
William Goldom, 211, a former er AfiiiiUDl (IMl ~) .,. ~-= ~........,.
c:.a't Fllld c...
beet far e.da ~ COIIM8Ior at lbe &amp;Dter, with . ' - ' IWiey ud ~
- - - t o lillll. .
ID dial:u8iQJ the Ceoler, Mr. -. tape---., whatner. In a bullet wound ill tbe a-&amp;.
Ollcials ol U/8, wblch has :r
C!-.:~
Kibby aDeDtilmed, "We aon't r.ct, tMcbeia otlell -u up
lh.Bailey,..tJo-~ lldminislratlwftiiiiOIIIiblllb&gt;lew
~YID2t
find ·out what .,.,_ a poor their own ma&amp;el1ala. daailni!ll· was -ted tOt a .-)p .._... tile ccc... had JMde • com. a...p.. 8lr -'1 ...... 8JIIl,
n.ler, but we aon dla,noee his · iniJtructional ~ to -meefi lion aullmed wt.a lie meat at «eporter cte.dllne COD- olblr paR cAie ....,_ Pfttiem ud CIJII8tluet. a pro- . &amp;be D8e!la of the · ind!vldual atruck by a ~.,._. hl!mmer ceminl eitber· tile incideat or be ......_. ~ne· ..._ 1*1111
I'IIDI of t.Mc1UJ1i to try to rem- cbild."
duriDc :die . , . _ t ud llboDt- tbe lnimodiate fulure admlnie- ....,..._
Ia ad. edY il" The aludent .........
Since the Center ..... not ...... •
'
tratkiia of &amp;be Caller.
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(there 72 Ia&amp; y_.) - are · have ~ .........- .to t.b ill
Accoi'IIIDII to' BulfaJO ~
The COC faciUt7 - clowd ldaiiL The locatiODe are BQ.
aUpemeed by
.-y'tliild who needs inltruc- - quolat 1n the c-i&amp;-.b- followilallllellhootini..S- Hall ~
, . _ s-- .
tantB who heDdle probleme. or tioQ. . . . _ WIJI_..gtt. tell&amp; a , _ , &amp;be · inciCJeDt .-...eel 1q ...U. clolld tbrcNih ~- · ~ aad
,.... .BM1aJ1iDt.
· · . 'ltais year, Junek~ . child abd then coaetruct a- pro- from an ll!I:IJII*l&amp; between · Bailey baa'-' ~-a leave The
ldoll ia at Cboil
and Charlotte ~uppl pam of Ilia , _ . wbic:b Ia 11811&amp; Bailey ud the Goldeila OVV of . _ . . . from his dutiel to ~ A - ale ol NCIJ'toe,
1
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- t by _file
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"jlllpeCt tbe fao. ~ tbree Uni~ty~ cfi... eiaa by tbe lnatructor,

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~­

ulty to plaY a major role In im- - ; • Cbatlee IL V. Ebert teldllln!:'.ttba 81adeat'a
be. g:::;,lillc lzmoYatiolla and of the Division of Undertra4- ,.ance.
.,., ~
a
quired by law every four yeua. d8viaed, iDCludini 11aib1e ad• 'ty ~ to more el· · W.te Studies 'DOW that · IM ~ ~. .a....L.
a.8Cellor JCIIII!Ph W Me- missions ud INDefer criteria. fective . teachina and faculty aingle m 0 s t impoiiaDt fact
.2. sm.--~ drop~.
Go\Wil said 'the RepiltB may 'lbe plan placea pat JeSPOII!Ii· P"?'i~~.w Co~-~~ about the po!icy, which~ 88Y8 ~.,: ~%gtwf
make ..,Y . - . , . cblulles in · bility on 1M poet~ m- IJIUVIIIIII.ties "are to . ~ will be strictly ·eilforced. 18 that . . _
,
. o
tbe 1an ~grIll' stitutions tbem8el- to Diakc mecb•msm• fD!r. f8COIIIWIII•· students must be ol6cially en- the
eDmliaallall penod.
t1ivbw it final
· lifelong ~ties a~ • cellellce ~ felldUDI, as !!"J.as rolled .in their CXIIlJIII!S. and ~ For ~ f!all ~ S - . the
at lheir-OC!Gber
• .
to all.1ndiViduals. thus m -ef. for terminalillc 1l;&gt;e 8ep'lQe&amp; o( ultY members .musf estsblish tUtMI13x'~""
IJ!i¥ 1M t~ ~
The maaaive 500-pqe docu· feet upanofula the open access th.oae tenwed facul7 foo,md .to theii· .·clasa 1iats, OJrith.in aiJ:
· -.,-:-- .,........
meat; entitlecl "Eaucatioli Be- "toncept.
_
.
be least CCIIIIP,!IeD.t . . ~ Re- weeli.s .after the semester starts. be. trea
m the. &amp;alii!' way as
yODd Hilh &amp;booJ,W ClCJilt8ins ·
Goals set forth in· the·,pl(m cents ~accep.t· ~ aspects pi There . will be • no retroactiye resuJa;r CXJillll!e&amp;. lmd JI!USt be
85 ,.,...,.._.tiona. covering . are"
,
. coUective ~ by-faculty addS;' .-Ebert: BliY.S. 'mmept in • ~lisbed Wllhir\ tbe 'Sill-week
all ~ .of ~ - • To achieYe ezce1leDoe .m : JlleJI!bers, ~t beJ!eve that aca- proven cases of ,medW&gt;ical reg- pen~ ~· the Dn;ll[ eJ:·
educatiGD.
·
the .PIIJ1!Uil of knowl~ge, · m: ~c ""'!"'delation&amp; -must re- istratiorr ...,..rs or ·failures ori. ~on 18 that o;ne ad!fitional
Its thnl8t · falls into three eluding .increased expenments.- mam outside ,t he arm of ~ the pert of the OftiQe of Admi&amp;:. inilependeat studl88 urut· (1 '!'
major areiu based on apecific tion to ·facilitate change 8nd tiatioo." The latter lnclude sions.and Records or the SARA 4 1tours) may be added until
gOIIbi and objectives. They are: imprinl_ed uianagement of facil· award,ing of tenure, Cl!-"ricolum .Ystem.
~.·
two w~b&lt;ifore !he eru_i of the
(1.) /huelopma.t of a com- ities and resources which would development,- evilluation, pro- 1 Tlie new policy was an- instructipnal penod WJth the
~ .,-~~~em of P,.t-«e· !-dt in ~ p~uctiv- motion and reteotiOI! Pro;ced· nounced ·on April 1~ of this approval .of t.)l e _dep&amp;rtment
ondary edut:olio11. .
• .
1ty.
/
ures, s~en~faculty . r.a .t 11~ a, .
ear " as a joint policy of the and/or program¥""'¥' if the
1
The plan "boldly endorses".
' To strengthen ·~uate class SIZe and sdministrative br..Juate School; the DiVision ~dent's 9C1!denuc program so
for the first time .both non-tra- education through !&gt;el!"r use an d. '!Cad~ic . organizs.tional of Undergraduate Studies and reQuires. -The Di~oo of Unditiooal innovations in b1Jber ~ reejlln:eS ~d. reahgrung p_ro- s~re, ~only group ID!!IIl·' -' .the .Division of Continuing Ed- · dergra~uate Studiell . must ··apeducation and DOII-&lt;lOil8sia!e ~- olfl!llid . m . response to be~ including ~'?men and eJ:· ucation. It will aJfect. all stu- -prove 1f lh&lt;o total. semester toad
post.eecoodary PrDIJ1IIII8. ~ · cbaitpng ""'!'!s·
·. · . · pen_enced . practitio~ f ro.m deniS of the Uniyersity,- Ebert ~ 23 ~t hours. The
as the extemal deJree. evening
. • To achi~ _rac;,a.J ~tegra- bUSin~ mdustry and. cultural points ou:t.. After a year of cfis. ~1rrw_m load IS 28 /C red 1 t
aod extension programs, P!"" tion at each mstitution m stu- . "!'dea~rs ~d be_pven con- cussion,- i t was brouwht before . boors,
...! •
,
prietuy schools, apprentialaliip dent body, faculty, non·lellch· · Slderallon for appomtment to the Division of Undergraduate
"Before lamenting the re·
. propams, and trade ceaters. inc. .P.I'raoi)IIei,_ .and residence assure a truly diverse faculty, Studies Policy Committee, ·ap- pressive .. atmosphere' of this
AJao for the fiist time, empha· · facilities. Spec~fiCaUy, the Re- . the Regents say.
.
proved by the Academic Coun- campus, Ebert "!'YS. those who
sis bas been taken away from g~ts have "!"I ~ gnal of .12.5 . F!'flll!ll recommendations on cit, and by the deens of the find the new pohcy uncomf'?rt·
physical expension and placed ' per cent mmonty-group full- •nslltutiOJ!B) management call various divisions he says.
. able should note the followmg
on further deveiOPIDeDt of aJ. time underg!3'duate e~t for fsculf:r """""l""t "and re,'Jbese are ~ specific rules deadJi!tes ~or ~ding cou.rses at
ready esistbia fi!80IIfCe8 by by 1980. This would be m line ward devices to encourage the and dea!lJines·
other institutions: SUNY at
utilizinc all the elements o( with total State population and · growth of a faculty inix appro1 New 00.;....,. . -may be ad- Binidwnton, two days; SUNY
post.eecoodary edu&lt;ation.
up from 1Pe current enrollment priate to an institution's goals dec!. by n:Jistered students dur- at Albany, seven days; SUNY
t2) llilpleiMntotion of "" level of 9.5 per cent.
.
and ~·Reaen!B, ing the first six weeks of ;n. at Stony BrooK, 14 ~~;:ur·~":.tr;::8-y,., -~"'T.:s.,~ ~ - =~~~1!&gt;~ strucllon Jlllly. Fo~
~~"!_te, four days;
us,
acboo1 paduate by 1980 ;1lb education, the Regents ~m- grams and move to end oi'
Semate, 1M tUad ,
Y
an. opportunity to enter an ap- mend more independent Jeam. solidate -those not _,tiaf , to
propriate post.....adary pro- ing and participation in an io- preserving a unique . academic
pam· without regard to race, terstate· "credit bank" and eJ:· character. In olher ~­
age. creed, 11eJ!. national origin, amination center for students dations to control 001118, tbe Heor economic status. Tbe Re- I e a r n r n g by nontraditional gents urge that institutions
• cents eatimate that by 1980, m e a n s~, three-year baccalau- seek out and ililplement new
0
cent of all high acboo1 reate propams and eerly ad· ways of increasing faculty . protea will fO on to oome ~ona. r'
doCtoral
• ductivity and lessening 1M
THURSTON
Coun..., is the location for ' sevof' coiJeciate propams. ·
maate s and
eel· time !I'QUired for leaminc; that
By JOHN
eraJ :~ _ Swvivalw field
This would place the 11J1111bet ::ij"tion, a tireviewthois.:::fed of institUtions consider reorient..
T~"';;'"s:;::in tzips. Activities here include
of full-time incoming _freshmen,
curren Y au. n
, mas- ing schedules around a 12... _ -.~of edible and
at more than 180,000 com- ter's programs W1th llll eye to- month academic . year and Racbel Canon Collep, every ..., ....,
pared to oome 140,000 in 1971. ward withdrawal of.. th.oae not around the material content of c1asa is
en~tal work- otherwiae
wild plants, as
Total full-time ~uate meeting 'criteria of quality, courses; and that they strive to shop and every day. ia "Earth welf
orpnic Ianning and
eorollDalt would_ jJI!!rea8e by sbeogth and demonstrated estsblish · flexible .....,. a
Day." .. "~- ..,........... _
waate rec:yclina. Laboratory
38 -per CODt .to about 643,000 ._t· for graduates. Expansion recoJnizina DODCODvelltional
Rachal. """""' ..,......, -m... and lectmea COIDplefrom 1M . . - t 467,000. Lite- of doctoral programs will be past learning.. A~ .-ev1ew of 17 OI!!Jela - · part of the ,_t the field trips.
·
wise, enMilmeft{ in paduate encouraged only if they fulfill of administrative lllaffinl l ud llCIIdemic auricula at U/8, of• 11ru1 ....,..
.
aDd ~ e d u c a t ion ailnilar criteria.
•
operational Procedw. to In· fers counes~a
n i u 1 from
Another Cllllle focuses oo
~ lncNeae from 57,000 to
A competency-based system sure more elicient use of re- "Pbyaieal
to ~ the willeapreM we and misuse
78.000 in 1980.
·
of !'*"- education and certi- aourcea with psrticular ei!IPba· P!!ic Survival,
· •
the of c1rup, boch 1ep,1 ud illegal.
'Ibe· NO " • -=tation for a fication is eq&gt;ected to lle fully sis on facilities, ~~and utional . student concem for' -n.e Medicated-society". deals
ata!Mride open .,.,.. p~ implemented by 1980.
· noneducational asaets ia alao eoology llilcl 1M en~t. • orilb - w i l y peQple re1y· so
atema from 1M Repnts policy,
Nolillc . that the ieceat chop called. foo. ·'
•
Named for oue of the fore. heavily aa dtup aa' a cure for
..sopted in 1969, callina for in engjJieering em.J&gt;.lo.yment
i:lJ..._ ..J'!__
rwmers of the ecoloP:almove- all prublaua. It ...W..S misewry hlsh ICbool Jiadu&amp;~ ...... to be '-"iV.IIlfY, tbe
OUll.lleS ..
ment in th8 u.s.. ibe ('""''- ··- ·- Jlih·-"'-- -n..;n. from
or equlftleDt-bl 1M State to plan ~ ~or ~attention M-·- A--!1-Ll- views eny;.,_btl ~ ~b.I. ~~ the
._..,. an ~ ~ty for to ~ lchoola. Recom- J.'IUW n.vruuu.Jt:
as containing a bea-.y eompoa.. llusl.- world ud concerns
J1011t
...W, eilucation I n- mended Uti dewilopment of
The Pollal
. al villa&amp;e media theent of active as oppoaec1 to ..,._ dtup of the
• lion, ov~­
.. any caiJeliale .., other fonD be ruidelines for evaluating the oriea of Manltall Mc:Luban sive leaming.
~be-counter
van
may IWre. In oriler to im- fiacaJ ~~ ot· 8llch in- will be ..,.;,;ng f9 U/B this fall
"The rust neceasity" ucorc1- eties.
·
. prove bla okilla, kMwledp. and · stitutiGns in om ellott to reduce as part of a' Dllwly.Organized ing to its calafoa st,a~,"ia
Studies of -~~~ _.t.aaOn
~ "OIIlie~D~J!&gt;mi7 alii&amp; ·aDd· .exploration ~Y.S Crilicol ·Coomnuztbtiou and to place the studeut lu a alt.. 'tnmlll. Jli'MJ!Dt amlio( factonl
..-.I aid ecilaamic . _ . lo Blrmllhai, ~ edu- _ Medla.Center (CCMC).. Com.. .uatioo where be am psoai..,. ud 11Mi ra1e o1 bonD'aaes as
r '"- ......., an
of catlou ...........,. for enP-a.
m~mlcotion fheorieo aa well as coilfticts betweeu bia own II&amp;- ' bialoP:al - 18
are
the ~ ol ~ry . Innovative apptCIOidw to!"'" · llkill co.u rae a aa CIIIIIIDeft:ial . cim.. and hfa . euviromc-.~ iuclaited 1u t b e - aa -roo
...._... 111e a..ata ~ , 1arp emollmooiao of ·AIIiatinl COI!T writing, copy editing and ~" Most of the Colleile'a Man,. People."
·.
l)ldio/TV unw&amp;IY'iDJ; wlll 'be .counes illustrate th&amp;t. ~
Tbe obj8ctive ill to supply

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door . ellpflrienci!a . and temnilples .-led to deal ·with
thciae oiir:pedenl- ~ 11b'
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Pill 101uemu. to the problems

of 0ft1PC111111a11 ,
BmpbMia ,far t~major
Pftiii'&amp;DIIIIlthe
·is on
the lnMrtll8cipllrw:
Col·
lep lnducJea- from 20 ,
~ ck4Jutmeata 1u Its cur·

In COlli- tivities take plice.
'
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A -llimllat -~ "'rtanlc ricu1a.
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as ~ liklna, ;Survival," la~e
-et nea to ' RilCibcil ea- CoJiep even
• -""'....., ~ are lii'rited ID .•' Itdtleole· an
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~WBPO lll8l!tittla iD life~ tlaouah
' of 'h* Jl'orce.--. --inwlving
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• 8nl 8oor; lltltrillou, otp,Jdc
Of a .....B lliiiJlbw of atudents who
t 12 . . . . . . fqpd, pth8J:iDg uaeful .., _.a. lllriinltmenbtl p~
•P•clflc _~ 'irild plants and recy~llnr J-.htdleBdaloarea.Find·
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-Of -DI&amp;y bu beell weU"doc:u·

_ ... by,_-," aid 1

Jlootoa Uahw·
_,. pzofnlor at a neeat llltloaal collfer·
ODd! oil. Cbwdl IIIII campa&amp;. "Fiodtin&amp;
'to ftlllleii couaes IIIII Mabarllbia IIIII
ODd otr-amriu COIIIIIIIIJle&amp;, tbey

driCa

are lolitiDC eYeryw:~re for Goo! ancfeach
otber-••LiviDC IWclulatlcally In lndl·
.idual caves of dapalr, atudenta are
praytnt tbat oomeone divine or human •

REACHING t

, ·aity admllilllnlloll, iii JMmllen include:
1.. AU fllu.&amp;a Olllblned and/or
COIDIIIIIIIIOIIId .eampu deJIY (lncludloc
DUDI).

.

2. All ~ u-.lalniCI and all
part:tiJIIe ordaiDad or 'l'.~oned
ad_rioolio to atudeD&amp; • .......... aroups
..,.utered wltb tbe Council of ReU,ious

Olpnlzatlolla {a lludent tooemment
poup wblch. n:.llta to "ptoml;te the
rellllous welfare of tbe academic
co1D111)1111ty").
.
will come to reiCue them.,
~_·
Incilridual JDIDIIteia have "qualified
llf ·
times, the Chureh, oRen
Caculty status" at tbe University which
rejected' u divisively denominationil and
Includes use of fad1!tlit fclr meet~ncs, use
lm!lennt, bu been ·challenced to shed Its
timidity .and reach out to youth oo{ Its ~ot.llbrUlea, oppomupty for direct liaison
wltb -the admlnlatratlon· and permission to
: own terms: to ralae issues, to brine people
qetber, to - offer them bumanlzin&amp; · enter dormitories . after hours in
emefiiDcy situations.
. experienc:es, to ~ach valueS, to ~
PriOr to the {!ouncU'a establishment
iiCh~ J;o en&amp;&gt;ple wltb the transcendent
tbere wu no ayatematle &amp;(lproacb t~
· At U/B, -.· cjoan reli(lous OIPD-izl·
campus mlnlstzy, reaultinC in duplication
tlons - botb individually and corporately
ot -effort In many, uiu and onilssion.s in
IS a Council of U/B Campus Ministriesotbers. Accordln&amp; to lbe Rev. Arlo Nau
I l l aUemptlilC to ic&lt;ept tbal challeoce.
of Rellllftetloo H_J'UM!, the ~ _group's
-Foe example:
•
convenor for Ita tint year, -the Council as
The Wesley Foundation has presented
a unified Ofi&amp;Dizatlon •ttempts to
seminars on Ute miUtant Catloolic
Berifcan brothers and bu ~ned de..lop an overview of campus, Ufe as a ·
buls for action. Ita ' members serve as
"Groop R;" students committed to the
llaiaons to Individual U.u of · cainpus
renewal of the Chwdl.
aetirity, such u tbe . Faculty Senate, the
Amo._ tbe wlya .Hillel, a Jewlah stu·
Rellllou• Studies~ of College B,
dent poup, tiu """npted to apj&gt;ly the
inlematlonaJ atudeli~ and athletics.
!dealS of. Judaism bu been tbrou&amp;h a
' llalaon lndlridllala report back to
ooclal servke pfOCl'IJII which Includes
the parent poup wbble members meet
coUectlnc boolu for u&amp;e by the inmates at
weelr:ly wltb facultY' staff and :student
Attica Prison and promotlnc weelr:ly
rejlreaentuives to _.eqnalnt · themselves
recreatiorW actlvltiel wttb IIIII for hlllll~
with "the broeder spectrum or the
capped younplers.
.
"'
University."
• Tbe Protestant Campus Mlnlatzy,
uooclated with ·the Buffalo CouocU of
. _The eouncil serve~ In 111 advisory
. Churehes and United Mlnlatzies In RiCher
capacity to tbe University Calendar
E4ucatloo, bu co-spoooored appearanc:es
Corpridttee (to in-lUre that Uni-rersity
by · Sister Ellzabe!;li McAUister of the
achedullnt evokll· cOnructa trlth ieli(lous
oo-called "Harrlshuq Conspiracy" and by
hblidaya) and hu been active · in the
Dr_ Rosemary Bradford Reuther, the ' def.elopment. of tbe Prop\lp In ReliJious
perceptive social critic and advocate of
SfudleL
.
·
.
women's ri&amp;hts In tbe Cl)liri:h.
Aa a wilt; tbe CouocU .IMipa promote
The - Newman M&amp;rement ' bel'ped
adhitles of tho lndivldwil .ro..PI which
compri&amp;e Its membenhlp 'U4 sponsors
activities of Ita own, lnclud!Daauch events
Norton Hall'a FUlmore Room.
within tbel past year· u :-.: follr: · concert
oM member of tbe .Campus Ministry teatll!'lnl the composer-artist Ray Repp, a
discussion of how · tbe Chwdl has
couoaels youne mi!_p · about reli&amp;lous
misapplied tbe talents of women and an
beliefs In- preparation· for their Q1inc IS
!(:Umenlcal Good Friday dnotlon in the
conscientious obje&lt;tors; another ua1sta
·Norton
Conterence TMatre.
ex-prisoners to adjust to oodety; a third Is
• One of Ita moat lilolflcant lone-range
advisor to the reU,ion committee of tbe
Buffalo Mattachine Society.
projects Is an attempt to cllftlop a pro·
of minlstzy foe tbe llfOWinC numbers
.Meri\bers of ~ctlon HoUle (the
·or
minority student. at tbe University.
Lutheran Ministry_ to the Univenity)
lOIII&amp; to answer tbe question
reluiariY Ylslt the lied at 'the local of Anotber
bow to reich thouaancl&amp; of IS yet
Lutl_!eran Hoap!ce, IPOJIIIlf a Bruill8n .
uninvolved students. Toward this end, the
follft child IIIII provide a.e totalauppcirt
CouilcU k!IOtber witlr Ita counterparts at
for a ·NiaerlaiRtudent-enrolied In tbe U/B
~ araa achoola Is one of the lint
¥oolof~l:y,
•
,
orpillzations of Ita lr:lnd In the nation to
. Inter:Yinlty
Feuowihlp bu
hire a communlcationa director to
presented · ,workshops on· the complex
Interpret Ita PfOCl'IJII ancl alma through
• questions of plldical ethics whUe the . IIJ!O-of teltYisloo, news erticles, etc., and
· Campus Crusade for Christ has brouptto
to establish chmnela or feedback from
the campus evanceUam teams or. the students It bcipei to ~rve.
~alcians and an ex~rt 011 hypno.l llm
prophecy.
. • ..
•
.
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u.-

n.e.

' ~~~~~~~~~~&amp;n!l~ec!J

cram

CiuUtian

""'*

C:h~bad House ; a . mlnbtiY .or"
Lublv1tch Cbaaidlsm, JW l:ranlformed a
former · short-order reateannt bulldiDC ·
Into a haven for Jewlah atudents w,ho m
"loolr:lne for tbe IODullie thin&amp;."'··
thin&amp; pure In relilloUa eeNmollill .-zktd
by warmtlo • IIIII lplrit lnd filled wltb '
llinclnc, mulic: IDd danC..
·

Inte~ational siudenta. Inc.; bu 'aiDiecl
.•t cultlutla1 ~flll¥1 friendihlpa
between Aliierleo!D ~ IIIII forelp •
!illtors llld atudenta-lllroap an extelllift
~ JII'DIIUI IIIII flllliar Friday

........ llltberiDcL '

'

. . ; . : 1DiqluUoe ent.rprliea hate

-8cllael IIIIItbe.:r-~
~....

Cbrtatla!l

ox student
AD of: theae poupa have banded tolltber In llle Council of U/B Minla&amp;riea to
~c!mJ OD 1t111 other jlmjeeta. omdally
- ~ lua* lut year, tbe CoUDcU 11

· _,...,.... tn aerslnl the lpirltual, ethleal ·
. IIIII ~~and lniHella ot U/B
lludenta, ataff" IIIII bculty. ~ to
an ~nt drawn up wltb tbe lJalver.

Compus.

�Tile ~

a..... .,.._

w

.....__whleb
(wllldl 11· a ..... or· JDteNiit.
makinl ap &amp;he . ~~.~~nitbill
--.-""
~
..
' ............. Jllljor .-lliDP: .
aa..vm
olty . aJIIIou(
lllidiH . . ... ......... Hillel,. f«
........
. -·.
a-pie, aftea . . ......,. ~ ......... Gil
...., of tlle cryupo. illc:b u tile
line ,...,.. Ill ......._to 1ew1111 ·~ .
_, ~ ~t ~ualiiDlilly
Tlllaad ·a lllbla. IMI fDia.l II tile .
~ ~nta to afllllatioii wltb lllllol . leciuN .......... '8JIIbDdai .....
~ Clllinhea, a ~t 'f!r/11 to
lopia! u "Cbbl Dloobedlonca,'' ull ~'Tilt
fOIIIt ton.... IDiitractloa aDd -tul
l'allllilo afOdealliMI·ill llnll;"~·
,....a. Tile latlilrii,ID fad. ~or~&gt;
Tile NowmaD Moftmont JII'CII'Idn
~ Of the . . . . .Uilalltl)'.
caliedletlca1 . illltruCaoa Hdl · llciaday ·
· Olllea, u:ll u Rllamdloa BOUt,
~n for cblldlen of faeulty ~ llall ·
tba . . . . . . illudla&amp; ~.
....s ltUdlata. tllllnnlty .Jiudeata mate
Clllbad
-.llllllelllan~ .... . ap ............... ,...,~ .. .wt,;:..r
lidp..,._aftbelrcnfa.
..,_-o(tbne pia UniYealty .n.tHor
WGablp Ia • -~ ' otyte II . tadependlllt study. Se7eral otber
8aJMiay ill~ Bouae, • m1o1111on abo supenlle IDdepeodent
a n)lneallld formu · fllaeraL. bome
study 'jirojecta, proride .e~uo llb!IIY
.......,. Ill 2 Ualftnlty---4-ut, just
. . _ . _ lad IJilllate laformol riPI ·oli
.lblalltlWlllroal.,.....: Newmap / &lt;WNDtllsueo of faltb and-morals.
/
Boll, 08 tbe Of Nllp!a Folio
Tbe Proteotaat 'CAmpus Mllllllly.Jiao,
Boulenld IDd Mala, bu a duopel f6r
ill &amp;he put, ~ empbulzed ooc1a1
Weekday . . _ (8 a.m., DOOD, iJid 5
CODCOllll _ ill Ita_ 'edue&amp;t\'!nal eft~ ·
p.m.) aDd a llaad8y Dlflt Spaoilb"Mua.
opo~ oe~ wltb tbe ):'oUtlcal
Tbo c:bapel of &amp;he Caotalldoo . Center,
Sdeace Depadmoot''ancLiunc:beon rileet8288 llbJD, II uoed for fiYe o&amp;her 8uJiila~' 1 . . . . dnoied to•dllcuaiiOnl Of "tJii! Dlltule .
14--. lb. ~m~lic, illcklenlllly ,,IIIII tilt' . of ~
--....~· · coDCftPtlolial styles ot _
folk Idiom.
_
UviDC."
·
HUiel opoDMn Slbbatb· ieiYiees · : D....,~on ~naare a1s9 fostered by
. tlnoiiibout tbe year Ill -Ita center, 40 . tbe Butem Orthodox Student Aaocla· •
Capen Bouleurd, with students
-tlon w)llc:b enCOIIfll(es ·YOII!II men aod
determiDIDI tbe ltilld of oenlca tbey find'
women to~ wltb prlootund membem
- most latllfy!DI. Some of tbe time, ·t be
of tbe faeulty to dliCuJI tbe Serlptules,
.ead tbe ,Chun!ll Fatbi!n or lhare opiolonl
tradjtlonal· patten&gt; -Ia foUowed. At 'otber
limes, oxperlmenlll or -t!Ye oerricao ' · on iodal aocl.. ftblcal problemo. ·Tbat
are coodUded wltb orjJinal ~ aDd
students abould be encouraced In tbelr
DOHI otUiDp. Holiday oboenanee...loo · oearc:b tor pinonal commitment tbrolleh
-play an Important role :orltb tbo 'HIP ...,.u.. conftontlitlon II tbe underljiD&amp;
' Holiday oenlcel beinl eo..aueied on: - phUooopby of &amp;he protnJD.
,
'
AD appredatlon of God, alon&amp; Wltb.
- e&amp;mpUL
.. • , mdral·aod ~al prillclplei ·desiCJied to
EducMion
' · ' belp tbe illdiYidual ill ooivlnl academic
Tbe ........,..,. of illtereot In qaestloni .. abel oocial ~1'1, li- !be limllar bull
4f morals and ethics, war and J!OA&lt;8, ·bu
lilfo""'*l weoltly moet~n~o of Christian .
cast . formal .eiJIIouo eilacatlon In ...,
Sclenca ltladenta, adriloro aDd eounoeloro'
. Jmportaot pqlltiOD Ia · ~· ~and
'!'No~a-'Hall. · · v&gt;\.
~~ ,.~~f· ·--. . .t ~."! • ,~""~ ·.-· \
,..,...GroupMniltry ; .,. . . ~· ' · '
A unique Relilloul Studies~
;,.- Wblle .Doot members of &amp;he' Cimpuo
Milllltly are onl&amp;lned menibem of tbe
lnltloted lndepeadently by a lfDap .of
concemed students aDd c:urrentlyoffeled
· dei:IY, two lfDUps, tbe Inter-Vanity
u ·port of tbe Untreroity'o ei&lt;perlmenlll . · Chrlltlan FeUowohlp and Campus Crusade -,
CoDote B, .II e'lldeoca ol tbll. ~ phD·
tor Christ, mate uae of a youtb-orleiited
peer ministry approach. Not o!'lf. does
_ oooplly.!!!: &amp;he- priJinio . coate_ndl tbat
reJ111oui penpeeUfel aDd otru~. hove
tblo otter tbe oppeal of otudent-tcHtudent
oo fU..U..nlllly lnftueiieed &amp;he hlltorlol ~ contact, If allo mibdltes clooer lnvo!Yeand lattitutlono of world oocletlos tbay
ment In and deep commitment to
one's educatiOn jl neceaarlly ID~te.. __. ..u.ttlos for tbo• who are 110-minded. •.
aod ~without a~ imder- .
Beaun , In ED&amp;Iaod, Inter-Varsity,
ltandinl of &amp;hem.
·
'·
' ~tbroueh. Ito student-led prayer aod study Campus tolnllten.in.. ......,.nted, tbe ' .lfDUpl, hu exerted a contiDUlDc Clirlitlan
offerlap ol Ualveflity faculty ID· tjlil
lnfluenca on campuoeo' &amp;he world over
ftield by teacblill ..,.._ on ~ous
ilnce t~ l~~O'L 'lbi newer Crusade
l'enpedtrea- 011 !~&lt;&gt;defy," ''The Oper- . ''emphlllizea uie. role of uiO Churc:b, and,
u a.cooperatlve arm, 'p....Onto tbe ·aoapel
atlonal Prillalplitsof tbe New Teltamont,"
1n uwu of tbe student aod lay worlds to
"Iolmdneilcm to- tbe New T - n t , "
aod '~Iiitlodlldlon to J'udalliia." •
whlcib normal Chrlltlan.)Jitne• aoea .not
Enataal bopeo .are .that a fUII-Pedced
usuaUy extend." It detcrlbes ItSelf. u "ao
eou. af ·ftll!'llloua 8tudleo eao be interdenominational ChriltlaD movement
eotabllobeil 'I' part of tbo U/B coUeclate • of stud~ aod laymen who hove unlted
to ..help cltance tbe .world In Ibis eeneration." Its "Action Groups" bave become familiar student cluotem on campuL ·
Social Actionl
•.
&lt;

i!ldl'rldlllll ....alqtions
~-

~ cao be' klenllftod

o.,.......

a

a-

held....,.

lor

/ 1'

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The soc:lal eommltment of today'•
youth II on ' area iD '!fhlch ...era!
~- a(. tile Campus MIDiltly offer
Another orpnilatlolf.; laaillatlonal
opportunities tor IDwlmnent. ~
Studi!Dts. hie., b ~ a ~
The ProCram of tbe LutbeaD MIDillly
lfDUP.. Rellcloully-orlen""" •....t ~_........
·extenclo to . suc:b topi&lt;U . projec:9 u ,..
ated wltb"aoy: 'denombiallon, It deoellbea
eolleetlq donation• tor ~
ltoelf. u a I!OUP ol r-llloo IIIII .lndl.eru,- ·111 i:oo,...tiOo~wttb .tbe-· ~ - _ -.lduak united. by aur ~ ,claift
Student A-aatlon. •
·
·
offer the oerric:e to rilltilli fiOm emy: •
NowmaD HAll mateol to Wtlos anll·
natloD..:reedy to belp Ill aoy: Iota~: •
' oble for by ltudontl wbo oem u
ooc:lal, spiritual Ud ,materiaL" ·.-r- .
....S.mtorbUad YDIIIIC-peopio. .
,
BDalllh tutoriDI II c6nd • We8ey Foundation, iD. addition to ·. lniiiiUioDI of , tbo ..... ~-.aiellaj .
ipoiiiDrillf &amp;he I!OUP clelllcafed-io_~ . 08 &amp;he .... «. ~ .Oil ~ IDdlnaewlll, II ~eopolllible for ''Opeiatloll Yld...t '
Jailor-:,_
Reoohe," a otudeat-olplllzed -aipt to.
natlonll Slodeats, IDe., II- illl!ldq...-..t
bridle tbe C:ommunteationa pp-botw"'n
ot 156 Willopitar.
•
•
campua aDd commoDity. · r
'" "'"--"-·""
"'poratidll Gnoalllbt'' 11 BWoro
to, Ita JII'Oifalll ol worJt1D1 irU;b tbo
• 1Tilt Welt- ol tbe IDdltlllaailtUdlat,
baadlcapped -a project wbldl Jiroo111es
of - . II a -lnll . , . _ af. .U
beneiiballli opportullltlos for .-til to_ compcinenta ol &amp;he c...p. liiiDIIk1. !!_
both tbe youpt&amp;'rl aDd. tbo J Jlilol - youlb, ... -- ~ "ei)'IIC oat" far wp,
ltlldinl couMeiorL ,
·
tbat f:!Y dou DOt ICP1lllliaedld.

to.

BDal:lll!

poraon...,._...._

""'!"-,•

.

Moot-::::r-::...__....o;,c..
-...- ...•

Ntoollltlllrto
_D ..~i
~~
·. -.- .,..ahft!m .........
ol. a
.....,..__.... ...
fllllllll piopa. ....

a=...,tblt. ....__. . .
..a ...._

-'liltt II
.......
elomeatllll • • . " A all-lia
IQ'IIIIa II~ •
lletldo bellll . . . . . It their am.iu, '!·
-a....-....,~~ Ill ....., _.........
. • ...,.
...... b)'li!t~-o..llllls.r.
rice udllle'Oalle oi-.....&amp;AIIila .

...

�ThQ
.

...-..c...-......, ,
.

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

IIIOIIIIDSL
•
a.&amp;loZM.-Y. lU14

-

(IU-4260)'

.

Coun¢11 or 1I1B Camptls MliliStrl~
•

. ..,

ae.. PIIIJlp uiiinlnll
15 UllhenityAft . .

Butr.lo, N.Y.

1~14

J

~-- • ...
•
- St. Muy.luikhdllll
- - (8~ ,15 Ualwnlty Aw:'
40Qopea lllwd.
• -' .
Buffalo, ~. Y. 14214
~.N.

Y.14214 -

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

• . 1·1JIIIIilallr Aw.

• JIIIWD,II. Y. lal4_ •

-

• PAGE4

.
- (81'7-71i71i)

-

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, r.4·

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���~

.AulTroub/e;_ , SBI Signs ~ment

With Hqusii)g GrOur}

~Facing

Many~
Students
·
.

SBI . . up
a superviaory baud for the C..
alive Cnofta Center wbidl-.Jd
"advise SBI an the operatioaa"
ol the Center Thil _ . , .
Communicalioi..
mi
the Crafts Center are slartinc
an 'expoirinlental use
Under the plan, Conummicationa CoUece will use the
Crafts Center'a- facilitie&amp; when. ·
the Center. is clooed. U Iiiia,
BB""\"""!'t 1B IIUCCI!8SfuJ, Com~urucations CoUep will continue to use. the
and ~
also donate some of Ita eqwp~t to the ~ter. The situa,tion '!'ill be ......_ed at tire end·
of this semester.
~
.SBI a1sc;&gt; set.-':'1' a su!H:Om· rruttee which will draw . up a
slate of nominees for the student ·slot on the Faculty Stu.d"'!t ~iatio!' committee
which will coo~te the ssJe
of FSA-&lt;JWDed land m Amhent.
SBI. i~ .cufft!l!tlY looking lf:!r
·tw'! d1v1s1on dll'e,ctors"-Pubhcations and NortOn Hall. In
addition, they are . seeking to
flU three postions in Unive111ity
Press. 'Anyone interested •·in
these jobs ciin get more inforlriation from the SBI office rn
Norton.
~

Scbolaatic ·~ Cci, 1Dc.1
finaJJy entered mto a contrllc'
tu.l;i ~t Monday ~

TwO sela ol, financial aid
problems are ~ large n"!"bers ol retumilll students, m-

which will hopefully proVIde
cluclini. in_anyeruolledin~ ·· l:JIB.st.udtints With l&lt;iw-lncx!!ne
Opportunity P r o 1r.r a m a ima holl8llll. SCholastic Houaina, a
othe111 .who depend on loans stUdent run, non-profit corporalhroug'! the N!'W Yolk Higher · linn, W!'8 iilcorporated throuxh
~~o.n Assistance Corpora- · SBI laSt year and after eight
tion. ,
• •
.
months ol o~tionar wod&lt;
About 200 Equal OpPc&gt;rtuni- will now bell!' \its fi111t formal
ty Students appan!Dtly failed year ol operation.
·.
to meet the J\lne 30, 1972,
Over ~ summer, ~ group
deadline for applying for Schol- selected a ~ of di~111
ar IDc:entive Assistance to ·rover and elected Jtm BeaU as cliairtuition·for the 1971-72 academic man.. At Monday night's SBI
year. Under """' SUNY poli- .m~g" the formal contract
c:ies, these stiJ4ents can only. was Signed- and SBI alloea~
&amp;ave. waived that. tuition not close io .$4C!•OO\I as the housmg
covered under Sebolsr IDc:en corporations flfBt..~ear budaet.
tive Awanis or State Univer:
'lbe. con.t~ctwil and budgesity Scholarships About 1000 tary necotiations, however,
students met the ·deadline .;rter weren't w~~ controve111y: A,
a total of """"" notifications stormy d~1on oyer part-time
had 'been distributed by co
stslf sslanes ended witb Schoselors, EPIS ofliciaJs and %'~ lastk; Housing's ,Vice Cl¥rman
Uffioe of Student Accounts from Jennifer Was!ii&gt;Um ~ out .
January thrOugh June
,of the D~Miillg. Finally, the
·
SBI J3oan1 decided not to pay
· As a result, the $550 tuition the hOusing 'COrporation oftloers
not yet paid ·for fast year is the $2.50 an.hour they requestbeing deducted from awards re- ed but to give them stipends
ceived for 1972-73, leaving an instead. 'rhe amount' of the
undetermined number of stu- stipepds wasn't determined.
dents with little or no financial
assistance. According to ofli-

eon-

p.........., ·

For 1St Senate Meeting.

:.:.rts~~~rS=~

j'

-ce

·

$taff T~- 12 -Minutes

.

ID otber actiau,

(SBI) ud

Sub Baud I

Life Works/WjJs EmpJwsize

iencing diflieulties may be re•
'duced when it becomes known
~in Cf
11 ~
how many students nave not
f Ulr ... '0 1.1
/
f'(,UUS
"'lbe birth took On! 12 ·
......._,
the u ·
received awards because of ad·
·
·
Y
mm- ...,;,,..e to
ruvel1!ity Re- ministrative tie-ups in Albany,
"Got an Interest? Get a : group is Faith Hiller, Student
utes but the results should be . vi..W Committee list spring and l1!ther than because of failure Group!" is the informal slogan Counseling Center.
.
· ~round (or a long time."
recent .selection .o(' Standing to meet the deadline.
of Life Workshbps, a program
Campus minister Arlo Nau
This ...,. the obser.oation of Elections Committee chaired by
which was organized laSt year is the director of ,t he Marriage
a vetenm stall member -after Howard English, director ol . Another_~P. those who apto provide a way for University Mock-Up• course ' which aamthe first meeting of the Profi!s. systems support, Office of Fa- plied for N¥HEAC loans, num- , community members to share ines human oauality, marrlap
sionsl Slaff Senate· (PSSJ last cilities Plsrining. 'Ibis commit.. be111 approximately_·3500, . The interests; skills ·and ideas. This alternatives; tilrth eontrol, abOr- ·
Thtll'Sd!!Y. .aft.arnqq'!_
tee has tieen asked to name money provided for this pro- . fall, thenon-ci:edit, nonJee pro- tion, and divorce.
Pri 'm..arily intsnded lac
· The 3Ji Senato111, officers o( the Promotion Review' Panel gram originatee in Federal leg- lf1'liDl is"'beginning, with five
th'\ Senate and a crowd of visi- wilich is part of the implemen- islation, wliich this year carried workshoP'S and is continUing its studenf organizatipn treasurers,
tors heaid President Robert L. tation of the SPA contract. PSS with it the requirement for an Psychomat program. More the courae on business proc&amp;Ketter c!large the organization has 'alSo set up a grievance com- additional form through which workshops will be offered later duies will be taught by Leoler
with "renderina advice and mittee which will .report to the student certifies that the in the term.
Goldatain, ~ manqer.ol
counsel to hotli the President President Ketter, again as man- funds will be used only for ed- - The initial workshops are: Sub Baud L •
sod ·the acsdemif community; dated by the SPA contract. " ,ucatioll41 purposes. The ad- Decisions; Decisfons, 'Decis.Finally, Life Workshop&amp; il
sod developing and implement;.
Kuntz once more called the minislrative problems caUsed by ions: What Should My Major sponsoring. evening and af~
ing standards of conduct which professional stslf "the anony- the change have been cleared Be?; Now 'lbat -rve Got My noon ~lons. ol Psyehomat.
will enhance and maintain the mous leade111 of the Unive111ity" up and checks will arrive Isle Major, Can I Get Em pI o y- The ..,..1ons will be on Wedn5prolession of academic edrnin- explainfnl! that the supporting in the semester.
ment?; ·Facilitato111' Workshop; days from 6-9 p .dl. in Room
istration." His statement was staff "attempts to 'provide thbse
Marriage Mock-Up; and Stu- 232, Norton, 8J!d on 'f!lursdays
intentiOIIflily broad, Ketter said, conditions for teachinJ, learnAll students who depend on dent Organization Business from 3-6 p.m. m ·the first noor
so as not to be "unduly restri • . ing, and research which they NYHEAC loans have been ProcedureS.
cafeteria, Norton.
tive or oonftning."
would want for themselves had granted a grace period so that .
The workshop on choosing a
For additional information,
The President pointed out they chosen an academic role. payment of tuition and fees is major will be lead by Berths and reaisl:!"tian for workshopa,
that traditioniilly "the profes- · They help other pe(&gt;ple look required immediately upon re- Cutcher, ,..Sistsnt dean o1 stu- CORtact Billie Albrecht at at. .
sional staff bav'e been confront.. good by providing information, ceipt of their. loan checks. All dents. Cunent p~of the 2611. .-ed&gt; with ,_t difficulties in by implementing academic pol- other students are required to employment roarket, emerging
overcoming misconceptions and, icy, by recommneding sltema- PBY _tuition and f~.!&gt;Y ~r career trends and life styfe fore,
prejudices regarding their cho-. tives for action, and by being 13 or one week from the p&lt;ist.. · cssts will be discussed.
sen proleesionil.'! It is "your inconspiruous."
.·
mark on the statement from the
Possibilities for employinent
... our .. . ,_.ibility to
After the meeting, an m- .Oflice of Student Accounts, and graduate study will be the
change that tradition," he said. form81 rec:eption was held in whichever is Isler.
fOCtiS of "Can 1 Get EmployU/B!a PmfeaaioOal.staff Sen- the' Fa~l[ Cl~. •
'71•Q
_£"1 __ ,.:___
ment?'' .taught by IMry D1ike, . · ::::;i;~~~~~··,~""&amp;
ate ia p....&amp;..ldu the first of its
_,.
I~
~
8880Ciate .director of placemsoL ~
,_,_.
,...._..,.,
· In addition to Chairman T -~kAwroval
i':"'tl.!t C:'-~tbe ~~ English, other members of the .ucu;
The FacilitatOrs' Wozbbop
•
M;, ,
c""""""" PSS Standing' Committee on
will be a continuation" ol a
:mted out.·· '"l'berefor.e. we Elections are: MlB. Margaret'
The Di.vision ol {.!ndergrad- apring Life Workshop. Tbese
~-~ty to l..ansing, p u·b li cations and uate Studies (DUS) a current.. sessions are desicned to train
es
I ' l l - - WW&lt;a may schedulli;g coordinator, Educs- ly undertaking an inventory ol "facilitators" for the weeldy
~cbe~
tiona! Stud!-; Dr. J'*Ph&amp;!e.i~~~ CIIUI8Mbato de-t PBychomat personal intation." But
chaseko 8881Btsn~ dean,
"'""""' ......., ve no . ctlanle lllllll!ionL I.ader ol the

T.riterests.. srz..:

srz..

a

nus·

W,.!'m

.:W&amp;be

-

=
re:= :m.

crouP~that- ~

dopeDd 1IPGil lhli quality ol, tbB

J!..,.~tf,:m~m~::;
' !fe.::;'~.,:!.va:i::;
• • · · aJid known as 1be COUrse Monitor-

E'I--L ·M-.:.J

Lio$
.....tMJI.fhe,~
, UJUll'£ J.liUII~
a foUr-time

1he director

~ Y'lll: are ~ to - Records· Beft.adette Hawkina; ing ·sy8tem {eMS), ..-tly .
~; ,our-~- to ~ advisor 'Division d. Ulllilrlrad· completed Its lint 8ludy ol the .....U •
...... -

&amp;..dies Jobn
;s,.:.._r
;....tYIL ,...._
~.qualityr2•ft!C" ..._t Informa.\fOil ~·
_

..... -te - - - -

Oleuczyk,

for~-: and, ulllmaf!e-

reCorda. 'Die ll!!aldl foUnd that
710 of4,8CIO - . _ OD DUS
records bad 1d .._.lllllllOoed
by the DUS Caniallqm
mitlee. '~'~Mia.........,.......

.
C.boih
4!1e
0

f@ -a.
ud

EH
...-

ly, 11PG1l
..
fNillliilla'
belle, 18-...dinN l'llll
·
Leoriad Lewaadow.ak c.Dc-'M'JIIiOW
PallolriMKeU. Dr. Gllbat puler~· ·Urry
Jll]l'totimejlllll
!1-, c:lliilimu ;{the F-'t7 ...,.Ute direetlllr, Placement ..,t f!l all ~-- recOrd. ...._. • - . . . . . 111111t
s.ui, ..._. the efforts d.· ud Cueer Guidance; and 'lbla • onbr for-......_ .. . . . .:!'~' bit Me. YGdl
. . . . . . ..,. ......... ed -~not · -Madia~ Boyce, uslatant di- lllbed-- .......... d. J.9!18: ...........15~
•
•
......_. Ia 8ldlllt up a llld . - Houlbtt.
.·eou... .......-..... tllil dale
.
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.

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a

~ poup will llOIIIillate .......... ~
a..,_.._ bt- 11¥JD1b!a·forfiveolberiilandint ·- DUB I - .
B~
cOmmittees: ~Slalul;
' "Pallllealic!M. ,..,_._. De- ..
'l'lla111t fllthe .....-.. ... . ~ Uai¥e~alty 1!1aa- b e r f l , - ~......
P!l8 Cbalrmaa Dr. AileD · Ding,~ and Repla&amp;lclaa - tdbt m. • - laiD- ·
......Wtion" PIP-

-

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

"'lat....,....65CIIIIt.........., .=C

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Colillnunl~

ol ..........
lonMtlaa
for lbe .and
·!:ltalf ........ ildireal8dla
.... -aldilatiOD.
.,.. ._. fll CIIS. RiillatKua1i!.
Be &amp;l8lled
the b11eo1y
RelatiOhL
.........~
~ JIIO- vial• any flllbese-u.. Wdrer, 8lllille.lt tD die cS.a.

-

Uadar

bellltad

tbe .,.,. · - - ~tkln'B'

.IIUtililpatloa Ia aomlaatln1

r

I

-

.

•681l8.~
IIDnil
a

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.
•

!~-~~,~Qf~;, -~~~~~~y

.... ..load to CDllact the Blec&gt; ia - - l l y ......... iadlvid-. t::iJ·~~=~;~~
daDe Cammitlee .....-~ - ...... ~ ~ ~ ..:..:
from their~
.
·
ellllll)llder ~·
.

--·--~~----~----~~~~~--m-----=---~----------~------~--~~----~~~----------~~~~~

��~

1\miDaJ. UnitOO Fuixi~ m~ cmGHBR

.Will Be Aimed at~ of~$110,000 .
' ........:u...:__ u·~.._. -..

,

.

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oil~~
·-

- - --

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lant,

Fridii.y

"--

Robimoa., COiliWelor, Cooperative for furiding the recenUy enacted
Community CoUep.·
·
program of stuaent aid through
o~H~P,.v~~ ~~ Basic Educational Opportunity
ward Doty, vice pNiident; Cbair- Grants this year is virtually
man, Mr. Kenneth Conklin, aa. non-existent.

=:,

;J!:!~ ~ ~ "1:. ·~~n:.t
U

Secretary of Health. Ed~~ta·
tion and W e lr a r e · EUicitt L.
Rlc:bardaon baa made it o81cial: the likelihood or any money

Mia .Jeri LiDder,

:"~~I·••~re:!."'J:.::;

tN111i- ~ .. a -tmat to.- • ..,. re1a11iiaa ~ ababma or

worbd

~ ~;

1ioD1 Center;

lbe brflllt ~ 111 Nan Boot- lbe UDIWnit)l'l -ddft, baa D·
oo, wliD -...ed In two alt.ma- · -meed. ·
. '
.
tift h11h _..In ~
"1at ")'e!lr, lbe UniWIIIit,y
ud.£llill.,....
railled $95,(100 111 ila . $100,000
'lbey

Admiooiao. " Recoido; Mr:

~"t. ~ ~:

~,:ara-lnlerlor~ - ~~Qi:.~~~-

. lbll

=

GJIDUCATo; -

GNOTES

·,

sis~~no~~IATION

eoOrdhaturs "and 1i is our illtent .th[S- year

The Houte and Sonote,...
compiamJMd on on _.-apriotlon
$74-5' mM.IIon for the - .- c:unel IWih ~ lluden18,. $110,000 ia -part of tbe ovef8U /
Mr. Thomas ISchillo, aasislant vice of
of the Notlonol FOUndetlon on the
8ome ldcla Who ~~ dropped 11081 0( $8,328,455, an increase
pNiident for houaing; Sub-Chair1 and Hiunon- for lisco!
out, a few l'IICIII;'t bigh scbool . 111 12 pet cent, 111 tbli United
men: Mr. John Falkidee, uaislant Art
1973.
graduate~,
~~· pet..B - F\md of BulfaJC).D!I Erie Counto director, housing; Mr. Don8id
ents aDd m........,.. U/B t,y. Tbe United F\md raises
· ~~j,_ .fl~lfrM/"'t. ~~:r:
The White House FeUows _
studenfa. Tbey came for a va· monies for 70 c h a r i·t a b I e mation &amp; Library Studies; · Dr. manager, food iervice, Goodyear Program, under which 15 to 20 riel! ol - . One lirl,&lt;;z-· ~es .. and health aerv!ces Warren Thomas; chairman. in, Hall; Mr. Samuel Davison, Jr., outstanding young Americans '.
plaiDed that there was no whiC:h la:st year aerved more dustrial engineering; Dr. .Irviog assistant director, vending; Mn. are selected annually for oneway" abe oou1d dmp out of than 756,000 peraons in all Shames, chairman. · engineering Betty · Brock, auislant Jenera! year periods of service at the
. hidt acbool but
way" high economic groups. ~
.
ocience; Dr. Daniel PoUock, pro· ma~r, bookstore~ Richard to I I 0 f th Fed ral Gov
sdiool could aa,liafy ""':nee&amp;.
Again this year, the Univer· f"";~~~~~:f";"~; !.;ud ' assistant .
r, hous- eJ:m:t sia shoJ on ,.';,men a;.
either. She was looking for sity will organize its campaign D" Clyde L: Rap.dall; vice presi- ~FPI&lt;Z or VICE PliEBIDEHT FOR plicants. The director of the
some type o( after-achooi-SUp- around 22 divisions. Each clivi· dent; Chairman, Dr. Richard STUDENT APPAIRS: Dr. Ricbanl President's Commission on
plement. -j)then ~ - there be- sien will bave its own quots, · J o '! e s, -assistant provoet; S_ub- SiR elkow, vice president; Chair· White House Fellows reports
causelbey.-lookingfor~ Dr. Rowland said. In explain- Chairman, MISS Mary Wanng, man: Mr. Howard -B. Deuell, as- there were 1,509 applicants for
cific ~ not oftered. m ing the program of solicitation, seruor stenographer.
sistant vice president; Sub-Chair- 1972-73 fellowships, only t53 of
local .high scboola - creative 'he empbasi:r«&lt; the ;...~rlal)t
FACULTY OF_LAW AND JURISFRU- men: Dr. Jerome Fink, coordin- whom were women. In the eight
dancing, wrifinl or exteasive role -played by aeveral~ DEHCE: Dr. Richard D .. Schwartz, . a tor of student affairs &amp; services; years the program has been in
c~aft workahops. The . recent University faculty an~ staff ~in:!, an~ret!'::
~: i:!!"~r"Offi~be, senior clerk, existence there have !&gt;een· 136
higb i~Cbqol ,pduates said tbey meinbers who are aervmg as. vost; Sub-Chairman, Miss Aucl'rey
OFFICE OP VICE PRESIDENT FOR young Americans selected as
felt "an Obligaitbeir~tobi~scbooloth- chairmen and workers.
•
K6scielniak, principal stenograpb, UHIVEB8ITY RELATJONS: Dr. A. feUows, only 11 of wbom were
ers get through
,..,
"~the leadirig lnstitution in er.
Westley Rowland, vice president; women.
time."
,
.
Western New York and the . FACuLTY OP NATURAL SC££NCES t:hairman: Mr. James DeSantia,
1be session went in fits~ and number one generator -of eco- AND MATHEMATICS: "' D_r. George director, Information Services;
A new analysts by the National
starts. Ms. Booton olfered, nomic activity the University Nancollas, provost; Chatrn_&gt;an, Dr. Sub-Chairmen : J ohn Tlntntoa. Science Foundation 1 h 0 w 1 thot
".I 'm ready ~ ..to starr a ~ ~ again ~designs~ .as ~ ~~~~&lt;:;;k's:b.C~?=:i):. r:r:~~i~c;: ~~:~a:~~ti~: a~uate ~lments continue to

jor~=·.;..mb.t~·' to~~: quota -~

~~naofl~~~~~~~:

*

:'no

=:_:.

to start Jt toiDC?rrow pilot campaJgn orgaruzation
if tha~s what you "ant. I ·real- •.. Ri.wlandtsaid. T.llis means~t
ly want to see this work." She U i B will be a symbol of what
sfress!!!l. tbattheprogramW&lt;ft!ld dedicated oommullity citizens
center-around tile needs of m· can do in support of one of the
dividual-~ents..
~ · COllln!ullity's biggest programs.
She .outlined ~!ow the .pro,,_ be llllld. ' ''
&amp;1'8111 ~d;,_~on, J~~ -.ln,explainin&amp; the importance
woulll uae......, resources a
• Of contributions, lbe Chairman
able in th1! Uni~ty to fur- cited the roUowina: •a weekly
ther their educational needs . . pledge of 6 cents ($3.00 per
If an,.~vfdual stud~t wb_"ftyear). will buy, a lesaontallin
10 &lt;&gt;- counting
ed a ..,....ratory courae m
change •Dr a men Y
gy, lhli!' abe wOU;Id try ~ work retsnied ll1linee at Goodwill
sometbing out With an 1118truC· Industries who hoJ!!!S to be self·
tor in bioloo. If a one-to-one sufficient· · 22 amts a _...week
seminar 011 -dance was dO!Iired. ($10.50 Per year) will buy a
then abe would try to find a liead pointer for a cerebral ,paltutor (or .that. The structure sied child at the Cerebral Palwould be fteldble1 the only man· sy ~iation of ~y w_h o
daton.' part ~d be a week;ly can neither talk nor pomt w1th
meeting of all mvolved to &lt;!is- Dis anns or legs; $5.29 a week
cuss the activities Of the schOol:- (~5 i&gt;er year) will buy a
"It won't be easy," Ms. Boo- wlii!elchair- for a diaabled multon wll1'11BCl: "'l11e easy 'thing is tiple aclerosis victim through
to s~ in a, public high acbool" the Multiple Sclerosis Associa:
. But ·sbe 'faa !tel'&gt;: .t!!'thusiastic tion.
_
.
. ·
about the probabilities of 8UC·
"All of us at the Uruvers1ty
cess. Tbe ,n.test difficulty, . at Buffalo are in a fortunate
she felt, would be learning self. po&amp;ilion," Rowland asid, "and
motivati011 and that "takes a 'at the time o( the United Fund
long tin&gt;e.."
• ·campaijrl we have this clpporFinally lbe.poup decided to tunity t.O reach out to help dill~tart lbe project Tuesday mom-· ~ the old,_ ~ blind, the
mg when 11 ldcla reported to cnppled,· the ill, and t1!e restart a ecbool. Ms. ~ton apd larded. We can make this '!ur
Topper are working With investment in our commurul:y
them to aet_!P individual study -but, - more important, we can
prognuna · They estimaie there make this our invesbnent in
is room for about 15 stUdents • people. I am confident that the
in tbe Buffalo Alternative Hijlh· University will not only .make
School wblc:b Is what they re its 11081 of $110,000, but will exOOON caJJlq ~project. ooed it aubat.antially."
Aa with anYtlilnl that's new
Divisional chairmen and BUband i11ffarmt, a lot ol meetings chairmen for the University
and bud work will be "!Quired. drive are:
·
.
But TopperoaDd Ma.. Booton
FACULTY OP AIITII AND uomr:RS .
say theY're rady to do it and l&gt;r. .John P. Sullivan, p""""'t;
aslr. ~ ,..taois interested to Cbai~~~
caU ~at at 6888.
!MOOr ~ stmili.!aky. a.ociate
ol Engliab.
.
school -

~Iwishfull~-=-who
to ......, for tuition · )llllliver

~~!!or
~~~.:.,;:!r~.r:a
11lC &amp;.,_fi "~ prof,_,r

. Jacob Marin.sky •professo r of

chemistry ·
' ·
FACULrl OF SOCIAL _SCl&amp;NCES "
AD""!'ISTRATIOH : Chatrman, SDr.
Ed--:m Hollander, 'Pro""3~ub-

deadline for

In l'wlollnel is

p~TY

OF ~G-Wli"--N"
be 1U1I1n11111 with •11 _ . . r y APPLIIID11(31t(:a· Dr.
~ ·
eppoovaol. r-rt-tlme Gill, ....,....t;
~ tradueto ..slstants,' Ho-rd .stra~b 801 Weller
p...-t.

:=- :,-~ ~l~':'::
_..,.-per -

Jog~~~~VI~~m:,.T . ;.,R

FACILITIEs PLANNING : Mr. John l!J71,, alter
T elfer, vice president; Co-Chair~
The ''tal&gt;
~~r:=io ~~i~ sociolo~: man. Mr. Douglaa , Wheaton, u- 20'' p8Ciueta 1 - - (7 pullllc,
"n 1v• Sl 0 H OP UNDERGIW&gt;UATE listant faciliti!"' program coo'rd!n- 13 prlvat.)'upeMncod rec1uct1ons
81'VDIIit_;. ~r. ' Ciiarleo H.V. Ebert, • . :l&lt;!•j; ~'trman_. Rooe W.ew· In _ , llrwt.,..,, full.time - • ·
dean; .,_;nairman, Dr. Walter N.
ra '!..:.~"'op VICE PRESIDENT FOR rnent .t the , - _t . . - Kuru:, ~ted""'! ; Sub-Chair"'~
cent.
men:_ M •• • CJintbta Andenon: ~'!;..~:i.t;Radi:!C::.:~:: ,
.. . •
.- • .
_
~i"'N~rbeo;:='h:.ai~f. ,;,&lt;;!'::~i - Richard Dulfy,.-euiotant fo~ 1pon-~ ~ Thit -·number of ruli-Ume
professor l'hysical education for aored research; Sub-Cba•rman. graduates tude n t s &amp;uPP9rted
men; M.;,, Eleanor Greener, 1ten- Miss Jan Tuuynaki, senior rien- primarily by (..u-.hip8 • aDd ograr,ber UJ&gt;!"ard Bound; Mrs. ographer.
trai......mpe baa also declined
Shirey A GSyle, lllllis.lant to di· . ~TI';;',.u:'"'tl:.0 ".J 1:' ~: nearly 10 ~r cent from i970, to
rector, EPlS. 800
.
president,' U/ B F~undetion, Inc, ; 1971 _the highest"rate !'f '!,ecline.
1 type&amp;. of • outside supCIW&gt;UATZ ":j ~rC~AUll- Chairman H Kettb Mooiley, eli- of au
ter H. Hull . . r_
;rman, rector of cieve~opment, U/ B Foun· port. Tlie' doA:line ·in feU~
~;;'l;e~~e ~tSa,Jvo. ~mor s~nog- dation, Inc.; Sub-Chairmen: J!f-Y tmineeship support (or firstDIVISION OF COHTIHIJINc m uc• - Rickett., director, deferred 8'V- year students alone .was even
TIOif " MILLAIID FILLMORE COL- ing, U/ B• Foundstioa. Inc.;_Mn. higher _ about 17 per cent. In
w;E: Dr. Robert Berner, d"'!JJ; Irma Goeller, office DllllUlger, U/B 1971 tbe Federal covemm!'Dt
Chairman, Mn. Mugaret Nevm. ~:.:::r:!o:ll~~. ~!:;. 1 ~:!:: redu&lt;;ed its shar)! 111 aupporf of
director, Adu!t AdVISement Cen- iation; Mn. Marjorie pavoli,
oe&lt;'full-time ·graduate students !'&gt;
ter: Sub-Chatrmen' -Ni rs .. .Jean- retary, Alumni Asaociation. 32 per cent from :rT per cent m
cl~t:k. FDe~~n·offi~~r M~.3~An::
WE81'I:aN NEw v~ NUCI:.EU 1969. Federally supported telCanfield assistant to the dean, IIE8E.UICH \)ENTER: Cbaitm8;rt: Mr. lowshipe and traineeships were
CredifFree Programs; Mr. Keith Charles C. Thomas, Jr_ director; reduced by 13 pet cent and r&amp;Johnson, w istant to the "dean, Sub-Chairman: C he; YI· Lumb, aearch asaiatanlllbipe by 5 pet
M.f .G.;_Mr. David Karpolf. pro· ate;:':;:· cOoaoorATOIIB: Mro. cent.
gram dtrector. WBFO.
E ld
·
U/B
-.
U HIV,ER~IT_Y Ll~: Dr: ~:::f'~tio":.~
Mon- · ·, . ...., al
· ~~bkfr~'·~~~ ~i: t e it h, administrative .-iolanl, . . . . _ ....,....... Glllductbrarian, Science &amp; Enlllleenng Offi&lt;;e of Vice:-P~nt for. U_ni· ed .., . . ......,.. MIC8IIan Mo
. Library;, Sub-Cbairmen: !lfr. Jer- vennty Rela_tions, Mta PrDei!Ja . . . _ " - tMt . . ........,
ome Drost. associate bbra"!"-'1• Cl&gt;u~er, ~talent f~r commum~ ...., In 1171•72 ~ a
Special Collections: Mr. Wilham rela\ions, '(.:&lt;:"' Preoident for Uru 10.1 -per .... 1. . .70Dorf, auociate librariB!&gt;- Collec- verstty Re tions.
,.........,._._.__
~-u r&gt;e.el&gt;r:":'nJi, ~ •H~"':i: ri.....
A~"'
14.1 per ~ .._., 1. . .711
's.Je~~ry; ~iss Bart.ara, 1..11-.
~
1J174L
•
Goldbet:l aiOislan~ librarian, Law
A ..m.rrn.-nant
• •
•
Library· 'Mn. Marpret Giles,
~-'6 ...~"'
N- Y«k UDI~eraitl'',!l
· ' -tant librarian, Science It Eng.
SCbopl 0( ~ and Sci·'
u~rary~rs. Ka""! Smith, leeDr. ~ter. f. Repn, Pr111""!"'f eace . will
iDto the
~H:i,.~ ·tf~. ~~; M':; of~~~:::. r.~ .!:rC:':-1111
Lib · M J)i;Vemja. a.ociate p
·
eat in,P..U, to 03" VT
lib!'.::;;. Lockwood Library.
lieillth Care 8CideiiiiC y.-r, ~to
.
QPPIC&amp; OP-t'BB PUB,_,.; A Ill&lt;·
~ ..,.t .me. 0( - - :;:,~:::.:::.
Ill
-~ VTCB ~:
Rob- era1 ~ COUidrieL
o1
~
ert L.
Dr. IJePn
aNYU

cent._

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·

M.::'3'.=t!•

Regan"
Paris'

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uo::'..~•'.l.:=; _-.:::.;::.-:.;:: ~
~~.l"~
Weclnelilllr,~4. FCII'm!.musf

Gavem. 'Senior stenographer, Uni- ded.Jne. In cloctorat.arantlna In·
vel'llity Publication's; M\i 1d red ' ltttiltlons, flrst year, lull-tlmo 1'8d·

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~:..~~~U:':t..!: =-~if-~ 3'e::'~=~j~ - ~-::.~~ ~:--....,..

sl,_ ,.

PIIIt blue fonn. DMdllne for submlaion to Student Accounts , 'Octobar20,41ftor-ropriNrout·
1

ina

for......,...

of

•PPft.WI ~

Dr.:RalJih

a.au:::nr:

~- 'Merilyh Hut&lt;:'!-

..,..-~' 1~anovapber,alectrt·

:f"~; Or. ~n:t~
nier.jnof~r. 8cbool

cuu-·
bunt.

Mia

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a-ioa; tift
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l a;:::;;,"w. 'IIPIMI 'l~blilfll ...... fl'•• ..,.' : \ : •••
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----:-_.:..--::.: :---:''--- :;; .An oi.q SW&amp;Gl will .folloor. Hil"ftte llbort8,e of qualified
\m uRSDAY-14 \,
lei H -. 40 Cal*l Bhd., 8:80
~ ill IICiple"" ....... of the
p.in.
... .
•
Ulilted Stata baa maiJe 1be OOJI'l'JimDIG IIDITAL IIIUCATIOlf• : UUAB coPI'IIUicioa••:...Johnl.y
1DiiDIIII of ..u.taDIII qudfled RodiolDI)': ·A l'orlM:it!~llilm!B.&lt;• ·J Shima aDd Lany olohnoon, ~
to ~per(omi 08ltaln ~ ser- {railer cou.... {or tM ~iilf&lt;. ftoor
'"Nortoo, '11 p.m."
Yiaea an importaut pub I i c .-,.,..,.,lilionor, Drs: Alap Drimaan. F.....Junen aDd truo{em, f""!j otut..lth concem. Three faculty c)laJrman aDd pro!0000r. Deport- =d•::n::ts:.:.,~7.::.5~cen=la.:..:•:....:.:..
facal=ty.:..·_nau_,:..•.:...L
-.bers.in; the Sehoo1 of Dmit- ~nt ,of ONI: ~ae; Charleo
·
isi~y are~ that piOb1em - ~,.,:...7-:.,P~.:lT,~
~A~DAY.:_....;16
·wiJb the aid of~ ~1!'7,896 can- ate pro7~r. oral medicine. Ca- CAC -..ova• : In Cold Blood, 1.CO
bad bom the•Divisiml of-~p&lt;!il Hall, 10 a.m.-6:80p.m.
Capen,- 6:46, ·. 9: 4i&gt; p.m.....Admiotal Health ~ the U.S. PubliC ACT v••: A PJOITIIDI of television, oion: 75 CODia.
&lt; :. •
Health Ser9ice.
.. ~--- • ---""-. NOrton.
L
Tbo
- ~-Dra. ! ' - W , )'~ - ~~;;,.......'•: 10 a.m., HILlA &lt;il'w:N' HOW. . ..
·
Shirley A:""'.Bl'.d., and Peter .R. - Gtal: ~Teleoioion; 11 - ment of Hillel Houoe will be oet
CwmiDcham. aD_.Jrom lhli De- a.m. Bur.ucnlc:y; 12 noon, U/B
a p~
~te~
'Fo\ further infopaation, .c:a11 8111padlnept of Operative DenliSt;. FOOd ~ . (the
12:80 ment; retreobmenbr Will.b e -· 6626.
,
·
!!!..
.._"theof~"!"'tofACOthe
~~~~a!.!,Uncodi
~ ~::::; _oetting
The Hillel r•brarr will be the
Three areas to 6e explored are
_
•OI'Cle
"'"JI!C
.....,...,.
....,___ _
for a M•hWa MaJ!to. lea· the..__....,. of d"'""· ......,reel dia- ·
- ) CA Conoortium on Radoralive Wailina' _for the -:·-...
8 • : ~ P.D!-· tunnc a Htwd4klh Sen1oe -and e...~·alcobOilOm on · oociety.
D1Dtisay Education). ACOR- To Be Annomlood~ p.m., M~ traditional Hebmv '!'"loilieo. ~ --Other topico include trea-t of
DB ill alllltial,.) ~ wbicb to be llllDOUJiced.
firot .floor lounp will be an Ill· cheot clioeaM aotbma, oome ' im··
COCIIdioatealbed0118ofdental PBDIC8 OOLLOQUJU)(• : ' NucW1r formit;ioo center whe~ atudenla munolocic diaeueo aDd vuina
,.,_
R&lt;Odiono Exci~ the High En- •mar ••IJI . up for - - aDd coinmon irfttations 1111Ch • ·inoect
~~ c:ricwcountry.: "'f&gt;' Co~tinuum, Profeooor B, L actlvitieo. Hillel HoiiM!, 40 Capen otinp. Recent advanceo in the
- ~..,....._~-•- ~ umbe .......... co-. Uuj&gt;emty of PittoburP&gt;, Blvd .. 8:80p.m.
diaBnooia of thyroid dioo~ro and
...,..., ..,
.L..,_.
Ill Hochofetter, 4 p.m. RefreobUUAB OOPnZHOUBE 00 : Johnny controveny about the treotment
, iD_'tra ninl. apanded.....tles. meJ&gt;Ia in 112 Hocllofetter, 8:30
hnso finl
of diabeteo will811o be~
well p;m.
:PIL&gt;Ia• •: Oklahoma Kid (lloyd
U~ UCUt
Flarida-•
~;:.;, f::1t::'n~~t':"~
~ts~~!:ii::l: Bacon) ,
Lurto (John HusThis y$ii6,- A COR D.E re- P.m.
Pecki=!) 140
7 and 9
B
~::,!; r~"! ~.Ji. 7 aDd 9 p.m.
ree }_
AB.
.
e~:te
:
.
.Lawr,
Co~:"'ere
'
~~
E
treurt
,
ceived •
000 contnoct from
~
•u
..... T6ea
CONCERT": stePJ,.n. ~.. asthe Department ofBeallb, Ed
PILK"" : - Doc (~ Stacer
Norton. 'Cbeclt ahowcue for timeo.
f
f
pl&amp;D
ucation, and
to
Koec:b aDd Faye 'owmiway; di- Admiaoion .chai'J!&lt;'.
• :r'J!;~"'~I ~~ p....:
tate i.t s studies in dental ec!u-,
SUNDAY-17
cation. Three scbools-U! B, case for timeS. Admission charge.
~';ill' feeture worb br Bartok
the University of Califoinia at
CONCERT" : A Progi'om of. Early (the Out of DooNI suite), Weber
Loes,
·ty oAnfFlgeoln~da'~wderethe~'.!!_vebnyFRIDAY- 15
Boroq"" MWiic, a student JeCital (SonoiG No. 4 in E Minor),
..._
organized J&gt;y J ames Furdell ter (l'imao Sonolo)·, aDd Liut
'thetee
ACOoenRDte.Ers=2!- MEDICl:l::' oHE&gt;rumty BE&gt;UNAR# :
(Venezia e Napoli).
·-.-~
·
""
-. ,.._ ~ ~~
Mr. Maneo hao ap_.,..t esible for
produc~ of edu- Synthe . Utwy. of Amide Acet. RA!dtal
Hall, -a p.m.
tensively_ with major orcl-traa.
ca., __ , ~to
.........
11\
alo. Richard H . Dewey, graduate
incl~the
BaltimOre Sym....,.....
.....,..
student. De~t of Medicin· HILLEL SERVICES" : a Kol "'Nidrei
·
frainina .D;.t..'a. Eoicb acbool
Cbemis
H
Sci
· u&amp;he ·
· y
x·
phony, "' Bullalo Philharmonic,
1IVarded
tbinl ol the ~. 2 p.;,.,~~::.ru:~~ ~ "b;, ~I:VI:.,t sa~
~i"
the
the" &amp;chester PhilharmoJiic, the"
wu~,_.
ed.
ish religious year, Rabbi Justin National Symphe"nif, ~ the Ncon~-L
·
...,
·
·
· H frnonit
~A~
d ·
York Pbilharmonic ·aDd the Bolt·
Tbere &amp;Je about 400 awdl- BlOCJmo08TIIY BE&gt;IIN AIIM : The fo~asette;t\r.;:r.~~~ ton Symphony. He will peifomi
iary scbools ip the U.S. which - Profile o~ a Suy Glycoprotein, Nortop.. 7 -p.m. ,
._,.. ...
~ ~~ -~==~~r'1:
PU.M: . . . 1..®1 Man starring Burt opening concerla on OctOber ' 21
gienists, and · technologists. 4 p.m.
, Lancasier. Conference Theatie, and 24.
·
_
SIJice development of the' ma- cfAC Movu:• : Truman Capote's In ~d0~.!'io?~wcase for timeo, u/a·w PORUM : Univeroity radio .
teriala is too costly for any one Cold Blood, 140 Capen, 6: 45, 9:15
p rohngnunP. Soullin
artap....:..!t"'o!fOMOthe
.r
dental acboo1 to undertake, the p:m.
MONDAY-18
J0
,~ •v·CORDE
· t makes
· .Bued on the beot oeUer by c8Faculty of Alta aDd Letlem, is
alnong
pole, lhiO is an insight into the HILLEL BEaYICZS" : Senoices will the featured
Hooted
ecb&lt;&gt;c?li .in order to eliminate.
begin at 10 a.m. aDd' oontinue

car-.

.!'!!r/;

JU!

:..~~~A.~

fac:ili:

OOU:..

~~caf~J:.~o~

P~

=.':"'.;;

[Jmn.

Welfare

:!'.c:

:""n!!~To~';:,~~~";:

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~

fortouchfootballaredueinCiaJk•
G
~•- Pia tarts Beptem
No:
vember 17. Enliiea for _,..,rare
due September 21 with the aix·
week ....On becinninc lleptembitr
26. 'Entriee for the OctobOr 2 coli

~8 ':i:jY.;.,~,.:.. ~

;&amp;~a: ~vedHe~~
Bill Monltanh, 2924, 29215, for
'-'
tion.
"
=Orm&amp;

addi~wOnal

....,U.TlON HOU118. •

Cliirlr Gym

recreotion houro·for lhe falloem.

_.'~!'~.=:Mt~!:: =-~~~Fri~o~7,;,.,.~o~.,;:

"'J.::

:l'ay

' (Tueoday nights Girlo Oilly,. 7

p.m.-10 p.m:, except for opec1al
«ar-. 6coed
activitieo); Saturday; 9 _a.m.·
p.m.; Sund.O)'II, noon-10 .P.m.

WSchou~~·.,b.?:,_Sche
1. --~~~~-teveBair_dird',

88Pro~:ie!;t

ot -

~.:rfu..!;.:li~-.

ent ~ pm
.
.,.,.
oro for tbe - · ol ~;:
the propam on Frjdlrv, lie!
·
ber 15, at 4 p.m. in lioooii· 119,
CJ&lt;iol&gt;y H,IL ~
.
' ~

~U.O:,:f"~-=~ ~[.;.J?:'mistry~tB~~~:~

-t.
-!!'::

~~ ~'3.::

Pool hours are: Monday-Friday,

7 p.m.-10. p;m. (Tue.l,oY ••nilht.
Girb Only) ; SatUrday, ·1 p.m.~8
p.m:,· Sunda~"2 &amp;:iim.
-6, p:m. Mam
. -~ - - - L
"Gym and o r
-are·~·
'i•ct to clooe Tor ecbeduled opecial
events, intramuNio a!"! intercollegiate.• Contorl Bave Henbman
or Bill Monkaroh, 292f, 2926, for

additional information .... ·

1

-

Students
:'"!;! =~or~~B~
PIIIPOJIIHAHCE D8UIICII.

Perfontumoe Reeearch Unit of the
Ameriam Con-poiary Theatre
toniaht (SePtember 14) at &amp;p.m.
in ' the American Contemporary
Tbeetre, 1696 Elmwood Avenue,

.0:
by~
th!'tnt! ·:::- w~~4: :tl
/t!,Bi~:'!i:::.!f~~~~ ~o~d~~·~~
. •~
...'~~:'teof :o;.:a:::' ~ .ro.,·'o· n~.
· 7ema5'~n,:"~~~
e~ sounding
~~ !ili''twl';.~
~i:o~ ~ !.~ 94.5 o~ a., FM ~. 9:05 ~~
:tgr~r:; ~.; ~
~
of the Slwfar. the ram's
Perforni.ant:e RuetJreh, aa w.f!.!: u
uc:ao.

WJ.

Dr. Ferguson, _c:bJrirman . of CONCEIIT 0 : An Euening with iM hom, will ,mark the end of the
THURSDAY-21oll'orinc the opportunity ·to tab
the ~t o_f ~rative BuRak&gt; Philharmonic, preoenteil day and of the 24-hour fast. A
pot in the actmtieo ol the AmorDentistry and pro)eCt cfuector ..by UUAB Music Coinniittee, Ro- ~~~u~
Colfi1HUDIO DK!ft.U. a&gt;UCA!'JON~ : 1can Con-poN!y Tboatre on a
oflbe ACORJ?E task force at tary Practice Field, 7: 16p.m. Ad- Conference Theatre, Norton. ~ Con_temporary Care for the Child !:l!oun.!:'in:"=~ ~~
U / B, ~theu:dy
charge. I.n~caoe of rain, CHEM:Ill'111Y op' BJOLOG1C4L BY~~
D~c::n~ ~ realize or i:li; in al performance
'Ibe U/B
!N--•Tym.lON" POLK o•-CINa•·. ' LIX.'TtJIE BEIUE8#: -1'/eut_ron Dt/·
ment of . Pedodontica, .W eat Vir· ewnta on •lima·tena.
•
_,.....
.. . - - w.u
·~
~
{ractwn .for the Analysq of En· ginia Univeroity. Capoon Hall. 10 • a1 baoia.are aqed to attaod.
,..
produce ~tely 22 edu- _ U..truction in basic otepo durinc
ond Em ,.., Complerea
5 30
oonal interriewo by the directi&gt;n
c:ali!&gt;na1 pae~tqes or "modules," lint hour, 30. Diefendorf Annex, ii:,';:~ Schoenboin, Bioio«Y
a.m.- :
p._m.
.
.
will take lace at tbia -m.. aDd
(self-instructional m'llli- 8 p.m.
partment, Brookhaven N"a.tional PHYSIC&amp; COLLOQ111111f: TIU &amp;Gn:h perticipelion in the p...,...... will
coun.) oniiiiCb subjects as inHILLEL SABMTH s.im-caa• : Rabbi
Laboratory 70 Acheson, 4 p.m. for ~on R•so~UJ~~Ceo, Pro!eeoor be baoed upcm tbia - - .
strument c:laiJaification and wv ~-n!"lo\!~~'?:!"'of1{.,pe
•":::'...;~ Coft'ee aDd ' to., at 3:30p.m. .
~~~ ;:,"·~!~n!!"l'fr\.~
I..O".t year, in the fim '"year of
:::;.,.:~
~
PILKsn: Wild StrtJlJJben-iu . Hochstetter, 3:3(rp.DL
_
=tiN~~~
ina, IUid c:ompJ181tes, and d.iagD.
PIL&gt;I•• : TM. GIIMt 'f:hol
Beckett'o .now1 TM UIUIIJift&lt;lble.
IIOIIia and cbarting.
.1.
.cesl .
(Baillie), 147 Diefendoif; 7 p.m.
7 aDd 9
n,_: and. "---•--'-·. "A Festival
Buffalo's Peo- . Free from UUAB.
CONcarr•: Bullalo Feotival pre- the adaptatio_n of a'n y . ol bia
...,,.. ""'""'
~ .......~ pie" will be ' the theme of the LIOCl'UKE": Republican Coyreoa. ·
II
uG
rb. TM Ullll&lt;lm&lt;Jble bao been
will coUect and d!!valop ma· · BuHalo Renaiaaance Festival a man Paul• N. McClookey, oponsor- sents
Leon uaoe ~· worf rmed 69 ~ to date aDd
~WJ~th~n~wn·•-- •~r- series of cultuNI events to be · ecj by t!H&gt; Student SROal&lt;ers' Bur-8 l:i:,~ ~to~. p.m. ;N~ oreceived ' natiollal '!*ntion.
..,.
...- JUJr• held on campus, November-28- ~ Fillmore Room; Norton, _
-ts aDd no chairs on AN- YorltJ&gt;IUCiaction • aaticietta ~e to Pl'llp!lle the. writ- December 2.
'
tbil lloor.. A limited number of. =~..::.~a=-·
ten materials. Tbe doctors 8IIY · Spoliaored 1&gt;1 the student
TUESDAY-19
advance ticbto..$4,~ all~- s.s-ber 2111or m 1110111
that the teacbln, unilll
de- Association, the Fealivatwill be
~.60. Available at orton
clarinc whidl lime the uiiilt will
wlop
of aiJ Jl8- 8. fjua. .&amp;ou Bllbibition of:~ocal CoN. . . . ; Studant .RA!dtal,Baird; Tid&lt;etOfllco.
becintheoyntbeoiaof~-twmt
=::.-alil.~~in- muai~,
craf.., dJm-... and lbea- Recital ~ noon.
·
PILl&lt;'": Derli)', Confe......, The- of ·- ' mqnftude.
-.
7\c...
atre, Norton. Check~ for
·
ler'. Aceol'liina to ..mo.· Feliz, ..:Tt~D 0 : John Zeia, from Flick- timeo.
_
Admission
·
Tbo •Perfofiii8DCO RaMJdi" Unit
video tape, '
- of • its cfuector, ibe event will• at- inpro' WholMale Grocers Co,
ia - . , . f!&gt; upeDd .i-.~
teelh. ACcordlni to Dr. Blid!.' tempt "to - t e interaction l'ro&lt;lu&lt;:e tuiil Mourioll HGIIdW.,
aDd opoa- aDd u iliaklooi to
UtB team.hopea
lletwealthe Uni-.ity"JIIId the -__.Jed by-.tuclemt chapte; 01 Ji:XHIBIT'S
.make conlllct with_all wbo JiiJQ017 the ead
'
of '"-~-"- '-·
ltu 1 the American I.natitute ot lndU. • "'"-• _._..__ be inteJWied in ..,..,. Wilt . ,,......,..
_,..,
- . . , . . . . C'!
ra ' trial EDcineers, 160 Paibr, 1 ... aow : _._. ~ . 1bNtle-toofa"Wahba:ped~ 1972.
· . ·
- a e want to brina the PliiL
·~. etebinp aDd ~ JDODtal natare.
~
AI~ the ~t COD- cammunity • to tbe -um,emty
'
'
• by 80W&lt; KI&lt;OPJU. Run. tliiva8h ' aDd atatr are aloo wry ...._to
ta.e$ ll GalY lor cme year, Dr. ·and ......, with dan the llilnP-. m.ar•• : TM Seorr:h•r;o. 1~ ea. - Beptember 22, a.Dory 219, Nor- at:tlmd tbio -am,.
;. ,
D liove.a ~ ~
that aa&amp;unlgne to Buffalo alad P..., 7 !'fMI- 9 p.m. .Free fnlm ton; ¥ ~ . G.llery, -,
·
-.
be -~ft. Jilnce • ___._..
UUAB.
.
.
Bidp lAL Emihit - . . ,
y OOIIIIUNICIUIE
:.-~
1la _ .
~- IDft'fAL""· TM 11 a.m.-6 pa. MOIIdaja-FridQo;
li~DM. .
pe, · ·Tbe
wm nm -dli8 Brave 'WOI'ril&gt;r
a h L both·JoN-, u - . 8Ujldayo. ""-...
· ·
· ·..:
• 1JII!liiC aeivl "We ~ IUid liiV8IIInp af N~ HaD 1969, 110 mlao.l; Me~ria of the ~P- only. '
Fpr _ _ . , . IOIMI!Ie- ..,..
and, lf.IDOil&amp;b Bulfa!jll!leianolGil Sii8'r.; 1966, PHO!'ClOaAriDC Jlmmar•: s .o nu pleoau.., we llloe Ill
ell
. J ....~~
lblllr CllllnarJ' ~~ 26 miDO.l, CoaiOJenee &gt; n-tra, De.U. _. A,.,, . , . Who Are ...nta ~~ ~· on .......,..
,_,..,.the ,.~, _.. an Norton, li P.S
F ...... o#-MU... oiJd other Sub- To re COTu I~ c:ontKt,
ib the
'IN ~ JOpf.
· Iii 8atur·'
~; ololm I3Mrlt, m-tor. ol · Unlventty l'llbllcMions Services.
'clat.:a:;
,
ViiDNEsDAY-20 . ,_
......
cliopiay 250

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

On September 1, 1962, tbe · - cOnsumption while an ~
privately...,_pportec~ Univeraity paper buffed. tbat tbe Slate bad
of BuJralo oliicially became . "pun:baaed a P~·in-a-pobj"

.

Slate Uni...,rsity at New Yod&lt;

worianen

at BuJfalo.. S o m e

· -tc:bed .clown tbe UB sign on

tbe front campus and replaoed
it widf one notifying puaersby
.that tbe properties in view now
belonged to State University;
an individUal who wanted to
order oome supplies Jeanied
tbat his request was to he delayed a few days while "we get
used to tbe ·.State's ·way" · of
going about it (a process still'
not entirely mastered, some
might ssy); pl8ns were afoot to
manufacture an event ihvolving faculty and studenta and
starring- Gov. Nelson RockefeJ.
ler .who wanted to come. to the
' campus "to seal the merger'' in
oome public way (the. produc-tion came off. several deYs later
bu~ had to be frantieall,r superimpceed on the · regiStration
process going on in Clark Gym
m order to make sure the Govemor had a crowd of students);
people in various offioes re· ceived phone calls from strangers in Albany, inquiring into
their business and causing no
little consternation; rhetoric envisioning great - and unprecedented futures was 11owing
from all quarters faster than
mimeograph machines could
reproduce it for mass media

"-tfDrlhe~lllpiiiJiaflhefaiJIIIII-......,.m

1-., the u~ at. llulralo ·on
1!112,- (I tD r) Dr.""""- H. ~then
af SUNY, the UB ~ Clllloinl C. Fumas
-~,_~Allen Jr.

......, -

~- 11,

~

, - """* ....

-STATE

UNIVE~$1TY

in
even more ~ •
lllijastaBit lclllolriDI
1t 8Q'1 liDday Without · - ·
final plans -"' belnl tioa ~hat "tbe ..,...."
for a school year that would ridiL"
bring . tbe first enrollmeDt in'Dr. G. Lester ~ dl.,.,._ and tuition reductions; rector of tbe Center for tbe
there were confuailm, uncer- 'Study of HiJher Educatioll at
taint¥, many questions, few . P811Jl State, was vice preoident
answers. Yet there was an air -' lor 'educational dainl here at
of excitement, anticipation. the time.
Everyone seeined· to agree tbat
In a recent U.Ue (Winter
.w hatever was to' he' was really 19TI.-) of Niatlara Fronlie, a
going to he something, tbat a publication of the BuJralo and
" great Univen;ity" was about Erie County Historical Society,
to emerge despite immediate Dr; Andemon, while noting
difficulties.
· that the merger "haa not been
Second Thou&amp;hto? .
without trauma," writes tbat he
Have ten years brought sec- is nonetheless convinced that
ond thoughts?
.
State University at Buffalo is
The current administration a "better University" than the
answers that questiOn with im- Uniwrsity of Buffalo., "The
pressive statistical informal ion communities of Bulfalo and
identifyiilg rapi!l and signili- Western New York and the
cant growth and. 1!evelopment larger society are better served
· over the past decade as a basis since 1962 in all the ways that
for achievement· of more of the a true University can serve."
same in the years ahead (mat- Mutu•l Actv•nta..
·
ters which will be fully docuIn Dr. Anderson's view, the
mented and discussed in the merger gune about and has
Annual Report of the President beer! successful because it of.
to he forthcoming later this fered advantages to both sides.
fall ).
Buffalo, which "except for the
But what of those who were accidents of time and geoghere and have left and might rap~ . .. would have been a
presumably be,· if )lot "freer to public institution since its bespeak,'' at least impartial?
Jiru!i!!g," had determined durOne of those most deeply in- mg- the 1950's and early .1960's
· volved 'in the compleic negotia- that "the linancial resources astions preceding the merger and_ (Continu&lt;d on 1JG;IIC 4, col. 1)

AT BUFFALO

Plans F_irstMeeting,Todizy

Sex Disi'IP-

Tbe profile shows littlechange in freshmen student
etenclftrds in recent years. The
most visible·alteration is omission of female and male statistical categories. Because students were accepted without
regard to sex, infonnation on

Wbs.is

= ':fu =Ill"-

A 11\~11,
n~~~.-J~ "Q~...,C&gt;
~t.c..v ~ LJCf5
U W

This September marks the beginning of our institution's
second decade as a member of the State University of New York;
and it is this new beginning to which I welcome you as you
either return to campus or come here for tbe first time.
•
In this new decade, it 8eto.ms likely that hlgtler education
will experience the most profound changes it has ever undergone
in terms of its form, means, and even its aubstance. Within
tbe State UQive~ity 'of _New Yor!t, our own inatltulion ia capable
of leedin&amp; these new developments. It is the-p!O!II*i of dump
and of our own caP,.city lor leadenhip which at thla time and
on this campus can cteete an air Of antidpatioll which ia peeler
than that traditionally aasociated with the becbmlnl of an

0

._~

........

- ::;'i.,-~

~IDrl
led bued
... - 011
llecillaD8
tbat ...,...,
==~- ~'llltz
lbe

~~of tt! u

... ......... JllOCIIIIi will

ellm-

tlloa:IAL AMIOUNCDIDI1'

. _ .......... In-lor
........... It llllllbellnJalible
lor ... ~ pu~~~~~~~-.... CalleoiUe

_

""-ble
filbft. ......... ,_..,
wtU

-com.

other"...:; ~

for~
'!- _.:;...
licatiana.

e1a
· .• h•

tloos,"

'

J'ub- -i,384
Bote=·
this fall will be
re
y admitted incom-

~op-

~tiona ing f

ment, •

,, of whom 696 are
al)ll. U.u-.1~
• Serv- from tbe 8th Judicial Diatriet
i~alld~~ittee ito
"'!:::;ts ~
. . . ~ flrllateleet.ed pee&gt;- he a~tely 340 admitted
pie to bliP 'ill ... fonDaiatioa thrOiJih EducatioiJal OppdrtunUd ~tiD~ lty Proerams. ·
·

::..:s .!"':..

:!t=:e.:.r--

Kaatz---.,-.l fn· tbe
Tbe ~- W2 fn!llbman
~t ~~!_:, -lntei
a blah 8Ciiool aver·
· - ....II a-18 CJL..o
aie of 91.28 and tiCOred 573.3
~ ~tioll to die

8ldltfnl aDd 61SI.71 ~ oa lbe
.Seilate 01b. -~ ~ ...-I aDd m81bem11 •

_ _...In __ __
._.,.,,
... w.

-~,_ ~~"""'~
da.-oftbe·m~~
dinii:Qy ....,. the fiooiq ,... .... tJ.S.al
die~

.. lllllllilll .... -~-­

1111!;;.

FaCUlty

Oil

.............. comllll ,.....

., ·- · we 111o11 . . - "'

...... ,.......,..__

'

-«not

s-ta~bawil.~ =:..~D~~~

tlnt.cAiill--~ at-4
(e.m.-1 011 ~ 6. ""'- 4J

l b t - . . . . ___,.,.
,fftllll ouiBide lbe ....

aclldemic year.
•
.
An added factor &lt;in the - anticipation we hold In loGkinl
towru:d tbe new decade is the fulllllment of a poetpcplcl promilot.
Tbe , frustrations that have resulted from the ~ ill
develoPmen~of the Aniberst North Campua cui DOW ba - - . L
piaD ia no )onp!l' aiiDply a plaD: it a Qllllllantly 8III'UIIIIal
reality· of 'ateel and brick. - In thla pest ·decade the thlhw8ity
a ~ apanaian peeler than lib)' it 11M -

is

ne

·::...e.

.....,. ____ ......._5p:tt~~ ===:=~ ~
- - iiiUit In the

. . . . . . . . . jiiiiiRIIIod • uleJL WI _.a ....... tD curtail

differing male or female ranJ&lt;s·
and test scores was omitted
A criteria mix was used -again
this year in accepting students,
in an effort to overcome some
of the inequities resulting from
wide variations in high school
grading practices and stent Continue.d on po,e 3. col. 2)

Desr Members of the University C.ommuDity:

f. "':tat:t?.!bi::::

'lbia .aMiioa 11&amp;-

SEPTEMBER 7,1.9 72

VOL. 4 · NO. -I

- "Anonymous ladera" ia what - inate many of these diJiiculties,
By
. the new cbainban of .the ~
one of.. the ;;..t ~SUSAN ROBINSON KING
lessional Staff 1!enate eaJls ' he
Vnlnnity l n/OI'Il'Wtion ~
UtB's non-teachin profeaaional versities in the country to reelstaff. Dr. Allen ~ud) Kuntz, ize tbe need- for a professiAsonal
A new admissions policy
director of instructional serv· staff senate, Kuntz says.
a - which
that t 1 t
~
8
eaa
ices and testing, won a three- result, there are no models to .
way race fOr tbe ~ work with. Kuntz is confident, half · of U /~. s 1972 freshman
however,
tbat
the
35
Senators
cioJs!i
he
resJdents
of
tbe
Butof the ledglina ofliiUiization
will he able to cteefe a strong ·falo area· has 8PJ&gt;I!o"'fttlY had no
early this ~orpuiization during tbeirr Srst effect on the quality pf students
Informed of his e!ectiOO. year of operation.
being accepted. .
•
•
'Kuntz said •"They're coing to
The Senators ·have ~ in
A .student-profile released by
know we're here." And this ·
o4llce
for
only
one
month
but
the
Office
of
Admissions
end
· seems to be a good motto f"!' already some headway has~ Records indicates ti&gt;at local
~newly formed Senete.
IJII!de. . -A 12-person Executive and out-&lt;lf-area students in the
A Univenity ia more than ~tteerlrinhaa
freshmen ..class 'have ·approxi18
its faculty, K1111tz point&amp; OliL
' wo
01}
•
mately 4he same scholastic
But traditionally it'8 bam. the 8 lltandin« e ectiOlJI! comnut.- qUalilications. The effect of the
faculty who liave liad most -of· '!"' as ~as !' ~-promo- ..e.. policy' Ql\ stUdent qUality
tion/revJew
p8iJe).
..,quired
unliad
been a key point of debate ,
the say in (ormuJaliDc .....
demic poticy 8Dd opezBtianal der. the employment Olllltr.:t in tbe Faculty Senete after
procedures. This- &amp;•t • ..us- ~ted~ ~~ P.resident Robert L Ketter protic situatiOn, he COillends, be- • ilaJpiniDa
t for flii:ulty ~ tbe new Procedure Iasf
cause the --t.cbiD&amp; profoa- and-NTP's
poupa January, saying that i.t would
sicmala CNTP's) ..., 4ba ·the~
demons1ntte that U/B has both
widJ lbe ~-to-de dutiea of
aet
'WOrk
dJarges "resional and ·s tatewidet fwlc-

__.._

a

50-50 AdmiSsions MiX Has No Effect
, On Quality of This Years Freshmen ·

Profess~ Sf# 8ennte

.........

:\be '

f.eiloll of

aot"'

'Jbe-Jeadenbip we aMI in the_uw decade will
pvea.
.
he earned
I ~" he __ _.. _, .. If
-••
It. muat
; ;.... t .....
...-.-. --s
""' ............
~- to IIBinl our subetantlal - - . elllcic~ aDd
-r
iniltivel.!, I look forward to .~ thla COIIIII!itmelit with -=b .
of. you 1n tb&amp;
._.. ~
A_..

decade--~~

H(\ \.

.

m-e-

'-~
. .·

~~~";

~

�2

September 7, 1972

$2 Mi/Jinil,Hesoorch Stuij,y
Self·DisooVecy,
Skill Development
.
.
To Probi? Heart, Lung Ills
C4Ikrl Top Results of U/B Education
.

By JOHN THURSToN
rfiJINnlrr lnlortaMJoa s.ma..

$550,000,

":ward

meking

the

total

approxinvdely $2

niil-

As tbe ClaiB of 1976 takes / problem. •• . . ,
eluded, however, tbat U/B On September 1, medical and lion.
ita lint 111ep1 011 tbe 10111 road
Altboulh J8De Faulman ad· or any coli"@' or university engineering researcbenl lrom
~: Ff'8!'ds -!· ·Klocke, the
kMwD u tbe "Univenity u- iidla that tbe question ''What iB tbe only' setting in wbK:h the University and two Buffalo principel m~tor. is proll8rieDce." tbe ClaiB ol 1971 impact does attending college ·this impact could occur."
hospitais began a $2 millic&gt;n lessor ol llledic:irie at the Unit.a rePorted tbat iDcrea8ed have on a per11011?" canDQt lie . Tbe "Senior Swvey" ;s a ......-reb prognun ainied at versity ..t chief of Ollldiol
aW8ftP'II!B ol "who IIPd what I llll8oren!d from tbe results ol pout of tbe University lleaearcb an improved Understanding of at the Meyer Hoepilal. Seni~
and tbe develiipment ol Ibis study, abe feels that the C~.'s P!"jectwasBioRra1J!Iyedof;: h:esrt and lung disease.
investigators include: Dr. David
erilical IIDd aDai,ytical aldlls seniors' responses "do provide
....., wbich
eslablioh
Goals '!f the .flve-yesr p_ro-. ~- Greene, professOr of mediwere IIIDOIII tbe valuable some information coooeming 1964 to examine the character- gram projeot grant, according ~; Dr. Robert A. Klocke,
resulll ol.. tbeir alal at U/B.
students' involvement with var- istics ol Wlllerl!i'aduates at to Princip81 Investigator Dr. assistant profesao~ ol medicine·
'll&gt;e"studeate made that ewl- ious opportunities wbich a uni- U/B. 'lbis is Jane Faulman's Francis J , Klocke, are earlier Dr. Robert E. Mates, professo;
uet.ion about their IIDderaraclu- versity prcwides." She fU('Iher third senior surv_ey; ol&gt;e had ..detectipn, better definition. and. of mechanical eDIPneering and
ale -'eDce in e survey eOn- commen.ts, "Tbeee students val- previously conductea studies ol improved treatment of variOus Dr. Stephen M. WMtenberg
dueled by tbe University Re- · ued ~e outcomes ol a P!'r- tbe graduating clsases ol 1969 cardiovaocular and pulmonary associate professor of medicine:
&amp;ellfdl 0ft1ee.
sooel, ~~~~. and 111- and 1970. She is presently pre- disorders.
''TI&gt;e overall goal," Dr
In April, 1971, resee!CM&lt; tellecfual natUre about equally. paring for release two more
Under tbe project title, Klocke llllid, "is a broad innO:
Jane Faulman, 8811iii8Dt in In- - Tbe 'University made some secti0116 of the '~1971 Senior "Pa•'--...&gt;.ysiology of Cardio- vative and slable prognun of
stNctional Seivices, aent ~ direot contribution to the value Survey" ~ "Experiences .at pulm~·;, DysfunctiOn," a re8earch in ~ioVIISCUiar and
tiOIIIIIIbes coooeming cou..se of tb@e outcomes. U/B did U/B" and "Plans and Expec- tesm
invesjigators will pulmonary disorders, which anexperienca~ IIDd activities to a -have an - impact on these stu- taeions." Data from the 1972 conduct studies otbat range in nually 1lCCOUIIt for the majorirandom esmple ol 200 seniors dents, by provl'ding experi- Senior Survey has been col- . scope from electrical recordings ty- ol deatbs in the United
graduating in spring, 1971. ences f&lt;&gt;r them to sample, whidt lected, but processing ol it has .within single heart cells to Slates."
SludenCs were asked wbat Cbey they did. It cannot be con- not yet begun.
•.
evaluation ol the effectiveness
felt were tbe valuable results
'
of assisted ventilation in peol'tbeir college aperiences,. the
w&gt;tb
faetors oontribufina to those
Tl'hc&gt;StutJ;r.v 1bp,;ro
result&amp;, and major problems enV IIJIKI (.(;e V V(.(.o
V
"'-'
The detailed work covered
c:olllltered In the college years. •
· •
by the project is an ou~rowth
~~were publiShed last
Uj~h kf~L~~7 s·~ .,1~~~-.
of a ~vious seven-year colWhen. presented with a list .L'(
a;ttf.J(J£ ~~(Uj-laborative elfo~ It involves
Preeident Robert L. Kette&lt;
of eight possible outcomes ol a
·
six general progmms.
'
college elluCRtion, the seniors
Two hundred blacll.- white · give them a feeling tbat the
The first program deals with hiis announced tb&amp;t .he will
reported tba 1 tbem the
and Puerto Rican high sdtool Student li'orum was a commun- C:OJ;'Onary cireulation and in- coritinue his series of • regular
valuable
ol th .....~ students attended COII!'Je this ity as well as school project.
' valves an evaluation Of the 15-minute conferences with stu.
. e ~:' summer ID leam to deal with
Project directors stressed ma- herut's nutritional blood ftow derits, facultY, and stsJf which
-expenence were sts perao...,, violence. The Student Forum turity in this summer forum in normal and abnormal states. were inst.ituted last year.
interpersonal,
and intellectual on School Crime and Violence, the reason a university setting lit past ..studies, methods have
These conferences will be in
aspects.
-T he specific outcomes
they considered IIKNit valuable J1 federally funded program de- was chosen as a center for the been developed .to document re- addition to periodic discu.s3ions
were: · increesed openness to veloped in . response to last proji,ct. !!'he camplis as a set- duclions of flow in patients which ·KaUer ,nannally· holds
ideas and "!JJ"ftence&amp;, 'in- year's violence in BuJJalo pub- ting, aplains General Bass, a1l1icted with coronary disease with students, faculty, and
creased understanding of others, lie schools, used the U/B cam- school forum project director, which is the abnormalnarrow- stsJf.
_ The first conferences for faci!lcreased• knoovledge, , develop- pus as a setting for hand-picked was important for psychological ing of the al'leries supplying
· ~ or-wlls ID 'lically
students f"!m J.!lJ&gt;ublic.schqols. reasons. ''The kids feel grown • blood to the hl!lll't. These meth- Wty and stsJf will be held on
~ze· and s~ idees
Sandy BlocK, a ·gniduate stu- ap · .and. more: m«ture·. ~· it's Qds ,are now. used in, the .elllll: 'l'iliol!do!Y, ~ 12, from .
~ and increesed a-.e- dent in curriculum developmore mesniogful in -.. coli~ uation o( aelected patillllts'wilh 9.. a.m.. ·I!&gt; .JI!IOIL The .lirst student allilerencas are &amp;&lt;tleduled
neas of -''who and what I 'am."•
ment, had· been working with setting. One of· tlie boys 881d · cbel!t pains.
. Sex~
·
'
the .Criine •·€oni:I'OC . Board l&gt;f &lt;to te H riend, -!we meet . at the - 'The ~raJ p~. for 'l'iiesday, 8eptember 19,

am"

OrJ24

TT:~1~~~

;:n~,

:n...,I&gt;I!?" ·"

Dor flit:,•

Ketter Sets·
~Open Hours'

....Jn:::'

a'::'.i

Awareness ot"wbo'IUid.what

I am" was rated most"valuable
~~re~':"

tt!::"'w:;
· considered ~opment of skills

=

-~
=t
=l~ p~ -~~~~:~~ ·-i~ ·11iechanisms
~ ~ ;;,~,r;!'·
J: -~'!f],
ect itself was administered by proud of." .
which Wtilfte·~ .

tbe Buffalo Board of Eilucstion,
Though the ,18-hours-a-week noi1Jl!ll heart rhytbma and to
. · .''There· Mn•two ~ aspects of paid les4ersl)ip .tra!nini ·ll&lt;lb®l improve the physician's ability
· ·call 'arialvze a
the progiiun," Miss Block says. forum ended August 31, the job to ·· tteflt 'these ·clllbnormalities.
cr&gt;ti 'd y ~ze. and ~ The most important was to facing the students be~an with Specific attenllion is focused on
~ ~t result~ 1 bring together studeots, chosen th~ last' class. During the .rhythm disorders cal.-! by
;:os un
co - by high school guidance coun- schpol year, for eight hours- a Digitalis, a drug used to treat
• ~~ m1ac1.:Jciwer h.
sellofs1n" clin}uncticlil"with the week, the _ftudents)Mj).lconlinue hestt failure.
.~
tbe list
principal of esch represented' with the project
Paid .ein- Lunc Studios
portance
fout- school, with adult leaders of ployees under the Board of
Tbe third and f~ pro:;::~~- opmen
vo- the institutions to talk about Education. But with the re- grams relate more cloilely to
In evaluating the outcomes the violent realities that uist. sumption of high school classes, the lungs. One considers the
cf college attendance in terms
Through seminars run.ning these 200 stud~ts are con- ,process by which carbon dioxof ezpected long-ranse impor- on Mondays and Wednesdays fron!ed ~th the reality of po- . ide and oxyg~- ~ and leave
tsnce in their future )ives, stu- from July 6 through August 31, , tent!&amp;' vJOI"'!ce - not the the- the bl~; the ~r e~ua~
dents respo~~ded tbat they ex- students from esch school met ory. Eval'!"tlon of tbe St~!~ent , !he efteotiv~ees With wh!ch 8U'
~ outcomeo,of a "personal- to define specific problems in Forum will be most cntical 18 brought .into contact Wlth tbe
Social" nature to be more im- their school. During the course then.
blood Jl888"'11 through the lung.
portsnt in the future, whereas &lt;if the summer, t.bese, meetings
'
Developments fi'OID lh!""'
"academic- intellectual" out. and seminars· attempted to not New't'IT~~rT:!....-l.
tw.0.~"!"~ybemg
c:&gt;mes weri! considered more only de6ne the problems but
vvau:; i1llA
utilized to ~illt .111 the treatvaluable during the college develop suggestions about bow
lo.'t._-.,earCI~~
. . ment_of Pllti~_.m the Meyer
years.
.
: to deal with them in the·coming
nOCII
~C
HOf!potal Respiratory Care
When asked to assign rela- yesr. ,Suggestions_- devel'!ped
What may a~ to some 88 U'Tt, lina1 two '·
deal
tive impoJtance to various lac- are to be presented ·to the , .. ~ ~
- . gs· 0 a·moa
· t --·--'
.
· ··programs
tors·which miabt have CODtrib- Board of Education in Septem- w..,
AnnWU
wolh matbemalical models ol
uted to the v8luable results of bel.
· .· · •
the uCiear Research Center beBJt and lung function and
"their college aperieoce. ·tb'e
Acroiis the' UtB .cani11us in ·is in aetuality an excavation the d'~elopment of new methstudetils moat frequeDU JisteP · ~ -iljlferent rilol)ls,
stu- ·for' tbe installatiori of a new ods for evalual:iN various "":
courses and OCbef acs~ u- . dents, some 'of whom were eon- water tank. Tbe .Center uses a pects_ of heart and lung mal~- AJ6o Cllllllidered rna:- side~'~!'~ leaders. of the schools large atnount of water in · the . fimotions. . One . such method
F. lnPu1B were meeiU)i people, an\1 otber:s ~"troublemakers" cooling system for the nuclear involves the use ' of inert ps
infonna1; iJqpnJaJpiU disco.ls- oonfroli'lld O)&gt;e another with the reactor and several years --ago (helium) to ID88.8Ure Cbe
.liaas, IIDd JMn!ll*l tadilis." : ·6olls8queDce of' 'Violenci!. Em-· the blnk '!&lt;&gt;lditur the w a t e r - amount of blood being pumped
. _ ec-..io
'mit WilliamB. who is· Wi1.b t1ie began to p1t and' decay. Engi- by tbe beert. ·
_ Tbe i.uon ft111011*1 that lbe- -Boetil of EdUcation, in kpe&amp;k- neers at the Center decided to
Dr. Klocke uplained t1..t
pi'eWjima wbicli bad
ing to tbe 200 gathered in a "!Place it with a "!"" tank tb8t - this tecbnique is Ul11181181ly thim tbe peatea~.ooilcem dW&lt; U/B a'Cience ampbitbmtre, wOuld be."""'!""". m a concrete curate, and am be ._ted at
1111 tlieli-. cu111ee year~ were DOted: "You are working in a vault.~ ~elditur would~ 10 ~ 15 sec;ond . interYals for
diolce ol a ~ ~ !!If- Very .Wtive .....
you -. j"'n!_!_!:&lt;: pitting aruftheoretical- effective meesurement.
iqi1al _ _ , ..t ' iclellliJ;y. are talkina. eboolt lhm. you
Y ........, the tank last forever. Units 1""""'-d
Eecb · ol ' 4lllii ~ W
oan't ewa d.llbout at home."
Clno! small problem, however. HFunded by Cbe "'National
'*-II ~ fur
Tbe PI'Qiect laders atteiQpted Tbe cild tank was located diOI8Jt and Luna: Ill8titulte
";_Bt/lthe
'- toinwtft....,lainthe~ rectlY under the reactor and . (NHU) ol tbe National In~.
IIJildb' ~
1 - U.l!li.t wilbiD tbelf CJWD oouklbe reecbecl only by lllellll8 ~ of ~th, tbe pam. is
bilr
1IPt nilolwid tblll' , _ _ . _ , They bopecl to ol an underpound ·door.
~ ~-and inllr . . . . tiiO _... pt tt.n iDvalved-in tbe f/!'1·
~ ia what all llie ~ terin8litulioaa
It • involve&amp;
declaion-.-ldnl is abPut. 0n -ru.~av. tbe COih "".""&lt; 11t tbe E.'~=
Roe.
abollt pet'- ~ ctl tbe ....,. under tnctor finally pulled away Pif!!l. and '!dJoiniDI t1niwaity
- ' ~ tile
tbe ....1¥ and
to 1-=b tbe door ~ ~. tbe Bu&amp;lO
• diM!• in a lltnldund ..uiJII. M1aa .,..
new·~ 11tee1 tUde ....,._.. Hoapital and tbe
'flllllllil'- Bad~ ........ •:Aa-m;.-tx.,
-be .,...,....,. in1ts118c1 8oulb Oanpu8 cl UIB.

:b

"'deve1

t°

ifu-

a.

At

eaaied

ana

5 .

-=dirt

........ ._.- w •· enaa. .,..

......_.91

..a.

~veM!:su.=to~~

preeideot, 831-2001, for appointments. All meetings will
be held in the President's Office,
Room 108, Hayes Hall.
On oocasions when the president oannot bold lbese confer-

i:""'J"'~J~':em::'fi
will !alhatitute.

$J.A
Q {)()() Grant;
'%OJ
Fa:....n.._.,.z.;,.,_,
~JUUUU J

Tbe Di..Won ol Community
Psychiatry· has t-o awarded
a $148,000 pant from the Natiooal Inatitute ol Mental
Health to tbe quality
of mental t..ltb ..-vices.
. Tbe tbnle-year pooject, beedeel by.Dr. Jack ZiBnan, direc!.or ol the Divifllqn at the UniYenl!ty has ' - i supported for
· tbe poi,t' two ·E
·
: through
fund&amp; liom the
Health
· FoundatioD · ol
eMem New
York,aUnllled .Fundqency. ·

AcconUnll to Dr. Zuaman,-''mil&amp;aa al sdiUo IIDd volun-

tory dollul- ~annuallY
in tbia -..mw without any
f t U i l - of as~ a. quality ·or elfec-

8Cieotlftcally

tiwmeia, ~

mUUoaa

ol dol-

~~ - s.=~ol-..r:; "by-&amp;:~ol.DBt~ ~~~= :::=:.~

=tm:.: ~~.-J!.~ ~fales ~at

=: ........
be
-;'~met~-=t-n:~
••'iRIV
· •b -:::.1
~WI
• ,..,, ---a.. din lD
- - -' Other - '
which

-

u.nr

.,=•thete" ~ a
notice
e eonttaJY; this will
be the paltem for the pre
year. The ilcbedule for ttie next
tWO mimlhs c8118' foi conferences with faculty and staff on
Tuesdays, SePtember 12, 26,
Ootober 9, and 23. Student conferences for the oame period
are set for September 19, Ootober 2, 16, and 30.
'Ibose Wishing to he.ve conferences With Preeident K-r

lllil_fl!l" ...._ dill DDt meet~ tbe Uni-

=·!'~-!!~~
·~~~ In
---...- _ , _ - ',":!:.in~
.., pro_.."'.,._.
to

........

ogy aniJ

!luiJeoy.

amatruction 'Appcoved cliR!ct COlla for tbe
,!lvlllea 011 CU1PUi illdadecl die lft!lt 1ntal .1,476,987 for tbe
~lion
o f - rnooa1~~.Jw.!!t
to
.,.....
.._ farflflliOO
a _ _feet
boiler.
..~ • .. , •· _
ID....._ COlla are lllllillll&amp;llld 11t

beet," be
Tbe ultimalll J1U1111* of tbe
_ _ . • to ........ 8Cientific
too1a to ...... a ....,ey to
deWmlae..t
. . lll1equacy
its
pbqiolnt ol
areas

-we.

IIIIIch J..t

~

�3
~Fees

Ath1etics On
Slate of 1st'
Faculty Meet·

.Rescinded BY
SUNY Central

Budaet. planning and athletics Will 6e tbe three major
topics ol discpaaioo at tbe first
Faculty Senate ~Meting thla
fall The ..,.;,;on, nm&lt;t Tueaday
at 2:30 p.m., will be held in
148 Diefendorf.
'
-- ' '
After the traditional report
of tbe Pn!sldent and tbe report
o1 the chabman. tbe senate
will vote oo tbe canftrmation of ·
a , _ perliallll!lltarian. 'Ibis
position was fcmnerly an elected one but last year-a By-laws
vote cbanlled It to a post which
is IIIIDiinaled by tbe cbalnnan
: and then confirmed by the Senate. The cbairman's choice is
_ Dr. Newtoo Garver, Philoeopby. •

The increase ill U/B fees and
charges announced in the .,.P. _
tl'l!tion packets thla summer bas
been cancelled, the SUNY
Chancellor's Office announced
last month. The move came
after a llurry ol protest from
University administrators and - ~
student groups about the ip'
creases.
In late April, Harry Spindler, acting SUNY vice chancellor tor finance, JD81181ement
and business, sent out a threepage memo discussing various

~~v=":ow~~~

-

M ·
on. the senate will
be
to emmine a new,
more apecilic cbaJ-i11&gt; for its
Committee oo Athletics. ~
cotding to Chairman Dr. Jamm
Hanseo, the Coaunittee'is seeking to ~ ltiJ original
Charge to inclUde. regular. !'&amp;views ol the recreational- and
intnunural Pf'OIJ'IIIIl aa well
as intercollegiate sports. 1be
group wantl lileo to review the
women's athletic aree. In addi-

:::.::f

,_

Days ofE~tensive Orientntion Gone~
This FaD8 Freslimen Soon DiScover

letter suggested both a aoublina
of SOD)e emting U /B fees and
some new charges such as a
fee for late registration and
late drop and add.
The content of the memo
"raised more questions than it
answered," one · U/B administrator aaid. These questions
were sent back to Spindler for
comment.
Student groups also felt the
majority of the fee cbana:es
were unlair. The Student Association of State Univemitv
( SASU) raised objections df.
rectly with the Chancellor.
After a summer ol appeals
to Albany, the April memo was
rescinded by Spmdler and the ,
deposits,. fees and charges returned to their previous level.
The acting vice chancellor indicated that the "entire matter
will be very carefully reviewed," adding that the units
"will be receiving .further _infonnatlon concerning the consultative procesa and review of
thla mJittel' from the Chancellor."

tion,tha.t fourtbe ~- is asking
1be lnlditiooal Fall F!alh-' ant vice preSident for aui:iliary only such unusual questions as
under tbe group's ~~ · men Orientation Ia dying a slow en~ estimated. But the where to rent a refrigerator.
and/or conaultatioo. Tbeee death. As .-.tly all la8t year, crowds 1 at · ~ o r ton certainly
Perhaps one of the reasons
areas are "scbeduling and level incoming ~tl bad a ~ didn't look that laige. Every- for the quiet was the absence
of . competition for sporting of concerts, displays, mo~ thing seemed peaceful and of organized orientation proevents; conference aJiilietioii anc! -.~ use ,of l'lorton Uruon qUiet. When asked about the grams thla fall. Various foreign
and qualificaticms for post facilitia~. Tbere -was a month lack of enthusiasm and people, student groups a p p li e d lor
seilson/toumament competition; long 'extravqanza Planne!i to · moet observers seemed to feel funds for Sub Board I but were
student/athlete' relationships· "'t tbe new ·freshmen activelY. that after .two ye8rs of crises, denied them. Student A1!alni
eonaulta'tion· oil blid,et 0..: mvolved.
'
drug problems and racial rum- and Academic Affairs took care
· gotiation with the appmpriate
That's all ...O.onwed thla fall blings. .U/B · was returning to of the majority of their concerns
'
N""'· st;u!iel!to~"""..._"n~ in · ~rmal .. For ~ "! , them,. Jl dufuqr ' the aummer1 but they
University olllcers."
: Under its .folmf.r·'auira• ·r1m aD'd" slowlY" &amp;,'i;;i ~tA.cl • return to norinalcy meant a were on -band to· inan the lour
l?.pm,mitlee was l'ell)loDsif;1'i, for
imo- the Uruversity I!Yslem. On :':l'o~tement and,, more infonnation booths thla weekend. Norton servibes took hlmB
·the relationship ol tbe Unfver- Mondey only 1J. few hundred
·
sity's academic propam to ,the l!twlents' wanderec;l-amund Nor- . .
~i!~~:= staying open. The 'Bookstore
athletic progrsm. 'Ibis clelicrip- ~ So~ stopped !It the four LoUDge,' it aeem8 tha't incoming ·was closed on Sunday-but 'Open
tion proved to be too vague, information booths m the Cen- students must have read the Monday w hi I e Food Service
Hansen explains. The new. ~ Lounge to ask a few ques- materials in tbl.ir freshmen on- remained shut on Monday after
charge is more speciJic, he l!ODS. Most of tJ:Iem were wor- entation packets. They were a poor turnout the day before.
110
~ Senate will a1eo vote on
~t~and...= mailed a: set of· eight multi-eolHIUEL 5EiMc£s . '
two resolutions:-:= Prestbet ~ be ,...:.,
~
acroas swermg
ored ·~bed sheets !'!'"
.
. to the'
~tiona on everything
Hillel will co'nduct Rosh Hoshonoh
The Faculty Student ABM&gt;ciident Ketter ' to
Uni- the s lreet, movmg m
1r _ from cooking in the dorms to services in the Fillmore Room,
vemity - wide committees on - donn fOCli!1'L
what is an academic overload? Norton, on Friday, September S. ation (FSA) voted last month
1
budget and academic planning."
By Monday night, close to These p a g e a· of answers ad- 7 p.m.; -Seturday, September 9,
1be final ~ of tbeae res- 90 per cent of. tbe dormitory dressed the large majority of 10 a.m. •nd 8 p.m., and Sunday,
oped
land
they
own
in Amherst.
olutions is still-being completed • studentl were installed in their common queries leaving the September 10, 10 a.m.
At their Ausuat 3 board ..-tand will be puaed out at the rooms, Tbomas Scbillo, aasist- people in the booths to answer
ing,
the-directors
decidecl
to eell
-ru-lay meeting. Basically
'
the land and use tbe income
tbe resolutions aa1t for a multifor
some
type
of
activity
whidl.
rep.-ntative poup on tbeae 5()-5()
amuni~ Faallty Senate
--------~----~---------------------- would "benefit otudentl."
Chllinnan Dr. Gilbert Moore
(C&lt;&gt;nliluud /Tom I, coL 6)
Trinde&lt;, easistlnt to -the pro- degree?" Hoatetter- pointe out Still U..-.ol
ezplaina.
'
dards. Firat ~wed here in 1971, vost, FNSM, aaid •that the that job-oriented and 'vocationStill undecided is how the
&lt;the milt formula provides tbet ~:S"':!!r wants to continue spe- ill, courses are still in great ~ w iII be apec:lftcaUy
•
UMd. Under a plan propelled
Ul-..f"'L...:~
45 per ceot of r:egularly admit- c· ·
admissioos iecruitment. demand, however.
Because of lllltional ecoilo- by Cbarlee BaiJiln, F8A Seonu.IA::ll
\..11~
ted fresbmen be a - on tbe
•
beais o1 high acbool tank alone,
Signilicant preesure for poei- mic c:ondKions and !ising coetiJ .
and accepted by tbe
,., ' ·~ ~-50 per ceot 00 'tbe basia of tiona within the University was for higher edllaltiOJi "atudeotl
tbe D1DJ18Y ~lie put
.lqBC U1 \.JUUl~.
hid&gt; acboolaverage in CDIIIbin- noted this year in regard to appear to be going to acbool
y in a truat fund adminThe kinds ol cboicea women ation with elandardized· teet transfer students. More than close&lt; to home to . ave board iatered by tbe F8A '-rd. Stumake about their careers and ecores and 5 per cent 00 tbe 41000 transfer apPiiaWODB, filed "':~~~·.· Hoole~ . &amp;!eo
_
a- dent IDO!IIIb8n ol tbe boud mplife stylee and how tbese cboio- baaia o1 selective epecia1ized aoout equally by graduates of
"""""
port a PfOIII8Dl tbat ~ use
es are made will be the areas &lt;talents.
two - year colleges, students
"Very good high school stu- ~ "pi'IICI!IIda to fund pwojecta
eDJDined by
be'
from olher SUNY ciiinpuses dents in an area usu811Y. cbooee m tbe areu ol "'ecseatlon, edoffered thla ~=-.
Budget~~l._._ ~ and atudeoto from out ol siate . a college or unlver$ty outllde lialtiim, IOCial, eultunl, bol.m,
rwn and ~.~ •.:..:•• will be of- prompted a ~ m ...., SIZe )IPd _private institutions, were. their area." 'This year, be ftnda · and' otber .me. activitiiL" .
fered ~O:...·a Studiell ol the ~ claaa to 1,410 procesoed with 1,240 being ad- "mon; top kk!s: aie . 8t,ayiDa , The board c:bamld l'nlldmt
- Callep" uiil New College o1 from a POOl ol 10,500 '!"a ap- milled for tbe faJJ toelll88t«. home. '
.
Robert Kattar witll the NIIJICDMbdem Education.
·
plied, ln 1971, appromnately OrUrinaliy, ' 950 transfers were
A ......1..~~.:.._.
8iblllty of 8PIIIIiDtiJI&amp; a ·,fov'Ibe c1aaa will be taught by - ~ '!8111" ll1IDiler filed fw ad- to 0.. accepted, but supple- .tUUll~LW~
\..1~ penon committee to ciliordiDale
Claudine Sdnoeber Koren, a
but 1,750 ac- ~ -~
~
The Sc:bool of Architecture tbe ale of tbe land. FiDal apo
~/!i~~~.!J~
·
further IUleePtances. Univ~rsity and Environmantal :oe.ip will proval of tbe • ale, '-"'er,
initiate
a part-time propam N8tiJ with tbe ~ ~
,_,_ .~In~':..~~. SpoCro'hatl..,
policy requires that transfer
.....,. ..,........,...
AdmisolioD apecialliaticlll baa studentl- ~ve academic grade
:..':lei=::...~~ ocCurred-in Olily a llmlted de- point average~ of 2.7 out ol4.0.
gree hec:aiMe ~ are cboThe eqlerimental evening
'!:~
thla...,.. their upirationa and _, wilbeut ft11U111 for future
tliey are aatis- academic fD8)a. Among freeh- TDr.
1M
-T
--·~:r.=~fNmJ.- Norman . Hoeteliler, ~.:=:r'~ot
...,
..__ ....._u_
....,_
d
ta, begina · ...., ...~ • . _ , an
a
fled • llllCflllt.
admllited 1bla Septlmller, .-islaDt director bl admi&amp;- tun-iime workin&amp;
~~~-~~
bowever, 90 . . . c::t- by- BiOal, notea ~ trend8 in ad- thla manth widi a fquN:Ndlt .....-tati.._ from tbe adllliD,...._
.....,.~
secia1 criteria tbroulb a Fee- mlaoiona tbia year that .etalia- .,.,...... in bMic c1M1p. a - ·iatrallw part ol 1M F8A Board
and liiU Jlll)jeet.
• '
of ulty o1 Natual Sci8tlcM and tiis do yet prove: flilbM will ~Mel tor1ce a ...._
ol Dlrecliln. The PleDdeDt ._
are
Scboal -c6:lala ...... _ . ulr:ed' for · 1
=let!ma
1M itlalnlqiiDr Ia ~
..Mau-.tlc8 (FNSM) admia- educatloa and Ita
being --.luatad by Doth DMDded' lbat appUanla lbaald from -=b ol tbe cxatltoaat
Stadenlll will ....... ~- aioaa ~t. J5y tunlty, "to do -..:b. .inter- q ..... who lndlaeta ~ IIUentiJ and tl&amp;uclalla, r.. ea,p. bawl ~ at leMt two llf'OIP.
. . . . -"-TV COIIIIIIIIIdal8 in tbeae- 4be ~ 11M He ' - foUIId lbat - t 418- yean o1 .aa11e1e uc1 -... at -.,.......
lll8dia aq11ipment eamlne delllptad to naul&amp; 4lop lltu. -ua.~l6t8N8tt~Mta and de- denta1rilll' epecWiaad ......... ......... ol NlevaDay bawl bad - - • ._.,... - - In tbtle ~ Ia alao in 1!-. ~
wlap 8111) teet altenlati- to _. abDitlea. IWalled 8ftluatbe
ay11ao o1 advising don o1 las&amp; ~· FNSM ad- .Jwu8 the -by to a job aa it Ia avan.ble ~ tha 8cbaal PoiDtacl out that tbe - . . . .
In 4be ~ ...... - -.y~ . ol Atdlltecture and En9IJco. hadn't ..... ...,...,. III'IJI1I)ajd
- . 'lbere are tine mlaaioB ~ t.. not ~B/ aiplled &lt;lata for tbe caurae.
~ ODiiipleiled. but llll9ld
ing 'IIIIa&amp; .a;od Ia a liberal at111 mmtal Daaip. .
. . _ It )lllldiMed In 196f.

ana

u.::ro.:::

FSAto-Sen

-=

Ainherst Land

~an':f~~X: ~f~:

Admissions Mix

a

&amp;

p

J5'.! ·

=·

l"ff----

~~ ..... ~~n3to~

J::!...":Iet.

.......u-

......ma

..-t

-'

:n~aJ:-onta': :l:!-:~:.."'!::;: ;!.,~t';.~

�WhichWzyto
Mcun is 1lite'?

(~ ,_~-- 1, col. IS)
8elltial for the eltabl....._t of
DajcR iDIIitldiaD woald JIOt
, . ~ flam private
- ln tldli .... "88uddeo
Jllllde ln tbe late 1950'• Jndi,.
c:ated that ·the Uaiwnity
ahauld earpect 1111 fiUOIJa.at of
"" 20.000 or mote atudmta 'b y
19'70, thAt tt abou1d have- at
tbat tiJile 1111 ilperalinc badpt
ol from 40 to 50 mD1laa. cloll&amp;n.
It waa aiMaUI that IIICCeMI¥e
iDenlaiM in tuJb would DDt
produce lhe neediil income and
it cloubtoid that olber
ol
would apthe aiame per·iod
(195(1.11J82l, Dr. AnderaOIL~
'Oiece w r e, however, be
c:aDa. the State bad ~ says, .nous matlenl to be comPn!beallve atudiea ol the IOJiated inwlviDI the ril!hta ol
Deed foe public hilber educa- individuals • the u . rsity o£
lion and the meeflenioma by •Bulfalo, a .:.ma.,~::::..,..=
wblcb these ~ c:ould be aat- ·
t ... _.. --"'
t
isfied. (At that time, SUNY men ,......, ·"""' ~ 8lftllll!leD
bad no units more compraben·
~tl::: J."th
aive than four-year .teacbera' . the University. ~the
coiJepo. l 1l&gt;e result was the endowment issue cootioued to
~~t ol the He.!~ Com- be significant until the final
mittee which reported m No- · ...,.,...... o1 negotiation, with the
vember 191Kl. "''11e He a I d ultimate ,_.lution beinl that
Committee indicated in i~ !9' the VBSt majc&gt;rity of the then
P&lt;?rt that lbere was a: ~le more than. $30 million . W9111cl
need for a complez uruvenuty pass into the coffers of the
to be establial;led by the State State 14 "foe used only for the
of New York m the up&amp;tate n&gt;- p~ of the University at
............ .. _ ... thla_
gion (ADd another dowasl'ate) • Buffalo. -An amount elf $1.5lD . . - a far the U·
.IIIIL\ p~ that. the . Stale million ifas granted outright to
"
" - f l f - . . , • wldo variety
l.!ruvemty meet .this ezii'!'I!'Y the University at Buffalo Founflf t h e - f«i~Wthe ac:8demlc
elther _by ~ one of 118 dation, Inc., with another $1.5
communUr. W..welcamo both
colleges o~ by lak!ng over'. one million loaned to that agency.
of the (pnvate) upstate uruverpooltlon papa~•--. ••
sitieo ~ developing it into a 8ene11b to U/B
major uiiiversity center. It was
Dr. Anderson summarizes·
disclosed informally to local ad- the consequences of the merger
ministrators that the lfeald for U/ B as follows:
Taking the ril!ht cowses can
Ccimniittee bad in lliind the
1. "There can . be no .dqubt
do it, we decided. But I still
Universi_ty "of Buffalo, among that the basic motive fof the
. · O!IIJ 'piiJiicaf ~ ~ I!W;·· ~..Dr. ~ felt strongly that an edlll:ated
.
merger was the expeclation.-that
· uys. Here, fomler - · Martin ...,.._. (loft) •
• ·
i&gt;efson 'shOUld 'be literate. Adothers. . . .
n,_ two cos)escing forces, the University of Buffalo could
- l e r break ground for • MW .~-In lHB.
mittedly lllll8t Ameriean colDr. ADdenon say s, "conse- not meett ita obligations as a
~ •• '
.
·
·
. -·
"• .~
_left. ~ dori't come close
~e com~ve ,un!Vj&gt;rsity ·j~ iil!hien'ed· -~· activ- '
\iiibliitl.iln, suppQrt "tl)'"'J!!wop8iih iiiBnaarda when it
~
suJ:~t = a
in a ll}"tropolitan area w1thout ities 'd&lt;!veloped:'·
to'b~-expansion and to the comes to handling language. I
7.' "Libmry expenditures for development of .tciols Deeded in doubt• that ten Pel' cent of our
sions looltina -ard merger of a !'ubslantili;l inc;rease in its rethe State Oniversitx of New sources._&lt; ~moe 1962_, . !&amp;~ . of qoak aoquisitiops, ' periodi~ . ~ in~uding elaborate • 91!ldents can type J:&gt;a1f a page
.YiB~'':,andcouldtbibe
" .•Uanruvd ewo~&gt;'d-·beof mpney ·~· no liMlger a 8lgnifl~ arid' bindirig ·moved in•the f1ve- compllter' ·centers. In short, ·wtthout some enorm grammar
wuuu
ul(
cant item in the University's year period after the merger State UniVersity is formula~g ot sPelling. So, what's an edundertaken."
endeavo~ to - meet ~ ~,; from approximately $150,000 to policies which- are permitting ucation!
Almost within bours of the lenges of 118 expanded )Dl8810n. . more than $1 million."
its graquate centers to become
My colleague came back to
release ol the He.IJI Report, be
.2. "In harmon)" with. a oom- - The one area in which the truly such."
her point: "You shouldn't ex.recalla. · "University of Buffalo mitment to develop its gradu- ·OriiverSity seems to have' suf.
·
·
peel someone ·to write as exadministrators addressed a Jet- . ate ' prQgrams, the University fered, Dr. Anderson says, is
Concluding, Dr. Anderson of- pertly in !' foreign 'Jm.lguage'
ter to State olficials indicating added substantially to its staff, that of physical fac;ilities. But fers the opinion that "trle form- as the nalives," she sli!d. She
their interest in discusaing the appointing persons of academic- be notes that now the long- er University of Buffalo · now could speak Spani!!b with "'!me
sugJestion that an upstate uni- stature in significant numbers. delayed new campus in · Am- bas definitely realizable pOesi·. fluency, but had a tern'ble lime
versity be incorporated into the It bas bE:en _able to do_ so .'!&lt;&gt;- berst, the cause · of. so many bilities of grea,tness. It IS no writ!ng it. "In a Spanish uni,;
State University system-and, in cause of 118 1mproved financial frustrations in the f1rst decade longer money Po&lt;&gt;r. It haS at- vet'Slty, I would have trouble,
addition, Cptop08lllg) 'that the posi\ion and consequent abil- of the merger, is well under tracted and continues to attract · she added.
University ol BuBaJo be that ity to compete in the matter .of way.
staff of increasingly recognized
"You're rillht there," I reinstitution. It -waa learned in- salaries with major 'unhcersities to the Smtio
scholarship. Its student body tumed, ~t ~ wouldn't ex. formally that .-poosible lead- of the land. Accordingly, the
For the Stste, Dr. Anderson is continuing to grow in aca- pect a · Spanish· univer&amp;ity to
ers of the State University number of disciplines offering finds that these benefits have demic quality and is coamopol- give yqu a decree if you
Board of Trustees would be in- doctoral programs bas grown accrued·
itan in character. . . .
c:ouldn't write )n S!lanish!"
''Ttie,:., is · no question that
.Sbe apaed. But f still wasn't
tereoted. in d.iscuMing such a io ·a present total of 97."
proposition, and a~ a meeting - 3. "The professional ·schools the. ~ibilities of St,ate
"The merging of the Univer- ccmfol'blble. It's not o;nough
of the Council of the Univer- -have been able to attraCt per- Uruvers1ty to meet the educa- sity at Buffalo bas not IM!en for
m&amp;rlrs don t mat'ty of B--·-·'t
.
without trauma. Local officers ~.
_.... _ .... _ range
81
WUIIU • • • J
was sons w b o· have significantly tional needa of the State, which in the early years o( the merger ;;;·
y ~·....,_
,!!!!
~~~ broadened the . f.JOirama of encompass not only ·serving un- were perplezed,..frustrated, and
-~~'!,;..y
.-·these achools. . .. '
dergraduata students, 'but also
'onall 011 ~by the· . MIIYbe "A'
Twenty ._tha of 11880Da·
4. ''The ac:ademi&lt;l disciplines contributing substantially to """"'!'
.Y
m a Bllldt 8DIIee program;
tiona fo&amp;w.L
of the Cfonner) College o( Arts. griolluate education and the re~ti&lt;Jil!!hiJ? Wit!'
· State ~ all, my collaulue WO';'Id
'Locll, llocl and Scieooes have developed at production of knowledge, have Uruve"!•ty officials were a! the · ~~ in the _Engijs!'
"'t hlld been the bope·of the 8!1 aocelerated pace."
been seryed by the merger. . . . aame time equally . perple-1,
•.
of· a Spanish uruUnlveraity ol Buffalo repre5. Three new divisions have
"Stste University officials, in frustrated and occas•onally out- vemity!
-talives,• Dr. Anderson ..,... bllen established-the schools cooperation with officials in the raged. Neve~'"'! .the merger
- JO!fN lltiBRX •
• ,
"to dect aa acnmunodation of He.lth Related l'rof811i10us, vanous S tate bureaucraci"'!o was accomplished.
_
Direclol' ol Orientation
- ~lh 1be State ol New Yorit;' Information and Llbmry Stud- have ... worlled diligeotly tO
IeS.
m'"
tbet Wlllild ..-ve • COilsider- is -and Architecture and' En- .erMie new peracilinel policies,
able pOitiaa ol the autonomy vironmentaJ DesiiJi.
.
- new policies of purchasing and
o1 the .Private lllltituliOQ, as
6. Faaulty..,tudeot ,-atios new policies for providing
~
·Courses
·
,
they IIOUiht and llllCUl'ed State b&amp;ve been reduced, teachipJ. pbysicaJ facilities-not solely \..JU
.
--~- beCause Buffalo """"""' pert
of the State University s~ EDITOR:
,
menj;._ ' Tbe ~ doscripbut because the merger d1d give
'Ibis spring the Depariment -&amp;0118 aubmitted to DUS (Divisicnific:ant added motivation to !If Computer Science revised iiB aion of Underiniduate Studies l
c:baDg8 many ezisling Univer- ,,.........,,....__,
of the
·
be '-·-~
aity and State policies."
,_---~J coume· -awmce.
_._
DillY
avw~ on
A . . . - - - " r ............ ,;.,...., ... ,......._. 1r a. 'l»ri..a. o1 u...
Amona tt.e, Dr. Anderson Tbe change ~made alter · · the a-- of Roam 10 at 4226
.....,..,.,.._,...,.u........,...,ll
..
r••......,$U.I
..
.,.,
•
.._,
dteo
the
option
granted
to
new
the
1972.
74
~
Ridae
t..
. II. F. JGJ,_ ..._.., ols-.-. ....._. .. . _ -11.1. 250 ...............
- . . . . _ o1 State uru·~:ty
Catalogue wu· sent Co- the
- &lt;:StU1 H8 a. 115 are para)(,.._ aJJfJ.
.
.
8111.,.._,_
·~·printer (conoequently It is now lei mtroaacklry
couraes and
to eeleet the TIAA-CREF re- out of date). Sinoe informa- prepare atadeats lor ~ent
41:,. warur JIIOWI,AifD
tbement JI!'Oil8l1l in preference tion on the new structure ill OCIIIIa. .m 0oaq1uter- Scienee
to one ol the State B)'8lenls and ~ to ~tively few people, &lt;e.c._CS 2U at CS 846J. 'They r. M.&amp;IIU1T
~PI~ ~teaory Ibis letter 18 an attempt to difir ~ in terms of
.....-c -'""- ~·cb ,___ racuJty po-the J&gt;!""'ide 8 brief (and Ull08ICiaJ!) the latiDded audleaoe and AS"" ' ........ ww
..... "freed
V1I!W
the relaCi"'""dpe b&amp;- IIUID8if ~
•
--Unl-.ity in liB eml&gt;loYment· ~ these OOWIIell aa perCS 115 Ia mlalded for pl'06·
..,_,P~ from ........., the pre- """"d by 8 member o1 the PllCthe _ . 1D Computer
•
. vi6ua .-!ctioDs ·or Civil Ser- d~ committee that sa- at fat lltudenia ..having
~..!..~
s. ~- vice polideL" .
fonnulated the ~
_ prior ~ with oomput.Mia~~=n~·tono.!::
~ infonnalion illould· be --. It ~ to the for__. intematioaal eel·-.:- It ofdeniule!est to faculty BDd stu· mer CS 1411. A pxl . liack·
...,..
_......_
ta m many other depart.. (~,.- 7, cOl. I)

a

-~

-ue

e

""4:

-:0,

_....,._

J:i&amp;i- ·vex.

.li!::

=

':,!:lJ:

Profclarif· .Changes
· .

---------------=---·

.

'"'""·mputer·Scienre
·

·---..

or

=-:.;.,-_--:=_

.._.

�s
ChaOOd PJans
w- fllcaltr )alabw lbe Uni-

versii;J d a rfn 1 lbe academic
year l9'7J-71 lllimber 128, full
and ~ 'lbe IIIIIIIIJK cloaa bot represent a IIDtal pln in teaching
stalf, ~. eiace many are
~ ~-...
By ........, appoin-t
numbenl '--1&lt; dowD dlia way: '
~ ud Applied 'Sci......... 6; ~ 8tudiee,
3; Natullll . . , . _ and Matheaia1161, 28; ~ 8cleDcea and
Admin~ 86; Health Sd- . 21; lAW and Juriaprud2; Ana and ~ ~. Allllllll t.:ulty, - . 1
have bem ldmti8ed by Uaiwrs i t y - u b!dnl particular.
I dlsliDpilbed additioaa to
U/8 -.mii;J:
-"" DONAUI ~ DIDLIBil.
) A well .......,. modem aulbor,
Barthelme will be a visiting· prof_..-. Ria IIIMm stories have
appeered In lbe New Y orhr
-and other Jlftlllillaue - mapzines. Ria lbari lltory ODIIectiOn,
e, was one of the 12
ou
boob of 1970, aooordinrto me N- Yn Tima Book &amp;vie~D. He received tlae
1972 Naliaaal Boak Award for
hili c:hildral'e boot. The Sli8htly lrrqu/Gr Fin Et~~ine.

Twire as Much
This "Yffir.

U/8 from lbe University of
Wlacaasin as a apecia).i&amp; ill
COnlnlda. lnf.en!sted ill beiJav..
ioral science, he was a fellow
in the Center for~
- StudY in 1be Behavioral Scieuces in 1966. ·From AIIIU8t 1970
wttil JlliiUilly 1972, he ll8n'ell
as director of lbe Cbile JAw
Protram of the Intemational
I.epl Center in Santiqo. Ria
latest peper, "Some Rellec:tioas
on law and lbe 8ociai ScieuctJB," wiD lie published in Spenillh in Boktm tkl lnt1titulo tk
.Docencia, e lnvestigacion Juridicaa.
Heelth ....._

Tlie academic

year

has ;u.t

begun but tbe work of Rabbi
Noson Gunu:&gt;' of Chahad Houae

has been ROmg on all summer.
In fact, says Rabbi Gurary,
Chabad House will be ofl'ering
twice as much of everything for
Jewish studenla this year.
.
Helping make much of tbe
doubled effort possible is the
addition of a aecand cha lain
to the chabad flouse sld, ~
bi Heschel G~.
Aa the Univeraity opens, students wiD lind 'Kosher sandwich
machines installed in Nortcm
Union and Goodyear Hall This
is a joint venture be~ Chab&amp;d Houae, which auperviaes
the Koelter aspect of the food.
~nd the Food Service which
operates the machines. Though
this arrangement exists on other
campuses in the country, it is
the first attempt at U/B and
W88 worked out between Rabbi
Gurary and the Facui ty StudJ!Dt Associaticm.
But food is only the berin-

DL JOHN H. IIII!GEL. SVJIGEIIY.

Pemape !be moat prominent
additicm _to lbe Heelth Science8
3'..,
~ty is Dr. ,SJeiei. f0ftll8rly
directOr of the Renal (kidney)
Trans!&gt;lantation 8eMce at Albert ginstein Medical College,
N- York City. He will 111!M!
aa prof-.r of 1111rge1y in the
School of MediciDe and will
also bead the De!lartment of
Sur~ery at 8ulfalo General ·
Hospital. 'Ibe author of over 80
J18P81:8. Dr. Siegel's work has
been .reported in N-fr.. He ·
has taken a leadh!, role in im~ the uae of ClOIIIp\lten in . c!ia1noeinJr heart conl:li- ~
J U I - WANG. EINSTEIN
tiona. Dr. Siegel has been a
CHAIR Di 810PH1'111CII. Joining
fellow at John Hopkins UniU/B from Yale, Dr. Wani wiD versity&gt; Yale University and
set up a Bioen8rptics Laboza- bas tniined at National Heart
US
GREENWOOD
.•
tory, continWn, with his re- ·InsH tu te and UniYJrsity of By S ~ s..u
~te-''--'and~will11811UD8t
o,..ruze,.,. an ~ichi~Uf!is ~ty aredJohnsfrom
In the past four years, Dr.
m ,....,...
... our
Cornell• l DlVI!lBI
an
Khai
Abdel Kawi has bad
fellows .fr!xn ale will """"!"'· Hopkine University (MD.).
iobs
WichitA Falls, Tel&lt;88;
~Y him to Ull;J. A l!.roijfic
DR. ~o~ P. ~us.pm"' , Fayettal(ill,il,. Arkansas; and
wnter, Dr: W~il ~ of 'ie- PSYCHOLQ;Gr. _.'l'l;le neW .diiectOr Tripoli, · I.ibYa. This simuner,
~ are _varied, clealiDg par- ,of. the J?iYISIQil of Child P"Y.- he moved a fourth. tiJDe to Bufti&lt;:UJarly wt,th fonll8 of ·l!lle!IY· ~try m the ~ of Medj- falo where he started a new job
~ Ia• ~ fiD.t;,_ cme,_Dr Anden-bnngs a medi- tant •- the
ti'
deal' wilh' ~ " ' tliosiS. '""7"" cal and · - i:hiatilc bacqround. ~ IIS8lS •
~ .
~ v~
- ~ J-...
.-~
•
_...._ ENGI· J-"~
.,""'... Ei'!'· it.
v1ce. premdent,
DR.
•. BAll.
._.._,..
u.- ' !"'Y/8'
'U/ f--'·~ ."""!"~·
• . Dr. Alli'&lt;ll't ~m
NBERING. Joininr ,U/8 III'COild
stem
U"B!' of Medicme m
Four positions .in four years
~ter, I.arael:e Dr. ~ ~-_York C!ty, _:qr. Anders has is typical. of·Kawi wi¥&gt;-,oonsidbnnp .alons an mternati~ publiabed s • x papers on the era himself' an internationafist
repull!ticm ae a hydraulotliat n~m, two &lt;!thers have ~ -ready to go anywhere in the
and Civil ...,u--. A prof-.r submitted both ooooemed With world with his expertise in pubat Tecbnioo, Israel Institute of sleep jillttems in the infant. A lie administration.
Tecbnolo1y, Dr. Bear has graduate of stanford UniverWhen you discuss his vita
ser:vec1 aa a Yiaitina prof_,.- '!t sity with tbe A.B. and M.D. • with Ka;n, he explains that.his
~- M.I.T ~lleb.- ~m- ~ Dr. ~den alao hol&lt;!s is really only one career-just
vem9', N- Mexico-Institute a certificate m peycboanalysiS the locations change. Last year
of Mininl 1: TecbnolOSY, and from Columbia. He will he af- he served as the United Na:
UniYersity of Wlaconsin, Madi- fl!iated with Children's Ho&amp;- tiona expert in public adminisscm. .
p1tal.
!ration at the Natiopal Institute
IIICBABL TILSON THOIIAS. -'
DR. RICHAJID L. 00880N; DEB· of P -ublic Administration in
IIU81'?· _111e 27-year-old wicleJy r 11-"TOLOGY. D~. Dobecm will be- Tripoli. In this, the capital of
aoclainied conductor of the Buf- come the chairman of the De- Libya, he trained lop and midfalo Philhenncmie, who """!'" pariment of ~tolo(Y, in die 1D8118gement officials of the
mutea ~ the Boato,n Phil- the ~I·of ~edicme, 88 .well government. Now he"is in the
hamtmic, Bl6lo and numer- 88 alliliated With Bulfalo Gen- U.S working ils a middle manous guest 81111111e1DeDI8, wiD eral Hospital. Interested in the ag~t official himaell
teach a- 1~1ecbini ~ ~'Dil- area of public health, Dr. DobKawi contends thet there are
ferent WII,YB. 01. Jfearin&amp;.' for son served 88 a research fellow
t many similarities among

City=·

~~~i': c':.:~x ·;r.;~ ~

Buffaln's Now Home to Kawi
'fu

duties is to ansWer part of Somit's mail-a job he feels gives
him additional insilht into the

inner .VOrkin_gs of the University.
. l&lt;awi, his wife, &amp;lid -13-yearold daughter are glad to be hack
in the States, but his threeyear-old son-isn't so sure and
still misseli Tripoli. ~wi finds
the ,country mucli the same as
when he left a year and a half
ago. 'Tve re-allirmed my attiJui!e; about New York City,
though. It's a good place to viait
but I wouldn't want to live
there," he iOkinliy relates.
U.S. Home ~
plansNowto mamtha.t tainh~'shishachomek,Kabasewi

to he found everywhere. At
Ch&amp;had, LSD stands for "Let's
Start· D&lt;weni,- CYiddish ·for
J&gt;ra~ ) " and POT is "Put on
Te{ilUn Cphilacteries) ." Accord- ·
ing to Rabbi Gurary, "Chahad~
niks" plan daily services starting at 8 a.m. in the Chahad
House and then again at 2:15
p.m. in the Union and again at
7
in the Chahad House.

JH:'·

at ba".J~:r3 ~i~wi&amp;at:
opelt, to everyone, Rabbi Gurary
88Y'!&gt; beginning with Rosh Heshat\ah, Se_ptember 9-10. Yom
Kippur l 'Ibe Day of Atonement) foliO... on September 18
and then the University will
see Chahad House's Succah' Mobile; a 'tabernacle placed·on
a trailer and brought to the
front of Norton Union. 'Ibe
holiday season ends with Simchat Torah &lt;,Rejoicing of the
Law) on September 23. Last
year, students, faculty and community danced ~for hours on
Main Street wi!P Torah scroil8,
Rabbi Gurary t'ecalls. The following Sabb&amp;th will he an Encounter with Chabad Chaasidus. Sin(injl. dancing ~a,nd learning highb(ht these midnight

in the U.S. TbouP, born in
EIYPt 45 years ago, he IS a
permanent resident of America
and will become a citizen "in
the near future."
He first came to the U.S. in
1957 as ·a United Nations Fellow to study public adrninistra- farlmmgentl (p~p) spontion at Cornell. He completed sored on the first 1labbath after
his masters in 1959 and went 'Simchat Torah when cme besina
hack to E~~Y.Pt where he worked the annual readinr cycle of the
OIJ organiZing a civil servic:e Five Books of
Rabbi
type system.
·

M._.
1
!!f:::Oi:e-j:=r·~;e~
I:ee1U:
N~~ins
~:~:
~lions
in Libya, B~alo, y!ri. :S~~"".:::"=~~D~~ ~o~...!'~ie':t :f:: ~
first Sabbeth goes, so goes the
T.
u---'Fall
..... t
'th the U .
-~ EIYPt and anywhere else m the
bl'
dmin' ~ti·
t N

unes ~ cow. (
,
1971), ~bas been comPiled to Leonard Bernstein.

oa. IIBB8IIAN llOaLa. liliAN,
SCHOOL OP IJOCIAL POUCY AND
COIIIItlNnT - . Joining

U/B from OICboJlc University
wherehe-AModateDeanof
the School of Social Service, Dr.
Merle briJwa Jbe ~ticm of
a demuiiJii of "quillty" with
a ~ OOIIIIDiblalt to the
''l&gt;rofelliaaal d .,_... e" In the
M.S.W. Wldle.at the Univentity
of~ be wu ~ for
P""PUation ol SocW Work edIIC81ora.

·

c:=a~aoftua~ ,!

avowd 8epmal;lst, M:- Aquin
baa wr11tm fw bolla radio and
~. ~ llt,erary

~ -~~-:

....U u --._, and produced
&amp;1-. at"'-a
_.~ __ _.en'"-'
- _...-:-- ...,
-.
M
- es; "
~~
uu...o-~- ·~

~

~.._.
He
·

n-.. ...__
,,.....of

....--t

Lil•a!Qre iiDd Bllb8ticut Collap ol Slllate-Marie, Uni-sity of Qa.bec.·
11111WAft MACAUlAY. LAW AND
J~ A Stanford

rraduate, Mr. MacAuley joins

et~ _years WI.
•
ruvem, _
of Oregon Medical SchoO,
Portland. He received his MD.
delree from the Universi~ of
Chicago School of Med1cine
and was a fellow in dermatolOilY at Dartmouth Medical
School. ,

DL WATNE L. JOHNION: ~
boLOGY • 0lliiTE'I'!'ICS· J o 1!' t n I

U1B after &amp;erYlce

88

chainnan

cit Obstetrics and G~IOSY
a~ ~ ~ty General Hos-

willpttal, -•~irginia, Dr. ~
....., serve as ~

here. A graduate of the Uruver-

~oft!~= I

:!!''1Q

ariicles em Pf8lll8llCY m eli&amp;eterility ind~ labor,
etc. In 1967 b.: Jolu8m was

world He believes a common "!' lC a .
!BwA on a
ew
t f. robl
.
'th only \ork Uruvl!lBity. When he fin- Y~ this plua c:Ndit COUI1Ie8
18
level ished in 1966, he again t:e~ on Jewleh myatlciam and. law
lr. m
Bec3 0 f this, he ·- to EIYPt only to find·oond•ticma 88 well u the WM!d_y Sabbil:h
~~-.
use
·
~ because of the new
and m.Je, Rahbl Gufee •t IS possible .~ app1Y _the . political regime. At this - time, service
aeya, wiD combine to make
~-kn.Jrledge, skills and ex- hedecidedtoreturntofheU.S. rary
this
year
another eventful one
~~ · over. ·
and~ a pennanent resi- fcif'-Chabad,
the' Chaasidic cena-.cs.rtos Not 1mportsnt
den~
·- ·
ter for atudente of all ~Mi~~J~B~Ia
"Peraowilly, I ftm1 it difficult .
SlllCI! lt_le!t, he ~ worked. at of the Jewleh cammunity .
to believe in national boundar- the Uru""!Stty of Alkanaaa and
. Counes being o«eNd are:
ies," he explAins, "the individ- at_Midweatem Univepity u a USB 239, Chaeildic PbiJaeo..
ua1 boundaries aren't importanl prof~ac&gt;r of .ioveptment and pby 'l'llllradaya, 8-9:30 P..DL;
What is 'important are the basic - puw..~adminiaplans :'~:';, at U/B
21~ Jewieb M~ ~
human needs." These needa .
"',
Wedneeclaya, 8-9:a,J p.m.; USB
"are beat eatiS!Ied by wOrking for now but would. sfilJ 'wel- 27-t, Chaasidic Music ae I;iterature, Tuesclaya, 8-9:30 11111t.
together," he adds.
•
u.;;.::::::.ty
. aDd· Plio C4llep 8 ~ TalSomit's new aasiatant has this
con11ict with my mudic uw ahd Oriifn of CbM- ~
been at U~B !or only tw_o University poeition."
sidle Prayer.
. ·
monthe and '111 lltillleamir!l )tie -'
.

::i'..,~ .P

tensie:' de;.,.,:m

usa

l::O:.,
d~'t

a~ cooisult8nt "-Project ~a;.c:;:::-~~~

Hope m Peru.
- LOT KEYS
PAIIKINow keys for ""mpuo t.culty..UII
P"r1dn&amp; lots will be ...; - after
Sepmrnber 7, Robert E. Hunt,
chat.-n; Tmllc Control AdvloOtY
eom-. says. CUnwnt ...,. are
to be . - until
11.
1.oc1cs wilt be chanpd &amp;epamber
11·18 'du~ whld1 time no armo
w1ft be on the ptso. keys will
be required Septamber'll.

s.......-

Uni~in

,::1}

Staff Senate

tbe
as abort a (Contuuud f r o , . - 1, col. 2)
~ ae
" A man who p.m. in 80 .Diefendorf AnMK.
chooies • worda C818fully, . 'Ibe
~be
Kawi is anxious to make "8ome an lntroduclooy one, Kuntz • ·
input" in his role 88. "trouble plaine, with Pre.ideat &amp;bert
ebooler" bere· bul believa be Ketter and olhen mHina InlllliBt !emu about the ~ troduclory remark._ After..
situatioa before hie "input" ean warda. -aiombere o1 lbe 8ellafe
be -inPII
·
_ and all pzot.tionahtalr " ' · - " · · : he ia .._.__ ....., bere are Dmted to the Pacaii;J
~·--..
--.
lub
•
...,__ •
in-depth ....n:b f« 8omit in C
for a ........tiolt. .,_ IDa number of .,.. includin( fonnal ret-~. wbiclb will
Campul Seemity. One ol bla start at 6 p.m., will· pve the

--....wiQ

�6

~

~7-1972 •'

SUNY Master PbmStnEses·Refolm,l~eaffitmatiOn GHIGHER--

Tr A"r]QN
"

Tbil lii72 ' Mater PlaD ~of m,; with the ~ that a .ity 8IDOIIII UnlvenitY.~pu.ses and econoorlcally maadvan- COT'\T
Slate UDJvenity of New York, . place wili be lllllld for them; be- • could ~ regiOoal ap- taged" whoe!&gt; prior education . - J::d.J~ ,
releued AUIUit 8, ....,..,......, fore they begin tlieir _.cdlege poinlmeftts · l9~ aome (arulty bas .not
them for in!·
.
·
a c:IJIIIIII'!beove aeries d. ac- studlea.
and DOIIa;ptofiiilsional mediate ·
on to other
lions aimed at intepating the
• Planned leaves of absence staB· ' C8!J11111S
•
of 'ex
vemity programs. TI1ese cen- -1,1
•
Univenity fJdlY with a cbang- be pantell to Univar&amp;ity stu- pensiV.. ·• inat'ruclio
ten; will be formed by consoli·
· ing aociety 110 lbat all quai]Jf'ted dents who would '!step out" of ment; ereation Ol consortia .for. dating t.vo existing progDijns,
periiDIIII will have to an their fonDa! education program the ·grantiiiir of "edema! de- the Urban Centers and'Cooper- • ' starting salariea for June coleducation tbat meetB tlleir wvithout--. 8!l8demlc peoalty to grees·!' and more joint use of• ·ative College CenterS. Students lege graduates, in most
needs--&lt;! ~ of "iefonn work, travel or study indepen- ~ rf!I!Pilrces and couipu.t er will reCeive' instruction and
were up-Only
hom. last
and reallirmation."
.
deJ!,tly.
•
. radii ties:
· ·
·
counseling to help them qual- year's level, according to the .
The .University p._...,. a
•"Cootri!ets for continued
C:~li~ - l&gt;e~ life . ify for college admissiOn or College Placement QlunCil.
Master Plan f!Vf!1tY four yeani.- ~' he amonied so that University and - non-tcademic , develop employment akills. · The !artiest increase in average
This doi:ument is incorponoted ~ collf!ile-jraduates could contin- institutions could include -re· • Community colleges guar- salary alieni li&gt; men. with -bach- into ~ ~I State Jl!llicy ue ~ying _wi\h a f!niversity gional aJ?po\ntments of adjunct antee all high scli"'!l grad!J!lle!i elor's degrees-was 2.8 per Jleilt
sove.mmg public and pnvate, .faculty mentor dunng . theu stall froin industry, museums m the college's service area ad- in aeronautical engineering, For
higller eduaitlon in New Yodt worl&lt;ing years. •
and government;. the JIBe or in- mission , to .a suitable two-r,ear women, the biggest' ~
·througb 1980.
•
• Jnaustry -education pro- , :ventory' cemers on a regional program, -insofar as tliliiJ s eaS- 7.6 _per cent:-,was in communi. . ln submitting the ·tJJiiver- grams he devf!)oped for &gt;per- - basis to identify non-ll:cademic ible. .
?-liD'!", hut -the avenge salarY
mty's 1!.{2 PIOPosa1s let Gov- sons of post-high sc;hool age learning resources; . and devel~Agriculture and technical: m this field 8IIJOI!Dted t&lt;&gt;-II!Jly
emor ~eller and the who, for exJ!IDPie, m1gh&lt;"work opment of specialized learning colleges, although rontinuin:g to ~77. a month. ~i~ JliiYilll
Board of RegeniB, Chancellor fo"! ~ys a week !"'.d l(ke "!'Diers where there are unique roneentrate on technical -and jobs for men. With ~or:s
Ernest L Boyer described the . Uruvemty-pJanne&lt;! lllliU cours- resources 'and facilities, such as ·awlied studieS, also oller tiber- ' ~ w!t"" m cllemical engJ·
Master Plan as an agellda for es one day a. wee)&lt;.
New York·. City or the Adiron- a1 arts programs to some high ' neenng, With an ~verag .e of
'..\ ~e change ~ a .. • The ,,Umvers~ty cnf!'le an . !!acb·
~
.·school graduates in their ~ $928 a mo'!th. The top average
springho8rd for specific action.
ed~care ,program !'!fenng edThe University will work 1&lt;&gt;- _who do not live within commut- for ~ With maste(s, de~
Prlndpel ~
•
~~ti()Dal. "!'P"rtunities. to re- - ward the development of cohe' ing distance of a community was m business administration,
The pru!Clpal thrasta of the hrees on a «:"'!'pus or m such sive plans imd joiht policies college.
$~,129 a month, and f'!r those
Master· Plan, are' Chat:
.places as retiremen~ hO!IIIll!. • for cooperation IIJDO!Ig all high• Senion:lllnpuaes
pro- "!th d~ _degrees m elec• The Umveraty will ,oller
Campus sll,ldY will conqnue er education_.institutions Within portionately--g reater numbers n1 trical engmeenng at $1,439 per
a broader J111111! of educational to he the mam mode of learnframe
k ~
'delines d
.. , · ·
tuden
fa
, .--..,onth,
·
opcions d '
the 1970's to ing, the Master · Plan empba- a - . WD&lt; 0 ' gw
e- UpPer-.uVlBion s
ts to • · .
,
•
o• • o ;
serve a • = t clientele that
But tbe" Universl~ ree-' termmed by the ,Board ol ~ ~lil!'te .transfers from two-year
A , _ s,.m of~ pro.
will be niot'e divenilled in in- • ognius that it no longer is· gents. "
msti~o~. .
~ .motlorW _.gnp 111 tile un...,.
tarests, abilities and 111e dis- possible or 4eiirable to concen- Admissions and TreThe Uruv"!""ty also will aeek ally of Mlchlpn has rone - Into
tn'hulion.
,
trate all of its resources and
The ~ter ~ alao ~!"'" g~ter, continwty aJI_IOil( the -.:t. .._,.. tor current Job
. • The 72 University campus- students on the tra&lt;titional ~ spel:ifi!' !'ctions for IDI· vanous levels of learning. •
vaea- oil UM aie g_- on th,..
es· will, operata Within a fully campus. Jt• therefore will de- rrov~
adn!jssions and trans- - There will he more collabora· bUlletin and ~
in~ 'orgenizatinnal stmc- vefOp new net.vorks of learner P
urea.
•
•
tiv~ p.ro~ with the , high In tile· em"'- ~. Unlture so that learning · resources ing locations through w!&gt;ich
. Piannlld changes m admis- • t!Choots, . including "University versity Record. 1lle - m Is to
are used elllciently to meet the students can move with ease.
sioils ,Procedures include:
in the sohools" activities, to Insure that UM stafl tile same
high« education needs of the
The Master Plan recom- ' • De\l~loping a mu!tipl&amp;- r,rovide collegiate and pre-col- chance as outside candlclatft In
entire Slate. The empbasis mends that eaci) institution in- choice apPlicatio,n form on egiate enrichment' ~tudies for epplylna tor campus -"'np.
will be on fostering more effec- creasingiy encourage olf..:ampus which applicants will list their students enrolled in high
•
•
•
·
live distribulions ol programs study, 8Uch as non-resident pro- preferences among University school.
The American Association of
among exist!ns campuses, rath- grams 1n whidl studenis would ~C8111Puse8. The ~niv!'rsity will
One-piWHllle formats involv- University Professors has been
er than addinl more campuoes. pursue at least part of their procx,ss the applications from ing two-year institutions will· certified as exclusive-bargaining
, . Toial enrollment within ovet:all studies. · ·
one campus to another,_if ne- provide for a pen od of h'herar agent lot\...._SO"ilf' . 1,~.500 faculty
the Utiivertlity will.iul:li.ae by
Empire Stale ' 'College, the """""!Y• on hebaU of the pro- arts -stUdy ·.at one .campus fol- and academic" stan at Wtiyne
15000 fUIJ , Iime .equivalents University's basic non-residen-. spectiv~ students.
lowed by - a period -ohopeciat: Stete'Univ.ersi~. AAUP:defeat\FTE) per year lhroUsh i98o- tial program, will serve more
• Creating regional . college ized &amp;tudy at another campus ed the WSU Federation · of
81, eveaJy ~vided lie'twem. the young persons and adul.ts who loeator cenlenl to .help prospec- in such flelda .as the health sci- Teachem, 615-586 in a rim'.olf
S~ -~ and ' wish to pursue. .their studies
tive ·students asaeas th!!ir ahil- enceS; -eQBineering and journal• elec'l:ion for bargeining rights.
locally ~ community without lh6 convent!onal stnM&gt;- ities.for college study and .flnd ism.
. •. ,.
,
__
. ~
• . •
coll"JJ"S- Tbi8 will include ap. t~ !&gt;' campus !""i classroo~ , opport~J!'iti.es ~ P!'ivate as well
' Baccalaureew, progmms in. . · A , _ 132-member Unlvefwlty
pronmateJr 4,100 more ~ Additional satellite cente"!' will_ as !'ubhc.. ~ti.tutiDIJS, .or high- technical and- applied '11tudies - - up of feculty, stuannually 1n new c8Jid ezpen' ~ -~~ope&lt;;! 1'5 . ~ 81'181&gt;.. 10 ~t .~.ucatiop.
. .-:
will -be developed .;;, regiolial aclm!nlstrators ~ has
"!""tal programs, 8Uch as ·Em- proy1_de ~r learrung_ DPP&lt;!r• Broede~ the criteria areas for students who already :}&gt;oen es&amp;bllsllod Ill 0 h I o pue State ~e. ·
tunities Within commuting -diS- used for admissions decisions have completed the existing Unhletslty. 1lle lf1IUP has 68 fac- :~ !&gt;asic atructure ~ the .tan_ce or most New York State on an. e&gt;perimental basis to two-year\programs in this field.
ully, 40 sll!dentl,- and 24 aclmln•
. ' ·' Uruversity was created 1n the residents.
reflect the University's lieliel
Credit for master's and doc- triiiDrL 1960's, The ,1972 ldaster Plan , Unlvefwlty- ~ cam.,.. • that total dependence on test toral degree programs will he
notes, ~. tbat ~es
ln ~.dition, . the Universi_ty scores and ~ school increasingly coordinated 80
FaCulty and stafr at Central
~ ocx:umnB m education and P!"J'D''"'! Cfe~!lion of special grade .records is an 11nperfect · that master's work at one cam- Michigan Universio/ · will pay
m . ~et?' that call for new Umver&amp;~ty- w1de, oft- campus· IDe&amp;~)!! ot detennining college pus will be accepted for full a $10 annu81 parking fee bepnonlies.
atudy centers to accommodate readiness.
credit in a doctof!!} program at ginning in the fall . Students in
Young pen;ons todey are ma- students .. from any campus.
Transfer to a senior campus other campuses
university housi!l..L will pay a
llJ.ring eariier physically and 'These students .~ould focus -on will be guaranteed to all stuThe M
Plan alao gi
$5 fee to park in' slota designatlire more advaiiCed academic- a particuiM problem ·of study.
dents completing a degree·-pro.
. "!'fer
ves ed for ~ housing unitS, an&lt;J
ally tban previous generations.
The five possible study cen- ~ at the two-year level imd' high pnonty to ~ - ~VIUIC&amp;' for $10, students may park .in
More adults are ~ life- ters ·i dentified in the ' Master desi~nng
· to continue their edu- searchment of ~- Uruve':"'ty's . '!"" any student lot. ·
. • eapac&gt;ty and 118 ability
·
o
•
• .
long learning opportupities as Plan are:
new fields Of I!IIIP!oYment apen
- • An Ulhan Study Center in cation.
to disseminate - " " ' ~~~~
~ of'lllchlpn PNoldent
up and the shoftening of the New Xwk City wbere atudents jec~:..~t:' ad'Ji'J::ft ~ foA~~t
~~wide ~ W. l'lemlni has ,_,..
work week creates additional- would examine problen&gt;&amp; of that lull f
. al ts (_...,) -~--'ters~~-- •
to tile UM 111pnts that
· leisure time.
·
City and benefit from the neb
· une eqwv en
" • ..,.
""""""" cen
~..... upon
tile ...-..., aot ........., with tile
GOvernment at all levels is cultural resources available per year a~ t?'!th Slat&amp;opemted ~ throughout the· sys- ~ ..........,.
·
'
~ a serious fiscal there.
and community .colleges take - tem will he establlabed, es..., ..,... • ,..._ '1Dr
eriaia.
· ·
.
A Center ~ F--'--' Gov
into ad!ount )be trenda -..rd pecially in the areas of .human- of .. .
'
•
or """""'
- deferred intennittmit or ~ ..~ ities and the social '
ana -'1111 far tile ...._...,, •
Much. of the public~~ erniDeot Studies
Waahing- time atu'dy 8nd the a;..,rslfiC,;'. in the field of ~ tbe'
•
•
•
repnla )liiber education With ton, D .C., to enable stUdents4o ti'
of _ _.__ ,_.
and
•
·
Island Uiii-' ..-'a
an atli!Udoi of awe..
· stud)' national and intamation- . on
a....-wc programs. · ' ory •
practices..
--·"'
uCkmly," Chancellor Qoyer aJ affaire and ihe operation of
Wilhin the overall growth
Consido!ration ·w ill be
!te
said, "we are being~ the'U.S: Government.
Jill~ the University will ..to~ tbese new ni- study in 'September, iiader
to build within and UliOn ' the
• A Center for Siilte Davern- steadily expand a proportioll of ver&amp;lty"wide centers for tbe which tudeo
UDl~a -Nhhecl atruc- ment ~·in Albany for Btu- its. C!lJIIlcity f!'f' .theae apecial study of aP.&gt;I• society and ,the 12
a ...::.:.=earn~~
ture in thla decade aa boldl_Y ·dents interested in decisioo- pnorily COIDIDI~
..-ts.. """"!in~ and I~ · c1asaes
aaa we did ln·-.dnl that ,basic makinl at the state level.
- It 'ia apeCied that the p...,_ ~lie poHcy and. wbm af- ~
of two :::::
12
~~
•A Cei.t:ertorRuralandM!- Edellt ~-~~-~ liyla.
The-\lnivenity
to~ ooe-b8lf hours' duration-are
............. ~':fi ~
.......,_.,to focus on .....,_
..,.....,.... ...,.......,.....,"f..Jl'8ll
'Ill •-•----- · - · • acheduJed for the _ . . , _ and
11e •
with briCks and mgr1ar cwtuial~ 'and the Ciii6: , and liEEK programs will DIOl'e
• . ·'- . ............wllllll!'!ti
.,..,........... ot bolb-:o:::-"
and min with _ . , and cWties ...,...._,. fann
rkers than double. bY 11180. and that
inaiedieal, Ne~ to link~ - ----::r •
• . ._,~
.
ideaa. What we laCe, ln ahorl, .
· ..,..•._
W&lt;!
• new Educational Opportunity jlether - ~ medical schools
·
•
is a cleaoiJe of refonD and re- · ezpenence,
.
·
· Centers ~ropoj,ed in the Mas- m the Um~o!&lt;i States ·and Eu1lle Fonl F'ound8llaD _...., •
a5nnation."
·. • ·
• A ceDtedor Environmellt.- • ter PlaJi
more than dOuble rope to ,.,rovide for the ato1111e of.$6.5 ,....... _ . 2 .far J
·
,
al and ~ Studies -in
.
- · ·
' · and mtrieva1 of .curri!i1t medi- 309 ~ aludJ ..-a ......
· ~- ~
·
which the pb.yaical and teaching ~ 10•000 periiDIIII new - - ' cal information __._. in . 150 docllnl .............. far mim., · To sqolemalt tbese ODIIOIIP!B or vulciua Uiliversity m two other programs.
leadinc llleiiHlal ~bon . of m1nar1tJ .....,. ....... !13
more fully, the Master Plait' ~would be biought !&lt;&gt;-The .....lhneDt at lhe 818te.
.
4 1 ' - - fallcMallipl Iii - . . .
ia
..., ... that: .
·
pther · to' deal , with Ollviron- operated ~ 'will dimb
~ B~cal NetWork Wl!8 111u11ea.
.,..Bach
~ llelt-- mental .p roblems. •
,
, _from 146 700 ll'l'E. in 1972-78 aitaiJiisbal m 1968 "'! J!eiDiit
·
•
' ·
ible units Ol studY of varyina "
The ,__; ieamibt' ~ to 206,~ Fl'E m 1981)-81! ~ and .~ to. re. SOMETHINII NEw .
-len&amp;tha within a year-IOUlllfCaf- menlil 011vlaioned bY Cha U ·: ~ty: ~ ~ ~ ~onnation from medical Somethlfll new. will . be Hiled to
endilr.
vem11;y would ~ ~ will nM fmiD 16i,OQO PTE -m ~ti!ID&amp; More tban 20 tile Unlve.-ity Phone Dl-.y
•The timiHlhortened b&amp;o.a- by furlheio dMiopmmf o f to 211~
ill .~~c:=:to~ th~lell-tlle--'oftlle'"'~ prapam become. lhe opeml;jve
ton -«nni VirPiJa_
of !Nile stafl rnembera: Plevlously
.....,,.,_ for - • 'of UDI-mt.T ~ bet,nal
' The Master Plan clari8ee th6
..._.,_,_~ the · ·
•
only tile husbend's·firSt name ...i·
, the........,padua'-....... MKI ~- lbi!Wmlt.i~ef!il IIUCfi.IIDil' ~te ~-of '!ftRy. tq . of.~~
. . . Plan~ in.c},_. ~r • INI!Tied .-nan's
-~for- ~ta at ac8deiilie inltltuiian8 u ..,... the •.' lilllltkaniiiWi Ulllveraity. tribQtion, ~ . .
_ entry: This- to fecllllala mall·
oll)oei'. _ . . •Ualvenlty cuD- emment; eoclal .and eultiual , II_: rec m• • :lo that: ,
. · llliWe&amp; Into the _ ,
:~ lnp. the 1'8raonnel 0111ca saya.
~
~- -Jn•New idacational ~ Eadl 'colleae will'J!UII.Pil illl Uilclor tile,_ policy, e.rnan.lDo,
' •HIP ..:boo~ . , . . _ be dilltlr.' &amp;Dd widr oll.r-~ it&gt;'
.,..ted· m eeeb· own indivldiml Master~ for may his • - · · fll1t naptonllilfed to ...,U
a Ual- tiollllt"inatitUtiona, both public major llllion of the Slate ID the eame peiiod ol
• - I,_,_ - ~ wnoit)l _.,... but fint epend and prf.te.
, . _ over the qe of tenna of ila own ~=
their INirltal at • t u • end/or
. _ •lime .........., or - travel-.
lni:n!Med -CCI!&gt;P8!'&amp;~ llCfi¥o l!l. such aa the edueatiaiiUly polential
·s - · s name, If they pm.r.

:x::r.::r

vm- r.1\.T.OTES

' equip:

slighl!f

.

cases.

serve

sized:

d

7

m.

i"""

.=ri&gt;=·:f..:::::;,
c:n.dl1a

C

pbms

':.m

....,pua

l=

zelatiaDilhipe......... .

•-

"' ' ..,...aes-

at

· •""

_....be

·

.,J:l'E
• · · •.

.,: :-

c.:.!'

�GRE~D&lt;-' ~"""~&amp;~

7_

~

--~~tments.
Listed
A ..1 ....... .:_..:~~ D;.....L~

GDEPORTS
~,..::R~.; ~""~:::Jr.:=-n ... .
;-J;;'if:'-··
Yiai11Df-ON
·
~rof•••· or.
GpEOPLE'
. _
,
•
.
~
bioiOCY:

_or .l'U.llll11J..U:)Wc:tLJ.~rus~
_
_
_
.
· Several maJot' lldminlatzlltive pi'OVOIIt of the Faculo/ of Social

appoin-18 for the COIIIiDg Sciences """ -AdministratioiL
ellr bllve'-11111l0unceil since . ReplaciDg Dr. RichBrd J. 'Popp
·Y
the lasf 11111D1Mt issUe of the wbo will """""" lelldting in lhB

Re~: ;,

Adlnll'rllliaot ~ •

~.

-•

The State Univeraity of New
Yolk Bollrd Of Trustees Executive Cammittee 011 ~ugust 17
' appoii.led Dr: 8 tan I e y H.
Cramer 'acliJII p1'CJV&lt;I&amp;t of tbe
Faculty of~ Stumes,
elfecli'l(l!l laDeilfately&gt;. He was
.... cm....:Jed to the position
by Preaidellt Robert L .Kettef
for oDe year CluriniJ tbe sabbatical I eav-e of Dr. Rollo
Handy ~The Ezecutift
which is empow·
ered to ad for !he tull Bollrd
during tbe ~,:also -~ ·
Dr. Gerhanl M. Levy · dis!-iri·
guisbed prof"'!f!!l: o( pbanna.
ceutic:a BDd Paw E: Mohn proof 'mechanical
,
lnlematlonal llludlls
Dr. Albert L · Michaels, a
native Buffalonian. lias been
appointed dil:!!ctor of the Council OD lntemationaf StudJee, ,t be
administrative arm of tbe Univel8ity for illtemational progi8ID&amp; and aclivitiea.
.
A graduate of the· Nicl)ols
School, Dr• . Miebaels received
Jlis B.A., M.A. BDd Ph.D. degiees in history from tbe UniveiBity
Pennsylvanill. He
joined -the .U IB fllculty In 1964
ss a lecturer and will 'CODtinue
with his position as an associ·
ate professor of history. A
Latin American scholllr, -pr.
. .Micbaels' fields oll'l!lll!lln:h include '·the •Mexialn ~OlutiOb
and Twentieth Century Chlle
and Bolivia. . .,., . ~ ~··
. h' i ~ ... ··~-:- : ... ':;-"1"'-1 1f·· 1:,._ :~,.1; .,

Committee.

=tuB
of

Aoslstont -

,&gt;

Dr. Jamee B . Brady, assistant professor . of _pbiloaophy,
has been ·-intled .,.....istant
~

Compinerc(Continued from 4, col. i;)
ground in mathematics is as-

sum&lt;id.

.

.

.

. . . , . lt'TIIl,

~t~sb~~~:
Hollander provost, witb lid- NEW CAMPUS
ministrati~e duties of tbii sec•

ond largest faculty at U/B.
Joining the Depai-tment of
Philoeop.by in 196'1 as a leeturer, Dr. Bridy came from tbe'
Univel8ity of Texas where he
received tbe LL.B .' and PbD.
degrees. He did his undergnuiuate work-'a t Soulh&lt;im Metbodist Unive~ty.

·;:

.

_...,. _AIUN. inotrucl;&lt;!~. tea_c her
educatiOn; M.S., CaniaiWI.
·
1ll. IIOBVYN ' AU.IIYNE, visi!ing asoociate pro~euo_r,lingui .atica;

June

DR.

ALWIN

BAUM,

"i"=

Uniwrs.ity of v •
I
. }'!..":.":k~~:.
DIL wti...w.. JUBKO, reoearch u veDity.
.
aociAte professor,_ pluirmaceutico; DL IIJDINK ID(I, ...utant proPh.D., SUNYAB.
·
feuor, elemen~ and J'OII&gt;I!l!ial
DR. K. ABDEL KAWI, ...Utant to the
education; Eci.D., 'Woyne Siite
executive vice preoident; Ph.D., ·UniYOnity.
•
N.Y.U.
OYCII SIRWI
• tant
f
DR. PH.ILLIP KINGSTON. research
!nthroJl!IJocy~' ~.• 'Stf~y~_r,
imtructor, medicine; M.D.. West- ·
. te
1
minster School of Medicine.
~. ~~N:iJ:""'and ~:~,::
DR. HEINZ KLEIN, visiting -.ciate
gueoe· Ph.D Harvard.
p.rofeaaor, computerO;!ICienceo; DR. ~IAN l'rACIIUIA, ..,.
PJ:,.D .. UniveDity of Munich.
eearch ...UIBnt prof-.or, mediDR. JAMES LA FOUNTAIN, aaaiatant
cine; MD., Harvanl.
'
professor, biology: Ph.D., SUNY DANia.. 8TEINIIOill!:, uoUtant proat Albany;
·
f
Ia
and · ·
d
Da.• IITZPREN LAGAKOS, aaautant l''jf.r'Yalew Law SC~:tru ence;
profeuor, otstiotico; Ph.D.. George DR. THOMAS BTORI:R
• te
Washington University._
feuor, mathemati~;~~-.

APPOINTMENTS

~ :p!fZ:~e~:i.·

W.,~v:;in;Om&lt;SON, ~rman. ~:!~·...Utantpio...wa.
B::l:

'tlholt!trico and. G~IOCY: M.D.,

Ph.D., Uruven1ty of Stpiabourg.
DR.-moMAS """""'· ll08C&gt;Ciate profeoeor, poychiatry; -M.D., Stanford
DonnokiloiJ
.
Univenity.
. •. . .
•
Dr. Richard L. Dobson bas HUUIIT AQUIN, Vllll~ P':"feal!"r,
been . named pro~essor BDd French; DoCtoral de f'Umven•te.
cl\airman o( tbe Department of DL ClL\IIIa BAD.BY, director, CoDelmlitology at the School of operative' CoU"'!e; Ph.D., UniverMediCine. He assumed his .new s•ty' of ConnecticuL
.
duties
1.
-. DONAlD BA1t1'11ZLKE, visiting pro.
He oomes to Buftalo from feuor, English.
tbe University of- Oregon Medi· Dll. THIOODOBi: BATI:II, ll08C&gt;Ciate pro·
cal School, Portland, where he f::b~ ~r:s:;tics; Ph.D .• Coogy

..._ WILLW( !ICOftLL.
liataGt
cbcmfatry; ·
Ph.D., U.U,.Dity. of MUm.lla.
IlL VIIAY 8RADIA, .-Jda tant profeMor. - : Ph.D••
N tioiull Cbcaic:al Labo to
I
•
ra ey·o

.•

Usiatant prol-r,
S cJ, o o I of Mlli1IIPIII"'lt; M.S.,
Pwdue.
IlL GAaY 3/IIIN, &amp;IIU!ant prof•·
tor, Ruuian; Ph.D., UniftDity

,

(!.o~:C:ol~·p~8.~~~

aasistant pro-

STEWART MACAULAY,

_

visiting

pro- ~~~'itj:f:o.~~giJ.,C!~~~

~B:. :~~ jruu.ru
..
· ~ru
.tyd.ence;

sinCe 1961. He was also a feuor, · English; Ph.D., University

senior scientist at the Oregon of California at San Diego.

~..

U:

1

l\::l:

. versity of Southern california.

MICHAEL TILSON · THOMAS, visiting

adjunct profeuor, muaic; B.A,

~:rwtfr?n,r ~~ ~ ~ :;.x:':n~.~S~iting profer- :~.~~~~g}r;ass~~t &amp;::t!:: ~ni';;~~ :~~=:he::::~

n serv~ on the Univer~ Dlt. a. CURT'l&amp; BENNETT. assistant to
f North Csrolinll Medical the direclor, international studief!;
I faculty from 1.957 to Ph.D., Harvard.
1001. During the 1969-70 Yl!!lr OIL ftlANK SSOWN, ll08C&gt;Ciate pro·
he was on sabbatical as a visit- fessor, Educational Administraing professor of physiology, tion; Ph.D., University of CaliCatholic University, Nijmegen, forni.a. Berkeley.

The .Netberlands.

Chemical

J.r.'f':••&lt;&gt;r,

DR. CONSTANTlNE MANIKOPOULOB,
yiaiting 881ii~nt profesaor, phya-

1cs; Ph.D., Pnnceton . . . . ,

vitriting asais- DR. .u.nacDO MATILLA, associate
tant profesaor, biology; Ph.D., professor, Puerto Rican Studieo;
Unlveroity of Michigan.
Ph.D., N.Y.U.
• tanJAMEI!t
DR. GARY CHAISON, ass.i.Stant pro· · DR.
pro(!!?.rCLA,
atsVE:.:_Vllti:csiting
·,. p .D
...·,
fesaor, School
Mansgement; 818
·~
: Ph
Ph.D., SU~l\8. ·. '
R.r;UvenityofFlofi:~
.
.
NATAUII: CHIL!ON, .UiOtant profeo- DR. .I'OHN MEACIIUI, uoutant prooor of Italian. S~ nnd Portu- feaoor, psychology: M.A.; Univer~n~eoe; ~.A., Middlol&gt;lltY Col,lege. aity of Michigan.
r '.t.u t,···cr.Bzx.owsiCJ, ·aMiata:nt to m:A.'".xEDur~ ' 'instrudor, occupa~
chairman, -biology; B.s ,, SUNY.
tionahherapy; B.S.; Univeroity of
AB.
Puerto llico. ,_,..
,.•. OOPII:LAND technical Usistant, DR. ..........,. MEIIlZ dean and
Einotein Cbai'r atsff: l!.s :;·Sydhey piofeaor, iiociai ' Jio'y:•.tnd· rom'
University.
munity services; 'Ph.D., Brandeis
DR. IIABl BAR DAYAL. research 88 • Univenity.
KEIT-H MUBGATBOYD, S e h o o I of
8 0 cia t e atatistician, statistics;
Ph.D., SUNYAB.
·" · ' ·
OMhi"""""""o
ts•~n. t:•...M. Accoun~,
""· BOGEa u..; ~ : &amp;.aut8nt
uo Stste · .
professor, hiatDry; Ph.D., Yale.
f!.,~~;::hy~~·sciS:;teP~D.:
DR. ROBEB1' DE YARMAN, aaaistant
Kyoto Univenity.
profesaor, music; Ph.D:, University of Iowa.
DR.thCA~pg~sE~ecttge~·
DR. DINA CA&amp;OLINE,

EnalnMrinc

Dr. Sol

aity of Mic;higan.
DR. JOHt&lt; MACINTY.E, vuitin; aa~~~
mathematico;

w, Weller, professor

of chemical engineenng, has
been appointed ,acting director
of the .. J~emicial _Engineering

~t for 1972-73.
Dr.~Weller will serve in tbe
absence ·o f Dr. Harry -T. Culli-

nan.'"' •'Jr.; '-~" department

chairman, who will be on lmve
as .a · visiting professor at tbe University. . of Maocbester Institute'Of .Bcience;lllld ·Teclmology.
.
Dr. WeU~r has just returned
from ·a one year leave as
United, ,Nations Technical Expert in Israe!. ..He joined. tbe
U/ B faculty m 1965.

CS 113 is intended for stu- Speech_co;mmun~
An acting cb.ainnan and an
dents ifi tbe sciences having asscx:iate
chainnan of the Dea quantitative bllekground and
orientation (e.g, Biology, Chem- .:=n.!vC:
istry. Physics, ~). Three President Ketter.
ye&amp;ri! of high Bchool matheDr. Mary B. Mann, who has
matics, t4rougb analYtical gSO: beeb director of tbe Speech and
metry; is llllllllined.--·
Hearing Clinic and an 8ssoci~
ate professor of speech patholCS 111 is jntended, for students in ijle arts fllid humani- ogy, will serve for one year as
ties having ·a qualitative and aSctingd chairman. Dtlr. Derek. .Ate.
an ~ r s, presen Y assoc1a
less roinllil ~. ahil 'ori­
inassocthe,pete~~~
•ntation (e.g. Att, English, PJCOf~servre 88
..... uMUJ I..I..WUI
H i s tofY , Pbiloeophy, etc.) . for tbe year.
.
Three years of high ad&gt;ool
Dr. M&amp;ll~C"tbe mother of
mathemalics Is 88IIUIDI!Il ·
three ebildren, . ·joined' . U/B's
faculty 4n. 1967 •after twenty
CSe.. ~~but~.-~~- years with Indiana University.
vid
...._.
, _ ..,.....,.... A ~duate of Parsons College,
introduction to compu•a- pro~:t·--.
Dr Mann received her M.A.
gramming, 1185
computers, and PliD. degrees from tbe
and aociallllll*lla Ol oompuleJII University of Iowa
in society. 'l'blire is no f01'11181
Dr. Sanders..Acfucaled in
prerequiaille, .nor dOes ' this both· tbe United States and
COW8e act
a perequisite to Grellt Britaih, . ined U/B in
any otbor
C0U1M C8 lll; 1964
at Royal
CS 11.3 or_p8· U5 DillY subse- Victoria Univeraity, Manquently be 'tabn for credit (ex- cbeete&lt;,.· England and ('.entral'
cept by .CS majon).Michipn University.
.
"-:
'
•
·
-.._ ~ · ·'

of

~~~~; ~s;-rP~r=~~;:~:tinif. t~ :-nit~

will

rJ:

c!i

after ·-~

cs;
· ·•
mOxford..
DR. WLODZIMIEBZ OSTROWSKI, visitDR. GLORIA ROSE DONINGToN, visit· · ing reeearch professor, biochemiling lecturer, music; Ph.D., Yale.
~'h.D"~_u!:;:: !;"~";j.~-D.,
DB. COLIN G. DRURY, ..auiltant pro·
f e 8 8 0 r, industrial engineering; L. ROBERT PABl:(OFF, inatructor, inPh.D., University of,.Bi~ struction; Ed.~ .• J?LJNYAB. ,
BLIEH.o!&gt;U BOIS, uoistant professor,
DR. · NEIL PLUJOIIB, uoiStsnt pro. .
American Studies; M.A., North- feseor, 1eolo(ical -aciences: Ph.D.,
western lJnivenity.
Northweotem Univenity:
•

uaiatant pro.
feoeor, atstiotico;, P.h.D., • London
Univeaity._

DR. STU.Aa"'" POCOCK,

•

IOBEilT 'II:DWAIIDS, .....tant prof. . .r. Ensfish; Ph.D., Univenity
of Californi&gt; at Ri_yeni,d e. .
.;
.
JOtS. .I'OHiiiQCHROD'I',aaaiuta·nt
l!rofeosor, hUtory; M.A., CoJum.
bia University. ·
.
.
DAv 1D a.Killl, ·uo..tsnt to VlOe
preoident for acade'mio alfain:
M,S.,- UnivenitY, of_. Colonodo.
DL' P811:D Dom&lt;os, ...U.t ant. pio·
f.-.r, dentiotry; D.D.S., Univer;ty of Minnesota.
,.
DL __,., ..,._,, visiliN&lt; u.
•uiBnt prore.or, Frendl; Ph.D:,
Univemty of CilifornU at San
DIL

Diqo.

.

.

At111DY POOIIi:; 'viOifmt·
aaiota.nt.--profe'aaotr:
aaatliematicli
.Ph.D., Californi&gt; 'Fech! ·'
'
•
Dit.. ~ MlCHABL , a:iooY . . fnittb.Ctor,
chemiotry; Pb:D:, SUNY'AB:
,
, , _ • ,, ,
,
Dll.

r~o~l
'" o.'f ":!!."~~:.·
-v

~

,..__

A.B.c Hamilton CoUep. : •
DL·' oew.w. .

·

aNDOill·i'uiiii.o. 'a:C~Pkl)~:,""!'· ~~~~;
I'Datitute and'Tt::
.
,...

u;;r.;;:.;~

,__ c . ...., a o;·,~f"!-"•·

.

profeaor E ' te· Chai
ta.ff
Ph.D., Y:Uoll:;v:Sity. r I
;
DIL AHMED ALl IJTJI&gt;IAN, visiting
ueociate p r of e a o o r, dentiotry;
FDSRCS, London RC. of Surgery.

KONRAD WACHBMANN, viai~ pro=~ ~~~re and Environ·
_ ..
DR JUI HSIN WANG Einotein pro
f~r; Ph.D., W.:S,.,:-....... n Uni:
·
-~
vero1ty.
D&amp;.

.s~HAI:o · . w~ '· a'l.iltant

profeuor, · eociolol}'; , ·M.S., ' Uni·
venity of WU.OIUU1.
.
DR. WDNEB \\illlsENRoFEII, in·
~.tructo,
.ty .of.~'.· ·,.~ry; _M.C.., Uruv
.· er·
, v ·-DR. MAIULYN WHITE, uoutant pro.
fe.o·""'.;~.- infPhoDrma,..'!~run·-~,.;.,,~!"ry
0 ,.....,~
· . ~ ·-· .,.·~ n.
lino11.

DR.

..

.I.T.

Dllh AMEB' wh.iWa. ;;h;~pro~ilna·~::S6,u~~-· ortb

81'! ~: • 8=-~t. I.A.~

~~

1

SUNYAB. ·

w~NKLB~, auiltant
Ph.D.,
9hicqa.'
·. .
D&amp;. OIAXU Y.UUUCR11 -.reb u-

oa. NORMAM
profeuor,

":=n~rn~~!~'tj~in 91Wr
; ~.
·• ·~
.mwruty:
~~~~~~ ~:
Jane !'niveDity.
- .
l""

-

2. Due • • .._... in fac-

,...._ CS nl :wiB DOt &amp;e offeNd

ib: fall.~ Mudeala: See
~(1). .
·,
·

3. 8tud!mla ~ 111 ap- .

ply for . . . . _ tD tbe Campuler B.--~ lboiild
take CS 11&amp; arCS U.S,. DOt CS
lll..

Waterloo.

•.

~

:

of

·:·
' - . . . . . .a ua.. IMONDII" .l'HROUGH

"'MAIN
-~
~
-t'ft~ -~1;)8
AJ

fl
~··

~~

1:00
•

ji

PM·

• 12: 00 PM

12:20

..,.

~~

-

:;r.
.,.. _

gg
1~ -

. up
·

2:011

, 1m ~ .2a::2•1!
!.~ ...

F!!-

lift

2:11

1"'11

tii'.JO

•1:21
s..o

• ""'

,·

11:' '

• 1-

DolliWI

,;.,-......,.oonox _,_.,

Dr. ol ·~·

• ti-;

~-UaMOIItr. "'

'--

·=

.

·

,1

1:111

Ui§...., ·•:;II

•l'!J ' "- ·.

.,. 1

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- .· .wast profeo.

•m
i:H·.
~

·
10:10 .: •.

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l=· · 't'ft

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.,..

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....40

0:211 •

•2z:!22:21.~

....,,

~u
· "'
~
,..JiO..,•
-....,. '
CIUaA!ftS aoi11Ji1ii1!. ,;w~
ii!iii ·
~
~.
Ph.D:,
ll:ll
Ym
,.
.
J=t' ,··•

I&amp;

;;'B:! • 11e Ia

uaittoalt7

-

~·

·u= •• . . .

llll8och ........Uniiwti-; M.FA:
-Taril ·Cbriltiaa u~.

- . Ph,D.
of Iowa.
DL ..r IW£. -.&amp;' ~,
01
·""'" .,..,.,.., ' '1- " :;";:..., ~; Ph.D~U.c.J...A
-..
"':".=-:~7 ~ - .
pro,.
... -"lr;;i'-;J""'..J&amp;.::" · - '-• ~ MJ1.. -Noltb':'

.;..
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mO..v··

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I:H
=· :....., l:U~' ·. . .,..,
,

•
,, . _

•

ll.lll9ft - · Nidaa.pao.l

10:00:00 .

ICHDULE

MAIN STaaT CAIIPUS-IDDR LEA

:/:;""'tory
... of"t:::
· :t•,.
Pb..Q... ~~
-~·-~
.
•.:t;ga
1111

lllOII!'ON nu&gt;IWf, Vioitina Sloe
Profee10r, muoac.
.· - . ;_,

:e-"f ~--..,.,._- _ of M.-ac., U~
- . . - . :jg
·' ...
=·,
.: . !i ,... t-Or...n~ fx; Pli.D_.. RJ:T:
w:~
:....
sau ..:·I'IR'II ~ ~ -,.,

dermatology;

l;nivenity of

· L.Studeala~haY!'di8iCui· --~... -·~- ~·- ·........., _ - u- uu.w&lt; ~"·~~t_P.J'O- - uia ~
ty m .deciillal wbidl ot tbeee
• ......,. ..-';,...
~~~ati~tician,' otstiolica; ' M. - ~ u~· ~· ~A.;

~=~:~P!!....,
,...._... 1-turea •
-=Iiana fi1r ~
~
ed 4tieD deCide.~ fRI

·

WILLLUll, aui.Jtant

GEORGE

~{of e • • or, lincuiati.c.; Ph.D.,

.}m

•.

4:11

~. ~

tl. -

~

.

.
'
.::

I= - -·-v·
=--12:11
"

.

"1:21

•

- ~:ll

- l;g

·--:a . ~ ·

~~;:'Cri:$• - ::::':.1 ~-. "" ...
Pobtooludi!Jaolitloii.
.._
• l1iL tic.wna,"....:...W.
='~-=.::'

·-II

.-n..-,......,.
"""-or.· 1 •U
Ph.D
-...!!'1! --~
. ·
CoDIIIII:"
"'
'
"
-~=
r:=~
--miit~ta:aft"ar::LCft :-:.1l.UI··~~.
·=B~'::i·
~wt._~=.dlr
~ Praf-_n
~ -:
11,.

..

.::: ' . .
......
'"

�·-

GRE
·•

~

..

· ~,.

~~ -..:~

11172-78!11 Eric: A. I;IAnelocl&lt;. ~­
moad 1'101- of a.ioolol&lt; U/8,
""" @lidiD« ~· "Emori&amp;uo,
Yale. s-iiDani .-1 -~

lo ...-

•OOpen.to _....,. afthe ~
.. ~-·the oulljoct
~ ~ 131-2228... ......... .
~
-~--------· · ~ the Cbanp 2
Buf ·
~-·'f!olk Ft!IIIMI ;,:..x_~bto; :i
Mmohall Mc~''The
p.m&lt;ed\ :• ,.· the u--·-·," 4 p.m.,
•Open

• .open only lo-.-

COKftHU1NG .llEHT.U. aiooCATIOi&lt;# :

Endodontic P.roljkm SoWing, Dr.-

~:2 ~~r!'Jc;.:~f::

Slate 'Uniwnlty, New OrleaD.;
Capen Hall, 10 Lm.-5:30 p.m.
li:r v• • : ·A p~f televiaion
in tbe --Haa.
e. Norton.

:o·

e':-:~~!2'-.:r'~~A~

Video Committee, a division Of

-

~ SubThil~ :t.eIDefb..t~ atudent at.~
~~
A ~~Jree
~~ta; v:iunC::n interes~

=te

in •'"' upect of &lt;television •~~tdto atop by RoGm 60, Norto~n":
To(lay'siCbedule· 1
South
HaW.neu stnet Society ' sliillle
BaM_; 2 ~.m.. The
~.t Ci~

p.m.

RllmJilen. 3 p.m.,

.!'lew

M

n._.

-

=-:::::::~.~,"trea~~
Onds in ·T elevision; ,9 p .m., Muaic

-to be

~

PILMS•·•: To ' 1/am{al -(Baillie,
}963, u; min.) ; Ala. /or the Do-

ACT

v·•~

A Proimm

prof...,r ·Hawlock will!leOI wllil
such topics • oral commwlicalioa
and culture in.the Maditernmeaa;
the raJ tul
· compooi

tioq~ancl"-tli~:l:!";.m.te,..,;'

of oralitY Jnto the claMicil .,..,
the G~ drama u oral ~rfona.

:::d"h!.he~~':ii!.:'~f~~
th
' ti
f
eel
ti naJ
sy=~~J&gt;;;.n~· ~~be ~c:mtiOD

Of television, ..-B:~~.sS~~~fs~CJ a

88

1

i c_ '

390

.

Susan Klwpfia"
· '~ 6z....:.. •• ~
~.~ ~
In
- "2 l'fJi:;__~
. v.;;ArM,~ '
.utuu:rlKA':i ()lt.r_.r (.(..f,U..r

Halis Lounge, Norton.
FRENCH cOURSE. Hubert Aquin, .
•
,
. T7{s ~u\e: ~P·~fni one of eana~·a best knowq novHtireearin'!...- 72-73, ··s'ub n:'_.:...~ ..,·'gees · elis~ will giCanveaadin.ull.deliJ:Inidtuuate .
- .
•.._....
uucuu ... de
course on
an
tera re,
-

~.::.g-ii!:'a=lia~-~~·~ -~t:nc~~~!ill ~~ncoM::~·

...... ·

-

FILMS•• : M y Darling Clementine

Band.

(starring Henry Fonda; directed
by John Ford) an
_ d TartuU&lt; (directed by F.W. · Murnau) , spon·
sored by UUAB. Film Co=ttee
and the Departments of. 'Endiah
and French. Ck mentin&lt; at 3 aiul
9 p.m.; TartuUe at. 7 p:m., .i4o.
Capen Free

Jii:BCB"110N f'OI PROFESSION"'ALirAFP

TM

~DU.CTOBY

L,E.CTURE•:

IIDiBas: The l'rofesaio.W Staff
Donahue, East Coast 00•
Senate invit&lt;J all non-teaching ~·Charles
Oidinator for the Students• I.it.ter-

=~~:' r";'~o:uin.:!.'ff

to_,.,r...ailomic CNitif. Tbo -a.-.. 351-

~; t.ra:'!':'G~~:=

koto.Sioux (BaiHie, 1964.24 nUn.)', Of a uni~nity ; the inveiltion o~ .
3 p.m. aDd 7 "p,m., 1~7 DiefendOrf.. :::::;"'~:~~,;., ~ rl:! 0~~~
.!I'UESDAY-12 .
For f.urther details,. conoult the

Bureaucracy,
a utinc_ look. .prnduc:ed by U/B
otudento .• 7 p.m.,-~nhlill Me· .
18 10
~'The .~ed
the Mas- aqe, ! ~~· . .
Own Y-our
, Qody~•• Bill Baird,-9 J.'.m., So!Jth
i:lappmesa Street Society Skillle .

you

u::.:~,:~~

derpadilate- ill

natiOnal ,Meditation Society. will

'";

.

OflA.JL.()
,

day, Wednesday and .Friday in .
_
~oster 322A. It is also croas-liated
- .
.._
as History 344K and Art,History
A ·couectioil of -&gt;ntinp, .
.369K (French. registnition No. sculpture, dmwinis ;;;;d' etc!lli,
168 sur; History and Art History ing.S all personally ~nceived
N o. !68'829).
by Sussn, Knop
· ka cilmprise an
nfrURE OF MAN co
. URBi. M•-rv aJid
• u1
Jim Danielli will give tbili' sem- extensive show,.-op&lt;lnihg•SlDl •
inar on "The Flltwe of Man" taneolisly in galleries ,at two
this
te E limen · b
campus locations, Seijtemller 8.

inte'"rvie~onlY.. ~!ill thet::roll

ment will be from students aJ.
ready on the campus. Call 831· te ·
1322 •
'9r~~ rv~ew.

"Se}f'-~rtraiture

. · ·· the

pe,...

events of my life and my
tion' · 0 f
•
1
ho' e
cep
~ e '!" v •
toUChed on if' 18 boW Ms.

memben are welcome to come
and meet their representativee on

fu~~l!:'::fo: ~'!.t':~ ~~~~~~t,l~~ ~~r'ri!i . ~:J~~ ":'~
Meditation. 147 Diefendorf, 8

Simons, is open to all' memben

will be ...-...~.

().m..

of the University community. Re-

the Staff Senate. Ref,..,.hmento

•

-

WELCOME PICNIC: President .and
Mn. Robert Ketter will honor·
new faculty &amp;nd professional staff.
lB6 J,.ebrun, 6 p.m.
ni.M_.•: The UQAB Fiim' Com·
mittee becins ita weekend aeries
with Strow ' Dog• with Du1't in

Hollman, Susan George; directed

LS::.
:=r~?.e.=
for times. Adm.i.uion charge.

--

WED~SDAY-13

~H!Jf. ~o.ldawed.n~~Conference Theatre, Norton, from

Act, vn: A program of television,

7 p.m.-9 p.m. The Chorus will
rf0
tw• this
d .

Haas~

Lounge, , Norton.

T o d a y 'a schechil€:

11 Lm.,
Michael . Levinson in the Gym.
..U/ B's own · 'Cosmic Rapper' ;"
12:30 p.m., The New Lost City

W.:::!:!::.~ita' &amp;8··p~1~t.!~
G.l .'s.

F lLMS4'.. :

.&amp;cr v • •: A program of television,

Haas Lounge, Norton.
.
·
Today'• achedule: I p.m., To

..~~clf~' ~otm..;.~~2~
fi78· p~~G.!~o~;~
in.the USA."

•

CB.ABAD HOUSE SEB.VJCES• :

Cbas-

:=. Aitwe~t!~~c:ba3I.ia!:':.
3292 Main

~reet,

7 : 15 p.m.

coFnZH:Oua • •: An evening
&lt;Sf blues with Paul Geremia and
"legendary" Leon Redbone;
. freshman ·a nd transfer. students,
free; othe·rw, 75 cents; first ftoor
cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m. ·

· UUAB

:the

~~.
t~n?~~~t:=
for times. Adm:ssion charge.
SATURDAY-9 ..

I

w(l8 a

Malt? Wa r

f: D ~~and i:%.";."1J1"'::;;
- -

welcome to join.

UNITED FUND TRAINING BISSJON8.

~i;j'~o'r~":i~ 1 fb: !:.:d~~

according to .the following liChee!ule. It is important that as many
workers as poesible attend. Please
•utleBqdpeth
rso
enn'!"eel m
"'!lte"!'res
t· co
ted
.nl!"m
. nieeeenl_
/1
~!'!.,US:,ted
pte!"benrd .~.Rooarema!so
,. .

l!ri&lt;l• (•!llrring Cary Grant; directed by Howard HawiCs) and
San Francisco (starring - Clark
2~
Gable and Jeanette MacDonald;
~
directed by W.S. Van Dy,ke) . War I!~. ~~nH:;.!!: 8:i~!?~';::
Bride at 7 p.m. and San Francis~
tember
26,
Conference
R
0 0 in,
co, 9 p.m., 140 Capen. F ree from
1807 Elmwood, 4 p.m.; Septeinher
UUAB. ,
27, Room 21 , 4242 Ridge Lea,
MUSICAL INNOVATIONS : University-.
radio program originating from 10: 30 a.m.
the M u s i c Depadment. This
week : Renee Levme, .coordinator
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
of the Center of the Cre.ii.tive and
.cofl DEADUNE

~BC~~M .i 9-t~s ~~u.;=~~ 'd~:
THURSDAY-14

·

.

. .

r

..

rectsngul8r fqnD. J;p o.ther
. pSmt·
ings, tbe SUB11ower &gt;diom ·pre- •
vailS witii foims leaniN toward •

.:&lt;
A
of small
- ·•
group
wax ..,...p· tures will alsO be-on 'View in•the
Norton galley..
··'· ·
sun anii wanniJL&lt;

~V~.. ~ewiJuilfzamedl
. COver th~wallsea:;
th~e
• ·t Depa...,..-&lt;-tJ:~e~ .• ,
.n.c

J.

~u

·~ ~

4"'n Ridge ,..._ _ fn
. largeSt..
of"
these, ~ - Rnopkll'-nas -

aChieved an aged perehmenlr
show. . Because sbe wanteil.'to like quality. This look carries
" exp"lon!" exposure and- non-ex· over in another pj.ece-peinted.
posure" and .:'the discovi!ry ol on ·a found sKeet .Of ni8t giving
pleasUres of the body,'; sbe has the"appeouance of ·an. old tablet
assembled a group of works or cave_-paintiilg.
- '
in which paintings, dmwings .. .Ms.
26, reoeived the
d tclWi :11
to the
M_,F.A. deg
from U/B $el&gt;an e
gs qw _g~ • r. • · teitiber l .
· is: lll68..£i8dA seven.foot · coUch' ov_erlaid uate oU~uftalo State ~ bas
with images, worked On OVer· taught .ar( Jn.....' ~ ~re
a three year jleripd, •will. ~m- schools. @ne of"her ·~
inate that portion ·of the Show" was included in ·the recent
in Norton's -Gallery 219. :.The Westem New York show at the
artist thinks of the pieCe as a AlbrigbtrKno11 Art'Gallery.
~-history. ·-'~ in . "
":I'be emibition; ' cofl!pOnsored
number of places on the couch by the Art Conimittee of the
is the face of a little boy, ller University Union : Activities
four-year-old son, Blal!A.
Board arid ' the Student Art
Paintings · will . hang freely - Board, • will
with public
from the waU of. ..G81lery 219, receptions for ·the altist fnxil
unframed. In one of~ can· 8 ' p.m : to -10 p.m. ·;n Gallery
vasses,· an arm frees itself and 219 and the Art Department
swings out from the traditional ' gallery in 4240 Ridge Lea.

Knopa

a

open

-

~

NeW Faculty
Boo~ Probes;
... .
.
TOO:~ of Revolution ·
....

.

'

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

53

0. 11lZ

-

SARA Instructions - See Center Fold
•lloW'ORTANT - THE SARA REGISTRATION FORM. COURSE REQUEST FORII.IIUST BE aM'LETED WITH A
NlMJER 1WQ. .. #2.. LEAD--PENCIL IF YOUR REGISTRATION ISTOBEPROCF$$HI.

..

�2

· ~~structions

for Use of the
Sclledule of Classes

~ l

.

~

1972

ACHSN . : . . . • . . . . Ac:beson Hall
ACHSN A

L 'l1le IIUdeat obould pay eueful attention to the
.......,. IDclkstor coiWDD obown In the coune IJstln&amp;.
ll'llia IDdle8tm ldentifloo thole counea which ue
........ at outlyln&amp; ~ indudln&amp; RL (Ridle
Ia Campus), BP (Bell l'lallt or Race Stft!et Campus)
..,. IIA (Mo7w AnDex or Grides' Stn!et Campus). It is
1M .......,.,.aNUt of the lndlvldualltudent to - tbat
......-~~.- (approximately 80 minutes) Ia proYided
iD llil ocheduk fO&lt; tnftl between c:ampuaM. Bu.aoinl
.moe, loaYinl from the Dlefeadorf AnDex Bus Stop,
, Ia piOIIded to the Rldle t. and Race Stn!et campus

SUMMER SESSIONS CALENDAR

BUILDING ABBREVIATIONS
.

.. . .•. Adleoon AnDex
Continuous Kepotralion • • • • • • • . • .

ANNX B ....•••. . .• AnDex B
BAIRD . . ." . . • • . . . . . Balnl Hall
CAPEN . . . . . . . . • . • Capen Hall

Ij I

CLARK . .. . . . . . . • . Clark Gym

p

H

CROSBY . . . . . . . . . . Crooby Hall

FOSTER . . . . . . . • . • Footer Hall

. . . . . . . . .F - AnDex

...........

HRMN L . . . . . . Harriman Ubruy

2. SetaaJ abbrnlatloas

appear In the prerequisite
cohmla f« tbe coune ocbeclule. Some of tbeae abbre-

HLTH S . . . . . . . HNith Sciences
HCHSTR . . • • . • • Hocbltetter Hall

'fiatloDo 111e abown below:

PARKER . . . . . .Parker EnciJ&gt;eer1nc

rn

HAYES . . . . . . . • . . . Hayes Hall

PD CRS APP:
PI:

l'eDdint coune approval by the
appropriate academic -les.
Permilolon of lllltructor.

3. For couneo that ue lilted as "ARR" In tbe build-

Inc aad mom IIIOICnment coiUIIIDS, consult the depart·
meat as to localioo of tbe courae.

pp.~!:.~.~

. I~ Ip pp~.!.':!:.\1

DFNDRF . ·. . . . . . Diefendorf Hall
· DIEF A .. . . . . . Diefendorf AnDex

FSTR A

Beclns April 3

...

TNSEND . . . . • . . . Townaend Hall

~

... . .

July 10-Aucust 25
(aeptzatlon d . - ~uly 7)

.

.

.

·'

Unles otbenrlae Indicated, " ' - in

TRLR .- . . . . . . .. . Trailer Complex

each -~

meet

tlve daya a week, Mooday tbJou&amp;b Friday.

4224-4250 .. . . Rldle Lea B~cllnp

• • •WN ...•. .W~ Avenue
180 RACE . . . . . . 180 Race Stn!et
(Bell Flclllty)

Note : Studenta 1ft permiUed to enroll in any
combination of ..-..... proolded enrollment does noc'
exceed the maximum coune load ( - Summer Sessions

Bulletin).

4. Pleaoe note that, in aome ._., tbe endn.d listing
of couneo may differ from the Summer Susiom
Bidletin. Studenta abould ree1ster for counes only as
tbey appear in tbe followlnc piiii!S.

FIR.ST SESSION ...•.............•......• .-•.•••..•••. May 22-..kJiy 7

CAMPUS MAPS
MAIN STREET CAMPUS

May19

Friday

May22
May25

Monday
Friday

May~ :
~une

30

Last day to "''ister for First
Sesolon COUll5.
•
lllltruction beelnsLast day to te8lgn from First
Sesolon COUIIIIS without clwJe
of tuition: • •

Monday: \r No.~., ·~ ·"· : 1
Friday
Last day to te8lgn from -FUst
.. _· • -, _\, , - ~ , COUIIIIS ,m.bou1 pade

pe.w&amp;f. '.

'!
~y4

kly7

Tuesday
Friday

.

'. -

No daoaes.
Last day of Instruction.

'

SECOND SESSION .•.......... _ .....•.....•.• June 26-Augurt 11
June 23

Friday

Last day to register for Second
Session cou.r:ses.

June 26
June 30

Monday
Friday

lllltruction becins.
Last day to resign from Second
Sesolon courses without cbarge

July 4
August 4

Tueaday
Friday

August 11

Friday

of tuition.
No d -.
Last day to resign from Second
Sesolon COUIIIIS without pade
penalty.
Last day of Instruction.

THIRD SESSION ..•.•.........•..............••• .July 10-August 25
July7

Friday

July 10
July 14

Monday

August 18

Friday

August 25

Friday

Frl~

RIDGE LEA CAMPUS

Last day to "''ister for Tbird
Sesoion COUIIIIS.
Instruction beelns-

to te8lgn from Tbird
Sesolon cow.~ without clwJe
Last day

of tuition.
Last day to te8lgn from Third
Sesolon cow.~ without pade
penalty.
Last day of lllltruction.

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...ptfted on !be SARA ~ Sys.llm. 'l"br sludmt sboald liD oat b i s -

1.

B_.a F..._ a p o r t b e -

--

..._a,to..,......tbe~JRO-

.... to IIIOii*L 1 ' l l i o - is a ..,_.
polileolaB
tbe CliJIIIIIIotioD ol a nDel:y ol ~

f.... ..,.""'
is . . iDRpal pat ollbe .........
1. -0...~1-%) ........... Tlloftf-,-- fd
to . . dais fonD d be illofiCible to AD-IIltbe~-..,_.

. , . . . _ For Ses1972 Re&amp;i"'"tio" coaliJiuiaC stDdoDis,

plofe -

p1ote or apdoM! a Dola F. . . plior to tbe -

~ol.----~

*JiaCIIaislipliac

1972-.-.....,.

.----for ....._,-;or
ID
tile
tbe _.u.. ne CliJIIIIIIotioD ot'lm.
--......... NI!dy--.--.

- - - - ...ptfted

a

llpdole -

---

If

-

or-~---

,...._~Dioir---

plofea_f_illits~--

,..;s&amp;Dtioa caD b e . . . - .

a.~---­
.-mlbe-.
s

U}B

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

_.,_.

eodiDc""'- for- """ .....
~'l"bl!ole--CIIIIy

SDba1it !be Loc:al AddRs iiDd Vt!llicle
KepiDtioD Fonn (eumpe -9) for
Summer Ses&amp;ioD JI!Cisb:olioa if dlazlcl!s

-~
b. - - , -.m.d Students ore ""' ~ fO&lt; !be lil5t - a t
dais UniRisil:y as ~ a fitsfaman,
IJamf«. .,..tuate or profesoioaal sblclouL 1beso studmts .no reeerre a blank
Dlla Focm iiDd are 10 complete it iD ils
eatirety. 'l"br dat.r JuDe 1972 must be
iDoorted . . - date of lil5t ~
at UtB is requosled. (...,example •2)
~ Ytsitillg Speciol Students iDdude
all tbooe wilo are DOt ._w- students
here iiDd are studyillc here ooly fa&lt; the

............ tam.&lt;- example •2)

NOTE: Vll5iliD&amp; aod Sperial UDdor~ sblclents sboald das&amp;
Cc* 5 ( U - ) iD n- T {a.&amp;)
o l t b e - Data F....._

Noo-lla&amp;.rirulant graduate saudeats
Cc* 9 (Noa-Yauicuam)

mould iDitemT.

-;!.!!

_.......

. c·--~~

-;gJ

=-~ .

J

imml!diat.ty

iD ""' -

me.

. l;.!J

.,...,.,mmc

..

..__

&lt;-

-o(""'---

Dola Fons ue to be relumed to tbe
£-.mc olfics
plior 10 tbe

two..-

---

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

2.

b!l

t b e - f o r - IIIey...,. ..,.;.ta'l1lis form be ~ iD its
eatirety6Miple •2)

JCJ.

l

- - ..
r.,..,_ u--.uyStudents
sblclents oot Olll"Clhd

cL _.....,.

=t-------J

-~ to ..,.;.ta (or.

~--------~--

~.

o.y

stu-

· 10 tbe Ollirle ol
106 DiofeDdorf

I

u .. " ........ - .

HaL

All---todoeotlirleof

~.-=~=-JJ -t&lt;r~

---illllayosB.

-

J

Pi

I

I $lllodolds - 10 ""' -

-

ollioe iD ""'

._me . . . -

.AJ"'tWa F - d - b e lannnled
... ~----tolhe
._.....,....~_..,-be

.........

""' sa.lat ........ Fa

...,.__ -

II.Ra
-4)

-Cioed&lt;~3

o.

eoa..IIJ
IOI!tioiC
... _.....or -.........or- I

•

be

,..._.,. -........-c .... __.--

totbe~,~F:E"Iar~

w"J'I'

- . It • . - ,

L

L ••

r=s

M1

~..., ....

,._

J

J

J~

-

J

"" ""

•~:~

.

....

~'W'~

~ -i-1:._,:.-

o

zn,.

of ""'

. . . . . , fD . - - _ . . . . . . , - - .
tbe II z .. aakeil~ol .....

111!1---=.....:r--=•---.,;:.•.
---·-(·· ·e- ...............
----.......
R

i

_

_._.,

....... (SUA~

..JoM;Weefa.... ................

�CLASS SCHEDULE

14
1ra1ioa Form wbic11 will be pro'lided. 'lbe CLEARRD TH8 PREREQUIS~, HIS

J1oF1ratioD Form sboald
follows:

-t

be comploeed •

REGISTRATION

IN

THAT

COURSE

WILL BE CANCELLIID.

Geaonllllformatioa
1. 'lbe
llloald rmt look tJuou&amp;h
lbe o«eriDp lilted to detennioe
wbicll COUIII!S be wil:bes to late \his semesler. Alia be Ius doddecl, be sboukl list
em bis Student Scbedulinc Form
(eumple •5) to maR sure be Jus DOt .,.
. . - - any CODllict with
-" · ('lbe - or this rorm is optioa·
II a . , - point or riew aud is in·
eluded Gilly ro. tbe eoaftDieDce of tbe stu·

6. Non-lb&amp;riculant Gmduale Students
(emoiJed in caduale pro.,..... ot -llllhesities, o r - wbo
"""" comploted tbe llo&lt;:colowale Decree
aad ore DOt ftCUiady emoiJed ot this UDi·
...mty) must obtain department or inltnlc·
tor appronl ror - " caduale leftl cowse
lbey to late. 'Ibis approftl sbould be
ec:ured prior to ft!Cislntic&gt;D.
7. lD au attempt

to

opportunity to ec:ure . . . . . . - in lhoir
primary oelodioas, ..... to .,_ in ..,.,.,...
d.mce with sbte
sllulml will
be permitled 1o ..,.;.ta rex 111101e Ilion 17

L

....-,no

1. Gnduale tatiDc illiderpaduale Cftdit
aud uadeqnchgtp Cftilit clepartmental appnmd to rep~er ror

craduale .,.,.._ for

bows dllline SUIIIIDO&lt; 00!5I5ion.

-

Type of Special " -

-.,.,..,__

8. It is tbe t's n!pODSibiity_ to
insure !hot his ..-u~e allows for approxi·
mate1y oue-balf hour tn..t time between
campuses.

2. It is llii!O adrisable for lbe - . , t
to """""' his~ or adrisor's
appronl wbeol be ftlisters for a variable credit .,.,.._ to -.ue !hot lbe
bQws or Cftdlt poopody illider-

9. Advisai .. lt ll is 5UJIIOSied !hot aD
students..., their adrisols be(.- tbey . . .
1er for appronl of lhoir desiftd cowses aud
gm, .n students the ou aay special request desiftd.

stoocl by .n putios~

--)
L Afta tbe llucient Jus IOiecled his
- b e llloaJd cbed t b e - CUI·
1m1 copy or lbe a~ Sec:tioas t:.iltiup
(a.lpie .S) to - - !hot be is DOt
att•mpti11ito ....-...for a coune wbicll

...

3.

10

20

is~lilled.

-llis-....,_

:Tol.n 13rown

....... .._

2. 'lbe lluclent may eled, - . to
diledly OD tbe
,..,...._ . . . . . . Table, eumple •7

3. Pra.ly -

..

......

,

llloo

-led-----to
(-MA"oflbeeoa-~

s-- .._. o--r• •

~F•Own'*

•

FOIDl}.

0

"

.

Alleraale- ...

..

SoCiiiiiSialnty ....

~~~

fnmuy-'1'be llucient sboaJd lint ...

L

~Is audfor lbe
wbicll ..., prelem!d. 'lbe
.,.,..... sboald be ideDtillad • rrnt PI?:·

fallll .....,.

me -

...

,_ -

-

in lbe priJMty

- -substituteb. Al--'lbe student -

4.

...

00
20

:To!.n J'm.il:h_

will
late if ,m-y courses Gl?: c'-&lt;1.be('lbe
is ....,s to indicat.e ollemale

~; "" doiDC 00

c:liaicis -

""

--

libo

,....,

~~~l..Mehco...n..

Wp to - . . ... a&amp;&gt;eeptableule.)

-

..

..

Scxiii~· ND.

!!JOO

~,~...c&amp;os;.t.c,

~

17%if@

0

b.l - - - bea.ipod
Gilly If tbe primary 8i!lectioo is UD·

b .2 A

-t

may cboooe two (2)

·
-4; ro.
primary oolec:tloas 1
tluou&amp;b
b o - , only 1 olleraale
is

pc-.re

for primuy oo1ec:t1oas 5

tluou&amp;b 7 .
1&gt;.3 AllerDale COUISi5 canDOt coDflict
in with any primary except !hot
primary for wbicll tbey are lbe aller-

-.

-DS

1&gt;.4 AD alleraale oolec:tloas sbould be
........- in lbe ''altemate "
of lbe form prorided.

to

4. ll is lbe student's respoaoibiity
....-... """'P-"'-tly for - " kclun , l?:·
cilalioft, ad labonltory in aD couna ""'""'
colllllu.OO..S Gl?: requirid. l!Gch of these
Idee- rhould ~ ll?:aled as prinuuy •
lee- .,.., INn{OI?: l?:qru:lled "'PGTRtdy.
~ c:bemisUy or pbysics

-amd-.. . . .

5. ...

:r;,~. Sm. t A
-~":"."

,_

1\

-

lbe laboratorios redtatioDs
....... --..:lion letter; i n -

lbe recitation
...... lbe IOdioo tette. - lbe
A lluclent be ftllota'od ro.
lbe . . _ lodue,-...- Jabon.
loly r~- - t o rece1te cn!dlt ror
lbe ......... It is tbe atudenl~ responsibility
lo poopody ........ tm.elf Ill u- .,._.

·-

lodue.

.... .,.,

3

IDJI - 1131

4

11 .. 11111
lll:ll · ll211

5

nt·•

5. PREREQ~: IT IS THE
STUDENT'S RESPONSIBILITY TO
slicuRE THE APPROPRlATB PERMISSION OF THE INSTRUCTION OR THE
DI!PAR'niENT WHERE INDICATIID; IF
HE ATI'I!IIPTS TO IU!GISTBR WI'TIIOUI'
lliD!IVING I'BiliiiSSION, HIS lli!IGISTilATION IN '111AT COURSE WILL BE
CAJt«&lt;BLLED. THE 8TtlDBNT IS ALSO
RESI'ONSIIILB TO CL&amp;Ail. AU OI'IIBR
I'REilEQUJSITI! IIBFORB RBGIII'I'BilING FOR A COUBSB.. IF HE HAS NOT

til - !~

11:11 · 1~

U'tl U:5D

3Rf

Jim

~

Jml
J'llbi

JllB
l ml!

lml!

llllL

,_

1:!1111

Jllllll

J-

11!'11.1

IW · I~

tl ... l:11,

7

fl'• · J111

8

tul - •111

9

lt::li - S211

[10

Jim

Jm.

1:111

6

~wbeoltbeyae~

Jml

,{tli · 9"JI!

2

w-.

-

.....-

,_.,...._.._
I ..,., I IWII&lt;l I .....,.., I ...,.., J ._, I ,.,_,
~]!-1.::-.1-1..;-.J-1 o!:k 1-1 o;:-1-1.::-k

...,.

~~

...l.i.h

l iM.

Jfllb

...,.

...... .

--..

L ...IS

R

H:.

"

IR

•

................... ~ .. ,.. ..... __ c..-..

·~-:-: -:::es.-=.~.:=-~----~....._
~\

:R

_ ~ ---

�CLASS SCHEDULE

'REPORTER_,

6

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEV YORK AT BUFFALO
THE FOLLOWIN G COURSES ARE CLOSED

AS OF 11/20/70

C 0 U R S E
**ADH**
403

181
181
181
181
181
181
181
181
181

c

**ANT**
105 A I
105 A 2

•

105
105
105
105
2 15
225
301
311

•

A 2

2
I
2
3
I
2
3

C

c
c

D
D
D
g2 A

c
c
D

182 c
182 D
205 A
205 8
317 c

B
D

c
•

46 1 8

351 D

*ii:£ LE* *
202 8
350 8
350 K
376 c

c

113
114
159
163
167
229
259
337

A

c

G
J

H
G

204

A

11~

t:

2

101 GE
201 A
319 A

211
211
211
211
211
211
211
211
219

3Zl C

**ECO* *
181 A I

.......,...

8
•
B
8
B
D
D
D
F

I
2
3
4

G

F
H

&gt;

201 A
202 8

30 I
301
302
403
403

.

-~

-~

1

D

8

c

A

A
8

A

c

c
c

A
D
A
8

ll*HIL**
101 H

**POL**
Ill A

119 D
412 ·c
493 B

**PSY**
101
101
101
IOJ
103
103
105
105
207
221
222
223

c
D
A

**OI.G**
301 F

=
..,,. ....

nn.£

--...·--

tSIJE 'A1

,,. r._.,._ fr:

T•r !!f;

AMM!r. ,,._ . , _ .

I

~

.&amp;

~-·
aJUISE Tl1l.E

""""

....

~

_,..,....

"'"

lAin

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l.4t IMille...,,

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D SdcM£ -...LIM&lt;P IIIIIJ I• •• ,:}~Po I....IC ... SCI. llllrM. ~ 1....,, IN:::

.,..:.

aJUISE Tl1l.E

,r.Mil ~a~~ I &amp;..

..1

r-., .

T_. };~
~· T•T 1.'~:
1¥10

1., ICI TWT
.......
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......,...,,,,~.,1 loll.-,

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-=.-1 "'" '-~...!

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.... I-- J"..l
111¥1)

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· F1MWJJ&amp;l WID 11~:0·

...-TI1l.E

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.... I .... 1'--.1

~I!',-::" I
..
.a•.alw.. l--•~~ 1:-

1111~1*•·' ~

..,_

-.1¥821

•1

l.w.ICJ.ul

.....

-TI1l.E
lC:
~-~,__,-~~

A
B
It
B

c

D
D
"
FR

c

It

A

223 D

c
I9Miill _-I__LG A_W =~-:.;
I''""
I~ II~ c !«eN.
~ AWL ,:::
AS Joa c ltMJJtLI~
::~=-

-~

c

K

**PHY**
101 c
. 107 A
107 011
107 012
121 A
207 c

282 8
336 c
357 c
411 8

loollw. •PW. tt«M. I 'I IG To._C_ l::J !!•

"""""'

D
k

D
B

335C r

8

Pl.AIIIIG TAilE

COI..mE

co-

c

345 A
360 A
463 FL

c

103 GE

A
8

117
117
118
119
137
137
137
141

&amp;

A I
A 2
B

216 A
329 D

**KEC**

121 JE
201 A
223 H
2 U UE
27 3 G
283 GE
291 A
305 F
313 HE
325 H
391 c
401 HL
427 H

c

£AeM

....

IIIDIPU.TIOIII

107
107
108
108
109
109
110
215
215
215

c

D

**MAT**

&lt;XURTI1l.E

IYo I
lMn ~~-.ll

•*PHI**

8

C

301 F
301 H

**HIS**

IEOI-=:0..

left,. •.

D
A

**HAN**

102 A

1.29.1 w

"

**LIN**
205 A

47 0 G

....JlJ.~...

301 H

c

D
413 c
41 7 B
427 8

429
~&gt;l A

401 K

201

8

.... ~NT **

Ill G
113 8

103

IM.un IMS 1¥~ w

-~"~-

30.
1 J .
301
30
303
304 K

**MAR**

-.. - ,., •
-..
-.. ,.,.,..... ,._... - ·..
z
..... - .. 2••
- ···~
--.. .... .,....
--- -..... ·- -....
.. ........... ,_..,-..,;..,.,
121M
- -~

G

**FRE**
101 FH
101 GJ

•~tESISTIATIOI

.....
ra

F
K

**IND*~

G

**CEO**
101 c

3
4
5

141
14 1
141
142
142
145
231
241
24 1
242
25 1
259
31 1
319
321

393 H
J

39 3
417
435
462

G
403 J
404 K
407 A

:I !A !5

**CHE**

J
H
J
A

~

D

211
211

**BlO**

H

m~
203 ~

~~~~

H

J
G

**FIN**
203 A 1
203 A 2

**ENG**
20 I F
201 G
201 H
203 F
203 G
203 H

**AB.T**

S E C T I 0 H
2 17 8
2 23 A
242 K
281 D
359
369

367 G
38 7 J
483 J

335 8

D

G
H

351 H

301 FH
321 c
FHI
FH2
FH

H U H B E R

219
219
219
289
289
289
29 3
293
305
313
325
32 7
345

B I
8

**ARC*•

403
403
404
423
453

7.

15

.... , __ "

_,........... ,... -'llti

. . . . . . . . -•,.

•-... ---...u...our-....--_.,_,._ ~' ..-r----.-~
~---~---­
___~.,.......--~--1'0---._..
,_ _ _ _ ........,... -"T".
,.~
--c..-........
.-.._
_,.,..
-------- ~ -

�CLASS SCHEDULE

16

--(Side

*
·a·10.01~
o - .._..
•a
L Ia•

loewllbe,.._.. .. _ _
e.~.-e_

~-------- - . 1 lbe
b. ~ * ........ 'N* (Side •A"

e.1 F« -

iD

or o - aeq.- F. . .l . . - .lbe
~ eopy or 11oe "'oee Sec:-~to-~fora

- - iio al.-y lilod. 1 f sarytloe---~

•

~ ia tloe table to re&amp;et -

8.
;

..,

..-F-.

•2-~on/y, DO.­

~

find Cftdit ... - .......
credit iDdiclllioD iio ~- - cate drop oaly if you to drop a
........ prerioaoly ~ f«. Now
blackeD lbe _....,.. . _ _
blocb below lbe .....-..-...,....
and "t1lliable Cftdit bauL

__
lkle • A• to lkle -a" of .-e CoaJR Be-

F...)--BDalple

,.-y

laod allemate

v.-.

tloe . . . . . . - IIIUD- - ....... _ . ia tloe blocb
proridod. A " - cooodit bour "t1lliable

• To be llb01111 for
Credit
Couna only, find Cftdit ..,..,_
need not be iDdiaded.

Cftdit - - l o e - ..
010. Oaly indiatedialbe--asVARas
. . . . - . . - .........._ AD othets are

c.2 The s&amp;udeDtlbould be ft1J ~
fuJ when lnDSpOiiDc lbe reptr:alioa
numbets from side "A" to side " B,"

----~AWrk__,_
I -~d I ~~i'c:::i

..... ' .
..:.
'
. f~ . .. .- .. 5:
. ~·~ 1= .. . r ~
'

·~,
•!•
I.ill

c.3 At IIIII point, tloe - bil fonn Ill lbe UJIIIK loft lllaod
""""""· pdDt bil below it ...
iDdi&lt;de bil ... ... tloe
d&amp;bt lwld .we or 11oe eoa-J~eopK
Form. TbeD, in 1be ...,_ ript lwld
"""""" of lbe form, lbe lludeDt
lbould WJite in bil oociol _,my
. . . . - aad lbe fiat leUa oCbillast
name. At this point, lbe IIDdeDt bas
completed bil formal reptr:alioa 8Dd
is ready to tum in bil reptr:alioa
materials.

lien

11. 'l'be!e 'lrill be facilities - - in
Admissions 8Dd Records to -s&amp;udents iD bow to properly complete tbeir
ft!Cistration materials. 1f students dome
belp in completing their registration fO!IDS,
lbey should seek help there before attempting to tum iD their form. Incomplete ..pllation Corms will not be accepted.

•'

'

wllll lbe blecUaed .......... ..... oa lide "B" .....,.or.w•
i:Ddial&amp;l!d OD lide .,.A..,

'

·~

f2_ The s&amp;udent llbould report to Ad- ons and Rerords to tum iD his registration materials. Other tum-in localioos will
be posted at Admissions and Records if
"""""""'Ya. When turning in your registntioo
Corms, you may baud them to any
cbecke&lt; who will review them to assure a
certain decJ1!e or cor:rectnes&amp;. The
cbecke&lt; will then give you a recipt Cor
your Course Request Form and tell you

1I

wben your Schedule Cud will be anilable. Schedule Cards {or all Milltud Pillmore students will be aoailable at Milltud
Pillmore Colkge. Hayes Anna "A.."

I
I

I

I

I

ll

&lt;0
CD

l

i

I

.....
....
0

13 . Completed Class Schedule Cuds
will be a vailable Cor pick-up by students
approximately one week after a Cowse
Request Form is submiLted.. ScbeduJe Cuds
will usuaDy be a vailable at AdmisoioDS aad
Records with other locations posted if
requirecL Students aides will be anibb1e to
din!ct s&amp;udents iD pickinc up their ~
lion Conus.

a. The Stu- Class Schednlos are
-~
lbe student eutea Admilliom 8Dd Beconk, be lhould go to lbe dedt takiDC
care or billettes-, Pte bii/M name 8Dd
I1!CII!iYe his Sc:bedule Cud.. U there is DO
Schedule Cud ........ (01" bim be
lhould go to tbe Problom Desk.

aDaiJil!d alpbabetic:aDy by last -

L~-~-.-. ,

~ L~~" ,H,

'-hd

,£mith

Clt ol' l es

a-

b. Wilen lbe dedt ~ oat ScbeduJe
Canis - - lbe otudeolt billd&gt;edale,lloe

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>28 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

SPRING, 1972

aJ(TIIA

·SARA Instructions · See Center Fold
*IMPORTANT -THE SARA REGISTRATION FORM. COURSE REQUEST FORM. MUST BE COMPLETED WITH A
REGISTRATION IS TO BE PROCESSED.

�CLASS SCHEDULE

Geaeral Hates far Use of
the Schedule of Classes

W.iutioll Scllelllle r. a.ses

'lblo Sc:bedule provicles room ....,_Db f« lbe SecoDcl Sems._ 1911-1972- otreriDp.
s.-.1 points should be un-..od by lbe Rudenb:

1.

in the Day Division

--to

MAY 1 TO MAY 9, 1972

'!be lludent should pay c:orefuJ
lbe CUDplll
IDdlcator coiWDil shown iD lbe coune liltiDp. 'lblo IDdleator identifies lbOE COII1WI whldl ..., otrend at oully!Dc

--·

fiDII

It .. lbe -lllibWty of lbe lludent
lime (opproxlmaloly 30 minutes) II

to . .,

-t

be

p.. tllil -

-

ro11ow 111e

to---.......,..,..

IDDft!-

bariaC
two liD* ill my P.. lily.
As iD "tbe ~-- to ......... , _ llmtlbe ...... of lbll
odledDie depeads . . _ lbe fall """'""'k- ol lbe bcalty

.,._Is.
-

that 8dequate

Frided iD his - u l e

for t1a1e1

to

'lblo _ . . .,...... ....,. - - lbe ,..._._of lbe
...,....IDIII-tobe .......... 811d...,.._lbe•tlleeum
........ ill sudl • r.laloa •
ollloet Cllldllcb
clluiaC lbe exam period. 'lblo .,.a.m..,~ lbe ...-.mtY of a

'1"-IDdude:
RL • Rldp Lea Camp111
BP- BoUI'IIIIt or IUce s - Compua
MA- Meyer A1u1ex or Grider s - Campus
. AX - .M1 0t1w Auslllary Locatloas .

2.

~-

.,...... ..... r.. .... 1971-197%.

' * - ~- Buoolhc .moe, lea"fiDC from

lbe Dlorendorf Allllex Bus Stop, is prorided to tbe Rldp
Lea ODd IUce Stzeet Clmpua locllions.

to

3.

.For..,..... that ""'lilb!d • "ARR" iD tbe Day, Haws,
liulldiDt or Room columns COIIIUit the department as
lbe localion of the coune..

4.

If a particulor coune, department or
is not lilted iD
lido -ule. contact tbe Deputment for furtll« IDfor.
matlon.

cOueee

BUILDING ABBREVIATIONS
SOIJTIIC~

NO CAJIPUS INDICATOR

ACH • . . . . . . . . . . . .. •.. . ...•• ••••.•••. ••. A-.11111

ACHA •................•. .. . .. . ..... .. A-.Aimex
ANXB . . . .. . ..... . . .. ... ......... . . . ......• AimexB
BAIRD ••..•.......••••••••.• ••••• ••••••..• llolrd 11111
CAPEN .• . • ... . . .....•..••• .. •• . •••• . •• • • c.pm11111
CLARK •.. •••••••. •••••. •• . •. . • • •• •.••••• a.!&lt; Gym
CRSBY ...••• . •.•.••••••••••••••••• ••• . . . fiolby 11111
Dl'N . • . • . . . . . . . . .... . .•. .. . .•..• .•.•. Diefeadodllll1
DFNA ........•.••.••..•• ... •••••• . • DiefeadodAIIIIex
I'STR ••••••. . •....••••••••••••• , ••••••••• F-11111

Explanation of Times

FSTRA .. .... ... . . . . .•...•••. .... ..... . F-Aimex
BAR L •• ..•...•.•..••••• .• •.• • . •..•. .• Haalman Llbary

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY
South

cOmpus

&amp;clionutto

8:0(). 8:50
9:0(). 9:50
10:0().10:50
11:0().11 :50
12:0().12:50
1:0(). 1:50
2:0(). 2:50
3:0(). 3:50
4:0(). 4:50

A

8

c

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J
K
L
M
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Ridle U#lllld most
Awciliary Location.
8:30- 9:20
9:30-10:20
10:30-11:20 .
11:30-12:20
12:30- 1:20
1:30- 2:20
2:30- 3:20
( 3:30- 4:20
4:30- 5:20

HAYES . .. .. •.•••••••• .• • •••••• •••• .•••.• Hayeollll1
lfl1l s - - -- -- - - - - . .. - -- - - - - -. - - - - .a.tlh ~ BuildiDc
HOCH ••.•••. . • ••• .• . •••••••• •••••••. .HoebllloUetllll1
"NORTH •..•••.•••• . .••••••••• • • .•. -••• •• • .Nadon 11111
PAJU[R

············· ··-····· ·· · · ···-~~

SCHKP . .•..••••••••• . • • • . ••••••••••• • Sc:boolltopfllll1 ·
SHRIIN : . •.••••.•• •.. • . • ••.• •••• ...••• • ---..11111

-

..'l'NSND -. -. . ~ ::- .--:--;~~-:-:- .7 .-:ToWiiiiiii"Bilr ---

TBL ··· · -··················-····· ·· · Tbolla-Cooaplex
VIVAR .... . •....• •• ...•• ..••.. . .•..•.. .. .. Viadam

RL CAliiPUS INDICATOR

TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY
Sotlth (Ampus

8:00- 8:50
9:0(). 9:50
10:0().10:50
11:00-11:50
12:0().12:50
1:00- 1:50
2:0(). 2:50
1:0(). 1:60
4:00- 4:50

Sectionu~r

E

.-

F
G
H
N
0p
Q

v

Ridle U#lllld mort
Aouiliary Location.
8:30- 9:20
9:30-10:20
10 ~ 30-11:20

11:30-12:20
12:30- 1:20
1:30- 2:20
2:30- 1:20
1:30- 4:20
4:30- 5:20

11:00-10:210
10:11).11:50
·u:oo. 1:210
1:11). 2:60
1:00- 4:210
4:11). 5:60

iud,er-_,_
Audiory Locdolto

8

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T
y

z
X

9:11).10:60
11:00-U:210
U:IG- 1:60
2:00- 1:210
1:11). 4:60
i:OO-

BPCAJIPUSINDlCATOR -

·---- ---- -- ---llldpi.. ........
(BBLLFAaur.Y}

RACB . ....•• .. . . .•....... .. . 1110&amp;.e~(llel hoiii;J)
JfA CAJIPUS INDlCATOR

(IIEYU A11NEXJ

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4621111 -- .• • - ••••••• • • .• •• ••••••••• 4620ddlaiiiiiii&amp;.BB

AX CAMPUS INDlCATOR

(ALi OTHER AU%IUARY LOCA'l'IONS)

Z211A · ·· ··· ··· · ··· · ··· · ···· - ······ Z2ll ..... IIIIIII&amp;A
451CM •.• •• • ••••• ••••••••• • •••••••••• GlOIIillllllllll&amp;

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

TUESDAY and THURSDAY (ONLY)
(Double Pelioda. 80 millu.ta)
. Soufll Oalu&gt;UI

(RIDGE UA CAJIPUS)

4224-U50 ------- ··· - -

·~

_D!IIB •• ••••• •• ••• ••••• •••• : •••• ·: ~lllolwooiiA.,...._
1'1GII ..•....... . . •.•....••. ..• 170....,.._.._...,
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.IPJUIN .... ... ..... . ...791......_(¥'
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GIINJIL • ·-· - -- --- ·-- ·- - -- •••• : ........ ~ ......... .

=

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DBaal • --.-.--.-----.------------ •• o..-.......

:: :: :::::::::::::::::~~--=-==

IIOIIWL · ···· · ·····-····· __..._.....,_...,_...

::C·:::::::: :-::: ::::::::::~ :::::::v:::=

�r

COt(ltNTS

i

:
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""'

...

~ OMI NI STFI ATl ON

AEROSPACE ENGINEE~ING
AFRICAN STUDIES
AMERICAN STUDIES
ANATOMY·
~NT Hll CPO LOGY
ARABIC .
~RCHlTECT &amp; ENV OSGo SCHOOL OF
ARCHITECTURE
ART
ART HI S·TOR Y
ARTS &amp; LETTERS, FACULTY OF
eEHAVIORAL &amp; RELATED SCIENCES
eiOCHEMICAL FHARMACCLOGY
etdCHE"ISTRY
BlbCHEMISTRY - ROSWELL PARK
etOLQGY
etOLOGY·IIOSWELL fARK
etmPHYSICAL SCIENCES
etmFHYSICS - ~OSkELL P~RK
BIQSTATISTICS - ROSWELL PARK
eLACK · STUDIES
EULLETIN eoA~O PROG~AH
(.P. SNOW COLLEGE
CH~MICAL

I

.PAGE

DEPARTMENT

ENGINEE~ING

CHEMISTRY
CHEMISTRY - ROSWELL FARK
CHINESE
CIVIL ENGI~EEqiNG
CLA'SS ICS
CLIFFORD FURNAS CCLLEGE
CLINICAL DENTISTRY
COLLEGE A
COLLEfoE B
COL~EG&gt;E E
COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENC
COHMUNICATIOI&lt; COLLEGE
COMPAPATIVF. LITERATURE
CO"PUTER SCIENCE
COUNiELOR ECUCATIO"
CUR~ICULUM DEV~L &amp; INSTR "EDIA
DENTAL MATERIALS
DIAG~OSTIC SERVICES
DIVISION CF UNDERGRADUATE STUD
ECONOMICS
EDUCATIONAL AD"INISTRATIO~
EDUCATIONAL ·fSYCHOLOGY
EDUCATIONAL STUDIES, FACULTY 0
ELECTRICAL E~GINEERI~G
ELE~ENTARY &amp; REMEDI~L ECUC
ENGINEF.RI~G SCIENCE
ENGliSH

~

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1
2
3
4
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6
6
7
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8
8

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12
12
12
12
12
13
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17
17
17
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18
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19
19
19
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20

2C
21
21
21
22
23
23
23
24
24

FNGN &amp; AFPL SCIE~CES, FAC CF
ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN
F!NANCE
FINANCIAL ACCOUN~ING
FIXED PROSTHOOCNTICS
FOREIGN STUU~NT E~GLISH
FI\ENCH
FR.ESHIIAIII SEMINAR
f,EOGRAPHY
GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES
GERM Alii
G~FEK

HFALTH REL PROF, SCHOOL OF
H~AL'TH SCIENCE EOUC &amp; EV~L
HEALTH, P~YS EO G REC
Hf8REII
HIGHEg EOUCATIO"J
HINDI
HISTCRY
HOSPITAL·CENTAL SERVICES

30
39
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39
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40

42
42
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43

44
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45
45
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45
45
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HUNGA~IAN

4&lt;;

INOONES IAN
!NGUSTRIAL ENGIN"F.RING

49

!NCU~TRIAL

RELhTION~

INSTRUCT 10"1
!NTERN~TIONAL

ITALIAN
JAPANESE
KORE.6N
LABC~ATORY

COLLEbE

,
ANIMAL SCIENCE

LATIN
LAW G JURISPRUDENCE, FACULTY
lEARNING CENTER
LIB~ G INFO STUO!ES,SCHCCL CF
L Jt\GUISTICS
M~NAGEMF.NT SCIENC£
MA~KETING

~ASTeRS IN HUMANITIES PROG~AN
MATHEMATICS
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
MEDICAL TECHIIIOLOGY
MEO!CINAL CHFMIST~Y
MICROBIOLOGY
MICROBIOLOGY - RQS~ELL PARK
MUSIC
NnTURAL SCIE~CFS &amp; MATH,FAC OF
NEW COLLEbE
•
NUCLEAR ENGI~EERI~G
NURSING, SCHOOL OF
OCCUPATIOt\AL THERAPY
CFERATIVE Dc~T &amp; ENOOCONTIC5
ORAL 810LOGY
ORAL ~Uq(,ERY

50
50

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52
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52
52

53
53
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54
54

55
55
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61
61
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62
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65
65
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66
67
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ORTHOOONTICS
PATHOLOGY
PATHOLOGY - ROSWELL PARK
PEOOOONTICS
PER IOCONTICS
PEPS UN
PtiARMACEUT ICS
PHA~M.6COLOGY

68
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68
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69
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FHARMACOLOGY - ROSWELL PARK
PHARMACY
.
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FHYS!CAL EDUC-HEALTH EDUC
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
73
FHYSICAL THERAPY
74
FHYSlCS AND ASTRONO~Y
74
FHYSIDLOGY
78
FHYSIOLOGJ- ~OSWELL PARK
7tl
POLICY SCIENCES
1'8
POLITICAL SCIEIIICE
78
PORTUGUESE
80
F~ YCHOLOGY
80
FUERTO-RICAN STUCIE~
83
RACHEL CARSON CCLLEGE
83
RfMOv~eLE PROSTHODONTICS
84
~OSWELL PARK SPECIAL PROGRAM
84
RUSSIAN
84
SECRETARIAL STUDIES (SEE TEACHER EDUCATION)
~Cf'OOL OF SOCIAL' POLICY G COMM
84
SOCIAL &amp; PREVENTIVE M~DICINE
~5SOCIAL SCI ANO ADMIN, FAC OF
85
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85
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86
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WO~ENS STUDIES CCLLEGE
YORUeA

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INSTRUCTIONS FOR.SARA REGISTRATION
PLEASE READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY AND COMPLETELY BEFORE ATTEMPTING TO FILL OUT ANY OF THE
REGISTRATION FORMS. THESE REGISTRATION FORMS MUST BE COMPLETED WITH A NUMBER TWO LEAD PENCIL ONLY.

)
Introduction:

who Call to file this Corm will be lneiiJ!ble
to complete their registration. For Sprinc
AU students at the University must Semester 1972 registration , submlsion of
complete or update a data C0 rm prior to the Address and Vehlcle fteeistration
the be&amp;lnnlng of the semester In which Chance Fonn (example •9) wUlaerve as an
they plan tu reel5ter. This document Is a update Cor continuing students. Newly
composite of aU the student data necessary admitted and re-entering students must
Cor the completion of a variety o( Univer- complete a new Corm In Its entirety before
sity reports. 'The cOmpletion of this Corm a registration can be prooeaaed.
by the student Is an Integral part or the
a. Continuing Students are thoee
registration process. 'ThereCor;e. students
enrolled In the aemester Immediately
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
preceding the aemester Cor whlcb they
1ie registerinc. Tbeae students wUl
receive 1 printout of previously sub·
mltted data and need only to update
Incorrect Information. This can be done
by drawing 1 line throUgh the .old information and inaertlng· the new Information in the space provided. (aee
example d) •

Essentially, the system Is a thtee-step
procedure, each portion of which must be
'The procedure uaed Cor registration as completed In full If the student Is to be
descrl- below can be uWized Cor .registen!d on the SARA Reptratlon
adnnced reptration, In-penon registra- System. 'The student should fill out his
tion, and Cor cbance of registration. 'The Student Data Form, Student ScbeduUnc
system aiJowo the student to cbance his Form, and Course Request Form, as per
~ (with permllslon) nnW the end or
the attached examples to complete the
a aemester and olao allows Cor registration registration process.
In future oemesten where departmental
orferlnp are known.

1.

I. 5rudent Data Form-Examples 1 and 2

b. Newly Admitted 5rudents ..., those
who ..., registering (or the rust time at
this University as a freshman, transrer,
graduate or professional student. 'These
students will receive a blank data Corm
and ..., to complete It in its entirety.
The date Januaty 1972 must be
inserted where date of ftrSt registration
at State University of New York at
Buffalo is requested.
•
c: . Re--Entering Students include all
fonner University students not enrolled
in the semester immediately preceding
the semester for which they are registering. This form must be completed in
its entirety. (see example •2}
Data Forms are to be returned to the
fo llowing offices prior l.o the registration period.
·
.....- .. u•.-LL

sn.~:ar

Day Undergraduate · to the Office of
Undergraduate Studies, 106 Diefendorf
Hall

..... ;;.,
l W•

All Graduate Students · to the Office of
Admissions and Records, Hayes B

2.

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
STU0£NT DATA FORa
Pl.u.H IU.O MSTIUCTIOMI Olf ln'UU: ..01 IIHII:l QIIWUTIIK I"Oiltll

.! -w~l::.~

CRu.·••""" I?-'-

•

Professional Studenu · to the main
administrative office in the respective
professional scbool
Ail Data Forms will be forwarded to
Admissions and Records and then to the
Data Processing Center where they will be
keypunched and the Student Master File
updated.
II. Re:gistration Check Stops-Examples 3
and 4

.!

Currently enrolled students or those
seeking admission or readmission may be
prevented from registering Cor several
reasons . Indebtedness to the University,
academic di&amp;quallfication, or disciplinary
reasons. It is the rupolllibility of the
student to clear his record by contacting
the appropriate office in oduonce of regis,
tration.
Ill. Registration Proc:Miuro (SARA Method)

c=-

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Each student should aecUn! a copy of
the appropriate semester Schedule of
C l - along wltb Courae Req.- Form
w b icb wUl be provided. 'The Courae
Request Form should be completed as
follows:

--L-------;1

..

I

1111

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oo;;&amp;.0

1;&amp;.!1

~,.Information :

1. 'The student abould ftnt loot IJirouCb
the courae otreriDp llltad to detarmlne
wblcb eow.a be wlshas to take tills

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a.ASS SCHEDULE

6.

29

STATE UHIVHSITY OF HEW YOIU( AT BUFFALO
THE POLLOWlHG COUI.SES AI.£ CLOSED
AS OF 11/20/70

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. .,.

�CLASS SCHEDULE

'.

&amp;2. It Is aloo .triable for the
studeot to oecure bls instructor's or

-.!'filer's opprooolwbeD·be ,.mters(or a oariable credit coune to
asue that lbe bows or credit are
properly uDdentoocl by all parties
coac:emecl.

b. Cbect lbe c~ soieded in tbe
KeptnUoo PlanniDC Tobie (Side "A"
or tbe Course Request Form) opiDSt
the curreDt copy or tbe "0.-.1
SecUoos Listio(' to avoid repteriDc
for a course wblcb is alleady llllecL If
IM!COIIIOr)' the student sbould mate
appropriate ~ in tbe table to reflect the new ioformatioo.

9. CompletinJ the Scan Sbeet (Side "B"
ol Course Request Form)-Example •8
a. Use a •21Md pencil only, DO other
pencO or pea may be used. It is tbe
studeot's Mpoasibllity to brine his

10. After the stuclent has completed his
Course Request Form be sbould cbeck if
over to usure its correctnss and completeoess aad place It in lbe eo""ope pro-

tided. 'l'boft io a place anJiable OD lbe
~ ......ope for stuclenls to
place an ei&amp;bt cent stamp and their retum adcllos to insure proper bandliDc.lt
is important thGt all Course Request
Fomu be returned k&gt; the Office of Admisoions and &amp;conb within two ID&lt;W
after rtaipl It is ....,.,lial that forms be retumed prompUy if stuclenls
wisb to haft their Course Request Forms
procellll!&lt;l in order by clas. ,.,_ be ......
thGt ya&lt;t hmJe cleared your """""nt at
the Office of Studeilt Accounts
(lhrout!h the Fall Semester) before Y""
mail your Course Request Form. If your
account is not dear your Course Request
Fonn cannot be processed.

lL After lbe eou- Request Forms for
a - - et.. o( studeols ..., pr...-1,
ocbedule will be produced and beld
In lbe om.e or Admiasioas aod Records.
All stuclent ocbedule cards will be avail·
lillie fa&lt;· ~Uon OD January 11·12.
'l'boft will be separate roomo set up·
UOUDd campus_in wbic:b sdledule c:udo
will be a'fdable per tbe first letter of a
stuclent's last oame. A schedule of these
locations is inchuhd with the registration
m.teriols.
L Sc:bedule cards will be distributed
witb a o( illltnlctio,. for pro.....mc c:lwJ&amp;os or reptralloa. This
stamped card sbould be takeD to
Room 16 Footer Hall, where It will
sene • autborizalioD (or tbe studeDis
LD. card to be isued or validated !or
tbe SJIQD&amp; Semester.

b. Sludenll who do not haft valid
putiD&amp; permits (or tbe Sprlnc Semester sbould tate their stamped ocbedule
card to lbe campus security office at
196
Aveoue, wbere a oew
partiDc sticker will be isued. This
sbould be accomplished during tbe
first two weeks or the .......ter to
noid my diflicullies in parting
authorization.

w-_.

1.;:. eour.. ~ for Majors: Durine
lbe initioJ registratioD period, aad after.
wards in some cases. there are some
departments reoeniDg a fixed percentage
or lbe space in cowse for majors.
Counes where some portion of the enrollment is reserved for majors are indicated iD lbe clas schedule witb an aster·
ist(*) to tbe left of tbe registration
Dumber. Studeols who are closed out

durine ~oD because they are not a
major sbould check "; th the department
concerned during change of registration
about enrolling as l'.. non-major. lf the
student feels that h• IS a major and bas
been closed out erroneously he should
report to 106 Dief• ndorf Hall to insti·
tute a change in hu· maJOr designation.
Gr..tuate studeDts shou ld contact their
departmental orr.ces.

. '

9.

_,£p,;t b

Chof'/e.r

JD.reph
t

Augurf J)J'liJ
IF 'I&gt;C'HA).Gts I~ AIIOttl.~ OM \UIII ' U.IILI,ISTRATII" ll:r,n, O(I I klhiJ"I" "I YIM lliLDYOllil DATA J"OR)t
tOM TltLL"U).If"t· .. Oil..,·Tl:M. t'MI.I"I'i:llt.tll
'-'IIIJOI ''Jl IIU. &lt;&gt;I"l rm: HOI\1'-Dt.ttl..lf llUS t'UJOI

•.

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13. Studeols who do not participate in
the mail registration process may register
in the Office or AdmiSSIODS and Records
January 11·12. Course Request Forms
will be available there and students wiU
complete them anc return them to
Oark Gym Basement
StudeDis wiU
be told by the Admissoons and Records
starr wben their schedule cards wiU be
produced aad where they wiU be avail·
able.
ALL STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED
TO PARTICIPATE l!\ THE MAIL
REGISTRATION . IF AT ALL POS·
SlBLE. THOSE STUDENTS WHO DO
PAIJ.TICIPATE HA \'E THE FfRST
CHANCE AT COURSES AND ARE
MORE LIKELY TO HAVE A
TROUBLE FREE REGISTRATION.

At tbis poiut tbe student has offic:iolly
completed lbe registraUon p - . Aides
will bf aYOilable in the rooms where
ocbedule cards are to be distributed to belp
witb any problems. Don't hesitate to as1t
q-....s. Cbaute or Registration wiD be
beld from January 17-21. NO CHANGE
OF RBGISTRATION WILL BE
ACCBPTBD BY THE OFFICE OF
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS PRIOR
TO JANUARY 17.

lftiLtlft.l Yata.l UGII'T'I.AnoH
(1).

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

FALL, 1971

SARA. Instructions · See Center Fold
•iMPORTANT -THE SARA REGISTRATION FORM, COURSE REQUEST FORM, M.UST BE COMPLETED WITH A
NUMBER~ "#2" LEAD PENCIL IF YOUR REGISTRAtiON IS TO BE PROCESSED.

•XTIIA

�CLASS SCHEDULE

2

' •• f

General Notes for Use of
the Schedule of Classes

Explanation of-liatls
3:. ~ J a ·I_. ..
·

2~10Ull ' AA ) : c&gt;:,

BUILDING ·~1!~~S

~t nlll.'

1. The student should pay careful · attention to
the campus indicator column shown in the course
listings. This 1ndicator identities those courses
whicb are offered at outlying campuses, Including
RL (Ridge Lea Campus), BP (Bell Plant or Race
Street Campus) and MA (Meyer Annex or Grider
Street Campus). It is the responsibility of the
student to see that adequate time (approximately
30 minutes) is provided in his schedule for travel
between campuses. Bussing service, leaving from
the Diefendorf Annex Bus Stop, is provided to the
Ridge Lea and Race Street Campus locations.
2. For courses that are listed as "ARR" in the
building and room assignment columns consult the
department as to the location of the course.

&lt;#•• WN

.,.~Jf.'

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY

ACHSN . . . . . .. . .. . Acheson Hall
. ACHSNA . . . . . . . Acheson Annex
ANNX B . . .
. . . . Annex B
BAIRD . .. ..
.. .. Baird Hall
CAPEN .. . ..
.. .. Capen Hall
CROSBY . .
. . . . Crosby Hall
DFNDRF . .
Diefendorf Hall
DIEF A . . . .
Diefendorf Annex
FOSTER .
. . . . . Foster Hall
FSTR A
Foster Annex
HRMN L .
Harriman Library
. HAYES ·. . . .
. . Hayes Hall
HLTH S . . . . . . . . Health Sciences
HCHSTR . . . . . . . Hochstetler Hall
NORTON . ..... . .. Norton Union
NUC RS . Nuclear Research Center
PARKER . .
Parker Engineering
SCHKPF . . . .
Schoellkopf
SHRMN . .
. . . . Sherman Hall
Townsend Hall
TN SEND
VIVRM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vivarium
4224-4250 . . . Ridge Lea Buildings

This schedule provides room assignments for the first
semester 1971-1972 course offerings and a tentative
final e~ination schedule key for the offerings. Several
points should be well understood by the students:

~-· ": .......

Ridge Le4 and all

South Campus

Sec tion Letter

8:00- 8:50
9:00- 9:50
10:00,10:50
11:00-11:50
12:00-12:50
1:00· 1:50
2:00· 2:50
3:00- 3:50
4:00· 4: 50

A

B

c

D

J
K
L
M
R·

Auriliary Locations
8:30- 9:20
9:30-10:20
10:30-11:20
11:30-12:20
112:30- 1:20
1:30- 2:20
2:30- 3:20
3:30- 4:20
4:30- 5:20

TUESDA '(,THURSDAY AND SATURDAY

South Campus

Section ,Letter
E
F

8:00- 8:50
9:00- 9:50
10:00-10:50
11:00-11:50
12:00-12: 50
1:00- 1:50
2:00- 2:50
3:00- 3:50
4:00- 4:50

Winspear Avenue

180RAC . . . . . . . . 180 Race Street
(Bell Facility)
1685EM
1685 Elmwood Avenue
(Domus)
2299EM
2299 Elmwood Avenue
1749ML 1749 Millersport Highway
4510MN . .
4510 Main Street
Roswell Park
ROSWEL .. . .. .
Memorial Institute

Ridge Le4 and all
Auxiliary Locations

8:30- 9:20
9:30-10:20
10:.30-11 :20
11:30-12:20
12:30- 1:20
1:30- 2:20
2:30- 3:20
3:30- 4:20
4:30- 5: 20

G
H
N

0
p
Q

v

TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
(DOUBLE PERIODS-SO MINUTES)

South Campus

Section letter

Ridge Le4 and all
Auxiliary Locations

s
w

9:00-10:20
10:30-11:50
12:00- 1:20
1:30- 2:50
3:00- 4:20
4:20- 5:50

T

y

z
X

9:30-10:50
11:00-12:20
12:30- 1:50
2:00- 3: 20
3:30- 4:50
5:00- 6:20

Preliminary Final Examination Schedule for Classes in the Day Division* *
December 16 to December 23, 1971
The Schedule for final examinations to be given during

the period from December 16 to December 23, 1971
follows the system used in previous semesters. Its success
again depends upon the full cooperation of both the
faculty and students.
This tentative key is provided for faculty and undergraduate students to assist them in planning for the exam

period . Consult the period letter assignment in this listing

DATE

to determine the section letter for your cour&amp;e. Your
section letter is assigi.ed by the day your course meets and
the ti~e it begins. The exam key which appears in. this
listing shows combined exams for certain COur&amp;eS, and
section letter time blocks are assigned to all other under- ·
graduate courses giving exams. If your specific coume is
not shown as having a combined exam, then detennine
your exam by the section letter. It there are any
questions, please consult your departments.

8:00-11:00

11:45-2:45

Modem
Languages
101

Thursday, DecembOr 16

Friday, December 17

D

Saturday, December 18

N

Monday, December 20

Speech
101

l

'

,.

3:30-6:30

B

M

R

1) F
2)S

G

E

A

1) v
2)X

c

1)Q
2) z

1) H
2)W

L

K

1) p
2)Y

Modem Languages
103
Tuesday, December 21

&amp;

French
114

J

W - y . December 22

'

•Thuaday, December 23

'

..

1) 0
2)T

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.

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ARCHLTECT &amp; ENV QSG, SCHOOL CF
ART
ART HISTORY
ARTS &amp; LETTERS, FACULTY OF
BIOCHEMICAl PHAR~ACOLOGY
eJOCHEii!ISTRY
- I!IOCI-EI'!ISTRY - ROSWEll PARK
BIOlOGY
I!JQLCGY-FIO.SWEll PARK
BIOPHYSICAL SCIENCES
P.IOPHYSJCS - ROSWELL PARK
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BLACK STUDIES

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7

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PROGRA~

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10
1n
10

11
11
14

15
16
lb
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16
16
17

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11!
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CHE~ISTPV

N~TURAL SCIFNCES &amp; HATH,FAC CF
IIEW COLLEGE
NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
NURSING, SCHOOL OF
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bl

· p~ARMACOLOGV

b3

- ROSWEll PARK

P~AR~ACY

1)3

66
66
66
67

EOUC-~EALTH

PHYSICAL THERAPY
PHVSICS ANC ASTRONOMY

POLITICAL

37

3Q

GEf'GRAPHV
dEOlOGICAl SCIENCES
GERMAN
GREEK
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40
40
41
41

HEALTH SCIENCE F.DUC &amp; EVAl
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HIGHER EDUCATION
HNOI

41
41
42
42
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HISTORY
HUNGARIAN

42

39

INTF~NATIC~Al

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4i'&gt;

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COLLEGE

48
48
48

POSWELL PARK

SC.!ENC~

SCI ~ NCF

PCRTUGU~SF

PSVCHOLCGV
PUERTO-RICAN STUDI~S
RACHEL CAPSCN COLLEGE
wnMFN STIJOI ES COLLEGE
· ROSWEll PARK SPECIAL PROGRAM
RUSS UN
SECRETARIAl STUDIES
SOCIAL &amp; PRFVENTIVF MEDICINE
SOCIAL
SGCIAL
SOCIAl
SOCIAl

SCI ANC AD,.IN, FAC OF
SCIENCES CINTERDISCIPI
StiENCES COLLEGE
WELFARF, SCHO~l OF
SOCIAL,P~Il &amp; HIST FCUNDATIONS

snCICLOGY
SPANISH
SPFECH CC'4 MliNICATION
STATISTICS
SWAHILI
SYSTF~S

eNGINEERING

HGALOG
TEAC~ER

4b
4i'&gt;
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63
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EDUC
PHYSIC~l ECUCATICN INON-MAJORI
PHYSICAL fCUCATICN FOR HEN
PHYSICAL ECUCATICN FOR WOMEN
~~YSICAL

20
20

36
36
31

63

PHILOSOPHY

P~VSIOLOGY-

FINANCE
FINANCIAl ACCOUNTING
FOREIGN STUDENT ENGLISH
FRENCH
FPESt'MEN SFMINAR

bl

Pfll StAN
PHAR'HACEUT IC S
PHARMACOLOGY

POLICY

}6 .

61
61

b2
b2
b2
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1"1

21
22
22
27

60
!&gt;0

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CRGANI7ATION
CRTHOOONTICS
PATHGLOGY
PATHOLOGY - ROSWEll PARK

19
19

ElEMENTARy &amp; REMECIAl EOUC
ENGINEERING SCIENCE
ENGLISH
fii{GN &amp; .APPl SCIENC-ES, FAC OF
EXP PROG FOR INDEP-ENDENT STUDY

·INSl'FIUCT ION

49
50
51
51
51

9
9

TECHNOLOGY

P~VSIOLOGY

INDGNESI~N

49

"'ICRC!HCLOGV
"'ICROBIOLCGY - ROSWFll PARK

14
14
14
15
15

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL RELATICNS

4()

8
8

CHINESE
CIVIl ENGINEERING
CLASSICS
CLIFFORD FURNAS COLLEGE
COLLEGE A

ECONCMICS
EOUCATlONAl ACMINISTRATICN
ECUCATICNAL PSYCHOLOGY
ECUCATtCNAl STUDIES, FACULTY 0
FLECTRlCAL FNGINEFRING

48
·.49
49

56
57 ,
57
57
58

10
10

C0'4PUTER SCIENCE
COUNSELOR EDUCATICN
CURRICULUI'! OEVfl &amp; INSTR '4EDIA
EDUC DEPTS-NON SCHOOL AFFILIATED
DIVISION Of UNDERGRADUATE STUO

Ar.IH~l SCIFNCE
LATIII
LAW &amp; JUI1.1SPRUOf'lCE, FACUL TV
LA~ AND SOC(ETV COLLEGE .
LIBR E INFO STUDIES,SCHOOl OF
lABORA~ORY

LINGUISTICS

I!ULLETIN BOARD PRCGRAM
C.P. SNCW COLLEGE
CHEMICAl ENGINEERING .
CHEMISTRY
/ C~EMISTRY - ROSWELL PARK

COLLFH 8
COLLEGE E
COLL~GF OF MATHEMAT.CAL SCIENC
COMMUNICATION COllEGE
. CCMPARATIVE LITERATURE

KOllE AN

PAGE

FOUCATION

68
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75
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79
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80
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INSTRUCTIONS FOR SARA REGISTRATION
PLEASE READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY AND CDMPLETEL Y BEFORE AITEMPTING TD FILL DUT ANY DF THE
REGISTRATION FORMS. THESE REGISTRATION FORMS MUST BE COMPLETED WITH A NUMBER TWD LEAD PENCIL DNL Y.
Introduction :

The procedure used for registration as
d esc ribed below can be utili zed for
advanced registration, in-person registration , and for change of registration. The
~stem allo~s the studen t to change his
schedu le (with permission) until the end of
a semester and also allows for registrati on
in future ?emesters where departmental
offerings are known.

1.

Essentially, the system is a three-step
procedure , each portion of which mu st be
completed in full if the studen t is to be
registered on the SARA Registration
System. The student shou ld fi ll out his

Student Dala Form. Student Scheduling
Form. anct..Course Request Form. as per
the attached examples to complete the
registration ;&gt;roct!ss.

I. Student Data Form-Examples 1 and 2

All students at the University must
'comp lete or update a data form prior to
the beginning of the semes ter in which
they plan to register. This document is a
composite of all the student data necessary
for the completion of a \'ariety of Uni\·er·
sity reports. The completion of this form
by t he stu deltl is an integral part of the
regist raii on process. Therefore. studrnts

STATE UN IVE RSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
STUDENT OAT A FOR .II.
'LU.U 100 lMSTIUCTIOHS OM I( VUU !.101' &amp;I'FOttr COW.I"LU'"' 'OJW

•

who fail to file this Conn will be ineligible
to com plete their registration . For Fall
Semester 1971 registration, submission o f
the Address and Vehicle Registratio n
Change Form (example •9) will sen •e as an
update for continu ing studen ts. Newly
admitted and re-en tering students must
complete a new form in i.ts entirety before
a regist ration can be processed.
a. Conti nuing Studen ts are those
enrolled in the semester immediately
precedin g the semester for which they
are registering. Tt'lese students will
receh·p a prin tout of pte\'iously su bmittt&gt;d data an d need only to update
incorrect info rmation. This can be done
by drawing a line through the old information and insertin g the new infor·
mation in the spaee pro,·ided. (see
n:ample •1)
b. Newly Admitted Students are those

who are registering for the first time at
this University as a freshman , transfer,
graduate or professional Stud ent. These
students will recei\'e a blank data form
and are to complete it in its entirety.
The date September 1971 must be
inserted where date of first registration
at State University of New Y..lrk at
Buffalo is requested.
c . Re· Entering

Students include all
former Uni\'ersity stu dents not enrolled
in the semeste r immediately preceding
the semester for which they are regis·
tering. This form must be completed in
its entirety. (see examp le •2)

Data Forms are to be returned to the
following offices prior to the registra·
lion period.

Day Undergraduate to the Office of
Undergraduate Studies, 106 Diefendorf
Hall
All Graduate Students . to the Office o f
Admissions and Records, Hayes 8

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEw YORK AT BUFFALO
STUOEMT DATA fOU

Professional Students· · to the main
office in the !espective professional
school

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All Data Forms will be forwarded to
Admissions and Records and then to the
Data Processing Center where they will be
keypunched and J.he Student MJSter File
updated .

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II . Registration Check Stops-Examples 3
and 4

J

CurrenUy enrolled students or those
seeking admission or readmission may be
prevented from registering for several
reasons · Indebtedness I&lt;&gt; the Univel:llty,
academic disqualification, or disciplinary
reasons. It is the respomibaity of !he
student I&lt;&gt; clear his record by con~
the appropriate office in aduance of registration.

Ill. Registration Procedure (SARA Method )

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Each student should secure a copy or
the appropriate semester Schedule or
Clasoes, along with Course Request Form
which will be provided. The Course
Request Form should be completed as
follows:
Genend lnfonnation:

1. The student should flnt loot througb
the COUlll! orrerlnp ·to determine
which counes be wlsbs to tate this

�CLASS SCHEDULE
semesrer. Afrer he has decided , he should
list these on his Student Scheduling
Form {example •5) to make sure he has
not requested any courses which .conflict
with each other. (The use of this fonn is
optional from a systems point of view
and is included only for the convenience
of the student.}

a. After the student has selected his
courses he should check the most

current copy of the Closed Sections
Listing (example •6) to assure that he
is not attempting to register for a
course which is filled . Since we are
implementing a mail registration process for this Fall Semesrer the Closed
-Sections Listing will not be available
in your registration packet. However.
there will be Closed Sections Listings
posted on campus at the Office of
Admissions and Records and in the
Division of Undergraduate Studies
Office in August for those students
who are in the area and are interested
in determining which courses are
closed. It is advisable, since no closed
listings will be available by mail , that
students take full advantage of al ternate choices before returning the
Course Request Form.
2. The student may elect to record
course selections direcUy on the Registration Planning Table (example •7 side
"A" o f the Course Request form ).

3. Primary versus AJternate course selection:

STRUCTOR OR THE DEPARTMENT
WHERE INDICATED. IF HE
ATTEMPTS TO REGISTER WITHOUT
RECEI VI NG PERMISSION , REGIS·
RATION IN T)AAT COURSE WILL BE
CANCELLED. THE STUDENT IS ALSO
RESPONSIBLE FOR CLE AR ING ALL
OTHER PREREQUISITES BEFORE
REGISTERING FOR A COURSE. IF
T HE PREREQUISITES ARE NOT
CLEARED, REGISTRATION IN THAT
COURSE WILL BE CANCELLED .

6. In an attempt lo gi ve all students the
opportunity to secure registration in

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8. Advisement-It is suggesred that a//
students see an adviser before registering
to secure approval of desired courses and
for special req·uests.
a. Type of Special Request
al. Graduate students taking un dergraduate courses for graduate
credit and unde rgraduate c redit

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b2 . Students may choose two (2)
alternates for primary selections 1
• through 4 ; however, only one alternat&lt;! is possible for primary ·selections 5 through 7.

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b 3 . Alteriaate course selections

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b 1. A I temare courses will be
assigned only if the primary selec·
tion is unavailable.

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7 . It is the student's responsibility to
insure . that his schedule allows for
approXImately one-half hour travel time
between campuses.

Tolon Bro wn

a. Primary · Students should first
select those courses which are needed
to fulfill degree requirements and /or
the Cree electives which are preferred.
The courses snmii'~ identified as
first preference and reco~ the
Primary area.
·
b. Alremare ·The student should also
indicate those substitute courses to be
taken if primary courses are closed.
(The student is urged to indicate alternate choices wherever possible; doing
so will help to insure an acceptable
sched ule.)

their primary selections, no student will
be permitred to regisrer for more than 19
semesrer hours during the initial registration period. The addition of courses
above 19 semester hours will be accepted
by the Office of Admissions and Records
during change of registration, September
13-17 . The stude nt is responsible for
consulting with his academic adviser
when requesting courses over the 19
semester hour limit. An adviser's writte n
pennission is required for a student registering for more than 23 semester hours
duri ng the Change of Registration
period .

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cannot con{Uct in time with any
primtJry

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nate.

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b4. All alremare oelections should
be recorded in the "alternate" sections of the fomt.

16

4 . It is ~the student's iesponsibmty to
register ind~pendently for each lecture,
recitJJtion. and !IJboratory in all courses
where combiMtions are requ ired. Each
of the~e sekctionr should be treated as

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primary selections and therefore
request&lt;jl separakly. When requesting
chemistrY or physics coUDeS, the l.abora·
tories and recitations must have the same
section leNer; in mathematics and economics courses the recitation must have

the same section letter as tlie lecture. A
student must be registered for the proper
lecture, recitation, and laboratory for
science courses to receive credit for the
COUJW. It is the student 't responsibility
to properly regisrer in these combinations where required .
5. IT IS THE STUDENT'S RESPONSI ·
B!L!TY TO SECURE THE APPROPRIATE PE~ION OF THE IN-

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CLASS SCHEDULE

27

6.

STATE UNIVE RSITY OF NB\1 YORK AT BUFFALO
THE FOLLOWING COURSES ARE CLOSED

AS OF 11/2_0/70
COURSE

**ADH**
403

181 A 2
181 B
181 B
181 c
181 c
181 c
181
181
181

c

**ANT**
105 A I
105 A 2
105 B
105
105
105 D

215 B

1M2

A

182

c

225 D

182 D

30 I C

205 A
205 B
317 c

311 B

**ARC**
301

321

c

D

461

FH

8

201
201

II 3 A
11 4 c
159 c
1 63 J
16 7 ·H
229 c

a9

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l!IJ

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101 GE
201 . A
319 A

211
211
211
211

8
8
8
B

211

IS'

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181 A 1

251

4 13 c
417 B

304 K

427 8

32 1 D

429

205 A

c

**PHY**

101 c
107 A
107 011

107 012
121 A
207 c

**HIL**
10 I H
103 GE
121 JE
20 I ·A
223 H

20 1 A
202 B

301 c
301 D
302 c
40 3 A
403 8

301 F
301 H
401

3 I 3 HE

K

117 A

~0

117 D
118 A
119 B

~2

**HIS**
20 I C

GE

101 A
101 B
101 K
103 8

F

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103
105
105
207
221
222
223
223

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**ORG**
30 1 F

14 1 A

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100 A.RR

137 B
137 · C
137 D

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325 H
391 ·c

**HAT**

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**POL**
111 A
119 D

2 33 HE
273
283
291
305

**HAR**

101
102 A

7.

D

335 c
34 5 A
360 A
463 FL

••HAN**

**GEO**
103

329

**KEC*"*
282 8
336 c
35 7 c
~ 11 B

A

**LIN**

113
4 70

I
2
3
4

A

259 B
311 A
319 c

JOt. J
301
30
303

~ 53

101 GJ
111 G

2ll D
HI D
211
219

**ECO**

142 8

. . . ~NT**

**FRE**
101 FH

A 5

301 H
**PHI**
107 A . 1
107 A 2
108 B
108 c
109
109
11 0
215
215 c
215 K
216 A

145 c
23 l D
241 B
241 c
242 A

**IND**

404 K
407 A

211

**CHE**

435
462

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39 3
4 17

m
q

F
G

203 H
204 D

a

J
A

G

203 A 2

20 I
203
20 .3

33 7 A

242 K
281 D
359 J
369 H
39 3 H

203 A I

**ENG**

**ART**

141 B
141
14 1
142 A

22 3 .\

H

** FIN**

c

376

21 7 B

345 c
351 367
38 7
483

202 B
350 B
350 K

423
4 53

SECTION

c

F
3·2 7 H

**ELE**

40 3 FH I
40 3 FH2
404

219
219
219
289
289
289
293
29 3
305
313
325

335 B

FH

351

NUMBER

I • 101 An i

HOUia

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CLASS SCHEDULE

28
need departmental approval to
register for these courses.
a2. It is also advisable for · the
student to secure his instructor's or
ad viser 's approva1 when be registers

for a uoriable credit course to
assure that the hours of credit are
p roperly understood by all parties
concerned.
9 . Com pleting the S c a n Sheet (Side
" B" of Course Request Form )-Example

•8
. a. Use a • 21ead pencil only, no other
pencil or pen may be used.

b. Cbeck. the cour.s aelected in the
Registration Planning Table (Side " A"
of the Course Request Form) against
the most current copy ot the "'Closed
Sections Listing" to avoid registering
for a course which is already.filled . If
necessary the student should make
appropriate changes in the table to
reflect the new infonnati on .

return address to insure proper handling.
It is important that all Course Request

10. After the student has completed his
course request form he should chec k it
over to assure its correctness and completeness and place it in. the envelope
provided . There is a pl ace ava ilabl e on
th e pre-addressed envelope fo r studen lli
to place an eight cent stam p and their

Student Accounts ( through Summer

Forms be returned to the Office of
Adtn issions and Records within one
week after receipt. It is essential that
these forms be returned promptly if
students wish to haye their Course
Req uest Forms proeessed in order by
class. Please be sure that y ou haue

cleared y our account at the Office of
Session) before y ou mail your Course
Request Form . If your account is not
clear your Course Request Form cannot
be p rocessed.
11 . After the Course Req u~l Forms for a

given clus of atudenl&amp; are ~.
schedule cards will be produoed and held
in the Office of Aclmll&amp;ions.and Records.
AU student schedule cards w!U be avallable for distribution on September 7 and
8 . There will be· separate rooms aet up
around campus in which schedule cards
will be available per the first letter of a
student's last name. A schedule of thette
locations is included with the registration
ma terials.
a . Sc.hed ule cards will be stamped by
a clerk when d istributed with a sheet
o f instructions fo r processing changes
or •registration. This stamped card
sho uld be taken to Room 240 i'lorton
Hall , where it wiU serve as authori zatio n for the Fall 1971 semester I.D .
card to be issued .
b . Students who participate in the
mail registration will have their studen t park ing pennit prin ted au tomatically and mailed to them by the
Campu s Sec uril y Office. Those
students who do no t participate in the
mail reg:stration should report to th e
Campu s Sec urit y Offi ce, 196
Win s p ea r Avenu e, the week of
September 13-17 to receive their
parking sticker.

12. Courses' Reserved for Majors : During
the initial registration period , and after·
wards in some cases, there are some
departments resen•ing a fixed percentage
of the space in course for majors.
Courses where some portion of the enrollment is reserved for majors are ind icated in the class schedu le with an asterisk(* ) to the left or tlle registration
number. Students who are closed o ut
duri ng registration because they are no t a
major shou ld check with the department
concerned during change of registration
abou t enrolling as a non-major. If the
stud ent feels that he is a major and has
been closed out erroneously he should
report to 106 Diefend orf Hall to insti·
tute a change in his major designation.
Graduate students should contact their
departmen tal o ffi ces.

9.

13. Students who do not participate in
the mail registration process ma y register
in the Office of Admissions and Records
September 7·10. Cou,.;, Request Forms
w ill be available there and students will
complete them and return them to
Admissions and Records. Students will
be told by the Admissions and Records
staff when their schedule cards will be
produoed and where they will be available.

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ALL STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED
TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MAIL
REGISTRATION IF AT ALL POS·
SIBLE. THOSE STUDENTS WHO DO
PARTICIPATE HAVE THE FIRST
CHANCE AT COURSES AND ARE
MORE LIKELY TO HAVE A
TROUBLE FREE R~ISTRATION .

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At this point' the atudent has officially
completed the registration process. Aides
will be available in the rooms where
schedule cards are to be dls\ributed to help
with any problen;,.pon't hesitate to ask
questions. Change or Regisp'ltion w!U be .
held from September 13-17. NO CHANGE
_ 0 F REGISTRATION WILL BE
ACCEPTED BY THE OFFICE OF
ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS PRIOR

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Fritz Will
Coordinate.

HPER
, . . io few ~ ...... studmta plmmiD&amp; to pumue en-

.u-iac iD

college """'
....... ol • IIIIIIIBiW! oversupPlY ol ~ Students
heeded tbe ~ N-, iD
view ol • ~ eogineer

......

~~!~'il:.!!3

• multi-pi-t ......Utiog plan.
a-am E.
BEislant
""""ol ~and applied ......_, noted that enmllmeat iD tbe ~ ~
ulty is down considerably from
.,_ yeam. Fipres indicate
!bat tbe......, is true natioual.ly.
216,000 more engin'lber-e esinl oludeala iD tbe u .8. iD
19'10 than there """' iD 1971.
The enP&gt;eerinl ......Uting
plan . _ . . this year with tbe
mailiDg ol 10,oocnxodnues to
aD oludeala ~ paeraJ
appljc:etjon lorms from tbe Uni_,;ty. 'lbc.e indicating an in-

sm.-

-iD~"""'aeot

a more detailed brochure and a
.,.,.....J leUer from Faculty
l'roov...t William N. Gill
The """'""' ........ explains
various and
enP&gt;eerinl
offered
points out -what tbe
future libly holds for particular kinds ol eapneen.. The engineering ln!nd, ~ to
the brochure, is a bn!akaway
from ~tioo of the

~ literature eq&gt;lains that
as a "acieace fD&lt; society," the
field will have to
cope with such cballenses as
urban CXJilii'!Stion. '-lth ser-

enP&gt;eerinl

_rPor This I Needed cOllege?' Is the
Comnwn Lament of Job-Seeking Grads
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
-Stoll

In February, Howant Tamler
sent out 300 to 400 letters seeking a university post teaching
paycbology. He bad good recommendations and an interesting diaaertation. He h a d
~ to aD the conventions and
delivered a strong paper at a
top convention in his area of
paycbo-linguistics. Last week
he got a one-year job at the
University of Texas because
someone in his department
knew the chairman of that department.
Helene Scherer graduated in
June with a degree in the new
field of environmental desi
During her four years of s : .
the nood for people trained to
solve growing urban problems
was continually stressed., Last

~.::.a~ l:'

:m 'i:i

only until September.
This is the situation for a
number of May U / 8 graduates.
Economic indicators say the
plioary c:wril:ulum, the mailini ...-omy is saininl strength but
as far as many new degree holdmaterials point out.
The IDililiDD al8o provided era are concerned it's still slug......Uteno with .....nhwhile in- gish.
Definitely gone are the days
fonnatioo. "We found that a
number of students ""'-e-not to when an applicant could conattend U/8 after 1ieiBI ac- sider two or three offers, when
was easy for faculty members
cepted and - decided to lind it
to get jobs for their students, or
out why," Mr. Strauas said.
when
students could simply
·LeUerS of iDquiry """' sent
to aD sludents c:boosiilg an al- send out their resumes and
have
a
reasonable
chance of gettemai:M! college. Return letting a position. Now the pro- -.......t that the principal" cess
includes
more
emphasis on
""""'"' why sludents reconsidered their choice was a pref- politics a h d influence. ''It's
never
been
truer
that you're
erence fD&lt; community or junior
only as good as who you know,''
(Contilw«&lt; Oft 2, coL I)

vices, food production and envinlilmental llueo.ts. In prep&amp;nltioo (O&lt; these, the student
will study a bicblY iDtenliaci-

recent graduates say.
Sometimes, however, even
contacts aren't enough. A new
acsdeJnic kicker is approval of
a grant b11t failure to fund.
Thomas Pajak, a recent doctoral glJlduate in biomedical
statistics, is a good example of
this phenomenon. He received
an oller right before Christmss,
but it fell through before New
Year's because of a tack of
funding. In the early spring, he
got another litter, but it, too,
was dropped Deaiuse the government didn't come through
with the money. Finally, in
early July, he got a position
heading a cancer research team
in North Carolina. This post
was part of an already established grant
It would he inaccurate to say
th!lt all graduates aren't getting
good jobs. For example, a female industrial engineering
graduate now bas a "fantastic
job" with Eastman Kodak in
Rochester. But stories about
such jobs, so oommon a few
years ago, are heard less and
less.
What's taking their place are
ironic arguments over whether
it's better not to get a job oller
or to receive one and then have
il fall through.
This new combination of lack
of jobs and lateness or lack of
funding is placing special stresses on job hunters. Some can't
stand the emotional see-saw of
waiting for fiscal approval. " If
the r e weren't any positions
around," one graduate laments,
"it wouldn't he as bad as playing this damned waiting game."

SUMMER,

~PORTER.,

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

NO.9

JULY .27, 1972

Applicants in this category ·
have evolved strange coping
techniques. Before Tamler got
his teaching job, be and his
wife would tske turns being depressed. In May he reached a
new low plateau. In July, his
wife took her turn.
Then, there's the other situiltion where there are no jobs
in your field so you tske any
job and become chronically underemployed. One recent doCtoral recipient is workin~ as a
hostess at a local pizzena. A
holder of a master's in social
welfare is out selling shoes.
Such underemployment bas its
own special strains, especially
the worry about what the interim job will do to the applicant's chances of getting a professional position.

Dr. Harry G. Fritz bas been
appointed coordinator of both
the instructional prognun in
Malth, physical education and
recreation ( HPER) in the Faculty of Educational Studies and
the programs in the Division of
Physical Education, Recreation
and Athletics iD Clark Gym.
The annoWlOeiDellt of the action by President Robert L
Ketter represents a further step
toward establishment of a fullfledged school of Malth, physical education, recreation and
athletics.
Such a school, Ketter bas
said in the past, '"will give us
the opportunity to develop a
more acsdeJnically ""-! teaching; research and training program" in health and physical
education fie I d s, intramural
athletics and intercollegiate
athletics.
In announcing Fritz's appointment, Ketter noted that
negotiations to merge the related instructional programs in
HPER in Educational Studies
with those under the jurisdiction of Clark Gym into one unit
of school level have been going
on for four years.
"Those negotiations are now
progressing to a climax,'' he
said_ "'The faculty members involved have voted favorably,
the administrative officers of
the University and the unita involved have agreed."
There are, the president said,.
"a great many details that must

Whether they're underemployed or still waiting, most of
the . reoent graduates echo the ~:f~ to,;,cf~~ cl~:
cfussic lament - "for this I ance, future planning for budspent four years in oollege?"
gets, space, academic ollerings,
calendar, etc. Up until now,
such activities have been a cooperative venture. Wp feel that
avenue is no longer practical
and that responsibility must
now be centered in one person."
As coordinator of the proThe Student Association of
State University (SASU ) is grams, Dr. Fritz will have "full
sponsoring a series of work- ~so:~~~ZcJ~ti~,academic
shops this weekend at U/8.
The three conferences will focus on issues in higher education, the initial drafting of a
statement of student rights and
freedoms and a proposed uniform enterfainment contract for
student activity hoards.
-'f!le~g-event-will beiJ?e~ University's
semmar on Current Issues m professional s t a f f elected 25
Higher Education," Thursday. Senators for the new ProfesStarting in the afternoon, three sional Staff Senate this week.
professors from U/B's Higher The election results covet the
Educstio!' De~nt will dis- areas of Operations and Syscuss unt~erstty ~ovemance, tems/Community Relations·
~roblems m e~"!'tion, edu?t- Student Affairs; and the F..;
tiona! accountability, financing ulties. Another area-the Ofand len"!"- ~ter these areas fice of the PresidenVVice p,...._
are ouUined m general on ident for Academic A1fairst
Thursday, participants will University-wide divisions- is
break up into small discussion still conducting its election. Regroups. Friday morning, the suits of this vote will be availdiscussion leaders-Drs. Walter able next Wednesday August
C. Hobbs, Peter F . Regan and 2
'
J -. Bruce Francis-will wc_&gt;rk
• The new Senators from Op.
With the co~erees to examme erations and SystemstCommUnthese areas m depth.
ity Relations are: JIUD5 CarOn Sa~y and Sunday, rier, Office of Computer SerB!OUP meetings '!n students vices; Neil M. Goen, BIJdaet
r~ghts and enterts.inment con- Office· Dennis A. Hamem&amp;n
tracts will take place sirnultan- Office' of Computer Services:
eously. _Both groups will wo~k John P . Hauspte, Office oi
on drafting resolutions that will Computer Services· John F
he acted . on tJr the . SASU Honeyman, ~t Infor~
membership dunng theu gen- mation Systems· W"alliam R
eral meeting in September.
Johnson, Jr., F;..,ruties Plan:
The group on students rights Ding; Hilda Komer, Personnel;
and freedO&lt;ns hopes to clearly and Richard P . Kucbarski. Ofarticulate "the rights and free- fice of Computer Services.
doms of IDday's students for
The Senatora from Student
their protection and benefit." Affairs are: Rowena Adams,
Most SUNY campuaes are op- Off-Campus Houaing; Ed Dale,
erating under a Statement of Norton staff; France Pruitt,
Rights and Fteedoms of Stu- Office of Foreign Students;
dents which was written in (Continued o n - 2, coL I)
196'7. This document is ''no
longer up-to-date a n d ad&amp;LAST SUMMER ISSUE
quate," SASU leaders iay. Ron Today's is the last issue .of the
Stein,-aaooc:iate director of Stu- Summer Reportor for 1972. The
den~ Affairs and Services, is Reporter will resume regular weekservmg as a consultant to this ly publication, Thursday, Septem·
-group. He hopes lbey will draft ber 7.
(Continued on _ . 2, coL I)

SASUMeets
This Weekend

StaffMembers
Pick Senators

�"' ....... here to ..., what the
placeechoed
loolred .......
liJre."and
- .......
the -by
...
pereuls here . _ Saimday fO&lt;
the .-ad ol four .......tay Parents" OrieDtalioD Coufermce&amp;.
Tbe motben and ra the rs
""""'""' to react aimilarly to .
their iD&lt;:olniDc freobmen SOliS
and dauchtess w h o w e r e
oriented to UIB durinc the
....,.S---they were . - I by the
size and ooafuoed by the cam-

~

their nizle.bour stay,
they heard about the admissioiiB situation from Dr. Norman Hootelter ol AdmissMJos
and Records. Dr. C h a rl e s
Ebert, dean ol Ulldergraduate
llludies, discualed the pattern
ol 1llllieqraduate education.
And Jolm Buedt loolred at the
cultuml values ol youth. All
the lecturers were ready to an_ . questions and help but as
oue mother eq&gt;lained, 'Tm too
jgnonmt to ,_., know what
questions to ask."
This seemed at various times
to he a reactioo sbared by every
member ol the group. Tbey appreciated the information given
by the speakers, they enjoyed
their tour or the dorms, but.
dearly, they had no real picture or what going to U t B is

Staff Smate(Corttiluoed f.-

-

I , coL 5)

llocJEwit RbDcloB. Olfice ol Minority SludeD1 Mrairs; 'l'bomM
Schillo, Almilialy Enterprises;
and Clifford Wilsoa. On-Campus Hoasin&amp;s...aton. from the seven Faculties are:
Patricia Colvard. Social Sciand Admini&amp;tratioo, Pro...... Olfice; Nelsoo Cosgrove,
Natuml Science&amp; and Mathematias, Physic&amp; and ~
omy; Jolm Coulter, Health SciHealth Related Profes.
&amp;iom; Marion I&gt;ic:ksoa, Social
Science&amp; and Admini&amp;tratioo,
Anthropolo1y; Iawreoce
Drake. Health ScieDces, Dentistry; Marilla Giles, Law and
Jurisprudeace, ProYost'&amp; Olfice;
A.-asia Johnson. Social Sciand Administration, Sociolou; J o s e p h Nec:basel&lt;,
Health ScieDces, Health Related ~;Bernice ......
Social Science&amp; and Administration, History; George Ritacher, Arts and Letters, Music;
and' J._.t.ine w-. Natuml
Sciences and Mathpmatirc.
StatistiaL'

SASU(~from - I . col. #)

a statemeut that not only outline&amp; student ,.qbts but also

cites their lepl . _ _ Paraphrasinc a Supreme Cowt dec:isiou, 8lein points out that
"pidpodr.ets have more ,.qbts
than atudeots." . A simple praeiicaJ statement ol student richts
and freedoms could rectify this
situatioo, he IDIIintaiDs.
1be third .....mar will focus

on clrafting a uniform Clllllmct
and~ to he .-1 by all

ClllllpU&amp; activity

boards tJuouch-

=~~
izatiou&amp;, such as UIB's UlJ!:B:

=::..~problems

Engineers-

North Campus Lake, Bizer Creek Relooltioo
Will~ Saf~AgainstFlooding
ReprdiDg

the ~

aspects of the ....... Mr. Sbort
notes that plans have been
made to utilize the lake for
fishing, ....fuuninc and some
boating. as· well as for educa-

tional the -

depeuding
quality.

00

"At present a study is heine
cooduded by the Sasaki. n.n.80!0 and Demay firm and ClODsuiting engineen; Camp, Dre&amp;and McKee oo the Jalre"s
qualities. Suitable water
quality will he maintained to
....._for~ use.·

like.

Coolributing to the probabil-

ity ol eliminatinc

quality and
the poa;ihility or
are such f.acton; as
the lake's depth of 20-25 feet
and the faet · that two natuml
sprincs which OOiltinue to feed
the lake were tiDCOYel'l!d while

stacnatioo

it-heine~

-rhe lake has already fulfilled our . - I f&lt;&gt;&lt; land 611, as
....U as provjded adequate flood
ClDIIIJoL When it is complete
around 1.975 we can he sure
that it will add to the overall
aeslhetic view ol the North
~" Mr. Short says.

FOOeral Grrmts Underwrite
New Programs in Nursing
.....,..~isanewap­

proecb to teadlinc cbild health
care. Two models--the practitiooeo' and teamer-will he orfered to the studenL Both
models provide COIIIIDOII8lities
ol cbild health care ......,lial to
improwd health deliW!!}'. 1be
edalded role ol the nwae in
the deliW!!}' ol cbild health care
is an iofecml part ol the propam and pediatricians are coiJahomting in providing this

_.a!ion."

.

Dean McGmrey pointed out
that the Pediatric Nurse ASK&gt;ciates Propani- eD&lt;IonBl by
local, rePaual and State cies as -n as the pedia~
ol Weslenl N- YoriL -rhis
1&amp;-......s CIOIIIBe will cift the
IIIII:Be prw:fjti .... an ed:eDded
role. For eample, obe will he
aiJie to ...,..... more edeDsive
health hislorie&amp;, provide priIDIIJY care ~ on special relatiaaohipB with the pedialrician, plan and provide health
pDdomae to c:bildJ'en and their
r-ilio&amp;, ..,.,...uz, and utilize
OCher health and aoc:iaJ
provide aJI&amp;Iltatioo for famil..
irs by home visits, office visits,
or .......,.,.,__ T h i s ed:eDded
.role lor the ......., will posmit a
"'--or - ol ........... per..... in appropriate health
_,._ where they ........ here-

.mce..

.......... been . . . . .-

~~

Many of them tried to relate
by asking questions based on
their own experieoce and memories or oollege: -reU me about
the fraternity and BDI'Ority system." "Do you still have to
sigo in 'a nd Out of dorms' at
night?" Of """"""' aome or the
questions hit h o m e stilldo ~a had
Primarily' the parents had
trouble grappling with what
they viewed as the enormous
amount or freedom sludents
have to~ couraes and a life
style. Tbey always came back
to the question, "What kind of
guidance will my c:hild get?"
Tbey had a difficult time accepting that decisions about
JDOBt matters are left up to the
individual
'lbere were C&gt;lha m il d
shocks for some ~ coed dorms, poasihilities or premarital ses, and gaff """"""'But JDOBt""""'""' to know where
the youth cultwe "is at" in
these areas.
Shocked or not, JDOBt or the
parents seemed glad that
lluld. Ebert and the student
aides told them the truth about
d o r m c:coditi&lt;m&amp; and overc:l-.led freobmen ~ One
aet ol pereuls who had been at
orientati&lt;m&amp; at OCher acbools
were happy "to fiDally l!ll'l the
truth" about the 8&lt;bool their

-::::::18":':-?'""

dauchter- .... to.

"' came to ..., what he'll he
~ ., I am relale to what
he hrinp t.dr:' IIDIJiheo- mother
esplaiDed with _ . . . , t atisfacti&lt;n

Kavanagh Named
Dr. 'l'bomM M. KaYimalh
has been appointed aBJCiate
provost ol the Faculty ol Arts
ad Letters, e«ecti¥e immediately.
In his new post Dr. Kavanqh's main areas ol ClODCI!I'D
will he ednartiooal policy, Btudent a1J'ail'S and pro-

~aasistant p r o f - in the
J::)epa.- ol Fri!DCh since
19'10; Dr. ltawDqh is a 1.965
paduate ol the
ol the
Holy en-. He ~ both
the fimt the M.A. and PhD. depee&amp;
year, and from Yale. He .... atadied at

;:::.,1-:.:

eou...e

A.ociateo Pmcmm
you, 12 the .........t
14 the third year. In the - - the~ Maiamo Norte........ there will he 6 to americano, the Goethe ln8litote
10 otudoala the fimt y..,, 1.5 and the Um-.ity Film SCudy
the ........t year, and 20 the Carter at Amhent, .,_,._
third:r-r-

-

�I'!Y 27, 1972

GREPORTE~

3

SUNY Grad Education Reports Propose Gradunte Dean Discusses
More Cooperation and Specialization ,~ ~~C~-~~ ~
dent and Ph.D. production have crease and the length of stay
establishment of rigid require- in a mediocre . graduate pro- come under increasing public would drop.
\
ments." T011 narrow specializa- gram and a mediocre Univer- scrutiny. Now, two recentlyHull believes that both retion should' be replaced by sity. . . . Any significant re- released reports have responded ports "identify some but not
-multi-disciplinary broad-based duction in efforts devoted to to this interest with an exam- all of the f.roblems" and are,
knowledge, the Senate urges.
graduate education will have a ination of the entire SUNY- on the wbo e, valuable. In comThe Senate report addresses severe and adverse effect on wide graduate program. The paring the two, be is " more in
itself also to continuing educa- the. char_acter an,d, quality of the two _studies, one done by a favor" of the SUNY Faculty
tion which " more and more Umvers1ty. . . .
Cluincellor's Advisory Commit- Senate report. While many qf
New York citizens . .. expect
At the same time, however, tee, the other by a SUNY the differences between the two
their institutions to provide." " Graduate education . .. must Faculty Senate group, outline are subtle, Hull believes the
This need "can be met only by be developed on the premise problems within the system and Senate report is more practical
development of a separate pro- that each program be notable suggest possible areas of re- and more clearly thought oul
gram on each campus, planned for the quality of its faculty form and improvement. (For The Senate report waa the work
to utilize faculty competence to and students, and for the rigor the highlights ·o r -t hese two re- of a standing committee that
meet the needs of Society. In- of its academic requirements. portS, see Reporter stories last worked together for two years
Regional cooperation of fac- fusion of large numbers of con- This is the only acceptable week and this week.)
before it began its evaluation of
ulty in particular disciplines, tinuing education students in justification for support of such
As far as U / B ;,. concerned, graduate progr;ams. I!t contrast,
the Cbanrellor's committee courses designed for degree a costly venture ... ."
these findings will have little ~ Chancellors AdviSOry ComsuggeSts, s h o u 1 d be implestudents will usually result in
· ·.immediate impact, Graduate m1ttee met f!'r. app'?nrnately
mented under the leadership of mediocre degree progl"9.ms and
. . School De a n Dr. McAllister 30 h?urs ..This 18 an llDportant
the four graduate centers with not .,dequately meet needs for
Hull says. He feels their main considerati.on to rem em be r
ci&lt;Mer integration between continuing education."
purpose is as an informational when reading the reports, Hull
M.A programs at the colleges
Both reports indicate that
source for heads of graduate feeWbils
. . th
d te d
1e e gra ua
and doctoral programs at the appropriate financial support D
programs within SUNY. The .
"!"' ,.._
university centers "so that a must be available to the grad- .['
documents may result in some J"&lt;:ts the reports as, a 'bluestudent can go directly from' uate student throughout the
changes in emphasis and direc- pnnt for ti!e future, he does
quality work" in the M.A. pro- period of study. "An adequate
Dr. Richard N. Schmidt has . tion, he adds, but he is reluc- feel they Will serve as a useM
gram at the college to the uni- stipend level is essential to at- been appointed associate pro- tant to discuss specifics.
gwdepost.
One reason for the reports'
versity center's doc to r a 1 se- tract the intellectually gifted, vost of the Faculty of Natura l
quence.
to provide them a reasonably Sc•ences an~ Mathematl.cs for relatively small impact on U/ B
1be Senate group also en- r,lecent standard of living, and the academic year begmnmg is that many of their suggested
dorses region a 1 cooperation to commend their dedication to September 1.
improvements used the l ocal
wherever "inter-institutional scholarship and personal develPresently assistant chair~ program as a model. The seccooperation and coordination opment," the Senate rePort of the D et?artment of Statistics, tion on gradtiate program evalwill increase quality, efficiency notes, adding that "an increase Dr. Schmidt has been a mem- uation used in both reports was
and eftectiveness." Such effec- in State funds is needed." Also, ber of the U / B facul ty for 24 taken "almost verbatim" from
A letter of commendation has
tiveness, they emphasize, can the amount, type and timing of years. In the associate provost:s criteria u tilized here. 1n addicome only if public and private service required of a graduate role, he rel'laces Dr. Paul Re1- tion, many of the suggestions been received by the U/ B Hilinstitutions cooperate, even to assistant "should be relevant." tan who will be on a one-year dealing with graduate student lel Foundation from Rabbi
the extent of cooperative purThe Chancellor's committee !'"bbst•cal to conduct research support and regionalism have Mordecai _J .. .Simckes of Conchasing and sharing of expen- also calls for attention to the m Oslo, Norway.
already b een implemented gregation Shomray Hadath of
sive equipment.
special needs of graduate stuExcept for graduate work and here. This extensive "borrow- Elmira, N.Y.
Addressing himself to Rabbi
Speciollzatlon
dents for study and recreation an appointment as American ing" is easy to understand, Hull
Specialization is a key con- space.
·
Guest Prof"""?r at the Royal explains, since SUNY's Provost Jus tin Hofmann, director of
in Buffalo, Rabbi Simckes
&lt;ept in the. Senate report, just
.Both reports emphasize equal .C ollege _of Science and Tech- for Graduate Education and Hillel
said:
.
as it is in that of the "Chan- opportunity, with the Senate nology m Glasgow, Scotland, Reseruch Dr Daniel Murray
"
On
behalf of our Congregacellor's group. "No campus can particularly noting that female Dr. Schmidt has served co~tin- who serv~ ~ a consultant
possibly provide quality gradu- and minority group grad stu- uously on the U/ B faculty smce both reporting groups was tion and the Jewish comunity,
ate programs in each of the dents are currently in short 1947. He received the B.S. and formerly graduate deM here. I wish to thank, most heartily,
wide "!"Je of sub-disciplines supply. These groups should M .B.A. degrees he~ an~ the Also, Dr. Andrew Holt, assis- the members of Hillel, and you
included m undergraduate pro- "be encouraged to con tin u e Ph.D. from the Umvers•ty of tant d ean of the Graduate personally, as director of Hillel
grams," the Senate report says. their education," the Senate Michigan.
School, was a member of the activities. for sending us a supply of Tefillin, T a I ei s i m,
1be complex determination of study says.
Faculty Senate panel.
who will specialize in what will Effective Facilities
Effective innnediately, Mrs.
Probably the most evident Prayer Books, and Yarmulkes
to
help those people of our Condepend upon available campus
The Senate also emphasizes Nancy Broderick, assistant pro- shift here will be toward an inresources, other State Univer- that udevelopment of a gradu- vost, Faculty of Educational creasing emphasis on education gregation who lost these .,_
ligious
articles
the devastat· sity offerings and "on whether ate education program of qual- Studies, will also assume the for teaching as part o( advanced
academic competition can be- ity requires effec tive facilities duties of acting associate pro- degree traiuing as urged in both ing flood which recently income academic cooperation," as well as superior people." vost for the 1972-1973 academic reports. Currently, the Grad- undated our city.
"The thoughtfulness of tbeee
the Senate group says. More Levels of support for individual year.
uate School is conducting a
than one graduate program in aunpus libraries, for example,
survey to find out what courses, young people is truly · commendable
and deeply appreciany field or subarea "is gener- "should be based on realistic
seminars and resources are
ated by our Congregation."
ally in the public interest," the appraisal of the sub-discipline
available in this · area. Hull
In
addition
to supplying the
report contends, no tin g " it mission of each institution in ·
0
WI
hopes to start a series of aeroElmira Congregation with rewould strengthen State Univer- teaching and research, not on a
insrs dealing with teaching in ligious articles, Hillel also PlQ:sity to have two smaller pro- simple count of FTE students."
the very near future. 1be programs in different region• of Moreover, t h e report notes,
gram will probably be general vided large quantities of kosher
to Jewish families there.
the State rather than one su- "Fluctuations in levels of liA Campus Security officer in nature, including considers- food
per-program in a single loca- brary support are particularly arrested two men on aunpus on tions of communication, the na- Hillel also shipped an entire
truck
load of clothes and cantion."
disruptive .. . and should be Friday (July 21) and charged ture of students, and the under- ned food
to the victims of the
'lbe Senate group also con- avoitled."
them in connection with the lying theories of education. flood in the city of Elmira for
curs on temporary student and
Also cited is an "urgent need theft of a tape recorder from a Such seminars would not be general distribution. S e v e r a 1
faculty exchange am?ng cam- to modernize campus libraries. campus building.
required for an advanced de- station wagons loaded w it h
puses, freely interchangeable The academic community conCampus Investigator P a u I gree, but the graduate dean medieal supplies were taken to
" mini-&lt;X&gt;W1le8" made possible
tinues to hear glowing reports Orsi arrested John W . Bufford, hopes that all departments will Elmira. Hillel volunteers also
by a uniform calendar and di- of the library of the future 19, of 1028 Jefferson Ave., examine the necessity for inin cleanup operarect trailsfer from an M.A. pro- based on a host of scientific Buffalo, and Michael Green, 21, creased emphasis on how · to participated
tions in that southern tier oomgram at one campus to an ap- and technical 'breakthroughs' of 307 East North St., Buffalo, teach students how to teach.
munity.
propriate doctoral program at in information storage and re- as he saw them running from
He also expects more reanotber. While such transfer&lt; trieval. Yet, campus libraries Baird Hall about 3:55 p.m.
gional cooperation in SUNY's
"can not be guaranteed," the continue to be collections of
Both men were charged with graduate programs. U/ B is
T_
. report says, the possibilities books and periodicals from petit larceny, burglary and pos- already part of a loose confed~U
must be fully developed if which , the user retrieves infor- session of stolen property. They eration of graduate schools exSUNY is to develop a "gradu- mation by the same slow labor- were booked a t ' Buflalo Police ploring possible methods of reCentral Stores has changed
ate eduA:ati.on sya~m."
ious method used by a medi- Precinct 16. Neither is a stu- gional cooperation. A group of the format of their "while you
flw \'MrS ar four1
eva! scholar. State University dent at the University.
deans is now conducting a sur'Ibe Cbanrellor's committee should start innnediately to·
vey of programs and equipment fueere .:;~cal~~~~
believes that attainment of a create a truly modem library
available in the reMon and Hull listings as "please call him"
Ph.D.- in any discipline is system."
predicts that results will indi- and only a Mr. at the top for
sex:
poosible within r i v e yea r s
Effective equipment mainto lSCUSS
cate areas for practical cooper- name of the caller.
related references have been
after the B.A Precise modu- tenance and future construction
a tion .
lar units and distinctively de- designed for flexibility of use
U! B also will probably go dropped.
fined steps to the completion are also urged by the Senate.
furtber down the road toward
of the degree should· be set up
Repeatedly emphasizing the
'.'Musiral Innovations" will establishing a five-year support
TELEPHONE DIRECTOR\'
to accommodate this, their re- need for a "system" of gradu- feature a discussion of the year limit on completion of the Preparation of the 1972·73 Unl·
port urges. 1be Senate group ate education within SUNY, ahead for the Department of Ph.D . This "five year doc- versity Telephone DirectOry is now
recommends four-years of full- the Senate report says that al- Music on Wednesday, :August torate" recommended in one of under way es a cooperative project
time study as "reasonable," but though financial considerations 2, at 9 :05 p.m. on WBCE-FM. the reports is a very valid ex- of University Publications services
cautions that "faculty involvl!d must be an important element Dr. Albert Cohen, chairman of pectation, Hull believes. He and the P,rsonnel Ollioe. Deport·
in Ph.D. programs must con- in the evolution of such a sys- the Department, will tell of new feels, however, that the limit is mental listings for the front of the _
tinue to protect the flexibility tern, " decisions reached on the developments in musical educa- possible only if students rehave been distributed to ell
o! tbeee programs and prevent basis of cost alone will result tion, University Choral En- ceive a higber level of financial book
chairmen for revisions and up.:::....:::=...!::::!!!!::=..=::...;~:.::::::::......::=::...::::....::::.:....:=:::....:.:.:=-== sembles, musicology and other ~'!.v~l: /;.~J'o!~ dating. Information is to be re·

EDITOR'S NOTE: The fo/Jow..
ing i6 a colllinwltion of an arc:oru:erninl two repor/:8
tUialin6 with f1"rJduaU education within the State UnWer-oily ay.tem. The reporting
bodies are the Chonce/Jors AduiM&gt;ry Commillu on Graduale
Study and Research and the
SUNY Faculty Senate Co~
miUu on Graduale Programs.
The first half
appemed in the
r Reporter, July 211.

tick

&lt;&gt;J,::::;:tick

2

Named to

·

llbsts
aculty rl

Rabbi Praises
Hillefs Work

u;

m

Tw Charged "th
Bar·rd Hall Theft

Sex

1\...t

Cohen D •
Musical Trends

D _
- ~roR'fE.L'-.:)
.

G1:) 'W""'\'

fu. will also

disCuss honors
ancf new faculty appointments,
including that of Michael TilThomas co d ctor of the
s.:'rwo PM.,_::,o':uc Orchestm.

:n.e

an increase in student-faculty
interaction. In total coet, the
graduate dean feels thai a fiveyear Ph.D "pipeline" would aetually lower the coet of· educa- ~
tion per student sin&lt;:e the drop-

turned to the Personnel Office on
or before July 30. lnd1Vidual listings will soon be sent to each de·
4

partment for aimilar updating. A
mid-october delivery date is pro-

jected for the completed din!Ctory.

�~21.1!172

4

Campus Parking Regulations

Defme~hicle Operations
For the benefit of periiODS unaware of current parking regulations, the following is excerpted from Univefllity traffic
regulations•
Parting is prohibited on all
roadways and service drives except the cutaway area adjacent
... Hay.. Hall where parking is
limited to 30 minutes.
p-x., of a motor vehicle
permit entitles the holder to
-park only if there is available
in the allotted parking
areas. The Univefllity dom not
pumu1tee

a parking _..,_

Overnight parking is prohibited except lor resident students. Faculty, stall and students whose wo.. requires their
presence on campus alter 11:00
p.m. may obtain a special permit from Campus Security. On
South Campus only, the designated area of the Main-Bailey
Jot may be used lor overnight
parking.
Snow days (days or nights
when Jots must be plowed) r&amp;quire special consideration of

:trc1~ :~= !'::d.u.n:

Faculty. stall and students pus location. All cars must be
must display a valid
"l
moved to the cleared area by
Visitors must disp~ visi- 11 :00 p.m. and parked in the
tor card obtainable from the cleared area until Jots have
Visitors Booth or from the d&amp;- "been plowed. Vebicles n o t
partment to be visited. A dated moved on request may be conJetter from the department left sidered to be illegally parked
on the left side of the dash is and towed at the owner's exacoept:sble.
pense.
Unauthon-1 perrnits· or boC a m p u s Security Officers
lUS keys are a violation and
'fiolators will be subject to a may tow or have lowed any v&amp;bicle ~g in violation of
traffic tag.
No vehicle may block a muniCipal ordinances of the
""""""B'k, lot Jane. lire hy- New York State. Motor Vehicle
drant, building 8CCIB8 or driV&amp;- and Traffic law.
way.
1beee regulations are subject
No vehicle may be parked on to change, and some modificaa lawn or sidewalk.
tions will be made effective
Parking prohibitions do not with the beginning of the 1972apply to State-owned or oper- 73 school year. The regulations
ated servioe vebicles. Pool cars are in print and will be disdriven by faculty, stall or stu- tributed to all students, laculty
tlents are not exempl
and stall who register vehicles
Motor scooters, motor bicy- for parking on campus. The
cles or motorcyciM are not to Traffic regulations w i I I be
be operated on any "sidewalks printed on a map of the South
or grassed areas. All such v&amp;- Campus which will be given to
hicles must display a perrnil
each person registering a V&amp;Bicycles must be parked in · bicle lor campus parking. Inone of the bicycle racks pro- cluded in this printing, for the
vided lor tbem at various locs- first time, will be regulations
tiODS on the campus. Bicycles regarding available parkin g
are permitted on all campus areas on the North (Amherst)
roadwaya.
Campua.

•Open to public;
•Open only to -

••Open to memben of the U-.Ky;

With

a prolealonal In the IUbjact
Contact SUzanne Malzpr, 831-22211, fur llstlnp.

THURSDAY-27
The Student Aoaocia·
tion of State Univenity of New

SEMINAR• :

!orkJ~~~~ ~=t~

i:u:Oi!:'fu;:rr:s~~ti:n.~~

at the Norton information counter for times and pla.cee. Alao on
Friday, July 28.
CREATIVE CllAFT CENTE&amp;•• : Leather: Bel.U, 1-6 p.m.
PJLMS ~ : Children Adrift (Luntz,

~lio!!7 Di~ i~2).· 8~

r.r n~:t!!.t~:r 9me~-:.· 1948).

CREATIVE CRAFT CZNTEB•• :

Botik,

7-10 p.m.
a
Life Workshop, 232 Norton, 7: 309 p.m.
ROCK MUSICAL•: Touch, the Poet.
hom Playera, 233 Norton, 8 :30
p.m., admi..a:ion charge.
CONcarr•: JUuuly Newman and
John PriM, Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:30 p.m. snd 10:30 p.m.,
admission charge.
PILK•: Chofed ElboWs (Downey),
Conference Theatre, N o r t o n.
check ahowcue for times.
lN'TEIU'ERSONAL COMKUNICATlON :

FRIDAY-28

.........

tography, but in a drawing this ALL CAMPUS ~ON : Act V,
can be accomplished by con- ~';d~ct=~':;..~~~
trasting colors and stylized sur- cloeed circuit television ayatem.
face characteristics."
11 a.m., Bureouc~ 12 noon.
Mr. Diedrick was a student
(1932-34) of ·the late Max :;;;~=~ b~; 2 ~~~·a:~
Broedel, who taught the world's 2 :30p.m., Mcl..outhlin Orehutrc;
first formal claas of medical il- 3~.m. , Dave Van Ronk at But-

kf".!if~rssJ!ofol!;jedri~=- ~U.,p.i...~'f.o,:'k"'F~~5°p!':'fv~:
for tM C/oonie; 6 p.m., Great

retumed to his native Buflalo

to become its first medicsl illustrator in 1935. He worked
with faculty and other physicians at the Buflalo General
Hospital, and at the same time

was assistant curator of the
Medical School's pathology
muaeum, before joining the faculty.
1'be m e d i c a I illustrator is
proud of his m a n y acbiev&amp;ments---..;pecially his work as
the principal illustrator of three
widely used specialty books.
"Today there are so many
demands on my time that it
would be impossible for me to
spend several months on illustrations lor one book," Diedrick
aaid
His thousands of illustrations
over the last 37 years have been
a potent teaching tool for students, professors and physician&amp;..

. .-. . . . . . ,. -=

John
Lawler, cbaimwl, ~of

~:fw~~eei.Li=.:,t

Diefendo~ 7:30 p.m. LoMly Boy
(National Film Board of Can·
ada), 147 Diefendorf, 8:30 p.m.

:Mediml Illustrator Has
Unique Blerrl of Talents
Melford D. Diedrick, U/B's
medical illustrator, embOdies a
unique combination of artistic
talent and medicsl Jmowledge.
'Tve lesmed my profession
the bard way-through clinicsl
observation, study anil1'1!81!e!cb..
The first step is acquiring inlormatioo--wruaUv verbal communication with !he physicianauthor. No one can make a
aood medical drawing without
knowing his subjecl Often I
-reb the scientific literature
of the last 10 or 20 yeara. Sometimes I spend several hours in
a hospital viewing a procedure.
Tben I apply a scientific ap• proacb to my illustration.
"Anything visual is a meens
of communication. No task is
too amall. A graceful letter is
very demandina and con~
lites to the efflciency lor the
~t level of illustration,"
says Diedrick who bas been at
the University since 1!147.
Most of his illustrations are
foe the printed psge-periodicsls, joumala and boob. On
any ,....., day, one or more
of the 1,000 BuJialo physicians
might ask Diedrick to creete a
picture • of a petcbed bear!,
show a prepyloric ulcer or illustrate the latest technique lor
pinning a fractured bip. Whatever the project, the artist bas
cme objective: depict the subject clearly and trutbfully. He
works mostly with pencil for
preliminary sketching, and
Wllllb or print ink for the finished rendering.
But be also uses a camera.
"'ften a camera will show too
mudi or too little. Drawings
can eliminate the oon-&lt;!SSential
details and locus mote dramatically on the main elemenl
It is also difficult to show the
differences ill tiasues with pho-

&lt;wEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

Secon.tU in Tekuilion; 7

p.m.,
Bullwinku; 8 p.m., D~k a.-.,.,ry,
Haas Lounge, Norton.
Cll&amp;ATIYE CRAfT CZH"rr:&amp;• •: IA.ather: BeU., 1-5 p.m.
PJLMS• : Zve.U,Orc (Dovzbenko,
1928) ; 140 Capen, 7 p.m. Zuo &lt;k
Cond..ue (Vige, 1933), 140 Capen,
8: 30 P.JD.. Lo Chuu de 14 MoUon
Uoher (Epstein, 1928) , 140 Capen.
9: 30J.'i.':; TM Fall of tM Hcnue

~ ~ -&lt;,'f:~:uy:!:J'E~!:.
~~Plcf'so

JtOCK

:'.!ry,

1928) ,

140

1W81CAL•: ToUch, the Pc:.t-

bom Playera, 283 Norton, 7 p.m.
and 10 p.m., admiaoion charp.
INTII'.&amp;NATIONAL POLK DANCING :

In-

struction in basic ate.-, during
&amp;rat hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex.·
8p.m.
CllUt.AD 'BAlla.\_TH SlaVICIB•:

Cba-

bad H.,._ 3292 Main St., 8 p.m.
DANae•: Dan.ce Foundatil:m Company, U.SA., Ronald M . Sequoio,

cborec&gt;grapber, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 : 30 p.m., admiaoion charge.
OOP'PDBOUB&amp;•.: Sara Grey. 1st
Ooor cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.,
admiaion charce.
8A8U OONPDZNCB• • :

Draft pro-

JUidelinM for the _operation of Activity Boardl in the
contracting of entertainment
Check at the Norton information
counter for times and
Allo
on Sunday, July 30.
BABU ooNPI:D:Na:••: Drafting of
Student Bill of Ricbta. Cbeci at
the Norton information counter
for timeo and pJa.... Allo on Sun.
day, July 30.
cedllft!S and

placaL

SATURDAY-29

:-::~ T~=-"~~:::&gt;·~
showcase for timee..

Swim. trip,
Crystal Beach. Ontario, 10 a.m.6 p.m.: faculty, staff and otudento: $1. lf you are not a U.S .
~~tLo; -:_ust have your puaBUIOII:Il &amp;XCUB810N:

0

T~

Coa.fereDCe Theatre, N o r to n. 3
p.m.
DATING UID KA.TUIO: a Life Worlt·
shop, 232 Nonon. s p.m.
·PILKII• : N.U. (Anloaioni, 1948),
IUport (Connor, 19611-67), 147

~;t'ri!s~Pfs49f.~4~

endorf, 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-2
Do&amp; Vit&lt;s (Fellini.
1961) , 147 DiefeDdorl, 7 p.m. P~r­
(BerBman, 1967), 147 Dief-

PILKII• : Lo
IIOM

=~·1~r.~40A= ~~

Strike (EiMnotein, 1925), 140
Capen. 8: 30 p.m. TM Britltle
(he,.., 1928), Caotro Strut
(Baillie, 1966), 140 Capen, 10: 30
p.m.
PSYCHOIU.T•• : a liste:niDc and
speaking esperienoe in open and

hoDflat communication._ 232 Nor·
ton, 7-10 p.m.

THURSDAY--3
P1LK11° : Kino PNJIJd4 (Vertov,
1922), Diuilk and COI&amp;tliU!r (Capra. 1943), 147 DiefeDdorf, 7 p.m.

aocx MUBIC4L~: Touch, the Poethom Players, 283 Norton, 7 p.m.
aDd 10 p.m., admiaoion charp.

7 : ~9

8UIOID
TtJD• •:

ro.a••:

P ILK

INBTI'r1.Jft

UDC-

Tom Dewitt. nperimen·
taliat filmmaker, ocreeninc and
discwooion of !AJp, Atmoof.,
and Fall, 140 Capen. 8 p.m.
DAN&lt;Z• : Dance Foundation Com-pany, U.S.A., Ronald M. Soquoio,
cborec&gt;grapber, Baird Recital
Hall, 8 : 30 p.m.
OOPPDJIOUs:&amp;•. :

Sara Grey. 1at

Door cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.,
admiaaion charp.

SUNDAY--30

C&lt;&gt;lloquio: A New PatA

iA Slt.olteapeore lnJupretation,

IN"'DPP:aaHAL

OOIDilJNJCATION :

a Life WorkshDp, 232 Norton,
p.m.

8UKKS&amp;

PILl(

IX8'I'II"lJ'ft

UDC-

Stefan FleUcber, --=i·

ate pn&gt;fe.or, Doparlmoot of Encliab. Corwmtio" and tM D«u""'""""·
147 DiefeDdorf, 8 : 30
p.m.

EXHIBITS
PA1111'1l01l8 BY OUYD IIOX!IIa, GUIery
219, Nortoo, MOIIday-Friday

~ l:;;.~ u

p.m.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
All••

50rB ~ or z
lOYca'S UL...... 'J/D7 Lockwood

Library, Moad*}o-Friday, 9 a.m..5 p.m.

NOTICES

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1382038">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382020">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382022">
                <text>1972-07-27</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382024">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382025">
                <text>en-US</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382026">
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                <text>4 p.</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1382035">
                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                <text> Buffalo</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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                    <text>U/B Sciertist Analyzes
First Complex Hormone
STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

N0.8

JULY 20,1972

SPA Suing for Interest on Back Pay
The SeDate Proleosional Jw.
aM:iation (SPA} bu...-...ced
a auit to .....,_ 11011111 $275,000
in back~ due SUNY PI'!&gt;'
feioionaJa. The nioaey ia souabt
as ...tn.1or the 10-month deJour in Jl8.)'lllellt of the 1971·72
&amp;U _P.er cant -•·~

u..:r-.

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

dated ~ 22 IDed directly with the Cbuaellor'a Olfic:e
in ...,..,....._with Article vm

offiltilf~~L
~· outlines both -the

bisto11'ti.!l detail of the Apee-

llll!llt:

"Siped ali Aupst 31, 1971
with 1111 ellecti"" date of ,TuJy

1, 1971, the employees of the
SPA barpining unit immediately complied with the various terms of the .Agreement
and as8umed their respective
duties. All -'ions of the
Apeemeut were propi,rly impl.,._ted with the """"Ption
of Article&amp; XIX and XXI
CBasic- .Amnlat Salary} : ~o
olber -wrililll! or written memonmdlo eziat which alter, modify or contradict lbe Aireement
-including its aalary portic&gt;m
-in lillY way.
''ID addition, lbe Agreement
, CODtain&amp; the IIDIIqllivocal stalellll!llt that its terms sball con-

tinue in full force and eftect
from lbe first day of July or
September, 1971, until August
31, 1974. The aalary require.
menta of the Agreement are ef.
fective as provided"
Notmg the State's rationalization for lbe 10-mooth delay
in poeyment, the grievan&lt;e continues:
"'lbe Department of Audit
and Control caDDO! DOW modify
lbe clear langu&amp;~e of the Agreement for procedural reasons.
For other matters of payroll,
the rule has been that payroll
change requests, if submitted
eight days prior to payday,
could be eftective immediately . ...
( Conlimwi on_. 3. col. 5)

2Chargedin

Dorm Incidint
Two students were arrested
Sunday night by campus . curity o«ioers wbo charied one
with disorderly CODduct, reaialilll! arrest and third degree
._ult and lbe other with obgOYI!lmDelltal adminTbe difficulty reporiedly bepn when a student identified
.. L. c. Smith allegedly refused to ...... identification ..
be atlempted to enter Goodyear Hall about 11:55 p .lit
Hearinc diff'JCUlty between lbe
tlludmt and a student security
aide at the door of Goody_.,
a security ollicer approached
to infonD Smith that identification _ . . - r y. AD aQ!Umont and melee -.eel, with
Smith ~y I'IIDDing .-t·
the - . t y of6cor and into the

=

cbmillllly• .

A __..inn, Earl S. Cole,
alao •
allepdly inter-

......-u.

. . . . with the ....-;t ol Smith
by the
-.
i q. ....... · llaiilb
..._
_
_
.,the~

.... _.........,.Sbytbe...carity of6cor wbo reportedly
WI'MIIed with him in the .moalilide~.

~-trailed foraMcer-

aliaa ol the .... at .._.
w-ial ~The._:.
ity . . . . alao trailed' ....

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

The two ........ the
....... ill City c-t. Trial il

afOrAupA n .·

In cl&gt;ouaderizing t h e - - .
specifie cbemiad
• 4 aoda
bad to be ayolhMi2:ed in the
laboratory. From 1969 to 1971
Dr. K.L. Matta worbd ... lbeees of eneyme subetratee..
This W88 follooMd b y ful applic:ation ol to
structure. Determination ol tbe.
COIJII)Iel&lt; structure ol .........
came neD.. Dr. N . 8wauu:iudwo
....n.ed ... the beta oubmit
structure in 1970-71 and Dr.
Habert B. Carlaen.
1971preaent; Dr. Bcmald Bellioario

rr-.

worbd Oil alpha BUbunit twe ,_, 1971 to the ~
All of the tools .-1, wbidl
were de'lelopod in U/8 labono(Conlimwi on_. 3, col. 5)

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~mGnd~~-----------------------------------

(Coftlill.-1 t.:O,.- 3, eoL 3) '

for both fMIIuatiCil of old pro- allocatillll ol tbc.e ID
maladies. "'There is no question grams aDd applOV8I • ol new prosniiD8 ..t.ere .,.,.,u.,.,.,., .,..,
.
that a drive for ezcellence is ones call for prepanotioo of a be eq&gt;ected."
required " in tenns of high ad- detailed program daK:ription;
Where ..., eliminmissions' standards, cballenging on-campus evaluation by facul- ated, the Seaate ..._
c:ourse work and a signirlC8Ilt ty, ~duate studen"!
ad- SUNY Central abould have
com pone n t of. independent o:wustra~; aDd en tical on- funds to facilitate rea.-tiCil of .
scholarly act i v 1 t y. At the SJie reVJeW aDd ftlCilllliDI!D&lt;- faculty and find CJpl!lliDp for
SUNY Colleges where they are tions frofn a panel of ~ graduate studeDts at olber in·
the highest degrees offered, evaluators. 'The system JS sun- stitutions.
'The Chancellor's committee
master's programs should serve ilar to that now used in U / B's
report makes other s p e c: if i c:
as an important intellectua) Graduate Scbool
catalyst but they can do so
"Weak programs should be recommendations concerning
"only if academic rigor is re- eliminated where they are not tbe status of existing propams:
quired" the s-.. n a t e report vital to the institution &lt;&gt;&lt; the cloae evaluatillll of educatillll
cautio~ •"Ez.oellence at the graduate education sy~" graduate programs aDd the
undergmduate level cannot be the Senate report says, "or expiD&lt;ation ol alternative -.a,ys
espected if the master's degree where strong programs are rea- of aotisfying teacber certificaprog•ams have low standards, sonably available in public or tion needs; consideration
poor morale, and an inferior private institutions. W h e r e of the ba:lanc:e of the disreputation." At institutions weak but needed programs are . cipiinary profile ol graduate
where both master's and doc- identified, additiODBI resources programs in the SUNY sy-.,
torates are offered, the Senate required to build sln!ngth must as a wbole and within recioos;
of
group says, "The master's de- · never be obtained by reducing consideration of limiting
gree must not become siJnply support for other needec;l. pro- Ph.D. in disciplines
a consolation award for those grams. . . . Instead, additional where the employmeot rDilll&lt;et
unable to complete Ph.D. re- funds must be obtained by is limited, and emphasis ... coquirementa...
eliminating the weakest and operative stratepes between
Senate committee procedures least valuable programs, and camPuses and IUDIIIIC depart.

!"""

me

'within..:..:;.,:~=
"'to
foJOter
• · · ..
ud
llladirs."
Ull .~
._
C&lt;JncemirJ&amp; ~
1.

of -

tile

graduate
ceJloo&gt;s
ftllOI't
r

a-..

k:

LifliDir ol tile _..........

...2.appoowil
Appronlofof- o D -I y tbc.e
new wbida are _ .
demicalJy inDovaiM, llDCially
needed &lt;&gt;&lt; for wbida &amp;pecial reSOWCI!S

3.

are available lac:ally.

FlmdiDc o l a e w -

from within a .,.._.s pre.iJ..
in&amp; ft!9DUJ'CeS (by elimirwtinc
other
ing faculty
I i aDd
Des re-allocataDd resoun:es) .

4.. Ricorous pmcodures, pajodic review of -.red

faculty, aDd ~ lar
early retiremmf - lar -.red
faculty to .......... ..........._
DeDbility in uiilir:ation of r-.
ultyrellllUI&lt;a."
IDlemlsof~co­

opemtiau, tbe Chancellor's

&lt;WEEKLYCO~QUE

an2y"'--. ,._-............

O()pon "' . . . - ;
•OOpM .. of . . 1-...i;,;
.Open
----.an~..,......_

THURSDAY-20
IH'I'I!aP'DBONAL

OOliiiU'JrfJCAt'K:

• Uf• Wdrh.r.op, 232 H - .
7 : 30-9 p.m.

SUIIJIOa I'ILII I H aT I 'I' U T &amp; ta;TUD• • : V1ldimir Petrie. ~~~
oor, ~ of n-tre. HMio,

Film ond TeleorioioD. ~

¥..,......,

y~ Politir:GUy ·~

Film in Socialial
~

o n d - of Orason Ni?ro?ic'o Wloon I Aa D«MM
and W/Uk. 140 Capen. 8 p.m.
IOCrt llDSJc:AL• : Touo\ , tbe hom Ployen. 233 Non..., 8 : 30
p.m., odmiaoioD c:hup.

""""'" ' HIDlkrw (Marohall.

~~)~~en:;;~&amp;:..=.!

!:s.,~8ma' ~~1~ ~
(M~
1969) , Spoco and p_,_- U.

Spo/ktl &amp;ciwcnlo

PtJintUJ6

(Mcl.aagbbm. 19 6 II),
147 Diefeodorf, 8:45 p.m.

FRIDAY-21
m.&gt;r• :

Two~

lDilD), ComeJeDCe

too. cbec:k

Outt1oor Poetry
This -

air, -"1 ..-., last Tllonay, the
In the ....._•• "Sumnw I'Ootry - . . _ " The

F----...-~_....,111
2 P·'".
'

Alternatives s~ Set
A symposium on alternate
life styles, religion and vocations is being sponsored by Life
Worla!bops this weekend. 'The
Friday evening aDd Saturday
JIIOCl8lll will explore opportunities open to those Who want to
_ _try different ways of life.
TEI.DHOH£ DIIIEC'rolrY

~ of

the 1972·73 Uni·

WISIIy Tolephono Dirwc:tofy Is , _

• - woy •• • coopomtve projoct

of UNwBity Publlcotlonl Servlooo
the Personnel Olllco. Deport·

-:::::-'
..::::~~== ':. ~
....,_lor--up..... -.motionlotoberw-

....... ID the ,........,.. Olllco on
....... Jul)' 30. lndMdual lilt-

-

---be-·---

~

lor olmilor updotinc. A
-"141 I r - r y Is pro......... the ............ dlrwc:tofy.

'The symposium will becin
eveninc with a aeries of

Friday

vert.! aDd written eD!n:i.a desip&gt;ed to ''loca!D up" _puticipanta aDd ha.ve tbom think

=

about their valua Participants'
~ aDd .mlitiorJ for disal..._ti_ will be ezS.turday ,m o r D i D &amp; three
......._ will he oftered-Alternati'l!'ll to Inotituta.l Relidon; Altamali.ve Life styles
(HoW to Live and With
Wbam); ud AJten.tiYe Vocatiaaa. 'l'ber!e ......._ will he
- t e d Salurd.y aftemooD.
ID-...d -.ben of the
Uniwnity ~ty.,.., t-rePoler for tile A l S)'IIIIIIJiium by c:alliD&amp; -.. 2511
... by - - . . ... Roam 225,
NodaoL 'lbe QJIIIlllllium is
'-ofcbarp. ' AB....._.are

daaalill&amp; their time.

BladtDp (Hell.

n-tre. Nor-

ahowc.e for limeo..

rTUESDAY-25
DUUlC ...... .........,, •

aMp, 232

H-.

3

LiJc
p.oL

w-.
THURSDAY-27

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

.Enrollmeit
Down from

New&amp;rord

LastYmr
Summer Seo&amp;ioas emoilment,
8,316---doom
12.69 per cart •from last year,
the Ollice ol. Admissioos and

as of .IUDe 1, Records

~

'There _..,

6,180 ~ students eliroiJed at
that time, almost 1,000 fewer
than last year, Evening students totalled 2,136 - d o w n
11.52 per cent from last year's
2,414.
A further drop of 35.50 per
cart indicated for tbe secODd ....,..;.,., ll&lt;lCOitiin&amp; .to tbe
AAR~

-

_ __ . ___
....

Decreased funding and loug-'
a -.ion Jeuatb are tbe major
, _ behind the decline,
. 1 - Bladdlwst, director of
Summer Sessioos, ssys. How"""'"· he that fins} figures for the secoad ......non are
not in yet and aome upturn is
anticipated.
Tbe fins} olficial Summer
Sessions Registration Report
will be available sometime in
tbe nert few weelts.
Tbe drop in registmtion reOected so far predicted by
Blackhurst when Albany sharply cut swnmer school funding
in tbe spring. Most of this
money was returned in tbe
supplements! budget but major
dsmage bad already been done;
tbe second session had been
completely cancelled before tbe
fwxl rest.orstioo. It was "reinstated as best we could," Blackhurst uplsins, but by then it
was too )ate_ Tbe loss of time
required a 15 per cent cutback
in course offerings.
Another reason for fewer students, Blackhurst ssys, is the
" double" tuition increase being
felt this year, Tbe Board of
Trustees' latest increase was effective at the beginning of this
summer, while last year's bikes
came too late for summer sess ions. Bolh are reflected in lhis
summer's- charges,
While the particular factors
behind tbe enrollment decline
are tmique to U / B, the phenomenon of diminishing summer enrollments is not.
In fact, tbe WaU Street Journal reported this week, schools
aU over the nation have been
adverti,sing their scenery and
weather as part of a "fieroe
competition" for tbe estimated
summer student pool of some
one million,
"Berkeley advertises t h e
'California summer' wilh its
'perfect .....ther.' Tbe University of Maine says its 'recreational opportunities are endless.' Tbe Univenity of New
Hampshire boasts 'room to
~ out, quiet lakes, tbe
ocmn, mountains and clean
air.'"

Fri!JJre Fizzles

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

......,., _ _ _ a . ' t l l e - -

I

I

&amp;me Fee;
Are Hiked

--

(C01tliml&lt;ed on -

2, coL 2)

Library Post.

Search On

-

Endaoed Choirs
"'-.,

A !IIM!IHDI!IIIhe oammittee
to conduct a "national -..:h"
and recommend' candidates for
the positioo of director of University libraries ha been ap. pointed by President Robert L.
Ketter. Dr, Myles Slatin, who
boiS held tbe post since 1968,
recendy 8IIDOUIICI!d his intention to resipl as of 8eptember
1.
Dr. ~ BohiDski, dean of
the Scbool of Information and
Lihnuy Studies wbo will be
acting director of University
Libraries, wiD chair tbe commi.l.
tee. Other aiembers include:
Mrs. Madeleme Stem, associate lihlarian, Lockwood Library; any B. Wenger, associall! h"brarian, law Librsry·;
.laaepb RouDda, director of lhe
. ' . BaiWo 111111 Erie County Pub• (~--ll. ,coL2)

�. -~PolrrE~ ·-

2

Leslie Fiedler Goes Too Far Beyond:
(Beyond theValley_of the DOlls':
.

.

t

.

i$ threatened. And, of course. background for ihe screening.of ·
there in living color :u-e those a Russ Meyer satire. '!be only
It's one of the schlockiest wild Hollywood parties every thing miSsing :was the popcorn.
.
. It was a carnival. There was no .
movies around. Beyond the single night.
I t's exactly the kind of movie need to ·sort ll\lt ~ symbolism ·
Valley of the Dolls has no reand delve for meaning. Every-.
·to
see
time
·
a
nd
again
you'd
go
deeming features. no saving social values. It's the king of for pure escape but wouldn't thing. hung. but and was Spelled
.
those old Hollywood films that dream of recommending to any oul· The hero's eyes were too
trip over trite phrases and · of your friends.' Leslie· Fiedler big and · blue, tbe maiden aunt
clutch cliches. But that's ·ex· would, though. He showed . the was too kind. and her laWYer
·
·
acUy what makes it so much filin last Thu'r sday evening as was too evil. . .
fun to see. It's funny- reaUy .a "treat" to himself as part of . Wbleen~':tall:~~
.
the Summer Film Institute. peop
funny.
_1 . · ••
The big bosomy nympho- Hundreds showed up. Whether the real world,
When Fiedler s t l&gt; o d up,
maniac blonde wants to make it was Fiedler who drew th~
everyone
·
cheered
because
tbe
over-capscity
crowd
or
the.
film
·
"it" everywhere--&lt;!Xcept in bed.
The. Senator's daughter gl!ts in- itseU is moot ·since together folk hero bad just been ~eared
of
the
marjjuana
charges
.
.
Be,
they
were
a
winning
combinavolved with a lesbian because
sides, after· cheering tbe_people
this woman "'is the oDJy. one tion of summer theatre.
in
the
movie
it
jUSt~
nat.The
whole
.scene
was
a
"total
··.
who understands me." T h e
liandsome · y o u n g blue-eyed environment" happening. The
hero leaves his wheelchair to sardine conditionS; the ,smoke ~etol~~ ~- ~~­
walk again because a girl frio:pd and heat created the perfect erice's p~ arid _ei.joyment"
with the film. ·said it was ·a .
cool filril, put hili stamP llf aP. proval on 'di~ging- il .Yop ,
· ·
·
· · should just ebJOY mov_:ies ·at .a :
(Continued from page· 1,_col. 1)
. tion Metals;" . C. D. Ritchie, gut ·level and ·n ot· worry aboUt
Faculty of E111ineering and cheinistey, $9,500; PRF, "Nu- the literature .and the art and
Applied Scie~es : H. _T. &lt;;!'-!1- cleophilicities and Ion Pairs;'.' · the histOry. of the · period to
linan, chemtcal engmeenng, C. Chou, mathematics, $6,500, tinderstand the 'film, be said.
$25,100 from NSF for a study NSF, ''Algebraic · Theory for He debunked the whole myth
of· "D i r e c t Measurement of Amenable Groups and Related of needing four y~ of college
to really . understand a SaturThermodynamic Properties;" Analytic Problems."
P . E h rll c h,. $33,80Q, N~J.".
Faculty ·of Social Sciences day matinee. •
. ·
"Structure and Paramagnetism· and· Administration: C. DaughBut then be started to tsJk .
of Conjugated Macroradicals;" try, social policy, $92,026 from about the underlying -~
W . . N . Gill, chemical engineer- SRS for "Social Work Field stulf and· the values m the film
ing, $40,000, NSF, ~ 'Mixing Progl1'ffiS;" W. Gt'e!'ne;' urban and that blew it. The mood ·
Properties of Materilll and extension; $62,475, State Edu- evaporated; the audience poe.
Thermal Pollution Sources;" . cation Department, "High~r keted ita emotions, stifled its
E . T. Selig, D . c·. Wobschall, Education Oppo~ties f o r gut feelings and started -.)nee
civil engineering, $29,953, Na- Comm.unify Service Workers."- · more . to , analyze _. ever)' little
t'ional- HighW!IY Research, "Inframe· of film. ·
. .
stnunentation for. M o i s t u r e
Fiedler knew. be blew it and
Measurement;•: A. S. Gilmour, ·
&gt;aid· so later on. But that was
.. ·.
.
.
7; . . . .
·. . .,
. .
electrical engineering, $550,000, (Contiliued from page 1, col. 5)
after' some of the ·resident left. Rome Air Development, ·"InterCharles E. Noyes of the Uni- ist/ revolutioriaiy/radicals stood
"Tlie
Iii- bond" th8 - ·they
SYstem Communications-'- versi.ty of MissisSippi, .pre8i· . up to . ·denounce this ,"bour· · lntroc;IUCOd 8fl!l' durt,. !Mir twO-cia, otancl In- Nomin IDt - · .
Elec~nics;" D . T. Sbaw; $26,- dent· of the National· Associa· . goois . decadence," b I owing
·e~~~~, the Buck1J Gily anci .J~~Dior Weill ..,;up
IMt
850, ONR, "Correlation Analy·
.
S
Sess1005
·
·
things even more.
·
.''bl.,..··11 -.utlfUI," . And
a ·winn ium~o nlcht- .
15
.
.
.
- .
.
ses of Turbulent Plasmas;"· J · tion 1 ~er
'
But When it was good, it was
G: Hall, $40,000, QN_R, ','Un' ,9uo~_)Yth
.· th!',_t_our~~~- fl!IY:
·ooa·' ... ·
steady .Vi8cou, :F1oWs;'' :-.-. ·.· f.li ·"'!l"'"· ..,~~ wuyU&amp;i~are- SQ : very,_veey_ g
:
School of' Dentistry : J . A_ ·-· desperate for •!"""'~r fees
.
.
.
..
.
..
English, oral biology, $558,300 t.lu!t ther, are domg . al1D9St :
·.u_· r.
. ~ -~
;..;..~--.-v.
_ f.K,f
rnrlUA:J
-1-n
.. Jl• 1.tlJ.JK
A
. r_-,J-,..
:
_
,..-from NIH for a study of "Tech- anything to get studentsf ~.JU{J,t
'U
~/1
nical and · Behavioral Evalua- ·
That anythil}g, : a Journal
tion of Preventive. Caries Pro- .roundup in&lt;!icates, includes '!,.as . -. T.n
·.
·-m eer·
,
m g ·-, VJ.:. · ~~ -.;.,.
· ~ ~1
cedui&lt;!S."''
. ·
·
.Vegas and _ Grand Ca.nyon 1.1
~L(}{~
~
. School of He al t h Related W"&lt;;keti&lt;!s being _off~red by the
ProfessiOns : J . .W. Perry, $44,- Untverstty of Anzona, a course · New departmental appoint.- ing after seven·· yeanf of em· .school ad minis tra tor and
'796 from NIH for A IIi e d in ·mountain...;limhing at the menta in the Faculties · of En- pl_o yment with ·the :Ford Motor taught, on the university· level,
Health Special Improvement; University of Colorado, and a gineering and Applied Sciences Company. He holds 14 patents · theory about how to teach: He
H . E . Flack, $94,984, NIH, for Berkeley ad in student new&amp;- ( FEAS) a 'nd Educational and is ·author -:o f more tlum 60 · has also contributed to·- mony
Consortium for Allied Health: papers around the country lea- · Studies vf e re announced by : scientific papers. -.
.
texts and prepared .teaching
Distidvantaged Studen ts· H. turing a "curvaceous s:oed in a 'President Robert L . Ketter thjs
In Education,, Dr. Eugene I,... · films. _He is assistant editor of .
Lees, $37,153, PHS, Graduate Bikini" as _a rom~. NYV: is week.
-Gaier will become ·chainnan of The ArithmetU: Teacher.
Program for Medical Techno!- e~~en offermg_ ~ tnp to Cht~
In FEA_S•. Dr: · Irv'ing ,·H. the Depa~tmentof_,Education_81 _
Prior ' to h'is _appointment
ogy.
·
next summer-tf you enroll m Shames will c!'ai~· _the De_part- Ps~chology, effecttve ~tem- with Georgia State; Dr. Ril!de-School of Medicine : C. E. its Asian Studies cou~ . this ment of Engmeenng Scumce . ber 1, and Dr. C. Alan Rtedesel seJ was directo~ of the Center
Arbesman, $57,470 from NIH summer.
: ior a· three-year 'period which has_been named· director !'f tlie for- CooPerative ~ with
for study of '·Reaction to Sting·
Noyes gOes on to ·. explain began July 1, and Dr. Sol W. Office of Teacher Education.
· Schools -at Pennsy-lvania State
ing Insects."
that the pool ·of summ•; •.tu- Well~r will Sl!rve_· a. one-y"!'r
-Dr. _q aier joined . the_ U/~ 'University. ·He has also tit.Uf!bt ·
Basic Health Science De· dents, which grew fro111 five to · appomtment as acting chair· faculty m 1960 after: set:VtDg.on at Kansas State -U:niY'ffl!•ty;
partments:· P . E . Bigazzi, im- ten per. cent annilally during mari _o f ·the . pt.pa_rtment of the f'!cuipes of tbe _University State University. ot l&lt;lora~ and
munology, $78,000 from NIH the 1960's, has levelled· off, in- Chemical Engmeermg, effec- of Illino~. Vanderbilt, Lowst- -the State Univeraity 0111lege-at
for " Immunological' Studies on tensifying . the competition.
·tive SePtember 1. ~ ·
· · an:a State and · as ·a Fulbright PLattSburgh. He received his
Steroid-Producing;" E. Koenig,
The economic recession and · · Announcing the 11ppointc Profe6sor of Social. Psychology B:A. from Cornell College, Ml
physiology, $21,065, NIH, · a general disenchantment with . ments, Ketter expressed ronfi- at the.'Univer8ity Of Helsinki in VemQn,- Iowa, and his M.A" Neurotrophic Control of Sar- hi¢li&gt;r education are cited . as denc;e that the sel~t\ons, tee·_ Finland .. He recei~ed ~e B.A. and Ph.D. degrees f-rom the
colemmal Molecular Plastic· reasons.
ommended· b.Y'FacUlty .Provost from Bucknell ·Uruverstty, the . UniVersity o( Iowa.
ity."
. .
William .N:. Gill and Ul B Vice MA -from State University of.
, Clinical Departments:· H . A. C!---'L C'.-301,.,;...,.
_. ;...
President for ACademic· Affairs Iowa and tlie Ph.D. from the ·
Sultz, social and preventive ~ U.L vut'
Bemaid ' R. _ Gelbaiun, ' would University Of Chicago.
.
·· · :
·
medicine, $31,814 from PHS
· ::-· • ·
-..eimaiice ·the _qitality of their
Ann~g, lh'e appointnient ,
Q..;.• · ·
for a ·study to "Define Concept (Continued /(om Pill• -l; col. S)
'deparfmelita." ·
in a letter ·to, ;Dr. ~er. P.resi- ;
lllpUter Ol;~
and Test and . ~t · Pro- lie I,.ibrary; ,Dr: LOwell ~· Dr. -.Shames. w·!l-o · replaces .dent Ketter ~d; "you certain· ·
·
cedures for Developmg IAcal feld, professor -Of mathematics ' Dr. Tsu-Teh Soong who ·is re- ly must . take satisfaction in ·
'1'1....-....l'----------..l
'Area Community Health PrD-&lt; · and ¥=an· 'F!'cillo/ -&amp;nate tUrning to a professori&amp;J j)osi- being the unique choiee of your : 1
J.H:Llll:il~~
files."-'
.
·_· Colli!"'~~ . on Librafleo; Mrs. tion, came. · to . U/B · iii 1962; department and I am cOnfident I
Faculty of Natural 'Scie~ces - Ann WtllianiS, !'- ~ Jrad"!'te .after serving on the ~ties of that your . RI*{oi'IIIIIDCii! WiJ;r
~ ~t _of, Co!Dput.- .
~ and Mathematics : M , Roth- -Of. ~ School.~ Iiifonnation Pratt Institute, !!tevens Insti- justify their..~-~ ·
•
er ~ has bam tnmaf~
BteiD, biology, $204,487 from . and .Library Studies and a law -tute of Techiiol!'IY; NaYal Qril- - The author of more than 9Q . offic!ally. from tbe _Fiu)Wty "!. NIH for "Studies of Aging in a stuEd~~- ~_pr.ofTbomaatbe
LeamJ; nance LaDoratoly And .t be Uni· publications irl various fields 0~ . E~ ~-• A~;~; .
Nematode Model System;" F . . w~--. wnocwr·.
• Ver'aity of MarylaQd;
,
J.&gt;SYchology, Dr. Gaier ia a ' ences to tbe .,.....,..ty of -~~a-,..· ·
· wno~~, chemistry, $9,500, PRF, tng C&lt;!lltet.· .' .; . ,·
· '· He is '!"tbor of 12 pubti~;' _member Of· tbe Am,rlcan and ' ~ and ...'l.fherQatie{l, J(- .
-stud¥ and Application of the
In a letter :10 tbe. poup, - ti0118 'and 18 weD ~ for hiS ·. Eastern i'Bychological· Assciclal ; fectiW! iD;uDediinely~.
,~.
a..m;.try of Stahle · Radical Presideilt Ketter llllbd ' tliat a te#boQb ~ inOre dian a · ·~ Educational Research -· approved earlier u:~ 1he'
-.
catiaall and Decations;" G. M . . _''national ~ 'Iii!. eooilucted ~- milliOb letudenla ha-.e : Aaaoclati'"' arid tbe :.{-n...rl ~s.:=,te.
;.,.bf;.•
lllrrie,chemistFy,$3,000,ARO, ·. w find tbe beat-- ~ -ala~ ·studied.·
:
·_ :.;:. - . ·Aasociati'"' of UnivefiiitY~ J
l-&amp;bertL.~- ~"'Dardination .and Activation '.'Of· candidat4!-~this.-.tim. . · :pr..Weller~ _loetintbe ·eb- feeoo.i:a.
.._,_ • . · . .- Week. .
, - __• . · '·.•'•
_
ftiSmallMoleculea~Ttailai-. portant-~~
.
· .. 81101!1i ril ·!i'!t; . ~t -·· Dr. Riedeael ' com·ea~11J
&lt;Amam-aadielbllt;Dr. ·.
· - .·
.·. ·
. · . · .-·
CbililmU . ; -~ "1\. CuJ!,i- GeOflia State UDhelillty'
· · An~ Raw-, ~- ftl ·
be '-' · ~ fll ew&lt;j.. tbe ~..,.
iDclll&gt;'
Dt'\DTJ::D ·_. ·. · , . · la'!ll- He jaa ·
8lltb- rlculuiii Ull biiliuctiaa and tiao ~ J!!m~ -- u d
.·
~· -~n:'-&amp; ~ ·- . .
·· . oiii;J - GI(~ . . _ llooni!Da\Odouu~. ed- ' 'lbat'lbeJ.iiii;i;i;; • -- -• ·
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Rqoder St•ll

Research Set Records-

EnroJJ_m_ent-.

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July 13, 1912_

Managemffit Is .rpoetry FestiVal.' Begins Today With
On Its Own. ~ Ope·.n .LT}nrv~;n;;
atNorfDn:s FOUllJ:Liin
~ '5·

.wNYPIRG

._ ~~~~~

okiiJs,
ideas about cleaniuc up the-llh!ft;of the School .of
· .
·
.
'
·
·
·
vironment or are intereBied in
Manaifiliiebt lrOm -the Faculty
A Summer · Poetzy Festi~al, · 1968, whose worl!o has appeared tOnight Fel&lt;!man is a U / B working oo CllDSIIII8" or .,.._
o( SpeW SCiei&gt;ais arid Admin- co-sponsored by the UUAB
in Poetry, Beloit Poetry· Joiu- graduate &amp;t\ldent who has been vironoiental.........., WNYPIRG
istralion to an· indeperideot ·Literary Arts 'Committee and nal, Choice, and'seveml anthol- published in the Co_lumbia Forloolringthe
W
- -for
_you.N-~Pubstatus in wbich it reports · di- tbe English ~t, gets , ogies. On-the program at 4-p.m. . um. He is author of a collection
~- ......
rectly to the Viele President for under way at 2 p.m. today with ~ James Paul, a r:ecent U / B of poems, The Household. lie interest Re.an:h Group, a .
AcadOmic: AffairB was ~ of- an open' poetzy reading iii the jfraduate whose work is forth- .' Finri's work in Audit is his firSt Nader-iDsi&gt;ire!d studeot poup .
ficial last week b:v. President vaJNo~.!'.._ouncontaintiDue
. Court..._!_~-· coming in .Antioch·. R e v i ·e w, publication. He worl&lt;s as a tree that _ _ . to "wad&lt; within
·Robert Ketter. Adminisfrative
~~w
_.......,..
Ordrfdos ;Ant h o l o g.y, and surxeon on Long, Island.
the .mating educa~- aad .
approval of the cbanl:e, en- Tuesday, July 25.
Choice•. · •
. ·.
. British po,et Rnthven Todd, social systems to anal~
dorsed earlier 'by the FaaJ!ty
Max Wickert of the English
In case,· of· bad weatbe_r,. this visiting lectUrer in the J;;nglisb help solve Western New Yook"s
8&lt;\llate, came •·~aft,ec: ~ve . I)epartment will· be master of afternoons program will be Department, · w i 11 present a p~ problems in a u d l and e&gt;&lt;hau&amp;tl9e .Cxmsultation ~remonies for this aflemoon's · held in the. Conference Theatre, reading- at 3 p.m.,. Tuesday, as eDviroamentaJ jNE&amp;!IVatiaa
with all relevant and -aJrected ·. """"tat which all campus poets . Norton. ·
.
'July·- 18 in the Colife......,... and OOII8IIIDel' ~"
anita;". Ketter . ezplained. He .AJ'll invited . to ~ their. work.
A "J?ebilt ~ for A~it Theatre.·' -At 8 p.m. the ':.;;;; _ ~ spring the. ~ .·
wished the' ' Scbool "good for- . At 3 p.m., the FestivaJ will pre-· ·Magazine -.Wlth Alan Feldman day Michael ~ author obtained endorsement aipla.tune in your bew role." .
. . - t Slueela Ray,. 'flnner of the _ apd·Mike Finn" iii slsted for the . of Wesle)'l!ll Poetzy series' The tures of •a ppnmimately 50 per
Tbe return to. ·autonc;my 18. New York .(D~sclo""ry· Award,' _ Co
__ nference Theatre -at 8 p.m. Body · li!Jd other O!Jiumes .of cent of the Ullderp.tnate - the result of .six Y!'llfll of. elfOrt
will take the Coot
dent body and ...._.;.ed
of MaMgement
Benedikt
· by the Student A....;atiaa
.Iri
lost sep- ·
.
·
.
-.
a_ frequent con.
. tributor of_ cn_
..ti- Now · the group plans to Bb1rt
. 'llitien 8aadeoiic res
active research into area prob,-.-c1iviaeii by fOrmer
:;':-'="'of
lems. Tbe primaiJr COIICI!ID ia
·Pn.ident ' Maztin · Mqeraon
l;.l~
. . ~ .,
_ ogteS of modem drama.
"getting peopl'e to
A fall iraduafAl sludenf fee · North iMrato Food Co-op imd .
A
open poetzy
.
tration.
.
.
· . of $!!.50 for fullctil!&gt;e students the U!B Day Care Center.
ing in the Norton · FOuntain
A general · meeting will be
'l1ie cbanl;ed ' .status is being . "was .APProved by the_Senate of · :'The increase ~ds :to part- Area, Monclay, ·July · 24, at 2 beld soon to determine what
_
watched dcisely by many. Some ~ - Graduate S!&gt;Jden~ ~- time students wbo will now pay p.m., leads into a featured read- specific isoues abould be
5
·.
le feel thilt the schools of . tion (GSA) M~ rught at $6.50 per semester.
.
.
ing by Pol Ndu,' Niflerian poet, alilined Among.,_ ol.inler·
'~tec;ture and Enviromnent- ·.i ts·finrt IIUIIIIIH!l: meeting. But a
The fig_bt was especially b1t- author of Go!gothiz. He has est a 1 readY mentioned are
· Info-ti'on and Li- ·brisk Ooo.r fight OCCIIlied· be- ter since 1t came after the Sen- . been published in the New _.._.., __ ~
t _.
.,
al ~:
........gn,
·~Social POlicy . - fom . •L·__ _. a to rs wem told about
decreased y ork T !l7leS
'
Li terary SuppteI
~"' -~
· . brary·S!Udies
and
..;., mcreilse ·was ,_....,...
.
pOllutioo laws and
wodtinc
for
_.. and Community . ServiCe~! may ... Tbe GsA ofticers puShed for,· ~olar Incentive -Funds and - ment, T"!"', and the antho~, stricter environmental legislaWisli to wllow · Management's :the !'Xtra. $2 per student, citing incre!JSed graduate 8 tude!' t New Afncan Poets· (}'engum) . . tion. Members of WNYPIRG'a
Iliaci: -·u ·this -happens, specula- increasing· costs. ManY Sena- fees ... John Greenwood, ~ce
AnthOny Hecht. Piilitzer board of directors a r e - to
~on is that' a ·~ Profes-·.: tor&amp;, ; _however, _demanded ·a . Pj~1= 1~:t::£t :,:W~ Prize · winner in poetzy, 1970, ·other suggestions; however.
stOOal School Faculty .ma)' be &amp;pecific. ~lanation of where
fees that will be ~ ~in-J'!!Sidence at ~
Tbe group is particulady in: formed._ 1be -dean-s, of the_ the additional fuilds would go. raised o~ ·- levied foi: the first l,Jruve!"•ty .of Rochester, will terested in wlunteerB cspahle
. ~Ia . · ~ · . ~ to . · · Fon'ner GSA treasurer Fred · time this fall (see stbry p . 1 ), read · m the Conference The- of doing c:hemicsl analysis and ·
~ Offi~y on -this - - Kaiser, c:hemistz-y, explained . arid told of cuthacks in scliolar- ·atre, a t !! p.m., Tuesday, July people willing to do aample
81bility1 however._ . ·
·
the fiacal _setup .to the : group . ship fundilig. Earl Sidler· im- 25,: as the filial program in the collection;
· .:Now that M~ement ·has Several tiines. He.outline4 the tliropotogy, complained of dif- Festival. He. is author of A .• U ·you are willing to 1l'OI'Ii:
mbveil,- the ~"IS"!!"" for ltle·. s1uire of the fee . that .B'1"'!'•.to ficulties in obtaining · informa- Summoning of S .t on u , '!'he _with . WNYPIRG or have. iugF~~ ·of ~ ~en.,..._ a¢ . Sub· Board I for Uruver&amp;~ty- tion about National Defense · Hai-d HOW'8, and other volumes 'IC!I'tions of . , _ they lbould
~pqa~on ~ ~Hol1ts . wide sbldeDt activities plus the. Education. ACt (NDEA ) loans. of verse . and - is featured· in loOk .lnto; .pte,u,e cootact Katie
name &lt;ovost ""' ""'w~
- · tema1 portion :.that "'-"'"- tor These· two re!&gt;!&gt;rt&amp; eased pas- many
anthologies.
·
SimOn ·at ~125'7 or go to the
. OL Ld' ·.
•L:• ..,:_ :bcien "dis-' m
All events.in.•"" .Festival -are .'IInJVUYD,. .of6ce in 361 NcX-~
"";:"'Y"
~-~~:.-~- ,..__ .. GS.O. - - Iii addition, he """e elf a . :motion made by .
· w.,
.,. .. •• ......;.b!Jt 18 .,.,.._..,..,.. ~.-...ry •·llllid; the graduate ' Btud""t or- Mlchael Nicolan, civil engin- free and .open to' the-public.
ton.·
.
. ~ikely. at. the-.moinenl ~ · ganization fun!h. D11111Y c;lulis eering, calling for an-investiga. pomts · outembe111at ~"'the...,.
and several projects such ~the' tion by ·t he GSA Executive
faculty m , . rs m . . . uru .
, ·Committee o( both the cut-who .8.!" ·ve!'Y· m~~ m ~
FIEDlER CLEAI!ED
.. backs in sCholarship funding-.
~::!,tid~~- The narcotics convictions of Or. and th~ in~ in fees.
·CIO
· ylogy,· Political'
Science 'and Leslie Fiedler and his wi.fe were ·
In other. .actio!JS, GSA YO~
.
, ·
·
. to rcH!l&lt;8lllllle club DJelllben;hip
Psychology:. He . doesn t rule overturned last week by Now York qualifications with the intent
• out 8 mtum chang:e, ~ever.
. state's Court. of Appeals. . The ofof who
Erlglish professor was charged
is a
. . ..J . . .

.n;;;

JSJS:

GSA Fall ActiVity. Fee

b~~~~-l!lcbo9l:
~

~ ....

Is
' '" fu~~_"-,..Jto $9·50·

,;;,rood

6

"ti!t ·

.

•
SILS Gams

with maintaining premises ythere

marijUana
andarrest
hashish
The
original
tookwere
pla·cused
e in.
·
·
· ·
- - --Af&gt;ril-of--l.-967-t&gt;UHegal battles ·c~e~
A ~~~..l!J..~ -. laye&lt;! sentencing _until May 1970.
1"\.lX.l~LC:iL.l\J.l.a.
At that · time, Fiedler . was senUTB School of
tenced to six mo~ths in t~ Erie
tion .and LibrarY Studies County Penitentoary and hos ~fe, .
&lt;SILS) haS received aCiliedita- · fi008jl $500 .. }he· Thursday ruhng
tion by the American Library· throw out the se~nces _-because
Association .(ALA l . .· ·.
~'::'.~~~ p::.n.'~o cnme was
The. ~ Committee Ol! Ac·
·

The

.

Informi.- ·.

l)reditation voted the status to

~~earc:::.=:~w!:k
in. ·c I! ka c,o. It · makes 1be
~andooe~ool~ .:'~t:i

~t"~ei;~ci~:,""~ftlte~~~~f:=:::::;;-l

.

and gradililte ·
.and are having trouble getting
funded through either GSA. or
Student Association. The Senators asked that a special cate- .
. gory of membership qualifiC!I·Dons be ·drawn up for these.
.

SBI Delays. Decisim On
Buying aPrinting Press
.

·the dist.inctimi.. A,ppromnately
..
.
~ ot&amp;ers ha've., not yet been
Sub Board I (SBI) at its see" attitude.on sinking money
granle!l aa;reditatioli.
Monday ll)eeting put off any into improving .heslth care on
Tbe aa:redi'-"on, made ret- · -hard deciSions' on ·estalilishing campus: The University/Health
the 1971 72 a prini shop until next spring. Service · iii Michael Hall has
rosctiYe; I?.. . ' lies ·
Tbe bOard IIPProved a motion : asked for $50,000 to- espand
~y~~-de- .which g&amp;Vt&gt;• "low priority" to -serviile!r. SBI,however, has dec-i pJ'O'iram. . · . . · . ~ i~ and asked _for a c:nn; ~~.,!' ~~~en!,~
. Dr· Geo.ft S Bol!in8ki; dean ..._!_an .s_re~!'_!,.!!!:," t spbopenng• . ~•bl!' COUJ1Ie
.
of
_ action.

inch.de

.of the .,...::::. '....::.

ihe

''N tional · • ..., IIIC!"'e ...,............,_~

.=~t!:'- ::C,,
. ~ -.

~

·of setting - up IIClllle kind .of . Given the green J.igbt Moo'-.
printing P!""i'. operat!&lt;m for stu- · day Was an. alumni discouiltJor
... SILS .
it .....r ";dent pllblications Ibis year.
' campus events.. Under the new
the .""'"''
.- "'
· IIIIICe ·
· For several months lbere's
""'"-·· __.__of the . n - - :.
eotBNW&gt;eii·in 1966.
·
· .c:liscwMioli ·a tj qu t ...--~ · """""""'
"'""""
.
·-lthicb could be.'a-'-''if.. . ~tioo will pay the asill!l.
• .,..
rate as · staff· and faculty for
· SBI~ activitieo&amp;. They
will ---~ to-attend

a • .

' ::.-T.!--- ~ ·. l,;~ni=:
·,' . . .

iboonil 'i bat • .cOmmunity;

f:':l:

f::.;

.d:ii~ ~~ni'!!

:Jl:us

an

read~

-me
::r:. -~ ::::::-

�.4

·- _

.

lr11TI3,19~ .

SWdentHousingChrponition
~ 4 Nm-Student Directm;

Four of me ~ nonsiudent members of the tioanl
of dindon of the Scholastic

lfousiD&amp; Corporation, a student-nm. DOD-profit a 1 e n c Y,
have '-n appointed by SubBoenl I. Inc.. the parent student f1SC81 - -1bey are Nelson D . Civello,
housing de\lelopment officer,
Marine MidlaDd Bank w~
ern; Jobn Latona, presideut,
U/ B Foundation, Inc.; D. Garry MUDIOOil, president. Niapra
Frontier H
· Development

Corpolationo;-:::3 J""""' Ryan.
associate dinlctor, Olfice of
Urban Alfaim.
A fifth - t on the board is
reserved for a minority reprelll!lllative yet to be named.
1be four new directors and

some of the student board
members met quietly and with
almost no publicity 1-.t Friday
to approve bylaws anll to hire
Stephen RapbMI, a New York
housing attorney, to act as consultant on lep) matters. A student member of the group,
James Beall, was named interim secreta ry/ cbairman.
Agreement w a s read&gt;ed on
placing ads in natiooal newspapers and professional journals ~ applicants for the
po&amp;ition of executive director
of the corwrstioti. commonly
known as Unicom.
·
In addition to these specific
actions, the directors discussed
~and what types of housing !hey s h o u I d pun:base.
Problems .J!Udt as moving too
quickly, ~ement of bWid-

iop and aelection of - t s
were discussed.

1be board will -

again

August 3 to elect olficera.
Onicom, aet up last ~.
has had a stormy beginning.

Initial troubles r e v o lv e 4
&amp;JOUDd the new group's relationsbip to Sub Boenll {SBI).
Under. the fin a I agreemeril,

studeDt ............. ol the board
were appointed, """' lt!l8ip&gt;ed
for peraonal - ·At the
aame time, the lfousiD&amp; Committee of SBI was havinl
trouble fiDding candidates to
fill the DOIH!Iudent pasta.. In
early J.UDe, a . ~ slate was
diacuaOed by 881,· ~ which
time Housing Committee mem-

~ or":eruJ:,.,..."'C ~'"":, ~~U::

of directors, hut no member of IJ'OUP repre~~e~~tatives. At the
SBrs board can be a member · SBI fDI!!'I:inl of June 26, · An-

; ,~:·· -

n-ae.

free aDd open to the

public. .

.

.IIUBIC COlfc.t'

-~

0

:

· The

·o..m
U. the C1ouico1 Era,
~ Foot.er, orcan, Baird.

ca&amp;ATIR au.n &lt;:ZN'!a* • .: Jewelry: &amp;We Metal Conalructio11. 1·

-4 p.m. E~. 7-10 p.IIL Cero..UC.: Wheel Tlirowinf, 1-4 .P.IIL
· Lemher: Open SMp, 7-10 P.IIL
BOin'ICIJLTUIIE: Booic .Gardening
ond P~t Core, a Life Wor.bloop,
232 Norton, 1·2 .p,m.
PILid"": By the Law (KuleohoY,

~~;,.~!"'rwJl~'146sn:

dod, 7 aDd 9 p.m. Winter Liiht
( Bergman, 1962) . 1-47 Diefendod,
7 p,m. Quick Billie (Baillie, 1971),
147 D iefendorf, 8: 30 p,m. aDd
9:30 P""- Rhy th nuu 21 (Richter,
1'!21). R etour a Ia RaUon ( Man

~~.':~ i~~t.t'A~:f:~
ema (Duchamp, 1926) , 140 Capen. 7 p .m. and 9 p.m.
WOMEN' AND CAREER ALTEaHATIVES :

a

L ife Worluhop, 232 Norton.

7:30-9 p.m.

TUESDAY-18
CltEA.TIVE CllAFJ' CENTEil**; J~J­

ry: Basic Metal ConBtruction. 14 p.m. ETUJmeling , 7-10 p.m. Ceramics: .W heel Th rowing, 1-4 p.m.
DATlNG AND MATING: a Life Work • hop. 232 Norton, 3 p.m.
MODEaN LJTERA.TU&amp;J! SER.t£8: Ruthve n Todd. poetry reac!iJ&gt;c, Conference Theatre. NortOn. 3 p.m.
rn.KS•: No.nook of the North
(Flaherty, 1922) , 147 Diefendorf,
7 p,m. aDd 10 p,m. Anllotec: Et~­
kimo Boy (Canadian National
Film Boanl) , 147 Diefendod, . 8

fA!nS~ ~.'ti:.!r;il!/B:a!l~
1.47 Diefendorf, 8:30 p.m.

00,. ... ........
··Open to ., tho u.w-sKr.
. ..Open...., ... - - • . . . - - lil .tho oulljact

c.- ---· 131-22211, far
THURSDAY-13

-...

IJtJJDIID

I'lL)(

IHB"'''"'"lJ'f I&amp;TUD:

H~ : ·ooc~ond

·m

.

Nalioalll Film Baud)";
Dief.
imdorf, 8: 15 p.IIL Goll ;. Dot

lfi:glf:l8~ ~~

P~'-•'·• (Mcl..a~ 1966),
--•

=~~'D'!td) :'ri:"'tni !:=·~~~lf:

MONDAY-It

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

Dr. Anthooy F. Lorem.etti,
associate vice p~ fOI' student affairs, has beea .....-1 ·
president-elect of the 4,000member New . York State Personnel and GUidaDDe "-&gt;cialion.
.

o.f the housini corporation's thony DiPaulo, .member of the
b o a r d. The fifteen-member Housing Committee, told the
board of directors of Unicam organization that a list of csnis to be composed of l&gt;ight stu- . didates would be n!Oidy at its
dents, two tenants, and. fift nest meeting. 1be next ~•.
He is alao c:w;JeDily serving
non.,students, two of wbom !Jov;ever, DiPaulo and olbers
mU&amp;t .be !Dell&gt;bters . of the Uni- -went to SBI .members asking as ·president ol the Western
versity community.
them to certify a list of four New Yodt PeJ81111Del and GuidLess than tWo months after names for boerd pilsitious: On """" Association.

SUNDAY-16

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

LorenZetti NamOO

Ro-

alanmi, $LOO; otudent., $.50.
Thio will be lbe fifth
of the ais-coocert A1lmliu eerjee
" Malic Acroa lbe Centurieo."
Mr. F~r will be~ by ·Ra• ·

a Life Wor.bloop, 232 Norton,
7: 30-9 P.IIL .
.'

by Mozart, ~aff, J . C. Bach,
ltaycln, aDd Soler.

c1ioc:u.icm of o-~o
When I Am DNJ &lt;Did W!Uk,

WEDNESDAY-19

lOCK KU81CAL" : Touc/o, lbe Poot-

8lJJODa nLK Drl'rll'lJ'B J&amp;TOa:

Vladimir Petnc,

emj of 'Ilieabe,

rof-.r, AcadC,
Film aDd

:1
~; "'&amp;':.j~~o~ . Televiaion, ~ YaaoaJma,
aDd a •trin« enoiomble in worb ~::t..,~~ Fibii. U.. !:i
CII:&amp;A'ftft ar.&amp;rr

1&lt;40 Capen, 8 p.IIL

aana•• : Jewel-

Metal Con.eruction~ 1..4
E~UUr~&lt;linl 7-10 p,m. Ceramra: Wheel Throwin8, 1-4 p,m.
BORriCVLTUIIE: Booic GGrderJin6
ond plant Core, a Life Worluhop,
232 Norton, 1-2 p,m.
smooca EXCUitiiiON: N i a 1 a r a
Fallo, departo 3 p,m., returns 11
p.m., $1.50. Non-U.S . citizens
need paaporto.
FILMB 0 : Silence ( Bergman, 1963) ,
147 Diefendorf, 7 p.m. YeUow
Horse (Baillie. 1965), Quixote
(Baillie, 1964-65), 147 Diefendod,
8:30 p.m. aDd 9:30 p,m. TM
Cloak ( Kozinb!r, Traube111, 1926).
140 Capen, 7 p,m. aDd 9 p.m.
Ballet Mkhonique (Leger, 1924) ,
Emak BaJ.ia (Man Ray, 1927),
Gho•u Befo,-., Brf!Oir/a.t (Richb!r,
1927) , Filchinge Pilms (selection 1929-39) , 1&lt;40 Capen, 8 p.m.
aDd 10 p.m.
PSYCBOKA.T* •: a listenin&amp;' a n d
ry: &amp;aU!

1'""-

speakinc esperienc:e in open aDd

honeot oommunicatjon, 232 Norton, 7-10 p.m.

.

: Touch, the Poothom Playen, 233 Norton, 8: 30

lOCK KU8ICAL 0

p.m., admiooion - - -

THURSDAY..:...20
Curr Cana••:

~

maru:e, John K. SimoD, chairman,
Fnmcb, acreening aDd clioc:u.icm
of Reenaia" H iro•himo MOll
~- 1&lt;40 Capen, 8 p.m.

er: BeU.. 1-5 p.m. Batii; 7-10
p.IIL
.

au.O.:,. POC1"aY nB'nt'AL• : 8 p.m..,
Michael ·Benedikt, .ecrmer-

. ~~lj,_!!? ~:: ~~

ca:&amp;Aftq

nLim•: H~U~Un (M·arah~

hom Playen, 233 Norton, 8:30
p.m.

EXHIBITS
P.u:NTIJrfGS BY OLIVIIt BOifllia, Gallery 219, Norton, Monday-Friday
11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday 2-5 P.D!Throuch A....,.t 4.
.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
50rH A!fN'I'VDSAaY OP I A)( 8 8
JOYCE'S ULY-: '1fJ7 Lockw~

Library, Monday-Friday, 9 ILm.·
5 p.m.
-

~r·~oc:::s=Mc::~:

day, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

NOTICES

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1381992">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451162">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381972">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1381973">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381974">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1381975">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381978">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381979">
                <text>en-US</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381980">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381981">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>n07</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381987">
                <text>4 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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                    <text>~ Tofusts

\'. lnFSSA

..__....,._

__ .....,_

The llbinen ifi.the Law Class of1974
Are Proving Thnt Chnnge IS Possible

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
It didn't tHe male students
aud law f8calty Joac to dis..,..,.. what different about
l.ut year's freshman law daatbere were 50 women in iL
.Fifty out of 200 students
much at fust
~ but .....;der !hat only
(DfiT women graduated in law
tbioiyesr.
&amp; the year unfolded, the
men bepn to realize there was
.....tber d&gt;anp--es one male
put it,"~ women don't take
any . abiL w When letters were
out ...td.-1 to "GeotJ&amp;.
· -.waaeofthewomenwould
.,.,..,..wn. When the standard
"inw ;Me about preJnant
women aud larp! injury aettJe.
...... trntted out, these
women didn't laUJh. Arid what
W88 ......, or better, clependins
on your point of view, of
the women did better aaulemiadly !han their male claasmstes. In fact, in recent ye&amp;n~,
there's t-1 a clillploportion
afllly hiP number of women
elected to help edit the LauJ
R~ honor based ..,

.._.t ......

""- 8buJdins.

In the fall of this year, there
be lllliOihel' increaae in the
Dumber of w om e ..-pproD-

'!ill

mately 60 are ezpected out of
an enterinJ class of 200, the
Law School Admissions OlrJCe
reports. But last year's freshmen women will probably still
be "uniquew and "more together" !han the other classes. 'The
111!88011 has to do with age..
While....., of the group were
recent uildergraduates, many of
tbem had been out of acbool
for anywhere from five to 20
years. For these women, Law
School was the beginning of a
second career. .

..__Why

No one has figured out exactly why the number of women
in the class beyond the traditional ~e qe is 80 high or
why such a Janre number of
tbem started in the class of '74.
'The women themselves give
many different reasons for deciding to embarlt upon three
years of legal llllining.
Ooe middJe..alced housewife
has a husband wbo is a lawyer.
She's "always t-1 interestedw
in sludYinJ law, but wanted to
wait until ber children "were
old ~ w ~r youngest is
now in high acbool

Others have strong feelings
about "working f o r so c i a I

c:banse.. w

'They bad been " in·
volved" in various causes for a

long time but had laund that
the strategies of "revolutionary
change ~ don't work. 'They
decided to "worl&lt; within the
~ystem" and have plans to go
mto poverty, consumer or pub.
lie interest Jaw.
Many were doing graduate
worl&lt; in other areas but discovered these weren't the "real
world."
Some had "purely personal"
reasons. Caroi Burl&lt;e worl&lt;ed
as a model and journalist before beginning a third career.
'Tm a dilettante,'' -she explains,
"and practicing law will give me
access {0 many different
areas .. .. It's already opening
up all kinds of doors . for me.
Besides, I'm beginning to understand how society is run and
that's very exciting." Tricis
Semmelhac:k looked at the profession from a very practical
angle. She has three children
and as a practicing attorney,
"1 have a better chance of relocating easily and choosing my
own bours.w

Cha- In the School

Whatever the reason for it,
the presence of these women

'It Eagle Street has definitelY
tiltered the School, not to men-

tion their own families. 'Ibey've
(Continued on page 2, t:oL I)

SUMMER.,

~PORTER,

STATE UNIVERSITY AT Bl;JFFALO

· NO. 6

JULY 6, 1972

• At a time when are
lbinlring about this summer's
vacation, President R o b e r t
Ketter and members of his
staff are defeudinl[ the Univeraity's bud Jet lor 1973-74.
Tbougb thiS year's budget is
only three months old, U/ B's
budgetary officers have t-1
working on 1973-74 apenditure requests for a Ions time.
And this week, they're in Albany going through the fir8t of
two formal budget beerinp to
justify their wo~
Tbougb SUN Y and the
State require only two formal
budgetary bearings, U / B has
devised a four step p10Ce118.
First, the vice presidents are
asked to prepare their divisional budgets. This year they were
required to file four separate
statements---&lt;lne outlining decreased apenditures, the second a "no growth" budget, the
third dealing with a small increase, and the last using a
larger increeae. This method
forces the vice presidents to
" rank their programs." Executive Vice President Dr. Albert
Somir points ouL since planning budgets requires a great
deal . of input from individual
departments and units, the
heads of these areas also have
to rank their programs. "The
most important element in this
game," Somit aays, "is what
can we reasonably ask for?"
Since the State is undergoing
what the media terms "a taspayers' revolt," this will ''probably mean drawing the belt in
another notch," the ......,mve
vice president explains. Of requested increases, "90 percent
are tied to enrollment incrauJes
. . . there will be little in the
way of improvements or new
programs," be noted.
How "reasonable" these increases and the total budget
are were tested last week on
campus. Last Friday, "mock"
budget bearings were conducted. Four men whom Somit
terms "local budget experts"
acted as a pseudo State Division of the .Budget '-rinJ
panel. University officers who
are now defending the budpt
in Albany practiced their entation&amp; and tried to find
weak areas in their lllJUII*118.
'The four men who were the
"judges" in this simulation
game helped prepare the budget originally and were well
aware of any ~ flaws.
All this p,_mtinn r-1 ita
first real rue yesterday when
.Kettec started his preeentationa to the Cbancellor's lllaff.
He has to "aell" the budget to
SUNY 80 they will defend it
to t!Je. State. Sometime later
this month, the documenta oonnected with this p-tation
will be returned to .Kettec with
a statement outlining the ....,..
Albany will be ~ to aupporL Somit is optimistic that
the changeo will be emall"We have a good feel for what
SUNY will support."
He wouldn't predict, bowever, bow the State Division of
the Budget will view U/B's
proposals. These State bearings come in the fall and are
probably the bnportant Of
all. Budget division ofticers are
well-known for their "red pencil" techniques. In addition,
they usually have little understanding of academic iEues and
concerns. As a .-.It, they
don't always buy iuatifications
thst lack cost aDalysis.
After the Division of the
Budget has fmisbed cutting
and slaabiq, U/B's budget becomes part of tho. SUNY package and then part of the Governor's Budget Measage Fi(Contin.ud·o , . - 3, cot S)

�....... -

.............. u. ............ ,_

\\bmeninthei.awCJ.;m ' 7 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (COIIlinued from I, coL 4)
.pwle professors reaiU&gt;e that
freshman students are no longer
fair game for snide comments.
-Since many of them have ad:'-anced degrees or have had
other careers. they're ·m o r e
likely to stand up for their
rights in class. "One male piOfessor tried to make a joke
about my presence, but that's
the last time be tried it," one
co-ed said archly.
1bey've also had a bulletin
board reaerve&lt;j for their use,
have pointed out .the sexism inherent to Jaw textbooks and
have even made plans to brighten up the hallways, ao to speak.
Before they arrived, the corridors were tined with P.ictures of
judges and outstanding lawyers
--all male. Soon, thanks to Ms.·
Burke, aome portraits of females will join those of their
male colleagues.
This fall, the women will also
change the curriculum. Because
of the efforts of Ms. Semmelhack and Burke, a class will examine the effect the constitutional amendment extending
equal rights to women has on
New York State Jaw. In the
spring, findings from this seminar may lead to the establishment of a Women's Law Clinic.
~lntbeW-

1bese changes in the School
are minimal, however, when
compared to the changes in
the worneo themselves. A1! they
become m o r e familiar w i t h
.

-

HEADS AWMNI

d~offid! wsmr!'wbeJ.:'.:i

"-'ciation will take office in
1973.
Judge M . Dolores Denman
of City Court was elected vice
president and president-elect
of the Association at a meeting
.-.tly.
Current president is John lL
Gridley. Other officers are; secretary, R o b e r t Scbaua. and
lnasurer, Irving D. Brott, Jr.

worl&lt; actively in the courts and
within established firms. But

most of the """"""'- For Ms.
Burke, it bas meant "a whole

new outlook and life style;" for most have "few illusions' about

~~Latona, it's been an "ex- getting this kind of job," Ma.
education in logical Semmelhack My&amp;. 'l'bey realize
thinking," a gosJ which at- that there's still discrimination
llacted her .to Law School or- in the "1!!'81 worl4". and J&lt;qooy
iginally. After her first year, they'll have to face " gallant"
she's found that abe and her
lawyer husband "have much
better discussions."

For the women who have
children and have to maintain
a home, the experience baa also
brought a "crash . courae". in
"rnan8.gement science." In the
beginning, one woman recalls,
"it was a constant matter of
dllCidiog what's going to~ neglected this week." But aa the
term wore on, she and the
others in her situation became
better "jugglers" and found
they could do just as much at
home if they simply organized
their time better.
Another frequent problem is
finding a good baby sitter"someone you csn trust to care
for the children properly."
.Making sure offspring are well
cared for is very important.
"I don~t neglect my children
for my training," one woman
says adamantly.
Cha_.t_
1be women give credii to
their husbands for h e I p i n g
them. They emphasize the need
for "complete cooperation, support and love" from t h e i r
spoWM!S and for "understanding
and flexibility." In seveml of
the marriages, the wife's return to 8cbool baa caused
changes in the huoband'a role.
In one family, the huoband ia
now in cbarKe of the dilldnm
all weekend. 1n aome lll8r1iqes
where the man baa Dexihle
worl&lt; hours, the husband's jab
acbedule baa been "tailored to
meet the demands .of a "two
career famil~.".
This flesibility at bame will
..__
have to eaatinue when ...,
women paduate in """years.
Moat of them have 110 inteatlon
of Jettinc their tmininl coUect
dual. But wben aome of tbem
talk about ~ Jaw,"
they don't mean haDP&gt;&amp; out a
llhiniJe and waiting for C:liellta.
Instad, they ~ of workinl
for "social dlanp" and "re-aamiDI tbe place or ·a lawyer in
eoc:iety." SGme pia to I'D into

I1!IDillb from judges or will be
mistaken for ·the court ·sleDolrapber. But they are "highly
motivated" by tbeae "cbaiJenges."
.
Tbere are also u..- wbo
plan .to go. into ooo-legal.fields,.
or ·to ,_ their training as a

atewinl
to olber thinga.
A1! Ma. Latoaa points out, ".it's
a ridiculous !lrpii!JOilt to ssy
that are wasting their
training wben they don't practice Jaw. Half of the men who
paduated from .Jaw scbool are
not Pmcti&lt;iDi; ~ -~ I?"

New PJantings Memorialize GEnge ff"Crofts

"'The Jove and devolion of of lawn over an eight-year per- and one J.lf ......., Dllhl.ia
iod and bad planted many PriDceaa.
venity Campus and the infinite flowering plants and sbruha.
'l'be Uniwenity ........ .,._
care and inlen!at with which be He """lributed 8.000 ~ ___.,
~administered ita "'*-&gt; and -ninD """''Uired from the ._.....y ....._._ no-r bed
~ovement w hi f e be New York s - Conservation planliap ...._ tima 8 year.
oomptrolles- a n d - of the Commi.uon. many of which ~itr
University" a r e - _ , _ _ are lllill pre-.ot on csmpus.
·
._..._
· orated in two hmutificaliaa 'l'be ""''""' elms in front of ermc .,.... are
aftl!r
..,..... Lihlary were aim ~
the - the ~1D dediDe.
projecta.--DMr Main Street and Jlanoimu
..,_,.
bave
aloaa' Winopar A - .
lift.
completed
'l'be projecta _ , a.de 'l'be projecta uadertaJcen this
818
their rights Wider the Jaw and
8ible by a .....,..;,) fuDd ealllb- opriDc are In front of Baird ......U
inwopcii8tlid.
otiacover how the Jaw ia uaed
lilbed in 1954 by MiiB Emily . Han and in front of the SeMoe
Oa W " - A - . lllnle
by IIOciety, many of them MY
H. Wet.ter, ...-.u.t vice .,..... Ceat« BuiJdiq at 250 W"m- RaDdloro liDIIoiM and lllnle ealtbey . experience a feeling of
!dent, and •....-ted by MiiB ,._.._
lery pear bave been
•pining more control" -over
Wet.ter and olmr clooMn.
ln front of Baird are five planted.. Aa:anliac 1D Ricbanl
dieir aim lives. Some My it
Mr. Crofts, a di8tiDaniobed larp _,m,m of pyt1IDiidal 8e1Jian. Uniwenity ·IMxtiadturPws them "a new rr-lom . . .
BuflaloniaD, ·died on l"eelruary ~ llornmam or Carp- iat, wbo cll!lliped bolb lllaalilllf
1• tbeae aiB
.,et a harden of ,_..jbility
15, ~ aftl!r -w.,- ao yeui inlll which form a._._._ tor
.t the
time" Others just
aa tbe lJnivenity'a c:biof bali- a low ~ of~.,..
to llledi.- 1lllllilbt o-.iDc
... ~ve a "surer p-aop of a .........tvenar ~ oaa- , _ alfaira !!lllCidive.. He b.t A larp flowW bed
~ 'l'be fndt• tbe callery ia
. _ ..,....,_ aDd the Jaw cemed with eduCating people been JarPy reopaaoible far oaa- in front of the - . . - _ 'lbia alicbtl7 larpr tbaD a and
......, wad&lt; ., that they can about their lepl richta -rather venion of the fanaer ......., year the bed Ia CliiiiiPriaed of • taod for l!irda.
a.lle dllula- If . - r y .
, .~~&gt;an filbdnl for tbem in tbe a1m!111ome ..-tY into wdl- 380
·(Variety -·: 1!be pmjecla are one of the
Thla.learninl and IJIIder.. . coartmoaL
Janderaped ......... W"dh liiD- ~). 18 ........ Jabelia, 15 lirwer ....... •
rr;,wtim ef........ ia ~ ea:itlna tD ·: Ollaw, of~ want ID Jtalfanda,_ _ _IIOO_ • ..__ . . . . . . . , _ .... ..____fadaJa.-..&amp;--. . •.... ~
.

Geo&lt;ll! D . Crott. for the Uni-

0::.

his_.

:S.r.::=

....m-

amo-··•

..n

�3
Twofr&lt;mU'B Take

State in Line fer
$'TJ Million in Aid

Off-QuqJus 1\lstS

'l'be UA Ol6ce of Edualtion
._ alimaled tt.t New York .
Stalll ~ IIIICeive over $73
miJJiaa iD feclonl flmds in fi&amp;.
... 1973 ander . . . and con~ ......... lorllilbet eduadioD ~ in the omnibus education amendJIM!I!Is of
1972 pa.ect by Concreao this

.-lb.

AMumiDc fuJI fuDding lor
f"I8Cal year 1973 (which WasbiqloD atJaerven admit ia "the .
kicbr"), SUNY
......Jd IIIICeive the followinc in
inatiluUonal aid baed on Congnaioaal formulas:
Uniwraity center8, $5,597,319; four-year coiJegea, $8,647,866; two-year coiJegea, $8,423,148; "' and lllcb odlleaes. $2,630,657; cootmct~ ( ~r­
nell) , $541.052; medical centers, $229,528; _.;alj:red colleps, $392,614..
Sin&lt;e the approved bill
(S.659) ia an authorimtion
bill, "not only w!lt -~ fillht
have to be made for :the" appropriations for continuinl programs, but also for lleYei"Bl new
Pf'OII'IIID8 contained in the legNwaes, 1i1re doctors, are beislation," says W i 11 i am F.
· Claire ol the SUNY Washing- coming increasingly specialized
within
their proles&amp;ion. They
ton~
are pe(Iiatric nurses or opDGI.inf room llUI'8e8 or, in a newer
special field that deals with the
treatJIM!I!t and care of stroke
Tbe Board of Trustees of and heart attack victims, .,..._
State Uniwraity ol New York
have approved the ~t ""?~
in the coro~~~!ro-t.
nary- face special p .............
of Social
and Admin- Statistics show that 25 per cent
iatmtion. He-had.been !ecom- of. rmrt comoary -attack vidims
mended ·to the poSitioO by a die· within ·one . or· two bows;
committee and Presi- approsimately 40 per cent die
dent Robert -L. Ketter in May, within one year. As " result,
patients in corooary care units
11972.
require CODSiant surveillaDce
Also approved by the Board and the benefits of split-second
were emeritus prof-.mhipa for d · · -·'-'-Dr. Irving Cbeyette, music, Dr.
this conLyle E. Glazier, Engl.iab., and slant risk. high emotional area
Dr. J . Gibson W"IJIIUill, physica. have on the nurses themselves?
A1;l three are retiring from U t-B : How are they different from
thtB year.
nurses in specialties with f5'er

aun-

Two members o1 the umllity community ........ to
major State 111111 lllllliaaal pollitions in their 6elda ,_,ay,
Dr. William F. Hall, president and Procran&gt; ~ ol
the Western N- York Nuclear
Research Center since 1989,
was -inted program director
ol the New York Slate Atomic
111111 8pece Development Authority, and Allen D. Sapp, 011
leave from his position as
U / B's din!ctor ol cultural affairs, was elected emcutive director of the American Council
for the Arts in Edualtion.
In his new position which be
will assume July 10; Dr. Hall
will supervise the State Authority's nuclear power siting
program and will coordinate its
various~ and environmental research programs.
The American Council for
the Arts in Edualtion which
Sapp Will head ia a federation
of more than 20 national organizations with • membership
of some 100,000 edualtors, artists and administrators. He
described. tbe job as "a d&gt;allenge to help form entirely , _
emergency situations? These ity and a desire to give better attitudes in America coooemare questions Elsa R. · Kellberg and more comprehensive paasked in her master's thesis tient care."
i:gtt!"'li:!..talof~...:cit"'~
here at UIB.
The two groups reported disSbe surveyed 60 nurses (30 sstisfaction with d i ff e r e ·n t
in corooary care and 30 in other things. Nurses in other 8.n!llS
fields ) -in 15 Western New were unhappy with "attentionYork and Eastern Pennsyl~ seeking patients, family intervania hospitals, finding that ference and administrative duDr. James w. Julian will
comoary nurses view them- ties." But specialty nurses.....,..., serve as chairman ol the Deselves differently than their col- more dissstisfied with " working partJIM!I!t of Psycbology for one
leques. While both groups with nurses wbo showed a lack year effective September 1,
felt the most satisfying part of of responsibility and knowledge 1972. He repla&lt;es Dr. Joaeph
nursing is patient care, the cor- and were not interested iit fur- Mas1ing wbo is taking a ~
onary care nurses fel t that pa- thering their nursing educa- batical leave in England.
tients view tbem as b e i n g tion."
Dr. Julian aees his one-year
" more knowledgeable, m o r e
One way they learn new pro- chainnanship as a ucballenge
skilled and having
exper- cesses or perfect old techniques to recruit" faculty and develop
tise. . . ." In addition, there is by increasing professional the Department which produoes
was a difference between cor- communications - e s pecially more students with PbD.'s
OI)IlrY and " regular:• nurses in
with d octo r s. Ms. Kellburg than any other. He will .be ·a&amp;-.
tedns of motivation: The spec- found that" coronary care nurses sisted by Dr. J . Sidney Slimug-·
ialists indicated a "greater use have a significantly h i g he .r er wbo bas been an associate
of judgJIM!I!t, greater challenge, amount of communications with professor and chairman for ongreater amount of responsibil- physicians.
detgraduate sluj!Y. in the De-.
This s tudy was one of the partmenl since 1969.
fi rst to use the lakes Area ReBeginning his academic cagionsl Medical Program's Tete- reer at U / B in 1963, Dr. Julian
phone L e c t u r e N e t w o r k joined the faculty as an assis! T LN ). The TLN intercon- tant professor after receiving
nects 16 area hospitals and is his A.M. and Ph.D. degrees
used in continuing education from the University of Dlinois,
programs for individuals in the Urbana. His resesrch work bas
health-related fields. Nur s e s been concerned with the idea
were in terviewed o v e r the of personslity and the process
phone and heard a pretaped of developing a sense of ideostatement on the purpose of tity.
the study and then the questions. The ten-minute tape ·
cartridge was preset to stop
automatically after each ques- ! Colltin""d from I . coL 5)
tion, then was manually re- nally next March, the Legislas larted by the interviewer after ture mskes linaf eliminations.
the nurse finished answering. '
Whil tbeoe budget-making

Professional Hierarchy_May Be ~lq»ng
fu Nursing, Study of Specialists Suggests

Trustee Actions
so-

Facult;

=.

-rm

"vn:'t';;«;,tdo.s

Julian to l:mi
Psych Department

more

Budget

sid~ ~"l,,~th::J. ~ :\::

umenting the effects of increasing specislization within the
.
f ....... _
nursmg pro essJon. . • "" resuits of several questions, Ms.
Kellberg says, indicated that
CO!f&gt;~ care" nurses ha~
secunty ~ a feel ~ their
own worth. The reqwrement
for additional training plus the
constant challenges of the" 8.n!ll
may make tbeoe nurses consider n~· in general as a

!!&gt;"

ti.

.....
-... - .
__-------... _. , . . _ , tor

..i.t ,_..

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

the .,.,... "' _...,••

be-

nega ve
group
cause
of theerence
general
lack ol
higher aspiration I~" abe
sa~ one study in a IIWIIing
specialty it is too early to formulate a theory about an emerging nursing hierarchy. Yet Ms.
Kellberg's .-.Its ·are a fairly
strong indication that this
be the cue.
may

steps have remained largely

the same over the years, the

n:"""'Y supply

has ' - ' dra&amp;tically altered The problem
uaed to be hiring ~le, Somit
recalls,
t
juatifyin&amp;
their
0

S.::....... ·

lilll!ll:"
of the Pablic's
incn!asin&amp; ....,;.,_ ol educa-

lion ..-_ U/B ;, ebiftinc ita
f"mancial Uitade. 'l'bis
attitude ~ be ......, ..,.
lor
11 when
the first lime tbia ran
U •
•ty-wide
d
•
a
~
•Co! eauc
plan 18 UDYei1ed, 8amit -.ya.
It will
outliDe
~=
c:onaidelatXw. and
~t is IDMIIt by a "
departJIM!I!t" 111111 a ".-dy .*te
or status quo ~
Somit _ . the Dl&gt;tion that a- ~tal
statuses will be c:anoed iD Bkme.
The academic plan will be
"subject to .....mid: nMsioa.•

j';

�4

Show by Self-Taught Artist
Slated for Nrlon Gallery
By JILL RADLER
u,....,,.
,,.,_,._

S.,.,ioN

Oliver Bonner, a 72 year-old
self-taught painter, will have a
one-man exhibition of his works
in Gallery 219 in N o r t o n
Union, tomorrow through August 4.
.
Mr. Bonner's works belie the
fact that he has been painting
for only four years. Combining

an impnlllllionist technique with
a flat application of pools of
expre!lllionist color, his paintings have an unlorgetlable vibrancy. Patterned and textured
areas are composed into a jig-

saw puzzle elfect with curving
pieces fitted together into sbikingly itloovative yet simple
compositions.
·
Painted with acrylics on canvas boerd, his subject matter is
derived from the observations
and experiences of a lifetime.
Born in Nairobi in 1900, he has
lived in rural Illinois and Chicago, and most recenUy in the
Buffalo area. He bas traveled
throughout the world. As an
adolescent, he worked in the
galley of a· merchant ship; in
later years he bas been an active tourist.
In his paintings one can see
intricately ¥eometric Sicilian
farmlsnds, Jungle a n i m a Is
stslking prey, American fann
wells and wagons, all skillfully
combined in exciting composJtions where perspective is
gracefully flattened out.
Painting is done at nightwith no easel, on a Oat lable
top. "I can -get the picture more
perfect that WI!Y.'' he says..And
oiUS!ies? "I'm stingy about
them." He reuses his, trimming and reshaping them as
they wear down. "I paint anything my mind fixes on; I paint
what I feel and have experienced." Oliver Bonner is his
own man. He dciesn't look at
the work of other painters. "I
don't want to coPY others. I

.CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
"'pen to public;
••CipOn to members of the Unlverslty;
•Open only to with o professlonol Interest In the subject
Canlact Suzanne Metzpr, 831-2228, lor llstlnp.

THURSDAY---0
C8&amp;A'I'IVX CltAFl' CI:N'la •• : Leath·
or, bello, 1-5 p.m.; Batik, 7-10 p.m.
Dr.

Roger S . Lane. biocbemiatry, Univenity of California at Berkeley,
A Novo! Hiotidine' Decarborylaoe
for Baclobocilbu 30A: Studies on

~..~r~o~~d:::':i:~./..'b:
....u.. G-22 ea-. 4

P'ILMB••:

p.m.

A Mouie (Connor,

1958). Report (Connor, 1963-67).
140 Capen, 7 and 9 p.m.
Bl1liOllll: INSTITUTE FILM: LIDC-

TUJZ• : Ledie Fiedler, profeuor,

~a'}tli!th.,;;.Be~.:lt.~nd

the

~ion of &amp;yond t~~JS ~J:end~rf~8 ~~er, 1970),

and

--

FILII•• : Bum (GiDo Ponteoorvo),
8larrinc Marlon Brando. Confer"""" n-tre, cbeok abowca8e for

snow•: Paintinp by Oliver
Bonner. opening reception from

AliT

8-10 p.m., Gallery 219, Norton.
Gallery hours: 11 a.m..-5 p.m.,
Monday-Friday; 2 p.m.-4 p.m.,

~~l:i'i"-~U~- 11::' Di~
endorf, 7 and 9 _p.m.

Chabad Houoe, 3292 Main Sl, 8 p.m.

CHABAD BA118ATR SICilVICIIB* :

INTERNATIONAL fOLK DANCING:

In-

struction in buic etepe du..ri.nc
lint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 1&gt;.1D.
CONCIZT** : Buddy Guy and
Junior Wella, Fillinore Room, 9
p.m., admiMion cbarP-

do."
Mr. Bonner bas ......-........
prizes includinc t-t ol ........
at the Erie County Hobby Barvest and fifth ~ in the 19'10
New York State Senior Citizen's ·Art Contest.
'lbe show opeus with a -

TUESDAY-11

Byar Kiye Ja. a
comedy starring Shashi Kaboor,
Kisbore Kumar, Mahmood, Om
Prakash, apomored by India Student Auociation, 147 Diefendorf,
7:30 p.m., students $1.00, nonstudents $1.25.
PILM**: TM MoUy MaGuiru,
Conference Theatre, check showcase for times.

E,...,..
p.m.
DA.TIKG AlfD IIU.TDIC** : a Life
Workahop, iDcludeo c1iocmoioo&gt;a
on human aesuality. daliac. hmDosexuality, , . . . . . . ~
birth control, aborlioa and divon:e. Recister at 831-25WNorton 225. 232 Norton, 3 p.m.

Sunday. Through August 4.
SUNDAY--9
PILMS• • : Two or Three Thing• · PILl&lt;•• : The MoUy MaGuirea, ·
About Her (1966, Godard), Kino Conference Theatre, · check showPravdc. (1922, Vertov), A Propos case for times.
de Nice (1930, Vige) , Wovo~"fth

A}:t~ ~~;!,' ~:w~~co~

derstanils the patients liloe I

SATURDAY-S
UrrolAN FILM *:

FRIDAY-7

BIOCBBMIS'I'IlY SBMINA.&amp;• :

want to stick to my own style."
Now retired, Mr. Bonner
worked as a tiler and ~r
helping to put three of his eight
brothers and aisters through
college. Always interested in
others, he spends his days at
three Buffalo hospilala belping
to feed patients. "I help everybody," be says, "nobody un-

MONDAY-10

CIIBATIYB

CaArr

CB&gt;m!a: Elltlln&lt;l-

ing, 1--4 p..~a Ceram.ia, 1-4 p.m.
Lemher, 7-10 p.m.
:
Lifolina (Emahwiller,
1960); Geor10 Dumpson'o Ploce
(Emohwillar. 1966); S&lt;u&lt;!nlh Seol

PILII8° 0

CR&amp;\TJYB CltAFI' (ZM'ID;• • :

elinll,

1-4 p.m.

.PILilS* :

c......w:.. 1-4

&amp;lediou~

Lumiere

B r o t h e ro (1895-96); /..,.,.._,
Frontier (Holland, .Wecmaa);
The Naked Eye ( S - . . ) . 147

N&lt;YTICES

Diefendorf. 7 and 9 p.m.

~~:.t;;.i.p,i,2 ~;:i!!.

1::

64) · Inotibaional Q.ality (lAD-

. oo,.;, ) 969); Wind Fro• 1M E.l
(Godiard, 1969).
and 9:30 p.m.
CONCDT0 :

140

c.-

7

-

Muoilc Ac:lwa tM Ca--

~=-w.V{;!!.~.-='t;

~~~~~1~~~·t~ ~K~~~
kin, 1925); Bolkt M h:/Jani4ue

(Leger, 1924); L4 Re11ion Controk (Snow, 1972), 140 ea-. 7
and 9 p.m. Weekend (Godard,
1967), Confereoce n-tre, 7 and
9 p.m.

LIBRARY EXHIBri'S

enboom. Baird, 8 :30 p.m., admiooion charge.

WEDNESDAY-12

___
.--.---.......,--·
___I-_
.,..
WEDII.Y-WQIE
CIIP'I--

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

To_ ..

Senll:a
- - 2ZIB.

._....-250-.----

caw .. ~ - ..,

,., f'llay---

-~----­
~-

Evening Maste-s _

InEanmia;

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>1st Step Thken 'JbWard
Undergraduate Library
-n.:

fiat ,.... . in aeUiDg

up .... bte lh1uy
(UGL) ...... last 1111!11!1&lt;

..._ eiabt- ill Diehldod
" ' - - ...,.,...s for library
- . V"llle PnooideDt ...... ,..,.
domic A&amp;Ws Dr. Bemard Gel- - ._....., This ........
implementatiaDol. •• pmtial
Faculty
s-te
r
*' JaiMe paSsed in
May. which called ...... esbJb.
lishmeut o1. a UGL. •_...,ave
. as ...._ • po&amp;&amp;ible.•
'I"hoeae 11001116 will be in use
this floiJ. Gellaum noted. but
will ~Y be for readinc statiaas." Boob will be put
in lbe facility "no earlier than
spriQg ol. "73." be added.
"l'he wlminjstnfim is cur·
radly esPoring ... IIUIDber ol.

~.: .=-l~h'!

classrooms. buy boob and
....a-t aad pay UGL staff

STATE UNIVERSilY AT BUFFALO

N0.5

JUNE 29, 1972

Senaie Asks Budget Rewards for Achievers,
A tblee-w8,y aet ol. crilieria lor
Um-mty lludplmy aDocatiaas ............. t o _ . . . . . _
who - .dUeviac .... penalize
.._who me_.. t.s bem approwd by lbe ........uy SoDale
~ Committee aad
traD&amp;miUed 1D Pnsideolt Robert
L Ketter ""for his ..............
tiaD" ~ lbe 19'13-74- baolllet

- -~ -

1mila

jointly in lbe ewluation ol. lbe
academic units ol. 1be University for ol. decidinc
wbeCbet tbeae units will reoeive additional reoou.n:es, reoeive lbe ........,._, or reoeive leaB .-.urces for ibe Cllllduct ol. their procrams."
As liD individual, s.w.said be feels that if lbe guidelinos .... applied JiilomUsly in

~ toCJUI&amp;OiDcSoaate ~nt;'~~ci!
Cllai......., William~ '!'hD pu:tments m i g h t be phased
supplied lbe ~ ..,_ Iltiuu,.
lbe crilieria_ me . •delmenltely

out."

'The criteria are merely ad_ . . , . but ptOVide_.....,. JDUCh ' visory to lbe President and.
ol. a ~ up ... ..up IJ!Il"' ap- Baumer notes, will at best be
.,.._., to lbe . allocatiall of
of .
Is into ......
JDOdios within lbe Uniftlllity _ ooe
many mpu
"'!"
s.w.- &amp;llyS that lbe three ~t round ~ ~ decicrileria-&lt;pJIIJltitative aad qual- SJODS_ He ~ys 1t IS U~ to lbe
·tati
iDdici!B of ~ ,_. E&gt;recutive Committee to
to society- decide whether to bring tbe
me IDMilt to be applied simul- guidelines before the fuJI Sentaneously in CODSidering a pro- ate for a fall ...te_ If app~
gram. -ro be ou-nding in by ~ fuJI SeDate, tbey DllJbt
·
__ ..._ " conce1vably have greater liDani
he~~"' not......_...,
pact on tbe 1974-75 budgetary
Or in tbe iaDguace ol. tbe process.
E&gt;recutive Committee. lbe cri'The text of t6e criteria folteria - - to be applied con- lows:

:.n.t ':.,tributioas

U/B Unable to Share Rilly
In SUNY's Arts Program

LQ!
-.
One criterion is lbe studentfaculty ratios ol. lbe in
Ienos ol. full-time equivaleuts.
'I"hoeae should be divided into
lc:o.tiaaft-- 4. col. I}

............ No llllllllllittee has
bem sot up to fonnally exmiiiae lbe situation. the vice
pnsidoul noted. but se..eral
"possible" p 1-a n s i n d-u d e
l8.ullrhing an clutside f u n d
drive; using -a.ble .....State
funds. • .......- be termed
"'not ...........t.le" aad securing
State funds from Albany.
In order to free lbe eight
c:lassrooms by fall a •crash propam ol. re-assigning" has
started. Gelbaum explained.
Tboucb lbe DiefeDdorf Annex
. _ _ . , . a small .portiaD" ol. lbe lola) classroom
... campus. it will be
"""""""' to inc:n!ese tbe number ol. 8 aad 5 o"dodt classes
~ Directoo- ol. Sc:beduling aad 1nvento1y .lobo Volk-

ert says. 'The room abuflling
will also push back pahlicatiaD
of tbe fall daM scbedule by
about a IDOillh. It will be
available by July 17, Gelbaum ·
says. 1bat scbedule was em lbe
presses last .....S wben the decision on tbe UGL was made;
it had to be remlled pending
class time aad room re-assignments.

'lbe move to ........,., lbe
space for tbe Libraries' use was
urged by the Faculty SeDate
E&gt;recutive Committee. Last
Wednesday. that group passed
a motion calling for the "mandatory" l'l!llCbeduling ol. the
area. This was an extension of
the Senate"s May recommendation which included a tentative
timetable for ClOIDPietion of the
UGL Under this plan, would have to be set aside by
early summer if the facility
is to be completely _.....
tiona! by fall of 1973, tbe suggested target date.
'The Senate and its Information and Lib~UY Resources
Dommittee will play IIJl ·advisoo)' role" in fuJJy establishing the UGL. Gelbaum said.
'The Library system has also
started work on. planning a
UGL for the North (Amherst)
campus and has done """"'
" preliminary ......,.,..,n" em number of titles, bows, staffing and
size. In addilion to setting up
an Amherst Planning Ollice
and allocating a line for the
head of an undeJl[raduate library, Dr. Myles stalin. director of Libraries. has also
pledged to allocate "no more
than two additional FI'E"s to
(Continued on. JlO# 2. coL 1)

�~

2

'lhmsition Wzll Be an Orderly One,

Arts-

Staff Senate

f5:~=~;; Moo~ Siiys of Moving to.Senate Po~t ~E~dsQt'lbding
n
ay
~~~~~

By SUSAN GB.EENWOOD
Senate will be oonsideriJiil
- " " suu
many of the same issues it did
After July 1, you'll have to
last year-.fmissions. curricudial Dr. Gilbert Moore at ert.
lum, minorities, and ac:ademic
2223 1bat's wben be olficially
areas. But when be discusaes
•
over as Faculty Senste
lbeoe topics in detail, it's clear
L--ctlairman.
that he's asking new questions.
Ms. Swartz notes. ...,..,ver,
'Ibis is ~ third move for
In ~ admissions area. be bas
that some of ~ groups and Moore in recent months. First,
moved from entrance qualificaperfonners have appeared at
U/B or in ~ area in the re- came ~ shift to the Old Factiona to the question of trans-eent past and are not likely ulty ~ where be asrved as
fer Ptudents. In the academic
candidates for booting this acting provost of ~ and let.~r, be's inte~ -~ eo¥&gt;.
ten; lben it was bacl&lt; to Foster
lisbmen_t of a l!mverBlty"'!"'~e
yearoiber aspects of the SUNY- Annex and Counselor ~uca- .
aca~emiC P~-if ~ ~
wide arts propam are a three- tion. 1l&gt;e new Senate chairman
tmlion doesn_t do 1t maybe
day Saratop. Summer Convo- doesn't mind· the ,moving, "'?wthe. faculty ~ ha~ to stud!
cation on the Arts, a Student ever. He says be s been domg
setting one up. ~cally, this
Co~npcMers Festival and con- • it on ~ average of once every
!""""". to _be a shift from dealtinuation of visits to ~ con- eight months since be started
1111 Wl~ J.S8UeO! that have ~ be
temporary art world in New at U/ B. He just takes it in his
aolyed immediately to articuy ork City
stride, like he does · everytlting
lating deeply felt ~.
else.
him but I don't view this as
Moore 18 even taking a new
s...._ c:a-tlon
_
Just how his stride will alarming." As a mattel' of fact, look at the Qlii!Stion of "Senate
At the Summer Convocation, ci!Jmge ~ Senste is a matter be feels it is a ''potentially effectiveness." While others arJuly 11-13, faculty "'!" "!"- . of- much gpeculation oo cam- heslthy thins'' and will not "al- gue over whether the Senste is
~ _from ~tate UruVerBlty pus. Moore, however, doesn' t ways insist oo a conaensus- be- ~- most widely respected and
will )Om public scbool educa- want to raise any expectations. tween the President and the listened to group oo campus or
!'&gt;&lt;&amp; at the Saratoga Perform- All he'll say is that the " tran- Senste." Under Baumer, con- an ~ted puppet of the
1D1 ~ Center.
will sition will be an orderly one" llicts were often disguised but administration, Moore say•
Featured on ~ P~
and that be's meeting regular- Moore plans to accentuate the "~ jury's still oul" 1l&gt;e efhe ~ ~ew York Ctty Ballet; ly with Dr. William Baumer, differences between ''legislative fectiveneas of an organization
!be Acting ~; ~whil&gt;?ch die present chairman, toward and erecutive · function" and can be tested only by its reUlll W~ . Quin~t,
this end.
make instances of erecutive suits, h_e says, and he's now
bas been .m ~mt reBidency at
Other observers are more veto clear. ''I aee this as a per- formulating a "Senste scoreState U~vemty campuses for definite. 'Il&gt;ey say the Senate fectly responsible procedure."
card." Critics say it will be
the past fi~ years; ~ College will be different in tbe fall but Not Sulliciently G..w
easy to fill up the minus side
a~ Fredorua Student Chamber there is little agreement on
However, be doesn't see any of such a balance oheet and
Singers; ~ S.Yf8CU!"' Rock En- what the changes will be.
potential differences as being Moore himaelf couldn't think
semble; a~ Mildred DunOne sure bet, many feel, is "of a sufficiently grave nature immediately of any pluses, but
nock; art cntic Lawrence All?- that meetingS will be more in- as to imperil the relationship .he'~ still witbJ:&gt;ol&lt;l~g judgment
way, and dancer ~ward Vii- formal. The two s e s sion s between tbe P resident and the until the tallymg 18 complete.
lelia. The!" also w~ be a panel Moore ran this year as chair- Senste." In fact, he says,
Moore admits that he has
on Stravinsky, wtth . Robert man-&lt;Olect were less bound by " there ought to be pretty good "questions and concerns about
Craft, Geoi'J!e Balancbine, Ma- Roberts' Rules and more con- agreement between the P resi- this campus" but "no panaceas
~ ~travinsky and Jacques cemed with tbe dynamics of dent and the faculty-but not for . the Pr&lt;?blems." Instea~.
d AmboJSe.
the discussion. Moore epito- every time."
dunng the first months of his
qpen .to all members of tbe mized his style by recognizing One area of difficulty at term he plans to "work with
U~vemf:¥ . commuruty and Senators by their -first names present is the recently passed the present organization, com~ ~es, ~ Con~d: in contrast to Baumer's use of · Senste motion on personnel municating as best I can with
.,J:'~n
~ more formal ''Professor.. ." policy procedures for faculty ~ many "?ns.titu!'Jicies as posone luncheon)
&amp;gistration,
Substan?aJ changes, how- appointment, tenure and pro- stble, an~ !"di""ting ~hat I see
however, must j,., made in ad- :wer, "!" likely to "'!me _slowly. motion. The major conflict is as the cntJcal ISSUes.
\I8DCI!.
Forms are available 'I ~on t .see any po'!'t '!' tam- over composition of a Univerfrom Patty Kerr Ross at the permg wtth an o~tion un- sity-wide R e view Board
University-wide Committee on less yo~ have a particular '!fled (URB) which will give final
A visit to the Coming Glass
~ Arts,
Washington Ave- to do Jt . : . when ~re 18 a recommendation on these cases
99 N
y
clear cut ISSUe," Moore says. before dley go to President Center and swimming at Crysnue, Albany• · ·
The Senate's present structure Ketter. The approved Senate tal Beach are just two of the
~·has ~ in operation for only motion grants ~ Senate auth- Summer Excursions to area
'Il&gt;e first SU_NY Student 14 months, be argues. ''It's a ority to appoint all URB mem- places of interest or relaxation
Composers Festival will be little bit too early for change." ben, but Moore indicstes that which are &lt;&gt;QeD to faculty, staff
held October 20-22 !'t the Col- Ml- R-.-nc
the President wants final veto and alumni
lege at Potsdam. A Jury of well
He will, however, atteropt power.
On the schedule are:
known composers l;&gt;as se!ected some aperimental alterations
To prevent any such legisla• Wednesday, July 19, N istudent works which will b;e in existing structures-minor live-executive differences from agara
Falla: an extensive tour
performed by a number of Uru- rather than major rebuilding. "imperiling'' the Senste, Moore of the Falla
area including both
versity artists. Guest. com~r Though he doesn't want to dis- will probably use many of ~ the American and Canadian
Earle Brown, wbo will wnte a cuss details of the proposals skills gained in his professional Falla plus the Power Vista, The
ch'amber-on:bestra work especi- he'll make to the new Execu- area-&lt;:Ounaelor education. He
ally for ~ program, will join tive Comfuittee on July 10 he plans to utiliu more fully the :draltheG~:"C:~ Cf:':J~
-'!"ith faculty, ~posers and hints ~y will be ''primarily three types of communication lowed for dinner \n Niagara
jUIOrS to. talk wtth s tudents
organizational- to see if we can channels--informal, crisis and Falls, Ontario. Time: 3 p.m.about their works. .
s timulate more interest, more formal--wi.th an increased emU/ B students wbo have been aenae of responsibility in tbe pbasi.s on_ formal exchanges. 11 p.m. Price: $1.50.
• Sunday, JUly 23, Toronnotified that their works have Senate." 'lbere may be more n.e President's time is full to
been selected for the program extensive uae of devices which overflowing, as Moore learned to: a completely unstructured
day
in "our p"''"'JJ15ive neichare: Lee Lavallo, Ralph Blau- saw only limited action this wben be:'Wall an executive asvelt, Margaret Scoville and year--ad hoc committees and sistant to former U/ B Presi- bor city." Time: 10 a.m. to 10
Price: $3.00.
p.m.
Ralph Jones.. .
.
"workinl 111!118ions" of ~ Sen- dent Martin Meyerson. So he
• Saturday, July 29, Ceys-~ m JIB fifth year, ate. Moore points to the Sen- is thinking of sugcesting more
tal
Beach:
a full afternoon for
will. pi'OVIde students f r? m ate's meetm, oo personnel poll- inter-group communication seathroughout ~ State a ftrst cies as the type of session that sions with Ketter. Since "most swimming and outdoor recreation-the
beach
and amuse"'!mf exposure to New York " gives the Senstors more op- issues concern more ' tban one ment park are at your
disposal.
Ctty's conl.empo!'8J'Y art. world portunity for participation in constituency," the Senste chairTime:
10
a.m.-6
p.m. Price:
at three-day III!S8100S dunng the legislation."
man feels it may be valuable
fall U~r. guidance of ~ well
None of his proposed changes for the President to meet reg- $1.00.
• Satunlay, August 5, Comknown cntic Barbara Rose. stu- will involve changes in by-laws. ularly with more than one
ing Glass Center: a day-long
den~ will visit artists in ~ On this point, be is quite firm. group.
studios as well as producJ;ion As a result, he's not going
Moore is a1ao planning t-o in- visit to ·t he center !mown worldwide for its glassware and cersbot!s ~re much of today's to push Baumer's plan of hav- crease communications with tbe amics.
You can watch pieces of
art 18 being created.
ing Senstors - t depart- Senate Professional AaaociaStudents from the Att Qe- meniB ra~ than Faculties al- tion (SPA) . 1l&gt;e Senate's re- ~ well-known Steuben Pass
~t will again participate
thouih .._
else may."
lationahip with the barpjning being hand-blown. Time: 9
ID this program.
'Jbe relationship between ~ - t is "most critiail," . he am.-6 p.m. Price: $3.50.
• Saturday, August 12: a
administration and ~ Senate says, and "aoon elfort&amp; will be
may alter also. Baumer was made to be more formally in- return trip to Crystal Beacb,
see
above for time and prices.
viewed by ~ as an "ad!nin- . volved."
(Coatiluud (rom- I , col. 6)
• Wednesday, August 16: a
istration man.
Moore 81l)'ll . . _ at Old _ _ , . .
return
trip to Niagara Falla,
mff an undergmduate library he'll uae his office "to ~ the
'Ibis way of taJr:ina a new
..... up· to $20,000 to purchase President moat accurately in- look at old relatiollllliips and aee above for time and priCll!fl.
Ticieta for tbeae excursions
tbe Jllllcleus of a reserve collec- formed of faculty viewpoinlll . . _ may be a trademark of
tion lor this library."
.. . try;n, to ....,., ~!ely ~ Moore term. He says the aie available at Norton.
Before ~ decision was made ~ teaor of the fallulty's feel- -------==-~----------,-..:_~
late Jut week to tum over the inp and ita implications." But
eicbt Diefendorf Annex class- "I make the II88UIIIPtion that
a.,
- t o ~ Ubraries, ~ Pro- there's bouDd to be CoaDcil passed a reaolu- of ~t ' * - ID)'My :-.. " J ol lr-'.--.:t ~ ~~:..:;
Ciaa -*in~ that the space not aelf aDd the W
~~e · .....nocated until~ spring style, orieatation will, at timol,
~~t
- m, - .._ • put me iii ~t with
a black tbMtre oompany elireeled by Vinette Carroll; ~
Mimi Garrard Dance 'Ibeatre;
Jaoques d' Amboise; Irish actress Siobhan McKenna; and
~ Dorian Woodwind Quintel

:ve,.cos,!n

mcludes

Excursions

UGL-

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PORTED
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U/B staff members have until 5 p.m. today to cast their
votes for officers of the Pro-

fessional Senste. Ballots are
due in Room 1, lfaY.es 'Annex
C, Clifford Wilaon, member of
the Staff Senste elections committee, says. All stall members
wbo spend leas than &lt;IIIIHialf
their time teacbinl are eligible
to vote.
Nominees for chairman are:
Marilla Gila-Assistant to
Provost, Faculty of Law and
JurisprudenCe. Has been with
SUNYAB 3 1~ years. Previous
experience includes Assistant
to Provost, · Faculty of Health
Sciences; Aasistant to Director,
Poll Sciences Program_
Aik,; H . K~Director of
Instructional Services. Has
been at SUNYAB 11 years.
Previously was Director of Student Testing.
Harley E. FIDck- Assistant
Dean, School of Health Related Professions. Has been
with SUNYAB for 2 years.
Was Administrative Assistant
in the School of Health Related Professions and had a
clinical association with the
Department of COunselor Education.
Nominees for vice-chairman
are:
Shirley Ahrens-Assistant to
Director of Summer Sessions.
Has been with SUNYAB 12
years. She started as Secretary
in Summer Sessions Office,
then became Office Manager
and then Assistant to Director.
Eugene MarteU- Director of
University Placement and Career Guidance for the past 3
years. Has been with SUNYAB 6 years; 2 years Assistant
Director and 1 year as Counselor in Placement
Joseph Drew - Programmer
Analyst in the Compufing Center. Has been with SUNYAB
6 years in current position.
Nominees fo r secretary are :
Erico Federrnan- Deputy to
the Director, Libraries. Has
been with SUNYAB for 4V.
years. W a s previously employed in the Computing Center and Computer Science Department
'fheodore B . Filzwater-Assistant to Chairman, Att. Has
been with SUNYAB for 6 years
in his current position.
Robert J . WagiU!r- Assistant
to Provost, Faculty of Natural
Sciences and Ma~lics.
Has been-With SUNYAB for 4
years.
Nominees for Statewide
SUPA Reprmentative are:
KtllMriM Kodlala-Academic Advisor in Department of
Undergraduate Studies. Has
been with SUNYAB for 5 years
as Academic Alr"VJ&amp;Or.
Robert Dombrowski-Director of Off-Campus HouaingStudent Affaira. Has been with
SUNYAB for 4 years. Was Associate Director of Student Affairs prior to becoming Directer of Off-Campus Houaing.
WiU Brown-Assiatant to the
Vice President for Academic
Affairs. Has been with SUNY-.
AB for 3 years, and was formerly Director for },finority Faculty and Staff RecruitmenL

Acting Provost
Dr. Stanley H. Cramer bas
been appointed acting provO&amp;t
of ~ Faculty of Educational
Studies. Having served the faculty :as associate piOYOIIt since
1968, Dr. Cramer will stanc1 in
for Dr. Rollo Handy, provost,
wbo will aaowne a key position
d~ 1972-73 with lbe Behlll!Ji&gt;ral ~ Council, a
nontProfit research foundation
in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

�~

3

Revised POlicy for Non-Academic,Use
Of Campus Rriljties Is ·Established
'Ibe Policy for Non-Academic Use of University Facililiee, printed in its entirety ill&gt;low, is a clarifjcation and more
precise definition of the process by wbicb individuals and
J10U1111 may pin authorization
to use University facilities and
...........,. Aa a startina point,
all such individuals and groups,
with the ea:eption of those
specifically interested in NorHall 8J&gt;IIC8, must contact
Mr. Paul Kane of the Office
of Facilitiee Planning in Room
9 ~Hall (edenaion 4725).
Requmts for Norlml Hall space
abould 10 directly to the NorRMervations Office at &amp;114630.

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11

Aa a public institution of
higher education, the State
University of New York at
Buft'alo recapUzs&amp; its 18ponsibility to IIIJPP)ement its undergraduate, graduate and profeaaiooal PftllliUD8 with extracurricular·-rtunities.
To J"''''llit the appropriate
acbeduling of facilities, the ob- '
aervance of recuJations ooooeming their use, and also the observance of requirements for financial responsibility, all requests for use of any type of
University space or ~.
other than that required for
scbeduled a c a d e m i c, intramural, and intercollegiate activities must be presented to
the Office of Facilities Planning.
'Ibe request should be made
on forms provided by that office and contain all needed information, including but not
limited to:
1. Name and function ~f the
group;
2. Purposes of the meeting;
3. Preferred meeting dates;
· 4. University facilities, food
servj ce, personnel iequired, and
other special needs;
5. Budget and source s of
funds.
'Ibe staff of that office has
the responsibility to check with
the following, where appropriate, concerning the availability
of space requested, support facilities, and propriety :
Office of Facilities Planning
(for claasrooms, lecture halls
and allied spaces) ;
Director of Health, Physical
Education and At:hletics (for
athletic buildings and
grounds);
Assistant Vice President for
Awriliary Enterprises (for
dormitories and dining balls) ;
Director of Norlml Union
(for Norton facililiee);
Aaaistant Vioe President for
Physical Facilities (for ..,...,raJ
· campus crounds and! or park. lots) ;
~\"'..!.:.. oflioe of

....

thath:,tj~ on~

Three Professors Now Hold
Endowed Chairs in FNSM

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t@Jl

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,..._"_

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'Ibe individual having general responsibility for the space
assigned will also have responsibility for notification of Campus Security, Maintenance,
Health and Safety, etc., re: servicing tbe evenl
'Ibe University use of all facilities shall have pre-emptive
priority. Academic use of space
shall have pre-emptive priority
over non-academic use. The ex. ercise of pre-emptive priority
· in a situation where commit.
menta already have been made
shall require the approval of
the President, or the Executive
Vice President, of the University.
On the basis of availability of
space, necessary services, review of 'the event for propriety,
and properly executed documents of authorization, the request is accepted or rejected.
Section II

Requests for ad hoc use of
space come from both University and non-University groups.
Subject to the above statements, the following procedures
and conditions apply :
1~ Faculty or Staff Requests
for Campus Area or Clmu.rooms
for Non-University Purposu.
An academic unit ( through
Provost, Dean, Department
Chairman, or Scbeduling Coordin&amp;tor} or an administnltive
unit' must sponsor the request
in terms of accepW., all responsibility tbroulh' bucJ«etary
assessment for damage to University property or inordinate
_cieanipg requirements.
are charged for tbe
event beld and proceeds are
110t received into and disbursed
by a University authorized fiscal and disbursing agent, fmancial statements showing groas
income, itemized expenses expected, and proJX*d use of net
· income must be filed with the
oflioe of the Vice President for
Operations and Systems prior
to the event, and a statement of
actual income and filed, following the event. A
.c ontract aimifar to that uaed
by DOD-University gioups may
be required if the event or the
damage potential, or both, are

u rees

sipunenl
AU requests will be reviewed
by the staff . for conformity to
S t a t e University regu)alior!s.
and U'niversity at Buiralo pol~=...~ · the following
1. 'Ibe pwpoaea of the meeting are consistent with the general objectives of the University.
2. .' Ibe . - r y documents
(atandanl contract for DODUniversity groups, document
of ~t for Uni~ty
JIOUIIII) are ezecuted and filed.
In a case wbere clear deter- l.arJe.
2. Stulkl'll or Stulkl'll Group
mination of aooeptanoe is DOt
po8lible, the ~ will be re- Rqunu for C!JI'IIHU Area or
ferred to the Vioe President for CIDarootU.
'Ibe six recoenized student
Academic Afrain wbo •
juDction with the v~m~ associations (Under!rradflate
Student
ABiciation, Graduate
dents for University Relaficlbs,
and Operations anlll Syateina, Student ABiciation, Medical
'Student
ABiciation,
Den taI
will make a determinatioll" fe.
prding the appropriate~.a of Student ABiciation, Law Student
ABiciation,
and
Millard
the reqU5l

Fillmore College Student ~
ciation), the Inter-Residence
Council, and such other student
groups as certified by tbe Vice
President for Student Affairs
are those representative bodies
from which a student or student group must obtain sponsorship by gaining, in advance,
through signature of the appropriate officer on the proper
form, a greement to support the
request in terms of accepting
all financial responsibility for
damage to University property and for inordinate cleaning
requirements. If f e e s a r e
charged for the event held and
proceeds are 110t received into
and disbursed by a University
authorized fiscal and disbursing agent, financial statements
showing gross income and itemized expenses expected, and
proposed use of net income
must be filed with the office of
the Vice President for Operations and Systems prior to the
event, and a statement of actual income. and .ezpenses filed
following the evenl A contract
similar to that used by nonUruversity groups may be required if the event or the damage potential, or b o t h, are
large.
3. Non-University Groups
and I ttdividuals.
A. 'Ibe purpose of the meetinc must be educational in nature and consistent with the
general objectives of the University.
'·
B. 1be group or individual
must obtain sponsorship of the
proposed activity through a
SUNYAB academic department, administrative office or
recognized student group (as
indicated in points 1 and 2 of
Section ll) .
C. Groups or individuals not
sponsored by an academic unit,
administrative office, or recognized student group as set forth
in previous sections must execute the approved contract.
D . AU information_ and promotion bearing the name of
the University must be reviewed by the Vice President
for University Relations prior
to release.
E . 'Ibe group or individual

tJ:rve~ ~.!t.,payu!!d

by the trniversity ... a result
of the event (Security, Maintenance, materials, etc.), including damages, if any, and
must be willing to sign a contract to this e«ect. 'Ibe contract
will i n c l'u d e appropriate requirements for insurance coverage for the event.

Two faculty IJieDlbers have

been appointed lo endowed
chairs in the Faculty of Nat-

ural Sciences and Mathematics
and another will continue to
serve in a chair be has occupied for the past nine years.
'Ibe appointments were made
by University President Robert
L. Ketter.
·
Dr. Stanley Bruckenatein, a
professor of chemistry here
since 1968, has been named the
A., Conger Goodyear Professor.
'Ibe Goodyear Cbak WBII establisbed in 1965 through an
endowment provided in the A.
Conger Goodyear Trust
Dr. Bruckenatein bolds a
B. S. degree from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn and
a PhD: from the University of
Minnesota. Prior to joining
U/ B, he was professor and
chief of tbe Division of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Minnesota. He is author of more than 75 scientific research articles, several
chapters in advanced chemical
monographs and co-author of
the fourth edition of Quantita·
tive Chemirol Analysis.
Dr. Nichoias D . Kazarinoff,
chairman and professor, Department of Mathematics, has
been appointed Martin Professor of Mathematics. This professorship was established in
1927 through a gift from Darwin D . Martin who specified
that the contributed funds be
used "to establish and maintain in perpetuity a Chair of
Instruction" in Mathematics.
Dr. Kazarinoff joined U/ B
last August and has been chairman or his department since
September. He received his
bachelor's and master's degrees
from the Uruversity of Michigan and the Ph.D. from the
University of Wisconsin.
Dr. Kazarinoff was a member of the Uruversity of Michigan faculty from 1956 to 1971.
He is author of three books and
more t h a n 30 mathematical
papers and is a past managing
editor of tlie Michigan Mathemotirol Jourool. In his native
Ann Arbor, Michigan, he was a
member of the City Council for
the two years prior to his move
to Buffalo.
In 1960-01 and in 1965, Dr.
Kv.arinoff was an exchange
professor at the Steklov Mathematical Institute in Russia.
In appointing Drs. Bruckenstein and Kazarinoff to the
chairs for five-year periods beginning July 1, President Ketler noted that appointment to
an endowed chair is "one of
tbe highest honors this University can award."
Dr. Gordon M. Harris, professor of chemistry, will continue to bold tbe Larkin Chair
in Chemistry, which he was
granted in 1963. This chair
was establisbed in 1930 by tbe
John D . and Frances H . Larkin Foundation with the stipnlation that the recipient be a
professor "wbo ranks high in
the acience of Chemistry and
wbo has an eatablisbed reputation as a teacher."
Dr. Harris has been a member of the faculty since 1953
and was chairman of the Department of Chemistry from
1956 to 1970. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees from

the University of Sasb.tcbewan
and the A.M. and PhD. degrees from Harvard. He baa
published more than 60 scientific papers.
In 1967, Dr. Harris received
tbe Schoellkopf Medal from
the Western Ns York section
of the American Cbemical Society for his efforts in the development of the Department
of Chemistry here.

Hillel Group Aids
Victims of Flood
Hillel students carried out an
act of humanity this week, in
coming to the aid of Western
New York State flood victims.
Judy Prince, student' }lresi-.
dent of Hillel, was tbe moving
force behind tbe mission. Announcements were made on tbe
radio asking that donations of
essential items be dropped off
a t Hillel House, 40 Capen
Boulevard. Students received.
sorted and packed supplies
which included generous quantities of clothing, food and medical goods from Buft'alo area
residents. 'Ibe group worked
Jrom morning until night on
Sunday, filling six station wagons with goods which were
then taken to !hi! Ellwood Fire
Station. A 16-foot-van was donated by Hertz, loaded by students · and driven by student
Alan Jeff to the disaster area.
Rabbi Justin Hofmann called
tbe operation a "tn!mendousand heart&gt;warming job,"
0 t h e r volunteers included
Robert Altman, Susan Gresbin,
Eileen Greshin, Marsha Kushner, Michael Goldberg, and
Susan Fernandez.

Skiers Buy Land
Agreements were made last
week for the pun:baae of 10.65
acres of land in~. Vermont, by the Scb•- ' oters
Ski Club. Negotiatioas were
completed wben the Student
ABiciation agreed to lend the
$13,500 neceasary for the tnm&amp;action. 'Ibe mooey will be repaid within three yean at interest, Art Gleiner, iDterim director of the ScbUBDeislers,
says.
Gleiner is 'enthusiastic about
tbe purchase and potadial use
of the property. He deecribm
the land as "all wooded,
tl
sloping with a 8inall ~
brook running fhrouab." Tbere
are 25 major ski alaPea within
a 4G-mile radius BDil a swimming and canoeing is lovo
miles away. 'Ibe area itaelf was
"never intended for aa slri
slopes," Gleiner points out. Instead, the Club plana to construct a multi~ Jod&amp;e
housing 52 people. n.e croup
has bad "initial CODiacta with
contractors" about the feasibility of the facility and hopes to
have it open by Aupst of 1973.
'Ibe lodge would be· pajd for
through fees.
'Ibe acreage is em ooe of the
"major" VenDODt highways,
Gleiner says, but is far enough

::.~ :~~t:...~

bother anyone.

�4

'lbe Abuaa Katehalsky
Memorial Committee, ........
UIB, reparU~ a -_,.
_....me_... to it.

am at

....
..,.__....,...._Dr-.,·--..,
-· -of
of-pencil.__-------Tlle-.pMntinp---.. . . . . .-. _.. ,. . . .
the~ c...ft
1 IDthe-AitOop_s_,

-·-Jolt'

One M{ln Show

14...,... ... - - - 5

1.-.-,."
-,
p.m.,- ,-s .

.rtilt, - - the visuail sense
.., T . - y throuch Suo-,, 1-5

....., Jolt' 311.

leaer
.,._;..,
"wodd
- -. •.
trihule" totothe
_...... biopbyaiciat wbo lllllldenod in the May 29 Tel
Aviv airport slayinp. Since the
~of JUDI! t h e las .....t out over 2,000 letlens
to ~ and hiocbemisla all over the wodd. 'lbe Jet,.
Ia ..... that they write to Kurt
Waldheim, secretary pDI!r8l of
the United Nat&gt;m.; Dr. S.U..
fonl .Kadhioh, president of the
"-iam Aaooeiation of Uniwnity Prof-. and Dr. J. c .
Kead&lt;ew, preSident of the IDtematioaal Union of Pure and
Appljed Biopbysiao, a s k i n I
lheae men to hoaor Prof-..
Kstd&gt;alsky in some wa,y.
Replies hsw lleen JIOUl'in&amp; in
from all over the U.S. and •

Budg&amp;~furAc~~-------------------------------------(Continued from page 1, col. 3)

those for undergraduate majors,
undergraduate non-majors,
first..year graduate students,
and advanced graduate students. In addition, the potentisl
deparlmental eruollments and
student-faculty ratios should he
evaluated in terms of the obligations the &lt;iepartment or program has to provide "service"
cowses for o t h e r academic
units.
Another criterion should he
the quality, e.g., GRE scores,
undergraduate honors, number
of qualified applications rejected for admission, and quantity of the applicants for ad·
mission to a unit's program,
particularly at the graduate
level.
II.QuaHtativeThe first qualitative criterion

to ·he applied is a multiplel:
one, dealing with the use whkh
a program has made of past re-

SOW'CI!S available to iL Included
tunities and other I1!ICIOplitioo
here is the performance or re- whkh recent recipients of padcent faculty appointments in uate degrees in the propam
terms or leachin&amp;. resean:b. and have recei-.ed. Also included
Uniwnity service. Also to he here should he some evaluation
evaluated under this heading is of the prospec:tiye utilization in
the success of the unit in its employment of the knoorJed&amp;e
initiation and dP.wlopment of and slrills provided by the proits instructiollal and """"'""' gram. Another factor to he inprograms, particularly where corporated in this aspect of the
additioDal resoumes were made evaluation is the ...W. of
available to support sud&gt; de- teaching effectiwneos w h i e h
-.elopments, and the eztent of the faculty of the propam or
nearly isomorphic: duplication the Office of Teaching Elreeof efforts undertaken in other tiveness hsvc mmpiled..
units or the Uniwnity.
A third qualitative criterioa
A 9llCIIIId aiterion to he ap- to he applied is that of the .....,.
plied in the evaluation of aca- cess of the unit in its researdl
demic units is the instructional and creative actrnty. To he
ac:hie¥ement of their programs. evaluated here are the ~ty
This should indude estimates and quantity of the research or
of the ac:hievements of the re- creative activity and the recoc·
cent participants in the pro- nition such activity has regram, indud.iu&amp; here h!M»rs ceived. Included here is the ...,
awarded, national sdlolarships whkh the unit and its peniCDreceived, and the like. At the nel have made of researdl or
graduate level, this should in- creative activities grants and
dude the employment oppor- other forms of support for these

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

of

•Open to public;
• •Open to .....-s
the Uniwnily;
#Open only to those with a professional . _ in the subject
'
Contact Suzanne Metzger, 831·22211. far -.p.

THURSDAY-29
CREATIVE CRAFI' a:N'IDl• •: Leath-

er: belrs, 1-5 p.m. Batik, 7-10
p.m.

IH'I'EilHATION.AL FOLK DANC!NC : ins truction in basic steps duri.nc
first hour, 30 Die!eD&lt;iorf Annex,
8 p.m.

SUJOIER

The Bed Sitting Room,

Fn.M ••:

Conference Theatre, 4, 6, 8 and
10 p.m.
FILMS • • : Les Carabiniers ( 1963.

78 min., Godard), 140 Capen, 7
p.m. and 9 p .m. Ritual in Transfigured Time (1946, 15 min..
Deren) ; At Land (1944, 15 min..,
Deren ); Window Water Boby
Moving (1959, 12 min., Brak·
hage); Songs 1-10 (1964-69, 43
min., Brakhage), 147 Diefendorf,
7 p.m. and 8 :30 p.m.
LIFE WORKSHOP • •: [nterpersono.J.
Communication. Register at 8312511/ Norton 225. 232 Norton,
7:30-9 p.m ., ...,iy Thursday until August 3.
PSYCHOMAT . . : a listening and
speaking ezperience in open and
honest communication. 232 Norton, 7-10 p.m.
•

FRIDAY--30
CDlA.TfVE CRAFT CENTEit• •: Leo.tla&lt;r, belts, 1-5 p.m.

Bed Sitting Room.
fcl"':'::nceTheTheatre,
4, 6, 8 and
PD.M:• • :

C01'7RHOUSE• • : Johnny Shioea.,
lot Door cafeteria, Norton 7 and
9 p.m., admission c:barp. Aloo
oa Salurday, July 1.
PILII8 00 : Battlulaip Pauraltin
(Eioenotein, 1925), 140 Ca~ 7
ad 9 p.m. Lc. CIW.oiM (Godaid,

~ ~~~~·14~ &amp;!i:
.....s..rr. 9 p.m.
.,.._-Til ......., a..

..... ~ 32112 ~st., 8 - -

~·:

F I L.fll

JNS1T11JTE

Lro-

Raymood Federman,
professor. French. Godarcfs A m ·
oricanism. 147 DiefeD&lt;iorf, 8 : 30

p.m.

SATURDAY-I
Johnny Shines,
1st Ooor cafeteria. Norton. 7 and

COFf'EEHOUSE••:

9 p.m., admission

char&amp;e.

MONDAY-3
PILKS* • : 0 c t o b e r (Eisenstein,
19'ls) , 140 Capen, 7 p.m. So1111•
11 -18 (Brakbage, 1964-69) , 140
Capen, 7:30 p.m.
From
Utuhr Childhood I &amp; II (Brakba&amp;e. 1967-el). Fire of Woten
(Brakbage, 1965), 140 Capen,
9 : 30 p.m.

s«,.,.

aacATift atAFT (ZlftD• •: Leatlr.-

er, open shop, 7-10 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-5

pwpo8l!6. Also to he evaluated
is the eztent to which outaide
fuads hsve been -'&gt;t and
obCained where appropJiate and

~final

qualitatiw ailaion to he applied is the proof the resources
which are or mi&amp;ht he available
to the unit and the anticipated
~of such funds.
Also to he oaasidered here are
an.y t&amp;Pnmeols for auxilisty
.........,_ which an academic:
unit may Jlll!ll'!l1lte • a CD1181!qoeDCe of its actrnties. Thst
is, the amount of UniWI'IIity
fm&gt;ds, oot immediately or dilec:tly inwlved in carryin&amp; out
the
- will hebut
which to
- delhelem
required
velop or maintain the procnliD
must he ClOIISide!ed.

...-1...,

IIL~ID5odaiJ.

A further aiterioa to he used
in evaluating academic: programs is. the eztenll to which as

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Grant of-$l: Mi1JionWill~~
Five¥oor StlidY :Of :~ of Agiri::::=
By JOHN THURBTON.
.,.;;,;.d aPnl. - ~- hapu~~...._.
- i n the cell8tbat alu8e8 an
A U/B prof_,. ot1 bioloiY cirpniazq to ~" ineffective
bas betan a study of the caUIIe8 l!llZ,YIII5.
of ...mur, with the belp of a $1
"'Ibis could be the .-.It of
milliiiBpant from the NatioDal a cbanile in tlie enzyme After it
Institute of Child Care and is produced, production of · a
Human Development. Tbe bad·
which ...Uta in
cnmt is cme of the larpBt ever ineffective enzymM, or poor
awarded to a prof-.r hare.
translation of ·a good .......,.,e
Dr. Mo!'ton ·Rothstein will which would have the same reuse the five-year stipend to sult.
ClOIIdUct ....,.... into the grad"'Ibe nematodes are grown in
ual deterioration p1'0&lt;811 which test tubes, isolated and sepaC8UIIe8 people to age.
rated into young and old or~ "Tbele have - . , numen&gt;WI
pnisms. The life _.. is .20-40
t,haori!!S about the aging pro- days. The cells of these oqpmiams
can be esamined with
"""" down· through the years.
Praclic:ally ao quickly as ooe total concentration on what is
f0"'5 up with such a theory, it
JS contradicted by another," Dr.
Rothstein ezplains, "but ....
gardless of the why or bow, we
all age and there must be a
reason for il"
Tbe project, "A Study of
Aging in a Nematode Model
System," involves use of nematodes or small worms, barely
visible to the naked eye, which
maintain the same cells from
birth to death. G-r 0 w t h is
achieved through enlargement
of the .cells rather than through
cell multiplication as in inost
organisms.
"What we are working with
is an organism whoee cells we
can observe at both young and
old stag'"' and we are observing
the same cells,'' Dr. RotiJStein

-.e

said.

u-•na ot Alina
He ezplained that basic to
the research will be an understanding of aging from a molecular point of view. " We already
know, for instance, that physiologically wrinkled s k i n is
csused by oxidation or a binding together of skin tissue, but
what csuses the oxidation can
only be leamed on a molecular
level," "he added.
"Aging is a result of a
changing in the operation of
the cells. Every function performed in the body depends
on · enzymes which are· produced and which act as catalysts for every chemicsl reaction in the body.
"The DNA codes an RNA
(message) whicli is ~lated
into an enzyme or pro'tein that
will csrry out a specific function. I believe that in the proAn

~SecUrity Mounting

tSafetyAwareness' Drive

happening to them with - - - '
to time.
"By havinl contrul ovw the
n u triente, tempeJature and
other . - r y .,_tb requi..,.

=

::n.!t!:-"!ect
~
c;:
be ot.erwd," Dr.
_.. can

RotiJStein added.
Part. of the hmde will be
used to oet up a culture Cll!!lll«
where a staff will -.It to keep
a corJStant supply of , _ .
lodes available for the _.m.

:i:~~n!:.
::r.:~
and a number of .......,ici_
will alao be added. Dr. Noel B.
( colllilwed 010 2, eel. 4) '

Slatin to Resign in Fall;Bobinski Interim Director
Dr. Myles Slatin,-director of
libraries since 1968 has resigned from that post, effective
September 1. He plans to ..,.
turn _to a teaching Jl(lSi~on in
the DeP&lt;irtrnent of English.
Pending the appointment of
a pemJSDent replacement, Dr.
George S. Bobinski, dean of
the School of Information and
Library_ Studies, Yiill serve as
acting director.
In accepting Dr. Slatin's resignation, ·President - ~~ L.
Ketter thanked - bini·, "for _his
"~edication .and'J:Iil!Q~Wodt dUr'
ing the past '?pur;;,
' ·;Biu~ Jat!"i06!
difficult period o '
~,fDd
transition for our UniV.. ty' li-"

brariM. This University is v~
indebted to Dr. Slatin for his
20 years of dedicated oervice
in many roles."
Dr. Slatin,. a .profesaor- of
English, joined U/ B in 1962
and at various times has held
the positiOmr of assistant dean,
associate dean and acting dean
of the University's College of
:Arts and S c i Dr. Bol&gt;inski, dean of ~
since 1970; was aasistant dean
aNi ,professor at the Univemity

of ~entdcky; frmh 1f!!L."'.~?70
and was·di~ji of ~ at

the State " Univ~

at Cortland from ~~

.

sUMMER:&gt;· -· -

~PORTE~ -

:~·

1-·.

�~

2

/uM :.r:.r, 191:.1

EngliSh Plans SASU Celebrates Its 2nd Anniversary J~ Bunting
A Series of
Wlih E..-v~~~n
Stimds
SUNY
Issues The
Will Head
11
.
¥ «-«-"-'
.
.
MFCSA
4 Lectures
'-n

an

A series of four public lectures and readings by partiapants in U/ B's Ninth Summer
Prognufl in Modem Literature
will be held in June, July and
August
All lectures are scheduled for
3:00 p.m. in the Norton Conference 'Ibestre under sponsorship of the Office of Summer
Sessions and the Department of
English.
The authors and schedule of
the series follows:
June 27, Wilfrido Nolledo:
Reading from his Fiction. A
native of the Pbilippines, Nolledo is a graduate of Paul Engel's creative writing workshop
at the University of Iowa. He
is the author of But for the
~,., t 1970) and is currently
finishin . his second novel COIImndro ~ickett in the Wings.
July 13, Ruthven Todd:
Poetry Reading. A multi-talented author, as well as a psmter and engraver, Todd is the
author of several books of PD!'try including Until Now !1941),
The AcretJIIe ola,;he Heart
},~': )' !l~) . p He t isin.
known for bis work on Blake,
including a volume of essays
Trac/u in the Snow ( 1946) and
the editing of William Gilchrist's Life of William Bltllu!
t 1942, 1945) .
July 25, Bemsrd Benstock:
"James Joyce: The Creed of
the Fanoonerite." Professor of
English at Kent State UniversitY., J)r., Benstock is the author ol .l~ce-Again's Wake, .
"'Ibe Dead,' in Jama .Ioyce's
Dublinero and many critical
articles on Joyce. : ·
·, :August-". l, •·.Jobn · Law I er:
"Theatre Colloquia : A New
Path. in Shakespeare. Interpretatiim." Head of tJie Department of English ~ge and
Literature at the Uruver;ity of
Keel, England, Dr. Lawler is
the author of The Tr&lt;Jiic SeMe
in SluJltapean (1960), Piers
Plowmt111: An Eamy in Critici8m (1962) 8nd n.u merous
other books.

The Student Association of · a calendar would be a violation
the State University of New of the individual and local preYork tSASU) will be two rogatives that are necessary for
years old in August. While its the units of SUNY to function
history to date has been a elfectively.''
Approved was a reciprocity
s.truggle for simple survival,
its annual meeting held June of stUdent ri~ and privileges
connected
wtth attending stu10 and 11 raised hopes that
something will come of it. At dent activity events for all
SASU-aftiliated
SUNY units.
least, Mark Borenstein, a U / B
student who is chairman of the Under this plan, students from
one
csmpus
could
buy tickets
organization, is talking ab9ut
for activities on- another csma "strong future."
SASU is beginning to take pus for the same pri!:e as stuemphatic stands on a number dents at the host institution.
of student-related issues. Seven SASU also authorized the orresolutions endorsed at the an- ganization of a committee to
nual meeting concerned con- develop comprehensive guidecepts as varied as student rights lines for students contracting
and cooperative booking of en- entertsinment groups throughout SUNY,
tertainment activities.
A resolution jlaving the way .
The student group refused to
for a "Statement of the "Rights,
~:"'~I!,rar~::;: Privileges, and Freedoms of
SASU "cannot accept the pro- Students" was okayed but the
cess by which student partici- group rejected the Central Adpation was sought nor do we ministmtion's idea of setting
think that student input was
~te.su.r:;::.C:i~et
sufficiently heeded."
SASU rejected, too, the idea ment drive to get SASU recogof a University-wide calendar nized as the official represent&amp;because "the formation of such tive and spokesman for the stu-

:JNY

=: .

w!{l

Ketter to Air
Reports onWKBW
"The President's Report," a
new !"""tbly- radio feature with -

PresJ!'ent ~rt L Ke~r
pr_euueres this Sunday eveJUI!I
at_9 p.m. on WKBW Radio
l 1"20 J • .
.
Questions about the Uruversit): which are of concem to
~r . sepnents of the commuruty will be ansWS'ed by Dr.
Ketter and members Of the
U/ B faculty, staff and student
body. In the first program this
Sunday
Dr. J . Nor-

everuna.

::~m:~~~

Gets in and ~-" Vice ·President for Facilities Planning
John D .,_,. discusses
'
the·
· • cuer
status of construction of ~
new U/B N.~ Campus m
Amhetes rst. thepro~_,~
1or . new ...,..._ over
ra
the next two· years.
.
~""!hers of the ~uruty
·are tnVJted to!""'~'~- or.
suggested top1cs ol dl8CU881on
for upcoming editiobs of the
p~ to: U/B Infonnation
Serv1ces, 142 Hayes Hall, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214..
The program IS hosted by
Jim DeSantis, director of U/B
Information Services.

Students Aid Jail Inmates
Mike, a . 27-yt!SMild Caucas- jor components. One deals priian, had .been free on bail marily with actual ·services to
awaiting a bearing on a charge inmates. 'Ibe other involves ...,.
of possession of a dangerous sean::b of both piOCledures and
weapon. When he appeared in performance.
City Court be was arrested on
a charge of second degree assault.
·
students, working cloSeiy with
He claimed be knew nothing professional supervisors, atabout the cbarKe. A check was tempt to bridge the gap bemade at City Court which dis- tween the inmate and communcovered that the assault com- ity resources and facilities.
plaint 'was actua1ly swom out 'l'beoe •" social brobrs," 88 they
for .anotbar man, alao named are cslled by the ECJCS, proMike, who was 19 years old vide a variety of services
and black. . Because of this from making phone calls to obcase of mistaken identity an tainingtes.. legal counsel for ininnocent man • pent three ma
weeks in jail awaiting a hear- OUtside eoning that wOuld eventually clear
. Willialii A. Geller, . a spring
up the mistake. .. ..
graduateofU/Bandastudent
To alleviate circumstances counselor for ECJCS since its
such as. this as well as ofl:er a inception, f e e I s an inmate's
multitude of additional services most pressing need is for a conto Erie County Jail inmates, tact with the outside:
the School of Law and the
"A lot can happen to a man
School of Social Policy and having to spend three or four
Community Services have been months in jail, even if be is
operating the Erie County Jail found innocent after his trial
Counseling Service CE.CJCS) Our case histories show that
since Oct{lber, 1970.
some men have lost their wives
Fl.:.t cit .lis Kind
and/or their jobs and possesBefu.ved. to be one of the sions as .,. result mainly of inprograms of its kind in the adequate communication beUnited States, the ECJCS was tween the inmate and other
the brainchild of sev~ facul- parties involved.
"'lberefore, we become a sort
ty members, students and concemed "tizens including Rev of messenger service to the inmate,
contacting his family and
Carl B •
chaplain, and
Clarence J. Sundram. who was notifying them of visiting
times,
or letting his a t =
then a law student working on
an. already estsblisbeil prisoner lmow that be wants to
release
with him if requested...
Inmates learn of the student
'Ibe ~ which began
with limited funds and a hand- service by the "~" explains Geller. "WheD an inmate
ful of ~lunteer studelits. has desin!l8 some help be fills out
matured into a sts!f of 16 stu- a request form and gives it to
.~f!i ~ prot.,.;o,w super- Mr. Congdo9- or one of the
VI80l'll. Smce J~, 'federal
funds from the Ene County Of- gusrils, who relays it to a
fice of Crime Control Plan- special mail slot in the guard's
ning, 8 creation of the Fedoral locker room. 'Ibe student
Safe Streets Act, have provided
the budgat.
~
• ...,.,;ft~~ --''--'y."
Prior to tbe MaJ&gt;!ishi!Wit of his ....,...._......,.., -..........
ECJCS. many of the services 'Ibe aocial brola!r -provides
wbicb student .counselor~~ ..,. ."aerviees wbicb do ·not exist,
handle were carried out by access to aerviees wbicb do
.._ iaan, w. J. ''Bill" Cong- exist and COUil8eling in .the
doa, apecial .-vice&amp; o1ficer at JIIOCfuctive use of those sertbe jail To Coagdol;a, the pro- ==~,~~
pam much needed asaistaJlee.
•
.
'
ECJCS CXIIUiists of two ma- include a ~.!t"1:if

rust

.iall

:"'tb! :.Jt",.!ttL:!.:;

-

-

SASU lobbyists probably won't
be success f u I in pushing
through legislation orr their
bwn; however, be hoPes they
will be able to !'liJID ~ves
with other I~ groups to
make the Whole legislative process more open and respansiw
to the needs "of tho!J&gt;80Ple."
Meanwhile, SASU is working also to make SUNY ''more
open" to students. One ~t
csm ·go is aimed at getting

=

~ ~=·=

mlttee of the Aalciation (with
an altemate chairman because
of a conflict of ·i nterest situation with the 1971-72 chairman) heBr the pievance and
report findings to the still incumbent esecutive committee
88 well as to communicate to
the Dean of Millard Fillmore
College, 'all matterll requiring
disposition by the University.'
"Since, following a lengthy
meeting of the incumbent .,..,.,_
utive committee, there was no

- - - .. -

dent and .faculty m emb·e r grievance, I l'ecll-..d the Acting Vice President for Student
of t.lie Boilrd of 'I'rusleM. An- A1lairs to validate the ballots
other push is to ~ Trustees' received apinst a list of reg
meetilip ·to the ~_aDd have istered , MFC· stu-!ents for
ageudu widely pui&gt;lici-t:Jie. fall and spring - - of
forehand.
1971-72. Ballolll to be tallied
"'o help sol e 1"ts ~ m· were tbc.e ............... -~ pn·or to
te~ ~~cati~"j,,OO: or on w~M:- 3, 1972,
lems, SASU is opening three and received by Friday, May 5,
~onal 1&gt;ffices in the fall, in 1972. In this connection, I acPotedam, Stony Brook and cepted the decisions of the inBinghamton. 'Ibe offices will cumbent Pre.Ji ident of the
be manned by graduates of MFCSA that such timing was
schools in these areas and will a prudent interpretation of the
put every SUNY unit only 90 Constitution-and By-Laws.
minutes away, by car, from a
"'The results of this validaSASU office. ·
lion _proceas are 88 follows:
A new slate of olficem will Pruident, Joan M. Hurlburt,
taketoo? oBove!,...~teinlatebasSep~~ 190, Jack Bunting, 199; Vice
•
·~
Pruident, Roger D. Hurlburt,
feelings" about nmning for re- 145, Brian Coyne, 247; Corelection. He took over in the ret~poNlinl/ Secret.ary, E d i t h
middle of this year when the Duft, 2111", Joyce Kopf, 175;
former chairman quit and he T . - - , George Kraus, 217,
isn't sure he wants to 110 ~ l.ewandowaki, 176;
through another full year.
Recordittf Secretary, Patricia
MincM! (1lJICII&gt;IQed).
"Since in the abaence of a
report .from a Judicial Com(contiJuud from I. coL 6)
mlttee 1 COil8ider the u-JiaRose. cfuector of the U/B Cen- tiim of the MFCSA of6oers to
ter for Immunology, will also he a matter requiring disposibe involved in the project.
ti011 by the Dean of Millard
_ , for the Cure
Fillmore
(:Ille ......
Nematode research is noth- t i - of ihe Siudeat A.ociaing new to the lmowiedpable tion ""!~lira an adiwt - biology professor, who oe1e- tive committee wilh time to
brates his 50th· birthday this plan d1UiDI the . . _ . ADoyear and admits that if there cation oflii!IM, ID tbe "-c:iais a "cure" for old age, he is tion from colleded .tadoDt feM
ready for it. He has '-n study- requires ~ Olllcial itwtal..t:ion
ing the biochemistry of nema- ol elected amc..), I witb this
todes for ten yeara with monies IIII!IDOI8IIdum taloe ~
from past grants aDd already tiw 8Ction in o8lclall,y itwtalbas published a large number ling the followillJ ol6cera:
of technicsl reports 011 his fiud- President: Jad&lt; BualillJ; Vice
ings.
Preaideot: Brian Cclyfte; CorA natiw of VIIDCOUvet, B.C. J'I!IIIIIOII(Ii Secretary: Edith
Canada, Dr. Rothstein has Duft; Treaaurer: George
'-n 011 the U/B faculty since Ki:a
RecordinJ Secretary
1965.
Patrlda MiJldleli.
:
Reflecting on possible results
"I congratulate the nl!w ofnamed as non-voting members

h

$1 Million• _

eou.e

~~will =~'a¥3 =~~=-t!i

---~~

...,._.,s...u-....rya~,..r_.., .

i:."'ll4ll4.
rPM2121).

~tud::,t)f:;'""'tha~theDo'::;

Jack Bunting bas
installed 88 president of the Millaril Fillmore College Student
Association (MFCSA) by an
administrative memorandum
fiOID Dean. Robert F. Berner,
dated June 15.
'J'be .move ~ially, at
any i:ale--il controversy which
bas sunounded this year's
MFCSA elections since they
were beld last spring (Reporter, June 1). In. his memorandum, Berner
reviewed . the difficulties and
the actions he bas taken:
"Because of a sriev!mce filed
by 01&gt;(1 of ·t he candidates .for
the e I e c t e d ofticen of the
MFCSA, there bas '-n a delay in ofticially announcing the
results of the balloting to the
MFC student body. Yoll0¥dllg
an advisory hearing, chaired by
the Acting Vice I'lesident for

~rrta:~:~= would
eni~.::.=~~~
::lu~~~~&amp;!uru~
also like to have a stu- nor a committee to bear the

GRE~
· ·- - -...

dents of SUNY" was called for.
Also introduced at the meeting was an amendment to ihe
SASU constitution that makes
membership open only to undergraduate student 110vemmen!!~. As a spokesman points
out, current activities deal primarily with undergraduate conrerns and this would simply
codify existing practioe. 'Ibe
propoaed amendment further
limits full membetahip in the
organ i z at ion to four-year
SUNY units. Community colleges and private schools could
become associate members.
'They could use SASU programs but would not heve voting rights.
:
In line with its goal of becoming a stronger spokesman
for students, SASU will be
opening a full-time legislati~
lobbying otfice in Albany in
September to work for student
concems and push. for passage

.
st........,
........
.....,J...,
....

~

-

.._-

~..:_~. -~,-v,.....,.
m -•

:..a...

_.;

,..._ """ .
bousilig. Alao ~ is the
..~ · ol a "bottine"
telt!Pholle mmiber wbicb the
lii!Wly released may call for an=to~ ih time of

!!j't be found -in his generation.
t may never be possible to
stop ihe aging procojsa QID.
getber, but such -..::b miJht
one day enable scientists to at
least contribUte to a ~th
life that. is -o~ •
~ 'old age,'"
con-

formally verifying ihe installation alld coaiJw.tulalillJ them
i n . . _ I would hope thilt
tholie who lost in the election
· will continue to be inteielited in
ihe alfainl oL. the . :Aillociation
and to 8UJIIIOit tbc.e endeavors

~roveservicetoallour·

�~-· 22,

1972

The 8exuai RevolutionIs It Rffilly HereYet?
By SUZANNE METZGER

su.u
'lbou8h we're in tbe midat of
a aema1 revolutioo, purportedly dlaracterized by permissiveneaa and f.-tom, listening to
IIDme of tbe lectures and discussions at tbe U / B workshop,
SUUIJlily GIUi New Life Sty/a,
one wondered where it's happaning.
·
.
EuliJhlelled speakers a n d
puticipent&amp; often referred to
tbe ~ve faolioDs wbo oppoee au education in tbe
scboola and .to tbe auua~· iporance of a ~ty of adult&amp;
who are etill burdened by tbe
doalt of . a "morality" that
would keep us and our children
in tbe cJatk. about both tbe
pbysiolotJical and emotional aspecta of sex.
Tbe tone of tbe worbbop,
spoaaored by Continuing Nwains Educatioo, at tbe StaUer
Hilton HotA!l, Friday and Saturday, was frank and streiioed
tbe preesins need for honesty
and ~ in brinsins au
educatiOD to every geueration.
Repressive attitudes were generally as a eocial ill.
Participant&amp; included guidance counselors, e d u c a to r a,
bMith education administrators
and teecbers, acbool and baspial nunes, and psychiatric
and eocial agency wotbrs.
Tbey d.- together in tbe interest of combatting what Clarice l..eclmer called "the very
real problem of tbe shortage of
people wbo can stand up and
talk simply, without embaras&amp;ment and .wilb ·emotiOD about
auusl relationahips, w h i c h
have been liD split off from tbe
rest of life."
· Mrs. Lechner) asaclc:iate pro- ·
f_,. In the ~t "of'
Maternal Healtli, 0/B's Scboo1
of Nursing, followed her openina nmarks with a p-tation of eo olides selected from
a aeries of 300 prepared by tbe
Unitarian Universalist Association and ll8ed within the COiltezt of their """""" About Y OfU'
SuutJlily wbiC:h has been offered to ~ hid&gt; school children lhroucbout the Noftheest.
Participant&amp; were asked to jot
down their reactions on a
queationnaire and to check tbe
column that moat nearly ezpreesed lhair feelings about
each elide. C o I u m n s were
'-ded. "Enjoyed tbe Picture,..
·~t Pleasing" "Both· erecl Me Somewba~" "Made
Me Q u I t e Uncomfortable."
Slidea included p i c t u r e 1 of
nude gida looking at each other
in the mirror, nude boys, boys
and gida onpged in mastnrbatioa, in~ a nude
mother and.child. breasts, male
and female pnitalia, family
...,..,., a white girl 8JIII a black
man ellllncing, and occasionall just -m. 8Uch as "akin,"
...,:_,.. .and four-letter and
aJan, worc1a relating to Inter~ and ...__,udity. If it
aounda lib an X-rated movie,
it t.r from thal Tbe olides
frank _ , . without any
vulprity or alacious quality.
IOdl DDn't . _ Alta the allde ~tatioo,
puticipent&amp; separated into six
groupe to m..:u. their ...,.
tionL Thlo latmched talk aboUt
· tbe JII'Qblema of education
in the acbools; as ~ educator
from the Rocbeater ayatem
pointed out, tt.e olides would
be approved for display
by the panmta of childlin in
her .:hoola. Tbere was a conthat au education is
that many adult&amp; and
childrea haw little
about their bodlea
and are COilfuioed about auuslity: "Kida reaJly don't bow
much about au but ~ want
you to believe they do. Tbey
p.-u! to bow more in order

=

to impress peers, the participants noted, and avoid talking
to their parents about sex becarmeduse~andparenare tsuncoare_Jlortablt
· ine10

uu0

with tbe subjecl Adults "can't
accept sex as a part of life,"
and liD oppooe sex education in
tbe public acbools. Cowsea in
tbe community college and tbe
use of mobile units were sug~ested methods of disseminatmg information.
Cited as one of the best proF."".!!' in Bullalo was tbe Family Education Program at tbe
Jewish Community C en t e r,
which encourages open discussion among family members on
matters related to sex.
Elizabeib Kaiser, aBIIDciate
profe&amp;IIDr, Department of MatemaJ Health, spoke on Eroticism GIUi Bodily R~po,_, ezploring tbe pbysiological responses to auual stimulation.
"We sprees our sexuslity in a
consistent manner throughout
our Jives," bea.n .Mrs. Kaiser,
whether it lie beteroauual,
bomosemaJ, both together, or
celibacy, "Whatever tbe melbod of preference, we t e n d
not to forsake this type of auusl ezpression, e v e n under
tree.tmenl And whatever the
mode," sbe oontinued, "our
cultural heritage teou:bes us it's
d i r t y, debasins, discusting,
something to be feared and
hidden.
"We must honor our auuality," Mrs. Kaiser contended,
"and face it bonesUy, enjoy it,
and consider it a privilege."
Shesaid it's a wonder we're not
more schizophrenic than we
are, considerins tbe polarity betw~ religious orthodoxy and
Madison Avenue- hardaell auuslity.
.
.
No Set -

of -...!

'J11ere is ·~ !"'t · mode .of
erotic arousal, &amp;aid Mrs. Kai&amp;er. "Individuals are conditioned
early to specific erotic stimuli
such as kissing, strolring, suekins. light bitins.'' All parts of
tbe body are erogenous, but
some are more responsive than
others. " Physiological response
is only half tbe picture," sbe
remarked. "The psychological
aspect is just as important but
more difficult !!,~:!J·" Mrs.
Kaiser also d '
sexuslity in tbe aging, which sbe said
has been subject to "ridicule,
distrust;" and is alluded to in
·terms auch as "dirty old man,"
or ''abe's over the hill." A perIIDD can remain sexually active
'into tbe 80's, sbe remarked,
citins tbe findinss of Masters
and Johnaon.
Mrs. Lechner, in ber talk,
'"The Swinging Seventi-The
Egalitarian Eighties," referred
to the era of tbe 70's as tbe
period of beginnins acceptance
of a variety of auual ""'!avi!'rs
and patterns. The "egalitarian
80'~ will be a time when moat
~viduals will have tbe oppottunity to develop a sense of
community with nature, tbe
world, and with other human
beinp, sbe predicted. "We're
living Fulun Shoclt:," sbe said,
wituesaint tbe breakdown of
COilventional patterns. Today's
youth are aetting tbe stage in
man's relatedDes&amp; to tbe natural They are atrug~
against a "sense of emptineaa,
and tbe IOM of meanins in life.
Mra. Lechner referred ~ the
advent of group aex, _ . . _ , .
tation, group ~- Though
more complez mantal &amp;truetws may be more rewarding,
sbe said, they are also more
denunu!ing and require a great
deal of ClCJilr&amp;ll!. Mra. l..eclmer
enVisioned tbe time when pnulery has vanished, when we can
talk openly and ~about
aex, when there is.
for
ezperimentation to f'mcl alternate ways.. Tben people will

Coni- ....... !If'

enter into "non-coercive, non-

ezploitive relationships,'' and
man will ·have recaptured his
sense of " joy, wonder and delight" Which was lost to him
centuries ago.
Tell H Ulot H Is

''The Adolescent -Tell ins It
Like It Is," was the subject of
a talk by Ann Cotter, director
of health education in the Kenmore School Districl Miss Cotter emphasized that you cannot
teach about tbe process of sex
without conveying some understandins of per11Dnality development, and of the values
and problems of society.
" Schools can't go it alone," said
Miss Cotter, but home, community and church must also
become involved in sex education. Sbe feels the acbools are
presenUy failing in their attempt to get through to students. Sbe played tape recordings of conY.,rsations among
several 15-year-old girls from

ber health education classes
who stated t h a t they had
learned inost of what they knew
about sex from boyfriends;·
none from their mothers. Miss
Cotter feels the need .for the
teacher to convey basic, acientifically accurate information
about reproduction. She explained "that New York State
schools are now required to
teach about mental health, alcoholism, narcotics, tobacco
and first aid, but sex educalion has been blocked by opposing factions from the community. People who are for
se~ education should -'&lt;: as
ioudly and strongly as the
groups opposed, she said.
Miss Cotter displayed a book
entiUed How &amp;hies Are Mlllh
by Andrew Andry and· Steven
Schepp, a Time-Life S e r i e s .
publication. The book depict&amp;
in simple and colorful drawings
how flowers develop, how dotls
copulate, how the spenn travels
to the egg and the embryo sub-

no.. .......

sequenUy develops, and goes on
to show a mother and father together in a bed fo~ by pictws of tbe cte....IO{&gt;JI!ellt · and
birth of a human baby. Tbe
book .is suitable for. kinderpr.
ten age children. And, sbe said;
a teacher and a principal were
fired from a acbool in North
Tonawanda for using tbe book
in their cia-.
Other topics p-led during tbe conference were "Homosexuality as a Viable Alternate Life Style," by Dr. Jamea
Haynes, prole&amp;IIDr of bioJocy,
and Donald Ucht, graduate
student in anthropology; "Who
Owns Your Body," by Dr. Halvey Kannen, director of Communitr Service and of PBychoIIDIDStic RMearch, San Vincente Hoepital, Loa Angeles,
California.
Tbe "Sperm and Egg Handbook," and "'lbe Birth Control
Handbook," liD popular on campus, were distributed in tbe
Jlll&lt;bt of conference materialo.

Student Group Has Impact on Pollution Law
Sil&lt; Rachel Carson College
students and a former genetic
biologist have again proved
that a citizens group can do
something about pollution. The
group, puticipenta in tbe College's Environmental T a s k
Foree, course ( 404), seems to
have succeeded in changins the
pollution laws in Erie County.
First, they helped re-wri~ a
_,tjon of the County's health
code, opening the Air Emission
lndez to tbe Pllblic. Enactment
into Jaw ol tt.e revisions
"seems ~t," Dr. Beverly
Paigens, courae in8tnlctor, says.
Nezt, the group took tbe lead
in a public bearing dealing with
air pollution controls on t.fu.ee
area coke ovens. At a session
at which "citizens don't usually
teatify," they detailed, altemative p..,._ compames could _
use to make their ovens cleaner.
Finally, last Monday, ~y
testified in favor of legislation '
lowering tbe allowable percent-

age of sulfur dioxide in coal
burned in tbe County .
These activities weren't the
result of a one...venins meetins.
It took tbe group almost five
months for tbe necessary backgrouod research. The class
studied steel making, coke oven
technology and coal minins in
order to have a reasonable degree of expertise.
The complez area of air pollutinn was choeen be c·a u s.e
"other people shy away from
it," Ms. Paigens, an active
member of tbe I o c a I Siena
Club, ezpJaios,
The claaa met informally in
ber bome. Tbere were no rigid
lectures; ina_t&lt;!ad, student&amp; prepared material to be p,_,ted, Tbey took "field trips" to coke
ovens at Bethlehem Steel and
other area companies . .Belhle- hem was very Cboperati~; the
o!hers ~ not, . 'l1ley mterVIew¢ !"''J&gt;Ie liv~ near ~e .
steel mills to discover their
':'!~ ~ the ovens- ~~_EO_!:-

lution. And they worked c:ll-.
ly with State and County envii'ODIJI'!Iltal olficoa P.tberin&amp;
infonnation.
Ms. Paigens choae this way
of orpnizing the courae to
show that "a lechnical background isn't .-led to understand environmental problems." Only one student bad
a scientific bad&lt;gmuDd. More
than anything alee, the claao
demanded a Jot of Jecwod: and
listening to aperla.
.
The courae will be olfered
again this fall
MEETING
The Buffalo c.nt.r Chapter of the
Senate Pn&gt;fesoionll ..........,tion
(SPA) will disclaa distribution of
money lor merit i n c - at e
membership . . - , . today (June
22) at noon in tho Red Room of
the Fecutty Club. Also on the
apnda wiU be: PD!icy for tenn of
Initial appointment end orrencements lor &amp;um&lt;Mr ariewance procedures

- ==-·--r,....,===----

�4

~-Emphasi?m SUNY's
(bnmitment to Equality

--~

-&gt;)_4 PuNic Film LretUres SdurliiiRJ1
....,_. "'teJoaDd the v.o.y a1
the Dl6.' • 146 n· •
·~• •JIIIy u. l
..... n...ao, Frmd&gt;. U/B,
-n. A"'w . tim af ~ill

*1!

)UIL;

.,. a...-.

c .

W"dh

8pecW A - - . ... . . . . _ .

146 Diefendorf, 8:30p.m.;
J,q 18, ~
Vi • ' • Cinema 8tadiee,
NYU "Daa:bmmp'e ·~
'l1le Pilmic Object
aDd the Artietic Subjed," 147
Diollmdad, 8 p.m.; Twalay,
Jllly 18, .I ohn K. Simon,
French, U/8, "'liroehime:

r-..,.
ca..;,..,

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

140~

8p.m.

Jllly "'·

-u.t

orDlooitt, ...,.nm-a..
1e .c.

8 p.m.; ,..,...,, . . . . ,
8,Stefan.........,......,
U/8, ~ -_.the
~."147"'

If

8:39 p.m.; r.aM7• ......, 8,
Ralph Albck, •
2
~. 147 Dief. .do
8:30 p..IIL; r.aM7• ......, 16,

It

PaDel llilll:aBaD: ...,. 111111;
?betic n;...-.. af the

noc...

...mary.• f j l
. . . WiDanl
D7b aDd FNdorid&lt; w--

Van

c..-.

140
8 p.m.; . ,. .
ltaday, ....,..., liS, Gerald
O'Gmdy, ....... UIB, ...,_
Documentary af ~
Bruce u.illie"e 'Qaidt
Billy,'" 140 &lt;&gt;-. 8 p.m.;
MOftllitay, .._., 2l, ~.sp;.
pl, EDIIiih,"\JIB, :'J'rOm Plmhen to Joyce: 'l1le ·JWolntim
of the Cilleme......... Farm,"
140 Ca- 8:30p.m.·

IDBD,

-=

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
-a,. ... ...-.
'l1le domnwo!ary theme will
he ~further iDa poup
of leclumo by UIB .,..,._,._
Film aDd politice, the pnJblem&amp;
of tachiDc film, aDd film's relatim to ott.r arts are am&lt;JII&amp;
other acbeduled topias..

•*Open t o - of ... ~
I I 1111-lnh~

.ap.o~tD--apo

c.- - - - - ·
THURSDAY-22
CBA.'llft

caarr aana••:

831-22211,

tar - . . .

L«dJ&amp;.

er, bela, 1-S p.m.; &amp;tilr, 7-10
p.m.. Caft c..rter, Non- Roll.

'l1le ........ has bem - ized by Gerald O'GmdY, .....
laD1 prof- iD the llel&gt;arlmeot of EDIIieh.

l'll'fCIIOIUY"' : a 1isteDiDc aDd
On the edledule are: Tluln- _.me .,._;e,c. ill opeo aDd
day, J~ 22, Tbomae M. Kn- s....t ......--. 232 NorIUIIIIh. 88SietaDt prof- af - 7-10 p.m.
Frend&gt;, U/ 8, "Rocha aDd the ,.....••: Vivre So Vie (Godard.
Rewlutionary Film." 147 Dief- 1962). 140 CllpeD, 7 aDd 9 p.m.
eudorf, 8:30 p.m.; FridtJy, J~
30, Raymond Federman, .
Frend&gt;, U / 8, "Godard's Americmi&amp;m," 147 DiefeDdod, 8 :30
p.m.; 'W..ua-lay, July 5, BertraDd
Comperatiw Lit"Prohhmms af

FRIDAY-23
caarr CDBR•• : Leollt.er. bello, 1-S p.m.
PIL. r•: JI~·Fcai•iae
(W., Goard), 140 ~ 7 aDd

c:a&amp;~.'nft

9 p.m.
.,.._
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- - . 1:292 ..... St.. 8 p.m.
-..-..r.II&lt;JLit DAIICDOII: la.....,_iaJ.oic ..... douiac
Diol.dDd A - .
- · • : ,._ T - . c l II.,..,_
8p.a.
-· •

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9 p.m.

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-·~--=~~-~
THURSDAY-29 .

z: !::'::

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ec.re.-. n-a.. cfleCk - - SUNDAY-25
LIBRARY EXHIBri'S

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

, _ 15,1972

U!B Joins BemRley, Stony BrOOk in
AdnptingMini-Cornmerum1entCmapt
F-~--•

Two weeks ago the """""
Government
a bombshell
on thedropped
bopes of many
people planning to go to Europe this summer. It issued an
injunction against two nonscbeduled airline carrie&lt;s prohibiting them from trans-At!antic charter flights unless the
25

".fi'.i:":k ~~=
p e p 1e f r m getting

~

....,.,t
0
0
stzanded in Europe but would
also pre.......t others from even
getting there, people at U/ B
thougbl
At firs tt glance this seemed
t~ Donal~n International
Airways, which ~d been con~ for U / B s sum~ e r
flights, ymB one of the earners
named m . the .case and 90 Ed
Dale, Umverslty travel plan~· cancelled all European
.O igbts.

Since then, however, arrangements have been made with
Air India to take over comtnitments to several hundred
UI B faculty, students and staff
members. Dale, assistant coordinator of student activities,
now says that all people who
signed up with _him ~ e!ther
acbeduled on Air lndis flights
or have received. refunds.
It's been a hectic two weeks
for Dale. Shifting carriers also
meant changing the departure
area-&lt;ill flights are now leaving from New York City instead of Toronto. Changing
agents meant sending out letters to aeveraJ hundred proapective passengers and answering numerous phone calls.
He describes it as "e IJiJ hassle
but dJe only responsible thing
..., could have done."
Tbe result of the work is arrangements that allow most of
lbe people to leave on the same
day as they had previously
signed for and at the same
price.

In . _ to an almost immediate demand for revision,
the Board of Trustees of State
University baa altered ita February I'MDiution on faculty goveinance. Under that policy, all
faculty bylaws - - "~ject
to approvU of the Board o(

=.rtiontra=i~ ~
•

lege chief administrative officer
and the c:hancellor."
It app&amp;IS1t that this
)&gt;I8Ciic:e ...... "impractical," Dr.
William Baumer, cbairman of

=. .

::..~~~~
~,;
- -......Jd have been .....-ive.

AnotJ.r problem, be ........ the fen that local preaidiiDta
mi&amp;ht reject faculty bylaws
without proper study. .
.
Baaed on tbMe - - . the
SUNY Senate and the U/B
hculty Senate ialed Cl1lls for
reviaioD ol the policy. N- pro-

ceduroe. ~by the om-

in May, mab actioDa and.
. 8llcb bylaws "advismy upon
tbe cbacollor and the chief adllliniobalive C1l&amp;ca ol the ool..._. But the bylaws tbem- - bave anly - to be "ODDIIillart with and dject to the
Palicio!a of the Board "' 'l'r1Sol the State University of
New york, the laws ol the
Slate of New York, and the
• •
of as-Ia beState ol N-· York
and the Cll!ltified employee organization eotablisbed
to article 14 o( the ~
ltlw."

t:::":

_....te on-&lt;:ampus indoor lo- in dle audience.
cations for programs which
Each graduate also received·
seemed to impress no one. ,.And a certificate and several depart.
Arts and Letten! and Social ments presented additional letSciences and Administmtion ters of congratulations.
A third common feature was
ended up outside anyway because ·t hey bad .too many peo- ' some kind of social gathering
where
parents and gradua•a
pie for Clark Gym.
... . . . . . . . &amp;ani,
Under this year's alternate could mingle with faculty and
sta11:.
.
plan, the last-minute smaller
Still another, according to
ceremonies followed the format
planned for the one large con- the Berkeley spokesman, . ''was
vocation with faculty repre- their popularity.''
sentatives reading the guest Stony Brook's Pion
Stony Brook adopted a simspeaker's addtess. By contrast,
however, next ye&amp;!"s mini-pro- ilar plan in 1971 when 21 smalTo .F. Marshall-Evans, Uaingrams _will be individually tail- ler ceremonies were held in addition to a main exercise. Tbe ing is "meeling tbe needs of
ored.
As noted from the president's reason there was "a preference .t he people--all the way from
-~
direcmve, they will be "person- by many for programs that the guy who pushes the broom
Observers of the U / B scene -alized" as well, with eaclt in- might reflect the parilicular in- .t o top-level management," As
will be able to say much the dividual getting a piece of terests of students and faculty U(B's new dil'ector of tmining,
same next May as the result of paper of his own, instead of and thus keep commencement he hopes to he able to put his
a presidential announcement rising with a thousand others indi~dualized despite the Uni- dtifinition into practice.
this week that in "1973, on a while two representatives of the versity's rapid growth."
Right now, .though, he's satone-year trial basis, we will enliire group march to the piB.tThis May, says Commence- isfying his own orientation
decentralize all of our com- form for mock diplomas.
ment Chairman John Bll!'lles&amp;, needs. Evans who baa been
mencement activities."
The de-pers onalizationthe · main exercise was elimin· u 0 n board" .f or less than a
News that Buffalo is to try which had to he instituted it a ated, partly because of contin- month finds that U/B "is a
the California pattern need not, joint Commencement was to uing interest in smaller cere- wbole new ball-gatne" comhowever, lead anyone to tho6e run less than 14 1wurs-is the
once popular, now painstak- biggest complaint ID09t recent ::ni:'cta~ ~~~use~ pared to his previous ezperand
ingly avoided, comparisons be- graduates have bad about dle austerity." Foe faculty mem- iences at Freezer Queen
1
tween Bu1falo and Berkeley. ceremony-and one of the prin- bers, however, there was still ~,!!; ·~~chtheW:J ::;m;
State University at Stony cipal reasons why more and a common processional march. mind boggling."
Brook has already become the more were shunning i l
The Stony Brook ceremonies
The work is officially des"Berkeley o( the East" in terms
Berkeley's Wilson cites this produced an interesting sam- cribed as "initiating, coordinatof commencement, having as a major reason for change pler of speake&lt;s including No- ing and conducting a wide vastaged sdme 20 separate .cere- there. He notes that Berkeley bel Laureate C. N . Yang who riety of orientamon a!iil trainmonies both laSt y.....- and again first tried encouraging supple- addressed the Graduate School,
programa." Already, the
this May.
.
mentary prog·r ams to be staged Dr. Ismael Mena of Chile,
Under ·the plan II!UlOunced by each of its component units visiting senior clinician at tbe new man in Peraonnel is talk·this week by President Robert (similar to those the Health Brookhaven Najional Labors- ~;;thQ'~ h ;
L. Ketter, U/B will ''probably" Sciences have here). · Results tory, who spoke to Psychology, units such as maintenance and
have from 13-15 separate Fac- were negligible, however, with and Dr. Karl Turekian of Yale buildings and grounds. By
ulty or s c h o o I ceremonies, all but three or four schools or who appeared before Depart- working clOflely with them,
scheduled between May 16 and colleges opting to do nothing as ment of Earth and Space Sci- Evans
.
believes ·he'll get a feel
May 27, 1973. Stony Brook long as there was also to be a ences grads. Alao on hand were
local and county government for what SQrt of ·t raining JW~ple
concentrates all of its events on combined ceremony.
officisls
speaking
to
Political
in
these
areas would find usethe same date while Berkeley 'Unrepresentative' Speakers
ful By fall, he bopes to set
uses the scatter plan that will
Berkeley's .large commence- Sciences and Educa1ion.
Stony Brook augments its up general COIH9e8 dealing with
he attempted here.
ment also came tmder student
F- Requoremento
f.ire because "speske&lt;s were un- several commencements with basic supervision and manageIndiV'idual ceremonies, Ket- representative." (While t h is an "annual moonlight fereyboat ment training. ·Over the year,
· " th nigh bef
d
these would be expanded into
ter seid in his announcement to had not yet become a major
· I!
t
ore, ur- the "complete packages" of
pl'OV08ts, vice presidents and issue here, there were at least crwse
ing wbich about 500 seniors, al-· topics DecessaJY' (or Opgrading
scbools, will be up to them. The private grumblings.) Accord- umni, ·faculty, sta!i members or retraining. For exam pIe,
only general teqUirements are: ing to Wilson, 1969 st Berkeley and guests take a three-bour
the range o( dates, a standard saw "an awful row." There were Long Island Sound cruise. AI- Evans is lhinl&lt;inJ about workfonnat for a printed program demands that the three largest umni are also invited to par- ing up a secretarial promotion(to be .developed by Univer- minorities on campus-Black, ticipate in the exercises of their al "package" to include such
sity Publications Services) Chicano ·and ~ repre- former departments.
C01U81!8 as report writing, comwhich can he adapted to each si!nted on the commencement
Reactions to the new com- munication, IJillll!lviaion a n d
Faculty or School, and uae of a program in addition to the tra- mencementil have not been psychology.
general certificate ( not the ac- ditional speakers. This was totally favorable. Wilson of
Once tbese programs are estual diploma) so that each de- done but the problem was not Berkeley notes that in ita first tahlisbed, Evans hopiOI to move
gree candidate will he handed solved. The folloWing spring, year, the system attracted fewer into lDOre "custnmim trainsomething at the time of the requests began to•multiply : "If than 2,000 candidates and less ing" for both hillier level Civil
ceremony. "It is suggeSted," the Blacks, Chicanos, and than 6,000 parents and friends Service grades and non-teachKetter said, "that each Faculty Asians were .epresented, why compared to 3,000 candidates ing· profeasionals. But Ibis is
or School- personalize its con- not Women's Liberation? Tbe and more than 15,000 specta- "at least a yeaJ" - · be prevocation in every way _ . .Young Socialist League? Hil- tors who used to attend the diets.
sible."
lei Foundafion? Gay I.ihera- mass spectacle. Tbe second . Ott- lutnre plans include
At UlB, the Health Sciences lion? Newman Hall? etc., etc. year, however, 2,900 candidates estaNishin1 a "very .-ted , ..
acbools and the School ol Law Such demands shalply focused participated along with 10,000 sophislielo.ted and lmlibY" orhave t.raditiOnally held _.-ate the basic difficulty; no ilingle parents and friends.
ientapon for staff. Such a 1110recocnition or hoDoni programs. commencement ceremony could
Critics argue that color and gram would: live- tbe ........,._
However, · tbese have b e en possibly give attention to eve!}' pageantry are diminished; that er an undenl:andinc ol W
a
oimply awards galberinP,- 8l.lll&gt;group let aloue every indi- the sense o( onenea&amp;-of the en- university is," an him ... ._
clart.y "supplementary" tO tbe vidual."
tire univemity uniting in a about his beaefit par:kqe and
main .,_t,
At this -~int, Chancellor sinsle celebrati............, laclring; · inform a h out ~
'The ceotzelized extravagan- Roger W. Heyns decided to that ·dle efficiency of central within tbe Uui-alty. Evans
za, ooce mounted twice a year, eliminate the mass ceremony, planning is gone, and that the it as "an audio-visual prebaS more ~Y beeil pre- and invited acbooiJ;- colleg'"' wbole concept is simply an- oentatloa." to be a.cad up by
amted only annually. And lbe and clepartmenla to stage their other "fad" wbidl will fade.
an employee hanlllaak h fuaudience for it has diminished · own in any Way wbidl snited
Proponenta bold that much ture reference.
lli&gt;I:Dahly, despite a Jigantic them, with the University pro- is gained: Bach srhool, college
Anolber -wee be Ia CODBidincn!aae in the number uf de- viding the funding by dividing or ~t can emrcise ita ering .....Woblnr Ia a dearing
giee candidate&amp;---more than 5,- ~ ·monies set aside for the own individuality; a far
bouae for i001uoiatiGil on train000 this year.
mass gatlwring. U/B also will number of sludenta and
in the local
take this apprOach to funding are involved in ~ and :::.._opportunities
·
F8Cilitis bave J..-1 night- under the new plan.
staging; opportunities are pro''Building~ tbe Uni-aty's
mariah problems.
of~
vided for individual attention minority pool Ia IIIIOCber one
'lbe anly ball in Weetem
'The finlt year at Berkeley. and for parents and friends to Of BWns' aim&amp;. Tbouch be
N-- York larp 1!1110UJ1! to a~ there were 39 8ID&amp;ller cenmon- minale with faculty and staff.
claims "not to be havily miCXIIIIIIIOdate a poleDiial 5,000 · iala which _.., called "eznority oriented," be Ia interrnduatea and familiea is the . Vemely ~" Activities
, -lNG 11B:ESS SHIFTED·
ested in "makinn tt.n jnat as
Memorial Anditorium down- varied from_ a fonnal cap and Next yeor's spri1111 - . will tall lllllllp!titiw as ~ else."
- . Two y..,.. ago, ......_, a-n _..,.., by the College · eMCtly In the middle of the Lib his predawa, Clannce
CIIIUIInlctioa .....n: made the of Auicultural BcieDcea to a second The calender Cooper, be t.op. to work with
Aud unavailable and this ;year fjve ~ Pi~ and celebra- CommlttH ~ revised the minority studenta to ~
no dates were ~ to Umver- tion m a public l!&amp;rit. by the prwtously announced olllciel cat- their skills ., dley ean _ .
aity boobn.
~t of Dramatic Arl
enclar lor yeor ond mowd fully compete Oil Civil Service
'Ibuo, ~ ~ ~
At all ~ ~ &amp;tu- tile break from the middle of elllllll8.
the site-. atua4ian w h l c h dents .received individual atten- April to the middle o1 Morch Un
BYana ..,. be &amp;hares the
worb ....U _..t.. crowd-willa, tion. Ill the ~t of cleo- the revised schedule ~ .;_ problems ol otbaa Oil campos
~ -tbei- · is conducive. ~ elldl ~te was cess bealns ot the - oi ~ -money anil the red tape and
'l1lia rear. ~:...~ ~~.~ ~tu%. ~- on 10. ln....ctlon ....,,. delays involved in .........
. funds. ~ be is confident
~aki~ •;.;;;;;~ lib:
!rl;-t;;ity
fri~ on Morch 26.
•
that tbMe ean o e - ··

"Commencement at the large
university, once rightly billed
as 'the grea- ecademic sbaw
on earth,' is und&lt;qOing a temarl&lt;able ~
""·-~e.
...... I.n&amp;tead o( a
single, gigantic spectacle concentrated in one campus arena,
it is now becoming a multitude
ol smaller ceremonies-or minic:ommei&gt;cements--ecattered like
sideshows over the entire campus."
.,
So Garff B . Wilson, chairman
of public ceremonies, Umversity ol California, Berkeley,
wri~ ol that University's in~on of 47 _....te """!"'
momes to replace_ dle one . b1g
.~at Berkeley m the sprmg-

Evans is New
Tnrining Head

8

mg·

F_.. . . . ,.

=·

T,_

trodUooo

:m

�J-1$, 1972

Political Pulse Quickens1, col. 2) · also in the '68 campaign. Kurtz
Robert Sunbelg is part ol doe ·ecboes some of tile sentiments
"Aaldimics for Musltie" pro- ol the McGo\oem ·people when
pam but is probably more in- be says be is more interested·in
tere&amp;lllCI "in the loac baul," in the "principle&amp; and program ol
-worl&lt;ina for the party and "giv- the" candidate" than in the
in&amp; the Republicans a nm for party itself. As a member of
their IDOIII!)'." He's laavinl the what be aills "the progressive
"enthusiasm (or the cbarismatic: . center," Kurtz and his colcandidates to - l y enfran.. leagues, Profl!ll80r&amp; R i c h a r d
cru-t voters," preferring, .as · Coz, Marvin Bloom, F r a n k
lllackhurat, the ploddinc won: Hodaea and Albert Michaels,
.-led to .,_ the party 10in&amp;. ' are lookin« for "constructive,
ltumpllreJ _...,.
re&amp;pOIIIIible hl&gt;eralism" .of the ·
Do-. ·Paul Kurtz is d&gt;airman kind tbat tiley feel Humphrey

(Co..n...-1 (roW! -

of "Citizens for Humphrey" on
the Niapia -Frontier. 'Ibis is
his """"""- time around . woritiDg for HHH; be was active

stands for.
BecaUBe -ru-lay's is largely a Democratic primary in
terms of interest, moat of the

Dr. von~ 71, ·
Dies after Brief Illness

Do-. ~VOl! Bertalanlfy, · Southern Califoinia and direcintemationally-.............t scien- tor of biologics~ .........n:h at
tist and theorist, who first pro- Mount Sinai Hospital in Los
~ the _ . . ) systems the- · Angeles from 1965 to 1958, and
ory in 1932, died Monday Sloan Visiting Profl!ll80r at the
momm,, June 12, after. a brief Menninger Foundation in
illness.

.
· Do-. _, Bertalanlfy, 71, bad
been· Faeulty prof1!1180r in So-

a

cia! ScieDces and Administration and Natural Sciences and
Mathematics since 1969.
Inadditionto_..)syatems
theory, Do-. Bartalanffy's fields

~~ =~

==

1958-59.

.

Prior to joining the University at Bulfalo, be served as
profesaor of theoretical biology
at the University ol Alberts,
Canada, from 1961 to 1969.
·Dr. von Bertalanffy was
. foundet and a life member of
the Society of General Systems

:::l
intardiaciplinary synthesis. ~ ~~= f~
An author ol more ·t han 12 the Advancement of Science
boob and 21i0 ecientific papers
and IIICJIIIICI1IIl h i a worits
bave been printed in five Ianguapa. His moat recent book, .

and the International Academy
ol CYtoJoly and an honorary
meoi!ber ol the American Psycbiatric Asoociation. He was
~ S y . - TMor:y, was
awarded a gold medal ol the
published in 1968. Others in- Postal History Society of the
elude Robota, Men Gild M~ Americas in 1963.
(1967), Problem • of Life
Do-. von Bertalanffy married
. (1962, 1980), T"-etUche Bi- the fonner MariaM. Bauer in
o/ofie (1932), and Modem 1925. 1'beY bave one aon, Felix
Tlleoriea of Deuelopment D . von~(1933). ·
Memorial aei"Ylces will be
Dr. von Bertalanffy was held Friday at 11 a.m. in the
hom m Atzpradorf, Auatria, Beacb-Tuyn Funeral Home,
on September .19, 1901. He at-. 5M1 · MaUl Sl, Williamsville.
leaded lbe University ol lnDs- The family bas requested lbat
brucl&lt; and received his Ph.D. instead ol flowers, contribufrom the University ol Vienna tiona be sent to the von Bertal·u. 1.926, where he was a pro!.,.. ady Fellowship Fund which
aor from 1.934 to 1.948. He was will support a gmduate
a . . . , _ and mrector ol bi- felloorsbip at U/8. Contribuolotical -..:b at the Uni- tiona sbOuld he forwarded to
veaity ol ~ Canada, the .Uni.versi ty at Bulfalo
from 1.949-64, a visitinJ pro- Foundation, 25(). Winspear Aver - at the Uniwnuty ol nue.

-.Duotooc----.
-tJ·- -_.., . __ _
.. - ...........l'!'l--.-·
--- - . . . . .

political activity is coming
from this party. However, it
would be wrong to thmk there
are no Republicans on campus,
warns - Dr. lawrence Southwick. He's a member of the
Amherst T~ Board and is al-

=

~;'!ni~ ~,m':.~.

Scientists &amp;?king
Mronswllonu
SlafnBi.q:Jhysicist

-m-

~ty-fi 7 - ...:-...:-ts who
·~

are U/ B faeulty members bave

~a~ ~ort~

physicist who was murdered in
the May 29th Tel Aviv airport
slaying of 26 people. Tbe
gibup aills itaeH the Aharon
Katchalsky -Memorial Committee and is aeeking to "organize
a proper tribuie" to the man as
well 86 "condemn this savage,
all&amp;~
......... is best known for hi&amp;

== ::;o:.:.=:.
~..

m creating poI y mer s
wartificialh!d&gt;.
coulmduaclea.be
UBed to develop
worit

The committee includes such
well lmown figures as Dr.
James Danielli, director of the
Center for Theoretical BioJocy
( CTB) S . John""-'-Nobel
•
lf
....,.....,
laureate, and Dr. Raymond
Ewell, vice president for reaearch. Headed by Do-. Rebert
~U:-,£1'8,
biopby'
Robert
~
-~
group
is ~ out letters to all
U/B faColty.· members and to
tbeir wortd....,ide collaaguea in
the biophysical and biocbemical aciences. The letter asks
tbat individuala write to Kurt
Waldheim, secretary _ . . ) ol
the United Nations, Dr. Sanford Kadiob, president ol the
American Asoociation ol University Prof_,rs, and Dr. J .C.
~. president ol the In.temational Union of Pure and'
Applied Biophysics, a akin 1
tlwn to honor~ Katd&gt;alsky
emae way.
For copies ol the peqeioa to
Waldheim, Kadilb And Ken-

""'!u!"ti.e

m

5

5

a

.... _

--.-.,~~oeuta_Y_e.

:r;

believes that there'll he " lDOI"e
opeo faculty &amp;Upport for Nixon
by October" and "knows ol a
number· of people favoring the
President"
Why are there ao few active
Republican faculty and staff?
Southwick believes it's becaUBe
moat of the "Democzata and
liberal&amp; come hom the Human-

• wa.J

-(loft). ___ .. _ _ _
c:am..--s
-

..,

-~
• ....-. • • -

FrilloJ; ....... (.......,
............. p81tJ's-

--tlca4;--. ..... - - -

- · · · •tt

.....

ities and seem to have .....,
time for political adivitios."
He points out that ol tbe
student Republican au p port

comes from tile hard ..,...._
and "1bey dcll't ID baft
- mUd:o time b political ..,_
tivitios."

State Has Enwgh nttists
ButSomeT ~~1!.£-!~:.. TL-:\ .

.=.

Y~

Altbouih New
This is the
IQOd share ol dmtista Slate's iDcftasinc ren..- ...
(the ' - deutist-ir&gt;1"'P"l•lion out.=of-State acboak ID - ratio of any state), they aren't dental trainiJic. l'i¥e oukf..
always located in the richt state ·acboak ~
places.
atteuded by New Yad:la are
This is the -.jar fiDdinc o( sincled out--the dmtlll eala manpower study recmtJy COD- 1eces at ~ ad llilowducted by the Stale Educatioa ard m W~ Pwa.yi,...__....__
vania and '11
in Pliil8dei'f,;i~ are that the New .,.,,_ and Tufts mBoataD. 'l1oia
Yorl&lt; City, Nas&amp;au-Suf(olk and :.Tt;;tion . _ . . . 1D baft deMid-Hudson recioos are ...,..._ ~ the ...,...t ~ ~
supplied and the CeDtral recioB beawae ol sloor a:pmi8iaa ol
adequately suppied, the . . _ t dental trainiDc facilitios wilhiD
""""'""-In CDDtrast, the St. law- the Slate,
._,., rePm is seriously underSeveml metbodll ol ......
supplied and conditions are with this are .._..._ ...:h
alao relatively unfavonihle m - .............. fuailii ...........
aeveral other areas, indudinl emii.;~ facilitios _ .
the Lake Champ I a in-Lake starting a ..._..., o( ~
Georce and Southern Tier-West ~ to .,._._ ..._.
regions ol the State.
~ llimiJmr ID lbe llid PAnotiler related findinc con- to _.t.lic lllllllliclll ..-.....
cernscboiceollocationbyden- lfoweve&lt; the r e p o r t tists in aetlinc up tbeir prac- DW!IIda that, befuoe ..... ,_
tioe&amp;. New Yorl&lt; State residomta a dental edloal ia
who atteud dental adlools m Slate, it would be .............
the Slate teDd to locate their make the . _ J..-i1J1e ol
practices mh i m - . . - - . or facilities cum!lltly aftiWIIe..
in areas wib similar cbarader_.____, - ..._ ~
istic&amp;. n.. Henry Wechsler, ol . Alao . , . . _ m ,_ the Medic81 Fouadation. Inc., was the likelihood . . , _ _.__._..,, ...oL- ol er domaDda for cloollal . . . . _
of BostDo. ,..;..,.;._. a.......
will .
IIIJiidly
the report. say&amp; that this bas . • • 1lllllor .:...
-::
sipificant implicaliaas for atDeDs " ; :
.......,..
dealinc with the prablem ol ~ will n!IKft
cl.istribution ol dental ~ ~
baft'W'au::ci-:'l
He 8IJII'I!iit8 that an appropn- little dental..cme iD .,. J1M1. to
ate ~ may he to - - . -'&lt; aervice1 &amp;iDee lhe 11i11a wiD
ly recruit dental ~~ be paid. In tum, claolilla wiD
..,.,.,......, c:areem m
face in&lt;:~-' wwl&lt;-laMII, ~younc_~fnm&gt;areM only bec:a.- ol ~ pa~-=- ~ol ~
t.d:1 - inCoatns to ........... ..,. - students and praditioaThe ftlliad.
era tlesipal"ID a&amp;tDI:! tlwn to
be_-"- 1D
undm~ - - .
the pcaibility ol lmilllllc 81111
bas a

.

I

..!
0

,...t:;

::::•r
.=:.

.:.;-.J.qa

that_..........,a-.

......-

:rv~=-:t:t"124...... ~-==- ;.•:.:m: :=:::.;.·:--·~-

�~-

4

~ · 15,1~

___
......
...
---uu.n._
_......,. ___

The Gujdeli-~ Papers
.........
..
..... - .. _.,_,.lJ_..
...............
........
....
............ . .
..............
,.....,..
__ .......... .._.._Pt. ..............................
.........
,............. ..... :=·=·=,·=............
.......,..~12.-·

. . . . . . . ..,.;pt . . . . ........
O&amp;leel
. . .. ...

•.

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(~)

willoia .m 1lllit, ....,

....... . . )+Mft

(&amp;) ......................... . .

willa .... 8PooPe, ..... ........
hl,yL

u.dor- ...... ..,_...,.,

-...... _ . lillmly
- willc:llite. u per-.....,. ...... wllile
1 • ...

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larA'··; :·we

. . . . PtulaooiuoiMia) will lll:lliwe •
............. CB!l.
laadlliliaa,Cioe...- ........ -

IWL5per--!ia ;·
J,-"t
wlji.. _
_ . . woald a.
......._ . . _...... _
I el
.......... .-1 ASP"L Gooillolio.lardle..._....el . . . . . . . .

.-1

- ... - ._tllia __ ..,
......,_llalat L KaB ill.,...._

&lt;-fiaal.......,._ ......._, ,_

..._willa_

. •,,__

........ faaiiV ... liliiariaaa _.

........ ............,.,.__.
....._.,,_1%.
. . ~eiASP"a).

Tile~•

Uaitalil;r-wide ~ willa -

aaliaa

..............................
......
.
.......
.................
_ -,,___. ...,...
. . _ . . . . . . . . . .,:

tihe

_

..,..__...,.-.:· KaB ........ .,._

_,_.

......... -

........ will" trill
.__.~

... IMe

.., J'reoi-

h!'

I

. . . Kaa. Alao ........ _ . . . . _

... -

faaiiV -.laiy ....... . . .
a?iwe -.laiy IDIIoa lor 197%-

w' • •
1973.

-r

11 .......... .. ..... that Cbe
.... al funds awilaiJie - .............
ary ...,._ in .do al lhn!e .-·' m"t), a..n- _. NTP'a
- i l IIIJIIiwaloat to 1.5 al . .
_ , --...,....,. in ·.m . . - al , _ 30 al tbia ,...._
u.dor . . . . . . - . ap to lhn!e
al
10 . - - . . faality . . . 'li-

eoay _.eoay._. __
...........

......

lilnlillc ASP'e'- eJicjiJie

-

.... .

1

, _ .............. iPa
P...
-.doaio..

. ... a.
&lt;1&gt;&gt; be awailallle

v- .,__

- - I Boaldo 8cimoM,
..........
lll:lliwe
tt;. • tor
i?ll cliltrihdiaa ,._ lbe n-. al . . fiwe
8choala in the Boaldo 8c:ioaall; .. . .
Cc ) be......,. to lbe
Pn!oi.._ - Ac8detttic Alioin, ..........
lll:lliwe I
,.. hticww ,_the IJial I..ibarieo . . . lilouwliuoa
8enica, lbe n..m al lbe School al
M
J
o! lbe 0.... flf the Drri.... al Gmolaalle 8tadiea, the n..m al
0 , . • I Rdnr.tian, aDd IMe
adler .,. Mra•ive .._..of alliS'

v-

...... - - - clin!ctly to him.
Tile I
t•ticww *!lloie .., de-

__ dJai.-_....._......._

i11a1iwe 1-'a to the l'rova8la or

........._ • -

--

v-

·cOalam ~

.. ,. . . . . ....,. be made with
lbe 8id al ~ Cliolins or

..--

. . . . . . . . . . . . . to . . .-l' tar
-..... ,.
....... tJae par-

~-=-c

· ........
. . . . . .1.-1 ...
Merit
...,._
~ ailolatiy pm!i&lt;Minm; de_,
I 1 faculty, U~ ..S
---··ty~ service; ~ and
-.11; . . - ; 1Di5i!beii!bip . . . in. . . . _ ill ...p..J, DatioaaJ. ...

=..:.:.'-~and

........

Eqaity, ia addition Po ..............
tJbaii _Wre into 8CDII!Dlt lmph al ..,.._
vice. ....._nble ...,.. ...........
... al ad!ieWBI!OIIt.
2. Fnoe f&amp;&lt;lOilt ( 5% ) al the -r
~ _..available· to a.
ail: F......
4JDY ...._. !!1!i11o n&gt;- .
]l!ldias lo lbe Oftice ol the v ... Pmoicll!at .... Aaodemic Mfairs, ate to lie
diolribnted by lbe v ... l'roBidmt for
Aadomic A6ita; . . . ( 5% ) al lbe

and

~

dioc:t......., IIIOIIiesllYllilallle ...

lbe Health 8cieacoa ""' to . . cliotribated .., the VJCe Pnsidmt tar
Hmllh 8c:iouceL 'l1!eae - - . . ,
be . - I to - . . ! u..e ............
.... h4od oipificantly to lbe .....
.... al lbe -'"*"ic lll1it but ..... .., qaBify andor ....... al lbe
criteria iciHdifiecl ....,_
3. o- lbe s-t
.,_ aatltibutiow to Um-.ity ...,_
. . . lbe
allbe
Um-.ity ............ made by - ...... allbe faculty ............ ~
little or no - . . ! for llieir ........, .
tlaoash ..,..... um-.a,.. dameiL
.Aax!nliasiY. m.. J,ll!i'Cf!iJt &lt;5% &gt; allbe ·
~ ~ty JDCJDe) .lhooll . . allocated .., lbe Preoicktt Po allow bim
to - . . ! ...t. Um-.ity-wide . . -

few,......, .....

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

•••

?-6ai

v-

iafaa---. clilobil •led to ...,

........._.., H.

w. :1\Jppey- , _

&amp;,lin%.
11 .. the )llimaly ialait ... - ................ to...._. ......
- .. padical in lbe lilloited time

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

awaiillllle ..e ...... , ••• ., . . . 1&amp;....._ ....... niJeot lbe - - .... .do ................. . .
u.n..ity_ Merit ....... ..........

_. -rice iD ,..,
. . ......... bold. llqailr' ..... iDc:llide, - . . ............... Clllllioll!r- - - - ·

§

I

•

...

..........

..........
._._,.,_,._.
..............
-.
.....,., ....... ,_
aliaaalCioe~allbe..-..

-

-

al ........ .....,. ..... clae ...

--~~~~:~e.--..

.Ad-

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

..... . . . _ . . iadiftd-

_..welfare

lrillaticww.
.._ ........ that faculty merit
_,. .. baDdlecl .,.,...,...,.
_....,.,..., lharian merit JDCJDe)•
5.. In •!Waiailioc lbe ~

_ , . lhtuocl&gt;uat lbe Um-.ity, lbe
........ lllllilbt be Cllllllidorod - min-

... ........ al family .........
................. ia that .... al tiJi.
1ar lhnle ,_..,
Feadty
10 ,__ s.J.ry
~
$l8,fiiO
"-'ide ....,_
15,1100
~ ....,_
J.2,liOO
.__
10,000

u--..,.

.s-m.-_....,

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

. tianalaDlewla .. to . .
_.._ c-.a,.. the . . . . . in....... will .. - ......., Dopan.- a . . - ....,or 0.... iaitiate
*'"lllflll willa ...._.... jwlifioW' M'
~ ..Vor Aadotioic..,. IIMIIb -

~L Nioooty

.......

·r;··

.
..
..
. .alder
•
..
. . . lie..._
.....·~
_
.._
., 'oc the qaeatioa al

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

. . . _ _ _ lie

_.
:

alallq;

_

0

.......

I

•

.,;..,

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

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

ll T o - •
..........

... ......
~

......_ (~) el Cloe

sa-. v ... ........._ ~--Ill
lbe _ . . . al lbe ~ - - - - ·
jow?'CM'

........ ia _.,s

........ -

tbeV_ ............ _

+ticwwal~Me

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

,. -

lbe ......

. . . _ . . . . . -......t!otbe
......... c-. Jar ftM"taiak+edr

...... . . . . . . . . T i l e - ·
tar .... ;•
al lbe
~ Pwe+l
;w ........._trill be iaI

;•

dalholalhe v-I'Noidoatial ......_

L .N". . . . - - t (110%) al lbe
...oat.~e io 111e
,. J i * ' - wlealtheUDi...ui.- l b e - - al ........ - ........ wilhill .do anit, lball: . . diYidod iaiD ...... .w-1 - .....,.,
l'lelidtet tar Aadomic A&amp;in·
~ tar Beallh
~tar 0penaea
~ V'JCe l'lelidtet - 8taiiHot
A.a.; . . . Ofice al lbe Praidtet,
iadaditc .._ _ . . . to the

--, z ·v .....,.

_,

v-v.v-

Scieacoa;

..s

v ...

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

u..n-ity Relaliaaa,

a-dt. and l'llciliti!la RamUtc-

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

- Tile I

hli&lt;aM

made .., ...,...
~

tatiwe 1-'a ·to the l'rova8la ....,or
n-. to*..............,
l'lltli-

v.......,_......_..,....me...__
....se ......

...matian ... . . , be
tJae
aid al _...nate aioCins or ...,;al

;u

PROM:

-r..-.,~

RB:· 8peaial 0
..... -llarit ·
Gaidlllioo.-.
r
Ia m · ' 4"•• of tbe l'aBIIt caa-.
lialct 'lhidl ....,cialed .......
?be . &amp;aate PJ......... ~
..t4hea- u~ allilewYIIIk.
it .. _ , -'41oat - .........
pt&lt;Jpda?io saldtlliaea - the
..... al merit - - - 'aD faculty
and ~ al the UnhWait;y. .
YCNO .!!awe beoa I
.d d by
eilh.SPA.Iha~ 8oaala, or

~

.

. ~OIIiclt,·--·~
which ill Po _... . .
&amp;e+t•tn. to
me _..tile eritaia aad .,ilaeli,_
that . . , lie _ . . , _ in the allocatinnal..a.--. -:Dr. 'l1latMa ~ &lt;llainnan ol
tbe ~ .. eaa...lor Bdoa~ ... _,.,... lbe Owjmwwhif&gt;
al lhio c-jMee, and I ~ hope
.... .do al ,...,. .......... willins Po
..-I yqur . . . . . with him Clll tilia
- - 8iDce lime .. al . . - - .
. I ~ hope I could teCO!iYe your
_....,-by .l~~~te6U..

Pw?beuoote, I~ 1i1re Po point
oat that tbe Uni-aty i1 ~
in lbe dilo?:ribntite :al ...... IDIII&gt;ieB by
fotlh , _ Albany. 'l1le
~ al . _ ClOII8trail4a

...-wo- -

.... - foUoon:
.
L Tile D!lillber al faCulty and libnoriana ..... .....,. be lf8litec;l 8!ldl
merit u.c.- 8ball be limited to
30% al lbe ~
D!lillber
ol ouch indMdaiola ... . . _ ;
2. A~ me.- ma,y not
be JIIDted Wbicb. ~ lbe nwr:imum aalaty for lbe rank;
.
3. Diactetioaary ..,.,...,_ in """"""
al $2500 pnJpCMod fOI' any individual
trill requite full .iuatifi&lt;aCiuo;
"-· p....,. Pf&lt;lliJOiod m liCIIdemic
iiU!k ·may lll:lliwe cliacretionary 8lllary
iDcreaaes Clll )Jniii!Otian.
Many tbanb for your aBstaDce in
tbia matter.
.
IUNB5,1972

.-...me

..

�i- 1!1, 11112

5

cudlibodlw .... ......_ of ibe ,_

b) Recorda of lbe · p-tation of
FROM: . . - L. IIDiftD
of Ubrariea ad Information.
. lbeae vitae for caaaideratioll tO lbe
8erviceJj for fladty within bis jurisRE: 8pecial Commitlee Clll Meiit'
diction, lbe no... of lbe 8c:bool of
department ballh for fillinc .....~
vacancies ad for ...... tbe pool of .. ~ the no... of tbe DiviIn
of lbe ftiiBll - sion of Underpaduate 8tudie8 for fal&gt;. tnct wbidl ........... ~
minority
""" -uni-aity
··
..;p,ad
to . lbe ll8llled
. recruiting
uky. within hia jnriac!iction, IIDd adtbe Smate ~ ~­
miniatrative bMd8 of olber units re-·
.ad lbe.State Uni-mty of N- York,
committees, indllllinl tbe for
CDIIiiiiiilfty. .
portinc diredly Co him. .
not inviting cadidaliOB to visit in mch
it is............,. that- ........ appro3. lleril AllDcatioll COIIIIftiUa. A
Each Provost; tbe · Yice President
cue preaented .wtiere no i,nvitation is
priate guidelin5 fOr lbe diiJiribatian
.....,.._t tift IIIRilb. SUNYABiaaued.
for Health 8clencea, IIDd tbe Vice ·
of merit IDOIIiea to the ~
wide -.miUee is ID be Mtwhliahed
c) Recorda of viaita of Dnnori.ty and
Pnsident for Academic Aft'airs shall
prof"""'oaal Maff oflbe Um-.ity.
~ of one "*"'- lllllecled _by
women CaDdidates, and departmental ' ~ bis appropriate democratically
You have ._.. Je+
wW by
tbe s.lth 8cioDca SPA~. ODe
elected committee Co review lbe
- t o thoae visila, includiDg·- either ~ SPA or- SUPA III'OIJll8 to
......... llliected by tbe Dml-Hadch
80DS for failure to olfer appointment
reoommendationa of tbe units within
• Oil this Coaunittee, which is Co
if none. is oftered.
hia jurisdiCtion IIDd arrive at the final
SeieDcM SPA cbapter, 1111!11i1ers
. make ~ . to my oftice
.,.,._, by lbe Faculty Smate, 8ild orie
allocation· of funds aasigned to bis
d) Reooids of offers inade, includ._rding criteria ad ~ that
"*"'- of tbe admlniatmlion c:baeen
unit to individual faculty 111eJ11bers on ·
ing reasoos for level of appointment
might be employed in tbe a1Joc:alioD
by lbe Plalideat. 'lbilp Merit AIIOcatbe basis of . tbe principlea delinMted
and salaJy olfered compared to curof auoh monies. Dr. .AIId.- Holt, As. lion Commlaee aballloe ......,.. 10:
above. The allocation- of tbeae monies
rent status -of amdidate, IIDd comsociate no... Of the Graduate 8dJool, .
ll) JbidldliiUI pideliDee ad crimust conform to tbe guidelinea laid
has accepted tbe Owimwnobip of Chis
pared to level """ salaJy of 001Dp81'·
teria .... tbe PNsideat ad Ulocating
out in tbe SPA .....,ement, but may
able fllculty already in tbe departCommittee; IIDd I would bope that
units ( tbe alloc:ating uDitJI ..... tbe
not involve IICJ'08&amp;-tbe..b guaranment U olfer is refused; re&amp;9IJJI8 for
each of you would JIB willinl to spend
tees of percentqes to mch sub-unit
refuaal, including any letter from tbe
Fllc:utties ad lbe Olfice of tbe
your enerpea with him 011 Chis maUe&lt;.
Vice-Pialideat for ~ Aft'airs)
within tbe allocaling unit.
·
candidate, sbould be pout of the
·sini:e time is of lbe - . 1 would
for tbe allocation of.msit-equity
record.
Tbe nlllOIIIIDI!IIdtiona made by debope that I conld receive your recamlunda.
'
.e) Record of actual hiring of minorpartment cbaiJmen """ other adminmendaliooa by " - 6tl&amp;.
b) ..review lbe alloc:aticm procechues
ity or women candidates,
·
beads to tbe Provosts or Vice. FurtbermoJe, I would lilre to point
Presideuts inust contain IRJPportive
The Univeraity Review Committee
""" praclica of tbe edminialration
out that tbe University · is severely
(item 3 above) aball .ftct .. .tbe redocumentation IIDd may be made with
. COll8tnJinad in tbe distribution of auoh
""" olber Jlllocatinl unitB. Ample lime
tbe aid of
• te eDsting
for tbe review, bJkinc account of ofmonies . by guidelines set forth from
view committee tD tbe Pn!sident's determination of !be.incrementa awanled
Albany. The more inqxwtant of lbeae
nlittees
or
COJDJidttees""::
ficial ............. """ budaet oftice con- stninta, ...... tie~ ---tablisbed
for
Ibis
.....-.
.
l.OFaailties on tbe basis of lbeir
COll8tzaiDts ..... - follon:
c) tab auoh actiaD as may be
Final allocations wilbin eadl .unit
pn!SeDtation of evidence of elforta to
(1) Merit 1D1M1iea will be available
~ includinc lbe ini1iation of
of the faculty. hoWever defined, aball
hire minority or, women faculty. The
for distribution 8JDOIIC 26% of tbe
be
subject
to
tbe
..:rutiity
of
tbe
Merit
~to- adbi!nnce ... tbe
Faculty evidence IIUbmitted to tbe
pei'IIIIIJJiel;
. princ;iples lilnin aat forth.
AllOcations Committee described in
Pnsident is tbe coUection of evidellces
(2) The muimum of the ASP
· d) _,.,tl:latanappropriate
item 3 above.
submitted ... tbe Provost by tbe deGrades to which tbe position is alelected cammiaee in ._.. aDoc:alinf .
7.
Over
tbe
past
few
years
signifPBrlinOnts. The Provosts of Faculties
located may not be o.-led by a disunit JAJperViJJes tbe ~ proicant .contributions to university govcretionary increase; ·
awarded incrementa in IbiS category
ernance and tbe general welfare of tbe
are enjoined, with tbe aid of their
( 3) The average of all lllliariell of
"""" """ nMewa lbe aJJocatiana in
tbatunit.
university have been made by a num. appointees wilbin eadl lrade may not
review committees; to .-ani il_.-t- .
The Merit. A1loaitions Committee .
ber of faculty wbo have received little
ments IIDd individuals for whom eviexceed tbe mid-point of auoh pade:
or no reward for their elforts through
~ of University service . in tbe
( 4) State funds are not provided
""" tbe review comiDitteea in tbe allocatina units ..... tbe major Yebides
-m of minority and women hiring regular university cbannela. Accordfor either acloe+i-the-board or aelectiw
tluough which tbe principle of peer
ingly. ten percent ( 10%.) of tbe total
has been presented.
raisea for any poeitioas, full or part..
merit-equity money sball be alloc:ated.
~t is to · be implemented: To
. 5. ln distributing tbe merit-equity
-time, which are paid ·from jncame!
implement Ibis principle it is - t i a l
money throughout tbe University, the · oto tbe . Presi4eat to allow him to n&gt;olfset or income/~ ID&lt;Rlthat tbe Merit Allocations Commit..
ward such univenlity-wide OOJJtribu. ies;
following minima for salaries of f8o.
tions,
provided
that
tbe
amount
90
tee be~ to both review and, ·
ulty members who have been in that
· ( 5) DiscretiOIUIIY monies are not to
allocated be ( 1) not more than $40,if - . y , OVerturn decisions made
rrm1r. at this university for t1uee years
be· used to raise tbe lllllary level of
shall be in effect: .
000 (2) subjeof to revi- by the comwithin tbe administration ad tbe
any . vacant poeiti0118.
mittee described in item 3 above, IIDd
BeYeJII1 iillocatint unila, in oompljance
Librtll'imuJ
12 mo. .alary
Many tbanks.lor your aasistance in
Ibis matter. .
&lt;3 ) 90 allocated as to bi. kept wilbin
wi!h tbe contract between SPA and
librarian
$22,150
tbe State.
-the SPA guidelines with reilpect to.
.(\ssociate Librarian
18,000
4. DiscrelionaJy funds ..... . to .. be
peroentage of faculty affected and
.rtlNB 6, 1972
Assistant t.'brarian
15,000
limitati0118 on increaaes to individDBA.8. Dll. KE'I"l'BR :
ll8ed to encouiqe ~ta to add
Assistant Librarian 1 12,000
uals.
.
women IIDd indipnoua minority , _
EncloeM please find the n!pOit of
Fat:ulty
10 mo. .alary
8. Finally, tbe guidelines for alloc:aulty to their ranks by ..-.uding verithe - Special Committee on M e r i t
Professor
18,500
t.ion of merit-egUity money set forth
Guidelines. ln manY ~ tbe profiably canacientioUs recruitint elforta
· · Associate Professor
1!1,000
iii lbeae areas, imd penalizing .disinby SUNY Centnol indicate that the
cedures are parallel to a- appliAssistimt Professor
i2,500
number of fllculty and libmriana wbo
cable to tbe fllculty. you will note,
lnatructi&gt;r
10,000
- - Tbis is to """''''lize tbe hish
may be g,..med auoh merit increases
however, Chat tbe Committee 11M not
This 9Che!lule is poedicated on · tbe
priority - ~ ibeae .foiDIS of uni.....,.;ty JJeiYice to have. For ibe 1972shall be limited to 30% of tbe total
JecoJIJiid&gt;ded that a apecial fund be
8.88UJDption tbat negotiations 'to proreturning number of such individuals
created to reward units wblcb have
73. --..;., .yea, five percent (6%)
vide librarian l1lllb paralleling proon ClliJIPUS and discretionary increases
of tbe merii equity funds shall be
fessori81 l1lllb are succesaful and ac' - ' 8UCalllful in recruitinc or
minority peJ8011Del, Thill .-lted
ll8ed for thiS )IW1ioae. The perci!Dbip
. complished in lime for tbeae reoomin """""" of $2500 proposed for. any
individual will requ;.., full justifiaaof meriHqulty JDODey used for Chis
from a recotPJilion that tbae are Ilia·
mendati0118 to apply. ln cues where
tiott to tbe Chancellor.
nificant clifferenas in tbe employJ'IUPC)8e Jlbou1d a.c.- to ten pertbey exist supplemental salaries to
9. U JDJD3mum salaries for rrm1r. are
cent (10% &gt; for 1973-74 ad fifteen
one's basic state 8lliaJy are to be conopporlunitiea, """ not from ~
in effect tbe President is wged to
ladt of
concern for lbe v;,o.- n&gt;· percent (16%) for 1974-75. The relaSidered as part of tbe individual's
negotiate for appJOVBI Co grant merit
cruitment of auoh qualified ............
tively small percenbip of .hmds set
basic salaJy in calculating tbe !Diniaside for rerirding minority hiring in
increases where - r i a t e that lead
. The fact that SUNY hu failed to
mum.
remedy the ton,-«anddng ad widloly
tbe 1972-73 ecadenaic year refleets
to salaries in """""" of maximum.
Up to five percent ( 5%) of tbe fllc.
THOIJIAII T . P'llANTZ, Chainnan
admowledged inequitiea iD tile ..._
·tbe e«ort SUNYAB bas made in mi. ulty · Jlll!llilers in tbe University may
lllinAY
.DOWN
nority hiriDc over lbe put five yeam.
be excluded from tbeae minima. U an
fication """ l'fiiiUIIenltio of Che
NTP's made it eodnmely difllcult b
By - n y inl:n!uin, . tbe JDODey
MARY CA!IIATA
individual feels be is unjuStly . . _
'IBOKAS CONNOLLY
tbe Committee Co develop ~ -s
JMiiJaiJie for ..-.uding tbe ............
tbe ~um for bis rrm1r. be mayJfiie
proceduroa
wblcb did not ..
DONALD
~0.::
tioua .e«orta to biJe indicenous minor. a gnevance.
l!ldusively Oil the inequity .........
MC Ai.u8r'BIIIItltL
ln ~ilion .to raising aal.o.riea of
ities -.....-it is """""' that , _
.JOIIBPH IIDBICK
ulty .......... will tab aerioualy tbe
. ...... deserving indiViduals, tbeae minIt wouiJl be dificult to - - - tbe
strength of tbe aam-t ..... ....
.-s to in~~~pate tbe uni_..;ty com.r~-.
ima 81'1! ...tehHahed to PI'IM!lllt hiring
munity. .
. vades tbe entiJe ~ . . . CJil
or maintail)ing of fai:ulty that am not
Ibis point! N~ tile ~aide­
1'b8 PNIIideat Jlba1l award lbe funds
oommand at leJist tbeae mininium 1111lines do provide for
...., ..... of
ary levela. u ............,., lbeae minima
' . for hiring iDdipnoaa lllinoriti5 ad
meritorious 0011tribu..... ad the
are
to
be
1DI!t
.....,..
a
....,
year
periodto lbe .u.-tinc Units in a
..opottiuual to .tbe eridonce
1972-73 """ 1973-74 ad sbould be
Commilltee has dnifled .....
,_.which may be of .... ftlaela
of minority hiring elfona outlined bead~ as IDillket fluctuations waridentifying ~ or ......._
rant.
Charge
to
and
- - It ia caaceivJJIIIe that ....., alsiluati0118. The Commilltae .........
locatiq anita C!!Qid naive ·a larp
6. Eighty-five percent (86%) of
Recommendations from the
the preiaues of time which 8lillb' iD
propot1ioa of-the fund&amp; available while
the toW meriW!quity money, on tbe
o1ber uDitJI conld pt no J!10D8Y at aD.
Non-'reaching Professional
dJis situation """ would be aWIIWile
baais of aal.o.riea ...,erated wilbin mch
T,nlical eridonce to be' used to deunit, aball be divided.IIIDOIII tbe Proto any qUMiiCllls wbida ..,.
Staft Ccxnmittee
arise, or to .....u.t in any odiw 'lftQ' it
tennine~ .....,
voeta of tbe aia Faculties, wbo aball
IIA'l' 26, 1972
can.
a) The .......,., -of and records of
Jeceive reoom"""""'tiona for ita' disMEMORANDUM
In conclusion may I take 41i1a opJJCtivity in ~ reeruitinl - tribUtion from ~ IIDd proTO: DR. ANDUW BOLT, CbaiJman
portunity to I9COIIIIIielid tbe _...__
pam c:bainnen; tbe Vice PMiideat for . ClOIJIJnitteea which """" with """ ~
DL JIWf AUDft
of tbe Committee rD you, far tbey
Health 8clencea, wbo Jlba1l n!C8ive
!~lemont in their fielda lbe """" of doe
IlL BOWAIIII 118J11i.L
._,lved DlliiiY of lbeae diffieult ....
~ty Rec:ruiting Committee aDd
reoomi!JI!Ddalioas from lbe deJma of .
DL WALTIIII JroNZ
lema during their-..
~
Recruitinc Committee by
tbe five &amp;&lt;boola in tbe Faculty of
IlL CHAJJU!II MOlL
CCIIDpi1iq liala of qualified _
..ad
IIDd .............._ I can do ao with a dear
Health Sciena.; ad the Vice Pnsi..a.~o·....,AN
minority CJIIIIIidatioa ad collectinr
ODJJ8Cience for the Ullljor 1Jun1ena dent for Academic .Alfairs, wbo aball
• ' receive (ecDIMMIIM!I Winns from tbe Di~.--.
&lt;COittinual - 6, ~:ot 'n

alty-- to lbe lllli-aty. Beace,
lbe tenD, -it. ill to be dofiDI!d iD lbe
caalad of lbe illdiYiduU'a ooatriiJu.
. tiaD to lbe am-.it)', La.. in ...... iii
lbe iDIIitridual'•
p
ad ..W.·to lbe ...u-.ity ad tbe

....-..v............

---lion

w-

. ia!rative

::f"=

I

3

a-.

w._.·.

.... _....,JIAIMDOUX

....

�-~

6

.J -

i5,1fn

Guideline Papers (continued)
bome by dlree ~- with
the final polisbinc done by the .....
tire Committee. My contribuliclll was
limited to aeUinl the time and place
of the ..-linp. 'Iberefore, may I commend to you the followini: MetU:
Howard Deuell, Edward SaiDdom:;
P~: Marpret O'Bryan, Patricia Hollander, Leonard Lewandowski; Equity: Walter Kunz, · Edward
Gray, Allen Caidield.
.
· Yours very truly
AliDIIBW W. BOLT

Asaociate Dean
Graduate School

PropO.a1 by Senate ProfeasioDal ~
ciatioo and Proll!llllional Staff Senate,
SUNYAB, for Allocatiag Discretionary and Merit Funds Specified in
Contract between SPA and the State.
1. Tbe funds secured tluougb the
efforts of SPA should be allocated in
accordance with the procedUtes developed by the COIIIItituents of SPA
to ensure coofidence \e.,~ooed­
wes. As P« agreement
SPA
and the State, the principle of peer
judgment should provide the basis of
the allocation procedure.
2. Tbe allocation procedure should
be structured such that the teWIII'ds
are distributed in accordaooe with the
COillribution -=b member of the pro&gt;
feaoional 8laff makes to the univerllity. Hence, .the term, merit, is to be
defined in the coatext of OllbtaDcliDI
p e l f - and -w:e to the university; i.e., in llemls of the iDdividual's efticieney, creativity, and ellect i - . Tbe term, equity, is to be
defined in - - of:
L salariea filled at """"" levels than
the IMst acciplllble minima as
CDII&lt;eiwd by SPA for~... moolh
appoin-ta for prof-a.al lllaff.
b. salariea filled at """"" levels due
to louilt in . . _ ......... the lad
that an individual is a a
lllll!lllb« of an iDdipDouo minority, ar
"IIIIIDill'ried
e. . . . . . frozen at cmtain levels
CM!!l1ime because lbe individual has
r-=bed the hicbest pay level under
the old de-ificetion syatem_
d aalariee liad at l·o we r levels
without recocnitions of the requiJed
educational pro6les (depees) .
e. aalarie8 fiDd at """"" levels for
u...e llll!l1lbers who ba... bigb professioaal proficieDey but low educational
profiles ( deireM) .
f. aalariee of part.time pei'IIODIIel
who are
paid leoa than balf of a
oormal full-lime salary, or llliDBna referred to ......
g. special individual and/or group
~lous situatiolls wbic:h IIIBY be

on-

documented.
3. Tbe procedunrl are to be dear,
unequivocal, and 'W!Iifiable (110 as to
minimize pievaDces and conflicta) .
Tois does DOt require 4hat salaries
be made public.
4. ~ poMible, the ezisting
orgeniation, alcmg with appropriate
democratically elected aJIIIIDittees,

should be utilized to tbat the
allocation procedunrl adhere . to the
aboYe: In addition, a penDIIIIeDt
SUNYAB-wide committee u to be
established ClQDIIIOI!8d of two IDSIIbem
. of SPA Uni.ersity Center Chapter,
two membem .of SPA Health &amp;ieDcea
Cbapte&lt;, two membenl of the Professional Steff Senate, and .one member
from the administration to:
,. a. J:eYiew annually, · the allocation
prooedures and practices
·
b. reoommend guidelinm to unit
committees, etc.
c. initiate grievances for the purpose of ensuring the adherence to the
above principles. ,
d. ensure that appropriate demo·cratically elected committees in each
unit supervise and serve as revi- to
and are consulted relative to aotivities of that unil
5. Tbe allocation of the meritequity money io to be as foUows:
a. 25% . of the total merit-equity
money sball be at the discretion primarily of. a SUNY AB-wide committee
Csee item 6) to ndress inequities and,
under spe(,;at circumStances, reward
· meritOrious service, from a universitywide perspective, provided otbat individuals ao redressed receive amounts
of monies within the SPA guidelines
with n!SpeCt to j&gt;ercentage of professional staff affected and limitations
on iDc:reases to individuals.
b . 75% of the total merit-equity
mooey, on tbe basis of aa1aries 11enerated within each unit, sball be divided
into .units defined as foUows:
1. Vioe Presijlent for Academic ·
A1faim, iocluding J;)ivision of
Undergraduate Studies; Division of Gmduate Studies, and
Division of Continuing Edu-

cation
,
2. Vioe President for Student
All'ainl
3.. Vioe J'resjdent for Health Affairs
4. V.ioe Presideot for ~lions
and Sy&amp;tems
5. Vioe President for Public Relations
6. Vice President for Research
7. Vioe President for Facilities
Planning
8. Pteaideut's Oft'ice
6. Tbe recommendation p ~ o cess
sball take place at three levels.
Firat, at tbe unit level by -=b immediate supervisor in consultation
with each .Btaff member for whQm be
is responsible. Such consultation sball
result in two separate sets of rerommeodations from -=b supel'\liaor, one
for merit and equity unit review and
the other for univeraity.....;de equity
review.· An individual may be recommended for neither or both.
Tbe guidelines for detennining eligibility for discretionary and merit
monies, as defiDed by the Special
Committee on Merit Guidelines, will
be distributed to eligible professional
ataff lllll!lllb«a.
Eedt profOIJIIional ataff lll&lt;!dler
will prepare himaelf for the evaluatiOn
interviews according to these gu;oo.
li.-.
Tbe immediate supeM&amp;or will evaluate lb!.e for wbom be is responsible
by the criteria.
Tbe immediate supervisor sball
compare and diacuss bis evaluation
with -=b ataff member for whom be
is ._..mte.
Tbe supervisor will indicate to the
8laff member whether or DOt bis name
will be fOIWIUded for further consideration.
U a staff member thinb tbat be
sbould be conaiderecl, contrary to the
decision of the supervisor, be may forward his oorn J:eqUMt for consideration to bia unit c:ommiltee.
"Supervisors will ~ a co...r
lllalemoat of 16
· • dation for pn&gt;!.-1 C&amp;Ddidllla
A staff ..-.bar propoaing ilia oorn
candidacy W'llUid provide the same.

-Tift--=-=-..:.::::
.......
--T-- -...... u:= -. ----STAT£

u_-rt OF l E W m%·1171

~--

........
ASP-1

.......
ASP-3

........
........,
......
ASP-5

- ......

$7,425

10,710

14,2110

17,750

25.075
30.775
3&amp;,750

$ 9,150

g:ng

26,725

3&amp;,750
47o875

.....a

,,_

$111.6Z5

. U::·
10.525

»

It=

. .....

~~

-

~

G

~42.750

...775

F.,. all candidates, tbe evaluations

Within the limillld

lime available.. iloooewr, lll!iiMr - of l'I!ICOIDmmdaliana can he adapCed in - l o r
allocatiOn .... tbe 1972-73 merit flmda
for the following , _ ,
•

-&lt;M!Il

of one's self and by one's superior(s)
will alao be forwarded to bia unit
committee.
&amp;cond, through appropriate democratically elected unit commi&amp;tees to
be composed of three to five individuals elected by the--members of. that
unil Tbe chairman of a unit oommi1tee sball be elected as chairman,
for the chairman sbaU serve tben on
the sUNYAB-wide committee representing 4hat unit.
With repnl to meriWquity l'I!ICOIDmendations, the unit commilltee and
the unit Vice President, or bis designee, sball review and arrive at allocations to individuals in "the UDit in amount of money DOt to ezoeed $1200
nor be less than $300.
Wttb reprd to u n i t OlliDDitJee
recommeDdatioos, this committee shall
make the final recnmrilend•tions of DOt
more than 18%% of lb!.e mOat eligible for merit-equity rec:ot!J1ition in
each unit, relative to -=b unit's &amp;bare
of the total merit mooey.
Third, through a SUNYAB-wide
eqliity.-nt committee wbic:h sball
be ~ of the elected chaimlen
of .the eiJbt unit c:oimnittees plus four
representatives ".ppointed by the 1111minialmtion (oh!o of tbe tOOii 110 appointed to be the Vioe President for
Academic A1faits and 4be VIOl! Pn.ideot lor Sludeat A&amp;ire):
This committee shall recei... equity
JeCOIDIDI!Ildat lrolil all eight unit
committees, or wbateveo- """""" and
may alao receive merit -....,.taliona from wbate...r IIOW'Cl8 for univeisity-wide ~
With repnl to equity-merit recommendations, this commi1tee sbaU make
the final I"'Q.,""'*"""'ataons of the ~
mairiing perceutege of ttx.e moat !lil!lDle for equity - - in terma of
the equity cri~.;t forth ..,.,..,
and relati.., to a SUNYAD-wide apeolive regarding use of tbe total
equity money.
NOTE : Final recommendationa of
awards will be a minimum of $300 and
a maximum of $1200. 'l1le total
amount any one mdividual may reoeive sball DOt ea-t $12110. ·
Final !'eClDIIIIIIeDdona of the SUN,
YAB-wide committee and unit. oomniittes sball be ·subject to !hi. IIClUI:iny
of the univenlity-wide aJIIIIDittee described in ;tem 4 ........

( 1) 'I1le doiiiiiJi,_ wbic:h be
met make it ............, 1o adopt certain of the l*ocedwts augested·eleclion of ClOIIIIIlitteee dual committee review, eliC.

(2) A mmlbor fll the 16'"""....mtioos Clllllrary to _.... ..,...
delnic adminiatJaliaa. Ccmsullalioa.
with 4be __......, and iliiiHe&amp;ching
prof.....ac..al . . . in 4be ~
of llllch pDdelinee and eriteria is deaimhle .... lbe ...... ~ ., timal policy. 'Ibis ClllllllePl is DOt mdy
lnoditicaal a 4bis Univasity, it is
fundanwrteJ to tbe canm coDecCi..,
bupiniac . . . - . 'I1le DOCioD of
"peer ......,.., ..._._, is DOt a _,.
- . y pmt of 4be SPA....-, and
is, at boat, ., ......,... merit inaofar
as
tn- of aaluy
&amp;Je
. ............t.. It is impartant, if DOt imperatiw.
to ...-ne c:haiDMa,
.... Cbe admini&amp;_ _ .....,..,
de8n.

u-

mer-

~

ell:..-- .,...aty to want..-••
a ......
in lbe aiiDcatiaa
n 1be
PIIJidto .....
of - .

u-

decioioas made ...,
adminiatraton &amp;Je DOt .__..w - _...., .....
lbe ........, ... to ........ the
echnin. I • ill ._tiaa. . DOt to 11rip
ant~Mmty. :

bim " ' --- -

~

(3) Ii ............ be ·..,....;.r~
that the~· .,.....,;ty to apply

w-

iililiiY .,.the ••
•
may be
limillld ..., teatative .......;-that
may ...... al.-l;y t-.-te by chair-

mea. ..... ~ ....... with -

prd to merit

mer- .... 1972-73.

(4) It......Jdbe~toadopt

_ . . calliDc

by..- ..........

for -GIIlllllitlme -

~

baWlc iDdi-

vidual . . . . . ~ ill e&amp;ct, pub.
lie ..__.... Wllile tbie may be
lepiJy ~ 1111111 -mac to
deoiaoWe, ,..... ......... be
_,., that aach a P.tiic diadcaJre
woald cxadaawa:w:- • I
A
rl•tim
oflbe Faadty &amp;o.IP;
a
; - - . . . . it is &amp;lplllble 'lrbelbel-. the
pabiDty inolviWJiy" atloDdlult . . .
iudividaal ........ is ...ad

....._DO

In - e&amp;aot to iadade - iililiiY of
• ._.....
- ........ and to
aimal-..ly dofiae - wfminialn- .

~Mee"ibelbeA~-:
I&gt;iaJ:retiaauy 8 a I a r y ....,._..
(....._) - II!- prepind Tbeee
...... . _ , ; - t o .n v-- Preaidoata,

4

Uui-.iity-wide :00.... aad . , _
for further diabil J" • aJaag with a
detailed liatinc ., the VBJiaaa .,..._
·atrain!s that be .... in the ~ of
llllllliee.
Tbeee pDdelinee and pooceclureo. iJidicaled, &amp;Je for 1972-73, and are iDtended plimarily •
a ~
equitable and .....a..IJle ad boo ....
tion to - iaJaBiiatle ...,.._ 'IIIlich
has lobe~--,_ ....
time ~ .._._, I believe it
is desimlJie 4l.t tbia adiJe _.._ be
PWD m a eh cr-tor aawid&amp;lltioa
"'- lime is -n.ble ......
tbenfore, I iiiilloDd to ....,._. in IIlia
directiaa in .the- fatme.
I p.cty ............ tbe e&amp;aot -=b

President Ketter's
Response to the Committees
.ltiNB

u-

6, 1972

TO: II8IDIBII8 OP THB BPBCIAL COJriJiftTaB ON IIBIUT GUIDBUNIIB

P8011.: . , _ . , . L. KErn:a

It is obvious from the ._rts of
both of your commi- that conaiderable thought and elfort ba... pllle
into your respective recommendations
reprdiJic the guidelinm and .pooedUllll to be followed in the alJocatiCil
of 4be 1%% morit and equity JDCIIliel
made 8VIliJahle tbie yeer. Many of the
propoee)a advanced c:Jo.ty are _ofoe.
siJable and -.thy of~

an-Jellllond
to tbia · and
in :roar
,.,.

of
theyua
.........
'
portL
~

·

�7

.. ...__ _
u.s.------

.._ ...._

_,

..,_...._

----. ..... .......--.
.
.
.--·--"'. . ----&amp;·
jects-"' -

"' ... IJ.S.SJL -

llla-~"'--­
......... •
lateracalll. .y • ·

Biglliyin

TIIa
. ._
.-._
.-.
-.-ct-.
._
,

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

1!173 ~~"'

19!111, .. far U72 -

far 215 -

I

of -

--far215-

-

A11entavn

Calli ..... _ _ _ _ _

bJ

..._
II of

............
-.....;, Art ... ~ ..........1D
ci!Mn ~ - -

,_
fnlm ......,.,.

.., u.s. - - .. lila So-

iaiii.TIIa..-.---~----far Jail -

..... -

lila l!llh -

last -

-

Allon

..

-

lila -

~*tid- -

"' the -

Prof~ Ed~&lt;cation:
Some Na~~ Dinctiou is the
tenth in • aeries of pmliles
_ . . s by the Camegie

Conmri-im ... lfilber Educa~·
tion. The ........ Edpr H.
Scbein, . . . , _ of «PDim·
tiould &amp;Wicboluu 111111 _...,.,.
- a t MIT, c l * " - iJmova.
Ia. be Clllll8dera _ . , . for
~education 111111 dea'b-iba a ......... of ~ of
~ $6.95 fnlm lkGmwHill Boalt Cclollpa.y.

.

.....,..,._.,...,_,.,_
.,_._ ___ ...

-----lilac-...... _...._ ....
_ _ par _ _ . . . , _

.._. c--.. .. -

..- .. 1171 at . . . par
- . , . . . . - ID JA1 par • UJIL n. - ... p a r - .. u._ n. ..._

-..... - - - - . . , lot-

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

lllll&amp;1 - - - ........,. 1
"' .,.. _., • . . . . _ ., 2.0
-- .......... _ _ ,
L Tile . . _ .... .. ..
... • .. . . - .._ lllaa
......, ID . . ....... .. . . .....
- .•

Tile -.... ...., -

a.- .......,_,
..
an.
.......
- . . . . &amp;-.. - - . •

(Ill rt•• par
..,... . _ IU Ia .._,. 1D 17.1

•

I

Orientation Program Offers-Chanre to See U/B
.

June 111111 .July madr. the anIIUIIl mipatioD of students

to C11J11PW1 md this 8llllllller ap-

prmimately 1700 incoming
freobmm are apecled to at.lllllld SuiDIMr Academic Wodt....... better boom .. freobIDIUl orioatation.
J&gt;uriDc lboiir two aDd aaehalf c1a.y--., .., c:amp111,
lltudomta will be - - - ' to a
-n .._of what life at U/8
is ~ lib, in additiaD 1D
for fall c t - .
sa..tuled anolla.:b. with fao.
alty - - . . , talb by Pnwicleat Raboirt ~ and other
_ . _ . of hill~

u- ·

--...m.
111111

~

-a.

pt.4D-

Dr. Ricbard Siggelkow and his as well as attend special wod&lt;-

staff wiiJ talk with the group.
'The conferees will be bedded

Minority Student A&amp;in.
'The last four conferences at
down in Tower where 16 student aides will be available for the end ol July will CIOIICI!Dtrale
on incoming Natural Sciqueslioning at all times. 'lbesc
.._-classmen worked with aDd Mathematics stuBuerk during the spring aem....W to ~t themselves
with the Uruversity.
Mler breakfast on the III!COIId
day, iDcoming freshmen will
..-t with the University's top
administrators, take laDguaae
~t tests md staJt'individual academic counaeling. A
faculty hmcbeoo 8l!lllliJIIIr will
folloor. During the lUDCbeian
bnak, students will be able to
~ with faculty ·-~ in

n. -~ A- • 'm of J1!1b-.
.
~ ........... . . . _ .
'The - - of wanobapa .... tl_&gt;eir -~ lii&amp;J(IrL Diacuot•
......... - a ~ gina ... J - 28 and ClllltinuM ..... ja .....tly gmeNl, Buerk
... oalleelhoe .......... 1llltil the .... of Jaly. ..... C!IO- ~ -..,.y p~the !d"~ .....- a.t '-nll;y . , _ will nm '-:It to '-:It; ~ With *'!"" "insidlts miD
1171-'71 - ........... ......., mom- hiP« education. ' ....... ~
lbe
lartlle............ -ing ...t ..-ing ttnoaab Wed- 25 -~~ will be partici- - Ae .&amp;.oc:ildlla bepn ita ...tay at 11 ....._ n. follow- palillg m .ibis progn1111. Tonrs
..... ........,. ia .... 'n.e ing ....... at 1 p.m. lbet of the CIIJDIIU8 md ~ fol •

:a;:: -

..... ....-t "'

ila ()wwoiUee

- .. . _ . . a.m. of the

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

" I
:1
of t.aiMy iDa-.1 ....,. 4.1 ... CBit this
,..,., . . . . . . ...,.,..., _..tmy

Baak, eli.- ol ....irnWion.
...,... IDilllllliag lltudomta will
lint have ...
•
with --.uc ..maan in Dillf.
thoa . . . . . . . 1111 out
llllllll!nt poraoptiaa forma. Din,_ ia ~ b.r 8tndoat M·
fainl Oriadaliaofid wbidi Vaee
Pn!widont . . 8tndoat Maim

...., ....... -*. ..,...... ...

. . . Ia pu
....
:1 ... a ........
.,._ Ia lbe ..-........ . . of lbe ...... ..tmy o£0.7 ,_
a&amp;.
I

I

•

.... - -

J....lie

'l1lla ,.,..,. achednle will

........_ ..,. lbe . - p limilar ID

.......,

-w ,_.,.,

abape plumed by the Office of

low hmth. Ill lbe ~ ll&amp;udents ...... the opportunitY to_
-what's~~ campus or to ~ ID -.k-

....... ... folk-dulcing, films,

ek:.

~ ~day is _ _ . tor
regiatmlioll Jor the fall.

Bueott is ~ 160-1'10students for MCh ....._ In-

Clllllini EPIS students will..,.,._
ticipate in the

J'ell!lM -'Oils

dents.
Ill addition to student orilllltation, Buerk is coordinaliDI
five conferences for panats.
One three-day 8ellllion is acbeduled plus four aae-day caafer.
.

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

-

__ ___

TIIURSDAY---22

_.._,_
-·=
.._ .. '-·

-

-~....-.·=
-~
........ l-6p.a. . . . . . 7-10~
.s.
......
(~
._,, .. a.-. 7 . . . . ....

-·= . ,. _ .,.._,

o..lor-

MONDAY-19

-·=
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-

.~-.

caoft

, _, -oloop,7-10p.a.

-CXBII'IJ'IIIK: Clll"n. - -

~

-.-.-IO,CZIII
Aloo -

- . : P.AmJ IV,IIIIney Ad.
~ . _ 1-$ ....

~~~2Z.

PASS IV •

a dia:t k .._

11 io way ... - . ; , &amp; ,
---~
-.........,.;. JIORnlAN rv:
u..,..-~~oe...
a
...me. qaeae
~~

---.-..
-

. . _ . _ a i d a . P:a
I'Oil'I'BAN IV.

-·=

...

certaia
.

; ••

Ik~~ - -

E"'"i":= ~r:.-- !k
-.......-..,-·.

.....

-~.,
· - (1-)- 147

aarw.---...::.
--=-..-;,.--..
~

----

..u.-•:r..~--

C"'iN"..,~~=

LIBRARY EXHIBITS

•

PW7nic
lA 7i1':J~
ea.-,
.....

1!1&amp;5), I4D

.'

TUESDAY-20

NOTICES

~Day Set
'Doe UIB .u...i A
' •
will • BII-UIB ..AJio.

.... n.r .......

~-.­
·-~clllr.
Paillll ~

--c. .....

U/8...._--. ........
........................
a. ...........
_......_""-_....__
...................

......... a...a..Ail .....
CWioa

.................
..................
'DIIN'IIillllea=IJ6

. . . . . . . . " ..

2

liar...._..._
--4UI..

•

r

...

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1381900">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451158">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381880">
                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381881">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381882">
                <text> Universities and colleges &gt; New York (State) &gt; Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381883">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381884">
                <text>1972-06-15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381886">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381887">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381888">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1381889">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                    <text>UIB8Doctorate Ou/p.d;
U/B in 1974-75 will rank someWbele ~ 20th and
_ 30th in the nation in annual doctorate production (Ph.D.
and Ed.O.), according to estimate figures .-.-tty prepared for the national -&lt;:ouncil of Graduate Schools. To
arrive at the estimates, a base line of doctonltes for 1970
and 1971 was identified and th:lln projected to 1974-75
"applying whatever subjective modifications seemed reasonable" to the Graduate School adm"istration. T1M! figures were distributed to members of the School's Executive Committee to be confirmed or modified. These are
the· departmental estimates (and the Graduate School
emphasizes that they are simply that) arrived at
PILD. &amp;EILD.
E.-...... PILD. .. u.a..

-

f~

of Arts &amp; lAtt.rs
ClaSsk::a ···-··-·-···--·-·······

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2

1

=~-~~~--~-.21

3
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14

1
7
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o.nn.nk:
&amp; Slhlc , ________ .: 2
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0

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0
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3
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15

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TOTAL
27
15
2!t
FK&amp;.IIty ol Educational Studies PhD EdD PhD EdD PhD EdD
CounMtor Edue.tion --- ____to
s 20
o to
o
Cun1culum _ .... -----··-····--·
14
a3
12
Educ8tlonal Admlnlstmloft __ _2
16
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217

Allentown Festival to Be
More Frustration than Fun

Crurt BattleLxms as the NeXt :Move
·Inn-I8Y,
D!ive tO Alter GitYHOusing_Code
On
a biD tD rerioe
Balralo's dwediDc onlinmtas
by eliminatina _ . _ &lt;11 the
code sludenls CXIIllliiB -.-.
c:riminatory" apin tabled
in Common CouDcil ...._jttee
Tiiis, obErvers ssy, dfediVely
kills the p~ and mub
the loa! of round in the ....
~ battle sludenls ba\le been
waging since March.
Many of the ·students -..xking to revise or repml the «·
dinance whidl prohibits ~
tban t w 0 umeJaled people"
"from living together """ pinning their hopes to """""""
in oourt.
•
Carmin Putrino, rep........ting
the Niagara Frontier Chapter
of the American Civil liberties
Union, plans to begin Jepl action if the motion fails nest
week. He feels the ordinance is
"unconstitutional" since it
"limits the use of property
without reason." Other grounds
are "unequal treatment against
studentsH and possible discrimination against q,e financial
circumstances of tenant&amp;. Bee·
ulations already on the boob
would prevent the garilqe and
n 0 is e infractions I"''VDCiJDlflll
complain about, if these rules
were enforced, Putrino argues.
He believes be bas a slnloc
case and is optimistic about
winning.
Supporting Jepl action is
the third avenue U/8 students
have uaed in their fight to re~ the amendment whidl ....,.
pasaed in Marc:h of 1971. '""'"
oretiailly, it was pasaed "to

•

l:J:.
::a..:~&lt;II~
dilions on their
but

5
7
5

dents.

8ladoDt Alioocialioa, aDd Sub
Baud I em band · tD sup-

part Arthur aua deaoomce what
the7 aolled ""tbis qo_.;m.Ne

boDiina Cll"dialmce."
N - D!1J011s &lt;II the..,...
sian-~from termina "it "a
fame" tD ssyina tbat -debate
"bmted," but tbe reault
&lt;II three and a half hours of
dis:uEion the tsblina of
·~

the lllllliaa.
'lbe A:iibur IIIDiian was Ibm
sent to Clllllllllitlee while the ;,.
wl-.ed llludenla bepn
witb O&gt;unrilmen ~ ... another 111D1ian intniduced em
May 23. 'lbie cme eliminated
the "Do more tban two llllreJaled peraons" rule.
Instead, it tied number of resi-

....mna

(C&lt;mtinued ""

"'*

2. coL 5)

·

~."

1

many feel it wes aimed at stu-

Councilman Raymond
Leo....ilow111ri,_in fad, ' - I01id

44
2

•

7
1
3
3
10

2

•

21
7
5

~-

331

who once
deslruclion."
Soon after the~ ...;.
palR!d, th!! -city bepn ... eviCt
students who were in violation
of its provisions. 'lbe si-Doo
became increasingly strained
and finally 011 Marc:h 14, 19'72,
Cnmr1man George Arthur intnxluc:ed a .-&gt;lulion ....,..ling
the so-called "antHlommnne"
section of the code. At this
meeting, close to 20 U/8 student represeotstiws from the
Student Asaociation, Graduate

,_

Worn Halt

--..........
of.............__..... ----'-. Isn't----- of--·-

...._

... -

muctiall---

..,- - - - , . Dr.

-

plent--

Jahn-.-

-- He's--..

pnljlc:t ... 1he

In 1 h e - -

1he _ , ... 1he - ·

_ _ ( s - . . , _ 2 . )finn .., the~ ..........

SUMMER.,

~PORTER,

STATE UNIV£RSI1Y AT BUFFALO

N0.2

JUNE 8,1972

�I-. •• IP12

=2
·The AIJentownFestival.~

SUNY Units

.(c~ from -

SetPolicj·: .

~ .-.Ita and
.planatiana.

On Trans~

~- ~- a lot of dan to

=

. . . .

0oe major debate is 011er the
use of tear ps. 'Ibe slatement
of Police Caplain Gom&gt;ley_wbo
is "quite posilive" lbere "110 indiscriminate
firing into inDocent
" is
contnLsted with an
vit n&gt;~·"l'bere were little babiee
Sud·· older people in the oomt
When the gas hit. 'lbey (pol.iee)

• .

==~~-= ~~ifo~~

r~.~;,:~~~to·~~~~lad&lt;"'7~-

...!1':u! ~"':j!M'!,..of~:~~~~-Oll
: ·: T liD: ~,....;;4-.-., V~V¥1~0
b)' the prea;denta dl the SUNY· ~~--\.K D ~UI. J.li.Y f.'\.n.cvv

uniYeft!ities 81111 ~ty .cil!l' . -:: .BY STEVE LiPMAN ·. ·
Jecea m Coordinalinl .-.oa ~ ·DiD · wa~pte - :u, a ·year
Ooe. 'Ibe motioa belPi· ~ • 'out of Ufi: where be J&gt;lllyed
a 8eptanber . 8oeril ·of. · foolbill and'-wrestled for four
'I'nloteea N1ing that. a!! - ~ j~- after _wbidi be .lilbsti·
_year_ ~~tow· JD. Ill"'":. -l;lltp-~-hill! ac;bool pbys·ed
demic • .....,.,....... l]i! -~ -- ~ :I"" a . .!'Jake things_ as~
space m a four·Yf!Bl ~ m· -come: type of penoon; ,Politictheir lli'I!IL U/B m particular ally, be BII,YB be doesn t "noranticipated difficulties with.. .mally . follow a liberal or conthis N1ing since :it"'Diiieil G- .-~.li~-tiecaU..!some of
pectatiOIIs of coiiidnmitY- ·col- lbo! 1lberal poirita of view I
lep students wbo 'felt ' they don't agree with, and some of
'!""'JJd have DO ~ lettinc • the CDIIIIen'81i~ points o! view
mto pn&gt;grams·tbat ilocept'only I don~tllgn!l&gt;wtlh."
:
a small n~of transfer stu- · T~•. Dim is in the middle
dents.
·
:
.ol. hill thi(d mouth as. a cam'Ibe · approyed asswance -of · pu8 ilecwity ~ here,. one
transfe&lt; dOes mt assure colitfu- of a number of new members of
-uation in · the major ..field of ~ !oree which now requires a
.nnmmum 'Of· ~ yean.~
lower study:
To Pl'ovide !or these stu- He~ 1be .iob, financial~-dents, the presidents pledged 80118 aside, "because ~ s a
-that:
. ·.
great neea for. ~ .m law
L Within .Cc?onlinalinl Area f!l!lornement ·· ·With ~ucalion,
1.. the admission of students "!'th ":" understanding. espeWith AA or AS decrees from a . cially m campus law enforcepublic ~y~ co~ into a ment."
· : ·· :
: .
.State Uru~ty aeruor college _ 'Ibe .-1 -for understsJ:Iding,
will be without 10118 of credit Walgate 88YII. bas become more
fOr ~ ·courses included in ~ sirice. be stsrled
. the AA .or AS ~ prognuns. . ~ ~- :'! ~ Pllt ,ID,YII!elf
·11iatsUch 'cOUiaeaWillmeetor m 'tliis JIOBltion · (wben a.stucount toward baccala~UMte •
dent)· I ~ ""4 &amp;nY -~
gree requirements other than that rd be m this JIOBltion
total number of credit bQurs, or :someday. :
· ·
will meet Bdvaiaci' coume pre~t's what rd. say to a lot
niquisites, is mt and cannot be of ~ students :- Don't be

.

•.

aTo.......,~-

80 quick l'l judge """"! o! these

-:=t~ J:""'""~Y J::

.J.....

JIOBl-....

DD!!·

as

. .

\-m . .,_.,!_'!
,..............
·

..... t

n,...

. It's~i~t way of look·
~.
himself~~Danlikefinds
,
thiDkin,r
a
~ . 'When I pve out a
psrlring tid&lt;et, I lp' to look at

.

Pllblic
year -cob-· D..:.!l...:..... D'l~--'leges in · CoordiJ ·
An!il ~1 · .llUJ.Jt~r C :U:UJ1,
into the Universi s senior
units in this
an admis.
Bions clearing
will pn&gt;vide infoi::;a.:'m~ a r d 1 ~ g
~"!
.
.81111 ""!ll
.
iMMnT
88llist m ocs.,:::.i 8eDlOI' uruts
.
o&amp;. • •~J
in.~ ~
transfer adA ,mid-October completion
nuanon 18 ~ '
date bas been set for instaJia.
'Ibe pol.iey ~ be eft~ve tioo of a new 60,000 pound per
for ~Y"'!" collNe stu'den.ts hour boiler, to be' hoUIIed: in an
paduating m ~· -Eftorta-will additioo to· the Gerald F. Mebe~ to ~ate 11..- . Kay Power Plant nmr Winpadusting m 19'12 wbo haye Aveaue. .'Ibe rebahilitabe;en, unsble to~ ~"" ~ tioo. 81111 ~ PI'O.iect.
llli8IIIOlL
'!
. · . ·.bud&amp;Saf at $420.000, will re!.C Uh..Jr...~
place a 1200 pound .P"!_ houi
~
boiler 81111 insure adequate
A c:bance to IM,.;, about~- -.n to heat all ~ build·
selfiliteiatioo'kroibentmoP&amp;h U.." Dr. ·Jolm Neal,~
-r.-._.,.._1 Anabais"'ia one el rehabilitatioli and CCIISrucof muiy life W'~ .l!einiJ tian, ~
oftered thili lllllljnjer.
·
~wmter;lberewere.....al
Claaaes in llqitjing 81111. cro- · ~-.;, crisitlil" because .al.
cbeting, ~tioo sldJls ~ fiWure 81111 "if there
from the

ey--

. Carelully ~ : are the
differences ~

ordinalinl Area (ol s- om-.
......,gty of N- York): ~ ;
tunity to continue tbeii- stu4im.;;
pnMsioas must be ·made fix •
11..- studeDts wbo , do DOt
through normal transfer pn&gt;cedures oblain admisaion into
an appropriate adYllDCed llllderpaduate propam which will
permit them to continue ~

2. W•thin ~rdinalinl Area
1, 1be ~t t&gt;f students
with AA or AS ct.,..- from a
public two-year college wbo
have.not been admitted through
nonDal transfer ~Wl!fl into
a senior State Oftiversity unit,
will be the ~ty Of the
Presidents of the ileilior State
University units.· , • · · ·· · ·

E
x
·
·p
· msi
• on

Now lJnde

L ue ..

Is

ship and direclion ezhibit.ed by
all policemen inwl...a," 81111
the initial reaction of the police to a fight in front of Multhe police, the blaclt c:iti· ligan's Bar. ·
"""" and «be blacl&lt; and white
.· 'Ibe autho,JB' condusion is yoilth
1be city are cm.acterthat ihe police "rioted" 81111 1be ized bYof «be
deepest fears, dis~-s.tum8!1 CommunltJ ' ·
media 1 'limatized this break- trust 81111 sleft!otyping on both
"You're in a --&lt;lilturated down of~ rocedure. 'Ibis hap- aides." Community memben;
community where everyone's _ _. ..!..
because the
also seem in agreement with
livm
·· g 01on top of one __ .....___ ~ - : r "'!Y•
like
•
• - ~· police, the mecli!l. 81111 the Buf- the slatement tbat lbere is a
I~"
~;.:thin
falo (lOY~ 'f!ave "foDDed geueral failure of the """"
media "to present an appropri!ut in the~
-~~ ~
because you're gonna see these direoll ~ t.o the neilds ate sccount of police and their
students every day You get
Y
. • activities."
'lbale criticisms were tnJe
· ted with tbelb . . ."
and ~ _ of average alitwo years ago when· tbe. "inci·
~do' students react an _zens.
·
· ·
ex-lll&lt;!lllber of their' ranb 00..
Many of these "'-rvaaions, dent" occwred and are. slill
a large extent.
on the othet" side of the badge'&gt; however· are bafoed an one-shot true today
"Some- tzy to put on a front ~ to the organizations Re-reading this work on «be
seeond
.
arun~
of. «be
in friln:t of'tlieir frieuds," llan l'a bel·Ied . as ' "hostile" and
says, "and tzy to make you "self-serving." There is 110 "riot" gives the reader DDt only
a sense of DDslalgis but a strong
look foolisb .•. You don't like
•
it as a per!IOD - but you',.,
feeling of discowagement. For
.if the.l181De .lhinl' .happeps this
got to tsl:e'it as much as poesi- · ~
-. . -: · . ·. ·
weekend, there's a aood d&gt;snce
ble when you're in a position
sum as we aie ..." ·.
. ·
. ·. .
.
it '!rill be bsndlecl 1be 8lllDe
· ' Most stndeuts· be's . .....,.,.,. !lhf'~·~ - sl.....L:.i...l :
way. , . " .. . . ·. -· ..
tered,· ·however, - "an. - JOietty ' l"~.l:i · . •.li:IU:;!IU: '· .
good. 'Ibere's only a small per- • ·
. ··
.
. · ·.
·
· ·
· ·
centsge, that . have a. definite · ·SCientists from ·around «be
• 'Do' ~ towama yiJoi."
·world will meet in «be Hotel
· 'Among students he's en- Statler Hilton's Golden Ball- (Contilwedfrompofel , col.6)
countered 80 far was a former room June 1.2-15
participate dents to the habitable square
teammate. ."He was puked for in the ThUd lnterDatianaJ, Con- footage within a dwelling. _
-re than five minutes (in an vocation
InnnimOIOgy, span. Bv .....,_ .,_ a ..L Board rs
i1legsl zone). Sometimes a per- 80red by U/B's Center fO. 1m- ~vu.;:;n':"'...:::::::.~ had beson leaves his Cl!r for five min- , munology. •
~ -~·- ......
utes and. !"""' in, . 80 while .
At the three 81111 a haH day come IDCOIJIOl8.ted under the
you're wnlinJ the ticket, you biennial; they will focUs an
fs~c~...a:
tsl:e your time, you tzy to Jive · p . - s1i well• future tM.ds com. Members of «be _..,.8
him a break. .
in many areas ilf immun6Joty .,.__. .. committee ~
''But tllis guy was puked ~ And 'ltiey will· probe
reiulation would sefor an hour, 81111 when he ·CiiJii8(·both relstionships 81111 interac&gt;- verelv limit what..._. could do,
out I gave him a ~~ I lions of. antigens, aillibodies
J
-:r
1"Quldn't tzy to tsl:e it back .or and cell~ for 80 they began to lobby for the
give him a break ali it. He • • the immune . _ in the Hoyt motioa's - .
se.--1 it .. . ll&gt;at's the. way human bod ·
' ·With the help of Sub llo!ud
I tzy to be."
'Ibe EJn!;t W'rtebaky Mem- 'f"''I!!OU!"' they ......, 8IIOCXBiful

to

·a student's pOint of view. When
I was a student here, things
. wem kind Of tough. I tzy to give
them every break I C8ll.' That's
the_ way it~ to be in a Bituation like 1his.
.

mb!tt'·

a.!n

..::=

stmefs

·to

to

lloUSiJig -

·an

to

b':,"

{J:j:

&amp;

lh,rtihe

... .

~-·Dan. had 1!0 ~ - !" !-

to

ent~ J'l'lOI'
f:his i6b.
H~s getting 1t on _the .iob. ~
this .lit' wm atta&gt;d a
four-'lll!eek · ~ : for 8pNY
Campus~..,t{;
~
!Jom.y,
. ~en
teels aids
~ his teaching
.DI!W was . "'n
prepsralioil. COU.JII!'B..
tC way &gt;''!"
'could ·aa:y: working as '!- ~
gave !"" ~ ..tot. of_pomters ~
~ people, stu.• "I ~·I. like to be
·...ounct jJeople: . i like tO help
peOple. And that's the main
role of a ~ olllcer.
"Sometimes · the kids are
.;.;..&amp;.t on certaiii issues, but
•""'!re bere to stop them from
~ wiDdows. You bj to
ellforee the law, but you know
deep down lbilt ma,ybe· the Vi-

Ofl!!:lers.;:'·

t:.'ts%._

" " " ' L o d m { , . _ m ...... Pnoo{don!..._.
guished professor of becterial- Ketter make a statement supw11o died -portin&amp; the Hoyt nB&gt;Iutioo. Dr.
oo Ilecembe. 7 · 19619 was the Antbouy l.oremJetti, actin&amp; vice
'Center's 'first •ctireclor) will preaident for student alf.8.irs,
open the acientific --..._ also 'tVIOte, ~ out in-Professor Elvin A. Kabat, ~ . Squities in the ezisting regula. f~ of ·IDiaobiology. Cohim- Iiana.
t;~a University, will sj)oak an
• .._ .,.__. __ .. committee
geneial' features al. antibody
...,....,. • _ , . 8
· molecules. A receptioo 81111 buf. actioo, however, it _ , . that
fet 'dinner st !lie Albrigh$-K!Ma the Common Council .will n&gt;A1t GsBery (7 p.m.) will cloao main •mstwkshiA tbenby pe.vthe first day's 81!111ioos.
mg the way fortbe oomt case.
On Wednesday, June 14, a
banquet at .7 p.m. will hoDor
U .... l"'--£.~_,r Piene ~ of ~
J.'f~ U'Ci1.llUS
lnstituf:e Pasteur, Paris, for. his · Twenty--'.....
tiCODimcta
many 'important CCJDiributioas totalinc ~
the _study of, anlipns ll!"'
. . $
~~
antibodies. ~rahe,r has~ m- . · Ceived by Uni......,gty ............'OIY 81111 JDDDUDD!ogy

to

•lnlmlm¥ m.llimulalinl •
~t .of:::::;:,~:" a
... _!:::::.~m..._ _ __,}• ...,.. •

: : . ... . =:.-: : : =: .:-.: : :.-:. ;: -: :;: . ;. " " "' " "

An informal ..:.-.... .-Ia"
• interested in "'!'-..- abarina
CDIIIDOil·
or . leclmlng
, _ aldU8, the
Worbbopa
brinp
- CMiiflod ~
81111 ....,._
ben of the Uni-mtY ClOIIIIIJIIi&gt;.
ity. .
·
·

cloae eumjMtian of the &amp;1m&lt;&amp;
pbere in Allenfown during 'the
eveaing or of «be .,_Ia in «be
bar which ~ started
the turmoil Nor ia tbere a-·agraph aplainiq !bet this';;;.
the apring in wbicb 8CI088 the COIIIIbry, including
U/B1 ~ rioted 81111 thet police Dlld . . . . . to eq&gt;ect ra-paging._ 'lbere are dlapters
an~'s Finest" and
"Media 81111 Myth." but none
an "C.-.1 Panic and .Ita Results."
Some of the autbora' conduBiona largely lllijuacified,
)'et it does appear that ihe police 81111 the media did overrmct, ~ ratber 1han
c:larif,ing the ........me's events.
· Tbus, there is a peniatent
iine of irulb 81111 a&amp;ree6ble crili·
cism. Many Buitalo citizens
.would prObably ligree 1hat, in
many instanceB, the police d&amp;psrtment
- ''relations
be unread&gt;able."
0.."
thet
be-

~' anil ' oclfii:isl 'versions.

'"I'o 88IIIU8 all recipients of
AA 81111 AS decrees in the pub' lie two-year colletle!l in this Co-

88llll1l!d, . ·•

:f. coL J)

-n:t. for .,..

etDamWaris,....,....

·

On ihe IUbiect Of: V'Ietnam,

why didn't

Nimn's ~ an-

.n «be bnildinp," aa a f - :!ein ago. · ·
.·
Dan lbinb it'a' "the 'liew stu'Ibe addition lrill be faced ill dania . • • 'llley'""' had 'niore
~ 'llimilar to t h e tr.dam in hiib achool Their
C8l the oricinal buildinp, but
- t a· ..... ....... liberal towill have a fist calhw ' than · Wiirda ·u-a. And wt- they
- a d ···IGol. Since tha ~ · eet bin,· tbey're not paltin&amp;
boiler will be ..,.._.ad. an the dirt;y ,_,., 81111 Jetlill&amp;
__...,. ill

· N.J ialplainL

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

~~~~

a.n:b, has &amp;nliOIIIICed.

Amon&amp; new ....,ta were: H.
H. Pattee, theoretic~~~ biolacY,
' ''The .Primeval ~"

1/o!J:Hzkes. ·_ ;
~ . f.!!:""~ ~t::l
has mised mtes for faculty-&amp;nd . for Lep1 Services;" ·f";300,

lawt::::

stall member&amp; Wbo.wiah to...., I N.B.F; M . Galanter,
ita facilities or receive in8tnJc- ~t Proc.- ill the
tioa. 'Ibe increUe ·from '$6· to · ..-tatioo of LeD1 Policy,"
$10 : ......tad ,by· . 8ulj f75.too. NAF; F. Wadi, ........
Bosnl L · •.·. ·
.
, ut.y, "'Oeaiiloory of &amp;able QJ:
. Othe&lt; f -· at the Center. in- ganic· -Rildlal &lt;:aa...,• $25,dude:· $6 for ,IBDIIal IDIIkin&amp;, 100, N.B.F; T. J. Jeeb, a.the~~~~flee~ :meL..~ · ~-:: - ~~balr~\::!f~ !!.!:i~· ~ - Jt 'for malb."Set'll-r,"$17,600,
~.....u CJI*L """"
..., _ _ . andilrJniUnd
._._
81111 a~- dlarp N.B.F; F .. 0. Gearin&amp;. anfhro.
further information 811d/or rec- hind Clad&lt; Gym -...1 o.iley don't fael they"ve p · to 8iht for .m '!eft. Rates for the·PD- ·I'OI!v:. "E~ in Ecfu..
imatioo call est. 261L
.
A~ •
· for~ hae.":
eral poblic.ue- a...,.._, . cation, . $100,000, USOB.

L...,.....

L""""'

I

�~··

~

JP72

__

:J!uppe!BAre .·:
~J.Reture Tcpic .
,.
. ·By 'STAF'

The hialory of the marioaetle
tbmln! and the ...... of _.......
- i n teaching Jangnqea
were higblighls of .a preaeatation by .Jacques O.ionin-n in
the FacUlty Club Sunday ~t.

The-~­
abip ot the Cerde Callmel de
Langue Francaise of Bldfalo,
opened with an ..,__ of the
origins of ~ and ~18 ......
....... the ages; . "Herodotus ports the ....., of marionettes as
early as the 5th .c:entwy B.C.

D~l!."....;L' S!f-.vln
E..._,.:._._.......,...--+
llV llUUJ.J.Jta.U,
~.llt:a

Greeks, ROopansand El)1&gt;tiim8
made....., of "the "medium ·c:hief-

lll.Ll.Y

1

01-L~..lm" ..DU1..UHU
n..Jr....l~,A....l~·.·
..
\ASIU

~tou::.;:t~·= ·

O.lal:6..l

Ttoo t.:ulty ..........., will
_ . t t h e - -'emic year
in Bmope, initiating a sludy to
CIIIIIPIII'e beliefs about the en•i:t--Jial crisis lliDOIII the
_.ae of Oalo, Norway, and

physical problems. He feels
that U/B's Environmental
Studies Group reflects t b i s
view: "We must find out if peale know that iiociial instability
be directly· tinked "to the
Bafalo
industrialized envinmment man
Dr. PiwJ H. Reillln, aaociate has created. Wbetber or not the
~of Natund Sciences and
general public, politicsl deciMathrmalira, and Dr. Lester sion makers and scientific elites
Milllnllh,......,te ~ ·of-know thanRICb tliings as diSocial ScieDces and Admini&amp;- vorce and illegitimacy rates and
tratiail. are members of the the incideDce of . crime are
U/8 EnviroumentalS t u dies strongly related to"environment
Group CXIIIIPI.al of fa cuI t y will "&amp; Umgly infl..,;,.,., what
........._. wbo share an iDterest governments and aoc:ieaes do to
:in b IJI(IIJiems of the environ- ' remecly .the situation.
.
IDI!Ilt but come from diverse so·"All of the frustzation causcial acience and natural ecience · '"« - ' - to _.......,.. radicsl

i:.ay

the Middle A&amp;"'- Dllring . tLe
. Jlen•i-ance, in Italy, the puppet as we know it, the "glove
marionette," was· fust ~for
. j!lltertaimilent purposes in the
characte&lt; "Pulcbinella." During the 17th century, the dJar..
acter traveled to France as
" Policbinelle.'' tO Russia as
"Petroucbka," and across the
Channel as "Punch" in the
. ''Punch and .Judy" shows.
Meanwhile, the character
~'Guignol" was created as the
stereotype of tbe Lyonnais
silkworker wbo saw nothing
wrong with a little drink before,
during, lind after work; today,
. FreDch puppet shows are called
"guigD&lt;ll." wbether they rontsin
this ..&gt;.:--~-- or not.

t~then;:.:r.:•lhattiooUU: ~~~~u: -~~::S:~i r::l~

Wiela ~*~Pie hold about envinlmneDtal problems will pro.faundly. shape .the . way A" society ._..ts to the environ.....m.l crisis."
Dr. Reitan will leave ·for
Oalo on .July 1 under ooe of

triaiired environment."

The OIBD project will serve
as preparation for a pl'&lt;lpMal

the medieval taboo surrounding
the use of elfigie:i of living per-

lions for comic purposes. marionettists had to lt'IY on stock

235~CrabApp1es

AreP~on tOO Campus

Two hJmcb.ed .thirt)..fi.ve ornamental ·flcMering and ·fruiting
crab apple --.representing
17 varietie&amp;-iue included .in
campus plantinp, R i c h a r d
Sebian, University horticliltur-

ist, says.
for a three-vear grant: to rondud a rontinuins ciompaiative characters like Punchinello and
Acconling to Sebian, the idea
study. ~ Reitan and ~ Mil- .Guignol, . As .comic. theatre debralhLebopefUI.· ihilt..a~ - ~the ·~~~~me..tahoo . .... of~ ·a -~ crab
only 30 NATO Senior. Fellow- foundation will underwrite the ·p~ ao ·that ·the "actors' roles apple collectidn on campu8 was
ships in SCience awaided' "t!iis wort&lt;.
·
·
· -deYeloped in imitation of the . CXlllicei..ed in ¥BY m52 by Mrs.
year in the United States. He
marfOtiettes · &amp;:nd not "the other Fredericic: H 'IboiPas, - wilt: of
the former chairman of the Inwill be
in .fllllWliY by
way around.
Dr. Milbrath, wbo will spend
CJ........l..~
M . Chicoineau has U9l!d pup- dustrisl Engineering JJepart.
the fall semester as a visiting
~
pets to ·teach ·Freuch coocepls ment. Approved by University
......J"-- U ·
· of
at all leVels"{rom -n.&gt;rimenfal authorities, the plan"was
...
~ at ...., mverm.ty
Aarhus, Denmark, under a FulFLE8 classes to ~
college-level adopted the fciuowing. year by
bridlt grant.
advanced conversation cowaes. the Eishth ~ :of Fed1beii sludy in Norway will ·
.
In this age .of audio-visual tech- erated Garden Clubs. 'I1ie first
be -the initial step in wbsf tbey
Aft«· .h!O {,.ears
~ Diques, he :suggested, the pup- two trees of tliiS undertalring
hope will be a three;YMr p,..: · ~the""'::~ ~ pet can PlaY im iDJportsnt role. were donated and plan~ by
gram to ~ attitudes to- has a
body of data It can he ~ simply to illus- Prof~ lind Mrs. 'lbomas. In
wards the environment 811101!1 to indi"-•- that ......._.__ __ _. lril.te a concept like gender, or the spring of 1953, the mall in
~~..~~~tific~ , insomnia"":'"'can be~ "i; as a medium for dialogs and back o(/Lockwood was ·lined
· CI8IOil - . . . . ...... IICH!Il
.
•• "systems'"'- ... ___._
. ...,......._ "
convemations. Puppets are es- with M.UU. Hopa, some of
and technolocical eli
of the
""' --~"J!"C!ially e1fective in this latter which were donated _by·. the
two areas.
tea
This . method of .therapy I1!!IPect, siJice students wbo are seoior clssll of the School of
They "!-e Norway for their'
:,':'!:!..~to:. behind a pupaet stage do not

joined

Pro&gt;ject"

Phobia. Czue
.
;1!

suhsts.ntiar

~1.J;!: ~~=:

•virooiDI!Ilt and man's. relationabip to it are sicnifjcantly diffemlt in N-y" than in the
United States.
:
.....,.___
· ts
t, .. _
Dr· ......- pom 011 uuw·
ever, that 0a1o and Buffalo
have aimilar problems. "P-Ie

:t'::..:

,!':

series of situations involving his
;;:,~:!ie~~
fears. ·.
.·
.
.
lind creative. "The d - - . .
~ thisreluechttuation,
~ iJ!lt ha..,; to be ~
a. pa~t finds ~ ~ of elabOrate '~ M . Chihis fears become · ~ :"9iz!eau "pOinted "out! an ~
tolerable. "'n . other words,
tumed ~..,_
u . ..:...~. ~...__..
says Dr. ·Lick. "if the patient
....,..,ora.,..._.,.~
has
pbob" about a...:..a.ts
over a doorway will do.
a · ':" · · ...,.. .we · .The fuale.. of the prosram

·-&lt;:

=

Phsrmscy and Alpha-Phi ()me.
ga.
Planted for their flowers
which usually appear in May
before lilacs bl0001, the majority of tbe species and varieties
hsve single hloBJms. Some
with semi-double ·a nd double

blossoms c o m p a r e cfavoiably

_with double-Ooooerin orialtal.
cherries, Sebian saYB. although
·the flower ci.-rs are not as
· large. Colors· ....,.. frOm pure
white to dint&lt; "pU.pliilh red; with
many varialions of pink and
red between.
· . The varil!ty ~~ Hopa.
on the ioop 'IIVblire Dielendorf Annex is l~ted, has nc-in
which are (irst reddish. piilk
and later fade to ¥ t pink. .
The fruit th8,t follows IS a pink. m!SJt ~~~.le slightlY. ....,.. &gt;%"
.........,~

Most. of ~ cmJ; aw.Iea are
smalltrees&amp;ndcontubute
many diffenint natunol ...._,_,
depending Oil the varietY,. ! .-

·GBRIEF-"REPORTS :.
~

•

•

NYSTA DIRECI'OR. "Dr. Coa.

~--tiDe A. "YC

• •

reoident.

u;r._.;ty ee::~.lcbapter,

.... ~ -•~_.. .. ,~r ~ IJ&gt;e

•

•

f

BlED~.

BENNIS AND

W

G B

.

..........__.

u:t:::ity ·ofe!i:.!.r~

mer •""-• ....._ -~ ~
aDd P.b::ia"w.ri~

~ .=-t:i Di.trid st of
' ~ :'.t~so:, i!jo'!d:: :.:li!F,cin~h.:;s;/! ·::! ~t;t~
!:..,!'.':..,Yt:V~A~. ~~ ~3~~ ~
ca...... it is rontaminated..In
.ladder. 'Then'"'! have bim-1,11 a · p~~~.~th
. · -'!!•..Frducucedrillllll
.·~,.:.._~ trict io oae of three formed in [rv Biedenaaa,
it is _.Ne to Lake fust . !lo~r ~ and ao
"""
·~
............_ April to·PIOYide SPA repreoenta- collaboratoqo.., a B.;;citiaed
Erie," he ·
· forth.
.
. :
· music, zany accents, ligliting tioa: in NYSTA. following merser iu:tide, ~ To ~!
ODe

I

'

• "Booh . . - haw air pOilu~ problems ....Wting fr 0 m
the "--'- of to.il fuels. And
both~have
taminated

,..;C:::

.....:;!.

Many patients · have . been
found to overcome fears
through ln!atment. The treatment "significantly reduces

~ ""!'tua~~

·=·i=

'

1
.. ·,

II

i

A

a-m's ............
en~
IJI(IIJiems of
varies
1 with
the llitualioD of the com-.ity in wbidl be liWL ·To
1 i
I
n&amp;c:t Ibis, the llludy will indade belie&amp; of . . . living in
1 rural .uinp outside the
o.lo and Buffalo wtlcm.--.

t

I

·Dr. IW~ in. . . tba&amp;
c:rilis .... tie viewed in- _,.

t.a.d-. as aoeiaJ·as well as

Pav""a·-...

·current - - . , ~
.._
. . . •· •
!'.~"!:::.!!::::"-·;.
~-t _.._,.... .
- · ·~
·- ~
ENGINEERING OFFICER Dr. be.,_.. I ' - ....... ~ Ad-

of the

two

orpni&amp;atioas. . .

-.

f":tt.; !r~
k ~;,::;~...:; ~~..=t'~d:
•' ~ Ill
~~ n-•-•- ,.....~-r..;....a·
· ~ ~ ·-

by
and inmBriooettes' strings are
......_,"
- In addi'"'....,. r "'·'
• - __ _. _ _ . . ..... on a · e
_
. , be ~--. Dr
,_..e 81 - """ _..........,_ ......,
the two citiea are comparable in
· ........_
of their own, to the point that
'-tion
.
Dr. . Licit and his' IIIIIOCiates, ooe am see their woodeir faces
6
Milbrath, a politital ac:i- .who have received a grant from amiling. That
certainly
Olllisl, _...of the "alilo cW· the Nationllllriltitulle of Men- tzue here. .
.
tme which" ...,. come 10 Ncir- tal -Health . to caatinue Ibis
A native of Paris, Dr. au-.Y in the put 20 yeam,· p1ac- work, wish to galber further in- ,;,;-u just fil:aisbed a term as
ing 111n11a on the nation's road formation and data to acientif- president of "the St. Louis chap· ," similar ically JII"Oft ~ theary.
ter
Of I'Allianae
and
•__._
. . , _ and ecoaamy
......_,_
18
• • _.._,
_ _ ~ Francaise
Modem
.
- •-:..::..OIJIIIIIIIlion of Buffalo's
~eb:ter Collece-~

air

"1;

J •

and a portr:a)'!ll elf. hell "that riftled any light show. Acoording
to M. • Chicoinecrll, after ·five
minutes of a good prodpdion,

-s

~t~~the
•-~

.;::;_tyY·-of.

~ ~

__, -

'Th,;~~,m.-

·

::..::.:::.._-::

...,.....
-. ~were-_,_ tWo,

CMI ~,. .f~, ~73: ·. .

.=:; :;:,z=s !2:
e-:
-·

. . .
• • .-: • · ·
·
~
FALL PAYCHECKS For tbl.e
r-Ity --...who -~... thejr : ~:
pey...U doecb over 21-l"'J' peri-

odoalty~~-""T.:'::'! "'to the
.~
~ ~thoir..........,oalaryover:l&amp;
"pey

·-·g

~..:r-:,lo:' :: .,..me--.._

the
.!'lib
to o_ther - - . Ill .._~...,..
tralion,
aDd
the~lllc
·.
ted
:~-...-_- ~ •

M•"'!J:."f.'!::=.=
C':; the~- date~ the
ob- eral
maintains~
A....::'i~';'.!l_:;_s......~::.t ooop•••::...:§~~o
. ~'spiden,
.iotcb&gt;or a~ Clllll&lt;ftlie
with~
. AmeriCan and . .in
_aev. , ~for
sUNY'':"'~ ~.B:~
.~
-

iDdioicla.Ja will

nia are invited to paltidpata in _guilds_of;~
·
l i e - • a..-r 8.
the uatment · · _
-'----..-------....,...----'---.;.....-. U..J ~
10
~
•. •
. . .
one-hour--.... AQ&lt;IIIIIwith
~ • dellire 'to elimiate .. pbebia
.: .
:1. _ . . , :1. .LA.'-.:)
or
PIOIIIem .-y _ . · · ·
·
·
tact Dr. LD at .4230 Ridge .. . _ - - ; ; : : : : : ; - - ~ ~- ..
l.iea, cir...U · him at 831-1180. ~ ; ...l. .:::... :.
::J"l!
~
,._~is free and boon for """"" 207~ .
•
~are llaible.

-ae

--...ua

:..-a -

ter at Balf.lo ._
oertilicata II&gt; llllolloodi
inc i~_c;ou-.

Jiii

gram---=::.............. ._*!i.
~

1

n. c...

""' ,__

of _ . _ . . .......... ::::
them 1,000 ........ - ~

.......Ued. · ·

&gt;

......

= =t-.. . . . ,:.u..

·

'

•

• • · ..

.~

�4

13TOOrneys

S1ated b.Y- ,

SnmmerRec

1_. _.. ,.,. .

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
eo,.........
•eo,. .. .. - .___
•a.--..., ... --...
7

- - - -.:.. llll,zza, ........

'l1airteen orpiiUal activities
and lioumami!DIB, ... addition "'
speciali!W!IliB "' be 8DIIOUJII)OJd
later, will be
by the Of-

•erecr

fice of Summer Recreation, 113

CJarl&lt; Gym.
Included""''
Handball: entries opened,
June 5; entries dose June 9; aotivity begins June 12.
·
·
So{tboU: entries open, June
12; close, June 16; begins June
19.
Tennill (singles): entries
open, June 19; dose, June 23;
begins June 26.
Frisbee: entries open, June
26; close, June ·29; activity b&amp;:!1 gins June 29.
• .
Bowling: entries open, June
26; close. Jul~5; begins Julr 6.
C&lt;&gt;-ed Vo
ball: entnes
THURSDAY-S
open, June
; dose, July 5;
begins July 6.
..._._, _ , . . . SDill&lt;Ait# :
Tennis (doubles): ~ entries ._red by Dopartmeat&lt;Jf Pediopen, June 28; close, July 7; atri&lt;s, Scbool ol ModiciDe. Bubegins July 10. .
- reau ol Matern a I and quid
Paddle BaU: entries o p en, H e a I t h and Family l'lamliD&amp;
July 3; close, July 10; begins Hotel Lenox, full clay.
July 11.
&lt;-..'11ft C&amp;IPT CZNfta n&lt;BftOOGolf: entries open, July 10; ,..,,... , L«Jrher, bela, 1-5 p.m.
close, July 14; beJins, July 17. &amp;Iii, 7-10 p.m. Craft Center,
Tennill (miud): entries Norton.
open, July 13; dose, July 19; ...... •• : 8~ (Fellini, 1963), 140
beJins, July 20.
Capeu. 7 and 9 p.m.
Archey: entries open, July
FRIDAY-9
19; close, July 25; beJins, July
26.
H~: entries open,
July 26; close, August 1; b&amp;gins, August 2.
SqUGB!i: entries open, J u I y
21; close, August 4; begins. AuNIIU.1'UC ID'IIEIID SDUNA&amp;# :
BUSt 7.
Individual use of facilities is Hotel Lenoz, final clay. ,
IJfft:IUrfA'DON.AL POLK DAlfa:MG: lnalso available.
Tennis, bandball, paddle hall atau&lt;:tiao in J.oic atepo duainc
hour, 30 Diefeadoaf Aamez.
and squash courts may be :re- 8 p.m.
served by dialing the - - CONcar•: An Eomilal of M~
tion office (2924, 2926) from
noon to 8 p.m., Monday /or F/Mte and Gaiuu, with .Eiko
through Friday. and from 2 lto, llute. and David Suooman,
ptar. Procram includes Soliata
p.ni. "' 6 p.m., Saturday and -ua
A Minor, 0... 1. No. 4 by
Sunday. Reservations may be Geo,P Frederidi HaDdel: a new
made two days prior to use. woat&lt; by Ralph Jon.; Sonata in
The reservation sli muat be
picked up , at the ~ti&lt;in !u';'';!:;;.-~k ~~~~~
Office pnor to plaY. Reserva- lhert. Baiad, 8: 30 .P.m.. free.
tions may be made lor ODe bour nLil**: TM Con/ormi.at (Italy
only.
1971), Come,_,., 'lbeabe, checlt
Faculty, staff, MFC and ohowcaoe for m.-, thJoa&amp;h June
graduate students muat pur- 11.
With Jean Louio Trintipant,
cbase. a five dollar _.rut to
use facilities, which also in- !!1"~~~
dude swimming, weilbt train- Iucci. Trintipant playa a -.Illm,,
bs8keiiJall, and be .-..her ol M._.um•a F-=iat
foothall Penmts may be JI'W'· Party, aaoica-1 to kill hia old phic:based from the ~ office, ~ prof-.r while ... huneyRoom 300, Clad&lt; Gym from "IDOOD m Paris.
9 a.m.-noon and 1-4 p.m., MonSATURDAY-10
day tbrouP&gt; Fridlu'-.
BUJOlD DCUaiOx••: CoT"JJ.in4
GltJa Cemu -trip. 9 a.m.~ p.m.,
s:u;o, tic:keta available a t the
No.um Hall Tidret Olica.

bsdmin"""

Security Gwlld
Statns Change;

Signature . 011 ~~Due Bill
11961 by Govemor Nelson
Rockefeller~ May 22 campus -=unty officon at UIB
"""' have the ~ of police
officers. ~ly, tbe bill, '
effective Statewide. _ .. that
campus oecurity aaicen em iiisue warrants imd appMIIIIIC8
tickets.
Before the bill WM alped,
U/B oecurity "''dzi&lt;S.
ly of6laB" aDd bad.
'1ittle mOre ~ than -GI'dlnaay citizeas" • - - civil -uations, ~ Kamalh P.
Glennon, din!ctor Gf ~
security.
As police ollicem,. c:enp. aecurity officers CD _ . . ._...
rants and ~ ticba.
as the bill alala; ""wbwbe in tbe
peaionnance Gf clat8,• wllhin
their area of jwildicllaiL
Relatioasbip
pus security and clt;r paliDe ...
not been ...... b.r . . lliiL
oecurity ..... JarW!otion oaly wilbiD-IIIe UJB _ .
pus and wilbiD a .U. ....
. dius beyond c:ampa1 oa.a-,

ISLIGIOU8 OOKJaDIC:Z PO&amp; J~&amp;US•:

._red by Bulr.Jo Area CoomciJ
of Clnan:ba and Chun:lt w........
United. S~ and worbbopo

~~~':I

-ty

Jftr

.etc:

buiJdiDc beyond
Slide&amp;,
and m..

ma..

C e D tr al Pai6ilb.tlerian

playa.

Cban:h, 16 _ , _ Pamw.y, 9
a.m:-9 p.m. For further infonMtiaii;"Rew. I:luadl s. s......., 113680110.

:;"~~ Coii/.....W, -

Fri·

SUNDAY-11

a.e-- -

c.-

-....,... _ . . , .1-.
ry:

..aa..
7-10-. . - . . - .•
c-ier. ~ .'~·JO

1-4 - .

AliDDC.U( . . . . , .. . . . . . . . 1JliRD,.

BITY

~

. . . . - . ::

c:odrtailo, cwoawliia.-- ;...·
troductioa to the AAUA. ~

·--

g"tt;.,!·:::a..:=!'

s:a=

......... , to b e - .
Capeu. 7 and 9 - -

1.

('

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

U/B Pay Scale Ranks
35th ill the Nation·
Faculty salaries a t U/ B are
spin lliDOII8 1he higbest in the
oati&lt;m. IICiliJI1Iinc to r e c e n t
findings oltbe Ameriam ~
cialioo ol UniYersity Professors. For 1971-12, U/ B ranked
35th with average salaries and
benefits ol $19,914.
Only siny...igbt D&lt;JD--medical
institutions offer average salaries aboYe $18,000. the survey
sbowecL 'lbe fipres, foe nine
months or adjusled to nine
months wbe!e DI!CI!9&amp;Il1'Y. combine bolh salaries and fringe
beDefits for full--time faculty
members.
City UniYeiSity ol New Yorlr.
facul ty have ~ highest salaries. 'lbe average income of $28,-

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

JUNE 1, 1972

N0.1

492 a t CUNY Graduate Center
ranked first_ CUNY-City College was number two, at $23,900. 'lbe New Scbool for Sc&gt;cial Reteudt ranked number
three with a salary average of
$23,724.
'lbe survey sbowed that faculty salaries rose an avenge
3.6 per cent in 1.971-72 while
the CoDsumes- Price indel&lt; rose
OpercenL
Others in the top .co included: Harvard, $23,424;

Claremont Univemity Center,
$23,385; Cal Tech, $23,172;
CUNY- Brook I y n, $22,883;
C UNY-Queens, $22,602;
CUNY-Hunter, $22,499;-Heb.- Union, $22,198; Stanford,
$21,898; CUNY-Bernard Baruch, $21,571; Univemity of Cbicqo, $21,519; Yale, $21,271;
CUNY-Medgar Evers, $21,262;
MIT, $21,211; Yeshiva· Grad
Scbool, $20,979; CUNY -NY
City ' CC, $20,866; Northwestern, $20,804; C UN Y-Ric:hmond, $20,773; CUNY-H. H.
Lehman, $20,728; AF Institute
of Teclmology, $20,727; Union
'lbeol&lt;JSical Seminary, $20,725;
Pennsylvania, $20,685; SQ;NYFasbion Institute of Technology, $20,668; Johns HoplrinsArts and Sciences, $20,527; Columbia, $20,497; CUNY-Staten
Island CC, $20,296; Navy Postgraduate School, $20,142; Cornell-Contract Colleges, $20,102;
New York U ., $20,080; Michigan, $20,058; Columbia: Teachem College, $19,994; SUNY at
Stony Brook, $19,930; SUNY
at Bulfalo, $19,914; Univemity
of Rochester, $19,907; Duke,
$19,854; SUNY at Binghamton,
$19,795; Corne II, $19,729;
CUNY-Hostos CC, $19,690.

126thAnnual Commencentmt Held in 6 Locations-One Outside
lndemeDt ....tber forced
U/B's 126ih Annual Comto be bold in .m
~ indoor Jocatiaas, May
14. Bat the _ . for for
parads prevailed
tbe raind._ in the
for tbe
Faculliee ol Social Sciences
and Administration and Arts
and I - . 'lbey -re ec:boduled for Clark Gym but the
...... ,......_, ol pereata _ .
~ m aUeudance .....00 the
propam to be IIIOVI!d outside
to Rotary Field.
'
'There amid acatt.ered rain
this .-Don of U/B's Jarsest
paduatiiJ« a- bmrd ComlliO!DCII!IDellt _ . , . H a r o I d
· Taylor call hlcber education
ola&gt;lete and Whitworth

:::.:z.:

F - prsident of Fe.--

,_,., Electrical Construction
Co~ receive the Cbancellor's
Medal. Awarded ~ year to
a IDIID or ........, -.bo "bas perfonued ....., pst thin&amp; which
is identified with Buffalo," the
medal is the higbest banor b&amp;lll.owlld by U/B.
F- cited for his
es::tea.ive nweb a iild• to tbe
electril:al induotry in New y odt
and for his firm
"!wed to
............. the potadial ol .....
dMr ....,..,._ He is Mid ... line

!i:"w=:~v!k 'N::
a-reb Ceme.-tu the aaapua.
s-.e ol 1he ....tber and

. _ ol .._....., the - - part
......
by a.ram.J..
ity •the
ol bolh
the pad- - .... the.,...;-_.,..._
l'teoiidaot IWiert ~ aad
1o1m ..... Bballmd, dea ol
the 8daoal ol ~ aad
:Eavi.-1 De • i c n, d&amp;-

.,......,.._.....,.............U

... II!ICe the faiJme ol paduales
to ataud for their clecrem~ the .......... -.bo did
...... the fiat ... receive
....,_in the~ in ED. - . t a l Doaipi.
tDDr.

eqw "

'l'a71or,

aD ............_ ...

''~~be

............ the . , . _ ol bieber
................ be "cDolele aad
iloooetiaua to the - ' a ol a
_ ............. oliiiDdoods.. As
a .-.It, be said, .......... are
.......... the acboals
-&lt;B!Iaaoflife,
plaoa wbe!e the

intelleet .... - ~-· ftiD free, aad
adull8 aad their &lt;Idem .... - joy the art ol Joaminc llllled&gt;er... . 'lbe , _ ....._ wberewr they CaD find it, tbe kind

of teachinc which does have an
ellect oo their lives . . . if they
CIIDDOt find it in the schools
and colleges they will find it
elsewbere."
He was not optimistic about
cbauge coming about mpidly,
pointing out tbat seven years
afte.- the revolt at Berkeley,
"nothing mud&gt;" bas changed in
bieber education or in the
world situation.
U/B's Com"""""""'t, Taylor noted, also marked "very
Jll!llrl.y the 2nd annive!l!ary of
tbe day Ali80D Krause put
flowers in the cun barrel of a
National Guardsman at Kent
State aDd ...... c:ruelly !IIUJde.-ed
with three fellow sludeDta in
n!lum." Taylor sharply critic:Ded 1he war in Vieluam aDd
the __....t's use of "'paid
llll!l'l:f!D8ri . . . to

~

a cor-

rupt IO"'''DJUU!Dl
-"
He
believal
1he war in
and-the
filhtinc are beld "filthy and UIIIIIIP~

by most p-aduates of

1972."
Demoustnltioos against tbe
war are ODe of the IDIIDY ways
"the students baYe put tbe
CIOU!llry in their debt," Taylor
said. He c:baracterized the u.s.
as a "CIOU!llry which bas Joat ita
way, wbe!e the languqe ol
democratic IJtllotesma"""ip bas
beeu oorrupted into little more
lhau a rbetoric which Jl'!!!ll!l'8les
disbelie{, w h e r e imasimM,
bombiDp and killing in .....u
....._ are ca1ted incursioDs,
interdictionli and protecti"" actioas."
This .... of -directioa to!ll!lber with ""'--eee curricul.una," be said, are Cftl!ltinc institutions where "90 per cent

of the students float through

their four years without any
idea of the issues and agonies
of the world's problems." To
change this, be w-eed "passionate lltud}' and informed oonduct
which will make the world work
for 100 per cent of its inhabitants."

;J'aylor asked paduates ...
" &lt;ionsider your own education
as the beginning of a life-lone
enterprise to create new institutions to make new lives."

...

'lbe implementation of . the
alternate
p1an
brought about this "'"""'- of

eom-•

letters between a [acuity memher and President Kater:
"I am writing this letter without any lmowledge of wbo bad
the responsibility to plan tbe
graduation at the Univemity of
Bullalo on Sunday, May 14,
1972. We at tbe Univeraity
( CfHililuud on -

2, coL 1)

$enate~ Pmmnel.ActionProredlu-e,/

Calls fir &amp;tahlishing Undergrodlihrory
Steps aimed -.u-d assuring their current practices. SeYeral Pl'l!llllllre csn be exerted, it
-u,ty faculty and facilities for ·amendments were made to al- should be broucht to bMr."
'lbe Senate Willi also CllllU/ B were takeu through Fac- low the U.. Scbool to 0011tinue
ulty SeDate actioa; JaR month.. usinc proles&amp;iooaJ esperience cemed- about the role of - For the fimt time in tbe Uni- as a sipifiamt put of appoint- t e u u red faculty. IDcluded in
venity's hioiiiry, a Cllllllplete set ment criteria. 'lbe Health Sci- the original peramuel propo&amp;of procedures for faculty per- ences may also Cllll~ue use of als was a parapapb J110bibitinc
8011111!1 actioa; approved by qualified -enic ranks in re- faculty members 011 term aptbe SeDate and is awai.tin« aearcb or clinical appoiutmenta. pointmenta from bavinc "aicOthe.- " " " - in tbe proced- ui1¥:ant administrati"" respoopresidential 'lbe criures ~ cm May 11 resulted sibilities." This sectio.u '10'118
teria
s-1. ~ in
incraJsed empbeais on _.- characterized as "patemal" aDd
~ will ao- a lone way towan! CftJ!Itinc a lnlly hiP csl- evahatioa. ~m the pro- , - ~ve" duriDg debate and
iber r-.tty. .
pc-.1 Uuiwnity Reriew Board eliminated. ln addition.
In additiaD. the Seoate ..... ( URB) aDd a call far public another -.lion lhst ca1ted for
~ ol a l l - tbe _.-ate reportina of the
calted far ........ . . . _ of iW!Iapadaale lhiJry (UGL) lions aDd _ . . , . _ . . 'lbe votes ·of D&lt;JD--tenured peOple in
SeDate also calted far "llipifi- ~ actions was repealed.
..,.;hie."
'lbe pr&lt;JpCMai for the UGL
which ~ c:un-eat "d&amp;- caut ...a-ity aDd _ , ....llcieaciool'" in the JiJmJy 8)'11- · .-tatioa• .., the URB and also ~ lengthy debate as
asbd"lbat ""in tbe c.e of ...,... the Senate met in a special sesclurinc their .......r _.mtmenta . . . a positive sioo on May 19. Because of the
and third ....,. ~ that -.dl for ...u..ity and _ , late date, lhe.-e again a
C!!lldidUes" be made. "Evi- failure to attract enough memtbe SeDate ~ tbe _ . . at Jeuclh and in bolh deD&lt;e of this aearcb" be hers for a quorum but the 34
. , _ to11111 m+o •
. .y for apsulmitted with. each JeCDIII- Senators present approved .
IDI!Oidatioa for appoiu-L
Discussion cm-tbe UGL pro... - - - ' policies J&gt;.m-.r .18CDb H,ymau, I.nr, ~ centered .., bow '-- it
poiDted
out
that
a
"profa.iooal
would
take to establish u;," fapriaiuily aimed at ma-.
tbe hibility ol the pro- principle for inll!cnltion is not cility. 'lbe Senate's Committee
= - b y a1Jowinc various """"'ch ... it is important that on lnfonnation and Library ReUniYersity c1ivisic.- to continue at every Jecitimate point that (CfHililuud on ~ 2, col. 5)

·_.m..e--~

~te

-

�---Is-

•AD of our _ . . . .,.__

b.!ld eilba
iD
...._.._ AudimKloiD-

s.n. ...

. . . .Maoic
RoWy
6old. This is the fiat
wbida ......... ... to liD iDside.

-y- ....... aid the . . . . .
t i a a - of the~ of
JM! o·
I 8loadio.- a &amp;......... ,... dia'\ illdio:ate ..

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

�.&lt;BRIEF
GREPORTS

J:ll-_ ~·s dassics cbairtDallllbip will begin in Septem-

NO PLAYOFFS FOR · BULLS.

:.=pidMa;e::c:

1973, - year
· completion
of
aber
saiJbalical
at Hamud's
Cent« for Hellenic Sludies in
WasbiDgton, D .C.

~ ~!;'

J:ll-_Ronald A. Zirin, ~t
in tbe" ~t,
will be actiDg c:hairman in tbe
interim. .

Committee l'elm State, .
St. Jolm:O .aDd .LIU with Temple
to meet in recioDal playa~&amp;_
&amp;lb, who -ted a 17-7 record
with two of the leading oolleciate
hitters in a., Dlltioo. will &amp;a.., to
"wait till Dert y-."
.

P""""'-

Professor Peradotlo received

hiS 8..\- aDd¥..&amp;.-..._ ......

St. Labia Um-sity aDd. his
Ph.D. frQID Nortbwestem. Pror_,.. Zirin received tbe RA
from Queens Collece aDd tbe
Ph.D. from l'ril&gt;ceDL

major

was cut abort late in
the NCAA Diotrict 2. Se1ec1iaa

n.e '-

..
.•

P 0 LIS H TO BE OFFERED.
Elementary Polioh will be taudlt
besim&gt;in« iD September_ Dr. JUlia
Bnm-Zejmio, c:urreDIIy .., the
faculty of the Univenity of Texas,

~p..': ~ !i:.~·~

and third-year Ru.ian.

Undergraduate Sludies; Howard Deuell, Student Afrairs;
Edward SaiDdow&lt;, Student Accounts; and Charles Moll,
Management In£ormatia.il Systems. Representing tbe ~Diver­
sity Center Chapter 01. SPA
are: Dr. Jean Alberti, Uni"'!Csity Research, aDd Mariaret
O'Brien, Undergraduate Studies.

�~

4

J.._I,IID

Strauss Heads
FacUlty Club &lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQl]E

ID--a...--

OOpmiD~

Ff ow a r d Slla1188, aaoistant
dean, Fllculty ol Engiueering
and AJ&gt;P!ied 8cienoes, is the
..... pl1!8idellt d. tbe . Fllculty
Club. He succeeds . J - Blackhurst. ~ ol Summer Sessions. Other DeW!y-elected officers are: Dr. W. Leslie J3ar.
Dette, .Jr., psyc:bolot!Y, vice
president; Dr. Harriet F. Montque, mathomatic:s, -.er,
and Thomas .J. Sc:hillo, .....
lant viae president for houaiDc
and aiDiliary enterp"-, _,.
retary.
Elected to two-year terms on
tbe llknember board of direo- tors are: Blacl&lt;hwst; Dr. Barbara A. Bunker, psycho!~·

.Open aniJ

••OpentD-vltlw~

In tlw oullject

eaoaa- - - · Dl-2Za. tar ......

Dr. M.' Luther Mtlll8e!man,"';i;.:
sistant director, Student Health
Service; Dr. A. Westley Rowland, vice president for university relatioos, and Schillo.

Non-Renewal

ProressSet

Procedures to provide greater consistency in letters of nan-

Et.l8 SdtwaOOcher Show
Opens in Norton Tomorrow
"Visicaw on the Way," an e:~:­
hibitioo of paintings by Ethel
SdJwabacber, will be shown in
the newly refwbisbed Gallely
219 in Norton Union, beginning
Friday• June 2.

Eleven paintings on mylh&lt;&gt;logical themes, all done between 1989-1971, will be on
view. The color relationsbips in
these acrylic compositions are
critical; the artist uses a loose
post-impressionist bruSh stroke
in applying large Oat areas of
vibrant, pure color.
Mrs. Scbwabacber, now in
ber 70's, is •represented in the
permanent collectioo of several
museums throuihout ·the country including the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery and the
Whi-y Museum. WCJT11inB, a
1957 oil owned by the AlbrightKnox, W88 included in their
..Abstract-Exp11!11Si.onism" show
in January.
A studeot of Max Weber and
Ashile Gorky, Mrs. Schwab-

acher baa been painting since
the 1920's. She is author of
AMik Gorky (Macmillan
1957) and wrote the foreword
to the Whitney Museum's catalogue of the 1951 Gorky exhibition.
Mrs. Sc:hwahacher bas long
been involved with civil rights
groups and iS a member of the
New York Urbao League, the
New York City Bnard of Ed·
ucatiim Committee on Integrat!o~ aod the Civil Rights Negotiating Team to the Bnard of
Education in New York.
The Norton exhibition will
open with a reception for the
artist .tomorrow night from 710 p.m.~ the public is invited.
Thereafter, gallery hours are 11
a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through
Friday. The show, which will
run through June 22, is sponsored by the Summer Activities
UUAB Arts Committee and
was organized bY the director
of UIB's Creative Crafts Center, .Joe Fisc:ber.

MembersOf~Staff Approve

Establishmmt ci Senate Organization
The non-tmching professional staff of the University baa .
voted overwbeiJnincly to estaJ&gt;.
lisb a Profemioual Staff Seeate. By a vote ol 110 to 4, ataft
members have decided to set up
a new legislative
• tion
similar to the Facui"':"""Senate.
This body will replace the local
chapter_pf lbe State University
Professional Association
ISl!PAl, tbouch lbe new .,.._
pruzation will still be an affiliate of State-wide SUPA.
-~ully, tbe Staf( Senate
....... have its first ..-inc-.
time in July, Dr. Norman Has- . j&gt;rl!llellt SUPA chairmtm
A new slate ol olficerB
and the entire Senate will have
to be elected before this can
- - . . ~. An elections
eao;nmittl!e was recently 111&gt;-!ed ~ is now aending out
~ting ballots for the new
J&gt;Oil!tions of chairman, viae
c:hainnan, secretary and repreoentative to State SUPA. These
t..llots are due .June 6.
H06tetter aplains that this
set !lf ofrlCI!rs will actually .,...
.saruze the new Senate. Aa a result, he is asking that the chair-

man be given credit for his
Senate duties when his job responsibility is allocated. Fund!llf for the StatJ Senate is alao
being requested.
Bob Wagner, aaaistaot to the
provost, Fllculty of Natural
'Sciences and Mathomatics, is
chairmtm d. the elections committee. Rep,_,ting the Faculties are: .Joan M. Katz, assistant to the cbairman, Psychology, and Marion ~ 88aialant to tbe cbairman, Anthropology. Representing the
Ollice of the President are
.Jacqua)yn
associate direc;tor of adviMmeot, and W'ill
81'0W11, IIIIBistant director, minority faculty' and ataft nocruitmenl Representing the Ofticea
d. Systems and Opemtiooo,
University Relations •and the
Computing Center are .John
Hanspte, businesil ol
Computer Seivices, and Hilda
Komer, supervisor, Personnel
Services. Representing the Office d. StUdent Alfairs are Row. ena Adams, aaoistant to .the~·
rector, ~. and CliJford
wn-t. administrative silperviaor, Housina.

era-.

n!DI!Wa! for all faculty and ABP
positions have been llllllOUDCed
by Presideot Robert L Ketter.
For Faculty: Oflicial letters
giving notification of non-renewal of appointment will be
written by the Provost of that
Faculty involved, and muat be
countersigned by the Vice President for Academic AJJairs. In
the "'!!!I' of the Faculty of
Health Sciences, the original
letter is to be written by the
appropriate Dean aod must be
countersigned by. the Vice President for Health Sciences. In
those academic units that do
not report to a Provost or Dean,
the letter will be written by the
Director of that unit aod must
be countersigned by the appropriate Vice President
For ASP Positions: The of·
ficial letter of non-renewal of
ao ASP appointment will be
written by the appropriate SU·
pervisor and countersigned by
the Vice President to which
that unit ft!POrts.
These letters, signed and
"'!untersigned aa delineated,
wil_l,. benceforth, constitute the
otf•cial letter of non-renewal
Ketter said, aod the date oi
such letters will determine conaideration for timeliness. Additional!y. copies of all such letters must be forwarded to the
Director of Peraonnel.

VP Search Group

With the addition of three
names, the Committee to recommend candidates for the oflice of Vice President for Health
Sciences is now complete.
President Robert L Ketter
"'!" _appointed.Dr. James Dunn,
clinical 8880CI8te profl!880r in
anatomy, to the panel. Dr.
Dunn repnamta a unique combination since be is ao alumnus
of the Sc;bool of Medicine and
a volunteer faculty me m be r
tmching in the pte-clinical sci-

-

Student elections decided the
two student members of the
Committee. Miss Dorothy Ackerman is a fourth-year student

!!'~ and Mr. Daniel .

.,.,..,....., 18 a -....1-year stu~t in medicine. Their ap-

pom-ta are a resillt of eleotions involving student ollicers
from -=h d. the five acbools of
the Health Sciences Center.

Mix to Harvard

Dr. Marjorie c. Mis, aasistaot prD\1'08t of the Fllculty of
Educational Studies, baa been
selected to participate in a six...,.. Institute foe Educational
=:u::~~ UniD.r. MD: is one of 125 ~·ticipanta.
~

THURSDAY-I
CDA.Tn'B a.&amp;rr aanwa INB'nlucTJOH•• : J~lry. basic metal con-

struction, 7-10 p.m. Alao on Jane
5, 6, 7, 1-4 p.m. Je-/ry caolinl/,
1-4 p.m. Cercmia, •U.I lhrocoing, 7-10 p.m., Craft Center, Norton.
NmSING INIIm'llft# : The New
Porrob lo Colle(e Heclth Nursing, a three-dey institute for p..,.
f-.ional nu..nea workina in colIeee bealtb aervi-, Executive
Motor Inn, 4243 o - SL, aJao
June 2 aDd

a

FRIDAY-2

=~~~L~=-

a.iotant prof-.r, " - " ' com·
munication, aDd J . Barry Roach,
project

administrator, • .......,...

..-t aDd orpnizational deYetop..-t, General Motors lnotitute,
will lead tbe procram. Wor:bbopa
in Room 90, 4226 JUdge Lea, 9
a.m...Sp.m..
at&amp;A'Dft atAI'T CIIN'1D IHBft1JC-

Jt!I.Uelry~ 1-' p.m. E~
e!inl. 7-10 p.m. Cercmia, hond
buildinl, 1-4 p.m. Leather, ...,..
dolo, 2-5 p.m. aDd 7-10 p.m.

'ftOH•• :

=:.=~. ~:g g=- 7(!:i
9 p.m.

TM

Carpenter~

f•tur1

VISIONS ON TBJ: WAY• : paintinp

CON&lt;Z8'r'•:

through June 22, Gallery hours

ground. "The muaical drama loob

:,.,:~ t'!ll~"t;; ~= k?em~~T=.:.:..~: . ft:
7-10 p.m. Exhibit continues screen; multi-viaual show aa· badt·
11 a.m.·5 p.m., Monday-Fridey.
eerv;-. &amp;Del meal, Cbabod Houae,
3292 Main SL, 7: 16 p.m.
FILM . . : King of Hearu (France,
1966) ,_Conference Theatre, cbeclt
showcase for times.

CBABAD SAIIB.ATH SlllVI&lt;ZB• :

~!,!~.Ci'ocT.Jo.::...d'._ a1~:
tera around Tbomaa, who qUM-

tiowo God's way of doiq tbinp,
although be aooepta Hia emtenoe

aa God and Creator of tbe univene.'' Music includa forma from

to balled to rod&lt;. Melody
~.p.m., free admiooion aDd
~cal

SATURDAY-3
CBABAD BABBATH SEVICIB• :

::S~ 'M~":"".!";.~i~

aerv-

::=:

THURSDAY-8
&lt;DA'I'lft atAFT &lt;ZN1.D.

msmuc-

venation, refreshment&amp;, Chabad
House, 3292 Main SL, 8 p.m.
FILM"" : King of Hearu, aee Fri·
dey liating.
·

-noN• •: Lecther, belU, 1-5 p.m.

SUNDAY-4

LffiRARY EXHIBITS

(

•• K .
fH
Fri
=. 1111
earu, aee
·

FILM •

dey liating.

°

~~7-10

p.m.

PILK 00 : 8% (Fellini, 1963), 140
Capen, 7 aDd 9 p.m.

~o!'f'nea":"~P~f J~

Louis Chapter of I' Alliance Fran-

caiae &amp;Del prof...ar

at WeiJoter

Collep, Mo, lecture aDd - . , .
stration on Marionetu TMatn
in France aDd EffU;acy of Pup.

rr.:,: J=a~~.R;:
freabmenta.

-----------

MONDAY-5

I'IIIU.ftiC l:ll'aBIIIa BmOJIA&amp;•:

for phyoiciana who proride mal-

~:e for ~~u::

~-

School
aDd tbe Bureau of Maternal aad a.ild.

Heeltb and Family J.'lannin&amp;,
N.Y.S. ~t of HeaitlL

:fote!- ~!i;.,~~?~

It=~~ WedDeaday, .1- 7.
For further informatioa, call 881-

::;;...Con.tinuinc Medical Eda-

TUESDAY--0
al:&amp;i.'ftva ca.\ft Cll2ffta IIIB'I'RUC-

~o~·· :
~ling.

JeweJry. MODday
Ename/int; 7-10 p.m. Cerbaildin6. 1-4 p.m.

.,,...., hond

WEDNESDAY-7

Craft Center,

NOTICES

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

MAY 11,1972

Vf)L _3-NO. 31

Pre;idmt

Repcrts
OnYear
Movinc with
- 11lpidity, the Facul~completed a larce portion of its
qeuda Tuosday leavin&amp; only
the th..
ws iaticm for establisbinc an undeqraduate librmy (UGL) untouched In
the course of tluee bows, the
acted fa\IOI'IIhly on organizing an Oftioe of Te&amp;chiog
Evaluation, lnms(erring a department aod nominating degree candidates. They also exteosiw!ly discussed proposed

=~~\:,":;.,P,::
joumment was called.

The rece;sod session will betoday at 1
p.m. in 147 Diefendorf aod
then proceed to discuss conditions in the libraries.
Tuesday's meeting opened
with quick confirmation of un~te deKree candidates
for Sunday's &lt;'nmmenoemenl
Discussion of student evaluation of teaching eftecti..eness
rou.-L A set of five reoommeudations from the Educa-

Pi with this item

5)586 Dlgrre CruxJidatffi Lishrl in Pnwam

Nrtrel21&gt;thAnm13l Coounenrement Pageant

=i~"::!d't.!::d...:=

at the ..xmd April Seoate
but the quorum
Doeiled to act was DOt preaenl
Dobate ... the pJ'OpCM8) this

~

....... centered ... where the
06:e of T..:hiag Evaluation
sbouJd _ . _ The &lt;Xlllllllittoe
sugestion ...... that it be establisbed under the jwisdiction of
the Vice President for Student
Affairs ( VPSA ). Dr. Robert
Stem, political sc:ieoce. how....-. wanted it ''wiled into the
_ . , . , side of the UniYersity"' aod ~ that it be su_.,;-1 by the VPSA aod the
President for Aaldemic
Affairs_
Seoators ...,..,

v..,.,

oo-

d:r"~~the~t:
fair&amp;"' whida reoults of the evahations micbt
-w.

-

if they

-

In the ead, the Seoate 'OIOII!d
55 to 7 to ........ the Cliii&gt;CI!Pt
of otudoat evm.tioo. UDder

BuikJing Names Sought frrAmherst

::..~~":~.
-~.-....modi-

=..~~~

be_.in............._.proce...._ 111111 the mlinl 8.~wbo.•II8Dben
willbenmbyllll...., _ _
of the Coaacil of the Uaiwr- ,_,.by tbe VP8A 111111 VPAA.
sity, tbe Adminiabwliaa or,...;: ......_. vi S..te .......Ut.-.
a11y of tbe u~.
from tbe
_ . , - . b y awdriladiiw
the
to the iDailutiaD
l'lelidooll lor IIMltb AI-

o....:..lloo'a ModU.

...,.

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either........
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....

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fails will

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vi Namml Sc:ioac8 111111 Matbe• Ul. Pei Daanitaoy c.-- ......
pia;
:In - - . tbe - - - '
• I.w .... ............... - policies~ to tbe Sen- -

....:~~c.-- ~~ c..:. '!Zi..S:i

thU
. , _ !~he Wlllbd ... this eet
Tow- "'crilll!ria l o r - 18J110Dths.
en;
Tbe . . . be said. ...... to estab- • ~ ~
liob
uaifonD ~~~~~~ just eet of
• IDdutrial ~ pmaodun!o tbnJuPaout tbe UniBaildial;
_,aty,• ....,., 110 such uni• BDdisb .............. l.llllo larmity eDats. Dr. Lee
pia;

•

· ~tBialacY

(~- -

M.

Z, oal Z) '

(~

oa-

2, oal ~)

�~­
Smate-

2

FulbrightWmnerWill
Study BrazilS Theatre

(C~

from I , col. 6)
Preston, 11141111a-l lltroailY

reiterated the .-d for IIUCh a
document but wamed that there
are people "down in the d&amp;partments" as well as "up in
the high administration" wbo
need to be aold oo this set of
policies.
.
During the ensuing debate it
seemed that members of the
Senate alao needed to be con. vinced. 'There were many CJUI!Btions about procedures and..Jndividual -.tiODB of the dOcument and a general call for
more tim!&gt; to study the proceE.
A peat deal of concern was
voioed over the confidentiality
of a propooed ad hOC credential
review committee. Dr. 1-'t

llflrll,l912

Summer 8e3sims ExpeCting
9,000 to Attend ThisYear '

''In recent y......, we'w ljesa as a IDUiic C8l'lliwl iD ~­
~ faster than any oiMr , weekead CD..... 111111 a
major mstitution," 8 u m m e r rock 'n rolliiMWie t.tivaL
s-ions Director lames Biad&lt;• Life W.......... openhurst aays of his l?fDgr&amp;ID which ended rap ..... topiaa
faces an appiODillllte 15 pel' will include Ao•............
ics for
cent chop in ollerinp this sum- Women, Bible &amp;uily, Bicymer. After months of financial cling, CampiDg, BcolocY at
insecurity-including fears of a Home, Intematloaal Ooakin&amp;
40 per cent cut in coura5- Nutrition, Orpnic Gardoainl.
Blackhurst says s~ Bes- and w- and ean- AitersiODB bas received an additional natiVI!II,and
·
$260,000 from the University"a ~
money which the adminislm- and• sPsychomat,
p e a ki n a moperieDce,
tion apects to have reimbursed Thursdays, 7-10 p.m. in 2S2
from the State's supplementary Norton.
.
budget, ('Ibis is the sum origA complete liBtiDa ol all sumMasling, psychology, arKUed inally cut fro111 the 1972· sum~-r.;-life.
mer
activities
will
be
pablisbed
that faculty·, "are entitled to mer budgel With it, funding is
His profeooor is Dr. Kenneth
know who's judging them."
at about the same level as last in a calendar available the lint
Rasm11881!1l whom ~inaon
week of summer OIIUI8e&amp;.
Representatives from the year.)
feels be owes a peat deal. He Fulbright Foundation wbo will
is an exa!llent teacher, Sabin- alao pay for his transPortation Health Sciences noted a lack
But, Blackhurst adds, the
of understanding of · their use money .buys less than it did
SOli points out, and gives his
and tuition. Two other ' U/ B of qualified faculty rank. In last year. "We'"' going l!leYBil
students a thorough knowledge students
w e r e awarded Ful- addition. Dr. Harold Bl"'fy, weeks inatead of six, and. that
of the lallguage as well as a
this year but turned anatomy, pointed out that Sen- costs 12'h per cent more. 'Ibere ~vlSionary'
love of tbi culture. 'Ibis inte- brights
them down because they re- ators from this area will be at- was a six per cent negotiated
~tion. al0111 with extenllive
drilliDg in idiomatic expres- ceived better offers from other tencfuig a Health. Sciences salary raise, and a 2'h I*' cent
award&amp; convocation on Thurs- regulai increase. We have 19
sions. p,_red Sabinaon very agencies.
Sabinson is uncertain about day and will be unable to fur- per cent more ICOSts than last
well for his first trip to Brazil.
"When T got off the plane, I his future. At 22 and in his first ther argue the point. The role ,Year."
President Robert L. Ketter
found I had no difficulty speak- year of graduate school, he is of vice presidents in the promo- 9,000 Expec:t8d
bas charged the recently named
ing to the people. ... I had no considering pursuing a career tion and tenure Process was al'Ibe
number
of
course
offer14-membesSeardl Committee
as a Portuguese scholar. Right ao questioned with Senators
problem blending in."
ings-which at one point he for Vice President for Health
now, though, flying down to
Sabinaon alao cites Rasmus- · Brazil in July is all he can doubting the need for their feared might be as low as 550- Sciences to recommend candiinput.
:sen's ability to work closely and think of.
will be around 900, down 50 dates wbo are "visionary, wbo
Dr. Constantine Yeracaris, from last 8Wnmer, and the will look to the future, wbo can
eJfeCtively with his students as
president of t he University number of students ezpected to cope with and f o r c e rapid
part of his reason for choosing
Center
chapter
of
SPA,
prois ~ut 9,000, 500 less change, wbo are not tied to ·
Portuguese as a JD&amp;jor. ''To me,
tested that the bargaining agent enroll
Dr. Rasmussen represents a
than last year.
what each of us know as the
large part of the academic vital- (Conlinrud from page / , coL 4) wasn't consulted when the proRegistration,
which began a traditional methods of educaposed procedures were drawn
ity rve seen on this campus."
month ago, "is running quite tion, and wbo can lesd Buffalo
guages Buililing;
up. He pointed out that this is well,'' Blackhurst says. Regis- to J!re-eminence as a center for
Sabinson's coming to love
• Administration and Serv- contrary to the contract and
tration continues until a class the.. ~e'!e!oe~Jlel!1 of ""'!' . !'J!d
Brazil may be accidental but ice Building;
he, too, asked, for more time is
filled, or until the Friday be- effective beSlth care systems."
his interest in the theatre isn't.
• Food Commissary;
to study - "after all the ExeThe Vice President for
His father is a Broadway press
• • ..Education I Philosophy cutive Committee had three or fore the first day of that class.
agent and though he wasn't Building;
Summer
Session # 1 runs from Health Sciences, Ketter told the
four monthS to make meaningMay 22 to July 7, Session #2 Committee, "is charfed with the
born in the proverbial trunk, he
• Chemical Engineering ful chan es."
bas spent more than his" share Building;
Thoug'h many members of from June 26 to August 11, development, coordination and
of time in theatres. Because of
• Joint Social Science, Edu- the Senate seemed to favor de- Sessiori #3 from July 10 to administration of the Schools,
this he is well prepared to make cation, Arts and Letters Li- lay, President .Bobert Ketter August 25.
'
centers, .inafitutes and programs
an exhaustive study of the Bra- brary;
Teaching staff will alao be located within the Health Sciwarned that " if I don't have
zilian theatre and compare ·it
• General Library I Central documents from the faculty smaller this year, Blackhurst ences Center and, at the oame
with the rest of the theatre Administration Building;
dealing with personnel proce- says, clown from last year's 900 time, is responsible fM the forworld. His base of study in Sao
• Music/Chamber Hall/ Per- dures, I will have to develop to shout 750 or 800. The result mal and informal relationships
Paulo will be at the School of forming Arts Library Complex; them because of the SPA con- will be "a larger student-facul- between this University and the
Art and Communication of the and
ty ratio; there will be more stu- hospitals, clliiics ·and other pa- •
tract."
Federal University.
tient care facilities with which
• Mechanical and Civil EnThis is where the Senate will dents per class." .
'Ibis is a fortunate place- gineering Building.
This despite rises in summer we maintain cooperative rela'
take up the matter today.
ment, Sabinson believes, betuition which range from 60 to tionshipa."
Those submitting names for
cause most theatre productions consideration s h o u I d attach
220 per cent.
He "must. alao maintain a
open in Sao Paulo. It is alao supporting d a t a, biographical
"We're not realizing our po- close working relationship withthe fastest growing city in the material and a statement of
tential this year,'' Blackhurst in this University community
Americas and is quite wealthy. how the person meets the stat1l _A:: .17~
sayf ' of the program which last and plays a key role in UDderFrom there he will study liter- ed criteria Names Should be
1 YL/.,UUj
year was the largest of its kind graduate and. graduate program
ature and plays of the past as sent to : The Committee on the
in the country. 'Tm not sure development," Ketter aaid.
well as current performances Naming of Buildings, 186 DJ ~ D
where we'll rank this year," he , Alao, ''The Vice President for
and theatre companies.
Hayes Hall, State University
UU 1-..L a.t:(.l.(;(,lVI
says. "I don't know how other Health Sciences is our chief
Sabinaon believes that much of New York at Buftalo, Buf, The University Governance =rs~~~.frams have
..f"beai":':""~
of today's Brazilian theatre is falo, New York 14214.
highly imitative of what's going
U/ B's cutbacks, he says, have and to the .many public and
Members of the committee, in Committee is now assessing reto the first draft Of its -~-~-~
t d~..........
pn"vate A........;., WJ"th ~'..1. on in the U.S. 'Ibis is a con- addition to · Mr. Saltarelli, are action
proposal for a University-wide ..._..,....,.. mos
..,....~ts
deal." . . . , _
w"""' -~
troversial viewpoint, be aays, William C. Baird, Dr. William ·
tem Th d
equally. It was first thought
·
e ocu- that all offerings in some areas
' Ketter p-inpointed the
but one that will be exciting to H. 1;3aumer, Thomas K. Craine, governance sys
prove. 'Ibe results of his studies Robert-J. Graves, John L. Het- IJ18llt was sent to the Faculty would , have to be scrapped. primary resPonsibilitial of the
will probably be a chronicle trick, Dt. John T . Horton, Mrs. l'lenate, the five student gov- However, "the cuts ended up Health ~ as "tmcbing
about the Brazilian theatre and James E . Kelly, Mrs. David J . emments, CSEA, SUPA and pretty even aCI'088 the Univer- and -.dl." but, be llllid.
a major part of his master's Laub, Robert E . Rich, Daniel the administration in an eftort sity. AU programs, with just "we cannot .ignore the ayina
lbeais.
A: Roblin, Jr., Dr. A. Westley to get feedback about fhe via- two exceptions, were reduced needs of society for better aofrom last year."
01!1111 to total beal1h care, which
While in Brazil, . Sabinaon Rowland, John D. Telfer, and .)&gt;ility of the propooed system.
"In aome ways there was a
'Ibe exceptions are the Li- includes prevention of mwill receiw a stipend from the Miss Emily H. Webster.
.l ack of impact," Dr. Marjorie brary School and Law and iS well as ln!almeat ol il It
Mix, chairwoman of the Comwould
'-'-'-'
mittee aays. She believes that Jurisprudence,_ both ol which
lli!ii!m mOst ...,....... to as.this lack of s ,i11 n i f i c a n t or started summer courses for the sume that the uniWII'IIity .,..._
lengthy criticism signals aati&amp;- first titpe last year on a small ters of our country are ~
faction with the document and acale.
~ to mount the multijfeels there will be" few difficul- Other - - .
~~ 1=·:..~
ties in implementing il
This year's summer activities needs."
A few changes will be made, other than classwork will inMembers of the Seardl Coml&gt;'!w.ever. Tbe Eli'8Ciltive Com- elude:
mittee are: Mrs. lobo (Milmittee of the group is now writ• An Institute in the' His- d red) CampbO,u, CIIIIIIIIUDity
ing a preamble that discusses tory and Interpretation of Film,
tati
Dr • · the need . for University-wide which will fl!lature seminars repreaen 'Y'!i
• ,.• .....,..
governance. Dr. Mix views the conducted by visiting aperts.
Cappiello, - t o the~
aystem as a way of bridging the
• MUIJic Across the Cen- utive vice president,
lpps that n&lt;riv eDit between tury, a -series of concerts spon~~.permanent governance groupa. aored by the Music Department sistant to the; ..__ ~
·She alao feels the system is which will trace the develop-, ·a~-.. ;
·
u
·
Dr. Daniel Fahey, ....._.,
necessary to exanune
ruver- ~t of music from Brahms to U/B Council; Dr. ADibew
,sity-wide questions aDd to in- avant-garde. (Tbeee concerts Gaae. Veterans IV-'.., Dr
:crease channels of cxmmunica- will be presented oo liiM!01 Milo· Gibaldi, ~
tioo ~1 t,be diverse constit- . Tuesday evenings in IUDe and Dr. L. Bamn ~ Bociolo1uenaes.
July at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Re- BY; Dr. Georp Gft1iiDe; Oral_
'Ibe final draft of the docu- cital Hall Tickets-will be avail- Pa.....,_· Dr " ' - - u D - ' .
•.I IDI!IIl: will be voted on by the able in Norton.)
....._,;
·.....,.. • - - .
1 Gowmance Committee during
• BtriUord Fe s t j v a I and ~
~
' the first part of September. Shaw Festivaii!ICUlllions.
bi~ . M
Mmaial
Dr. of Cainpoiew . - - . - After that ballot, the entire
• Weekend Conference Th&amp;- Hoapia;i•df.ii,:
- - .... 1111 Qnoplllc;a Carllplar.,..,.,..,.
University will be able to vote _...,a tre movies sponsored by
or- Health Bcielae llbl-. The plcbn _ _ , . , . IMt - · ~r.., accepting or rejecting the uu~. including a aerial of dents, yet to be appointed, will
....... - - of • In .... Coonpullnl c.-,
nat Carllplar . - - .
. proposal.
. . • apecial. - · · filma, . as -well . alao .... the c-i«-

. f.f

-1970, Eric Sabinaon studied in Brazil for a year. Since
lbea, be's been clreluninl of
aoinl bed&lt; and .this summer
that dream will come true. He
bas """' a Fulbrilbt to go to
Sao Paulo to study Brazilian
theatre.
Sabinson's love of Brazil and
Portu,uese occurred quite by
accidenl When be came to
U/B as an Ulldenlraduate be
was sick of high aCbool French
and ready to· learn a , _ and
•
Janguaae. H decided
~~and
decision

a!

--

KetterWants
HealthVP

-

Names -.

Gavernance

Group

.r

,,.,.h.,...n

::'=

= .
-:=j

v: ,_, . . -

n;;.":.

�3

U/BEngimers
Helping Cure
Tre~
'lbe Department ol Civil E.
gineering, with the ll8listance of
a cootract from the United
State&amp; Army Corps of EDgin- ·
eera, ia trying to find a cure for
the pollution piquing the Cuyahop River in nortbeastem
Ohio.
Recently awarded, the $12,972 contract ia to aupport the
services of the Department,
through Dr. Ninnioo E. Hopsao, assiatant prof-- ol civil
engineering, in water cjuality
studies in tbat
Dr.- management
geographic area of Ohio.
. Dr. Winans, professor of phy- · . Primary attention is being
BJCS, has taught here since 1962
gtven to the T h r e e Rivem
An active re&amp;eald&gt;er, ~ Watershed area, made up of the
and autbo~ he ""!'. held "four ~~ Cuyahop and Chagrin
?uJbright LeCUlJ"eSbips includmg one at Banaras Hindu Uni·
Dr. Hopson's concems inversity in India in J.968.69. He clude restoration of the Cuywas a faculty member at the ahoga, one of the most polluted
University of Wisconsin for 32 rivers in the U.S., and manageyeam before joining U/B.
ment of wastewater or sewage
throughout the Three Rivers
area.
According to Dr. Robert P.

'lbe teaching career of ~
Travis at this University
_..a aome 45 years. He was
named an instructor in the 1)&amp;.
partment Df Endish in 192'l,
progn!!IBing linalfy to full prof - - in that department. In
1947, he was appointed first
dlaiJman of the newly-aeated
~t of Drama and
Speech. He held this dlailmanship for 20 yeam. An aocomplisbed actor and ·noted lecturer,
Profesoor "Travis is a distinguished citizen of the BuiJalo
community. He also has been
named professor emeritus, in
""""Snition of his loog and dedicated emrice to the University.
feB~&lt;

Dr. Chey~educat«, author. c:omposer and conductor.
joined the University in 1956
aa a~ of DUiic"and
profeB~&lt; of· education. Prior to
that he was oo the faculty of
Syracuae University. He has
written aome 32 teUa for scbool
bands, orchestras, and dJoral
~ and has been especially
cooc:emed with developing the
musical Cl'l!lltivity of c:hildren.
Dr. Cheyette has CX111JPC*C1 several original worb for hand,
orchestra and dlorus and has
been .-x:iated with the Amherst 8,mplw;my ~

a

Dr.Or. Woodburn has been
c a II e d " the architect of the
present U/ B graduate school."
He served as dean of the School
from 1953 to 1966 and has been
a member of the faculty of
the University's Department of

Dr. Mmwwslri, a native of
Poland, joined the University
as directol- of ita Quboo Reaeardl Cenw and cbairman of
the Department of Physics in

C~smoo1~. Hewas

chairman of that department
from 1945 to 1966. His service
to this institution has been recognized in the inauguration of
1949. Well known for his r&amp;}}&lt; series o~ graduate feJiowships
aeardl and discoveries in phy'bearing his name. :n.e Board
sics, he has been editor-in-d&gt;ief
of Trustees of the State Uniof the lnl#:mtJlionDl Carbon
versity of New York have reJOUITIDl for the past ten years.
.cently conferred two honors on
Since 1966 he has been presiDr
. .Woodburn. He was named
dent of the Polish Institute of
disti!u!uisbed service profesa&gt;r
Arlll and Scii!Dcea in America.
and,
litter, distinguished serv' Dr. Mrozooralrl the lint .... .
ice professor emeritus, effective
~ cipient of the Geoqe Sbloel
Mia&amp;
Webaler,
wbo
ia
now
September
1.
Memorial Award 8Dif is one of
with the University
oaiY. two ~ llll!!lllbea of .-x:iated
at
BuiJalo
Foundation,
-will
rethe ' Poliob Pbyaical Society.
Jloll8 of an ~ dellree tire. thia year after 48 years
from the Uniwnity of Bor- ol CODtinuoas emrice to the
clemm, be has been a villitin&amp; Uniwnity. After graduating
from U/8 in 1923, abe became
• po"'-w in both Gemeny
J ...... Blfedhe ~ 1. ...-.aant to .the treasurer, . a
paailiaa
..... hold until 1930.
be wiD bald the title ..........
Flam 1930 to 1951 abe was
The baaebaJJ complex on the
-m."' .t UIB.
--..nt - · n!llpoDIIible ~ Street Campus will. be
far budpt .,._raliaa and con- ofticiaJJy named J....- E.
trol, C!!llido,onoeut f u n d 8 and Peelle Field this Friday at
odler &amp;.cal mlttera. For 12:55.
..aeyeam, 1951 to 1962, Mia&amp;
Brief dedication ceremonies
Dr. Gluier, widely-jdllioiBI
W~ was --..nt vice
prior to the U/B ~r
poet, critic and pae-or of
c:banceUar far buoineM a1f.aira with the University of PittaEu8liab, has be en a faculty
. and a.iotant - - In 1963 burBh (1:00) will include com1947........
• an 81111iotent vice pralident menta by University officials
1952 to 1963 be, cbairman
obe _....... ll!8pOIIIIibili for and the unveiling of the ol5cial
ol the interclioocipti , _
the University's 011ice ol Con- plaque for the field. '
pam in American 8ludieL He
tract Adminiabation
where sbe
_..__.
....__, _.._._...._tion.
Peelle. served U/ B for 35
-hold the
lint
American
to
.
. . - • - ,_.,............,..a
years aa director of athletica
a Fulbricbt. 1-...bip
ol ....,._m ..-ardl of the and coadl of varsity football
in American li1eralme in TarSlate University R e 8 ear c h and baoeball. A - - ' - r m·
key, ~ from 1961 to 1963
Foundation, kaling about $12
.... _ ....._ and the U""-'ty of meo'8 physical education, he re:J.:!!:r.:,g.t!,..~~
~ Foundau..;;:·-~ tired from his athletic posts in
tme at the University ol IF
8IIOiber $1 million. ....... 1939 1969.
tanbuL In J.968.69 be hold •
to. 1962 Miaa Webaler was asPeelle actually helped con•
of
struct the field where the Bulls
Fulbridlt Ledun!abip .tilll&lt;a~sf.,
play. He penonall~built the
' - Oniwnity, Anbra, and
in 1970 at Madms, Hydeaolal,
Dr. RoDn .......... - both ed alumni member ol the Coun· thefiratlandwire andbackstop,
~clear
and Srinapr, India. A pMu- c:bUnnaD ol the University's cil from 1940 to 1952, the first
.
cut the diamond,
ate ol Hanan!. he has .f:llalbt .Deparlmeat ol Pediatrial and . ........, to be ., elected. Sbe following World Warn
there, at Tuft&amp; and at BeteL ~ ol BuiJalo has also oerved as vice J&gt;m.Si·
Still
active fan, Peelle
l'rofe.or Mobn has been ... Cbildn!a'a Haolpital from llN5 cleat ol the Eioatern AaK&gt;ciation I coad&gt;ed U/B baaebaJJ for 19
the faculty 8 i n c e llN4:. For to 1967. For-~.-&amp; fiYe yeam, ol CoiJeee and Univeisity Btiai- and .built a 187-74 reoOllcea and is author of a ord, includin« two trips to the
23 ye8lll, from llN4 to be has coaliDued • pmllaor 196'1, be cbairman ol the ol pediatric&amp; ia the Schaal ol ~ear history ol the "-'cia- NCAA CoIfe g e D 1 vi 8 ion
'!ad~
,
AlJI'C!Iifi!;
..tbol::llll!l
tiaa.
, : - Championship&amp;.
~}~-~~

---

PrelleWill

ana

Be:Homnrl

..__

....... bon--

..!"',!1:

en

Apmann, U/B asaociate professor of civil engineering, wbo has
alao done work in the Watershed area, the Corps of Engineers has tried to restore the
entire Cuyahoga River to a
state of good water quality.
."Upstream portions of the
Rtver are not too heavily polluted, but in the lower regions,
various wastes have contributed
to a deplorable looking IJle88 "
Dr. Apmann says.
'
Combined bigger and bettettreatment plants for sewage are
a m o n g lDlprovements to be
made. Dr. Apmann pointed out ·
that these larger treatment
plant£ are a must for bandlins
increased domestic and indl18trial sewage.
general, an attempt is
being made to put sewage into a
more effegive gyslem/' Dr. Apmann said. uOne example
would he to have separate gystems for storm water drainage
and sewage. This would prevent overflows of untreated
wastewater into the rivers," he
added.

:'In

3ArtistsWm
Travel Awards
Three summer acholarships
for European travel have been
awanled to women in the IJ&amp;.
partment of Art through • bequest made by the late Evelyn
Rumsey Lord.
The scbolarships, of $1000
eadt, were preeented to Rhea
S. Banker, Unda Broob, and
Jane B. Lewis, all now ClOIIIPieting their junior year.
Ms. Banlu!r, from Binghamton. N .Y ~ will puiiiUC her in~in Gothic art and itil influence on the Italian a-iaaance while tnlveling thraucb
Fiance and Italy. Sbe ia a CIIDdidate for both a B.A. in art
history and a B.F.A. in fine
arta.

Ms. Brooks' plana have been
inDuen&lt;:ed by a aerie&amp; of recently completed paintings of huiJd.ings. She plana to study' observe and record the architecture and environment of the
Netherland&amp;, France, S p a i n,
Italy and G.-:e. Armed with
"sketchbooks, a camera, and
Jots of film," she plana to travel
by motorcycle. Ms. Brooks ia
from Mjneola, N.Y.
In Italy, Ms. . Lewis intend&amp;
to combine photography, writing and drawing. Rei .
...
the experience of her
trip abroeil, she will. be sketching on
3 X 5 cards. The conveniently
small size forces her, sbe finds,
"to direct """""' and sight into
a small surface . . . it either
work&amp; or not." Ms. Lewis ia

'l::

from N!!W -Y~_ (;jty.

�.. :

-':·

-:

~ "

.

.

Did ~~Conferenre Endorse-Racism?
EDITOR'S NOTE: ThU pro
and """on iaua amu., or not
aminf OIAl of tM CG111PfU aym,_;,.,.on ·'Ethiml and&amp;&gt;ciDl Ptob~mo in Hrun.on BioiDIY" conclub:a a ~-part

oma

of

V~poinU.

Ira Uebowitz, representative
of the National Caucus of Labor Committees, spoke during
the disc:usBion periods of the
Symposium. 1be opposition of
the Committee 110 the Symposium, Uebowil;t said, was meant
110 point up the Committee's
belief that the a.- of zero
population ,._tb, geuetic ......
.
·
--~ miDd control are

cu-rmg, -..

not simply academic or acientillc matters but have wide ao;,'~~ that IIIII&amp;Ck of

freeh, amdid, . _ . tbeo&lt;ioB uil
procrams provide elaborate rationalizatiolls for the eftects of
theecoDDIIliccrisis8JI!i~ing international cap1~ pepression, aDd for the capitalists'
attempts 110 stove off complete
capitalist CQIIapse_by 'fresh.
new' austerity measures aDd
regimentation of the labor forre.
". · · It is no aa:ident that
no aocialista were invited 110 debate these 'eq&gt;erts' in the 'potential of human Jeue8 and the
C1.TT1:'1.•~~Yre
- Y .u:, YY C Vll, .I .;:,

~ _ _ .., ~ -

·- .._- . _

-

~ted

I have
110 JIOIPODIL I
do 80 primarily u ... ..,-1 _110
the membel8 of IIIia U...-ty

~unity._
Five or SIX ~ of the
Buft'alo Labor Committee. attempted 110 disrupt the CXIIIfel-eoce, :'Ethical aDd_Social Problema m Human BioloiY," held
in Norton Union aDd co-aponsored by the Faculty of Nat.ural Scieooes aDd Mathematics
aDd TM HW71l110Ut mapziDe.
1bey distnl&gt;uted leaDets that
contained vicious peraooa1 attacks on aeveral members of
the.faculty aDd " -· - ' - '1y
-~ • .,.__...
attempted 110 dominate the mil&gt;
ropbones with
that
were not relevant 110 the topic
of the ............,;,~ Tbey hone

an-a...

World

I'~ ~- ~

·T~Prcfs

em H...mot A..........., -.1
I 8DI DOt.__.,. ball of
tbeirpolicieL
.
In IIII,Y .,.._~me 110 defend UCRA. It • a bcall,- arpnizaliaD ~ 110 a def - of~~ -.1

~

-

....-..

..=...

far .._ -

::::".::...-..,:. ~--=

uniwnity I l l " ' - iDdDdiac.

w--

commuultJ. . . - -

n.a.n

&lt;a~~
declare IIIia sympoeium ~
"'et": ~'!:.:.,:.:
.., "l'be Etbiad an,d Social . t.et- ·tliatindividualaDdao-·

. fo'r"'';

~n:' ,.':!

"=

~ an UCRA-ite)
in behalf of propams whidJ are
oothinc more than brwibed-df
aDd toucbed-up versions of
Nazi master ..____,_ --~
~ ..__....., ....
rationales for fomed labor and

~ -=~

a voluntary sterilization bonus
plan in order 110 eliminate 'the
poor •• • the laa foreaichted.

::th~::::.,
rulinc d.. of

-:!' ;:rm;;;,

h._ ~w.

their handmaidena.

entisto like B.F.

propmis indude Kurtz aDd

~~~ .:...~
·;;.;.:;bite, are denied enllaDce
becaUBe
u .I ens en
"-•-~ are,_...__.._

\:'! it,
m
·
-

~t than~_:~-··......_.
--_........., -~
s-tically inferior,' or u Eyputs it, 'the innate inferiority of the puts
them at the bottom of the
American Moritocncy.' n-e

-"*

_

...
!i
......... li-:.:a: .
.....................
_

Dr.hwsia~ef . . .

I :•,

...........
..,_.,flee
........ .....
. e _. ...........

=

:; ~ ~~=J:'! .

--~

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

Deatala..I.Sie...._ . •
~

-

_ _ ......_Jk.hws . .

wriUal ___. ...... il:aliJw • • •. 2

, _ . . . . - - .•

.,

I

.._..

•

...

•

II

I

s

..

. . . . . . )lUll

G(_CIJe~ef -

--

.
&amp;Dd"fnwd"ofwbich...,areac- 'til-..~ T ~
.
lllilmct llilwllll . .
ciety,IDediated by aocia1 p-aup- ~? I abould a1ao point out Y'liiHI~ll
_a .,.
inga. Therefore, Clllly wt.... ao- that the . con(........,.. was CIIDciety provideo the opportunity ClO!fDO!d With a number "!- .U.. for making the tbousht pall&gt;- OUI , _ em the frou.tien of
.
!lcaJ CIUI ~- ~ ~ It_ ' biolav.• aDd ~~ aDd
.
;_
not pnetic inferiority, but that - . ! 8CIIolady jouma1e
Fe.- a paap ef _ _ . a&amp;
cap i tali • t .-iclioa of the aDd universities in recent Ridp ~.a, Jaada io .._
growth of productiw (llkilled, · monlho have ClOIIducted similar a time 110 ..t l&amp;lllu:idw -.1
creetive) -jot. whidJ ldda.bad&lt; - 11)'1111&gt;08iums. It is unlortaiJate , _ doe ~ It'a •
the intellecbJal ~ of that miiii,Y tesdJen aDd ..... . hoar 110 ..... abaat doe 1:Juha..
ALL worlting-daao layera. . . • denta from neicbborinc 8Cboola . llity lhmacb • ....._. _..
lntellicence Clllly baa IIIOlllllinB wbo ......, preaent were unable of hml:b8i:Ja ~ ..,_..
in a aocia1 situation where audl 110 pertieipate in the coafereace aond by doe Adalt .wv·
intellicence CIUI be .-1. In a becaUBe~ cliaruptiam Center aDd , _ 5
revolution or Wider aoc:ialism, by the
Labor Commit- lilarpftt Neria, ....._of._
tee.'lbe ,,_,,.._a~_.__. T~- ~ &amp;Dd a.Dy nm., ~
~......,.• ......,.. ""' ll8lialliDt..
the running of ·society itaelf. HwnaniaUor Pllllliohinlr a aymBut Wider 'nomlal' COIIditilx. posium on "'.Q. &amp;DCf Race~'
In the ...., ..,... ef . .
of capitalism. real bmnan in- (.lan.!Feb., 1972). TM Hu,.
doe .....
..._
tellipDce is not • commodity _,..-. lllqiiZine doea DOt ....
...._ ef Afril:a ~
Jk. ~ ia ...,._ ef
demanded of wvrltinc-cle., or done the vien of
By- by ~ n - , ..._ eup- ..........,. _ . -aiillll ...,.
minority amc:k or Shockley, but i t .,~
indiYiduala."
_
_..__. a _.,____,_ of ..,_,_
ture .._ 0... n.- ~ ~~~H.,.: ";;t ......
~.anJius Ceuller, _. •.__ • . . ~ ~
KurtzS.S&lt;llazp
this .,........;um iDdUdeli an m.-1 110 • lulk ...._......,.
Ilia_ a .,
a

At Lunhms

- ,.

1

1

I

..,.

::=:::..,": :!:.M:,!':t;

.1-,

eopecially __.

c::=• ..-.....,

=.::r-_..:..,~ ~

a .... . . _ . . . . . -

_.....~me""iiftori ~-!!:;~
--

........

-

~':,;b.-~lz ~

the lkdfalo labor ('nmmlttie
are 80 - - _ , ..,,....
ont foundatioo that they hmdly
merit ,.reopame, Yet tbaR wbo
...,... in politieal ~
_.,....

__... _

_..

....

moy 80 poiaoa ......... tD •
univaility that &amp;Dtidole
DillY be required.~.

= . . . ._

.--....,.__,._.a...._
t'1..

~- Are'~'

Skiimer. Such

.lY~IUUI£

W . V. QuiDe. MD~.._.
Seabury, .lalm ·Baaaol, BidJud
Lipsitz, Bnmo BettWwiw Sir
.lalm Eccleo,; Kiapiey nm.,
Arthur Beolor, CIMalb Bnlab,.
:Bmolli NaE...,...e P .
101, aDd Rabat N"~ otbenL Its....,...~­
Sidney Baal&lt;. Its Jill-' ideat io Alia P. x-_ 6lillpiobed ....-&amp;t ~

m-· .

Prob1e1D1 in Human BiolocY'
110 be an eserciae in outricbt
intel!ectnal fraud. It is part of
a nationwide ~ led
cbiefly by l!idDey - . Paul
Kw:tz ~ ~versi~~t!,;
at i 0 n a 1 Alternatives
t , __ _. the
(UCRA) • ~
"" pu '~""'
Jllll!lllllo«:tillc theories of rae· ist aDd a ·n t i~ e I as a

r-.. ~~~__,J

autooamy . , . . - tbaR ....,
would undo:nniDe it. Its _ .
benbjp _ _ . . . 3500

" - ' ~ continJvxw
vililante ~ of Yilificalion over the pat oewal wbofled~•aftdilll
policy
HW71l110Ut, a ex&gt;- ,..._. p o p o r a - - •
monlho in Norton Union. n.e- of -the NaiL Far f.-~
. Lie- the_ C&lt;lmthe Nazi
..-.·
- tD
apaaaor of the sympomum,
,.._
. above
mittee·
is Clllly
a. -..,.
mWI
.. of . inc
interat
of UCBA
huthe
.__
:.lzJ:d~theof'1:'!:',· - - - - - - - - - - the literature that~~ .w...t therlchtefiadiv"' '
~. HenmteiD, aDd oth- des i 1 n in 1 of IIIIUL' AI. the J - t out. ' l b e - Commit- aDd . , _ 110-• , . . 88 JePiimate. r '--'--'lz inUCRA apolocisto for capital- tee baa men:ileoalY ilandond · aDd the richt 110 ........ fnloiJ'
clicated that IIIia ~with ilm's F"mal Solution know full Prof-.r .lobn HalatMd of the d-...m. peiuh of Yiew,
- • ~t _,....._ 110 lftll. their aUempts 110 make History·Ilepartmmt, piuterinc ..,.m.t t1n.1a of *4t
••
;-oui~
reJI(leCtable &amp;pin in ac- poatem all ...... ..._......_.. ..,. ............. .. the-- . .
ciertain _,u... of the worlting ademia aDd lhua forp in the · not ....; public """' baa .~~em lh!o WI. .,......... ......... _
population." Raci8t ~ universitieo ideolocical ..u-1 ..,. IIIOIIIbem of the fac- paL
~tmctastar
. of";!.;';'!:"~ "ti- "!!_
~~~jnotof~-·~ "!ty ·or the ·adminislmtion in . Pumucmt*J ia III!S f1i art io
81 ·~ ......'lind
....._........
his beblllL .. . ·
.
- _. ...,; thine- 1'\a . . . . it. 'fili:
.....
be~- b ·wf!at they are . eri1 u well u ~ d&amp;I abould~ out that the · ~_......,.____..
aDd fousht.
~
-ted-~= ,..__._
~.~ ...................
coafereace
t the Committee aliaa .. the .. the
--initiated..,. . ....u-.il.y .. DOt....,. ......_
.....~~the.s~.·um,Boysa
• . •
Prof- Hamid Secalt .wbo five of the wllale
_.,
Hook's
'"l'be l.abw Ccamittee pointa. lll;lt Clllly helped 110 OIJIIIIIZe the ~ hod ef the .-y idea ef
Play Nazi
," _ . . . t by out the . fuwle.._..lly -=ia1 coafereace ~t invited of the~ illooolf..
llll!lllber, of the lkilralp Labor nature of in~ 'Society the oul8ide opmlrers (~.
Committee aDd PODER; was de••-'- .
.
~
E~ -~ of MIT. _._
PADL 1D1BZ
distributed Following are ex- ~...~u;...,.. mich~considera ~ tD
-;:;;.~

. ~atheutioosedi.__,__,

110 . . . - • -

CiletJ, by•

......_

·;. .:-=: =-a;;n

.J

o.luliD
'lbe artideo by B. 1'.
•
tbae will . . . . . . . , _ . . I.-...,
ia ll!f· .U
in TM HIUMIIi# aun1y have Atb1otic J)qwl
• a...._ ~... • .._
no relatiaD 110 t h e , _ - - Clll ~ wi8a - . . . . II.. ........ .. . . . . . .......

- - , . . M - , in oar
March!Ac&gt;rill972-iaJe
of TM
HIUMIIi#
the three IMd
edilorials aplicitl erilidzal ...,_
imJ 88 a ::ci:{potiey aDd de•-~-' the -:.....:..L. of
--... ......~ity.
TM H....n.:.t em its.,....
1-s explicitly otatea ilm
"opinions ~ are tbaR
ofthe&amp;ldhoraaDdDOt-ily tt..e of -the edition." We
believe in ~ • full
- - of opiDlan. 'lbe earrent

·--

~~of

Cl!-

8oil

8:,......m;:-~

•• ·w
••
llouD ••
'C
• __
•
al_pm.
,_....,....,.Jk.
. . . . .........._..__
......
~ ~ llillory, _.a .._ ........
;ii-=i:
~ •
. . . . - . , &lt;-&amp;---. •• a' ........
~~ -

--:e:i:..

......

....

...... - - -

~ .. ...
_k,a1 _~
. . , ~ -.&amp;.:::--~

'lbe ........ - - - . . . . . . . . . . .

~ -~ . .P!I' :
...., ~ ' -

fS

11a. Nerioi-.1
...._..
ru..tioa .. doe Adalt ~
Ola ef 8lia t.

c-.

terelt _ . ........ - -- -

~._. lha
~~
.......

._......_..a ....

......_ _.

.._ •

~the- - witll.....
L-...11. ~

• . _ ..,.
........
.................. - - •
~
•
iuolliiJiw..l

Ieaa.-y_.....,..f:;

...,.__ ~.pati••'lroworl 'g " , _ . alwa:ra
.....,. ,., -....... . _ - - - . willl _ . . _ , ,._ ._
-,--a a becaor b ~ " - ...._

:!:'"-U.:~.!i lpl:z:t.~ --~~ ..........

· ...,ha...,........,_IIOour..,._
a wide ......, of CJUidlooaaial

__

nJDO:t:'..~...O

_....,..,
-..rt" r . .IUitU7T
.

....

· - "'-W/l';;,q',~--

--

JOBII ... a.acnuar
-

O.R&amp;IUnrUCID

==-~"'=-;=. ""='-..
.. OOII'TIIUurtJIO Aa'I"DI'.t . _ M • ._..,.

"tiaae, ...._._.,__ artideo .._

c-.

IlL .._._

.-.. - .

he
~ Howari! ....._ art at 12 _ . -Zinn,
oam
• Bdpr .....t .,;,a _ . . - . Friedenberc. Paul
.._.. ......_ ~ _ .
SidiiiOy Hook, Hubert lluaiFiarey aDd Georp MeGowm..
The ~ . . . . . . ~i!'J t _he ebarcea ~
~

~

~ -

:r...t:.,u'AI:Z.~

simply h8d nothina: 110 do with
this.,....,_..,.( 110 atlad&lt; it
- - oequilur, I~ 110
be em the Board of UCRA, but
I am or hone 1-. em the
Buarda of A C L U, U n i ted

=- 1!:!- ....

... - - - c... --"- ___.. .......

,....__

:t-'

.................. Jk.n..

0...:.: --. .._ wedieal....._..

"'~ ...a:r AI!'~

tJpe of~ ............ -faw .... he albor ...... -

. _ , .... - .

:.:: ~

--

·
AD;Jaae ialaeoted io ......
110 .,.,._ eiihor ...,_, 1!foina
or s.p,. Donia at at. :188.

~
Tr : t
c:;;
...........
-.;,z - AJJIIU!'~·

: : " ....
...
-

:-:

tD diuil:ul - - . . . , ........._
the ef . , . _ _ _ _ . .
......,..,., ....._, aoaad/
llille p
Piww -.1 llwL•
I

�1

1
~m{nt.iflrP.J·t~ J!:.'rr~~ ll~ Jl!l~1Q11
Ni[JhJ !ii!J··,~JtW1 ~J!ilJ~~I rli;,r.rl.f~:\1 ~~~~~(l!lr1'.1' i ~ ·r
IJr~~~ rfll J t 'u( ··t. 'I' l ''=1~·~,. 'II ' ll·'l rJll· t I ~t[ I s~ r .•1,. ~ 1 r t· II ~
lP!,filalt!. r•• t1,P. h•.,•~thai i'1.t·-ii.J :tJ1 !!'1 I~~·•ilr.hfihii tf.~. 11UI}1 .~~~·1~:f. u.~ ~
,,.lr.~i!• I'~ 11.:· ~~ I :.~ .1!' i r •.1
Jilt' ·f'llrrr•l•J' ~ . t! ~l':l .. ll ~~~I!· .~ ·
U'JU ~ .. rf (A r ,, '
fth lit lh ·rl''
rfll thrfltfll· Jn. 1*•· ! ffll .rt;· •. ffl" h t ..; d ::::;
t:. •·t-~l1 ;1~1.1'11
':J.j.J'rill[ht·unr.'Uli!lJlrntt~ if~J ~~:~1~H.i1·rrm ~ ·· trr· ii: ~,~~1 ln~~JJ·'1 ',.f i'r · J.~Jt a
l~·1 ...l;r,!. ~t •·:, ~J}j(f" I'U~f~~ ' I )1 Jrtl{•· : 1·~t I 'lf ~- 1Jl [f ·li
~ hlr
1
;.,~1''1r,tpI· 1r': t•llitl
:1 'll mf•~! ifhi!d!.Unb ~~~ s J'I..l~rM,~I,f h!fdr
nil
f ~. 1J
t r 1 fl.1 U! I ... 'l&amp; I :tfi.J"t f
h l i •.
Jl .,..r~rtJ~ lr~thLr .:fa~fl·~tHrrhf, rrM~rn!~ ri~ ~· llt!·li!J(!dnmt •HI
t'rfr·J·JihrlftJl·~·
~r:,•r.J! ('lfJtU•·!I~tJ•JthlJff:l r,~,
~~J·.:···;i f(-~~. tl.
~ ~· l:.Jr.fnrJ.fli~J ~ rrru~ =:.
'r .~ ~~ ·'f' .,, Jl
,,
J(••;\ Jf ftUJ• ' t•• !'15
1t'f.Bli~li!J·~~!r'!~f;!IJ'rU !Hht~
l~~ii
.
Hl(~~~imll!l.JtP,
i!~li
~
l,tr l•·r' •·t• r r r ·rt J'" f'} r •I:J '
{l·lt(•l~
,,, ·'I.r Jr.·,,
a:: 1l
rlrfr ·u~Ur rf.ub,lbrlr• ., · rf.ll ·rl
. d ~ .. tnJitU

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r · r

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.

.

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:u • .· . . ~ ... ~~~... ~

ar··t ·n1

t . ·:. ·

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'

.ll . 1 .trf. 1

r·
~11'1 ,·I, 'J~
:t~luhr~l ~r:tllllhd.~nl.hif r~!lrh~~h~liHrh
tf!,~r~st l; !:3~

u.1 1 "t·'
lll fll'fJ :t hr.t~ i.~~~l~ l·a Ill.' ·t [tr ·h,s.r h~ra r!ll
r I : l c: '[f~!~: .:f.~ :a• 1• . J!lr ll' 8 ~ tt f U"~ RiJ .
B'

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!r-IJfiU

J ·l~ r ·Jt Irr.llt.f .:t &amp;I~ ··~r ~. f J 'fl fil iii. ,, . ·h~·
iU~r~ltHl n.lhH~r~ll h;ralall...t•., t 1'1 rr~h t!~ ·uJ

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�_...,II, In!

6

TMSimpJe,
Lader Says
'IM•••Wtal Meditation
- is • liecbDique of diJect esperiwhich can't be deacribed
lbroulh tbe medium of wonla,
Sialnly Summer, UDderwbo bas studied wilb
tbe ~Mahesh Y o ci
biaa!1f, and lee tu res and
• ..,._ tbe mecbanics of TM

::...e
bere ..,

csm-.

'Ibis BUIIIIIJe&lt;, TM will be cme
of tbe activities olfered to all
fn!abmeu, with iutro-

='leclun!s

pven ~ a
wee It and follow--up leclun!s
f!llefY two weeks. 'The first
1ec1ure will be held at 7:30

WBFO Revive;
Program Guide

Olllle

...._

pm., May 24, in 240-248 NIH'-

WBFO, tbe University's FM
8I!&lt;Vice. will .... revive
its Jl10111lDliUicle aDd is askinc
1isteDers wbo wish to be on the
mailinl list to CXIIltact the atatioa.
-Acconlina' to Dave ~

'The "local representative fer
Students IntA!matjonal Meditaticm Society &lt;SIMS), which bas
C&amp;llo!IB around tbe w o rld!
Sialnly aays that TM is a
"simple, natwa~ · mechanical
aDd JDI!!Iltal ledmique that P"""
tbe _.wnity f o r - to
take his ............... within aDd
CDllaet an unlimited IIOUIU! of
jntelljl"""' aeativity aDd enI!IJY - qualities which are lall!llt within f!llefY individual"
Eyeryone can use more of theae
inner powers to meet the ever
increasinc demands of life, she

nodio

-i!!"r!!.~
~~.!!
live poopam IUide in a map.me format,

includinc artides,
pbotos aDd illuslmtioos."
' n - wbo want to receive
it sbould 8elld their lJ8IIXB and
addresaes, with zip codes, to
WBli'O, Norton Hall (3435
Main Street for thoo.e oil campus) .
'The mailinc list will be entirely new, KarPoll says, ".0
names .., our old list will not
automatically be included on
our new one."

SIIYB-

Followinc introductory lectun!ll, individuals 10 home to
try !DI!ditstion on their own,
then """"' hsck to discuas aDd
sbare their experieDa!B with the
teadJe7: and other student&amp; It
takes only about seven steps,
includinc one-to-one co ntac t
with the teacher, and refinement of the mechanics, before
you become a true meditator.
But everyone can become an
apert and particularly appealinc is the fact that the ~
requires no long hours of discipline and concentration. TM is
~ and suited to every
individual, need be practiced
only-11&gt;-20 minutes each mominc and eveninc. and is not a
technique of concen.t ration or
cilotemplation.
Meditation is not done "just
for the act itself," says Simmy;
but rather "to enrich the per8011'&amp; activities and expand his
cspacity a n d enjoyment of
every er:perience of daily life."
It puts a person "in tune with
himself, bel ~ him to become
11101!"

~-

New lffi.PAwards
Total $2iU,515 _
Four federal grants totallinK
$210,515 have been awarded for
the training of health personnel at U/ 8, Congressman Jack
Kemp announced this ......_
'The grants are for the fimt
year of five-year progmms · under the direction of Dr. J . Warren Perry, dean of the School
ol Heslth Related..Professions,
aDd will provide training for 43
paduate stu.ients and 10 un-

Rouhoats and Tires?

u.u-."

=-~~druca.tl-

Staft' Senate\ti-e
Is StilllliJerwey
'The dmdline for 1IOtinB on
a Professioual Stslf
.
... been eDended to
~. Ma.y 12, Dr. Norman
~ IIDIM"U"""' this ......_
The ......., was Dl!lll!lllllty
. . _ _ of tbe delay in cettinl
tbe a.Doca out, be aid. , ._.,._._

8t the o.y Care Center ..._........_ Far ... - . . . _ . . . Hnen-~llr-.-

to the -

----aid*-. ..,.

--··-forthe _ _ _ _

project--

Thei'WOUitoftt.lr--

.

Transcendental Meditation is
an ancient tradition which has
• been pa-t on !.rom teadJe7: to
sludmt, aDd in our time reviwd throuch the dedication of
Maharishi Mahesh YoP, a
former mcmlt wbo left the monaslery to &amp;hare his k:nowledce
with tbe world He has described TM as a atste of "restful
aDd it bas ala:&gt;
been refen-ed to as a fourth
major state of. CllliiiiCiousno
· 'lbe physiolopcal chan1es
which the body Ullderaom durinl TM have fascinated re....:bers wbo report that the
..-bolic rate of ,.._........ en....,.Sin TM is ~tly d&amp;~ that the lreart pumpe
Je. frequently, that there is a
.....,_ in emotiooal ll!llsion;
tbe body produces s m a II e r
aDIIIIIIds of aubon dimide, and
there is a reducticm of amiety.
Sc:illlltists have lll1ll"8ted that
pradiee of TM may have ap~ in the treabnent of

-

-

E - . . , _ . . just two of the plarthlnp In the ~
-~designed by the SciKd o f [nwinw••••tal Dooip's P r o x l i M t a " - Far
juniors -bled to - - .

- . • .......,, two . . . . -

•nd -

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

- - . Far u.
-...........
u. -"pDJpaund
is • -. . . . - . . - "
STATE U IIIIVBISITY TUmOIII FOR 1972-73

- -.......
·- - ·-o...,.,...

Pr...m Tuldon SchMiule -

IIIMT......
F~lncome

2 0 ,000+
12 -20,000

0
100
100
200
300
300
350

550
550
550
550
550
550
. 550

8 -1.2,000
6420-

8 ,000
6 ,000
4 ,000
2 ,000 ,

0
0
0
0
0
0
200

~

550
450
450
350
250
250
0

·-- - -- -- -u- 20,000 +

8 - 12,000

650
650
650

6420-

650
650
.650

12-20.000

0
100
100
200
300
300

•so

8 ,000
6 ,000
4 ,000
2,000

0
0
0
0
0
0

a.ow. DMsion

0
0
0
0
0
100

-T-----

.........
650
550
550
450
350
250

· ~

-·- - -- -- --........ .........F....a,tncerne

20,000+
12 -20.000

8-12.000

6 - 8 ,000
4- 8 ,000
2 - 4 ,000
0 - 2 ,000

C....,.

•

800
800
800
800
800

800

800

FCif~ ........ ..-.a;

u.lle .....,..,

450

200

0
100
100
200
300
300
1100

0
0
0
0
0
0
200

0
0

ioo

100
100
200
0

u.-

800
700
1100
500

400
300
0

100
100
100
100
100
0
0

250
250
150
150
150
50
0

DiriAan Sc:ho&amp;lr'IWip~ , . . . . _ t.om 11.200 ~ to inconte ...... For pror..ioMI grld.u.ract Upper OMsion 5chollriNp-........ ,...._. . _ t1,600 &amp;IDCifding to l~ity' income. .
•
_

This c:t.-t appl- ta ,._YorkS...,........ .... dct fllll .._. a ~ Sc:tdlnhip..

Approved by the Division of
Allied Health Manpower in the
Hesith, Education and Welfare
~t, tbe grants include
$151.250 for the advanced traininK of 25 paduate t.chers;
$52,915 for 12 medical technicians at tbe paduate level;
$30,150 for six paduate occupatiooal lberapista aDd $36,200
for _,.,. IJI!!IIBI1ltion at tbe
undeipadaate level

Comnlmremert-

Dhrislonl

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

N. . Tllildon llc:Mdule -

.._T...

~uates, the Conp-essman

(~ , _ 1, coL 4)
into o&amp;ct, amdidalios, IIIUIIbaJs
aDd faaalty oboald _...... in
tbe ~noted by 2 p.m.
Under tbe replar JJ1an. can.
didala will _ , . . at tbe
of the...ll!llnis comta at 2
p.m.
There will he a ...__ of
the -a-, ~. MOlY
13, at 9:30 1L11L in a-.y .wd;
a ..,... - 'Eilt is UDder tbe
direction of Dr. Burvil Glean,
Univsait;y ManbaL

----

In addition to the

.......n

c...,.., .. tilt -a-,

aw-

eml ..:bools will be boldine .iltdividual convocations aDd
awaid Cli!ftiiDOIIies as loDowa:
School of Medicine, TJmra..
dit.Y. May U. Kleinhans M..,;,

Hall. 3

P-Ill-

School of Dmtistry, TJmra..
May U. Kleinhans M..,;,
Hall. 8 p.m. School ofl'baJmaeY, Suaday,
MQ 14, h run c h, l1illmore
Boom, Nodm Uniao, lliLIIL
School of He a It h Related
~ Suada.Y. May 14,
8:30 p.m.Boom, N - Uniao,

dit.Y.

1'-.lty of

r-

aDd .Juri&amp;-

~~~~

�. . li.Bn

~

~Beta Kappa Plans to Initiate 175 Studmts

...

n.~~..._

claliaa ... _ . . . .... u.i-

,~~.
$25&amp;,ZIO ............. Ollo*r

.... u-n:lt ia sa-. ....
tiaD.. '111i11 io lhe . . NSF D.....e .......... ....,tlarlhe

-',

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

: " t::'l.-*

' ia

I

__
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I

•

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Qualoo Daa
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that..,..._ ... · F

AWARDS
1&amp;. III.&amp;I.KC. 1... IA(X)BS~

diDical as-

.........

The poesidmt , SauiJe:D
Illinois U.u-siq&lt; will .-t a
$975,000 bouse after ell. n.
bouse amtled so mucla ~
-decided
twotoyears
tbat
it::i~ ::w~~
.....-t
it into·
•
~lorida.
otwafereDOe Clelller. Now i t At the recent Medical Ahaami tbat the CIIJIM5SioD woaalol Cll&amp;l
SpriJac Oinical [)ays, awanls for
muclato
tbat
the - decided
~te
it . ...
best ezhibib weal to: .._ .1'08a"B so
c. .... prol....r. - - - ~.,....,. president's baase.
- aJid Tn
......- -Tool
Experimeotal
latmcraDial
mom. .. first place; PAUL H. WJD:Z-

sistant prot...... psycbolocY. Depe..rb:Deol ol P s ychiatry. ,.,..
awarded a pl8qoe aJid $1000 foe
ber resean:h into leaminc aJid

B:t

IIIII:Nli:C, ..-lical studeDt, .. it h
help ol ... JUIIIO JIOHDS, diniaol
a ssociate pro(eaol'. patboloc:Y.
"Chroaic Pu1moaary ~:
~
ol IDcreasinc
in our Modem
Euviroluaeat.
..

"""""" place; IlL T.ti:IJ[ ......._
diniaol inWuctor, .mediciDe. -Fi-

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

__
_
..........
...____
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_, _ _ _
_...,a

choose •

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544----..
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S t a t e _ . . . , - .. a

_ _ .. l i l a _ . . . . . ,
_
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lila-

331 . . lila -

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

.... ..._ ._.._
~rol~·a::diti~~
...

boropticthird
GabointestiDill
-copy.place.

GRANTS

lila _ _ . , . . . . . ,

$25,165, -~oo~a- ol a l'abaocharide htipsa ....... N . c::-r" - . " C...ter for Dioooooe ·a-tnll
I
IlL CUBTA110

~WICI, ~-

~ti-"1.!50'&amp;.~:-u:
---NIH.

........ lULL, . - . .

c.q-..

tiwo Collece C...._, S2S.274.
-r.aininc St.l( ol Ccq.mtne
Co1Jece C . - " USOK

;.;::,

.._ TllOJIIIAS L IULIIAIC..........

~~-

=-~

Acid Mee.bolioao." NIH.

=

... - - B. IWfcou.tll,

~

.... cbomiotly, $33,144 for ore-

.':t ~-~--==

=

Imtitu'- ol Health.
- - Natiaaal
.... u.rY JIMIU( • ..ataat ~

f-.

~

i! tbeSS..f.::

:!;.'"~~ •" NSF.

IlL I...WC &amp;. WAa!OCII . . . . . . .t

c::.s::-~~

play~- "J:n,~

RECOGNITIONS

l)yotro-

___.. ___ ..
_
___..__...._....._..
.. aaa.r..-....
.._,
••a••r.,..___ .. _....
~.~=-==.:
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~-

•

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--·-~·-:---:-....-a

The~O

-

Hilber Bduao.tiaD ......... ia

........,.. .......... A.r..•

o(~.M.._

.-=:o::.:m
&lt;=.
.
...
,, . ,,, ..

:
l
For ....... write ... lhe o.-

.. -a.doc--....

miooiaa at 1!N'1
~.

8lieet,

Calilamia 9t'IOL

~

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

~----­
-~-,.._.....
SF$
D.C..

lila-

-=tlrcie, T

�8

&lt;--

=-

~~00~--------------~~---------------------------

(~ tr- I. eoL I}
-.ity ... . . _ iD the . - to
...... wbat it l o l t - illopowe........ iD ita ..a-ity .tudeut
- t h e r.ct ........ tbat
the - - ...... by t ' - llludeats are valid - . The)' deud will I'I!DOive the full
- - . ol Ibis administratiaa."
I..IIDCbiuc - iDtD a fuJHc:ale
r e v i e w ol fiDaDcial . .tiers, .
Ketter DOled that ulboU&amp;h the
~ for ClllleDt - . ata. is c:aJied a ~­
~ the term is a misaomer.
"As 1aiJ« as there is an inflaliaamy factor in the economy.
tbi!D the same -.Jly mMDS

.....

Tbe - · b e said. is for
the University to use the CIODcept ol aelective powtb. Baaed
... aelf.evaJ. .a... made last
fa)) by campus adminisbators,
the President said thii:t particular IU'I!II8 li&gt;r faculty birinl[ have
been """'blished aod that a

~...........,

plan" far lifted -ad priadtieo have beeu
::::-~::.._.,Nap of

the Uniwnity bas beeu - ....... by . - - - - vice
~t.

'!bat plan, be aid,
in the bands ol the aod further JMeiDip lUll
lllqJeCtal to ..Wt in a more
dearly defined propam.
Alao helpful in eatabliobinl
priorit.iea, Ketter said, bas beeu
the inolitutioaallmowleclp vided by the Self-Study Report
for the Middle States Asmciation which is now in its nat
to fiDU editing. 'lbe report is
being prepared in anticipation
of an accreditation visit this
fall.
'The University Management
Information System unit set up
this year. the President said,
will provide another vitsl -planning tool. In COOpetation with
involved individuals on campus, current and pertinent infonnation about the University
which is needed for inteUigent
decision-making has been iden• -

CWEEKLY. COMMUNIQUE
eop.. to .,.-;
.apen

••ap..

"""to--.

-

to

~- in tho

subject

"" Hstlnp.

COlf"'llifUUNG DCN"''AL EDUCA'ftON# :

-

'Thunday lialing.

Pediatric Conference-Or. Jimmie C. HollaDd,

~':.':"~~.:i" {;' ~ p:o

YA1181TY

LIIL•

8Aliii:IW.L

(2), campus. 1

0

:

p.m.

Pittoburch

P BY 81 c 8 OOLLOQUIUJI : Francia

Gupuini. Ohio State Univem ty,

U1 Hochotetter, 4 p.m.

J"08.ra

Dr.
Geo"4" Pimentel, profeMOr of
chemistry, Univemty of California, Berkeley, CMmical UJ..
.,.., 70 Acbeoon, 4: 15 p.m.
L&amp;CTUKE

BaliS:

C1UaAD &amp;AIIBATB BI8VIciz• : lleZV·

i&lt;a ADd mNl, Cbabad Houoe,
3292 Mm SL, 7:15 p.m.
JN"'aafA'I'IONAL "POLK DANCING: In·
otrw:lion in basic stepo durin&amp;'
lint hour. so Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.

OOlfftlfUJJrfG lmn'AL DUCATION# :

'Thunday lioling.

CIIAB.AD BABB.ATB

I 5r. Peter Vlad ADd Dr. Henry R.
Wagner. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital
•
PHYBICWfB 'l'LN# : Caneer Oncolnooo, TM CEA A nti,ren Studiu,
spo1100red by RMP, 40 stal¥&gt;110,

IIDVJ(ZB• : .,..

-=

;.. ADd refnohmenta, 9:30
Mal&lt;walo Malltah, mwoic. ccmver•tioD. refre a hme nta, O:tahad
Howe, 3292 Main SL, 8 P-"'-

;.;~:,~~"C

•t the Albridl~Knox Art Gellery.
Procnm
Le,iuen Hiller'•
So11olo No. 3 For Violill Gild
Piono, Mark Sokol, violin, ADd

ma.-

:!':..:;"/:!""~::r·edi~
anlmown banloicbord
p,.,;,uoiy

music. She baa recorded for

Deu t oche

G~­

~· of the ......w
s. -ioMaoic
F - in Stauf-

ochU

en, CeJ'IDIIDy, ADd • member of

the Freib-r KCU~~~~~erlrio fur
alU in F'teiharw. Genuny.
WNID-TY--&lt;:IlAlfxa.

llKNTIBrn' 'l'LN# :

Dr. Fnnk L

Gnu:iano, S=uo Gild FtJilure in
Endodonria, sponsored by RMP,
40 stat&gt;ona, 7:SO ~ llloo on
'Thunday-18 at 1:SO p.m.

17: E-u.p

::n.,.Muwe!i-0..-

for New Mruie. "Ei&amp;ht Soap for

a Mild KiD&amp;"

~ f.:-~ ~::n"-=

Petr ~ llate; -

Laeri.

THURSDAY-18

=~s~~i
banJoichord; Mark Sokol, 'lriolin;

=~~e;..,u

WEDNESDAY-24

o-ratories. Murray Hill. N.J .• Con.-

Douclao Dnio, c:eiJo. 9 : 30-10 p.m.

lrolkd TMrmo"""/ur Fauion-Wity1 How? Wlien?• . 111 Hocbatette.r. 4 p.m.. coffee at 3: 90 p.m..
112 Hochotetter.
PIWIKACY TLH# : Rob e rt M .

=r·tr!;"la:!J!;.
~.:i
by RMP, 40 stationo, 11:SO a.m.
FRIDAY-19

.t.NNl\'D:S.lKY-...,. liiiSYD
HOSPIUL DBP.t.ar'lriRN"'' OP PSYCHI·

20 Y&amp;Ul

ATIIY: 6: SO

SATURDAY-13
-

2nd lloor t.lcony. Moaday-Frid.y, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

ll :SO-=

PIIYIIICW&lt;8 'l'LN# :

stationo, 10

Locke. Mozart and other compoe-e'" of the &amp;roque 8lld Rococo
periods, Bainl, 8 : so p.m.
Mno. Krskamp, • p&gt;ld~te of

;~;n~:tJi~ ==~:

Participants include D r. £dward
c. Lambert. o = r or the sym-

reJY~=f:D;_I"Gu.~~:

FRIDAY-~

THURSDAY-11

niDc
31M inIMt
the.lab-_,._
•
peliod to~ (. . . .
the r.ct llilt t h e . . . - . . .

lki'S!ml;!;,urthyds~~:

members of tho Unlverllty;

s . - ---· 831~

in
Albeny
amte
lllmy) ~
promiaed to alleviate the a . - prolJioa (by
.
.
.
........
u-.ty adReiic-JMm identified vanced by UIB) ....,
_.
- aaaet..
to -Not- at ~Mat e«ectiwo
me......-~&gt;
ol ........._
more ~
in~ thnle lll!parllte plans li&gt;r . . fw&gt;ds li&gt;r the I..ibraria. Howlliaaalim&gt; in this .... (Tbe ever, that budpt did - inWeatem New York eon..rt- dude U / B"s ~ for fw&gt;ds
ium, the SUNY plan aod a Re- for the Amberat ......,.J liblary.
Tbe capital budpt enls which
p~~ts pIan), the Pl'alident
su-I his bope that "we am were .-...1 in the ouppleavoid. regional OYeJ'-kill, for the · mentsl bu!ilet, Ketter • a i d,
need lor inter-institutionU co- were beneficial in one - opemtion among bOth public the fisbt to restore them
and private education is an ob- brought the Uni¥el8ity an d
vious one.» Tbe SUNY plan ares lqislators c:lole toptber.
Other areas touched upcm by
for regionalism in this area, be
informed the faculty, is in draft the President included:
form but will require a great
• The inronnation that the
deal more consideration by all budgejed enroJiment for nat
faJl is 22,845. Pions are to enconcerned.
Ketter identified the Univer- roll 23,647, a decreolse ol 739
sity's most immediate financial over this faJI's actual enrollproblems or this year as the ment.
Summer Sessions, the Libraries
• A report that research
and the Amherst campus. The support is up 13.1 per cent for
supplementary budget passed the nine month period begin-

p.m.-Coclttaill; 7: 15

f&gt;:"vid~nn;;:. 1:~ ~

..m. BulWo Athletic Club, NWc... Square (entnmce - Det.ware

~:l.i

t=" ~-~J!i.:t

tralon: J . Sheldon, P. ZU..W.,
K. Burl&lt;.e, A. Wandell, E . KlW&gt;
or MJUY Ban:sU, 831-8181, An·
nette W.W., 831-8221.

SATURDAY-20

=-~h~:~.~
.....,poni-t . Jecl by l.aweD&lt;:e

llope; J - Hurt, actor; Pamela Hemy, OCODUio. 9-10 p.m. .

SUNDAY-14

LmRARY EXHIBITS
501'11

' IOYCK:

~ or ~ ••••
'JJT1 Loc:kwaod Lillauy.
9 -=~ p.m.

Moaday-~.

W'II.LWil _

,

coatimliDir.

~~a...,..,.._

~--a...-....,.:y

aod DO ._~ill UJii..
-.ity films).
• An
. . . Uaiftlllity-eommanity 1lllllloliaDllhips have ;_.....t the
year. One iDdioatiaa ol lllio,
Ketler aid,- the . . . . . . .
ol eitizl!ll8 to .....te ud pulil&gt;ipate in a~ ea.-ity Advisory &lt;Aaacil
• An iDdieatioD . . . the
proposal for Uni-.ity..nde
GovemaDce. with . ll!'risioll8, will be BUbmitted to Uaiftlllity CODIII:itueats iD "a fa))
referendwn.
• Tbe inrormaticm tbat the
not too ....,U-received ~
for University ..........,;.at
submitted by last year's Taok
Fonle on Uniftlllity Orpnizatiop has been "fiied."

NOTICES

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1381831">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451155">
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              </elementText>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

MAY 4,1972

VOL 3-NO. 30

3 Controversial Items
AwaitFaculty Senate
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
R~St.ll

May's Faculty · Senate meeting will start off with the traditional nomination of undergraduate degree candidates and this
may be the only time during
the cowse of the meetiog when
the Senators arrive at an easy
consensus. The rest of the agenda calls for debate on the
merits of teaching evaluation,
on establishment of an undergraduate library, and on faculty personnel policies. Many observers predict Joog discussions
on these three major action
items when the meetiog is
called to order next Tuesday at
1 p.m. in Acheson 5.
First on the agenda is the
report from the Subcommittee
on Teaching Effectiveness, a
hold-over from April when the
Senate lost its quorum. At that
session, Senators changed and
strengthened the first three or
fi\'e motions on evaluation of
teachin g. The suggested alterations strongly endorse the concept of assessing teaching performance by student evaluation. Under the proposed
changes, each class would participate in teaching evaluation
with the students using an
adaptatioo of the Davis, California, plan. Results of this
survey would

~

easily avail-

able and would be "included as
evidence of teaching effectiveness .. . in advancement pn;
cedures_"• These modifications
have to be formally adopted by
the entire Senate. In addition,
the body will discuss whether
to recommend establishment of
a n Office of Teaching Evaluation which would be part of the
Office of Student Affairs.
Personnel-

Tbe second likely cootroversial motioo is a proposal on
F a c u I t y Personnel Policies,
Procedures and Criteria.

Grad Faculty to Consider
A G~R:eview System

YOCates 8 review

that is domin-

ated by faculty input. In addition, it details evalua tion procedures for junior as well as
senior faculty ranks. It also
provides for a clear picture of
where conflict on appoinbnent
or promotion is ooming from.
If a departmental chairman is ·
against granting tenure when
h is department has voted in
favor of it. then he must write
out his objections separately.
Tbe same applies when a provost. dean, or even the president, disagrees with the majority opinion.
Coonolly sees a fight shaping
up over who will appoint the
(Conriluud o n - 2. col. 3)

Ketter, BSU Continue Talks
On Issues Raised Last Week

A set of prooedures for re- • sentatives from e a c h departviewing l!""'uate student aca- men~ne a · faculty member,
demic _...,.,. will be con- the other a graduate student.
sidered by the faculty of the These members are to be ..,.
Graduate Scbool at their an- lected democratically by their
nual meetinc .-1 Wecl.-lay., reapective constituencies and
A subcommittee of the are not to be appoinfed by the
Scbool's Executive Committee depaftmental administmtion.
1-sed by Dr. Richard Koehl,
From this poup, four people
l'biloKJpby, M8 cbawn up rna- who are not from ~Is
cbinery that tries to _.ate involved will be seleded to rethe "dialortinc pressure of per- view a case. One of them may
..... involW!IIalt" from griev- be replaoed without atipuJalina

Tbe campus Blaclt Student
Union at a meetinc at noon
this Tuesday designated six
rep.-otatives to meet with
President Robert L. Ketter ye&amp;tenlay aftemoon at 4 p.m. in
his o8ice for furthos- discussions
em a aeries of isaMS raised laat
week.
Tboae diacussions, held after
Rep&lt;wkr time. were expeeled to follow-up a aeries of
demaDdo, .......... and ooun...., - .
,
a roason and additional.-.. . ter, _ _ ~ laat
BaaicUly, the document out- hers can be removed if a writ- W........_, and 'lbunday be- ·
a aet of formal review teo "c:ballenn for c:auae" is ac- the President and a
proceclweo for redution of cepled. ~ principal in the of BJaeb wbo claimed
pievancoa. However, tbe auth- case bas tbeae righla.
to - t UIB'a Black - on indicate that "virtually all
Tbe Faculty panel's reoam- dmta.
cliopoRa obould, if feasible, be mendation may be
lli¥e - - preaented ...
reaolved informally between the Gradlat.e Scbool dean wbo ~in Room 140 CapeD Hall
the dioputanla."
will then set up , _ review w~,
1 2&amp;, by a
Tbe larmaJ system provides panels for the case. Tbe mem- paup Wbicb
ilaolf '"J'be
for a review by. a department bership and pn&gt;ceduzea to be Black Papulace at UIB."
pjevance prooedure to ba es- f""'-1 by this board are Cbe
They
tablisbed at the . diacn!tioo of - aame as at the Faculty level
~1. 'lbat Black Studies be
tbe ~ti then, if Tbe ~system }.a jur- immediately
lillY, a review oy a committee isdiction . . - all padaate - - full..fledaed Dllpar-.t.
set up by the _.;ate Fac- dent grieYaJicea indudina "but
"1 'l1i.t a teaure and review
ulty divisioaaJ committee « the not ..uicted to violatiana, mi&amp;- procedure be c:rallld to o.ue
dean of tbe Graduate Scbool. in~ or inequital&gt;le tbe miDority people re,....,. ....,..
·
application of any ~of cone ~ in oudl
Tbe faculty llfievanCe panel t&amp;e Uni-.ity, Graduate matlllra • pniiDI)tian and..,_
would consist . of ·- - ...... • &lt;(~ " " - z. col.~)
.f. . . . . .

n-

- * ' ...

A set of recommended prooedures in these areas. was first
submitted to the Senate last
fall by Vice President for Academic Allairs (VPAA ) Dr.
Bernard Gelbaum. One of his
first major d 0 CUm e D ts as
VP AA, the 10-page report outlined a step-by-&lt;itep prooedure
on how faculty members would
be reviewed for appoinbnent or
promotion. Tbe final draft was
given to the Senate's Commitlee on Faculty Tenure and
Promotion \ FT&amp;P) in October. Tbey came up with a revised version which was sent
to the Senate Executive Committee in January. Since then,
a subcommittee of Dr. Thomas
Connolly, chairman, Dr. Solon
Ellison, chairman of FT&amp;P,
and Dr. William Baumer, chairman of the Senate, has been
altering it. Tbe full Executive
Committee also modified it and
finally sent a 15-page report to
the Senate.
Large sections of the document were lifted from Gelbaum·s draft. However, there
are seveml important a ddi tions
which change the tone of the
procedures. The report coming
before the Senate Tuesday ad-

!.f.!:

-=

· ·

...,iabed . ..

"3. 'lbat you becin immediate d i a I o c u e with minority
poup students in profe&amp;Bioaal
and gradome scbools for the
~ of allevialinl their
problem&amp;.
"4. 'lbat ProletllllliB Cllades
Gayles and David Banb be
immediately l'l!lllliJOinle 88 Aasociate Prof-.. with teowe
in the i r · respective :n..-tmenla.
"5. 'lbat tbeae FOUR · d&amp;manda be adopCed immediately
and ' " - be IIWD wberMB a
perpetual ........ be set up
betW.D tbe l'reaidlmt'a a.ce
and Black atudoDIB and r-.1-

!l.:..::\."C"'!:~
~
i th
faculty ..

~

com-

muniattiall and c:banDelo.•
In h i s - ..... 'J'bum.
day, April rt, at 1:30 p.m. in
140 Capen, ~ taucllal
e.:hd. tbe li9e.

--

Coiicslliila tbe finlt, be ..
ported that the Palicy

Oammi"t

==~~~~~
. _ ............ and .... 9DIIOd

. ·~iJnrwwly

to .... iDto . . .

�2
~;BSUOmdnE~------~~--~------~----------(~,__I, col. II)

l'raitklol K - 1lcD ~
l1lat , . , _ i711..- ......
~ Profeat!Jr Baooa 6e..,..
plietl to 1Wa
"Now the. caae of ~
loDon: Gayle. Prof...... Gayle is in the
......._. Bub is m-~y -.aD~~ year of a tlue&amp;-year ap_ . . of a tlloee-year , _ . pointment which ....,. until
~t ~ U~ty. JUM 1973. Tbe~-:
....._•isat-•-hisCXJD- Music bas
.._.
• ._,___.._ but voted IIOl to that aplilmaliaD at the..,..;~...,
poinbnenL The Personnel
his....- that~ be~ Committee of the Faculty of
to -r-.1 "-'daae
. Arts and I - . . is c:unaiiiy
Tbe poGCIIIIaie in ....., aatten
· ·
the caae. Tbe abjecis • .....,., lint, a ~ ~basbeen miaed that there
mental retommeadatlon; lion been
.
'ty _
___. "-db'-in this eilae bas
no mmon
·~~ of Social 8cionces -tioo 00 the two
aad A.........,tioo - ....,..... . eatities whic;h bs~ ~t '!'
JDa111atioo. Tbe ~ of this c:aae. GIW!Il this ai_tuation,
AntbropolO&amp;J' J.a recam- lJ.&gt;Iarittee,
- to~~·~.,ill"b;
;::;::.:~ the Faculty an
on _....., ""'"' •
c-ittee, ...,__., minority """"""""talion, to
._
w rled tbat amaid- study this matte&lt; m ~
en~U:..
of pnJilllltian be delayed depth and to mak;e an -~­
for 8IIIICber year, &amp;iDee Prole&amp;- ate recommendation to me.
aor BaDb is ooly now complet- ......,.
•
in&amp; his third year at this UniIn regard to calls for P"""_,;ty.
dential dialogue with minority
"Ullller tt- cir&lt;:nm•lances professional and graduate stuthe matte&lt; """ before the dents and for regular diaJocue
afl-Uniwni.ty faculty per!IDil- between the President's Oftice
neJ . , _ , the President's He- and Black representatives (deview Board. Tbe Board is mands no. 3 and 5) , Ketle&lt; said
acbeduled to COilSider Proleoaor tbat be has met with students
Banb' case -.ow. It would from Jaw and the health scibe ~ and, in fact. po&amp;- ences and would be bsppy to
sibly prejudicial to Professor continue doing '!"• period~y
Banb, far me to make any or as specific ISSUeS reqwre.
oo this issue until I Other graduate students could
have the Board's recom.,..,.ta- also be included, be said His
tioo before me. I eq&gt;ect_ to re- regular Tuesday morning office
c:en.e this , .. , ...~+...,.,tation , . hours for faculty, staff and stu-JDDmJW.
dents, be said, bsve beeD at(lt , _ ,_, 1aurted that tended l1Y members of the ·mi- nanty c.OOuiiunity and t..:·bas
met with v a r i o u s advisory
groups and committees tbat
bsve been constituted to recomA new tool for social science .,..,.t courses of action on parresean:b is """' availsble at the ticular issues. "I would be bspRidge 1.- Library. The ten- py to explore whatever ammgewlmne Index to the Human ments might be """""""' or
Relations Area f"i!es provides a desirable to improve or regularsimultsaeous topically organ- ire these already e " i s t i n g
iD!d indel: to more tban 1,000 modes of communication," be
sa i d "T b i s administration
obares your desire that these
world--most of them primitiw problems be resolved in man. tribes. Full inslmctioDs for the ners which will provide optimal
use of the lndeir: are contsined beDofit for our minority stuin its intruductioa. The indel: dents and for the entire Univercampiled at N01thwestem sity community."
Uniwni.ty under the supervision of R.d Naroll. now pro- ~-~
Ketter stressed three necesf_,. of antluopolcv here, at
sary conditions for productive
• cost of about $50.000.
discussions
on all the issues in~ for """"'pie, a student is writing a 1e&lt;m paper volved:
"First, tbey will bsve to be
oq abortion. He fust loola; up
the by word, "Abortion" in approached by all parties with
sincere desire to arrive at a
8IIIICber book, aittinc on the aconstructive
solution. I can astable at Ridge 1.- to the sure you of such an 8IJIII'(I8Cb
Indei- book called o..tlUae of on
ibe
part
of
this administraCultural Jl--_ 'lbere be
finds that the topic "Abortionn tion. I look forward to your
collaboration.
is inderal under the by num"Secoud, . . . the CDllllemll
he!- 1147. Be turns to Volume
8 of the lndel&lt;, and loola; you bsw. miaed must be up nlllllber 1147. Here be finds .,...,..,...,.. - OOGilDOil problems,
.,_ 400 eiiiriea. Each entry wboee solution is in the commoo inten&amp;t. We must be willtabs him to • specific of
a different book or article, and ing to examine alternative aoin terms ·of their po&amp;about evay fow1h eDtry turns lutioos
sible merits. .
to
cultnre or aaciety. The
-.ten.Ja .., inderal are tbim~. I fully epee that
the '..&amp;olutioo of tt- aatten
wilt require ..,..uinl( discusRidge Les.
sions. ·At the aame time, I am
sure you will apee;the student
.
_.ticjpants ' in these discusllo.~ D~~jrig sioos must be - t a t i v e o1.
.A..ICUAA.~ ~-- an4 be~ by, their student ooasti-ts. I ask, therefore, tbat you p....-1 to desi&amp;-te the individuals wbo are to
Dr. Rollo L.
provost with U8 in . . _ discusof the Fai:ulty of Educational sions.•
Sludil!s, bas been reappointed
to that position.
Dr. Handy's resipmtioo &amp;am
The poup which isoued the
the post to bsve become demauds, however, found that
elfective .July 1. lnstMd, be the Preaideat's
will tee a lea~ of abaenoe for 10 far eDIIUih. In their ftlply
the 1972-73 -s.mic yi,ar. to h i s . _ , - t e d to;
~at 4:15 p.m., '1'1nuad..Y. .
~ that time there will be
an ~ ~ wbo Will be April 27, the poup inai8lad fur. ·
_,.,.j within the nert (ew
thor that:
..
.
• A1Jy BID 8ludiea :0.'
~t Raben . L. Ketter parlmeut
~.a to indude African
that be is "delighted tbat Studies and Caribbeu 8ludiea.
;;:" flaDd.Y irill continue to
• BID Studies ,._.. be
. ia • paaitioo which be ~ to devWap a .......,
:'.""'lilled with distinction over propam, abould be ....,._ imtbeputhyeam.•
mediate apace far faculty and a
( .-....l

...... with -

w:

--4~~

u.;: ;.,:., .._ -

,_.,_-a..)

.....,_t

FW:u!:

!YewReseordl, Tool

===!=a:
a-

==-~~-~
..

As ~

Handy:

.

The._-.-......

Shan&amp;; Cit.OO
~~-----------(C....u.u-1 fro,. - 1. col. 6)
Ezecutiw Committee is pre-

ByFEAS

Dr. Irving H. Shames, proUniversity Review Board senting a counle&lt; motion which fessor of engineering and ap( URB) which would reView all eodol8eS the c:cmcept but J.&gt;laoes plied scieDoes, bas been given
first Distinguished Profes· tments for &amp;lii!C&gt;Ciate and no time limit on the ~ '!' the Award
by Cbe U/B Faculty
~rofessors as well" as con- · the facility. In addition, It sor
of
Engineering
and - Applied
fticls between departments and urges tbat the library staff and
Faculties owr re-appointment the Senate commi_ttee
to- Sciences.
Given
in
recognition
of disof instructors and assistant pro- gether toward this end) 'lbe
and continuing confessors. The Senate document library staff is ~ to. en- tiDguisbed
tributions
to
engineering
and
empowers the Executive Com- donie the -...d motion smce
mittee to appoint the nine URB they _feel at least a year ~ a applied science education, the
award
includes
a
certificate
and
members. Connolly notes, how- ball IS necessary to establish a
a minimum stipend of $250.
ever that President Ketter UGL.
In
a
letter
to
the
awards
comwanis the board to be selected
In addition to these three
the same way other committees motions there are two other mittee, Dr. Tsu-Teb Soong,
U/ B professor of engineering
are-by him from a list of can- resolutions on ':be agenda. ~ science,
wbo sponsored Dr.
didates submitted by the Sen- asks lor continued financial
Shames
as a nominee, noted
ate. Connolly also says tbat support for study abroad proDr.
Shames' contribusome
of
when the Ezecutive Commit- grams. The other recommends
tions to the University, citing
tee voted on this procedure transfer of ~ Department of as
most
significant,
"tbe qualioilly · one · Degiltive vote was Computer Scienc;e&gt;! ~m the
education be brought 1'.0 tbe
casL
Faculty of Engibeermg and ty
University.
Chances from Common Low
Applied Sciences to. the Facui"'Jbrougb C2lrefully planned
Otber changes r rom the ty of N~tural Sci""""!' and curricula, integration of courspresent "common law" system Mathematics. The move IS "'!P' es, his direct involvement in
of appointment and promotion ported by bo!h .or the Faculti!"' classroom teaching and develractices include·
mvolved. This IS the -...d m opment of pertinent textbooks,
P • ~t of an ad an anticipated series of moves
lrv (Dr. Shames) initiated . ..
boc committee of the URB to by departmen Is and. scbools. bigbly integrated academic proreview credentials;
The firSt change shifted the grams emphasizing depth as
• A set of minimum pro- School of ~t '?'It of well as breadth of mathematics,
cedure requirements tbat must
~~~ Sciences physics and engineering funda~~ in all personnel
U the" Senate fails to com- mentals," the 1 - said
" Furthermore," the letter
• A' required " job descrip- plete this agenda on May 9, added,
"his efforts bsve alao
lion" for esdi faculty member; it will contin~ the meeting ~ strongly influenced the educa• Annual informal review May ~1. starting at 1 p.m. m tional goala of other ~
by "appropriate administrative 147 Diefendorf.
ments in this Faculty. .Judging
officers" for all faculty below
from ~ popularity of ~ ~
the rank of professor;
Grievance
.
books m many other umverst• The prohibition of assil!"sities, I bsve no doubt tbat
ing "significant a~tive (COAtinued from- I, col. 2)
his educational pbil"""{'hY ~
responsibilities" to facUlty on ScbooJ. Fa c u It y or depart.. his dedication to eagmeenng
term• appoAndi!',__~~tu"- of a ment," unfair or inequitable educatioo bsve alao made a aigw"' -w ~
treatment which is contrary to Iiificant Dnp.ct far beyond the
"2 yr. + 2 yr. + 3 yr." system established policies or practices boundary of this University."
of term appointments rather gowrning or alfectiDg graduate
Dr. 8oooK's letter alao intban the two-three year terms students and "an intention tbat cluded a lour-page detailed
riow liven.
bas been demonstrated or made documentation Ul support of
In geuera1. Connolly feels known which gives· rise to a Dr. Shames as a prime canditbat such a comple&gt;t set of pro- - ressonable belief tbat an action date fnr the awanl.
cedures is Meded to provide a will occur which will cause inDr. Shames, who holds de"reaiiODilble assurance of fair jury to a graduate student as from N~ Harlreatment" to all wbo undergo a result of violation, miainter- vard Uni-mty
and the Uni.- n - for promotion or re-ap- pretation or inequitable appli- versity of Maryland, joined
p;,i;b..euL In addition, be be- cation of existing regulations. n the 0/B faculty in 1962. In
Ueves the shift to a "2 yr. + Unique .,_,_
1969 be a yjaitinl( profes2 yr." aet of initial appoint'lboulh the system is primar- sor
at Teclmioo Uni-mty in
inents would give young faculty ily based on existing grievaDc:e Haifa, Isaoel.
a "fi!IIBOil8ble time" to start practices, it bas several unique
He is the author of 12 put,..
their academic 'l:llreerS. Under features:
licationa and his teds have
this system. be feels the -...d
• Extensive a n d o p e n been studied by more tban a
two-year term should be given records at the Faculty and quarter millioo students.
almost automatically with a Graduate Sc:bool levels;
tborougb review coming after
• Open bearings at these £;i-..-, 11.1--1the peraoo's third year.
·
two levels; and
c.ur Ul J J. ~
Baumer, too, strongly sup• A potential for cballengll-:-..J:-1ports review of young facult,to ing pane1 members.
.reriUUIU./Ci
iive them aome ides of
ir
These procedures are "in....,:._ C'-·'-"'- no.-.....__ t ,
pr&lt;lln!9B. This "early review"
tended to enhance the peraonsl
• uc .......,..~ --r--:-:proceas, however, would not freedoms" of graduate students, at Lockwood Library IS asking
IMd to the system of a "rotat- Koehl explains. He believes members of the Uni~
ing bottom" similar to Har- tbat because graduate students ~~~~ used
vanl's where junior faculty are bsve a dual role as colleques
_,__,_
-·'-''-"automatically kicked out after and students, tbey "can get
wuou ...., ,_.....__,
three years, be adds.
·
dumped oo from both sides." is bound. Copies of the foUow1..11noy
The document outlining the ing publications for the years
I.at oo the 8f"Dda is the system tries to avoid legal J.970.72 are Meded: A.maz.
~forqmlinllanunder- .sounding phrases, be notes, Allantic Monthly, COIIUOIOil·
graduate library COGL) CFor wbi1e "attempting to cnw.te an - ' , Co,...._. Repona, Lif.e,
.a C1J111P1ete c1iscuEioo of Ibis • .........., of the need for griey- NaliDA, Natiolltd ~.
~ - Rept/#Wr, April ance madlinery." .
N,_,l&lt;, Nrw Re~, Nrw
27).Tbemoliaa&amp;amthe8ell~systemiscom- Yor-. Pltlyboy, P~
ate's c-ittee oo lnfonnatioo plica , Koehl admits, but this '!:~.·Tll,".:'.!"""and·Solurdayus
N--R&amp;
and Libnry ·Reiourcoe pro. will cause ~IB to ere- ~-·~
~
. - "'the l!lltabliobmoont of u
ate informal pmcedun!s to re- World Rq»rt. U you are willUGL oo "1be Main Street cam- solve disputes before tbey resdi ing to donate these periodicals,
~ .which is U:, be operaU':" ~ formal review level, be be- please call Mrs. .June Cberk.
Within ooe year. Tbe Senates liew!s..
_-..:exL
:::;;;,_4=
3 17.;.;·~

._did- .,_...

'"w::ri&lt;

!':t

Back

as~fill-ms'

~-

�, . , 4, 1972

Alternate Plan Is Set
For May Comlnenooment
Tbe altemate plan for lbe
l26lh Almual Com......._....t,
aebaluled forRotary3
p.m..Field,Suuday,
~ week by lbe

c:::.

tht.

~!, ~.....nber,

a decision to effect lbe altemate
plan will be llJIIIOIJDCild 011
Jadio aDd television by a.m.
on lbe ComDI!!IMW!I!!I!t Sunday.
Altemale IIIIIOIDbly """"' for
lbe eeremoaiea 1111!:
Faculty of Arta aDd LettersClarll: Gynmasium (capacity,

8

3,000).

Faculty of Social ScieDces
and Administmtion - C I a r It
Gym_

of S ei en c e in EaciJ&gt;eeriua;
·~of

Scieltce in~

ip';.¥~m
. ~~ ~

~~'fi:i:k." ...........

Under lbe altemate plan.
candidates will 80III!IIIble at lbe

-ropriale buildinp by 2 p.m.,

..:=.."::

:t..,"'t'Y~;!~

signed Marsbals will
·
candidates (or a
Faculty
will ...
directly to 1be nan lllllipJed
for cert!1111J11ies to ait 011 1be
platform with administzakn
aDd prowBs. Tbe ~ will
desipWe a JD1!111ber of lbe faoulty or administratioa to .-1

Faculty of Educational Stud- lbe
ie&amp;-147 Diefendorf (capacity ~ ~ few lbe Ill&gt;
500). robiDa 100111, 146 Dief- oessMmal..n-e will be 110 ...,_
endorf.
.
Faculty of Health Sc:ieDce&amp;Tbe Clark Gym allemale
Butler Audi......__ " · - Hall plan diffl!lB in that Jllalfoo:m
_._,~
gul!lltB aDd faculty will Jllllti&lt;&gt;( c:apaca'ty 500'&gt;......
• •........, room, ipate ·i n a pt"'"""'*'"'al which
139~of Natural ~ will. atllll!lllble in lbe Girls Gymand Malbematies--114 Hod&gt;~
. - Hall (capacity 300) • '--nent .,.,. under lbemMain
roiJiDg room, Ill ~~Gym_ Tbe CbaDcellor's Medal,
F"?Jlty &lt;?f Ensineerilll and .n-. annually to an ou-..1~ Sciencea- ~ o om 5,
citizen of Boffalo, will be
robiDa ~ (:%_ 400), pre&amp;l!llled at this c:enmonY·
Faculty of Law and Juri&amp;- Tbere will be a recessional
pnJdeDce-..Con(e......,. 'lbeatre,
Nortoo (capacity 300), robing
100111, lbe Cafeteria
When lbe alternate plan is
put into effect, candidates, 111111'shals and faculty should assemble in lbe buildings noted
PIOvosts will award depees
for their faculties as follows:
ARTS AND LETTERSAaociale in Arts; Bochl!lor of
Arts in American Studies, Art
History, Classics, E n gli s h, •
Erench, German, Music, Russian, Spanish, 'lbeate.; Bacloelor of Fine Arts in Art, Art Education, Music, Music Education; Master of Arts in Classics,
English, French, German, Humanities, Music, Russi an.
Spanish, 'lbeater; Master of
Fine AriB; MtJJJter of Architecture; Ph.D. in- Arb: and letters
fields.
EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
- Bochelor of Science in Education; MtJJJter of Science in
Education; Master of Rehob~
Doctor of
Edmond N. Straincbamps,
E
assistant professor of music at
HEALTH SCIENCES: U/B, has been elected a Fellow
Bochelor of Science in Nursing, of Villa I Tatti, 1be Harvard
Pharmacy, Physical Tberapy, University Center for Italian
Medical Technology, Occupa- Renai_...,. Studies in Flortional Tberapy; MtJJJto of Arts ence, Italy, for 1972-73. Tbe
in Biochemistry, Physiology; - Villa I Tatti annually aelecls
Master of Science in Biostatis- m ........,..n Fellows who are
tics, N u r a i n g, Orthodontics; working 011 pojects that rePh.D. in Health Sciencea fields; quire their ~ in F1oremce
Doc4»' of Dental Surrery; Doc- or otber nearby Italian Cenlels.
tor-of Medidne.
Only one fellowship is awarded
NATURAL SCI EN C E S . ..tl year in lbe history of muAND MA'nl: BocMior of Arts sic:.
in 'RW....., a-istry, Ge&lt;&gt;logical~ Malbematic:s,
Pbyaica; ·~ of Arts in
Geakv. Malbematic:s, Pby&amp;ics, B!atistial; ~~~ of Scim Natural Seiencal,
Varsity Basketball eo..b Ed
Matbi!maticl; Ph.D. in Natural
Muto will CIODduct a Summer
Sciencea and Math fields. .
Basbtball
Day Camp 011 camSOCIAL SCIENCES AND
ADMINISTRATION: Bochl!- pus, AJIIWil 14-18. Tbe 811111mer
801J11i0D
will be opon to
lor of Arts in Anthropolono,
boys of all !'P.". tluou!lh lbe
F4m«wn!'"'· . ~~ 8ellior year of bip ldlool
Coach Mutn, ~ momber of lbe UtB pbyRcal edu8ociaJ 8cieDce. SOCJOIOI}'o c:atiOD
aDd baobtball
ap-b; Boehdor of Science m
BMisted by Nodi
Manai-t, Social Welfare; statr,
Master of Arts in Anthropol- Bascbnapl

dJ'd:.':: '!J

0

":,;

l'Di

-

to:::_:.,/!,._&lt;JUMe/.int;

Music Pro{Noned
Resrordt Fellnw

JW;igfuillCamp
Scheduled by Muto

~tical~~:

...'ill"f:"'

"~&gt;'•

F4mcwnics, ~.
Hmtory, Liquistics, Pbiloai&gt;-

phy, Political 8cieDce. ~­

OIY. ap-b; Maoter of Scieltce

in Social Scieltce; Moster of

Buinea
AdrttUU.trotion; · fer of Social Wart; Ph.D. in
Social Sciencea and AdminlatratiOD fields.
LAW AND . JURISPR~
ENCE: JIIIU Docuw.
ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES: BocMior

--

participad:c...::::l

'lbe ,...uh '....
tivity is lbe lbinl aacb JlftlllmD
for lbe Bulla. Bob DomiDc iD-

stituled

to lbe

a football camp,
djolwndnwd

prior

of that

sport hole. aDd Ed Micmel

admiDisleJs a ........ruJ Broc:hures aDd fur1ber inlor- •
lin«
- .,.,-· avU!able by writiD&amp;
matiOD

to: BuiWo BUn. 8akelball
Day Camp, 200 Clark G,...., ew
by c:alliD« 831-29136.

--

Speakers, Circuitln{est£dWdhBigNames
Who Demand Big Abley, StudentL«xkr ~

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

.-n.e r.... ...,

outrapous!,"
Marl&lt; Weiner -,ys of lbe """"'
demanded by natiao..Jiy--inent figures 011 lbe . , . _ Jeo.
twe cin:uit and be's in a position to know.• WeiDer was lbe
moving fon:e behind lbe Sludent~Siu­

dent Asaoc:iatioa (S A- G SA)
Spt.kers' o..r..u wbidllJroucbl
. , . _ 30 ~to UIB this
year. He's left lbe post with bittemeos - . . 1 lbe "'bic
stars" who ask few "too 1J1UCh
IDillleY" and lbe- people who
only to listen to "'bic
llllliMS."

Tbe sums peid out by SA
and GSA are hich eDDillh to
abodt anyoue. Mowment lawyer William Kwaler cot $1,000 for a t&gt;uo-bour _........,.,
last fall Did&lt; Gregory was also
paid $1,000 but be sta,yed Clllly
15 minutes helore stalking out
in protest over being videotaped.
Ba&amp;ltetbaJl ~ aDd span,.

~- Bill Russell spole
for $1000, too, then ran up a
"super...tar" bill at lbe Sip o{
lbe Steer.
Ralph Nader was lbe highest
paid, n!Oeiving $4000 for his
one-nilbt stand WeiDer was
thinking o{ bringing D&lt;M!Iist
Norman Mailer in also, hut his
$4000 fee would haYe hrob!o
lbe budget.
Att.tfar-

Some o{ lbe speakers ha""'
interesting CDDtrads Congresswoman Bella ~ ro.
enmple, wanted $900 and a
new hat.

Not "au lbe speakers are that
high or mighty, Weiner is
quid&lt; to add Fonner football
player Da""' M~ ...:ei-'
$500, hut speot lbe nicbt 011
Weiner's living c:oudL
Most of lbe ~ people
are i-....ted in hearinc are in
lbe $50IHmd-up - . Weiner
says.
This makes geUinc ~
a bi&amp; bu&amp;iDoss, ha fouad.. ~
SUIDilll!l', be out 300
leU.en to people . . . . . 11-.
to ~ Clllly to diacoooer tt.t
1J1IJ8t of 11-. listed with
15 to 211 . lecture " " ' - . Of
lbe ...... is proMbly
lbe American ~ o..-u.
wbidl is aid to do $4
million in boakiiJp ewoy ,......
Wofting with lbe _ . . - is
an art, Weiner .,......._ -n.e
_ _ ....... - ' t dolinilely
----..r lbe . . . ~ there

u-.

!::I::~~-~
m..

dilll!r willoly
iDdividual to ~ t o - - &amp;-oflbe--.., btboir c:lieat's _ _ . .
tian, food aDd lodcinc. W'J.th
othen, it's cbe boat i11stituti0D
that laotB lbe bill
~T. .
Havinc ..._with lbe..-1&lt;..,. -lbe IJicblilht o{ lbe jab.

w..a--. Maaoft~-.wait

to lmlil
!1.7. ,......
hec:a.of lbeafter
........
.._
lliea." ~ &amp;bey ...ny
Jelu, be ..,., aDd ..,.... . . .

find out about lbem - 'ptlllllle..
Russell """" ...Jiy fuJJay with
his tales of his cl.ys with lbe
Celtics. And Hanisaa Soll.i&amp;hwy, of the editors of
lbe N.., ·Ycri TWos,....,.._
isced about his ........ ~
er"' days.
'l1llqh- of his.....,....

-

....., thnJnP _......

WeiDer - " ! radoor work clinoctly with lbe ....,._.._ UsiDc
this ~ ._...m• is
llllldt harder, but can be rewardinc. ha says. Evel thouch
you "h a v e to &amp;t iDio thair
plam;,- usinc this method - erally .......... cbe coat.
Tbe ............... method is
...mat WeiDer I
... ls ....

Help fir Tmdus Is Aim
Of~inE~

�4

Can ManS Gerietic ~Be Manipulated? L~
If
~
~
vzeum as
......u..-

EDITOR'S NOTE: Tile Re-

its future de...,..._.t. It is

_ , . froa , _ . ~

tJJU lllll!ei fDitJ&amp;

wise, lben!lore, to critically esamine past periormance in the

B'"- BioiDtlY" ~ by

ulation. It aumot be merely as-sumec1 that -the rapid rate of
social evolution in industrialized societies bas prcwided us
with values which match the
inherent in genetic manipulation. Value systems are
highly resis- to change and
it is evident that sophistication
in capability ~ not in itself
deter seH serVIng urges. 'The
historical perspective, therefore,
probably oilers the most cogent
argument for defining and developing values which assure
the well-being of individual recipients of intentional genetic
change.
.
"'lbe possibility of preventing or decreasing the incidence
of certsin genetic diseases represents a second major' compunent of the vision for genetic
engineering. 'The n u _m be r of
diseases identified as be i n g
simple Mendelian genetic traits
is greater than 1500. . . _

parter

,ElltictJl
* _,...
•sy,.,.,.UU. "" - area of interplay ~ buaa4 Social Probletu ill man valUM and ....,.,UC manip-

* ,..,uy of ritJ1411Ul ~

..., Jl~ 111fA1 tM Hummist _,..a-. Today: a diaCidlion tllfll ~ on
-~ tM potatitJI af
H - c -." W., COIICIIuk
_., -a ll1illt a 'pro 111fA1 eon
.,.. f11iMr ~ uHtit:1J ""'Y or
""'Y noe Ita« ,.,_ ...u.ed by
tJte Sy-.....in' ·-.--By VERIE E. HEADINGS

-

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

"A ~ IIID'VI!Y of relatively

..,.,.m history rewals that the
in~ in ~tin&amp; man's
. , . - CDIIJPIIIItiall P~
the em ~ molecular biology.
'The _ . . . . ~ of Europe and North America dur~ l9lh and early_ ~

inc

-

II!VI!IBied a distinct

p8Uem !" tbe pri~ •~Jill and imiJII!meDtinll decisiolls
about the - MW:ial ~ of tbe
los~s~~
"
............~
in to operate at the
level '!' ~ ~ ~

~the ~

.. . .

"In some quarters a third
impetus for intentional genetic
change is the presumed deteri-

.....,;:ll;

~o:;. o!,;~ ~":-:, g~~

unfit class....., to be restmined
from____...__. __ while d .. - of
·~~-= to be encourthe
___, to~:_ On an ~~-

sucx:essful ln!atment of previ-

fit

related is the lllated
CDIIIIDOilly
priDcitiall that 'If - don't COD- J&gt;les ol the dipity and welltzol of this fimt, being of the individual must be
someone else will do 80'~ 0 bserved. 'The -roaches
latter ~tin&amp; peraoos or which are likely to serve these
natioDs .of a dillermt pOlitical principles are: 1) Prevention
pel1IUIIIIion.
and tn!etment of t"'- inberit·
ed conditi!""'. ~ b i c b clearly
.. ~ for intentional make ~ indiVIdual J!laladaptgenetic dumge must be aepar&amp;t- ed to his or_IM;r en~t,
ed into two categories bssed 00 and 2 ) ~ashi~ an envuonobjecti
tecbnical fessibilit
ment wh1ch optimizes the perevol~ ilnplications, ~ formance of genes. . . ,
the human values to be served. .
On the one hand we can spesk
''Proposals f o r modifying
of prevention and ln!atment of. genes and their performance·
hereditary disease and on the must be consistent with the
other of genetic reconstruction total well-being of the individof man or of custom made in- ual. This means that the most
dividuals. Unfortunately writ- efficient means of ellecting geners of popular science stories etic change may be unscceptfrequently fail to make Ibis dis- able in our scale of values. . . .
tinction. 'The implication that At the point of preventing deman w i II eventually become leterious genetic disorders the
superman or that we are on the well-being rof the society and
threshold of custom-made peo- the individual are not fundapie requires, as we shall see, mentally at odds with one anan unjustifiable intelleotual leap other. - ..
beyond the advances in molec- Supen1*1 . . . _ . .
uJar biology of the last few
" Proposals for breeding supyears.
ermen founder on at least three
• ·
counts: 1 ) It is virtually im"Propooals for improving possible to predict the new
'normal' man concern ·t hem- characteristics which would be
selves with characteristics such optimal for the human situaas intelligence, personality, and tion in the future, given an
behavior. A major rationale of accelerating rate of change in
2
these proposals appears to rest E!l's ecosf-~~- ) 'lbewouldobon a claimed need to prevent _,.,..-ves o ......., a venture
the species from destroying it- needm
. a substanto
invotiallve feitherra
· ction
. cbangof
thee
self by virtue of limited innate popula .
else
.call
capacities relative to an intion or
a geneti
y
creasingly unworkable man-de- elite class. 'The first objective
signed ecosystem. 'The compll!l&lt;- would likely be frustrated by
ity of each of these three bu- lack of population-wide comman characteristics is a result pliance and the second objecof the interaction of at least tive may foster even greater sothree factors : polygenic inher- cial conflict. 3) 'The producitance, developmental genetics, tion of suppoeedly superior
d
·
·
perso b
ithe · "d selecti
":"
g~vuo~~terac- b......fu': Y e b ~
ve
00
feasibili
"!'-- · 0 of r to tegmdthe
ould J..':{ to~
meanstyp.
ty
a majOr up
- w
uce geno
•c
ing of the human genome let us as well as phenotypic variaconsider the case of intelligence. bstrii~ctty. raThistber
. woultband-~-toevo. ,..A variety of studies have shown
•
~
us that a large number of genes 1ubon by nat u r a I selection
must additively contribute to which in any case will continue
the innate intelligence of an to operate. Man can control his
individual and that up to about own evolution most certsinly
70 per cent of the variance in by protecting his genome fnllll.
measured intelligence am on
environmental hazards and by
individuals can be attributsbl~ ensuring environments which
to genetic dilferences. 'The ef- e I i c i t optimal ""Pression of
feet of environment on mess- each genotype."
ured ·mtelli-~ 18
• -"-~-~ ·m
• - """""""'
8
the observation that suboptiBy RICHARD T . HiULL
~ environment ~'))duces ~
.._.._ """-· ...........,.
~ attributable to "'!"'~C
" . . . 'The speculative view of
yariation. &lt;;onversely, op!iJniz- a society having a place for

F.,._

1\. Tnnrlt..,.rt
J., v~ '5

Help

EDITOR'S NOTE: Thia

ua

report aubmitted by tM Graduate Slullent AJ.&gt;cialion

~~entatioe on 1M FacuJty s:::::;

1nformation llltAI Iibrvr;y ReBOWCeB Co,n:t!litt« to tM E:tecutiue ComMittee of tM GSA
It is run cis his ~· oiewpoint" on
the proble,.. of the Iib1Yllia.
By HENRY M. BUDA
During the past academic
year, this committee has undertaken a long and paiilstaking study. of the University Libraries in order that we might
become intilnately fa m i I i a r
with the problems. It w'as immediately .clear that the Libraries of this University are
in a horrendous slate; they are
inadequate for an undergraduate institution and outrageously inappropriate for a University of Ibis size with its
Iarxe and diversified gmduate
and professional procrams. In
addition, the library baS important responsibilities to the
community and the region. For

GVIEWPQINTS

The JllopaoW , _ ... ously letbsl genetic conditions
to pnwlde • far tho exand from an inverse correlation
- . . . o f - .... nrioly
between intelligence and rate
of tho faclnc tho ~~ institUted a classifica- of reproduction. . - - 'The issue
communltJ.W.-~.;{individuals _
_., __ to of relationship between intellipoolllan p • p e r a - - M
social value followed_by......,
radical gence and rate of reproduction
"ponnlts.
appears to be popularly misoeptive selection 011 the one understood. Genetic evaluation
band and positive selection on • based on a comparison of varyl!l&lt;ample, t!!e. Law and ~th
the other..
. iilg degrees of biological rel.9.tSciences Libraries are unique
"'The history of slave breed- edness and intellectual percollections in the WNY
ing practic:es in the Americas formance demonstrates t h a t
'The problems of the libraris notably absent from most heritability of lQ may be as
ies stem from several factors
dm_._, of designed genetic high as 70-80 per --t. Some
- - - Fint band """"""li! ...,_ .,......,18 of leoa
average
:J!::chdiffi.
· in!J'ti: ~-~
- ~the
oon1 that..,._ N~ Ameriam lnleiligence do reproduce at a
uwou u--'
slave holden; selectively lllflted rate above their more endowed
stsiJ m attempting to cotrect
peniOIIS who__
physical counterparts but ri~rously conthe deficiencies. 'These factOrs
cbaracteristics iud&amp;ed
be
•are:
.
"Uable. to
.ec- -d u c t e d investigations have
L Lack of Money. Specific~Y val
e. Lilr.ewise, shown lbst the average reproally, the lack of adequate funds
m more ..,.,.m ~- a
ductive rate for the entire sibfor the acquisition of current
company op;ra
. m
ship of such parents does not
journals, periodicsls, s e r i e s,
~ f~ ~
diller appreciably from themmonograpbs "and other scholardian
tiooal average. This reflects the
ly materials. 'The acquisitions
_ 8lud
~ fact lbst the least intelligent
budget has been "raped," the
1111
"""""""' sibs of such parents reproduce
bud
IDdiJm liils were to breed slave at less than the average rate.
get allocstion has b e e n
~..:
all the'~-- ,., ....... the
_"Still_anotber. appeal for gen.steadily decreasing (plummet.o.u
~""""
feeds
ing may be a more appropriate
objectiws of the designed gen- ~~tt his in::ill:.'i
phrase) in total dollars, while
eti&lt;; dumges !""" l'! _protect and technological &lt;!evelopment.
the numbers of journals and
~- establish political 80_1- 'There is a propensity to defirie -~n~r-theem~~~t.of..cbildren..eam
man--and~fi:Jred~
publisbed each
perioril:y, or to. amass e&lt;onoJIUC all or most of such develop- f r 0 m depnved "'~ in his place; a society in which year u.c.-_ To further ..,.,,
walth. In no -..ce was the ment as progress (increasing ~measured intelligence the complementluy open-i!Dded pound the situation the priCe of
~~the~ of the power over the outer world)
Ypossibilities of upward-mOving these materials has mc.-1
individuals at 8l:l!b- ~e can and to aroept it as an asset to
success and downward-&lt;lriiSbing enormously in the - past few
ill odlonl. to ...tJmergie. iDtD the human well-being.
~ of E.....-.
failure are forever banished· a yeam. This does not even tsl&lt;e
•• • • • us such painful l!l&lt;•
•
"Finally, any proposition for society in which creativity ai.d into IIClCOIIIIt the funds needed
perieDces, siDce they provide a
im......nna the ,_.;_ must deal seH-determinstion are COD'-'-·- for nmedial _,_.,__ which
key iDBicbt inlo tbla! old fasb~'The~':"!,~:.U or with-d.;~ of evolu- ally encroached IIPOO and'; will enable ~~ to fill
ioDed lmman cbamcteristics of optimal human genotype is 110 tion. Evolution prooeeds on the rificed in the name of ecDDOIJl- the serious pps that esist in
..-1 and pride which ..mort longer credible; however, the basis of a liberal IIIDIKint of ic, social and political or4er- the P""""'t basic coiJection.
their dividouds from the other speculations 011 redesigning the genetic variability from which such ~ view becomes a spectre
2. Lock of Space. 'The Unifelluw.
genomea
dreamwoulisd __!,.
.m, Wlp_!thy enyironment selects tbla! vari- haunting the future into which venity LamuHis suffer at Ibis
1-, .,_,.
....,. such a dn
Huu
ants which in the final analysis we seem to be sliding.
time from an _..nm. leek of
"'We .-1 not insist that his- us.
are translated into repi;Oductive
"Dr. Headings and I obare space (bulb in quantity and in
IDly a1wQB ~ i:taelf; bow- ·
adVBDtage. This DMmJS that in- alarm at Ibis p . _ t . And yet, the quality of the space avail....,.., it is IIDiibly that the his"Finally, the availabilitY of tentiooal introduction of genet-" the proopect, while bled:; does able). 'Ibua, the Lihluy is unIDiy of a .ual pnJOI!IIII, in Ibis new tec:bmJiogies in itself ic variants in4o the gene pool not - - to be bopelaB. For, able to elfeetively oqpmize the
collection 80 a to. e«icicase dooipa for 1J!D1!1tic change, ~ a curiosity and an are 1B!ful for the improvement one's feeling bere is tbat is k*Jly discontinno.., from .....,.,..... to apply them. Cic.e- of the species if they confer an are confronted with a choice Elltly !Me its stsll, non:u it
advantqe in a pariicular en- ~ three.alternaCiw couraes provide adequate -.vice to the
viromDent. . . . For a polygenic of action, a choice forced 1g&gt;Oil .,_,. becauSe of tbe leek cit
trait -1llJcb as inWJiie "" US in all its , . _ _ implica- CODtiguous, u.bie ()n
have· no hiiDdle 011 •
tifying lions by the 8IIIIPicion that, in the liasis of available alandard
the ~ which d&amp;- general, the worst poooible will formulae, the Lihluy Qbould
even the ~ nor- be realized: (1) We may allow have more fban doable the
mal . of human intelli- the bistorical patterns to real- space it J)raiODtly occupiea. 'The
C..~a ~f!:..,~ ize their potentialS by Library is unaliie to......, tbe
indUotrial and poat-indl&amp;ri- tolerating both the uncbecked Pl'I!IIEilt collection (no addi0
__..... • an ____.__..__ advances of acience and ta:b- tiooal boob may .m~y be adal -... 18
nolocY and the uncbained s- ded to Lockwoail, Facilr':..:1i~:,'op"':::; plo~ of ~ by the his- ities Plannintl or ~ it
.._._..__the_, torical fon:a~ of lmman evil; or apinst the ravaias o1 tm.and
- . - ..,.
""" (2) We may reject the ·nnret- enviroamenL The Lihlariea
am be ~ to be tered aearcb for lmowledp "" have a po&amp;y inadequate DIDD. - b i y ~ · on I Y if a witleM .tool .o f the aploita- her of Iader stationumd tbla!
!!:.~(~~ tive 'aubjuption of man by available are 80 poor that it is
inflnct With ' tbe
or, finally, "" !""Y faoe
that anyone is 8ble

;;:;;doo ,.;;t;'if':Nazi ~

u,;;;·

=

po8111!811ed_

-3., .1
ra::::.;::!.,

=

k. -

area

!!..".?.""'

.
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QWJWJJW ~ l4aal ._ . ~....., &amp; ~
CILWIWJIW ~~..._a.__.

...,;
a.,..,...._
=- ·~~
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.
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CJIII!.I am·bi
lbl!
and preilicted fOr the · fu- the· ends· which lmowledp ja
~ ' · · · • .•
= : _ - : ; . b y pladnj tbe
.
back in
"'n order to apply pn- the baDd&amp; o1 tbe paople. I, IUid
etic ~~man's meda, (C""""'-lon- 6, coL.4)

Amhent COII8Iruction and the
confusion attendui . to the
problem of~ to Amherst.
3. 1:.ado of Slalf. Aa a ..Wt
(C~ .,.._7, ~ Jj

�s
Out-of-St:al£
TravelRuk!s

G(JJB

'NOTES
By "D"
1be Carnegie Corporation of
New Yom bas reported a gnmt
of $102,000 to Rutgers Uniwrsity for the study of collective
bargaiuing at New Jersey's
public colleges and universities.
"Mally - l e are talking and
writing about unionization, but
we really don't have concrete
information about tbe way it
works or what~ it
may have for the future governance of institutiODS of hilher
leaminl and•for faculty~
istration relationsbiP&amp;." s a i d
Alden Dlmbam of the foundation's staff.

AreEasro
~

.

- D . ........... jaln
the of Yele U.-wtty _ _ _ _ tte . . _ of the
d eonr-.t 1s - -

his.....,_,-...u_.,

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

of Tlmalhy Dwilhl Collop,
- o f Y - 1 _ . , . . . . _ .....

......

pa1n1mM1t
Ill Y-1
~
__
In
_ I far
DEAI_

..

on clewelapment of new .,.,.,.._
inhi&amp;IW-·
Stanford University will attempt to raise $300 million over
the oen five years io wturt it

U/B's Chess-Playing Wunderlrind' llinputer
ReJresents a Brookthrough in SeveralWays

Special restrictions im~
by the State Legislature em
out-of-State travel" have expi'!'&lt;~ and the criteria for outof-State travel are now the
same as for intrastate travel,
~=~~L. Ketter anHowever; Ketter said, the
Cbancellor has directed that
advance approval of out-ofState travel be required from
the campus president or an a&amp;sociate. Executive Vice President Albert Somit has assumed
this responsibility. •
Procedures for out-of-State
travel approval will require that
requests come to Dr. Somit
from the appropriate area vice
president at least two weeks before the proposed trip.
Approved requests will go
from Dr. Somit's office to the
Travel Office and notification
of approval will be given the
prospective traveler by that office.
Disapproved reque!lts will be
returned by Dr. Somit to the
ares vice president.
Prerequisites for travel approval are: 1. The funds to
meet the cost of the travel must
be available io the Department's buBget; and 2. The purpose of the travel must be in
the interest of the University
and the State of New York.
Rules and regulations concerning reimbursement for
travel expenses, Ketter noted,
may be found in the "Traveler's Guide," a copy of which
should be available io every department. Prior approval from
State University and Audit and
Control is required for reimbun!ement of in excess of the maximum amount
authorized in the rules and regulations. This provision applies
primarily to . lodgiog costs and
conference fees.
··
Travel advances are limited
to approved costs. U such costs
are to be uabove the maximum"
and the full travel advance is
required, a minimum of silo
weeks should be allOwed for
the processing of the advance
approval request.
Foreign travel has always
been and still is subject to prior
approval by SUNY Central Administration and the Department of Audit and Control Approval of such travel is giW!IIl
only in """"Ptional cases and
requests fo.- 8 u c h approval
should be received by Dr.
Somit's office at least silo weeb
in advance of the anticipated
date of the trip.

Hull, de a n of the Graduate management information tool,
School, stated that "the route to determioe liow many wasbof computer development has iog machioes to produce io a
~ .drive ~- by a
been remarkable and extremely given time period. Architectururuvenuty. Officials said an
ioteresting and it g i v e s me al finns are using such computanon~ donor has p~ged
great pleasure to see this de- ers to take customers on simu$~5 nill1ion, the largest. ·~ . Founilation gnmt and manufac- velopment."
lated tours of proposed buildgift S~on! ~ ever received · tured by Information Displays
A unique feature of the rna- ings via the television screen.
from an iod1V1dusl.
Inc., the IDI ioput.&lt;&gt;u.t.put ma- chine is the I i g h t pen with IDI's can be used io road de•
•
chioe can demooStmte sopbis. which the user gives iostruc- signing, control operations, inof of the
ticated scientific principles ( rei- tions after the oomputer has strument landings, urban renation's ecl.-tlanal ativity, ._tive friction ), per- been programmed. Use of the newal, Machover continued.
, . - . . . . - .,. ... fonn iotricate tasks, chart the light pen was demonstrated io
He cited a set-up io San Anomined in • - ' . , . - progres11 of computations, even
a chess game. The program be- tonio, Texas, in which an elecby •
bold its own at cbeas or pool. gan with a chess boani set up tric power distribution center
IUIIinC flmi. Thot 1971-72 . . . _
According to Dr. Nicholas V. on the screen, with the oper- is operated (rom. the oomputer
1,8!1. ~ Fiodler; professor of computer ator's pieces distinguished · by screen, obviating the need for
from 2!10 • :' lions so- science, 1t&amp; installation repre- their greater iotensity. The op- a wall-sized display that would
lnwltod Ill ...,.ticfpot.. Thot
sent&amp; a breaJd:brough io several · erator selected the desired level require switches, meters and
salllry of the - . . respects. Previous to tbe ad- of difficulty and poioted the lights. During recent thunder...,.... from $210,000 vmt of graphics computers, io- light pen at the piece he want- storms when circuits through·
In tha the teradion between man and ma- ed to move, depressing the light out the city were knocked out,
....,.... _.unc buclpls ($!10,- chioe bad been "restricted to switch. A sinal! circle appeared it took only two men to reset
000 Ill $2!10,000 ........., Ill non-ioterruptable messages. It in all the squares to which the
the circuits from tbe screen.
In the field of chemistry, dis$35,0011 1n the the I ike a bad marriage io selected piece co u I d legally
lupot buclpls (more tlwl $1.5
whidl one partner made a non- move. The operator moved the plays can gi~e the experimenter
million -..lly). Solarlel of - ioterruptable statement and it pen to the move square de- great -insight i n to molecular
loul - . ·are - " " ' - was usually aeveraJ days before sired and depressed the light structures.
The principles of relativity
• - • ~ bonelltl- per· the other came around . for a switch. 1be computer made its
......,.. . . , - .
responae." N-. in a system of move after a computation de- can be demonstrated; with the
• · •
"frieDdly iotenuptions and ex- lay. A game score was typed picture· tube acting as the wio1be two faculty unions of the change of advice" between man by the teletype.
dow of a ·train, terrain can be
City University of New York and computer, the bad marriage Text Edllinc
made to move by at increasing
were formally merged April 14, is over.
Editing of text can he ac- speed which can approach the
creatioJ the largest umversity
Also, 0011tinued Fiodler, "io cOmplished on the screen; with speed of light.
union m the nation. The new the area of artificial iotelligence the light pen the user can bacl&lt;Other imagioative applicaof'IIIUiimtion, which does · not and in all computer areas, an space, replace a letter, delete tions include computer-generatyet have a· llllJIIe, was fonued interactive mode of computing or ioaert, set the type io larger ed art, sculpture and syntheby the merger of the Legislative is indiopeuae...., and represents or s m a II e r characters, even sized music.
Confermce, repre8011ting t h e the first big step io the right move the text to a different (auniversity's professors and direction." It is planned that cation on tbe screen, duplicate
other full-time staff members, the new computer will eventu- it, or change its orientation.
with the United Federatioo of ally be u 8 e d in 0011junction The aame techniques can be
Collep Teachers, wbich .bas with the CDC 6400.
used in lioe drawiogs. Equip__.ted lecture!B and the 'It C.. Help y.., Feel ...,....
ment has not yet been iostalled
Forty high school matbemat- .
put-time staH.
c:Jpeniq ceremoniel! ioclud- at the department for providTbe metpd orpnization will ed the cutting of the ribbon by iog hard COPY
barpio for all 16,000 iostruc- Dr. Ben.rd Gen..um, v ice
Carl Machov'er, vice president mer Mathematics Institute at
.
.
tional lllllff member&amp; of CUNY J&gt;!'!8idout for amdemic affairs for marketing, Information Disin DOIOtiatians for a new 0011- aDd prot....,. of mathematics, play Inc., discusaed the appli- U/8, June 26 to A~ 4_ ~..!.."~:!"and~::... :=w~
1be ~titute,. aponaored by United States
to imlnlct. 1be two ~t
who pointed out that half a cations of graphics computers
lllldB, ~ted _.ately in ·millioll dollars bas a 1r e a d y io iodustry and academic areas. the National Science Founda- prove their
tion, will include courses and
.
~19811, eqme AUJ. 31. 1be merg- been appropriated from aovem- He pointed out that tbe dis- seminars
io the tbeoey of num- proficiency "!"!
"" ~ ~
er was nrtified by a vote ol 2.- meat apacies to U/B's Com- plays "force man bad&lt; ioto the bers and probability and atatis- mer "!' ~ts · m U/B s
819 to 268.
puter S c i en c e ])epartment, decision loop," givina: him more tics wbich are part of a program ~tensive EnJiish l..ancuaae IDwhidl nmb IUDIIIII the top iD importanoe, greater freedom leadiog to a special degree of atitute.
the CIIUiltry. Dr. Gelbawn said and ~ productivity, Master of Science for Teacbenl
()pan to graduate and undertbaful t "!'!._compuat
theter ;~~~ rather than d.isplacint him. of Mathematics.
.
~::::...
~Ia; 88 ~ ~
~~
..-..~
Such gymbiosis between man
· western New York high want inteasive ~tramMr .. ~__, L Ri
~leYel. 1be intimately interal&gt;- and machioe "could even~te
tiw ~ ol the computer a social rewlution," be said. ~~-:nell~':
the prosmm will nm from
Science
U /B bas been am help in lllldentanding the
Grapbics computers can save
Y 12 to Aucust 23·
awarded ': w~ Wilson. 1awa ol motioD. It can belp you time and ·maoey, improve de- apply fo.- participation io a
demonstration cia. for the In·Basically the propam is deNational Felloonlhip for the eduaJ1y u - ~ feel cision making, 1 i v e insiahts stitute.
About 25 will be se. signed to ..-1 the participant's
amdemic year 1972-73. A stu- wbat ha=ensm pb,yaica." ioto procaa!ll, and be .-I"as lected to study the Institute's ~ ~ ~mel to
cleat lll8jorina io ..._.,.tiYe Many
ts indudina analytical tools for desipl..
topics and be ~ by mtroduce him to American culpolitica with empbasis ... Latin ~
GeocraPIIY Me- uparticipants.
lure while ·- " " 1 him for
Ameriam hilltory and ~ -chooniml and Eledrical &amp;;g"iBeginnina with a coafiJwa- t-mer
Applications haw been dis- g r a d u a t e or llllllo!qraduate political acieace, Mr. Ri-a- .......... and the School of Med- lion, Machover said, the ..,_
Ortiz will _..t oen ,_. in icine hne _ _ . m- in can then change or delete parts, bibuted to all w-.. New study io the United Statea. ·
Fw;tber iof~tion and apColombia, -.chine .,his dis- 111inf the ,computer, Galbaum pt immediate feedblld&lt; and Yom hilb echoola. and are clue
..tadaa, "Reeatiaalhip Be- ClllltiDaal.
•
.come up orilh a desip.. Gemr- no later than May 8. JDquiries propnate 4PPlicatiaD f.-- for
.
should
be
add.-1
to
tha
ID"the
lntealiiYe EnJiish I..ancuaae
~ Po1itica mel ~in ·
Dr. 8aymaad B we II, vice Ill Motors CorponliaD lias .-1
a Latin American Country.
pn!11io111D:t for re•earc·h . ex- the. ""':,~and·~ stitute's diieetor, Dr. 8tepbea Institute can be obtained
R.
Carior,
M•!Jwmtica
0..
th10IIIh
~~of~ C: _
Mr.
did bia 111&gt;- . , . _ . "the
pti- desip
w....clerpMuate wad&lt; at the Uni- tulle to the N •
Science abield wiper a. W~ ~t, 4246 RidJe Lea J:lumat, -~~~director, 212
RoM,
Buffalo
14226.
T......-1
HaiL
venity o1 ~Rico.
~ Dr. McAlliste.:: _ -~ . ~ the computer • a
calls the largest single fund-

1be new wwuler/iind of the
Computer Science llepartment
is a graphics computer, whose
maio -.:lion is a 21-i ncb
television 8 c r e en. Purchased
through a National Science

So-

w............- .,....

40 Expimrl,For

"Math Institute

Eng) ish Institute
~ =~:'!'"'~ &amp;t f&lt;r Summer

.:::wish•---·-!"t!

caa-

WIWlFellow.

Ph.D:

i::"'P:;u'ii;,.'l

ru--Ortiz

T.f.

u:y·

�~

6

LixJlwood WJl
Pim-up BodlS

vonMoltke Leaving,
Calls 00~ Mature

--

From Faculty

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
In AlJIUSl ol '19'10, the Colo( ita

Jeciate 8ya- r-1 -

....eminc~Y ~en-. Col- ·
~ A anii F were ._u.d lo
move back on CIIJDPU8 and the
system bad 1o appoint a director acceptable lo the administmtioa. Two CIIDIIidalm rejected, but the tbird c:boille.

Dr. Komad -

~tums

Moltke, was

out, be was a
wise choice. Under his 8Ift,.
sPoken !Mdersbip, the Colleciate System ' - developed and
today is a vital, Oll-l'lin&amp; pn&gt;gram. In JUDe, however, his
term is over and the ~te
Aaaembly ' - JIDIIIillated Dr.
Wayland (Pat) Smith, one ol
• the foomders ol C. P . Snow
ColJep,
lo be
hisY"""'
- baW!D't
·
1be last
two
.,_, easy. DuriDI the past 21
months, the system ' - ......,...
...... JIIIUIY . . _ a n d wstbered .........al crises, and DO
doubt will eDdwe ........m .........
But Moltb is optimistic
and feels the system is "mature," """" lboaib it will
still UDdergo groooriq pains.
He points with pride lo a
developing ol ideality
with the CoUegiate System
within the University. "'ur relationship is DO Jonaer boelile,"
be eJq&gt;lains. '"lbings are swted
out now and people are becinning lo identify with individual
Wl.its."
1bere is still difficulty in
"our relationship with the administration," be notes, but argues that this is a ''Universitywide problem." He feels there
is "no sense of direction, ol priorities being pursued. •.• Tbey
have difficulty articulatinc
their priorities." Some ol this,
however, "may be due lo fiscal
problems," be adds.
In the future, von Moltb believes the move lo Amherst will
marl&lt; a " critical time" for the
system becsuse ol the transition from a limited residential
aet-up lo a more eldensive one.
1bere is alao the neceasity lo
plan academic PJ'OiriUDS for
this new _,., be aays.
Another hurdle is the , _ .
sity lo bridge the "geueratioaal
gap" between the people wbo
were instrumental in aetting up
the Collegiate System and the
people wbo will be canying it
Oil. 1be CoUegiate old-timers
muat make room for .......,.....
ers and allow them 1o _.....,
leadership positions within the
structure, Moltb aays.
Ot.ervers ol the system alao
point out a need lo emmine
the 'Collegiate Aaaambly and its
purpoae. This CIOIDIDOil forum
and letlislative unit ' - failed
lo IDlllller a quorum at four ol
its last silt -anp. And it
took almost an bour 1o J'CIUIId..
up the required ll1lllllle.- for the
- t aaasion at wbich t h e · c1irec1or was JIDIIIillated. This
apelbetic bas .,.._.
- t h a n - lo ........ the
need for the Aaaambly and Moltb . _ with the c:aJl for
-..:hare
wt
~the syatem's director empbasi- that it ' : &amp;tn!alths. He beliewB that the
~ ol the. syllll!m are
ita and its edlmoive
u. ol review, an .,.. in wbich
be feela the Uniwaity ill Jam,. '-n-e is DO elfective pn&gt;IIJBIII review at the Uniwaitywide level that I boor ol,• be
........ and b e - the need for

;'1 cm8 •c:ntieal."
.
1be Collegiate ~ aloo
.,..,ndea a . . _ ..._;.! at.-

--

_ _ . needs, be aays.
His persooal needs now are
1o re1um lo his native Germaoy
and be and bis family will be
...ving in late Jame. He bopes
lo continue the collegiate concepts and is toying with the
idea ol aetting up a Collegiate
~ . within a university
After his two yam, be sees
the need "'IIDD'e than ever" for
_.....,. that are responsive 1o
the needs ol people and provide
"811111ething they can plug inlo."

Any faculty member wbo ' books """'-~ from Lockwnod
is asked lo csll 831~ be8:30 a.m. and 4 :30 p.m.
He can lea"" his name and the
location on campos wbeoe bis
boob ~ be pided up. 1be
Libnuy will attempt lo give
some idea ol the time wben the
books will be called for.

3Mre~

NSF Fe~

Three additional winDers of
National Science Foundation
traineeships were lllliiOUDa!d by
the Graduate School this week.
1be fellowsbips provide a
$3,000 annual stipend plus a
..,.;ver ol tuition and most fees.
1be new ·awards are the result
of non-acceptances on the part
of some ol the 12 original winDeiS. 1be awards flO lo: Don
Daniels ( Electrical Engineering ), Marilyn James (Biochemical Pbannacology) and
Cheng-Few lee !Economics) .

Dr. Mac Hammond, English,
' - woo the post of secretary
ol the Faculty Senate, Dr.
Tbomas Frantz, present secretary, lllliiOUDa!d M o D d a y .
"llaiDmond. wbo will start bis
~yaor term on July 1, ran in
an unconleliled election.
Dr. Marvin Feldman was
re - elected lo anolber ~
yaor term 88 SUNY . Senalor.
Marilla Giles, aasislant piOWJ8I,
law, re-gained her post as Feldman's al-te. Dr. Pierre
Hart, Freud&gt;, aelected 88
the other a l -

~Foculty

To~May9
1be Voting Faculty will bold
its annual meeting Oil Tuesday,
May 9, at 4 p.m. in ~ 5.

This seasioa will follow the
Farulty Senate meeting wbich
becins at 1 p.m. On the _..ta
are .,.,.,.a from Preeidmt n..
erl Ketler, Dr. William Baam-

&amp;;...~2 ~acul..:
Faculty 8eDale ofticon and
"Good ol the Order.•

---·
--

..., 22 • Aocuot 2!1, 1,-n

........ . -....a. ....

~9:00--J.O:aDpm
....

: : : . . .9::00.....s:aaPM

~

9:00..... ....

9:00am-5:00Pift I.U,....S:OO ... c:a...d
t:OO am-6:00 ,.... 9:GD-.6:CID ...• a...d

I:GJ _,..PM
11:00 .-.5:00PM
-..c
9:00 ....S:OO ....... 9:00 .....S:CG,...
IEL
a:ao ........ P"' 11:00-...5:00 pa
~ 8:30 -....4:30...
1.:30 em-4:30,...
'8:liD ~ pm•••&amp;:JO ....-5:00pm
. . . . . . ,.~ ....
9:00.-.6:::00pm

HSL

-

.._

9:00-.5:00....

9:00

- -

.....&amp;00,..

--~ ...

..-~ ...

9:0D~ . . .

a....

.,...
_ .JM
__
9:0D _
...s:a:t....
a.....

a.....

........... for faculty .........
... ~t in, Molllle

....--.Many~­

deul 1 I

s a "dual .nioooce'" tD

-~·art and

lll8lltillc -

a ca11ete,
o(

lbair

.,."",. .....

·--

l::OO.....,s:GO.-

9:GD ...s:tDpa

- -----

fur Adults
GetEdAid

�. -,
~
~

Canmmicy Grwp
lbuslmavitm Leadrr

7

'REPORTS ·
ON

GI»EOPLE
OFF-CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

PRESENTATIONS
............ B. BAD. associate
. . . - . . pha,maceutics. " Mech. . . - of Druii Aboorption." Uni-.ity of Rhode Island; ""The
F"&gt;daft Role of tbe Pharmacist in
l'atiood C....." Northeastern Uni-..ily.

..

BEFORE YOU GO

The Office of lJrWaSty Publications Senric:es wiU be
this summer for BOOKS BY THE
FACULTY which will .be., ~in the &amp;pi,.
this WI.
•
will way ftwtly be asking dl!pmment '-Is .wJior ..-s 1D fumistt us with
ir•ca•lllliui• on boob published by faculty during
1971-72.. induding billliognphic information. boolt
jKbls .wJior nMews.
.
HOWEVER. last vew. some faculty mm- ............. the ~ published-that asking

lftl8rinl C1DPY

-··-·liw:

-·t

offices
good
enough.
- - SO-if
you ..n
10 be
sure yolll" boolt
is iinduilad. please send us the infOI"IMtion NOW~You. !P-

SlildtD:
. ,
lmOitS BY THE FACULTY
2!iD ........ ~

c....-

�8

~~
Enrich State
The Slate Edu&lt;atian DoputmeDt bas iasued a study which
reports 1hat the Rep!nta )&gt;10gram of fundiDI academic
chairs at coJiepa and um-sities in New Y orl&lt; Slate bas
made "enormous 01111tributions"'
to the d.....Jopment of bipec
education. The chairs a•e
named in honor of Albert Einstein in the sciences and Albert
Schweitzer in the humanities.
The program, inatituted in
1964 by the Legislature, is intended " to attract the world's
m o s t distinguished and renowned scholars to New York's
lu)her educations! community,"
and, by so doing, to improve
academic excellence and intellectual vitality of the public
and private colleges ofi the
State. A recent study, entitled
"The Regents Academic Chair
Program," points out that ' the
program has attracted more
than 60 eminent scholars and
artists to colleges and universities in the State. As an example, it notes that the funding
of an Einstein Chair at the
State University at Stony
Brook has led to the University's development of the largest faculty in the nation in the
field of theoretical high energy
physics.
The study also notes that the
chairs have attracted at least
$11 million in financial re. sources from private and Federal sources. It reports that
Cornell University alone attmcted $8 million.
Since the establishment of
-t he program in 1964, the Regents have awarded Einstein
Chairs to:
• State University of New
York at Stony Brook, for Professor C. N . Yang, in theoretical physics.
• The University of Rochester, for Professor Elliott W.
M on t r o II, in mathematical
physics.
• Cornell University, for
Professor Ephraim Hacker, in
biochemistry.
·
• Rensselaer Pol ytechnic
Institute, for Professor Joaquin
B. Diaz, in applied mathematics.
• Tbe State University of
New York at Bulfalo, first for
Professor Conrad H . Waddington, in theoretical biology, then
for Professor Jui Wang, in mc&gt;lecular biology.
Schweitzer Chairs in the humanities have been awarded to:
• New York Uniwrsity,
first for Professor Cooor Cruise
O'Brien, in litemtwe and history; then for Professor Ralph
Ellison, in 01111tempomry literatwe and culture.
• The City Uru-mty of
New York, for Professor Arthur
M. &amp;:bJalin&amp;er, Jr~ in histmy. ·
• s~ Uniwrsity, for
. Professor Dwi&amp;ht Waldo, . in
public adminisbatian.
.
. • Columbia UDiYenlity, lor
,....., BadJua Ward J .......
~'tematianal ecDIIIIIIIic deveJopnau. . •

CWEEKLYCOMMUNIQOE
1D .,.-.
ID "'pon
•"'pon
ef- -...;,;
•OpenaniJID--a...-...---~

•
THURSDAY-4
c:antact -

Acc::::a:DI'I'ATION

CONJ'IZENCE:

- - · 1131-22211. far .......

Ex-

plora.tion of Cru-rent Cont:f!pU on

~fi.!fth~~:

cation and Evaluation, Depout.
me.at of Higher Education and
Health Tecbnologjes Asoociation
of SUNY.
8:30-9.: 30 a.m. - Registralion
and coflett hour, Fillmore Room.
Norton. 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p .m. - ·

_.___

~~::.nUs~:~· ~~

Francis V. Hanavan. assistant
professor, health sciences education and evaluation; Bernard R

~u:ifai~~ Willi!:nk f&amp;td:~
director, S tudy of Acc.reditation
of Selected Health Education
Prognuns; RuS5ell Edgerton, Department of Health, Education
and \Velfare.; Claude Puffer, director ol SeU-Study f~r Middle
States Accreditation for the University; Robert }{jrkwood, executive secretary. Commission on
H.ighe.r Education, Middle States
Association of CoUeges and Secondary Schools. 1.2: 30-2 p.m.Lunch. 2--4:30 p.m.-Information
sessions. Specialized and Profes-

s -.

!llan 6)· la/rared
... - - 4:lli p.m.

w---..-.-by-

c::aaM!AD a a u L•: Robert

J.S. - . ~ Baird. 8:30
....._ fiee.
-

NOTICES

sional Accreditation, 231 Norton :
Institutional Accreditation, 234

Norton..
CON1"1NUUNG DENTAL EDUCAnON# :

Dr. E.V. Kasper and office staff.
OOicf: /llan.tJgf!ment for Dental
Assistan.ts. fee $25, 146 Capen,
tel. 831-3806 for infonnation.
SU&amp;CIC.U. ASPECTS OF CASTROE.NTER·
OLOCY: sponsored by Department
of Surgery, School of Medic ine.
Visiting authorities and members
of the Faculty will discuss recent
advances in surgical t reatment of
di~ of the digestive system.
The Parkway lnn, Niagara Falls,
tJu:oul:h May 5.

PODIA THY

'I"EEEPDONE

LECTURE# :

Marvin D. Steinberg. Osteoarth riti.. Osteodystrophies and OsteOchrondit is of the Feet . sponsored
by RMP, 40 stations, 11:30 a.m.
MEDICAL TECUNOLOCY 'l'ELEPlfONE
LECTURE#:

Anne Morrissey, Clos-

CIIABAD SABB.U'B SIIIEVJCES• : serwices and meal. a.a'-1 Hauoe,
3292 Main St., 7 : 1.5 p.m.

lN'I"££tNATIONAL FOLK. DANCING:

In-

struction in basic steps duriD.c
lint hour, 30 Dieleadotf AnDeK.
8p.m.

Karen Hems tein, piano. Baird. 8 :30 p...m....
f..,.,.
SENIOR

RBCli'AL• :

SURGICAL ASI"ECC'S OF G&amp;SDOEN1'I'JtOLOGY : see Thunday

1.istinc.

SATURDAY--0

tridia Toxigenicity. sponsored by

irwin
Kugelman, Environmental Protection Agency, Present Accomplishments and Future Projections of
Advanced Waste Treatment Tech nolo'y, co-sponsored by Faculty

ENVIItONMENTAL WORKSHOP:

,

Shirioy

--

by

RMP. 40 - . 7:15
a.m. and 7:15 p..m._
fUSI'Dl L E C T U a It SIID:S:: Dr_
Georze P i men t e l profe.ot of
chemistry. U.u-.sity ol CaJ&gt;.
fomia. Berhley. la/rared s~
LT'CMCOpy. 70 - - 2 p.m.;
Chemi&lt;al EdaaJtioa. 10 ~
8 : 15 p.m...
JIIEDIC.U. IIIDXm8 'ILK# : Smaa M.
oonod

sponooftd
2 p.m.

bY

RMP. 40 - .

PATBOILICY SII:IIJKAa#:

fael

:!x!""="u; as~.~~r:liDtt~

La-

profe.ot,

Dr. Raf-

....-...u

and diredor ol saq:iaol )IMW-

OCY.

ColaaoiJia U.........,.. York City, " " " - lrlllioryfje
145 ~ 3:311 ...-.

Army Corpo of Engineers, 111
Hochstetter, 3 p .m.
PHYSIC!J COLLOQUIUM•: Prof. Jonathan Reichert, A Search for the

r._..

FACULTY~~:

Works by~--­

~"::"",Srof"oii!l"n:fw~:U t':.

..,.. t'uJJft. &amp;Mft - . . - liam ICadle, ~ •I i •• - .
Baird. 8:30 ...-. fiee.

1
Hodlstetter, 4 p.m.; refreshment.
112 Hocbotetter, 3: 30 p.m.
FILM••: 'Loct · HOrizon (U.S.,
1937), 140 Capen, 7 and 9 p.m.,
fiee.

THURSDAY-11

Slanillc RoaaJd cOlman. Jane

WyaU, Sam Jalfe. ~ MitdleiL Ilindod by F111l&gt;k Capra. A
piaDe c:anyiuc _
.. oat ol
war-tom China craabea in the

==:t'" ~~et ~ ·U:

s=rLL

-Pubapo
- We in
.n ,..0. oat ol
~ 140 after tbio loDe and
tiriJIC-.... • • . .

-m

....... :

R.N_ P"&gt;~ " - of
C4n of the &amp;u-a.d Cllild.. -

Dua;an.
Ginmok.
Sr..
MaJy Kenneth
.,......_
.........,
M. Huttsell Pro6lr-. Cliaic:,.

RMP, 40 stations, 1: 30 p.m.

_ _ . at the Dental .,.,.,_.._
tian.
The .8cbool of Pbannacy will
' - 17 of ita paduatiDa iDm at a )lnmo:h at 11 a.m., Sanday, U.V 14, · at the Fillmore
RomD, N...- Uaion.
The &amp;bool of IIMlth Related Pi........ will haDor 18
at 8 :30 P.DL, Sundq, Ma;y 14,
in the Fillmore Room. Dr. X...:
Delb Edber:t, eliDbl ..._.
tar in lepl medicine and aoc:ial
and ,....mve medicine,- will
be tbe
epeabr.
The Sc:bool of Nuraiaa haoored ita paduatinc ..uon at a
llimilar """""""tian April 2li. ..

WEDNESDAY-tO
N1liiSES

--·=
=--- . . . .

SUNDAY-7
MmjarioBainl,
8 : 311 ...-.

MONDAY--8

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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!Uit1 [J~Url Plil~tu:m·~~ tr!i~(!(!!·mJ~iliJli!J~l~J lHJ;t:unr~ Ifail u~~·liU;Y;F}.~miUlJ~t.9f;~~1i!!U

r

"::~.:t~l1i~I,tuah;rr
maHmi~r;tl:~i!fH
t·J!iJf·it{ ~l(lfi~~~r~.nft'l IHirbi!i :!bril ~t·~ ~!~ iii~tl[t.•t--mtm~liij.! f
~~. tJ·CJf(,. •lUi h:JJltJ[ =ht lllf.i~rl!.t l~ Jl.trl'' ~rr,~·~ah Jlt1gr~ •t ~Jius {·a;.,t •It I· r'l'i/l. ~ .
rl.

.( ru :J:I r1U ft.~t~~~4l.r.Jitfr ~~~.mir H.ti~~I .o ~M~,,.r~r-lh 'r-l~hh• •l,t! •• id~ .m1 ~~~rl~lUhl.f

.m .I~H~1 r•!r!J~ IU!:flihl ti!~!U,fi~ftlil; l,;isl~: hrf1 . ~mh.•bk dl ••~1..
. l'lf~M hf!~fr'~dr ~ ~ ~~~~~~Jnl~~~ . i Inn 't~ fil at~[l ~ g.rHll [ifillll ~ !!U lrllll6Jt i. tJ'f~HU~i ~l· t;[r rl.ll;:fJ~tit~'
·r a!Jflfif t:lltlitil ·~(' 'J l"t~Jr Ua•IJI i ~r.rw·r '*l rW• l..pr•f jt•.r t i'"Jf!Ut•'~•tir!. I ·i ..
:.;,j~r~F~n~~:l;i,~i
f. ·i;~~!i ~!~: i.fi!hiH IU:IHiftl~~r~:~rl!iitl ill~i!i}~~ ~,uiu~i! 'iS!t!fi!i!t!~~ !
~td,, dt!ffj u o.!tlr bd:~ J!~,~~rr~mt.ld,~ iibdf~!r••l n~.~.,h l rHmlu:b~~!~~J!r~lfr[h !
: J •z-~ 1• tl

·

I·

y

ir

g.l

I

�Minority Plan

Discussed at
DUSMeeting
·~ Friday'a Division of
Ullllerplllluate StudieB' COUS)
Sprinc Faculty JMetiJic mvered a wide. ..._ of topics
includinc tbe 8/U Jll8diD« ay&amp;tem. tbe prDIJI'e88 01 DUSiluperviaed minority_........ and
iDboduction of Dr. Walter
KDDz, new liSIIOCiate dean.

Tbe lllliiBion tidied olf
by a ._rt from Dr. Robert
Grantham, also an liSIIOCiate
dean, about t b e - - Ullder
his direction. SiDoe be WBB appointed last _ . , Gnmtham bas been supervisiDs tbe
I..atmiD&amp; Center, EPIS (Experimental Program in. Independent Study), Upward
8ouDd. and tbe DUS _ . . , . ,
advisors. Tbe 8liiiOCiate dean
bas been working, be aaid. to
briDa the minority PI'OIJI8ID
011to tbe aame eaJeodar as tbe
rest of tbe University. He""'pecta that by September there
will be DO dilJ"""""' iD eruollment and registratioo datea. In
addition. Grantham is instituting an exteDsive ~ and
e...aluatioo PI'OIJI8ID that will
start this IIUIIIIDel". It will provide iufonnatioo about tbe type
of students iD tbe minority
programs and accurately record
their progreaa.

FolkFestiml
- of the
cold
-Folk &amp;God
--Flopplnc
. . pert
-.1o
- --on--.The~lilt
of ...,..._ Incl.- puts Earl

- - .. _ ... T1lou!lh - • .....
~-Doc·-·""-­

the - · put .... bod ·to the mo.k.

2.000 people •nd ct.mp -

Grantham is very ·
that all tbe minority

timistic
:Ji:
are

"be&amp;inniDa to really .....n: tuetlier." 'l1Us unity will "proa better minority PI'OIJI8ID
as ,..,u,.a. benefit tbe other as-

C

pects of tbe University," be
pointed out Tbe """"""" of
tbe EPIS PI'OIJI8ID "piOWII that
other folks can liaduate from
colleae. too. even thou&amp;h !bey
don't quite tbe ._m,d
SAT IIODftiBo" be a,d&amp;d
In ft!~!ly to a qo..tion about
tbe I..atmiD&amp; Center, Grantham

~,:-~...:~

writiJI&amp; ~and DBIIL Tbe
Center is looltiJic for totora iD
tbeae- who will be paid for
their 'Milk.
Dean a.rloB Ebert · criti-

Grad Evaluations
Started-Will Deadline Be
Met?
the
evaiuatioo,

Over two yeara qo,
Graduate Scbool faculty approved a
moCioo • ._.;ring that formal
evaluatioo
graduate proIJI1IIIIII by an outside evaluating
team be cooducted by Septem' - 1972. In January of this

or

used.·in m a k i n 'g budgetazy allocatioos."
Originally, many departments
were against tbe idea because
of tbe huge amount of work
involved. When Sociology was
preparing for evaluation, it took
a faculty member and two stair
people "a full month" to generate tbe required report, Dr.
Theodore Mills, former cbairman of SociolocY. remembers.
"We looked 011 it as harassment," be aaid. "since we were
&lt;&gt;Y1!JWO&lt;ked .w-iy." But as
tbe document was fleshed out,
tbe deputment "discovered a
lot of ~ we didn't reaiize we bQd. be notea.
What ca..-! all tbe work is
tbe required "description of
"
this document
areIncluded
at leastin"""""
or
D.eats

year, Dr. McAllister HuU, dean
of tbe Scbool, eet a deadline of
Ma,y 1 (or tbe initiatioo of tbe
proceoB. Witb tbe deadline ooly
houra · wbetber. all tbe
IJI8duate
IJI'I)IJI8I::S will be evalc:imd faculty . . actively
IIUIJIIIIftD&gt;I DUS ...a-ity
pro- ~~._s..&gt;tember date is
Tbe call f a r - in tbe ..... -~
Almo8t hal( of tbe ezistina
m
pnJIJI1UD8 are well into tbe proTbe dean ....
IKulty .,.,., Dr. Alme Payne, acting
and lltudllllta who add ..,...._ 8BICiate dean, ._rts; howafter tbe .-m..e dale. He ""'!- this does not include ally
pointed- tbB lbil ...,_ of me pnJIJI1UD8 in tbe ·Healtb
Admiooians and . , _ . . a ad Scimcea. Olll,y BJ&gt;-b Com--it~ ..... IDIIOi- dlanjcatioo and tbe Soc:ial Sci&amp;altious detailtr.....ipla- ...... To belp """" M - . Program s t iII eicbt
alleviate Ibis libmiaD tbe ...._ -..,. to be evaluated in tbe inc~ from tbe general
Facalty of Soeial Sc:ieDcM and ratiooale lor tbe pnJ1J11UD to an
line . . adda a-. ....... Adminiotratian.
Tbe FacaJty of entire list and description of
np ID
~ and Applied Sci- . COUJIIe olferiap to tiD emmina- - will be ewoluated all at tioo of libruy~ in tbe
elfeet ....
.... fall Tbe l"acuutial ...... It is
by tbe
of Edaattiooal S t u d i e a and Graduate
thet tbe vilae
m..t .......... - _ . . . ~ 8c:ieac&amp; and Mathe- of tbe faculty be included as
laealty ..... ..... • "'ad&lt; of malial ..... ...0 ... their -..y. well - IJI8duate atudeats' eval~
~:- ~ =-...:..tbe~department
and I - . -...! tbe eva),..
Alter tbe _.,.tioo and
tioo
of ibe ...,_..... of tbe "description
~-.-liDO­
....
of Ibis trPe of ".-le"' ..____ta lbeoe will Pftlllabl
or tbe ~-" ClOIII5 tbe visit
_...._.ill;l!--....,.1.
;-"~ ia tbe fall
y of h~ton1. There are
call tbe ...Jiy lluee - two from the
~
......_~the
.
part of outsideandooe fi'Oillbere. This
-•
Ylll'ieo, ...__., depeodiDg on
A . . . _ loodl8ll Dluer.- ....,
Oae oullpalra ......_of tbe size and compleDty of the pro. .................. IWIMil-

"fb,: ::J

_...te

....

.r.:- .a.'::=~-~~

_

....... ..
.....................
_.........,.iatbeir- :....·t-

NewGSAOtl'mS

W=wt.t -

During a two-day stay 011
campus, the team begins tbe
evaluation with a briefing tn.u

the d e a n of-· the Graduate

School. After that, tbe group
has meetings witb tbe depart,ment and Faculty members,
graduate students and other related people. At the end of their
stay, they are "de-briefed" by
the dean and ha.., a final meet-

ing to begin worlring 011 tbe
written evaluatioo ._n
In additioo to actual evaluatio of the program, HuU points
oui that many departments receive invaluable consultati..,
services. Most of this iuformation is picked up tbrougb informal conversatioo with tbe

~~D~~~~

sional committee, DOtea. This
proved especia).ly valuable, be
says, to ~phy, 'lllbicb t-1
recently staited a PhD. progiam. Tbe evalua.lors, who t-1
long exi&gt;erience in tbe area,
were able to point out pilfalla.
A copy of tbe completed evaluation is sent to tbe depart,meut c:hainnan (or reply. This

Athletes Honored
Eleven U/B student-athletes
ba... been aeJected to in tbe 1972 edition of OuultuldU., Collqe Athletes of AmDiaL
'The leading campus aporiamen are: Ric:bard J. Albert,
baaeball !lbortstop;Curtis Bla&lt;kmore, record-holding babtball

~
~~-~ seJ!i: !-.!;.;: ~..!":.:.~ . !':; c-~..::::·y= ~~id&gt;eel~=
............ Bab Da1aa is a - - the Uaheaity is ..;. .......... ... the ....,._t hockey aoaJie; Dale E. Dol-

.......... Ibis ........." Al&gt;y- This lilt -, reviewecl by tbe
Ieading - · hockey;
witllblthe ~ ...........,. - · "'ti a..laate School a..laate School E-=olthle ~ K. Goody, hockey d.
Colmnitteewbicb.,..._lillll! f!!DOIOID8D; Eric Knnutila, 167..t_,.bew_._ID ........ .._,t Nally ._. the to ......... the ...taa&amp;iaai," be ~ The ~ lb. 'lmllltler; JlliDI!II P. Mohan,
an-~·
.
poiala oat Uatil- the .....,._. eJwhawn then I l l - the ..,tier; 'l'boDBs Paulucci, 180Tbeoll..._ ........, ........ far ftUatioo J.:w bad- luator caadidala UDtiJ be bea ord-boldiag obot putter; An.....,. the eNiaalioD the _ . . . .......__ Nat, a tbooy Policare, beayyweipt
·~
, (a.-ical .,...._ will , . . be empty fanaal iDritatioo is ID tbe ' W'I'OBIJer: and no..,las E. RUt....,• be - - .._._. of -the team by the ter, l$h 'lmllltler.
vice
• • ........
Ballia apliaiWic ahaat-- dean of the Gnoduata 8dxlol..
AnDOOn a - '- of their~
- - (Sclbeal of ~ ......,. an the ........._ tJY For their • ....-.... evai..- tioo- made by tbe 8Gard of
the ... of the faD ........ . . of $100 Advisor8 of ~ Calplaa......,. ..t .-dian lep Atblela of A-x.. an
Jahn a.--l(I'Qd'nstl . ...... that the ..._.. with
.aadad ......... ~ ...........,. _ _ , . 111'11 ,looltiJic ....-. '""' illlide .......... ~ ...... ........ ~
at
...,_-.............
..
•
'l1ley
...........
and . - dian ·-- lilbed ID boaar tbe •tiaD'a
-IY).ar-..
n... GriMa (AIIIIuapalo- .,. ooe of_ the imtna- plaa ......__.,
~ collep athlelea."
~---ofllle"w.k

J= . .__ ..... .
a-

::..:"~.Jc!~

a-.,.

.:-e...riam

reply, tbe
and tbe
description of the program, is
then to the Faculty's divisional committee for tborouch
review. This review along witb
tbe three other documents is
&amp;nally sent to tbe Executive
Coounittee of tbe Graduate
School wbich makes a recommendatioo of full approval, conditiooal approval or rejection to
tbe vice president (or academic
aJfairs.
So far, no evaluation bas been
rejected though "in """"' d.
partments certain restrictioos
have been recommended," HuU

says.
After review by tbe _ . . , . ,
vice president, tbe I'I!IJUits of

tbe evaluatioo are sent 011· to
Albmy.

~m

J)ispayat~

Tbe .-It of • --year
collabollltioo . . . _ artiat Jim
D i De and phuCacJaplw Lee
Friedlaador, an ......... portfolio of ~ and etch~will-be ... edlibit in~
lGbby tbroulh Ma,y 16. Hoara •
are 9 a:m. ID 5 p.m., MCJDde,y

tbroulh ~-

Tbe ...............

of~

...._ imaplo"' in bladt and
white. Each pair of imqoa a photosnqlh.., the left and an
et.c:bin&amp; 011 tbe rilbt--flllt illua,
tratiac eMil other but d!!llaitely IDMilt to be aeeo at tbe IllUDe
time. .
Tbe .........tine ~ made
by eMil with the odiK in mind,

lws part of tbe individuU artiat
in it: Friedlander's nllectiaas
lloat upoll tbe pbotocnopiJs; the
handa, feet and tools in tbe

--boloociDDD..

-DiDTs painW.,

. ts, llook!&gt;
and aeulptum can 'i:"found in
the permanent CDllectioaa of
............. His Child'e
Blate-WaU ia in the coJieclioo
of the -AibriPt-Kaox
A ......, ofFriedlander's pbl&gt;lillpqllja of parties JeeeDtJ,y1leld at tbe M.._.. of ModArt in New York City.
Tbe e:dlibit is &amp;p&lt;IDilOied by
tbe Olice of Cultural Affairs.

�4

~'

April 27, iP72

.PmblemsciHurnanB~ NorinativeEthicc; &amp;Public Morality
EDITOR"S NUI'B: Last ....Vs
"Sy..,....... 011 Bllliall ,.,.,
Social ,.,..,._. ia

a - Bi-

their ..-..in&amp; or application.
We do bow more than earlier
_.tious about what ._.ae

olottY.~ - - ' ~ tAe F..,_ .-1. ~lot'! at~.~ ~
lilly of N-..1 Sc:iao&lt;a ,.,., ~ ..,..,.. • ...,., ......
~~~,.,.,
u-iot . . baditions, wbich
........-. ...,.,_., a lllitle if in .-1 of some refwbisbiD&amp;.
,..... of tAe {roltli6 ,....we- are by oo means deed . : •
of 0111' W.... TAis .....,., t1oe Tbere are . . . some startiDc

*

Reporter ,._,.,. ,_,.(TOM . points. Where they will take
a , _ ,.,., ~ 011 us we will oot know until they
"NtJnMli« Elllits ,.,., hblic have been followed throoJch."
Jlaralily." N- ...-: a .&amp;- c:.11 tar c:ulliool ,.,., ~ Problems raised by devices
-~ tAe Potalitd of for the artificial maintenaDce of
H - Ge.-" """ a ~- life. - t i c counseling. U....WO

in6

*

mlin

fertilization. genetic surgery.
cloning, drug therapy and electric:a1 stimulation of the brain.
o-- •
other scientific advances,
"'t is quite palllible that, in ~ said. pom.t io the
. ~ the elhicaJ .,......... .-1 for re-eDJIIID81ion of norof the life ..,.,._, the doml&gt;- mative ethics and public morcratic political meCbod is the -ality.
!at We have and all that ...,
First, the choices we make
abouJd aopiJe ...." Dr. Dlmiel
CallabaD, en-. !Dsti- of """'· particularly in genetics..
Society and the Life ScieDces,
~H........ N.Y~and ously and perhaps irrevenlibly
formes- editor of C""'-1. limit it.
8l._tad in his ...
Second, the increasing com"Ni&gt;IDllltive..Etbic&amp; and..l!lmlic '"'-'ty of medical and b:...l-'.
Morality in lbe Life ScioDcos" :;Idevelopments means
at laat ...,... "Human BiolocY"' lbe public, for the most part,
symu~um.t
IS
. t h e - he-'-'
will cmiy be dimly. aware of
....
~
their social mailing and im"then the !at patb to follow plication&amp;, less able to judge
would be to altlempt to mai- what is "aood or bad"
mize public information and..
Third, the J&gt;(JIISibility of difbate, submit ....m.c issueB to fen!nt and ~t ethical
courts and ....,..._ ....... standards existing between the
~ and hope for the medical and scientific CIIIIIIDUAt the lliUile time, baooe¥er, ~~~the iarge~~ty
" aometbing additioaal is ' - ' - . ......,~mutual t..~
eel As a slartar, I do DOt bo&gt;Fourth. although medical alieve that, in fields as intimate perimentalion on human 8llbjects to develop future techno~
..... .............,. ,....... lotlies will be carried out 011 a
laws
ptofessional codes will ~-•un•--... ..__,_ the ~-•
suf&amp;ce to produce &amp;ellllitive etb.... ~~ ...........
..........
ical bebavi«. EverytJ.q am- ~e~=;::::
be ..=::!:tedomdomd;,!\= !ems which cannot be ignorell
might well be badly crippled if simply because tbere was oo
an· altiempt ...te to i&gt;riDif ~
all acts UDder legislative or
A number of acbools of_..
Jepl 0011lnll"
tar etbical thought further romBut, he asbd, "if it is agreed pound the problems, Callaban
stuklltalt 011

conference ,..,_ t1te Balfalo

LDbor COIIIIAilt« """ l'ODBR.

::i"fu~ ~..:: ~

"'ib'.:t

.. bl'=r. __. __,:. .:. . __.
:!..,

"'· - . .
the public wiH save money
through a cortain policy, then
that policy is the "ethically
correct" one to tbose wbo believe in "primitive cost-benefit

~"~~=:.t~':'!

variant of "professional ethics"
_ " that's oot our responsibility," " if we don't do it, then
someone else will," " that's a
political quiistion and rm a

theolo«ian."

A T- -

• TrW

"'n one sense," Callahan admitted "it is a tribute to the
freedom available in our society that tbere can be such
.
-'~-'- m1~~a public
etbical """""""'
and critical forum. But at tbe
----------- ·

:!;.~tya..:,SStolilf.~~Y~

the- exwarilltJ
of the --.:the_.

..... lllpaotar . _ ... tD . . . - a farwn far

_ , . . , _ .... -

_....,.... we

co m m u n I t J.

Wlllc::orM both

_....papers--. •

~'--~
this

w...,....,.

redineedible towelaskter

w
l
_ le
lC

of opinion. together witb tbe

~ C:..~orlaw~ =t.,; ~kesn-:~1=:,; =J!. ';.~ ': ~:~

all......t to
tro1 all CllDIIud, out of the contert of some tradi- setting for coping witb ethical
good beba,: is DOill!lbeless lion of religious morality- "be- issues of the life sciences. . . .
still desirable, bow is such be- cause I am a Christian," or "be'"'be sometimes spoken and
havior to be facilitated and en- cause I am an Orthodox Jf!!W." sometimes unspoken premise is
..........,.t? And what abouJd be Tbe "emotive" scbool takes that ethicslly one position is
counted as JOOd behavior?"'
"gutaf~g"ventionalist'!"
D?r~acboolative as JOOd as IUIQiber, a kind of
Tbe wey idea of IIOIIDiltive while
~~
easy110ing ethical ge n iali t ;10
ethics and public morality, be accepts a certain behavior be- which is politically highly servsuggested. entails at least two cause " that's what eveJYODe iceahle in our kind of pluralistic
important 888WI1Pbons. "ODe doles." "Empirical conventiona- society. Indeed, it is, up to a
is that society, particotarly in lists," Callahan said, go further point. Tbe question is what is
confronting elhicaJ issues of by relying on the results of pub- the point? It may be objected
the life sciences, would profit lie opmion surveys and "simple at once that to even suggest
from an altlempt to develop utilitarians" talre their stands tbere is a p o i n t where the
some ODIJUDDil core of eiJijc:aJ "because they are believed con- ethical diversity, informality
standards by wbich to frame ducive to the greatest aood of and freedom cease to be valuthe problem, and pooaibly to the greatest number."
able is to raise the specter of
set some outside limits to acAnother and related cluster the dictator or the public imceptable answers. U that at- of schools can be fuund, he said, position of 'conect' thinking.
tempt ......-led, .,.... in part, f o r malting judgments about But while history bas e v e r
elements of a public morality pemoual behavior and the re- taught us of the hazards here,
micbt be found. Tbe lll!lCOild solution of so c i a I conllicts. it is oo less true that few of
8BllllPticm is tbat lbe eftort "Bare-foot ci vi I libertarians" us are willing to really follow
would DOt be in vain.•
believe "eveJYone should do his . through in allowing ·everyone
Tbe altlempt wouid be val- own thing" as long as it is to act as be or she sees fil Most
uable, Callaban COillended, and "booest" and "sincere." "Gross of us do oot find freedom served
there is oo , _ for completa ~tarianism" holds that by a 'live and let live' tolerance
darpair. '"'I1lere are cortain tbose public aCts and laws are -..rd anti......Utes, racists,
val.- ._.. ......... ...... rilbt which_ command majority ~t manipulators, inif they do DOt ahrQB qree em support. U 1t can be shown tbat duslrialisls wbo pollute the
water and air. We are forced
into this position if only becaUHe it is rarely possible to
honor all values simultaneously....
"Let us consider, in the con~....::::-=.
~ ~~ ~ ten of the foregoing remarks,
~=t ~..._.,~~
ia-2J.J.250W...... . - . - some of the issues I mentioned
at the beginning. . . . Haw are
... lnSt'UI' &gt;lDWUirD
we to determine, and then act
up&lt;m, our obligations to future
......u::=\.~
-tious? Reftect, 'in particular,
011 the possibility of pre-....aw
ROIIBRI" 1". IIAJtLB'I'T
sent genetic interventions which
may Significantly and irreversi·--~,~au~..._
bly influence the genetic conJ
stitUtioDs of future generations.
.....,
JOBlf ... CUN12DR
Whatever "" do, it will not be
with lbe . CODIII!Ilt of tbose fu.
~
ture generations; nonetbeless,
they will have to live witb tbe
snrr&gt;a1fT' AIPABS DJl7'0R: s.... ,.;...
fruita, hopefully good, but posco~ a&amp;n"OKS: 1 - .a..~~ s. ·~...,

--

o-=• .,;,_
......r-:t

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

..... .

~..........,.,.,

~~JMi ~: . . . . . . - - -

.. u

:_~;rth': ~':i'si~~

lion to let the matter be decided
by individual scientists, tbose
technically eapable of malting
the intarvenlion? And what
would "" be willing to count
as a aood ethical , _ for
running unknown genetic ~
witb the welfare of future generations? 'Ibat some - l e
'feel' that it would be acceptable? Or that, by their reckoning it would contribute to " the
grea.test good of the greatest
number?" Or that, since the
topic is controversial, each
scientist should be allowed to
·make up his or ber own mind?
Or should the matter be put to
public vole, going ahead witb
the intervention if a majority
approves?
"I am- not interested at the
moment in judging the validity
of any of these possible re- ·

if the oolion of 'the )ieople"
controlliDg acieDce is far DIOft!
attractive than that of ~­
tarian govemmenlll, tha .-.Its
micbt be eqwilly delelerious for
the quality of scientific wom.
Even """'· basic -.c:h bas
been harmed in this country by
popular praBW"e in and ...
Congress to fund 'only relevant' researcb.
"Still another limitation is
that, unless there is careful
thought given to the elhicaJ
issues before decisions are made
by the public, tbere is 00 JUII·
rantee that the decisions will
be Wise ODeS."
Nonetbeless. he aaid, it may
be the Dest metbod we_have.

Bl..J:!.lJ!: ~

::1:

(.:e"~,:.:,l~~

is· .;;b.!~
~~
tbe 'ethical geniality' I men- metbod by which"" shall evaltioned woUld constitute respon- uate the uses of science? I
Bible behavior on our part as would qree with Dr. Callahan
a community, in the light of that ·w e need to insist upon a
our possible obligations to tbose democratic process. I would ...,..
as yet unborn? I seriously doubt sist entrusting our destiny to
il At tbe very lesst, future gen- a group of behavioral scientists
erations would have grounds for who claim to know what is best
condemnation of our behavior for individuals without their asif they discovered that the mat- sent, or to a group of Pentagon
ter had been decided on the experts or Party bureallCnliB,
basis of the unexamined 'feel- or phil"'""""" kings.
in ' of a small minoritY: A
Tbe uses of science should
soFution which all......t each be open to critical scrutiny.
scientist to make up his own Here political and economic
mind, willy-nilly affecting the factors intervene. U these queslives of otheiB wbo will possibly tions are resolved by an open
have no c h o ice themselves · process tbere is less likelihood
about the conseqUences they of abuse. What is vital is th&amp;t
will live witb, might seem no there be an informed citizenry
less·capric;ious.
and that scientists re8ect on the
"'The question of different moral and social uses of their
and discrepant ethical judg- discoveries. 'The mad scientist
ments between physicians and wbo is morally insensitive to
patients poses oo less vaing the need of oth&lt;!rs or politically
dilliculties. Part of tbis prob- illiterate no longer is defensible.
!em can turn on different stand- Scientists need a fuller training
ards of what is good for the in the broader wisdom provided
individual, witb a conllict be- by the h'beral arts and they
tween the patient's judgment need to develop some procedof his case and the judgment ures for peer evaluation and
of his physician. Another part review of resean:h projects.
of tbe problem can stem from Public: - l t j l
a conflict between a physician's
I am uncertain as to what
judgment of what he awes so- Dr. Callahan means when be
ciety over _against the claims of says that ...., need to develop a
individual patients.. .."
"public morality." For I am
Callahan asks: ''Haw should fearful of the possible tyranny
we as a society cope witb these of a philistine majority telling
problems, when it seems that scientists what they can or canhazards await us no matter oot investigate. I am IIPPII!benwhere we turn?"'
sive of public moral prejudices
Polltlal Solution Less Adequ.te
im
·
a dogmatic creed an
n..n It ~"'
non':forming scientific invesOne commonly proposed so- tigaiors. Presumably, Dr. Callution - the political solution laban doesn't that. U all
- is, he emphasized, "less ade- he means by a public morality
quate than it appears."
is that what we med is OODtinThe·general concern. be said, ued public inten!et in lbe moral
"is that a way be found for the uses of acieDce and a commitpublic to have a greater role in ment io a free and open prothe estsblishment of acieDce cess of evaluation of tbeae, then
policy, in the determination lll "" do, indeed. .-1 a -...hi;...
desirable lines of researc'h, in morality." But would ~
tbe application of new techno!- be a democratic and pluralistic
ogies, and in the development morality and should this oot
of professional codes of con- allow for the widest depee of
duct. Tbe spirit behind tbis "elhical geniality" C0111l01l81lt
concern is commendable" but witb. the public aood? I llllreiY
there are limitations.
would be opposed to either pubOne is tbe fact that consider- /"lie opinion or ..._..._.tal
able education and sopbiatica- legislation ~-aciiiDtific
tion is often required to UDder-- researcb.
?tsnd what may ~ at_ stake.
Tbe real danpr, I reiterate,
'When even 9&gt;&lt;- m different • is not scientific -.c:h but
b~ of SClence cannot keep · the uses to 'which science will
up Wltb or understand what be put by political. ecooomic
tJ:teir. coli~ in_o~ ape- or military mlen!sts. Tbe dancialties are domg, 1t IS ~ ger is that these may be exa_ ~ot to expect the ordinary plaited for immoral ends In
Citizen_to do any ~tter."
the last analysis, the !at
.A~, the reality of muc;h antee against abuse is full crit~entific_ work_ !lt . the frontiers
ical discuasion by the OODIDl\Dl·
IS that 1ts SCleotific status is
ity of scientists and the eduof!en . h o t I y debated among cated public.
~entists themselves; ' 'Tty' for
But tbis does
t deal •tb
mstanoe, to get any conaensus
no
WI
amoog biologists on whether _the fact, however, . tbat· tJ;lere
and when it will be possible to ~ over 140 BOVerelgn nations
'clone' human beings."
to~man~,:..._u;:rMoreover, Callahan stressed tbougb we in the United States
that tbe progress of scienoe in may decide not to develop the
the_ f!l"dem ~ bas been the SST or to . clone a new bmed
~rwt m _part of &gt;ls freedom from of h~ otber nations may.
•deolofcal and governmental 'The broader issue that scientifcontro . "y.&gt;herever science bas ic technology now faces, there-.
been . sub~ . to governmental fore, is the imperative need for
s anctions, 1t bas suliered. Even (Continued on /Hit&lt; 7: coL I)

iuar-

:,'t.,!:

�s

. . 27,1!112

tvn10II - . E

-

.... 22.1~

-

........_

-- ---

STUDEirT STA1VS•

-

- ·~

t

TUfTlCWI CMAIIQE

..

UTE PElt

- . r a IIIJIIM

OfkY. -

........_

S ISO

f 1075

U1 .50

800

1300

21.75

43.50

~ -- · · ···· ····· ··· ·· ·· ·· · ····· · ···-··-- ...........--·-··---···-···----······· 1200

ISOO

40.00

50.00

zooo

53.50

M .15

21 .50
26.75

35.75
43.50

__._Lwei c.o..- ···················-···--·---·-·····-·-···-····-..................... ·········-··•·················· 40.00

50.00

....-Division

158 Hra.

IDf . . . ., ········ · ······ ·······-···

._.._
(Mare ....

~

-··-···· · ··· ···· ·············-···--··

51 "'-.I ···························-··-··--···········-······-···

...

--·······························--·---·····-···--·-----···········-·-·· •aoo

~~

sH.Js

~~

22 Grad Sttderts Wm
Wxxlhnn Fellowships
.nm.en.

'lbe lint
of tbe Hemy
M.. Woodburn Fellowllhip&amp; ....-e
8IIIIOUIICOid I as t wee!~: by qr.
McAlliBter Hull, aclioc dean Of
tbe Graduate School The 22
rec:ipienls will receive $4.000
J.2.moDth fellowshiP, plus a luitioa waiver.
Competition for tbe 22 spoiB
lllmo&amp; Dr. Andrew Holt,
c:hairman of tbe selectioo&amp;, noted. 'There were -113 applicants
with , _ departments reoom-·
mending c:andiclates..
Hull was ~ at tbe
__ ,.h.... of ~-~-ts ..... ~.....
..~y

ICJ0-200 t..l
'"--1
3CJ0.400
500

ec..eo..r..s ·······························-·---·--··-·-·-·······························································
•.•...........,____________________________________________________________________________ .

·~r- - ,.,~'Wiii...,Fcr1ZOr...,.s.............,or~

hr1-r - - Sludenta A..,__. Far F-- n- 12 s _ _ .

tto.n 01 er.A.

-- -T.....
.---T---'- -- T.-.,_ ·-u----T----Divlolon
-- - ·--u-

STAlE U.IYEIIIIITY TUITIOOI FOR 1972-73

- '

-T-f...,

Income

" " - ' : T....._ Schedule- U,._-IMII Low• 01visior.

550
550
550
550
550
550
550

20.000+
12 -20,000
8 -12,000
15- 8,000
4- 15,000
2 - 4 ,000
0- 2 ,000

0
100
100
200

300
300

350

-T- ·-20.000+
12-20.000
8 -12,000
6 - 8,000
4 - 6,000
2 - 4 .000
o- 2 ,090

0
0
100
200

150
050
050
650
650

300
300

450

..- 65~

f...,,_
-T-

-

inkya (Cbemical ~)
Bradley J . Arbeitmlul ( ~

ic:s) , Christopber BoUas (Eng!ish), J .C. Chi (Chemical Engineering), Stanley Fimer

650
550
550
450
350
250
0

-

0
0
0

11001
11001
11001
11001
11001

100

0

0 ·.

0

-

Tuition

800

20.000+
12-20,000
8 -12 ,000
6 - 8 .000
4 - 6 ,000
2 · 4 ,000
0- 2.000

0
0
0
0
0
0
200

600

800
800
800
800
800

0
0
0

100
100
200
300
300

0

600

2- ~

0
0

12501
12501
11501
11501
(1501

300

100
100
100
200

0

0

600

700

600
500
400

'501

'

01

Far~•MUdeN:•. abnclUpperOiorie.ionSchcNnhip~ Pn:~s~r-

'*• ......

~ Upper

This ct.t

~in

hom $1 ,200 a:oording lo R:ome ........ forproleuionlll grad·
OMsion Setdlrship Incentive Progqm lrol'l'l t1 .600 ecording IO fM~ity il'lc:ome:.

110....., Yoft..stae

,....._who do ftOI ._,. •

R..,u

SchcAt~ttC» .

Higle- Tuitioo.Rates Are Effective May 22
In order ID aid students unEffective with the beginning
of tbe 1972 summer _ . _ , der tbe bieber tuition acbedule,
tuitions for the State Univer- tbe State will c:ootinue tbe
sity of New Yor1&lt; will iDcreaae. Scholar Incentive Propam and
Tuition rata will be hilber for . State UniYersity Scbola!sbips
and will, in addition, initiate
a State UniYersity tuition waiver for tb&lt;.e wbD qualify.
&amp;ion.
1baae studenta wbD bave
It is more important than
.......t 56 credit bows or Ieos .,_.,
Uoi-.ity officials say,
bave bem ~ted "lower
students apply for Scholar
division" students. 1baae with that
IDCI!Illive
Aaaistmxe BS aooo BS
._., tban 56-credit bows bave

u::..:=in~

poosible ID assure that they receive awanl certificates in lime
for .Fall registmtion. Otherwise,
cash payment will be required
at tbe lime of registmtion.
At present, U/B bas not received any more detailed information or iDstructioas. However, it is hoped that more information will be included with
tbe pactet•for Fall pre-registm-

tion.

="~ted "upper clivi-

Tuition for graduate and prof--....J students will also in"""""'For tbe aummer, matriculated
lllldergraduates will be d&gt;arjed
tbe hourly rate as either .upper
or " - dMsion, ba-t em tbe
.,..... code ... lbeir CWTI!Dt stucleat data form - ._..ness of
the courae level for wbic:h they
"'lister. Graduate and professiooaJ llludents (ex&lt;:ept law)
will be ~ tbe graduate
hourly rate. Law students will
be charpcJ tbe pro!essiooal rate
because lbeir _....., provides
for grantioc credit -..1 lbeir
law &lt;!epee for summer III!S8ions

courses.

Non - malriculat.ed students

Startmc -

fall, pbannacy
students will be able ID earn
a IDIIIIIeJs depee in business
adminislmtion at tbe same lime
they are worldn&amp; -..1 ·tbe
bedlelon
pbannacy.
This is beinl made poosible
•L-...a. a - . combined de~........
-pee procram receutly set up
andby ~-~t.ofSixPbarmacyyears
of

in

........__..,..
study will be required for its
completion. U taken - ! e l y,
lhe pbannacy procram would

._me five years and tbe busi"""" propam. another two

eara.
Pharmacy students c:boosing

::! ~~~~~~- - ~~~-twill~

courses as electives in t h e i r
thin! or fourth year. 'Their sixth
year-efter they bave ~
tbe pharmacy depee-will be
spent entirely
tbe School of
Manqemmt.

in

In lliiiiOUDCioc tbe combined
propam. Dr. Ri&lt;bard Bnmdenburg, dean of Manal""""'t. and
Dr. Micbael Schwartz. dean of
Pharmacy, eq&gt;laiDed that &amp;tu-

deilts

graduatioc with tbe two

degrees w o u I d bave diverse

areas of: career apecialization

available ID ~~MDL
Said Dean Sdnrartz: "In our
nation's rapidly ....alvioc hmlth
care systems, hmlth prof_._
als
with
aophislicated
ment
Bkills
will ....... _ im~t . roles ID

=.,::tonurn ofw;..,a22str;:
ners, with each receiving seveu
out of a poosible nine votes.
Each applicant was nominated by a depariment and three
leUem of recommendation as
~~ a transcript were reAll hut three of tbe winners

~c!!.:.'!.t:t!.) :"' e I

Also 8IIIIOUIICOid were 12 winnem of $3,000 Naliooal Science
Founclatioa tmineeships. "They
are: Osmanno Carosa (Civil
Engineering). Anne C. J:lool&gt;.

van

(PsycbOlogy), Catherine
Frantz (Biology), Marsball .

.UL!! students.
Rudich (Anthropology), Tihor
n.e winnem an,. Milind AJ---Koertveiyeosy cAnthropologyl,

Dlvloion

BOO

"""""""'

are aurent

550
450
450
350
250
250
0

0
0
0
0
200

...........

and praised tbe faculty-student
committee Oil lbeir cboices. He

hie &lt;Microbioloc'). Mi&lt;Mel A.
N y Ian (H.ialory), ...........
Popan (Fn!adl), M i c h a e I
ReopiDrf ( Fn!adl), J a n i c e
Sc:hultz (l'lliJoaapll,y), Marpret Scoville &lt;Music), Ricbml
Sips ~), C hris
~- (
· ), Tracy
Taft (
) , Anna Tan
(Bioc:hemistry), and F. Cbriatopber Zusi (Medicinal Cbemisln') .
...-A lternates are: Mindy Cohen
(Enllish), Stuart R&lt;Mimd
(Computer ,scieace). K. Afimiwala (Aeroopace En •
• )•
Trudy Nove c k ( r = ) ,
MarsbalJ Hurlich (Anthmpol- ·

fill w

Trudy Nove c k (Statistics),
Charles P I e if e r (Statistics),
St':'art Rowla!&gt;d (Computer
Sctence), ~. Rummel
(SpeechCommunicaf:i&lt;Dl. W"!·

stein

(~ Engineenng), George SidM!lman
(Mathematics), and William

puler Science), Steven Lewis

Walton ( Sociology) .
The two NSF alternates are:
Donald Daniels (E1ectrical Engineering) and Brian Shero
&lt;BiolosYl-

(Cbemisby), Martin Finkel&lt;Hieber Education) Nadine Goldberg ( Mathematics)
Sister Eva Mary Hooker (Eng:
!ish), Kwok-Pun Lee (Com-

( I'Bycbology), Paul McEntire
( Mathematics), Bemioe K. No-

ter ~too

LakesAreaMedirolProgram
&amp;ffiu?s $1,490,185 Grant
A grant of $1,490,185 has
been awarded ID tbe r.kes Area
Regional Medic a I Program,
Inc., by t h e Department of
Health, Education and Welfare. The UtB-hased program,
wbic:h encompasses seven Westem New Yor\. cxiunlie&amp;-Allegany, Cattamugus, Chautauqua. E r i e, Genesee, Niagara,
and Wyoming-and Erie and
McKean in Pennsylvania,
serves over 2 million individuals.
Dr. John R.F. Ingall, I!D!CUtive director of tbe Propam,
said the awanl covers a 14month period of operation from
Man:h 1, 1972 1D April 30,
1973. Funds will be used 1D
continue present hmlth-related
projects and initiate new ones.
Regional medical programs lire
primarily oonoemed with activities ID increase tbe availabilitY
of quality hmlth care and make
tbe delivery of h e a It h care
more ellicient.
Projects currently funded
are: Telepbooe Lecture Net-.1&lt;, a private telephone sy&amp;tem linking 42 hoepitals and
oilier stations wbic:h provides
continuing education programs
for all hmlth disciplines; Tumor Service Registzy, a oentral-

ized COillputerized registry desiped ID supply~
w i t h ooofidential cumwative
data on canoer patients; Information Dissemination Service, wbic:h provides free library
services ID all hmlth persoonel
in tbe reiion; Chronic Respiratory Disease Program, a manyfaceted, COIDprt!bensive project
featwin&amp; screening and training or -hoepital per&amp;ODDel, a
home care program, and an
A!Biciate Arts degree program
in Inhalation Therapy; Model
Piocram f o r Comprehensive
Family Health, a family practioe Center In Bu«a1o ID be
used as a model ID demonstlate
tbe elfectiveness of family phy.
sicians; Allegany County Mobile Health V ehlcle; Compre!_&gt;ensive Continuing ~ f o r

Chronic I11nea;, a project geared
-..1 tbe inner city population; and Master Plan for Planning and Articulation of Allied
Health Educalioo, to identify
manpower needs, lzaining programs and develop a master
plan for liolring professional education programs based on Deed.

The name of tbe program was
March 1 from ReMedical Propam for
Western New York 1D r.kes
Area Regional Medical Program, Inc.
.

cban&amp;ed on
gional

Cmfermre S1ahrl
On.Aocreditatkn
"Current Concepts ... Accreditation" will be es:plared in
a May 4 campus oonfen!noe
sponsored by tbe Department
of Health Scieuces Education
and Evaluation, tbe Jlepartment of Higher Education &amp;Dd
tbe Health TechnolotPee A....
ciation of State UniYersity.
Principal participants
tbe
clay::10nc event, ID be held in
Norton, are R....n Edgertoa.
member of tbe N"""""' Task
F...... ... Higher Edtacatioa
wbic:h produoed tbe _ , _ _
sial HEW Report em Higher
Education and is CWTI!Dtly
studying tbe prooess of accreditation; Robert Kirkwood, emcutive secretary, Commission em
Higher Education, M i d d I e
States Aaoociation of Colleps
and Secoodary Sc:hools; William Selden, former eDlCUtive
director of tbe Regional Commission on Accreditation, au- ·
thor of tbe basic study on accreditation, and director of tbe
Study of Selected Health Educalional Programs; and Claude
E. Puller, U/ B profes110r emeritus of economics and director
of the recently-&lt;X&gt;mpleted Study..
on Instituliontil Accreditation
in Higher Education sponsored
by tbe Federation of Regional
Accrediting Commissions of
Higher Education.

in

�April 27•• 1912

6

Rreruitment
Group Seeks

2Elections
For Senate
Now Underway

CoordiDator

Bellota for two FIICIIlty Seaate electioos are due wilbin the
week.

T"""'"""' is the deedliDe ill

tbe Faculty Senate ~
election. Ouly aae C8DIIidate,
Dr. Mac Hammoad. EacUob.
ra:eiwd eDIJUih JWDjnetions to
be pWal 00 the t.llot, bat

_.,., is left for a write-ill ....,..
iDee. 'The job of -=retaJy includes lal&lt;iDg aDd cin:uJatiDc
minutes of the EDc:utiw! Committee aDd the Smale. In ......
lion, the -=retaJy is ill char&amp;e
of n!iationoliipa wi!h the coordiDation of grievauce . - ,
aDd I1IIIDiDc Seufte electioDs..
'The -=retaJy preiidos at inp of tbe EDc:utiw! Committee in the dJairman's --....,_
Votin&amp; for SUNY Seaator
BDd lWo alternate positions will
be ""-! Monday, May 1.
Apin, then! is oaly oane DIIIDinee for ..:11 of thea positions.
Dr. Marvin Feldman is aeeking re-election to the three-year
oenatorial post. In Ibis position,
be represents U/B at the IJuee
annual meetinp of the SUNY

=...=

n.

C:..Ul, Dr•

...,._.,CAL_.

~

Industrin1 AssociotePlan
Offers rOn-Job' Ei1urotion
dents
to inBy
dustrial
SUSAN ROBINSON KING
u
.......,.
,.,..-...,
........_
lo&amp;titute or AeronauA sl rona uti c s, Dr.
For four years Tom Diegel- tics

practical espo6Ure
discijJlille. Through tbe
American
and
man bas been a student of en- Soonc developed ties witb varJiueering at U/ B, studying ious ...,u-s on tbe Niagara
formulas, solvinc equations 3Dd Frontier, aae of whom il; Dr.
......ting a b o u t aeronautics. Phil Reynolds of CAL. Industrial Associates was a natural
outpowtb of these contacts,
says Dr. Soonc. Industry needs
says.
Today, after those years of well b3iDed, educated future
scbooling about tbe maybes, be employees; future employees
is seeing. through experience, need esperience.
that maybe a + b could eqwd
UQ Fall the Industrial A&amp;a future.
sociates program began to jell.
Tom is lal&lt;iDg part of his ll is DOt a new coooept. only
fiDaJ amior semester at Cornell new to tbe BuJ[aJo area. CorAeronautical La b o r a to ry nell I.eb was sure it could make
( CAL) where torice a week, be a CODtribution to tbe s tudents;
_,.ts his days with Dr. Paul tbe quesliou could tbey
Motyka, a CAL ...,n-, wod&lt;- make a mntribotion to tbe lab.
ing witb variable stability sy&amp;Bad&gt; studeut ill tbe Induslema.
trial Asaoc:iates program has a
Tom , _ witb Dr. Motyka proleasioxm? advisor as well ' as
..:11 Monday BDd Wedneday aae faculty advisoc. 'The entire
JIIOIIIiDc" to - ap priorities for thrust is - . . 1 iudividual a t.
the day. He ,_. the . _ for teutioo. 'The faculty member
attadinc a particolar problem bas
primauy ._mility for
aDd lhrougb his wod&lt;-imoohe- t"YBBuatinc tbe results of tbe
wif:b Dr. Motyka_ aDd wod&lt;-study program in wbicb
..:11 studeut must _ . . , an
o
h e r - he
thetdevelopmmt
ofcan
a problem indMduaJ projed report. 'The
aDd the ......t.iDc out of a eo1u- '
tion. 'The _...., aets him ~ ~ participates
m the padinc aDd m a It e s
..,__,_~ .
___...,_

-:..n~ :S:!.,"'%/~" ":

S!:.te
tees. In addition. be is a member of both the local FIICIIlty
Senate BDd its Executiw Committee. Feldman is a member
of tbe Psycbology Dopartment
BDd bas been at U/ B since
1948.

Marilla Giles, assistant to tbe
provost of tbe law Sobool, is
aJao I1IIIDiDc for re-election as
SUNY Senate alteu.te. 'The
primary duty of the p.t is to
fill in for the rqu)ar SUNY
Senator. Ms. Giles is a rommember of the SUPA moecotive Committee BDd is c:urft!Dt
cbainoomau of its o . . - Committee as well as a member
of the Uniwnrity-wide Gowroance Committee..
Dr PierJe Hart is .-iDe
~or the other SUNY SeDate aJtemate J!08l.. He bas· ""'!"" at
U/B for tiw years aDd • an
assistant .,...,_. of .......
ill the German aDd SlaYic Departmeut aDd a member of the
Faculty Smale.

WI-

*' rletjmw

;;;;d_':"'

m ---........ ........
'The wriable stability system

tl.e..._....,._.,

~~~1,~·=

as-e

fly1 . . IBJ' «
8bodtle Vlloida.

v-

~~._.__ =~=~.Pte.

~--::..-.:a

., ~

,__.....-liar . . ~

;;;;;;;r...

5
of the .A
. Ma,y 5-41. 'lbat .............,

'"TheA......... !"iilca1Jectiw .......... a
a
oaajar ~
"'.....
a,.
..... itt

131--;:.....,...,;;;. ... a-.

.................. &amp;p.ellla&amp;tie Vebidi. "'Y...d -

.....

tbat IIIia ........... .....

-.ld-JIIoea ......... Jta

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

I - ........
Tta.
..... .....
is~ ....... .........
cate auda _
_ . .... • · "-c:iabea, .......... , . at
...., _ . , . far ... ...,._ Deed . Dr. ..._......, ..__
llf'lodjw de
2 ., IIIia . . . . _ "' - ~
... . .

the~
m.t-~_. ......

ad~~;...·
I

Ilia. At

.....-: ........-..~.... it.-

en on Campus.

12Nursffi
Win Honors

uate

~Mrs.

4"5
4M

"'"'"

,.,..
·~

~15

12:2!1

12S
125

L-15

~

1!15

..

ut10

U:JO
. liM

'"""...
,.. 12S
.,...
"15
.,.... · 1:11
~15

l2o05
lUI

l:S

4:45

"*'

..,,
..,..
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7:»-•

8:10. .

(.Psydliatric.. NuniucJ; aJJd
Mr-. Sanoh
HuiJIJan! (Community Heeltb Nuniuc&gt; .
'The Au. Wa!Ur s...,bua:b
~ Awuda: MiM Marlba J . N ....... (lllllior); and
MiM Gay ......_ MeGe,e
(paduate lludeut).
.
'lbe 8tudoDt CGuucil'.a Au.

c.

'(- ).

Wa!Ur .....,_.,Award: MiM

~.:-=
•

Clinical Praotlce A....Z: MiM Lisa E. MiDk
(juuior).

. may b e - - t h . . . . . . . , . of IJuil&amp;llt anllclpetlon to_ ... the -

nut Man:IL

of the

IJuil&amp;llt -

In -a special issue of ·the
JohM HopltW MO/l&lt;lZW, Pres.
ident Steven Muller sees pUb. ·
lie: suspicion of higher edUcation •

a temporary pbenomCitinc the pendulum effect, he says universities are

t!DOIL

until there's
a cilaJice, al wbicb time tbey
tend to intepate .w itb the D11W
-blisbnw~t; then, """" problema arise, antiesteblioi&gt;nwltarianism bad&lt; into
anti..estpbJjpbmeet

~~~==

...... ia very critical, it .._..t
....., "educ:atilm as au ideal is

~~~.p~--

Ia-- tD-

11.- - - .

~

-fill
er
tile......,_ .....lo(Jolllll 2e 1
- - . . - , er .._ Ulol...... .._..._ c.._

...._

w-. ... . - - . - . . . . . .

AebJmom (Adult Heeltb NuraWande?

.,.,.
...... ....
....
,.,.,
....
;;!-..,.cau.::::-.:- ':"'.w1.:!i ...
'""' - '""' .....
....
..
.....
....
.. -- - -·.......
if he the

'The President's Committee
was fonned last August to help
increase ~ties for wom-

· ~); .Mile Arlme V .

It - .....
.....

'l1le SUNY......., ' a..ter
- . . , the rule at AAU1'~ w~~ere a c~B~oo.t •-

com-

"Awards eon.......tioo." n-.
day Diehl 00 Goody....-10.
Dr. Rutb T . McGrorey, deua
of the Sobool, we?camed students aDd faculty. Ma GerUude J.1'1YJIII, ~of ing. the maiD opellbr. Her
topic:: '"lbe 'l'ramM aDd Triumpb of a ~ Apnt."
Sbeisaleo881c:iatea-,
psychiatric II1IIBiD&amp; at theVDi_,.;ty of RAlcbestet Medical
center.
Awards - t e d aDd their
recipient. were:
Sebool of NlllBilll Aluumi
Awards: Joan M. Rice (undercraduate student aenior); ,...,..

AAIJPWillEiect
Ofi'UnlTWDtoW

GNOTES

By "D"
'The President's Committee
Adi&lt;&gt;uinment date of tbe Stele
on Recruibnent and Promotion Legislature is still in doubt.
of Women is seeking a director Many now think that it will
and invites applications from windup during tbe first week
anyone who is interested.
of May. One of the important
. Duties will include working bills to be considered is tbe
closely witb the committee on supplements?: budget which
all phases of its activities; co- hope(ully w 1 I 2 restore $33.5
ordinating tbe work of tbe com- million for capital construction
mittee and canying out its ·pol- items for the U/ B Nortb Camicies and procedures; manag- pus deleted in the regular buding tbe ollice; participating in get.
discussions and negotiations;
Also, becall8e tbe University
planning . and proposing variready to move forwanl on
ous projects tbat will furtber is
three
other buildings approved
equal opportunity on campus;
by the Cbancellor's l'ask Force
and compiling information and on
Facilities
Development at
reports.
Buffalo (1971 ) and endorsed
Qualifications include a com- by the SUNY Board of Tru&amp;mibnent to tbe' work of the com- tees at its September 1971 meet.
mittee and to equilable treat. ing, President Ketter and his
ment for all minorities; ezper- staff are urging inclusion or
ience in U / B administration; tbe general library BDd central
an ability to organize and man- administration building ( $21
age an office; skill in oral BDd million) , adminisb'ation service
written communication; ability building ($3.5 million) , and
to work well and effectively food commi.ssary ($4.2 million)
with all members of tbe Univer- in tbe supplementary budget.
sity community; ability to work
with a minimwu of direction;
tolerance for OOU&amp;iderable amq.-Jon todnc the Lee·
bi~ty in working relati~n­
lsiWJnt Is the manner In which
ships; and, finally. an ability the will finance recent con·
to handle statistical data (not tract with three unions
necessary but helpful ).
the CMl Senric:e EmplcJrees
Applicants are asked to send · repraenttnc 140,000
WOO!ers; Coundl 82 of the
a resume to the committee's AFL-CIO St.te, County and Mu·
office, 192 Hayes Hall, witb a
nlclpol
Emplclrees. which CCJVefS
cover Jetter indicating interest
ce~Qln others In
in the position. All applications 4,000 &amp;UIIrds the
should be ra:eived by May 15. corroctlonal Institutions, Recoll)lllendation .for the ap- Sen • t • Profenional pomtinent will be made no . (SPA) ......-ntit11 15,000 fKulty
later tban tbe end of May.
i1 oiHUchlnc ~
within SUNY. llltlht ,_ the - ·
Questions on tbe post will be Inc of many fiscal
pionanswered by Dr. Raymond
_..
Is e
- -...
the_tDtal
th
_ _- .....,_,
Dye, chairman of the acreening er
sub-committee, erl. 4934. .
$75-fi!thlsflscal--

Ten students aDd lWo faculty
members of tbe Sc:hool of Nur&amp;ing were booored at tbe 8IIIIU8l

is a putiocululy illteresliac
Comell Project. A C-131 CooYIIir plane bas been -uitted
witb a computer system aDd
lllllllified for the U.S. Air Foree
.,
tbat it can be lad to llimBJectioa of ............... ulate
_.._. aircnoft projecta.
aidealtion of the cajjliiiliudiuo's
Four
major nx&gt;dificatians rule ill collectiw ..........
will hidWdlt the......J ~
ing of
the
ficatiaas permit it to fly witb
American A8Jc:iation of UuiYel'llity Prof-. .......... - clecii!OII of tr-loal; a a J planes haft cdy
for 3 p.m._,_. CApiiJ 28)
in the Red Room of . . ~ four.
ty Cldl.
'The lllllllified . . . .... he
,.._ ...___ ,_ ~ di-di- ......, • a C-131, but witb a
...; ~ A.--. -pilot in the added adpit,
1-a the slate of ....... it ......... fly- the ...........
lleiDc ......-! ~ the "-iD- )liaDe. 'The - - - ..... the
ations Calllmittee.. Dr. ........ ~ ......... the added
Zelom, PI"'- of ..._..__ io adpit with the • i JD a I a ted
the daaice for vice~ ........ ......td-be rea ctiou ..
aDd Dr. a.m. Abilli, '"lbe Olllput , _ the _ . _ .
c:iate a - , ....... , .. ... iDdiadea ille the C-131 .
_._..__ ..._.._... •• ....._ ~
plane .._.. ' - ' if
- the llimuJated ................
:.~ ~.=.:= Dr. 11ot7b. S.,. .. T- witb
the lloor, '
the _ . _ of . . . _ . . . ,

GU/B

l!oiDmate Studout Award:

Mioa .Naucy R Giani.
·8. Mouobly 8mall Award:
Mrs. lab R. Hoover (.uor) .

OutataudiDI Teachiu1
R.

Awarda: ' MiM ClaudiDe

..... " ' - · as IZieJ ' - ID , . . . . . _ - . ~ le _ _ . , .
to ·"'* IIIII .......,_ for ...
"' ............. -

er
-

t11e - · -

........_

......... - -

In tile ........

__... ...._. for fill
1172 - up an1J 1.37 par ciM
- - ......... - . lll?lle tile

,...

.

•
'The U.S. Olloe of Bducatilm
estiinated
tbat- " menta
in Ibis-the uatilm'a
aDd 11Diwnitiea will ~
li6 -.t cluriDa
aDd r..:b 13.3 million by the
fall of 1980.
.

......u.

u."7m.

T,_.,_.._.._
ollr_
1-. ...... Hlnllol
_

L.-

....

.,.._elthe~

GaJ:Iner, t-lth
- - ·(UIIderpadu,...,_,
matau.J
ate) ; Dr. 8ylYia B. Hart,c:iate ............; adult h.ltb
........ (padaate).

_.._..,.._Lite_,_

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

&amp;-...,_ . . ~
__

II.

F-. ..... -

I

�Apn~

27, 1972

7

(~froM- I. col. 6)
. _ . t i w -.1&lt;1-'lli'ide discu&amp;-

sian tJ/. the ell- tJ/. tecbnolot!Y.
N~ ,_, if 1here
democratic di8cualion of
the , _ and " " ' - of eciences,
bow oball ""' decide? What criteria obould ""' .-? Are 1here f
any priDciplea of etbic:s that
"'!' deciai~? What
DOnnaaw eCbiao aa,y?
M y - 18 that it is dif6cult to find ultiD.IJe principies. 1be atudy of -...thics,
if it baa any 1-..s, is some
okepliciam and humility about'
impoainJ one's v a I u e 8 upon
otbem. We obould be as worried about the moral absolutist
as "" are about the moral iJl i - . N~ some
_g e n e r a I conaiderations seem
pertinent: some objectiwly reiatiw lltandarda pertain. What
is clear ill that traditional autboritsrian moral r e Jig i o u 8
codes inherited from the past
and immUDe to criticsl inquiry
are DO 1cJnaer suticieot an d
cannot be stretd&gt;ed to do the
job. We should at Jaat bourware
that ..., huiiiims aie ._..mle
for our own destiny and that
we caDDO~ look e1EwtJere for
moral salvation. 'There is ·urgent need for .,...tive and revisionary ethical inquiry.
1be moat .......mJe posture in
ethics, in my judgment, is that
.

would

of the mnledualist: what....,
,ought to do ia a function of
the concrete mntsts in wbich

people find themaelvea. There
18,

f&lt;&gt;&lt; eumple, DO one ......,..

BPPI.imble to a wide ranee of
dl«enmt moral problems now
~ in the life sciences

3Concerts

!""enc:e

twice mora ll1ia . , . , _ - on
May 4 and May \1. -~~ - .......... wtn b e - tor the first
time ll1ia yur - awry Thurwct.y
In June and July.

Gf&gt;EOPLE

p"""""'·

WNEDtoAir

PUIUCATICIII ICtEDUl£
The Reporter will be ~

ON

.but difterent answers are .,P:
P""riaJe to the difterent ;,.. A-=-=w=AR==ns=~----siJI!I'; problems, v a I u e s and
needs.
How to . . . _

U I were to offer a recom!'J"Ddation of bow to
!t ""?"id. be first by persistent
mqwry the facts of the
""""; ~ by ezploring alJema~ve IIMBDB at our dispo&amp;.
aJ, ~. ellort to ~er new
ones, third, by exaJillll1Jl&amp; conaequenceaof
_...,_ ('i~tive COWII('B
-~ .......,. !"Dp and long
ranae&gt;; fourth, by_ ~ clear
as to '!'&gt;a.t our. ensting values
and pnnaples m the situation
are (these may be in dispule
and so the principle of toleranoe would allow a plural number of. moral solutions); fifth,
by havmg some regard for basic
"!"JUJUID hum a!' need; and.
~ and most liDportant, by
being p._...,.t to modify and
~ our values in the
light o~ this process of inquiry.
Tbere IS thus the """" for an
adventurous exploration in new
moral possibilities. Moral ideals
and principles should be taken
as hypotheses, lentstive rules
upon which we can act. We
should · be receptive to allemative fO&lt;mB of morality.
In the present situation this·
IIMBDB that we need to be wiliWNED-1V, Channel17, will ing to take risks. Prometheus
broadcast three color programs stole lire and the arts from the
featuring the U/8 Creative As- gods;_ modern man now Jl068e&amp;6sociales in May.
es SCience and Jechnology. Will
On Saturday, May 6 9-10 be use this power to construct
p.m.• an· "Euenings for' NeUJ . a betler world? 1bere are those
M us i c" program. videotaped who are fearful and reluctant
last season at Domlis, will be ~ move ahead.. 1be future they
sbown. -~1be progriun features f1 n d uncertain and uncles.r.
MAP and AUTO!biogrophic.
Nevertheless, we ought to be
MAP, a competitive musical prepared. to take new directions
game by lAlkas F01111, was writ.- ~ mo!"'llty. """"'?""'t.with new
ten in 1971 and was ~bed directions m 8Cle11Ce. We are,
as a "fun-f&lt;&gt;&lt;.aJl piece''liy- the ~ther we lik~ it or not, in the
New York Times. 1be compos- mu~st of a radical mo_ral revocr dess:rlbes MAP as a game lution; .and """:. of_ 1ts basic
for the performers and a piece "!'uses IS the 8Clef!ti6c. revoluof music for the lislener-viewer
ti(&gt;D we are ezpenencmg. We
AUTO/biograpiuc, a tone~ will no do~ make mistakes in
for voices and visuals was also ~g "'~~' values; there
videotaped at Domus: 1be ten will be false starts and blind
is by Frank Pannan;• a u d i 0 llll:eys. Yet the whol~ theme of
real1Z8tion is by George Ritscb- this postmodem age 111 the mner and visual realization by stsnt ~ for moral ~­
Joseph Dunn.
mentalism. Thus I am not
On _Saturday, May 13, 9-10 worried aJ;&gt;out the. new _breakp.m., a program filmed at the through&amp; m the life IIClenoes,
Albrisbt.-Knox will present the but ~t ~d hope f u I
Solltlla No. 3 For Violin Gild about their PI'OID18ell for human
Pitulo by Lejaren Hiller per- good.
fonned by Mark Sokol rioJin,
In conclusion, I would make
and ftot1er Shields, pw;.,. Also the following points. First, '!'e
on this program will be a the- ~ ~ ~elop a nonnative
aler piece, Crockett written in ethics m plillooophy.
Second, we need to e:rtend
197G-71 by German'-bom composer, Wolf Rooembenr; aceuar- """!modify_the traditional sciio by Pamela Henry. 'I'he wodc ent!fic cumculum so tha! the
is a tour de force by actor, social and !""ral uses of
James Hurt, who switches dra- are fully ~ and myestimatic styles between Beckett- gated by 8Cl&lt;!Jlt.ists and IICleooe
like phiJoaophiziJur and Crock- ~ts.
ett-like folk:talJ.tsJe Jelling An the~wed~ !'&gt; keepand ~
olf'lltaJe chamber accomplllli.en
18CUS81on
.,...,.
ment l8 Jed by baritone Laur- !'ftbOD of the 1111!"' of science,
eooe Bogue.
•
m the last analy818 the controls
Monday, May 22, 9 :30-10 should be democratic.
p.m., Ei6hl Sonp For a Mad
F~ we need to deve!op
King by Brit 18 h composer, mec:J&gt;anisms Of! .a world Wide
Peler MuweiJ-Davies, will be bsfiis for app1'11181ng ~ uses of
performed. De.:ribed by the IICleDOe and the posaible damBuffalo Euenin6 N " w 8 as a '!lie . to the ecology o~ ~
"millbty wodc of thealer" and
ruth, . '"!' need to insist .on
by ibe Nf!UJ York Times as "a ~ ref!Uic;ti&lt;&gt;n '!" ~ree """'tive
delight." the wodc f - Jul- !""""tific mvestigalion. -No top.
ius EaStman
tbe ill8ane King 1cs should be b e y o n d the
Gec&gt;rae m 88
bounds of inquiry. But this is

'Ibo PI'Oir8ID8 were partially
funded by theN- Yodc Stele
Council ... tbe Arts.

GJrnPORTS

&lt;Ji!f""!"t rrom. ~loeical ap.
plication, ~ 18 '!- proper

~

8CBOOL OF IIAMAGDODIT AWAimB:

Robert J. Beebee won the padu.
ate etudent of the year award for
h_is work in the MllJ&gt;aCt!IDODt Aostslance Prognun. aidin&amp; minority
• m a 1 I businea8es in the area.
Charles J . Miller, an Air Force
veteran. c b o • e n uuderpaduate
atudent of the year. K.ea..neth L
Tuchman receiwd the Wall Strut
t:~~tud~t of ::X!:'~e•W::.
ord." and~t oem.e
record."

OFF CAMPUS
-

APPOINTMENTS

JOHN A.. BUE&amp;K., director of orientation. installed as bead of the
new team ministry of the Parkaide Lutheran
Buffalo.
DR.. BERKLEY B. EDDINS, profeuor.
pbiloeopby. and 108. ESSIE A.. EDDIN&amp;. assistant profe.or, functional nW11ing, have been appointed
to the "-&gt;ciatahip p_...., of
the Danforth Foundation. This
program, in wbich 2.500 faculty

Churc:.

:;:r~: ':.r;:!.7~~~
:U""".!d~~-~~~:1.;

include 11..- ~ with the
oneeds of minority groups. improving communication amonc atudents. fa~ty and adm.iniatn.ton.
and explonnc the role of atudeua
in the decision-makin« pi"'C'eM..
Dr. and Mro. Eddins plan to develop and utilize the format of
.. Faculty Fire • ide •." tfuouch
which studeula would be imlited
to meet faculty and lldminiatraton in their homes for a m.ct.aion of varioua topics of interest

and concern.

~ ~A 8IGI:L,.

pro(e.ar, po-

litical ~~e~enoe, bas been nominated to the Council of the Ameri-

can Political ScieDce "-ociation
for a two-year term.
praident of
the Erie County 8aYinp Bank.
and lecturer, School of Mlmqement. bu been appointed chsirIIWl of the l'laJmiaor and Deftl- t Committee for the weru N- York Clerxy EcoDomic
Education CoafeJeace for l9'lll. ·
PAUL A.. ~ vil:e

f:, s:::f ~- .

the great impact tba~
and Jecbnol"ffl: will continue to
have upon ovilimtion, and ...,
should be _....t to embark
on -a moral rewlution in· wbich
our social and moral val,_ are
ope n to critical examination
:.:..~!.:' light of thia
- •

.... . . . .4

NEW ·cAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

------------- ... ---·

DL a.AUIIC B. 1ni.CII,

a.ociate

P""-r. political acieaoe, "Af-

rica : What ..... tbe ~­
IUUlual oympooiam of the 8alfalo
CoaDcil - Wodd Mraim.

�8
r-e-t~_... by .
RMP. 40 - . 10:311 ...._

.......

---.-.,. . .

~--.-:

~Jiotiooc.

WEDNESDAY-3

:

~ ~.F. ~ 'u,;.:!.:;~

.--aD ...nr:

s...-

~ -~

-

232 NoriDD. 7-10p.BL

U/B Sy.p/rllay Ba.ul.

Doll Quimle,

Adea -

-

.. Saad&gt;o. Gloria

EXHIBITS

~·IOLOGYR:JIIIU&amp;*:

CBOU-&amp;IO.:Z SCULP'I'U&amp;&amp;:

~o~2:, it.!,~~

-

tJae AcloM)'CMia Hypotltf!si• of

~JIB

Cell

SBOW:

--

ThMbe
Ana
GaiJd.
c....itllee,
T..ay -.......
Somd~Qr, 7:311 ............. - - ille .__ TicbD $3JIO. 1695 ElmA...; Ticbt v.ice:
Ticbt Olice.
~~or~....:r•:
Playwricllts T....-.e lldUIIy

-

...... n-a.e.

____

~.:h':'i~ 'luo;': ~:

tluoucb May 16, Monday-Friday,

9 &amp;.IIL-5

LIBRARY· EXHIBITS

~JIOI..I[~: J....

•onz: 2lT1 Lockwood Libnuy,

.......

.......,

50I'B

~

~

Aaditoria-.. 8

ti&lt;Rta Ill $6.

t5.

$4, -

_ . . . Fe•tiwal 'lidoet

r-.,.;, sc.dor-aa-; Hanimaasa.tion-be.8p.BL
"'"' Colle&amp;e
OOIIIIOB' CAtiK .-nae•: .1o1m

-

Ticbt OfTicbt Olice.

==.::,_~. ~"i"ride. ---~
Room, 8 : 311 p.BL-1: 30 ....... $Jill.

....••: Jla Nllil. CMz M-.tl.
EDibi-·
c-.. Faarth&amp;..-.8JU~L.&amp;ee.
(Jiy Ni#&amp;f ot Jl.-1•) ~

.. ~

m _ .: Ultiw:nity o.doaba.

---

19&amp;9). ~

.. -:::,!&gt;Y

--··=
--.... -. ........... ....__
.ty,

.........

~--

&amp;.in!. 8:311

n-a.e.-

~fcwtiae ,........._

. . - . Go..-n. . - - . .. ~
~

Of'

INTERVIEWS

Ill

~

...:=.::-~

Gudloer,-. will p...-

AIOIIna8.\aY

.I A II B 8

Maaday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
WILLIUI BDDOUlBB: continuiq,
2Dd lloor balcoD.y, Monday-Friday, 9 Llll.-5 .......

- . .. 30 1 - . . t A - .
8 .......
~ CC&gt;l&lt;aU": Tlora: Dac Nidd,

11w N..

c:.::~~

p.DL

Dtc hp•E~~f o/
Faa::isl Ifll:olocy. N o r to a.. 7: 30

Zuo Grordlc.

----- =c-ay u.

t:aiGN 81'tJIEN'I'

tluoucb Friday. April 28,
ArL Dept. Gallery, 4240 Rid«e
La. 9 ~-5 p.m.
I'BOI'OCUPBB &amp;l!fD &amp;'I'CBINGS: the
work o( .lim DiDe ...t Lee Fried-

AdJraiDa. Room 29, 4248
Jtidee La. 4 .............,., . . 3:311

u . -.

2917

Main St.. 4da lloor, (Dert to Benffich Sdxd), tluoucb April
30, 2-5 p.m.

Dt. ILB. Kalop..-.loclr, Uaiwr-

hja

vm• :

at .U area tidret qeoc:ies.
by - ' l or pbooe, or at tbe Studio
An!Da Hem 06:oe. 681 Main SL,
1156-5650. tluoucb May 21.

- - IIIDOic. &amp;.in!. 4

DlmDKal~
~~,tV'-. Uif,!g :;:-_

out of

Joac ...t

~-De~~avatr

p.m.

p.m.
I'S'It:BOK.lr: 232 llJo-. 7-10
p.m.
_ _ _ _ by,_
'IID:U8": Tw
by

tbe

Alldtew Stiller, &amp;.in!. 8:30 p.m.
Bnllm .MDfA TIIICA'I'B• : Man o/
La JIIDtdta.. mae i cal etarrin&amp;'

'1-.m..---

.........

:nu:.

...a

as&amp;'Dft ASMJC~&amp;ta ..:%rAL

... _ ., o_

~=

-

=

Cli Tibet

~ bf:!-:ds~
~

C.Wi!Wt;DA ~da­
.I.C.
I-:...
E~~­
N...,_, , . _ ,.,_, Silia6. UN

Pum. 3

=:e-.~ ._&amp;."'

-

1411

E:-~~
3 2 2 - . 2 ......
_

w,..u.- .Ide, n - Mitdt.n. Dinded by FraDk 0qmL A

Peboja

.a,....,•--·
- .. -~
-----Dl~llr

F. Knr. N-

Sp/DIU.
....by
RMP.40 . 1_
p.a.

~-

p.m..

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE _.,.,...,u--. -

~~-a.;.

...._., -

--

.... cloJiMt. BoiN.. 8:311

I'IIDDOD--=..__ ..-.
THURSDAY-27

= T k U -.

'J"banday - -

SATIJRDAY-29

....... , Clain'• "-« (FJaDce.

1!1'111), Qoafenslce ~ doedt

~fortimea.........._.

1!130),
eam-Jloroeeo
n-ue.(U.S...
doedt ...__

._

FRIDAY-28

------=
llaniaD_ - . , _ _ _

......
........
aOlmool,...,
ftlwF
- .,_.
.t
by RMP. e - . _ 11.:311 ....._

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

VOL 3-NO. 28

APRIL20,.1972

~

1entative SPA-State Pact Provides
$9.4 Million for Salary Increases
A $9.4 million salary in:
·crease package for State Uni·
versity faculty and non-teach·
ing professional staff-including provisions for merit increases-was tentatively agreed
upon Monday by the Senate
Professional Association
(SPA) and the State. 'The set·
tlement C!JVers the period from
July 1, 1972, to June 30, 1973.
'The agreement, subject to approval by both the SPA membership and the State Legislature, calls for an across-theboard salary boost of 3.5 per
cent for all faculty and libraryacademics and a hike of 4 per
cent for all non-teaching professionals (NTP"s) .
In addition, 1.5 per cent
boosts designated as "discretionary, merit and equity adjustment money" will be available to 30 per cent of the faculty and library academics and
to 25 per cent of NTP"s. Ac·
cording to SPA, these percentages are University-wide figures-and variations may be allowed on individual campuses.
Peer Puticipotion

SPA says that decisions on
who will receive the ''discretionary, merit and equity" adjlisbnents will be made through

~ito"=::,.~";;;;

Neither Raiit rwr...
~---- could *"' 5,000 - . . .
Yof-Itsfrom
tourina
Community·Univer·
o.y, SundaJ. This rouna 1ac1y 1s INIIdna • moc1 duh tor
.~· For....,. .., c-u o.y, - 5.

0

0

s11y

0

-

the ....._ ..,

Senate.Okays Motions on
Informal Study, Cheating
'The Faculty Senate finally
wrapped up two pieces of old
business on independent study
requirements a n d definitions
of aaulernic dishonesty Tuesday but the weather was too
nice for all the Senatonrto stay.

After meeting for .about ~
bour, the body agam I~ 1ts
quorum. From then on, 11 met
as a committee of the whole.'
'The motions on independent
study and academic dishonesty
bave been on and off the Senate agenda since January. Upon the 'l'ecommendation of Dr.
MacAllister Hull, acting dean
of the Graduate School, the
Senators voted that students
have " to have written consent
of their faculty supervisor" before they am enroll in independent study. At the conclusion of the course, the instructor will submit a written evaluation of the work which will become part of the student's per·
manent record. Additional regulations can be placed on the
independent study procedure, if
individual programs or departments 11esire it, the approved
motion says.
'The Senators accepted defini·
tions of academic dishonesty
drawn up by an ad hoc committee chaired by Dr. Claude
Welch, Political Science. 'The
dccwnent, however, was ac.:..
cepted as an appendix to an
alread_y passed set of procedures dealing with resolution
of cases of student academic
dishonesty. Originally, Welch's
grol)p was asked to submit the
definitions as an additional, integral part of the procedures.
On Tuesday, however, the Senatora changed their minds and
voted to look at the definitions
(Continuft on -

2, eol. I)

fol'll!ulated and distributed to
each campus by SPA Further
details on this will be forthcorning later, but, SPA spokesmea indicate, an appeals procedure will definitely be incorporated into the guidelines. 'The
total eannarked for these increases is $2 million State-wide.
'The agreement also aUows ·
SPA to re-open negotiations for
basic annual salaries for 197374 and calls for immediate implementation of a cad tym i c
status for librarians. The latter
will be carTied out through a
"high level joint State and SPA
committee."
'The agreement for the coming year together with the wage
boost for 1971-72 provides a
combined monetary gain of
over 11 per cent for professional
staff since the inception of the
SPA contract two years ago.
'The 1971·72 rai'ie, retroactive to Jubt.-l-;' 1971, for 12-month etllployees, and to August 26, 1971, for !G-month employees (and including the annual servict! increment for the
period between August 26 and
November 14 for LG-month empJ9yeesJ, is ni&gt;w expected to be
reflected in the paychecks issued bere May 19, the U I B
Personnel Office said Tuesday.
The 1972-73 increases will be
figured on the base salary as
of June 30 of this year. That
is, the new gain will be fjgured
on a base salary which includes
this year's six per cent increase.

tiations. We believe that SPA receive different pe,y. It is .,._
bas succeeded in winning what timated that $400 million .......Jd
is demonstrably the best pnhlic be requited to eliminate .n
employee contract settled in such ~ties but SPA bo.New York State this year. We lieves that this - . SI!Uiement
were able to accomplish this at least wins remcnition of the
without jeopardizing pub I i c concept of equity,
trust or engaging in the organThe n e w aettlemeut says
i?.ational sabre-rattling that so nothing about "annual increpervaded the State this year. ments" for professional stall.
Hard-nosed bargaining within
SPA claims, however, that its
the framework of the law bas settlement reflects a considerprovided both salary relief and ably higher pe- employee hike
equity for the professional staff than that achieYed by CSEA
of the University."
SPA reopened necotiations
According to SPA, equity as with thE State.., January 15 of
used in the setilement agree- this year; an impasse was dement means the alleviation of clared on March 7, and PERB
conditions within the State ' mediation was conducted from
University which cause individ- that point until Mobday's setuals perfonning s imilar jobs to tlemenl

SUFT Merger on SPA Agenda
The possible merger of the ate of the National Edumtion
State-wide Senate Professional Association (with which SPA is
Association t SPA ) with . the associated). and the United
State University Federation of T..,chers of New York, the
Teachers &lt;SUITJ, an affiliate AFI'-afliliated unit represent.
of the Ameriam Federation of ing public school faculty.•
Teachers 1 AFI' ) , will be disToday's local SPA meelin&amp;
cussed at a meeting of the Uni- will attempt to develop a Chapversity Center Cbapter of SPA ter position ... the pororiiJie
at 4 p.m. today (April 20) in
the dining room of the Faculty mercet
wiUthebeS -tate
COIIBiden.tion
at
Club.
'·
NYSJ'A meetiDg. April 21-23.
According to I o c a I SPA
spokesmen, "this issue bas beOther mattem ~
come critical because of the an- fore the meetmc include _,_
nounced plans for merger be- inations for State.ide ~
tween the New York State grievance matters and local i&amp;Teachers Association, an aftili. sues.

bu.m... ""-

Fundina ~ •-ucec~

'The tentative settlement is
being sent to all dues-paying
SPA members this week for
ratification. To avoid the delays experienced . this year, a
liill for the additional necessary
funding was introllnced in the
Legislature Monday for incor·
poration in the supplemental
budget for 1972--73.
Commentinl( on the settlement, SPA President Robert
G........,r of AHred noted the
.....,.... of what be sees as
''bard-...-! but rational nee&lt;&gt;-

........,~-----­
-the
~
- I D .-...
- u p . .the
_·t f a.._r ___
_ _.....
nthe-...-----•11111!"

ntua."--In

of·:........

0

�~

UB AddRd $91 MUlinn'IO Camty Iruxme in 197V
__,.,.CAMPUS

TOTAL LOCAL tM:OIIE GEIIEIIATID

--- --.....
·- ·-

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ur

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11.s21

1J_34S

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

11.171

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U.J77

and services outside tbe an!a;
110111e will be taken as lalres,
ell:.

To 8ClCOWlt for this, tbe study
made use of a matbematicallydemonstrated fonnula w b i c b
-tes that tbe multiplier of
each dollar of direct iDcome to
be ..-! in calculating total income is equal to 1/1-bobo where
bo is propensity to spend loc:ally l oa tbe part of locol raidoJU) and bo tbe local share of
wlueadded.
This can be ezplained by
using tbe direct loc:al iDcome
esample of $360,000 from a $1
million payroll, cited earlier.
In a """" wbere loc:al residents
spend 60 per cent loc:ally and
tbe loc:al value added share is
40 per cent, tbe total increase
in loc:al iDcome would be computed, using tbe fomwla, by
mulitpl.ying $360,000 by 1.316.
Tbe total would be $473,760.
U/8 Aprw

To arrive at U/B's loc:al inmme contribution figures, tbe
study used tbe8e calcnbotimw:
HiMorit:Gl ruilknl payroU
(tbe ~ std payroll, adjusted by 3.2 pu cent),
$13,639,137.
UniDenily rolfllfWIIity
roU lprota.ional std),
Z7l,:DI. Local _..titure pro.,.....;ty, ..8083; loc:al wJue..edded
~bare. .74011. Direct loc:al inmme p!DI!nlted, $17,6Z7,166.
Local ~ for bud«rt. ~ tmd apeMa, $9,093,1'71. Local value- added
~bare. .74011. Direct local inmme ~ t6,736,221L
C4piltll ~: totalesJifJIIIlitwa. $12,50U61· total
.,..._ $7,142,236. L;;i value
added .70. Direct local incame,
$4,9119,566.
OuH{-IDUm.,.., ~

Gl.-

-_
- ---- ..... - -......

TOTAL LOCAL . a . E - T I D 81' SUllY EJ(f'EM)JTVRES AS A PBICEIIT OF
TOTAL COUIITY . a . E 81' COUIITY FOR 1970
of - . ,-

--·
--- - -c....
-----T- --....

,__

.._.

-

- c-

.cs.3n

Aaoiiii - A&amp;'f. ~

._
.,_

._

.,.

03.309

212.200

S1S,.aoo

t41.JIOO

A&amp;S

11 5.MS
7 .7&amp;7

.... , _

0...,.. - AAS

......,

C..... - A&amp;$

8.071

._

-

.c.nt

20.771
11.515

m . - - . , - .&amp;&amp;S

-

A&amp;$..c-c -

12.526
li.2W7

A&amp; T

~-AAT

s..,-... - c:--. ..._..... -.c..--~-

. _.... _ • • $
.....,.. _ • • $

-~

1. n

uo

2.74

1. 77

1&amp;1.300

..._... _ • • $

...... -

144. 700

...

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

..........- - A&amp;S

~ - A&amp;S

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

2 .627.100

Z4.4S2

'.262

, . . . . . _ .... $

Ordlli - A&amp; T
.._c:-:...... c . - - A&amp;$

o-

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

AA t"

,.....

. ....11
M.S75

n_,.,

13.G07

.....,
n.-

2..54

2.5Z

111..000
201. 100

4.oa
U5

........... ......
, _,27.200

1.,s34..ZOO

...-

o _t:J
2.00

514. 100

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

~.535.100

0.25

za.too

-tC.700

315.-cJO

4 . 10:Z.o;IO

4.27
4A2

1021

254

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

11.,.l00...,

0 . 12

• 75.71

.................
.......
110.42
liUI

_,...

,.....
,
••.7.

...

U . ll

...,....

.........

124. 14

f G..J7

ZN.al

4 1J .7l

..........
••2•

- · .$7
Localincame,
value
added
74..INI.,8t6.
Direct JOcaJ
$5,543,llli6•

TbedirectlocalU.O...~

emted by U/B 11-. $411,446,000.
a total IDoame
local multipliei of 1.88, 'lUTAL

u.mc

local~~B

-

calcula

at

.

Tbe..........., ~ llludy,

ll&lt;lllOidinc ... Cliftoa c. n-..e.

SUNY vi&lt;e ~ far uaiwnity dain, ... the . . . ill
what will be a ..W of opecial
lital&amp;s to ptber
....... unesplored bat ~

b... wr ••

----of~W

Tbeoe llludiee, be~ are Clllllllioleat with Cbucollor En..t
&amp;,er's "call far ~ 011111nwnriretjme aDd ~­
ity.w

�~

A,.il 20, 1912

3

AfedGrads,
Affmnative Action Not
Rapid 'fransit a Must,
llospi;tals
Ketter Says at &amp;ring Are Matched Always~ Sims Says
p..J.i
Rapid tmnsit is vital to tbe

the other. Rapid transit would

is reason to be
cn-tb of Buffalo and tbe Uni- alao give inner city residents a of "There
the results of this year's Navenrity "abaU work eueJ'II!tical- much greater opportunity to
tional Intern and ResideDcy

ly to bring about, without delay,
tbe fulfiiiment of it.i'Ultimate
promise of ellicieocy of ment,M Praoident R o be r t L.
Ketler said in a statement for
a public heaiiiq(on tbe matter,
Aprilll.

'lbere are fiw major reaaona,
Ketter said, why tbe Univen!ity
"feels ao stroogl~ about sucCI!SIIful completion of a rapid
tmnsit system for tbe BulfaloAmbent Corridor:
• Our anticipated level of
student, faculty, and staff travel between tbe North and South
~;

•

Our shortage of student

housing;

• Our desire to make more
to all c i t i z e n s of
Western New Yod&lt;, tbe broad
educational and cultural programs ol tbe University;
• Our shortage of parking
facilities;
• Our _..moo of c:oopemtive arr&amp;ll(I'I!!DeDts with alliliated hospitals; and
• Our ewr-increasing interaction with Bullalo's cultural
and educational centers, downtown facilities, and tbe community at large.
...,.,.,.,.mJe

To meet tbe phenomenal
growth of tbe University in tbe
Ketter said, "it has
been """""""' to liupplaut almost every open _.., of tbe
Main Street campus with either
tempc&gt;r8ljr structures or parking lots to accommodate peraoos as well as their modes of
~tion. Even ·then, such
_.., has been inadequate and
properties bave been ....,_ at
40 otber locations around the
City. This, of course. has severely compOunded the Uniwrsity's communication and transportation problems between its
several units."
Over $ll5 million in congtruction is already underway
on the Amherst site, he pointed
ouL The first academic buildinga will he available in February 1973 and the first residential facilities will be ready for
occupancy in SeJ?tember of this
,year. Other facilities are programmed to he added incrementally until the full growth
goal is reached abo u t seven
years from now.
In the interiq), Ketter noted,
"we have approxima~ 1,300
:J~J:t"'....!.t tripsty~
hetween our Main Street campus and our interim Ridge Lea
campus. to say nothing of the
total travel load generated by
the
manyforother
locations. full
In
planning
the continued
utilization of the present campus, as well as anticipating rapidly increasing workloads at the
new North campus.in Ambers!,
past decade,

~~s~u~':::

ployed by the University will
_,., be outmoded. On the basis
of our projected campus occupancy patterns, we would be
most disturbed ahould the propoaed rapid transit not become
an early reality.

participate in University programs, be said.
"It is impossible," K e t t e r
con~ uto envision sufficient parking areas or roadways
to accommodate the density of
uae tbat is projected for either
tbe South campus or the North
campus. . .. Undoubtedly the
rapid transit system as presently p~ will go a long way
toward alleviating thiS problem."
Rapid transit will alao make
poasible, the President said, a
cootinued and expanded rela-

::.t't.
oo:J:..~..Y.::tir:.!il
and recreational facilities of the
area. "University use of these

facilities and community participation in the "activities of
the University has been increasing, and will continue to
do ao," be predicted.
In order to make rapid transit "the attractive and efficient
mode" of transportation it can
be, Ketter pledged tbat the
University will work constructiwly with the Niagara Frontier Transit Authority "in the
planning, design and development of right-of-way and station inter-relationships. Wherever the University is naturally
involved through its ownership
of land or properties, we will
provide the maximum s upport
possible to expedite the development of the rapid transit system. Clearly, Buft'alo's rapid
transit system, with advances
in speed, safety, noise reduction, · and the careful detailing
of design and aesthetics, can
readt or exceed the finest aspects of the San Francisco and
Montreal systems.,

Complete Audit
Set for Athletics
A complete audit of Athletic
De p a r t men t books and a
change in the Department's
voucher and purchasing procedureg have been instituted by
the Department in the wake of
charges levelled by the Spectrum and later retracted last
week.
"The audit will he open to
the public. I! we didn't feel it
would show our activitieg had
been properly conducfed, we
wouldn't want it," Dr. Harry
!d~ritz. director of athletics,
The Spectrum charged the
Department with "dragtic financial misconduct,'' and alleged tbat "money was stolen."
Irregularitieg cited by the paper
included unaccounted travel advances to Department personf
ch' 11neJ, payment or a coa s

~ :'~':JJb~ !:Ji1~;

43 people. _
The next edition of the Se_ectrum, however "categorically
(retracted) our allegationg of
criminal activity on the part of
!,t!,etic Department personIt was shown tbat the travel
.
vouchers in question were accounted for, tbat funds for the
coad&gt;'s trip came out of anothi!r budget, and ·t bat the 43
people at the meal in question
included coaches, managers,
cheerleaders, and a Spectrum

· "While classroom schedules
will be formulated to minimize
student travel between the two
major~ and · the vari._rter.
ous outpoets such as the aliliAn audit c o n d u c t e d by
ated ~itals, subetanfial trav- · parties outside the ])eprutment
el will still be llllCI!IIIlitated. -- ." is being arraJlled by U/B Ex.
ecutive Vice President Albert
, Becauae C!""'JlU8 housing can- Somit, and a change in voucher
nqt be provided.for '!" the stu- procedure is being drawn up by
dents of the Umvenuty, Ket!"r the Department itaelf
cootinued, there is a . - . t y
·
of b a vi n g ~lion to
"The studeiKs on campus
pw 11:..- living
as haW! a ~_to know tbat their
....U as 11:..- housed at oae money 18 being spent per bud. . . _ but taking ~ at get allocations." said Frit7-

oft......,_

Matching Program," assistant
Medical School Dean 'Thomas
Cummiskey informed 119 obvioualy nervous members of the
graduating class (all of wbom
had been matched) and their
families this week.
·
"Many of you will be working in some of the ID06t prestigious hospitals in this country,"
he pointed out to the seniors
who will be distributed among
23 states.
The Jargegt number (27 )
will enter straight medicine,
followed by 16 in rotating, f5
in straight surgery, 11 in
straight pediatrics. While ten
will enter directly into residency programs, seven have
selected family practice programs (four at Deaconess Hospital). Entering university-affiliated hospitals will be 84 of
.the 1972 graduating class; four
will intern at unaff"lliated hospitals and the remaining 24 at
limited ones.
Three U/ B programs were
filled by seniors from here and
elsewhere. They are straight
pediatrics at Children's Hospital !12) , straight medicine
(16 ) and rotating medicine
( 12) at the Buffalo General
and E . J. Meyer Memorial
hospitals. The straight surgery
program at the Meyer received
2 of 6 requested, while 1 of 5
in the same program at the
Buffalo General was filled.
Thirty-nine U /B seniors will
remain in Buffalo to complete
internship training; more than
ball of the class will remain in
New York State ( 19 others in
New York City and 3 in other
parts of the State ) . The .econd
largest contingent of seniors
will intern in Massachusetts
(9 ) while California and Maryland will each receive 7. Two
will enter Public Health Service work in Boston, and one
will join the Army Medical Services.

Clwice of Styles
Offered by Dorms
A few years ago a dormitory
was just a place to live while
going to college. Not any more.
Today, a student has a wide
choice of life styles.
At this week's housing lottery to determine dormitory
placement for next year, there
was a choice of six distinct living arrangements. Tliere was
the now traditional choice between co-ed and single sex living, and, of course, Allenhurst.
This Y"'JJ", however, learningliving options were expanded.
All of Macdonald Hall was regerved for students in Clifford
Furnas College who bave scientific interests or are devoted to
s c ho Ia rs hip. Two-thirds of
Schoellkopf Hall was allocated
to College B, which "explores
the liberal am tradition and its
fundamental cultural presuppositions in an interdisciplinary
way." The remaining Schoellkopf spaces will bouse members of International Dorm. In
the Macdonald and Schoellkopf
possibilities, students are encouraged to extend their learning experiences beyond the
classroom. Some classes are
beld in the dorms, and informal
seminars and rap sessions go
on conatan~.
Students who didn't participate in the lottery but are interested in aome of t1ie livinglearning options are urged to
contact die Housing Olfice,
Goodyear Hall, en. 3322.

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
~SUit

Last month, die women of
America were insured the equal
rights under the law tbat members of other minority groups
were g r a n t e d last century.
Many civil rights proponents,
however, point out tbat this is
the first and perhaps the .easiest
step on the path to equality.
The next, barder step is enforCement, they say, and this
battle is now being foughL The
name of the game is affirmative
aotion. It's a program in which
companies, unions and institutions show tbat they are fully
utilizing members of minority
groups and women.
The guidelines for drawing
up this kind of plan for U/B
are now being examined, especially by Ms. Barbara M.
Sims, U / B's Equal Employment Officer. A faculty member
of the Law School and director
of the Office of Equal Opportunity, Ms. Sims is in charge
of seeing that the federal government's Jaws on equal opportunity are enforced. But implementing this seemingly simple
concept isn't easy. The guidelines are outlined in a sevenpage document that has been
revised twice and is about to
he revised again.
Ms. Sims sees difficulties in
enforcing the guidelines here or
at any academic institution because the rules don't take ac:tdemic practices into account.
There may be less trouble in
upholding the regulations as far
as CSEA and middle-level professional staff are concerned,
she believes. The difficulty, she
predicts, will arise at the facul-

degrees in teaching or CODIIIIIIIlity oervice preaeally heine offered here or elawbere? 'The
gu..idelines. however, r e q u i,.. e
that trainins for job&amp; aDd upgrading be provided.
The Equal Employment Officer alao tabs a careful look
at the uae of peer ~
Sbe points out that it is not
practiced 011 collese . . . _
in the normal aenae of the
word. Instead, establiabed ~m­
ner sanctum" piof_,.,. widi
tenure judge the qnaliC""ti&lt;wiS
of younger "outer aanctum"
people without tenure. 'Ibis is
"one of Jhe most autocratic aDd
undemocratic system a that
exists" she argues and compares it to masters judging
slaves. You have only ti&gt; '1ooC
at the results," abe charges, to
see bow valid this oompariaon
is.
Because of these areas plus
the basic problems in getting
people to change tbeir prejudices, Ms. Sims sees the job as
a most difficult one. Sbe believes tbat the post should be
filled by one with job security.
" An equal employment olficer
needs to have this type of security if he is trying to enfon:e
equal opportunity rules effectively."
HEW Y"lllt Expecl8d

The problems inherent in enforcing the government's all'im&gt;ative action guidelines are important now because the Department of Health, Education
and Welfare is expected to visit
sometime in the near future to
see if the University is complying with the equal opportun-ity concept. There ue three
parte to tbe propam the inty and t o p administration spectors wm view-the availJeveb. She cileti areas that able employment pool, the inwould have to be altered in or- stitution's ~&gt;' ..., the
der to comply with the rulings concept and the job descrip- the voting and committee tions and implementation promethod of appointment and gram. CurrenUy Ms. Sims and
promotion and the use of peer her staff are working on the
judgment in grievance and ad~ first part of the University's
vancement cases.
proposal for allinnative action.
A SOCial Mechanism
She discounts, however, the
Ms. Sims sees the present possibility of a fmal program
system of voting by tenured based entirely on tbe governfaculty on whether to grant ment's guidelines. "Mter cloee
others tenure ali a .. social mech~ analysis of the contents of the
anism" tbat doesn't really take affinnative action guidelines
into account bona fide qualifi- and means of implementation,
cations. She . points out tbat it is apparent tbat other types
there are no job descriptions of guidelines will, out of necesfor the 1400 full-time faculty sity, have to he promulgated if
positions or any lists of basic there's ever going to be implerequirements for advancement. mentatioo of the equal oppol'Instead, Ms. Sims says, the tunity concepL"
process is like "playing bing&lt;&gt;The time for higher educait depends on who is on sab- tion is running out, however.
batical or the. personality of HEW has already told Colwnthe candidate." She tells of bia University tbat they are not
shifting standards that are used moving quickly enough.
when the vilas of blacks and
women are judged- the person's publications aren't judged
scholarly enough or are judged
not to have appeared in the
most preHtigious journals or the
Alumni in Western New
candidate is penalized because
he hasn't been invited""to speak York last weekend began receiving the UIB Plllybill,a new
at Ivy League schools.
·. SQme type of job descrip- . publication of the Alumni AstioOH and ouUines of qualifi- sociation which provides a listcations for promotion will have ing of campus events open to
to be drawn up, Ms. Sims graduates.
Using the listings from the
points out, because of the affirmative action guidelines. In Reporter• Weekly Communiaddition, she questions the con- que, the Plllybill covers events
stitutionality of v'oting on an- from Monday through &amp;mday
other's right to employment of a given week and is printed
without detailing the qualifica- and mailed Thursday of the
tions. The right to work is a prior week.
On the aooond side of tbe
fundamental constitutional
right, she points out. To deny single sheet self-mailer publicathis right, without providing a tion is the Alumni Nerm, brief
valid legal basis, may give rise information about recent e11e0ts
on campus and news about
to prolific litigation.
alumni activities.
0
HoiH=e~ ~ty memPublication of the Plllybill
her here, Ms. Sims isn't so sure maries l;he &lt;&gt;!ficia! beginning ~
it is possible to formulate tbe the Un!~nutv-wide A I u m n 1
"""""""'Y qualifications or des- . Recognition~-~
criptions. What couraes do you by the Alumru AaaociatiOD.
t8ke to become a college proFor additional information.
fesaor or an administrative of- call tbe U/B Alullini Aaaociaficer, abe asks. Are tbere any tion at 831-4121.

New Playbill
Fbr Alumni

�~

4

Should There Be Unions for UniverSity Professors? Yes, But ...
EDITOR'S NOTE: Thia ia the
aecond paper on faculty ~
I~" as port of a recent ~
oJoeue on the UJpU: sponsored
by the Torr:h Club of Buffalo.
The first, by PtUident Robert
L. Ketto, appeared in the Reporter. March 30.
t
By ROBERT FISK

different campuses which from two-year agriculture 81111
tecbnical institutions, relalillely small in many .,_, quite
isolated, to the uni...,.,.;ty ......
ten; at Stony Brook. Albany,
Binghamton. BuiJalo . • • .
1bese are campuses with different tmditions, value structures,
and sense of mission; as well as
wide differences in job definitions and working conditions of
faculty and professioual stslf.
We have other problems such
88 distance. We range from the
Niagara Frontier to the middle
of Long Island to Plattsburgh
in the north. We ha.., differences between the needS of~
fessors and the needs of nonteaching professional&amp;-people
who serve as registrars, counselors, health service employees,
or residence hall supervisors
and in a host of essential positions other than teaching. We
are employees but we also view
ourselves as prof~ with
a certain amount of responsibility for our own discipline and
destiny. Within this, fall a
number of conflicts. We are
concerned with students but
we've not given a great deal of
thought to what _tbeir ~
shalf be upon umon orgamzalion. If you were to look at
our contract, ~re is no mention of the wonf studeol
There is, of course, at the
moment a fair amount of public
antipathy towanf higher edUCItion . . . . and if we malre ourselves heanf and are a bit DDisy
in our demands, this public antipathy may be exacemated.
Tbe last point in this category is the very fact that we
are organized and sanctioned
under the Taylor law to bargain independently with the
Governor and Office of Employee Relations. This means
that we challenge and are a
challenge to the existing decision-making apparatus of the
University, both on the campus
and within the complex as a
whole. Trustee policies, for example, do not carry quite the
same weight they did before
because the contract may void
a Trustee pnlicy by virtue of
its acceptance by the Legislature and the Governor.

l"'roo..,.olu---.

Tbe question is "Sbould
there be unions for profe&amp;80rs

t1=:

: ':1/!:f:re
~':!:"::
"Yes, but with some qualifications."
Within the last year and a
half, the faculty and professional staff of SUNY have
voted to affiliate with a baJgaining unit known 88 the Senate
Professional Association. It is
an autonomous unit, but has
merpd with the New York
State Teachers Association and
the National Educational Asaacistion.
rm going to talk about this
business of unions from the
point of view of a faculty member.

--

First, we call ourselves the
Senate Professional Association. not the Faculty Union.
But, in fact, our organization
and legal sponsorship really
fall within the same construct
as otber unions within the
public spbere. We have trouble
with the term because most of
us view ourselves as private
entrepreneurs. seU-sulliciellt professionals. And as profe&amp;80rs,
the concept of collective organization is in many ways disturbing to us.
Tbe second problem is that
we are rather late in unionizing.
As a result, 't here are many
pre&lt;:edents both in the law and
general- practice which govern
much of what we do. Some of
these precedents seem inappropriate to many of us on campus.
A thinf problem is that this
is a very costly endeavor. As
professionals, we are accustomed to affiliating with one or
another organization. This adds
up to a very substantial sum
each year but now we find that
the uniori costs about as much
as all the rest put together. At
this moment, for example, our
bargaining organization is
spending about a quarter of a
million dollan; a year. I would
estimate that this is about half
of what we will have to spend
within the next two or three
years to maintain organizational viability and to provide the
legal and other kinds of services
implicit in a union organization.
•
Another problem is the extreme heterogeneity of our
membership. I am a member
of a 11&gt;-person executive board
which represents some 15,000
people. The range of diversity
of personnel 'there is almost
beyond comprehension (from
technical assistants to MD. PbD.'s).
There are also major differences in the institutions we rep.
resent .. .. The bargaining organization represents some 28

What Is the Professor"s Role!

So there are some problems
with our neophyte activity and
I am sure we are going to have
problems for many. many years
to come. Some of them wiU
cause many of us at times to
wish the day had l1e\ler arisen
when we affiliated with what is,
in fact, a collective organization
best known as a union. Nevertheless, there is a certain inevitability about it all I believe
there are also some very real
positives if we take the long
view and are careful not to set
bad precedents. Howe\'er, before we get into more detailed
discussions of unionism as sum_
perhaps we should pause for a
moment to think about the role
of a professor.
Presumably the prof&lt;SSOT is a
teacher or a scholar, or !both.
He is a part-time administra-

a---.
.................

&amp;&amp;or

~

._....~

rJmO~

V . P..u.mDIO

~

•..,

II:OaaNT

-r.

JURL&amp;tt

~,;r,~ou,....

--

.JOIDI ... ClDC12'JU

.....

..,..,~

svs.ur O....,..OOD
STUDBtrr UPAIES EDn'OR: S... ~
C:OltT11l.UTllfO ~ 1 - Jt. .o.s..dl,. . . . _ ,

r....

colfrn.ururo

Aln'ISr:

s - JL . _ . ,

tor in many institutions. He
certainly is a committee member llllleE he manllges to put
himself out of sighl Finally.
be would view himself as a
self-dieciplined professional But
his primary roles are teaching,
produdiw! scbolaJship and service to the ..,teoprise which indUdes the community, broadly
~

I believe that for us to behave
in these wrious ways requires
a situation which encourages a
nwnber of things.
•
Yost. the seUing must en
cowage imagination, creativity,
intelledual integrity - without
these we simply have no right
to be called a rollege or university.
Sec:ood. we require a setting
which enmwages identiftcat.jon
with a mis6ion that is greater
than owselves.
a~&amp;n:lir\Tl\l"rC'
- Y ~ YY I Vll"' J. ~

n. .........

11apes .., -

far the ex-

.., . , . - • - . , . o1 .., • -

wariotJ

- o1 111o - , . the c 0 n1 . , u a 1 t y. we we1came bath
__.

p•pers--. •

....-.
.- - - - - - - - - - - Thin!, we require a confideoce in the direction of that
nris&amp;ion and the leadership of
that mission.
ADd, finaUy, we require a
l'n!edom from anxieties such as
primary economic insecurity.
But fuDdamental is some
seme of involvement, some ·
sense of identification. some
""""" of control or inlluence
over ooe's endeavors.
This leads to oonsideration of
the nature of the organization
and - - in which the
scholar, lea&lt;ber or professional
admiDisaator can function most
effectiw!ly. There are two I
would like to mention.
F'ust. it must be an organization which re&amp;cts the concept
we cdJ collegial or shared au·
thority . Tbere must be a balance between the trustees and
the faculty on policy matters;
between the administration and
the faculty over decisions; be......., the State and the faculty
.,._ the mission of the institution; and betw"'!" the student
and the facul ty over the mission and the operation itself.
Without this sense of coUegiality and involvement, we will
bave inefl'ective and insignificant teacbing and scholarship.
In other wonfs, the faculty
member today feels he can function best where he and the
student "can do their thing."
Anothos- exln!mely important
organizational characteristic is
coostancy or predictability. I
recall a faculty member laughing about beint on his thinf
c:baD&lt;:rllor and second dean. We
at U/ B bave been and are in a
stale of ftuL It starded me to
reftect that in the past six years
I ba-.e kuown three presidents.
They ba-.e been men with diffenm w1ues, styles, energy
.......,..._.. 81111 potentials.Duriuc Ibis period rve seen morale
flO to heights and deptba. I
ba-.e seen a ·bigb level of productivil¥ oiJatt.eral and essentially lllopped for a period of
DI8DY IIIOIIfbs. y.., seen years
of .,.....,.I ....U-being 8nd times
....... aaDeties were expressed
in all kiDdo of counter-produo.
li¥e 1111111De1B. Within SUNY
r..e seen a mdical c:baD&amp;e in the
Gowmor'• attitude -..m ed...,.,.,... 81111 the Slate Univerllity. r..e seen the Lecislature
becia ID ....rt ilaelf in quite dif,.,._ directions. . Yve seen the
. . . - "' the Trustees and the
a..a..&amp;ir diminiab, so ~t
boCb are ......... at lea8t
with--....,ID~

a.

~

...._...

r ... _,......,.-dump mpidIJ'. - .

We ba-.e 1.t an;ytbing

bat~- 'lbio, I feel, baa

been one of the primary faciDm
behind . unimizatim
People
have 8llid, "We'.., lfiOl to ba-.e
some kind of a lew!ling off.
We've lfiOl to ba-.e IIOIIIething

A-oiwe can

count c:m..•

Tbe collective orpnization
we call SPA am rightly be 1
called a uniou, and to
offer a number of positives. For
the first time, to my 1moorled&amp;e
at least, "" are functioning
under a cootractuaJ relationsbip
instead of an informal orpnimtional structure which depends
on the whims of the Legislature,
the Trustees and adminisbators.
We have the right to daim a
hearing with the Trustees ...
matters that ClOIJCelll ..... They
don't have to grant it, but my
assumption is they will We
have the capaciJ¥ to define a
relationship with . . _ administrators and the Cbancellor
which is on a far ....,..; even
keel than has eDsted ... too
many campuses. Of course,
there are the economic faciDm
that are """" a matter of conllact. We gained a aala:ry incremenl We were able to establish grieYance procedures.
We bave the right of CIIIISIIltatiGO with adminisha!oni on a
pre - determined basis which
lends the ~ty for great,.
er rationality and greater "Weight
of faculty sentimeDt in decision-making. This .......1\tstion
endeavor aloDe is a distinct
plus. At UIB, "" moet with
the president every maoth for
two bows with an open agenda
and discuss virtually everything. We bave an ~ty
to share points of view on matten; that have simply not been
discussed openly before between administmtom 81111 fac.
ulty. This bas not wurloed 88
effectively at the SUNY level
with our Cbancellor, but I see
no reason why it llhould not in
time. We also have the opportunity to settle issues by adlitration.
These are things that provide
us with 8Clllle predidability, a
reasonably constant setting, and
wiU be very important for good
morale and effective development.
We also have an organizational base to carry on political
activities. In the past, _...,
depended largely on the Trustees and on the Cbancellor to
carry on political battles within
the Stste Legislature. But we
now bave the orpnizational
strength and professioual stslf
to take an independent stance
on matters we think are fondamentslly important to the wellbeing of the Uni...,.,.;ty. We
have also a potential for greater
self-discipline.
·
.
Finally. we bave the opportunity through asking~
and gaining informatioo to
achieve an improved administration and greater order in that
administration. Frankly, 88 a
loni;-term educa~ rm not
3.11IJOUS to see life· perlect administration. Tbe odds are it
would be too efficient and too
effective; there llhould be a fair
amount of ~ about
it. Bnt one of the CIIIBe&amp; of
college and univenlity adminis!rations is that for the most
part we look to amateurs for
our direction. Deans, )JIOV06Is,
vice presidents and. in too
manyinstsnces,presidents
"'!""' c;&gt;ut of the ranb of people
WJth little or 110 adminishative
~_They ofteu quicldy 1
~ this in the way
they 8l11W! at Cll!l1ain decisious
or in the dl'ectiw!neos with
wb!d&gt; _they lreep reconls and
maintain order. I think that
through union """""'Pls, GrJBDizalional
elforts
81111_greater at.we
are lfiOing
to ...,
tenlioo to Ibis lllldter. I think
~Y ~ are lfiOing to ...,
a fairly mpid tnmows- in col· lege~ We will prob-

~

ably develop a bftet o1.
presideals, u..e wbo are peniQillll!i orienll!ll; u..e who
can live with and be 111n111c
enough to sufficiently baloao.i

!f~::::...bouDd

toThe grea- hazard is the
poasibility that faculty .......
may become too ~
We need to inYol-.e Y'IUIIC 18&gt;ple, ones who are vicorous 81111
eueraetic wfth I 0 D ' ..........
~ of them, mtber than so
many senior faculty. Tbe interest of senior faculty is in ~ what "" bave. "!&gt; ...

:-'thl:.k y;n:.::;-u: .:t
...,.,.;ty-and here 81111 there it
needs 8Clllle I"I!IDilkinc.

.__-.o.-

By way of !IWDIDaly, let's
take another look at Fred
Hecbinger's questions abo u t
unions.

::s:::.lot;:;;:

~
unions
tbeir own economic
simultaneously considering the
(~ 0 1 0 - 6.

col. 5)

Support for
Coach Sanford
OOACH WILUAJI IIANI'OIID

Clark Gymnasiwn
In light of recent ew!Dls surrounding the Spectrunc article
and editorial of April 12, 19'72,
dealing with alleged finllnOal
miaoooduct, I would at this
}&gt;Oint like to go on reconl as
offering my full &amp;UpPOrt 81111
reallinn our confidence in you
and the program which you
lead.
It is my aboolute muvic:tDt
tbat 110 wrongdoing took place
on your part, and would only
say that it is a 80ITY of
aJfairs and ediiorial ilresponsjbility that allowed those
statements to be made.
Once again, pledging onr
port and reallinning our faith in
you, I remain.

suP-

RespectfuUy yours,
IONATHAN A.. DANJJel,.

Director
Student AthletU:
Review Board
~~-·~Ban,

T

~

B;ll ~,./;YO"5

.rt

"

.L t::.l K.UI

TO AIL PACULTT:

Tbe present ban .., sabllaticals is due to expire this spring.

Unfortunately, bills ba-.e been
introduced in both houses to
continue the ban. ( Asaemllly
No. 11744 and Senate 98118).
While both bills are still kded
up in committee, a strong passibility exists that their ~
ents will take advantage of the
rush of business that always _,_
companies the clo8ing days of
the 9l!l!6ion and 8I!CUie ~
It is aboolutely - a . l that
the faculty·inform their legislalive represenlatiws of the educational value of llllbiJatials
and tbeir relatiw ........_.....
at the Uru...,.,.;t;y Cl!lderL This
is one ~ .me-- tril!
largely depend upcm the individual elforts of faculty ,_._
hers to alert a sufliciftlt ,_..
ber of legislators of the slakes
involved. Write, taepbaae, or
malre pencxmi visi~ a
handful of informed 81111 dedicated legislaton; am malre the
difference.
.
• -DXINOIIIC BrAftl!l
OOIDI!ri'IIE or 'l'llll
FACULTY IEIIAD&lt;
IIDIIIlAY _ , .

PH1UPlliiiEirr
1'181&lt;PAIJIBI'II
JOHN .v-

. . - JIOGAif
nAVID II:OCIIIIII"I'

�5

BirthCmtrd
Center Opens

G(JIB

·&lt;NOTES

'Die .,alatiaD _.... •
.... but .,..,. 15 IIIOidb&amp;

'

UrB~J.sabirtb~
. - . . Ofil:ioolly • put of
~ s.ltb e-ta-,

........ -....
C-UDay
."1....,..=.::.... .

_

.......

..vice is nlll aDd staffed by
...................... IIJtpether
OW!r a ,._.. as the Com-aty Adiaa Corps (CAC)
Birth CG.tral Project, aDd laiB
as the Studeat Beolth A&amp;Kiciatioll..
u..t- then UJd there
.......... doM.ysaad ......

T _ . . . . _ _ _ _ . ; _ . . . . . , . _ eal ......

-~-.-.----~
-:==~
a f - s.- .. l i l a -

c

0.,,

s.....,,

00.. ...... -

with~

IMIIin&amp;
the first 10 enminetjms were
.,.,....._._ La s t nilbt, 20
.... bipe but Mand8y

ezsminedofaDd
NaJiicy
Levine,
d&gt;airmaD
the
baud of eli.-.., feels there's
a ' - DO limit to the number
of stucii!Dis wlio am use the aervice.
em.-tly the Cll!lller is using
the '-* ball of the Heelth Ser,..., far:iJities, the section that
faces Bailey A......,_ But Ms.
Levine belEws they can e&gt;:pand to the front portion.
What the dinic offers is a
_.;red c:omse in human """"
..tity UJd birth CDIItml methods, then aa eauninstion for the
_,who decide to use denical or .........,icol methods.
Ahortiou aDd COUD91!lin&amp;
are also oftered aDd,
......, the center hopes to start
dasses for ~~ fathers.

_T_______
___
-----21.-------......,

... _14,.1ois _ ___

w-

- t b e o l d _ _ _ ...

- - - - . . old

Dr. Clark Ken, chairman.

the CamePe Commissim on
RiPer Education, says that ...,

can look- forward to the fo&amp;ming oertailities in flilber Education:
• 1970's--Great cr-th in
enrollmenL
• 1980's-No increase in
enrollmenL
• 1990's--Bic increase in
enrollmenL
• 2000-IDcreases in enroDment '-sed em how the society
grows.

• Costs of hilbei edu&lt;atioo
will CDIIlinue to rise. 'lbe.e
law which indicates that the costs of bid&gt;et
education increase at the !:aiDe
rate as iDflatioa plus three per
Cli!IIL
•
• Costs of bid&gt;et education
will be from $31 to $40 billioD
in the 1970'.., $60 billioD in the
$100 bii-

seems to be a

::;;; =._will .....

In addition to supplying
......,., with a hirth CDIItml
method, the e&gt;:amination indudes a pap smear, pelvic and
breast """"' and a veoereal di""""" test. Ms. Levine says
there is a VD epidemic em campus and this is one way of
cheekin« iL 'The clinic will also
SUJlllly pnlllhylactics.
'The procedure for obtaining
an appoinlmel!t is simple. Students =oy caD the CAC office
a t en. 3609 or 3815. They will
schedule the mandatory class
and also an eJalDlination.
Becaa.e of its status dS an
ann of the U niversity H ealL"
Center, the clinic can serve
onl y registered st ud e nt s.
Spouses are not covered by the
center•s insurance. so they are
ineligible.
Project head Levine stresses
that all visits to the dinic are
...UKiential and that the birth
control records are kept sep- ·
arately [rom the Health Ser-

vic::e•s..

· Mexico 'frip
A chance ~ see MeXico City
and le:un about ancient Toltec
UJd AUe&lt;: civil.imtions is being
oftered this summer by the Division of C&lt;&gt;ntinuing Education
which is sponsoring a week's
tour of Mexico City and surrounding historical sites. Dr.
Stuart Scott. anthropology, will
. he the cuide.

isfactions with biaber ......
~P.m. Dr. Ken citiOd three of

lnduded in the trip are visits
to T..,.;m.,n the temples of
the· Som UJd Moon and the
Great l'ytamid of Cholula.

......t c:urril:ulum, UJd -

Cost of the trip, which nms
from Aupst 2»-26, is $299. For
additioaal infcxmation, CDIIIact
Allan Caafield at e&gt;:L 4827.

ID

cli&amp;c:uminc

&lt;:III!Blt dissat-

sicnificant imporlaace: the
Me.t ror atteDtion to
leoidWJc rather thaD .......,., a
atteDtiaol to the emotioaal
cr-th of studmls.
palioios, Dr. Ken-

c::a........a.

............. that the loDooriac
are of lr.ey import.,ce: to help

..... llbaut. _ . . . . - o f

--. ........ ..........,
9IICial justic., ... the Ameriam
people; to de9elap '-lib

..,_, UJd - . . . e ; ... atlempt to ........ aut the 6of .,.._ educatiall; ...
~u&gt;d~~cli~ - . . ............. of

.....u.c

hicbol- ~ aDd ... -- .
JIUid ...... ...,.,._the ......
P&lt;l8t
luy - - aDd
~ (a..-tiw!
aptiam).

GSEA Direct&lt;rs
'The Civil Service Employees
Association ( CSEA ) has just
elected liYe members to its 10.
member baud of directors. 'The
- t y elected direclots who
........, as representati..., from
their amos are: Racer Frieday
(administration), Cathe&lt;ine
Mas&amp;imi ( derical ) . H ow a r d
Stmuss (r.culty ) , .1.-pft Coia.
(-in..........,) aiJI! Floyd
Malthie ( lecbnicol ). All eu:ept
Coia inrumbent baud

IIIOIIIbem.

.,..

�~h!~~~ !!HNW !~~m~~il:li~t.li·l,! 11 ,~~ !~~~ m
!l!!,i!1i!UdP;imnJ.i'U!if~i!!i!.linHf~i~r~ !! [J!~! rr ~ 03 ~
•r

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lK

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11 1

0\

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~,~:,r;:J"'fl 1lUJ!t~~li!Udfifiji~Ut~lltr~qft~t
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rmiw;~~nlj'~fhr!J.~·r!!r! ~~~id::,_.
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irJ• ' .;J·r
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~~ ·fr r s ··[ ··~~~ ~{-~ trfJ~ t ~~;;
J·f ; e
' ih ·i ll.
1!. '

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h. Ua·h 'f. dt.!f~iUt~ r~r.h~ L .. Unh· .. 1: ~ ~,t hn~ ~ ·,i~a.fl~t.~rh ·r.th' .rULi ll~

H!Ui~~}~}:l~~!i~' !'~t~; HI~!!Ji~f!~~~~t1JH!rai~i~!~i .tm!d: ij~~~! .mri!H~ :1
qJJ~~=,~~t~~~~~~~. [N.t:~~frtt~rtt:H! ~~~~?i I:[rlifi~: ~~~: mi ·H~. ,:•'r~ ~t~~!!~! ;i
1

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,l 1u•h fJI··ll·
ta.nllllh . ;;a f~ia. J ..rlhrU~ f:-...... h .U ' rnh . . d:l ri

t ~L~ ·~tt! •·• t·r~:

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a2· .....

u

;~~~~
[ntu!'i'-rl11!~~~f UfJH~ittr~h u~nli~~~~~ ll [iJf!l w::~. t1 ~~ ~liUif!h ~
1
t.1t!: i~r~~'i~Cl!!r~ll :·ti!llihi~rf~ f!!;;ltF nlhf!lrrlrt~Br~t ;t~l~~;n :u J
.1,., ~f.J -i•ll. ~-'•}! r ~J~{~t~jt~!ti ~!~hfl•l! !irH~IH~l !l, d 1 •

rn.tr
I.~~:Jitfa. l 11 J.·1 1 hlhf!.·!~rh lan·:,r!~ I J~J~hhu~Jt a~, [,J.ul~lf f II
itJIW ~~~~,, Ul(n:Jiirjr;lb .lfJi·![Ml~~i WH!1 i'l{1'-llil1J' Pr1il~i .!fjf~f!~~W1~~ ~~iU1 IliU!ini~! ...

1
. fi!t ,r,~ !{iJl~ ~ !!~~~!1Jt.!~~~~~! : i ·fti!!if~t:· lr,rit~ ~ ri ~'i!t ir ~ ~ w iJ: i•~J,i~!litflii
rr~...

1 1

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1
1
~u•tnr~i~' i~mtmtmnf.J.li1 i i:f:i[rft~tlr~ mprHtiW ~~tfi:fl

lff•f~ l~t~·· ) f

f[

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fa.-.u

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If

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wl.!!!hllrl •• n:tl

r.,I'I·J ''' 4rl·f r[Jil~''IJlJfl ~. :•{ 1 ~~~~ :!1J j·1ftl tli f· r1trfrf · .l't

1

iJ~!lil'ii'r }~!rl1t ~
hf'U

·

!!~~~HUFfW'lfili Fwr~,:· rtm.,ttb-1-ttt! i:~r]Jii~fdtittJl !1H·i~~ ijnl~hivr~~tHi• ·rmtu~ti'il~~1!! ,
·mb&amp;Jir.frrl!l~:-1. llrtfd:Urtdd~~ ;,;,l,,!rtl ~.ti~muJh~ hltd~~~~~lld!t.Jla ih~ ~mr.1~.~h.1~~ t~

;

�7
En.viron~Mntol

Con..Uhrotiou in

Nuckar POW&lt;Ir P/Gnt SUU.., IOf
Parlrer, 3 p.m.

~~~~:~
p.m.,&amp;ee.

APKIL &lt;*lY OP 'I'IIIU.!D

ar:.n•:

~~.. srd'="'"wruMdf!!ll~

Co-dy in 1M Na» Tlulatn,
Harriman Sludio n-tre, 8 p.m.

John
Gudner, cbainDan, will ,;... brief
- . followC ~ • 'l'*tian
CO)Q(ON CAU88 IIIEI'DfC•:

~"':" ~~. ~~n::l

='·

nuo:••: Bonniz &amp; Clyde

(U.S~

140 Capen, 3 aDd 8 p.m.,

Starriac Faye Dunaway, Wsr-

""' Beatty, Gene Raclanan. Di·
reded by Arthur Pena. No better
way to eod an American &amp;1m

~than with thio -

-

OOIIJ'UrDJC CZN'na usa, &amp;laVKZ8
aamua# : MAPS, a multiple
anaJyliis progam syatem for bebavioral ocience reoean:h, Robert

~= ~"'1-;r·p!:."""

10,

AIWI. 08CY OF TJIJ:ADZ DfiiiGY • •

Wo~~UJ~"• Theatre Council will
talk or their theatrical elrorta " to
di s cover and eDC."'U.J'aCe new
women playwri«hto aDd also to
prcwide opportunities lor' women
in other areas of tbeatm as di·
rectors,

desicnen a D d - - . ··

Rep ....... tiog the group will be
Roooylan Drexler, .Julie Bovaooo
aDd Mepn Terry. Harriman Stu.
clio Theatre, 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-26
N U &amp; S E S '!ELEPRONE

u:crtr~~Z# :

Garle Traver. R.N., Knowledge.
Skill and .ludgm.e.nt in lnteruive
C.U• N~g . s ponson!d by RMP,
40 s tations., 7 : 15 a .m. and 7 : 15
p.m.
PHYSIQ.AHS TELEPHONE ux::TUKE# :

Psy cbia~ri~ Conference-Or. Rog.
e r Castilho, Legal Queatioru in
H cnpital Admission and Care.
...,....n!d by RMP. 40 Olations.
l l a.m...

Coordsls
Man of lear
Henry H. Coon1s. president
or Y!Sb«-Prioe Toys in East
Aurora, has been named Niap.ra Frontier Businessman or
the Year by the School or
ManagemeoL Presentation of
the award will be made at the
"The Uivi&amp;ian of Undergrad- Annual Alumni - Student - Facs:udies will bold its spring ulty Awards Banquet, Friday
Fa:ally Meetinc today &lt;April .,...,..u,g, A'Pril 21, at the Packet
20) hom 3 to 4:311 p_m_ in Diel- Inn. North Tooawanda.
-md 146.
Mr. Coords describes him.3be ~ includes: intro- self as a "people h"trelcber. ~
clodianof Dr_ Walter Kunz, as- Tbe ro1e or management. be
mc:ide dmn; a report by Dr. esplain. is uto stretch
Robert J . Ganlbam. associate to tbeir capacity.~ A ~ul
businessman who spent 25 yean;
ct..o. - the -Learning
- of special
..-(EPIS;
Cen- with lhe Weslern Eledric Co~
e.r; O_.,t BcluDd l since they Mr. Coords £eels that comnnmi- - iacaoporaf.ed With i D catioo between industey and
DOS 1.t SepCember. and a re- scbools is an essential point in
p.t by lhe ....... and subse- developing American industry.
- ' ........... oolhe......ly
Mr. Coonls says that be has
...__. '-oalaureate dep-Pe been "preecbing'" for some time
, .. &amp;m!ty aajors and a the need for such communica_ . . clocreetion. While a t'Westem Electric
be cot sdJools and industey
talltinc. 'Td like to see more
and more of it. for instance,
more lectures hom businessmen."
Presently at Fisher-Price.

_.e

~~:~'4=~ Re ci tal~

ar 1'D.EPHOHE UCTURE# : The
COTA'• E ducation . Work on d
Contribution in the Health F~ld ,
SJJOn.!fOred by RMP. 40 s tations.
2 p.m.
PSYCHON:AT : Cafete ria, room 112,
Norton. 3-6 p .m.
_
STAnsncs COlLOQUI UM: Dr. D.V.

I...iodley, U n iversity College. London. An o I y• i • of Varian ce: A
&amp;y~ Approach . Room A-49.
4230 Rid~e Lea. 4 p.m. CoiTee
hour. Room A-16, 4230 Rid"e Lea.
3 :30 p.m.
JOHN C. rx:x:u:&gt; U'.C1'UBE" : third
in a t:~eries of lectures on Com munication and the Neruou. Sy•tem... AU students interested in
the bioloj;cal and philosophical
ooooer.ts ol behavior and brain
function a re invited. 146 Diefen.
don. 7 :30 p.m.
AnaL ORGY OF TIIEATD £NaGY *:

Film or Jean Oaude von ltallie's
The &amp;rtliOll. Harriman Studio
'l'be.atre. 4 p .m. Playwn,hu in
Collaboration. Susan Yanlc.owitz:
and Jean Claude von ltallie, Harriman Sludio Theatre, 8 p.m.
EYE-CON "12: Peter Kubelka, one

of Eui"'(Je's leading avant-prde
fi............... """"""' and diocusoes
his f i l - Albrij:ht-Knox Art Gallery, 8 p.m..
COKPU1'1NC acH'I'I'a USI!a 8BRV1CB8

Aduanced FORTRAN, oee Monday 1istinc.

SBIUNu.# :

~ &lt;f~pllw~,!..~

Capen, fee $40, for further in·
formatioo, tel 831-3806.

IICiinc
- intemL
"The
i s - atlempt
to
-- M.RA.

THURSDAY- 27

&lt;:mJdidates to lhe .-..Iity. Mr. Coonls says, lhe uiJUls," ol

A n!llidmt ol lhe Niapra
. Fnmlier for lhe l.teicf!t years,
Mr. Coonls is a f....- viae
preoidmt ol the Bulralo Ami
a..mtJer ol c-a. and is
.....,tly a dimdor. He is alaD
preoidmt ol lhe · Greater Ni_ . . Fnmlier CcuK:iJ Boy
8caulll ol A-a, and a director ol Janiar Adliew!moDL
-well ........... ol the
Nata.~ . . . . _ CcuK:iJ for
ec...mea Alfaim. .

or

p~~...~c:::w~

:.,c:;:
Copland, Sibeliua,_ Straoinoky, and WaiP&gt;er, Bainl, 8:30
p .m., &amp;ee.

m.M••: Clcire'• Kn.u (Fnmce
1970) . Confen.noe Theatre, c:beck
ahowcaee for t i m e a. admiuion

charge.

m.x••: Morocco (U.S, 1930).
Confereoce Theatre, cbeclt show.
case for t.i.me., admiuion charge.

NOTICES
BANGLADESH EIOBCENCY K.ELIJ:P

Send your donation to
Marine Midland Bank, P .O. Box
902, Bulfalo, N .Y.

PUNDG :

~urimo~,:relli~:~e ~~

seminar on the Future of Man in
the autumn semester 1972. EnroUment is by interview on I y.
Hall the enrollment will be from
s tudents already on the campus.
s;.tJ I 831-1322 before Ma y 4 for
mtervaew.

VOLUHTEEKS FOR DENTAL STUDY:

Study for control of dental plaque
and periodontal disease requires
volunteers. Pa rticipant&amp; make five
visits over a period of a month·
free dent a 1 examination and

th.':!i'ho?"~ro~~
EXHIBITS

(Dental

CHOU· B.JORG£ SCULPTURE: 2917
Main St., .Cth .Ooor, (ned to Ben.

i:.ti~nf ~J&gt; ·p~r:.~~~:tar;!
Friday.

COMNUNICA'nONS DESIGN STUDENT

suow : Monday, April 24- Friday,

April 28, Art DepL Gallery, 4240
H1dge Lea, 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
PHOTOGRAPHS AND ETCH.IHGS BY
JAMES DlNE AND LEE f1UEDIJ.NDDl :

April 25 through May 1.6. Spon""""' by the Office
Cultural
Affairs, Hayes Lobby, 9 a.m..·S

or

p .m., Monday-Friday.

UKLUNIAN ARTS FESnVAL• : ico111

und enamels on display at Center Lounge, Norton; an exhibit
at Lockwood featuring Ukrainian
books through the ages, until
April 22.

INTERVIEWS
ON-c.AlilPUS lOB lHTERVIEWS:

Of-

fers the opportunity for individual
interviews with educational, busi-

ness.

industrial and governmental
representatives. Candidates from
all degree levels are invited to
interv:aew. Forms in Hayea C

Room 6.

'

THUIISDAY-20 :

tics, SUNY/B.
f'IUDA~21 :

fied Setvioes.

Dept. of Statis-

Investors Diveni-

RocbMter City
Scbool District; SL J-pb Scbool
WBDHI!SDAY-26:

~::..,.:N~tional Children, IJun-

TUUitSDAY-27: lroquoia Central
Scboola (Erie Co.)

OON'ftNUINO III:NTAL DUCA'ftON. :

there are """"" &amp;tudeots from
U/B's School of Manapment

.........

Fourth St., llulfalo, 8 p.m., free,
pen to membera
Oommoll
Cauoe a D d """~·: Univuoily Orclonlro,

0

MFCHonors
Eleven Milllud Fillmore Colwere admitted to
Lambda Chapter of Alpha Sigma Lambda, National Ev...W..
College Honor Society, last
week. Tbe new members are
Micbael A. Altieri, Jerald R.
Barber, Joan M . Crouse, J&lt;~~~e­
phine A. Doqlin, Georgina L.

. lege students

Fr:aaer, Sharon Gardner,

Thomas D. Graham, Joseph
Karb, Dennis J . Romance,
Karen R. Szaszi,- and Jewell R.
Trancbell
•
At the hmcbeon where the
atudents were "tapped," President Robert Ketter was preaented with an hononuy membership.

�8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
oap.

oniJ 1D -

-

P'ictures." Cast: Keir Dullea.
Gary Lockwood, William Sylveater, Don Richter. Directed by
Stanley Kubrick.

••Opon to members of the U..-.lty;

1D . , . - ;

.Opon

~
!!:::'I!:'f..~~c;,.~:::; =~amW::"'Pa~u.
Bradstreet. Owen McBride, Top-

-

• profeaion8l in the sullj8ct
_ _ . . 131-22211. for llstinp.

FRIDAY-21
SPRING J'U811CZ 'DlAINING P'80Qiti.K:

Law School, 77 W. Eacle St., 9
a.m. - 5 p.m., also on April 22.

SYMPOSIUM ON ETHICAL AND SOCIAL
PROBLEMS lN HUMAN BIOLOGY• :

~nao~n~ o;,:aM',!~:.,~::,;

and the H umanUt Magazine.
9 a.m.-Introduction, Dr. Bernard
R. Gelbaum, vice president for
academic affairs. 9: 15 a.m.-Nor-

motive Ethics and Public Morality, Dr. Daniel Callahan, director,
lnatitute of Society, Ethics and
the Life Sciences, Hastings-onHudson. N.Y: 9:55 a.m.-Commentary. 10: 15 a.m.-Open ·Discussion. 10: 35 a.m.-Coflee Break.
10:55 a.m.-Developing the Po·
tential of Human Genes, Dr.
Verle E. Headings, assistant pro-fessor of pediatrics and medicine,
Howard University C.oUege of
M~cine, Washington, D. C.
11:35

am.~ommenlary .

11:55

a.m.-Open Discussion. 12: 15 p.m.
-Lunch. 1:30 p.m.-Designing
Man, Dr. Evalyn F. Segal, director, lnatitute of Child and Family

~~fo';;~turriV:Jt;of:fNo..tl!

... c.p.n.

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

THURSDAY-20

~OG&amp;APBY

WoaxBHOP:

El«trocanJiDiraphy in Coron&lt;ujl
C&lt;Jn Uniu, aponsored by C&lt;&gt;roaary Heart Diseaae C&lt;&gt;mmittee of
the New York State Heart Aasembly, Inc.; co-aponaored by Central New York Regional Medical
- Procram; Rocbeater RMP; C&lt;&gt;nMedical Education, SUNYAB; Lakeo Area RMP. Executive Motor Inn, registration at
8 :30 a.m.
rMIII' "222: OONDIOfU&amp;IIII IN SCIEHCI:: Joel A Cohen. student Jectwer, 362 Acbeaon. 10 a.m., visiton welcome.
HBALTB PAl&amp;: aponaored by United Health Fonndation and B'nai
B'rilh, BouleYllld Mall. through
Apri122.

tinumc

PBADIACY 'l"aDBONB ~UII:E#:

Robert Peanon, What'• New in

~~ fbto'R;:~seM:ti~ sh::
pam. 40 receiving stations, 11 : 30
a.m. and 10 p.m.
BNVI&amp;ONJII:NTAL

-,

WORKSHOP•:

Hetman Forest. SUNY/Gen...,.,,
Citizen Commentary on Environmental Impact Statem.enLI: Is It
M eoninB/ul? oeriea aponaored . by
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Buf!alo
l:listrict Army C&lt;&gt;rps of Engineen, 104 Parker. 3 p.m.
PATHOLOGY BEIONAK#: Dr. Marilyn G. FIUQuhar, Rockefeller Uniwnity, New York City, CytocMmicol Electron Micrwcopic
Studia on Developing Leucocytu, 139 Capen. 3 p.m.
PBY8IC8 COu.oQIJIUll : Dr. Gerald
E. Brown, Nordiak Inatitut Teoret. Atomfyaik, C&lt;&gt;penhagen, and
SUNY/Stony Brook, The Nuckon-N u cleo n Interaction, 111
Hocbstetter, 4 p.m., refrealunents
112 Hocbste~r. 3:30 p.m.
'
CBIDOS'I'KY COILOQUJUK : Pro f.
Mirlto Mirnilt, Ruder Boakovic
Institute, C r Dati a, Yugoslavia
Some! R e c e n t Obseruatioru o,;_
Ekctrolyte Athorption SurfacUJnt
lnfbunu, Cry•tallotrophic Modification and Heterogen.ou.. Ex·
c/um6e in Siluer Halide Solo &lt;ind
SU8pe1Uioi)O, 10 Acbeaon. 4 p.m.
- C L U B: meeting, 264 Norton,
7:30p.m.
UK&amp;UNI4N Alt1B n:srrv.u. •: Embi;Oidery worbbop, 240 Norton
6 p.m.. NatiofUJUty Diuent: Th~·
UluGUUtm CtJK, Dr. Rom an
Szporl.uk, Univenity of Michigan;
NIIIJJOille panel; moderator, Dr.
G.&gt;rp P . 'Majeaka, 29 DiefeDCiorf
" " - . 7 : 30 p.m.
J'IUil: Spellbound, 140 Capen. 7
aDd 9 p.m., free.
a-t: Grego,.Y Peck, Ingrid
B e - . Rbooda Fleming, l.eo
G. Ca.....U; directed by A1hed

==~ro:JLn:~

,........~,.

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

American film to deal with the
subject of psychoanalysis. SpeUboru,d involves a newly appointed
director of a mental hospital who,
after a few days, begins to doubt
bill identity. An extraordinary
work. The Dati dream sequences
are famous.
PHYSICAL

FJTNE8S

WORKSHOP:

sponsored by The Professional
Physical Education Department
and the Western Zone of the New
York State Association of Health,
Physical Education and Recrea·
tion. interested educators and
coaches are invited to attend.
Clarlt Gym. 7 p.m.
PSYCHOMAT: 232 Norton. 7-10 p.m.
DENTISTB.Y TELEPHONE LECTUD#:

Dr. Ray S. Krug, T issue Control

~~ru!fe~~~

Tro; ~ ~:

ceiving stations, 7:30 p.m.
BJLU:L PAJn'Y: Hillel at U/B will
join Hillel at Buf!alo State. Hillel
House, 7: 30 p.m.
PLAY*: Samuel Beckett's The Unnamable, presented by the American Contemporary Theatre, n
new professional theatre in Buffalo, 1695 Elmwood, Tuesdays
through Sundays, 7:30 p.m., admission $3.00, tickets at Norton
Ticltet Office, Buffalo State Ticket
.()ffice, and at the door.
I:EiJ)[N'G: John Hawkes, novelist,
will read from his new fiction, 1
Diefendorf Annex. 8 p.m.
The author, whose latest novel
T~e Blood Oranges (1971), received excellent notices, is on
leave from Brown University. He
ia serving as visiting distinguished
profes:sor of creative writing at
the pity C&lt;&gt;llege of the. City University of New York.
Hawkes has been the recipient
of several fellowships and awards
arld his works include ~ The Cannibal (1949) , The Beetle Let
(1951), Th~ Lime Twig (1961).
Second Skm (1964), and Lunar
Lan@capea (1969).
o~ •: A Fe~tiua~ of Myt.M in
Muuature, Umvers1ty Opera StUdio, Muriel Wolf, director. Ba.ird,
8:30 p.m.. general adm.ission
$1.50; faculty, staff and alumni
$1.00; students $,.50. Tickets at
Norton, at Baird Ticket Office on.
evening of performance.
Four operas by Darius Milbaud
are being pedonned in honor of
the compooer's 80th birthday.
Procram includea tbe rarely perfo~ The Abduc,.Wn of Europa,

t,;~~ ~h=,M~T~heLit;:;

Caroline, Greensboro, N.C. 2:10
p.m.-Commentary, Dr. Ludwig
von Bertalanffy, faculty professor
of Natural Sciences and Mathematics and Social Sciences and
Ad.miniti:tration. 2 : 30 p.m.-Open
Discussion. 2:50 p.m.-Science
for th e People, Dr. Ethan Signer,
associate professor of microbi·
ology, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
3:30 p.m.-Commentary, Dr. Har·
old L. Segal, proleaaor, biology,

~!.!;'io";BAJ:!!.;;:-~~= /!.,~:
rerence Theatre. Norton.

SYMPOSIUM ON MODERNiST INTERFRETATIONS OF ANCIENT LOGic•:

i!hii:,r:fybyinth~~:=en!i~
clusics, linguistics and mathemat-

~c:'ai~~N':!tD~ G:~-;::o~e:~

tinctWe Features in Categoriae.

10:45 a.m.-Norman Kretzmann..
Com ell, ArUtotle on the Meaning
of Names. 11 :45 a.m.-Lunch. 1

p.m. - Ian Mueller, Chicago,
Greek Logic and Greek Mathe·
mati&lt;."B. 2: 15 p.m. John Corcoran, Aristotle's Natural Deduction
System . 3:30 p.m. - John Mulhern, Binghamton, Corcoran on
Aristotle's Logical Theor.v. 4:30
p.m. - Sherry. 8: 30-11:00 p.m.
-Reception. All sessions in Room
14, -4244 Ridge Lea. Information :
John C&lt;&gt;rcornn, philosophy, 8311331.
VARSITY BASEBALL 0 : W est Virginia,
campus, 3 p.m.
ENGlNEEBJNG SCIENCE SEMINAR: Dr.
K. s~. group supervisor, re~rch group, guidance and con·
trol systems and research aection,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. Aduanced Elec·
tric Power for Spoce. Thermionic
Energy Conversion, 104 Parker
Engineering, 3:30 p.m.

~·:.~roc:~.E~~~t

Park Memorial Institute Dico.rbor)!l.ic Acids and Their A.mides,
G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
IN'I'EBNA110NAL

COFFEE

soua••:

all foreign and American students, staff a nd faculty are invited, 204 Townsend, 4-6 p.m.
LECTURE* : Dr. Thomas M. Tomasic, associate professor, John
Carroll University, Cleveland.
The ~fyth of the Divine Comedy:
Medteool Neoplatonism Revisited,
sponsored by C&lt;&gt;llege B and the
Department of Philosophy Room
15; 4244 Ridge Lea, 4 p.U.: .
Pro f.
Gottfried Noether, Univenity of
Connecticut, Dist-ribution - F r e e
Confidence lntervala for the .Center of a Symmetric Population,
Room A-49, 4230 Ridge Lea, 4
~; ~~:"J:.':u3': 30~:_ A-16,

STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM * :

ANNUAL ALUMNHtfUDENT-FACULTY

AWARD B~U&amp;T: School of Manof Orpheru.
rro:=!s~
I'!LK•: 2001-A Space Odyouy, awanl, undergraduate and gradui~ril
$.76, alllo on •:;.,de~~f S~r
J:;~
This is more than a movie. It awani Packet Inn. N . Tonawan.
;. an exploration of tec:hnoloaY da. 7 p.m.
and of man's constant queetion· CII.&amp;J1AD BABB4TB. IDVIC28*: eervinc into life and death, "With . _ and mMl. ~ H - .
aome of the moot dauliac visual 8292 Main St., 7:16 p.m.

c;r,"22 '!.!d-'24.

t!f:eT.:

:=t

i:"f

~w~~!·BRJI~:. "lfet

Weal, Doe and Merle Watson;
M .C., Owen McBride, tent. Clark
Gym Field, 7:30 p.m., all-festiwl
ticket $10.00; Friday evening concert. general admission $4.00; faculty, staff, alumni $3.00; studeniJI
$2.00. Tickets available at Norton
Ticket Office. For information.
write Buffalo Folk Featival, 261
Norton Hall, SUNY/ B, Buf!alo,
N.Y. •14214.
UKJl.UNL\N FISTIVAL * : D u n a i ,
folkdancing ensemble, Upton Hall.
SUCB, 7:30 p.m., general admission $2.50, students $1.60.
BLACK POETRY WORKSHOP• : Harriman Studio Theatre, 8 p.m.
HILLEL SABBATH SERVICE• : Hillel
House, 8 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Instruction in basic steps during
.first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
ROCK F'ESTIVAL:
Alice Cooper,
Spirit, MemoriaJ Auditorium, 8 ,
p.m., admission $4.50, tickets at
Buffalo Festival Ticket Office,
Statler-Hilton lobby and a t Nor~~:e~ur:~~t the per-

The Clow118 (ltaly,1970),
Conference Theatre, check showcase for times, admission charge.
Directed by Federico Fellini.
Fellini's glorjous tribtotte to the.
cbwns, and somethinc' else that
be senses as absent from today's
life. Done in a marvelous three·
ring fashion. The Clowns goes beyond the suggestion of documentary into a strong personal vision
of life that will give everyone a
sense of joy; but especially Fellini f8IUI.
FILM• : 2001-A Spac• Odyouy,
... Thursday listing.
OPERA • : see Thursda~ J.isting.

FILM . . :

WOMEN 1N THE ARTB SYJUOBIUM•:

Open, self-juried exhibition. reception. lectures, films. rinformal
rap groups and workshops con·
cem.ing women in the arts. SUCB,
Elmwood Ave. campus, through
April 29.

SATURDAY-22
CHABAD SABBATH SERVICES*:

aerv-

ices and refreshments, 9 :30 a.m..

Makwah Malkah, music. conversation. refres.hme:Dts, Chabed
House, 3292 Main St., 8 p.m.
SYMPOSIUM ON MODBaNIST ~­
PBETATIONS OF »iCIENT LOGic•:

Second Day, 9:30 a.m.-Coffee.
10 am.-John Mulhern. Modem
Notations for ;Ancient Logic.
11: 15 a .m. - Joaiab Gould, Albany, Deduction in the Stoics.
1:V. l&amp;-Lunch. 1:30-3:30 p.m.[f'inal PaneL All sessions in Room
14, 4244 Ridge Lea.
VARSITY BASEBALL* :. West Virginia.
campus, 1 p.m.
·
BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL• : Guitar
workshop, led by John Wilcox,
11 a.m.· I p .m . lnalrumental workshop, led bY. John Herald, 1 p.m.3 p.m. Ceilidh (Kay-Lee) worltshop led by Tam Kearney, 3 p.m.-

5 p.m. Euonint con«rl, .J..,._
Browne, Tony 8Dd Jolm, Jalm
Herald and Friends, Pat Sky,

J;:::i:' ~::'Yt.sum:,:~

Traum, M.C. - ~y BuiDiL
Worltabops: general 8dmiloWD
$3.00; faculty, · to!umni 12.00;
students $1.00. C&lt;&gt;ncert: _,a!
admission $4.00; faculty, ol a ff.
alumni $3.00; students 12.00.
Tickets at Norton Ticket Ollioe.
H1LLBL CLASS : Toroh witlt Commentariu, Dr. Hofmann'• home,
3

!~io&lt;:1 ~~~Z.t. ::o:.; ~at.
Hillel House, 8 :30 p.m.

oacy•: Tli.e Loti.n
A merican Fair of Opinion will
produce one of its muaical and
theatrical events. The production
will be followed by a. critique by
the revolutionary theatre team,
Julian Beck and bis wife .Judith
Malina. Harriman Theatre, 8 :00
p.m., admission charge.
FILM• : 2001-A Space Odyaey ,
see Thursday listing.
oPERA•: see Tbunday liBt:ing.

APRIL THEATRE

SUNDAY-23
CLERGY ECONOMIC J:DUCA'ftON CONFERENCZ: Firat in a fi~y pro-

gram of aerninan; leclurea, and
workshops designed to help men

of the cloth "better understand
the workings of the American
economic system and the various
economic problems aqd concerns.••
For information, COntact Dr. ~
ert F. Berner or Dr. A. Westley
Rowland, SUNY/ B. Program
runs through April 27, Trenholm
East Inn, Fannington. N.Y.
WLLEL CLASSES: Conve11141io11lll
Hebrew, advanced. 262 Norton,
12: 30 p.m. Convert10tional Hebrew, elementary, 262 Norton,
1:30 p.m. Talmud, Hillel Houoe,
3 p.m. Hillel closing affair, by
penonal invitatinn. Hillel Howoe,
evening.
CONCI:BT • : U/B Symphony Band,
Tonawanda Senior Higb Scbool,
·3 p.m.
....
BUFFALO FOLK F£8TJVAL•: Biua
and Gospel workshap, led by Paul
Geremia, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Songwriten worluihap, led by Pat Sky,
l p.m.-3 p.m. Dance worbhop.
led by Bill Vanaver, 3 p.m.-5:30
p.m. Euenin1 concert, Paul Geremia, Beaaie Jones, Walter Sc::ott
and Richard Hughes, The Johnstona, D8n Smith, The E a r I
Scruggs Revue. Miaaiaaippi Fred
McDowell, Bill Staines, Bill
Vanaver, M.C. · Jim Santillo,
7:30 p.m. See S.turday listinc for
ticket prices.

=-~~cNH'!Ji. !f~: :

at $6, $5 and S4 at ~ Featival Ticket Office, StaUer-Hillobby, Norton Ticket Office, SUCB
Ticket Office.
APBIL '1'11&amp;\TIIE oacv• : The Modicine Show will perform The Medicine Show, Harriman Studio
Theatre, 8 p.m., tldmioaioa cbarp.
BPBClAL C B .A. 8 .A. D 1'80CaAM*: a

=-.pies.

~ught-f~f:,.~
(Coll.tilwed

The Art of Jam.h
7, col. 3)

011 -

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1715762">
                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 3-N0. -27

APRIL 13, 1972

Comnnmity:.University lli;rSunday
To Feature U/BsSrope&amp;Diversity
W., Nov. 22
M., Nov. 27
Th., Dec. 14
F., Dec. 15 · F., Dec. 22

W., Jon. 10
T., Jan. 16
W., Jon. 17
M., Feb. 19

s., Apr. 7
M., Apr. 23
w., May 16
F., May 18 • F., May 25
Sunday, May 27

SUNY Plans (}Jlendar Study
As U/B l.engtlals Its Year
Slate Ulli¥asity a.mcetJor
Emeot L Boy e r IIDDOUDOI!d
last week _ , i n - ol a
Ulli¥asity-wide commiltee to
sludy SUNY's -aoic calendar.
.
-~
The aim, the~ said
is to ClllllllicB different a~
proad&gt;es to year-ruuDd operation ol the O&gt;llep C8IDpll&amp; and
to lldUeve lleDble acbeduliD!J ..........- witbin the

-semi&lt;: year.
At the same time, U / 8, in
an unrelated - , IIDDOUDOI!d
its 1972-73 calendar which ea:tends the -semi&lt;: year by two
full weeks in May. ( See ...,.
.
chart.} .
~..,... UtB plan,
~ will begin I!W!D earlier
in ~ as ....U as .nm
......... but there will be a twoweek opriDg vacatioo during
April and three weeks between

semesters. Tentatively, U/ B
bad planned to end instruction
earlier in May but Chancellor
B o y e r indicated that classes
State-wide have to run through
May 15.
The SUNY commiltee will
be made up of administrators,
faculty and students on individual campuses, and members of
the C en t r a I Administn.tion
~will report its
.
to the Chancellor by July 1.
Dr. Harry W. Porter, the
University's provost, will serve
as chairman of the committee,
with 11\embership to be announced shortly.
'l1.e Chancellor emphasized
that many students can be effectively served by the traditional semester a n d summer
(Continued on 2, col. 2)

"Linked TOgether for Mutual ~ is the theme of
Commumty- University . Day,
the second total University
open bouse, which will be held
Sunday on tbe Main Street
campus, at Ridge Lea, in Amberst and at otber University
locations.
U.St year's 125tb Anniversary Open House attracted
more tban 10,000 visitors to a
series of campus events and
was popular witb botb tbe public and tbe University community.
This year, even more events
are slated and tbe day has been
officially proclaimed by County
and Town of Amherst officials.
According to John Buerk,
chairman of the event, exhibits
and features are planned: to introduce tbe public to tbe "diversity, scope, and relevance
of tbe University;" to make tbe
public feel welcome on campus
anytime during the year and
.to "clear hazy areas" of ..;.,derstanding in town-gown relstion~ps. It is hoped that tbe event
will become an annual aliair
University spokesmen say.
'

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N- Yodt State Jecislaton
met~ in Albany to cJi&amp;.
.... . - t i o n ol $34 million
ID U/B's ...-uctioD budpt
for !bill year. This amount cut late la8t IIIIIDih wbm the
Slate's 1972-73 budcet~ 1'- is ..... nmninc
hich lbat the funds will be .re. lllored wbm the ~tal
budpt is pa sa e~this
lllllldb.
~s ..-tine is a followup ID a lwiefinc _.., held
la8t 'l1nuaday at which ana
and Slate bnnnllkl!n told
ol tbe "'-t and loac...._ im~ ol tbe eula.
Telfer ea:plained lbat the lldioo would
l.lt C11118truction ol a chilled
pIau t, an edul:atiobal
llludiea and pbikalpb;y build-

~~~

n;;.'1d also prewl1t the Law
·and olwiapr...,._ Building
...... CJIIflllilll in 19'13 because
lbat buildinc ..,....;r. air COil·
dltiaainc. TeUa- said. In addition, tbe reduced fundiDI will
nadt "in an m.bility to meet
c:ritioaJ - c o m m i in tbe '-llh .........." be
apWned.

Four ana Jecislators and
County ~ Edward Re(c-tuuoed - ptJie z. col. 6) .

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Wide-Ral!lina Schedule

.0!' tbe schedule are concerts,
clinics, demonstrations, tours,
lectures and exhibits cove ring
from opera to moon
Between 1 and 4 p.m., bus
tours of tbe new North Campus
(Continued on page 2. col. 1)
C-U DAY GUIDE
A four-page guide and schedule for
Community·University Day is in·
eluded as an i nsert~ in today's
Reporter. Consu tt this guide for
time and place of #!!II activities
scheduled as of press t ime.

Colleges Get an Extension
By a unanimous vote of the
Faculty Senate, the Collegiate
Sys tem was given another lease
on life Tuesday. After slight
alterations in the review and
appeal sections of tbe document, tile Stem Prospectus was

StateAskffi toRestoreAmherstFzmds~ Add More
niDI .lobo Telfer, and Weslem

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approved for another two years.
About 25 members of tbe
Collegiate System were at tbe
Senate Session to offer information if needed, but only Collegiate Assembly Director Dr.
Konrad von Moltke was called
on for clarifications. Discussion
on tbe prospectus as revised by
the Subcommittee on the Colleges of tbe Educational Planning and Policy Committee was
quiet and subdued.
The Senate voted to omit, because of vagueness, a review
mechanism that would appeal
any contested decisions of the
AsSeuibly or its director to the
vice president for academic affairs.

a =nw~\en:!:Jd ~~.:
up a review, by ea:tmmwal
bosrds, of tbe Colleg...........ungly
or collectively-every two
years. Dr:"'C barles PlaDck, Political Science, submitted a substitute motion that called for
the entire Collegiate System to
be reviewed every two years by
a single panel of nationally
prominent people selected from
a list of names submitted by tbe
Collegiate Assembly. Planck
pointed out tbe higb cost of
having a number of reviews.
Prior to tbe Senate meetina,
otber members of tbe Collegiate
System · expressed fears that
tbis process would be uaed to
eliminate controversial pro-

grams.

Dr. John Halstead, chairman
of tbe' Senate's Collegiate
subcommittee, spoke against
Planck's motion, noting that it
would be difficult for one panel
to review a program as diverse
ag the Collegiate Sysfem. Other
Senators noted that no program
has tbe right to totally select
tbe people wbo review iL
(Continued on ~ 2, col. 4)

�~

Ukroininn
Arts Fest
Coming Up

' ~~-~tmt:'.t":U 1bec:ol.~

(~f,_-1,c:ol.~)

School ol Ardd-... and BnIn the ..S, .l'lanck'a ~
viromnental De 8 i C n (2917
waslarpibo ...,.,.,ced, but an Illvided. a - will Joe..e period- Maio Stzeet) will also be open.
ically from the parkiDs ...... in
lenition
the 8~ only
1be IDtalli.t ol fealun!B fraut ol ~ Uhnuy ... numbers more than 80, .......nlthe ._re
the Maio Stzeet
No ing to Chairman Buertt. All
A Festival ol UknUnian Arts
By the lime the Senate~
private .... will be aJJowai ""' events are free.
the Amboat ate.
"We think 'Community-Uni- ~22.be held_... campus April em the final motion to ......,..
A IDI!IIIber ol the U/B Facil- versity Day' will be even more
the Stern~ a quorum
Sponsored by the UknUnian
itiell Plmmioc llaff will narrate succeasfuJ than last year's open
DO loopr - ' - This
Student Club, a group with 75 W8S
the lllunl, esplainiaJ construc- bouse." Buerl&lt; says.
was
the ~ lime in n!CI!Ilt
tion u - l y
as well
A photo contest (for pboiDB members, the week will feature meetinp that lben! bas been a
ethnic
concerts.
lectures
and.,._
as do8cribiDc plaDs for yet un- taken during the day ) is open
sbortqe ol membelll. Senate
Cba.innan Dr. William Baumer
dewloped ol the ...... to all wbo atteud.. Entry blanks bibits.
In Bull'alo, there is a Ulaain- ruled, llowewr, that since a
.,.,__ Bolom and after the and information. alone with
lllunl, Yioitan can view the schedules ol the day's events, ian community or some 3,000. quorum was P - at the beIIIOdel ol the entire facility in will be availsble at Information 1be students want to present to ginning ol the deliberation, the
201 Hay-..
Booths near the parking lots ·Ibis community a Jiving and ...,. final wte 'II'OI1Id be ollicial.
While in HaYIII. visitors will and in Health Sciences, at the tive presentation ol their cul1be Senate also beard a realao be llble to ~ penoo- NO&lt;!Do Candy Counter and in ture. And, as well, they wish to port
from Executive Vice Presmake the larger Buffalo ClDIDally with Pre8idmt and Mrs. the Hayes Lobby.
ident
Dr. Albert Somit who
munity aware ol UknUnian conJfGbert L Keeter and other
said lben! is a "fairly good
tributions.
llll!lllben ol the UtB adminUochance"
ol restomtion ol $34
1be week's events will cultmiaa, .mo.; ol6ce8 will be
million in COIIIIIzuctim lunda in
opm from 1 to 5 p.m.
(Co'!'inlud from 1, col. ?J minate in a formal ball in the monnl-..,1 Stale budget.
'lbe portion ol the Univer- &amp;e88IOIJ ammgementB now avail- Goodyear Hall. Tickets will be
$12.00 a couple. $71i0 for stu- Allocatb.~ money 'II'OI1Id
8ity alrmdy f1mctiooioc in Am- able.
1, col. 1)
permit C011B1zuction ol four (ConJUuu.l , _
dent couples.
bent ... the rudp! Lea Campus During the week, UknUnian buildinp ... the Amberst cam- ""' ~ GPiimiotic after the
will have a fuD slate ol activHe added. """""er, that """"
..-...
and
felt
ol the
icons
and
enamels
will
be
on
be
pointed
oul
Somit
also
ities. ViaiiDrs to. 4246 rudp! calendar patterns must now be
.._,._ lunda wuuld be - . . t . State
Lea may tour the Mathematics oonsidered. M a n y students display in the NortOn Union noted diat lben! Aas!lblyman
. 1 - McFarances
ol
support"
for
inclusion
Center
bounge
and
an
exhibit
~ and bmr bow that
want to engage in continuous
land was poaili-"1 feel con~t _...the tupaystudy. 0 t be r s - especiaUy at Lockwood library will fea- ol an additiooal $28 million for
....rt ...., and- what-the tax--adults - are ready for mini- ture Ukrainian books from COD8InJclioa; however, be didn't fident that DOif that - have
ClOIIIIDeDt on~ for hav- accurate ioformatiou. - C8D
payer receives (at 3 p.m. in courses, worl&lt;...ludy progra.ms tbrougbout the ages.
ing lbeee ISila flinda approved. restore a large part ol the monRoom 38). 'lbe Art Depart- and guided re&amp;eaJdJ projects.
1be week's events include:
ies in the supplementaJ budment at -4240 ftidce Lea will Further, the Cbancellor noted,
Ned, the SenaiDrB tumed to
"Lileya," a UknUnian Ballet. an ezamjuQon of tbe propoeed get."
fealun! eq&gt;erimental student "we must find ways to utilize
April
15,
4:00
p.m.
Diefendorf
While the men qreed about
films and Geography ( 4230)
fully our c a m pus facilities
Articles ol Govemance for a
Annex. Room 146.
will olfer a display on soils and twelve months or the year."
Universilf Aasembly. T b e y the ~~~lone poaaibiJity ol resiDrEaster Egg Designing, work- were limited to suggesting re- ing the $34 million, they were
~Dr. Boyer noted that the traBuaes for rudp! Lea will de- ditiooal academic calendar is shop, April 17, -4 :00 p.m~ Nor- fonna to membeDl ol the Gov- leas CIOIIfident about additiooal
part from Circle Drive nest to an accident or history. Ameri- ton. Room 240.
emance Committee becauae a funding which U/B is aeeting.
Diefeudorf AimeE on the Main ca's oldest colleges imitated
"'&gt;e'Nationalization in Uk- formal vote on the matter will At last """""• ~ Telfer
Street Campus.
patterns that esisted at Eng- rainian History," Orest Sub- not CDlDe until Ibis faiL 'lbere advocated money for three ad~ - . - - Alt
land's Cambridge University in tenlny, Harvard, April 17, 7:30 was disagreenalt about . the ditimal projects - a geoemJ
'lbeatn!, daDce. music and the early 1600's. Cambridge p.m., Fillmore Room.
"impotence" ol the p~ ~I oentral administration
building. a food commisoary
art will abound "" Main Street then bad three academic terms
Ukrainian Folk D a n c i n g, Aaoembly. Some SenaiDrs felt and an admioislzatioo/aervice
where participants can view an extending from early Octoieit
is too slmng, olhen believed
worlcsbop, April 18, 5:00 p.m.,
oenter. McFarland DOled tbst
opera """""""L join in a "Singto early July.
it
is
IDo
weak.
Dr.
George
Out" with the U/ B Blues. bmr
1be agricultural life or most Norton, Fillmore Room.
Hocbfield. EDilisb. leJmed it a there "may be some problem"
"Ukrainian F o I k I o r e and "newbom foosil" and "a func- getting money for these buildthe U / B Band. view a slide, Americans led to a reduction
film and tape musical perform- or the three-term academic year Culture," I r e n e I.awriwsky, tiooless being," while Dr. Her- ings Ibis year.
- . &lt;&gt;&lt; aee an art esbibit in to two, so that young men could Ukrainian Actress, April 18, man Falsetti, Medicine, said it
Also, present at the Thursday
tbe Hayos Hall lOOby. For be home lor plantinc and tbe 7:30p.m., Norton, Room 233.
would be "a dilution ol our (the meeting were S t a t e Senator
tbooe wbo Jon,- for music or a harvest
FaculljY's) power." A repre- " 0 ~I) LaFalce. Amembi.Ymen
Ukrainian
Ceramics.
-rkby..,_ - . the Hislory De" What we must move toward sbop, April 19, 5:00 p.m., Nor- sentative ol the Gmduate Stu- Cbeiler H a r d t and Stepben
partmeot will present music now," Dr. Boyer said, uis a cal- ton. Room 240.
Greco, Amherst Superviso&lt; Aland 8 0 U n d 8 or the 1930's
endar that will meet current
len Dekdebrun and representa" H. Skovoroda: Socrates ol
Through the U/ B Endisb :0,: social and educational needs,
tives or otber area lawmakers.
partment, visitors wilf be able rather than rellect life styles the Ukraine." Taras ZakydalBryn Mawr, April 19. 7:30
The IDtal U/B request is
I'? ~ their own · films and o~ earlier, mainly agrarian so- sky,
p.m., Norton, Room 231.
bacl&lt;ed by a resolutiori psssed
....,. tbemselves do i n g it oety.
by the University Council
tbrougb ~
a-.ee.t Cl~
Ukrainian Embroidery, workMonday:
Much ol .Community-Univer"Circumstances in tbe aca- shop, April 20, 5:00 p.m., Norsity Day will be service-ori- demic "'?'J'Dlunity and througb- ton. Room 240.
An
emmination
or
teaching
~ the development
enled. 1bere will be a free oral out sooety have changed so
"Nationality Dissent: The and bow to eft'ectively evaluate or the North Campus in Am"""""' detectioo clinic and much in recent years that we Ukrainian Case." Dr. Rotnan it will highlight nest week's berst of the State University or
demonstrations on tooth decay m u s t reeJ~amine conventional Szporluk, University or Mich- continuation or April's Faculty New York at BulfaJo is or vitsl
in the Dental School and tests calendar arrangements," t be igan, April 20, 7:30 p.m. Re- Senate meeting. 1n addition, educational and eoooomic imfor BicJde cell anemia and an Chancellor said. ..State Uni- sponse
: Moderator- Dr the Senate will consider a ..,t portaoce to the citizens ol
edtibit on the "Pbysiological v~rs!ty already ~ developed .George Panel
P . Majeska ! UIB ru.,: or definitions ol studen
Western New York and the
Elfects or Transcendental Med- SlgD1f!cant strategies which will tory Dept
),
Diefendorf
Annes demic _dishonesty, a
State ol New York, and
itation" in the School or Medi- perm1t qualified students to ad- Room 29.
' ~pporting the continued (Wid.
"Whereas tbe delay which
cine. Advisement on the writing vance at lheir own ....,., under
"Dunai," Ukrninian Folk- mg or study abroad programs would result from the capitsl
"! resumes. the availabillty or ft~ble educational patterns. 1n
ovil. service positions and addi~ we are .now offering, dancing Ensemble, Uptoo Hall, ~ !'- revised proposal for grad- budget deletions in the .......,tly
credit-free c:owses ror updating expenmenlaJJy, t • me - shorted Buft'alo Slate, April 21, 7:30 mg independoint study courses. approved State budget would
.A report from the Subcom- bring about a .._ o1 capital
sJriJis will be featured at Jhe ~ programs which recog- p.m.
Adult Advisement C e 0 t e r
1117.e that some ol today's young
IDitlee on Teaching Effective- dollars tbrougb eacalation ol
1'boa! interested in careers u; people are more advanced sea. · ness is urging the faculty to ClODBtruclioa cos t8 in· t be
"endorse in principle" asoess- amount or at least $5(; millioo
management will be provided demically than in the past.
ment &lt;!f ~ performance ""'!for will result in loot edu- .
with inlo.mation on undergrad~ procrams rellect the
by stUdent evaluation. Under cstiooal ~ty for lbou!J81e and graduate degree offer- senous DJC?Ye to in_lroduce more
tbe proposal, pet(onnanc., will sands ol New York )'OIIIIg peamgs ol the Ut B School ol Man~thin-hithegh qualiu• ty approach..
agemenl
es WI
ruversity. I see
be evaluated by an adaptation pie.
ol the Davis, Ca1iforni8. Ian- . "Therefore, the Council ol
the study ol the academic calthe State UnWenilf o1 New
1be scientifically- incliQed endarbe
__ ...~ ~ C&lt;JI!Unitlee will
1be 63rd Annual Blocl&lt; "B" which would be used in
can see at the School ol Engin. u~"' Ibis spnng as a creBanquet, b o n o r i n g class ol 10 or more students. In York at Buffalo, in ita meeting
-me ..,_tions ol a min- ati~ extension ol these efi'orts Altiletic.
UI B sportsmen, bas been re- addition, the proposal asks for ondoesMondar. April 10, 1972.
ialun! radio station, a oom- to '!"Prove the educalional ef- scheduled for tonight. at the tbe formation ol .an Office or
by Ibis ~ Ulllllliputer oonlniiJed IIJOdel railroad, f~veneas and adJ!ilnistmtive Hearthstone ManOr. Sports.. Teacbing Evaluation within the mously request 1he Lecialatnre
ID8IIpOIOer aircraft and an acelliciency ol the Uruversity."
caster and columnist Howard OfrJCe ol Student Affairs. This to restore in the oapplemental
CoseU is the main speaker with o([ioe would be charged with budget the folloorinc buildings
2from 1he Govemor's
Gerry Philbin '64 ol the AFL "conducting studies o( the deleted
197 73 Capital Budeet reNew York .J e t s serving as leaching function and
IDDOIII'OCb and describe his revising the distribution, ~- ~: Natural ScienCe and
master ol ceremonies.
~ findiopthe
·
which r i v e
....,... to
are ol the moon.
.......~banquet, originally
Atbletie events and demon......,..uJed fo. Monday, andPianPhiloaophy; Cbilled Water
DkWed to a later date to ...,. report
::IO.t~ be staged in and
l
OII!JIIDCIIISte Mr. CoeeJJ. wbo is to "inlo.m llludents and enable
inalnJctors to im"~, inasmuch as the Uni1be
~ ol a """" television aer- iodividuai
pnwe." They will also be uaed Yenllty is rmdy to ·forwill ..... the latest results ol
~~· Mmday Nirbt as evideDce ol .__.., __ --~ ward .., three other buildings
their_studio'! ol the aett1inr ol
~ in
..._....... .,......._.. approved by the CllanceJJor'a
v a flo a 8 e t b n i c-lingui8tics
It .., "ABC'a IIDuda cedaros.
advana!meiit pro- Task Force em FacilitiM Dewipoupa in the BulfaJo ........
Night Footbill" t Ira t
motion .., indeperden
~ at Buffalo (1.971)
~ ..._tiona, both
strenctbened
bia natiiJnaJ
~ and romp, and
previouaJ
- t
which aJao ........_. by the
tation as one ol the ~ study etbnie ..... and danci!s will reered
by,the
Senate
~Board ol ~at its
broadcastinc ~ties.
flect the~ diversity ol
Rick Well8, director ol U/lra
~-~- body in events
Golden Bull Fund. M}'S that alJ
....,..._. for Norton.
~ three addi~banquet~­ talre in:f"P rleut ~ ~
~ Jab1. the Nuclear
the - . A codtta.il hour the coune i! ClOIJii&gt;!eted. ibe fac&gt;. mental budPt· m0::,~
Re8raldt Center, the Astronat
6
p.m.
will Pl'lllll!de the banauperyiiJor
will
file
a
writ,.
bnuy
and
CeobaJ
Administmomy ObaenaiDoy and t be
quet at 7 p.m..
~t!YIIlualion ol the work ~.i~~ioishation Servic.e
DUIIWIIC; Food Coalmi8Mry."

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Calendar-

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NextWeekS
Senate Agenda
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Banquet Set
For Tonight

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�Norton Bazaar

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Llloo Allee's -uoant. - · s lllfonTW bvur of
- . . . . pracluc:ts o11en luot •bout onythlnc JIOU
time to limo. Spotted .-nlly . . . _
the - - . come co were lndlvlduols - . .
Inc p'1ostlc bou- with
with butterflies other objects - v o •-blnln•d
ovols);
- · In- health ·- .-•u•lb;
the ultiJMte

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April Orgy of Theatre Enel-gy Offers
A Sampling of the New &amp; Innovative
Tbe n-tre Doputment is
stqiog an "April Orv ol tnatle Eneqy." t.turin&amp;: COD·
temporary • theatre, ita playwrigbto, critics, directors and
prnducliona.

.

Gonloa Rogolf, chairman of
the Doputment, is holding the

~ ewot to bring •
nutllide theatre .....td ioto Buffalo. "BufffiJo is far too isolat..
ed and ftiiiiiiOIIed from tbestre," he aplaioa. "My main
CI!Dinl driving fora! for the
~ill concemed with serv1111 the otudmta with the--"
The Mlulally eiiDIJib, ill
"that wbi&lt;h • ,_,
: '~ io today'a tbes-

immvative

Made pcaible by an endowmali from the Sidney B. Pfeif.

~
~pr;m~ ':l!
lauded
n-tre ol New

=

been c:aiJed "American pop with
Kabulri overtones" probably
becauae their director, Joe
Genimann, is a studeot of oriental tbMtre. This group will
present A Muuummer Nifht's
Dream at 8:00 p.m. SwKiay,
April 16. Richard Gilman, former critic for NewtuJJUk, will
give a critique following the
perfonnanoe.

A Latin American troupe,
the Fair ol Opinion, will perform an original work Saturday, April 22, at 8 :00p.m. The
t

r u up e's performances are a

misture ol song, dance, and

tbestre tenoed a tbestre "corDUDOPia" by the New York
Tima. Julian Beck and .Judith

Malina will critique this performance.
Also performing will be the
Medicine Sbow, a New York
City group whose original performance is called The Medicine Show aod de a Is with
America and the American Sensibility. It will play at 8:00
p.m., Sunday, April 23.
U/B's Center for Theatre Research a n d the Performance
Labpratory, in 8.Sti0Ciation with
Performance Magazine, collaborated in the planniog of the
"April Orgy."
For the complete schedule of
~vents, consult the W ee k l y
Commu1lique for the period&amp; involved.

Conference at the Vatican
Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice
president for research, will go
to Rome this month to deliver
an iovited lecture at a conlerence at the Pontifical Academy
of Sciences io the Vatican. Tbe
subject of Dr. Ewell's lecture

~...'x.u~· or"= ~

t.ary.
.
During the week, confermce
speakers will be honored by a

lJl«.-

struction 9 n I y.
adds will be authorized by the
deans of the respective divi&amp;ions, listed above, only io
cases where the student can
bring p o s i t i v e documented
proof that, for technical reaaons
(computer failure; illness), be
or sbe Wllll unable to add the
course dilriog the six-week per-

ate Studies Policy Committee
- - - ' by the ...._.._... and

the COUJ1Ie, must accompany
sucb a _ _. )

_,......,.aty

JI01icY ......

private audience w i t h Pope

Paul.

-

CS~t

St.auat.z to Head
Search Committee

•
Dr.-William .J. Staubitz, pro-

:ill'b:-bwiog
and"= =-~~:::! !::· ~~~J....'ti: ~ ·~~.::as.:
....., :.61al8o he 01*' to the llriJulht before the UDdergradu- to the student's participation io Committee for a Via! Pnisident
pat,lic with a mioimum c:harp.
The~ Ploject will Jll&amp;-

-

lboir'

oricill8l

produdioa.
~
wbic:h
ia a "'hhlca. ...,... ol Zen and
Gnlek W11eL" IMry 8luk ol
T'-e ~_, calla d the
poop "a theatre hMica.~

w-__.._,"

t!' can

'
:A:"!
:~~~=
'*prodacliaD

will he fallooNd t- a
aitiqae by Erica Yuat. editor
ol Pet.-- ~
The Bnlam SUeot n-tre
tram Yadiaon,
baa

w-........m.

....,.,~

v•~--

~~and by the lhrl'e
...._ -''-· 18
. 88 •-nl-.
•""' ...--~
............

~

CIIIUIB5

may he ad-

ded by ~ atudenta durtlte fint sis - - of ill-

u..

3. Indepeadent studies will
be viewed the aome 88 a rec·
u1ar C0UJ11e, i.e. ioclepncloolt

.i:"!t~ ~ :l:;!i: ~ ha.:'..::.OO :::::_

:.... until two weeb ~
~ ol the finlll
·
alion period. (The....,.,;::
will he 8.RDIJtiDCBII .ch _,..

ester.)
2. N-

•-.-

H

0 . , ever,

ooe independent
studies unit (1 to 4 credit
houn) may he added ualil two
weeb before the end ol the
with the appJOV8l ol '
the depart....t and/or program
cllairmul if the lltudeat'a academic .......... ., ~)

will be ''Fertilize~'--The UJDit.
iog Factor io the Succeal or
Failure of the Green ReYolution." Dr. Ewell's will be ooe
of 24 lectures to be presented
at a conlerence on '"lbe Use ol
Fertilizers and Their Elfect on
Agricultural Yields."
Other speakers at the weeklong cooference will be from
Great Britain, F.......,.,. West
Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Italy, Spain.
Hungary, Romania, Israel,
Peru, Brazil and Australia. ProAcademy of ScieDce8, will be
chairman of the confermce and
Prol.-.r Dr. V. Hernando Fernandez from the lnstilute ol
Soil Sciences and Plant Biology io Madrid will be -

New Pr1;n-l,
J for Drop &amp; Add
Goes into
. E'l+.
N
D~ll
'1/ect ext ruu

;' Yark City, .Julian Beck and
_of
T.......,
i chard
Drop and add deadlines for
GibDa. Rabat MonlpJmerythe ' the 1972-73 academic year were
and all.. from 811111111
8.RDIJtiDCBII this ......S by the
IIIIIR impmat ...-and per- deaJJs ol the Division of Under...utieB in
the- graduate Studiea, the Division
atre.
ol Continuiog Eduadiclil cnd
AD lectu-. .,.,...._ and the Graduate School
~ ~ wbi&lt;h will be
Tbe revised
deheld m ~ Hall '"'-tre. veloped after a year-long dilr
will ,_ 1:.,1D~ at CUEion io a joint committee of

!f::t1n~ ~m::
MeN~

Ewell to Vzsit Rom£ for

for Health ScieDces. Tbe membenhip ol the Committee. espeeled to be appointed witbio
the nest f - days, will include
12 memhera ol the faculty, student bodd-Jand staff ol the Fac&gt;ulty ol __ _th ScieDces.
Dr. Clyde L. Randall baa
been serviDg 88 vice president
for
aciences Iince ur.o.
Baca.- Dr. Rand all baa
r-=bed the mandatory ~
ment age. he has held tbe post
on the t.sis ol annual appoint..

~

mmla.

_..Eruoute to Rome, Dr. Ewell
will atteod a one-day
io Paris ol the Eia:u!ive Ccmmittee ol the Boord ol Governors ol the Institute ol American Studies, a dMsion ol State
University ol New York located
io Paris. He will alao altaid
a two-day meeting io Vielma ol
the United Nationa/Wodd
Bank .Joiot Advisory Commit..
tee on Financing Fertilizer
Planta io Developing Countrim.

.-me

WmermGroup
SlatesMmng
Tbe President's Committee·
on Reouitment and Promotion
ol Women iovites all _ , io
the UniveJSity Cilmmunityfaculty, studi!nta, clerical, operations and ay-... and pd,._
aiona1 staff-to an opon - .
inc on oru-lay, April 18, from
noon to 1:30 p.m. io the Nortoo Confereace n-tre.

�~

4

Cdlege B Plans Several OperiHouses Letw-Says.Administrotion
To Recruit Members for Its Programs Sti[lRsArodemic Vllality -u

pam is implemented tluoulh ol Social Policy and Communspecial ..,..._ .-n:h. and ity Services). Dr. GibaoD, Howregular
Uni..,.,.jty olferinp ard Bradley ( busine&amp;s manager
Interested students are ~
vited lo attend a series ol open croo&amp;-listed in tbe Collece. The ol tbe Bulfalo Philharmonic:) .
houses lo be held by College B "rash" insi&amp;bl bebiDd tbe for. and Jonathan Ketdwm will atin Macdonald Hall, April 17- malion ol this pftlPlliD is tbe tend tbe Open House and talk
21. The pwpoae ol tbe Open suspicion that it is possible with interested students.
Houses is lo introduce students that tbe traditional liberal arts
Friday, April 21, Macdooald
to five ol the College's most im- departments have !oat sicbt ol Hall, 7-9 p.m. Studies in Repartant procrams and lo ..... a certain general whale and U.ion and Myth.
auit members lo live in Col- that we departmentally trained
Religion and myth baV\!
lep! B's residence at Schoell· ~ rather resemble blind played such an important role
kopf Hall llii!Ol1 year. The Col- men touching an elephanL .in tbe developmen1 ol human
lege is aebeduled lo move lo 'lbough we may be blind. there &lt;XM1!'tciotrsness as to warrant ser·
tbe Amherst campua in tbe fall seems lo be no reasou why we ious stUdy by believers and
c:annol c:onverse and compare non-believers. A pemon can
of 1973.
College B's policy is lo sup- viewpoints about these peren- banlly be considered cultiport tbe liberal arta tradition, nial and vital """""' problems. vated and becomes """"Y prey
including tbe fine arts, in an Jonathan Keldwm. (asaociate lo cultural prejudices when be
intenliaciplinllry manner, .., master ol College B ), Profes- io; unaware of the religious and
that tbe relationships between sor Richard Cox (Politic:al Sci- mythical traditions of his aodifierent diaciplines will be ence l , and Dale Scoville will be ciety and ol their role in tbe
clarified. In addition, tbe fun. present lo talk with students development ol other social indamental cultural presupposi- about tbe program.
stitutions. The religion and
WedDeslay, April 19, Mac- myth program ( implemented,
tions underl . lh&lt;Ee relationships are ~ In particu- donald Hall, 7-9 p.m. The Fille for tbe most part, through
lar, Colleie B add.- itself Arta p,.,._._
c:onraes cross-listed with deIn c:onjunction with tbe other partmeniS or originated by tbe
lo tbe relatiouships between
liberal arta education and cur- College programs, tbe fine arts Campus MinisUy ) is designed
rent vocational opportunities, program is designed lo bring lo give tbe College and Univerba .
&lt;DWdered the wide- w.rious kinds ol artistic events sity community amess lo this
ol cultural aliena- i n to int.er-relalionship w i t h important cultural pro hIe m.
lion among lh&lt;Ee who have course wad&lt; and daily student Jobn Riszko ( program coordinstudied tbe liberal and fine arts life. Some ol these events bring ator) , Dr. J o h n Peradotlo
and can find no place in society avant-ganle American and Eu- &lt;Classics), and Jobn Buerk
where their falents and insights ropean art, as well as w.rious will be on hand lo talk with
can be utilized. The College kinds ol minority group art,. students.
will
•
.
......,..,.m wad&lt;. lo tbe attention ol Colinlo ~~..:r establish
its own vocational guidance

By BILL HATCH

........,..~.~·

=sense

=

lqiaM Sy.lera. Too

I beliew that all members ol
tbe SUNYtB c:ommunity-&lt;;tudents, staff, administralion aDd
faculty-iibould be made aware
ol bow dif6cull it bas become
lo bold first.rate faculty alibis
im;titution. To this end, I quote
Cwith permissioo) from Professor Charles Pailthorp's letter ol
resignation ( March 29, 1972) :
~I 'm IIOing to ld candor taU

to jut
about
""'

.,_. good wte . . .
principally because I don't
want my reaignalion miscol&gt;atrued l&gt;y 1M Ad...UU.tralion at
Buflalo. I want to stress thct
my tliBOC:iation with 1M Phil·
OIKIP/!y Depcrtmenl was one I
benefited ITftllly from and
would, I think, conl~ to benefit from. I don't find ileasy to
break off 1M many satiB(ying
relalionships roe had at u .B.,
especWJly wilhill 1M Departmenl. . .. But 1M evidence ..
00t!11Dhe/ming that KetU:r and
Company iB not frioldly to aca·
demit: "'""'lienee or to humane
COIIIiderntiDna. IJud&amp;dmy con..
atrainta aimply cannot ezpltDn
1M
of KetU:r, Gelbtuua
or Somil. It ..,.,.. tMir CIJ'70o
~ is without limit, and it'•
that UIIIY. arrogcznce of """"
po&lt;.oer. I aaw Gelbaum'• presumptuoua 'revision' of 1M accrrdiutli.on report on 1M Col~nee

ac'""-

~=.n...,~ '""'1m-rnnn
'""'!1llmends
tbe -rtunity for such - - \..JU_.LLIUJ..I. \...AJl.ll.1(;l \..JU

plOgnUIL Vocational guidance
will grow in part out of informal asaociations between fellows
from tbe faculty and tbe COOl · u1es, aeveno1 fellows rrom tbe
munity and tbe students ol tbe performing arts field will be
present· Alan Sapp ( Master of
College.
The College hopes that inter- College. B on leave)· Joseph
Dunn
and Irja
(Do.
ested stUdents will cboose one
mus Theatre)· Ric:bard Blau
0&lt; several of tbe theiMs pre( ~~)· JimPap-come talk
durin&amp;
....... and pas ! Art ~t) and
with the
faculty
fellows
and other students about them Carfo Pinto ( Music).
Thunoday, April 20, Maafclo.
in the Mac:donald Hall lounge.
Monday, April 17, Maalon- ald Hall, 7-9 p.m. The LihDoJ
ald Hall, 7-9 p.m. Depth Psy- Arts Managemenl Progrum.
Many colleges, universities,
chv/ogy Program.
American psychology has museums, libraries, orchesUas.
largely followed tbe traditions and other culttual institutions
of Anglo-Suon scientlllC epis- have been finding themselves
temology. Many students of unable lo stay afloat ~
psycbolilgy are ·UDaware of tbe ally. One reason is that private
e&gt;:istence of a large corpus ol donations on which they formpsychological works treating eriy depended are 110 longer
tbe human personality and con- suJI"lcient lo meet tbe needs of
dition from a variety of other an expanding oonstiluellcy; esviewpoints - e&gt;:istential, pbe- pecially minority groups. with
their unrepresented interests.
~religious,or
phi1oeophjcal. The Depth PSY· Oe;pite change and develop.
chology Program approadles menl in general managemont
this literature comparatively. principles, there is a basic core
Ne&gt;:t year, a core course will be which can be mastered and aptaUJht by Dale Scoville ~Ph.D. plied lo tbe management ol the
Philosophy ) and Dr. Mic:bael hDeral and rme arts. CultivaPe&amp;l8DII, M.D. ( resident psy- lion of these skills, along with
chiatrist) , both of wbom will knowledge ol the liberal and
be present at tbe Open House fine arts, will go some distance.
lo talk with interested stu- on the one band; -..niS solvdents.
ing tbe problems faced by the
Tuesday, April 18, Miocdon- liberal arts tradition, and. on
ald Hall, 7-9 p.m. The Genero/ tbe &lt;&gt;!her ~ may_ pre&amp;eDl
LihDoJ Arta Program.
some mten!sting vocational opThis is a study ol such cooo- JXXtunjties for liberal and fine
cepts as "liberal Arts," "gener- arts_ graduates. College B will
al education," and "culture." begin a ClOUI9e on Liberal Arts
Special attention is devotell lo Management llii!Ol1 year, t&amp;UIIht
tbe viewpoints on which theee by Dr. Oliver Ga- (EducaCIDDili!Pls are t.-1. The pro- tional Admin.islmtion, Sd&gt;ool
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -

~~:=r::...~.,a
Kol;o.;.,.._

GREPORTER,·_ .

----

... ~

~""'~~....: 1

WBFO's ot:rv
C!~...:~
~""'"'
~
.1. uo.1.
.1.

.
The Common Council ol tbe
City of Buffalo last week unaniJna:u!;IY passed . a ""!"'ution
PI81Sllll tbe public servroe procramming of WBFO (88.7

~). ~University's public
nod10 station..
•
'lbe_resolution, m~ by

Counc!'man-at-~e W•lha'!'
D'Auna, ~ WBFO s
broadcasts of hi~ghts of. tbe
9'mmon Council proceedings
smce 1968 and of tbe Erie
County ~ture since 1970.
The P~ beanl Tues..
day evenmga at 10 P:"'- .on
weeks when tbe two legislative
bodies are in session, includes
commentaries and e&gt;:plana!,ions

by WB~ newsmen.
~ lo ~FO Program Director DaVid Karpoff,
broadcasts ol tbe sessions are
• part of an overall ell"&lt;!rllo make
~BFO ':"" "p~t publie """""" rad10 station ol
~est.ern New York." 'The sta~ staffed mostly by partLime volunteer student anllOUilCer!!- reporters, technicians
and clerical personnel. produces
several other public service pro- ·
grams.
Cammunity Issues
Each Monday evening at 8
p.m.. issues ol the West.ern
New York community are disCUSHed with individuals direct-

ly involved On Thursday eveninp, pressing University prob!ems are e&gt;:plored with membem ol tbe U t B faculty, staff
and student body.
"Participation and """""'B are
tbe keys lo theee progmms,"
911YS KarpolL Listeners can
either phone questions lo tbe
WBFO studios or puticipate in
a live studio audience. -rb.is is
an aopect ol 1811io ..., have
maintained throughout
WBFO"a -mming," Karpoff-

---

WBPO baal..t BD active and
pmdacliwe diliation with tbe
~ Public Radio
(NI'R) .-11: ""'- pro-~. William Silmera ...._ WBPO Illation
. . . . . -. . The UIB Illation baa
_ . . _ . 111111
Ife. Yad&lt; ....... to the-.
-'tlar Mlimm .......,._on
_ . . - - - duriDc tbe

r.:.-.

ld.:;;.d'1a:

an'Oil:

CUlli)

.
.
first year ol tbe network's .,.,....
tence. "All Things Coosidered,"
a daily hour-long NPR news
and feature program, is anchoredbyformerWBFOnews
director Mike Watem.
· Looking lo tbe future, Karpoff sees more feature and documentary programming as part
of tbe WBFO daily lineup. ~e
see a real obligation as Buf.
falo's public radio station lo
emphasize this type of program.
Our lis\eoers and potential listeners can ezpect more of iL"

Mreting flJ Probe
E~ of Biology
Ethical and social problems
ol human biology that are """'
almost overwhelming society
will be discussed at a camjlus
symposium on Friday, April 2L
Sponsored by tbe Faculty ol
Natural Sciences and Mathematics and The HumaniBt, the
day-long program will focus on
recent scientific breakthroughs
in human biology and their
ethical considerations.
The seminar will open with
an introduction from Dr. Bernanl Gelhawn, vice president
for academic aJ1airs, followed
by a talk by Dr. Daniel CaliC
ban, director ol tbe Institute ol
Society, Ethia! and tbe life
Sciences, Hastinp-oo..Hudeau,
N .Y ~ on "Nonnative Ethics
and Public Morality." The
-.oDd lllOIDing ~ is Dr.
Vede E . Headings. Howard
Uni..,.,.jty College ol Medicine, .
who will diacuas "Develop.
tbe Potential ol Hun:;
Genes."
Following IUDdJ, Dr. Evalyn
F. Segal, director ol tbe Institute ol Child and Faculty Development,
U n i v (:~!,! ~-~
~orth Carolina,
Will talk on "Designing Man."
Dr. Ludwig von Bertal4nffy ol
U/B will comment .., this talk.
"Sc:ienl:e for the Peoplew ·is tbe
~ ~ ol tbe day, lo be
1M!D oq Dr. Ethan Siper. ·
M - "..... Institute ol

w w - Tec:hn&lt;JiaiY.

The - w i l l be held in tbe
~~ Confl!l'I!DCII! n..tze, beJIDIWIJ at 9 a.m.

a

. . elllfl6ed
;,
arTOflGIIl , _ ; - .
to

u.

~oeo~,llall...,1M

incidaat ao typiall of Kettet'o
Adminiatratitm. And 111h y lfUUit
they try to do 1M Collqiak
Syatem in? I don't ~oe il
hao anythinf to do 111it1o coct or
a iudfment that 1M entupriae
iB eduaJtiDntJlly ,._,.,_It hao
a ITftll deal to do ll1itlo 1M fact
that .uch efforta art! not eaoily
~ and art! not to be
~ l&gt;y IMm at alL"
I fear that if Pn!aident Keller daes DOl take actioo very
soon lo improve tbe academic
climate at SUNY/B, many
more ol our moat vilal and e&gt;:·
citing faculty members will ...,..
sign. To be SUie, a teaching
slaff will remain, but it will be
a teaching staff with moat ol its
vitality ..,...,.

&amp;gistration
Wins Praise
EZIITOII:

As we "-""' lo prepare for
fall ~ registration, it
seems appropriate lo point out
bow 8UCCI!9Iful spring registration was. I feel that this success was based on a veri high
degree ol involvement and cooperation at all levels ol tbe
l.inivel)lity.
The service units of tbe University such as Admiasions and
Records a n d tbe Computing
Center did their usual competent work. The academic departments have significantly
improved their planning lo ...,..
duce registration problems and
tbe students have shown pa·

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

-

The . . . . . _ ... _ _

..........--.........- - ,
ID...-8-farba·

communltJ. . . - - " " " ' p•pera- -

M

tieoce a n d · understanding in
using tbe registration syste{n.
Some department&amp; did an e&gt;:·
ceptional job in BivinJ special
attention lo student ...,.;st&gt;ation
problems. In particular, tbe
Engliah IJeparmatt ia lo be
~ for their aignific:ant
elfort in pre-regiatmtion planning which Jl'!lat[y C!llhanced
tho registration p roc e as for
lh&lt;Ee students deairing English
COUl85.

To make tbinp """"' Mllier
in tbe future, work ia continu·
ing on tbe SARA ay-. in
order lo reduce problema 1!11·
countered by studeniB and lo
improve tbe inlamalion report.
ing proceduns lo furthor aaaiat
deparlmenlal plaDnini adivi·
ties.

I feel the eiiOiiB made by
both tbe aerviae 111111 _.,.,.,
departments cleaerw a peat
deal ol COIDIIJOIIdalion from tbe
University oammunity.
-&lt;lHAIIUIII . _ . ,

Aliaiatant

to tbe
Vice Preaideat for

Academic AlfaiDI

AWMIIJ

.-a

AI - · a paychcllciiiJ
r t F.- Kennedy
J.ournalism
sludant.
- the

Award for his - - ~ In
Sa!*mbar 29, 1971's ............

· "Sociaa
"in - Mr.·
ca: Tha
C...
em&amp;"
- · .... f i n t - journal·
iatiDba~a.-

�PHOTO CONTEST
While you•re on campus take a pictur-; of the campus,
an activity and/CK an event and enter the contest for
money prizes. First prize $25, second prize $15, third
prize $10. Entry blanks and information are available
at the information booths. (See map for location of
booths.)

�IN CASE OF
EMERGENCY
CALL (831) 5555

-·

IAIADLOT ,

II

IIAIN STREET RT·5

•

• • BUS SERVICE

' " 10~•·h ll• t '!"ljll' l oM C.on~ ""' l10om

,••. " '"' s....... c.••1 ......
•• • 11• •••

N o;~~ ..

•.o

- (2) TOURS OF NORm cAMPm
AMHERST
•Tours ue amiable to the North Cal
in Amherst. Buws wiD leave from
parkin&amp; area in front of Lock•
Library every baiC bour beginning
P.M. (no private cars pleue).

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

f, ou ,. &amp;• oh...,,tnl

''""''"''""""'' u ..... _,,.,. .•• , ... ..
''t..

INFORMATION BOOTHS

ll '"' A""-'' lo ~ t "'""1.

(3) BUSES TO RJ,DGB LBA

•Buaes to the Rkfce Lea campus will I
at 10·15 minute Intervals beginning
P.M. riom Diefendorf Loop neX1
Diefendorf Annex and wlil return I
Ridee Lea on the same ocbeduie .

•

BAIRD HALL

•An open rehearsal or four one-act OI
by Darius Mllhaud, "A Festival of M
in Miniature," will be in final stag~
prepuation, aCCordin&amp; pubho
behind·the:..,.nes view of the makml
a full ..taee opera production. Directe
Muriel Wolf. Recilll/ HalJ/2-4 P.M:

"·

•Multi-media work " Doors" by CreJ
Richard Trythall, Co~ sli

.. Assocwe

�.

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

..

__

~~

. ,
11111ey:•

~--­

~~-...,. r a • ·

bat liobta ,_......,. ...... ......
lied • aara-,a.a-._..1&amp;._
Noma a- om... ......... - o f
Apdl10• .s.rrm...~

c....e

will ~ • - ....... "Youth Calblre G.a. • a - - t
,_19a-b-'20H&gt;/I-4P.JL
•Tbe sblf .......... - ol the Ceala ,_
Caniculam PlaDiac will be ~ to
aplain the Ceuta's f . . - .,.. to
questioos ~to
An alllllcHiide . , . _ , . _ ezplaDiac
Colllputer 11-.1 Reooarce u- 111!1 ....,
they Clll ladlers ............. Will
be ndable Cor fte1rinc_ Room 220AII-4
P.JL

.C.P. SBaw

a--.

•The lnstructioa.r Commenjc:wticm
Center wiD conduct tows ol "beelind the
_ _.. adiYities wbido af&amp;ct - instructioll_. TV studios, flmadeast .
Cadlities ol woo 55, aad pbotocraplry,
motioD pictwe mel papbic stDdios
wiD be open. Eldlibib a malti-media
procrun wiD be ofCered. See yoanelf OD
TV. Room IO/I-4P.M.

•
LOCKWOOD MEMORIAL
LIBRARY
•The Library wiD spo.,_ a ceaenl open
bouse; tours wiD be conducted and
special collections displayed.
•The English Department wiD jJRSOIIt
poetry readinCs by three poets hom the
Department and a visitinr poet hom
BWra: Mac Hammond, Howard Wolf,
John Ndu and James Paul. Room 208/2
P.M.

•

TOURS OF NORTH
CAMPUS IN AMHERST

•Tows are anilable to the North
Campus in Amherst. Buses wiD
tea... periodically hom the pukiDc
area in Cront or Loctwond Library
(no private cars please).

CROSBY HALL

•The Sdlool or Manaceaient will offi!r
inCormatioD and baoe
ol

rq&gt;..,.,.n_

.mm and tape. Room I ixJII, 2, 3. P.M.
•Three

miDI c:bambe&lt; concerts by
odvanced stude11t eDSI!mbles (strinp,
piano, clarinet) in worts by Beethoven
and Dohnanyi, 110der supenision or Pall
Katz and FriDa Boldt. Room I01/I :30,
2:30, 3:30p.M.

•TOWii or electronlc music studio wiD
include a demorulration o( studio equipment, induclin&amp; Moor synthesizer, 110der
supetvision or Ramon FuUer. Continuous
I-4P.M.
•U/B Symphony · Band, with guest alto
soxaplionist James lliflie, llDder direction
or Frank CipoUa, and U/B Collefiate Jazz
Enoemble, 110der direction or Gary
Samul&amp;ki, in a vlried prorram- Norton
Hall, FiUmore Room/3 P.M. ·

•

HARRIMAN LIBRARY

•The School or Inronnation and Library
Studies wiD offer exhibits created by
sludents. Starr and sludents wiD be
available to answer questions and provide
materials obout the School. Room
I54S!I-4 P.M.
•The Theatre Department will present a
performance by the "Broom Street

the 111lCleqmduatr iD bwinoss
lllmlllistralioo, the MBA clepee (-.....
ment oo day and put..timo e.....mc procrams) and the JDaDOCOIDI!nt - - .
prorram (Ctee lzdmical - .
especially to minority small bwinossmen)
anilable to tolt with 'fisitoa. Room
I51/I-3P.M.

•

HAYESHALL

•Presideut and MIS Kette&lt; mel the immediate presidentW odmillistntift sblf
mel their wifts wiD be in their oftiaes to
meet with -.isitols mel to dioau:s actmties me1 prorrams or the Ulliftlsity.
&amp;dt-&lt;Ding, (int floor/HiP.M.
•A model or the North Campus wiD be on
clilplay. Staff ol the Ollice ol Facilities
l'laDninr wiD be presmt to questioos and explain ...., _ _ . , . . _

Room 201/I-5 P.M.
•Print exhibit or papbics produced by
"Team" workshop llDder the directorsbip
or John Mcivor, profi!ISOI', Art Department. Lobby

•

HAYESA

•The Division or Cootinuillc E d u Office Cor Credit-Free Procnms wiD raiDe
two Cree counes for the 1972 C. Rmester. W'mners wiD be notified by Jail
InrormatioD on credit-free procnms wiD
be fiYen oul Lobby/I-4P.JL
•MlUard FiUmore CoiJeee rep&lt;eSeDtalifts
will be available to answer questioos oa

summer and ran procnms- Applications
wiD be available. Lobby/I-4 P.M.

•

HAY~SC

•The Departments or French; GelmaDic
and Slavic; and SPanish. Italian mel
Porlui'.H!S!! will present ~ Jabon..

·--l'..........
J) .....

.Chw Roo. 1/1-4

-1 I...........

..

'trill...-.:&amp;~
1 .Chti 0D

llpllos ....

..........__.........

~,.,

----10-Ui--~
...,
...flaal .......

~

........ lilPJL

~

rally . _ ,

A - , . . w i l l - fraoa
._
__

'-wort,

.......

•

a- wiiiM •III!IHIIoutzuli

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

ol

P.JL

a....loiiJ

1110011

P.JL .

"" ... ewaiiiC the

AoQoaomy Oboena...,. wiD be opeD to the publle. lD .... ol
dDals lloele will be a demooslution OD
... mdio teleooope. Gueats ... req.t o - . . buidiDc lluoaCia - y c.
m Ftoorn P.JL • Mi&lt;fni&amp;llt.

•

ACHESON HALL

.or. Dlllld c.daiiMd olthe Depo~Wellt

Cbdotia
IICmdmes . . . . . . Moo." Room Ill/3
~

PARKER

cfuplays.

-all ..... ........
rocb. Room 5/1:30 P.JI. _, 3

•Tbe o.r-t-at ol Olemislry wiD .....
dad ......... CUided lluoacb ...
ball!liac. 11-a. llbcntarles will lie
opeD .... opedll apedmeata ............
...,. ...
tzH . . wiD be_........
Colree aad doauta wiD be aened. Toun
"""'Y 20 lllinulles , _ 1M ,.,.,.....
.-../I-4 p .JL

~NGINEERING

•Tbe Compute&lt; Science Department wiD
.-t
inlenc:tive compulinf
You will be to communicate with a

RIDGE.LEA

.._

polarbe&lt;l IIPl eire$ .... -ale
........_ Roo. 11411-4 P.JL oa lite

oDr.. ~

1-IP.JL

I

HOCHSTETTER HALL

......

FOSTER HALL

.._

..... .,...._&lt;JI...,...mate..,...
.....

•

•

319~

r-\
~
\

. . _

1 p .JL. Ctitiqac 10 p.JL

. , . ....., ol R4w l h - Ill-. will
alrer • llde ...
'.Ch ............
Teac:bel' llldooeoi&amp;iaoa ...,..__ ~

•

..,.

-P.JL

•
NUCLEAR RESEARCH
.
CENTER
•Tbe

Nuclear ReRarcll C...te.- wiD
an open bouse mel conduct
periodic lectures and tows tflroucbout
the aftemoon. I-5 p.M.

.._ter aad bawe instant resulls.
Jlecllcnical ~ lAboratory,
'--nl/I-5 p.M.

spo!lJOr

•Dep.tments in the Faculty of Eugine-

ftinr .,..

Applied Scie!ICI!S will present

demo~ show ~ and explain
displays. Maps and charts sbowiDf trans-

•
CARBON RESEARCH
BUILDING

pilltalioo f&lt;&gt;&lt; inDo&lt; cit)' ~nts wiD be
eqJiained. Adirities wiD include EJec.
trical En&amp;ineerinr: miniature radio
- _ telerision demorulration, radar

•Tours or the Cadlity wiD be conducted
by Physics mel Astronomy Proreuor
Jonathan lleidaert. Room IA!I·5 P.M.

nlocity measurinf, electrocanliogram
dilposis; Enrineerinr Science: - . .
strain telatioDs in plexiglass; Nuclear
l!~Jcineerinr: demorulration or neutron
bowilze&lt;, audio-visual electronic COilDlinf
equipment, neutron activation or metals;
NroSpace Engineerinr: hover croft
demons:tntioo on Parter lawn, manpower
aircraft clilplay, model ~tpafi contest;
lodustlial En&amp;ineerinr: "bilman factors
demonstration, operations research preRntalion; Cbemieal Engineering: demonstratioD of a Cractional clistillation
chamber; Mechanical Eocineetinc:
computer coolmlled railroad. I-5 P.M.

•

•

DIEFENOORF HALL

•DiYisioo or Uoderp-sduate Studies
odYisels wiD be available to to1t with
-.isito1s (especially bifb school guidance
C!JIIllSielcm). Room 114/I-4 P.M.
•An information booth for those interested in Ocmpational Therapy will be
pmftded. Audio-visual equipment and use
ol ~ media wiD be demonstrated. First
,_.,I-4 p.M.
oPror....,rs Miltoo Kaplan and Robert
!leis or the Faculty or Law and Juris.
prudence wiD present a ball hour mm
"Uiliftlsity. EcoJory and the Law." The
6Jm deals with tand use in the WNY-area
aod reweals some problems of tbe environment .,.. ecolorieal phenomena. Room
I46/I-4 P.M.
•The Department or History will present
eallibits, a boolt clilplay, a music mel
sO!IIIds of the 30's prorrun, mel
"'J'needy in the To-r" synchronized
SIOUIICI and slides. Rooms 203, 205/1-4
P.JL
Lectures in Room 204
•Dr. Flank Jen, "Financial Problems or
lodi-riduals."I·I:45P.M.
•Dr. llilton Plesur, "'lbe Heartbeat in the
White House: Aspects or PresidentW
Hnlth." 2-2:45 p.M.
•Dr. C. D'Amaoda, "Drut Abuse." 3-3:45
P.M.
•Dr. Henry Lee Smith, "Where Are You
From?" (the elwacteristics or ..,;onat
dialods in the U.S. and Canada). 4-4:45
P.M. .
lrr/Dm!IJiiDn about 1M City. RotundiJ/I-5
P.M.
•Dr. Charles Notess, Department of Civil
EngineeriDf, on lnnsportation problems
in the City.
· -ProCessors Johnson and Tatje, Depart.
meat or AntbropoiOfY. on the anthropolocy or Bulfalo.
I

•Dr. Wolipq Wolclt, Department or
Liilcuistics. with linruistic inronnation
about Buffalo. Sludents will be available
to explain research (..-itb maps) on
· e~rroups in Buffalo.

CLARK GYMNASIUM

•Rae Ann Hawkes will conduct an open
rebeusal in modem dance. Dance

Studio!I-5 P.M.
.Sports Club demonstrations in judo,
&amp;kiinf, scuba diviar (in the pool), cbeer·

leadiuf, bowliDf, fYmnastics and ridiDf.
On mtlin (loor women ·s small gym and
basement "'""""'h laboratory/1·5 P.M.
•The baRball team and the meD S and
women's interc:o1leciate athletic teams
wiD bold pactices (weother permlttinc) .
Gym Lawn/1-5 P.M.
9

9

•UDdenrater sound equipment wiD be
demonmated and SYnchronized swim-

mlnr performance wiD be held. Swimming PooC!I-3 P.M.
•U/ 8 mues and Baby Blues in concert
- (7th aiinual sprinr sing-out). Basketboll

Court/8-10 p.M.

•

HEALTH SCIENCES

•The Sdlool of Pharmacy will offer

pharmacy career iDCormation Cor prospectiwe pharmacy studenls. Information
oo _.amities ror women and special
procrun information wiD be anilable.
Faculty wiD be present to provide informal counselinr and advi.,ry interYiews. Room I 18/I-5 P.M.
•The School or Pharmacy wiU also offer a
oo careers in pharmacy,
Room I34; litenture on druf abuae,
Room I I4A-B; poison prevenlioo iDCor· .
matioD, Room I28; and veneral dioeiD(ormation, Room 246.

slide-•The School

or Nursinr wiD have a taqe

display or teacbinr materials in Room
23I. Smaller displays or student project&amp;

will held

00

the second floor.

c- dls--

fllay5 or c:linieal theses and Continui!JC
EducatioD and lDtematiODal NuniDC
materials wiD be exbibilied on the first
floor. CouDSI!Iors wiD be ndable to
discuss the nrious procrams o!rered by
the School or NursiDf. Rebesbme.n ta wiD
· be aened iD Room I3I.

•

CAPENHA~L

•Tbe Blact Medical Students Association
wiU
a lecture on sictJe.ceO
anemiL A questioD period will follow.
'l'tstinf Cor ~D anemia wiD be
available. Lecture: 140 (Apen/2-3 P.M. ;
'l'e$ting: LobonJtory/I·2 P.M. ond 3-5

.,._.,t

PM.
•The Dental School wiD orCer titerolure
oo career opporlunities in dentistry.
Guided tows will be conducted. lD Cront
or Capen HaD a sidewolk care will be set
up; a musicaJ.frGUP will perfoi'IIL
First floor just inside the main entranceWilY.

•Tbe Department or Oral PathoiOfY will
demorulrate diafnostic methods Cor Ofll
caacer detection.

�S..Lofut#
•Tile l'reftntift Dmdiolry Cllule 1rill
•Bdueatlonol OpporWalty Proerdemo- modem metbods of pre. (EPIS, Upnnl llouad, '-"'ac eeater,
ftntift deotlotly iDciDdiDC a - ·
Coopoattw CoBeto Ceat.K, Olllee of
Illation of
to .-bol deDlal
Miaodty Stodeat Amlin) ril ofrft
decay.
lnfona- on ~ll....w aids,
•The Deportment of Ortboclonllcs 1rill
prorided, ete. Slides depidiJJc
pruent a oerles of slides demooslntiDc
propu~ actiritla and llldio ~ment
correc:ti..., treolmont for malaliped teeth.
wiD be olfened. 1·5 P.JL
•The Department of Periodontics wiD
' SECOND FLOOR
have clinics open for- the enlualion of
oCommllllicatift C!uttrity Wori&lt;Jbop led
dentalooft tissue.
by Blmbii AbeboiL Rooms 231, 24(),
•The Removable Prosthodoatie Depart- . 248.
ment wiU open its clinic area and ,
oOrigami (........ foldine) 1rill be
techalcal labomtories for cuided tour
demonllnted by AIWa bhihara. Audi·
inspection. A display of prosthetic cues,
ence wiD be able to particjpete. Room
a visual education pfOCJ8JD coasilting of a
24211·2 p.M.
program slide oeries in complete denture
•Raneoli (Indian saud painting) demontechnique and a clinical TV program
stnlion by Arun W$ Room 244/1-2
(showing cliDlcal procedures involved in
P.M.
denture service) will be o~ned . Abo,
students will demonstrate various sleps in
oBuf{alonitm pbotograpbic essay. a.IIery
the techalcal procedu"' of complete aad
219/Conlinuous.
partial dental service.
•Happy Hour cash bar. Tiffin Room
•Department of Biochemistry professors,
235/1-5 p.M.
'
Dr. Li,ppes and Dr. Bahl, will di5CUSS
methods of birth control. Room GBR/1-3
•Wine and Cheese Party sponsoned by the
P.M.
Graduate Student Aaocialion. Room
215/1·5 p.M.
•A student exhibit on Pby&amp;inlogical
· Effects of Transcendental Meditation (the
•Representatives of the following
simple, natural, mechanical/mental
organizations wiU be in tbeir offices from
technique, practiced a few minutes at a
1·5 P.M.: Administntion, Room 225;
time, which can give the body profound
CommuDlty Action Corps, Room 218;
rest while the midd expands in awareness)
Campus Ministly, Room 232; Student
will be available. Lobby at Bailey Aoe.
Association, Rooms 205-207; Sub Board
entrance.
I, Room 2158; Univetsity Union
Activities Boanl, Room 261 .
•
TRAILERS 1 AND 2
•The music listeninc: rooms and browsing
•A media study will be presented by the
libruy wiD be open. Room 257
English Department under the supervision
111IRDFWOR
of Professor Gerald O'Grady. Visitors can
oCbess tournament. Room ~911·5 P,M.
make their own mms by drawing,
.Sunshine House wiD orrel" an exhibit on
painting, scratcbin&amp; on film wbieh wiD be
drug abuse. Room 332/1-5 P.M.
distributed to them. Puticipants wiD .be
videotaped as they work on their film.
•Representatives of tbe following
Trailer 111, 2, 3, 4, P.M.
organizations will be in their offices from
1-5 P.M.: Buffalonian, Room 356; Assist•The results of the mms made in Trailer 1
ant
Coordinators Office, Room 323;
will .be projected on a large sc..,.n. In
addition, the videotapes made during the • ethos newspaper, Room 302; Ualversity
Press,
Room 343; Publicity, Room 307;
filmmaking process in Trailer 1 will be
WBFO Radio, Rooms 325-327;
shown, so that the puticipants 'can see
Spectrum. Room 355; Amateur Radio,
themselves on videotape. Professor Gerald
Room 324.
O'Grady wiD give a talk eacb balf bour,
on film, media. the effects ofT. V. Trailer

-Ia

t

2/1:30,2:30,3:30, 4: 30P.M.

•

•

NORTON HALL
GROUNDFWOR
•Th~ Bookstore wiD be open 1·5 P.M.
•A Crafts Center exhibit will feature
ceramics, weaving, jewelry and other art
objects. Continuous.
•In the recreation area a table tennis
tournament, chess tournament, bowling
tournament and trophies exhibit will be
presented. 12 Noon-throughout the day.
F!RSTFWOR
•The Bookstore will be open 1· 5 P.M.
Center Lounge
•Ukrainian exhibit of folk art. 1·5 P.M.
•The Staff of the Overseas Academic
Program wiD be available to ex plain
opportunities for study outside the U.S.

UPM

·

• 0 ivision of Uodergraduate Studies,
Admissions and Records, Financial Aid
and Career Guidance and Placement
Offices will have information tables
set-up and advisen available. 1·5 P.M.
Conference Theatre

•The Chinese students dub wiD present
native oongs and fan dances. 4 P.M.
•Edpr Rojas &amp;ad Martha Maldonado will
perform native Peruvian folk dances. 4: 15
P.M. .

•Ranjit Chalrra•orti will present Indian
folk oongs. 4: 30P.M.
.Chantilal P...,kb wiD present a Yop
demonstration. 4:45 P.M.
•MoDica Polowy aad Panl Norek will
perform natift Polish dances.
oilkraialan students wiD sing aad dance
accompanied by the baadura (multi·stringed native instrument).
Fillmore Room

•U/B Symphony Band, with guest ·alto
saxapboDlst James Riggie, under diftction
of Frank Cipolla, aad U /B Co1Je1iate Jazz
Ensemble, under direction of Gary
SamuiU:i, in • varied pr1llraJD. 3 p.M.

2917 MAIN STREET

(next to Bennett HiF Sdlooll
•The Scbool of Ardlitectute aod Environ·
mental Design wiD present an exhibit of
student designs aad pbotopapbs aad
models of the work of Koprad Wadltsmann, professor at the Scbool of Ardli·
lecture, University of Southern California. 1-4 P.M.

•
4240 RiDGE LEA
•Experimen~ films made by Communications Design students of the Art
Department wiD be shown. Ridge La Art
GaJJeryII, 2, 3, 4 P.M.

4230 RIDGE LEA

•

•The Geography Department wiD offer a
display on soils aad geomorphology.
RoomC-30/ 1-4 P.M.

•Adult Advisement Center will have representatives available to ad:rise on
writing · resumes and wiD offer information on civil service opportunities.. Room
B/1·5P.M.

•

4246 RIDGE LEA

•The Department of Matbemalics will
have an open bouoe, aad 0.. Kazarinoff,
the Deportment Chairman, wiD speak on
"How the Deportment of Matbematics is
.spendine the taxpayers' JDODey aad what
tbe tu.payer receiYes in return."' Room
38/1:3~: 30 p.M.

IN CASE OF
EMERGENCY
OR FOR FIRST- AID
CALL (831) 5555

-·

�s

~

April 13, lP'/2

~Primordium'Will Enable Architecture Students

By

To Experiment withTlmOwnWrkEnvironment

--

suSAN

GREENWOOD

'

Nm fall. U/B'a Scbool &lt;II.

~aDd~

a1 Desip will. iDstall l'rimarcli~ complic:ated 'MII'Ii lor
a ~ philoaapbic, ..,;aJ. 81111

==-wife~~
........
Peter and

~

Mill

were 8llll:ecl last fall to ~
""""' 8llrt of IIDu8ina lllftiiii!Pfor tbe Scbool'• 200 fac.

ulty 81111 aludeota.. Peter 81111
Pleasie, 88 _t !&gt; e y are .........,
aroUnd a.e - . b..t tbe 80
foot by ~. foot --.1 Door &lt;II.
the Bulfakj Meter BuildiDc to
work with. FIII:Ulty llll!lllber
Richard Cbalmen 81111 0....
Jobn Paul Eberbanl stipulated
that -=Ia Scbool llll!lllber must
have his own ......d&lt; ....,.. 81111
that the ay8MD .-1 aboald
enable people to ~
with 81111 be aware of their...,
woritina envimament. T bey
pve the Mills six weeks to
come up with -..elbing. Tbat
"90IIIelhinl" lumed out to be
Primordium.
Physically, it's a ClllllltruclioD
8fT81111!1181t t b a t uses two
b u i I d i n g CIXIIPIJDI!Ilts-UniPRIMORDIUM (pri mor eli em)

1.

the eo~iest J&gt;lllt or ~ bo!Pnning. origin; 2. the rudw.nt· or

commencement of • part

or~ orpn..

strut, a metal slnlt system nrtber like a grown-up Erectoc aet;
and HalloweU, pieces of wooden boani that can be .-1 for
tibelves, work lops, etc. Each
faculty member and student
will be allotted an eight foot
long, eight foot wide 81111 13

":ta:: !:!

f:toff:: o~
construct the station, each will
be given a kit of Urustnrt 81111
Hallowell which will include 6
and 13 foot aectioos of two iDcb
square U-ilhaped metal bam&gt;~~
wilh regularly _.,eel boles for
screws and . clips; a number of
nuts, bolts and screws; and
several pieces of Hallowell
board. From this roiJection,
each is supposed to create his
own environment baaed oo personal needs.
A-

This is wbere tbe second part

i

of the Primordium concept
comes in. U ·
this combination of
campooents,
users will be able 'to ezperiment with and be aware of their
surrounding&amp;-on of the orici·

I

buil'Ji!,

I

I

bd::jj

na1 requirements for the pro-

' ject.

Peter and Pleasie are especially keen about this. ....,.,ct &lt;II.
the system. They are stroDe advocates of arcnitecture and environmental d e a i g n students
¥Jclinl and deaigniuc real eovuomnents rather than simply
playing with
p1-. ADd,
they point 011~ aJ..
lows students and faadty .....,..
bera to ......d&lt; 00 their"""' eoviromneut, bOt practice .., a
project .-1 by else.
. This learning tluoulh ...,..,.
tice COIIIlept is actively pwbed
by the Scbool but is a IJn!U.
oft from the ~ "'istal
and learn" IIPIIII*'h ._. in
lectun.Gtyle Jeamin&amp;, Pleaie .
IIIU'L ~linK with Uniatrut
Hallowell aDd other
-terialo, fonle tbe student to "do Slid 1eam.•
The Mills .m.ioa the .,....
Clept 88 an orimlatioo 1oa1 for
tbe School IDDDininc .........,.
can _ . . _ and ......, their
eicht~ • a fiat pooject. ~ they will a· .
~

a _,. ..-1

...y ~ Slid ......
lecbual ~

Peter is

the.,...,._

.....,. -

8hoat

.. a

~ ~-Dever
~ ~~

'~---·''

I

B
ever, this Om: is greaUy bamp- rival date is late swruner or
ricid physical environ- early fall
ment. Ergo, tbe necessity of
Some a.pects of the s)'b-tem
l'rimarclium being extremely ~ are in use. however. 'The second
flesible so that in a day-to-day Door is almost entirely open.
- . a peraoo who is having a EbeJbard doesn't have four
Ia! day can completely change walls surrounding him; instead,
the work area to match or a . mobile. windows, a mnfercounteract his mood.
ence table and filing cabinet an..
A 5odol ~
the rough boundaries of his
Finally, Primordium is a so- "ollioe." No ooe e1ae has an encial system. The metal and dosed apace either. The dean
wooden solid barriers that tra- praises this openne6S and says
cliLioaally _...te oftices are it increases communicati&lt;lll. One
nowhere to be found. So there graduate studeot, bolliever, laim't the uaad aoundproofing. ments that mmmunicaticm is
As a .-.It, the Mills expect too cood - he can oo klnler
that ..,;u interactions will put his reet up ... his desk and
c:bliDae. Quite lilelally, the take 40 •inks. ·
walla will have ears because
Mostly, people are critical
tbere may bOt be a barrier be- of the noise level Sl:ranp!ly
ooe ......d&lt; station and enouch. they say tbe place is
anotber.
"quiete&lt;" whoa Iota of people
But bow well this .........,.. are around beca&lt;a all the conment will work and, in fact, versatiom then blend to_trelher.
bow well the whOle COIIIlept
The Scbool is strualilic to
will fDDdiaa is atill unteolt8d. eat.blioh the &lt;II. idmtity
The building '""" . _.. ..,., and Clllllllamity _ _ . , . to
~ to arme in Mardl the Primanlium ClDIIIOI!pt._Prior
when the Scbool moved to the to i!B Mardl - . tbe Scbool
Meter Bnildinc. Me. the ar- ....., in tbree _ . - locatioaa
t!l'l!d by

and communication among undergraduates, graduates and
faculty was not exactly "16&amp;.1."
Now, they are forced to become
a total mini-society because of
tbe way the new location is arranged. Everyone seems to be
working very bard at this. But
it'll be a long time before a
s~ of mutual trust for all
is established. Until then, tbe
typeface ball for the electric
typewriter will still be locked
up and pens and pencils
will be permanently ''borrowed."
-CaiiT..-1

Wliat about the phYsical ~ ..
of Primonlium? Well, ~
say it'll turn the _.,., into a
tenement laDIIIe of metal wor:lt

atatioaa, a maze of small boles

that """""" studen!B and fac&gt;.
ulty like aardinea. 'The Mills,
al CDUrlll!, clen,y this, but do admit Chat people will lave to
loolt at ....,.. in a "-Y·
'lbMe'a aome q...tian too
about the apace being fles:ible.
Some people don't think ,indivi-

duals will lake advantage of
the multiple possibilities but
will instead set up shop for the
duration. Others see waves or
decorating fads sweeping acroos
the lloor. 'There's also a real
question of how easy tbe building components w i II be to
cbaDge. Future inhabitants may
find that cbaDge will be limited
to moving books rather than
totaHy restructuring their
square because the metal frame
will be bard to alter.
A system somewhat like Primordium is in partial use by
other ardlitectural schools, the
Mills pojn~ out, and seems to
wor:lt.
Until all tbe questions can
~Y be answered by using · ·
the. system here, Peter and
Pleasie remain enthusiastic.
They fumly believe it will ....,. •
._, and put off .&amp;heir critics
by. moonnn• Merleau Panty -nJ.-~ of operation will
_..., well to OYeroOCDe many
pojntll!lis dilemmas - provided
that we ask from time to tiple
why the apparatus wades."

�~

6

Drs. Marlrello &amp;Armenia Are Named CSEAGoes

To Head Medical School])epn1ments
or-

a~-

Medical School
istrative appointments were an-

On Strike

For 36 HOlD'S

·

A 36-bour atriU apiDat the
State by the Civil SeMI:e BmployeM Asaocialioa (CSBA)
Willi settled Somday, April 2,
with a tentative ....,..,...... CIIDtract,.._.L
According to loml reporla, the atriU _... before

~~~~u:':

Hays Will Head

NSF
Committee
Dr. David e. lia.YB." profesaor

~~ru...bass.:fs:=

chairman of the Department of
Anesthesiology and Dr. John
V. Armenia is the new acting
'-&lt;! of the Division of Ophthalmology.
Dr. MarkeUo has been acting
chairman of Anesthesiology
since December 1, 1969. He received his M .D . from U/B in
1957 and aJao did his undergraduate work here. He joined
the facUlty in 1961 as clinical
assistant professor a n d was
named professor of anesthesiology in 1971.
Dr. MarkeUo has co-authored
several scientific papers for professional jour n a Is and
served both as ·chairman and
member of several University
and hospital conunittees.
His research includes : studies on various effects or hyper-

.bas

-

-

Meyer Hospital. ataff s i n c e

planned Pictetinc at the Main
Street campus and at Ambent
could be set:UP. 'The um.-sity. mostly -c:lcad 011 Satur-days and Slmda,ys anyw~~y, relatively unalfected by the
brief wali&lt;-&lt;!Ut which """"' during the always quiet spring rece!a period.
The new contract . . , - .
forged after 23 bows ol. llllll&gt;stop I:Jargaininc. calls for an
immediate 4 per cent ~ increase, and an additionallllmpsum ''productivity" pa.ymeut ol.
!1,~ per cent ol. annual aa1ary
tO be paid April 1, 19'13 (baaed
on 1972-73 wages) . Ott- new
itema agreed to are: the npt
of employees to withdnnr excess contributions from pension
plans at the time of retirement.
a speedier •
proceduie,
and ~ol. a system
under which the State and
CSEA will determine what employees would be laid off in the
event ol cot-bacb.
CSEA's original demand was
for a 15 per cent .....,....theboard salary hike.
The settlement ~ far
short of· that. will, however. cost
the State an additional $60 million during the present fiscal
year, Alheny sources have iJ&gt;.
dicated. Governor Nelson RockefeUer said the money "wiil
have to be paid from inl:n!aiEd
federal assistan&lt;e or ........,...
anticipation bonowinc-"

Advisory Committee of the Na·
tiona! Science Foundation.
The committee, ClOIIJil.-l of
members rep.--.ting all the
social sciences and universiti,..
and coUeg,.. across the United
States, advises the director of
the Foundation on its activities ~~=on ce~b~ fi'~th'ft~
in the s o c i a I sciences. The and :::fiac output; studies on
Foundation's current program elfects of anesthesia on ventilain this area is valued at more -tion-pedwrion ~bution in
than $40 million. Emphasis is the lungs; and effect of canlioplaced on the use of mathemat- pulmonary bypass on cerebral
ics in social science, problems blood flow.
of poverty and violence and
factors determining social n»
bility.
Dr. Hays has been a mem·
ber of the U/ B faculty since
1968.
.

Dr. MarkeUo is a Diplomate
of the National Board of Medical Examiners, and the American Board of Anesthesiology.
He is also a c t i v e in several
o t h e r - professional organizations.
Dr. Armenia, a 1958 Medical
School graduate, is clinical professor of surgery !ophthalmology ) . He is Buffalo bom and
educated and has been on the
faculty of the Scbool of Medicine -since 1965. and on the

\\bodhnnNamed
DistinguishOO Pr&lt;i

strategy which measures an read up on the subject .,. ob"awareness of the constraints tain the necomuy information
under which managers function,
prefer.
the considerations involved in . The
will probably cost
the fonnulation of coJpOrale between 00 and $1,000 which
policy, and the implications of includes fees for taking exams,
policy decisions."
having transcripts evaluated,
'The exam at the third level keeping records and special ,....
requires a comprehensive un- sessments oosta.
derstanding of one area and
The committee is still workThe Taylor Uno makes State ,
othef itsresmt
· lefr-relab·~'~~pe Wllem.th ing on exams for the various employee strikes punishable by
~ Prob
levela ol. the degree and the
jailing
ol union lmden, fining
solving ability and ability to first BSBA will piObahly be
apply theoretical knowledge lo awarded in 19'13 or early 1974. the union and fining llll!lllbem
{
two
days'
pay for
day 011
real world situations will aJao Witliin a few months, interbe examined.
ested people can obtain appli- strike).
Training at the coUege level cations to start wodt on the
may be substituted for
of general education -uon, Wdthese tests. Williams er:plained. liama noted.
In addition, a person's profesComplete details ol. the prosional experience can be evaJ. gram are still being worbd out.
uated to see if it can provide but further information can he
.
•
obtained from the Repn1B ExTCliiiODOW (April14) 1B the
possible equivalents.
The BSBA and the associa- ternal ~ Propam, State deadliDe for IIIIIDinatioos ol.
te of arts degree are open to E d u c a t 1 o n Deputmeat, 911 graduaq 8l!lliono from uta
anyone. Neither a high school Washington Ave., Alheny
and acieDcaJ fields for caoh
A spobaman for the ·UIB prias to be awarded by the~
diploma nor residence in New
York State is required. What School ol. Management aays cal Omiaon a-pe. ol. Pili
the degree really is, William they are "interested" in the Beta Kappa.
Berline, management professor Prosnun and noted that Dr.
The awan1a ~ he
at New York University, said Richard Brandeubur&amp;. dean o1. at the Pili Beta ~ Initiaat Monday's conference, is "a tbe School, . is 011 !lie degree tion Ceremoay, ~. IIQ'
certification of acquisition of committee. In addition,- o1. 13. in the. Non. ~
knowledge." To obtain this U/B's IDIIJiagellll!lt facolty 111e n-tre.
knowledge, ·students may at- helping formulate the different
The Samuel Paul &lt;:..tend traditional college courses, level - award, hanoriDir the uansity'a distinluiobed forme r
cbulcellor,
is a c:l-*who
far a$60
for the~
.........Pifioa ibe spirit ol. flee

1963.

Dr. Armenia has certifications
and fellowshi
in the American Board orOphlhalmology,
American Academy of Ophthalmology a n d Octolaryn£olocy,
Society of _E)'e Surgeons, and
American College of Surgeons.
He h a s consulting appointments at St. Mary's Hospital,
Lewiston, and the B a t a v i a
School ol.- the Blind.

The T»ernal' B.S. in Business RapJires
Students to. Pass 4 Levels ofExaminations

Going to a university isn't
the only way to get a college
level education, the State's
Board of Regents realizes. So in
Dr. Henry M . Woodbum, a 1963, the Regents established a
member of the faculty since process through which qualified
1923 and dean of the Greduate individuals can earn college
School from 1953 to 1966, has ciedit by passing proficiency
been named a ''l&gt;iatin!luisbe exam&amp;-the New York CoUege
Service Profesaor" by the Board ProficieDcy Ezamination Proof Truste... of the State Uni...,.- gram (CPEP)-which has now
&gt;lity.
granted over 25,000 credits. The
Dr. Woodbum has been called program's success led the Regents
to look for ways of grantthe "architect of the P""""'t
U/B Graduate School" for bis ing degreftl for acquired proficiency.
Aa a result. the external
e f I o r t s to decentralize the
School, giving · major ac!Jnini&amp;. degree program was born and
three
degrees-the Associsoon
trative and poli respoosibiliti,.. to indivi'd:::l departments. ate in Arts, the Bachelor of
Business,
and
the Associate in
New pad.uate feUowships bearing bis name were recently in- Applied Science in Nursingwill
be
available.
augurated in recognition of
On Monday, members of two
these contributions.
of the aegree. program commitDr. Woodbum aJao served as tee&amp;-the Bachelor of Science •
cbainnan of the U/B Chemistry in Bus in e s s Administration
Department from 1945 to 1956. (BSBA) and the Associate in
He has authored aome 40 scien· Arts-were on campus to explain their programs and hear
~=.:~~y and hal; comments.
Aa outlined by Wayne Wilchief, independent study
Math~1loo Iiams,
program, BSBA is basically a
testing process through which
a student proves that he has obAppointe... to the "Georxe tained the knowledge necessary
William Hill and Emmy Noeth- for a basic degree in business
er ·~ Instructorships in administration. Though the deMathematics" have been an- gree granted is a general one,
DOIIIl&lt;ed br the Department of the student will have special
CODlpetence in one of five areas
Matllem!otica.
•
-accounting, finance; manageAccepting the George Wil- ment ol. h u m a n resources,
liam Hill Research Instructor- marketing and operations manship is Brian Ha.asard, who will agemenl
·
People in the program first

From Field of 250

M':U:O..~cs~ ~U:
J~me.

Dr. Catherine Olsen, who
received her PhD. from Tulane
in 1970, has - t e d the Einmy Noelber award
The Hill-Noetber IDstructorships, named in booor ol. 1-.
outstanding 19th century mathematicians, were initiated in
September, 1971. Tbey are ol.fered to young mathematicians
with doctorates to enable tbom
to conduct -..:h propama.
The n e w appointees, who

were selected from a field ol.

250 applicants, will besin their
two-year~tments in Sep-

~~

ol. the Department ol. Matbe-

matica.

=

:.,:SS

wt;:ne=tsedJ:l;
basic colletle-level ocimpetence
in the humanities, social scinatural sciences or mathematiC&amp;. An associate of arts or
science degree can be substituted.
Ned, wodt is begun on the
business part ol. ibe degree.
Here, a student must go
throuch three levels ol. exams or
their equivalenl
At the firBt level, the student
muat demonstrate an ~
tory know1ec1Je in -=It of the
five basic .-a. In ' - ! tWo,
he muatlabow a more comprehensive lind detailed~
ol. two ol. the five. In addition,
·he is required to an exam
in ~ mviroammt and

any:$

·

0

'*"'

any

..-w

Black-White Sistermod Js
FocusofForumforWmen

~~~--=

"What problems are COIIIIIlOil from Wllllhinjltoo·" small and
to all women? Are aome prob- large discussion groups on
lems specific to b I a c k s, to "Wbat Do Women Want?" and
whites? Are there bonest fears ··what About Intenacial Relilof interracial competition? Is tionships;" and a talk by Floraisterhood possible? Is aister- ence Luca, assiatant New York
State commiasiooer for human
bood neceiiiiiiJYi
rights. Some ol. the discussion
Thet!e are 8JJlOI1II q,__tio.,. group leaden will be: Ann Eskto be considered at a day-long ridae, W BEN -n!pOrter..,.....,_
forum on " Bladr. Women, While spondent; l.eyla Sooiit. former
Women-Is Sisterhood Possi- interviewer for the New Yor1t
ble?" on April 15. The Satur- State Employment Serville;
day seminar, sponsored by the Florence Baugh, Community
Division of Continuing Educa- Action Oranization ataff·memtion and Office for Equal 0p. ber; and l&gt;r. Maiy B. Pub,
portunity, -"" to discuas this
topic "at a human level," "'?'" :,ta;'t~~-B's Adult AdMalpret B. Nevin, co-chairThe fee for the )lnlllalll is
man of the evenl
.$5, which includes lunch
. Highlight&amp; of the program will materials. The . - . . , is open
includf!: a noport from Dr. Ann to the puhlic. For turtt.. inScott..~lefislative coorilinator ol. formation and regiatratioo mathe National Orpnizatioo ol. teriala, call the Adult Advia&amp;Women, on the "U.u.t N""" ment Center at 831-1808.

ana

ly, acienllfie, or artilltic .,.._.
te.- is eli,;ble. S&amp;udoodll -.y
submit _ , . , _ . ol. esperimenls, creations ol. li1edl7 or
graphic art, or oCher -me

Wad&lt;.

The Rn.i-..o.. F. mu-.
Memoriaili~.-......m far a
prominent rom- ........ ol.
the Ezudisb ])ope.-t, ia a
c:l-* tor $50 ennled far a
student -.y iD 8IS!I fiold. 'l1le
-.&gt;' muat be a eritio:el treat. ..-t o1. a sipificent .........
theory, book; ,._ or oCher
apprapiale
wiD
bae their dedliaaa Oil _ , . . .

IIIJ¥-'J....

te;".=!~..: ::':~~. t

work I!I8Y he ~by depertmiatal ~ or by the
facplty ,_._. iD dlmll8 ol. a
~· hma8 ~"'
Dr. W. L. ~­
taJ:y ol. Omiaon
PfD
Beta Kappa, 4280 •

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�8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

~
N.riW 'IU.l\n.-

•April l:J, .W/2

s1JAKESPEARB
FESIWAL

PUBLIC
TIIIWER
UI/J£1 CIJ/IS11IfiC/II

MONDAY-17
Tu s..n.- Harp,

CoafenrD&lt;e ThMtre, 8 aDd 8 p.m..

PILl&lt;•:

;rr&lt;;,..u;c.&lt;~ d.t~ ;-

v-.

free.

GE SIJTRO ASPIDIER WJ.ER
• ESTELlE R. NEWMAN T\f.~R
• ANTHOLOGY FllM. ARC~~~
• THE
• CINQUE

ca.t: Sboji
ReDtaro Mikuni.
Tatouya Mihlplbi; by K.., kbibwa. At the war'a
- a poup of J . _ eoldiers

• Fl.!

!::.:";;:;-:
:.:w~
Private Mimahima ooouts ahead

to wam his comradso of ambuoh.
Bat. during his -ture. the
war ODda aDd be must deal with
the death and disillusiomnent
which lie before him.
£J11UL 'I'BK.UD

oeay•: Peter

Handke, A u a t r i a n playwright
whc.e Ride Across LaJie Con-

:!iir..=y:. akl'nZ'.!,.~o'::
Ricbarc1 Gilman ..:In read to the
reading and the work. Harriman
Theatre. 4 p.m., free. 8 r o o m
Street Tbeatre's original production, Hot Wonkle, Harriman Theatre, 8 p.m.

~

.. . . . _ .......... Of:cl.' -a n-.IQ.

J~:NC~Haa~NG ac:a::Ne&amp; ~JD~IHA&amp;• :
Dr. ~ Sbi Liu, BMC&gt;Ciate pro-

Roma. alidea. poetry.
litemture aDd music of the ''Eternal Cily " Leo Smit. piano aDd
nanatio.;_ Central Library Audi-

..._..

f e as or,

~

acieDce, A

Na11 Exptllr6ion Metlwd /or Solu-

U.. &amp;xutdGry L a y e r ProbklfU,
104 Parbr EnciJ&gt;eeriog, 4 p.m.
servica aDd meal, Cbabad Houae,
3292 Main St.. 6 p.m.
ARIL ...........,. oa:y•: Tbe Cbi·
cap Project. Tu Chinae WiaeC711C.Wra, Harriman Theatre, . 8

CIWW&gt; ......._,.. .....,.,....,

.,._ minimal c:blup.
'72: Ricbarcl Leaa&gt;elt
oereeus aDd his films,
147 DiefeDdorf. 8 p.m.
JED.CX&gt;H

IIIIUL

BABBATB

sawc:z• :

=~~~7'

Dr.

J;:lh To-

UKB.UNlAN All'IS nrBnVA.L•: ECJIIlt!T

OONcaT•:

f!:rto~=De~::OOnJk~

torium, 3 p.m.

COMPUTING CENTB &amp; SEION.ut#:

UKIWNW&lt; .urrs n:BTIV.u.•:

Lileya,

a ballet. 146 Diefeudorf, 4 p.m.
INDIAN PILl&lt;•: Ankhen, starring
DhamJeudra. Mala Sinha, Mehmood. Kumlrum; etc., diJected by
RamaJumd Sagar, music by Ravi
147 Diefeudorf, 6: 30 p.m., members $1.50, non-members $2.00.
AI'IIIL ,.,.,..,.,. OIIGY 0 : TM Chinese WU«raciera, followed by a
critique by Erica Munk. editor of

fajj!;:"::d! '::;i~H:.riman Theatre, 8 p.ni.

DAHCI: PIIOGIIAJ( 0 : Tbe Barbem
Gardner Construction 'Company,
Tu Euenu Pruedint/ Gild Followinlf Gild In&lt;~ a /kh«uJ.

;::...%JA!.'!-;2::S2.~.!.t:t;

SLOO, available at Norton Ticket
Office.

:g~;~':{fi;...,o:"~"!:

7:30 p.m.

Aduonced Fortran, Roger Campbell, instructor, Hoom 10, 4238
Ridge Lea. 7 p.m.

=

DlNI8T WI'I'EB8KY :MDI.ORLU. I.acTllllll:0: Dr. RR. Race. Medical

~'l,"~Blllit.,r1:'£

mte, ~ ~. B~
Grou,. and tile · Red CeU M em--

=· :f"~£~!;j""J!;

Center for Immunology, Butler
Auditorium. Capeo H a II, 8 : 30
p.m. -

TUESDAY-18
PMBII 222 : OONftOVDBIIS IN BCI-

ENCI::" Joel A. Cohen. student
lecturer, 362 Ac:heson. 10 a.m.,
viaitora welcome.
PBYSlClANS CZNaAL Df'l'all81' ft:L.

sponsored by East Eu.....-n
Studies Procnm, SUCB; home-

BPIIONll ~#: Dr. David H .
P. Streeten, EtkmiU of Obocure
Ori8ins, sponsored by Regional
Medical l'n&gt;cram. 40 receiving
stslioas. 11: 30 a.m.

::.=·u=

W. Elhia, 262 Norton. 1 p.m.
N U &amp;888 DU:PHONS ...cn:JD# :
Gretdal Smith. lt.N., Cumolherapy lnfruion with Catheter

CAC nLil 0

1/, aee

:

Friday listiJ&gt;c.

SA8'r JruaOP&amp;AN IJINND DA.Htw:•:

cooked ethnic food. a Dutdl bar,
door prizes. entertaiJuDei:Jit and a
contiDeDtal on::beatra. T i c k e t e
available from the Procram in

ltd:~~

SUCB; Norton Ticket Office. For

infonnalioa, call 1162-4506.
,nLK: · -

Gild

day listiJ&gt;c.

Board. aee 'J'hws.

SPRING .JUS'I'KZ 'I'II.AIHINC P&amp;OGILUI.;

aee Friday listing.

HJLU1L a.AIISIB:

lJ4Uuwrs He-

bN!W, 262 Norton. 12 DOOB.

Jew-

Techmque, lljJOIIIIOred by Racion·
a! Medical l'ropam, 40 recoi.vin«
atslioos, 1:30 p.m.
PILl&lt;: Tu MtuU!Iwrimo C&lt;Jndi..
d&lt;Jte, Confereace n-tre, S aDd
8p.m.,free.
Cast: Fnmk Sinatra, Launmce

---"S'-UND"--'-.:..A_.Y
__1.:..6--,---- ~J· t:,c:: '-;;,.~.:=:

::.,~thl.~ ~~see r..="!r~:::!:~!:f

BILUCL

CLASSII:B :

Ad.ua.nced He-

-~~e~N;;:,!:u.,;~:~o~~

1: 30 p.m. Operation Greenli&amp;ht,
a.m.
HlUel Houae.
avo. LIBD1U8 l&lt;IZ1iNc: Annual
meetiJ&gt;c of the Niagara Frontier
Outptsr, N.Y. Civil Liberties
Unino; p,_..tstion of the Civil
Liberties Awanl to Proiessor herman Scbwart:z:, Law School, for
his outstandinc work in the field.
of priaooers' richts; guest speaker
will be Stephen Howan, WBEN.
Two films : the Smothers Brotbers
on tbe Bill of Ri&amp;hta. aod a CBS
poll 6lm. Rerre.ihmenu will be
a e r v e d. Unitarian Univenaliat

u

SATURDAY-15

~~ ~~·

7: 30

CONca.aT• : Szc:zecin. T~

control. in America.

UNDalWA'ID OOHc.T•: Water
Whistle by Mar Neuhauo, pre-

of.:;:,c:=

::'!~ ':l:n'=.

the Jewish Centsr of Balfalo,
Jewish Center swimming pool.
787 Delaware Ave., 5: 30-10: 30
p.m., general· admiooion $2.00,
s tudents SLOO, call 886-3145 for
reierved ticketa or purcbae at
the door.
To bear the concert. the audieoce must enter the water, llince
Mr. Neuhaus produces the -..do
with water pre • 1 u r e forced
through valves aDd whiatlea
mounted on the eDdl of Iaible

~ :~"':' :!.!'tedthe..ru::!;
a

c:one.ebaped

reftector

which

- ~"""'~~lloir~ ~ . :=..'f..f~~l':
Campua School Auditorium.
SUCB Campus. 1300 Elmwood
A-7:30p.m., PD'!rsl admiaion
U.OO, otudenls $3.00, available at

the tubes 8ez they .....tantly re-

::!ten~~.-=
(Conlinued on -

=n':

7, col. 3)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Insert: Community University Day</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>12 p.</text>
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          <element elementId="116">
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

MARCH 30, 1972

VOL 3-NO. 26

t

ru~oo
Agmdafor

&amp;trchfor
HealthVP
To Begin

The Senate

The Faculty &amp;!bate will look

AdiYalion altbe ....,.. mitlee for lbe poet al vice ideat for '-1111 aciencw is . .
DOUIIC8d by .Preoideat Rabat
L. Ketter iD a letter 11eiJJc m.
lributed today to IDOIIIben al
lbe ~ al n..Jtb Scioonl8.

at lbe

_

and~Dill!lda,~lbe

Committee membership will
be IIIIDDUDCed "as ooon as I am
able to complete discuasioua
with lbe ~" Ketter llllid. Name of lbe dlairman
is withbeld IIOilldinl u-e disCUEioaa.

':Ole 8laAe Vaiwmty· o1
N.. Yod&lt; at BdaJo can look
with pride -

il8 biAooy al -

==:em i:.;r::., :tX:
ter ala'-t saya. '"This Uaivenity founded as a medical ......... il8 ecoad --..;c

unit -

iDI ol

devoted to lbe tmcb-

pbarmacy, il8 fourth to
denl.iatzy, all before lbe tum

ol tbe century. Bullalo is
credited with awarding ODe ol
lbe finlt depeos iD the field
medical tedmolosY iD lbe
tbirlioa; after ....., year&amp;
~~
.
education procriiiD5 iD~ ._.
pi~ formed our _ ,
8cbool iD 1940; our Sdlool of
Heslth-Related Prolessioos ...,.,.,. lbe finlt IIOdJ o~tional units formed iD this
OOUIItly• • • •

8ylltem April

pnlllpO!Ctus 8liOtber two year&amp;

'"l'o help that our pro.
wiD be 8leally and wiD be
aJM.d al lbe al nata.!

p
•
-bewill . . lbe
ClOIDIIIittee ~ pay ~ attention to .
C&amp;Ddidatea
wt.o ·can JDOYe us !'! ~
""""" as a
iD delivery al
health care
·
At lbe
same ~
vice ilreaidmt
must provide a • te for ihe"
&lt;liJillimal
and ~
ol basic
clinical re...-ch.~

Colleciaf.e

u to decide~ to poe il8

_...
Its'*"*- .... "'--..... ......,. ......
................_...,
......,..,_
________

-____
.-.-·,. to-·_.,_
.....-·--.-.--.
......-..... .
the _ _ _ _ _ .. _ _ _ Yirplla- Symposium craft the
~
-

-

tllroulhthe Fillman- ID-IIIea&amp;,f

-

:·

tram his miner's cap~--- Aa t i l e -

-...--.

of life. And members of lbe
C4liJeciate staff and &amp;tudeuta '-e promisal to be on band
to ...-&amp; for lbe doc:ument and
provide infonnation Oil '"bow
....u lbe system is wodtinc-"
"The reriew"""""' ainxm two
yean to a day after the Senate
paased tbe original Colleciat.e
pro&amp;peelus (better known as
tbe Stem Proopectua) . 'lbat
document has been undergoing
examination and revision by
tbe Senate's Educational Planning and Policy Committee
since last fall "The Committee.
chaired by Dr. Jobn Halstead,
has come up with a revision
that Collegiate Director Dr.
Konmd von Moltke says, is
" reasonable .. . and is as strong
as an advisoty document can
be." He beliew!s the Collegiate
units "will be able to operate
e!fectively with it.~
Other members of tbe Cc»Jeciate System aren't eo IIW'e.
s..ae would have 1ilr.ed a

:.~t.axn;"-~ tr....'*:
mdl as &amp;mdi.ng and """""'...,.
tent.
lieliewo lbe -

oo-..

.mee

J)I!IICtas . . . . ."iacl-~
ecfmjnisfmtion will ~ it

any time tbey -

to."
EW!Il thou&amp;b tbey are divided about opecific proyisioas
within tbe Halstead Proopectus,
the Collegiate Asoembly did
........ to urce its - . At
their March 22 meetinc. tbey
110 ISSUE 4IEXr WEEK
The ........... will be published
.- because or sprirc recess. we will resume publication
on Thursdoy. April 13.

�........ ,,

~

2

.'fhe Cards&amp;~KeeponComing
But No One at U/BAids the Mailers
B.r STEVE LIPMAN
"'DD .,... believe that wide...... recycled waite
........,.. .,...of...ue
a llipaificant
....bit r,.. to a deaDer en~?"

"'D a

.ate of

1 to 10, bow

~ .JGU rate the

truthfulof ....._.._."• .-1 by the

lalloorilll'~ Automc&gt;llile ma"""*"'uem. eou,b and
cald ~ - Gas and e1eclric ._.,...;... Petroleum inc~uotty.•
"What io your .-ion to the

of - - premiums, gr.....
=-~ CDiltesls at service
-

the lime you're about to 11*1uate. It - - 11111..
Sopbomore

II&amp;Yll &amp;be

Cindy

Gerst6

"an't remember ever

aeudinc -

them away."

. I

just throw

ADolber U/8 student doesn't
throw the mail out; be saves it
foe the ~ when "DIY dog
bas an accident in the bouse."
One student a few years baclt
fouod another novel way of
dealing with the credit card
anDOY""""- He sent for,

and received, a card for his

~Is

at oeber acbools
ha.., requested credit cards for

Do.,...~ business really ~~~tled

cans bow .JGU feel about those
bas any way of
Well, -.Ybe, and yes.
U .JGU're a college student.
oddo are JOOCI that your mail
'-- I
d
will ....._

::::;,."'!.t'!J

~-;,:_~t!d'~

JJiua credit card applications,

.....-m.u.u.ce policy fonDs, inc:ludinc tbe above ~

&amp;am 9aD Oil (Sunoco) .
Moot are form !etten, but
_,. c:bamm,y. Sunoco's .-1 in
part:

students have used is the old

send-tbe-compiiu)y-a-bridt tridL
It goes like this. Wbeo they
receive an offending piece of
mail. they relum it to the send-

er, marked

DO

such

addres...e_

accompanied by a brick in
brown wrapping paper. Tbe
business bas to pay the postage.
Do Thor a.t the Wbele do theae businesses
get your IllUDe and address?
From hiP acbools, !DilDY of
wbicb allow easy access to inf01mation about paduates.
From r in 1o and cap and
_ . , companies with the

Dar Mr. GuJbul.
14• ,a ~ to tile point.
r4 lille a ooll4e -'or ltiJirla1
WAo S . Gulbal to #taw one of ....._ of c:allece paduates.
_,. &amp;utoco Traod canU. And
From poofeMional mailing
rlliiJa . , . ,_,_
. list coocems. Tbeae places sell
Oar ~ ,_ f" ll y to oCher businesses lists of stu-

1

~00-writes:
No ~t ~-=~~
U--1972 ;. a uery ;,.. another important ooe, the stu....,..,

, _ _ , YI!IIT for you. You

trad-

--...
m.-.icb• aron't m i as in I

dent directory.
Tbe policy at U/8, and at
!DilDY oCher acbools, is to sell

::::.:·:. ~"'~..;: ;!jeaden~~~~J.!:J:
CIU' Boad-lt io mam•Wfured

fmm 1()0 , _ cent Recycled

w- Papar. •

llrilllmUca offen a "bauti-

!afly ~ ~ bookJet" • ....U • the 111111111 "subantial" llludeDt
Galf Oil's tzawl card application ....,. with news of "the
bic Galt V a c a t i o n """"P.......• and. offen "an eliCiting
'naod tbe world multiband
partllble ~ abaolutely
110 ..,., or oblietrtion to you."
.Applications- i n s tea d of
credit cards ~Ye&amp;--aliDe
thmagb the mail because of a
law tl..t fodJida unsolicited
cards &amp;am beini
AI . . _ lloolr lD - . , . II
8ludmta in any class are
liWT to ....,.,;,., thio.,mail, but
.,.__ are - l e r if you're
~ ..- entering aebool
s.Dar Herb SJrat.er says
he'e ...-.....s mail for"- camcredit c:arda, tapes,
_ . . . , and a . . _ in l'lorida.
·~ .__ the " ~a.-""'""
naY)' to
•
One to • • Today's

clioalunt.

tion. But part-time or nicht sludents employed by buoji,_
.,... buy directories, as .,... any
oCher student 8ldred to do 80 by

a busiDfWPDl!n
Tbat was the case

last year

I'IOqU5ts for 8UCh infannalioo
and the policy of~
of "-rican colleges and universities i$ that set by the American Associaticm of CoiJePate

~tr;;hl~is~~~&lt;t

lion must make every endeavor
to keep the student's reconl
confidential and out of tbe
bands of those wbo would use
it for other than l.,.itimate IJW'poses. All membem of the fa&lt;&gt;.
ulty, administmticm and clerical staff must respect &lt;XliDfidential information about students
wbich they acquire in the
course of their work."
That's been A It R's policy
for a long time, says Direc:tor
Dr. Arthur Kaiser wbo bas been
associated with the Ollice since
1946.
Kaiser says few requests for
student information come into
his ofr~ee. 'We get occasiooa1
requests. Newat.oeell and Time
magaZine every year call that
they've got a terrific offer to
make to incoming fresbmen.
All they need is a list of tbe
freshmen ...,•ve accepted.
'We tell them ...., doo't release that informatiOD. Tbey .
don't like it. but what .,... they

New Dirretor ·
- . . . ..:.....- holdllllll

~

·--·
......
~of
......,
.......,_
trom
the RDpJ
Couri
--the--Ciubof-

do?"

Tbe same policy bolds for

Selective Service requests,

when a student deferment requires filing of a 100 form. "We

!tiM.Pollo!h
'_....._,-Wll!mt

Tie . _ , oppolnliod - - of the

3.000

C~f~Pial"
or,._,lilll&gt;4o-181ti
- pa..:
.

.·

go Oil the prillciple that the student record is the peraooal
property of tbe student,"
Kaiser says. ''It's made available only with the "student's .e-

Elections, Attendance Show
Growing Apathy in Senate

. at
U/8 have complete student
printout lists-the Libraries.
Bw&amp;ar, Student A1faim,. and
Student Health Service. All
four follow A It R's policy.
"We doo't release any stodent information. It's all COilfidentiaJ." says Mrs. Evelyn
Tober, _,...,tary to tbe vice
presidenf for student ·affairs.
Student H e a I t h Services'
policy, ~ to Aasistant
Direc:tor Dr. M. l.. MUIIIIelman,
is "_,. strict. We never pve
names and addresses. No lists.

campus, the Fac:ul~

~"
Four au-~
Four other de~IB

8:

tendeilcy for. Sena.tora . to
leave meetiDp ea'iiy. .
~
t ' the. iiiaidi ., :.......,.;"~
WaS
'beeailae ll '~

Like l&gt;lber oriiamzations .&lt;Ill
Senate .is

of~-

In.

&amp;..cw!·

n.e.

va.te ·

llyinl to. fiJiht !' ....,..uia -'f'!lve

-.!.i&amp;d
• lfo

i&gt;cent election

held to.C:::inee;.' for .,•
~~:libd~!Uii
Senale Secretary, SUNY Sen- tast vote it the Maida 21 ml;et,
ator and two alternates, fewer inc touod but
·m~xe- th8n
- l e voted than ever before, the DeCellllllly quorum still in
Dr. Thomas Fiantz, Senate seo- attendance. Some Senatom are
retary, says.
calling for a thorougb examinl&gt;urini tbe 1970 election for ation ol attendance records and
~. over 400 votes were
stricter ent.....,.,._.t of tbe rule
cast. This lime there were only that automatieally ~ Sena1-40 nominating ballots and Dr. ton; from .......-;p when
Mac Hammonii received -40 of they miss two ~tive
tboee. Of tbe 45-50 other nomi- ~ or three meetinp
nees, DO single candidate .e- wtthin one year.
•.
ceived more than three votes.
This is out of a total voting
facul~ of 2.000.
t:rz.LI.
.
Wbeo Dr. Marvin Feldman
t'~
was elected SUNY Senator in
SBJnR:~
the fall of 19'10, 000 J*&gt;Pie
V'/J fAX1 ;:,
!"~ This year, only 78 nommating ballots were cast with
Sub Board I (SBI) bas
21 calling ~
Feldman
elected Hatem EI-Gabri vice
election.
or
's ..,. cbairmanlaecretuy and Doug
Votl!s cast for SID{Y Sen- Webb "'-'""' to fill vacanator alternate nomillees were cies left "'-&gt; tbe Studmt Asevm f.,...,...
_,;,lion c:lianpd of1icera.
To ClOI1IpOUDd tbe problem,
EI-Gabri io Clll!'altly SA's inDO IIOIDineea ill any ol tbe races
temational alfalm coordinator

on:e

in partial1ar when the directory was aold in the U / 8 Bookstore. LD.'s were not c:bedu!d
80 cloaely, reports Fred Auenla,
co-editor of the directory the
past two .Year&amp;. "I cot a couple
of complaints &amp;am students
that they were getting fan
mail."
·
Under no circumstancea....
'"J'igbler control.w of direcTbe same policy bold&amp; for
tory distribution this year came requests about a student's medby restricting distribution to a ical records. "A student must
~Door Norton table. and 11&gt; sign a release form, even for
!be ollioes of Sub Board I his own doctor." Tbe only infor(S8I).
malioo given out is whether a
An SBl eecretary "we student was examined on a cerdo ret ~ for directories tain date.
Tbe libraries keep lists to
&amp;am people withaut Ulliversi~
d!fd&lt; identificalioo of students
iden1ification. ".:-t year bad tbe Amly calL" 'lbe ..,. wftbout LD. cuds. "We do DDt
- i s a form leta stating give any infOrmation out." says
tl..t "it's um-m~ and Sub Ubrariestin..
•
~r Dr. Myles
Board ...... ,__ ~ to · - the Slal&gt;urini campus disturbances
Unn-s.:-J~. toP•-.:....,.
-~7 -~..
~,.,_,_.
JCIID
DDt related to the Uniwni~."
two years ago, F.B.L _.ta
Ill n....ber, Herb 8178, tbe
Belen ~. wbo wodoed tried to get tbe ....._ m stu- election. Thus, the ballot lo be appointed pnNjcotiom director, ·
..n came in at the ..te of a tbe finlt fbw table for three dents wbo bad taken out boolr:s diatributed .., Aprilll will "• a ___. ..__._.
,.._ _._., ._. · ..._ a c~Q'. Since Ibm it's ....,. l a s t - . -three .., bombs, subvssion, 8nd only Hammond for --t:=
llailed off to a ,_ ~etten a or four
tried to otbe.- n!lated subjects. "We Feldman tot -SUNY-a.;,.~ ~
s mandoD
_ 't ....... ..___ ,,_._" Slatin" and Dr . , _ Hart .
...... director.
..
....
.
buy directoriea in tl..t time.
-~
~....
·
•
_..,
aild
MarilThe SBI c1irectooe Monday
"Not
it boCber bim? "Not
"I told them aaya
. ........ · - • Ia Giles for tbe alternate sj&gt;ols. nigbt a1eo hMrd ~Ia of a
.....,_ roeaway for three pe-r to ..u the directory for
Tbe Bursar's Oftice .,..•t re- Frantz, ~. plans to leave student-wide ....__.__ ~
_,.,...., credit cards. I · otbi!r - . '!bey UDder- .t..ae information to "~ plm~ of room for write-in held last
~­
.,._ tD l8t a car - . and ru stood. '!bey
JIQ!Ib.y. But but tbe student himaelf, -.,. candidates.
A total of 1,326 studeDts voted
-.1 tbe c;ardo.
I doo't know if they came t.dt :.e~
.
to di ~ h8!l aleo been a - t · with 1,282 8IJIIPOdinl boCh the
'"'Ole aaly tbm, that B1111DY11 and tried to buy it &amp;am m_Sena::,:::
. ::te:;:
. ..:a::ttend=::•::nce::..:and::! CODellpt and. fllnil!.,. of a atu- _ __..._ _....;..;=;;__--.:P.......
- -- tbe book .,.,... and the .....
denw.m "'-ina
tion.
~doll&amp; I lluow tban out.•
Of tbe 2,600 clirec:toriee orT
.Tbe tutuno d. die~
lWQel. Uo a -oar, ~ Joy .881. ..a-t 1,300 or
.LJUA Ul J.
and tbe CIJI!IIIIQ8idal of . its
IIQa lie, - . tla-. out bio
1.400 dd thio ,..., a
Durt1111· S!xtnl••ic•s. April 1-AJ!ril e. ·the. ub..ites wtH
board of ·clirectooe .ere also
....... 1• tl•wlle lifter finlt little'- tl-. 1ast ,_.._
_-...the h o l n - - RocWar HcMm·w;n......,. on
~ teatatively · · · ·
in ~e~r. N-u.a...
~ "'JJto·L~
-...ey, April-10. I
•
&gt;
:
: _.
•
Summo!r :badpta • .,;...e m:. . I!Qa be ....... - - ..._-:"file
.,_
----~
..
1:;:_· ..:.-.::..~,.. "':!· .
the baUd voted
...... Oclai!R, he'• ...-.....s ....
- .....
. . _ ..., or 15 8UCh ..,.__ the Ollb of U""-ity PalliUlclooDaol . _a... ~ . 9-9" . . " "· . 9-5
2-10
. DDt to fund 811,)' ... ..-;at
llo!-w
~
~
M ·- 11:5 · 1-5 · 2·JO .
.ina...t pH!cw.._ darialthe
. , _ ... liae . . . . of liter- cations 8orric&amp; 'lbeir JIOiicy
1
~ . . . . b- credit card&amp;ill
.
.
8ait
aa.d'L
'
2-e
8-u 8-9
..,.
2-9 . \
a1idi- ·
.

El-Gahri,
New

sent.

~

=•'

~;::,~vat;:' ~"'Cj :!t.~z::::L.~

Ia._

-

-·t --·t

na.

......_it

.u!::,

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

........

'lbuiad.y---;;;:.

::,:.t::i-M;uy

.

......

·· .

\OO:diOO
_· . ;"---_·llnurs.

'I:.' .

....... ....

~' ~----~:_:9-5 ·

...... _._ n· _...

......

. Tbe dira:CGry'• 8ludolrt ciUa

A.

:.-·-:--·:---~· -~
.&amp; r.. · · ···· ·~ :~

~ ~~ ~-

.;u•.:-

2-6
... =~
==~
.
~- ....._~
·
·. 9-s - 2-6' · · ·· ~.-SBIBDcutiwinh.ctor
n...,. .........IJIUia&amp;
....t · .....
... ~ ..-. . .
a.-.,.~
~
n
.9-5 Clooed
·. StldMia~ ..w.·ae ·
. . .-11 . . . . _ •
bU ,fro• co•pater ~
9-5 ~ Clooed ~.I !rilf ....... anadailoo.....- ·
....... - - , . . . ....... a-iilell._ . • ~ .... .... ··-··7- ~ --- ~ · 9-5
~ ..a.. ..~c;aao,os .aa..l . . 9-5
9-5.
1-5
l-5 . . . '*- mne,- of ........ to . .
~
...t 8-.la c~&gt;;
Le,; · · -- ·• ~ ~ . 11:30-!1 B;lG.s . · 9-5
1-a . : · · their ~ ·and «£S 1*',.._ ~-:.a.r... ~·· - ·
R'a;palicJ-.aio ._....

.... - - . , record• and

-a-..

g-5
9-5

· .., ·

9-5
9-5

1'·5

.

_...___ _~,____;_:;..:._'"---:-....__;_::..::.,__::..:.:.~
- •. : .. ail CUllalt palllic:atlanL

,. .
-~

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3

~=~ .S~NewEditor. JoAnnArmao 45E~

=~ WaiitsCa~npJs,l'bStudent~ ~~
An. ......... ._.... up-

-

-

1ba _ ,

•-

of

..... NGIIoiMii&amp;ll o-n;u-'a

By SUSAN GBBBNW00D

In

--

electiaD .-It h t
.loAi&amp;D "'-&gt;

ia&amp;priaal,..-.
liD

• •
• ~ the
B:lilculhe ~ of the elected ediiiJr.iD.cbiof of
M.iJiad . J'ill&amp;&amp;lare Callele Stu- T~te
s.BI..Y ......_
dmt •...;.lion (IIU'CBA) DDOIL ~ editor b the
voted ......,_. to --.e l * l - years, ~ ~will
CIIJididate8 far .... tab the ~ - of
year.
•
the finlt ~ ~hi!' _._
Sevenol wbo Mol
A small. loac-baired bnmeUe
failed ~ wiD ~~ by with a 110ft ~ Ma, """M!C&amp;' !' ~. Cam- ~ lille the antilbesis of ~
miUee eited di&amp;a.......- be- editor -..otype. Her qo&amp;B
the
..uc-1 1111111D1!r s a way of~
by the CGmmiUee· aDd the people who Ibm find, ....... to
MFCSA ()_.jbdio.. Brian their disma
lbat it CIUDIIIlCoyae, a caaiJidUe b
vice 0... a
b _.pnsidsd. told of~ wbo
1111 acliw miDd that is capdidn't haft tbe 50 . , . _ _ llble of doaJina out sharp aitinecoiiaoary to IS - the t.Bot cism. Sbe defj,_ be&lt; au..b •
and aDI. the Committee Mol "well fouDded" aDd is ......-1
- · waited the pr-=rihed .,_ be&lt; imqe as a . . _
length of time .....,. ..........,. ,....,. ihinl-~ Sbe doem't lille
a alate. Clara A.. Kumlwind, the ima&amp;e of a as a " " " " - of tbe Committee, ·siw Cft!atnre aDd feels abe can
clefaMW the endDra.,.enta, bifldJe stories • fairly aDd obpointina out h t s..d &amp;lata, jecti'W!Iy as IUU' man--and _
MFCSA pnsidsd. Mol _,.,.,a little better beca..e of
l'I'CJV!Id namjnetjmw without pe- be&lt;~ ·
litioua. 'The _ . . _ proDuriJur be&lt; term as campus
COBI ..-led up, abe ad- editor, Ma. """- 8QS abe
dad,.....,_ of e1ectiaD dMd- warbd · bard to improve..,..._
~ ~ ~ fi- ~~ with fa&lt;ulty aDd
• ·~ ...._....'!"' ........W'""'!"
~ aDd to ~
~ .-.ted tf&amp;e Committee !he c:nitibility of TM Spec~ liillf.,... ~ ~ ,.,._ Be c au a e of be&lt; aDd
Cai&amp;didala the top
olben' eftorta, sbe feels the
em the baDat. Tbere will he ,..

Nett year abe p1aDa to.,....

tinue ....mi.. to
Tlte
s,_,._
a
than::=,.'=~

.

mab

rather

s,_,_

do this, abe is "'"'""- of

-..._
- b a s "come aloni: ""'Y in
~Tinc-qualityto s:!,~,:U~t['
....,.
......_
Ecboinc some of tbe ~
~ of be&lt; piiBIIecesoor, Dennis ~ ilbe _ . , . of l!l&lt;·
pandinc fa&lt;ulty input and dealinc with na~ aDd city news
as -u as with campus issues.

::'lf

•

:!:i:..:::.:.=i:= 'All of"W?st v~ a Company Store,'
Yablonski TeOs the A ~J,..,J.;,.,.,. SvmTl£1~1 nn
r.=.'t:
~~ .
~
if

~

U/B aew, under (:o.ch
Dennis Sc:bub, will ..... in tD

~ c:hal-

Slepbm

"'_.me
~~"C.,~

lenpd the melbod

"-~...,__~~

._......, ...,.,_ "'"·

.....

"Walt V"lllinia
the aaly
slallli h t is: a wliolly-owned
~of: the C)Oel ~-

a WJ-......,.1Dc81 .·. .'K.i&amp;i&amp; tJOal tkiminittlis ~
=~~~ =·:'.,=~!~;!~

iiiif-$1s;

finDed Sub Board ra boob, he
said. Blumenk'raDtz, h~NeYes-,
cited Ullllildiled aprinc I!QIO!IIIIilures. After emotioDal iiebate
cluring wbic:b Kama said be
would lake IIJU' disct_...;a,
out of his """' bank IICCOUII.t,
the bo8!d wled to ~ Dr.
Nidtplas Kisb review the
boob. Kisb, the ODiy active
stodent pM!ftiliieilt advisor
~ aasistant dean of contm.
uing education, is an aa:IDUDtanl
. .

ski ....,..
And he should know since
his father was murdered wben
be tried to lake OYer tbe '-lership of the United Mine Wodtera, a union his son says is
dominated by tbe industry.
Yabloaski spoke about the
"""""'''Je of tbe coal industry's stranglebold .., West ViiJinja to an audience of about
300 last Thursday as part of tbe
campus Appalacbian Symposiuin. He also outlined what the
people are doing to loosen that
~ Dash f1ol)ding of

Jones Pniessor
gri.f;,.,
or~~\·:".......
"'"4: ~~~i&gt;!",.ld:
~ :e~":':i

Freucb for lbiti .....-..... -· :
Two couraM will· be bul8bt
by M: Foucault from-...,.. unfil

~mi.!!

"ft.::' ~ 'I:

l8e et 19e siede8" ('"lbe Crimina1 in tbe Lile&amp;atwe of tbe l8lb
and 19th Caaturiea"') aDd "'Lea
de Ia Cultnre" ('"lbe
. n..:-:....~of Cultnre").
M. FlJucaldt is the atd~Mw- of
six boob indndi&amp;ur the riJceldly
baDBiated La lfoc. et ...
a..- (W.,..,. .M T._) .
.._._ ...-.... ....,... to the Cal-

...,._v ....._

lecedeFn&amp;~tat.tiJe
Uniwnltiea of
Tunis,
CJennoataDd J'ui.
aDd aerwd ..tier
88 Cullmiil AttKbe in w anil Dindar of the Freucb Instimle in' llaatlloq.
.
, 'The Melodia B. .,..., ED.......,_t eotahliobed iD
1929 by Mrs. .,...... T • .lanes,
to pmvide the~ em CIIIDof .a "native of Fnott:e of
hi 1 h adtolaotic •u.Dmwda"
ACcordlnc to the Freucb D&amp;pa-., aD of the , _ t
, _ ~ ._., ....,_.
in prindple to ta1oe )JUt _,.,
..;...• ....__ ..._ - - m· Baf-

v._

f,J;. ~~._._ tu-

loll!. Jet:tura. in the Depart.
meftt'a lblnl-,..,. c1oi:11amJ pro111'8111 in PuiS..

President Nimo and West V"tr-

C::: "~~

~~

ski armie!l that '"it's God
,.,._. sbouJd blame. it's tbe Pittston Cotporation.•
- This was one ol many example&amp; the attomeY. ..-1 to
hichlilbt the lltniiiJIIi! between
the people aDd the profit.makers. As tbe lawyft for Miners
for JJemoc:mey, Yablonski
woib tluou&amp;h the courts to
J!IOCh!ce cbanp." And be ,.,..

= :,. "::'.:!:.,

some faculty wrile&amp;s em the
~
&amp;!aft. Sbe also plaDa to ...... r:rew' in addition to 39 -sty
tinue tbe paper's exle&amp;&amp;siw uae aDd ·12 • • __,_ ......0
of news analyses aDd talb of
J11111!W
enlargina tbe number aDd va- ~~ ~
riety of opinioo cobmms. More his 21st outdoor
with
news of proi.OI!BioDal acbool students will be covered _...... abe the U/ B propam _April 15 at
.
.........
Rotary Field .piDot llutralo
says, m an effort to ~ter tbe State aDd ~ ~ 'Ihe
paper's undergtaduate JIDIII'I'. . ~ !-""' nme nDIIUIIl_ ~
In answer to tbe periodic ru- illdudina: the Penn ~
mors that TM Spectrum will April 211; a State u~_ty
go daily nert year, sbe points meet at ~· ~ ~ ti&gt;e
out that Ibis is a ""'ior llllder- ~ ~ . / : ~~
taking and "wouud be imp». ~ ~
.
sible" in September. H _ . , piou;sbips. ~ .13 at the Omsbe is .,.,.,.;dering taking the versaty of ~plunge in January if there is
Veteran JDeDior Bill Sanlard
staff and mooey to bad&lt; the his 24th le&amp;mis _ ,
increased roduction. Sbe feels ~ be sends his court team
Ibis
improve tbe crecfi. - - BulfaJo State, Aprill4.
bility, news """"""~" aDd re- Tbe Bulls will !JII!I!t fi'oe _ .
spect for tbe paper, yet ...,.. ents at home with four Datchbclooleclges that quality may es em the rom.
solfer.
Co.cb Bill Dllndo-..,
Primarily, sbe is emted sprinuolf to the ac:beduJe with
about tbe piO&amp;peCts of beinc in two toumounent ~
charge. Sbe is looiDng forward at B roo It Lea m ~
to buildinc up a good staff aDd &lt;R.LT, host) •• April 24, aDd
a "very, very good paper."
tbe SUNY Invitatimwl at S...
atop Sprinca, May 3 (Albm!,y,

·-v

....!q, ..._

line..,._

dab

....
...,. Z..,-:t..lla&amp;&amp;y
~

~~
~~.of

stitutmc 8 fa&lt;ul~ co1- ..- . , _ _ a D d 1111o1eti1:s.
umn ....t of ~aettiDI 'The 8u!ls will • ......- iD 46

..-m-

...a

m.

·

1'1-wmty ..... ~ .......... -

81'11111

=::!,~~

~UU/f, J" • "!"~-·"'
.John ~also s a sizYablonoki adwcates stroncer
The federal _........t was : : ' in '"""'' " : : . "f2

=

t-.iclicoui em strip lllininc and
em the co.l.............,. who are

"rQinc the ~of Appal-

:t..~'';:.,tt!.';-:
of the area aDd even tbe strip

mine&amp;s llenselves are alarmed
about what they are leaving for
their dliJdreu, be said. In addition to destroying tbe land, the
coal companies destroy people
by heine lax in safety stand·
ards, be c:barged. "'t's not tbe
natnre of coal mining for men
to be lrilled . . . (but when
com pan i e s) weigh safety
against production, safety always loses.~

also ceDIIUft!d for not enfoociDc apimst Niapna.
the law. "It_,.. "19lhea t o stJutg mine safety ~ r.1.
n~~med
--'-"he said. '"and em the 0JLID8D.l\t!Ui:f _ _

Jr

m:.,U:.:S::: h.-...~~
~~

~-;:&gt;'

lrilled because it wasn't eoforced."
If these conditions don't
change, Yablonslti feels- the
miners will rise up and ''pull
tbe pin" -&lt;:all a geoeial strike.
When Ibis bappens, be feels,
America, like Great Britain,
will learn bow powerful a group
the coal minets are for "they're
the only group that can tum
off America's ligbts."

~On Agenda
(ColtlUtaat ,,...,.

-'·coL 5)

D'--..l
.u.::;ptU
Dr. Hany T. Cullinati, .Jr.;
bas been reappointed for a
three-year term as chainnat! of
tbe . ~ of Cbemical
Engineering.
In malting the &amp;IIIIOUiiCement, President Robert L. Ketter noted that Dr. Cullinan bas
tbe "unanimous support" of his

Department for reappoin-.t

to tbe post wbic:b be bas held
since 1969.
Dr. Cullinan, 33, holds master of science and dodoral do&gt;-

The last change is tbe

m.

~~~t!:.~

~bu't":"~self~~; i!~'hlJ.f ~f~ ~t!"'~::m~ #t~
willlta"" a responsible authority repotting to tbe director."
!'.h.,'fty~.!"'is~~
out beaw9e of the diveJSe natnre of individual College strur&gt;lures.

Sbacll
'The -

• - _,
section ... budget
finaDcial position of the Syman since it asks
that "tesidoootial aDd administralive _ . . be ClDIISidered
tb.t ibere llqoe been~ in the IJadcetary allocations to
.......,.. audl aa u..:r-1 ..,. the CoDeces. It also proposes
liniment bepiiils for minenL
h t ~--..rue unit wbic:b
But o L - - • - _ _ _.._
-~ .....,.
funds a .....ber of tbe instnJr&gt;.
-n alepL Mudl larpr .,_, tiaaal lllaff will be e&amp;edited for
are _ . , - , be feela, before ~-with eruollpeople can.._ the Iicht at the JDeDt in ~ courses
md of the tunneL•
tauPt an btl:
He called b a .-italiation
Critics of the revised PJO&amp;ol the Walt V"lllinia lePiature ~are worried about a , _
wbiob """' "puts the .-1!1 of _ . , wbic:b bas the procrams
~ before the .-1!1 of tbe · of the 8)maD or •of the Colpeople.
~ ,_... lepB .....,_._ ~ther colleeb the .-1 indust&amp;y are ~ ~or sinciY" reviewal """'Y
o1 the .-...1 acbool e&amp;&amp;mal- ,..... by an •extramwal"
b&amp;m, bat in Mime counties c:hil- '-nl of tbe Faculty Senate
dnm haft to bu.y tier """' Cantmittee em the
acbool boob, be charted. He They feel this could be .-I to
c:bantclerilal the lociolature as '"ol.r of tbe controbivina a •damn the ~ -.ial """'Moltlr:e
attituile. They poll1lll8l!full a&amp;ld~~~worriedabout
..,....t HUie em education, be this, h~NeYes-. 'l1ley feel It will
• aid, ., the people ..,...'t "Blip help aplain Ca1Jeie prtJiliUDS
out from Under -their thumb.. to people.

iltn!ilclhms the

eon-.

sembly or of tbe director may ty since 1964.
be appealed to tbe vice pm;ident for academic affairs.
( For more Oil tbe bactcround
and purposes of tbe Collegiate
System, see Pill" 5.)
In ddition to
. .
the
U/B fa&lt;ulty D8iiben haft
--"~ ~"~"-'-te~ pledced $3.500 to the llutralo
'""~ - - - ... .....-- Pbilbarmonic On:t-ba Mam.
tbe Senate's April~ will - tenance Fund llri¥e. Dr W
also, ~ tbe propo&amp;ed Uni- Leslie Bamette, .lr, caiapu8
veiSily-wtde _........., chainnut for lba ...-~. aid
tem. No vote on tbe pt_.al Ibis week. .
will be taken at tbe meelinc,
This .
• .
filum.
but Senators will. be llble. to Dr ~ ~
suggest dtanges m orpmza- ~..:..,
,_..,__.:_., ..__ '--~
tion. Besides taWnc about ,......ty .......,..,.. ~ Uild alspecific points in the c~octmett, ready contributed Ilia OCher
Senators plan to ...amine tbe - .
impact of a Uni-mty-wide
Dr. s..- also _ _ .
~-- system. Some feel "'banb b the e11arta of iJ&gt;.
~tu;institution of ~
governinc body would ta1oe ~ ~ to"':!
away ftan1 the Faculty tact
With·
Senate, eYeD ~ the ..,..,... out Ibis belp, the . . _ c1me
nance pt:op01181 states that the could not '-"" been .........,.t.•
Uniyersjtv-wide body would
~ still to ..... _.____,
......ide. iasuM under the
"" .............
~tc juriadidioD of ezistinc sbouJd - io Dr. lll&amp;mette,
bodies.
~ of Psycholou,
4230 Ridae LM.
The Senate will Cllllllider For Cllllllributimw ol $10 or
other iteme of lwmb
• ....,. more, the PbiJhannonic will ;,. ..

their"""'.,.,..__

~~~~t~ -~coupanagoodfor
ol studoo
a pair of titbttt to one of tbe

-.-uuwuoiB

disbanesty- a ......t April

-tin&amp; ... the 18lb.

recuJar .......,..

certa.

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

�~ . - ~~i l':~~~umJ!m~i~!iii~rm!ta~~f~: Qi~~~!H~hi .i·f~~ ~t'W'i~it~1'Ui~1-l!I
i iif•in•tl·
1
I ; l .' ,J rt;!'tli.lftiWt~J jlldal~liJ!ff!~~·h:!i~!~':i~·. ,jrtt t·Pi ri~~·IW- ~(: I! ~t~!(!h
1

~ ~ i ~ ~~ ~ im!t! ld~:~!~.lUJ tJ!uU:;m mtrhmt~l~!l· mr idt!f dt!linl !~~i! II!liUU!:

! I, !r iJ
• I' il

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HlmtMH ~ ii!l~!!U.!h!tlt~~:t::.i:f~b
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t&amp;!' Uf i'U•i~J fJ iiR'IE·U :, l ·~l·'.f: 1
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1 1~ '!i ' ~ ~tt:J~~!~Hrmrtt rJr~r;r~.~
!~lr.ff1 tt!lJS:t·!J
If~~~
ii!i[~!W!h~l~!~J:!~f.~UUiinr~:~~~·ui~~t;f~lr
f fUJI Jt 1-)lfl~ •tijl!irf·~f r•r!.ll'. ·.·.~~~~··· ·!- ~~ t• 1:, 1 I 1 ~·~rnr·'-4 fl ~·~u •rrt"l
P!
n~

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-._..tclot&gt;utmeDtal
bM 1-. a iDputa.
situationThe
cl.
_ . _ w interaction: No

eou..., can c:onlrol the entire
auriealum cl. a student; at the
time there is DO predeter.m-1 limit ... the number cl.
=.,."':"'the
can involve

c:=w

OripnalJy it ......

to

reotrict the Collepa to 26 per
emt cl. a student's curriculum.

The aplicit limitation w a s
dropped in April 1970, but the
_ . . stnJCture of the cwricuhnnlimi_..::.""""T a m"""'''IDding
0 meet deere!&gt; requilaDenla a student must take
an aba&gt;lute minimlnn of 50
cl. his ClOU1'IIell in the :
P8rlments. Tbe realities cl.
planning the curriculum cl. an
iD:Iividusl student actually imP'*' an upper limit cl. approximately 33 113 per cent College
ClOU1'IIell since it would take a
.........ined freshman indeed to
desicn his cuniculum immediately in such a way as to lake
all his electives in the Colleges.
It is probably accwate to say
that the delay in the developmeu.t cl. the new campus bad
a major infiueoce in changing
the direction cl. the Collegiate
System here. As it became evident tbat there would be a
major delay in the completion
cl. the planned Amherst facilities. it ...... decided to proceed
'lrilh. the ezperimental developmeu.t cl. Collegiate units on the
esislinf campus. For this purpoae. ..,. faculty members ·were
appointed as mssters in 1968.
SewraJ of tbese incipient mllopate units began to offer
~in the Spring .of 1969,
just as plans for developing a
stmclwal framework for the
Collegiate System were getting
undenray. In addition, one further unit, Communication Col.__ bad developed at student
initiative aDd occupied the first
resideatial space in the Allenbumt c:ourts. FinaUy, in Spring
1969, an extensive Universitywide effort by lbe Educations!
Policy aDd Planning Committee c1. the
Senate in
CDDjlmction with the Office of
the Vice President for Academic Development produced a further ten Collegiate Worbbops
which ......., given authority to
proceed with the development
cl. a Collegiate program. One of
the ori8ina1 mssters having resiped, this left five "latter
CoUeces" and ten "workshops."
Communication CoUege was
made a worbbop.
•
By now, the adoption of a
slructural framewod&lt; for the
CoiJesiate System by the Faculty Senate bad become an urJIII!Ilt necessity. Tbe winter and
~ of 1969/70 saw a long
and mtenaive prooess which
finally led to the adoption of
the "Stem Prospectus" by the
Paculty Senate on April 10,
1970. By this time the concept
cl. wbat was a viable CoU~te
unit bad broadened COIISlderably beyond the origins! ides

Pacuiw

~~~~
tiell.

n.-~
Tbe new concept of a ColJeciate unit was defined in the
Stem ~tus in an oblique
but unmistakable fa s h i o n.
Four ~es taken together
CDilStitute the basic definition

~: · te units shaD be
educa~umtsattheStste

of

University of New York at Buffalo. Existinl{ mUeges and mlJeciate workshops are hereafter
named Collegiate units.
• Colle«iate units sbaU provide additions! dimensions to
educatioot at the State University cl. New York at Buffalo
that supplement and implement
esistin« prllllr8rn&amp;. Tbe devPlopJDl!llt cl. Coi.Jeciate units wiU be
a c:ontinuinsl prooess within
SUNY policies, taking into aomunt the educations! needs of

all IDOIIIbenl cl. the Uni-aty ly, the .-..idealia1 callep em which ataapta to ftiiiiiiDII fD
CoiJowiate units are !'in&gt;PJY he viewed • a JIUticu' the cl. the ·llludenta
not .....,...my rsidoatial in Jar-...., cl. the more....,... ...... ap as int.erdlaciplinar
c:banocta; they ~ - er:ist as
,...;:t..~~ ~
the Collepa .....
~ 'lrilhin the Univemity ~
The Cclllets ..... became in~ llhared ....... tiona! ob- and wiU he 1IIOfal ......_.
they fonn a part cl. t h e - n ~ in maUera cl. ~
• ColJeiiate unilll
he desicn cl. a ColJeciate unit.
c:iplinuy cxwoopelal oe • 1 n c e
by JrflfJP
stu- ~~ty or ataff at
Jegiate units incorpolated in t.ckpounds. n-e are many
• A Coi.Jeciate unit
dis- the Stern PtoolpectuB is llimpl.y , _ b this. To some ..,._
estahlisb illlell,_IIJ.'Oil ~­ an ~ cl. the ideal cl. tent, the .Collepa were orilinlion to the ( Ullk!liatel .A&amp;- living:~ units abatmcted ally cWi...t in a ._tive mansemiJiy.
from the reality c1. pbyaical fa- ~-;-:,..:U,'f~~-t
and "'
. upple• the
Tabu together, tbese pas- cilities.
18
This is particulady im- Proapectus.
define the Coi.Jeciate units portant in a large. urban, com- phm. in the
as lempoauy -temic. struc- muter university.
This m.nt that they Wllllld
tures ._.tina to the exAny living-limning envir&lt;JD- ...,.. to attempt to define .......
~ needs cl. faculty, staff ment wiU ._ve to prove not covered by "aiating proand students. This shift in defi- sponsive to the c::banaing .-Is grams," which IDMDt the denition has made the Collegiate of its CDilStituency, since the Panmenlll 1n all instructional
System quite unique in this constituency mther than any araa. Tben the flexible ,.ture
count.y: while the creation of disciplinary or other subject- cl. the Colleps makes them an
such ~ -temic struc- oriented definition of education atlnoctive Slvironment for unture leading to a multitude of is its primary focus: as _.)a- clertakinc any kind of task- ,..
~ucational sel:tiniB of varying tiona change, residential Col- orimted work, which interdis8m!S has often been adwcated,
leges must and do c::banp.. We c:iplinuy procrams tend to he.
we !mow of no other compar- can view the residential Col- At the very least, interdisciplinable institution which has made lege as the prototype cl. all ary pmpams may find it difpossible the creation of this temporary academic stnJCture ficalt to always project accurk in d of flexihle. temporary• in a time when all students and ately their long-term developslructure. .
faculty were involved in the ment, making it deeirahJe to loSuch an approach to eduat- resideoces. c-umdy the cate in an environment which
tionsl structure raises two fun- CoiJeaiate System's CDillinued allows •te substantial adjustdamental issues: how is it pos, insi8teqoo on n!llidential units ment
the initial stages.
sibte to remain open to trans- as a cnJc:ial element in its pro- Tbe most important induceformation or even tennination gram does not rontradict the ment for the Colleges to enter
and yet to retain clarity of pur- basic thrust of the system, as interdisciplinary fields was.
pose at any given moment (the long as the residential fac:illiy however, the simple fact Chat
answer fD this . . _ . . to be is not committed to an infiex- a relatively smaU proportion of
that sell-reflection becomes an ibte academic prognun.
the undergraduate student body
integral part cl. Collegiate exir
In aU of the Colleges which identifies directly with departte..ce) . More important in a have been operative this past mental mnoems. W e m u • t
practical sense: this approach year, students ._ve been en- leorn to reolize tJw.t the baaic
represents an attempt to give couraged to participate directly altitude . of ~ ~"'inninl stuinstitutional recognition to the in defining both the form and dent .. i.riUrdUciPUIIary, while
needs or tempoauy JlOI1Pinp the mntent of the edncalional the baaic altitude of the faculty
of members of the academic experience tbey are involved in. member ia diBciplinary. In
community. On the other hand Tbe apparent diffeoeDces be- many ways, one of the most
universities as insti!uti...s hav~ tween the collegiate units de- important efteclll of our current
tended. 1i1te aU other institu- rive from diffeoeDces of atyJe. syatem cl. advanced education
tions, to create ...Jy structures
which wiU he visibly loug-term
and persistent. 'Thus institu- may diHer from unit to unit. favor of disciplinuy cxmcema.
tional recognition IUDS the dan- but in all inoolarJa. .....,.,;.ion8
On the olber haDd, tbse is
are made and utilized.
hardly a faculty member em
~~..:,.,~~ Tbe fuU diYI!IBiJ;y of the Col- this campus who is enUreJy aatgroupings which was never in- Jegiate System is not generally isfied with this state of alrairs.
tended. Plann.in&amp; for periods appreciated : the fifteen cur- AU faculty members have aca- ·
two or more years in the future rentJy active units caver a .,..q demic interests which lie outis quite common in most univer- spectrum of styles and themes. aide their main area of disci- sitia While we do not argue We have a means of providing plinSJy competence. Many of
with the necessity for such for both traditional and pro- tbese would welcome the opporplanning, it sbou1d not claim gresaive f o r m s of education tunity to branch out from their
to he completely determinative. without applying an aba&gt;lute departmental teaching activiIn particular, the efficient 10111 standanl: the rail standard is ties into ad,iacent a rea s to
term planning procaos should the appropriateaess cl._a _Ji"!"- ~Jbey~ffd. they Cllll..Jilao _
make provisions
term "educationat",.;umg\ aCoUegc) Contribute in light of their ......
adjustmenl Tbe Colleges rep- to the needs and aspimtious of disciplin&amp;Jy had&lt;grounds. Tbe
resent one such JIMIIC'banism In tho6e involved in il Tbere is ~ System provides an
practice. this dichotomy creates no Jess genemJ OOIIIIDOil denom- et!ective mMDil of doing so.
many problems.
.
inator to .,...,.,..,_ the entire -.
spectrum cl. CoiJeciate units.
In discussing the Collegiate
Tbe fundamental pro b I em What cl.ten is not realized is the System, it rapidly becomes eviol CoUegiate units thus defined fact that the most Jmdilional dellt tbat tbese four pneml
is the tension between the neo- approaches to .......lion (Clif- . . _ are dearly inter-related.
essities of institutional valida- ford Furnas
or VlCO Each can he viewed as an aition, involving some degree or CoUege, for
) can he temste form cl. each cl. the
advance planning, regular eva!-· just as "~ " as the others. Tbe relationlbip b.
uation and overaU reporting, most progressive ( College A or tween intardiac:iplinary stud
and the sense cl. sell...ufticiency Women's Studies Colleiel iD and "1 en era I education" ~
one may espect in any group the kind of institutional t!D- more ""- than is usually radwhich is pursuing mutuaUy vironment which prevails in i2ll!d. This became evident in obshared goals. Without a doubt most ~e. urban, disciplinary
how the
thiS problem bM been the universities.
8PPft*bed the problema cl. inmajor issue or the past year. terdisciplinary teaching over
Nearly e\-etY rontroversy conFor the purposes of tliis re- the past year. It r a 1.' i d I y
cerning the CoUeges has bad to port, it may he uselul to out- .....,....,.t tbat the teaching ,._
do in one way or another with line the various issues which ~ of interdisciJ&gt;Iinsr studthis problem. On the one hand. have ai'ISi!ii as focal points in "'" is DO more and no ...., than
we have had programmatic the development of the individ- wbat is generally caUed "1"111!1'statements on the part of most ual Collegiate units. In doing a1 education." One can ...Jy
Colleges concerning "sell-deter- so, it must be emphasi:oed that sunnise why this has not premination" and "autonomy". On this is a descripti&lt;m a post, viously become evidenl PClllsibthe other hand there has been that this does not constitute as ly because one thought of intez-.
the caU for """"""""ibility" and a prior definition of the CoUegi- disciplinary work ...Jy in re- ~
"evaluation." In reality both ate System such as the preced- search situations and restricted
atti!udes a r e complementary ing' section has tried to outline. ~general education" to the
expressions of the same prob- It now seems.as if the activities teaching content.
lem.
or lbe mUeges over the past
Tbe fragmentation of the unTbe rea1 &amp;tn!ngth or the Col- year can be JrflfJPed in four dergraduate curriculum is a
legiate System is its ability to distinct but in~ areas fact-a student takes a certain
give minimal formal articuls- of COIICem: interdisciplinary number of courses, the majority
tion and expression to roncems work; "general education;" ere- of which are unrelated to one
of a variety or campus mnstitu- ating "centers of identification" another and aU of which have fl!!cies without irrevQI:ahly com- in a •large university; issues of little or DO visible link to an,v
mitting the entire institution to theory and practice.
Cl!lltrai JIUlPQjle the student 18
a long term ....,..__
· ''""" a olp' • • aware ol. Integration of this
With ~fn the definiCuriously, people have not . eiperimce c:snnot take place ..
tion of Collegiate units, .the realized tbat interdisciplins On the abstract level: it must
question arises wbat has be- prOblems are even more pres- he part cl. persons! experience ~
come of,. the original ccmc:ept rn 'Cling issuee of teaching than of related to some s p e c i f i c
living-teaming units. Essential- ~ In fact, any teaching (Contitwed on P"8• 6, col. 2)

==--

ClOIIIIIIUIIity.

~

7

~t~~o:~ ~~-~

St:..

==l!~ ::;:.tt:,~

'""short

llleF--

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eon- ._...,

�6

GREPORTS

ON

Bob GnAt
oliow;. 1111111
!D........
.., WNEW-'IV;
tbe
t . Graluom I a - Show,
WNYC-AM 1111111 FM.
,.. w. . . - a u , -=iloilo pro-

. f_,r,~~with

a.a. .IUMC aDd W • . . . . _ ..A
Study or 1.arp ScUe Oplimioa-

GpEOPLE

-~:"with3.nall

:,~.-~·"'=':

~ut Natiaaal
Meelin« or Ala.E, DaJJao, T--.

izali&lt;m

AWARDS

s,..-,

~~..:;;..:=---=ar~

~..:!J:'~p~..!r.!

al Market -n:b Society, Park
Plaza Hotel, Tonmto.
1.&amp;0 SlOT, profeaeol', muaic. leeture-recital, TM M&lt;UUra Write
Jozz, William and Mary College.
IlL DAVID A. BMl'TJI, ueociate pro-

~=~ f:':f!~!Y· tt!~te~

Chapter, National Railn&gt;od Historical Society; Rochester, New
York.
DL J 0 H H

BUU.lVAM~

pro(euor,

classics, "Psycboanalysio and the
aauics," Wake Forest University and University or Florida.

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENI'S ·

KJCIIAJ:L G. SYKA.CUBB, aasjstant director, environmental health and
safety, presented a serie8 of five

Colleges Describe Pllfpose,_Outline I s s u e s - - - - - - - - -

n&amp; and accepl The evidence
(Contilwed from 5, coL 5)
cowaes. As long as we no long- that universities are somehow
er p,.,..,.;oo to students what becoming "too big" is everycourses they must taken when, wbere at hand, and it seems deOFF-CAMPUS
we must fiDd acme other way Bimble to "break them down."
of facilitating sud&gt; integration While thia may seem desirable,
APPOINTMENI'S
where necefiBill'y. The Colleps. we really know very little about
DL BOW.AD G. rona~ uaiatant d e f i n e d not on disciplinary
the e11ects of size on an instiprof_,r, iDduotrial relations and
bumaD ~appointed ..re- terms but in tel1ll8 or the per- tution of higher education. Un.-n:h ooaoultant to the Con- sons inwlved in the Colleae it- til we understand the implicastructioD Industry Stabilizalioo self, provide one sud&gt; veliicle. tions of large or small size more
Committee, the fecleral agency The p r i m e cbaracteristic of emctly (both advantages and
courses in the Coiiegl!s which diaadYBDtages) the ~
:::au:--~ 8li&lt;freas tbemselws to this ques- are
slim indeed that we will
tion will therefore have to be ....,.,.,..j in breaking down inintegrative (which is simply &amp;titutions in the right way.
·
another -way of saying; interAs institutions bave pvvm,
disciplinary) .
it bas been possible to main......._ LOT!&lt;la. umtant dean.
The underlying intent of the tain ihe formal aspects of the
development and external aflain,
liberal arts education, embod- learning enviJOJlDlellt: clasaes,
Scbool of Manacement. baa '-n ied in """""!&gt;t'' of "general ed- COill'lle8, departments have not
appointed a a:mwltlmt to act aa
a tat administrator for the New ucation" bas always been to changed all that much under
York State Education Dopou1.. teach students the limitations the impsct of IIJ'OWih. The
of knowledre even as we teach bachelor's degree is still defined
D*1t Repoto' Eldernal .Decree
them the ezcitement of know- in much the """"' way as it
PJocram.
ing. The me&amp;DII to adtieve this was fifty years ago; the same
I&amp; ./O.IIIf PI&amp;UJO'ITO. auociate
profe.or, claBca. elected fellow goal have been programs which number of credits are required:
of Harvard Univeraity•s Center define in a bindin.f fashion wbat the area of major concentration
for Hellenic Studies. Washing- a "well-educated ( i.e. not· ex- is still in the departments; even
ton, D.C.. for 1972-73.
cessively taken in by · what be the · number of undergraduate
has learned) person sbould t e a c h i n g departments has
have been exposed to. Varia- grown Only very, very slowly:
PRESENTATIONS
lions on this theme have been there is still a requirement that
DIL IIAD.Y T: CULLINAN , chairman,
tried over the years, but as
c:bemical
.
ling, "A New institutions-have grown, and as some coun;es be taken outside
Experimen~echnique for Liq- disciplines bave grown more di- -the department, although the
precise sequence of those
uid S o 1 u t i o n Thermodynamic
is no longer pn.scribed.
Properties," 71Jit National Meet- verse, it has become increas- courses
. ingly impossible to define edu- All that bas happened to ...,.
in« of AIChE. Dallas. Te.,...
catiooal
norms
in
termS
of re- commodate this system to
DIL RUTH ELDI:Il, aseociate profesth has been
quirements. Even tJie very gena loosening of
::;r~in~~gksS::~~Tb~ac::: eral "b a s i c and distribution grow
these requirements to some ex1
of the Dying Patient. Statler Hil- requirements" were dropped at
this University in 1968, since
ton.
'::£g .d"uca.':'onf"h:'!
,.. .........., 1.. POIIDX, asoociate
it bad become evident that they been sUccessfully maintained.
profeuor. education. "Dilemma were no longer serving their why bas ihe content of the education a s tude n t receives
1
changed so much in his eyes?
and Worbhop tlpODSOred by the norms which are valid for all It cannot simply be perversity
Aaociation of New York State students (and, incidentally, on the part of so many stuEducators of the Emotionally which are to be reftected in the dents.
.
Disturbed; Divioion for Handi- teadting of the faculty, a facet
We surmise that as institu~~'t.:t:.:.r
of the problem one tends com- tions have grQWD, the only matYork State Department of Edu- fortably to disregard). Never- ters they bave e11ectively been
cation.
·
tbeless, the basic need. remains, able to attend to bave been the
011. IIDON 0. I'O'I'!Ua,
that is to teach the limits of maintenance of the form a 1
profaaaor, m.tuotrial relaliona and ourthat~ledge ev.en "." we teach structures of education, while
-at the same time ; _
_. __,
enviroomental anal)'lia ,od pol&amp;UUOVJedge
icy, 1be M......._t and s;g.
Undoubtedly there are still identifying these ..;;.;.,~
ntriali!k-~.c:,'~ty,".~~- large DUJDbers of students for
. _ . . _ ~ ,...,.....,
whom the traditional liberal :ti'on
a.:;
- - :ortal~~tem N- York, Con- arts curriculum with a wide the many informal activities
......
'-..
varietY of requirements is de- which must ao
to ma1re the
... - . . GIBSON
sirable educational experience. formal encounters meaningful.
"""-r, oociology, keynote There are in fact several Col- Put
· I - if student
is ~
in~ d - .
room only, he won't Jearn any.., IDaDc:inc medical care, Buf- tarly Vico College). On the
thing.
A
..more
extreme
formnfalo. •
other hand, the
bave
_,_ .....,.., inotructor, muaic, mode it poeaib)e to adopt pro. lation of this attitude tDwanls
1111111 c-tiw Aooociate, with LU- grams of g e n e r a I education the relationship of curricular
and "extm"-auric:nlar activitiaJ
~ ~Fia;t~~ which deviste quite substantial- is the IIOIMWbat bizarre with Brooklyn~ ly f~ the norm (ouch as meat that "walking between.
-a Bruoldyn Academy of Muaic.
Racbel C a r s o n CoiJere and bui1d.inp is an educational ac.
Women's Studiea College, to tivity" o r - IICIIIIeliJm8 form~~=r·N':; name two very disparate .,._ ulated bY
A this pat
Y~ City a - m oo~ampJes).
year-"all tbe activities ol a
-a.. !"th a ~ "Eroa
~or......,..
. student are by definition educational boo!ca.e
is a &amp;IUa
denl" There is truth to
·..! ~ ~~ u.~ti': beading designates is tbe one this statement even tboulli it is
· Study or Ses. Inc.: interview oa people can most ._my recoc- an over-&lt;limplification. What ia

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he

really at stake is the right pro- tivity with clear impliadi&lt;wM on
portion of curricular and em.- the pmdicaJ. primarily tbe ~~~&gt;­
curriclllllr (or c:o-curricular as cietaJ. leYeL In recent yeanr, a
they 11111 now called) aetivil&gt;es growing literature 011 tnmds in
a student in. There is inatructiouaJ ~ abows
no ~ however, that, un- that this debate baa now also
Jess there is mMDingfuJ discu&amp;- eDtered the area ol te11f:bin«
sioa, purposive intemc:tion, and and Jeamini Not Olily are we
normal reluation aoing on b&amp;- reijuired to teach tbe limite of
yoand the claMrocm, the events knowledle aa we teach knowlinside the cl.-oom will come edge itself (tbe daaoiad definito seem Jess and Jess DMmling- ' tion of p!Denl) educaticll) but
fuJ. There . . _ to be four the pnloCiicaJ implications ol
vital ClOIIlpollellts to tbe educa- our -teaching acjivity are also
tional proceos in an institution being ~ More and
of higher education; Jormal in- more studeuta find it desirable
temction between. faculty and or _,_.,. to intepate their
students· infonual interaction formal cl.-oom esperience
between.' faculty and students; with a variety ol "outside"' eopeer group relaDonsbips (both deewn, relating both •to -#le
faculty and students); and self- social envinlnment 81111- tli/~
~Je ~ J th!ll _js_ liliad n!Blitj' lrfdlm 1flildliWdthe ability of 60th facWtj:liiid ucatOan"'..,._ . ......_ ..,IWW
students to withdnnv from lhiii; long t - . _ ; - 1 tbat 1he
peers and c:ollesgues).
practical e&amp;cts ol goaid or bid
Traditionall
American •
teaching become ID1IDifest only
stitutions of ~ ed~ many Yt;ars in the future. 'That
bave given formal recognition _ future, it appears, · bas come
only to the · finlt of these pr&lt;&gt;- much doser and can no looger
""""""- In the kind of social eo- be disrepnled as it loog bas
vironment which existed pre- been.
-viously at colleges and univerDesigned as an "esperisities, the latter three proce&amp;- mental, individually-tailored,
ses took place of their own ac- problem oriented i.nwlvement
cord. This was the result not in Jeaming," the ,.,__,,_ are
·
bu also 0 f
~
0 n1 Y of small SIZe,
t
attempting to provide· for 'tbe
an essential coogruence of~ Univemity as a wbole •(~-1hi! ·
0ms.
r ti~tution.J."""'''S involved in the society) that~ of tbe laloWI'- ·
edre proceos which reiJects CODAs institutions bave grown, crete, .....un,rnJ relommt aland as the constituencies within tematives for the .-pnizathe institutior!s have. grown
more heterogeneous, tbere aJ&gt;- is ;.......-::.::"'~-- •"t -"--'pears to bave been lees and
......... ~ .........,
........,.
less informal faculty-student for the intepatiaa (by 411Y incootact, fewer JDellllingfuJ peer dividual) of tbe knowledP he
group cootacts, and less oppor- baa been tauPt _.mely
!:unity for self-responsible (disciplinari)y). It _...,.
learning. U we speak of col- the opportunity b ~
leges as providing a center of thus for all ol us and the Uniidenti('JCation in a large insti- versity aa a wbole--lo - tution, we are eesentialfy think- aede the evilll ol
ins of the Colleges as the kind both 81110111 diecipl~ and ~
of environment in which--the
~enotor ~~icetbe
latter three .components of the
....
educational proceos can take failme ol any one ~ &amp;o
place, either
~n:,_~
8UCCe8ll of
total inwlidity, IUOb ......., •
the institution that cootacts b&amp;- lesst indieatea 't&amp;.t
tween faculty and students or active·
~.;:
between. students not he restrict- der. Without IUOb a i.e. if
ed to the kind of formal aet- depatfmentally tauPt • - .
tings which tbe institution is iae" had 110 .. . ~Y in a position to pro- the Univamy-tbe failme .Gf
vide.
~..:."'!:....he~:::i
or ~ ..,_
itself rejected its "immi •
. The laat obaervations of the ized COII8I'.·0. , . , _ " tbe __.__
precedinJ ..:tian Je.l directl
m'ty.
" .. _
•
....._.
into the fourth ses&gt;!mJ .....
di8cuMion the Coiiegl!s have
Again it is inlen!otin&amp; to
been t!IIP&amp;ed in over the put note, tbe very evident JDter..
year. Tbe- relaliomhip of the- relationobip of this "theme"
ary and pradice ia one of the with the ott- three mentioDed
daaoiad
--.u., life above._ In may ....,., · the •
In poeral. however it ~ ~ ~ol
to
CDII8iden!d .,..im.my in four aapects o1 coiJePJte 8divterms ol raeardJ and its appli- ity baa t - oae cl tbe most
cations. T~ itself ia mre- intermtina rewJations J this
ly ~ as a "tbeoretical" ...,. . put years wort_

~~S'J!.m"l:

=
=
i:

conacioual&amp;.:.:

~~

,.,._,.Dan

,......,..nditaa~~
-;w;;;.

tf

he

... .

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e-

�Architecture School Plans
An Open House, Aprill0-14
Wben John P. Eberhard was
named dean of U/B'a newly
establisbed School of Architecture and Enviroomental Design

Catpeted tiJroulhaat,
the space am function ei!uaJI,y
well as ol6oe work ........, plleries, and tbMtre 8piiCl!8. .AI&gt;
cording to Ebeduud, it Is l.._t
that a variety ol events will be
held with the - - flexible
enough . to meet the ..-Is ol
the School, the University ud
the community.

8piiCl!8.

~~u:.~the~

would develop: "It won't be a
conventional school of architecture which trains the architect
simply as lin artist Environmental design is more th!tn an
artistic license; it sliould be the
infusion or our tecbnological
processes with a sense of man's
individual and aocial needs, ao
that the resultant p r o d u c t s
(from buildings to cities) reflect their users' life styles and
aspirations."
The community will have an
opportunity to see how these
ideas have been implemented
when the School opens its doors
during an open house April 1(}.
14 in its new location at 2917
Main Street.
Highlighting the open houae
will be the week-long residency
or Konrad Wachamann, pioneer
in industrialized b u i I d i n g.
Wa ehsmann, a professor at the
School of Architecture, University or Southern California, will
be worifinf! on an industrialization-in-building project w i t b
the Schoors graduate students.
Wachsmann will deliver an
illustrated lecture, "'The World
Around Us,'' April 12, at 8:30
p.m. in the Sculpture Court of
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
1be talk is free and open ID
the public.
Several exhibits will be on
view at the School. Occupying
the main exhibit space will be
a show of pbo~ and
models encapsulating Wacbamann's life's work: Toward ln.~
dullria!Uation of lJuildinB .. In

,SPit Pharmacy Ed,

......--

....... .,,_

_,,

Colqr:a4o Sp171(2 &amp; White FirAre Included
In the UnWersitys EvergreenP!ontings
EDITOR'S NOTE: TIIU is

1M 1«01111 in a ..V.

tie/a, to be pub/Wied

of arfrom

tUM to time. conoerrain6 azm..
pul~-

• •

.

By RICHARD SEBIAN
u...,.,B~

PicetJ ~ or Colorado
Spruce Is an evera- .-1
Yeo' often in UJd lll'OIIDd the
B~, ft "
.

-~-. native' do ol the· ~ . . . . . "'
North America, bat ape ci e s
which have been iDUoduced
from Europe and Aaia have
proved beUer from an oma. mental viewpoint than our natives_ Practically IIDDe grow old
gracefully; that is, as they mature, they begin to 1.- their
lower braDCbes. For f o r e s t
trees, this may be an ideal tzait,
but for specimen ill good
plan.._ it is DOl Spruce. in
general. look aplendid as )'CIUDI
trees, ud are as aymmetzjcal
as any odler eveqreen. but the
p e r so n who Is planting for
abould DOt be led
astnuo..
by the appMI3DC8 ol a
young lnJe_
Tbe native Cobado Spruce
ol the Rocky Mountains is .wy
&amp;tift while aome olben are quite
the ~... haviD( ,_etul.
11101'1! or . _ pendulous bnmd&gt;leiL Tbe Colora4o Blue Spruce
. and ita varieties quiddy
from Med, ....,. coDiiderahly ill
color, ud IDIIka ..,._,. pymmidal YOUDI plants that are
de8ir8bleillftriouatn-ol

'Ibis plant is considered one
of the halt of the firs and is
thoroucblY reliable as far north
as Boston. It is noted for withstanding beat and drought better than most It is often grown
for the excellent contrast it affords with o t be r evergreens
such as While ·Pine and hemlock. Under good conditions it
should grow 1 'h feet a YC81),
falrly rapid for most evergreens_

value, older abould he .....
moved ud .....--, We have
~olu--..- ...
......... with . . . . nice apeci..... -..diDr bobiDd the
vanity

t.oiMU

bacbtop.

One of the last
- white fir on campus ~
along the edge or the Main
Street parlring lot where the
blacktop sidewalk lead&amp; to the
w...t Side or Goodyear Hall at
the outside staiftl.
··

A radical plsn to divide the
nation's pharmacy colleg'"' into
two groups, giving each group
responsibility for educating two
distinct breeds of pharmacists,
was proposed by a Walt Coast pharmacy educator, Dr. Jere
Goyan, at a T . Edward Hicb
Lecture held on campus recently.
Explaining that such a plsn
would help the pharmacy prof....ion meet the future demands or health care, Dr. Goyan, who is dean or the School
or Pbannacy at the University
or Califomis Medical Center
in San Francisco, said that one
group of colleges would train
"drug delivery specialists" and
the other would train "dnla
therapy specialists."
The c o II e g e s training the
"drug d e I i v e r y specialista"
would do so in a four-year program leading to a bachelors degree; the group training the
"drug the r a p y speciaJ.Ists"
would do that in a six- or aevenyear PfOI1'8IIJ leading to a dootor or pharmacy degree.
.
Under Dean Goyan'a plan,
the d u a l ed.U&lt;:atioaal oy.would ba aet up 80 that the
foiJI'oyear pbannacists would
have free ...,.,_ into the doo-

~ti~~~r:'~

!':::."!:::;, '!;"~~

GU/B
GNOTES

=~~ea:'~

School's three programs: the
undergraduate Pf011'811J in environmental design; the program leading to the Bachelor
or Architecture degree; and lhe
master!! program in architecture

answer questions i:aised by the
Governor's veto last year md
the hope is that, if it geta Assembly approval, the deferred
tuition plsn will be signed by

-·
By "D"
Congratulations to Dr. William H. Baumer, professor or
pbilaoophy and chairman or the
Faculty Senate, on being selecteel as one ol 40 new American
Council on Education Fellows
in the Academic Administration
Intemship Program (A /.1 P l .
Dr. Baumer will join a class of
intems which includes nine
women, the largest number of
women in eitbt years of the
Pf01l81D. A recent report of the
11rat six years of the AAIP
shows that more than 75 per
cent of the 238 participants
have made significant advances
into positions in academic administration. Twenty-four have
become presidents, and 32 are
vice presidents, vice chancellora, oc provosts. Dr. Baumer
is of two fellows from the
SUNY system.
~
'
•
•
l!"'ffem ar ~-loot opeciC1111W H. Did&lt;. • IIol Colaado 8prace .....
~ ... the pOaad, but,
of - - . at
~--- they taller
....
ol
the
lower~ die out ud the of _ _ . . , . far l'altl - . 1 lnolltule, hao _ ,

=:e~~;:;

Even though the branching is
horizontal, its growth b a b i t
forms a sorter loplring tree than
the blue spruce.

U/B Speaker Says

their education at a pace ol

t b e i r own choosing, be ex-

pliined, because the criteria for

obtaining the b i g be r degree

~.:n:;:r ~~"¥:"~~~ S~d.':,~d~'jft ~"':'" ~~i~

ply- ID both public and private
oolleg... and the loans would be
spread over a 1{}-,.Year period
commencing afte(" the student
baa graduated and found gainrul employmen l

answer questions during the exhibit hours, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
1be School now occupies the
entire second floor of the building which was formerly the
Bullalo Meter plsnl 1be large
0
0
expanses and high ceilings are
Mont than 85,000 .,.._ con- especially well-suited to expertrl.,._ - $10 m111on to col- imenting with the an:bitects'
' - - . . . - - In 1970 un- ideas of the multi-use of large
der 'arnupments In thW 'E'BcultyTT....:~~
- l i f t s .I.'&lt;
mont lhan Sll mlllon of their
_, funds. About 500 ......_.... (Conlinud (rom fJ08e 4, coL 5)
, _ . _ such .-..-tift .,.... fessional starr in higher educrams. ., . , _ of about 100 cation." 1be IWilRinin• 00 per
In the- taur _ . .
cent include-adMWStrators.
•
•
•part-time teaching ·stall, and
Tbe fac:ulty at Franklin and professional nisearchers. It is
M81Shall College have agreed possible, writ... Tyler, "that
to a one-year freeze on salary academe may repeat the hi&amp;"""""""'to
' be -'~ '!!!..~-woofiflh't hatimeve . tory or the earlier ~ts of
,..._. •~ ...,
labor by o J&gt;. tin g for 'craft
in six years.
unions' speaking for special interests, rather than 'industrial
M. CettiJir hao .....,_ as unions' represeitting the whole
_.- · .... _ . campus." He calls this ~lciMt of \'on ~ to bility fratricide. My own view
join the of 1the Cemocla Com- · would be to com~ such a sit.., 1t111w - - tte uation to the · Plilltt of many
- - ......,,~....., far . . - - - - city -mments, who must
poMc far the U.S. on the a . - ...., at the Cleal with 1IIICh a variety and
1ba paat, of"t h e - - I n - . . ·
number ol unions -that the sys-·
Mthe lllp ..,
•
•
•
·
tem 04 govenlll8lt does indeed
... .... - - _...,.,, In- - . Tbe American A8ldation ol become ~
.
State CGUecw and univmliities ~ ICI!'d·of ~It..,
lion..

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

would be baaed on some aort ol
competerii:y eumination rattthan on length of study time.
Pharmacists in the PJOillllll
for therapy specialists would be
educated with the capabilities
for interpreting and applyini
the findings of drug research to

.....-r

=r~
::::~ s:~=t
practitioners as well as to patients, be

said.

uua.m------------,

- Dnll-lllti-•

==::::::-..:=::

stance that typuU!S bargainiD&amp;
b e - industrial manageuart
and worl&lt;ers be avoided in the
bargaining betweM faculty ud
the rep.-tatives with whom
they must deal? Can the strilre
be eliminated as a weapon. thus
reducing the dangec of an irreconcilable t-tility ~
the fac:ulty and the public?
Unions which allow poaitiw
..,._.. to tJ&gt;.e qUMiioas are
the unions which I believe t.o.
uJty members sbould have. Yet
it is too early in the procell!l to
answer such quations coidusively, yes or no. One am only
hope that the UIIIW8l8 will he
more positive than they have
been in the cue of the primary
and aeoondary public acbaol
system.

Onecan on1y hope that Piu.'

noe ...--Unit~ r~ted$'10~~~'-,.;3; uw&amp;~ · u.U:will ~:.!:~~
50 - . _ , . : ' estabiW. a~. Abn.t ~-- ~ve!t I believe it ~:tfore than two .;:,..::,. after
Tbe Abia CtiiiCOIDr or white -......, In 118, Mr- old&lt; hao _ , Center in Madra, JJidiL 1)le . ,. ~ . to- BP.JII recall the · the atrille," he a.ys, "the ad-

r:..

llr, while not . . - . . - aftal~ ill.i,:.~
~ to he far ...,...._ 'l1llio

•
wblo:b ._ a..;:..:..--;::-:.:. ....- .., he

-

to tha . . , - . t of the

~ ~ c;o""!' at F - .

- Tbe State Soaate baa

...ru-

giWIIl

_.oval to a pro-

~ ...-til. - - . ~ ·~·-b.Y ~- HeeD- . venu:t 8taDce wai atill ~
.:,t;;' ~ !*=WtY 1J1U1!D1 con- ·. At the lut AAUP meeting the

CMllen ill.MontrMI;HGme,ud
Puebla. Mexico.
- • •
4

lbeli : . : : : . . : lot~ .Pl'lllident nminded the ~tY
• ..
llimal._..;.......,_ -"'errDa tbit . ibat d. ~- ..-. , ~·

• : ..

s-~ 1ar lftllllial ~ 1oau . _ . _ _ , - _..., .-a~~ahiluca- - ~ llllllody lingen 011- • • • .
..... ....,. pp- far ~ edul:iltloaal .,.__ ._.. ......... - .a ...,._. ''tion? Cu~ a.Jre t.ftocg tp.. : . l do not b8Iieve that this is
-a. • Wla..t ....,.. ·to the...,_ _ I n _.. , _ llf ~ ward 1 ennat imla-t ' a me~oc~y · wbiCb, we am doni

...._ 'l'ha...._*.....,.....,-'
..... -

ii!P. ol ~ Tbe ~ . .,._ ~ ~- _,.. ·withOut tbeaJaYei·bein( ....sB to .play too ellen if we are b
w aa ....,._ bY · ~ .. - - ., ..,. ....oubeidba .a- iq&gt;rove' · · ha• an ellective system ol
~ ill the . waatern ._. LMder':'lfart . W:, ~ ud - • · ~ ~ · ....ta? eu lb!ad .,.,..
liliher education.
· ·
~ tJaltad. Sida . · theoDtireGOPmaJOfttyilllbe ,IIIJO.
-. ·
. \
· .' - . , .. , . .
. .· , ..
.
.
. l:
~
~

lilae, ...,_

:to

- lltht Fa7 ,._ 'ill. CIIIIK.· Da

f

••

"r

•• •

•

-

•••

•

,

•

·;

• •

•• • •

,·

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

THURSDAY~
I'OiliADT

-

Harold H . . - .

....,.._.:
u.-..,

tu Diabdi&amp; F - ...t Tlooir ~~­

~• ._.,.tby~

MedX:al ~ 40 statioDs.ll: 30a.a.

w-.

S 0 C lA L I"STCCIILLC:" ~

....,.,.., n.. - . . .

UDivenity a( c.liraaioo. t - Aap.leo. Auriba- ,.__, ef 11..

z-.
12:30 ......
---C-34-~

JamiCAL

~&lt;W.OC:T

~

l.OCnlD#: Dr. ......,. H. - -

..... Myeo,.._ 1-t_,_ ef
111011 • ..-nod by a . p . . l - ical "-"""- 40
- . 1: 30 p.m.

~ --

FRIDAY-7

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1381713">
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                <text>1972-03-30</text>
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                    <text>ST~TE

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 3-NO. 24

MARCH 16, 1972

MostEd Coursffi,~Others
Will Be Restored to Summer Program
A major ,portion of the Faculty of Educational Stud i e s

ed that efforts sre being made
to reinstate s o m e other programs in health sciences (inclu&lt;!ing t,he School of NursiBg ),
engmeenng, computer science.
hysical education and tbe Colegiate System.
On March 3, Blackhurst had
announced ·t hat about 40 per

courses for the 1972 Summer

Sessions will be restored because they are utoo im(Xlrtant
to be sacrificed," Pre si dent
Robert L Ketter said Tuesday.
S u m m e r Sessions Director
James Blackhurst also indicat-

r.

Demonstration Fizzles as

,._- ,_- · - ,_r
-

•
'

.

o
· n

_ ,_

Ketter said local legislators as

AWaJaChia
·.

and about'
People
Is.._,11 A..~ Yablaaaki,
.
·
""!' o1.
late night talk show circuit
t~Q&gt;P

u,;~.Jaaepb Yablonski.&amp;.,

of the United Mine Workers of
America, will _ . . 011 "IDSwv-

tmCY in the Coal Field," as one
• or the highlqhla o1. tbe University's Appalachian Symposium,
Mardi 21 tluough Mardi 24.
Other featnres include Ellalish professor Bruce .Jackson,
on leave in California this year,
who will describe the Poverty
Program's "seU-out" of tbe
.poor, and author Hany Caudill
who bas recently been making

Retroactive
PayAsswed'
Tbe six per cent retr&lt;Uctive
pay increase for facul ty and
professional staff ·is now assured, Kermeth M. MScKenzie,
SUNY vice cbancellor for Persoonel and Employee Relations, said Tuesday.
Under tenns of the State's
conuact with the Senate Professional Association (S P ~
the increase will be retroactive
to .July 1, 1971, for 12-month
employees and to September 1,
1971, for those on 11Hnonth or
academic year s t a t u s. Tbe

~A-~~~~~

15. 1971.
Tbe checks for back pay sre
most likely to be issued in late
April, Dr. MacKenzie sa.id.
Paving the way for the action
were the S t a t e Legislatnre's
- . e Ia s t Wed.-lay of
G&lt;wemor Roc:kefeller's de&amp;it
bud&amp;et ~ and tbe Federal
Pay Board's recent -roval of
tbe cxmtract's retroadivity.

~ ~!.rv.!~;
u.cr-

72
pay
in tbe 8acal year
""""' clnnring to • doae. Tbe
1972-73 budp!t ~ still to
(~ on- t. coL 6)

tnmaitlon'bot Dlif'~·-

~ ChanceUor

again and
again ~ his .r a i t h in
tbe
SUNY and lts"ftbility to suron television on behalf of his viye the cutbacks and limiied
works describing social condi- growth of this decade. He
lions in Appa1acbia.
pointed out that higher educaTbe symposium, "about and lion and the SUNY system are
for people," is an attempt to · ~ entering a •:per!&lt;&gt;&lt;! .'~f pripresent a CliJIICelltmted view of onty and consolidation. Govpeople imd their crafts--Bpin- emor RockefeUer's "no growth
ning weaving quilting whit-- budget". forced SUNY to seek
t.lini, people ~ their ,;,usic- alternative sources of revenue
blue 'gmas, country and ballads· because s t a t us quo funding
people and their probl~ ~I&lt;! "shatter some of our instrip mining black lung di- •titutional development." The
sease, w~.
"painful mid dIe cdurse" seAccording to reports from lected was to move up the enthe organizers, a chartered bus
wiU bring -''mountain people"
and "valley people" to the campus for the event. "Many of
these "have never set foot outside · of their home county of
Randolph, West Virginia, in
the heart of Appalachia."
Tbe contingent will include
social workers, tescbers, musicians and craftsmen.
Linda Felix, coordinator of
the event and a U/ B graduate
student, lived , and fanned for
almost four years in Randolph
County and most of the participants will be her friends and
neighbors from those days.
Each day of the symposium,
in addition to the scheduled
round of music, lectures, poetry
readingJI. films and topical commentaries CSee Weekly Com~ue for full details), West
Virginia craftsmen will display
their works from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. in the Fillmore Room of
Norton.
According to Ms. Felix, this
is tbe truest form of contemporary folk art. 'lbe art is nonacsdemic, attnned to life. Many
of tbe crafts to be demonstnsted -re developed out of
a need for utilitarian oojects.
Some were forpd out of a desire foe creative n!luation.
"We ' - that tbe craft domoastmtious eapecially willllriDI
an about a 1WHity1e

-..__
little""""""··- -·

actment date of projected tuition increases. 'The additional
revenues will go for the libraries; maintenance and startup for buildings already constructed; additional students;
and the hospitals within the
sys(l!m, Boyer promised.
Four Gools

In addition to recommending
the tuition hike, the ChanceUor
is pursuing f o u r system-wide
goals.
( Continued on page 2, col. 1)

GovernanooGroup
Slates Hearings"

Tbe audience seemed to sympathize with Boyer when he
said "these are di11icult days,"
and
apll"ftred williDII to woli&lt;
Wilh~glf •d\!1, time of
•

'lbe u ·
' ty ~~----• ru~
~
Coimni*!""will
-h_o·l d . ·OIJ!ID
}~~"o~ ~~

·: :=

$2SI,OOON ow, however, $200,000 is
being restored to tbe program
through a " personal" decision
on_the part of President Ketter.
Although the decision was his,

weU as members of the State

BdyerMlressesAhunni
A promised· large-scale student demonstration to protest
State University tuition hikes
turned into 25-30 students carrying placards urging the State
to "Tax Rocky, Not Students,"
as CbanceUor Ernest Boy e r
came to Buffalo Tuesday for
the first regional dinner of the
SUNY Confederation of Alumni Associations.
By the time Boyer arrived at
the Hearthstone Manor, "''D8Jly
of the . d~monstrato_rs were q!ready ms1de as paying guests,
~=~ng the increases with

cent of 8UIIIIDel' courses would
have to be dropped because of
proposed State budget cuts.

nonce for a University Aaaembly;: Tuesday, Mareh 21, and
Tuesday Mardi 28 in Acheson 5 at'2:30 p.m. '
All members of tbe University community are invited to
attend.
. The C&lt;?mmittee _is also willmg to d1scuss the draft with
any University group requesting sucb a mee~g. Address requests to: Dr. Marjorie C. Mix,
chairman, 205 Foster Hall.
The complete text of the
governance proposal is repn&gt;duced on 'p&amp;ges 6 and 7 of today's issue of the Reporter.

University of New York central staff share his views about
the importance of the summer
program. U!B bas been assured,

Retter added, that "every pose effort will be made to re•tore to its budget the funds
required to underwrite this better rounded summer program."
To m a k e the new adjust.
ments, Blackhurst announced
that tbe beginning of registration bas been post:poned from
Mardi 20 to April 3. He said
that a complete list of cowses
to be offered will be available
at that time.
Ketter said that the summer
program is "extremely valuable
and the time delay is too costly not ouly to our stndents, but
to our faculty, our inslitntion
and our 8 t a t e. which would
have lost moaey in tbe form of

-~-·

He estimated tliat tbe additional required $260,000 would
y i e I d between $450,000 and
$5(Xl,OOO in tuition i u com e.
"Most importsntly, howwer, is
the fact that we will now be
able to provide opportunities
for several thousand stndents
who w o u I d have been told
there was no room at the University."
'lbe proposed budget reductions have already made "planning very di11icult for so many
people," Blackhurst said. "We
hope that this decision by Dr.
Ketter will h e I p to aUeviate
some of tbe di11iculty."

n...._-............ - ...-- .....

-,........, ....d._.., ___ ....
--~polltaltM-NIIM'"It '_.,.. _

-....,. n. -

- - - ......-

-llldooopJ . . . . . - ... - - - ·

...

f'Mit," ..

L......._,_,:..,.':\'
,, --••~.-~:,.__;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __J

�-~-'

2

GRErolrrER.,

? Chanool1or Jqw.
(~/roa-1.~#)
the e«ects of the 1960's""""~ there will be
the countzy ......t throullh a
~ about the direction
seil" ol "national neurosis. Cerpriority ol powth within the tainly every family here baa
syslem. "We will pace our been toucbed bY it," be aaid,
powth to dollars received," and it is having a de6nite elBoyer esplained. This position feet oo the syslem. Yet, be
is liaaed 00 the coocem that pointed out, it is it:Jportant to
"we were apeudinc more
~ aStUNYthepft!l&gt;l~,!"the~­
on buildinp than people." The
ve.
'!' • ...,.. . "?t
result is a reeligmneut of - !unded educational in;stit~;ttion
space requirements .-art 01· Ibis m the world, be mamtained.
packqe is a. halt j., the build- Clooe to "$2400 is spent on
ing ol ilormitories and a move !;"ery ~dergracl':"'te," which is
toward rePonaJ.imtion: 'The
lhree ~the mcome of most
Cbaocellor noted that rejpooal human beings on earth." New
e«orta curb duplication a n d Y'!rk's mental institu~ons and
praised the prop-e88 t akin 1 pnsons are also feelmg . c_utpllp!_iJi Ibis ..,poo toward that backs, _be added, eRlP~IZlDg
.-1::;:..,rmt that SUNY 1S not

:',d

moner

A nH!liiiDiination of existing
academic pqrams is the secondSUNY.-1-baaln lbeiDl."tia
DB!J!B&amp;ltedfi'!!..ear-&amp;,
v•~· 50
DI!W masters and PhD. p~
grams, the Cbancellor pointed
out, and -m some instances
there are more profesoors than
students in tbeoe programs."
He baa called a halt to the inlloiluction of new graduate p~
pams and for a review of exist-

__
me 0118.

.....,_

·

'The third goal is to strive
toward "more fleDble patterns
ol aludy within the University.'\
Boyer ...,.,)d like to see "the
campus as the point of de[llJI'Iun for the student rather
than the point of confinement.'"
'The ..,.. Empire State CoUege
is a direct emmple of Ibis phikalphy and of the "need to
come to terms w i t h certain
thinp that are happening outside the University." This will
hopelully lead to an increase in
continuing education programs
and a new pbiloeophy of people I o iII I tJnoullh "cycles of
'-mine" durinc their lives. A
Uniwnlty degree will merely

~~=~~~~~
oo as a "continued opportunity
for aludy," Boyer hopes.
FinaUy, the Cbancellor stressed the need to reaffirm the
centrality of the Univerility's
social role as "man's m o s t

No ~~ AttKic
.&amp;yer ruled out the possibility that the UniversitY is "under special attack." Instead, be
feels there is a "broad-based se&gt;cial dilemma . . . we're not
fighting a backlash of bostility from the people of New
Yorlc" SUNY "is not a place
that is unloved," be explained,
instead "we are simply looked
at with greater caution DarN."

'The romance between the
public and higher education is
over, be said. People have
learned that "the University is
not the 110le solution to the
problenlS of human progress,"
and that a degree doesn't always mean a well-paying job.

ed~tioo~ ~ C:Cts

ing and goals, be said.

=

Boyer called upon alumni to
continue working with SUNY
to help it through Ibis period.

~call~~ ~frj:j ~

alumni ever hsd" and he
pledced to give the alumni
"greater participation in local
~ti!,~te-wide University ac-

He urged the audience to
look hack on the great progress
the SUNY system has made
and to "hold firm to the vision
of where we must go."

-~~ln2

Tenure mil Faculty Unims
Draw Fire at AAHE Meet
Tenure shopld either be dras~~Y changed or done away

Faculty unions are in the best
interests of neither the fsculty
nor the institutiorL
Higher education is no longer a top priority item on. the
federal agenda.
Students should participate
in most areas of govemanoe in
higher education, but not as
voting members of trustees or
on rommittees that decide p~
motion and faculty tenure.
Or so the majority of respondents to a poll on "key issues"
taken at the recent national
meeting of the American Association for Higher Education
CAAHE ) feel.
'The poll, conducted by Harold L. Hodgkini;on, Center for
Research and Development in
Higber Education, University
of California, Berkeley, measured delegates' responses to a
variety of issues affecting colleges and universities. A total
of 1,560 representatives of 864
public, 375 independent, and
288 denominational institutions
participated. 'The vast majority
(940) were administrators, 84
were departn)ent chairmen, 127
we':" professors of higher education, 34 were professors of
elementary or secondary edu?Ilion, and 88 were professors
m other fields. Also answering
10
w~
trustees, 50 higber education researchers, 91 graduate~dents, 2 undergraduate
stu
Is, and 103 others. Well
over half of the delegates were
from the East and Midwesl
Unless otherwise indicated
th~ _g_roup endorsed these pro~
OSltions by large majorities:
'The predominantly Jay board
with essentially ultimate authority in campus alfairs is a
workable governance mechanisn:' for. ~rican colleges and
uruvers1ties.
V e r y few required courses
are in the best interests of most
students. ( On Ibis topic, the
vote_)was extremely close, 810.
713
The e~ degree does not
necessarily mean a lowering of

should become the_predominant
degree for tb&lt;w!planning to hecome college teachers.

Institutions that can no longer continue for finsncial reas&lt;fns should die. (705 agreed
with this, while 636- contended
that institutions in such situations should be "saved" by federal furu:ls.)
Groups such as the Carnegie,
Scranton, and Gould Commissions and the Newman Task
Force have considerable impact
on edlJCStional practice in higher education. (783 endorsed
Ibis idea while 676 felt that
commissions have little impact
on anything.)
Students should be given academic credit for out-of-class

a_s'l::':~ions

~
Riseby15%

.NigttSd;todMeet

~wiD

-m at the.

be Ron. Ia'* . F.
Kanp, ........... ol ec-rhom the 39th District (Hambur&amp;. N.Y.) . He wiD_., at
the Saturday luDch.
.

:::::e """"""

bibB

r

~in

:=a:::t~love~
Albany~;

1M&gt;

another
said. This

""!'t bibB!;"'~~
l1ll8e&amp; were m necntietjm

Tile Federal Pay Board in
approving the CODizact terms

~ a,o_Intemal

Revenue

Service decision ... h i c h had

.ill

State--;;;;;.

FdrWIRR

.JfA

stated--·

:=::~~

tb:."'..-":!!

· A c a m p u s is no difterent
hom
other '-'-~
Ra.lt tuitioo
wiD en- . • any
...... of organable tbe Univenity Slate-wide ~lion, and does not need 8pe~tioo.lepl
..........,._
'dto • w
lata an enzollment ~a
... v--• or w~•
m.r- of aaly 6,600 ..... last
yoar.
Tbe
ol
teaching

Allhoalh the Leciodature'a
does not .,.,_
the entire amount - Dr. MacKenzie said~
are available to _ . far the
full increment due -=b employee.
~I!I!Bimial a • a f f daBfied
as manalf""W!'t- can&amp;dential..
and ezduded from the SPA

-~

GrowthMarks
2nd Semester

=""rst

'The lr.eynote

----

l, · cul l)

found the ~ve increases
~~ ol Federal JUide..
learning experiences.
Dr. MacKenzie said that
delay in &amp;uing the checb
occur bec:a.- ol the - - - " of filing with the
troiJes-'s alice new hur:leet certificates for IDIID.Y of the employees inwlved.
·
- 1'be CIJIIIPinlllez'a o f f i c e is
cunently handlinc tbe Jar.,...
Wllume ol b n d «e t aertificate
WIRR baa signed 00 the air- ....._
._;,-oo for the .. _,
for Ibis semester with $2500
support (rom Inter-nsideure 1 Civil Service increments~
must complete t h o s e before
Council,
espanded facilities in
)llllll!no&lt;Jik.
Clement Hall, more equipment, ~ll:V.,tbe
and a strooger signal to .the
Ml!!l1l1ri&gt;ile. the CbaDcellor's
dorms, where any AM radio 9ftice !n Albany is expected to
tuned to 640 on the dial can I8IIUe 111 a llllllter ol clays an
pick up the Pl0fll8IDII.
"'ur motto is to be enter- . ollicialatatement ClOIIIirmin« the
retroactn&gt;e
me.-.
taining, innovative and crea- ·srA
_
_.
live 110 listeners won't shut off
Dr. Constantine · Yeracaria,
the
_ station," says Gayle W.at..o..
president ol the SPA BulfaJo
"!...., one of_ the program coorChapter, says tbe dmators. Day-to-day operatioos 19enter
n c r e a s e provides a definite
are .run by four general coordin- "'yes" to the question of wbetbators and a five-member p~ er or not SPA is an e«ective
gram committee. Minimum barKaininlt: .,....l He said the
broadcasting hours are 4 p.m.
Federal Wap Board
througb 2 a.m.
that it had _.muect
'"'!' studio is Open in the cilically
the retroaclive apeen&gt;ent as a
mommg so that announcers can ~result ol_SPA _ . acprepare ~ programs. Each
~uncer li aUotted a two-hour
Said y eracaria, u A young col~ slot ller week d u r i n g !ective ~ . _ witbwhich he presents his tree-form m a uruvenlity system 111181l01&amp;~rogram, without FCC restrictio"'! to curb his dialogue. A tomed to collective hllr-pining
was a h I e, leal than a few
special two-hour Period on
months after its ~ to
Tuesdays and Thuradays gives come
up with an esa!llent CODto get on- tract and succeed in its impleOur a...,..;ation ac1s
Special features Ibis term in- !'""'tation.
cl~de: Jim SanteUa and his 111 the estahlished -se.ruc
~tar workshop; Michael Lev- tradition. I hope that my colleagues and an the proCI!lBional
lD80D, poet; a weekly spot for
t a f f of our UnivenitY will
Hare Ktishns diaciples; a p~ sa.baDdcln
their last ~
gram on the birth control clinic
join SPA. . . . We need
on campus; nigbtly news, from and
7:15-7:30. p.m., prepared by your membership in order to
Sandy Kimmel, which covers be able to filht for a betler
c a m...P u s and international contmct this yeEr "
. N~ I••&lt; the fJllDIIIWBevents.
r
. Both classical 8Dd rock mu- lC portion 91 the 19'12-73 CODtra&lt;;t
~ ""!' Ullderway-, YeraSIC are now aired, a ~
from I as t year's continuous cans s:lid, With indicatioos that
SPA
e~ -..e1biDc bet1er
rock sound. WIRR baa .,..,...
to a fast-growing record library
the OllllliDuing ... per
. which has discs that were 00:
Dr. Robert 8. Fiok, a memnated . from such com-"'- as
ber
ol
the S t a t e EDc:utive
DunhiU Col
~
tra.
•
umbia, and Elek- Board ol SPA ud a lllftllber
. General coordinator David ol the barpininc SIDIOD says WBFO has given sible for the caatn11:t, DOled
li?at the ... per Cll!!lllwben comWIRR a big boost, including bined
with the . , . _
the loan of two turntables The
two stations both schedul", In- viously received ~
!erface (an interview with Pres- ~ IM!juslment of.....,. tluloe
:::.- that oricinallY ....... by
•dent Kette ) and
- State. - •• In Ill)' judcment. .
games.
r
h oc ke y
Ibis was a sip1ificaDt
Future plans for WIR H aim pin
which would not CJtbenrie
toward estshlishin
"
g a satellite have been adlieved.•
0

At the banquet, the Alumni
Confederation presented a
plaque to Hugb .J. Tuohey, Jr.,
public relations officer for
to the integrity of humanity." SUNY
or educaCentral, for his "service
He believes that the University to the Confederation."
boo have taken over decisionwiU be one ol the places that
making that should be left to
will aolve problems, that will
the institutions. t (756 agreed
make polllible a "better existwith Ibis while 663 held that
ence on Ibis _.,..,mp Earth."
state rommissions have done
only what was necessary to deTbe Cbancellor tied SUNY's
velop coherent statewide sysfiaad w o e s to the finsncial
terns of education. )
Applications for admission to
crisis withiil the nation and to
Racial tensions on campus
the far-fiunc State University have remained about the same
of New York system are run- or have decreaaed during the
niDI about 15 per cent higber last year.
than last year, SUNY IIOUJCeS
~rtiJ!cstion is an appropriMillanl Fillmore Collece will said in Albany Ibis week. .
ate mstitutional function.
host the Mid-Year Meetinc ol
. ~~ is. v e r y little or no
'The
University,
currelitly
atthe United Stalal Aalociation tempting to pin more money discrimination against women
ol Eveninc Students, April 7-9. for
its operatioos in the com- !'t institutions of higher Jearn.
ing year, said that 126,000 ap- mg. ( 790 'took Ibis view while
Over 300 &lt;!VI!!Ilinc students plications have been received ~ reported "discriminatinn in
hom 45 c:oUeces COIISt-tcHloast for next fall, up more than 16 - the recent past.")
will altaid the tbree-day event 000
Faculty morale has remained
over Ibis time last year. '
at the StaiJer-Hiltoo Hotel 'The
~ the same or improved
~ will be co-boated by
More than 170,000 are .,._ durmg the past year.
Canisins CoiJece, Mobawk Val- pected to apply to U., 48 camIn most cases, students learn
ley Community Collece. Mon- puses which participate in the more e«ectively with I e t te r
roe Community Collece. North- uniform admissions plan before grades than with pass-fail. ~745
eutem University, ltOchester the process ia ""-~. Last year, agreed but 528 felt that grades
!'B~j nothing to do with learnInstitute of TeclmolocY, and a total of 148,900 applied.
R....n !lace CoiJece.
.
.
SUNY h a a approximately lllf:l
• HegionaJ aocred.iting associaDr. Albe.-t Somit, eza:oltive 60,000 fnahmen and 12,000 tions need drastic revision in
tnms(er
places
available..
vice-president ol UIB, will welpractices and objectives.
~~
'?""J'US.
Federal financial aid should IIleD1bership .• the applied for
come the deleplal at the FriBudcet n!8lrictions have preday ~ ...... and Dr. cluded any major eqliUI8ioo for be given mainly to students, ate B-~- Syi_!~a~.____,.,. o....., ~
Nicholas Kilh, ..a.tant dean the COIIIinc year, according to rather than to institutions
EdlJCStiooal vouchers(money
.
wort&lt; ol AM coUege stations
ol MPC, wiD -...!come the stu- Dr. Cliftoo c. Thome, vice
to
den
· around the U.S. Though man
denta at the 8atwday morninl' chanoellor for univallity affairs, pven
stu
ts by state or "!"Uege~ .have clo!oed--'-·'t sta~
......,_ Dr. Kish ia a naliooal even lhoalh an incralae ol 15,- federal soun:es, aUowiJ&gt;c them tions, s
~~
to take it to any colleael will b"
unon feels "we have a
ol the Upstate N- 000 atuclmts ... 16
•deil
Yod&lt; RePoo ol the Aalocialiod. ~the Univenity's master
to higber edu- ·
better operatioo

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

(~ /roa -

II!' acted ~ the
so:perCll!!lllbike.

WIRR will carry advertisements at $2.00 for a 00--..1

spot, free to students
s~-~-

.

......,..ts intero&amp;ted
.ioininJ
WIRR
altaid thein .I

ean

:rJ...'CL!::;t ~~y _

=

..........rue

New

B
e d

Issued

�~

3

Management's Bid for Independence Grod SdzoolWill Spmsr
Is Watclled Closely' by &amp;me Others 22WoodbonF~

:;mtime.depeM in aahwW Jencth

1be new .._,., repi8DIII
!be Gradusle Sc:bool'a divisial&gt;al diatribution of·ftmds syalem,
Dr. Andrew Holt, BBJCiate
deaD, aa,ys. Fellonhip funds
have djminjabed rapidfy in ~
cent yeam, be points out. !Am
year, !be Sc:bool awarded 94
fellowsbipa of $3,000 -=b; this
year, cmly 30 recular addarships would haft been available for pn&gt;pOrtiooal distribution to faculties and depart;ments. To avoid tbe IDlteuable
position of having single adlolarsbips divided up .......... departments, tbe Financial Aid
Committee decided to c:baD&amp;e
tbe distribution format, increaae tbe stipend and create a

==-wide

prosram, Holt
In addition to !be 22 Woodbum FeUonbipa, tbe Graduate Sc:bool will also be - . d ing 12 Natbm Sc:ieDoe l'oaD-

clatioll-panla liD ell&amp;lble ~

ments.

.

Suh-&amp;ard I Orders etJws to Move orLoseFwuls
1Jecim&gt;ia1 of

tbe year coo-

tbe total los&amp; of space was 124

!:.eU.::a~- awarding

a-;n

!be

-..m---'-'

finDiDc a poop's ript to tbe square feet.
romD they ......, oa:upyinc. ask1be

this~

S'm_UUc;;:
fused to hear tbe case apin
and bad !be mapzine's funds
frozen because it refuiBI to
move. ~~ eontended t bat
ethDc'
-was stopping 15 other groups from shift-ing their open.tioos and many
of tbese were &amp;ettin« impalienL
Tboucb ..,...,.) or lbese tbreaIn their case to SBI, RoeUer
leDed to bemme major &amp;tzug- and editor-elect Stuart Beqer
cJos, only tbe etJroa case acto- again argued that curtailed
ally dicl
space would allect plaJmed ex1be oriciDal te-allocation cut pansion_
!be _.me's Ill*"' in ball
David Smith, acting cbairAftor repmled appals by
man of UUC, . _, 8DCll9ed
tboucb. UUC .-iped it to a
of makinc tbe ~
larpr room. 1be supervisin&amp; ings a "pooitic:al spectacle
ediliDr of ea-, Carl Roetter, rather than a pn&gt;blem shared
~~"':::...'!::"_as~ . by human beings wbo are able
.._.. ~ to oooperati.lely fiDd a human
be-felt !be
would soltrtion_"
'"tHe a way !be mapzine's
ability to operale e«ec~M!ly.•
In - estn edition em ValeDtiae'a Day, RoeUer &amp;...oc.d !be

1be lloor plan UUC bad a t
!be 1Jecim&gt;ia1 of .1811WUY was
d&gt;a._t t.i&lt;e as appeals started pouriDc in. Sewral sharp
ClOIIIIids arose over tbe allocatioa&amp;, !be proce66 u s ed for
determining tbem and certain
poop's needs for more space_

ea-,

.....n.:r-

ea-

SBI ruled that ea- bad "Do
grounds for .,._)"_ but, because of tbe publication's need
for continually actift p b o De
lines, pve tbem UDlil April 10
to move. H the p•Niration
elects DDt to move, SBI aaid,
its fomds will nmain frozen.
Mter tbe ru1inc. editor Roetter said be would cliacuM !be
decision with his edillriol baenl
at an emeqoeucy meeting last
nipt at which they would decide wbetber to - - Editorelect Berges- iaaued !be following statement: "' repel !be
pemonal and slanderouo au.dt
utili zed by O.vid Smith ol
UUC Mcmday nicbL Repnling !be §BI doc:isiaa, it is apia
evmp!i&amp;d vividly that 8BI is
totally laclr:inc in ~lity

.,.,.,.,...,mg matlienl CXIIIfJuutDc

iL It .._.,. that fair and . .
jeclift criteria are romp pnotices I'! !be board..

U/B~WmsSuggesti:nAward

,_
_......
to •directly
- editon.l
...
.
is
related
to our effective fuDctioaing. •
uuc beard aDDibor .,._]
at w b i c b !be ...,..me at.t_,c,od to . . . by papbsl.-

ad-tioiac .........., was related

t o - In additiaa, ea- told
!be Clllllllliltee it plaJmed to be•of..sty
year and
ina-t
a bi-monthly

-w additiaual for in.,._............_uuc
·
......iowideoedand~
IX'-Felt'1be ea- is cum!Dtly
iD (345) . . . 1,0'U square feet
wbids indados a darboom. It
- ...uy .-iped to 340
wbids ... 800 square feet 'lritbaata ........... ~.of !be . . . . . _ ... !be 3nl
lloor (llialt 100 square feet)
.... _....._ In !be-.

FbrHis Design&lt;Ia •T&lt;Mel:BaggB-'
1be '--"· • tapond SiD&lt;h bich wood fmmewmt&lt;,
bolds • IDioel hac into wbids
dirty tow e I a are depoaited.
Wboll !be device is lifted, tbe
towels are .-1}' to - . . to
!be linoD supplier.

.AccanliDc to

nm..

!be de-

vice will be put into 'bolh
this . . . _ and 8tal&amp;wide.
Doaz • obtch of his
device and a do:ocripticm ol ita
wodh to tbe SUNY Employees
Sugation Committee which

Oil

fonnnled it to !be Civil arice Cammi-im in Albany. tbe
....., wbids made !be -m.
A check of $25, a dedi: set and • eatificate of ~­
pr--.1 to llr. ))em by Prsidmt Robert L Ketller last
......L

�~

4

Kurtz Suggests a tTriple~'
Shapes tCertainAcademic Thinking'
KURTZ

may be appropriately labelled

B~lJ!:-.

1be three letten! by J.. C.
""'--'-- .tid S
Curran.
W. C · ,_,.,.,
·
~ de a e r v e COIDIDI!IIt
· - -, March 9, 1972
. ) ._All
(R~.-_ _,,_

~~ ~~[..S

:C
Line"), in wbic:b "by means
o1 ---•-· and satire I tried to

=-

.,_,..,.,
-·"•• ~
Point out some__.... 0&lt;1118
ol ''potted thinking" DOW
alent in arlain circles in
ome
andEducation,
the Department
o1
Health,
and Weidefinition
(Fo
HEW)
flue (
·
ra
ol "poUed
e L.
8lman Stebbing,
111/l toi
Some PurpMe, Ch. 6.) If, •
..
....-. Jheir real intention was
ii)ol"c:Ut~me down to size" (l am
5' 8'~" in my stocking feet),
but
't)
wonchauZ:
ist thinking. 1be point of their
indictment apparently was that
I WllB deadly humorous about a
subject with wbic:b I sbould
bava been deadly serious. In
particular, I am aocuaed of
blaspheming the latest eplitarian .a..-. 1be critiCLSlD8
illuatra;;:il"too well that 88tire
today is in "abort supply" and
tlJat one attempts it at one's
peril, particulsrly when the

~w ~

:!:: :0: shortist

c _ ___,

,_,__

-red

H~~~ts "us

witlJ the puadax that many of
tlJose who are against douhle

"triple winger&amp;")
Directly to the pomt: many

triple wiDged standardisls are
a-'-'
~"lies and dis......-• .......,...
criminatory quotas, yet they are
tl willinc to use re~~in order to reverse
the widted double standard.
This is what I think some of
the dewtees ol HEW's dirmative action policies insdverten"" have been defendinl. But
_..:::!.. ..,__,_,_tion is .still
.
·~·~- . . - . .e-V en if it IS
discrimination,
called IIOIIll!tbing else. To illuslnlte, because there is discrimination~- """""' or
mmon·"ty
. ._._ tllis_en""""' against
title one to discriminate
the bigbly qualified individual
who bappeoJs to be a male Wasp
or Weej by denying bim a poSJtion in the Univemity, because
some ol his bretlJren may be
over-represented on faculties?
Do not the rights o1 such, persons also need to be proteCted?
Those of . us who are genuinely ODIDlllltted to the demoeratic principles of equality and
the open society believe that
all discriminatory b a r r i e r s
sbould be broken down. that we
ought to treat human ~
as individuals, and judge iheln
solely 011 tbeir merits. All invidious disUnctions based !'1'011
Bel&lt;, reliPm. race, 01' national
origin sbould be ~:
1be ODiy method ol choice
should be based 1lJIOil equal opportunity and the Only test

standards are olten willinc to
oammit tbeir own double standards in order to stamp them
out 'Ibis I lahel "the triple demollstrsted coonpeteoce.
~-~--'" Some of . •L-•wwuouu.
.....,., who Ac11an Pion .
are today most vebemenUy
Unfortunately, the allirmative
"apillst fatherhood and fpr vir- action plan of HEW has bel&gt;n
tue" oammit it galore. One ver- construed to say t h a t Y~
sion ol the trip 1 e standard will judge a pe&lt;BOil by . ~

=t=:

~ ti; ~~ :;r'vid~~~\~~at~ ~

tlJings that you ta1ce seriously,
but it's no fun poking fun of
my poking fun out of you (i.e.,
it all depends on which poker
is being poked at).· A shorter
version Of this is: altlJough my
jokes are good clean fun, yours
are invariably nasty. Since my
. earlier remarks were intended
as simply "tongue-in-&lt;:beek'' observations, I bad better slip
into straight prose at tlJis point
so as to avoid getting my foot
stuck in my mouth again.
What Is tho F..IKJ?
What is the fallacy of the
~ triple standard? Roughly translated, it means -t hat since one
on moral grounds is against a
double standard, he feels be (or
she) is entiUed to stamp out
double standsrds...OO can improvise any standards at his (or
her) disposal to do so: in short,
the triple standardist says, I
will out-standani your doublestandard by tripling the ante:
that is, since my '!fKis are virtuous and true, I can use any
means in the name of my good
cause to fulJill it (Note: AIthough most right winger&amp; are
by definition double standardites, biple standard persons are
not truly left..wingenl (like myself) since they are apt to belnly the revolution; hence, they

mean, if implemented, is that
some highly taleDted individual
can be passed over for someone
else, if be is not a member of
the compensated group. What
about the rights of such an
individual? Never mind about
him, we are told, be must be
sacrifia!d to repay the centuries of discrimination. In a period of tight budgets, some universities have virtually been
warned, you will hire women or
members of disadvantaged
groups first, and you will excl!'de others, or else YOU! hmd_s
will be cut off. Columbm Umvemity actually_had its ft!nds
suspended ( which have smce
bel&gt;n restored ). and it was informed that aJ! of its private
personnel dossiers had to be
turned over to the govemmeut
for acrutiny. Other govemmental ageDcies have followed !he
lead and are now requesting
information co~ ~or_ example, the religJOUS alliliations
of i~ faculties, in violation of
the nght to pnvacy.
'There is an Olllinous aspect
to HEW's actions. Wbere are
the triple standardites on tlJis
score? If the Def~ ~
ment or the FBI 01' mvestigatory committees ol the legislature had even suggested some-----------------------

ErwiB'rithWants Merit,
Na Qudos as Job Factor
beam the _...a.aity fOI' 8Ut'h
oociety Dcldfnlly must,
aDd indeed h88 t.o.un to, unclertaR the jab al righting
tiBn. 'l'bis ia the cl_eyelapmi
..,.;aJ ~ behind "af-

-

tbin3 similar

they
baw
been IOUildly ""'..., ned for
invading the auloDDIDY ol t'!e

univemity and endinl .-lomic
fre~&gt;dom. Or "do......,,__
thoee who
that
"HEW the line .,.,..,!"" •
_ , _ t a l· int..rvention ••
~it is a &amp;ODd~
1be worst witcb-hunla's ~ .
McCarthy em justified their mvasion ol academic rr-loa;&gt; em
"moral " and ideological
_,......,
~-=---~
~-•
-·B u t they ~ we '!"'
__ ..... discrimination and m~and we want to redreal
it Well and good. So ~ L But
will you compel com
...... ,._ by
e rod i n g .-lomic...-......
pniCI!IIIII!8
witllin the univemity? How far
are you prepared to JO-:UP and
down the line? Should there be
on every faculty ol 100, 53
women, 24 Wetbnics. (Roman
CatlJolic lrisb, Italians, J&gt;ole!.
s..rbians, Croatians. Bouman!ans and Hungarians), 6 aucsDos, U blacb, 3 J_ew:s, 1 J~
hovah Witness, amstian Scientiat, Mormon, and Muslim in
rotation. 1 American Indian. 1
Eskimo or Asian in rotation.
33 short people ( ~ 5'5"),
12 fat (over 220 lhs.), 4 blind,
and 6 miscell•JW&gt;~JS?
1be moral ol the slmy is
that thoee who are willinc. to
en g a g e in tripl&amp;idandarding
may be playing a ~
and CXIUDterproductive pme:
would they be willinc to submit
to quadruple-stanclarding? U
not, why not? (I was soing to
say that to adopt such a abort
sighted approach is "to cut olf
your nose to spite your face,"
but had better not, since I can
be accused of being insensitive
to the needa of long....-! pee&gt;-

~adiall - d e aipod
to
- ....._
-*&gt;Yand
...........
__
itieB fOI' 81Mb. But the aim ol
~ction

lliJauJd be
.,._-regards

...... ..,.;aJ

racial -*itY not the -.ignal the-~ blame
upon. and tbm
of,

-mm.:

-

-=

HOHQIWII.B LO&lt;liB T .

-

•

~

srAB ~ OP NBW

YOIU&lt;

AT AI.aANY
. _ DL

~
On JllllllBIY 6, ""''"
~ •..
Malcolm J . SbemJim 1IROte to
us, 88 be did to you. in ~
tion witlJ · the implementatiOII
by ·the State University ol NYcwk at Albaey (SUNYA) ol
its AJirmative AclioD l'lopam
in beball ol minorilil:s. Subaequently we received !1om Mr.
Leon Calhoun. to wbom you
referred the matte.-, a CDPY ol
his llll!tllOl'aDII ol JllllllBIY
19,~
man,
ticizing
aor Sbemllm'a adioa. in writing
to us aDd~ witlJ Pror....
!hnDon's point ol view.
We beliew! ~ ~man's plllition to be IIOUDd. Let
us ....,U out ~:
1be Anti-Defamation
Leqoe's ""'"1.- for being .
otis

~~.::'!~_J'!..all~

....
...-.~
ination apimlt eilbel" groups 01'
----"'-indiriduals..
1be •ADL
~
___._
~,_.,___
an
•~o.,..... ..-..~

ic_....,

ainalle ~ iniimduals-wbo
. . . _ lo ..... white skin.

Here - bear in mind
tlJat ~
at
either
- ..loabd
in llerms
ol OllllCreCe .
nadts, is

==:s::=:::.,:
~be-=-=--:.n~n.e:

is an individual rilbt. • the
Supreme Conrt ... Clllllsistently held. aDd it . sbould
not be abrid!led .. mOdified ...
the t.sis ol an indiYidual's race
01' the history ol his ....,_ "Jus-

u.s.

____............,
. .....-.-.......

13 TTU1: )( ~~l"rC'
-y J.&amp;YY CV.IJ.'I .l ~

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

- ----

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

co••••ltJ. . . - -

---------tice" for a 1 roup is ~Y
DMW"inP- if it ~ injustice -..1 individuaJa. This
concept lios at the.,.,..., ol
American aDd demoeratic vsl-

'""'"""
violation ol the
moral aDd Clllllltitntional principles uponala~and"'=
~L's policy, therefore,
bas al.,..ys been to - f i r m ly quotas or olher limitaliolls
based em race, ~ « color,
and to support and demand
pmctices in employment or in
school admissicllls based solely

ues.
The ........... by Mr. Calhoun to a U.S. Supreme Court
decisioD tbat aJlepdly h e I d
ooostitntional an interpn!tatinn
~~ J~ It StaD
ol dirmative adioa. - includWhat is at stake bere is the
ing prefen!lltial ln!alment and
ability of faculties to make proracial quotas, is emJDeOUS. 1be
fessionally qualified judgments
issue before the Circuit Court
about applicants witlJout exof Appmls in tbat case [Contraneous matters intervening.
troeton " - . of &amp;Durn Pa.
Granted, we need to get rid ol on individual merit We IJelie,le o.
&amp;cy. of LDbor, 442 F .2il 159
all forms of inequality and dis- tlJat our position supports the (3d
Cir. 1971), «rr. dmW,
crimination. We should aJ:low only final guarantees against 92 S.Ct. 98 (1971) J is not the
merit and talent to be the chief discrimination and injustice f.o. question before us in the
criteria. We should treat in- ward minorities.
~the
dividusls as individuals, not as
In our view, nothing can jus- SUNYA sm.lion.
Conrt in t h a t esse
members of groups, either to tify-let a1oue initiate--injus- Supreme
no decisioD ex c e p t to
apply diacriminatiol( or to re- lice agaiiist an individual or made
the application for review.
v....e it Even though the HEW apinst a group because of skin deny
plan was ill-&lt;:aneeived, we need color or other edmic factors. Time aDd spin the u.s. Susaid that in
to &lt;lOIDi! up witlJ new 0180 to "Preferential treatment" and preme Conrt
• Writ ol certiorari. it
ensure that everyone be treated _ racial quotas in bebalf ol mi- denying
tabs DO position &lt;Rl the merits
fairly that women and minD&lt;- norilies impose o n e fonn of ol
the.,__
ity ~ be encouraged to - racial discrimination in place
compete &lt;lll equsllernJS for po- of another. Ulte classic bias, it
7
aal
sitions in univemities and other is the deliberate prefen!llce for ...
institutions of society.
· an individual ol one race, and
U, ~one- to know
Is it impossible to defend solely because of his race, over the law ol our land a laid down
the view that the chief end of an individual ol anotber race, by the U.S. Supreme Conrt on
the university is learning and ·even in CBBeS where the latter racial quotas, the ~
tM quest for luww/edRe, teach- individual is lJel;la qualj6ed in case is H"'ll- o. Supt!rilN
ing and scholar1lhip? '11ie point all other ......-_
Court of Califomia, 339 U.S.
is, those who wish to use the lllwd
la;J 4&amp;1 (1950) in whidJ the Suuniversity for other pwpoees,
~- IS. no ~........_ tllat preme Conrt cloml,y beld tllat
however commendable these
'""""
.,_
racial qldas in employment
I
ID that
may be-whether God "" coun- BladrB have bel&gt;n greatly dis- Are 011 . . ., ,.
try industry or rewlution, JD. ~"'!':t ~~ case the PJ..,..eaaiwe c;:mchange or moral justice- tion ol such bias and its COil- ol America pidoofiod a pocery
may end up by undermining tinuing after-dfecls. But . - -in~ ol itB do!mands
and destroying the university ~~,--.,___ does not ;._.;r.., that, - white elida qnit 01'
as a free and independent in- ............,..~
, _ _.
llanoll!rn!d, the hire
stitution.
as an attempted remedial-.. N...- unlil the ~.ol
ore, a new aDd ~Y delit&gt;- Nepo delb lo white ~of
emte and arlJitrary discriminacaimated the~
tion against otbem. The ~to white--~
tiaus tllat must be IISloecl in tlJis Supreme Conrt ..........•the !D"
juDcliaa ...... the pil:b!linl
~
A third-year German-pre med to be judged on his own merit granted by the ~ Clllllc:t.
Mr. Jnatice ~ted.
major is dluW supervising by accepting discrimination
editor. Stu ~. who against himoi!lf based dely on writing fOI' the~.....
special projects editor tlJis year, the color ol his skin? By what tlJat the picbtinc, if~
would •p.e nwwljl I wJ proelected to the -.maga- loP: does ame allepd "hiibeszine'&amp; lop poat by its editorial i..tice" legitimiJJe such an in- tection lo petitiaaonl' o&amp;rta to
ol 1)01board last Saturday. He de- jostiae apin8t an individual subject the
feated local editor Joe W81'De1" who h88 DO penoaal ._,....;. ting a jab ID a ...- ayatan."
by a ten to four vote.
biiitY for historic
? And
Noor lo the - - at band:
- dhoa is puhlisbed bi-weeldy; .......,;ally haw does~~
lnaHH
•N••CftiiiJI'~
~~
· at a univaaity in a aibatioD
"•Cllllbibute
a weoidy
·
• tinn Ititcan
a where tlJon is DO erideiJce tbaf 1971. adlh-' tD ~
whale lot to the itudmt tt.n h88 t - any deliherate deals, . . . . and dinii:IDnl. you
practice · ol anti-minority dis- .,._.,.. - - • it h. tlJe
nplacM Carl RoetW
pJa o1 the 8laiB uaivaaity'a
in .,.....aJ (~-- JO. .""'.; I)
onJ.,..L

-o.-5

;,w

BergerIs Named

Editorc-1 ethos

_.,..,

aoaaar ·r. .w.&amp;aLftT
w-.~,~--

--

SfiS.Uf-

_,::; ::a.a:...r.;;

_baait,

=~

..,__ ......

t'o:'?oociety

�==-=-o:~~
little ..... for lbe Ullhlersity,
• ~'Wet I'' tuwet
fll B!ale tiCOIIIlllly.

lar--

'""' UDhlersity ..... accrued an. _ . . . aDd cliotrust . . . ..,.
salt fll _ . years of student
- ClCIIIIiDIMs
As • topublic
it
,...., iDstitution
.tion

m..

iDla-ests SIJIIIl : : : pri-

vate . c:o~Jeca;

aDd universities
aDd • Board of ~ whidt
bas bwtiticwwUy demonslmted
. . . _ t of an elitist coocept or
hilbor education asoaciated
with -.public institutions,
'lhore am be 110 convincing
~ apimt lbe necessity
to catt- lbe forces of lbe academic aDd professional segoflbe Ullhlersity to prolect ita aDd !heir interests. But
such pmlec:tioo is n e e d e d
apiD&amp;t eldeJna] lorces. Threats
of ~ cutbada; and inlnlsiaa&amp; into educational au~ come fnml pressures in
lbe locislature and the executive arm of lbe State governmont, r rom individuals and
pooqJS ladrinc an understandinc of lbe vital societal importance of bieber education in
bach iJBnJcticm aDd """"'""'Thus, it behooves SPA ..} a
i*ole&amp;iioual organization
to masider its situation carefully_ It and its amstitueucy
en.t as members or a University DOt . . employees or state
~Where and against
wbom, tt-elore, sboold lbe
battle be foucht? Is it wise to
assume tmthjnkingfy a union
model based upon industrial
pr1ldice ..- public employee associatioos? Or should SPA seek
a , _ model lor its relationships whidt rest upon lbe profes&amp;imal service of its members
and their
fnndamental
-aca.....
• members
ol an
demic corporation which requin!s a special kind or autonomy fnml State government?
lu effect. is not lbe real opposition the State in the sense that
collective bargaining implies a
competition lor available resources? lu such a competition,
does it DOt """"' aU best il the
University faces the State as a
united orpnimtion and blunts

effort&amp; to crealle an artifil:ial
cliatinction t.et- staff aDd
administration?
-FartM-aiSN?
Till&amp; lllpiJ
ID terms of lbe foreaoiD&amp; position, three pootmes Would .,..
pmr JDOBt ' eBectift for SPA in
its relationships with lbe State

University administration and
the State or New YOlk.
Tbe first am be called, as
noted above, "eulichleood ...J..
ism." SPA must assume an acgressive role in an ellort to ~
teet lbe economic and olber employment conditions of its
members. While SPA bas this
fundamental oblip.tioo to its
members, lbe administrative
staff not included in SPA bas
a responsibility of a lllllll8l"rial
kind to furtber the effectiol the University as an orpnization. At times the two interests will conflict. ID such instances SPA must take a hard

DistxJrtal
Benak's L~ Positinn

Error inS
EDlTOil:

ID the ReporWs front page
artide of March 9 dealing with
the Seo&gt;ate's
on lbe Library resolutions, an error was
made which bad lbe effect or
mdically distorting lbe Senate's
action. One IJIUql'8ph in the
resolution on o u r Libraries'
funding called upon the President to "realign internal aUocalions" il DeCeSSiliY in order to
"preclude a n y lurtber downgrading" or our Libmries' holdings and services.
It is true, as the Reporkr
stated, that an amendment was
rQP08Ild which would have del:,ted this puagraph. T h a t
amendment was alao deb8ted,

...,u;

:..=..tt; ~,::"~J

accepting the original request,
if they rejected the amendment
offered. And, contrary to what
the ReporWs story stated, the
Senate defeated t h i 8 amendL·
and
ment by a ,_vy ~ .
went on to rote the ongmal
resolution in toto, word lor word
tinchanged, with
its implications unde&lt;stood.
Why? Tbere are ~~ least two
reasons, both or which emerged
in ~course or the deba!e. Tbe
first IS_ that the Libmries_ are
t~ uruque _core or the UJl!verSity, """"!'tial to all ~ Wll'!"'sity can live .and f~ Without many things, but tl IS DOt 8
university at aU if it .Joo:s not
aocumulate and use aU tt can
ol human Imowledgc-and lor
practical pwpo81!l! tha,t ~
it must put lbe I..ihraries m tts
top priorities' category. By wting lbe resolution as i~ stood.
by stipulating that f1mds for
the Libmries must come, if
need be, at the ezpense of all
t1te otlte openltioos oflbe University. the Senate was aftirm.
ingthis.
A resolution deploring cuts
in the budget is just1nother
"mooheebood aDd a p p I e-pioe"
resolution. By ezplicitly retaining this conllOYersial paragraph
the Senate was putting itself
on the line: the library is our
top priority in hard cmJt tenns.
Tbe aeoood reason to emerge
from debate was that the Libraries bad ~y suffered t/.iaptoporlionak budget
c u I &amp;. Tbe iMerall cut in lbe

an

SUNYAB budget w a s 5.5'?oTbe cut in the Libraries' book
budget was 26%; ie. apprm&lt;i-

mately 5 times what our unit
as a whole is being asked to
absorb. Nor was this a targeted
cul Tbe original budget request
lor books was $943,000. Tbe cut
imposed in lbe executive budget was $243,000. In o t he r
words - blunt ones - some
clown in Albany &amp;Jbitmrily decided that we shoUd buy only
$700,000 worth or books and
cut the budget in nice lazy

"""'«!

~
This IS part or a. long-term
'I1!e Libraries' ~
IS a tempting target: l!iL .,..

pattern.

:"""~~~-:
SIJ«ial interest to nobody, and

therelore assumed to he an easy
bit of oooessential lluiL Last
weelc the Faculty Senate f!""maUy a?e&lt;f as a represen~tiYe

o! the mterests ol lbe umverSlty as a whole, selflea;ly es...._~-- special · terest. It de~u'6
•
'!'
clared the Li_branes a nole ""'
~~u~gere and ~ ~ ~rocess de~~'Ar'~ ~

individusl interest it eqilicitly
allinned, in terms o1 dollars
and cents, the primacy of the
ac:ademic oommunity.
'lbat is why a simple conec-lion or lbe Repor!D's error in
reporting will not sullice. What
the S e n a t e did was in lbe
noblest lladitioo or -enic
lile and il lbe Reporter bad an
editorial pqe it would surely
COIIJIDOilt 1!PClD this action. It
is rare enouch. in our society
for ....., to act in 1be ........,.;
i n - . Tbe Senate did that
last ..-_ Should it DOt recemo
its due recop&gt;itioo? I . _ it
will

�6

a..--

................ ~poliOoe,

....Jae I

hiMww upCIIl

theBe

to lhe .........,_., lhe Unnoenity, aDd
.... thonby - - lhe tdiDialllhip .,
lhe Unnoenity aDd ita aJIIDI!Dl (or
. . _ .......... ~ develop.
.-L'Die ....,._ is Sllbmitlillg
lhe ........ Finlt Dnlft ., propcad
Artides ., ~ At its April 211, 1972, lhe oammi.tlioe ..... - t o n ! r i e w - to
tbis dNft freD 1be Om-sity com~ ...... ....Joe whOever JeYis.

_

.-me.

..,.

_,_

It is lhe ..... ., lhe cammitlloe to
doaip
• -mainlaiDS
lhe aolf-41!8aitiaD
., wbicb
ll8llbersbip
by
~ -~ to CXJIItinue lhe
~ -"'' I I
o &lt;JI mda present

_.,_t,aDdloedmd
1be fmachiae b Um-sity aovemlo illdade atudmls aDd sbdf.
A ..;or &lt;11 lhe propcad
~ &lt;11 Uaivenity-wide

_........,t

iatD~tbe-~lbe

. . - - - lllnlotun!s. It is
.hapal h i ...,.. • ~ will be
in l&lt;i*iWIIIDc lhe -.risbos
., lhe Unnoenity CIIIIIIIIUDity.
'l1le .............. &lt;11 lhe cammit11oe are:

..-...m..

Williaa

a.-

(hculty

....., ~ (Lillnrios),

Seua.le),

Peter Cat-

(llo!idlol Sludeuls), Sua Marie
Gicuelli (a.ttb Scionca;), I u n e
Crawfanl (Millanl .Fillmooe College
Stmlo!nts). lolil:mel Jlit.y ( Oassified
Employees), bn :O..Waal (Undergraduate Sludonls). Robert Fil:zpatrid&lt; (Admiaisliation), O&gt;arles Fogel
(A.............,.), Ronald Gentile
(R
.~ ewl 9blltie&amp;). Marilla Giles
(}')........._Sid), Nicbolas Goodmm (Namml Sr::ii!Dces aDd Matbemalial), .Ruold Gubenooan &lt;Undergmm.le Sludonls), Georce K051U10vicb (Giaduale Stmlo!nts). Ruth Ellen l.oo!wmbmnn (UD!Ia-paduate Studeals), Robert Lipp (Alumni), HowI

~

MuD (U.aDdl~).
Eliileae ManeD ~ Sid).
lalm Yillipn (Sociol Sc:ieDces and
Admjnislntion), Marjorie MD: (Pro......_ Sid), M8lcalm Morris(l.aw
Stmlo!nts), Edwmd O'Neill {Engineerinc • Applied Scieaceo) ,l._m Pov- - (c....te Sludonls), Gerald
Salluelli (SUNYAB Council), leanSd..&amp;r (ca..ified Employ.
1o1m Salliwn (Ads and Let-

-&gt;.
-.).

'l1le s-ine Cammitlloe CXJDSisls ol
.......... Cicuelli, ~ Good(Eieded o-itlioe v-.... CbairMr.. Koaa.aovic:b, Dr. MD:
( .......... ~ a.i!mm), and

-&gt;.

-L-- .
.......... aam-.
_

Sec:ciaa 1. Tewa.
Aa -s iD. .._ A1tidos ., GoY..... .......,.....,;&amp;ed, tbe

-=

lallooritic
..........
L -a....-..• 'l1le GolaDor &lt;JI tbe
Bllde&lt;JI~YadL

'
............ ., ....__- 'l1le Boanl
&lt;11 ~ &lt;11 Slate Um-sity ol

~YadL

-a.....u.w.-

c:.
'Die.a...c.lloo- ol
lhe Slate ~ &lt;11 New Ycft.
d. "'U..n-ity Caoml:il.- 'l1le Coanc:il &lt;11 tbe Slate· 0-....;ty &lt;11 NYad. ........ ia PIOrided b by
8edila 1&amp;6 &lt;11 lbe ~ Yad. EdueatiaD
... "'Piaidomt.- 'l1le cbief admiaiatratiwo . . _ ol lhe Slate Um-.ity
&lt;11 New Yad. .t 11u1Wo.
t ~-- n.e SlUe unn•
&lt;11 New Yad. .t Bl6h

u..

.

c. .,._., }')...........

~

tiaoa.• ...... a-te }') ........... , .

a.....- .,

...

......... Ooala:
lbe Slate
U..n..iV' el New Yad. .t Ball'.io.
h. -a'lil 8lrYice .....,_ , .
..........- 'l1te Chit 8irrice Employ- .
.\....;.tim ClttoPor ., lbe Slate
U~ei. New . Y-.k.t........_,:

'l1te

91*
&lt;11 New Yad.a......._
•b. lJall8l ~All----.,.
lhe Sdllial ol ~ se.lrat AsSDc:iation ., sa.. tJioiwallil.y ., New
Yad. .t ...... • ololiooed by lhe
......tilutbt ..Vor ...,..._ &lt;11 lhe
School ol Jliodildr7 Stadeod ~
tion.
.
c:. Factdty. AD ............. &lt;11 lhe V"'"
inc hculty ollhe Side Um-sity ol
New Yad. .t ....... • olofiooool by
tbe by-18ws . , lhe ~ Sellalle .,
1be Stale ~ ol New Yad. at
BulfaJo.
d.~

Stoooloals. AD .............

ol lhe Gmdnale Stadeod A...;mr..
ol 1be State UDMnity &lt;11 New Yad.
at Bulralo • olofiooool by the CD!SiitRtion ....Vor ...,..._ &lt;11 lhe Gmdade
StudeDt Aaociation.
e. 1.- ~ AD .......... &lt;11
lbe School ol
Stadeod Bllr A»sociation ., lhe State u.u-.ily ol
New Yad. at ......, as olofiooool by
lhe ......titution ..Vor by-18ws ollhe
Scbool ol
Stadeod Bar ~

u.

u.

tion.
f. lledictJl Stoooloals. AD llll!lilbeis
ol lhe School ., MeoliciDe Sludoat
Polity ollhe Stale U.u-.ity &lt;11 New
Yooi: at Bulralo as olofiooool by lhe
CliJDStitution ., lhe School ., Medil:iDe
Student Polit;y.
g. llillt&gt;N ~ CoiJrcr St.
tknU. AD llll!lilbeis &lt;11 tbe Mi11an1
Fillmore CoDowe Stadeod AaociatiaD
ol lhe State U.Divasity &lt;11 New Yad.
at Bulralo as olofiooool by tbe CD!SiitRtion ....Vor by--... &lt;11 tbe Millanl
Fillmore Col1eae Stadeod Asaaciatian.
b. Pro{esao..I Slatf. AD ..............
ol the )&gt;101.......... std - clofiDod by
the by-laws ol tbe }')olesoiuual Sid
Seua.le ol lhe State U.u-.ity ol New
Y orlt at BulfaJo.
i. U~ Statleats. AD
............ ol lhe Sludoat AaociatiaD
as by lhe
"""b•liowt ....Var
by-Jaws ol lhe Stadeod Asaaciatian.
j. U'"-nily td &amp;ffalo _....._ AD
membeis &lt;11 the U.u-.ity at Bulralo
Alumni Association as by lbe
by-laws ol lhe Um-sity at Bulralo
Alumni ASfiOI"iatirm
&amp;ction 3. Go...nWrc llotlia
For lbe J10.1i110!1!S ol these by--...
lbe followinc _ . shall ... bebalf o1 the
clofiDod
in Artide I, Sec:. 2:
a. Civil ~ ~ Association for Clas&amp;ified ~
b. School olllenliotry A»sociatioo (or Dental Studml&amp;..
c:. Faculty Sellalle b Votimc Flo!&gt;ulty.
.
•
d. Graduate Stadeod AaociatiaD b
Graduate Studeals..
e. School ol u. Stadeod Bar A»sociation (or u. Stadmls.

eo........ · .,

1'1:11-

f. School ol Medil:iDe ity (or Mediall Sladmls.

g. Millaid .Fillmooe Col1eae Stodent A...;mr.. (or UiDud .Fillmooe
CoDowe Sladmls.
b. }') , . I Sial( SellaJie (or Piof......... Sid.
i. Sti1do!at A...;mr.. (or Uuolergnduate Stadottola.
j. Boanl &lt;11 ~-el 1be Uai-..ity at Ba6lo .AJao.Ji A_..;.t;m

-L .-.--.....
-~

1loit

'l1le

....

aa..ti-- ....--.~

lheU~~ot.llbe:
L

AhmJai •

in

•

d.~

e. Gadt.R sa..lema
f.
Sliidoala

b. W&amp;e (5) ~ E
5
.......... beeleclad by6e a..tiled
I

Rlsi'

)CCL

c:.OIIe (1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . be a

~
Slillloolt ......... ·--~
SludoniL
cL ~ &lt;«~&gt;

---.., .. v•

inc hculb' ...... by .... ~e. Bilbt (8) - - - - ......... be

GmduUe ~ .......... by the
Gmdade Sbilllaol&amp;.
f. Olle (1) . . . . . _ ...., ..,.. be a
u. SliidoDl ...... by the u. Stodeats.

c. Olle (1) ......,_ ..... oltall be a
Mediall Stildooalelo!dllll by the Jlled..
icol Sludoal&amp;.
b. .,_ (4) ..-....s ......... be
MiDanl l'iiJ.aie OAwa s.-....... by Millanl l'l&amp;oaole

eaa..o

~

i. Tea ( 10) - - - . &lt;11 the ~

~S&amp;.-elo!dllllbytlte~

r....-..ISDIL
j. SiDeea (16) _ , . . . _ ..........
be ULMIEi...,.._ SlaoletiB elo!dilll by
tbewodet~~

1&lt;. Olle (I) ....._ ..... ot.ll be

apmber&lt;JIIhe~lll....,

Ahmmi Asaociodila ...... by lhe
Aluami.
L Olle ( 1) .....a..:r ......... be a
~ ol tbe s...R I'Nltaoil&amp;ol
A......;.tion aoli!c:t!ll by the s..de
}')olesoiuual ~ ..... shall
saw: as an ....._. willtaal - .
m.. Olle ( I ) .....a..:r ..... il.n be a
~ ol the Ciwil Serrice ~
ees Aaociation ao1i!c:t!11 by the cml
Service ~ A_..;.t;m .....
sbaJl - - ....._. willtaal
wte.
Sediols 3. Oflian ot • u~
A.aeably.
Tbere shall be a a-u- _. a
Soaelaiy ollhe Um-sity ~­

Set:bc.o 4. h - o a - ot 11or u~
siry Aarably,
"' 'l1le U.u-.ity ~ shall
at its disaetiaD ..tYise lhe Pnsideat,.
lhe Cooncil, lhe ..,...,..,. the Ba.d
ol Truslees aDd the
.n
natiss ol_.)....,.... tDihe lhliI

o.-....r -

WDi.tyarcm&amp;IO'_whicll_
alf- thma . , ita ClllllllituI!IICios..
b. 'l1le Um-sity ~ ..... .
at ils diacretiaa ..moe ils - - .
e!lcies-cm - - &lt;11....,.... t D than

ODe

" ' - ' ( 15) .......... oiQs (eoduoive

.,. .,.,_

en-

--.. be
'lrithia .....
d-. len (10) .......... oiQs (ea:fu&amp;.
ive., .,.,_ ~ &gt;be-

-me if.....,.__,...,.,.

..... the
in the jwlgmeal ., the l!:aadive
Ccmomitlloe or lhe
ol tbe
Um-sity~.
d. A ~ ol the -mg mombars &lt;11 tbe Um.-it:J ~ obo1I

a.u-

~-----.

ol the U.Divasity ~e. aa..tib- &lt;11 1be Ullivasity
~ olJtaia lhe pivilo&amp;e;
., lhe IIDar aDd ., ~ ... lbe
IIDar &lt;11 1be O.m-sity AsaomiJiy without"'* .t BQ ..........,.. ftg1liar or
"'JJ!lCiaa - . IJIICI!I recacnition by
lhe a.i!mm &lt;11 the Um-sity A»sombly, or by .........,.. ol lbe UniWDi.ty Almmi:Jiy at f. 'l1le Um-sity AsaomiJiy IIIIIY
such ..... (or lhe _ . ,

-me.

d"iiii·......,.. as it_,-...._....,.,._

suy. Oniea; ~ PIOrided by
those by. . . . . . . lhe Um-sity A»sombly lhe la&amp;t editioD ol Roberts'
lbJies ol Order, Rerioed, ..,pies..
g. 'Die lllinut2s ol mda - . ol
lhe U.u-.ity ~ shall be
_ . . aYailable ... ptiinofinn iD. .n
Unnoenity puHicatirws

....
.__,..__

-IV.~

Sec:ciaa l. lWaJtioe ec-.utto.e
'fbere ...... be J!:aadive
., lhe Uai_,;ty .Aa.!m-

y.

•••

c:. Tbe Um-sity

~

.....

DDt CliiiiSido!r h i ...,within lbe ~ jw" •••
ol its ......tilut:uti&amp;.
d. 'l1le u..r-.ity ~ .......
at ils diaoretimt,. .....-. - - . . .
_ , . freD ita
n
, llad;.., or freD their

..,...

e. n.e u~ ~
be lhe iudlle ., lhe U
i + . , ils

-&gt;

~
ala
""""""' by lhe ~ . , tbe lhli_,;ty A&amp;mbly. Natice ., ........

L

~

bly.

b.

,~

c--;u-

'Die l!:aadive

.......-~

., •

lWaJtioe

~

ol lhe ............,

..... be
~

i 'Die ..........., u-411#1iDo, _ . 11Gtiii!C ....,. in .,_ ., - -

I

lili!iilbenr..

Sec:ciaa 5. , _ . . .

fl# llor U---

PROPOSED GOVEM. . . ..xJY' STATI

····.

siryA....wy
L'Die~

E&gt;IEQIT1

....,

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

thn!e (3) ....... - - . . , _ 9oplembor tt.uap IIQ. l!.dt .......

u-m.c -.a iotdtiole a
tbe

~

- ' "-

c:a.u-., .... ~-

~

b. w~ DDtiae ., .....- - iapob.nbe_..,._._..

ive.,.,...

.... len (10) .......... . , . { - - -

_,
.-..
,_,

~-&gt;be­

.aa-

..... tbe ~ Tbe
DDtiae
shaD ClliilaiD. lhe ageada b h i

~&lt;J

1---

1111 a-ilioe - .

-

the

c:. Spa:al - - . . . , lhe 1Jiona..
........ _
time by lhe
the Uai_ . ~. by .... E.utlioe
ec...aitlioe, or pi!liti!a &lt;11 ...,_
(15) ......... . , the~ As-

am.- .,

g. ......... Sliidoala

CoDowe

--- .-.--...

~

~
L~~_.~

llity~-be

u.

~

., . .

sc:heclulecl ... p

c:. llo!idlol Sliidoala

a!.MiDanl

•

u-m.c ...
u-m.c.

b.a..ilod~

i.}')'

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

. &amp;dioa1 ..........

Sec:ciaa 1

Oam-

-- . . . . . - Siprioi!I&lt;JI 1971
................ Tlllll liWce ... lhli_ . Goo+
'l1le ..-itllle
.......... wilh tbe _..;bility
., ohftillc artidM ., - - (or
tbe ~- n - will pmvide.
~ lhe ....... Clllllllitu........ &lt;JIIbe ~ ....- mil

..

._..._...,.c-. _..;q ......... .,.ua.,.,
Lc.....-r s'sc::a&amp;M...._.
..... ., lied_..,_.,
.... u.n-iV ..,..,.. _...,........._ __

...... .,..
'De . . . . .

Sto-

~

j. Undor...,.._ S11a1ooi1a

Sec:ciaa.1
'Ihae ot.D be a ~ A.
- ~g

~

ololnaed .......

~.,

lhe U..n...ity ~- A pi!liti!a
ot.ll.tbtlolhe-tDbe--w- lbe . . - - - - . . UaloM
lhe petition ... • . . , . . . - - .
lltipalalm
a ..._
doe;
.-iagot.ll
_
_-*
. . ...-_._

-.a....~·---~~...._,,.,_

...

,...._,~,"-

.

\

�.

GJ:)~ '­

7·

~,-~

ii 'I'M&gt; (2) IDOIIIbers deaipWed by
the Presidoat, lll!ninc without - iii One (1) _ . _ elected from
the Uni"""'itY AasDbly - t a tiYI!II ol the a-ified Employees_
iv. One (1) _ . _ ol the Council
elected by the Council who ahall ....,
without-Y. 0oe ( 1) ............ elec:ed by and
from the . Um-aty ~y repreaentati¥81 ol the Deutal. Law and
Medical Studmta.
vi Four ( 4) IDOIIIbers elected from
the Uni-m.ty ~y - t a li""" qf the hmlty.
vii One (1) _ . _ ol the Geoerai
Alumni Board. elected by the Geoerai
Alumni Boerd lll!ninc without - viii One ( 1) _ . _ elected from
the Uni-m.ty AasDbly - t a li..,. ol the Gradiiate Students.
i%. One ( 1) ............ elected from
the University Assembly - t a li..,. ol the Millard Fillmore College
Students.
lL '!'- (2) ........... elected from
the University ~y - t a li..,. ol the Profeaoioaal Staff.
xi. One ( 1) member elected from
the University Assembly reprmentaU.... or the UD&lt;Iergnduate Students.
m. The Cbairmao and the Secretary ol the Uoi-aty ~Y u'officio and without - c. OflU:en of ~ Ez.ecvtiDe Com- '
mitlee
i. The Prmident ahall be Cbairmao
ol the Emocuti"" Commitw.
ii The Cbairmao ol the Uoi-aty
"-ubby ahall ...., • Cbairmao or
the ~ CommiUee in the abaeoce ol the Prmident.
d. POU1t!n oN1 DuJiea of tk Ez&lt;!CU~ioe COIIUI!IiU«

i. The Emocu~ Committee sball
with, CDallt with and IMhiae
the President ... any matten ol tmi-_

ERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

'""""

_,.;ty policy which the ~
Committee may vote to Cl0118ider,
which are '"''" • w !led to it for .,....
sideraticm by the Uni.-ity "-nbly, or which are plaaod belore it by
the PrmidenL All matten 80 Cllllllidered sb8n be included in the Emocua... Committee minutes, a n d BU&lt;:b
mattem may be teYiewed by the Uoive.ntity Asoembly. The EsecuU... Committee sball send ""Pies ol ita minutes
to all membets of the Univenity Assembly.
ii The Esecutive Committee may
~ information from !UJY member
ol the University stall or any student,
and may invite any pe1801l to sit with
it for the pwpoee of OODSUitaticm and
advice. Committees and otbets wbo
tep0rt to the Univemity A&amp;ai!mbly
ahall Pte8ellt such reports to the Eltecu~ Committee for tmnsmittal to
the Assembly with . the reoomUJeDC)a.
tiaus of the Esecutive Committee.
The Esecutive Committee sball communicate its views to the Univemity
Assembly at all tegUiar meetings and
at such special meetings as may be
"""""""' and appropriate.
iii The Esecutive Committee sball
place mattetB on the agenda of lhe
Univeroity Assembly.
iv. The EDlCUtive Committee &amp;ball
serve as tbe committee on committees.
St!ction 2.
There shall be no standing &lt;XIID·
m i - of the UnivetSity Assembly
other than the Executive Committee.
St!ction 3. Ad Hoc Committees
The Assembly or Eltecutive Com- mittee may esiBbliBh od hoc &lt;XIIDmittees to prepare reports on particular
issues for the information or the University Assembly, or to recommend
policies on particular issues to the
Assembly.
Article V.

Elections ond Tenns of Office

of the University Assembly

Section 1. Elections
a. Elections to the University Air
sembly sball be conducted by the
&lt;XII1Siituency governing bodies as defined in Article I, Section 3.
b. Tbe Chairman and the Secretary
shall be elected from the membership
of the University Assembly by a majority vote of all members of the University Assembly on or before May 1
of each year.
c. Unless otherwise provided herein, election of the members of the
E:recutive Committee of the University Assembly shall be conducted by
the governing bodies of the respective
coostituencies as defined by Article I,
Section 3 and according to such procedures as lbose governing bodies shall
define.

•

St!ction 2. Terms of OflWe
a. Members of the UnivetSity Assembly shall serve for two ( 2) years
in staggered terms in lbose cases
where a single constituency has more
dian one representative. Members
shall aasume office on May 1. Each
constituency shall determine whether
or not its representatives shall be
eligible for ~
b. Tbe Chairman and the Secretary
of the Univemity Assembly shall serve
for ooe (1) year, and shall not serve
for lbao two ..,.,_..live terms.
c. Elected membets of the Emocutive Committee shall serve for one
(1) year.
.
St!ction 3. Vacuncia
a. When a member of the University Assembly representing a coostituency vacates bis position, lbst constituency shall provide for the aelection of a p&gt;ember or the oonstituency
to fill out the remainder of the term.
b. When a meniiJer of the 'Eltecutive
Committee representing· a constituency vacates bis position, the University Assembly representatives of lbst
consti.tuency shall elect one of their
n~ to fill out the remainder of
the term, unless the gowmiog body
or lbst constituency is be{eio empowered to. ~ect E:recutive CommiUee
membets and shall bave made provisioos for filling such vacancies.
St!ction 4. Remoucl
It shall be the obligation of elected

- t a l i " " " to attend all meetings
of the University Assembly. U an
elected member of the University As-IIOIDbly is alam.t flom any two ( 2)
.....-:utive meetings of the University
Assembly or three {3) meetings all
year, without satisfactory ezplanation
of BU&lt;:b abeeooe to tbe Chairman of
the University Assembly, be shall be
dropped automatically from IDI!II1Mship; and bis constituency shall be
notified thereof.
ArtldeVI.
St!ction I. Proposal
of

Amendments.
Any member of the UnivetSity Assembly may propose an amendmenL
A proposed amendment shall be submitted to the Chairman in writing
not less than thirty ' ( 30 ) days before
the meeting at which it is to be presented for action by the UnivetSity
Assembly. U proposed by at least fiv•
t5) percent of the membership of the
University Ass em b I y, it must be
placed on the agenda of the oert
tegUiar meeting. No vote shall be
taken on any proposed amendment
uoless tbe written notice of the meeting iocludes a copy thereof. A proposed amendment may be acted upon
at any tegUiar or special meeting of
the University Assembly and requires
a two-third&amp; majority vote of the members present for acceptance.
St!ction 2. Adoption of A mendments.
An amendment accepted by the
University Assembly shall become ef.
fective if approved by a two-third&amp;
majority of the constituency governing bodies as defined in Article II,
Section 3 above within 180 days of
its acceptance.
Review of the
Artides of Governance
Tbese by-laws shall be reviewed

Article VII.

two ( 2 ) years after their adoption
by a Review Committee representative of the Coostituencies as defined
in Article U above. The lteview Committee &amp;ball be appointed by the Executive Committee of the University
Assembly. Tbe Review Committee
shall recommend to the UnivetSity
Assembly such changes as it shall
deem necessary.
Article VIII .

Rolificotion

Tbe University Governance Com' mittee finds the following ratification
procedures acceptable:
L ( i) For the Central Administration, as in the memorandum of underslalldiog of October 21, 1971 to President Robert L. Ketter;
(ii) For the classi.{U!d emp/J)yees,
as in the letter from Mr. Edward
Dudek of September 22, 1971;
(iii ) For the dental studentB, lbst
the School of Dentistry Student Council conduct a referendum of its members·

( i~) For the faculty, as in the letter
from Professor William Baumer of
October 5, 1971;
( v) For the graduate students, the
Graduate Student Association w i II
conduct a referendum of its members;
(vi) For the laUJ students, lbst the
School of Law Student Bar Association will conduct a referendum of its
members·
(vii) For the medicalatudents, lbst
the School of Medicine Stodent Polity will conduct a referendum of its
membetB;
(viii) For the Mi.lJJud Fillmore Colkge ttwkntB, lbst the Millard Fillmore College Stodent Association will
conduct a referendum of its members·

profeuionol stoff, as
in the letter of Dr. Norman Hostetter
or October 26, 1971;
(x) For tbe UlllkrgroduiJte students,
lbst the Student AIM&gt;ciation will conduct .a referendum of its membetB.
n. Tbe Final Dtaft of Articles of
Governance will-be forwarded to each
of the above named agencies for submission to constituencies· in referenda.
Oooe submitted, the reports of the
results of referenda conducted by each
agency must be submi~ to the. Uni(iz) For the

veniity ~ Committee by
(date to be cWatmined).
m The Artida o1 a - - . &amp; will
go into elfect if and cmly ,if naile ol
the ' above named ...,...,;.. ~ a
._live vote by (date to be clelermined).
~

. L (i.) The memorandum ol understanding, OdOOer 21, 1971 to President Ketter from Chairman Mis, atated. lbst it is the Committee's understanding "tbat the PI'OPI*II tatification procedures are acceptable to you
(and); the Govemaooe Committee
will ""P'ict to receive written CODfinnation or disapproval of the articles
of governance from you after tbey are
submitted to the five constitnencW
(by tbe teo agencies) named in tl&gt;e
proposed tatification procedures."
n. Tbe letter from Mr. Edward
Dudek, . September 22, 1971, states:
"At a meeting of the Boani of Directors of C.S.E.A. SUNY1AB Chap.
ter, held Monday, September 13, it
was the unanimous decision of the
Boerd lbst we go on record as wishing
to ratify the Governance proposal by
a majority of the ballots received."
A memorandum of understanding,
October 4, 1971 to C.S.E.A. from Mix,
Chairman, states:
"We undetBtaod lbst it is the intention of C.S.E.A. to provide an opportunity to all classified employees,
even those wbo are not members of
C.S.E.A., to indicate approval or disapproval of the proposed Articles of
Governance. Tbe majority lbeo will
be of all those voting.
IV. Tbe letter of October 5, 1971,
for the Faculty Senate E:recutive
Committee states:
"At its meeting or 22 September
1971, the Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate coosidered the question of ratification procedures for proposed Articles or Governance for the
University Community. ln · dealing
with tbia, the Senate Esecutive Cammittee viewed any sucb proposals as
being essentially, 80 far as the faculty
is concerned, amendments to the bylaws of the voting faculty of the University. Co~U~eqUently, it is the determination of the Eltecutive Committee lbst the procedures ~
in lbose by-laws for their amendment
shall be followed with regard lo the
University Articles of Govemance.
Specifically, Ibis means lbst 8llch Axtides will be presented to the Senate
by a committee with such reoommendatioos as the committee deema
appropriate, and lbst if the Senate
acts affirmatively on tbe proposal, it
will then go to the entire wting fac.
ulty for mail balloL U a majority
of those wbo respond to the mail
ballot are in favor of tbe proposal, it
will be considered to bave pa-t 80
far as the wtiog faculty of the University are Clli&gt;CII&lt;DIId."
IX. The letter of October 26, 1971
from Dr. Norman Hostetter for tbO
. Professiooal Stall Senate atates:
"'Ibis is to inform you lbst the Stall
Senate is williog to conduct a referendum to determine if the .....aitu~ency approves of the Articles. Such a
referendum would be canduded under
the following oooditiaus:
1) That all agencies condudiog
referenda agree to a CIOIIIIIIOil time
scbedule for conducting the refetal-

dum.
2) That it be clearly stated prior

to the referendum wbat tbe rmults
of the referendum mean to lbst agency.
3) That the Professional Stall Senate would bave sullicient time to poll
its members regarding any and all
changes in each Article or Govemaooe
before the final tatification vote is
scbeduled.
4) That sullicient opportunity be
given for an opea diacuasion of all
the Articles regardless of constituency membetBbip.
5 l That the Professiooil Stall Senate's GoVernance Committee a.ve as
its agency to conduct tbe """"'"""Y
administrative procedures with regard

to 1118\'tiogs._ . .. ~:'.•.••

�8

- ~

Student Housing Plans
Delayed by Sub-Board

JOO OzltJines,

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
The dream of a

st:w1ent cor-

poration running 50 units. of
housing next fall seems a little
less c e r
i n this week. Sub

rl:

Board I (SBI) voted Monday
night to table a p..,_} for
the independent housing_. corporation but did vote $300 to
educate tbe student body about
the idea and to conduct a poll
to obtain student views em the
situation.
Operating under a t i g b t
ecbedule SBrs Housing Committee hoped to get its incorporation papers and by-laws
approved Monday ao it could
bold a referendum next Monday.- The ballot would b a v e
asked the student body to approve allocation of up to $100,000 to "begin certain invest,.
menta needed for housing." U
this passed, the group hoped
to purchase or lease housing
units during April and tben
work on remodeling during the
summer. At the same time, the
incorporation papers would be
processed and the student,.run
rorporation-Unicom-would
be bom. End result, 50 units of
housing for up to 200 students
would open in September. ·
This tinie table now may
have to be pushed back or altered.
Monday night's debate focused on two ronfticts - should
Unirom be totally independent
of SBI?; and shOuld the housing corporation have a recall
mechanism for its board members? A special SBI sub-rom.,Pttee was set up to discuss
tbese questions and report at
a special meeting next Monday
night.
Of the two issues, autonomy
is the most substantial. In late
fall, SBI commissioned DrayfA?n Bryant Associates, a Philadelphia architectural finn, to
work up a proposal to solve the
critical shortage of student housin_g. It alloca1ed $3,000 to the
· projed and gave the finn three
months to rome up with an
idea. On. Friday, the final draft
of the proposal was delivered,
recommending a totally autonomous student housing development corporation.
Primary author of the proposal, J . Michael Haggans ,
U /B architecture grad student
and employee of Bryant Associates, on hand to defend his
~tion befo~ SBI, strongly
rejected any ties 'between Uniron'l and SBL "It would be a
~ mistake if something as
1mpo~tant as a student-controlled and operated housing
development corporation becomes involved in· tbe day-today and sometimes petty struggles among student governments," be contended.
Graduate Student Asaociation
President Michael N icolau
wasn't ao sure. He. defended
baving representstives from all
Btudenf · governments on the
board and argued for closer
ties with SBL
•
Housing committee members
stuck to Hsggans' p..,_} and
reiterated the need to keeP student politiciaJ)s out of the housing corporation. The commit,.
tee chairwoman, Jennifer Washbum, said that the Nirolau proposal would " cheapen the
quality of the board . . . . People
ALL STAR GAME
The Community Action Corps will
hold Its first annual All Star Game,
culml118ting five months of Sunday
ba.-11 for fifth and sixth grad·
ers, In Clark Gym, SUnday at 10

:;.,:,

~t2 r:_':;.". ~ch~

been competins In the eN; progn~m will be selected for the All·
Sta.r line-up.

Libraries on

with a real """"""' for housing
should be on iL"
Other SBI members questioned the funding figure in tbe
Hqgans proPM&amp;l Paul Cumming, SBI cbairmaD, pointed
out tbat tbe "real" root of running tbe corporation for tbe first
year would probably rome to
$100,000 to $200,000 r a t b e r
than the $65,000 suaested in
the document.
Hqgans admitted tbat staJ:ting a corporation "wouldn't be
easy. . . . 'lbere'll be a lot of
problems, but it can be done.
It bas worked in otber J)la&lt;les."
One of the problems bas already been ironed ·o ut. The
Housing Committee met on
Tuesday morning and came up
with a recall mechanism for
board members. Solving the
conflict over autonoiny prob.
ably won't be as easy, but the
housing group and tbe- special
irub-rommittee are meeting later
this Week to try.

Photo Contest
ForC-UDay
La s t y e a r the University
sponsored a contest for a symbol to be used for tbe 125th
Anniversary; this year it's· a
photo rontesL
A n y o n e who tskes photographs is invited to come to
Community!University Day,
April 16, snap some photos and
enter them in the contest. Prize
for the best entry will be $25;
second prize, $15, and third
prize, $10.

Rul'"' for the contest are: .
1 . Photo must be tsken on
Community-University Day.
2. Contents of the photo must
be of activities related to the
Day.
3. All entries must be 8x10
~r ~ger, black and white. (No
lim1t to number of entries per
person. )
4. All residents of Western
New York and members of the
University community are eligible.
5. Name, add.ress and telephone number must be on the
bsck of each photo submitted,
a long with details on camera
film, exposure, etc.
'
6. Entries should be mailed
to Colinnunity-University llay
Stste University at Bufl'alo, IsS
r_3J_~ Hall, BulJalo, New York
7, Deadline for entries is
Monday, May 1, 1972.
8. A w a r d winners will be
notified by mail oo Monday
May 8, 1972.
'

JOO Pra;pects
Are Brighter
The C o II e g e . Placement
Council, quoted in tbe WaU
Street Jourool, reports that jo,b
prospects b a v e brightened
"somewbst" for 1972 graduates.
Most significant changes are
noted at the IDIIBiel's level
!"here ~e volume of job off!!rB
18 runnmg 28 per cent above
last year. Salary offers to
MBA graduates with a techni-

SPA~

·-16,1912

-Dismissal of Officer
Said Completely Legal

The University's recent dis- tum until a~ bad certimissal of ~ Guard Rich- lied him pb.vsically able. Hunt
ard H. Morgan Who suftered a noted tbat Morgan bsd earlier
A l'eQ\MWI by the Vice presi- back injury during a campus
provided a physician's te:&lt;tident for academic alfairs for distwbance in 1970 was in full - mony tbat be wa8 "compleh !y
job descriptions from a segment compliance with Civil Service disabled," a medical opinion n
of tbe U/B community and ,...gulations, oflici8ls said this
ronftict with that of a """" d
budget c u t s in tbe Libraries week.
physician ""'-' by the l' ·iwill !haw tbe attention of the
'Ibe
incident
gained
public
versity under Workmen's Co.nUniversity Center Chapter of
pensation prooednres (and also
the Senate Professional Associ- sttention last week through a
ation (SPA) at its monthly front page Couriu-Express ar- in conftict with a later report
ticle in which Morgan alleged filed by a physician for the
~p meeting, Thurstbat be is permanently dis- Stste Insurance Fund). Hunt
day, Man:h 23, in the Dinin
Room of tbe Faculty Club. g abled and was - terminated il- suggested that in case no pby.;ilegally.
The story was accom- clan could certify Morgan's reThe 4 p.m. meeting will consider resolutions on ooth tbese panied by a photograph of tum to duty ststus, a ststement
Morgan,
wearing pajamas and · of the limits of his physical
topics in addition to bearing a
seated in a wheelchair, looking capabilities should be filed.
forlornly at bia security gu8rd This might necessitate assignunifonn. The article left many ment to snother position, Hunt
stsntine Yeracaris.
Current committee reports with the impression that the said.
University was guilty of high:
By January 20, 1972, Morwill alao be presented.
The job description resolu- handed, callous treatment of gan's ststutory leave bsd more
than expired and Hunt contion urges withdrawal of the Mr. Morgan.
v i c e president's request and
Not ao, said K. P . Glennon, eluded ''that from the record of
c a II s for establishment elf a director of campus security.
the case and from the fact tbat
committee consisting of repreGlennon said Morgan was ad- be is under continuing medical
septstives from SPA, the State vised on February 24 tbat be care, Morgan's return to work
University Professional Associ- was being terminated since be · seemed highly improbable and
ation (S U PA ) , the Faculty bad been absent from and been tbat his position should be vaSenate and relevant adminis- una~ to perform bia duties for · cated to permit the hiring of an
trative offices "to explore the
active person."
~issue of local job descriptions, over a year. Under Civil Serv·
Under C i vi I Service law,
the development of an organ- ice law, Glennon said, the
year's
absenCe
can
be
cumulaMorgan
could
be
reinstated
if
izational structure for this Uni- ·
v e r s i t y and the appropriate tive. From February 25, 1970, be applies to the New York
the
date
of
the
injury,
through
Civil
Service
Department
withmeans to secure such."
It asks, too, tbat "future ad- October, 1971, University re- in a year of termination, alministrative decisions on local rords indicate, Mr. Morgan though the law does not gusrantee reinststement to t be
issues alfecting professional em- used more than enough sick
ployees . . . include,. to the and compensation leave to ac- position vacated.
Morgan contended to I he
maximum extent possible, par- count for a year's absence. A ·
ticipation by professional em- work year is 261 days. Morgan Courier-Express_tbat a full, conbas not been on the job at all
·
ployees."
June of 1971, at •which tinuous year of absence was
. The request for job descrip- since
time be bsd already used 143
necessary before he could be
tions, SPA says, "bas created
legally terminated and that a
t:terious conce-rn about the lack days leave from the time of the Stste
Insurance Fuitd doctor
of clarity" on their use, "about accident.
bad declared him "totally disthe phrasing of appropriate
Glennon no I e d , too, tbat abled."
questions a n d. consequently
through administrative error,
=~"validity of the ques: Morgan received ·full pay for
approximately four m o n t h s
· .SPA asks that the request be longer than be was entitled
w1thdrawn because the informa- (from May 19, 1971, through
The Ridge Lea Recreation
tion could be used in a way September 8, 1971) . Morgan's Area, 4236 Ridge Lea, is exwhich may "prejudice the ben- si:z: months' injury Jeave at full panding its services, Dusty Milefits, privileges and the condi- pay expired February 26, 197h ler, its newly appointed mantions of employment of some
sick leave, vacation and ager, bas announced.
staff members" a n d because qut
personal days carried full pay
The Candy/Cigarette Counneither it, the Faculty Senate ststus
to the May date, at which ter will now sell stsmps.
nor SUPA were consulted in time half-pay
should have comAn extension of the Norton
advance.
The Libraries' resolution menced for nine pay periods. Ticket Office is open and will
would add SPA suppprt to res- Morgan was placed on leave- sell tickets for every event exolutions dealing wiii{ the situa- withoul"i'BY on September 9 cept campus movies.
tion in I h a I segment of the with the notice tbat, as of that
A centralized Ridge Lea lost
University passed by the Fac- point, he had used 243 leave and found bas been estsblished.
ulty Senate on M a r c h 7. It days ~~ of the total of 261.
Items can be turned in or reurges that the Stste SPA "inMorgan indicated a desire to trieved at the Candy Counter.
clude in 1ts negotiations . . . return to work on September
University Travel Service indemands tbat sufficient funds 29, 1971, but Robert E . Hunt,
be made available to acquire director of environmental bealth formation and general informane&lt;:essaty library materials and ·and safety, who handled the tion will be available. ·
to piOVlde for essential stall case under Workmen's CompenMiller is also allowing groups
and that the construction of sation, notified him that be to reserve tbe bus lounge and
library facilities at the Amherst could not be pamiitled to re- Rec Area during off hours.
=~.'pe given tbe highest

~~~l:..~ ~~~

"'&amp;':.

Rec Center Changes

A cut of 26 per cent in tbe
aapllsitions budget, a reduction
of 25 in tbe number of authorized personnel and tbe delay of
at least one year in tbe construction of the General Library!'t .Amherst, SPA, says, "make
1t 1111possible for the University
Libraries to acquire, process
bouse, and service the instruc:
tiona! and research materials
- n a i for the academic programs of the University."

Student Data Form Update
Unde~radua~e

students should update their student data
form~ starting Apnl .,.l Graccording to the schedule below. (Note:
The time one turns rn the data form will have no burif'll on the
time of roe~stm~on.)
Accurate. d~ta is essential for a trouble free registration.
The ~rrect liStmg of a student's major and class can mean
the drfference between ~ good schedule and a disastrous one.
Information on theJregistration process will be handed to
stuD
_eldentsd rfas they. come in to .update the dats forms In the

r en o

~
h'i~~uate
~~{;
Wrest:.kn;l..a3e
per month.
'
,

Offers for
.'s are 86'-~r
. U/B s wrest 1 e r s have recent above
t year but "well tUrned hom~ em_pt-J-han!led
below'~
' two ears ago And job~ tbe NationBT ColleJiate"'-.
offers at
bachek.r's level Alhlet;ic A~tion;s national
are s ·
·
last year when wrestling tournament at Col- \
ped
61 per cent from \elle Park, Maryland.
P
, year. In terms of ~ gniy one U / B rep"'l"'nlstive,
!i&lt;&gt;
~1:8, ~
""nc Knuutila, 167 pounds, got
JOrs are ~the higpst beyond the first round and be
gains over last yiiiir,'s atsrting was defeated in tbe second.
•
Blilarif!B. abo p t · ~ per cenL
Seven Bulls' wrestlers J!I1Cbemical engmeerDII gradu- tered tbe matches; an eighth /
ates command the hlahest dol· Ron Brandt, was unable t6
lar ave1111" for bacrel-te make. the trip because of ~illdegree holders, $929 a IIIOilth.
-.

~

ma-

Reeeptron area.

B - . Deslgmoteo Your PnMnt C1us

l

April 10
11
April 12
13
14

A· L
M-Z
A-F
G- L
M-R

17
18

5
T·Z

April 19
20
21

A-F
G -M
N -R

24

S·Z

April 25
26
27

A-F
G-M
N-R

28

S·Z

Sef!tors
Juniors

SOphomores

Freshmen

�__________&gt;

111...:6 liS, 1912

9

China Talks'
Set for April

11 Carniwl for Kids'

the--- the-the

In • "Cammvaa for IOdt," • ..., af ~
. . . . . . . . . - - - . mqlclans, , _ . . . . - - - .
camlval and prML ~ bf
Cammorilr
Corpa,
to all
af-

SotunlaJ

--...-.

PresideD.Iial candidale EdJIIIllld Muakie'a &amp;bowiDD in
New Hampollire Moaida
ha- spurred his UIB IIUJlPOdem lo new elfmis. 'lbe Westem
New Yott chapter ol Academics for Muskie. based here,
p1aos- to start a -~
81111 solicitation ID all faculty
and staff members.
Tiie group bas been in operation for four ID five weeks, Dr.
Robert S a m b e r g, secrelalytreasurer, says. It bas sent a
mass mailing ID every faculty
membe&lt; and soon hopes ID
send tbe $500 result ID the presidential amdidale. In addition,
a number of faculty bave indicated a willingness ID wodt ..,
the campaign.
Samberg is "fairly gmtified
by the reapoose" to the mailing and believes support for
Muslrie is growing on campm.
Early efforts for tbe candidale
are important, be feels, because
lbey may cause him ID . "loot:
m academics as friends." 'lbe
poUtied ~exe professor
points out !bat "since J1IK,
academics haven't bad much
input into the governing -

cess."

Poetry &amp;OOing
'l1uee well-......., JDeiiiiJem
af U/B's EoPish DeparlmeDt

will be featured at a CAUSE
benl!fit
poelzy and .-..
ing ... March 2Xl. Dr. Lallie
Fiedler, critic and social CIIIDmentaiDr, will serve as JDOCielalor for the program lo be held
in ibe Frank Lloyd Wri&amp;ht
House. 123 Jewett ~­
John Logan, nationally-eoclaimed poet, and John Bertb,
widely-read DOW!I.ist, will .--1
aame ol ttieir recent .....a.
'lbe ~t will start at 8
p.m. Ticb4a are $3 and caD be
oiJtained at the N..- Tidlet
Olioe ... by calling 876-8429
alll!r 6 p.m.
l'mcaiols will 10 1D ~
4be CAUSE Sc:bool, - iDol&amp;:
pendeat IMming inslitutiaa tablisbed last year.

�~

10

-·

~~9abdu.nem~emt;-----------------------

US. Leaders
Are'Hugets
ForAndersat

By "'D"

U.u-.itv of New Yortc
is S181e
the . . . . . ~ty in the
Ullillld S1Uoa, -tine to a

By ln'BVE LIPMAN
Wlwl Hemy .,..;..;,..-. I'Neideat N"lllllllll'a ~. first

the.J!~
the
l!O inatitutdm with the ........
kal ~in Ik. l"ada!r's
IIUJ'W!Y. Fu 11-tlme ~
-in~ the first

his past, he-;;;;'lui;. viewed by
columnist .lad&lt; Alldemm. Riehl
oil, ADdenoD ..ud ~
if he ~ to hit the capitol's Dilbt opola.
"Ale there allY ni«bt dubs
in
wa,:.~~·"
~
asked
.
y. ADdenoD
didn't say.
Tbe .lle:o:t ~. Alldenon's

1,2110 inatitutdm by
Gmlomd G. l"'ubt, vioe-poovost
lor admitlliaas Uld ....,.,..., at

IIW'W!Y of

came tow~;,.-

isC:'ii:.t"':f

fiame - - - ' ._._

=lor~full-Uidput..
1. ~Di-a;ty of New
Yart, 348,686 (226,629).
2. c.tilamia &amp;ate Colleces.
2118,6lM (l81,328).
3. 'City u.u-.;ty of New
Yart, 2011,1165 (117,288).
4. U.u-.ity of WJtlllOIISin
~ 133,'101 (108,040).
5. U.u-.ity of Califomia,
108,440 (103,8'74).
6. Um-.;ty of Teas, 72,665

&amp;:';';..?.?::,."t;;...~
!"*eel after his u;Fa1 in Waobilllloll - - . . .
That .lad&lt; Alldenon's
own dMcriplioa of his writing

..... .......,., style ... Friday

(56,768).
7. U.u-.ity of Minno&amp;ota,
68,.336 (51,246).
8. IDdima Um-sij,y, 67,448
(G,M7).

. •

9. ~ State Uni_,;ty, 59,1i88 ( 40,051).

-

10. U.u-.ity of Jllinois,
57,QIIt ( 48,778).
11. Ohio &amp;ate Um-s;ty,
50,IIIN ( 46,644).
12. Uahasity of Miaaawi,
48,152 (37,13'7) .
13. tJai...oty of North Quo.
lim, 47,45'2 (40,153).
14. Mil:hipu &amp;ate UMier-

latter instructioll in the n-..

is

____
_
-----""
__ _
The---_n._s_cal_,farlhe

fll -

Yclltt at Sllany

_,_~-ln

-

... the
-----~

..._ .... -

Two dillerellt poop; have
been formed tOstudy the pn&amp;
...... ..... future of Ameriam
cmdaate educatDI, it .......
ported in _ . . . UIIIDUIICI&gt;DII!IIts lEt week. A new Natiaml Baud ... Graduate Edu-

-··--1

catioa, Board iiiby"-:ialed
the COil,.....,
a-n:b Coomcils, will "take a
clme loak at the •ticm's system of .......... educaticm .....
...... aolatioma to its ClllllPiex
............ Tbe 1'ulel ... Alter-........ _ _ . _ to Gradlate

~~~.._.......tby
the Caani:il of- Graduate
Sdloola in the Ullillld States
and the Graduate Record E:o:amineticma Bamd, will "study
Tecea t JW
Mtirma in
Amaiam Hieber Echxaticm
and . _ t ways in which
padaale .........,. am educatiaml lleeda."

-.me

ASimMor-

Ailotber documellt, d a ted
August 10, 1971, fnlm your
State UniW!Isity (SUNYA),
made available to us by Prole&amp;sor Sbermall,
enti•'-' "Affirmati"" Acticm ~ for
Equal Employment Opportunity." On pqe 3 of Ibis memonmdulll, it is indicated that
"the UniW!Isity will defer the
fillinc of some pooitam Ulllil
qualified minority members and
women are added to tbe sta«
of the UniW!Isity." In our view
Ibis instructioll is similady a
violaticm of Jaw, in that it
virtually foroos adminislzators

is

to

~ ~

hirinc ...

racial or ethnic poomds or baYinc .......tial jobs ... unlllled.

A third iDstaJlce of violatio..
is the ._uement in B-l!IJ of
tbe policy statemont ... Ibis
subject issued A..- 31,
1971, by SUNYA. It calla for
tbe "adoption of a delibelale
posture of acti..ely -'tine ...

~-or~11l111011ty status •• • wbo are

UDder - . _ _ . .
ed. ...• By itself, tbia ~

p-tly

ticm is tbaoouply - · but
A -- . apinst the llat:lpouad of allier
.....
.......,. ., a- - . . . ..,
directiWJa emallatill&amp;,....,
p • - - 1 o - ID . SUNYA,it-he.-lMre-

-

- - .. llln
..._.. ~ ...... .,
C.... Ia I a rat •••

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

... _... ss -CIIIIIIt.--111111-

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

um.-.

sity's appuval of it, are in dMr
violation of the Federal Uld
New YOlk law, a well a
SONYA's own p o l i c y ~ its Equal Employment Opportunity Propam.
Specifically, in New Yortc Slate,
and that
wbat ..., are here
dealin&amp; with, there is ... a:pticit statute prohibiting diacriminaticm in employment ... ..,.
COUilt of ....., creed or Jlaticmal
oripn. N .Y . Blaecutiwo U.,
-=. 296, subd. 1 (a). To say it
llllOtber ~. the thrust of an
three mUidates is~ ill
the pnihibitioa set forth in
SUNYA's own policy statement--a lll8lldate apinst "m.
criminaticm in employment because of ~ color, reliPm,
BB 01' uatioaal ari,pn.•

_
....,A.....,.
__...,.,_,....
t-.ltJ

ow-...._,

memonmdum. and tbe

~~lr-.

,_.,.._
~---·-

Is £qull

At the risk of repotitDI, we

emphasize our view that tbia

41,129 (30,230) .
16. Um-sity of Michigan.
39,986 (31,653) .
17. IAUisiaDa State Unive.oi.ty, 38,731 (30,.22t).
18. Roqon Um-oi.ty, 36,869 (23,949).
19. w.,_ &amp;ate Uniw!rsity,
36,765 (22,901).
20. Soutbem Dlinois Uni..eroi.ty, 36,325 (28,259).

,

to-

quiriuc ......,.,...,.. . ~
;...-. of indiYidaal ~ ._;red by the ..._.. of. our
laDd. Ullder the~~
cmlythe...,_.. . . . . .
..... -JIOtcuoy~

..,.y be ~ J'artbel.. '
more,fora~tDbiaa
_ . "qaaliiWJJe" ~ ..
bea~arerh""' hw ·

at the &amp;atler-Hilllln Hotel in
... llllcb.- ...........,.s by the
Bullalo Council em World Affairs.
Lib a Sidewinder miaoile,
Alldersm tabs oil fa s t and
'-Is stmicht for the taraet.
Take his dMcriplioa of govemmollt IMdem:
l'lsideDt Nacm - "I' don't
like him..
Pleaident ,.,___"I don't
particularly like Lyndon JobnSIIIl--be bard to like."
Ricbard KleindieJlst-"Somecme w h o ft!ICIIIIlizes perjury,
and who ft!ICIIIIlizes a crime"
=.,._he better as Attorney
Allderaoll's speaking style is
~ He talks without Shouts, wbispels.
slows down. Fists in the air,
body ... tiptoes, be bangs Oil
the podium.
"Tbe FBI bBs beeo ""'Y .,..._
cemed about my actmties lately. It's nice to taBt before some
~you am .......- Mild
lalllh8. Tbe 800 people in the
Tenaoe Room-. few st8Jldees
in bade---wore crewcuts, fur
ooata. Reapoosi.., to Allden!on,
but llOt ........t.elmiJy.
"'ur security system is in
e f f e c t a CI!IISOrabip system,"
Alldersm cbarpd. "More lhBil
95 .:- eent of classified documents are dassified to keep the
informaticm fnlm tbe Ameriam
~ Natiooal security iall't
!"voM!d. but political security
18.

"Ciasai&amp;caticm ._,.-; s p a r e
politiciana fnlm ~t,
- helps keep them m power.
..... olicials like to operate in the clark. They don't like
the bot apot1icbt llhininc down
... them. Wlwl in the apotlicbt,
they're like fioh out of -8.
It's llOt aood for them.
"What kind of fools do they
~ the Ameriam people

Former Attorney Gmeral
Jobll Mitdlell one of All. . . _•• fawrite taqots.
"Wlwl Mitdlell became Attomey Geaeral, he promised to
sbU' sdirely out ol politics.

"He -llepartmst.
hataOae
in day
tbe
JUBiice
be Attorney Geaeral, d&amp;c:idinl who shall be ...-:uta~.
The day he Ricbard
Ni:o:cm'a c:ampaip - ·
"He ... , ; - out patlaaqe
in tbe form of juotice. I ~ to
~be .sa-.•t wind up l.d&lt;
in tbe JUBiice llepartmoDt..
Doopite his 11i!imticm in tbe
rrr
.,..,.., ·tdlell . _ llO
fearoflepl--~

feels. "It'a 1lllliloely the Jaotice

~~~the

no--

to w..eH ia -

lhinc~-he ........'t ,

~~11e-~

...,_ who tbreelll!ll have
aommpliabed t be i r purpoae.
They're tryiq to scare you."

�·-=

n

16,1972

~~~----~----~------~------------Cbulotte Shedd. harpoicbord· pam, 40 ~ otatiollo, 11: 30
Warren Hoffer, tenor; EdwUd a.m.
Bocusz. boa; ~ohn Hofmann, or- APPALACIIIAR IIDIPOBIU)(• : The

Be.ie Smith, Confeft!ll&lt;&gt;e

Ire, 2 p.m.

n--

8DIP08l1JII•: FoOt

APP.AL.U:BUN

~wJol~rJ::~ ~ k~~~k:.~ l:~ B~ fi'~andoJly'8::!i~n::!
p.m.

~=~; :P~~~s=:;

.Jacbon, Haas

Loun&amp;e.

12 noon.

~

B&lt;11innero Hebrew,
262 Norton. 12 noon. J e w i • h
Ethico, 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
EVENlNGB POl. NEW KUBIC CON- .8Ttlll£N'r III&gt;Cl'fAL*: Baird, 12 noon,
taT*: music
Xenakis, Mat- free.
llllUL CLASS:

by Brahms, Mendelooohn, Bach.

Baird, 5:30 p.m., free.

SUNDAY-19 .

1:

~~(L~t.. ~~:~uc::.

pe~ormen

iuclude Stuart Fox:

y;u,:;, X:':.t'ru.!!:~~~Lo~

NURS!NG

TElEPHONE

LECrUBE#:

~~::a;. =~g;~:.::S

!=. t~

40 receiving

neri. piano; Jan Williams, cond_uctor; _ Gany Kviatad, .percus- 4PPAL.\CBlAN SYM:POSlUM.•: Jour••C?n; Ricbard TrythaJl. piano. AI- nali.lts Eye From tM Mountaitu.
bright-Knox Gellery, 8:30 p.m.,
otalf and

student. $1,

facul&amp;

=:.r:d!';
..~ $2.oJ~fJu!-~~:
cert will be repeated on March

23 ~~;t Fulton-Montromf"1")' Com-

Jim Comstock, editor of Wut

~/"Jfflii:m~~'J.:! ~~H:~~

~by~~~~~~~
by Michel de Ghelderode, Harri-

free.
With John Garfield. Lilli PaJ.
meRorbe,
directed
..
.· a

rtH~--~rooT~L
~
•~

UU:::,,!1~::U..,~~:~.'~.fe~ prizefighting

ArsmSuspe.;ted
In Cmn{XISFires
U/B Security and the Buffalo Arson Squad are looking
for an an;onist with access to
campus buildinp Iollowing a
$1200 blaze in the ladies room
of Harriman Reserve Libmry
last Friday morning.
The Harriman fire was the
12th this month in which 8l80n
is suspected. Seven of the fires
were set in a t.Juee.,day periO!f
last week.
Only Friday's blaze required
assistance of the Buffalo Fire
Department, The reat, mostly
involving towel racks, were put
out by U/ B personnel.
James .oes.ultis, director of
public information,

indicated

that all of the fires have been
confined to reatrooms in Acheson, Diefendorf and Harriman.
All appear to have been "deliberately set" and have come during late evening or early ·m orning. No damage estimates have
been made in the 11 minor
fires.

All buildinp were locked
when the fires occurred, DeSantis said. "Tbe amonist obviously has access to the buildings and we'll have to catdt
him in the act to make any

cha,rwe stic .."

Campus police are reported

li',.,~= a dose watdt on

Beirut Pr&lt;wani
The State Univenity of New
York Middle East Studies Faculty Aalociation has lliiJlOIID(ll!d
its eecaad study prclll'8lll at the

American Univenity·of Beirut,
~ for the 1972-73 aca-

demic year.

• The progi11JD, in the arts and
sciences, is open to SUNY juniors and seniors and -'&lt;a to
g;...., students a first-band apPreciation of Middle East cultures. No .mpetence in Arabic
or French
required. The acadt aic per. niD8 from Octobe&lt;
ti&gt;"OIIIb J 1 e with an orientsti•n in Be;. ut in~The Amt ric:an Univeiaity of
Beirut is &lt; private. non.-:tarian institu· . 011. with an enrollment of -.pradmately 3800
from 80 m unlriea.
·
Further information and ....
'plicatb. are 8ftllable from
1M Ollce ol o - - Aaldanic
Procrams, 10'7 Townam&gt;d, ext.
4217. DBadllne forapplicatiODS
is April L

-•--~Yc

~

film, which depicts

~rl~~':u :~:.; :h';!U:~

r.so.

Tickets at Norton Ticket
Oftioe, aloo on Saturday-25, Sun . . his mind on the eve of his laot
day-26 and Tueoday-28.
~~~Fo~la:, ~.r~:.::;
PILK**: Sho(t, see Friday listing. Willie Boy is Here) ; photography
by James Wong Howe (Hud, and
othen).
MONDAY-20
PIL&gt;l * : Law and Order, directed
HOBPITAir.MBI&gt;lCAL 11XXHW ADMINby Fred Wiseman, Room 110,
IllftATOitS ~BONE LECnJRE# :
Law School, 77 West Eagle St.,
Fred W . Trader, The Pro(euwnal 3:
30p.m.
Activity Study (PAS) , spolliJOred
by Regional Medical Program, 40 APPALACHIAN FILMS• : Unit e d
receiving •tationa, 1:30 p.m.
Mine Workers, 1970: A House
LIKGUIB'!'IQI ON T.v . ••: Pruup- Divided; Appalachian Genesis;
How to Afake Sorghum Molauu;
The Hi&amp;h Lonesome Sound; The
dillcua whether utterances neces- :,;wc~r~ldR~~; ~::J.';;;~
sarily include specific logical presuppositions or whether what a Theatre, 3: 30-6 . p.m. Also on
opeech act iucludes is dependent Thunday.

~= ~r:::·.!.d"J'o~~rar,;
~::.~~\~~~is 0~=~~:

10 Foster bssement, 2 p.m. lnteUectuol Bi.osraphy. So 1om on
Marcus, 2:30 p.m.
PILK*: High School, directed by
Fred Wiseman, Room P -1, Law
School, 30 Church St., 3 :30 p.m.
CO)I(P'll"ftNG CZH'IW. BEION.U# : CO·

BOL, Chris SideraJda. instructor.
Room 12. 4238 Ridge Lea, 7.g p.m.
COMPUTING

CEH'I'IIl SEMINAR#:

Harvey Axle rod. inotructor, Room 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7 .g p.m.

FOR'I"RAN lV.

students, faculty and staff interested
MULTl-Mml4 KEBTING••:

in multi-media COW'8e8, facilities
and programs are invited. AU
those interested in the technical,
theoretical, aesthetic or practical
aSpects of communication are

:!X'
n:'.,::::!;t c:r~:: ~
Information and Library Studies.
231 Norton, "7-11 p.m.
PILK** : Dec.lh By Htu~~~ing (Ja.
pan), Conference Theatre, 3 and
8
~'fti. ~~o Yun, Akiko Koyama, Kei Sato; directed by Nagisa
Oshima. Oshima is at present Ja.

:::f'.&amp;;"!.f.l)'!!:J.
'li; #.::;t:;
are his moot important films. An
inveotive and daring director, hio
concema are with the stale of the
new Japanese IOCiety: ita values.
ita mores. This bixarre work deals
with a
Korean falsely accueecl o the ra,r and munhr-of

rouna

tio~·.:u: .tte ~~f

Or Bow lncithnt) . This is a pene-

~~Y .o[ ~~~~~:

~fact

lution. of
that law needs
crime to emt and that capital
punishment is the supreme crime.
GRADUATE ux;rTAL•: David Witten ,
piano, Baird. 8:3!1 p.m., free.
UNI9Eit8n'Y 8 Y If PHONY BAND•:

Fr&amp;Dk J. CipoUa, director; Jan
Williams, percuuionist. SUNYI
Brockport, 8: 30 p.m.

TUESDAY-21

PSYCBOKAT:

cafeteria, 112 Norton,

3-6 p.m.
·
PILK*: H-ilc.l. directed by Fred
Wiseman, Room P -1, Law School,
30 Church St.;-3 : 30 p.m.
COMPU'nHG CE N TBR BEIONM#:

COBOL, Chris Side rakis, instructor,

Room 12, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7.g
p.m.

COilPU'l'ING C B H T B R BDIINA&amp;#:
FOKTSAN IV, Harvey Ax1erod, in-

structor, Room 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7.g p.m.
•
BENEFrT SHOWING• :

Westem New

York premiere of The God(a&lt;Mr,
way, aaociate profeseor, philoso- . starring Marlon Brando, sponphy, Berea CoUege, Kentucky, sored by Junior Board of Planned
Conference Theatre, 2 p .m.
Parenthood, Holiday I Theatre,

::'.::i"~ ~~~. JC..~~~~~ ~i:~~pe':.:'da ~ 8 &lt;~!:
Hall, New York City.

Ire, 3: 30 p.m.

Union Road. 8 p.m., $5.00/penon
or $7.50 for patrons, oh!ain ticketa by contacting the bax ollice,
6114-mOO.
EYE-CON "72•: Ken Jacobs ecreens
and discusses his films, 146 DieCeodorf, 8 p.m.
APPALACHlAN SYMPOSIUll• : CrUU

of the American Lond, Harry
Caudill will speak on problems
of urbanization, Haas Lounge, 8
p.m.
EY&amp;-ODH "72•: Vladimir Petrie.
professor of film b is tory and

~mrrs

E~-:r.:~~~
'ht:r::
dorf, 8 p.m.

are in¥Jted. as appi'I!D.tices.. Ji'iB..
more Room, Norton, 10 ....__.
p.m., Matth 21 throuP

~~~~icR,;di~cad..:d'yT~

David Fu.lUr.
organ, Baird, 8 : 30 p.m., free.
IEPDtTORY THEATRE•: Dr. Fcuutu.s.
see Friday listing.

FACULTY IWCITAL• :

~~
rea::~ear:!·iJh;:~,

~=~:ent~ ~'m~g~~

alism in Buffalo, Wofrgang Wolck,
Mazie CampbeU. Donna Rice, and
Roger Sbuy, 4 : 30 p.m.
APPALACHIAN BYMPOSlUM • : Block
LIUIII and the Diaob~d Miner,
Bill Worthington, a
over 20 years and now active in
the Black lAmg Association, will

miner for

=~~~~oh~a'i~nga:d"eu~~r::
Lounge, 7 p.m.

COU&amp;SE ON DRUG PROBLEMS :

Wil-

liam A. Carnahan, Law School,
The L&lt;II&lt;Jl Aspects of Mind Altering Drug•. course offered by
Office Cor Credit-Free Programs
and MFC, registration $30, 15
Diefendorf Annex, 8 p.m.
A.PPALACHlA.N SYMPOStuM • : Blue
G"'" music by Dwight Diller and
the Currence Brothers, Lawrence
Fluhardy, and Woody Simmons,
Haas Lounge, 8:30 p.m.
REPf.Z'I'ORY THEATRE• : Dr. Fau.st&amp;a,
see Saturday listing.

WEDNESDAY-22
NURSING

~# :

'IU.EPHOHE

Sr. a-mary Sullivan, Review of
Techniques in Prelfllll.ure Infant
Can. sponsored by Regional
Medical Program. 40 receiving
stations, 7: 15 a.m. and 7: 16 p.m.
PHYSICIANS 'I'EIZPBOHE LBCTUD#:

Paychiatric Conference Dr.
Jooie Olympia, Re11reuion and lu
Relation to Poychi&lt;Jlric Tn&lt;Ununt, sponsored by Regional Med·
icol Propam, .CO receiV1Dg stations, 11 a.m.
APPALACKIAlf SYMPOSIUil.: Glw#t
Storiu, Ruth &amp;m M~ 231
Norton, 1 p.m.
OOCUPADON.AL T'llaAPY

~ONE

~~~ria~

co'FA·,

·-red

Won

Edamtioft,
ond
Co..tribldion in the Heolth Field,
Part [[[,
by Recional
Medical Procnm, 40 receiving
atatioaa, 2 p.m.
APPALACIIWf IIYJIP08IU)(*: Strip-

-X.

APPALACHIAN PHOTOGa&amp;PII'f Jaiii..
Bml: }.tilton Ro,ooiA. a - .

Festival

PHYBICL\NB 'I"EUU:PHONB ux:T"UD#:

Erotic l.anilUIJIIU? Robert Longacre points out some contributions
that only the study of off-beat
languages can make to the study

v-....

=~==.:.:-=
~.r'~~.~-

a.m..-1 p.m.

THURSDAY-23
see Tuesday
listing, Conference Theatre, 10

LINGUISTlCS ON T.v.• • : Why Study

WtWW:

APPAL.\CBL\H P'(L)(S•:

Michl. University of Utah, A
Simp~ Physical Model of Organic

en.ca. 70 Ache8on. 4 p.m.

&lt;ZDT

resident craftomem ol Wlllt

nian and o.--nat, will .....,_
a series of pbotoe tabD CJ~~Mr a
period of nine ,.,... ;, A~Jpooia­
chia. Center~ Nortoa.
Lonny s~ bioloey-.
display of pbotopapho ol lain culture, 2nd lloor ......,.,

CHEMISTRY SEMINAR#: Dr. Jose(

':a~wU:'::~~ll!~~ac;,.r;'k; ~t/f;:

APPALlml&amp;Jr(

==

Trauma Conference ~ Dr. MicbMl
S . Feinberg, Tendon Injury of the

~!ti.!i ~ !i

stationa, 10: 30 a.m.

c: :r~ "::~

APPALACI!L\H SYKPOSllJK• : /IUU/"-

r.~at:i;~,

leader. will speak of his experi ence with the public interest law
firm, The Miners' Project. He will

be introduced by President Robert Ketter. Haas Lounge. 11 a.m.
Workshop with Mr. Yablonski,
231 Norton, 1: 30 p.m.

PHYSICAL TBE&amp;APY 'lBLEPBOM'&amp; I.&amp;'C-

Dr. Harley E . Ft.ck,
of the Physical Therapist
in Neighborhood Hea.ltla. Centers.
•ponoored by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations.
1 p.m.
TUBS# :
Ro~

PSYCHOLOGY ta::n~B•: Ira lacoe.
current p..,.ident, Division Zl,
Commu nity &amp;ycboloo. AFA,
What to Reaeorch ontf- How to
Do It, Once You Get Out of the
Lob, Room A·9, _4230 Ridce Lea,

1 p.m.

Norton,~~

INTERVIEWS
()l(-c:.uau8

na

IWIW!f&amp;WL 01-

fentbe-.-t;ylwinterviews with ecfqc.ticweJ - - .._ indaatrW and~

!it'~o.~- t':rw"":

interview. Founo iD a.:,- C.
Room 6.
TlltiJIIIDAT-16: NDC!eu Fael
Services, Inc.; Gatea Chili Caatnl
Sc:bool

(Momoe); Lyacoart

School (o..o..dap) ; M - &lt;:atral Schools (OrleUo); Wlllt s-eca Central SebooJo (Biie) .

.--r-17: O r t b o tical Corp.; QoaJaer s - Oil Re-

fininc Corp.; Kenmore P•blie
SebooJo.

LffiRARY EXHIBITS

NOTICES

CBBKICAL ENGINa:aNG SEKIN.ta•:

Prof. A.N. Gent, lnotitute of Polymer Sc:enoe, Uni.enit.f of Aboa.
Ohio, EU..tic l""tabilitiu and
Cavitation in Polymer•. 322
Acheson, 2 p.m.
APPALA.CI:UAN 8\'KPOBIUII!: Beverly West Virigina: An Historical
View, Eliubeth and Gene.ieve
Ward, 233 Norton, 2 p.m.
8YJIPCl8!Uil•: PoUt
Life Stylu in Wm.n. Appalachia, a alide ohow by Lynwood

APPAL\CIIL\H

Montell, coordinator for the Ceo.ter of International Studiea at
Weobem Kentu&lt;:ky Uniftrsity, 231

Norton, 3 p.m.

8LAClt 8TUDID t..a:I'UD.:

Deonis

~=!':i'M:..:.!u~~
Atria&gt;.

355 Hayea, 3 p.m.

L........... LIICTIJD: A multimedia _p~ oa .Jameo Joyoe
and DuiJlin, p,_ted bt Dr.
Marlt Scbeclmer nC the ED,Iioh

~~=
W!nity IIDil . . - . Faculty Qab,
3:30 p.m.

Dr. Scbeclmer ;, ~ currad exhiiJitiooo

---.

WEEJCLY CCIIM.... E
For ...,...... cucua-....:e -.11
To
...........
__
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----.~.r:=.:::::::. --~2SD---caw - .,. - -.

in.......oary ol tbe publica- ol loyoe'a
Ul~ .

Dr. Azl.

~~~ N;;:n[;;=..."'f:'w:f thoa.Y ~ llioloiY. SUNY/ Fn&gt;ilkOkOalliiilfit IDIDfa•:

- . 222IL

....ol Frtdlly
~----­
tlvaulh
~-

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--------·----------_... .._.....,.

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

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

~-------

'111URSDAY 16

-.. a..;!=

:;--...._""!'-k~

--se.-t.-

..... -.

eo.-..,-

. . . - : Destr7 · - . ......
(U.S. J!IB}. . .

9

llieclid&lt;. -~­
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8:311 p.m.. - -

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AJ.--.. Mar. TidetSat..--

- - aid ....,...

loy Die&amp;-

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---

19;

25; - . . - - 216; -

FRIDAY-17

n-.

cleeler aDd an Italian crime orpnjza- be obould bow doeon't

emt.
: &amp;Uy ofiM Sawcbut, 140 Capen, eheelc CAC
"""""-for timeo. $.75.
This 192b w.c. Fields classic
combiDes comedy, melodrama, rural-I'OIDa.DCe and race-to-the-rescue finish. It is the lint sileot feature to alar FieldL Loa,: thoucht
lost. this receDdy rediscovered
daoic is invaluable also as D.W.
Grillith'a only comedy. Live piano

. . . - ? ll&lt;mJIS 0

........,poniJ!W!t.

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

VOL 3-NO. 23

- MARCH 9, 1972

Senate Urges Restoratioo of Funding
For Summer, Libraries, U&gt;nstruction
a...c.u..,
. 'The Faculcy Senate called
for a. reatol]ltion of funding to
the Universicy Libraries, Summer Sessions and the construotion of new libraJy buildings on
the North (Amherst) campus
at its meeting Tuesday.
In all, a total of six resolutions were passed at the first
March session. Tbe vote on the

last motioo, ~~..,~ llludy,
was not finalized, however, because two Senators left between
the voice and roll call votes aud
the body IOBt its quorum_ This
necessitates another bUiot oa
the p...._)..

re~~~~:::"m:~~./!

the
the SUNY
Seaalie aud 8PA to wod&lt; bthe .-tiaD of the r .._..,..
budget and staff J.iDm.~
debate 011 this motioo, bowever, the Senators dJopped a
_..,., UFiiDc the pre&amp;ideut "to

=

~:-:.i:fi""~

budget cuts was verified by _ . - ! . "
President Robert Ketter's ~eDebate &lt;Wl a third Lihmry
U
port. "By any standard, we moliOil UFiiDc departmenta to
.
J
have been widely di...,;,inat..t provide QIIPOrtunities lor li~
againat," the presidmt said in brary staff to pursue part-time
.11
describing tbe "dioproportion- pad llludy was intl!DIIe. Variou&amp;
ate cutbacks" llllffe!ed by U/ B IIIODibem spoke againat tbe
as compared to otbel- SUNY "discriminatory" nature of the
units. While be "felt sure dee resolution. pointing Olll that
will be a rei~Satement" of otbeJ- staff members 5bould be
"We have asked lots of addi- funds in 50IDe of the areas, be gi.., the same opporlullities.
tional questions" of b u d g e t outlined various CIJillincmcy Both the actinc dean of the
IIOW'a!S in Albany, but haven't
plans being considered. Ooe of Graduate Scbool, Dr. Mc:AIIi&amp;received any · answers, James tbe5e would put the Summer ter Hull, and his 8ll&amp;istant dean,
Bladdunst, director of Sum- Sessions on the "income/offset" Dr. Andrew Holt,~ large
mer Sessioos, said at mid-week method of financiug. Under this sootions of the proposal but
~ the "probabilicy," plan, the Proeran&gt; would be the motion was passed.
IIIIDOUDCed last Friday, that able to &amp;bow a profit, the pns'The body debated the resc&gt;nearly one-third of the 1972 ident 58id.
lulion to formalize independent
l!lliiliDer Proeran&gt; will have to
Some relief may aJao be in study procedwes for over an
be scrapped because of fund sigbt for the Library, Ketter hour. In speaking for the 111&lt;&gt;reductions.
added. While the Cbaoce11or lion, Dr. Carmelo Privitera and
Unless action is taken in AI- · may stand firm on the ceoead Dr. Charles Ebert, dean of the
bany, Blackhurst said, the fac- cutbacks ordered, the UIB U- D ivisi on of Uoderpadnste
ulties of Engineering and Ap- brary may receive additional Studies, bolh pointed Olll that
plied Sciences, Health Sci- lunda unde&lt; the Slate l)eput- there ia DO - - l;aw and .lwiapnadence . . - t of _ _ . . ~R . - of a •
~-~·~·;:;~=~~
and Educational 8tOili&lt;!io will ~Refeftuce a u d - bill- m~ staoty-offer no c:ouraes this fiUIDltler, Researcb ReBounles. Already even ol wbo the faculcy superwith a few -tioos. In the . under this plan, Lodtwood is visor - . Many faculty momremaining three faculties-Arts recognized as a regional library bers """"' ~ to the parts
and Letters, Social Sciences open to all qualified ......,..,m.. of the moliOil asking the stuand Administration, Natural ers in the SW1'0UI1ding area. dent to deocribe in advance the
Sciences and Mathematics Because of this responsibility. proeram of sludy to be fol·the second session will be vir- it needs additional ftmds, Ket- lowed. Representatives of the
tually dropped and the first ter said.
·
student govem..-ts genemlly
and third sessions wiU be cut
'The poor flSCal shape of the spoke against this also but were
by 25 per cent. In all more Library was further emphasized in favor of a thin! section
than 400 of 1100 coun;;,. will in debate on two motions spun- which urged the inclusion of a
probably be eli.ritinated .
sored by the Senate's Commit- written evaluation of the pr&lt;&gt;'!be crunch · is based on tee on Information -and Library ject in the student's pennanent
.S.mple mathematics: To oper- JWsources. Dr. Myles Slatin, record. After debate on the
ate the 1972 summer sessions director of Libraries, told of three points, the Senate voted
on the same level as 1971 would additional cutbacks and llie down the first two and adopted
have &lt;XJSl $14 million How- Senate unanimously passed a the tbird-&lt;lr at least tried to.
ever the budgeted ~unt of motion calling for the reinstate'The Senate will con&lt;ider the
$940,000, when adjusted for mcnt of constructiOn ftmds motions dealing with · Jculty
projected salary increments, needed to keep the two library and student academic
egrity,
yields only about $870 000.
buildings on the Amherst cam- scheduled for this ,...,., - at its
'
pus on schedule. Tbe body aJao second March meetiug on the
wronc PIKe to Cut
passed a motion wging Ketter, 21st.
However, while the figures
are clear, the logic is not,
Blackhurst feels. ''The summer

AlbanYIs Ke
mO

Slimmer Cuts

A ,J•• ~~~~ors"'- .,J~.J. f'l~ ·~~
..t1{..l.(A}(;t '
U«JKI U ~
·
·~~ ~ ~~ ~

-

T-

.rno
Spea)i-at \JUf
n
__,;. I U I tt:1 «XI I~nt
.1 (
A man described as "the
leading advocate. of the student
cause in the current worldwide student rebellion,"· (Phi
~____Q_eJU:l..KIIl&gt;P/UU.and aa ooe _wbo .
has "a blueprint for radical
change in the whole scyle and
purpose of our collegea and univeraities" (Neril York Timal
will be speaker for the University's l26th Annual Commencement at 3 p.m., Sunday, May
14, at Rotary Field.
Harold Taylor, fortneJ" president of Sarah lAwrence College and currently director of
the World University Student
Project, won those accolades
for bis widely-read book Students Without TeocMrs: TM
Crisis in tM University, ~
lished in 1969. His most recent book, How to ChtJnge Colleg~: No~ on . Radical Refo~m, continues m the same
vem.
Known as a leading educationa! thinker, Taylor f i r s t
gained national prominence in

1945 when; at 30, be became
president of Sarah lawrence, a
P!"'t he beld until 1960. His
tdeas for ~ent in educatinn In the a.tiwo.arlll, in stu-dent democracy, in world affairs and in curriculum refonn
drew international interest.
Since leaving Sarah U.wrenee, he has continued to develop pioneer educational experiments, among which was a
r,ilot project for a World C-olege, whose students from 22
United Nations countries and
an international facul ty developed a model for curriculum
to "unite the youth of the
world in a new world community."
Dr. Taylor is alao co-founder
of the National Committee for
SupPQrl of Public Schools as
well
~nnlll! and founder
o! the National Research Council on Peace Strategy, a group
of distinguished scholars and
scientists involved in research
on peace/ war issues.

as

Jo/mLatonaNUm£dtoJhead

Women's Movement Has
' ~t~bz~ ?.:~:~~ UIBFowulntionActivities
Its First (Real Victory_ :!~ati~~i~~~~
than it pays out, it aJao serves

, Tbe Women's Movement has.
come of age with its first real
victory in employment legislation at the national level, Dr.
Ann Scott, assis~t professor
of Engliab at U/ B and vice
president for ~ePilation and enfora!111011t ol • the National Organization for Women (NOW) ,
said in an interview this week.
In addition, NOW has won
the first round ~.!f't to gain
-wbidl "can
of acbanJe themeasure
face of
education in America," Dr.
Scott said.
'The "Equal Employment Opportunicy Enforcement Act,"
approwd by Senate-House
Coafel'l!llllll and awaiting Presidential aipature, exlioD!Is Title
vn of the civil Rilbta Act of
1964,

prabibi,....

d.lacrimiJ&gt;a,.

tion in .......,....t Oil pouodo
of color, religiOil, aa, or
...aloaal oriPn. to state and local pemments ..... educatiOilal institutions Cas well as

previouslX:uncov~red small
businesses). More significantly, it provides "enlorcement"
authority to the Equal Employment Opportunicy Commission
CEEOC) which before bad
only powers of "conciliation.,.
'The aecond bill, approved by
"voice vote" in the Senate and
awaiting Senate-House conference action, amends the Higher
Education Act to prohibit """
discrimination in education in
any syatem receiving federal
8Aistance at all levels from
kinderprten thJougb graduate
ochool. 'The H~ version of this bill outla- di&amp;crimination only in J!r&amp;!luate
school, but Dr. Scott 18 bbpeful that the Senate vemioo will
1&gt;e approwd in conf........e, although a "fight:' is apected.
If enacted in the Senate . version, this measure could "tum
education around," Dr. Scott
says, througb its impact .., ad(Cont~&lt;l on -

3, coL 1)

ity. 'There will be literally
thousands of students who
would be willing to pay adequate tuition who cannot go to
!ICbool while our classrooms are
empcy, our faculcy is unemployed and our State is losing
rnc:mey."
For example, the canceUed
Educational
Studies
program
which __
more than
1,000
school teachers in western
New York (a huge plus in &lt;emmuniey relations) would bring
in $400,000 under the old tuition rates and would 0081 only
$3)0,000 ca huge plus for Univeraicy operating funds).
Help in saving aome of the
c:owaes in question could come
rr 0 ni a $260,000 allocation
wliich President Ketter has
asked lor from the State's SUP:
plemeDtary budpt. Another aid
'would be ~ve approval
ol the SUNY Tiustees' propo&amp;al to . . income from the le.....uy~ tuition bike to
(Coratilwft on -

3. coL 1)

John Latona was named
president of the University at
Bulfalo Foundation, dfecrive
April( 1, in a meeting of the
Foundation's · Board of Trustees this week. ·
In making the~
of the appointment, Foundation
Board Chairman Gemld c.
Saltaielli said, "'The Foundation looks forward to the future
under this new ellecriw! '-lei-ship."
Mr. Iatona has been pll)jec:t
director for the state Urban·
Dewlopment Corpomtion in
Bulfalo sinee July, 1970. He
has been on the faculty of the
Univenicy aa an adjunct leoturer in the Propam in American Studiea lliDce 1989.
A graduate ol the Yale underpaduate c:ollelo. law acbool.
and graduate acbool. Mr. Latona i8 a Bu&amp;Jo lllltiwe. Be
serwd- ~ ~ dt"
the Erie Councy Cilizom' Ccmmittee on ln .....miripel Affairs from 1968 II&gt; 1970. In
1967-68, be was dopaty to the
mayor of San F1811ci8co aud

,_
darinc
1966 .-Jda ....
onlinator ...... ........&amp; to the

Social 8cieDce RaMrcb ......
llrew!lopmeut

Corporatioa,

Beobiey, CalifcmiL
In '-line the U/8 FOUDdatioa, Mr. Latona will direct the
actiYilioS of the io rto,. """t

.,.,._._ ~ . . . . . )JIIII1mi!

is to pin fiDancial . . _ t ...
addady ..... -.do' activities at the Um-.ity from
olber than State. of N- Yodt

--

�....... D72

2

MR.d,Aburmi,

Clinic Days
Set for April
"Cum!nt Social aDd Blhicol

Issues in Medioine,• willa

:d

ticular focus &lt;al abaoti&lt;al
drug addiction. - wiD be tbe

-

_. ot- ..., -

--

The Day.Care Center Needs More Private Funding
'lbe need for more privste
the Cooperative
~ Day Care Center will be dramatized through a "candy sale"
which begins today and continues for a week in the Center
Lounge of Norton Union.
According to Russell Vacante, U/ B giad student and
-public relations cbainnan for
the Center, the candy sale is
ooe facet of a projected wideranging campaian to enlist raeuity and community support
for the facility which may end
its fiscal yesr with a deficit of
support for

up~

so,;,.,

: u t y or
type
of lottery as well as other dibeing con-

~peals are

Mr. Vacante emphasizes that

::..,een~~ot;,'C:!;.i.t,1:

like more space on this campus,

its primary efforts at preseot
are ditected toward "full operating efficiency" .in tenns of
originslly-e;tsblisbed criteris.
80 Children Serwd
The Center can serve 48 children at one time and has a total
enrollment of 80. However, Vacante points out, at least 1200
other families on campus need
day care facilities. The Center
bas a long waiting Jist and gives
priority on vacancies to those
with the lowest incomes. Tbe
age range for those who may

be enroUed is from three
months to sii:-years old.
Vacante says the Center benefits both the cooperating parents and the cbildren. Tbe
" warm" environment provided
by the staff, be says, ofters
a maximum amount ol slinJulalion ("far superior to the average home environment") while
also aftording a " free play" altemative for those who do not
wish to engage in a given activity. Among activities available
are cooking, art, dancing, and
singing_ Many children who

Jesve tbe Center for elementary
school prove to be far IDOI'e adYSDCed tbsn average, Vacante
contends.
If more people could see tbe
worlt being done at the Ceoter, Vacante feels, it would be
easier to drum up contributions.
" You don't have to ask tbe c:hildren if they are loved, you can
see it in their faces."
'lbe Center is open 48 weeks
a yesr. It is ~ two weeks
for winter vacatiaa, oue .....,..
before summer school and oue
week after summer acbool

Ad'J'YJ;cocowns·
Letters to3.500News~
...J~~~
., 'UAX:J
/
UlLIKIIUS

ietum:

v..,...te

n;!'j

c.:f.:::!::f'!:i

!::.

::_!"T:.:.:..,~J!:

....,Ia

sbdr ill !DIIIDeDted by part-time
-t«udy
and -...lurJ.·.
. ' - - - ...... by tbe )l8nDta. .
·
While tho! Center bopluftll.tuiiJ.y to ftiCIIift &lt;al the
Allllleat
_•
eampuo
_
and
.
-rd

·-·

~

=~- Garry W.lfeoly.

- ~tbe...:-'- BoleaiPih.JlaM
m
~~ _.., be...__tbe
~

...,... wua
a
11:15 LDL _ . _
•
ct.y_ l'BDelisas wiD include~
I\)ODii RoU, Jr~ aDd Jack Geller, Bulralo aUomeys, aDd IlL
~ ~~M'idi:!!.ttinc don- ...,. ~­
111 Yadt
On Friday ar....,_ at 1:45,
"Abortion in New Ycd: Slate
One ·Year after tbe ._.- will
be ~ by no,_ Liae Fortier, 88llislant ~ o1 obstetric:s aDd gyuec:o~ocy, Uuiversi.ty of M&lt;altreal Mediad

=

~ ~- :&amp;:·~~
eo.m-

~dU::ra..ol::

'nd ofa 5-YearPlanning Proa:!ss

"We are pleased to advise mix, but proportions of the academic averages_ From this,
port as an 'alternative to rais- you that you have been admit- other factors are largely de- a long table is compiled matdlma rata l01or t'ta -~ted into the Septeniber '72 cided here. un..ile Admissions ing hi--'- -~--• aver ages
MSDbers of ii;"'i:fuiversity class at the State University of and Records '(A. &amp; R ) and the against""test'"".:;;'res needed for
community who wish to con- New York at Buftalo."
Office of Management Informa- admissioo. This table is ..-1
tribute to the Center beyond
Over 3,500 of these letters lion are worlting out "targets" for most of the regular admisthe purchase of candy may di- started going out last week. To for escb of these mixes, they sions. 'lbe table shows, for exrect gil!B to P .O. Box 19, Nor- the students who receive them, have to oonsider the number of ample, that with a hiP~ 9Cbool
too l/llJDIL Faculty are especi- they mark the beginning of a students returning or graduat- average of 94, a student needs
ally Urged to help underwrite new part of their lives. But to ing.
.
only a standardized test """"'
the program_ All donations are Charles Fogel, Dr. Charles
Because or the difficulty of ol 168, whereas a Student with a
tax-deductible.
Jeffrey, Dr. Norman Hostetter • estimating accurately .the own- hiP~ school average o1 87 needs
'Hat Lunch' ,.,.,_
and the Admissions stsrr, they ber of students accepting ad- a standardized score o( 240 to
'lbe candy sale coincides are the end of a long process:
mission and those returning, be admitted. Most applicants
with the beginning of a "bot
The size of this year's class U / B is currenUy about 700 with these combinati&lt;als or betlunch" program for children at was initially decided five years above its State enrollment ter were """"Pled into next
the Center-a move which is ago by the Office of Long quota. This isn't regarded as fall's class.
being made, with full Health Range Planning in Albany, ~Y bad. "We'd rather be
Competition,- ~ was
Des&gt;artment sanction. without wllicb makes five to ten yesr ahead m enrollment tbsn be- rough; tbere were over 10,000
a note _increase. Once the pro- projections on the size of the hind," Jeffrey, assistant vice appliCations for 1750 freshmen
gram lS underway, tbere is a Stste system and the enroll- president for academic altaim, slots and 925 tmnsfer _,.,.._
possibility that the federal gov- ments of individual units. To says.
Fogel. Hostetter and Jeffrey
emment may supply funds but make these estimates, they The 'Maid!'
are already taking a prelimit bas to be started through the work with admissions officers
After targets are worked out, inary look at '73 and their limt
Center's own efforts. Vacante from the units and look at both A &amp; R begins the actual pro- deadline for setting up ll!ntatiW!
ays.
the educational needs of New cess of deciding which students targets is Jtme 1 o1 this year,
'lbe Center's budget for the York and the societal dentand 'get in. Eachapplicationisread They expect that again next
year eoding this summer is de- • for certain occupational cate- and checked for course require- yesr tbere will be too many aprived from major grants from gories.
ments, types of courses and plications and too few alota.
tbe undergraduate Student AsProjections for this campus content -of recommendations. A That's the '-rtbreak ol tbe
!Klciation and tbe Graduate Stu- are nut sent to U/B where very tentative acoept-reject is admissions Pf'OCII!88, Hosletter
dent .AIIIIICiation (GSA) and Charles Fogel, assistant execu- then put into the prospective says. "Most of. tbe kids who
from aliding-acale payments live vice president, 'works with s~t's file, _Next, applica- apply can do tbe work, but
PR&gt;-mted according to
the Office ol Management ln- tions are statistically analyzed tbere's only 80 much 111011ey
. _ . panuts '""- chil- formation to substitute a series for standardized lest scores and available to teach them." .
dm;t are emolled. Local area of real numbem that mesh with
busimE firma have helped budget restrictions and space D..-...~Wiill~lrtoAI··--:illt.T--..4.
~~tiona and merdi- limitations. Sinca_emoJiment is ~.rc•
ur~
UlliiUJ.~I. ~
andiae diacounts and tbe U/B based 011 a nuulber of factors
Alumni and key administraClub bas also aided bard to estimate accurately.:_ tors from 15 Sta_te U_niYelSity of
tbe ....ture,
tbe state of the economy, tbe N
y 0 rk
w
·GSA. r--, bas recently number of PEOPle graduating
ew
uruts m
estern
! --f......t to eut badt some of tbe number of students
New York will bear an address
•IB funds &lt;S300).
ing-the admissions figures are ~~~~
Tbe .....,IB also contribute known as "targets."
Mann .,....,.,___ March
14·
"""hour ol work fur .-11 sU:
Dr r,..:_~
boum ol child CUI! and must 'Tile - ~"'er
""""Pled an
aerve on Center committees.
'lbe next step is to work out ~lion ezt!'nded by ~
w. that this co- "tbe mix" of students to be ad- to . . - ~500
operatiwo ~is one ol the mitted. Students at U/B can other
from Universities
key factors ill tbe Center's sue- be claasirled into 10 or more and col
in SUNY's new co.
_ to
Since
-~ __,_.__ ..,..,__ .._-;. District I: 'lbe
"-tbedate.
•--"'ty
L-':"""P-_ ca•--'._.,._ -- ·~,_..
""" .........,...
....... .... ~tinual- tiona. ' " - include: ~te ~:.. will talk about how
ly uppaded tbe quality ol its w. UJJderJraduate, nilbt vs. tbe State system operates, its
- - ............ be IBY8. and is di~~_c_!!~ ~ infl""""" "" Western New
: ~ "one ol tbe beat da,Y
.__, - - . ·- u--.... York, CIIJTOIJt budget imp1ica-

w-··

a!&gt;d Nathuiol w.._,

vision, 'lbe Population
cil, N- Yorlt City, aDd Dr.

Jl A: .l. ~l. ~E
1Yl.Grf(, u~

income;

tbeme ol tbe Mediad AIDmi
Asaociation's 35Ch annual .
Spring CliDical lla.Jw. to be
held- ~10,. Apdl7-a
Six pul!ls aDd tbe tmditiaooal -8locSDl Kimlld . - . . .
are &lt;al tbe a:bedale ol - :
"Modern ~ to
Drug AddictioD,- wiD be' tbe
openinc ....... at 9:45 a.m.,
April 7. l'articipua wiD be
ll8llbers ol tbe .... ol tbe
~ Park RebMJilitation
' Centef&gt;.--Drs. Oocar s. l.apez

County Health

~L

M~l&lt;,!.. ~febe_.~~

:.::=.._.. ..L...o~!':'.~'

...,.~~ _..,
be &lt;al "CarJca:
~ tbe p,-~
moclemted by Dr. John ~
li-n dinicaJ - - ·moor:=
-~
-~
aDdat

.!'..:!!;
-&amp;-

&amp;'ii:Li

Mercy Hospital.. I'UolisiB wiD
!:.:_~
Gordoaat..~
~
~ R ,...__ _.._
..............
~~
....,....
.._..........,. _.....,..
- " " " " " - Bulralo

~:'i:ii -~~
~........

Tm
_ -

~

--3

~-- al -..1
"'Y..y= -~• .,_~
_.,____ ol ~-~~~

c._

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

~-

to New and R 1 4wl
Drugs and ~ wiD
open SaturdaT• session.
F•tured will be lr.Jpb Hal{IIIDderator); Willi.l A.
Cam.hm aDd Daniel T.
Ro.dl. Bulralo - . . . , . ; Ora.
Joba IL W.._., dlief thaa- j&gt;eUtic rwliolnpot, R o awe II
Part. aDd Jack~....,.._
ol ~ ..r
':!.,,~;.~ ol 0
. ty
• Meyer ~
~~
....,._ .......,. B. can,-, .....

c&amp;n.:!ar

-aDd~n...r-

&lt;Jl

Family l'l8ctiae, Tbe lledical Calli.., ol 8aalh ~

d!!i..;~~~
-.li:l::

._

-~

•
at 11
~ 0... will be

in Health Care
iLDL

-8cbool
nr_ T. olw...;.
I"tm7, --.
BMith ......,. ~

........ aDd IlL ~ -F
c:liaicol ........,...;
ill _,;.) ..r ~ _ .

1famn1taa.

;:= ::': dlief - - . ,:n...:.. 11'.-ib'
_

Center,

~ no,_ ~ a.,-.
dinical
--.&amp;.-_ .
, . . _ o1 .........._
_,

practice aDd . _ "' _tbe
:n..ahmii:F P rae ta e e
Center, wiD--..... - •
Dr. Habert J. a..r, ::Ttl.~:..,:~ Y~ -

~~
PW......,~ a~ at tbe U/8 Al11111Di
didal District vs. oulllide the ~ ~ lotal• State ~~B3-~){~ Ja-t
.._~
·. ~ ~ ~ ..:. I ~
8lh Jndlclal Di8trict, aDd ~ UmWirllty. _ _
_.__
.,_.._._ ~Tbe
~
--~
te.laaal echool ..... DIIII-IJiole&amp;A ....,.,._ t 6
UUUIC
~
liooal ecbool SUNY C..tral cec1eo tbe 7 p.m.a~-::;lJ:
U/8 BlUM wiD .ioln
de..·
'II( _the
_ 1 JI!OUP boon Alfred Uni- 8cbaal.
r..
decided there be a - crw-IJor' ~Caet 18
m
40180 JiJww -...... upp.
_ dlvi8iaa
•
S5 versity in Ji!OVidinl ...ll!rtainTbe JJa ..... will .... lie •
per penon_
are otill .- a t tbe banqu.,(
·
~ bandnd.

:::;ial..;.!!,mi;;o

!t:;,;future

,'!,1:

a ....._

1';=-::.v

�3

African CDDlinenL

n started in

1912. And from 1912 to 1960,
we did everytbinc poa;ihle-

petitiooed, sent cWepw(attempled) murt cases, demoostrated, encaaed in passiye
resislaDce. Almost without a:cepboo, their ( tbe whites') re&amp;p0116e was rioloa:e.
"'Then tbe _...,.m more
or less proclaimed DDD-violeoce
to be illepl, when it banned
( OD April 8, 1960) tbe Cllll,y two
black orpnm.w- wbid&gt; _ ,
viable.
.
"So we were fao:ed with an
option. Either to sufl~ ~.
~ quietly and accept secooddass status, or to c:ooduct a
slruQie hY otJ&gt;es. _,._ n is
natural that people want to be
free, 80 tbe optjoo availab&amp;e to
us was tbe «me we took.•

Afriao, 1 haven't bad tbe ame

~ty.

"Even il you are desirous ol
(white) African.
a law wbid&gt; limits and
prohibits 1111,)' kind ol aac::ial
inten:owae."
Another rillbt tbe South African ..-mment denies blacb
is tbe freedom to ... """""" to
study. Most bladt Africans
wbo come here - like Noleah-do 80 illeplly. Undercrouud. Without ~ or

talkin&amp; to a
~ JS

permission.
'll'llllld be tbwartinc their
~....... to allow us to co

"'t

"'f I decided to go badr.
home tomonow, rd ~ a minimmn ol five years· m jail lor
leo.vine tbe counby illeplly."
'The bladt South Alricans td"""""" " . _ t lbe
Moleab aid tbe divillilm be- · ucated
lutme al our people to a.....,
1
-ca is aided
lbe
by-tbe - Afril ol
in-~- -since I've beinc jailed. . .
come here ( to lbe U.S.), I've
H e - be will co bact, """"been ~ to wbiles; I've """'"· 1.\bybe in a year or two.
been able to liiD&lt; to u-n and
"1 left ulkhpouod, I will
gel to them. In South have to go badr. underpound.• .

No--in-

~~Tr'Cr~

Former Surgery Chnirrnmt
Dies at Home in Georgia
(~tr--I, col.:J)

wbile tbe IIUIIIber ol fuU..time

~l faculty b a s - by
Cllll,y al&gt;out S per coaL ~
year, ....... 114,000 credit bows
lor mw&amp;e worlt earned by

students in tbe three sessioas,

makiD&amp; U / B's l be Dation's
larpst -ol inslnJdion
'The
amount
was umre
tt.n double lliat ol UCLA and
tbe Uni~:!.t
Berbley
. California at

o- 90 per coal ol students
decrees at U / B attend summer !lf!SSions at least
....., and oae U / B depee in
six is ~y CQIIIPietled dul'inc tbe - - ' It bas ' JIIOjectod that 60 per coat
ol UIB studeats ""~"dine to
......ne ......... darinc t b e yar-would have a~ tbe
~

1972----...,..........,.,the_
-APPDlS
A....-ls 011 . . - - ~

-

-the--SJ¥. ---the.-..~-~­
- ....... the
....,
...._..,_15,
____
the ....
·----lftheea........

~31,1971-

---if· ... ·-

15, 1972. ..

.., -

_., _____
---·-tioila.

o-stiDno Dr. '*- B.
sillr-

.. -

--

~

11&lt;, -.N.Y.

.

..
o.-t·

Foot Sclwp\_

'The man wbo was c:bairman
(or CXH:bairman ) or tbe Deparlment or Surgery at tbe
Medical School for 20 years is
dead. Dr. John R Paine died
in his sleep at his home in
Jekyll Island, G«qia. February 29. He was 65.
From 1949 to 1966, Dr. Paine
was CXH:bairman or s u r 1 e r y
with. Th. John s-art. wbo
headed tbe E. J . M~ Memorial Hospital's SllJ'Iical departmenL When Dr. Stewart retired
in 1966, Dr. Paine was ........t
chairman.
Dr. Paine was tbe fiJst SUI'geon to ~onn heart swy;ery
in Bullalo. 'Iliat was in AUIUid,
1947. two months af~ be came
here from tbe University ol
Minnesota. His patient - · .
24-year-ald bellboy at tbe Statler-Hilton, wbo bad been a
"blue baby" as a .....W.t of an
inborn heart clefecL
Dr. Paine joined tbe UIB
faculty as pnfts&amp;or ol swy;ery,
July 1, 1947. He was "'''JJinled
1-' or tbe c~epartmeat at Buffalo Geueral at tbe time.
He retired NOftlllber 18, 19'71.
but bad ' - leave . . _
JIIIlUIIIY 1, 19'10.
In 1967, Dr. Paine ... 8
awarded tbe fifth Slnc:bm

Kimball Awanl ol tbe Medical
School for--.... ......... and
_,.,_ In ......_, 19'10, be
received tbe ~ Par It
Medal ol tbe lldP&gt; SarPoai
Society for .,.......u.m .........
tobis . . . . . . . . . . . t...Dil!'.- He received bill t.:helor's
and medical . . , _ from 1181'vard in 1927
J.SI3L In 1936,
be earned .......... from tbe

..a

Um-sity ol ~ Ud in.
1938, a Ph.D. Durin.c World
Wu D. be ........t lor three
and -.balf with tbe
25th Geueral Hospital in Eu~
retirin.c as a lieuteDant
Dr. Paine was author or coauthor ol more tt.n 30 aciootific papers. He a Diplo- .
mate ol tbe Ameri&lt;an Bomd ol

SarcaY 111111 ol tbe Bomd ol
'I1Iooacic SarcaY and a Felloor
of tbe Amorican Collep of.
&amp; - . He aJao an ..,.
live -mer ol ...,.,.,.) slate
and ..tiaual prolasional ciatirxm. Hill Dr. J-tt.n
Paine, is a 1969 Medical School
He is .a resident in
ortbopedic ~ at tbe Uni~ty or JJt.b. Salt Lde City.

.-mate.

�4

MattinaUrges Reform
In 3Areas of the Law
What is a crime? Is it an

act in which there is a definite
victim? Or, is it an act tbat

society says deserves punisb-

=t~t~ds7o ~=

more severely tban a car dealer wbo cheats a customer by

tbe same amount?
'lbese and other questions

........ discussed whet! County
Court Judae Josepb Mattina
beld an informal seminar with
members of tbe Policy Sciences
propam on Monday_ The disCUIIIion focused on tbe public's
attitude toward criminals, tbe
1-t for sensitive law enfon:ement and tbe formation of socisl institutions to deal with
''aocial criminaJs_"
M a tt i n a dealt -with three
areas in need of reform-alcoholism, drugs and sex offenses.
Previously, he said, people with
public intoxication c bar g e s

:Wn!:-mo":'tktoJ'n~n4~\~
penal code, sentence is reduced
to 15 days. This has shifted
the emphasis from incarceration
to rebabilitation and reflects the
new attitude that alcoholism is
a disease, Mattina pointed ouL
He praised rehabilitation programs at Meyer Memorial Hospital and Terrace House and
would like to see them strengthened and expanded.
Known for his stand on drugs
and as an advocate of rerorm
~ the marijuana I a w s, the
Judge called for re-&lt;!l&lt;aminstion
of drug abuse cases and for reform in current sentencing practices. He believes it is unrealistic to give a person arrested
Cor possession of one marijuana
cigarette the same sentence as
a heroin pusher who isn't an
addict
The ''victimless crimes" of
many boiiKl6eXUality c a s e s
"have bothered me for a long
time," Mattina said. He has
seen a r r e s t on homosexual
charges "stigmatize a man with
a responsible job." In many
cases. be maintained, this can
cause "far greater harm to a
person's societal status" tban
tbe actual sentence. As a result,
be "honestly feels c b a n g e s
should be made in the laws
dealing with consenting adults,"
but unot with aggressive deviants."
Mattina also advocated
change in rape laws. Currently,
force, penetration and identification must be proved with the
identity of the rapist being verified by another witness. Because the need for additional
identification isn't . part of the
law for cases of robbery or assault, be favors a compromise
tbat would allow the woman to
. be tbe sole identifier of her
assailant and let the jury decide if abe is telling the tri!th
Some crimes, Mattina says,
are oonsidered crimes only because society labels them that
~- He feels tbat alcoholism,
drop and some aez offenses fall
under this category and that a
new look abould ·be taken at
laws soveming these to see if
tbe public still considers them

~

a question and answer period, the judfe expressed faith. in the legislative
and law enforcement systems
and80CI_ etbeirtal
·-~~ty to respond to
...,.,...,_
This was sharply criticized
by Dr:.!.,P~~~J:Iitical science,
~a...,..
t there is
no progress in !heae areas, "in- . ! "" are going backward."
He pointed to an increased
number of black people being '
"""t to .iall. and the failure of
state lelislators to meet the
people's needs instead of the CXIIICeftl8 of v e s t e d interest
llOUPL
Mattins adYocated a more
active 80Cial role (of. members

'"

of tbe bar. Traditionally, he explained, judges have been educated to '1ock tbe outside
world out, when they put on
their robes." Today, be feels
magistrates can become more

objective by interacting with
different groups of people and
getting an understanding of
their perceptions. ''Public opinion ought to be a consideration
in a court decision," be JD.ajntains.
This was Mattina's second
Seminar in the Grover Cleveland Fellowship program in
American Studies. As the
Cleveland fellow, be will also
be speaking to the School of
Management on M a r c b 20
about "The Sii:-Month Rule
and Judicisl Administration".
His series of talks will end with
a general discussion of the law
on April 20. · All events in the Cleveland
Fellowship program are open to
the public.

Indians Plan
5-DayEvent
Rights of American Indians
in contemporary society will be
the t..pic of a five-day series of
campus events, March 13-17.
Entitled "Spirit, Unity, Peace
-The Real People," the program will feature films, a concert by Floyd Westerman and
discussion of Indian problems.
Barry White, president of the
Native American CuI t u ra I
Awareness Organization, says
the purpose of the week-long
·series "is to bring to the University knowledge or Indlan
opinion and viewpoint. to give
our analysis of our own problems."
Primarily, three issues will
be discussed :
• The ro.year-long fight for
fishing rights by the Puyallup
Nation in Washington and Oregon. (Tuesday, March 14, 'Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.)
• The Onondaga N a t i on
and their current conflict with
widening a highway through
their reservation_ (Wednesday,
March 15, 234 Norton, 2 p.m.)
• And the fight over constructign of power plants on the
Black Mesa, sacred ground to
the Hopi. (Wednesday, March
15, Fillmore Room, Norton, 8
p.m.)
All events are free and open
to the public. The full calendar
of events for Monday thrould&gt;
Thursday is listed in the Weekly Communique .
On Fnday, March 17, a
Workshop conducted by the
Seneca Constitutional Rights
Committee will be held in
Room 234, Norton, (rom 2-4
p.m_ A concert by Floyd West-

erman, Spectorrecordingartis~

"Custer Died for Your Sins," at
8 p.m., 148 Diefendorf, that
night, will conclude the program.

FacultyBrunch
'The Faculty Club, in association with - the U / B Women's
Club, will have another Family
Brunch, Sunday, March 26,
from noon to 2 p.m.
•
as11:t ~:h.,w~~ J"::u~
brunch '---'udin chi
&amp;rY
.
• """
g
cken
a Ia king, I"" ~ bag_ e Is,
acrambled eggs, chicken hvers,
!"'!'tries, and s p i c e d tomato
JW""Adults will be cbara:ed $2.75;
cbildren 6-12, $2 and children
under 6, $1.
'
For reservations, contact Sue
Carrel at the Faculty Club
Harriman Library, ext 3232. '

African TalentN1ght

�-~~

~

s

~White House Ero3' Is Plesurs Topic

At Society for Scientific Sex Study
BY SUSAN GREENWOOD
-

-

'"Enls in the White ~~ouR:
~ ol Pleaidoatial Semalit;y" is the ~Y -tiao-

.a title ol tbe lalk. But the am-

ol Dr. Mil._ Plesur's
Jodare are a rather tame..,....._
inatioo of the """
ol tbe
35 ....., who-......, occupied the
house at 1&amp;10 l"ennsyivania
ATbe _ , . , will he
to...,.._in New York City as
the . . . , _ addrms at the an..J
of the Society for
the Scioatilic Stud,y of Sex, an
..._a.tillll ol phyaic:iaDs, psy-

m-

en-

-me

c:balacislll. _,._.

and other&amp;,
whca!
I e c t is the
...0- . _ , BalfaJo Jill - Dr. Jadt l..qJps.
(I'8IICI8Jl
To jaotify his topic, P15ar

....-...m-e

paiats oat !bat ~ytic
sddlors .......,.. !!leDialiW ...,
ol the la!ys to lllidet-.clinc a
and bis """'- 'l1lu&amp;, "it is
thedatyolbio6uriansto""'*'""
this ~ ol the Pro&amp;idential
~•
.._ 'l1le ......_ ... .,,...._,. he -__,
...-.....,
plaina, t . - there is '"peeious litde evidence• to aa:uralel;y clocomad any helaavior
!bat _ . . he aJII!Iideoed Ieos
than IIIDI8l Plesur .-1 presidealial hiapaphies and many
...,u.._, p e r i o d i c a! s as
-llllllll!limes dippinc into
movie IUid .........., magazines
for _ _._ ol .-m_
·
..._.,._ · Be fam.t cmly two presidents
who had eztramarital alfairs
while in the White House and
, _ , w h o - known to have
had ......,....) disease.. Out ol a
population ol35 IDOil, the Iieure
low, Plesur aclmuwledaThe public, he points out,
teods to_...
with private coodnea&amp; and also
displays m.:r-t to1enmce o1
a politician's pe..-1 weaknesses. This is well documental in the .....,.,, scandal over
Ted Kennedy's "adventures" on

=-'

public--

·~

Plesur also ll&lt;hanCles the

theory that the """"' may he
"'"PCJJISihhe for CO\-ering up passible 9C!Dial "scandals in ~
places, bot he doesn't pursue tl

........_ -

-

came

Most has been written about
W&amp;ITC!Il G. H a r d i n g, Plesur
says. He ....,. "never a pinnacle
ol IIIDI1Il virtue and if his earlier activities had been puhlic:iaad. he prohahly would nOt
'-"" . _ "IIDIDinated for presi. dent.- It ........ that MIS. Harding ....,. fhe years his senior
and "as damiJ-nni and unatbadive a as Harding
...... virile and weak.- Tbe story
ol H'an:linc's afrair with Nan
Britbt and of ""' dti1d hom
ol this relationship (supposedly~ in the Senate
doUrocma) widely puhlic:Urd at the tim&lt;&gt; but, recently,
a secooid lllisbe&amp;s has been un-

""""""'Mrs. Canie Phillips, a fellow
Obiama, carried "" • torrid cornq
M e with Harding. Tbe
letller&amp; full ol "sizzling
prose IUid fleab..toned ~
historian Frm&gt;ds Rusael say&amp;
bot ....... also '"&gt;opbomoric and
BlllllliDc than obodring."
1lte _,,.. w 1leuce dealt, too,
with mallels of ........ politics,
British diplcma:y and Carrie's

U/B Ranks 61st
Ui B JaDbd 61S . _ 100
~ receiviDa the ~
&amp;IDOUDisol federallilwlcial
. , _ t in 1989-'70, • ~
fna the NatiaDal Sci en ee
~ (NSF) iDdicatec;l
last .......
NSF lima sboor !bat U/ B
receiwd $1.5.216 mi1liaa ,_,
r..c~na~- in the fila! year
eadinl J - 30, 1!1'10..

pro-German feelinp, PIes u r

Tbe. native Buffaloni8n Grover Cleveland was involved in a
8CIIDdal. As a young man here,
_"he did not deprive ~ of
worldly pleasures," Plesur explains, and "the world of the
bar-room and bawdy house were
his haunts." He had a relationship with a Maria Halpin ·and
when she bore a son. Cleveland,
then a bachelor, assumed his
support since her other male
friends- married.

"The mood was enlbnsiasti&lt;;
and the ideas lecion." J o h n
Buett, coordiJator ol Commun-

Apparently this liaisaa
ity-Uniwnity Day, ~
....n-.mo.m hecauae the R&amp;aftet a recent meeting of .t()
puh1ican leaderahip ol that day
U/B representatives who pooled
appropriated money to send
suuestioo&gt;s
for the ciJeervaDce,
Mrs. Phillips and her husband
to Japan_
:-~
Sunday afternoon,
'llie young Franklin D. Roosevelt, Plesur describes as "a
Among tentati.... ideas """"'
• Programs an women's
handsome. well-bullt man with
rights, ecolvgy, elections and
the long muscles of an athlde."
general legal services to he preDuring his h n u r e in oGice,
sented hy the lAw School;
many prominent wrilels knew
about his relationship with
• Programs on the collegiate
Lucy Mercer which had begun --.•s Femo1e -ttlliaotion
system involving the collegiate
years hel01e. It wasn't until JoPlesur surveys two presidents residence h a 11 (Macdonald)
seph Lash deserihed it in Elin rather psyc:boanalytic terms.
- eanor and FranJzlin, """"""""· 'Thomas Jefferson is said to
that the public found out. Pie- ha"" been troubled hy "female programs;
sur speculates that the Roos- identification" because his fath• Refenal service and inewlts' UJJSUOCeSB!ul sexual lives er died when he was 14. Ac- formation for community indimay he attributed to Eleanor's cording to one interpretation. viduals w i t h handicaps and
Victorian view of intercourse the "intensity of his fainous pro b I ems, to he coordinated
~ Franklin's virility. He also
feud with Hamilton was a re- with the School of Social Polpomts oat that, perhaps, the action formation against an un- icy and Community Services;
sexual failure of her marriage conscious libidinal attraction.
• Demonstrations of tbe
led _Eleanor into her public perllaps fostered by f e m a 1 e University's involvement with
servJOe career.
. identification which provoked non-polluting detergent testing;
_.,., - .
1
anxieties over homosexuality.~
• Perfonnances in drama,
Conceming most of the other
33 presidents, history has proUlysses S. Grant was
c:ase music, dance. poetry, etc.
• A "sing-out" featuring the
vided. I itt I e solid -~.ostudy in &lt;;Ublimation and in~·~
experience,~ the historian heU/ B Baod and the U/ B Blues·
merely speculation and gossip, lieves. "Grant had a girl's prim• Displays of sculpture, sri
Plesur notes. Movie and ro- ness of manner and modesty of and graphic arts;
mance magazines ran weekly conduct
and boasted tha
• A ooncert featuring comstories about the sexual prowess
. - .
t
of John F. Kennedy. While he he had never been seen naked munity ~ singing groups;
•
ForeJgn culture emihits
was a senator, JFK led a stereo=::.a~
demonstrations;
typical hacbelor's life and was ing no basis for rumors of scan- and.....
n~rtation to campus
considered "most e I i g i b I"-" dalous behavior, he nonetheless for ..J,;.,~individuals in the
Plesur is doublful that Kentes
"I
than
nedy lost "his eye for a pretty quo
one ess
charitable central city area;
girl" _.__
source who states that the study
A parade of hiUids at Row""" he was married. A of Grant's love life provided tary• Field,
involving local high
contemporary jouma1ist has re~tantial
I I the
cently revived the old story su.,..
proo 0
rumor school units;
•
An
open
house in the
about JFK's relationship with ~!)~onl~ ~~~~ ~
Marilyn Monroe and about her husband's love for ho111ES." President's Ollice;
•
A
pbot.o
CODteat;
how the star was supposed to
PJsur skips over the last two
• .G ames and activities for
~,!:!.1~~~ presidents almost entirely, ex- younger children;
"how Kennedy was adept in cept to note that Gloria Stein• Athletic contests involving
escaping secret service surveil- em calls Nixon "the most sex- U/ B and local professional
lance in hotel corridors hy
~~ ~hief of State teams (but not in their field of
interest ) , for aample, the Bufusing
escapes," hut Plesur
discredits these because of the
It is remarkable, Plesur says, falo Sabres and the U/ B hockey
team in a basketball game;
hack problems.
that our presidents have es• Exhibits and displays in
Several presidents who mar- caped the sexual scandals that
engineering.
pharmacy, mediried women much YOllllf"'" than have rocked leader.l of other
themselves fed the (IOSSIP mills. governments. This might he the cine, dentistry, etc.
•
Placement
and admissions
John Tyler was wed to a woman result of a thorough, youthful
30 years his junior, less than "sowing of wild oats." Or of information and displays;
a year after his first wife's de- the fact that the sexual li ves of
• Outdoor food service
mise. As Plesur notes, however, the p!)!Sidents h ave received booths in the Norton pla7.a;
"c oncern over his sge was little study. Or because men in
• An .. international gourgroundless since T y I e r sired the Oval Office " grew up in the met" huflet in the Tillin Room;
seven children hy Julia, the
job" and let the "dignity of the
• Student aides to direct
last of which came when he was Office govern their acts." Plesur
pco!leitecreation area demOn70."
•
lets you take your choice.
strations·
• An ~bit "of faculty hooks
in the Bookstore;
• Community Action Corps
Geological societies meet peri- sity College at Buffalo. Dr. Ed- information, exhibits aod demodically fqr inten:bange_ Schol- ward J . Buehler, professor of onstrations;
ars present their latest findings_ geology here, is chairman.
• ArtS and crafts emihits
Fellow colleagues dispute such
Participating members of the and demonstrations;
findings. Tbe hope is that the
• Film~;
.
U/B
Department
of
Geological
m e e t i n g will stimulate the
• An avant garde worship
Sciences and their topics are:
members_
service.
Carlton
E
.
Brett,
"Borings
in
Such a meeting is being held
Tbe final program will he dein Bufralo, today t h r o u g h Crinoids From the Mid Siluri- veloped from these and other
March 11, as the Northeastern an Rochester Shale;" D. Cham- ideas in coOperation with variSection of the Geological So- pion. E . Oaksford, G. Palmer, ous University units, faculty,
ciety of Americi convenes its D. Hodge and P . Calkin. stafl, and students. To facilitate
5e\'ellth annual session at the "G r a v i t y Detineation of the scheduling, a coordinating comPreglacial Cazenovia River ValStatler-Hilton_
ley, Western New York;" G. mittee has been fonned, includThis year, the society is op- Gordon Connally, "Major Pre- ing: Buerk, student aiiairs and
ening its doors to the ~ glacial Lakes in the Hudson g&lt;&gt;neral ootivities (Ext. 2511);
A sYJI!posium dealing wtth the Yalley IUid 1beir Rebound His- Bernice Poss, academic interreal problems of an existing ge- tory;" Brayton P . Foster and estsrExt. 2314 ) ; Esther Swartz,
ological phenomenon-Niapra P au I H. Reitan, "Kimberlite cultural events &lt;Ext. 4!&gt;44);
F~is set for Friday, March
Dike Emplacement in the Cen- Patricl&lt; Young, ethnic inter10, at 8 JU1L Tbe mayor of tral Finger Lakes Region, New ests (Ext. 3011 ); Morris PoumNiaga_._ Falls, N-Y., E . Dent York;" Paul H. Reitan, "Alu- mit, community agencies (852l.ad&lt;ey, -will moderate_ Joining minum Distribution Between 8888), and A Westley Rowlaod,
the mayor will he Dr. Victor Sites IUid Octahedral Sjte Pop- administration (Ext. 4501).
According to Buerk, a numK Prest, Gealosical Suryey of ulations in Some Biotite&amp;;"
Canada; 'lbomas A Willtinson, Graham Howard Scott, ''Tex- ber of departments and Univeru_s_ Army Corps of~; tural Interpretation aod Genet-- sity oftices haYe already made
Dr.· Shaile&lt; S. Philhrid&lt;, Cor- ic Significance of Some Canad- plans for 1he day and others
nell University; a n d GeorJe ian Massive Sulphide J)epo&amp;- are in process. To as;ure adequate coordination a n d pnb.
Deny, ~ Aulhority ol the· its."
licity, he ........... that those
State ol New York.
Also on the p~ from the wishing to participate follow
y...., than 100 papers, lec- University' is 'lbomas Buergen- these~:
tures IUid exhibits will he pre- thal, profe&amp;a&gt;r of international
1. Hyon'-veapropam
sented clurina the three days. law, .me.. topic is "In~ planned, 81!1111. the detail&amp;--deTbe Conf.......... is co-spCJIIIlOred" tional lAw Aspects of Planning scriptiool, time IUid locatioohy U/B IUid lhe State Univer- in the Eri4&gt;:Niapra Reiion."
to Buett, 225 Nortlm.
lliiY&amp;
was

1'r"

""'! U:u!l:~~!'.::iu...

:.:CXJ.'l:sursm:t::'

rue

=

Geologists Meeting Here

2. H yon wish to out an
idea, call the commiUee her coordinatinc 1he ......, in
whim the faJla.

3. Detailed infonaatioo he receiwd hy March 16.
4. Tbe individual in c:barp
ol the event will have to ar1"1111&amp;" hia own - . bot Cl&gt;will help wbereYet

:::=m

5. Maintenance will build

~~~d
R"Y Heinie at Ext.

vance_ Call
4739, for a8llistaDce.
Publicity an d information
concerning the event will he
widely distributed throu!lbout
Western New York.
. University:Community Day
IS an extension and continuation of the "successruJ "Open
House" held in connection with
the 125th Anniversary ear I y
last May. At that time, 10,000.
12,000 Western New Yorkers
toured the campus and its facilities, meeting with students,
facu!ty and stafl. Original suggestions and gUidelines Cor the
event were provided by lbeodore V. Palenno, director of
University Publications Services..

Phase IT Is
Seminar Topic
Tbe School of Management
Alumni Association will
. sor a seminar entitled .. ~
ll-Outlook for the Future" on
Thursday, Man:h 16, at the
~ White Houae. w~
Tbe Western New Yodtagement community is invited
to the session. tickets for whim
are $5 and are availahle at the
offices of the U/B Foundation,
~in:'~~ Ave_, or hy
Participants in the seminar
are: Dr. Jerry E. Pohlman, assistant professor of industrial
relations, School. of Management; Richard Saas, economic
controls consultant for the Arthur Young and Co. Bulfalo
oflice, and Emanuel " Tahachnick, an attorney associated
with the Fudeman aod Renaldo law firm, specializing in
labor law and public employee
labor relations. Dr. Howard G.
Foster. assistant professor,
School of Management, will
moderate.
Tbe program will begin at

2:30p.m.

2 Prrfs N:uned
To ECHO Boord
Dr. 1beodore Hullar, ......,.,;.
ate professor, medicinal chemistry, and Dr. Edward J. Massaro, associate professor, biochemistry, have been elected
members of the interim hoard
of directors of the Environmental Clearing Houae Organization (ECHO) .
Dr. Massaro has also been
named to the nominating committee which will p_..t a
slate of officers and directors
at the group's June 1972 Annual Meeting.
ECHO, a non-profit. organization with an office at the
Buflalo MUBeWJI of Science,
was initially sponsored hy the
Junior League o~ Bulfalo, Inc.
During ·its year and a half of
operstions, it has been staffed
completely hy ,..,Junteers.
Tbe Board is now seeking aPplicants for the position of
part-time salaried executive direc!Qr to administer,.·coordinate and expand its operations:
Interested applicants may direct resumes to: Mrs. J~UMS
G. Berney, E C .H 0 Ollice,
Room 216, Bulralo M.-wn of
Science,_Humboldt Pat~&lt;;

�~

6

- - ,, 19'12

.

As OthersVIeW lk Rochester Paper G~~- Di1xwows
~,.ror.hrnl &amp; ~
~~1-..;.nn·Responsibility for~
Finds ~n·r"n'nco
~lb:) u~
\.d.l.ll-'6
1!1111'011:

By READ KINGSBURY

....._.r-v-

-rltey ( m.dmlaJ t.ud to
...,_ doinp O«J7tit,U llliJJa
t1te ra.tical _ . . Now
tltey'rria_.,. of~~

"" eesily as &amp;Wdents """" did
They are not lelbaqic. but suspicious; not """" SDPhisticated.
bul ........ ~'lbey
-~Ha•'e America'; ""' :almost depffi1!d oc \he ioto
...0... _yaulbs .....w the dw:es.&gt; .....,....,., of not knl&gt;wing
of bani times liven up their be YOUDC is almost impoo&amp;ible."
colden visiaas of a beUer ..odd
This y..,..s frSuoen, for ex~"":.c;:i"'jubsa;n- ~ "have m3de their deci'lbe _ . . , o f the Slate Uni- .;ions ahoc t ·drugs. """ and
wnity ol N""' York at Butlalo God." say;; Helen Wyant of the
p!d pl8ce to"'*- Two Uru-sity reoeardl office, who
,..,.... . . , the Uni......sity "
' - bem questioning swdeuts
tom by strife aDd strike. For a about their beliefs for several
time it all but pve up its yeaJS.
Four or five y e:t r ~ ago.
~role.
'Ibe Clll!ll!5--tbe -..ar, lhe in- "freshmen d i d n ' t articulate
such
maHer.;. But DOW by fhe
justiaes of eociety, the taiaty of Um-s;ty lmdership time they graduate from bigb
sdlool
they bave met such
- - all familiar IJec:lr&amp;round

--

-a

.·

...mnc IIBlin~- His
otudents, _"" SII)'S
his clipped
German
_,., in
udon't
laugh

... of campus uprisings
of tbat •-"'&lt;l But lwtJuleDce

' - .... ~ .-:bed the
leoel it did !Jere.
'Ibe . , . . _ is calm now.
Some ol lhe larger causes of rebellion ba... resolved and
fcqDCaeD; stnJo&amp; ~-

__

::::.,eo;.r!.!"ts
.,.. ~,.,::
inc

liD studeDts.

But beyoad these reasDDS,
there dearly is a oew studeot
style ......, lio:al and .-rching.

Goae from the bulletin
t..n1s ol N..U.. Hall. the studen! unioa, are the c:alls to action maap"'"""i"': as off!5in&amp;s
of study. In their place are proposals fOI' oomses ; iu Jewish
,..uQsm and Cbas6idic mu~
meditation.

::;;.:~-~
0

........ of ...... of capitalism- aDd "altemate institutions

to - . family, education."
U,IIISWrs in the o«ice of Sunsbiue lfquse, a •-olunleec drug
crisis seovice, a studeot ol BOcial 'IOI!Ifare from Suffolk Counly •no p•-e his name only as
"Shades" said: "Wben YOUDC
people became aware of probleln&amp;
they tried to change
~hines OIIOI!nlicbt with the radical _..m. N&lt;M' they're in
.....m of lbemselves.w
~ ~ leathery
bearded ,..., with wire-rimmed
........ is old beyoad its years,
doa:ribos the work of SurSUne
House, one of 38 wlunteer pro0

0

0

~~ity~
!ion by 1.000 studeots.
They belp the poor and bandimpped. bladt and Indians,
children aDd elderly, mental
.-tients aDd prisooen;, Shades
ezplained. aDd """""'- they
1110\' e i D t 0
middle ~
hapefuJ)y tbey'JI Ireep the values leamed in this work iu
their .minds..w
. Ewa if there are a thousand
ol U fB"s 17,000 full-time studonts i.nwhed in such woric.
D ,, o..dos H. V. Ebert. dean
ol the cfu.ision ol unclerpaduate sq.dies, says his studeots
are "distwtJiDcly quiet."
Dr-. EIJert still carries a full

0

0

0

problems."
Nor is training for a YOCBtion the paramount oooccm as
; - was with ~ in years
,__ These lresbmen. Mrs.

Wyant _.,., "mo...ed ioten9e
interest in tbemsehoes •.. more
empbasis oo their own develop!DeDL It's the kind of interest
used to eqJeCt to see after
they bad been here a couple
of years.~
The summary of questionnaires ~ by freshmen
last summer shows they certainly eq&gt;ected to leaf!l job
skills in q&gt;ilece, but they· were
even
~
ing tomore
thinkin~
c:riticall)',in aoder•
stand lhemoeives and e a c h
other. appreciate the unfamiliar.
'(bey put '"pollution" at the
top of a list ol """""""" folby mcial strife. campus
UDI1!St. M.superf'JCiality and lack

-

IDOIIIIioc io life," over-population.
'lbe V'oetnam War was io

of

sixth place.
Surely the daBs enteriog in
the fall of 1969 would bawe put
the war at the top of its list.
The fuel of U/ B rewlt was dislike for unifonns &lt;ROTC or
city police l a n d defense re-

sOan:b and those wbo were re-

sponsible for their """""""' on

campus.

~It was perhaps a

misunderbrood~! the oops
to cunpus first in February
1970, but radical leaders skillfully fanned ~ incidents that
followed and Acti~~~: President
Peter · F. Repn rmaUy Cldled
the police bad. He got peace.
but also a compu!..-tride strikt&gt;
that ate up more than a month
of teaching time.
HanDy bad normal operations resumed than the Kent
State ~ stirred the campus and i~ was impo&amp;;ible to
ODDtinue.
But since then the sdlool has
had only a normal slate of
problems, very tmublesome but
very routine.
"The SIUdents bave changed,"
said Dr- Albert Somit, two
years ago 1-' of the political

standing that

--

~Y.P~

..c:-r':'~

-----

·-~,~-­
_

.... c:r.ouna

.
a:..n.sr ,_a.,..._.,..._.&amp;.........._~
S::mam ..a.r: -&amp;-..,.
~~.-s~a..-.u.-

U::WIWJW

·
SCience department and now ex~t;ive ~ presidenL '"The"'!;
m1JU8tratioo :has changed too.
"But I think ttM:re are other
""'""!"'· 'lbe outside world- •
the oty• the state-was_ 110 ' - tile that the Univers1ty was
shoc;ked back ioto a sense of
reality.
"And lhere were faculty and
students who got to the very
brink I of University ~~poe)
and looked over and
t like
what they saw there. .
•
D r. Reila!' had a brief c;areer
as SUNY Vlce _chancellor 11! A;lbany, then df:'Clded "? remam '!'
Buffalo and IS teaching psychia try_apm.
Kattor
Dr. Robert L K~~r. w_bo
ha~ been head of ovd eogmeenng at 29 and later dean . of
the _graduate ~~ _and Vlce
P!""ident for !a?Jities plannmg, became pres..lent on July
I, 1970, at the ay.e of_41.
He brought With' him an al~ whoJfy new team of admuustrators.

!Fdn

C1.1TE"1.1l ~Tl\'l""rC
- - y .u::;, yy C V.l.J.-. .l ~

n.
lllpalt8r
to . . - •

' - - .., -

-

forum far ... ....
_,.,. of .... ....,
of ... facln&amp; ... community. We - . . - .
, - - paporo •
penn1to.

---------------------"We came io with a law and
order reputation," Dr. Somit
said
Irs been tested Eigbt students were espelled after the
s tril&lt;e; two returned to ~
and wen! charged with oiminal
trespass. Last summer radicals
disrupted a conservative professc&gt;r's history coun;e and were
hailed before campus c o u r t,
which they also tried to disrupL
Tbe campus security force
has only 43 membera but it bas
professional supervision now,
under a former FBI man and a
former state trooper. T h e y
managed to have 22 men present and arrested seven students.
Security forces have reasserted their presence io Norton
Union..-' which once they
shllDIMid. Last spriog a part of
the basement was clO&amp;ed because of drug pushers, assaults
and thefts. It's open now.
Even

Docs Have Gone

Even the dogs have gone.
Students made a fad of having
dogs, but they voted 2-1 to ban
them from Norton, the school
hired four part-time dogcatchers and Iaid down new rulesand added fjve dogs of its own
to the security force.
But the s tate's highly publicized decision to beef up campus security is only now baving
results. 'lbe force is " still just
a handful, not enough to cope
with our problems," says Anthony F. Lorenzetti, acting vice
president for student allaira.
'lbe problems include burglaries. assaults and thefts. 'lbe
campus is readily accessible to
anyone who can ride out Main
Street to the northeast comer
of the city. 'lbe growing IIWDber of black students. some 1,·
200 now, tend to become concentrated io the dormitories,
and black-white coofrontatior!S
resulL
But Dr-. Ketter, aooonling to
all reports, bas faced everyone,
Black Panthers, angry activists,
~ faculty members, with
bluntness and honesty. He's
built lxidps with the boetile
city (be made 129 Iaika in the
community io his first yaor)

~"ia -~ single-b&amp;Ddedly

CIIIIIIIICiin&amp; .a drive llDlODII busifor $5 million..a drive

wbicb would bave bem "tm(c:..tillwd-- 10, col. I)

I wish to tolally disa,_ any
,_.jbility 1
the RepoG.
and ~tions 00 kc:ountability ol the Faculty Sente CA&gt;mmittee 00 Academic
and R~tity for
wbicb
ve me credit as a
The Facul~ E&gt;-ecuti~ &lt;;:omrnittee
did c:oofirm my appomtment to
this -..rnittee io early November a - Chairman Rose
aeiiber oontadect me nor rnitted a copy of the draft tmtil
1 finally oontacted him io January. Dr-. Rose's position was
that the d raft was complete
prior to my appoiotment and
thus there was DO value io rebashing the issue. He &lt;!id. pve
me the option of submitting a
minority position.
Since 1 have spent more than
a year engaged in attempting
to establish formal procedures
for due proce!6 for graduate
studeots, I utterly reject the
premise that the peer pressure
of "mutual regard" will pro~
the richts of studeots. It IS,
bo_wever, DO! UDCOlDIDOD_to fin!!
this mutual regard acting directly oppoaile to the ioterests
CJ! studl;nts. _faculty !""' the ~tire Umvermty and instea&lt;!- tied
to pocltets of vested self-mterest. 'lbe dnalmentatior) tha,t I
"'!ve gathered from Umvers1tyWide surveys, from the files of
the late lamented ollices of the
AdYOCBte and the ~
as well as the numerous gnevanoes pi'OCII!!II!Ied by -~ Gradoate S!udent .Aseocia~ bear
undeniable Wllness to this pattern.
More p~ however,"! a
paUem whit:b directly denies
wbat tbe CA&gt;mmittee ."!&amp;tes are•
the .....-ry ooodi~ . for
~..:"'ktha:OOlS,.;;
eration. There are DO shared
norms, there is DO Universilywide coopention and the only
compromises are those students
must make iu order to force

·=.:.ru..,..

Fn....t.,...

0

.

tbom mto tbc maid faohioao.:l
by the 11111811 poup that _,..
pletely CODtn&gt;ls the atudent's
&lt;~epee J&gt;IOt!IBD'· The-~ of
the Committee are ironically
apt wbeu they oay that . . .
"discretion I eaves for
abuse VlliU" standards leave
'for rnisappliaotion, infor- ·
mality ~v~ room for. sloppy
fact fiDd.inc.
.
I fiDd particularly naive and
the comments o1 the
C:ittee that . . . "if the
does not .ict, it does not
l:j"~y I!I10IIIh about the
alleged infraction" and that
"
the choice is to be either
•.:..ilistic' or to bold to lnlditiona! academic valueiL" 'lbe
Ivory T.....,. elitism wliicb permeates lheir entire position is
the antidiesis of the emerging
model io which ~=~pol­
i
is the .Jtared
ility
all membera of the campus
and the provioce of nooe. 'lbe
im licit assumption t bat the
ac!'demic tiebavior of faculty
should onl be judged b other
faculty ...:.any only ~ bigb.
est rank of .faculty, is an outdated authoritarian mode I
wbic:h DeYel' did work in a fair,
impartial lashioo for students
or faculty. U "lnlditional academic values" are not "realistic" io ·generating an ionovalive, even-banded academic envirortment n o u ri s h i n g the
growtb and training of academicians, tben the values are
suspect. 'lbe Faculty Senate beJieved tbere was a need ftw
norms of behavior and due process mechanism for students.
It is time they recognized that
the norms. of academic freedom
are not and cannot be retained
witl!out equally we 11-defined
and implemented norms of accountnbility.
~OHN CIIEENWOOD
Extem8J Alfairs
Vice President
Graduate Student
Aseociation

:l

3 Unamused Readers Find
Prof. Kurtz (Slrrt onWit'
EDrroll: •
distracting us with a serio-&lt;lom·
Proli!SIIOI' K u r t O:s letter io , ie unravelling of biaaes against
'(iewpoinu ( Reporte, Feb. 24) small people. Everyone is dison discrimination against short criminated against in one way
men, is an - p i e of donnisb or anotber, so what's all this
humor of the m o s t tiresome fuss HEW is maidnc about
liind. I am sure that be is right women in the nnhlenity?
in arguing that short men are
'lbe fwll partly has to do
discriminated against; this is with people wbo are not very
DO! very dilferent from discrimdiscriminating about the lrinda
ioation against women: if you of prejudices they are willing
thioi(men are b 'l tt e r than to deal with in cood faith. N o
women, tben you will think big amount of belittlement thinly
men are better than little men. masquerading as comic irony
However, his elaborate exer- can obacun! the fact that blacise io parody is an insult to t a n t discriminatory attitudes
w o m e n, trivializes the real and practices do esist.. I fiDd it
p r '! b I e m of discrimination bard to understand why a man
against women and other miof Paul K u r t O:e intellip!nce
norities ( ......d our "liberal" would re110rt to allmted nonand "humanist" speak io such sense as a way of confronting
terms of black liberation?&gt;, and
these realities.
does litUe to iocreaae the stat-wJLl.IAI( c . ..,....
ure of this University or the
Department ol English
stamembers.tureol its m a I e faculty
•
•
•
EDrroll:

c. CUJl&amp;Alrr(
Chairman,
Department of Classies

--l.D)

"""""'

Paul Kurtz is short on wit.
I was not amused by the little
piece io the February 24th Reporter, 'lbe overall e«ect of his
~. whether iotentional &lt;W
not. is to diac:redit any aerioua
attempt at dealinc with major
. . . . - ol discrimination, . .
pecially recardinc """' and aex.
He OOilWyll a dista8&amp;iful ooncieecl!naiooi - one that twita at
the ...._;ty ol refotm (it'a all
an borin&amp;. an incaavenient) by

For his sophistic put-down of
University alinnative acti o n
for women and minority perSODS ("HEW It To 'Ibe Une,"
Reporte, Feb. 24), ProfMior
Kurtz wina the Most Leaden
Parody of the Yaor Award, and
an autographed copy ol The
FeiJIIJk Eunuch by Gennaine

Greer.

'lblj Reporter, ~ ciMa'ves
a prize for printing a faculty
v i e w p o i n t which, boweve&lt;atavistic aDd .......,._.tative,
ser.,.ea to illu.trate~
why -"mic i1181ilutiana need
a little belp from HEW.
...-.n&amp;ft)OOGAN

J..iiJiar8

�7

. Jlan:ll 9,1972

were defined. A Colletliate

GJ&gt;RESIDENTIAt COMMENTARY

SYstem

was initiatecL

Q: on pat c:anllnullr. on
.,._,t
"'! .......
,.,..
__.
_- the_..of
tlonl for the - . do
-A:

What Are the Goals of the UniversitY?
Why Are They Important to Our Future?
Q:-~the-'&lt;

of the

UnhlenltJ, ,.,..
whJ _ .. are

..,. to -

~ tD me that it is

imiJ(IIIIIible tD get any place
unless you know where you
are going. How can ~ hit
a tarpt, if you don t know
where it is 0&lt; what it is?
Goals are important bQcall8e
they set directioas, indicate
riorities, and pve a real
tD what the University
is about, where it is going,
. and what it wiab5 tD be. .

1.'.,....,

Q: can ,.,.. be ....,.. opecltlc on
whatthe_..ofthe~

..... --oeiiJT

A: In reality, they provide
the over-til guidelines on
which priorities are set-the
allocation or budaet, the recnlitment o( faculty a n d
stall, library aequisitions, admission o( students, and the
nature or reaearcb and public
service activities.
Q: Are there any _.. that ap-

1111 l
to ' all """- -

-A: There are many who 00.
· lieve that on a ·globtJ baais
011e could say; at .least for
universities, tbat there are
three over - riding miaoions:
Tea-chmg, · Reaeudi, and
Public Service. Within these
broad catesorie&amp;, some institutions bilhlight the responsibility for the transmission
of culture and the training
of the young for the professions, while others emphasize
that colleges and univemities
have an important additional
sorting-out function.
Q: If _ .. are to have any real
.......... do ,.,.. believe that
lheJ can be couched In auc:h
- 1 tenns7

A: No I .don't believe that
~w gosls can be stated in general terms. It seems
to me that tD do so is tD
oversimplify, and con·
sequently, tD come up with
some glib, meaningless answers.
Q: In a practical - · are
there any &amp;Iobei _.. that a
c:ollap or un-.lty "'-lei follaifl
.

A: I don't believe so.

G&lt;?a~s.

objectives, and mission must
be tailored tD each college
or university All have a different hist-ory, tradition,
sponsorship, financial support, faculty, stall. lind studenls, and to treat these all
alike in order tD come up
with universal gosls would
be a mistake from either a
philosophical or an operational standpoint.
Q: can an Institution's -Is be

sat for eternity or at least for
a '-tlme7
A: Well, obviously, goals
cannot be set for eternity. I
am equally sure, however,
that it is possible, in some
institutions, tD have s o m e
fairly long-range gosls. Some
institutions have short-range

g,~stx&gt;W:.,~~=~l':.~
these longer-range ones. I,
personally, believe that it is
important tD keep institutional goals ftenble, capable
of modification and amendment, but still su11icienUy
long-range tD make demands
on us in moving tx&gt;ward our
ultimate goal of academic
excellence.

q--

Q: The Unlvanlty lo In Its 126111
,..r, so . . •ssume that the

oner

of _ . . .. not a -

~~

A: You are right. 'lbere have

been defined over a period of

time various sels of gosls for

the University at Buffalo.

Q: We undentand that when the
UnMtrsfty was private, In Aprtl
1955 to be exact, that. the then
Chancellor of the University, Or.
Clifford C. Fum.., had a statement prepared entitled .. The
Pu,_ of the University of
Buffalo."

A: That is true. That statement was specifically directed toward the self-study report p~ the Univer-

~7~~~~~vtesua~'1iti~

and it appeared at a moment
when the University---£till a
private institution- was 00.
sinning tD raise ils aspirations significanUy.
Q: Wasn't this also a time when
h i 1 h e r education was doln&amp;
some needed soui-Marchine?

A: Yes, higher education in

SAElects 1st MVman Chief
With slighUy more than 2,000 or 11,000 eligible vqters
casting ballots, the undergraduate Student Association (SA)
has elected a woman to serve
as its chief executive for the
coming year.
Heading the ticket of the
CURE party, Debbie BenaOn
-the finlt of her sex ever to
head SA-received 947 votes
to 466 for Deonis Ward of the
Alliance Party, 197 for Keith
Frankel of Vantage, and 147
for Stephen Glassman o( the
Fresh-F'aced ElevenMe. Benson, who C!'frled TM
Spectnurl'a eudorsernent, campaicned em a platform calling
for still another reorpnization
of the :=!ft.~ Student
, cratioo of a
unicameral faculty-etudmt goveminc body, .a review of all

University-wtde and Division
of Undergraduate Studies cornmitlees, more student input in·
to tenure decisions, ani! transformation of SA into a body
concerned more with issues af.
fectin~ studenls' lives than with
financial matters.
Other officers elected were:
Tyrone Saunders, CURE, first
vice president; Douglas Webb,
CURE, second vice president;
Jeffre:r Osinski, eURE, treasurer. Coordinstx&gt;rs e I e c ted
were: Janine Janas, CURE,
academic alfairs; Hatem ElGabri CURE, international affairs; 'Brenda Smith, Alliance,
minority alfairs; Edward Wolfe,
CURE, national affairs; Edward Gamble, .Alliance, student
aJfairs· Andrew K.-.ver, Al1iance,' students' rights; and Diane Zwollnaki, CURE, student
activitiefl.

that era was beginning to
realize the enormity of the
transition tll&amp;t would be required in melding the tradi tional concept or education
with the contemporary.
Q: What were some of the lmportllnt etemeltS' In the FurnaS

.UtementT

A: The F 'u rna s statement
not~d that the first and foremosl goal of the Universily
was "deliberately and oRIcially to foster the advancement of knowledge." ·

--

Bulfalo" stated: "In short,
the gosls of the University
must encompass freedom of
inquiry, devotion to truth,
and the joint advancement
of creative teaching and creativo research. Within these
goal&amp;, the Uni\'crsity is commitl.,d tD fur the'r the WJderstanding, imagination, integrity :md professional capacitie-· of its students." The
emphasis here was on academic quality.
Q: Didn't the Middle Stites As·

sociatlon conduct a v i s I t at
Q: How was this to be done!

the University in 1963!

A: Tiuough instructjonal offerings in the acad,jm ·c diiciplines and profE"s.pion a!
studies urepresented in the
constituent schools of the
UniVersity." Also, the University was to encourage and
provide resources for carrying out research.

A: Yes, an abbreviated visit
W!lh conducted, and at that
time the self-study reiterated
the !955 pui'J&gt;OS"S. It should
be noted. however, that the
report submitted at that time
emphasized the University's
expanded charge to develop
as a great graduate center
within the Sl.a te Univemity
system, a charge which had
been indicated in the Heald
Commission report.

Q: What were the other goals
of the Fumn statement?
A : A second goal was to

serve the local community
and region. This was tD be
done by providing "a local
opportunity for study and
learning ... and for teaching
and research:' The University was · to work "with industry, oomnu!rce, . government and the institutions for
educational and social welfare in . finding answers to
current problems." The University was to furnish services "which are appropriate
to a University" and which
other agencies might not be
able tD provide; it was to
keep the professions informed
of scientific advances affecting the work of their practitioners; it was to offer opportunities f o r understandi g other cultures; and it
was to inform all types or
citizens "of the great moral,
political, and aesthetic values which have been distilled
out of recorded civilization."
The third goal of the University, as defined in the
Furnas document, was to insure the· accomplishment of
the others by providing "a
setting in which intellectual
freedom may be exercised
and the search for truth may
be prosecuted unhampered."

pu._bJ

Q: Were the goals and
of the University modified
President Martin Meyerson?

A : Yes, the goals were fur-

ther defined in 1966 in an
addrcos by President, Meyerson to the Faculty Senate.
In t h a t address President
Meyen;on listed seven points
which were to serve as guides
for h is adm inistration. 'lbe
first of these was a re-emphasis that the University was
to become c.a pre-eminent
graduate ceoler," advancing
knowledge through research
a n d teaching in academic
and professional fields. Second, the Univemity was tD
do this by evolving ways " to
reinforce the traditional disciplines a n d to transcend
them by new approaches tD
research and teaching."
'Third, research was tD be
'' supplemented substantially" in fields outside the
health sciences, which had
conducted most of the research . in the past. Fourth,
the University was to be "a
great unde rgraduate center."
Fifth, "centers of identifies~ lion" were to be established
· for faculty and students "in
wh ir boUt intellectual and
social values could be realized ., Sixth. the community
Q: Did the Furnas ststement In·
relationship was to be "close
elude anything specifically :n
and dynamic" but one which
terms of enrollment and servrecognized the University's
Ice?
"nationlal and international
A: Yes, although it defined
ties." Seventh, the Univerits "distinctive area of servsity was t.u be administered
ice" as Western New York,
uwi• :t stvle which encourthe University r a i sed the
agr the ~ reatest degree of
J:pe~Jm~ntco~~d s:a:'~ freedom for students and facul ty to study and do other
from other states and from
creative work not only in
foreign countries, a n d inconventional, but also in new
crease its services on a
fie1ds and through new ways
national a n d international
of ·learning."
level ·
Q: Is It true that these broad
alms ,..,. realllrmad prior to
and-.......,. with SUta
Unlvanlty, that - - of
the .......,. the Unlwrllty's
l'lalllanad
vision of - · certain of emphatls .....

'f:""'
That, also, is true! For
~inl960~
a

the nierger,
"Report on
ObiecliY!!JI and Broad Policiea of the Univenity · of

Q: Is It true that coalo two, five,
and prvvlded a baals fO&lt;
a major ,_..nlutlon of the
University?

•

;.

A: Y""· they did. 'Ibe unplementation or these three
goals in particular was intended tD integrate the various disciplines and fields of
knowledp. and p r o v i d e
greatet administrative aut&lt;momy among the··~
unita. Seven faadty poup8

IUnlvanltyr
would aubmit the following as the present goals
and objectiws o( the University at Buff a I o: (1) 'Ibe
University wjll continue its
evolution intD 011e of the Dation's pre-eminent graduate
and profallional centers with
a 6rm commitment tD the
advancement o f knowledge

:in~:!S...,'t:

and profeasiooal disci lines;
(2) The University ~con­
tinue tx&gt; aocept the obligation
inherent
its graduate center aspirations o( creating
both an out~ undergraduate division With a rigorous academic orientation
which cballei.ges the individual tO test the limits of his
intellectual and personal development, and an outstanding continuing education division dedicated tD the concept of education as a lifelong pursuit; (3 ) In each of
its major divisions- undergraduate, graduate, professional and continuing education-the University will act
tD maintain elristing academic strengths, to strengthen
areas of promise, and tD develop new areas which possess indications of f u t u r e
importance to the University
and to society;
( 4) The Univemity will
remain unequivocally committed tD academic freedom; ·
it will simultaneously insist
upon a commitment to academic responsibility; ( 5) In

in

::.:~ernie pro~ po~

Univeaity ~romaln open
to innovation and seositivP
to the needs of faculty and
students, both present and
prospective; .but it will never
lose sight o( its academic

a:O:OO~f ~~

in favor of the most effective
methods of advancing and
transmitting knowledge, understanding and abilities
which are significant and valuable tD mankind; ( 6 ) The
University will recognize the
importance of an environment conducive tD learning
teaching and research; and
it will seek tD provide facilities, services a n d personal
examples which create such
an environment;
( 7 ) 'The University wil t
oontinue to recognize a special relatiom;hip ,, i t h the
community and region, and
it will serve in this relationship according to its academic interest~ and abilities; ( 8)
'The University will never be
bound tD the tcaditional
forms of hid&gt;er education.
it will be willing to act alone
or cooperatively iH using its
resources to create Jlf!!W fonns
which will further the reeliz
ation of ils aspirations, pur·
poses, and 'osls; and, (91
'The Univel'Slty will strive tv
organize and govern itself in
such a manner as tD make
the most productive ll8e of
those N""'VurceB enlrusted to
it by SO&lt; "ty for the achiev&amp;ment or tl eae gosls.
Q: How -.lei JDU summa~-ls7

A: 'These gosls suggest that
the University can, at the
same time, have both inteIR'&amp;tive and adaptive goal&amp;that is, we can and must
hold and pass on the values
of society while also proving
tD be innovative.

-

:,--.,..
Q:· WIII -

_ . . be . -

A: Yeo, they "will.

for

�~

8

Plan toVJSit Europe?

tts ~Than Ever

Critic Says

UIBQuortet
Is 'Exciting'

stock up before you Jm.... And
EDITOR'S NOTE: Byro11
tske tzaveler's checb.
&amp;II, ,.,.;., edikJr of lite Staten
ing, and with it tbe chance
-......
- - apinst
0.,. llyiDg to lsland AdvaDce, fikd u.e fol,.
Both
to ao someplace escitillg - liR Don't
Europe. For U/B students, fac- sm..,.Je in .t._ '"l'ber-e's no ~ report "" Uoe Ullioaulty and staff, it's easier and due proceas in IIIIIDY European Wy'• cleodDnd s~ QUartet.
cheaper tbsn ever before. You oounb'ies," Dale emphasizes.
They don't look IIIIlCh liU
can · """'- from 36 differeut and he tells ol students sitting reyolntjraa~ the DJSDbers of.
departure and return dates oo in jail for months without being tbe clevei&amp;Dd' String Quartet.
UtB and other SUNY - wide able to see a lawyer.
but they have tbe talent. concharters: And tbe cost is low.
Tbe best time to start plan- viction and determination to
Flights sponsored by "tbe Uni- ning a summer trip is now, tbe make a dramalic impact on
versity Travel Center cost only two say. Dale has a Uniwensity tbe world ol chamber lllllllic.
$1 '19 ( rotmd trip) and tboee Travel Oigbt achedule in his
At a recent gatberinc ol tbe
chartered by tbe lntematiooal office - 316 Norton. All Oigbts National Music Coomci1. variAir Travel Program nm be- still have open seats and reser- ous me_., and radio """"""
tween $173 and $214, depend- vations can be made by calling utives shared a panel on toing on destination.
him at ext. 36m or 3603. For day's arts. Wii!Jout """"~&gt;~ion
This summer, BCCDrding to tbose of you from New York they agreed thai tbe moat poi&amp;..· .Ed Dale, coordinator of Uni- City, tbe International Air ooous tam in selling lllll8ic in
'versity Travel, more people Travel Oigbts leave from there. concert hall or via tbe airwaves
tbsn ever will be going to Eu- Tbe local contact_. for Ibis was "chamber music." I t rope. And Dale, along with tbe charter service is Alice Kapler, to spell boredom and llmili'eicome profundity to an overStudent Aasociation of SUNY 836-1850.
fSASUl , bas been lO'Orki.ng to
U you're thinking about fly- whelmillg portion ol the pohlic.
make it easier. They've aotten ing with another charter service.
Since tbose wbo dwell in tbe
tosetber a packet ol ioforma- make sure it's legitimate. Last
tion 1-'ul to traveler,._ year, students lost tbousaDds or rarefied atmoopbere ol tbe moat
_ . - t and health certificate dOllars to shysters .wbo took exquisite taste have always proapplicatloos, guides to London, their depa;its and disappeared_ claimed tbe absolute superiorP a r i s and Amsterdam, auto Dale is suspicious of any mm- ity ol vocal and ~
rental or lease ioformation, and pany that 'MlD't tell you tbe music for s m a II eQ11!1Db1es,
subway maps. In addition, name ol tbe airline it's using. cand, ideally, small rooms to
there's ioformation strictly for
Dale and SA S U are also perform in), it would be a
studenta-application&amp; for Eur- opening up a bmncb office of shame if mere terminoloey were
rail passes, international stu- Uniwensity Tmvel in LoodcJo. permitted to continue to tum
dent IDs and an inte&lt;-Euro- SUNY students -will meet each olf unknowing atJ&lt;fieuoes from
ol tbe. moat magnificent
Oigbt to help people make con- some
(and frequenUy moat delipt,nections and Cmd lodging"and
Both Dale and Elaine Schlis- to answer questions. Office per- fully entertaining!) fuusici in
.
sel, assistant director of Over- sonnel will operate a 24-hour tbe ._rtory.
A young string quartet can
seas Academic Programs, have ioformation and refenal servicfo.
al[ord to experiment and seek
lots of hints for would be trnvelEveryone should go to Euers. First, tbey strongly recom- rope at least twice, Dale and its own atJ&lt;fieuoes more freely
mended that you apply for your Schlis se l say. Maybe you than an admired member ol tbe
musical establishment, perlmps,
psasport now. Tbe processing should tzy it Ibis summer.
and thus it is that tbe four inlake&amp; only about two weelu; at
terestiog personalities that
this time but by May it will
comprise one ol today's moat
tske about a month. Wben you
escitillg
, _ musical orpnimgo downtown to apply, make
tioos are adopting new ways to
sure you have your birth cerwin
new
audiences for music
tificste, Ms. Scblissel urges bulb old and new.
uno certificate, no passport" is
Tbe
Cleveland
String "Quartbe bard and fast rule. Dale
!et members came from Juilbas set up a discount rate for
liard
and
tbe
Eastman
Scbool
~rt pbotos with The Bu{ol Music, and studied with a
fawTIJlUI, and tbe passport is
Dr. Marvin K. Opler, pro- collection ol tbe most stellar
now good for five years. To fessor and chairman_ Depart-. artist-teachers i ma g i n a b I e.
make things easier still, rules mentor Anthropology, and pro- They first came to public at.have changed and people going fO'I&amp;Or of soc i a I psychialzy, tention in 1969 at tbe wellto Western Europe no longer School of Medicint'. has been spring of chamber music gold.
need sbots.
.
selected to present the 21st An- Rudolph Serkin's influential
Look • • Mop
nual Karen Homey Lecture in
Before you go, tbe two trnvel New York City in Mardi ol M.ylboro festival in v ennont..
TWauthorities suggest you at least 1973.
Tbe name stems from tbe
look at a map of Europe and
Conducted by tbe Association years ( 1969-1971 ) when they
have some idea of where you're for the Advancement ol Psyartists-in-residence at tbe
going. Too often, Dale says, choanaly~is, tbe prestigious lec- were
Institute ol Music.
people eitber under-plan or ture bonors tbe memory ol tbe Cleveland
dJanging labels becomes
over-plan. Good guide and trnv- founder or tbe Association and aSince
problem once an identity bas
el books are abundant and of the American Institute for been established, they have not
Frommer's "Five Dollars a Psychoonalysis. Each year tbe become tbe "Bul£alo Quartet"
Day" series, tbe guide written Association invites "a speaker now that they have replaced
by Harvard students, and tbe prominent m psydtiatric or re- tbe famed Budapest Quartet as
new Whole World Handbook
lated fields wbo we feel csn tbe. resident eusemble at tbe
are recommended . However. enlarge our view and add to tbe State Uniwensity of New Yorlt
"these are only guide• and effectiveness ol our work."
at Buftalo.
sbould be used that way."
Past lecturers have included
Tbe Buftalo assignment is a
Traveling around Europe is Abram Kardiner, Paul Tillich. partiCularly prestigious as well
easy, Dale and Ms. Scbliasel Abraham Maslow. Roy Grinker, as d&gt;allencinc one. Under tbe
explain. Tbe Eur-rail pess is Tbeodore lidz, Kenneth Ken- Slee Bequest, tbe Univemity is
highly recommended as a bar- iston, Franz Ale:mnder, Bruno obligated to use a milJioo..doUar
gain as are tbe student inter- BetteJ.beim, ~ C. Wynne. grant to _,... perfonnances ol
European Oigbts. Other people and Robert Jay Ufton. Tbe tbe complete cycle ol Beeare advocstes of tbe gypsy tour lecture is published each vear thoven string qua.J1eiB within a
wbere you tske tbe i&lt;napsKk- in tbe Americiur Journal of 90-&lt;lay period each year. 'These
hitd&gt;-hike route. Still others PoychoonaJy.;._
perform&amp;JJ&lt;:eS are in addition to
say the only way is to rent a ·
Dr. ()pier's lecture will be individual and eiJIIOIDble incsr.
called "Culture in Psychiatzy." structioo. with ample time olf
•1
It's easier to find lodging in
A distinguished author, lec- for world lnlvel and CXIDClOitiztbe morning, Dale and SchlisseJ turer and ..........,.,, Dr. ()pier incsay, tbeit you can get rid ol bas been widely pubiiobed Oil
Since neither lltrinc _ , _
your baggage and have a worry- such topics as adolescent and nor their repertory spring to
free evening. U you're trnveling youth psychialzy, - ·:..:.a..L.-fuJI bloom at tbe IDOIDI!DI ol orby train, tske over night trips schimphrenia, aex ~ ~~ the Cleveland
and sleep on tbe train, they an eulture, youth eulture and StriDe Quartet will play ito
IIUgJe6t.
cullural iDIIueoces Oil behavior- lint fuJI cycle in 1973, -:r 'Thl! pair emphasize tbe usual al paltemo, to cite a handfaJ ol while obarinc tbe BedbowD
hiniB: lnlvel light, ·you're there CUJTf!D1 elllllllpleo. He ioo a fte- - - with such eob!Njolvd
to - Europe not wony about quenl cootr:duior ol book dlaptbe Juillianl Strine
'-'vy I - . e. Bring a lot ol ters written from "~- .
hand 'MI8haiJJes, you don't al" or "to I a I antluopolar;y"
Diacowrinc tbe Cleveland
milch from a laundromat winC!rlainly •
JlliDcipal- ~ Quartet dow. Most ol ·your eJectriaoJ ~and
~ ol our recent llllllical ·
in~oltbeMidtowo
appl.iaJxa
Oil Eu- - a n d in tbe ,........
~nhettwn Sta:ay, a ~
_ . . CUJ"n!llt . . forget about inwlltisation in WIOCial psymiato-~wiDIIID1!lybe
tbe electric ........ and batt. dryer, ~ is cheaper here ., ~ at Come~~ Medical :::::.by.....; live! They make

So what if tbe -

is still

deep outside, summer ;. ..,..._

n.-......--

::"be~~a:;in~~

OplerNamed

Karen Horney

Lecturer

Ct.-

-·t . . . . .

Furnas Coli~ ItS

MretingwithS~
Wed B1D11DC the ....,._, bioJocy, dlomi&amp;IJ;y, ~ -

By LYlE B, BORST
-...,,c:::Jille,4T-~

Tbe rapid ,._tb ol tbe Uniwensity in tbe years llinDe it
became part ol tbe system ol
tbe State University ol New
'yorlt has made it incz-eosincly
erideut that 8DIDI! means be found to give eadl student
a ......., ol individual sipi6-.
c:aiJ&lt;e, a group to which he can
belong that is small eDIJUib for
him to be a rerncnm.ble part
and an ._umity for peraooal contact with tbose enlruBted
with his lea&lt;:hing and suidance.
With these ends in view, tbe
formation ol a system ol collqe; was pr-opcad in 1.966 and
tbe years that have elaPBI but
point up tbe urgeucy ol implementing these plans. Tbe adminislnltion ol Yale Uniwensity
attributes tbe sua:eas ol that
University in 1970 in aWJiding
confrontation to tbe inftueD&lt;e
ol its well-establiobed c:olleps
and tbeir direct CDitacl with
their students. ~-Uy,
'tbe conslnJction ol similar collqe; bas been given priority at
tbe Amherst Campus.
Clilford ~ Colleale (Col•
D ) now occupiea Macdonald Hall Tbe Colleale is dedicated to adUeving IIDUDd ~­
sonal ad_iuslnelt by brinPnc
tbe underpaduate student into
c:lo&amp;e BMOciation with individual faeulty members tbn.gb
tutorial instructioo :and throulh
social contact at CoiJeciate ..,_
tivities. A unique~
philoaopby is not ~ Although a large IU.IIIIbe!- ol tbe
students of this Colleale are M:ientifically oriented, elforta are
being made to adliewe a bala.oced distribution tluoucl-rt
tbe humanities, arts and social
scieuces.
A board ol Fellows has met
during tbe past three years to
establish philoeophy a n d objectives: Dr. L B. Borst, Master; Mr. and Mrs. w_E. Barbour, Antbnipolocy; Dr. M . w_
Banta cMrs. ) . Libnuy Sciou&lt;e;
Dr. J. G. Boot. Manocemeut
Science; Dr. G. Breit, Physics;
Mrs. F. S. DaLuiao, Libnrian;
Dr. J . Daniel1i, Tbeoretic:al Biology; Dr. D. Evans, Pbysics;
Dr. G. Harris, Cbemislzy; Dr.
J. G. Hoftinan, Physics; Dr. T.
L Hullar, Medicinal Chemistzy ; Dr. J . W . McKinnon, Music; Dr. D. Murray, SUNY Central. Albany; Dr. H. R a b n,
Physiology; Dr. R B. ~
Physiology; Dr. v_Santilli, Bi~; Dr. E. N . Slnlind&gt;amps,
USJC; Dr. D . Tamari, Mathematics; Dr. J. E. Tavares, Bi"OiOgy; Dr. M . White; Anthropology; Dr. C. Yemcaris, Sociology; Honorary Felloors: Mr.
J.,_ C. Evans; Mrs. C. C.
Furnas; Prof. Fredrick Hoyle,
St. John's College, Cambricl&amp;le;
Dr. G. Moore, Director, Public
Health IJeaearch. State ol New
York. I
.

Furnas Colle3e opened as a
residential .,..,. in Septem.
ber 1~. sharing Macdonald
Hall with Colleale B. Durinc
tbe autumn tbe Col-

qe had 75 iuembers. In September 1972, Furnao Colleale

will fill tbe Hall with 150 Diemboos. In September 1973, tbe
Colleale will apia double in
size when it ....,._ to tbe newly c:omp1eted buiJdiDg Oil tbe
Amherst Campus.
Bo!cauoe ol tbe zapid pawtb
planned, an .......Uy high~­
c:entqe ol ,......._ admitted. u~ and
paduate otudmiB Clllllplete the
.._.,_.,ip_ Tbe CllftlOr objectiws ol ball ol tbe otudmiB
are in tbe haltb ~: ~
icine. dfmiotry, nuninc. ........
patioaa) -"" pbysira) IM8py.
.............te and lftlllaate.
The other students are djotrib.

.,...n • nwtheuwtica and _ . .
J11f!e1iJJc. lw
·•Ww music,
qwrwp,.....,t ~

law. pbiand ...t~uapa~ocy_
Tbe Colleale has JOUCbly 30
~
ClOilt ........... It been
polllible to place ....,... iD. one
wine ol tbe lint, ....... and
third - a n d .._ m.· tbe
oouth wine ol three ...... well - the whole ol the faarth
ftooo-.
At the end ol tbe &amp;mt - .
ter, be.vy atiritioD apected. Only tlnee otudmiB loft tbe
Col1ege, I e w by - - , . ; . ,
with o t be r cllxmitorios and
other nsideulial unila. They
were repiMal by tbree new
IDI!IIIIbem.
We have ......,..... -.:urity
~

" " " _ . , which have elimO.Ial theft in tbe ball 'Ibis is
unique Oil . . . _ .
Tbe JlliDcipal Colleale .......ts
ol tbe &amp; m t (a)
a Collece dinner at which Sir
Fredridi Boyle ol St. Jolm's

-=

Col1ege,

...me

CaJnbridee. -

Honorary Fellow; (b) Faadtystudent lund&gt; pro c Fa m s at
which one or 1M&gt; Fellooos ol
tbe Colleale invited to join
studoula at I u ncb NCb clay;
Cc) picuics at tbe Mastleo's
~&gt;ouR to help students and Fellows to . - ; ( d) a Ouislmas
tea given by Mrs.
Furwife ol tbe fCIIIDel" presideul ol U/ B for whom tbe Colqe is named; ( e ) a Christmas
tree. followed by a fn!e.swillging .Christmas party.

c. c.

O u r - - amnrnpl....._t
was to dew!lop a ......., ol CIIIDmwlity 81D1J11C tbe s t u de n t
IDI!IIIIbem. Tbe students claim
that there is a wanner and more
frieudly almol!pheoe at MacdoDald than in any other dorm.
Our &amp;mt at Macdonald can therefore be coanted a
""""'"""-

2fuwams
Available In
Israeli Study
State Univen;ity will apia
............ and full-time
study
propams in hzaei_
The&amp;mnmer
interdiaciplinary
em
lsmel"-&lt;ndudoa an educational tour and study at tbe
Heboew Uoi¥ft11it:y o1 Jausalem and Haifa u -

=--"Mod-

Nine-bows~

...y be ......00. and - ~ mat is $1055 (indudmc l'OUIId-trip ~

field trips. •
1 ••••
..... and tuitiaa) The full-you ..
open to otudmiB iD. ~
any field and carries apprao...tely 40 bows ol
credit. Studoats study at
either tbe l:lelftw um-.ity ol
JenJMiom or Tel Aviv Uaiwr&amp;ity. s-ic ..... ~ tai~ are _...m,.tely $1,900.
KDoorledpi oll:lelftw .. hiabi:Y
desimble but ._.n.,.t. .....
teasiwo Rel!oew Ia a c u ace
..,..._ are a&amp;nd durinc the

!'v..iw,a;, Some KhalanbiPa are

~applicatiom
will be reviewal Oil
April
L T - ( llarcb 10) ioo
application review ..,..; lor the
year . . _ but late BPPticatiom will be ...-....r-on a
aoaiJable t.oio..
F..- further ~aa..;
!!."! Ollice ol
A.cadom-

owrite to ...._ Allaa c...u. eli-

IC~ n.-IBall,..-

-

ol ialaaotiuoal .......

~ State Uaiwnity

0.0....

o.-ta. .New Yorlt 13112D.

�-·.wn·

9

Pluio Club Exhihitinn
'lbe UI B PboCo Club is presenting an eshibition of ·60
works by four of its IDI!IIlben in
Norton's Gaiiecy 219, tluouch
Tuesday, Mardl 14, including
nature studies, portmits and
social commentary. Shown here
are exhibit pbotocnophs by
Ridt Dorin (obots from the
~Celebration o( Life" rock festival beld in Loaisiana last summer l and by Mike Rieger
(candid portmits taken in the
New York C ity area). Dorin, a
senior majorin&amp; in ecooomics..
is also represented in the show
by : a Portugal series, sbols
taken in the Buffalo Grey-

---~

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

bound station, photos of New
England fiSbennen, and a West
Virginia series. Other works by
Rieger, a junior majoring in
psydlology and sociology, indude portraits of young children. Also represented in the
sbow are Dan Considine, a
math senior, oolor photographs;
and Pam Yost, a junior majoring in history, candid oolor portraits. Hours for the exlu'bit are
11-5, Monday through Friday,
and noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday.
Joe M . Fischer, director ol the
Creative Craft Center, is tbe
Club's faculty adviser.

�~

10
OthersV:aew U;(~ , . _ - •• col. 3)

tbinbble". ~time .... Dr.
Somitoaid..

Auxom.ess&amp;~AreGoals of U'B,U&lt;iR

lnt£rnotinnn1Dormifnry&amp;periment·

:-...:-..=:z;::% .
n-la.Y

Be -

momiDp

l8lk with him.
"He's like a falber; be bates
to be away from Ibis pla&lt;e,.
said an ..,.;ate.
Eoo, ToT... T o , - To~

And .. Slales could tell us,
"He's a n - man to l8lk with,
if be 'a a bani man to coow-_•
m.- Paul ol Bul!alo, a
-t
subati- Eallioh lal:ber in Buftalo
hilh odlools wbo also .... c:aOmlend in tbe Sunahine
o - aftice, aaid, "He'a tbe
'-t preoidmt we've bad in five
yeara. Be'a tbe first one you
could ao l8lk to aa an individual about tbinp you want to
..l. talk about, not aa ' - i of some
group wilh o4icial busine&amp;B."
And Sbadea and Milll Paul,
wbo aBle it dear they are far
left ol tbe Cl01181!lY1llive views
lhey believe Dr. Ketter holds,
could oay, "He doea provide

..-mate. .......

a tnuaewod&lt; for onle&lt; here, for
Jeamilqf and for allowinl us to
do our thing," and they do not
believe his aJieaedly Cl01181!lY11·

--F-

live views will alter tbe rich
life at U/B.

variety

o1--.mc

Mudl ol tbe cootroversiea
faded. ROTC ia ..,...,. 'lbe reaarc:b fabooaloly foe which tbe
Navy provided tbe equipment

:.:::.
~ defeDae..:
JeotJ.y claimed, ~y

do-

ins open pb,ysiolocical reaean:h.

A committee em a ayatem of
..........,.,., to include- all part&amp;
of tbe University is due to re811011, but meanwbile stu-

t:.

By

--

SUSAN GREENWOOD

'lbia year 43 meDIIDII-bawe t-1 inwlwd in a unique
.
t to further inBna~-and poovide.
~ allllcJIIIbn in which
. fonqn atudenta CB11 adapt to
Ibis Univenity. On tbe "'nternaticmal Floor" ol Sd&gt;oeJJknpl
Hall, a group ol A..-ican and
foreiln
student&amp;• haveSeptember
been liv.
.._......
;fd.lbe ";:: two !birds

:!t

t!":!~!'!.~ to rate

'lbe aoing baan't been eaay,
tbe students admit. "We've bad
our proble.m s and ciisagra&gt;ments regularly," Graham Curti&amp; from Manchester. Encland.
C!liPJains. ~ ol tbe original
students moved out at tbe end
of tbe fust semester. And Kalhy
DeMar!, tbe floor's resident adviso&lt;, remembers some "bit baasles." But · tbe group ia willins
to ccmtinue.
Since December, they've been
meeting wilh tbe Office ol Foreign Student A1lairs and University Housing to evaluate
their ezperienoes and plan foe
next year. What they've come
up wilh ia a four-paae proposal
for an Internaticmal Dorm in
one of tbe smaller South Campus resideDce balla.
'lbe program there wcuJd
have lhree aims. First, it wcuJd
"piovide enterinl foreip residents wilh a medium to adapt
to tbe University," and would
"reduce tbe feara and culture
s h 0 c k ezperieDoe ....,;.tad
with adjustment." Semodly, it
would provide a place for existing University procrams and
adivities to meet. Finally, it

-~~.:'n'!: =:.=:..~~
ticm committee&amp;.
their educational and profes-

CollepJ A and F, two of 15
coJiep&amp; in which students and

Caculty were to form oommun-.
iliee ol inleralt wilhin tbe
~ cooCusing University
~ were CDDtzoversial.
'Their ideas of political action
and canmunity organization
cauaed an uproar in tbe city
and, aJooc wilh College A's
practice of student aelC-grading,
ca.....t """"""' among some on
tbe c:ampu8.
But Dr. Ketter faced tbe issue quiddy, laid down strict
"""" rules. 'lbe colleges are all
on tbe campus now, still free
to eq&gt;eriment wilh new propam&amp; but under restraint. College A's pdlly master, Dr. Fred
M. Snell, ia back tescb.ing biophyaica.

......... .,Lone-A_ _
'lbe acbool now faces tbe beginning of its long-awaited
move to tbe new Amherst campus. Some dormitories may
open in September. 'lbe Jaw
acbool and olher dormitories
are to open in 1973, but it will
be years befoce all but beaJih
acienq~~ ba¥e departed from
tbe Main Sbeet c:ampu8. In
tbe IM8Diime, operaticms must
CDillinae in aeveral scattered J&lt;&gt;.
catim&amp;
.
A reduclion of tbe acbool'a
budpt by 5 per &lt;ll!llt
ron- tbe University to operate wilh about 400 atafC pxli.a... and 75 Cacu1ty pxliticms
-, unfilled, Dr. Sornit said. It
force a difficult negotiaticms
with tbe Urban ~t
Carp. COIIIIInJCtion ol Amhint ~ to aubstitute c...
tbe cbmiiiM- SUNY baa aaid
,it will - build.
•
Bate- are problems which
..., CBII be met wilh ingennity and
......... 'lbe
. .
of 19'10
...... tbe . . .~tis tbe
rule ol the~? And lhe
..... - ... tbe olher

~--"'
tbe
....... ia ...... to t.-:t.,
- aplaaetoleanl,aplaaetofoe.
. . ller tbe ............ ol youth.

---

sional goals" and ''provide a
focal point for international...,.
tivities on campus."
~ ,_
'lbe problems .which ~ international group baa faced Ibis
year have united them. 'lbe biggest light was to keep tbe dorm
open over holiday breaks. Residents of tbe other lhree floors
were worried about thefts and
there was a " general lad&lt; of
trust," Ms. DeMart C!liPiainecl
Finally, tbe International Floor
group agreed to keep a 24-bour
watch during tbe 'l'banksgivinc
break. Tbia was impo611ible over
Christmas, btit indicaticms are
tbe dorm will remain open during spring"""""" What Americsn students fail to realize, Ms.
DeMart belieYes, "is lhat to tbe
foreign student their dorm room
is home." Most of tbe students
·don't have .d&gt;ugh money to
~ytsyeJduring hol.idaya or DeC!d
s
on c:ampua.
Over Christmas, Ms. DeMart

buildinc ia often dcwotlld to in- Arab_friends. One day, hia
and
_
_
. .found,
. . , . . friends came to visit wben be
--_
livinc.
lhey
l8lkins to tiDIDe lsrMlia. A
apeciaJ activiliee foe foreign ...... beeted cliaiDBian stuted. 'lbe
deata clurins tbe holidaya. Tbia Dutch boy Jxoke it up by ....
is .imppaaible at U/B bec:auE plaining lhet ')'on are away
ol tbe tight fiscal situation, they lroin btime and m my room. ao
reali2e, but tbe women c:ame I want you to Joo&amp; at .-h other
badt wilh a """" outlook and .. people. not .. traditicmal
hopes fO&lt; implementing some enemies." They did.
'There are olher emmplea ol
of their idees.
One is about tbe need cultural~ O n e =
to eu:bange ideas and Pe C!l&lt;· a poster advertising a
~ to other cultures in onle&lt; on one wall and a Moslem
to better understand tbe world. pray&lt;!r rug ... tbe other. SluLarry BeJewich, one of tbe resi- deuts from many coontries JIIII.Y
dents of tbe Boor, C!lldonles Ibis tocetber on tbe ~team and
philosophy from his own .,..
perience Ibis year. From tbe
wide variety of cultures repre- guage.
Tbia . . . . - tbe floor is
sented on tbe 8oor1 be's learned
about: tbe American Revolu- n&gt;ughly baH American, half foetion from tbe British point of eign, wilh more than 20 COUiiview Abicsn opinion&amp; on racial
p~ and tbe Vietnam War
from tbe Vietnameae pen;pec- foreign men predominate. Moat
ti¥e. He's now a strong advo- of tbe A..-ican student&amp; are
cate of people getting togetber getting degrees in a modem'
and exrbanging views. Befewich fang-uage or heve lnM!Ied
believes lhat "even the United abroad and liked it.
Nations would be a betlef place
When tbe resideata cliscDB
if tbe deJegatea bad some aort their esperieuce, all ol them
of international living esperi- seem to agree that tbe pm ol
euce when they were students." tbe dorm is to "CI'ellte an atmosphere where intematimwl
Ms. DeMart tella a story students get ra;pect as individabout a Dutch boy who bad uals, not as aliena.•

~~~:.:=~
~~~

---

&lt;REPORTS
PRESENTATIONS

ON

t&amp;.

Gf&gt;EOPLE
_A_W....:.ARD==S=------

~ CIUJtU:S ~ ~· profeMOr.

library aad information studies,
was awanled a certificate in ...,.

~ 0 B If

cx.:xaA!f.

.-..at

chairman, pbiloeophy, -~··
Natwal DedDctiaD~S" As.
80ciatioo lor S
· Loaic.
meetinc. New odt City.
-

~~~~~
DeD8e Gao," Siza.-io cia Estadiatica, ~ -

ocnition "' patuiloUjl service to
lnfortn41ion Science AbotrocU
foundin&amp; of the joumal

rn:.""

:-

:ct~~:= ~t!:

tional dorms at ComeiL At
other ~ties, an entire

SASU.t.o Fight
Tuitim Increase

NEW"'C"AMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

10...........,

oa. c..-:oooz
of the
Uniw!noity of Utrecht, the Netherlands, has joined the Computer
Scieace Department as a visiting
faculty member for nerl year.

l!;.,WILU.Uipby,
..,.!:_~~~pbitail·: ·

OFF CAMPUS

...' -~ ~
-~ ·-·-~ ~

f_,r, political science, has beeD
named a manuocript reader for

of
Advanced Lung Cancer," Veterana Administration Lome Study

ment Tbeo~~~~ ,_
Symbolic
N':"Yo;;-'a't;_

x.;;c;,

=

::.:AP=-:PO:...=.::INTME::..:..:==.::.NTS=~-· ~~~~0:
DL CAKY BOSKIH, associate pro- peutlc Apnbl for ~t
the Journ41 of DeiJf!loping A,...,.
of Po-

'tf:!utheslff:1e"':"' Journ41
oa.,.....

IUD'S, profeooor, pbiJooc&gt;.
phy, has beeD appointed editor of
~~lY eeriea for Gor-

=
Aaian

aad Bl'I!OICb ecieDce publish-

'lbe Student A8lcialioa ol DL DONAU&gt; ... State Umv.nity (8 AS U)
f:r: : : .
plans a Sta~ .CIIIIIP8ilnto ~ for the Journ4J 'of Aoian
roll badt tuiticm r. Stadier, llloo a reviewer for crant
aently announced by lhe apptieoticm&amp;lo lbo Cauda CounSUNY and a l s o - cit:
a CIJIIIIllele abolitiaD ol tuiticm ca. - - . .
beginning with lhe ' 1B78-74 . lilical . . . . _ - : : =~
acbool year.
.
- o f 1bo board of clirecton,
Two U/B 111uc1en111, A1m1 ~ Scioace sm-- OoaSc:bwartz and Mark llorenMI!iD, . . - , lloalder, ~
bolh ol N-. Yodt CiQ', are ca. aJL••a. Jlftll-or,

b:, .,::'=.t ~..:;:

='....,._foelheAccordin• to Borenateill, .

=-=-

lnated alloplhor, he .... by

-

~rou~ :.==..~

otatiatiao, "Statiatical ~ti';;C
aad Job Opportunilieo," N
Uni.enoity Mathematics
ta.

wn..u.ur:

&amp;. SCBOI'I,

;;.rs;.te"T:
tun....
.

.=.::
inalllditoe

~
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...... to( Brain

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OL &amp; - . JI'UUCIU.. ~. Joio,.

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=.;.":.:

~ Wllliliac- . D.C.; ~ Bi-.1 S...
od Modelio," -mar, Boll

IDoti- of

f!!l:

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Dooip." ..-tine o1 t h e - .

--=..~-= - ~0aa&gt;1acY G - . o..-

·

3 . CII.&amp;B&amp;II. - - - -

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e.,_
-n.. Eva1oalioe

M~"- =ti~ i a - s.p.;..·

g::,a.:~.,~- G - . o.-,
DL
pa
tis~~ of
i c a J - in Bio-Medic.l Be..m..·
eom......... - o.;.,..,
Ezperimonto, Wal'- H.- ADiiy

« ~CJ!Iem u..c-· -;::;===:-:-====---

hic!JerSUNYtuitblawill ..... ~A-.~ foe • term PUBLICATIONS
~ floai aUedlnc ..: ~ ~.:'~~
CXIIfoee. Tuiticm could be tolim- of 1bo National Fed~~·

Pool Faculty

_,

__

......._

RECOGNITIONS
... _ _ ... _ _ _

Ji..

- a a t i o a o l ... Year

i D - bl!m loy ... .4-.

PollUit/le_iio_

�n

.-- •. wn
~DJQD~~---------------n. ..... 6)

G(JfB
~OTES

=:=

• (c..a..M , . _ -

~~.·~-·
.._-with
.-lily. l'lmlio Wa-

!.!tt7;;

-.
Toaao Abe. Kb; clindod by NqiM OlbimL

y-

TUESDAY-14

____
,..- ............,._
-_....
_____
......
---loy
...,_.,,..__.,...__
__ .. ___..-_
c:lilll:lll-1

- .....

- -~--­
- .... flllllloals J ••• t

__
.,
-·---19_., ..

~E&amp;SEHl&amp;C'l'llii:E* :

Philip 11&gt;iel. profeooor or archiUnivemity of Washing-

:::i"t~Lj, E.~~~.'i:

Environmental
Deoica.
2Dd- lloor,
2917 Main Street

&lt;----Rich Sc:bool) , 7:30

~-.-...--

p.m., free.

---~-

::=:D~~~

az,75!L

-.-...--

..

iniiD-J.R

~

7 _.

Gbolderude. clindod by Saul El-

kiD. aBJCiate prof...,r, theatre,
"a Can:e to make you sad," tbe"
oricinaJ text c:oocems the begio-

Ill Hocbstetter, 4 p.m., rebeohmeot. 112 Hochstetler at 3:30
p.m.

:to-~t:OmJ:,.n;;;
G;:
Nortoo

BIOCHEMISTRY SUIINAR: Dr. ftocer
How a rd, medicine. MetaboLic

niap ol a revolution. Harriman

lic:bto "a t
Ticket Ollice.
Abo &lt;m Thura.. Mar. 16; Sun.•

Characteri.atic of lsoltJted. Intact
Rat L i u e r Parenchymal CeU.,
G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.

26: aDd Tues., Mar. 28.

m.x•• : Deatry Rilla

Mar. 19; Sat.. Mar. 25; Sun., Mar.

~

(U.S., 1939), 140 Capen, 7 aDd 9
p.m.. hee.

INTERVIEWS
ON-cAMPUS .lOB IN'I"DlVJBW8:

Of.

~::=r:~~~~
DeliS,

iDduotrial and govem.-tal

~=ti~ea,:,id~':IAidtro:!
interview. Forma in Hay• C,
Room 6.
TBUIISDAY--9: Republi.c 8_,

,. _

::U~rs===-_:~

Di~~~Bri:, ~;~ =~=~·--..
FOIDAY-10: U.S. Dep~ of Api~rayc:e:~~ ~:;;!h! culture-Forest
Service; Firel:toae

tries to refonn a conupt and violeot town, peaceably, aDd at the
same time. cia.ims a boisterous

:ttceA~&amp;:&gt;'~ ~~t-

Desmond
Hamlet. Milton'• Concept of Ju.ti« in •• pa.rculi$e Lo•t.'' Red
!Wom. Faculty aub, 8 p.m.

ENGUSH OOLLOQUIUK * :

LICCt' U &amp;B• : Rosemary Radford
Reuther, The Prudenl/ Pnu-iott
Syndrome (The Liberation o/
Women in the Clwn:h), 146 Diefendorf, 8 : 15 p.m._ OpeD to the
public.
Mra. Reuther is married and
has t.bree cbilclreo. Sbe holds a
Ph.D. (rom Oaremoot Graduate
School in claasics. Sbe is a mem-

Tire &amp; Rubber Co.

TUESDAY-14: ReliaDce Electric

~.;:m::-~~~~(?ur:

folk); Webster Central Sc:bools
(Mooroe).
WII&gt;NISDAY-15:

Fiaher-P rice

Toys; Americao Hoopital Supply
Corp.; Chittenango Central
Sc:bools (Madison); CI&lt;M!IaDd
Public Sc:bools (Ohio); Iroquois
Central Schools (Erie).
TlltJIISI)AY-16: Nuclear F u e I
Services, Inc.; Gatioo Chili Central
Scbool ~:--~; Ly~court
School(~) ; Medioa Can-

:==

~~~~~f. SenLmRARY EXHIBITS

=r~ ~_!t,~or89~
the Catholic Teachers of Tbeoi-

OCY· Sbe has editorial e-rieoce

witb Con.timuuft, Soundinl•. aod
The JOIU7llll of ReliiW... T~oo&lt;A~ht.
Recently ohe has taucbt at Howard University. Her very estensive articles aDd boob deal witb
widely rancinc topiCL Perbapo

NOTICES

=

HILLEL will place etudenta in
homes of faculty or COIDIIlllllity

~~U:.W~. ~(:;:.~: =~J::
to~~=..
tO a studeDt Cor tho Seder ohould
Hillel at 836--4540 u _,., a
~":':d ila:.~U:i:~ · call
pooaible. Studtmto who would lib

of Women in lhe ./!UleoChrUiiDA T~ical Tradilion,
SimoG Sebuliao, 1972. Tbe
lecture.is -red by the Ollice
Cor Credit-Free
U/B
Campus Minisay
. .
Stud.
... Pzocram, ~- .

?F

to receive an i.nvitatioll UJoWd call
Hillel at tboir earlieot ....-.i-

ence eo that. proper
can be made.

a~ta

_.., •• Romeo
Juliet. -tluouda
IITUDIO
- · and
...........

March 26 ticket. aftilahle by
mail.
or at tid&lt;et apacieo
t!JrouP&gt;out the a-. aod at tho
Studio A rena Box Ollice, 681
Main s~. 858-6660-

pbo,:.,

�12

....,.!I,D72

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

STU:mft CiOMJ'IOSilaB • &amp; C I T A L•:

Baird. 8:30 p.m.. free.

...-ro.y T'IIKA'ID•:

M.a.dowe'a

~~:fD:Mcl
,r.;!''!;:

This production uti!Ua
and cbuacten ., tbe oriciDal aad is 1-.ic:::ally a conta:opo.r :uy

:.:!:...~

:!:'..

..... 8: 30 p.m.. ceoe&lt;aJ admiooioD
Sl. sladmta $.50. tid&lt;eto at Nor-Mar.TicRt
Olliae. Aloo - 5wL.
l2; Sat.. Mar. 18: Tua..
Mar. 21: Wed.. Mar. 22. and
Mar. 30.
CIC FILII ~ : 1 Neou Son« For My
FaJiru. Friday ~

n.un..

SUNDAY- 12

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

VOL 3-NO. 22

MARCH 2, 1972

Law Grads Fare Threat
Of Bar Exam Exclusion

___ _

-·1973,_... ____ .. _

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

-Senate Agenda to InclOOe 3

Items;

Mailagmlent Shiftlssuels~
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

R.,.,_.

Stflll

Integrity,

infonnation and
independent study will be the
three main toi&gt;ics of discussion

at the March Faculty SeDate
meeting. 'Ibe session. which
will be held on March 7 in
Room 5 Acheson, bas a 13point agenda and .Seoators are
forewarned to expect a &amp;eaJOd
March session on the 21st.
One item, a proposal to tmnsfer the School. of Management
from the Faculty of Social Sci-

ences and Administratioo. is
already scbeduled for the laltel"
date.

'Ibe proposal to formali:r.e independent study procedures is
a bolck&gt;Yer from the &amp;eaJOd
Febrwuy meeting. At that
time. the maltel" was tabled until Dr. Cannelo Privitea. chairman of the Educatiooal Pbnning and Policy Ccmmittee.
and Dr. Charles Ebert. dean ol.
undergraduate studies, could
be presenL Under the proposed requirements, a &amp;tudent

Sullivan ReoommendErl as
Arts and Letters Provost
Profl!ll80r John P. Sullivan
bas b e e n reClOIIIIIII!Dd by
President Robert L. Ketter for
appointment as pnMJ6t ol. the
Faculty of Arts and Letters. .Dr.

Ketter's recommeudation requires approval of the Board ol.
Trustees o1. State University.
Since 1969 when be joined
U/8, Professor Sullivan bas
held t b e unusual ac:ademic
rank of facility professor, a designation whicb permits him to
offer """"""' in any depar1ment
of his faculty or on a facultyat-large basis. fle is an internationally-known classicisL
A native of England, Professor Sullivan holds two badlelor
of arts and two master ol. arts
degrees, one escb from Cambridll" University and ·Ozfont.
A wumer of some twel\le ....,_
demic honors and awards during his collele career, Profe.or
Sullivan taullht at Cambridce
and Ozford from 1953 to 1.962
and was dean of Oxford's Lincobi Collece in 1960 and l96L
He joined the Uniwnity ol.
TeDS in 1961 as a
fesaor a n d became
and cbainnu ol. the" lloliar\ment of ClaBica thin ill 11163.
Since be came to U/8 in 19111,
Profaa&gt;r Sullivan ' - been -

viiD;!!J:

SUNY Hikes T,ptionRates ·
Effective Stnrt ofSummer

�llezcb 2, 1972

GREPORTER.,

2
Tuition I...,.... Sclledule. Unlvwnlty of (Slate
On!J, Excll•lve of Comm"""'

eo.,_

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

$550 (Fratun.n---Senklr YraJ

-...T£

S900

Yorl&lt;
c:!::l

1172 ....,...,. . _ . . .

•t.ower Dfvfsion

·u..., '?'vision

(Frwshm~~n-S.nlor YrsJ ::J::~

(Mnte,.a &amp;. Oocto~l)
Hew Yorit State Student
$1100
Out«·Stahl Sludent
$1,000

g:::::n

$ 1100
650

s
ft:~

2nd Semester
~-~
u utUftt:f
u
E,l-~11~
7
T.S
23,96
1.~

Total enrollment for the
second semester, as of Febru-.
$1.200
ary 151 is 23,967, down 5.9 per
$1,5{)0
cent from fall, but up 3.4 per
cent from last year, the Office
of Admissions and Records reports
Th~ figures include creditfree registration of 800, down
26.27 per cent from the fall.
Total undergraduate regisODtration is 16,515; graduate stuhelp enroll 1,000 -more fresh- d_ennalts toschtal 5,26tu1danendts p.ro(lafes-w,
81 0
001 8
m~ general areas in which medicineanddentistry),1,391.
relief is considered most impor- All of t£.ese categories of en·
tant, in addition to taking more rollmeot reflect incre8ses over
students, include library book last spring, ucept graduate stuacquisitions, support for disad- dents where ..a slight decline
vantsged students, bealtb sci- (0.06 per cent) is noted.
ence and hospital operations;
Admissions and Record s
maintenance and repair of the breaks down' full and part-time
physical plant, student services enrollment as follows: lower di. and expanded summer session vision undergraduate, 5,038
enrollment.
· full-time, 291 part time; upper
Tuition Woh•ers
division undergraduate, 5,374
The Trustees specifically pro- full-time, 713 part-time; gradvided for tuition waivers in uates, 2,679 full-time, 2,582
combination with the State's part-time; professional schools,
Scb Jar In
ti p
and 1,391 full-time; and Millard
Sta~ Uni~i~~ S:,~arship Fillman! College, 5,899, all
Program to offset the impact of parWime.
'
higher tuition charges on low
Day ~vision tota1a ~ .14,and middle-income families. As 482 full-time, 3,586 part-lime.
a result, lower division students..._ Faculty totsls are: Arts and
whose families ·have a net taxa- Letters, 1,626 undergraduates,
ble' income under SL2,000 a 578 graduates; Educational
year will pay no more than $100 Studies, 482 undefi11!-dua~
above present charges at the 1,894 graduates; Engmeenng
undergraduate level; at tbe and Applied Sciences, 835 unupper-division level, not over dergraduates, 603 graduates;
$150. At very low income levels, Health Sciences, 1,618 underthere will be no tuition increase graduates, 523 graduates and
whatsoever.
·
797 professional School stuDr. Boyer said this reflects dents; Law and Jurisprudence,
the Trustees' deep conviction 594 professional school stuthat no one should be denied dents; Natural Sciences and
the opportunity to obtain a Mathematics, 1,274 undergrad-

SUNY Hikes TuI"ti
(Continued from _ . 1, coL 6)

Stste-&lt;&gt;perated campuses and
not to eueed one-third of the
operating budget of each community college.
-., In a separate but relatedalsoaclion, the ~f:ees have
approved a revJSlon of the room
rental charges at State-&lt;&gt;perated
residence halls to reflect a reduction of half the State's $200
annual subsidy for dormitory
robms. This cost will be passed
along to students who rent
dormitory rooms, mak:illg the
base charge $650 for an academic year instead of $550.
In addition, tbe University
will implement at State-&lt;&gt;perated campuses next fall a policy
under which students who desire to have a telephone in
dormitory rooms will assume
responsibility for the full costs
incurred. The Trustees authorized last summer the termination of the telephone subsidy,
but that action could not be
implemented for the present academic year as a result of Phase
I Federal wage-price regulationsCbance.llor Ernest L. Boyer
said the higher tuitions are ne-

~~------------(~ '"'"' -

._..

~ TuMday of the
!"""'th dtm~~~ the next academJC year.
• full agenda.
Because of ds
the Senate will ~c&amp;cus:·
.
smg transfer of ~
1 of
Management. until the second
Man:h
meeting.
'lbe
.Uansfer
proposal is still being drafted.
This motion marks the first
time any department or program has soul!ht transfer from
its Faculty smce the present
organization was set up during
the administration of President
Martin Meyerson.
At one of its March meetings,
the Senate may a1ao. !iiscuss
11
roposa) from Vice Presid&lt;!llt
for Academic Alfaim Beman!
Gelbaum which asks . prowsts
to rank propoeed prom&lt;itii&gt;ns in
order of importance. GeJbaum
considers this procedure:~
sary because of the Ia~ of ~
to back promotions fi
~Y The Senate
live eou'muttee. aooording to
Dr. Thomas Frantz, Senate
secretary, is opposed to sucb a
procedure. One alternative that
has been -discuased is to give
"dry" promotions-this would
give the faculty members tbe
new title without the extra
oney usually associated witb

1, coL 3) . 011 the

into eftect. The prooedwe inco~rates an attempt at in-L•-..
formal .-&gt;lution of p"""""""
but, if this fails, a1ao delineates
procedures for carrying a case
through divisional and Univers•'ty- WI'd e bearing groups·
The process reco'!'!"""ded
for fa~t_y aooo~tability _and
•ntegnty os !"Ore informal •Ill&lt;?"
' th~ CoiDIDlttee on ~~denuc
Flireedothamant~dRespoefini_ti_ns•brulility beev~
. . ve
es es!ablished a prr&lt;m_~rve Jess to
msure aooountabil!~ than to
~tuate dogma. The comm•ttee has_ recollllllel?d_ed IJ;Iat
"appropr1~ te a&lt;IJI!inis.trat;ive

urutsestablishormam~ade-

q"!'te forums for the bearing of
gr~evana;s b~ any ~ ~!
the Uruvei'Slty commuruty.
Thsm·ece"fothrumseco" ~'notteet describedbeli_ev·
es

~

"it is diffiCult and unwise to

form~te detailed ~ in ~dvance. ~ a lengthy discuss1on

of _!J_le vanous types of accountabilit~ systems, howe~er, !he
comuuttee. ~es that seekinj
aocountabihty purely through
a system of . mu~ ~ani
· tends ~ be -~fiClent m a
commuruty ~t lS at once large,
complez, · alienated, concerned
and suspicious." Included in
the report is an appendix dealing with tbe grievances that
might be brought aj!!rinst laculty members and Identifying
the machinery in existence to
handle such situations. (See
the ''Viewpoints" page for the
full text of the Committee's di&amp;cussion of the matter.)
The Ubnories

Execu:

!"

•t.

·

Management
Gets 2 Grants

Two grants totalling $27,000
have been awanied to the
School of Management.
A $17,000 grant to enable the
The Senate will again con- School· to continue and expand
sider the fiscal crisis in tbe Li- its program of business .assisbraries. The Information and tance to the inoer city has been
Library Resources Committee received by Sanford Lottor, asis presenting three recom- sistant dean, from tbe Otrice of
Minority Business Enterprise,
44
Washingtort.
4,034 undergraduates, 1,175 ter, Cbanceflor ·Ernest Boyer
· Graduate students have been
graduates.
·
and the SUNY Senate " to seek, working with small · businessat tbe very least, a restoration men of the inoer city for two
of the previous assigned budget years in establishing programa
(Continued /rom page I , col. 2) and staff for tbe Libraries as for developing skills in aooountgraphs, ten book sections, and well as a release of tbe frozen ing, public relations, marketing
150 articles, reviews and lee- positions." In addition,- the m&lt;&gt;- and planning.
tures.
tion urges Ketter to "realign
The General Electric FounAs provost of the Faculty of internal resources to provide dation will provide a graduate
Arts and Letters, he will serve sufficient additional 8 uP Port grant of $10,000 for the 19728s chief academic and admin- for tbe Libraries to preclude 73 academic year to support
istrative officer for a unit com- further downgradinl of library work in public policy environment under the suggested direction of Dean Richard Brandof Architecture and Environ- &lt;SPA). bargaining agent for enburg and Professor Lee E.
mental Design.
faculty and professional staff, Preston, Jr.
Professor Sullivan, 42, will ,p.sroalsopna· te"urgactie&lt;_lontootsken
. thistbemaa~
Aooording to Dean Brandenreplace Dr. Gilbert D . Moore, ter." T h ,·
recommendati'o~n burg, "this grant provides for
8
who has served as acting pro- notes a proposed
per , cent further program development
lines which anticipate tbe
j'~=ing tbe current academ- cut in U/ B's library26book bud- along
In ·nr
·
be
f th
get and the permanent loss of growing complexity and consequence
of public policy environ• onnmg mem rs o
e 25 authorized Library personment for managers in both pub~!~~sal~ ~~ ~~f.:~~~ nel lines.
lic and private sector organizabased on recommendations of
The second motion "requests tions."
tbe search committee and con- the President and Chancellor
sultation with tbe Committee to seek the construction funds
A
. tments Pro t'
needed to keep (the two major
on ppom
'
mo •ons libraries on the Amherst cam~1icJeo~i.,.,Ed~~tio:: pus) on their previous achedCouncil of Chairmen of the ules."
the· Senate
on
rd It puts
"
· di&amp;Faculty.
reco
asth expressmg 1ts
Dr. Philip G. Miles has been .
Said Ketter, ''The esteem .in ma_y_ at
e fail !Ill" of budget appointed chairman of the Dewhich Professor Sullivan is held officials to provide for the time- partment of Biology, ejt'ec£ive
by his colleagues is redected in ly completion of tbe two major immediately' President RObert
his rank of faculty professor.... l;ib~ies." These Amherst li- L. Ketter has announced. •
Professor Sullivan brings to the
ra_nes are a general h'brary
Dr. Miles has been a memprovostship an outstanding rec- which would house -the Science ber of the U/ B faculty aince
ord of scholarly achievement, and Engineering collection, the 1956, prior to which he taught
administrative experience, as sdpeciald collections and .the un- at the University of Chicago
well as a deep interest in the
ergra uate library; and a joint and conducted reaearch at Harfuture of this University . .. . I library which would house
vard.
.
am most confident that tbe Fac- ~rial i!' Arts an!f Letters, SoA native of Olean, N.Y., Dr.
ulty of Arts and Letters can cial Sc•ences and Education.
Miles completed his undergradlook forwani to continued sueThe . third Libniry motion uate studies at Yale U11iversitY
cess under (his) capable and asks each department to pro- (1948) and holds a doctorate
creative leadership."
):ide in ill! _graduate programs, from Indiana University
opportunities. for the Proles- (1953).
WENGER NAMED
. sional Staff of the Library to
In 1970, lie was the first sciU!ny B. Wenser has been op- pursue part-time advanced
entist in the United States to
pointed_ an associate professor In study." ~ ""'!"nittee is supthe Faculty of Low ond Jurisprud- portiog this motion because re- ~i! a&amp;r::,t ~
ence end Facutty Ubrarian for law. cent fiscal cutbacks have
Assistant U/B low llbrorU!n since caused many graduate pro- &amp;:i.!,.t~::,;~~
1969, he hos headed the libno.y at grama to bar students · from gram. Undar the pant he ef-the Low School since the rHiano· working part-time on an adfered paduate iDitruction and
tlon of Dr. Vldn Mostecky in Sep- vanced degree.
conducted reaearch at the Bottember. Prior to coming to Buf- • Finally, the Senate will con- any
Institute Aaldemic 8inica
f111o, he -ulsltlons ISSistant !"der a recommendation from and the
Botany' Ilepariment of
et HIII'VIIrd Low Ubra.y.
lis El&lt;eclltive Committee that
National Taiwan University
Senate meeting&amp; again ba held from
.July, 1970, to .July, 1971.

~!=~Pb:theg~1~-e(
h:a~~F~raf~:ri~~·Y
Sci~ces ~~raf=r~~~ fi~t~~~de!f~ri ~;
backup support for essential
The decision to distinguish
oa--'ces.

~&amp;..use of severe fiscal constraints, the State has been
forced to hold its appropristions in fiscal 1972-73 to 197172 expenditure levels, the
Cbanceflor noted.
Under that policy, the Executive Budget submitted last
month recommends a $481 million operating bud get for

between charges at the lowerdivision and upper - division
levels of undergraduate study,
while a significant change, is
an extension of the University's
traditional tuition policy, under
w h i c h undergraduates are
charged less than graduate stud"!''Thets
. Trus•- reached the,·r
"""'
decision on tuition after exten-

Sullivan-

SUNY, the same dollar amount

~"";:;,:n,.::~ ~eS = ~:~~ro~ nan~e~s:'~l S:,~&lt;;:p:C~:~~~.:r.::

m iII i 0 n of additional costs
which the University must absorb

of the University," the Chancellor said. "The Board coneluded that a tuition increase
was necessary in order to adequately support Uhiversity op-

:~er~:l:~ ~
'No

Gro.tt.•

"It is. all but impossible for ~~i~~~rinft,~e.f"'n:~ a~
the University to meet its ob- deeply committed to low-cost
ligations to serve more students public education. I commend
and to aerve them well within them for their wisdom in adopt'no ~~ b~get,; Dr. ing a tuition structure based
eyer sru · " e ve e ected upon sound principles which
significant economies. We have provide a framework for the
set rigorous priorities for spend- future financing of higher eding. It appears that there will ucation."
be no additional tax-generated Loon MIXImum
funding. Yet, there must be
The Trustees have also adopt11t11ne supplementary support if
the University is to meet un- ed a resolution in support of a
avoidable cost increases and to $1,000 increase in the maximum
provide 8 e r vice 8 in critical yearly loan students may negoareas."
'
tiate through the New York
The only responsible move, Higher Education Assistance
the Chancellor added, is for the Corporation ( NYHEAC).
University to raise additional
The Board requested Channeeded income through its rev- cellor Boyer, a NYHEAC direcenue sources, rather than regu- etoralr, toacti~onsewhir~chtatewoanuldd nuseF~lar S
· 0
new !'~x,'~f':jf:!:, d':;,
the maximum amount of an
sure on campus operations and individual loan from the current yearly $1,500 ceiling to
$2,500. The Trustees said the
ACADEMIC APPAREL
new ceiling would continue to
The University Bookstore will have apply "to persons who are resionother -.nic Apparel sale dents of the State and who are
Day fw f11culty, Friday, Man::h 3,
attending or .plan to attend
9 a.m.-4 p.m .• 266 Norton. A: re· oolleges in this State. or e1aepraentet;w of the store's official where, .to aasist them in meetsupplier of IICedemlc apparel will
ing their expenses of higher
be pt-.t to ISSist In Mlection education .. !'
of f11bric styles. Measuremenlll ·
Under terms of NYHEAC
will be bll!en lnd • five per cent loans, students pay no inlen!st
discount (liven on all orders. The while in acbool and begiJi realso hos • 11111'1 selec· ~t llt 7 per cent interest
tlon of "IIIJhtly"' IIOWOS· to tJegiDJlinj! nine months after
be so I d et d - l l y noduced comPietilur or leaving co~Jeae.
priceo.
Students Can take !'I' to ten
years to-·the obtiptioo. •

&amp;,

;;.::

Miles Is Named
Biology Chairman

rna-

�~

· - 2,1972

3

IfAll GoesWell, Sub Board I Hopes·
Soon to Be in the HousingBusiness
. Next faU, if everything goes
nght, Sub Board I· (SBf) will
be in the housing business. To
make Ibis dream a reality, a
Housing Committee of about
20 students, beaded by Jennifer
Washbum, is now investigating
the poeoibilities of pun:hasing
housing units within walk:ing
distance of the U_niversity.
ThiDp that need to be done
before September are enormous.
Same type of corporation must
be ilet Up. A structure for purchasing and
.
the units
must be iaitia~ possible
rehabilitation of the buildings
must · be taken care of. And
teaants ·mll8t be folmd.
The last problem will probably be the easiest to solve, the
students feel, since Buft"alo has
a critical housing shortage and
a "tradition of students psyinl
too much for too little housing.
This is why SBI decided to
start a housing corporation. The
board is interested in providing
housing within walking distance of the South (Main Sl)
campus and, possibly, building
new housing out by the North
(Amherst) campus.
'The Housing Committee
has been discussing the alternatives and last Tuesday their
su!H:ommittee on incorporation
met for the fin;t time to ~
framing by-laws. Working Wltb
their housing consultant, Michael Haggli.ns, graduate arcbi·
lecture student, and Stephen
Blumenkrantz, SBrs executive
director, the group diacussi!d
problems of envisioning housing needs in the next five, 10
or 50 yerus, and the difficulty
of forecasting future situations.
Will the same power struggle
between studeRt government
and administration exist then?
Sbould they create a detailed
set of by-laws or a loose one?
Should they follow an existing
structure such as the traditional rorporate model or crea~
new type of organizational
chart?
Using each other as devil's

advocates, the five - member
group came up with a plan for
al~memberboardofdirecto~

and a ()..person executive committee. Membership on the
board would include three representatives from SBI, seven
members of the student body
selected on a petition basis,
two membe~ of the general
Unive~ity
community (not
students), and three members
of the Buft"alo/ Amherst com·
munity. By Man:h 13, the three
SBI representatives" will be
chosen and they will be responsible for getting the other seven
student members. Candidates
for these positions will come
from students wbo obtain at
least 200 signatures. If more
than seven people get the ne~ number, a refeJ;eDdum
will . be ' held to select them.
'lbe8i!- 10 lrtudents will then ....
lect the' Univemty and general
community rnembe~.
The corporation will be run
on a day-to-day basis by its
executive committee. Member·
ship on Ibis body. has not been
finally determined but the subcommittee is seriously consid·

=

!.f.U:'!J"'ti'!. ~

So far, thi• structure is witbout a name. One sulcestion is
" Unicorn." to sugga1t intera&lt;&gt;tion between the University
and community, another alternative· is "Housing Cooperative."
The group has until March
13 to set up the housing -

Job Market in the 1970's'
Predicted to Be 73ullish'
College graduates s e e k i n g organic chemicals, computers,
employment in the 1970's will: plastics and pollution control
• find most opportunities in
The best bet, be said, is .......
fields requiring tedmical and pulels. "They're an undisoovprofessional skilla.
~"1.J":!,_~e haven't begun
• sufler from the unwillingness of colleges to give their
Pollution control will be
disciplines a more employment- helped by the live billion doloriented slanl
M the federal~ will
• find fewer employers will- pump into that indUstry in the
ing to invest in on-the-job train- next three to four years.
ing.
The optical, drug, and health
Thoee were the conclusions care fields will also gain during
of a panel, "Where the Jobs the next decade, Berner said,
May Be in the 1970's," spon- though not as much as the
sored by the Office of Student 0~.
A1rairs in Nortoo last ThursRegions of the country with
day.
Guy Berner, vice president of the best employment pictures,
Niagara Share Corporation, Berner said, will- be the Mountold an audience of ID06tly stu- tain states, where business will
dent advisement personnel that expand by 30 per cent in the
"' have a very bullish seuse nm:t 15 years, and the Pacitic
sbout our economy. In the next and Mid-Atlantic states, where
ten to 15 years, our economy a 25 per cent rise is anticipated.
However, that fact may be of
is going to s h o w ezcellent
growth. AU sections will gain little consequence, said U/ B
Placement
Director E u g e n e
significantly."
Berrier based his feelinp on Martell "Most college graduates
stay
where
they are educa·
predictions that the U.S. ecOnomy will grow one per cent ted," he pointed out. "We're
faster per year over the next not as mobile as we think we
decade than over the past one. are."
That, couPled with the
·
He ad vi-' ·that schools start
of undeveloped countri~ planning their programs with
require skilied personnel, will an eye on the emplayment marmake the graduate's employ- kel "IBM doesn't want history
ment outlook better, Berner majors," he said.
said.
Another proposed change was
The grestest growth, he add- to increase ioformation about
ed, will be in the professional, jobs available. Claudine Koren,
technical, and service areas. · academic ad v is o r, says she
The l&gt;usinesses with the best counsels many students "wbo
outlooks are communications, don't want to teach, but don't
utilities, electronic compon_ents, know what etse there is."

Forming Grad Union May P~ Problems
'The Graduate Student Association (GSA ) voted overwhelmingly in J a n u a r y to
explore the possibility of eStablishing a graduate student
union. On Monday night, they
heard the first committee report
and it seems that the path to
unionization is strewn with
problems.
The main problem seems to

:~~l,.,mosu!.:,~SAu!'F'~
union would be a good thing
or markedly improve their sit,.
uation. Questioning of the com-

.:J:: ~!!V,~nlJ:

~ttee

my tax-free stafus on my stipend?n or uwouJd the union
be able to establish effective
grievance processes?"
Jim McCabe, chairman of
•-- COIDJDJ· ttee to ·m vesthe ad """
tiuru.ll!'onste theatpossibo~-~tyuru,
The University""'.:r W~~
the only one with an independentedt ~tb·theandU }t ~ negotisti:a
Wl
DJVmllty on pends, class size, contents of
personnel files. work surround-

!!!:!:=

rector of the housing project.
Policy decisions will come from =us~~-~
the board of directo~.
with -~ faculty unions
In setting up Ibis type 'Of or
but McCabe feels that "after
. •
the
talking with SUFI' and SPA,
concemed with if students want a union they
"trying to l!et rid of some of will have to go after it themthe politics • that plague stu- · selves." Committee member
dent I!')Yel'11JDMts. They alao Sam Abbate spoke of the powersought to insure a geQera1 com- lea!MM of graduate students-:m · tion flow ~ the ''unionimtion is a good poEIthe housing bility but it's not aoinc tO be
•ts
day-to-day basis BJJd easy. . . . It's the oaly . , _
:.:;nl policy c1ecisioDs.
to the problems we face." GSA

=':':.ere

=running

ll:..,

sub-comrniu.,;

ration and get a name. At that
time, they're expected to give a
full report to SBL If any member of the University Community has a 111J181!S1ion about the
name for the corporation or the
possible structure, the committee would like to hear, Blumenlaantzsaya.

Vice President for External Affairs John Greenwood spoke
against the concept, generally
pointing out the cooflict of student - faculty desires and the
ramifications of a formaii?.ation
of this relationship. After two
hours of debate, GSA representatives voted to receive the
committee's report and take its

!:'! ~~~: coru:ti·
The treasurer's revised budget
report also aparked debate. SeC
cause of lcss of income and unexpectedly large phone bills,
~SA found it necessary to revase tts budget and subtract
,money already allocated to
~~ts. and
Cente
~ Yto lose
r was
•
S425 but a representative from
the Center argued against the
reduction and outlined the need
for the money. Debate centered
on the number~ graduate.~:
dents actually usmg the facility
and the need for day care ceoters. The Sena~ finally voted
to return $125 to the Center
and look into -ys of possibly
re-allocating the other $300.
. Alao scbeduled for Monday's
meeting were a discus&amp;ioo of
housing by Aasistant Vice Pres• ident for Auxiliary Enterprises
Thomas ScbiUo and a dental
care plan to be presen~ by
Dr. George Goldfarb. ~
ofl the S~t Do;nll!l Clinic. ·
TI\e8e men will ~ JDYlted '-*
to the next~- the_debale over funding aad UlliiJD. ization lasted UDiil 10:30 p.m.

;i.uhs.J:::

PurimFestUxiJ
~Claghornism' Stops FSA

FromTaking Up LaD4 Deal
A spirited

~

of the

operation of Faculty-Studen~
Association's &lt;FSAJ Auxiliary
Services took up of last
Friday's FSA meeting. but &lt;Jb.
servers wondered if it wasn't
just a rdibuster to stop the
boord from considering the Amherst land transfer.
Michael Nicolau, Graduate
Student Associatioo ( G S A J
president, with the helP of
John Greenwood, GSA vice
president for external all'airs,
tied up the Friday session for
close to · two hours. The pair
insisted on going over auxiliary
service study committee recommendations in such detail that
President Robert Ketter aocused them of fllibustering and
called Nicolau ..Senator Claghorn."

The body was scheduled to

;gt; ~w!J ~~
the money to fund student proie$. which was introduced at
the Januar.y meeting by
Charles Balkin, FSA secretary.
Sub Board I Chairman Paul

Cumming strongly protested
the proposal, however, and l!,&gt;e
FSA board agreed to aJDSidi!r
a secnnd Jecomrneswiation fJUD
Cumming. Informed sources
say Ibis proposa)ted was not readyCumto be presen
nor was
ming in Bulblo, so the meeting
was tied up by Nicolau and
Greenwood.
•
The lengthy barrage occurred
just as the board was going to
vote on accepting the Auxiliary
Servioe Enterprises' revised
budgel Each of the divioional
managers diacu8!d their ope&lt;ations and the reaBODS for budget revision.
Raymond Becker, of the Food Serrioe, _...,..
that aU operations, with the esoeption of the Tilfin Room, are
lo&amp;ing money. 1..- are due
to ' a decreeae in donnitooy
board c:ontr-,
Ratbskeller· sales bec:aue o1 ..,_.
peD111e ~.Nora&gt;. aad
a drop ill
......,_of
~
con-

r-

tS.

Jdminla.

~

•

lltulb'

'·I·

eo.Dmit"te.~ a:
made ttUs summer, the Ratbslteller raised prices on some ·
ilems and is changing its hount.
In addition, prices for Pepsi
and coffee were increased by

two cents yesterday. President
"KeUer pointed out that lack of
policing in donnitories for bot
plates and other cooking utensils may be a cause for the decrease of board coniJacts_ Vtce
President for Systems and Operations Edward W. Doty commented that college food ..,._
vices across the country -are
f'mding that sales aren't increasing as rapidly as student
population_

Sam Davidson, newly appointed manager of Vending,
aod Richard Cudek. manager
of the Service Center, both ..,.
ported increases in income, as
did Thomas Moore, manaaer
o f : . . : - : the reasoos
for the rev;-r budget. the
board was unable to aftinn it
- ' - Nicolau ~-~ to let the

=
~

=._,..

matter come to a vote until the

,;;;,":;]:"'JSSed"""7n""i:!::

agers of the Auxiliary Enterprises studied the mmmiUee
recommendations and late last
year reported to the board ..,
the status of the p,_(a. If
---~- •
•
a """"'""""""'tion was not unplemented, the manaaer es-

~':!,wh~.fN~~

study commiUee, went over in

~un~ted.of ~~the ~

............
~....,.
eus&amp;ion, the board voted to preBeDt aome of the proposals to

~t!;, ~ ~

the pro1J1em of late ordering of
teslboob, coordination of departmental ·leldbool&lt; ordering,
aad use of boob after peak
leldbool&lt; sales. The board aJao
heard a resolution faJm Doty
wbidi outliJM5 procedurao for
- a leldbool&lt; diacount, if profits
....,_t a oerlain penll!lll:qe.
This motiou will be f.......Uy
presented!« a wee at the ned

~
JlllleliDc. - - -- •

�4

ACentral~fori!_te~~~

EDITOR'S Nf!I'E:. The ~ol-

1ofDin1 ;. the ~ ""'tu&gt;n
of the Report ~J}h,~

JatiDM on A

ill«

the Foculty. Senate 0Comm
on A~nuc ~ ~ and R,_
sponsibilit)l wltil:h w~ be P!"'
ienud at the SenaU; 8 meet.. ,
nat -~"· In CJTIUU'I .agoms
tk(inilwe rulea established a
priori, the CommJU&lt;!e no,!j;
that such ~ wo
"ser~ /DB to UIBure,::t:;~
ability than to perpe
he
ma" and.!. uII II f:uts
fuproblem "u"':.~.~;f:: .. Memlure of the
·~-J ·
bers of the Commtttee are N.,.,..

This traditiooal form of aodemic community con t r o I
bmreiY ~ with rules
and relies instead on standards
of behavior which Jeaye IJl!ICh
room for individual discreti'?"·
NecessarilY the commwuty
can only take offense at a relstively gross sbuae of the power
im lied by such general standof proper behavior. In. a
community which reganls WISdom as the goal of all and ~e
exclusive province of none, t.!ri"
traditional .form of nonnative
control makes perfect sense.

oen~~ized. At ~ the~
penodicallY ~ ts and
havio! of ~onnsl

exe""':

&lt;:'resawe) .

contro
eompn&gt;fllise •nd ~
The technique of slanllards
enforced by mutual regan! depends, neCessarilY, on consensus compromise and oooperatio~. The ted:ullque of rules and
formal procedures depends, at
best, on a different sort of compromise-but not on a "'!n·
sensus. Since rules reqUire
rule makers questions are sub-nl
'eel to majority vote. We o Y
~ote here the nature of ~
difference and observe that 1t
is possib,; that formalism may
rigidify divisions w.ithin the academic community rather than
clarify areas of existing agree-menl. Earlier we noted one possible disadvantage to the technique of standa~ enforced by
mutual regard- 1ts tendency f:O
immobility. &lt;We note that this
is a disadvantage on the assumption tMt the situation

intrinsic to the ..,..., (3)

for·:

his class is striCtly 1ectme aad
there is DO provisioo
time. 'De absmce ol a
rule 1o """"'.this ~ 111BY

=to
Hz
1~j~
~~

·By AGUBnN OUVENCIA

-

,_---

- · - - _,---.

result in serJOU!I lllllainMs ~
Takiac a ...,.1 1oo1t at aar
the student(s) if the -semic Hilll.aicc-ity~..t
community does ~ ~ ~ t h e - , _ - .
the teache':'s ~ or it -..,... o.t-......, ~
may result m unfaimeaS lo the in an &amp;eldL 'l1lio o.t
teacher . who . though~ be ~ a ol
conducting his c:lass m ~ ap- in lboir liaal . . , · r
propriate ~ or~ wall:binc '*-ly the ~ ol
1o the group which_finds 1
our Hioimlic c - i t y in
being asked to deode whether 1965 aad b:yiac tD .-.he the
the. comments of . a ~ huodndo ol ~ . _ constituted "pooenuc ma"""',!
...m • ....._. jabs,
~ctlon W'rth
not inttinsic f:O the course.
~ ............ ..t lmdRose, Center for lm11UJ1WIDIIY.
Nann- Control
•
In sum, discretion leaves room enbip, . - aad .._a-t
chDirman; Ro_bert f!erdahl.
As we observed "':'fli~r, the
for abuse, vagu_e ~ duiJs; ..., ....., - wUb
hieher educatwn; O""jwuf:,· questions put to us J.l!dicat.:tha
leave room for 11llS8.PPlicatioo. political pi!I1D5 wbD helped
Jones, anotomy; James
• degree of dissatisfaction WI
informality leaves room foe us .,s --.1 ..t ....,. .., ...,
psyclwloey; A~l Katz, law;
the traditional method of !'orsloppy fact finding.
deftloped a .,..t ol inron _Koelr.lr.oelr. • . German
. mative contro~. The questions
We have b_urdened our o;ol- ~ ....- wbD ....W ~
Sta01c; John Sunon, FGr:f'· indicate a desl!'e for cl~ly ar1 e a g u e s Wltb the I~ wor1t hard tD aid our ~
and John G~.
u- ticulated rules of bel_laVJor, and
beca~ i.t fonns the OOsis ol bmtbom with lboir ........._
ale Student AssociatiOn.
the creation of rela~vely formour thinking on the reoommon- 'Ibis ...., are lladay's
a! procedures which m u s.t
dations set out and because 1os1om.
neaissarilY precede the appliwe see the problem as ceo'Ibis ~ wUb the .....,....
The Academic Freedom and cation of a sanction for vi~latraJ to the future ol the aliaa of o.- wbD am-I in
Responsibility Committee bas tion of the rule. We bel!eve
University. In ~ ......, ~ Bofb1o . . . . . the .-t faar
been asked to address itaelf to that this indi?Stes . a senous
choice is to be "'~ "reali&amp;- yean, are -..~~inc aD !" ~
aevera1 matter&amp; rangingoffrom shift in the onentation of. the c.1; TTn"l ll TDr\TN'fS tic~ or hold to traditiooal aca- _.....a, ~ wbid1 mthe geoeral ..-ning
ao- academic community whIch - v .l.LJ VV .l V.l
demic values. The "Col&lt; ~ . , . _ ddy dlle tD the~
oountability to the more par- should be fully explored and
port" on the events at ~ ol the ~ suml&lt;ia&amp; &lt;1111&gt;ticular question of the aPP"!" understood. We do not ~e The ~'-on-.,.. bia a few years 8110 opens !"'th · lllDiily_ &amp;.- ol-tbeae Io.deos
priate way in which the Uru- the position that this trend 1S to provide • forum fa&lt; tho u- the assertion that_ the UDM!I'· l'urtbeled lboir edacaliaa; they
ven;ity should deal with pia- unacceptable; ~e woul~ bow- c:Nnae of on • ..rietJ sity is a . "'!mm:UWty ol acbal- laced miJiiaD&amp; ol ~ clue
giarism by members of the ever indicate 1ts negative and of tho iss- tacin&amp; tho -.He ars. But 1t 1S fair to ask wbeCb- to the lad&lt; ol ~ help.
faculty. In our recommend&amp;- positive aspects. What is at community. we ·both er the report would.,..... btne Todlly_....., _ _
tion (see aeparate slo':Y ) • .VI!' stake is best indicated by_ the position papers •nd _ , . .. been necessary, whether the to help tbeae ........,. to CODconsider plagiarism as ~mpliot question whether the Umver- penntts.
disturbances would have oe- tiDue lboir ..........._ F..- esin the concept of faculty ac- sity should be governed by the
curred. were the assertion ln1e.. ample. - btne EPIS. l"Uel1D
oountability.
rule of Jaw. In our view the
Wisdom may DO 1 - _be the Riam Sludio&amp;. PODER. aad
At the outset we wish to ob- answer is not clearly "yes."
demands action. It is also goal of all and the provmce ol BiliJ1cual Procram.. ~Ail ol
serve that the form and con.
possible to say that if the group none. "Competence may now !"' tbeae procraD1Ii are bellliDC our
text of the matter&amp; put to us
A commuruty govem_e d by does not act it does not feel the goal of all and the expertise youDCSier&amp; aad - are esped.raise questions far more lunda- rules draws less heav1ly 0 !' strongly enough about the ~- the province of some. This shift ing a cnod poup ol tbem to
mental than those actually ar- mutual regar?. While. ones leged infraction. Therefore, m- may mean that an . effort _to finish lboir bacbelor's ~
ticulated. We find in these peers or constitue~cy will con- action may be qu1te proper. ) maintain a commuruty ol m - and C1011finue lboir eduCidiDD to
questiolis a tendency to search tinue to have op1mons ~bout There are olher possible disad- formal standards enforced !JY ot.ain a masters aad from
lot rules and a demand for the appropna~ess of ones be- vantages. Standanls w hi. c h mutual regard and lh&lt;;~ there. a PhD.
tonnalized. procedures to deal havior, there 1S a tend~cy to \eave much room for discre.tio~~ of reasoned judgment JS quimtYears a&amp;D. we could a:JUDt
wi\b vio\at.iODs o1 tbeee ~es . withhold judgment pendmg the ary appJication may result }Jl
ic. In our vie9i, howe-.oer, the in the Uaiw!lsity of Buffalo no
as a way o{ resolvin_g pe~lvc:&lt;f outcome of lorf!lll1 procedures. unfairness in a number of dif- retreat from wisdom is neither more than three studeld&amp;.. To..
problems 0 ! conllicts Within This is n~dy so; for rules ferent ways. For example, ~e so clear nor so compelling as da ..., btne ....,.. oae buodred
the UniveJSlty. We would like mus~ be spec1fic "!'d relative!~ Subcommittee on AcademiC to justify abandonment .ol the
fifty- at UIB. In thil; lieid,
to discuss the implications of precu;e, and preciSIOn magru Freedom of the Task Foree on advantages of the technique o! - btne l..t a peo1 imprvvethis observation.
lies the relevance of factual University Goals states: "The mutual regard,_ Our ~. oo ment, tbaDb tDI!'&amp;tudill. EPIS,
Traditionally, the norms of nuance. But there 1S a more right to be controversial in the the questions of plag:iarism l"Uel1D Riam Studies aDd-behavior in the academic com- important consequence to be classroom and laboratory, how-- and accountability are in- 1 ID ..,._, dodil:aiBI lo!aden;
munity were loosely defined, noted. Where standards a_re eve r carries with i£ the respon- formed by the principle ¥
~ in ..,m of bi&amp;b
left broad latitude for discre- enforced by m_utual regard, diS- sibil\ty to avoid the introduc- academic freedom may vary m- sdJOol ~ aad ........,..
tion in application, and were agreement w1thin the. group lion of polemic material not versely with the eflicieDcy ol ...,..t tbem .., adiDoe lboir ellenforced by a system of mu- need not be very senous to intrinsic to the course. The the mechanisms of control ucatiaa. We ...., ......, "'*&gt;'
tual regan! (in the literal, non- prev"!'l the imposit!on of any teacher is the judge of the rele- ConsequenUy, the formnlation the peal help ol the Coopoftevaluative aense of the word ).. sanction at all. It will often be ~ van of his teaching, but the of precise rules should be: (1) u- c-ity~
Thus, whether a teacher's class- sufficient that some '"":"'~ stud nl should have the right reserved for the serious
litudyinc!
room conduct was "proper" of the group find some jUStili- to question and to criticize, and questions in academic life; aad The ol lhil ~
was a matter for judgment by cation for the alleged ImP"( to present his own views eve!'
&lt;2 ) upon a demonstration that
Commaaity ir; in ,....... -t.Dds.
his or her students and other priety, or some members .br
though they may be at van- procedural medlanisms alone u ......, a BA. adiDoe for
teacbera. "Proper" c~ass1:00m the grouP' find the po55l e ance."
present a serious possibility ol
. a - ..t .._for,_.behavior was never precu;ely sanctiow; more severe than the
We suppose a si tuation unfair treatment or are dearly I;i} T~ - -lw!lp
defined, and there were no offense warrants, to pre~ent wherein a student demands the ineffective as methods ol pro- the~ ......,; wbD -to our
formal procedures which had any action at all. W&lt;&gt;; beh.,f right to reply and the teacher tecting the general good ol the lw!lp aad ~ tD ....., bim
to precede a finding of improp- that this tendency f:O rmmobl · refuses on the grounds that ( 1 ) academic community.
&amp; - the dr-. aad the
.,. c:lassroom behavior. Further- ity is parUy responsible for the
We a11aw aar
more, the aanctions to be ap- current search for rules as .so,.: . . . . .., .,S .,.,._. )last
plied were never articula~ in Jutions to problems of conflict.
A .-..-.~T~_,J,;,..
,...;c:&gt;nc&gt; r',.....,.n.,,.
ol tbem
~
advance with any preCISIOn : It is true that immobility. tends
·f1J'fAUU'-' u,u, • Ulpt r.x.:&gt; \..AUt~
'Ibey . _ " ; : . : . . . a..d1oos.
the teacher could be assigned to disappear in a rule-onented
Elkins is a small town in
"They have !! different life e11c. 1n oCbor _... - poalsto a different course (perhaps community, but the reason for mid-east West Virginia. It is style; live for di1l~t ........-, ....._ 'Ibey . _ be a peal
elective rather than required ); this should be understood. · typical of cities in that area have diff~t !""""'Pts ~ ~t lw!lp tD ...- ~ o-&gt;be could be refused promotion Since rules demand p~ures rolling 4,000. foot bills, sur- they 001151der ~mportant m life. ity o.t ir;
Ia -.
or tenure; be could be denied and procedures reqwre ~c- rounded by half paved, half
" Before we went, we l..t the ~ ....loeol..,._.
other indicia of merit; be could tionaries, a rule system ~bi_ft,&amp; dirt roads, losing its inhabi- idea that
erybody was poor ity the i.. ilo wl1it:la W liw.
be reprimanded by his Dean or (or delegates) power ~ lDlti- tants. Its neighboring cities are and unhappy - poor people ao o.t ilo the , . _._ will
ceosured by his colleagues; or ate action to a few de8lgnated Junior Harding, Beverly and with nothing to ..,L
foe! ...-1 of the ........ ol
it could aim-;&gt; I y "be made individuals. The matter of sane- Mill Creek, and its. people are
"'They're intelligent, healthy, oar a...-.. ilo . _ peal
)mown" to him that his classtioning and norm ~tenan~ poor. Many are stnp-mmers.
happy."
~atheGaadNeill&gt;_ _is_no
__10_0_g_e_r_un_d_e_r_the
__immedi
___That's where participants in
"There are two cultures down bam- ......._
r_oom--oond--uct--was--reganl---ed-as
U/B's upcoming Appalachian there,~ observed Mary Erickm..p..ic ....... ollhil...,._
Festival will come from, and '"'U. et.lws feature editor. '"lbe lllDiily. Jet w .,S ....,a-! 'Ibe
that's where four ethos staff people in the city are what- ouil ir; fertile. W with aD the
members spent four days ~t expect in ~ - rural. _..... _._ Solid the
week doing reaearch for therr conservative, leading an orderly - t ; Jet w 111-l ..,_ Appalachian edition.
type of existence. Shirts aad ......, the fao:ililios. W e - be
'lbey stayed on a farm a half- slacks.
~ We......,-.....,_
•"lbe Hill people bell- _.._ tbal ..... a tiDe
hour's drive from Elkins. .,....,__
• ........,
"
job. We..._.. jaia a-; lbo!y
are spread out there. Most· bottom jeans and anny ,iacbiL
....._. ...- rilbiL 1M • help
houaes are .30 minutes' apart by
The effects ol West Vqinia's
It.ia ...,._ tiloe tbalcar - which few people own. flood- 100 miJa1 away....__t _..,.. ...,...... ................
Most walk.
&lt;to Elkins. R&lt;*l&amp; ....,..,IDIIIIdiod,. _. , . _ • ..-..moa, We
~
'Those who do have C8l1l, buy one went under five feet ol ..... - - _ , Tty
_._.,. c-;;;tr;,;:',~u-• two identical ones at a time. water. It was hardly noticed.
tD .... _ . . . . lieOne to drive, the other for
'"lbe people there are .-1 ilo the . . _ ...,.., will
parts.
to such tbinp," ~ ......... "",__...., . . . o-"People down there are com- -xl1ey act as if it's poedestined. ~. '!"' ~ ,the ~
-OU&amp;MI'OOD
pletely different," a8y&amp; ethos I heanl oue IllY em TV it .- ~a__, :..a. w ~ w - .superviaine editor Carl Roetter, waa the will ol God. U it ' - ,_. .-.
~~~
s. ... . . . - - oae of the four who made the pened up here,~_.... ..._
trip.
·
be crying, 'Why me'!' •
{~ - 7• .-. 2)
=•td&amp;lilHO ~:--If. . . . .

t';",!,

__,

arJ:,

·

!id

·e., .._.,.,.

r.::mc

a:tit•

y...........,., ......

S

'&amp;Jitors

--.c.

u,;;;;;:-

--

..u.;;--

�s

An Vnlwly'AllianreExistsBetween
LorolMedia &amp;~Report Claims
By STEVE LIPMAN
"AD maboly alliaDce exists

-police.- lo&lt;:aJ media the
'lbe
was Bulfalo at-

-m-

toruey Ri&lt;:bard R&lt;J6Cbe at a

ox- mnf"""""' Mooday mominc in Norton Hall, the
was to his imlesliptillll ol alJeced sbootincs ol
U / B studonts by Bulfalo police

dur:inc the campus' Spriac 19'10
clislwban&lt;les.
In his ._.-t. TMy Slwol
~afticially released

Mooday-follo..-ing almost two

Keller Gets

ol ~­
- - that •at!liou&amp;b the police) COlle.
media -....s IIIllCh credit for
• New York State - al.orm for a c:ivilian R'riew
the limited success ol the in....ajptillll, . . . ( il) . . . aN- though Gowon.or Rocbfeller - - - - W"Jtbout typeaDd
ol .
personally
promised
an
imoestic&lt;mlrol,
dissideat CJOUPS
end the afl"air ooly reluctaaUy
minority CJOUPS in the..._ will
aDd geoeoally in a '""Y limited gatioo, the State police ..........,.._ This reluctanoe re- fully in..,;tipted the matter. face p o I i C e mjsawyfprt that
Oeds aD unboly alliance be- 'The State . . - miniJnwn f!f- could
. facts which eDIIIJCh lo ..,.._
lbe police- the media.
said a lihel suit by
City police in respoase lo his
~ media rely heavily ..,
c:barJ1es is unlikely for two .-- ·
the police far most stories in
SODS:
that area aDd geoeoally """'""
lo be Ulllluly ~ witb
FUst. "it's pretty hard to cet
the police agencies. Media relaa lihel case aliiCelllinc ........_
tioasbips JD nonestablisbed
tbinc that happeDed in the
poups sui:b as studonts are less
public spiJore.tbaa intimate, slantinc stories
And. .....,.,..Uy, Roa:be ol police mjsmndurt even fur"trutb is lbe ultimate defeqse_
ther.•
Hlcan-wbatl...,.is
RoodJe, wbo beaded the in~and honest,
•-estiptillll as a UIB law stuthey'd ba,. a hard time. 'The
clout. said this alliaDce probpolice definitely CIID•t cli&amp;pove
ably isn't put ol any systemiL•
alic __...... the
priDCipds. ather it is a '"philoCopies ol the 78 ~
sophical political problem
are llVIIilable at the
-&lt;&gt;Ide.- people in the p res s
Erie County l'lllllic Lilaly,
....., beliewe in police miscooDoorntown Bmnch, in the rare
dac:t. Tbere"s a
reluctanoe
90dio:m. Copies ol the re.., the put ol the press to loolt
purt distributed as put ol
into iL Many ol tbem tbinlr:
Mclulb,y's Spectra.__, avail..,. c:barJies are lies."
.ble far $.25 eM:h by writinc to:
Tloey SloooC ~ Rm. 214.
Norton BooD. 3435 Main Sbmt,
Those charps. as c&lt;mtained
BullaJo, N.Y. 14214. a - b
in the n!plOt. are tbat "'On the
are ...,.ble to Sal&gt; Board I. Inc.
ol lby 7, 19'10 • • •
palicemoa. without antbority oc
richl. filed liboquns hapbaz_.., into ..... ct-.ls ol studmls,. ......:line-' parties.
'The police slrud&lt; in fast,.moy..
inc .......,..,. .....miscoDt ol the
~ stribs .....s in the ""'Y
the studonls ....., prote:styears

l25thAuxud
Dr. William Keller, superinteudent ol sdJools f« the WilLiamsville Cenb31 School District, bas r-ereiwd a 125th ADniwmuy Award from the UDi......,;.ty.
In cer-emanies in the Olliae
ol the President last '1'11msky,
Dr. Keller """' cited f« -.....
CDIIIIDOil CXJUnllll' in clefininc
aDd supporiing that
be felt were desipod to provide
educatianal eij .
far - donls in his district aDd in
oeui;Jy urbaQ
,jtiies
which addressed tbemselws lo
c:rocial social issues.- 'The citation CIOiltinued, "'W i t boa t
mriiiJ81tinC &lt;m the specific
merits ol his proposals, - me
m o s t particuJady impre;&amp;ed

witb his CXJUnllll' in ~
himself aDd his sdiDol district
lo the problem when ......... in
similar positioos frequentl y
look the c:omfonable slaDce ol
sileoce..
Dr. Keller was pnjsod as a
"model lor ........ to_..... in
dealinc witb the CXIIIIjlles poabJems ol public educatiall.- He
was called a -upmwtati:veol "the leedeDbip ol the .....
lie ol ecluc:atila'" whidl
bas .,__ the bnmt"' ol criticism ol the .............. ...

....._..
...... --a....t ol wbidl
faiJinc -lo respaad
lo
the social _ . . ol !JDCioty -

~:'d=.tc:;:...J~

-

aDd sQmulatUc edprwtjrwwl ....:-

..............
.
Dr. Keller was also c:iled far

---~

go--

--

...J

""'*

-me

~ charps.

while the .,...,

ol the n!plOt. are Clllbiladowed.
.,.,.,....,.. lo RAa:be. by wbat
the - ' ,aais "the fruitless

"remarbble i"M&amp;- ,.
aad
__.,a.tillll far imwHatillll'" iD dJads to briDe tbem Cthe poeducatillll wbidl

~

.... tbe

.&amp;ct
earidlinc
tbe-.1
-~
........ ol
ol tbe
lltu!loolts

ulty in bio ~ ~._..... .

biliQ'.-

-

'The -..1 c i t a t i o a llipBI
UIB Pnsidoat &amp;bert L ~ -.1 Willio.o C.
BUn!. .,.,.._ ol tbe UIB
Coaal:iL
.

w

• 'The City ollk6Jo--.bicb · er itself if oCher apa:ies did
police dopa.- a6:ials but eaouch lo fully
ooly tried to .,.,.,._,.. the matter more,
in....ajpte the atlair.
..... but misled the public while
• 'The Fedeoal ~
the lby..- -.bed his bands
- -I did ) the most~
olthemaliler.
but ... """" the F.B.I. did ld
• 'The Erie County Dislrid make attempts lo cfi9cowr .....
Attomey-altboucb .n the .,..;.. 'lriluessl!!i, makinc tbis .imestideoce ~ .............. lo the cation incomplete.
D.A., .., wiiDessos ......, inter-.. -~p~ · _ , ...._.
viewat aDd .., real was
'The report ...,..., reopen allY
. . - lo ~.... the truth. ...
'The enforcement ol justice ....s in....ajptioo, R&lt;J6Cbe feels, but
on a putjs:m basis in the Sum- it can serve to make the public
ol "police miscaD:::ti:,~ !ill?~ -du&lt;:t. aware
People """"' the Iicht lo
deoce -tban be .... in tbis ( the ...,._ what's ""-inc. l'lllllic

lice) lo jolsti&lt;e.

~ obriaus fact is
tll.t wben locol police are ao• • .n hilllc:mli.a a6:iM;, police """
I*
•
iwl ~ire ma&amp;l

allld ol .

--

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

f tq SloooC

~

---~

llevioB

�·-2.

6

New Program Studying

McLean: No Set Style

·Ancient Inca~

But Lots of Exploring

By CURT MILLER
In just a few months, Don
llc:IAml bas ewlved from a
.............., folbinaer wbo
_..,.t at eoBee houses and
..U group ..-tiDp, lo a P"''..,_. wbo padr;s them in at
lllllllic .balls em a nation-wide
Dlr of one nilbt stands.
Tbe Joost 80111 in McLean's
aet at KleinbaDs Music Hall
SuDday nilbt mi&amp;bt as well
have been the first of his career.
It "American Pie,• the
llinlle wboae sales have set
hilbs and whidl bas refused to
budee from record charts for
.........J months. Tbe 80111 bas
been inteq&gt;leted as everything
from a DIISiallic farewell to
loc:lt and roll, to a metapboric
...,....,. for the restless, root-

=..,r::.mt.=.PJ!!V~
to pve interpretations. None-

lhelais, 1,500 Joyal fans sbowed
here to waldl bim coot his
, ~- and other treats. Until
the release of "American Pie,"
it milbt ha"" been dillicult to
IDd tbat many McLean fans
nationwide.
~ Mc:Lan played the song on
_ __....,_, ~·;tar witbout
his .............
a•

'Good,IJrcJft~'

"It's a good constitution,"

Dr. Nol'll!'lD Hostetter, chair-

or

SUPA. says about the
pooposed c:oostitution for the
man

Professioual Staff Senate. And
many U / B staff seemed to
. . - at an open meeting last

Wem-lay in l&lt;l6 Diefendotf.
About 4() poople showed up,

and, aooording to Hostetter,
"there was no real expression
the document as a

:t::::!

Discussioa of the constitution centered aropnd the seotion on representation. Several
diHetent methods of allocating
Senate representatives w e r e
disrussed, including one based
... job classification. 'lbe proposed c:oostitution breaks the
Univeosity into foUr areas from
whidl representatives will be
aelected: the Faculties; Offices
of the President, Vice President for Academic Affails, and
University-wide divisions; Syslems and Operations, University Relations; and Student Affairs. 'lbe resulting assembly
would have 35 members.
Anotbes- suggestion for "'"
vising the constitutional draft
was to include a process for reID!Jvinc ollicers or ri!presentatives.

Hostetter believes that the
coostitutioo will be revised and
.....ty ·for a vote by the end of
Man:h. During the balloting,
staff members will be asked to
.....ept or reject the document.

U it is amepted, elections for
._.,.,.,matives will be held by
May 15 and the body will beBin ,_,ling in July.
Tbere will be no lack

or

tbin&amp;s for the Senate to~

Hostetter believes. He points to
auch areas as the creation or
job laddels for staff people, dis-

tribution of merit mcmey and
~-of staff to Univerllity-'lride committees. He ex~ more areas will bemme
~once the Senate starts
..-.... and the structure is

-~

Tbe SUPA chaimum points
-that U/B's Staff Senate will
be ..... of the first of its kind
ill the CliJIDltry. Other acboola
....... indulled staf( members in
their faculty - · but the
liluae
IIUIIIbon of staf( people
at U/B haw )!~.....ted this,
lloBietlier oayiL

.....

.(.

accompaniment When be came
to the. cborus, be asked the
audience to join in,
·
'Tm sure I d&lt;m't have to~
you the wuds.• However, while
the audience did DDt. hesitate to
join in on other 80IIIS. they
were reluctant to sing along on
this ooe, possibly because MoLean """"""' to be el\ioying his
own penoi'IDIID&lt;e so much.
Tbe concert '-'&gt; on time
but McLean was a little slow
starting. Striding onto the stage.
be ._.m,d to -lause with
a oerwus hand wave. He '-'&gt;
with a DODdescript 80111. neglecting the patter whidl IJUilC&gt;tuates the perfOI'IDIUl&lt;e of more
experieoced singers. and forgetling even a perfunctory introdoction.

--- . . .

M&lt;:Lean ~ his failure m
~ the_ audience. He 81!"1·
ogized for his slow pace. saymg
be W!'5 dead tired from a:is;r

crossmg the ODUDtry on his
"magic ~leather
In a banJO smg-along which foJ.
lowed, be was able to scorewith humor. In the sterile and
orderly atmosphere · or Kleinbans it takes a minor miracle
to get an audieuce to join in

"'9"....,.."

on
the was
singing
or a 80111- This
group
DO different. Said
McLean: "I can't bardly bear
you. You'd better get some of
that Bu1falo sausage." 'lbe
dieuce brigbteoed up and MoLean responded in like manner.
'lbere is no typical Don MoLean. His songs range from soft
sorrowful ballads, to barsb jazz
tunes about betrayal, ·t o ~ talk­
ing blues." ConsequeoUy, one
can not peg his style. His music
is somewhat imitative, but his

au-

JA Sar~
SUB'L'l.
'J'&lt;'

lyrics are his O'W'fl. probing with
a diamond's hard ness and

sparlde.

McLean's songs and, indeed,
his entire act rely heavily on
hmnor. He is not the ooly singer who attacks society's sacred
cows with wit, but be bas an
exceptional a b i I i t y to blend
b8lbed lyrics with soft music
for i n c r e a s e d effeCtiveness.
Some aspects of society sadden
McLean. He is angry at a society which destroys its own traditional images. He points a
musical finger at Hollywood,
. the natioo's chief image maker,
whose images are no longer
selling and at the movie studios
which must even "auction off
Dorothy's sblles" (from the
Wtzard of Oz).
'Babylon'

A Bible psalm, sung to banjo
music, with the audience singing three-part harmony, took
McLean a while to set up. But
when the arrangement fell into
place, "Babylon" bad the elfeotiveness of a church spiritual,
relieving the · audience or at
=-some of its everyday teSongs fiom McLean's "American Pie" album drew the most
audience ~ His landscape-type tribute to Van Gogh
was painted from a pa I e tte
which contained ooly sad
colors.

·-.........

"Crossroads" is a gynopsis of
the life of a performer who is
still in the process of becoming.
McLean says there ·are many
roads to walk and DO matter
what we may have planned, be
knows "we11 walk. them all."
sometimes walking one way to
aet us free, ooly to find we've
- t h e - dimdion.

-~ ~~a.:!ib!

free to ~ ~ And while
one cannot say tbat Don McLean bas a style &lt;#. his own,
one can not deny. !hilt eq&gt;eriIDI!Iltation into various musical
styles is a more vital fonn of
ezistloace.
•

'f{-.1'\'JIQ

~

. ':111.

1!172

Citing a •crisis in diJection,•
Janice Schultz, coordinator of
By GUS PATUTO
I--...a.. s.nc..
events and arts propamminc
... College B, bas resigned from
Spanish and Portuguese are
her post effective at the end of .the ollicial languqe; of South
the - Ms. Schultz bas America. rigbt?
also resiped as Co1Jeciate Air
. Well not quite.
III!IJibly ~resentatiw for the
At least 7 million Latib AmCollege effective immediately, ericans, says Dr. w~
since she feels sbe is no longer Wok:k, associate prof.....,.. bf
representative or the College's linguistics, still SIM8k Quechua,
ideals.
the native tongue of the ancient
wbo inhabited the Cen'lbe "crisis" that caused her Incas
mountains from the
to resign is the "intentional ..... tral Andes
througb the 16th century.
gJect or the arts focus" of Col- lith
Dr.
Wokk
beads a new prolege B "which I consider es- gram in Quechua
at U/B,
sential to . the nature and ....,.
whidl
was started, in part, to
cess or the College." Originally • help overcome some or the soCollege B, founded by Allen
problems the anclent lanSapp, was concerfied primarily cial
guage is causing in South Am- •
in creating "an envirOnment of
theatre and music and art erica.
the arrival or the SpanWhich would tend to open invi- ishWith
conquistadors in the 16th ·
tation to serious intermediate century,
the Inca empire Mpll
work in criticism and to the to crumble
eventually vanproduction of combined media ished-but and
the I a n g u a g e,
forms." Sapp bas been on ex- lbougb completely
different
tended leave ·since 1971, bow- from Spanish, remained.
ever, and the focus bas shifted
~theto "our general cultural en'"Today, the people wbo
vironmenL"
speak only Quechua live outIn her resignation I-., Ms. side the mainstream of social
Schultz says that since she is and political life in South Am·
uin no position to improve tbe erica. MosUy, they live in isosituation," she is taking "the lated villages in the worst povonly course of action that both
takes into account my COIIIIIlit- :!;;3.:~ olfne~ :,:niti':o;
-ment and preserves as much as Spanish way or life." says Dr.
.
possible harmony within Col- Wokk.
lege B."
.
In Peru. a land of i2 million,
for example, about :ro per cent
Her work with the College speak Quechua as their first
bas ''heightened my perception language. while the rest rely
and appreciation of the variety mosUy on Spanish or other
of levels of human communica- lariguages. ... varying degrees,
tion, and bas thrust me into the same is also bue in Bolivia,
rather intense situations from Ecuador, Argentina, and Cowhich bas evolved for me an lombia.
awareness of the inseparability
"Some people," says Dr.
of manner and matter and of Wold&lt;. "estimate that the averthe complexity or the problem age Quechua-speaking family is
of defining collegiate values about 200 years behind in comand goals on the one hand, ani! · parison with the standard of
attempting to realize them on living or the average Spahisbthe other."
speaking family as a result or
the language barrier."
With his . new program, Dr.
Wolck hopes to help open the
way for anlhropolngists, linEight U/ B wresUen;, four of guists, and other social scientists, as well as government
whom won Eastern Regional
tiUes last weekend, will com- officials, to bring about intepete in the NCAA Univt!ISity gration between the Quechua
D i vi s ion Tournament this and Spanisb.speakin people.
Interest in the language is
month.

u,.__,

8 Wrestlers Win
Trip to Nationals

-

growing. 'lbe National University ol Peru asked Dr. Wolck
in 1969 to cooduct a survey on
the Quechua - speaking people.
And two countries,. Cuba and
Russia, already ~t radio
programs in the J.anguage 24
hours a day.
·

_...._

'lbe U/ B Quechua program
also bas its academic purpose.
Dr. Wolck points out that as
the oldest native American
tongue, Quecliua could very
well be the link for understanding the development of other
native American ·languages.
Now in its second semester,
the U/ B program is the most
complete of any in the U.S.,
says ·nr. Wolck, offering
courses for both graduate and
undergraduate students. Dr.
Wolck teaches linguistic analysis Courses, while two Peruvians
wbo speak Quechua as their
native tongue - Colodoaldo
Soto and Pablo Alcocer-instruct in bow to speak the Jan.
guage.

-

Dr. Wold&lt;. a graduate of the
Univt!ISities of Frankfurt and
Kiel in Gennany, and London
Univt!ISity, spent 1968 as a
visiting professor at the National University in Lima
Peru. He spent the two p...,:
vious summers in Peru, teaching and working on his Quechua survey.
He joined U/ B in 1970, after
three years as an assistant professor at Indiana University.

/

'The four who took tiUes at
the Eastern finals at the University of Cincinnati are Ted
La w son. 142 pounds; Gary
Kumm, 150; Eric Knuutila,
167; and Fred Marcello, 190.

Joining them at the nationals, March 9-11, at College
Park, Maryland, will be four
others wbo finished in the top
three in their classes: Roy
Guarino, 134 pounds; Tony
Policare, heavyweight; Doug
Rutter, 118; and Ron Brandt,
190.

rLife Workshops' Seeking
End to Campus Alienation

Working or studying at U/B Employment?" and a "Facilimeans you're part of a com. . tators' Workshop." Other promunity of 30,000. U you break grams that may be olfered in
it 00,.... further, it means you're the future include "'rganic
one of 24,000 students, 2,€00 Living," "Alternative Vocafaculty or 5,000 staff. But does tions," and a "Worla;bop on
it have any meaning beyond Consume.. lofonnation."
that? Does it mean participaTbe program is anxious to
tioo in some type or communi- set up additional sessions based
ty? Or is it just a five-day drag on individual needs: and intera degree or ·a pay ests. It seeka to .....,; ' is a
'lbe U / B Law School Alum"clearingbouse" for~ wbo
ni Association will honor three
interests and -sltills that
is a newly have
members at its lOth annual
they are willing to slllire and'
mid-winter dinner at the Buf. organized program that is try- those wbo are inten!sted in
falo Atbletic Club tonight at ing to cut tbiougb the aliena- learning or~. A wide
6 p.m. as Richard D . Schwartz, tioo and isolation which Norton
provost of Law and Jurisprud- · staff members perceive on camence. awards doctor or law de- pus. It's based on the belief
~orbbops, programs and
grees to 16 students wbo com- that "group interaction provides
pleted requirements this month. a means or encouraging person. semmars are open to all memto-person communicatioo which bers of the Univeosity communJudge John ·T . Curtin, Miss -rontributes to wtderstanding ity and their families. · "Life
Gretchen Hazel and William and a feeling of closeoesS Worbbops" is just getting orB . Mahoney will be the award among people.
ganized and is still seeking inwinners. 'lbe Association each
Tbe program_is tied to groups
year cites a jurist, an attorney
from
prominent in public service and but uses DO rigid definitioo of from 2-5 p.m., the program
what a group should be or how bold an open bouse in 232 Nora lawyer in private pmctice.
~t should ~teract. • Instead, it ton at whidl the initiators or
Judge Curtin is thiS yeal's IS encouragmg a wide range of "Life Woda!bops" want to talk
honored jurist, Miss Hazel. "'" learning and sharing experi- with people about their needs
cenUy retired after service as ences outside the classnxxn or and interests. Everyone is en-.
an assistant state atlomey gen- ollice. A sample of programs oourqed
to stop by and talk
eral, rep-Is tl&gt;e. pulilic seo- being oifered or soon to start to the people in the~
tor and M@oney, ODe pi the includes: "lnteradtunll Com81ea's lmding -defeuse attor- munication Wo rksb op on ;;~~u~
ney~~, the private pnodiae seo~.· "Now that . rve uals may c:aiJ Ann Hicb or
tnr.
.
Got My Major, Can I Get Coni Bumbam at ert 251L

Law Cites 3Alums

=

·~e Wo~"

='!i..to~vaib%.~

D

=

i~ beliins Frf:.t

:r;

�----·lllf&amp;llt............._
__
_...______..
.... ---a-t;-.
__, . ,

Ona "' 11/rs . - . . .

- - · - - - . . . . In

--..---.
::.· . ::: :-Juuil:=e:"'---.........
polttD_the_of

::...

~

~--

~::::..~-=.
-. • •
Mr.

-----.-

.A.ccardinc to the WaU s-t

JounttJl, proviDe fraud ..... be
easier if the defmdaDt is a Pbi
Bela~ To &amp;tid&lt; an m.lerpayer ol with the 50 .....
ceot fraud _,alty, the IRS
must show ·c~eu IIDd CliJIIYinl&gt;.
eYideaoe ol fraud. 'Ibis
often isn't-· IIDd marts fre.
quenUy reject IRS fraud Ill-

mc-

'lbe Slate Baud ol ~
in tboir replar IIIOIIIbty - inc in AlbuJy last ....... wted
to ameud tboir Balea IIDd the
Omuni,.;,.oa Replaliaas "to
t!lllabliab paW ..,....mtahlity
"""" the quality ol .m.........
...... olrered a1 collops IIDd um-sities in NYork Slate.•
'lbe cbaDaea reGect a shift
from delaileil &amp;UnleillaDce .......
credit,.bopr IIDd """""' requireto a~ wbicb evalualal educatioaal in
Ienos ol per{onnance, IIIOOd,
IIDd the ........n capability ol m.
~to~theprocrams

ol study.

Under the new
•
the objecti\'eS . of ~
ricu1a aDd changes in ·existing
cmricula must be clearly defiDed aDd pubijsbed, aDd the
mlle&amp;e must devise ,.,;.,.;,g
syslems to eslimale the """""""
ol students aad fa c u I t y in
achieving prognun objectives.
'lbe """' regulations also re-

.

-.T--

\\eeklyCommunique - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

~~i===
~ ::t.:;:r~ p~
teria. (lDe faetor that in8ueDces I'Oills' State-wide plan in meet- f.S..
judges is the lqlbisticatian ol
the tupaya.

'lbe Tax Court recently

local ._t."

~~u·:;:~
~~=R~~
fanner. Amlin&amp; other ~ """"""'8' new aDd non-lradi-

~ cowt DDII!d_ the mm "re- - tioaal methods for students to
""'~ only • Bilttb-crade edu- obtain miJe&amp;e credit, including
caboo, ......ted loag ~ external degree aDd three-year
~d. like IDiliiY fanners, "main- p r o g r a m s. This was &amp;alOII&gt;tained only the pJjsbed by deleting requireformal ........ts.• But in the ments that students spend a
case ol a ~orth Carolina ac- specified period of time as res;;.
countant _with a college degree dent students before being eliand a Pbi Bela Kappa key, the gibJe for receiving a degree.
cowt upheld the IRS. (lDe de'lbe action by the Regents
ci~•= 'lbe ..,....mb!nt's specifiailly deletes that section
" in .
busiJM&amp;I . - - of their Ruleii wbicb rohibits
ience IIDd ro.-1 educatian ..., institutions from .,.,m p .
desuch that be oedainJy wa8 . . . grees "on eumination~t
oogoizant . • . that be wasn't resideuce." Also deleted was
keeping accwate reconls . . ." the section which required stu-

T--.

•

•

•

~
At •
of the . - ....,..._

n-.

~

., ...,_ - .

Empft 51* ~ "' Com.,..... ~ Vice -

John J. . . - _.... far
"Stubllw-11: o f - ui1: the
City - - , of Y- far . , In the charted uil: ~- 5ucll
"""- _ . to be ......- -

• ....., whlc:lr far
......,. """- •
kllll IBm .._ IMJ • ~

~ 11le far .....,...
of - - uil: CU1CT
........,. .., t i l e - of
~ fWI)' a. - - ..
did nat "'-'
In the -..e, -m -.
- ·•

'J'bir-. members ol the Nalional Asaociation ol State Universities aDd Land Grant Col-

leps are
the top :10 in
81110111
the U .8, in Ienos ol beocalaureale padualls """" - t 011 I!&gt;
earn doctorates between 1920
aftd 19'10. 'lbe Jist includes
(with nmk IIUIIIber in parentheses) Uniw!usity ol Cali(ornia, Belbley (1); City ColIeee ol N- York (2); Uniwr'"'--'- (3) ·, U-'--'ty
st·ty ol .......,._
~~of W"IIIDIIIIBin ( 4); University

~i==n (~~~; &amp;::ii'~.:t.

venity (9); MIT ( 10); University of ~ Los Angelea (13); Ohio Slate Uru--.

Bity (14); Uniw!usity ol Teas
(16); F'eumoyi..U. State Uni......ntv (18); IIJid Uniw!usity of·
W~ ( 19). .

dents to complete at least one
year of their studies in regular
attendance at the institution

conferring a degree.
'lbe Rules change further defines degree requirements in
Ienos of goals rather than time

&amp;Ddsetsuptheprocedure
....t.ereby credit can be granted
to students meeting equivalency requirements establisbed by
committees of faculty membeis
in the various disciplines.
'lbe requiremen t for an
earned bacbelor's degree was
cbangec! from "not less than
120 sen!ester bours of credit, or
its equivalent" to " four academic years of full-time study
or an equivalent which can be
shown to accomplish the same

gOoJs..

Requirements for

0

•

11oo . - . -

......., -

tile

-

tor- . . . - ..t.•

-

'DIBADB• : Cosm.icomi.a. directed
by Gordon Roculf:Harriman Studio Tbeatre, 8 :30 p.m., general
admissioo $LOO, students $.00,
tkSets at Norton Ticket Office.
Abo on Wednesclay, Mareh 8;
Friday. Man:b 17; Thunoday,
Mareh 23; Frids,y, Man:b 24;
W - y . Man:b 29.
C.O...UCO.UC. is baed Cll1 a book
of short . - by ll.alo CalviDo.
w hi c h 'MliD a Natioaal Book
Awanl for ita tnmslator. William
WeaYer. It is essentially an ef.
fort to deal with acience fiction
with a m.iDimal reliance on tecb noloc:Y and an attempt to establish peculiar relationships over a
period of billions of years. A
c:bilcllike view of science ooupled
with rational esplanatioo.s for irratiaaal sta"""""ts form the basis
for the improvisational thrust of
this produdioa.

ilarly changed.
~ .,.,.,_
In a related move. Commissi&lt;mer of Education Ewald B.
Nyquist also announced specific
requirements for the first two
external degrees establisbed--

=

=:e.t,:;:..,.,~

:"

ness administration.

WEDNESDAY--8

SIDIJND.* : ProL Edmaster's BCONOJIJCS
win Kub. economics. Massacbuo-

aDd doctoral degrees were sim-

etts Imtitute of Teclmology, In·
lroducliolt 11&gt; Applied Mocroeco-

......ua CU.U.. a Medium.Siud
Macro Modd). Room 24, 4224
ftid&amp;oe Loa. 3:30p.m.; coiTee hour.
Room 9, 3 p.m.
sn:a.u. PliYSICS 8&amp;'IDEIIBNT OOLLOQtJIUJ&lt;" : Dr. J.G. W"mans. physic&amp; aDd atrooomy, TM FOWJda.
lions of PltysX$, 111 Hochstetler.
4 p.m.; relftsbments will be served

,..__ ,__,__ Nyquist
" said in 112 Hocbsletter. 3:30 p.m.

.......~~
that the external a""""'ate in
arts
degree
willarts
require
60 credits, 48
in the
aDd sciences

~~~~=

may be choaen from all fields

~~m:".,t~~~~~...!::

-------

tiaaai M..,tb, 234 - . 8 p.m.
111ua:oL Jl(l(OYADONB, ndio pro-.. od~J!!..U.,_D
. r. ~~-~

£ ..__,..._t Koo
~
•
x Art Gallery Aud·
aDd 12 in free electi""" wbicb - ' - - . 8 p.m.
.

HispaniCS• 'Conti&gt;ulaf ' - -

4 col. 6)

'
•·-- ·
r......
-·......
~
~~!~MI~-!"'y
clirec:lo&lt; of tbe Muaic
..., ~
o..--t•s electl&lt;lllic m u o i c
IDOI'e-- must unite i f - ldlldio, clioc.- tbe Mooc BYD·

.rucnu ..........,

w a n t - - i f - w a n t to
soim-.e.
We .-J - t a t i o n in
COurts, 8enb, Coomtv, Cil;y
·u II I
tor - al- Hall, Department of Welfare.
, _ _ ta a Ia .lUis, Haopital&amp;, eCc., IIDd in
. _ , ............. · manyplaca.
•

c.......o.- · • ...,_Ed,_.. __. • -Alii:

A Wali' in 1M San.
~· 140 Capm. 3 aDd
Wa; stoey of an ~ bat,.
talion attackiDc a Ge......, hideout
iD Italy. Sensitively cfuected to
ewokelwman aspects of war. StarriDe Dana ADdrews, Ridtaid Conte. St.sfuq; Holloway. John Ire.
laDd; cfuected by Lewis Milenu1. • •:

inc a patlem of State-wide aDd

C......-.

- w i t h boot Michael P .

Bwb. WBCB-FM, 9:06 p.m.
.......,..,... calfTa&amp;IIDillfu•:
COBOL,- Moadloy JiotiDc.
COJIPIJIDIC C&amp;I{TI&amp;a IIDillf. . . :

FORTRAN IV, - Moadloy Jioi.
~
.
n-unite.·-becamellrODC ...,......., c-icru"a.--r-.

8bd our rillda will be~ dQ lioliolc.

-------Drs.._.., ..................
- THURSDAY-S

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
~&amp;JOB 10ftZ.----.501H ...
~

::.r=ty~
..-.u.&amp;ul
~.

:e:::;--J!:..

L«S-

- =l.a&gt;auy.
2ad Loc:bood

NOTICES

�lllarclt 2, 1972

Di:rr.AL• : Cb.riJtopber
lute, Baird, 5 p.m., 11M.
WBJ'() PIIIIIIEN'I8.: ~ Bachman in "An Eveninc of · Poetry
and Song... 'The prograai will be
taped for a later broadeaot and
everyone is weJ.come to attend the
live performance at 7:45 p.m. in
Norton_327.
8TUimfT

eoo...r,

. &lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

EYZHINGS POll KUBlC Tll&amp;l!a•:

~~~~s~-=
p.m., adDiisoion chaqe.
U/8 BYMPRONY BAND CON~•:

Frank J. Cipolla, clliector, Villa

eon.e .Auditorium,

Maria
p.m.

8 :30

JilL)(••: Soul to Soul,. eee.FridaY
listing.

MONDAY--6
NctiuOJ.
Hilltory of an Inurv~, Henry
Lee Smith, Jr., Norman A. McQuown, a n d Ray Bridwhiatell,
with Sarah Greenfield. 'llhe"finecrain study or speech and ito accompaniments, one hour, 10 Foe.ler baaement, 2 p .m.
PATHOLOGY BDON.u• : Dr. Lawrence . Feinman, Department or
UNGUIBT1C8 ON T:v. • •:

·tt;'~n~.:.~:,~f~=
Me&lt;aboU.m on Col/aien Synthe,;., 146 Capen. 3 p.m.

COMPUTING C E N T K R SDUNA&amp;#:

. COBOL, Chris Siderakis, instructor, R&lt;xlm 12, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7
p.m.
COMPUTING C E N T £ B SDUNA&amp;# :

tory Theatre ol Lincoln Center,

~~~";,' ..J:":'rea~;,:

Lincoln Center, as Mercutio. Stu-

dio A r e n a favorites Charlotte

Jones and Richard McKenzie will
appear as the Nurae and Friar
Lawrence; Armand Aaante, lately of Lake of the W oorh•. on
Broadway, will be TYbalt; and
Francis Betbenoourt w i II play
Loni CapuleL
·
Pllilll.• •: Mod Dop and En8liah.men~

Conference 'l"beatre.- cbec:k

showcase for

~

~

charge.

More or less a visual album.
this film bas no other content
than the music. Tbafs actually
enough when the music is coming
from so monstrous a band as Mad
Dogs. It takes 114 minutes to see
all of them. In four track. stereo.
With Joe .Cocker, Leon Ruaaell.
Rita Coolidge, International Butter Queen, Claudia Linnear, Chris
Stainton. Jim Gordon.

FRIDAY-3
CONTINUING DENTAL DUCA.'IIOH#_31

Dr. A. Drinnan and Dr. S. Ciad-

J::;./fo':t~Ti:'1;~~o G'oo:Ijf;::

·ti•try, 146 Ca~ $40. for further
infil.rmation. call S:U·3806.
CONnNIJING DENTAL EDUCA'nON #:
Dr. R. Sheldon Stein, Bcoton.
Restoralive Denti6try and It•

R o l e in Current Preventative
Theone.; Capen. $125, for further
information. call 831-3800. Alao
on March 4.
APIUCA WIZK•: Dr. Allred Moleah, Temp I e Uru.ersity, The
Crisis of Southern Africa., Col. lowed by oommeots by Dr. S.
Okechukwu Mem and Peter Pa~o. 233 Norton. 2 p.m.
LGC'rUKE- DEMONB'nlA.!tON •: J 0 e 1
Chadabe discu.s:ses electronic music, 101 Baird, 2 p.m.
)li:[)ICD'fAL Cll£li:rsray -8EMINAS#:

C.K. Chu. graduate student.

Structure, Synthe.U, and Biologit:al Actiuity of Camptothec~ 134
Health Scienoo;s, 2 p.m.
nnzRXATIOH.U.

OOPfi!B

·aoua••:

all foreign and .American otudenlo,
staff 'and faculty are imiled. 204
Towooend, 4-6 p.m.

.APIUCAN

:d

Wd

~rCV':C' ~. OO!niKUING DCN'rAL IDUCA'DON#:
·
Ratorative Dentiltry, see Friday
=ru...~~ lis~ .
.

ol~t, 10fParbrEDci~ 4 p.m.; colrM bour, 107
Parker, 3 :30 p.m.; all iDle.-..!
ue imited to_ f'IIIUJ80J'Hr ~·: Pro--

1e0oor Gaamilo Reyw,

U~

Guess

br

Hari H.
Dayal, &amp;hren.-F;./zer Probknu:
SAJ'{JRDAY-4·
Bayuion SoWiioM,. A-49, ~
Ridge ~ 4 p.ia; coftee b:Jur. CBAJW) 8ABBATB SB&amp;YJ.c:is• : eerA-16, 3: 30 p:m.
riceo and refn!ohmento, 9:30 ·a.m.
IIEIID&lt;Aa• : Dr. Jolm T. Fleck, Molauah MalkaJo, music, oonwr-.
oenior •tl!ff ocientioto . Comell , oation_ . refreobmento, Chabad
Aeronautical Laboratory, IIJc.. Houae, 3292 Main St., 8 p.Di
8T.U'IBtiCS COUDQiliUl(# :

D.\NCZ AND P A 8 H I 0 N

:.!o~=~~~r!r:J

services and meal, Chabad House,
3292 Main SL, 6 p.m.
by the Africa Club and the Africa
Union. African Cultural
lSIL4.Eu FILM•: The Siege, 147 Students'
Center,
350 Masten Ave., 8 p .m.,
Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m.
donation $1.00.
AFRICAN TALENT NIGHT.: 8n enMUsiC BECITAL•: for Interta.ining display of the multi- KOREAN
ternational Month, Buffalo&amp;. Erie
faceted aspects of black heritage, County
Public Library, 8 p.m.
~ Norton, 8 p.m., f~.
_
MUSICAL Dlt.AMA•: Carry Nation, a
CONCUlT•: Dais y: A Concert
Sculpture, Joel Chacjabe, director sort of American opera by Dougof E 1 ec tro n i c Music Studio, la&amp; Moore; Barbara Wagner, diSUNY/ Albany, one-half hou.r, . rector; principal soloists: Marlene
Badger, mezzo-soprano; William
runs between 8 p.m. a nd 10:30 Wagner,
baritone; Edward J3o..
p.m., 100 Baird, a dmission charge.
gusz, bass; Ruth Mohn. soprano;
ffiLLEL SABBATH SERVICE • : • The
Wallace Mohn. tenor; presented
Jewish Attitude Toward Jesus~ by Unitarian - Universalist Choir
Rabbi Hofmann, Oneg Shabbat to of Buffalo. 695 Elmwood Avenue,
follow, Hillel House, 8 p .m.
8 : 30 p}n. Donation of $3 per
person or $5 for two:
lHnSNATION'"AL FOLK DANCING: Instruction in basic steps during THEATRE •:
What's Cooking
first bour, 30 Diefendorf Annex.
~~!d• B.'~rh~~=dJ!~
8 p .m.
ical
numbers
featuring
Raj&gt;bael
CONCEKT• : Go I d, Wick Dining
as soloist.. apoD.&amp;Ored.
f!oom. Rosary Hill College, 9 -12 DuBard
Black and White Arlo F!!Stivar,
p.m., $-75, bar.
GleaSner Hall Theater, Erie ComCAC FILM •: Eyes of H ell, 140 Camunity College, Main SL and
pen. $.75, check CAC showcase
~~~':d~-; ~~~:ts 8~~
for times. Through Saturday.
The a udience will wear special senior cit:izens $1..50, includes re3-D glasses during the dark and heshments at 6320 Main SL after
magical fantasies which are inflicted upon a young archeologist !:tin~~~:~S~&amp; ~:U~:~
and a psychiatrist by an ancient
Union, Norton, and at Amherst
ritual mask. This is a s.n stereo.f~.::._ Unitarian Univen.al&amp;t.'Opic picture and is as gruesome
as anything ever s e e n on _j.be
0 fHll
• E
F '
screen. A Taylor-Hoffman 'Pro~~ ';l!;"~
yes
e ' see nduction with Paul Stevens, ClauPILM . . : Mad Dog• and E"'/U.hdette Nevins, Bill Walker.
,.,n. see Thuraday lUting.
P1Lll••: Soul to Soul (Africa,
1971), Conference Theatre, check IN'I'EKNATIONAL KONTB I..£CTURB•:
Dr.
Andzeas Papandzeou. on
showcase for t i m e s, admission
Greece, check time and place at
charge; also on March 5.
Nodon
Information.
Some of .. America's best black
musicians attempt some cultural . (
SUNDAY-S
exchange with black people in
Ghana on that country's 14th an- THE NEWS AND YOU, radio program
niver&amp;al"Y of independence. Mavis ·
Staples and Wilson Pickett stand produced by University Informaout as monsters, but tbe "entire tion .Servioes, now expanded to a
show is beautiful. Alao .iltarring half-hour; _moderator M a r vi n .
Bloom, associate profeuot, Social
Ike &amp; .Tina Turner, Santann. Ro- Poliey
and Community Services,
berts F1ack, Leo- McCann &amp;· Ed- 'interviews
David AbOsch of
die Harris. The Staple Singero, U/ B, a FarDr.Ea:st.em
scholar, on
Voices ol East Harlem. Directed
by Dennis_Sanden.
~ ~pac:u:!, PW\!;:t.:;m;~
FM,' 8 : 30 am,
C1UBAD BABBA.TH SEKVICES•:

I'IDim&lt;a•: No~ Dame-w/Syracaae, Oart: -Gym, 1 p.m.
IIILUIL .wnvrroos: Torah w i 1 h
CantlftDIUiria: Rabbi Hofmann'o
-.e_ 12 Colton Driw, 3: 30p.m.
The tr~ Point, CommUni-

FORTRAN IV, Har...y Aslerod,
instructor, R&lt;&gt;om 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7 p.m.
.
FILM• •: Live Todo.y, DU· Tomorrow (Japan. 1971), Coolerence
Theatre, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
Crime drama set in modem day
Japan. This film won the first
prize at 1971 Moscow Film Festival. With Daijiro Harada, Nobuko Otawa, Kiwko Taichi; directed by Kaneto Shindo.
INTERNATIONAL MONTH LIX.'TURE•:

Dr. Franz Michaels, director of.
Soviet Institute, Fillmore Room.,
3 p.m.

TUESDAY-7
FNSM 222: CONTBOVERSIES IN SCIENa: •: Dr. Mendel Sachs, phy-

sics, The Revolution of Relativity
Theory -Apparent Paradoxes and
Resolution.s, 362 Acheson, 10 a.m.
Also on March 9.
PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE LEC'I'UHE#:

Dr. John M. Hodson, Vasectomy,
sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations,
11:30 a.m.

:=.-26~n,Brti::::~

Jlf;:

Uh Ethics, 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
NURSING

TELEPHONE· lEC'I'UJUI:#:

lone Rhodes, R.N., Nursing Audil, sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations,
also on March 14, 1:30 p.m.
LINGUJSTlaJ ON T.v.••: Interview
with F .R. Palm.u with panelists

~~ Sl?!th .

-:! liJ...ary~

school. :::,ru;,almer's views on

:r:.~'C~:!~Z·

:JRu!'U:,

A6ia (l), Marbelle Nardin clio-

~gh=ta'n.~~~

land with Mohamed Ehaan Entezar, .4.njami K. Sinha, and Prapart Brudiprahha, 10 Footer hue-

men!, 4:30 p.m.

.
Bruno
Nettl, professor of music and
chairman of the Musiocil~' Di­
vision, School of M usiC;· 1:hiiversity of Illinois, lmprouillotioh in.
Persiqn Music, 101 ~rd;"~:ao
p.m., free to the publ_ic. " ·
,
PIIARHACY ~..&amp;CTtJB:&amp;•: ..Dr. Jere
Goyan,. dean. University· of Callfom.ia Scbool of Pharmacy, San
Francisco, Pharmacy EducctionA Ticket 1.0 Profe1Ulio114l Survival
Or Ertinction? offered under the
a uspices of the T. Edward Hicks
~e:~~ ~re series,_
MUSICOLdGY I..£CTUBI!:•:

90

G-22

CHESS CLUB:

5-round tournament.

f.':.t'l: =~ ,!!;::O..fee.;....~:
248 Norton. 4 p.m.

.

COMPUTING C E N T I! B BEIIUN.u#:

Job Control Lan,u.age for the
CDC 6400, Roger Campbell, instructor, R&lt;&gt;om 10, 4238 Ridge ·
.Lea. 7 p.m.
.
.
PJLM:• : The Triumph _of &lt;he Will

£Ge:::!i

t: :.,nc~.,:!ti:Jr":l,:

~reohmento.
p.m., free.

23i Norton. 7:30 .

ZNGLIBB ~·:

(Contimud on -

Profeeeor

-7, cOl, 3)

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSilY AT BUFFALO -

VOL 3-NO. 21

FEBRUARY 24, 197~

Boyer Says Higher Ed
Must Share Creatively
State University -Olancellor
Ernest L Boy..- bas issued a
call to action to _,..i higher
educa'tion opportunities in New
York State through a more
creative regional sharing ol re!IOIJJ'CeS among tbe State's public and private colleges and uni-

............
.......
- TiJd 100'Is Helpful in Smoothing
,.,....

.-..::~

versities.
"If tbe colleges ol New Y odt
are to educate more students
with diminisbed financial support, we must achieve a higher
level ol coopemtion-espely among tbe public and private
institut:ion!&lt;-lban any attained
thus rar,•J&gt;._ Boyer said in an
address Ob "Regionalism and
Inter-institutional Coopera~

RelntimSBetweenStudents &amp;P~
Called Pilot 100, tbe propam was staried last Spring to
improve relatiOns between U / B
students and police_
Oaly a year earlieo: - in tbe
Spring ol "10 ~ ol
Bull'aJo police in riot bad eull!n!d U / B ~ ·!D
belp campus cop&amp; quell dislmt&gt;....,.,._ Ambelst police_ - wbile. c!aafronted U I B -

:...sts:;.,::t{;:"'.:,.:J!:".;::
mult ended aome 800 Buffalo
police bad made their way onto
tbe campus, a number ol buildini!S-were damaged, lumdJ'eds
ol students ....,.., tear gassed
and IICDI'eS on both sides were
injnred

" ' __,_
- Sludeot.-police relations

remained cool until last Spring
tbe Marine ~
Bank - Western decided sometbing sbould be done about il
Marine o6:iaJs approacbed Dr.

a series ol meetings between
police and U / B students, and
at one ol them a U / B managemeot student, James Wenzel,
hit on tbe idea ol student-oi&gt;~ in police au&amp;. When
police buulht tbe idea. Wenzel
quiclr;ly re&lt;:DJitm three otber
~ fofi&gt;elp--.lolm ~
Tom I&gt;iDm, and Bill Ricbard-

aon -

and t b e - """'set

up~ frankly,-_,.., both

delichted and surprised." recalls Tbomas R Blair, deputy
CODllllissXmer ol BufWo ~
"We knew that something
sbouJd ba~ been _done to improwe relations With tbe studeuts, but - ctidn't know just

~U:=:'J:,?of~
pam to them for fear they
would bave laughed in our

raa.s."
Lauchter,

"""""-· was the
least ol tbe problems_ At the
hichest administrative levels,

~.,.1....~==~~~
with~ influential bank- bled wbm tbe was
inc firm bais a doae .....t&lt;iuc relatiaaobip_ lilmim! aet up

tion."
Tbe Cbancellor's address was
delivered at tbe eichth annual
Regents Conference on tbe
LeadeJ'ship Role ol tbe Trustee.
Dr. Boyer proposed that
specific steps be taken on (our
"""""'te but interrelated froots
and urged tbat such action be
taken IIOOIL
He listed these overall goals
for regional (XJIOIJemtive arrangements:
• To facilitate tbe admis-

•mo.......t
(~ - %, eol.

c6:iaJiy

I)

A call for re-investigation ol
the "Binlsbot Incident" Oil

May_7, 1970, in wbich BulfalO
Police were alleged to bave
fired pellets at student demonstrators will be issued Mooday at a press con(erence sponsored by tbe Concerned Law
Students for Peace and otber
agencies_

At tbe event. slated for Ronm

232. Norton, 11 lUlL, Attorney
Ricbard J _ Rosche will release
an investigative report dealing
with tbe incident
Tbe premise
Rosche's report is tbat neith..- law enfon:ement nor administrative agencies adequately investigated tbe
alleged &amp;booting """ "in tbe
face o( docwnented evidence
failed to issue any substantive
report reganling tbe claim that
City ol - Bulfalo police fired
upon students." Rosche hopes
his report will prompt a re-investiptjoo.
Tbe Ceoler (or Justice
through Law. tbe Ni&amp;Pra
Frontier Olapter ol tbe New
Yod: Civil Liberties Union and
Sub Board I. :Inc:.. are CIHIPOilaom ol tbe press cimfeftuce.

of

Graves Now
An Assistant

sian, transfer and mobil.il;y ol
students and colJeee applicults
in New York Slate.
• To integrate better tbe
existing human and physiall
resources on all campuses._
• To move collaboratiw!l,y
to promote educational reform
at institutions ol bieber education.
• To provide community
service more elfec:tively within
regions
tbe -State.
Dr. Boyer said his proposals
were aimed at achieving tbe full
potential
ooopemtion among
colleges and universities. Regionalization at its best. be
said. is "a ~ve propam wbich brings togelbe.- all
ol tbe 1earn.in&amp; resources in an
area and then. in tum, channels these resources back to
every point in tbe region where
teaching and 1earn.in&amp; and professional c:cosultation are re-

of
of

quired_"
Specific: steps propooed by

the Olancellor included tbe
creation ol:
• College Locate.- CenJ...s
that would provide plU!pl!Ctive
students with - - - v e

=~~all~

~- ........ The.-.-visement
be placement
... IDDd olalfi&lt;e
ad- .
and
foe JM'"'Iwtiwe colJeee - deuts,- Dr. Boyer said In addition, private collep!s and universities would be SWW!Yed relionaJiy to cletennine b 0 ...
many ol them would be willing
'" establish "aftiliate relationships" with tbe State u..n.-sity and tbe City University ol
New Y odt to .........,mndate tbe
ausb ol students adin&amp; to
transfer into senior colleee programs afte. they bad mmpleted
transfer _ . at two-year

...u..,s..

• A panel ol Distingui!ibed
Regional Proleoaom to dusters ol colleces in a P,....
region with State finalll:ial
support.
• New non-campus decree
aJonc tbe line ol

State Um....sity's Empire
State Colleee- ChaDcellor Boyer propooed a CXIIIIIIIDII, Statewide project in wbidl one «
more private institotions mi&amp;bt
tial_f
o c _-_
establisb
adjmd
-sludoala
---and ...,.;,.e Slate finalll:ial Ul

at tbe - tbU -..ed
to fimd poiJtidy .._w - dmla. In Ibis -,y. New Yaft"a
""'dollars w o u l d - onJy tbe ol privalie .,.._
fac:iiitis but ftiiiPIIDiible edac:atimal u..w.tiaa - ....n_
• sm-timwl s..vias Offices wbidl would """'- . .
poo-.ride ...._ poiuiB lar
pul1lic and privalie collep!s and
IIIIM!nitioa CD join togelbe.- in
. - ; , . tbe ........ ollocal -

..,...,aes. indualries, and such P&lt;JUPI aeaicw c:itizeas' Ol'll"'iuti«ms in
tbearea.
emJDI!ida, ..,.,;.)

J"

•

�1'*'-Y 24. 1972'

2
'Pilotl00'-----------__:...---31

-

...........,.t a call there . . . house where 17 kids - - . .
I'Q' wbo liWII em that CO&lt;·
&amp;gelS and 8lll8lle&lt; cbiJdnm ~larir.ed about were having a party ln cramped,
•
· the
few years mostly unfumisbed -and IPll'
14
j;;;;,. Qmninpm m-1 oi
~t mlady .., the comer is
littered quarters. Four of
the Buffalo 1.400-~ ~ b.Own as a 'lady oi the nigbl' "
including a 14licE Beoewlent Asaociatillll. n.en, 1nng disoour8e6 .., the year . old girl wbo was six
stated that be felt it would problems with prostitutes-bow months pregnant, bad Pll'!""'i
fail because the fury oi the many there are, where and bow out and bad broken out into
previous Spring's fighting was tbey operate, bow you arrest cold sweats after popping pills.
still too besb in the minds oi ..._ what fines &lt;&gt;&lt; sentences
Police found that the lady of
students and oopL Meantime. ...._
and bow the bouse, a 24-yeaNlld wei·
many oi the city's 1.000 patrol·
~ ~r
good in- fare mother. bad left the cbil·
men Dally refused to allow stu- formers if you give them a dren "to go oul" AB medics
dent ob;erve&lt;s-or "peeperS'" as break ....., in a while. Or per- carried the 14-yee.r-old girl to
tbey call them-in their cars.
bi oi
rldl
·
an ambulance. the other cbil·
In Amberst, when Capt. Ka&gt;~
~;:;. dren ran alongside·crying with
neth Braun aimouDced the proStudents~ join the glee: "'The baby's going to die.
gram, about oae-lhird oi his ollicers after they go oft duty 'The baby's going to die."
1.24-man force said tbey would for a cup o1 ooftee or beer and
Later. ·Miss Guenther's quo;Bnot go aloog with il
-"·
1n ticms triggered another long disT,...o-..
c.-ingbam
pizza
to -the
ue
rsppmg.
from the ~
this time
.......,.. """"""""
_ _ _,:_.._,
....t:Amberst,
policE
are now co"~~
-~
and olhes- ......,._..,...;._ ,........,- setting up regu1sr. rsp sessions on welfare and welfare recipimen are belieoers. Capt. Cun- m· addition to the car rides.
ents and on bow the sys~-~
ningbam, and Kemtelh "Pat"
administered and abused ano
Glemtou. ~of the 4S-man ,.. lmpfeaed
bow it should be changed.
~ police Ioree, both reStudents are impressed with
"In that short time with the
~thethaideat
~baoi"'~~ the program. For one thing. police." ssys Miss Guenther, "I
~--- _,_':Wl·th·-them.""A;;d tbey lilce the excitement, es- felt that I learned more about
.,..,.,.=D........,
peciafly the kind they find in welfare than 1 could ever learn
Capt. Braun reports that his some oi tbe city's "action" pre- from weeks in class or from
entire fon:e - to a man - bas cinds or with the Bullalo hours reading voluminous ~
1101117~asked to be included in Tadi&lt;BI Task Fon:e Bureau ciological . papers. 1 remember
Pilot 100.
(TTFB). a squad of cars which that going beck to campus that
~roams everywben!in the city night 1 felt that for the first
Most enthusiastic are the pa- """""'""'cnmes
·
·~ -~!-~df~~ time I understood something
trolmen themselves. "You find
"' • ..,..,.,.
about tbe people I want to help.
out that most of the students the TTFB or in an "action" I also felt that I was returning
are pretty nice," says Patrol- precinct, students get more to a world of objective realism
man .JOOJellh T. Ransfcxd. a six- thanOoetbeyru·_._bargainedt
a car. WJ.~thor.an ob- that perhaps was missing part
year veteran with the Buffalo
,...
of tbe st:oey."
police who was in the thick oi ..,....,.. was dispatched on a
tbe campus diaorders. "Ooe shooting call to another pre- Campus Police
c111y a mob of students rusbed ~badto beltheirJ! oubandst
policefull thereWJ.th
With campus police. students
w~
view tbe problem of trying to
me and ......,...) olhes- ollicers. olhescalls. Hitting speeds of police a small. self-amtained
Big chunks of asphalt """" dy- 80 mpb, the car blazed along and rsther unique city. Tbe
a;.= a;!~:;,;:~ the streets, 8asbed through in- main campus with 178 acres,
Afterwards, 1 really didn't feel tersections, and careened plus 42 off-&lt;:ampus sites. conlilce talking to any students. I around comers until it arrived tains 59 buildings. including
figured what was their big gripe at a small frame house where a seven donnitories. Tbe 4:&gt;-man
in life. 'They're getting a col- young man was lying wounded force patrols around the clock.
·
What -'-'-t in an upstairs bedroom. Mo. In recent months campus police
lege education.
.._
roents later the man stslked were hit by a series of asssults
~":.:::::~:a~ outside stripped to tbe waist and robberies on campus as
in tbe car 1 was willing to give with a bullet wound in one well as with a beavy traflic of
them a second chsnce. Today thigh and canying a blood- non-student drug pushers and
rm more than happy to talk to spattered shirl Wben police users in tbe student union.
them...
tried to get him into an ambuTo insure that students get a
Ransfonl and his partDeF in lance be furiously broke away. balanced view of police work.
the Buffalo PolicE Tadi&lt;BI
From this incident, tbe stu- a three-tier system was put into
Task Force Bureau, Patrolman dent-oboervet-s learned that the effect this fall. First students
Thomas E. Fay. a five-year man refused mcedical treatment must ride with campus police
police veteran, now welcome a because be knew be would be or in a light crime area. Next
chance ·to ride with student ob- questioned by detectives at tbe they can choose a moderstely
serven;.. Says Fay, "It's enhospital And that, be feared, active precincl Finally. they
lightening for us to get to know could lead to further reprisals can go out with the TTFB or in
the students. It helps us see by the gang youth who bad an "action" precincl
another side of them and they stooed his bouse, then shot him
Whatever precinct students
get to see a side of us tbey wben be punched ooe of them.
ride in. ssfety_, for obeervers is
never saw before."
Aside from tbe actioo, some tbe bywonl. \ Patrolmen and
Mimy police today, in fact, students find the rides attrac- campus police have been given
are olten as eftusive as sales- tive because tbey coincide with emphatic onlers to steer stumen when students walk into their studies. Miss Guenther, dents clear o( dangerous situaa staticm bouse; tbe edeuded ol Hamburg. N . Y .• as a senior tions. If there's even tbe slight..
band, tbe beefy grin. the "Hello. majoring in social welfare bad est chance of danger, students
rm Patrolman so and so. . ... more than a passing interest are ordered to remain in patrol
are all part ol a new found in "domestic" calls in welfare cars with tbe doors locked. Cofrie&gt;dlineas -...Is U / B stu- homes and in pesk periods of eels, furthermore, must also be
~ police. in fact, ...00 ~sa~ ~~:,ru:,
~~~panied by a male stulilce tour guides cmce the stu- suance of welfare checks.
In tbe six months tbe prodents are in the cars: "See that
One night sbe went with po- cram has been in operation,
ta-... About three ..,.... lice to a small, dilapidaled , some 500 _students have taken

(C~ froa -

I. coL
Tbougb be favored the JliO-~ from the .,..-. Captain

'lbe

...,. bas bem

l::";ounpters,

:!:,

:::k:'

!i:::;:1::

m:

ll:

":

about 800 rides in police cars.
While some students find fault
with some police tactics, generally they come away more sympathetic.
"It's made me realir.e," ssys
John Liarakos. a senior from
Allegheny, N .Y .• "that mostpo.
!icemen are really dedicated to
their job and are really trying
to help the oommunity .... Irs
made me more objective. Now
I realize tbe police are not out
to get students but are just
~:fo~" to do a job they're told
·~t gave me a chance," says
Frances Lachiuss, a psychology

~de~~ua: !:'.f ~"=d

what I think is one of the most
misunderstood jobs in our ~
ciety."
·~e

-

Don't Realize'

"After riding with the police
I realized I often blsmed ~
ciety's ills on them," ssys Donna Fossum. a doctoral student
!rom A:lbuquerque, N.M.
PJbey're a convenient scapegoal But the grest majority
of ~ are l'u!nl-workiilg human bemgs trymg to do a dif. ficult job. People don't realize
that a lot tbey object to about
po~ v:ork is tbe result of poor,
con81cting laws the police must
enforce."
"I decided to ride with tbe
police so I could learn more
.about other people and become
a better doctor and a better
person," ssys Alan Koslow a
pre-med student from Queens
•· N .Y . "The progrsm has taugbt

me a lol rve been able to
view police work from all angles
and I realize now that policemen are all human beings some bed but some good.''
To get a more scientillc reading on the progrsm•s worth, Dr.
Robert E. Fonl of the U/B SOciolOSY Department is giving
students a 7-- questionnaire.
Initial 6nd.inp. be says. show
that police and students are imPfOVJDC their view of each other
to a "startling" extenl
Unlilce similar programs in
other cities, Pilot 100 will be
continuous rsther than ~po­
rsry - and even bigger in tbe
future. And at least one small
parochial college in the city
now plans to copy tbe U/B pro-

'Aooording to Deputy Commissioner-Blair tbe program is
an opportunity - if not a ~~&amp;­
cessity - to allow students to
undemtand the police function
within a larger context.
"It's diJiicult enough." be
says, "for the police to do their
job when tbe public is with
them. Without the public, it's
impossible. Many young people today harbor a ~t disrespect for authority. Tbey want
to tear down and destroy the
system and tbe people wbo are
trying to protect il They don't
seem to realize that we are
trying to enforce laws to protect people ---aot oppress tberrP.We would !i¥ the young people wbo will be to~s public to ~ and appreciate what fie do. To help not
hinder ua."

�:-,, ....
F.._, 24, Jll72

Commenrement ~the ltbrldwithWmes'Mams
IsMay14
At Rotary

'Ibe University's 126th Annual Commencelnent exercises
will be held at RotaJy Field.
Sundlly, May 14, at 3 p=,
Bwvil K Glenn, University
marsball, has llllDOUDCeCl
Candid ate s participating
sbould plan to aUend a rehearsal at 9:30 ILID., Saturdlly, May
13, and sbould be present in
academic costume on May 14
at 2 p.m._
Csps and gowns may be ordeled, 88 usual, from tbe BooltC
siDre.

.

According to Dr. Glenn, it
is anticipated that candidates
will receive diplomas through
• tbe mail after July L Individuals wboee address will change
after graduation are asked to
notify tbe Admissions and Records Office so diplomas will
resch tbem properly.
Tickets to Com"""""""'t
-.ill not be required thiS year
and an alternate plan for inclement weather will be provided, Dr. Glenn says.
Faculty volunteers to serve
as assislant marshals are now
being recruited. Interested individuals are asked to contact
Dr. Glenn at 313 Foster Hall
(ext. 2420), no later than Monday, April 3.

April14 Deadline

To Add Courses
Absolute deadline for adding
courses with the permission of
the instructor is April 14, Undergraduate Dean Charles H.
V. Ebert has announced.
According to Ebert, students
will not receive retroactive credif ror imY'Course work unless
they are officially registered for
such courses by the April 14
date.
Ebert feels that "fourteen
weeks certainly provide adequate time for : a ) faculty
members to establish their offical class enrollment, and b )
students to get their regisbation
straightened ouL"
Last semeste.r, Ebert notes,
there were over 600 requests to
reboactively add courses after
the deadline and, for the most
part, after the final examination
had been given. This, Ebert
says, "is clearly against the
existing regulation of this University. Moreover, such practiC2S wreak havoc with any attempt to get accurate class inventories for planning pwposes
and to get our computer registration system to work efficiently."

Study mBri.t.ain
As part of its summer program, tbe University will offer
a """""' in "British Primary
Schools,'" to be held at Didsbury Co II e g e, Manchester,
England, !rom June 26 to July
21.
Open 1o both graduate and
undergraduate students, t h e
course will involve visits to elementary schools operated on
tbe " infonnal" or "open" plhn
now being adopted in many
American schools. Participants
will worlt in classrooms and
lake part in discussions with
British teacbers as well as atteDd lectures by British authorities.

'Ibe British coordinator of
tbe program is Peter Raggatt
of Didsbwy wbo was a visiting
professor at UIB during 197071. Dr. Richard Salzer of tbe
Department of ElementaJy and
Remedial Education will accompany students and parl;icipate in the program.

A Vmiage Season'for Faculty Club

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

.._ _ _
By _
"17"_ 315_

---..-.-·...-.----.-····--...
the

-

were grouped around a table,
a plate of cbeese and crackem
(to cleanse tbe palate after
tasting) and a &amp;ottle ol wine.
Mucb ol the mystique that accompanies wine-tasting was di&amp;pelled, """"""""· by the use ol
Pl&amp;stic
glasses ( though tbey
did have a simple but elegant
design) and Ritz crackers.
Next to each place was a
list of five wines to be sampled
with a short description and tbe
= L ol each plus a scoring

Dry -

Burgundy

The lust wine was a white
burgundy made from the
"famed Pi not Chardonnay
grape," the description sbeet in-

pled, my table r a t e d this
French one tops. Next was an American wine
-a burgundy bottled by
Charles Krug. It was described
as "an excellent example of the
quality wine that can be produced in America" and we were
supposed to enjoy its "medium
body with a pleasing bouquet,"
My table was kind to this California wine and simply wrote
off '68 as a bad year for the
Napa Valley and especially for
this Krug burgundy.
'The third wine didn't rate
much better. It was a Bordeaux
red which is supposedly "the
heartiest and most full bodied
wine . . . made from the famed
Cabemet Savignon grape." It
may have been, but it also had
a hearty aftertaste, too. We
needed another plate of cbeese
and crackers after this one.
The wine company's chief
representative at the tasting,
Fred Renzoni, explained that
we were following tbe traditional order-&lt;ilarting w i t h tbe
whites, moving through tbe
reds and ending with tbe roses,
tbe sweetest, Renzbni, wbo has
been in the wine business for
12 years, says tbe current interest in wines "is tbe greatest
in tbe history of this country."
In tbe past year, he's worked on
many wine-tastings and believes that Americans now view
wine "as a genUe compromise.
not a harsh spirit."

·Conservation Plan
'Ibe New York State Department of Environmental Conservation is seeking citUen input in tbe aeation ol a master
environmental plan to pmCect
tbe State's natural .......ua!6
and control air, -ter and land
ppllution.
.
Comments may be sent to:
"Environmental Plan," Department ol Environmental CcJnaer..
vation, 50 Wolf Rd., Albany,
N.Y. lZ!OL

U.,

... s-.,. .... J4
u ..... - - . . . . " ' .

Slieps - ... beeD. tabln in bach
Califomia aad New Yadt 1D

slop thelllileolllolm-ID

mllece studeldL Ill New Yadt.

tbe State atillnley ...,.allied

suit in tbe State 9apftme Court
apinst a New Yadt City linn
c:barPnl that it bad belped - dents obtain decres CJr dipbaas "by frauduleat _ . , and

that the ~ bad violalal

"public policy'" ol State law
that """""' 1o "'maintain and
Pre&amp;eJ'Ye the intepity of the

Chedt Color First

When tasting wine, Rem:oni
suggests that the color be
checked fust for clarity. 'Iben
tbe wine should be poured and
swirled in the glass to aerateit, 'Ibe sample should then be
sniffed for bouquet, After a
while, he promised, you can
tell how the wine will taste
simply by smelling iL

-~~=~
described
as a ' sort of knowl-

edgeable man's Lancers since it
tastes as good but costs only
half as much. My table decided
could pass the distinctive
t:rn::~ aw~~~~ we
gundy flavor" and to note that fake pottery bottles of Lancers
for
this
sparkling taste.
the wine was "dry." The wines
Tile last wine was an Italian
were to be rated on bouquet,
color, body and taste. Most of one with a "slighUy petulant
us, however. were DeW" to wine
tasting and skipped over the
fust three, going right away to
taste. Of the five wines · sam-

~-U•I,.rsity

1!172..

last FridayIt wa5 a sit.iown t,ype ol
sampling-eight to ten people

On band to answer questions
and distribute tbe wines were
representatives of tbe Italian
and French Wine Company of
Buffalo. Accompanying them
was tbe manager of Twin Fair's
Liquor Store which some feel
has tbe best selection of wines
in tbe city. He was offering
a discount to anyone w h o
bought a case of tbe wines
being sampled.

_____
__ __

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

I!_ W¥ a pedect way to spend
a Joliday afternoon-tasting
wines. And close to 100 other
peop~thought so, too, as tbey
came tO the Fa&lt;:ulty Club's
"Around tbe World with Wine"

aftertaste," according to our
description sbeeL To some of
tbe Jess knowledgeable at my
table, it was highly reminiscent
of Ripple, an American "pop"
wine considered hardly drinkable by true wine buffs. Luckily. there weren't any wine
snobs at my table, so we enjoyed tbe sweet taste.
Last Friday's wine-tasting is
part of a "new spirit" in the
Faculty Club. Tbe Club's Program Committee is trying to
foster a "renascence of the
Club," Dr. Chester Kiser, committee member, says. Earlie r
this year, they sponsored a
Sunday family brunch and hope
to have another soon. The success of Friday's wine-tasting indicates that they should have
another one of the!;e soon, too.

educational p:ocoss.- An alidavit filed in the c:aoe said that
at least 965 students at 109
colleges in New Yadt and elsewhere had bought _ . . in respome to the adveni!;emenL In
California, Jecislatian drafted
with tbe assistance ol tbe California State Colleces was introduoed in tbe State 8S6I!IIIIJI.y to
siDp tbe SOile ol papers.

~
_dnlp_af..,.__
A

:....; of students

--the-oltaur-53.3
.,..-cent.ttaur--~­

-.if----

....- -

liUi .,... cent

at

--~--­
lint - -

clegTees at -

enrolled or Ired ~ t h • t

four---........ . . .

transcripb
"' - .......
tamons . ....Clllt.BIIId-

ten." -

.....,...._ ...........
~ ot

outs" .... ....,

Food Prioos Found to Be
Generally Lower on Campus
A cheeseburger, french fries
and a Coke will cost .you 65
cents at any one of Ole campus
Food Service locations, 65 cents
at tbe Red Bam, SL20 at Your
Host, and 51.20 at the Blu
Galaxy.
'The
snack will run you
85 cents at Buffalo State, 60
cents at Canisius, 75 cents at
the Fredonia SUNY campus,
85 cents at Brockport, and 80
cents at State University at
Albany.
'}1)e price comparisons are
from a survey recenUy conducted by the Faculty-Student rur
sociation Auxiliary Service Enterprises .which found that UIB
prices ..are generally I o w e r"
than those of riearby off-campus
restaurants and those charged
by four other units of SUNY.
· According to John Fallrides
of tbe Office of tbe Assistant
V i c e President for Auxiliary
Enterprises, local food service
board contracts are similarly
offered for less money than at
most other units of SUNY.
Other information from the
survey reveals that:
• U/ B's 10-cent cup of coffee can be matched only at
Fredonia and Brockport; at Albany, tbe tab is 14 cents and
tbe private restaurants charge
15-20 cents.
• U/B's bot dog, at 30 cents,
is undersold only by Canisius
where it goes for 25 cents.
• A grilled cheese, 32 cents
on campus, sells for 30 cents at
tbe Red Bam, for 30 cents at
Canisius, for 25 cents at Fredonia hut for more at all otbe.loc:&amp;tions """"'Yed.
• A tuna salad sandwich
aoes for 45 cents oo campus, for
40 cents at Buffalo State and
. Fredonia, and for equal to or

.,_me

=

~l.d~'!.~=

by cammercial locations) -

• A 45-cent U I B ham sandwich compares with 50 and 75
cents at Your Host and the Blu
Galaxie, respectively; college
prices range from 50 cents to a
high of 65 at Canisius.
• Milkshakes are 30 cents
here, on most other c:unpuses

.

__........_
.

34..1.,...

University ol Michipn officials ha"" agreed 1o proride
" most of the information" about
employees requested by HEW's
regioual civil rights ollice in
C'hicago in C&lt;JilDeCticm with the
University's allirmative action
prOgram to promote equal opportunities for women. Among
the information swgbt by
HEW is a list ol all employees,
including name, race, sex highest degree earned or le.lel ol
education, past job history, current job information, and tbe
date and method ol entry iniD
current job classification; and
detailed information oo all employees wbo have left in the
past two years and were hired
since October 1.970.

and at the Red Barn; higher at
Your Host and the Blu Galaxie.
U/ B's SEOO boanl contract
rate, tbe only optioual one at
12 SUNY units surveyed, is less
than that charged by six of the
units ( including Buffalo State) ,
the same as Binghamton's and
more than the rate charged at
FredorWi ( 5580) . Oswego ( $5!!0)
Ten~--­
Stale llniwnilr- ....... - .and Oneonta ( S550).

..

·--..-___
......------.

In making tbe comparisons, op • caono-, Falkides elutions that "mere m e n t c r f _ T I I I e _
price comparisons do not reveal
tbe entire picture (quantity, ~in.....,..,._......,.
quality, atmospbere)-"
c:ial.-*.--

--·-·-~

Olaful~

At Sports Banquet
C o I o r f u I Howanl Cose11,
Friel&lt; to Dandy Don Meredith's
Fracl&lt; on ABC's Monday Night
Football and Fruit-of-the-Loom
underwear salesman. w i I I be
guest """"""" at tbe 63rd annual Block B Atblelic Dinner,
Monday, April 10, at tbe
Headhstone Manor (7 p.m._) .
Coaell, who refe.s to himself
as "the ' - ' - commodity in
AmericlliDday,- will be making
his first Buffalo appearance at
the U/B S1XRo dinner which

~";..;= J! N~

Jets..
'Ibe ewnt is open 1o the campus~ and tbe·puhlic.
Tickets are available at tbe
Atblelic ~ Clark
Gym, and at the Alumni Office,
123 . . , _ l"adtway.

.......

�~··

4

..
'HEW, It to the Line???

The University and thefunpnmity-

By PAUL K.UB'n
~.,

How Do~Build Better Relations?
......aiws iD abe ...._. ..t
••
A law

.......-

.......-.r

lbeir """ lrmd) t..rd to
ay,_~of our former

.r:.-=-~lllld _,;any ~&amp;m.. .d.i.:) d- 0 f f

11oe

ita uuiwenilie&amp;) is iD .-1 of n. - - A - ~.. adii!D to eDd. dis- ol It cma&amp; ...... abe sanoand- , 2 • . ,• . , - - aD 1111110rA&lt;lcardiDIIy, aD wbo be1ieYe
puiJiie • it milbt with a itios. In pmtimlal-,
is _ , _ iD epli1ariaDiom abouJd insist

u.-n

it

iDe

=.!hi..-~-:':': ::;::::....--:..~:::: ~-~it"=:'...!;..":!': ~.....u:.._~toll:::i
wllile

laoiac with

'l'be ....,los of -

e.

-

-

odlon;..

llillcle ...t ,._,._

6os -

...-,s ..- -

ma tbe
sille of l!illaa- .......- ..- inIB..J
jtirs if abe pal
is kiDd of...._. - .

.........., ..- _.... a&amp;oliaa--&lt;Jr ..,. -

._:~.. s.- a.
to 8llhle ..- aaohe

~ wilb tbe - o f

a......

time bat they
-&gt;os,
of wbids _...... lor
- . 'l'be ........ aebellioas
(wbidl ~ ianahed oaly
a .....n peamatalp! of smdenta)
_ . . , b e a lhiac of abe~
at Jmot lor abe - - They

will be ai5itiiibaal lllld aoed
by Cllllmlllllity _..ms.

...._ it

'l'be

=

5D

:/mlt:f :=;...is..:!:

:=.e ~

of tbe oulside .._..,m.s

Curready, lor ~ an issue of CIIIIDenl to facolty
of tbe Weslem Heir ·
lllld YOI'k area _....,., is tbe
question of from what pari&amp;
of tbe sble or abe-"!~
smdenl&amp; be aoAedal? A ..,.._
doDt of Kenaaon. o r - or
abe~ _city'" aaiPt be offeDded if biB dDidrea are ~ ~- ""N-

=
=.
•

~t

'!!d loc:aJ-~ \:?'
maD

rc&amp;

·~u

......my as ~ be oupBe feels eatitJod to -

pcwts..

return.-~ facolty that
abe ~can only ~

:..lm.:t~':,~ ..: - ' bighly
reprdless
of lbeir ~ oricia.
"!'- loc;al. smdenl&amp; are ~
aied. admissiaa. . ~ becin
":!';~daddy

!:..t
a t M . - about abe~

"ty
It be:::,.
•a "!1:• ...diJ
bed J· albeism
and
"
.

festal.~llllda ~
icm evil Wbm lbeir~
do P&lt;f. """"Pfal. similar state•

~""' ~

IIIOI'e

tically.

.

•

sloop-

•

Wbm a UIIM!asity as ·~by IaRs. abe puiJiic at
larcoe as more ·lilr.ely to be..,....
- - ... w f2lliiW to "be
iaa tbe

~

-

it. as ". ID-

has a ~ . _ lor the attitudos of ils _ . - -

wlma it is laK ~
.
--------------------

m~
·~ .l ~

.
· 0 ~r~~~.r'Z;::~

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

--r.-.a:r ~
- -

_,_~

_. -

-

.&amp;. .,..,.,...

-

srvm.r I U P I D I S - -

:-•- QAU-&gt;w&gt;

-

-

a. .una--,-._-

,.,.--

-

-

-

ID . . - a tar . . •·
.._ ol- • a _....
., . . .....
-

a. -

abe C8IIJPIIM"' of ADe:iaa do
. . . _ iD disrrinrinatrwy
pmdicls, - - - . . or 1iDDDDsc:iadl, a cains t any puup.
Eway effort be made to
eamiDe biriac a n d padiac
pmdicls, loUers of daticm lllld olber proc:edares iD
appaisiDc smdenla lllld facol-

ty
~ ~Y ~ case
of donilii!IIHIMM! IS abe pernXious attiliide - . . 1 """"
....., lhat permeates the c:amof abe land.. An ~

MidDpa Uai......,;ty BIDdy aeCll!lllly asloed 140 n!CI'UiteiS to

mab byp&gt;tbeticd biriac dJOic.
es bet-.-~ qualified
appliamts lor a sales position.
'lbe onl variable beicht;
ODe ~ ...... ,_.six feet
and one aader five feet five.
Aa:onfiac to the sunoey, 72 per
cent &amp;aid lhat they would hire
abe biller one, ZT per cent .,._

-

reqwre
empge
in dirma!Mo adioa to ClOmlCt
this fieBia!riDc eocial iD.iustice
- - lli&gt;ort mea. One way to
do this is to ..., to it that
.,.,.._~xwy quotaa be establiobed - dear cuideliaes for
abe future. In llilort, if 8lxwt
mea (th&lt;a! aader a leW!I of five
feet five) mab up 31 per cent
of tbe adult male population
(and BD evBI lar&amp;w pera!Dtage
of )IOIIIII'I!r- poups), why do
they bold only 8.1 per cent of
abe k.e:Y posi- of in
abe UaM!nity?
Tbere are th&lt;a! wbo maintain
that the main ~ of hiring
pmctiaea abould be to hire tbe
-qualified per8DII for a posi.
ticm and lhat to do any less
would jfive-u.e students "sbortllhrift." But this is obviously an
eq&gt;reMioa of sbortist elitist
diauvinism of abe woast kind
While ""are at it, bow come
tbere are DO Christian Scientisla Oil tbe medical facolty of
this Uaivenity? Why DO Jehovah's Wilne&amp;les at aD on tbe
facol!M;s of ~ Scieoces and
Administaatioa and Art&amp; and
~ and~= three
ideatifiable
? &lt;Are
tbere'lbesecretonl quotas at wori&lt;?)
. Y way to aolYe this
problem, if "" are to baYe eadl
minority puup reach it&amp; emct
equivalent in tbe tots! popu1a.
lion, is to adopt reYe111e prefereatial quotas. Thus, if Episco.
paliaas constitute les than 2
per cent of tbe population, why
should they ~ 14 per c;ent of
tbe key ~~~J:i
DO morebe. hired until aD Jebi&gt;Vah's
Wilne&amp;les, Christian Scieotists
(and Seventh Day AdW!Dtists
and ~ I might add)
baye tbeir lair share. qoiy. in
this way can tbe UruYelSlty
reach tbe average in aD things,
as justice demands. Indeed. DO
oue should be appointed simply on tbe basis of merit. but a
system of compensatory quotas
should apply to all levels and
positions in this University, induding senior faculty. To apply this only to "junior" faculty, as_~ been '!""ested, is
to discriminate against them (a
subtlesortofsborlisttbinking) .
Should tbe h i If b I y qualified
WASP complain lhat be is be~ discriminatal apiast in not
~ hired, let us point ou~ to
him lhat to reward tsleat IS a
(orm of eatreprmeurism-boflllOis, elitist DOil8eD8e.
.

.......,..1 DO .,..,.,...,.,. and only
ODe per Clellt &amp;aid lhat they
'IOIJIIid hire tbe &amp;bxter one.
. - papers •
A sunoey at the Uai...,.-.
....,aty of~'i~Dboaap ....,_ lhat
.
the hi«ber oae cnes up, tbe
olber _.&amp;e's cbildrea. Such pester tbe pn!(erartial treat.parent&amp; baYe a low thre;bold - ......._ 'l1llas, cradnatiac lll!lliom
of initaticm when SClliJethiac at CM!r six feet- iD&lt;:bes J'l!CI!ived
abe Slate Unive&lt;sity disluabs an avaqe_ &amp;tartinc salary 12.4
them.
per cent hi«ber than paduates
An admiaisbator leyiDg to llllder m feet.
satisfy an of-the oonslitueat&amp;.
Aa:onlibc to ProfeaKJr Saul
·
.
.
• IS Feldmon at Case Weslem Bem a more difli&lt;;ult saluatiOD sene Uai......,;ty olber studies
~ tbe proverbial man-&lt;JD.a- indicate that ..bat individuals
tightrope. . Not only must be &amp;eel&lt; mo&amp;t iD a
•
mate
~
~ ~::::!: is me. For lli&gt;ortmar:t.. abe
IIIIIDity - . , d!DPPiDa: at abe
~am ~ edzemely seri!Dds While
. """ m ClOWtlllaip. S b or t mea
=.,..at 1:'':!;,~
~ are aJII6isb!mly discriminated
him from above and
dodg
apinst,- onlY by taD WOIDI!II,
iDe ground fire from
but by &amp;bort ones wbo are apIn abe fa&lt;:e of this · . ·
paaea_tly reluctant to be left
bow do"" achieve "~ S03I?'Dil tbe botWm of tbe pro.
rmmil:y relations? Rea1izirq: Yeibial boneL •
that a-esyooe c:aMx.t be satisOur entire Jancuage is infectlied at an limes. tbe President at w i t b "slxwtist" tbinlring.
of a Slate Uai.....aty must 'lbe toiJI"Ci "short" it&amp;eli bas
work toward educatinc as
~ 011 clenJcatory COiliJOta.
of his mmmunity - . ,
timas: People are "short,.
possible about tbe
of c ban ll e d." ~"
tbe problem.a,m-'- ~
" " ' - ' of cash," or they are
~
,...,.
IS ad&amp;aid to receive abe "short end
lime. to ~te~~ of tt_Je ~ ~ Small individuals
is a man of good will. ooe wbo are m~y c;aDeoJ ~names
will listen as ....0 as tay to .,._ such as shrimp,
slxwty,"
plain, and to ask (or help from "peamajs," "junior," "pipaD mmmunities to solve tbe squeak," "rant,~ or "little shiL"
multiple problems be races. R&lt;lpt's T"-wrtu shows bow
Witbout altemptinc to silence tbonJu&amp;biy polluted are .,_,
criticism. or bead to pressure, our ID06t ~ ~ refertbe admiaislmtor can. perhaps, ""'"' wonk. It lisl&amp; as SYDwin ~"-- undeaslaad- Oil)'IDS of "short" the following
inc. ;;;------· ··
w:or~s: "inmmplete,~ "delic::ritia; to~~ in"'''.::: cieDt, "defective," ~macll&gt;liDc pi-oiJiems_ This tbe
~" "wanting." "in default," ~
admioistaaticm bas~ "in anear or aneam,~ «slmtf:.
We abouJd be grateful to tbe
m· •-· 'They:::= ed," -..,.._,.~" "'---•-'" Federal J111M!1DiDeDt for inter- - measure.
...~
.........._._
w ...........,
•
•
tbe iatemal a1fairs
and
whida
-.1 c::ritia;
cbaa&amp;ebe are viciously cfiacriminated fore ~ been aadrwv!mooas in
•~~
en- ~•
~
~ as old ones return to bctJet. 18 ~ ~Y ~ ·
for · ·
In the name
tbl!ia; nmb. pedaap&amp; more lriad- tbe
only area m whida
rillda
aU, political
ly diopoaal.
.
_of .short "!"" are
•
•
lilould supplant
EDl7YJirS NOTE: TM aut&amp;w ~..:.~bet!&amp; but
evaluatioa" (.._.-is ana l'lle1lfber of the Pre.i- tbe horae ..t
·
ma Other obvioua form of sbortist
~.!_~-f._~ on UnlorrIt is dear~~~
Only by .adoptiac
-_,~r Rdtztimu.
ciallllld ala,..,tiooaJ __._ •
policim can "lliJortist,"
sidioualy
m- "
. ~ "fattist"
abowa in
"Pl-~
.
tbe 8lxwt - ~
tbe dislike of fat· wbo
~
eaafiest, iuDainc ·
. ·-_, arecalled\~""fatslob~
of
a et eeteaa),'aad olber cliacaimiDIWiola lor aomiDatinc one individuals sudi ti.;atm"::: atrwy practioea be~ ouL
SUNY 8eDator and- alter- leads to PIDduce tbe Napoleon We need ·~ vicilaate
bnoe ......, dislributed to comples, but this is only a .-1 ~ of a1ert citizeD&amp; to see
aD --.Jtb acieDces full-lime to ...._te lor CI!Dimies of to 1t lhat . . . . , _ are made
~ ataff "by tbe Fao- oo:iciai dia:aimiuatimt.
to HEW the line. In lhort. ""'

-••••IIJ'.

W. -

-

"h., .
tJei!.,

-

m:uz;

M.
··

~areai! l"!~:.... ::"'tf~.

w::J:

~
oi

$.).

·--Underway

d-.;;n;;;;;t"-.

-

m.:

&lt;•

inadeQuacy~Jnwilb

.__

• - "'Q!f

-~.:.-=:;:__
_. -

cmemtes

~" ~':''t;J:.:."""

~~

c:allal ~ aastatutioa.
n...
U~ ..-..ity aJoo

-

ol -

Sl:alle or public support for a
UIIM!asity
criticism
and demaDds from private
&amp;dJoals and parents of smdenl&amp;
at such &amp;dJoals wbo
high
tuitions for their ~ as
....U as tbe taxes that pay for

CVJEWroiN"fS

-

- - - ~ ~ u..;._;,...

.&amp;.

'- -

11oe ......., ..,._ •

-

~and

~ =t

fli&lt;t.

-

claac .....,..... whid1 apto be a aatmr llmad .,...,
.,.... iaadadiac bich a:llools and
ewn ailook,. may
also ~. bat it will be
reawiwed by tbe Sberiff"s
~-- Dillen!at kiDds of
.....,......ariselllld ..,.,._,--"

~= -

n:.

Dimity.
CXJIDIDOD ~
lor a "'wiDe" iD decisicJo..makiDe can arise from any aepaeat
o f - ClDIIIiiJiiDit: with result
iDe dwtisfactioa' aadfor ~

~
appears - ful to those aepaeats to brine
them up.

-

:..:;-

li'ol is at a dislaDce, as
is abe c:aae iD this ~ dindives can come down from
abow! whid1 DO one iD abe UDi......,;ty or Slli1'IJiiDdinc .......
lllllllity
'""""Pi wilb

"SmatieElectiom CammitNon: I t - dear lhat M:!:....'1!~~=
'111e8ellatortobeelectedwill ;:.,...~why tbe former foraDtbatlli&gt;ortpeopleareaot
......... Marvin Feldman ....._
• of this Um-.ity did looked down upoo. To daim
lam apins ma .June 30 of this uot ...,.,.., tmme here be- lhat ...m policim are ':sbort-:r-r. '111ealtemates will replace ...... of biB llilfonamate boicbt sicbted" from the standpoint of
~ altemate to Feld- ( CM!r !fbidl II(!. bad DO C11D- --boib demoeracy"aad "JUcber"
......, term_ ....,;- aJoo
~iDcJ;eed. - have mt education is to tair.e a "1oog
ma " - 30. lllld Walter Roam
.m- lhat a lDOiliiJer poiDt of view" whid1 aeen faom
wbo has ftllicaed and ....._ ~ UfB Coaacil (tma.if c1oom bale i1 pell!lltly prejull!nu apins .June 30, 1974.
-.-., •lllfll oflll!lf-bate, wbidl diced, ~ and subjecmaba "'-'people tum~ live.

it

�~

Some General Notions
OnAcademicPIBnning
By
" "BERNARD
" , _ _ ,_ .
_ GBIBAUM
. _ ...._
SUNY/Balfalo ' - f a r .....,....w 1rilh opirit IIDd
vi&amp;oc _to tbe m.Jiollp that it
make ilaolf' one ol a .....0 ........
bel' of ~ foci o1 --....;.,
esceUeace. In tbe euly yam
ol Ibis elfort ID1Ida ol tbe ~
time

:::..t""
~ :;::::= a:i
a p!DSBl ~ ol tbe

support 1ew1
bach te.biDc
aDd ..-rdL It ' - lJ&amp;.
come ~ dar that ~

must me a_

di!fenml -

fo,.., to ocm1iDue tbe ........,_
Wbat ~ we have,
aDd ha... bad lliwap: - ba...
tbe talent, tbe - . , . , tbe lime.
and. in great~ tbe will
to reach our ...-. To tbeae must add tbe ·~ that
what we bope to
we oball
aDd can do Clllly by .............._
I ¥ieYe tbe ~ will apply its oolleclive wiadam to
produce a lone .._ academic
plan. Sum a plan, meshing
witb Prosx-ls from tbe admiJ&gt;.
istralioo IIDd os-alin&amp; within
budget, will Io.l the drMo
toward excellence. ec-m..
ment to ........,., IIDd ~
to tbe .....uare ol tbe atndl!lds
aDd of tbe aociety from which
we dnnr our aupport.IIDd to tbe

our

pooitive ........, ol........PW..

ment, :K;_ tbe dJ:noe.
The AdiiiiiJ I have been llllbd to IIIJQI!8t
an acadeuUc plan ol my -.._
I am reluctant to submit mine
for public BCJUtiny IIDiil tbe
current delibemtioas about priority schemes for ~
are ooocluded 1IDII until tbe
members of tbe faculty, via
their organi.......,.l stJudures,
have pointed their way. N....,...
tt.ete.o; -t- ohunlit-tJR lo" cftr
some g e n e r a I notions that
would lie at tbe heart ol any
academic planning in which
I might participate.
My own notion ol academic
greatness stands 011 two simple
ideas: work IIDd play. I believe
tbey fall UDder tbe rubric ol
cullure.
For centuries tbe cvJbooed
man was one who was familiar
witb tbe subjects taucht in tbe
early universities.. While tbe
amount of available ~
grew aDd developed, tbe notion
of culture beld fast. Tbus, for:
a very long time, - . tbe cultured person bas been: wellread; _..,;.., to JDUBic IIDd
tbe plastic arta; skilled in dis-

course.

In: my view be is cultured
wbo is aware. as IDUI:h as his
talents IIDd ......... pemUt, ol
what his wodd is about IIDd ol
what it is likely to be as be IIDd
his descendants CIDI1IiJme to inhabit it. He . . . _ bow tbing&amp;
work: about - t IIDd
law, ~ re1atiaao IIDd education, Datnml
IIDd
teclmolou-. He alao a - bow
to play: to enjoy tbe YBJielies
of cerebal, I!IIIIOtiao.l IIDd ......
sua! I!IPOiioDae.
Ample,_

·.a--

There iiiiiiJIIIIe pr-s.m for
stance __,._, Some ol
~ moat ~ puiJtic institutions ol hilber edno:atiaa

the

~ by aiming for iSnldiDD
m tbe apieultnml IIDd mecbaniaol uta. 'l'beae ".uts" recanled •
!ife•s
.......,;tiea for tbe _ . ol
America. Deopite -=h ..... .

--..c

U?liJarian IIDd bamiJie~
~ many ol tbeae institu-

tions

ewhaf.

in .._ tt.n a

certuJy, as llti'cllllhalds ol inteUectUal ~ artistic

creativity,

I'OICDIIdite adiolar-

::_ IIDd ~ ....,._

"Wmen lllite
To 1tmplify'

- - • as~
...'~
•
IIDd able
Morley
a Salk vaccine

to~ a
::;:-at.
aamics

c;;..~ ~­
1

~ PJO,Jecl,

•

a

· . - . . _ , a studio for
=.:=;'
ngor'...:... center for tbe

To thoote who say "Man

liYech not by b""!'' alone," ~
can ~Y. "Nor li\'elh be Wlth~e must first make
Um-sity
fust bow to survive, then bow
to enjoy his survival
()pemtina on tbe premises
P,.,.. above. I _, an academic
plan in which - recognize tbe
importance ol .....t aDd play
IIDd tbe order of their precedeuce. When tbe IICJUr&lt;eS are
abundant we sball 110t have to
worry about what comes fi111t,
since lbere will be """"'!h to
~ almost any academic
POlSUit. On tbe other hand in
lean yeam. when ..., must ...;..,
bani IIDd fulureorieoted decisions, we sball ha
dear!
defined
"" a_
y
will
,:n~
tbe periods of adversity and to
EIJ!I!ilre witb our basic strengtbs

::.t

~

5

::t :!!':

allow""'::;:

increased.

1st Draft of
Study Ready
A fust rough draft of tbe Unive.si.ty's Sell-Study report, prepared in preparation Cor an
aa:reditation visit by representa:ives of tbe Middle States Association, bas been completed,
"""""" for a few gape, Dr.
-~~ ~ .directo.- ol
y, says.

Copies of tbe report have
been aent to tbe Executive
Committee ol tbe Faculty Senate; to representatives of eacb
student association; to tbe president, tbe vice presidents, tbe
pnMJSis IIDd others.
All haw been asked to review tbe rough dtaft to see if
it provides an "aa:urate aDd
adequate picture." Recommendations or opinions are to be
sent to Dr. Puffer, 21 Die!~
dorf Annex. Reactions should
consider what should be deleted. added and/ or modified.
'lbree copies of tbe draft have

~ ~ ':'\~:::: ~raz;

Room of Lockwood on campus;
IIDd one will be oo reserve at
Ridge Lea. Students and faculty are encouraged to examine
tbe report iJ\ its present form.
Comments should be sent to

Dr. Puffer not later !ban Man:b
15.

TeaclH Ed Plans
Information Day
T'bi" Olfice of Teacher Education will bold a series ol
meetings 011 Man:b 2 to infor:m
students of tbe Teacher Certification Propams available at
U/B.
Tbe meetings will give an

.....,...;ew ol t b e - in-

for:malioo 011 admissions pro........... IIDd courses JeQUired

for tacber cerlificalioo. Infor:"
matioo 011 tacber education
centers in tbe Bulfalo ......
sndl as Tbe Iliad&lt; Rock-Riverside, East Hisb School. WiJ:
liaJmMIJe. and Woodlawn
T-=hing Center l'iogJams. will
alao.be presented.
.

Open to all interested - By 11&lt;1miUin.: • cu1twa1. not .clents, the meetinp will be
only tbe arlil, bat eo:ioDae ·IIDd beld in 231 Norton at 9 a.m..
~ too (both "art" IIDd IIDd 4, aDd 7 p.m. Further inlecbnoliiD'" ..., ............... for:malioo is available at 8314843 or tbe OlrJCe ol Teacher
roots - a rich
"llkiir').
- iDIIke
P&lt;lOBible
_.,...,
en- Education, 319 Foster.

Fetal Que Unit Helps
DeliverBetter Bahia;

Their Stand

"";;:~lib to amplify a
point made in Sue Gnlemoocxl's
011

~~y

....... :.~-a.~~ wbo

~- ontbe~i: is ;t"~~ is t b e . ; p
mentiiDd Pnm&gt;otion of Women. ol a new fetal aue 111Dit that
An inonlinale ~ ol high- ~~t openedof
fModt:JM~aDe-nd
ly ~ ............. paid .-.~
from "aoft iiiOilies"' or· resean:h Gynecology at tbe CIWdn!n•s
funds adminislered ttuoup, tbe Hospital

---

As a ~eaideul fellow at
Los ~ County ll&lt;loPW
Baa. tbe
. , . _ . in electJ'oaic (egJ itor:inc.inDr.
cand~
- tioaiB
tbe ~
perinatal
UDder nr. Edward a

aue deliYery JOmD or simPY tbe ........,., center
..-.. various iil8!erJ.I ..r

~ ldudied
~FOIIIIdatiooolSUNY. M~Rayi,ts ~· Er: fetal
with """~"'Clio eertain ............

Tbey are appoinled to "~
~ ......,
fied" faculty nmb and, as through a two-pbase ~
such, they participate in ..... in evaluating fetal ...n beinclll!IIIZt:h IIDd a1ao coolribute to By continuous mooitorinc ol
tbe teadUnc ol BeY· tbe fetal heart J:ale from tbe
em! ~ Many are capillaries of tbe scalp IIDd aualao JDeiJJbeu o1 tbe Graduate tunatic ~ ooto &amp;trip
Faculty ol this University. charts of tbe 8UeoB of_,_
Tbey teach underxradua•- contractions (the pbysioiocgmduate IIDd professional ..;;. ical phase) the pbysician can
dents. While tbey
._,__ tell at any time clminc deliv" de facto• teadJen;
ery bow well tbe baby is doing.
sean:ben;, witb equal ~
"But if an aboormality is inbilities. as many of their col- dicated," said tbe 32-year-old
leagues. tbey 1ac1&lt; tbe rid&gt;t to Buffalo bom and educated pityvote. to elect representatives sician. "we are equipped to &amp;0
IIDd '--=-=-... and
to the next step to determine
~-;::;" :'"7-~ tbe biocbemical balf tbe acid
other Univereity employees base balance of the tmbom
have. Their salaries are de- cbild through a sample ol its
~. by lfie discretion
blood frmn capillaries o1 tbe
tbe pnnapal investigator ol tbe scalp."
resean:h g:nmt, allhougb their
Well over 98 per cent ol
work 011 that project may a&lt;&gt; pregnancies are nor:mal ooes,
count for: tbe .cor:e ol tbe re- pointed out tbe assistant poolill!llrdL Cases of definite gross fessor: of obstetric; IIDd IYJI'!(:IDIsalaiy inequities have b e e n ogy who divides his time equalknown to oocur. And since 110 ly between Children's IIDd E. J .
~ acmta or other Meyer Memorial Hospital

"'!...t""""'

or

or

=

for: negotiations are
-..ery little bas been
to redress tbose situa~-. the qualified appomtments: accrue neither seniority nor: count towards tenure.
Tbe traP: part o( tbe problem
is bicbligbtal when an ClpeDing
for a regular faculty position

available.

where a monitoring

progiliiD

~tage

is

s:t

:.~~eu.:"

of patients with
problems. They ma.y
range f r o m severe bDem.ia
(metabolic disb.nbmces) to diabetal, heart or: kidney ct-.,
w
or an .tb. incompetibility cw a
=~_baby
.....t ol
special

m

ol liDOIIIheaia (sndl as _ .
ceoviaJl blood IIDd its ~ tbe baby in utero IIDd afllor
binh) .
He a1ao wodred on a _ , _

::..u:·pb~~

limos

~

to slop _labor until tbe
"""""' m ntero IIDd then pm~

with tbe deliYery. Ex-

!'iained Dr. Ray. there is b&lt;JIIt.

mg hetla than a uterus as incubator or a 110rmal placenta
as an organ ol biclchomX:aliiDd
blood gas &lt;=hange.

Reluming to Bulfalo in l97J.,.
Dr. Ray developed IIDd set up
tbe new fetal aue unit at tbe
Children's Hospital wbere
tminin&amp; is also an ~
feature. Resident pbysicians
IIDd medical studeuls rotate
through tbe unit and a SUiiiJJIOI"
is offered to tiDdeopad.

:::!""

_"We are doing DODDal tbing&amp;
WJth 110nnal patients in a new
way," says Dr. Ray. "We are
uliliJ;ing electronicS in fetal
monitoring. Monitorial bas
b:een used in adults," he .....
tinued, "but never belor:e in
tbe inba-uterine .patienL-

SUNY Taking Bids

For •Cooversatioos•

Up to t.ei""~fao.
At least 250,.(n) babies or ulty conferences, to be 1r:noom
Being tahn for g:nmted is just about three per oeuf o1 births as "Conversations in tbe DiJr.
ano:ber form of discrimination. in this COWliJy eadl year dis- ciplines," will be spoosond by
Since the article was drafted, play neurological d a m a g e ~te University during W/2we ha...., J1!Ceived confirmation which may be due to a p!lll!tic
Any academic department 011
tbat lour ( 4 ) lines have been conditiOn sucb as Monp&gt;lism
a SUNY campus may dewelop
allocated (o tbe Committee. AI- : ~~~
: sndldue
15
a _ . for planning and
though our earlier request for
a specific number of faculty to either birth asphyxia or: pre- hosting a conference and submit
lines to be filled !Jy women was natal byporia-a lack of my- it tbrougb tbe campus presidem
denied by tbe Council of Pro- gen at some stage of birth- r._,.. possible support. App1ica.
vosts and Deans, as s tated in then Dr. Ray believes tbat lions must be submitted before
April L
Greenwood's article, we wish to something can be done.
Aa:ording to tbe guideljnos
thank them for their coopera- Hazotdous Journey
lion jn agreeing to this allocaMore tban 120 babies at high foe these proposals, the conferlion. Representatives ol our risk, or a litUe o...r ten per ences . should b r i n g tocethor
SUNY farulty members to .,..
~ttee will be meeting ;:r'~,b!.~ ~ amine
new trends in their fields.
WJtb Dr. C. Randall and Dr. E . . d .
tbe
. t' first balf
and review ........,., findinga.
Lipp;cb_ulz ~Y and hope ofurmg :
E.mw.ated ~
Emphasis should be U p 0 D
to recetve a similar CODlllllt· been~guesswork
bow well scholarly ~t rather
U::tb ~.!!."' Faculty of a baby is doing ~its jour- ~ ~tive. cwriaalmIn clo6ing. ..., wish to ex- ney tbrougb tbe birth .....I. or instructiooal mattem and
pre;t our appreciation u; tbe the most hazardous trip that funds are not intended to UDFaculty Senate Budget Advis- any of us will e...r llllllerlUe. derwrite professional OlpDiz:a..
DrY Committee for: their sup- It is ~uring ~ 24 hams sur- tioo meetings which ........ be
.
poet 011 bebalf ol minorities rounding ~ when tbe beld anyway.
Since 1965, 59 ~
IIDd females. We feel their sup- death rate JS_ hicbel; than. at
tioas'"
have
been
beld
on
many
por:t pve stren&amp;th to tbe elrorts ~other period clminc a life.
...._..... in many d;...;pmof our groups..
Find.ing a beUer way to ewl- Because ol budgetuy CDI........-..-r's co.........,.,
uate bow well a baby is doinc sba.ints, tbe iiliiilber far
ON _....._.,AND
dUring labor IIDd deliYery lJ&amp;. W/2-73 is UDa!ltain but $2,1100
...........,.. OF WOIIIEN
came a q.- for Dr. Ray. Tbe will be made available far .-il
sndl event IQJIIIVVal
Among crilleria to he -.-1 ..
were listening to a baby's approving - - ...,, ldialCharges haft been filed heart beat-wluable oaly in arly relevance. feasibility, pn&amp;
apinst two members ol tbe the moat OllliJKJUS amditioas- able direct beaelits to pmioiCampus Semrity force, Ken- IIDd looking for meconium pants, timelineas, IIDd tbe pmneth P : G1eDnon. directoc ol 8laining ol tbe llllllliotie flnid- poaed budeeta signal ol potential pooiJiems..
Sec:urity, said last ..........
FOIDIIII.ts for applfttirww ...,
Together they lacbd reliable
According to GlemJon, CiYil predicti... Yalue IIDd maid not available from tbe 0 f f ice ol
Serviae law pndudes naming point to tbe depee ol ......... Uniw!lsity-Wode Services, 10
T'buitow T....._ AJbmo-, New
ol tbe ........ IIDd deCailing tbe tbat tbe baby iDiet&amp;ainc- YOlk 1.220L
c:haJps ..mot them.'
With encoura~:ement IIDd
l:lowe¥er, it ill believed that . . . _ t through a U....O Fel- ba...--~ bytbe
tbe dlaJps 8lem from a I1!!CI!IIt lowahip from ibe n.p..- ol
presidem
who
will - \1Uidalism incidi!IJt in tbe Nor:- Obstetrics IIDd GyJMO:iOiacy IIDd ..._..
want it to
the Vice.
a..-Dar
_.,._olU~in funds from tbe Uniliod 1Io.lth
New for Uniw!lsity-Wode Sonicer..
which two JDeiJJbeu ol tbe Cam- Foundalion o1
'Ibe Committee on Facnlty
pus Security ........ ......, alle!led York. tbe pb,ysi&lt;iom.,.....
tbe.nen year (19'10-71) stqdied l'iopiuns ol,tbe SUNY Faculty to ba... been iDwlwd.
oontinuouo' · lotal t..rt r a t e Senale wilt evaluate IIDd ...,...
Aixording ·to GlemJon, bear- monittwinc atzewsd iD tbe lit- OIIIIDI!Dd _ . . . f o r _ . . _
•
... tbe c:haJps will be beld erature at that ~ tbe
AJIIICI'--t of._....,..
as quiiSiy • pciiOlible UDder Um-sity ol Saulhom Cali- - - will be made afllor
~15.
ol tbe Civil Serviae LaW. fornia.

~ocr::;:~~j~

=tt

~=~

~

w-..

......

--

�·.,?,
F~24,

6

Newffit G&gt;-op
Is More Than
A Food Store

Mattina Is
Cleveland
Lecturer'
Honorable J06ePh S. Mattina, Erie County Court Judge
and mediator for tbe AJiirmative Action Progmm in Erie
COunty. will be tbe next to
bold the University's Grover
Cleveland FellDwship.
~ fellowship is part of tbe
Program in American Studies
and is uuder tbe - direction o(
John Latona. lecturer in tbe
program_
1be pwpose of tbe fellowship is to bring local or national political figures into
d.-, informal contact with
students and tbe entire University community_
Judge Mattina will make a
series of four visits to the University Ibis semester. His general topic will be "'The Administration of Justice." The
Judge's first three visits will be
aimed at meeting with different
departments. 1be first will be
with tbe Law School on" February 28, Room 2 of the Prudential . Building, from 12-2 .
p.m., to discuss the " Final
Resolution of Criminal Cases."
1be next meeting will be
held. March 6, from 12-2 p.m .
with tbe Policy Science Department, Room 42, 4224 Ridge
Lea, to discuss "What is a
Crime."
The last of the special meetings will be held with the
School of Management, March
20, from 12-2 p_m_ in Room
231, Norton, to discuss both the
"Six Month Rule," and "Judicial Administration."
On the afternoon or April 10,
Judge Mattina will wrap up the
series at a meeting combining
all departments involved.
According to Mr. Latona,
"The Grover Cleveland Fellowship is an excellent opportunity
for the entire University community to ·meet with prominent
political figures to discuss the
multitude of questions confronting our community."

~ wbo are imolved view
it ..
to -U_
. .- ,• '"alternative
-. ClCJIIIIIIUDity-r
n
......,., fat the exchange of

~~,:;~

--

time~

impressed by low pm.

o:s, frieadly atmoopbere 8Dd an

.dd-it-GP }'OUI1IOif c h e c k~

T h is is the North Bulralo
c - i t y Food Co-cJp, locat.... - t h e ODIDI!I" of Main 8Dd
w-- K-..
to the ()antal.:
;.,;..,
e-ta.
simply as
~ OH&gt;p- to those imohed.
it's the third of its lrind in BurmiD 8Dd has a palicy of "sellinc the . _ food for the c:bmpest pDce_A wide variety of roods are
... sale - c:beese. wbnle
""-liiOIJdles 8Dd sassabas lieiL
On the lhn!e days the OHJp is
(Mgxby. Thursday 8Dd

-

~) .............. 110 down
to the Bailey-Ointoo marlret at
6:30 LIIL to pidl: up produce_
H yua am- around 11 .ua.
just the door opens, you
can ...., 10-pound boxes or

iiiiiibho......., aates or oranges,
sacks of cmions 8Dd many other
.arieties of fruits a n d vegetaNes. The OHJp also stod&lt;s a
luJle IIUIDber of herbs. spices
and teas as ..well as organic
.,._, rice and natural peanut

.,.__

Prices. .., the whole. are very
-

-

two ounces or oregano
But those in-

aJ6t 16 cents.

......,.. are adamant about not

viewing it ~as a store that peddles cheap health (ood." Inslead. they seek to emphasize
the O&gt;lllllllll1it; c:oope&lt;ative part
of the name. TI&gt;ey work to "en~ a true sense of oomIIIDDity among the people wbo
liw! in this small comer of
...nh." The Main Street storefront is"oampletely run by
IIII!IDbeos 8Dd anyone can be.,...., a member by paying five
dollars, refundable when you
....,__ (You need not be a mem' - to malre pun:hases. bow,_-_) Members are required to
.,.... lour bows a month " doing
anything that needs doing_"
GeoeraJ membership m e e tines me held &lt;mce a week on
allemating Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m. The group
may discuss what items should
be stocbd. The coordiuatots of
IDillketing. bagging and mainmay talk about work
that needs to be doue. And
JIOOIIIe me urged to sign uv for
their bows on the weekly mas~ sdoedule. Information is also
~ at these meetings
about """"Y'hing (rom recipes
to political ideologies_
Althou&amp;b the North Bullalo
OHJp has been- only about
.•IIXIIdh. it already has~ 100
membots. Dom. one of tbe coonlinatms, says_ He is new to
the CIHip SCI!IJe but really likes
it. Dum views the experieoce
.. --..rucatinnal. politic:aJ. econe. and feels
~ there has ~ugbt me
a lot.• For him. the idea "is to

---social

==.

~....!-~work-

SIDle bows are Mooday and
~ 11-8 and Saturday

1972

BackWill Chair
Israel Task Force
Carnival!

(

Dr. Nathan Back, professor
of biochemical phannacology,
has been appointed chairman or
1bis Brazilian Club ...rdi Gras C.minl. eartier this morith is the State University of New
but one of a whirl of il1b!mmonal activities slated now thnk,gt, York-Israel Task Force by the
SUNY Office or international
...rdt 12. See Weekly Communique for this week's events.
Programs_ The Task Force was convened
by Chancellor Ernest Boyer in
response to a mandate from
Governor Rockefeller to advise
and help develop significant relationships and programs between campus units of SUNY
and universities in Israel, Dr.
Back says_ Both tbe Governor
and the Chancellor are "commited to move forward vigorously in expanding and developing undergraduate and graduate programs as well as farulty
exchanges in a variety o( academic disciplines.•• be reports.
On tbe initiative of tbe Task
Force. a consortium comprising
representatives from six major
cenlets and colleges has been
established to review present
undergraduate programs. a n d
guide, in a coordinated fashion.
development of new ones.
The Task Force is
also tbe interests and
ti,.. of SUNY faculty
ing types of
changes.
fort will
f·eels,

�7

AfricaWeek.
'iREPORTS
Slated-f or
The Campus ON
Africa Week. a (IIQIDIID of
activitiee ap&lt;JIBII1lll by The
Africa Club, IIDd rwmiDg from
:MODiiay. February 28, lhroullh
Saturday, March 4, will offer
lectutal. films IIDd enleriainment"wbicb dip into the politicaiiiDd c:u1tural berilqe of this
vast oontinenL
On Moadioy, February 28,
the Weoll: will open with a lecture by !llii:Mel Dei-Ana~Ja.
assistant P " " - at SUNY/
Broeiqxxt, IIDd formerly visiting proli!IIIIDr in Blad&lt; Studies
here. His lecture, "My Poems
and Africa," will be followed
by ClOIDIISltB from a . _
panel with studeata Jidlapb G.
Kamod&gt;e IIDd Flmao Ay-se in
233 Norton at 2 p.m.
On n-t.Y, February 29,
the film, "Noa-Aiipal Nations," will ezplore policies of
"thini 'IIIOlld" countries that
support neither East ...,. West.
Tbe movie ..,_. a Clllllf"""""'
beld in Zambia during which
' leaders of IIIJIHilip&gt;ed Dations
outlined their
for
dealing· with 'II'Odd It
investiplies ecDIIDIIIic IIDd social problems Cllllfroolin&amp; the
developing D&amp;tioas of Africa.
Tbe film, which will be sbown
at 3 p.m. in 148 Diefendod. will
be fol)owai by a . _ pomel.
with students W a I Duany,
Bubs Bsjop, IIDd actio~ director of Blad&lt; Studies .Joan
Stamper.
"Rhodesia CountdowD," a
film will be followed by comments from Dr. Norman ~.
assistant prol...... of history,
and specialist in Soutbem Africa, and student Fnmcis Getao
on .Man:h 2 at 3 p.m. in 148
Diefendorf. This film sbows the
present government of Rhl&gt;desia, fonns of political reprar
sion, and world reaction to the

stra.......

existing govemmenL
Dr. Alfred Moleab, a South
African, presently on the faculty of Temple University, will
lecture Friday, March 3, 2 p.m.,
233 Norton, oo '"The Crisis of
Southern Africa." Soutbem Africa consists of the countries

that are still ~ white minority rule: Mozambique, An-

gola, S.W. Africa, Rhodesia and

South Africa. Dr. S. Okecbukwu Mezu, DOvelist, poet IIDd
associate proli!IIIIOr of Freuch,
and P.eter PalaDgyo, assiStant
prof1!8110r of Bladt Studies, will
lead a follow-up discussioo.
African Talen1 Njp&gt;t, March
3, 240-8 Norton, 8 p.m., will
feature singing, poetry readings and dances performed by
African students IIDd representing the traditioasl c:ulture of
their countrie&amp;. The program
will include the Gumboot
Dance. as dooe by the workers

in the sold mines of .Jolwme&amp;burg, South Africa, aa:ompan-

ied with 1111111 IIDd drums; IIDd
dances of Niporia, Siena Leone
and Kmya. Talen~ Njp&gt;t will
· be followed by a dinner of African foods prepared by African _ _ , wbo reside in the
Bumdo~ DiDDer is by invitation ooly.
A Daaee IIDd Fasbioo Sbow
. will mark the fiDale. Co-sponsored b,Y the Africa Club IIDd
the Africa Students' Union, the
event is oo Satnnlay, March 4,
at the African Cultural Center,
350 Masten Ave., beginning at
8 p.m., dooation $1.00. Authentic ~ IIDd West African mUSlC will be per{mmed by
the African Combo, a wellknown, Pi_
ttsburJI&gt;-based group.
WEDCLY~
COP\' DfADlJNE
To record il1fonTwtlon, contact SUZ·
·anne Melzilo&lt;, Univefslty l'ubli&lt;:8·
tions Servlcos, 250 w--r Ava.,
ext. 2228. «:.,., will be due bJ
Monday for an don Thursday end .......,. of Fridey thn&gt;Uih 111u.-y.

Gf&gt;EOPLE
AWARDS

a.ociate pro-.
f-r. eculpture, re&lt;&gt;eived the
Fint Award at the 3Srd Western
New Yorlt Ezhibition at the Al-

DUAYNK IIA'I'CBETT.

~J'~~~'ri.e ~:

chue Award in tbe Print Eihlbitioa, R.LT, R""'-ter.

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
car.. T. ANIJDSON bu been a~
cted coordinator of the Rural

~.t""'~ PP'.=: ~

Weotem N- Yorlt. Mr. Anderecm. is a clinical ..Utant pro(esoor, pbyojcal theraJ!y and oerved
~-::!'t~.prior to
1&amp;. ltOIIIRT aoGIItS.,

profee10r, Eng-

lish, DaDied director, Center for
Payc:bolockal Sludieo of tbe Arts.

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DR. ALAH L ANmii!ASKK. aseociate

proleeaor, marketing and environmental analyoio and policy, &amp;!&gt;pointed a member of the Ameracan Marketing Association's
Committee on Minority Buaineaa
Enterprioe.
1&amp;. DOUGl.AS R. BUNXD., aseociate
prolesaor, organization and hu·man reaou.rcea, elected an accredited charter member, International A.ociation of Applied Social
Scientiata with profOII&amp;ional .,.
creditation in the fielda of orpnizatioaal development and laboratory education for IOcial proc:eaa

·....

~

L

PLACK, . . . .tant

dean, School of Health Related
Pn&gt;fe.ioDO, appointed to tbe Advioory Community Board of the
J._ Nub Community Health
Center. Tbe center is acbeduled
to open in Buffalo's inner..city in
early 1972.
mt. KAC B.OIMOND, proCessor,
Endisb. named editor. AUDIT/

POETRY.

MAC

BAJOIOND~

feeaor, JOCial policy and community oervices, elected chairman,
Committee on Aging, Reoean:h
and Planning Council of Greater
Buffalo; appointed a member of
the Retired Senior Volunteer Program Advioory Committee.
CA8L PSCI:tB,

asaociate dean.

Scbool of Manqement, appoint-

ed to Scientific Advioory Commit..
tee of the American Ned C10011
Blond Program, Buffalo Chapter.
UIIOCiate
profeooor, claaics, baa been elected a fellow of Harvard UniverRty'a Center for Hellenic Studies.
Weshincton, D.C., for 1972-73.
'Ille Center, a siat:er-inatitution of
Dumbarton Oab, annuaUy aelecta
fliibt .-reb fellows from tbe
United States and abroad for re-

1&amp;. .IOIIN Z. ra::ADo'I'TO,

~U:~ryin..:d~~=

DL SILVIANO 8.\NTIAOO, 8810ciate

profMM&gt;r, French, named visilinc
profeeaor, Pontificia'Llniveni.dade
Catolica, Rio de Janeiro, MarchDecember 1972.

PRESENTATIONS
iDatrw:tor.
occupational tberapy, "Nuning
Home Consultancy," N i a 1 a r a
Frontier District. New Yorlt Stalll
Occupational Therapy Aaoocia-

ILIUBI:Til ISICIDUN,

professor, Eq-

lisb. " Des Moines, 1948.'' a poem,
ClwU:e 7.

DL RONALD J . IIUEt'NIS,

assistant

COIII't7'IDfC CllftD ~ ~
SEJ&lt;IN. . #: Haney Azlemd, in-

~r:t.:..:!!r'l:a~:Xti.=

"Picnic," in Reodmga 3 and PoinU
of Li8hl (both anthologies); "New
Poem,'' Hudson. RevWD; ••poem
f~r my Friend. Peter;· Iowa ReANTHONY PAJ'EitSON~ associate pro-

SE&gt;UNAil# : COBO~- 1!1.-b.y

Albany

l..,ow

ReuU!w.
professor, English.

uuw.

OOKPUII:NG QIH'ID

fessor, sculpture, bad his drawing, listinc"A Portrait of Bernard Greban-

.

~ ~~ ~~·

::.:.1Tee~/:'

Apt!.." and "-.ell oa lnter-

poeu.tiooal Relation a... Paul
Beerwald School of Social Work,

~:!Sa

SlaYICZS

THURSDAY-2

TlltiDDAY-24 : Fint Netiooal
City Bank; Material c-.; IDL Co.; Stroml&gt;eq-Cou!oocm 0&gt;op..
- Y - 2 5: GTE Sylvm&gt;ia, boc.;
The Trawolera IDL Co.; BoqWamer (M.one Chain DiY.);
Neisoe.m Bros. Ioc.; Nanuet Public: Scbools (RoddaDd Comlty).
KOHD&amp;.Y-28: New York Uni~nity Medical Center.
TtJESDAY-29: Aetna-Casualty lo
Swe:ty Div.; Univac Data P'J'o..

=-Board

:n:~~~
wmmsDAY-1 : Wurlibcer
~

Co.;
Forb Central Scbools

~ScbooiCoun~~Mal~
Comlty) .

....-v-2: Malone C...tral

Scboo1 District (Fnmldin): Wello-

ville Central Scbools (A.llepny).

EXHIBITS

Prof. Grebanier, Dragon's
P......, Georgetown, California

DL GBOitCB !'aLE, visiting profeseor, music. "Hepresentation . and
~M~tbe/le~c of Woz..

-JAIDB JOTta---50nl AM~ :

aoBatT ltOGDES, profeseor, English. "The [)ynamica of Meta-

..........

DL

ebor: Modes of Mentation in
Poelry," Hartford Studiu iA Literat.u.n.
SCIINIIIlJf'JlM, assistant
professor, English.. ..Afloat with
Jacques Lacan.'' D i a.c r it i c •;
" Hamlet Acrwo the Imaginary,"
Genre; "Hamlet or Hommelette,"
Poetiqu.e.

STUAJn'

UX&gt; SKIT, profe980r,

music. "'"111e

Classic Cole Porter," SaturdtJ.y
Review.
DAVID tiltBBT, assistant pro(e,..&gt;r, Endisb. " Lockean 'Intuition• and Johnson's UJ.aracteri.&amp;ation. of A e a t h e t i c Respon.e,..

DR.

Eiehtunth-Cenliuy St.udiu.

._t

~uni~ ::d ;::::::~ f:~

u...

structor, FORTRAN IV, 10, -c238 ftMI&amp;e Lea, 7 ~ Mcmdaya and W"""'-'ays tluuuj:h
Man:b 'ZI.
EYE-CON "72• : Arlhar B a r ron
screens and ~ bis films,
Albright-Knox Art Gall&lt;oy Auditorium. 8 p.m., free.
'1BA. ca:DIOMT• : .J~ demoast.ratioo for lntrmatioaal MODlh.
232 Nortoa, 8 - .

DANIEL KA'I'IO:N~ assistant professor, social policy and community
a e r v i c e s. ..kes.idenoe Requirementa: The Unreaolved Issues,""

D&amp;. P111UPP P. vat. aaoc:iate profesoor, German, "~ and His
chairman, phy- - Cousins: A Reconsideration."
oic:al therapy, "The Uoe and The Ge~ Review.
Abuoe ol Pbylical Agents in Menof Pain in Athletic lnRECOGNITIONS
jurieo," Annual National Comer....,. ol Athletic Trainan, Groa- DONALD BL~• .-ociate prolin&amp;en. New York.
feaor, art. i8 repraeated ill a
croup abow at the Tonmto G.l-

uomi. aaociate pro-

T,_,.

Claracteristics. •• .Journal of Act:Ounlin.6 Reu:arch.

IlL ....... .....,.,

f_,r, oocial policy and c:ommun-

t~~~

Adoanco U. E~
Room A-0, Ridee U... 4
p.m.; ca«ee -.. Room A-~6,
4230 RMI&amp;e
3 : 30 ......

tion.

I&amp; AD.lliAK

Br.i.T18'1'ES C'XW'4lQIM'M ~=
Prof. J . Gam. The u~ oE

profe&amp;IIOr, accounti.n.c and. manqement acieDcJe. with XANAJt C.

.lORN LOGAN.

1&amp;. dBAJLUI M:ONK, associate pro-

.... c.

D&amp;.

~~ t:&gt;:="!:' J:N'!""~

lnntatiooal Emihit Group Sbow,
" Portrait PbOtopapby," Moon
Collep ol Art, PbiladelphiL
BA&amp;V&amp;Y ~. prot_.-,

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
:=rm~~v::-J!1-LockIIUDOUCIIII:

2Dd -

~- Lockwood Libn.ry.

N&lt;YriCES

�P~24,19Pll

8

all in-tea playe.._ Competition wiD be b8ld in aix ~

MONDAY-28

Norton Rec-lion A-. 10 a.m.
Reciater at Norton Rec Dook before 8 p.m., Friday.
cBJlfiSI: J'ILM*:
Moun~

Talce Ti1er

by Strategy, a revolu-

~=[.;.• o~E:"!rni~; ~

leased in America two months
ago. 5 Acheson, 1 and 3 p.m.,
students 75c. non-•tudenta $1.25.
LlilCTUBE •: Dr. Anees Ahmad,
Temple Univenity, will speak as
part of Internatiorial Month eel·
ebration, 3 p .m., place not yet
announced.
SPORTS EVENTS*: Fencing, R.I.T.,
Oark Gym. 1 p.m. Fre•hrnan &amp;uketball, U/ B Alumni, Clark Gym,
6:30 p.m. Varsity BasketbaU, AI·
bany, Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m.

::i :::: ~Zt: i:'~~':d :·:.1' .l~~~ni=~
~::: ~of Pi::!~~

BIOCREMISftY-cuNIC.U. CBDIISftY

d
b 'l'he
n
ture
Court. Albright-Knox Art ~lery,
1285 Elmwood, 8 :30 p.m., tickets

~~~nst;\~k~~ Ji!'•a:~

stuftJ!

State Union Ticket Office. TeL
833-9043 for information. Also on
Feil,;"bauet ia inspired by the
labyrinth of identity in the play,

of Vienna, The BiochemUtry of
Comparatiue AtheTOBCivooio, G22 Capen, 4 p.m.
HILLEL PURIM BDMCE·• :

reading

of the M egillah by Prof. Philip

~~!;e~:~~:!tC. to~

low, _Hillel House, 6: 15 p.m.
CB.ABAD PUIUM SERVICES* : reading

~~170:, bd'.!:~ ~ch ~laJi: _i.~ ,Mef= ~.~~
rector, Cristyne Lawson, ~cbor- Main ~t.. 6:45 p.m. At 8:30 p.m.,

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

CHABAD SABBATH

vices and meal,

eop.

••Open to members of the University.
with o ~I Interest In the subject
CmDct __,., 831·2228, "" listings.
Sydow, Bibbi Anderson, Conference Theatre, admission charge,
THURSDAY-24
check showcase for times.
FILM••: Twentieth Century, 140
Capen. check showcase for times,

tD pu1111c;
4tOpM ....., 1D -

free.
With John Barrymore, Olrole
Lombard, Roscoe Karns, directed
by Howard Hawks. " . .. A tin~t
rate farce about theatrical per·

sonalities. and John Barrymore
was perhaps the greatest of farceurs. ... The director, Howard

SEBVlCES• : ser·
C~ House,

3292 Main St., 6 p.m.
HJLLEL SABBAm•:

Dinner at 6

p.m., followed by service at 8 p.m..
with panel discussion, How Should
the Sabbath Be Observed; Oneg
Shabbat to follow. Hillel House,
40 Ca~n Blvd.
FENCING • : Hobart. Clark Gym, 7

p.m.
TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENTS: The

U/B Table Tennis Club and the

intramural program w i ll have
tournaments for both men and
women~mpetition restricted to
University students not memben
of the Club, Norton Recreation
7

eographed a full length work ezploring in dance the relationship
black and wbi~the colors being worn as masks by both the

Chabad House will move its activities to the Fillmore Room for
dancing and si.n.g:ing.
The Jewish holiday of Purim

ber of the audience so that they

over the qttempt!. of Haman. the

o(

M~~rm:m t! ~~~:;, :;i~~ :::: :~'!1-~h ~lith: :

rJI~~ thTh:x-:~~ ~~ne:£ B~t.).r: ~v~~ P~(~
Bl.cc:k Ivory has been commia·

=

celebration of the defeat of Ha-

t:::.edth~Yy.:!::/'f:~:~a::
~:ws~~~8,~:,00theM~
=~ ~e::~ ~fu~":o~ ft~~hi~~ ~ ~~:
string quartet.. double bass, piano,
voice, bass clarinet, percussion
and other wind instruments. A

de f e a t ty the intercession of
Queen Esther. Each time the name
o( the wicked Haman is men.

atrical action. It includes a song
and litany by Mindy Alofl'.

sound of his name from history.

:~e~: h:lhe 8~~fO:OJ: ~~~~toO:oU::Tt:=:no~ud:

ty'::e:d

!!~,a ~:od.:f!.~li~y

the victory of freedom. To help
Rabbi Gu.rary, director of Cbabad
House, celebrate the evenina,
pean. Studiee., S u c B. Citizen's
dozen atudenta o! the Cbasaidic:
Adviaory Committee Cor Czecho- . Jewish aemina.ry in N8w York
slovak Studies, Ukrainian Con- City are coniing with 'their muaicgress Committee. Ukrainian Cuia1 in.stnunents to liven up the
tural Foundation, Campus School holiday. In addition, a three cor·
Auditorium, S U C B, 1300 Elm- ~~~wC:::i.'Z =.;;"to"'::,\'~
= ~~:~~~-:·i.'Sf.:io~ti~: the three cornered hat that Haets at Norton Ticket Office, SUCB hoifdawo~~ ~)~ ~~
~~~:~ ¥,~°Fm!oa;· elve:ra~~ The \\romen'a Auxiliary of the
at the door.
Friends of Cbaba.d baked hun·
Program: P&lt;nm for Viola and dreds of them to give to tho
PWno by Husa, Jesse Levine, vi- evening's guests.
ola and Roger Shields. piano: Se- COMPUTING CEN'I'I:a usa BaVJ.CE
l..ct&lt;d Arias and Songs (Ukrain· SEMINAil#: Chris Sideralris, in·
~·Ror;~reg~el~~~~:k~~: struCtor, COBOL.
Room 12, 4238
7
ed Works for Violin and PioM
W~.,!t:y, ~hMM= ~-d
(Ukrainian), Peter SalatJ, ·violin,
and Roger Shields, piano; Dumky
TUESDAY-29
Trio by Dvorak, Donald Weilerstein, violin, Paul Katz, cello and B1LLEL PUIUM BEilVJCZ* : reaclinc of
M egillah, coffee and bamanRoger Shieldo, piano.
tasb.en to follow, Hillel HotUe, 7
GRADUATE BllCIT.U.*: Marsha Hassett, c e II o atudent of Mischa a.m.
Schneider, works by Mozart and PNSK 222: OONTROvatSia IN BCICONPLJcr AND UBOLU..Schubert. Baird, 8:80 p.m., free. BHCB TION• : Dr. Parker Calkin, poi.
HILLEL SINGLD DANCE*: music by
ogy, Climat~ ClrDnge and the
the Silver Dollar, Caatle Inn, Eg· Cauou of P~iotocene G/acimion,
gert Road, nominal admiuion, 362 Acbeoon, 10 a.m., vilitono wei·
8 ~ 30 p.m.
come, abo on March 2.
CAC P'ILM:*: Sign of Zorro, 140
Capen. check CAC showcaoe for
· times, $.75, tickets at Norton
Ticket Office.
The · dluin' escapadea of tho

CONCERT*: presented
~~!:'rc:ffli:~t
~ =~~ ~~ ti~~Des~t~::~ ~~~:. COMPOSERS
~vi~ll~ ~aa'?O!~O:.
unpretentious, entertaining, with

a aopbisticated a n d hardboiled
attitude toward sex and money."
-Pauline Kael

CZECHOSLOVAKIAN AND UKB.AJNIAN

~S::asrn:a•~ t ~~ndln~r!:!.u!:!i

Month. 147 Die!endorf, 7:30p.m.,

$.25.

___F=-=R.:ciD=.:..A.:..Y=-._25
=----c- •. st:.;'.;'~~AL~~ ."~CINJ'~J:~
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION#: ,

first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annez,

see Thursday listing.

8 p.m.

OPEN REBEARS.\L• : Cleveland
Quartet , 101 Baird, 11 : 30 a.m. -1

CONCERT * :

p.m.
UNGUlSTICS ON T.V. • •: Points of
View Abo u 1 TrCUUiformational

Grammar with Bernard Vauquois,
Sydney M. Lamb, D. Terence
Langendoen, and Janet Groet as
moderator. Tbe evolution of generative grammar and its several
modem types. The cii&amp;cussion is

=~:::;Shu!o.ins~ti: V:b~~~

ter basement. 2 p.m. Focuti on
Linguistics: Linguistics and the

Natural Sciences with Jon Ha-

ma.nn. Solomon Marcus, and Har-

ry Whitaker. The linguistic model; relational hierarchieo; and
nab.tral-science work on the brain
are discuasecL 10 Foster baaement.
2:30 p.m. Open to faculty and
students.
MEDICINAL CIIEMISTRY SEMINA&amp;# :

B.S. Murty, graduate student.
Metalloenzyme. : Cobalt as a
Functional Probe, 134 Health Sciences, 2 p.m.
EY&amp;-OON '72*: Stan Brakhage,
America's foremost independent
filmmaker will acreen and discuu
his three latest films, Th• Pitt•·
bur«h Documf!nU, 147 Diefendo!f.be3 tC:!;• ~. ::.~:O~li~

=~~~ ~uc;it~riha :,~~

Deu.. Er, on the hospital.. and'The
Act of Seeing With One'• Own
Eyu, a penonal record of the

performance of an autopey in the
coroner!• oftice.
A filmmaker for 20 years, Brak·
hage was honored by a major
roboapective of his more than 100
films at tho Mwoeum of Modem
Art in New Yo.k laatapring. Eye.
Coo ;. C&lt;HpobiiOred by tho u.ru.
veroity, tho Albricbt-Knox Art
Gallery, and Media Study, Inc.
STA.TIB'TICB oou.oQUJU)(

UIC'J"UD• :

Dr. .John Jacob Bird&gt;er, 'The Of.
lice of tho Air Foroe Surpon
Geoend, DetecW., the Heroin

·Addict: The Sum.lical Aa~&gt;«.U,
C'ted by GSA, Statiali&lt;:o,

~~to~~1:.

p.m.,
4280 Ridp

~

8:80 p.m.

Dorian Woodwind

8::,':;;~'·p:;J~.r t:c~o t:!~'!d

Fran~ Members of the
ensemble are Karl Kraber, flute;
Charles Kuskin, oboe; Jerry Kirkbride, clarinet; Jane Taylor, bas-

Jean

~dchh~m~B:JrdBReciL:1 ~~~:

8:30p.m.
The Dorian Woodwind Quintet,
organized in 1961 under a }o~romm

r:aun=~ ~an~:~t!n~:w=:

ticipant in the world of chamber
music. The Quintet has concer·
tised throughout America and

Europe, and, under State De·
partment auspices, in A£rica, Asia.
and the Near East. Formerly,
University-wide a r tis t s-in-residence f9r SUNY, tho Quintet ia
now the resident woodwind ensemble at Brooklyn Rnd Hunter
Colleges in New York City.
UUAB COFFEEHOUSE*:

Jean Red-

path, Scottish ballad singer, 339
Norton. 9 p.m.-12 midnight, $.50.
Also on SaL, Feb. 26.
CAC FILM *: Dauy Crockett, King

a

0

the

10

1
~e ~ask:~
~.:;ke :fl~ ~~~ ~r ~~: b!:te:rb~.
Zorro, at his clashing beet, races

$.75, tickets at Norton Ticket Office.
Disney's version of the story of
the fantastic fighting man who
became one of America'• greatest
heroes by striving for right and
justice, from Washington to the
Alamo. With Fess Parker, Buddy
Eboen, BaaiJ Ruylldael, Hans Conried.
P'IL)l••: Hour of the Wolf (lng-

~ ~o~).;w~~,!!:j

through high adventure to ri&amp;ht
tho wronga of evil doen. Caat:
Guy W i 11 i a m a, Henry Calvin,

Gene Sheldon.
FILM* • : Per.anna (l.ngm.ar BergBibbi Anaerson and
Liv
Conference Theatre~
admisaion cbarge, checlr. showcase

mantn1:'!!

Cor times.
~:c.oon.soua•:

=:

eon. Conference Theatre, admis~charge. Check abowcase Cor

SATURDAY-26
CB.ABAD BAB8ATB BI:RVJCICB• :

Nr-

viceo and refreobmenta, 9:30a.m.
Mol&lt;woh Mollwh, muaic, converulion, ref~bmenla, C h a b a d
Houoo, 8292 Main St., 8 p.m.

~

aee Friday

SUNDAY-27

CLASSD : ConverMJ.tional
H&lt;brew (odvanced), 262 Norton,
12:30 p.m.; Conver.atiolllJl Hebrew (elementary), 262 Norton,
1: 30 p.m.; Talmud, Hillel Library,
3 p.m.
.
~~lac· l"'!ry, - Salur·

8TUIJCNT ltiDCITAL •:

noon. Cree.
HILLEL CL.\811011:

B a i rd. 12

Bqinroen He·

brew, 262 NortoD, •12 nooa; ,J.,.
ioh Ethia, ~2 Norton, 1 p.m.

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

VOL 3-NO. 20

More Jobs
For"W&gt;men,
Minorities

State Set
To Boost
Tuition

ro!.,;~:l==.:

'lbe Slate UDivaaity Board
o l - r r - plans a tuitiaa bike
in Soplembet of this _.. bam
$550 . - ymr to a bich of $850.
-

Goor.

DOrity hiriDr" by the Ketler
administration ..... ~ by
Dr. Lee PresiDD,..MaDarement,
at Tuesday's Faculty SeDate
meeting. PresiDD, who is ...
the three-man Senate Budgetary Advisory Committee. ....
ported ID the poup about the
Commitl:ee's "sua:ess" in . retline a "strengtbeaed. emphasis
on minority and female hirinr-"
Earlier this IDODth, the Committee norommmded ID President Robert Ketler that this
commitment be ezpanded "as
much as possible" and that
caodidates from these areas be
riven top priority. After coosultalioa with the President,
Vice President for Acac:!emic
Affairs Bernard Gelbaum and
the Council of Deans aDd Provosts their proposal that a "substantial number of new appointments be reserved fnr female and minority candidates"
was """"Pled.
Preston was varue as to boor
this policy will be carried out,
explaining that full details
"sboald ....... from the l!dminia,
tralioa."
Be "
labeled
-ture ... _
_tbe
._

B........,..,. _.w at a

_.. .... Widapawiuat&amp;i,

-n-illy.
CXIIIferenl:e in Albmry
'lbe Govemor llllid be will
8lllt b a ClCIIIJII8IIian m.::.in lbe State's Sc:bal.r lDceutiwl
.. thatlow-inmmeatudeula will DOt be bumed wbeD
lbe priam lor a SUNY

tioa....Jate.
'lbe

FEBRUARY 17, 1972

em..-

n.--

finaDce cam...... llllid ID ...,.., met in
N- Yodt '~Waiay, apeeiac
yady rates of $650 lor

........... 111111 ............... 111111

!r'~~,.at_.....

u.............. lllilioa wbidl
went ID $550 this ymr was alraody slated ID be raised
•
ID $700 in Soplembet ~
'lbe Gooemor indicated that
rates for paduate students 111111
out.&lt;lf.Qate students will ala&gt;
be J'll.&amp;d, aJtbouciJ lbe of that hike ..... DOt~
Some of lbe ma-llllilioa
income, lbe Gcwemor said,
ahould be .._t ID pemdt State
UDi•'enlity 1D m.::.-~
ship pants.
At his preas """""""" 1be
Gcwemor a)., _ . . . . that be
is alwndoninc lor lbe
his attempts ID '-""' lbe City
UDivenity of New Yodt 1111!1'&amp;ed into lbe SUNY system.
At preas time, official an""""""""t of lbe tDilioa boost
bad DOt been made by SUNY.

-t

Dr. Loken
Resigns

U!BFPost
Dr. Bobst D. U...., Jftllideat ollbe UIB F'auadUiaa lor
lbe . - lhree ·.........
IIIIUIImd his ...,;p.tioa, ID beCIIIIIe eiJectiw! ~ 18.
Dr. .l..Ma loma 1be FOUDdatioD. "'with - ' rep-el b&amp;. ..... ol lbe .,..., - - - 111111 ~ n!lationships" wbidl be fomJed
durinc his u..-_.. period
of
..,.,._ IIDM!wr, be 8 . y ...

•

l'f~TU ' 0
'-AU I~

women SeeLongRoadAhead

T. D~~l:_,J
.L 'relJtrnent .LS ~
Before- EqUolrn
..
.

-SUB

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
· Tuesday was

Susan B. Jur

1~ birthday.
~-- .... ---to«- tbo:ty's
'lbe date was eepecially sigby lbe IM ctio•o of leav-

in&amp; behind a - . _ , better
.....,u-1 111111 viable orpnialioa tban that wbidl
eDated lhree years ..... 'lbe

nificant ID members Of tbe
President's Committee em Beauitment and Promotion of
Women as they .look hack on
the pins women have made
since Anthony's birth. But tbe
KJOUP ala&gt; ,_. a lonr road ID
travel before equal treatment
for men and women is realized.
In the six II!OIIths it has existed,
the Committee has been workinc to determine the slep6
"""""""' ID obtain this ~ on
cam-e-&amp; roup was appointed in
July with President Ketter's
mandate that U/B "assume a

orpnialioa a)., beoefill!d
from lbe addition of lhree eli~ directon;: John Car..... in Alumni Allairs, Keith
Mooley in Development 111111
Hooranl Moodoa in Administration. 'lbe!e is little doubt
that 1be Foundation will caatinue ID improye its ssvi&lt;:e 111111
increase its income. T h r e e
years a r o, th e Foundation
hand I e d approDmately $L6
milliOIL This ymr the ~ in~ will be well
His rea 8 on lor leavinc at inc an allirmatM. actioa poothis time, Dr. .l..Ma indicaled..
pam for
-"
last
ymr,
IDI!IIIbon
of Earlier
tbe Plaiill that the Board ol
oltbe ~lion...._ ID iD- clent"s .Adwmy Cammittee em
.,._ lbe empbMiB of lbe ~L.a.~ 111111 loeaJ .....
- (~Oft-5,eoi.I}
-··
•
poups bOame

:!::tt

=~~

-rr-

actively inlen!sted in tbe silua- to negotiate for an ol6ce in 192
lion of women .., campus. Rep- Bayes which they share with
........tati...s from the National Mi!Dity Recruitment. They
0 rca n i z at ion few Women haw receiwd funds for miDi(NOW) , the SUNY Caucus on I mal ol6ce eo:peuses. Women are
Women's Rirbts. Bulfalo Wo- beinc lli!POinll!d ID UDivenitymen's Libetation and the Of- wide search and advisory &lt;lDIDlice of Equal Opportunity be- mittees and tbe role .matitle of
ran ID weekly. This ad the President's Ad~hoc oommittee 'M&gt;Ii&lt;ed with mittee on Minori
• has
olber campus poups indudinr been ex pan d e
ID include
tbe M i n o r i t y Recruibnent women. But their proposal for
Committee and came up with a specific number of faculty
a plan for a women's recruit- lines ID be filled by women has
ment and promotion poup. In been defeall!d by tbe Council
tbe proposal, wbidl was !lCXli!Pl- ol Deans and Provosts. And
ed by Ketter, they asked the they ha.., also failed in an
administration to- "take a lead- elfort to haw an assistant vice
enhip .role in the adv8ncement presid!!Dcy cnoall!d ID deal with
of ......,.... ricbts."
tbe situation of women oo CamSince the .......-, the poup pus. 'lbe Committee ala&gt; asked
t..s en-&gt; 1D its pn!III!Dt sUe, 22. the Prarident ID insure that the
A wide mvenity of UDivemity IIIIIDber of """""' appoinll!d
interests, ethnac IJoo:qrowads '""""'-~ equal the IIIIIDber Jeav111111 ate .__ted by inr- No been ...,_
faaalty, &amp;lalf. administration ceived, but tbe Cammittee exand ...-mty llll!lllbers.
pecta a minim1ma ol four lines
.
and PQ!IIibly w!ll be a1loTbe Cammittee's ....,_ t..a c:aled.
' - millled. Tbey'w ._able (c-.u....t-- z. eol. Z}

'llOIIIIiders it an implementation
of policies "this body has been
enunciating for some time."
This is the first ..,.,.,...,.., ...,.
lion ol the budget committee
CJIPII!IIIIell ol Dr. William Baumer, c::bairman of tbe Faculty
Senate, Dr~ Stanley Bruckenstein, Chemisbtrt..and Preston.
They have been meeting for
several months """' and haw
looked at all the departmental
budget proposals, Preston said.
Input from faculty members
was "solicill!d" !:L,,~tter and
Gelbaum, be exp .
'They
asked fnr information "em a
continuinr t..sis" on boor ID
determine hiab priority departments, wbat areas should have
"arrested dewlopment," wbat
stance should be taJum ... fulfillinr past promises and the
question of minority and female

~io"!t.."':';!.;~onl..;;~
last two, _ Preston said. 'They
=~~~eJI:.~

rommitmenf;sfrom otberadmin~':s.in lqht of chanred
Faculty· rmction to Preston's
report was millled. Dr. Dean
Pnritt, Psycho I o g y, spoke
api.nst the move, sayinr educational needs should be riven
top priority.
In other actions, the Senate
passed the so-adled "institutiona! funds" motion wliicb will
return 25 per cent of money reoeiwd from the institution's
portion ol a grant ID its geuerating unit. The Senate also
tabled a motion on requirements for independent study.
The body will wait until Dr.
Charles Ebert, dean ol Undergraduate Studies, and Dr. Carmelo Privitera, c::bairman of
the committee that wrote the
proposal. are present. Several
members spoke api.nst the m&lt;&gt;lion calliDr it "one more instance of· ri(idificalioa." Dr.
Charles Fall lllbeled independent study "the last WBiige of
Jeaminc em this campus" and
said tbe motion would .........
round it with bureaucratic non-."

.

�,....., 11,1912

2

CSEAPlans
Dinner Meet

OnMarch9
The Uni\lt!ISity's Civil Ser-

vice Employees Association
will bold its quarterly meeting
-dinner meeting-Thwsday,

Man:h 9, at 5:30 p.m. in the
Faculty Club, Haniman Library.

John Kmsner, representative
from the Travelers lnsunmce
Compaoy, will higblight the
program with a discussiori ol.
the payroll deduction master
plan foe au-.obile and homeowners insurance co v e r a g e
which is available for CSEA
member.; oal.y.
Also ID be considered are
nominations foe the campus
CSEA's board ol. din!dx&gt;r&amp;-&lt;JDe
-=I&gt; ID be selected from clerical, t.ecbnical, administrative,
maintenaDce and faculty areas.
Names ol. nominees may be
submitll!d now ID the Nominat. Committee. which iidudes:
~ Bush, Hayes c. and
Grant Eichler, Maintenance
Pb,ysica) Plant. co-cbairmen;
Sbaroo Nusall. Cclo.t racts Administmtion; Kay Van Lier,
Sc:bool ol. Nursmg; Gerty Caputi, Mail Room, Ridce Lea;
Letizia VISIIIDe, Hayes A; Joan
Picone. Purc:basing; and Jane
Kristy, Contracts Administm-

tion.

Close ol nominations is
Man:h 9 at which time the slate
will be ol.lered to the general
membership. Nominations will
also be accepted from the floor,
if the nominees-in-question are
P"""'"'L
Reservations foe the dinner
meeting must be made before
Man:h 3 by contacting Kay
Massimi (Ext. 4822) or Dottie
Haney tExt. 5217). Price foe
the ~ dinner is $2.

. Pete Seegeris Tr(JJJ(!]jng Salesman for Ecology

By CURT MILLER
Loan Fund of the 'U/B W&lt;&gt;- the folksinger-laureate to more
than. two generations has not
Pete Seeger is a traveling men's Club.
· · ·
'"At home music., is what lost his controj..
salesman. He sells ecology in
.
.
the guise of music and a good Seeger brands his performance. The Folk ,tt,rO
time. Says Seeger: "People In order to get the "at hQme"
Seeaer~ ~ ruce ·th~.sterwho woo't read pamphlets or feeling, the performer &amp;skea eotyped folk .hero. W.or:k shirt.
listen to speeches may learn that a group of chilCiren join Sieeves nea~ rolle\i to ~
through m u s i c what they him' and sit on the stage. the elliow. 'cOjduro . ' t:S. A
wouldn't leam any other way." Seeger asked the audience to red bindanna ~ ~ his
Seeger brougbt his music, relax and imagine · themselves back pocket. But this is · gengood times and ecology mes- at home so that they would uine &amp;l!ger. All folk heroes
sages
to Bulfalo, Sunday, when feel comfortQble about joining who followed used him as a
This ymr's BuffolonitJn is
trying ID cli9cow!r creative gen- he appeared in a concert at in and singing. Audience par- model. He is noticeably thinBennett
High Scbool for the ticipation is the key to the suc- ner. And older. Wrinkled foreius ... campus. Editor Elimbeth Scbachtoer iS 8Slring any benefit of the Grace Capen cess of a Seeger concert. and head. Grey hairs in his neatlymember ol. the Uni\lt!ISity comnnmity-facalty, slaff or - deiJt..-m submit original un- VVomenSooLong~Ah~----------------pubtisbed contributions to tbe
1, col. 4)
examples: the male professor and· that the men are then alBu/falonian. In addition to the rcontinudl from In general. the m e m b e r s · who wouldn't let a student do lowed to evaluate women by
tzaditiooal creative contributim&amp;- poems, sbort stories, art ol. the group see the discrimi- a paper on problems between these, . their own standards.
the sexes because ''he doesn't Stoff Women
workand~re natioh problem on campus as
cbol 'cal!attitud- thlnk there's a problem;" finanalso lookiuc foe disrussioos of being a
Stall women haven't beei1 forinsl
conr:l:i
~
Poss,
actcia!
~d discrimination againSt gotten.
c:unent natioaal and local isThe Committee; along
...... and ~ about re- ing chairwoman, says some men marned. women; tbe I a c k of w i t h Minority Recruitment,
-..:h pmjects. The yeadJoolt g r e e t their proposals "with W!"""" m many departments to
1ans to
k 'th CSEA -and
amused tolerance . . . and all serve as role model!! for female &amp;PA to ~ -some type of,
will P8.Y foe pieces used.
kinds of rationales." Others, stu~ls; tbe departments· ~t­
Editor Scbachtoer is hoping sbe
!'can.er. ladder." Tbe_r're also
finds,
feel
the
sibla'tion
"wiil
trajn
women
·
\jut
·don't
·h.•
r
e
foe a yarboak that "'1:eeects
concerned that SOIDe women do
.
.
people's ..........., the issues ol. be nonnally rectified without ,them.
Dr. Jean Alberti ·point&amp; out ~t _receiye ~t foe -the -adIbis year.• As a ....W.t, sbe's specific progmms."
In an attempt to get past J:bat 11.5 per cent or the Jaeulty 1DlD18trative duties they perll(llit the "bi&amp; book" into seven
. fol'Dl;, And Alberti poinl!J out
IIIDIIIIer facUlty boob. Sbe is these basic problems, the Com- IS f~ bu_t J:bat u.e over- that there are no women m tbe
mittee is trying to get rid of ~g ma)On~ of them !""' top echelon of University adIIOIOkinc foe the faculty boob "three
COIIllllonfy
beld
myths."
m
Nursmg,
Pby~
~ucation
cxoulributioaa ._......... _,;al
mmistration."
""
u_ruvennty· · wide 1evel,
faculty identities~ as First, they are quick to point for Women, the ~b"'"!"'o and
~u a
out with statistics and actual the Scboc?l of Soci;al Policy and
ol. U~ty- resumes/ lhe J.arxe number o1. Commuruty Services.
the &amp;&gt;1D1D1ttee urges women to
....U-qua.lified women. available
. The aource of fundin_g for the contact ~ OEO or SPA if they
The .-nine for contribu- for faculty and staff positiona. line a faculty_ lll'!"'!'er 18 on can have a gnevance.
lioas is March 17_ .
While _,., people talk about a I s o . be discriminatory, the
'lbo!1gh the past six montha
a lad: o1. qualified WOlDI!Il can- Committee.argues. In some have been busy for the group,
rrl...l...~
didates, the Committee has Health ~dfrom~ft ts, the . future seems even more
\JUUJ UJIUI "
received vitae o1. aevmaJ. "auper- women are. Pill
so man- "!'ctic. The Corruriittee is planU/B's_dub__.team qualified" women. Secondly, ey"-lunding that~ from rung to encowage women to
• · the
..,.....
the group- that they are research. AnY teaching dODe run for ~ many faculty and
IS m
middle ol. its fimt-- wod&lt;ing ~Y with Minorjtv wbile ·on this line doesn't "!""'t ~ elections to he held this
...,_
Recruitment. Both ethnic u:J_ toward tenure and ~ times spnng. The group is awaiting
It's the bowline feam......mich Di&gt;rities and WOlDI!Il have been WOIIJ!'D on these lines aren't the report ,or .the HEW Title
pmdias Sundo.fs from 2-4 discriminated qainst, the Com- considered for _faculty (hard Seven Compliance Review
p.m..., theN..- Lams.
mittee .,..,..._ "We don't view DXIII!'Yl VllCIIDOes. "It's~!""'­ Team and is working on "a
~ a...a.mt Nor b -=h o t be r aa competition," ~-land, Dison mode I ~live action pro- - - - - . wbo '-:~Me the in- 1"- aplains. Thirdly, they ~ """"" "!""""" can _be gram which will oomply with
~ bowlin_c ......., argue that the. economy, not eiJ!Iily ~Without '!"""'d.; the HEW soals," Alberti saya.
.,....._ dJe lam.
women. and etlmic mi~Kmt:iea, enng their Y""!"' ol. ~
The lOIOCIId to date is causing the current slump in
The Committee mtendS an
is ...., .,;, llDII ...., 11a and a Um-.;ty job """"""'*ellort to change some o1. the
of valuable
fourth
........
finioh
in
the
3(). - - -1
eval!'&amp;tion
criteria used for pro- human """"""""' rarulting frolu.
team 11amae Ooanty x..m.
. . - , and Oenure. Some deof \lie taltiooal ....._
. • In addition to ~to ..,._ . ~18 have had ten- the
plode ! ' - mytbe, the Cl1llllllit- -tured female faeulty and while ent ~ ~ of • many
" ~ rec-~ ~
lhe tee is ~ on adode types ltbe Committee admita it's hard ;:::::,.~
- ... !adadinc tha finot ~ ol. discrimination ~ facul- to discrimination, they enrich this u !'1'8 -~.to
m~ty as It lD·
U/B IDviatiolld ........._. f111;( ty and IOiudent - . Com- point out that the evaluatiDg creaaes
.... ,~t."
.lor womMarch 18.
H mittee aam..a live llllll1lil'OU8 crilieria ...,.., developed by men
en WI..,... I

Buflhlooian Sreks
Creative Talent

'&gt;

&amp;

.=.:,:
Newest

=

teeN&amp;;;the=.eW::~ :/:y
mind
underu~!ii&gt;n

-m..,

trimmed brown beard.

However; age has improved
him. · Vintag,e ·Seeger -is more ·

:oomniitted · and · · coilsequently

.: ':"

~m~n!~t-vital •.' · ~ :· ·: : ~~
1
· Si!egel's BO"JS"&amp;re6till-bimd-

clapping, ·· aocial •·COmmenlaly
sing..alongs,' :but 1hey' h a'v e
lake!i on a new emphasis:
ecology.
'"'bis Land is Your Land"
was the first song which everyone joined in on and for some
reason the usual e&amp;IXJ{'ho"¥ of
audience ·off- k:-e y s 1 n g 1 n g
sounded instead like tbe single
voice ol. a well·tuned choir.
Seeger certainly helped by performing the
' cal
ca1 u
fea••t of barmonizing with himself and his
audience at the same time.
At one point, however, it was
impossible to sing-along because Seeger had added some
new ver&amp;M; ooo about eeology.
He sang aoout woodlands an!l
grasslands, linakss and lDI"""':;..~~"We're· all liere
~eyou -~me.~ - -- made
.
led- the awiieDce· •
-..l,. folk ' claMics
"Where Ha all the Plowers
Gone," ~ might be called
his trademark. In-.......:..- 000
•
I
.. --......,....
80_ng B11DP ~ aa a 1101111 a Y~
friend of mme wrote last year,
he IIIIDI!.. Don McLean's "American Pie," aided by an en
thusiaatic a u d i e n c e
joined him on the cbon1s.
But tbe most audience reaction was evoked by IIOiliJII like
"Last Train to Nwanberg"
which brands everyone from
Lieutenant Calley, to President
Nimn, to all the voters, aa war
criminals for their inaction.
"Ain't FWD' to Die Rag,"
written hY Country Joe MaoDonald, was another
~-along w i t h ita
·
~~ we're all ·
die."
Non.seop ...,.,_ .
m
.
agi

incl.

s-w

which

=

er.~is ~:' =~

l:4a! '18
lace ~
on
1
li:r pickingS.::
bouiJo. Once in a wbil8 be muat
pause for applause and wben
II!' does be places his hands In
his pqcbts in an un88•ming
the singing, nanati

manner.

(Continued

Oil -

=~

4, eol. 6)

�&lt;iREPoRTER,

pa-y 11, 1912

•

Med Students Are Authors
Of (Sperm&amp; Egg Handbook'
It started as an ~·
project in Medical Sc:bool and

j;;t,;-~ as -

~.=,Bfu.':t~ ~ 11,:"

authors ol a ~ booldet m
~ 0011trol. 'D&gt;e fruit ol ~
8

= et:1!-

~mn... the book ODDieuds,

venereal disease. Writtm in a
very readable llliiiiiDm, tbe text
s p e lis out everytbiilg and,
~ poeslble, -....,.1wmof
to pt the point aaoes.
'D&gt;e authors, twin hrolhers
who are both medical studPnts,
became interested in population
control clurina their Ullderpaduate days. When they started
medical school a year 1110 last
fall, Wayne and Bruce decided
towriteabirthcontrolpamphlet to help educate other medical students. 'D&gt;eir pro(easors
liked it and they bad tbe material reviewed by loc:a1 gynecol~
gists. After their OK, the 23Year-&lt;&gt;!&lt;' twins took it to Jean
Hutchinaoo at Plumed Parent.hood. Sbe thought it was {'Ietty
Rood but needed "something to
fiven it up."
This is where B r u c e took
over. By then it was April.
Wayne was ptting married and
-leaving for the midwest, so
Bruce wori&lt;ed on it aolo all
summer. After eigbt drafts, the
booldet linally came out at the
end of August.
Didn't KrMM

W11J

'D&gt;e pair is salialled with the
result. "We made it to the point
as much as poesible." Bruce explains, "and laid everything out
on the line." He defeods the
corny hmnor-"it m8kes it eaaier for people tO read." ADd his
wori&lt; a~ l!leYw .MEIII1Drial, 'Ho&amp;-

Gay fih SessinnBHelpHonwsexuols
Solve Individunl Ickntity Problems

does.

~;

By ~ ~ER
may be once too often." 'D&gt;e
Jim, a ~ senior who
brothers feelthastrongly that it is recuJarly a
Gay Libera-

H~.1,. :d::'.m-~ ;~"~';"~

ll8IDPhlet cowriDa the JIOUIIIi
lroul ""!"'!'Ption to abortion to

""""

In order to get the booklet
printed and make it widely
available, the brolbers worl&lt;ad
• -through the Conmnlnity Actim
Corps (CAC). CAC is DOW
distributing free copies from
220 Norton. Copies will also
be distributed at the Birth Cootrol Clinic in Michael which
will open this spring.
'D&gt;e h8Ddboolt has been well
received in the community and
by Planned Parenthood centers
aa-oss the country. Dr. Ja&lt;;k
lippes. developer of the lippes
Loop (one of the first IUD'&amp;available), says it is "one of
the best college hooks on the
subject." Other area gynecol~
giste are also backing it.
.
-so far, close to 6,000 copleS
have been distributed 'and another 5,000 were just printed
Bruce intends to keep wori&lt;ing on the painphlet, ~ting
it when neoessary. He vteWB the
project as part of both his medical training and tile respoosibility doctors have. Both ol the
Middendorfs1irmly believe that
"IM.lthy understanding of human aemality goes hand in
hand with a healthy mind and
body - : . · and !hat ~ re8poll8ibility entails haYUliJ a full
~ledge of your human sexuality."

3

J:"'
2.12N'!:':. (s -:'~
"For some stnmge reason rm

~..!...ct:'l~y~~
button." They all advocated
~~not atleod Buf-

falo's Gay ul&gt;eoation meetings
because, as one member put it,
more at ease since r ve started "'fbere are mutual BUBPicioos;
ClOIDing to meetings. It all began it's diflirult for gay women and
because one day we bad an gay men to wori&lt; together. 'D&gt;e
~ discuasion about
women don't associate because,
how I bad asked a girl to come as one told me, they feel they
home and meet my parents, just - don't have anything in common
for the sake of appearances. with the men """"!'t their prefSbe ~ gay, too, and knew erence for memben; olthe same
wby l'bad aski!d her, but the sex."
group ~ me of u s i n g
One commeoted, "'ne of the
someone. 'D&gt;e implied solution gay b a r s in Buffalo is DOW
was that I should have been mainly for lesbians and I fin:!
completely open with my tam- it intolerable there. rm unoomiJ.y about my hoiD09eXLUllity. I fortable. They're just not
thought a b o u t this and it friendly."
ae&lt;med the most plausible ..,. 'Discrimlnatlon'
lution for my own peace of
'D&gt;ere was consensus about
mind."
f e e 1 i n g discrimination from
To Jim, " Gay 4bemtion friends, neidtbors, family, emhasn't accomplished anything ployers. ''Employers can fire
for the ga,y community as a you if they find out you're
whole," ma: it. has belf""! him homosexual and there are no
pe~lly ~come out' - to go laws to protect you." "A polioebeyond just accepting the fact man deooy can attempt to pick
of his own homosexuality and up a guy and if be ODilBents to
to end his plight as "a closet go along with him, be can be
case" (one wbo keeps in hid- arrested" ''It's considered dising).
orderly conduct for men to
'To KrMM Younell'
dance together in public." Jim
Fred, Jim's friend in his mentioned a friend of his who
esrly twenties, feels "~ Lib- had been thrown out of a bar
eration ensts to get people to for linking fingem with another
know lbemselves and each oth- boy. "Wf!re considered undeer. First of all you must know sirables."
youraelf and accept yourself be'"'be who I e problem with
fore you can try to liberate homoaexuality i s aociological,
yourself or someone else. Half not psychological," remarked
of the liberation involved is
the Ph.D. amdidate. "Just as
ternal-within youn~ell. Libera- in anti-bladt or anti-eemitic
tion is really the wrong wordprejudices, society's behavior
it's understanding."
must be adjusted. Hopefully,

mile away!" Dan"iust said, Oh,
yeh! It wasn't until aome time
later that it came out that I
was lwwwwn•l My brother
approached me with the question, 'Are you biaemal?' I said,
'Franldy, yes,' and his.........,.
--. Tm open minded, hut I
can't see how you can do those
tbinp..'"
C&lt;&gt;rJ...-, Open
.
Dan has been compLot..a..
open with his family aholrt~

hoiD09eXLUllity. Though his
mother was not happy about it
and perhape doesn't comprehend it, and his father tends to
ignore the fact, be has not experienced rejection hom the
famil cin:le.
brought up in a strict
Catholic environment, be had
felt ''the hoJJI06eXUIIi act was
sinful, and chose the priesthood
as a way to lead a 'moralistic'
life." But be left the seminary
after two years. ''I bad had
two encounters a n d realized
that I couldn't live as a celibate." He's since transferred to
U / B and is studying both se&gt;ciology and numing.
He recalls the diflirulty be
had in convincing his draft
board that be was gay. 'D&gt;ey
wouldn't believe him and it was
oDly then that be bad to seek
psychological counooJiing to
deal with this problem. He says
'Tm well - adjusted in my
world." His ideals are the same
as thoae of the heteroeexual
"''Orld - and of his home. "'
hope to find a relationship to
last my whole life. I want to
marry - gaily. or course, I
realize rm a romantic, living
in a realistic ......td, and that
compromise is the ouly But rm not .,..., to go to lillY
bani and piclt up guys. That's
jlenl position. Various groUps
just
like
sbipe
ll&gt;at
pass
in
the
m the country are .....-king- on
antidiscrimination bills. Basic- nip&gt;t." He feels that he mainallx, it's an educative prooed~high~~":"!t
ure." To him,
time, but you bring them
=::~~m;::,.,; in: aome
hack up again to the same
dividual.
level."

ael:,g

m.()(){)Apply for
0
'"";i!!t':.f~ ,2,oiJo.FroSJiSWts ~/ ~~ej~i?~':; ~~ideas~=
J:'pi~
1 it,/~
· i v.;; r y . A~tely ·· '10,000 stu- we're lioping people will treat
. .,
.L' ',vvv

have "'applied tor next
.term: At .-rbe _M.ey"er," be 'dents
2.000 freshinan
wori&lt;ed with U. 12 and ~year- fall'
in~• while
4""" aredaas. open
._;
old unwed moihers who didn't M-''-'~--'' vymgts, :;::
know why ~ pregnant. 135
.,....... .........., slots. ""'
'"They didn't
that inter- fjff~""ning News reported
oaurae caused babies; they just
Dr J N
H tetter
thoucht it sort of grew mside ~ ~of
them," be remembers. As re- said that freshman applications
suit, words such
in= are about at the level ol the
~ ~letely "'.:- past several years (!'X""!'( for
plained. In another effort to last year when an 18 per cent
make everything easily under- drop was noted, presumably bestood, the · Middendorfs orgao- cause of the campus distwbized subjecte so they are com- . ances in the spring of 1970) .
plete on one pap or at the Hoetetter reported that aooepmost on a two-pap spread. As lances are now being mailed to
a result, venereal disease is ex- top applicants among the 45
piliiried .., two facing pages. per cent of freshmen who will
whiletbere'sooepapon"Get.- be admitted on the basis of
.ting It Slnlisht about _Myths." -high sdiool percentile IBI1k.
Ta!&gt;feo) listB an4 ill-lions · · The Medical School aPPiicaare also includ'lli. A --item · tiona ·are · 'alJri?st ~e: ·last
list .of sip&gt;s o1 P!."JJI''D"Y·i&amp; di- · year's 2.400-m 'l ine with a
vided into ~ _apd prob- atartling -upward trend nationabla llillna ftllll a full ezplana- ally. U/B this year will have
lion o1 ~ fo11owa 10 more places for medical
Malford Diedrick, director of freshmen than it had last fall.
medical m-tiom for the
U/B Medical School, did eiaht
ID
drs ·
llilllwinl DOt oa1,y ibe
iLD

:'c!miasiO::

a

~··l~ likeh"uman beings,
no t like animals.
'D&gt;e fucus of the discussion,
and perhaps the essence of the
localtro!'ra:f' of
G~
era
ovemen co
the place of and for the homo-

t'

~l!ar.;, ~- ':'l'~te1,

""""-"'= :!'"

o..-s

The Mattachine S 0 ·
"acceptance," ~:;.. which has both male ~ tf~
"we'~ considered u _n d_e s ! r- male members, it was pointed
abies -these terms, mdicating out, is more politically oriented
internal pain and external con- than Buffalo's Gay lib, fighting
ftict, were used by the young for e q u a I employment and
men - seven people who ap- housing opportunities, trying to
peared to be fully at ease with change laws, "striving to im~ves and with each other prove the lot of the homosexual
-friendly, often humorous and on the ·street." While Gay Lib
witty, often deeply thoughtful. on the U/B front has no par'D&gt;eyhadeach"comeout,"had ticular program (there's no
taken the ~tel' described by president, no organizational
J i m, ''It's diflicult to walk structure, meetings are com. tiu&lt;J!ugh that door." .
pletely informal and free-form ) ,
One was a Ph.D. candidate they have organized a few danat U/B; another a Canisius stu- ces. Held in the Fillmore Room,
dent, me
tmemployed Buf- they were well publicized and
falo resident; one newcomer, a drew a large group ol both gay
student at U/ B, had spent two men and lesbians. Another
s:..tudying for the priest- dance is being planned for
!h!m dropped out. ~ ( M arch, though one member
IS an artist; another IS
pointed out, "'t's diflirult to
male"":~ r-1e reproducti9e
·
a Junior at U/B in computer get a band to play because
sy-.. hut lll8o the llilal ol
most are straight. We had to
~t lor variaul methods
Hurw Up .., - , _
play remrcls at the last daDce."
of birth 0011trol He 1118o deU/B students """Pl up an
J?a..n. the e~;-eeminarian, dropGay lib has also initiated
aipled the oov.- wbich depicts amazing total of 13 boaors in ped his wrist and swung it in co~raising (CR)
a . apena fer1iliJ:inc
ep.
Uthe_ ann~-~tad~ JDOCbry of a stereotyped ges- groupe which the computer sci111011 ......,..........,..
The GPimation of birth 0011lure. "People are bung up on ence student described as "entrol methodo ia divided into RecnBtional Toumament this the stereotype of gay people. counter groupe in which 9 or 10
aectiona hmdad effective, fairly ......u..d
'D&gt;ey :won Tbere is a whole mnae of peo- meet on a weekly basis in SOIJif&gt;good, a. e&amp;clive and not reo- ~ j'~ table ...!::.i~ pie hom ballet dancer type to ; one's h o me to discuas their
omnwxled 'D&gt;e aut h ora ao """ .......,
.......,. trudt dri- and the bomoeelt- hangups."
thJough 11 ditrerent cateaones les ·and ·singles ....,_•s howl- ua1 ma,y fall anywbere along
Dan. who ,_my tells _his
o1 _......... fully -'-'-'-- ing, men's poclr.et hilliards and the aca1e. U I were a complete own history,_ "!'fl' be dated girls
and~ a~~vu;di: \'!""'. ~ ~ ~
- peti....~ .___,181, rd be a wet nOO- regularly in bilb achool, !hould&gt;
advutapo and elfec:m.- ol .m addili&lt;m. _...... ,....... ~- ciJe. · But my -Y of thinking be recognized the fact that be
Mch. Folloorinl thlo is a table were wm in many other cate- is that of a guy. It's just that was """"-"'181 by the time be
listing tbe coot of Mdl method. gories.
·
my sex preference is for was 14_ As Jim put it, "What
ADod&gt;er chart
the avU/B women, Sandi Gajewski a male."
was just a stqe ol development
eraae dinical fallnre rate - a and .Jean Harris, took first and Dan feels gay men are ju&amp;t for other boya, became permaof the
o1 II8COIId planes m the Women's as aaiat as heteroae&gt;:uals, hold- nent for us." Dan has an identhe method when it Is used "All E .....ts 8porlina competi- ing the same concepts of role tical twpl brother, and....,.,_
UDder
cooditiaas-by av- tioo. Jim "Disnn won first place · -•··"·- and ide as of what from a Cloae and devoted Iriab
eraae people.
~'!'&gt;~them
·
doubles ~be the female's role in Catholic family ol eigh.t. He
noop
,., •
~
tablet.
aociety. "After all, we came recalls the time whlln be was
Throwlhout tbe boo k, the
As a result ol their winDinp, from the same c u I t u r e as · sitting m the ~ of his i&gt;ola&gt;
j&gt;eme t1 paraas ahariJqJ the Miss Gajewski, the U/B Bridge straight pepple."
with his twin brother. who said
i'esponoibility Ia ~treasad. It Team and Dixon will be aoing
"''min total agreement with of a shop-lrsepe&lt; across the
ct-'t matter who takas tbe m to national competition.
Women's Lib," Jim said, street, "' can tell a faaot a

ti:.,"::f

ur StudentsWim
Honors inTourney """"""'-

an.

at=·
88

a-

..,_over

ooll&lt;di•.,._

sindas....::!

2

an

u..,...
1be label of promiscuity afLobel

fixed to the gay life is unfair,
the group contends. 'D&gt;e standards of conduct, it was brought
out, are no different from thoae
in the heteroaexual world. "People tend to project their fan'
tasies of promiscuity onto the
gay world," one student said.
Fred summed
his feelings
of direction: "Y.::fve got to get
away from the double standard
if you're going to survive. It's
a double standard because you
try to live up to what olbers
expej:t ol you and what you
expect ol youmelf and in the
end, that won't make anybody
happy, least ol all youraelf."
Jim expreaaad some lin&amp;eriniC
reticoooe, 'Tve never told any-_
one rm
and I wonder juat how many ol my
frieada would """"Pl me? At
least baU I think would reject
me. Some IUYB did find out
and tried to oamplet.ely ruin
my reputation."
As Fred said, "How many
1."!"1'~ can ao up and aay to a

.___,..,.!

~:a:~?m=
not commonplaao to be able to
J:""'*'

do il Not many
would
what!'
Jim says be plans to leave
Bulfalo after graduation.. "BuffalO is bad as far as the gay
scene is coocemed. I want to
10 to a larger ci~th a large
f!'Yn=-tion;
's slrengtb

answer,~~

"No," be added, "' wouldn't
want to be straight. That would
be denying a major part ol my
personality. I just people
to leave me alone.
"Sure, print my name," Jim
said. 'Tm DOt tbet paranoid
about it. Vas, ret il ouu wilh.
put it in the news."

�......

..,_,;.an~era.tl

By .IILL COHEN

v....,..,... s....t. . . . . .

COflle 11:1 ....e CN* r
about the ~

Last J: '-l tbe opportunity to do my student

•

Wf

roe

.--!.
U/8

tmc:biJJa at Williamsville North

rve just fiDilbed ClllftiCiiDc
Hilb Scbool I:lurin&amp; my .,qbt
oet ol '"Cnacible"' ,...
.......a ol ~ I was able 8IIIJibel'
pen. I lbiDk rm .,.me to

,

to ........,.,.., tbe rigid nature ol
daily routines 8Dif .__ aDd
as a result was able to grow
""-r to tbe students. My wori&lt;
with tbeae juniors aDd seniors
......Jed ._, sheltered """
idealistic they are. At times,
I could not help but feel a
sense ol remorse kDowiDa tbat
lliiiDY o( their ideals will be
pmdy altered, once they are
em their own. Simultaneously,
I eapaieuced tbe kind ol fulfillment wbich arises wben encounterinc aomeooe who places
his faith in tbe goodness ol life.
Fortunately, I was able to institute some of my ideas about
tbe way literature should be
taucbt. I muJd see ' - ' tbe institution o( these ideas helped
tbe students become more candid aDd booe&amp;t with me. I also
diaDverecl ' - ' eager they are
lo talk about tbinp which tbey
find to be curious """ pelplexinl- This is why I tried lo make
our diocuSIIinns relate lo their

ocream if I .-1 cme ...., J»per wbich becia&amp; • Ardaa- Mil-

ler wrote "The Cndlle' 11&amp;o-- half o( tbeae
papers are a fi!C1Biitatioa ol
what ' - """"' ........,.t ia daE
""" they do not reOoct tbe - dsll&amp;' ...... ideaL EW!Il Eaclish studeotll ·are intent em pro;
ducing tbe richt .........,.._ I )usl
wish that I could make them
realize that literature is a reflection ol life IIDd because
there are DO alalhttes ia life,
there are DO ah&amp;olutes ia liter-

c:ouae . . ..w

=~.;'~~,.:j

thoughts are is when they digress from tbe aSIIigned tDpie
and relate geueral tbemes ia
tbe play to their own experi-

"""""&amp;ntenas full of fam
~ IDilh no
At.DOrd~

......Following are eu:erpts
~

from
tbe joumaJ wbich I kept during student lalching. In this
journal, I ha.., tried to convey
my o( reliel """ discovery that lllldemath these studeal&amp;' repraa!d feelings lie insitlht about tbemaelves, hope
for true ~ aDd creati..,
abilitieo.

IJia%llin6

War
Olhen folloiD
I feartDaT
As ,_.,u 011 the paper fade

H~fa«
~before

:=:::.
in a:ltool!

'-nteJ

berent.
.
I bad a very interesting con-tion with cme of tbe studslls from tbe highest level
class. We discussed both her
feelings """ her peen;' feelings
about tbe irrelevant nature of
high school Eoglisb classes.
Here are some ol tbe ideas sbe

"Ugh, whY do - have to do
that?" " I f - wauted dmmawould have· tabu a dmma
&lt;Ia.." I l o o k - - kido....t
want to scream. I do not feel
that I abouJd -them to .-1
tbe litenture or sbouJd tell
them .mat to read.
"Killing time that's all wre
do~-&lt;md that's all they're
going to do as lone as they remain within tbe system. Of
course they're goinc to kill
time wben they have to ....
main in cme building for oeven
bows, five days a ......... IIDd
don't care about beia&amp; there.
Wliat do people do when
they're in prison? Kill time and
lose all interest in life.
I dared aqd did i l 0.. tbe
board r wrote three stal.eml!nbi,
Dlusioo vs. Reality, Alieoation,
View ol tbe Wodd as Evil, aDd
told tbe class to write anything
that came to mind. At fin;t tbe
studeuts .;- sat there, ........,
of wliat to do aDd ao I yelled
'"Think about it IIDd
write!" After me miauteo I
saw peuciJs movinc quidly
acroos their pepera. MJ oaly
ba... three words ... my ,...
per." "Good", I soid, • At lost
you're thinlriDc. Yd mlber _,
three words ... your -thaD
having you sit jp daE with
tbat blank look 00 your face."
Aa tbe students ....., ~ I
not.ioed boys ia particular
-Rick """ Georp.. It tbe

We've~ il and
.feel lhtJl none of us liU
taJrinf the lilDulure apart.
It's 1&gt;orinf U.tening to the
UDcher teiJin8 WI emclly
IDhDl 110mnlling means. I
Irate lryi.nB lo find aU lhtJl

u-

.,rnboiU,. in boob, bed:,;:t'"Uf&amp;J
'it~
and I con'I relak ill&lt;&gt; anythinf. I

ID&lt;IIIl to dUcua
my Uktu IDilh my _ . .

and do more

lhinkin6

on

eiREPORTER.,

~....:::-=. o.Z::, .1h.'r~ ~ "'.J:".f!:"::.
~ ~~

--.. ....

........, .,.,.. . . - - - - - 2U,

:...=

:z. .................

.L W'DJ'I.a'" IIIOif'LLWD

~~

-.....-.

aoaam- r.

MA.JrZ.DT

----·
--

·-~,~--

-

.&amp;.

c::z.ocnua

UFJUD""""""'
._CIMIWJJWO
~ J - a.~..._&amp;.~...,_

Q JWJWJJW

~: ._If..--

far 1M U·

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

=

poolllon papers -

11/4

conveyed:

ID . . . - a -

_.....,._.

11/11
'They .;- dou't care. are
lazy, """ dau't to lhiak.
"Gi"" us dmma """ role playin~-" . .. I kill myaelt tbiakiac
ol ways to Jlll!l tbom ialen!Sled
and ._, do they nspoad?

I:lurin&amp; tbeae put three days,
I ha.., becun to see tbe difierent leYels ol interpreting literature 81DOIII high school studslto. It is quite interesting to
- me daMes have eli&amp;-lated tollimilar
. . . - aDd
"TTie Crucible"
ha.., come up with cooclusioos
wbich range from a superficial
SUIDID8Iy ol tbe material to an
iiHieptb analysis o( il
r... already conected a set
.o l compositions for a level two
class lclassified as a....-age
level). It's surprising to find
tbe amount ol difficulty these
students have in expressing
their idees. Man:! o( these
ideas are good but rather inoo-

_ , . . . , _ _ _ _ wMoty

co .. aounlty. W. -

me

-

Tllelllpartior._ ... _ _

-

-

•

tbe job that ' - """"'

orpar,.,%...~~

to end cfWrimiaotion against
aemal m~~::::
f r a D k - o( this
subject ia """ educalilm at all
levels. I penaoally believe tbat
tbe myths about aemal miDDritieB will '-t le destroyed by
eerly. educatioa.
We ia 1be bomopiWe IDOY&amp;meat llod it di8icult to bn!ak
into this &amp;n!ll siace tbe myth
tbat .............h are more ·
to cbild moleotation .,..._
am- to prevail Our interest
in """ educalilm 81!1!1118 to inforce that myth. We must
therefore reI y em Profi!IIIIOr
I.ed:mer a n d &lt;&gt;Ill« informed
teachers of hmnan aemality to

r,::;:,

:!'!.;!d;.!:' filht apinBt these
Sincerely,
--JAIIEB P. ZAIB

Aasistant Prof...... of

Political Science """
President, Mattachine
Society o( tbe
Niapra Fronti«

�GRE~R?

, _ . , 11, 1912

5.

Notes on the Classicism ofaNon-VerbalArt:...JJ

;J

Casey Gets
Yale Prize

EDITOR'S NOTE : ThU;. the
second of a IUJo-porl artick on
the arl of pantomime. A ''Weekend of Mime" ;. being sponsored !his weekend by !he Office of Cultural Affal.rtl, Whik
lhe Canadian Mime Theatre
presentation al Rosary Hill
Colkge Saturday is sold oul,
lickels are avai/abk (or lhe
Claude Kipnis Mime Theatre
performance, Friday al 8:30
p.m. allhe .Downlown Library.
Tickels may be obtained al lhe
Norlon Box Office-$2.50 general admission; $1 .00 (or studenls. Free buses will kave
Norlon al 7:45 p.m.
By JOHN SIMON
Pro/-

o1 French

Mime is based essentially
on a series of denials or refusals
which seem to purify or
Micbael Casey's poetry, some
the theatrical epof which was printed in the unadulterate
vironment,
the perReporter'• November Colhcg~ former truly leaving
alone and in iminsert, bas boon called "the first mediate contact with nothing
important work of imagination but himself, without any frame
to come out of the war in Viet- or reference i&gt;ther than that or
nam."
those he may wish to creste:
The accolades cmne fro m
a. props or accessories : the
Stanley Kunitz, Pulitzer Priu- mime creates what he needs
winning poet, as part of the offi- when he needs it; they appesr
cial imnouncement that Casey, . and diSappesr as extensions of
a U /B physics graduate stu- himself and thus define his
dent currently on leave, bas contest and the contours of his
won the annual poetry award being.
of Yale University Press for • b. space: vertical, stationsry,
new writers.
fills out the spsce he occuA former military policeman he
pies; there is no other, save
in Vietnam, Casey, 25, submit- what h~
evoke with his
ted a book of poems entitled, eyes, and this be
may enlarge
"Obscenities," based on his mil- and condense at will-it is alitary ezperiences.
ways seen as an inner projecKunitz, who was judge of the tion, a kind of psthetic fallacy;
contest, said, "Casey bas in- grounded
( in hostile opposivented a new poetic idiom out tion to the angelism of ballet) ,
of the G.L lingo."
he is defined ·as having his feet
.AsJ Casey told Suzanne·Meti- on the ground, as his being is
ger. of the Reporter last fall, contained and .expresses itself
"It bothers me .when-I read· a iri. his .bOdy. . . .
·' .. :
poerll~J: can't understand:". ThE
:c. time:- like space, it is his
language of his po8try1 th~ iJ;• tb ·condeJwe.or: stret.cb,.,ut,· and,
'»JiJ . ~u.ninbfbited--tex~
once a -rhYthm is crested,. the
pree&amp;lV&amp;." Ji •J" u l'; h ,., ,, ,~ : lrLJof!"' tension·bl!tweelr bl\ler'and'l;ytiJ
copstiori, concentration arid ex'pansion, eternity and the moment, can be played out: without music or other sounds,
there is no external chronometry.
d. sound: music, words, all
State University Chancellor
Ernest Boyer· will address a sounds are normally removed,
dinner meeting of the Alumni leavin~ only the process of
bresthing and the exercise of
~;o~ o/n~ "J~~~! movement.
e. !he face : powder, greaseManor, Tuesday, March 14.
College presidents, Alumni paint or a mask covers the most
Aasociation presidents and ap- distinctive expression of huproximately 950 graduates and man personality, leaving only
faculty representatives of State a stylized set of featureo, holunits m the area are expected to low or void apertures in an
attend. The units in Region I anonymous oval which come
are Alfred Community College, to be used in ways not much
Alfred Tech, Brockport, Buffalo different than the hands, efState, U/B, Canandaij!Wi C.C., fects of counterpoint to exComing C.C., Erie C.C., Fre- ' Pre&amp;!'. as Buster Keaton does,
donia, a - c.c., Geneoeo, immobility in a world of flux,
J~ c.c,_ Monroe c.c. or flux in a world of immobility. .
.
and Niagara C.~,.;.
f. the body: likewise anonyThe Alfred Varsity Singers
will perform prior to the Chan- mous though exposed, if not in
cellor's address and the U /B its nudity (as Decroux sough t
Blues will do requests table-by- in many of his mimes), then in
its natural shape, establishing
table.
Tickets for the evening are $5 balances and counter-balances,
each and are available through exercising its appendalfe&amp;, asthe U/B Alumni Aasociation, serting articulations, hnd i ng
123 Jewett Parkway, telephone equilibrium between its workings as a machine and its exis831-4121.
Mrs. Roealie Turton, alumni tence as a mere sheU (its indirector at Bullalo State, is the ner being too must be expressed via this shell ) .
banquet cbairman.

m.ar

AIUIIllii'Slate
Boye:r;-Talk

Loken-:(Cimtitoud from Pl'l• 1, coL 1)

r:"'
~ ~t ra:n"!o~ ~
more expertise in fund solici-

tatioo abould be found to direct this MW elfort.
He bas no immediate plans
for the future other than completing a book which is now in

~=:'ii.:e ~toJ: ¥:~

Foundation's international proit is 1&gt;08Sible that he
may return to the intematiooal
field
Dr. Loken will be on a terminal leave for the nest six
gram and

months.

...

The contradiction at the root

of mime is not dissimilar from

the dllection of a poetics of
the body. The substance of
mime is often that of sstire:
cbarscter, types, psychological
s ituations, the mirror of a sc;
cial universe in which we see
ourselves act. Its form is more
analogous to the esssence of
symbols: mechanics, geometrical movements, displacements in
space and time.
These contradictions may become more apparent and meaningful if they are pointed out
in the context of an analysis of
some typical mime routines. In
some ways a goo&lt;f common
paradigm for mimf! is the hard
trick of rubbing one's
simultaneously w i t h
one's hesd : b a n a l
whose non-banality
the control needed
both at once.
based upon an
oneseU into
originates and
a basic
built-in con,tra,diclaons,
gles
but
by
in
tion is
so to speak.
Some examples:
1. The basic movements of
mime which are part of the
repertoire of a mime troupe,
like scales for a musicianwalking, running, c 1i m b in g,
swimming-are performed in
the context of one of the denials mentioned above: space.
A very primary aspect .of the
a rt, then, is based upon a fundamentsl oxymoron : stationary activity. The mimetic element is · arrested by its performance in place, and we begin to notice it as an abstract
exercise~ of the muscles, whlch
is bow it must be analyzed and
mastered at the origin by the
artist.
·
2. A rendition of the crowd
or group of passers-by is 8
standard tour de force of a
mime. It demonstrates his gamut of style, but it also demonstrates some of the paradoxes
inherent in the art: the way in

:~ch~~~ ~~te~t!da'h. ~

mime's movement from one vignette to another; the stylistic
unity which perv!ldes a d iversity of character. Marcel Marceau's garden begins and ends
with a statue; Claude Kipnis's
drugstore begins and ends with
the same old gossip; cycles are
perfect f o r m s, impenetrable
zeroes which have a single center, whatever the permutations
along the circumference.
Crowd scenes performed by
a group of mimes usually have
an expressionistic aspect, with
masks, costumes and expressive
movements accentuating the
uniformity within which a diversity of theme develops and

!:!"·
~v~r'!~o~,,&lt;:!..!!~
admiration for the precision of

the group and an instinctive
wish for some kind of relief,
even at the risk of a bresk in
the mime routine (like a girl
out of step among the Rockettes). Mime performed _...by
more thari one artist al'a411De,
however, is rarely as sstisfying
as the solo, partly perhaps because of the grester set of expectations aroused when the
tension is contained within a
distinct unity. (Marceau's
troupe is no exception here;
Etienne Decroux alone was

a rell\llar syncopsted movement
and an ultimate immobility.
The immobility is comparable
structiuaUy with the control
against which the life of mime
is played oul Thus one of Marceau's most famouS creations,
titled something like ''Youth,
Maturity, Old Age," shows us,
in a few minutes and in a
single position on the stage, the
cyclical passage from a foetal
position through the vitality
of youth to the d.eliberation of
maturity and a newly adopted
womblike posture as d e a t h
closes in. The central movement ·i s a constant stepping; a
cognate is the mythm of the
arms which become a sort of
pend ulum allowing . the last
gesture to be a downward fall
of one forearm crossed over
the other. The context crested,
as often in this art, makes us
rivet our attentiOn on the most
relatively m i n u t e gesture.

!,~~~~ 1-h,~e~~~;r:;~~td 0 f",;

butterfly in another Marceau
mime has a comparable intensity. Chapl in in a d ream episode of Limelight used his eyes
alone to suggest the dance of

~';,f": 1:0~e~eM~:;~ ~

his fingers take on the extension of the butterfly wings and,
~=~~eth~:...!ll/ ~~ n~
condense in a small gesture
and contain in a lew figures of
one hand the possibility of life
and death. A "'lif-&lt;:rested ~e
pitting movement against
mobility, the routine then
dis 1a 0 f th te ·
~Uili, alhe k fy 0 r J:e =~
himself with . the result either
the relief of freedom from
movement, or freedom from
immobility.
(
4. Mimes often take legends
for their subject matter which
allow for a dedoublemenl : Marceau's "David and Goliath,"
Kipnis's "Eve and the Serpent," "Jacob's Struggle with
the Angel." A partition serves
Marceau to aUow him to
emerge on one or the other
side as a brute or a flute-plsyin~, sling-shooting youth; he
miXes them up in order to
point up their origin and resolutions in a corporate union as
it were, but this mime is a

the paradox of anti-literature.
Fiction of today uses words to
express its lack of confidence
in their l'?wer. Mime is performed With the body alone and
~gly with a technique of
"::
mimicry; yet, in its purest
manifestation, mime aspires to doubtedly through greeter pre- &lt;the same time Eve (;·;us one
a level of abstraction wbich cision and abstraction, more arm ) and the serpenl Econwould deny the body in · its uninhibited ahd harmonious in- omy allows the ps!ii ·on to
normal recognizable h u m a n terplay in reference to a less serve as the tree. Lilte the cia&amp;form. In fact mime is a com- - ''hwnanistic" theme, such as ' sic tour cfe force of the mime
bination of mimesu and asce- trees. or machinery, cloeet in seen from behind with his arms
rojected behind him caressing
su: a caricature of reality fact to dance. )
3. The most profound mime,
back in sudt a. W!IY. as to
which it evokes to treat ironically and an exploratory synthe- in terms of mythm, is baaed BugJest a leas N8.1'CJ!"'lS~C emsis of. physical movements upon a contrast, often. of melb- brace .a dewc, the. trick IS ceowhich' transcend that reality in dramatic proportions, between tared m the seemmg autonomy

:::!f ~rfc;::/:rs ~~~.

~~h.n~iu= l::'~t

I:

==.:

of the arm as it appears to Eve,
tempts her less and less unsuccessfully. The counterpoint
of her expressions,- however, indicates that, symbolically, the
serpent is a projection, just as
it is li tersUy a part of the performer. Jacob's angel, participating in a more abstract ;;truggle which approaches close to
Decroux's kind of experiment,
must be imagined as a similar
projection of the human figure
we see contorted before us.
New legends of this sort also
are based upon a tension between freedom and control
Marceau imagines that he is
trying on a. mask wiW:h he fi·
nally cannot remove. Our atte n t ion is concentrated· on
the face. The hands serve as a
kind of curtain although they
are used realistically -too as the
efforts to take off the mask intensify. They pull at and draw
the face now this way, now
that. T he dedoubkmenl remains a p roblem of immobility
and movement but it seems
now to have enveloped the very
nature of the mime itself, the
mime himself. It poses in the
same mold the problem of appearance and reality. Kipnis's
most perfected creation, "The
Bottle," is in the same vein.
It also progresses in tone, beginning on a boisterous level
and ending in tragedy. As
the tiny bottle grows and envelopes the drunk, the smaU
spsce emanated by the mime
around himself becomes a prison, like the mime's mask,
the nightmare of a frozen state
or claustrophobia. Real or ima jpnary, the bottle is obvioU&amp;Iy a projection of the body,
numbing first the finger and
!inaUy the whole. The beauty
of the paradox we aperienoe
derives from the fusion of
theme and technique: We witness a struggle between a basic
aspiration toward free movement and the irremediable encroachment of human limitations. At the same time and
inversely as it were, we wi~
ness &lt;the supreme control of
1he artistry as it articulates expression through the body. A
humanistic achievement occurs
as man becomes a kind of superior machine while enacting
in which his body fall_s

!i:a

Bibliography

Barlanghy, Istvaa, Mime
Decroux. Etienne, Parolu •ur
le mime
Dorey, Jesn, Mim&lt;!

~r!'~tn~~
phyoionomiu ~~ gatu

Lohan, Rudolf, Tho Ma.t•ry of

Moueme:nt

I..woon,Joan,Minu!
Sodey, Eyea

W::!'~;!&lt;:thrine

�~

6

,...._, L7. D72

Brait Coastltatloa aad By-Laws
lor Prolessiolaai Stall"""""'Seaate
t;

-

The campus~ of t h e - Uni-

_ , - _ , ISU'AI
will hold . . ..-ling to dis&lt;uso the
...-- Stoff Senale Constitution ... Febnury 23. The session.
which will Sbrt .t 3:30 p.m. in Diefendorf 146. i s - to ~
·p r o - Qff - - Dr. Norman

........ '*"*
-· -

-

of SUPA. is ento .-the constitution

..... -.,.,....,.,.,. ... .._oons.

- He the constitution ..
prin1lod here is only in the first chft " he is anxious to change it to
of the mff
~ The orgoniation is _,;.lly
open to .._nons for Ar1ide s. Section
lie. which-witho,..esaototioointhe
Senote. The - . . . . . . . COmmittee is
-=rively
ilhemotive plans asks tMt .._nons be 10
--. Mel- rc.z. ext. 1801. Com-

-

l11l!l!t more fully the -

solicitinV

... moy
be._,
to · eof
xthe
t .document
211M....
Noncy
· - Sludios. prowost.
F.,_
ulty
of Ecluc3tionol
ext. 5447.

After the open .._... the Constitution Conmittee will ~ -- lions into the document this draft
will be ... by the ~ ..-.eniie.sloip. expects the Pl'ofossional

Stoff Senale to be functioning by -tv
... ly.

PR OPOSED
CONSTITUTION

-·--

~of-YortcaSuffolo.

Article,, _,..__-

Stoff-_,

, _T h e seel&lt; an actiw&gt; role for the professional
mff in the_.......,. of the UnM!nity.
2. The Professional
provide advice o::ounoel in adminislnttive matteos. including such motters "'
-"&gt;tment of p r o - mtt. ond
- • assist in the derelopoobot of ad-

Stoff-_,

ministmivepolic:ies-~

Stoff-forum f..- exchange of

J_ T h e -

inf-

7

Yortc """' ......... for pB3i
.._......... -~-be
- - . . . . . . . ritjlls- ~of
_ . . , _......,... rxapt ..,.

- - no.....,.--

be ineligibTe

IOhold office in theiWp-L
~1/l·h----·

·bdei p-.oofthe-definition
of """'........ is ... b e . . - by the

-~

,.......

Section I · Offlt:Jrn ...i/ Dutirs
- The-ofStole

Stoff--

-~of.....--;­

provide pro,__ in order
t o - i s h _ , _ _ , - f o r its
aJitintetheCXImmOnillity
of . . _ ......... ~!-' in the
normol _.....of the Unioouity.
5. The ......._... Stoff Senile-

-=-

llffiliWon with the Saolle Uni_ , - Asmciation ISU'AI
_ . . . . . . , w i t h _ . . . . . , _ ......
corned with Unioersity .tfaios in order 10
promote the ~ welfare of its ........
bas- the Unioersity_
Anidolll-"

T ...

~~-~--­
Memtwuloip slooll include .. profesoionol ~ of the Stile IJrWasity
of Yortc .t lluffolo with thefulow_i n g _ .

w domic
pruhooionol ....... .... - . - I l l ..... - -

__, ..... ;au-•

-=
let--

.-omit- i n - . -..-- -

lbiCiliiiS.WO.~~

in iinlom-type pulitianr..

Secloian/1 - ~-""""'14&gt;

The ~ip of t h e - - ·
aJI1Sist olthe foliowing:
(a) The of Sti8e Unive&gt;ity

o1 Yortc at Buffalo who - ·
""""'ezc olf'tdo without vore;
(billie Dainnan of the~ -

of

-""""'as

benhip• ......,
O&gt;airmonoftheSenate;
(c) The V;ce Oaimun of the pB3I
...........p_ ..... _ , _ ...

--.---- - l'residont of the StitJel-.;ty
of Yortc • The Ouinnm

ViCE Oaimun of the Senale -

a...-.

int1!mo1 ond . . . - to SUNYIB
-~---10

Elecl;
benhip
...... _
(dllhe
Soi:Roory
of t_
h e_
_ . _mem-

P r o - Stoll ,_..,.,_ The
be - - for can-

tary of the Senile;
(el35 ....,._.._ eledi!d by ond

_,;,g ..-.,. of the Committee. the Sol-. the _ .
" _... ,.,.., . . . - • these
.........,._ The Quinnm -- - .. . . . . . - b y t h e
Executioo ~ The Quinnm
- b e - - f a r . - . - ol
afflcio The

be ...

-

from the _ . , ~ip
according 10 eledion pi'OCII!GJres

....., tiol&amp;.

- - be alloc:ated to
eoclioffournuior-·111Faculties; 121 Offices of President.
v..,. for Aocademic Af-

Dr

t.Jils..

l..lniwe1ity-wide Oivisinns; 131
~ Uni...ny Relations; (41 Soudent Af.

of. officiol aJI'IIIDit:tJ!e

the in deillings with -

Sysurns

.....

Stoff

bir$. This - - be
according
to the mio which the

---

~-ipoleocli­
-tothe-~-­

v-.... ~Elect-'"""

v-~a.a-='

ship. a1111Pi110d._ of SeptariJer 1
prior 10 the eledion of the Senale.
(Detains of the ,.,. ..... , _ ,
sysli!m .... being finalimd by the
Gowern.-.ae D&gt;mnil11le.l
(f) The .........
to the l..lniwe1ity Pl-ofessionol Associ&amp;-

.. his pr;m.y ~ the ._.,;;,;pity·
unclstiking ~-of the
-mon in his - - - The VICE

Cuini....-

Iii-

=~:;{~
•

mmitont ........._
a..innon
Boa -

-

- - He

..,__., botome

the of his ...... ... ViCe..Oiiirmona..innon Eloct.
Sor:rrrary • The Soi:Roory-- ..

a..-ing_a.._isl0be-1Dthe

Office far ~ ... the
~ . -....... TheSoi:Roory is-.
- - for , _ . . , periodic .......
Stoll - - ------~by
t h e a . . . - ... ~~

-of,..,._..

~/1-T--«~
a.;,_,_ Vice ~

Bod, Soi:Roory b e - - by
the_.."
L Jloipond-office oo July 1. AI -=sians of 1hese

~

officers -

be
"" the - - o f - Eloi&gt;tians ~--be..__
_
.... _ _ _ _ ....,.,......of
not ..., 15. The officers-

toinot -

... _..\Iicea..---the ViCE

a...- .... - -

far

- - - Oloir-. The Soi:Roory
..... be...,..,... .... . - -.........

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

.-;odofiWJe-.

-

-

far •

~111- -R;'
1«~
CJflir.s
•
- SToauld-of-~be .......

...__,_.._,
~~~~--3 ........

in the b y - - ~

-

a . . . - . - - indiwiduoTs.

forE-.-~-- .

......-

-.--..e--

....-~----

w n.

offic.softlle s...;
(bl Roza-•IMiws - - by . from theS... Rep; ........... of
..,. of die 4 in IJRIPOition

to the -

qf the -

iiXalpt -

nu-slooll-te..m..one
(111D'monm..two(21;

lei The- ••ee•liitioo 10 the Store
Uniweaity Profesionol Association.
No moy- oothe ExecutM
COmmittee ............ not COiiCi.n1!ntly
--·-oftheSaaa_
The a...-. of ""' slooil be
the Quinnm of the Conmit- - The ViCE o..inJw&gt;.Oioirm Beet
slooll be a of the ExecutM
Conmittee. . . . - in the
Oiairmon·s - . The Soi:Roory of the
- - be. - o f the Executive Commitll!e. """"' as Secretary to the Oonwnittee. "The
Parliamentarian of the Senate - • be a
iiOIHIOting I'IIEITitiOr of the ~
Conmittee ...,., .. Parliamentarian to the ExecutM Oonwnittee. The
- o f the University shall """"'ex
afflcio without a vote. All membets
f:leced to the ExecutM Oonwnittee shall

...,.,,..., _ _ sloallsenoenotmore

a..innon -

.... Sorulr - . . IObe_..swithin
~ - . . ._
Theoe
_
..........
_ -,

the profesoionol derelopooeot of
irdMduols committood to c:oreors in the

T -.,of

.
1bere be. -1hr'ia9l which
the _ . ............. functions_ Decisions ituWIWiAidaliiWA of the Seiute
be binding ....... the ~ip•
• is caPied for by 30
percent of the SenmJis ,..,....r or by
petition of 10 peraont of the~

lJniwssity of Yolk • Bufblo sloaR
b e - of t h e _ . . · - - " ·
Clioi'D8n- The Quinnm- ..
his pr;m.y ;My the ._.,;;,;pity liaison - . t h e - S i a f t S o n a l e

Unive&gt;ity - · ..... such recommendations .. ....., be """""""'Y in these

4. T h e -

, . _ V. "-inn.- 7'
dies.~ 1 - FfiJCiions

~ip..

his pr;m.y ;My - - of
minutls for _ . , ·--sloip - -

promote

~of- ......:

morem..3rnon1hsi'i!iliilinii1g-a
----beheld.

ArtidePV-or&amp;.sofdie_..._

tion and for a&gt;nsidontion o1 ~
related to the administJation of the

matters.

ofthe _ _ _

2 ....

tion be ..... ......-..
......... o f - - 1 - . ; t y o f -

mmmittee adiwity -

This oovonization - • be known as
the P r o - S t o f f - of the State

provide •

......._...

s..-.11--

tion.

Rep;"'""'ototiwes eledi!d 10 the Senoe

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

--f..-two(21ye.s.in~

tams. -

""""""' office ... July 1.
A '"*esaototioo to the Senate sloaR be
.-;..~
inoligibTe .... .....nection two
(21
of -

.-

foZZowing his finalll!mL

't be the obliglbon of eledi!d
'"*"'""''- to all meetings of
the Senote. If ., - o f the
Sorulr b e - from- t w o -

. . - . , . of the Sonale.... -. • without satisbctory
~ of....fi.-10 thell&gt;airmon of the Senate. h e - be~
. . , _ _ . , from _ i p _ His

conduct . . .,
fill the """"Pired ............. notific;otion
by the Soi:Roory of the 'Senate.

CXIIiSbtuency -

-·INiT

The Soi:Roory of t h e ... - - . - t h e minull!sofiiZI
Senile - . within 1En cloys folow..

-.--..

--

~ 1- Funt:tian

Oammit-

s.-. - s.-.

of the
by from
of . .
which - . - - ... - o f t h e s . - , .
lliiJioct 1111
- - - i n .........
. . jurildiclion of tile Senile.

s...

~~~----..
n. Ex8cutM Comnoiae

of the UnM!nity ...... may
invite to sit with it .... the
...,.,... of a&gt;nSUZiiition advice. but

without voting - Stonding Speciol ~- othoii nquin!d
to I'EpOrt to the sto.- ,..,....r such
reports to the Exealtioo Coirmittee fiW'

~ to the with the .......... .. of the ExecuCominitbe. The ExecutM Qxnmit-

expe;itious

- · ...........,..,
its Send!
opinionsto the
at all
....... meetings-. s u c h - - - . . asmaybe.-y----

RICOIIMi6G6oiiS

The - - - of the ....,_...
Stoff s-- ... -~in ..:cordonee with IUCh b y - - may be

- by_
. . -,., ..._No..-be ,._ty
rmfied
the .......
b y - ...., be rmfied if it is not in
- w i t h - aJIIItitution_
AnidoVlii-A
t ..........
SlociJOn I
Subject to the Section ... IMelings
(By~ Article II. _
..._.IS 1 0 .......utution....,
moliono
10 be conside;ed by the ..................
ship (11 from the
121 by •
s9Jed petition of • 10 percent ol
the ....... ,., ....

be,._..., •
s.- ...

~II

AnidoVl - e--.~ofdie

1bere- be . . -

~III · Pow.n-Dutirs

The Executioo Committee - · have
- t o considor-- ._..ing all
matteos within the jurisdiCtion of the
Senale.ond -~--comultwith
the University President ... . . , matters
of Univs&gt;ity policy which he ....., place
before it ... which the ExecutM Conmit- - moy voiit to considor. In .tdition. the
Exeo:utiWo Committee - ' _,. as the
COmmittee On O&gt;nwnittees.
The ExecutM Conmittee ... its Clair..... may .....- infomation from any

AnidoVlT-By.u.

Ser:tioniii-At.u-

~IV - &amp;r-ts

m.. 2 terms without., iniErVI!ning year.

Such ..........IS be sulirniU8d
totheExecutioo~--30

ct.ys prior to • . . . . - ... - - ..-in!!
of the _ . . ....... ,.,..... 1hat ..,.
....., be . , _
... t
he
--circu·
'-ltotlle
_
_
_
2DdoYS
~to1he~_..._
~Ill
-

..-in!!.
'"'*"
_. .... . . . . .,...the.....,.._t.
•
16iiS . . .

_
. - _ be
- ........
, . .,.;ned
,..,._
,.,. ._
within2D

-

be

�7

, _ _ , 17, 1!172

cays of moiling.

bolots
and ........
..,ms as .--inld. The
~ ..,

- - of -

~IV
~

shall become a port of

this cansti1ution if - - by ' - "
thirds of the members voting.

Artil* IX • RatifbtiDn
This c:onoti1ution shall be ralified
m0a bolol$ sent ID all gerwal
......-s. The ballots be returned
within 20 cays of the mailing. It be
_ . - t by two-thirds of the members
voting.
•

~

~forall-~

Sei:1JOn
l n _I I
· SllrodliW
D _
~
_ ___
of the Exa:utiwe
constitute the Committee on ~ of the gerwal
mernbenhip. The Executive Committee
shall appoint~ ClDmmitlaes on

bilities, the -

Artio*l--.....
SIEoiafl I - _ , . , . of the Gmt!nlt

..,_......,

The ...,.. ..-ing of the genera!
...........ip be held in the spring of
..,.. yew and the
shall advioe
all members in .nting of the date; place,
and time of the ....,,..-!Meting at least
fou,_., (141 days-in advancle. This meeting shall, omong
items, be devoted
to the reports of the elections of new
_ . . ........... ip officers, and new
members of the Senate. Special !Metings
of the gerwal ........... ip may be called
by the a..innan or by at -fifty (50)
pat:ent of the Executive ConwnitU!e or
by petition by at least .;-(1 01 percent of
the mernbenhip.

s.a-v

0--

~II -llenit&gt;gl of the Senate

The Senate shall hold at six (61
regular .... ..,.. yew. e.:h regular
meeting shall include a report from the

a..;.....,_ wm- notice of._._ meetings shall be sent to all members at least
ll!n 1101 cays before the !Meting. Notice
shall contain the _..ta for the meeting
and all CommittEe reports scheduled for
pnsentatioo. Special !Metings may be
called ~ any ~me by- the Qlairman, by
the Executive COrrmitU!e or by petition

·or -. -u 01 ri.oin~ieoi c.n... s-ui. A
majority shall constitute a quorum for
!Meting of the Senate.

any

E1aJcrJtNe

O&gt;nrtnir.e of the Senate
~ngs of the Executive Committee
shall be hold at._. . i n - . not less
fnlquently than once .m month. A
majority of the Exeartive CommittEe
shall c:onstitule o quorum.
Artil* II • Elactions
n-e will be • 9anding ConwnitU!e

on Elections to exen:ise CIVIInlll vision of elections 1D the Senate, 1D the .
Executive Committee of the Senate. 1D
the GrioMiic:a Conwnittee, to statewide
SUPA eoo-ning Bo.-d, ...t of Officels
of the gerwal ....-.hip. To .,.,.,;de
repnB&gt;tmon from small' consti1uencies
within ..,.. ........m.tions and elections of Senate members within .m area
shall be c:onducl8d punuant 1D 1he
"Buulet ..,_,._-

Eoch eligible VOIW within an .ea - 1
be allocated ..... equal in .....-- 1D the
total .....-- of his area's Senate mem' bers to be elected in • .;-. y-. and his
total allocated ViJtiiS may be cast for one
or more ancliclo1IIS as he ..,.. fit. e.g. a
- i n area 1 (if 7 ,.,.._,tatives...,to
be c::t....l for the Senate) is entitled 1D
seven - . Upon ....,.;pt of a list of eli-

m.v

gible in 1, t h a t divide his 7 wotes omong nenbin or he
may cast all 7 for one .,..._.,_ The fOUl'·
- . r-oans receiving the . numbor of ViJtiiS . . oomiilltlld. In the
final ._.loting. the ..,..- agoin casts 7
votes either divided or all for one norni._, and the.i with t h e . , _ . . . . . o f - - elected.
Duties of the Committee on Elections
shall indudilalloation of the.....--. of
oep-•ta- omong . _ '*tifiuotiou

of eligible and .,......._ _,;tiof ............. and run-off ballot
llrOCIIIb-.. distribution of ~ical
dota on all candidallls. coonlination of
election ~ within and

Sgft

s..- -

ment,- time- be____,

Clilillb:t. -'Ia
" ' · . the
of • .-an11
_....,.the.....,..,._
Sboff s.n- to on the
~ Bo.-d of SU'A.
11js--be-brthe
-

-Ill-~

ComnoiUie.s..tf
The """'-ionan

s.-.......

1D SU'A thall be a memtoeroftheS...

and the Exa:utiwe
Senate.

~

of the

Q&gt;rnmittee -

(a) Economic(b) Sections

BY·LAWS

~Itt - _,.,. of the

Elections and •
~---..--....-....
and the Sonne be the of

...o.........

The

(cl l'l.obliations
(dl Professional Deoeiopoa•
(e) Uniwenity "'-'ing, Sorvicl!s, and
Regulations
(f) Commooity Relations
Members of s.anding Committees shall
serve fD&lt; one 111 yew begiruW1g July 1 .
They maybe~
T1Be shall also be a s.anding CommitU!e on Grievances. ~ of this
CommitU!e shall be elected by the genenl
- i p. They shall-forone(11
year beginning July 1. They may be re-

-

v - Gra-Mila.lrwos
Secaioro I-~
~IS may be railed by the pro-

fessional mff - .. by ......
ants with " - " 1D actions of Slid
professionolmff.

Sei:1JOn II • Scapo .
It is expected that &lt;:&lt;&gt;mpllints bnJu!tot
to the ot1ention of the Profeslional s..rt
Senate Grievance ~ be
not directly ISIIOCinod with ihe
tams and conditions of ........ment,
sinol! the bqoining _,o: . . . , . _
under the Taylor Law will _ . . . . .
for t h e thereof.
r

!Jiennce ...-,..,.
Secfjon

Itt- Ptotes.ionM 5rJH-..

as-

~~

elected.
S«tioo II · ~ Slructr.we -

Po-.

Senate and eadl Standing
Committee are th~ polic.yrecommending bodies of t h e -al members. All sud! ~

(a) The

shall

commence

functioning

immedialely upon assuming office.
It shall be the illty of eadl St3nding CommitU!e to ~ opstions and pol'ocies within the
CommitU!e's jurisdiction and to
initiate investigations of .-cy qoes..
tions germane to its 311!11 of interest. All Standing Committees shall
report in writing 1D the Senate by
submitting their reports to the
Executive Comonitlloe. whido in
shall promptly the
reports 1D the Senate with the recommendations of the Executive
ConwnitU!e.
lbl The Executive Comonitlloe. with or
without direction from the Senate.
may from time to time create
Special Q&gt;rnmitu!es. ~ of
Special Committees shall be ,.,.
lected by the Executive Commit-

tum

- · and shall _...{tor sud! tams
and_ shall perform sud! as
the Executive Committee determine. The ExeaJtive ClDmrnitll!e
shall dos9&gt;ate the a..innan of all
Special Committees.
(cl The .,..._.,. on Special or
Standing Committee (with the exception of the Grievance Commit-

0--

tEe) shall be - - by the
Executive Commitii!L Voting

"'""""""'ip on

-v

except the Executive

may

i-

CommittJoe.
CommittJoe.
Q{jJhe

Uni-.ity ~- OJmm1b,e

members who .e non-tows;Gai of
the general .... - , . , - t h e
privilegos of the floor of the So&amp;
ale, and of ~ing on the floor of
the Senate. so long .. sud! ........
bership continuos.
(dl Eoch Committee and
consult with .._u.e UoWesitv
personnel within the of its responsibility and report 1D the
Executive ~ on ...-s
within the area of its ; n - . The

. _.. -and

·-.-me

---One

This cornmitU!e shall be on -

tiQdv of five 151 members of the profos-

committee-be chosen by the cornmitU!e
It shall be the choinnan's ._-..jblity
1D ...,.;,e c:omplaints,. set up comnoittee
meetings and .,.,.,;de for the efficient
functioning of the committee.

Sei:1JOn

The complainant submit, in
the Professional Sl3ff Senate
CommitU!e. the folkMing
information:
(a) Name, position, campu5 adoii1!s$,
department and 1eieiJhone.
(bl Nature of c:omc&gt;laint, induding
~incidents and-(c) Names of any other pa-ties wh&gt;
m9tt be ii'1VIIOMd as wimesses or

-

mi!#lt

mation.

s.- -

The Pro,_,.. s.tf
.......... affil- oftheSIMaUnMnity
Pro,_,.. Aalociation ........ the
- o f SIA'A ,__as - . 1 in ils
II, Sldion I AIL

.. CbniUtution.-

~

SlictDIVI-AppM
Cal- thiny (301 days of the necoipt of the final docisian. ........
-be-IDtheExa:utiwe

CommitU!e of the Prolioslianll
s..tf s.o- on the _ . . . . that
there
of
.
, .- - Ill
~or 121 that

~··
-~~·-·
-the .-tv
erntlliiOUS,
or 131 that •
.-tv
excasn.e - im~ or (41 as justice may re..,re.

The ........ must be in .-iting and must be delivered 1D the
Oioinnon of the -

Professional Sl3ff Senate• ...,.,..

__..and '-sucb .........
(cl The Executive CommitU!e shall
review the filtdongs of the sz.-ding
Grievance Comminoe and either
1. accept the findings and nectAI WI eel idatiol IS;

2. occept the findings and prowide diffen!nt ........... .
tions;c:w

.........

3. -

mmplaint will be received by the comminoe cfuinnon;
(b) Within five (51 - i n g days of re-

ceiving the complaint, the - -

man shall _.,tone member of
the COIIIIRittee . . . mediator of the

complaint;

lei Within len (101 ~days of receiving the comploint, the mediathe disshall attempt to pute in an informal ~ prior
1D. forl'llli
(d) If on~ at infonnll - .
tioo does not ........., the corn-

cornrninoe--..

plaint, the cornrninoe shall CXIINftle the Grievance Commit:IIOe. (This shall be dane n o -

than

(211 of the fonnal

-ty-one

days from the complaint.)
(

lei The COIIIIRittee shall hold ., inforl'llli '-ing and - - i t y lor •

pi1IOiide ful
pa-ties 110 be
- - Air( porty 1D • . may object"' the~-­
...., that a member of the cornmittee is prejudiced or otl&amp;wioe
disqualified from ....... &amp;och
objection shall be a.obmit1Bd "' the

- · in writina. at the time of
the tint informal - - . . The

-.-.........
___....,___
shall CiliiOidor sud! on
it -

from the - . . . The ........
-be .._..tiD._....
·-=--of-~Thl
~-bl_.t1D

w i d e - .............
COiiliilinle -

w-

- . . - its . .

within~ 1211
.-..-~Upon--

liblnlians

the 'entire

_ t o _ the_"""""'·"

to-

'*"" -

(3) member
be
appointoed by the Oioinnon of the

-Committee
sudt
....,..._ At..- fuD delibention of
the
the sub&lt;:oooooti.-e thall
present its f'ondings and ...,.....
llll!lldotions. A copy shall be 1D both the cornploinont and the
defendlnt.

..,.,e..,

Sei:1JOn VII - Further AppiWs

1•1 The fonnal

-

1D -

(d)Should the Executive Committee

form;

v - l'roc:erlun

Re-

ceipt of ....,..., shall promptly

s9&gt;ature of complaiiiont.
Secfjon

-

Executive CommittEe.
(b) The Executive Comminee of the

infor-

.,.,.,;de -

(d) Date of fonnal mmplaint

objection and if "" -

S.. Uoii-

...... - - o f .its
f'iliilingo and iaAWWdootiut&amp;.
(This shall be dane no 1han •
(141 . - . . - ~ ....
the condulion of the_...,
Ill n. ............t and - diftnclont be - - . t in wrilins of
the f i n a l - of the Gr-..

Grievance

-

I~

theGr-...~--

~ 1D

be _,;tied in.~ .....
_ . . t by the Executive Commin..

Artil* IV - , . _ -

Upon .._... ......... --

- a n d .... ful · - · · . . .

IV·~ for~

of-~~­

-*fl'il.

1ft

(o)At..- due delibention. ...,.....
iilOildotions for resolution of •
comploint win be ror-nted by the
Executive Committee of the l'iof1sionol Staff Senole 1D the President or his~ for~
tioo.
lbiShould the ~ ...,.....
mondation of the President or his
~ be unsatisfactoly to the
pa-ties .._-ting the ~
the Executive Comminee of the
Professional Staff Senate ...,.
JI!Sl that the griewanae be for.
- - t o the Stale Faculty Sonne
~ Committee for further
'-ina and action.
AI • times cbing the . - - pro-

-

c:abe · - piOi2S" . _ - be---~.--- include
but not limited 1D the followil1g

w.--.-;..;

o f - . . . 10 •

---IS;
-VI (b) right 1D counool;

fclful - - - of all (dlconfidentiality of •

~

Pw §
ta f Alotllarily
~ Rules of Onlar. Neoily .,.
...... - _ . . t h e Pro........ Sgft

in all elliS in they -nOt
in conflict with " - a-,-.
The Oioinnon IIOIIlii.- and.
with ex.:utiwe CIDrnmiNe - - .
IIIPOint a l'aliai&amp;"'"iaL The ......
~lhalf--~hisprw-y~
the •-atiliil'J for rulii1s o n - of

............_.. .._._,.,,s--,
and ex.:utiwe~ ,_.,.._
&lt;~--·,eoll)

�, . , . _ , 17, D72

8

WhateverHap~ to Greek Organizations?
Well, the Times Changed But TheyDid!-Jot
By STEVE LIPMAN
Delta Delta
a social 01'p!lization at lbe University ol
c.:alifomia at Belteley, where
lbe ............ ol Greek societies
is ..,. only ball wbat it was
eilbt y a r s - .-1 to call itself a fratemity. Now it wants
to be "-'&gt; as a "revooutioaary liviDc-." aDd ~""' inducomeuls like camplete self_...,.at. small membership,
II'DIJII food. aDd c:t..p living

au.

-

At lbe University ol Wisconsin at Madiam, lbe number ol
Prls Pledciac IIDIOI'ities bas
dropped more than 80 per cent
in sewu years. One sorority,
Alpba Bpsiloo Psi, once amoog
lbe lltnJa&amp;oeSI: at lbe scbool, bas
l.t fllrtdosure actions started
on its tbree-year.ald $750,0Q0

-

At Bowdoin College in
Bnmswi&lt;:k, Maine, where 80
per ClOilt ol IDIIIe sludents slilJ

beloac to frallemities. lbe adminisbatioa built a 16-&lt;;tory
dormitory in lbe mid-'00s to
cet lbe entire 9l!lliar class out
ol frat hooas aDd into an euvinllmamt that would "support
lbe _.,. ol lbe collece nttber
tban ._te or merely toler.ate
1181L"
ADd at 0 / B, ~
a
natioaal fratemity, l.t for over
20 yars ~ its shingle
on lbe hoot ol a house at Main
aDd
Falls BouJevauL
r . t yar, lbe shingle came
doom, aDd lbe boys """""' ouL
'I'bat s h i n g I e symbolizes
what's happening to fraternities
aDd IIDIOI'ities nationwide, aDd
particularty at U /R
"0/B never l.t a strong natioaal fraternity system," says
Dr. Ri&lt;hard Sigelkow, vice
president for sludent allairs,
but Greelr;s at their strongestabout
- peryars
~
15
to 20
Cl!llt ol lbe undeJ'.
gnd&amp;ate populatioa, comparable to IIIIIDY "IJic frat schools." '
~ lbe fipre stands at
two per cent aDd is sinking fasL
That indudes both national
aDd JoaoJ Greek organizations.

au.

w_..

...

. . . . . . . . . . tlleEnd

'The hegiuninc of lbe end of
lbe Greek system at U/ 8 reallY started in 1953 (although
- the elrect was not felt until
Ia~) _ That was lbe year lbe
State University Board of
'fiusteos adopUd a resolution
buring n a t i o n a.l fntternities
from SUNY campuses_ 'The
. _ was discrimiaatioominor acandaJ at lbe time inwlwd national fraternities
which had dauaos in their 0011Biitutians Imming JUcb, Jews
aDd o t her minorities.. 'The
~ ......s this happening
on SUNY ...,.,.,.,... campuses_
. U/B, a poivate instilution
llirouiboat lbe 50's aDd lbe

__

= "':

a.:-u:'

SUNY's &amp;gionalism-

Some Cheer, Some Don't

early 60's, was unaffected by
~he -~
By SUSAN-~OOD
~ policy ol. hilher edthis ruling. When it joined
--.
-ucation within .._...,rting di&amp;SUNY in 1962, """"-· it had
~·~
At lbe end o1 last Sepllem- tance. 'The rising aaa of eduto comply with lbe baa. Bnt
perieoced_ 'Ibey had their
be&lt;, tbe Board ol Trustees an- mtion and donnitooy oot without a fichL
eyes DOUJXll!&lt;l their plan "'to region- lion and maintenance h a v e
Six U/ B fra~ with na- openecL
"Students -mg college aJize 1be State University ol made living at home ~.
tional aJJiliatioos SOUilht a ....
that Greek
New York" aDd U/8 suddelll,y he argues. PnlpoDents ol this
claratory judgement in Erili
County Supreme Conrt boJdiag l::.!.~ not build ~ found itself part or lbe Westem policy seem to feel that gntdu· Region of - Coordinating Area ate school is 9000 enough for
tbe resolution invalid. 'lbeir uality."
Other lesser [actors contrib- No. I. Since then this policy ol people to travel long distances
grounds were vested i n - .
Explains Sigelkow, '"!'hey uled to 1be Greeks' demise, "regionalism" bas come UDder to set educated. Dr. McAllister
scathing attack from some aDd Hull, adiag dean or lbe Gradbased their case on lbe idea HendeiSon sa,ys.
that tbey had been here such
'The a1co1&gt;o1 license Norton received praise from others. It's = t~ Jrl..in
a long time, tbey sbaoJd be alU/ 8 is a state university and
lowed to remain."
'They losL
mystique of going to drink with recently several groups have
~
'"!'bey made a mislake, I
dorms,
to implemeut lhlr' need for maintaining tbe interthink," Siggelkow
"They
Yet many people slilJ ask- national scope or lbe gntduate
sbould have Iough~ lhiilc which alSD began in 1968, were
on tbe basis or the right o1_. another factor: " dating pat- ''what eDdly is it?"
olp~_7hep-IS~~
ple to associate with othes-s, terns were broken. Fraternities
When tbe Board fust discu&amp;- be~ "--__:u-to~
mam--..
lain
"
used to get pledges by meeting sed lbe policy on September
_.,_., ....
'They took tbe wrong tadt.
"I still have trouble accept,. men after they brought their 28, tbey looked at it as "a this onmplni&lt;m, you m- dJaw
ing tbe fact that sludents wbo dales back to tbe donn. Open means ·or providing new oppor- sludents aDd faculty from all
bours made it more difficult to !unities for inter-&lt;8JDPUS plan- over d&gt;e world, 8nd address tbe
pay their tuition and fees and
Ding and cooperation." ~ needs of lbe world."
everything else cannot some- make contacts."
'The large student u n i o n, cellor Ernest B o Y e r said 1t
It is around the problem of
how join a nationalJ.y-dilialed
with
its
myriad
or
activities,
would "permit lbe University traiisferring students from comfraternity group.'The State Conrt decision assumed 1he role that frat to achieve three basic ob_iel&gt;- munity colleges to four-year
held, however, that it is within
used~n s':';'i ~- ~= ~
~tt'!,.lbe::;
lbe Tnlstees' power to appU
tbe resolution to all units of "Peoppe are DOW able to meet tnttive services; improvement ol formed. The group emerged in
friends on their own, tbey don't sludent admi8Sioas and trans- tbe late fall when lbe SUNY
SUNY.
need flatemities."
fer programs; and oonrdination Fllculty Senate began hammer'Ibey don't need them · to ol the University's CllllliiiUnity ing out its position on reciooalF"onislled It
What SUNY started, lbe make business oontacts, either, service propams to focus more ism. In Coordinating Area I,
fraternities and SDrorities them- Henderson sa,ys. "People today shalply on reci&lt;Joa1 needs." 'The this SUNY Senate committee
aren't going to join a Greek or- new policy was not "imposing on regionalism is rompoaed of
selves finished.
ganization to get into WM."
another organizational level," area Faculty Senate chairmen,
'"!'be trouble is, they Tbe emergence or Women's lbe Chancellor eq&gt;lained but SUPA chairmen and the SUhow failed to stand for """"''h
meaningful ~" Siuel- Lib played a role too, Header- was "to develop a closer fun&lt;&gt;. NY Senators. 'Ibey have had
kow suggests. "It's very likely son thinks. Girls e n t e r i n g tiona! relationship amoog col- several meetings and will coothat tbey still attract tbe kind scbool in tbe last hall decade leges that are in prozimity to veue later this month to coosider tbe tntnsfer sludent probor kid who wants ooe beer disliked the ~type or tbe each other."
•
•
LAine . ~ In !jUNY_ _
_
lem. 'The Trustees have promblast after another, and that's sorority girl_
very unforlunate.
But, the biggest reasan •for - · Ttie ~ dl_ ~ ised freshmen wbo enroll in
"For eumple, tbe whole fewer sludents joining, is "ris- bas a long history!" the SUNY community colleges in tbe fall
question of ntcism, instilutiooal ing political activism. 'They SJ&lt;St:em, pr. William Bawner, of 1972 a place at ooe ol the
racism, whatever that means. felt it wasn't a relevant .lhini c:hairmal&gt; or
_, lbe Fllculty Seu- reciooal four-year s c h o o Is.
U they were ae&lt;:used or this in to do. After all, you can't 1&gt;e in ·ate, saya 'It started . when Bawner considers this issue
tbe past, lbey sbould be leadess SDS and a Greek organization. Gould was ~r. if not "tbe ID06t ~te" because
to enodicate whatever it means I think _yoU can dntw a com- before, and ,... m the last Ma&amp;- or lbe deadline unposed. 'The
DOW. 'They could worir: with lbe
parison betJoeen tbe failure or !"&lt; Plan.• But lbe ~ direct _ ~ I Commi~ wi!l p.,...,.,.t
American Indian program; Greeks aDd lbe popularity of unpetus came a Y.~ ago when ill; _prilposa)S': to lbe ~ of
they could worlt with tbe Puer- CAC (Community Action Gov. RockefeUer issUed Execu- recional presidents. U/8 s Facto Rican sludents-if they real- Corps, Student Association's tive Order 44 calliag for re- ulty Senate cbainnan believes
ly were interested in trying to public service brandi) Right gionalization of State deput- "tbe group will have as much
correct thal
DOW there are at least ·18 sepments. Since SUNY is a de- influeDce as it merits."
"'They could oertainly "worlt antte di~isions of CAC, and partment ~ the GcM;mor, T- Olhor ~
in tbe poUution area. 'Ibey over 1100 sludents in iL 'The •t began to implement his orIn addition to lbe presidents'
could be concemed about some
of our social problems, and slilJ
ol i!'ter-cunpos
carry on with some or their mooey for, and- send money to. coordination, ~aDd pro- have been fonned Jocally to
other activitjls.
While they were noising money, grams have been 8011111 on for look at regionalism_ 'There's lbe
"If tbe apPeal is not great they were getting publicity for years. Campuaes have shared Special Cammitlee on Kepooenough SD that sludents really themselves. CAC works with a sthereludy bas~-~~~-~ afism ol U/B's Facnlty Senate
want to join, there's something minimum ol publicity_"
"!""' .......... · - - - aDd a loose fedemtioa ol gradwrong with what they're olferDid fntternities Je&amp;lize they b e - um!&amp; by pn:l{"!"""'- uate deans frcim area public
ing_"
were fading fast a few years U / 8 even iried son:"' rePooal aDd private scboola. (An older
Bob Henderson agrees. N- hack?
gntdua!" _ . . . , . m lbe. 6!"• CIIII8Drtium ol
New
assistant director ol Norton
"Sure they ...w-1 it,• Hen- for ~ ~ beld joint Yodt public aDd .,mate colHall, HendeiSon was a frater- den;on says. "It was apparent appointments With~ SUNY ..... is aiJD fimdiouinc.l
nity man at State University at that they ...,..., losing their in- ~ but this ~
: , . .....-• .....mttee is
Albmy in tbe mid 1950's aDd
that they weren't a&amp; . . _ llew 'IOOIY ....0, - . _ . ........-lof &amp;-.Hall, Dra.
served as advisor to U / B Greek f!uence,
ting any~-·
er
remember&amp;
_
1m
CalaJ; .AD.t BelrMe, Rogroups when be came here in
Did they Je&amp;lize why?
~~
bert ~~aDd Carmelo Privi1966.
.
"No.
a rePooal propam_ ODe is lbe lienL 'The group '!"" formed as
He says tbe activities or the
_ -n.ey tried to bemme more cun-ent tight fiscal siluation. 8 ....U ol a by ~
groups in both decades """ry much the same."
unportant, 'Ibey !a)ked of ways This necessitates a stricter look ~ ::: ~ umvmt~~­
or becominJ socially . relevant. at programs to make sure there BPinst diacriminatooy&amp;IJIIIG;IIdl
But they didn't know how."
is DO UDDeCe1188ry duplication a[ ~ _,._ • nplll•
•
•
and that resources are fulJ.y
,......._,..
tbe staggered terms ol oftice nn.n.
.
utilized Seoondly, tbeoe's lbe
'The group ol gnd&amp;ate echool
of tbe Senate specified.
When Norton opened . ten promise SUNY has made to deans was con-..1 biy Hn11
'The present Executm. Ccm- years - . lunch bours for U/ 8 CDDIIDunity co I I e g e sludents late ~ YM!"· CunentJr lbe
mittee shall call lbe first Greeks meant the Fillmore JUIUBDteeing_ admission to a body IS worlrlng on an JDVa&gt;ing or tbe propc&amp;d Senate for · Room. Card games aDd c:onver- (our-year coiJege in their area. tory ol ...........,. aDd _...,.
pwpoees or electing tbe &amp;&amp;:- satian.
Almoat """lY'De loob on co- --laculty, ~t,- aDd
uti"" Committee ol lbe Senate
This 'ln!llt on until about a operation in planning aDd full library facilities--within the reunder tbe supervision of tbe year qo.
utilization or resources as beDe- gional area. When this is comSpecial Committee on Elec&gt;'1"-. says Henderson, it be- 6cial Even Dr. Geonre Hocb- pleted, they will discuss ..,.,....
tions, aDd upon c::xnpletion ol came "very dear that onJ.y a field, wbo bas ._teilly spok- to thea! facilities aDd tbe eduthis election tbe pt1!llellt Execu- small number or sludents" -.-e en out apiast ..,.., """"""' ol cational needs ol lbe area.
lift Committee shall be. di&amp;- eMinc there.
regionalism, qrees that .......
Theae four poup8 aDd oCher
solved, as shall be lbe Special
r.t spring, frat luiich tables ~ of oonperation in this area ellorts across lbe State are part
Committee on ElediaD&amp;.
"""""' to the 9llCliiDd floor cafe- IS good."
ol an eflort by i n d i v i d u a I
Nothing in this article is to Ceria.
SIDIJ
schools to ~ in on the pound
be coostnJed as allectinc in any
'This fall, only a few groups
-~ ~er students aDd ad- Boor ol "''Panal planning_ Both
way lbe terms ol oftice, aDd still met there.
IDI8SIOIIII IS another story. 'The
Baumer and Hull are striiag adduties ol p r e s e n t Standinc
This term there are none.
policy of giving tnmsfer stu- voc:ates ol 1his app,...n Hull
Committees aDd Ollicers ollbe
'llat siluation aDd lbe coadi- dents top PJ:iority in admiaJions that "'we have to ll!t
Senate.
tx.. c::wsinc it aren't likely to aDd accepting fJeohmen on a our own house in order or some'The i &gt; - t EJ:ecutift Ccm- ~
reciooal _b_a_sis has -receiw!d ooe else will, aDd there's no
mittee ol lbe State Ulliwpity
Pat Maiaue, a U/B junior, ........, cngpsm from soae. WilY t h a t - else's manProfossionaJ Aaax:iation (SO- aDd former """' pnoDdoat · ol Hoc:hfield calls regional fn!ob- date am come out ...U for us."
PAl shall contiaue . to _,., lbe deflmd ~ Kappa Pbi, mm
"a dihrtioa ol Baumer libns lbe situation to
until lbe - t y elected ~ !QS aada ~"are juot ely- the quality _or tbe UniversitY a poker pme where U/B has
feasional Staff Seaate . . . . . ,.. out ~e.
- - · a -terinc doom of stand- a larp ubnunt ol dlipa in the
aDd Senate tab.oftice - July
'"Y- don't- J-t lbem, but ~-olBaumelcthe_, on,_ the ~ 1*--"'we am either nlav out
I, 1972.
tbey _ , nice to have."
· ...,
""'!'- points to ..., our haDd or ~ .,;m:t.

::t.:-tJ:

~t~im~shedU..,":'i.oi'! li':'s::"::t~ ~led~

&gt;~= t!"'d',;"

~oaned

~
7,
coL 4)

A"'""""'-ts to tbeae Bylaws will be """""""' by Artide vm ollbe Ccustilution o1
the Pi......... Staff Senate.

~~~:~'Farticle,

lbe . . . - Canmittee ollbe _ . ~
slaff orpnizatiaa shall determine lbe _ . _ ol ._.........
tiws aiJocated to_,.,_ aDd
shall ~ _ , . , - to ~
._. with eJedianl to the pro..... Seade ....... l b e - villiaa ol • Special Cammitlee
on E1ectioaL .........,. ol lbe
..., . . - Bla:uti¥e Committee

........
lililible ... .. I
' 1ri&amp; to tbe prupoaed
s..IL ~ ......... tion ol
....

·= Committee,
fram ~--.
--..u...... shall deoic-

the
. ........

7

tn.....,_ .. _ ...

--~_.
ODe
.... - , . . ..... to ..me...

r!i:,

=-.,

:!:':

~ ;.:O~d"~.: der~ ~

=::!: ~

=

w..-..

a!:ost...!!:.

PN'tssional Staff Senate---_,.
v-(~

=
":
:=...•"::r::

T.- -

""""'*""'

tr:

�,~ 17~ln2

9-

Creative Intensity at
the Craft Cen1er

Intensity seems 4o be tbe indispensable ingredieut in metalworking and ceramics in the
University's Craft Center, as
the acx:ompaoying pbotograpbs
indicate. In addition eo these
two ~r activities, the Center offers leather worksbops
{811Ddal-malring, bag-malting
and ~). maaame
(tbe art ~- knola using
different
· Is of rope, twine
and string),
till: (the dyeing
of material ~ a wu-resist
method ), enameling and band
woodworking. Weaving bas
been discontinued because of a
lack of. funds and resumption
of the silk-screen workshop is
awai~ installation of proper
ventilation equipment. 1be
Center and its activities are

open

to aludenlll without cbarse

and also to faculty and staff
(who must pay a nominal fee) .
At present, there are waiting
lists for belt-IIIBi&lt;inl, 88lldalmaking, batik and macrame.
But new basic inst.-uction in
metals, ceramics and eoameling begina every four weelra.
• 'lbe Dl!1t c y c l e - Fet.uary
22. ~ iDdMdnala may
obtain further information at
the Craft Centerc!::."?• Norton HalL 1be
IB open
from 1 p.m.-10 p.m., Monday
tluough Thursday, and from 1
p.m.-5 p.m., Fridsy and Setur~- Aocording to J~ _Fiscber,
director of the facility, the

Center las!- year bad 1!JOO students registered for 1ls programs.

�I

10

Canoor Researcher Has

International Standing

. By "D"'
Tbe Americ:ml A..,.;.tion ol

MARION .JfuoNOWSKY
...... sa-c- .,....
. Dr. Gtaaw Cudkmricz, m..
tematioaally blown UB pro,....,.. ol patbolacY and ~
biolocY and a member ol the
advisory boenl ol the Center
for II!II!IIJM!oc', hM bem invited to participate in a joint
United Stals - AuatmJi8n ~
_,.m iluust ... c:aDCer 88 well
as in an .Amoriclu&gt;-Ji'n!ndl e»-

=-...=..~

..

PaDd-BaioiDI Coumel .........

==..u.::=~-=
from priyat.e in !up
fnnd-nUoinJ ~in 1971.

_-. .q. , .J. .aca
. IIIIEVI'JY:
. exch•n••
__
VIDcw:
•

blo ...-tD--blo-.LesM---..
· The.....,.
.., HoeD 1812. HoeD -

human

At an jntenuotional .......,..
ClOIIfen!Dce to be held in SydDey, ~ March 13-17,
wodd eqJerts in leukemia,
....,.._, and akin c:aDCer will
report ... ...,.. information in
the hope ol improving UDderstaDding of its causes aDd
"""""'nisms Dr. Cudlwwicz
will participate in the sessions
Oil leukemia aDd report results
hom his investiplions rele;;r.:.:_~ rejection
He will join an AmericanAustnllian symposium OD cur·
n!Dt .......,.. .......:h· Jo be held
in Melboume the following
week 88 ODe ol 12 u.s. repreaentaliws. He bas also bem
invited Jo pn!8l!llt seminars on
immunology aDd tran&amp;plantation at Melboume'a Walter
aDd Eliza Hall .Institute of
Medical s-rdL
In . _ to an invitation
hom the Ji'n!ndl Public Health
Serrice (INSERM ) , Dr. Cudk-&gt;cz will journey Jo Paris
for two ...;..a as a visiting
acbolar. He will visit several
medical instilulioDs aDd leelure on the same subjects.

....

Ia

... -

IJat

~--. 'T'

-

....

Scxoe p o s a i b I y BDJpliaing

facts about leal:ber quality evaluation emeJ1I'!Ci hom a twograft is a.ccept.ed, the
. . t year study cimduct.ed by MillOll Hildetmmd of tbe Unive&lt;will also accept
from the same donor."
sity of California, Davis, and
Details of tbe test systems Robert Wilson of the Center
for tbe joint collaborative eflort for Research and Develop.
with Dr. Dausset aDd for tbe ment in lu,ber Education. 'The
shill from labomf:rur Jo hospi- researchers found that students
tal are presently being worked aDd faculty agree about who
out in U/ B's Department of are the beat teecbera on camPathology. A team bas bem pus; that students of differeD!
-rking with Dr. Cudkowicz geoem!ion&amp; idl:nCify the same
!"""" . ~ past few years .., ~ as beat; that studeuts
Identifying, defining, aDd elu- do not equa.te faculty " &amp;bowcidating kinds of cella that par- ~" nor "easiness" with
ticipate in humoral aDd cell- elfectiveDess; aDd that the beat
mediated immtme reactions.
aDd worst -teedlera in
In their esperiments in the the """"' professional activimouse, tbe currer&gt;t team (Eva ties aDd allocate their time
among
academic
pursuits
in
Lotzova, Ph.D., instructor ol
pathology; Domenico Trizio, about the same ways. In addition,
student
ratings
of
taM:bM.D., and Tosbija Kino, M.D
era &amp;bowed Clll)y negligible corboth Buswell Fellows aDd
search assistant professors of relations with the academic
pathology ) bas found that rank of the instructor, dass
hemopoietic - specific antigens level, ~ of c:owses preare controlled by indrpendent viously tabu in the same degenes. 'The major one, tbe team parlmenl, dass size, roquired
discovered, is closely linked to vs. optional cour&amp;eB, m a j o r
the c:hromoeomal region that is courses, 81!\1: of tbe respondent,
To lJettes- predict the out- responsible for tbe usual trans- grade-point average, a n d explantation antigens. Said Dr. pected grade in tbe course. •
Cudlrowicz, -rbere is a slnlDg
_ 1 - . H J .... _
will also fommlate plans lor possibility that tbe same bolda
future research with Dr. Jean true in man.•
~ ODe oC the p~
. Considerable p~ by the
tile --'PI
in identifying human trans- team bas permitted an insight . . - ~ "' • its
- 1!5qlh
"' 546,345..811
In IItts
plan_tation antigens (!bey trig- !J&gt;!o cellular eveots leading to fGr
. . - , F&amp;nl.
A
ger Jlllllllllle responses that will munune response a.nd IDili'I'OW
result in rejection of a graft) , graft rejection in mice, a natat the Institut de Red&gt;en:bes ural prelude Jo work on man.
sur les Maladies du Sang in Explained
the Italian-&lt;!ducated
Paris. 'lbe9e es:pe..-iments will Dr. Cudkowicz, "What we are
George Washington UniVerbe carried out UDder a Franco- basically alter is a better u¥ sity will begin a tluee-year acfor Trans- denltanding of bow tbe many tion_ study this month aimed at
facets of tbe inDDtme system getting 20 undergraduate deThe contemplated studies on are regulated. Anned with this parlments in liberal arts aDd
about a dozen families who knpwledge, we could then inter- sciences to "work tocelher as
have already been typed for vene more effectively by them- a nnit in tbe realiatic ........,_.
ment of their needs, free of
~ tran&amp;plantation antigens
=~!; treatment of tbe pa- departmental rivalry."
( DDportant for rejection or acceptance of
tissues aDd
orpns sud&gt; as akin aDd kid·
The.......,"'~:..
byiD.50per_ol .. ......,
Dey) are aimed at identifying
additioual antigens that are
- I n 1.972-73-tissue specific. 'lbe9e may be
.
esdusiw!ly espn!llll!d on hemoAs ancient em- legend
poietic cella whi&lt;:b are responbas it that there once existed a
sible for blood formation. 'Ibis
will . be the linlt · aUempt at
Tbe local Uniwrsity Center ~ poor Cbineae family ...,_
"typing" .lmmans for tissue- Chapter of ·t be Senate Profea- Billtin&amp; of a Gnmdfatber, a
specific transplantation anti- aiODBl AssociatiOD (SPA) bas Fathel-, aDd a Boo. 'The Gnmdcalled upon the State SPA to
"""' ol boDe marrow cells.
To date, aplained Dr. Cud- JNlll! for contract proviaioD fM
lwwicz, stndieo Oil hemopoietic ment U&gt;Crell8l!ll as the collecthoe was unable Jo work, and, thus,
cell ~ haw bem carried ~ageot_._.. CDDtribut.e Jo the famil income. yet be coat.inued
eat
.., caly in Buftalo. 'lbey have tiatiODs with New Yodt Slate..
bem coafined Jo the labonltory
In a letter Jo Robert Gnm&amp;- and olbenri8e provide a cbain
...
the
family.........,.,._
In
this
.. JII)OCl transplantation er, State SPA '-1, Uniwnit.y
model for - - Invaigations Ceo~ Chapter Pla!ident Coo- ~toation, the Father finally de~"" -"'!~ that tbeae par- atantine A.
calla cided, ~ that Gmndfalher could DO ~ be afticular aD l I g e D 8 determine upon SPA "to the pro- bdo!d and bad to .... So be
wbetber boDe marrow grafts vision of amounts f« lDI!Iit
~"tab" or be promptly ,... .-...,_ perbapi at WllYinl put C.mndfatber in a -*,
*me the
his oboulJorn!:f~ nnita.., the der, and ~ for the Yellow
Biw!L
On
the
way,
be
met the
Why is boDe marrow transTbe Jocal" SPA feell, Yeaplantation ., important? "'n a caris ..yo, "that tbe indirect •
Baa. wbo - c:uriaUa about the
~ of inbom immune defiand
ita
....
Father
&lt;;luaion ol merit m.::r- ';
4 w4 edly, · admitted . that
cimcy cliaeoas and blood disOrewthltw
in the SliCk,
original c:oatract orders (sud&gt; 88 opllllllq!ofm- our
of tbe main SPA
linemia and oictie cell ansnia) bas not bem ., .....-ful .in hat .delioaed a ~ leeto the lllloct that, in view
aDd in _.ued diaeaaM (BUdl ita ownhenflip ...._... ... of C-*•!!rllaltw'a ~-~
as boDe
lll8l'IOW
to our....,__"
an
........._
ol
) ."due
aid
Yeracaria aiM&gt; urpd ... b&amp;- and pam. and - inability to
Dr. Cudlwwicz, .._,.,; grafts balf ol the local chapter that ~ life. it - a mal kind... do bUn in. n.e San
~ 4beqpy. there be ..._.... "" ..... For lKit Clll)y do BUdl grafts~ lisbini minina
-=b ,_
place lht IJiood.lonninc .,..,... ul~ (ldaff) zank . w i l b 1 - ..........
......
but the immune ayat.em 88 well.
J.ck."
'I'bUI, ....,., a fcxeip lll8l'IOW
an ... briDe tile

olher-=

.&amp;:

F----

...

b;""~~Dr~

-~·---­
--~-8.
--$35..-alhe-s

....

.

=..Agreement

...

olher

SPA Urges
Merit Rnises

--

..

.

:=n~..;::.,;:!:

1:,

""' .

I

~I

.a -

--

v.......na

..,__

=

-a .,._

l:;::

-a

that

for

~-=-r:..="for

=-::..:!:":t~:
~ that.~
-a

,_

34 Types of TreesAbotmd
On South Campusi..aruhnlpe
loq. _ ( All pine haw .-115
olJ
··~ .tl&gt;r,. ,.,.._ ~.&lt;ill
~) It ..,.. to be. ef
...... habit, domoly ~
rather ·~ trilll a
nJUDded top. Ita oricinal ....
tat CIOiltml and ...a.Europe and Mia Minor. and
i t - iatroduced Jo Nodb America in 1759. 'Ibis be
_ , . Oil . . . _ in different apola. Tbe lllOBt Cll!lltDIly located ;. either at the CXIITner ol Hay.,. ADnes B or at tbe
~ CliiiJlOr ef the aid

It's very bud to adlmly
eYaluate the worth • an 11oe
plant mat.erial ...
Jet
aloae
in the
It would
be • • 1
IMl
to ........ IIIOBt ol t h e _ . . .
wilh-itwoaldbe-pcaibility. For a - . b)'
to vi8nalbe the ......... wid ol

*•
-·cuwliac
-

an_ ... .,,....._ ..
~ lt'a paillfal to fD
-m-tordead-lloiJJc
cut doom, liUt lhia ;. a sity .....,._ ol tbe . . _ , . alford
ol ""'*'iDieeliacolc6er
and aiM&gt;
tile . -- . .
~for in.iarinc ....... ~
-JII)Od_
wbidoa .if. lbey
A
. . . li!ll..
.,_
care qdadoa pnllllpt _ . . . .
of badly . . . . . . . . . . dead

-

.
Even tbaalh- lies 1a1oe
many- ... - . - .....
some
ef
accidental
- -I )- -• ....._
..,.,
dODe toor.....
'IT

that_...,._

-----... at~m...-

....

~--~-'~ homL-~ ..........

'The WDdala wbo ... lhia _ . .
wliat ...,.._ . . .
adJoa.. It ........
be elllfA"..a. if eweryo•e
~rated tile ,_..
- - -btbe-.
- If IIley
.and
. , .pial
,............

~ -

actiona .,...

E"!"'tbaalh.............-;.

a hie tbnaat tile~.-....

~and ........... clliYmg Oil lawn ltill .........
ue to dietnlct from . . - n
beantiful landaeape.

�P~l1,1!f72

' New'Study
Probes Ideas
Of Women

-t

baa-

IUid 'ebaimlan of the Ambalakny

&lt;REPORTS

ON

Care c-miltee. He also
III&gt;POinl&lt;d a member ol the Bloe

b. PASIUYA!f, "Electron Tnmsfer

~f.t:ts:;nri,:m E~= ::t:t'P~~~o:;;:l:".:.:=~

IUid

00

to the Fbyoieiao . ./OJU'7Uil of the AlrU!ri&lt;:an CMmAooiataot Propam at Erie Com- icol Society.

GpEQPLE

DIIIDity

reeearch

PMQU.AU: .L
clinical asoiataot prof...,r, OWJII!ry (urol- · opri&gt;eot aDd iDotructiooal media,

.U...t1E81m T.

BAYS, aooociate
profeaor, medicine, was elected

OIL

p..,r_,r, medicine, received the
1UU1D111 ocientific awanl of the
:~
ABM&gt;ciatioo

~;~.~~~iN~':~

KICIIMD .l. LEVINE, aenior dental

~~~~c:G~~\v:t

'tnc_..dical

·otudeut. Woo fiDt prize at the

Greater New Yorti Dental Meet-

iDe for his research in the field

ol implantolocy. He also received
aD bmonble mention for this
worlt at the annual meeting of the
American Dental ABM&gt;ciatioo. Levine's raearch deals with the use
ol metal blades placed in bone to
aDCbororalprootheoes.

GRANTS
1&amp;. .Jc&amp;. ll. BI2N8TEIN, clinical as~
oociate, radio~, $10,000, Ex-

tem, NSF.

DL DaiZK. A.. BANDERS,

associate

profeaor, speech communication,

$6.390, Eftect of Acoustica on

~S.:=.!~1f!
~~~ ~::.1~[-~

.......talioBal Competeo&lt;e Among

Rwa1 Guatemalan C h i I d r en,

GmotF~

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

chemistry, and E. EYAL,

"Selectiv-

~~;rM~....!':lt~~ .Pn:

em New York. has been named
the new chairman of the national
steering oom.mittee for all 56 re-

alytical Chemiltry.
DR.. HUVIN L THOMPSON, post~OC·
toral associate, chemistry, and G.A.
RECRNITZ, "Fast. Reaction F I ow .

~.:'t"~~,:t~~

throughDR. RUTH MoGJlATB": associate pro!esiOr. elementary and remedial
education, bas receou become a

ti:"'fo~ E~e ~cx!:'C:

tion. and a member of the United
States National Committee for
Earth;Childhood Education. Mem-

·

Peilormance and Environmental
Facton, NIH.
PL ltOBEin' JU.TES, professor, mechanical engineering, $51,400,
ModeliDc of Caniiovascular Sys-

Instructional Improve,.,nt; "Occupational Education in the CUr·
riculum." Educational Lea&lt;knhip.
DIL GARRY A. RECHNITZ. professor,

Medicioe.

wtob~==~:i~'!!t
E:;~~~~ ~d~~
~ODS in the field of early

DL 1.a::nc P.UUU, professor, physiology, $126,()75, Canliorespinltory

t::YErie~ecoN~ ~

aaoo,
~ ~esr!;r!""=e&amp;d~
::g&gt;·~=teto~ ~r:~vk!.':';l'!;:,~:

oa.

Rockefeller.
.AJOI&amp;UB,

usi.at:ant profe.or0 mediciDe. ia
one of the fOUDden of tt,. Niq- a r a Frontier EnvirolimeDtal
Health Reoean:b Foundation that
will conduct a thlee-Tear Pilot

== i'!Ji!i'.f.!l.-wi!'i

CoiJece.

Committee by Governor Nelooo

AWARDS
II&amp;. .JULUlf L.

F~

IlL AUII2f PADW.._ profeooor, cbemiatry, &amp;. .......uwo&gt;r, L G&amp;~ 8Jid

~.;:te~~.! ego~~~~

alytical Chemistry.

RECOGNITIONS
DR. EDWARD J4. CORDASCO, clinical

as well as environmental aapecta

~o.::;~OO:·'t:

next three yean to determine related facton I~ to IUDC dia-

:;e
~lluio: =~~
ia the finlt environmental health

group in New York State and one
of the finlt in the nation.
aseociate chairman, biochemistry, bas
b e e n selected for inclusion
Who's Who and in Comniunity
Lwden of Amtrico.

DB.. BEN1AIIIN £.. SANDERS,

m

~ s~a!d ~!:::~· &amp;r:C::.
~ oJo u~o~~th~~;~~i

of the Caoadino Urological Association. He will be presidentelect in 1973 and the foUowing
year he will take over as president

at the Ottawa meeting.

Conun~e------~--------ccontinued from page 12, col. S)
CAY

meeting, 232

LlBEBATION • :

Norton, 8 p.m..
associ. ate professor, curricuhun develoPment and instructional meclia. bas
been elected president-Qlect and
program chairman of the Western
New York Affiliate of the State
Association for Supervision and
Curriculum DevelopmenL He has
also been named assistant editor
of the Journal of Industrial
DR. ALBmT 1 . PAU1U:R, IR.. ,

CREATIVE ASSOCIATE ReCITAL IV •:

Henry R u b i n., violin ; Stephen
Manes. piano. Works by Beethoven, Telemann. B r a h m s, Schumann, Baird, 8o30 p.m.
m.M :M.AKOtS SDUES•: a panel on
logmar Bergman's films, Confere nce Theatre, free.

THURSDAY-24

Teacher Education.

NOEL a. ROSE, professor of
microbiology and director of the
Center for Immunology o is the
new secretary-treasurer of the
Academic Clinical Labomtory of
Physicians and Scientists.
ESTHEB. BCHw.un-Z, assistant to the

DK.

c:id=:~r:~~the~y~

Committee on Cultural Resources.
VAN 088, aaaociate
professor, microbiology o ti8s been
invited to serve as a consultant
to NASA via the ·Univeroity'o
Space Reeeareh AaOciati.oti for

OR. CAliiEL 1 .

::!!:~of;:r=~t.ch!!::;
separation processes planned for
Skylab I to be launched in 1973.
Four bioche:m.istry faculty members were elected "to membership
in the American Society of Bio!op:al Chemist.. They are DRS.
IOH.ll'IIAH D. BRODIE, EDWAIW I.
IIA88AIIO, litOBIZT NOBLB and DBIIImUOS PAPABADIOPOULOS.

PRESENTATIONS
DL DAVID A.. CADENliEAD,

associate

J:~~~SoB:eStJ:

sorption on Apollo 14 Rock Fracmenta," 3rd Lunar Seieru:e Conference, NASA, HoUlton, Tuaa;
.. Monolayera,... Bilayere and Membranes: Their Phyoical States,"
John Baylor CoUege of Medicine,

~~~;e~·~!~~~
Daiiao, 'l;'eL

OL WILLLUI: SYLVBS'I'IIa, professor,
Eogliah, "Il.iterary
in an
Age of CaDoer," Modem Language ABM&gt;ciation, Cbialco-

a..-

CONTJ.NUINC DENTAL EDUCATION# :

Or. C. Lipani, Modern Radiographic Technics (hygienists and

=~ts~ci/~. Capen,

fee $50.

222tJ

PNSM
see Tuesday listing.
PHYSiCAL THIZAPY 'l'ELEPBONE LF£-

TUBE# : Dorothy Shaw, LPT,

divi.dual.i.ud Core in the

~~ s'P:,SO~
stations. 1-2 p.m.

tz,

In-

Nura~

~~

'L\EICWOKDO X..UU.'I'S (K o r e an
Demorutration) •: as part of IntemationaJ M o n·t h, Confmence
Theatre, 2-3 p.m.
COU.CE CAJa!BtS AND THE cmauc-

~g:;~y ~

:ft: l:;~:.espo~

sored by Office of Student Affairs.
Guy Berner. vice-president, Niagara Share Corp., will discuss the
growth areas within the national
economy and bow they will ~r­

tain to employment opportunities

INTERVIEWS
Offers the opportunity for individual
interviews with educational, business, industrial and governmental
representatives. Candidates from
all degree levels a.re invite.i to
interview. Forms in Haye. C,
Room 6.
ON--CAMPUS JOB INTERVIEWS :

THUBSDAY-17:

Raytheon Co.;

::~~~~:!':~

Corp.; Firestone Tire and Rubber
Co.; Lancaster Central School
(Erie) .
PIUDA.Y-18: National S tee 1
Corp.; Service Syotema Corp.;
Weotioghouoe Electric Corp.
TUISDAY-22: Abraham StraU88;
Cutco-WearEver Corp.; Allotota
Ins. Co.; ArliDcton Reoearch Ctr.

WEI&gt;NESDAY-23: Co[gata Palm. olive Co.; Scott Paper Co.
THVRSDAY-24:

First National

City Bank; Material Com.; Aetna

Ins. Co.; Stromberg-Carlooo Corp.

LIBRARY EXHffilTS

for students. 340 Norton, 3 p.m.
PATHOLOGY 8BKINA1t: Dr. Oecar
Carretero, Hypertension Research

~it!"'lfi!l.~. FT~ HR:t~
~lo_E~~!n~'1,;~; EXHffiiTS
An I mrruu.DIDcicol App.--.:h, B152 BeU Facility, 3 P-PL

;.d""~to:t.~

tel" Resou.roes Qmter, Univeni.ty

~~...;;!~fo'.up!~~

gioeering, 3 p.m., open to aU who

are intereetec:L
PHYSICS OOUOQUitJ)(• :

Prof. M.

Rustgi, phyoiao, 111 Hochstetter,

• p.m., J#reshments 112 Hochatetter. 3·30 p.m.
Bloco::DO:I'I'RY SDUNAil#: Dr. Gilbert Aahwell. National Institoteo
ol Health, Betbeoda, MarylaDd,
Stud/a on the Bindinl of Cin:ulatinB GlycoproUU.. by HeptJtic
P,._ Men&amp;broneo, G-22 Capen,
• p.m.
ctJIIIIIalft IN .........cr#: Dr.· AI-

r..:,~:=:· =-~tr;:;,
U/8, p,_,tly with Ollico ol 1!6...-.:h IUid Stotiotico ol HEW

Waobinctoa. D.C.. Pharmacy;·

Role ill the c - M.,.,.,..,.t
of the I970'o, 246 Health Sc:ial.._ !I p.m.

--for-=lj=-

........ , llltaiM a-r Bercman), with Liv UUman, Mao -

:=-n-~=.=
~'~..!!.""::"~
With .lolm

~

Carole

~
- Hawb.
Kamo,
by
Howald
• ••.cliJectad
A-

.:r.w:.-It:.~~=

-

2nd floor
Norton, through Febnuory 29, aU
welcome.

lN'!DNADOKA.L EXBlBIT:

WOIUCB.BOP IN WA'l'IC&amp; IIBOURQD•:

padlapo tha - - ol - -

NOTICES

�p~

17,1!172

12
THURSDAY-17
FNSM 222: CONTilOVDSm8 IN SCI·
EHCZ CONn.ICT AND DSOLU-

~EEKLYCO~Q~

TJON•: Dr. Gordon Harris. Larkin
prolesoor, chemistry, Tlu Polywater Caper-How Eminent Sc.i-

entiiU Con Fool Themulvu and
One Another, S62 Acheson. 10
a.m., viaiton welcome.

BJIUL

Richard Hutchinson, Cliniccl Aa-

rro=:- ~ ~~~~::

KIlt &amp; D

&amp;N8aous•:

GroeveDOr.

Society Series ol the Bullalo and

tiona, 11 :30 a .m. and 10 p.m.
IENTISTRY TELEPHONJil u:crtJR£#:
,Dr. Raymond E. Kielich, Caria

t~~!r....Lib:~u::-c.:

tral Library Auditorium, 3: 30
p.m.
JroS1C TBJ:ATD•: ll41e Over ~
Loot B«thouen, music by Lejaren
Hiller, script by Frank Pannan,
directed by Terry M o o r e, Alb~ Knox Art Gallery, 8 and
10 p.m., adults $2.00, students
$1.00, tickets at Norton Ticket
Office, audience limited to 200 for"
each performance. AJao. on Feb.
20.
lloi• Over tlu Loot Beethooen
is a lull-length play with music

Prevention and Patient Home

eor.; sponsored by Regions! Medical Program, 40 receivin&amp;' •tations, 1: 30 p.m.

CRDOC.U. ENGINEE2UNG SEMINA&amp;#:

Pro I. Eli Grusbka, chemistry,
Chrom4togrophy, 322 Acheson, 2
p.m.

WORKSHOP IN WATEB REBOUBCIS•:

sponsored by Faculty ol En.rineer- .
ing and Applied Sciences, Robert
V. Thomann, civil e~t;erin&amp;.
Manbattan College, Alf&lt;U Dynamics in the San Joaqum Delta,
California, 104 Parker Engineer-ing, 3 p.m.

:o:q~yp~ ~ tC

=:~~':!:.::

;:csh~~rs,;h iffe~u~

with the following titles for each
movement: R - Ouer tlu Loot

Hochatetter, 4 p.m.; refreshments
112 Hochstetter, 3:30 p.m.

Spirit. The lint movement will be

tM Tfree Nucleon System, 111

~~'tiJ:;:?and~Of~'O:e/'::e J!::

=~bU'~~!'i

BIOCHEMISTRY-CLINICAL CBEMISTBY

SEMINAR*: Dr. George Guibault,

~~~U;uv~~~~

to;

La., The Uses of Enzymes as Analytical Reagenu, G-22 Capen, 4
p.m.
CONVDlSATION CLASS: for foreign

~~~~·~~~o~ d~~
0

p.m., for information con tact
France Pruitt or Maly Loinaz.
OUTING

CLUB:

general meeting,

340 Norton, 7 p_.m.
FILM• •: The Paradine Case, 140

eac,.r;;
o":': ).!:;f· J:::· Todd.
Charles Laughton, Alida Valli.
Directed by Allred Hitchcock.
••. . . The story o( the Paradine
Case is about the degradation o(
a gentleman who becomes enamored of his client, a woman who
is not only a murderess but a

~~~~utii~-:a~e{!

on trial for poisoning her bus·
band. Peck, as her attorney, falls
completely under her spell and

int o a quandry. Romantically

~~~to~r;'."~:rg'~y :....=~

the SO's.

FILM• •: Millhouse: A W h it e
Comedy, Conference Theatre,

check showcase (or times, admission charge.
Starring Ricba.rd M. Nixon;

~~=~ =~y b~E~~
shwiller, Mike Gray, Bruce Shah
10

.=n. AW:~ ~~~rbfte1~
FRIDAY-18
LINGUI8TICS ON T.V~ •:

The Agnelwgroph, Ian MacKay and David

~:u~:~=-~te~ibt~:U:J:

'Ral• over Lost a..tttoven." S.turd8y •nd SUndlly.

Boyesian Classi(icotion; Room A49, 4239 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m. Cotfee hour, Room A-16, 4239 Ridge
Lea, 3:30 p.m.
ENGINEERING SCIENCE SEMINAR#:

John W. Dowdce, graduate student, engineering science, Ran-dom Least Square Analysis, 104
Parker Engineering, 4 p.m.
SERVICES•: services and meal, Chabad Mouse,
3292 Main St., 6 p.m.

CBABAD. SABBATH

CHINESE NEW YEAR'S FIESTA •:

au-

~e::cby(~~~ty~ef.~~d ~::

ditional celebrations including Lion's Dance, Fan Dance, Chinese
music, drama, folk singing and
excerpt from a Chinese opera.
Ridge Lea Dining Hall, 6 p.m.,
students $2.00, general admission
$2.50.
KOREAN FILM • :

Spring Fragrance,

for Internationa l Month celebration, 147 Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m.,
$.25.
HILLEL SAB8,1,TH SERVICES•: Rabbi
Justin Hormann, How To Build
a Sanctuary, oneg shahbat to follow, Hillel House, 8 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING : Instruction in basic steps during ·
~t~our, 30 Diefendorf Annex,

The
Claude Kipnis Mime Theatre-will
perform Men and Dream. Buflalo and Erie County Llbrary,
'Lafayette Square, 8:30 p.m., general admission $2.50, students
SLOO, tickets at Norton Ticket
Office, Wick desk at Rooary Hill,
and Statler ticket office.
French-born Claude K i p n i s

A WEEKEND OF MIME• :

~:...Um:~
~tiona for thea~ua~~·~
phonetician :'£i1~~l::h~:t~ ~T!iAviv and founded both a mime
F011te~~ /:~lfe~ !~

:t=~~. ~~~~.aS!n~e1
Levin and Stanley Fish ask if the

reepo01e tO poetty is special? Lan-

Cr ~~2 ,~dp.:'L

10

MEDICINAL CIIEM18TRY SEMINAB#:

Dr. William F. Johns, G.D. Searle &amp; Co., Etiojervanu cu Antialdosterone Agents, 134 Health Scienc:es, 2 p.m.
WINE TASTING PARTY: Around the
World With Wines, wines on sale
at &amp;u~~tial saving., Faculty
Club dining room, Harriman, S-5
p.m.
INTERNATIONAL

COFFEE

BOUB••:

all foreign and A.mt:rican atudenta
staff and !acuity are invited 20C
Townsend, 4-6 p .m.
'
M"OUX:ULAB

BIOLOGY

BEMINAJt• •

Prof. RG.E. Murray and D;.
l .D .J. Burdet~ University ol Weo-

~l:u2:;J:~0~n rceudo;ivu~

Septum FormatWn in E . coli and
Some Other Gro.m. nelfll.ive Boc-

- ::r.-:...~~~1~= ~:

" oea, 3: 80 p.m.
BTA'IDTICI ux.-rua• : Dr. Connie
Shapiro, Univenity of Mic:hipn.

MONDAY-21

a.oss: Torah with Com-

mental'i.a. Rabbi B of m a n n'a
home, 12 Colton orne, s:30 p.m.

pecu of Anti-H&amp;perurai.ve Ther-

""·

~

p.m.

PHAilMACY ~HONI: LECTUB&amp;#:

~·

SATURDAY-19
C!UBAD IADO'Il . . . . - •:

- a n d - I a , 9:30a.m.
MaltwaA MalMJh, muoic. omver•tion. ~ Cbabad
H.-. 3292 Main St., 8 p.m.
J&lt;JII8UIZ JU&amp;t.V.uf 0 : Iuaeli folk
dancinc inatnlc:tioD, No...-. U

t.beatre and a achool or mime.
Men and Drea.rn., which he created and staged in 1963, formed
the basis or tou .. ~ut Js.
rael and Europe. Klpnio brougbt

his company t.o New York in 1966
for a nine-week engagement at
the Theatre de Lys. Following
tremendous success in New York.
he became resident director for
the Boston Opeta Company.
COMPOSITION

RECITAL•:

Ralph

Jones, student or Julius Eastman.
Baird, 8:30 p.m., free.
Coffee HoUR,
a p3rt of International Month celebration, poetry and songs. with
Shum-Bai.Z41 (The Garlic-Onion

KIBBUTZ KAllAvAN•:

~mironi) f:hegkibf,:/z y~~e!t~!i
in the Je:ueel Valley a n d the
north of Israel. 1st Boor cafeteria,
Norton, 9 p.m., aleo on Feb. 19.

~~i&gt; ~: .!ta9~Jb 1~?-rn:
tickets at Norton Ticket Office.
Also on Feb. 19 and 21.
From the "finest Hamlet I have

~~~~=har!fe~d(!n ~Je,!i
1

(~ttme).~i:T~tt?:n!"; ;:U::

the 9uestion without qualification.

~~=~~i:o: ~~eJJi!

generation a.ncl in this portrayal
of Hamlet he reinforces t)le con=~ Directed by Tony Rich-

the third by Roger Sbielda. 'The
play is abeut the people ounound·
ing Beetb&lt;mm, not cmly tbooe

C.."i"""~tw~

= ":.

~~

Dr. Jolin Duokin, mati.onatic:o,
sin&lt;:e his death in 182'7 have idol- · Non-Euclid«Jn Geo""'trica, 362
i%ed him. lt concemo il8elf with ~ 10 a.m. A1oo .., Feb. :U.

~~~fincuC_~~

times, admission charge, alao on
Feb. 20.
·
With George Segal, Ruth Gordon, Ron Leibman, Trish Van
Devere, directed by Carl Reiner.

~~eF~jo~~ca!~: It"~K:~~;

Pappa? ••. • . By far the mo.t
tnsM!tess movie of the year • • ."
It was also one of the most auccesslul commercial films of the

year. Carl Reiner has launcbed
an all-out. and rather" outrapoua,
attack on poseeuive motberbood,
with George Segal as Gordon, the
son, and Ruth Gordon as the
clammy mother.

BTAJ'ISTICS ~ -.&amp;aelll&amp;-

which features seve.ral awanl winnen of various act:inc competitions in the Buffalo area inclndeo: Eli:abeth Alrelrod., Dotti
Drummer, Richard Hackett, Carl
Kowalkowski. Jaiues Keenan.

Ttlll&amp;#: Prof. L Olkin, Stanfcml,
MultU.UU.t~ Anolyoio, A49, 4230 Rid«e I-. 11 a.m. and

las Dunbar, Linn A. Walker, and
Claudia Can. Tecbnical director,
Edward eo.. a n d electronicis~
Stuart Fox.
POC1'8Y KADING• : a benefit reading for the Independent School
of Bullalo. 'The poelo, who will
be introduoed by Leo1ie Fiedler,
are: James Wricb~ lilternationally known poet currently on the
faculty of Hunter College; William Matthews, on the faculty ol
Comell University and editor ol
Lil/4bulero mapzine; Bob HaM,
currently on leave from the Eng.
liab DepL; AI Poulin, SUNY/
Brockport; John 1.&lt;Jcan, prof...,r,
E.n.gli.ah and editor of C h. o ice..

receiving statiooo, 11:30 a.m.

4 p.m... coffee at 3 : 30 p.m..
PJIY'8JClANB 1Zim'IIOKZ t.BC'I'UD#:

Dr. Robert E. Y..-itch, Tire

lt.~ i"~J:·~y~'f.'~: ~;"~Il~P.~

~~.::::=
~ J::.
tions accepted. Fillmore ~ 8
p.m.

:g-:•ri:~reC::k~;:rr:;

TUESDAY-22
PNBK 222: OON'D09111S1118 IN BaENC8- CONPUCr AJrfD -.uaox•:

.

A WZBKBND OP ~~~~~~&amp;•:

Tbe

Canadian Mime n-tre, -

~!!=n~~~/:::

ary Hill CoUep, WJck . Ceater,-

~~:-·f=-=":t"N!~

Ticket Otlice, WJclr: c1eok at ao.ary Hill, and Statler ticket olllce.
'The Canadian Mime n-tre.
founded in 1969 by Brian Doberey and Adrian l'1!cknold, is UDiqae
for the e&gt;&lt;ploratory clirec:tioa in
which it has taken its talents. 'The
eeven-member c a at baa toured
Canada esteooWely_
HOCKB\' 0 : Kent'SL, Amherst Rec.
Canter, 9 p.m.
~
PILl(•: Hamht, aee Friday

PILK••: Millhorue: A White

Corrwiy, aee Thuraday listing.

!'::rU:Zsae~~:r Etb!ib~
'!'ith dis'Niay of book o, Center
~~ ~rto~ afternoons.. Alao

20

!:~~~~: Coffee HOUM,

SUNDAY-20

~

..::rr.&amp;~.• :

noon., free.

·

IDU&amp; a.&amp;88118:

Baird. 12

Bqinnen

H~

brew, 262 No...-, 12 1100a. .1-..
W. Ethia, 262 No...-, 1:30 p.m.
NUitBDfG 1SLBPBOIO t.BC'I'UD# :

Dr. Michael Ray and Paula u.

~~M~~:

~~':'tioua.-1:30 ............
LINGUIB'l'ICS Olf' ~;v. • •:

..

&lt;2aarJe.

J.._ N . Bailey, i n - by

:~
~=
amerialn ~-. P a al L

!':i...EoooJ!. ~ ~~ .r.=
Garvin, Wall- Wolck, -

~~.,-=-~
2 p.m.
........ ,

Tlu

M~

.t.-

t:.::"'"· 140 Cape, 3 and 8 ........

Stan:illc J_.ta Ootlal, Da1oNo
CooteDo, " " - l!.nor, Tia Bolt,

"~~-- Diredod"" o..
;;::~~~
!ollow
m

ap to c~ Jr-. - . .

llnllll)'

inc.

wayo, •

A bo:illiaDt -

-"" --

al a faooil)'

~:...."'--ita...,. allilo

WEDNESDAY-23

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

PanelWeighs
Alternatives
For Reactor

The President's Council on
Residential Facilities has submitted it5 interim rep o r t to
President R o bert L. Ketter
outlining recommendations fo;
allocating residential space for
the next academic year.
Among chief i terns of the report is the Council's judgment

Grant Funds
On Agenda
For Senate

The Center's FisQI Problems

In a statement circulated to
the Trustees prior to the meeting, Hall outlined the Center's

fiscal problems as follows:
"'n mid-April of 1971 the
Center learned, through a news--

(Continued 011 -

2, coL l)

"Ailelk!s-Eiit-Righi TIU!iJfy
BringsWarning from &amp;gal
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Adelle Davis, food guru of
miUions, the well-known food
theorist whose trio of books has
i n d u c e d millions to increase
their protein intake and swallow brewer's yeast daily, decried the nutritional habits of
America before a crowded Fillmore Room audience Monday
night.
And, in tum, parts of her

FEAS Unit Has Grant
• E
R0 "'" Socl.o- nginee&gt;l'""'ng
o

'J_

·~

o

'.1. .1.

theories were decried by Dr.
Harold S e g a I, -biology, who
warned the audience-"halJ or

The question of disposition
of institutional funds wiU try
for the third time to come before the house at next Tuesda~·s Faculty Senate meeting.
Ttus second February session
will start at 3 p.m. and take up
where the first recessed. To be
discussed are new requirements
lor ihdependent study and the
report from the Research and
Creative Activity Committee.
l For their recommendations.
see Rewrter, January 27.)
The Execu1ive Committee of
the Senate bas selected· aever:al
new members for standing committees and has set up a new
special committee. Drs. William Baumer, chainnan of the
Senale, Robert Stem, political
fiCience, McNJjster Hull, acting dean of the Graduate
School, Albert Rekate, medicine, Carmelo Privitera. biology, and Im Cohen, psychology, are on the special oommit·
tee on regionalism. Dr. Robert
Rossberg, counselor education,
will replace Dr. Joseph Riddel,
English, on ·t he President's
Board on Faculty Appointment. Promotion and Tenure.
The new members of the Subcommittee on College Credit by
Examination are Drs. Richard
Mit&lt;:hell, geogmphy, and Gordon Silber, French. Dr. Walter

what she says is t rue, half
isn't."
The session had some of the
a~phere of a faith healing.
People came up to Mrs. Davis
after her talk to ask what vitamins to take lor backache; others stuck out their tongues to
gain her assurance that they
were healthy ( M rs! Davis contends that the tongue provides
a good index of geneml health )
and young couples brought up (Contin ued 011 page 7, col. 3)
their babies for her examina-

that it is necessary to have
"firm assurance by May 1, 1972,
that anticipated housing facili-

ties at Amherst will, in fact, be
available to the University by
September 1." It is not yet
known if the 8()(}-student dormitory-dinin' complex designed
by LM. Pet for the Nortb Campus will be ready for occupancy
by that time.
The report endorses the existing lottery system for hous-ing, with some modification, for
the South Campus and the Allenhurst apartment complex. If
available, Nortb Campus facilities will be entered into the
normal residential lottery for
returning residence students,
with all remaining spaces on
the North Campus being as-signed on a first c o m e-first
served basis. Under the system,
students who draw favorably
get preference as to buildings
and rooms to which they are
assigned.
The Committee also expressed the desimbility of changing
the present system of advance
deposit to reseTVe rooms in the
dorms. Presently a student is
required to make a $25.00 de-

~~~tt_~;

tember. The Commllllae'a ....,_

ommendation is that a substantial, non-refundable deposit be
required by July 1.
Other recommenda1iona include the extension of housing
opportunities to more transfer
students, and; as recommended
by a special Faculty Senate
committee, to minority graduate and professional students.
Other issues which the committee said need consideration
are: the possibility of housing
contracts on a semesterly basis.
instead of the present annual
basis; the extent to which University bus service should be
extended to the Amherst campus, and the provision o{ space
within residential areas for student-run enterprises.
Although the interim report
(Continued 011 page 2, coL I)

tio~

her talk. as in her books,
Mrs. D a v i s relates anecdote
after anecdote about people who
didn't get cancer or recovered
lost vitality because they took
Vitamins C and E regularly.
Or about how, in her opinion,
calcium may prevent heart attacks. Her critics contend that
this can't be completely true.
But when she explains that peopie's nutritional needs vary and
discUSSes nutritional sources of
vi tam ins a n d minerals, most
agree she is on solid ground.

.caun;ested techreqwrn'.ing mkore
. sospanhisdThe National Science Foun- cot
dation has announced the
. 1cal 5 . 1 11
1.
award of $118,925 to the De- those requirii)J! a lesser degree
partment of Civil Engineering of technical skill will be offered.
for the development ·of an un- A student will then be able to
deriJraduate progmm in socio- concentrate in either or both
engmeering. Dr. George C. Lee, of these subprograms.
professor of engineering a n d
Following this there will be
applied sciences, will direct and a work-study internship durin g
coordinate the development of which the student will partici- 'Foodles5 , Food
the multi - discipline .u ndertak- pate in solving actual socii&gt;-. · _,
ing.
technical problems. Graduates • i" Mrs. D a vi s was adamant
'ibe progmm, which has a!- of the progmm will be expected iloout the "criminal amount of
ready been initiated with three · to have "a deep awareness of · foodless food Of! ~!' market"courses, will aim to prepare the interaction of the many in- and severely CTltiCized over:re"young men and women to face dividual systems of our society: linement of cereals and gnuns.
tbe modem challenges and de- the technological system, the · "Wheat flour has 40 nutrients
manda of our changing society ecological system, theopolitical- removed and then they add
and environment" by offering economic system and the hu- some A and D so they can call
them a sequence of broadly- man system," explains Dr. Lee. it en_ricbed." She tol!l of inbased core coun;es which will Tbey will be members of a neW. c"'!'"mg numbers of go1ter cases
integmte technological studies profession, able to make techno- which C8J! ~nally be prevented
with the humanities.
logically sound decisions which by use of Iodized _salt. The manDuring tbe first three semes-- will be advantageOus to society ufacturers of _prepared foods
ters, courses will be devoted to and tbe physical environment. su~ as ·ry.dinners and potato
development of basic skills in
1bough the concept of bring- ch1ps don t care about health
the
_ ~ p8Clh~en·ca1,ces oocialand.m' andmathema"""-vt-- ing humanities courses into the an_d don't use iodized salt, she
till .
engineerins curriculum is not saul. Sbe advocated '-vy taxies. In the fourth through sixth new, D r. Lee- points out tbe ing of foodless foods such as
semesters, explains Dr. Lee, fCo11tw..d " " - 2, coL 2)
(Co11tituu:d o n - 2, col. 6)

10

FEBRUARY 10, 1972

Housing Council Asks
AssUrance on Amherst

Possible new means of funding for the Western New York
Nuclear Reoee.rch Center, Inc.,
are being considered by a subcommittee of the Board of
Trustees of the financiallyplagued research facility.
The sub committee wasj
charged with "PursuiniJ various
alternatives, trying to keep the
facilities viable" at a meeting
or the directors last Thursday.
Another meeting is expected
_within 30 days.
On this panel to secure future financial stability are President Robert L . Ketter; E. W.
Doty, vice president for opemtions and systems; Dr. Ralph
Lumb, Conner director of the
facility ; WiUiam H. Wendel,
president, Carbonmdiun Co ·
Ira G. Ross; and WiUiam p'
Hall, director of the Center.
and James A. Porter, counsel
for the research center corporation~ consultants.

:'llJ:'r s~··r~t$i1~~b}l~
· educational aei'Yices and rad!
oJOgical protection was terminated as or April 1, 1971.
"As a result of the reaction
or the media, an&lt;1 certainly to
a large extent, of a belated recognition in Albany that without this contmct, the Center
could not survive, the contract
was extended for six months.
It was, and still is, the contention or the Division or the
Budget that the Center need
only mise prices, and increase
business, to become totally independent. In the six-month
reprieve, the Center was expected to accomplish this . objective. Alao during this period, the administmtion or the
Buffalo campus was to prepare

VOL 3-NO. 19

WhatiSThat? .
Thill to fte the q.-tion bolnl . - br rnembollo of the
Kipnis Mime Thutrs, schodulod to appur locally a part of
the 011tca of Cultunll Aflalrs'
of Mime," Februai'J
18-1!1. Others may the same q.-tion In repnl to
pantomime. - · In
Reporter (pap 6), John Simon of Fronch . IJeclns a bacqround&lt;dlscualon of the

·-nc1

this-··

art.

�~

2
Reactor Alternativesfumiab fuel, and edloalliw: _
(~ /roll&amp; -

1, col. I)

a juatification, oo an educational basis, ol ll&lt;lCOrding the'
Center a relati..,.y high priority for c:ootinuance.
"Near the end of October,
clue to a dellly in the preparation ol an educational justification for the Center, 1he Buffalo campus was authorized to
use operating funds (an additional $90,000) to tide the Center over for the remainder of
the fiscal year (ending March
31, 1972) . Because of some
basic relationships 8IDOIIg price,
supply and demand, no dramatic price increases were ef.
fected, nor were edensive """'
aources of business cleveloped
dwiDI this period .... Almost
concunently, in late N&lt;M!IDber
and early Dea!mber, the educational case for the Center was
P""""'ti.d to SUNY in Albany,
and the preliminary budget
bearing for this campus was
c:ooducted by the Division of
the Budget. .. .

,.,~~·~__,..... -?~£:'----=-- .....

.L U/TtUt-rUUJ~

uxT.U-uuc:;

AdeDe(~

, _ - 1. cool~)

aolt drialcs .... most ....,..
their 1-=lt ol

~i=C.~

TWJghtBySTTS Tt.bday =::=.•':':"-...:

ed dwiDI a pr-olcujped .-iod
of inactivity.
"3. Reduced- o l tion. By retainin&amp; a ......._
staff, capable o( limited _ . .
tion of the reactor for l1Di¥ersity - a n d aboooptian,
by the Buftaio """'- ol main-

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
-Try .--.benne the first
lime you in a libruy and
think about wt..t libraries to you. . . . . libly, _ , .
think ol ....... dad&lt; buiJdinc
with Jon&amp; hicb &amp;Ids ol boob
and an atmosphere that

cooling tower, could be ....-..

~~"f:

cility might remain open for a cauldn't rea II y be tenDed
cost o( $60,000 to $70,000 ..... frieudly.
nually.
·
Well, you11 '-.ve to &amp;et rid

- - "'n considering the optioas
described above, it dndd be
pointed CJQt that this a._.
must ~ to speud $50,000
annually for radiation pro1a&gt;tion services for the 00 to '10
campus laboratories usinc radioisotopes,_ ~ or the
reactor is operable. Thus, the
present level o( operation repFuture u.-rt.1nty
resents a oost to SUNY ol
"During this general period $130,000 C$180,000 "'= S50,from April to Dea!mber, the 000) .
"At this juncture, the
staff ol the Center shrank from
Z7 to 21 full-time employees, tion might logically be 13
largely as a result of tennina- 'Why hasn't the Center been
tion of cootmcts and the un- able to operate oo a '""'Uy
certainty surrounding the fu- reduced staff in the
ture. Particularly noteworthy
"Tbe answer lies in the fact
was the departure of Dr. K K
that the Center pa,ys its ......
S. Pillay, our internationally insurance (about $3),000) , ..,._
known activatiao analyst (mer- sumed maintenaoce and utility
cury and 'otber toxic elements
respdnsibility !about $30,000) ,
in trace amounts in the envi- pays
interest 00 the bank loaD
ronment) to Penn State, where cabout $10,000), and llfDSl U.45 other applicants for the pos- por/Dnl/y, provides on its stall
ition were considered, and of the professionals who, at this
Mr. D . A. Berry, reactor super- institution, perform """""""
visor, to Niagara Mohawk in a and instructional functions that
staff position at the Nine-Mile are traditionaiiy supplied by
Point reactor. Both these losses the faculty at other llllivesities
will be ref.ected in decreased having reactors. To date, no
income to the Center, and one at this instihttion bas
neither man can be replaced
under present conditions. Other seized the ready-made ~
key staff members are actively ~: o'f ~
seeking employment elsewhere. facility, which is adnowled&amp;al
"I~ appears that unless some
by third parties to be ooe of
permanent soi1rce of operating the best in the country. Tbe
funds is developed (endowment Center has tried to fill this gap,
but
without the stroog support
by ~tial philanthropists is
being explored), one of tliree or faculty, and now or c ... trai
Administration,
the effon cancourses of action must be seI
lected by the owner or the Cen- DOt bu t oail. Tbe !Jagaly o(
this
conclusion
is
only shaJpter CSUNYJ:
"1. Termination of opera- ened by the growing rea.lization
that
nuclear
_
. constitions, and decommissioning or
the facility. This option essen- lutes the only solution to the
tially would entail removing impending energy and resonn:e
the fuel and entombing with crisis of the nation, and that an
concrete much of the reactor increasing demand for gradutanli;' along with highly radio- ales of programs in nuclear
active objects. Cost for this ociences .and engineering will
process would fall in the order surely follow."
of $250,000 to $400,000. This
option is obviously irreversible;
~~
that is, a reactor could not he (Continued from 1. col. Z)
operated at this site again.
program at U/ B represents a
"2. Termination of opera- very
first
effort
at
dewlopinc
tion, and mothballing the facilentire sequence ol COUl1ii!S
ity. Again, fuel would be re- an
blending humanities with techmoved, the facility decontam- noJocy and. taught jointly by
inated, and minimal caretaker faculty memben; from a number
activities would be maintained of disciplines.
indefinitely. Tbe initial cost
the courses o&amp;red
for this option would be on arePresenUy,
seen as "useful' electives.•
the order of $100,000 with an- Tbe first oowse. introduced in
nual ....m of pedJaps
Falri97l, ~ anil Todtaol$2Jl,OOO. Reactivation could be ogy.
had 00 students. This ...
unexpectedly expeusive, how- mester
"-'ever, since there is no assur- offeredo
ance that the AEC would again in Environmental Studim, with
80 students emoCed, and Mathematical Modelinc ol Social
(Conlillued from 1, col 5) and Urban SysU!ms. with about
focused on sbort-range reoom- 00 students. Students are from
mendationsmr the 1972-73 aca- the f ie I d s ol social acie1xr.
demic year, the Council notes cbemistry, natural science and
that a aet ol long-range recom- engineering. It is hoped that
mendation&amp; are expected to be within two to three yaus then!
complete by Spring. Tbe report will be a few ae1ect &amp;IDIImls
ap.-1 anticipation that ad- rnajoriug in the itai!H.
Eventually, so.YS Dr. Lee, it
ditional participation by repre... tatives ol variOus aepnents is hoped there wiD be • cmiluol the Unhlersity community ate level in SKitreciawiucProf.-.rs Wilfred ~
will be solicited and noted that
it ia expected that other sub- civil eugineerinc; Robert .._:
oommitleell will be formed to well, c i v i I ...,.u....inc; H-K
eumine related areas ol coo- Chane. civil en a i aee ria r.
Chades G. DeWIIId. .........,.
cern.
Tbe Council
ReaideDtial ~; Jobn v. lblllcllt&amp;·..t
Facilities was a'fpointed by loa. C i V j ( -ct
President Ketter in October to Chades B. N-. c:i-nl'
recommend occupancy pattems .-in&amp; hne
in~ollhillfor residential ..,..,.._

':d,

.-?'

':'!:;

....,
ol that
....ima&amp;ecalledScboal
Scboallibraries
Media
Centers; a library is as lilrzly
to be tnM!Iinc around in •
Dodce VIlli as it is to be in a

buildinc. and lien time you
hne to """"""" a subject, all
you ~ '-.ve to do is ask a

.,._w,r.

_ In the . - ten years, libnrJeS and the jobs ol Jihr-arimas
!-""' doaneed eoxmnously. ADd
m the next ten, the wtrirlwind
ol cbanee wiD move......., faster.
.,._,_..._ _ , _ _._ can - • •........,. ...,..._, • ..,
~
ily adapt to these cflances is

....

~~..::a by~'e

brary -~ (SlLS ). Tbe
name "' the Scboal accurately
refJeds its empbasis oo
inc information retrieoal,
mation systems, the use ol
media, and traditional lilmuy
~~~~lalocueo{
li-

=;!"

=

u'"' ,....,......,

brarianship is still defined as
the col1eclioo, recording,
e&lt;vation, oopnization, ,.J:i,'!
ai, dissemination and transf..ol recotded information; howew!r, the domain of these activities is ezpanding in a variety
ol ways.•
fuMe -

.._

Tbe crux of the Scbool's
lies m "edocaU,. - .

_.,..,..,

.;::n., C:,::
libraries may involve

=-.:,orin'!:,~
future of

miniature storage
and a 't1IIOrlring koowledge oC films and videotape, ~
oompulefs,

systems

day's graduates still ha,.., to under.;tand the ~ and tibcuy of &lt; ' - - dassirJCation
systems.

.__.......=

Sll.S is fairly unique in the
way it attacks this, Dr. Geooge

~~~~i ~,tiooa!l!Jf
~y.Scbool,inf-­

• .....,
~·
mation science and librariansbip have been sepuated. Sll.S
tries to dose the rift and train
""'"""""-

~~ ~::...~ a,nd

Socio-li'.-ft~...... lion
t!&gt;e uniting ooocept of i n f =
bansler.

under

~~

Housing-

..._p,

This ooocept rovers a Wide
area and three of the Scboal's
faculty of nine provide a flOod
example oC the backgrounds
and intere;ts which information
tnmsf..- indudes. Dr. Edward
O'Neill receiwd JOOSt ol his
baininc in engineering. He's an
information scientist and is
usually at the computer tenninal in the Sll.S ol6ce. Jobll
Blli9an is a media specialist
who is lilrzly to be found in the
Library Studies Media Lahortory wookinc
video
!..tatioo.
Prof::. EJmS:h
Smith's lave is cataloging and

classification and sbe has a
stronc interest in the histmy
ol boob and printing.
'l1tese faculty memben and
others train 165 graduate sfu..
. ~ in ~ """"' o( specialimtion-public lib-aries, _ . , . ,
lihnuies, special libraries, CXJI.ledian developa-t and terial selection, dassif'..,.tion
and cataloPnc ol maten.ls,
ftloftDce and advisory serW:es,
libmry .............., and sys-.... llllliprint media, school
libmry media and libraries in
......,.L Tbe Scboal o&amp;os .....,..
40 .........., pouped 111111..- 1i¥e
......,... _....., "--ed.,
i*
I firm
CYII!!I!P"Iicetims
. . . edacatiaa, u.ra..-tioo
ac:ioDce, sociai '".::
- a n d edmiuiistmtiaa ....

been.......::: - ....

-.-.:IL "'be ~· - t s
the MIS, ................ depee
-.hit:h lo the r.:t that
the stadmt is a specialist as
...n as a flOod hEic l.ilxarian.

...,.__..,_

This is relatiw:ly
- - U / B slarted a lihoary
school in 1919 but phased it
aal iD 1945. In 1966, it tried
apia. A1 that time, the idea
to start. school whose empbasis ... inbmo.tiaa sci- . ~ relations
.... adti-media. This ap....... was hold and eu:iting
but ..._. a foundatiaa of
hEic ............ in libnrianship.
lillnrians ....., suspicious
.and felt the Scboal - " ' ad!&gt;~
students for
the~ In the -me ol
l.91ll. thiacs .-:bed a '-d.
n-e ....., .......,. the Scboal
....,. caine to be phased out
apin aml the dean was leavinc. "'be CllllBil sllldents and
the Scbool's 1.50 pMu&amp;tes
baDdtd ~- Tbey ......,
~- lo CIIIIVinDe the Repn adnpnisbafion to r e t a i n the
school ..... becin the .......:Ia for
a clam. In SepCember ol

-nne

~'-d. BobinSILS'

..-inc

pains aren't

...... ,...._ This spine. it will
r.:.e - aoaeditatiaa teom of

t!&gt;e

~ Library As&amp;ocia!JoD which wiD loolt at cunicu-

~

objediws. faatlty, facili-

ties,. siDdent body, alumni and

Unhlersity . . _ t . Wheth..the Scboal wiD be a:x:redited is
IIIIDI!Itain. Presemly Sll.S is
bculty llll!lllber short of
the minimum number needed
and the ~ be dissatisfied with the oC Uai,.......,_ . , . _ t . But Dean Bobis hapofuJ that they will
focus oo SILS' nnique approach. the it will bave
OD the Amhon;t campus and
the pins the Scboal bas made
in the past two years.
the Sdiool does achieve
aa:reditatioo and pins in..........t finaD&lt;iai support, Bobinski's ....... is that Sll.S will
ClDiltinue to . , . _ . , the role
ol lillnrians and educate our
students for the future."

u

ChinffiePlan
New Year Fete
A ChiDese New Year's Fiesta, with aulbeutit:, famil style cuisine, prepared
Ya
ChiDese - .
be
held em Sa~. February 19
at-the Ridce u. Dining Hall
at6p.m.
"'be ewnt, CC&gt;-5piiii9CJI' by
the ChiDese Sludent As&amp;ociatiaa the ChiDese Club, will
also fetolun! the IJaditiooai
~·s llotJa, Fan D a ace,
ChiDese music, dtamatic pre............. follt ,.,._and an
e:a:eqJt &amp;om a ChiDese opera.
'l"icclzts for students are $2.00:
_ . admis6ian is $2.50.
•
n is c:ustomuy to '-"" a
...... ..._..,. ... the ChiDese
New Y..r's Eve to berald in
~:iod which in ancient
lastal for a full month
aad fell -durinc the """""" ol
rest from apiadturai w o r 1t.
Otinese sllldents and faatlty
at U/ B lllllllber close to 500.

~

...3!

Dr. I..intB l'lcalia«'• thoay
on the beaofita ol Vdlaia C
was 1-*ed . . - . . _ . , .......,
about the wlae ol Vdlaia C
for years.• ADd 11m. Davis
aitici21!Jd dodan ......
it
isn't_.,._
ly '-.ven"t ....., their ........_
~- Reponod CII9I!S ol &amp;ideeffect cliauhs ...., the ftSIIlt
ol the biudoo- ,_. in the y-..,.:
man C talllea, ol the ,.._
trient itself. sbe aplaiaecl.
Tbe food tbearist also hotieoes
that America is failiac. I i k e
Rome, because ol lllllriiianai
.W · 8 Sbe. spoloe ol ooe
dot:loc who feels the u.s. wiD
......... ,.,.,.,.._ the flOod '-lth
the nation once ellioYal 11m.
Davis ~·· quite so Pl"""itaisti
~ hotieoes_ ~ cauatry is ....
m a '"tra!Eitional s t a a e- in
which '"we are '-vine a becinning o1 in~e~est u. JJDtritioa,
but it's-........._. H this
leamo;
llbout
nutrition
lhi!D
there's
........flOod
but
"if ooe more geoeratioo eats aD
u.junlt food lhi!D - - " t
bave .....,..P bnias loft to run
the country.-

people"':.....

~~

Mrs. Davis also diacus&amp;ed the
functions of vitamins A.
Bccmplez, and E plus the min~ calcium, nwprsium and
trOll. Sbe explained the SIIURleS
of these nutrieuts .... their de~ symptoms in some de-

c.

Sbe ClODduded bel- prepared

'inc that
eot cheese, milk,
meat ( especiai]y I i v e r ) and
fruits and YegdalJies ...
flOod .soil
During the question and answer period, m a n y students

remarks by ,..... ..
eveey&lt;JIJe

=

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

ets. Yes, ~

believes synthetic
Vitamin C is as flOod as natma1
C. Young children dndd always bave wbole m i I k and
adults dndd ......... dtink slim
miUc: unless some fat is tabu
with iL Feriilized egs are better than unfertilizal egs. Yes,
the Weight Waidlers diet is
good

Tbe ptadicaJ advice was intenupted by Sepl's COiilllelts
on the validity ol Mrs. Davis'
theories. He agreed with belon the need f..- ......, instnx&gt;tion 00 nutrition in IDf!dit:ai
!d&gt;ools- a-.-.... be .....,.._
sized the ~ ol Fine
to a dot:loc for an illnes&amp; talbeothan tryinc to cure yoamelf
with vitamins and mineoal&amp;.
Sepl said it his ._,.;bility to ......
fessiooal

these ODIIIII8lls but ol
the llllllimce ..........t iDtereslal in Mrs. Dovir( vi-a.
than his - - ol .....

:::::ies

Prof is Editor

�~-

--,.,111, D72

3

(Funky 50's,' FolkRock&amp;New ~usic
Are Hallmarks of the (New U/B Blues'

-A

~

iginal SODgs as a substantial

on the present

memben;hip. grouped by weal
puts, iBIISUates the -tility:

Basses include Mamn pla.ys the 12-string guitar. bass
and Oute; Dan Schneider, an
audiology grad student from
Buffalo. plays electrical
and aooostit::al guitar ( "super
guitar." the Blues call the latter I and Burton whose instruments are guitar. trumpet and
drums.
Second tenors are Rich Stoyell. a Buffalo sophcmooe majoring in engineering. ~
doubles with hand percussKJil
and .lobn FIOrino, Mineola.
N. Y ~ biology senior, solo and
' - ' wc:alist plays drums,
guitar. percussion and trombone.
Sandy Schneider. a Ut B alumna wbo is an elementary
school teacber. is the Blues"
alto section and an ~
female ' - ' vocalist.
First t e n o r s are Dennis
O'Brien; a senior English~
from East Meadow. N.Y~ wbo
also provides hand ~
and Al Stewart. an engineering
maio&lt; from Baldwin. N.Y~
whose talents extend to guitar.
..... piano and organ.
The Blues were fanned in
1962 UDder the direction of
Doll Conover. a pianist and
weal BJTUIIl'l'l". A spin-off of the
UIB Men's Cborale. the gronp
r-twec1 obow and barbeosbop · harmonies, ~
campBDied oc • c:appolJa.
In 1967. the guitar- introcluo::ed by Geny · Wydoof and
Neal Radice """ CIIIDe ont
of the old tradition ol. tbe
Blues. "They ...... 8IDOIIC tbe
first to integrate four-put hal'with cuitar and ...... the
'-len for • period """"" the
Bl""" atwed a . . t ol. Kinaslon Trio 9IIUIIIL
Wbon Burton joined in 1.968,
the 81.- ......,tially ...... eiPt
pys UBinc one microphoae and
..... two oc thn!e cuitars. The
• tml&amp;ic: '-vy on the l.etlemel
and the ......_ and h - . eltbuucb • Radice's
for

cem•

writinc and &amp;rl1IDiinc -

pv-

By the fUI ol. 19"10.
--~

tmiSic

inc the tboir first feelinc
ol. self ~ identity.•

-

cllualinc- Bunaa. who"""
aDIIIICinc from Rldice.

leuDed

........r to .,.,._ with the
tm-. He """ tbe Debt . _ .
to - ' : with.
u.- who came in that
ysr blou&amp;bt to tbe Blus ~ in oriPnal llllliic. He
and Burton ....... writiDc ....

part of

Blues also sing free for cbarities and special oa:asions.
On campus, they have performed for various resideDce
hall activities and for some ol.
the colleges. 1bey also coordinate the annual Spring Sing Out
which brings together perfonning talent from various sec:ID&lt;s
of the campus and usually overflows the Goodyeai Dininc
Hall This year. the Blues
would like to shift the eveat.to

the repertoire:

Fiorino, an ex-Marine medic.
contributed a solid lead tenor,
a voice to rocus·a solo on. Havinc been "into music" since the
third grnde. Fiorino also knew

trombooe, drums, a cappella
arrangements and, fortuitously
as it turned out. instrumental

rock and music of- the late 50's.
His rendition of " When We
Get Married," an old Dream
Lovers" hit. "electrified"" last
year's Spring Sing Out audi-

ence. putting the Blues at the
. . - of the current wave of interest in music of that era.
a udiences responded to the
SloyeiJ. Burton describes as contrast with the more modem
a very, very strong "part"" sing- sounds. It shows a Jove f!&gt;r
er with a histo&lt;y of choral work music. Burton feels. and is defin high school He was a "cbal- .initely a vital part of the "traleoge" to bring into the group dition" or the Blues.

but added a valuable voice.
He also helped bring the group
together, Burton says, because
of the great need to make him
feel at home.
Burton credits Stewart with
-getting the - group orr the
ground" musically. T we I v e
yeaJS of studying pianO had
given him a feeling for and extensive knowledge of music as
background for a vocal group.
His ocgan work changed the
physical &gt;;lyle of the music.
The "New U/ B Blues"" were
born. based on a folk-rock concept similar to the Associati?n
or the Fifth Dimension. For the
first time. Blues performances
became more than a show of
weal strength.
O'Brien embodies a feature
that bas lasted tluougb the
Blues" ten yeaJS-that of the
higb male wice on top. At one
point. be might have been
Clilled the resideut cnnservative
-« IDI!IIIbe!- of ROTC for a
time wben most of the other
Blues were letting their hair
pow and cbanging their ideas.
_....., T ~ it is no longer- empbasiD,d, a bubersbop tradilion bas survived the wave of
musical c:bantle and motinues
tO be an important element in
the clue that holds the group
I&lt;Jtletber. As Burton recalls,
then: ba"" been two dominant
penllllla)ities with this orientalion who hoi"" made maio&lt; cootributions to the Bluos. Wydrof
the fust of these and in
-...,.,..t years it was Bob
Allen. Allen loved bubersbop
harmony tbuucb .....e of
the others tbuucbt this side of
tbe Blus '!'OQJd and sbould die
ouL ADen, Burton se.ys, bad
the physical siae to push his
poinL Bubenliq&gt; stayed and

Allen left Bu1ralo last year
when he decided that the industrial arts program at Oswego is where his real in&lt;erests
lie. However, he almost remained here as a chemistry and
biology major, Burton says,
just because of the group-the
ties are that stmng.
When AUen left. the Blues
decided it would take two to
replace him - the Schneider
husband and wife team. Dan
Schneider had been in the
group in 1969 )lut had lelt
school for duty with the reserves. Back in Bu1ralo, be was
ready to rejoin and bis wife
Sandy was more than anxious
to do the same. The Blues at
one point had a sort of female
·a wriliary. the Baby Blues, a
group which was in eDftence
for about four year.; but JS now
non-&lt;!XistenL 1be Blues themselves, boweYe£, bad always
been all-male. Chauvinistic Iradition gave way and Sandy was
welcomed because be.- voice
added a new and eu:iting quality.
Meanwhile, Dan. wbo plays
classical guitar. also started to
seriously write music for the
Blues, displaying a talent that
enc:ourap!CI Burtoo. Mamn and
others to follow suit at an increased poce.
The 81.- perlonn primarily
in the Buffalo ........ app...,u,g
at high schools and colle&amp;es
and before service groups. "They
have carolled for pammar
schools at the Holiday _ , . .
' and have entertained at ..,..
men's dub hmd&gt;eons.. (To inquite about bookinc the Blues,
call 831-21U.)
Cbarpa vary II&lt;!CDI"IIing to
orpnization-$100 an hour for
high schools and $200 for cnl. _ and service dubs. But lbe

Clark
Gym. """""""'·
studenl
orpni2ationa
which usually
underwrite the free event · are
short on funds and prospects

are not brighL The Blues will
never charge a cent for stUdents
at the Sing OuL
. ·
M•io&lt; Diuppoiooboeol

All of which brings Burton
to one of his maio&lt; disappointments-the relationship of the
University with the Blues. Student Association, Administration. Academic departments,
Alumni (except for some funds
for a record in the mid~s)
have shown little interest in
the group. or in promoting
them or providing any funding.
1be Blues have requested on
several occasions, for example,
to be allowed to sing roc orientation. This would provide visibility and a means to recruit
potential new members from
among freshmen. "They would
also like to peri&gt;aps tie the
Spring Sing Out in with the
University"s Ccmmunity Day
this April. But nobody in
charge seems ton inleresloed.
Here's a gronp of talenled
students would be ..__..
als" for community and alumoi
~lions mn- and would
Jove to do it. Burton UIB
may be overlooking a vay effective tie-in with lbe Clllllllllll&gt;ity, he feels, particularly in
these times wben communi!;y
relations and "ima&amp;e" ....., io
weiRh so heavily in llayao
Hall thinking. The Bl.- a&gt;uld
play an important role in the
University"s drive to betta- ita
relations with the communit,y,
be thinks, and the Uniwnity
oould play an inloegral .-rt in
the future .....,.... of the Blues.
Whatewo-- ol. tbio, Jooa...
ever. eight oc nine , _ ....,
and will in all liJoeli.
bood go on singing for lbe joy
of it. cbanging and _ . . iD
ll!usical style, beiltc lbe Blues.
. As Burton """"&gt;' and then "mqic'" '-PI- at a
ooocert. "Suddeldy. """"" strike up a 110111. our IIIIEic b&amp;CIIIDeS everybody's IIIDiic.•
"lbat"s entertainmmt. "lbat"s
lbe Blues.

1

�J

GREPOR'I'ER:&gt;

4

,__.,,

10, 1!172

Planned Paren~hood and Women's Lib: Emphasis is Changing
of vasectomies has risen sharply, and the safety of birth control methods has been given
considerable attention. Women
are questioning the rigid hoepita! rules on sterilization and
these rules are beginning to be
relaxed. We are only starting to
have a more realistic attitude
toward having high school students getting information and
contraception, and birth control
is still not as available as it
needs to be for college students.
Thus, though progress has been
made, an enormous a m o u n t
must still be accomplished if
we are to really hav~ that basic
prerequisite for responsible living, that is, control or our
own reproductive systems.
Margaret Sanger, surely one
of the most effective and remarkable women in American
history, wrote in her autobiography:'
ur knew something must be
done to rescue those women
who were voiceless: someone
had to express with white-hot
intensity the conviction that
they must be empowered to
decide for themselves when
they should fulfill the supreme
function of motherhood ..,
There have been two changes
in emphasis since this was written. The various liberation
moveznents have questioned the
ell'icacy of "being rescued."
They have begun to see the importance of rescuing themselyes, seizing hack their own
voices. Welfare rights, the black
power movement, women's liberation, etc., have seen the process as important as the result.
Thus, several years ago, when
women were brave enough to
stand up and talk about their
own abortions in a public legis-

EDITOR'S NOTE : Thi8 is the

fifth and fintJl article in a series

in (X)IUW!tion wilh the aJliUUII
fund-raising campaign for
P~ Porenllwod of Buffaw
in w/Udr many individuals assocUUed wilh U / B ore ilwol1Jed.
The Reporter wishes to thank
Mrs. Beatrice Silber for her .efforts in securing and coordinating the series as we.U ·as the indwidool faculty and staff membeo who have contributed articles.
By MARY SCHWARTZ
......,, Ptol-,

PoKy . . , Community

Soc:ial

~,...,u,..

My first lesson on the way
laws on female sexual ''morality" relate to the pocketbook
came when I worked as a fledgling social worker at a social
agency in Boston. At the time,
Massachusetts had a state law
which forbade the use t&gt;f contraceptives, and therefore no
publicly sanctioned clinic could
be founded. We had to bus our
economically poorer clients to
another state which, having no
such law, had a thriving
planned parenthood organization. Many women understandably found the whole procedure
not worth the trouble; followup was almost impossible, and
u n w a n t e d pregnancies continued. Needless to say, my
middle class friends went happily and conveniently to private docf.9rs in Boston, where
contraception was r e a d i 1y
available.
My second lesson came when
I began to discover who obtained abortions at the time
when the latter were illegal
except in the most extreme circumstanoes. Again, of course,
it was the more prosperous,
lmowl.edsea\&gt;le p eo p I e, who
knew how to get around the
system, or who had the money
to fiy somewhere where it was
legal. Even then, an occasional
middle class woman made morbid headlines. One can only be
awe struck at the tremendous
progress, at least in our State,
made by the new abortion law.
Planned Parenthood is to be
commended for its present important referral service in this
regard_ However, while the
changes in both climate of opinion and availability of service
are enonnously encouraging
there is still much that nee&amp;
to be acoomplished.
In some hospitals in Buffalo,
abortions are still not available
to women under 21 who do not
have their parents' permission.
In some settings. women having
abortions are still viewed with
disapproval by many of the
boepital staff and treated accordingly. We need to be sure
that not having money does not
constitute an obstacle to getting
the desired service.
Why •re Women the Guine• Pigs?
In the area of birth control,
women are questioning why
they, rather than the males
~ve to be the chief
p1gs. In the last couple of years
it is significant that the amount

GVIEWPOINTS
The Repotter · " - on thlo to provide • forum tor the exch•nce of views on • wide v.,.iety

of the issues facing the •e.demlc
community. , We welcome both
position p•pers •nd letters n
space permits.

lative meeting, this not only
began to change public opinion,
but changed those women
themselves, who could . at last
let out that '"dirty secret." Onoo
the dirty. secret was out and
could be stated publicly, instead or whispered behind
closed doors, it began to feel
like a different hall game.
Not When, But Whether

Secondly, women's liberation
has changed the question of

when to fulfill that "supreme
function," to when or whether.
This is a crucial point. If I decide not to have a child, and
many have for a great variety
of reasons (the list is endless,
and the reasons complex), then
I can no longer justify the use
o[ contraceJ)Iion as "planned
parenthood." I can no longer
say (as women have been
taught to say throughout most

guin..;

GR.f:PORTER,
A. ~ ~ty ~ pub/hhH .acJa Tb.undq by the Dm.ion o1 Uni·
;;-:. ~~:.:":JZ:.IT ol N- Yo.;k a! Bullalo, 3435 N~ St., BullaJo.
(P'- 2127).
.
Joc:.tM' '" Jr--. 2J3, 250 w_,... A BneutW. Kditor
A.. W£STUY ROWLAND
M~Dhctcr

7"11.oDO~

V. PA.URMO

BdJfoNtt.CIWI
ROBERT 7'. JIARLE1T

_

W..tly ~j,';",~8U,._,.

u;,_

Art ...J ProdCICtion
JOliN A.. Cl.DUTIZR

..........

CONTRIBUTING AR'l'IST:

s.._.

111.

Brr~

Robert

$~

1
Ndh--.... AU4Utlt

that a woman should not think
exclusively in terms of what
was good for her children.
In much the same way, I
think women need to come to
terms with their own sexual
needs and desires. I would
rather Planned Parenthood be
called something like " Planned
Sexuality" but then it might
very well go out of business.
The double standard, though
improved, is still very much
with us. All one has to do is
realize the way the word
&lt;~p romiscuity" is applied to
males and females in order to
realize that we still are very
much a part of the 19th century tradition of fear and contempt for female sexuality.
Women's liberation is talking
about oomething broader than
the a bility to have sex with-

outgettingpresnant.althoucb
this ability is the absolute
foundation on which all other
considerations must rest. Norman
to the contrary, the
movement IS about the ability
to love and to feel good about
one's seU as a woman, without
necessarily following the more
traditional f em i n i n e role.
l There are as many variations
of this theme as there are _.
men who are bying the variations.) We are on the verge
of very different definitions of
femininity and masculinity. As
our terror of overpopulation ·increases, as our pathetic need
to prove our ''manhood" in
Vietnam is seen as an exercise
in futility and cruelty as our
perverted national · Priorities
are exposed, one can only hope
that this has not come too late.

Mailer:

.Budget Cut Implications, Master Planning
Among Topics at Latest SUNY Senate Meet
By MARVIN J . FEUDMAN
suNY ~,..,of

The winter meeting of the
SUNY Faculty Senate was
held Friday and Saturday, February 4-5, 1972, in Albany. The
meeting was somewhat abbreviated for Bob Stem and myself. Our early morning flight
was cancelled and our late
morning flight was blown to
Hartford. The two-hour bus
ride got us to Albany in time
for the afternoon s e s s i on.
Speaking for myself, some of
the morn ing's high altitude turbulence stayed with me the
balanoe of the day, which could
conceivably affect my perceptions of the proc;:eedings.
I gather that Chan-cellor
Boyer spent most of the moming discussing the tight budget and its implications. ·Once
again be seemed to feel it was
important to note that the
SUNY system hils not been
singled out to effect more than
its proportional share of the
readjustments in hudgel
On F riday afternoon the
Senate discussed the p..;paratio of the Master Plan, which
is mandated every four years.
Perhaps the stage was set by
the gloomy discussion· perhaps
the Senate needed no 'additional priming, but whatever the
reason, a la rge number of discordant voices were raised. Thecri ticisms were of two kinds:
a ) Was there really a s ignificant relationship between the
Master Plan a nd subsequent
events? and b ) Could the very
ProcesseS ~sed in creating a
Master Plan generate anything
other than platitudinous ideas?
It was pointed out that severai
new directions were established
for SUNY by the 1968 Master
Plan; on the other hand important developments lik~ the
Empire State College could
arise without benefit 0 ( prior
articujation in a Master Plan.
A number of symposia were organized as a means of facilitating the planning and reports
are available of their deliberations. It did not escape notice
that some of th""" symposium
reports are mutuall y contradictory. The Master Planners will
continue to solicit ideas in a
variety of ways from the various constituencies within the
SUNY system. But how to
plan meaning(ully for a compl!cated organism like SUNY
mlg)lt well be the first order of
busmess for all future Master
Plans.
Committee Reporls

SUSA.If ORZaNWOOD

~Y.~~U:::~oA-g~~'1.!=-R~U..

of history) that I am using contraception for the "sake of the
children." And in fact, a major theme of the moment has
been some resolution that a
woman can choose to do things
because it fulfills her. Women
are uncomfortable with this, as
they have been socialized to
see their femininity in terms
of their ability to nurture, support, help and facilitate the
growth of others, be it husband,
children, friends. I .was struck
by the fact that in talks on
women"s liberation that I've
given, women have been most
uncomfortable with my reasons
for placing my three-year-old
in an all day nursery school. I
explained that ·t seemed a
good·piace for my daughter and
necessary for me to continue
my work. It felt alien to many

D.uring the final session on
Saturday moming the Senate
dealt ~ith committee reports.
No action was taken at this
meeting on the report of the

Budget Committee as the re- understandable reaction, it is
port called for setting priorities still dismaying to note an inon complicated matters. The ward turning as a response to
commitree listed seven areas financial pressures.
which might be re-evaluated Ch•nge in Sen•te?
in the light of current budgetFor several years the Goverary constraints: 1 ) continuing nance Committee has been coneducation, 2) farm operations sidering a change in the com~
at A &amp; T colleges, 3) health sition of the Senate itseU. Their
care to communities, 4) inter- proposals this year, however,
collegiate athletics, 5 ) massive were to affinn the continuation
support for agricultural re- of SUNY Senate as the voice
search, 6 ) campus schools, 7 ) of the voting faculty but at the
summer sessions. These topics same time to endorse the pospresumably will be discussed si bil~tY.. of other governance
in detail at the May meeting. · mechanisms for State UniverThe committee also recom- sity which would include the
mended more autonomy and various constituencies.
hence flexibility at the local
The report of the Committee
unit level which implies less
specific budgetary control by on · Graduate Programs illustrates a major problem for the
the Bureau of the Budget.
University Centers. The report
The two resolutions pro- took cognizance of the fact that
posed by the Personnel Poli- graduate training is customarcies Committee and passed by !'Y subsidi":"" by recommendthe Senate li1emmed from the mg that stipends be provided
current financial crisis.. The for at least 50 per cent of the
Senate underscored its concern full time graduate students at
by reaffinning the notion of each pnit. For those Senators
faculty consultation in estab- ~rom the Centers who thought
lishing pcioriti.es. relative to re- m terms of doctoral training,
trenchment. Similar!~ ·th~ Sen- the proposals were certainly in
ate ~ed the ob)ectiv~ of the right direction-but per~tical leave as conta~ed haps a bit too conservative. On
m the Board of Tf?stees policy. the other .hand....cluite .a few
The latter resolution no doubt Senators from the four-year
was .rna~~ n~ry _by current colleges felt that the resolution
amb1gwties m granting .sabhat- would mandate a disproportionlcals ..At present sabbatical ~p­ ate allocation of resources for
phcallons for 1972-73 which this purpose. The report was rehave been approvec:f locally ferred hack to committee. In
have not bee!' . conf!""ed by general the committees seem reCen~ Ad!"'rustratlon. Our luctant to recognize the differ,d~ay m get~g. to Alt;omy pre- ential needs of the Centers and
eluded Otlf ra1smg this matter the four-year institutions. This
d~n;ctly w1th Chancellor B&lt;?yer becomes quite apparent when
dunng his custt?mary question- · the issue is one involving docand-answ~ penod. In a later toral training ·which clearly
conversa!Jon .w•th Dr. Kenneth demarcates the objectives of
McKenZie, vice chancellor, per- the Centers in contrast to the
sonnel and employ_ee relations, four-year colleges. It is easier
he re1terated that smce Novem- to state the problem than to
ber the iBureau of the Budget · supply a good answer.
has placed a complete freeze
A final note. We made it to
on . approval of sabbaticals the meeting by altering our
which IS . expected t:&lt;&gt; '!ost !It course to avoid the turbulence.
leas~ until the expuation m On that day, February 4, the
!"-Pril of the OJ!e year morator- A I ban y student newspaper,
1um on .sabbaticals enacted by ASP, earned several long and
the LegiS!ature. ( I would note
articles on sex
parentheti?'Jy that this freeze well-documented
in the employment prac0!' sabbaticals '!'ould seem to bias
tices at that institution. 'Ibe
glV~ SPA the nght to invoke data
suggest that there, too, an
Article 26 of the contract alteration
in course is in orwhl,ch. allows SPA to reopen ne- der.
go~tlons on ~ subject of sabThe Spring Meeting of the
batical leaves if the State proposed!
th to change the Policies Senate (or will it be the late
0
Winter Meeting?) is slated for
e E!oard of Trustees.)
. The Co~mittee on Interna- Potsdam on May 5-6, 1972.
tiona! Stud1es presented several
~ther modest · proposals deWINE TASTING PARTY
S!gned. to. prevent further eroSion m 1ts programs. Since The Faculty Club will sponsor a
Wine-Tasting
P a r t.,. in its main
most of the speeches began
with, "rm not opposed to in- dining r o om, Harriman U.brary,
from 3·5 p.m.. Friday, February
!"rnational studies, but . . .,"
11 was. not surprising that the 18. The Club's newsletter had
resolutions were referred hack mistakenly listed the event for
to COIDII!ittee. Although it is an January 18.

�s
F3culty-Staff C'mDJs Active Ag~

Begins Publicatim cl a News1etter

~.u:aaa

r~:~se

'1:.. OIJIVl.Otl

Gmduale sludeat
Iadian Studies
c.._ the ADibro..."

: : : . : - - P-..ption

a resean:b park is, not so iDcidentally, ooe of the future
projects of tbe Ut 8 Foundation. ) Investment in the
University by private individuals and indusby viewed
in this light is a conlzibu..
tion to tbe promotjou of a
revitalized eronomic climate
for Wesa...n New YodL
Such a climate benefits aD
individuals and all institutions in the area.

GJ&gt;RESIDENTIAL COMMENTARY
WhatistheRo1eof the UJB Foundation
In ~e Develq&gt;ment of the University?

----.....
-

Q:-~-belhenlle

aflhe-inlheQ:-islhe_.,_
tion, lnc.1 - llniwnlli

-

A. Tbe U LB Foundation.
Inc., a priV&amp;Ie ooo-profit corporation, w a s formed 10

years aco at the time of merger with the State University to provide private resources for eoric:bmeol- of
academic
programs and - vices at State
Uni.-sity at
Bulfalo. With eacb ~
year, priwte funds loom
more and .more important to
W&gt; e University's f u t u r e

g,_u, and dew!lopmenL

-·--.--tDQ : - ..............

-lbe

A. TbeFoundationbas

raised more than Sl3 million
during the past nine years.

H.,...,...,., it must ioaease
the level of this suppxt in
the future. A goal of $5 million for the oest year is bolh
. realistic and """""""'-

-

Q:'"" 1s .....,_ tundlnc

A. Tbere is no siJJcle, asy
- - It is dear that this
Uoiwnity c:armot ..mt -...
ly Oil what the State will
supply in the -yean;..
Sharply a.cr-1 domuJdl;
for relatiYely State
llllllldate that, at
'-1,
for the
Uoiwnity will remain
at
CWTellt ......,. for the DeSt

--iations

year or - - ID:reolsiiJc - -

aline
-j._...;ble
· will
make itaRB,
vUtuany
to _.ale at the pr-esent
level with present fnodinc.
let aloae to provide for the
_...... and eoridlmont
- baYe projected.

.....,.__

Q:is.,._....,......,.

A: Definitely not. Private
funds, I!W!D when State appropria.tioas are at the level
of the past .......,..u "cr-Ib"
years, make the viW differ-

i'k"~~~
"'"a~· ID'IiYersity or a
-peat"' oae. Ewfty -crear
State IIDM!rsity such as inleud to become ( Midligan, California, lndianol and
"Purdue are esamples which
rome to mind ) depeuds oa
priwte funds for a largie
share of its toW lJud&amp;,et_

Private funds meet needs
wbicb the State IIII!C&gt;
essarily be esped.ed to fi..

___
----.;ay-

~andfel­

looiships, opeciaJ ~
and teaching~. esperimenta) educational programs, suppxt for distinguished' scholars, specialized
library a&lt;qUisitions, sludeatfaculty loans, pants for resean:b projects, support for
c:ooferences and 5e11Jinani,
athletic programs, and support for off-cunpus projects
such as dental diJUcs and a
variety of olheos. While a
S5 million annual additioD
to the almost $60 miJiioa
State budcet may seem
SlDIIll. it provides a -c:riticol
dill.,..,..,.,.. in programs and

__ _

SO!I"Via!s.

Q: _ _ l i i e _ s _

.,

- - ID tile

aM-..,

merced with
SUNY in 1962 the State
took title to
II I
A: Wlel U/ 8

eudaoonomtof~

$35 million. Tbese fuods

are beld by State Uoiwnity
of New York for,_ oaly by
SUNYAB-.-d. far the most
.... ..._ - stricted
by the daaor.
WleJ apecified
the UIB
put,

oaly

Fouodatioa WIIS ect.bliohed
the State paDted to it r.....
the dd UfiJ tsidowSl.5 million. An additimal
$1.5 miJiioa -

-.-t.-

'Ibese "bned"' funds, proclucinC about Sll4,000 in iDmme eacb ymr, most be returned to the State ymr, thus~ the

F_.,..- • ......,.

stricted cifts by a similar
-eacbyear.
Q:De
__ _

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

. . - . ls _

_,_,.ID

Oae of the most valuable
aamibulicw of the Foaodatioa to the Uni.-sity is the
prvrisiao of appnDimately
~ eacb year in supplea\mtal espeose funds for
admjnisfratjye oftioers. This
iodudes cleans, departmen1
dJai:nneo and """""""" as
....U as the president and
vice presidents. Tbe ftmd is
. . - ..-"3ilable lo the president allocates it to ,.,._
ioos aftioers in accordance
1ritb priorities and Deeds.
Tbe IDilllies are used for a
varietY. of purposes-Ua.el.
I i bra r y _.;,;itions, purc:base of opeciaJ equipment.
pmyment (or~
ClDSis in ......wtin&amp; faculty.
clofayioc ClDSis of visiting
~ Clllils of CIJilfer_ , eDtertainmeot.
and related "-'m•res
are carefully
audited to insure that tbey
..... . - I far the benefit of
the Uoiwn;ity and its deA;

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

.---_

Q: - t i l e - . ; t y . i n -

-..
. .- I

-

-

pri-

A : B 1-s . _ aaid ._redly .d..t, t.aday, there is no
ada lbiac as a slridly public .... ....,. private uniw!rsity. ADd I lllil* this is trne.
Private Cllllleps ..,.,.,;,.. - aaal Slate and fedlelal .. _.......in New York
Slate,.liladerdS in private iD&amp;tiialiam ..,.,.,;,.. acbalars h i p - ' and ...... funds
_ _ . by the Slate just

as SUNY do. All
the coiJep!s in wesa...n New
Yad&lt; are united in a aJIIIIDit..
ium th.rooq:h whi&lt;b moperative propmns and poolilq: of

educatioaal resources can be
aa:ompli!;bed.. State University's new recionalism plan.
b iocrea5ed
coopemtioa amoac aU institutions, public and private.
througbou1 the Slate. In
short, bolh public and pri- vale bieber educatioa are
agreed that it is both finaDo.
ially impog;ible and academically UD!iiOUIId for every iDstitutioo to do -everything_"
We must in many areas pool
our efforts as if we were one
educational establishment
Here at Ut B, - baYe . _
cxmducting an intensive
study of the diredions in
wbicb we should _.,.! in
!he future, rea1.iz:inc that sel' ective ~ l baoed our strengths and alao the strengths and awilability of quality academic programs in other area iostitutioosJ is the tey to ........
dew!lopmenL We rmlize
also, ....__, that as a mul~-~wilha
wide f3llp'! of padnate and
profeosioaal proiJ3ms, are the major edpratjnnal ~
aowce in Wesk!m N- Yoo:k,
....-ville
aU and all
inlensU, public and private.
Our cr-Ib and clen&lt;topment .
p!lllel3le not oaly cultuml
enricbment and a wealth of
educated iodividuaJs h u t
alao u.c.-1
State ditures
for ...........
.,....

""'""""""·cabs

and _,._, and jabs
in private ioduoCJy-io CliJD&amp;tructioo, in aervici!S, in
practiCally m&gt;Y field y 0 u
care to name. A IDoac uai_,aty, ~amau-:t
a duster of 81&gt;-CllW • reaean:h oriealed iDduolries
whil:b will
up ltill
jabs and llrynx:bt
our ...,.,....., ..,._ oa the
area. ~of such

more..,..

.

A ; Beoidea the projecleol .....
sean:b park, the Foaodatioa
hopefully will raise funds required lo implement a variety of new prognuos and
~ activities. Amoac
tbese are support funds for
the Clilford Furnas College
of Sci.eoce and for the Einstein Profes&amp;Onlhip; addilional financing for scbolarships, fellowships and lec-

tures; support for an espanded community service
program for the School of
Management; funds for a
faculty-alumni conference
center; support for i.n-servX:e
tJaining for law students; financing Cor prognuns lo be
held in new theatres; funds
for pollution and enviroomenW control progt31DS;
support for new faculty and
student housing; more hmdo
for library and art acquisitions; medical school scbolar-

ships and loan funds, etc.

a:..-:.:u=..:;

~-C::

A: No. Ten of the sb.._t
20 academic institotioas in
this country are public_ AD
have achieved their """""leore by countinc on approximately one-third of their
support from non-State
sources. While we do not..,_
vision that ~ of private
support here, "" are acutely
aware that the full realimtidn of our futnre plano d&amp;pends adequate fuuding from the priYate as ....U
as- the public aector.

( EDITOR'S NOTE: T1te
Presidential Commentary
IDill be pub/Uhed periodically in 1M Reporter. Topa
planned for /utun! iaua include: ll4lu6 of 1M Nortlt
Cmnpta, mi#ion of 1M Uni-

~. comnt~JJ~iq relatioM,

inJercoiJegime al!.ktia, aM
innooalion aiUl uperimenlo.-

tioll.)

�F..,_,, l O, 1!172

'REPORTER,

6

Notes onthe Classicism Of aNon-Verbal8&lt;IIUelhinJ!
Art

EDITOR'S NOTE: TIU4 i6
the firot of a liDo-part article
on the art of pantomime. The
.-ad part tDiJI appear next
wed "" the f!De of the UnioerMIY• "W.eknd of Mitu."

...

By .IOHN K. SIMON
,.,.,._ Ill

F~

- ~ the recent period of
.audeD1 activian some of the
relonn demanded within the
Uaiwaity was directed toward
ap accepbmce of the DOD·
wdJal. The powth of media
IIUdieo ia 1..-1 upon a recocoitioll that the
printed,
..,.._ or """" 111111• no longer
' - the kind ol privileged status
it """" hlld. ADd this has even
.,.,._ to be tzue of the acatalogical variety.
While ouch a movement may
tie toward a different form of
intelligibility tban that of ..,.;tine or speech. it is not , _ .
~ anti-intellectual nor un-

-ro.

~~~~

toward other forms of expresCDJIIliSI8hle witb musical

llioa,

compooi~ ~m=

:0';'~":;

dieciplined if not
IIJDdJ more m.:iplined than
the Yerbal lladition.
Litemture, like the late divinity, has heralded its own
death IDr some time now. Modem fiction, with its post-Joycean emphasis upon "spatial

~J:io":.r.ne:~~

fonn,w it&amp; infmconJ;ciouso
lms aspired quite deliberately
to another state than the pended upon to carry meanprinted word. The contemporary IIIUT&amp;Iive is clearly in•en- ing.
ious in ita phoenix-like ability 19th Centuoy Fronoo
to tell a story after it has
Without harking bad&lt; to
-...! aL ltx· outset that it has Livius
Andronicus in Rome, -a
~ to tell and no credible
convenient
historical constel~ to tell iL It is forever
of mime artists origin-"iDe a Failwe out ol lallure. lation
ates in 19th-century France

--

When we have concluded,
there always remain visual patterns of some kind-in the form
of a map, a photograph, a seemingly ungraspable and irretrievable """"!. a complex relationsbip-beyond the expressible,
left to ponder by some other
means tban the finite ones at
the novelist's disposal. The
..,.;ter, sometimes a frustrated
painter or &amp;CUiptor, or an engineer, !urns often to the cinema. lt is as though an ambiguity can be preserved only outBide the ....-bal, as though the
Yerbal immobilized it. not in a
state of darity, but in insignificant and demystified hanality
liJr.e the espoaed repetition of
any deeply felt emotion.
The l&gt;laYwri&amp;ht a Is o h a s
faced the
impasse since
the advmt of "espreosionism."
EW!Il • far back as Cbekhov
and BlriDdbers. the cooclusion
or~ .tatement OClCWB in
llilmce. The authenticity of
PimDdello'a Henry IV, of Pir..wlo himeeU can be exPI-t only in mute gesture,
"*'- or bolh. w.-:.o•s orator awaited in The Chain finally arriws only to sputter.
Beebct his plays as
tbauab they ending; be

·....me

=-

~"'"!'u~ :f:'e ti;
tboacbt ~ well, and a si-

lmt film, llllliely titled in fact
(Filla), which deliberately
cbaws &amp;Umtioa to ita muleDess
.., ~ ia pure tbauab failing via-

-rz.e

the clialotlus of modem fiction .....,;.,. toward the
blomkpqe~ .. the-

':f:stage

- - b e .tudied

diMclioa&amp;. The 'pt!Tf017J11111Ce. ia
ewl)'lbinc. for the eaaeoce of
wt.ta...s.rar -~de-

. n- from a

"'itealy" work is
laadaf el.ewbere Ibm in
doe - ' - ' Iabrie. An of
........ .........._the very
,._. with wbicb today'e cam"'h• OIIX!IID and tber&amp;fooe ...,._, an tbia .... _ . far too

-

rm.ne.
...................... tobect.

GU/B
GNOTES

else more hybrid,
c:ommercial (e.g., the theatre,
-operetta}, denigrating as
artificial the abstract research
By"D"
of purists like Etienne Decroux.
The late Dean Crain, South
lt m u s t be admitted that
mime i6 useful to the actor or Carolina preacher-humorist,
singer (Decroux's tmvels all used to describe the educated
over the world to schools of man as "one that can read and
a c t i n g, including even the write and tell the time of day."
famed Actor's Studio in New But, of course, it takes more
York-Marion Brando's stud· now to be "educated" tban it
ied inarticulateness would seem used to.
to be of an entirely dill'erent
A committee from the faculvariety-attests to the function· ties of Andover, Exeter, I..awal value of the art}. Also, with- re.nceviUe, Harvard, Princeton
in the spectrum of mimes, a and Yale recently did a study
kind of sanctum in fact, Mar- on what it means to be liberceau, for instance, has been to ally educated. Here are some
some degree euommunicated of their conclusions:
for his adaptability, eclecticism,
''The liberaJly educated man
vulgarity of medium, etc. (Par- is articulate, both in speech and
adoxically, Chaplin is a kind in writing. He has a feel for
of deity for Decroux, and yet language, a respect for clarity
his aaft was surely "impure.") and directness of expression,
Surely, no one would reduce and a knowledge of some laneven the most impure mime to guage other tban his own.
the level of a charade, that liv"He is at borne in the world
ingroom fad of the 1940's or of quantity, numher and meas50's. Any m i me perfonned urement. He thinks rationally,
merely to elicit in the audience
o b j ec ti v e I y, and
a discovery of its stimulus, logically,
model, or sou.rce is 'DOt worthy knows the difference between
and
OPinion. When ocfact
of the name, just as the words
of a poem. play or fiction, once casion demands, however, his
thought
is
imaginative and
comprehended are not replaced
creative rather than logical.
uHe bas oonvictions which
are reasoned, although he canence in an artistic context.
not a lways prove them. He is
Closest to Dance
Closest to dance, mime seeks tolerant about the beliefs of
the essence of movements, with others because he respects sina point of departure in mimicry cerity and is not afraid of
but rapidly extending to . an ideas.
"Above all, the liberally edelaboration of patterns or conventions of gesture which are ucated man is never a type. He
not dissimilar from certain con- is always a unique person,
temporary research in linguis- vivid in his distinction from
tics. The aim is to abstmct some other similarly educated per·
general rules· which lead to an sons, while sharing with tbeni
understanding and control of the traits a~.dy ~~tioned!'
the fundamentals of bodily ex-

with the theories of Andre Del-

sarte and Deburnu's creation
of Pierrot. Inspiring a series of
French writers from Jules Laforgue through Henri Michaux
and Raymond Queneau, the figure of Pierrot appears in Marcel Cam e's Lea En/ants du
Parodi6. Jean-Louis Barrault
and Etienne Decroux perform
a famous mime there, evoking
Deburau. When Barrault performs it again in the late 1940's
upon the stage, Marcel Marceau, a pupil of Decroux joins
him. The constellation is complete when one acknowledges
that almo;;t all contemporary
mimes were atriliatcd at one
time or other with Ma.n:e.au..
While &amp;rrault did much for
mime in the 1930's and 40's
and remains capable of phenomenal physiall expression,
it was Decroux. a militant socialist of Bl""'': populist origin, whose tense energy, prophetic spirit and dogged perseverance embodied the spirit
of mime. A theorist and philosopher as well as a superb
gymnast, Decroux is the pammarian of gestUre par euellence, and his attempt to codify mime, to make of it a kind
of ascetic mode of being, has a
genial qualitY nmnistskable to
anyone who has aeen him perform, teadJ or tsik about his
art. Yet the performance of
mime itself, partly due to IJe.
croux's infllleDDe, partly because of the nature of IJ&gt;e art,
has a built-in purity, an ascetic
quality apparent in young artists such 88 Claude Kipnis.
Why a preciaely FrendJ tmdition? POilllibly a factor of the
atmoophere of theatrical experimentation in the early part of
the 2Dtb. centmy in France.
Gordon Craie's elimination Of
the actor's ~ty. his interpretiye or imitaliw role, in
favor of larp!r more at.Jiule
and abstmct ....... Alao, the
immeme influence of Cbadot,
and other phenomona of the
thMb'e liJr.e Alfred .larry, AnIAlain Artaud and the .....-..1iats.

The Kipnis . .,...

n..c..

Finally, cartesianism might
be an explanation, the theme of
f{t!edom ant! restraint ~v. ~­
cine ) beauhfully combined m
the confines of the body with
its challenge and paradoxical
yearning to achieve the perfection of a machine. Also, the re-

~li~u';"Fo:sg~~ :e"'~r;

limit the vocabulary but banishes it completely and sets out
even to impose a restrictive
grnrnmar o! mo~em~t.

pression: a sort. o( transfonnatiooal grammar of the body.
Decroux's exercises and the

The Ford Foundation announced
support this week of a new Con·

sortium

Center for EducatiOfUII

arduous rules he sets down for Leadership as well as a manage·
all movements represent an ar- ment development proeram for adticul8.tion ·or s y n tax of the ministrators in hleher eduation.
bones. A literary ten which, The consortium, aWirded a gnmt
tbough Jacking in Decroux's of $814,488, wos formed by seven
The Essence af the Art
seriousness, comes close to his
Mime is neither a means o( kind of ~' is Raymond universities previously aided by
communication prior to speech Queneau's Ezercices de style the foundation: Atlantl University,
Graduate School, Uni·
nor when speech is impossible where the sam e deliberately Claremont
t because one is dumb, distant,
hana1 incident is related in an versity af Chicogo, Teochers Col·
, Unlwrsity af
lege
(Columbia),
or unable to speak the same infinite number of styles and
language}. Neither is mime an vocabularies. On the other hand, Masnchusetts. Ohio State Univer·
sity,
and
University
af Pennsyl·
adjunct to speech nor to any rather than subjective multiother form of communication. plicity, Decroux's art seeks an v.nl•.
1~-n,y forUJ!tous\y come ~~t essence, like Gaston Bachelard's
The Federal budget for the
Uiat, in a g1ven mstance, 11 JS poetics of the elements, in
one or all of these things but things tbemselves. T h us, his coming 1973 fiscal year which
to designate mime as a suhsti· kind of m i me, though often President Nixon sent to Contute for or auxiliary to other coocemed with the gestures o( gress on January 24 proposes
forms of expression does not the artisan (e.g., ''The Ca&lt;Pen- significant increases in Educahelp to get to the essence of ter"}, naturaJly tends to mimic tional Opportunity Grant&amp;, Colthe art. No more tban to sug- nature and the modem world lege Work-Study and developgest tbat the art of wonls is a itself: tr e e s, machinery, ab- ing institution programs, and
means of communication avail- geometric shapes. In its also in funds for the National
able when gestures are not pos- most pronounced form, perhaps Science Follll$tion, the NasiDle or have not been success- ' in an ide a I never attained, tional Foundation on the Arts
ful or .sufficient (after all, a mime is o I ate s gestures and and Humanities, and for acamore appropriate designation! ) . movements from their original . demic research in general On
Like all arts, mime is beat de- realistic setting and draws us the other hand, the budget confined in its purest state, even into a transcendence where we tains no new funds for conthough tbat state is nuely re- .identify in a higher formal syn- struction grants for teaching
alized.. As such it is far re- thesis.
facilities at colleges or medical
moved from speech l when
and nursing schools. For colspeech is evoked by a mime,
lege academic Cacilities It reit is suggested by a great emlies on loan subsidies to supphasis upon the physiall moveport
COb8tructiou. The ~
ment of the jaws, mouth, face,
also propooes to reduce or elimwith added gesticulatioos of
inate
aid to land-grant~
the arms and whole body,
Dr. Peter H. Hare has been college teame. fellow8hips and
drawing attention away f10111
the verDai} . It is thus a mistake appointed chairman of the IJe. grants for purcbaae of nnderto identify mime, for eDJDple, partment of Philosophy where . graduate teaching equipment.
All told, the budget caJJa for
with the silent movies wbere, be has been acting chairman
outlays of $246.3 billion in Fisoften actually apolre and . since August, 197L
Dr. Hare, who joined the cal 1973, with a deficit of $25.6
where usually fairly rmlistic,
exaggerated gestures were made UnM!nity in 1962 as lecturer billion. This compares witb outmerely beca,_ technicall)'there in philoeoplry, received his B.A. lays of $236.6 billion in the
could not yet be a recording of in 1957 from Yale and his M.A. current flBCai year and an ex(1962} and Ph.D. (1965} from pected deficit of $31.8 billion.
~the reliance -on the verEducation's share amounts to
bal is eYiden&lt;ed by an often Columbia.
auperfluous ,_ of titles. This
A Diember of the American $15.7 billion, or 6.4 per cent of
en-or indeed ia anaJocouo to PhiJcwJpbicaJ Aaoociation East- total Federal spending. 'That
the early. miatske of -mg the em Diviaioa, Dr. Hare held a is a $1.1 billion increase over
new art of film as merely CeUowomp from the National
this year, and a $12 billion infilmed theatre. Yet, even boob Endowment for the Humanities crease since·l963. Of the $15.7
appreciative of' the art, like durin1 the 1968-e9 academic .llillion total, $7 ..t 1illlion, or 47
. .
~ 8 or
Walbr'o year. .
per cent. ia allotted to higher
He t.a Cl&lt;Hil1lhon!d Evil and ~ucation, and repl'l!lleDts an
~oninM~ of a
the;=t't of God, and some UlCn!88e ol $395 IDiUion over
artidee.
aMiJnilatioo of mime i D t 0 25 •
this year.

Hzi.eNamed
As Chairman

t!.':J'

t;:'t!:/;

�.

.

Ftlbrwiry, 10, 1972

~~
And Signing

7

&lt;REPORTER,

SUNY Presidents Hear Discussion of
Crucinl Issues for '72 MasterPlan ·

Communique(Continue&lt;i

from -

B, coL II)

California, 104 Parker ~­
ing,

3 p.m.

PHVSICS COLLOQUIUM·• : Prof. ~

~tf~1.'"~~~~1of,!!~:1

'Ole environmental-&lt;D~~SU~Der
4 p.m.; refreolmlo!ot&gt;l
aeries of "crucial issues" to vary by field, by the status of phases. Completion of develo~ HochsteU..r,
action poup, WNYPIRG, beAcovered
developing the student, by prospective return ment is scheduled for Decem- 112 HochsteU..r, 3:30 p.m.
started ita campaign to collect required 1972in Master
bee
BJOCHEM1811lY-cLINICAL CBEIIl8"'''IY
to the graduate, etc.
Plan
for
12,000 support signatures from
Master ~Ianning is required &amp;EMJNAil•: Dr. George Guiheult.
Logistics-'Ole problem of
U/B students on Monday. State University of New York improving productivity.
every four years, Somit ex- prof&lt;SilOr, chemistry. LouisiaDa
After two days, the group had were outlined at the recent
plained.
After being developed State Univer11ity, New QrleaDO,
Regional and inter-instituLa., The UliU of Enzyme~ all Ancollected over one fourth of the monthly meeting of SUNY tionaf cooperation.
by SUNY, CUNY and the pri- alytical
Reagen16, G-22 Capen, 4
number needed and Coordin- presidents.
vate
institutions,
the Plan is p.m.
Continued accessibility to
According to U/ B Executive
ator Jeff Levin is "fairly optireviewed and synthesized by
the educational system.
mistic" that they will collect Vice President Albert Somit;
FILM• •: The Parcu:lin£. COM. 140
the
Regents.
Once
adopted
by
·
According
to
Somit,
1972
the minimum number during Sanford Gordon, an economist Master Plan development is the R&lt;!gents, the Plan has the Capen, 7 and 9 p.m., free.
G r e g o r y Peck. Ann Todd,
the first week of the two-week at the State University College now in the fourth of seven technical status of law.
Charles Laughton, Alida Valli.
at Oneonta who is now on loan
campaign.
Directed
by AlLred Hi~
to
SUNY
-Central,
handled
a
Weatern New York Public
Inten!llt Research Group discussion of these issues which
i~.·
J'~~'f?h.:'fd~
included:
(WNYPIRG) is a Nader-style
a gentleman who becomes enam.Mission-Has anything ha~
action orpnization that started
ored of his client, a woman who
is not only a mwdereas but a
in November when Nader's as. pened to cause SUNY to resistant, Donald Rosa, spoke on consider its goals and pwposes
ili:~be&amp;utii~-!,~e!
campus. Since then. the group ( tbe same would apply to a
trial for poisoning her hua.has been growing in strength given institution) ;
Following is the schedule of on
lnte.;;.tional M on t h will
band. Peck. u her attomey.·fa.Ds
aod support.
Openness and accessibilityprograms
for
the
Month:
"provide a rare opportunity for
completely under her spell and
Locally, reaction has been The l.ar2:er the constituency, the foreign students, American stuFriday, February 11-Exe- into a quandry. Romantically
good. Councilman W i II i am larger the "base of support."
dents, administration, faculty, cution in Autumn (C hinese
Hoyt introduced a motion in
and the general public to get film ) , 147 D iefendorf, 7:30 and v~~IDI§~.!::rg~ :.~
Commitment to teaching.
the 30's.
the Common Council on TuesImproved coordination with- together in the context of a 9:30 p.m., $.25.
day supporting the organiza- in SUNY.
cultural exchange," says Peter
Saturday, February 12-Car- FILM•• : Millh~use : A Whit •
·
tion. Levin and others have
Kong, this year's coordinator nival (Brazilian Mardi Gras), Co me d y. Conference Theatre,
Public image-SUNY must of the event.
Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.
check showcase for times, admiaspoken to County Executive
Tuesday, February 15-The sion charge.
..The program is sponsored
Edward Regan and he is re- better inform the public, it
must
serve
the
public
better.
Art
of
Roy
(Iranian
demonstraStarring Richard M. Nixon;
portedly enthusiastic a b o u t
by the student govemmen\ and
Funding-SUNY must have has been in preparation for a tion ), Center Lounge, Norton, ~~~r!fu~ =.:t!Y b~E~~
their aims. Members or WNYPlRG have been on local TV a more rational method 9f fund- long period ol time in conjtmc·
and radio, and faculty members ing; it must avoid or minimize tion with the various foreign i~::2r!"~~~f~n~ h ~g ,:'J shwiUer, Mike Gray, Bruch Shah.
have asked representatives to the "crisis syndrome" i n to student clubs and many other floor Norton, 3 p.m . Exhibit ~~n.~e~;~ ~~!k!r%f:.
discuss their aims in their class- which it bas fallen.
volunteers from the University ;~1 continue through February LIBRARY EXHIBri'S
Pluralism - Collective l y, communi ty. Over $5,000 bas
es.
Friday, February 18-Spring JAMES JOYC&amp;--50TH ANNIYmSAKY:
On campus, a big push came SUNY should span the enti re been spent on · the entire proon Tuesday when Karen Calish, spectrum; given units, however. gram, excluding fees for speak- Fragrance (Korean movie), 147
Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m.
a Nader's Raider who is work- might well specialize.
~r:rtr;:~~~f v~:::s~Lockers." Kong says.
Friday-Sunday, February 18, WILLIAM BURROUCHS : 2nd ftoor
ing with other PlRGs, spoke in
The high point of the Month
R&lt;!gionalism - Toward better
Norton's Haas Lounge on the use of the system's resources.
wiU be the International Festi- 19, 20-Kibbutz Karavan---ex- balcony, Lockwood Library.
lectures a nd coffee house
aims of PlRG and their imAdmissions-Perhaps sys- val, Saturday , March 11, in hibit,
portance.
Clark Gym from 7-10:30 p.m. Iebeck Weekly Communi&lt;/ue). NOTICES
tem~wide admissions, the better
Friday-Saturday, February ::..:..=-:=-=:==--;;-.,.:--;---;The local PlRG is especially to match students' interests There will be demonstrations of
native dance. music. song and 18-19- Coffee House. 1st floor }~~e
P~=
interested in health care since with the campus mission.
Most of the books were destroyed
costume; foods from around the cafe teria, Norton, evenings.
one of their members was killed
Possible creation of "colleges world will be served on Sunday.
Saturday-Sunday.
February
in
the
riots
and
the library mU&amp;t
in an automobile accident in within colleges"-College of
Center Lounge. now be rebuilL Students may
December. E v 'e n though she Social lssues, College of Cre- March 12. in Norton ('afeteria. 19-20-Exhibit..
Saturday, February 19- Fo\k drop off their book donations .at"
was hit in front of the Veter· ative Studies, College of Prodancing instruction, 2-5 p .m.
the Hillel table in Norton. Sam
ans' Administration Hospital, fessional Studies, etc.
Sunday, February 20-Lec- Prince and Robert Burrick are
wiblesses say it took over half
lures; Polish Folk Art, 233 Nor- the co-chairmen of W. project.
Flexibility
of
timi&gt;-Possibly
an hour for an ambutance to
ton, 7 :30-9 p .m .
HILLEL McroNAL INSTITUTE: Fri~
arrive and allege that she died a three-year baccalaureate; noThursday, F e bruary 24- t'~j't!:· }I,!'k
~~
from loss of blood. Levin ranks tion of life-long education with
alumni
returning
for
"rejuvenAlarm
over
the
quality
of
kwondo Karate f Korean Falls. Ontario. Among the parinvestigation of ambutance ser- ation;" released time to be pro- the libraries in the State Unj- Tae
d
emonstration
),
C
onference
ticipating
schools
will be Toronto,
vice as a top priority item.
y 0 r k University, University of
vided by industry; retraining of \'ersity system was expressed 'Ibeatre, 2-3 p .m .
If WNYPlRG is successful specialists. The need for a more by Chancellor Ernest Boye r
Eriday, February 25- Wind- W es tern Ontario, McMaster.
in collecting the 12,000 signa- flexible calendar with the pos- during legisla tive hearings on fall in Athens ( Greek movie ) , Rochester. Buffalo and some of
tures, they may be able to get sibility of mini-eourses, inter- the proj)osed S ta te budget last
147 Diefe ndorf, 7 :30 p.m.
the smaller schools in W. area.
close to 5100,000 in student rupted study, etc.
week.
Saturday, February 26-Dr. ~:;,le§::"Pri~':;:,"\t~be~f:~~
funds next fall. 'Oieir petition
The quality of campus exPointing out that budget Anees Ahmad, Speaker from Sue Grcshin and Marlene Rinde.
authorizes formation of WNY- perience--The need to develop economics have forced a drop Temple University, Pennsyl- Any student interested i:n pa.rPlRG and allocation of a vol- better measuring instruments.
ticil&gt;ating should call Hillel at
of more than 40 per cent in vania, 3 p.m .
untary student fee of two dolMonday, February 26-In- 836-4540 immediately.
Graduate program - What acquisitions of new volumes,
lars per semester. Whether aims are the needs in graduate Boyer said that it would be lemation.al Coffee House, Haas DRAMA": Trial of the CawrUJvilk
of the group will fit within studies? The need to share re- "almost impossible" to catch Lounge, 3 p.m.
Nine by Daniel Berrigan, a docBoard of Trustees guidelines on sources; importance of insuring up. Libraries are a measure of
Wednesday, March 1-Tea umentary drama revolving around
fees isn't known. Levin indicat- that graduate programs are the University•s quality, he Ceremony (Japanese demon- the burning of draft records, is
ed that President Ketter has ,..'unique." and that there is a said, noting that ''if this trend stra tion ), 232 Norton, 8-9 p.m. now playing at the Studio Arena
promised to talk with the group minimum of duplicate and isn't arrested," SUNY could
Thursday, Marc b 2-Dr. Theatre, 681 Main Street. TuesJames Wilkie, speaker on Latin day-Friday, 8:30 p.m.; Satunlay,
after the petition drive. The overlapping programs. For the be in difficulty.
American Studies, Fillmore 5 and 9 p.m.; Sunday, 7 p.m.
organization is prepared to fight four-year colleges, this raises
Boyer said that while the
Ticketa: $3.50, $4.50and
, $5.Sa50i.!i.OO
for its beliefs and other PlRGs the question of whether grad- overall budget of State Univer- Room, 4 p.m.
Friday, March 3-The Siege extra on Friday
Y
across the country have bad uate programs reduce the qual- sity this year is stable, CO!"clsraeli
film
)
,
147
Diefendorf,
Call
856-5650
for incampaigns to convince I o c a I ity of their undergraduate ef- mitments for faculty salJi.r-¥ mboards of trustees of their forts.
·
creases, more students and new 7 ' ~ii'::·rday, Mareb 4--Dr. INTERVIEWS
worth.
Resesrch- H ow does re- · facilities run t.o $30 million
· Right now, coordinators of search help to fulfill the mis- more than last year.
Andzeas Papand.zeou, speaker oN-cA&gt;&lt;PUS 1 os INT£IIYIEW8: OfWNYPfflG are confident of sion both of SUNY and the inOnly six of 50 members of on Greece, check Weekly Com- fer11 the opportunily for individual
success with the drive and are dividual unit?
interviews with educational, buDthe Senate Finance and Assern- munique.
planning for next year. This
Saturday, March 4--Korean ness, indWitrial and govemmental
Problem of faculty responsi- bly Ways and Means commitspring and SUIIliiM!J", they will bility and obligation - Prob- tees turned out to hear Boyer's music recital, Bufialo &amp; Erie ::lfd:r;:~ls~~a:.ro:
be organizing and selecting pro- lems arising from collective bar- plea for funds.
County Public Library, 8 p.m. interview. Forms in Hay.. C,
fessional researchers. In the gaining
As the New York Times ob- ( Monday, M a reb 6-D r. Room 6 .
Call, they will begin work "on
THUliSDAY-10: D,.....r Indus&amp;x:;ai
impact-Should edu- served, "The chances of getting Franz Michaels, director of Sothe blemishes of society," Lev- cation be roncemed with solv- more State money are slim, viet Institute, guest speaker, tries. Inc.; Hooker C be m i cal
in says. P088ible areas of inves- ing social problems?
· Fillmore Room, 3 p.m.
Corp.; The Institute for Paralepl
since
the
Governor
has
already
tigation are river pollution, and
Wednesday, March 8-0ri- Traming; Dioceoe of Bullalo Dept.
Central SUNY Administra- obtained legislative approval
r o o d oompariaon studies be- tionWbat should its role be? of a new tax program and em· gami paper folding (Japanese ofPIUDEducaAY~o1 n1 _ (EHneoo·) .er ~-'-'
tween ghetto and other areas of How to
demonstration ) , 234 Norton,
k ~~
improve the decision- phasized that budgets must re- 8-9
p.m.
Corp.; Goodyear Tire Co.
·
the city. In November, they
process. How- to make main frozen. This open-andFriday, March 10-Professor
&gt;&lt;ONDAY-14: Chemical Abhope to have the experience and making
tlie entire system more ac- shut case has made the budget Wing-Tist Chan will speak on ~:;~'1,~; Cornell AeroDilldknowledge to tackle difficult
hearings :; kind of immovable
problems, the coordinators indi- countable.
Chinese philosophy and reliTUE&amp;DAY-15: U.S. Social SeCollege Councils -Tbeir ·role wailing wall."
cate.
and composition.
¥~· $~IJJ:t'&gt;(~ric!m3
~~~i.;M.!~~ ~ueCoS:.
"Basic policy themes" for the
CORIIECTlON
147 Diefendorf, 7:30 p.m.
vice: U.S. Gypoum Co.; Fl1lDidin
Master Plan were considered in
The 1111poo1er has been nked to
Saturday, March 11- lnter- Academy &amp; Prattaburg Central
a discussion led by Charles W.
correct a statement attributed to lngler, director of Master Plan (Continued. from P'liJ&lt; 1, coL 4) national Festival Night, Clark School (Steuben); Liverpool CeoPresident Robert L Ketter in last
Dannbauser was named to the Gym, 7-10:30 p.m.
tral School (Onondaga).
week's 8rticle on the Jan u • ry
Nominating Committee a n d
Sunday, March 12-Inter- eo':.:~Ys;,~!~~ul.!t
meeting of the Boord of Directors
The
of higher educa- Dr. W. Hermon Ray was a~ national Feast, Norton Cafe- man Kodak Co.; Univ. of Rocbesof the Foculty·Student Association. tipn falar'strictures o( time and pointed to the Information and teria, 2 p.m.
ter.
At the meeting. Dr. !&lt;-.- stlrted
Library Resources Committee.
Tickets for the last two
TIIUIISDAY-17: ·Raytheon Co.;
for the AICOrd that he did not kmw ~mics of higher educaDr. Herman Falaetti was events
available at Norton Eai1man Kodak Co.; Mebopoliof the Service ~ surwy. He tion. Who contributes-State, electeil to replace Dr. :l.ebu1on Ticket Office. Studenlr $1.00, tan Life ..lns. Co.; Iroquois G..
did not uy that he had 110 prior Federal govemlnent, commun- Taintor as a Senator from the faculty . and staff, $2.00, others &amp;:rr·;~te": ~= ~
knowledp of the concept of bring· ity, etc. Tuition-Should it be
Faculty of Health Sciences. ::~.ticket is good for . (Erie) .
ina in outside competition.
equal at all levels or should it Taintor is on sabbatical

1972 International Month
To Offer Cultural Blend .

2

isAW;

Boyer 'Alarmed'
About Libraries

sH'.'l!r·

:ro;..

Jt:&gt;:

Senate-

~~uded:
m-

are

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
OOpoa ... . . . -

af -

•OOpoa ... -

1-..:r.

•o,.~----..--·-.-.r

~- - - · 831-22211, ... - . . .
New MdlrDbof Dind ~
SynJ}rlsio. 134 Health - - ,
THURSDAY-10
2 p.m.

ESGon:.:EaiNC

.::mlCK IDIIX_.:

Dr. Darolcl C. Wobocball. _ . _

:::,p;=:; ~,;lj,.;~
104 Puller ~ 4 pa.;
~ 107 Puller, 3:30p.m.
srAnsn:::s COLtOQIIIUJII uacro.a#:
Prof. William S. ClftdaDd. The

U~ofn!~.!:;~, ~

~Soia DtWz,- A-49,
4230 Ridge Lea. 4 p.m.;
A-16, 4230

hour. -

Lea. 3:30 p.m.

~

JN'D'.ID(.&amp;TIONAL

..,.ee

ftG&amp;e

JJOOa*•:

.n foreip and Americaa-_

stall and faculty ..... imited, 21M.
T~ 4-;; p.m.
B.lBIIATB SIZYKZB•:

QlABAD

te:r-

vices and meal. Cbabed Hooae,
3292 Main St.. 6 p.m.
CHINESE KO\'__. : E:readioft ill
Autwan. t-1 oo ~ story
of the ezecuti&lt;Ml of a family's oaly
male heir, 147 l);deadod, 7:30
and 9: 30 p.m.. $.25.

Cancer. Today and
TomorrouJ, ._...t by Reci&lt;mal
Medical Program, 40 ~
stations, 11: 30 a.m.
NU881NC 'IIIUm'IIO!U uacro.a# :
consultant dietitians of WNY:
e~Biod&lt;Ur

EYB-OON '72• : YWJD:De ~
. . . - and ru..:u-.. the lilms of
the Yellow Ball WodobaP- Albricbt-Kaos Art Gallay Audit&lt;&gt;rium, 8 p.m.. free. open ID the

public.
HILI.El!

-

SAa.\TB

by

Roome. 40

~:

~~~;!~~!.~:

fol-

CJnoc S.....,_t. Hillel
ea.,...
BI..L. 8 p.m.

IND:Il!i'ADON.&amp;L 1'01..1[ D&amp;IIKDfC:

tell, Vera M..-_

nLK••: Tlwc Rin.l R.uul. C....

fenooce~cbeck­
foTti:me&amp;..----..~

Diredeil by and -...u.,; ~
Fonda, with Wanen Oata. Veraa

~!lric~nl="'t.: .2:

ha.nfly any aotice. Foolbts cfirec..
t&lt;&gt;rial debut is • p!llde
.,;ece about two driflen
after

TUESDAY-15
PN1D1 222: CON'DO'ftlltSI£8 lN SCI-

OOJOIUCT .om RI'JIOLUDr. Gonlou. Harris, Larkin
prot_,., cbomistry, TM Polywakr ~flU) Em.inent Sci--.C.... Fool T - l u a end
(me AnDIMT, 362 ""'-&gt;n, 10

EKCZ TI01&lt;0 :

~

wisitoa welcome..

a:a:::IUL.: 12 JlllOD.
free. open ID the public.

ftUDDI"''

Baird.

lft1a:&amp;IHC BIJ1JC.U'IOJr nnrnrt1'IB # :

.mo.
~!We~-: q~m.::

Tlwc D~ Palinol, a l:wtH!ay in- b d by the School
of Nunioo&amp;. Main speaker, Dr.

=

of MiciUpn, Ann Arlx&gt;r, The
to D~. 12:45 p.m., Statler-

mestic life. There an hichJy a:pressive perfo1'1D311CeS. a.ud mme

esquisUe

by

cinoma~Dcn~&gt;by.

:;:r:~i3J!:j
Ed O'ReiJJy, 339 No-. 9

p.m.. $.!;0.

.

SATURDAY-12

~d~=~:-u:t

:tf::!._

IIILUIL a..s&amp;BS: Bqinnen HebraD, 262 Norton. 12 noon. Jewish E~. 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
s~. 140 Capen.
3 and 8 p.m., free.
With Jolm Wayoe, Claire Trevor,· Andy De.iDe and Jolm Canadine. Dinded by Jolm Ford. This
is Fon:f's claMic Westem which
f"""""" on the relatioaohips between ao - t of otqeroacb ~ each for individual reasons in a state of exile.
T b o ma s Mitcbell J"eJJeiwd an
Academy Award as the drunken
dodi&gt;r. Beaulifully pbotograpbed
and ri&lt;bly stylod..

I'ILJI·• •:

UNCUJSnCB ox T.l". • • : Noam
Cho~ by &amp;win

Howanl, Wolter Huber. and Carlo. Quic:oli Cunent i s .s ues in
thoucht. 10 Foster
p.m. European Ro-

Cbomskian

-.....,t. 4

:C:n
Vs~~ T,.t"o!:,d:
Bow:man
is m;derator w i t b a
panel of specialists, 10 Footer
-......~. 4:30 p.m. -

::.'fi':t '=~.1~~~
!Jn'~~-oh:;o=rth~
Faculty Cub, 8 p.m.

WEI;&gt;NESDAY-16

-·

iI

r..-

in G~rWtric N.utritiontd C CJ r e.
OpoDBOn!d by Recioaal Mectical
Program, 40 ~ slalioao,
2 p.m.

Ia-

' sbuctioo iD ...., stepo cluriDc
lUst hour, 30 l);deudolf " " 8 p.m.
CAC PILK• : Getlin# Strai&amp;}ot. 140
Capen. cbeck CAC ........,_ for
time s. $.75, tickets at Nortcm
Tick.et Olli&lt;e.

KtJB!COLOCY LI:C!"UD• : Dr. lJoaold J . Grout, IIIIISicolopst, Comell
University. Hiaory a1Ul Muit
Hutory, Saini. 3 : 30 p.m., free.
open t&lt;&gt; the public.
Dr. Grout is the aotbor of A
Hutory of Waum MMSic (W.W.
Norton. 1960) and A Silort H;..
tory of Opera (Columbia Uniwrsity P....., 1965). He is a fomoer
president of the Americaa MusicolotPcal Society and of the ID-

temational Musicoloci&lt;al Society.
Retin!d from texbiD&amp; but lltill
active iD """"""". bis artidos and
reviews are numerous and may be
found iD every important IIIIIBical
jouma) bere and ab.....t.
BLACK. T H B AT a B 8YII:POSRJK•:

Guest. at the one-day

~um

i!"'~~, s;t~~

playwright; Loftoa Mito:beiJ., play.
wright; Woodie KiDc. actor and
cfuector; Ed ~ cfuector
of the Afri&lt;an Cultunl Center of

BuBalo; and Roo Wolfonl, actor
and aasistant di.-r of the Black
Drama Workshop. NoriDD, 4 p.m.,
free.
DENTIB't'RY 1"ELEPPIOHB IACI"'JD#:

Dr. Raymond E . Kielido, Coria
Preuention and PaliGtl H o a e

f~-;~z~M.::
tiob8,

7:30 p.m...

"72• : Richard M y e r •
ocreens and d"""- bis &amp;Jmo,
Conference Th""tre. 8 p.m., free.
open lo the public.
COI&lt;CEIIT 0 : C...rles Haupt. 9ioliD
and Noo:ma
pia-. Saini.
8: 30 p.m., admioliioo cbaq&gt;e, tidtets at Nqrt&lt;&gt;n Tick.et Olice. ·
EYE-OOH

Sapp,

THURSDAY-17

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1381549">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1381537">
                <text>Text</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1381538">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

FEBRUARY 3, 1972

VOL 3-NO. 18

Senate Approves Change,.
In Admissions Policies
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Report~

ShadesofGpernicus

. -----,_a--of
..=: :":.

Food Service and the Book·

slon! for two yeaJS. Tbeir dis-

c:ussioos, . are still in
the UOIIIID!!Pl" sta&amp;e and IJO
plans ba.... been made, be
Schillo and Dory feel
that oulside competition would
P,.. tbe Universily Communiry
a sbmdanl bY which to judce
I'SA seMa!s and possibly to
better the intemal systems. Tbe
"""" Ambel!;t campus will m:
craose the demand for seMa!s
and outside firms milbt be
belptiiJ in meeting the increased demand. N'me months
qo. Service Systems, an outside -.ding fum, o&amp;red to
survey the I'SA VeDding sys.
tem to see wbetber there would
be ' """""' business for two
firms. 'lbe results "' their sur-

---

By STEVE LIPMAN
A year ago, U/ B student
Howard Goldman found him·
self at an academic crossrQads.
A junior then, he bad ' been
an Englisb major for two years,
but bad " got fed up with
Shakespeare and Milton and
Pope and Dryden. And Mar·
veiL"
He was "into studying ecology," but didn't want to do
it "througb the tra~tional Uni·
versify cba:nnels - b i o I o g y,
cbemislly, engineering."

a&amp;r to lll!n'ice the campus.

'Ibis &amp;11, the pace cl the diseuasioa quicRaed wben Dory
inlianoed Schillo that the VendiDe Service would M.... to move
boloreaezt~.Vend-

.....

=:s..::-~ ~
liaa """""- it bloclls .future
-........ the Ambel!;t
.

'lbe I'SA Board cl Directors
'-ln't been laid cl Ibis CDIDpetiliaa -CDIICO!pt,- Doty oaid,
"""""- tbe allerualiws cl .....
(~ • f , col. I)

Finding hi~lf with no interest in his major, and no major in his interest, be did what
many U/ B undergraduates have
done for the last two yearshe created his own major.
It's called a special majorfonnerly an ad /we major. Any
silldent whose educational interests or objectives are not met
by an existing program can de~ign his own field of concentration. It requires two facully
sponsors, at the rank of assistant professor or above, and

'tnysses' Is Fifty

aa:ompenied by 811

&gt;Jey -

Only a Week to Study

The Senate Admissions Com·
mittee chairman, Dr. McAllister Hull; discussed his group's
evaluation of Ketter's modification of the policy. Since the
committee had only a week to
study the modiiication's effects,
Hull warned that the report
would be incomplete. If the
modiiication had been applied
to last year's admissions, only
one per cent of the total, or 80
students, would have changed
from non-local to local status,
the chairman explained .. He also
discussed this year's estimated
grade point cut-off for non-local
residents vs. 8th Judicial District candidates. Last year's
quotas were used for this estimate since the s i z e of this
year's class hasn't been final.

=.0ffu!~Jidt,esg9c}~~~ J:.~

dicial District students and 92
for non-local applicants. "I can
see very little difference between 89 and 92," he added.
The reJ.&gt;Ort a! so pointed out
that extending the definition of
" local" to the entire 8th Judicial District would " probably

increase applications from this
lot 'UI73 admioo~DoaL"

Dr. Cliarles Planck, political
science, 8liJred about Western
New- York legislators' concern
over local admissions. ~~ow regional do we have to become
!;jJ.~~h;"~=~er us regionKetter said that the legis.
lators weren't as concerned with
regional admissions as t h e y
(Continued on paee 2, coL 6)

Had Too Much ofDryden or Disraeli?
ThenCreateThw-Own ~'SpecialMajor'

Vending Gets a (Reprieve'
As FSA Defers I ..and Action

sillo.

SuJJ

It took three bounl of debate
before the Faculty Senate
passed a motion Tuesday
affinning President Robert Ketter's modification or their admissions policy. Tbe final resolution accepted the 50 per cent
8th Judicial District......OO per
cent non-local admissions mix
the president proposed in January. The approved m o t i o n
backed this policy for this year
only, however, "as a precaution
against undue interruption of
the historical pattern of admis·
sions.u
The resolution also reaffirmed
the Senate's responsibility to
udetermine the admissions baSis" and expressed the body's
"concern" over the way "the
president chose to modify the
intent of the admissions policy
adopted by the Senate." Consultation on the matter may
have been precluded by " time
pressures," hQwever, the motion
added.
In discussing the resolution,
Ketter to I d the Senate that
their dropping of the 50-mile
reaides&gt;cy Teeluirement cbangecL
the-~loeall1.oft..Jocal-mix -of the
, f.res!un;m · class. T hj s abrupt
shift !tid him, in tum, to modify the Senate's requirements.
(For a further discussion of
n r =..;:'~
.,~.,.,:,.~r:c,:: this,
see Reporter, Janwuy 27.)
The president also pointed out
the
1500's,
....... . . - . . - . . . . . . A doud cower prevented Western that this year's applications are
- y - """' - . ,. eclipse, but a.-...r is 50 per cent abead of last year's
- - . .., In 1!175. - . lhe Hochstetter facility is
( thougb last year's were below
tar --*'~! lhe each fncgy from B p.m.-mkl- those for 1969-70).
atpt. pennittirw.

ULYSSES

Fifty years aao yastenlay,
JorMS Joyce's Ulysses, hounded by censorship In the mojof
Enctish._.l&lt;inc countries
the -'&lt;!, , _ Its lonnal publication tlobut at Sylvia Beach's

of

Shakespeare and Company in

JAMES JOYCE

hriL In ~s Reporter
(paces 6 and 7), Professor
Matte the Depart·
n*1t of Enclish recalls the
- . . . , birth of this Influential

of
----of
-ly. ,_
-

of -

and briefly

matllrjalo In ~

The
-

l..lbrO,Y,

Joyce
UbralJ.

a !10th Anm-ry
dloplaJ In the Pooby - ..
ZTT~

approval of a special major
committee and the dean of the
Divis i o·n of Undergraduate
Studies.
40 Have G...tuotad

Forly students have already
graduated with special majors
since the first four were conferred in June 1970. Forly
more are now working toward
s uch personally-tailored degrees.
Tbese programs range from
Public Health to Judaic Studies; from Brazilian Studies with
emphasis on the Portuguese
language to Humanization of
Computer Tecbnology in Education. And to Howard Gold·
man's Environmental Studies-.
Pre-Law.
Most special majors are organized like Goldman's-a ...,.
arranging of existing courses to
fit individual interests. A few
students take heavy concentra·
tions of independent study.
Ecology-related courses
Goldman took last term were:
Limnology, the biology of fresh·
water bodies; Engineering and
Applied Sciences - fiow sys~ water and air; C. P.
Sn&lt;iw-lo:p.l system seminar
and macro.ecoqomics.
Courses he's laking this sem- .
ester are: Rachel Carson College- Environmentallnforma·
(Continued on pase 9, coL 1)

�CiREPoRTER.,

2

Smate-

·Rockefeller Requests $470.7 Million for SUNY;
DeCrease Means Enrolhnent Limits,Other Cuts
A total of S4 70.7 million is
recommended for programs of
State University of New York
in Governor Nelson Rockefel·
ler's 1972-73 budget request
now pending before the State
Legislature. This . is a decrease
of $5.1 million, or 1.1 per cent,
from 1971-72.
Tile sum of 563 million is estimated to be available during
the year from SUNY income
funds. The State's support,
thus, will be S407. 7 million, a
decrease of 512.7 million from
the amount a llocated in 197172. (See aOO&gt;mpanying cbart. J
In addition to the S470.7
million, monies requested in
other areas of the State budget
provide 59.4 million for SEEK
programs at State University
campuses and $3.3 million for
such programs at community
colleges.
PolicY Decisions

The budget recommendations
for 1972-73 are based on a series of policy decisions sbaped
by the State's fiscal situation
and the need to maintain a
strong University system, the
Budget message points out. Enrollment increases bave been
limited below those in recent
years to a rise of 4,599 full-time
equivalent students. (See accompanying chart.) Major enrollment expansion will occur
in Empire State College which,
the Governor points out, "may
prove to be the future vehicle

Town Meeting
In Amherst
"An Old Fashioned Town
Meeting," of interest to some
members of the University com-

for educating large numbers or
students at low cost." EnrollFISCAL REQUIIIEIIDITS Foe: STAl'E. ~ .......-s
ments will also be increased at
1971-n" ~ - . nn-n
t h e developing campuses or
Purchase and Old Westhury Central Administration ..$
and at several other campuses Univemty eent.B..
. 1
to permit graduates !rom the
Albany
.
two-year colleges to continue
=~';f!',:mton _
their educstion.
Stony Brook
~
Improved space utilization Colleen of Arts &amp; Science 1
~
....&amp;31 !ftl
.will result from the added numBuffalo
ber of students, the Governor
Cortland
10.
9.731..DOO
indicstes. However, he adds,
~~
11.553.0DD
the limited overall increase will
N- ~hz
13.35UOO
Old Westbury
-u.oao
mean reductions in the number
Onoonta
IU30.000
of freshmen accepted, despite
05we&amp;O
15,Z1UOO
ptattsbUrah
increased n u m be r s of high
9,944.000
school graduates. Graduate enPurchue
.,.619,1100
Rome-Utieo
rollments will not be increased Healt
h"'science Centers
-1.717.000
in 1972-73 "because of the high
-6QJ1I10
Downstate
Upstate
cost of educating such stu-U114..DOO
~L&amp;77.000
dents and the apparent slacken- Specialized Coueaes
Foratry
ing of empl6yment demands
Maritime
-146.0110
for such students."
Optometry
-238,0110
Empire State
-L740..00D
Staffing patterns, unit costs
Contract CoUeges
I 9MIODO
and other indices of State ~u p­
Aaricullure and
port have been adju s ted
Ufe Sciences
11J16l,OOO
-1.000
Cenm ics
-74.DDO
2.036.000
throughout the University and
Human EcoiOSY
3.,974.000
all campuses will have lower
Industrial and
labor Ref11tions
3.058.CXXJ
-21Q,OOO
funding per s tudent - despite
-111.000
increased salary costs, new
~!~n~~~'::',ci~
GeneQ
buildings, rising uti I i ty a nd
Experi"-1\t ~tion
-434.000
other prices and other factors. A&amp;ricuttul"'ll a1.d
Tec:hnial CoUeaes
For example, cost per full -time
-l.6D7.000
35.309.000
Alfred
7.40l.DOO
~Uiii
equ ivalent s tudent for ins trucCanton
-11S.1100
4.&lt;121.000
tion and departmental research
Co~eskill
4.636.CXXJ
-234.000
Delhi
~ 17.000
at U ! B Cin areas other than
-2&gt;5.000
:.a~~le
:
health sciences! will be reduoed
-314.000
from $1,503 to 51,423. U/ B tra- Uni~ity Wide Prosr~~ms 9
-14.2?3.000
Unive~ Pl'ftS
ditionally has the lowest per Buildin,a
~
Repa'ir
1.250.000
s tudent figure in this category Student loan Funds
-312.DDO
52&amp;000
Fac:utty
SenM.e
-18Jl00
of the four University centers. Adm ls.sions
The University center average
Proceuin1 Center
840.000
31.000
-37.000
for 1972·73 will be 81,505, down ~::'J~~~~~
35.000
-15J1DO
from 81,606 for this ye:lr. U/ B's Arboretum
117.000
-187.000
Collese
per student cost in the health University
Computers
25,000
-aooo
4.Jiio..coo
sciences, separately fi~ured, is New Buildina Openings
4.700J100
Increments
I.-..em
.;..J.105..000
projected at $5,668 for 1972-73, Clauified
Profusional Salaries;
12.25IUJOO
.q.395.000
Uni..,.rsity
down from S6,367 in this year. State
Scholarships

·-rt

,.__

Larger class sizes, increased

for the
Disadvantaged
COC"per~~tive College
Centers
Urban Centers
Equal Opportunity
Centers
ProRr~~ms Administered by

·--

._.

im~I~eusob!d.

• Tbe "politics- ol the ft!9Diu..
-Dr. Geoqe
the
~ ClllDD!m
ol
Hoch6eld.
BDclish.
-3.8 wbo t..l ......,., out apiDst the
-5.5 modificatinn at the .1-..ry
-3.3
"'s the anly
-4A Senate
-5.4 purpose ol this resalutinn to
-3.9 sa v e the pra;idoat's face?"
- 3.4
-3.2 Hochfield felt !bat Keu..r "'act-5.1 ed like a bully- iD chanciu&amp;
the Senate's policy """ tt..t the
- 0.4
-5..5 Senate should -stlmd up to the
-3.6
-0.2 president" """ reject the mod-5.1 ification. He a I so COIIIebded
-+=5 that the "resooutioa is
-2.8 matic of somettUnc
-2.1 Senate's becomiuC 'd.; ~
-3.7 dent's club.• Tbe motioo ..,..
+12.5 "setting a precedent in the eli-·
-5..0
-4.3 r1!dion ol selling quobs for
WNY students,• be said. For
+~ him,
the "c:enbal issue• is
' - 5..3
whether U/ B is to be a '"pe3t
- 5.2 natiooal uni\"ee"Sity- cr a re.
-3.6
-5.1 gionaJ one. He introduced a
motion opposing the Kette. ad-3.2 missions mix and instructing
- 0.1 Admissions and Records to im-11..5 ~t the Senate's original
-4..3

=-3:5

-- -···
............

Pro.~Jr~~ms

see it IJ'8dual]y

..-me:

::::::::
_....., _,....,

::m=

Larger Class Sizes

--

""""' the
policy
tosaid.
be
instituted.
pnsideut
lawmUen; would like to

-

· =u:s

:e
_...
---.....
--............

..........

.....,.m

(~ , _ l, cool. li)
....., with the abrupt~ a..
policy. U a striclly p.!e ..,..

........

...........

~

.__

~

~

~

...

-4.6

-4.6

-4.3
-5.0
-U
- 2.3
-6.5
..:...1ca.z

-10.5
- 0.7

+1.52.3

~
-11.1

Dr. Mart. Shechner, ~
backed Rochfield, ea.1.1iDg the
president's policy "part o( a
principled mediocritizatioo o(
the Univer.iity." Tbe modifi.
cation is "part of a t.o1a1 pat·
tern of administr.ative beba,-.
ior'" which incluiles denial of
tenure. loss of key faculty and
an inability to replace them, he
cbaJged.
In debating the ExecutiYe
Committee's motion backing
Ketter's policy, and the Rocb-lield motion, members o( the
Senate again and again came
out against the way lbe pres;.
dent modirled their policy.
Finally. Dr. Robert Berdahl
-higher education, P""'"1"ed
amendment to the Executn'e
Committee's resolution "'ilich
cslJs for the Senate to decre:&gt;se
the proportion of 8th Judicial
District students if they feel
the ratio is not in keeping with
U/ B's "mission to sen-e the eotire State and the communitv
at large."
•
This amendment passed and
by a 4G-1G-7 vote. the Senate

teaching loads, reduoed library
........0110
5.431.000
-13&amp;.000
____,_ -.13.6
U50.000
munity, will be held Saturday, acquisilions and limited plant
-3.8
February 12, at 1:30 p.m., at maintc:nance arc cited as other
~
~
the Wick Center, Rosary H ill ways in which the fiscal situa~0.727.000
College. The topic: property tion wiJl affect tbe University Ai;~~t~~...:i=~~tcal and ~
~
taxes and public educstion.
Dental Schools
in 1972-73. Ut B's student-fac9..5lliU&gt;I1I1
ti.736.Doo
-2.164.000
New
Yorjl
Networt:
l221.lJO(J
1.2?7.non
Panelists for the discussion ulty ratios, for exam ple, are Aid to Brooklyn Poly
1 .000.000
- 3.11011.11110
will include AI MacKinnon, as- budgeted a t 4.9 in the health Grand Tctal
5470.747.000
S4 75.iOi7iiO
~
-1.1
sistant to the State commis- sciences and 15.8 in other areas, Am11unt Financed from
Income Funck
-55.«0..3211
-611100.000
--7.559.612
-13.6
sioner of education ; William compared to 4.4 and 15.3 reMacDougall, executive director, spectively for this year. SUNY Apft~feri~~mFund $420.363.672 SA07.747.000 -4Y-ti1U12 -3.0
Adjustment of
United States Advisory Com- averages are 5.2 in the health Nd1971-72
Appropriattons
--6.1J9S..SC.8
mittee on Intergovernmental sciences and 15.4 in other areas Appropriated 1971 -72
$413.4.68.124
Relations; State Senator John at llie Univers ity centers.
·LaFalce, member of the State
State University es ti rna tes --------------------------------------------- · ~~~~ Executi\~
• Senate's Education Committee; that non -appropriated funds in
AHNUAL AVERAGE FULL·TltiE EQUIYALDIT ~
Larry Southwick, A m h e r s t • the form of grants contracts
1970-71 , 1971·72. AND J!J72.n C£XCt..U1J1111i S t - . SES:SK:WIS)
other Actions
Tow n councilman; a nd Dr. and aid to stud en~ will total
Duane Mongerson, vice p resi- Sl51.7 million in the coming
1970-n
un-.n "'u~
In other ~ Senators
Institutions
dent, Sweet Home S c h o o I year. or this total, $59.1 million Total
un-73 passed an amendment to the
~7
Board.
or 39 per cent represents fed· University Centet5
.;.~
Bylaws making the Olr~ee of
46..337
Albany
~ Parliamentarian an appointn"'
Sponsors of the event, which eral government support; an·
. 1~
B i n~~;hamton
~~
~ rather than an elected position.
is coordinated by the Amherst other 522.9 million or 15.1 per
Buffalo
111.10&lt;
1 an
o.o This amendment will DOW be
Stony B~k
9,431
Junior Chamber of Commerce. cent is from other New York
9 777
1J
\IDled 011 by the entire faculty
'
State
agencies,
and
the
remain·
·
are the U n i ted Taxpayers
Colleges of Arts and Science 57.307
59.938
6U11
3.2 before it becomes put of the
Brockport
~
league of Buffalo and Erie ing S68.3 million or 45.9 per
&amp;2411
Buffalo
&amp;.495
cent
comes
from
gifts,
grants,
~
t~
~te's
mnstitution..
•
11.116
County, Amherst League of
Cortland
4.823
4.9711
3.1
After this ¥0!1'- the Senate
Fredonia
4255
Women's Voters, Amherst Seni- contracts and food service in. ...11
Geneseo
4.903
4.913
~
recessed
the
1rioetiDc
u
n
tiI
or Citizens' Center, Zonta Club come. Sponsored research proNe• Pattz
6.03:5
....,
4.1 Tuesday, February 15.. At that
Old Westbury
204
of Amherst and Bee Publica- grams, University-wide will to41!11
1
Oneonta
5.308
tions.
tal 539.5 million, a=rding to
...;:
~~
time,
they
will
consider
com-5..3"'
O swego
71J79
1.220
Plattsburah
4.696
estimates. Other sponsored pro!~
_. mittee reports from Education1
Potsdam
4.287
4 .465
grams include an estimated Purchase
320
140
g~
54.1
~i':..tac!..~~
Rome-Utica
135
$19.5 million for instruction and
225
lZS
-44.4 ity.
training jll'llllls, $11.0 million Health Science Centers
3.039
4
.7
for extension and public service,
Buffalo
At the becinninc ol the meel·
-r.&amp;i"7
1.843
Downstate
6:6 ing,
1. 167
$0.7 million for libraries, and
1,.29&gt;
President Ketter discus1.29Z
Stony Brook
$19.7 million for administrative
Upstate
.... sed the Governor's cuts in
741
1
.3 U/ B's budcet. 0ven11. the proCharles E. Donegan, assist- and general expenditures. Specialized Collea:es
~
4.112l
~
ant professor of law, has been (Note : Of the $49.775 million
posed budget 1W1Uid institute a
Empire State
Forestry
1:675
1.2n
awarded a fellowship to pursue of these funds for resean:h and
1.330
1.431;
Maritime _.
7.5 5.5 per cent decline in fuDds
729
812
sponsored
programs
projected
a doctor of the science of law
Optonwtry for U/ B which is "aboul: """'
v
~
54
sistent with the other iDstitu(JSD ) degree at the Columbia to be channelled through the Statutory Coltecn;
~
tioos,• Ketter said. Tbe cut
University School of Law, dur- State University Research
Aarfcutture &amp;
~
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Foundation, U/ B is expected
'IIIOUid come from _,., "'particing 1972-1973.
Ceramics
l.02I1
to receive $15.49 millon, or apHuman Ecolocy
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In addition to the Columbia proximately three-teotha of the
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3JI5
study f~ the highest acsdemic
u ooe session """ $300,0110 from
Student aid programs funded Aaricultural and
dqtee in legal &amp;twliefl. Profes- by the State Educstion ~ T-=tmbl Colteps
acquisitions. Tbe Govemar's
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the r;mdillate ..... uudetpadu2.;145
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post-doctoral fellowahip in out SUNY during 1972-73. Fed3.7 ate lew!la. This badalel. the
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~and~be~by
timated_ at $9.7 milli&amp;..
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"'-

Dr. Eccles Studies the Hzunan Brain
Because It Affects All ThntMatters
By

MARION MARIONOWSKY
HMitlt s.:a- w~
Man studies the brain because all that matter.&lt; in his life
is a re;ult of its functioning_
The brain accounts not only ftw
man's immediate pen:ept:ioru;his vision, bearing~ memory .
emotion, thougbts, ideals, imagination, technical skills-but
~lso for his creative 8chieveruents - his art, philoo;opby.

science.
Inv...tigatioos of the lxaill
begun after World War U by
an Australian neurophysiologist
led to his knighthood in 1938

t-quioalenr:y ezisl:i in all races.
Man*s Uniqueness

He explains that what ex~
t:mplifies man's essential uniqueness is his attempt to unden,--tand his world through acc..:umulated txperience over a
lifetime. In his self ~'Onscious­
~ Dr. Eccle; says, lies man's
tnmscendence o v ~ r animals.
.. Man bas imagination, a sense
of values, and systemization of
knowledge stored and transmitled in the coded fonn of writ len
language, thus permitting progressive development. Man has
the power to understand nature
and ta control it."
But, for this amazingly
young 68-year-old scie nti st,
there remains a fundamental
mystery of man's existence beyond any biological account of
the development of the hody,
including the brain, with its
genetic inheritance and evolutionary origin.
''In some way completely beyond my understanding, my
thinking changes the operative
patterns of neuronal activipes

and to a Nobel Prize in 1963.
This investigator, Sir John Eccles-" Dr. Eccles" as he prefers to be called in this country,
- now heads U! B's Center for
the Study of Neurobiology_ He
came to Buffalo in July 1968
from the Australian National
University in Canberra where
he had been professor of physiology for 17 years..
As a Rhodes Scholar from
Australia be went to Oxford
earlv in his career to work under -Sir Charles Sherrington ,
FACING REALITY
distinguished physiologist and This material has been eKtrapo·
Nobel laureate. 'There he was &amp;ated from Dr. Eccles' book. Facing
introduced to the scientific ex- Rulit)': PhitosOphical Adventures
a.mination of the nervous sys- by • Brain Scientist, published by
tem and later derived a philo- Springer-Venag in New York
sophical approach to its prob- (1970). In this book, Or. Eccles ex·
lems. Sherrington's philosophy, presses his efforts to understand
published in Man on His Na- a human individual, namely himture, has guided Dr. Ea:les in self. as an experiencing being with
his efforts to undersiand the an evolutionary ori&amp;in. The book
way in which the brain is re- was published "in the hope that
it may help man to discover a way
lated to mind.
From analytical studies of out of his alienation and face up
individual nerve cells, Dr. Ec- to the terrifying and wonderful re·
cles has developed theories of ality of his existence with courage,
bow they function, the .._.,. faith and hope."
by which impulses are passed - - - - - - - - - from one cell to another, and
in my brain. Thinking thus
the manner of their intereoo- comes eventually to control disnec:tioo. New insights into both charges of impulses from pyrarellex actions and the formation inidal cells of my motor cortex,
eventually contracts my muscles, and so gives the behavioral
pher provide a fum base for patlems that stem therefrom."
future progress.
'There is general agreement,
Before man can experience says the holder of the Royal
even the simples! sensation, Dr. Society's 1962 Royal Medal,
Ea:les explains, millions of ce- that for every conscious experirebral nerve cells must be ac- ence there is a counterpart in
tivated in just a matter of milli- man's neuional mf!chanisms.
seconds. 'They must then be "We may be on the threshold
woven into patlerns by both of understanding the basic prin_.,. and' time. And the limit- ciples responsible for memory
less possibilities of oormectivity traces) pat_temed engrams as
between them provide an infm- they are termed." 'These enile variety of patterned opera- gnuns, be continues, al-e available for recall in memory when
tions.
Ten billion oerebral nerve there is .an appropriate input
into the brain's circuitry.
cells - each a living entity endow man with potentialities
'The Nobel laureate-Or. Ec,adequate for any achiewmenL cles ,..,.. the pri7.e at age 60And Dr. Eccles be~ves bruin futher explains that a neuronal

~~~~':t~

pathway, activated by a particular sensory input will, on re- in synaptic use. These .. plastic"
peated activation, achieve a patterns, he said, point to the
kind of stabilization through "know-how.. of the brain.
enhanced synaptic functions of Creative Imagination
its neuronal linka ges. W h i I e
For creative imagination to
neuronal mechanisms irivolved exist, Dr. Eccles pointed to the
in pen:eption are known, there need for an a dequate number
U; much less understanding of of neurones, and a wealth of
the neuronal mechanis ms un- synaptic connection between
derlying conscious experience. them to build up limitless enSc:ienco Loaded Wrth Values
grams or highly ;-pecific characScience, says the distin- ter.
guished professor of physiology
Continuing, he explained that
and biophy~;cs, is loaded with &lt;:ontinuous intensive interplay
·•values." It represents the sum of these patterns of neuronal
total of each scientist's person- activation are necessary for lhe
al performance to explain some subconscious operation of the
aspect of nature. This explana- mind. New emergent patterns
tion is then offered for critical can then be expected and if
judgement a n d experimental these patterns have organizatesting by others to eliminate tion to combine a nd transcend
error. Scientisto; therero·r e can existent ones, .. some new idea
on I y develop hypotheses ap- b o r n of creative imagination
proaching progressively nearer will 'emerge."
But he cautioned that if creto the truth.
"If only mankind understood ative imagination is to be fruitthat science is a very human ful .. there must be a process of
endeavor to understand nature, L"Onscious c riticism, evaluation
to present in all humility the to discover flaws in a new idea,
best of our reeble efforts to do a &lt;.:onsistency with e x i s t i n g
so," the fonner president of the knowledge, the design and carAus tralian Academy of Science rying out of experimentation to
said, ••perhaps it could then be test predictions from this new
apprecia:ed.as a great and noble idea." And , he added; "fmally
achievement rather than as a there must be new hypotheses.
destructive force, as some great
Because science is an art, Dr.
monster to be either feared or Eccles says, it must be learned
worshipped."
in a strange way. Creative imFor Dr. Eccles, chances that agination, experimentation, and
life exists elsewhere in the cos- a good idea or what to expect
mos are infinitely small. ___But from past experience are needbe points to the immense proj- ed. Yet, it is the "something
.ects that are planned for Mars else roming in that you take no
to search for forms of life. Says notice of . . . the something
the Melbourne mediC'II gradu- that ke&lt;!ps reappearing, that is
ate I 1925 1 who received his nature's way of trying to tell
doctorate from 0 x ford four me something'' that is essenyears later, ••we must realize tially the way he has made
the full negative impact of new discoveries.
knowledge derived r r 0 m the
s tudy of the Moon, Venus,
Mars, and the problems of plex than ·a vast telephone exspace travel. As physiologists, change, says Dr. Eccles. Its 10
he explained, •'we can predict
with com·plete assurance that
man is forever earthbound. We
share this earth as brothers and
President Robert L . Ketler
there wiU never be anywhere
has appointed a len-memlx&gt;r
else to live."
Although its mode of opera- Search Committee for a Provost,
tion cannot yet be explained or the Facui ty of Social Scienscientifically, Dr. Eccles feels ces a nd Administration.
certain that there is freedom or
The panel has been asked ta
will. For, he said, «we experi- tiubmit no fewer than two nomi·
ence. do thihgs. have conscioUs nees by March 24 and tp issue
control of movement." While ·progress reports Ol\ February 18
he feels that scientific activity and March 3. President Ketter
is an affair of man's rational, will select one of the nominees
conceptual thougbt with exer- to succeed Dr. Ira Cohen, whose
cise of wiU. movement, and sen- resignation from the post was
sory perception, be cautioned effective December 15. Dr..,.Edthat creative illumination can win P . Hollander, professor of
· only rome to minds prepared psychology, has been a c t i n g
by assimilation and critical provost since that time.
evaluations. its permanency reDr. Richard D . Schwartz,
sulting from increased function

~e~~t~~~rk?f :!;~;~~~

Dr. Eccles: KiMtist·phUosopher.

billion densely packed nerve
cells-within the folded surface
sheet of the cerebral corlexoommunicate with each other
by specified regions of close ·
con tact called synapses.
Each nerve cell receives information fro m hundreds of
others by convergence and in
turn gives to hundreds by divergence. While 6.citatory synapses stimulate, inhibitory ones
oounteract or silence what otherwise might turn into a oonvulsion of millions of activated
nerve cella. ·
Three Wor1ds

Dr. Eccles recognizes the existence of three worlds. The
first is that of matter and energy (World I ) . The second is
conscious experience l W o r J d
U ) _ The third is civilization
and culture ( World ill ) . Wbile
World II is dependent on the
neuronal mechanisms of the
brain, ready for recall, the world
or objective knowledge ( ill) is
where problems, theories, and
a rguments are coded in some
appropriate fonn to ensure their
objeclivity and rontinuing in-

dependence.
But knowledge o f all three
worlds he believes to be a result or human intellectual activity. Science, for example,
gives us our knowledge and understanding or World I and also
is roncerned with World ll.
Dr. Eccles asks: •'Does not
the mystery and wonder .of our
origin and nature surpass myths
whereby man in the past attemp~ to explain his origm
and · destiny? And cannot life
be lived as a challenging and
wonderful adventure that has
meaning to be discovered?"
And he responds: "'We must
appreciate man's greatness, we
must regain faith and hope in
man and his destiny. Else all
is losL"

SSA Provost Panel Named
provost of the U/B Faculty of
law and Jurisprudence, will
chair the Committee. Its other
members are: William Bailey,
assistant vice president, Marine
Midland Bank; Mrs. Nancy P .
Broderick, assistant provost.
Faculty or Educational Studies; Dr. J o h n P. Eberhard,
de a n, School of Architecture
and Environmental Design; Jeffrey Greenwald, U ndergraduate
Student Association; Professor
Frank Henderson, political science; Jay N . Nisberg, Graduate
Student Association; Professor
Lee E. Preston, School of Managemen t, and Professor Wolfgang Wolck, linguistics.

�~

4

lJonest' Sex Education, Counseling
Said Neressary to Prevent Tragedies
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is 1M
fourth in a smn of articles in
connt!Ction with the annual
fwul-roising campaign for
Pitul=d Parentlwod of Buffalo
in wl&amp;icl&amp; many individUIJis associoled will&amp; Ul Bare involved.

By CLARICE S. LECHNER
Mntral Hf'lllr.h N....-.,

Do we know aU the psychological !actors that influence
the individual's non-acceptance
or acceptance of only certain
contraceptives .,...,., though be
or she has knowledge of effective methods? No, but there are
at least some hints if we listen
carefully to young people.
In an informal survey of 100
undergraduate students conducted by members of a clasi;
in Human Sexuality which I
teach with Mrs. Elizabeth
Kaiser, another Nursing School
faculty member, 75 per cent or
students interviewed felt that
their knowledge or birth control
was adequate; but 66 per cent
stated that they bad had intercourse without using a contraceptive. In a survey conducted
at Oberlin College, or the 40
per cent of unmarried coeds
who had had sexual
more than half
po
having used y con
'There is
. g
edgment that
psy
logical
aspects of
pie practice conlra
efficientlv
may be almost as lDlportant is
accessibility to an inexpensive,
safe, reversible JDFibod- Acceptability is the key word.
Very worthwhile studies are
being done of early medical
complications of abortion, ao
· that as Dr. Tietze states, .. the
knowledge obtained will spur
the improvement and standardization of sale and effective
a!&gt;&lt;&gt;rtion practices."

ceding this meeting were rapidly and obscurely presented.
'll&gt;e fetus never aborted. A perfectly formed baby was always
delivered to ecstatic parents.

a.onces

Must

ae -

Changes must be made to
legitimize sexual activity that
does not lead to reproduction.
Children and young adults can
be taught that every person is
a sexual being from birth to
death, that rome will choose
never to be sexually active, that
others may prefer sexual activity with persons of the same
sex or with both sexes, 'and that
those who are sexually active
· wiU have very, very few acts
of intercourse in an entire lifetime which will result in a pregnancy. Most crucial of all to
tht! problems of over-popula-

tion, they can be taught that it
is well within their competencies to choose when a pregnancy
wiU occur.
Young people need to have
an opportunity to discuss their
feelings aOOut femininit y and
maseuJinity. Are t.hf;y strongly
associated with becoming pregnant or impregnating a girl?
Is infertility or sterility viewed
as crippling or degrading or, if
\'Olun tary, at the very least,
selfish?
Is pregnancy seen as a j ust
punishment for sinful behaviors, as a way of making more
secure a tenuous relationship,
or as a way of a-;serting one's
independence? Is sexual activity deemed purposeless if there
is no chance of pregnancy occurring?
'We Must Listen to Feelings'

Use of the most effective

methods of contraception necessitate advanced ·planning.

the umacbismo" oriented male
insists on deciding when and
if contraception is used.
There are some young wo-men who express guilt about
the possibile abortifacient actions of contraceptives. Ravenholt writes of the fifth technology tier in the development of
methods, which will include aU
the known effective contraceptive measures, legalized abortion, and a "completely effective substance or m e tho d
which, when sell-administered

'VIEWPOINTS
The~'-onlillo­

"' pnwiclo o forum for the ex·
c:flon&amp;e at views on • wide voriety

fodng the ocodemlc
community. We welcome both
position p•pers •nd letters •s
-permits.

of the -

on a single occasion, would ensure the non-pregnant state at
(.:ompletion of a monthly cycle."
Comp~ Psychological hctors
Who is to guarantee, with all
ol the complex psychological
aspects involved, that when this
technological advance is accomplished and such a method
is freely available, that the cultural lag we already see will
not prevent a woman from acceptirig it?
ln a fairly recent poll, only
49 per cent of adults questioned
favored permitting abortions·

when parents have all the children they desire. However, 87
per cent or these adults felt
that the government should
make birth oonlrol infonnation
a"ailable to all who desire it.
Any governmental interference
in contraceptive p r a c t i c e,
though, may be strongly resisted as a .threat to the autonomy of the individual or group.

Adult attitudes toward young
people's freedom of sexual express_ion very often limit both
the opportunity for discussion
of responsible ;exuality and the
access to the best methods for
Abstract theories regarding
preventing unwanted pregnancies. When given an opportun- the threat of overpopulation
ity, the young speak often or rarely convince the individual
spontaneitv, sometimes without to think of limiting his or her
realizing that even if the fear reproduction capabilities. Each
of pregnancy is not a strong individual must be able to see
deterrent to intercourse it that his or her health, economic
often is to spontaneit
' we a nd social development will be
hear that the foam is messy, enhanced if each child that is
that condoms redu.ce pleasure, born is a wanted child.
that the diaphragm means one
Widespread, honest and realmust ~ndle one's genitalo;, that istic
education in all aspects of
the p11l causes depression! We
.exuality
is needed. So is conmust listen to all of these feelcounseling so that effecings and their implied attitudes tinued
tive
contraception
methods are
in order to help individuals
eagerly sought and consistently
make infonned decisions.
used.
These
are
goals
that may
A young woman may use
periodic abstinence a'i a way of help prevent some or the personal
tragedies
that
we
hear of
limiting intercourse because she
finds it unsatisfying, as well as every day.
a method to avoid pregnancy.
As: a voluntary age ncy,
In this case, use of a truly ef- . Planned Parenthood of Buffalo,
fective contraceptive may be Inc., baS urgent need of .funds
abandoned if the resulti'lg free- tb meet the counseling and
dom causes even more distress. medical needs of thousands of
C ontracepti v ~s may be
individuals. Because of the exviewed as causing an alteration pertise that they have develDf power or oontrol in a sexual oped over the yean;, they are
relationship in another way ru; best qualified to offer consultation services to groups who are
somewhat belatedly becoming
interested in the most crucial
problem facing aU of us-overpopulation. .

-MorelboOO...I

However, prevention of the
unwanted pregnancy that ends
in abortion is a far more rational use or our limited health resources, whether we speak of
skills, time, facilities, or money.
As David states in discussing
men&lt;al health and familv planning, "even in countries with
liberal abortion laws, motivational studies related to effective and ineffective contmception practice and to repeated
abortion-seeking behavior are
only beginning."
Skillful counseling to help
sexually active individuals decide on an effective method of
contraception should include
exploration of sexual attitudes,
sexual patterns, and interpersonal relationships.
Traditionally, sex education
both in the home and the
~ bas worked aWns~ limIting the population. Sexual
activity was always and generally only tied to reproduction. 'llle egg and the sperm
always met, and the events pre-

GREPORTER.,

__

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locatW •

·a_.;..

~ 2U, 2$0 W ...... A_,_

Uitor

nDO~

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P~O

is charged with recommendjng to
President Robert L Ketter a panel
of nominees. The Search Committee would like to receive names of

~

llOlJDl'T T. IIUIUZTT

---

• ...,.. c:-;:;:r:,;r,.~ag,_,. uno,
-

candidates to review. Please sub·
mit names

SUSAir OI!J!mnFOOD
UTTD&amp;IIT AI'PAID EDI1'0it: S..... U...
aDI1"'JtS: , _ ._

OOMT'IlDl1TfNO JUtnST, -

.o.s-ar. .....,., s.

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of cand idates, along

with their curriculum vitae, to the

... CLOo"Tmll
.._._

~

GRAD DEAN SEARCH
The Search Committee for Dean
of the Graduate School (see last
week's Reporter for membership)

A- IPZSTIJ!rF RDWLAND

·~

......,

Chatrman of the Committee: Pro·
fessor Edwin A. Mirand, Roswell
_ Park Memorial Institute, 666 Eim
~~ Buffalo 14203, by February

~

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1~72

Lipset Virus Sociologists
.As Further beft tJumMost
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
R..porNr Stall

"Sociologists are further to
the left than any other discipline group within the academy," Dr. Seymour Martin
Lipsel, considered by many to
be one of the most important
men in sociology today, contended in a recent presentation
on campus.
The Harvard professor cited
study after study showing that
academic sociologists are more
liberal/ leftist in terms o! attitudes toward national politics,
opposition to the Vietnamese
War, support of student activism, and championing of racial
advancement.
While "rank and !ile" sociologists are more liberal than
their colleagues, the " dominants"-those who control the
prestigious departments or se·
cure the most research fundsare more leftist still. Lipset
pointed out that "sociologists
who had served in the 12
months preceding a 1969 survey as paid consultants to some
agency or the national government or who had held federal
grants during that period were
much more opposed to United
States policies in Vietnam,
more supportive of an immediate U.S. withdrawal, than the
rank and file of the-profession."
Anticipating his critic., the
sociologist explained that the
field has a slightly smaller proportion of members or Jewish
background than the other social sciences and "is not much
more Jewish than the .faculty
at large."
Not surprisingly, sociology
graduate students and younger
faculty members rate. themselves as more liberal or leftist
than do their older colleagueS.
Why the a ttraction.: of liberal / leftists to sociology? Lipset .
feels it is "part or the general
tendency o/ intellectuals to
support a politics or social
criticism."
- On a theoretical level, he explains that "intellectuals are
concerned with the creation of
knowledge ... that the emphasis is on creation, innovation,
avant-gardness." Within this
"obligation to create," is the
"tendency to reject the status
quo, to oppose the existing."
On a more practical level,
Lipset reminded h is audience
that sociology is concerned with
topics that "inherently remain
a focus for discontent- race,
stratification, power, crime,
etc." More than any other
group of social scientists, .. they
are recurrently exposed, as part
of their professional work, to
the 'oontradictions' of their society."
Currently a two-pronged debate is raging in sociology over
the nature of the discipline,
Lipset explained. On one band
younger sociologists are criti:
cizing their elders for being too
conser:vative. Lipsel, who has
been one target for such criticism, feels that in any "leftist
discipline" as within any radical political party, the question
ot "who is the most revolutionary becomes a salient issue."
He cited cases in France and
Gennany w h_ e r e sociologists
who, at one bme, were considered radical, Marxist etc were
criticized for .. not beini' revo-lutionary enough" and have
left universities.
The second part or the debate centers around whether a
~ologist should be an "activlS~' or a "scholar'' or a coinhinabon or both. Lipset considers
~e .two p o I e s incompatible
Within one person beeause of
~ferihg philosophic orientations. The politician/activist, in
general, makes decisions on the
basis or limited information,

ignores contradictory materials
and-acts in a self-assured fasb.
ion. The scholar, on the other
band, acts slowly, stresses the
inter-relationship of many elements and urges caution. Lipset feels his colleagues and students should realize this distinction and make a choice between scholarship and action
since the two cannot be effectively mixed.
Lipset pushed for a scholarly
approach with objective methods of inquiry because "social
scientists are more likely to
coptribute to the 'solution' of
many social problems if they
can separate themselves from
policy-relevant matters so as to
be free to look for more abstract levels or generalization."

SorryAbout

The SellOut
EDITOR :

I would like to apologize to
all those people who wanted to
see the performance or Jack
MacGowran in the ..Works of
Beckett" on Thursday, January
20, and who were unable to get
tickets, the latter having sold
out very quickly indeed. Unfortunately, Harriman Theatre
seats only 200 and it turned
out that close to a thousand
people wanted to attend. We
were unable to run the show
for a longer period of time because: a ) this wru; Mr. MacGowran's only free date and b )
we could only alford to have
him here one night anywaY.
I also wanted to draw attention to an omissiOn iri the pUblicity inforinalii&gt;ri tha.t was circulated ·abouf. this e v e.n·t . .',1~
should have read "sponsored by
.the Office o/ Cultural Affairs,
in association with the Depart-·
ment Q£ Theatre" since without
the extraordinary cooperation
or that department, both in
making the theatre available
for the performance a nd in providing a fine technical crew,
wh ich worked very hard a nd
long, it would not have been
possible to present MacGowran
here. I am very grateful to Gordon Rogoff, chairman of the
T h e a t r e Department, Paul
Brown, technical director, and
to the Department's faculty,
staff and student body for working jointly with the Office of
Cultural Affairs in bringing this
outstanding theatrical production to our campus.
Sincerely,
ESTHER SWARTZ

Assistant
to the President
for Cultural Affairs

Co/legeBAward
Joan DeiPlato of Batavia has
received the College B Foundation award for Philology, Philosophy and Cultural History,
Jonathan Ketchum, associate
master of CoUege B. has announced.
The award was given "to a
student who bas contributed·
significantly to long-tenn policy
fonnulations for College 8, in
accordance with the goaJs or
the Foundation."
Miss DeiPiato, a freshman
majoring in philosophy, titled
her paper, "General and Pragmatic Education: An Eumina·
tion."
Mr. Ketchum said of the
paper, "the grest merit of -this
piece of writing is to have
brought two basic and conflicting gnala of higher education
and, ~- education generally, inw a particularly sharp
focus, and have done so in such
a way as to forestall simplistic solutions to perennial problems."

�5

Anthropology PhD. Candidate Has Devoted
Years to Research Among the Seneca Tribe
The Iroquois Ceremonial of
Midwinter is an · expression of
thanks for the past year and a
prayer for the new one.
As on other Iroquois Indian
Reservations, the Senecas of
Tonawanda began their New
Year's Feast on Friday, January 21, five nights after the
new moon, with religious rites
having remote origins many of
which date back more than a
thousand years_
The Festival, which lasts for
a week, is the climax of the
yearly religious · cycle-, and in·
corporates rituals from other
seasonal ceremonies such as
Thanks to the Maple, t h e
Strawberry Festival, the Green
Bean Ceremony and the Green
Com Ce.r emony.
Mrs. Hope Isaacs, Ph.D . candidate in anthropology, has
been involved for several years
in ethnological research among
the Seneca Indians of Western
New York. Her special interest, traditional medicine, has
takep her to the Tonawanda,
Cattaraugus, and Allegany Reservations of the Senecas, the
largest tribe of the Iroquois. In
the course of her research, Mrs.
Isaacs has come to know their
customs and way of life. She
delivered a paper on "Iroquois
Herbalism-the Past 100
Years" at the 70th Annual
Meeting of the American Anthropological Association in
New York City this winter.
Tr.dltlonallots

A high percentage of the
Senecas of the Tonawanda Reservation are traditionalists, according to Mrs. Isaacs, and the
ancient ceremonies are extremely important. Explaining the
major ceremonial days of the
New Year Festival, Mrs. Isaacs
' says each ceremony begins with
a Thanksgiving Speech. On the
first day the Big Heads, or her-

aids, go around the Reservation announcing the "doings."
The second day is the Stirring
of the · Ashes ceremony. The
False Faoes and · Medicine Society ceremonies are held on
the third and fourth days, the
Great Feather Dance on the
fifth day, and the Naming Ceremony on the sixth and seventh
nights. During this ceremony
babies are named, some adolescents receive new names, and
some adults take on new names.
The Bowl Game, played with
painted peach p i t s between
members of opposite moieties
(factions ), is also played on

~:~~f~Jing ceremony of

the

Our Life Supporters, a homage
to the Three Sisters, com,
beans, and squash, takes place
on the seventh night ending
with distribution to all assembled of com soup and many
other trnditional foods. On that

to the increased use of madlinery, electricity, oil burning
stoves, etc. There is also a
marked increase in dermatitis,
heart disease and diabetes mellitus. Much of this, says Mra
Isaacs, is attributed by the Senecas to the white man's civilization, to pollution, and to the
way foods are grown and prepared for market.
Encounter

w-1111

Explorers

Mrs. Isaacs recounts that the
early explorers such as Cartier
and Champlain, as well as the
Jesuit missionaries, recognized
the amazing surgical skill of
the Iroquois. And she believes
that centuries of botanical experiment and experience would
account for their pbannaceutical achievement. "When Cartier
travelled up the St. Lawrence
River," she report s. uma.ny

of his men were dying of scurvy. They met a party of Iroquois wbo ..,.,.,.,.j to unders tand the c:oodition and prepared a medicine for themprobably out of -.Jodt dles-whid! cured the I!CimiY
and saved the whole expedition." This is only one ol many

stories attesting to their understanding and lax&gt;wledge of
the t•.se of plants..
Amongtbe medicinal plants

Reconstitutes G •

night a in
speech
cbanted
from SB~
memory
the Sen~
language
·
recounts all the Important
events in the community during
the past year. The speech this ( The local University ~ter
year was given by Chief Cor- chapter Se n a t e Profess1onal
bett Sundown. The Com Husk Association &lt;SPA ) Grievance
rite a kind of addendum to the Committee has been re-consti N.,..;. :tear's Feast, will be held tuted to p~de for "g~roots
this year on February 5. All of representa.llon, peer - Judgm_ent
the ceremonies are held in the and efl'oct1ve handlmg or gnevLong House
anoes at both informal and forPressure of vihite Civiliutlon
mal levels," Professor ConstanMany of the traditional med- tine Yeracaris, Chapter presiicine practioes of the Senecas dent, reports. _
are highly pragmatic, Mrs.
~ Comnuttee has two onlsaacs feels. She finds that both ~n, one from the Ca~ty
individual and group therapy is and one from_ the _professional
often suooessful. She points out stall'. Ea~ identif!abie ~r­
that sociological and psycho- 8J:OUP constitu!"'cy IS prov"led
logical p r 0 b 1 em s associated With a !Armmttee m ~ m be r,
with the increasing pressure of Yeracans ""Y'!· who Will serve
white civilization are affecting as_ the first pomt of con~"!' f'!r
every aspect of Iroquois life, in- ~evance;;. In effect, this mdJ1 d " go the practice of medi- vidual will a&lt;:~ as .a local omc.u m '
budsman dunng mformal atcmMrs. Isaacs uncovered a col- tempts at . resolution. Subsel~tion of _lroquois herbal medi- ~cl~~·~the
Ctnes _whJch ba~ been stored rnittee's functions in the formal
away m the archives of the ~- procedures at Step l . Grievants
bany Museum ?f Natural H•s- are, Yeracaris points out, entory, gathered m 1915 b.y cur- titled to come directly to the
ator Arthur C. Parker, hunseU Committee chairman or the
part ~neca. The plants are President, in the first instance,
now dned up but the_ names of if they 80 prefer.
the plan~!! and _notations as to
Employees covered by the
use remamed · 1 n t a c L Mrs. State-SPA Agreement are urged
Isaacs checked this information
with her Seneca friends and
CASE DISMISSED
learned that nearlv all of Parker's plants, are still bPJng used Or. Betty AHiamdani 's sex dis·
crimination
c h a r g e against the
medicinally today, although to- University has
been dismissed by
day many of them are used for the
State 0 i v i s i o n of Human
diffP.rent disorders.
Rights, the local press reports.
The kinda of ailments affect- Dr. AI-Harlldai\i who charges that
ing the Senecas have dmstical- she .was denied tenure soJety be·
ly chan~ed over the past lOO cause of her se:~ will appeal the
years, Mrs. Isaacs has found. Wrdict before the State Human
Today there are many more ac- Rights Appeal Board, the reports
cidents, including cuts, bruises indicate.
and lacerations, probably due

Gri':"...::YC::

""""-

which have been trnditionally
uoed by the Iroquois and which
Mrs. Jaaacs finds lllil1 in ,_
today ..... wild bladt cberry
hark for colds and coucbo. ~
for ._ . _ prickly
toothacbe,
-......,._
iliaash
for for
· blood
problems,
fras for poor circulation, witch
hazel fur skin diseases, ra,.._t

as a preventative.. Seneca
malteroot for snal:ebite, and
~ hark for womxls.

~£11: T~
J.. ~ Y j

to bring grievances to the Committee member provided for
their area
Dr. Jean Alberti I ext. 4404 )
and Professor laurence Michel
cext. 3330) are aH:bairmen of
the Grievance group_
Faculty members are: Prot:.
Thomas Connolly l ext. 4445) ,
Arts and Leltuo; Prof_ Edwin
Duryea ( ext. 4806) , EducaliDnal Studiu; Prot:. Herilert Reis-

:::rA~~~/~

ffyman

Jacob
1852-43'72) , Law
and Jurisprtllknct!; pro(_ Gordon Harris l exL 3932) , NaJural SciellCeiJ and MatMmtJiia;
Prof_ Arthur BoiJer I ext. 71504 ) , Social Sciences and AdminUJralion; Ms. Mary Brady
I ext. 4~ ) . UtJioenily Libnuies.
Professional s ta Cf members
are :
Group A ( Academic Allain;:
Admissions and Remrds, Continuing Education, Graduate
School, Swnmer Ses&amp;ion&amp;, Undergraduate Studies, Coooerative College Center, EPIS) ,
Dr. Donald Brutvan (ext.
3818 )_

Group B ( Aademic AJrairs:
Centers, Colleges, Councils,
Departmental and Pro.'O&amp;tial
Units, Instructional Communication Center, ~ Education, Urban .Airain) , Ms. Anastasia Join&amp;ln ( e:J&lt;L 7-1637)_
Group C ( Esecnliw! V i c e
President. F~ l"'anninc;R e 6 e a r c h. Um-sity Relations), Mr. J.-pb Drew ( Est.
7-138l}.
Grocq1 V (()pemtions and
Systems: Aa:ountiD&amp; Ansiliary

Group

Services, Budget, Bursar,
Comptroller's Office. Environmental Health and Safety, Financial Services, lntemal Audit, Payroll, Pen;onnel, Physical
Ptant, Purchasing}, Mr. Neil
Goen (Ext. 4012} _
Group E (Student Alfairs:
Financial Aid, Foreign Student
Allain;. A~••m• Inslmctional
S..Vioes,. ~ty Student Affairs, Norton Union, Placement,
Student Counoeling}. Ms. Dorolhy Haas ( Est. 4414}_

Music Ensemble
Receive; Grant
Four Creative .A.ociates of
the Music Department's Ceater
of the Creative and Performinc

Arts, wbo formed an ~
called S."E. M. in 1970, have
been awarded • $1.500 pant
from the New York State Conncil on the Arts for perfDrmanoes in the cunent &amp;ea80IL

Members of the~ an!
Peter KDiik, fiutist-composer
and founder of the group; Juliuo
Eastman, pianist-composer;
Robert&lt;&gt; Laneri, clarinettiatCIJIIIIlCI6'!r. and Jan WiJiiams;
~&amp;Dd-­

&amp;istant clirector of the

c-a.

Since the ....emhle's formation in January, 1970, they haft
g;....,.. five~ in the
Buffalo area. die IDIIIIt at
the Kenan Center in LoclqJort_
They have been invited to give
a ~ tour of OIIDClerlll in
European cities, includinc Colop&gt;e, Berlin and Geneva

�By MARK SHECHNER
........_, ,.,.,._. crl

&amp;1/i.b

Yesterday, February 2, was the fiftieth anni"""""'&gt;' of the publication in
Paris of 1 - Ioyce's Uly_.. This
boot, an inlematiollal catUe cell:bre
at the time of ita publication, remains
the most influelltial worlt of litemture
writleo in this century in Europe or -...
America In a """""' February 2, 1922,
was only the formal publication date
since only · two copies of U lyues were
deli,.,...r to Paris by the printer that
day. Ioyce k.ept one and the "other
...,.,t oo display at his .publisher's
bookstDre, SylW. Beadl's S/otJkespaue and Company at 12 Rue de
I'Odeon. Immediately. it . attracted
crowds of Parisians wbo came to buy
• or pwk at the moostzous 732-page
book in ita Gnoek-blue cover. But that
formal date """" ao important one lor
Ioyce lor wbom numerical and verllal
wtt"""
...,,... of all kinds bore
mqicaJ oiiDffinmoe For Ioyce, wbo
was bom in Dublin on February 2,
1882, the publication of u lyiiBD .....
meant to coincide with his fortieth
birthday. 1be boot, as be saw it, was
a part of lWMell, his dUid pedlaps.
or even bimsell reborn, and the date
of this rebirth bad to correspond with
his birth if things were to worlt out
well
1be cboioe of Paris as the place of
publication ..... DOt made foe magical
,.,....,. but for two Very practical
ones: Ioyce lived there, having moved
to Paris from Triiste in 1920, and
Uly- could DOt be publillbed in the
a.jo&lt;

FAd--king

counlrie&amp;,.-

Eogland. Ireland, or the U n i t e d
State..
In the United States, thanks to the
mediation of Ezra Pound, Ioyce bad
publisbed chapters of Uly118eB serially in the mapzine. Little Reoiew, b&amp;-

tween 1918 and 1920. But the magazine ran afoul of the Post Office ~
partment, w h i c h ooofiscated and
bumed four issues in 1919 and early

1920. In the lall of 1920, the JulyAugust issue of LUlie R eview, which
contained a section of the "Nausikaaw
episode. came to the attention of John
Sumner, oecretary of the New York
Society lor the Prevention of Vice_
He swore out a warrant against the
editors charging them with having
publisbed otJscerucy. When Pound
beard about it be wrote to Ioyce,
u 'Nausikaa' has been pinched by the
po-lice.w With New York lawyer and
~Iron lobn Quinn as their attorney, the editors, Margaret Anderson
and lane Heap, came to trial before
a pmi,J of three judges in the Court
of Special Sea;ioos in New York. As
it tumed out. these three were less
than ideal lor presiding over a case
of this nature. When the prosecution
hepn le . - f selected uobacenew pa&amp;one judge urpd that theY not
be .-1 in Miss Andenlon's presence.
uaut obe is the publisher,w Quinn responded. 1be judge replied gallantly,
'Tm ...., obe didn't know the significance of what obe was publishing.w
When the l1!&amp;dinp were completed,
tWo judges ~ed that theY
hadn't amdemtood a word of it, whid&gt;
eDilDIUllled Quinn to observe that
what couldn't he •mderstood couldn't
c:onupt. 1be judges were ' not pe&lt;I!Wided and ,..,.,._t the trial lor a
week in order to .-1 the entire chapter lbr u..m.elves. 1be oonrt then
found ~ ADder!lon and Heap
cuiJcy of pnbliobinK obecenicy, fined
them fifty dollars """"' and ordered
them to djwmntjm!P p a h lis hi n g
Uly..,..
Uly..,. 1'ftll8ined iiiepJ in the
United Slates until District Court
.ludr.e Woolley"• famous decision ad-

mittal the book into the country in
December 1933. Woolsey concluded
that the book was surely not aphrodisiacal, though its effect on the reader "undoubtedly is somewhat emetic."
Simi~r

F - in

Eneland

Ulysse~~

suffered a similar fate in
England. As in the United S~tes.
Joyce hoped to pre-publish Ueysses
serially in Haniet Weaver and Dora
Marsden's magazine. The Egoist, but
the magazine ran afoul of queasy
printers and only five issues containing Ulysses ever came oul Miss
Weav.er's dedication to Joyce and
Ulysses was tiUCh that she dissolved
her magazine at the end of 1919 and
reconstituted it ru; 1be Egoist Press
in order to publlilh Ulysses as a bonk.
She managed an English edition" of·
the book in 1922 though it had to be
printed in France and sold more or
less pen;onally and sub rosa. In January 1923, a second edition of 499
copies was seized by British Customs
at Folkestone. When Miss Weaver declined to--challenge Customs authorities in court, the copies were burned
and Ulyuet~ was not published again
in England until 1936. As for publishing or selling the book in Ireland
- that was simply out of the question.
From the beginning. neoitral responses to Ulyaet~ were hard to come
by. 1be book bad its advocates and
sensitive readers, of oowse, not least
of all in tho&amp;e countries where it had
been brumed, but nothing in recent
literary history can match the spectacular vebemeooe of its hostile critics
who &gt;!trained to outdo
another in
discovering adjectives of disgust.
Typical of reviews in the popular
press in London and Dublih were the
obserwtioos of the pseudonymous
u Anunis" eaily in 1922 in the pink
Sf'Orlin8 Tima or Pinlt 'U n as it was
called. He stood aquarely behind
U.... N - York judges wbo bad ~
the LUih Reoitv editors one hundred

one

dollars ~for the original publication
of a very rancid chapter of the J eyce
stuff, which appears to have been writ- ·
ten by a perverted lunatic wbo has
made a specialcy of the literature of
the latrine." Parts of Ulysses, be
noted, display Joyce "in a mood of
kindergarten delicacy," while its main
contents "are enough to make a Hottentot sick. n
At the other end of the litemry
spectrum, Virginia Woolf, while publicly expressing confusion about the
book. privately observed that it was
" underbred" and thought it the woik
of "a self-taught working man" or a
"queasy undergraduate scratching bis
pimple;."
gven one of Ulyuest admirers. John
Middleton Murray, writing in the Nation and Athendeum, was moved to
rhetorical excess by the book's em&lt;&gt;tional demands. In response to V a1ery
Larbaud's pronouncement that with
Ulysse~~, " Ireland makes a sensatiooal
re-entrance into high E""""""' literature," Murray snorted, "European! He
is the man with the bomb wbo would ·
blow what remains of Europe into the
sky."
Irish -

- . the

w-

1be worst attacks had to 00me, of
course, from Ireland. Shane Leslie,
writing in the Dublin Review under
the pseudonym "Domini Canis," declared that for a Catholic to read the
book was "not only the description
but the commission of a oin against ··
the Holy Ghost." He observed:
''Doubtletis this book was intended to
make angels weep and ti&gt; amuse
fiends, but we are not sure that 'those
embattled angels of the Churdi,
Michael's host,' will not laugh aloud
to 'i8e the failure of this frustmted
Titan as he revolves and splutters .
- bopelesoly under the flood of his own
vomit." A more charitable and ambivalent George Bernard Sbaw, when
asked to suhocribe to the first edition,

wrote to Sylvia 8-=b that he bad
read lragmonts ol Uty-. lllllilhouiht
it "a rewlting .--.rd ol a ctilpsling
pbue ol civilizatioo," albeit a truthlui one. "I obould like to put a awdan
tOUDd Dublin," he declareci. "ttUDd
up every male penon in it between
the ages of 15 and 30; force them to
read it; and ask them whether oo re!lection theY could - an.ything amusing in all that foul-mouthed. foulminded derioion and obecenicy." But
as for purchasing a copy, be replied,
"I am an elderly Irish gentleman, and
.. . if you imagine that any IrisluDan,
much less ao elderly one, would pay
150 francs lor a book, you little know
my countrymen."
Of oowse, Joyce was at least as ambivalent about Ireland as it was about
him. He bad left Dublin and gone
into exile in 19()(, at the age of
twency-two. A sell-&lt;rtyled Wandering
Jew from that point forward, he nlade
Europe his home, settling for extended
periods in Trieste. Zurich and Paris.
His reasons for leaving ln!land were
many and be presented some of them
in his first novel, A Portroil of the
Artist as a Young Man, as a defense
of his sell-impcl8el! iaolation. He has
Stephen Dedalus declare that ''Ireland is the old sow that eats ber farrow," and what he meant by that covered a wide range of political and institutional cruelties and clerical cyrannies.
In addition to those reasons that
are obvious - in Portroil, there were
some obscure ones that hurt Joyce
deeply but which be did not readily
discuss or write about. One of them
was his failure to meet the conditions
of "class" that were requisite to b&amp;coming a writer in Ireland in 1904.
Joyce's father, John Slanislau5 Joyce,
had been, as his son saw it, ua drinl&lt;er, .
a good fellow, . a stot-rteller; -·9oinebody's secretary, something in a 'distillei-y, a' "taxgatt.erer.- a : bankrupt and
• • •1 ii ptaiaer· Of ltik 09m" paSt:" • In"
short, be·Jiad1 been a tai1'ure' and tliitt ·
failure lia)! plaCed a . bunlen·rorMi-' ·
nancia1 need; and an a uta of disrepirta•
bilicy upon his childreJL When
Stephen Dedalus, in
more .or •less
autobiographical section of Ulysses,
asks John Eglinton if liewill he paid
for a contribution to Eglinton's magazine Dana, ironically subtitled, "A
· Joumal of Free Thought," Stephen is
acting in bad taste, and knows it, and
is setting himself apart from the genteel and middle class "Celtic Twilight"
literary movement. But in realicy, the
movement did what it could to set
itsell apart from Joyce.
Oliver Gogarcy, the Buck Mulligan
of Ulysse~~, with whom Joyce lived
briefly in the Martello Tower at
Sandycove in 1904, never Jet Joycefol!&lt;et that be, Gogarty, had money
and that Joyce did not. At the time,
Gogarcy was a medical student at Oxford wbo spent his summers slumming
in Dublin with witty YOUill drinkers
like Joyce, while writing- bad sentimental poetry and -good doggelal in
his spare time. In Ulysses, Mulligao
reminds Stephen that "the alDlt thinks
you lrilled your mother. 'lbat's why
she won't let me have anything to do
with you." B~;tt for the a\Dlt, Stephen's

a

�7
dedicated "to James Joyce who will
probably ploed the .,.._ ol oar .....,
at the bar ol pooterity.- ClllllllliDod tbe
first three dJaptem o1 u~ Tho

~-~

........

and bowdlerizai ao • to Cl6BI
the likes ol Jabn ~- Tho of Joyce's c:opyricbt in
incomplete and bmmed puhlicotinn
was in doubt aDd Joyw:e had .., Jepl
Je.oetage to compel Bocb to quit pub.
lication. When Joyce pmllsled. Bocb
arrogantly demanded that be ......, ID
New York, at B o c b ' s - to .._.
....,.. my c:barp!s apiDBt bim far bis
conduct in the ID8iier ol my ............
tion of his 'Ulysses,' - aDd (lftlBiisod
Jayce the oppodunity ID "eliDe with
the Van Don!os, see the W....-...nh
Building, and get a thousand dollam
in cash besides." 'lbe. lilloo&gt; came ID
an end in 1927 after Joyw:e's friends in
Paris circulated an jntenwticmal p:otest Petition against Bocb that signed by lfn eminent persoos iDduding Einstein, Ortega y Gasset, u....
muno and Yeats.

America--

&lt;and Joyce's) refusal to pmy at his
mother's deathbed was only what ooe
~ might expect of the 1000 of ·a Simon
Dedalus· or a John Joyce. And Gogarty himself late£ admitted that be
had never invited Joyce down to Oxford out of "regard for its conventions."
'Let Ireland Die for Me'

Joyce's incessant need for money
didn't help. Geof1!e Moore, who held
regular literary evl!!)ings at his home
during this period, never invited Joyce
though Gogarty was a constant guest,
and once exclaimed upon bearing of
Joyce's borrowings, "Why be's nolhing but a-but a beggar!" Moore
never abandoned the prejudices and
late£. ~ '!fter the publication
of Ulysaea, "Joyce, JoyCl!, ; why be's
nobody-from . the Dublin docks: no
frunily,· •!O. ~in&amp;-'7, .,Ip.8J.I, it .is liy. ·
tie !'ODd&lt;!f ~~ ,Joyye "188 finally ljW&gt;war.m to . ~ .lJi!!h. slnliP...for.inde- •.
pendeoce . A . ,!friestine :-frieod ooce
asked ·Joyce if• be would like to see ·
Ireland an independent oation. "So
that I might declaie .myoelf its first

Exiles. In Trieste also, be began work
on Ulysses. Ulysses had been origineoemy'?" be asked in return. Asked if
ally
planned as a short story for Dub- ·
be would die for Ireland, be anliners, and was to be about a day in
nounced to the same friend, "Let Irethe life of Mr. Hunte£ whom Joyce
land die for me."
had conceived as one of his Dublin
As if jn a gesture of class defiance,
characters, a cu;e study in Irish parJoyce eloped to Europe in ).904 with
a peasant girl from Galway, Nora . alysis. By 1915, however, the idea
had expanded enormously. 'lbe story
Bamacle, whom he did not many
had become a novel and Mr. HIDlte£
legally until 1931. When his father
gave way to Leopold Bloom, a Jewishlearned that his son had run off with
Irish
- Hungarian - Catholic - Protesa girl oamed Barnacle, be wisetant advertising canvasser who was
cracked, "She'll never leave him."
cursed/blessed
with a bwmm, poetic
Joyce and Nora spent a brief time
and sedu~ve wife oamed Molly.
in Zurich, then went to Pola, Austria,
&lt;now Pula, Yugoslavia) where Joyce
Financial Stability Fome
worked at the Berlitz language school.
In 1915, the war forced the Joyces
They left Pola for Trieste in 1905
to leave Tries~ whlcb. was in an emwhere Joyce worked again for Berlitz
battled comer of tbe Austro-H-and where they stayed for almost
ian Empire, and move to Zurich wbere
eleven years. While James wrote and
they stayed until 1919. It was during
taught English, Nora raised two chilthe Zunch years that Joyce's wodr. .
dren, Gioll!io and Lucia, amid condifinally became known. Joyce had been
tions of ext:raoniinary poverty, aby&amp;"discovered.~ by Ezra Pound in 1914
mal looeliness and CIOIISlant misunderand ttuuu&amp;h IUs in~ and instandings with her artist-husband It
sistence lJubliners and Portrait were
was in Trieste that Joyce finished his
publisbed, the former afte£ Joyce himbook oJ short stories, Dubliners, and
self had tried fruitlessly for nine years
wrote both Portrait and · the play
to find ·publishers and printers who
would handle its "pomographic"_and
"libelous·· stories. Pound saw to it
that Portrait was published serially in
the Egoisl, then edited by Dora Marsden. ll was Miss Marsden's interest
in Porlroil that cleared the way for
Dubliners to he published as well. It
was in Zurich, from 1915 through
1919, that Joyce wrote the bulk of
Ulysses, and it was during this period
too that he was accorded his longoverdue recognition as a major writer.
Among other things recognition took
the grateful form of his first patronage. Early in 1917, Harriet Shaw
Weaver anonymously gave a yearly
grant of 200 pounds and for the first
time in his life, Joyce had a base of
financial stability from which to work.
In 1919, with Ulysses nearing completion, Joyce moved his family bad&lt;
to Trieste for nine months, and moved
again in 1920 to Paris which remained
his penniment home, or at least his
base of operations until 1939. When
Joyce moved to Paris, be\ was already a celebrated write£ and the unfmished Ulysses, an international
cause as well. By that time, the Egoist's serial had been run, publicized
and discontinued while the Lillk. Review's public8tion was just encounte£ing its famous· suppression. The decision to publish in Paris then was a
late one, made only afte£ it was perfectly and finally obvious to Joyce
that publication in an Englisb-speaking C&lt;JI!D!ry was impossi.\Jie.
Joyce's inability to publish Uly""""
in the United States for many years
led to a bizarre complication in 1926
when Srunuel Roth, a New York entrepreneur of literature. began pub.
l.islllnll an imperfect and espurpted
version of it in his own joumal. TIDO .
Worlds Monthly, which ~
cated. to the Increase ol the Gaiety ol
Nations." Roth started the mapziDe
solely for the purpose of pinltiDg
Ulysses. The first issue. in July 1926,

.loJ&lt;e-.tU/8
This literary annives:saJY is ol
special importance ben! at UIB because of the emaonlinary &lt;XIIJec:tiaa
of Joyce manU9Cripls, boots and memorabilia housed in the Poetry Roam
of the Lockwood Library. 11 is ODe
of the two or three mast important
coUections of Joyce materials in the
world, mal:cbed only by the &lt;XIIJec:tiaa
at CorneD. The BulJalo &lt;XIIJec:tiaa
came from three sources. 'lbe first
and iall!est part is the W'ICkser Collection which contains Dl3JJIJSajpl&amp;mostly Finnegans Wake-~
gr.aphs, and books, indoding ~
was left in 1939 of Joyce's pemooallibrary. This collection mnsisls ol
Joyce's persanal boots aDd .--s
that were rescued bemically from bis
apartmeo1 in """"~lie&lt;! Paris in 1940
by his friend Paul Leaa. who-_..
lured a-tiy _ _ . _ . ..
a Nazi ' uioceuballoii coii!Dp "lii 19ft:
These materials weut m sale in Paris
in 1.949 and were pun:balal for the
I:ockwood Library by a Blpfra!onian
Mrs. Marp.retta W'ICkser, who poesented them to the Library in the
name of her husband, Philip J . W'dser. Included in the Wieber ooiJec&gt;.
tion are: thirty-two pages of D&lt;J1e;
that Joyce kept for his play EziJLs
which reveal Joyce "free associalin&amp;'"
on paper for the dual pwpose of analyzing himself and daoeloping image;
for his play; one of the two eo:iStinc
manuscripts of his early " epiphanies,"
and the original manuscript of his
1904 essay, "A Portrait of the Artist."
which was his first sketch for the
no•el be completed e~e...., years late..
There are, in addition, nmnenJUS bok&gt;gr.aph manuscripts, typescripts aDd
page proofs of UlyS~~D, plus an edJaordinaJy collection of proofs, typescripts and notebooks for F " ' Wa.lre, one of which, the Scribblodehobble notebook, has been edited aDd
published by Professor 'I1wJams c-nolly of Buffalo's English Deputmeut.
The coUectioo was greatly en1arJ:ed
in 1959 when the l.ocboood Libmry
managed to aoquire the boots aDd
papers of Sylvia Beach wbic:h had
gone on sale in Paris the pn!¥ious
year. The extent of Bead&gt; malll!l:ials
in the Lockwood Library is enormous
and the worlt of cataloguinc it is still
incomplete.
A third portion ol the Joyce collection was dcnated to the J...itnry in
two parts, in 1951 a¢ 1959, by B. w.
Huebsch, who rust published Joyw:e's

Chamber Music, Dublint!rs. Portrait,
and EziJLs in the United Slates.

Yesterday, some ol the Joyee ooiJec&gt;.
tion, relatiDc especially to Ul:ysws.
was put oo emibit in the Poetry Roam
00 the seamd floor of Lockwood Library. Un!ort:unately, due to la&lt;k al.
space in that room, only a 6:apDeul
of the Uly....,. materials can be put
out on display, but these slxKlJd bold
a treat fascination far anyooe who has
ever taken an i n - in Joyw:e aDd
his

wort&lt;.

�8

~)

&amp;gents Name PanelooPhD.Policy,
Urgeehangffi in F~Higher Ed

Arcudils
· AATIHead

Barnette Is

~fir

Music Drive

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

UW:i . .

0.. -~~-·
-.

... co..,
_.,._n._

$1.96.639 ... ...--.~.,
$1.9.63S.

�~)

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

I,

ml. ~)

me -aside CliiiiiPIIIUm hadn't
' - fully ~ "We
caalda't - t a case for tbe
plloaB,- SdliUo added. •
.Do(y's ...-tation to FSA
. . ...-......by._ta.
tiws of the studont IIOW!ft&gt;siDae, to them, tbe .......
"""' . . _ . fairly well down
the b8dl: m-~y_- PftSident
Ketller ...... that tbe record
sbow that neither lie Dor any
board .._._ me.. about tbe
Service SystaD """""Y or tbe
=it:,briacinc in outside
Bmd Roborts, MFC ._.,.
sontatiwe. asbd about other Iocatioas for Veuding. Doty .,._
plied that Sc:hiiJo had written
to Facilities Planninc asking
for .-her location but had received DO "''JJ.y.
As Dr. Anthony I.Drerm!tti.
actinc vice pre;ideut for student alrairs, pointal out. """""
is not the critical factor in the
discussioa. What seems to he
tbe c:nu of the oaUer was at
... ,.--bat point ma•pment should
report its plans to the Board
of I&gt;irect.oos. Doty's "own
thinlring is that """"'""""'t
should only tell tbe Board
..-hat's goinc when -·re
ready to." He felt that he and
Schillo were ca&amp;Jd&gt;t between
being acxused of "conspiracy"
because they waital to rmn up
their plans and heine attacked
for being ~ because
theY discussed their~ too
early.
Mic:bael Nioolau, president
of the GSA. presented a motion to keep Vending in its
present location u n t i I tbe
Board ;,; pre;ented with a plan
from Doty or Schillo. 1be motion passed unanimously.
After of tbe motion,
Doty told tbe Boanl that "as
loog as Vending mntinues to
show a profit, they're ·in pretty

&amp;ood shape" and that he
" doesn't anticipate III89Give layotbt' of Vending personnel
-lloport

Third Try at College Proves Clu!rm
For Outspoken Bill Masters. o{WBEN

--

A financial report of Norton
Hall's operations foll~ tbe By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Vending discussion. Dr. James
In 1959, Bill Masters,
Gruber, director of tbe student
union. presented w h a t he WBEN's afternoon OJ, went to
called •an incomplete financial college for one semester but
statement." 1be operation's bi- didn't take tbe finals. In 1968,
he went to night school at Buffalo State but didn't like it.
in 1969, he enrolled in
'!'J'IId be made up in a $5600 Finally
su: mon~. 1be candy counter, UI B's day school. 1be third
time was tbe charm for Masters
"""""""· IS threatened with a
rUJa! ;;t&gt;ut-down on February who finished requirements for
U , if 1t does not get additional a BA in sociology tast semester.
"!"'Jies to meet its payroll. 1be Once he put his mind to it.,
director then asked the Board Masters needed only two and
to allocate funds from its .... one-half years. As a matter of
he will graduate with 140
serve to meet thi• commitment. fact,
Ketter asked Gruber to put credits, well .over the required
128.
Masters is pleaSed with
this request in writing and
his aooomplishment and points
scheduled another Board meet- with
pride
to 22 A's. He's ·•wait·
ing in two weeks to consider
to hear from Phi Beta Kapthe allocation. 1be session will ing
pa,"
and
if
he makes it, the key
oa:ur before February 24 and
if the Board allocates the ~~turally go on a watch
money, the candy counter
1be 40-year-old DJ's area of
should he able to continue its interest
is. of ·rourse, IIl8SS
operations without interruption. media
and put&gt;lic o p i n i o n.
1be last item discussed was Choosing tbe m a j o r wasn't
tbe transfer of the FSA owned hard; he simply selected what
Amherst land to SBI. Charles he thought he knew best. Wl)at
Bal_kin, FSA secretary, ex- he learned at U/ B in the momplained that SUNY would fight ing, though, didn't always agree
the transfer since they feel with his ten years of radio exFSA should retain control of perience. ''All the authors atthe property. As a result tack tbe media from the outBalkin proposed seUing u,.; side,"' Masters complains, ..even
land and setting up a "quasi- the prophet of pap, Marshall
endowment fund," the income McLuhan, was never ins ide a
from which would he used for radio station except for an instudent projects. Paul Cum- terview." So most of his time
ming, SBI chainnan, and Nic- was spent .. learning the theory
olau fought this plan because and then piecing it together
it would still give F'SA control with what's really happening."
~ the tnoney. After discus- 'Don't Mean Anything'
smg alternative p I a n s, tbe
Even though Masters critiBoard decided to allow SBI to cizes communications theorists
draw up another proposal for their '"Ivory Tower~· apwhich &amp;lkin would submit to proach. he is not ready to revotbe Office of SUNY Counsel lutionire public opinion llieory.
Instead, he's hoping to come
for its consideration.
beck in the fall to work on a
double masters in sociology and
curriculum development and inmedia. Masters is n't
,eo.,ru......, j . - - I. col. 5) hurt his chances. His 3.3 aver- structional
doing it for professional adlion in ~; c. ~ &amp;oow age won't hurt either.
vancement- "in our profession
College I which is cross-regis- Ropresentative Group
degrees don't really m.ean anytered with tbe freshman law
Not all students who apply thing ..-but because he enjoys
course I - Urban Land-Use
for special majors have aver- finding out what makes people
~ and College F ages as high as Goldman's. tick.
For a while, he thought about
Fritton says uthey are a reptaachinr-part-time but relill?.ed
A special major aiiows the resentative group of the regular
student
bndy-no
bettef
or
w;;.uZt,:l~~~~l~ :~~
student to rut across disciplinary and ~tal regula- · more intellectually stimulated nouncer does feel he could bring
lions. Only UnM!rsi.ty-wide dis- on the whole than the mass of mudl needed practical experitn~ requirements and .... students.
ence to the classroom with the
"Not aU of' them have defi- outlook of someone " who hasn't
QUIIt!ments set by the student
nite career or educational been i n s i de the ivy -&lt;.'Overed
himself must he met.
A 2.5 .......0 •"""'~!" and a plans. Some don't plan past walls for 30 years."
their immediate degree."
This is M a s t e r s' ·sharpest
2.5
· - -are
in tbe
field offor
.......
centnltion
._m,d
a
Not Goldman.
criticism of academics - their
student who wishes to have a
He wants to study clerical cloistered outlook. He calls it
special major approved_
law, with an eye on environ- the "hangup of the profession"
"The Um-sity sees the ment, "to find out for myself and points out that most pro~ oajor as a ~ty de- if the system can be made to fessors go from _.kindergarten
gree; it's considered a gar- change. 1be way to effect real to thesis" without getting acbqe pail,• ays William M . change is to have people work- tively involved with the soFrilllla, ll!i&amp;istant to the doBn ing in and out of the system called outside world.
1bere are other things Masol tbe Divisian of Undoqrad- at the same time. 1be imporuate Studios 111111 c:t.innan of tant thing is balance. At this ters doesn't like-"the endless
Jines,
tbe need to push and use
point, rm not willing to accept
tbe special ~ oommiuee.
word .t)Jat it's not influence to get things done,
"'t's dosipal as a post anybndy's
and
the
ensnaring bureaucrat - ~ sludmts who going to work." •
cy." He reserves special words
can't p!t ..,.,...ad by a departIn Goldman's case, balance for SARA, though. With piercIDI!Ilt.
hopefully will come through at- ing humor, he credits the com"'I.t ,.... ....... students tending Law School in Buffalo puter registration system ''with
~ .....,.. ~ as a last- and living 20 miles out in the fouling up more people than
country. "I can walk around
aptiaa-as outlets. Now the country and realize what any other instrument in the
!he.....,..
_.,.. is more ~ rm doing in the city."
w o r I d, outside of the safety
i6cally attuned to what tbe
pin."
.
sludom's ~ iDterests
After Law School? 'Til fig~ The -'ity 111111 calibre of
ure it out then," he says.
Criticism aside, Masters says
people applying foe special
he:s "happy here" and has some
~are biPer em the whole
IGIEIEEHTH CENTURY ._ES gOOd memories, too. 1be "big
tl.a the · who applied in The State Unillefsity Press, AI· thing" for him was "ool[ee at
the.-.
the Union" and having argubony, ' - reissued ments with people.
'"We
cmdual2
111111
_.,.,..,.
to _scbools
. tbe ~-ln-­
His stay at U/8 radicalized
Yarll, • pictorial reconl of ''the
_
....
__
.....,..
~lib
allY....
othertbey
de- varied •nd imaciMtive architec· him IIOIDeWbat, Masters admits.
lure typified llmerican home- He ...,. ......,. flares, boots and
buildill8 duri"ll the last century,"
~ at it - · No filures are by
Jewel H. Conover, · pn&gt;hlsso&lt;
GoldoMD ._ applied to four of ort, Stole University nBling habits have been broadlaw adJaolro.-U/B"s iDdrlded- CoDoeo ot F-.lo. The 1 6 1 - eued to iDclude Malcolm X.
aad . . . . - ........ flam tbom volume with 125 photos ond orch· Cleaver and Baldwin. He
doesn't pic:lret but he does write
in a lew ........ He doesn't il8c:bual ..... for $10.
letlers to his representative~
tbiM: his .....,.. ~ will

==8'.=-

u:=

~w~------------

CUt-....-

9n-·

·;:!,

-~'=

=

~!.,~'~te~

and the President - "I don't
know if it helps but I feel it
does."

see Things Differenttr

He also tries to get people
to look a t events in a different
light. After the Cambodian invasion, Masters went on the air
a nd told his a udience that the
''invasion was out and out terrorism. . .. rm not supposed

to comment on politics . . . but

the onJy reason the President
can gel away with it is because
you don't do anything.... I'll
probably get fired for this."
His o u t p o u r i n g tied-up
WBEN's 18 trunk lines for almost two hours wiTh people who
backed up his right to comment
on politics, though they didn't
all agree with hi!'i stand. Masters remembers how surprised
bc....:as at. the response and how

" the people out there" stopped
him from getting fired .
If U/ B helped radicalize him,
Masters may also have helped
some students see how the " outside.. views education. He feels
he is " paying for the privilege
of attending the University"
an~ during the s p r in g 1970

~ndk~1~e ~ ~~k:~~~

why. He objected to the non-

democratic way the radicals
went about tryirig to cJose the
school and "if I want to go to
class, no one is · going to stOp ·
me."
Ma ste r s admits the last
two and one-half years have
changed him and he's waiting
to see what two more will do.
"Ri ght now, though, I've gotten
a lot more out of school than
I gave.}l -

SPA,AdministrationAgree
On Personnel File Policy
Official guidelines for University Personnel Fil~elineat­
ing which materials are or are
not available to employees or
their r:eprese.ntat.ives - have
been '&amp;greed upon by President
Robert L . Ketter and the Buffalo Center chapter of the' Sen~te Professional A ssociation
cSPA ).
The guidelines c o v e r five
points:
l. The olf~el!'-1 Personnel File
for each emp,loyee s h a I I he
maintained in t h e Personnel
Office.
·
2. Each department or unit
head is responsible for forwarding to the Personnel 0 ff i c e
copies' of all material (defined
below J that were prepared hefore September 1, 1971. Copies
of aU materials prepared or received on or after September .
1, 1971, shall be sent to the
emplOyee (except as noted in
SA below J as well as to the
Personnel Office.
3. Upon reasonable notiCe, an
employee, or designated member of SPA having written authorization from the employee,
shall have the right to examine
his official peraonneJ file (aee
58) during business hours in
·the presence_of a stalf. member
of the Peraonnel Office and to
file a statement in response to
any item placed in his file.
4. An employee may not re-

move any material from the tile
but is permitted to make copies
of such material.
5. The oflicial Personnel File
shall contain the following material:
A. Not Available to the Employee or His Representative:
Letters of recommendation solicited or received in connection
with the individual's employment.
B. Available for Review by
the Employee or His Representative: 1. Personnel transactions (appointment authorizations, salary changes, notice of
reappointment or appointment,
leaves of absence); 2. Statements of class assignments, departmental and other administrative assignments, committee
appointments; 3. No tic e of
awards, presentations, and citations; 4. University fringe benefit and payroll information (life
insurance, health insurance, disability insurance, soc i a I security ); workman's compensation claims and unemployment
insurance claims; 5. Curriculum
vitae; 6. All official correspondence to the individual employee ··
regarding his conaitions of employdlent and replies "!hereto;
7. Summary evaluation reports
prepared by the supervisor, department, faculty, dean, or
other administrative officers.

�10
G(JJB

.GNOTES
By "D'"
The informal meetings with
President Ketter for students
and for facuHy and staff are
continuing on alternate Tuesday mornings. The motil """"'t
faculty and staff conferences
were held on Tuesday, Felxuary 1. Nat Tuesday: Februaly
8, from 9 am. until 0000, student conferences will be sd&gt;edule&lt;L Students, faculty, and
staff can make appointments for
!!&gt;-minute confen!DCeS by calling Mrs. Ruth East. assistant to
the president, 831-2001.
PSans are ...,_., far the a.
nuol Comiftunity - UnMrsity Day
(lonnerly the ~ Open
Housel - f o r Sund•J,
April 16. lolr_ John A. Buerk, ....
ordinator of the event. br
luoPPJ to hear from fac.
ulty and staff who are inten!sted
in participating.. He can be reacbed
ot 831-2511-

.

The American Association for
Health, Pbysieal Education,
An ~IKIWan' mother 8nd chUd.
and Recreation newspapec, UP
Dale, in its Fd&gt;Aiary issue, carried an article and picture about
the Sports Symposium held
here as part of the 125th Anniversary commemoration. WilThere are proud people in which observers will be a ble to Iiarri H . Sanford ill Was chairparticipate.
the mountains of AppalachiaSpeakers on social and eco- man of this very successful
people whose American heri·
. event.
tage goes back as far as the logical problems will also be
featured
. Harry ('auldil, Appal18th century. The lifestyle,
At least 35,000 - .....
crafts and problems of these achian people's lawyer an d tirnatm
to be ~ cunentty
people will be presented at an harsh c r i t i c of strip-mining
13,000 places will br - Appalachian Symposium on practices, and Becky Smith, a for
able in next fall's first.,ear dasses
campus this spring. The festi- housewife active in the move- in medical schoots. This is an ..,..
val, March 21-24, will focus on ment to stop current mining expectediJ lrigh increase "' 6,000
techniques,
will
discuss
the
the people's problems-strip....... lastyurandftmaymining and ecological issues- ham\ strip-mining has done to to be • c:::on:servatif ~
and their joys--crafts, s inging the area. Arnold Miller, presid ent of the Black Lung Associand dancing.
Roger W. Heynes, new presiation, will talk about mining's
dent of the American CouDcii
Coordinator of the festival is physical hazards.
on Education, will seek ~ to
Linda Felix, a graduate student
In order to get the Un.iver- identify problems in higber edwho lived on a farm in West
Virginia for several years. Dur- :;;ity community intimately in- ucation before they become a
ing her stay, she c:.Jme to love volved with these people and crisis.
"It's a real tragedy that the
the people, their cui ture and to make them feel at home durcrafts. Ms. Felix strongly be- ing their stay, Coordinator student unrest of the 60's came
lieves in the mountain "way of Felix is asking fat:ulty and staff totally unanticipated,~ be said
life." Her plan is to share this familk~ to house conference recently. ''Now everyone bas an
philosophy with the University participants_ She expects ap- overabundance of explanatioos
community and let them see di - proximately 30 mountain peo- - so many that ooe has to conrectly how the people live. This ple to come for the four-day clude that the disruptioos were
will be accomplished by demon- festival. They will need daiJy inevitable. Students felt their
strations or basketry, weaving, transportation to U/ B but wi!V s ubject matter was irreleYant
spinning, broom-making, quilt- receive a meal ticket. FacultY and they had too little to say
ing , and instrument making. and stall families who can about governance.
The Duffs, well-known educa- house one or more of these peo"They were unhappy about
tors in the a~. will hold sing- ple are asked to call Susan the war, disillusioned about
ing and dancing sessions in Sch'Onwetter at 838-4896.
social progress at home. Perscoally, I'm not inclined to subscribe to any of Ue;e_ Why?
Because there have been few
changes. u these explanali&lt;los
are as important as alleged
we'd still be up to oor .....Sin

Mountain Festival Planned

I

Undergrads Back Athletics
ButNJtMuchls Changed
" A nice vole ol confiden&lt;le,~
but not one that "alJoaos os to
change much from what we've
been doing" is the Athletic Departmeo.f's react i o n to last
......_.s Studen t Association
CSAJ referexlum on support
for the spwts and recreation

~rote, whid1 SA ollicials
say is "binding'" 011 Student
Assembly in ooosidering the
Athletic ~t's ISn-73

~~~
SA's funding of the athletic
prognun by more than two to
one_

Meanwhile, however, SA
President Ian DeW a a l has
"frozen• all athletic budget
lines, eu:ept payroll. for the
time being in a cfi,;pute with
the administr:ation o v e r acmunting practices regarding
athletic proceeds_ The effect of
this, athletic ollicials say, will
be primarily "embarassmenL~
The questions 3 n d results
from the referendum were:
1---Siudent Association presently gi\le; 8240,000 to the Athletic budget_ Sbould the Athletic budget receive: More 1881 )
Less 1445) Same I 706 J Nolhing (1'10)_
2~ Student Association fund Interoollegiate Athletics? Yes c 16221 No c564 J.
~en's InCeroollegiate Athletics ...,.,.,;., 593,636; should
it receive: More t 7931 Less
1487) Same 16621 Nothing
1251 )_
4---Women's Interoollegiate
Athletics ...,.,.,;., 58,.335; should
itc- recei•-e: More 19381 Less
{2216) Sa me 17111 Nothing

! 320) .

5-----Sbould Student Association fund Intramwal Athletics

and Athletic Rem!ation? Yes
ll942 ) No (256)6-Men's and Women's Intramural Athletic:s and Athletic
Recreation $55,000 ( including s u m me r budget) ;
should it receive: More ( 895)
-Less t 306) Same (881 ) Nothing (113) .
7--Should Student Association fund Club sports? Yes
115621 No 1597).
S-Ciub sports receive $16,500. Should it ...,.,.,;.,: More
t TI7 J Less ! 281) Same !886)
Nothing ( 303 ) 9-Have you participated in
Intramwal and/or Athletic Recreatiooal activities? Yes (1400)
No (769) .
10-Have you participated in
intercollegiate s p o r t s? Yes
&lt;3741 No 0681 ) .
11-Have you attended intercollegiatesports? Yes 11471)
No ( 712).
Assistant Athletic Director
Bob Deming said the results ol
the vote "swprised me a little.
I was surprised by the number
of people who wted to increase
the budget I expected more to
•-ate to keep it the same.~
But be doesn't think the vote
will have much effect. "You
don't know when there's going
to be another vote. Anytime
they want a n o t h e r election,
they're g&lt;)ing to call one_
"And you don't know how
long there are going to be mandatory fees. There's a bill in
the 1New York State) Legislature which would stop mandatory fees. There's_ a good
cbance ies going to pass."
About the only thing the referendum does, Deming says, "is
allow us to buy some time. It
keeps us from facing an immediate financial a:isis.~

WNYPIRG Launching All-out Campaign

For Support and Funds from Students

t

-~

After three months of organ- der's raiders, Karen Calish, will
izing, the Western New York speak on what other PffiGs
Public Interest Research Group have done. Starting Monday
(WNYPffiG J will start its all- morning and continuing for two
out support and funding peti- weeks petition tables will be
tion campaign on Monday.
set up in Clement, Goodyear,
The Nader-style action group Tower,_ Diefendorf, the Ridge
wants to get 12,000 student sig-· Lea bus lounge, Acheson, {'..anatures on petitions asking the pen lounge, Hayes, lll!d Parker.
"stud~t governments, the UniMain headquarters will be a
versity's administration and the table in Norton's C en t e r
State University's Board of Lounge.
Trustees to authorize the forWNYPffiG also pI an s to
mation of WNYPffiG." Tbe speak to classes about its pubpetition also calls for a '~volun­ lic interest aims. Ms. Calish
will speak to classes on Montary student fee of two dollars
per semester per student."
day and Tuesday before sbe
The organization p Ian s to gties to other schools in the
reach its goal of 12,000 signa- area to help them organize.
tures or half of the student body
During the two week drive,
by knocking on every door in WNYl'mG members will disthe dorms and standing outside cuss the organization on WBFO
. every classroom. According to and WIRR. They also liope to
Jeff Levin, a WNYPffiG co- get time on WPHD, WWOL,
ordinator and chief organizer at and WBEN radio and TV.
U/ B, 60-70 students have
Levin believes the bulk of
signed up to assist in the drive undergraduates will be reached
and he's hoping more will vol- . during the. first week of the
unteer next week.
drive. After that, the organizaThe drive will f e a t u r e· a tion will concentrate on getting
noon convocation in Haas graduate and Millard Fillmore
Lounge, Tuesday. One of Na- student sigru.tures.

trouble_~

Dr. Heynes feels that while
the majority of student grievanCes were legitimate. uniwcsities were an inappropriate
targeL V iole.n t c:onfrontali&lt;los
·have subsided because students
have learned they were CIJWlterproductive, be says.
" Universities were quite slow
to respond to the special needs
of minority groups and other
problems, but changes were
evolving. Disruptions oa:urred
not due to a lack of progress
but disagreement abcut its
speed_"
•
•
•

_,__.sT-Farca

on the Finllncinc til ...,_ Edu-

w

c:atian, the Direcll:r "'
Operations, Dr- y_ ...........
Hurd, has _ , c:onsiderin&amp; --ID--~

tuition -

the present $5!iO -

annum.-IDchalptuitianoot
y-- Tuit i o n - -*lbr.....-ed bJ $ 7 - f o r _ , al . $ 5 0 At CUNY, for awnpe, 109,000 • $700 - . , .
-*lrulize$75.6-City - . ; t y til -

in-.-.

·' Man~gementlnternDesigns

-

Slide Show for Purchasing
l\n hour-long slide-accompanied presentation on the in'saod--out's ol·pun:basing - prep:ll1!d by a 34-year-old U/ B
senior - is making the rounds
of the University. The presentation is c:alled "Let's Get Aequainted With Purchasing ..
and the student is TCDy Fibs,
a business lllllDagemellt intern.
More than 100 secretaries
and department heads have alreadY seen the presentation DOW in its third ........It whid1
P-:es ~ on SUNY pourc:hasing
guidelines and a behind the
scenes look at the Pun:basing
llepartmeuL In all, representatives from about 150 campus
departments will view it in
coming IDOiltbs.
.The """""'tation was ~­
oped m.,.. four months by Filres,
make people who do the
purchasing more aware of some

"t"

points. We're focusing on the
fine points.~
Ooe point stressed is: wMil

in doubt, caJJ. P~- Effects of that n!lllinder are
already felL
'-rbe number ol c:alJs has
gone up," reports Pun:basing
Associate Charles llew!udorf..
And Pun:basing A&amp;ent William Prudden ...ys, "Peoppe ....,
more informed when they're asking QUestions. They're not
just asking questions in the
dark. We want to conect prob,!&gt;efore they become prob-

=

"'t's been ""'Y well received,~
says Fikes, a senior who entered U/ B two years .ago, after
working for the Post Office 12
years.
The presentation will be
shown at this spring's Natiooal
Educa!ion Buyers' Association
meeting.

�~

GREPORTS·

a.oci-

::..:1=~-T~~"1t
Mebd Pbyoic:aJ Coooiderations in

Print Exhibition Called Required Viewing
By JILL RADLER

the ~of Metalo." Wm w~ D.~· A.S.M.E..•

· ON
Gf&gt;EOPLE
GRANTS

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
'The followiac are the uew Lockwood library ollioers for 1972.
Assoc:iatioD oL Librarian s oC
SUNYAB .....,.;dent, IWlY LEI:
:I.A.KCO; vice-presideat, SERRY

coa...

oaJSr;. treasurer. KJUSHAN

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
IlL IUTA BOUCBJ:a.

38lciate pro-

=r~~~~p'i:
the American

IlL ~ IWOLDf~

Coacreso of Re-

babilita.tion Medicine.

direc:·
tor. aerospace encineering. •-as
elerted: an associate feiJow of the
American Institute of Aeronautits and Astronautics..
D1t. IAWR&amp;SCE A. ICB:NKEDY,

.... Kt."'tH T. JICG&amp;OREY,

dean.

School of Nursint::. bas been appointed by the New York State
• 'u:rses Association to the Council
on Nursing Resean::h for the period t972-74.
EEXATE L ?oi:D:li:AN. instructor. occu._,ationa.J therapy. elected member of the Association of O&lt;:cupotional Therapists of Great I:Sritaio.

PRESENTATIONS

lCAJt:t"_ ELLES BOL.tS. associate pro-.

fessor. mental bealth-ps}•cbiatric
nursing. speaker at l&gt;istriet II
~urses Association toeeting oo
:eriatrics, Ounkirlt..
.._ LBO C. Ct.o-.::&amp;.uo. assoriate professor. and cbai.rman. classics.
-&lt;&gt;rid's Metamorphoses: A Heevaluation." Smith CoU&lt;l;e; -Qvi&lt;fs • letamorpboses and Penooal
Identity.- Five-Colleges Humanities Semina r. Nortb.runpton.
Massachusetts; ""f.&gt;bscenity as P()etry: Some Latin and English
Examples... University -of Massac:husetts at Amherst_

~~v?!~-~.t;::!ki:·gP.J:

Taboo- Talking About Death Sunday," Unitarian Cbun:h.

rt:~~~!t:~~
Edwardian Literature s e c t i o

llniwnity w - - . s.nc..
"Prints in
a show
or
intaglio.
relief prints and
II&amp;. 'ftDODOil RANOV. profeuor medlanical et:aPDeering. with o. i.:oL- working proofs, is required
[or anyone with an in=..,~~~~!!&gt;'~: viewing
terest in the prinbnaking pro~ual Meetinc, A.S.M.E.. Waah- cess. The exhibition is now
aogtoo. D.C.
open at t!&gt;e Art Department
KtraiP.L s.unnu. assbta:nt p~ Gallery. 4240 Ridge Lea
ft:SSOr. &amp;ocial policy and ' :ommunThe show is at once intriguity se rvices. •·Communication."
teaching and oocial work perooo- ing and instructional. A series
nel of the Bulralo Area Head or large photographs illustrate
the processes used b_v the printStart. Irving:, New York.
maker in exposing the plate.
OIL KUDA.Y SCHWARTZ. assistant
prof....,r. English, ~shakespeare·· inking and wiping, dampening
Necessary Emusions., ·· Modem the paper, and the actual print~e A98oc.iation convention. ing itse!L
Several examples of prints in
.JOYCE SOilE:IICREN. assistant professor. adult health. presented a their various stages are display•'Orbhop to Du.nkirk nurses on ed along with the plates and
geriatrics.
objects used to make images.
The viewer can see for himself
the various }&gt;ossibitities oonsidered by the artists. lmd the
~ety of objects used along
With the traditional Tine plates:
fiberglass windshield s. metal
templates, cardboard. records,
aluminum grills. etc. In short,
a wide range of experiments
which could lead to resolved
images are d isplayed.
A variety of finished prints

assodate
professor, social policy and community services, -Policy Issues in
Welfare Heferrals to Hirth ControJ Programs." in Fl.lrence Haselkom, ec:l. Fa m i I y Planni ng :
Rdulings o.nd Ca se Materialii.
Council on Social Work Educ-.!tioa New York.
JOHN LOC:aS. JUofessor, English,
a special issue of Voyag es magazine, Winter 12., devoted to ius
work.

DL BDlNAIW CKf&amp;.II{BLATT,

professo r,
mccbanical engineering. with J . J .
IIEPETS:KI. ..Rotational Temper-o.~­
tW"e in an Underezpanded J et;·
Ph}·sics of Fluid;;.
..._ ROCill lUYNE. assistant proDB..

BOBI.Zr E. MATES.

n.

MW!west Modem Laocuage As-

liOCiatioa MeetiJI&amp;. DetroiL
lUa.IORIB IUoCBDC, as&amp;istant pro-

fe!JIOr, maternal health. oonduded an orielltation p.rocram on
family planninc. Y.M.C.A.
........... Balralo.
IDIIII 1Ua1t!C. aMistant profeseor;
, adolt beelth. .,..,....ted material

on teJevioioo production for the
Weotem New Yod&lt; Educational
Comm.micatioa "-&gt;c:iatioo.

Prot:ress..;

ranging !rom etchings to a mezzotint are included as well.
The artists. juniors, seniors,
graduate students, an4 recent
graduates, often collaborate in
solving design and printing
problems. They bring to the
exhibit a varie ty of backgrounds
- some are painters. sculptors
and photographers and one is
a chemisL The exci tement
which they have experienced in
changing and exposi ng the
plates is clearly visible.
Students represented in the
exhibit are members of the intaglio workshop under the diThe Faculty of Engineering rection of Harvey Breverman.
and Applied Scienc es will professor of art.
sponsor a '' Workshop on Water
R esources•• every Tbwsday today through March 9.
The weekly 11A'o-hour semi- (Continued from page 12. col. 5) .
nars will deal with various as- so red by Regional Medical Propects of water resources. Open ~':,~- 40 receiving stations, 1: 30
to all in terested persons, each CHEM.ICAL ENCno-'EERINC SEMINAR; :
will begin with a presentation Prof. E ~L. Cussier. chemical en-

Workshop on

Water Slated

mechanical

by

an

invited

speaker.

fol-

engineenng.

IDIU1ticism - - _ Modem Lan-

M-..c.

II&amp;. ~ IIOklt, a.ociafe pro-

~.C'Pi!.:fo;
the Aced.- Paul Baerwald School

~~ Befuew Univer-

o·CUDY. assistant p~
f-.r. Eacliob. -n.. Documentary Film." New Yodl: Uru.e..ity;

11&amp;. C2UI.D

~~~;.:~
Sdoool of .,__...ic:ation l'lliladolpbia; -n.. F ; 1 m. of s-

t:!!':-" New School of SocW

:::,.~~-7:~
a-• (PftllidoDtial &amp; ... Uh).
CaiJep Cluh of Balralo.

PneerinJt. Carnegie-Mellon Uni-

.. Fluidic Implementation . of a
Perturbation Exfremum Control ler,- Fluidics Quarterly .

~~--:!i~=;.~
C'!"ce "-ociatioa

NOTICES

Film Series Runs ThruMay
"Eye-Con '"72." a oomprehensive series about fllms including screenings and discussions
by botb filmmakers and scholars will run through May 3 on
campus and at the AlbrightKnox Art GalleryTbe series will present a
well-balanced program including foreign film directors,. film
aitics and scholars, and new
and estahW;bed American experinw!lalisls. including Richard Myers, Stan Brakbage. Arthur Banoll, Ed Emsbwiller.
Ken .Jacobi, and Richard

1bose whose work is included

in the show are: Todd L
Chalk. Debra Stem. Deborah
Wheaton. James J. Catalano.
Vicki Schuh, Evan D . Summer.
Sherry M. Tamalonis, Frank
Renkas, Marin W. Anderson.
Nancy D. Griebscb, Celine
Hopf, Wendy Weisman. Solomon N . Schanzcr, Margaret R.
Scally. Donna E . Schnapper.
Susan J. Knopka.Joyce, Linda
Erling.
The show, sponsored by the
S tudent Art Board, is on view
through February 10. Gallery
hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. and 9 a.m . to 12
noon on Saturdays.

\\OOkly Communique-

lowed by a more detailed ex- versity. Pitt s b u r- 1! h. Strongly
ploration of the topic by the
Coupled /Jiflu$ion F I u xes. 322
Acheson. 2 p.m.
speaker and audience_
WORKSHOP IN WATER RESOt.,"RCES • :
The six · seminars include:
\Villiam
H . Diment. geological
DL J.BIL\H.A)o( :MONK, associate pro" Diffusion and D ispersion in
fessor. socia.1 policy and commun - the Great Lakes'" with guest sciences. U nive rsity of R ocheste r.
Runoff of /J eicing Salt: Effect on
ity services, .. Factors in the Prepspeake
r
Gabriel
Csanady.
IleI rondequoit Bay . R ochester. New
arntion for Retirement by Middle
York. 1&amp;4 Parke r Engi neering. 3
Aged Adults.,'" The Gerontologist. partment of Mechanical E ngineering, University of \\'aterfoo. p.m .
DL »OSUE ~-u31.AK . chairman,
February
3;
"'Runoff
of
Deicing
PUYSICS COLLOQ JUM "' : Dr. Akira
chemistry, Rosv.-eU Park, w i t h
Salt: Effect on Irondequoit lsihara_ professor. phvs ics, A
.JOSEPH o'GJWONlCK, graduate s tuBay. Rochester. New York."' N ew A spccl of FcrmicOiopy. J II
dent. ...Alpha. beta-epoX)•ketonc
William H . Diment, Depart- H ocN.i.et tcr-. 4 p.m.• refreshment:.
Chemistry: Neaction of H F with
11 2 Ho.-hstettcr. 3:30 p.m.
Steroidal 4 beta. 5 teta-epoxy-3- ment of Geological Sciences.
ones.'' Tetrahedron Lett.e~.
Uni versity of Rochester, Febru- PJLl\1 S z ~ : Th e Pearl~ Vampire
Killen;,
140 Capen. 7 and 9 p.m.,
lt&amp;.""A'l'E L. ?~.~"'· instructor. cc.' ary 10; " Algal Dynamics in the
free. a nd Bananas. Conferem.:e
cupational ther..tpy . ""Perceptual- San Joaquin Delta. C,a!ilomia,'" T heatre. t.-hcck s howcase for times•.
Motor Attributes of M ental Re- R obert V. Thomann, Depart- admission charge.
tardates A Fac~ or Analytic ment of C i v i I Engineering.
Tfu:. first. s ubtitiOO Pardon Ale
S~... Perceptual and Motor
Manhattan College. February But Your Teeth A re In Jr.ly Neck,
Ski/h.
17; "Remote Sens:ng of Water completes the Polanski Festival
DR. ,._"DL SCIDUT7... assistant pro·
Resources.•• Paul Bock of the begun last semester. Directed by
fessor, English, .. Donald Barthel·
Wa ter Resources Center, Uni- Roman P olanski. ~· i t h Sharon
eme and the Emergence of Mod- versity of Connecticut, Febru- Tate. Ferdy Mayne and Polaitslci.
Bananas is Woody Allen·s spoof
em Satire.'' Minnesota Review;
..Stephen Crane and the Colloqui- ary 24 ; "Surface Water Man- on movies and T.V., the latest atagement Models." Daniel .P. tempt he•s made to blemish his
al Self," Midwest Quarrerly ( to
Loucks, Deparlrnent of En- career as a cute. funny guy. This
appear in the spring).
vironmental Systems. Cornell film is absolutely evil in its satire.
DR. HOWARD WOLF, assistant proalso pokes at marriage. revo·
fessor, English. "A Kind of Let- University. March 2; and "In- He
Jution. and psychoanalysis. Outter." CHOICE - t r y magazine; stitutional Arrangements f o r
the Management of Lake On- r=_eot:=~:thH~~ ~
··Qassroom as Microcosm," College Englislr; ""To A Mountain tario,.. L e o n a r d Dworsky, sell
.
Girl : 1 and 2." Ponache; "The Water Resources and Marine
Psychology a n d Aesthetics of Sciences Center. Cornell Uni- COl'tlPUTING CENTER. USf2l SEaVICEB
Abandonment in Henry James' versity. March 9.
~:'~ PASS IV, see TuesAm.baamdon:· Literature and
AU seminars will be held at OONTINUlNC MEDICAL mUCA.nON :
PsycholOgy; 1"eaching and Counter- Transference.·· T h e Psycho- 3 p.m. in Rm. lOt. Parl&lt;er En- Principlu of Respiratory Care.
gineering.
see Thursday-'! listing.
tuJtZlylic Review.
fessor.

professor. English.
poetry readings at Hofstra Uni'\-ersily. Hempstead. Long Island;
Union CoU&lt;l;e. Scbenectady.

.JOU.S BAETH..

ll

LeacOck. .
Organized by Gerald
O'Grady. assistant professor of
English. one of tbe leading
film educators in tbe c:ountzy.
"Eye-Con '"7'1:" is free 8Dd open
to tbe public. It is co-sponsored
by the University. tbe AlbrightKnox 8Dd Media Study Inc.
Watch tbe W«"Y Communique for listinp of tbe programs. Nat Thursday. a

~.8-:...:.:=ionm:

Que ViDa Mcia&gt;!. will be presentecl

APPALACHIAN SYlO'OSIUK:

March

and wor:ks on Kibbutz is available
at HiUel House. Call 836-4540 for

::.~::."NTE
_:•:::P:::·JlO.::~.::n.::;=~::L:_W_S_ _ __ _
OS..(:..U(Pl!S JOB IN"'!XVVE9.""8:

Of-

fers the opportunity for individual
intentiews with educational. busi·
ness, industrial and governmental
representatives. Candidates from
a ll degree levels are invited to
inte rview. Forms in Hayes C,
Room 6.

TU IJRSDAY-3; R ome Air Developmen t Center: Coming Glass
\\'or ks: Sin,::er Co.-Link Division.
f1&lt;1DAY-4:Eli Lilly and Co.

EXHIBITS
lK\"Do.'TIOSS OF UX)NAROO DA VINCI:

worl..-ing m o d e I s of da Vinci•s
fifteenth - centurv inventions in-

~~~~~'~m~~et'h!:1sJ=ss. :

device to measure teBsile strength
of wire. Also. plans for human
flighL Dn' Library. Erie Com-

9~~:!:, ~~:~yZ::~Wt~~~"S~

7:45 a.m.-5 p .m. Fridays. Th~b
February 22. Open to the public.
ONE--MA....!OoO SHOW: The works of
Robert K. Senltpie~ M .FA stud e nt. Highly imaginative. Senkpiel"s work is largely oriented towards historical events. The artist
comb:nes paintings, boxes and collages in a manner reminiscent ofthe work of Jooeph Comell Upt:m

HaU Gallery, BuiWo State ColCampus, throuch Friday,

t"l;e

February lL

PBOroca.\PB.s OF llOIIBRT

f'tCIJ"'D.:

Office of Cullmal
Affairs. Bayes Ball Lobby.

sponsored by

through Febroary 29.
PlliNTS " ' P80GIIEII8: Art Department GalleiY. 4240 Rid&amp;e LM.

9 a.m.-5 p.m., Mooday-Friilay md
9 a.m.-12 p.m. on Saturdaya.

LffiRARY EXHIBITS

21-24 featuring musicians. crafb..
men, dancers and s.-J&lt;ers from ·
Appalachia. Organizers of the

event. •?Dosored by Student Asoociation. feel that guest. !rum

Appral.achia will feel more at eue

aDd enjoy their stay here in Buffalo if they can stay in bomeo ol
University farulty and staJr .....,..
be~ Aoyoae interested in belp-

::cA~an=..,~
calls-..

Sch:wwellel. 1138-4896.
c.ua sOIIB: Studenta iolereoled in
politiOm M 8UIIIIDI!'I' camp COUDoe!Jon - Y ioquiJe at tbe HiiW

--of

Bouoe llbOut _l i p p o _

IBUIIL:ExtoaoiftiofomudiaD.OD

oludy,

-nne.

WEEKLY COIIIIUNIQUE
COPf DEADUNE
For everyone•s convenience arid
pleasure. ....

like to publicize ...

events taking plloc:e on campus.
To record information. c:ontac:t Suz-

anne _ _ . . University Publications Sepas, 250 Winspear AwL.
- - 2228.
will be due by

ccer

llonday fo&lt; .., distributed
on Thursday •ncl cowering al Friday through 'lllursay.

�12

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

SATURDAY-S
ENCOtJNDa Wli'B CBABAD* : Sbab-

bo&amp;-Ealtalic ~ An In-

~.f&lt;&gt;.Jl:'r i.~=;

:i::O~~:fn~i~~~db.td

House 3292 Main Street. Mincha
(afte...;oon prayer), immediately
foUowed by the t h i r d Sbabboo
meal. Maariv and Havdoloh, followed by party with food. drink,

THURSDAY--3

tt5p.!',"f5hatztHoU:gin

~~~'rbe~~
~..:;~:~:~ ~y~:

WOMEN'S BOWLING•:

Clark Gym, -1 p.m.
J•1lliCING*: Penn State, Clark
Gym, 2 p.m.
S\\'IM?oONG*: Penn St., Clark
Gym, 2 p.m.

try and Policy Sciences Program.
Program: Prof. Donald T. Camp.
be II, Northwestern U~versi_ty,
Methods for an E xpen!'lentmg

~t%: &amp;z~~~:~.7n:

put and ProceBS Evaluatwn as

Compkmen.U and Altematiues to
Outcome Research; Hon. Edward

~;:~~!,'1:,c:J~ ~:u~~;~i

_,

Politician in LocaL Go1Jernment;
Prof F..diflon -Trickett. PsychoEdu~tional Clinic, Yale Univer-

;~ty~7h!!f: Rc:~~:i: o!fS'A_~:/oo.:/n~~

at

Invitational.

T orah with Com- .
mentaries. Dr. Hofmann's home,

HILLEL CLASS:

FRIDAY--4
PH[L()SOPHY OOLLOQ1.11UM*: Prof.
Gilbert Varet, University of Bt:sancon and visiting professor, philosophy, Theorism and Terronsm ,
the French Issue, Room 15, 4244
Ridge Lea, 5:30 p.m.

.12 Colton Dt., 3:30 p.m.
FILM * :

Wait Until Dark, see Fri-

day listing.

{or A Few Dnllars More
(Sergio Leone), with Clint East-

FD..M . . :

wood and Lee Van Cleef, Confer-

ence Theatre, check showcase for
ENGINEERING SCIENCE SEl'oONAR#:
times. admission charge.
Dr David B. Reister, assistant
prOfessor, engineering science, UUAB COFFD': BOUSE**: See FriThe Energy Crisis, 104. Parker day listing,
Engineering, 4 p.m., SOCial hour,
SUNDAY~
107 Parker, 3:30 p.m.
CONTROVERS:II3 IN SCIENC&amp;--CONn.ICT Allo"D RESOLUTIO
: FNSM
ENCOUNTER WITH CRABAD*: TeE.."''COUNTER WITH cnABAD • : Kub222, Dr. Mendel Sachs, professor, bolos Shabbos. Confronting Cha- , phillin Brunch, Chabad House, 11
physics and astronomy, Con~ro­ bad. foU owed by festive Chassidic a.m.
uersiu on the Nature of Light- meal, 6 p.m.
·
HILLEL CLASSES: Conversational
and the Problem of ltfaller, 362
Acheso_n. 10 a.m. , visitors wel- HILLEL SABBATH SERVICE• : report H ebrew, 262 Nwton, 12:30 p.m.
on the National Conference of
come.
Action for Soviet Jewry, AJ[e n b;~":au:/~n H~~e:~~ht;''
PODIAT2\' TELEPHONE LECTURE#:
Kobrin and Judi Prince. 011eg meet at Hillel House, 1 p.m. TheJeffrey M . Carrel, and Hyman H. Shabbat to follow, Hillel House, at.er Party, The Tria l of The CaGraver, New Techniques in Hal- 40 Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
tonsville Nine, Studio Arena, for
tickets caU Hillel or -stop at Hillel
~~usJ:df~· ~~~ ~b INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: In- Table.
struction in basic steps during
receiving stations, 11:30 a.m.
first hour. 30 Diefendorf Annex. FILM n : The Good, The Bad, and
.MEOICAL TECIINOLOC\' TELEPHONE
8 p.m.
The Ugly, Conference Theatre,
L E C T U B £# : Benjamin Lipford,
check showcase for times, admisUliAB COFFEE nousEc • : with Dave
Laboratory ltfanogement Probsion charge.
Van Ronk, folk-singer, Norbn, 8
lems~ sponsored by Regi~~ Medical Program. 40 receJVmg sta- and 10:30 p.m. Also on Feb. 5.
MONDAY-7
tions, 1:30 p.m.
CONCERT OF EARL\' AMERICA. N
M us 1 c* : The American Music
PATHOLOGY SEMINAR#: Dr. Colin
Group, Neely Bruce, director, A
R Jefcoat. biochemistry, UniverProgram of the Most Spectacular
sity of Edinburgh, Scotland, The
Role ot MiJocholidrial P4-50 in
0
ability. Commu'nily Psychology,
and the University. Norton Con·
terence Theatre, 9 am. -11 :30 a.m.
and 1 p..m.-3 p.m.

.!wft::

the Control of Steroidogenesis,
B-152, Bell Facility, 3 p.m.
WORKSHOP IN WATER RESOURCES*:

Gabriel Caanady, mechanical en-

mH:O!•~ve&amp;;%;;~0~ai~r~h!;

-'J

Great Lakes, sponsored by Faculty of Engineering and Applied

r:,~ces, 104 Parker E.ngineering.
OOKPUTlNG CEN'T2a USER SEBVIQ3

SEIO.NAB#: David Murphy, instructor, A TS- T J E, Room 10,
4238 Ridge Lea, 7-9 p.m.
FJLM• • : The Horrors of Dracula
(Brifuh, 1958) , 140 Capen, 7 and
9 p..m., free.
One of Hammer studios finest

Ci:!t~~ ~~ ::S! n~dofm~

"Prince of Darkness.•• With Chrls-

~'b"; k'..;,l'.:;.,terFTs'h~· direct-

TBBAra•: Starry Night , a new
1

:::a~c:-!!lll ~ppe~~= by ~

Starry Night Cter, Fillmore
Room, 8:30 p.m., free. Tickets at
Norton Ticket Office.
I'D.ll••: Tu Good. Tlw Bad, and

~;;,~~W:r':!s ~;Sf:he~ Gi=~-.

J.J. Husband,' Henry K. Oliver,
William Bimng:s, A J J en Eldred

rree,

open to the public.

NURSING

TELEPHONE

~::aeN;i;hb:::hJ:od· Jlee:ltl ~~:

rro=

ters:' The Concept-The Ne_ed,

~6 ~~X: :ta~~

1:30 p .m.
FILM••: lt'a A Gift!, 140 Capen,
3 and 8 p.m., free.

his dream, an orange ranch.
Many -venture this to be Fields'
best 1iJm and it can't be far from
it. Join in the search for Carl La
Fong. With W .C. Fields, Baby
::~trm!'~Z.lfc~· Directed
EYE-CON '72•: Jay Leyda screens
and discusses Eisenstein's unfinished film, Que Viva M,erico! T~

!:oo~t ~ f:cfwlli:, msc~=

TUESDAY--8
CONTROVERSIES IN SCIENCE - CON- .
FLICT ANP RESOLUTION*: Dr. James
Dickey, statisti~, The Meanings

of Probability and Scientific Reporting, 362 Acheson, 10 a.m.
PlfYSICIA.NB TELEPHONE LECTURE# :

Dr. Jules Constant, Venous Pres-

~:lt:1:~~'M~~~ ·~r:

gram, 40 receiving stations, !,1-:-30

a.m.

HILLEL CI.ASSa:

-

BeginMn He-

a n d discussions · by 1ilmmakers
and scholan, 5 Acheson, Part I,
4:30 p.m. Part II, 7 p.m. free,
open to the public.
.

~~tys:~~~:~

6:30 p.m.

COHPtJTING CEN'ID USER BERVIC13
SEMINAl!#: PASS IV, Harvey

Axlerod, instructor, Room 10,
4238 !Udge Lea, 7 p.m. AIIIO on
Feb. 10,
PASS IV is a discrete-time

Ui:~~~~~~sck·~tpr,

but embedded in FORTRAN IV.
It provides the programmer witha supervisory r o u t i n e, queue
maintenance routines, c e r t a i n
random sampling functions, and
deb_!.tgging aids. Prere~uisite:
f'9RTRAN IV.
,
OPEN THEATRE*: one of New
York's b o l .d e)l t experimen~

~'::::ci lt~ser:.;,':'J{~~~

I...

,

~n~C~£ J!~~tory Care ,

LEC'I'URE#:

Charmian Phinney, Stephen J.

t~ ue

~h~~~~eoro~~~ !:do:~ ::~r.

cotics gang. Au d r e y Hepburn
plays the terrorized blind wife or
photographer EfTrem Zimbalist,
Jr. Included is perhaps the most
sulpenseful scene in cinematic
history. Cast: Alan Arkin and
Richard Grenna. Direc~ed by Terrence Young.
FILM• • : For a Fistful of Dollars
(Sergio Leone). with Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef, Conference Theatre, check Showcase for
times, admission ~e.

\'A R 8 J T y BASKETBALL • :

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION:

w~~e!:yhl: f!:ili:~~~~~~

and many more. Also, famous
temperance play, Don't Afarry a
Drunkard to Reform Him . Audience participation in A Sacred
Harp Singing. Baird, 8:30 p.m. ,
general admission $1.50; faculty,
staff and U / B alumni Sl.OO; stude nts $.50. Tickets at Norton
Ticket Office.
CAC FILM ~ : Wait Until Dark. 140
Capen, check CAC showcase for
times. $.75, tickets at Norton Ticket Office.
This is a suspenseful and emD-

Eastern
Michigan, Clark Gym, 8:30 p .m.

brew, 262 Norton. 12 noon. Jewish Ethics, 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
STUDENT RECITAL•: Baird, 12 noon,

Terminal. Harriman Theatre Studio, 8: 30 p..m. General admission
$2.00, students $1.00, ticket. at
Norton Ticket Office.
Terminal has been called ..a
powerful, affecting work that confinns Joseph Chaikin's Open Theater as our most thoughtful,
painstaking, least malarkey-ridden
avant-ga.rde company." . .. Newsweek, 19'10.
... . . an extraordinarily concentrated statement,.-u terse in

!::miti:.:
~fi~xct=:~r =~~
whiCh is human death, and the
range of emotional reactions to
it." Christian Science Monitor,

1971.
..Just as Terminal saye, "'the
judgment of )'bUr life is your lile,'
!hi&gt; jud&amp;ment of the Open Theater's work is the work. See itif you can find il" The New York
Time•, 1970.

WEDNESDAY-9
NURSING

TELEPHONE

LECTURE#:

Rudy W. Roder, chaplain, Crisis:
The Hospitalized Chi ld, sponsored
by Regional Medical Program, 40
receiving stations, 7: 15 a.m. and
7:15 p.m.
!otEDICAL SOCIAL WORKERS TELEPHONE LECrURE#: Staff, Depart...

ment . of Social Work, W.C.A.

~~p~~ie~r~po~~ w~k lte~

gional Medical Program, 40 te·

ceiving stations, 11 a .m.

MEDICAL RECORDS TELEPHONE LEC-

TURE#: Joan Banach, Joanne F.

MuUer, Principles of Manogement Applied to Medical Record
Department, sponsored by Regional Medical Program, 40 receiving statiohs, 1 p.m.
CAREER 8EMINAR: sponsored by
Sociology Department, representatives from University Placement
and Guidance Oflice will meet
with those who attend, Room 42,
4224 Ridge Lea, 3 p.m.
OPEN THEA.mE*: Mutation Show,
Harriman Theatre Studio-, 8:30
p.m., general admission $2.00, students $1.00, tickets at Norton
Ticket Office.
"The Mutation Show displays
sUr: ferocioualy gifted y011111' performers - three men and three
women-trying to put together an
existential statement about human
rebirth and mutation. Ita basic

::nrit£~~ :!"h!~r·~i::
troduces us to deformed and de-

·=::tf

E:Jhedis
-~·b1:: ~;
own corrupted version of 'reality.' " Chicaso Daily News, 1971.
WBCE-I'M: Jeffery G. Kowalaky,
assistant conductor, U/B Percuasion Ensemble, is featured guest
on Musical Innovation~, weekly
radio series about the Music Department, 9:05 p.m.

THURSDAY-10
CONTROVEBSI!:S IN BCIENCB FLICT AND BESOLUTION *: Dr.

CON·

Jamea
Dickey, statistics, Tlw Meaninl•
of Probability and Sc~ntific Reporting, 362 Ach...,n, 10 a.m.
INHALATION

TIIElt.\PY TELBPBONE

LOOI'UR£# : TM Principles of Mechanical Ventilation, A•Uted and
ContraUed, aponaored by Regional Medical Program, 40 .-!"vine
stations, 11:30 a.m.

MAN~

AND

sl1l"lllivmoaY

D&amp;-

'-.:LOP~ ~#:

Ralph P .
Brighton. Industrial Relat:ono Di-

W:~11.~~ ~:.::...f'lf.':

view for the Look-A-Header, apon(Continued on II, coL 4)

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSilY AT BUFFALO

UIB Annual Report
Issued for 1970-71
EDITOR'S NOTE: TM 1970.71 Annual Report of 1M
Praitknl to 1M Board of Trratees and Chmu:elk&gt;r Stole
Unioenily of Ne1.0 York, and 1M Coancil and Facidty of
S - Unioenily of Nt!JIJ York at Buffalo UI08 released on
CfJ111P1&lt;a thU W«k. TM Reporter preaenl8 Mre the f uJl text
of 1M introductory overview and a summary of information
from tlu!_ remDining, no&lt;&gt;re detailed portion of the 24-poge
lfi41W.llt:npt.

... During the past twenty years the leading universities of the country have changed
markedly in- form and function, carrying with

them-part way or altogether-the eighteen
hundred other establishmenh! called ~~~= and
universities. All tend to suffer from · · and
unexampled diffiet¥ties. They spend huge sums
and are desperately poor; their studenh! attack
them; their neighbors hate them; their faculties
are restlesS; and the public, critical of their rising
fees and restricted enrollment, keeps making
more and more peremptory demands upon them.
~ universities
t;xpected, among other
things, to turn out SCientistB and engineers, foster
international understanding, provide a home for
the arts, satisfy divergent tastes in architecture
and sexual morals, cure cancer, recast the penal
code, and train equally for the professions and for
a life of cultured contentment in the coming Era
of Leisure.

m:e

-,JACQUES BARZUN

1be primary pwpooe of this report is to provide an
0\"erview of some of the activities that have taken place
in/or that have been directly related to/ the University during this past academic year, 1970.71. It is not intended to
be 11 total picture, nor even to present selected material in
a chronologically consistent fashion. Rather, it is hoped
that the kaleidoocope-resulting from the blending of the
many"bits and pieces-will portray a pattern of progress.

The years immediately preceding academic year 1970.
71 were not easy ones for the University at Bull"alo. Students and others had engaged in demonstrations and acb{
of physical violence. Property-had been destroyed. Administrstors bad resigned. Major segments of the community
bad become antagonistic, if not openly hostile, to the University. It was in this atmosphere that a new President
assuroed oflice on July 1, 1970. Almost immediately be
directed that five areas come tmder the purview of University .lask forces. These joint faculty-studenktaff-rommunity committees and their assigned areas of responsibility were: University-Community Relations, University
Governance, University Organization, University Gools, and
Sense of a University Community. It was hoped that these
groupo would incorporate a diverse range of opinion and
suggestion in their deliberations; that their final reports
would provide valuable guidelines; and that each group
alao would serve to belp create a sense of cohesiveness
within the University and between the University and the
~ty. In general, many of these goals have been
While it is true that the commW)ity and the University
are at times still critical of each other, these criticisms In-

creasingly have been carried out in an atmosphere of mutti81
resPect and an appreciation of the University's and the community's in~ This appreciation was enhanoed
by the commuruty's cl&lt;a! cooperation in the University'&amp;·
celebration of its 125th Anniversary. .
....... Appalntl-a

Another major """"""' in the early months of this

academic year was the .-nbly of a JI'OUP of aii-Univeralty adminiatralora wbo could work "-"----'th the """"

~ the Uru-aity. ~~ in
iD other than actiDa capacities, .......... iD duonolog- .
ical order: Dr. Albert &amp;.!!ili. Profaa&gt;r of Political 8cien&lt;:e
and f""'* ~t Chairman, as Eucutive Vice J&gt;res..
ldmt; Dr. Rlduud ~. n!IIPIIOinted as V10e Preaident
for Sludeal_AJra.Usj Dr. Hany G. Pritz, Doom 111 the 8dlool
"' u.ltb, royBica1 ~lion and RecNatlon and JliJeclm
oi·Aibletlco at w-.n Dlinaia Uni-.ity, as~"' the
DMsioa of Pbyaical Bducation, RecNation and Alblelb;
Dr. G.qe 8. 8otJiDotl. Awiefent Doom and Prof_,. at
the 8dlool "' ut.ary 8cimae at the u~ "' &amp;n""*oY. as Doom 111 tboi 8cbool 111 'lpfamwticw aaid Liblary
sa.u..;
(~ • 2, cel. I)
1.WII).71,

I

VOL 3-NO. 17

JANUARY 27, 1972

Building Total Is Still $650 Million;
'$64 Million Asked for ComingYrer
U/B still baa a firm commitment for capital constru~
tion valued at $650 million and
for a significant number of new
projects during 1972-73, according to Jobn D . Telfer, recentlyappointea vice president for facilities planning.
While it may now take longer to construct the entire new
campus, Mr. Telfer pointed out
t h a t Governor Rockefeller's
budget message to the l.egisla-

N o r t h Campus construction
projects which bad been announced as suspended or postponed I as t week, Mr. Telfer
noted that "the major portion
of those projects bad been dropped from the campus master
plan some time ago, and this
was an opportune time to remove them from the 'books.' It
provides us with a more precise
assessment on which to base
Removed Some Time Ago
our planning. The dropping of
In commenting on those the projects does not, in any
way, reduce or weaken the $650
million commitment"
Such deleted projects included facilities for the health sciences, which will mostly remain
at the present South Campus
dent's Financial Review Com- on Main St., instructional space
mittee was "castrsting'' student which had been planned for
and campus autonomy in fee areas adjacent to the LM. Pei
dormitory-dining complex presexpenditures.
ently tmder construction, and
DeWaal said that ''hope- for colleges which will not be
fully" student allocations for buill
"T h e postponement of the
things the University " takes
credit for" (athletics and stu- building of I i b r a r y facilities
dent services) wotild "not have may have the most serious conto be reduced,'' aJ.&gt;parenUy a sequences," Mr. T e l f e r said,
veiled threat to do just that "but we are Jiving this space
u n 1 e s s the administration
changes its position on matters ~~a!;..in;!~
mediate future and for the 1973in dispute.

ture includes a request for U/ B
capital construction projects to.
laling some $64 million in new
and reappropriated funds. Mr.
Telfer pointed out that projects either completlld or underway at the new site are valued
at 5115 million and that another S92 million in projects
are presently in the planning
slage.

Ketter Says Rules on Fees
Must Be Followed for Now
President Robert L. Ketter
said Tuesday that Slate rules
and regulations concerning the
use of mandatory student fees
must be "lived with" until they
are changed.
He said also that a system
recently; set up to monitor the
vo I u n tar y Inter - residence
Council fee w a.s " mutually
· agreed upon" by all parties
concerned.
Ketter was responding to a
letter, published in Monday's
Spectrum, in which Student Association President Ian C. DeWaal charged that -the presi-

Elsewhere, DeWaal called
for a three-day strike and sus(Contin.-1 on 1'08• 7, coL J)

74 J:""'rurJ:~lained that the
"shelving" of the other projects
(Conliluud on 7, coL 4)

·Rockefellers U!B Budget Proposal
Is $61.287Million~ Down 5 Per Cent
U!B's " fiscal requirements" and percentage-wise, is the larg- rAmherst) , $4.8 million ($100,for 1972-73, as outlined in Gov- est ol the four university cen- 000 to be expended ); central
emor Rockefeller's Executive ters. Albany is down $1.239 supervisory control center ( AmBudget proposal (subject to million, 3.5 per cent; Bingham- herst) , $1.114 million ($300,Legislative approval), tot a I ton, $731,000, 3.8 per cent; and 000 to be expended ) , and re$61,287,000, down $3.549 mil- Stony Brook, $1.227 million, novation of the former Bull"alo
lion, or 5.5 per cent, from the 3.3 per cenl U/ B's total, how- Meter bldg., $643,000 ($100,000
appropriation for the fiscal year ever, remains by far the largest to be expended ).
Reappropriations requested
ending this March 31.
-.....,r the four. Stony Brook is earAs explained last week, how- marked for a total operating for Amherst (monies previously
ever, the 1972-73 total is roughly budget of $35.701 million; Al- (Continued on _ . 7, coL I)
the same as the operating level bany, $33.833 million and Bingof the current year ( the total hamton, $18.489 million.
appropriation less Slate-manU/ B also will receive an estidated lillvings factors and ex- mated 515.49 million in nonpenditure ceilings).
Slate funds for research and
The Executive Budget-- indi- other sponsored p r o g rams
.cates also that the !acuity and through the ·Research Foundsprofessional slafl sa I a r y in- tion of SUNY and will adcrease of six per cent negotiated minister an additional $1.643
with the Slate by the Senate million (down $143,000 from
Professional Association w iII last year) for the Bull"alo Conot have to be taken out of operative College Center. It will
individual cam p us operating also share in such Universityfunds - if the Legislature goes
"de programs as the Univeralong with the Governor's re- sity Press, Slate U. scholarcommendation. Rockefeller baa ships (up Slate-wide by $260,asked for $12.25 million to pro- 000 to $2,100,000), student loan
vide these aalary increases for funds (up Slate-wide by $372,1972-73 (and $4.855 million for 000 to $900,000) , claasified servreboactive increases for 1971- ice increments, etc. ( No pro72) aa part of University-wide feasional service incrementa are
-ropriations. Local ollicials included in the budf"l request
bad been conceined that in- since they are "not mandated
~ for U/B employees
by alatute and are subject to
might haVe to come out of the collective bargaining.")
local baclcet, thus seriously cut,. AppcGjii-•
ting back the actual operating
Through the State University
level for 1972-73. Presumably, Construction Fund, the Govertbat worry baa now passed_
nor is aaldng for $16.~ million
OniJ3~Ciot-

Only three of the 36 Stat~&gt;o P. e r a t e'd units of SUNY
will receive operating budp!t
increueB for 1972-73 - the
Empire State Collep, the Colleae of Optomeby and the Collep of Arts and Sciences at
~

U/B'a ~both foUl

inDI!W~fOrU/8

construction with the estimate
that $2.5 million of Ibis will
-.ally be _ . t e d in the
llOIDiua ll8cal year. T hi • indudes a cbilled - • plat
( Amhenlt). • 809 milllm to
be _..,.;.;.ted ($2 million to
be _...s.t); bwlalletim "'
eledrioal~and......._

�J-.-y 27, 1972

2
(Cotllinlud from page J, colo. 1-2)

North Campus, for which the

Dr. Richard D . Schwartz,
Professor ol Sociology and Law
and Co-Director of the Program in Law and the Social ·
l:iciences at Northwestern University, as Dean of the Law
School and Provost of the Faculty of Law and J urisprudenoe;
Dr. Clyde L. Randall, Professor and Department Chairman
ol Obstetrics-Gynecology, as
Vice President !or Health Sciences; Dr. Cbarles H. V. Ebert,
Cliainnan of the Department of
Geography and Acting Dean of
the Division ol Undergraduate
Studies, as Dean ol the Division of Uoderpaduate Studies;
Dr. Beman! R. Gelbaum, Associate Dean of the School of
Physical Sciences and Professor of Mathematics at the University of California, Irvine, as
Vice President for Academic
Affairs; and Dr. William N.
Gill, Chairman of the Department of Chemical Engiru&gt;ering
at Clarkson CoUege of Tecbnology, as Provost of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences.
Standard procedures for the
selection and functioning of
Search Committees to be utilized in filling vacancies from
the Department Chairman level
up to and including Vice Presidents were announced These
replaced earlier methods whlch
had been loosely formed and
were inconsistent. Tbe new pro-cedures were designed to insure
a voice in the selection process
for aU University constituencies. They also should insure a
consistent procedure for appointment of the most qualified
persons. The benefits of participation and consistenCy outweigh the disadvantage of unwieldiness which sometimes afflicts the Search Committee
procedure and they are especiaUy valuable to this University
at this time and must be preserved.

!~~=ty~t':i

Ascal Diffieulties
Aa the year progressed, the

S650 million, will help aUeviate many ol the problems a&amp;sociated with the shortage of
spare. However, in regard to
the University's fiscil problems, the need for a difierent
budgeting procedure has become obvious. The so-called
line-item method now being
used is immensely time consuming, is not effective in holding down costs, is not conducive to orderly planning, and
is a hindrance to the development of educational quality. A
more Oexible s y s t e m-one
which obviates the preceding
inadequacies-must be found.
The formula-grant me tho d
wruch has been sua:essful in
several locations, most notably
in Ontario, Canada, has much
to recommend its serious consideration. It should be noterl,
however, that the introduction
of such a system in New York
State might weU require
changes in the Education Law.
Other alternative budgetary
methods which provide "real"
incentives and flexibility to the
local campuses while simultaneously requiring accountability
from them' should also be explored. Time, however, is of the
essence, and suitable alternative methods must be found in
the near future.
Minority Opportunities

Despite our progress in minoritv enrollment, the Universitv has faced- and continues
to face-a critical funding problem in minority student programs. Federal and State support is not as great as it shoUld
be, particularly in the graduate
and professional areas, and this
is becoming increasingly more
important. The U ni v e rs i ty
must recognize that it cannot
in good conscience admit stu-

dems on the basis of financial
promises whlch cannot be fulfilled. Neither the student, the
University nor the minority
community at large benefits
from such "opponunitieS."
Also related to minority affairs were the sell-reported vier
lations by the University ·at
Buffalo of the NCAA 1.600
rule application and provision
of excessive fmancial aid for
athletes in special programs.
Aa a result of_.!hese violations,
the Universitj' was placed on
probation during 1970-71. Nevertheless, we took the lead nationaUy in bringing belore the
N CAA a belief that that organization must chan~e its
rules in order to reoogru2e the
needs of students with fmanciaUy and academicaUy disadvantaged backgrounds.
Our efforts on behalf of this
cause, however, did not temper
the diaappointment·which came
later in the year wben it was
necessary to eliminate foothaU
from our intercollegiate athletic
program because of inadequate
financing. This decision.. even
though it was unavoidable, was
made reluctantly and only after
extensive study and consultation with many interested individuala and groups.

new administration, together
with others throughout the University, became increasingly
concerned with the fiscal difficulties facing the State. Budgetary stringencies i m p o s e d
upon the University and legislative forays into the area of
educational policy endangered
academic programs and created
morale problems. F r e q u e n t
complaints were voiced by departments and faculties about
the shortage of spare and insufficient numbers elf academic
and staff personnel; and a
major complaint in many of
the "hard sciences" was that
budgetary cutbacks in equipment purchasing made it extremely difficult to adequately
conduct laboratory courses. It
became more and more clear
that the previous pattern of
general growth, whlch h a d
been characteristic of the University ainoe it joined the State
system, would have to be replaced by growth . in selected
areas. Institutional purposes
and priorities had to bedetermined.
late in the year the University received notire from the c.._ Sea.wlly
Middle States Association or
Students and their life on
Colleges and Secondary calnpus cannot be ~
Schools that an accreditation without mentioning a problem
visit would be requirecl in the which baa been a oonstant CODacademic year 1972-73. This cern ol the administnttion· that
visit, the earlier task forre ne- is, campus security.
fact
portB, the r18C81 oonstmints that this is a problem wbidi
being im~ and those an- has become endemic Ill the naticipated in the yeano immedi- tion's larger and more importately ahead, have causi.d us to ant institutioas of bisb« edufocus atteution more positively cation )las not ~ our
than ever on the problems of cal CIJDiiem. We bepn the year
the definition and direction of by "''PPinninna- ~of
the University. With diliJiepce, Security, Kennelh P. Glennon,
it will be poosible to lraJiid"omi wbo bad -...! with the Fedtbill period ol ~ into eral Bureau of ImwtiDtion
an opportunity to develop . an from 1998 Ill 1989. In addition.
instituliaa . wbidl is lltrontJer the Security Oftice, wbidl bad
and an.fn of itaelf. This "-' ..u.chal Ill the -Divioiaa
- intead Ill dol
Caiiltluctloo of the Amherst of Operalioaund &amp; , - , -

-n..;

»-

PhysiolocY graduate faculties such aa those in the Faculty ·of
were mted among the best in Natural Sciences and Mathethe nation. Also, the Univer- matics !"develop a systematic
sity was rated "better than ade- ~ relia!&gt;'e means of evaluatsecurity forre which will pro- quate" to "strong" in each of mg teaching effectiveness.
Facilities, too, are important.
vide a muimally safe campus_ the twenty-five disciplines in
This intention was frustrated whlch it was eligible to be In this ._...t, 1970-71 was a
early in the year by differences mted.
particu!arlY.significant year for
AdditionaUy, the University the U!"ve_I'Blty at Buffato. Conof opinion between the University and State Civil Service cooperated during 1970-71 with struction as underway! After aU
Commission regarding job cia&amp;- . UNES::O's International Insti- of the fillse starts-the probsifications. Once these had tute for Educational Planning lems of land acquisition the
been resolved, our intention as one of ten institutions-the restudy and confirmation .;c the
then was hindered by the bud- only one in the United States site, !f&gt;e mo!"torium on conget lUring freeze whlch resulted -cllosen in a case-study pro- s~on while affirmative acfrom the State's fiscal difficul- ject on Planning the Develop- tion programs were b e i n g
ties. Despite these circum- ment of Universities. 'The ulti- worked out, the difficulties or
stances, the Director has been mate aim of the study is to en- obtaining agreement from aU
diligent in Ills efforts to move able UNESCO to help develop- of the interested local and
the forre toward greater pro- ing nations establish or im- State agencies-concrete, steel
fessionalism and a better mp- prove institutions of Ill~- · and bricks can be seen rising o~
port with the campus it serves. ucation. A secondary, though the Amherst horizon. With this
Our intention is to continue important, benefit for this Uni- progress, enthusiasm within the
versity as we proceed in the University community as well
these efforts.
One factor whlch will aid the sell-study prior to our Middle "" in the community at laree
University is the recognition by States Accreditation visit will also is on lbe rise.
students that their own a&amp;- be possession of a document deIn conclusion, this year was
sumption of responsible roles tailing the development of the in large measure one of familand attitudes can influenre the University's aims, responsibil- iarization: the President learndegree of security available on ities, and organimtional func- ing more about the many and
campus. This was demonstrated tioning from the time it was. a varied aspects of the Univerfollowing the month-long ad- private institution to its pres- sity, and the University becomministrative closure of the Nor- ent position in the State Uni- ing more fami.liar with him.
ton recreation area as a result versity system.
Now that this process is comof the number of incidents FKUfty plete, those educational issues
Faciiwhich occurred there. Once the
Of course, any assessment of and needs which cannot be
....., was reopened, intensified the University's academic a- easily solved or fuUilled must
J)iltrols by both the Security chievement must take into con- be addressed in earnest.
Forre and student aides were sideration the teaching competIn the ·ruture, many of the
effective in controlling unac- ence of its faculty and the old assumptions which hsve
reptabte activities at this loca- value or the various curricula. been made about higher education.
The inaugural add.-..s of the tion wiU have to be questioned ·
Development as • M•jor ~
President emphasized this as- there must be devised me~
Although budgetary stringen- pect of University purpose. for measuring and improving
cies were imposed by the State, Since then it has been reiter- effectiveness in the primary
it is encouraging to note that ated by many at the Univer- role; of tesching, research, and
sponsored research funds ex- sity; for example, by efforts service; and there must be adpended by the University during 1970-71 amounted to $17,:.0l,022. This total, the vast
tufTAl
bulk of wruch comes f r o m
lhtldillt.ew C..UIItt LU1
OTIKI
sources other than the State,
ll•ct.. ltlnl, lldnniu . t u
represents an increase of 6.5
perrent o v e r the preceding
UOISOIUIESUICK
year and ran counter to a naIOIUtl CUII I
tiona.J t r e n d of decreasing
amounts of money made available for research. This phenomenon indicates that our faculty
ii
is conducting research of an
extremely hlgh quality and that
the University is indeed progressing in its development as
a major graduate renter.
Another indicator of this development was the American
Tllal lll~el · D,erllill let•es l UjleiSes
Council on Education's graduiistllical l'qeclire
ate school ratings. In this necent survey, the University's
English. Pharmacology, and

~ ~ to the Office of
Our 'i nitial inta&gt;tion was,
still is, to create a professional

ud

"'

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

1970 · 71 Operating Budget
(TOTAL: $61,850,000

I

Maint. &amp; Operation
($5,131,000)

General Administration
($3,578,000)

Instruction and
Departmental Researc•
($36,323,0001

Auxiliary Enterprises
($1,822,000)
Student Serwices
($3,330,0001

Or&amp;aaized Actiwities ($1,376,0001
E~teuiliR &amp; Pllblic serwice ($686,0001

~yud~~------~----------------------------------__j

�]811UMy ~7. 197~

3.

hered to a concept of accountability, not only for the public
but Jor ourselves. Most importantly, we must have the courage and imagination to transform this period of financial
stringency into an opportunity
to develop at this University an
institution which is certain of
purpose and which employs its
resources in the full service of
that purpose.

foreign oountries.
The University awarded 4,663 degrees-an increase of 525
over tile p.-ling year. The
total consisted of 67 associates;
2,917 bachelori;; 303 professional degrees; 1,127 masters and
249 doctorates.
On the minority " t u den l
front, figures relea.OO by the
National Aaaociation of State
Universitie. and Land-Grant
Colleges indicated that the
University ranked sixth among
the Association's members in
percentage of black student enrollment.
Students enrolled at all levels
of the University received nearly $11 million in financial aid
from known sources.
"The Collegiate Assembly
and the Colleges made consid
erable progress." Enrollment
increased from just over 2,000
to about 3,500. " Alao, the agreement to assign Macdonald Hall
to College B and Clifford Furnas College ... will result in
information that is likely to be
valuable in preparing for operation of the Collegiate System
on the North Campus."
Students, according to an
opinion survey conducted by
the Survey Research Center,
"shared the concern of other
University groups about establishing better relations with the
community, and they have
acted upon this concern both
Connally and informally. For
instance, a number of undergraduates in the School or
Management created a program

..

-ROBERT L. KE"M'ER

A summary of the remainder
of the report follows: (ED.
NOTE: material is paraphrased unless aet oU in .quotation marla!.)

-

In 197Q.71, the University
had ita largest enrollment ever
-23,763, an increase of 1,134
over the p.-ling year. 'Ibere
w e r e 16,536 undergraduates
(7,696 lower division and 8,840
upper division); 5,899 graduate
students; and 1,328 students in
the professional schools. Upper
d i v i s ion undergraduates increased by more than 13 per
cent, "indicative or the importance attached by the University to articulation with SUNY
community colleges." Summer
enrolhnent was 12,000, the
fourth largest summer pro.gram
enrollment in the nation.
The freshman class of 1,888
included 941 (48.84 per cent )
from Western New York; 872
r46.18 per cent) from elsewhere in New York; 39 (2.07
per cent) from other states;
and 36 ( 1.91 per cent) from

rotE lSI

44 ,135 J10G\J
43 .511 111.7'1.)
34,11ljJJ.3%)

2Ull!IU'11
22 ,111 151.1%1

ates; creation of a course in
"Critical Issues in Higher Education" in the Department of
Higher Education; funding of a
CoUege of Women's Studies;
establishment of a Center for
Process Metallurgy to develop
engineera capable of dealing
with environmental problems in
the metals industry; and the
first offering to sophomore medical students of a comprebensive undergraduate program in
family -practice taught by the
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine.
New degree programs included establishfnent of two joint
degree curricula, one between
the School or Law and the
School of Social Policy and
Community Services; the other,
between Law and the School of
Faculty
Management. Alao, a Master of
In the second category or the Science in Medical Technology
American Council on Educa- was approved; and in the Fine
tion report (cited above), "ef- Arts, a master's degree is being
fectiveness or the doctoral pro- offered in programs of Comgram," the University was munications Design, Painting,
rated ''better than adequate" Photography, Printmsking, and
in each of the twenty-live dis- Sculpture.
The University also is atciplines in which it was eligible
to receive a rating; and in the tempting to use, as we II as
third category, an estimate or develop, new methods of in·
change in each program since struction. One such method is
0. ,Preceding 1964 report, the television, which has been em.
University was judged better ployed in the School of Mediin every discipline surveyed by cine and by the Faculty of
a majority or persons who felt Engineering and Applied Scithey had sufficient information ences in cooperation with the
School of Management. A
on which to baae a judgment_
In addition to participation closed circuit system has linked
in University affairs through a the Buffalo Veterans Hospital
reorganized Faculty Senate, with the Medical School; and
faculty an d administration in Engineering and in Managewere "particularly involved" in ment, a Cu II complement of
by the
efforts .. to continue with greater courses was televised
1
effectiveness the recruit01ent of Instructional Te evision Studios
minority and women faculty to SUNY at Binghamton, Griflis Air Force Base, and the
and staff."
"Significant awards to facul- Cornell Aeronautical Laboraty for individual academic ac- tory.
Another innovation for this
complishments were received
by: Dr. Nathan Back, Pro- campus was the development
by
Dr. Peter Boyd-Bowman of
fessor and Chairman of Biochemical Pharmacology, who a pilot team-teaching project
received the E. K. Frey Award
for 'outstanding research in a
basic scientific discipline' from beginning classes with only two
teaching assistants rather than
the International Congress or the
customary five. And in the
Obstetricians a n d GynecQloFaculty
of Educational Studies,
gists for his work jn the pharm- a task fo
approach to the
acology or protease inhibition; study of rce
specific problems in
and by Dr. Thomas J . Bardos, public education
was approved.
Professor of Medicinal Chemistry and Biochemical Pharma- Ubrary
The
collection
in the Unicology, who became the fourth versity Libraries reached
1,202,School of Pharmacy professor 002 volumes; library attendance
to win the coveted Ebert Prize was 943,374 and circulation was
of the American Phannaceuti- 547,732,
up 14 per cent over
cal Association for the best
year.
scientific report published dur- theulnprevious
view of this enonnous
ing the preceding year in the usage, the University Libraries
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sci- have severe problems. . .. In
ences."
the interest or physical safety,
Instruction
one book mlL•t be removed from
''During 1970-71, the student Lockwood for every flew one
insistence upon 'relevance' and added. More than 40,000 of the
the Universit~ acknowledge- least u s e d books have been
ment that it could do more to stored elsewhere in the past
relate education to the prob- year. Additionally, the ratio of
lems or contemporary life, resulted in the creation or a num- r.:'ti:nstoinsea~" ~"fib:'~
ber or Courses whose academic has increased annually in reorientation involves current so- cent yean; and is now 12.9 to 1.
cietal issues. New degree pro'"The problems of space have
grams, instructional 1innova· been aggravated in the libraries
tions, and, in some instances, by budgetary re-trictions. The
extensive curricular revisions acquisitions bud get has dealso were put into effect."
clined annually either in total
Cited were curricular revi- dollars or purchasing power
sions in the School of Health since 1967-68, and in 1970-71
Related Professions resulting consisted of $1,003,244 for
from 'iU; commitment to Oe- books, periodicals, and binding.
velop new and productive clin- This represented 30.1 per cent
ical centers in the community; of the library bud,et or $3,470,a new undergraduate curricu- 298, which was 1tself 5.4 per
lum in the School of Nursing cent or the University's operatemphasizing c I i n i c a I exper- ing budget_
ience· a new Doctor of Pharm"Although the dec I in e in
acy program; reorganization or funds has been restrictive, the
the School of Management into State-imposed -,....,...., on hiring
four units-organization and may have been even more harmhuman resources, operations lui. Personnel to provide deanalysis, environmental analy- manded s e r v i c e s have been
sis and policy, and manage- thinly scattered, and both Cacment systems; and the School ult¥ and students-as well as
of Law's continued expansion library staff- are aware that
toward a full undergraduate service is not a.!_the level which
should be avail8ble. . . .
program.
''Until new space (on the
Other examples given were
the development of a multidis- North Campus) is oocupied,
ciplinary, problem::oriented ma- the library will be extremely
jor in ecology for undergradu- limited in the progress it can

continue to make toward the
dis!fuctio?, which is demanded
of 1l ...
Research ·

During the year, 432 grants
and contracts we r e awarded,
with the federal government accounting for 89.6 per cent of
funds. '!be Health Sciences-had
65.5 per cent of the total; Arts
and Letters, .5; Engineering
and Applied Sciences, 2.8; Natural Sciences and Mathematica,
10; Social Sciences and Administration, 9; Educational Studies, 5; and other areas, 7 .2.
Financ:lol Afllllro

In 1970-71, the University
had a total budget of $92.8 million and an operating budget
of $61.85 million, both of which
were more than t h r e e times
larger than the $27 million total
budget and $16.45 operating
budget the University had in
1962-63 during its first year in
the State system. However, the
State imposed an expenditure
ceiling on the 1970-71 operating budget of $60.2 million. The
operating budget increase over
1969-70 was 10 per cent before
the inllationary factor. Wben
this factor is subtracted, "it is
clear that funds available for
actual growth were not as great
as they appeared, nor did they
match the increased demands
for service placed upon the
University."
F0 Tti

A~p~ximate~y S85 million
had been awarded in Amherst
contracts as of July 1971. '"The
Pei dormitories, Collegiate un·
its A-F, and the Law and Jurisprudence Building . . . should
be occupied in 1973.
"A primary concern in regard
to this North Campus was to
obtain an equitable voice for
the University at Buffalo in
campus planning and construetion activities. Oft campus, the
University's concern has been
to increase cooperation among

~~:~~:1r~tiv~~~-~ :~~~~ 1~e~~e;~~~~~!

11.014 131.4!.)

Geograpllical

entitled 'Pilot 100' to cultivate
a greater uhderstanding between community police officers and students. In another
instance, two University stu·
dents investigated consumer
protection in BuJJalo for a District Councilman and found
that sufficient laws existed for
this protection but that a shortage of manpower hindered enforcement
''More numerous, and perhaps more important in the
long view, are the instances in
which students have been involved ·in and exposed to the
community through the University's regular instructional program. This type of involvement is on the ascendancy and
will continue to be encouraged
by the University."

D~

If

liliil All•lli [Dec. 19701

)44 ,131 ALU.III

E•r•ll•ut 1971 · 71
lhtJJI•idtt •I Stdttts ll.llll

.Doctoral
Profeuioul

I..
w

w

..---euhelon

D

AUICiltl

L_&amp;Dj·lm1~md&amp;m~~I~5·~1~1Dm~ma-=~7~0k·7~1:_~
ICAOE.IC YEllS

lqrees a.... - llistDal Pers,ectne

s ure that the neeCis of both the
University and community are
served by the growth which will
result in Amherst from the impact of the new campus. Although considerable progress
was made in meeting the primary concern of the University,
apprehension continued about
off-eampus development. This
is especially important in view
of the Jimited number of resi·
dential accommodations being
planned for the Amherst site
by State University.
"Nor can the need be empbasized too strongly for the continuing development or the
North Campus-now that it has
finally begun--&lt;Uld the need,
too, for rehabilitation of the
M a i n Street South Campus,
Any delay will only exacerbate
an already severe University-

=~~t~~ Pf~=tedtha~

tations and seveJ&lt;! overcrowding
or facilities.
''For instance, the University
spent more than $3 million this
year to rent nearly one million
square feet of classroom, laboratory, faculty and administralive space. In addition it purchased approximately 60,000
net square feet of space near
the South Campus. Nevertheless, overoooupancy in the Faculty or Social Sciences and Administration was reduced only
to 155 per cent from 173 per
cent; and overoooupancy in the
Faculty of Arts and Letters Will!
red1,1ced only to 134 per cent
f"!?'An14?~d"!"'m
. gl ma· tructi.onal
--workload and accumulated overoooupancy has outpaced the
University's ability to acquire
and prepare space as .-led
for ita educational prograDL
._Alao, it must be emphasized
that rental spaoo is not a sal:i&amp;factory solution to the Uni-sity's space . requiJementa even
if it were in adequate supply.. .."

�GREPOR'f'ER.,

4

Feldman Urges ACtive Faculty Role Reader Says Only 6 at UIB
Are ituJJwrities, On Rock
In Regional Planning Now Underway ~~
m
11mnday's . _ d

By MARVIN .1. FELDMAN
SUKr s-.ar
FoU--"n~ a Governor's direc--~
live, New York .State is being
organized into regions. hopefuUy to facilitate planning and
utilization of "'""""""' by ,.,...
ious State agencies. For most
purposes. the State is divided

~~=vZfb:"~

will be comprised of the two
coordinators along with Professor Cberkauer of the College at
Bulfalo represeuting the four
year coUeges, and two additiClll·
a1 persons (yet to be named )
representing our Universicy
Center and our Health Sci·
ences. While the group stems
initially from the public sector
of higher education, we will no

w:!

GD..-.

-~PORTER.,

limiW . . _

muld"i:;

=-

through four. Our Westem re- ~h~ .!'!.a~':~J...
gion includes 'The State Univer· of private coUeges within the
sity Colleges at Fredonia, region, e.g., cooperatiClll in
Broc:ll:port, Bulfalo, and Gene- seeking fede ral funds for cer·
seon_cul; ~'Ceramicsand
·~..:.!feoAg:1 tain ventures.
'
Whil_e a number
_
of areas_of
leges~'"
at Alfmd;'' and at least
seven community coUeges as potential regiOnal cooperation
far ruteld as C o r n i n g and were explo~ the g ~ e a t e s t
Jamestown.
amount of time was directed to
A first meeting of faculty the trarl!'fer problem from the
representatives met at ~ communJty coUeges. 11be State
on Tuesday, January 18, 1972. has guaranteed. that aU gnu!u·
Professors GillY T. Fraser of ~ ~d~~U&lt;f:'t
Alfred A &amp; T and Wayne AAS· Associate . A lied Sci
Scblifke of Erie Community
•
m pp
·
CoUege were asked by SUNY ence) can transfer to a. four·
Central Office to serve as coor· year coUege. Tbe commitment
dinators for this group. 'Those is absolute for students eotering
in attendance were SUNY sen· ~mmunity coUeg~ in ~972. !-t
ators, and beads of governance IS expected that regionalism will
eU
Robert Spenc
faCJhtate the transfer problem.
.ts,
~
s~ Central Offi~ Tbe num~r or such s tudents at
.
presen t JS ary&gt;und _1600, and
cling
a
as a resource person.
they are readily _be_mg accomTbe (local ) SliN¥ Senators modated under.existing transfer
present were: Robert Stem. AJ. practices at the five recipient
bert C. Rekate, and Marvin J . institutions. As was brought
Feldman. Representing the gov· out, there is no problem cur·
emance units were.: Tom Rob- renUy within the entire State
inson, Professional Senate; and system in accommodating the
William Baumer, Faculty Sen· numbers who wish to transfer,
ate.
but there are some problems in
11be first meeting could be terms of programs. We should
described as 18 characters in note that none of this bears on
seareh of a purpose. What will initial admissions at the fresh.
regionalism mean to higher ed· man level nor is there the
ucation and what role will this sligh test hint that regionalism
ruiW faculty body play in imple- will ever impose direct con·
menting regional goals? It was straints in selecting freshmen.
~e very clear that this group However, the transfer problem
IS not to be a legislative body.
affects freshman admissions in·
Rather it will be a device directly in that SUNYAB and
whereby faculty from the des- a U other public coUeges have
ignated institutions will edu· sharply accelerated the number
cate each other about those of transfer places which in time
problems which could conceiv- limits "the number of freshman
ably require regional solutions. admissions. We now admit
11be group might spur such de- 1500 transfer students, mostly
velopments by furnishing facul- from the two-and four-year col·
1¥ input back to their respec. leges within this immediate yj.
tive campuses, as weU as to cinity. Perhaps i
not sur·
SUNY Central and to a para!. prising that with or without re.
lei Regional Council of CoUege gionalism, most of the appliesPresidents !which has already lions for transfer are Westem
beenmeetingforabouta ~ear) .
New Yorkers who seek to u~
Similar faculcy groups are grade their education.
being organized in the other
I believe that through our
three regions. Presumably each new regional body the faculty
region will have considerable should be able to advance inlatitude in developing plans for novative plans to better serve
regional cooperation in keeping the community coUege graduwith tbe character 'of the insti- ate. For example, the private
tutions and the ingettuity of the colleges in the State cla,im that
cooperating groups within each they have thousands of unf"illed
·
spaces, and under these cir&lt;:uJD.
region.
stances it is wasteful to build
Our group felt that it was additional public factlities. It
best to maintain a flenble has been suggested that the
structure with loose ties to both State subsidize eD&lt;&gt;U!:h students
Central Office and the College to fill these unused facitit:Ws.
Presidents ( who title theot· I would think that the comselves: Western New York munity college graduate would
SUNY Articulation Discus- be a natursl candidate for such
sions) • A steering OOIDlnittee subsidy-both in being readily
_ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___..:::....__ ..::_
-

rro::

;_-

the Rq&gt;arkr ~ ba»e - arYou, aDd the adminiotratioo,
tide writt.m by Mr. Qat Mil- who ba»e ~ t&amp;e
ler. Wilhout civiDc a poiitical c:ourae haw! felt 111!11!11 1o _.._
diatribe ClD the patilics d the lisb Jlltides ClD rock
~
~ ancf: ~ Well. Mr...Miller
policies .reprdinc eh•:aliaD. I
used the mume: to mentioa a
will DOle the follaoriDc: I am few errors, ""The Book m ~.ove~
an ~ d Pap Music was by the Monoloaes,
SOS 308, I ClDIIISider mysolf aDd not the Be1moa1i;; the Bible ...,.
a few others "" this CIIJIPUS fers to the saoc. "How Do 1
auu-ities "" roc:ll: a n d roll Know 'The Bible Tells Me So ~
~~llTDr\Tl\.T"rc' music. We are roc:ll: ~ I muJd co "" and "" about the
or !oct ftlm?n"~
factual mistakes your writer
Y LC YY .C Vll" .l J
David Ca;1m. 8 •II• e Altman, CCllltim.oed to make. not even to
Muuy Kinb, .loe F~ mention his inteopn,tation,
.Self N"......._ and mysolf ~ wbi&lt;b I feel is abo off-base,
'1.
U,IA..A)
a 1tnoooleclge d roc:ll: lllll5IC m
but then apin be _ . took
wbi&lt;b ..... feel adequate ... ofi&amp;. the CODnle.
"
0'"~'"med
"""';inate information about ti!e
Mr_ Miller, we at 520
1
mrroa·
subject. What 311D0Y5 me '"
l.m-1 AWDUe "" Wednes.
It ..;.,.,. to have become a that ~ asbd a penon wilb- days from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m.
fashion on this campus to pub. out any 1tnoooleclge d roc:ll: and Any members of the adminis.
tidy pick on the Department roll to write an article ClD iL tratiClll who would lite to 1eam
of Spanish, Italian, and Portu- W~ ~ ha.., a I.atin His- something about y outh culture
guese. Individuals that cannot
wh:rmongel= ~ or roc:ll: music are also invited.
possibly be 1n the. """"'""ion gi06&amp; nqkf:t that roc:11: music
Yours truly, .
of all the facts find Jt """""""J and roc:ll: studies as a wbole bas
E1DC ~· mstructor
to use the media of greatest
Pap MllSIC S0S 306
circulation, TilL Spectrum, the recei&gt;-ed at UI B. My course
Reporlu and now the new FSC (SOS 306) bas been taucb1
N eJ141etkr to make judgments bere for the ' - ' &amp;... yam; aDd
on the basis of fragmentary m. has not been en- any a&lt;Jmin.
fonnation. 'I1be inclusion of istratiYe support since its ;....
such statements as oblique ...,. ception. As a d ~ I
maries within other material of ha.., recened payment for my
substance naturaUy endows teaching Clllly this ' - ' (
1971).
tbem with considerable cred·
ence.
Two yam; ( 19'10) I was
Now, the FSC NewsleUu, ilGructed by Profes&amp;or Aiborl
Curt Miller's otherwise - ·
on its (root page, discUsses the Cohen to submit a course """
pre•ent administration's ...,.,.. line and description for my
onl : NO:!iecisions, slow decis- course to be intq:rated within have been ClliDpletely accept·
ions (with a few &amp;ascy ones) , the Music llepartmem_ He slill able if be had correcUy identi·
lied the group wbi&lt;b sang "'The
~ a marked tendency of act- bas not ............. my - - .
Studeuls w h o desperately Boot of Love~ as the Mono~ on pressures, though
'!' good measure due to Jegisla. feel there are .., few courses !Cllles rather thau the Belmonts.
Sincerely,
tive and SUNY-wide strictures. to identify with call my home
CEDacE ALTOM.AaE
This is mixed with the half. CDiltinually durinc registration
Dept. of Higher Education
truth of attributing the depart· only to be deuied enrollment
ure of former colleagues mainly
to their dissatisfaction with the f"l~mnuuuty·
_J
administrative climate, while it \.A)
W tt:£
is rather well known that some
~eft ~Je:cause of other pressures,
mcludmg those coming from
,.,..,.;.,.u,. R•~ -~~1'\1
certain sectors or the FSC.
'IU,Utu.t::; t:FIIUU~IULJ
In the case of the Depart
ment of Spanish, Italian,
'The Uuiw!rsi.ty's Communi(¥ dents in its activities and the
"Portuguese, the threats to its Advisory Couocil, es!ahlisbed dndting of bylaws, foUowing
autonomy arose long before the last year to in"""" communi(¥ wbi&lt;b elections of new ol6cers
present administration. 'The residents in -pbnning foe the will be held Donald Hohman,
naming, last faU, of an acting 125th Auniversary, will OIJI&gt;- &amp;Uomey, is current. vice chair·
chainnan for a limited period tinue on a penn&amp;neut basis man of the Council and Mrs.
was merely a belated, parlia} although JIO"Sihhy with a new Esther Kratzer· E...rett, secre.
taJy.
response to several departmeu- name.
tal polls. Thus it is quite in·
'The 116-member group, repre.
'The Council will be involved,
aa;urate to state that the ap- senting aU segments of the too, in planning for the Uni·
pomtment was "without the Metropolitan Buffalo OOilliiJU.. ...Sty's second annual oPen
knowledge of the fuU depart- nicy, bas YOted •manimnusly to house, Sunday, April 16.
ment." 11be SIP reappointment carry ClD its work -with U/ 8
problem is a most complex is- after being invited to do 90 by
sue. but certain people have President Robert L ~taken it upon themselves to
At the Council's January
A Search Committee for dean
pub~ in the me d i a, with meeting, ~ Said that UuiQU3SJ· ligation §till in Progrelll!,
..,n;icy and community are m the Gnoduate Schoo I has
bits of information, including clctier today thau they have been appointed by President
sentences lifted f r 0 m dearly been in many years. He said Robert L ~- 'The nineconfidential docwnents, while be would lite to ba\-e tbe eo.m.. member IJIIIDI!f bas been asked
the other side has been unable cil become a 10011! )JelmODeut to JiUhmit DO i'eooer than two
to publicize statements, wbi&lt;b body with an actiYe role in Uni- nominees by Maldi 24 and to
present the case in an entirely ..,n;icy alraim. Wbeu critical ialoe 1J10Cn!SS reports "" Febd.i lferent light, not only due to sta~ements are ......ted, the ruary 18 and March 3.
the limitations of obse~ the president &amp;ugp!Sied that the
Dr. Edwin A. Minmd, prorules of the game, but &amp;lso IJe. Council engage in a "dialocue fesoor d l&gt;iodmniral pbarma·
cause much of the documents- of mutual trust" with the ·
cology at Roswell Part Melion is unavailable due to presi- Stitution. This
m- morial Institute, will chair the
dential
vide_ a body
Underprerogatives.
the circu.mstances; the vemity
can of
caU
to ~- ClOIDllliUee.. Other liii!IIJbss. indude: Mrs. Patricia M. Col·
011
reading of confidential papers, mme _.. _ _ ,
under_ e.moination by Sena!P
· """"""""ty reaction to ~;s.r=..t;::. ~
comnuttees, to a medley of uu- ~::;rams and activities, Adminiotnrtion; Dr. Don aId
dergraduates is patently absurd ~
mmmittee of the ,.._ _.,
Dareoobourg, assistant pooler
and the confusion described in
...............
the two letten; to TM Spectrum
by Dr. Ralph 1.- sor d cbomislry; Dr. Stefan
t.lllllllllly 21 ia!ue) , writteu by pastor, Holy Trinity ~ Fleischer, - - - . . prale8Jr of
one llludent
U
•
Chun:h. will Pn;&gt;are a 10011! Eodioh; Sb!pbeu Golihrr. a
presen Y m an ~ slatement of the poup's paduate sludeut in ..,.mlocy;
'U~~W:~t~
o:&amp;er llJeUlbe.s m that Dr. Leo Laubele. prar-r of
and .-her not cUrrenuy en- ~.include: Dr. Echrant hislooy; Dr. Daa.ld w. Rennie.
rolled, __.., for it&amp;elf. Can
dentist aDd p u t
any .aenous member m the uni- Mildred' U/ 8 Council; Mm. d ClOilDIIOiar edaratiou, and Dr.
"!''"if:Y. community share the lind .....__.~...n; Mm. &amp;.a. Irvine H. Sbllmea, prale8Jr of
d Mr._Levinaon, eJ&lt;- B .~._.._ !-' lftSideat,
Pl-.-ed in his last sentence,
us•ness and Professional enPnea:iuc.
Dr. McAllister H. Hull bas
that a biology major in his first WSc:hiUoomen of Ba1fa1o. and
semester of &amp; ginning Italian .
d the ~ std. been 8S"¥inc - ..tine dean of
ohauld participate in the ...... • The Advisory Couocii. chair- lbe Gmdaaie Sc:bool since ()e.
tiny d the !-' and futme of ed by Morris Poom-it, c:bair- lnher, 1971, wt.... Dr. Jlllniel
H. Mun:ay a&lt;ICI!IJled a poot in
theltalw':"andmbJ"'"Jt of Spanish, man~ the baud, Calm CcJm. the Ceatrai Adwiuillb:atioe Of.
~?
-Y.ISalso~anew 6ce d the &amp;ate Uru-sity d
~ 0. a::HANJ!a
name.. the ~ d New Yadt in Aha;y.
identifiable and also, for aome.
permitting attendance at a pri.
vate college cl09er to home. At
any rate, it would seem incumbent upoo the faculty to suggest regional solutions which
are acceptable and desirable,
rather thau to wait passively
and have UllllC&lt;eptable solutions im~ upoo us.

S'TP Cr;h,.n

l!Jninf&lt;

:S?"

Miller Found
i\lmost' Okay
.....,.,

r

~ ';;..::S!·o~f~

Advisory R·-

WiiJl (h

and

Grad Search Group

::;&amp;

-t

:= 8:;t

....,.
:..,""::;:t&lt;,

ll.t::'k~~

n-

�5

J~27.1W2

Boyer ListS Responses· CU/B

~Pill' Only the Start

To State Fiscal Woes

Of Birth Control Aids

'lbe State University recogniJles tbe aeriousoess of N e w
Y ark's fiDaDcial problem and is
determiDod ID pmvide ezcellent
edualtional _.wnities at this
di8icult time, ChaD&lt;ellor Ernest
L. Boyer said in a special statement Jut ......a..
IluriDa -the ~ year, Boyer
said, tbe University has taken
.signifiamt slep&amp; ID llldlieve economy of operatioas and stabilize its &amp;aoal situation without
diluting procnun quality. These
Tllllll8l"'ll't actions include:
• Raising tuition charges last

fall~ Cutting back planned
dormitory constructioo;
• Imposing a moratorium on
"":'~;Centrai

Administration and cutting ad-

ministrative oosts;
• Developing regional institutional arrangements for better use or resources, and
• Creatine new educational
models, such as Empire State
College and time-shortened baccalaureate prognuns.
In order lo meet expanding
enroUment demands and pre-

serve quality, tbe University re-

quested a care£ully developed
budget increase for tbe n e w
ftSCal year, be said. The I 9721973 Executive Budget recommends, however, an appropriation reduction or $5.5 million
and funds tbe University at tbe
current expenditure level "Tbe
reduced funding wiU have serious r~mpact within the Univeroily and beyond, both in tenns
or how many persons can be
,;erved and how well they will
be se rved ." the Cbancellor
warned.

4,600 New Students

To meet 1975 Master Plan
goals an enroUment increase or
15,000 students at State-operated campuses would be required this coming year, Boyer
Sa.id. Tbe total projected now
is a bout 4,600. Meanwhile it is
anticipated that a quarter-million students - the largest in
the State's hislory - will be
graduated from New York high
ocbools next June.
Emphasizing t b a t numbers
alone do not teU the slory.
Hoyer suggested that the quality or the academic program
and tbe backup support needed
lor essential services also may
be seriously affected.
Even though 4,600 additional
students will enroll, the lotal
number of faculty, librarians,
counselors and otber key personnel wiU not be increased.
About,1,400 existing unfilled aulborized positions wiU. be removed.
.
library support will be cut
back. On a typical campus, it
is estimated that the number
or boolq; and periodicals that
can be purchased next year will
be I'OUihiY balf of tbe 19'70-71
acquisiUon&amp;.
Maintenance of raolities wiU
be reduced and some needed
repain; delayed. In some inslana!&amp; , _ buildings may not
be opened.
Tbe plumed development or
several emerging campuses wiU
be jeopardized and constructioo
of several new community college CIUIIpU9I!S w i II be postpooed.

While tbe number . of students who wiU enroll in special
PIOIP'BDI&amp; for tbe educationally
and economically disadvantaged - EducatiiJoal Oppor1unity Prnpam, ~ve College Centers and Urban Centera-wiUbeinc:ftuedby
1,900, tbe appropriation ID supthese will be ~'ill'!. by appn&gt;Duately $1.5

port

--F-

Faced with these serious proiectioos, Boyer 'emphasized, it
is "imperative" that additional
funds be secured lo bring relief
in critical areas including:
• Special programs for tbe
disadvantaged;
• . Library services and instructional support;
• Maintenance of tbe physical plant;
• Health center and bospital
support; and ·
• Strengthening or emerging
campuses where the major enroUment growth is projected.
"I recognize the great demand for essential services in
the State. I also know that the
dollar problem is acute," Boyer
said. But, "in support or the
Governor's and the legislature's
detemrination lo meet tbe higher education needs or the State,
modest additional State revenues ID assist in these critical
areas should be considened."
MO&lt;e-raiSU~

'lbe University also wiU continue to press vigorously for
greater Federal higber -education support, the Cbancellor
promised.
As a final alternative, he said,
the University w i II consider
raising ad d i t i o n a I income
through its own revenue sources
in order to serve effectively as
many students as possible.
"A furtber shift in the tuition
and fee schedule, consistent
with the basic concept or low
cost public education, will be
considened in order to provide
i n c o m e to support essential
University programs.
"Sucb a move assumes. of
course, that there will be an
appropriate increase in student
aid. 1be University cannot support any move that would increase financial barriers a n d
discriminate against students
from low and middle income
families."

Plaque Inhibition
Study Underway

_GN_OT
_· E_S_ .
By "'D"

-n.e

.University should be
ooocemed about tbe manner in
which it meets genuine IIOcietal
needs," Purdue University President Artbur G. Hansen said
recently. -n.e immediate future of oociety is clouded. U
ever ,;ociety was in need or tbe
special expertise a n d t b e
special critical and analytical
functions that have been characteristic or the university, it
is now. Whatever we may decide a university lo be, I would
propose that there is one thing
it must be-a place where reason prevails, where seholarship
is honored~ in whatever sense
that term implies, and a place
wbere all wbo employ reason
and respect scholarship have
the opportunity ID e x p r e s s
themselves freely. On far 1oo
many campuses, issues that are
or genuine concern have been
treated in a manner that can
only be termed at best, immature or insincere. I want to see
an end 1o game-playing with
sud. issues. I want lo ..,. an
end lo emotionalism that replaces thoughtful, scholarly
critiques with collections or
cliches and diatribes randomly
interspersed with lour letter
words. If a university cannot
rise above this, if its members
have no greater pride in their
ability to reason and to defend
a position with logic and clarity, then tbe processes or education have been lo little avail"
More thlln 22 per cent of Yaie•s
undergraduates, includinc nurly
a third ol the , _ fleshman class,
hhe signed up for the progn~m
which pennils the linonclnc of a
....... education
futun!
lifetime eamines- All told, 1.257
including 210 graduate - . put in for the long·
m... loons. Under the plan, stu·
dents .g,.ee to poy the univef'sit)'
0.4% of their ""nuol posl&amp;nduote

tf1""""

"•le -

income for eoch $1,000. -

-

The repayment p e r I o d could
stretch out as long as 35 years,
but Yale figores its first crop of
loans will be paid back in about
26 years.

.

A grant or 512,485 hao been
awarded to the School or Dentistry by the William S. MerMs. gains as a proper way to
rell Company, a Cincinnati address women, but slowly.
pharmaceutical r i r m, for a Congresswoman Bella Abzug
study of Dentol PlaqUR lnhib- hao introduced a bill lo har
iling Agents. "Dr. Sebastian G. Federal use of any appellation
Ciancio, associate professor and denoting marital status. But
chairman of periodontics. is the those using Ms. ( pronounced
principal investigator.
miz l are still few and far beDental plaque, explains Dr. twren. Levi-Strauss adopts it
Ciancio, "is a bacterial popula- for all press releases and pertion on teeth whicb causes both sonnel memos involving wodecay and disease of the gums men. Annen Steel, Me II on
and supporting structures or the Bank, Neiman-Marcus and the
teeth, known as periodontal di- National Association of Insursease." When plaque becomes ance Women use it on oorre;...
calcified, it is commonly known poodence, but only if they don't
as tartar. Periodontal disease know marital status. A motel
affects 90 per cent or the pop- chain official sums up the sentiulation, says Dr. Ciancio, and ments of many executives over
is the major faclot:..in looth loss the matter: "'s there no end
in persons over the age or 35. 1o this foolishness?"
" Periodontal disease can be
prevented by proper methods
of elimination or dental plaque
on teeth," but most people are
n.e Office or Enviroomental
not motivated enough lo brush Health and Safety is sponsortheir teeth properly and use ing a oourse in Advanced First
dental floss.
Aid ID be taught by an instrucDr. Ciancio says that "a lor from tbe Bull'alo Cbapter
study like this, if successful, or tbe American Red Cross.
could give us an agent that Tile course wiU oonsist of 16
could control plaque."
hours or lectures and demooIn tbe study, agents ID coo- strations w h i c h are usually
trol plaque are being evaluated broken up iniD eight two-hour·
using a mouthwash as a carrier sessioas.
Tbe oourse is a aequeiiD tbe
for tbe agenL Tbere are presently 100 volunteers, wbo serve Basic First Aid class taught
a one-month term of duty, get last - - Anyone wbo suctheir teeth cleaned and a lotal ceSsfullY' ~ tbe basic
dental examination free. Tbere
actia:.u.Basic
is need for more volunteers, says ~....::: ~
F o r additiaqal information
Dr. Ciancio, and persons between tbe aces or 20-00 are in- and recistration. oootact 1olichvited 1o cootact tbe School or ael G. S,YI11&lt;l8!, 205 Michael
Deotisby, 831-3845, for further . H a II. en. 5341. Beci8lmtiao
should be made by Feb. 1.
information.

"

First Aid Course

EDITOR'S NOTE: Thia is the
third U. a M!rin of ortidD U.
collllet:tion wit/a the annual
fund-raiQng campaign for
Pi.annLd Part!nlhood of Buffalo
in whicla many indioidools associoUtl wiJh U/ Bare ilwolom.
By MARIAN MAY

r-

w___, ~ lac.

c!:::'Z; ~

diaphragm, botb of wbich preaent a barrier lo tbe spenn.
- A relatively new method has
been 1D rendet the environment
or tbe uterus inhospitable ID
tbe sperm, or 1D tbe implantslion of tbe developing embryo.
The intrauterine device ( IUD) .
while &lt;DOt a , _ idea. has only
recently been developed for use.

A few years ago, "the Pill"

:f~",ill~~

~~="'~!"J!, Y~ ~

plant apricot pits iniD tbe utero£ population control. An effec- u• of their female camels to
live 100 per cent sure method prevent pregnancy.) Many deof contraception was now avail- · velopments _or tbe_ IUD have
able to anyone who 'N3.Dted it! now ~ mto ~~· J?r.
\\'hy then do we see very little Jack Lippes or this UmversJty
slowing d o w n of population and tbe Planned Parenthood
growth in some parts or the '?'nter or Bu~o _bas~ parworld, and still a rapid increase ticularly active m this field.
in others? Like all changes, un- The presence or the el""""!t
Jess a result of a catastrophe, co p P e r on tb&lt;; small plastic
some time is needed for tbe frame ~ used IS a particularchange 1o occur- time for pen- ly exctting devel?pment of reple to accommodate lo tbe idea cent. years. It IS not known
and 1o accept and put it iniD preciselr how ~ ~prevents
practice. To communicate in- conception, but \t 16 thought ID
formation to 3 wide variety or ca~ ~es m . the uterus,
people in 8 population requires making 11 _unposs~ble lor tbe
skilled techniques a n d time. embryo to unplanL
Unfortunately we do not have
!"onother n ew . ~ now
time 1o spare. Present world bemg developed IS an ~pla,nt
population is expected 1o dou- or a progesiDgen under die skin,
ble by tbe year 2000, if it 0011 _ which will slowly ,release ~
tinues to grow at its present hormone and """""\ effective
rate
for about a year. ThiS method
Ti.e search continues, then, is eff~~e since it prevents ~
for other effecti•.., acceptable capaotauon or the sperm m
contraceptive methods, t h u s the female.
.
hastening tbe change ID an efRecent developments also_mfective control of our reproduc- cl~e the use or prostaglandins,
live rates.
wh1ch em be used as a &lt;ina&gt;-a'The control or reproduction month-pill, _initia~g menstrual
can be achieved in a number flow. or as an abo~nt.. Howof ways: by inhibiting tbe de- ever, at present, ~ effects are
velopment of tbe gamete, either somewhat severe, further develsperm or ovum, by preventing opment of ~ compounds~
tbe meeting of the sperm and be forthcommg._ The mommgovum (fertili7.8tion ) , or by pre- alter pill ~ !' dose or
venting tbe implantation of the f""'!"e hormone Wlthm 24 ~
fertilized egg through inactiva- of ~n~ lo be etrect:i':"'•
lion of the zygote or making agam. Side .,a:ects p~ude lis
the uterine lining inhospitable use on a ~~ basis.
lo the _dividing embryo. u a!l ~.':!ti::!: made or tbe
~- fwlo;, and a -pregnancy 15 role of sterilization in tbe oonII'Utiated, then as a hack-up trol of reproductiorL Unfortunmeasure, the ~ntents of the a tel both vasectomy and
u_terus can be ehmmated t abor- saiPingectnmy are irreversible
::!~hie ro;nts o1 Awith ~resent techniques. Future
l.et us examine_tbese possible ~~"",;;~ur~~~
pomts of al.t!Jck m the control example, the insertion inlo tbe
or JeP!"'iUCbon. C on t ro I of vas deferens or a plastic foam
ovula!Jon hao a I r e ~ &lt;! Y ~ plug which later can be reachieved by the admuustrabon moved is a process or particular
or the female sex honnone, · teresL
which inhibits tb&lt;; develot&gt;!nenL m 'The need for active, wellof '!"' "'"!"· Th~IS achieved supported researcb lor the cooby m creasmg the levels or ."':; trol or reproduction cannot be
trogen by ~ or "the. pill
"''eremphasized. 0 u r p._,t
so that'!"' pituitary gland m !he environmental woes are only
bra1!' wiU not rei~ tbe slim- partially due ID our inept use
ulalljlg bonnone which would of the resources and failure ID
cause the o v u m ID develop. clean up after ourselves. CM!rNormally, the amount of ~ population-too many~
~~~theb~t!!i'tar';~ is the real cause or these probwhich_ responds~ low l_evels by ~~n=~"':,..~~~
releasmg the stimulating l}or- only gel worse. What then or
mone. !he development of t_he the future? I believe we have
ovum _m the, ovary. now, Wl!}l a choice: I i mit our numbers
the pill, cauaes an . mcrease m voluntarily or the limitations
estrogen levels which neduces which have acted in the pastthe production of stiinulating
[ ·
disease-will limit
hormone r r o m the pituil:al}'. :::;;, {:":;_ Are better things
Release or tbe ovum results m ID come• It's up to us-all of

~~!oo~~~
~US=--WATCH
-----------------tinues in this way. This is tbe
YOUR CHECK STUB
way the pill works. It is now

Paychecks being issued tomorrow

adveme side e!lects of tbe pill,
but tbere is a higher incidence
of mortality due lo pregnancy
than ID tbe pill
How far has researcb man-

amount of

~~ ~~ s:i"d =~

aged ID develop a similar cootrol of _spennatogeDesis? 'The
male pill is being developed
and altbougb many side e!lects

have been encountered, it is
probable that a male pill will
become available in the nest

few years.
1
Tbe preveation of feni1ization COD be ............ in ........,)
ways. In _ . , . use for yeam

bave baen tbe caadom and tbe

will reflect an inc~ase in the
Fedel'31 tax withheld. If
you feel the , _ rate will result in
an overpayment of tax due, or if
you feel it woold be to your actvanage, revised W-4 -withholding promions permit you, if you are single
or • married peiSOn whose . _
is not employed, to claim a "._;al
withholding allowhce." This is
~tly recommended if you hhe substantial itemiud deduc·
tions.-'rlle Payroll Office 'lias circulated an explan.tory memotlll1·
dum and W-4 form to au employ·
MS. The form may be used to
claim the ._;at allowonca•

�"REPORTER.,

6

New Budget Freedom
Thaws Staff Re-Hiring
-n.e long-awaited letter from

the Cbanoellor returning to us
""""' measure or the financial
flexibility we enjoyed prio_r to

December, 1970, has finally
been received" So s t a r t s a
memo administratively issued
""""'dy, which outlines n e w
areas of fleDbility and relrur:es
oertain economies instituted in
1970.
'lbe brigh- news is the lift.
ing of the freeze for hiring nonfaculty ~ in three ways.
This is being done to bring
"back a better balance of nonfaculty to faculty positions."
Currently appronmately 4.2
per cent of faculty positions are
vacant w h i I e approximately
14.4 per cent of non-faculty
lines are empty.
COIIIIECTION
The 1111porter regrets an editing
error in last week's story about
.. the F.cutty SeMte. What Executive
VICe President Albert Somit said
to the Senate was that there would
be no additions to the faculty next
year beyond the $100,000 for key
appointments mentioned in Presi ·
dent Ketter's krtter. Through an
error. the figure was chaflged to
100 and a further subhead error
read "100 additions. •• This is wrong
and we regret any confusion which
might have been caused.--R.T.M .

'lbe first thaw is the lifting
of the freeze on replacing staff,
teaching a n d graduate assistants whose lines were vacated
after November 21, 1971. The
replacement must be h i r e d
" after the predecessor departs
and at the same or lower salary level."
AdditioNII Personnel

In addition, hiring of additional personnel "will be permitted for non-faculty positions
if the line exists in the 197172 budget (or can be created
from lines which exist in the
1971-72 budget) and if the fiscal dollars for 1971-72 for the
salary are taken from the 197172 Other-than-Personal Service
budget within the Division into
which the individual is being
hired. However, this will require the permanent reduction
of the 1972-73 Other-than-Personal Service budget of the division by the aniUJQlized value
of the salary which will have
to be permanently added to the
1972-73 budget for Salaries &amp;
Wages Regular."
Lastly, temporary appoint.
ments from Temporary Service
Funds mar be made " if the
m o n e y JS available in the
budget of the organization involved, if the appointment is
for less than ninety days for a
Civil Service position, and if
the individual is a replacement
for someone on the payroll as
of November 20, 1971. This
appointment process should be
used sparingly, however, since
Temporary Service funds will
be lesa than the current year
in the follow!nf fiscal year,"
the memo expfains.
'lbe news for faculty hiring is
not ao bright. One hundred
thousand dollars w i I I be set
BBide for "strategic academic
appointments to move forward
aitical programs." As much of
this money as JlOSSll&gt;le will
came from normal turnover savinp, but "if turnover funding
is not sullicient, these will be
hmded out of endowment eamiDp."

.
.
Another reserve of appron-

mallely $250,000 w i II be set
ll8ide "to COYer the possible hirIDI'" ol three ptO\'Il81s, one dean,

. - vice president, and one full
.,...,_,.. (W a t e r Resources)
l!lld - ..- three Health Scien-

ca~

... -

f.alllJ tertnc

BIDopt lor a- poeitions ~
tbe milaity fllll-&gt;enr- hir-

ing "in the thirty minority faculty I i n e s assigned in priDr
years," plus honoring academic
commibnents already made for
the spring or 1972, there will be
"no new faculty hiring and no
replacement faculty hiring in
lines vacated by normal atlrition in 1972-73, until further
notice."
To achieve as f u II use of
available resources as possible,
these plans for faculty and staff
hiring will be operated at the
vice presidential level, and "all
actions, budget or pentagon, ef.
fecting payroll a"""""ions must
be signed by the vioe president
responsible for the area." In
order to fulfill outstanding commitments within departments,
"some Other-than-Personal Service budget transfers may have
to be made between departments or possibly Facul~es."
Howev e r, uh.iring beyO nd
these outstanding commitments
should certainly be reviewed
and handled at the vice presidential level in order to effect
as much control as possible
over resource allocation."
Hiring in any line can "occur
only if the line is cleared and
on an Approved Certificate in
the Division of Audit and Control." This is a change from
past practice. Even lines used
for replacement hiring should
be checked to assure that they
are clea red and on a Budget
Certificate before their replacement is hired since the " prior
incumbent ma.v have been on
an uncleared line."
Finally, if the Other-t h anPersonal Service account is exhausted p r i or to March 31,
1972, and charges accrue, then
these must be given first call
from 1972-73 allocations.
The points made in the memo
were based on the assumption
that funding for annual increments, SPA and CSEA increases and moving costs for Amherst would come rrom add itional appropriations. The se
same as~mp tions are contained
in the Executive Budget presented to the Legislature last
week.

Next Years
Cage Grants
Are Funded
By STEVE LIPMAN
When President Ketter announced January 5 that State
Funds could no longer be used
for basketball grants-in-aidthat outside sources would have
to be found-he set January 21
a5 a deadline date by which
time he would tell the basket.
ball slaff if it could go ahead
recruiting players for next year.
January 21 was last Friday.
The answer was yes.
Ketter said that he and the
Golden Bull Fund- the at&amp;letic arm of the Alumni Association-have raised the needed
$10,000, the amoun necessary
for five full grants-in-aid. This
is the number Head Basketball
Coach Ed Muto said he needed
to recruit for next season.
Ketter- using mainly t be
mailing list of the Golden Bull
Fund-collected $5,550 r rom
friends and alumni of U/ B with
a letter appeal.
At the same time, the Golden Bull Fund took in about
$1,500. That money came from
renewals of previous years'
pledges, and can be used for
basketball, u n I e s s otherwise
eannarked. Fund Director R ick
Wells sent out 250 renewal requests at the start of the year,
They've started coming in lately, at the rate of 7 or 8 a day,
he reports.
The presidential appeal and
the Fund pledges total $7,000
so far. The difference, says
Wells, will be made up from
other monies of the Golden Bull
Fund.
Directors Must Deci de

According to Fund bylaws,
· general funds can be used for
the sport most in need-which
basketball is now. The decision
is up to the Fund's Board o'
Directors, Wells cautions. But
they're not likely to veto the
request.
At the same time, however,
Wells says the Alumni want assurance that the local administration is attempting to get
SUNY to reverse its rule about
no grants-in-aid from S t a t e
funds. "We know that it isn't
about Jo happen in the next
year or two," . Wells says. "But
the Alumni can't have the
Sub Board I, Inc., (SBI) has whole responsibility of funding
decided to drop its court peti- the athletic program. We want
tion for tranSfer to the corpor- Albany to take its load." (ED.
ation 534 acres of Amherst land NOTE: Actually, students now
now owned by the Faculty Stu- "fund" the program with Alumdent Association ( FSA ). Jn. ni providing only support for
stead SBI plans to seek the grants-in-aid. )
ss.le of the property.
Meanwhile, Muto and bis
This course of action was in- basketball staff met yesterday
formally adopted at the Jan- to plan their recruiting now
uary 13 meeting of SBL Hopes that they have the green light.
for transfer were dashed when
Recruiting was iri the conthe Office of University Counsel for SUNY ruled such a tact-by-letter-stage I as t fall
mi7Ve illegal. FSA Secretary when Muto was told to stop,
Charles Balkin said the opinion pending results of funding efwas based on non-financial as-- forts.
Now basketball assistantpects of the dJi'!ll since SBI
would not have reimbursed and chief recruiter - Nor b
Bascbnagel
will go on the road
FSA for the land. SBI and
FSA bad been working for over -to scout prospects in person
a year to make the transfer. · and talk to them.
FSA acquired the land with
Most players don't commit
student funds which SBI, under themselves U9til the end of the
its charter, now administers.
season, Muto says, but he adds
SBI Chairman P au I Cum- that U/ B will be at a disadming would now like FSA to vantage in that uwe're one of
sell the land and put the pro- the last schools to contact these
ceeds into a truat.fund for SBL players."
While details such aa composi'lbe $10,000 that Muto was
tion of a board and irivestment
practices for such a truat fund told be has to work with can be
are still being negotiated, this broken up several ways. He'll
is the basic proposal SBI will probably do it this way-give
present to the FSA Board of two junior varsity players full
Directom. Cumming is puabing two-year scholarships. (ED.
for a truat fund board "where NOTE : A full grant-in-aid is
students are fairly represented" worth about $2,000.) This is
and ''both parties can specify more practical than 'giving out
specific investments." Interest five one-year scholarships and
on the i n - t s would be returned to SBI to fund new =-::u:~t~~~
to
one year," be says.
aerviceo, be added.

LandShi/tPlan
Dropped by SBI

recnJJ~r

Admissions &amp;Funding
Again on Senate Slate
Admissions and allocation of tivity, call for the crmtion ol
institutional funds-items held a new adviaory CXliDIJJittee to
over from the JanUary meeting UCDIF: This body would ad- will again be on the Faculty minister institutional f u n d a
Senate's agenda when it con- from NSF Institutional Gnmla
venes at 2:30 on February 1. for Scienoe and NIH BionalThere will be other uaction" ical Sciences Support Gnmta.
items before the group-two 'lbe Senate committee feels thia
amendments to the Senate's new group-is necessary bacauae
Bylaws and a statement of pol- UIB has bad to retum some
icy on independent study re- or these fu:&gt;ds in the past b&amp;cause or miaallocation. 'lbe ~
quirements.
President Robert Ketter's tion before the Senate also calla
modification of an admissions for the return of 50 per cent ol
policy approved earlier by the institutional f u n d s received
Senate to insure that "at least from a project to the unit that
50 per oent of aU the freshmen generated them. In reviewing
in the final class enrollment of this proposal the Senate's ExSeptember, 1972, are residents ecutive Committee dropped the
of the 8th Judicial District of rate of return to 25 per cenL
New York" will provide the Close to $100,000 in institubasis · for the admissions dis- tional funds · from NSF and
cussion. This year, 55 per cent NIH grants are received anof the entering class came from nually.
At the January Senate meeta 50-mile radius of Buffalo.
Dormitory limitations were at ing, Milbmth pointed out that
least one of the factors re- UCDIF has changed its prosponsible for the large percent- cedures to solve the misallocation problems. "You don't need
age of Western New Yorkers.
to adopt this proposal to salve
No Geographic Quot..
this problem," be said. -n.e
Under the policy passed by real
question is, should the peothe Senate in November, no ple who generate money receive
geographic quotas were delin- more money?" Milbrath came
eated. The policy called for the out against the motion because
admission of as ~Y EPIS he feels the return of funds to
students as resources allow and the fund raiser would not have
the reservation of 100 spaces an impact on his motivation to
for the Faculty of Natural Sci- go out and get more funds, as
ences and Mathematics' exper- argued
by those who drafted
imental admissions program. the measure.
For the remaining slots, 45 per
Other
Action
Items
cent would be selected on the
The first of the final two acbasis of high school percentile
tion
items
is
the reading of two
rank in class. The other 50 per
cent would be admitted on an proposed amendments to the
Senate's
Bylaws
which would
aVerage rank sum which adds
high school average to the re- make the office of Parliamensults of s tandardized college ad- _ tarian appointive and remove
missions test. The remaining 5 his vote in the Senate's Execuper cent would be chosen solely tive Committee.
The second motion formalon the basis of numerical rank
in high school class. A second izes requirements for independent
study. Under the recommotion in Ule policy package,
however, dropped the dormi- mendations of the Senate's
tory residency requirement for Committee on Educational
freshmen w h o s e homes are Planning and Policy, a student
more than 50 miles from Buf- must submit a written proposal
falo. Conoeivabli, a higher per- outlining his independent study
centage of students from out. project. This proposal must be
side Western New York might signed by the student's advisor
then be admitted on the basis on the project and filed in the
departmental office. After the
of the other -criteria.
program is completed, the suDebate over the modification pervisor must submit a written
started at the January 12 meet- evaluation of the student's proing of the Senate's Executive gress which will be included in
Committee )Vhere Ketter first his permanent record.
presented his proposal. At that
session, Dr. Marvin Zelen, stat..
istics, pointed out that the
Last year, when a transfer
Senate's Bylaws state that "the
Senate shall have initiating or student came to U/B, c:han&lt;es
confirming authority with re- were he might not have hia
spect to general University ad- credits evaluated until be waa
missions policies.,
ready to graduate, thus running
D.iaeussion of the modifica- the chance of finding himself
tion at the January 18 Senate not ready to graduate.
meeting was prompted bv reNow the situation has
marks by Executive Vice Pres- changed. Robert Anatett, coident Albert Somit and cen- ordinator of transfer admjBBioos.
tered around two points-pro- bas instituted a two-step
cedures used to present the new cess for evaluating crediL Adpolicy and the wisdom of the missions and Recorda (A loR)
modificatiODJ ~ During debate, evaluates aU courses in 1em1s
Dr. Thomas 'Connolly, English, of bow they satisfy geneml UJii..
pointed O!Jt that the modification is already in effect because -::::J.ty-~e ~=
of a January 12 letter from student with hia letter ol aoPresident Ketter to Admissions c&gt;ptanoe. Anatett explains that
Director Dr. Arthur Kaiser. The all courses given at aocredited
Senate could, however, effec- schools in which a student retively modify the procedure if ceived a "D" or better are at&gt;
they chose, he said, since stu- cepted. Most of this first step
dents are admitted until late involves simply convertinl quarApril. The Senate then elected ter hour credits to III!II&gt;0!8tB
to send the matter to the Ad- hours.
missions Committee which will
A second half of the proce1111,
report next week.
however, involves an evaluatioa.
Fund Distribution
of these credits in 1em1s of maDr. Lester Milbrath, elected jor requirements and thia JDUBt
representative from the Uni- be done by the student's major:
versity-wide Committee on the departmenL After the transfer
Distribution o f Institutional has arrived. be is u r 1 e d by
Funds CUCDIF), will be on A &amp; R to visit his academX: adhand again next week to review viaor to start this IIOCIIIId step.
that committee's position on
A -transfer can ba- maithe institutional fundsi&gt;roposal. mum of ·96 credits accepted
'lbe recommendations, drawn from another four-year instituup by the Senate's Committee tion or a muinnun of 66 bow&amp;
on Researob and Creativity Ac- from a two-year collep.

Transfer Credits

J&gt;IO:

-J:

�7
~on~F~---------------------(~ tr- I, &lt;DI. 4)
peaoiaD at aD IIIUIIeaHee .....

oidizllld 8dimieo, -m.c FoD.-ry
the ......
iatmtiaa-.
~ full J. the ...,.._
dent's leUi!r 1D DeWMI fal..

3,.,.,-

lowS:

my atfiDe ~ with ila
pub1icatioa in Tie Spa:lnuL
Uaf..-.eiy; I ......, t-n ..,_
able lo .-:11 you, 10 ......,
oot bem able lo ' - - ' -»ally ID tbe.....,.... Y&lt;* miood.

"Yoar 1eUi!r

"'t -

~eMbed

lllllllitoriac
the IDter-t • tba1Coaacil
......
untarY fee - . in your .........
'bulllt tbe bubiJie of a-tion

'= •

---.....-cea.aa.
proteot _..tillc tbi&amp;' au d

other III8Ddated .............
pus. ID rwiewiDc tbe IDterJoesicl&lt;slce Coaacil wi-.Jy
fee siluaiiaa, I find tba1 v-. ..
Pnsidea1 Doty, ..... SdliiJo
aod Allm MiDor aD Cliiiii:Ur tba1
this WM a JDU!IIally ..,..,..S
aAJ4*oudoe with whidJ
party &amp;bared lipifiamt
satisfaction AJom Milles"s Jet.
ter 1D the Editor in tbe ame
issue of Tie Spe:trrua oubstantially supports tbis poRtion.
uwith respect lo the more
general matter of tbe Ulle of
mandatory sludi!ut fees, both know that tbe rules regulatioas gowming tbis were
passed on 1D us by the Boanl
of Trustees of Ststr Univer&amp;ity
of New York. and reganiJe&amp;s
of their merit&amp; or dlawblda;
must be lived with tmtil ouda
time as they are modified or
otherwise a I t e r e d. At the
present time, it most be remem-

=

bend tba1 tbe entire IIIIIDIIatiary
fee recalatioo in reality .,...,.
- a 'lnllt' and aD of us .....t
_ . t e within tbe prescribed
cuidotiDe pnwiaions of that

trust in .._m,g """""""

b tbe beuefit of the campus
........,;ty.
is my - llbmdinc tba1 udespite
what may
be aJIIIiclen!d by IOIIIt! as overly
le procedures 0 D I y
W!I'Y few ""11-..1 propam espoudituns h a v e been di&amp;-

"" •

allowed. ID U.... matters where
there were questions, the Advioaoy Committee made judeor, for the more tedmi-

cal. lepJ problems, assist.mce
of l1Divasity eo.m..J was obtained.

-n.e disqreemmt regarding
tbe Sludent Aaaociation's ownenbip of property ;. a lepJ
one. ~ opinion of U~­
sity eo.m..J has been, aod .....
Dlllino, that the Studeut ASIII&gt;ciation, as an uniDcorporated
. purchase or own
body, may oot
resl property. Certainly tb;s
opinion can be dJallenged, arcued- ultimately resolved in
tbe court&amp;. ffowew!r, at this
time, it is the legal positioo under which we must operate.
ADotber esample of legal interpretation-ag one with
which apparently disagree:
~ fact that an mpnizatioo is
DDt a profit-malring enterprise
does not give it the right to
make use of tu:-QJpported facilities to compete with tu:paying enterprises. Because of
this ruling, outside project&amp; of
University Press are no longer
allowahle.
"1be questions you mise
about the PODER Day Care

Cente:r and the Uni1lelllity Co:
()p are cl.ifficuJt lo deal with in_.m as to elate we hilve not
received anythiuJ hut individ-

ual sludent requests for interpretation. Se.eral students ex~ """""""' following articles published in Tlu! Spectnuoc prior to December 15;
bowevrr, I . _ t . we have not
received a formal program r&amp;
~ outlining whatever it is
that ..n of these agencies
wishes ID do.
um clOsing, I am sure that

~-mo':!th~!u~

the Deed-for more local aua struggle not only
in the area of student fees, but
for many other areas of the
University's operation."
tonomy is

G!nter Gets Grant

SPA Seeking

New Members
The Uniyersity Center Chaj,.
ter of the Senate Professional
Association (SPA) has posed
and answered three frequentlyasked questions as part -&lt;&gt;f its
present membership recrui~
ment campaign.
"What has SPA done?" is
answered with reference ID the
contract negotiated with the
State and with the claim that
" SPA has provided valuable assistance to colleagues involved
in local grievances and has established a regular basis of coonlination with the local campus administration.''
••Why is SPA so expensive?''
Because, the recruitment mateerial says, uthe operation of a
statewide network or chapters,
with a central office, auxiliary
personnel, legal counsel, etc., is
~iveu as are •~negotiating
and monitoring contracts, lobbying, providing p u b I i c information and developing local
chapters." Statewide dues have
not yet amounted to the sum
spent by NEA/NYSTA in
negotiating the contract, SPA
contends.
"Why Join?" "To make the
voice of the university centers
heard" within the diverse SPA
membership. The local SPA
says that BuiJalo--alone among
all local units-has worked ID
preserve the tradi lion of pee.r
evaluation in grievances. With
strong Buffalo chapters, the
group contends, .. these uniquely favorable conditions" can
be preserved and perhaps extended.

Tbe Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts or the IJe.
parme.t of Music has been
a~ a grant of 550,000 from
the National Endowment for
the Arts to be allotted for Creative Associate Fellowships at
the University for the present
academic year. Tbe Fellowships
are ear-marked for young professional musiciaJ1s who are
studying and peffonning new
music during tbeir residencies
on campus.
Tbe Center sponsors the perfonnance series "Evenings for
New Music" which are presented five times each year at the
Albright-Knox Gallery, at Carnegie Recital Hall in New
York, and at universities and
mlleges throughout the Stste.
Tbe """"""" feature performances by the Creative .Associates of r e c e n t chamber and
mixed-media compositions. Also ((.'ontinu ~d from page I , col. 5)
• Reduction in librarY acqu.i- offered by the Center is the
(Con"""" from I , &lt;DI. 5)
new Evenings for Music '!hea- listed would result in a "good
appropriated but not yet adu- sitioos I -$243,000) ;
deal of inconvenience and some
• Elimination of direct sup- ter series and the Creative ineff.ciency
ally paid out 1 amount to adfor students and fac-ditional millions. (See _,ate port for WNY Nuclear Re- Associate Recitals, which are ulty using the new campus."
presented
on
campus
and
elsestory for Amher&amp;t OIIDSinJcljon search Center ( -590,000) .
He
said.
ho..-vever,
that tlleir
• Reduction of animal labor- ,.-bere in the city.
details. )
delay ''would not c:!use as many
The $61,287,000 U/ B operat- atories and otber organized acproblems as that of the library
ing budget request I """ aa:om- tivities 1-$37,000) .
space." The projects delayed
• Reduction in supplies and
panying chart for hreakdoom)
include facilities for physical
is based on a total full-time expense for organized resean:h
plant and btL'iiness operations.
I -$108,000 ) .
equivalent ( FI'E) enrollmen1
student activities, a food com·
• Reduction in all otber supof 19,814, an increase of 222
missary. and some general site
over the previous year. IA:M-er pties and equipment ( -598,000).
work.
• Special one-year expense
Projects Totaling $64 Million
division students are ~
1D remain COO!i&amp;ant; uppei" divi- for Middle States accreditation
Mr. Telfer lis ted the followsion FI'E's, 1D increase by 284; siUdy (+550,000).
ing new capital construction
• Increased utility costs
master's aod profeasional FTE's
projects as those totaling $64
( + 5100,000).
(
by 91. Doctoral FTE's are promillion and whidl are included
• Adjustments in saving.; facjected 1D decrease by 153.
in the Governor's message to
tor over last year ( + 5353,000) .
''~
the legislature: ·
~ budget proposal calls for
CioaDps I
W1oderl (0'0111
• Education and Philosophy
3,96&amp; FI'Es for University opBuildings and Sitework.
this year's loud&amp;rt are:
• Industrial Engineering
• Ahnliobment of 50 in&amp;tnoo- emtions, alloc:ated as follows:
Building and Sitework.
tiooal JX]Bitions (sa v i n g s of teadling, 1,407; teaching support. 757; organized activities,
• Physics I and Sitework.
$712,000).
• Utility Cable and Load
• Aloolioobment of 62 in&amp;tnoo- llO: organized researdl, 17; ex~ and public service, 38;
Center.
tiooal _ . t paoitioos
• Utility Spine Faculty Dislilomrios, 215; student services,
( -$55l,IXIO).
tribution.
• Ahnljoimert of 143 oCber 'Of· maintenan&lt;e and operation
• Sitework, Roads. Central
of
472; geuend adminispositions ( -$1.353 million).
Interior.
• Summer s..ioa&amp; redadioa tmtioo, 295; geuend institii• Utility, Interior Road Distioaal services, 245; aod resi( -$260,000).
bibution.
• Redactioa in ~ dence haUs, 133. Totals are
• Sitework for Colleges A
service . . _ t b U..tdiolloll down in ..n catego&lt;y with the
......an change amounting to_ a
Tboma;; K. Craine, 29, has and B ( Pei-designed dorm-dincomplex) .
~ &lt;;~u!t,tdiolloll decrease of 255. ln many m- been appointed assistant to the ing•1hall
Sitework for Coll'lS"es A&amp;lance&amp;, tbe culhacb in jobs president, e«ective immediateF (Davis-Brody-design.!d colhilvP ahrady been met throul!h
' (-$240,000).
• ReduciXoD iD aD oCber tem- employee attrition during the !{;i,.::-;,~;p.=:!:::,; leges) Phase I .
Sitework for Colleges Apft!a5lt year.
porouy service ( -$100,000);
Facilities Planning Division F •(Davis-Boody-designed
colsince 1968, succeeds DooaJd G. leges), Phase n.
Dunn,
appointed ex• Chilled Water Plant and
ecutive
8111istant
to
Erie
Coun~--a..IIB.,. ~
Sitework.
ty Eloecutive Edward Regan.
• Utility Cable and Load
1D his Pft9!Dt JXG, Mr. Center, Phase n.
. , _ T- _____,,_____
..
.., 'iiii:Bn':O:::n'""
$A..37.000 --13.5oQ.OOO
'fl::'::t
Craine has been involved in
-6.5
• Central Systems Control.
the coordiuation of the aca• Rehabilitation of Bullalo
demic and facilities piau&amp; (or Meter Building, Phase n.
~.3
~
--4.5
the North CamPus. SinCe Oc__.
• Hish Temperature Incintober, 1971, be has chain!d the erator Facility (at Buftalo Me-100..£0)
-1.5.3
President's
Coaacil 011 Resi- ter Building) .
-7.5
ileutisl Facilities, a group ~
• Iucreaaed Boiler Plant Ca-l.J
-6t.AD&gt;
pointed 1D recommend occu pacity (on South or Main Sl
.....u
pattems for residential ~).
--6.1
-na.aao , -4J
Tbe projects . at the Bulfalo
... tbe campus,
A 1964 paduate of the Uni- Meter BuiJdin2 are part of a
-.ity of Rochester, Mr. revampU., of die facillty which
Craine n!lllliwd his ~ of the Univaaity pun:haaed 1aot
+d.J
Edumtion decree in 1966 at year. The last project listed is
U/B iooherr be ill eompletiuc designed lo relieoe 8D OYI!rioad
llllllliM b a docloral decree in of the - t '-tine plant fnr
the South
tbe---

Building-

Rockefeller's l.VB Budget-

.........

Plant.

Tom Craine Named
Presidential Aide

..
llllpPiios--

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

-----

-----

-

"""""'Y

-=

a.-

Communique(~ from -

8, coL 5)

~n~~'!rr'U:

event, sponsored by Student Association. feel that guests from

:~:~ !:!

'h::: ~;;::.

falo if they can stay in hoJDeS of
Univeroity faculty members. Any
!acuity member interes~ in helping, especially anyone interested
in Appalachian culture, please
cull Marilyn Rooche, 877-0137.
APPLJ.CA.TION FOR DeGREE CAilD8:

In

order to be coN:idered for graduation it i5 essential that each
student 61e . with the Office of

:~:;:~fo:uie~=~~ ~
5
~i:~~:. ~~m~~~eent :J!~

ruary 15, 1972. Applications fo r
Degree Cards are a vailable at the
Office of Adm.issions -and Records.

PEACE CORPS-VISTA
VISTA and Peace Coops representa·
tives will be on campus, Monday
through Wednesday, January 31·
February 2. ln the Center Lounge
of Norton Hall, from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
All interested students are invited
to drop by. Seniors will be aided
in filling out applications if they
wish. The four representatives will
be Gail Snyder, Ginger Getman,
David Yarbrough and Bill Brown.
FiNANCIAL ASS.l.!&gt;'TANCE :

The Office

of Financial Aid is distributing
financial assistance applications
fur the 1972-73 academic year..
Students may obtain fo rms at the
offh..-e, which is located in 216
Harri.mun Library. Completed a pplications ( Form U.B.) are to be
returned 10 the Fimmcial Aid Of.
fit.'C not later than March 1, 1972.
Financial statements will be required in all cases, and these are
to be completed and sent to the
College Scholarship Service not
later than February 1, 1972. Ins truc tions relative to filing will be
found appended to the a pplication
packet.
FNSM 222 : Controveraiea in Sci..
cnce - Conflict and Re.otution
meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 a .m. in Acheson 362.
See Weekly Communique for top..
ics. Visitors welcome.
t1t£NCH .101 : Section J-1 had ~n

d~= "~~

0

cl=:r:t-re~:

!:e:e
ter for 101-J2, regia t r a t ion
~ 186570. Class meets in Foster
322 B, Monday through Friday,
12 noon-12 :50 p.m. U any diffic ulties arise, contact French office, 2301 (02).
HILLEL : A class in Conversational
Hebn.~ (elementary) is being or~:;ani:z:OO by Hillel. Interested stu-

~~n~;~=dfo~/n(;,~~tio~.fil~

lei Howe hours have been extended.. The following schedule is
in effect for the Spring semester:
Sundays, 2-10; Monda ys through

f.l;_2~ds8 ~~:-fo ~~~-;~~~
9

7

days, 8 p.m.-12 p.m.

OFFICIAL SPBJNG 8EMESTEil BUILOINC UOURS FOR NORTON: Monday-

~~~: aJn..t~: s~=t=;

8 a.m..-1 a.m.; Sunday: 12 noont2 onidnigbL

EXHIBITS
PBl'NTS by students of Harvey
Breveoman, 4240 Ridge Lea, 9

a.m.-5 p.m., through February 10.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
~ IIWUBlT

of works by

Robert Graves and JSJDel: Joyce,
Room 207, Lockwood Library, 9

a.m..-5 p.m.
WILLl.Ul

·
BUUOUGBB exhibit, 2nd

floor balcoay, Lockwood Library.
PABLO NERUDA-worb by the Nobel Laureate poet, Room 207,
Lockwood Library. .
10i!N BERitYXAN 1914-1972, A
J.femorial Ex h i bit. continuinc,
Poetry Room, 207 Lockwood Lib~.

WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
COPY DEADUHE
For everyone's convenience and
pleasure, we like to pubUcize ell
events taking place on e~~mpus.
To record information, contact SUzanne Metzaer, Urilversity Publialtions 5efvices, 250 Winspear Ave.,
ext. 2228. ~ will bo due by
Monday for.. an issue dlstribuWCI
on Thursday and covsring events
of Fnday th~ Thuosdoy.

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to public;
••Open to •membol'l af tho U-l'llty;
#Open only to those with o pn&gt;fesslonol Interest In the oubjoct
Contoct Suzonne Metqer, 831·2228, for llstlnp.

THURSDAY-27

meal, Chabad Houae, 3292 Main
SL, 6 p.m.

PHYSICIANS n:LEPBONE LECTURE :

~bl::~ ~=• :AI=

0

r!:.~~rthinCo.!"fer~ ~~,!,!;

!tr ~=

A Report on a Study Tour of
Israel, Oneg Shabbat to follow,
Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd .. 8
p.m.

8 0 CIA L PSYCHOLOGY LUNCHDON

~=::~~~AL~~ 8D~CINdG~J:&amp;

·-"-

Utii~· rro~~

stations. 10:30 a.m.

::mp-:~~~~~~~r.A.n:!:

first hour, 30 Diefendorf Anne:r,
tion. of Tad· Rupomibility, Room 8 p.m.
C-26, -1230 Ridp Lea, J2 : 30 p.m. . UUAB CONCERT': Bat McGrath,
PHYSICAL THERAPY TELEPHONE LEC·

bassist.

and Don

Potter, guitarist,

~~e!:uplro:=~~?'t':~Jk:k
:~~ !i:i:.~~
~!!,~~. ~~:
Probkms, sponsored by Regional rock
up, and Natural, a coun
Medical Program, 40 receiving
stations, 1 p.m.
CHEMICAL ENGJNEERlNG SEMINAR#:

!!'Y-r!~ ~nd from New York
C1ty. Fillmore Room. 8:30 p.m.,
tickets at Norton Ticket Office.

Professor K.B. Bischoff, School of

COFFEE HOUSE• : David Bradstreet

sored with Pharmaceutics Department, 322 Acheson, 2 p.m.

CAC FILM•: Performance, 140"Ca-

g~~;fty,EI~r:"ftX~r~ok~!~ ~!~N~~~.B~d::~~.t :=~
({~a:dc~:::w~,::~:,.M·:-~~ 0 ~ charge. Also on SaL, Jan. 29.

fiT~ ~~~~w=~:;

fellow, Brookings Institution, will
receive a 125th Anniversary
Award citation at the School of
Management
Symposium. and
0

i:!!~:~~blic 1f:~'Wh~ ~~~i
~~ ~~r:~Y~~nflau~ ~e~

conference,

2 p.m.

MUBIOOLOOY L E C T U

aE

SDUES•:

~~pbJ;' ~c~l~:!tl~~,':.;
0

Choral" : A Critical Evaluation
of a Myth , 101 Baird, 3:30 p.m.,

free.

PHYSICS OOLLOQUJUM#:

Dr. Shi-

J{i~~l~~t!::~rbe~7'~~;

111 Hochstetter, 4 p.m.; re[reshmenta 112 Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.
THEORETICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR*•:

~:;to~b~0~Ctio~~ o:OONo~

Ticket Office for showtimes. T ickets $.75 a t Norton Ticket Office
only, available up to showtime.
Also on Saturday, Jan. 29.

ent!!f!'in~~fj~ f~a:s;:

==:

wifh two hippie gi rls while experimenting with ultramodern
1
~~~bjaJ::~
is~U::

:::d:r

:f:x

!,iJ;~fza:rep~=:~~~~~

Cost: Mick Jagger, James Fox,

~~~~i~~'b;!fm!!\~~:ll

a nd Nicolas Roeg.

~~e·: ~ r~~k~~~fl~~::erer~
times, a dmission charge, also on

Sunday, Jan. 30.

the History of Theoretical Biology, Room 29, 4248 Ridge Lea,
4 p.m. Coffee at 3 :30 p.m.

The lecturer wrote the first
scientific textbook entitled Theo-

~':!c,1!:so~i':.,~g' J:lsd tios: m~ie::~
sity of Vienna, 1934). He will
discuss a few basic aspects or the
:0~~· :ri~~ ~~e!n:~o~

a~~'!ro~~abo:~a d::· ~

and then loses it tragically. The
)overs, played by Toshiro Mifune

:!se
ls~f' th~~arair.d~nnao!~
town for ·an outing and spend the
night in Tokyo. The feeling of the

f;ri;t,= '::dw:he isimOO,:~:

e nce o( love and the tragedy of
being a woman. emphasized.
VARSITY BASK.ETBALL•: Northern
lllinois, Memorial Aud. 7 p.m.

TUESDAY-I

SATURDAY-29

OONTROVERSIIS IN SCI£NC£--(X)NFLICT AND RESOLUTION •: FNSM

SABBATH AT CHABAD•: services and

physics and astronomy, Controuersiu on the Nature of Light
and the Probkm of Matter, 362
Acheson, 10 a.m., visitors welcome, also on Thursday, Feb. 3.

Dr. Ludwig von Bertalanffy, faculty professor, Natural Sciences
and Social Sciences, A Glon.ce at

ing and honest film that seam the
memory. With E. Funakoobi. 0 .

Taki:&lt;awa, M . Us hio. DiJ-ected by
Kon Ichikawa.

refl'e&amp;hments, 9:30 a.m. MaltJuoh
Malkah party, music, conversation, refreshme nts, Chabad House,
3292 Main SL , 8 p.m.
WRESTLING* : JameStown CC,
Coming CC, Erie CC, U/ B JV,

12:30 p .m.

LIBRARY CONCERT•: Th e CletJe.land

222, Dr. Mendel Sachs, professor.

PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE LECI'UBE#:

Dr. Jerome P . Maurizi. Practical
Day to Day Aspect• of Man.agement of PatUmts with Ru~ratory

~=c!i

srron:= ~ ~=

~uartct, Donald Weilerstein, viohn; Peter Salaff, violin; Martha stations, 11:30 a.m.
Stron~ Katz, viola; Paul Katz, HILLEL CIJ.SSEB: B~ginnen Heviolon-OOUo ; with Stephen M a nes, brew, 262 Norton,. 12 noon. Jewpiano. Central Library Auditori- ish Ethia, 262 Norton. 1 p.m.
um, 3 p.m.
STUDENT RECITAL•: Baird, 12 noon,
~1o;:{ ~:ru::eanittsinr!J~~~ IIILLEL CLASS : Torah with( Com- free.
mentaries, Rabbi Hofmann's
with such important disciplines
home, 12 Colton Dr., 3:30 p.m.
aa biophysics and molecular biology?
VARSITY BASKETBALL•: Cornell.
COMPUTING CENTER USER SERVICES • Memorial Auditorium. 7 p.m.
S ~KIN A a: Computer Language
BAWA FILM FESTIVAL•: The Story
Orientation, Harvey Axlerod, inof a Three-Day PtJ&amp;B, romance
slnlctor, Room 10, 4238 Ridge
between a black soldier and a
Lea, 7-9 p.m.
white girl and the discriminatory
action it brings upon the man, in
FILM:••: Invasion of the Body
French with English sub-titles,
Snat&lt;:he,.., 140 Capen, 7 and 9
Woodlawn Junior H.S., 450 Mas.
p.m., free.
ten Ave., 8 p .m. Tickets at door,
FILJ,l•* : Ramparts of Clay, Con$1.00 for adults, 50¢ for students
ference Theatre, check showcase
and senior citizens.
for times, admission charge.
CAC FILM•: Performance, see Friday listing.

tbe field and term, theoretical
biology? What is its origin and
history? What is its raison d 'etre,

FRIDAY-28

~~: ~~an:ro~~cc~=

admission charge.

UU,AB COFFEE HOUS&amp;• *: ·See Fri-

day listing.

IKETETJ&lt;S 'l'EUIPBONE 1&amp;ICI'tJD.#:
Dr. James C. White. Ia Your
K now/.ede• of Boderial COIII4Jiti"

:::::::tb: receivinc
~~!'i'J~ ~

gram, 40
-tiono, 2 p.m.
SWUOONC' : Penn State. Oad:

Gym. 2 p.m.

WRES'IUHG•: ~State

JV'&amp;. Clark Gym, 6:30 p.m.

w/

Lon Year at MarW:nbtul.
directed by Alain Resnaia. 147
Diefendorf. 8 p.m._ free.
FILlll.•:

�</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1381503">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>Annual Report of the President to the Board of Trustees</text>
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                <text> Originally included Colleague, volume 8, number 4 (digitized as an individual collection)</text>
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                <text> Newspapers</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT_BUFFALO

Telfer ofCo/umbio,Pid«rl
For UIB Planning Ibsitim

VOL 3-NO. 16

Sketchy Budget Details lndic3re Cut
In Funds to Current Qperating ~el_
---,_

.lolm D. Telfe.-, ...,.;,m,t vice
lftSideDt for physical planniug
-at CGlumbia Uni""""ty,--t.as

.

~~~~~ ======================~============~----­

for appointment as vice presideilt for facilities planning at
0 18. President Robert L Ketter bas forwarded the reaJII)IDI!IIdation to the Trustees wbo
will meet on .laniJIUY 25 and
26.
Mr. Telfe.- will be responsible for coordination and plannine ol the new North CamPIB
in Amherst. About $115 millian in ClDIISbuctioo is DOW Ult~ ... the site ol the $650

Long-Range
VIeW Bright,
Ketter Says.
"'The pro&amp;peds for U / B are
for almost
81\Y
tb
uniwrsity in tbi&amp;

mucho bricbl..lhlm
er

~&amp;:.tp,:~~~';:

cd to campus ollicials this """""-

Aithouch funds will be in
short supply for -semie 19'1273, the president 8 a i d be is
"confideut that the Univeosi.ty

m~~:tion

(~ .... -

7, col. 1)

ture

Col~

Telf... bas supe&lt;vised the .,_
pamminc. planning. design and
utilizatioD ol all physical facilities ol the UniYersity.
From 1960 to 1968, Mr. Telf... held positions at the Uni.ersity ol Michipn wbere be

~ !~~"::..n~

the Univeosi.ty An:bi- for
planniug from 1900 to 1964.
From 1957 to 1959 be was prolessor ol graphics and bead ol
the Department ol Engineering
at the A b a d a n Institute o1

~-serious
unknown in
the bud&amp;et. Somit said, is bow

~io~
~

6 , col. 5)

------

. olf-ice
~t~f~"t ~~ J: ~
success at tbe Aud will

...-...,.

100-

af-

_ . _ ...,..,
Wricbt calls Obio Slate "'the
best team Ul B bas !&gt;b~Ycd in
my -years ~ than

....,...,..

:!'""',.?!B

Hockey Bulls Test C/imote
For 7Jig TirmlAud Dates

The -

"-

the sii ~ cent acroos-tbeboerd saluy in&lt;:n!ase for fac.
u1ty and stall will be fuoded.
u a bas to ......, mom the proposed budgoet, then the institutioD...is in ~. vay serious
lnloll*.- be said. If, .............,,
the IDIIIIeY ClOIDeS from an addit i o n a I lecislative allocatioo,
is ooly in "8erious

n...e will be liD additions
tn the faculty yar beyood
tbe 100 mentioned in President
~.. loaer .... the faculty
tbi&amp; ........ he added. (See uatesby.)And _ , . t o the
qoestioas ol ropiacins t b o s e
By STEVE LIPMAN
Chunpimmips in the future.• ...... ba"" left will bopefull.y be
. - e d by tbe communication
U / 8 and Obio State square
1'id&lt;ets for the s.-la,y pme
is fortbcolnin&amp; from .Alolf for a set ol boc:ltey pmes are heine sold for $2.00. Fam- wbidl
bany.
•
tbis ~ wbidl are heine ily tickets-for both - I s ,
The only hopeful note the
billod as the important in and three tids ol 12 or m.ler vice president could 90111111 was
the Bulls' tbn!e-year boc:ltey -cost $5..00.
that the $6L5 million budaet
bistnry.
Studont ticbls - ID mnl istheiUIIDIIIIl~bytbe
The first pme is Satum.y, ....,.....,. _ ..., awilable in G
over no r and poasibl.y Ibis
9 p.m.. in the Amheost Rec Clartt Gym.
could~ for the better
Center. The ........s-od .......,
A C!-.1 ol 5,~ is
""""
the Lecislature cliscmas
important ooe-is--Sunda.y
hoped ~ llod&lt;ey ec-b Ed the mattes-.
He also pointed out
temooo. 2:30 p.m.. in Memor- Wrid&gt;t tbinb the C!-.1 - · t t,bat ..._ ...,., more freedom
iaJ Auditorium.
be disappointed. "'The _,ae
lhlm
mcmtha ago• in
It's the Bulls' first boc:1tey in this areo t - bocl&lt;ey. A
pme in the Aud and a campus lot ol them ba""' hem ~ ~i·L~~:=!r.
and community ClliiJPilign is tn mllece boc:ltey, but not many than ..._ bad a yar ago.•
heine mounted to tum out a ba""' seen U/B's brand. I think
larce crowd. 1'id&lt;ets are avail- ...,•re coinc to amaze tboin.
.t.le tbrouch multiple . tlets; They
believe bow well ministration tn tU:e "a .,.__
spot aDIMJIU)CftD,ts
we pa.y.•
vatne stance, yet cme that still
lreeps a oe&lt;tain IIUIIIber ol opand
televisiooand
ba...
used 1)loee
eortensively;
the""""'
Faculty
If the
Bulls
are -to '-.t the tions open tn the prtJW8s, the
Club is bavinc a family bnmcb Budceyes. .............,, tbey'll ba"" -semie vice president and the
prior tn time with """""' tn !&gt;illY three 1'110'1 _.,..., cbaiimen wbo have to face defor the Aud lmvinc from the sometiUnc they t.a...o't done cisions here and DOW and dcm't
Club.
at bnme in -yean;, Wrid&gt;t ~~ lumry ol waiting until

OO\ f'flllio

___
_____
. .__
--____
_
........ ----;...
-

ceiJinc.

Somit was em band tn give
the news because President
~ was unable tn attend.
His infonnation came from a
telepboae ccmvasation w i tb
&lt;::huo::ellor Ernest Boyer wbo
iDdicated that the budget re. . - for U / 8 represents a
$4.5 m i II i o n cut from what
oricinaJly allocated I a 8 t
year. I&gt;uriDc the fiscal year,
.............,, ..arious savinl!s factors
and eq&gt;ellditure ceiJinss were
inbodoced wbidl dropped the
- . . I opomling level ol ex- •
pmditures tn the $6L5 million

at
wbidl be bas held for the .-&amp;

(c..wu-1 .... -

Althouch Eiecutive VICe
President Albert Somit could
&amp;i... ooly sketcb,y details uf
U t B's fiscal picture for nen
yar because ol a del8,y in information fro m Albany, the
Famlty Senate learned TIJes..
d8y that nen year's budget.,_
- ' would be $6L5 millioo,
the SIIIDe as this year's eq&gt;elldi-

tluee and OIIHmlf yean;, Mr.

to__move ahead. pu1Der aod -design c h i.e f.-a\
both in 1972-73 and in tbe • A.O.A Scbmidt, A.LA.. and
years thereafter.•
Associates, an an:hitectural and
Kelt..- cited four ........,; for planniug firm in DetroiL
his optimism:
Mr. Telfe.- studied c:iYil enFirst, aJiboud&gt; most replace- cineerinc at P M C Colleges,
meut lines will be left vacant Chester, PL. and the Uni...,..for 1972-'13, a reserve ol ap- . sity o1 Kentucty and recei\led
pnuimately $100.000 bas hem a la:belor ol an:hitectum deset aside for ley f..Jty ep- pee in 1951 from the Univer~ "'f theae funds.,..._
sity ol MidUpn, wbere be was
not be provided from our aper- awarded the master ol city
aline bud&amp;et,• ~ said, "'I planainc depee in 196L
""' _....t to..,. our....,._
From 1962 to ~· be was
ment monies for tbi&amp; - . • a member ol the Ypsilanti,
Secoud, be pninted out, MidUpn, City Planninc Com...,., attnocted to tbi&amp; Uni¥er- mio1;iau, .....W.C as its chairman
sity an ou-.liDc faculty. from 1963 tu 1965. In...New
"Let me_.., you that- will Yod, be was a lllt!Dibei" ol the
mab ~e&amp;rt to bold our Board ol D i - . . and the El&lt;1'110'1
lee.•
ecutiw! ~ ol MorninaTbird,
pnllidellt ..__...t side Jleicbts, IDe., an
• CIXIfidonoe that ..._will n!alllle tion ol reliPJus, ~I
faculty -..nc ... a. siaiJicmt and med:icaJ institutions dediscale by I!J'13.74.• The Am- cated to the betterment ol the
heost campus will bean tn ClOIIIIDIIIIity.
"em Jine• by late 19'13 and .,...
He is ...:utiw director ol

_will continue

JANUARY 20, 1972

be as important to tbe Athletic
Oeputmeut as the final score.
The size ol Sunday's C!-.1
will det..-mine if futw:e pmes .
will be acbeduled down-.
Acconlinc to an Atbletioc Department ..,.,;letter: "'f the
' date with 81\Y. depee &lt;I
.....,.,..... - micbt be .t.1e tn
cleor DJI&gt;re And pmes for 197273. plus the possibilitY o1 bao;tinc the B C A C or N C A_A

-·t

=

says.
This year,

liDCOidinc tu the
c:IJIICb. "'the team bas hem
slupisb in the first period;

:d.eaf~·'.=

then they'"" c:oaslal tbrouch
the final fmme.. They hadn't
!&gt;b~Ycd tluee CIIIIDPiete periods
until the Hamiltcm wa m e•

(wbidl the Bulls ..... 7-2 -

~ .:l.t'bas~~o

On the mattes- uf enrollment,
Somit felt the I1!Stricted budget
would affect projected eruollment • sliPrtJy - perhaps a
mupJe ol hundred students."
The reduction in the number
ol faculty, however, coupled
with a small in&lt;:n!ase in students will ..motinue the march
~ ol tbe student-faculty

......... ago).

But, Wricbt adds. -we've
still W&lt;MI most ol our games.
Tbe fluOa ..., &amp;.3..) It .........
""''re a poetty 1'110'1 team if
- can play mediocre boc:ltey,
and still .q."
(ConD.u.et on 3, col. 2)

l'lolir:y

iJia!llkollioR

The eRCUtiw vice president
then discDSBed bow nen year's
~ will be chosen. He
told the SeoUe ol a "modification" ol the admissions policy
( c:o.mu..d ""f'GIIC 2, col. 1]"

'f

�~

2
Budget( C - fn&gt;a -

1, col. 6)

it had adopled earlier. Uude&lt;
the cbange. 50 ...,.. cent ol the
·regular freitman cLass will

~ ~r~~W~

Eidtth Judicjal District. This
policy, be ezp1ained. will show
area legislators that UIB "is
making ...-y attempt to accept
Westem New York students."
On Janwuy 13, President
Ketter sent a lett« to Dr. Arthur Kaiser, ctirector of Admissions and Records, instructing him to implement this policy modific:atioo. At that afternoon's meeting d the Senate's
&amp;eeuti...,..Gommittee.-~.

MediCallnvffitigatoiHas Dfficribed· WorldWak
Is Expanded
A Disease Nerer Before Documented -To a Month
By SUZANNE MftZGBR
An beleditary
before documented. 11M bel!ll
described by Dr. Jolm A. Edwards, ~ assis1ant prof....,. ol medicine at the Medical Geoeti&lt;s Unit ol Bulralo
Geleal H o s J? it a L T .........
Cllllll&gt;kH&gt;rot:irydaclyly (Greet
for bent, sborl digit), the dil&gt;ease, IICClOiding to P,.. Edwards,
is characterized by abuomJal
band aDd root f.,._tioo.
times acrompanial by inccatiDenae ol urine, « a sepCate ,.._
gina· (two passageways ~
of one) in the female.
'The symptoms ...,... fimt seen
in a male patient admitted to
the Buffalo Genenl Hospital
for impotence. Because be bad
malformed bands, be """' refened to Dr. Keith Vance. an
EDdocrinologist, on suspicion of
acromeply, a d i sea s e also
lllllrlmd by impotenae and enlarged band ~L Dr.
Vance noted that other mombels of the patient's family bad
simi)j&gt;r bands and refened the
case to the Medical Ge11e1ics
Unil Dr. Edwards supervised
inwstigation of the case with
the assistance of Robert Gale,
then a medical student &lt;m a
genetics elective. wbo did field
worlr. and inf.enoiews with all
membem of the family_

A IIIOidb loac internatiooal
celetn.tion with edlibits, films,
~tioos and a fiesla is
being planned by Peter Kong,
undergraduate from

m-. -

Ke«ei was informed that it is
the Senate's ra;ponsibility to
"initiate and cmlinn" admissions policy. To some. Ketter's
modification seemed a change
in the cbaracter of the Senatelljlj)IOW!d policy_ At that point,
the ERcutiw Committee asked
the president to giw the Senate
time to ooosider his modification and to direct the Admissions OIIEe to report rt!l&lt;lJ)arly
to the Senate on the implementation of the policy.
.
This discus1;ion with the
president was pointed out to
Somil Dr. Cbades Planck. politicsl science. said that two
separate issues are involvedfirst, the wisdom of the Ketter
modificatioo. and. secondly, the
past procednre by wbicb the
modification was made. Alter
lengthy debate, the S e n a t e
moved to baw its Admissions
Committee review .the cbange
and report at their" Fetiruary T....-.1 ~ F"N! ........,nw.
'The disease, traced through
--....
fiw genemtions, is manifested
Soan
by disProportionately broad and
In response to another ques- short h a n d s and feet, with
tion, the &lt;!D!Oltive vice presi- stooled. bent fingers and toes,· ·
dent told the Senate to expect and knuckles out of line with
a meaningful decision soon on each olher. 'The little finge&lt; is
what University areas will re- nnusually short, often with onl,y
ceive the "push" of additional one skin crease instead of the
funding. 'The process to deter- normal two.
mine this shifting of resouroes
Amording to Dr. Edwards,
is lengthy, be explained, and the gene canying this condition
inwlves numerous oonferenoes is autosomal dominanl 'The
among Ketter, the vice presi- genetic histozy · can be traced
dents, deans and provosts. He from an alllicted parent, mardefended the procedures, sln!ss- ried to a normal, wbo produced
ing that "you cannot mate de- two offspring with the coodicisions by fiat when 130 pro- tion, each in tum producing a
gngn"~~~toved.still"- ana~-- child with campto-brochydac·-,............
,....,. tyly. These two childn!n, fimt
question, Somit noted that it CIOUSiJ!S, manied eacf\ other and
is "reascuabbe that as inany their first child. a 8011, showed
"""""" should be appointed as severe manifestations of the
) eave" the University and disease. Although J genetic
that the administration ~ "dis- counselor had ad,;,l;,t the partressed by the djgproporiiooate ents that they had only a l-innumber of women leaving."
4 chance of having a normal
At this point, the vice l!resi- child, they didn't limit their
dent 1"!'1 tp leave the meeting family, again proCiucing a child,
and the Senate moved on to this time a girl, severely afe&lt;msider a resolution cslling fected by the disease. Tbose
"the maintenance of the mo- with the condition can Jearn to
mentum of development of the walt and use their hands withAmherst csmpus a matter of out too much trouble, says Dr.
highest priority_" Amording to Edwards, but the offspring of
one of its authors, Dr. Lee the fimt oousil! marriage suJrer
~~a..,~ ~f'{;,,,Sd~ disshling" Conn·
record of the· viewpoint of the
Dr. Edwards believes tbat the
Senate." In urging passage of case is "interesting geoetically
the motion, Dr. 'lbomas Con- because it is elln!IDel.y unusual
no1jy, English, pointed out that ~human ~ to find an
ftmds for the Amherst csmpus examRle __of...a gene for a domfor nerl year have been cut inant liili.t present in double
by the Governor. 'The resolU- dose."
tion pllS8ad with only one "no" ea. In vote casl
Dr. Edwards' work is 60011
Members of the Senate then to be published in the Amerislarted to leave the meeting can JOOTIIDl of Human Genetand soon Dr. William Ba=- ics. It was fimt presented at
the .AJMrican Society of Human
noted the lac:k of a quoninL Genetics Meeting in 1970 at
~
::!,'"~.:.,
whim time a leading geneticist
Research and Creative Activity stated. that as far as be knew
the meeting adjourned with ,.; no other cases bad bel!ll reoogfwther action ,.. &amp;geDda items. ~ Alter preaenlation at the
lntemational CoograB of Human Gellelics in Paris in 1971,
one doctor in lsnlel ' - mntacted Dr. Edwards and thinks
Dr. D. Kenneth Wilson, pro- ~-=spotted the diaeaae
.
fessor of 81-=h communication ma
and Dr. Robert E. McGlooe,
Bam in Waleo, Dr. Edwards
IIIIIIDciate prof- ol 81-=h receiwd his Badlolor ol Medioommunicatioo. h a v e been cine and Badlolor ol named Fellows ol the .AJMrican ....,._ from r ..__,
Bi-=1&gt; and HeariDc Asaocia- aity in 1959. Mt;,;:;d;.,.q;in
tion (ASQ.\). They were u-poal. b e - - - 8.IDOil&amp; 76 ...ty 8PJlOinted Fel- in E.! Africa and the Paaia
G u 1 f witli the .Royal_ Anlv'
lows this year_

'::::

l-,20,1972

t:;

u..r.;:.

:=:,

!':i!:.t
~~............_. by the Student As-

~'b.t..matioaal M&lt;mth

will feature a --.....It display
of wares from other -lands in
the seooad floor edtibit room
ol Nonon. 'The --.....It period,--.unning from~ 15-29, alloont time lor displays to

-

:~~~~=

Medical Corps_ Following residency at the Liverpool Royal
Infirmary, the Liverpool Slan-

and is ......n.ing em a project
ley Hospital and the Wallasey . investigatibg psychological slatVictoria Hospital. be held a us and androgen prod~
fellowship appointment at the rates in males with the~~
Nuflield Unit .of Medical Gen- syndrome. T h i s syndrome IS
etics, LivetpOO) University.
characterized by unusual tallHis current work at genetics, ness and a tendency towards
clinics at Meyer Memorial Hos- aggressive and eriminal behavpital and Buffalo General Hos- ior. He is co-author of a paper
pital inwlves genetic diagnosis on the XYY syndrome in Atand counseling. He is also en- tica prison inmates.

NewSJXllX!rS Say SPA Raise

ls Part ofBudgetReqt.Jm
Amording tp local newspaper
reports, the Senate Professional Association's six per
alcenl!_ .!"!Yty andraise.pronegof-'tiao"naltedstalffor
of """"theSlate uru·ve~rs,·ty, 18
- m
· _

would be provided in the deficiency budget Later in this
legislative session. However,
both aspects of the pay raiae
are subject to approval by the

duded in Governor Rockefeller's executive budget proposal
for the coming year. 'The same
articles indicste that the Slate
is checking with the federal
government on the question of
whether or not the raise can be

=~'8!.::,!:

University ollicials said earlier this weelt that they as yet
bad 110 indication wbelher the
SPA p a y increase would be
separately funded or w o u I d
bave to be provided out of the
University's regular appropriation or ezpenditure oeiling.

SPA. Reports are that if retroactive payment is approved, the
· exira amount of funds needed

CSEA negotiations with the
Slate for the coming year are·
reportedly bogged down.

Legislature.

.

SUII11l1.er Study in SpUn Being Offenrl
U/ B is offering a !llJIIUiler
program in Spain whicll will lui~ r::: ~c:t=
from mid-Jtme to mid- eludes round trip transporta-

rtm

August_ Any ooUege tmdergraduate or graduate student is

eligible for the program which

~li~in~

ization at the University of
Salamal¥"8 ·A basic understanding of. Spanish is preferred, but students will be accepted w i t h 0 u t this hack-

~pmits

will live in private homes, ga\ning the opporbmity to learn about the people and language of Spain.
After arriving in Madrid,
students will be Iaten on a
--.....It guided visit and lecture tour in such cities as Gran...... Seville. Toledo, and Mal-

--

-

-

-

. The Um-aity ol Salaman-

ca is located 125 miles of
Madrid, and 00 miles from the

l"ar1uaui- banlor.

-

tion New Yort/Madrid, room
and board for trips and hous-

ing_
Application deadline is April
1. Applications and information may be obtained from the
Overseas Academic Program,
Slate University at Buifalo, 107
Townsend Hall. or the Department of Spanish. ltalian and
Portuguese, 219 Cro&amp;by Hall

be changed. offering a ..,..,_
variety and incentiW,(;;
visitom to return. As in the
past, the lntematioaal Institute
ol Bulralo will c&amp;r objects for
sale.
A movie series ~
Janwuy 21 with El Cid, 147
Diefendorf, 8 p.IIL, will rtm
every Friday until Man:h 10.
'The Fiesta ... Man:h 11 in
Clark Gym will be a final highlight of the month, offering entertainment by each foceign student club, a fashion show resturing typical clothes of each
oounlly, and intemational food.
Last year, a meal was aerved
in the Fillmore Room wbicb
can accommodate on I y 500
guests. but Kong plans to aerw
it in a Larger facility this year.
other features of International Month will be an International Coffee Houae, demonstrations in Haas Lounge, and
an invited guest speaker, "some
ambassador," S&amp;ys Kong.
'The final schedule for events
will be released 900IL
Kong estimates that at least
$4000 will be spent on the event
which serws to "dose the gap
between American mid foreign
students." To .make it worthwhile, be urges every student
to participate, at least in some
small way.
Interested people may leave
their name and telephone number at the Student Asaociation
Office. Nort&lt;m 205, by January
25.

Campus Clergy
Reaffirm Ties
To University
A day-long meeting last week
of those inwlved in religious
ministry at U/B has resulted
in strooger ecumenical ties, a
re-allirmation of the ministry's
relationship to the University
administration, and a new appreciation of the ~ of the
Amherst campus, the Rev.
James Brewster reports.
Campus ministers representing Roman Catholic, Proteslant
and Jewish faiths agreed to
continue their relationship. with
University President Robert L.
Ketter. 'The status ol "qnalified" faculty ' - allowed tbooe
in full-time ministry r.-lom of
a&lt;a!SB 011 the .,....._-and the
uae of University services.
'The campus clergy heanl
from the Rev. Jolm B. Birdsall.
-repreaenlinJ the North Amherst

~e(!h.;&amp;O:i~i~j!!,;,,::

that group in ..-der to relate
csmpus ministry to the larger
~ as the .,....._ espands in Amherst.
Dr. Bemard Gelbaum. vioP
preaident lor academic aJrairs.

::d,!d...,~..:ae

-a

=

TIIANSFEJI ~TION
The Ollice of Admissions Re- at the Unhoeraity. He complecords has

desianed a -

ID

assist ~ in~ "''IUia-

tions..aJtd_gqui--_
The - let, T - , _ . . . . , PDIICJ,

... "" ...... -

.mnissioni,

ll;ansfer c:nodit, apjlllcation procedures arxl on ~ student perfonnai'ICO. It is from A&amp;R"s Tr•nsfer St:uciMt

Ollice.

mented students lor their cootinued Bellllitivity to mate education relevant, yet called lor
a
smse of discipline in
the ne.-,y tzaining involved
in~

'The group visited the Am-bent site of the UniW!r&amp;ity lind
toured a dormitory calnples
acheduled lor CICCIJIIBIICY this
falL

�} - - , 20, 1912

&lt;REPORTER_,

Steegmann Studies Effects
Of Cold on Racial Traits
By GUS PATUI'O

u~~s:.:r-ne..

To most people another perIIDD's face is simply the mask
be wears through a lifetime of

~tharsthal

But to Dr. Albert T . Steegmann Jr., the many faces of
present day man may very well
bold clues to tmderstsDding
bow our IIDCient ancestorS wandered the earth .and adapted to
various euvirooments.
Since 1964, Dr. Steegmann,

~~ _an~logist, ~
- - ilill'en.nt

i!f. -o{ t:"P!ri'd-

bave di1fermt facial c:baracteristia!.
"Since man bas spent at
least 50.000 yeam on• esrtb
adapting to the cold, irs only

~!,~tha~y,!

cold adaptive." ssys Dr. Steegmann.
T-In-

At firsi, much of the research
consisted of t!lUllllining explanations of many of the lesding
theorists, but in 1967, using a
three-year, $42,700 grant from
the National Science Foundation, be spent a year in Hawaii
testing some of the theories and
a few ideas of his own.
At the University of Honolulu, Dr. Steegmann placed 100
men of Northern European or
Northern Asian ancestry in a
chamber where be measured
facial temperatures. F o r 70
minutes at a time, the men
would sit in fan-made winds
and in zero degree centigrade
temperatores.
. Dr. Steegmann found that
the sharp-nosed, stresmlined
races of Northern Europeans
were better suited for keeping
wano tmder cold temperatores
than the low profile, rotmded
fsces or Northern :AsianS.
Many anthropologists hold
the opposite view-that chubJ&gt;y
cheeked, h i g h cheek-honed,
rounded faces, such as Eskimos
have, are better suited to avoiding frostbite.
·

:W~~ ':,.~~r ~~= ~

&lt;continu;d from pa£e 1. col. 4)
Wright conceded the Bulls
can't he mediocre and best
Ohio Stste. His capsule scouting report shows why: "Ohio
Stste bas good size, they're fast, .
they move the puck well---ro
fast it makes your head swim."
Since two six-goal defests at
Ohio State earlier in the season. Wright hss devised new
strategies to use against the
Buckeyes. Another change
which he thinks will he a plus
will he the presence of defenseman Les Teplicky. Teplicky.
sat out the first two games with
injuries. He's recovered now,
~ Adaptdano
Dr. Steegmann's findings, and Wright says, "he's reslly
improved
our defense."
however, do not mean that the
latter tbeozy is to he scrapped.
Wright alao fe&lt;;ls the added
What may have happened, he experience of tlfe Bulls' raw
sliggests, is that hundreds of players will stand the team
thousands of years ago both better this weekend. ''It's tsken
Northern Europeans and the longer than I thought for our
Northern Asians adapted equal- freshmen to get used to the
ly well to extreme cold. hut in- team. But they're playing as a
di1fermt ways.
team now."'
It was found, for instsnce,
Wright's prediction?
that chubl&gt;y cheeks actually
" We're definitely a better
cause the sltin to get colder. team then the last time. But
This could mean, however, that six goals better, I don't know.
fat cheeks and high cheekbones They're going to score goals
designed by evolution to on us. Now we have to do the .
. . - the nass1 passages and same."
sinuses of Northern Asians,
while N o r t h e r n Europeans Faculty ·aub 11nmc1t
adapted in other ways.
"'f you're gomg to the BullsDr. steeimann choee Hawaii Buckeye .hockey game, why not
for his control research because come to the brunch at the Facso many di1fermt types of races ulty €lub,'' is the suggestion of
live in the islands. To test'""u n- the U/B Women's Club. To
der adual conditions, be spent help people get to the game
some time in Alaslm the (ol- busses wiU leave from the hack
lowins year, measuring facial of the Club.
resctions of American Grs on
Menu for the brunch incold -ther ·field bips.
cludes: chicken a Is king,
sauteed chicken livers, all kinds
~Dr. Steegmann will continue of eggs, loX, bagelS and cream
cheese, ssusage, bacon. fresh
his research on two fronts.
· He spent the last two sum- fruit, herring and hot spiced
mers in Canada on exploratory
visits to Cree and Ojibwa In- tm.n,:'-~ .is from 11 a.m.
dian villages in the northern- to 1 p.m. and is open to fsculmost racbes of Ontsrio, trying ty, &lt;~taff and Women's Club
• to make contact with the In- members. .Cost is $2.75 for
diana so be can conduct re- adults, $2 for children .under
search among them in the fu- 12, and $1 for "children under
five. A brj:ng-yow'-own drink
ture.
.
This summer, he and a bar will he· set up in the Red
graduate assistant will retom to
reservations will he ~
the repon to get the research.
cepted until 5 p.m., Thu{sday,
underway.
.
Janusry 2XI, and .can he made
Meanwhile, at U/B Dr. by calling the Faculty Club,
8toepJan will continue re- ert "3232; Mrs. Ricbanl Koehl,
search in a cold chamber at the 634-7267: or by stopping by the
Ridp LM . . . _ wbem be Club in Harriman Library.

---

Somit Describes His Duties to GSA:
('To Assist President Ketllir in ... '

A visit from Executive Vice
President-Albert Sornit and the
defeat of a ·proposal for a student-wide judicinry followed by
strong support for .exploring the
posSibilities of a graduste student union were highlights of
M o n d a y's meeting of the
Graduste Student Association
' (GSA).
Somit's appearance ·was the
result of a letter to President
Robert Ketter last fall. In the
etter; the GSA Senste asked
Ketter for a job description for
both the executive vice president and the vice president for
academic a.f£airfC"At that time,
Dr. --.,n.nn the group was concerned about
bas conducted a study o! how
facial characteristics of rats
are alfected liy being raised in the University."
The executive vice president
different climates. From that
study, Dr. Steegmann bas began his talk on "a delicate
found that rat£ raised in colder •-ubject - what it is I do," by
climates have longer,' leaner discussing the history of the
fsces than those growing up in post which Came into existence
warmer environments-a differ- during the Meyerson adminience that could have resulted sLration ''because of the deonly from cold adaptstion. Fur- m!Ulds on the president." Stresther studies will he made with sing that his position bas its
counterpart in m 0 s t or the
rats.
Dr. Steegmann, associate brge universities in this counchairman of the U/ B Anthropology Department, hss been a
U/ B faculty member s i n c e
1966.

Hockey-

Roo&amp;id

3

try, Somit explsined that the
post is necessary to "screen the
president from some of the bivial decisions in running the
University." It was alao necessary to have "pne office that
cuts across all levels of the
University."
'Assists the l'rMident In'
The job description for the
executive vice president di1fers
from the presidenrs in only
four words-"assists the presillent in~" Soiffit exjjlaiiieii. This difference, though, · makes for
apologetic introductions- 'Tm
sorry the president could not
make it but the executive vice
president is here," be humorously added.
For the rest of his hour visit,
Sornit fielded questions from
the audience. He explsined that
while the statement "the president deals with outside matters
and the executive vice president deals with inside concems" is a 14 good approi:imation." it is best "not to push it
too far."
He was alao asked to outline
the objectives of the Ketter
administration. Among these,

Local Health Neffis Survey
Being Conducted by 2 Units

h~

ssid, are: completion of the
North (Amherst) campus since
"it is essential if we are to continue to grow;" absorption or'
budgetary cuts with minimal
impsct; survival of this acadernic year without reducing
the student body or stall size;
and continued instructional excellence: In discussing these
goals, Somit pointed out that
li!e present situstion "~ a l'!ng
dtstance from_.".. de~om~
one:• an&lt;! ~f 1f ~ "~
desu-e of this administration to
get the University moving
again." This will he accomplished, in psrt, be explained,
by . usink:ing some money into
'critical fsculty appointments'."
In answering other questions,
Somit revealed that difficulties
in setting up a Jewish Studies
program are "almost on the
verge of solution." He alao ssid
that while he didn't think there
was conllict between the various Faculties· on this matter,
he refused to comment on the
situstiOIL
Gelbaum Expected to Appear
At the end of the questioning,
GSA President Mike Nicolsu
thanked Somit for coming but
asked him to convey to the
president the organization's desire for Ketter to respond with
"his perceptions of the jobs of
executive vice pfesident and
vice piesident for acsllernic affairs." Dr. ·sernsi-d Gelhs.um,
vice president for academic affairs, is expected to appear helore the GSA for a similar talk
in the near future.
During the second half of the
meeting, the group discussed a
series of constitutional amendments which would in\oolve the
GSA in a student-wide judiciary. In a surprise m o v e ,
Roger Cook. sociology; introduced a motion- calling for a
graduste student union to replace this judiciary. In"the motion, Cook ssid "the student

By GUS PATUTO
given to pregnant women.
u,w.,.,;,y lnJonn..Uon ServOce.
"It's important," said Dr.
For the last two months a Warnecke, "that women get a
groupo( U/ B interviewers have pap smear regularly so they
been asking women in the Buf- don't leave themselves unfalo inner-city such questions guarded against a d is ease
as "Do you use patent medi- which bas a high cure rate if
cines?" "Do ypu think someone detected esrly enough. Considcan catch cancer fr6m someone ering tliat cancer of the cervix
else?" and "Do you often go is the number five killer of
downtOwn to the movies?"'
bla~ women today, the mesAt first glance it would seem sage must be gotten across
that_ __.the questions are un- · about just what a pap smear
relaii!d'. But they are not. They is."
are part or an over-all study of Lung Cancer Alannlng
Buffalo health needs conducted
Dr. Warnecke ssid it is alao
by the Department of Sociol- important that people become ~'U:.,,tj~~;ne . ~~
ogy and the Department of So- more aware or the dangers of he u n d e r constant political
cia! and Preventive Medicine.
lung cancer. The disesse, he pressure from the administraArmed with comprehensive said, is increasing at an alann- tion to conduct itself according
questionnaires, a team of inter- ing rate among women and is to their apectstions." Instead
viewers will ask some 2,000 in- one of the most prevalent types of this, he proposed an organiner-city women by next spring of cancer among men.
7.ation that "would extend and
how their feelings toward the
Oats gathered .from seeming- protect student rights in all
community and a v a i I a b I e ly unrelated questions - "The areas of student interest . . .
health care facilities af!ect how church I attend is within walk- by me8ns of coUective bargain•
&lt;they and their fainilies try to ing distance to my house;" "I ing."
.
meet their ,medical ueeds.
often go downtown to the movAlter debate on the merits of
Tbe dats will eventuslly he ies"- will help health planners the student court in which one
given to area health planners, identify the most popular and of the authors of the studentthe projecrs director, Dr. Rich- prevalent groups or activities wide system, Christina Grahl,
ard Warnecke, explains. This , in a community. This, in tum, French, recommended ita dewill provide iefia.ble informa- will pinpoint the best sites for feat, the motion was v o t e d
tion to help them ptan future distributing I i t e r a t u r e and d o w n overwhelmingly. Cook
programs for improving health pamphlets on preventive medi- was then appointed chairman
care and for educating people cine, Dr. Wsrnecke explsineil.
of an ad hoc committee to inabout the health services avail;
individusl responses to the vestigate t h e possibilities of
able to them.
survey wiU he confidential but forming a union. The group is
Basis for Masurlng Changes
summary information will he to report ita findings at the
''The survey informa.tion will given to doctors, clinics, and next GSA meeting.
In other actions, the GSA set
also serve as a basis. f'or meas- other health agencies in the
up a committee to "look into
uring changes in community survey community.
the
question of the Jewish Stuattitudes toward the use of · The project is being conhealth care services,'' Dr. War- ducted with funds from a five- dies program" and find out
what
is delaying faculty apnecke said.
year grant from the National
Much of the survey wiU deal Cancer Institute in Washing- pointmenta. GSA representstives
to
the Faculty Student
with what mothers and their ton. D. C. Once the initial Association
were alao charged
families know about detecting study is completed, similar surwith
finding
out wbars hapand preventing various types of veys will he conducted in other
cancer. .Q uestions s u c h as psrts or Buffalo and in neigh- pening to the Vending Service.
''Have you ever bad a psp boring s u b u r b a n and rutal
smear?" ''Where would you get areas.
HIGHER TUITION?
a pap smear?" "Do you plan
The first phase of the survey An increase in SUNY tuition was
to teach your daughter how to will tske in the area generally suggested by Gov. Rockefeller in
give herself a breast examina- east of Main Street to Bailey his "State of the State" message
tion?" and "Have you ever Avenue and Grider Street and this week. According to the GoYtried to stop smoking?" will be south from West Delavan Ave- ~~~ 0~8~:J:!ui~~np~~~:u~
asked.
nue to William Street Sl!d leges in the_ State while straining
Many j,eople, says Dr. War- Brosdway.
SUNY facilities. Not to mention
necke. lesve themselves open
Principal investigator is Dr. the fact-that SUNY needs sources
~ illness because they are un· ~on Graham, professor of so- • of extra revenues in light of budget

!::!!."=
o~ ~t!m:~ .·~=· ~;.:~':,';,::
ture of many common diseases. will
analysis of the
supervise

Many women, for example,
consider a pap _smear a pregnsncy test tbougll actuslly it is
a for cervical cancer often

data. Women from the innercity trained bv the Survey Research Center will conduct the
interviews.

~~ R=~·~~~e~i~ut~~~~u:

SUNY tuitioiiS--illready scheduled
to jump to $700 a year in 1973are but a quarter of the private
tuition average.
-----------

�GRE~

4

~20, 1972

(Bye, Bye, Miss A.Iperjc3n Pie' VieWed as Being
ANostalgicF~ to an Era That Has Ended
By CURT MILLER
Until tecently if you asked
anyone what American pie was
they would reply: "A.rple." But .
now "American Pie is something else. It is Don Mclean's
oow album which is at the top
of record swveys nationwide.
American Pie is a 90DI-poelll
which can be interpreted on
many levels 80 that its mmning
is sometimes elusive.- It is not .
like. a jig_..,w puzzle with interloc:lrlng pi"""" which fall into
plaa.- to make a rigidly defined
picture. Instead, it is a montage-a nosts!Jic review of rock
and roll mUSlC in which the
images are superimposed. Some
are dear. Some are shadoWy.
'lbe net result is that no statement is made but emotions are
evoked.
CUrt Miller is a senior journalism

major. The anchor man for Amherst C.bi&lt;Msion's weekly "news

capsule." he is a member of ttlis
JNr'S
Beard f o r tile magazine, a position he gained
by sublriftllni• examples of his

Co"-

poetry. Curt .has also written a
"l&gt;&lt;&gt;rJIClllfllphlC scr..nplay," "The
Professional," now beina filmed in
Toronto.

Before lilitering into the labyrinth· of ·lyrics, we must accept a presupposltioil•fu ·llct as ,
a guide. Pie, P-,-"1-E, is an •
8CIOil)I'ID for Peojile" lh Entertainment. And the r e f r a i n,
"Bye-bye Miss American Pie,"
is, in a way•..a ·farewell to an

era

.

Drurnooflbrdom
Mcl..e&lt;!n opens

the song at
the Impressionable-age of about
twel~ when most boY,. are
d8uwring . news.papers. His
dream is to be a rock and roll

star.

.

.

'-lanc--lcon-----mlllle.-

-If
__ ...

I D - - - - A n d l - l f l Mel mycN--1 could
tt- .....,.. dance - And maybe lhoy'd be ' - for. a
- - B u t Fellru.y . . . - m e - w i t h - - I ' d - Bod • tile daintDp, I couldn't ode lnOI'e st.p I can't
I crlod - I . - about
brideBut - . . t t q tDuched m e - . , - tile cloy tile millie diedSo.

his-

..,....,.
o.-

my a-y to t h e - but the was dry
Them pod old boys...., clrir*IIIK wt1isbJ and rye

Sift&amp;IIIK -'0 be tile cloy- I die. This'll be the cloy- I cUe.

Did ,au the of !..owe ..;;. do ,au have faith In God
· - - l f t l l e Bible- us s o - - do ,au bellewln rod.
and rofland con ,au teac:b me- to.,.dance real.._- Well,
1 "- ,ou're In " - with him 'ca&lt;ne I saw ,au clonclna In
the om - You ldc:bcl of! ,our . . _ and I dig rllythmlc - I a -.y - - -.cillK buck with a
pinll c:amation and a pldwp trud&lt; - But I I was out
of lud&lt; tile day tile millie died - I starlled olllllnc.
(Chorus)

- f o r. ten rears wew-. on our own and -crows fat on
a roflinll Slonenot - I t ID be- When the
sane for the 1111111 and q.-. In a coat he _.__liNn - I n
,au and me-Oh,
-tile lliftc- ~ - · the jester his """"'
CftiOI!II -Tho ......_., adjoumeol, "" retu.,_ And .l.onowo . - a on Mane, the quartet practicad
!n lbe park- And-...,.~ In tlle-cloilt the cloy the muole

But_..

·---from

jeAor

-.

.

from

.

(Chorus)

Holter - I n • ..........,-· Tho Byrds t h - of! their fallout
. . _ - ollllt mile$ high _ _faiiUic-- Anol Lennon fell • .
the the . . . _ titod for • fonnrd pass - with the jeAor
on the........., In a
the halftime a i r - perfUme ...... the - - plaJed a man:lllng tune - We -all
cat up to - . oh, but ... nell!"r eat- .... _ - Tho pla,en
triad to ·tho field, the man:llina band reJusecl to yield - Do
, a u - - - . . . . . _ the cloy the muP&lt; diad- W o -

cat--

olllllnc.

~~

oh Ond thono .;, ....;. d In - .,._, a generation lost In -with 110 time loft ID st.rt -eafn - 5o come on jaclt be ·
~ be quick. ~Flash sat on a c a - - 'cause fire Is the
- · · o n l y - - Oh and as I -~ hlnl•on - ,stap;,my ·
In fists of , . a - ,N o anpi ,bom In hell

could---_.--..
=....-r•
hands,_..--

the flanMS d l - high
iniD the nliM to Iicht -the sac:rtfldal - - I saw Satan lallflhlnc
If- day the m~ died --: We _.. ~.'!~~!!&amp;-

End9{the
SPA-SUFT

ing. But she tumed and walbd
·

away (suicide) •

4nd remember the old fashioned record stores where you
could go into a booth and gyrate to the sonss of your favor~ ite artist? Tbet's the sacred
store where the music won't
play. Another way the unasic
. died.
McLean's next bit of symbolism is not entirely consistent. He tslb of the Father:
Elvis Presley, whereas .Holly is
referred to as the Father earlier. 'lbe son: Bob Dylan. And
the Holy Ghost: Buddy Holly.
McLean sees all of them as
being on their way out.
Don Mclean gives us no
revelations. He does not say
that rock awl roll died at one
particular t i m e. It suffered
many deaths, each upeetdng
the poets, the cbildta&gt; -and
of us rock fans.
Bye-bye Miss American Pie.

an

We miss you.!

Jobs Scarre.

For Ph.D.~
PhD:'s seeidng employment
bones at the annual mid-winter

-aCadeinic meet,ings found the

au

but bare, The
c,.,.,;,u,k of Hig!J6 Education .
reports.
So -acute were the frustmGons. the Chroni&amp; said, U..t
job cupboards

b~==~
Assoclation tske steps to limit

PILI?; ~on.tb&amp;ro~~
: n ' s meDWeri 'be tBXed to
provide milisisteoce fOr an 'OI;timated 1,000 unemployed J&gt;istory FhD.'s.
History departments ai'OWIIf
the nation have listed 150
openings with the Association
which bas nearly 2,300 job
seekers registered.
At the Eastern brand&gt; of the
American Pbiloeopbical .A811&lt;&gt;ciation, fewer than 100 departments listed jots, while more
1,000 applicantS ......, on

~U£
l!llft'Oil:

lh response to the leUer of
Dr, Fries in the December 16
issue of the R~ ~
a comparison-of SPA aDd AFT
contradj;, SPA ~ like to
point• out the -~ facts:

ityl':"J::.=~~ma:;;

repre&amp;ented by 'The' I.ecislative
ConfereDCe, a poup similar to
SPA, wbiJe oilly the lectmers
and teacbing_BIIIIistants..!!J!Uepresented by UFI'.
Item: Repnlinc academic

~li:,!!t!J~a::.!d

to in his earlier leUet does not
appear in the body of the
CUNY-UFI' contzact, but caly
in the preaDJble of the contzact,
thus casting a cloud ..,.,. its
enforceabili.ty.
Item: 'The refereDce to language COIIIlel1ling SUNY-SPA
grievance procedure is quoted
by the SUFI' repnloentstive in
an incomplete fa s h i o..a; and
when .-1 in full ~
~ ~Y to that m the
Item: R_..,;.... released
time for~and bandling grievances, the AFI' alliliate at Erie Community College
(as reported in the Buffalo Eoerring NelDtl Oct. 17, 1.970) was
decertilied as bup.ining agent
because of """"""' of tu181J8We&lt;ed pleas for stalf assistaba! and
otber services."
While Dr. Fries does not indicate if be bas apressed these
views peraooally, or ollicially as
• ·teiuesentstive of SUFI', SPA
wishes to apress its disappoint.ment at the use of partial truths
.and .distortions in an attempt
,jo discredit. SPA : a~ a time
.,hen the ~ of ,all of us
in !be barg8iniDg unit beie at

··lODe ut•:Mcl:eon's idols and,
=~~to~
indeed, .one of the fathe,rs of
tssk of Implementing the currock and roll as we know it
I mot a &amp;lrf . _ the blues and I her for some happy
rent
SUNY-SPA contract. Furtoday was Buddy Holly. He
--but-justsmUedancl-tumed. - y - l w e r t - t o
ther, we see no need .to continue
wrote sqcb old-time favorites
the sacred stora whore I'd heard the music: JNI'S· l&gt;efore - but
this
un roductive diaJoiue beas "Peggy Sue." ·Holly died in
tween '/);_ Fries and our SPA
the man thono Aid the ....play - In the the
a fiery plane crasb about ten
children saamocl, the cried and the peels dreamed - but
chapter via the Reporfb.
years qo. !IUs Holly~s wiclo\l'ed
not a - _,spoken, the churdl al were -and
-EXECU'DVB IIOOD
bride whO is. -talked about. And
t h e _,, _ I' admire.-, the Father, Son and Holy m - t Buffalo University
Buddy Holly's is the "music"
They callflht the last tr¥1 for the coast, the cloy the music: died
Center Chapter, SPA
that died..·
-And theJ- ollllln&amp;.
From there, the song goes
(~
Copyri~~Jt JP7I . BM1
T~ Reporter COIICIUS and
into a history of the era. 'lbe
The Modem l..anguapi .A811&lt;&gt;- hereby decltzrea an .end to 1M
typicial rock stsr or, at least,
decline
of
rock
musk
~For those IDho eare.
the idealized image of one drove•
ings which are shared in rom- :"tti~~~~ ~ e=h organizutimc
hDa its own
around the countryside in a Tho Klrw- ~
nerosktter
to use aa its pkrtNext,
.&amp;Qme
time.
psases-10
Cheyy pick-up truck. This is
~lmJ did tske the crownjob
mid'!!:;:',:W~~Iianby
to several times in the , years. And .Bob Dylan enters from Presley as a folk Rock l,030~-~";. at form.-JI..T.JL
with. .!W! •~- "Like a Rolling
Tbe "Book of Love" refers Stone." He IS the jester wbo ~ro:ufih Presley's title four-year colleps (akmg !With
Be a tl e John ~ was 293 "possible" positiOB&amp;). Howto a 1958 rock """'t by the 1!8J11e sings to the King of Rock and
name recorded by the Bel- Roll: ElVis Presley wbo often quite interested by the writings ever, 900 additional PhD.'s in £DnOa:
mont&amp; 'lbe Bible is mentioned dressed in gold, and also to the of Marx. And while be read, English are ~ to be
Will you please give some
Queen of Rock and Roll, Little his band practiced in the park_ sraduated this year. lh foreipl publicity to a widely held opin~ ipon~ :Wu~ Richard, wbo at best can be 'The Byrds sang Eigbt Miles languages, ualy about 350 open- ion
... C8lllpUS, reprding the
Love" was written by descnbed as elleminate.
High, and they fell from popu- ings were reported in the As- length of Christmas vacation
someone ,up above.
Dylan's style is aomething larity, probably because many soc:iation's .S\I!'V".V. witb jobs this year:
A vacation is always too
'lbe following recre- like that of James Dean. 'The of their original members left being .particularJy llllllnle in
ate&amp; the mood of the typical reference to bis voice can be the group.
Germari.
.
abort; in subjective time; but
h!sh acboOI dances which took interpreted in lloo ways. His
'lbe next football scene teU8
Tbe American Association
thU was ridiculous!
p18ce in gyms, to the melodies _-'Oice is often considered un- of Dylan's motorcycle accident the AdVIUIIleiDIIDt of ~
Sincerely,
of bands with greased hair.
musical like that of most peo- which put him in a cast for beard that about 3 per oent of
McLean says be koow be .ple. But, more imporiantly, it quite some time. 'The sergeants the nation's scientists and 3.5
was out .of luck the day !be is the CDIDIDOD voice; that is; playing their marching tune re- per cient .of engineen are unOlemcial~
music died. Foreshadowing the it is saying things about feel- fers to a Beetles album-"Ser- employed, with an additioaal
geant Pepper's l..onely Hea:ris 3 per cent considered "lmderClub Band." And no group
employed": U~tD _
really .able to tske over ·rrom · reported highest amoifa pb,yai.L~
the Beetles wbo would not yield &lt;:i&amp;ts, with chemists a clOSe....,.
Tbe IICOIIinc and - 4.__.,. _
;...,.,..., _ . ......_ ar .,. """"- ..,
until they brolre•up.
ond. _'lbe ~ Insti- of miag division of Inatructiooal
s- u.......,. o1 N- r ..... BaH..., ...., ..... SL. a.u.... · Tho llattilia said - that ualy 111 em- ~bas moved to ,the uIf. r . ~42J.f •. _ UitarW oitiaat Joo.t..,d • a - 2u. 2SO
An.e Rolling stOnes :ue re- l'hysica
ployers tume111. ·up to intelview ~ aection'ot tile Ol6ce of
( , . _ Jn). .
..-.. - •
ferred to neD, with their """' 618 job seebrs at iiB 11111111111 Compater Sarvico8, CliO_Rid&amp;e
L IFli3TurY ROIFUJm
Jumping Jack Flash. 'Jbe devil meeting. In i986, 100 employ- 1.al, .Rm. 46. It was foiaafy
k&gt;cated at 6 Ha,yes HallCJmes froill a ~ album, era iill:ervieMd 130 job candi~"Their Satanic MB,ieetim Be- dates. 'lbe Amoriaui ..........te
,User s..Ma. will ,JIIIIF oller
~"
. • • .•
.
of .B!&lt;&gt;Jolic:!d ~how­ a IICOl'iug ..mae -Wblcb will
ao.eaar 7'. llfULnT
pmvide the ...._
academic
Miclr. Jagger -JS the devil on ~· · eaperieDced an
tlie Biage, .at the Altsmount rodt .. the· IIIIIDber of -.players oaapnunity and other loQal eil'
~N;",_~o;.~val'wliere one apectator waa i!lterviewing joh aJllllicutB. ··
acaa.-1 institutions with
killed, and """" the Hells AnIn W"""!ncton. a . . , . , . _ timely """ ......m,ful IIDIJring
JOIUt A. Cl.OU'rlD
- gels~~ ~ ~ !fie spell fo~ the c-&amp;tiwe -co11aae ~ of machine rMdable
_~ IJlU!DC di'!li . here, too, as RecisliY, wbidt """""- ~ eumination and ftalllJdl inSUSAM GJtaBJWW'OOD
this waa another factor leading wbo want ·jobs with coU.wes stnmaats.
to the downfall Of rOck festivals. U..t want people, told the
Further information DillY be
. Janis Joplin is the girl wbo Clrronick that the marbt in . obtained
Cllllltscting Cbarles
amp the blues. A smile best most diacipii,_ ".._.,. to be F. Dunn at 831-1181 or Carol
befits t - ~tude. -..rda liv- as clepr....e.t !Ill ~ year." .
J . Stq:Geoaon at 831-1.245.

- ·t

l::d_

::=:::

Short Vacati.Gn?

"Boof::r

far

.;:.;0008

w-.....

.-

--

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

---

&amp;xring Moves ..

was

GREPORTE

-.....

u-.

m.:.-

by

�5
G(JIB

GJ»RESIDENTIAL COMMENTARY

&lt;NOTES

What is the Administration Policy
On&amp;iual OpportUnity in Education?
-

A: ..'lbe mot t~ of Slate
University of New York,
"Ia Bad&gt; Become AU He
Is c.peble of Being," is indicative of our O"C!Jmibnel'lt
to equal ~ty for all
~ofl11&lt;le,color,

reliPon. or linancial - - I n the last few
yMJB, we bave IDIIde mnsidenlble in developiaa ud implemontinc pro-

- . creed,

-udthefor minority
~
cies of u:'W::..ty must
mnlinue to empbasUJe this
orienlatiolk As president of
the Uniwnlity, I.....- tbat
our ollioes,.......,. ....t.fllculty will be bath re&amp;pCIIIIIive
ud re&amp;pollllible in this .......
and that their elforts will
reftect the best of the University.
~-.,.....,_,..,the

-of!M~r

A: 'lbe best, I belieYe, lias
been-imd will mntinue to
IJe.....&lt;!lforts to achieve program quality -an ~
oo educatinc individuals
ratber !MD ectiDil·diteclly.,..
a social action a
·. A
shift of~::= this
latter JXllllil!ility woWd lead
'.to • politicbed 'and - - '

. 'ft!;:..~::::; :.O"t~

::r
__.,..,_,_,_

tion to act &lt;Jbjectivel in the
broad ....... of
oppOrtuni.ty.

Q: ~ '"equol - " " " "

maintain-a-beaming-eenterwhich provides .,.,..,_ in
areas of particular help to
many EPIS studen-..ead-

ing, writinc; comnrunicetion,
and bilingual ......m_ In addition, instnlctional programs
in Black Studies and Puerto
Rican Studies, I i It e other
regular departmental programs, are available to all
students.

_____
-·-·-'*---.
Q:-

Q: -

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

=

to~'::!\::;;

educational attainments are
as valid as those of any
otber student at this institu-

........ .,_, at
==a~is=
To
to

most otber inslitutions.
be able live
tbe typ5 of desired, ...............tal OIJUI1IeS,
_,;,) orienlation
ud totorini are a~
mnlillue to lJe available. In
additioo, .... baYe and will
mnlinue to do everythinc ....
am to IJI'OYide every disadvanlqed aludent """"P'ed

an _ ... ..-ue of

..........

........... bath linmeial ud

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

----Q:-lathe~or­

..- -

A: 'Die basic stnicture for

~~·
t=.~.
is tbe
Experi-

_....
in ladependlltullim (EPJS). -.1&gt;lw.d in 1ll68. EPJS ~
to..., ()office of tbe ~
of U~te Studies
( .......... anceotly~
-a.te clean wbo ia a
millodty - ' - l i v e ) . Ita

ed

atudada are _ . . . UniYBraity llladolaD; tbey are
cial Gilly in tbe _
, ::
tbey are receivinl a" t r a
CIIUIB!Iinc ud tutarinc to
help. tbem 8IJIDed. We alao

For
tbe University budgeted nearly $1
million for .,._of programs
and oliDos .._ung equal
opportunity. fn addition, tbe
east of instruclioo and SIJj&gt;port or instruclioo for tbe
numbers involved is $1.8
onilliao. Another $1.8 millioo
is provided for the Coopen.tive College Center, and financial aid f r o m federal,
State and eDdawment ftmds
amoun.ts to more· ·tboni $2
miJ1.ion. 'l1oe to t a I dollar
amount for tbese procrams,
then, is _..,mnatety $6.6
miJ1.ion.
.

A: Tbe Univenity main-

=.d.=-~mnuni~

which aaoist not ool~
demic programs but also in
tbe design ud implementation of a an"--nmn~ aeries

of~r;;~at

...,..,..,.} levels: A nceotlyeJqiOIDiied Presidential AdYis-

~='!;'~~

oo matters~· ; tbe Office of
Opportunity

serves as
administrative
arm of that mnunittee; a
'for
ulty and Staff~'Fac:
Recrui-t
aasiats tbe Olice of tbe Academic Vice President. Otber

Ccimini-

OlliCe of'Mi~
SCudent Affairs-

Q: . _ is the .-wily's

-In - . c t-..&amp;.-., - ---

.~~tile

worb toward relieving pressures on students and tbe institution and is also invoiYed
with tbe el&lt;lemal oommunity; the Olice of Minority
Faculty and Stall Recruit-

••conu..-.a,- =~~~~~
_..r
Women Faculty a n d Stall
A: Definitely not! Both
tbe University and tbe students in tbe programs share
a CDIJCeiD for quality. 'lbe
students emolled ba,ve indi-

==~='::
fices of tbe University in

bell.'ing them increase minority and female - .tation; tbe Urban Afta.irs Of- fice, and tbe Peraoomel Office whi&amp; aponsors pftJp8Jm
to aasist individuals in paring for and passing civil
aerrioe euminations.
Q:--IM-of
- f u r the EP1S
A: Students en ler into
E PIS: directly from high
scbool; fro m a .University
• SUIDJDeC program known as
JJpward Bound which helps
high scbool juniors and ......
iors _..., to become college students; f r o m otber
institutions of higher leaming, and from tbe CooPitalive College Center in Buffalo (an information, eiiBluation, refenal and tacbing

_....1

~=!3
.tbeiStste
and
. .
by State
University at Bufralo, which

~~~1':'*
collece-r e a d y and thereby

0: " '" .

able to emol.l in eitber public or private institutions of
higher education).

. ....... .., ......... , •• =•c

-

1M . - . . , . .

.. .,._,.,., of ..... .tantr
on ... ......

..t of .......,....,

............
A:
1971-72,

other~

a

. A: Some 1,120 ~
uetes are ·&amp;tudying at
tbe
Univell!i1'_Y. in - opacifically ilirectad to . . _
wbo' bave been diMdvan-

1aaed-~722

are in tbe ~ divioiaa; 888

1

___..........
__
0:----

.....,

~-·

-A :'IR 1!lli&amp;-'10,..:tbere
. -· ..,..,

376 ,..;,.my ~ of
the University. Las_t ~.
the
509, indDoliJoc:
162 - famlty
.._......
( IL5
, _ CliSil of total faculty ) ;
128 . , . - . I staff (21
per ClOIIl of tbe total) ; ud

· 219~staff

~~~...1.':
::=;-'.-!"'! ~ --- new
and replacemeDt
A: We bave a 1ar&amp;e minority ......-u&gt;tion in our pro-

fessiaroal scbools, in CXJillpari1100 to wb&amp;t otber institutions
are doinc- 'l1oe Sdoool of
Medicine , which had on I y .
Dine minority group mem-

IIPI•oin!ueots undoubtedly
slcNal the pace o f but plan to tepiD our
itMMiWfibMi

85

90011 8S

~

!ole. l'rcJcre;s in this must and will aoatiDDe.

bers eruoUed in 1969 bas 46
minority students this year
out of a total enrollment of
486. 'l1oe Sdoool of Dentistry
bas 21) minority,-{;tudents enrolleol B o t b ihese acbools
are inYOIYedJn a long-range
Career Development program with tbe minority com-

munity. lAw and Jurispudeoce, with only one black

freshman emolled in 1967,
"""" bas a total of 73 minority students - 36 of tbem
freslomeo. Tbere is a serious
problem in providing minority students in tbe . profes..
sional and graduate areas
with financial aid. Neither

State ..... federalgoYerllllii!lll
provides """""""' for this
There is also a
problem in providing bou&amp;ing for tbese students and
their familil$.

__ .__,_Ill ..

Q:--IM---

-·

toor-._--

A: Tbe University w iII
mntinue to push for aole-

'1'-"' funds. Tbe money

e

pnololem, ·~~owew:r. is y r y
....t too1o,y.
minority pro-

-u

- - a r e to be as ...........rul
.. - thelll to be, the
minority Cllllllllllllity w i II
also have to aoUe adequate
finandnt of ,..I opportunity ..... of its pri-

__
__ .. _

___
.. .,.
·-~·-·­
RBIY~- ·

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

A: 0.. .,...._ a tlat
. . . _ tbe University's 19'11

L-------------------~----~--~----------~

___
..
----L
......... .._
.
........._..__
_____........
____..
-.._...... ____
. . ____
_.,.__

MD71_11t_'JZ

_...

"'----~
.___.,.
="':-....=-::

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

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

�}~.20, 1!172

UDCSeeking
Consultants
From Faculty
'The Urban ~t

~r~',.'!!':v~~ml~li=.u:.fi::!

Faculty Senate to belp find
talented UQiversity community
members to aasiat in building
a new community in Amherst.
David Parker, UDC representative, gpoke to the Esecutive
Conunittee . tast Wednesday
about the organization's need
for consultants.
Since UDC normally P.!_lys
consultants to researdl different &amp;n!8S of a planned new
U/B'o _ _ _ to _ _ _ _ Oneoflhe community, Parker hopes "to

,_
Pretzel Hid?

--...-....-.t.-

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

1n SOOiethlne
Clllrt Gym ..
c:c.cb Ed - - ,__...m.. Nut home mm:h• JY Qud - . . . . . , _ , Comlne Erie CC's, J•n. 29.

Buffalo Planned Parenthood Center Offers
Coosultant Servire for Other Areas in WNY
County, from Canada, from the
oommunities of Western New
York-questions that add up to
the one big question: How do
p~ Parenthood of Buffalp
you set up a family planning
in whida many indiDUIUDls as- service?
socioUd with U/ B are inooloed.
StaJis are brought in for an
entire day of training and obBy SANDRA BERWWIT".l
servation in the Buffalo Center.
.sc:;... ...
• .....,,..._
An orientation program is set
What medical IAists are part up for case workers. Educationof your physi&lt;al examination? al materials are provided for a
What lrinds of educational ma- new clinic. In these informal
terials do you provide? Where ways, P I a n n e d Parenthood
do you buy your supplies? 'The spreads its expertise and serves
staff of Planned Parenthood of as the prime source of belp for
BulWo, Inc.. spend hour after this region.
hour on the telephone answer~
'The lack of family planning
ing questions from 0 r I e a n s services in Western New York
was higbligbted in a 1968 report produced bY Planned Parenthood: By county, the
number of medically-dependent
women in the child-bearing age
groups and the number receiving family planning services is
Dr. Alice M. Rivlin, ecooo- as follows: Cattaraugus. 1,833
mist and senior fellow, 'The women - 0 receiving services;
Brookings Institution. will be Chautauqua, 3,11~; Genesee.
given a UIB l25lh Anniversary 1.108-0; Niagara, 2,339-1,154
Award at a symposimn spoo- (Planned Parenthood of Niagsored bY the Scboo1 of Manage- ara Falls) ; Wyoming, 771~;
menton January Zl.
Erie. 20,194,L4,016; Allegany,
Dr. Rivlin will lead the sym- ~- Plamied Parenthood
posimn in a discussion of ~~~~;: ';.,~
" Management P rob I ems in lain' current p~- m· the
Public Policy-Wlzy Can't We
·~~
Get Thinp Done?"' Other dis- ==~ti~apand
.,._..Is will include Dr. J&lt;&gt;- ~-~
seph Sbister, cbairman, Depart- • · - ment of Orpnization and HuH.,.,_, with the informal
man o - · - Scbool of Man- belp of Planned Parenthood,
.~......
progress bas been made towards
agement, and Dr. John M. providing Western New Yorkand-~~. ~
·
·
"f:ci_
ers
b better
opportunities
• ~..
for wit
family
.planning. County

EDITOR'S NUI'E: This is the
-=ond in a series of articles in

C'OIIIU!.Ction with tlte a n n u a I
fund-roising campaign for

..-...~.,_.

Economist
ToGetAward

lxWth departments c a n now
. 'The award to Dr. Rivlin will apply for State funds to estabbe preelted "in l1lCIJCilition of 1ish family planning services.
... outstaDding service as Dep- 'Their plans closely foUow the
uty Aasistant Secretary for Planned Parenthood m o d e L
Propam Analysis and Assis- Education. counseling, and
tant Secretary for Planning and medical testing are part of a
Evaluation in the Department service-oriented program directof Health, Edocalion and Wei- ed bY physicians. A choice of
fare in reohaping the JDilD1I&amp;e- birth CDntrol methods is availmont planniuc and !Judceting • able under medical supervision.
process of that Department, in 'lbere is a sliding fee acaJe for
encouraging the Government to those able to pay and some
apply a mst eftecti- aiaci- patients are covered bY thin!
pline in UDde!tllking procrams party payers such as Medicaid.
for cbild bealtb, CDntrol of di- ·As in Planned Parenthood, sersease and reduction of medical vice is available reganiJess of
core costs, and ..,...,..ny fur- ability to pay.
tbering the CIIDIIe of bicbeF edIn Chautauqua County, a reucatioo.•
"""""' other than the private
Alao cited will be her work physician is now available to
at 'The Brool&lt;inp Institution meet family planning needs.
"in bringinc forth important 'The is aimed particupenpectiYes, tbJuudl writ- larly at medically dependent
ings and ledurea, em ihe ...,... women wbo previously bad no
DIJIIUcs of education and oCber available services; 8 breakpublic
•
public llmmae. lhrouch - beat made in meetol pay- iDg the needs ol the rural 1&gt;00!·
and ~ ol public Wben ·~to~ 101aedar nwftep+
I •
pant WIDrkera of Cba11taurp.va
The~ Awanl &amp;y.. County to the Bulfalo Planned
paojma iii edlaluled.b 3 p.m. ~ ~ ~ unin Goocbeu-10. A r_.cioa • aatiafadooy, the millistl!r of the
follows from 5-6 p.m.
•. Swthw t 11 Mipant Commit-

-·~

tee of Western New York became chairman of a commun-

=~~(.;.~"':~

people in Buffalo?"' he asked.
'The only problem the UDC
representative aees is his lack
of staff to find these people.
As a result, he's asking the Senate for belp.
"We need consultants in everything from detailed engineering studies to avant-garde
social science theories," he explained. Among &amp;n!8S to be
covered are: geophysical analysis, environmental impact stud-

!:ti!::f"Ja~:%.~i!'f:

ity conunittee. This conunittee ing strategies, community iden·
represents a cross-section of tity, bealth services, cultural
aspects. student housing, archewas instrumental in bringing a ological site preservation and
family planning service to the excavation, and arts and crafts
county.
cooperatives.
c.u..-.ucus County
UDC currently bas some
Cattaraugus County will be funds for these studies and will
starting its fa m i I y planning be able to obtain more, Parker
service t h is month. Applica- said.
tions have been received from
Presently, the Executive ComAllegany and Wyoming Coun- mittee is discussing ways they
ties, and one is being prepared can help UDC find consultants.
by the Genesee County Health Any one interested is asked to
Department.
"
contact his representative to
'The Niagara Association for the Faculty Senate.
Family Planning bas submitted
a grant application to permit
expanding their servioe with a
program of outreach to all of
the medically indigent women
The Department of 'Bi&lt;&gt;of the county. 'They are seek- chemistry ~ received a grant
ing a new executive director to of $39,000 from the Cummings
belp upgrade a n d reorganize Foundation of Buffalo to set
their services and to bring com- up a protein-sequencing labormunity understanding and ac- atory which will puL~ Uniceptanoe of their work.
versity "abead in this field."
Erie County Health Depart'The grant bas been awarded
ment and Planned Parenthood to Dr. Eric A. Bamanl, profesof Bull'alo bave a1ao applied for sor of biochemistry and chairState funds to finance expan- man of the Department. 'The
sion of existing programs and equjpment purchased under the
new programs in family plan- grant will be uaed in researdl
ning.
O!l muscular dystrophy and
'The Comprehensive Health other genetic diseases, as well
Planning Council of Western as on the evolution of protein
New Yorkand the Com!nunity molecules.
·
Research and Development
Acrord.ing to Dr. Barnanl,
Program of the Department of the new equjpment will reduce
Social and Preventive Medicine from years to weeks the time
of the State University of New needed to determine the aequenYork at .Boft'alo are applying tial arrangement of 8 m i n o
for a planning grant from the acids, the building blocb of
United States Department of protein molecules. Cbanaes in
Health. Education, and Wei- these sequences bave been
fare.
conductitig
a com~~
· study
to col- JinDrked. toBamard~i:!:t':-tes that
lect and tabulate the informs- "This equjpment exists ao far
tion needed for efrective plan- in only a few labomtories in the
ning and setting ul' a task force world. It will lead in time to
involving all in~ groups an acceleration of our studies
in the region to Oesign and .ro- of the differences between pJOordinate a regional family plan- tein molecules found in the
ning program.
· muscles of animals and chilMrs. Irwin Alpern, Executive dren with muscular dystrophy
Director of Planned Parent- and thoee found in normal
~of B~o, _Inc., wt:Ioomes muscles." This research is
!his comm"'!'ty mterest m fam- largely supported bx .&gt;the Musily pI ann 1 n g. As she says, cu1ar Dystrophy AssociatiOns
"Planned Parenthood of Buf- of America
·
alo, Inc., supports the principle
of the proposed study. As the
major provider of family plan- ITI-l~er
· _
ning services for the medically .I. taL•
indigent women in this area, we
bave &amp;bouldered the lion's share (Contin!Uld from page 1, coL 2)
of the responsibility for direct the Society for !;:ollege and
services. We bave alao acted University Planning, a poet he
beld since 1966. This is a
as the sole catalyst to stimulate bas
world-wide organimtion nmnawart!DI!&amp;I and interest of other bering
1,000 llll!lllbera,
agencies and providers. With
our limited staff and ~
He WlllU1ected to memberit bas been impossible to evoke
~~
sullicient community involve- :::.;rin ~
menL We welcome and will ro- and
lll'28, in 1980 and
opemte in this efrort to develop was elected to fellowship in the
~ community ap- Royal Society for HM!th in
Sepiolnber, J.97L
medical and lay people and

$39,000 Grant

sr

the~

�7

GR£PORTER,

, _ _ 20, 1912

74 !J'aculty Rereive State Research Grants Totaling $119,583
u~:-"....%t!:' ~:~~ ~.,;!;r."Po!'~";'"D~ 2...~

gmn1s from the 1971 State Uni- HaskeU, Englioh, Ououcer'o Uoe
vmsity Research .Foundation of Botanical Symbols in the CanAwards Propam. ll&lt;lCOI1iing to IA!rbury Taleo:
an &amp;nDOOJD&lt;li'I1W!t made in AI- nu?ti.;.~~..,!'· :t:!,~ ~!i:;
bany yesterday. The total of · Problems Which Arioe in Fluid
grants awarded to U/),3 was Mec:banico: Dr. Milton A. lyobo.
$119,583.
Economics, Optimal Sharing of
State-wide. 480 faculty mem- Adjustment Burden by Trading
hers bite been given awards Count.rieo: Dr. Fr&gt;lllk C. Jen, fi·
to t a I i n g $772,693, enablin_g nance . &amp; Management, Pncmg
them to carry out
proJ· - gpaL:'~~I ~:::,~""";',..:~:
ects. scholarly studies or crt'- Woman as Myth in tbe Worko
ative worts.
o( Em i 1 e Z o 1 a : Dr. John T .
Awards are of three types: Keams, Pbilooophy, A Formali%f a c ltJ.t.y ~ fellowabips ation of Combi,ultory Logic With
(Protiiam--rl;~in-aid for
Diocriminaton: Dr. C a r1 o • E .
varying amounts (Program 2), Kru~ .. _Organizati"!'&gt; Aca·
or a combination of a fellow- .denuc Mob!ll'¥· !'rof...,onaliza.
sbi and grant-in-aid (Program li?~ &amp; Pohticuation: Dr. J,eon
a) p
Livt.nga~t.one~ Modem Fore a' n
i.ocaJ facul
· · p
Languageo, Problemll of Identity
1 awa~ in ~::f ofif~
~ov~eM~~~ohn~~ul.!,!~
and their projects are:
li.sh, New Poems: Mr. John W.
Dr. R Arthur Bowler, History, Mcivor, Art, Constructions and
The Social Composition of the Combine Paintings; Dr. Sarunas
American Loyalioto; Dr. Gail A. Milioauokas, Anthropology, ReBruder, P~chology, Memory Pro- !iearch On The Neolithic in Po.,..... in Aged and Certain Clin- land: Dr. Jooephine M. MitcheU,

res:earch

, ~tiC:i I?r~~=~: ~u~=~~!ri~b:~ ~
Study of a Phono"fi'IA! Weathering

Sequence From Brazil; Dr. Bruce
T. Oeveland. Physics, Applicotion of an Approximation for the

CN; Dr. Lee K . Mohler, Matbe.
matiai, The Fixed Point Property
For-Demands; Dr. M i l ton N .
Parnes, Mathematics, Some Prob-

:~Ft~~~eJ~~ro:u~~.r~: ~~wtn~i(T~P~~ru~::

ence, The Standing Committees

Dr. Lewis C. Perry, History,
Henry C. Wright and Romantic
.Refonn in America; Dr. A-lan G.

Analyoio of the Theory of Constructions; Dr. James M. Green-

feet Research; Dr. Peter D. Scott,
Electrical Engineering. Electro-

Hart, Germanic &amp; Slavic Lan-

Sontheimer, Economics, Non-Tatonnement. Monetary Exchange,
&amp; The Velocity of Money; Dr.
Dov A. Tamari, Mathematics,
Formulate For Will Formed
Formulae; Dr. Melvin J . Tucker,
History, The Rise Of The How-

~!Ue~ti~.icp~o ~( -~3~ ~~::ie~~ke~~J~:-~t

~:Ji-va't!!.?'~~i&gt;r. ~~:::~~ tio~d~!d~D/'k~C~

Housing Plan
Sub Board I (SBI) is now

ardo, 1400-1572; Dr. Richard E.
Vesley, M a thematics, Axioms of

Choice in lntuitionistic Analysis:
or:.- Claude E . Welch, Jr.. Po-d~mg p~ fur~
s tudent housing. What kind of . litical Science, Milita ry Role And

housing and in what locations,
however, are two questions Lester Goldstein, SBI's director of
housing, wants help in answer·
ing.
. SBI's commitment to student
housing is still '"wide open"
and undefined, be explains, and

Rule.
Program 2
Program 2 recipients of oma1J

members to help fill in the details. The student organization
has hired Drayton Bryant Associates to do a preliminary

$1,471.00; Dr. Thomas W. Cusick,

he is trying to get committee

study of possible alternatives.
But, as Goldstein says, "consultsnts can only help you up
to
point"
after
tbat the students have to de-

a certain

and

grants-in-aid and their projects
are:
.

Dr. Peter M. Boyd-Bowman,
Modem Foreign Languages, Index or 16th Century Spanioh
Emigrants To The New World,

~,;:=~:· oPi~=:u'Fo~:

S92.00; Dr. Donald J . Dareru~­
bourg, Chemistry, Photochemical
Substitution Reactions or Metal
Carlxmyls, $922.00; Dr. Cbarleo
H. V. Ebert, Geography, Time

California, students CUJTelltly
operate cooperative housing developments. Locally, SBI could
buy houses close to the campus,
renov11-te them, and rent them
out. Or they could build a new
student community in Amherst.
Probably, though, the final plan
will lie somewhere in between.
Rigbt now, Goldstein is looking for 1(}.15 people who are
willing io give about two yearsto the project and wbo tbink
they can stay and wor~ during
the summer. For more inform&amp;·
tion, contact Goldstein at ext.
5507.

Long ViJeW-

(~ from _ . I, coL · I)

rollment will move sharply "P.:
ward from then on. '"ltU.S will
require tbat we not only fill
vaamt positions but also it will
neceasitate a significant expansioo of our fsculty beyond its
present strength.w
Fourth, Ketter said, the salary stnJcture at SUNY is, and
is likely to remain, among the
best in the country. "Also the
Amherst campus will!..; a
ma·
in recrui-.twill be 011e o1. the very
few universities 'in the market'
for fbat..rate ~"

:::r"'-

New York Secondary Schools, $2,
182.00: Dr. Elaine M. Hull, Poychology, Olfaction And Crowd,ing

ium, $2,614.00;
Dr. N88"5h S. Revanbr, Eeonomica. Efficient Testinc In Simultaneouo Equationo Systems, $1,-

Humphreyo, History, A Political
Analyois or Tbe Ayyubid Empire
In Syria, $1,521.00: Dr. Tai S.
Kang, Sociology, Life Orientation
And Social Mobility In A Developing N ation, $2,832.00; Dr. Leo

Poe To Po st-Modernism, $1,659.00: Dr. Dale Riepe, Philooophy, Social Foundations of Pool- ·
lndepeodent Indian Philooophy,

~~c,;;r

f)}

V~~=c t:!'m!'u:'~t!:,:

~$2,2~~~y~l~~~"'5.

t&amp;!::"&amp;·
W"~'l&gt;r:cti':.fl:!
Italy Since 1800, $1.,843.00; Dr.
F. Anne Payne, English, Otaucer

And Boethius-Chauc:er's Philooophical Satire. $1,521.09: Dr.
Milton Plesur, H istory, Periodicals Of The 1920'.--Mir(9rs Of An

Era, $1,811.00; Dr. Willis H. Ray,

GREPORTS

ON
NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
JOHN v. WNDS, ins truc-tor, English, State University Co Ue~ e at
Brockport. has been appointed
adjunct lecturer, linguistiC'S, for
the Spring semester 1971-72.

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
MO..TON ALBRECHT, professor,
sociology, appointed a membe r or
the Board of Directors, Buffalo
Chamber Music Society.
ALBERT OOOK, professo r, L'Ompa.rative literatu re, has been named
one of twelve American scholant
in aU fields to participate in the
U.S.-Soviet Union Senior Scholar

DR.

~~~J;~~~tt:::ili:rincth: ~~:

Union this spring, mcetin.: with
Russian poets and scholan. and
working towanhf a comparative
study or romanticism wh ich wm
include Russian material.
DR. ALBERT SOMJT, elr:ec.:utive vice
president und professor, political
science, has been :lJ&gt;I&gt;Ointed to
the Board of Directors, Buffalo

Zoologi.,. Society.

chairm..an ,
managemen t systems, has been

DR.. D&gt;WARD L. WALLACE,

DR.

JOSEPH A. ALUTTO,

worksho1&gt;

OIL BRUNO AllCUDI,

chairman, Span-

ish, Italian, and Portuguese, sem-

ina r cha irman, "The Literature
of E:~~~:ploration," Modem Language Association, Ch icago.
Dft.. JOHN CLARKE, associate p rofessor, English, poetry reading
from his volume of poems, Lou,
at SL Lawrence University.

For J u d gin g Otber People DR.. MAJlVIN A. D' LUGO, assistan t
$932.00; Dr. Jameo E . Tavares:
Biology, Membrane States-Pos- · ~~~~~~~!'-c!:r: a~
Bible ~ction or Phmt Hormones, First ~anifesto of Cronopismo,"
Modern Language Association,
$1,315.00.

f'nlenlm 3

Program 3 recipienta and their
projecto are:
Dr. Warren L. Balinoky, Man_....,.t" Science, FactOro Influ.
1

~~_;;t'!~ k"i.~s'i~.~;~

Robert D. Bereman, Chemistry,

~y~:::. &amp;IA!l:Zi'T'": ~~

monia, $2,167.00; Mr. Seymour

S. Sigel, Political Science, Rura1J
Urban Youth's Political Inwolvement-U.S. &amp; Germ:my, $2,167.00;
Dr. Albert T . S'-'&gt;n, Jr,
Anthropology, Algonkian Physical
Anthropology, $2,785.00; Mr. Ed-

diJec..

tor, Carbon Research Institute,
"The Band Structure of Disordered Carbon Materials." University of Windsor.
DR. cm.tU&gt; o 'CIWJY, assistant pro-

University of Texas.. Austin.
DR. JOliN PERADOTTO. associate
professor, classics. .. Myth vs.. Miirchen in Th e Ody.uy~" American
Philological Association annu al
meeting, C incinnati, Ohio; .. M y th
in the Bible," WBEN-1V.
DR. ALBERT T. S'I'I2X;MANN, associate
&lt;·hairman. anthropology, '"Evolution of Mongoloid Face Fonn...
70th Annua l Meeting, American
Anthropological Association, Statler Hilton Hotel, New Yoric: City.
DR. lU.R.K VAN DE VALL. professor,
1

~~ ift· ~ceu:

'8e!f=

Countries." international seminar
on Applied- Social Science Research and Productivity in Developirq;: Countries, Ankara. Turkey; "'A Theoretical Frallle'Vr.'Ork
for the Utiliultion of Social Science." semiru:Jr on AJ&gt;plied SociaJ
Science and Policy, Ame.rsfoort,
Holland; .. A Theoretical Framework for the Use of Applied Social
Science, .. Conference of the Social
Analysis Br:1nch. Social and Econ om ic Division of- the National
Center for Healtli Services Research and Development. Department o( HEW, Wnshington, D .C.
DR.

CLAUDE E. WELCII. associate

professo r, political science. '1'he
Africa n Military : Modernizing
Patriots o r Predatory Militarists?"
6th Annual Iowa State U niversity
I nstitute on World Affairs.

Chicago.
PAUL L. GARVIN, acting chairman., linguistics, '"The Study of
Linguiotic Artifacts," 70th Annual
Meeting, American Anthrop:)bg-

DR.

ical Association, New York C-ity.
DR.. TAl S. KANG, assistant proles-

~Ci~~~~·~ ~ri=

~c;!:t~.:.:;;!o~E;:::.':,v;;;

tive literature, Enactment : Guek
Tragedy . S wal.low; with Edwin
Dolin, Play$ /or the Greek Theatre, Bolbs-M errill.
DR.. P.\UL DU:S.INC, professor, ~
litical science a nd philosophy.
Patrenu; of DUicovery in lire Social Sciencu, Alcfine...Atberton.
DR.. ARTHUR f2l"BBN, 3S90ciate professor, E nglish, -editor of Paunch
#35, printed with the help of the
Coordinatin g Council on Literary
M agazines.
DR. LESLIE Flf.2)LD. professor, Eng-

lish, f"'pe~ volumes of the
essays. An Erid to lnnocen«. No ,

In Thunde r, To the Gentiles, Un.(utished BWJinea, and Ct'O$$ tlr.e
&amp;rder, Clou the Gap.
ROBDrl' FORD, lecturer, sociology,
with M.. A.LEXANDOl and D. LESnia,
" Fear of Death oC Those in a
High Stress Occupation," PsychoWgical ReporU; '"Tbe Medical
Profession and Fertility in the
Emerging Natio1111," Moh/uu.
DR..

HOWAJW G. FOS'1Eir.,

assistant

professor, industrial relations and
human resources., .. FinaJ Offer Selection in National Emergeocy
Dioputeo," Arbi(l'alion Journol.
JAN OC:.OON, uaistant prof~r.

Engli.oh, ·-n.e Fi&lt;:tioft of .Joyce
Carol O.teo," ComlriOIUD&lt;Gl; review of Sylvia Plath's ...Wmter

Relations in Post War Japan."
UJ»tate New York Conference on
Asian Studies, Utico, New York.

•=
the ~viclual." Westem New
8:'"~ ~~z:,oob!fe~~r Ei ~~on:-=--~
York Public School Superinteod-

Cryatah," JOfUniJl of ·"Ciu!rroiml
Phyllia.
DL TAl a IU!IO, ..atant prolea._,.r, ~ ... Fo.reip. Studerat

OnJ
. E~~

·~-

recto or

~=~tudieoDel.

TiP&amp; Moaey-An Em-

piriad StudY, $2,687.00; Dr. W"d-

EletJiaiJ of 5ocioloo.

Ia. Cd:L08 B.~ _,a.
ate proles.or. oqa.niaatioa. ..MaDocemeot Styleo and Social SUuctwe in Two 'Identical' Eaci-·

inc Groups," I.E.E.E. T , _ .

f=.&gt;r~"lf:· o'f~ =~ ""'"'ond tbe fihno of Stan Brakbage,

Treeo," MO&lt;km Poetry Shulieo.

Dru.mlevitch, Art. IUuminationo
For Tbe 2Iot Cantury, A MacroMiooc:oan, $2,950.00;. Dr. .Jorge

lnl~

E~

MaJittl6t!-

a!IIJOC:iate pi'O(essor. tilOCiolocY, with 1a.. :arroaAY

DL Al&amp;.ll't'E LlmNE,

~~~~·~::=.:

ology; Some Derivatiooo bom
·avitizatioft and ito Diocon'-.to,' •
in Donald s. Milman and George
Goldman, P&amp;ychOONJ!ytU: Contributions to Com.munity P.yclaot-

ogy. Charles C. Thomaa.
JOHN LOCA..~. pro(es90r.

E:ndish.

poems: " A Heart to Heart Talk
\Vith My Liver," toothpasu.;

" New Poem," Hout.on EletJiaiJ;
""''hree Poems on Pbotopapbo by
Aaron Siskind," "'The Dead Man' a

v.._.
~~;·~-n.e~

Room,"

tioft of an.ma-Verite," FilauwGJrers New$lerter; -n,e New Am!t!!r-

ican C inem,.. See MfJ#J;Zine;
'1lle American Experimental
Film," U.S. lnlonnatioft ~
Cor broadcast in 65 countries.
DR.. r.a: E. NESI'ON, ~ eoYironment:d :uudyoio and policy,
Industry and EnlerprUe Strvcture of the U.S. Eamomy, Gen eml ~ Press, New York

a ty.

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

'l

tary Motter. Part
Philoooohical Approach and General lm-

plications: Part ll: Electromac·
netic and Inertial Manifeotationo,"
lnterna.lionol JOIUNJl of Tlteoreliml Phyliitt; Tlte Searclt. for a
of Matur, McGnow-Hill

'{:!eory
PUBLICATIONS
:f:~"~~t~ ~iliii':futa1~ ,\LBUn'
COOK, professor. compara-

Regior;wJ Red Cross Blood Center.

Equilibria, $323.00; Dr. Frederick
0 . Gearing, Anthropology, Field
Study In Village Greece, $1,251.00; Dr. Peh!r HeUer, German,
Clasaico or Modernism: German

~~.~~~~:~"0'~':!;

fu=ti~· ~~t!!i.:"fi';

'!be Zeroeo or '!be Riemann ZetaFunction. $1,521.00; Dr. Roberta

rioM em

GJ&gt;EOPLE

associate
professor, organization and human
resources and manageme nt , conducted a three-day
entitled, " Strategies for Plunned Organizational Change," for the faculty of the Niagara U niversity
School of Nursing.

charideo or Algal Origin, $1,·
475 00; Dr. Sebastian 0 . Mezu,
French, Idealism &amp; Revolution In
Black Renaisoanc:e Lih!rature, $1,·
~1.00 ; Dr. ¥oti L. ~tgi, PhySICO, Theoretical J,b"""tigation or
OF-LP SheU Nucl01, $1,079.00;

~2~%,_ ~:mp.:tic.,R~

DB.. STANISLAW MltOZOWSEl,.

PRESENTATIONS

Ws';"re" ~.'::.~'1~nt:!,~t
ology, Biosyntbeois or Polyoac-

Engi.-riDc, Mathematical M o d e I for Emulsion
PolymerU.ation Reactor s. $2.·
397.00; Dr. Jonathan F. Reichert,

~-in':al~.!"inEdw~~ ~ro~&amp;-'!,!t~c~

$673.00: Dr. Paul Ehrlich, Chem-

ci&lt;l~,Jl have a lot of choices. ~eas~~:m:ii~hg·p::en~~

In Wisconsin, Philadelphia, and

Chemical

pby, Fractional Syllogisms;

of tbe USSR Supreme Soviet;
Dr. David A. Gerber, History,
Ohio and. the Color. _Line, 1860-

SBIMulling

liam S. Hamilton, .Jr., Germanic
&amp; Slavic Languages, Deep And
Surface a...nges In '!be Slavic
Nominal Syotem, $1,521.00;

-

:.':'"co.~
mm.;::.;.rti:!"":"~

Group .. "Btlmic: c-.mity,"

~~SYL~~=
~~ 71'.:!.!:=~~:

temporo; ~Licht and the Loa of
Lit:ht." Tlu! Arlincton Quort&lt;rly;
"We Live in Happeoing . . ." and
" ld Est." D .C. Gauue; • .._.

~f~"St!;" ~~~
KOIUtU Quort&lt;rly; "Prayer for
YOWII: Looen," Wind.

RECOGNITIONS
Dlt. RICBAJa)

c.

BaA.NimrrBU&amp;,

deim.

School of Mana&amp;emeat, ...,.,..memberahip on tl.e ......ty
Technical Aaoiotance Boon! of

f....-

the G""'ter &amp;ll'alo ~t
Foundatioft; became a ~of
the Propam Advioory Committee
of the N"Japnl Inatitute for lntematioaal Studies.
diotinguiobed
prole:MOr.. physics. invited to eene

... CIISlOirY - . -.

as a member of the Advioory
Board of the Intematioaal School
for Theoretical Physics. Italy; inYih!d to a - the In.tematioaal
Confereooe 011. Nuclear M01111e0ta
and Nuclear Structwe, Ooab,
Japan, and the Intematioaal Conr......... 011 the Core-Mantle lnterfaoe, Mep.ou-. Auatral.ia. ·
•

~~~~mn:r.:
ulty -

Fellowohip for his

applicatioa entitled ..De m. a n d
~-in. Repeti.tioft At-

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

~

orpni&amp;atioa. aad ht~JUD l'e80W'- . inYited b7 the PnoidoDt to

the WIDe Boa. Confe......., on
the I - - . Wodd ~Feb-

111817 7.Q.

�8

==
=

-._,- ..............,., LeM- Dr. WoriJiiDctoo G. Sd.dt, J&lt;.,

r..=.
~~ ~t!~~~
auk Gym, 8 : 80p.m.

Medical

b;

40 zec:eivin&amp;

Btry. • Maple Rd., 9 I&gt;-"'ststiono, 10:80 a.m.
uuo ~ aoUBE•.•: Gonloa PlfYBICAL 'I'IID.I.P'I' 'I'IUI:PBOD t.&amp;CBoA: and Jeff Green, 1st Ooor TUIIB"'
. Ex'e~~tor'T~~
cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m., admio· - • •-..·-~ ~~
oioa c:bup.
~~·;::,;::.:::
CAC ftLII.*: TM Mag~ eee station&amp;, 1 p.m.
Friday listinc• P l L 11• •: TrC.t.ana, Confenmoe
'Theatre, c:beck sbowcaoe for times, .
admissioo charge_

SUNDAY-23
r.utn.Y aaUNca••: sponsored by
U/B Women's Club and FaCility
Club, open to faculty, stalf and
Women's Club members, $2.75 for
adulto, $2.00 for children under
twelve, $1.00 fo.r cbildren under
6ve. Faculty Club Main Dining
Room, .bsr in the Red Room, 11
~

a.m..-1

UB Round Tab~, The
Taylor Act: How Well Is It
Working? will be discusoed by
Dr. Robert D. Helsby, chainnan
'WBKN-TV:

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

BAWA P1LM FESTIVAL• :

The Learn,.

of the Public Employees Relations
Board, and William L. Holcomb,
Director of Personnel Ac:lminiatration of the City of Buffalo. Dr.
Joeeph S b is te r is moderator.
12:30 p.m.
HOCKEY*: Ohio State. Memorial
Auditorium, 2:30 p.m., $2.00 per
person, $5.00 for families.
BILLa. CLASSES: Talmud, Hillel
LibraJY, 3 p.m. Corwersation.al
Hebnc; (advanced) 262 Norton,
12:30 p.m. ThMtre party. Hillel
House. 6 p.m. For tickets call
836-4540 or stop at Hillel Table.
WOKEN' S BASKETBALL* : Canisius,
Clarl&lt; Gym, 7:30 p.m.
FILM** : The Conformist. Conference Theatre, checJc showcase for
times. admission charge.

MONDAY-24

ing Tree, Gordon Parks' autobiog- FILM** : Ugetsu and Street of
raphy describing his growing up Slwme. 140 Capen, S and 8 p.m.,
years in the South, s ponsored by Cree.
Blacl: and White Arts Festival
and N .Y. Council on the Arts.
TUESDAY-25
Woodlawn Junior B.S., 450 Masten Ave., adults $1.00, students PHYSICIANS 'IELEPHONZ LBC1'UBE:
and senior citizens sot. 8 p .m.
Dr. Michael T . Genco, Parkin1111.1.a. SABil.ATB*: Rabbi Hof- liOn·• Di«tue tuu:l IU Treatment
mann, EtltU:al Reflection.tJ of the wilh L-Dopa. sponsored by Re..
Rabbu, Oneg Shabbat to follow,
':'~::!. ~f:~~40 reHillel Holl9e, 8 p.m.

:r=g

Beginners Hestruction in basic steps during brew, 262 Norton, 12 noon. Jewfirst hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex, iah Et./Uco, 262 Norton, I p.m. 8 p.m.
B'I"UDBN7 RECITAL•: Baird. 12 DOOO..
CONCDT• : Twentieth Century free.
C~t M...U:, Allen Sigel, clarN U a S IN G 'I'EID'HONE I&amp;'TUIZ:
inet; Ruslana Antonowicz. piano. Eli%abeth Deiclmum and Mary
Works by Perle, Stravinsky, Lut- Ellen Boles, Is Tlwt Whot You
y-., Goeb. Back, Martino. Bainl,
8:30 p.m., general/ admission :~::-~s~~bk~
$1.50; faculty, stalf, a'lumni $1.00; ceiving stations, 1 :30 p.m.
students sot. Tickets at Norton
Ticket Oftice or at door evening m.x .. : Brin8in6 Up Baby, thirties' comedy with Cary Grant and
of concert.
Katherine Hepburn, 140 Capen,
CAC m.x•: T~ .¥GBician (lng3 and 8 p.m., f.-.
INDRNATIONAL FOLK DANCING:

In-

:::"'ad~~~mol~

Ticket Office. A1oo on Satunlay,

Jan. 22.

WEDNESDAY-26
N U a 8 I N G 'I'BtEPBONE LBCTUJtZ:

ni:.x•• : The Conformiat, Conference Theatre, check showcase for
times, admission charge_

SATURDAY-22
OON'I'INUINO DBN'f.U. DUCATION#:

aee Friday listing.
ftLil•: The Chi.cago Compiracy
Trial, a TiiM-Li/e, BBC film,
with actual trial transcripL Spon-

:~by~W. ~riiti~

Union, 500 tickets available at
U/ B Law SchooL 77 West Eagle,
1370 Main St., and at Norton
Ticket Office. Showings at 1, 4
and 8:30 p.m. in Fillmore Room,
Norton. Rap aeuion and refresh-

FRIDAY-21

lULLEL CLASSES:

ments following 8 : 30 showing.
General admiSsion $2.00, students
$1.00, for 1 and 4 p.m. &amp;bows.
$3.00 for 8:30 show.
IIlLI&amp; CLASS: Torah With Com-~
nwntaria. Rabbi Hofmann••
home, 12 Colton Dr., 3:30 p.m.
F. a a 8 B II AN BASJa:r~J.t.L~.•: LeMo)ID8. Cad: Gym, 6:80 p.m.

m.x• ~ rttef':i.,P97o ..,.
~. 'K:."::"':',.d N..:::n:t
~~y~:,:-=

IHIJW&lt;

Lr!._ ~~~~ ~:.!~c;ru

fiatienl, sponsored-by Regional
40 rec:eiving
stations. 7: 15 a.m. and 7:15 p.m.

Mecfu:al Program,

PBYBICIANS TEU!:PHONE

ti)C"J'tJD:

Dr. Norma Panabon, P.ychiatric
Confennce - Neurological Syn-

1fun~po:O':.J6';~:nSo£t~:

ical Program. 40 receiving stations. 11 a.m.
(

OCCUPATIONAL TIIDLU'Y 'I'Bt£PHONE
LBCTURI:: Janine Voorhees and

Fay Hagelberger, The COTA'S
Education, Work and Contribu-

!::!dinb/h&amp;::::Jh :~~ s~,:

CJ1D0CAL , . . . _ G IIIDIDWl#:

Dr. K. B. m.:boft Scbool of
a.emical Encmeerii.c. Comell
Univenity, Pharmaio~wtin and
Cell Kinflic MO&lt;U&amp;, 322 A&lt;:beson,

re.=

6lms and refreshAnnual General
011

~!ymr...::::lyro~ d:

Claaia 416: The Aneid: Vergil's Journey into the Wasteland
(English 419). PerrniooioD of the
instructor is not ""'11ired (or ...Y.
of tbeee counee. Note oa. ..doeed

=~: ~~ ==~.:

any announcement that a c:oune
has been clooed with the Dept. of
Classics (390 Hayes, 881-2816) or
with the instructor invol..t.

EXHIBITS

Cree.

Orientation. Harvey Axlerod. instructor, 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7-9 p.m.
•
FILM* *: lnuruion of tlat! Body
Snatchers, 140 Capen, 7 and 9
-p.m.. free.
I'ILll . . : RrunporU of Clay, Conference 'Theatre, cbedt sbowcaoe
for times, admisoioo charge,

PmNTS by students of Harvey
Breverman, 4240 Ridge Lea, 9

a.m.-.5 p.m., Janusry 24-February

10.

WORKS

BY RUTH

MOIUUSON :

A

1951 graduste of the Univerwity
of Bulfalo and the Albright Art
School, Mrs. Morrison has ezhib-

NOTICES '

ited her works in Western New
York shows and has been a prize
winner in 1952, 1!1.53, and 1960.
This exhibition consists mainly

interested
in ~ ol developing

~t.,.:''f:i ;~n~e:;;_.

ANY FACULTY IODiOBa

~~"'C~~~Isra~

perience related to Israel, pleaoe
conU!ct James A. Michielli, Din!ctor, o.e- Academic Programs, 107 T...........t Hall, 8814247 for f u r t b e r information,

preferably by Jannary 2L

APPALACIIIAN 8TJII'OSIUJI: Man:h
21-24 featuring musicians, craftsmen. dancers and apeaken from
Appalacbia_ ()qanizen of the
event, sponsored by Student Association. feel that cuests from

~a:?:!:!

r;:::: t; Bui-of

falo if they can stay in homes
Uni..,rwity t.culty members. Any
faculty member interested in helping, especially anyone interested
in Appalscbian cullure, pleaoe
call Marilyn Rooi:be, 877-0137.
APPUCA'IION .U. W1C11R CUDS: In

order to be considered for graduation it is eaeential that each
student file with the Office of
Admiasinns and Records an Application for ~)epee Can!. 'l1&gt;e
deadline date for the Suntl4y,
May 14i Com.~ is Fet,:.
ruary IS, 1972. Applieations for
~)epee Canis are available at the
Offioe of Admiosions and Records.

~:::'in~~~
CFC 3l12-Methodo of Mulli-Sci--

.,.,. will be meeting 011 Moaday
and Wem-lay from 1-1 :50 p.m.
and Friday, 1-2:50 p.m. Coune

~~~n.:~

are invited to CODiact Recina Coben, 881-2768, 1665 or ailrord
Furnas Coli- Col. D.
P ACULTY a.tJB LOCKS wiD be
changed on Tueoday, January 25.
On. or after that date you may
replace your key at the ollice of
the club, 2nd Ooor Harriman Library.
BILLII.: lntrod.udion to Ju.dtJUm
(USB 273) is _.u.g at a DeW
time and ~- 11nmidaYB, from
2-4 p.m. m 220C Foster. Call
R a b b i Hofmann, 836-4540 for
further inlormaticm. Hilhl Con-

venational HebnuJ (elementary)
is being ecbedu1ed for a new time.
Call Arlene I..an«er at 881-3881
for information. Hi.lhl HOUM will
be open every evening of the
week. Moaday and Wem-!ay

v i c e president. secretary and
treasurer and t-b r e e eucutive
committee memben may be sub-

oM!: bi

~p!.:"i:..~~

election of a new executive committee. Conference Theatre. Norton, 7:30 p .m., frM.
Each nominatioo obould be oiped
WBCIO-PII&lt;
Musical f - i o m
with
Robert
E.
Mols
diocusoing .
147 Diofeodorf, 7:30 ........ - the peat ~ in the Depart- one who eeconds the oomioatiob.
cleato $1.00, non-clultooia U8.
ment of Music oince 1958. Micb• re.=:&amp;:~-~
&amp;Y&amp;l'I'B Ar CJlAIW)•: ~ ..a
ael P. Burke is hooL 9:05 p.m. .-ay, Jan. 26.
"""'""-to. 9 :30 ...... 'Mo/eoh
MolJJtJio party,
HEW COURSBS Df a.&amp;881CS: CloaiC$
THURSDAY-'1:1
tioD. """'""-to. Chld&gt;ad
113: Myth and Relipm in the
3292 Main Bt., 8 p.m.
_
Ancient World _!EDIIiOh 118).

m.,._ - a.-e.

the Making ·(Hiatory 309, EncliJJh
=~e~"t'.,!! ~=~:

OOII:PtmHG CBN'ID 1.1Ba 8aVICial
S B K I N A a: Computu Langucge

INDL\ 8'I'UDENT8 ASSOaA'nON EU'JCTIONS: nominations for president.

LS.A.

~~~:~ ~0/,;

Tburoday: 7 a.m.-12 midnicbt:
Friday: 7 a.m.-1 a.m.; Satunlay:
8 a.m.-1 a.m.: Sunday: 12 noon12 midnight.

Documenwy
ments.

Claooico 219: 'l1&gt;e lewa in the

Christopl&gt; Wollf, Columbia Univerwity, J.S. &amp;cit's "Dftllhbed
Chorof': A CrilU:al Eoolu&lt;ltion
of a Mytlt, 101 Baird, 3:30 p.m.,

celebrate lndia's 22nd Republic
Day. Dr. Donald Rosenthal and

~~~~~ti;.ticis:~

1972

2 p.m.
OPP!CIAL BPIUNG 8EMEBTP.a BUILDKUBIOOLOCY L&amp;CTURB SDIBS*: ._,lNG HOURS FOR NORTON: Monday-

evenings h a v e been clesignated
study nights. Tue.iay and 11run-•
day evenings .... oocial nights.
Students may drop in on Saturday and Sunday evenings for recreation and study. Friday evenings are reserved for Sabbath
progr.uns.

gram. 40 recei~ stations, 2 p.ni
INDIA CEU:BilA'ftON*: India Students Association invites you to

/~20,

~ro.::S\i'.e""~~n":.J (t'

:~Tonfi:!': ~~:glaO:

4240

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
works by
Robert Graves and James Joyce,

I"DtllANENT EI.BIBIT of

ROom 207, Lockwood Library, 9

a.m..-5 Jf..m.
WJJ..I..lAM BURROUGHS

exhibit, 2nd
Ooor balcony, Lockwood. Library.
by the Nobel Laureate poe~ Room 207,

PABLO NEBUDA-works

Lockwood Library.

JOHN BERRYMAN -

1914-1972, A

Memorial E .x h i b it, continuing,
Poetry Room, 207. !,oockwood Li-

brary.

:

Foreign Pnsitions
Are Available
S e v e r a I opportunities for
teaching or conducting post-

doctoral research abroad are
open to U/B faculty members.
'The Fulbrigbt.-Hays pro&amp;ram
still "has openinp for 1972-73.
Lectureships are available in a

n u m b e r of 6elds including
American literature (Argentina,
Brazil, Costa Rica ) ; biological
sciences (Colombia, G b a n a,

!:~"i.~~~

tration (Ecuador, EI Salvador,
Mexico, Peru, Philippines, Yugoslavia); English as a foreign
language ( Bulgaria, Costa Rica,
Indonesia, I t a I ) ; medicine
(Afghanistan, ~ppiJMm); and

theatre arts ( Tanzania) . Resean:h opportunities exist in
Ireland (agriculture, food tecbnology, """"""t'&lt;, nnaiiiOciology); Romania; Yemen
Arab Republic, and Yuaoslavia
Applicatiabs are availa&amp;le from
the Committee on International
Exchange of Persons, 2101
Constitution Ave., Washington,

D.C. 20418.

'The Committee is also Ill&gt;
cepting applications for a limit-ed number or SEATO awards

for research in the social. ec»-

nomic, political, cultural, scientific and educational problems
of Southeast Asia ani! the
Southwest Pacific. Research is
to be carried out in the member countries of the treaty organization. Application deadline is January 31.

Lectureship and r(! sea r c h
grants for 1973-74 will also be
available from the FulbrigbtHays program. Over 75 c:ountries participate in the program. Faculty who are U.S.
citizens are invited to indicate
their interest by completing a
registratiOn form, available on
reque;t· from the Cpmmitt.
Registrants will then """"""" a
detailed annoWJ&lt;elll&lt;!Dt or sYBilable awards. The deadline date
for the 1973-74 research s.wards
and lectureships is July 1.

�</text>
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STATE UNIVERSilY AT BUFFALO

VOL 3-NO.l5

JANUARY 13, 1972

Private Funds Sought
For Basketball Grants

_,_~

U/8 Pn!sident Robert Ketter 8IIIlOWlCI!II last
tilat
althoush U/8 can DO ~
s u b s i d i z e atbletic granJ&amp;in-aid with State funds, the
program will be continued with
the support of noo-State funding. An infonnal campaign to
raise these funds is DOW under- y in addition to a move to
incorporate atbletics into the
academic program.
Dr. Ketter ezplained that
grants-in-aid bave been provided through tuition waivers
and remission of dormitory
fees for atbletes, a policy contrary to a 1967 ruling by the
State University Trustees. To
pennit recruitment of new basketball players for nert aeason.
Dr. Ketter ezpre;sed h6jJe that
approximately $10,000 to cover
new grants-in-aid c o u I d be
raised in the immediate futwe.
All oommitments to current
.grant-in-aid . atbletes on both
. the fresbman and varsity basketball squads will be honored,
Ketter said. He also empha_..-ra¢'.S
. . ...
~. BCJDIIdeda
U/B ~ sized that a firm financial base
_.....
._;,...,
....,...... f«the. U/8~
- , with the Rev. Bdwmtf letics; physical =edocation and
T. F'isbw, chaplain, Newman recreational program must be
Apostolate, providinc the in- found.
IIOCiltioa.

"""*

Blizzord Hlls FiDmore ()bsenxmce
~·

Braving ~ .;.,.!Y uiaming_
bllzzanl .mlcb . -.led. -tm6:
and 11111111! -..ce•-wurbrz late
all over -..,· Univel'llity rep,_latiw!G punctually ob&amp;enled the 17lst lllllliwrsary of .

!"'!
birth
ol_ Millanl Fillmore.
Friday
mommg at Forest lawn .

cemetery.

cnnunander, lO'lth F j g b t e r

.Group.NewY~AirNational

Guard, Niapnl Falls, and a
lloral ammgement from the
Univel'llity was P""""'ted by

Somit.

Instituti"Olli:U
-~ 1 F~·-...l~
A -1-......-L
UlJl.R; Distribution," r1UJIJ.t;:nsL

Said Dr. Albert Somit, .,.,.
utive vice president, who presented the memorial addn!as,
'"That the -ther tends to be
....-bat inclement in esrly
Tbe University's Fa c u It y sions criteria ......,..uy approved
January merely adds to the Senate begins the second haH by II¥! Senate. As part of what
plessure we derive from parti- of the acsdemic yesr nert Tues- Exe6Jtive Vice President Alcipating in this ceremony."
day with di&amp;c:ussion of a new bert Somit calls "our regional
Fillmore, ol C'lOUJ'IIe, was first method of dividing institutional respoiiSIDility," the administration would like to mandate that
chancellor of the University, in
50 per cent of the regular fresh..
addition to serving as the naing for completion of C'lOIII!truo- man class come from the 8th
tion's thirteenth president.
"When the University of Bu£- tion of the North I Amherst) Ju&lt;ticial District. This area,
£alo was £ouJJded in 1846," campus. Admissions criteria which rougbly runs (rom Leroy
Somit recalled, "Millanl Fill- will also be the &amp;Ubject of dis- west and south to the Pennsylmore and other leading citizeos cussion. With nat week's vania. border, covers Niagara,
of Bulfalo ~ the need meeting, the Senate wiU change ·Orlesns, Erie, Genesee, Wyoof the commumty for an insti- the """"" of its deliberations ming, Allegany. Cattaraugus
tution of hilher education. Tbe · for the remainder of the yesr, and Chautauqua counties. This
immediate need tben was for shifting from 147 Diefendorf to yesr, 55 per cent of the regular
entering class was from within
a JiJedical od&gt;ool which """"d 5 Ad-. Hall.
President Robert Ketter is a 50-mile radius of the city and
help &amp;Upply proper '-lth &lt;:are
to the community. But these ezpected to discuss an ·adminis- in this sense the p , _ ) repcitiz.en founders also bad a trative modificatioo of admis- resents DO real change from

On Agenda for Meeting of the Faculty Senate

:mu...'d~

r:ru.= :D.

~No~o(IM

Uni«nity o1tall ,...,UU or
honor allMhnt rubsidia "-"'1
primmily on a -.knt'a athletic ability.Kettieo&gt;~· .....- tiaht
SUNY
.-idloall and

-

doaoiy..-5
.beiac
. . ......._.to
n ....-.......,.

Si'1N'r~ of6ci81 ruling ...
pan~ 'tbis fall. Tbe--

........ a flat DO.
T b i s - that gnmts..iiHUd
-used &lt;lilly for hasbtball and
formedY. for~ bave
to come aolely tluooqb outside
9DIIIa!ll -from "alumni and
friellds of the University.20Scl"*'i1Wpa

current practice. Tbe Senate's
Executive Committee, however,
while welcoming administrative
aooeptance of parts of the Senate's admissions criteria, "regrets" the possible modification. Dr. Tbomss Fraotz. .....,.
retsry to the Senate, said. In
addition, the Executive Committee will request a repcrt
twice a month from Admissions
and Records on this policy, if it
~ into effect.
~--z.coL:r)

He .......Jed that podimiDary
plans have al.-ly been l'onuulated for a School ol Health·
Education whX:b 10IIIIId provide
the kind ol "..........., home"
which be CXIIIIIidem pn!leqUisite
for a firm set ol in
this IIII!IL KeUieo&gt; aaid that a
IJIIlDber of University deans
have al.-ly approved the idea
of such a od&gt;ool which ~
have an initial :JO.momber fao.
ulty.
He pointed out that beallh,
physical education and ...,.,..,.
tiolil at Penn State
and West VUginia have been
suocessfully based in such a
school
Tbe prewiling Trustee position .., inten:ollegiate athletics
says, in part, that "the University intends tbatlll!itber its liscal DDr its student
personnel policies shall be distorted to . . .
olate such

Five wrbnlanhipl a year aver$2.000 apiec:e-20 scbolanhips and $40,000....,.. a four
year period-&lt;ue what the basketball program ._;res.
Tbe immediate - ' of $10,000 is euou&amp;h to let Bead Basketball Cclach Ed Muto and
his staff recruit for ..........
-with f i v e acholanhips in
band.
~

Muto, ' - - " ·

WBB

told via

a memo flam the adminislla(~•-!,coL6)

~~tiOnal~

meniB of their day ~ be

tral8li!Dded by .......ts yet to
come. and new fields ol knowledae ~ be required ahd
that the future """"d demand

sld1la.~
.
We can bouor Fillmore.
Somit said, by oiJaerving this
principle and gniding "ourDeW

eelW8 by this ....... wisdom.
We must be -tive to the
needs ol the CDIIIDIUDIty. But- we lllllllt be equally
ClOIICerlled that - ..... educatinc studollts ...... minds .....
directed to the llitme and
....._ lesminc and laleats are
aqUie ol copina with 111'1&amp;
!ems yet to ......... - ..,;n those al.-ly ...Tbe Fillmore .......... decorated
sprillk)ed ......... A ...tb
flam Preaideat lticbud M.
Nimn - placed by Cal 1o1m
E. BiewMt, base iletw t
I

f'I"'B'!lt

with--

Tbe future ol the ClllllJ'US'
Vending Service is tmeertsin
after JUDe, althoush the eervice
will CDDtinue in "BDme fashion." .
On June 30, Vending bas to
....... out ol its pn!8ellt locstion
at 1725 Millenlport Highway
and a ..,.. locstion bas DDt
been foaDd.
Campus IUIIIOr bas it that
this the end ol the Faculty-Student Aseocistion-run
liilsinoal and its replacement by
an outside .,.....,.. However,
'l'lloma Scbillo, asislant vice .
prarident for housing and aumililuy mlieQirilal..says "this is
DDt a viable alternative" and
lliat
will CCDtinue in
...... fasbioa:- .

ing, is COilCeiDed about. He calls
it "a bad situation." Tbe Vending operation needs 7.a,OOII
square fee("of """"" to opemte
in-about haH the size ol a
temporary building. But this
aree must include inside truck
storsge. Tbe .-isbable nature
of CIID!Iy and Bolt drinks male
it """""""' for the 12 trucb
to be l!bellen!d from the weath-

er.
Tbe MaintenaDce Department , ..

;:::-~~

( Ambenit) ........... but Frieday .

says Vending D1!11!k t h e - to
fll!rVice the whole University.

--..m.
:rbis~~is~~
......... . . .- 8cbillo a:.ait will coDtiDue is what plaiml, and ... decioioD .._..
~Frieolay.~olV.-. came .........., this JDDDth.-

--·
..----·--_
---

GoodlJ)f! All That '__
....
_
_
_
__
_
__
_, __
- - llllo-lloe-oiDr.--.........
______
.. _. ..--._..,. .. ,....,-.-- ....... ..
...... _....... , ... -.-...
to

_ _ _ _ _... _

.. _ , . .

•Of.

�~PORTER,

2

Prof. Garver

Leads Study
Of Violence
For the past sill: years U/ B
students have been learning
about violence- non-violently,
that is.
Under the guidance of Dr.
Newton Garver, professor of
philosophy, the thrust of these
studies bas been to understand
how various forms of vio1enc:e
--«&gt;cial aDd !JI!YC)lological as
well as physical-penneate dif.
ferent spJ,.,.... of BDCiety.
"I became inlen!sted wben I
foamd I was dissatisfied with
many of the """""Pts of violence given by people both for
and against it," says Dr. Garver, who bas taught a number
of courses on the subject, including "Violenc:e aDd the Social Order."
"One of the things a philosopher should do, I think, is to
!ly a n d stmigbten out ron·
cepts."
With this in mind, Dr. Garver bas pored over hundreds
of writinp from oociology, I"'Y·
cbology, aDd literature, includ·
inB ancient G r e e k literature
where the nature of violeoce
was edensively ezplored.
From his """""""' be bas
fOUDd that tbouP&gt; violeDce is
often

lhouabt of .. synooymous

with fOI'Oe, very frequently it
exists in """""" subtle, institutiooalized feriiiS that violate a
man's dlgnlty aDd autonomy.
For ezample, so m e acbool
tea&lt;:bers uae discipline to tbe
point that it stifles c:bildren's
aeativity aDd produa!S stunted
students. Anotbet instance, saya
Dr. Garver, is in the lhettos
where people are deprived of
their autoaomy by being denied
many of tbe options open to
tbe rest of BDCiety.
Dr. Garver is perticularly
interested in institutionalized
forms of violence. In the coming montha he ezpects to an·

:yd.:'k" .=p~"'7t i~ ~

in the name of the law.
A Quaker, Dr. Garver is opposed to violence. One reason
people are ao interested in it,
be says, is that the media cater
to its entertainment value and,
as a result, many people falsely
associate it' with adventure.
Can violence ever be completely eliminated from our society? 'lbere are those wbo
argue no, says Dr. Garver, but
be maintains alternatives of
peaceful confrontation could replace it. It is important, be
says, that pec)ple, m fact, understand that opposition to the
Establishment does not always
have to be violent and does not
necessarily mean opposition to
the system.

Blumberg Coinpileg
Book onV:Ietnam
Sections of newspaper photographs from stories dealing
with Vietnam have been incorporated into a portfolio by Donald R. Blumberg, associate professor of art.
Entitled "Daily Photographs
1969-70," the portfolio ·roosists
of l'X) oversize 11'h by ' 17 inch
reproductions, aDd bas been
published by Light Jmpressions
in Rochester.
In his introduction to tbe
portfolio, Blumberg wri!e&amp;, . ':_I
wanted to make my work pofiti·
cal, without metaphor, simile.
aentimen~ or heroics. I
a..- to transpoae typography
and images from daily ,_,..
papers, inben!litly direCt polit..
ical propqanda."
"Daily Pbotopaphs" has
been pw&gt;lisbl!d in an edition of
500 signed copies aDd is avail. able in tbe boobtore at Norton
Union.

.1-, 13,

Nine Groups OutlinePr~ for
Ratifying New Governance Articles
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
~SIMI

University-wide gov~
is one steP cloaer to realiza-

tio~ week, Dr. Marjorie Mix,
chairwoman of the University

Governance Committee, announced that the Committee
bad accepted ratification procedures hom nine involved campus groups for use in approving
proposed Articles of Govern-

~ procedures consist main·

ly of having these ~ bold
membership referendums. 'The

groups are: classified employees, dental students, faculty,
graduate students, Ia~ studeJ!ts,
professional staB, Millard Fillmore College students, medical
students, and undergraduate
students. 'The proposed governance system will have to be
approved by each of these
groups. Final written approval
will come from President Robert Ketter after the voting is
held
of H&lt;lrd Wort

-

Behind this week's simple an·
nouncement lies several montha
of bard work by the 24-member

Faculty Senate-..:.__________
(Contimud from P"'• I, coL 4)
Twa Adlan ltams

tiona! funds go into a general
pot that is re-distributed to all
Faculties. 'The amount alloca ted is determined by the
number of full-time faculty
members each Faculty bad in
1969. Under the committee's
propoaals, tbe remaining 50 per
cent of the funds would rontinue to be allocated using this
formula.
A different distribution metiJ..
. .
od is recommended fo~ mstitu·
tiona! funds DOt commg from
NIH/NSF. He r e, allocatioot
would be guided by the following fonnula-"tbe amount 8
l institu_tioMI funds ) would be
proportieMJ to N ( tbe amount
of funds allocated by tbe NIH!
NSF committee) times R (the
ratio of the total outside support of the budget UBita applying for this money ) ." Parzen
jokingly refers to this as the
"sinner (SNR ) formula."

On the pre-set agenda, the
Senate is scheduled to discuss
two uaetion" items.
First is a resolution calling
for completion of construction
on the new North (Amherst)
campus because "significant in·
terruption or delay . .. would
seriously jeopardize both the
current operatiolla aDd the fu.
lure prospects of the University
Center." 'The motion terms the
"maintenance of the 1110D1eft·
tum of development" a "matter
of the highest priority." This
reaolution, written by the Executive Committee, stems from
a remark Dr. William Baumer, chairman of the Senate,
made to Chancellor E r n e s t
Boyer. At the last Senate meet·
ing, Baumer came under attack
for saying to the Chancellor
that "U/ B could better aflora
a significant worsening of tbe
student-faculty ratio than it ~~
Senates EJ&lt;eCUtive Com·
could a hold in tbe construclDlttee bas come out agamst
tion of the Amherst campus."
~th the formula. and the ~t-.
'The second resolution in· SJde Support Adv!""'?' Comm1tvolves the complex issue of dis- tee that would . ~tribute these
tribution of the monies from flJ!Mfs. In ad_&lt;htion, the Ezecresearch grants known as "in· utive . Comrruttee suggests a
stitutional funds." In addition lowermg of the 50 per cent reto the dollars individual re- turn rate for ~NSF-funds
searchers get from grants, tbe "! ~ per cent, whi.~ would ~
institution receives funds not dJStnbuted by a democratic·
tied to any specific contract ally selected committee of the
which may be used in other budget unit generating them."
parts of the University. Restric· Parzen is said to be "generally
tions on allocating these funds amenable" to these changes.
depend
on the', source
of the
The E xecutive
.
Comrruttee,
.
grant. Basically
U / B receives
most of its institutional funds however, did stand behind the
from four sources- National rest of the Parzen Committee
Science Foundation ( NSF ) report, including its reasons for
Grants for Science; National returning institutional funds to
Institutes of Health (Nlli) the generating unit. The ...,.
Biomedical Sciences Support port points out that return of
funds " ( 1) encourages profesGrants; NSF Traineeship Pro- sors to seek outside grants; ( 2 )
gram Cost of Education Allow- provides funds needed to car·
ances; and the National Deth
posed
rch
fense Education Act CNDEA ) ry out
e ,.-Pro
resea
Graduate Fellowship Program. which cannot be provided for
3
Guidelines for spending the directly by the grant; &lt; l profirat two are fairly restrictive, vides seed money for growth of
' th the latte tw0
'din
the unit's research activities;
WJ
r
proVJ g and ( 4 ) provides recognition of
more leeway.
the fact that in allocating reFund Difficulties
sources one must attempt to be
lately, U/ B bas experienced fair in two directions; one di·
some difficul•.. because NSF rection rompares .d ;partments
.,
with other departments in the
and Nrn guidelines have not same university while the secbeen strictly adhered to. Some ond direction compares departfunding from both Nrn and ments with the same departNSF bas been challenged and ments in other universiti"!'."
may be disallowed. Other
monies reverted to Nlli beIn addition to reviewing the
cause of inequities. To help report of the Parzen Committee
aolve these problems, the Sen. on Resesich and Creative Acate asked its Committee on tivity, the Executive CommitResea!""&gt;the&amp;Dd Creative !-dclielin:vity tee last week approved the apto reVJBe
current gw
es. poinbnent of Dr. Kenneth
1be group, chaired by Dr. Laughery, p s y c b o 1 o g y, as
Emanuel Parzen, Statistics, is- chairman of the Senate's Liaisued a report calling for the aon Committee 'with the Unieslablisbment of two commit- versity-wide Committee on
tees--one to review NIHJNSF Computer Allocations. The ilpinstitutional fund allocations, poinbnents of Adrian Lund,
another to distribute institu- psycholozy graduate student,
tiona! fwlds hom other aouroes. to the Teaching Effectiveness
'lbe Panen Committee ajao Sub-Committee of tbe CommitIRlll~ested that 50 per cent of tee on Educational Policv and
NIH/NSF institutiOnal funds Planning, aDd Foster Thaver,
received be returned, upon ap- · paycholORV graduate student, to
plication, to tbe generating tbe Continuing Ed u c a t i 0 n
unit · Currently, all institu- Committee. were a1ao approved.

:n&gt;e

Committee They bad to make
some ·~ decisi&lt;;&gt;ns," Chairwoman M"' esplains, on bow
to proceed
First, a ·basic &lt;:boice bad to
be m a d e between using the
present governance bodies, sud!
as the Faculty Senate, CSEA.
and SUPA, or creating a whole
neYi structure. 'The latter choice
was made by SUNY/Bingbmnton wben it instituted a University-wide system of governance. 'The local committee, bowever decided to "strengthen the
existing bodies" and create a
system ·that would be "a bridge
to fill in the gaps." left by 5 ·
isting structures.
How to ratify tbe proposals
was the next question. Sbould
the Committee bold a Univecsity-wide election? Or, s ~ n c e
they bad decided to work with
the existing groups, should they
use them for ratification purposes? A 'g a in. tbe existing
groups were cboeen. 'The medJ..
?&lt;I !'f. ratification was ~.to tbe
individual £lOUI1Il. Oljginally•
the Govemaooe Committee bad
p_lanned to uae only ftW! CJes-.all
tbe.....,_,
students'lbe
werestuto
be lumped
dent
18 came stron~ tbio, ""'""'-·
f Eadl wanted a _ . . , - .

1972

~:aJL 6)
::P.t': ~-~b=

lion last fall to stop recnliting

be says, "we're definitely two
. montha behind in . recnli~.

::~'A~~
-..uto

~ ..

L'-

&amp;etting

m
aays ""' ...... was at
the preliminary ~-Jet. ,
~ ""!3e of recrwting when the
directive came. They've gooe
no ~- No periiClll8i "'?"tact
or VJewmg of prospects m action is acbeduJed.
~~~ ·~

.- - ...._
.
'The bold-':'!' has alao hindered acbeduling for next year,
Muto says.
'The trouble is, moat schools
prefer to acbedule two-year
home and away aeries, which
is impossible fur U/B now.
Muto doesn't know what type
of team, if any, be will have in
two years, aince only tbe present oommibnents for grants-inaid will definitely be honored.
Muto has 13 games acheduled fur .next ........, but be's
hoping for ten, or 11 more.
Even tbCJuP&gt; the immediate
goal of $10,000 is enough to
guarantee the team's existence
for ooe year, Athletic Director
Harry Fritz says "We want to
be certain' •or
' ' more than one
year. We want to~ sure we
can&gt;bonor our ~bnents to
tbe athletes - bring here !or
AUIIauJh thio giwe slutlomo ~. hopefully, four years. .
the majority of &gt;votes, ..m ..... ~ be;:: of~':fi
JP'OUP involved baa abeolllle ~ one or
·
veto _.,.. 0 - approval of tbe tiona be met: l). !bat the ~t·
final articles. U a governing ees change their gran~~
body does not bold a ref.,.... ~; 2) that tbe administradum or convey tbe results ol ~ l'8U1e the ~ funds
its balloting to tbe Governance """" year.
Committee, 11a1 its vote t . . 'lbe Trus~ have shown no
comes an abslention. 'Ibis p1ac.. Signs of~ the rule, ev~
es the ratification burdeD on though Fritz believes they will
the agencies involved. Each bas soon do so,
.
.
to decide how to oonduct the
Accordm1r to VJCe PresJ·
balloting aDd bow to educate· dent for Umversity Relations
its oonstituency about tbe pro- Dr. A. Westley Rowland, "Dr.
posed governance system. ·
. Ketter feels very confident that
Mechanical aspects of the the friends and alumni of the
voting and making-up of the University will come to the aid
ballot will be handled by tbe of this program. We have bad
Committee. To do this, they some 8ssurances from a few
have been promised aome fi.. people, and letters have gone
nancial aid by tbe President's out to a group of alumni and
Office.
friends asking them to con·
Enfnlnchioement of others
tribute."

The Committee gave aome
thought to the enUanchisement
of
groupsgovernance
not covered
in the
Present
bodies
employees of the Research
Foundation ani! the U/B Foundation. It was agreed that these
employees could vote if they
organized themaelves.
Although Prooadures have
been resolved, the Articles of
Governance s t iII have to be
completed. Now in a p- _._h
'""""'•
stage, the Articles are being
reviewed by the entire Committee. "Within a month, a first
draft should be ready," · Ms.
Mix says. This firat document
and suoceeding ones will be
based on the principle of "sbar.
ing of authority."
AU drafts will be available
for study and criticism by tbe
entire University community.
Sometime after the first draft
and discussions, tbe Committee
will decide that the Articles of
Governance are as complete as
they can make them ·aDd will
declare a "final draft." 'Ibis
docunient will be the
sub0118
mitted for referendums.
HELP

w•~

~·""'

Sub·Board I (SBI) is !®king for
a business manager to replace
Mark Borenstein who is leaving to
serve ••. President of _the Student
Assocoation of the State Unhlersity.
Applicants .must have • knowledge
Ctf accounting. so me experience
workong with - n t publications,
UUAB and/ or • t u d • n t iovem._.
ments, and mast be personable:
Steven Blumenknnotz, executiw dlrector Ctf SBI, " " ' - that au
resumes be sent to him in 214
Norton.

Golden Bull Fund

·

'The year before foothall was

droofptbeped,AlthewnmG!?~~ti~on-

which will help raise the baskelhall money--collected barely eoougb funds to pay its di·
rector's salary. Since the sport
was dropped, reports present
Golden Bull Fund Director
R'ck Wells, tbe umber of
1 tions has droppedn "aignil""!':
tribu
·cantly."
1 Money collected w i 11 be
handled by tbe U/B Founds'
tion, Inc. 1be Foundation is
not an olliciai bran c b of
SUNY, thus funds from .ts cof.
1
~ can be used for grants-in·
Some alumnl leaders ..,.
mained critiad of tbe admin.
.
af Ketter'
istration even ter
s an·
nouncement that funds would
be sought for besketball.
Alumni President Ed Gicewicz, a BuBalo physician and
former U/B athlete, bas been
especial)y c r i t i c a I, although
labelling himaeif as tbe "loyal
opposition." He feels that the
State University has an obli·
gation to underwrite both intercollegiate and intramural
athleticS JROilMl1ll8. both of
whic:h (~ fur coacbea' salaries paid by tbe State) are
currently supported bY student
fee allocations. Gicewicz seems
to feel that student snpportwhicb can be voted down at
anv time-is, at best, an unreliable Daais for a program. He
contends a solid sports probacked by the State aDd
~ ·
'ty would
long
go tJ/B's
~.in thelm~ty.

=· ·

�·3

J-,. 13, 1912

Speech and Hearing Clinic Provides
Therapy for Many in the Community

u.._..,,w_,,_..,..l
By GUS PATUTO

Christmas Day was
especially joyous affair at a orth
Bullalo home.
Besides the spirit of
season, the family was particularly rejoioeful this year for a son,
Peter, a peppy, brigbt-&lt;!yed,
four-year-old
Last Christmas Peter was
not such a happy lad.
As a result of a speech problem, be was closed moutbed
·and would not join in games
with other children. When be
talked at all, which was rarely,
his speech was garbled and disorganized. He literally oould

!:~~-S::~d·~~~'::

mas." And because he could not
express himself like other children, be tried to withdmw from
a world that seemed frightening
and confusing.
Peter's parents took him to
UI B's Speech and Hearing
Clinic where his problem was

found to be a delay in language
development. Immediate themPY was prescribed a n d ever
since Peter has made regular
visits to the Clinic for individual and group treatment.
Steady ............

In the past year, Peter has
made steady progress. He now
has a fair yocabulary, which is
growing daily.
"Now be expresses his
thoughts in sentences and is
more spontaneous and readily
volunteers in conversation. He~s
well on his way to learning how
to speak like other children,"
says Miss Ellen Green, a student thempist who's been working with Peter since September.
Pete r's story is similar to
that of many others who have
found help and hope at the
Clinic through the years. Since
the facility fust started taking
patients in 1949, hundreds of
children and adults from the
Bufl'alo area have been treated

for stuttering and articulation
problems and for o t h e r language and speech disturbances
resulting from cleft palates, cerebral palsy, aphasia, and other
disorders.

CoinPIIh Process

0 f t e n, though, progress is
slow for patients. As M i s s
Green explains, "Speech is a
very complex prooess to teach
and learn." One tot, an 18month-old boy with poor bearing, spent several months just
being introduced to the world
of sounds. First he listened to
music and simple sounds. Next
to more complex sounds, then
words. At the end of three
months he had mastered the
use of five or six words, though
he understood hundreds more.
PresentlY', about· 80 patients,
most of them children, are receiving treatment at the Clinic,
which has a staff of seven professionals and about 50 student
thempists.
The C I i n i c, explains Dr.

Linda Moulin, assistant professor of speech communication,
has a dual purpose: treatment
and training. Supervised entirely by faculty members of the
Speech Communication Department under the direction of Dr.
Mary B. Mann, the facility
provides first mte care to patients. But at the same time,
students get a chance to watch
these professionals give treatment and to work with patients
themselves. Miss Green, for example, a graduate student in
spee ch pathology, bas been
working with thempists and
three o the r patients besides
Peter as part of requirements
for a master's degree.
In addition to care, the Clinic also gives diagnostic bearing
tests each Friday to the public.
In recent years, however; it has
bad to cut back on aural (hearing) rehabilitation somewhat
due to a lack of staff. A handful
of hearing patients are s t i II
tested, tbough, and the Clinic
will recommend a good thempist when needed.
All the Clinic's public services are free.

houaed in the same facility at
Ridge Lea-to try to improve
therapy and t h e o r y about
speech pathology, audiqlogy,
and speech communication.
Dr. Moulin, wbo also beads
the research tab, and Dr. Derek
A. 'Sanders, associate professor
of speech communications, for
example, are studying the effects of classroom noise on the
speech discrimination of cbildren wearing hearing aids. The
project is funded by a $11.000
gmnt from the National Easter
Seal Association.
Other projects include a study
of the relationship between
verbal and non-verbal communication by Dr. Charles R. Petrie, a s s o c i a t e professor of
speech communication; an investigation into some of the
causes of stuttering by John A.
Onufrak of Binghamton, N.Y.,
a doctoral candidate in speech
pathology; and a study or noise
levels as a class project by a
group of students t a k i n g a
course in noise pollution. And
Miss Green, a gmduate of Bennett High School and the University or Rochester where she
Research Lob
studied psychology and linguisStudents a n d faculty also tics, is comparing the developmake use of the Speech Dement of language in fmternal
partment's research lab- and identical ~-

Carnegie Fwuls SUNY~ Three-Year Degree Trinl
Carnegie Corpomtion of New
York bas announced gmnts
totaling $343,760 to State University to help develop experimental, time-shortened baccalaureate degree program• at
four campuses.
The programs are to be built
upon two main premises: ..
• that college baccalaureate
degree programs, traditionally
involving four years of study,
can be condensed to three years
without loss of quality or content., and
• that the secondary schoolcollege experience can be successfully compressed from eight
yean; to seven.
..
The Carnegie support will
play a major role in the immediate future of undergraduate education at three of the
four campuses- State University at Albany and the Colleges
at Geneseo and Brockport. The
fourth gmnt will provide planning assistance for a three-year
degree prograro at the developing Upper Division College in
the Herkimer-Rome-Utica area.
Not...._ - . n e t
Alan Pifer, president of Carnegie Corpomtion, in a statement announcing the gmnt,
said: "'The traditional four-year
degree is no longer sacrosanct.
Today's students are more sophisticated and better prepared
than they uaed to be, requiring
so m e fundamental rethinlring
about the content and of bisber education. The
imental programs of the~­
vemity, which will inwlve typical students, not just the WirY
bri,bt, will the proposition
that ks time in coUep am
produce both .-led curricular
reform and major coat MVinp.

lC they prove successCul, they

may be the means to systemwide change in the State University."
The programs a~ the four
campuses will enable S t a t e
Univen;ity to implement what
promise to be substantial benefits to many sectors of public
higher education, Chancellor
Ernest 'L. Boyer said.
•
Savinp to Taxpayers
"We expect that these programs will prove their value
to students, who could enter
the work force or gmduate
study sooner; to parents, whose
sharing in college e,.P.nses
could be reduced by one-quarter; to faculties, who are reexamining tmditional curriculums and time structures in the
light of today's relevance; and
to taxpayers. since more classes
of students oould be accommodated without co.11y additional
building programs," he stated.
The time-shortened degree
concept is the · second SUNY
innovative educational progran•
to receive major foundation
funding within 11 month•,
Cbancellor _Boyer noted. Carnegie Corporation and the Ford
Foundation each gmnted State
University $500,000 to initiate
l';mpire State College, the University's off-campus degree program, last February.
'The four campuses will implement their own progmms independently, based upoo the
p~ -:I pbiloeophy .or
=-=n~ty, Boyer 881d.
Alban
.
.
.State U mvemty ~t
Y
will approach the time-sltorteoed degree through a combined 12th grade and fiJSt year
!&gt;f collep; it will llOIICll!l1tnlte

the progmm in an entirely new
college which is expected to enroll 1,600 students sometime
after 1976.
Distinctive features of the
College at Brockport's timeshortened degree progmm are
the awarding of a bachelor's
degree after three years and an
independent faculty which will
select, admit, counsel and evaluate students in the progmm.
Nine hundred students are expected to be enrolled by 1975.
The Coliege at Geneseo's
three-year baedilauieate progmm is the largest contemplated and expects to enroll
2,000 by 1974. One-half of the
incoming freshman class in
1973 will be admitted to it.
The three-year p r o g r a m
will not have to compe!Al with
established curriculumS at the
Upper Division College because

U/B Students
Benefit From

no full-time bachelor's degree
courses are as yet being offered.
The gmnts to the campuses
were mP.de for periods of up to
three years. Albany's awards
Students in the Faculty of
under the time-shortened bac- · Law and Jurisprudence and the
calaureate progmm will total School of Social Policy and
$100,000; Brockport and Gene- Community Servioes will be
seo's $80,000 each; and Upper beneficiaries of a $48,378 gmnt
Division College, $5,400.
from the New York State Criroe
Tb~University's Cetitral Ad- Control Planning Board f o r
ministmtion will receive a total maintaining and expanding a
of $78,360 for· coordinating all social and legal aid prograro
programs and evaluating their at the Erie County Jail.
effectiveness over a period of
The 14-mon th-&lt;&gt;ld program
live years, ending with 1976- helns pre-trial detaJnees w1th
77. A project director will be problems other than those diassisted by an advisory commit-. rec..ty inVOlVed WJtn tnelr uptee of from 15 to 20 persons to coming court cases.
include representation r r 0 m
gmnt, which was given
Central Administmtion, partic- to The
Erie County, is being subipating campuses, University contmcted
the University
units which do not have a time- with act u to
a I administmtion
shortened degree, and second- being handled by the Student
"!Y schools.
Counseling Service, until now
a volunteer organization. To
date, ten students have participated in the program, but it
abilities in such areas as: using will be expanded to 16 under
good judgroent in the law en- the State gmnt and will proforcement field, understanding vide a small stipend in the fuand interpreting legal passages, ture to persons wbo bad previand preparing written material. ously volunteered
Candidates for the G-15 slots
The progmm in Bullalo is
will also be tested on super- one or the first or its kind in
vision. An oral examination is the country and may serve as
required for those wbo pass the a pattern for providing aervices
written test.
to people ~ held for trial
To take the test for super- A major function of the provising campus security officer, gmm is to refer prisoner's Probpermanent competitive service
as a campus security officer ll lems
cy. to the proper social - is required; for the test for camWith the State gmnt, it is
pus security officer ll, permanent competitive-JI&lt;!I'Vioe as a hoped the program will expand
campus security offioer I is to l?rinl! in a lawyer who will
work With students to provide
'The local Civil Service OOioe low cost legal counsel to debas applicatioos.

State Grant

Exams for Security Offirers Slated
Civil Service Competitiv~
Promotion Examinations for
supervising campus security offi&lt;:er (G-15 ) and campus security officer ll (G-12) will be
held on February 26, with application&amp; being accepted up to
Janwuy 17.
The exams are ~ to all
qua).if'led employees Of SUNY.
At pn!81!Dt, Civil Service says,
there are nomerous vacancies.
First conside tion · apppintment will be ':iven : employees in the promotion unit~
-a vacancy OClCUl8. after which
anpointmeftta will be made
(ftl!D the - • lisl..
•
-:---.

'The wntten emm will for lmowledae. akills and! or

"""""""'·

w-.

�4

]--, 13,1!1112

~

How Do the State &amp; SUNYGoAbouti)eterminingtheBudget?
EDITOR'S NOTE: TIW di#c"""ion o( the SIDU'1 Gild the
Stale UniDersil)ls budget-IJIIJking process was sup"plied by tlu!
Office of Coi7IIIIUilil:olina for
SUNY.
~time period
in the State -

,.arr

Is-

A-'lbe Stele fiscal year begins on April 1 and ends on
March 31.

~-the-­

mit the Executive lluclpt to the
~r

m o to r W!hide lellistmtioas;
busiMM - ; and baada.

~- ....... - o f _

pendiluresl

A- TheY are:
1. Local aasistance, tbe aid
provided by the Stele to help
run I o c a I snvemmeniB and
school districts. This is the
largest single area of e&gt;qB&gt;diture. As a rule of thumb, the
Stele pays out for locsl assistsnce about 65 OI!IIIB of f!!VfS:Y
laxpayer dollar it collects;
2. State purpoees, the cost o1.
running the State government;
3. Capital construction, New
York's building Prosmm .
4. Debt service, the payments
necessary to meet bond principal and interest and interest
and tax anticipation

~jeclld bad 1 e t dl6:ll,
$'iiO,OOO,OOO.
Additioaal tu .......... leci&amp;latioa ol ClDUIIIe. I!D8Cied
last month.

::..,._bond

·-------

~---­
--~-...,-o - - - - - . . , .........-lnthe_.....,

-~~~-....-~
A-l'llmninl and review tab

plate Oil ewoy . , . _ and
Ceotral Administutioa peraon.
nel meet with repn!III!Diatives
of
institution. As a ft!lllllt
of theae d"
•
detailed
guidelines
of bmel hudcet subm .........
""' P- to
aanpus.
..-,?
A-Stale University representetiws ha... l'ormal and informal disn....._ with tbe Division of tbe Bud&amp;et ~
out the fall A ClOIIIpl'l!hensve
request is developed for review
by tbe State University Board
of Trustees. The Board authorizes the CbaDoeUor to submit
operaq and capital budgeiB
to the Budget Division.
the basic .......
ponents of the Uniwwslty

..n

~t

'*"'

.....

A-Yea. Uniwrsity..,......ted

:;:=

..............., _.....,_.. ...........
part ol ita .......... badpt.

. - .... Uloloienllr - . .

A-y.._ Fl:lr tbe lint time,

tu~ 8UPIXWt lar tbe
U . . - t y ey-, DOt in~

"""""""'
sum as tuition and - o - - - .... _....
room rental charJies &amp;Je .,.....
mitted to tbe 8lJIIIXII'l ol tbe
debt service .... Oil tbe capital constTuction propams..
Only revei!IJOII in ol debt
service requiremeniB for a parQ-Daes _ _ _ _
ticular ye&amp;T ""' applied to - port the operatinc bud&amp;et-

-- ------

A-T h e Stele Constitution
~~r to submit
an Executive Budget by the
second Tuesday after the first
day or the annual legislative
session, except in the year following a gubernatorial election,
~-the- tittlla
when it is due by February 1.
In 1972, the Executive Budget Executive Budcet ~by
will be submitted on January
-1971?
In FeiJn8ry
18.
A - '!be ~r propaal a
"stopgap crisis" budget calling
Q-What
.....
do department h e • d s hne in the for total expenditures of $8.45
o---- ....
-ration of the Executive llud- billion. In his Budget Message,
aetr
the governor observed that:
buolpt for~
A-During the fsll, heads of
• Rising unemployment and
A- There are siJ: areas or fi.
State departments and agencies, declining business profits were nancing
a n d e&gt;qB&gt;diture for
including State University, fur- significantly depressing N e w operatioas:
nish the Division or the Budget York's estimated personal and
U nioersily OperoliollB, incJud·
with estimates of their needs corporation income tax receipts. ing
instruction and departmen.
for the coming fiscal year. 'lbe
• Government costs, espec- tal reseasdJ, maintenance and
Bu&lt;~fet Division holds fonnal ially at the S t a t e and local
hearings on these requests with level, were rising far more rap- ~lion ol pI ant, student
the chairmen and ranking mi- idly than those or the ordinary
~::S~ aid, ornority members of the legisla- citizen.
adminislratioa·
general
tive fiscal committees in atRevenue was e:&lt;pected at that
Pro/f!UI7U ~tered by
tendance. The requests general- time to reach slightly m o r e tlu!_
Unioersily,
sum
as
chanly are reduced by the governor's !han S7 billion, leaving a pro!"'fing State aid to private medoffice before the Executive Bud- jected gsp or
billion.
ical
a
n
d
dental
schools
and
get is submitted to the Legis~-thepptobe
SUPP&lt;Jrtinl the New York Netlature.
closed, sihce the Executive llud&amp;et work of educatianal televisi
on
stations;
is SUpposed to offer a boJancod
Q-After the
11uc1pt spending plan?
PITJffiUnl$ for tlu! disaduanhas &amp;one to the le&amp;ls!WJre. whot
A-1be governor proposed to taged, the Educational Opporis the next step?
A- Legislative consideration raise $1.1 billion through addi- tunity Program (SEEK), Coof the budget proposed by the tional taxes and another $300 operative Centers and um.m
governor, which includes public million through the Transports. Centers;
Supporl of Coi7U7JUIIdy Colhearings conducted by the As- lion Bond Issue scheduled to
sembly Ways sod Means Com- appear on the b a II o t in the ~talcovering operating and
Clpl
aJSts;
.
mittee and the Senale Finance November 1971 election.
Q-Wasn't the bud&amp;et reduced
General Stak charges, such
Conunittee. State agency and
department heads appear be- : : : : : . : : , ' ; ' in the 1971 lee- ;:,.,,'~and pension payfore these conunittees to anA-Yes, about $750 million
Debt _,ice. rents) paymentB
swer questions concerning their
budget requests. These hearings ~cut from the origirial apend. to the Housing Finan&lt;ii Agenmg
plan, largely by reducing cy. which finances tbe mnstzuo.
~din February and
spending for Stele government Iiiia of academic and adminisoperations and holding the line trative facilities, and the DoriDQ-What JeVisions can tl:e Lee·
itory Aulbori.ty, which finBDDes
isbotu,. lNIIe in the buolpt ap- =~ ~;:.~vemments and resKiential bniJdings.
requires the

hospitel _.w....~oc~en~ - -mjwplle,_.,..
aJicwmicwM
.... and
.:JIII'IBr.

from _ _ _ _

A-Yes. Resideutial and nonresidential build in 1 s are
finailCed OYt!l" 30 yam; tiJroaKh
the Dormitory Autlaity and
Housing Finance Agency, respectively. S t a t e University
does not own theae facilities
u n t i I the obliptioas to tbe
bondholders have been met.
Q-Who - -

the-

respomibBII)r for . . - . . . -

--"01
the they
... _...u

...-.. -

A-State University does as

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

A~powthbas

t... ..a.-1, ~ JlOI!itioas
"""" . . left UDiilled, capital
a:JDBtruct:icm r!l:,!::,d,priabons
have been
maintenBIIDI! has been cut considerably,
faculty-atudart ratios have beoome leal rich.

__

...

,

cr-"t there - . . .
----~~~-ID
S t e t e - - - - In - -

A-Stale University and the
various Stele departments and
ageucies ...,.., advised by the
Division of the Budget t h a t
new requests for the release or
r u n d s were suspended. This
meant, for example, that no
vaaincies were to he filled, no
out-of-State trips authorized
and no new contracts awarded
until further notice.

The costs of materials and services
PERCEiff-AGE lNCREASE:.

..

l9M~1110

su

Ex--

propriation bills submitted by the

&amp;ovemorl

A-The Legislature may reduce items in the bills or add
~parate i t e m s of appropriation.
"
~volin&amp; margin is . - .

:::;-~ec~•latlve - o f buolpt

A-A simple majority in both
the Senate and Assembly.
Q-Con the the
: : : : : bills oclopted by the tq;s.

A-When there are oo additions, appropriation bills become Jaw without further action
by the governor. But any or the
separate items added to the
f!OYernor's budget bills by the
Legislature ""' subject. to tbe
governor's approyat

~-the--of

Smte income ~ expenditures for
1971-72 folloilling the rejection of the Issue?

A-On the income side, in
millions of dollars: Cuni!nt revenues, $6,950; Existing bond
authorizations, 225; Total estimated income, $7,175.
-~ the expenditure side, in
millions of dollars: Stele aid
to localities, $4,772; Stele operations, 2,422; Capital construction, 569; D e b t service,
182; Total estimated expenditure, $7,945.

o-- io thepimeoy -

~.:.-.::; - - for

the State

A-State tupayer dollars.
State Uniwrsity receives the
largest appropriatioa or any
agency in the State pwpoees
part of the budget and pins
~tianal support in the locsl
~~oftheState
Q-Are ,.....
-.......?

oth'er -

A-Yes. Additianal income is
!i"""""ted by tuition and donnllcry rental ~ University

BUSINESS
TAXES

....

PERSONAL
INCOME TAX

""'

..

USER TAXES
AND FEES

Q-Are _ _ ........., ....
durifil lila lollolative _ ,

A-Yea. There is a~
mental budget and a deficieUcy ·
budpt The supplemental budget usually is acted "~"!"' at
the end of the annualle«issative
!l&amp;l8ion and is a cafd&gt;.afi ..,__
ing both e&gt;qB&gt;ditures that ...,..,
not anticipated when the main
budget """ adopted and the
reconsideration ol eulier reduc~ ~ by tbe l..ePalature.

EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTION 1971-72
SMILUONS

1.327

soa,u

DEVELOPMENT

1.10!t TRANSPORTATION AND

AVEL SAFETY

1.1109 -

HEAL TM

addi~~

~ts heynnd what originally lllloCated.

ID

o--- the potndpol-

the.....,.. ue tbe
-

of . . . . -

A-Tbey

PERSONAL SAFETY

.RECREAnOfll AND CULTURAL ENRICHMENT

oujipolt

HDifi'NG AIIID ~ITY DEVELOPIIIEJfT

penaaal in-

ENV1_..TAL CONSERVAnDN

oometu;--andr-

sum as tbe Slate . . - tu and

.. --

.. . .....

-NESS AIIID INDUSTRY
~ ~

~

�~

}~13,lll12

SBI's New Director
Has HiB Mbrk Cut Out
Wbai lllarted out aa an iD-

::;":'C.~~
~-.........awdi­

ndor of Sab-Bomd I (SBI),
tumod into an ezamiDaliaD of the ills of the oqpmimliaD. E-. aa SBI Chairman
Paa1 ~ liatal Blumenbmdz'a dut1es, it aounded
liloe be bired to . .
• ....,...;. SBI 1ban simply be
i1a
director. 'Ibe 25yaoNJid anployee will "beep
SBI c:baDp from a decision
lllllkiDc body to a policy-makinc ODe; make the 8CCOilDting
syBian ellicient; establish
a CllllliJJaeacy fund; ewlve a
.,...;ble reoqpmizaliaD few SBI;
espedite the A m hers t land
transfer; aDd iDcrease romDIIlllicaliaD between students
aDd SBI." He will also coordinate the wod!:· of tbe various
SBI divisiaa&amp;.
'Ibe p~ BlumenlaaD!z seemed to lake all these
duties of his $13,000-a-year
post in Blride. last June be
graduated from Brooklyn Law
Sc:bool; his previous degree is
in ao:countinc from U/B. JJur.
inc his years at law school, be
was active in environmental action propams and helped formulale a natiooal law school
council on ecological issues. fte.
oendy, be finished tbe third
part of the four-part Certified
Public Accountant exam.

.........aw

PrlnwyT......

::t"
~~~ ;;Ncym:d
inviles all students In visit him

in 214 Norton.
•
Barely bad the new bearded
director msde these remarks
when the p r e s s conference
turned intn a forum in which
.various factions presented their
views on the ills of SBI and
pc!610ib1e cures. Dennis Arnold,
editor of the SpectTUm, re-.
viewed his ideas for oeorgaoizing the board and increasing direct representation. La r r y
Stein, UUAB's chairman,
pn!!Bed for 6naocial reform.
And Michael I.eYinson. campus
poet and ~ caodi·

date for the E!D!Ciltive director- -

ship loudly waJ1red out-of the

c::oni...........

protesting that be
bad previously wo!bd out an_ , few all of SBI's problems
but was ~ ....,.. for the job.

---r

SBYs responsiveness tn studmiB was also q u e s t i on e d .
Cummine was asked botr Blumeala8Dtz was selected and
Eric Schoellfeld of W B F 0
--~ tn know ....... it wasn't
...........

WUJ

ID's Are Tickets

Studi!nta will be admi~....to
Clad&lt; Gym few all home ~t-

~~.!:3/D"':::.~ti:.

8tudoat Entrance. Students will
be admitted tn all Bl'!" ~
of the Gym. 'Ibe Wbita aectiOn

isthe'-'taectim~~

_,~~ _ ,ts, and visit!""- .....,._. ~
t-

!"' taun complimentary """
llllf 'l't'
D&gt;eelt "'!"" ae• 1 Jes are
avU1able tl!is ~ and will be

run .., a tip blais. A refreshlllaDd is also a~
'Ibe dii!Ck 1001111 are located m
lbe ~~....:rl!
.• .

.AnS\\ered By
U/B Students
U/B studeuiB are starting to
Ralpb Nadel-'s call for
"active citiz!I!Dsbip.• More than
200 are now CJI1IIIlrizing WNYPIRG--4be Weslem New Yodt
Public lnlen!st Reaean:b Group
-in an elforl to practice Nader's principles. 'Their or-pniz.ation, one of 18 nationally,
promises In "work within the
existing edocatioosl and social
systems In analyze and belp
solve Western New Yodt's
p......U., problems in such areas
as enVliOiliDelltal preservatian
and oonsumer proCeetioo."
In~ to "analyze and belp
solve," the group needs IDDI!eY•
Early in February, WNYPIRG
will hold a petition drive to
raise student fees by two dollars. Tbe money would go to
hire a professional stsll of reserudlers and laWYers to investigate different problem areas.
llD8Wel'

llOOil

'Ibe director oonsiders
as his primary targets improved
oammuoicatioos between SBI
and the student body and the
hiring of a new student busi, De9S manager. He and Ed Dale,
oewly appointed director of
public relatioos_for SBI (a nonpaid position). plan In publish
SBrs operatinc budget aod
make students more aware of
the !JII!!DCY's open meetings. In
addition tn letting students
"know where the money is g&lt;&gt;-

Nade-s Qill

-

put to direct student vote. "'
don't ·see the need In lake the
e""""tive director's oelection In
the students," Cumming replied, ·eEI&gt;IainiDc that the position was a day-lo-&lt;lay managerial one rather than a policy
making poal Schoenfeld, bowever.. shot t.ck that it was a
matter of "expediency vs. acoountability~ and denJaoded to
know bow responsive Blwnenkrantz would be tn students.
Cumming Jnade it clear that
the new director would "'receive
his orders from the board of directors and work widJ the
chairman of the various divisions."
CUDmling did acknowledge
that tbe organization bad been
doing a poor public relations
job and that possibly some reorganization was in order. He
pointed out, however. t h a t
Blumenkrantz's selection was
handled by a committee of
three SBI members and bad
lhe tacit approval of tbe majority of the board.

n~lliPOies
~lll.o

Use

Tl..- ~ ~ ..1. • ~

Newr

I~ure

Tbe Collegiate System this
semester will begin using a n&lt;tW

accountinc system for_ allocating full-time equivslent (FI'E)
credit to departments. Under
the procedures, tbe department
which pays ao instructor will
be credited fo~ students in
the course. 'Ibis, in tum, will
allow the department In use tbe
FI'E's in genemting budgetary
allocations.
While the system is not new
and bas been used in other
areas of the University, this is
the first semester the oolleges
will be using il Previously tbe
system used bv tbe oolleges for
allocatinc FI'E credit for budgetary purpoees was. not clearly
defined.
.
.
Tbe process will enable m·structors In """';!' Coll~f:e
System courses on load if
this is acceptable In the departmenl Previously, maoy areas
were reluctant tn have faculty
teach in the colleges as part of
their normal teaching load. As
a result, some faculty taught
college courses in · addition In
their required load. Dr. Konrad von Moltke, director of the

~P s~,:: ~

psrtments to e. II ow faculty
members to teach e,oll~ge
courses as part of their normal
~ new system also ..,p.
arates "budget load" from "curriculum load," von Moltke
notes. "A histnry p~essor
could now teach a """""' m the
History of Literatwe in Vioo
College and the History Depsrtment would get credit for
the students in the oourse,': be
explained. 'Ibis frees faculty
members and allows - them to
teach
. tbeir area of
~ the deflart-

C'tad in~~~--· -~-~

LowSc!M*

Already. Law School students
have voted In raise tbeir fee by
$2 and PIRG is hopeful tbe
other five student govemmeots
~n follow suil
'The February petition drive,
however, "!!D't be limited to
U / B. WNYPIRG organizers
are hopeful that Buffalo State
will hold a drive at the same
time.
Current plans for the petition drive, tentatively set for
the week of February 7, call
for door-to-door s i gnat u r e
searches in the dorms, active
campaigning at dub meetings
and appearances on campus
radio stations. 'Ibe local chapter hopes Donald Roos, Nader's asSi..staJit for setting up
PffiGs nationally, will ' oome.
~By

F. .

By fa11, the gr oup plans
to be "definitely ftmctiooiing,"
Beth Kassirer, member of the
Coordinating Commit:tae. says.
A successful petition d r i v e
among all U/ B student governments would net WNYPIRG
close to $50,000. U the money
is raised, the group will spend
tbe summer organizing and selectfug members of its full-time
professional stsll.
·
What area will be investigated first is still tmdecided. Ms.
Kassirer favors a hard look at
emergency bealdJ care IBVices..
Sbe cites the tragic example of
a U/B student, active in the
WNYPIRG movement, w b o
was tbe victim of an aa:ident
in front of the Vetenms' Administration H o1i pita I last
month. While the victim was
waiting for JUl. ambu1snce. sbe
died from loss of blood, Ms.
Kassirer alleges.•
Objectiw Aopao1s

Wbalever problem is first,
tbe organization bas pledged to
provide "objective and informative reports." ' WNYPIRG also
wants to "provide ~ts with
a means whereby their oon&lt;em
widJ problems can be translated into oonstnJCtive activity.•
It promises to "provide the
Western New York public widJ
a professional a n d volunteer
group dedicated to ...-ving the
public interest.M o s t of the investiptions
will be haDdJed by the professional stsll who will receive
orders from a studeut board of
directors. Members of the board
will come from .all ooolributing
schools in the Weslem New
York area. Representation m
tbe board will be ... the buis
of size of student body.
PIRG ~ ·frCUII
U/B are cunenlly .....tine widJ

:.~.~~
County and iapra who .......

shown inlen!st in ~
c:baplen.

rstnw StdrvatioriHits.
Student Health Clinic

--

it would be.._._._., to tbiDk
of the State iDai!Miloc ila ......
cial
i'
d to atadeat
beallb ........_. But, be ia
quick to 8dd, "' .....t tbiDk the
Stale will -n,- elimiDUe ita
....-y.._t.·~
feels '"the best--~
is
by the
Health Atraim is the organization of a Sd&gt;aol of Ho.IJh
Educo.liaD .. h i c h would be
"closely relali!d'" to the 8tudoat
HealdJ Serrite aDd would sibly he I p with ...,_ aDd

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
SUNY's tisht financial I&amp;
uation is forcing U/B's Univer-

~~::r~s::..~~=
its director Dr. Paul Ho«man.

'Ibe Seovice was recently informed that next year's budget
woul.d be tbe s a m e as this
year's. 'Their requests for an
additiooal position and foo- an
iDcrease of $35,000 in operatinc
funds were denied. This situation, while similar In conditions
in other areas on campus, may
have far reaching effects, Dr.

8:..,.,- or;;.....

funding.
U.lim•; Willa

Hoffman says.
As it now stands, the HealdJ
Se&lt;vioe is short one full-time
physician out of six and bas
lost two nurses. It can no longer provide out-patient service
after 5 pm. and if the lll1lSe
at Ridge Lea is sick, there is
no replaecmenl ·
Tbe Bursar's Office bas stop.
ped collecting the Service's bills
and no longer puts "stnps" oo
student registration cards for
unpaid accounts. This puts the
HesldJ Service in the red for
several thousand dollars each
year since there is no way In
force paymenl
Denial of the additioosl funds
and position, moreover, makes
tbe opening of an emergency
health station on the new North
( Amherst ) campus "unclear"
and " uncertain," Dr. Hoffman
says.
Dr. Eugene Lippschutz, associate vice president for health
sCences-calls the situation "untenable" and "serious."

-mve

:mrm:::. .~~~

healdJ service really belonss ...
this c a m p u s because of the
large number of sumJlllJding
ho&lt;;pitals" and also how to &amp;et
such a service funded if it is
deemed"""""""'·
These disrnssimm deal with
next year and the future. Steps
are also being tabn In alleviate
some of the current - .
Hollman is ClOIISideriug, bavinc
outside agmcies do some of the

~-~~Heal~

U.SU:

bility is to have the
carrier do more of lbe paper=..,oe'IbeJYm!:,.:a~i~

lli&amp;M Get Wone
'These oonditions, while bad,

can get w o r s e, Hoffman believes. He worries about losing
more people and not being able
to replace tbem because of the
State's hiring freeze. LOss of
additional personnel, be says,
might mean the oomplete dose
down of the Clinic at 5 p.m.
daily widJ no evening emergency services. In addition, there
is a possibility that the ~
mini-hospital on the second
Boor of Michael Hall might
have to be terminated because
of lack of stall.
In light of the situation, Dr.
Holl'man and the Heal Ill Affairs
area of the University are looking for other means of support
for the Health Service.
On tbe State-wide level, ao
advisory council made up of
representatives from the four
SUNY medical s c boo I s bas
asked tbe Board of Trustees
and the Chancellor for additioosl funding for student
heafdJ services. In 1968. the
Trustees adopted a resol!ltion
rejecting the State's responsibility in this area and the Statewide council is also working to
repeal this.
......,._ lor Funds

Locally, Holiman bas dnnm
up a p._,.al for additioosl
ways for the Health Service to
achieve financial independeuce.
Tbe director feels the Seovice
should "make available· tn the
student diagnostic and tn!atment facilities equal to the best
in the commuruty. . . . and
sbould actually provide tboee
necessary services which the
community cbs not . • _ lOOI'e
rapidly, conveoiendy or ecc&gt;nomically than the community."
Funding of this type of - vice woul.d come from a manda-

tory student bealdJ service fee
and maodatory insurance. Hollman estimates tbe fee would be
between ~100 per yair d&amp;peDding on the services l'OIIdered.

c.-...

'Ibe Uru_,.;ty-wide Health
Advisory c-ittee is lllJ&lt;ICM
group e:auniniac the situatian.
Dr. J:.wreme c.ppiello, asoi&amp;t:mt to the
vice pn!Bident, is chaiJmon of this group
of faculty, stalf and student&amp;.
'Ibe Committee bas just started

-

Others, illd~ a.mcellar
Boyac, are .......;.tering the~­
man plan as a poasible 8DiuliaD.
Dr. Clyde Randall. vice
.
dent few bealdJ alrairs,

r.J:

hopeful of tuming -dent beallb care OW!r toofcr:mmunity doc:lxln.. 'Ibe C I i n i e

nonnally aeesover310 students
a day. Hollman . _ to cut

~
-:..-~1f.m:"..-:=

rendy the practice in po-o:Jiaaged

=..,"::, ~n":i~~ shots and when X-111Y aDd Jab.
oratory ......,m are needed. This
move bas hit some raadblocb,
................ Many outside doeton
hesitate In take students because of their inability to PIIY
and because of their elfeet ...
other patients. Tbe shortaee of
physicians for refemd is especially acute in the "'-ia!gynecolocy area, Dr. Hollman
says.
.
Another partial hope is the
unfreezing of some peramnel

lines or~ lleDbility in
the use of previously
funds," 'Dr. Lippa:bulz says.
llrilllat Spat
One bricht spot ... the Health
Seovice SCI!IIe is the O....tal Division. At the ...t of the mer, it looloed as if this Divisioa
would not be able to open in
the fall Maoey few this academic yair -found, however,
and DOW the Divisioa t.s :on
"""""'""
Natioaallnstitules
H!!!lllh cnmt
which could _of
.

r.u.en

port the _ . . , . , for tbe three years.. Dr. Geoqe GolddindDr of dealisUy at the
Uniwln;ity H!!!llth Sa-rice, ia

ram.

"oplimistio:" about the cnmt
being funded this
•
n the
doaon't ~
however, the O....tal Divisioa
will clo6e down at the ...t of
tbe scl!ool yair. "'t's all or
nothin&amp;" Dr. Goldfarb..,_
"there's .., WilY to cut

JDODeY

1:!::::

'I'houch the UIB sibmioa is

..=!:.::.:i

~-:::
the termination

point 6Jr sludent t-~lh care. 'Ibis
the
studeut beallb RIYice at Oberlin College "out of haai"
....,;,._" N"" students ...,.,. to
rely ... Ollllllllllnity doeton for
all medical needs. Thia situation, thouch. "doaon't imminenl'" at U/8, Hollman ..,.

-

·· .. -:..·

ran

�~

6

~U,lnJ

~Wrld's PopulatiooProbleni: HowDense Can~ Get?

ecoouts for insistiDc on pollution Olllltrols?
"0 n e thine is ceriain: we
Wim't blame tbe deaths Oil....,....
population No one ever dies of
ovapopulation. It is unthink-

-

able.•

...

• t' .

~
And what
of America? 1be
population problem at home
seems less acute than tbe
wodd's problem. Almost nonexistenL Swely with all of our
millions of acres of uninhabited
land we cannot be badly off.
We shouldn't be. Yet our
tedmology bas made us vastly
moie ~than our 205
million ~ sugest. Our average citizen pei1IODII)Iy uses
100 pllons of water a day. In
his life be eats 10,000 pounds
of meat, drinks 28,000 pounds
of milk and bums 21.000 plloas of - - Our yearly crop
of 4 million babies will ,_ 200
million pounds of steel for 6
million refrigerators and 11
million cars &amp;mODI other knic:kllllll:b during their tenure on

news, but there are some bookera

1be birth rate bas oscillated
up and down (mostly up)
throughout ""-ican history.
It does not necessarily follow
that tbe present low rates will
continue. 1be 1930 reproduction lapse was IIOOJl followed
by tbe greatest baby-boom of
all time.
Even with low rates of reproduction, tbe population will
continue to grow much too fast
because t h e r e are so many
young people entering their
fertile y e a r s. 1f all married
couples had only two children
from now on it would still take
roughly 70 years for tbe U. S.
popUlation to stabilize. 1be

b..~~~""=

of old folks that are Clll!8Jtly
~=-dropping out of tbe
1bere is little doubt that anotber 100 million Americans
will be here in 30 years time.
~is little room for op.
-

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-

... CloOIIIDR

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........... ..._ a. ....._._., ._....

=--=•m MftB":--. .._

ol 'llutfMI?

To narrow our field of vision
!"'en more, what of Buffalo? It
IS at home where we can moat
graphically see what a ladt of
b i r t h control can eztmct in
human terms. We see needs no
longer j u s t in statistics but
fleshed out with race 8 and
names.
Mrs. AndelliOD .is pregnant
for tbe sixth lime-t;be wants
none of tbe kids. Betty Ann is
a 16-year-old who is an unwed
mother-for tbe second time
Billy Joe has to marry Sandy...,;
of CO!'fl"'. 1bey didn't ""P'!I't
anything to happen; sbe was in
her safe period A IP.rl on
Broadway is taken bleeding to
tbe hospital~ bied a coat
~ for an ~rtion. -

�&lt;REPORTER,

7

PrQfes8or GallagherVoices Objections to
(Knuckle-Rapping' Style of Some Articles
EDITOR:

PlaDed I'Uallbood ol.
(rom tbe

Bulralo -

eftort&amp; ol.

a ""' ............,

iDopired by Mars--'s cn..te iD
tbe .,.... ol. birth CIODirol
Amid doubls and politics
tbe fouDdors -.dB! ...
~and t b e elusi11e money............,.
for """""""- 'Their '-latiw
IJecimaiDis led to tbe ol.roc:W CJII"'IiDc o1. Bulralo's
lir.it Birth Calllrol Center
at 11 .Niqua Sbeet iD
-

pn!ll

1.933.

~.

39 years afta
that .......taiD birtb, we
fiDd tbe doom- PluDed
Parenlbood _.u.alion at
210 FmDkliD StJ-.. ~
aeplu&gt;ce has co me. al-

thouch a liDcerinc

skepti-

cism. still remains in &amp;Dille
puts ol. tbe ClllmMIIIity
tbat will ..........y -eli&amp;_ . . UDtil """' '1tself is
u.o... suspiciaa_ 'The"- lin! ol. its """"""" is that
PlanDed I'Ualthood has
two CJifspriDc ol. its .......
Neip.t.orbood centers at
Westminster House. 42'
AdmDs SUeet, and at 2211
Main Sbeet ha.., been est.blished to becin to cope
with local --.:.
F.:ilities and staff are
ellllOIIent. Down-.. tbele
are four ezamination
rooms, a lilnly, inl2rview
oftx- and a 111-=ious waitinc roam witb a c::hildreD.'s
c:omer to eDCOUra'!'!' . - . . .
em to mme even if no baby
sidenl are available. Four-

~~s"':...t""a:
are lqlpOiilod by an ioaced "administratnoe std.
Nm. lnrin Alpern is tbe

............, _,.u..,

ciim&gt;-

~~w.. !lbe is -..aped with a
.,.,_.... ........... wbidl indodos spealtinc ..... writinc ol. . . . .

~tnwrinca""'

daiJan out ol. tbe
a&gt;aatry_
l'lllaned I'Uallbood does

-

11-. fit -

with

diaphrapus, IUDs, a n d
prescribe 'The Nl It has
an extensi.., edUCBtional
Cllllllllitment. 'The o'l!llnizatioo lmins government welfare workers in family plan!'inl- Workshops are organUat to leach new contraceplhoe methods to ~
tered llUIBeS. Professional
baininc mumes in nwses'
eduattioo are regularly
taucht at tbe local hospitals, coUeces and universities. Traveling to d07ellli
ol. junior and senior high
scbools tbe Planned Parenthood staff lecture on
""" eduattion, -ulation
and contraceptives. Hundreds ol. students p6re o...r
tbe limited libnuy facilities
eadlyear.
Tbe Buffalo Center's
Medical Directx&gt;r is Dr.
Lippes. His research
has made tbe center world
............t. Developer of
tbe famoiJs inbauterine device kDolm as Lippes Loop,
he c:onlinues to search for
tbe ideal c:ontraceptive with
visitiDc scientists f r o m
mauy countries. Current
research projects, financed
by outside agencies. in·
dude studies in tbe new

""'*

:'T~~"!.,~

is a project involving an inbauterine plastic ring that
is impregnated with the
• contraceptive chemical pro-

JII!Siin.
'The Planned Parenthood
Federation, with all its facets ol. education, research
and per!IIIDIIl. medical and
social assistance. remains
today just as when it was
e;taNisbed . .. a unique orpnizatioo. It is not only
ClliDIIIitted to bring about
naliaDal and international
papulation stability, it is
.-, ClOIIIIDitted to the concept tbat all people shall
...... tbe ricbt to limit the
lllllllhor ol. children that
they ~~ria« into tbe world.

I wish to object to tbe
linuclde-rawing style of some
recent news articles in tbe Reporter. An artide in tbe December 9 issue begins: "'t was
billed as a discussion meeting,
but Tuesday's Faculty Senate
mee:.ing went a. little further
than that, sometimes lapsing
into argumentation."
.
How many thinga are wrong
with this senll!nce? The Oxford
English Dictionary defines "discussion" as follows:
"1. Examination, t.-ial (by a
judge); judiclal decision-1526.
2.. Examination (of a matter)
by llJ11.UtDellts for and against;
debate; a disquisition in which
a subject is treated from dif.
ferent sides--1556. 3. lnvesUgation of the quality of food, etc.,
by consumption of it (joc.·and
colloq.) -1862. 4. Med. The
dissipation or dispersal of humours. etc.-1758."
The entry under " argumentation., is
"1. The action of inferring a
conclusion f z om propositions
premised; methodical employment or pre9entation of arguments; formal reasoning. 2. In~!!e of ariument; debate
Argumentation ( sense two )
would seem to be a natural part
of discussion ( sense two ) but
perhaps it is the third or f~urth
sense of "discussion" that is
.intended when the administration meets the faculty. What
was supposed to go on at the
meeting, cheerful talk about the
weather, or a ootriuiunity- sing?
Tbe verb "lapse" is also interesting:
·
. ".!· 'l:&lt;! ~&lt;tway by slow degrees; 10smk gradually through
want of effort or vigour- 1641.
~in~lfi:#_,!nf.(&gt; error, heresy, or
Argumentation, I had always
thought, was what we are paid
for, not somethiDg into which
we "lapse," but my understanding of these thiDga predates the
Ketter Era of Consolidation.
Later in the article, we find
that when a faculty member
raises an issue of principle, she
,_questions" Dr. Gelbawn, but
when he replies, he "explains"

Gelbaums Pledge
To Faculty Group
Is Pointed Out

~J:,=tJ!iW~·s~':

cus (Reporto, October 28), we

learn that the Caucus "alleges"
certsiD things, while the ever.-eady "U/B spokesman, in correcting t h i s allegation, e&gt;:·
pwined . .." (Emehssis added.&gt;
Man proposes,. Qod disposes.
There l8 probably no remedy

=ling

ReaderSaysNotAllllbmen
Support Proposals ofNOW -EDITOR :

Although I am in sympathy
with some of the NOW organization's goals (equal pay for
equal jobs, more (sir evaluation
of our work, the end of the
snide comments like 'just like
a woman') , I find myself less
and less in sympathy with their
proposals if the demands mentioned in the December 16 article of the Reporter are a true
representation of the group.
The most blatant falsehood
is the statement that "all of
SUNY's female employees . . .
need such parent-controDed . . .
centers." Many of us who work
here have no children, have
other suitable arrangements for
our children, or have grown
children who are not day-care
center candidates. Why should
our tax money be used to add
one more service to those with
small children? Those among
us who are single are discriminated against already · by the
tax structure. At a tinie when
people are advocating a reduction in the birth rate, it seems

don't imply that being a secretary is demeaning. ' " " - of us
who work with-secretaries daily
know that a department can he
affected strongly by the secretarial staff. The "underbell~
is often, in reality, the part that
keeps the univei'Slcy going.
I hope your readers will not
take NOW's proposals as the
thoughts of all women on campwi and I trust the- administration will act on the suggestions
after careful consideration mtb,.
er than impulsive giving in to
pressure.
Sincerely yours,
( KIS!I) DOROTHY E. WYNNB

Assistant to
Director of Advisement

Fund Campaign for
Planned Parenthood
Is Now Underway

mrrott:
We begin our work this week
for the Planned Parenthood
Fund . Dri.o(e. Our ' gosl is to
read. every member of tbe
U:,f
and increase the tax.burden of UniversitY · community. _Please
those without children 'or who be at-· least as generous with
luive provided for their children your contribution as our workin the past.
ers are witb. tb.eir time and en·
ergy. Overpopulation is everyThe faulty assumptions in- body's problem.
clude the belief that female secWe expreSs our great thanks
retiries cannot upgrade themselves on their own. Many take to the ReporU!r, which, begintuition free courses now and ning in this issue, is publishing
many more could, if they so a series of informational ardesired. It is also insulting to ticles on various aspects of
the secretaries to imply that population control.
being ·a secretary calls for no
-KRS. BEATRICE SILBER
skill, cannot be a rewarding job
KRS. ANNELIFBE GABVER
and is equivalent to being "disCaptains for the
advantaged." Raise their ssJ.
Planned Parenthood
aries if they are underpaid, but
Fund Drive ·

~~::l;n

•=

~~.J~

Band Is Now Symphony Unit

The University Band program, under the direction of
The December 9th issue of Professor Frank J. Cipolla, has
the Reporter, in sumrnafizing undergone a major reorganiza·
the discussion which occurred tion this Ye/JI brought about in
at the Senate meeting of De- part by the elimination of incember 7, refers to Vice Presi- tercollegiate foothall on camdent Gelbaum's statement when pus.
be was asked about faculty statThe "traditional" marching
us decisions. He indicated that band
is no more. In its place
he would, if in his judgment there
has emerged a concert
he felt it necessary, recommend (group
selected by competitive
action to the President conaudition
and "capable of pertrary to the unanimous decisions of appropriate Deparlrnent forming 8s a truly"fine musical
organization,"
CipoUa says. The
and Faculty bodies. The ac- Sy mphony Band,
as it is now
count of the meetin' does not called, performed three
concerts
include Dr. Gelbaum s response
to the further question whether during the first semester-two
were
on
campus
and
a
third
was
he felt it incumbent upon him,
under such circumstances, to held in conjunction with several
church
choirs
of
the
City
give a reasoned statement in
support of his recommendation. of Buffalo.
He stated expliciUy that he recThe Band will be active again
ognized s uch an obligation. · during the second semester and
Since the issue of procedures sever a I oft-campus concerts
in the administration's handling have already beeri scheduled.
of faculty status recommenda- A March 5 date in the auditions haS to date been much torium of Villa Maria College
discussed in these columns, and will be followed by an appearsince there have been recent ance at the State University
- instances of administration re- College at Brockport and at
versal of fsculty recommenda- several high !:chools in Western
tions without any statement of New York. Music to boo- perreasons, it Q/ould seem to be formed will include Milhaud's
appropriate that this conunit- "Percussion Concerto," "Symmenton the part of Vice Presi- phony No. 3 for Band" by Gident Gelhaum be noted.
annini and the compleq, "Pictures at an Exhibition" by the
Sincerely,
Russian composer MU8110rgaky
J.D.~
Professor of Law which has been especlally tranEDITOR :

for this verbal gerrymandering,
unless the faculty demands that
tbe Reporto become a ...,..._
paper. In the mMntime, I beg
you not to attach to this letter
a litUe ~ in italics dispersfk~
lh!' humours
c.' A. GAL.LAGIIEB
Assistant Professor

scribed for band. Professor Jan
Williams of the Music Department faculty will be soloist in
the l\f ilhaud "Percussion Conoerto."
Appointments for auditions
for the Symphony Band can he
made by contacting Mr. Cipolla through the Music~
ment office in Baird Hall. 'The
instrumentation of the group is
fairly complete b u t qualified
and interested players are always welcome.
In an embryo stage of development, but with brigbt prospects for the future, is a Jazz.
Lab Ensemble under the direotion of Mr. Phil DiRe who has
performed with some of the
finest jazz figures in the country. No instrumentation is set
for the group and the music
performed is based on develop.
ing an "iinprovisstory feeling"
among the players. Mr. DiRe
feels that to develop a true
jazz-lab ensemble means to experiment with sounds and feelings of today and not to force
a preconceived instrumentation
based on a particUlar "big band
era" of tQe past.
The first meeting of the Jazz.
Lab Ensemble of the second
semester will he on January 18
at 7:30 p.m. in Baird Recital
Hall. Anyone interested in pat·
ticipa.tinc or learning more
about the group may atleDd

�J~J:J.Jm

8
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROG_RESS

-iod- ... . . . .

Feculty of Arts Md Litten . .. .. . . .
F . c u l t y o l - - ... .

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---

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F . c u l t y o l - - - · · · · ·· ·
F.c:ulty

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~~.~-~-~-. ·· ······~·············

F.cultyof _ _ _

_F_a..op_

AdrninistiMion . . . . . .. . . . . .

~- ·· ···· · ···

-..- .. . ... ' .... .. .
- " - · ····· ··· ···

Qon-

Educotlon • . .....•

Cl&gt;onmunic:oban •••• •. • .
- . ·1 E - Vies

~':..~. : : ::: :: :
-

. •. •••••••. ••. . •••

Affoin, . . . . . • . . . . . . . •
-..-. •. . . . . . . •
F.c:ulty- -

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~·;::,:,~ ~~ ~-

-York-

- O s n t w .. . . ... . .. . .

- ---------·--

,..._,,., atr- · · · · · · · · · ·
---

-

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--

IK~ &amp;40.00

nn 11110.00
13.580.00

I50So 240.00-

New.Appointments Listed
For Administrative Posts

Two University department
beads have been ~
for new tenDs,. eftectj.., September 1. 1972, President Robert L. Ketter. 8I1IIOUDiled CM!r
t h e - break.
eoo.oo
Dr. .Jobn K. Simon, chair103:::&amp;eoo.oo man since 1.969, bas been reappointed in the ~t
of French and -Dr. Howard
Tieckelmann in the ~
ment of Cbemistry. Prof. 'l'ieckelmann bas been CbeDUstry
cbainnan since .JI!DDIUY 1970.
Prof. Simon, who laD8bt at
tske this opportunity to thank
Divisions which exceeded Yale
University and the Uninot only those who oontributed their goals in the csmpaign YeJ"&amp;ity of Illinois, bas recently
to this csmpaign, but also the were: Uniwrsity at Buffalo edited the bank, Modern
msny individuals who served F oundation and Alumni Affairs, Frt!IICh Crilidmo ( from l'rolut
as volunteers to do the bard 226%; Offices of the President and V aiDy to St.rut:turaiUm).
job of raising the funds. 'lbe and Executive Vice Prel!ident, He is also the author of four
numbers are in the hundreds, 184%; Faculty of Engineering
books and 40 articles
and the success that we have and Applied Sciences, 151 %; and
reviews ... French writers.
bad this year is due to their Research, 150%; M FC and
During his first term as chairContinuing Educstion, 137%; man. the ~of French
eJrorts."
t' aculty of law and Jurispru- organized SUNY study abroad
An analysis of the csmpaign dence, 135%; Division of Aca- pro g rams in Greuoble and
reveals that there were 2,B60 d emic Affairs, 123%; Faculty P · France; a teadling in-·
oontributors to the University's of Educstional Studies, 113%; te'::iup for beginning paduate
drive. 'lbe size of the average Division of Facilities Planning, students;. an inleDJj.., French
gift based on thoooe who gave 113%; Division of Student Af. ~e rourae for beginners;
was $33.28; based on a total fairs, 103%; W.N.Y. Nuclear and a broadmed cwricu1um.
faculty and staff of approxi· Research Center, 103%: and
Prof. Tieckelmann, who
mstely 5,000, the average gift the Faculty of Natural Sciences joined the UniYI!IIIity in 1946
was $19.03.
and Matbemstics, 101%.
as. instructor in cbemisby. is
author of more than 60 cbemical papers and bas held aeveral o ff i c e s in the American
CbemicaJ Society at the national and Western New York
Jevels.
- -

----·-- ---

-

-

~.5110.00

1,11111.00
1,200.00

••••••••••••••••••._.tus

U/B Raises 95 Per Cent of UF Goal
'lbe UniYeJ"&amp;ity at BuJralo
raised $95,527.00 for the United
Fund Driw which ended :0...
oember 31. 1971. This CODl·
pares to $79,000 raised last
year, aroordiog to Dr. A. Westley Rowland, vice president for
University relations, and gen·
eral cbainnan of the United
Fund Campaign.
Commenting on the drive, Dr.
Rowlsnd ssid: '"l'he University

Community should be oongratulated for raising more than
95.5 per cent of its goal for
the United Fund. Naturally,
. we regret that we did not make
100 per cent, but we did exceed
I as t year's oontributions by
more than $16,000. I want to

Dr. Anthony F. Lorenretti
bas been named acting vice
president of student atfa.irs replacing Dr. Richanl A. Siggelkow who is em ....., until .June.

Associated with U/ B since
1960, Dr. Lorenzetti was first
director of placement and then
director of financial aids. He
was named 11!180Ciate vice president for student affairs in 1967.
Dr. Lorenzetti bas also been
director of the evening division
at Canisius College, director of
guidance of •I.ancsster Central
Schools, and a guidance counselor at Hamburg .Junior High
School
Dr. F. Anne Payne, 11!180Ciate
professor of English, bas been
appointed acting associate dean
of the Graduate School. Ma.
Payne will be in charge of coordioating the evaluatims of
every graduate department.
Tbe new associate d e a n
joined the U/ B Faculty in 1958
IU)d since then bas tsugbt
uate and'undergraduate rouraes
in Old Englisb, Chaucer and
other medieval authors. Sbe
serYed as chairmsn of the Master of Arts in the Hmnanities
prognun and bas been a mem::;,.ofc!::ru'=ersity AdJnis.
A graduate of -Sborter College and Yale University, Ms.
Payne also s tudied at St.
Anne's College, Oxford University, for two years. Sbe belongs
to the Medieval Academy of
America and . the Oxford Medieval Society.
Prof.,...,. Payne bas written
King Alfred and Boethiu•
(1968) and is currently working on Chaueer and Boethilu
and Fau, Hooi.m, and Fru-

cmd·

dom.

..,_

�1~13.1912

•l.Jrban Offire
Studies\\bes
Of the City

GREPOirrER:,

9

Survey UnitAssistB U!B Pollsters
SUSAN-~OOD
-

:Beet-hoven Is
Subject of
Unique WJrk

&amp;be . 1eemed the depths IIDd
"strength of the human spirit."
Her work bas enebled he!- ID
~ ..., full of public
meet many loaely or tmoiJied
auneys, televiaioa news
people, and many uae her • a
~ lbout about "the polls,"
sort of "Motbe&lt; Conf-.,."
By BONNIE WALKES
and ~ llOillzolled
MIS. Janet ~ another- .
.
by the ~ market li!III!IUdl
long time i n t e r v i e .,. e t is
A """" total enVliODIIWlt
How .... lbe """*'P:a: t.l- ~ Tbia popular tool is
amazed at people's ~ Wildt entitled "Race Over a
ance or 1M type of ......_. al8o being in tbe academic
"They COYer up nothing," &amp;be's Loot Beelbown" will be prealfect urban 111811? How .... ~.:;.,- opinion and
found and are "Usually ¥ery ~ • part_ of tbe new E.veurbulizaliaa ,&amp;ct ......_ . . ...._...
and _, .. __
ll1IICB for Music '!beater senes,
But to actually conduct a
open
-...;.... to talk."
iD COIIIIeCiion with the Ooe
inp? ADd iD our aJ1111&gt;1s .,_
Professional ,.,_,.
HUDdred Tenth Anniversary of
ciety how .... 111811 eDt IIDd poll that si""" you the inforAs with any job, the Wildt lbe Albrigbt-Kno&gt;t Art Gallery,
;;;;;:ld. lbe ~ of bia life? maliaa you want without bias
bas its professional problems. Saturday, Febnwy 19, and
U/B'a Ollce of Uma A&amp;in is very difficult. Obtaining a
CDm!ICt ~ sample is
Foremost is the difficulty iD re- Scmda,:r, Febnwy ~-{QUA) loab--at tbme trickr and writing a good suritlaining neutral to what a re'lbree yeais in preparation,
...... daily- it ·~ to W'Y
"'
bard.
In
order
to
help
spondent
is saying. Mrs. B.-.., the full _I__._ ptay and m""'1111
.
who is a "~ence sitter," lrij.s
........ ~
~
of -.diers
tbrougb the survey
to see both Sides of an issue but haW! been completely inteadmits this isn't always po&amp;- gmted to achieve what the
OUA -"""'ted iD 1967 "to jungle. the Campus Survey Re- More Thon Alklnc ~
plan and impleaart public ..,. Center for Field ReSince interviewing is "more sible. "Most interviewers haW! Music Department calls "a
t i o n - that would heich- in tbe Social Sciences than asking questions," new blind spots-areas where their """' eslhelic bllance between
len lbe Uaiwraity'a imool- was started. This academic
people attend a · two to three- personal opinions affect their music and theater."
ment iD lbe MUd&gt; fDr aolutioaa unit, commonly called SRC, hour training course where interviewing techniques."
Tbe music """' written by
to local urban problema."
opened three years ago to ".probasic interviewing techniques
The two women have found Lejan!n Hiller. co-director of
Today, accorcliDg to DUector vide a 8IUVey research facility and background on the Cen- many .different reactions from lbe Center of the Creative and
Frank J. Corbett, ita hmc:tic.. ~.""""!am associated with the fer's services are taught. Sur- people who are surveyed. Many thePerionning Arts which presents
ruversaty and other academic vey procedures are outlined.
"think it's a test," Mrs. Brown
series. Tbe script is by
are four fold:
Rookies learn that a Jetter is says, and "want to know what Frank Parman. creative associ• It ..... lbe ""''8'88ion of institutions." Its projects have
opportuaities for llllllerpaduate ranged from a poUution study first sent out to the respondent the right answers are." Others ate with the Center. Creative
and graduate educatioD iD ur- to evaluation of a federally telling him about the survey, are suspicious. "Why was I Associate Teny Moore, an acthen an appointment is. made- chosen?" is a popular question lor-director with the Center
ban diaciplill5 within l b e - hmded job tJaining program.
Uniwnity faculties,"""" Ullder- Several State-wide efforts are ·•at the respondent's ~ven- and during last year's Univer- ~ director. Pianist Rog.,.!
graduate aod paduate decme aurently being coordinated ience"-and, finally, the inter- sity Attitude Survey, Mrs. Hay- . .tbe will be featured soloist
p r o g r a m s aod proleaoioaai from SRC's Ridge Lea Office.
view is done. Good interview- ward was asked if she was a m
wod&lt; which is scored for
While moot of the project spon- ing techniques are explained narcotics agent. Some members
alone. Ten actors will
schools.
• It pw1IUI!8 new kDowleclce sors come from U/ B and are and terminology gone over. In· of the University staff didn't P Y the roles of various perooocernm, lbe "urbm crisis" CODDeeted with research grants, terviewers learn the di!ferences want to answer since they did oonagthees surrounding Beethoven
by conducting independent aod surveys have also been funded be tween "questionnaires"not think their answers were at
time of his death.
joint applied urban -..:b by by such diverse bodies as the which are self-administered sur- important enough.
Unique Owdappinc
other units of lbe Uniwnity. Department of Labor and Cor- vey iriStruments-and "interIn addition to the sensitivity
Advance word on the work
• It pi'OYides educational neiJTbe
"'::Fy~ts rsrcrap~ryces. view scbedules"- which are of the sample, the University indicates that "actors for the
services. encou.raging diverae
surveys conducted by an inter- Survey turned out to be unique production will be called upon
academic and ema curricular on the research it undertakes viewer. Strongly emphasized on other aspects. It was one of to ~ ~g not normally
programs which create lft!&amp;ter
ones
smce. the pr:Ju
participation in public action
by University COIIIIIIUDity mem- public poJjcy importance." Re- importance of not "talking up o!'e ;,f the. Jon= ~"'..-.- three ~
~
bers.
suits must also be made pub- or down to a respondenl" The v1sor of aU of the interviewers, eventually culminating in si• It conducts short lean ..,_ Jic. Ofoourse.asinotherU/ B group is reminded, too, that she found thateachofberpeo- multaneous dirnaxes. Three
. r-imental projects to develop academic service units, priority responses are strictly confiden- pie bad at least one interview coliiiDDS of teJtt occur at once,
and test new theories aod ap- is PW!D to University projects. tial and "not a topic fqr neigh- that was three or more hours ~ a cballenging prebomood gossip." Correct re- long. Other complications am;e OSIOD m perfonnance." Author
~=solving in " " ' " ' - " Staff of Ten
Research studies are handled coli:ling of answers is stressed with the lengths the Center Parman's architectural backThe OUA carries out these by a pemument staff of ten. since this is "not a course in went to in protecting the re- ground has inlluenced him in
functions thro\1gb its students, who are capable of canying out creative writing," the field di- spondent's confidentiality. Each the creation of a new theatrical
staff and reoouroes.
all parts of a study. Among the rector emphatically notes. After interview was originaUy coded structure which be refers to as
"Resources .are rich" at the services offered are: research learning the basics, the new re- with a randoml_v selected num- a .._.,..type" construction
Uniwnity, says Mr. Corbett. design. construction of a sur- cruits conduct a practice inter- ber. When it was completed.
Lasting approximately one
There is student and faculty vey, sampling, project manage- view.
·
this number was erased and re- hour, the work is about Beetbointerest in all disciplines. "Just
t, field · te ·
cod.
Future training sessioriS will placed with another be I ore ven's death and the desecration
from available catalogws """ ~:" c:;'.:,";:'teri:~ be lengthened to increase the being sent to the coding sec- of his body, belongings, and,
have more than 300 counoes in- statistical analysis and data re- capabilities of the jnterviewers tion. Surprisingly enough the most of all, his spirit (the three
yolving u r b a n problems and trieYal. For easier band lin~ of and other staff personnel, Dr. precautioriS worked out almost rages). Tbe music is a large
~- Moot likely the number pro.ie!:t&amp;, the Center is divided
Hunt explains. He hopes to too well. Some respondeuts prognunmatic sonata for piano
IS cJooer to 400."
into three main service areas- further outline the various op- called the Center and asked in three movements- "Rage
OUA's fields of study and field. coding and technical- eratioriS of the Center to new to change their 8JlSWelS but the ave&lt; the lost composer," ''Rage
oourae olrerinp are divided into
·th the ---'-- bein f
recruits.
re-numbering of the question- over the lost artifacts," and
seven categories: environmen- '"'
g ree
· simply helps nru·res made this. almost -~
•~ "~&gt;-to use any"""""'""r
pne or all.
All this trainmg
•._..Tbe ave&lt;
,~ the lost sp'"'t."
~·
tal '!IJ8lity; mbm and regional
Aclual data Jmthering i• the sharpen the talents of ~ood in· sible.
....,. movement involves
quality; demopapby and hu- .....tt of the lleld section. Under terviewers, Mrs. Bary believes. A 'Going eor-m•
a for Beethoven's style
man behavior: public systems; the direction of Mrs. Jeanne She feels that good interviewAfter three years of lRil'Vey8 and coocepts. Beginning in a
g~t, ~and public ad- Bary, .0.00 men and women ers are "born, not made."
like the University Attitude vague IIDd wandering manner,
~!'!"'~ historical and are ublized as interviewers for
Before interviewers actually Study, SRC is what director the " " - romes into focus but
~ penpectives; and
ene&lt;al and elite
pulatio
start working on a survey, they Hunt calls a "going mocem." is lost ave&lt; and over again. Tbe
~and~ ~
po
n get a briefing on the particular He now COriSiders the Center "a pianist bemmes more aged durinterview schedule to be used.
me the murae of tbe music
OUA do5 not olre&lt; a decme
~. beaded thebv Mrs. Ca~- Since Mnt. Bary believes it is major basic and applied re- wlticb al8o evolves but comes
respon..,- important for interviewers to search facility on this campus." abruptly to an end with Beeprognun - of yet, "and with olvn Tasker, has
the 1&gt;ud8et fn!eze, it's bard to bility of organizing information understand the contenl of what Hunt would like to see SRC's ~hoven's death lind the wellwhen we'll be able to ~...,':i::~~~~ is being surveyed, the briefing :!!"~~""to~ ~ known tb11D11er scene.
=~ one." Mr. Corbett points itself to analysis. This opera- also includes a thorough back- of facilities and offer a wider ~
'l'be aecood movement is a
However,IIDIIapaduates can liaa may varv from simply re- ground on the subject. To fur- range of services. · Tbe Center
.cording
numbers
to
cod
i
n
g
ther
combat
blank
stares
of
igis
already
doing
program
eva1uScbeo:m
baaed
on Beethoven's
~ a _ , _ major iD mbm
allaid, and when a atudeat en- 8D&amp;1ft!IS from ,.in-depth inter- norance on the part of the in- ation worll, behavior obsena- ~ Ove&lt; a Lost Groec:ben."
tera paduate ~ bia • ter- views into a quantitative form. terviewer, the tenninology used tion and field exploration. But Tbe 8llOIIe is when Beethoven's
NeJtt in the analysis ladder in the survey and what may the director talks of doing more ...._ and apartment are randiociPlinuy ~.riD be
is tedmical services. This area. possibly be in the answers is in these areas and of strenctb- sacl&lt;ed aiW his .death. Tbe final
8lnJnc
iD
IDUI)' lbe
diworking 111111er Joel Rose, is gone over.
ening his staff to handle tbeae is slow and is a aet
reetoraaya.
, programs. Aftet all, "lleld re- of variatioaa. Tbe music and
OUA, Mr. Corbett . . . _ capable of statistical analysis On Their Own
of data and wJll also devise the
After training and briefing, search should not be just sur- ac1iaa imply the process by
tbe CIOIIIIDUDity - well population 88Diple needed to tbe rookies are c&gt;ut on their veys," be points out.
wlticb Beethow!n's music bas
- OUA'a
tbe llludeata.
Dr. Hunt also wants the Cen- been more IIDd more commerCX11111D1111ity _,;.,.,. get the infonnation in tbe first ·own. And "you can tell very
rapidly whether a new inter- ter to "participate more in the cializal- the development of
enable ......... to dewlap- tbeir . place.
Coordineting all this is the viewer will work out," Mrs. educational life of the Uniw!r- the "industrial Beetboveu."
own~ lllld pia. tatbe&lt;
Pedormances will take place
than cloinc lbe Wildt for tbem. Center's director, Dr. Raymond Bary qys. The crucial test is sity." Center personnel .w-ly
Hmrt.
and his associate direc- the interviewer's first refusal. give guest lectures in dasaes in lbe Sculpture Court of the
"'We ""'!~~ire ~ to
know what tbe JII'Ciblem is IIDd tor, Dr. J. Bruce Francis. Ad- "U they can survive that and on interviewing and computer AlllricbtrKno&gt;t with 1two per... ""'!~~ire bolrledp 011 how visinc them is a committee of look at jt as a cbellenge, then services, but this will be ..,_ ' - -=h """!'ing, at 8
to ..,..., the pntiem."
echolars appointed by the Pro- we know they're good," she panded to include Center &amp;pOll- lllld 9:30p.m. ~
.
sored conferences and summer
Artifacts value
ave&lt;
Aa ... - - . • COIIIIIIUility ....- of tbe Faculty of Social says.
. Quite a few of Mrs. Bary's workshops. This year, SRC is SlOO.OOO will be
t in for
poup in the
Fruitbelt Sciences and Administration.
Moot of lite 'M&gt;rk at SRC .staff have passed this "lest'' also broadening the .....tt doae the IMIIt from various places
dialrict came to OUA for advice
to the ceaters around .........m con- and have gone on_ to complete by its University-ftmded ..;a. iD lbe United States and
State for a dq aae COllier to clacted iD the rleld. As a .-.It, thousands of interviews. At ants to include more diwDe Europe. indudiDg the Pierpont
-the-.U!B.cudoals MIS. Ba~y's inteoViewers are times, the subject ·or a survey work in the field -we - . Morpn Ulxary, New York
"Tbe whole area &lt;if field re- City, the N- Ynrk Public Li"""Rd . . . . . tbem t h e - ~ of coaducting both can lead to ..,....,.rung insights ·
.....,..____.. • irHieotb in- into human nature. When Mrs. - i s coming into ita - , • bmJy u-t of tbe now~
1erYiewa. 8ew!ral mombers ol Jeanne Hayward, an eight-year Hunt uoerta and be~ Beelbown A8odation), and
iD
her lbllf ue also bi~-and interviewing veteran.
ed SRC will ~ ol this oChaL
..., avaiWIIe for apecial pur- people •
bad ~the new emphaaia: "I think . . . . . . . lor the produc-lladieL •. - · - · ·,- - ·
. . face nmoved due to . r u - , ' ~ aniwlrl.• . ~-.- . •• ·- · ~ . • w..aa~ ~IIIJUIU)'•• • • ••

---

=life 1111d~..:nc!inc

By

'l1oi&amp; is the - o f

Moot of the slaff a r e good intersays the ....,._ ,
getic Mrs. Buy. Interviewing,
for moot of tbeae individuals,
is a aecood job or a ..,.y to
suppleDart the family's income. While tbe&lt;e are no prerequisites for the job, the field
services director looks for peopie who "can eslablisb rapport
almost immediately.» lndividuals who can do this seem to be
more "extroverted," she notes,
and "look like they belong," in
almost any environment. The
ability to "go from an interview with a bank president to
one with a Chevy line wo-'·-r"
'""
is something she looks for also.

tboulh "men make

tboi lllll'Vey. viewen. too."

Pl:""

~t! ':v~~':;lytJ!'u~i ~e t &lt;;"~::" Li~i:::: ~ ~c~::m~ex

Buir!J..
... ....sm. • - '

=

=..~= m::~=
:-.roi$.!1,::;
.........1:._...

done~ . ~

iss~

UO:.':'rtapp;,;':

�~

10

Prof Says Uentol ~ealih[ndustry'­
Puts Own Survival Ahead of Patients

Bu.flhlo-Made
Detergent
Studied Here
American boiMewiws maY
- - - - t o washday problems bec:auoe ol a oew
cleteqeut developed by a Buffalo man aDd teBted by a U/B

PI"=

;..,..tbs ..... Dr. Zdzis-

Jaw Cbmielewicz. --=iate pro-

r-

o1 bjoctwniraJ pbarma-

liwn a ~

coloiY. -

pbate ............. Fomwla 2oz.,
to -for toDcity. Hal TraYI!rll,
a Bullalo reaideat, chief ezecu&amp;iYe ..._..,
a..mieala
IDe., aDd cleYeloper ol Formula
2oz., bmded tbe lhtoulh
tbe U/B FouDdatioa, Inc.

a.-ca

_,.,.,

Dr.~~~

...... product is~
DOIHI!kaliDe, DOD-~ • • to
1 r ad e a b I e, DDD-m'ltalinl
akin, aDd capable ol cleaninc
cloiiMS 88 ...,u - any product
011

tbe IDIIIbt.

Accan1inc to tbe FDA standanlo, a product is det.enniDed
to be DOD-loDe il 5 ol it
are ~ wilbout ellect by
• -animal [or ..-y kilocram
tbe animal weicbs- Dr. Cbmielewicz tailed Fomula 2oz. sucClllllll[uily to 7 . 5 - II« ltilopam ...,;pt in rats. What tbis

....,.... to IIIBD, mmparatively,
is tbat a peraon could swallow
up to 20 oz. ol tbe liquid without barm.
He also found tbe product to
be DDD-irritalinl when kept in
constant contact witb tbe skin
or a rabbit for 24 bows. How~. when an UDdiluted {101":
tion of tbe product was applied
to tbe eyes or six rabbits, a
slidrt rednea; did D&lt;nlr. By
delinition of tbe Federal Hazanious Substances Act, 191.12,
tbe product was tbus judged to
boi an eye-irritanL
The biocbemicaJ pbarmacolocist sent samples ol tbe product to a number ol families in
BulfaJo, :n..troit and ChicasoComments from Detroit and
Cllicqo are tmaYDilahle at tbis
time. but tbe Buft'aJo families
report:
"F&lt;li'Dlula 2oz. cleans dotbes
better tbao any product used to
date. . . . euellent cleaning
product. . . . ........,..,.. regular
stains tbat active children acquire. . . . YerY clean wash;
clotbes noticeably brighter,
dotbes softer and easier to
iron, stay fJesb longer. . • .
best noo-pbospbate p rod u c t
eYer used, CDIDpiUeS well to
pbospbates. • . . clotbing besofter after one or two
.....t.inp."

T-

....

Lllloary - . . . . .

Aaumpllano

ness

·et ";

tJ!n:::::W::

=:

...

~= :'i::::.W
~isabili~~

Teacher Education Program
Will Be Offered in Summer

Seniors in tbe Teacher Eduindividuals ratber tban to "con- cation Program will be able
tact witb a social environment to schedule a half-semester of
tbst needs reordering." He ob- tbeir cowses during tbe Sumserves, uLess is heard of new, mer Sessions this year, Prolarge-scale programs of social fessor Sidney L. MacArthur, dichange tbat extend help to tbe rector o( tbe program, has anminorities and to tbe poor, and nouneed.
elforts may once more emphaA maximum of 60 seniors will
size private treatment of tbe be allowed to schedule courses
intraP6Ycbic dynamics of af- tbis summer, he said. In tbe
lluent individuals."
last few years, there has been
Tratment May cause Problems
an increase in students apBecause hospital personnel plying to tbe Teacher Educaoften do not have "criteria by tion Program; 'con sequently
which tbey recognize mental tbere has not been sufficient
besltb," tbey cannot distinguish staff for instruction and superbetween patients' difficulties vision of students and student
caused by tbeir own · practioos teaching requirements have not
and pi"OCe&lt;!ures and those boen sufficiently di stri_buted _
caused l!_y ill~ilie!o- --ttlroughout thea caOemic year.
tbis as analogous to a situation W i t tr tbe Education Profesdescribed by French refonner sional Semester being moved to
Philippe Pinel 160 years ago the Summer Session, each of
when he asked: " How are we these problems should be overto distinguish between the ex- come, MacArthur said.
asperation caused by the &lt;;hains
The program will be advanandtbe ili::'.mptoms peculiar to t&amp;geous for students in many
' ·

=

TC,

li&amp;c~ as

respects, be said. Tbe shift will
facilitate acceleration of the
undergraduate program. Senior
students could complete t be
first half of the semester during tbe first Summer Session
and use tbe period from July 6
to November 1 for employment
or bavel. Better distribution of
student teaching will m a k e
more cooperating teachers avsilable and improve the studentteacher supervision ratio.
Admitted to tbe department
for the first Summer Session
will be senior students involved
in Secondary Education Academic Areas (i.e. Social Studies, Foreign Language, Jfi.story, Politieal Scienee,andEconomics ) . In tbe Faculty of Education, tbey take tbe education work necessary to obtain
a degree as a certified teacher
in New York State; this involves 20 semester houni of
stud y. The Professional Semester includes 16 semester
hours equally distributed be-

...

of

1971

this question:

"Whet

r.=i=~;~~·r:we~~W::ntu~

do you most •dmlre?'' The ten
mentkmed most often ranked In
the following order: (1) Mohondos
Gondhl; (2) llortln Luther Kine;
(3) llolcolm X; (4) llertrond RUS·
sell; (5) A. S. Nelli; (6) Albert

Schweitzer; .(7) Rolph Noder; (8)
Coesor Chewer, (9) Poblo Plcouo;
(10) John F. Kennedy. Tho 700
freshmen portidpotlnc Identified •
totol of 230 ficures.

Latest figures on collective
bargaining in higher education,
cited in the New York Times,
show 133 colleges witb recognized bargaining agents - 101
junior-community colleges and
32 four-year institutions. The
National Education Association
represents faculty at 71 of these
institutions; the American Federation of Teachers, at 42; tbe
American Association of University Professors at seven; and ·
otber groUP6 at 13.

...

Quote Du Jour. From the

hells of

Cone-.:

•usust

A Wnhlncton

;:=; ArlJitration
Study .-=:.u~~k ~~::':m ::--&amp;:.:...~'=
Four U/ B faculty members he _located in .Prsc?cally a II
IAalstotlon

~~

-

~

=-.:r.;r. ..

;;;;;r...ble

-1
----

titbetieal to tbe humanitarian
aims ol e1inical practice."

,._

.

si~~~

flrlt

G{J/B
&lt;NOTES

public aitention from tbe need
By "D"
to evaluate tbe real elfectiveor those programs and tbe The Second Annual um-sity
Open
House
bel!l1 tenDr. Graziano attacks tbe line wisdom of furtber investments," tatively scbeduledhas
Cor Sunday,
ln!atment or its. customers."
of reasoning wbicb attributes Dr. Graziano ssys.
April
16,
1972.
Mr.
John A.
So ssys Dr. Antbony M . tbe deficiency in availability of Moy Be c.utlnc · - ·
Graziano in an article entitled P6ycbiatric help to " lack of
Tbe public education cam- Buerk, director or orientation,
"In tbe Mental Healtb Indus- money, lack of lacilities, lack of psigns of tbe mental-besltb in- Division of Student Alfaira. will
try Illness Is Our Most Im- enlightened policy. . . . (and) dustry may be creating "ever again be general coOrdinatOr of
porlw,t Product" in tbe Janu- man's ancient prejudices. ..." larger numbers of csiCk' per- the program.
aJY 1972 issue of Psycho/ofy . He said tbis approach to tbe sons," accordinc to Dr. GrsziTho Annuol Com..............t ax·
problem is based on "three un- ano. Such campaigns may be
T~.Graziano, associate . pro- founded
and dangerous assump- "convincing ever greater n!""ols!:.,~~...
fessor ol P6Ychology at U/B, tions. .. .," nsmely, that P6Y· bers of pe"'?ns that even nunor
further ·contends tbat tbe rhet- chotberapists-exercise scientif~lllfiieties nught be symptoms of P-"'- in - . y FJolcl, l11lo Ia •
oric !lie industry uses to attract ically valid methods of treat- deeper and more severe prob~
the financial support or the gov- ment· that mental-besltb ex- !ems." He asks, "Mi¥~&gt;t we not,
3
ernment also "obscures from pert&amp;' are handicapped because i.f! effect, be mobilizn!g pur so- =-ry~~ in ~-:~~
the public view tbe fact tbat tbe public req&gt;ains ignorant of cial p o w e r to convmce more -ther, pions ore belnc ...- to
ln!alment available to mental tbeir achievements and fails to and more persons that tbey are hold the e x - Indoors at wlllch will be onnounaod lol8r.
patients is of questionable ef- develop the supporting social- mentally ill?"
fectiveness and may sometimes politicsl structures necessary to
Dr. Graziano calls on grantTbe National Science Founbe destructive."
provide elfective mental-bealtb ing agencies, university departMeotal-besltb authorities, servioos; and tbat because of a ments and clinicsl agencies to dation and tbe National ~
Dr. Graziano charges, are "will- lack of enlightened public pol- "give priority to evalustinc our cistion of State Universities
inc to extend tbeir servioos to icy, tbe mental-besltb profes- direct elforts at therapy and, and Land-Grant colleges will
a conference on the
impoverisbed and m i n o r i t y
are unable to help all most importantly, to consider- co-sponsor
"Public Service Role of Unig r o u p s only when tbey are sionals
ing tbe large-seale and possible versities" to be beld ~ tbe
pusbed by politicsl criticism or those in need.
These assumptions are part negative 'second order' elfects sprinc of 1972. Tbe invitational
pulled by tbe lure of government money." A reform of tbe of tbe "mental-besltb power of our professional politics and meeting will involve represenprofession's rhetoric is then "at- structure's s e I f - perpetuating camouflaging rhetoric." He says tatives from local, slate, and
tributed to enlightened profes- strategies for ~g greater tbat tbe "clients, tbe conswn- federal government levels, unisional practice" when, in fact, social power, higbet !&lt;talus and ers, should demand more ef- versities and private industry.
"tbe professions were reluctant- incomes for professionals and fective services for the extreme- Participants in tbe three-day
ly dragged along by tbe impell- m o r e self-seeking agencies." ly higb price-financially and conference will attempt definThe rbetoric used to justify personally tbat they may ite recommendations on poliing power of social reform."
Dr. Graziano says tbst the these demands "also distracts have to pay."
cies, pi"OCe&lt;!ures and support
"pro(e&amp;liion runs along politicsl
necessary to make tbe univertracks." As a result of tbe consity a fully effective partner in
servative approach of tbe Nixon
solving national problems.
administration, he says, it was
predictsble t bat tbe mentalFolk Heroes Revisited. Antioch
besltb industry would again apCollege osked Its f,.,.hmon duo
'"The American meotal-bealtb
...... ~. expends tbe cream of
it:~ upon tbe politics o(
survival ratber than upon tbe

Mr. TraYelB aDd Dr. Cbmielewicz felt tbe product should be alliances between mental besltb
teBted first, tben IDIU'keted.
11gencies which often s h a r e
"'nst..t ol puttinc o u t a board members or band logetb~and tben doinc t b e - er and label "conffict of interest
mg. which is DOnDally tbe way · · · as pooling of talenL" AIit's ..._ ""' have been speud- 1iances between local mental
inc
&amp;ime doinc all
tbe testinc before tbe product besltb agencies are tbe binding
is marketed," Dr. Cbmielewicz ~:fu'cl.o~:=:~
~ ouL "Witb tbis idea in protects tbe status quo, Dr.
mind, il tbe product did not Graziano contends. "As tbe
-certain standards it would mental-bealtb needs of society
DOt be put ... tbe market, but continue to change, tbe ability
~ have to be altered," be or tbe mental-besltb professions
.
diminisbes
ac'
tbe favomble !:~~"help .
Dr. Graziano argue; tbat tbe
"""'" [JOID Dr. Cbmielewicz,
Mr. TraYelB orpnized Seueca inelfectiveness ol the profesClaDiaalo, Inc., 318 Ulbm St., sion is perpetuated by a lack
BulfaJo, which is now D1IIDIIfac&gt;. ol •objective evaluation. "Susturinc Pannula 2oz.
tained by tbeir own deception,
individual clinicians believe
tbey are performing noble func.
CCMMCIIIM
tiona in 1!6110!1ltially bure&amp;ucrst..
In t h e - - of the .........
ic, unsympathetic aDd doubt,_ o f - FKUI!y Sen- fully etredive agencies." Thus,
818 .,.,..,.,_ lncomlclly clinicians avoid self-evaluation
~ OIL ~ Millo, Sotbrough a failure to incorporate
c:iolalr: n.a..- ....-.
evaluative 1ecbniqws in tbe dea..nloby, G • r !I' -.nit%.
·
ol clinical i"""'llations
a..nloby, - - - to the
.uad&lt; critics for "their
~011-­ ·ill&lt;* ol humanitarianism aDd
III!IJ8itirity'
aDd ~eject eva1ua....,_ to the ~ on InU... from --.,;., aDd BCieD-

] _ , - J3, J!l72

".......,.liD-

are among 20 persons selected
to participate in· a new program to develop qualified arbitrators for labor-management
relations.
The arbitrator development
program, announced last July,
is sponsored by tbe Industrial
Relation Research Association
of Western New York in cooperation witb tbe American
Arbitration Association and the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. It is tbe first
program of its kind in tbe nstion to be held under such joint
auspioos· '!- !' d is in~ to
meet a enticsl shorlage m tbe
6eld
The four selected are: Joeepb
A. Alutto, School of Management; James B. Atleson, Faculty ol Law and Jurisprudence;
Howard G. Foster and Jerry E.
Poblman, Industrial Relations.
The program will mmbine
c:Ja.room traininc, planned by
tbe New Yorlt Btste School or
Industrial aDd u.bor Relations
at Comell, and em-the-job ex- - - tbrough Which caDdidates will Bit in em - . . I arbitration . - .

1uruor and seruor ~gh schools
m . the Buffalo, N111gara, and
Ene County areas.
Suggestion for the program
change came from Dr. Warren
Button, professor, and cbsinnan
of the ( Department of Social
Foundations, Faculty of Educational Studies: Students involved on tbe ~mmittee .are
Susan Hurley, seruor; and Rtchard Spencer, doctoral candidate.
· Cowses to be offered tbis
summer are: TED 400 Educationa! Psychology (4 hrs.) ;
TED 412 Teaching Reading in
Content Areas ( 2 hrs.); TED
418 Teaching in Inner City
Schools (2 hrs.); TED 430 Instructional Media (2 bra. );
TED 410 Methods of Teaching
English ( 4 bra.) ; BED 424
Methods or Teaching Social
Studies (4 hrs.); IED 431-539
Methods of Teaching Foreign
Language (4 bra.); SPF 418
Politics and Urban Education
(2 bra.)
Course descriptions and infonnation 011 tbe program csn
be obtained by contacting Professor MacArthur at 319 F06ter

FWL

Steed tho! "Fedenol
Is
like .. usop: you enJoy 1t 10 much
more If you dan't
It rnede."

..e

U/B JoinsAJ.AW
The Commission on Intercol·tegiste Athletics for Women has
granted U/ B charter membership in tbe Association for Intercollegiate A t h I e t i c s For
Women.

Buffalo women compete in
eight intercollegiate sports bowlin(, basketball, volleyball,
swinumng, field hockey, softball, goU and tennis.
'nle De'W' women's sports organization '(AIAW) is mmparable to tbe National Colleciate
Athletic Association which governs men's athletics 011 760 cam-

puses.

The pro~ operating code
for tbe AlAW is to uphold and
promote tbe highest standards
m women's collegiate athletic
programs. The focus will be on
tbe individual pajticlpant and
..ber primary ro~ as a co1lece
· studenL
Bulfalo is also a ll1elllba- or
tbe Women's Varsity Sports
Orgsnlmti011 of New York
State.

�: Ill

~~ ·

ICC Explains Its l&gt;oodle Slinger'M~iling

A promotional campaign recently llonducted by the Instructional Communication
Center (ICC) resulted in confusion among some faculty
members.
'The December campaign was
started wben two "doodle"
slingem, spaced about two
weeks apart, were sent. to the"
faculty. 'The flrSt blue slinger
bad an "'" printed on it and
the second, an "'C." A plarmed
third slinger was to complete
the ''ICC" symbol
'The main objective of the
campaign was to increase laculty- awareness-of - the "IOOdla

.

services available to tbem. ICC as a remindeo' ol ICC services
wished to raise questions as to available to tbem.
"wbat this was all about . . .
'OJere were ._tive ......,.
wbat does it mean . .. wbat is tious to the ..._qp, boweYer,
its purpase . . . why bas this tbet were not anticipated A
been sent to me?"
few ol the faadty, not underThe blue doodle slingem, as standing the of the
an attention-getting d e v i c e. doodle slingem, felt lbey were
were designed to associate the a waste of . . _ , particularly
symbol "'CC" with the Instruc- in view o1 the eumm budget
tioual Communications Center crisis. All three doodle slingers
and with services directly re- cost ouly $9.80 to have printed,
Iated to classroom instruction. and mailing labels ....,..., $15 a
A wall calendar which depicts seL The wall calendars will
communications services is the cost about $50 total Non-State
second half of the campaign funds """" used to cover the
and will still be given out to cost ol the caleodars and mailfaculty members. u · will ·serve ing lahels;
WILLIAM T. OIV.UZ. gnoduate slu-

w~.:~::~'!&amp;J'Po~t!.:

GREPORTS
Powered Arm Brare Project
Receives Funding Support
A U/8 ~ project that
promises help to ann paralysis

cases received flnancia1 aid last
week in the form of gifts totalling $5,000 from the Bulrak&gt;

Community Relatioos Committee of the Ford Motor Comp.ny
($3,000), the Thomas .J. ConDOrs Foundation ($1,500) and
Servobwlics, · Inc. ($500) •

Pants

Announcement of the
was made by .J. Sam Miller
and Dr. William P. Walsb, directors ol the Rehabilitation
Medicine Engineering Laboratory. ·The funds will be used
for further ...........tt studies using the ''Buffalo Arm," a powered brace.

Contro~" 70th Annual Meetinc.
American Anthropological "-&gt;ciation, Statler Hilton Hotel, New
York City.

ON

DB. B. OLIVia GIBSON, professor~ ed­

GJ&gt;EOPLE

ucational administration. ..Collective Legitimacy and Organizatioual Attadunent: A Lo~tudi­
ual Case Study of School Penonnel Absences;"- with CBARLSB
l'f.ANZ, '"Perceived Equity at work
a nd its Relationship to AIMmces
snd Tumowr; •• cbaized symposium on "Teacher-School Orp.nization Relati.onsbi.-,: Three Analytic Investigations, Northeastern Educational Research Aseociation Anaaal Meeting.
DR. .JOHN GLANVILLE. visiting lecturer, philoeopby, Colloquium on
Greek Poldical Philosophy.
Princeton University.
HOPE I.BA.lCS, paduate student. an-

"We bave shown tbat ann
paralysis following stroke may
be reduced by therapy sessions GRANTS
in this brace," Mr. Miller said.
Witbin four weeks of' daily ex- :Ogy~s~7~· t!~y:o~f
ercise in the device, much of Water PoUution Enforcement in
the normal a r m motions re- the Western New York Region,
turned in two stroke patients. U.S. Ilepar1ment of Commerce.
Dr. Walsh cautioned tbat this DL FllEDI:IUCK 0. GF.AitiNG, profes..,r, an thropology, $88,600, to de-

~~U:.OO,~,!ro~ 3:J!

velop an Instructional Process of

may be a real breakthrouP in Direct Observation and Inductive
Inference for Teachers and Adstroke rebabilitation."
The Rehabilitation Medicine
Engineering Laboratory was
started in 1970. Part of the
School of Medicine, it is clinically alliliated with the E. J.
Meyer M~ Hospital

Graduate Assistants, TAs
Should File for SIAwards

ministrators, Ca9e Western Reserve University; $11,250, State
College of Arkansas.

~TI:'p~i ~~y~~~oo.

Annual Meeting. American An·
thropologieal Association, Statler
Hilton Hotel, New York City.

co-director,
Center for the Creative and Performing Arts, $50,000, Creative
Fellowship Program. National
Endowment for Arb.

DR. LEJAREN

HILLER,

D1L .JOHN D. IU.LBn.EISCB, assistant

professor, lltatistics, ••Analysis of
Clinical Trial Comparing Methotreu.te as an Adjuvant Therapy
for Head and Neck Cancer." Radiotherapy Oncology Group, Denver, Colorado.

UK. PIYABE L. lAIN , professor, pby&amp;-

ial. $16.700, Study of 200-500GeV
Proton Interactions with Emu1 aion Nuclei at National Accelerator Laboratory, Research Cor-

PEARl. KATZ, IP'&amp;duate student. an-

pqration.

f!:ro&amp;J~~· ~==Is The~h
Case;• 70th Annual Meeting. Am-

chairman,
civil engineering, $18,.999, Phys iDR.

RALPH

R. RUMER,

SUNY Chancellor Ernest eligible for sc!&gt;olarships. New cal Model of Lake Ontario, U.S. erican Anthropological AssociatiQD , Statler Hilton Hotel, New
Boyer bas advised campus pres- York State legal residence is re- Department of Commerce.
York City.
idents tbat recent amendments quired.
DR. KENTON M. STEWART, associate
in Scholar Incentive Program
Students academically ineli- professOr, biology, $19,000, Iso- DR. .JACOB A. M.A.RJNSKY, professor,
chemistry,
"Prediction of !on-Estherms
Under
the
Ice
of
Lake
procedures allow students h\)ld- gible for Scholar Incentive ProU.S. Ilepartm&gt;nt of Com· change Selectivity," Michigan
ing appointments as graduate gram (SIP) awards, but eli- Erie,
1 'echnological University, Houghmerce.
assistants or teaching assistants gible for State U n i v e r s i t y
ton, Michigan.
to participate in the Scholar In- Scholarship (SUS) funds DR. MARVIN ZEIEN, professor, statANN MCELROY, assistant professor,
centive Award Program.
(family inc&lt;ime not over ,a net istics. $19.639. Statistical Coordin- anthropology,
" Influence of ModThe tuition waiver policy is taxable income of $1,800) may ~F~~~r. ~.=.a! J::::.~~ ernization on Female Eskimo Sex
being amended, Boyer said, to still qualify for a scholarship Support for Veterans Adminis- Roles,'" 70th Annual Meeting,
tration Lung Cancer Studies, Vet- American Anthropological Assoallow participation in this pro- covering full tuition cbarges.
ciation, Statler Hilton Hotel, New
A student wb'? bas ~oved as erans Administration.
gram with the expectation tbat •
York City.
this will increase tuition de- a permanent res1dent mto New
DR. MIKE Jl.. MILS'I'EIN, associate
POSits in the State University York State during the previous OFF CAMPUS
professor,
educational administraIncome Fund. Although filing college year is el_igible for ~ APPOINTMENTS
tion, spoke to women lawyers of
of applications will present a SUS award covermg full tuiWestern New York on educationbunlen to the students alfected, ti~n ~es, if the income of oa. R. OLJVEK cmsoN , professor, al interest groups and the State
be said, provision of additional bia fam~y IS not over a net
Legislature.
~ k:un~..Lu ~~~::· DR.
. revenues is critically important taxable mcome of $1,800.
GEORGE H . NA.NC:OLL.\8, profesto operating programs. Boyer
Foreign students, out-of-state eral Systems JournaL
so r, chemistry, "The Kinetics of
requested tbat every effort to residents. part-time graduate. DR. MARVIN ZELEN, professor, stat. CrYstal Growth of Calcium Salts,'"
muimize participation in this students. and those students istics, appointed chairman, Na- Proctor and Gamble Company.
program be made.
supported by NDEA, NSF, or tional Cancer Plan, Committee on Cincinnati, Ohio.
External Carcinogenic A g e n t s
.
.
Nlli are ineligible and need and
Human Relevance, Ai.rlie DR. RAOUL NAROLL, professor, anFull-time .students ( 12 credit not file SIP or State University House, Warrenton, Virginia; ap- thropoJogy, ..Th~ Double Lanbo!""") bold!nl graduate fellow- Scholarship applications.
pointed to the Program CommH, ( guage Boundary m Cr&lt;l8!H&gt;llbual
ships, teaching, graduate, or re. .
search assistantsbipa are re.Application _fonns . for SIP tee. Institute of Mathematical Survey," 70th Annual. Meeting.
quested to apply for a Scholar are usually available m depart- Statistics and Biometrics Society. ~J~~Sta~:=~o~,1::;
York City.
Incentive Award and/or State mental offices, the offi?"' of th_e PRESENTATIONS .
University Scholarship.
P~ts. .and the Off!ce of FIDB.. MARVIN K. 0Pl£1l, chairman
NE W y 0 R K sTATE nancial Aid, 2~6 Hamman
anthrop:»logy,
"Culture and PerWA.RREN T . BARBOUR, assistant proStudi.S in E-nded ReSCHOLAR IN CENT IV E
Application fonns for State fessor, anthropology, .. Figurines '"'uality
lationships.'"
70th
Annual Meetas
Communicators."
70th
Annual
PROGRAM: Full-time gradu- University Scholarships a r e Meeting American Anthropologi- ing, American Anthropological
ate Students who meet academ- available in the Office of Stu- cal
Association, Statler Hilton Association, Statler Hilton Hotel,
ic requirements and are making dent Accounts, Hayes A.
New York City.
·Hotel, New York City.
satisfactory progress towards
Beyond filing of SIP and/ or DB. ROBQitT D. BEREKAN, assistant DR. KEITH OTl'F.2IIEIN . professor,

:.a'!n':d

=

~
~-=~~:!
~!:.!f.. ='dt}~~~b~,:
to apply for this award. New practice of completing a waiver
York State legal residence is
required. On the S~.P. application form, in response to question 13, students should enter

!tu
f:!,;~tui':,.ten,::,t..;~
in an amount equal to tuition

less echolar incentive."
STATE UNIVERSITY
SCHOLARSHIP: N!'!l4Y studenta from familles with a combined New Yorl&lt; State net taxable income of $1800 or less are

of tuition form (8141 R). 'The
desdline for filing the waiver of
tuition form is FEBRUARY
29, 1972.
Each waiver is to. be signed
appropriately then routed from
the ()fflCe of the Provost or the
appropriate University-wide.
Dean directly to the Office of
Student A c c o u n t s. These
waiver forma are NOT to be
·sent to the Pemotmel Office.

anthropology, chaired session on
"War and Peace in Primitive ~
ciety," 70th Annual Meeting. Am-

professor. chemistry, · "Nuclear
Quadrupole Resonance Spectroscopy in Chemistry," l25th Anni·

ti~~s~Jii~~""W.!;

~~~wv.t~~=r-ia in honor
U1it. WAL'I'Bil DAMN HAUSER,

associate • York City.

DR.. ALBI2!' PADW~

~::'~ri:~~·s~

=~·""~~=·

ing, American Anthropolocical

Aoaociation, Statler Hilton Hotel,
New York City.
•

j

tant professor, chemistey, "The
R2latiw Importance of Si6ma
and Pi Bondinc of Molecular Nitrogen and Carbonyl in Osmium
(ll) CompleJtes as Determined by
lnftared lnteoaitiea of the"Molecular N i t r o g e n and Carbonyl
Stretching Vibrations," Ino,.,.,.U:
Clrmoinry.
DR.. PAUL R. DIESING,

prof e 8 8 or,

!:,~"Wo;,~att&amp;,i:,:!.~~

Atherton, Chicap, 197L

M:lr'CliR.L PILUIKLIN, professor,

philooophy and law,

-~

Im-

portant Document in the History
of American Roman and CMI
Law&lt; "The de Ia VeJlllle Manuscript." in A Dieat of the Ciuil

Latos Now in Force in th.e Terri,.

tory of oman. (IBOB) , published
in Baton Rouge, U.., 197L

profeoaor, chemistry, with K. YBPBBIIARAYA, "Amount of Statio.wy
Phase - Time Normalization

DR. BU GRUIIIIXi. IIOIIistant

Chromatopa~," Jourllol
Chrorruzto«rap/Uc SeW~«.

of

DR. COIIDON 1IL IIAJUUB, profeuor.
chemistry. with H. Kelm and H.
Stiecer. "Der Loounpmitteleffekt
auf d i e Isomeriaienmgreaktion
des trans - Dia:Juodioulatochrom
(ill)-Anions," Chemioche &amp;richU.

d-..!:.'=-~~=~

tion of the Addilivity Rule." Journal of PhyaU:trl CM..u.try.

profeMOr, cbemioby. with J . M.....achia and V .

DR. AUIIaT PADWA.

profeaaor,

chemistry. ''The Pholocydoaddi-

Liquids." State Collece at Buffalo.
BBTTY DAviS, graduate student. an-

PUBLICATIONS
DR. DONALD I . D.UENBBOUBC, assis-

~~~1~~
~t."

tion of Aryl.azirenes." Qaeeno
Collqe. New York; Rockefeller

ical St-ructure

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

Da. CILIIBRT VAD'I', viait:i.q profM_,r, Irotenuztionol Directo~ of

___

!{~~A'b.!,o~-¥C:

selaer Polytecbnic Iaatitule, Troy,

N.Y.

ciale, olatiatico, "Analyoio ol

T~ - Lette,...

f~Jt'J'o..)."'~;P~:
-Cemer.

�12

} - - , 13, 19'12

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
, eop.. to putinc;

••Open to ·members of the UnlvenltJ;
o professlonol 1 - In the subjoct
Contact Suzonno Metzpr, 831·2228. 10&lt; llsllnp.

•Open only to -

BAWA FILM n:BTIVAL*: T~ Cool
World, otory of a 14 year old l&gt;'!y'o

THURSDAY-13

~~~ b:' ~~:0 ~;:;

OON"fttrfUINO DDfTAL IDUCATI.ON #:

Dr. John W . Osborne, uoociate
prol.,_r, and Dr. Roy Wilko, aseiltant professor, A Review of
Gold Foil Procedaru with Empita.;. on Vorioua Suu• Board.,
aloo em Jan. 14 and 1.6, leo $250,
146 Capell.

Arts Festival and N.Y. Council on
the Arts, Woodlawn Junior H.S.,

450 Masten Ave., adults $1.00,
students and senior citizens 50¢.
8 p.m.

lllCITAL •: Ellen Lang, meucHKr

prano, Baird, 8 :80 p.m., free.

INRALA'I'IOK 1'BIItAJ'Y ftla'BONK

~~~""J!;rw: ~
lHvU!a Uoed in Homa and

SUNDAY- 16

'f!Z.

lllLLa. TAL&gt;&lt;UD CLASS: Hillel Library, S p.m. lht·Acquainted
Coffee Hour, for faculty and studenio, Hillel House, 8 p.m.

=~~"'o~:

.,.;w..

olatioao, tel. 835-0728 lor
inlormatinn, 11:80 a.m.

&gt;Wu,,.w. AND so-tiBCMt

Sbavalier, Ut Your Pe~l
You. aponoored
by Reponal MeclicaJ l'rocrom. 40
~ atatioiUI, tel. 835-0728
for information, l : 30 p.m.

·neptJTIIMnt Help

::::"...~~~";::'Jt~~
Ooll l'hyoioiCJIY Lab. T/oeonl and
Pnxhce ol Afetam.orplwail, Room
29, 4248 RidP ~ ~ p.m. Refreabmeola. 8:30 p.m.

FRIDAY- 14
ooHTINUINa rmmu. muclnoN# :

. . 'I'!wnclay llatiq.

~~ ~=~#j_
cu,::~ D.;yD:~~:;:fi~

if"rocram.
40 reoeiving otationo.
tel 835-0728 lor information,
11: 30 a.m.
KOUCULA&amp;

MONDAY- 17

J&amp;- ·

~ ~"!.t~.h

-I'ILII--,•.:=•::.:::,:W:;.o::.man==in-=:cthe,.-::D=;;-un-es-,-a
recent Japanese prizewinner, 140
Capen, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
S£&gt;UNA&amp;# : Harry Piriiarski, in-

structor. Statiltical Tec.hn.iquu,
10, 4288 Ridge Lea, 7-9
WEDNESDAY-19
This seminar will be an introduction to the statistical NYBLIB PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE LECI'UBE#:
programs and FORTRAN sub0
routines available on the CDC ft~C::U ~::8h;;nt;J:e~?;;
6400 co::'!,uter library. Topics Brecut Ccuwer Can Be Improved,
sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations, tel
for information. 11 : 30
~~:r:
in- 835-0728
a.m.
GSA SENATE MEETING: 233 Norton, DENT18TS TELEPHONE LEICTUIU!:# :
Dr. Roy A. 'Wilko, Dental Clini7:30p.m.

:;;:n

~tio: '!!itav!'hlrr:::·ti~

::nu=:es

TUESDAY-18
8TUDENT RIXl'rrAL•:

BIOLOGY

SDIINA&amp;#:

Dr. Donal A. Walsh, Univenity

of California, Davis, Functional

~A':!~c;~~~~~f.! ~~=

"""• 246 Health Sciences, 4 p.m.,
relresbmento, 101 Health Seien- · 8 p.m.

D"GlNDZINO AND .tPPLDD SCJENCI:B
&amp;aiiiNAit#: Dr. LS. D a r k e n,

member, National Academy of
Sciences. Cakin4tion and Desul. furizalioll of Li.maton~, lOC Parker Engineering, 4 p.m.
SABII.ATH AT CHAB.W•: aervioes and
meal, Cbabad House, 3292 Main

St., 6 p.m.

lllLLa. IWIII.\TB siaVJe&amp;• : followed

ODe&amp; Shabbet, Hillel
Capen Blwl., 8 p.m.
PW&lt;O ..,...AL•: Stephen
will perform works by
Beethoven, Cbopin, and
by

House,

40

Manes
Haydn,

George

~~:r.:..s::·.:ii=.i

U/B alumni $1.00, students $.60.
Ticketa at Norton Hall Ticket Of.
fico.

noon. bee.

sf'ro":".::.

~

on Thursday, Jan. 20, I: 30 p.m.

PBYSlCIANS TELEPHONE 14'TUBE# :

DIETETICS

TELEPHONE ux::TUilE#:

Dr. LaWrence H. Golden. The Marian Spears, Ph.D. and EleanHean in Pulmd1l4T)I Disease, or Carey, Planni'-" Layout and
sponoored by Regional Medical

nc:eryF~i~~

!~:~~n~~~th

Program. 40 receiving stations,
tel. 835-0728 for information, sponsOred by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations,
11: 30.,....,...
tel. 835·0728 for information, 2

HILLEL CLASSES : Begin.ne,.. He- p.m.
brew, 262 Norton, 12 noon. Jew-

ish Ethic•. 262 Norton, 1 p.m.
NURSING

TELEPHONE

LECTURE# :

Ruth Neiman, R.N. and Bertha
Settle, Prin.ciplu of Remotiuation,
sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, 40 receiving stations,
tel. 835-0728 lor information, 1: 30
p.m.
WBESTLING*: Geneseo St., Ciar.k
Gym, 2 p.m.
SLIDE-LI.)CTUJt£* : Dr. Thomas E .
Connolly, professor, Engljsb, Podic and Pictorial Im¢,ery in
Blake'• Song• of lnn.ocence and
Son 8 • of E%perience~ upstai.ra

conference r o o m. Harriman. 8
p.m., free.

~Y~ ~~ U:o~!!{o~~o~

work written in 1968 by visiting
profa.or George Perle aod entitled SIUJrt Sonotll. Beethoven's
Soncta in F Minor, ~57 (Ap~
the fiist

FILM••:

Colloau.a:

TM Forbin

Project~

science fiction, loCO Capen, 7 and 9 p.m.

NOTICES
OOUBSES IN CllASSIDIC PHILOSOPHY

AND KUSJC : offerings inC 1 U de
Chassidic Phik»ophy USB 239;
Chaaidi.c Mu.aU: as Literature

~~.J!~..!;/.:'tf! tf§;f~~~R:t

bi Nosen Gurary, instructor.
Music and BOng are an intrinsic

~:: .;'~'f::r~.t::;

in the sphere of music bas been
to broaden and deepen it, and
make it a part of a way of life.

~i :ln~ ':o:Oo~wd

the early Chassi.dim compose melodies themselves, but they encouraged othera to do so. . . . folk
songs of the areas in which they

~= =:~:M:.!~cinht.;. ~

songs have no words. ... Feeling,
the outpourinc of the heart and
mind, is the inner core of Chabad
THURSDAY-20
Chassidic melody, so there is lit.
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION#:
tie need for words." Rabbi GuDr. Sebastian G. Ciancio, cbair- rary's courae will treat the subman.
Preventive ject or this music as a literary
'form.

periodontics,

f.:aJt~~J~~) ,n;~~~~)tj:n~~

pen.

.

PHARMACY TEu:J.aoNE UJCTt1BE#:

SaUy Kaiser, WIUJt PluumocU.u

SIUJuld Know About Pediatm Di·

~~ci.tsw=. ~ ~~

stations, tel. 835-0'728 for infor·
mation, 11:30 a.m. and 10 p.m.
DENTlBT8 TELEPHONE LECTUU#:

oee Wedneoday

lialiDc.

O.......,.G: Contrary to
listing in Reporter clasa schedule,
CFC 302-Metho.t. of Multi-SciCOUI!8E

enc~ will be meeting on Moncbly
and Wedneoday from 1-1:60 p.m.
and Friday, 1-2:60 p.m. Couroe

~ea:tilf~~ !:'~~~

are invited to contact Recina Coben, 831-2768, 1666 or . Clilford
Fwnas Coll.....-&lt;:oll- D.
PAliiLY BRUNCH: aponoored by
U/ B Women's Club and the Faculty Club will be beld at Faculty
Club Main Dinin« Room, Sunday, January 23, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.

EXHIDITS

W:!m~ 6~~~~d:r:

$2.75, children under twe)ye $2.00,
children under five $1.00. Bringyour-own-drin.k bar will be set up
in the Red Room. Paid .aervations will be accepted bl:., Tues-

c::rt::f"l!!.

Followinc intermission. Mr.
Manes will perform the Twelue
Ellula. Op. 2S by Cbopin.

~y~~:i;/i;=;aub,~t

Mr. Manes, an usiatant profMIIOr or music. has-appeared extenoivaJy "with major on:Motras
including the Baltimore Sym-

3232. Mrs. Ricbard Koebl, 634-

~~·a~y;,"~~ ~:

r:'A;J::.!~f~~

students interested in Corwer«z.tional H~brew both
on tlie elementary and advanc:ed
level should contact Arlene I..anc·
:_da~:;~ for meetiJlc time
HILLEl. CLA881:8 :

Natioaal Symphony, the New
York PhilbarmOnic, and the Booton Symphony. He baa won
aworda in the Leventritt, Koocn-Jco and Michaela competitioaa. Mr. Manes hao participated
in the Marlboro Muoic Feotival
aDd •tudied in Vienna UDder a
Fulbrid&gt;t cnmt.

"HILLEL TBEA1U PARTY: perform-

ance of M a m a, StudiO Arena
Theatre, Sunday, January 23.
Tickets are now available at the
Hillel House and at the Hillel
Table and will beo&lt;liatributed on
a fint-come-fint·eerve basis. Tbe
ticket price indudeo lntnsportation to and from the theabe.
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
LD. CAJIIlS : Student identification
COPY DEADUNE
·card oerviceo will be open the For everyone's convenienc:a and
~= timeo in Room 16, Foo- ploosure, we like to publicla 811
Jan. 18 and 1~: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. ewnts taking place on campus.
January 17-21: 9 a.m.-9 p.m. To lnformotion. c:on1act SUr·
January 24-28: 9 a.m.-9 p.m. onno Mel&gt;!ler,_ University PublicaStudents muat . - their - - • tions Services, 250 w;_,. Aloa.,
ond
oc:hedulot card in
Ill'
order· to haw their idolltillcatioa ext. ~- Copy will be card ftlidoled. N- otudoog Monday for on Thul'ldoy ond
abould aloo brine their ocbodule on
.
card.. Any
or """-D of Fridoy th I"OUih Thul'ldoy.

SATURDAY-15
OON'l'llfOINO IIDn'AL DUCA1'10N#:

'I'!wnclay lialiDc.
1181'\'ic.e aDd
nolnooim*&gt;ta. 9 : 80 a.m. Maltwah

U8U.'I'B f t Clt&amp;IL&amp;D• :

:..,~.=.::,,:':t:..'d"u~

v

8292 MaiD St., 8 p.m.
IIWIIOIDfll• :
St., Clarlt
Gym, 2 p.m.
- . - • : Blodlport St. w/
IV'o, a.dt Gym, 2 DIU&amp; III'UII1' _,UP:

~gi!!ito{i'~~l

reoeiving statio..,, tel. 835-0728
Baird. 12 for information, 7 :30 p.m. Also

'The procram will open with

a.-

IRI-..:..=··-+

COMPUTING CENTEII USia BmVICES

-r.

2'-.A until

~tO..~~

......nne -

cz-a-

I

.I

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

. ·voL 3- NO. 14

D~C.

16, 1971

$5 Million Sought in

U!B Foundation Drive

WomenBringChristrnaB Joy
To the Old
andAlxouJorurl
..u i.
:,.b;,i ,. tbi!
Some C8J!!11
a I de d
many had to come in wheelchairs or )&gt;llllhiJII cbairB with
wheels on the ieiB beca,_ they
couldn't wallt by themselves.
Some looked normal but there
was a young man without !ega
and an older woman with deformed arms.
They are the aban~ned of
the County - the res1dents of

Erie County. Home and In-

firmary.

Each year these people have
Christmas brought to them by
the women in 0/B's Office of
Contract Administration. For
the past three yems, the 2:7 WQIIIell have not exchanged the
traditional office gifts or cards.
Instead, they uae the money to
buy gifts for the old and infirm
at the Home.
Last Friday, 11 members of
the Office staff went to the
Home with 140 gifts they bad
prepared Tbe brigbtly wrapped packages really didn't contain anything most people
With Christmas and New would consider gifts- a packYear's r.n;nw on Sa+.. w!av this age of KieeJli&gt;X. a tube of den--::-!'U
· -~c-:-v..vil Se
twe cream, a container of talyear, the ruW!lBlty s 1
r- cum powder or a package of
vice employees must receive Life Savers. But these are the
SP..~~ ~t things the patients need and
·
clo!pa.in value most.
~
a memorandum this """"'- ·
•Tbe gifts were only part of
Per8DIIDI!I.......,.. that these the party. With them came
wodoen be off .., Friday, De- candy, coolries and Santa Claus.
comber 24, and Friday, Deoem- As Santa and her helpers pasbar 31.
sed out the presents, Christmas

Tbe U/B Foundation, ,Inc.
(U/BF) this week 8llJlOUilOed
its first formal fund-raising
campaig~~, "_
s eeldng an annual
goal of $5 million" for the neU
live yeara.
According to Dr. Robert D.
Loken, president and "'""""-live
director of the U/BF, the aim
of the drive is "to provide scholarship and r e sea r c h funds,
special faculty facilities and
supplemental salaries for exceptional faculty."
Dr. Loken noted that the Univeosi.ty faces a tight money
situation in reganl to both federal and State funding in the
years m-1. making private
support for University development even more DeCJe!I88IY.
At the same time, -the State
is asking the U/BF to repay
$1.5 million loened to it from
old University of Buffalo Endowment funds - which fWerl!
taken over by the State at the
time of 0/B's merger with
SUNY. Repayment of the loan
will cost the U /BF an estimated $100,000 annually - the
amount of interest earned -=II
year on the $i..5 million. Loken
said that this amount will have
to be rep1-s -=II year aimply
the . . - level of

.:.=tain

- . a..iiae -~ In an interView with the Buffalo Eomine N-. Dr. r"""explained the~~
Foundation'•~ to the

Univeosi.ty'a-futwe:
.
"'The basic jab of the Foundation is to help the &amp;ata Uni-

versity at Buffalo cbanae and
develop, to keep a fleldlile outlook.
"State coffers - in ..-y
state that has such • lllli-mty
srstem - do not fund new deBlgns, prognuns ew directimE

until~

are - . - b a t - .
"WliY. Because the taypay.
era are willing to p.y few on-

going education, but aperimentaticm is a different matter; it's
much simpler, easier and faster
to uae private funds.
" Once these c:banges are proven practical or useful in the

~~.:.rc::.~ ~~

the proving process is underwritten with DOIHitate IDOiley,
and the state then picks up
whatever is proven heneficial.
"We are not radical; we aswith c:bange," Dr. Loken

=!t

"We are looking for innovative programs, which poasih1y
have no means of support. So,

:ott:.:n:..~and~

U/8U /B

menL"

Hos a Chalco
has a choice, Loken
said. It can become "a force few
l1:_~" or it can "biaad the

...... 8lata .. ""--tad in
grOI\'Itl, in pmvidiJil .facilities
(Continud on eol. 4)

z.

HOUDAY BlEAK
The nut issue of tile .......... will
be published Thursday, January 6.
1972. Meanwhile,
extends
best- for tile holiday--

the-

Leave Policy
For Holidays

~!.&gt;i..:,"'1,.,~~will~ :d!h.."':!d~~.whl!!."'~

because they fall within the se- mMtsr break. Tbe last day of
euminations will be Thursday,
December 23, with instlucticm
rswning Thursday, JanWJ~Y

13.

However, professional service
employees, normally scheduled
to work on December 24 or December 31, must c:barae V1112·
tion credits if they wish to take
those days off.
Civil Service employees required to worlt ~ Day
and/or New Year's Day, wbeu
Saturday is part of their....,.war
five-day worlt ....... should ....
ceive straicht time p.y for
workina the boliday. In addilion, tlie anployee should ..,.
ceive a CXIIIIpenllltory day off,
or a day's salary, as he has
elected.
U the SaturdaY holii1aY is the
sixth worlt day that-- (OW!r
40 bows), ....._tion should
be at time and a half rate, plus
the COIDpenllllory time.

mas" came from the 1~er.
It had all the makings of a
traditional Christmas party; the
same ingredients were used that
are used in lhouaands of homes
8Cr08B the country. Only here,
some of the people couldn't
open their gifts becauae their
~?.~in at i on wasn't good
.............
Tbe women of C...tract Administration had their Christmas best on - angel pins and
holly wreaths on skinny rib
sweaters and mini-drea!s. Tbey
moved 811101111 the patien.::lf:~
ing them mffee, and
··
so they wouldn't cry.
Ned ye8r1 the women are
thinking of p · a "Chrioomas
in JulY" party~ that's
wbeu the vol--.. ..... (ODe
-..and the laar hot months of
June, July and A~ atretc:b
oui endlsMiy for !&amp;.- at the
Home. It's a "'-t time from
(~

011 -

Z, eol. 1)

&gt;•

-the-.
.
.
.
,
.
.
----fllthe
. . . , ____ . . ,._the __
----------....-Feliz Navidad

... - .,......._far
lliiM
~-the--U/8---.........-----~
,..__ - - _..,.tor - - - Nr

----..-....

�·---

.

-

--

---

--.-..
--·....-..
.--.
.. ~

0

,.,.

••
1-;1-.-

Jl

c~~----------------------(Contiluml from 1Jtll&lt; I , col. 2)
Thanksgiving to New Year's
but a long lime from New Year's
to Thanksgiving, one of the wo-

men points oul
In addition to

givinl! this
=!: ~is.:.1fl~

was a choice between a foreign
or American child, Mrs. Elaine

Sdlafer, director of Contract
Administration says, and ''we
decided ao American c h i I d
needed the help...
The money for the party, the
adoption and other things comes
out of a $.50-a-month fund
which membets of the Office
staff contribute to. Each year

the whole office decides bow the
money will be spenl
This office on Elmwood is
really no different from other
olrlteS on campus, nor are the
women worlring there recognizably special Mrs. Sdlaft!l' aays
" they're just mncemed people
who want to do something
about their concem.~ . .. ..

~

•

•

- ~

D

~

t-

II-

t-I

~ V/~Al'~ · ~· ~

------

1111. ·•~

CampaignSaam;

....,. _ _ _ _ 1571's _ _ __
o f - far tile U/B F
••s $ 5 - ...,_

ed1Dl972's....,._

.. - c - . , ......

n.-..-•-&amp;hllnlls
* - ......., .-..... the

paoillo!e .., .....
- - ~ L ec.ponlilo &amp;hlinl
ID r~~~e-...,.

Is- prlljocmd

(~ fro• I . coL 6) . CDne of $10.000 simply to Clllllnumbers of students," be tinue its important studies of
explained. "With .us, it is not • gi!Detlc mntnil of the immune
just growth, but ilnpco- system. More is ·needed for
in quality, diJectioo and type equipmenl
• The Community Smvi&lt;e
. of programs.
""The real problem iS to in- Progmm of the Scbool of Mancrease the quantity, but still in- apment which provides admincrease the quality, as we do so. istmtive and financial advice .
That's the difference between a for the Buffalo Philharmonic
great, as opposed to an . . _ . and ClDIDII1llnity aervice agencies
university. .
and which must be ezpanded.
"We look upon the ..,. Uni• F..e;taNjsbmpnt of a Faversity at Buffalo not just as an culty-Alumni Confl!n!DCe Ceoe&gt;q&gt;BDSion, but as a ln!meDdous tel', being mnside!ed for deveJ.
on Dine acres adjacent
opportunity to become a sipificant foroe for cban&amp;e in many to the Amherst campus donated
areas, induiling socio-economjc by the William C. Baird Foundation.. Such a Cll!llter would be
and cultural ooes.
"It is the quality of people a "bridp! between faculty,
which determines the rate and alumni and CDIIIIIJIIIIity."
cow:ae of development ol 110
~:,tou.:;
area, and we believe the Unioersity can do IIIOl'e tban lillY IIMalzai plumed fw a Cultural
other institution to noise that Ceuter ... the Amla8t Campus.
~ew~.·
.
• ~and onrichment
~
Amoog esamples ol Fouoda- :" 1m ~and":!;
the
tion prociams cited
.
• Endpwed cbaim to briDe Health~
• Provision ol ldQarships
to the campus ~ faculty wbo will, in tum, attmct for....., tban .1.l!OO _,QooaJ
other outstanding faculty and and Deoily llludada eamryear.
~ ·-a NObel prize win'! Sla1-IBm emerc!!DFY
ner, for eliiUDPle. ·
..... fw. faculty and "&amp;lalf..
• s-.m and .CUIIIIIIIInity
• The Ernest w~ ee....
ter for lmuntnolngical s-m. aenice pro.ilicla wiUch.the State
which requires an 11111R1111 in- will not fund.
(0&lt;

....,...t

Ecology &amp;gins at U/BasMaintenance,CAC
Institute the Use o~ Recycfuig ~ ·

..; :,-:=.,

...........

-=

......._..under.:::=:,

Like c:barity, good ecologi- the bari-els also. In the ne8r fu- one with suilable scrubbing
cal practices should begin at ture, hopefully in January, ad- equipment J;llat roul.d bum 2,000
home and through the efforts of ditional barrels will be placed pounds of paper waste at a temthe Community Action Corps in the Allenhurst a:rea and on "p erature.in....,..., of 1,800 de(CAC) and the Maintenance the Ridge lea campus. ·
grees. "We think the budgetary
Department, that's exactly
request will be acted on favorGlass recycling in Acbeson ably," Ernesl Edwards, assistwhat's happening at U/B.
These two groups currently &amp;nd the Departroent of Chem- ant to the Directorof the Physiare operating projects on vehicle istry is continuing. This. pro- cal Plant, says.
exhaust, glass and chemical re- ject was started in June tluougb · Edwards and CAf have also
cycling and are p~ one the efforts of the Graduate worked out a program to reduce
Chemists Club and Mainten- vehicle exhaust in State-owned
on pa- recycling.
.
· vehicles. The majority of fofk
The newest effort is in the a.n&lt;:e.
. ln. rutur.., Dr. labn said,
In addition to recycling glass, lift .trucks ·used on campus are
area of glass recycling. Last
. the "Fouadatiaoi
to tab
week, CAC and Maintenance the Chemists Club also found now being run on propane, a
a
role • -!ad;aepta:aa" in tbe
put out the first barrels for a way to recycle chemicals. The low pollution fuel. and a lead
~ ol Amberst. Of
glass mllection by the kiosk in idea started after Earth Day free gas puinp · bas beOn inparticular imaOIIt is a "say on
front of Norton Hall. By Sun- 1970, w b e n students learned stalled for tbo6e State vehicles
U /B's Scbool of Dentistry is me arm surrounding lfie Uniday, five barrels for clear, brown that cbemical waste was being which can operate on this fuel the new bome for the DisbXt W!IBity, ita
design and
and green glass were full and used for land fill After exten- Edwards and students f r o m Academy of General Dentistry the open--~
were BUttOUDded by more boxes sive meetings with Robert Hunt, CAC are alSo investigating the in. Western New YOlk.
By its a.rter, the FoundaU/B's Environmental Health possibility of installing catalytic
full of bottles.
DOCJ-ptofjt organization tion can buy and aell real estate.
However, CAC Project Co- . and Safety ofticer, the group mulllen! to furtber reduce .,._ - • """""""" _ . . . 1'181&gt;titioneos "to m a i n ta in high
ordinator Steve Gross warns helped rewrite the University's haust emissions.
that the effort will be a suc- bid &amp;pecillcations for removal of
The Custodialllopartment is standards and to up-date their ~ CorpOration is
cess only if the bottles are chemicals. A mmpaoy that re- also moperating in the overall """"""'"' tbroulh ............... .......tine with -developers
cycles
·
or
bums
cbemicals
at
rinsed and all metal removed.
effort by using detergents and education," the ·~ for -..ctioD ol faculty .........
Many wine and soda bottles, high temperatures now holds supplies that mntain a mini- establisbed in ~
inc ~ to the Amberst
be says, have screw tops that the chemical removal contract. mum of pbospbates.
......,... ODe IDmdred seventyleaye a metal strip on the bottle
~ bopes tO get a
five
~bousesare
in the future, CAC, Edwards
when opened. This must be re- high tem~lure incinerator and Hunt hope to mntinue co- YfBIB and bas "had a Jninimmn plmmed • a first *P.
moved because the metal affeCts for campus use. After ezamin- ~., efforts in _reducing all of 25 bours.J!( ~ .,._
In addition, labn said, pri.
the pwity of the glaas when it ing the one they bail been using types of pollution oo campus. tinuiug educatian.
funds are .-led to attract
~ membem w i l l - --a ~
is melted for recycling. I.bels, to bum combustibles, they de- 'lbeyl are almost ready to start
-..,..,;alist for a
however, can be left on.
Cl!llt diacount .......,., .-1&lt; ....... "aoftware"
cided to abut it clown because a paper recycling program but """"""' a l!O Gross invites people from of the pollution it cauaed. To final details must be worked ~ '!'BOY of the ClDUiaS in ..,... ~could b:ate and tieg'ffl~ dmtal education at in with J.aic re...,..rch being
areas surrounding U/B to use replace it, they have asted for oul
Cllllducted at the UnPasity.

Dental Arndemy

~totampus

~-""'***
........n

wt!t,

~~~=

~~~=lf~

�'REPOR"rER,

-l6,l97l

~Lived a Dream SA Mulling
As Ph . . to Saud
Chnnges jJr .
~

n ___.,.;-h,.,.;,.n

is

--

~

.izal It ~-;rt,;'"Iargeiyi;;.
elfectnoe polity or town meeting
form of government aDd voted
ill a more representative Sto-

etil; :ruu lool :ruu to bold
the - - ill :ruur blmd. 'Die

::..,is==~--

=l:=:·~~

lk. .lolal-.l 8. .._._.

poaitioa) • • ............ dlio!f.

of~

An

-

mdialoPit aad

1111180&amp;

_,,..calf d8y aad Dicht.

dQs a . . - , with lour

.....,...ayearlar-=atioa.
Wbaleow tbe Kille IDDVIId
from his ..;, .-lace at n.,db
to alia- _ . - . he look ....,
doctor to allald.
~ could -

""i:'

~ ~ • .-.. - - '
~ ...-~ ....- ....
Dr. ~ aJw..ys " " ' - to

&lt;L-'-

atlald the bomliDc apeditioas.
Hmdiac ..,_ aad Ill-niB
with baiaed falcaaa is """ of

~ ~~-e~~

...,. _ . -

..., -..- ~~

Clllllluded &amp; the ejoyable lime of tbe year, the .winll!t, ..._........., ...._, aad tbe
wa!ber m.L Before an expalitioa, the Bedouins _ ,
aoked if birds aad . - Wl!le
~ thea tnoilers were
- - t o bWid a city of leota,
aad ~ aad food Wl!le
.t-1 by lour da,ys. The
Kine. his COIIUltien aad a doctor
_ , thea Ibm to the site by
DC3.
Spalr:illc of ~ life, Dr.
~ "I DDEt .._,.
- t b e - intereotinl ~
of life withiD the palace, be-

is

more demo1
CDDtro of gov-

""lbe load ....,.,u,m aDd
~ aDd wbelber; there
_ , five )JeDIIIe ar a tbousaDd,

there -

aJw..ys

I!IIIJIIIh far

doullle the J111111ber of IIUI'BI:s.
'l1loy very clrmocreti.o
aDd piDoos aDd Blaff

.en;

..W ....,..__ 'lbl!re were DO
mi-t putioa ~ IDI!Il aDd

~--~..:.. ~ =~

-

-

...,

~ whicb _ , mizal~

The Mepheds have tbree
c:hildn!D: Ballm,tbeeldesthoy
16 aad . . - . . Calasaoctius
Pnp Scboal Amre, the middle
.., wbo is 14. aad Niville, their
1.2-you-dd ~ attend
pulllic acboal.

is

_t!:., ~life
Seo~tA~
m·

~

&amp;till am't •

~

~

,.,.tate to ex-

baoecivilizatioa.. People there
Wl!le tied by their 1001'11 of
honor. Since I left thore, I have
DDt _ , Ibis - . Here
:ruu Deed the siplaiure of a
lawya- to III8R ~ bindinc-• He ..U.. wbat be terms
the "_.,oity aad aimplicity"'
of life aad )JeDIIIe there. "I hope
i t - DDt c:ba._t.•
·
But be feels deeply iDdebted
to the U.S. aad to Bulfa1o,
where be 1.iwd 1ar &amp;eYeD
yam, "despite the fact that it's
the Dilly city with lour in ...., d8y. Our c:hildreo, my
wile aad myaelf are peatly appra:ialive, aad Ibis is from my

'-rt.•
-

ef

tile -

What be holds dear in his
. . _ ; . . of life ill the RoYal

~~=-by.:=..-: :::=e~ "!;t~= :l:; ~;:Ow&amp;, to~dF!:;'::=

lliaa, etbial aad ""'t"lity to re¥Ml _._) r.em.• But . be
doel:ril.l tbe -a. .-lace •
Mriac a roof Jib the -r.i Ma-

~J'!':;::~
~

.....,.,_ .....
...,... ...
- t h e ....td, I'BBian eupets.
c:rylllal c:t.adolien, ultza.mod..
.... Nar-.ilm pioas- aad ....,

ft:; . ia.. ._ ,

....-, -..n

..___, • '

__, m

villa,• hold
their _,. .......... ..a b.t ln!e
.. tbe .-lace ltitd8L
"' - _,. paflfalto t!W!I)'•

...., bn.• .....aa.- Dr. lolfcahal '"n.y .....,._ aad
aD ....... liloadare .... ......
col ...,...__ abllliiBI
b..._ 1....-...s
..Jaly

a.....

.....--~.,,~.-"!~
~ ":.

.-..,e.

Dr. ,;::_

i;i,-.;_ ..... illc.iloaad

b.t ...-1 his M.D. thore,
.......... to . . . . - - tbe lllltitme "' Mel-. IIia LaadaD.
Ta Jr-. A Or............. wife- u
-- w q
~ ill c.i1o

..._ tbeJ-. " ' - .....

...me ... -mal her to be

a ._.,._ But I .......-..s
her thd lhe aDd...., d8y finilll her eduadiaD. I ~ have
IIIQed,.. at the ~~I

. . - . . to ....... ....,. pn!lllllle.

y.., have to loam Mrl7 .........
~ _,. ald. She Ia ""!'"
~-.lou M.S. m

little fountain ill frcmt of my
villa;" tbe ,....... aad fleo&lt;ibility of daily life. "Here it is
W!1Y riPd, aad t!W!1Y ~ is
macb the__, mutiDe.•
At the Meyer Manorial HaspitaJ, Dr. Mepbed teaches
....... to Ormpetjoml 'lber-

it and AUbmit it to the Student

~u!iro

set of amendments
incressed CDDtinuity.
U they are passed, election of
oew SA officers would be held
in Man:D rather than in i'MYThis wa,y. the incoming Eiei:u~
~ live Committee would be able
~ ~~.·
•
• ~ ,..__• the to ~ the budget it works
.. ............,_ ...... ~
with the following year. In this
student yeubook aec:tioa quonun policies are also
of tbe Medical aad Dental foanal1y stated for the first
ScbDale, dedicated to him, time.
aad lllalllld t h U - than anyFurther amendments would
...., eloe. .,.. • ._, _.cy set up a Standing Committee
tbrJulblfuL CIIIIIBisiBdly belplul em Student Athletics. In addiaad liooa ~ bated .. with- tioa to supervising the expendi- .•
twe of athletic monies, this
'"l'o be a.,.,....~.- tiQS ....,..)d also prepare an
Dr. Mephed, "' loak at the athletic budget for dUect preshoy aad I leol he is Hatem ar eotatioa to the Assembly.
~J:: ~~r~
A stipeud "'$700 for each
ill ....,. to.:hiac. This is SA ollicer is also proposed.
the recipe: to .._ :ruur stu- ~::: t.?:e~
denla - .._ :ruur dill- the functioning of Student As~ . :raa'll aee the dif- aociation," De Waal say&amp;, and
. .~- ~~ _,..._, ~
"'llloor it to coutinue as a nee_ _ _ _ , - . - - ~ -.yputofcampuslife."
sioao, Dr. .._...,.. loels, are
tealpllary. •Am~a aDd Jews
liwod ~ ......... aad - . SOCIAL I'OUCY -!NATIONS
will We ....... macb ill The s.lftt Commitll!e for the
. . - - ; oar IIO!IiPm IIPd ba- DMn of the Scloool 011 Social Policy
~are aioai1ar.. We Deed to Community Selvioe ' - •n·
............... ~alia- without . ~ Docember 31, 1971, ..
lear. ,.._ ........... ..... ttoe fiMI for ttoe submission
aibility aad 011-0IIOLdditionolaondridot there Ia ........ bocb f a r - ~ ,.... Commltlee
...._0Ded8y_....,._
011 ........
- - - - submit
...111M

.t IDB

:1:

II,.,..,

.....a

I

-

, ....

-==:.-J?e:e !'l:t ~;:.::!:::::::.:

Be ..
putioa .. tbe RayU

ity Budget for SUNY," wbich
would pi'OY:ide $15 million each
year for five years for minority
· and female faculty and graduabtey thestudenSUNYts, Wisobeingmen.'s Capusbeducus

!d

l!IIID• ..,.....to Kille 8IIUd

of s.adi Anlllia, aDd _....of

edal lar their .........,., _ .
biiAJ' aad .......,. Wllhill the
........,.._....., "it-lib•
cil¥ wilbiD a ri4y,• therea 411-bal hospital built by
~ aad.....,. with a sur_ . . . . , . (Dr. Mepbed'a

A proposal for a "Special
Equal Employment Opportun-

and the National Organization
of Women (NOW) .
'lbe amount is tbree per cent
cmtic
of the total SUNY budget. It
: :~~ ~f
should be appropriated by the
_ ....__ it in the bands of '"The Legislature and/or the Gover~"
.
~r. the two women's rigbts
For the past tbree months, groups say, in order " to remove
~ it basn't worked this the inequities of the past and
wa,y. SA's Executive Commit- transform the public university
tee &amp;till bas CDDtrol over the of one of the most progressive
......, that is mosidered most im- states in the nation from an
portant--tbe budget. Tbe As- overwbelmingly white male enaembly can only pass or reject clave to an institution whicb
the Executive Committee's bud- truly represents the citizens of
get; they can not make any New York State."
changes in iL In addition, SA
Developed for presentation at
officers &amp;till vote in the Assem- the Governor's Conference on
bly and before the Assembly Women: a Political Force, held
readaed its present membership last month, the proposal says
of apprm&lt;imalely 50 they con- that, by rigbts, employees and
trolled a large voting bloc.
graduate students of the UniHopefully, these conditions versity who are not white males
will change """" SA President should receive $75 million eacb
IanDeWaal'sproposedmnsti- year in order to g8in parity.
tutioaaJ amendments have gone "Given the present fiscal sitthrough.
uation in the State," however,
Tbe changes fall into five the Women's Caucus does not
-.:
propose " to remedy the inequiTbe rust would eliniinate the ties of a long past in one year."
coordinators for national affairs
'The $15 million figure is
aDd students rigbts along with cslled a "decisive beginning"
the second vice president and and would be allocated each
add a recording1i&lt;!Cretsry. SA's year for: an Academic Incenpresident would asoume the tive F\md ($6 .million); trainfunctions of national affairs co-· ing awl upgradiDg ot U-grade
ordinator and all student rigbts awl civil service positions l $6
activities would be handled by million), and child care ($3
an Oftice of-8tudent Affairs.
• mill!~n ) .
. •
.
A basic strenl(tbening of the
Coting a national climate ol
Student Asoemhly is the object't. " fear and trepidation" concemof the second set of amend- ing bwnan rights and equal opments. Tbe president and all portunity programs, the WoSA coordinators will 00 longer men's Caucus and NOW csll
be members of the Student As- upon New York State "':&lt;&gt; seize
sembly, with the exception of the _moment for leadership, and
the vice president who will by Jts eumple to show our nachair Assembly meetings. 'lbe tion wbere its future lies."
Assembly will fmally be able
The State, the women say,
to alter the budget presented ~ed in the past decade .of
to it and budgetary review by SUNY's greaU:S~ growth to mthe Executive C'.ommittee will ~ opportunities to ~d
be eliminated. Tbe new budget- hinng "'!d. gradua~ ~'!cation
ary process would have the Ex- opportunities for mmonties and
ecutive Committee giving its women.
axiatioa (SA)
· by ......,__

_.._.....,__of...........,
aDd diDiall ..-..m pa&gt;~aaJr
of . - . _ , .....s from lll53-

.._ _ . . - ...,.., . . . . . , _ , .
Kills s..l'a .-lace _ , aol-

the •......._..

studen/'!!..-...:::='':;;".!!~

-n. ....._. of the deast
........... Y&lt;lll clr-.1 of llvm.
ilL 'Die '*;y a Dilbl is ., po-

u- eiPt _.,. • "a clr-.1
aDd the '-uiifal
=·ill ID;J' lile. I otilllive ill
...._ .___ ~ _._...._._ ~

·SUNY Women Asking for
Funding of $15 Million

UJI~f,u-ut-W.

By 80ZANNB METZGER

3

Middle . . .-

.,....._to

- - - tiiM pwicod.

bas named a direct9r of Equal
Opportunity Employment and
several campuaes have initiated
affirmative action programs, the
Slate hiring freeze makes such
programs "a sham· and a delusio~" the two 'W'CXDell's action
groups maintain.
State University spends .$150
million annually on faculty salaries and graduate traineeahipe,
the women say. Of this, ouly
$15 million goes for minority
and female faculty and graduate students. Within five years,
the proposal calls for onHWf
the total SUNY allocation (or
$75 million) for these groups.
To do this, an increase of $12
million per year for the next
five would be necessary.
Since, however, "much of this
deficiency can be compenaated
in the hiring of replacements,
promotions of present staff and
vigorous recruiting of disadvantaged students," only $6 million is asked annually for an
Academic Incentive Fund.
Aooording to the proposal,
"For every additional dollar or
line (above the erpenditures of
the previous year) which an
SUNY campus provides out of
its own resources for recruiting,
hiring and promoting women
and minority instructional staff,
that campus will receive an additional dollar or line from the
Academic Incentive Fund to
spend on the disadvantaged. In
tne following year, if these expenditures are 1714intoined, they
should be incorporated into the
regular budget and an additional $6 million appropriated
to matcb further incnlaaes in
female and minority instrucI:Ullial staffr in the same manner. Thus after five years, the
$60 million deficiency will be
eradicated."
Bl-. In the 'Undeoi&gt;olly'

Because most of the Universit;ys black employees are "concentrated in its underbelly,"
and because female secretaries
" have virtually no access to the
better paid profeSsional jobs,"
a sum equal to the Academic
Incentive Fund is urged "for
training and upgrading programs to enable the p""""'tly
disadvantaged to shed their
Sham ond Delusion
status awl tske their rigbtful
And although SuNY now place• in the operation of the
University."
F\mds for Day Care Facilities are necessary, the p~
says, because "all of SUNY's female employees-white, brown,
black-need such parentTbe State Bureau of the Bud- and
controlled
... centers, operated
get must be "sold.. on the ez.•
on
a
free or sliding fee basis, to
penditure of University monies enable
them
to participate fully
in excess of $1,000 in several
professional, educational and
categories, Charles E. Deven- in
dorf of the U/B Pwchasing training opportunities available
the University."·
Department informed the cam- in 'lbe
proposal also demands .
pus community in a memoranthat
detsiled affirmative action
um circulated this week.
Aooording to Devendorf~ "the programs be developed by
present State fiscal criais bas SUNY a8 a whole and by MCh
affected e:ipenditures as fol- campus "to insure competent
recruiting and piaoeDdlt and
lows:
• All purchases nf equip- to set intelligent goals for the
ment, supplies and se~vices various - r s of the Univerex&lt;Bding $1,000 will require sity."
Developed by Vera Rcmy, coprior approval of the Bureau
ordinator for equal employment
of the Budget.
• Renewal of all contracts, opportunity, State University
maintenance agreements, 1 - at Stony Brook, and Dr. Estelle
etc., which .....-! $1,000 will James, chairwoman, Campus
Policy Committee, NOW/
~J';!or ~submitted Stonv Brook, the proposal is
to the ~ Department "predicated on the assumption
apinst State funds which ex- of a ReDerai budget freeze.
.-18 $1,000 must be aooompan- When the freeze is lifted, half
i1t,~ written letter of just.. of all increments) lines shonld
be used for women and minorThis letter, Devendorf said. ities. .. .
"U this special Equal (')pporshould be "precise, dUect and
sti'Onl" and should indicale: 1. tunitV Fu1)d is not approprithe llll!llbel' and type of OOiiftl.. at.Ad," NOW and the SUNY
to be affected; 2. the num- Women's Caucus ask that
ber aad grade level of students "~ be required to use
aU replacement lines and aU
promotions for women and mivisiaa, etc., will be ~ . llO'rities, until the $60 million
ifDOt._......t
. deficieDcy is eliminated.-

$1,000 Purchases

Need StateS Okay

es

~~~r.u::.

�4

GREPORTE.R.,

Decetzoer 16, 1971

Anxieties&amp;AppiehensionsAboutSPASFufureAreOutlined
They are hard-working, aggres- whid&gt; requires financi8l aDd osophy which needs llliP....,.;OII
sive individuals with much to logistical support ol. consider- without fear ol. contmdiction.
give SPA, but need careful able substance. One hears in- But tbere are some pemons
..:hooling in what some of us creasing talk of parity as a within the faculty of all cateregard as the eternal verities of mechanism to handle existing gories of units and within eleacademe before their judgments inequities, although thus far it ments of the professional staff
may be entirely trusted, what- has been interpreted by SPA to · who may differ from most of
ever their intenl Nonetheless, be a consideration at minimum us in their vision of a univer..
I doubt if, under the circum- salary levels. Only the State sity aDd its obligatioo to them
stances, SPA could have done OER has thus far suggested 88 employees. Many ol. them
better, and I
this as no maxima, and these clearly dif- have justifiable reaaons f o r
reflection upon them for people ferentiated among categories of complaint It would be unforwith long experience in higher campuses. They seem less like- tunate w~ tbooe complaints,
By KOBER 1 _ FISK
education collective negotia- ly to be stressed, but large in- however, ~political powPro/~-. £d-UonaJ su,iu..
tions simply do not exist. But creases in minimum salaries in er to outwugh the fundaWhat anxieties or appreh•u- the importance of academic the smaller units may eat up mental priorities of SUNY.
sions do some of us share as we participation in SPA is clear.
resources at such a rate as to · To summarize these concontemplate the future under
The present Executive Boanl limit tbooe monies whict&gt; can cerns, first, I should not wish
collecti,·e negotiation?
of the State SPA consists of 15 be applied to the further de- the con&lt;:ept of the University
First and foremost of con- persons, only two of whom velopment of the Centers or Centers to be lost or negotiated
cern to me is the likelihood that come from the faculties of a even their capacity, by virtue away by virtpe of relative imneither campus SPA chapters University Center. Among of salary attractions, to hold potence within SPA. I believe
or the State SPA organization those from the professional their own among comparable the Centers are imperative to
will reflect adequately, for the staffs at the Centers tbere are institutions in other states.
the bealth of the entirety of
present, some of the concerns two who appreciate the academAt the moment SPA is still SUNY and of SPA. I see rxi
moot of us would share as aca- ic values which predominste on a fragile entity. Its membership immediate danger of rapid dedemicians.
their campuses. These attitudes is growing, but slowly. Its eJI'eo- terioration - unless budgetary
PresentJy, SPA is composed are supported, for the moot tiveness in both the short and catastrophe occurs-but neither
at the State level of a small part, by the four members from the long run depends upon the am I reassured that there are
cadre of officers, a smaller pro- the Colleges w bose back- commitment it receives from
fessional staff drawn entirely grounds are primarily in the within SUNY as a whole. It
from NEA sources, an Execu- academic disciplines.
will be made aware from time
to time of the existence of the
tive Boanl of 15 including the Power Lies Within
officers, and a Representative the RepresenUtive Assembly
State University Federation of
Assembly of perhaps s i x t y
Teachen! ISUFT) and of the to pnMcle • for· the -members. The officers (presiPrimary power within the AAUP. The former must con- - of .... varloiJ
dent, two vice-presidents, sec- Association lies with the Rep- form to the discipline of indus- oltheluwst.clnctheretary and treasurer) consist, resentative Assembly. It elects trial unionism. The latter has com m unity. We w.lc::arM bath
by the resignation of the first the officers and the members of not demonstrated its capacity pooltlan papers as
president, a Binghamton physi- the Executive Board. The by- to meet the full responsibility -permits.
cist, of four from the profes- laws are such as substantially of formal negotiations. (l say
sional staff and one from the to favor the Colleges in con- this, regretfully, as a member sufficient forces at work to
faculty. They are strong peo- trast to the University Centers of AAUP who hopes it will maintain the excellence . we bepie who have given generously despite the fact that the num- continue to press for the ideal lieve we have developed, Jet
of their time and energy to bers of faculty in the two cate- and to think deeply about prin- alone build upon il
launch SPA. The president has gories are in a ratio of ten to ciples apart from seeking partistudied closely earlier attempts . seven, respectively. Each unit san adva.Dtage.) But SPA does Local Campus Autonomy
at collective bargaining in high- of SPA is permitted one facul- exist. It has a contract. It more lmperwtive
er education and came to the ty and one professional staff than any other o.,;anization
My s e c o n d • apprebensiorf
bargaining table exceedingly member of the Assembly with represents to the Chancellor flows somewhat from the first
we!l,.prepared for both the an additional representative and to. the State of New York in the interpretation given to
formal baraainina and the in- from eacb category &lt;to a max- the int..rests of the State Uni- SPA by its State pr.ofessional
fonnal political- maneuvering imum of three each) for every
•t
staff and to collective negotiawhich the role requires. As a 150 SPA members in that cate- verst Y·
ruember of the professional staff gory in the unit. By virtue of
Thus, it is imperative that all tions given by OER and the
of an Agricultural and Tecbni- their si?.e the Center faculties elements of SUNY be fully and c e n t r a I administration o f
In the final analysiS
cal College, be emerged from could generate 12 faculty rep- fairly represented in the SPA SUNY.
this comes down to two able
that group of the professional resentatives. They haye r four Representative Assembly by young
men,
one the execUtive
staff previously described as at present. (I have insufficient persuasive and a r t i c u I a t e
the largely disenfranchised who data to estimate the maximum spokesmen for their unique con- director of SPA and the other
- the assistant vice-cltancellor for
are determined to seek what potential representation from U:.,."'tk~Jh!;i ;:[':;:'t,1
employee relations in the centhey view as their right to the the professional staff.) This
reduction of existing inequities. will contrast, however, with a mal unless there is a turnabout tral administration of SPA.
He is strongly supported in faculty representative potential in the interests and attitudes of Each has a great deal to gain
this by several others among of approximately 45 to 50 from so many of my colleagues who from the growth in importance
the officers and the members the Arts and Science Colleges. appear to me to have their of the collective negotiations
of the Executive Board.
There seems to be a rowing heads in the sand when it process, since they appear dedThe professional staff of SPA, sense of commonality on mat- comes to recognizing the effects icated to careers in this fieldis composed at present of two tars related to collegiality and of their lethargy upon them- one as a representative of empersons, both young and sea- governance generally. Whether selves personally. The State ployees and the other, a lawsoned veterans in the collective there will continue to be simi- SPA spokesmen of the future yer trained at SUNY~. as a
negotiations field through thei r lar agreement on economic con- should have participated sui- represe ntative of "manageassociation with NEA. As such siderations remains to be seen. ficiently at the local level to ment." Each is ..:hooled in the
they bring a considerable or- Presently those at the Centers know the issues emerging there. adversary approach engendered
ganizational wisdom and exper- are regraded by many at the They must follow developments by negotiations. Each may be
ience, primarily in grievance other units of SUNY as the at the State level so as to be able to point to much precematters, but conditioned almost "fat cats" of SUNY. Many . able to "":oooe. among postures dent in justification of his role
entirely from experience ill the elsewhere appear to lack a on the vanous ISSUes and to sel- and behavior in that role. But
public ..:hool and community commitment to or a sen.'le of the ~ strong officers 1rna Execu- neither appears to be steeped
oollege fields plus some work kin d of academic "marke(,. bve Board '!"""bers. I ~o not in the traditions and values of
with or familiarity with the place" values which press upon ye_t see th!' kind o! &lt;:&lt;&gt;m.m ttment the academic community in the
smaller Michigan State insti- faculty members at the Centers thJS reqwres exhl'!tted among manner in which ·they are ustutions and CUNY. None of and which require a substantial many faculty on this campus_ or ually expressed on a university
these, in my judgment, pro- time commitment to scholar- !'t the others. My apprehenston campus. While it is more than
vides a suitable mode I for ship and to research not di- ts . that. the commtlment re- possible that each can and will
SUNY patterns, but where is rectly associated with teaching. qwred .'~ greater than most grow in his oomprehension of
tbere another SUNY involved _ Thus some may fail to reco~- a?'demtctanS and other p_rofes- the nature of a university as
in oollective neg o t i a·t ion? nize the nature of the competi- S 1.~ ~ho are. approp~u:tY distinct from other public or( SUFT has no better exper- tion within higher education for ~h~ent m. purswt of thetr dts- ganizations it is imperative that
ience and AAUP almost none.) ..:holars of national stature CJplines will or shoul~ make. each receive direction in role
Pmsequently, we may find our- definition rather thin be perselves with leadership roles in mitted the privilege to define
SPA filled by those who are his own without restraint. It is
more interested in process and equally important that their
JX~Wer than in academic status
personal relationship r e m a i n
or by aenior facultv whose ca- more distant than otherwise,
reers are settle&lt;! but who ' may for the power that could be
not alwavs ....nect the interests Bhifted back and forth between
or needs of those uoon whom them by virtne of the contract
~ture of the University deand the grievance process is
considerable, to say the leasl
Despite my concern for aca- For these reasons, as well as
others, it becomes imperati\'e
~ dernic considerations let me reiterate my personal belief in that local campus autonomv be
the commitment we must make ~ppo~ at every opportuiuty,
to the needs and concerns of nduding for example the setthe prOfessiOnal staff members. tlin« of l{rievances on campus
Some of them may well be gen- at Step I of the grievrutce proerated by considerations which cedure whenever IJOSBI-ole.
are in apparent conflict with Eflect ·of lmplett..,.tatlou o1
lb.- ol. scholarship, instruction lito lfa,lor law
· aDd service. I do not wish to . . My thin! area of apprehensugpot theirs is an elitist phil- sion revolves around the ~

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
the sl!&lt;'ond part of a comprehensiue ,. VI-part diM:ussion of the
Sena« Professional Association
by Dr. Robert Fisk. In the iirst
installment, published in last
week's Reporter, Dr. Fisk detailed the history of the •stablishment of the o. ganization
and po111tcd out som" of its accomplislomwts ·to date. Today,
he turns to •the ["tu'

=

CVIEWPOINTS
... __

The~._

Z

'REPORTER,

---

of the implementation of the
Taylor Law upon the powers
of the SUNY Trustees and tlie
Chancellor. SPA bargains directly with the Office of Employee Relations, a division di- ·
rectly responsible to the Governor. It do5 110t bargain with
SUNY. The economic portions
of the contnoct muat be approved by the Legislature. The
contract was signed for the
State by the Director of Employee Relations aDd the pri-

~:=n~t:~

The SUNY Central Administration was represented at the
table at all times aDd in numbers varying from two to an estimated maximum of 18 on one
occasion. While it was clear
that the Cbancellor and other
elemenls of the administrative
"hierarchy of SUNY were consulted, there was always. present in my mind the fear that
the OER might place greater
priority on economic considerations than upon factors other
than economic needs which are
close to the concerns of academe. Frankly, I was often very
uncomfortable as I observed
discussions w h i c h consisted
largely of a dialogue between
the OER negotiator and our
negotiator, both of wbom lacked
any direct familiarity or experience on the campus of a major
university. U anything, arid
largely because of the foresight
of the SPA president, we were
better prepared than was OER.
But it was aeldom that anyone
with experience in the administration of a complex campus
participated directly in the bargaining P"""""'- U we were to follow the precepts of collegiality one might
conceive that in this situation
the central adniinistration of
SUNY sl1ould tiave beeifon the
SPA side of the table. For it
now seems that the eJI'ect of
the Taylor Law as presently
interpreted may be further to
entwine SUNY within State
Government generally. The
contract seems clearly to have
greater authority than do the
policies of the Board of Trustees. While its interpretation
may be subject to rulings by
the Public Employee Relations
Board &lt;PERBJ, this body is
appointed by the Governor and
must be aware of his interests.
Thus it seems inevitable that
temporal State political considerations may have their direct
effect upon Universi ty policies
through contract determination
and interpretation without major -input by the Trustees who
have in the past been otherwise
viewed as responsible to the
State for the operation of the
University. However, it may
also be noted that the Trustees
had no apP81'1!11t grievable responsibility to faculty or staff,
nor was there provision for direct and meaningful inputs to
the Trustees' decision-making
process by faculty or staff.
Were SUNY a constitutionally d&gt;artered institution with
the aU!onoiQ.Y of a lump sum
budget for operating purposes,
we should indeed bargain with
the C h a nee II or and/or the
Trustees. My fear is that the
present situation ia one which
may weaken the position of
both these elements. It has always been my contention that
a good university requires a
strong faculty and staff and a
s t r o n g administration a n d
hoard of trustees. The present
situation in SUNY is not one
calculated to encourage the latter aDd thus may seriouslv affect the former. Hopefully,
throo&amp;gh ita awareness of the
dangers inherent in a weak administration, SPA may function politically so as to
lltlengthen and ultimately to
(Con tiltu..J on 9, co/. I)

�~16,1911

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

1BiM

you could buy a pair of
trou.ra for $.al 111111 a bra8B bal for
$25. Bullalo in thoae days ..... slill
,_,_;q from the Pan American Bxpoeltioa wbldl pmduced today'a Mu....., of Hiatory 111111 the
of Preaideat William McKinley .
" " ' - 011 the Niqara F'roatler taJlllllll DllllliWI with bleb oelliDp 111111
~ 100111&amp;. This ..... the eettinc

- In

.-mation

when, in 1904, Frank Uoyd Wright
built a bouse for Darwin D. Martin 011
J......rtt Parkway that ..... like nothing
Buffalo had ever oeen.
A IH!WIIPBper article of the day termed it a "freak house," but quicldy
added that it ..... "oanwnient" and
for all its oddities, a "very attmctive

dweJllnc."
People -re taken abacCJ&gt;y the
bouse's lone horizontal lines 111111 the
way it huged the earth, a far cry from

the towering structures they were used
to. 'The home had a predominance of
angles and strong straight lines, with
none of the comforting curves of the
Art Noveau period. And strangest of
all, most of the rooms on the first
floor were connected, one Oowing into
the o!ber - completely missit1f" Wll8
the formal seperation by doors and
walls.
This is a building that, even today,
gives rise to stronc feelings within the

viewer - feelings that nmge from love
to hate, but are never neutral. Some
feel the linkage of spaces oo-.•t afford enough privacy. Others decry the
beavineas of the horizontal linea. Many
can't undemtand what these criticisms
are all aboul
Stro11g feeling is cbaracteristic of
Wriaht 111111 his buildinga_ This dynamic man developed an architectural
style that America 111111 the wodd bad
never !&gt;efore ~ His " orpn-

�- 1 6, 1911

ic" c:oncepts ~ his feeling for a dominant horizontal line which allows
house and nature to interact gave rise
to toc:lay's 1"'lll&lt;h house&amp; and picture
window&amp;.
An-ID'Cio-'lbe home 011 Jewett Plllkway is
typical of his work, incorporatin1
. many Wrilbtian ideas. 1be eDeDded
roofs and pronounced brick ESierior
and interior pnMde a stroDI of

shelter, 80IIIIOibinJ the world lmnDuB
ardlilect .JWII)'a alrived to ...me.e.
Ita form is an antidote to wbat he
called "canlboara house" clwelliucll of
the period - home&amp; """'- interiors
were "cut up, advisedly and complete.
ly. with the pim detennilllllioa that
Bbould 10 with any cuttinl .,..,.,...."
n- house&amp; OIJII8iBted of many ..,.,.,...
In one - · Wrilbt sarcastically
deecrihed them as "bose&amp; beaide or
inside the " - . All balOI!8 imlide a
complicated lxmnJ. Each domestic
'function' was properly box to box. I
could see little aense iii this i.nhibilioa,
this cellular sequestzation that implied
anceotora familiar with the cells of
penal institutions . . . So I decJIIJed
the whole lower floor as one room,
cuttinl off the ldtcben as a laboratory,
putting servants' sleepinJ and IMnc
_.un nen to it, ...U-delat:bed, ...
the ~ floor, screenin1 variouo
portioaUaJhe room for certain ..,.,_.
lie ~ - like dininl or .-~ina
or ....,.,;w., a formal caller •.• 8ooral
of cloon ~ and no ead of
pertilioa . .. 1be ""'- became -

free as 'spa&lt;e' and more liveable, too.
Interior _ . . . . , _ began to dawn."
After reducinl the number of rooms

to a bare minimum, Wrilbt also

tJroucht the ceilinp down and desip&gt;-

80 that ceilinp ~ walls
flow tocett- as "one larp t!DCiomre
of ·- . " 1be then atandanf 12' P!il0. "-eel to today'&amp; level of
7lh'. Ceilinp and walls painted
the color and ClOrDOIII discw-t to create the illuaioo of conlin-

ed interiors

UOII8-

windowa.
'Ibis eDensive use of window&amp; """'
quite innovative in 1904. In order to
supply some aemblance &lt;Jf privacy,
colored leaded Pass """' u.mJJed inilorpomtinJ his famous '"I'ree of Life"
pettem. 'Ibis abstract JII!OIDI!Iric deOil liUIDI!IOU8

sip; features "'"" rectancles of Pass bordered by amaJier gold .and
copper _.-es. 1be entire effect is
very modem and was prot,ehly an unknowin&amp; forerunner of the cuiJiatic
~

--~~
Wricbt ..., diopioed .n
lilbtinl and

fust built; instead, Wrilbt depEIJded

malin&amp;

plumbinJ sy1ltemL Radi-

Wrilbt also desiJned mast of the
fumiabinp and the landscapinJ since
he felt they Bbould be "all """ with
the buildinJ." 1be Martin home was
ODe of the firat places in which he ._.

-_ .-. bybiddm
behindJrille.
"""'-or
a WIICidwod&lt;
Pbnl&gt;the now famous barrel chair. When
iD&amp; ..... ~into the walls or
sittin&amp; in the semi-circulsr seat, the
occupant is partially enclosed 011 the
!loon with only tluoulh amaJI
....... ..........._, by doon deoicned
badt and sides by flat spindles of
to loak like lmmdry dDJtes. Many of
wood. 1be ~ desiJo and spriDJed
the Jiabla . . - I and Jalund - seat make it ODe of Wright's mnst comfllmnination ..... .-1 as liiUdla _ .
fortable cbails. 1be innovative archi8ible. He ..... edenoive ... of akytect wasn't content sintply to design
l;,bta and 8imilar dericeo to illUQJinste
the dJaim, tables and sofa. be also
crested
the piano and its bench, niany
bard-fo.lilbt 1be llkylilbts in
the ' - - 1 of the J - Pamray
of the lightinJ fixtures and even the
home me pal ........... of this. A
outaide clothes poles.
portion of the ' - - 1 cOilin&amp; esteada
..._ the p'OIIIId and io f1uoh with the
~--theW' - o f the. wiadoln ..._it. 'Ibis....,_
All of the furnishings and """""""""
lioa of
-uy esteada oat. wete
hOlley mlonld ftimed oak. Wright
llbout ..... loet fnm the fraot of the
was stzongly in favor of a "DIODCHDS""'- ead within ita CliiiiCMe are Et
terial" for the interior of a ""'-. In
each of his houses a differi!nt wood or
. . . - o f - - t h a t - to'""'
llcbt to the a - - t . 1bere were no
what be called "fabric" was aelected
to "make the whole buildinJ a clearer
"'-'-!! ~labia wbm the ....... -

...mna

and IliOn! ezpressive place to live in."
As a result, everythinJ in the Jewett
Parkway house chosen to blend
with the hOlley color of the oak. 1be
bridt is a mellow aold and autumns!
sbades of broom, yellow, -orange and
._. for decontin&amp; and
lanclerapinc

n- liw concepta - _.;n,
- ; ~ em a human ll£8le;
hidinJ the ..vice a y a t em s -Of the
""'-; deoipina ~ withiil the
house and .., ol a .....,._terial are quickly J&amp;t• i ehle iD tbe Martin
home. n - - - to mske
the ""'- IliOn! nve.ble, Wrilbt IJe.
lieYed, and
the oacupant to be
free to live the type of life he wanted.
But did it 8llllCI!I!d? Debate is still

.no..

JOinl

OIL

Mrs. James Foater is the daughter
of Martin. Sbe moved into the house
when abe was """""'- Today abe "appreciates the house as I never did

IJe.

fore," but when abe was married she
. and her husband rejected a plan by
Wrilbt for a home of their own. 'lbe
design featured a curvinJ pagoda roof
and jagJed tri.aniU1ar leaded glass windows. "It .......Jdn't be out of place in
Burma." Instead, the couple had Olaf
Sbelgren desiJo their home. !.Jn. Foster-still reuaDbers vividly how a furious Wrilbt "couldn't undenltaDd how
someone who lived in a Wright house
would .,_ want to live in any other

kind."
Nat the . , . _ -

ID LhM

Sbe and ~ otla' residents of the

�house agree that it wasn't always the
easiest pia~ to live in. When it rained,
the roof leaked; in the winter, the low
pitched roof didn't shed snow ao it
was """""""' to shovel it off.
&amp;pairing the built-in pI u m bing
system was often diificull Mrs. Foster remembers that when the shoWer
in the master bedroom developed a
leak, .they had to stop using il It
couldn't be fixed 1be beating aystem
eventually proved inefficient and later
was partially ripped out with baseboard beat being added. While these
obvious .beating fixtures are hanlly in
the Wricbt tradition, they at least
work and are iiasier to repotir.
Other typee of upkeep alao proved
difficult. Within the house, the brick
Pillars have raked joints - the mortar
holding the bricks together is .-....-.i
ahout 'h inch from the edge. Dusting
these joints was a constant job, especially since Wright ordered the mortar
painted gnld and may even have had
some gold leaf rubbed in. This reflected the light beautifully, giving a
golden illumination to the bouse but
alao catching the dusl 1be ''Tree of
Life" windows could only be satisfactorily cleaned with a hairpin or toothbrush, Mrs. Foster says. And the small
slit windows, aome as ll8l1'0W as two
incbe&amp;, were nicknamed the "Q-Tip
windows" by Mra . .Robert Ketter since
tltat's the only way they can be cleaned. In recent years, there's alao beerl
a problem with ants and termites ant!'
the roof is slowly rot:tina oul
And yet, _ for _ ~ the ~ . "'t -

sociated with the house, everyone who
bas lived there or been connected with
it bas strong positive feelings about it.
Some have developed a protective attitude towards preserving il Mrs.
Ketter describes it as "feeling very
close to the bouse . . . iCs almost like
another child to me." She, says she
senses Wright's presence 1n the bouse
and believes he "keeps a watchful eye
over il"

'The -

.. So

lllcht'

Fred Tamalonis, Alumni Association
director of special programs and actively involved in restoring the hoiJse.
descn"bes his love from an architectural point of view. '"'be bouse is 80
right . . . Everything within the building is respected and understood, he's
pulled the essence out of every material used and made it work to complement the other things that surround
it . . . He's taken man and material
and -oe and people .and made them
come together and work well"
AB a graduate architecture student,
Tamalonia is amazed at how people
without any training in architecture
come into the bouse and instantly have
a sympathetic understanding of what
Wright was trying to achieve in his
design. "'There's a paycbological and
aociaJ reaction when you come into the
bouse . • . you interact with it rather
than move through il"
.
Others have an even deeper emOti&lt;mal raction. S1&gt;ounie ~. University ardUvi8t, who DOW bas ber of.
fioes ~.; ~ in the

buildina:

speaks of the "demands the bouse
makes" and " the need to come to
terms with the strength of the building." She believes the house is a statement of the Wright family's motto ''Truth Against the World." This
moral philosophy pervades the bouse
and "makes you feel you should sit up
straight in his chairs" and "cultivate
s tl'ong oonvictions."
Even those whoee contsct with the
house is of short dunition seem to feel
Wright's power and spiril Visitors
are a lf e c I e d and people who gn
through on tours aeem instantly at ease
and able to appreciate the serenity and
understated eleganoe.
Not EW&lt;yOne Lilies the Doslp

erous· people who liked to entertain
and have people over to talk. 1bey
read a lot and Martin liked to have
referenoe boob bandy. 1be family
loved flowers and gardening and ooe
of ber father's happiest IIIOIQ!!DIB, Mrs.
Foster says, was when be was acaidentally taken for a gardener.
Wright enjoyed these things alao
and stressed them when building the
bouse and its 8UlTOUJJding buiJdinp.
When be was finished, there ""'" ~
tually a oomplex of buildings on Jewett and Summit AYI!Ilue for the Martins and Martin's sistet, Mrs. Gaqe
F. Barton.
Extending from the entrance ball
of the main bouse ""'" a 1oag oovaed
walk or pergola which ClliiD8Cted the
bouse to a .....-vatory. Nen to the
conservatory _., a caniage bouse
and three greenhouaes. Facing Wood- , ward Avenue was the prdeuer's CDttage and on Summit was the Barton
house, DOW owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Eric Lanabee.
· Inside the bouse were extensive
bookcases. Wright even designed ODe
for the dinintl room 80 Martin could
have a"""'" to references to settle any
dinner arguments that ~arise.
Her father kept the Encyclope ia
Americana tbele, Mrs. Foster
.bers; the Encyclopedia BriUuonictJ ""'"
in the library in a Wricbt-&lt;lesiped
caae.

Of course, that's not to say lhat everyone likes the design. When it was being built in 1904, someone stopped by
and asked Martin, ''Who is the damned
fool that's b u i I ding this plaoe?"
Though Martin, according to the story,
simply replied "a man named Martin," he knew that his new home wasn't
gning to be universally appreciated
This didn't seem to bother the Larkin
Company official. Martin, a native of
New York State, knew what be liked.
And when he saw the bouse Wright
designed for his brother, be knew this
was the man to design a home for him.
Apparently Wricbt liked Martin,
too. and they ~ a 1oag frieodlflip. .
during which the architect ..... to design and build nine bouaes and buildings for Martin's relatiWII and lrieada.
. Open~-··
Living room, dinintl room lpl liMartin and his wife...., warm, IIDbrary are all oombined into ooe 1oag
~.t.
a"' • '
' . •' ! .
"1 Jd) .JtL
.J J \
)
_J

14

�-JIS,J91t

8

(
space with tw&lt;&gt;-foot wide lowered
sections of woOd ooming down from
the ceiling to a height of about 6'h
feet as internal separations. This long
rectangle is intersected by a s!Jorter
one wbich runs from an outside rovered venmda to the end of what the
Martins called the South Room .
Standing in the intersection you can
view the entire length of the unit room
and look IICr08Il the entrance hall into
the South or reception room.

T o - tbeae b r o a d - without w8ns are ................ But Ibis was
perfect for the Mutins wbo Jo...d a&gt;~ and happy tbat 100
~ eoald fit audly into the unit
ropm for a piano recital Having 20
~for dinDer was no problem siDc:e
the dinina- Msny merpd with the
living room. In tbO baam:tent undernmtb this ...,. is a
ol the aame
leagtb which the two Marlin cmJdren
used for a playroom and where Mrs.
Marlin cfinner.dancal for 80 to
70 . . - . Illlrinl the yeB1'II ' - 11011
.... lll"'rinn up, Mrs. Marlin bad a kinderprten. down there. ADd
for a Jona time, the lficb1and Pari&lt; Lit..
enry Asociation held regular inp in the lOUth ·~ of !his playroom.

"'*"'

Many ol the oricinal paintinp and
decontiolts witbiJl the tioUoe ........ Jap.aneae Or J - i n s p i n d On JI'CIUDii
level, there """' aeveral Japanese
acroU paintinp and ADd .....
roundilll the double ~ finpJace
in both the unit 1'00111 and ballway -

In 1967, U/B ~the home
a beautiful purple, gold and wbite m&lt;&gt;from Tauriello's widow for use as a
saic o£ wisteria.
presidential
residence by Martin Mey'llte recurring theme of man's intererson; to restore it, Edgar Tafel, a
action with nature could be seen inside
and outside the bouse. At each termin- · protege of Wright's, was hired. He
promptly tore out the apartments, cut
al point on the outside terraces, Wright
aame new doors for easier access and
plsced huge urns for lantana , an
added a skylight to brighten the enorange, salmon and yellow fr"oWering
trance ball
.
plsnL Within the bome, Mrs. Martin
kept several dwarf trees, including
mimosa and labumum, potted plsnts,
Mter Meyerson left to become presideut of the University of Pennsylvaand arrangements of rut flowem. For
the landacaPing scheme, Wright imnia, the new president, Dr. Robert
. ported ...,.,.m large dumps of pampas
Ketter, decided not to use the bouae
grass and two ginkao trees which are ( as a reaideDce. Mrs. Ketter e.plsina
still thriving today.
tbat abe and her husband feel it is
important for them to be cloae to camVKMtfar.._Y_,.
within easy walking distanee. In
For cloae to 30 years, the Martina
addition, abe feels the bouae is Imlived in Ibis building, but in 1937, the
portant to the tell ol the community
boiMe became vacant wbeD Marlin's
and abouJd be open to anyone who
widow lefL For 10 years, it remained
wants to uae or tour iL "'lbe house
meano ., much to ., many and they
vacant and ~ kids broke
in and ran wild iDaide. Ilurinl Ibis
have the right to see it .. .. But if we
period, aame ol the wiDdows """'
living there, Ibis wouldn't be
broaD.
poaaible," abe e.plained.
In 1946, the City acquired the "'"and in the early 1960'1 .,)d it to 8&amp;t.stian Tllllriello a local architect.·
Be made quite a',.;.., chanaat. boardin&amp; up the ...trance ball CJ1N!11in1 for
the finpJace and J:O!II10ViDJ what Wt ol the wiater:io. _.,_ In the late
fifties, be .... r...:..l to ..n put ol the
~. and tear down the .....,-;
prap and conae"atory. In their
place, an~ building-.,..._
IJINeted. Part ol the main ""'- ~into---

A~

ConJ1!1not1on

and other information on early Buffalo. In the future, abe hopes to maintain a ·permanent esbibit of Wright
memorabilia, including aame of his
blueprints and artifacts from his old
Imperial Hotel in Tokyo. In the besement, the entire coJ.lection of the Alehives is together for the first time in
many years and intereoted people have
a large sunny room in which to Gamine materiala.
In January, the Alumni Asociation
~ to be able to racWar
public tours. Currently any orpnizatjon wishing to tour the building can
call Tamalonia -and make ments, but there are no proviaiana for
people to cbap by and vlsiL 'The
Alumni Office a!-. wants to flDCOWill8
groupe to 1l8e the bOlla for m.tlnp
and other gatherinp. While the building can't be used ncularly for ~
or meetings, both can bave special
Be8llione !hero. 'llte Alumni Aaoociation is
working to _,..,., ftmdin&amp;
to obtain additional furniture
there are now only enough chairs for
about 10 people in the meeting areas. '

m..

.a.-

Today the bome is being used by the
Um-.ity Archivea and tbe Alumni
Asociation, which is proving to be a
Today's usage ol the house makes it
C'I!IDbjnatjon hicblY compatible with
more aecessible. For years, people from
Wright's aims in designing the bouae.
Buffalo and all over the world have
'lbe 1arp i&gt;pen
on the first
come to the door and asked the occufloor l!rB perfect for the large gather- .. pants if they could oee the bouse. Now,
inp !be Alumni A8&gt;c:iation Ita and
it will be open to aD wbo wish to view
the 1'001111 ~ make good offices.
the work ol the architectural pniua
In the room that..,.. Martin's study,
~ "~ medxd produced
. Archivist Finnegan loeeps boob on
"one great thin&amp; i - . 1 ol a _....tWrilbt, old pbotopapbe ~ the house
ing collaetion of .. many little tbinp."

"'*"'"

�Decturb« 16, 1971

9

~Futiue----------------

(Co10linud ,.._ 4, coL 6)
win the aulnoolny for. SUNY
which StriJDI uni\'ersities re-

have been taken. Similar steps
JDilY be anticipated by other
mterest groups within SUNY.
quile_
.
This illustrates bow we may innuance _policy within SPA by
Decloion-Maldnc
appropnate strategy, but to exIt was, in some ways, an hisMy fourth anxiety or appre- .pect to be left outside its effects toric meeting. Fpr the first
hension grows out of concern is to be naive or to contemplate time, the executive committees
that the deciaion-making pro- leaving SUNY.
of the ~big student..... to the alent that it bement&amp;-8 t u d e n t Aaaociation
What I have written is not (SA), Graduate Student Assocomes suboumed within SPA or
SPA-related activities. may be profound and may be more po- ciation (GSA) and Millard
removed !rom the diaciplines or litical than otherwise. It bas Fillmore College Student Assofrom bodies cfuectly respon- made no mention of another ciation (MFCSA)-'were going
sible for them_ There is inber- power group, the students to bold a common meeting.
ent within employee organiza- Neither does the present oon:
But MFCSA couldn't make
tion policy, it seems, the neces- tract, regretfully. Much could it and the undergraduates bad
sity lo favor the employee over be said on this but action will finals to stody for 80 the meetneed
to
arise
!rom
probably
the institution_ As a humanist
ing broke up after two bows.
this bas ita aJlPM) to me.. I have stodent initiative. F u r t h e r,
Durinc
time,was
"""""""·
alws,ys felt that inStitutions there are many more issues in some
real that
progress
made
c o II e c t i v e negotiation with
should be large """""' in their wbich we oould deal; but these on iEuea that affect SA IIDd
vision to comprehend the inGSA..
and
probably
most
of
the
oompetent and the unique or seem to me to be the most rele- stodent body. while it is probto SPA and SUNY at this
the distractions from those who vant
ably
premature
to
call
this
the
time.
differed with a "departmenrs
beginning of a &amp;tudent;.wide
I believe the SPA oontract government, the two groups
geneial thrust. But we ·now
must contend ·with a flaw of represents a net gain over have agreed to continue meetdecision-making on important where we wouJd otherwise have ing on a regular basis and to
personnel matters, for inslance, been in this very difficult year. take joint action in many areas.
from the department or disci- It can bode well for the future.
The meeting started with
pline to the ultimate authority I believe organizational talk or practical things-keys
of arbitrators or a Standing strength within the SUNY fac- to the storage room and joint
Committee on Termination, ulty and professional staff is hiring of a receptionist. Probnone of whom may be from the imperative. There are obvious- able duties and lines or comcampus where a problem origi- ly organizational problems to mand were worked out for tbe
nates, and oonceivably none be resolved and important prec- new staff member. '" Spor' Gufrom the discipline w i t h in edents to be set. Certainly the berman, SA vice president, Pat
which the problem arose. Again whole process requires f a r Gallagher, GSA secretary, and
I must stress that one way to more comprehensive and care- Mary Palisano, SA office manstem this now is to work to in- ful attention than it is receiv· i!_er, are to hire the receptionsure that our local campus ing from the bulk of the progrievance procedures and gen- fessionals, both faculty and
Next on the.....agenda were
eral personnel practices are op- staff, throughout SUNY. Hope- more politi::al mattem - joint
erating properly at all levels fully, many more will join action on the Food Co-op and
a nd within all categories of SPA and, having made -a fi- Student;.Wide Judiciary. Posnancial commitment, make a sible oourses of action on tbe
personnel.
The oontract article on the personal one in time and in in- Food Co-op and its attendant
Committee on Termination, for terest. I can think of few en- funding questions were delayed
example, was a substitute for deavors more closely related to until a meeting with Vice Presthe inclusion of an article deal- the future well-being of SUNY ident for Student Aflairs RidJing with fair dismissal, one and of each member of its staff. ~iggelkaw can clear up
which would have made dismisareas.
•
But the discussioo on setting
sals impossible were it eVidenced that -they were due""t&lt;&gt;· .
- up -a- Studeht-Wide Judiciary
·'arbitrary, capricious or diij·
'
launched into full-scale debate
on possible IJie8l1!' .of .attacking
criminatory" reasons. There are
......1....! Pro~
·
cases elsewhere now wending .[' i::1.1111
the problem of administrative
their way to the u:s. Supreme
recognition. SA was angry with
C'.ourt which may settle this isGSA for appointing students to
An
$800,000
grant
has
been
sue; but in the meantime one awarded to Dr. Leon Farhi, pro- the Hearing Commission on
must ponder what constitutes fessor of physiology and project Campus Disorders because they
a rbitrary, capricious or discrim- director of the Laboratory of felt ·this '1egitimalized" the
inatory conduct towa rd a fellow Environmental Ph ysi ology . body. GSA pointed out that
faculty member who views his Funding by the National Heart the Commission was legitimate
scholarship as a genuine con- and Lung Ins titute over the whether students were on it or
tribution but who in tum is next five years will permit ex- not and that they appointed
viewed by his immediate peers pansion of studies into ~rdio­ members so students could get
as having demonstra.ted shoddy vascular effects of changes in a Cairer hearing. Dave Steinresearch.
wald, SA's student right.; coenvironment.
"
Implicit in the concept of
ordinator, oountered that stuThe grant will allow the De- dents have uno meaningful insome peer judgments is the
likelihood that the individual partment of Physiology to sup- put" into the Commission and
may be sacrificed to tbe ap- port not only individual inves- that there "is a serious ques-parent good of the whole. Im- tigators but also the electronic tion whether due process is
plicit in tbe posture of many and mechanical facilities of its being provided by the Hearing
employee groups is the concept unique new central laboratory Commission."
John Greenwood, GSA's vice
that the individual has rights containing the human centri·
greater than that or the em- fuge, submergence basin, run- president for ""~ affairs,
ployer. In academe, who is the ning track, and high pressure pointed out that by appointing
someone to the Hearing Comemployer? Perhaps by this chamber.
This new laboratory, Dr. mission, the GSA is showing
point alone we can make clear
the i.nil&gt;ortance of the quality Farhi says, provides a focal President Ketter they are tryof leadership and tbe traditions point · for the team of investi- ing to work within legitimate
that early beoome established gators affording mazimum ef- channels. [( students work
within SPA and as between ficiency for an enlarged joint within "the system," he said,
effort to study the effects of "maybe the President would be
SPA and SUNY.
The paaaage of the Taylor air, water, atmosphere, and more willing to recognize \he
Law bas involved us all in col- .i"ravity field on three interre-. students' system."
''The Cirst step to taking over
lective bargaining. It has set lated areas - cardiovascular,
our parameters in this regard. respiration and circulatory the duties of the Hearing c..:ommissioo," Steinwald ~."is
What we have to do now is, to physiology.
e&gt;eert every effort to insure
While fundamentally still in- (for the Student Judiciary) to
within these parameters leader- terested in the basic processes be viable in areas the Hearing
ship and actions which support that affect man under environ- Commission doesn't handle."
the nature of the University as mental stresses, Dr. Farhi points He advocates a judiciary that
a distinct and- very vulnerable out that "there is no doubt that would bandle cases tl\e Comintellectual enterprise.
we are also looking very serious- mi.silion can't, such as civil acThere are far too many mem- ly at things that are important tions.
While no decisions were
bers of tbe· academic oommun- in the.everyday life of an urban
reached, the group made plans
ity who may choose to avoid population."
1he full implications of the
One ecological application- for further discussions.
This was also tbe case with
Pl:l!&amp;ent situation_
a study of the effects of aubon
the question of joint funding
Some have suggested statu- mbnoxide on the population tory change to exclude the Cen- bas already been made. In a of various studenf,.ruo projects
ters !rom coUective bargaining. pioneering work op the effects and clubs. The way was paved
I view this as virtually impos- of carbon monoxide in man to for setting up a Joint FinaDce
sibe. Othen~ have argued for the which Dr. Farhi bas · made a Committee. CwreoUy, GSA
division of the Centers into a major oontribution, it was found IIDd- SA operate under differ1
that there is no level of this P!B eat ol JUidelines. Activities
in our envirOnment that ia With- run from one to the other IIDd
chanp ia most unlikelv for the out effect. It, therefore, becomes some activities receive IliOn!
fo~ f u t u r e. Inf9rmal
important to minimize man's funding than ~ther government
reaJl,y wanted to give them_
stepo toward a Center caucus _....., to it, Dr. Farhi 1111YB-

:..="tar

$80(),000'to
v_

P:ft~I..!a~...'i o~~l

SOFT Says CUNYAroni
Superior to SPAContract
EIIIIOII:

Copies of the CUNY oootract with AFI' Local 1460 are
now available in Crosby 319 for
any interested pemaos to view.
I bave also a few copies of proposals we of SUFI' would have
negotiated for bad we won the
bargaining election last year.
Since SPA-NYSTA-NEA negotiators failed ·to negotiate very
well on 80 many items, ru happily offer oopies to Drs. Hol-

lander and Fisk_
~ I have contrasted and
compared a few selected topics.
Compare carefully and decide
for yourself bow well SPA did
for us.
TlmotofiloaGrievance
SUNY-SPA: "A grievance
must be filed within 45 days
following tbe act or omission
giving rise. . - •n
CUNY-AFI': " A grievance
must be filed by an employee
or the Union within a reasonable time from tbe date it was
found to exisl"

sc.p
1 "' tile - - - ; ....
SUNY-8PA:
"A grievance
sball be filed at step 1 with the
Campus President or his desig,__ The grievant may be required to meet with his depart..
ment or division cbairman,
dean or other appropriate administrator in an effort to settle tbe grievance informally.
The Campus President or his
designee sball scbedule a review within one week of the
filing of the grievance. A re""""""- in writing sball be issued within one week after the
close of the review."
CUNY-AFI': " A grievance
must be stated in writing set;.
ting forth the basis therefor,

''H you don't like SPA, c:1&gt;anee
it by geoemting your point of
view among a majority_" And
wben did 13.3 per cent make
that majority?
[t DOW . . _ , . to the writer
why there is a real laclt of visibility of SPA-NYSTA-NEA ..,_
tivities on our bebalf-&lt;lG!y 201
belong bere 8CIOOid.ing to last
week's Report8_ The is
simple. SPA did DDt baQIIIin
for and get adequate ~
time for local officem. Since
adequate time is DDt boia,r
made availahle by SPA ol'ficel8,
nor bargained fm by them. SPA
bas decreased from about 3,'100
to 2,000 paid membem in
SUNY. And bringing NYSTA
people on campus to help IKihe
our many problems is hardly
the answe&lt;. We need time fm
both state and "local of&amp;ers to
adequately represent all grievances at all levels.
SUFI' is telling the obvious.
Only university and ooiJege
professors can, using tested negotiatiog practices. help the
SUNY faculty IIDd professionals get what bas been and
should be theirs. Let us all reconsider the vote to certify
SPA and at first opporlunity
vote for SUFI' representaticln.
Join local 2134, speak up on
the weaknesses of the SPA cootract; help y ourseJ.( while helping advance the professioo at
SUNY, whether students,
NTPs or faculty. As tbe October Harper's magazine cover
said, "Professors Unite!"
w. Fll.l:m
SUFI' Local 2134

-HENllY

Aid &amp;p.restro. for
~~~wi~ Planned Ituenthood

tbe President of the College affected or his designee. The
President or his designee within ...ven ( 7 ) calendar days of
the receipt of the grievance

f::f
amee...:,;::ta~ ~"7'.:
Union for the purpose of discussing t h e grievance. T h e
President or his designee shall

within seven ( 7 ) calendar days
after the grievance meetings issue his decision with reasons in
writing to the grievant and the
Union_"
Released rune for Union Business
SUNY-8PA: ''Whenever any
employee is scheduled to participate in conferences or meetings with a representative or
the State or State University
administration regaMing neg&lt;&gt;tiatioos or grievance procedures, be shall suffer no loss in
pay. Such conferences or meetings shall be scheduled at times
wbich will not reasonably interfere with the operation o(
the university."
CUNY-AFI': '"The Board
sball grant released time at
each coUege to the U n i o n
Olapter Chairman or his designee for the implementation of
this contract and the bamlling
of grievances, to the extent of
the weekly oonbict hours of one
course, not to exceed ~ contact hours. Such released time
may not be used to solicit union
membership."
As you read these two contracts, you can see how much
SPA copied from AFI' 1460.
And when their 1972 oontract
is completed, it will set the
pace for more c:opyina by the
bargaining acent representing
tbe nearly 15,000 profe&amp;lionals
in SUNY_ And did you get the
SPA letter lllking yoi1 to join
that you may vote fm a """'
cbapla pn!llident? It staleo,
"At tbe - t , ~!ely
2,000- · t.:u~ty IIDd staff wide ........ to SPA- . . -" And
their
~ arriving in the 4!llVI!Iope in- .
vites - -.membeis to join.

N..........,

EDITOR :

As captains in the University
oommunity for the Plaooed
Parenthood Fund d rive, we
have been worlting hard on our
organization through the whole
fall so that the yearly drive in
January will be a &gt; ccess.
Last year we doubled the
number of our worken; from
among faculty and faculty
wives. As a result, our Univer!iity oommunity was the star of
tbe wbole BulJalo area campaign in that we """'t over our
assigned quota by much more
than any other group. Again
this fall we have drastically extended the number of our wodters, trying to reach all areas of
the University. Any faculty
wife who wants to help us in
January, please call us DOW.
To tbe whole Univenity
community: Please plan right
naw, before the holiday to contribute to our Fund drive
in January. Planoinc is always
a good idea
IDS. llllAftJCE 8IUIIa

Captain. Plaooed
Parenthood Fund Dme
Telepbone: 632-5636

1018. ANlfALII'.SB CAa'VIi1l

Co-Captain
Telephone: 592-7100

British Seminar
EDrt"'R:

May I uae the cowtesy ol
your columns to invite faculty
colleagues wbo ba"" any _ .
cia1 interEst or oompeteoae in
various aspects ol British bisber education to get in CIIDiact
with me as soon as pc&amp;ihle? I
will be oft •
a seminar on
this topic ~~~ the !~priDe
~ on Mondlt.Ya at 1:00
p.m_ IIDd woWd welcome the
ocmsioual or oonlilnlinc JIU"
licipation ol ~ putioB.
Sinla-ely,
~0-BaD.un-

1'1"'-'r ol

~-;::·

�--16,1971

10
' •

Fall Faculty Promotions
Listed by the University
'lbe foUowing faculty members were promoted, effective
September, 1971:
Fram_nt_

...

--

Dr. Kenneth F. Barber, phiJoeopby; Dr. H . Chen, School
of Management; Dr. Ralph T.
Cheng, mechanical enpneering;
Dr. 'Thomas W. Cusick, mathematics; Kenneth M . Davidson,
law and~; Dr. ,Carl
E. Dennis, English; Dr. Saul
Elkin, u-.tre; Dr. Gary W.
H081rin, political science; Charles Keil, American studies; AI
Katz, law and jurisprudence;
Dr. Carloa E. Kruytbosch,
School of Management; Dr. Edward T. O'Neill, School of Informatioo and Library Studies;
Dr. Willis F. Overton, psychology; Dr. Francisco Pabon,
American studies; Anthony R.
Paterson, art; Dr. Wilfred W.
Recker, civil ensi!'ee~; Dr.
Lawence A. Schneider, history;
Muriel H. Wolf, music; Dr JiWu Y81111. mechanical euaineering.
Fram _ _

.., _ _ _ T.,..,.
Dr. James H. Buqbart, e1ec&gt;
· tzical engineering and engineering science; Dr. John P. Corconm. philosophy; Dr. J. Ronald Gentile, educational psychology; Dr. Mike M. Milstein, educational administratioor Dr. John A. Neal, facilities p~g; Dr. Robert W.
Springer, engineering science;
Dr. Kenton M. Stewart, biology; Dr. Darold C. Wobscball,
electrical engineering and engineering science.
Fram-toFull-

Dr. William H. Baumer, philoeophy; Dr. James A. Cadzow,
electrical engineering and engineering science; Dr. Gale H .

~~.!';,t~;J&gt;:· ~ffr;

Coppens, chemistzy; Dr. Frank
A. Cozzarelli, engineering science; Dr. Stanley H. Cramer,
OOUD9elor education; Dr. Berkeley B. Eddins, philoaophy; Dr.
Newton Garver, philoaophy; Dr.
Peter H. Hare, philoaophy; Dr.
Kenneth K. Inada, philoaophy;
Dr. Allan H. Kuntz, instructional services; John Mcivor,
art; Dr. Stephen G. Margolis,
engineering science; Dr. Michael M. Metzger, German and
Slavic; Dr. Orville T ._Mwyhy,
history; Dr. Keith F. Uttelt&gt;ein,
anthrop?logy; J?r. Milton
Plesur, history; M1chael Ray,
geosra~; Dr. Robert R. Rogers, Engliah; Dr. Robert Rosen,

=:.~~rst,.~~

Dr. William W. S!ein. anfhro.

pology; Dr. Richard R. Stevie,
counselor education; Howard
E. Strauss, engi.neeting and applied sciences; Dr. Chih-lan Su,
engineering science; Dr. Zbigniew Zielemy, mathematics; Dr.
Marvin Zimmennan, philoso.
phy; Dr. Bruce .Jackson, English.

Psych Depart;ment
P~Prolific
When the American Psychological Association's 11 professional journals roD off the
presses throughout the year
there's a good chance that nearly aU of them will be carrying
papers by U/ B psychology faculty.
The Department of Psychology, in fact, is consistenUy
, . "'--" .................... ss.
among the top 30 oontributors
to the journals, often topping
departments at such schools as
Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and
CorneD.
Aalording to data acquired He lets samdhing [aU.
Thia ecological message from meetiflgs of Biology 100 last
by the Depa$nent, U/ B has "lt' a TruffriltJ seed. It's til£ children's author, Dr. Seuss, Friday afternoon in Capen.
contributed 2.4 per cent of the
Thia aatire on pollutioo is
was the theme of a one-act play,
/iW one of all!
articles printed in the Journtd You're in chorge of til£ last of '"The Lorax," staged by mem- one of &amp;eYeral special project&amp;
of CoiUIIIeling PsyclwiDgy from
bers of Dr.· Clyde Herreid's which students in the class,
til£ TruffuiLJ seeds.
1960-70, ranking 8th in the na- And TruffuiLJ trees are whal
·Biology 100 claas at Scbool 53 "Ecology of Man," undertook
tion; 1.9 per cent of the aron Roebrer Avenue·Jaat Friday. this semester for grades. Others
everyofU! needs.
included a student-made film
ticles in the Journtd of Pe_n&lt;&gt;n- Plant a new Truf[uiLJ. TretJl il
Ten students adapted and on pollution, a slide sbow, poswith care.
the play, in addi- ters, boob and displays.
Give il clearwater and feed il performed
JANUARY SENATE SESSION
tion to designing sets and cosGrsdeo for the 500 students
fresh air.
The January Facutty Senltte meettumes. 'lbe children loved iL
in the claas will he based on
ing will be held on January 18 in· Gro&lt;o a forest. Prorect il from
Campus residents alao had a one final eDIIl and the project&amp;
cues that h=k.
stead of January 11. The meeting
Th£n til£ Lor= and aU of his chance to glimpse the produc- which involve some relevant
wfll be In 5 Acheson and will start
tion during the regular claas ecological theme. ·
{rrends may come back."
at 2:30p.m.

- Bidngy Students Present Pollution Satire

ality and Socuu PsyclwiDgy
from 196l&gt;-70, ranking lOth in

the nation; and 1.5 per cent of
the articles in Deve/Dpmental
Psychology from 1969-70, ranking 14'h.
Other journals and rankings
include:
Journtd of E:rperi.menl&lt;ll PsyclwiDgy (1960-70), 1 per cent
of articles, 24 'h ranking; Jour1141 of Abnormal and Social
PsyclwiDgy (1960-70) , 1.6 per
cent, 14th ranking; PsyclwiDg&lt;cal Reurew (1960-70) , .7 per PRESENTATIONS
cent, 34th ranking; Jourool of PAUL A. BACON* assistant vice presApplied PsyclwiDgy (1960-70), ident for business affairs. reviewed
.7 per cent, 30th ""tking; Jour- book, Somerby R. Dowst, &amp;ui&lt;:s
nal of Consulting and Clinical
PsychoiDgy ( 1960-70) , 1.4 per ~~t!"d':O': ·~rutf:~~-:,wnaivl:~
cent, 14th ranking; and Psy- sociation of Educational Buyen;
clwiDgical BulLetin (1960-70) , conducted worb!:f on "Purchas1.5 per cent, 1,2th ranking.
~r~;:~eg:M~~~~
According to Joseph Mas- ation of College Buaineee Officers.
ling, chainnan of the Department, the data indicates that BTEPIIANII: B. BENNB'I'T, coordinPayCboloS¥: , .faculty . members ator, media programs. Instrucare doing what- they're sup- tional Communication Center,
posed to be doing: reading, ~~~i~.!l:~~
writing and research.
ton., New York State Educational

GREPORTS

ON

GJ&gt;EOPLE

21Jepar~ Heads NamRXl

liple ViaD.
Bebe Joining the University
Ia 18, Dr. Garvin talll!ht at
1M u.a-.1t;y of Oklahoma
ad~ University and

.....
- -.er. Llmlluaae
~ .... Translati~ the
~

••
-

Olrp. and Pred~ from 1960-

Dr. a.ma .. ...-~dent of the

York.

1JL

'r-Uni=~t

"--s were
this week by
Pra!ident Robert L Ketter.
Dr. Paul L Garvin is cbair,:-man of the Department of LinJUistic:s, effective immediately.
Dr. Garvin, who ,.,..,;ved his
J.ioenM ,.._lettres in !inl[uistics
in l9C5 from Ecole L0re tka
H - Etlula '(Free School of
Hi.t- Studies), New York,
...a his Ph.D. in 1.947 from Indiaua University, is the author
ol five boob and more than 100
artideo on ~ He has
recently edited two books,
llelhod Gild Theory in Lin~and Cognition- A Mul-

Communication Aaociation, 24th
Convocation. "S t r a t e g i e s for
Lea r n in a:• Grossi.ngen, New
OlUIDT

BDCLABS,

assistant

c:t::· W'km.itWo=.-:~ot:

technic Ins tit u t..e, Worcester,
Maa., aDd at Stanford Reoean:h
lnltitute, Stanford, Calif.
DR. CEO&amp;GS 8. BOBINBXI.. dean,.

School of Information a n d Library Studieo, "Current Programo
aDd Future Goala of the Scbool

r:.~~o:...~~:'.;

Inter-American Program for
L~!:tics and Language
'11
• , and a member nf
&amp;eYeral profeoaional aocieties. Dr. Ricbard A. Mild&gt;ell, acting d1liirman of tho; Depart..
ment of Geotlrapby 8lDOe July,
baa been named chairman of
that departmenL
!k. Mild&gt;ell ,.,..,;ved his B.S.
from W...tem Miiihipn UniversitY in l9EO and his Ph.D. from
the State University ol Iowa in

lllk
Before joining the University

in 1966, be ..vOO .. U1 ..u.tant pml.-.r at Arizona State
Uni¥8111ity-

of Libruy/M ed ia S.-;alista,
Lockport, N.Y.

University iuchiviol, wu cbainoan of a - oioD entitled "Omfidentiality of
Univenity Arcbiveo," at the an-

SBOHNI&amp; PDI"NIOAN,

MlTCBELL PKANKLLN.,

profeseor,

!:.f!Th'.!:~ .d't,l::;..'~'T._~;

ComeU Law Scbool; "CoDceminc
the Dialectic of Romaniat Triliun-

profe.or; educatioD, director,
Woodlawn Tea c be r Ectuattioll

Irony," Second Intemational

Telos Conlerence, SUNYAB.

DR. GABOR T. llll:lllLUf, acting chairman, computer science, '"Reconstruction of Pictures From Their
Projections." and "Automata 'J'b&amp;.
ory in Biology," Worcester Polytechnic In at it u t e, Worcester.

M1198.

OIL GliiOIG&amp; 1'. BOUILlNI,

profe.cn,

~~~y~~~;.;r:::..:

of Michigan_

..aci-

OIL LAWBZNC&amp; A.. B::BNNDY,

ate profeseor. engineerin&amp; tc::ieDoe.

~ '1,! t '!":~Ju.s'l':m~
=~c:rFl~,_~.....,~~
ing, LaJolla. California.

D&amp;. &amp;K4NUI:LI: LlCAS'I'It:O,

8111Ututt

f.::'!.":=.~~~~

.:c:

...,b,;;jj,;, in Pinmdello: from 'La
camera in attela' to 7be Life I
8!,~ou'," SAMLA at Atlanta,

director. Black
Studies, "Ricbanl Wricbf aDd Mrica," at conference, "I..inb&amp;w in
the Black Pluriveroe," SUNY1
Binghamton.

JAJOS J... IOLUIIt,

1 . 8.01. JIIJLI.a, di.Jector. Rebahil.itation Medicine~ Lab.

:r:=;

:!t~~· ~~b~·..

Medicine Encineerina Laboratory, aDd JOSEPB L O'OOIQI'O&amp;,.
clinical profeooor of medicine aDd

~~':!:"·M~~~ 'f.

Meyer Memorial H":rtaJ. "De-

tan Noohville Educatioo "-&gt;cia-

ua and DR.

~aical Medicine aDd RMabili'

:...
o~a;:!_::e~~~
Re"babilitation Medicine San
I ·

tioo,NIIIIbville,~;­

Juan. Puerto Rioo.

tali . - with ~-in ~
:::_-. WLAC, Naobville,

=--~..;:,O=.!drot:;:

~1, "The Bob RoouU sbf::..

T_,

K.. K..

a.

I'ILLAY,

eenior reaean:h

scientist. " Mercury Pollution of
itial I ntercea.io During a Period · Lalte Erie Ecoophere," 3nl N.E.
of Social Ambiguity aDd Social ~=I ~~-in g, American

H':.f'Fo"~.·".a~
WALSB &amp;lao preeented
;:.~E'~r!..~~!~
==~':t:-1~
o'oolflfc:. praented '1' en • ion
cioco.
~~~t!.~r.i'~~~
. . JIDBia' L. P08!'Ia. -.ciate
oembly, American Academy ol
Q!ater, -~ aDd DiOru
tioo in the 8c:hoalo," M~

Pluriveroe," apol190red by SUNYI
Binghamton.

literature "WO!'bboi&gt; at the _,_
f e - "I.iDbpO in tbit Blaock

:.

~= ,~ 'P':r::

fj!,esep..~~..f..~m!!':

aity ol Windoor, Canada; "Reality, Alienatioo aDd Myth in Con-

~':!.""ltat! tl'J~ty~..::
Trend • in Italian Utezature:

1961-1971." Mid-West Modern

~ "-&gt;ciation Conference,
DR. D£U: I:II:I'E, profe.or, pbiloeo-

s:s-·

phy, "The Pbilooopby of Art o(
A. K. eoc.aara.w.my;" "What
Makes a
pby Department?,"
y eolloquium, Punlne niwnity.
DR. D. lrJDflrfftB WIUIOH, prof-.

eor, speech eommuniea tion.
·s~ ~ for the APe;"

r.:....~
ro:1..~
iDe." p._..,. - r e d by De-

~'!ss=.~~
PUBLICATIONS

�-

~

J6, JJI7J

11

SPA Plans on Campus Has 3 Mental Health Centers Senate TriOO,
Jam13ry Push
But Door Shut
aem.
as
a
JOin&amp;
B:u Ombudsman
For Members
He
so
can
a
"one

-sua

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
John

W"rlh
membership
eighth o1. what it should be," the SeDate l'rofeatiooal Association
(SPA) plans to start the new
year with a membership drive.
Plans for the drive alo1111· with
nominalioos for election of a
new chapter cbainnan were discusaed at last Wednesday's
meeting of the U/B University
Center SPA.
After Do: Conslantine Yi
calis and Dr. ..,.,.,_ ~
were fonnally nominated, Acting Chairwoman Dr. Jean
Alberti told the 26 m!'mbers
P""!""t that ~ proressioaal staff will now 6e appoinle!f to_ search _and other
all-Uruver&amp;lty
Tbe
Tueaday morninl open meet. gs President Robert Ketter
~ set up for siudents are now
open, 011 altemate 1Walays, to
staff as well as farulty, she said
Members leamed also that
Leonard Snyder of U/B, State
SPA treasurer, bas been appointed to a State SPA Committee on Evaluations. This
group waa set up as part of the
SPA contract to look into eva!ustion of non-teaching professionals.
Tbe upcoming membership
drive was discuaaed. Ms. AIberti was told that many farulty
and staff - l e are unwilling
to join SPA because of the CO&amp;t
of membership. It was suggested that information explaining
the need for such a high dues
level go out with the presidential balloL 1be acting chairwoman eJ&lt;Plained that this information wouldn't be ready
until the January drive.
Dr. Robert Fisk, member of
the SPA negotiating team disc:ussed the demands SPA is
taking tD the newly re-opened
contract negotiations. Merit increases are a "strongly recommended" part of the proposals,
. he said, as is minimum salary.
Yeracsris DeJtt eJ&lt;Piained the
current grievance situation noting that 57 cases are currently
being processed- 12 r a c u 1 t y
and 45 professional staff. Many
of the ones already setUed, he
said, were satisfactorily resolved in step one of the grievance process or prior to a fonnal hearing.

COII1Dl.l-.

)A

SBf i

s· . .
:h:ll~nrr

'I..&lt;.U. li.U.J6

Legis1ati
D.
.1 CllSl\. rorce
Seuate

~

'1"1~ ~1-

N~

junior, bas been

feeling "down" lately.
realJy _likes going to U/B but be's
gomg to "'!duate DeJtt year and
then ,there s the d r a f L He
doesn t know wbat ~ w'!"ts to
do~ ~ 16 JUSt
80
,
~Johns like thousands of
other stude_nts - wandering
~ ~ _for something,
wanting to get tt !'fi together,"
to "know where his bead's aL"
Like many of them. John
went to""'! of ~- psychologi­
cal ~ _clinics on csm:::_
P him work things
There are three such centers
-Student Counaeling located
in Harriman ~t· the
Psychiatric Section of U.:, Student Health Center
the
on
second floor of Micbael Hall, and
~ Psycltological Clinic _at
R,idge Lea. Each or ~ tri&lt;:"
to help students WJth their
!'"!'&gt;!"'!"'- but ~ goes about
Jt m slighUy different ways.
-~!.. Is'!"' urpst
By far the ~est 16 the S!'Jdent Counseling Center wtth
39 staff members and an estimated 7,000 "contacts" a year.
'Th&lt;;Y're ~ on CBmP';'S for
lhei~ Oe~t~bility and ~ extensive group counseling program.N . the P ..._,_
. eJtt 16
sy........ tric Section of Student Health. It bas a
staff of 41 and averages 5,000
contacts a year. Perhaps . ~
least known of the three, 1t 16
probably a litUe more conventiona! in its approach, but also
does a lot of group therapy.
Ridge Lea's Clinic is the
smallest and most specialized.
Primarily a teaching center for
traini1111 clinical psychologists,
it handles a wide variety of
!;86es • and uses more diverse
types of counseling techniques.
It is the only csmpus clinic
which takes staff and faculty
cases and does child and family therspy. Usually, it accepts
only cases that fit the needs of
the interning clinical students.
Admittance procedures are
generally the same for all the
clinics. A student comes in and
fills out a card providing genera! information such' as age,
sex. class, etc, The ~ti?nist
schedules an mtake mtervtew.
After the intake session, a
decision is made whether the
individ.,W needs individual
counaeling or group therapy,
and a second appointment is
scheduled For "group" patients, this may be within a
week. But for individual counseling, the stDry is radically
!~ifferent. A~ _Stud~t Counselmg, !he Wlllting list •now g"!"'
well mto DeJtt semester ~ m
t!&gt;e ~!her two centers the SJtua-

Tbe
Profeasiooal Assoeistion (SPA) is forming a
task force to "impact" the Legislatwe, Robert B. Granger,
State SPA pr~&gt;sident, an- 'CIItionnlcl6~~
budget cuts. It bas also been
~ •.
working doaely with the New
These conditions cause stuYork State Teachers' Assoeis- dents to play the game of
tion and their legislative con- ~ "clinic roulette." They go from
sultants.
· clinic to clinic trying to be seen
SPA, Granger said, bas been l1;nd become part of the waiting
direcUy involved for several lisL Tbe game has a regular
moolhs in an 011-going process r!;t~ and pattern. At the_ beconcerning ))0811il&gt;le legislative gmmng of esch semester, things

:;j:J;-J!~~rk";:te"T=

self to consultation"·with SPA
before any~ in terms and
conditions of anployment are

~ ~ a":!.derand~J.:

of employmenL"

Informed&amp;.~

1be informality of these outreach programs is reflected in

the Student Counseling Center
itself. Counselors come from diverse backgrounds, • such• as
English, Education. Social Sciences and Social Welfare, buf'"
seem very close. As one of
them put it, "it's a place wbere
the staff work and party together .. . where counselors enjoy working at counaeling."
In addition to running therapy groups for others, the
whole Student Counseling slaff
is in a group together. Each
staff member is supervised by
another oounselor--a sort of
"therapy for the lherapisL"
This came about because of the
strong belief in the philosophy
that "the better your bead gets,
the better person you become
and the better thef8pist you
are."
,Student Counseling also adheres to the policy that "counseling is a helping profession."
The staff members like to think
of themselves as "consultants"
whose business is "to enhance
human growth." Within this
school of thought, every c:dunselor operates 011 his own variation. Dr. Diana Cnshing, a
former therapist, views her job
as showing people "that they
have choices , and that they
~d know they have

cboices." Sbe tbom to
"be in touch with their feelinp
of what's
011 and flee ol.
emotioDai couflict
they
make cboice8 about bow to respood, instead ol. being dri"""
out of am&lt;iety." None of the
ClOUIIBelors feels that a person
wbo comes in is "sick and 1nust
be bealed."
Dr. .James Marcia, cfuector
of the I'Syc:bological C I in i c,
loob at ClOUII8eling slighUy differenUy. He feels that it is a
"relationship between two people, both of whom have the e~:pectation that it will be of help
to the person wbo comes in
~ for help." But be adds,
"one person doesn't do all the
taking and one person all tlie
giving."

Wed.,. Jan. 5
11HirL. Jaa. 6

~ ~- '

sw. ..

Jan. 9

Mon.. Jan.. lO
Tun.. Jan. 11

Wed.. Jan. 12

....,..,.......,.,
Art

==t!=
u~wa,.·

9 a.m .-5 p.m.
9 a.m.-12 noon
CkrMd
CJoHd
9 un.-5 p.m.
• 9 a.m.-5 p .m.
9 a .m.-5 p .m.
9 a .m.-5 p.m.

9 a.m.-12 noon
Cloud

ao.d
9 a.m.-5
9 a.m.-5
9 a.m ..S
t a.rn.-5

~-5

p .m.
p .m.
p .m.
p.m.

p.m.

CloMd
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

9 a.m.-5 p.m.
9 a .m.-5 p.m.

~,......~~

~

9 a.m.-2 p.m.

Closed
CloMd
ctoMd

9
9
9
9

-

-~·~

a .m.-5
a .m.-5
a .m.-5
a.m...-5

p.m.
p .m.
p.m.
p.m.

8 a.m...-3 p..m.
Ba.m..· l p..nl.
Cloood

~-9p.IIL

........_,.,....
I a.m...-9

p.IIL

I a.nt..-9

p.M.

CkJsed

la..m.-5 P-IlL

CloMd
Closed
RRS•

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

Cloood
Cloood

I ........ p..-.
11Uft-4p..-.
I e.ll\...-9 p..-.

...............
I p..m.-5 p.m..

"""'""
RRS'

.

:

1be Clinic cfuector likens
to marriage. He
feels both should eod "wben
the relalionsllip runs out of
stesm-that's why people get
a divorce."
How to give the "help" and
keep the "steam" up is not universally "agreed on. Many of
the oounselors at Ridge Lea
Clinic are student-interns wbo
are giving therapy for the first
time; others are e~:peri.,.....!
professor-therapists. This diversity results in a wide variety
ClOUII8eling

~~

techniques being
At the Psychiatric Section,
yet another definition of counseling is in opeqotion. Dr. lloyd
Clarke, bead of the section. believes its mission is "to help
students, wherever possible w
get their education . . . to promote growth that will enable an
individual to handle himself
more suocessfully more comfortably, wberever' he may be."
To fulfill this definition, this
Center bas zeroed in on helping
minority students. "This group
seems tD have the most difficulty getting wbat they need."
Clarke eJ&lt;Plains. As a result,
his organization is tsiloring its
personnel and structure, wherever possible, tD be of help w
U/ B's several thousand black,
Spanish-speaking and Indian
sludents. CurrenUy, there are
eight minority group staff members.
.
In working with sludents,
Clarke has found that some
come tD him simply because
be's a psychiatrisL ''People
come in and say 'I don't want
tD just talk, I want to see a psychiatrisL'" Clarke does keep a
C&gt;l&gt;tJCb in his office but uses it
only tD sit on
Whatever the pbil&lt;&gt;SOJ&gt;t&gt;y at
the individual center, eaCh or
the three is overflowing with
people seeking its help. 'lbey
come with all sorts of problems,
everything from vocation a I
choice to marital d i sa s t e r.
Clarke says most of the students come in with "self-identitv" dif6culties while Marcia
believes "categorization is diff1CUIL" Dr. John Wipf, associate cfuector of the Student
Counselin.g Center, simply says
"We deal in human problems
: .. and that's what life's all
about."
.

~ -

,.,.__

.

u.. • ...,.._

------THE--U-BRARI--ES--CH-~--.r-1101--LIIIII--Y-&amp;.-WINTEJI---~---~----,u:------

ert/ Associatioo and their legislative consultants.
Now, Granger said, SPA will
be Pl'l!&amp;ellt at budget bearings Thurs~ Dec. 23
.. O.C.. 24
and will ''present a strong point Fri
s..t... Dec.. 25
of view on bebaU of its bargain- ~ Dec. 26
Mon.. Dee. 27
ing unit members. SPA does Tues
.. De. 211
not ~rt budget cuts that w.t .. o.c.. 29
Ole. 30
will eliminate employees from ThufS..
Fri .. Dee. 31
the University, or programs s..t... Jan. I
Sun..
Jan.
which are _.tial to the oper- Mon.. Jan. 23
ation of the University."
Tues.. Jan. 4

~~~J::

are slower and tbse's a better
chance ol. being
But
the weeks 10 by. c:JJBekals pick
up, I'I!IICbing a peak during the
beginning of emms; then the
cycle atarts qain. 1be game
lias its advantages. Students
feel they can be seen more
quicldy if they sign up at all
the clinics. But ODCe they're
regularly scbeduled at one,
they forget to notify the other
centers. This results in delays
for others 011 the list becanae
the centers have to track down
these people, ooly to leam
they're being seen elaewbere.
Loog waiting lists aren't the
only problem the centera share.
For a loog time, they've been
UDder-staffed and over-&lt;lluffed
with students. Large demands
and small budgets have
prompted them to adopt a
"we'll do wbat we can" philo&amp;ophy that doesn't rest easy with
the cfuectors and staff. All of
them would like tD have larger
staffs and more apace but realize that chances of this are
slim.
'
They've tried to adapt to
these difficulties by offering
programs outside the cramped
boundaries of the clinics. 1be
Psychological Clinic, for example, goes out intD the community on a consulting basis.
Student Counseling is involved
in aeveral "out-reach" programs
such as "PsyciH&gt;-Mat," which
are designed not only to help
- l e wbo haven't come tD the
clinic but also to create a better psyc:bological atmoopbere
on campus. And the Psychiatric
Section works with Upward
Bound, EPIS and other minority students in an atlempt tD
help them informally with their
unique problems.

J

1be Executive Committee of
the Faculty Seuate tried last
week to keep the Ombudsman's
Office going-but to no avail
Dr. Robert Stem cl.-1 the
door for the last time yesterday. 1be Executive Committee, however, is ronlinuing its
efforts on bebaU of the Office.
At its meeting last Wedne&amp;day, the group beard a plea ·
from Dr. Geor&amp;e Bobinslri, fMsl
of the Sc:bool of Information
and Library Studies, to try to_
save the trouble«&gt;oooin office.
Among various alternatives
discuaaed were possible funding by the student governments
or by the U/ B Foundation, use
of subvention funds or ))0811il&gt;le
..-mne.tt to an academic program such as Counselor Education. "None of these altemalives bas a very high chance or
"""""""'" Dr. 'lbomas Frantz,
Faculty Senate secret a r y,
noted. SUNY bas ruled that no
State money can be allocated
to the Qmbudsu;lan's Office._
1be Executive Co=~
~ ~ from Executive
V-.ce Presulent Dr. A I bert
Somit that 350 administrative

r.:.::::aa:: ~()() t=

tD
ulty jobs._ In light of the twoto-one ratio of staff to faculty,
this means ~t the_ cunent tiscal ~ 16 hurtiog the profe&amp;Slonal staff more than the
faculty, be sai~
In other aetions, the Execulive Committee:
• Appointed Drs. Theodore
Mills, Sociology, 'lbomas Bardos, MediciJl!ll Chemis_try, and
Gary ~tz, Cbenustry, . tD
the CoiDDllttee on Information
and Library Resoun:es;
.
• Named a budget COIDDllttee tD discuss fl6cal policy with
President Rober!- ~r. composed of Drs. William Baumer,
chairman. Faculty Senate. Lee
Preston, Manag~l, a ~ d
Stsnley Bruckenstein. Cbemistry;

• Announced ~t Dr._Jeannette Spero, Nursmg, will replace Dr. Sylvia Hart on the
group and that Dr. Ira Cohen,
Psychology, will temporarily
replace Dr. Ernest 'lbompson;
and
.
• Charg_ed_ Dr. M a r v 1 n
Zelen, !!tatistiCS, and Dr. Prestoo wtth drafting a oupport
statement 011 the importsnce of
the Amherst campus to the
continued l!llllellence of U/B.

Aid ~~
A....,]~"""~"
1be Office of Financial Aid

distribulinf

is now
financial assistance applications for the

1972-73 academic year.
Students may obtain fonns at
the office, which is located in
216 Harriman Library.
Completed a p pI ica lions
(Form U/ B) are to be returned
to the Financial Aid Office not
later than March 1. 1972. Financial atstements will be required in all cases, and these
are to be completed and aent to
the College Scholarship Service
not later than February L
lnslructions relative tD filing
will be found appended tD the
application packet.
CORRECTION
The .......... regrets that last
_ . . story - on the Ridge Lea
C.mp(ls blood drive in~
iclen&amp;fled an Individual associated
with the .project. Dr. R-rt Rosin,

~:"'.:!"~ced.f;:
drive. not Dr. Robert Rosen as

port.dtat-.

r&amp;-

-

�December 16, 1971

12

.&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
SUNDAY-19
IUD': Georxe W. Albee, Ph.D.,

THURSDAY-16

profeooor of .-ycholotY, Uniftr-

CBAM1D1C CJIAifUJtAB BOOK PAIIl•:

Tbe CIIIIIJacl H..,. UDder tbs direelioa ol Medroo L'lnycmei Cbi-

ro~~ =tioa,~t!:

::. .

=:'
b;a,::"'",!:.t:e.,:;&gt;.c:t!f. f:::::l
periodicals to vioual teacbiDc aida
~=-~~~

llidic ~. Jewioh law aDd
etbiao. CIIIIIJacl Hoaae, 8292 Main
St., 10 a.m.-9 p.m., public invited.
PllADIACT ftUII:PBOifl: ..cruD#:
Eother Eddy a n d Gresory M.
Cbudrik, Some ClinWal A•pec~&lt;

1&gt;f P&lt;dialric

~...

apoDliOred

~~~~~&amp;!caltX~

for information, 11 :30 a.m.-12: 30

p.m. aDd 10-11 p.m.

BHCilODINC BCIDICI: SDUNA&amp;#:

Dr. Daniel A- Ptelew;i&lt;:s. uaialant
~!~~"~pariment of Applied
:;;;:Wa;iili llbd Computer Sci-

i!:'., ~~;'&amp;~~"'!it·..!;

Periodie Sy•teiM to Rmulom Ezcit&lt;ltion, 112 Puker Encfneerin&amp;.
3 p.m.
BIOCRlllq81WY AND CUHICAL CIIEJ(.umn' - A &amp; : Dr. F. Hocb, pro-

f""""r of intemal medicine aDd

By STEVE LIPMAN
"There are 1M&gt; Americas in
this CllWltly today," anti-war
activist .John Kerry said on
CIIJIIPU8 Jut Friday. "One is
that of the alopn&amp;-wbat our
IMders say. 1be other is that

of reality."

1be Kennedy- Kerry,
2:1, a decorated combat veteran
' who became famous when leading vetenms . against the war
Jut May nay and speaking be-

=-

~d:e ~re,t:,:
after, tolii a small, unresponsive

audieDce in Haas Lounge:
"'Ibere's the America that Americans think we a~ a n d
there's one that we reslly are.
Al.atol-

" 'America Love It or Leave
It.,' or 'My CountJy Right or
Wrong.' and all of that. That's
a lot of bunk. 1bere are a lot
of people in this counby who
don't lmow what the word America means, and who have been
deprived and depraved
"1be other America is pretending that America is all
good, that soldiers don't kill
P.,.,Ple; they just band out
cbocolate bats and chewing
gum, and things like that."
1be result of this, Kerry said,
is that, "unless we solve the
problems, and rome together,
there's gonna be division and
violence_"

Kerry said this situation bas
rome about 1&gt;eca.- "people
baaically don1t care.
"1be students on the campuaes have been iarKely unwilling to make the typea of sacrifices .-led to bette. t h e

soldier comes back to join the
iarKeat unemployed group in
the counby." ,
Kerry enlisted iit the Navy
in late 1965 "because I believed
in the code of service to my
counby. I believed basically in
some of the things that the
President and the Bundy's and
the McNamara's were saying.
1be alternatives of jail or leaving the counby just weren't
there. they weren't real
"'Ibe change came when I
got to Vietoam, the real change
came. My perceptions grew as
I was in the military, but it
wasn't until I got there that I
actually saw what was wrong,
and made up my mind."
'lbese feelings didn't lesd
Kerry to desert the service, he
said. Instead, "I chose to fight
it (rom within the system. And
I did. I argued with office.-.
over there; we had an extensive
policy of dissent going on in
my division. We took our dissent all the way up Jt&gt; the admiral, and to Genenl! Abrams
in Vietnam_
" And I finally wrote a letter
and requested that I be released
from the Navy. And I wss."
That type of relesse upon request isn't common, Kerry
said. He doesn't know why it
worked for him. "I argued and
~t and got people behind
Nat • ~

Kerry ran for a seat in Congreas from Massachusetts last
year, but withdrew in favor of
a candidate who eventually
won_ He says be isn't using the
~cl
Vietnam bandwagon to further
"And It's as bard to reach his political future, but explains
the IllY in the emcufive offiai""" that it'a "just natural" that a
as it is to anest a IllY for rob- person involved in national
bin&amp; a _parting meter.
events wiD become well-known.
-n.at's why the split aists."
Kerry, WMring blue slacks,
Kerry, a "member" of the denim .iad&lt;et and shirt, and a
Natianal Vietnam Veteran's "careful" baiialt, debated a
Aplnat the War group, bas student who identified hlmaelf
apolr.enln about 35 states in the as AI Donohue of U/B's Vets'
Jut four montbs. In that _ . , Club. Donohue SPOke in favor
be ...,..., 'Tve """" what bas to of a aoeiaJ.ist,.type government
be a _ , ~ mood. which .,..,..)d take the-rout
(People) think President Nix- of the banda of the few; Kerry
obut off the very reaJ said be .... lor worldng within
....... of .u....m.
Ibis system_
"Peoppe are turning off.
".Jobn, y&lt;Mre nothing but an
..,_ . . . apoiopt for_ "!!'J'italism," Don"'t'a a _ , aerious situa- - ohue laid, picking up his coat
~~an.•
and waJkin&amp; out on the ~r.
'l1da lllluation is espec;alJv
"'Ibaea your oopinion,"- Kerry
W _ , r e t u r n i n g aol- rejoined.
...., wbn, Kary aaya, "don't
Kerry also denied reports
....&amp; 1 D - '**-to lind Am- that be bad been wined, dined
_.. taot m. tiMry left ll 1be and quartered in a faohionable
O r ..._.. - - to Vietnam c-plown reaidence Jut May
be could rome while "ordinary" ~-piooul

... a-

aDd ....., :0"'i.t

bad&lt;~ ~...,.,_1be ~~""'!!
J

!.f ~;p7:t;~; .U..U:rsi,Z
1

::=.me:~A&amp;::n.o~ ~~id
FILII•• : SyluiD and the Phantom

~·. i~oief;!."=.
:u=~
'

free.

Autant-Lara's fi.nt film (after
worldnc in the indusby 20 yesn)
was made during the occupation.
ia written about very little. and
baa until only recently, been unavailable. It is a highly escapiat
(811 would be expected) film about
a young girl of ai.xteen who falls

!f.:

eociation, Current TrentU in. Mental Heahh Deliu&lt;ry, 139 Capen,
8 : 30 p.m., open to
public.

-

the

FRIDAY-17

2Dd lloor Townoeod, .f-6 p.m., aU

.......

In·
etrudion in basic eteps dwinc
fi.nt hour, 30 Diefendorf Anne"'
IN'!DNA'ftON.U. POLK DANCING:

8 p.m.

1I.Al(f'LEI;

OP AJIEilJCAH KUBIC•:

Micl:'::l Louis

Moreau Gotts-

tl'.:r.

~:;..:.:~Tthe~::;

of the Creative and Performinc
Arts, the Buffalo Pbilbannonic.
the l)epartment of Music aDd the
Cleveland Quartet. Preoented by
P
in Soviet aDd East
Cent~pen Studies. SUCB:
CoUege B; the Polish Cultural
Foundation and the Hunprian
Cultural Foundation. Upton Hall.
SUCB, 1300 Elmwood Ave., 8: 30

the

Ne':ta

t'~t!~r~-=..ru.J!'!:

~~;_,v;.-:.;~;:!..~ IJl

fice; Lombard Tra.el Agency, 187

Lombard St.; Pomoc Pareel Aaency, 629 Fillmore Ave. Ticke!&lt; al8o

at the door.
Program: Selected Polish Songa

A S~t by Benjamin

~:,j~ ~ylebe £.:f~~

.:a

Judith Herehberger, violist
James Doveraberger, and cellilt
Marsha Haaeetl The first rwr-

!i:i.
0~~ =..~"";t.,"t.:
No. I by David Moritz Micbael.
Performen for this work include
Amron Cbodoo, clarinet; Roberto

Laneri, clarinet; Donald Montalto,

lowed by SoUV&lt;nir do Porto Rico

=~ vi~k~ no;!~s::~

piano; · Remin.iacencu de Don
Juan , Concert Fanta.y on Themu
From Mozart's Don Giovanni by
Liszt witb Roser Shields, piano.
UNIVERSITY CIIAMBIZ

caora• : Ju-

lius Eastman. conductor, in a

th;ran~t~ ~..~N;:!!!
Dame by Guillaume Machuat

douce Rou«e, will a.leo be performed. The program wiU continue with four madrigals by

~mpJu. Tlurt Trip AlonS; Lo"'l

A:::,, trwe~~ef!!e~-h~ ~:;.':,
Command Thinl! A"'/el lhal He
Come by Dietrich Buxtehude will
conclude the fint half of the proFoUowing intermiaaion, the

choir will perform Creation and

~Th'..:.:·~: willkn~m:

inp.

The fmal work will be Stravinsky's L'HUtoire du Soldat, with
three members of the choir taking the roles of Nanator, The
Soldier, aDd The Devil
V.ut81TY B.\SKETBALL*: Northeastem, Clark Gym. 8:30 p.m.
PtLM . . : Roman Polanski Festival
- Rosemary's Baby, Conference
Theatre, check showcue for the
times, faculty and staff $1.25, students 75c; 50c if ticketa purchased
before 6 p.m.
Polanski'• most well known and
popular f'Lim is a fanatically accu-

This is tbe ftlm which precipi-

tated the recent deluge of devil

~?!n;;rro~~~R~ ~";:~·
SATURDAY-IS

W11E811.1Nc• : Lock Haven State,
Clark Gym. 2 p.m.

tt'ao~fe~~.rf=d or:~

~~~: Canisiuo,

eel by Winifred Black. soprano,
aDd Barbara Warren. piano. n.e

Clark Gym. 8 : 30 p.m.
FILM.• •: Roman Polanski Feetival
-Cui-De-Soc, Conference 'lbeatre, check ahowc:ue for timeS

formed

7

:::r"'w.!t~= !/:::?~:.
by Henry Ruooeil will be pre-

~~by~~~'=
'i( Robert Winter· they

=....::~lndiuz.. ~. !!i
&amp;:ott Joplin.'• Nrw &amp;g.
l'ln'CIII&amp;ftiC 011181'

IAICTUal:

..

WBC&amp;-PK:

Mu•ical InnouatioM.

featurinjr Carlo D. Pinto, usociate profesaor of muaic and direc·

tor of the Univeni~ Chamber

Orebestra, who will discuss plam
for thie newly-created musical
group, 9:05 p.m.

EXHIBITS
~:

VDIGINJA Ct1'1'11111BT
AND PHILIP J:LUOTT. a Community

ly lmown painter. The ez.hibition.
mode ...-ible by the generous
asaiatance of a few community
friends. will emphasize m a j o r

!rtht:taX:
;.r::mr,&amp;,~~o~m~~~ ::et~'!:~~tid~
in a New York City town house.

baoooon.
Following intermilaion. Gwen
Polowe, piccolo, and Jeffery KowalaJti. perouooion. will perform
thJee Civil Wu Fife aDd Drum
Tu..... Pianist Robert Wmter
will perform Anthony Heinrich's
Y ank..doodh. This will be fol-

~~!::l::r. ~~ r:~/~147
WEDNESDAY- 22

The F"ounltWu of AralhUM! by
Szymanowtki; Pi~een. Pecuant

i~rd~P~ ~r:=o. !:f~=~

emori Okamoto, piano.

MONDAY- 20
P1LKB": M (Fritz Lantr, 1931,
German) and Kam&lt;tradocli4/l (G.

Tribute . Erhibit -

gnun.

~~lino.te~.:~ted,.2T~.::

b':.fi:!p~t!: ~==t!;,

in honor of

:;:uJ',~~o~~:=,~bi!
:On'!~in:;!,,!&gt;'b; ~~.=:~~~ wife
Virginia Cuthbert, national-

'[_':,.mastheG:;:h,i~ EKt,~?ds.!::;

Weinfeld, harpsichord. will perform the songs entiUed, Come
Fair Rtnin.a and Beneath a Weep·
ing Willow'• Shade. Raynor Taylor's Sonata for tM Piluw/orte
with an Accompaniment for a

WHEN-TV: UB Round Table, " No
Fault lnsurance" will be disauued
by Attorney Philip H. Magner
aDd Dr. Kenneth Babka. uaiatant

by CbOpin, with Sylvia Dimiziani,

8 :30 p.m., free.
The program will open . with
four choral pieces: Chater; When
Juut Wept ; Jargon ; and Afodern
Mwric, ~William Billinp. This

~fos::;t '?ortwU:ei.

Malanowicz..

11 a.m.

~n·H~~b:vicJ ~~~~ ~u~~eB=::S,.2P!!a~=u~

R~U ".:;.~&amp;;,J!Wo~lt:

-n

~t.w;:::w~Le:n N~~

MUSIC OP &amp;48T CEN1'RAL EUROPEAN

~~~~l;~nl. 8 : 30 p.m.. f...,

Tbe program. under the direction
of Lejaren Hiller, will include
worb by William Billinp. Fran-

ence n-tre, cbeck ahowcua for
times, farulty and atalf $1.25, otudeato, 75c; 50c if ticbta J&gt;UI"Chued
before 6 p.m.
Serene and aboorbing ........,t
of a love triancle aboard a
Jolanta Umpecka and ZyBJDunt

P'OIZIGil BTUDENT OOf'nK Boua•• :

"4~t ft'i:t. \\':.;.":~~ &amp;~::. B:U:b~e, bli~ha~

charming fantaoy.

A

~t.oi::=~~ro;.::7!:

PILM• •: Roman Polanald Feeti'ftl
-A Knife in lhe WCJt&lt;r, Confer,

VARSITY

BA.8KET'B.UI.• : Illinois

St..

facu]Sc: ty aDd •taff 1!:25. •tudenb
, 50c if tickets purehaoed be-

fore 6 p.m.

y- w-

~ very dilfu:ult film to talk
about You oee, Donald PJ.........,
is married to tbio

=~byw~ htw!.~ta·sk::

:!,~w"Ct!J:. ~~!J'ci

Center, SUCB, Rockwell HaU,
1300 Elmwood Av&lt;~., tbi'Ougb December 30. Houn: weekd8yo, 10
a.m....f:SO p.m. and Sundays, 1-6
p.m.; cl..ed Saturdays.

LffiRARY EXHmrrs
~ EXHIBrr of worb by
Robert Graves and James Joyce,

Room 207, Lockwood Library, 9
a..m..Sp.m.
WILLLU( BUR&amp;OUGB8 exhibit, 2nd

ftoor balcony, Lockwood Library.
PABLO NDUDA works by the
Nobel Laureate poet, Room 207,
LOckwood Library.

NOTICES
PROGa.um ON IS&amp;AEL:
The State University Colle~e at
ACADEMIC-

~.:n1i·~'iiflleiW~tio~

has announced three winter academic prograzne on modem Israel
An interdisciplinary survey c.,u ne
on Israel's ecoDOJnic, IIOCial, political, religioua and lcientilic in·
stitutio.,. will be offered. In sddi

lion. partie:~ will live aDd
work in a kibbutz aettinc, having
the opportunity to ""Piore idea
in education, 80Cial orpnization.
economics, ideoloey, politiao and
religion with Iuaelia. ~; three,
and five.week COUI'llel are available, starting Dec. 21. F,pr further

=~tionffi~ :r~.:=·:c::

demic Programs, 107 Townaend
HaU, Ext. 4247.
BDmf.Aa IN 181tAEL•: The State
University CoU..., at Oneonta baa
announced ita aeoond Interdisciplinary Faculty Seminar in lorael,
to be held from Mon:h 28 tb100gh
April 7. The Seminar featul"" international tra.naportation, hotel
accommodations, viaita to historical and cultural aitee, lectures on
current topics of interest. and
mee~ with faculty of Israeli
universities aDd with Israeli rov·
emment official&amp;. Further info.r·
mation is available by contacting
Profeooor Ferdinand A. Emilich,
a&amp;~iata.nt to the academic vice

r.:~n~!~::. &amp;::"n':~N?"~;
13820, tel. _(607) 431-2515.

OPZNJN08: FNSM 160
"Future of Man," second semester, •till hat openings for female
otadenta, though there baa been

oou.g

=tein~en~~~.. ~

coune is uked to telephone Kay

Mabler, E•t. 1823, to make an

app:&gt;intment with Dr. or Mra.

Daniel!i.

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

VOL 3 : NO. 13

Talk Time·
At Senate
Heats Up

tOld' College A Seems
Finally tLaid to Rest'
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
R.,_,.,. St.ll

It was billed all a discussion

~ ~:!.~~~ ~hil=p~r.

meeting, but -r.-iay's Faculty
Senate IIIOl8ion went a little further than that, aometi~DM Japs-

"\~\'::a~':~ber

meeting co~ of """'""
from President .Robert Ketter,

Vice President for Academic
AJfaUs Bemaid Gelbaum and
Senate C h a i r m a n William
Baumer. But after the reports
came ~ns and heated debate on the decision-making
process, the role of administrators, and the qiJeiltion ol·how
representative a leader should
be.
.
'The meeting-started smoothly enoudl with the President's
reporL Ketter asked the Senators to give senous consideration to "what . is meant .hy a
baccalaureate degree~ and to
determine ir it is possible for
UIB to offer a three-year degree program. He said be would
also like the body to discuss
what types of off-&lt;:ampus, self.
study and external degree programs should be offered by this
University, since the funds for
the Empire State CoUege "are
not forthcoming at the expected level."
Art e r questioning by Dr.
Marvin Zelen, Statistics, · Ketter explained that the State will
make financial dreisions in the
next month "on hard political
grounds" and that the fiscal
situation is a "most disturbing
one."
Then Zelen asked about the
President's promised decisions
on what departments and programs on this campus will be
given "IOQWih" money. Ketter
replied that ' 18 o m e tentative
run-throughs" have been completed and that meeti.nj!S will
(Continutd on

~

3_, coL 1)

Service Hike.
Is Approved

,_

Nader

Crusading Nader Galls for
~on the-Job'-Citizenship
Ralph Nader brought his consumer campaign to Buffalo last
Thursday and Urged students
to band together and "carve out
new citizenship roles" that work
toward "on the job citizenship."
'The way to do this, he feels, is
through organization of local
uPublic Interest R e s e a r c h
Groups," called PffiGs.
Nader spent a good portion
or his speech pushing the formation of a strong PffiG chapter
here. His advocacy seemed to
be pert . of a planned action
sinoe his chief assistant, Donald
Ross, was on camp,us in November to begin the lbcal group.
Ross has been instrumental m

State University or New York
has advisal the local Personnel
Office t h a t the September 1
service increase, for 1G-month
faculty, will be effective November 15, 1971.
'The inctease will appear in
the c h e c k of_ December 15,
retroactive to November 15, appro:rimately two and one-half
pay periods. 'The check for December 29 will revert to the..

new,::!t~l. ~..:

increase, Peraonnel says, will
be that whi&lt;h was """"""""·
ed on September 1 Appointment Authorization forms filed
by de~ta.
S t 1 II unresolved, Personnel
notal, is the salary rate for a
few faculty ~ who were

~~r~~t=~

their September 1970 "merit"
increases when they returned
to peyroU status in September
of this year. 'The PayroU Ollice
has been in cootact with departments reprdina the individuals concemed. State University is said to he atill attemptina to obtain a Javorahle
rulina rrom lbe Dr.uoo-~ or
Au cfi t and Control and the
Federal Waae Board to permit
this me:.-,

DEC.9,1971

setting up PffiGs in Iowa, Minnesota, and Oregon and wiU
probably keep c I o s e -contact
with organizers here.
Nader told his Clark Gym
audience of 1,000 that these research groups are needed to
combat the gaping dichotomie&lt;;
in our culture-a uation that
has a booming economy yet
tremendous poverty; a countrY
with a rising g ross national
product but where hospitals
have to declare bankruptcy.
The consumer advocate
pointed out that America is not
Number 1 in medical care delivery systems, police depart.
(Continued on page 3, coL 6)

Fred SneU's principles, as embodied in the old CoUege A,
were finaUy laid to rest last
Thursday at the Collegiate Assembly meeting.
Ever since its inception, the
controversial CoUege has fought
one battle after another for tile
philosophy of total student selfdetermination. Last year's hattie over grading and the call
for "demonstrated stodent accomplishment" was too much.
ln the late spring, Dr. Snell
resigned as master and Bambii
Abelson took over. College A
which was originaUy described
as a place wbere "a student
could study anything he wants
in any way he"""" fit," became
"College A - Self and Community."
Since then, the College has
been involved in an internal
battle rather than the external
ones it previously fought. ln
early summer, Stanley Dayan,
a College A staff member under
Snell, submitled a course proposal for the t h i r d Summer
Session and the faU. 'The course
was eventuaUy approved by the
Colleges' Program Evaluation
Committee, but Miss Abelson
refused to have the course
taught in College A.
Dayan Says He's the Real One

This action caused Dayan to
file a grievance with the Collegiate Assembly charging that
he was denied "impartial review of his course," and that
he was the "real" CoUege A
since his philosophy was "more
consistent" with what had previousjy existed.
After attempts at informal
negotiation this fall on the part
of Dr. Konrad von Moltke, director or the CoUegiate Assem-

-

bly, the matter was submitted
to an ad hoc committee. 'The
committee 0 r representati'ft!S
from Rachel Carson, Women's
Studies and CP Snow ~

~~-:~~29~~anda.:;

reporL
'The report, favoring M i s s
Ahelaon's position, was acted on
and accepted at the CoUegiate
~mb(y meeting, December
Acceptance of the recommendations, however, came after an
hour's worth or argument on
the rights or Dayan and about
w h e t h e r the grievance was
worth so much or the Assembly's time. At the start or the
debate, Dayan announced that
SneU was there to talk about
how consistent Dayan's philosophies are with his own. When
the former CoUege A master
did s pea k, however, it was
against Dayan and the whole
grievance which he JaheUed a
..waste o£ time... "Times have
changed," he said, "it's necessary to seek out the real needs
of ~tudents." If Dayan still
thiriks his philosophy is important, then be should set up
another coUege, SneU added.
Throughout t h e discussion
D a y a n, while asserting his
legitimacy as part of the College A staff, kept pointing out
the importance or this discussion as "pert or the learning
experience," contending it built
political awareness.
Snell Soys Other Questions
More Important

S n e II, however, countered
that considering Dayan's grievance wasn't as valuable for the
Assembly as it would be for the
group to acquaint students with
problems within the University,
such as "why the University is
an institution or instruction
( Continued on

~

3, coL 6)

-

....
3 Department Hends, Associate Dean Appointed
Three department chairmen
in the Faculty ot Educational
Studies have been reappointed
to three-year terms by President Robert L. Ketter. Tiley
are Dr. Robert S. Harnack, Department of Curriculum Development a n d Instructional
Media; Dr. Carlton R. Meyers,
Department of lnstruction, and
Dr. William Eller, Department
~.=tary and Remedial
Tbe &lt;:hairmen have beenA

pointed to serve new terms or
r r o m September 1972

·o~~~ce

throulh

Se!!temher

1975.

Dr. ~. who holds three
degrees from the University of
Wisconsin, has been a mem ber
of the UIB Faculty sinoe 1954
and chairman of his department
since 1959.
Dr. Meyers, who received his
undergraduate education at
Springfield College, was awarded the Master or Arts and Doctor or Education degrees by
Teachers CoUege of Columbia .
Univenity . .()n d. UIB feculty
since 1957, Dr. Meyers was acti
chairman or his department
d~ 1968-69 and &amp;as been

chairman for the past two academic years.
Dr. E II e r, a graduate of
Wisconsin State University at
PlatteviUe, received his M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees from the
University of Iowa. He joined
UIB as chairman of his department and professor or elementary and remedial educalion in 1966.
•
•
•
Robert J. Grantham has heeii
awoiDted .......O..!Fdean ot the
D i vi a ion of Undergraduate
Studies.
Before joininc the Univer-

sity in 1970 as clinical aasistant
professor in counselor education, Dr. Grantham -..orbd at
the Erie County ~tot
Mental Health, pJannin&amp; rooniinating and evaluatinc
~th~grams on a County'The author or three papers
on rehabilitation, Dr. Grantham received his B.S. depee
in psycbolot!Y from Pennsyl-

~ita~~=~1~

seling from Seton HaU University (1965). and his PhD. from
UIB (1970).

�~

2

CommitteeWill Study
Problems of Security
A ClOIIIIIlittee to "recommend
•• . ways in wbic:b we can move
•.. toward reK&gt;lution of &lt;am·

=)
__._

pus security problems" (not a
IJOUP to "investigate Campus

Seruricy," as reported e Is e-

~""'L_m~ ~

Elevation and Responsibility;
Tom De Martino, t!ndergraduate Student Asaociation; Fred
Cazar, Graduate Student ,.._
sociation; Albert Berrian. Jr.,
Black Student Union.

Mills Attacks
K,: ~~":
N"IXOll D..-1!
~..=.:;
ruucy

...,.,._
to

•

lour priDcipal areas:

,_!1nt,to

;;;d' rela~ps

between the
campus security force and the
other members of the Univer-

siey community;
Second, steps wbic:b might
be taken by the entire Universiey community to impro... the

S":"~~f o~vi~

GSA 'Thaws,

Funds for Food-CiJ~op

~

1be Graduate Sludmt "-»
iatioa (GSA} voted Moaday
nicht to UDfnle:re- f« the
U/B Food Co-ap. 0..: FJil!aY,
Fred Cazer,
ba4
temporarily held up~ ror
the orpnization on the advice
of Dr. Ricberd ~. vice

GSA-·

~ ~:..=
the freeze-because ol

Several Groups Caught
By Fee ~certainties

cp-aooo

Congressman Wilbur Mills,
cbainnan of the House Ways
and Means Committee, ma.y be
guarded about the Democratic

Albany and the State mditora
: : em
ol stu-

Presidential Nomination ( "li
the party wants roe, I won't
tum it down"} but be's out·
spoken about deficit govern·

vide ~

~t

t 111111115.
CIIIICI!Iftl centered on the ...._ ol wbetber

~ of(~ ~ ~ ~

.,.,..,_liaa to pnd::i '.:::::"~~~

1be problem
of allocation of student r- ia
apin becominl an lldive t.ue
on caDIJI!I&amp; Last year'a ~
of auideljnes by the Board of
Tn..- and J1NY1ou1 rullnp
outlined the..,._. pollc:y that
student , _ could be \1011111 for
"educatlol\al, ....,..tionel and
social" ~ but atill Je!t
many polnla buy.
1be U / B Food Co-ap and

==
~

~now

Last Friday, a ~ came
from the o&amp;a ol UmW!ftlity
eow-1 probibitint the _...
tiona of UniW!ftliey P rea o, a
s:.udent-nm print shop in.Nor-

~Is.~,_. · ~"':"'U:~"'ot~~

benefit
1
and.1 point arose when t """' siey Counsel. ruled that "the
poulodn t erobebld
out that the ~ University Preas is a privste
w
P
Y .serve mem~ commercial en•--'- u a in g
He's not pleased with any of of the ~ commumty Universiey Cacili~";itboutauproblems encountered by our them.
as well as students.
tl)ority. 1be Uni...mey Preas
securiey pel1IOIIDe! in carrying
Speaking last Friday at the
1be acti~ by the graduate exists primarily lor the benefit
out their duties; and
ISth Armual Institute on Fed· students to release the funds of outside ,entities and not for
eral Taxation, ~nsored by
taken to "ho
•t1..
Fourth, possible changes in the University's Division of was
nor a COIDIDJ
the Universi•y communio/. 1be
present security policies and
ment" .aJey had made in Sep- present resolntion prohibita any
practices which might oontrib- &amp;:::r.tinty~ ~";, theandEtherie !.ember !!~hen the co-op'a ~ authorization to be giYeD for
ute both to the objectives prewas approved. At that .;....,
viously mentiooed and to the local Chapter of the State So- several hundred dollanlwaa liPmorale, espirit de corps and . ciety of Certified Public Ac· propriated but none of it baa
e8icieocy of the campus secur- countants, Mills expressed sat- been spent to date by the croup.
ity force.
islaction only with the 1971
Roger Cook, Sociology, was
Ketter urged the rommittee Revenue Act (his ••signed the first to question whether
in making its recommendations _topic)·
GSA should stop funding of the
to "keep in mind the security
1bat bill, "coupled with bet· organization even though there
A Red Croos blocld drive beld
problems faced by -an urban ter control on government is a possible threat of legal last'lluuadayattheRidpLea
uni•-ersiey; the current strength spending, an adequate incomes action lor misappropriation of Campus set a reconl for units
and training of the aecuricy policy and a change in our ex- student funds. A heated debate of blood coUected at a State
lome; the manpower and relat- port situation should help to foil ed ·
hich
GSA laciliey, organizels of the drive
ed limitations which are likely get the economy back on a high ~rs
to gef::"'motion report.
to persist over the next budget growth path again," he said, up passed that would simply ask
Faculey, stalf and students
year or two; the manner in to at least five per cent a year. Siggelkow to continue looking ~_,c:ipahadteda into.!:','edopnarotion_i
e coft
which securiey personnel are
~ut, he noted, the final bill,
into the matter. Finally, the w"""'
uu
recruited via Civil Servioo; and which he commends for "its ba· group passed a motion, intro- 136 units of blood, two more
the impact of union contracts" lanced program of tax reduc- duced by Christina G r a b 1, than the previous high for a
upon all of these.
tions for individuaL; and tax in· French, to unfreeze the funds. blood drive at a State-run fa..
"1be problems associated centives for business," ditren;
Whether this action willl!ave ciliey.
with maintaining securiey on "signilicanUy" from the initial much effect is doubtful. Cazer
Chairman of the event was
the c a m Pus of the modem Administration proposal "which explained that $300 worth of Mrs. Sandra A. Herlro of the
wban universiey have increased was weighted heavily again.•t run d s had already been re- Ridge lea Personnel Office who
!n IJl!Diber. scope and complex- consumers." The Act as leased. To get more of their _ organized a stalf of captains
m"W':':~ ~li,!-thart amended "can be expected to allocation, however, the GSA Who used posters, signs and
a truly eft'ecti·- .......... pus secur· provide more jobs for our ex· haS to have a voucher sigoed memos to recruit volunteers.
.
·~ ~
panding population, increase by Howard Deuell, assistant 1be effort, held in the Main
~ ~~~ =eli~tanratedardour seofn·ob.usvingbalananee-d ~ioo ptheresidendt ~or . studenttt. sf- so~~!:...,4236ful thaRidtge lea.indi"":"
it¥. unit, but also on under•aus.
a m 1 n 1s r a 1 v e
~
some
standing and cooperation be- of-P":yments problems," Mills designee. who handles student viduals had to be tumed a....y.
tween the security force and predicted.
/
accounts. On Tuesday momDr. Robert Rosen, professor,
the campus constituencies it Deficits Y - as Dobirltatlng
ing, Deuell expressed doubt that biophysical sciences, was also
serves."
The Arkans a s Democrat
;:i:g ~J;: active in the campaign.
An initial progress report is scored Federal over-spending as of the _....,..nns involved.
due from the ClOIIIIIlittee Janu- an "important contributing fac..~ary 15 with interim and final
tor to our present economic
In other actions Monday, the
reports due February 15 and problems." Citing the Cact that Senate temporarily recotiJiized
March 15, respectively.
the Federal budget baa regis- the History, Indnstria1 EngiMemben of the committee tered surpluses in only two of neering, and Spanish, Italian
are:
the past 10 yean;, Mills noted and l'ortuguese departmental
1be Office of Sports InlonnaFaculty: McAllister H. Hull, that in fiscal 1971 and fiscal · clubs and the F i I m Society tion baa moved to 90-92 Hayea
c b airman, dean, Graduate 1972, the combined deficit will pending their IUDjl!lliling their Hall, the Uni..,gjty's main adScbool; Jobn G. Boot, School ol exceed $50 billion. ''Botli hi&amp;- constitutions to open IDOIDbel-- ministration center, joining the
~;:= ~~ tory and reason tell us that if ship to any interested graduate University-wide Information
.-~
~. wewantabealthyeconomy . . . studenl 'l'hese oonstitutions Services set-up.
William GJe!ner, Faculty of we must learn to control ·our will also be checlred to make
D i c I&lt; Baldwin, who joined
U... and Jurisprudence; Edna spending " be warned.
sure democratic election and
the information aervic:ea stalf in
G.-. Sludmt Aflaim· Dapb~ to ther 1 e1s of representation procedures
1968, will remain as director of
ne Hare. Scbool ol M~· fiscal
g
Moills
ev
•~ted.
are the ......... public rela"'- and
and Beary Richanls,
woes,
said "the -·~.....-•~
vice pn!llident for academi sf
Administf!ltion's revenue sbar·
0f1icers ol GSA reported(on publicity office. Miss Lynda
fairs.
c · ~ mg plan IS not the answer to t!&gt;eir various areas. Paul Cum- Martz. Baldwin's ollice _,.,..
StDff. 'Thomas J G
the financial problems of the ming, chaUman of Sub Board tary, bas also re-located in the
1 e
08ice· ~J
State and load governments." I, told the senators that the Hayes Information Services.
Dye, Sludmt Counaeling c.,;
'f'!le
is "wasteful '!!"' in- option ·for Poverty Hill is curSports Information will reter: lee E Grillin, Cam
g.,. efficient and bas too many de- rently being sold. Negotiations tain its fonner 831-2935 te1ecurley· J,;,.,. Gruber
6ciencies, he charged. "It makes are s&lt;ill continuing oo the mat- phone number in Clark GymHall; 'Joan Claar, s i u dent no att;empt to get at the root ter but be expects to have aome nasium, where Baldwin will also
Counseling C e n t e r· Norman 6nancial problems of State and kind of final ~ by beae his operations. Hia new
Hostetter, Admissions' and Reo- local governments - it makes the end of the week. 1be equip- telephone ouUet in Hayes is
ords; Hucb Stock, Jr., civil no attempt 1o apply Federal ment purcbaaed for the prop- 831-2139, a special I in e lor
Service Employees Asaociation. funds where they would do the erty will probably be l8tumed, sports information.
A I u m n i and Counl:il: M. ~t g?"':'..... It does not as- be added.
Robert Koren, U/ B Alunmi ~ ~gn·pnonties to bow the money
Pat GaJia&amp;ber, GSA _,.,..
STUDENT STlCIIERS
soc:iation; Phyllis E. K e II y
IS to be spent (and ) by eying
tary, reminded the . . . , to Campus Security -..lei like all
U/B CouDcil.
' the amount of the aid automati- apply lor their tuitian"""~ students who ~ their cars
Corrununity: Judge Joeeph ~Y to the income tax base, He also explained a new rUling duriiiB tan •registrotion to come 1Q
S. Mattina, associate judge, 1t saddles the Federal govern- which requires Nea: York State their oflices at 196
and
E~ County Court; Tbomas R. roent with an additional un- residents to apply lor acholar picll up t h • f r parking - r s.
Biair,
Commissioner· controllable item of expenditure incentiYe funds before they
There are •. _ 1 thousand" of
(.,'jty of
o Department of which will continue to grow.• . ." ply for tuition waivers.
them loft, Lee Griffin,
Police.
H State and local. aid is to dents working .., Nationel Sci- do111C1or of security, and with·
UniDer•ity Or~: be granted, Mills said, we must eooe Foundation p8Dta ..,.., out_them a car pa..-on campus
Bmdley Roberts. Millard Fill- develop a lillew approach as well .-.red that their funds ba"" can set a Buffalo parking tic:Ut.
wore College Student Asoocia- as assign prionties to various DOt beoll c::ancelled, oimply held . Stuclents may picll up these ·
lion; Hector Rivera. Puerto competing demands for limited up due to dela,1111 ill obtaining ers at any lime since tho- lo
Rican Organization lor Dignity, Federal funds.
the JDDDiea in; W............._
open 24 hours • ~-

;;;;;rt;) at SUNYAB;

=
and

Third. ...,ys in which the Uni·ty
·ey
· bt be
~'\"'y
ol the

.....:!'

=~~·.::J::.':~

ecoDODlic policies in geoeral.

Ridge LeaDrive
Sets State Ream

:ri.:f

!!t_

:Z

:b.,=

Sports Publicity
MovestoHayes

88Bistant

1Jousin3

=

l;
'rfurton

'!!""

-nt

w.,.._,

S:::

uu. type ol ..,terprie to operate on a Uaiwnity .,.__"
8 . - t.ed his deciaion on
• Board d om..- ....rution
which "prabibita authorization
to be fiiWD to any private ClOIDmen:ial 8llerprioe ID - t e Oil
a Uni-at)' ~w This
reaolution, be added, opeci6c..
ally esdudea F8A activitiea.
Sub-Board I aclivitiea, boowew!r
do not to be eodnded.. •
1be Albany rUling almost
CJMtea more ........ than it

..,__

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

As • .-.It ol the letter, Dr.
Ricberd ~. vice presi..
dent for lludmt affairs, bas
beld up - ' of funds for
the U/ B Food Co-ap Jiending
an Albany rUling em this organization. In a letter to Walter
Relihan, v i c e cihancellor lor
lepl aJfaira, ~ asb
for r u I i n ca on the lollowing

areas:

• Would a IIDD-PfOfit service,
as the co-op wbic:b is open
to ~ be oonaidered

such

unfair

Miii_,.jl•wt

with outside

busi~Ms~

... it ~ for the
op!&lt;lltion to be limited to an
......,._.. location or may it
be located em Um-.icy~
•

property e!Ewbere? .

• ADd, would atudeut 6nan-

c!al

support_ d such an operalion be oonaidered an appropri-

:,~...t!JCihu,. With i D the

1be vice pn!llident also asb
for clarification ol bow much
supervision such student enterprises are required to have.
Keeplnc Out el L11

IWWtla

Sigg~ bas continuously
stressed througbout Ibis whole
afl'air that be is "neutral" concerning the appropriateuea; of

lor the Food
~ student.-run
"'I am only ntisiiJi
q - . on the llii1Uer that
will bopefully insure keeping
myself and the ~ student
lee
out of I.eawnworth."
1be VICe Jll8lideut l u r t b e r
added that if be didn't raise
speading -

Co-ap ad

~rise&amp;.

"""'le

the~"- else
.....wd." Recently the w b o I e
Ualwnity laced a lb:JroUch examination ol the boob by the
State Comroller'a a n d it i n g
- a d 8igelkDw feels 11MB!
are ~of ....... the
}::'
raise about atudeut

.

1be vice presideat is alao
COIICeiDed about the ~ ol
an~ atndent
poup, ...... - the 8ludent ~
soc:iation, _.,.,.... property
.....,.__ ll this ... doea
~ UDiwnity baYe--::;' lepl
ricbt. or obliption to limit or
reslrictthe-dmchprop~r-?," the vice
1be currm&amp; quealioaing ol
allocation ol .tudeut las cen!era around - CiiD
students nm or fUDd adivitiea
that may be in direct competition with oulaide ...,..,.,;ea and
can student.-flmded aervicea be
uaed by _.Jdenta These
.......,.... iDclude many more
orpnimtioN than limply the
U/B Food Co-ap. lbere are
~ ltUdoat-fUDded qoocies,
such as the UUAB Film Committee wbic:b .......,. IIJIIIIt .cb
weekend ill the Coalerence
n..tJe. tbatare ilrdirectClOIDpetition with of(..,._ buai- . Amon 1. _oqmirations
wbidt a.-Y ...,.;bly be dected
• are: Ulliwnity 'l'rawf. the Rec-

ord~Co-Op, 8&amp;mobine 11...-.

=--

Book ~ ad the Com1111111!1¥ ~ earp.. The up-

~ ml~inc~
baYe
~

�3

~9,1911

Nader-

Senate(eo..wu-1

from -

/, col.

I)

..,.. a t a r t with proYCIIta to
~ IIDal deci8ioDS. He apin·
.....-1 that "...,., propB1D8
may be pl..-! ouL" U/B ia
euJTODtly in a "delay or holdme oituation which may extend
for ..... time, ~ be added.

·

---

Tbe Pteoident was then IRed
wbo will ~ the decision OD
which will be cut.
"'t's a hard decision that will
be aBle in Hay.. Hall with
input from the proY08tl! and
vice pn!llidenta," be replied.
Dr. Nicolas G oo dman,
Ma~ tben Blllled that
the Seaate'a _Eseeutive Committee osteaoively .......... the
matter of this deeision-making
with the President.
Baumer took OW!r the
mike to talk about his "aoberins ..... w i t h Chancellor
Boyer," ... n..lay in Batavia. At this
the Seaate ehainnan tOOl Boyer be felt
UIB "rould better stand a

,_

~Wba~:

ChifJng's Emissaly, Taiwan Students

..-m..

~:,"~~n;;.,..,
sru:u~facul~

members were
invo1-' in t a t decision?"
Zelf!ll ........... sbaJ1&gt;1y pointing
out that there was DO faculty
input into the ehainnan's statement.
Beumer replied that be was
"llyinc to refteet the eoneerns
of the
his remarks
:::.::
-"' penoonally.

h

a:

:;l1le IIDal opellkeo- was Gelbaum wbo alao aune Wider fire
for his ~ procedures for
appointment, promotion a n d
tenure, DOW being considered
by the Faeulty Tenure and
Privilege Committee. Diane
Cbristi8n, Engliah. questioned
Whether be ....uld """"""' IDIIInimODa decisions made by departments and proYOSts on ten-

~m;'!=.'\"'l:~e~

right to """rcise this power, if
neoetBlrY," tbe vice president
esplained. He added that the
thrust of his procedures was to
"formalize the ad 1wc proced........ eunently operating. He
advocated the use of a University-wide review board to "get
a cJobal view of personnel mat,.
ters."
Tbe vice ~t also answered quesljons
be
feels the &amp;ell&lt;lemic
and
goals for this Uni
ty should
be and about what his role as
academic: vice president is. Gelbaum asid be feels that UI B
ean be a great Uniwrsity .,_ bave within ua the n!8011r..,. to do a marvelous job but
we ean DO longer look to the
outside for additional """"'""'"We must.- the I'O!IIOIIrol!6 within .._" U the faculty wants a
great Uniwnity, "they bave to
~ peat contribUtions," be
added. In this regard. be feels

$t

::..!a::!:
~on""! om~
-my
statement

Goals
rather
tban waitlnc to comment 011
a statement which someone eJae
- writes. (No mention was made
of the - t OD University
GoaJe iaaued by last year's
Plaidaltial Tuk Force 011 that
aubjeet.)

lVI academic: vice president,
GeJbaum aya be bas to "mediate ........,
_ large number&amp; of not
.-rily cooperative forees
... in liD attempt to get optiuial
raults from ...........,. that are
... _tban optimal"

ManageneJ;tt Leaders

A

dtfle~

of opinktn •t AmbeaNdor Shen's talk.

ClashOverWJwls ~"Wave ofFuture'
"Communism, though in lem-

=...t~~~~YCb.:.n-:

wave of the future," James
Sben. ambaaador of the Republic of China to the u.s..
said in Norton Hall. Mooday.
Spmking to an audience with

a lar!!e niiJDbe&lt; of Taiwanese
students, the lllllhel&amp;dor disCUSIIed "China Since 1870: A
Century of ~ to Foreigu Impacts."
While the ambaasador didn't
feel communism is the wave or
the future. ...,., of his audience

didn't think the government of
Chiang Kai-sbek is e i t h e r.
During a sharp question and
answer period, Shen was questioned about bow democratic
the government on the island
really is, since some of the students didn't feel · it is really
responsive to the people.
In his speech, Shen stressed
!hat the current government is
dedicated to political democratization and the three principles
of Dr. Sun Yat-sen- nationalism, people's rights and people's
livelihood.

FNSM Students Rate Profs
Again this aemester aome students will be able to evaluate
their instructor's teaching effecti........., presentation of ma- terial, attitude and testing procedures. The opportunity to
evaluate as well as be evaluated will be available in all
COWIIes offered by the Faculty
of Natural Sciences and Mathematics &lt;FNSM ) with the exception of independent study.
Sometime before finals, instructors will aet aside class
time for students to rail out a
~tion evaii!Btion form.
Sepaiate forms will be used. for
lectme and laboratory ~
of clasaes. Tbe evaluation will
be retumed to the FNSM ~~fic:e by December 17. J!Y m1dJuuary, the forms will ~
full&gt;: be~ by the UmJl::":J:,:·:::~to
individual instructors. In additioo, the information will be
available to students in departmental oltiees and in the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences Ubrary
T
This ~was~ for the
first time last spring At that
time, roughly 51 .,.; cent of
students enrolled in FNSM
COWIIes that muld be evaluated
responded to the questionnaire
While "this was not 88 good
, _ _ as we ....uJd b"ke," Dr.
JOD8than Reid1ert, i n t e r i m
chairman of the FNSM Instructiooal Evaluation Commit,.
tee. says be ' - for an 8().85
per cent , _ _ level this fall

;:m.:tts

CU,;

a

_....,. -

llloopllcilm

The committee attributes the
low peroentqe of , _ _ to
1972 olicen; of the Graduate mis-upa in aorting questionManapment As&amp;oeiatioo of the naires, faculty slcepticism. and
Scbool of Management have re- stUdent non-participation. Even
eently beeo elec:ted.
with these problems. the chairTbey are: Gary Young, pres- m8n points out that Chemistry
ideitt; RidJard Frederiek, vice was able- to obtain a 70 per
president; Willi am Godfrey,- cent response for both Jabora&amp;eeretsry, and Jay M c K e e. tory and lecture clasae&amp;-the
treaaurer.
Members at large are George highest level retumed by lillY
Apostol. Greg Hays and Tim department.
The etJorts of the ei~~ .
Scanlon.

During the address, lhe ambassador used a historical approach to show how lhe present
government of lhe Repubuc of
China was formed, tracing hi•
way through lhe entering of the
West and its influence on Chi·
nese life to the fall of lhe last
dynasty, lhe Manchu, in 191Z.
These 40 years saw a series
of responses by lhe Chinese
government and others to the
influx of foreigners. The period
was turbulent, lhe ambassador
explained, with one uprising or
rebellion after another. During
!his time, intellectuals and liberals were also trying to obtain
more rights for the people of
China, he said.
At the tu·rn of the century,
Dr. Sun Yat-sen fonned his
famous China Revival Society.
After a period of intense struggle, a republic was formed in
1912 under lhe leadership of
S un.
In 1921, when the Chinese
Communist Party was formed,
Sun's party opposed them, because they felt that "communism could not be realized for a
long, long time." Shen said !hat
the communists were opposed
also because !heir phiiO&amp;Opbies
w e r e " theoretically unsound
and alien to Chinese thought."
On the other hand, the ambsssador pointed out; Sun's teachings were the "successor to the
ancient Chinese sages . . . and
be praised the traditional Chinese virtues which he wanted
to preserve."
The Communist Party did
take hold of mainland China,
however, and Chiang Kai-shek
was forced to move his government to Taiwan.
Even after two decades of
C hin ese Communist control,
"rommimism is not accepted by
people on lhe Chinese mainland," Sben said. ''Resistance
is everywhere," he said, and
could Ill! seen in lhe early stages of the Cultural Revolution
which occurred between 1965
and 1969.

member committee of faculty
and students are being strongly
backed by Dr. George Nanrollas, provost of FNSM. The Executive Committee of FNSM
bas cleared the way for rontinuation of lhe project for the
rest of the year and has approved the placement of resuits in faculty members' folders. Information in these folders will be used - by a review
committee to determine advancement within lhe University.
In addition, Nanrollas hopes
"these procedures wiU have lhe
ejfret of improving courses
where such improvement is indicated."
This philosophic support is
backed by financial aid as well.
Last semester, the F.aculty
spent $4,000 proc:es;&gt;ing eva,Iuatu~n forms and will ron!Jnue
lhlS support for lhe remamder
of the year.
Elfo&lt;t to lm~ QuaiHy
The evaluation f o r m s are
part of a broader effort by ·the
F""!'lty _to imp"!ve .the quality
ol teaching. "Were m lhe early
stsg"'! of this process," Reich&lt;;rt
explains. Last year the ?&gt;mMJtlee developed the qu~tionnrure
!hat's currently be 1 n g used .
This year they're testing and
refming it. And _some trends
are already &amp;bowing up. Surprisingly, "students tend to be is
kind in their evaluation" and Chinese way of life." lhe amdon't cut into instructors . ":" bassador declared. He exmuch as some ~ty antiCJ- plained. that lhe communist syspaled. The romm1ttee has also . tern is destroying the family as
found !hat while it's easy to the primary social unit, "uppick out lhe J&gt;est and worst rooting the system of private
~rs, the!" s a large gray
property a nd suppressing free
area m the m•ddle.
_
worship." All this has made the
For the future. lhe committee cause of the. Republic of China
is considering using other types - "part of lhe entire cause of
of evaluation such--as faculty hu'""n freed om," he said. And
evaluation of faculty, senior as- when "the dust finall y settles
sessment of undergraduate on lhe Chinese mainland, the
humanistic tradition of the ChiOOU11!es and alumni appraisal
of their education. Other ideas nese culture ... and lhe prinare to present financial rewa~ ciples of Dr. Sun Yat-sen will
prevail."
to good teachers.

~~:~3.F:'~":;,.~

(Contituud from pG6e l , cot 3)
menta or public t:nmsport. We
are 13th in infailt mortslity,
22nd in female life expectancy
and 30th in average male life
expectancy. " We have the most
abundant food but not the most
nutritious," be charged.
All this bas happened, be
said, because "our technololnr
bas run amok." Instead oflooliing at the bard realiti"" of life,
Nader says we use •ccosmetics"
on everything. The GS A-SA _
spoDBOted speaker discussed the
obvious use of "0081Detic" pbilO&amp;Opby in the beauty indus.t&gt;y
which urges us to uae a foot
spray instead of simply washing our feet. He extended the
analogy to military contract
over-runs where the over-run
may be several times the estimated cost.
Nader also decried the "surface aesthetics" of style changes in cars which serve only to
hide structural problems. He
pointed out lhe lunacy of cars
needing $320 worth of repairs
when !hey are hit at five miles
per bour, which is w al king
speed_
Nader extended his list of
problems to the educational
system, where be charged textbooks "fail to 11rapple with any
controversial. 1S8Uf!S _that may
get them reJeCted." He asked
his audience whether !here's
been any thorough examination
of the quauty of education out,.
side of asking whether it's relevant. Education needs a sys-

~f:Po':"t;..~~~~ dbe~

challenge to the student and
recognize that every problem
can't be departmentalized. Ins:ead of the lecture method, be
advocated going out into the
real world to take courses.
The "catalytic energy of students" is needed to cbange all
this, be said. Never before have
students totally used lhe energy they have. "Only a tiJzy
fraction of people's time" has
been used to " transform the
national awareness" on issues
like Vietnam, poverty and ecology, he pointed out. Now, be
would I i k e students to give
more time and energy to inVestigation of the economy, possible consumer fraud, and ineffective government. or course,
this is where PffiG comes in.
lf students give, as part of !heir
fees, two per cent of what !hey
spend on entertainment each
year, they could hire run time
consumer advocates to do something about the American system which is ..out of Cf?Dtrol."

College A(Continued from pG8e 1, coL 6)

rather !han an institution of
learning."
In the end, the Assembly
voted nine to five to accept the
four recommendations of the
grievance report which recognized Miss Abelaon as the legitimate ooordinator of College
A after Snell's .resill""tion.
Since she bas resigned. bowever, the group recommended
recognition of the Coordinating
Committee which 1tuaow running the College. "!''iis group
was given until December 22
(!he end of the semester) to
file its procedures with the Assembly. The recommendations
also ask for Dayan to resubmit
his proposal to lhe new Coordinatin Committee - which
some o~rvers feel is not sympathetic to his position - for
consideration u n d e r the new
procedures. The last suggestion
called J or the establishment of
a "general grievance procedure"
for the Assembly.
In its report, lhe ad 1wc
grievance committee included a
"special note of recognition and
commendation to Bambii Abelson for the program and work
she has done with handicapped
children.''
·

�~

4

, _ _ l i; U7I

Committee for a UniverSitY SaYs syNY's-Facg)ty
Is Being Backed-up to the Edge of a Prec~
By ALDO S. BERNARDQ
SUIIF/B.._,_,_
,_ • v~

~ c-.~uM

Before this year l!nds, facul.
ties tluouibout SUNY will be
-"'&lt;! to debate the contents
of a eies of position papers
_..,.( by all-University
paDels on a variety
topics
that constitute the basic format
for the University Master Plan
wbich Central Office must submit to the ftetreo:ts and to the
Govemor periodically. 1be
topics ranae from "Structure
and Governance" to "1be Campus and External Relationsbipa." In the paper entitled
..Acceas to and Delivery of Educational Services, and Certification," the following statements._:
1. ''The State University of
New York should consider separating the function of creditation from the deliyery of educational services. All degrees,
partjcularly undergraduate decould be awarded by
SUNY rather than by individual ......_ of lbe . iiystem.
1be campuses, of COUI8e, would
continue their IA!IIciJing and adviaellalt functions."
2. ~ higher education planning boards should be
~to coordinate curricula
wilhin 'the region, to evaluate
the educational' need of the region, and to direct resouroes
and programs to the end that
essential needs are met."
3. "Degree residency requirement of individual colleges
should be eliminated."
4. "Decisions on programs
and curricula at the various
campuaes should' be made by

ar

~~~~

suit hi. .-Ia."
9. "'nstndional personnel
should no Jouaw be COII8idend
the sole or J!VI!Il the primary
source oi information or oi the
' presentation oi that information. Faculty should become
developers and III8J&gt;III'!IS oi the
educational process and oi material that make up a - .
ingful educational ezperieuce
for each individual"
Fec:ultJ M IE'dll of a Pradplca
Very few faculty membem
C8,p deny that the role of the
faculty in academic matters bas
reached the yery edge.oi a precipice which, as with Humpty
Dumpty's, may prove fatal
1be democratizing and politicizing oi the University and indeed of the very concept of education over the past decade
represents primarily a revolt
against the traditional role of
the faculty in determining academic policy. 1be greater beteroaeneity in campus govern&amp;J&gt;OO
originally appeared sufficiel1tly
innOcent to most faculty .. ·..,
the new aystem a b:y. It~
now become clear that this is
leading to the serious erosionof the basic principle of accountability. Where once faculty was clearly accountable for
the academic program. and administration for making decisi6ns on bow best to ac:bieve
such programs, the new system
opened the flood gates to a 'variety of power struggles that
have practically emasculated
the faculty.
This brings us back to
Humpty Dumpty. 1bere is no
question that within the nat
two years the decision of wbo
makes educational policy will
find a resolution for the nert
decade. Right now it is clear
that Stevenson's "eggheads"
are not only at the very brink
of the wall, but have already
bad their sbells c r a c k e d.
Whether they fall off the wall
and suffer the fate or Humpty
Dumpty remains to be seen. It
is becoming ever clearer that
academic decisions are not only
being made by faculty, but are
indeed ..beginning to descend
from ~e: It is ·almost as if a
fourth interested party bad decided that the campus "constituencies'' are incapable of
making responsible decisions.
Consequently while on the one
hand Commissioner Nyquist
and -the Regents are beginning
to dispatch memos from above,
Central StsH is talJrlng about
assuming a more vital role in
the overall decision making. All
of this may be seen in such recent developments as the moratorium on Ph.D. programs, regionalization, new relationships
with private institutions, Empire State College, and combining the senior year of high
school with the freshman year

be baaed upon the needs of ~
ciety as well as student interests, as perceived by all Uniu:m:w~tuencies including
5. ''One suggestion is to have
the ayllabi for all courses in a
given . discipline by all instructors on all campuses of the University forwarded to the certifying agency, where faculty of
that discipline would review the
material and design the examination accordingly."
6. "1be elite student should
not be sacrif'JI'Il(l to the poor
student; indeeil, the better stu-.
dent should be pulled into the
basic slrlll process for bis own
aelf improvement. But there
can be less conrem about the
fate of the elite student because
be will sua:eed in s,pite of the
educational obstacles. . . ."
7. "1be cwriculum should
be atrootured to accept students
'where they are' and should
provjde whatever options neceaaary to take them 'where they
believe they should be.' "
8. "1be curriculum should be
~·in Si1Jl8}ler units
(modUles) that will fit together in a variety of ways ( ae- :=~ToSIIByl . .
1be question therefore · be- ) 80 that each student
can organize bis wodt to best comes whether SUNY faculty

GREPORTER.,

~!

I

~=t
'

-------

'1.:'.::.-t:, ~
............ _....., .. ..r::=.
_U.S.ut ....... . _
-

.........

.,

;,_

. .. :::

.... WDI'Ln' - . . . . . .

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

·-~,~-­
. -

.... cr.Drii'ID

Wfll1lill'r IIIPADIS
.....,.,
- - a.~
::.aaauuao
~
·1
......, s. ............ ...._,
CXWJa&amp;UUWO .Aa2"Ut': . _ IL - . . .

is simply to sit by and be , _ .
-ipulated by people wbo ' are
most distant from the - . I
cm-oom situation.:&gt;rbevaamms filled by these people
are n-..tMwuoNy the fault oi
the faculty, for the sludents
though a.:W'.I in sood faith
could not be -"'&lt;! to kDow
better, and administnltion naturally resets most favorsbly to
those pressures that . . _
momentarily strongest. 1be situation bas DOW reached a point
where statements such as those
given above will aoon be de- ,
bated on every c a m p u s of
SUNY in order to determine
what should be the o«iciaa policy of the University over the
nert several yeaJS. 1be statements """' ed;mded from one
of a number of posiliOii papers
prepared by paDels composed
of a number of constituencies
of wbich the faculty represented aboirt 25 per cent. 'That
the statements were designed
to be prowcative and that they
do not represent official policy
does not diminish the. fact that
they were approved for official
release. U faculties react in a
lukewarm fashion to such statements rather than vigorously
rejecting tbelil in the fortbcoming discussions, the future will
doubtless see the destruction of
the very concepts of a faculty
and of academic freedom.
1be Committee for A University has been quietly working to avoid having recen t
trends in higher education toward total lack of structure in
academic programming go to
dangerous extremes. From its
inception it bas made it clear
to all members that it does not
ezpect unanimity of opinion on
all issues, but rather general
agreement that without concern
for quality of academic program
and without faculty 8000Wltsbility in determining s u c h
quality a university does not
deserve that name. 1be Committee decries the recent trends
that maintain that any and all
life's experience can be equated
to university training. It decries the manner in wbich the
role of the faculty in determining the academic program has
been sbamefully minimized. It
decries the fact that the professional competence of faculty in academic matters except in particular specializations bas been seriously questioned and disregarded. It decries the fact that campus morale ~ disappearing because
of pOlitical coalitions based on
non-professional considerations.
It decries the attaclcs that stu&lt;IP.nts are euoouraged to make
against those rational PJ'OOOSses that are at the heart of a
true educational experienco!.
What it decries most of all,
hoooever, is ttie distrust that has
been inculcated into the stun
dents-..! the facultY in gen~~programs in

-.-the-iDa-

Members of the Committee
therefore would like to invite
you to consider. the possibility
of joining with it to help comhat all these dangerous trends

and to see whether the head-

)&lt;JiiiiU!lb - . . ! c:hao6 and anarchy in education can be at

least slowed down.
It to do this by
petiently COiltinuin«•t o its opposition to those trends
wiUC:h it CODSiders harmful
This will bopefuOy be accomplilbed through the periodic;ap-

t.:=.·~

:::.:"'by
~JeYio!wal by an ......,.,live
............... bernre publication.
It aiao bop5 to .............. stu-

dents to form their ""'"' CXIIil- ~ ~Uee wbicb may

want to COO!&gt;"l1ite with the faculty committee. 1be Committee hopes to eoc:ourqe the
membenlbip of administnltors
and elilployees in addition to
faculty and studeolts. But most
important of all it hopes to
start r a t i on a I discussioo,
through colloquia, of those issues wbich seem now to have
emerged as the lieritaae oi the
past five years oi restlessness
and discontent. 1bese would
include' a tedefinilioli of the
University, consideration oi the
role of the faculty, the prol&gt;lema engendered by unstruclured curricula and unwieldy
goWmance, the role Of Teaearcb, the importance oi accountability on all levels, and
most important of all, .a discussion in depth of academic
freedom.

For those wbo feel squeamish about joining a group wbich
may- not be viewed with great
favor by administration, call your attention to the following statement of Cbancellor
Boyer appearing in The Bin8htunl&lt;&gt;n 1'.- of August 3rd,
1971. In answer to a reporter's
questions CliiiiCe1"t!ing bis view
of the Committee, Cbancellor
Boyer answered as follows:
"J - as I favor a student mix,
I also regard' faculty philosophical differences as a healthy
sign. 1be Committee for A
University h e I p s contribute
such a bslance."

IR Colleague
Backs SPA
EDITOR :

After reading -last week's letter suggesting that "the members of our Industrial Relations
department" be asked their
opinion of the "adequacy of
SPA's Grievance Procedure,"
it is my pleasuie to step forward as a member of that department and offer my opinion.
First, regarding the comparison of academic contracts and
industrial contracts, the basic
difference between the SPASUNY grievance proce:lure and
that usually found in the private tiusiness sector is one
which rellects SPA's belief that
academic traditions s u c b as
''peer evaluation" of appointments and promotions consti~ an environment wbich is
SIDlply not the same as that
of industry. Thus with.........,..t
to appointments and pr&lt;JIDI&gt;tions an arbitrator is .,..,_..
ed to deal only with the matter
of the procedural · steps involved, not with academic judgments.
Second, there is the matter
of termination for ca.-. 1bese
are the cases having to do with
charges of inadequate perfonnance of duties, incompetence or
misconduct. Once qain, peer
evaluation prevails in the SPASUNY contract. A University
!t~ Committee, rat be r
....... "" arbitrator, hears the
charges and if it finds the employee not guilty, the charges
~ dismisseit Or, if be is found
guilty, the Committee .........
mends the penalty a n d the
Chancellor either may ftlllow .
that reCommendation or suaest
a laser one.
SPA stands for professionaJ.
ism a n d peer evaluation for
faculty and non-IA!II&lt;:hing professionaJ stalf. It maintains !bet
industrial models oi collecti...,
bargaining need not be f""-ed.
!&gt;Y D!lllective barpiniJIII aaents
:.':!..,."":am~ where
-PA"nla:A A. Bou...unisa J.D.

Member, SPA Center '
Eucutiw ,Board
~AB

SUFTExec
Charge; SPA

tSold Out'
llllft'Oit:

Rather than co further into
the details of SPA's inadequate
grievance and arbitration pn&gt;cedures I introduced last week,
I think we micht better look at
the November SPA newsletter
There SPA gives """"""""" for
its "sell out" contract. Watch
for their December newsletter
that will comment "em tbe
Agreement itaelf and its (&gt;n!9ent
implementation." Read these
two .........Jetter and our SPA
negotiated tlu-ft-ymr cootmct
to see bow well they did at the
bargaining table.
And when the November
newsletter loob at its AAUP
and SUFI' criticism, read
carefully. SUFI' is cidied~
misdirected mino'ri'ty cipposition" while AAUP is charged
with "open llllbotqe." SUIT
still feels that SPA did aeU ollt
and their diacuSI;ion about this
serious charge no way answers
our ~t it was i&amp;pt
bargaininf by a ten-man ( 9 men,
1 Woman) SPA-NYSTA-NEA
negotiating team. Read a few
clauses or pages in our SPA
negotiated contract and see how
strong, ellective and complete
the lan8uage is. And as SUFI'

r~~~loinan

au. wed oii campus,g pi=
read our views as carefully as
you read SPA's newsletters and
their (and our) three-year contract.

While reading this SPA negotiated contract loolt for items
that can be reopened within the
nat three yeaJS. Look to see
!'d.vanoes SPA negotiated for
women covered by this agreement. Find guarantees of adequate o8ice space 'and secretarial help. ·And are DUE PROCESS &amp; ACADEMIC FREEDOM as strongly protected as
you and I kDow they must be
on this campus and throughOut
SUNY?
U our SUNY aystem is oo
enlishtened and beats us as
professional equals why does
the vice cbHnceUor for personnel jn Alban,y have 15 top level
grievances facing him? And
bow many of those 15 cot ade'quate o;upport and help from
our negotiating aa-t. SPA? I
know of aome that got damn
little help from SPA.
More information on causes,
PIOCI!SSina and solutions to
these 15 .caaes will soon be

s;::, ':: .\:,~

~

Fredonia--two of wbam are no
lonaer "" SUNY -.....n And
I know oi a ~from

our campus wbo quit Wider
""""""" and would not- eYen
file to b:y to aave her job.
· In cloaing, may I apin
te
SPA's newsletter, "U you 'f:•t
like SPA, cbanp it by ......,..u..
ing your~ oi view 11JJ111118 a
majority. SPA with fewer than
4000 members is 110 -i&lt;!ritr of
over 11,000 SUNY pooia&amp;ionals. Meanwhile, SOFT is preparing to cballenie SPA's certification as a "majority" at the
first possible m o m en t. And
SUIT will have CUNY con-

~.:;:, CI 'i~.....:

will be in Crosby 319 for all to
see. Contrast pay, frin&amp;es, working conditjons, and due prom&amp;~
to our ·~ SPA contract:
Or if you are .-rby Crosby
Ban, why not ask any member
oi the Industrial Relations faculty · bow well thev rate the
::'tract SPA nec&lt;&gt;-

::n:

- I I D i r l •• PmiB

SUFI' lAICal 2134

Eucutive Board
Member and Delepte,

Bulfalo 1: Erie County
AFL-CIO Council

�~-

.Dec.mbor9; 197l

DoYouWant Success or Fail~ for Collective Negotiations?
most ftmdamental university ·. prised of faculty members of
concerns.
the SUNY Senate, many of
Aside from . ~ sub;~tive · them drawn from the Agricul~ of ~ecJSlon-making, the tural and Technical Institutes
~-'!'! cpnc-ro/_10
. posenald }~~!!~.
mtezpretation of the Taylor or from the Arta and Science
"""""'
""""""Law under which SUNY is ·op- Colleges who regard the Unilion, ~ coll«live barlfJinin« erating places the ~or versity Centers "" bastiOn. of
wut r.Dhich. repreaents lhe fac- and ~ .Board &lt;&gt;! Trustees in
p~ege, but wbo were still
ulty and non-t«Jching profes- the po&amp;ltion of being by-passed gu1ded by a tradition of colai.onal •toft of SUNY. The au- "!' much that is specified above, legi&amp;lity which seemed to be
thor lwu ~n closely -invokled smc:e SPA &amp;rgains with the emerging within the Senate.
IDitA SPA affairs for the post Off1!"' of Employee Relations, This group viewed SUFI' with
eilhl monlha.
a direct arm of the Governor. alarm, believed AAUP to be in·
• • •
Furtbennore, a!! aspects of the appropriate as a framework for
By ROBERT S. FISK
agreement which affect cost negotiation, and, baving lost in
....,_, u--..... • ...,.. .
factors '!lust be &amp;!!Proved. by the courts its attempt to bave
AS I visit with many of my the ~ture,. alo'll! w 1 t.h the SUNY Senate be declal"t'd
oolleques on this and otber ~ which reqwre. a "":&amp;Di~ m a &lt;;&lt;&gt;!'tender for .fhe role of bar·
c a m p u a e a in SUNY, I can ens~ law. 'Ibe unplicstions gammg agent, began to work
only coudude that there is a of ~ for the fu_ture of State outsi~e ~e Sel}"te toward an
serious lack of information Uru~ty are not fully ap- orgaruzation wh1ch would mainabout the Senate Professional preaated, perbape. but clearly tain ·the philosophy of "collegiAssociation (SPA) and of the "!ill for careful thousht and ac- ality": (El~m6!'ts of this group
implications collective bargain- I tion. by ~ of the aca- are still active 1n SPA, but seviug bol4a foe decision-making ~ 9""!"'uruty and others era! of thO!!" based at the CPnwithin SUNY. Few realize the interested m the ~ devel- ters bav~ mif!er left SPA or are
~ changes very like- &lt;&gt;P!"""t of SUNY and 1ts c;ap- largely 1DSctive.)
ly to occur in the approach to actty ~ ~ !'! appropnate NYSTA-NEA A Chief Objection
deciaion-maldng in many lll"eiiS educational pnonties.
A third group WM that rep'tll ~ - within the Uni'Ibe history of employ.., ne- resented by the New York
.,.,.;ty. Some changes would be gotiations reveals' the import- State Teach e'" Association
positive, but others could ance of early precedents. Those
(NYSTA) and the National
jeopardize much that we view most sipllficant are the guide- Education Asaociation lNEA)
as critically important to the
lines which build up b&lt;osed which, baviug been reconstiacademic effectiveness of a ma- upon decisions "!' grier8Jl~ tuted over the past decade as
jor public uniYe!Sity.
and the. gradual mcorporation the primary representatives of
This has led me to attempt a in ~t contracts of the the public sChool teaching prosummary of my feelings and in- essentia!s of the de_m!mds made fession, were now turning to
formatioo for two primary rea- at Prev10UII baJ:gaining tables. the colleges and universities as
sona. First, I believe SPA must Also, SPA as IS true of any the largest source of new memcollective bargaining agency, in- bership. Through Processes unescapably lends itself to being known to me NYST A began to
Gl;~I~INTS
ahi!Ped by strong leadership evolve a relationship which 111Y
.I.L
\'\'
C
V
n.Ropootor,_on _ _ wboee activities may · be gov- timately surfaced by its becotlt~ more by a con~m . for ing, together with NEA, a pri8Urv1val of the orgaruzation, mary sponsor and chief tinauto . . . - • far ... -- and b.!;' the ~ for power cia! backer for SPA in its fight
-...
o
l
on
•
Yllrle!J
.., .......... ,..... ... -..lc than, m many instances, ·by for recognition. Ultimately it
""'!""."' for 1\Je general wellare. became an affiliate through a
community. W. - . . . poolllan popors - . .. It JS unperative, therefo&gt;;e, that somewbat basty vote of the
we concern oupoe!ves With the early membership. To many
ponnlts. · .
early. t.;adership of . S~A, the faculty, NYSTA-NEA reprebargaining P"""""!o ~ Phil"!"&gt; sents the chief objection to
be supported and guided so that phy of the o~tion which their joining SPA. Many per""""!"
to be evolvmg, and the sons do not realize the extent of
its policies and procedures recognize the unique interests and quality and nature of the. ';"- the _NYSTA-!"EA support in
spo~
of the central adminis· serviCes and finance which W8.1:1
needs of the various units in its
essential to the winning o( the
constil:uellcy together with tration of SUNY.
For
this
statement, I should recognition battle and to th•
their contributions. S e c o n d,
the central administration of like to attempt three things: obtaining. of the presen.t conSUNY must not permit its ob- summarize the history of SPA . tract, an mvestment estimated
ligations for leadership to be as I know it, point to some of to be nearly on&lt;Hjuar;ter million
its accomplishments, and- sug- dollars. Although mval~le,
b~ by efforts to centralize,
to develop conformity, ·and to gest some concerns which I be- tods~ the:.-: repfese!'t a ~
reduce campus autonomy in or- lieve warrant serious considers- bag m the1r undeniable politlder, it will be said, to meet the tion ~ of these contribute to cal and organizational support
stipulations of the contract re- my benef that we should attend and their simultaneous blindcarefully to the further devel- nes.• to the important academic
cenUy effected with SPA. .
My comments are based upon opment of SPA, primarily by traditions and values of a unijoining and taking an active versity, their skepticism about
eight months of fairly close inthe workability of such tradivOlvement wilh SPA and of ob- part in it.
tions as peer JO"OUD reviP.W• in
servations of the effect of the Unusy Allianee of Til ree Groups
the grievance process, and their
Taylor Law upon various segSPA.
has, of course, ~ut a definition of the rights of inments of the University. I be- short history. It emerged m Oc- dividuals.
lieve SPA can be made to work ~ of 1970 as an UD""!'Y aleffectively and may well prove hance of t!J.ree dommant
Nonetheless, I believe that
_,tial to the future welfare groups. 'Ibe fust an~ most pow- moso-faculty me m be r s are
of SUNY as a whole. But I erful was a ~ete111'llled ~roup wrong m many of their generalfind litUe awareness of this on of non-teaching professionals izations about these two organthe part ~ most of the faculty througbout SUN y wbo. felt izations. I bave been a member
and professional staff.
tbem~el ves. ef!ectively ~- of the NEA for some 20 years
~ W&gt;\hin the Uruver- and a member of NYSTA most
-SPA'I~
s1ty s:nt;1 del?nved of a~ to of the tiq&gt;e, due to my interest
It may help gain perspective ecoDOIIllC gams or prof~o~ in and work with education.
if I fimt outline those areas of dev_elopment and ..,.:unty m While the ilwo organiz&amp;tions
~which conceivtheir careers by their ~ bave changeil radically in the
ably fall •within'. the BCOpe o( from camP1JS. "!""'~"'!' and .therr past ten years, their .constituSPA's "activities. Tbey include lack of administrative muscle. encies are still dzawn from
One .o~ the !"fects of the Qould those wbo bave a high stake in
adminiatration had been to fos- public higber education. Furamong peraonnel catesories and ter ~ develo~t o! strong thennore, we should not underinstitutions; policies and pro- faculties at. the U'!"veJ"Sltr Cen- estimate their political power
&lt;edures affecting the appoint- ters and, ~ly, m the at both the state and the nament, promotion, retention, and Arts and Science (four _Year) tiona! levels. 'Ibeir resources
career development of faculty Coll~es, !""' largely !-&lt;&gt; 1gnore bave proved of major importand profeaaiODal staff; the phil- 1\Je ~ of serv•cead':.'i::" :::.:_ inW~urw!:t ~
&lt;&amp;lpby and procedures governhighly vulnerable w i t h o u t
ing grievances; the protection !":,to ;::""" cam~ of
~those pro- them. Finall¥., it is their lejll!l
of academic freedom and human diKnity; all fringe bene- f~onals ~ non-~ roles. staff and pohtical insight which
lita; and ~ and cootinuous ~1th no. i&lt;!b aecunty, locked are now fighting the batUe of
COIISII!tation with the Chancel- . mto restrictive salary schedules the freeze lor SPA, something
lor and with the unit presidents (U-grades), and ignored by we are virtually unequipped to
on such matter!; as SPA deems faculty who viewed them handle. I believe we are inlmimportant, including ultimate- largel¥. as civil service person- itely stronger through this af.
ly much tbat must bear upon nel Wlth no vested rights ·in an filiation tban we would be by
PIOIP"IIIIUDiltic and . curricular academic setting, the bitterness ourselves, despite some reserconsiderations. I ..._:! this with which many of the pro- vations which I .shalf mention
list ia iDcomplete. Yet It hardly fessional staff view SUNY is a later about other aspects of
.-Is aplicaliDD in order to distinct factor in todsy's organ- their influence. 'Ibe important
considezation now is tbat of
demanat.ate how cloeely a bar- · izational activity.
The ~ . ~!'. ~- ~: . .~~~ the pp betw'!"D two
gaining ~ . a!'l'~ . the
EDITOR'S NOTE: The Reporter begins today o two-port
viewpoint tkaJing with the histot")! and accomp/ishmenls of,

_..,_ld,.

~of~e::u~:;';

:,.,nor:.,

u..;

sets of values. Somehow the political and organizational
strength of NYS'fA-NEA must
be directed so that it supports
the professional:l'cademic na· ture of the Uruversity. This
should not be as difficult as it
may seem because, in my judgment, the differences here are
less tban is nonnally realized
by university faculty members.
·A fourth and lesser factor
was the support drawn from a
Medical Caucus identified primarily with the Upstate and
Downstate Medical Centers
which tbrew in its support With
SPA in time to gain a somewbat special status in the bargaining process. Ultimately this
was reffected in the two articles of the present contract
giving the medical and dental
facilities in one instance and
the health sciences centers in
another unique and possibly
unilateral avenues to improvement of their " terms and conditions of service". It is interesting to note that on this campus !be approach is one which
includes most of the Health
Sciences faculty and professional staff and one which is making a de!e~ed effort to be
broader m Jts concerns tban
those relating I'! the medi"'!l
and d"'!tal faculties alone. Th1s
consortium may well suggest a
pattern to be followed ultimately by each of the special interest groups. Whether or not
this would prove politically
wise is yet to be demonstrated.
Had To Run Before It C111wlecl
. Unfortunately SPA was
forced "to run" before it bad
matured sufficienUy "to crawl",
since it was thrust into the bargaining process immediately
after recognition as the bargaining agent. Yet I believe
that solid gains bave emerged
from wbat bas transpired thus
far.
First and foremoot, at a time
when we in the universities face
a hostile society epitomized in
New York by a (presenUy) reluctant and financially bardpressed Governor and legislature, . SPA provides a Je~y
"!"'Ctioned base for orgaruzat1on to defend !he ])urpose&amp; and
needs of pubhc h1gher education from being undermined in
the drive for economy. This is
essential in a State which was
the last of the fifty to establish
a public university and which
is still largely controlled by interests owing their allegiances
to private oolleges and universities. Despite the tremendous
growth of the past ten years
and the substantial contributions made by the State to both
CUNY and SUNY, the latter
has not demonstrated the kind
of maturity and stability which
asSure continuity · of development. SPA and its affiliation
with NYSTA may well provide
the political base for advocacy
which present cir'cumstances require. For example, NYSTA
has already launched a campaign against those elements
within the Legislature which
sponsored such ·legialation as
the moratorium on sabbatical
leaves and a proposal for defining minimum faculty-student contact bours for the colleges and universities. We now
possess an organization and
affiliations which should add
measurably to our capacity to
inte!f;'~ the needs
~ni­

the present contract provides at
least the following :
(a ) Assuming legislative
support · the staff will receive
an economic gain larger by at
least 50 per cent tban that .
granted administrative penoonnel excluded from the unit, or
in my opinion tban that for
which the Office of Employee
RelationS bad anticipated settling.
( bJ A grievance process bas
been developed which permits
each campus to build upon and
preserve those procedures consistent with its values and
mores and which provides for
arbitration at the final step.
The concept of peer e.raluation
explicit in the SUNYAB processes for both professional
staff and faculty are unique to
collective negotiation and may
yet bave to be defended vigorously from the SUNY central
administration, but I believe
they ore consistent w i t h the
contract. Further the contract
strengthens former procedures
by setting time limits, providing for- arbitration and making
grievable much of the SUNY
Trustee Policies to the extent
that they are now formally included with the contract.
(&lt;&gt;) The contract provides
term appointments for professional staff for the first time
and, further, makes provision
for the development of evaluation procedures and a career
promotion plan for this portion
of the bargaining unit.
(d ) There is provision for
regularized consultation by
SPA with campus presidents
and with the Chancellor. Tbe
sessions on this campus have
led to the greatest sense of
unity which I bave observed
within any group since the
troubles of 1970. Those in Albany are regarded by participanbi as infonnative and constructive. They h a v e also
proved si ~nificant in outlining
for the Chancellor some ·of the
inequities that exist on individual csmpuo;es because of recalcitrant or inept administration.
r e l 'T'he contract is belping
with the development of a
l{reater sense of order ( in a
positive manner) in such things
as personl"'el leaves and other
benefits. It should clarify policy and procedure on personnel
files. It assures greater involvement of more staff in the various consultative roles (such as
search committees) and provides for staff involvement in
planning for such retrenchment

as circumstances may require.

By formalizing such relationships it has helped reduce the
potential bann from od hoc administrative, council or trustee
actions.
(f) Much to the surprise of
seasoned negotiators the contract permits discretionary upward salary adjustments, i.e.,
merit increments. The precedent is thus set for allocations
of monies in future contracts to
be used for this purpose. Along
with peer judgment on grievance matters and adherence to
AAUP standards on academic
freedom there appears to be
nothing which the faculty of
the Centers judge to be more
important tban the concept of
merit or discretionary funds.
In sum the first and all-important contract has established basic concepts unique to
university settings w i t b o u t
i':de',...,d~t
~ adop\ing the kind of nanowly
privatelv accomplished by the defined definitions of work
lORds. hours of employment
Chancellor and the Trustees
·
and .the like which could lead
to a much more restrictive em~ far Dl8laluo
'Ibe second major gain is tbat· ployer-employee relatioDahip.
the faculty and the professional
So J!!uch for the positive or
staff...now bave a coatractual near-positive.
( Dr. FU.k will continlu! hill
basis for dialogue with the
State on ''terms and conditions discUAtJwn 1Ul%t week, turning
of employment." While the lat- to the "allJCieties or apprehenter remains subetantially to be BW718" concerning the, future
defined as to ita parameters, under collective negoti4lion.)

":at'7

0:.

�~!1,1!111

GREPoRTER,

6

Most Veterans Seem to Share a Seriseof Bitterness
By STEVE LIPMAN
They're members of one of
U/B's largest minority groups,
yet you'd never spot one in a
crowd. You can't tell them by
the color of their skin. No CI06&amp;
or star hung around their necks
distinguishes them, and their
voices won't give them away.
Not unless they're wearing
their stripes or patcbes can you
recognize one of U/B's veterans.
There are 3,378 of them, more
than any other group on campus
-except for "groups" identified
by sex, race or religion. They're
. not so much a silent minority
as an unknown one.
Since after World War II,
when large numbers of veterans
begsn enrolling on the G .I. Bill,
ex-servicemen have made up a
large portion of U/ B's population. Today, almost one of every
six U/B students is a veteran.
The big jmnp in numbers
came after 1966, the year of a
· liheralimd G.l. Bill, which itself resulted from an increase
in returning veterans.
The fi(U"'S are:
1967~ 1074.
1968-69, 1341.
1969-70, 1844.
1970-71, 2365.
1971-72, 2506.
The 862 dill'erence between
the first figure of 3378 and 2506
is aooounted for by veterans not
on the Bill-mostly pre-Vietnam.
Common Trolt Bitterness

Most of . the veterans share
at least one oommon trait, says
Chris Sunley, 25, two years out
of the Marines as a buck sergeant Bitterness.
"Veterans when they come
home .. . are bitter. And why?
Because they know they've been
exploited."
Because of this, Sunley says,
m a n y discharged servicemen
have "no other interests" than
to "accomplish everything in a
small period of time," to "emulate thelr successful non-service
friends." Often, he says, the vet
finds himself on a "sell-destruct
kick" in order to do this.
The vet who has "no time"
for campus activities, who is
not involved, is only hurting
him£elf, Sunley feels. " He's be:,~~ stagnant . . . a vege-

In his esse, Sunley says, it
was the influence of friends that
"got me to he interested in
myseU as a human being."
Sunley served I8 months in
·Vietnam, entered U / B when he
was 23, the age most students
are leaving graduate school.
'"11lere's a problem there. (The
returning G.I.) might he 22, 23,
25, but he's also got the mentality and experience of. somebody 35. &lt;On campus) he's
dealing with 19-year-olds.
"Their tastes are dill'erent.
You can relate to them, but it's
more like a father-son relationship. . . . They're more interested in having fun with life
and you're more interested ;,;
being productive."

. ,.. . .

Hard Time Flttinc In

Dennis Jewell, unlike Chr
spent no time in Vietnam; ~
Army work kept him in the
States. He was 21 when he en~~ U/ B. It bothered ~
"I had a hard time fitting in.
I don't think I stood out that
much, but I think I just felt
that way at first Now I've probably adjusted pretty completely, though it took probably a
year and a hall.
"At the time I returned there

were many, many demonstra·

tions, one right after the other
- against ROTC, the Them is .
project, local demonstrations
against the war in general. I
felt it was kind of silly to demonstrate. I believe that through
the political process you can
correct the situation. I think the

demoolllmtioaa turned m o r e
people all, than (they) gat to
aupport a III&lt;M!IDfSit against the
war.~

Dennis doesn't llllj&gt; his political feelings on the customary liberal - OOII8ei"V8.tive scale,
just says 'Td describe myseU

as open-minded.
• But I know a lot of veterans
who don't believe that the political process works any more.
They feel that it's completely
corrupt, and there's no chance
of making it work, making it
work for the people. I still have
that hope.
"'n fact, I worked on a campaign for Tom Flaherty who
was running against Jack Kemp
(for a seat · in Congress) last
year. It was frustrating when
he lost-I had RUt quite a few
hours in it, it Was kind of tiring-but I still have hopes for
our system the way it is."
Dennis encountered little reaction to his being a veteran:
"A few times I was criticized
by the real radicals. The majority of people just accepted it
"Some people felt I was lucky
to have the service over with
and not to he bothered by' the
draft A lot of people thought
it was great that I getting
$175 a month (in G.l . benefits). Very, very few people actually harassed me."
After the daily regimentation
and supervision he had grown
used to in three years of Army
life, Dennis says he was surprised when he was so free to
choose his own courses here.
However, there was "very little

largeat numbers of black military e v e r, is returning only
about 25 P.,r cent of its veterans to the campus.

in~~=~~
~. taking advan-·

centage of

W:~t.:~~d::''l

often is that blacks from th"
ghetto have neither the bacl
ground nor the inclination t •
enter roll~e when their military duty IS over. Nor the finances. An unmarried peraon
on the G.I. B iII gets about
$I600 for nine months of study
- far below the government
poverty level. The unemployment rate among blacks, veterans included, is higher than for
whites, ao the black veteran who
lacks other scholarship h e I p,
finds it difficult to work and
study.
VerY simply, most ex-1!erVicemen who use the G~ Bill's
benefits are white. At UI B, the
Financial Aid Office estimates,
only about 500 of 2500 veterans
on the Bill are black.
None of the 500 are members
of the U/ B Vets' Club, but
some may soon be willing to
join a Third World Veterans'
Club which is now before Student Association for approvai.

~Ed'c:o:rusali1J' ~i~

which exists on campus, because 11Tbe University -System
and (its) activities are not set
up for black people and . • . .
the problems of black people.
This organizat;ion will he veterans dealing with veterans, third
world people dealing witli third
world people."
Part of the group's functions
will he social ~ Gamble says;
others will he geared to doing
"something about the other veterans who are coming out of
the war-getting them jobs, getting them into school, opening
admission to labor unions.
"'ll&gt;ere seems to he almost a
sense of duty among (black )
veterans who come out of the
war. They feel they have to do
something. They feel they want
to do something. And I think a
lot of them are willing to do
something."
Ed is a 23-yPar-old freshman.
He completed two years at Albany Business College before
being drafted and served one
year in Vietnam. He says of
Vietnam: "For me as a black
person, it was like serving in a
war I had no business serving
in. (l was) . . . being told to
do something, as always, that
I feel I didn't have any right
to he told to do.''

ad 1isement help," he feels.
"I went to my advisor before
I attended classes and he said,
a.dr. fr.m YWMm. to whatl
'Well, what would you like to
do?' I said, 'Tell me a little bit trait common to many veterans. deeper understanding of I i f e
about what I can do.' He said,
The Vets' Club has been and what happens in life.''
The 70 members of the Club
'You can do whatever you want around since before 1967, the
to do.' I said, 'I just want to year AI was a freshman, but it a.re "very representative'' of the
get started and feel my way wasn't until that year, and the 3378 vets at U / B, Donohue
around. What courses should I next when the first waves of says, because "within the Club
take?' And he said, 'Whatever Vietnam returnees came, that it there is a. wide diversity of
courses you want to tske.'
underwent a change. "It was political opiniori. I haven't met
''It was hard for me at first strictly social before," AI says. any h a w k s, but I have met
to make up my mind.
"This present Veterans' Cl!.!b some older vets, say some K~
''In fact, I originally regis- is different One of the mem- rean War vets, who have actered as a politicnl s cience hers !had ) the group take a e e p ted the anti-Communist
major, and, withil) the first sem- politicnl stand on Vietnam, and propaganda.''
Some U / B Vets' Club memester, switched to a speech in the last year people have bemajor and then about two sem- come more ·active. Irs started bers also belong to other antiwar veterans' organizations esters later, to business.
to grow pretty rapidly.
" All the time I was in the
"We're doing military coun- Vietnam Veterans Against the
Army, I didn't have this choice selling, draft counselling, and, War, based in Washington, and
of where to go and what to do. as a group, we decided to par- the Western New York VeterI llad always been told. That ticipate in the Vietnam Velar- ans' Union.
"Our members work where
bothered me while I was in the ans Against the War action in
they choose, doing what they
Army. But it was a big shock Washington last April."
being left so completely free, ahoWhut~. has this change come choose."
although I much prefer it that
way."
Al thinks it's because as a Black Veterans
White U/ B Veteran: "Thee
The most difficult time with veteran gets further away from
readjustment, Dennis says, is the war, he can think more ra- are a lot of block veterans on
cncountered by the ·veterans tionally about il He probably this campus. They have differwho served in Vietnam itself- questions more deeply and that ent needs, and different daires military are "true." This is one
than white veterans do. It's a reason that the two group&amp; find
at least by some of them.
pl8kes him more political.
"If a veteran really supports
"I've known aome veterans simple fact . They do. But peo- it difficult to join in a common
the war and feels that he was who say they want to go back ple on this campus still seem veterans' organization on cam·
doing something right there, to Vietnam because the United to subscribe to· the liberal men- pus. "We're ~ more ·
and everYbodY on campus tells States seems like such a dream tality that somehaw the whita aware of e a c h other's proband blocks are going to be able lems," he says, "but we have
him what he did was all wrong, world. ·
it's hard.''
" When I came back I felt like to get together and work again. dill'erent objectives.''
•
the people were totally unreal. Blocks can't relate to whites, · '!bose objectivea of black vetA New Klnd af Orpnlution
They weren't dealing with their and that's totally justifiable.
erans, Gamble s a y s, include
" You've got to take it down 110pe_tl admissions on campus''I didn't want to have any- false society."
thing to do with any groups
The Vietnam veteran, Dono- to wlw gets drofud. The people third world say-eo in what goes
when I came back. I thought hue feels, becomeS brutalized, who get drafted, and have oo on-&lt;IDii community work. In
that student government was a learns to take in stride the de- clwice, are first of all block and every city, you find a ghetto.
bunch of little kids playing with struction of villages, the killing poor people. So they come from There's a ·ghetto in this city,
real money. I really didn't see of civilians. "We began to see a different orientation before right? Nobody seems c:oncemed.
any purpose in participating in the whole Vietnamese people they even go inlo the Army.
The black G.I.'s are concemed
it, and I didn't see what good as our enemy.''
"And when they get out, about it The blaclr. G.I.'s are
clubs could do. I think a lot
As a result, he says, the G.I. they're more apt to be. ,more ooncemed about the kids . . .
of vets gn _through this sort of develops " verY callous attitudes bitter 'cause they're fightinq a about the drugs in the communanarchistic phase."
towards the emotions of other white man,B war, 'cause raclBm ity. They're ooncemed about
The words are those of AI people. If you've been involved in the Army is unbeliewble. all the things which the system
Donohue, 24, president of the in killing people, it's verY bard When they get out, they don't should he concerned about, hut
U/ B Vets' Club which has 70 to view the life of another hu- want to relate to whiles any. which it's not:'
memhers, 30 active. He is a man tieing verY seriously. It's more."
Does the University- part
senior, a member of the Vets' hard to start feeling again as a
Following World Wa r II, the of the system-care about the
Club ·
n1 last
·
human being."
first wsr covered by the G.l. black man, the black G.I ., in
when ~ kvolveciknn~
These emotions, which AI Bill, one of every two soldiers particular?
anti-war movemenl
says many ex-servicemen share, went to college after service.
''No. That's shown to you
He's a native of Ithaca, a are one reason for the Vets' Most were white.
the first day you're on campus
veteran of three years in tht' Club. "Veterans should get toAfter the ~orean war period, and they give you a number.
Army. He spent. one year in gether because they can com- the first to see bl"'ks fully in- Instead of making you a perVietnam, twt&gt; at bases in the municate about JJl8iity, about !Fgrated in the armed services, son, they give you a number.
States, JiJostJy in the south.
their exi&gt;eriences with reality, about 35 per cent of the veter"In the Army, as a black cat
He speaks of the military much better than a veteran to ans went to college.
you're constantly harassed,~­
The Vietnam War, with the (Continued on pag~ 7, coL J)
alternately as we and ~.Y.-:-!1- . . a non-veteran. The,Y have a

..J&lt;iwl';'lr! =:"urn~~~

:-v

�~9,1971

'REPORTER,

Gas-Chmnber LiheMEM-BRAIN I PromjJts
rl've Seen It All Before' Type of &amp;redom
One of the dangers which
lurks on the path or a multimedia artist is the danger of
overbwdenii:lg his a u d i e n c e
with information_ When one
walb into a room full of pro-.
jected i in a g e s and vanous
sounds. oo much elfort is expended in trying to catch bold
of everything that one quite
forgets ibat there might ~ be
a message or emotion hidden
b e h i n d the aenoory assault;
soon one I a - into the "rve
seen it all before" t~ or boredom- Tbe multi-IDI!&lt;IIB man can
avoid this pit(aJI in countless
ways, all or them stemming
from one common idea. Every
medium involved must be used
simply because the ides to be
exp~ can only be expressed
through the use or that medium. When this limit is impOsed,
the multi-medis event bas a
capability of expressing a far
wider range or emotions and
ideas than an event wboee mode
or presentation is limited to
one or the conventional media.
This didn't happen when Rob
Fisher came from Dlinois last
week to present MEM-BRAIN
I which was shown on Friday
and Satunlay. An air supported
structure, rather like a plastic
tent the size of a typicsl dorm
room, was built in the middle
of the Fillmore Room, .and 40
people were stuffed inside it.
One's immediate resction is to
ask what aesthetic purpose is
served by the uncomfortable
cramming or people in a gaschamber like s p a c e. Is this
event going to espress or involve the concept of overcrowding? Unfortunately the answer
"""""' to be simply that the
high cost of bringmg this event
to !3ultalo de11180ded that as ·
many one doUar people as possible be allowed to see it. And
all the way through an uninteresting hour one's natural

GJ&gt;EOPLE

Most Vets-

RECOGNITIONS

(Continued from page 6, col. 6)

JOE M. FISCHER ,

stsntly picked on, pushed up

:Jl~Y ~ront lines, given the

"At the University, they
don't want to be bothered with
you, period. You notice there
are no programs set up here
for veterans. That's discrimination.
''The campus doesn't want to
be bothered with 'the veterans.
I really think the veterans are
turned away from. I don't think
we're recognized as being ones
wbo have fought for our country. Whether we liked it or not,
we went over there. That's the
point.
"slack
were in that
war. I think after they have
come out, they want every right
and every freedom that every
white person has on this campus. But they're ignored."
By design or ignorance?
"It's definitely igno,nonCe."
Ed feels, however ~t "Black
~le _.., teared' more in the
military than they are bere. AU
or a sudden you had an inllux
or
drafted
being put together---sleeping together, esting together - whiCh (doesn't
hsppeD) in normatoociety. You
had that fear.develop. You can't
force people to come together.
''I don't think black G.L's
hate white people any more in
service than they do here."
Do blacks regard the ..relaxed
authority and ·increased fn!e..
dom in the University dilferently than in the military?
"' don't consider the campus

wterans

-Je

- ~ts!Htall;~~
black people. Black - k i really don't !&lt;now what fn!edom is.
Freedom is one thing I couldn't
comment on. I don't know what
freedom is."

questions about the form of the
presentation did not allow answers.
Strotchlnc •nd Stnolnlnc

I suppose that if a multi-media

show can evoke in a person a

feeling or privacy - deprivation
and mske him aware of certain
things which he normally would
not question, then it has a
point. MEM-BRAIN I failed
to have this point.

The walls or the tent served
as rear projection screens for
a variety of slides, an arrangement which has remarkably exlor • Dltdl
pressive )XJ68ibilities. 'The fact . Without a written expt.ruu.that the audience-member is
surrounded by pictures allows tion of how the presentation is
the artist to carry realism to to be understood, one would
extremes impossible to achieve have no ides as to how pictures
on one flat ares, and the emo- of a nude girl in her bedroom
tions which can be evoked with fit in with the later pictures of
such realism are of a unique Bertrand Russ e II (warning
tYPe. In ordinary life, or course, us? ). The description at the
there are always things to see beginning promises an intereston all sides of us but we don't ing event: Fisher, however, was
find ourselves constsntly ~tat­ incapable or translating the
ing oo as not to miss anything. written words into pictures for
During the time spent in MEM- the environmental structure, beBRAIN I everyone felt com- cause, I think, he never asked
pelled to stretch and strain his himself what would be the best
neck to an unendurable degree. medium for the expression of
But there was no aesthetic effect his ideas, or even whether his
accomplished by this constsnt ideas were actually worth precraning. Rather, it is clesr tliBt senting. He assumed that if he
Fisher does not know how to built an unusual projection enput images in such an order vironment, he could put any
that one's visual attention is pictures on the walls, because
drawn in one direction rather being surrounded by changing
pictures is exciting in itself.
than another.
'The first projection was a But he is wrong. The pictures
will
be exciting only if the
slide with a written explanstion or .the plot and structure ideas they express cannot be
presented
in any simpler way.
of the event. It seems that a
girl is undressing in her room Fisber jumped on a bandwagon
Chaaldle fDHt. .., . , Shlomo C.rWiech. Sunday
that
will
end
up in a ditch by
when raped and carried off by
a technologicsl insect, which the side or the road if events
represents the attsck on our like MEM-BRAIN I are taken !Continuecl from page 8, col. 5) 1300 Elmwood Ave., through Deprivacy by the advanced com- by the public to be represent&amp;cember 30. Hours: weekdays, 10
CON~: A Sampler of Early
munications media. This is a . tive of multi-media.
a.m.·4 :30 p.m. and Sundays, 1-5
American Mu.sic under the dj. p.m.; closed Saturdays.
--G.R.W.
ressona!&gt;IY hackneyed idea, but
rection of Lejaren Hiller. Baird,

-ni-

WeeklyConuminique-

GREPORTS .
_Q N

director, Creative

Craft Center, drawing accepted
for exhibition at the AnnUal Re-

~~b!s~~i':fi~d ofrJr~~t;;:

gy.

DB. ROBERT 1 . GRAHAM ,

associate

::deem:~~:~:, ~~a:;,~~

sultant to National Library Week
Committee, New York State Library Association.

AWARDS
JOHN

a.

ADAMS,

graduate student,

music history, baa been awarded
a scholarship, made possible by
the ·e state of the late Anna C.
Garrabee. Mr. Adams will study
ethnomusioology with an empha-

sis on Black Culture.

Group for Muskie
Is Now Forming
A Western New York chapter
of "Academia! for Muskie" is
now being formed with an organizational meeting slated for
Wednesday, December 15, at
3:30 p.m_ in 14 Diefendorf Annex.
Dr. L. Vaughn Blankenship,
associate professor, politics! science, is acting chairman or the

~':,{·is·~~~=~
ing membership c.- other ares

colleges and universities. Tbe
locsl chapter will work closely
with .the national "Academics
for Muskie" organization which
is headquartered in Rochester.
Other members of the steering committee are: Robert
Sandberg, politics! scienq; acting secretsiy; B. Richard Bu· ge~ski,
s y-c: hoI o.g y; JamesBlackhurst, summer sessipns;
and Mike Milstein, educational
administration.

L. J. KIEMENTOWSKI and R. J . H. 30 p.m., tree.
BRucE, undergraduate students, CHA.BSmtC CBANUKAH BOOK PAlll• :
chemical engineering, shared the '""' Wednesday listing.
second prize in the Lever Brothers Undergraduate Research Con- INTERVIEWS
test of the CoUoid Surface Chemistry Pivision.
ON--CAMPUS JOB JNT'ERVIEWS : The
EDWARD MERTZLUFFT, senior, chem- on·campus interviewing program,
ical engineering, was presented running through December 17 in
the annual $1 ,000 AUied Chem- the fall semester and from Janu·
ical Foundation Scholarship ·
in
Chemical Engineering.
for individual interviews w i t h
educational, business, industrial
ON CAMPUS
and governmental repreJent.ative:J.
APPOINTMEmS
Candidates from aU degree levels
CAfu. T. ANDFJtSON, assistant chair- are invited to interview whethe r
man and assistant professor, phy- they will complete their course
sical therapy. elected to repl;lce work in January or May 1972.
Dr. Vandon White as a Health Registration forms are .available
Sciences representative to t.be from University Placement and
Career Guidance. Hayes Annex C.
Faculty Senate.
THU&amp;SDAY-9: Albany L aw
DR. HAJUEY E. FLACK, assistant School.
d ea n and assistant professor,
FBJDAY-10 : Cornell Aeronaut·
Health Related Professions, ap·
pointed by the Executive Com· ical Lab. Inc.; Investors Diven;i mittee of the Faculty Senate as fied Services.
MONDAY-13: General Electric
a member of the Senate Commit·
Co.
• tee on ·Student' Affairs.
DR. NORMAN HOSTETTER, assistant
WEDNESDAY-15 : Union Carbide
director, admissions, appointed to Corp.; Niagara Mohawk Power
the Chancellor's Advisory Com· Corp.; General Telephone Co.
mittee on Admissions.

:C%e!.'t.e~ :1e~ ~e ~=r~~~W;

EXHIBITS

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

RETROSPI}C'['IVE: VIRClNlA CUTHBEBT
AND PHILIP ELLIOTT, a Community

DR. MONTE BLAU, research professor, biophysical sciences, chosen

~~tft~lllo~~J::~~~hl!

president-elect, Society of Nuclear
Medicine.
SHONNIE FINNroAN, University a r.
chivist.. appointed to the Com·

tr~~n ~~~: t9~2°~:0~r:~

Tribute Exhibit -

in honor of

wife Virginia Cuthbert, nationally known painter. The exhibition,
made possible by the generous
assistance or a few community
friends, will emphasize m a j o r
works by the two a r tists, supplemented w i t h selected sketches
and minor works of unusual in.
teresL The Charles Burcblield
Cente•. SUCB, RockWeU Hall,

Committee, Society ' of American
Archivists.
DR. Tin"RM.AN S. CR/,FTON, chair·
man, laboratory animal science,
has been elected president of the
American Society of Laboratory
Animal Practitioners.
The Office or Financial Aid
GERALD 1. MlL[.Eft, assistant dean. is now distributing financial asSchool of Social Policy and Com· sistance applications for the
munlty Services, elected president 1972-73 academic year.
of 'Ingleside Home.
Students may obtain forms at
DR. 0. KENNETH WILSON, professor, the office, which is locsted in
speech oom.municatio~ and DR. 216 Harriman Library.
ROBERT &amp;. McGLONE, associate pro·
C ompleted applies tions
fe.ssor, s pee c b communication, (Form U/ B) are to be returned
were elected FelloWs of the Amer- to the Financial Aid Oftice not
. ican Speech and Hearing Association during the annual conven· later than March 1, 1972. Financial statements will be retion.

Aid Applications

LffiRARY EXHffiiTS
P'ERMANENT EXHIBIT of works by

Robert Graves and James Joyce,
Room 207, Lockwood Library, 9
a .m..·5 p.m.
WJLLIA.M BURROUGHS exhibit. 2nd
Ooor balcony, Lockwood Libnuy.
works by the
NobeJ Laureate poet, Room 207,
Lockwood Library.

PABLO NERUDA -

NOTICES
CHANUKKAII candles and menorahs
.are being distributed by Hillel to
students and members of the University community. If interested,
stop at the Hillel table or come
to the Hillel House.
GRADUA'n'! STUDENTS: Have you
missed Nov. 16 deadline for tuition waivers? Get them in IM·
MEDIATELY.
INDIA ASSOClAnON OP BUFFALO

is

holding an essay competition offering two prizes for the best
written e sa a y s. Competition is
open to all. Topic: CnsU in In·

dian Sub·Contin.ent. E888y should

!:t
,!nfutthpas;'! ~~bl~ ~
or typewritten. No entry fee. A
0

panel of three judges will 8.MEIII8
work and judges• deciaicfn i.a final
Last date for submiaaion: lanu·
ary 10, 1972. Submit entrieo to
The Secretary, India Association
of Buffalo, 46 Collins Walk, Buffalo, N.Y. 14215.
Also, painting contest open to
all children below the age
12
years. Groub I -up to 5 yean of

or

P~~r:~freel!n~ ~ 1::

picting child's own originality and
thought may be submittA!d. Only
one entry per child
be ac·
cepted. There is no entry fee.
Judges' ·decision is final. Last date
for submission: January 10, 1972.

will

'f::ri~":how~ =t ~f! C

tary, India Association of Bufralo, 46 Collins Walk. Buffalo,
N.Y. 14215.

. .

INDlA AS8001A.nON OF BUFFALO is

c:J:d:"~=~~.=
::=t
~res~&amp;~:v~ Pln:)
873-1305 or Mr. H.. Dayal (716)
894-3232 at your earliest conven·
ienoe.

rosmoNs IN ZAMBIA: His Excelquired in all cases, and these Ieney, Unia G. Mwila, ambaasador
are to be completed and·sent to from ZambiJ! to~ United States,
.
the Coil- Scbolarshi_p S.,.,ice. _ wishes to . mleJ;V•ew prospective
r~IILJ:,\NCALO~:g.-adwlto otudant,....nof later ihmf Feb
1- =-r- .eOOndary' teachen for positions
b•ocberrustry, Cheaucal CompoIns
.
la"!MY · . .
in Zambia Ambassador Mwila
sition of Suntlow~r .See4 Hulls," will be~ons re tive to fllmg will hold ·a public information
Jou;Ml . of ~menoon Oil Chen&gt;. !Ound appended to the sessi&lt;¥f on Thursday, Oecember 9,
IBlB SocU!ty.
application packet
in Norton 340 at 8:30 p.m..

PUBLICATIONS

�~9,191J

8
POa:IGN IT'UDCNT {':I()WD

aoua••:

2nd floor TOWDMDd, 4-6 p.m., all

w.l..-.
AT Cli.&amp;BAD•:
Servioea
and meal, Cbabad Houoe, 3232
Main St., 6 p.m.
BABBA'I'H J..T ~ ·: Dinner, 6

&amp;ADA.'I'B

~ ~~Prin~.

8

r..=:

/;.':"
Marmt Diolotw. Oner Shahbat
to follow. Hillel Hoooe, 40 Capen
Blvd.
FILK ••: Gate of HeU (Japaneae.,

~~1!~~ hA::~:-~·bel~~

~~dbep~,o~:~ra~~;:

tival. Walt Disney films will aloo
be shown. Sponoored tiy loter·
nationel Student Aflairo, Student
Association.. 147 Diefendorf, 6 :30-

1
~~o~·Tid:ts9~~ J~~nS·~j:t

Office.

St. Bonaventure, Clark Gym, 6: 30 p.m.

FRESHMAN BASKETBALL• :

INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING:

In-

struction in basic steps during
first hour, 30 D iefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
PLAY •: The lnuutitation, presented by' Student Auociation and
Student Theatre Guild, written
by Peter Weiss, directed by Stev·
en Adler, technical director, D avid Dean. Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.,
general admission $1.00, students,
$.50. Also, Sat., Dec. 11 and Sun.,
Dec. 12.
This play is based on the wartime trial of 22 Auschwi tz guards
and is an indictment of not only
wa r c riminals but of all humanity.
VARSITY BASKETB..U.L • : Ohio Northern, Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m.
FILM •: Z~ see Thursday listing,
also Sat., Dec. 11.
FtLM.••: Afo Nuit Chez Maud

t~~ ifo~'::.er)' ~:r::~:ranc:~

a tre, check showcase for times,
facul ty and staff $1.25, s tudents
$.75 or $.50 before 6 p.m. Through
S un., Dec. 12.
The most popular of Rohmer 's
"Moral Tales" is third in his pro·llOsed series of six, and d eals with

~~~'::hg ~~~~b~~~tft~ ad~~

in love with one woman , meets a
beautiful young divorcee de termined to seduce him. ThiS absolutely beautiful film won a n academy award for Best Foreign Film.

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to public;
••Open to members of the University;
•Open only to IMM with • protesslonol interest In the subject
Contoct Suunne Mebpr, 831·2228, for llstinp.
lionary Tale. Ill Hochstetler, 4
p.m.

THURSDAY-9
ll'fiULATIOIJ

TBiaAPY 'NU:PBONE

~!~r &amp;6,.~nfra~:U:::d

0

Ji~o~lowM~' ~= ~t

receivirlg otalioDB, tel. 835-0728
for information. 11 :30 a.m.
KANAGIBL\L AND 8t1PERV1SORY DE-

va.GI'IIENT '!"ELEPBONJ: u::crtrBE#:

Keith W. Spnmger, Theodore
Stone, John S~en, Your

~~:::::so:: b~Rep~~~::r.
=-.~-0~~~'1:for!::
lion, 1:30 p.m.

l25TB ANNrvERSARY DlSTINGUISBED
VIBmNG UDCTtriiDl •: Dr. Richard

Bellman. profesaor of mathemat·
ico, electrical engineering and
medicine, University of Soutbem
Calilomia, Mathematic. and Med~iM. 147 Diefendorf, 2 p.m.

~MPUTING CENTER USER SERVICES
SEMINAR#: Advone&lt;d COBOL,
Russell Goldberg, ins tructor,
Room 10, 4233 Ridge Lea, 7 p.m.
FILM • •: Beauty and the Beast
(1946, Jean CocU!au, French) , 1~7

DiyjjthdJ~8J'~~~~tte Day

and Marcel Andre. A classic version of a classical fantasy, ren·
dered skillfully dreamlike by Jean
Cocteuu's daring special efrects
and familiar (Orpheus) themes.
PILl(*·:
sponsored by Commun-

SATURDAY-11
services and
refreshments, 9:30 a.m . Melauah
Molkoh pa-rty, music, conversa tion, re£reshments, Chabad Hou.&amp;e,
3292 Main S t., 8 p.m.
.
FENCING • : Binghamton, C 1 a r k
Gym, 12:30 p.m.
SENIOR IWCITAL*: David SU88man,
guitar, Baird, 3 p.m.
Program: Guiliani Sonata in C ,
Op. 15; Bach Lute Suite No . 2 in
D minor; ViUa-Lobos Etude• No.
1, 4 , 8 and 11; Britten Nocturnal,
Op. 70; Ca.stelnuovo Tedesco Tarantella.
HILLEL .ACTMTIES: T o ro h with
Commentaries, Rabbi Hofmann's
home, 12 Col ton Drive, 3:30 p.m.
Operat-ion Greenli1ht, c 1 o s 1 n g
fun ction, Hillel House, S p.m.
/8 PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE• : Jan
Williams. d i rector; featurin~
SABBATH AT CB.ABAD •:

z.
1
C:Ct!fov=:"~~~hBa'\"~
~~d 's~np~:75t :nfributi~n~ Recital Hall, 8 :30 p.m.
Allen Sigel, professor of music.

Tickets in advance and at showtime, Norton Ticket Office. Also
on Dec. 10 and 11.
A great pacifist leader is struck

g~ ~:~~~i~kih:~r~

ficial police report of aocidental

will be clarinet soloist in SvenErik Back's Fovola. The U/ B
Percussion Ensemble, a creditgranting course, ofTen students,
both nlusic and non -music majors,
the opportunity to perform several times each season. Members

Ri"ii ~:t_ 261 Swon, 3-9 p.m.,

pub~";"
will
typical ~dancinc

=

include a
and a cuJ.

ENGINI:IIUNG 125TH
AlfHIVD8A&amp;Y SIDON A&amp;• : Dr. A. G.

em Ontario, The Interaction of
Wind and Buildins•. 104 Parker,
: : J~o~:m..relreshments, 134 Parker,
TlmOD'ftCAL

BIOLOGY

SDaNA&amp;• :

~~io=~~~hy~~

with hieran:bical proporties,

COil·

=:ft
f{:"'d!:!.:rt.::il;:
4U8 Ridce La, 4 p.m., refJ'eob.

....... 3: 30p.m.

DJCii&amp;IOIIWi BDIINAa#: Dr. J.
lhudto, c:bemiotry, Uniwnity of
Ma••ac:hueetta. Con{ormatlonol
Suulia on Riboluu!'- A , G-22

~·-8

...,... AJID MftOHOKY C0U.0.

=~

J-.rs::::ri.t'Z:.

-~ Seduclivc and c-.

U/B OltCIDS1'IIA. •: Pamela Gear-

:..": condue!&lt;&gt;r. Baird, 8 :30 p .m .,
Worlts by Saint.-Saeno, Vivaldi,
Bartok, Debuloy, Stravinsky, Sibelius.

FRIDAY-10

::~da;'fi.J:.Jat at Maud's,

SUNDAY-12
ConverBGtionaJ
Hebrew (advanced), 262 Norton,
P";.._tJlmud clau, Hillel
BLA.CX: .urn W.&amp;l'l'l: A8T8 I'EB'TIVAL
PUY ".: The Me Nobody Know•.
Studio A
·
red
BILl.EL Acnvm&amp;8 :

IDiliCDIAL -cmDolnaT IIDIINAK# :

S. Gurwan, graduata otudent,
Adenyl CyelDoe and Hormorwl
Recepk&gt;n, 246 Health S c i 2p.m.

--tia,

and Frank Scinta, piano.

--·=

lli:.:.-'3

12linl ..,..._.... lllllm&lt;CIJIIIBm by
~
Dr.

9JII"'IMG

Ricbant - . ~r of
.a..c:trbl .,.;-r-

BAW~68'f'= ·~~ : 30

!'.,"';'~~~=~

:--s::1.~ ~u~ :::~~ !&gt;eMflt intagrate'i...., Qooa4ratic::

p.m.,-

n.lllocl

for

Syotea ldenli/lccfion, 6 ""'-on,

2

PUia'fO aCAM CIDI81'MA8 CULTUUL
PKOGK.\JI 0 : oponoored by the
i'uerto, Rican community, Puerto

NUDINQ

Ta.I:PBONW:

l&amp;TOD# :

Mila Arooka.r and Mory Brock·

PWfi"':"~~~~: ~u:or; ~':!.!,."':if: nc::;
members of the Puerto R i c a n
community and rep.reeentativea ~:ff!d ·~~ ~ Rec!&lt;&gt;!W
from the Justice Department.
Shlomo
Carlebach in a Chanukah concert,

CHASBJDfC l'OLK. . SINGIR• :

1tationa, ~836---:o72s for=:=
lion, 1: 30-2: 30 p.m.

FILJI••: Jida Ortd Jim (1961,

~rf~";:'.:YF~~ ~e!Di.:.-:::: b;':f:!'.io~ ~-~~ln.:.47

l:ero, students with LD. carda $.50;
general admission su~o. Tickets
at Norton Ticket Office and a t
the door.

w~~~~t!;'"b~ o~Ifrr!"r

~Shf~m~~rl!ba~:eu~~~

Chassidic folk -singer. Carlebach is
billed as a singer of &lt;llassidic
BOngs, but his performances take
on the charactet of a fervent religioua celebration in which both
young and old get caught up. Like
the Chaooidic rabbis, Carlebach

~r!,~~f:~~~'or~

C T T[:;

me1ody starts slowly,
gradually volume and tempo rise. 'Ille

::ti~==
os:e~ =~·~~"f!
rer:ch a frenzied cre3Cendo.

Ca rlebach has performed in
practically every state and city
from Toronto to London, Paris,
Rome, and Jerusalem.

EVENING

FOR NEW MUSic•:

Al-

bright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30
p.m ., general admission $2.00, students $1.00. Tickets at Gollery
door or a t Norton Ticket Office.
ProC: Comonance by Ma-

~i'et;'- :J,=~

0

6/&lt;f.!'::i ~i:

glariail; La Moutons ch.Ponurge,
by Frederic Rrewaki ; C•lla Sonato and ThN!e Short Pieces by

~~~:;;}:~~~~a.='t'u!::: ~~!~

certo fo r Piano and S euen In struments by Robert E rickson
(Roger Shields, pianist) .
U/ 8 SYMPHONY BAND* : Frank J .
CipoUa, director, third ia a series
of concerts devoted tD wind litera ture. Goodyear Hall, 8 :30 p.m.,
free, public invited.
Program : Ae1eon Festiual Ouerture by Andreas Makris; Variants
on a Medieval Tune by Norman
Delio Joio; Little Drummer B oy,
a rranged by Lee Lovallo; Chorale
by Vlaclav Nelhybel; Reflections
by Roger ·Nixon; two marches by
Sousa - Hands AcroBB the Sea
and George Wo.shin1ton B i CentenniaL

~;~da:'risJ::~h t at Maud's,

MONDAY-13

=.·~~~Q.~
b'::~e~{ ~d
Vampyr (1923, German), 147
Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
COMPlmNG CENTr.a USER SERVICES

SEMINAR#: NYBMUL, Dr. Jeremy 'Finn, instructor, Room 10,
4233 Ridge Lea, 7-9 p.m.

Dr. Finn, author of the NYB-

MUL program, will discuoo its
use for analysis of variance problems, with one or more dependent
variables, equal or unequal ends.
It is reoommended that attendee3
obtain a copy of the NYBMUL
(Version 4) · documentation for
use in class.. The Documentation
Center at 4250 Ridge Lea ae.Us
such documentation for $1.00.
HILLEL CLASS: Conversational Hebrew (elementary), 262 Norton,
•7-p.m.
UNGUlSTJCS ux:TUBE•: Dr. Ma deJ ~ine. M_athiot. associate professor,
hngw..stics, Textual Analysi.B, 404
Hayes. 7-8 p.m.
CRASSIDIC CATBEIUNG• : Prof. Jiv-

::.~~j~~::·ts ~:tr::~
~~bHuJ:n~:;e,:ev:- ~=~
~n=.~:~~n~~ sky, Warren Levy, William Rog. ~g:~~~J:~h~. &lt;;in~, ~~~
~ f:f:""w~~!i and
Irene PappBB.
.
en, Lamar Ren!ord, Larry Stein, ~:o:ru ~!; Ch!t!:'JriJ~:!Laboratory, u&gt;'mveraity of WestMichael WeUen, Andrew ZieiDba
JOCJimCJ.L

1tationa. tel 836-0728 for information, 11 :30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

T h i • is the kind of film lor
which Truflaut is loved by many,

~ w~rewlo;:b:: cfe~d:~

on the moment. With Jeanne
Moreau, O.kar Werner and Henri

Serre.

o:n.u:L CLASS:

Begiruur• Hebrew,

262 Norton , 12 noon. Jewim Ethic•; 262 Norton, 1 p.m. Ctuatl.k
Lightirrf Ceremony on bebaU of
R uaian Jewry at Temple Beth
El; cars'" will leave from Hillel
House, 40 Capen Blvd., 6:30 p.m.
FRESBJ4..\N BASJD:I'BALl.•: St. Bonaventure, Clark Gym, 6:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-IS
CIIABSlDIC CllANUK.\B BOOK PAIR•:

The Chahad House under the direction of Merkos L'Inyonei Chiouch, the Central Organi.zation
for Jewiah Education, will have

fe~~~~dm~e=~. f~~
periodicals
0

tD

visual teaching aids

!:~~ ~~ ~~a-Luba~ur-~

sidic philosophy, J ewish law and
e thics. Chabad Howe, 3292 Main
.Sl, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., public invited.
AlsO on Thurs., Dec. 16.
PHYSICIANS TELEl"HONE LEC'l'URE#:

Cancer Oncology Conference-Or.
Doneld P. Shedd and Dr. Kumao
Sako, Vocationa l and Speech #Rehabilitation of the Laryngecto-

~~~:. ~!!!~ sr~r:. ~ Rr::

ceiving stations, tel. 835-0728 for
information, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
DIETETICS TELEPHONE LECTURE# :

Dr. Jack Gold, You r Questions on
Current Pedia tric Practice in In fan t Feedin1, sponsored by Regional Medical Prog ram , 40 receiving sta tions, tel. 835-0728 for
information, 2-8 p.m.
PSYCBOMAT•• : f ree-f o r m comm unication for pe r a onal i ty
growth, Fillmore Room, 3-5 p.m.,
all welcome. ·
ECONOMICS SEMINAR: Prof. James
M . H olmes, economics, The International Intervention Storuiard: A Fire d Exchange-Rate
Standard Stabilized by Autonomou.t Fi.Bcol Policy Change s$
Room 24, 4224 Ridge Lea, 3:30
p .m. Coffee h our, Room 9, 3 p.m.
UNGUISTJCS LIX.'TURE•: Dr. David
Hayes, p r o f e s s o r, linguistics,
Focru for lnte1ration$ 404 Hayes,
7: 30-9:50 p.m.
WBC£-PM : Mruical lnnouatioru,
featuring Julius Eastman, instructor of music and a member of the
Creative Aaaociates. Mr. Eastman
diBCWBeB his October trip to Israel w h e r e he performed the

~~i~:te~~~ua ~~~~

the Tel Aviv Philharmonic Orchestra and Zubin Metah, 9:05
p.m .
FJLM••: La Chute ck lo MaUon
Usher (French, Jean Epstein) ,
check Room 261 for time and
place of ohowing.

THURSDAY-16
rHAKJIA.CY 'n!LEPBONJ: I..D:.TUD:# :

E sther Eddy and Gregory M .
Chudzik, Some Clinical A•poct•
of Pediatric DolltJ8U, spoiUIOred
by Re_gionel Medical Program, 40
reoeivmg 1tations, tel. 8354728
for information, 11 : 30 a.m..-12:30
p.m. and 10·11 p.m.
BIOCBE.M:IS'I'RY AND CUNICAL

C~

3292 Main St., 8 p.m.
' IBTBY BEMINAR : Dr. F . Hocb, p " "
feasor of internal medicine and
FRENCH LEC'l'URE• : Gerard Genette, French critic and author :rol~~g:w:~ i eU.ni;:rai,Z
Valery et Ia Poetiqru du Lan~ Mechanism of A ction of Thyroid
10
Hormone, G-.22 Capen. 4 p.m.
••: S ylvi4 and the Phantom
~!~;.' ~Ecof: ~=qu~di: PILM
(1946, French, Claude Autant,.
currently a visiting profeuor at Lara) , 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.,
New York UniYeroity. He is au- free.
thor of Fi1uru and Filuru-11.
Autant-Lara'o lint film (altar
CON&lt;ZRT•: Slee Beethouen Cycle working in the industry 20 yean)
Vl/'Ihe Cleveland Quartet, Baird wa made during the occupation,
Hall, 8 :30 p.m., ticke!'" oold out. is written about very little, and
hao until only recently, t-o UD·

~iof:=~:·! o~~ fa~­

TUESDAY-14

(;.~..I'd

e. ~~b.......t:!!

PRYBlCW&lt;&amp;-.rBOII&amp;LIIC'I'IJD# : a young ~rl of lixteen who fallo
Dr. Cedric M . Smith, &amp;tiorwl
Co r e Sy•tem. for AlcohoU.m,
Part. U, opoooored by Regional charming fantaBy.
Modical Program, 40 ._iving (Continued on _ . 7, col. 4)

!1.~":. 'T::U)~ fli:~ ~:.:n.~

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 3- NO. ·ll

NOV. 18, 1971

Student Services Face
SUNY Funding Cutback
A still gloomier fiscal picture probably extend to the Student
for SUNY with accompanying Health Sj&gt;rvices and the State
cutbacks in stUdent services subsidy of dormitory telefunds was outlined for the Fac- phones.
ulty Senate Executive CommitAfter meeting with the Chantee this week by Senate Chair- cellor, Baumer met with Senate .
man William H. Baumer as chairmen from the three other
Vice President for Academic University Centers. They
Affairs Bernard Gelbaum alert- formed an informal group to
ed the group to "abuses" in work on common interests withind€;&gt;endent study courses.
in the Senate Professional AsBaumer was in Albany last sociation (SPA).
week for a meeting of all faculThe Executive Conunittee
ty senate chairmen with .Chan- also listened to Gelbaum discellor Ernest Boyer. At this cuss violations of uacartemic
meeting, Boyer told the group protocol." The vice president
tbat the imbalanoed State budget will probably be corrected
THANKSGIVING BREAK
by taking money from State
agencies. He estimated that 35 The Reporter will not be published
per cent of the State budget next week because of the Thanks·
goes to these agencies and that givi ng recess. We will resume pub·
the single institution receiving lication Thursday, December 2.
most of these funds is SUNY.
The Chancellor warned the feels tbat there are problems
chairmen not to expect any re- with the independent study
lief in the 1973-74 budget, system as well as diacre'pancies
·either. Revenues are going up between catalog course desby only three per cent while criptions and what is actually
expenses are going up by about taught He pointed out, too,
that courses may change over
seven, he said.
the years from what was origStudent Setvlces Cut
inally approved but that there
Reductions in the SUN'i is no reevaluation mechanism
budget will probably come rrom to pick this up. In diacussina;
reducing State funding of stu- lhese occurrences, G e 1 b a u m
ilen~ seMoes. .In ,the future, if
made it clear tbat this is not
students __ want these _services, - an administrative matter and
t!Jey ' Will have to fund them, that he wants the laculty to
the Chancellor said. This will consider the situation. The matter was referred to the .Senate's
Conunittee on Educational
Planning and Policy.
The Executive Committee
also referred the Senate's mo.
tion to define "academic cfis..
honesty" to the ad hoc Academic Integrity Conunittee
Measures to combat gam- chaired by Dr. Claude Welch.
bling in the Rathskeller have They set up another ad hoc
been adopted by the campus committee to review the SenAlcohol Review Board, Dr. An- ate's grievance prooedures and
thony F. Lorenzetti, associate bring them into compliance
vice president, student affairs, with the SPA contract and the
announced this week.
President's guidelines. ChairAccording to Lorenzetti, "It man·of this group is Dr. George
appears that the combined Levine and committee members
Norton staff-Norton House are Drs. Arthur Butler, Lee
Council decision to close the Preston, William Baumer and
card room affected subsequent Professor Robert Fleming.
card playing and gambling so
to cause it to move from the 20 Unes for Women
card room to the Rathskeller.
Turning to other matters, the
Card playing in the Rathskeller Executive Committee learned
is not prohibited in the student that the President's Conunittee
rulPS and regulations. However, on the Recruitment and Promogambling in a licensed area is (Continued on page 3, coL 1)
illegal and consequently could
jeopardize the continuance of
the University's liquor license.
Therefore, the matter clearly
fell. under the jurisdiction of
the Alcohol Review Board."
That board has unanimously
Don't make your airline resauthorized the following:
ervations or other plans for
1. Upon detection of gam- the year-&lt;!lld holiday r e c e s s
bling in the Rathskeller, the based on, the tentative exam
sale of beer will be inrmediate- schedule printed in the Fall
ly discontinued, as has been the -Class SchedUle.
policy in the past.
It's been changed, according
2. The Food Service staff
will approach and advise al- to Jack Volkert, Division of
leged gamblers that gambling Scheduling and Inventory, Of_;s illegal and is prohibited in fice of Facilities Planning.
the Rathskeller area.
Volkert saya a new schedul3. If the gambling persists, ing prooedure has been insti- ·
the necessary enforcement tUted which will minimize consteps are to be taken including flicts. The new schedule will 'be &gt;
calling the campus police, if mailed to the Division of Unnecessary.
dergrsduate Studies, academic
4. Persons found in violation departments and dormitories
of the law are to be brought be- prior to the Thanksgiving refore the appioprilt_te tribunal.
cess, he saya.
- 5. Signa are to 6e pc;sted to
Schedules will be posted on
this effect in the Rathskeller
and the University community first floors of most academic
will be reminded of this reg- buildings, Norton Union and
large -dormitories.
ulation.

Rathskeller

Gambling Ban

Exam Schedule

Is Being ChangPd

�---18,D7J

2

15 Ibsitions
Reserved for
Minorities
This year the provosts have
again set aside faculty lines to
be filled by minority candidates. The practice is being
continued after last year's use
of an experimental formula
which allowed departments to
have an extra line if they hired
a minority candidate. However, that plan, developed by
the former acting vice president for academic affairs, Dr.
Daniel Murray, led to the hir·
ing of only three candidates.
The year before 20 lines were
allocsted and 26 minority faculty and staff members were
hired.
The process to be followed
this year will ''make it easy for
departments to engage in af.
firmative action," Will Brown,
director of minority faculty and
staff recruitment, says. The 15
lines allocated are in a University-wide pool and can be used
by any department.

FOZ

Ballet Doesrit Have to Be Boring-

As tile JarMO Cunnlncham Company's out Saturday nllht- First, they - . . trul8d to a , . _ ~
and snake dance. Then the Company on to a satirical
performance of the ballet-parody, "The First Family. Walt Dis·
ney •nd Isadora Dunean," fofk:Jwed by "Uwen's err.m." Cun·
·nlncham and his Aane Dance Company _,. at U/8 for three
days

The Committee on Uhiversity-wide Faculty and Staff Recruitment is looking for people
who will fill "the needs or minority group students that tend
to be overlooked or subordinated." They are interested in
Changes and clarifications in
people "because they are black,
and secondarily because they the locsl Step I grievance procedures,
outlined in September
are scholars," Brown explains.
The Committee defines minor- as required by the State's conity group members as " Black, tract with the Senate ProfesAmerican Indian, Chicano, and sional Association &lt;SPA ), have
been adopted as a result of a
Spanish-speaking peoples."
meeting this week between
If a department is consider- President Robert Ketter and
ing a candidate who they feel me m b e r ti of the Executive
will fill these criteria, they may Board of the Buffalo Center
request a line, in writing, from SPA Chapter . IThe Health
Dr. Nicholas Gamer, chairman Sciences SPA Executive Comof the University.wide Minority mittee has also accepted the
Faculty and Staff Recruitment changes.)
Committee. Included in the reAlso attending the meeting
quest should be the anticipated were Dr. William Bauiner,
rank, wnether it will be a joint chsirman of the U/ B Faculty
appointment, full or part-time, Senate, and Dr. Norman He&gt;and any. other pertinent infor- stetter, chairman of the locsl
mation. Accompanying this re- State University Professional
~t should be the credentials
Association (SUPA ).
of the candidate and a supportThe four-part agreement
in¥ statement from the appro- (with changes in italics ) is as
pnate provost or dean.
follows:
l. All grievances shall be filed
When the candidate com\":
the appropriate form with
on campus to be interviewed on
the University President, who
by the department, the Univer- shall forward faculty grievances
sity-wide Committee w o u I d to the chairman of the Faculty
aiJto like to see him.
Senate, and staff grievances to
The Recruitment Committee the chairman of SUPA.
2. A grievance review comwill also send out vitas on
qualified candidates to depart- mittee shall be impaneled and
shall hold its ini.li41. meeting
~ts with openings. These
credentials are to be sent "with- within seven ( 7) days of the
out evaluation, comment or !:,':~dent's receipt of the ~V'recommen&lt;lation." The Com. 3. The presentstion of documittee· anticipates the department will evaluate the candi- mentsJ:y evidence and witnessdate em the basis of scholar- es to the grievance review comship and departmental needs. mittee shall be completed wilhTbi!n, if the department is in- in .huenly-&lt;&gt;n;e (21) days of the
terested, the Committee will mu~al meetmg of the commitlook al the candidate's refer- tee.
4. Upon completion of l'reences in regard to "the needs
sentstion of evidence and witof minority group students."
nesses, the committee shall adOnce a minority line is re- journ the hearings to a time
leased to a department, the line and place to be sel This time
can stiU revert to the Commit- shall be no later than fourteen
tee until the person on the line (14) days from the date of the
receives tenure. 'Ibis way, completion of the presentation.
s,.., explains, the "line will During this tim&lt;;, the commitcontinue to be uaed for minor- tee shall review tne record and
ity candidate&amp;" In addition, compile its rel"'fl If the amthe Committee must be noti- mittee determines that further
fied, in writing, of all chang... hearinr are necessary, they
in the employment status of s h a I immediatelr. be scbeduled. The conmuttee review
~· person occupying the line.
ends with committee approval
Currently, Brown says, there of ill! report, such approval w
are 47 minority faculty mem- OCCIU' within the aforuaid fourbers. Within the next f i v e tun ( 14) t/ay•.
years, the . Committee would
Grievance fonns are available
like to see 150 lines conlmitted from SPA grievance chairmen:
to minority faculty recruitment. Dr. Constailtine Yeracaris
This way, the Committee can (EEl 7-1635).\.~o Center·
"act 88 a catalyst to insure Dr. Willard Euiott (Ext. 2726)'
(that) the &amp;ue of minority Health Sciences.
'
hirinl is nU.d to a OOII8Cious
Dr. Yeracaris made this fur.
lew!l and acted upcJII in a posi- ther ~tement 011 the piav.
tive fashion within atniX.W.7 anoe -...:

last- to conduct~

a-~

,._..._and -

Ketter, SPA Agree on C~e
. . in Grievance Rules
"Some questions have been campus consist of the followraised recently on the implica- ing:
"(1 ) those outlined ,by Prestion of the signed Agreement
between OER and SPA con- ident Ketter in the Reporter
cerning SUNY, especially on issue of September 23, 1971,
grievanres. The firm position of Page 2. These are to be folthe locsl SPA has been the rec- lowed when a formal grievance
ognition of peer evaluation ru; is filed with the President (diessential both at the infom18l rectly or through the SPA ) for
as well as at the so-called Step · the so-referred to Step I. Time
I leveL Peer evaluation consti- limits as agreed to by the Prestutes a hard fought for condi- ident and SPA are included in
tion Within a collegiate model this isSue of the Reporter.
essential for achieving excel"(2) Prior to this filing there
lence in an institution of higher is a period of 45 days within
learning. The long standing ac- which a grievance may be pre&gt;complishments of SUNYAB in cessed and hopefully resolved.
t h i s respect congtitute, with Mechanisms available are: (a)
some improvements in certain .the department-Faculty-Senate
areas,
desirable model-one grievance committees for teachthat the locsl SPA will fight to ing professionals apd the grievpreserve at all costs. It is grati- ance committee for professionfying in this respect to recog- als. (b) The Ombudsman's
nize that our President and his services. (c) Informal deliberacabinet are equally determined tions initiated by the grievant
to preserve these basic arrange- and/or SPA and the appropriments.
ate administrative personnel
•'Tile essential components of
''Once a grievance is not satthe grievance system on our isfactorily resolved at the in-

a

formal - prior to filing stsge
and later at the informal Step
I level- its resolution at the
recomrrumdatwn of the local
SPA is removed to the SUNY
Chancellor's Office &lt;Step 2 ) ,
and from there to the OER
(Step 3 ) and finally to binding
arbitration CStep 4).
"It is c I e a r then that the
existing progressive grievance
mechanisms within our University are p~ and encouraged with the limitstion that
they be terminated before the
45-day period specified by the
Agreement. It is also clear that
Step I also explicitly adheres
to the principle of p&lt;;er evaluation, a much cherished principle.
"We wish to report that a
number of grievances have arisen and that the handling of
some of theae bas auccesslully
tested the above _ . . . model
and the rest will be resolved
in a way which will reassert
the peer evaluation principle."

NTP Appointment Procedures Draw Criticism
The lllM! of temporary appointments rather than term
appointments for non-teaching
professionals bas come under
criticism by both 'the Senate
Professional Ass oc ia t ion
(SPA) and the Stste University Professional Association
CSUPA).
At the November 5 meeting
of the Governing Board of
.S UPA, the organization
dtarted the following letter to
Chancellor Ernest Boyer:
'"The Stste University Professional Association (SUPA)
wishes to register its disturbance o.ver what appears to be
the indiscriminate issuing of
temporary appointments, by
several SUNY units, to the
non-teaching Profeasionals on
September 29. We acknowledJe the legitimate and appropnate. uae of ~rary appointments 88
out in
the contract.
, infor·
mati011 before this ol'gBIIization
indicates that. aome appointmeniB may have beal made in
a last minute eftort to cin:um'YI!IIt the - t l y negotiated
qreement (which) the """•
siooal otaff's elected agentJaad
made iii aoOd faith tbrouch the
11118i8tance ol the Stste Uni..,...
llity, with the State's Office ol
Employee Relatious.
"Any arbitrary~ that

followed the vague directive is- . agreement allowed terminasued to the SUNY units, tiOIIs only with aood cause. The
served only to emphasize, un- locsl SPA jmgwtietely confortunately, the need for a ne- tseud President Ketler and regotiating agent.
qumted a list ol all tb.-e who
received such notices.
''It r.e mains the goal ol quent to ...:.. ~-•
SUPA to maintain a collegial
....., .............
atmospbere in the~ of were ~Wwd with unit
the terms and conditions of·em- '-&lt;Is about the nature ol such
ployment of its constituents, appoin-ts. It became clear,
which we have ebcouraged SPA ' especially when it was known
. the hope that amoog tho a e receiving
to foU ow. It remams
such appoinfnwlt notil:a there
of SUPA, that in the future, . ......, per80IIB with ovwlO years
~ Stste Unjversi~ will work of ,_..,tinnous emp~oJmmt, that
With \!II to t.bia end.
the instnJctioas • we 11 88
This week, after investigating ~ in~ ....... viothe .matter, SPA issued the fol- ~~,~~-.;:;:~-~
lowmg ststement:
~ these iubmal .,._''On September 'n, a teJe. patifyinc: . , . _ were
pbooe -ce was conveyed Biped by Prealdent K.ett.er and
to SUNYAB unit M&amp;ds from _,t 'to 12 per80IIB .-:indinl
!he Personnel Office instruct- tempora~y appointment and
101 them to aend out noti"'"' of 'freezinc' their teaure • per
temporary appointments to contract. ~ ....... filed
tb.-e of the profeasioaal staff with the President 011 Novemthe '-&lt;Is ooasidered 88 tem- ' - 12, 1971. for ... . . . - .
porary appointments. Follow- Six otham ~ desire not
ing such oral instructions eome to file pievaDceo and 14 NTP's
43 such ·appointment notices neve&lt; reaponded to our request
were issued to be effective 88 of for filing ~ tbus for·
September 29, the day before feiting tLeir rilbt to file such.
all profeMiiiDal 1llaff positious One .... deceued and
were to be fror.en. It was clear folu from the CJriljDa1 Jillt were
at the onset that this provided lumed ovw to the a-Ith Scithe last opportunity to SUNY local SPA cholpCer, fa&lt;
adniinistrators to release 'em- two o1 which the SPA cholpCer
pioy81S' at wiU inasmuch 88 the filed formal pievanalla."

consm-.

�------ __

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

_:.."-""-'-

________________

GD~.....

3

.l.~lr.t'\..:)

H~ BaskethaJ1 Sturtiilg$iias0ns .. ~ tlnitedFundDrive
WzthHopes for ITrl[J1UlXrl PerformanCe Make8 90 Per Cent of Goal
By SI'EVE LIPMAN
Before tbe start ol U/B's
bodrey season one year ago,
C&lt;ach Ed Wright said that tbe

differeme between tbe Bulls'
· having a "good ·and a mediocre
&amp;1!88011" would be three Canadian playem wboae eligibility
Willi in question. 'They didn't
mate it The Bulls bad a mediocre . aea&amp;OI1 (~7-1) .
About tbe same time, tbe
BaslretbaU Bulls _,.., ~ing for their following
one which bad _ , tbe teem
aplit by a black l&gt;layer boyrott
tbat led to tbe loss of three
leading players and one bead
coach. Final record, 9-13.

~ OO.:"t.t 'a:.~

year's. The boo bodrey players

in qiii!Btion-LAIB Teplicky and
Dale~ eligible
( tbe third, Rande Russell,
dropped out of U/B), and tbe
Basketball Bulls haw bad ,
year under Ed Muto's dinlction, following 14 with Dr. Len
Serfustini, DOW at Glassboro
State.

_......,_

Both teems' 1971-72 8I!8SOIIS
begin in two weela;.
The Hockey Bulls host N""'
England College at tbe Amherst Recreation Rink, November Z1, tbe first of eight home

contests, including a January
23 date at Memorial Auditorium against Ohio State. 'They
play 11 games Oil tbe road.
The basketball team starts 011
tbe road, December 1 at Syra-

Cutback(Continued from -

I , coL 5)

--

ruse. Tbeir 24 games are ewnly gplit between home and

away.
Both roocbes each starting
his !leCI&gt;I1el season--an! looking
for improvements o v e r last
year's records. WJ:iabt is shooting for at least 70 per cent ( 14
wins) . which be figures will be
good enough to get tbe Bulls
into the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC ) Division n playoffs.
They narrowly missed tbe
pla_yoffs a year ago when tbe
ECAC allowed only .four teems
'W take part. Since then they've
""''l!lD&lt;k!d that to eight
Anotbe,r ECAC rule change
will mate Wright's goal a little
more reachable. Freshmen are
oow eligible to play for tbe varsity:
That's good, because tbe
Bulls were liit hard by graduaTallt of team speed. new
tion. Gone from last year's faces and old systems carries
team are six players, four or . over to Muto's remarks.
whom were standouts. (One of
Only five players on Muto's
these, defenseman Jim Rea- 12-man roster bave any Buft'alo
ume, is bad&lt; this year as assis- varsit;y experience. ·Three trans.
tant coach.)
ferred bere from junior col'The Bulls will be hurting leges. Tbe transfers- guard
most on defense. Besides two Bob Varlllnian, and forwards
defensemen "! h o graduated, Jim Tribble and Greg Laker
they'll probably also be with- (all juniors) --will more than
out Grant Nicholson, tbe best compensate for three players
on tbe blue-line last season. lost from last year's squad.
Vartanian, who averaged 23.3
Nicholson is out with a medical problem-Wright isn't points a game for Leicester
c6unting· on him-and th at Junior College, will be the
leaves only one experienced de- quarterback in Muto's "basic
fenseman, co -ca ptain Bob stack" offense. Muto says of
Goody. Pat Dunn, brotber of Vartanian, ''be will eventually
goalie Mike, bas lettered on be one of the fmest backcourt
.defense two years, but with less performen; we have ever had.
ice lime than Goody.
He penetrates well, has a good
Wrillh.t plans to use these outside shot, and really cracks
two a.S 'One defensive pairing, tbe whip.on the fast-break."
freshman Larry Carr and Bob
Directing the fast-break,
Epplett as anotber, and Tep. which Muto was unable to use
licky and sophomore Jobn Mc- much of last year for lack of
Reynolds as tbe third.
speed, will be Vartanian's chief

-

or Women Faculty and
Staff bas requested tbe provosts to set aside 20 lines to be
filled by women. In addition to
these 20 lines, tbey asked for
20 per cent of tbe lines vacated
owr 60. Gelbaum said be estimates that :J8.40 lines will be
vacated this year and indicated that tbe provosts are still
considering tbe proposal
SUNY Senator Andre"' Holt
presented a report on tbe mee~­
ing of tbe SUNY Senate's Executive.. Committee. At tbe session, be learned that tbe Chancellor is appointing a special.
staff member to coordinate regionalism projects. Until tbe
appointment is made, however,
SUNY administrator Murray
Blodt will be handling tbe matte&lt;. The SUNY Executive
Committee also established a Ohr.--Oif
On offense, Wright thinks
sulHlommittee of their Personnel Committee to look at ad- be's a little better off. ''Uist
missions and hiring practices year I bad two good lines, but
I was afraid to put tbe third on
~.;,e:w.., approved tbe ice." Now be has fiw lines,
tbe following graduate student all of which be says, "can do
~ts to Faculty Sen- tbe job."
- Four · lines will dress for a
ate Coauinttees: Jobn Welte.
Fal:ulty Temue and Privilege; game, three of .which Wright is
Roberl Dugan, Economic Sta- 1;0re ol They are: 1. lw, Ted
tus· Myles Edwards. Educa- Mislcolczi; c, Jobn Stranges;
~ Planning and Policy; rw, Bill Reid; 2. lw, Bob AlJobn G...,.,.,..,..,O Academic bano; c, Dale Dolmage; rw,
Freedom and Responsibility; Mike Klyni; end ~. Jw, Dicit
Susan Schwartz, Admissions; Will; c, Bill Newman; rw, Gary
George E. Haase. Atbtelics; Romanyck. Mislcolczi, NewSam Abbate, Colleges Suhc&lt;!m- man and Albano are lettermen,
miUee. Educational Planiling giving each line a touch of exend Policy; Earl Sidler III. perience.
The boo lines having to
ne..rdl end Creatiw Activity; end Jim Felton, Student battle to dress are Jw;-Tunney
Alraim. The (on-ing UD!Ies-- Murchie; c, Doug Bowman; rw,
--'-tes also a)lproved: Jade Richards; end lw, Ron
. . . - -Ccben, Grading Evalu- Marmcle; c, Gary Tudbope,
rYi, Nick Beaver.
Paul A. Faiwl.
Ccben.
Ad!Qis- end
In _., senior Mike Dunn
sions; Howard
Atblelics:
David Kooiur Research end will get pre!BUre from
Creative Ability; David Bar- freshman Rusaell Fmach than
mak, Financial Aid: Fred be did last Ye&amp;r from Bob DaigKlinpuberJ, Colleges Subcom- ler. Dunn, -..he! played last - mittee. Educational Planning ... at 200 pounds, said he end Policy: David B I o c k, &amp;Oing to ~ at J.st 20 pounds
over tbe IIUIIIDII!r. o He . - . . . !
the lost weicht' ......tel .
end Policy; and DaVid more reOeloes, ~ in hill
lion

=

:!':::..,~tt:
~~t.L

~· c.ptain fhwman

With a question mark defense, and a deeper offense,
Wright plans to use basically
tbe same style of play as last
year---close-d:tecking, waiting
for tbe other team to err. The
key will be bow well tbe forwards can forecheck-badger
~ otber team coming out of
•ts own zone. "We'll send one
man in, and have the other two
=~their wings," Wright
Tbere's one hitch. "It takes a
while to drill a system into a
team," Wright says. "It doesn't
happen overnight" Or over one
season.
"We have better team
speed." Wright surmises.
"We'll have to see bow long
it takes for tbe freshmen to fit
into our system."

liei&amp;-.JuuiJiicbt . ~:ulJt-,

job.
U tbe Bulls are to get the
ball downcourt before the op.
ponent can set its defense, good
rebounding as well as speed is

"""""""'·

"Ceftter
Last year 6-6 sophomore center Curtis Blackmore was the
Bulls' only t h rea t off the
boards. He averaged 15.7 rebounds per game, almost one-

The Uniwrsity's U n i ted
Fund Campaign bas reached
91.6 per cent or its goal of
$100,000. Approximately 2:170
individuals bave contributed to
tbe appeal to date, for an average gift of $33. The appeal
will be continued until January
1 in tbe hope that all employees who have not returoed a
pledge will consider giving.
Last week's announcement that
the United Fund of Buft'alo
and Erie County bad reached
its goal was based on the prem·
ise that the Uniwrsity would
pledge its fair shale.
A letter will be sent to all
employees who have not responded in order to dose the
University's gap of $8.400. U
tbe 1600 yet to respond would
pledge $5.00 or more, Campaign leaders say, "we could
make the goal. This is an opportunity to show the community that the University and its
employees do care, do respond
to its needs."
Twelve campus divisions out
of 21 have reached their goal.
Twenty-eight subdivisions have
reached tbeir quotas. These are:
Admissions &amp; Records, Architecture and Environmental Design, Art, School of Management, Chemistry, Center for
Critical IAngusges, Cooperative
College Center, Cultural Affairs,
Continuing Medical Education,
Financial A i d, Instructional
Communicatiotls Center, Mathematics, Medical Technology,
Music, Occupational Therapy,
Office of Equal Opportunity,
Physical Education, Physical
'Thempy, Pharmacology, P sychiatry (in Medicine), Physiology, Political Science, University Placement and Career
Guidance, Speech Communication, Nursing, Heslth Related Professions, Internal AudiUPre-Audit, Student Coun-

FacullyCan

Visit Ketter
President Robert L. Ketter
wiU have infonnal, personal
meetings with individual faculty members from 9 a.m. to 12
noon on a lternate Tuesdays,
beginning December 7. Faculty
members will each have 15
minutes to oonduct discussions
with Dr. Ketler.
Dr. Ketter said that a similar
program. for students, initiated
earlier this semester, has been
very successful. He noted that
he has been "receiving with increasing frequency r e q u e s t s
from the faculty to initiate
such a program for their benefil"

Faculty members who wish
to s c he d u I e appointments
should contact Mrs. Ruth East,
administrative assistant to the
president, at 831-2001. A I I
.meetings must be scheduled in
advance. They will be held in
lOS Hayes.
The student meetings will
continue on alternate Tuesdays. Appointments for these
can be scheduled in the same
manner.

seling, and Student Personnel
Responses received from tbe
f o II o w i n g suJ&gt;.divisions are
termed "disappointing": Sociology, 20 per cent of goal; lfis.
tory, 37 per cent; Philosophy,
25 per cent; Anthropology,
none; Security, 14 per cent;
English, 50 per cent; Classics,
49 per cent; Pharmacy, 40 per
cent; Dentistry, 71 per cent;
Medicine, 61 per cent; Maintenance, 50 per cent; Payroll,
38 per cent; Budget, 43 per
cent; Contracts Administration,
53 per cent; Accounting, 56 per
cent

SA-Awards
16Grants
The Undergraduate Research Council of the Student
Association (SA) bas awarded
approximately $7,000 to gponsor and support research projects by 15 undergraduates,
David Kosiur, director of SA's
Undergraduate Research Council, bas announced.
The awardees, their project
titles and the amounts of their
stipends are: P . Dalton, Judicial Decision-Making Process
and Data Bank ( 1958-1970) in
Erie County, $175; D. Forman,
An Understanding of Life,

~~~O;~!:'hc&lt;&gt;x=~

and Aminobicyclic E t h e r s,
$600; A. Kurtz, Student lfou&amp;.

ing lor tbe Amherst N""' Community, $500.
D. u.Ronde, In-Class Cl.-1Circuit Television as a Conicular Aid, $400; L. I i"'-lrind
Stereospecific Synthesis of Substituted Tropolones, $475; G.
Miller, Histones and Cell Differentiation in Ascaris Lumbricoides Suum; C. Mrozek, Investigation into Identification
of Migrating Birds by Radar
Signature Analysis, $385.
D. Omel, Tbe Effects of a
Sexually-oriented Conversation and Stress v. Non.Stress
on Subsequent Psychological
and Physiological Behavior,
$400; D. Potts, Intermediates
in the Fixation of Molecular
Nitrogen : The Preparation of
a Mixed Nitride-Thio Molybdenum System, $750; H. Root,
'The Poetry and Literature of
India, 5300.
B. Serrianne, The Radioactive Labelling of Gerinial and
Trans, Trans-Famesol, $320;
H. Toner, The Preparation and
Spectral Study of the lDwer
Oxidation States of Zirconium
and Hafnium, $500; B. White,
The Skill of the Iroquois People, $290; D . Young, The
Status of Toolmctos Mariti'""" in . the Canadian Arctic,
$740.

Alumni Tours Set

third or tbe team's total Muto
New Year's Eve in Ha~
anticipates help in that area
and a mid-winter break in Baifrom forwards Laker ( 6-6) ,
hados ·are two ways you tan
captain Neil Langelier ( 64),
escape BuJialo this winter via
Rick Mantale (64 ), and TribU I B Alumni Association tours.
ble I 6-6) . Wbo starts depends
Tbe Association's annual "winon tbe nerl two weeks of practer escapes" were re-scheduled
tice.
.
recently because of tbe airline
Muto says tbe success of tbe
prioe war. Tbe Barbados tour
IA!am this year rests on two facwas moved up two days to Feb.
tors: "How well we can bandle
GEMS.ITV,· a U / B program ruary 10, 1972, returning on
pressure defenses I fuli&lt;OUrt, which televises graDuate February 17. A trip to Hawaii
balf-&lt;XJWt, trap ). This was a courses to employees at tbeir was substituted for one to tbe
.....,.. point last year," and plants, bas a new member, tbe Grand Baballlas and will leave
"How well ""' can become a Western Electric Co. in Ken- on December 25, 1971, returnp........,.;, defense ty.pe of ball more.
ing January 2, 1972.
dub."
.
.
Since tbe .sflirt of tbe fall
Tbe Hawaiian "Aloha Car'l1iis is espoicially important semester, 12 management em- nival" psclcage is $439 and tbe
this year """"'- of an NCAA ployees at Western Electric "Barbados HoI ida y," $241.
rule change. A live -.ond rule have- been enrolled in four Both inclUde hotel and airfare.
will be in operation the whole courses beamed to tbe Ken.Tbe two tours are available
- - t e e m will ~ tbe ball more plant
to all alumni. Anyone else wishif • player being pre!BUred
Western Electric is tbe third ing to go must pay alumni cfueS
holds onto tbe ball for five oec:, area company to join GEMS. which are $10 a person, or ·$12
IJPIIs. Q{_~ .... ...~ . . .... .
lTV.
·-··- ---- a -couple. ·-- --· ·· · · ··· - · , . •

GEMS .Mls Member

�WIRRS Robinson Says
Story Had Some Errors
BDft'Oa:

'lbank you for the November
4 article 011 WIRR It communicated the excitement, adventure and bope in stsrting a new
ststion very well. However,
there 8 few errors that
rd like to conect.
1. "WIRR is broadcasting
with.a 20 watt transmitter. This
is the aame as WBFO-AM beca.- it is WBFO's transmit,.
fer_ After our trial period, we
bope to incn!ese power to 200
watts. rm afraid that the Reporter bad Ibis backward.
2. Neither WBFO-AM or
WIRR bas caused any interference problems to the best of
my knowledge 'There bas been
some interference on the top
Ooors of Tower, apparently
from WBFO-FM's transmitter,
which is 1ocated on the roof.
The idea of tuning in either
station on a toaster is a fine
spoof, but not very practical.
Still, anyone experiencing interference is invited to call
WBFO or WIRR. We'll try to
track it down.
3. WIRR-FM is a long way
off. We'll probably remain 8
cattier current station for at
least this year--.possibly many
years.
4. My role as a "leader" bas
been minimal. As an instructor
in College E (not College B )
it's my job to bring together

deli- badly needed services
on a very tight budget.
6_ WBFO is not elite or an
establisbment ststion, nor does
it tum away students. As a
member ol. WBFO, I can teatify
that many, many students have
been trained at WBFO 8Dd
have received air time. Besides
sponsoring my Co II e ge E
course, WBFO allots 25 bours
a week to satellite (inner city )
program.mi.ng, airs c a m p u s
speeches and events, 8Dd bas
folk, rock and jazz shows..
In brief, while mainly middle class suburban Americans
may listen to my !lhow (classical music), WBFO actually bas
a wide 8Dd varied audience as
shown by our program guide
circulation ( 7,000) a n d by
CPB survey.
During the eight months I
have been witb WBFO, I have
seen continual eQbrts to improve programming, to offer
more air time to students, to
air more controversial views,
and generally to increase our
service to the campus and the
town in the face of increasing
difficulties. I believe WBFO is
doing a good job of serving the
public; WIRR was created to
provide a means or expanding
that service, to provide space
and air time that aren't physically available at WBFO. Both
stations are needed. It is my
personal hope that each will
stimulate, invigorate, and complement the other. The result
will be better radio for everyone.
Sincerely,

students and the learning resources they want. When it became clear that the facilities at
WBFO were already overcrowded, some of my . students
suggested creating a second
- DON ROBJN90N
program.mi.ng facility. I helped
them write a proposal, intro- •
duced them to some key peO'
pie-and that was thaL The
idea of WIRR dates to a proposal by WBFO member Scott
Field in March, 1971.
WIRR doesn't have leaders.
It was designed to operate on EDITOR :
a one-man-one--vote s y s t e m,
The SPA Executive Commitwith each person sharing equal
responsibility. We felt this !t:eof,!~bs~~u: ~
would insure direct student ter of October 15, 1971, from
control of the ststion, since the associate general secretary
anyone could walk in and vote. of the AAUP in Washington
So fap, the system bas worked (Reporter, November 11 ). 1lte
well Iocidentslly, the stsff letter assumes that since the
meets Sunday at 3:00 and contract does not agree in every
Thuraday at 7:30, and the detail witb the models ·estabcbainnan is picked at random lished by AAUP it is ipso fact&lt;&gt;
from amimg those presenL
a poor contract. This conclu5. The Reporter article listed sion is one which, possibly
WBFO's annnal operating bud- from naivete, ignores the dYget as- $80,000 with $10,000 namics of collective negotiation
spent 011 tspe. This is in error. and the fact that, desinible as
they may be, the AAUP models
~ annual operating budget
for 1971-72 is mucb closer to bad not been achieved by prior
endeavors
of AAUP to affect
$30,000--the $80,000 figure indude&amp; professional sa I a r i e s SUNY Trustee policies.
The Committee is confident
(some of which are frozen) and
projected grants (some of that SPA must move in the
wbicb didii't materialize) . Last directions for w h i c h AAUP
year we requested $10,000 for strives, but hopes that future
tape. We spent closer to $3,- AA UP postuies will be more
helpful and constructive.
000.
Neither WBFO or WIRR is
-BPA EXECtJ'nVB COIOil'I'TEE,
rich. Both are attempting to
SUNYAB

SPA Irked by
AAUPLetter .

~,

......;.,....,,1911.

~

4

,

~ ~t

AbonniSeell
PrivilRges
For Grads

Professor Livingstone
Repliffi to Coli~

A p o I i c y of ''preferential
treatment" for University graduates who atteDd campus activities is being ll&lt;lllPtt.bY Fred
Tamalonis, director 'of special
programs of the UfB Alumni
Association.
Starting in 1971, Tamalonis
says, the Alumni Association
will give all students graduating from the University a free
one-year membership • in the
Association w b i c b entitles
them, among other benefits, to
an ID membership cani Other
dues-paying graduates will also
receive the cards. The limitslion or tbe privilege, he points
out, is "that, if no official recognition is given to either n~
alumni members or to alwnru
members of longer stsnding,
this ID card is of little practical value."'
In line with this, he is asking campus departments and
organizations "to officially recognize and make provisions for
alumni members in thei r activities."
On many campuses throughout the nation, Tamalonis says,
"alumni are recognized as
'friends of the University' and
are accorded special privileges."
At U/ B, however, this
special status is not recognized
by any official policy or mechanism.. " An alumnus who
comes on campus to attend an
activity ·is obliged to pay the
'general public' admission fee,
having given up his position as
a student. He finds that many
of his former privileges are ~
scind!ld. distsnce is created betweed the alumnus and the active communitY, jmd he is no
longer encouraged to be a part
of campus activities."
According to Tamalonis,
" this is a major problem which
the U / B Alumni Association is
trying to remedy.
"How can the alumnus keep
up with a changing university,"
he asks, " if special provisions
are not made for his participation?"

Wbile I do not wish to m&lt;&gt;nopolize the pages of the Reporter with an interchange of
charges and countercharges. I
believe it would be only fair to
allow me a clarification of some
of the points raised bY Professors Boyd-Bowman 8Dd Schanzer in the November 11 issue.
'These attempted rebuttsls fail
to understand-or conveniently
choose to overlook-the fact
that my ststement bore essentially on the intervention or
the Administration 8Dd its bypassing of the provosts in faculty affairs, and that the departmental sit ua ti on was
quoted in support of this claim
and was thus only iocidental to
the overall purport of my letter.
r will not, and of course cannot, reply to the loose catchall of "gross distortions," "halftruths," and " inaccuracies,"
which are unspecified and undocumented. I would, however,
like to comment on the imputed unethicality of my divulgations during the hearing of
the Senate Grievance Committee and the alleged impropriety
of my criticism of the present
stste of the provostship while a
member of the Arts and Letters
Provost Search Committee.
My ststement to the Reporter is one which bad lain heavily on my mind since the beginning of the semester. Your announcement of October 21
which, intentionally or not, I
must insist bad the effect of
an official whitewash of a des-

Course for
Student Aides
Undergraduate students interested in "helping 3,000 new
students become an informed
and integrated part of U/B"
can now apply for a four credit
course that may enable them to
become Summer Orientation
Aides.

BIW'IO&amp;:

GY.IEWPOINTS
The R8porter ' - on this to provide a forum for the ex-

chance

call for aeveral hours during
the ,&lt;:ommittee's subsequent
&lt;some days before the
ap..-rance ol. my letlet} but
was not inv\ted to testify,
As for the 81J1111&lt;..t confljct
of .il!terests between my lowly
oplDlOII of the prowstship at
present 8Dd my membembip on
the Sesrch Committee for a
new' ~ Ibis did indeed
represent for me a dilemma, so
mucb so that I bad been tempted fJOID the becinning of the
deliberations ol. the Committee
to resign from it. To this the
Chairman of the Committee
can amp I y testizy, and also
Vice President Somit, to wbom
I ~g~tec! the possibility of my
reSlgrung m protest. However
I finslly arrived at the amvi.,.:
tion that I could accomplish
something, even if in a small
way, towards the rehabilitstion
or- the provostship by remaining on the Committee. In any
event, Professors Boyd-Bowman and Schanzer are bardly
in a position to cast stones,
since their countercharges on
behaU of the Department's current in-group do not sit at all
well with their own involvement as members of the "se-cret'' deparb:nental advisory
committee, referred to in my
letter, whose composition is
now a matter of common p~
lie knowledge.
So g r e a t indeed was this
group's "professional decorum,"
which prompted it to cloak its
activities in secrecy, and so deep
its reverence for the inviolability of grievance procedures that
when one of the assistsnt professors affected I o d g e d his
grievance with the Faculty he
was immediately ferocioUsly at,.
tscked as a traitor to 1M Department for doing so in an
official memo issued by Professor Arcudi to all members of
the Department.
Finally, it would be interesting to know bow Professor
Schanzer was able in the space
of one week to receive and reply to my ststement when he is
on sabbatical leave in Mexico,
especially in view of the fact
that my own letter, mailed 10'
cally, was not received in time
for the next issue of the Reporter.
Yours sincerely,
011

of -

"' the -

on a -

variety

t.cil'lll the academic

communttr. we welcome both
position papers anCI ....... as
space . permits_

perate departmental sitoation,
was the spark that finally ignited the fuse. Since this was
the precipitsting factor in my
reaction, I was faced witb a
now-or~never issue, since there
would have been no urgent
justification for my writing two
weeks or a month later, when
my letter could have been dismissed as an afterthought or
attscked on o t h e r spurious
growxla.

besrinp

UOON

UVDIC!II'ONE

Profesaor of Spanish

Otm-uctingCars
To Be lmpooD:.Ied

In any event, Professor BoydBowman is apparently laboring
under the misapprehension that
All vehicles obstructing trafI wrote the Reporter after the fic or blocking C8l1l in campus
Grievance Committee bad con- pariring lots are now being
vened. Actnally, I wrote two towed 8Dd impounded under a
The spring semester course, days after the appearance or policy adopted bY the campus
which is taught by John Buerk, the October 21 issue and Traftic Control AdvisoJ:y Comdirector of orientation, will mailed my letter promptly, but mittee.
help prepare 12 summer aides. it was not received in time for
A towing fee of $10 must be
Course work will include "read- the following isSue, as Mr. Mar- paid to Campus Security beings, papers, and exposure to lett's secretary called to explain fore the vehicle will be.teleaaed.
the U n i ·v e r sit y structure to me. As for the Grievance Robert E . Hunt, director, .....
through interviews, and weekly Committee bearing, this griev- vironmental health. 8Dd safety,
meetings with student counsel- ance bas b e e n stslled and says.
kicked around for six months,
ing personnel."
According to Hunt, the Trafso what assurance was there
Aides will be selected from that a new attempt would be fic Control Advisoey. Committhe various University constit- any more suocessful than pre- tee ,.....,mended Ibis policy in
uencies such as male, female, vious ones? If the grievants August of 1970, aince which
s,...11..t::, P::f"::':! r-:t
":a';-.~ ;'.:_:: transfer, resident, commuter, were apparently asked not to time vehicles have been towed
213, 250 . . . . . . . .c..and various classes. They will diacuss their caae publicly, I from obstructing p o s i t i o n s.
be respotlSJble for woriring at was never so approached and I However, none of tbeae have
LW'&amp;Sf'Ur~
the summer student orientation aeriously question the apparent been impounded 8Dd no towaessions 8Dd assisting with reg- impropriety -of Professor Bovd- ing fees have been ............,d
7"JJ&amp;&amp;DCNta "· p~
istration, organizing recreation- Bowman's access to this ruling "It bas become increasingly"obal PI'OtiTBIIlS, and conducting !"We bave been asked- not to vious," he says, "that a $5 trafJ!!08aRr r . IIU.JtLaT
peer group advisement. For s,ir our disagreements in pub. tic tsg does not bave sufticient
their work. aides will receive- lie", be aays) .~Nor do I feel, impetus to deter continued
.._,. r:-:;;tr;,;;",~--$600, full roixn 8Dd partial after due reflection, that the pariring in lot eniDDce&amp;, roadboard and "a cbance to under- Pnl6illl&lt;:t of my being called a8 ways aDd Ia.- . .. (and) imstand bow a University worts." a ~tlless represented any con- pounding baa now become a
.... cr.oorzllll
• __
atmint • on my declarations, , _ . , - pout ol. the enforc:eApp~ons for the courae aince lilY teatimonv would only mentprocnun."- ·
OJrUJnrODD
may be picked up at Room 225, have been an amplification 8Dd
Questions concerning t b i s
Ne&gt;rton, ~ i!J ' the ~tstion of the portion should be directed to Mr. Gene
,!"'WE JS bY mterYiew WJth the of my letter bearing 011 Ibis sit- MwtiiY, campus -_,.,;ty super-(
instructor.
uation. The fact is that I was visor, ert. 5555.
.

---.___,
---

:'m.
...... .,._ ................

_..__

�- ~

N-18,1911

5

Dr. :RitJuoUB
Opens CCC

College Day
Dr. Hemy Ridwds, essi&amp;tant vice president tor academic affairs, is p r inc i p a 1
speaker this morning at tbe
convocation opening tbe -.oDd
annual "College Day" of tbe
U/ B-affiliated Coopezative College Center (CCC).
The program will continue
wlth an infonnal lund&gt;eon,
afternoon worksi&gt;ope and es:hibits, and evenin8 preoentations by student musical and
drama groups_
All events are scheduled fur

ltepn heers Javtts.

Senator ouUinn his hutth plan.

Javits Pushes National Health Insurance Plan
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
.!!.ee!ter Staff

"We will have a national
health care system within the
next three years," S e n a t o r
Jaoob Javits predicted on cainpus last Thursday night as he
gave details of a bill he has
introduced to accomplish this.
The New York Senator, who
was the last speaker in the anmilt James Fenton Lecture
s e r i e s on Comprehensive
Health Care." used the occasion to explain the current
health care crisis and what
must be done to alleviate it.
He presented a shocking picture of American health care:
"The poor suffer three times as
much heart disease, seven times
11

~m~ ,::~cl,d::l!~t.~~

tion," as other Americans. The
United States' medical system
lags behind every European
oountry as well as the Sdviet
Union, he said.
Shottap of Physldans

America is short 50,000-150,000 doctors and five per cent of
the oounties in America don't

have a doctor. In one New
York county, the Senator related, the only physician within a reasonable a rea was
drafted, leaving the people
without a doctor for a 50-mile
radius. In other areas, people
face health problems which are
just as serious. Javita told of
children in New York City who
have become mentally retarded
because of lead poisoning, and
of a retired man in Queens who
ran out of the funds necessary
for kidney dialysis and is facing death.
SP£AKING FAVORITES
The Amerlaln· PJ;Piram Bureau of
Boston, which books campus
speaking engagements across the
nation to the tune of $4 million
annually, r e p o r t s that Ralph
Nader (who gets up to $4,000 per
ap'J)earance), comedian Dick Greg·
ory and Georgia legislator Julian
Bond a"' the
popular speakers on the coUege circuit. They are
followed by former Interior Deportment Secretary Walter J. Hickel,
radical attorney William Ku~r.
former Kennedy confidante Pierre
Salinger, Bill Russell, fonner astronaut John Glenn, anti-war veter.n
John Kerry and two journalists,
Sander Vanocur and David SChoen·
brun. Pinky Lee and Soupy Soles
are said to be . gaining rapidly.

most

These crises exist even

system would take "at least

though America spends seven
per cent of its Gross National
Product on health care. The

three tn five years," h e said.
The current system is so ove r-

rising cost of medical care is
"one of the major factors" in

mentation would "cause the

the inflationary spiral, Javits
ssid.
To solve the problems, five
health care hills have been introduced in the Congress. Javits explained the differences between his bill and the others,
primarily dwelling on Senator
Ted Kennedy's program.
The J avits b i 11, '·National
Health Insurance and Health
Service Improvement Act of
1971," would use the present
Medicare and Medicaid package as an "absolu te minimum
base criterion of health care."
The package's oombination of
hospitalization coverage a n d

loaded that immediate implewhole system to break down."
When completed, however, the
•ystem would he "one or the

greatest social reforms of this
century." Javi ts pledged to

bring about this reronn while
"I'm still in the Senate."

Halfway through the Senator's speech, newly elected
County Executive Ned Regan
came in. J a vits interrupted his

prepared remarks to welcome
him and the a udience gave Re-

gan a short round of applause.

Other Issues

Following his talk, Javits
faced a series of comprehensive
questions on his bill and other
world issues. One gentleman

supplementary physician bene- asserted that some parts or the
fits would he extended to the bill were present in the origipopulation at large. All exist- nal Medicare bill but were deing institutions in both the leted because of American
public and private sectors Medical Association (AMA )
would be used to provide this pressure. Did the Senator think
coverage. These institutions
would be under strict supervision and would have to meet
exacting standards, but if a
"If you have sometlting to
hospital performed more effec- offer in terms of skill or expertively or efficiently than the ience and you want to help
standard, it would be given a people, then the Peace Corps or
VISTA is for you."
bonus.
Funding of the system would
This is the message five
come from a tax shared by both former Pesce Corps and
employee tlnd employer, simi- VISTA volunteers will bring
lar to the current Social Secur- to U/ B November 29 through
ity tax. If a company has its December 1. The group will he
own plan that meets or exceeds on campus to "disseminate inthe Federal standard, however, fonnation," says Travis
it would be excluded from the Gamble, a former Pesce Corpsnational program. This way, man who served in Thailand.
.industry will have an incentive
Gamble says both the Peace
to work out a privately-negoti- Corps and VISTA are looking
ated plan, . the Senator ex- for college graduates with skills
plained.
in teaching, engineering, occupational therapy or languages.
Health Maintenance
In addition to the system of They're also looking for people
health care, Javits' bill also sets without degrees who have exup health maintenance organi- perience in fanning, t r a d e
zations which he calls .HMO's. skills or community organizing.
Contrary to the image of the
An ex tens i v.e network of
HMO's across the country young college-age volunteer,
would supply dental care and both VISTA and the Peace
"at least" one physical a year Corps accept individuals over
to those covered. Emphasis 21. They are especially lookwould be on "di.agnostic care." ing for those who have worked
- Other parts of the New York for several years and have pracSenator's bill would: establish tical experience to match book
a drug co-payment plan under knowleilge. This new emphasis
which people would -pay only is the result of countries asking
$1 per prescription for long for older, more experienced volterm. medication, and provide unteers and of the discovery
additional money for training that plumbers and carpenters
are needed more than English
health care peniOIII'Iel..
The setting up of the Javits' teachers.

this would h a p pen again?
While Javits " couldn't guarantee that it would pass," he did
feel public pres.&lt;.iure would
cause the AMA to support
these parts o! the bilL 1n addition, he believes there has
been a change in doctors' outlook with the "new generation

or doctors being interested in
practice for practice's sake."
J avits was questioned about

his position on Bangia Desh
a nd anns shipments to Pakistan. He considers this " the
most dangerous situation in the
world today . . . in a world
that can ill afford a wa r." The

the CCC "campus," 465 Washington Street (corner of Washington and Mohawk) .
Workshops (from 2-5 p.m.)'='
will involve both instructional
areas and student services:
English, social sciences, mathematics, physical sciences, the
special reading program and
academic advisement and counseling.
Allied health exhibits (from
2 p .m.) will offer information
and displays from U/ B, other
local oolleges, a n d hospital
schools in the fields of nursing,
medical technology, physical
and occupational therapy and
others. Dr. Harley Flack, assistant dean of U/ B School of
Health R e 1 a ted Professions,
will speak on allied health careers, at 2 p.m.
The evening program, beginning at 7 p.m., will feature the
CCC Experimental Theatre.
The public is encouraged to
attend.
CCC opened in the fall of
last year to prepare high school
graduates in the socio-economic
disadvantaged category for college work.
Administratively a part of
U/ B, the center was established by State University as
"a link between the urban area
that has been educationally deprived and the established edP'

Senator has authored a bill that ucational institutions."
wouJd give money to the refuEnrollment at the Center
gees fleeing Pakistan. These this fall is approximately 1100.
funds would he separate !rom
foreign aid a lready going to
India.
On the Supreme Court apThe Puerto Rican Studies
pointments. the Senator plans and Research Center and the
to " look them over carefully" Office of Overseas Academic
before voting, but he refused to Programs have announced a
take a position on what his vote spring semester study program
would he.
at the Instituto de Cultura
Puertorriquena, S a n J u a n,
Puerto Rico.
Staffed by leading artists,
People accepted by the Peace writers, and scholars of Puerto
Corps will serve in one of 60 Rico, the p r o g r a m offers
foreign countries for two years courses. independent s t u d y,
plus training time. During their workshops, and field work in
stay, they will work with local Puerto Rican culture, litempeople on any number of pro- lure, drama, folk art. political
jects.
problems and film-making.
All VISTA volunteers stay
Sophomores and juniors wbo
within the boundaries of the have a working knowledge of
United States during their one Spanish and a satisfactory acayear term. During this time, demic record are eligible to apthey may he assigned to do ply.
oommunity work in their homeFurther information and aptown or may be stationed 2,000
plications are availahle at ·the
miles from home.
Puerto Rican Studies and ReHeadquarters of the Peace search
204 Winspear
Corps and VISTA recruiters Avenue, Center,
and at the Olfice of
will he a table in the Center Overseas Academic Programs.
Lounge of Norton where they
will be from 8:30 am. to clos- 107 Townsend Hall
'T'he deadline for applications
ing- Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. Information will is November 22, 1971.
be availahle about the Peace
Colll8. VISTA and University
Year of Action, a new college
University Placement and
opportunity for juniors who
want to do community service Career Gnidance will be host to
for college credit. A film ex- a representative of the Alheny _
Plainiw! the programs and how law School on Thursday, 0...
to apply wiil run QODtinuously. ceQlber 9, beginning at 9 a.m.
In- · addition, there will be a
Students interested in attendspecial showing of the mm at ing the School can make ar7:30p.m. on Monday, Novem- rangements to meet the repreber 29, in the Fillmore Room. sentative either by visiting tbe
The five former voluntclen! office of University Placementwill he available to . answer and Career Guidance, Hayes
questicins or simply discuss Annex C, Room 3, or by calling
their experieucea.
831-4414.
.

San Juan Spring

Peace Corps, VISTA Want Your SkiJ1s

Law School Visit

�GREPORTER.,

6

Student Academic Dishonesty~ Listed .
..- .

EDITOR'S NOTE : With the
~ za min~ t ion
period rapidly apP_roaci_Ung, attention of the Umvertnty community is directed to these procedures and sanctions for adjadirotinB cases of academic
dishonesty, drafted by the Academic Integrity Committee of
the Faculty Senate (Dr. Claude
Welch, chairman) and adopted
by the Senate at its November
meeting.
·

fall semester

Preamble ~

1be University community
depends upon shared academic
standards. Academic dishonesty in any form, by any member of lhe University community, represents a fundamental
denial of lhese standards.
Should instances of alleged
academic dishonesty arise, they
must be resolved fairly. The
' absence of agreed-upon procedures to resolve such instances may work devastating
hann both upon the University
community as a whole and
upon individual members of it.
Hence, though the procedures
and sanctions below deal specifically w i t h academic dishonesty among students, lhey
form part of a broader concern
with standards of academic
honesty on the part of all
members of the University
community.
Procedures and sanctions will
not, of themselves, eliminate or
necessarily d e t e r individuals
from committing acts of academic dishonesty. How e ver,
agreed-upon procedures ~ OJ!·
sure equitable means of adJUdication and appeal if and when
instances of alleged academic
dishonesty on the part of students occur. These procedures
and sanctions require faculty
and administrative responsibility to act in accord with them.
They also assume that informal consultation between the student and faculty member concerned will resolve most questions of alleged academic dishonesty; in the event such informal procedures fa i I, the
formal procedures below shall
be employed.
1. Informal Determin•tion

In any case involving alleged
academic dishonesty on the
part of a student -lor example,
cheating or plagiarism (representing another's work as one's
own) -the instructbr responsible lor the course shall consult
with the student, informing him
of the evidence of the alleged
infringement. Should the responsible faculty member consider he bas convincing evi- dence, he may impose any of
lhe following sanctions:
• · Sonctlons
1 ) Admonition :

An oral
statement to the alleged offender that h~ has violated University standards of academic dishonesty.
2 ) Requiring the student to
replace or revise the :work in
which the dishonesty occurred.
(The instructor may choose to
assign a grade of Incomplete
pending replacement or revision of the work. )
3\ Warning: Written notice
to the student that repetition of
the wrongful conduct may be
cause for more severe sane·
tions. (A carbon copy of this
letter may be sent to the appropriate U n i v e r sit y-wide
dean or professional school
dean. to be kept in a eonfidential file until the student graduates or has left the University
for a period of one year or has
an appeal.)

-,won
b.

Rl&amp;ht of Appeal

Only the student shall have
the right to appeal the decision
of the instructor, by direct conference with the Chairman of
the Department and then if
7 necessary to the appropriate
University-wide or profeaaional
school l)ean. . I ;J !l'l J :n J\ l.UWI'\

2.Fonno1Dolennlnotlon

In any case raising serious
questions of academic conduct
that may lead to sanctions more
severe than those aboVe, the
instructor responsible for the
course shall consult with the
Department Chsi~ and the
office of the appropnate Umversity-wide or appropriate professional school Dean, in order
to evaluate the facts of the
case.
• · Procedunol SofeluOrds
1 ) The instructor will

infonn
the student in writing, within
ten academic days, of the conduct of which he is suspected,
evidence against him, names of
possible witnesses, p o s s i b I e
sanctions against him, and his
rights of appeal. He shall also
be provided with a copy of
these Procedures and Sanctions.
2 ) The student shall be en. titled to present evidence on
his own behalf to the lnstruc•
tor, Chairman, and Dean.
3 ) No decision of guilt shall
be made except under clear and
convincidg evidence. The st\l-dent shall be infonned in writing within ten academic days
as to the decision.
b. Sonc:tlons

After consultation with the
C h a i r m a n and appropriate
Dean, the responsible instructor shall have the power to
impose any of the previous
sanctions. reduction in grade,
manda tory resignation from the
coun;e, or fa ilure in the cou rse
lor reasons of d ishonesty, by
letter to the student (with a
copy to the University-wide
Dean or professional school
Dean, to be kept until the student graduates, has left the
Universi ty for a period of one
year, or has successfully appealed ).
3. Fonnal Determination--

Severe Sanctions
A severe sanction ( probation,

suspension, or d ismissal ) may
not be imposed by individual
instructors or D e p a rtm e n ts.
Where such sanctions seem appropriate, cases shall be tried
by a n adjudication committee.
For students jn the Division of
Undergraduale Studies or the
Division of Continuing E ducation (Millard F illmore College }, the committee shall be
consti tu ted in accordance with
the By -Laws of these D ivisions.
For stu dents in graduate or
professional p r o g r a m s, the
committee shall be constituted
by the individual school, Faculty or Division.
E ach adjudication committee
shall be constituted to be materially consistent with University-wide due process and procedures of adjudication. The
student shall be entitled to
present evidence on his own behalf to this adjudication com-

mittee.

Each adjudication committee
at the Divisional. graduate, or
professional level shall have
the power to impose, or recommend imposition of, the following sanctions.
a. Sanctions
1) Any sanction stated above.
2 ) Probation, upon stated
tenns; violation of sUch probation may be grounds lor suspension or expulsion.
3 ) Suspension; in lhe form
of a recommendation to the
President, and entailing exclusion I r o m specified classes,
privileges, or activities, for a
stated _period of time.
4 ) Expulalon, in the form of
a recommendation to the President, outright or Jor a delinite
term upon stated· col)ditioos.
5 ) Such other reasonable an&lt;!
appropriate sanctions as may
be determined by the Committee.
6 ) I ts decision or recommendation &amp;hall be promptly trana-cc..c.:. OJ I y :l.'t:&gt;t".l....! .'l.."J 't, L\ &gt;'U I L"S'-.1

mitted in wrif~ by regihtered
letter to all. parties.

b. -

The Committee shall preserve a complete record of each
case. Such records shall be confidential and preserved for a
period of not more than four
years after the disposition of
the case. For purposes of appeal only the alleged offender
have the right at any
stage tO examine and duplicate
any portion of the record of his
case.

rna/

c. Right af Appeal

Only the student shall have
the right to appeal the decision
of the adjudication committee
by delivering to the Universitywide Commit tee a written notice of appeal within ten academic days of receiving the adjudication committee's decision. The time period may be
extended for an appropriate
reason.

The University-wide Committee on Academic Integrity
shall maintain a record of each
proceeding that comes before
it, containing all pertinent information from earlier actions,
any statement made -directly to
it by the student or instructor
concerned, and a statement of
its disposition ·of the case. The
decision and the .entil:e record
shall be preserved by the Committee until the student graduates, has left the University
for a period of one year, or has
successfully appealed.

4. University-Wide Committee
on Academic Integrity
a. Composition

To insure uniform ity of justice, a Univ~rsi ty-wide panel
shall be appomted by the P resident, after consultation with
and solicitation of nominations
from the student and faculty
governments. T he panel shall
consist of at least twelve persons d rawn equally from faculty and studen ts. For each appeals case, the P resident shall
appoin t a committee of four
members (divided equally between faculty and students ) to
be chosen !rom the panel on
the basiS of a pprop riateness to
the student's major area Ce.g.
science, humanities) and status
(e.g. graduate, undergraduate,
professional}. Any individual
feeling he may be biased in a
particula r case shall disqualify
himself and be replaced. These
four members shall then select
a fif th member of the Unive rsity comm unity to act as the
appeal committee's chai rman.
b. Jurisdiction

Each committee as drawn
from the Uni ve rsity-wide panel
shall act as an a ppeals tribunal with the power to a ffirm,
reverse, or modify (by way of
reduction in severi ty only ) a ny
decision made by an instructor,
department, or ad jud icati on
commi ttee. T h e committee
shall limi t its deliberations to
questions of material denial of
procedural safeguards, erroneous detennination of the facts,
or imposit ion of a clearly excessive sanction.
c. Procedure

1 J A student wishing to appeal to the University-wide
Comm ittee rriust submit written notice within ten acade mic
da'y s of receivin g the decision
of the adjudication committee
to the panel and to either the
instructor or the adjudication
committee whose J decision
stands in question. The student
must then submit to all parties,
within three academic wee}ts,
a written statement of the
groiinds of his appeal. The instructor or adjudication committee may wish to provide a
statement to the appeals panel
in answer to the student's written Btatements.
2 ) After receiving the student's written statement, a
panel shall be selected from
the University-wide Committee
and shall- in tum notify both
parties to the dispute of the
time ana place at which it will
hear the appeal. Both parties
will be provided with a_., opportunity to present further arguments on their behalf.
d. Decisions

.

A majority decision is ·sufficient to reverse or modify any
previous decision. 1be appeals
committee shall promptly notify each party to the case, includilll! tha President, of its decision m writing.
_.,_.., • •l ')l..'l't

5. Flnol Appe.ol

lit accordance with State Ed-

ucation law, and through the
Policies of the Board of Trustees, the President shall be the
final source of appeal for any
of these matters.
6. Counsel

After the informal stage of
adjudication, either party may
be represented by counsel of
his choice.
7.R-

These procedures and sanctions shall be reviewed by the
Faculty Senate within three
years after promulga tion.

Snow Removal
Procedurffi
Are Outlined
Snow days a re approaching,
R obert E. Hunt, director of environmental health and salety,
reminded the campus in a
memo this week.
H is concern was not to scoop
the Farm£r's Almanac but to
outline parking pi"'ci!dures for

those days on which maintenance must remove snow from

campus lots and streets.
The procedures, he said, may
be inconvenient for vehicle
owners but " may not be as inconvenient as having to dig
one's ca r out alter it has been
covered by one of our big wing
plows."
The routine will be as follows:
''On days when plowing must
be done, campus maintenance
will infonn Housing and Norton Union a uthorities. These
authorities will make announcements over the P .A. systems to .
all residents and campus occupants. Maintenance and Campus Security will also make
announcements about the
grounds. About 10:30 p.m., or
a li ttle earlier, the center area
of the Main-Bailey lot at the
Bailey end will be plowed as
a temporary parking area. All
persons having vehicles in any
other lot or in the Main-Bailey
lot a re requested to move their
cars to this area. After the lots
have been plowed, cars may be
returned to their former positions. Cars on campus overnight must be parked in the
Main-Bailey lot. Those persons
who are parked in the currently
designated area for overnight
parking are requested to move
their cars into the cleared area
so that the snow may be pushed
off the lot and over into the
lawn area.
" Cars which have not been
be
moved from the lots
plowed in. If the snow is deep
and should !~ overnight, it
will be extremely difficult to
extract the car. In addition to
this inconvenience, S}ich vehicles are subject to tags Lor
prohibited- parking and may
also be subject to a $10 towing
fee."
·
·
Questions should be directed
to Hunt, Mr. Vern l.araen of
Maintenance, ext. 4016, or Mr.
Griffin, Campu:s Security, ext.
~t, .•.••. l.. \.' 1' • · · · , • ...__........ . ..

will .

125thAward

Horwrs Pozmd,
Haivard Prof
Physicist Robert V. Pound,
a U / B alumnus who is now
Mallinckrodt Professor of
Physics at Harvard and chairman of the department there,
will be honored bere Monday,
N6vember 29.
.
Pound Will be saluted at a
Faculty of Natural Sciences
and MaUiematics' 125th Anniversary Award Symposium in
his honor in Acheson 5. He will
receive a special Anniversary
citation from the University
and present an address1 "Photons Appear to Fall; the History of an Experiment." This
portion of the Symposium program will begin at 8 p.m.
At 3 p .m. in Acheson 5, four
scientists will share the platform : George W . Watkins,
General Electric Research Laboratory, Schenectady, speaking
on "Early Days of Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance at Harvard;" &amp;bert Kurland, Chemistry Department, U / B, " Nuclear Relaxation Phenop&gt;ena in
Chemistry ·and Biology;" RObert Berernan, Chemistry ~
partment, U/ B, ''N u c I e a r
Quadruple Resonance Spectroscopy in Che mistry;" and Juergen Heberle, Physics Department, U / B, ''The Mossbauer
Effect-I ts Early History."
Professor Pound received the
B .A., summa cum laude, from
U / B in 1941. According to the
citation he will receive, his research in physics comprises
major cont ributions to science:
• Participation in the discovery of nuclear magnetic
resonance which is said to be
"fundamental to research techniques now widely used in
physics, chemistry abd biology;"
• Initiation of the study of
nuclear quadruple reactions in
solids;
• Exploration of the interactions of nuclei with fields in
condensed matter, using the
angular correlations of nuclear
radiations;
.
• Using the ·Mossbauer effect "to bring the universe into
the earth-bOund laboratorr by
confirming t h e gravitational
red-shift predicl#ld by Einstein
in 1911."
Proft!8SOr Pound:S father was
active in the U/ B Department
of Mathematics for over -.ao
years.
'

SPAclilmtAcT
Copies of the SPA Contract· have
now been distributed on campus
by the U/ B Personnel Office (In
compliance with a provision Of
t he agreement). A cover lettei' rem inds.. however, that "the neso·
t iated salary increase. the Death
Benefits and Dental Insurance Qfr•
t ions (of the agreement) cannot
become effective until they are ap·
proved by the Stole . Legislature.
Similarty. '"lhe increase in the maximum accumu'lation up to 165
sick-leave days and 40 vacation
days may not be J mp~ed un·
t il the Federal Guidell,_ from the
Cost of Uvil\8 Council are clan·
fled." .
.

�7

NariDblr IB,l9'1l

GREPORTS

ON

llidic ~ sw-o o.aw.do
.... ...aw.He at . . " - Tidoet Ollloe or at . . Jlllol
TaiJie. 'The . . . - t will ......
'· col. 5)
5~~
dinded

Qmmuoique-

Jr., -

(c-tiaaetl , . _ -

-

- . r-1/tlt

~ r""i.;~ ~"!ir~

GJ'EOPLE

_ ...... _ _ . , (:!B) 6otiDc. 8:311 p.m.

SaDday

WEDNESDAY-I

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

::··.r£::r

~·~~=
1Dombeawillbe811aoiitedby

0- &amp;lled--

obowiDc

•

4 .F

eaDL Mail

will
. .- - s . . . d 6-.n
ed
with • ..U-add.-lollollped-......_ to HIDel. 40 &lt;:..- --.

Ba«aao, N.Y. 14214.

........,..........,..,u~

:.-op= ;::::.: .:.=:;J:;
np

~-

iD the

-

Diefeudorf Receptioa ,...,.. - '
cording to the followinc ocbedale:
&amp;niorr. A-F, Ncw. 29; G-0, N""30; P-S, Dec. 1; T-Z. Dec. 2.

Juniorr. A-F. Dee 3; G-0, Dec.
6; P-S, Dec. 7; T-Z. Dec. &amp;
Soplwmoru: A-K. Dec. 9; L-8,
Dec. 10; T-Z. Dec. 13. FrealonwA:
A-K. Dec. 14; IrS, Dec. 15; T-Z.
Dec. 16.

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS ·
DL BIUL I~ BRA'!'!'.

a.oci.ate pro-

feooor, orpnisatioa aDd human

reoouroeo, Scbool of MIUUiCement, has - . appointed chairman of the Wldergraduate program,.

PRESENTATIONS
DR.. ALAN &amp;. ANDaASBN.

I'ILM•:

ec..rereDOe

Kin6 Rat.

Tboalft, 6 p.m., - LD&lt;CUIIII'IQI . . , . . _ - :

Dr. WoU-

~~.s:=;J:""::4
Hayes. 7 :311 p.m., paiJlie iJMted.

auociate _

~~= ~m!:..;·Mar:.\

American Mal'keting Asaociation
Doctoral ConoortiUlil, Univenity
of Weatem Ontario; seminar
leader, "The Black Community:
Opportunity and Challenge,"
Pepsi-Cola Management Institute,
Phoenix. Ariz., and Milwaukee,
Wis.; "Towards a Model of Inner City Business [)yn.amica...
12th American Meeting of the
Institute of Management Sciences.
DR. RlClL\ItD

c.

BIIANDIItNBUilG,

dean.

School of Management, "lm:reaaing the Productivity of Sdloolo of
Business," Twenty-finot Annual
Meeting of the Middle Atlantic
Auociation of Colleges of Business Administration, C. W. Poet

~:~~"[ ~~'tl:ni;J:

ministrative

Structure

of

Scholarship
BallDec.3

the

THURSDAY-2

IIUK.lKJ8'DC ABSDlAC'ftOlf : G S 0..
JIEIKIC AND L~ collectioD

of recent paiDiiDp and paphics
hY Sheld&lt;m Bedyn. associate prof .....r of art, aDd Kurt FeoerTM Aeuu and Ch,.,U, Ankle, hen:n. aseociate 0011RrVBtor. InterhY Becional Medical M u se u m Laboratory. Oberlin.
Ohio. Gallery West, 3ll Bryant
St.. ~ Sunday, December
tel
5. Houn are : Tues.-Fri. 7-10
11:311 am.
Tlwn.. Sat. and SwL. 1-5
IITADimCII LIIC!UIE#:
Dr. UJl p.m.;
GrenaDder. B row o UlliYe:ni.ty. p.m.
'ID.I7'BOJIE LECI'UD#:

POOl&amp;DrY

c='

~~.!:a~

~~~.~~

A.30, -42311 Rid&amp;&gt;e Lea. 12:311 p.m.
and 4:30 p..m...; refreshments.
Room A-16, 42311 Rid&amp;e Lea. 12
DOOIL

J02JICAL 'IZCBJCCXDCT 1JIU!PIIDIU

IZCI'UI&amp;# : Sa r a &lt;Acarelli and

~~~hid.~

!thy·P:;r..::..ed
!f '=!M.::
o.-,
83IHI'I28 f« iaforma-

tiou. 1:311 p.m.

OOIIIPCDJIC:. aanD

~ SIIKftQ£8

....,......,, ADVANCED 00.
B O L , - ~Room 10,
4238 Rid&amp;le Lea. 7 p.m.
PIU(• • :

ll.ebe;xJa (Alfred

llitdl-

c:ocl. 19411). 147 IJiefeo&gt;dori. 8
p.m.
AD 0ocar

...-me

adapCatiaa

:L.:t~A-~7sn::

-bat--theof hio r - ...

N&lt;YriCES

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
---of-by
Robert (;.,... aDd _ , _ .lo7&lt;a.
Room 21Tl• ........._ I.ibaQ-, 9
a.m..~

p.m.

.........
- allilit.lloor ~
• ........._
I.ibaQ-•

N-

• ...., - - -

-

.,. lhll
'JI11,

IAu...te
~........._
I.illau7-

INTERVIEWS

�8
SATURDAY-27

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

SUNDAY-28 ·
THURSDAY-18
CON'I'INUING DENTAL EDOC&amp;'IIOM# :

Dr. Rooald Jarvis, e1inical - taot prof...,r, lised prcetbodootics, Operoliue a n d Loborotory
Procedluu ill C~l'fJIJlia for IHntioto and Dentol Te:ltniciano, 146
Capen. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Aloo Nov.
19'....1 20.
OON'IDflJDI'G DBN'l'AL IDUCA'IIOH#:

Dr. Alan J. Drinnan. c:hainnan,
oral ...ticine. aad atal(, DeniDl

. .::i

· m~~
Ca.-, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

ooo......'IIQ COI.I.BGE• : Con.oom-

~.

tion and c~ Day, oponoored
bY Coope.ative College Center of
SUNYAB. 9:30 a.m., cxm.vocation
aad tour, 12 noon, luncheon: 2
p.m., worbbopo featuring new
in education; 7 p.m.. .,_.

=

~U:t w!,:!'us!::rureoen,!j

drama croups. 465 Waobington
St..(oorn6ruWaobington&amp;M~

hawk) .

PII.ADL\CY 'I'EU!I:PHONE u:cTU2E#:

Robert M. O&gt;oper, Update on 1M
1971 ConlrOUed Su.b•tt~.ncn Act~

:r !:1::::1 !'ti!:~

~
tel 835-0728

BIOLOGY IICIIIDIA&amp;•:

Dr.

. . . , _ , DQUID( 0

Meiblm

i1:mama. ~~rtt~
Epotein-x.:: Viru• Fowtd. iA

aa. - -

Ruman Uuet&gt;cyu Cultur.,., 184
Health Sc:ieuces

Bide. 4 p.m.;

em TuaclaY. Noo. 80, at 8:80 p.m.

refresbmento, 101 Health Sc:ienc:es, 3:30p.m.
POaDGH STtJDafT COI'FIIE

2Dd Boor Townoeud.
welcome.

~

MONDAY-29

aoua••:

p.m.. all

SABII..lTB .&amp;T CBAB.lD•: topic of

I'&amp;AQI OOUS/VIIIrA:

the

Sab!Jaa!'-"'1..!::

T"'!"l~

~

oponoored by Faculty
ScieDCOO and Matbematico, in honor of R.V. Pound,
MalliDclaodt Profeooor of Pbyoics
and Cbainoan, Pbyoico Depert.
ment. Harvanl University. A/Ur1100n Sym~ium, featuring

POSllJ)( 0 :

m Natural

St.. 6 p.m.. all wel-

Mont~ny Pop~

PIL)( •:

apoJI901"ed

by Community A_ction O.rpo, 140
Capen. 6:30, 8 &amp;od 9:45 p.m..
$.75 contribution. Tickets in advance and at showtime. Norton
Ticket Office. Aloo on Saturday,
Nov. 20.
Tb.i.s 6Jm was recorded live at

~.l" ~.. ~~~~E:!r;

~:::ceofaf'#:::""00:'1h~t.ic~e:i

Kurland, profeooor, chemistry,
Nu.ckar Relaxation PhenotMna
in Chemistry and Biology; Dr.
Robert Bereman, chemistry, Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance
Spectroscopy in Chemiltry; Dr.

the Monterey Pop Festival by D.
A. Penoebaker. A colorful sound
folk and rock orgy. "Wbate.er
your music bag might be, M onterry Pop provides moments of
unfol'll"ttable brilliance."-Judith

~:t.,;{st,;:,~~

for information. ' OW. Redding, Jeffe.- Airplane,
and others.
11:30 a.m. and 10 p.m.
c:m:;aoc.u. ENctNEDUNG SEMINA&amp;#:
Dr. Jobn R. Ferron. cbemieal

~~~~t),ol~a~

Go«., 5 Ad&gt;eoon. I p.m.
·
Rotational effects and b o n d
otretclUng complicate the application m the lcinetic theory of

en ~f *!:~y=~~ c::

re;~;. ~'ex~~t!l~~

wed to illustrate the problem.
and oome new model calculations
and conelative methods are tested as bases for improved predic·
live ocbemes.
BIOC.HII:IOSDY SBJUN.ut •: Dr. Ru-

fus Lumry. Laboratory for Bio-

ktr.=~~.2~:~D~~

lltDUfuu of Wat~r and Its Probabk lmp/icaJions in ProU!in Functwn, G-22 Capen. 4 p.m.
BILUCL BOWLING: Norton Lanes,
7 p.m.
m.JI• •: V ilJate of the Damn.ed
(Wolf Rilla, 1960) , 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.. free.
OOl.U!IGB LIFE MEEnNG* :

spon-

oored by Campus Crusade for
Christ. featuring films, refresh.
meats to follow, Clement Dormitory Lounge, 8 p.m.. all welcome.
GlaM.A.NIC.SLAVIC DEPr. LECTUKE*:

L u d w i c I..andgrebe. professor

emeritus. • University or Cologne.

="O~i~~~';=~
Probk~ thr Litero.tur-1nterpre-

tation, 831 Hayes, 8: 15 p.m.
Dr. Landgrebe is a f o r mer
president of the German Phil~
oopbjcal Society and one of the
foremoet authorities on Hus:serl
and phenomenology. He has written numerous boob and articles
and his work Major Probkm.s in
O.ntemporary Europeon Philooophy is well known in tbis country.
oPD.I.B•: Poulenc's La Ma.nuUu

:..r~~Tr..J!~1 ~-:!7,;
th Muse Pedro (Mcut.u Peter'•

:=:J'bttJ.e
au:ti"'o::
era Studio, Muriel Wolf, director.
~~ dffi~; :=:.t~J:::~:

$1..50': faculty, otaff and U/B
alumni $LOO; s t u de n t s $.50.
~.- Throu&amp;h S!"'. Nov. 2L

JN'IDlUDONAL P'OI...K DANaNG:

=:t.~~~=i

8 p.m.

Trosh

FILM.••:

(An Andy War-

bol Production, written. filmed
and directed by Paul Morrisey) .
O.nlerence Theatre. cbedc showcase for times. faculty and staff
$1.25, students $.75 or $.50 before
6 p.m. Tbrough Sun., Nov. 21.

WEDNESDAY-24
OCCUPA110NAL 1'ID:RAPY ft:L&amp;PBON£

HILLEL CLASS :

Convr.rsational He-

brew (elementary) ,

262

Norton,

?p.m.
GRADUATE RECITAL• : David Cast.
tenor, Baird, 8:30 p.m., free.

TUESDAY-23

generally the incredible competence of the overall production
make this an important film for
those who groove on Joan Crawfold sboes.
o..,;..,.• : see Thunoday li.ting.

NURSES TELEPHONE LEC'I'URE#:

Claudine Gartner, Nursing Care
of the Patient Having An Abortion, sponsored by Regional Med-

~~.p~~-0~28 ~i~or!!::

SATURDAY- 20
CONnNUING DENTAL DUJCA.ftON# :

~.:~:~ ~dek;ri~~% ~
Lo Dolce Vita.
LATIN

A.MEIUCAN

SEMINA&amp;• :

Dr_

Abraham Monk, associate professor, School or Social Policy and

~:mh!"~r~it:'iC::a ~0:~

3-4:30 p.m.

Operative tuul Laboratory Pro- HILLEL ACI1VITlES: Hebrew (becedures in Ceramics for Den.tUt" ginners c tass), 262 Norton. 12
and D e n 1 a l Te.t:hnicians. see noon. Jewish Ethics, 262 Norton,
Thursday listing.
1 p.m.. Executive committee meet~
5:.88.\TH AT CH..&amp;BAD•:
Services ing. Hillel Houoe, 7:30 p:m.
followed by meal, Cbabad Howoe,
3292 Main SL, 9 :30 a.m. DU.CU..sion: .. Eternal Torah in Chang.
ing T'unes," Cbabad House, 3:45
p.m. All welcome.
HILI...EL C...\SS: Torolt with Com.mentari.u, Rabbi H o f m a n n 's
bome, 12 O.lton Driw:, 3:30 p.m.
lUXI'a AT CBAJW)•: M ekwah Molkah party with a.a..idic music,
refreshments. cornoenation.. Chabad House, 3292 Main St.. 8 p.m..
all welcome.
oi'EIIAS• : ..., Thunday listing.
~~ontuey Pop, oee FriPILK**: Trash, see Friday

liatinc-

SUNDAY-2l
BilUL

a.&amp;SSa:

c:c..-,...tionG!

Hebrew (adv,anced), 262 No.-,

~pe=.;"'Rttt'i

Houoe, 1 p.m. Talmud; Hilld Library, 3 p.m.
o"""-'8•: oee Tbanday listing.
FILM •• : Tro#J., eee Friday J.ist.inc.

MONDAY-22
m.im••:

Kino Prrux/4 .aDd Mtll&amp;
With o Mor1U Canova, botb directed bY DziP Vertov (Rus-

oian), 147 Diefeadod. 3 and 8

p.m..-- .

uocrua#: Dorothy Shaw, Anne

Simroondo, Elizabeth .Deichman,

Activity Program Ideas For Res~
denta of Nurain.g Hom.u and Extended Care Fac.ili.tiu, Part II,

rro;:t
:r ::::::1 :tato=.
tel 835..()728 for in formation,
2 p .m.

W a r h o I and Morrisey have
turned out aome ""undervouod"
classics. but none lane gotten as tion. 1:30 p.m., also on Tues..
much attention or praise as Trash Nov. 30.
with its lovable ..sna.gg.le-tootbed FILII • • : 8% (Federico Fellini,
transvestite." The film generally 1963, Italian), 147 Diefendorf, 3
has a ..hot.. 'Or ..cold- effect upon and 8 p.m.. free.
audiences,. but this is mostly due
Fellini's biography of a film
to the subject matter which is director which is also the highest
rather e&lt;pl.iciL But. the unsensa- point in his own film career_ The
tional and honest presentation. story is of a ramous director who
the humor. the precise attention has just com'p leted an extraordinto visual style and laaguaj:e, and ary picture and is worried about

8ioD

FRIDAY-19

In-

reauilera will

l&gt;e in Center Lounp, Norton,
8:30 a.m. to clooinc; film ohown
oontiououaly, Fillmore Room.
125m ~ · AWAIID IIYK·

week is SlrDblx»-Tu Mirock

come.

U/B Clonu,

:

s-.

Scbola Cantorum, Balfalo Philbarmoaie, Melvin
coaduc-.
tor, KleinhaDa Music Hall, 2:80
p .m.;at
.'I'ieDt
S6. k OIBOe. Aloo
able
Norton

COMPUTING CEN'I'EK UBm SEBVIC&amp;9

Juergen Heberle, professor, physics, The Moubau.er Effect-Iu
Early Ri.tory, 5 Acbeaon. 3 p.m.
Evening Award Presentation, Dr.
McAllister Hull, chairman, physics, m a s t e r of ceremonies, 5
Acheson, 8 p.m.
m.MS• • : Entr'acte (Rene Clair,
1924, French), Balht Mechanique
(Ferdinand Leger, 1924, FrenCh),
Un Chien Andolou (Luis Bunuel!
Salvador Dali, 1929, Spanish), 147
Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p .m., free.
OO'MPU'ID

SCIENCI:

COLLOQUIUM

SEIUES#: Dr. Richard Eckbouse,
Univeroity of Mauachusetto, The
Computer Science Laboratory,
Rooni . 41 , 4226 Ridge Lea, 3 :30
p.m., refreshments to follow. •
SUZ BEETHOVEN CYQ.l: IV: Guarneri Quartet, Baird, 8:30 p.m.,
tickets aold out.

BDDNAR#: MIMED, Harvey
Axlerod. Room 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea. 7 p.m.
VJOUN RECITAL•: Charles Haupt,
soloist. Baird, 8:30 p.m., students
$..50, faculty and staff $1.00, genTUESDAY-30
eral admiasion. $1..50.
NURSING TELI!!PBONB uacrtJBE#:
WNI':D-'!"V: Tallr of the Town, with
Fra.nk P a r m a n and Terrence see Tues., Nov. 23 listing.
Moore, Creative Associates, pre- ENGIND:RING AND APl"UED SCIENCES
senting ezcerpts from Charles Levendosky'a book of poetry, perim- ~~vilDr~'=!!~~·£",.::
eters; Jayne Freeman, boat. 8:30 . neering an,d Society, 70 Acheoon,
.
1 p .m.
p~

w B c &amp;-P K: Muaical Innovations,

featuring Jan G. Williams, newly
appointed assistant director of the
Center for the Creative and Performing Arts, with Michael P .
Burke, booL 9 : 05 p~

FRIDAY- 26
services and
.etresbments, Cbabad House, 3292
Main SL, 6 p.m.
BABB;.TB AT CBAB.AD•:

INTDNATIONAL POLK DANCING:

In-

struction in basic steps during
lint bour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.

FILM•*: The Magnificent Seven

(Seuen Samurai), (Aitira Ku~
sawa, Japan), Conference Theatre, 3 and 8 p.m.: free..
This bas been a perennial fay.

~te y:/~ :.,till~ed.p:::!:t

:

Kuroeawa originally releaeed it
uncut and in 35 mm. Panavision.
Incidentally. u n c u t means 210

~~!:'~lhtoh:_u:-~ S:rol:bt;

m order.

PHYSICS COLLOQtrllJM #: Dr. Lindenbaum, Brookhaven National
Laboratory, Upton. L.I., Multi-

=~ tlM':o"::::d J~;:::tra_

dron Production, 111 Hochstetler;
" p.m. •. refreohmento, 112 Hocbatetter, 3 :30 p.m.

COMPUTING CZNTI:I USia SD'VJCEB
CQ.

IIIDm&lt;Aa# : . ADVANCED

~:--..t:4a~Ui~ ~~

BOL, will include diacussiono of
opecial 110, report writer, IIUb-

:;:::=.,f~~e,~nGo~ ·

.=.; t.....trw:.r~:m.

Room 10, 4238

- · : Twelfth Ni61at, by the
Marlboro The at r e O.mpany, "

-c..red~'::.. t..!e~..:.
admisoion $..50, tickato at tbe X!r.
All the wit and oolor of Eliza.
betbao England will deoamd with
the Marlboro TbeaUe ~
production of William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. Clowns,
fools, drunkaids and princes make

~~.:!'!d"';t ;f 8~r

=:ts

.r..:=

touring stage with baloony and
adds to the unique ~

Wulely acclaimed' u ' one of
New England's moot exciting theatres, the Marlboro O.mpany bas
d fresh and vital approach to

~ra=e..:!!l"t.= y:~

youthful .energy and ·inventive-

J .C..o.nti/w.!!d on page 7, coL 4) . _

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

VOL 3-NO.IO

NOV. 11, 1971

Mzchad TiLsat Thonws 'Coot1ucW In[rrmoll.£Cture
Cdlege B
............................fir............
~

~~

.......

MEt Funds
Are Frozen
ByAlbany
U/B's chapter ol the State
University Profe.iooal Asaociation (SUPA) is askina the
SUNY-wide l&gt;arpinins
to negotiate for an allocation ol
,_.;t u.c.- moDey ~-

...,.,t

-.~!""'!:....... ~
SUPA is also 1U1in1 ibe Senale Professional Aalociiatian
(SPA) to ask the State to
recognize that staff people bold
12-monlh a~ts and
should get paid 011 a 12-monlh
basis, rather than 011 the baais
af 10-monlhs' ~ spread .,..
12 months which· some prot..,.
sionaJa DOW ,..,...;ve. 'l1ie 1111110ciatian af DOD-~ pro. feasiollals (NTP'a) wants, in
-addition, t!Btablisbment af a
procedure whereby staff mom- •
bers can be notified about lob
.
within the University
~
and the SUNY system.
•
ThMe t h r e e remmiiii'IMiations are heine aent to SPA
flom the "500 employ- wbo
repreeent middle 11181181im&gt;m~"
Dr. Nonnan Hoaletter, aa&amp;l&amp;tant director af admiaoions and
1oeal SUPA president, aaya. He
helieYe8 lheae employeM "can
_ do a better iOO and he af better
_,;.,., to tbe Uni-mty if are """''nized for the jobe do."
Canlnct . . . . llooipenoit
SUPA is iioouinl tbeee remmmendatioll8 because the BtatbSPA contract ia beiDa reopened

011 Mlary

matters

011

Nowmber 15. 'l1ie orpniratioo is also alartinl iJeveral
Jooc-term atudiea ol - - that
ehould be included
the
contract is eompletely re-D&amp;gotialed in three yeara.
In-ny, SUPA ia in the
ol orpniziDJ a Staff
whieb will 'he llimilar to·
the hculty 8eaala. The 8rtic!.
ol ..,...,._ and •
tian are heine drawa up by two

""*'

=

~

....wu-

t-ded by !Uncy

Broderick. all8ist81il prowet IDr
buoinoilll aJlain, Eduadiooal
- Studies; 8Dd Marilla Gilel, Moietant to 1he diledar, Palicy
Bcioma!B. Ma. BIGdlft* heliew!a the ...-~ s..te .will
be • .....
• tiw IJolbo ...sttbaa •-.::-....::-.: I

i'-

::'t
-w... .......- - thO
SUPA -.;.;;Jtutian 8Dd hopea
(c-tu.....l "" , _ 3, col II)

...

__

._jult _ _ _ . . . . .....,• . . - . . . . . . . . ......,

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

-EMc:...lf ... - - .......... ..,

- . - . . .

--

. . .

~~~-.-

0

_..-..,

,.._

....

_

...... o...-....

....

_

..__........... .-c:.--. . -_ril_
_....,.

n.-- - - a.a- - ' -10a.atD4-.n.t-..:r_....., __
today Ia

�-~

2

What'sa·stooertt.~Thbo
When It·Has CriSiS of Identity?

a

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

s.m ~.;;:. is having

an identity arisia. Tbe orpnizatiaa, wbil:h is made up of
~ from the six
student _....,.ms and CXIIl-

::.:~ru-~·~·

Until it was incorporated
1.t year, &amp;m Board I (SBI)
simp!y the fiacal llDD of
1hOe llludoiat governments. It
tOot ...-y from the various
_
.. and distributed it
to Uniwnity-wide projects
and
- tious. Since it was
~Faculty Student
• AMociatiall in the early 60's to
adminilder aludent activities,
ol iiB wodt done in
the S~~~D~~BC. StudeniB never
...ny ........ """"' about it un. . they
aDd
ewa Ibm it was a fairly in-

-w _,.

-~tion.

'11auuch the

yMIII,

however,

aludent ~t 1&gt;00:
pie Wllllled to moorporate SBI

;,.,~ "1::!1 :~u:

Student A.oc:iation bad bought
with aludent flmds. Tbey also
felt incorpomtion would give
110111e type ol Clllltinuity to student government&amp;. Finally, in
1969, they started to do somet&amp;u. about it. Legal P~­
inp for incorporation we r e
started in Delaware, then New
Y odt c:baapd iiB State laws to
alloor J.S.year-olds to serve on
corporation boards. Last spring,
SBI fiDally became a corporate
body &lt;battered by New York
State.

"';:"~-idoi\8.

'was

..,e:.

t&amp;u. CIDIIIPietelY new andplllY-

be ewa rewlutionsiy for the
aludent body and faculty. SBI
. . probably the first student
~ in the State to be
incorporated. But what does
an ~ lilre this do?
Tbe........,.. ol the 1970-71
Sab Board members was swift
in coming-they took a $10,000
option .., 1150 acres of land
lllll!llf EIIi&lt;ottville for student
. ~ Tbey did this without either asking for a vote by
the aludent body or infonuing"
them befiJreband of the actio~
It . . simply presented fait
accorapli.
'IbeD l.t spring, a new Sub
Boa'id took over. Only one
llll!lllber nmained from the
fonDer board and the grQIIP
. still WBSD't very sure about
what a aludent corporation
obould do and be.
During the summer, they administered Poverty Hill and
held budpt bearings to allocate of their mooey. .
In the fall, the fat, as they
lillY. bit the fire. Tbe new board
decided to 8old a referendum
to find out whether students
Wllllled to buy the recreational
land Because of its incorporation liiles, SBI couldri't direclly bold a referendum, it
had to ask the six student govemments to do it. Suddenly,
......._., it seemed to the members of the currett board, the
aludent papem and manv members of the aludent body were

-....BQinot them.

'Adually, pressures against
SBI had been biillding since
Sollie students were
irate that a 110,000 option 1o
buy 1176,000 worth ol land
tau.. without their lr:nowl..... SBI aJao .moved to tie
its ClOIDIDittees and proiects
dosely to the bosrd, •Tbey
did this by dropping the Publications Board and making all
the lltadmt publirations direclly ......,....;ble to them.
apring.

..,_ ....... Houae CouDcil,

wbil:ht.a a' lar'l!l!~of

CDIIrol over how Norton _.,.,
• aJiocllted, ~ direclly to

them aJao instead ol to the i!&gt;dividual student governments.
And finally, they bepn to monitor budgets very c:loeely.
Tbese acti&lt;Ds and others began to make SBI seem "urueI!POD&amp;ive" ( etlwl ) and "at the
best negligent and at the worst,
criminal" (The Spectrum).
Tbe pressures eventually got to
the board members. Mark Borenstein, business manager of
SBI, wrote a letter on October
'1:1 saying that "the time has
come . • _ to put Sub-Board on
~ line." He felt SBI "could
no longer_ function within its
current oUtline, primarily because 110 plan; no set of responsibilities, and no set direction has been given to SubBoard by itself, or by the student govemmeniB which created it"
Tbe result of this letter and
the pressures was a meetiog
last Thursday uight to discuas
the fate of SBL As usually happens at SBI meef:inss, not all
the eleven members were present. · Rapidly, tJ\6 meeting split
into two camps. One side felt
SBI should stey what it legally
is-the fiscal ann of the student goverrunents. The other
side argued for SBI to be expanded into a student-wide
government. Within the two
arguments were many different
plans and ideas.
Dennis Arnold, editor of The
Spectrum, was on band to say
that be believes "student governments are on their way out,"
and that an SBI student-wide
goverrunent is the way of the
future. He advoca t ed direct
taxation' of' stUdents by' ' the
board. John Greenwood, G raduate Student Association alternate, claimed t h a t "there's
nothing wrong with · the structure of SBI, what's wrong is
with the representatives from
the s tudent goverrunents to
SBI." He advocated the binding of student government representatives to their constituencies' wishes on "substantive issues." Andre 'Raszynski, representative from the Medical
School, called for at-large members of the board, an idea
shared with him by Borenstein.

izational activity; to identify,
ascertain and help meet the
ooeds of Uie student; to con-

duct surveys in areas conoem-

~=:oo~~i=:'tf!

estsblisbed govemanoe of student affairs; to evaluate developments! progress, -performance
and efficiency of student activities; to coordinate its efforts
and operations with other elements of the University commuuity; and to share the responsibility of overcoming the
impersonalization of a large
wban University." • ·
·Everyone at · the meeting
seemed to agree that this was
a · i!obd philoeopby but flO Ol)l!
moYea to have It accepted !&gt;)'
the·present board or ·to have the
present group work on one of
their own.
ln fact, the only action taken
after four hours of tslk Wa&amp; the
charging of Borenstein and
Scott Slesinger, SBI. treasurer,
to recruit someone as director
of public relations for SBL
to
~~"!fw~t!a~
foroed the representatives to
think about different ways in
which SBI could be effective.
I t brought out the issues of
wby people consider SBI to be
a closed operation even though
the entire student body is invited to all meetings. Also disCU&amp;&amp;ed was the fact that representatives "pass the buck" to
SBrs business manager Borenstein to such an extent that he
is considered " Mr. SBI" when
he's only an employee of the
board.
.. The '"big 'quEstiOn thotigh'-"whilt SBI 's hould be .and what
role it should play in student
govemanoe--really isn't something the student goverrunent
representatives feel they should
answer alone. All of them want
feedback from their constituents fof' a long-term answer to
that question.
. .
.
...

Yi,!:

_ ..... _

.. Ait,_.

Poverty Hill Is Defeated,
Three Governments \bte No
The purchase of 1150 acres
of recreational land near Ellicottville, known as Poverty
~re:.fu..:!e~~~k, student
. Last Thursday and Friday,
the .wuiergraduate, graduate
and law school goverrunents
held referendums to detenuine
how their SBI representatives
should vote on acquisition of
the land. Graduate students
(with two representatives) and

T:lnlrhrw-n£aw Oh . ..J~n/s
24 ~LUJ
...:Jl,~
f,

.

To Vzsit UIB Law &amp;hool

·a

~~

.,.,.__ U B • - · School ill be
.,.., I .....w
w
The Belgian goverrunent, howFour-Hour Discualon
host to 24 Belgian taw studen,t s ever, according to Professor
. Discussion of.. Sub SPan~.'• and two pf9fesaon; the week of Bart De Schutter, the leader of
image and purpose raged on November 16-24.
the visitors, hopes to hlive every
for four hours. Tbe CT\1][ of the
Tbe visitors, all alfili.ated student in the country involved
debate was whether SBI should with the Free University of in some international program
be superior to or subordinate to Brussels, are coming to Bu1falo before be graduates. · An addithe student goverrunents.. Rep- in cooperation with the Belgian ?onal aspect .of the euban_ge
resentstives of University-wide Ministry ·of Ed1,1cstion, the 16 tlu!.t ev@lY sChool that seitds
agencies, including The spec. Free University, the Law students &amp;broad hils to. agree
trum's Arnold and Larry Stein, School and the U / B Council on to ·accept students in return.
president of the University International Studies. ·
Prof. Bue\Jeritbai reports· 'tbal
Union Activities Board, pressed
~rding to niollli!B: Buer- U / B ''tuiB•' ,idfeady been· ·&amp;sked
for a student-wide goverrunent. gentbal.- p!Qfessor .qf law.~and to 'inBke·'planli ' for· sendibi( a
John Samuelson, zepreseilts- chairman -.of the. International group _to Brussels in the future.
tive of the La.w Batool, 'felt that Legal Studies committee; "We : ' TJ:ie·Belgie.Jis will .&amp;ts' With
the p r o f e s s i o n a I schools .want ow: guests · to get some ;U / B law • students · an'J' their
wouldo't support the idea be- ides of the ·operation of the ~es duri!ig'. their time in
cause of their special interests. Anlerican judicial system and Buflalo. They will be involved
What became rapidly evi- to learn what American law in regular law classes, viSit
dent, as Dr. James Gruber, di- schools are doing. We are in- courtS and jails, and meet a
rector of Norton, pointed out, terested in letting them know numbet of area judges.
was that no one agreed on what our professional .training
Most of the planning for the
what the role of SBI or its op- is all about."
.
program has been done by U / B
erational pbilosopby should be.
Tbe exchange program, un- students with the cooperation
At this point, Raszynski read a der sponsorship Of the Experi- of the Erie County Bar Associstetement formulated by the ment in lntematioual Living, ation.
1970-71 Board, outlining its Brattleboro, Vt&lt;, is an outMembers of the student comphil080phy, goala and objec- growth of connections made mittee are: G eo r g e Reidel,
tives. He was the only one during a summer law program Jean Hellmann, Willism Buswith a copy, apparently further between U/ B and the Free Dica'gck.lia, Eugene Haber and John
evidence that incorporation University several years ago.
doesn't automatically supply • ------=~=---------------rontinuity to student governT'HAHKSGIVI.NG UBRARY SCHEDULE
~ uine primary goala of Lockwood and Harpman libraries will be closed on November 27 and
last year indicated· that SBrs 28 (the Saturday and Sunday following Thanksgiving) because of elec·
objectives were to "engage in trical ma~ntenance and repair wOrk. All libraries will be closed· on
the funding, &amp;pOIIBOring, and ~::r.~:~fa~~f:~/~ovember 25. TJle schedule for the fe·
regulation of student-run activ·
-.
·.:,~
Sot. ~
ities; to include in its on-going Lodcwood
-. ..... 24
Nev. ·a
How. 2T
opemti011 aD -members of tbe H•rrlman
: • .m .· ~p.m.
: • .m .-9 p.m.
CIOHCI
Closed .
student body as repreaented in M~
_
9 : ::::: t : ::::
c•~..g p.m.
tbe compositkm ' of SBI; to ~: ~ :::!:::~~::::: ~sp.m.. ::·n,.·~p.m.
~:::::: f::::
oversee and coordinate t h e . ~ Lea
9 a:m .. s p.m.
' • .m,·5 p.m.
'._•.:_..
,.'":_:.•._f:_:::,.:_
t Pm 5
ftmctions of all student orpn- ........
1:30·• .m •. 5 p.m. 8:30 •.m.·~ p .m.
...
1 p:m::ll : ::::

=

law school students (with one)
voted against purchase and undergraduates voted 1652 to
1148 for it Earlier, however,
the ' Stildent Association, (·SA)
bad passed · motion binding
their representatives to the ballot and instructing them to cast
their votes in proportion to the
number of positive and negative votes cast by undergradu·
ate&amp; at large. Because of this,
three of SA's SBI representstives will vote for purchase and
one will vote against.
· E&amp;rlter fast Week, · the Medical School's Student -p&lt;)Jiiy
favor of purchase of

..:a

=1

4

This makes to. date a tots! of
four ''no" w'-"llnd four "yes"
votes. Tbere~ 11 SBI representstives and a nA~tive
vote of three is suffici-;,';;i to
block ~~·ge.
~

Still outslanding are the decisions . of the Dents! School
(.with one representative) and
Millard Fillmore College
. (MFC) (with two represents. tives) . In October, the Executive, Commi~ of .MFC voted
'against · Purchase and 11811iP&amp;t
holding a refereooum. Petitions
· with over 3,000 signatures besejged the gro..p, however, and
they then voted to hOld a ~
ballot. This was sent out last
week at an estimated cost ol
$1,000 for materials and bandling. 'The results of the MFC
ballot will be known Monday.
Next Tuesday, Paul Gwnming, chainQan of SBI, .wl
call a formal meeting of the organization so the repreeentstives of the various student govemments can officially vote on
the land purchase. This JS a
mere fo"'l8llty, however, since
most of the student governments have bound their representstives to the referendum
results.
·
.
,
Cumming is happy with the
way

the ·r eferendum was

::r~ed~~ s.:~r:

the votera and then Jet them
decide.
•

·

Now tba.t ·P overty Hill is out

are:;~~~·;:;:~d:

Amherst "":'Y and the _.,_illaJid
~
ity of student ilonsina.

�&lt;iREPORTER,

Nav-r 11, 1971

Faculty Will
NJw Drow-up·
D~.:~ .. D...1-.1. ~UfeW ~

-~Senate·issues·Official List

·tqe:

Reading-

5. The Pentoaon Plpors
7. Crisis In the C18slroom
B. The SonsUOUI Wom11n
9 . The Femoh. Eunuch
10. God Ia In EnifilhiNin

Seveneit£d

·or CUrrent Membership, eo·mmittees. As. Leaders

'J;he ¥acuity Senate of the
Uru.vemty has released the folThe Faculty Senate's Com- lowmg rosters of membership
mittee on Faculty Tenure and and committee assignments for
Privilege has been charged by the 1971-72 year:
the Senate's 'Executive Com- Senote Membership
mittee with drawing up a set
(~ number in parentheses
of procedures for al'pointment, followmg the name indicates
tenure and promotion.
the years of the term.)
Early in October, proposed ' · FACULTY OF ARTS AND LETprocedures for the process, ~ TEBS: Pierre Aubery ( 2 ); Hardrawn up by Vice President ·•; vey Breverman ( 1 ) ; Diane
for Academic Aft"airs Bernard Christian ( 2 ); Albert Cohen
Gelbaum, were presented-to the. &lt;. (1); Jeremy Cook (1) ; Leo
Executive Committee which ,..;.. - Curran ( 1 ); Sylvia Dimiziani
viewed the system and sent it · (2}; Pierre Hart (2) ; Ronald
to the Tenure and lltivilege Hauser ( 2); George Hochfield
oommitteee for extensive oon- · ( 1); ViCtoria Kirkham (1);
sideration. Last Wednesday, BYT&lt;&gt;n· 1coekkoek (2); George
tile oommittee reoommeiuled ·- £i&gt;vi)M: , (2 ) · James McKirmon
that the faculty draw. up'
{~).; :~~ce l.;f i c he I ( 1 )
procedures. The suggestlni\. was .' l1"fi~)-ls replacmg T .E. Conbaaed on the reaaonil!c · ·tha~.
~fs&gt;.i the remainder of the
appointment to the U/lf,~..: ·:
•fiitl· semester) ; Mark
ty is in reW.ity an appoin~( &lt;, ,
r ( 1).
to the University's "oommunicy ,..,,,ACtJLTY OP EDUCATIONAL
of scholars" and that it is the".fJrUDIES: Robert Berdahl ( 1);
oommunity of scholars who .~roy · Callahan (2) ( Callahan
should draw up rules for th"eir· is replacmg G. D. Moore ) ;
own body. As.a result, the Ex- Charles Fall (2); Rol&gt;ert Fisk
ecutive Committee charged the ( 2} ; E. Perry Hicks ( 1)
Tenure and Privilege group (Hicks is replacing S. David
with drafting a system for ap- Farr) ; Myron Milstein (1);
pointment, promotion and ten- Robert Rossberg (2).
ure and outlining job descripFACULTY OF ENGINEERING
tions by December 15.
AND APPLIED SCIENce: John
In effect, this oommittee will Huddleston (1 ) (Huddleston is
be re-doing what Gelbaum has replacing R. Paaswell for one
already done. The vice presi- year?; Robert Mates (1 ); John
dent, however, is willing to Medige ( 2 ); David Reister
have the facultY'\Irsw up pro- ( 1) ; Donald Rober ts (1)
oedures since he believes they (Roberts is replacing S. Weller
should have uuiximum input for his one-y!'8T term ) ; Ernest
into the system.
Selig ( 1 ); Howard E . Strauss
In other actions last week, ( 2 ) .
the Executive Committee deFACULTY OP HEALTH SCIcided to meet with the Urban ENCES: Murray Andersen (1);
Development Corporation and Wayne Anderson ( 1 ); Harold
the Amherst Town Council Brody ( 2 ); Maimon Cohen
sometime within the.,IJlOilth. lo ( 1); John Cunat . ( 1 ); J . David
diScusS housing. President Rob-) Eick (2) ; Solon Ellison ( 2 );
ert Ketter asked the group how Richard Finnegan (2 ); Sttiart
they would like him to report Fischman ( 2 ); Thomas Ftanato Faculty Senate meetings in gan ( 2 ); John Fopeano ( 2 );
the future. At the November Peter Gessner (1); Robert
Senate meeting, Dr. George Gumtow (1); Sylvia Hart (1);
Hochfield expressed dismay at Marguerite Hays (1); Barbara
the gloomy tone and oontent of Howell C2); Joseph Lee (2) ;
Ketter's report and indicated James Nolan (2 ); Richard
be would like to bear fewer de- Powell Cl ) ; Isabel Reed ( 1 );
taila. Tbe ,F;xecutive Commit- Donald Rennie ( 1 ); Jeannette
tee, howeVer, ''urged the Pres- Spero ( 1); Zebulon Taintor
iden1
.blet...to report as fully "''' pos- ( 2 ) ; Roy Wilko ( 2 ). One -senstor is to be elected to replace
s
V. White for a two-year term.
FACULTY OP LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE: Kenneth Davidson
(Continu•d from pag• I, col. 4) (l); Robert Fleming ( 2 ); Jalocally. Also "doing nothing oob H)'lllllll ( 1 ) .
locally" are The Pentagon
FActn.TY OF NATURAL SCIPapers by The New York ENC£8 AND KATHEMATJCS: StanTimu staff (fifth nationally) . ley Bruckenstein (1 ) ; Charles
and Boas by Mike Royko Cazeau &lt;2); Walter Dann&lt;nurnber six on the ChronU:IL hauser ( 1); Nicholas Goodlist). The SeMuoUB Woman man Cl ); Gordon Harris (2 );
by "J" was once strons here Juergen Heberle (2); MeAlbut has now disapPeared from lister Hull ( 1 ); Vincent Santilthe chart while remaining li C2); "Lowell Schoenfeld (2).;
eighth nationally. CmiB in the Norman Severo · (2 ); Marvin
Clauroom by Charles Silber- Zelen ( 1).
. ·.
· .
man (seventh nationally), The
FACULTY .OF SOCIAL SCIENce
Female EUIIUCh by Germaine AND ADiliNI!ITilATION : David I
Greer (ninth) and God Io an Bazelon (1); Marvin Bernstein
Entlishman by R. 'F. Delder- C2 ); Ira Cohen (2); George
field (tenth) are aimilsrly "out Hourani (2); Elaine Hull (2);
of it" at UIB.
James Julian (2); Dan i e 1
-'-· of sales which Katkin (1) ·, Dorothy Lynn
One ca•
-~7
the Chronii!IL did not report, ( 1 )_; Joseph Masling Cl ); E.
however, is setting records Neil Murray (1); C. Carl Peghere: comics. Spiderman and _..els (2); Charles Planck C2);
Superman oomic books are 90 Lee Preston Cl); Dean Pruitt
popular that 1he Bookstore has · ( 1); Michael Ray ( 2 ); Laurinstalled a special stand which ence Schneider {1); Ernest
it has a hard time . keeping Thompson (2 ); Edward Walfilled.
lace C2); Marian White ( 1 );
Constantine Yeracaris (1) . A
senator is to be elected to reNATIONAL COLLEGIATE USf
place C. Pail thorp for a twoyear term.
1. Futu"' Shock
2. The Last Whole E1rth Cotllog
SUNY SENATE REPIIESENTA3. The Greening of America
TIVES: Marvin Feldman, Robert
· 4 . Bury My Hurt ot Wounded
Stern, Andrew Holt, Albert Hekate.
Knoe
6.-

3

~

SPONSIBILITY: Chairman, Noel
Rose, Ceoter for Immunology·
Robert'Berdahl, Higher Ed
'
tion; Oliver P . .Jones, :~
omy; James Julian, P sycho!ogy; A1 Katz, Law; Byron
Koekk~ German and Slavic;
John Sunon, French; John
Green;w~. Graduate Student
Assocl8tion.
AD&gt;ll!mONS: Chairman, MeAllister Hull, Physics and Astronomy; Frank Corbett, Urban Affairs; Stanley Cramer,
CourJSelor Education; J. Norman Hostetter, Admissions and
Records; F. AmJe Payne, Eng!ish; Paul Cohen, Student Association; Susan S c h .w art z,
Graduate Student Association
ATHLETJ\:"S: Chairman, J~.;.
Hansen, CourJSelor Education;
F .. . Peter Field, . Physiology;
Mddrj!d _-Heap, Physical Therapy; . Mil~n Plesurl"' History;
Howard Tieckelmann, Chemis-

t~;.l~ardFaiwl,StudentA.s-

SOCIBtion; George Haase, Gradua:e Student Association.
ECONOMIC lrrATUS: Chairman,
Murray Brown, .Eoonomics;
Barbara Bunker, Psychology;
Her m a .n Falsetti,_ Medicine;
~rt ~Educational Stud•es; . Dav1d Kochery, Law;
~hlbp Ross, Industrial Relations.
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING AND
POLicY : Chairman, Ca r me I o
Privitera, Biology ; John Halstead, History; Barbara Howell, Physiology; Allen Kuntz,
Student Affairs; Stephen Margolis, Engineering Science; Joel
Raynor, Psychology; J . Sidney
Shrauger, Psychology.
ELECTIONS: Chairman, Thornas T. Frantz, CourJSelor Education; Laurence Berlowitz, Biology~ . ~uth J.'lryant, Co\IDBelor
El!"""'tipn; Theodore. Hullar,
Medicinal Chemistry; Lynn
Rose, Philo sop h y; George
Schanzer, Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese.
.FACULTY TENURE AND PRMLEGE: Chairman, Solon Ellison,
Oral Biology; Newton Garver,
Philosophy; Herbert Reismann,
Electrical Engineering; Roberta
Sigel, Political Science; Madeleine Stern, University Libraries; Lee Itetelbaum, Law. .
FINANCIAL AIDS: Chairman,
Richard KoehL Philosophy ;
Robert J, Brown, Medicine;
Paul Edwards, Social Policy
and Community Services;
David Barmak, Student Association.
INFORMATION

AND

UBRARY

RESOURce: Chairman, Lowell
Schoenfeld, Mathematics; Kenneth Laughery, Psychology;
Joseph Lauler, Law; Charles
V. Paganelli, Physiology ; Walter Pettv, Elementary and Remedial Education; Donald Robcrts, Information and Library
Studies; Kent Schriefer, University Libraries; W -illiam
S t e ·in, Anthropology ; Max
Wickert, English; Henry Buda,
Graduate Student Association.
PUBLJ'CATIONS: Chairman,
laurence Michel, English; B.
Richard Bugelski, Psychology;
Rich:ard Finnegan, Medicinal
Chemistry·, Chester Glomski,

Anatomy; Frank Hodges, Social Policy and Community
Services.

n:c'i:!i.:.':.,c;:.-r,:_v;
uA~
P~~ Sta~-"- ·, Milo a,·.
--~

........,.

baldi, Pharmaceutics; Car I
Pegels, Management Science;
Herman R a h n, Physiology;
Gordon Rogoff, Thester; John
Sullivan, Arts and Letters;
David Kosiur, Student Association; Earl Sidler, Graduate Student Association.

Mary

c~.r"ch.~~~~

"""""'
rn 1) •
standlnl ~of tht . . , _

ence; otber faculty inembers to
be ai&gt;pointed; Fred Aueron,
Studeot .Aiaociation; Jim Felton, Graduate Student Association.

LIBitAaiES:

},'lrady ( 2 ); Sbonnie Finnegan(1); Kent Schriefer (2) ·, Mad-

·'-'-· Ste

(

ACAIJDOc I'IIEBDOM AND liE-

SECBETAIIml· Mrs Corrine
Moore· Mill. ~ p
·
•
BIIZICIL

Educ:otional Plannlna
ond Polley Subcomm-

CONTINUING EDuCATIoN:
_B 8 r b ". r a Howell,
fl:::;;ologyOo,nalDda v' d Aboscb,
. . ry;
. Brutvan, Continwn!! Education; G e ~aId
~'rancJS, Mechanical Engmeermg.
.
T ~A c H 1 N G ~
Chairman, _ Allen. ~untz, stU-"
dent Affairs; Willis Overton,
Psychology; Murray. Schwartz,
:glis_h, ~bert Sbann.~er, Enst'd"':'A~~ Vl Bock,
u en
on.
.
THE COLLEG&amp;'!: Chauman,
~i:'s~!f"~ryli; Mar.
oom,
.
o cy and
Commuruty ~TVlces; ~eJll!"th
~,:r,~enunbergcal lf,':j"'nng;
. . . ge
•
ent AsSOCI8~ond, Sam - ~!eo Graduate tu entAssociation.
.
INDEPENDENT 81"UDY: Chairman, J. S. Shrauger, Psycho!01
~-gy • 1~ ~ Shuell, Educa•ona sy
ogy.
Speclol Committee
SP&gt;JCJAL COIDliTTEE ON BYLAWS : C hairman, Wayne Anderson, Medicinal Chemistry·
Norman severo, Statistics~
D "d s "th, Geo
h
'
~'%.mmttt.!"'p y.
OPPICEBS: William H. Baumer, chairman; Thomas T .
Frantz, Counselor Education,
secretary; R 0 bert Fleming,
Law School, parliamentarian
pro tem; Gilbert Moore, chairman-elect.
SUNY lrrATE REPRESENT,.Tivm·
Marvin Feldman, Psychology.;
Robert Stern, Political Science·
Andrew Holt, Graduate School~
.Albert Reluite;· "E. J . Meye;
Hospital.
,
ARTS AND LETTEIIS: Ronald
Hauser, German and Slavic·
Diane Christian, English.
'
EDUCATIONAL 8rUDm; : Mike
Milstein, Educational Administration.
ENGINEERING AND APPLIED
SCIENC£S: John Medige, Engineering Science.
HEALTH SCIENC£S: WaYne
Anderson, Medicinal Cbemistry; Sylvia Hart, Nursing, resigning as of Dec. 1, 1971;
James P. Nolan, Medicine.
LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE:
Robert Fleming, Law School.

Chai"""""

1

1

NATURAL SCIENCES AND MATH-

By Nursing
.

The School

of NWIIiDg ' -

honored seven .prof.......,..
muBeS for their leadersbip BDd
dedication to their profl&amp;ion.
Dr. Ruth McGrorey, dean of

the School, presented citations
to the nurBeS during the ....,_

day symposium, "Contemporary lsl!ues in NWIIiDg: Power

and . the Professioo," I as t
Thursday.
Cited were:
Mrs. Eva Bateman Noles,
clinical aaaociate professor,
honored as the first black woman tO be admitted to and
graduated from tbe School
Sbe was "'!"' I_Jonored for her
many contributions in the field
of cancer ntulliDg.
Dr. Ellen McNicholas, professo~ of adult health, for developmg baocalaureate and
graduateeducationntulliDgprograms in Western New York.
Mrs. Patricia Shine Hoff,
clinical associate professor, a
community health nurse and
the first director for ntulliDg sffairs of the Regional Medical
Program for Western New
York, for developing a series
of network television lectures
for nurses.
Mrs. Thyra Merriweather, a
professional public he a It h
~urse, for providing imaginative, creative leadership in introducing new nursing roles in·
to hospital patient care.
Miss Virginia Ego, for her
nursing education program at
D'Youville College as well as
her oontributions as a nll111e,
teacher and administrator.
Miss Elizabeth Bolton Marshall, for dedicating her talents
and energies to the lmprovernent of J&gt;ublic health nWIIiDg
on the NJagara Frontier.
Miss Mary Patricia Moran,
for her outstanding work as
chairman °! the Cominunity
health nursmg department at
D'Youville College.

Sl.Jm.(Continu•d from pag• I , col. i)

it will be ready for ratification
sometime this month. Hostetter feels it is a "good possibility" that the fJr&amp;t StaH Senate
meeting can be held at the beginning of next semester.
Grievance Proc:edurea

EMATICS: Stanley Bruckenstein,
SUPA is also developing
Chemistry; Marvin Zelen, Stat- grievance procedures. In Sepistics.
tember, President Robert Ket90CtAL SCIEN~ AND ADIUN- ter designated SUPA as the
ISTRATION : Lee Preston, School campua body to bear grievances
of Management; Dean Pruitt, from NTP's.· As a result, the
Psychology; Ernest Thompson, organization is currently re- ,
Speech Communication.
viewing ·its procedures in onler
UNIVERSITY UBJWUES: Shon- to develop a process OODSistent
nie Finnegan, Archives.
with SPA guidelines BDd to

'lbrlrey Rare Set
All members of the faculty,
staff and student body are invited to join in a "1\ukey
Trot," to be sponsored by the
U I B Intramural program, November 18, at 3:15 p.m.
The foot race will start at
Clark Gym with the mile and
three-quarter r o u t e crossing
Bailey A v e n u e, continuing
through Grover Cleveland GoU
CoW11e, returning to the campus at the Michael parking lot
and ending in front of Norton.
Turkeys will be awarded the
winners.
Both men BDd women are
eligible to participate and no
entry form is needed. However
those planning· to enter ..,.;
asked to oontact Bill Mookarsh.
directo of intramurals, at 8312924/ 2926 prior to the race.
"Even if you don't win a turkey:· ~onkanJh llli,YB, "we guarantee that all those who finish
will at least become lit."

~.;......"""':r&lt;&gt;J...~.:

Committee, Ron Stein, aaka
NTP's with grievances to call
him at en 372L
Other issues which alfect
NTP's are also ~ d.isct-t.
Ed Gray, Inatructional Communications Center BDd chairman of the Iasues Cdmaittee,
says his group is cdKCemed
about campua security, tating
oourses, staH input into University decision-making a n d
the SPA-NTP relationship.
Hostetter has written a letter
to President Ketter asking him
to appoint SUPA members to
administrative ....:h oommitHe believes that NTP's
are institutioiNIUy-oriented
rather than diacipJ.ine.oriented
and have a loyalty to U/B BDd
an expertise that would be
helpful on these oommittees.
SUPA also expects to start
a newsletter soon for its local
constituency. Judith Dinpl~
director of student affairs,
I of Management, is the
editor.
\

�~

4

Leaders or AAUP s~ sms Contract Prrf's Letter1s '1ermed .
Causes Thnrern' on &amp;Mrcil ~ · _..., Shocking':;::!~
Of'...,._

(EDITOR'S NOTE: The fol- tbe clocu-.
mo- mental richt of Jaculty
Prol:eosor Leoo LivinpUme's describe tbe office of ~ ProlotDin&amp; COIJUriLif4!ry on tilL con- cern to uo 'lrith reprd to gav- ber faced with ~ ":":; ~ leUel' in tbe &amp;portu YOSt in such unllatteriDg fenDs
tract " " ' - ~StalL of NetD emment is SPA's acceptsooe of bearing before his peers. The of November 4. 1!111.. o«eods wbeu. be bimoelf is a meJllber
York and tM Soook Pro{e.- a contractual "Management SUNY regu).atioo&amp;, DOW specif- by its bold inaccwacies, its of that provoaliaJ ..rm eom..
.Wool ~ion. on ~htJJf of Rights" provision: "Except as ically embodied in tbe contrac- unfOUDded interpretatioos, and mittee. Howew!l', this trait of
the foculty and non-teac/Ung expressly limited by other pro- tuaJ agreement, provide ooly abcrlle all by its meretricious inconsistency ' is not ..,., with
prof~ool .taff of StalL Uni- visions of this Agreement, all of for a bearing before an all- timing.
Profesaor Livinptone. It is typ.
verszty, u.u directed to tilL tbe authority, rights and re- University ciomm.ittee. with tbe
Although we are most eager ical of him. He bas on at least
pusidelll of tilL SUNY Coun- spoosibilities pooe;sed by tbe furtber stipulation that any in- to respond with ample docu- two occasions refused tbe cbaircil of Affilioted Chaptna of tilL State are retained by it" The dividual on that committee wbo mentation to all tbe allegati&lt;Jos mansbip or that Ilepartment for
American A6«&gt;ciation of Uni- AIB&gt;ciation bas insisted, prop- is (rom tbe same campus as tbe made by Prof.,...,.. Livingstone which he Pretends so much convosity Prof e . . oro by the erly and suooessfully, that col- individual whose case is to be in reference to tbe Department cern.
AAUP WtuJUntton O(fit:e.)
lective bargaining ~ts heard must .disqualify himself of Spanish, Italian, and PortoAs late as November 18 1970
Our Clllla!m5 .....,.. tbe con- for colleges and universities from serving._Thus tbe SUNY guese, there is tbe maUel' of Prol:esaor Livingstone, then oi
18lts of this leugtby document sbould not leave all unspecif'Jed faculty member faced with dis- professional decorum. ProCessor a very d.ilrerent mind, leYeled
are nWDeiOUS and serious. you matfF1! to tbe discreti:m of tbe missal not onfy lacks tbe op- Livingstone focuses on a situa- j u s t as unequivocal cbarges
will recall that when we first governing authority, but that portunity for a hearing before
~ tbe-power slructwe of
Jeamed that tbe ten of tbe shared authority, as set forth a committee of his peers; he GtTTE"ti~
tbe Faculty of Arts and letters
agreement bad been released in principle in our Sta~Lment cannot be heard by any one of - y .1...1J yy C
which in his view was reducing
by SPA, to SPA members ooly on Gouemmelll of Colleges and his peers.
tbe rest of tbe Faculty to a
and with ooly 181 days in late UnWer&amp;ilies, sbould govern acaThe question of judgml!nt by The ........,. ' - • state or resignation and utte.August allowed for votes on ac- demic life. The SUNY AAUP peers is also a matter of con- to . , . - • ......, far "- • · helpl""""""" as well as demoraioeptance, we wired tbe Presi- Council will have to bear a cern when one looks to tbe dwlp of • • w.loly ization. Professor Livingstone's
dent of SPA to urge tbe post- major responsibility as long as agreement for protections for of " - - . . . -..r a. opponents change, but his VGpx&gt;ement of tbe due date for
tbe current SPA agreement is tbe individual in situations communay. We cabulaty does nol
replies until after tbe academic in force to see to it that aca- otber than dismissal for cause. pa8tlan p•pers •
Sincerely,
year bad begun and tbe ten demic government in the State The available grievance pro- pormlls.
-eEn&lt;R BOYD-BOWMAN
bad pined wider circulation. University of New York, wlticb cedure, presumably the total
Professor of
The ten itself bad not yet can stand improvement, con- procedure officially available, is tion in tbe Department which
Hispanic Linguistics
reacbed us at that time, but tinues to de.&gt;elop, and that this a series of administrative ap- at his writing bad already de-JAKES~- POHTIU.O
we felt it """""""' to register development is allowed to go peals: rust to tbe president on veloped into a formal grievance
Graduate Student
opposition to a procedure wlticb forth under the aocepted aca- a particular campus; then to which is now being reviewed by
Organization
would allow a document of such demic principles of s h a red the chancellor; then to the a Faculty Senate committee.
De~t of Spanish,
scope and importance to go authority ratber than under tbe State Director of Employee Re- Yet, in tbe interest of fairness
Italian, &amp; Portuguese
into effect without a reasonable unilateral authority or the lations; and finally to outside to all parties we have been
opportunity for responses from State.
arbitration. Missing are any asked not to air our disagree- EDITOR :
those wbo were to be governed
I need hardly remind you or provisions for a faculty mem- ments in public before a judgOn authorized and sponsored
by it Our ~t examin- any other active AAUP mem- ber, who wishes a review of an ment bas been reached. Livingation of tbe agreement conf"lnDS ber that the Association since academic judgment or who be- s tone's remarto; ·rererring to cer- leave abroad, I learned from
our judgment that tbe inade- its inception bas had as its lieves his academic freedom lain assistant professors and the "home front" that Profesquacy of consultation prior to paramount concern tbe adop- bas been violated, to have his their griewnce are particularly sor Livingstone bas divulged
its adoption was most unfortu- tion and implementation of case heard and judged by those disturbing. Furthermore, asser- internal controversies or tbe
nate.
•
sound prillciples or academic most qualified to make aca- tions cited by Prol:esso.- Living- Department or Spanish, Italian,
The provision in tbe agree- freedom and tenure, with at- demic determinations, by his •-tone form part of tbe body of and Portuguese to the Univerment for salaries does not seem tendant provisions for academic colleagues on the faculty.
the grievance itself. Despite his sity community in a letter to
to warrant any extensive reac- due process, and with related Retrenclunent
claim that he is not making tbe Reporter.
After having studied tbe W&lt;t
tion (rom us, especially since interests in tbe rights or tbe
One a rea of the agreement as a blanket defense or all tbe
we are not in a position to say individual faculty member con- it related to academic freedom, assistant professors concerned, of his -statements, I consider it
what might realistically have sisl8lt with tbe well being of tenure, and due process is es- the fact remains that he may quite improper to discuss such
~tters w¥e hearings on lcey
been attainable. We would as- the institution as a whole. The sentially new for SUNY, in well be called as a wiiDess.
swne that tbe overall six-per- Senate Professional Associa- that it was not covered in any
While we feel that tbe gross ISSUeS are m progress before a
cent increase, which we under- tion, in its campaign to become detail in the existing SUNY distortions and half truths in Senate Grievance Committee
stand to be about tbe same as tbe exclusive bargaining agent, regulations. I refer here to the his letter merit refutation,
- A~. it is unfortunate that
that attained by tbe various called for tbe attainment of tbe section on "Retrenchment," a ticularly in reprd to his~­ Livmgstone chose to intervene
civil servants ol tbe State of 1940 Statement of Principles, JiO&lt;;sibility that has unfortun- accurate vote !'Dllllts. we, on- during tbe absence of tbe secNew York, was a good deal and what that basic testament ately been proven to be far lilce Prof.,...,.. Livingstone, have ond ranking member or his Deless than most faculty mem- implies, "as a minimum" in a from hypothetical in today's cbooen to abide by tbe ethics partment who is at least equally
hers, in tbe light of campaign collective bargaining agree- depressed academic market oftbesituationand thus main- mvolved. The time of his interliterature and general aspira- ment. We have gone through Any """""""'Y reduction in tbe lain silenoe until tbe delibera- vention, which can reoeive an
tions, bad been led to expect. the agreement to measure tbe size of a faculty must be ap- tions are over. Our silence in adequate reply from his colFurtber, tbe inability to secure result, and tbe lack of achieve- proacbed with great sensitiv- lhil! regard sbould in no way leail!e&amp; only after tbe courts
have spolcen. is utterly reprefunds for merit inci-eases'is a ment is manifest
ity and skill. Faculty involve- be mterpreted as either ind.ilrer- hensible.
·
disappoinbDent to many peo- Shortawninp ,...,.,.,.,._
ment in general decisions on ence or tacit oooseut Accord-cmacl! 0. SCHAN;EK
pie, and tbe abJeooe or any
A number or shortcomings in retrenchment and in particular ingly, we shalln!Senle our com..
Professor
or Spanish
prQYision for aelective increases tbe exist i n g regulations of decisions affecting individuals menb; for an appropriate future
• seems to impose a new and dis- SUNY have either not been is crucial, tbe i n d i vi d u a 1 s dale.
twbing rigidity upon tbe Uni- dealt with or, worse, incorpor. whose services are to be termNooetbeless, there are l»n~~
versity as a whole.
a ted into tbe agreement and inated require ample notice in gential alletlations made and
LA ILUUI ~
- thus given contractual status order to relocate, and a viable inasmuch as they do DO&lt; bear ~~nnr.JTJ;z.__
SouDd academic government without correction. One ex- academic prognun must be re- directly upon tbe grievance, we ~~u Uf61UJ Yn.JIItef£
is ol coume a 'central and long- ample is suspension, an action tained if tbe institution is to j:&gt; sbould like to ta1ce this-The President's Committee
standing interest of our Asso- ~cb has ominous implica- on. The "Retreracbment" sec- tunity to respond_ Despite Pro- on tbe RecruibDent and Promociation. The SPA agreement tions for academic r reed 0 m tion in tbe SPA/agreement con- f.,..... Livingstone's judgment tion of Women Faculty and
seems both casual and enatic when improperly taken. Unde
tsins no provision for any fac- of Prof.,...,.. An:ud.l~s acholar- StsJf bas issued a request to all
on tbe subject: it does not real- · ~tion policy, ~ ulty consultation. The provi- ship, Arcudi's publications both campus ~ts for inly deal with goyemment, nor JS to occur only when immedi- sions for notice, and ~ in quality and quantity stand formation on their needs in facdoes it leave the maUel' alone. ate hann is threatened and it ooly as "desirable" and "where well when OOD&gt;pared to those ulty appoinbDents for 1972-73.
1bere is a promise in tbe pre- is to be with pay. Under the cireumstsnces perm i t," call of aeveral other CW11!1lt depart. ~ to tbe leUel', "The
~ to wodt towards AAUP SUNY regulations, in provi- oolv for six months for those ment chairmen in tbe Faculty • ,.......,.;t estimates that 911111e
principles ol goyemment Much sions which are DOW incorpor- with tenure and for (our of Arts and letters. Furtber- 60 faculty replacements will be
later on there is exhortation to ated in their entirety into the' ""!"ths for thoee on term ap- more, Professor Livingstone made in 1972-73, in addition
oaadoct dqlartmentsl alJairs in - SPA agreement, tbe chancellor pombDents; AAUP standards ~':i:'"a
~ to liliine faculty linea Which
a democzatic wa)!". and here and is given wider latitude to sus- require at least twelve months objectivity toward this~ are CW11!11tly vacant The Comthere other aliiiBIODS ~ern- pend and at his discretion he at notice for all faculty mem- ment, when!as tbe fa~ t are mittee is ooooemed to see that
8
ment appear, but tbe
ject is can stop tbe individual's salary
hers beyond tbe -.one~ year at otberwiae. To cite ooly one
.,._ in eKh instance where an ap, _ . IJeated systematically in Another emmple is tbe ~ ~ and SUNY's own or- ample: Livingstone alludes to . poinbDent is pWmed, quaJi6ed
dina!y procedures for notice of ~y's oul.nissioa to Vice ~or aretbe ~ be
~are fM more gen- "-----'•-'-• M
r,
emus than thoee provided · • ·~ urray at a list ol able to submit appropriate vitae
this lll'lCtion of tbe ..,..,.,..,.:: thirtA;eo iJII08ible candidates (or for departmental mnoideration,
for faculty members wbo may !'~t of an outside act- ' ~. it bas to lmow departat any time in their careen be ::1~ : :!':;,~t mental needs. The Committee
asked to leave because at cirCcnuoU
run.u- · aays it """"'nizes that "at tbe
CJ""""""'"s beyoud their aJD- gueae_this
Y did indeed - t time 110 .department is
tml Pem..p. moat diaturbinc tllJil'
upon Dr. Daniel Mur- certain that it will be able to
o1 all, bowewr, and not ooly ray in a letter at .lune 23 1.97L make ~bDents," but it is
for its own 8llb but to tbe a- ~. tbe Adine Pro.ost ~ tbe information in
l8lt ......... it' -~ tbe - - " failed to mmply with ' - - tbe eve t • ......._._.._
...... ....._,..,
....,...... able lltandarda at administrative possible_ n . . . . . . . - - are
~ ol tbe fmmera ol tbe ~in that be not ooly
The descriptioas of depart~
tbe faculty of tbe De- mental ..-!a are to be forward~,~
.lennininc who . , wben
aJIJ&lt;lemed &lt;with tbe ed to_ tbe Committee. in care at
..........;
retnncbawt is in........,..._ ~"i."i!:"U!~ ~ POSB, 231 Dieleodorf
_..._c:r,ouna
Wtthool~~~ry aiioonmce fc.-llea:- _ _,. student _.._.,__
The
ibility, without amy - - - ...,.._
-~~-Committee
to
.......... for who may be able
H
unr
arranae for one at its members
to do what and b- What_,_
""!'
ortonate, that at tbe to contact eKh department in
moat - a , in a 4'lllricnlnm, =m~
PftMJ8tial .ardl tbe near future to cliiiCJ.B tbe
~ £acuity m to be. re- is invitin&amp; ca!m..-.:' ~ ob~ ol tbe group and tbe
(~- ,.e 6, col.. 1)
CIIDipUB for inte.viewa, Leo~
;::rainwhichitmichtbebelp-

VIN'fS

nr:

Eb:nell7n,.....

::t::J

1 1

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

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

::":i.eS:..:::::C

=

also._

t

�EW&lt;)' day ond nleht lost something
-...d to be aoing on to fit everyone's
toney ond - · The cuiinory port of It wos
........,.. by o Noturai Foado Feast whlcl&gt; woo
port of the Colteclote SJ11em Symposium.
Artistic toney supplied ~ the Chlcoco
Women's Uberation Blond, which held
o wwbhap ond coocert on Soturdoy os port
of the UUAB's Women's Feotinl. There olio the photocraphlc ort of Donold Blumbora "' the foculty whose exhibit, "Portraits
of _ , . . Is now ot the Ridge Leo Gollery
(4240 Ridge Leo). For the sensitive, Dr.
Chortes Goetzinger hod tips on to "cet
It aH

toeetfler"'

In a lecture on ..... n's In·

ability To Communk.ate with Man" on Thurs-doy. Women got it "oil topther" the Arne
cloy when the Otlice of Equoi Opportunity
opono«ed o reception tor fermole tocuity ond
stoll. Adding o touch of the intemotlonoi
was the ChiJelln cultural attache, Fernando
Alegrio, who spoke on ''Chile-A New Rood
to Sodalism." What's left tor an encore?

Student Chemists Launch
Glass Recycling Project
Glass is just slighUy refined
sand which over a ·period of
time will return to the elements
as sand again. But it now represents 20-30 per cent of all
landfill, says Ernest Plummer,
graduate chemistry student,
who, with other members ·or the
Graduate Chemists Club, bas
taken an active interest in a
campus glass recycling project
to avoid the guilt of leaving an
inherilance of broken botUes to
future generatinns.
Earth Day 1970 marked a
time of decision for the chem·
istry students who began actual
recycling measures this past
June. Six to 55-gallon ~
drums were planted in a slightly out-of-tbe-wsy area of Acheson to avoid ·their being misused as catch-alls for other

AAuP(Conlilwed tram -

4, eoL 3)

leased be{....., full-time, fulltime faculty on temporary appoin-t· before those on term
appoin-t, faculty on term
appoin-t belore those with
tenure, and all these in strict
inverse onler of saUority. This
detceptively simple approach
might be the bMt and faireat in
a situation where all slriiJs and
needs are identical, but its ~­
verse ramif'acations for a uni-

~ ~rof_rn}p

Council

'bas its worit cut out for it,

as

have our local chapters on each
SUNY campus; and the ~
.ciation's N~ Regionlll
Olfioe and Washington Olfioe
stand ready to asaist in whatever ways we am.
--JODAN &amp;

KUIILAND

Aaaociate General
· Secn!tary, AAUP

garbage. There are drums for

clear glass, drums for brown
glass and those for green glass.
Garing students and professors
collect used laborslory glassware, broken bils and discarded
solvent botUes, rinse them off,
and deposit them in the drums
which are then emptied by Uni.
versity maintenance worker s
and carried off to Hamburg,
N.Y., then to the Owens Ulinois
Glass Company in Brockport
where their journey ends in an
amalgam of old and new in·
gredients to make up a fresh
glass product.
Mr. Plummer gives special
thanks to Robert Hunt, director of U/ B's Environmental
Health and Safety Department,
who aided them in the project
and directed them to Ernest
Edwards, assistant director of
the Physical Plant, which supplies drivers and trucks.

..,.;..~~~~~~~f! ~'rii

it were set up and run by the
administration as a g e n e r a 1
rule. As of now, it is dependent
on voluntary help and voluntary interest."
'Ibe only possible deterrent
to full participation in Acheson
might be the fact that people
have to carry the stuff down to
the drums which are on a losding dock behind Acheson and
accessible only via an elevator.
But that's a small price to pay
towards a cleaner environment.
Plummer, bimseU, even brings
glass from home and picks up
stray botUes from campus paths
aod~

F.or the future, Plummer
mentions that cans _might be
similarly handled and advises
the tonsumer to "avoid aluminum apd plastic containers; buJ:
glass and paper ones instesd.

Russell: A Game's 4 Ga~ Not a War
By STEVE LIPMAN
theme. In his words, "What
" We have made athletics into happens to you happens to me,
a holy war. That's the way and what happens to me, hap1fans ) see it, as a war. My
pens to you. It's not right for
guys against their guys. It's anyone till it's right for everyone. No citizen is free until
not a game. it'~ a holy war."
a ll citi4'.ens are free.
The words come in rushes"That same dope peddler
only an occasional pause and a that
(ghetto children)
slight lisp break the rhythm. on 20turned
years ago, is right here
A shift of the eyes and a pound· now. H e's in suburbia, he'!) on
ing fist magnify the effect . the fann, he's on the campus.
Then more.
he's in the high school and
"Some people think they live junior
high school. It took 20
and die &lt;by sports), or &lt;that) years
for that dope peddler to
one of the most important get from the slums to the farm.
events in the world is an ath- The point I'm making is: what
letic event. It's not. ... It's a happened in the slums is what
contest. No more. No less.'t
happened here. 'Cause we're all
The words seem incongruous in this together.
ooming from a man whose life
"A couple of years ago at
for 25 years was sports, . whose Kent
University four stuname was as much a part of dent&lt;; Stste
got killed. The National
&amp;-ports !"" any game. Yet the Guard that shot those students
words come as naturally to Bill down at Kent Stste (was ) the
Russell-a star for 13 yean; same National Guard that was
with the Boston Celtics-as did in Watts and was in ·Newark
blocking shots.
Russell was speaking to a
.,..:.....;~+
standing room only crowd in
... ~.aow.c:;u,lOll
Diefendorf Tuesday night. He
was supposed to start at 8 p.m.
Undergraduate students will
By 7:30, f..W seats weren't begin to pick up spring semtaken.
ester registration materials in
His playing feats d.reW some. the reception ares of DiefenOthers wanted to bear about dorf Hall, starting Monday,
the civil rights worit he's been November 29, and according to
in since retiring from the Cel- the schedule below, the Divitics two years ago. Both groups sion of Undergraduate Studies
got their wish.
(DUS) bas ·announced.
First he made a point. "I'm ,
According to DUS, "accurate
not a basketball player. I'm a data is essential for a trouble
man that played basketball. lree registration. The correct
That's what I do not what I listing of a student's major and
am. And if you 'look at me, class can mean the difference
aod all you see is a basketball _between a good...schedule and
player, then I'V&lt;! 'been cheated, a disastrous one."
and I'm offended. Because
Information on the registrayou've labelJed me aod dis- tion process will be baoded to
missed me without dealing with students as they pick up their
'the issue; the issue being my material.
humanness."
C1aas scibedules will not be
Humanness is R us a e II' s available until December 6 so

'R

•

and Detroit. It only took five
years to get from the slums to
the college campus that time.
What happens to me, happens
to you.'"
Retirement hasn't changed
Russell. He still loves a crowd.
He laughs at his own jokes and
applauds his own spunk. He
waves a hand in the air, or
stick;; it in his pocket-fum.
bling for a coin, not for a word.
Humor is his weapon. Humor
aimed at Agnew, at other athletes, or at himself.
A student in the front row
said to Russell: ''You're able to
use humor very, very well.
You're able to refer to Blacks
as Diggers, you're able to laugh
at yourself and to laugh at the
world around you. Were you
always able to use humor in
this way?"
"No," Ruasell responded, "I
used to have to use a knife."
The crowd roared.

p rocess Set

those picking up material between November 29 and December 3 will pick up their
schedules after that date.
According to DUS, the
schedule for picking up registration material will eliminste
the necessity of freshmen remsining on campus until December 23 '!'&gt;&lt;&gt;uJd their eums
be over earlil".
The schedule:
SophomoN!tl
Seniors
Nov. 29 A-F Dec. 9 A-K
10 L-S
30 G-Q
13 T-Z
Dec. 1 P-S
2 T-Z

Junwrs
Dec. 3
6
7
8

FN!tlhrru!n

Dec. 14 A-K
15 L-S
16 T-Z
P-S
T-Z

A-F

G-Q

,.

�-IJ.B71

6

ReYislons of tb.e · ~97~ ·P olicies
of the Board of Trustees
State University ol New York
ellectlve as ol October_1, 1971
ARTICLE IX
TITLEB

~in§~ ~s;o:tmeun~it e~fa~~:e~::r,o~~O:fA~~:ii~~:v:h~rgM~'Se"~i~ro~~~~~~n~:~
~er

bue salaries of
$18,001 shall be made by the chief administrative officer of the college
concerned; .aach appointments shall be reported to the Chancellor. Appointments of such

!f,~':~!!'wt:'u~~:Cco~~~sd:~:~~~~eth~,haJ!~~~~:~:C'otrfi~~~~h~Y ~~~n~~~~e~~~
:C:s":,f'sl'r.otiU:~":!c,'~ ~~,::d!~~e~~ A~~·~t~:u~fe:cha~~SC:~:e~~i~n~:~

Roommendatioa of the Chancellor, which recommendation shall be: made by hun after
R:c:em. the rtcOmmendation of the chief administrative officer of the college . Initial
appointment or recommendation for appointment of academic officers such as vice president
for academic affairs. academic deans and others with similar responsibilities shall be made after
ooniUltalion witb the faculty.
·
New R § Penou appointed pursuant to this Title shaJJ serve at the pleasure of I he appointing
off'JC:Cr or body.
.
~
New R § Responsibilities. Collqe: administnlive officers shall have such powers. duties. and
respontibWtiet u may be assigned by the chief 8dministrative officer of the colic~.

NEW ARTICLE XII
PROCEDURE FOR ACADEMIC PROMOTION

Title A Procedure for Academic Promotion
§ 1 Prior to makin&amp; promotions or recommendat.ions to the Chanc.:cUo r for promotio n
in rank or academic employees., the campus president shall review the rccommcnd;ations of
appropriate academic staff committees established for such purpose. Such committees in
makifl&amp; their recommendations shall be guided by the best interests of the University . Amon~
the quaUtics to which such committees shoukl give consideration arc :
L Mastery of subject matter - as demonstuled by such things as advam.:c d degrees.
liccnxs, hOnors.. awards and reputation in the subject matter f~ekt.
b. Effectiveness in teaching - as demonstrated by such thin~s as judgment of
colka&amp;Ues.. development or teachint material!; or new «.:owscs 11.nd student reaction.
c:.. Scholarly ability - as demonstrated by such things as success in developing and
=.::,t.:!f'r!;,~hc,~~~~':~;u!~e subject matter r.eld , contribution to the a.rts.
d. EffectiYeness or University scrvk:e - ;as demonstrated by such th ings as
aaccessfuJ commlnee work , part.icipaHon in k&gt;cal and University governance . adPlinistrative
work and 11o10rk with students or community in additton to formal teachc:Ntudent rebtionships.

e. Continuina p-owth - as demonstrated ' by such things as readirw. reseuch or
other actirities to tec:p abreast of current de¥Ciopment.s in his r.:lds and being abk to handle
aacceafully increued responsibility.
§ 2 LefWih of Service. Such commillccs may consider experience: in formulating their
recommendations, but completion of a minimum period of xrvice with the Universily shall not
be a qualif"ation.

•
NEW ARTICLE XI
APPOINTMENT OF PROFESSIONAL STAFF
Title A Procedure
§I The chief administrative ofr.cer of a colk~,;e. after set: king consulta tion with
academic or professional employees, may appoint. reappoint. or recommend to the Chancellor
for appointment or reappointment such persons as ouc . in his Judgment, best qualified .
TiUe

ContinuU. Appointment
§ 1 Definition. A continuing appointment tthall be an ;appointment to a position of
academic rank which shall not be affected by changes in suclr rank and shall continue until
resil,nation, retirement, or termination in accordam.-c with these pol..idc~
§ 2 Method of Appointment. The Chancc:Uor, after cons:iderin~ the recommendation
of the chief administrative officer of the collc!!c ~.-"'nt:erncd. and except as hereinafter pennitted
with respect to appointment of Distinguished , Distir~~uishcd Service. Di.stinpuishcd Teaching
and Univer.sity Professors, may grant con tinuing appointment to such persons who, in his
judpnent, are best qualirted.
§3 Elicibility.
L Continuing appointment as Professor, Associ;atc: Professor or libcarian.
Continuing appointment as Professor, Associate Professor or Librarian may be

f::'~~e~ne:;:~~::!S:::~!P~~e?~~~e;:~t~~t~Pr~~~S:r~v~b~.S:~ft::i~hc:&lt;~~~~ ~~=~~~:~

yeu of such service within the University must be on the basis of" conlin uing appointmenl and
such appointment shall be subject to the review and approval or the Chancellor.
b. Continuing appointment as Assistanl Profeuor. Instructor. Associate Librarian
or Assistant Librarian.
Except as provided in subsection (c) of this sc:ction , further e mployment of :a.n
appointee compietin&amp; three consecutive years of University service in a position of academic
nnk as Assistant Professor, Instructor, Associate Librarian or Assistant Lfbmrian who hu

:"!C~~d.; !~~\:~~:fn~~:~:,~~~~~ ;~d :C~~~~o~im:~~s'hsalt~c:!:;: ~~~mr'!ei:
1

and approval of the Chancel}Or.

c. ~:d!'c:d:'mT:~m~~:!'thC:.d~ a continuinl or a term appointment at one
campus who ac:cepts an appointment to academic rank at another campus may be ciw:n that
appointment for a term of not to exceed 3 years.
d. Service Credit
(l) Satisfactory fulJ..time prior SICrvice in academic nnk at any other acaedited
academic institution or hither education shall be crediled as JCJ'Yice, up to a m~imum of thrf:c
years. in determinin&amp; et.Cibility for continuiftl, ·appointment under subsec110n (b) of this
Section.
(2) In computin&amp; .conxcutive years of service for the purposes or appointment
or =intment to the academic staff, periods of kave or absence at ruu ~ shaD_ be

::=-mce ~·~r~~:!.a~:n:.nt :~ =e4or.:~-::,= :r~t~&amp;! ~:=:=

.emce. .

Tide C T - AppOill-ol
·
§I Definition. A term t ppointmcnt shall be an appointment for a JPCdf'.ed. period ol

not more thaa three years which shall automatically expire at. the end of that period unlea

tenninated earlier because of res;itnation, retirement or termination as prorilkd for in t.hex
Policies.
§ 2 EL@:ibility. A term appointment may b:e livtn t? any ~ aJJPC?in.ted to or
serving in a position desipated beinl in
Profc.ssaonal Se:rvioc:s NqotJal.JJW Un1L

as

the

SI8,00, 3sha~e~~~ :yp~=r"!tmt"~a:~,.;:,t~;=

;:,r:;: A-:r~ :;:.;=

at base annual sa.luic:s of S 18,001 or more shaD be made by the Chancellor" m his diseteboll oa
the recomnlendation of the chief administrative officer of the coUete; the: CbaDcre.lloc shall
report such appointmenu to the Board of Trustees.
§4 Renewal of Term. Except as provided in this Artide; lefl!l appo~tments auy be:
renewed by the chic:f administrative off"u:u of the collqe, for succcSSIY'C; periods or ~~ more
than three yean each; such renewals shall be reported to the ChanceOor. No term appomtmcat..
of itself, shall be deemed to create any manner of iepl ,.ht, interesl or expectancy in any
other appointment or renewal

§s Notice. Written notice that a term. appointment is oot to be ft:newed upon
expiration il to be given to the tppointee by the cUf ldministratiYe officer or his
representative as soon as possible and no t less than :
a. Three--1nonths prior to the end of a tenn expirifw at the end of a.n appointee's
fust year or service within the University, but not b.ter than March 1 for terms end.inl iD June
or AU~Ust;
b. Six months prior to the end or a term expifinl at tbe end of an appointee's
!CCOnd year of service within the University, but nol later than December lS for tennsendq
in June w Aucust ; and
c. Twetve months prior 10 the expin.tion of an appo"
nt after two or more
yean of service within the University.
d. This Section S shaU apply to term ap in
1968.
§6 Appointment of Other Than A cad
f. "'- professionil staff emplo)•ee. who
is not a member of the acadtmic staff and w is in the Professional Suvices Nqotiatift&amp; Unit.
other than one ~ivc:n a temporuy appointment punuant to Title D of these: policies. shall be:
&amp;iven a term appointment as follows:

J y;!~S:s a::~e:C:~en,:~~~Y~::cch~ a~c:;.~r~~~':e ~~~e~s ~;:

U:C
more than
appropriate September I.
b. Those in University !Crvicc on September 30, 1971 shaD bt 1Roen a term
appointment by the chief administrative officer of not to exceed three years. effective
September I, 1971 , such tenn to be equal to the number of full years of ~.-ompleted UniYc:rsit}'
service of such employee, except that such tc:nn appointments of kss than three yean shaD be
continued until the completion of an evalu ation in accordance with the evaluation system for
profusional staff empkJyees presently under study and development or until Augus&amp; 31. 1974.
whichever is earlier.
TitleD Temporary Appointmcnl
§ 1 Defmition. A temporary appointment "hall be an appointmc:nl for an unspecified
period which may be tenninated at any time . Temporary appointments ordinuil}' sha.U be ~n
only when service is anticipated to be par1·time. voluntary , or to be for a period of less than
one year.
§2 Eligibility . A temporary appointment may be 1iven to any person appointed tom
serving in a position desiJnated as being in the Professional Se.rvicrs Nqotia~ Unit.
§ 3 Method of Appointmcnl. Temporary appoin~nts shaD be made by the chief
administrative offioc:r of the coUege; such appointments shall be reported to the CbancdJor.
-Title E Disti.J:tluilhed: and Uaiva:sity Professors
§I Appoigtment. Appointment as Distinguished Proftuor, Dis:tirJt!:uished Strvice
Profeuor, DistiJl8uishcd Teaching Professor or University Professor may be Jiym by action of
the Board of Trustees on reoorumendation of the ChanoeDor and shaD M a continuq
appointment.
Title F Notk:t
§ 1 Changes of Status. The campus president or his repreltntative shall notify
members of the Professional Staff promptly, in writifl&amp;, of aD cJu.nces in lhc term.s and
conditions or their positions.
Title G Appointment Year
§ 1 Appointment Year. Unkss lelms and conditions of their appointments othcrwi.x:
provide, the rqular appointment year for academic and profeaional employees shall be from
September 1 through August 31. The professional obJCatioa or employees shaD. be eitha for
the calendar year or the academic year. as established under the tenns and conditions of their
appointmenU, rc:prdlc:ss of payroll mode, such obliption beinc for 12-mo.atb or IO..ontb
respectively.
Title H Academic Freedom
It is the policy of lhe University to maintain and enco~ ful frcedoaL.witllia t.be taw.
of inquiry, teaching and research. In the n:i:rcite. of ttUs freedom t.be r.cuaty tDCaber JDy,
without limitation, discuss his own subject in the c~m; be may aot, bowew:r, cllila as his
ri&amp;ht the privik:tc or discussiJw ·in his cb.ssroom contrownial matter whic:b bas DO ~ to
his subject. In his rote as citizen, the employee has the same freedoms as~ other citiaas.
However, in hU extramural uttennces ·he has an. obliption to indicallc: that be is aot an
institutional spokeiOWl.
Tille I Paint aod CopyriiJII Policy
§1 Patent Policy.
L State University recocnizeslhat the purpose of Uniftrsity retard~ is to teet aew
knowledge for the genen.l benefit and not to mate inventions for profit. It will DOt, tbelefore,
pennit its research pqrams to be directed intendonaUy to•-.rd in.ea.tions for wbi:b palelltS

~t~ ~~~:.e~ ~~';'~ec:J.in::C:'r."'~; ~~~~C:,;Y~ :=.!~~

invention may be made in the course of University rc5earch. 1n such cues it is deemed &amp;o be
in the best interests of State University and of the public that pateats mo-ld be
obtained and administered as hereinafter provided in order 1hat such inventions IDlY be uttflllly
developed and the net proceeds may be devoted to support of the Uniwcnity's rae.dl
prosrams. The State University Trustees, adint. through the Chancc:Uor with tbc .trice of the
Patent Policy Board, resrrve the fir:ht, however. to determine by spec:::ial actiOD in any sudl QR..
that it would not be in the best interests of State Univeristy or the public to obtaia a paraat for
a particular invention and to publish sueb invention without patenti:nc it. QDCSUoas as to
patentabWty and patentq sha.U not be allov•ed to delay prompt public:at.ioa of the ~of
University research but aU concerned shall cooperate to the end that al J*ent applicadolu:
shaD be timely mack. To this end, all invcntioru resuttm, from UniYe.nity reteardl sbal be
promptly discloJed to appropriate Univusit ~· offtci,lls.
b. AU patentable inventions tnal.le by fat.-ultr members, employees. student.s. aDd al
othen utilizing University facilities at any of tbe state-operated in.sUtutionsof State Uaiftnity
shaD be }Ore to State University and the inventbr or inventon sbal mW applieal.ioa for pat£DI.S
thereon u direded by State University and shall assisn such applications or any pateats
resulling therefrom to or ... dirc:cled by Stale Ufttvnsity.
_
•
However, a patentabk invcation made by aa iDdiridu.al whoDy oo bis OWD time
and without the UJC of such .lJniYersity faeilitie:s shall bekmciO t.be iDdiridaal eRG t1loaJb it
falls within the f.ekl of competence relatin&amp; to his UnMnity positioo... Whae IDY q.cstioa is
raised as to ownership ""O.f an inw:ntion or patent undeJ" t.beae prorisioAS.. tk: mallei lhll be
refened to a committee or fJve..membe:n to be named by the Chancelkw of State Uairenity. At
least three of such members shaD &amp;e memben of tbe academic staff of the Uniftnity. Sudt
committee sh.aU mate a careful investjption or the cin:umstaDCCS llDda" which t.be imention
~nerally

�-11.11111-

j'
was made Uld. thaD transmit its r~.s and conclusions to the Chancellor for rericw. If the
coaunitfee dctle.mliDes t,ha.t the iment.ion bas been made •'ithout the use of University facilities
and not iD the cou.ne oltbe inYCntor's employment by or for the University and the Chancellor
concu.rs in •c::b determination. the University wiD assert no claim to the invention or to any
patent obt:ained thetton..
•
c. With respect to any patent obll.ined by or lhrolJih the University or aqned to
oc as directed by it in accordance with "the fortroin&amp; provisions. the University, in recosrution
of tbe meritorious trrvice s of tbe "inw.:ntor aDd in consideration of his agreement that the
imrention shall belo~ to the UniYenity, will mate provision entit~ the inventor and his heirs
or leptces to a non-a..ssi@nablt: sbare in an)• procced.s from the management and licens~ of
such piletllto the u.tent of ( l) f"lfty percent (SO$) of the f"trst $3,000 goss royalt}' paid under
the: patent, (2) twenty..f"~Ve percent (2SS) of the poss royalty income between $3.000 and
$1),000, and (3) fifteen percent (IS~) of the pass royalty in excess of S 13,000.
Tbe Uniwnity may make suitable uraJ11Cments with non-profit patent
~nt ~ for the purpote of obtaininl lelYicies and advice with respect to the
pattDtabilityof iD:¥entions. the f?b~ of patents thereon and tbC man~~emenl and littnsin&amp;
of any such patents. S~ un.nccmcnts may provide for division of the nCt income from any
r=.~ paymeat of the Unauor's share betwce.n the manJgement .agency and the

equities so indic:tte. subject to such (;OnditioftS u mv .be appropriate;
(b) authoriza.tio.n , for exceptions__ to tbe patent
cumstances whcie the eq_uities to indicate;

i·

=~m~.:~C:~su:n.:=~Y~~~~~s

to the Patent~ 8~ for
1 (e) perform such other advitory duties rekvant to the U_niwni.ty's paleat
policy !I'd its i(nplementation as the Chancellor may deem appropriate.
(.C) The Patent Policy Board. t:hroUJb the OtanoeOor, shaU report annually to ·
the Board of T.rustces concerning its activities and rccommeadationJ and thole of its Executi¥e ·
Committee dwlng the preceding year.
.

§2 Co~t Policy.
Ger*rally the members of the staff of tbe University shall reta:in aD richts to
copyright and publish written works produced by them. However. in cues where persons are
employed o r diqected within the scope of their employment to produce speci('ac wort subject to
oopytight the llniversity shall have the right to publish such work without copy~t or to
oopyright it i~ its own name. The oopyri&amp;bt will abo be subject to any oontractuaJ
arrangements by the University for work in the course of which the wril.inf was done. Staff
members will ~expecte d not to allow the privilege to write and retain the richt to their wort

~-:...eitt;::!:!':; ~ ~ ~~&amp;mda-=, ~uir!e~:iiT:::::~~~(

NEW ARTICLE XVI
TRANSFER

· Tille A. Transfer

§ I Po lt ~..y . Members of the acad emic staff who desire to transfer to vacancies in other
. Lv l kge ~ o r l"Ontract ~..vllq;cli within the Universi ty sha.U be given consideration for such
vacanl' k: S.
§ 1 Co nse nt. No m ~..'lnbcr of the academ ic staff sha.U be: transferred to another coUese
or ~,·o n tract co llet:e within the Universi ty witho ut his con.tent.
§ 3 Plac.-cmcnt. Members of the academic staff who.: services are satisfactory , but
w ho!~: SL'n&lt;io:s arc tc rmin:~t cd bccau lle of c.:ha.ll8C in program , lack of promotional opportunity
or o therv.•isc· throu~h no fault of their o wn, and who desire to transfer to other colleges ex
1."0ntract coUcgcs within the University, shall be given special consideration for appointment to
:appropriate availabk po si tio ns in such other colkgcs.
·
·
·
· ·
§ 4 Sta tus. No rncmOCr of the :~cademic ~taiT shall. because of uansfer, lose ,..hts as
dclined by these Po licies.

~:;~:.,~i~c :~m":~~f~ !Jo~::,'dtmin~ft~:fo"~:~f~~Jr~~~v~~~~~ :~ a~~;;~~t~t:~~·o~

1

the four-y1.-arcotqes.a rep~Je{ltatift of the agricultural and tedln ical co U cg~s and a no n-vo tinr:
representative from the Research Foundation of State Universi t)· of Nc"'· York.
(.!l The Patent Policy Board shall h.ave full powe r of o rgani.ution. including t he
puv&lt;\!r to e.slablish an Executive Co mmittee and to dck.-gatc ini tial responsib ility to S:Jid
Exc..:utive Committee. The members of said Pate nt Policy Board shall sen e witho ut 1.'X l r.J
compensation and at the pleaswe of the ChanceDor. The normaltcn n of appointme nt shall ~
for three ( 3) yean.
..
·
(3) 1be Pat~ot Policy Board shall advise the &lt;:ha.nc."CIIo r in the cxcrdse of the
follOY.'ing dut ies:
(a) release of pattnt ~t s to the invento r in u nu ~a l circum stanc."l'S wh..:re the

~m!"'bol&lt;~~rol~:

!6 :!;:l:i~

:tae:~:~ l:~:m7,e'tn~ftt!~~t£:r!ti:

~~~:~':l
~ stations, tel 835.Q128

growth, Fillmore Room. 3·5 p.m .,
all welcome.

for information, II : 30

LOGIC

a.m..

JU:'I'B'I'ICS ~ONE LBCTtJD# :

Dr. Jerald 'Giller, Controuenia
lft(ectiolu H&lt;patitis,

S~

co~UIUN ": Richard Vesley. mathematiC», The Choice Sequence$ of Intuitionism, Room 14,
4244 Ridge Lea, 3:30 p.m . (For

November 22 is Deadline
For Spring Reserve Lists

and philosophy) .
C.: HEMJ S TRY

COLLOQUIUM ":

Dr.

Glen E . Gordon, University o f
Maryla nd, 7 Acheson. 4 p .m.
t'tLM u : The War Game (Peter
Wa tkins, Great Britain) , Confere nce Theatre, 6 p.m., free.
Famous documentary regarding
overkill in the Nuclear Age.
D£NnBTRY 'l'ELEPBONE ux."'''UBE# :

Dr. John W. Osborne, The Differences in Amalgam A.Uoy6 a n d
Triturating Deuicu. sponsored by
Regional Medical Program, 40
rec. -oeiving s tation!!l, teL . 835-0728
for information, 7 :30 p .m . Also
un Nov. 18, 1: 30 p .m.

ReserYe lists for tbe spring
• Faculty may place per- LlNGUIS'ftCS ux=TURE" : Dr. Ronsemester must be submitted to sooai copies of books or of pho- ald ·z i r in, assistant professor,
tbe University libraries by No- tooopies on Reserve, but this is classics, S y ntax. 404 Hayes, 7:30
vember 22, Mary Cassata, as- not reoonimended unless abso- p.m., public invited.
sistant director for public ser- . lutely _necessary.
JEWISH MYS'n.CISM AND KABBALvices. bas ~ ~ part . • All reserve reading lists AH " : Rabbi Nosen Gurary, lecof a new ae~ of" Guidelines on will be processed aooording to ture and open discu.ssion , Chabad
House, 3292 Main St.. 8 p.m.. all
Reaer\le PoJic;Y.
. date received.
welcome. Re£reshments.
~ ~ date, ~ Li·
• There is at present no
bmries pomt .out, makes 1 ~ !'!"'" limimtion on numbers of books CR&amp;AnYE AS&amp;Obu.TES RECITAL•:
sible to process tlie ma)Onty which may be placed on re- (.-ellist.. Douglas Davis. and pianist. Stephen Manes; workS include
of !"""'""' .~ before ~ serve; however a future limit
spnng
thereby
mm-" may bave to be established if ~i=''P:c!
~kb~
. . • semester-,
disappointing
dela
Schwrumn; Sonata for Cello SolD,
faculty and studen~
voli.une' dictates.
25, No. 3 by Hindemith;
• Tbe Libraries will pur- Op.
Lead time is needed because
for C•llo and Piano by
_ , materials have to be ..,_ chase multiple copies of a title Sonau.
Debussy; Capriccio by L u k a a
called from borrowers or bor, when required and if funds are Foss; and Donct! of the Elvu, Op.
rowed from other units of tbe available (one. copy for each 39, by Popper. Bu.IJalo and Erie
University Libraries. Also, tbe 10 students, but no more than County Library-Central Library
Auditorium. 8:30 p.m., bee.
Libraries indicate, some joumal five copies) . ·
·
articles may have to be bor• New reserve lists must be
THURSDAY-IS
rowed on Interlibrary L&lt;ian and submitted for each semester as
boOb not in tbe library col- no materials will be automatic- CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION# :
Dr. Ronald Jarvis, dinical assislection must be ordered.
ally retained.
Tbe new guidelines estab"Tbe purpose of the closed tant professor. fixed prosthodonOperative a 11 d Loborot.ory
lisb these deadline dates for reserve system, tbe Guidelines tics,
in CertllJ'li.cs for Dentbe future: for summer ses- indicate, "is to provide reliable, Procedurn
ti#ts and Dental T«lt.nician.a, 146
sions, April 1; ·for · fall aem- controlled access to required Capen, 9 a.m..-5 p.m. Also Nov.
esters, June 1; for spring sem- readings." Supplementary read- 19 and 20.
.
ings may be placed on open reesters, October 30.
DENTAL IOUCA'ftON #:
Otber guidelines indicate serve within limitations of CONTINUING
Or. Alan J. Drinnan, cibairman,
that: '
_.,., and funds:
I
·oral medicine, and staff. DentG.l
• ~rdlists-~listi'~ormon
For further infonnation, fac- Office Em&lt;rf&lt;11Cieo f-or D&lt;nlal
·~·~
,,
ulty may call Mr. Edward Hyg~nUI.I a. 11 d AuUtanU, 147
tbe
will be """"P'ed and all infor- . Brody (Ridge Lea, ext. 7-1261) Capen, 9 iun.-5 p.m.
malion ~ .., tbe forms or Miss Carol Goodson (Harri- PHAitiU.CY TZUII:PBONE r.crtJD#:
muat be provided.
·
man Reaer\le, ext. 2819).
Robert M. Cooper, Update on the

(:;':iJcl.

I

~

may be appropriately given and the

Applicability to Employees in Negotiating Units
§ I Appli~.... bility. The provisio ns of these regulationL, insofar as they apply to
employc.-cs in the nego tiat ing unit s established pursuant to Article 14 of the Civil Senice Law,
shall be continued , provided , ho wever, that during periods of time when there is in effect and
3f!: SL't.' lllcnt be tween the State and an c mpioyee organization reached pursuant to tbe provisions
of said Article.- 14, the provisions o r su ch :~gre e ment and the provisio ns of theJC regulations shaD
bo th be applic;a ble. In the event the provisions of the agreement are different from the
provisions of lhL'SI.' r~.-g ulati on s, thc: pro visions of the ag ret-ment shaU be controlllns.

specifically authorize the acceptance of such grant upon such t'erm s and conditiOns.
Notwithstandi:oa the JCDCtal policy herein stated, the Chancellor, acting with the advi~ of the
Patent Policy Board , may abo. by special action in each such case . in accordance with the
rec:omJilC_od.ation of tbc: chief aclministntive ofr~ttt of the campus concerned, rekax: to an
inw:ntor und"r conditions deemed appropriate "by said Patent Policy Beta~cl the University's
~hts to an invention for • •hich lbt: University determines neither to file a pA tent application
nor to ptlce in the public domaiD.
J
In all cases, the person requesti~ an exception or waiver shaU h.ave the
opportunit~· to appear, accompanied by repre.:ntatives of his choice. before the Patent Policy
Board or its Executive Committee for considttation of his request for an exceptio n o r waiver.
The Patenl Policy Board shaD prepan: a report'of its finding s and an advisory rero mm c nd:~ tion
to the Owu~llor for his revirw. The decision of t~ Chancellor o n the findings and
recommendations of the Patent Policy Board shall be final. The Patenl Policy Bo ard ~ all
annualJ)' make a report of its activik:s and the activities of its Executive Commitrec during the
previous year through Ute Olancellor to the Board of Trustees.
f. The Chancellor ~ establish and appoinl a Patent Po lk )' Board and d esigna te
the Chairman thereof in accord!R~"·ith the folow~
01 The Patent Poli(...,_ Board shall consist of at le ast fiftee n ( lSI but not mo re

tel. 835-0728 for informa tion , 2
p.m.
PSYCHOMATe. .;o : £ r ~ ~- f u r m com·
munication for pe r!iO nal i ty

whi~h

Th r fo llowlirg m:w titll' is add~d to Article XIII, as Title J, Dnd to Article XIV mad toAnicle
XFDs Titfe F.

f!ce~~~:::~.e:::~.rt:~ -:~ o!ftht~:op:;e:thi~~lt:e~r:~. t~:

~

h,

~n~~~~~re f:Uti!~e~~~~~~Zs d~:,Cus.kll~th;~d:a~:;~~t!n a~"r:.r~::t=s:Jr

institution in advance with respect to the assistance
equity of the Universi ty in the finished work.

patc:rtts or patent riJhts. nor sb.aD lll)'th.q herein contained prevent c.:.operative &amp;mltllements
-.ith ot.bet liCftCies oftht State of New York for retearch. In any c ase ~ where receipt of a grant
in support of~ from aay noa-proftt IF-DC)' or poup may be dependent upon acceptant%

8, col. 5)

•

j (d) aj,point a committee of ex~ to eumine the merits of the inYmtion ia
cases where t~ recommendation of the appropriate patent man.ement ,.a~cy may not be
satisfactory, o rt where it is determined Dot to submit the invention to a pate"at ~t

1Jniwoenity wil not pant or mate provision for cnnting exclusive rights in any patent obtained
by, f01; or throucb, tbe Ulliw:nity to any penon, f"um, association or corporation. Hov.-ever, if a
patent is o~ upon a..,. Unoention or discovery resulting from a program or proje~..'1 to
which ID indastriallpOIUIOr bas coatnbuted as a minimum the 1otaJ direct costs. exclusive of
contributed (aaalty retearcb'ti:me, plus appropriate indirect costs, such sponsor ma y be granted
iD its uranaemeats-willli the U.Diwenity, a non-exdusiYe royalty free license for the lif~ of the
poi. .L
·~ e. Gnau JUde aYa.B.ble to the University by o; throUJh tbe Research Foundation
or State Uaiwnily of New York shall be subject to the policy herein stated except in specia.l
ilutaaoeS as beleilafter proricled.. Nothinc iD the policy herein stated shall prevent the
ac::cltptaace: oL rete:ardl pants ~ or the condiu:t of reean:h for, qcncies of the United

Cmununique-

unusual cir-

cooperating~~.
=.:n"::,':~W:,'!'t:~:ht:: ~=:z :~=ieo:::r:r:
~
resuU of releardi carried on under grants or contracu; ·
.

d. Except as otbcrwile provided pursuant · to this statement of policy; the

(Co...uu-1 from -

policy~-tn

Mi!ioF!ik

1971 Controlled Substancu Act.
sponsored by Regional Medical

EXHIBITS

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINA&amp;": Dr. Ru-

POR'J'IL.UTS OF STUDENTB : a oneman show of pbotographo by Donald R. Blumberg, associate professor, art. 4240 Ridge Lea.
through Nov. 20.
ANl'BEW SHOWS: apouored by

Progra~ 40 receiving stations,
tel. 835-0728 for information,
II : 30 a .m. and 10 p.m.

fus Lumry, Laboratory for Bio·
physical Chemistry, University of
Minnesota, The Ouerlooked DimensioM of Water atu1 Its Probable Implications in Protein Funchon, G~ Capen, 4 p.m.
FILM •• : Village of the Damned
(Wolf Rilla, 1960), 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
oPERAS•: Poulenc's Les Mamelles

:!srir:tsd~T~~E~ J{e~l;

de Maese Pedro (Master Peter'•
Puppet Show), two short operas
presented by the University Ope ra Studio, Muriel Wol£, director.
· Baird, 8 :30 p.m., tickets at Nor·
ton Ticket Office; general admission $1.50; faculty, st.aff and U/B
alumni $1.00; students $.50.
Through Sun., Nov. 21.

INTERVmWS
ON-cAMPUS JOB INTBKVIEWS :

~A~m1b7: ~:c:e~~:

style reOects the subtletie11 and
grotesqueries of everyday life. 2nd.
floor gallery, Norton. 1-4 p.m.
and 6-9 p.m. every day. Novem~
ber 15 through November 24.
HUMANISTIC

i:~'df~d~rs m~r:::rt~~

educational, business, industrial

~~dae.:£::lalipd~~~=
are invited to interview whether
they will complete their course
work in January or May 1972.
Registration forms are available
f:rom University Placement and
Career Guidance in Hayes Annez

c.

Ohio. Gallery West, 311 Bryant

Bm'&amp;OSPBCTIVB: VIRGINIA. CU!'BIIIRT
AND PHILIP ELLIOTT, a Comnwnity

15: Peter Kiewit

in hoaor of

:i,~'tl',~"k'A\~:=-"'::'f:.:'.:

wile Virginia Cutbliert, natioDally known painter. 'The exbibitioD,
made possible by the gaMroua
W~Sistance of a lew COIDlDUDity
friends, will eMphasize major
worb by the two artist&amp;, mpple.
men ted w i t h eelec:ted skeimee
and minor works of unusu.l interesL 'The Cbarleo Bwddleld
Center, SUCB, Rocltweii Hall,
1300 Elmwood Ave., NOIISDbor
14-December 30. Hours: weoltdays, 10 a.m.-4:30p.m. and Sundays, 1-5 p.m.; dooed Saturdaya.
WOMEN'S

MONDAY -

G a 0-

SL, through Sunday, December
5. Hours are: Tues.-Fri., 7-10
p.m. ; Thurs., Sat. and Sun., 1-6
p.m.

Tribute Exhibit -

'Ibe

on-campus interviewing program,
running through December 17 in
the fall semester and from Janu·
ary 17 to April 29 ill the spring

Sons Co.

ABSTBA'cnON :

METRIC AND L YBlCAL-a collection
of recent paintings and graphics
by Sheldon Berlyn. aaaociate professor of art, and Kurt Feuer~
herm, associate coneervator, InterM use u m Laboratory, Oberlin,

FESTIVAL

Ml.T

BBOW• :

works by women artists, 2ud 8oor
gallery, Norton, through Satur-

TVESDAY-16: U.S. Social Security; Peat, Marwick, Mitchell

day, Nov. 13.

Harrison Radiator- Diviton.GM
Corp.:"'Bu.IJalo Forp.

I:DIIBlT of worb by
Robert Graves and J~UDM Joyce,
Room 207, Lockwood Library, 9
a .m.-.5 p.m.
WILtl.Ul BUDOUOHB · exhibit., 2Dd
ftoor balcony, Lockwood Lihruy.
PABLO NZitVDA worb by the
Nobel Laureate r-t. Room 207,
Lockwood Library.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS

t..C::iu~~!hf::!i= ~~ . I'IZifANENT
WBDNI:SDAY-17:

Factory Mu-

tual Eng. Corp.; Mobil Oil; U .S.
General ACCOWlting Dept.; Northwestern Mutual Life lntu.raace.

Di~~1'};_!~~·~

Gl""!"" Worb.

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to pullllc;
..Open to members ·of the University;
#Open only to with • ptolesslonol 1 - In the subject
Conbct SUzonne Motzpr, 831·2228, for llstlnp.
COMPUTING CENor£a USD SERV(CZB
SEMINAR#: PASS IV, a. discre.te-

THURSDAY-II
CONTINUING DENTAL ED UCA TION

COURSE#: Dr. Roy Wilko, ~t­
ant professor operative dentistry
and Malco~ McCuaig, dental
photographer, Dental Clinical
Photography, 146 ,Capen, 9 a.m.5 p.m.
WOMEN'S I'ESTIVAL WORKSHOPS•:

Rap Group, Older Women, the
.ro1e and function of the woman
in her middle yeal'B in contemporary society. Women from the
University and the Buffalo . ~m-

di=iotc!f w'hat fUr m~~~~
over 30. 332 No~n. 10 a.m.-12
noon. Puerto Rtcan Wome~, a
discussion of lhe Puerto Rican
woman and her role in society
bolh today and in history. For
lhe f'trBt hour it will he open to
PUerto Rican women only and for
the second hour open to all inleteSted """""" S32 Norton, 1-3
p.m. Erica Joft6, Barbara Harr-

!~t~ =bi~tia~ft~o~

:':man
in their work and about
their experie.nca u women in

lhe field of art, 231 Norton, 1-3
p.m. Art Di«uaion. interested
women are encouraged to bring
in some of their work for discussion and to respond to the
problema encountered by women
in the field of art, 231 Norton,
1-3 p.m. Rap Group: Black Women, a rap group for Black women
to talk about lheir lives. Blaclc
women from the University and
the Buftalo community are welcome. Workaho.- open to women
only.
INHALATION
LECTURE#:

TBI&amp;APY

'I"EU!PBONJ:

David Mentecki and
Marlon Siapl, Humidity Ther-

:py~r!im~ ~i~~

. rrogram.
40 receiving station&amp;.
tet 835..()728 for information,
11:30 a.m.
HOSPITAL KANA.GIIIUAL AND SUPDVlBOilY JIKVJ:LOPJGNT TI::LCPBONZ

r=

F. Kerfoot Sowers,
J. W. Mallion. T. J . Jendruiak,
Before That DoikJr Wa.te ' ln.
creau, How About Some Sense.
LI&gt;C!'UIII:#:

3 :=o.nal !t.'ti'.:~
835-0728 for ~r infor-

tel.
mation, 1:80 p.m.

woiO!:N's n:snvAL•:

t i me event-directed s~ulation
system. Harvey Ailerod, mstructor. Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7
p.m.
HILLEL BOWLING•: Hillel House,
7 p.m.

FILM• • : Thf! Green Slime, good

and gooey, 147 Diefendorf, .S p.m.,
free.

·

JAMES FENTON LI)C'f'URE•: Senator
Jacob K. Javits will speak on
comprehensive he a 1 t h care. 5
Acheson, 8:30 p.m .. (ree.
.
Known as one "'bf the most mtelligent and well-informed members of the Se'n ate, Javits ·ba.s long
been interested and active in matters affecting heallh and heallh
care on a state and natio~. ~e.
He bas introduced and rmtiated
many pieces of legislation aim~
at furthering health care, and lS
known as the principal architect

of

~4-C:.7c;n Series

Vl....nltl _CuthMft's 'County

is adminis-

tered by lhe Oflioe of Cultural
Affair&amp;
OOFPIIZ BOUSE: sponsored by
UUAB, Ethel Raim a 11. d Jeon
RitchU!, 1st floor cafetena. ~or­
to'n , 9 p.m., free. Also on Friday
at J'u!:,j'"Raim is wilh lhe Pennywhistlera, a Slavic folk singing'

3 to 11 p.m.

CIIICIOCAL D~G SEMINAR• :

Dr. Wil!Wn N. Gill, provost, Fac-

~T~
"Pt.::~~
5 A . - , 1 p.m.
BIOCIIDO:B'mY BDDND• : Dr. LA.

. Cohen, Natiollallnatilute of Arthritis aDd Metabolic DiMues,
Md., Storeopopu-

NIH,-·

~:::;,;"s~1,,':,,1f.~'C!';,.,~

4 p.m.

...,.,.&amp;.·,James Cunning.
ham 8Dd the Acme Danoe Com-

DAN&lt;Z

~!f:ing~~k;;:;k de:e:.c-~1
0

f~~~) , h,!t'!::n!'~~~

12:30 p.m. Nicht Versohnt (Not
Reconciled~ 1965). Conference

Tb..\'~~ P.:,;,posed of Michel
~J; =.!di:Jticg ~(=~

held at 4:30 p.m., immedialely

fo~~h~n!'e~':h!·

prime
forces in contemporary cinema,

::.~~tu:'un~~ub

hao been living 8Dd working i!'
Germany since 1958 when he e:Dllgrated from his native France as
a protest against the war in Al·

8Dd Com

~

he~~Cimay,

~~~:~~
recnlul-rleu"' ':!'t"':

~it y'a

~AB 8Dd tbe Of.

'liCe of Caltwal A«aira.

-.r,.....,.... RIIDIAa: ' V.

~

TlacontW!

St..U. "" Enzyme Mechanilml,
~ 211,- Rldp I-. 4 p.m.;
~8:80p.m.

Community Action Corpa,

which Lauren saw herself · and

140

wild as in this widely-acclaimed, listing.
outrageously funny. way-out · FILM••:

H

~i!~:&amp;r:~~:e.tidJ;:

4 p.m.; ~reshmenta, 101 Heallh
Scienceo, 3:30 p.m.
I.cTUD•: Dr. E.A.
Burtt, Comell University, Tit.

~Wt!:'G,h~

:,'::m 16,

The ProjectWnilt, see

tfa~:~~~~~~~~a~ ~F~n-~da~y~&amp;=ting=·~·~~~------Hickman, Nat King Cole, and
Stubby Kaye.

SUNDAY-I4

FILM • •: The Projectionist (Harry

CHESS TOUJiNAMENT•: see

Hurwitz), debut. Conference _T-eaatre, check showcase for times,
faculty and slalf $1.25, studenta
$.75 or $.50 be(ore 6 p.m. Through
Sunday, Nov. 14.
This will he the Buftalo premiere of Hurwitz's almost legendary fantasy about a revival thea"tre projectionist and hia \Valter
Mitty excursions into the ~tory
or movies. Chuck McCann plays
the madman in question. a n d

b!l~ ~~in~~ta=o~i

the silver &amp;ereen; pursuing Ming
the Mercileea, and bringing freedom home from the lavi.ah seta of
INTOLERANCE. lt"s a kiddie

=~l~te~ ::S 1~t :oa~d~

eastes; so stock up on popcom
and dust ofr your dancing shoes.

SATURDAY-I3

c H 1: s s TOUitNAK&amp;NT• : · Niagara
Frontier Junior 0 pen, 5-round
hertis, Faculty of Medicine, Uni- Swiss tournament. open to thoae
venity of Buenoe Airea. I.olation under 2 only; entry fee $5.00;
if under 18 yean of age, $4.00.
~cMil::~~;t_ro~.JiiuC:t:z"3 $1.00 additional if ,entry not re-

PBlLOSOPBY

partic:iJI!lt8.

Dream is

BJOCBDOSTitY-PBARKACOLOCYBDl·
INAR•: Professor Euardo deRo-

A hallmark of the Acme Company'• perfODII8Defl ia tbe induaicm of untrained puformeno,

~=he:J!.~~

duet cboreogra~~

Major; tuartet No: 7, Op. 59 No.

retrospective is being cosponaored: f?y the French· Depart.. se.sa.n:u AT CBA.BAD• : topic of the
ment. the Program in Compara. week u The Flint.tone of Juda-tive Literature, lhe French Grad- ~m. Sabbalh meal followmg oeruale Student Aooociation. and lhe VIces Chabad Houoe, 3292 Mam
French Undergraduate Club.
· St.• 9 : SO a.m.. iill welcome..

New York University Medical
Canler, Enzynu. R&lt;letue from Ly-

atwo-day prog:ram.MiWJchel
.th
Jones Profeuor

visiting
Deguy; Jacques

Garelli. French

=~ g!!;'Ue':.~ J:.:7~

6

ge~

p.m.

==::....--:::::

":tw~::'

co~ter),

·~ f~r':tQ:rrre~ ::r:
Literary Program. for the Canform Quartet No. 3. Op. 18 No. 3 the dance comp.!lny and those arealdirulanBdroaRodhecasrttingaS':-u,in wnM.otenr~
~3D (:f:j::~ ~r:;~;; rr~· ~ ' Ri!t ~::sriikeofto ~ina~en~r::.; in-~idence. u~~~ of Mont-

1W

835-0728 for information, 10 a.m.
PILM.B•: Jean-MarU Straub: T_he

p.m., to lhe public.
This worbhop ia presented as
a complement to the group's performaJ&gt;CeO he"' 8Dd combines elementa of y o rr a, ballet, actinrr.

~=:..dimS.':!::

Dt}he 0 f![,:;;-nF!!U~:!:i ~~~~

Dr. Vincent J. Capraro •. Adenocarci1Wm4 of the Genitalia 111
Girls: Relationship 00 StilbeBtrol

BJOLOGY IIEMINAR*: Dr. Gerald
~:e.= Pw:;'~p~o~"': Wei.umann.
profeuor of medicine,

Room. 4

IMirt of •tt aNIIIIt of

~~· s~~co~~u~':t':"ifc~c~': ~~~=o~ti:~:ero=r.
in advanc-e and at showtime, Nor~~~ve.f:~1 ~'t, 1 tl::;:
ton Ticket Office. Also on Satur- singing, movies and taped music.
~=:~ntRe~o~~M:d['~ s~ da~e~~v·~:· the West been
FlLM • : Cat Ballou. see Friday
gram. 40 receiving stations, tel

PHYSICIANS TEU:PBONE LECTURE#:

fJ'!~~~ ~~of~ ~el;.,~=~P:fu~

~e=~~~~:
atre, COD.tinuoua showings from

8

s.t.•

and Isadora Duncan and Lauren'11 Dream. CJark Gym. 9 p.m.
Non-students $2.60. at u dents
$1.00. Ticketa at Norton Ticlcet

~~s:t~:; !!~t!nisJn!:~ !~ion ~~rd, S:30 p.m., ~:aJ:~df~! =~~~
FILM • : Cat Ballou, sponsored by
It is based on a real dream. in
FRIDAY-12

· friend of Straub; Stefan F1eischer, associate professor ~f Engliah;
Thomas Kavanagh, aas~&amp;tant proFive biofeooor of French; Gerald ~~~~·
asaistant profeuor of
·

to illustmle different problems
in women"• livee, both at work
&amp;Dd in family situations: Caro~. Fabiaane, FNUICOise, l.4ureue, Mro, c-. TbMe filma deal
with women of different cJ..au. age

SDDVIC£•: Oneg Shabbat
-'U
Ca
to follow, Hillel House, 40
pen
Blvd., 8 p.m.

SAB ••TB

:l;'t,bb,~~rJ.!i..~'if!'[;
required. Playen can join this
the morning of the tournament
Cincludee a subecription to Cheu

Life and Review and di.acounts on
cheso equipment), fee ia $5.00/
year for juniors. Prizee: trophies
to top 4 places and fint in each
cl~. A, B, C, D and ~led.
Saturday •eaiou: 240 Norton, 10
a.m.• 3 p .m., and 8 P.m. Allo on
Sunday. Send entries (name, fee)
to Alan Fenster, 1040 Kenmo"'
~~.d~"ff'Y!~c:heaa oeta

Satur-

day listing for detailJ. 240 Norton, 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.
HILlEL CLASSES: Talmud, Hillel
Library, 3 p.m. Convenational
Hebrew (advanoed), 262 Norton,

u~ li:a.?.~;,a~;n~bbi~::

ard Buchen will a~ on What
is Orthodox Judaum?, Hillel
HoUlle, 7 p.m. Hillel F&lt;llowahip,
a group of faculty and wivea, with
speaker Dean Ricbanl Schwartz,
UiB Law School, "Community
Justice and Law in the Iuaeli
Kihbotz," open to all, Hillel
House, 8 p.m.

~Ns: ol::~ .-;~~

readings of ~by Deguy. Garelli. Marteau, Ouellette, and IMWE:r:;.~Jro&amp;'er~~..:.~
free, open to the publie.
-

TUESDAY-I6
POC!'RY COLLOQUIU)(•: Second 1ft·
aion : POSmONS: ·DISCUSSIONS, 18

Diefendorf Anne L 10 a.m.-12
noon, free. Third aeaion: OPPOSIPresentations Tbeoriques,
Lockwood Library Conference
Rooin, 3 p.m., -

TIONS:

PHAB.MACY 'l'I:LEPHONJ: t&amp;CTUJIZ#:

Drs. Frank J. Bolgan and Eli
Germanovitch, Di46nosil dlld Sur-

gicol TrNtment of Coronary Ar-

~~o~~t'·M~~ ~r!:, ~

receiving stations. tel 835-0728
for information. 11:30 o.m.
&amp;NGI.Ha81NG AND

·. .drua·: Dr.

APf"UUa)

BCIKNar:&amp;

Julian Sakely,
prof-.r, chemical encinNring,
Studiu . in Procua M&lt;tofi¥.rty,
70 A~n, 1-1:50 p.m.
1D1UL CLA881:8:

&amp;tinMro H&lt;-

brew, 262 Norton, 12 DOOtL Jewilh EtJUc., 262 Norton, 1 p.m.

~;:lis~. Projectionitt, eee

MONDAY-IS
Araenal (Alezander
Dovzhenko, Russian, 1929) and
Earth (Dovzhenko, 1930), 147
Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p.m., !Me.
PATHOLOGY I..&amp;C'I'tJD•: Dr. John

FILMs••:

~tywn:~i:,lh;~~ue/.~~
D, Capen, 3 p.m.

a aotmdi.nc
board session for uea busineeamen on bOw government regulations afl'ect employment and what

BUSINB88 81'.8810N #;

~=n:~:;~c:l ~f ~

ment. Panelists include Dr. My-

:~;

%r.FJ!::iciaaastta;i~~

leclurer; Dr. · Phillip R-. prof e s a o r. A question-and-auwer
period and open diacuaaion will
foUow. Faculty Club, Harriman
Library. 3:30 p.m.
COLLOQUrUM•: Dr. Nonnan R.

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

subject of occupatioual education.
Dr. Albert Pautler. Jr.. a.oc::iate

~~:~.:;,= ~""8:,.=;

a A. B WJ'l'B COJOIEN'I'.utDB•: of Curriculum Develo.,_,t 8Dd
Rabbi Hofmann'• home, 12 Colton Inatructional Media. 231 Norton,
4:30-7 p.m.
Drive, • p.m.
IIILtm. CLASS: Co~Wenational HeIDIUL HAYJUm:: with Bolfalo
Stale Hillel, by r.ervatioD. Meet brew (elementary), 242 Norton,
in front of Hillel. HOUM, 8:80 :I. p.m.
UNGU1811CS UICTUD~: Mr. Buckintham, linlruiati&lt;o, University of
....,..,. -...:•: J ...... Cwminrr· ROchealer, "N&lt;ruolinluiiU.:., 404
ham 8Dd Tbe A&lt;me DaDce Com- Hay-. 7 p.m., pubJjc inviled.
pany, will ~t two clauo.,
'I' 0

~~h:!..~~~~

Tit. Fin!_ Family: Walt Dimey

f,~1~n~==: 1':7,.:

WEDNESDAY-I7
PIIY8ICWIB -..rBOMI: ...,..,..# :
C~r o-w,y COII/c~: Dr.

(Contilwcd

011 -

7, col. 1)

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

VOL 3-NO. 9

Ketter Has
Gloomy View
Of Budget

GiftFbnds,\blunteers
May Save Ombridsman ·

Preoident Heart Ketter senlllld the gloomiest lJudtDeWy
· picture yet in his nporl ID the
Faculty 8enale 'IWalay afWDOOIL Tbe Preoident bad just
returned from his "annual ordeal by flre"-tbe ...-..,lion
of U/B's 1972-73 bud8et ID the
Stste's OOice or the 8udpt in
Albany. At the day-loq Mooday meeting, the I&gt;ireciDr or
the Budaet told the U/B dek.~
galion to mpecl DO
ilext year. In addition, be fore.
cast a ooe to one-alllkJne..b
billion do II a r · delicit in the
Stste's budget far tbis fiacal
year.
. Wben U/B's budget was presenlllld Moncilzy, it called far_
increases ol four to five million
dollars. Within lha!e ficures,
bowever, were Central OOice
mandalllld cuts in the areas or
Student Health Service, Student A ff a i r s, Intemalionsl
Studies and the Libraries. At
the· bearing, Ketter was told
tbat the Libnu:y would be able
to fill 110111e or its fiOIJI!D Jines,
but tbat it would also have to
institute a greater ssvings fac-

u.c.-

tor.

Tbe oaly bopeful note, Ket.-

..

=.-x~,: ':lll~~

t!ae-will-he-Jlm!ibllity in
bow it COil be _.t. U/B . . .
..-JiinPed out at the -.me,
be said, far the "ffscal .._,_
sibility it bas sbown."
.
Tbe President met ... Mon(Continued

011 -

2. coL I)

---

lsltthelorp _ _ _ ... t h e r f l l l t t w t h e - -

-

tram

--~F-AJSit'•-

the rtpt. FGr men .., IlL Furness' -

tip&amp; ...... . . , - -

F,.._,,--

fi.

Dorms Will 'Lock-up' at Earlier lfouio
In\\8ke of Assaults &amp; Wive of Thefts
_By STEVE LIPMAN
Earlier closing hours for
Clement and Goodyear donnitoriea, and possibly for U/B's

other

on~pus

residence

balls, are in 111ore as a result

of early - . asssults in
Tower and a series of relalllld
thefts sinoe last spring in

Clement.
Clement and Goodyear bouse
councils wiled last week to
JDOYe tbeir lodr.-up time from
10 to 8 p.m., starting ilnmediately, and Eric Levy, president
or Clement House Council.

NOV.4,1971

ssys Toper and the four small
balls fRlhounding it will "probably" do likewise.
'These actioDs come about
chiefly becall9e of these events:
• Three Tower coeds were
threatened at knife-point in
tbeir rooms two weeks ago.
• Six asssults and a robbery
by non-students were reporlllld
foUowing a dimce in Tower
three
weeks - • Clement
bas undergone
since April ·a series of thefts
""'-' vH:tims have claimed
their doors were lodr.ed, lead-

IJonms Stage May Have Seen
Its Lnst UIB Curtain Call
Domus, the lbeetre in a lac- Scbool, took over for Bennis
after the latter resip&gt;ed during
have aeen its last curtain caU the Spring 1970 campus disas an ofticial part of UfB. Its turbence. Munay renewed the
leeae with the Olliee of the Vice lease on Domus for another
President for Academic Affairs year at a -o&gt;st of $8,000.
""Piled August 31 and was not
Within a week of Dr. Bem..........,a. Tbe odds are good ani Gelbaum's appointment to
tbat the situation won't change. the vice presidency, negotiaSinoe the inception or Do- tions with the building's owner
IDWI in the faU of 1969, the
were undeoway oonceming tbis
Office of the Vice President for year's lease. Gelbamn, w h o
Academic Affairs bas been pay- says be "is in favor or Dcimus"
ing the rent em the fonDer but is opemtinj under the curPierce An&lt;YW faciliUes. Tbe rent U n i v e r s i t y "financial
totaf amount paid tbat yau: squeeze, applied stricter guidewas $6,000 In return for wbic:h · lines to the neaotiations than
tlie unn.er:.;ty bad CDilbol over did bis ,........._.•. his' office
the facilitieo for """ as class- would s-Y cmly that JIRrl or the
1'0011111 and for tbeetre poduc- lease~ """"""" time
tioo:ui Dr Wanen Bennis ... on "alijiiWnically ~ ...,_
vice prea;d.,m then.
tivitial," i.e.,~ That part
Dr Daniel Munay, then act- of the Ieue, aiOUDd $10,ing .Dean or the Graduate · (Co..wu.ed "" :11, ·col. 3)
tory .., Elmwood Avenue, may

-t

Two 'altematives e"ist for
CIOOtinustion of the OOice of
University Ombudsman, ED!Cutive V ice Pre.ident Albert
Somit said tbis week: (a ) to
pay the costs of the · office's
activities out of non-pub I i c
funds; and ( b ) to carry on the
activities on a purely-voluntsry
basis.
Tbe Stste, Somit · said, will
not provide funds for continuance of an office specifically
dedicated to tbis JIUIJIOS"- Tbe
current budget squeeze is one
of the major factors which led
to the decision.
Somit nolllld tbat the Ombudsman's Of6oe (as weU as
tbat of the University Advocate) had never been cleared
by Albany, although it has existed unofficially for three years.
SUNYAB bad been filling the
post as a balf-time facul ty assigornent and had been providing secretsrial assistance and
office space. The central SUNY
budget office first learned of
the ombudsman's existence this
summer when all non-teaching
s u m m e r positions were reviewed. At tbat time, he said,
SUNY indicated that U9e of
State monies for both Ombudsman and Advocate had to be
a t O'J' p• . - IY"'-lJI B
gained a c:on.tinUilD&lt;II! through
August l, Somit said, beca119e
of its commitments to the individuals oonoemed.

man's OOice bas performed in
settling grievances for members
of the University community.
And while every effort will be
made to investigate both tbe
private funding and the wluntsry altematives, Somit feels
tbat it is "perhaps optimistic"
to expect tbat either·will prove
to he possible.
Somit reviewed the situation in acknowledging receipt
of a report of a presidentiallyappointed committee which reviewed both the Ombudsman
and the Advocate's offices. Tbe
Committee was headed by
Dean George S. Bobinski of the
School of Information and Library Studies.
The report, romplelllld October 1(;, found tbat. little concern existed over pbasing-out
of the Advocate pust. 1n ligbt
of the fact tbat the Student
As3ociation and the Graduste
Student Association have bired
the fonner assistsnt advocate
to provide students free legal
advice and counsel, the Committee did not~ continuation of the Advocate's Office in any fonn. Tbe Committee, however, ""Pressed mDCI!ID
tbat there IDilY he some students
&amp;• well as f8culty and stalLwho
--~ ....,;h -•iee....t urged tbat some form of legal
aid be provided in the CWTeDt
planning r or University-wide
governance and judiciary systems.

~~ presidOnt
said be finds the situation " regrettable" in light of the excel- ,Jnittee "strongly and unanilent job which the Ombuds- (ConlinuM on 2. coL 3)

~~~C!!

ing Housing and Campus Security officials to conclude tbat
a master donn key i.• beinK
used

24.....,_
Twenty-four

sud! third degree burglaries have occum!d
since mid-April, the time Campus Security believes the thief
or thieves got hold of a key.
A maintenance man in Good-

~~~:.~f~W.

ing's elevator after be had used
key to reach the Pre.idential suite on the tenth floor.
Tbe keys disappeared
About the same time, a
maintenance man in Clement
reporlllld a maater key ID tbat
building miAsing. It was ...,.
turned within the week, but DOt
before, Campus Security ......
peels, a copy was made. 'Ibis
is the key suspected of being
used in the string of burglarjeH,
rather than the other set, siDce •
there have been few reports of
similar crimes in other dormi·
tories.
Techniailly, by agreement
with the man~. DO loc:ksmith withiJi a 100-mile radius
or U/B is supposed to have a
blank with wbic:h to make oopies or tb.se pouticular types or
keys. But Lee Griffin. aasistant
director or Campus Security,
eq&gt;lains U.t any druc ......,
or department slore--eitber unaware or Jbe rule. ar - lookin&amp;
far a buo::k-1rill duplicate such
ODe

keys.

•

••

He further that .....
llinlle !bat .....,.. a11 or
Clouelt is beinc .-1 ~
(~--%.col.%)

.

1-__.., --

Day CareDedicatWn

---,~-·o
.....

the U/B ~ 0., CMo

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

s . . . . . - , - - . i l t t h e l O O _ R _ Tho

-(-~---­
·-~-r,..,.

�~

2

DonnsW'ill ~.!up'~---------

Budga-

froa I, col. :J)
day w i t h SUNY ChaDoellor the dlefiB have occumod on
Boyer and the '-&lt;! ol lbe every Ooor but"ooe-tbe ~,.
Urban Devel~t Corpora- ity (75 per lll!lllt) on the fifth
tion, Edward Locue. to discuss t!J.rou!lh ninth floors.
University housing in Amherst.
Objecls stolen have fBIIIIIld
In several ......J&lt;s, "'Kette&lt; hopes from wallels to ClliDel8ll to ~~~~­
to have a report ready to send gage to TV ael8 and clothinl.
to the Board of Trusteee oo One third Ooor resident rethis matter.
turned to his .room in SeptemKetter also reported that 1~and found travelers' cbedm
lines have t-1 set aside for worth $2,700 missinl.
minority poup recruim.tt for
A aevaith floor ~t left
nert year and that in the .-&lt; his room for a few DW!"Iai last
future some lines may also be month, and upon OOIIUIIIl hack,
set aside for women. ·
found the following 11011"' $3
Mter his report, Ketter was worth ol dime&amp;, a Mickey
ql..tioned by Dr. Coostantine Mouse watch, an opal ring, a
Yeracaris about distribuiXID or typewriter, AM-FM desl radio,
SPA ccm-. 'The President portable radio, two pairs or
said that · none have t-1 re- shoes, 12 sweaters and a camceived on this campus and that era. Total value-$488.
he will look into the matter.
~ total amount taken from
Dr. William Baumer, c:bairman Clement during Septemberof the Senate, said it was his the month that most thefls oounderstandinll that Albany is curred-was $1,649. 'The orhavinf m a i1 i n I dilliculties. ficial total or all 24 thefls sin&lt;:e
State-wide SPA has been try- last April comes to $6,590.
inc to get the Chancellor to Aile,_, Hauls
hasten distribution of the COD·
Most of the burglaria~ have
tracts for some time.
happened during afternoon
'The senaton discussed bows, Particularly from 1 to 6
the report or the Committee on when many students are in
Acadernic .Intecrity whicb de- clasaes. None of the stolen
tails a set or procedures for items have t-1 reported seen
""""" or student 8aldemic dis- on the ~r floors during the
honesty. Tbere was some ccm- day, and ""-one has _ , any..,., about student a~ of thing beinJ removed from the
the ..-sures and David Stein- dorm at mght, so far. Concluwald, Student AssociaiXJD co- sion: a group or students living
ordinator for student aflairs, on one or the upper floors of
spoke on this matte&lt;. He point- Clement may be responsible,
ed out that the question of stu- according to Griffin.
dent academic dishonesty is
Griflin says the culprits are
only half or the problem and a band of up to ten students
that the Faculty Senate ~d who probably stash the booty
also worry about faculty dis- in their room, or rooms, and
honesty. While he feels the 'remOve it at night, when no
structures recommended by the one is around, to sell in the
&lt;;ommittee are fair, he would city. 'They apparently have no
like to see procedures set up for trouble finding custom e r s.
faculty, too. Procedures for "Who's going to ask questions
cases of faculty academic dis- when they get e stereo for
honesty are now !&gt;"ing ~wn $20? ," Griffin asks.
up by the _Senates CotDDUtee
Griffin says Campus Securon A~'!""C Freedom andRe- ity has a "pretty good idea"
&amp;poJlSlbility and are ~ about who may be responsible,
to come before the group m but hasn't moved yet for lack
~g lbe Commit- or _evidence. "We can't do anything until someone sees the
tee•s definition o r aca demic dis- mercbandise
in the 1"00111, or
honesty, ~ ;&gt;enate accepted sees one or the people ripping
the Co!DIDlttee s report but also something off. Suspicion isn't
voted to set up a panel to clear- enough to act on."
ly defin&lt;: what academic disHe thinks those involved
~S::..te also dealt with ~ they are suspected; ~
how students would be admit- sibly one reason the number
ted to U/B next year. ,Idler l'!.~~ by one-half
some !lebste ~-t the '!"'r!ts
A~ pattem ·developed
of vanous admissions cnteria, last year, Griffin reports. A
the group .""'!""'~ the repo_rt or number of robberies were going
the A!Im•_ssJons f0&gt;1D1D1ttee, on in the dorms until "word
amending J_ts suggestions as · to was out that we were hot on
~d:..~f
their trail They quicklf left
~by the ~tive
Jl:ri~ were much
(Colllu.-.1 from -

I , col. I)

f":,.:

~~!!,~:,=it=~~

(Colllu.-.t

=-

. Theon total
n~r of'lNf¥larcam~ m. the April to

the class according to a sum JeS
derived by adding their high October penod ~ by
school average to their stand· ~re than 50 ,per cen~ this Y""!•
ardized test """"'" another 45 G_riffin says. 'The difference JB
per cent would be' admitted by lh"e' rip-offs in Clemen~" Last
high school peroentile rank and year, there were "very few"
the remainin; 5 per cent would ~rts or the locked-door yagain admittance solely on the nety or thefts now plagwng
basis of high school class I'IUlk. that domJ.
In addition-to the8e methods. to
The number or actual thefts/
seJ.e c t the general freshman Griffin adds, is probably great~ other stodents would be er than those reported. "'nly
admitted via the E P I S !in&gt;- about 70 .p er cent ol the robpam, a11 d the experimental berieo that occur ever get reFaculty . at -Natural Sciences pOited_"
and Mathematics program. 'The EVIIIJ TWO Yeen
Senate also passed a motion
A master key-ether to a
callinc for dropping the p..,.. dorm or to an individual Ooor
ent dorrnitoiy residence require. -lalls into the wrong hands
ment for freshmen who live 50 · about every two years, 'lbomas
miles from Bu!falo.
Gullev, asaociate -director of
• In its I as t agenda action • 1-lousiDI{ reports. This hllpitem, tbe Senate passed a mo- IJOD8!I in Tower in 1969. All ·
tion
.
"faculty members lh8 loeb-cbanged.
to ~A." They also , . . 'The cast ol such an operQila!ted that lhe bargaining" 'ation is about $2.!i!!). And

r.t . ~/OI..~i':;

dauae in the oootract lhroulh
which SPA membeis would receive economic benefits equal
to those DeiOtiated by other
groups~ with the
State. In addition, the molion
c a I I a for the neaotiation or
lunda to be set aside for merit

incl-.

c;:,t':,s t!:.. i:'!..•t"'i.::

changed so far, although Gulley reports that HOUIIin« is in~ securing funds from

a I1PiiCial account in Albany. If
the funds mme ~ , _
loeb will becin to he Installed
within a week.
Another .. o I u t i o n to the
tbefta, Griffin ...,.. le to have

Campus Security ollicen patrol
donns during the day. "We

want one or two men walking
around thele full-time." This
isn't possible ..,._ "For a campus 1his size - need 85 to do an adequate job. We have
48." 'That number will be 64
80011" Campus Security is in
the
o1 addinc 19 employees.
Griffin ~- that the
"events in
"are not entirely a - t y pioblem as
much as a · · c:ommunity prob.lem. We .....a more cooperation; students have to be more
alert.
-

PIOCI!IIl

a.m.m

PeaplttwdTo~

Griffin advises that dorm
students hurt their """' cause
when they don't report thefts
or refuse to ' bring ~ .
"People get scared ol physical
retaliaiXJD if they put the finger on someone. rve t-1
threatened many timee, and

nothing's evw OCliD!' ol it. But
it'a hard to ccmvmce people
they'IJ be aafe.
"Many timM when a robbery
occurs, somebody has see n
someone they didn't "bow in
the halls. But if they don't . .
port it fw a day or two, their
memory isn't fresh. You see so
many people .in the dorm, bow
can you remember a strange
face a few days later?" :,.
'The move to cloae the dorms
early probably will have little
effect on the Jr;ey-related tbefta,
Griffin 1'1!11S01111, since 111D11t oocur in the aftemoal1 and those
suspected live in the dorm. But
he ·feels it "will be 'IIIIOrth it if
it makes students more aware
. . . and keeps undesirables
out."
Campus Security will pick
up the bill for the eztra two
hours or student security aides
and for a plain~lhed "coordinator."

Domus' Final Curtain---(Comu.-.1 from 1, coL 2)
000, .....;., to about $2,00G-3,-

Gelbaum conveyed the offer to
the insiJUctor of the Faculty or
Arts and Letters dance OOWIIe
Gelbaum has contacted which was to use Dooms. 'The
(either directly or lhroulh the instructor, however, bad made
Office for Cultural . Mraira, other 8JTilllii!II10!Ie.
i&gt;Mded by Esther SwartZ) a
. According to Dunn, the only
number or JfOUPS on campus
to see if they woUld make up way any 8JTilllll!ll10!ts can he
worked
out is if the Univeraity
the financial diffeJ'I!Da!. Of the
apprazimately ten groups con- agrees to his hours in the future.
tacted, Mrs. Swartz reports
that eight willinc to ~
nate a total of $9,000; the two
that declined claimed they
couldn't afford it. 'The pledges
she received, however, are more
than enough to cover the dif.
fereuce. Mrs. Swartz says " they
'The paralyzing p o li t i c a I
were given in good faith."
Dr. Gelbaum, however, did apalby of the early sixties is
not feel these pledges were creeping back on college cam" firm" enoUgh to rely on. Wilb- pusea. Moratorium rallies are
out what be considered firm spamely attended, mard&gt;es are
commitments to cover the en- few and far between and spontire lease, Gelbaum negotiated taneous meetings to deplore
for only that part or the lease the tyrannies or the system are
which involved time spent in almost non-ment. T
their place is a more
classes.
. On September 19, Gelbaum type or involvement, one that
works
for social change on a
ssys the building landlord informed him !hat Jooeph Dunn, person-to-person basis, as exemplified
in Community Action
the New Yom City director
brought to Bulfalo one year Corps (CAC) projects.
As
a
member
of CAC, a stuago by the Creative Associates
to manage its Domus activi- dent isn't one or a thousand
ties, was given complete control marching down Main Street,
of Domus on September 1. he's alone down on Chippewa
Dunn had formed 'The Ameri- Street helping to rehabili1ate ·
can Contemporary 'Theater, a an alcoholic; he's not in a gang
professional acting company shouting at the police, he's
composed mainly or UIB stu- Yellina: with .inner-city kids at a
dents, through whose activities baskeiball game.
he planned to pay Domus'
This seems to be the type of
lease.
Dunn proposed to Gelhaum involvement a t u d e n t s want
that during the weekday hours now. CAC membership has
of 8 a.m. to 12 110011 Univenlity doubled in the past year-one
class activities could be sched- or the few stu~t mganizations
uled in the Domus faciliU.... to do so. It ndW has 31 different projects and is staffed with
over 1,100 volunteers. N e :r t
semester, Tedd Levy, director
of
CAC, hopes the number will
( Contiluud {rom I , coL 5)
e:r.-1 2,000.
mously" recommended continuation in its present form as a
Students can choose from a
permanent ol6ce at the Univer- wide variety or projects with
sity, with reviews at five-year locations running the length of
intervals.
the county. CAC has volunteers
Acknowledging that there is worldna in the Tonawanda Inno money authorized to fund dian ~IVIltioo and at the
the ol6ce, the Committee report Bulfa.Jo Complaint Board Stu- :
said that it seems "tragic" that dents have also set up a basket$30,000 co u I d not be found hall ~ sports league for innersomewhere in 1he Univenlity's city kids and are providing
overall budget, perhaps in aav- companionship for veterans in
_inp or~ funds not aVail- the VA Hospital
able last spnng.
'lbough there are many pro'The report also calls for a
"coril:erted effort" to be made jects, a number ol them fall
toward statutory ...tablishment into three basic poupinp.or the ol6ce within SUNY, at &lt;lay care centers, tutoring and
least at the Univasity centers. mental health. This year there's
As an alternative or atop-pp t-1 great e:rpansion· within
1008IlUI'e tmtil _
State app.oy.a these categories, and, for the
and ftmdinc can be pined, the first time, CAC is sponsoring
two drug and · prob!ema.with.
Committee
carp&amp;
or living projects: the Amherst
7-"10
voluntary CliDbudameD
who
could ........ the ~ func&gt;. Narootlts Guidance Center and
tiona Of the olioe OW!r a SG- Sunshine House. Until they
hour week. Here,
find a home of their "own, Sunretarial help 1ft1Uid ha.., to ba shine House is operating out
of
the CAC Office on the . provided through 801118 other than Stata funda.
Qnd floor of Norton.

ooo.

lie cslculated.

CSEAGWes
Schdmships
'The Stale Um-.ity at Buffalo ~ ol the Civil a.Vice Bmploxee. A.aciatiOD
(CSBA) baa ........sed aiz .:bolarahipa for caiJece and Ullhwsity study to the .... and
daughtera ol lour UIB Civil
Service ~ and 1D . _
UIB Civil Servioe ataff .....,_

hers..

Schnlanhlp ..,.;pianta tue:
Cynthia D. Ftnter, a atndent
at Medaille Callep, cieugbt:er
ol Mr. and MIL Hemy Ftnter,
519 Mt. v - Rd.. Snyder,
Janet A. Bucbbab, Medaille
Callep, daughter ol June M.
Bucbholz, 125 PaJbidge Ave.,
Bulfalo; MaJk · A. ~.
UIB, 8011 ol Mr. and Mm.
Fnmlt c. ~. 414 LaSalle Ave., Bulfalo; Jolm M.
Hutdlinp, U/B, 8011 ol Mr.
and Mm. Roy T. Hutdlinp,
Jr~ 40J.· Gtuva Cleveland
Highway. Snyder, Florence K.
Bender, a .00. typist in Univeraity Libraries, t76 w~
li.ve., Kenmore, and Utizia A.
Visoue, an eccount clerk in Student Accounts, 88 Bickford St.,
Bulfalo.
Eadi receiwd a cbec:k for
$100.00 from Edward C. Dudek, pre aide n t ol the U/B
Chapter ol CSEA.

CAC's 'JYpe of Involvement
More Ibpular thari Rallies.

:e!'.::J

Omlulsman-

- ·a

oo.e-. ._

Also new this year are the
projects on Environmental Action and Consumer Protection.
'lbeae
two groupo,
"'""" to
50 stUdent
worbrs,with
are actively
involved in everylhing from
supplying footpower for the
campaign to stop the Pendleton
jetport to comparison shopping.
Consumer Protection has put
up blue complaint boD!&amp; in
Norton, Tower, Clement and
Ridge Lea Cafeteria for individuals to air any problems
they are hllvinc wilb local
merchants. Environmental AcIXJD hopes to initiate a paper
and can recycling proce98 on
campus.
Some or the other CAC
jects are shifting focus and
l:'ve t-1 set up for students
to use the sJdlls they learned in
their """' ol study. This is espacially bue at the Cantslician
Center.
students wilb
majora such as ~ Pathology or Occupational 'Therapy
can use what they leamed by
forming special projects or
their own. Numing and medical
student&amp; have started a birth
ccmtrol~- and have already
·
an informative
add
t guide Oil the sub-

n.e.e.

ject.

Not all the CAC projecls are
loog term. This fall. a """"""""
ful voter "''Pstration and absentee lJalloliq drift .,... ccmductecl L e v y estima!es that
over 2,000 """""*"".ballots were

addiu.:...er.=

filed
and were li
or
students
·
tion- about reP.terinl
y.
A big help to the poup this
year is the donation of a blue(.....,
and

white vw bus by Granville

Motors. Volunteers are ..,.
able to bring people to campus
for meetings and other events.
The bus is .-1 regularly on
weebnds to bring from
Terrace House. an aJooholic rehabilitation center, to vi e w
movies on the CIIJJll1l&amp;
'The projects !hat IU'e sponsored depead on student interests and sldlls, and Levy oays,
CAC is happy to start other
work
if there is in6nst
and
D d. Aocorcling to
I.evv, the number ol volunteers
is limited only by students'

.f.:":!

concem

fot..otben.

�GU/B.
&lt;NOTES
By "IY'
In the September issue of
CoUege and Uniuersity Business, Robert Thoobold is quot..
ed ·as sa · g "Education will
be a.
pursuit . . . the
emerti'!D"" of the Communications Era ""-! 011 full educa~
tion m e a n s the end of the
Industrial Era ""-! oo full
employmenl T h e Industrial
Era required that. everybody
toil; the Communications Era
•will allow everybody a reasonable standard of Jiving without
toil but with aelf&lt;bcsen work_"
One sign of this philosophy
has already emerged in San
Francisco where "Emeritus
Uniwrsity" is readying itself
for a 1.973 opening. The new
institution will enroll men and
women between the 8p!S of 55
and 69. Faculty will be of the

lif=

L

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------_J

SBI Commissions &amp;udyrl I.o.v-Cmt Housing
By Same Firm That Surveyed 1\Jverty Hill'
........ --.
hoasiDc
Sub Board I, Inc., (SBI) hailt
b
the Utt.n
has c:ommi-imed Dra~ Bry- CoalitiDD b the Unioerant Associates ol. .Pbii..Wpbia sity ol. Pawylo.aniL Cummilq:
to do a study ol. looMxlst stu- also ezplaDal that the mntrad
dent housin&amp;. the Graduate was P..... to the finn siD&lt;e
Student Assoc:iation (GSA l
"'they ........_... the political
learned Monday nilbl
implications ol. wlat we're
In a report to the November doinc-•
GSA Sena~!o_ meetinc.. ~ · cmstine Grahl,. ~ d
Haggans, ~te archi-.re the GSA s-:utiw Qmwnittee
student and employee ol. the wanted to ..,._ the c:oaaection
firm, spoke of a $2,000-$3,000 between 1faaans aDd the archimntract granted late
&amp;rm. The student ex::"~=.q."'!!!"....!..':": ~plaiDed t!-1 be ~ a padoate

last=

a 't1imoei&amp;ib-;wide ~
~" ...ruai ~ include
"strategies for providing non-

~.,t:':,!?f.;.",.~~

tioo of units, sources of funding, number and n&amp;l:un\. of
dwellings.
The study would not linlit
itself simply to land in the
Amherst area, Haggans reported, .but will also mnsider locations close to the South (Main

lr:"'~ ~ afal::::..~

sources of funding such as the

U/B Foundation, Alumni A&amp;sociatioo, local rontzactors and
federal qencies as well as a
~:i~~ corporation
. . of the report will be
The aun
to lind an alternatiYe that will
provide student housin&amp; "as
s o o n as possible," "-"'&lt;
says, adding that be hopes units
will be available ·f..- occupancy
in the fall of 1973.
" - " " estimates that the
study.could taice as loog as six.
111011ths. However, SBI 011 Oc&gt;
tobel' 12 auth..-ized only $2,000$3,000 f..- a three-~th study.

-.. o.--.
•
_.........., ... _ of

.,.__
Sharp .,....,.__...
~gans took place after be finished

his report. Senat..-s ~ !f the

mntract was let competitively,

wi_th SBI Pres_ident Paul_ Cummmg r&amp;ply•ng that 1t was
"granted Without c:omoetition
due to time restraints:'
This is the &amp;eOOnd study SBI
has mmmisaioned oo student
housing· an earlier one was
dooe
BOSTI. The student
govemmentsl organization has
also ......t&lt;ed pieviously with
Dmyton Bryant--&lt;lll a $3,000
study ol. _Povaty Hill.
Haggans defeoded award ol.
the mntract to his firm, sayin&amp;
that it is """" ol. the lafi!Oil
and best finns dealiD&amp; in - profit housing." He pointed oUt
that Bryant Associates ha""

by

olau on the reoeot 1DI!etincs be
had in Alhany with ChaDcellor
Ernest Boy.... and members ol.
his Cahi1a. Nimlau was also
in Albany on Monday to atlend
the U/B bud&amp;et bearinp.. The
GSA poesident amsidered the
e:r:perieD:e a wor1hwbile o n-e
and praiged members ol. the
Ketter administmtion for their

~=~~
to "fcqjet about inbym~ ::i delePtiaoJ.
aeases ADd w o r k from

'op

dormitory, noo State-wpported
residential ~ts for students,"
Jlau!ms said.
_
.
'lbis translates mto doing a
preliminary ~tudy of low-&lt;XJSt

~~":-~~~

is interesled in student bousing.
In an inlftview after the meetin&amp; 1faaans said be WOibd
011 the oriP&gt;al BOSTI study
f..- SBI, tbeu on the Poverty
Hill development plan and ..,..
will ......tt on the housin&amp; study_

In

other adioD at the Mon-

day ni&amp;ht

meetin&amp;

the GSA

Senat..-s eleded Fred Cazar,
MediciDal Chemistry, as the
new treasurer """"'- ol. the
resignation ol. Anthony lAw"'"""'-

year's

last

bud&amp;et ..............,• De-

spite this warnin&amp; Nicolau said
there was an inaease of $367,000 in the U/B budget f..- graduate. fellowships.

The GSA Senat..-s also discussed a student-wide judiciary
prtJIJ06al drawn up this~
by representatiYes ol. """"""'

student governments. This proposal was recently defeated by
the Medical, Deotsl and Law
Sd1oal
and a new
procedure is being drawn up.

_......,..ts

Smrch Committee Is Named
fur Provost of Ed Studies
A Sean:h CammiUee -tor a
F . - ol. the Faculty ol. Ed'ucational Sludies ............ lippointed by Pre&amp;ideat Robert L
~- The will .....,.....
IIII!Dd a puoe1 o1. .....u-s, .,.,.,
ol. ...... will IIIICDI!Od Dr. Rollo
o • ....a..... wboae ....;;_..._ from
.~..
· :::

=: !:'7:'.,::;,;"".,.!

~~

....,...... ,...._
· 'In a cbuJ1e to the Convnittee

~ asbd that at """"'
two DIJIIIiDeos be dosipated DO
later tt..a .......,., 'Zl, 19'12. Be
pointed out that IIDIIer mlos ol.
the ~ Assoc:iation of
U..n...sity Pn*aoors, recruitand ._,iieticww b I,IUCh
posita. c:an becin DO later
tt..a ._-. 1 .,...............,
,........
DO
~ter ~ Apil3f? ol. the -,..r
m whid1 the !'~'
d
t "' to
' - " " ellodi1le..
The presideat aiiD asbd the .
aJillllli!!iee to
J&gt;!Wis to- Dr. a_ Gelbwm, VICe pnoideal f..- ..,._
domic allaim, on December 20,
1971. aad ~ 31. 19'12.
Be......,.. 11m, m the .....t!K:t
'ol. the -.:!&gt;. ~ aad i&amp;-

Dr.

t:::.d- ..,..

ol. the mnunittee.
Other members include: ' Carol
Foodick, a paduate student in
&lt;DUDSelor education- Dr Ricb-

cbai."'DaD

SBfs Presidency,

New l6te Planned
The election results of the
local Uniwrsity Center chapter
of the Senate Professional Association (SPA) are in and the
officers elected- most of them,
anyway.
.A.n.ot-•ncemenl of the n e w
ol6cers I as t Wednesday was
followed by the resignation of
the new president. Dr. McAllister Hull, who was appointed
acting dean of the Graduate
Scbool d u r i n g the election.
Under SPA rules, it would be
legal for Hull to 611 both posts,
but be felt a "monll obligation"
to refuse the S P A position.
As a result. Dr. Jean Alberti,
the new vice president. is currently acting in the presidential capscity u n t i I a special
election can be held.
Since all the races, especially the presidential one, were
very c I o s e, Dr. Conslantioe
Yeracaris, who ran for president on the first ballot. was
"urged to run again," I eonard
Snyder, chairman of the elections committee, said. Running
a,;ainst him is Dr. Thomas
Frantz, chairman, Counselor
Education. Ballots for the race
will go out within the week_
Other winners in the election
are: Mary Brady, secretory;
Frances Dietz, treasurer; Ethel
Schmidt and Dr. Robert Fisk,

:c..,resen~:!ti~A~:

aniBu&amp;elsl&lt;i. ~pro­ Dr. Patricia Hollander, Marga:

, _ ol. psycbolocy; Jolm c.
8rou«btoo, an atlonley wbo resides in I..ewistlm. representin&amp;
Jbe CICJW!Mmitj; Dr. lerOy 6.
Callahan. 8II9!JC:iate prolesaor ol.
elementary ..... remedial education; Dr. DiaDe L DeBacy,
a&amp;stant pro#.....,.. of inslnx&gt;tion; Dr. William Eller, professor ...t dJairmom ol. elementary
and remedial education, and
Dr. Myron M. Milstein, asaociate prolesaor of educational administration.
lio.l:- ~

.l'WWI.l '-'~

BY a -vote o1. 10-7, the cfirec.
t..-s o1. the U/B Student Bar
AJBICia~ ...... I'll'!' ~ reconl ~ the_ - - t i o n !"
William Rel_.;.t to the United Slates ~ Court.
The SBA took DO adiJa1 re-

....,;n._

&amp;•~dine the
ol.
·louis I'I:Jwll aDd in illl 18duu.Je ~
be tion P."" DO b the
...............
~
Clppll8ition to ~ ..,.,
Dr.. Lany J_ Greoa. ........ - t l y nominated~
- · Sd1oal ol. Doatiolr:y, is l"mmidoDt N'mm.

obaald.-

Hull Wn't Acce!X

ret ()'Bryan and Larry Diake,
non-leaching professional members of the local Board, and
Drs. Marvin Feldman, loliltoo
Plesur and Lee Prestoo, teaching members of the Boord.
The election attracted new
members to SPA and totsl campus membe&lt;Ship (exclusive of
the Health Science chapter) is
now 171, or roughly 20 per cent
ol those eligible, Snyder says.
In other actions, the local
SPA chac. has approved the

=t..ol.~~

and its aooompanying motioo

s:..t.i!rg3!:U:!.~U:
tute the revised definition as
......... possible. The wbole
packqe was sent to the SPA
...... in Alhany and will be
mnsidered at the- meetin&amp; of
the Stale.olride RepreoentatiYe
Cotmcil at the eod of November. a.ana.. f..- swift substitution ......... - . - &amp;vcB
says, siD&lt;e the mntrad will be
~ on I y 011 ecooomic
- - . . this year.

...

same
with younger
age. Studenm
studenm
willfrom
uti%
neighboring campuses.
According to a survey recently completed by Alexander W . .
Astio end Alan E . Bayer for
the American Council on Education, the 1970-71 l'cademic
year on the American campus
Will! not as ~ as most people
believe. Astio and Bayer estimate that 462 institutions of
higher education experienced at
least one '"severe" protest in
1970-7L This is only slightly
lower than the 524 experienced
during 1968-69.
Astio and Bayer point to the
mass media as being responsible lor the caricature of campus
calm which is widely held.

...

According to the Chronicle

of Higher Education, Futwe
Shpck by Alvin Tolller bas re- ,
placed Everything You Wanted
w Know About Sex as the best
selling book on ·campuses.

United FUnd

Total Tops

SO PerCent
The University's United Fund
Campaign will contioue until
its goal of $100,000 is reached,
campus fund officials say. The
regular campaign lor the United Fund of Bu11alo and Erie
County is to be completed by
November 10.
Latest statistics concerning
the U/B campaign reveal that
$82,420 has been raised of the
goal of $100,()()().......&lt;)r 82.4 per
cent of the totsl. Efforts are
being made to contact each of
the 5,000 full-time. employees
of the Uniwrsity in order to
reach the goal Appro:Umately
1.600 have not yet returned
their pledge cards.
DiviSions which have reached
or exceeded their quotas are:
Engineering and Applied Sciences; Educational Studies; Facilities Planning; Law and JurisprudeQCe; M iII a r d Fillmore
College and Contiouing Education; President and _E""flU~ve
Vice President's ~
search; University at Buft'alo
Foundation, Inc. and Alumni.
Subdivisions w i t h 100 per
cent or more of their goals
include: Admissioos and Records; Architecture and Environments) Design; Art Department; School of Business Management; Chemistry; Center for
Critical Languages; Cultural
Affairs; Environments) Health·
Financial A i d; Instructionai
Communications Center; Mathematics; Medical Technology;
Music; Occupstiooal Therapy;
Office of Equal Opportunity;
Physical Education; Physical
Therapy; Physiology; Political
Science; University Placement

C:...,C:~uidance; Speech

�~-

4

ProfesSor Living$Jne Charges Chain Feli1num Gives~
Of Command ByPassed on Campus Of~Senote's Meeting
EDITOR:

'The notice in the October 21
issu&lt;;,of the Reporter announcing me «renaming" of Professor Bruno Arcudi as acting
chairman of the Department of
Spanisb, Italian and Portuguese not only omitted the signifJCallt detsil, unusual in itself, that this was a two-year
rmppointment of an acting
chairmanship, but gave the
!alae impression that this was a
normal, uneventful continuation of departmental COIDJQ8Qd.
It is so far from being aoything
even remotely related to such a
situation that I feel impelled to
present some of the facts. I do
so not with a desire to air intradepartmental strife in your
pages but to point to what
seems to me one more in a serial of autocratic acta on the
part of the higher administration that constitute a veritable
disdain ol the faculty. .
;~
1be Department of Spanisb,
Italian, and Porfum- has
been in a doiep cri,;i;,"~ last
spring. This crisis, which originated during the upbeaYSis of
1.969-70, ,centered last year
around the questioned legality .
of Professor Arcudi's appointment in- 1970-71 and peaked
with his naming of a handpicked secret collllnittee to decide the future of junior members of the departmenl 'The
negati"" votes, which by a surprising coincidence were reg-istered only against those hostile to the acting chairman, constitute, in my continued conviction. an invasion of academic freedom and an overall political purge. I am not making a
· blanket defense of all the assistant professors concerned, but I
do maintain that they include
in their ranks some of the
brightest minds ln the depart.
ment and the strOngest hope for
its" future. I cannot escape the
conviction that their major
crime has been to consort with
known "enemies" of the department's ruling clique in the
French and English depart.
ments and to have voted
against its wishes in impoltant
elections. If this seems like a
rash claim, I need only point
to the accusation I e v e II e d
against one full professor that
• be had told certain junior
members who requested permiasim to teach literature
courses: "If you want us to cooperate with you, you will have
to cooperate with us and vote'
with us in faculty elections."
'The charRe was loudly resented
in a meeting at which I was·
present and is recorded in the
minula! ol that meeting, but it
was not denied. A1ao recorded
is the opinion ol another full
prof_,. that it was quite natural to ezpect this type of alJePmce in the name of "esprit
ckrmrps."
~ Appelnboiont U...,.
I have tried to point out in

conest•iitdence with Dr. Ketter
and particularly with Dr. Somit
the judiciousDeas of appointing
a fair, outside medial« to the
acting chairmanship ol a depilrtment so violently divided
within itself, of the unwiaeness
of favoring either side in a dispute so virulent, and of the general weakness of Professor Arcudi's claim to the aeting chairmanship on the basis of a lack
of a genuine mandate (the reported dePartmental vote of1410 in his favor, with a faculty
tie vote of 9-9, inconclWiive as
it was, was based on an apparently inaccurate tally of the assistant professor ballot and
should fmally have read 13-11,
with an 8-10 faculty vote ), his
lack of scholarly production,
and his illegal procedures, as
outlined above. From the administration I received repeated assurances that the ultimate decision would be left
to the l'rovosl When Acting
Provost Connolly u r g e n t I y
recorouneDdlld the appointment
of an outsijk acting chairman
and submitted, at the Administration's request, a list of 13
names, his proposal was met
with stony silence. Following
this, I was once again·.given reassurances, this time that the
decision would be left to the
diScretion of the new Acting
Provost, Gilbert Moore. What
the exact nature of these subsequent recommendations were
I do not know, since Dr. Moore
felt that it would be an impropriety . to reveal them before the President announced
his decision, but the rumored
version is that they also involved the appointment of an
outside acting chairman. Jn any
event, what I do definitely
know, since Dr. Moore has admitted it, is that his advice was
not aocepted.
'That this by-passing of the
recommendations of two Provosts msuccession was not unintentional was made amply
clear to me in a meeting this
past summer with Vice President Somit, at his invitation.
Dr. Gelhaum was also present
at this meeting in which it became readily apparent that the
Administration had no intention of exposing itself to what
it considered the emhllrrassment of a search committee for
a third year and also that it
had little faith in the prospect
of fmding a suitable candidate
in the Faculty of Arts and Letters, or even outsider it, althoUgh some names were bandied aboul In reply to my contention that Professor An:udi's
lack of a scholarly reputatim
would make it unlikely that be
would be able to attract quality
faculty, Dr. Gelhaum countered
with
the amazing analogy that (
the judge of a beauty oaotest
did not· have to be beautiful!
If Dr. Gelbaum's basic premise
is that chairing a uniYelsity de-

_ .......... t • - · ' - ' - • ~ ._..,__ By MARVIN J. FELDMAN
!"' ~ l\lideiiDes for...,.
.-~ 18 ...~·- ~ 1....,.
SUNY....,_
c:eptiJII tnmsfer students and
ing-a- beauty oaotest, peduops
'The ran meeting of the the ll1llllla- ol placM allocated
be should aet m his _,. ad- SUNY Seuate was held oo for tnmsfer students is JP""Ier
vi"!'&gt; si~ during the. ~ Ociober 22-23, 1971, . on the than the ll1llllla- .applyma for
stein alfair, and ""'"""""' hU campus of Alfred Agricultural tnmsfer. Thus the problem is
sy~Jot~isue
and Technical Institute. About likely to increase in amportance
Choln of ~
six years ago, this unit of when the p,_,.., for tnmsfer
-._ ~
SUNY was limited to a few -""" booomee greater. ChanIf the po.iilt of my letter is buildings and a few hun~ oe!lor B!&gt;yer hoped that a comnot already clear, let me now students. Now it has a fairly llllttee of the SeDate would adstate it unequi~y : It is that extensive campus with an en- dreos itself to theee problems.
the normal cbain of COIDIDIIDd rollment of around 3,000 stuWithin thiS past year the isis being coostantly by-paaai in dents. The attractive aettinc sue of equal opportunity has •
~ oaod~ of ~nivemity af- was enhanced by the brilliance focussed ·u pon discrimination in
fiW'B, and m particular that the of the foliage this year.
the hiring of women. 'The Ofauthority of the Office of the
As is customary the openina five of Federal Compliance has
Provost is being "!'"ously ""!"i- session was d~ted to the· visited six campuses within the
ed-what other mterpretation Chancellor's report. He empha- SUNY system including our
sized four topics, budgetary own. It can be taken for
c;t ~I~
constraints, regionalism, equal gnmted that the past history
- y .u::, yy .r
opportunity, and graduate pro- of almost aoy institution will
grams.
reveal a pattern of discriminsChanoellor Boyer elaborated tion in its hiring and promoThe ll8poot8r , _ ... to pnMdo a forum for tha U· on the consequences of the tion policies. Just 8s in the case
cloanp af .... vwletJ tight budget and made some of minority hiring, an alfirmaremarks on the future. The Re- tive action program is called
of tha fac:in&amp;
tha communlt.,.
We Wlk::ome
both search Foundation currently is for to rectify the situation. Tbe
picking up the tab for a variety federal government has a pow-permits.'
of regular budget items, e.g. erful inducement in the form
the Faculty Senate, State Uni- of" cutting off federal funds to
can be given to the recent rash versity Press, faculty fellow- institutions not in compliance.
of provostial resignatioos? It is ships. 'lbe funding is on a re- The Board of Trustees and inthat presidential favor is being duced level and this stopgap dividual units of the state sysbestowed on the faithful in lieu method of financing cannot go tern are moving rapidly in setof due process (another ex- on for long as it would serious- ling up alfirmative action proample has been diacu&amp;ged in ly impair the regular funding grams.
your pages by Professor Rid- activities of the Research Foun- F..,.l Compllulce
The visits of the Office of
del ) -it would be ingenuous to dation.
Federal Compliance, however,
assume in the case under dis- Rei- To Economic Conditions
Obviously, the budget have raised a touchy issue in
cussion that there is no connection between Professor Ar- squeeze is ralated to economic that requests · have been made
cudi's one-man minority votes conditions and improvement is for unlimited access to confi.
in support of the President and likely to oa:ur _only whim rev: den_ijal fil"!'c _~e ~or
his appointment to a two-year enues increase. 'The Budget Boyer believes m all"._tive
defacto chairmanship over the Office, taking a cautious posi- action as a matter of principle,
advice of two Provosts. It is, tion, releases budget lines slow- be also feels very strongly that
finslly and most seriously, that ly, which has the effect of slqw- safeguards must be establiabed
the voice of the oppositicm, al- ing down new appointments. in the release of material. Thus
though it iS · m a 'It in g_ itself SUNY has,.been trying to "11- . in-lbe spirit, of a sj;rongly, ,WQI!1·.
beard, is being progressively tablish the principle of greater ed Senalj&gt; rwolution (S!Pring,
and disdainfully ignored. With- ·autoDomy in the use of budget- 1970) . centnil Administration
out a strong, healthy opposition ary allocatioos but at this is try;ni to work out ground
the Univemity community can point, it can only hope to rules which will protect the
in time only be reduced to a achieve fiezibility within a nar- rights of individuals. It should
be noted that there is no guargeneral pallid mediocrity. And rowly defined range.
Chsnoellor Boyer reiterated antee that information colwhat are the prospects for the
immediate future? 'The only a point be made · at our last lected by one federal agency
possible issues I forsee if the meeting; namely, it is his firm will not be made available to
present situation is not quickly impression that SUNY has not another agency. At present the
relieved are the bursting of the been singled out as a special federal office has acknowledged
pent-up reaentmeot of a rapid- target, · and he has 88SUl'8lllll!8 the basis for the University's
ly-growing disaffected _ . t that as r e v e n u e increases, concern, but still insists on an
t its full share. abeolute risht ol inspection.
of the faculty, the defection of SUNY will
increasing numbeJS of our more It is also a ~ sign tha~ Thus at the moment we are at
and/ SUNY received a substantial an impasse.
distinguished coli
amount of money, around ten
1be appointment ol Dr. Danor the resignation
sition into impotent indiffer- million dollars, in the supple- ie1 H. Murray as ProYOst for
ence and suJien sileDce. I have mental budget all of which was Graduate Protlrams and Rewritten this letter with oaosid- eannarked for s p e c i a! pro- SMrch fills a position which is
erable reluctance because of my grams. It should be noted that eapecially important at this
conviction that sileoce in this this action is very,pruch in line time. 1be cummt moratorium
situation is tantamount to com- with priorities IIUIIfi!Bted in a m graduate prosnuna is eKplicity.
Jocal Senate ...Xutioli paaai peeled to last only until Dr.
Sincerely}'OUIII,
last spring.
Murray and a Master Plan
LBON UVINOJI'ONB
Regionalism in all aapacta of committee haYe completed a
Prof....... of Spanish State government gained im- review of the cummt programs.
petus tbrougb the Governor's (Neverthelais the Sellate later
onler #44 directing all s - paaai a ...Xution cafling for
lljlencies to work tbrougb re- an eud to the moratorium).
pons. For most other purposes
A IIUIIIbl!r ol committee rethe State is divided into eleven porta rellected ·a n acute _,..
regions, but SUNY has asked 111!111 · th.U the fundioo8 of the
.
to be allowed to coordinate ita Senate ...... c:haDie in the
l!llft'OII:
efforts tbrougb four repoa..
lid&gt;t of ~"" JleiOIIatioall.
In repn1 to Dr. Lauren
Regionalism ol[ers c e r t a j n 1bere ·is, however, a · taaporary
Hitd&gt;oock's article m
•
possibilities which could be ail- deterrent to • , _ and. easy
vantsgeous. Savings could be . relationobip with SPA~ .that
ing in your last
effected
by sharing aervicea like 8 sU!eable number of t!lilatora
time to refute hi8 poaition.
First ol
Dr. Hilicbcod&lt; "'!"'pule"' or liblllries. 'The Em- are cumm!Jr defendants in a
claims that i~ is a mialab to pue State College (our co""¥e law suit which charpa, 811111111
think that feclmolocy is aUanlt without walls now formally m other tbinp, that SPA was erefor the .._ aociety has fallea operation) inigbt better opet"- ated to avoid the 1epl fees ininto because ol the great ad- ate tbrougb regions, It may be cuned by the Senate. HopefultecbnolosY has made. more effective for the Univer- ly the strain will eaae with the
It was teclmcology, aaya Hild&gt;- sity to relate to State coneo- ...Xution ol the Court cae.
cock, that has provided the .... ~ inatitutioos tbrougb ~
Seveml Senate Commi.iects ~ for - - hu- JIIOIIS.
Admlalano
•find it very natural to evaluate

viNTS

_._ ........

-- ..

":f':J:; -

HliJ:chcock
Draws Answer
u.ou:'f';

an.

......
-

_

.... c:r.ourma

~~~..::,

the comfort .that tecbnolosY
brinp """""' pollution and a
rapid deterioration ol our envircoomalt. Ralicwwli... he
-Cillto-.ythatit ...... _
baxome the ......,....O.Wty of the
~~ but ~=::.;ety
........ .
produDe. He makes the
anal(CoAtil&amp;ucd .... · ·s. coL 6)

~ =~ ~""b; which
~u;~:::
J:".!::~
relate to the expertise ol .

its impact on lllhiliasion .IIOiicies. · Chsncellor Boyer evidently --a.. issue primarily in
terms of tnmsfer students. That
is, resionaliam may be viewed

as a ,_.,. of providing mobil~ty !" tnmsfer students lram the

)IDUor " " " - "to the four year
coJJeces. At present there are

the committee. 'Ibus the Eronomic Status Committee felt
that the moat important pins
achieved by the amtraet we:e:
a) a . percentage
in
salary which ODillpan!ll favorably with natimal averages as
(Contilwed 0.. fX* 7. coL 1}

u.cr-

�·~

WIRR Starts Broadcasts as Statm
Serving the.Thstes of the
Sulents
.
.

-Uon

'"":

"-'r u.
Y!," Prevc "~
Your

los$.
Ca111 ,.. "P.Ittc.

-

SSI'F• ~rs'

Campus Security Artist
"It's okay to love your fellow
man." campus securitv officer
Wally Ashford says, "but not
when he's shaking you down."
T8is philosophy coupled with
a sharply increasing ClllnPUS
crime rate, literally sent AShford back to tbe drawing boards
where he came up with 'II set
of five cartoons to warn people
· a b o u t the increasing thefts.
Printed on ' white posterboard
and ; faatwio. !Uqny character;a
and ' catmy phniiles, 'the cartoons seek, in a humorous way,
to remind people that U/ B is
well-known around town as an
"easy score."
Because the campus is open.
Ashford points out, a lot of
dilferent people have easy access to offioos and dormitory
rooms. As a result, it's easy for
professional thieves to observe
people's daily routines ~ then
to snatdl a purse or wallet when
tbe individual steps out of the
room for a minute. No place
" on campus is immune, be says,
whether it's the 8th ftoor of
Clement or olllces in Hayes.
Many of the ideas in tbe
cartoons come from actual incidents• that Ashford bas observed. A cartoon showing a
thief walking off with one's coat and purse is a reflection of wbat is a common occurrence at dances, the security
officer aya. A sketch of a girl
running. after .a thief .., a bike
was aclnally bappeninll while
Ashford dn!w it 8Dd another
officer stopped the thief. A large
band """"'Pin~· down on an unchained bike . was the idea. of
Assistant Director r- Gri!in.
Griffin the one who save
Ashford the 110-81-' to work
out the anti-c r i me cartoons.
'The security ollicer, who has
been .., the U/B fOI'Ce for 12

51

years, says he has always "dsbbled." One day, Griffin saw
some of his cartoons and suggested Ashford eulsrge them
and put them into poster form.
That's how the series got start-ed.
The posters are part of a
campaign by Campus Security
to increaae people's awareness
of the amow\t of theft ~t on and of' ways to stop'iL •E8cli
I'08IIlt t..,. die ~ ·"heep us
help you prevent your loss."
According to Griffin, not only
have people been reading the
posters; they've been taking the
advice to bearL 'lbe assistant
director credits them with ducing tbe number of office
and dorm tbefiB and with increasing the number of studenta who register tbeir bicyles.
Ashford is now working on a
poster to alert people to the
dangers of leavinll tbeir cars
unJocbd. Within the next week
or two, wt.. someone leaves
his car windows open or the
door unlocked. he's liable to
come back to the vehicle 8Dd
be greeted by a poster of a
finger pointing at him saying,
"So you think you_... can't be
ripped off!"
In addition to stopping theft,
Ashfoid boJ- the cartoons will
help the University community
- Campua Security in a new
l.ishL
. He knows that it isn't easy
for people to break down ..__
eotypes since his blue ~
"relates me to ott.r ......,;ea."
But Ashford bop!s that his
posters 8Dd the increa8ed _,..,..
pbaaja ... -micelion will
break down the old imqes 8Dd
let the Security Force "bell!
. U. help ;YOU JII'IIW!Dt your loa

--..-

t

(J

.

~

WIRR is.., the air!
Ftom ils single. room on the
first floor of • Clement Hall,
W In~ Resi&lt;!ential Radio, the
newest entzy m U/B's growing
media-log, beginS operations to.
merrow afternoon. · Broadcast.
inc over WBFO's AM transmii.'
ter at a frequency of 640 kil&lt;&gt;cycles ( 640 AM ) , WlRR is
U / B's fust radio station since
WBFO (now exclusively an
FM outlet) began broadcasting
nine ye&amp;IS ago.
Following sign-on at 5 p.m.
tomorrow, WlRR will broadcast 52. consecutive hours until
2 a.m. Sunday morning. After
that; tbe station will be on the
air a basic eight hours a day,
6 p.m. to 2 am.
WIRR will be plugged di·
rectly into U/ B's electric circuit, allowing reception only on
campus. Because of this. WIRR
will not he subject to FCC regulstions. Unlike WBFO, which
broadcasts AM with 200 watts
and often is picked up on
stereos, recnrders, toasters and
electric shavers, WIRR will be
transmitting with a weaker 25
watts, initially.
WIRR bas rented WBFO's
AM transmitter (for which, in
return. they will effect repairs )
located in tbe basement of Tower Hall, for two months at a
total cost of $20. U still broadcasting after this tw&lt;&gt;-month
period, WIRR hopes to purchase its own fM transmitter,
thereafter to broadcast w i t h
more power off campus.
The if is aU importanL
WIRR is starting on a onemonth, $300 gnmt from Interresidence C!&gt;uncil. After tbe
month bas elapsed,· it will be
decided.·wbelber &lt;&gt;&lt; ·not WIRR
wiU conti.D..ie- to liioadcaat. Ita
founders have little doubt that
it will.
''I don't iiee any reason wby
we shouldn't go on." says Don
Robinson, a second year medical student whose College B
course. Radio ~ was
the starting bloc£ for WIRR.
''In fact, I don't even think
that's been discussed at all,"
Robinson adds. i n d i c a t i n g
WIRR's leaders are looking
past the first month.
''Of course. if we end up only
offering wbat you can get on

,.• forms.• "We'll be polling our
1istenem constantly to - what
they do or don't lib. We'll
cbaDge to meet tbeir needs.
"Listeners will be welcome
to •call
during a show """
make suggestioos. U tbey don't
like oomething, we'll try to take
it off. I can't say that all annOUDCers will be this liberal,
that they'll drop something
they have planned for hours if
somebody doesn't like it, but
that's our goal."
Moot important, 8Dd the area
wbere WIRR's founders feel
tbe greatest difference lies between themselves and WBFO,
is that "any student who to tbe station and wants to be
on tbe air will be given airtime.
"It's very difficult for a student to work at WBFO because
they have sucb a large slaff,"
says Carl Roetter, managing
editor of ellws. Roetter bas
been involved in the development of WIRR from the beginning.
"WBFO bas a staff of 100
people, and a waiting list of another 100," Robinson adds.
"Moot of them will never get
on the air."
WIRR will not be using the
traditional system of bloclc pr&lt;&gt;gramming that is used by
WBFO but will use a looser
free-form model 'The only permanent programming wiD be a
daily lG-15 minute 7 o'clock
newscast. Everything else will
depend on the station's core of
40 people 8Dd whoever else
pops up.
''We'll stay on tbe air as long
as IIOIDeODe wants to broadcast something," says Robinaon. "Spme studenta came up
last week and aaid they want
to do a black jazz show late in
the morning. Perfect!
"Friday night ...,·re going to
have an open jazz session. U 20
groups show up they'll have to
fight it out; or take turns.
Everyone is invited to watdl
them play, too.
"U someone wanlli to talk
maYbe we woo't be able to give
him a lot of time, but be'll get
somethinc, even if only 15 minulj!S at 3 a.m."
Some ideas in WIRR's plans
include hockey and basl&lt;elbell

we don't think that's going to

tronic music, music to pot
•-toned by. a Gmteful Dead
concert, jazz. bil.leS, rock and
western coocerts 8Dd live akita
taken f
tbe scripts of the
Lone ~ Spider Man. the
Green H...,.;t, Flash Gonloo,
and Fibber McGee 8Dd Molly.

m

~~~~ihe~ B7t ~
~~i,.';,d ~

happen. And, interference ( reception over toasters and razors. etc.) is another possible
reason we could be dropped.
But there's no real problem
with !.haL
"'RC hasn't given us flliD
guidelines of wbat they expect
us·to do. 'They are as excited
about this as ~are. 'They are
gi~ _us a lot of help."
Robinson, a six-year veteran
of college br&lt;wlcasting-four as
an undergraduate at Oberlin
~ WIRR as analt.emative,. rather than a compmtor to WBFO. "'!bey are
not ·-.eaJJy a .,._- station,"
he says of ..._ branch of the
OlfiQe of c..."ib.uing Education
from wliich he ......,.,uy signed as _,allons manager.
"Sure, their Ol6ces are ,.. aunpus. And 1J1811Y o1 tbeir people
are stud&lt;-nla. But _they are an
official FM educational statiob.
and have four prillmsional starfera. 'They are more inlereated
in puttinii&lt;D 'biah quality programminc' than in how many
people listen.
"WIRR is a student stalion
aervinll the student community.
We're· tryinll to use WIRR to

=

""ei'Lauburban
~ ;: ~t;_
Americana."

WIRR'a desin! to serve the

student Ollllllllunity, accordinll
to Robinson, will take many

'lbree tumtables 8Dd a tapecorder alae&gt; have been ~
uted by the slaffem.
~ warning l.ishta. lays, amp1ifiem, - ' - - ..,....
trol 8Dd mixing~ are
olber pieces of borrowed equipmeat which will have to be placed pennanently """" the
stalion is .., ita feet.
'The stalion's record libmry
is "zem," says Robinson, but
WIRR bas been given penniasion by WBFO to tape ita
records. In addition, every
record company rontacted by
WIRR bas agreed to send pr&lt;&gt;mos immediately.
Robinson estimates that it
will cost WIRR $15,000-20,000
to buy the minimum equipment
required. By way of compari-

aon, he points •o_ut that WBFO

bas an annual operating budget
of $80,000. "Last year they
spent $10,000 on tapes alone."
Comparing WI R R's equipmeat to that which be bad
grown accustomed to at WBFO,
Robinson says, "it won't be

quite as comfortable here, but
we'll get along."
- As for personnel, Robinson
says "there are a large number
of people with some talent and
training and there are some
with no talent or training. We
have three people with first
class licenses, which is more
than moot stations ( Robinson
included), and five Hams.
"Some have already worked
in radio, some professi&lt;mally.
And many WBFO people .are
working with us."
n..- ladring ezperienoe can
expect to undergo training oessions which will include "en~ ~. and
alllliliary okills," Robinson say&amp;
Aside from the usual prob1ems
• ted
·th
.....,_
ling
~--;;:.;
WIBR's bigsest obsjade cominc in the form of undue out.
side """""'"" not from me. or
Ketter's ollic&amp;-but from Al-

=-rise.

bany.
SUNY Cbancei1or Ernest
Boyer is reported ready to _sipl
an order requiring all SUNY
college stations to be 1JDde&lt; his
rontrol Robinson fears this will
hamper freedom of aelf-eq&gt;ression. "'The people in Albany
- studenta getting rontrol of

:!::In~
8Dd they're fight.
the case
the SUNYof

stalion conftict, says Robinson,

Boya can get WIRR off the
air by nlusing jt """""- Sbou1d
that llol..-, Robinson says,
WIRR will move off campus.
"But we bope we can aYOid iL"

"We'll have a lot of drop- Psalms~--L-"1-~- .l
ins, ~· with _ . . . lib
J..JJ.:Sl.CJJ.JllLt:U
Ketler, Robinson saya. "s.-.
one's working .., 8 telopbooe
hundred 8Dd twenty-five
~~there will be olber copies of 'The I'III!IIDI tmnolated
CDlil!mponlly EaPiob by
''Radio is an artistic media. iniD
'The American Bible Society
We to paint with IKIUDd dislributed free to U/B
.., .macnetic tape.
students and slaff durins the
"lbere'a no Cl!l180I1Ihip .., first ........ of the C~fD!Dt - our station. People can say
anythinc they want.
'The IJoolJeta. made available
one makes a pn!pOIIIierous state- by students afliliated with
meat about someone else, we'll ~ House, bame of
invite that person tu use our the Lutbenut MinisQy to the
airtime for a rebuUal.•
Uniwnity, were given as part
RoeUer bas an idea which of the student orieotalion prowould afford President KeiW gram 8Dd in lieu of more dea -lup block of airtime. "We'd nommt;mally~ promolike him to be our aerial for the tiaaal literature.
first-* of bmw' asljo""
"U &lt;mly 25 of the 625 people
()pmatina .., a sl&gt;oe-&lt;otrins wbo receivm the boob will debo.odpt for ita first mootb-tbe rive """"' comfort or inspimstalion ~ to pot $2,000- lion from tbem. the $80 cost
3,000 yearly ooce 1JDde&lt; way. will bave been well worth it,"
WIR.ft t.s to depend !wavily ~ Lutheran Campus

am

u ......,_

: :::..-~~

.....

.,

=

only $50 ... puta.
One person t.s loaned a
micropboae; another an AM
radio for monitorinc m.dcasla.

~AiloNau.

Additiaaal co p i e s of 'The
Pa.lms amtinue to be available
upm request at the Resurrec-lion House table · in Norton
Hall.

�-·

6

~Sees No Escape

From.CaJsurners Pfid1t
about bow new products dect
the environment Instead ol
advocate Betty ''beromin' giddy with all the
Furness says, "'lbe COII8UIDer technological wonders availcondition is something that no able," the. consumer muat finalone escapes from • .. it's a ·game ly realize that "we must giw
that everyooe plays and the up some small pleasurell 80 that
stakes are high." Sbe then 805 the world can survive."
on to tell you just how deadly
the game is. Outlining a dismal
game plan to ber audience ol
150 last Friday night in Haas
Dr. Julian Szekely, ............
Lounge, abe spoke ol two ....,.. chemical engineering, and di·
teams with ooe side-the rector, Center for Process Met.By SUSAN GREENwOOD
-SUit

~nswner

NewTextlxdt

~handicapped

In-· ..."
first....._-

Bic)d£Race

HAnd.tthecurw, the 1~ - • out
Th8t- the 11tuat1on s.tunt.y clurinc U/B'a
- · Aa the 1 0 - - around the 1.2 ...... of -

.._.-,10.1s..p.d _ . w_lald.....,.~
Wlnnera _,. blph ....., Bruca-£8ton In the 1~
up .......,. Cindy Eaton, In the - · · 1~
up. F« - - _,about the ,..., the

·-

~

-.·t
. JUnnlnll--

aprin&amp;.

RegiopaJism, Libraries, Equal Employment
Are MaJ&gt;r Concerns at SUNY Senate Meeting
Regionalism. library pJ:Ob.
lems and equal employment opportunity for women are Statewide SUNY concerns and are
not limited to U/B, Drs. Andrew Holt, Robe'rt Stem and
Marvin Feldman learned at the
SUNY Senate meeting, October 22 and 23 at Alfred University.
Action on the State-wide library crisis bas been taken both
by the Senate and by Chancellor Ernest Boyer. In preparing
the 1972-73 budget, Boyer said,
SUNY is giving high priority
to library needs, calling the situation a "distress · area.~· The
Senate affinned this action and
also called upon Boyer to "appeal to the Governor to restore
to the University the unimpeded prerogative of appointment to vacancies within the
budgeted means available."
'!be tight fiscal situation
throughout SUNY was another
of the major topics discussed by
· the Chancellor in his traditional report to the Senate. He explained that campus requests
for next year's budget are $110
million above the current level.
These requests will bave to be
trimmed by about one third,
he said. While further cutbacks
in some areas are pr\lving nee·
e6811JY, Boyer said he is working to increase funding for
grants-in-aid, fellowship programs and expanded educational opportunity programs.
He is also trying to get the
University Pn!ss back on the
State budgel
Boyer oftered some relief to
campuses in the area of aP:
pointments. He has managed,
be said, to secure a limited
formula for local autonomy in
respect to faculty and staff appointments; bowever, he did
not give any detaila of this
formula. He did discuss the
Board of Trustees' new affirmative action program in regard
to the hiring of women. This
plan calls for "interim percentage goals" and not the goal of
50/50 recommended by some.
'lbe program also calls for local campus presidents to develop affinnative action programs for each unil To coordinate these programs, Bover
Mid be has appointed a fulltime staff member.
'lbe Cbancellor alerted the
Senators that the Office of Federal Compliance (OFC) is increasingly coocemed about the
employment of women. He
pointed out that an inv,1'81iga-

lion of employment practices at
six SUNY units during the last
10 years reveals that fewer women have been granted tenure,
that fewer women bave been
rapidly promoted, that fewer
women bave been employed
and that they bave been paid
less than men. These practices
have led women to tum increasingly to the OFC as a
gt)evance agency, Boyer said.
The ensuing reviews to investigate these complaints, he said,
have raised the problem of confidentiality of personnel files.
Boyer explained that he is currenlly developing a set of rules
which will pennit OFC to conduct proper investigations without compromising academic
tradition. 'Ibe Executive Committee of the SUNY Senate
prepared a set of recommendations on this matter which Dr.
Norton, SUNY/ Albany, president of the Senate, considers
clearly to be the Senate's responsibility.
The Chancellor concluded
his report by discussing the
problem of regionalism. In outlining the history of the SUNY
policy, he pointed out that
Governor Rockefeller was the
first to advocate regional planning. In an Executive Order,
the State was divided into 11
regional educational areaS. The

Board of Trustees passed a
resolution aJiinning this plan
and requested that colleges
within the regions get together
to discuss more effective regional 1&gt;1anning •and use of resources. The Chsncellor ·aaked
the Senate to set up a committee to work with him on this
new policy.
After Boyer's report, Senate
President Norton asked the

~~rs ~J!ti~.!i"'m~~~
leaves and sabbaticals. This in-

:w:ttn, tuJ~ :~.:t"'t.;

preserve these activities. ·

In other actions, the Seqate:
passed a motion calling for
" periodic review of established
programs as part of a continuing effort to coordinate graduate programs in SUNY;"
moved that information of all
innovative curricula and instructional programming be
disseminated to all campuses
via the SUNY News or other
devices; and heard a report
from its Economic Status committee recommending that the
Senate Professional Association press for increased employment of women, sabbaticals for
non-teaching professionals _and
equity of pay increases between
faculty and staff.
1

SEL Qffering Vide&lt;tapes
'!be Science and Engineer- following bibliographers to asing Library tSEL) is experi- sist it in developing collections:
menting with media instruc- Prof. W. H. Ray, q,emical ention in the pl;lysical sciences gineering; D. Thakur, ·student;
and technology.
Prof. S. Ramalingam, meclianRecently installed equipment ical engineering; Prof. J . Wexmakes it possible for SEL to ler, computer science; R . Shafaccommodate two groups of six fer, student; Prof:' S. Prawel,
students each wbo may view civil engineering; Prof. L
two diffe....,t videotape pro- Schoenfeld, mathematics; J .
grams wift',.ut disturbing others Stroyls, student; Profs. H.
in the library.
Goldberg, R. Hurst and R.
Most of the videotapes bave Y eb, physics and astronomy.
~ made by SUNY AB faculty members and cover such
fields as FORTRAN and ANALOG progr:amming, nuclear
reactors, nuclear shielding, man.e recently-funned national
terial sciences and soil mechan"Congress on Manpower and
ics. SEL hopes these
will be _,;dec! to iriclude Health Care" will hold its first
laboratory 81!118ions in chemis- meeting in Buffalo, November
try, physics and geosciences.
' 15-17 at the Charter House.
This innovation is called !be Twenty-&lt;&gt;ne individuals reprefirst of ita kind in the country senting various health groups,
"to provide genuine quality in- agencies and lllii!Ociations from
structional tape services in the Clllllll-to-Cioast will participate
in three days of roundtable di&amp;librarv."
SEL bas also recruited the CUSBions.

Health Congress

""'' urces

;f=~ f .n::w4:-N~

so greatly that they bave never
known all the rules and are Research Centre. Quebec. ol a
forced to constantly play de- new text, Rate P'--'tJ in
fense.
p,.,_ Me~, publisbed
'lbe game the Graduate Stu- ~ork.Wiley-Interacience. Ndent Association sponsored
Called the first intepated
speaker detailed is 0118 where
consumers are "bard put to treatise Oil the application ol
transport
pheDomena and proknow what's in food, clothing
and other producls" they buy. cess analyais tecbnilpB to
metallurgical
procesoes, the
It's a world where the large
econcm.y size is Deitber the volume features:
L A thoq&gt;Uib introduction
lBrgest package available . DOT
the most ecooomical It's a situ- to the concepts of IMW, m8SB
ation where ''busiDeal is in bus- and momentum ~ with
iness to stay in busineBs" and particular emphasis 011 applicawhere industrial leaders say tions to process metallWIIY;
2. -A description ol the en"cooipetition means you doo't
always do what you think is gineering teclmiques of proceiiB
analysis stlessing metallurgical
righl"
This game and its stakes applications;
3. 'lbe presentation of embave forced "the American pirical
and semi-empirical relashopper to become the sharpest
tionships
of importance in
buyer in the world." Recently,
metals
processing, e.g., gasthe opponent (industry) bas
solid
rmctions,
the interaction
invented new rules, and the
consumer game baa taken a between gas bubbles and jets
with
liquid
metals
and slap;
new tum, abe says. "No longer
4. Many numerical exBmples
can you expect them (indus- drawn
from
metallurgical
p.....,.
try ) to protect you-you bave
to give up that security blanket lice to illustrate the application
of
the
various
techniquos
desfeeling," she stressed. Business
is now "out to sell their pro- cribed.
According
to
the
PublisbeJs,
duct to anyone stupid enough
to buy," without making"- sure R ate Phenoruna in Proce3s
it's safe. This new corporate M etalUugy will be of primary
philosophy bas caused people value in advanced unde&lt;gradto suspect the "benign corpor- uate and graduate level courses
process metallurgy. In addiation giants" and to distrust in
industries' promises to police tion, practicing metallurgists
themselves. '!be consumer is and chemical and mechanical
beginning to reject poor pro- engineers will find that this
is a valuable tool for the
ducts and is no longer accept- book
ing the argument that "shoddy solution of metallurgical pJ:Ob.
goods are the result of a- com- I ems.
petitive market" Buyers now
feel that "if my money is good,
it's not unreasonable to expect
(Continud from P'l/1&lt; 4. col. 3)
- that the product be good."
Enlightened buyers can ogy of the candy,maker and the
strike back at industry in sev- child wbo becomes siclr. from
eral ways. The foremost weap- eating too much candy. 'lbe
on is to complain. Misa Fur- child is ignorant of the conseness believes that "be who hol- quences of eating too much
lers the loudest wins.:' Consum- candy. but the candymaker is
ers should complain to the not: Neither me the parents
store where they buy the pro- of that child. Howe\&gt;er, the ....
duct and to the company that gineers, the makers, not only
makes the producl When are ._,.ible for the consewriting a letter about bad mer- quences, but haven't even bothchandise to a company, abe ered to find out what the conurges people to write to the sequeoces are. This is not the
president, sine.!! the letter "will case (I am grateful) in all pr-o.
fesaiona. For example, belore
get more attention that way."
marijuana will be ...,...,_. to
Another way to stop the Dow the public, scientists are looltof sb&lt;!ddy goods is to work to ing for any possible Jouc tenn
change the laws governing in- consequences.
dustry. This process is a slow
It is easy to sanction the idea
and tedious one, she warned
the audience. After six years
of hearings and .OOrk by consumers groups, Congress is just society, but it is another _ .
now considering a law which- lion altogether when the enwould require childn,:n's pa- gineer or capitalistic indnstrialjamas to be made of non-Dam- ist is asked to reronsider the
mabie material. She pointed to predicted social consequences.
the success the local group Through this kind of thing, the
Housewives to End Pollution engineer can rationalize all be
bad in getting a bill passed wants and simply say he is
which prohibits the sale of righl In my opinion this is
phosphate deterxents in Buf- precisely wbat Hitd&gt;c:!Jck bas
falo. Sbe praised the group for done.
My unauthoritative BUJIB'!&amp;taking action on other products
bamiful to the environment, tion might be not to educate
and -their presentations to the the public on modem technology, but to educate the acieDce
u.s. Senate.
•
. .In addition to ft!rcing manu- .ld, both social and technicaJ,
to comnnrnicate --with each
facturers to rec:ognize their responsibility for their products, other and be aware of the m&gt;derlying
.,..._......,.. IIDd .......
Misa ~ feels the CODSUJDer also must realize his ~ iously W1deratand the profe&amp;.
sional
ethics
involved.
sibility for the envirotm'lenl
Bl&gt; MDLNIK
'lbe buyer muat now think

Hitchcock-

erJ.=~==

�1
=.-the::;,~:;. be~J'.e por-

::l:

(~ from -

8, eo/. 6)

_
, . of. the - - orpniood
uadeaariNDIL
.
LUIN .&amp;ldmC&amp;JJ 1&amp;"'11lD•: Dr. AI·

:=..~.::."i':e
~~==
-of I9MJ,813~8 p.m.

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

.....

,~,w

.,. Up;,...,_, . - t the role of

:-;: =-=i::.."'l-~

Middle Eaot;
aria!M, . - t a
28-year-old liDivenity atudent
deeply - i n the ~,of

:;~~..0::": -::r.z
J*:U of life; Blood of the Condor.

ple aDd tbe Weotemiied
nalinc minority. n.e film obowo
the preaneditated enerminatioo
of tbe Quec:1ma lndiaiia by American docton who sterilize women
without their knowledp w he n
tbey cune to a recently e.t;ab..
~

modem maternity hoopital

SaatiU.. foi:'ON ua to ClOII.front the
prevailingcan
mytbolocy
thattluouch
-. opment
only come
enfon:ed population control
J'BY'C!I"O~r•• :

Free-ftoWinc com.-

:=boc!!ry!:!
~=·~
more· Room,
p.m.
3-5

WOllEN'S l'ESTIV.IL0 : Film.An,tela:

~·o.:.~~

~~~- ~·~•.;,w:.,~~ ~....::.:
-tors wbo
IDdiaao
!!r American
t a be a woman, a Communiat and'
llterilil:e
women in

moclem maternity ho.pital All
films . - , continooualy, Con-

, _ n-tre,- 3 to 11 p.m.

Dr. Mel-

,..........., COUOQIJJUIIl:

ll:"m. JJ:I~ !~naton,

by l..tuze·A.perture Array•• Room

Ms. Stone ia a former Buffalonian, arehitectunil artiat and
teacher, currently writin« a book
on women aDd mythok&gt;cY, abe
was West Coast repreeentative
for Experiment&amp; in Art aDd Technolou (EAT).
Ma. Johnston was author of
tbe column "Dance Journal" in

~~~&amp;~!:~p~

OOIII'Ufta CZinD

~

8DVl&lt;ZS

••m
..a• : Harwy Azlerod, in..-r, P - IV. n-., 10, 4238
Ridge., Lea. 7-9 p.m. Alao on
~.Nov. 11.

P..SS

ia a discrete -time

IV

~~:a:";,~~

bat embedded in .......,. IV. It
provides the p_.......,r with
a .uperviaory routine. queue
maintenance routines. certain
raDdom sampling functions, aDd
debuccinc aida. Prerequisites.
_ , I V.

The-

- - M i l l e ...... Laa

-

the--....,....._
Erie....._..

otnate"' ..........

- - 11r utra a-.

CMoo Toumo·

Club. Ower 100 -

~-~---lhe-durlnclhe...._ut~on.
'
'
.
.

.,.

Fe1dmans Beport.-------(COAtil&amp;ud from - 4, eo/. 6)
~- !IY :.tt...,MUP, .bl a
demal plan of some merit, end
c ) important pins in job security for Dllll-teadling proiessiooala (NTP's) . In lbe ensu-

iuc ""''IIiatiotls for

lbe

nen

conaact, lbe Committee would
llf'l'e SPA to press for specific
discretiaaary funds to be .-d
in part for merit end in part to

correct .
"ties, both individual inequi~ end certain class

inequities, e.g. BBiaries at Ag "
Ted&gt; ocbools end for NTP's.
Tbe Committee alSo felt that
proviaian sbould be made for
edocatianal leave for certain
NTP's.
•
Tbe G~ Committee
IIDDOIIIICed lla own Clemise eK·
cept to. complete Cllm!Dt cases.
HeDceforth grievance c a a e s
going beyond lbe local CIIIDwill fBil UDder proyisioos
esmbliobed by lbe contract. It
sbould be empbasized that lbe
laJIIIUIIII8 in any """' conlzact
is _ . to interpretation which
deYelop! largely through U1111f8.
Hmce we can eKpeCt some m·
ilial UDfleriainties.
Tbe ..,.. ayBiml is more of
an alheaary poe altho~¢_ on
our campus we are tJyiDI to
maiul:ain a degree of coUegial.ity in lbe initial slep. Tbe clef.
initioll of a grievance is probably .,.;, more limited than it
WM in as IIIUdl as it is tied to
lbe pnwisions of lbe contract.
It is not clear bow we will
handle tboee grievances which
...... of IICIIIdemic f.-1om
- . . . ot IIOYeftiii!IC8 matters.
W"Jth .......,.,t to termination for

ca.-,

lbe llOilt!act introduced
lbe notion of lesaer peo;Wties.
'Ibis may DOt be a gam in that
- it could lead to c:barps being
broaPt for Ieos serious infrac-

w...

_e,.u-

Tbe By-Laws for esm c:smhave to be Cl011Sist8tt with.
the Ralinp of lbe Board of
~
Tbe Governance
ea.n..uu..e bas lbe task of viewinc By-Laws. There bas
' - ' ..,., UIICIII1ainty about
lbe leplity of By-Laws 1mtil
they receive approval by lbe
pus

Boanl.. However, Central Ad·
ministration' bas !Uen lbe position that By' Laws are legal
until cballenged. Tbe point is
moot for SUNYAB as our By·
Laws bave '-&gt; approved by
lbe Governance Committee.
Tbe Senate passed a resolution in support of lbe libraries.
Cbancellor Boyer also made a
special point of • ling out lbe
library for
mnsideration even in ibe face of our
current fmancial.JI&lt;IIl""Z".
Acting upon tile initiative of
SUNYAB Senators, lbe Senate
passed a resolution eKpressing
concern end support for efforts
of lbe Vice Cbancellor responsible for community colleges to
help Dutcbess Community College end Onondaga Community College to rectify coDditions
which bave led to their being
placed on lbe AAUP's list of
censured institutions.
Our local Senate resolution
reganling lbe Stele's loyalty
oath was referred by lbe Executive Committee to lbe Committee ori Professional Rights
end Responsibility for study.
Tbe day after lbe meeting
adjourned, lbe Ag and Ted&gt;

:;J:.f

~:=~~

campus for a Week. U this bas
symbolic meaning, rm
not sure what the interpretation sbould be.

' Cl&amp;l-81.

....,.._.,

Bill - -

- - bao1elball star aDd 1.970
Atblele of the Decade, will talk
em t!&gt;e game. the country. aDd
r:sce - - . Fillmore Room. 8 p.m.
WDKDI'8 ftB!IYJ.L• : Chriatyne
X..W.O... Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.
Co-director of tbe Company of
MOll and an uaistant professor

:.= s:~ t:::

==

li&lt;m. ~ Doccie 'Dance," which

Unempk&gt;yme

tbe Vill"'le Voice from 1960-1.970
w~ included writ:i.ngs on
pamting, IICUipture, happeninp.
aDd all forma of intermedia. During thiH time, a growing aware.
ness of women's position cauaed
her writing to assume a form iD
which reflections on art and I()-.
ciety and peraonal revelatiQn
more totally integrated. She ia
active in gay liberation.

dance:

UNGUISTICS IEIC"''URE •: Dr. Erwin
Segal. associate professor, psy.
cbology, Pzycholinguis;tic$, 404
Hayes, 7: 30 p.m.

pation.

WEDNESDAY-10
~ T&amp;LBPHOHB ~#:
Carol Turay, RN. aDd Jo-An
Campbell. RN., l&lt;hnlity: The

Tad: of

A~.

sponsored

by ~ Medical Program. 40
""""YUill statioDs, tel 835-m28
for further information. 7 : 15 a.m.
aDd 7:16 p.m.
WOJIDf"'S nst'IYAL WCIIl.KSBOPS•:

~~ ~utw.,:og:·~"",!;.,~
:::::!J·~~n~y~n=

=-

tocetber for discussion and proj-

,H,:,Z~ ~;:oe~C.::::

ter. 332 Nortoa. 10 &amp;.m.·l2 noon.
&amp;p Group: LabimaUm; a place
for C&amp;Y womea. to get together to
talk, aoc::ialize, aDd develop bet,..
ter communica.Jion concerning
lesbianism between tbemaelves
and the rest of aociety. 332 Nor·
ton. 1--3 p.m. &amp;p Group: Di·
DOI't:ed Women, an exploration of
problems and decisioDs confront,..
m.c the divorced woman before.
dur!ac aDd after. COYerinc legal,
aocial and penoo.a1 issues, 332
Norton, 3-5 p.m. Worbbops open
to women only.
(
......:&amp; BOaAL WO&amp;l&lt;DB .......,_
PBO!Q: LKC'I'UR&amp;# : The Early
S•-- of tJw n_.__ ,_

&amp;;;i

Won s;:P;::':; den~

enJl HoopiuJl, - r e d by Re-

cic!D,a1 Mediciol-p;;;p.,_ 40 re-

. llaJIC&amp;L ..:oDB

the

""••helwiac

sonp.

EXHIBITS
PORft.UTB OF ~:

a

CD&amp;-

man obow of J&gt;botograpba by Dooald R Blwziber:g, auociate professor, art. 4240 Ridc-e Lea.
through Nov. 20.

LIDRARY EXHIBITS

I'I:RKANJ:NT DBllll'r of worb by
=~~~~~~~~·
violin; Earl Carlyss. violin· Sam: ~rt~~~~l1b~~
ue1 Rhodes. viola; Oaus 'Adam

cello. P~gram:

Quartet No. 10'

Op.74 ("Harp .. ), in: E~/la.t Major;
0
2

:::"to~
t=:a ~ aw::::f2: 8'M':Jo?: az!i CfJ'~!t NN0. 1~
tivi9' d.ass with audience partici·

ClOIYJDC staliom, tel. 835-m28 for
,lurtber inlcmuatioo, 11 a.m.
mu:PBONB uc.
nt1.~ roa• : W"~ W. Webber, The
TIUIOOr · Rqi.try, 8pOIIOOred by
Tbe national 1Dlemployment ~ M~ ~ 40
rate for Jl!'ientista in all fJelds re&lt;:eiVIDg ~liom, tel ~
. was 2.6 per cent in 1be spring for further inlonna-, _2 p.m.
of 1971. up from 1:.6 per cent - PlLK": Bk&gt;od of . the Condor,
in lbe previous spring, a Na- 8p01100red_by ~in Ameritiollal ScieiiCe Foundation !'8" Studios. 147 Dieleadorf, 3
(NSF) ~basfound:
~P&amp;i;;,~ ; _ San.PTbe national 1DleiDPioyment WOD the Venice Film ·Featiwl,
rate for .all -..orbrs in lbe first 1969, San Fnmcioco Faatival,
quarter of 1971 was 6.6 per 1.9?0 aDd the Pam Feotiwl. 19?0.
cent with profeosional, tedmi~ Made in Bolivia (titled Yarmr
cal end kindred workers ~ Maliltu in the Quec:lll,. dialect) .
inc a rate of 2.8 per cent. ·
the film ~ a hanh Iicht ..,
"lbe NSF IIIUW!Ied 300,000 ~ fate 91
IDdiaao who COD·
scientista wbo responded to lbe otilute ..,
majority
1970 NatiOnal .,_.__ of "-'
f!l that,~·· populatioD. San""'"' • - .., the coa•...,_
entifici end Teclmical PeJIIan. the IDdiaao" life in the
nel to provide lbe findinp.
~aDd life in t b e -

D-L-.

WOllEN'S I'IISTIVAL •: Merlin Stone.
lecture-discw&amp;ion, 231 Norton, 6
Fillmore

,;, Hinich. Camocie-Melloa Uni-

::f"Jj;,!~p;t,.V~

-

Blaclt. Conference n-e.e, continuoua Jlhowings from S.ll p.m..

a...m...S p.m.

WD...U.Ul BUBIIOUGBS

.
e.s:hibit, 2Dd

flqor balcony, Lockwood Library.
PABLO NEII:UDA worlcs by the
~~~~~ Room 207,

Op. 131 in C·sharp Minor. Baird,
8:30 p.m .. general admission $3·
faculty and staff $2; students $L f'Ril:D BOYLB publications on cfis..
Tickets in adva nC'e' at Norto.D.
Ti ck~t Office.
WBCZ-FM: Mwical lnnouationsDr. David R Fuller, associate NOTICES
professor of music talka to pro- HILU!:L AC'I'IVITmS: FridJJy, Nov. 5
gram bast Michael P. Burke - Sabbath Service, Richard
about his field or interes~ 17th Baumgarten will speak on "Tbe
!'ftd 18th Century keyboard mus- Changing Uniwrsity," Oneg
IC, 9:05 p.m.
Sbabbat and Israeli folkdancinc
to follow. Hillel House, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 6 - Torah with
THURSDAY-11
Commentaries, Rabbi Hofma.nD.'•
CONUNUING DENTAL EDUCATION
home, 12 Colton Dr., 4 p.m.;
HoUBe, State Hillel Houoe,
:~1~:.· ~~~~~= Ooffee
1209 Elmwood Ave., 8 p.m., all
and Malcolm McCuaig. dental
photographer, Dental Clinical ~~':.itfi;~~-/~1~
Phowgrophy, 1-16 Capen, 9 a.m.- veraational Hebrew, adoanced,
262 Norton, 12:30 p.m.; Opera.
S p.m.
lion Greenligh~ meet in front
WOKEN'S PESTIVAL WO&amp;KBBOPS• :
Rap Group, Older Women the of Hillel, 1 p.m. Mondtzy, Nou. 8
role and function of the ~man - Oonvenstional Hebrew, elein her middle years in con tempo- mentary, 262 Norton. 7 p.m..
lledniaen
rary society. Women from the Tuaday, Nov. 9 University and the Buffalo com· Hebrew. · 262 Norton, 12 DO&lt;JD;.
munity, join us for a apirited Jewish Ethics, 262 Norton, 1 P-DL
discussion of what it meana to be
over 30, 332 Norton, 10 a.m.-12 INTERVIEWS
noon. Pzurto Rican Women a
discussion of the Puerto rufan ON-C.Ua'US 308 DIDZmWS: 11&gt;e
woman and her role in eociety Dn-c&amp;;mJ&gt;U8 inte~ procr-m.
both today and in history. For l1lllll1Dgthe ~"f'r ~fromr Jl!-~
the first hour it will be open to the faU ~.c CLQU
__..
Puerto Rican women only and for ary 17 to April 29 in the apriac
the aecond hour open to all in· eemeater, offen the opporlw:lity
terested women, 332 Norton, 1-3 for individual interview. with
f..m. Erica ./_olll/, &amp;rbara-Horr- t!ducational. t.uai.,_ induatrial

Llat?'ra::. =~~ov~~~

0

u:;'~ ";!ibi~eaaboofutbe~ra· ~~~Ji'l!,~bo;~
-

~mane:e~ceswo,: ~j'!

ti"llield of art, 231 Norton, 1-3
p.m. Art Diocuaion, interaated
women are eDOOilrll&amp;"d to brine
in oome of their worlt fo~ discuuion aDd to reopond to tbe
problema encountered by women
in the field of art. 231 Norton,
l-3 p.m. &amp;p Group: Blaclt Worn-

:.,n.~p=p~~"W

-..•- -

tl:Yin!kted~e~~-=
worlt in _Janwuy or May 1972.
Registmtion forma are available
from Univenity Placement aDd
Career Guidance in Hayes &amp;uC.
TIIUIISDAY-: Eastman Kodak
Company (DOil·tecbnical aDd
tecbnicai ~rinc), Curtice-

=. ~"ri~=) .Central

women from the Uni.enity aDd
I'IIIIU.Y-6: Eastman Kodak Oo
, tbe Bufralo community are we{. !!.lica)·. Ci_!y Scboola (Oneida eo..,;:
come. Worbbopa opea to women ,.
Ollly.
_
~ ,..,......Y--6: Eudiat Vocation
llflLILA!ION TIIIUPY ....-aom Center.
~-: DaWi Menleclr:i aDd
WIIDNIIID.f.Y-10: S~ UniMarloa Siepl, HU&gt;flidity Tltu- .enity, Graduate Busineoa Proapy, Home "'!!! Ha.pit41
grsma.
8pOIIOOred bY fteci-' Madicai . _'l'lnlll8lllY - 11: Metropolitan
ProPam. 40 ~ - - . Life Imursnoe Oo.; Baltimore
tel . 836-0'128 fur f1Jrtbar in/or· City Pahlic Scbools. Baltimore,
matioo, 11:30 a.m.
·
Mseyl.ud.

u..

\

�FRIDAY--5

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

~,.

•oap.n ... -

..Opon.....,
... .
•
ea
-- ...._,
au-zza.
OOJIJ'BIIDfSift BKALTB CBa POR

g:~=#i-.~~00::
:':!::"":~· ~ed~ci~

8 :30 a.m.- Registration; 9:15Cardiac Probk.,. in the A8in8;
9:45--Neurologic Probkm.. in~
A8in8; 10:16- l'oychiatric P&gt;of&gt;le,.. in' the A8in8; 11: 15--0rtho~ Probk,..; 11:45 - Family

T'IlBICaftCAL

r;;2:==.a,:

sXM:Posnn.:•:

Hillel House,

BYKPosnrx•:

~d!~p~~!":·
The Continuing Debate, joint ses-

cuamns IN PIIAID&lt;ACY#: William

cmd H~ lru:titutioru:. 233 Norton. 7 p.m..-11 p.m.

8Y'MPOSit1J(•:

~ro~=: ~:e!tth sMW:':

A combination comedy-honor
film made as a spoof of aU the
old Tod BrowniJJc Dracula films.
A very funny and very fascinating film._

=t

CONC2aT-JoNB'nlAftON•:

Infor-

mal program sponsored by College B, Student Asoociation 8Dd

Department of Music. Pianist

l:"J:;

~ :!rio&lt;;:.~

discuss Jobn Cage's String Quartet
in Four Parts and Lejarea Hiller•s Twelve Tone V arialiom for
Piono. llainl. 8:30 p.m., free and
open to the public as psrt of the
Symposium on the

g:,u:;!:_Y
~SOJ~=. ~tu':fi:ts~ll:red

OOUBUATE SY81'EM SYID'OSitJJ[•:

COU..CIA'l'll: 8YS'IDf SYKPOSlUII•:

C!;...,~ca~~:
.~ira!;.~~i~=-2~.m.oollege. ~~
234 Norton. aU day.
Film by Jim Hart, member of

OOU..CIATE SYSTEM

B'YM:POSlUM•:

C.P. Snow CoUege. Simulation
Gamu, Haas Lounge, 1 p.m..S
' p.m. 8Dd 231 Norton, 7 p.m.-cloo-

r-

mc.

COtniCIATB 8Y8'rEM BYIIP08IUK•:

is

Whitten. - t-president of the
American Pba.rmaoeutical Aaooci8tion. The Plwrtn&lt;U:iot and hio

Bldg., 8 p.m.
FILH• •: Fea.rletl$ Vampin Killen (Rom8D Polanaki), 147 .Diefendorf, 8 p.m., bee.

m.MB•• :" The Wild Child/Miosiaippi M erm&lt;lid, two films by
Francois TrulrauL Cooference
'nleatre. c:beck sh owcase for

BYiiPosnJM •:

Ollie Fein, spoDBOred by Social
Sciences College, 231 Norton. 1-3
p.m.. 8Dd Fillmore Room. 9 p.m.-

clooinc.

BJOCIIDIISTRY BEMINAil: Robert
Wobl, graduate student will present defense o.f thesis, Phos·
phoenolpynwate Carboxylase of
E . Coli; The Allosteric Properties
of a Metabolic Relay Station,
G -22 Capen, 4 p.m.
Sti'riSnCS COLLOQUIUM:: Dr. R .
Gnanadesikan, Bell Laboratories,
Murrsy Hill. Dato-Based Transformation of M ultiruponse Ob.
servations, Room A-30. 4230 Ridge
Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshments. Room
A-16, 3:30 p.m.
P'OREICN fti.JDENT COFFEE HOUR:

all welcome, 2nd floor Townsend,

4-6 p.m. For further information,
caU Peter Kong. 831..s507 .
OOlLECIATE SYS'I'E)( SYXPOSt·uM•:

Workshop on Women's Studies
College, 205 Norton, 7 p.m.-closiog.
COI...LBGIATB sYS'IBII SYKPOSJUM:•:

'=:.t!~~r ~ ~-:~ ~=~":;'?:"';~~!:.;J'I:t~

Through Sunday, Nov. 7.
, College of Modern Education,
In the first film, French vi(. Fillmore Room. 7-8:~ _p.m. Also
description of the edible wild , lagers
capture a boy fotmd · ~.· films, see Thunday listing.
.
plants on CBmJ&gt;!ll!; field trip
in .the ~ ~ send ~ ~A'DONAL FQLK DANCING: Jn.
vanoua mstitutiona ao that he stru.ction in basic steps during
may become a normal procluctiw first bour, 30 Diefendorf Annex

C:

::.,.r~~~~n.m.eo:re';~

UICTVIIIl#: Dr. E. Rusaell Hayes
8Dd Mary C. Ricotta, Hiotod!em-

W'I.
'%/:;::!~at; ~,::
Medical Program. 40 rec:eivinc
stations, call 835-0728 for furtber
information. 1: 30 p.m.

OOua::IAn:

8Y81D(

BYIIPOSim(•:

FiiJII, The ColleBu at SUNYAB,
opcmoored by all collegiate unfta,
· Confereace 'rheatze. 2-3 p.m.
OOLUIIGIAD: 8Y8ftl( BYIIPOSiml:* :

Dr. M .H.S. Cozeter, profesoor of
matbaDatica. Univenoity of To-

;"!f;."~ot.;J:;.;.P.::"t!:!

:z:-...:&amp;:.."is.~=
~ eo..ter· is intema-

tiouaUy .1mown for his" math&amp;-

=~=-::n.~Dr~~

(Played by Trulfaut) whoU8 DOt Ollly bow we perceive_ but
~~nity of· our
In the ........t, atarrinc JeanPaul ~ Belmoado and Catherine

!!:J!~£!v:.:.J!""..:.~-;::
-am-; - "-a't .....
~~~~t::

=..!"'.,(

8 p.m.

•

IJISTINCUIBBII&gt;VIBJTINC UOCTURa 0
0

!.:: )}~· P..;vei)fef:!d':rt~
P.m.. free.

:

few

SYSD:&gt;&lt; SYMI'08IU)( 0 :
Dr. 8Dd Mrs. Heinz Pagels in
informal panel and diaeUoaion.
OOiniiCIAft

!':~:!f~ ~J~'Sc~:

are . - . - t of in- thio tale of
fataliatic love which is •t the
oame time a CCIIIOCioas tribute to
the films of ,1..., Reaoir.

282 Non.. 8:30-11 p.m.
I'ILII 0 : MASH, spoDBQred by
=~A~~ }:
timooJ, S.76 contribution: Ticketo
in adYance 8Dd ahbowtime. NorTicket Ollice. Also OD Satur-

• 147 Diol-

Wild Child/Miolliaippi ·JIUfriiJid, Thursday
liotiDc. Through Sunday, N~. 7.

~=

·':1:"*-i,: ~~~ ~~~-~he
-

;,.

endorf. 8:16 p.m.. bee.

:: f~&amp;%3:7"J:eni~f 7.:
=riC8D
Sociologicaj

OOU.::IA'IB 8YS'!'DI

011/IUiic surviool, discussion 8Dd

MIIJIIC.AL TICBNOLOGY 'I'J:LEPBONIC

'iia=·tfni~e:~: N:,;

DirectWn.s: Networks and In..U..
tutiono, Room 47, 4224 Ridge Lea,
3:30 p.m.
Profesoor White
a laedinc
developer of mathematical fecb.
niqueo in the study of ldnabip,
social networks, complei organizations and mobility · patterns.

Collece' A. Rok Plcyin8 8Dd dis--

What We Want to Beco~. Con-

8Y8'JEl(

=·

001101., Olris Sidemkis, instructor, Room 10, 4238
Ridge Lea. 7-9 p.m.

==

COI.UCU.m

wOMEN's PESTIVAL*: Film, Women
on the March, The Story of the
Struggk for Equal Rilhts, a his·
tory of the women's rights movement from the 19th century
lhrougb the present, Conference
Theatre, continuous showinp
from 3 to 11 p.m.
SOCIOLOGY LmCTUD•: Dr. Har-

COMPUTING aanut tJSa; 8BRVKZS

~:T~:\#..C:t":!·~~~j

F"'~ School Meeting, sponsored
b)' New College, Fillmore Room
1-6 p.m. COI.LaaATE SYS'I'ZM 8YMPOSitJK•:
W omen and ReligiOft.~ a workshop.
282 Norton. 1-3 p.m. Fran Fabion,
leading a discussion on Women
in W~1fare, 231 Nort.&gt;n, 4-6 p.m.
Lindtl· Gordon, historian, Univer~
oily of Massacbusetta, will speak
on women's studies, 210 Foster.

1926k

t.::lorf~~'!:dca· ~~&gt;it!!? Die-

7

cuarsion. Man.

sion with representatives from
alternati"" .nd traditional education. 114 Hochstetler, 8:30-11 i&gt;.m.
Ex.hibits-thmon.strotiom: a num~
ber of 1 o c a 1 and out-of-state
s c h o o Ia will be demonstrating .
their idaas for eft'ecti.., leaming,
throughout Norton today 8Dd on
Friday, Nov. 5. Events sponsored
by 'n.e College of Modem Edu.
cation.

b:~~yt=n.~

Workshops open ·to women only.
Mother (Pudovkin,
and The End of St. Petera-

P~LKS••:

samua#:

COUMG!ATB 8YSTDI

=

ism and ampbet:amine--barbitur-

ates affect women and their families. Related problema s u c h as

tion Graduate Student Group, 98
Winspear Ave., 4 p.m.
H1LU&lt;L BOWUNC:

de-

;ru::',~~~'!; t ~~f-

j!T~/n~!!:} ~op;:

p.m.

is

are conaidering .ny oort of medi·
cal work - undergmduates are
especially encouraced to ClODle,
932 Norton. 10 am.-12 noon.
Women in Comm.unicatiou, women from TV and newspapen will
speak about their careers 8Dd the
conflicts that women working in
the media encounter every· day,
932 Norton. 1,3 p.m.

Se,viu Teachers, sponsored by
Elementary 8Dd Remedial Educa-

Tl!:l&amp;PHONK UICTUI:B#:

am.

:!rt!r:::d~Je~: i:d:e!edi~

cal field This workabop

aicned for womea who are in or

t.ltrou6h Dra~ Technique,
Haas Lounge, 233 Norton. 4-6
p.m.
EDUCAYlON LBCTUIZ*: Dr. Betty
Ward, Far West Laboratory for
Educational Research 8Dd De.el-

=~r:.~trn~~

OOU..CIAD SYB"l'EM

made bread. fruilB, Fillmore
Room, I.S p.m. Evenla spoDBOred
by Communication College.

ff~~':ir''i&gt;l.~!.';';~

~~~t!'~n~

for further information, 11:30

means to be womeD in a maJe..
defined oociety .nd bow - can
work together towarda liberation.
330 Norton, 10 ~.-12 DOOil.
Women in Medicine, a look at

COLI.:IATB BY'8'!'Ell BYIO'OSilJ)(*:

in aU phases of practice to become more aware of powel'--i.ts

~!u,;df~
~= ~
receiving stations. call 835-0728

~ouat;.tat.W:;m.i!n.~~

BYKPOBltJ)(•: .

Dioplayo of crafta, 234· Norton.
aU day. De....,..trution of crafts
IA!clmiq._ Center Lounae. Nortl!n. 1-9 p.m. Nataral food fea~t .
with brawn rice, yogurt, home-

Cbarles R Cantor, chemistry, Columbia University, New York,
Studiu on ~ Structure of Bocteriol Rioo.oma, G-22 Capen. 4
p.m.

Hilton, lectures in Embassy
Room. dinner in Georgian Room.
Abo on Friday. Nov. 5. For further information. call 831-s626.
OONTEMPOIWlY 18StiBS IN N1J118!.
INC#: Power and the Profetlllion,

ter
~Rr:::p.=t iv:
opathiu of the Foot - Etio/o6y

ocx.uGL\B l!rY8'I'IDf

BIOCBDOB'TitY SEKIN A&amp;#: Dr.

b"f.A~;W!;u!y ~ f::u::~

PODIA'nlY

woJBN"a ftll'ftVAL ~OPB•:
Rap Group: Women"• Liberadoa,
tbia will be 8D introductory -"'shop (or women illtereeted iD fiDd.

BYIIP08IUII•:

Room 29, 4248 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m.
Refreshmenta 3:30p.m.
A presentation ol obeened
"molecul.ar worlds" 8Dd the fonn.
nfation of a geoeralized origin of &gt;
life problem for such worlds.

*he~-::~~~~=

in nursing and health care. Exec~
utive Motor Inn. 4:M3 Genesee
SL, $9.00. For furtber information call Continuing Nursing Education, 831-5548, 5549.

":;

ea- Q&gt;llep.

~.·:=:=.co~
1-U p.m.

BlOLOCY BDUM.&amp;&amp;•:

S. F~ On MokcKiar Eoolution and the Origin of Life,

•icnf
al Therapy; 1:5G-Nurain8 Care;
2: 15-Hearing Therupy; 2:4GSp«eh Therupy; 3:30 - P8Dei

~~~ f.~

-

~ 81'IJDD(

matical - " ' much of wbich io
centered oo - t r y . l6o taUt
will be illtellicible to tiiiY'ID8 with
a ~ of .hich ocbool
malhemati&lt;s.
OOu.a:::t&amp;.ft sYna.: 8YliU'081UM•:
Howard Weather. . _ r e d by
Social Scieo&lt;es ~ 282 No....
ton. 3-5 p.m. 8Dd 8 p.m.~ooinc-

THURSDAY--4

8'1111P081011..:

11:...~~!. ca~

of .... ~

...--ln
..........
tar-..

oap.n ... .,.-;

IJYIImM

::::::::..'t.:t.::=: ~

ence Theatre. 11

a.m..~3 p.m.

COLLECU..'IZ 8YS'J"D( SYMPOSIUJf•:

mmJ':rto~ ~:,~~p~~

Asoocla.

LINGUJBTICB LECnJRE*: Dr. W olfgang Walck, Quechua, 404 Hayes,

7 p.m.
Roeenberg. Tor9nto lawyer in- WOMEN'S J'ISTIVAL*: Florynce .
volved in the development of K~~k =:laRooe~·a!f::
paraprofessionals. will show video
tapes and s~ on The Deuelop- tivis~ author of the~k Aborment of Paraprofessionals in tion Rap, Floryn.oe Kennedy bas
0
in
Black and women's liberation
COI.I.roiA'n: SYS'IZM BYKPOSIUK• : mm-ement.
Open session. T h e Community

~:~ s:.~~r~;~ll~ ~~ ~e:w:!:; ~on a:~: {h!

W:m!~fSttuti! oCon~: dFiil
more Room. 1-6

p.m.

Talash, a 1970 re~
lease starring Sharmila Tagore,
Rajindra Kumar, Balmj Sahni,
Helen. Presented by India Students Association, 147 Diefendorf.
7:30 p.m. Students $1.00, nonstudents $1.50.
•
WOMES'S FESTIVAL*: Chico.ao
INDIAN FD..M•:

=;

TUESDAY-9
WOMEN'S FI!:BTIVAL WORKSIJOPS•;

Women a n d Taxation, Bal'bara
Sims, Faculty of Law 8Dd director
of. the Office of Eqnal Opportunity
will lead a diacu8aion on tax inequities, 3S2 Norton, 10 a.m.~l2
noon. Women in PrVon, a look at

u:i!"::l

~~rob!=::=""

out of penal inititutiona, 384 Norton, 1-3 p.m. Abortion and Birth
Control. a diacusaion about exiatFillmore Room. 8 p.m.
iog birth control 8Dd abortion
FILMS • • : The Wild Child/Mio- facilities in the Buffalo area. 384
sissippi Mermaid, see Thunday Norton, 3-5 p.m. Children'• £ikr.
listing.
awre, Ellen Kabaner will be uploring sexist attitudee in chit~
FILM 0 : MASH, see Friday listing. dren's literature, 932 Norton. 3-5
p.m. Workshops open to women
only.
SUNDAY- 7

!":::n:sx;~::~ioi;. ~

WBE.N·TV :

UB ROUND

TABLE. Dr.

Jooeph .Shister bas invited Robert
A. Swados, vice presidtint of the
Buffalo Sabres Hockey Club 8Dd
Howard G. Foster. assistant profes,or of industrial relations to
discuss Pro{usional Sports and
the Anti~Trusl Laws, 11 a.m.
U/8 SYMPHONY BAND•: Frank J.
Cipolla, director, Goodyear, 8:30
p.m., free.
·
The concert. first in a series to
be presented ~ut the aca~

PHYSICIANS tm.EPBONJ: LBC'I'UD:#:

Dr. :l.Aluis C. Cloutier. Bum Trt!al·
menl, sponsored by .Regional
Medical Program, 40 receiving

stations. tel. 835-0728 for further
information. 11:30 a.m.
NtJl!8E8 TIUPHONE UICTVIII:#: Dr.

Vi.rgina Stone, Li.lumea of the

!~ t~Yo~~o~ ~~·~

gram, 40 receiving stations, tel.
835-0128 for fu.rtber information,

1:30 p.m., also on Nov. 16.

~J.
Y:llf ~cl~de t~:=~ re;::~;~; '{~, ~ u~J::.
for w i n d inatrumene. ranging Andalou (An Andahuion Dog,
from the.,41ighteenih century. to Luis BIIDUei!Salvador Dali), 147

the twentieth -tory. n.e pro- Diefaodorf, 3 8Dd 8 p.m., free.
gram will open with Ouenun in
F by Mebul, followed by TOCCOUJ

Maniale by w~· T'he L«wu

~fi!!if...!': :J::wm.c=::17.;;

fes'g'"wt~":i~u!., ~
~~~!is.::..=

8Dd the puaionate, realistic leSisAway" by Grainpr, Trau.entn- (Continued on 7, col. 3)

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

OCT. 28, 1971

VQL 3-NO. 8

Minority Panel Gets

Wide-Ranging Role
A 41-member President's Advisory Committee on Minority
Affairs whicb will have "as its
province the entire range of minority problems" has been appointed for this academic year
· by President Robert L. Ketler.
Frank Corbett, director of the
Office of Urban Affairs, will be
chairman of the Committee
whicb has been charged with
advising the President on any
facet of minority problems
which, in its opinion, merits the
attention and concern of the
University.

President Ketler, in making
the appointments, s a i d he
hoped the Committee would be
"particularly concerned" with
·
four policy areas:

By, SUSAN GREENWOOD

music:, Summerhill Uld simula-

tion are . . _ attractions set for nert week's CoiJeciate System Symposium on
campus. The three-day affair
(November 3-5) , will feature
eadt college as well as the entire Collegiate System in an attempt to inform the UniW!IBity
ClOIDIDunity about this altemati.., educational system.
In addition to mountii!Jl dis~ Uld having ............tatives to discuE eadt college's
propam, some units will sponsor panel di..,..,_ demonstrations, Uld lectures to further
indicate what ~ all aboul
'l1iere will 8\80 be a movie,
JDIIIIe by CcUece E member
Jim Hart, which pictorially describes eadt c:oUeae. (Space for
the exhibits and the time and
place for showing the film were
still undelennined at Reporter
deadliDe.)

ADdrew Wendt, roordinator
of the describes the
Symposium as a time for ''the
colleaes to present themsel...a
-d&gt;8ir methods, their tedmique&amp;--t!Dd to show bow much
more instructionally effecti..,
they are than ,olher depart-

''Third, community service:
In recent years, we have vastly
espanded our range of services
to minority and disadvantaged
groups in the Western New
York area. Our most recent
step in this direction . . . is the
establishment of the Cooperative College Center. The CCC
is administered by SUNYAB
and will be providing a most
valuable educational service to
disadvantaged students of all
age groups wl:a&gt; wjj;h to continue their sdioolifig. I bope
that the Committee will review
our activities in the area of
community service and recommend to the UniW!ISity sucb

"First, the recruitment of minority and di.sadvant&lt;Jged students: As you perhaps know,
minority students now constitute more than 22 per cent of
our total freshman enrollment
and we now have over 1100 minority students as undergrad_u.ates. ~ addition, we have actively recruited minOrity students for • various professional
monts." He explains that the planiled, otber ooUi.g.s will take curricula- taw, medicirie, etc.
in tbl!ae ~ Word•"sympoaium" cameo from just as unique an approada to Inaeasing attenti~ must ~ a...are required by the needs and
the Greek, meaning " to drii1k , explaining their
as turned, I believe, to the matter desires of minority or disadof
program
CJU!llity.
We
should
togetber," and be promises that Communications ~doet;
be careful, furthermore, that vantaged persons in the Westa feeling of festivity and con- in sponsoring the feasl
em New York area.
geniality will prevail during the
College A will present a these prograins are complementary
intber than competiactivities next Wednesday. "simulation" of their Communi· tive. I hope
"Fourth, the Committee
that
the
Advisory
Thursday and Friday.
cative Creativity Workshop on
should review the current orFood Feast
Wednesday aflef11()011 in Norton Committee will look at these ganization of the University
The aspect of festivity and and a discussion of role playing programs and recommend ways
drinking together will be carried on Thursday. Also scheduled in whicb both of these objec- ( Continued on JIOie 6, c:ol 4)
to a logical conclusion on Fri- are a demonstration by Tom
day when a Natuntl Food Feast Mardirosian on "Sell Discovery
takes place in the Fillmore through Dramatic Technique,"
Room of Norton. While no a panel discussion on educating
more f,Pasts are currently ( Continued on page 2. rol. I)

3-DaySymppsium On the Colleges Wlil Attempt
1bDramatize the Ef[ectireness cf the System
. w..;.,l~S::., c:lassiCai

tives can be achieved.
"Second, minority hirinl: In
1969-70, we had some 376 minority employees at the University. This year, I am happy
to report, the figure is well in
excess of 500. Progress in this
area must continue, particularly in the recruitment of minority faculty members. I hope
that the Committee will assess
the manner in whicb we have
brought about this increase and
recommend such m e a s u r e s
whicb might seem desirable.

'

W&gt;inen's Caucus Plans
Public Pressure Drive
The Caucus of W910en's
Rights at SUNY has resolved
to mount a State-wide f'UDpaign
for public · pressure on the
SUNY system and New York
State to create .a special fund
for the hiring of women and
minority faculty and staff.
The gioup bas alao charged .
that U/B "refused · to open its
personnel Iiles" during a recent equal employment opportunity for women compliance
review vimt by fedem representatives-a charge whicb a
University spokesman says is
''not true."
The Caucus, meeting in Albany this month, passed a resolution declaring that the SUNY
system during "its period of
greatest growth . . . failed to
establish equal opportunity in
b i r i n g."· The motion further
staled that the system "mus~
no longer penalize w o m e n,
Afro - American, Asian - American, Indian and Puerto Ricans
for its past mistakes. The Governor, who played sucb a creative role in establishing the
State Uni...rsity, . should not
havot let this crucial matter
""""pe his attention." .
.
To equalize employment-OPportunities, the Caucus Calls for
theallocationofspecialmouies

to hire minority grouJl'l. Details
on !;low the fund would work,
or wbere the money would come
from are unavailable at this
time, a Caucus spokeswoman
said.
Tbe group has called upon
the female members of the
House Committee no Labor and
Education tq find out why the
Office of CNil Rights, Department of Health, Education and
Welfare, has balled review ol
the SUNY system for compliance with the so-called "Title
Six'' clause. This prevents employers who bold federal contracts from discrimination in
employment on the basis of sex. ·
If discrimination is found by
HEW, awarding of new contracts to an agency can be
balled
Parts of the SUNY system
had beeo undel:going !"¥"&gt; a review during the past &amp;II months.
The Caucus all~ ~.
that "the Univer&amp;~ty Center at
Bullalo refused to open its personnel files to the HEW investigators (and tbat) the review
ground to a bait without the
awarding of new coatracts to
the UniW!ISity being balled by
HEW~the D&lt;mJJal proeedure-in
sucb cases."
(Co..wu.ed on -

6, coL 6)

U/B's dub tum, _ , · - In • pme aplnst the
- ... Junior v...ny, Its mrt of the T.-.y at GMnon Colloge. The Bulls - . p t a 3-1 - . !
Into yesterdar's home came -lnot Conloius, lncludilll this
~win

ower

F-.

�\.

~

2
Symposium·
(COIIliluud froa- I. col. 3)
benc!ia!IJIII!d children aDd a
U/8 BlUM CDIICI!rt.
MicbMI Tilaall
tbe
BulfUo Philbarmonic:'s new..,....
ductor, will participate in College B's activities. Tbomas Jrill
visit on n-lay (a dsy )lefore
the formal IJil8llinJ of the sym-

n.oa.s.

posium) fa&lt; an informal di&amp;c:ussion aDd workshop scbed-

uled for Norton's Conference

Theatre at 12:30 p.m. A
piano will he on stage so he
can illustrate his comments. A
fuJJ-&lt;ICIIle ClOD&lt;ll!rt is scbeduled
for Thursday evening by Col·
lege B. Entitled "Musical Innovation,n the program will fee·
ture worts by John Cage and
I.ejaren Hiller. Performers will
include pianist Roger Shields,
a Creetive Associate, and the
Concord String Quartet. On
Friday evening, College B will
spoosor Dr. and Mts. Heinz
Pagels in an infonnal tslk comparing philosophy, religion and
the sciences.
Educational Concepts

Summerbill and other innova·
tive education81 concepts will
he the major topics covered by
New College of Modem Education. Films on Summerhill and
the documentary, High School,
will he shown and reviewed by
Dr. Carlos Kruythosch, a Summerlilll graduate.
C. P. Snow College will he
running several sessions of sim·
ulation games. These "games,"
invented several years ago by
social scientists, enable participants to. p!B.y out various roles
in different situations. The plot
may he to run a .city with
playem '-&gt;ming the "mayor,"
"councilmen." 01" "district attomey"-of a make-believe town.
In other games, the object may.
he to form a make-believe society or to 8wap goods .to create
a work of art. The numbers of
possible situations are endleas.
This activity w i II he offered
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons and Thursday
and Friday evenings in various
rooms in Norton.
Women's Studies College will
feature workshops on Collective Teaching, Male Bisa in
Embryology, Women and
Health and Women in Litera.
ture. throughout the symposi.
urn. On Wednesday, Fran Delinsky, Women's Studies in•
structor, will discuss ·wotneb
in History" at 8 p.m. in 205
Norton. Fran Fabian, instructor in Women's Studies, will
diacuss ''Women and Welfare"
at 4 p.m., Thursday, in 231
Norton, and the "Community
and Welfare," Saturday at 1
p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
Thursday afternoon at 1 p.m.,
"Women and Religion" will he
discusaed in Norton 232. Thst
evening, Linda Gordon, Boston
historian, will speak at 7:30
p.m. in Norton 232. Saturday,
the San Diego Women's College will discuas their pro
in the Conference Theatre.
evening, a potluck dinner for

¥1::

=~yhe

:~Fill:

"i:ld
more 'Room at 5 p.m.
Theee are the events that
have 1-. scbeduled so far, but
coOrdinator Wendt feels that
mo"' will probably happen during the conference and that
several colleges may sponsor
other special programs. All activities during the symposium
will he "inteuaely personal," he
_emphasizes, and are meent to
"communicate, using any meens
available, the ideas of the cOlleges and the entire Collegiate
System." (Fa&lt; more ·details
as to time and pIa ce, see
the "Weekly Communique,"
Norton bulletin boards. a n d
other media IIOUI'Ce8. However,
if you •till cs:n't lind complete
information . on symposium
events, just remember that the
colleges pride themaelves on
being "free, unstructured and
flexible!")

~.U.IJ7I

Student AdmisSions, Eanomic Issues GSA 10.Bring
~- Se~
'BpAgenda for N!xt Senate Mmng 1bCampus
How lltlldS.ts set admitted study he made of the tmtire adto U/B,
they abou1d act -en:•-~-haP~ :~ror"":
once they set hem and what
~"' 1-. ._,..
. benefits their instrue- past 13 years, the Committee
~ set will all he ~ "'l''rl points out, aDd a review
cuased at the oen Faculty Sen- is said to he in order. Sl&gt;ecifi!:.
ate meeting, n-lay, N&lt;M!ID- ally, the mport asks that the
her 2. The session, scbeduled study he made in light of c:erfor 2:30 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf, tain current educational issues.
has a nine-point agenda which Among these
open adJDis.
includes reports from the Sen- sions, experiments! programs,
ate committees on Academic quota admissions by faculties
Integrity, Admissions and Eco. or departments, Mgionalism,
nomic Status.
~d, finl!llY, a ~e c:en!'ml·
The meeting will start with LZ8tion m admissions servtc:es.
the traditional reports of the ~ Academic: Integrity
p,.,sjdent and Chairman of the
dealin
·th ad ·
.After
g Wl. . • llll8Senate The first piece of new
busmeSs'will he a report from s1ons, the Senators.~ ~
the Admissions Co~ttee. ~ds~~"!d.';:cialm:~
headed by Dr. M c A I_lister tee headed b Dr c 1
d
•
Y
·
au e
Hull Prior to the meeting, Sen·
ato,.,; will receive the group's Welch, w\'" se~ up to study the
eight_ psge report discussing student s1tustio~. At the ~
the.tota_l admissions pic~ and ~ca~~~o~!'d~
presenting several motions. At
.birt
char ed ·th
Reporur deadline, these mo- spons! 1 Y was
. g
WJ
tions had not 1-. completely • tudymg the . Situation ,among
finalized b the Senate's Exec· fa~ty ~moors, Welchs com.
Co Y •
b t
rmttee finished 1ts report first
;:!"~ tod~teewith
se": and the Senate will discuss_ it
arate concerns
on Tuesday. (For full details.
see the Reporter, Oct. 21 ).
Three Step Process
Basically, the Welch Commit- ·
The 6.rst motio~ in essence, tee recommends setting up a
is expected to ask . the Senate system of review for alleged
to reaffirm last year's criteria plagiarism and dishonesty
for general freshman admis- cases. The report from the facsions for use this year. The ulty committee is expected in
motion will, however, clarify December.
The final committee report
some of last year's procedures.
A three-step process for admit- to he considered next week will
ting incoming students probab- he from Economic Status
ly will he ouUined. First, ap- which will present six moplicants will he ranked RCCOrd- tions. The first urges faculty
ing to high school percentile members to join the Senate
rank (their numerical rank in Professional Association (SPA)
class divided by the number in so that U I B can have a maxithe class). From this list, 45 mum voice in the affairs of that
per cent of the fall class will organization. The other five petition SPA to change the curbe admitted.
The "''D&amp;ining applicants will rent contract in varjous ways.
then be ranked separately acSPA will he asked to work
cording to high school average for the re-&lt;~pening of the conand standardized college en- tract on issues other than saltrance test scores. These two ary concerns. If this is possible,
rankings will he added and a the Committee proposes that
new listing obtained. From this
list, 50 per cent of the class will
be chosen.
Finally, 5 ~ cent of the
class will be selected solely on
the basis of numerical rank in
high school clsSs. This procedure was designed by the
committee to pick up students
By STEVE LIPMAN
from small high.qua!1ty schools.
WBEN-TV's new man beThis system would he new to
hind
the mike is one of U/B's
Admission s and Records
(A&amp;R) and Dr. Nonnsn Ho- old hands before the blackboard.
Dr. Claude Welch, assostetter, assistant director, has
some reservations abo u t iL ciate professor of political science,
joined
the expanded
While he agrees with the logic
behind it, be feels this data Channel 4 news team on a part.
time
basis
in
September, doing
would he difficult to collect
since it is not currently· re- twice or tri-weekly features on
quired on the application form. religion and ethics.
It's the first solo shOt helore
Approval of this procedure by
the Senate would necessitate the """""' for the ex-Harvard
gathering of special informa- Crimson editor and WaU Street
tion by A&amp;R from the· high Jourool. part-timer, although he
schools which now submit only has g u e s t e d frequently on
WBEN's UIB Round Table ·
percentile ranks.
the Council of Churches
In order that students can ·aDd
program.
he admitted on the basis of
It
was the Radio-TV comthese criteria alone and without
"'gard to availability of Uni- mittee of the Council, boping
to
see
religious events covered
vetsity housing facilities, the
second motion asks that "the regularly on WBEN's hOur
newscast,
that asked Welch to
present dormitory MSidence requirements for freshmen whose audition to do the 1'h-2 minute
spots.
·home MSidence is more than
"Fourteen per cent of the eels
50 . miles distant from Buffalo
.•. he Mmoved. Freshmen shall in Buffalo a... tuned to the
no longer he ...rused admit- Channel 4 six o'&lt;;lock news,"
tance because of the inability cites Welch in explaining why
of the University to provide the Collncil approached the
dormitory facilities. The Diree-. station. "'The expansion of the
tor of Admiasions shall indicate news to one hour meant they
~ each admitted student, at wouldn't nec:esaarily cover a
the time of offer of admisaion, i"'&amp;ler _range of news, but they
whether or not dormitory space could go more in depth into the
news at band. n
can he assured.n
In addition to these general -A Firat
·welch . says his i o in i_!1 g
Procedure&amp;, the Committee recommends that the cummt ad- WBEN· as. · a non-professiODal
rilissioos rograms of EPIS and fiee.lan&lt;:e -rter marks "a
the F::J'ty of Natural Scieooes first in American telecasting."
Welch, an expert in African
and Mathematics he continued.
It also suggests that a major affairs, explains that the Coun-

how

-=

tw":

the harpining ....,t ask for an
'n.ls apriq, colleae paduates
increase in State contributioos will apin learn that tbae is a
to TIAA to match its share of job ibortaae. To IDIIke fhwfln&amp; a
contributioos to State "'tire- job easier for sludents ~
ment fuDding. Dr. Murray advaDced ~the~
Brown's committee also asks Student ASaociation (GSA) is
that the harpining ....,t work . sponaoring a aeries of seminars
for inclusion of a "most favomd during~ ~ves of
nation" cfauee in the contract. professioliill employment aervThis would automatically tie iCES will cliscuas job opportuni.
professional ecooomic benefits ties.
to any benefits granted other
The f1mt seminar is tonight
state labor organizations. in 340 Norton at 8:30 and will
(Health benefits currently have feeture Soelling aDd Snelling,
such an automatic carry-over.) Inc., Erie County's largest emResearch Option
ployment ~- The firm spe..
cializes in finding jobs in the
lfrre-operunthan
~!oou.;;.tecon~nc
fielda
of data processing, sales,
Othe
~~
technology, administration and
grounds is imposs1l&gt;le then the managemenL In these llleSS,
Committee asks SPA to at least they are seeking primarily stuconsider proposing that faculty dents who are graduating in
members have·a choice of using management, engineering, and
their negotiated increases eith- science a...as though they may
er as salary or as personal re- also plac:e students from other
search funds. This' unique ap- disciplines. Their representaproach woUld benefit both the tives will discuss openings availState and faculty, .the Commit- able, p,_m for the future
~1~ ~~~~
and
to list with and use
funds if a faculty member opts a professional employment
for use of the increase for re- agency. The company has also
search.
promised to meet with indivi·
dusl departments to discuss
Lastly. the Committee calls what the job mad&lt;et is like in
for a contract stipulation of their fields in addition to giving
w~fl' e foJ,.m~:!t ~ individual counseling.
de
·t ·
Within the oen month, tbe
doesn•t --•
.,.~u
men mcreas··
in two other
not specifically
man- GSA will bnng
es, it does
date them, either. lf such funda professional employment agen·
are added to the contract, the ciE!S---&lt;&gt;De which specializes in
Economic Status Committee educational jolie and another
makes two suggestions on how whose a...a is the humanities.
they should he allocated. One
All thMe seminars aDd the
alternative is to have the local subsequently-scheduled depart·
SPA chapter and the local Fac- mentsl visits are free to all
ulty Senate assist departments graduate students. lf any stuin developing allocation P.ro- dents are plac:ed by the agen·
cedums. The second possibility cies, this probably will also be
is the creation of ranking&amp; with- · without cost since most of the
in ranks suches di1ferentpades positions handled by these 6nns
for assistant professors, etc.
have fees paid by the employers.
lf graduate students have any
Before adjournment, the Senators will also hear a "'port on special employment agencies
the State-wide SUNY Senate they would like to have particimeeting held last Saturday and pate in the program, they ·can
Sunday.
contact Jay Nisherg at ert. 5505.

t!: .::"J:

,.k

how

Chanffi 4's New Man behind theM.icrqnone

Is an 01d Hand before Campus Blackboards
Western New York's congressmen about iL"
Future themes Welch plans
to cove&lt; include the Krislula
movement, Crusade for Christ,
and the general reb!OO&lt;ning of
Mligion on the campus.
One difficulty in his new
IIBIIignment, says Welch, is
adapting his clasroom techniques to the TV eaeeu. His
goal, he says, is to "develop a
simple, brief, personal, aDd dra·
malic style of p...aentation. n

ShoaM..-.

w

cil of Chwd..s cbo8e him because "I know what's happen.
ing. I know whe"' to look, and
where to get the information.
I have a lot of contacts in this
area.
''They thought it better if
they got a non-cleric, a layman
to do iL And
as lay as you
can geL"
Welch has already done 10
featu...s. Among them: Chahad
Houae's "Succahmobile;" silent
meditation in public scbools·
celibacy; and what hsppeos ~
churches that their congre.
gations.
''My pwpoee is to' cover local
...Ugious evwtts and the impact
of national issues,n he says.
"A constitutional amendmen
was being discussed in
House of Representatives about
prayer in school I interviewed

rm

tJ.!

pJc:h, -who has taught hem
since :i!l64, becoming an associate professor thMe years ago,
observes that "most pft&gt;fessors
would he shocked if they could
look at a videotape of their lecture technique.n
Welch's own c~asroom-..1110,
according to him, is to "411!8k
in long drawn-out sentences ...
pace up and down . . . and
never stare .anyone in tbe eye.n
But in a classroom situation. he
points out, he doesn't have to
contend with tissue-thin notes
Oapping in the breeze as he
does in some of his on-the-spot
TV feeturea.
Welch cbaracterizi!B the reaction to his efforts as "very
good."
One anonymous, irate, elder-

!ron_ladt.!..how.,:"'~

'hi:..::

this fan called Welch at home
and told him ''You better start
praying."
Did he take her advice?
''No commenL"

�-·-

PolMt Reek Ends in Whirl of Dancing
With petticoats flying and
heels clicking, the Wawel Dance
Group of St. Catharines, Ontario, brought to a cloee ·the

campus Festival of Polish Cul-

ture with a tmditional presentation at a Polish Folk Ball
last Saturday. 'The .........long
festival, which 1nciuded concerts, lectures, ezhibits a n d
films was da!igned to inform
the Univezsity community of
recent cultural dewlapments in
Poland and to apoee them to
Polish culture in general
Variety was the watchword.
Festival presentations centered
around six areas: music and the
dance, social issues, CDDiemporary daitre, literatuie, ~ i I m

renaissance and the joy of living. Within this framework, individual events varied ·from a
classical music concert by violinist Piot&lt; Janowski, to a discussion on ''Polish Tbeat&lt;e and
Drama in the Twentieth Century" by Dr. Edward Czerwinski, chairman of the Germanic
and Slavic Languagea Depart.
ment, SUNY/Stony Brook.
Members of the Buftalo community as well as U/B faculty,
staff and students were involved
in the planning. 'The main organizers of the festival were the
Sludent Polish Culture Club,
cbaired by Monica Polowy and
adviaed by Dr. Stanislaw Mrozowski But other Polish community cqanizatiolls such as

the Polish Arts Club, KosciUBZko Fmmdati011 and the Polish
American Council on Cultural
Affairs coaperated. In addition,
one· of the leading Polish dip.

�Oo*&gt;ber 28, 1971

4

Jackson\bices Conoorn Over How the Reporter
And the Ketter Administration Are Rmctiming
not have final say, or, il not hen's letter of resignation-be
that, one in which edito.r ial de- said it was impossible to work
cisions are not made--as they with Ketter and Somit-to warare now-by a group of people rant BODie questions by a seriwhose jobs depend on the good- ous reporter; hut only if the
will of A. Westley Rowland. Reporter really represented the
What kind of objectivity exists faculty and students of SUNYI
when all decisions have to be Buffalo. Why did. \he Reporter
approved hy the boss? 'I1&gt;e con- not ask Cohen what he meant
tribution an editorial board by that remark? Why did
could make would be in the di- Somit not ask Cohen what he
rection of editorial honesty: meant by that and try to pubthere would be someone there licly clear the air if it were not
who could blow the whistle true? Somit says there are no
when executive editorial chi- ways to respond to such charges
-that is nonsense and the Recanery was going on.
Rowland's final paragraph is porter should have taken the rean insult to Prof. Aubery and sponsibility of pointing that
the rest of the faculty: "Thank out: you respond to such
you for your inte~t and let me charg"!! by airing them and by
assure you that we are always responding to them, not avoidopen and willing to discuss the ing response by saying "We
Reporter with any member of can't talk about thal"
( Most people interpret data
the faculty." Who needs discussion with A. Westley Row- on the basis of previous experland? Prof. Aubery wasn't ask- .ionce. As an educator, I of
ing for patronizing comments, course approve of that process.
he was asking for a change in My first experience with the
the way the Reporter is run and Ketter/ Somit administration
controlled-either that or ad- consisted of AI Somit inviting
mit it is a house organ and me to his office 19 discuss the
,nothing more.
need for trust, an interview that
Somlt Artlde 'Disturbllll'
terminated with his telling me
It is ironic that immediately an outrageous lie. Ever since,
beneath Rowland's dissimulat- I have had a tendency to read
ing letter there is an anony- his statements with some care.)
mous article reporting comSure there are critical things
ments made by AI Somit on the in the Reporter. Joe Riddle's
problem of credibility. 'I1&gt;e ar- fine letter set tin g things
ticle is an example of the kind straight on the facts of the
of editorial problem Prof. Aub- Baumer promotion was one.
ery and others of us find dis- But there are some things the
turbing.
Reporter can't not print, and
It is unsigned; it presents in Joe's letter was one of them;
the form of a news statement
words that are administrative
propaganda-A\ Somit's New- a scandal that would have been
speak. No critical intelligence printed in the Courier-Express,
informs il
the Buffalo Evening News, and
Woii-Kept Secm
'I1&gt;e firat paragraph reads,
He gets to an example of it "The current 'manufactured' ~~ :::ne~~Z"'uld have
lf the Reporter were the
further down in the same para- publicity over resignations
graph: "As you know,'' he tells within the University, Execu- house organ of Reader's Digest,
Prof. Aubery, "we would have tive Vice President A I bert it would be doing a good job;
printed Professor Jackson's let- Somit feels, points up a very but it isn't the house organ of
ter if he had been willing to reol problem for this and other Reoder's Digest-this is Buflimit his material so that it University administrations." falo, not Pleasantville. The Recould have been print.OO on one Why should "manufactured" he porter claims it isn't a house orfull page of the Reporter." set off in quotation marks? Has gan at all, that it is instead a
'11&gt;ere is no reason Prof. Aubery tl,e administration any doubt responsible newspaper serving
should know that because it that there is publicity .about this academic community. That
isn't true. It may not be a lie, resignations? Has it any doubt isn't true.
but it sure as hell isn't truth that resign a tiona have ocThe residents of this partieeither. In the same semester curred? The rest of the article ular community-students and
as Rowland censored my let- about Somit says nothing about professors-have · a c u r i o u s
ter about administrative dis- those resignations; it deals only trade: everything they do is di asters (a letter which had been with reasons the administration rected toward truth, toward the
accepted by the Reporter edi- has for not responding decently meaning of things. They are
torial stat{ and which was sup- to criticism.
trained to examine and evalupressed oruy at his direct or- Nonsense
ate data. The Reporter does not
ders ), the Reporter published
If the Reporter were exercis- serve them well.
several articles from faculty ing any journalistic integrity at Creeping Assholeism
members that ran two full all, it would have pursued the
Over the past year what was
pages; at least one went over questions raised by Somit's re- almost a great university bas
six. If that one-page limit marks. Consider his second been slowly dragged down in a
existed before Rowland cen- point: " ... An accusation by a
0
sored my letter, it was a well- news medium or by an inclivid- ~~s:.izft~s ~ ~fu~t:c~i
kept secret.
ual may ·he stated in such gen- money that bas dragged us
Rowland writes, "I do not see eral terms that there is no pos- down, but the lack of intellihow an editorial board could sible way to come to grips with gence and ""'pect for intellipossibly have been helpful in il 'This administration is dif- gence at Hayes Hall. It may be
Professor Jackson's case. . . ." ficult to get along with,' is a a good idea to drive sharp, wellPerhaps I can help his vision. classic example of a charge not educated, professionally reThe board Prof. Aubery sug- subject to factual response." spscted '1l"n from positions of
Well, golly. That is close administr'ative responsibility,
enough to the core of Ira Co- but I sure would like to see the
Reporter explain why that is a
good idea? And if it isn't I
would sure like to see the Reporter expressing some concern
that people like Ted Mills, Ira
Cohen, Roy Pesch, Tom Con~~
'ii:r.P.:, ~ .,-::: ~. ~';-,=
nolly
(and how many others?
~ ~~~t UborW ~ . . .,_., .. a - 2U. UO ........ A ......
rve been away and can't keep
up) for one reason or "another
chose to stop trying to work
._ warurr J!OIP'LAJO)
with Ketter and Somil
~~
Somit saya that he must· keep
quiet in some of these matters
II!CdaJtT r . ltiAilLZ'rT'
because the people involved
were sometimes "negotiating
~,...,~au,..,.
for another position and _ . .
specif!cally ~ that the
/OilltLcr.oonu
mtuation not
made public
~~~ assignment bas
SOSAIJO..........,.,.,
uoucia.uy _confumed. · - ·"
£1-Un.lft' UI'Uif!J ZDlftllt: S.... u.-.
\
. A Conipeteot adbiinistrator
~urvto .Dn'ORS: J - Jt. ~ ....., s. ~~~ ........,
should he tearing up the coun- ·
tryside finding out what condiCOIIT'IlDUTlltO Al!lrlST: s - If. - tiona hen make it necessary for
BEB.KEI..EY, CALIFORNIA

EDITOR:

Someone just sent me a copy
of the Reporter (October 7,
1971 ) in which A. Westley
Rowland so misrepresents an
incident involving me that I
must respond.
After thanking Prof. Pierre
Aubery for his letter asking for
some response to Aubery's sixmonth old suggestion that there
be an editorial board for the
Reporter composed of representatives of the academic commtmity, Rowland carefully contradictJ; himself: "The Reporter . . . is not controlled by one
man as one of your colleagues
reported, nor is it controlled by
the University administration.
The Division of University Relations bas been assigned the
responsibility for the publication of the Reporter, and as Executive Editor, I am the individual who must ultimately
take responsibility for it."
What, pray, does that mean if
not that A. Westley Rowland
bas final veto power over what
appeara in the Reporter? If
Rowland does not consider that
control by one man, he needs
help in vocabulary.
Rowland's next paragraph
compounds the nonsense: "We
would submit that the Reporter bas alwe.Ys dealt fairly and
objectively with all the news
which it publishes [sic] . As far
as I know, we have never re-fused to print materials submitted to us by faculty, students,
or stafi." To the first sentence
one responds: Fine, hut what
about the news you don't publish? 'I1&gt;e second sentence is a
lie.

l::'~r au:::O'!.o:dd'~e

0

~:,~s ~d!"'~ R.:~d !:i~

8'-J'.::

tt:.

Jr.......__

.

___

._...,..,

•eM.b'

..,.

--

....

=

=

qualified people to be negotiating for jobs elsewhere. He
shouldn't be wallowing in
mock-respect for secrecy - he
should be finding out what he"
is doing wrong, if he is doing
anything wrong, and why such
good
can no longer work
here. •
And the Reporter, if it were
honest about its work, would
be asking those questions too.
Sincerely yours;

men

BRUCE JACKSON

Professor
P.S. : I know A. Westley Rowland says the Reporter prints
what the faculty writes, but
since things haven't qui t e
worked out that way in the
past in my experience, I am
sending a copy of this letter to

GVIEWPOINTS
The Reporte&lt; ' - on thlo to provide • forum for the unliMy
of the foc:ln&amp; the IIC8domlc
communtty. We ..icome both
pwltlon p•pers ond - . ..

ch•np of ..._ on • -

-

pennlts.

the Spectrum with the request
that if the above does not appear in the Reporter within a
reasonable span of time, they
publish the letter--as they did
with the last one Rowland censored-and explain why.

lli Back Is Editor

Of 2 New1.l..1..
lU!lliDeS ~

1-ManSJrow
ByBlmnherg
Operis NJv.2
Donald R. · Blumberg, aasociate professor of art, will have
a one-man show of pbotogmpha
entitled ''Portraits of Students"
in the Art Department Gallery,
4240 Ridge Lea, November 2
through November 20.

Upon entering the gallery the
viewer will be surrounded by
25 large portraits, all done on a
black field. 'I1&gt;e subjects are all
looking at the camera, and thus
at the ~ewer directly. Mr.
Blumberg comments that there
is a point at which the sitter
releases himself to the lens and
that the viewer then replaces
the camera. He describes this as
a "moment of remission" when
the peraon communicates his
personality to the camem. It
is this contact between subject
and viewer that Mr. Blumberg
bas attempted to capture.
Two stands will he set up in
the center of the gallery which
will display three series of mosaic-like photographs. 'I1&gt;e first
of these composites is designed
into platee 20" x 24", each composed of photographs of one individual 'I1&gt;e frames are all essentially the same, but differ in
tonal quality and variation of
expression. The design of each
emerges from what the artist
calls the "sense of th&lt;f picture;"
he stresses that there is no previously conceived design.
'I1&gt;e second composite bas
more of the feeling of a documentary. It consists of portraits of student passersby,
photographed at random outside of the Riilge Lea cafeteria.
'I1&gt;e last group of photograph&amp; were taken with a
35mm. camem and are gathered
into groups of two or three individual portraits. The frame
line is made to disappear and
merge with the background.
According to the artist, the
general concept of the photographs is an "attempt to fix in
a visual way what young people
look like with the dignity and
sensuality that they express.
They are also meant to show
the older genemtion what their
children really look like in a
positive way and that these are
the children that society'tends
to brutalize and send to Vietnam:'
Mr. Blumberg's work is included in many permanent collections throughout the country,
including the Museum of Modem Art in New York City, the
George Eastman House of Photography in Rochester and the
National Gallery of Canada in
Ottawa. He was awarded the
first prize in photography in
the Western New 'York Exhibit
at the Albright Knox Art Gallery in 1966, 1967, and 1969.
In 1971 he received an Individual Artist Grant from the
New York State Council of the
Arts. His photogmphs have
been widely publiahed, most recently by Time-Life in "The
Art of Photography."
'I1&gt;e public is invited to meet
the artist at an opening reception, Tuesday, November 2, at
8 p.m. '11&gt;ereafter, gallery hours
will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday
throullh November 20. There 1s
no admission charge.
The show is co-sponsored by
the Office of Cultural Alfairs
and the Student Art Board .

Dr. Nathan Back, professor,
biochemical pharmacology, reports the following additions to
books publiahed by the faculty
during 1970-71:
Shock: Biochemical, Pharmacological, and Clinical Aspects.
Edited by Aido Bertelli, and
Nathan Back. Plenum Press,
New York, 1970.
Reflecting progress made in
recent years toward understanding shock, this volume
presents the work of an international group of distinguished
scientists in the varied disciplines of surgery, pharmacology, in ternal medicine, biochemistry, physiology, and
pathology. It presents current
results drawn from every level
of experimental and clinical research. Special attention is directed toward the elucidation
of those physiological mechanisms and biochemical events
that initiate and maintain the
shock state. Included also is information on pharmaco-therapeutic control of shock.
Bradykinin and ReltJled Kinins: Cardwuascultu, Biochemteal &amp; Neural Actwns.--Edited
by F. Sicuteri, M . Rocha e Silva, and Nathan Back. Plenum
Press, New York, 1970.
Summarized in this book are
the most important recent findings dealing with the v..-ctive
polypeptides. I n c 1 u d e d are
studies on the pharmaoological,
bi&lt;&gt;e!&gt;emical, and pathological
~•gnificance of bradvkinin and
Its anaJo
eJed f •
•
gues,
OIBlJI, &amp;nglotensm, physalaemin, and caerulein. Discussion ranges from
the metaholiam of these importent chemical mediators to
their cardiOV8IICUlar e f f e c t s,
pathophysiology, human
pharmacology, antagoniats, and O...._..J-L "D-.....!..l---4newly discovered neural and OIA.Il.HlL r ~
neunlOecretory effects. P.reA U!B student-Mrs. June
sented is new information- on Crawford of Kenmore-has
kinin rele&amp;alr involving Rage- been elected president of the
DIBil factor and killin-releasing Upstate New York Region of
enzymes, and .the elfecta of the u. s. Association of Evekinins on vascular beds and
their role in a wide -=trum . ~~!fum is an MFC
of pathologic OODditiona.
Englisb major.

�OdDb« 28, 1971

5

GREPORTER..,

Student SWap Program
ProvingThBePoplim

Guidelines
Issued for
Stuilent Jobs

Dr. van de Vall Back

From 'Rw Years Abroad

After two years of research
The "considerable latitude" in Western Europe, Mark van
which
campus
departments
have
de
Vall, professor of sociology,
In the first year, 51 students
"I would like to go to any participated in the program had in making arrangements has returned to UIB's Ridge
college in the State as long as throughout New York State. with students for part-time Lea Campus to find "an atit is far from New York City." This number doubled the sec- w 0 r k has led to " inconsist- mosphere of cordiality which
"I am unhappy where I am." ond year and doubled again the encies" in rates of pay and to is rarely found at European
'Tve lived here all my lile and third. Today there are over 200 the issuance by the Personnel universities, with their r i g i d
would like to study elsewhere." students studying at institu- Department of five _pages of hierarchies."
"Little less enjoyable," he
Normally, letters of this type tions "other than the one from "policy guidelines" for student
says, "is the climate of intelfrom college students would in- which they are planning to be employment.
Intent
of
the
guidelines,
aclectual
curiosity in the undergraduated.
clude a request for an applicaPrivate church- related col- cording to Personnel's Kenneth lf:~eua~g~~ ~~~~:
tioo for transfer. Until recently,
this w8s their only alternative. leges account for half of the Conklin, is to ''help assure all
pares favorably with most EuToday, however, these students students using the program. managers and supervisors" that ropean
universities with their
and hundreds of others with as ' Forty-three per cent of these the University is providing superiorsubordinate relations
many varied reasons are not students chose to visit public "equal pay for equal work."
between faculty and students."
transferring; they are simply institutions, 36 per cent chose
In positions other than those
Dr. van de Vall was on sabvisiting another institution in !' '!on~urcli related private of a "pre-professional" nature batical leave in Holland in
New York State for a quarter, lllStitution, 21 per cent chose (where the work requires ex- 1969-70 and for 1970-71 be reanother church related college. pertise or training in a parti- ceived a special research fellowa semester, or a year.
The Visiting Student Pro- The private non-cl1Urch related cular field ) , the guidelines in- ship from the Center for Health
gram developed by the Associ- iru;titutions account for 30 per dicate that supervisors "should Services Research, Department
ation of Colleges and Univer- cent of the students. Fifty-three use" the University Placement of Health, Education and Weisities of the State of New York per cent of these visited the and Guidance Office as the pri- fare.
in 1968 enables students attend- same type of institution, where- mary source of candidates for
The two years, he says, were
ing a college or university in as 40 per cent and 7 per cent student employment.
both hectic and productive, inthe State to attend another in- visited public and p r i v a t e
uFor equitable pay purposes," volving research, teaching and
stitution in the State for a se- c!'urch related colleges, respec- student work has been classed consulting.
mester or year without the ne- tively. The public institutions into three broad categories, each Research in Applied
oessity of a formal transfer. provided 20 per ocmt of the with an approved pay range: Social Science
With over 60 institutions of students. Seventy pe&lt; cent of service/office ($1.60-$2.10 per
With a $37,500 grant from
various nature participating these chose other public insti- hour ) ; skilled clerical/service the Dutch Government and
( large, small, private, public), tutions and 30 per cent chose ($2.10-$2.60 per hour ); and pre- The Netherlands Association of
students have the opportunity private non-church related in- professional ($2.60-$4.00 Per Manufacturers, the resea rch
to complete part of their educa- stitutions. Less than one-half hour). Supervisors have respon- centered on the use of applied
tional program at an institution of one per cent chose private sibility for determining the social science for policy-makhaving different characteristics c h u r c h related colleges. To classification for a given job, ing purposes. Under his direcfrom the one they are presently summarize the exchange brief- making sure that the classifies- tion an ad hoc team of 20 socily, the church related colleges
attending.
provided 50 per cent of the tion and hourly rate are con- ologists a n d economists anstudents and received 14 per sistent with skills required and alyzed the application of social
science in regional and urban
cent in return. The private non- work performed.
Service/ office jobs are defined planning, industrial and labor
church related colleges provided
as
those
requiring
a
minimum
relations, and public health and
30 per cent and received 47 per
cent of the students. The public of specialized skills or previous social welfare. D ata were colinstitutions provided 20 per work experience. Examples are Ieete&lt;! on applied social science
typing, filing, janitorial, repeti- as a means of feedback, change
A -week-long festival on the cent and got 39 per cent in tive records, laborer, messenger and evaluation in monopolized
modem woman-her politics, return. Obviously, economic and library check-in, check-out markets, for instanoe low-rent
a r e imoortant
her culture, her thoughts-will oonsiderations
housing, ad u It training proin selecting an institu- and stacking jobs.
be held on campus, November factors
Skilled/ clerical jobs are de- grams, health provisions for ~e
tion to visit.
6-13, under sponsorship of the
fined as those requiring skills aged, child care and rehabtlitsUniversity Union Activities VIsiting Student Proeram
measwable by performance and tion services.
Boa r d Contemporary Issues at SUNYAB
l or aptitude tests. Such posiHolland was selected as the
Committee.
.
The following statistics with tions ''usually require consider- research site, Dr; van de Vall
The program will emphasize regard to the Visiting Student able mental activity and /or says, because ~ The N~ther­
women performing and creating Program at Buffalo are provid- manuaJ dexterity for equipment lands sociology ts preclommanf...
and, according to student Bon- ed by the Office of Admissions operation." Duties in this cate- ly an applied science. The n::gory are not as closely-related searchers sc r eened approxtnie Zimmerman, will be free and Records:
and open to the public. Free
In September 1970, 51 ap- to the student's field of study mately 2,000 projects of applied
child care will also be provided. plications were received from as in a pre-professional job. Ex- social research for their impact
The week's schedule in- students wishing to atte nd amples in this category include: upon policy making. Out of
eludes:
SUNYAB under the program; typist ( s peed-dictaphone ), these, a sample of 120 projects
November 6. Cpicago Wo- 113 candidates were accepted stenography, bookkeeping, rna- was selected for in-depth anmen's Liberation Rock Band, and 17 registered. For this fall, chine or equipment operator, alysis. S em i-st.ructured interapplications more than doubled driver, accounting clerk, key- views with social researchers
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m. to 104; 73 were accepted and punch operator, objective-type and policy makers then anNovo:mber 8. Florynce Ken- 38 have registered.
exam correcting, complex rec- aly7.ed the st ructure of the
Total applications, numbers ords.
transformation of soc i a 1 renedy, civil rights and women's
rights lawyer and author of accepted and numbers regisPre-professional jobs require search into policy action.
Abortion Rap, Fillmore Room, tered from each of several in- the incumbent to have one or
The project had a number
Norton, 8 p.m.
stitutions were as follows : Ca- more years of college training of spinoffs- for instance, papers
related
to
the
work
and
call
read
at: the 4th Seminar of
November 9. Christyne Law- nisius College (l application;
son, Buffalo dancer who will 1 st;ujlent accepted; none reg- (or a "relatively high degree of the European Association of
mental
activity,
judgment
and/
National
Productivity Centers,
perform and present a sensitiv- isteroo); College of New Roity workshop, Fillmore Room, chelle !1, 1, OJ; CUNY: York or technical skill" relateq to a in Rotterdam in May of this
8 p.m.
College (1, 1, 0 ) ; Hobart (1, student's instructional program. year; the 3rd Conference of
November 10. Jill Johnston, 1, l); Hofstra 0, 1, 1 ); Keuka Examples of this classification National Correspondents for
columnist for the Village Voice (l, l, 0 ); Marist (1, 1, 1) ; are: accompanist, tutor/ proctor, Social Welfare Research, orand author of Marmal4de Me, Marymount ( l , 1, l ) ; Nazareth lab assistant, writer-editor, art- gani7.ed by the United Nations
Fillmore Room, 8:30p.m.
(5, 4, l ); Niagara (1, 1, l); ist-illustrator, subjective exam Office at Geneva, held in The
.
f Sl Bonaventure (l, l, 1); St. correcting, computer operator/ Hague, in June; and !he 3rd
November 11. An everung o
John Fisher (1, l , l ) ; Sl programmer.
Seminar on Comparative Orpoetry with Marge Piercy, Er- John's (1, l , l ); State College
Personnel recommends that ganizations Research, organica Jong, 8atbar8 Harr, all of at Buffalo (1, 1, 1) ; Cortland hiring he done at the minimum ized by the London School of
New York, and Etnairis Ri- (5, 2, l ) ; Fredonia (6, 3, 2); rate in each pay range, and that Economics, Tavistock Institute
vera, a Buffalonian who will New Paltz ( 14, 10, 5); Platts- annual increases of 10-15 cents and Philips' Industries at Bindread poetry in Spanish and burgh ( 5, l, 0 ) ; Potsdam ( 6, per hour be offered Students hoven in August.
English, Fillmore Room, 8 p.m. 4, 2 ); Albany ( ll, 8, 3 ); Bing- are now permitted to earn a
Other papers based upon the
November 11. Coffee house, 1 hamton (20, 15, 9 ) ; Old West- maximum of $3,000 per year, project will be read at a Con. di te
ference on Social Research and
Jean Ritchie and Ethel Raim. bury (6, 5, 2); Stony Brook
guidelinesthe
m ca ·
folk singers, Norton, 9 and 11 ( ll, ·6, 2 ); Union ( l, 1, l ); thePayment,
guidlines say, Policy of The Netherlands Sop.m.
University of Rochester (1, l, should be made only for hours ciological Association and Inworked (with no vacation or teracademic Social Science
November 12. Diane Di Pri- l) .
.
ma, author of RevoluliDnary
Candidates a~pted here "'!d holiday pay). Long-term JOb Council, Amsterdam, November
Lettcw Fillmore Room, 7:30 a mean grade pomt average _m commitments should be avoided 3-4, and at the Interna"tional
p.m. '
their college work of 2.752. VIS- and two weeks tenninatioo no- Conference on Applied Social
tice is considered "reasonable." Science and Productivity in
November 12. Coffee house. }~ 5~ ~v~= A work schedule of up to ll&gt;-20 Developing Nations, organized
Norton, 9 and 11 p.m.
.
for an average_ semester load of bows per week is permitted.
by the Turkish Productivity
November 12. Appalachian l5.:t bows. The Long Island"'These guidelines are not in- Center, Ankara, November 8Women'~ ~ Morpn~ New York City area provided teDded to increase or decrease 13.
West VJJgllll8, present 1 n g 62.8 per cent of the visitors the present rate of pay for any Visiting Pro{ellor at Leyden
mountain music, F i II m o r e accepted for enrollment here; currently employed student," _ In 1970-7~ •. ~ van de Vall
Room, 9:30 p.m.
Centzal New "York was next Mr. Conklin says. They are, served as vwting P':"f"SS!"r of
November 13. "It's All Right with -18.~ per cent. Students however, to be applied for any sociology 1!-t the Uruvers1ty of
To Be A Woman Theatre," (f'O!II Western New York ac- student employed after October Leyden, w he r e be taught a
New York, preoentmg skits, im- 01X111_ted for 15~ ~cent of the 20. (The eurrent federal oalary grad!"'!" semlnat &lt;!n the U91! of
proYisatlona aDil performances aocepliiiiCies With 2:9 per cent freeze prohibits any changftl in ~unstic ~ m org~­
based riD experiences in the commg from the Mohawk Val- current hourly rates.)
ti~ an8ly818. An essay on this
lives of the cast.
ley-Catskill area.

By ROBERT R. ANS'l'E'IT
~tor.

Traruder

~

State-wide

&amp;stivalRJr
kb;1ern Wman

57

Proeram

Report

van •

V•R

subject in combination with a
selection of the students' papers
was published by that university's Institute of Sociology.
The author of articles and
books on comparative labor relations, van de Vall served also
as a ronsultant to various European unions and management
associations. An article comparing models of workers' participation appeared in the
D u t c h sociology journal De
Sociowgische Gids, July/ August 1970. A paper "Comparing
Systems o! Workers' Participation in Msnagerial Decision
Making" was read at an international seminar of the Rotterdam and London Schools of
Economics and will be published in a Reader on Comparative Organizations by A 1 an
Graves ( lSE ) editor, Elsevier
Press, 1972.
An article comparing labor
relations in Western Europe
and the United States appeared
in the Dutch labor law journal
Maandschrift Arbeid, April

f~t.!d Ain~~~3.':x,~:' ~
(with Charles D. King, Texas
Tech University ) comparing
workers' participation in Britain, West Germany and Yugoslavia.
Van de Vall's consulting work
centered on introducing individ ual grievance mediation in
European labor relations. He
was invited to speak for anumber of labor and management
audiences and presented a paper on this subject at the 17th
Annual Conference of the International University Contact
for Management Education at
Bergen, Norway, in August.
During his stay in Europe,
van de Vall lived in the international center De Paauwhof
in Wassenaar, near The Hague.
Founded more than 30 years
ago, this is probably one of the
oldest cultural "communes" in
the Western world, he says. It
grants residence to 11&gt;-20 international artists and scholars.
Dr. van de Vall says he "is
grateful to have escaped the
turbulent years of campus disturbance and intra-departmental strife" here at U f B. He says
be "is pleasantly surprised by
an unexpected spirit of collegiality and intellectual stimula-,
lion" now present among
colleagues of the Sociology Departmen t. "There is little
doubt," be conten~ "that with
the intellectual quahtiftl and independent spirit of SUNYAB's
students and faculty, this University still has a great chance
of achieving excellence, even
greatness."

his'

STUDENT BAR OffiCERS
Malcolm Morris has been electec:f

president of U/B's Student Bar
Association. A I s o elected were
John Anderson, secretary; Salty
Mendo~. junior director.
Mary
Ann Hawco, Reed Cosper, Michael
KarRer, Aldridge Willis, Larry Sha·
piro -and Ross Zimmerman, freshmen directors.

•nd

�....

GREFaUER:,

6

~28,JUJ

Craine Heads Panel On ~ Ski in Chamonix' Junket
Abroad Open
Amherst Dorm Policies 1b UIB Peq:ie Is Sclrouled for Ho~
A 13-manber pauel to develop ,......,mendations for oocupaDCY patterns for residential space 011 the new North
Cempus has been named by
Pnloident Robert L. Ketter.
In
· ting the President's

~Residential Facilities, n.. Ketter aslud the poup

to coocem itaelf with both long
and abort-term aaailnment of
aucb space. He pointed out
that the finlt residential facilities are -""&lt;! to be ready
for occ:upaDCY by September of

'-: :,itory-dinin&amp;

complez
deoipled by architect L M. Pei
is preeently under CXIIIIItruction
in the southwest portion of the
new campus near the intersection of Sweet Home and
Rensch Roads. The facility will
include living space for 800 students and a dining hall which
will accommodate approximately .COO. It will he the first sbuoture of any kind to be occupied
on the North Campus.
Ketter aslud the Council to
bear in mind that many University students may wish to be
affiliated with the residential
colleges, living-learning units
which will each enroll 400 resident and 600 commuter students, while other students will
simply want living space.
About five per cent of the University's undergraduate teeching load is now carried by 15
collegiate units. Thirteen of
these units presently do not occupy their own physical space
on the South Campus.
Thomas K. Craine, director
of architecture and planning
for the Office of Facilities Plan-

~tte~~chairman

Other members are:
Mrs. Toni Barbour, residence
director, Macdonald Hall; Robert Bell, a minority student affairs coordinator; M a d i s o n
Boyce, assistant director or the
U/ B Housing Office; William
M . Fritton, senior advisor, Division or Undergraduate Studies; William R. Greiner, associate provost, Faculty of Law
and Jurisprudence;
Spot Guberman, vice president, Student Aasociation; Dr.
Andrew W. Holt, associate
dean, Graduate School; Elizabeth M . Kaiser, associate professor, School.of Nursing; Alan
Miller, president, Inter-Residence Council; Michael Nicolau, president, Graduate Student Association:
Tbomaa J. Schillo, director,
U/B Housing Office, and Dr.
Wayland P. Smith, profeseor of
industrial engiMering and a
member ol the faculty of C. P.
Snow Colleae.

•

"Failure to includ-e~

meeningful minority participatiQil in the State University of

New Yom at Buffalo Council
on Reeideotial Facilities, anIIOUDI:ed by President Robert L.
Ketter," has been questioned
by Nelson H. Nichols, Jr., executive director of the Buffalo
Urban League. The 13-memher
council was announced last
......lt. (See story above.)
Mr. Nicbols spoke at one of
the worbhope of the Institute
on the Sponsorship of Low and
Moderate Income Housing,
&amp;pOIISOred jointly by the U / B
Urban Affairs Oftice and the
U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development The
two-day institute was held at
theStatlez-.Hilton Thursday and
Friday.
.
Nkbola told the worbhop
-.lion dealing w i t h Section
236 --profit and limited dividend JIIOCDIIII8 that these program~~ ... far from perfect.
H&lt;Mever, be aid, they are the
only JII'OII'8III8 aYiliJahle which

Private bath, double occuThe University&amp; sixth annual ski trip, December '1!1- pancy rooms, two mMla, gratJanuary 7, will offer skiing uities, and tranaren for ten
The Department or French packages in Chsmonix, France, days are being offered in the
and the Council on Interna- for as little as $298, including center of Chamonix for $318
(at the Les Gourmets Hotel)
tional Studies are looking for air Care and accommodations.
Other ski packages are avail- and $328 (at the Les Croix Hostudents and faculty membenl
inlere6ted
in
studymg
at
able
for
up
to
$328
for
the
11- tel). Some triple hotel aocomP~ praised the new Area University of Grenoble m day, 1(}.night trip and it is also roodations are available at the
office of HUD-FHA and the France. The program is for possible to elect air transporta- same rates; and some slnile
Buffalo office of the U .S. ne. either a semester or a Cull aca- tion only, either to Geneva or rooms, for $50 extra.
partment of Housing and Urban demic year and allows students Copenhagen, for $196 roundFee-~g students only will
Development and others who to take regular courses in hu- trip.
receive a $4 allowance from
haw asaisted the Urban League manities and social sciences, inThe flight will be vis Scan- their 1971-72 student activity
in its efforts to begin sponsor- dependent study, and advanced diriavisn Air Systems ( SAS )
ship of badly needed new French language classes or to DC-8 jet, non...top from Ni~ fees.
For information, call Norton
houses.
student teach in French pri- agara Falla to Geneva. PassenHowever, he indicated that mary or secondary schools. gers headed for Copenhag!'f' Hall, ext. 3602/3603 (Rooms
serious questions arise concern- Students are accompanied by a will continue on from the SWUIB 323/316) or contact the SchUS&amp;meisters Ski Club, Room 318,
ing the per(o~or the pre- U/ B faculty advisor who super- capital.
sent housing program. It even vises the program in coordinaThe $298 ski package in- Norton, 2145.
has been urged that a $50 bil- tion with the University of cludes, in addition to air fare,
The University Travel Cenlion national trust fund be estab- Grenoble. While in . France, apartment- chalet accommoda- ter is sponsor of the trip. Its aolished to supply rooney needed students are housed with tions (four person occupancy), tivities, programs and servioes
to solve America•s housing French families.
two meals, gratuities and trans- are made possible by student
problems.
Applications are now being fers, for ten days in Gran~ JWc, activity fees through Sub
accepted from students for ~ France, outside ChamoniL
Bosnl I, Inc.
spring semester. Faculty applications for resident director for
the '72-'73 year are also being ~ricy~-----------taken. Deadline for both is (Con~d from I, coL 6)
ucation; Harry Poppey, Perearly November.
with respect 1&lt;1 minority in- sonnel;
Requirements Co~ the faculty voluement. This should he
Roosevelt Rhodes, Minority
President Robert L. &amp;otter resident director are an exten- done with a view to improving Student Affairs; Henry Richhas called upon the University sive knowledge or French, ex- the organization. Some ques- ards, associate vice president
community to join him "in perience living in France, prov- tions the Committee should ad- for academic affairs; Hector Himaking a financial contribution en administrative ability, and dress itself to with respect 1&lt;1 vera, PODER; Mrs. Theodore
to the continued existence of the capability or giving instruc- minority involvement are: (a) Robinson, student; Rich a r d
tion or doing advanced research should the current special pro- Siggelkow, vice president, stuthe Day Care Center."
In a letter circulated to fac- at Grenoble. The director will grams and educational oppor- ~t affairs· Barbara Sims, diulty, staff and others on cam- be on the U/B payroll while in tunities for minorities still op- rector, E q' u al Opportunity;
France with no differences in erate under the current organ- Joan Stamper, acting director,
pus, Ketter said:
"Certainly those of us who fringe benefits, etc. Transpor- ization? (b) does this current Black Studies; Barry White,
have dedicated ourselves to tation costs will be paid and a organization facilitate their ac- Native American Cultural
higher education should do all modest sum allowed for travel complishing their function? Awareness Organization;
within our power to aid those related to the program, office and, if not, (c ) what modifies- George Wyatt, Office of the
who seek higher education. In supplies and a part-time secre- tions would be suggested?"
Mayor, City of Buffalo.
too many cases, educational"as- ~·~~~~ddJ:.!"J:!
Ketter also said he was conpirations are thwa.1ed or posttor with clerical and advisory fident that, with the assistance
of the Committee, the Univertasks.
DAY CARE DEDICATION
Current resident director is sity will be able to continue to (Continued from JXJI• I, coL 3)
The campus Day Care Center wut
translate into "effective policy''
A U / B spokesman, in corDr. Yves Courteville.
dedicate its renovated facilities m
Further information and ap- its conviction that "educational recting t h i s allegation, exthe basement of Cooke Hall at 2
opportunities
should
be
made
plained
that the SUNY complications are available from
p.m. Friday, October 29. The 11·
the Director of Overseas Aca- available not simply to the af- pliance review has been "BUBroom Center which now meets
demic Programs._107 Townsend fluent or the gifted, but to all pended" by HEW to allow
standards of ·the Erie County
HEW time to study and react
Hall, or the vepartment or individuals."
Health Department offers care for
Named to the committee are: to procf;!dural guidelines for
French, 214 CroSby.
more than 110 children of stuRowena Adams, Housing Of- such compliance visits which
dents. faculty and staff.
fice; Jean Alberti, director, SUNY has drafted for issuance
The Foreign Area Fellowship University research; · Arthur to all its units. Future compliponed by the responsibilities of Program has announced its an- Anderson, Cooperative College ance review visits will be connual competition for fellow- Center; Shirley Arnold, acting ducted according to these
parenthood.
u0n our campus a concerned ships and grants for disserta- director, EPIS; Dewayne guidelines or whatever modigroup is' now operating the Co- tion research in Africa, Asia, Baker, EPIS student; Warren fied version of them may be
operative Day Care Center with Latin America, the Middle Barber, Anthropology Depart- mutually aooeptsble to both
the main purpose of providing East and Western Europe. ment; William Baumer, Facul- HEW and SUNY. The decichild care which Crees student Grants for special training of ty Senate; Geneva Blackwell, sion on suspension, he said, was
parents to continue their stud- persons who hold a final pro- Admissions and Records: Will made at an Albany meeting
ies.... The University at Buf- fessional degree are also avail- Brown, Minority Faculty and which involved C . E u g e n e
Staff Recruitment: W iII i am Kratz, director of SUNY's Offalo Foundation has agreed to able.
The deadline dates for appli- Byrd, Undergraduate Studies;
fice of Equal Employment Opbe agent for the collection and
Al Cappu, Minority Student portunity, Cbaneellor Ernest
deposit of (gifts for the oper- cations are: Africa and the
Middle
East,
November
15;
Affairs; ·:t..enem. Cole. student Boyer and a Mr. Kiley from
ation of the Center) which will
be or real significance in help- Asia, November 8; Western Affairs; Rev. Kenneth Curry, the Washington HEW Office.
In effect, this 8IJliiCe said,
ing students attain their edu- EW)&gt;pe, November 22; Latin Commission on Human Rights;
America and the Caribbeen, RaymOnd Curtis, Black Stu- SUNYAB was caucht in the
cational obif!ctives."
November 30.
dents Union; Ian DeWaal, Stu- middle of discussions b e Further information and ap- dent Association; Vivisn Dison, SUNY and HEW on how comHymanf'I~-~..L...J
\.JU~ . phcations are available from
assistant director, Equal Oppo,... pliance (as opposed to comT ----1..-~
James Michelli, director, Over- tunity; Edward Doty, vice plaint) visits should be
J..A.UJLaJt:uu
seas Academic Programs, 107 president Jor operations and handled. U /B was acting UDTownaend Hall, ext. 5654.
systems; Paul Edwards, So- der the .SUNY guideliJMs and
The contributions to teachcial Policy and Community the review here was, thus, IJUBing, scholarshi and adminisServices;
Thomas Edwards, pended pending diecualion ol
tration which f&gt;r::ressor Jacob
Lesrning Center; J. D . Eick, the KUidelines at tbe HEWD. Hyman has made in his 25
A
ehift
of
the
Office
of
AdSchool
of
Dentistry; Hon. Ar- SUNY central administrative
years of service at the U/B
missions and Records from thur 0 . Eve, State assembly- level The suspended visit here
Law School were saluted at a Student
Affairs
to
the
Office
of
man;
Robert
Fisk, Educational was the follow-up or secood
luncheon in his honor Friday
the Vice President for Aca- Studies; Harley Flack, assis- visit, after which fiDdings on
at the Statler-Hilton.
demic
Affairs
was
announced
tant
dean,
Health
Related Pro- compliance will he preeented.
Professor Wade Newhouse
fessions;
ln9identallv, the HEW 8.&amp;praised Hyman also for his be- by the University Tueeday.
The tranarer is effective imCharles Fogel, administra- view of SUNY to date has beat
lief in the need for continuing
tion; Sylvis Hart, associate only a pilot visit to {pur dilfer.
contact between the law school. mediately.
According to Dr. Bernard R. dean, School of Nursing; Yiv- ent types ol units; eventually,
and the bar association, for his
support of ooritinuing legal ed- Gelbaum, vice pr.esident for ian L o g a n, MFC student; all units will probebly he ucation, his curiosity about the academic affairs, the move was Michael Nicolau, Graduate viewed. This, the IJP(Ib&amp;nan
law, his interest in the law, and made because "Admiasions and Student Association; Kay Nor- pointed out; is why SUNY feels
his willingness to carry roore ·R ecorda is obvioualy an aca- man, Booth Memorial Hos- that University-wide guidelines
than his share or the workload demic operation. Academic pital; Aug us t .i n Olivencia, are necessary.
planning and institutional re- Equal Opportunity; Francisco
Local Caucus member n..
in the School
The luncheon, sponsored by ....m roquire the kind or data Pabon, Puerto Rican Studies; Peter Gessner, member of the
the Law Alumni Association, DOrmally handled by Admis- Walter Petty, acting chairman, State-wide C a u c u s steering
wiJs attended by over 200 at- sions and Records."
Elementary and_Remedial Ed: Committee, refused to'comment
The move will facilitate cotorneys, judges and faculty. _
on any action the local unit
County Court Juilge Frank ordination between A&amp;R and a
mar take on the s e matters
-coNcERT POSTPOilm
R . Bay1er, president of the ' new Institutional R e 8 e a r c h A University Chamber On:Mitnt claiming that the Reporlel'a efLaw ·Alumni, presented Prof. Unit, hmded by Dr. Charles concert, scheduled for Slturdoyl fort to obtain such information
Hyman with a p~ from the Jelbey, which is also hiKised November 6, ot 8:30 p.m. has was an attempt at administrag r o u p in recogrution of his administratively in Aaidemic been postpo!Md.
tive inllltration of the Caucus'
Alfailll.
quarter century of service.
alJaim.
can produce any quantity of
low and moderate income housing for larger families at this
time in Erie County other than
the inadequate public housing

tt&gt;e

Funds Asked
&amp;Day Om?

Caucus-

AtLaw

A&amp;R Is(Shifted

�·~

7

28,1971

--.cia'-. profeaao r,

GREPORTS

a

&lt;NOTES

.

Jam. M:.

•

DICKD'.

-.x:iafe

::.-~~~
~yo;.,~~~::":.~:
1-;~~-a::::

GJlEOPLE

:dfe:w~~~
AWARDS
vanoecl Scieoce Seminar on Tocbma'IJ:a:O:.~~~l':::: ~ ~~!fo; ~~eF~
~r"20~~

~ -=~~~
year, P.&amp;.ftlaA. K.

Wedoeoday,

::.= J: ~

DUI'PHD.,. RICH-

::::

~the~F~~J~y~rt

~=":f·~~,;~~=
tical Inference in the Analysis of

Clinical Data." UCLA Conference
Mosby Award for high perform- on Statistical Computing, Loo
ance d uring the previous year, ~eles, California; ..Scientific
t bir d year, &amp;OBDT Dl BUNCO. Reporting,'' University of Iowa.
f"U(aaCX: a. HUBT; eecond year, "' Iowa City.
A11D A. BAVAO&amp;.

SUSAN 1 . HAICI:L, 8ftVI:N :1. MOB.-

~l~·r~~nU:

ance du.rinc tbe previous year,

n:i.oJUN,

profepor,
psychology, "The Sources of"In-

DL

MABY1N

~fiegr:ogttu~:ne:,•. in~~te~~

third year, KAitC I . L E 1 TN E 8,
NEWlUN sa.; second year,

national Congress of the A.ssociation for the Psychophysiological

MICHAEL V. KUBPIIY, TDIOTHY T.

Study of Sleep, Belgium.

G£080&amp;

NOS"'''I.ANT; fint year, BDtNARD
ALPGT, SUSAN P. RUD£0ND.

s.

during
Children's Hospital Prize for ability U! understand diseue in child-

;~ ~ ~r

Awant for
outstanding work in PliYchiatry,
MAltY lANE lUSBIE.
Physiology Award. for ouf":Stand·
ing performance m Phya1ology,
DONALD IL CRIZNE.

Ernest Witebek:y Memorial Award
for outstanding performance in
microbiology, IDL NOB TRANT.
MICHAEL IL SAVONA.

James A. Gihoon and Wayne J .
Atwell Anatomical Award for

~~~":""...:,:.."':~~

Komel L. Terpian A w 8 r d for
knowledge of pathology during
second year, BARRY sANDERS.
Roche Laboratories A w a r d for
highest ranking student during
first and second years, MR. SA·

~~~r Award for three years of
academic excellence,

THOMAS

1.

LAWLEY.

Dr. John Watson Award for ex·
cellence in medicine, 1 o H N w.

~:·Omega Alpha honorary 80+
ciety, MIL DI BUlfCO, JIB.. HUBT,
~ ;;:,~~~~ B'mPHEN
ARMEN IIAGDASAJIUN, graduate atu·
dent, linguistics, bas been

eaFo:t,.

~.';,.,'::i'i:!n~.,I'u!'.l.:t:,';, ot~

De

A

u.\:~~~-rmenian

professor,
physics, ..Infrared Luminescence

DB.. JOSEPH C. BOFPMAN,

Alumni Auociation Award for

Jthl'::Ja;;;~..._achi~-t

Aft' ·

811'8,

Hl:llMAN SCHWAIET$, profesaor, Law
School, received a distinguiahed

~~ru:::~~cii ~w:t

~wT~~:~reU~v:~i~r:r
Reading, England.
DR... PlYARE L. JAIN,

professor, pby.

~:; ~SSin::;c~Mt!:~~~:

cleon Interactions," 1971 Inter·
national Symposium of Electron
and Photon Interacti
at H.1 h
Energy, Cornell Uni~:Uty, I
aca, N.Y.; " Multiparticle Pro.
duction in K+P Interaction at
12 7 GeV/c" and "Tw p
T~pology iJ{ +P Inelastic (&amp;~e
ward Scattering at L2 GeV/c,"

tt.

American Physical Society Meet-

ing, University of Rochester.
MAIIGAR&gt;:T B. NIMN,

director, Adult

Advisement Committee, continu·
ing education, "Opportunities for
Women in the 70's," meefin&amp;" of
the Doctors' Wives Club of Buf.
falo General and Meyer Memori·
al hoapitala.
DR. WILLIS OVERTON,

assistan}!tro--

!::!
~~:~~ :t'~tell~:
al Change in Aging.'' American
Psychological
vention.

DR..

DONALD

Association

PARSONS,

Con·

''Inelastic

~~~~~~dr! ~~=conE~~

Agency and US-Japan Seminars
:,:.~~n~~:. Electron Micro.
DR. DEAN c. PRUITT, professor, psy.
chology, with S. LEWIS, "Orientation, Aspiration Level and Com·

ti~&amp;tio~~A:n!ri~te~::

chologi~ AssOciation Convention,
Washington, D.C.

DIL WORTHINGTON G. BCBENK,

.JR.,

Richta. Mr. Schpartz was

t:FoodFi~ws '/nr ~~ ~~~

recognition of the civil and human
rights of the priaonen at the At·
tica Correctional Facility."

:S!:.~=~V Coil~ !(~:

man

~"bri:! !t!,~~m:..!re=.~r:;

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DR.. KOK'ft BL\U, research profes.
aor, biopbyoics, hao been chooen
president-elect ol the SocietY ol
Nuclear Medicine.
DR. IIJWIK P. BOILANID., profee·
aor, psychology, appointed aaaoci·
ate editor, Socionutry.
DL AKDt4 IBIHABA., profeaor{"·phy·
sica, hao been appointed consultant, Department of p h Y I i c-.,
Univeroity ol Rocheoter.

Following Portacaval Transporla·
tion," "On.Line =utation of

geona.

associate
professor, political science and DL
HARWITZ, 8..Sf0Ciate pro-fessor, economics. spoke to the

OIL CLAUDE E. WELCH.
xm::BJCLL

Bulfalo World Hospitality Forum

on the economics and politics of
Kenya.

PUBLICA'.fiONS
BRUCZ T. ~D. lecturer,
physics, and DL .JUEBCEN HEBER·
8880C:iate professor, "Approzi.
,.;te Theoretical Shape or the
Mossbauer Spectrum of a 'T'hick
Split Absorber," Phy•iu fAtten.
DR. MlCHEL ~ research BS--

DR.
L£

~~~:=:; ~Jr: =~~~·~i~;:cs:':~ ·~t
the National Cancer Institute
Committee on Neoplastic Tranaformatioa.

PRESENTATIONS

\\eddyCanmunique-

CV/B

· Iaotitule,

ON

pediatzia..

~~ted
. .,~-':
Health
~IW-

ina," Science.

~v:~tb~~:.ntr:;

Arous'ing Communications, False
Physiological Foeclback and the
Acceptance of Recommendations,..
~;;:rP1,~1wfoX::.nmental and soDB. CHIZUKO JZAWA, assistant pro.
fessor, (IIIYchOIOCY, "M......d and

Spaced Practioe in Paireci-Aooociate Leaminc: List Venuo Item

~~w.%!~~~!1!~t

Trial Potentialinl! Model," Jou.&gt;nal of Mathematical PaycholoiY·
Dll. ~ 1. MCIBA.AC. act-inc
cbainnan, pbarmacoiOCY. "Cardiovaacular and Muocular i:lfecto or
Venom from Coral Snake," Tori.

coo.

~"ir
Latest statiatica
tbe University's U~
campaip ..._. that $77,462
has been raised ol tbe soai ol
$100,000,
77.4 per cent.
Every effort ia being made to
contact each of tbe 6,000 fulltime employees of tbe Uniwrsity in hopes of readting tbe
goal Divisioos w h i c h have
neared or~ their quotas
are: Engineering and Applied
Sciences, 140 per cent; Educational Studies, 103 per cent;
Facilities Planning, 110 per
cent; Law and Jurisprudence,
130 per cent; Millanl Fillmore
College and Continuing Education, 116 per cent; President
and Executive Vice President's
Otlioe, 182 per cent; Research,
150 per cent; University at Buffalo Foundation Inc. and Alumni, 204 per cent; Student Afla.i.rs, 95 per cent; Weotem New
York Nuclear Research Center,
97 per cent.
Subdivisions w i t h 100 per
cent or more of llieir goals in·
elude: Admissions an d Records; Architecture and Environn&gt;ental Design; School or Business Management; Chemistry;
Center lor Critical languages;
Cultural Affairs; Environmental
Health; Financial Aid; Instructional Communications Center;
Mathematics; Medical Technology; Music; OccUpational Therapy; Otlioe or Equal Opportunity; Physical Education; Physical Therapy; Physiology; POlitical Science; University
Placement an d Career Guidance; Speech Communication.
The next meeting or the Report Committee for the United
Fund will he held on Monday,
November 1, at 4:00 p.m_ in
Room 201 Hayes Hall

or

...

(c-tilwM , _ 8, crrL I)
~ Probluu; 1
oical '~'"-"; 1:~-,
a! 'f'ltuopy; 1:&amp;G-N....... CGN;

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

i~~~~.:_2~

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

=-

.J::'i: 8'eo~b&amp;.:::

~ ':c!:~:;l :~~

CO!ftDIJ"'OtAKY JllBUE IN NlJII8.
lNG# : Power and the Profeaaitm,

!~"":~ t!'~'::;.:

in all phases ol practice to become more aware of power-ita

:r~~~c:=~
in nursing and health care. Exec.
utive· Motor Inn. .(243 Genesee
St., $9.00. For further inform&amp;·
lion call Continuing Nuning Education, 831·5548, 5549.

~

Mr. Hiller, with aalistanoe aDd
demonstrations from the perform·
en, will discuss, in terms mean·
ingful to the layman, the' worb
to be performed. Cage and Hiller
are s t ron g communicaton of
much of the unrest and value.
questioning which have charac·
terized contemporary American
society.

COlLEGIATE SYST&amp;M SYMPOSIUM•:

PORTRAITS OP STUDENTS : a one.
man show of photographs by Don·

PODIA11tY

TELEPHONE u:cTUBE#:

Jeffrey Carrel, DPM, and J. Lee
Carrel. DPM, Entrapment Neur·
apathies of the Foot - Etiology

~gio~~~~

srn,;

receiving stations, call 835.o728
for further information, 11 :30
a.m.
C.P. Snow College. Simulation
Games. 233 NOrton, l .P.m.-5 p.m.
and 7 p.m.-closing.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY TELEPHONE

LECTURE# : Dr. E. Russell Hayes
and Mary C. Ricotta, Hist.ochem·
istry of Special Stains ( B eyond
H &amp; E) , spOnsored by Regional
Medical Program. 40 receiving
stations, call 835-0728 for further
information, 1:30 p.m.
OOI...t.EC.IATE SYSTEM SYMPOSWM •:

College A, demonstration by Tom
Mardirosian, Self Discovery
through Dramatic Techniqu e ,
Haas Lounge, Norton, 4-6 p.m.
BJOCHEMISTKY SEMI N A R#: Dr.

Charles R. Cantor, chemistry, Columbia University, New York,
Stu.di.es on the Structure of Bac·
terial R ibosomea, G·22 Capen, 4
p.m.

EXHIBITS

r.!o~· !L~rgru'4~t:. ~r::

vember 2·November 20.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
of works by
Robert Graves and James Joyce,

PERMANENT &amp;XBIBIT

Room 207, Lockwood Library, 9
a.m.·S p .m.
Wo..LlA.M BURROUGHS exhibit, 2nd
floor balcony, Lockwood Library.
PABLO NERUDA works by the

Nobel Laureate

poe~

Room 207,

Lockwood Library.

FRED BOYLE

publications on

d,ia..

ITb~a:;. ~~~~~.~~embe~
NOTICES
BlJ..,LEL

CONVEitSA.TlONAL

B:EBaW

CLASS hao been divided into an
H.ILLEL BOWUNC: Hillel HoU.9e, 7
elementary and an advanced
The membership program for p.m.
group. The elementary group
the Faculty Club is now undermeets on Mondays at 7 p.m. Tbe
way. Special membership cards 00I..LBCIATE SYSTEM SYMPOSCUM•: advanced group meets on Sun·
have been distributed which CoUege A, Role Playing and dis· days at 12:30 p.m.
cussion,
Man
and
His
lrutitu·
make the member eligible for tum.s, 231 Norton, 8 p.m ..closi.ng. R..UlADAN (fasting month for Musfree after-lunch coffee and,
lims) began Thursday, OcL 21.
eventually, for the purchase of COHPtmNG CZN'I'EK U&amp;m SIZVJCES Calendars are available. Salal.ul
liquor ( the board of directors I!E&gt;UNAB#: COBOL, see Tuesday Taraweeh eve r y evening at 8
listing.
p.m.. 264 Norton. Salatul Juma'a
are in the process of applying
for a club license) . The Green FILM • •: Fear/as Vampire Kill·
fo~.da~o~tfo:-·
~
Room has been ronnally named .,.. (Roman Polanski), 147 Diel4356, 833-5991, 834-5566,835-1835.
the Palmer Room in honor of endorf, 8 p.m.• free.
Ram&lt;Uihan M ubarok.
A
combination
comedy·borror
Mrs. Irene T. Palmer, former
film made as a spoof of all the TRANSFZ&amp; STUDENTS: Thoee who
secretary-receptionist.
old Tod Browning Dracula fil.ma. have been asked by the Office of
A very funny and very fascinatRobert M . O'Neil, professor ing film.
~!;!:io~ S:Od ~= ~Jlof
of law at the University of CalTlu Wild ChildiMisJ- transfer 1tudenta' perceptions of
ifornia, formerly assistant to PILMB*•:
si.uippi Mermaid, two films by this campus are urged to come to
the president at this Univer- Francois Trutraut. Conference 233 Norton Union, on Monday
sity, has been n8med provost Theatre, check s h o w c a s e for and Tuesday, Nov. 1 and 2. at
and vice-president lor academic times, !acuity and staff $1.25, one ol the following times : 10
affairs at the University Of Cin- students $.75 or $.50 before 6 p.m. a.m.; 12 noon; 2 p.m.; .f p.m. A
maximum of 30 minutes will be
cinnati by ~dent Warren G. Through Sunday, Nov. 7.
noecled.
In the first film, French vilBennis, fonDerly vice president
for academic development here.
~ethe
ca:!d:
':.,~Y
.!~'d"i!~
INTERVIEWS
The appointment is effective
various institutions 90 that be ON.cAMPUB .TOB lN1'1!::RVIEWB : Tbe
January 1,.197:;
may become a nonnal productive
ua inte ·ewin&amp;' program,
member of society. The task of OD...c&amp;:mP
December 17 in
For the year 1970, State Uni- his culturization falls to Dr. Itard
aemeoter and from Januversity at Buffalo ranked 6lst (played by Truffaut) wbo abows
17 to April 29 in the apring
in the nation in receipt of spon- us not only bow we perceive. but ~ter, offers the opportu.Dity
sored federal funds, amounting the questionable humanity of our fo r individual interview~ with
to $15,216,000. MBssachusetta humanizing processes.
educational, busin-, induatrial
Institute or Technology was
::::::;:;
rust with federal grants of
$100,177,000; University of bride, but when abe arrives, she are invited to interview whether
reaemble her photograph. they will complete their · oourae
Michigan, second, $59,059,000; doesn't
It is the Trufl'aut of JuJ.a d Jim ._ work in January or May 1972.
University of Washington, that we are reminded of "' in this Registration forms are available
third, $58,977,000; H a r v a r d, tale of fataliatic love which ia at from Univen.ity Placement and
fourth, $55,562,000: and, Stan- the same time a conscious tribute Career Guidance in Hayee Anna:
c.
ford,' fifth, $53,479,000. Total to the fil.ma or Jean Renoir.
federal obligations for 100 uni- oorm&lt;GIJ!SBIII) VIBITING UIICrU!Ial*:
FIJDAY-29: Columbia Preobyversities was $2,288,808,000. As Fred Hoyle, director of the In- terian Medical Center.
reported last week in the Re- atitute of Theoretical Astronomy.
MONDAY-1: Travelen lnlur·
porw, for tbe 118C81 year 1970=~"'~· I~f~ ance Company, Eastman Kodak
71, U/B ezpeoditwes on spon- endorf,
8: 15 p.m., lree.
~.
(technical engineering
sored researd1 a n d training
COLI.ciA.'IB 8YS1'DI 8Ylll"OSltJK•:
'J'UIISDA.Y-2 : Eastman Kocl.ak
amounted to $17,202,022.
N- College or Modem Educa- Company (tecbnical engineering),
tion p8Jiei diacuaaion, Innovative EPC Servioea, Inc.
RECEPTION FOR -£111
wmNa!D.\Y---3: Eastman K&lt;&gt;Educational Institutions, I~ DiefThe Office of Equal Opportunity Is eudorf, 8 : 30 p.m_
day Company (non-tecbnical and
sponsoring a reception for women
OONCDT Da&lt;ONsntATION*: Ropr technical engineering), Ae_tna ~­
!acuity and staff ol the Uniw:Bity,
Shields, pianiot; and the Concord.. suran.oe Com pan r• U!"vennty
Thursday, November 4, from· 3-!; · String Quartet will play muaic nf Hoopttal-Boston UruYenllty.
_p.m. in Room 304 Towntencl Holl. John C...e and Lejaren Hiller.
THUIISDAY--4: Eaa~ Kodak
Invitations have been issued. with SI"JJI80reil by Colle&amp;a B in co- Co m p a n y (non-tecbnical and
R.S.V.P.'s
by October operation with Studimt .A.ocia- technical engineering), Curticeboo and the De~t nf Burns, Wes.t Seneca Central
129; call ext. 5271 or 3011.
Music. Baird, 8 : 30_ p.m_, free.
Seboola (Ene County) .

:cf

:;:_ry

...

:h!"r.:if

o!'er~n~i!:r ~

req.-

through

c=.!jd:~~=~=

�8
:~andsm:t~

been the pe..-1 ~ ol
Carl Dolmetoch.
~ Rota••: Mmuoa Fam·
ily, 1st floor cafeferia, NorloD, 9
p.m.
PILil00 : THX-11$8 (Georp Lucu), Conference 'I'b.tre, Norton. dieek oboweue for ti..-,
faallty and $1.25, s~ta
S.75 or $.50 before 6 p.m. 1'hropgb
Snnday, Oct. SL
THX is a member of a drug
oedsted oociety which is always
COIUJcious of tta heine watdled.
bas production as its primary

Q.=~o~~~~

men. 'Ilaat's nOt a social

c:Cte

The Future is here.

1HXII38
. .Open to rnembets of the Unlwersltr.
o prolessU1ol interest in the subject
Contoct SUzonne Metzger, 831-2228, lor listings.

•Open to public:
#Open aniJ to -

-

THURSDAY-28
OON'l'INUINO D &amp; N TAL DUCATION

coUBSE#: Dr. Alan l. Drinnan

=n•"~c!ll:f:l:.
~ Z:.!i
Office, 146 Capen. 9 am.-5 p.m.
PIIYSICAL T R &amp; &amp; J. P "y

'I'ZUCPBONE

LECI'Uii&amp;#: Dr. Kyuha Lee and

panelists Dr. James E. Griffin and
John Noetrant. Inatrumentation

TUESDAY-2

'dt~t~:.~::::r!l.!~
a! Medical Progrom, .fO """"""C
atationa. for further iDlormation
call 896-0728, 1 p.m.

Hillel House.

::e=n~v!:.rint!'a rotefin

we:

gawa.JI•Ii8ion

Hoo, Cbina.
Aliee in Wonderland (1933, N .
Z. McLeod) stars W.C. Fields,
Gary Cooper, Cary Grant. Mae
Marsh and Baby Le Roy. You11
have to follow the credits care-

~~:erebew!.iX~Lum:oii!:tthei!

Graot is the Mock Turtle) in tbis
rather absurd adaptation of Lewis

~::J::io:::Z lfv~J:.n ~~~ !(#fel~s~ 'H~~~aKu:'~~

obedience to the beav&lt;nly father Carroll Not a great film. but a
ivben the heavenly (ather ben dis- priceless curio.
a~ is an iron cage.
••tn this experience of nothingFRIDAY-29
,...., we find that the bottom ben
dropped out, neither in the -earth CONTINUING D B N T A L BDUCATION
COUIISE#
: Adoonced Periodonl4!
bome nor the sky bome is there
any home at all-at the core of Surg&lt;ry; Dr. Robert S. Genoa, Dr.
....,ry aelf and every culture there Sebastian Ciancio, and Qr.-Ru&amp;sell Nis&lt;J111ard. 146 Capen. 9 am.is aboolute nolhinpeos.
''Tbe n&gt;&lt;:OYery of m,ythical con- . 5 p.m., participation limited to
12.
~ is """ of the peat
achievementa or modem ocbolar- CBA.BAD BABBATR SBRVICB*: Cbabad
abip - - - Civililtation ben indeed House. ~ Main SL, 7 p.m.
been baaed on the repr&lt;!88ion , of

ulty aub, 3: 30-5 P-"'-

PBYIIICB OOLLOQWUM•: Dr. Wun&lt;r Brandt, New York Uniwr-

~:"ftia.::.:.:. s:.:_

Refnlobmenta
3:30p.m. ·.

112

Hoc:bst&lt;tt&lt;r,

BIOCBIDOC&amp;L PIL\IDIIAOOLOGY - BI().CIIIDOIIftY IIKIIINAit 0 : Dr. Hellry

· :;.~~~
ZN1! t~~t::: l::' ..,

........ , Putney &amp;oope, op&lt;JIIOOred
~.

by Community Adicm Corpo, 1.f0

ftr"'.,;,.,-~t!,_ ~45m":i:

,.,_ 'a nd at abowtime, NortoD
Tidret Ol&amp;ce. 1'hrouch Saturday,
Oct. 30.
~- J)oom8y'o ..,roioa ol
MadiooD
ben Putney

A--

~Pi:;~===
ll'lmo(o..-1 iDtD Ooairmon ol the

.Boord of Tnlfla and SouL "Vi-

House, 8:30 p.m.

Manson Family, 1st floor cafeteria. Norton. 9
International H o u a e p.m.
and Alice in Wonderland. 147
PILM• •: THX·1138, see Friday
Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
lnJernational Hou.« (1933, A.E. listing.
Sulherland) stars W.C. Fields, · m.M*: Putney Swo~. see ThUJ'&amp;Stu Erwin, Bela L u g o s i and day listing.
Bums &amp; Allen. It is one of the

tun: Diakclia of Rep.....Wn and
Liberation~ Conference Theatre.
Norton, 3 p.m.
Professor Bellah is one of the
outatandiDg ocbolara on world religions and is the autbor of Tolwand Beyond Belief:

NEW ·FACULTY ORIKN'l'A'ftON: gueet
speaker, Richard Sigellww, vi&lt;:e
president for student affain.. Fac-

%.deMj=~~~~~~~

OOP'FD HOUSE**:

FILMS* •:

~J~:=~~
=~~Z:F~~tudi~!:!;: :~.:=~~rl~=
TM Indiuidlull in Ameri&lt;an Cui-

!=tis~O:r~libe~

SATURDAY-30

ft~&lt;no~t;'!.~: ::~

=:~~= ::r.CIN:~

SUNDAY--31
llll.U.L AC'nVl'nBS : Talmud claa,
Hillel library, 3 p.m. Supper, Hillel House, 6 p.m.. reservations
made at Hillel Table or by calling
836-4540, followed by lecture by

=i

ft:~~~~,!;; ~jmR~~

form Ju.df.JUm, 8 p.m.
flLM"": THX-I138, see Fridaf

listing.

BOIUlOR

NIGHT AT TRII:

OPiil&amp;l•:

presented by U/B Opera Club
under the auspices of the Student
Association and the Department
of Music, featuring a recital of
opera scenes with ghosts. witches
and vampires. Baird, 8:30 p.m.,
free.
Tbe program will open witb
the Graveyard Scene from Don
GiovtJiliJi by MozarL Performe.ra.will be Robert Willoughby as Don Giova.nni. Peter Kundorler as
Leporello, and Edward Boqusz as
The Statue or the Commendatore. 'The scene will be under the
direction of Edward B o q u s z..
Patricia Gutzwiller will aerve as

CLINICAL PASTORAL J:DUCA'ftON Ta.-

EPBONB I.IICTVD#: Lewis R Bigler, chaplain intem. TM Patient
with an Alcolwlie Problem, Part
II, sponoored by Regional Medical Program, .fO receiving otations,
call 835-0728 for further information. 10 a.m.

~ :J! ~":,;!.."':! ~

es, Coolerence Theatre, 12:30
p.m.. free.
NUISING

~ONJ:

UIC'I'UR&amp;#:

Ann Collard, RN., Introvenouo

~~~~i'b;n~~ T:.~
Program. 40 receiving stations,
call 835-0728 for further information. 1: 30 p.m.
LA T J N

COI..l.I1ClATZ

=

JIICIIAI:L TILBON moKAS• : will
give an infonnal talk and li8C!k
exchange witb otwlents, preoent.-

.oo:RICAN ux:TUD:

Dr.

Barry Lenlnek, asoociate prof.,._

~=p~. ~~=-"m

Townaend, 3-4: 30 p.m.
'1 ius is the aeoond in a series
of 6 lectures on Latin American
studies. S~ent lectures will

be bold on Nov. 9, 16, 23 and 30.
For further information call Lin-

guialia Department, 5031.
PD.ll**: Citizen Kane (Orson
Welles, 1941), 147 Di&lt;lendorf, 3
and 8 p.m., tree.
· Based upon the incredible ca-

reer of William Randolph Hearst

::0 ~s~Fa toa!Ur:~
structed newspaper empire.. Felt
by many to be the greatest American film o( the sound era.

CllOSS..COUNTRY JUTCR• : SL Bona-

venture. at G r o v e r Cleveland
Course, 3 :30 p.m.

OOKPVTINC &lt;ZN'rD UBa BI:RVICBS

BDm&lt;Ait#: COBOL. Cbris Siderakia, instructor, Room 10, 4238
Ridge Lea. 7 p.m.
UU.ill .l&amp;"1't1RB* : David Halberstam, preoented by UUAB Literary Arts Committee and UUAB

8&lt;;=::::

8Y'8TJ3(

8YJIP08RJK*:

New College of MOdem Education preoenta films, Hi6h Sclcool,
and another on Summeihill. Conference Theatre, Norton. 12 DOOD3 p.m. Also Thursday, NOYelllber

"OOLI.BGIATB 8Y8'!'BK 8YJIP08RJK*:

C. P . Snow College, Simulotion
Games, Haas Lounge, Norton, 1
p.m.-5 p.m.
DIEI'E'I'ICS 'I'CLIICPBONB I..8C'I"'a:#:

Dr. William T . Smytb, Laborotory Data-IU Interpretation and

~~inbyc~....f~:~~

gram, 40 receiving Stations, call
835-0728 for information. 2 p .m.
COLLI:IGIA.TB SYBTI3I: SYllPOBIU)(• :
College A, panel discusoion on tba
advantage of having open ciasarooiDB for handicapped cbildren.
232 Norton. 2 :30 p.m.
J
PATHOLOGY BDONA&amp;#: Dr. Karl
Knigge, chairman. anatomy, University of Rochester School of
Medicine and Dentistry, M•dian
Eminence--Gataua.y to tM PitW...
Wry, 146 Capen. s p.m.
OOI..I.I:GlATB

SY8!D(

BYIIP08IUII.*:

Collece A, aimulotion or Com-

municative Creativity Worbbop,
233 Norton. 4 p.m.

COLI.BGIA'IZ SY'B'nOI BYKP081Ull•:

New College _pf Modem Educat i o n demonstration, Innovative
EducatioDBI Institutions, Canter
Lounge, Norton, 4-6 p.m. Also,
Thurodsy, N~r4.
.
COLUJCIA.TZ 8YB!'Dl 8YKPOBlU)(• :

New College of Modem Educa-

tion panel discussion and work·
&amp;hop, Fillmore Room, Norton, 6-

8- p.m.; rooms 231, 232, 238, 8
p.m.-closing.
PILM:~•: Path. of Glory, Con-

ference

Theatre, 6 p.m..

free.

LINGUISTICS r..ecrtJD•: Dr. Erwin
H. Jo~n. antbropolocy, AA-

thropowiY and LU.,W.tia, 404
Hayes, 7: 30p.m.
BYKP0811J)(• :

g::r~r::L~~
~:~ ::n~~f':Cr::;:; ~offi!'~~~~Co~~~
Norton, 8 p.m.
.
-COLLDlL\ft 8YB'IZM

bepn dissent and caused doubta

He~= !he~oo'7re~::!

.JEWISH XYBTICIBII AND ltABI.ALAB• ; courM offered by Rabbi Gu·

i::
=t~ ~.fim. ~~~
books include TM U~

DIB'nNCUIBBBD VIBli'IHO I&amp;'I'IDia•:

spnng.

=ri~~~
~iety in Ancient Tima, 147

Prize for_Th• Malting of o QUG/1-

Od~ooey of Robert K&lt;nnedy and
a boography of Ho Chi Minb entitled Ho, to be published in tba

DIB'nNGUISBm VIBITINC UCC1'UJDI:I:•:
first bour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8
8 p.m.
( p~
Ernest Fred Hoyle, director of the InBABBATR BaVJCI:S*: Dr. J u 8 tin Bloch's Macbeth will be directed
Hofmann will spook on What io by Denis Azaro, and accompanind S~iety in Mo&lt;Um Timu, 147
by pianist Stepben Brown. PerRecon..tructioni.m~ fpllowed by
Di&lt;lendorf, 8: 15 p.m., free.
0neg Sbabbat and laraeti dancing, formers include Jane Bane, Robin
This is the fint in a aeries of
Willoughby, Joan Collopy, Peter
Hillel House, 8 p.m.
Kundorfer, James Furaell and.
/a::/ty
KULY KUBIC BaliS*: Guest arDenis Azaro.
tista C a r I Dolmetach, recozder
Th.ree excerpts from Der V a.m- ural Sciences and Mathematics.
and treble viol, and looeph Sax- pyr by Heinrich Manchner will An intemationally-rec:opi2ed cosby, barpicbord, in a propam of be directed by Stepben Brown mologist and profeooor of AstronWorks apa.nninc the oea.tu.riee and Robin Willoughby witb Mr. omy, Hoyle ben beld tbe Plumian
from 1588 to 1958. Boird Hall, B r 0 W'D alao eernnc as piano Prof-.rabip of . AotrollODly and
8 : 30 . p.m., general ..mu.ion acccmtpau.iat. Performen iDclude - Experimental Philooopby at Cam$1.50; faculty, otolf and alUIDDi, Edward ~ Sberyl K......,r bridge -University oince 1958. A
very distinguisbed scientist, Pro$1.00; o~ta $.50. Ticbta at llDd Marjone Roeenben.
Norton Tidret Ol&amp;ceTbe final offering will be the
The Dolmetoch-Suby Duo .. Sorcery S c e n e from .Pureell'a
omy and is one of the leading
intemotionally acclaimod for their
proponents o( the ateaclY state
~.,_ of early muoiC. Carl
tbeory of ooomogeD&lt;sio. ·lie ben
the oon ol the rebeen a l"!'der in the populoriza""""""- Arnold Dolmetoc:h wbo
tion o( 8Clence and· has often adcontributed importantly to the Muine Berens, Ann D 'Amico
revival ol anei&lt;nt and instrumenta, is ....,....;.d ·oo a ,.,..,_
.
y. moet authority ---iD tbe interpnta"' ~-......: · ·
r:..a:t;~~(jfi~~
lion nf early DWtJic. looepb Saxed So'¥ lUcent RU«ZrcM. in
by, bom in r.....loa and am-d
MONDAY__:l
by Fonny Dovis, a pupil of Quo
SOlar Plryllico, TM Natun of tM
0
~met AmOid Dolmetoc:h PILil • : October (Sergei Eiom- · Unwene, A Decad.e of Decuion.,

P:,i:Oirom

WEDNESDAY--3
SYJIPOBIU)(• :
Communications Col.lece. c r a f t
display, 234 Norton. A Ia o on
Thursday, N0V1!1Dbc!r 4.
COLUXOIATB 8YII'I"'I:M

Beginnen He-

Dr. Carl W. Backman, chairman,
sociology, University of Nevada,
Reno, Conformity, Room C-34,
4230 Ridge Lea. 12:20, p.m.

Roger Shields, Garry Kvisted,
Douglas Davis, Tsuyaabi Tsitau.mi. Albrigbt-Krwx Art Gallery
roo~ Z.:,~tt t,~oo= Auditorium, 8:30 p.m., free, lim....Joua, unintelligible an d rele- ited to the first 500 people.
vant .. ." -N.Y. Tim&lt;o.
TO&amp;.\B WITH COMMENTARIES: ~
COKPUnNG CBlaD. USER SERVJ&lt;2S hi Hofmann's bome, 12 Colton
SEJUN.&amp;It#: COBOL. Room 10, Drive, 4 p.m. Hillel party witb
band an d refresbments, Hillel
4238 Ridge Lea, 7 p.m.
7p.m.

· BILUCL CLA88EB* • :

SOCIAL PSYCBOLOGY COu.oQUJU)(• :

da ven.u.porteu,.. de ramour . . ."
(.1&lt;011 &lt;h Ia Croix) by G iII e s
Tremblay; Machine Muaic by Lejaren Hiller; Match for 3 PIDyen

r~!.J= .=:art&amp;~

Embassy, will _ . , on Chik-A
N#!JD Rood to Socialiam. Spooooretl
by Council on IntemotioDBI Studies and the Latin American Studenio' .Club. 231 Norton, 9 p.m.,
free, open to the puhlli:.

~o.::!J~=s~~

:;:-~~ney Swope, ..,. Thnrs-

Per·

J.&amp;C'rUD• : Fer·
nando Alegria. noted &lt;lillean DOY-

LA.ftN A.IO:IUC.Uf

receiving stations, call 835-0728
for information. 11 : 30 a.m.
brew. 262 Norton. 12 noon; Jew·
iah Elhia, 262 Norton, 1 p.m.

cu.aion. in. the New Chamber
M u • i c. feat:uri.n.g Ctenophora,
for tape, slides and mixed enoemble by Andrew Sfillu (premiere performance) ; Ice Ale. for

Fron.J.Un of A..tronolfty. 8Dd IIIIVeral boob ol • e i en e e -&amp;etioD.
amona them. A For AlodtoM&lt;da,
Ouian'a Ride and The Androm•da B.-.alt~h-

Dr. Robert E. Reisman, MOIIIJIIe-

soundtraclt.

cious and vile, the most offensive
~ rve ever aeen .. !'-N.Y.

IIILt.m. BOWI.ING:

:it'rl!:.tt&gt;OO:,U.U:a;:~ ~g:

mission $L50, faculty and staff
$1.00, studenta $.50. Tickets at
Norton Ticket Qi&amp;.,._

PRYSJQANS TBLBPBONB IBCTUBB# :

EVENING P'OK NEW KUBic•:

CWEE~'X- COMMUNIQUE

Smit. profeaaor of muaie. in honor
of Fted Hoyle. Worko include
Beetboven'a Sonora ill B Flat
Major, Op. 106 (Hammerlllcwie:r): Beethoven's 33 Variatiou on
o Woltz by Diab&lt;Ui, Op. 120;
Smit's Fant~Uy: TM ForeweU;

oame, at least tbrougb the 25tb
century. This is a beautifully
done film. which is so Yiaually
ezciting (in the style of 2001) os

turbine car race for action f&amp;DS
and a superb electronic music

,j

lllOVDmNfi, VA&amp;IA'IIONB AND FANYASIBB• : Piano recital by Leo

~reL::S li;:tc~thmoe;:'!f ~

!?m-;:rerepi~U:mC~ !o~

...,.

stein. 1928), 147 DiefeDdorf, 3
and 8 p.m., flee_
Dr. Ficlt~~ Merican. -404

LINC.,..... ....,._.:

~~'?E~~=:;

!:"...!= J'.!

Hoff.~~

~~~!:.~Cs~ed.;.':::

«=~~~~m=.
~udeJ!"~~~:
fc~Jfe..""f.!!e:::-.t;:i ~~ ~~~ : n"u.!i'.

rary, Chabad Houae, 3292 Moin
SL,_8 p.m., publit; invited.
Fred Hoyle, director of the In-

Di&lt;I~.

8 : 16 p.m., flee_

~~~~.t
worko include QIIIUUI No. 12, Op.

127, in E-f/at Mojor; Qum:ut No.
1, Op. 18, No . I,"' F Mojor; and
Quartet No. 9, Op. 69, No. 3, U.
-c Mojor. Membero of ~
land Quartet are Donald"W'eilerstein. violin; Peter Salaff, violin;
Martha StroJJBin K a t a, viola;
Paul Katz, oello. Baini 8:30 p.m.,
general admisoion $3.00; faculty
and staff $2.00; SLOO.
Tickets in advance. at NortoD
Ticket Ollice.

THURSDAY--4

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>VOL 3-NO. 7

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

OCT. 21, 1971

Research Outlays
Continue To Climb
University expenditurPS on
sponsored research and training amounted to $17,202,022
&lt;'uring fiscal 1970-71, an increase of 6.5 per cent over
1969-70, Robert C. Fitzpatrick,
acting vice president for research, indicates in his annual
report to the presidenl
As was true last year, U / 8
expenditures ran counter to the
nationa l trend, which is downward.

Amherst-Towers
Reassignffi

TlMtse twin towers, now under construction on thfi Amherst
campus, and originally designated as the first of a series of
such units for the Universft:Ys Health Sciences complex. wm
be OCQJpied by the Department of Biology, a unit of the
Faeutty of Natur.l Sciences and Mathematics, and the Sch~
of Pharmacy, the only Health Sciences school which will move
to the new site. In line with a special task force recommendation, recently accepted by the SUNY Trustees, the schools of
Medicine, Dentistry, Nursing and Health Related Professions
will now remain on this campus (along with the nuclear reactor and several other units) when the remainder of the
University moves to the Amherst North Campus.

Ketter Calls for Formula Grant Financing

fusteador~'Line-ItemSystem

One method ofcbelping the
..m-sity
ters of SUNY to
incorporate~-needed public
aooountability into their operations and, thus, re-kindle public
confidence w o u I d be "to do
away with tbe line-item budgeting procedure w h i c h public
hi~ber education n ow is required to follow," President
Robert L. Ketter suggested in
an address to the c a m p u s
Sigma Xi chapter last week.
Its replacement, he Said,
should be the "formula grant
financing" system which has
already proven successful in
the Province of Ontario.
(Formula budgeting is an accounting procedure which indicates simply the total amount
of moiley an institution will receive, based on the weighting
of various educational costs incurred by the programs ofrered.

Line budgeting indicates specifically the number of positions
and tbe dollars tied to those
positions as well as other support monies for every area
within an iristitution. )
uThe current procedure is
mis-directed," Kett er said,
"and does not serve the true interests of the public, the legislature, the central State University administration, nor the
local campus. It is directed
toward the control of quantity
rather than quality."
Line-item budgeting is, Ketter continued, quoting an SUNY
critic, "absolutely stifling to
local initiative and efficiency
and, experience suggests, never
leads to effective control of
costs, anyhow."

other band, has been described
as providing ua real incentive

for the universities to be efficient and- to manage their affairs
well; any notion that improvement in efficiency in an institution will lead to a corresponding reduction in support is
offsel Long-range planning is
greatly facilitated. Rather than
limiting initiative, the formula
system gives freedom to make
necessary decisions. And, im·
portantly, private donors are
assured that gifts for operating
purposes are an added resource
and not a substitute for public
~pport."

A change to the formula system is necessary, Ketter em(Continued on page 6, col. 1)

During the year, Fitzpatrick
reports, the University also
submitted 581 proposals to potential sponsors, with a net
dollar total of $35,594,263, and
was awarded ~2 grants/ contracts with a total value of
~ 19,406 ,2 99. Approximately
1,500 research I training ac&lt;."'unl" were active, Fitzpatrick
said.
The U.S. Government was
again the leading source of re,;earch funds, supplying $15,416,305, or 89.6 per cent of
total funds expended. Other
sources included : local foundations and associations (funds
administered by the University
at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.),
$847,300, 5 per cent · of the
total; natioruil founilatitlns and
associations, $358,064, 2 per
cent of the total; the Universi ty, $200,960, or 1.1 per cent
of the total; industry, $145,770,
.9 per cent of the total; private
foundations, $128,821, .8 per
c&lt;:nt of the total; state and local
government, $72,800, .4 per
cent of the total; other sources,
$31,982, .2 per cent of the total.
Expenditures we r e divided
among the following types of
activities: research, 57 per cent;
training, 40 per cent; Conferences and public services, 2
per cent; and facilities, adminis tration and library, 1 per
cenl
The Faculty of Health Sciences accounted for 65.5 per
cent
the expenditure total,

or

RMI Incentive for Elficlency

The fo.;,ula &amp;)!Stem, on the

Hull Acting as Grad Head
Dr. McAllister H . H;ull, Jr.,
chairman of the Department of
Ph)'Siai;"has been named acting
chairman of tbe University's
Graduate School by President
Robert L. Ketter.
f!e replaces Dr. Daniel H.
MUlTBy who has taken a leave

from the deanship to assume
responsibilities for programs in
graduate study and research in
the Office-of the Vice Chancellor for Academic Programs on
the central staff of the State
University of New York.
Dr. Hull has been professor
and chairman of the U I B Department of Physics since August, 1969. For the prior three
Y!"lr&amp;. he held the same position at Oregon State University. He was on the faculty of
tbe Yale University Depart..
• ment of Physics. from 1951
through 1966.
Dr. Hull received his bachelor of science degree summa
cum lmuie from 'II'ale in 1948
and his Ph.D. in 1951 He has
authored more than 40 technical - articles, 15 abstracta nf
talks in prnfessional meetings
and 20 articles in encyclopedias or othet educational voltmlef;. He also has written one
book, The Calcubu of Phyaia,
which was pabljabed in 1969.

·:

··--

In a New League . .
Dove loletr&amp;Yesy, former st. louls Cardinal Hnebecloer ond outhar of the Out of Their League, hu ]olneCI the
compuo ~na circuit leocuo. Appeariflc In lost
- . he . . . . hod for pro footboll-''worIIU." "-It," "dehumonizi"W:". ''lick."

an outlay in excess of $10.7
million. Other faculty percentages were: Natural Sciences
an&lt;! Mathematics, 10 per cent,
$1.6 million; Social Sciences
and Administration, 9 per cent,
51.4 million; Educational Studies, 5 per cent, $837,000; Engineering and Applied Sciences, 2.8 per cent, $450,000; Arts
and Letters, .5 per cent, $88,000. This breakdown excludes
the $847,000 administered by
the University at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.

0 the r University divisions
were responsible for the remain·
ing 7.2 per cent of non-UBF
expenditures, including: Law
and Juri s prudence, $8;481;
Graduate Schoo I, $806,316;
Continuing Education, $50,879;
Undergraduate Studies, $82,887; Computing Center, $166,988; and Library. $36,934.
Thirty-four grants/ contracts
in excess of $100,000 were reported, the targest, $1,510,855
for three years, was received
for Dr. Saxon Graham, in support of an Afghanistan Popula(Cont inued on PCJ# 3, col 1)

6Assaults
On Campus
Reports of six assaults and at
least one robbery were received
by campus police Saturday
night following a campus dance
which reportedly attracted 800
youths who were not University
s tudents.
The dance was held in the
dining area of Tower Hall. As
the crowd broke up, campus Police received reports of large
numbers of youths running
through several dormitories including Tower, Macdonald and
Cooke, as well as through NortoEfforts to disperse the crowds
were unsuccessful at first, with
several reports of assault reaching campus securitv headquarters. City of Buffalo Police
were alerted but did not enter
the campus and did not take
part in quelling the scattered
disturbances. Campus police
K-9 teams were used.
Three men, a student and
two visitors, said they were
walking near Tower between
midnight and 12:15 a.m. wben
they were accosted by a ·~J811g''
of youths, six of whom allegedly .physically assaulted ~­
David Schlegel and RiciJIIIII
Migliore, both visitors tn tbe
campus, and Richard Walker,
a University student, all suffered minor injuries. Schlegel
suffered abrasions and contusions to the face; Walker had
abrasions about the fRee and
body and a bruised left knee
and leg; and Migliore had
abrasions and contusions of the
face and jaw as well as cuts
inside his mouth.
In the scuffle, a pair of
glasses and wrist watch with
a total value of $100 and a
wallet containing $16 were lost.
Campus securitv reports did
not specify whether tbe items
were stolen or fell from the
victims.

a

(Colltiluud "" PGII• 3, coL I)

�~

a.-.. 21, 1971

~~tof.landlel~agiarismf:&gt;.; ~
AcademicDisho~-~~
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
~-St.II

The current vague processes
for solving student aca,demic
disbonesty cases will be clarified next month if the Faculty
Senate passes a set of proposed
procedures for handling tbeae
cases. Tbe proposals. drawn up
by a special Senate Committee
beaded by Dr. Claude Welch,
were presented to the Senate's
Executive Committee at its
October 13 meeting.
Tbe committee proposals
deal with both informal and
f o r m a I methods of handling
alleged academic dishonesty
which the group further defines
as either ucheating or plagiarism." The latter offense is defined broadly and includes the
purchase of a paper or any
type of .copying.
When an instructor discovers
what he believes to be a caae of
dishonesty, the new system suggests he first try to settle it
informally. But, "should the
responsible faculty member
ronsider he bas convincing evidence," he can deliver an oral
..admonition" to the alleged offender, or require him to replace or revise the work. Tbe
most severe sanction outlined
in this section is to write to the
student telling him that a repetition of this behavior may result in more serious punishment. If this last form is used,
a carbon copy of the letter must
be sent to the appropriate University-wide dean or professional school dean.
Student dissatisfaction with
the outcome of the informal
handling of a case may be appealed to the chairman of the
departmenL
·

..

.,

KetterAnswers Qziestions
On lVBFO Call-In Program
Every other Thursday night
at 8 p.m., members of the University . and the commwtity
have the chance to ask President Robert Ketter any question they want. The wtique opportwtity is a ff o r'd e d by
WBFO, the campus radio station, on its hour-long program,
"Interface."
The idea for the call-in show
emerged well over a year ago
wben Ketter talked to Bill
Siemering, then manager of
WBFO and now head of programming for National Public
Radio. They discussed ways of
opening up communication
with the administration. As a
result, "Interface" was born.
The program is actually on the
air every week with a community leader alternating with Dr.
Ketter. When the president is
unable to make the show on his
week, Executive Vice President
Albert Somit sits in.
The lively question-and-answer show started last fall and
since ..then has been sometimes
proVotative, sometimes infonnative, but always interesting.
Ketter has been questioned
about eyerytbing. People have
asked about engineering problems and his daughter has
called to ask if he wanted the
presidency simply because he

would get a reserved parking
space. The president declined
to answer that one.
· For every show, Ketter
brings along a faculty or staff
member wbo is expert in an
area of p:ial interest. Last
week, D r. Allen Kuntz, head
of Instructional Services and
Testing, was on hand to answer
questions about the makeup of
the freshman class. Previous
guests have i n c I u d e d Dr.
Charles Ebert, dean of the Division of Undergraduate Studies, Dr. LeRoy Pesch, former
dean of the School of Medicine,
and Dr. Myles Slatin, director
of Libraries. Most of the time,
the president decides who the
guest will be but often the
WBFO sta{f provides suggestions.
The president has found that
most o£ the questions are well
phrased and thought out, intel·
ligent. ••There are some who
harangue but not many." Us- Fonnal Settlement
The next step is a formal
ually, there are one or two
questions about current "cri- settlement of the alleged offense.
H an instructor feels an
ses," such as last week's concern about the effects of region- infraction is too blatant or repetitious,
he is to send a letter to
alism. T he queries aren't repetitious, however, and many the student outlinin g .his allegations
within 10 academic
deal with one particular probdays. Included in this doculem.
ment
should
be the evidence
Calls are fairly evenly split
between campus and town peo- against the student, names of
p
o
s
s
i
b
1
e
witnesses,
and an
ple. Last spring, there were
(
several calls about admissions outline of possible sanctions
against the student and of his
from worried parents.
While the show is completely rights of appeal. After receipt
open and people can hsk the of the letter, the student may
The internationally-rec- president anything, most of the present any evidence on· his
ognized cosmologist and pro- questions deal with University behalf to the instructor, departfessor or astronomy, Fred matters. A rather free-wheeling mental chairman or dean." After
Hoyle, director of the Institute atmosphere exists and it's not consultation with the chairman
of Theoretical Astronomy, unusual for a facul ty member and dean, the responsible facCambridge, England, will pre- to call up and correct the pres- ulty member may impose any
of the informal sanctio!lS, give
sent a aeries of lectures on cam- ident if he makes a mistake.
pus, November 2-5, under sponThe proglam is an attempt a reduction· in gtade, fail the
sorship of the Faculty of Nat- by Ketter and WBFO to close student, or force his resigns-.
ural Sciences and Mathematics. the gaps among the University, tion from the course.
The most severe puirishLecture topics are as follows : Buffalo. and the presidenC-to
Tuesday, November 2, "Sci- present a forum for an a- ments, such as probation, susence and Society in Modem change of ideas. Last year, the pension or dismisaal, cannot be
Timea;" Wednesday, Novem- concept worked out well, but employed by the individnal
ber 3, "Science and Society in this fall business is slow. Some- faculty member or his departAncient Timea: Stonehenge;" times there are fewer than five( ment For an undergraduate, a
Thuraday, November 4, "De- calls a nigbl
.
. caae involving tbeae sanctions
velopments in Cosmology I-''
If the number of calls does must be tried by an adjudicaFriday, November 5, "Dev~­ not increaae, Ketter is consid- tion committee from either the
opments in Cosmology II." All ering shifting formal As other · Division of Un!iergraduate
lectures will be held in 147 poosibilities, be sees broadcast- Studies or Millard Fillmore
Diefendorf, beginning at 8 :15 mg a campus media p...., con- College; for a ~duate student,
p.m.
.
ference, or an informal talk by a committee drawn from his
Professor Hoyle has pub- with student leaders. Either academic wtil At the bearing
lished a aeriea of original in- one Of tbeae would use a ques. the student may present evivestigations in astronomy and tion-and-«DSWer structure and . dence on his behalf. This comis one of the leading propon- people would still be -allowed mittee may impose any of the
ents of the steady state theory to phone In P"'!"ions.
lesser sanctions, put the stuof oosmogeneais. He has been. a
If the public isn't interested dent on probation, or use any
leader in the popularization of in this, tben the Preolident may other "reasonable and approscience, often address·
his tbinlt about dropPing his radio priate sanction as may be dewritinp to a lay audi..::::. His &amp;ppMrance entirely and oeelt termined." The group may alao
publications range from the another avenue of interaction.
recommend .._......, -or exIIQbaUrly and technical, Some
pulsion to the President
But- ~ is still
R«:eell Re.etUeha · in So/m- young.
ADd risbt """"· Ketter un~vwo~~y- ·eomPhy.U:. and Galtu:ia, Nuclei plans to keep coming every
Tbe student may appeal this
and Qutlan, to science fiction, other- Thursday night to decision to a Unhoersity-wide
~;[;:. Andromeda and OSBian'f WBFO's Norton studios, · sit- Committee on Academll! Integting with bmd )Jbooes on and rity. Members of this hearing
He is a Fellow ol the Royal answering QUMtions . . they panel will be selected from a
Society and ol. the Royal As- come in. If you have a QUMtion, slate of names retx&gt;mmended
tronomical Society and a mem- · the number to call is 831-5393 by faculty and student f0V'!J11·
menta, and appointed . by the
ber ol the Ameriam Academy To listen in, dial 88.7 on
ol Al18 and Sciences.
President ~- .cammit~ee·..,
.li'M .~land

Hoyle Lectures Set

a..;

to be divided equally between
faculty and students ...:... is the
last appellate. body, short of
the President, and can affirm,
reverse or modify any of ·the
former decisions on the caae.
Throughout tbeae formal p~ ·
ceedings, both the student and
faculty member may be represented by counsel .of their
choice.
These proposed procedures
were written this summer by
Welch's committee which consisted entirely of faculty and
staff members. Early this fall,
the makeup of this group came
under fire by Lester Goldstein
and David Steinwald, Student
Association coordinators. As a
result of their complaints, two
students wers appointed to the
body. Student input chanpd
the process, resulting in the
shift, for under~duates, from
a faculty bearirig committee to
a divisional bearipg panel. ·
In addition to receiving the
report of the Welch committee, the Executive Committee
also beard Executive Vice
President Albert Somit. Soll)it
reiterated to the group that the

Report:.;,; Univer-

Task Force
sity Organization will not be
implemented in the foresi.eable
future. The only chanies oiade
will be minor ones, he said,
witb · no major· re-alignment
ooming in the areas of deans,
provosts and vice presidents.
An ad /we oomnuttee was appointed to draw up Prooedures
for the University Review
Board which is part of u.e proposals for reviaed prooedures
for appoin-t, tenure and
promotion. (Reporter, October
14.) A proposed structure for
the group will be determined
by Professor Robert Fleming
of Law and Dr. Marvin Feldman of Pllycbology and presented to the oommittee in
two weeks. This team .will also
set out "guidelines lor a faculty
committee which will provide
input to the administration on
budgetary matters.
. The .Executive Committee
also lent its support to a motion Feldman will present to
the SUNY Faculty Senate, asking that body to look at the
two SUNY commwtity coUeges
which are on AAUP probation.

Nursing Professor Horinred
The past and future were
both part of the School of Nursing's 125th Anniversary Banquet, October 13. Dr. Margaret
Larsen, retiring chairman of
Functional Nursing, was honored with a citation and Miss
Jessie Scott, assistant surgeon
general, Division of Nursing,
United States Public Health
Service, spoke on the future .of
the health ·professions. -. . · .
Tbe hanquet was in ·honor of
Dr. Larsen and her 30 years
of !;ervice to the School oJ Nursing and U/ B. . More than . 200
of her friends, former students
and colleagues gathered at the
Executive Ramada Inn to .. tell
h~r how very much we love
her." Dr. Larsen received two
standing ovations as Dr. Ruth
McGrorey, dean of the School
of Nursing, read the citation
which praised her as a "dedicated teacher and wise counselor." Tbe award also commended
her ..lifetime contribution to the
growth of nursing." Miss Scott
also received a. cjfatipn.
.

subjects; experimental training
programs for personnel such as
midwives and other para-medii'SI people, and new sy.stems
for delivering health care· and
relating bealth to changing ·aocial ""tterps.
. .
.

Implications of l.e&amp;lslotlon· • .

Cl!o'!li"S !n

Nu~na

: ··

Miss Scott spoke on "Impli'The 8hi{i to reveniion and
cations of Federal Legislation maintenance wuf brini changes
for the Health . Services." The in the . n~g p_rofe8SlDD, Miss
seventh ann u a I Anne -Seng- Scott warned, and she urged
busch lecturer streSsed that. the the andieDce to· be reAdy. Sbe
!""&lt;fical -.ystem, now geared to eiplai,tied_&gt;that ''bioad bealtb
Illness, must change and focu.S funcj:ions iiie being delellated
on bealtb and preventive.main- to nurse.s." Now, .she feels,
tenance instead. Pending logi&amp;- nWBI!&amp; shoUld become ."aggreslation from the ·Nixon admin- sive spokesmen" far the needs
istration will haSten the shift, of the patient They should be
~ feels. Part o! the program advocates-alert tO a patient's
!" a new emphasis on conquer. feelings and protecting them if
mg cancer and an increaaed necessary.
funding of other medical reMiss Scott· alao expects
search. Tbe administration is . chanies in nWBI!&amp;' training. Sbe
sponsoring o t h e r legislation pointed out that only sllgbtll
calling for organization of a more than. half of the nation s
!J&amp;Iional health· ~urance plan, - trained n\lf8SS are 1lriorkinil at
increa!""f spending on family one time. Because r nlahy
= g programs and estab- trained female nWBI!&amp; drop out
. t of oommwtity bealtb to have families, she feels
agenCies.
should start adapting
!'cross the nation, Miss Scott ocbools
their pmpams to train older
881d,. many other agencies and people who will get into the
hosp&gt;tals alao have innovative work force and stay there. The
procrams which are training •assistant surgeon genenil would
people under this new p~ also like to see training baaed
Ph.!;'. SIJI! BP&lt;?ke of programs in on practical matters rather than
which ~ty groups and oth- on broad lh&lt;loriea.
_
ers tra&lt;htionally n o t in the
The key to all tbeae cbanaes
health services are now · being and shifts within the hMlth
actively ~1!!&lt;1 to provide aervioos is "accountability," she
.health mamtenance services stressed. The change ~ illand lleQTe PllOPle's needs.
nesil to prevention, the shifts in
1beae programs and many
ot!JI!rs may be nationally funded if Congress pasaes the people into the field must all
Health Manpower Incentiw be based on this philoaopby.
Awards legislation, Miss Scott
"And much of What must be
said. This bill would fund new done, must he done by you."
approacbe:s to , ~chil;lc ~'-h she oonclu.dlld. . • . .

~~~::=

�I
~2J,

J97J

3

(CGnlilwed from 1, eoL 6)
At abouf the same time, two
UtB· .fon!ign studeniB, Geoll"
Dib IUIId Hattem Elpbri. said
tbey were .acrcosted by six
youtbs as tbey entered the CIUDJUI from .. the Main St. en- - Elpbri suffered abrasioDS IUIId CIOIJiusioos while Dib
bad his- broken IUIId also
bad ......,.,.) abrasions IUIId CIOIJtusions. 'The group also took
Dib's wallet which contsined
$60 in cssh. ·Both victims were
l&gt;alted IUIId reiMsai by Meyer
Memorial Hospital
V...._t Oddo, a member of
the csmpus _,.mty force assipaed to patrol the dormitories
at nilbt, puncbed in the
face ·IIJIId ribs when be approached a of youths outside T.....,. Hall
Campus _,.mty ofticetS also
reported that one peraon was
confronted in the basement of
Tower U.U by a youth csnying a ...~ shotgun on a
sboulder slfug. 'The. youth reportedly ran from the basement
to the thin! floor of the build-

ing.

.

'The Gnlduate Student Association's Senate \IOied ....,.._

whelmingly Monday ru,bt

apinst the J&gt;Ul'd&gt;ase of Po.wty
Hill by Sub Boanl I. Inc. At
the meeting, cslJed ~Y
to discuss the ~ the
group of Senaton extensi\oely
debated the matter before voting :u to 3 apinst purchase.
While the vote has no binding
eJJect on graduate students who
will participate in a pmeral
student referendum 011 the matter expected in early November,
it does refleCt a growing trend
against purchase of the 1150
acres in Cattaraugus County.
D u r i n g the meeting, the
group ssw a slide presentation
by Michael Haggan&amp;, ard&gt;itecture student and employee of
Drayton Bryant Associates, the
finn which prepared a compn&gt;hensive development plan for
Poverty Hill. 'The slides illustrated the many uses of the
recreatioualland for swimming,

..

About 1:05 B.Jtt, csmpus &amp;&amp;curity patrolmen KeVin O'Connor IUIId W i II i a m Snedden
stopped a car without lights on
the Main ~.. nMr the Main
SL eotrance to the csmpus.
After tbey had stopped the car,
its lone o&lt;a~pant allegedly fied
towards Main St. Aa:ording to
csmpom _,.mty reporiB, Patrolman O'Connor tackled the
suspect in the middle of Main
St. Jose L Rodriguez, 17, was
cbarpd with unauthorized use
o&gt;f a JDOto&lt; vehicle IUIId with 00.
structing governmental administration. .'The car be was driving had been reported stoleo on
Friday ~ Jersey St. IUIId
Busti :Ave: ;. • . . ~:...;...;.,;~.a: ,till in-

hiking and camping. In addition, lloggans discussed development of additional camping
sites, the building of another

~t"i':cili':.._~~::!in':~

development, be said, some of

~~~

•"' . -

:'&gt;-~::-~~..

n ............:...l..

- ::·-

~-·

(Continued from 1, eoL 6)
tionJitndy. The oeoond largest,
$300,000, was continued support of' Dr. Leon Farhi's Physiology Facility, initially' funded from the Tbemis Program.
'The Regional Medical Program, under Dr. John R .F . Ingall. CIOIItinued to be the largest
siJIIIe JliOIIl8ID supported by

~.r!tiona~..deTru!i!

last year.
While there is no breakdown
h 0 w expenditures
w e r e distributed, Fltzpatricir.
notes that "if the funds were
expeDded as awarded. the rea.rch piogram of the Uni~
sity 'provided appnu:ima~
$10 miJ1ian for aalaries -and:
frinle bimefits. to the University's budpt. AppromnateJr
$4.5 miJlian. of the
the expeodi- •
indica~

~(~~
materials · and supplies), ex-

dusive ol indirect costs. which
......, appradmately $2.5 million." 'lbe- aeting _,.,., vice
president notes that these final
filwes are approximations inteoded oaly to provide "a feeling for the· order of magnitude
of the distribution "of expenditures IUIId the impact of the
Uni-mty's rea.rch program
on its operation IUIId in the
community."

AuberyTo Speak
Ptolemor Piene Aubery of
the Depal:tmeot of Freoch. will
spa1t on literary l&gt;altmeots_of
the Paris Commune at an m -

terdiaciplinaly aeminar maminl the ·.,...tenary of the commune being opollllDI"ed by 1be
Frmcb Area Studies Center of
Queen's Uni_,.;ty, Kingstoll.
Ontario, today throulh Sun-

~ scieotists. historians

IUIId Frmcb sdlolam will par-

ticipate in the - t .

WNYs No.1 Tennis Player

To Tffich at Campus Clinic
Western New York's No. 1

tennis player will take part

Saturday in a t.bree-and-&lt;&gt;oe
half hour tennis clinic IUIId demonstration sponsored by the
Department of Intramurals IUIId
Recreation. 'The event is free.
opeo to all IUIId will run from
9 :30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
.
Rev. Bob He therington.
ranked No. 10 in the East, who
moved here two yeatS ago from
Philadelphia beads a list ol
instructors .which also includes
William Mookarsb. director of
intramurals 'IUIId recreation IUIId
an active competitor in local
tennis; Norb Baaclmagel. baskethall assistant; Diane Hall
IUIId Cynthia Andenloo. womeo's physical education instructors, IUIId the mea's IUIId
women's tennis teams of UIB.
H.!tberington. since coming

to Buffslo, bas been Western
New York siJIIIes IUIId doubles
champion. Central New Y orlt
singles IUIId doubles cbampioo.
City of Buffalo t.ounwneot
singles IUIId doubles wilmet,
IUIId National Public Parlto
siJ111es runner-up IUIId doubles
champ t b is SUIDIDel". He's
ranked No. 3 nationally in

~ookarsb.

"Participants have to wear
some type of tennis shoes or
sneakers. You should bring a
racket if you own one. ( 'lbe
Department bas 50 for those
who don't.) Brings balls if you
want."
•
Monkarsh insists on sneakers to protect the University
Teonis Courts, all nine of
which were refurbished this
summer.
'The clinic will be held inside
Clark Gym in case of rain.

Arcudi Renamed
Dr. Bruno A. Areudi bas

been reappointed acting chairman of the Department of
Spanish. Italisn IUIId Portuguese. He bas aerved as acting
c:bairman since 1970.
Dr. Areudi received his undes-paduate IUIId graduate degrees at yale where be earned

his cloc:torate in Italisn in 1956.
He was director of Italisn
l.angua&amp;e Instruction .at the
Uni_,.;ty of California from
1956-58. In 1959-Ql, be taught
a course 011 Works of Dante at
the Uni-mty of Recife, Brazil. IUIId from 1961-04, be was
director ol the USIA BinaDonal Center IUIId library. Genoa.
ltaiy. He joined UtB in 1964.

who r-=bed tbe
siJIIIes quarterfinals ol the
Public P a r k s cbampionsbips
played in - Buffalo this IIUIDmer IUIId the semi-finals in the
FBI DROPS PROBE
city cbampionsbips, bas been
Niagara Frontier open doubles The Fede,.l Buruu of Investigachampion two yeam nmning.
tion has dropped its so-called
Monkarsb says this first 1111- ..birdshot!• investigation based on
nual clinic is being beld f!l lack of conclevidence. The
"open the. facilities ol the De- probe was based on student.
partment of Intramurals IUIId charps Buffalo pol icemen
Recreation to the Univemity . - shotlluns loaded with blrd·
community. It's designed for shot in quelling campus disturbeveryooe-Irom the nmk ...... ances on ~ 7, 1970.
teurto the~

which is necesiiiJ"y to meet local
health codes. lf the students
desire, more advanced development could also be undertaken
in the form of ski slopee, a
conference center and a natwe
study area.
The senators sharply questioned Haggans 011 the financial
aspects of the purchase. He estimated that up-keep and minimal developmeot of the land
would cost each student $3.17
a year, a total of $60,000. Over
ten years, costs would appt'Olrimate $650,000. Costs incuned
so far include $20,000 spent
this year by Sub Boanl I (SBI)
for maintenance IUIId operations
and over $8,000 spent on development and feasihilit}( studies. One student said that purchase a n d operation of the
property would be like "wallowing in quicksand-more expen&amp;..
es, more es:penses we don't
know where it would end."
'The question of whether buyin!' recreational land should recelve priority over support of
education or student services
was also discussed
'The GSA Emcutive Committee also came out apinst the
laod purchase in a 14-point,
three-page document givea. to
the senators before the meeting. Among the reasons for their
opposition wee: "It is not clear
that a significant number of
graduate students will ...., the
property; comparable facilities
. . • are as easily available;
administration o1 sum a 1arp
recreational property w o u I d
create serious problems ol CIOIJtrol IUIId supervision; IUIId it is
dillicult to bow SBI could
eJJectiveiy ciiM!lop lx&gt;th. Poverty Hill IUIId the A m hers t
land."

McCurdy Heading,.
Manage:mmtDrive
Robert C. McCurdy, aa1es
representative for the National
Gypsum Company, has been
named c:bairman of the 197172 Participating Fund of the
School of Manqement.
'The fund drive will include
solicitation of some 5,500 U/B
Manaaement School Alumni.
McCurdy, a 1959 alumnus
of the School. is praaltly
c:bairman of the District Sales
and Training Committee for
the Greater Niagara Frontier
CotmciJ and is a member ol
the Board of Directors ol the
School of Manqement Aluami
Asaociation.

�~

4

October 21, 1911

HymanBelievesPhilosophyProiiDtion rRegW~' Is Viewed -:-:
Requires Candid, COmplete Statement As Possibly ThreateniJ1g
•

EDITOR:

Professor William Parry's
letter, whiCb appeared on September 23, 197l, raises serious
questions about the promotion
procedures of the University
which are not at all answered
in the response of the administration as reported in the Editor's note a~mpanying Dr.
Parry's letter. The following
comments have a b so I u t e I y
nothing to do with the merits
of the · personnel action taken,
with respect to which I am
wholly uninformed. They relate entirely to the procedure
which appears to have been
followed and its implications·
for University policy.
Dr. Parry's letter indicates
tbat the Department of Philosophy, in accordance with its
re811lar procedure, voted 2 to 1
against a promotion for a particular professor. The professor in question did not file a
grievance under the established
grievance procedure. Instead,
the President intervened at
this stage, asking the Personnel Committee of the Faculty
concerned to consider the promotion. The Committee declined to recommend promotion. The President, then, on
his own initiative, it would

pointments, decisiollB not to reappoint, promotions, the graot..
ing of tenure and dismissal . . .
The governing board and president should, on questions of
faculty status, as in other matters where the faculty has pri·
mary responsibility, con cur
with the faculty jud~t except in rare instances and for
compelling reasons which
should be stated in detail."
I have always assumed, and
to the extent that I have
knowledge of procedures within the University the assumption has not been seriously
called in que!ltion, that this
Statement on Government represented the accepted practice
at the University of Buffalo
both before and after its becoming a part of the State University system.
.
b
The action reported :.f Dr.
Parry ~e~ . so drastically
from this traditional procedure
and from announced standards

~~~wo~t !.:mt!:le~

appropriate This fbe response
of the a&lt;~Ixiliustration as stated
. the R
fails'
sum
eporter,
utter1Y to
PP 1Y·
Oisincenuous Expl•notlon
The explanati"on o f why the
~rou~iJ:u::J'~v!:; professor in question did not
bring the matter before the
Board. The Editor's note states Grievance Committee in the
that the Board's vote was af- usual way is disingenuous.
firmative, and its recommends- Surely the entire mechanism of
tion for promotion "was ap- the University's governance
proved" by the President.
does not break down when the
Prev•llinc Practice
Chairman of the Faculty. SenIn my 25 years at the Uni- ate is unable to act in a partieversity, it has been the prevail- ular case, whether because of
·
·
th
illness, absence, or interesl The
. ht .
mg practice, at e Law School . te t f
and in most departments with m res ' o course, mig anse
hich I
· ted f
from his close association with
;,rsonnel '::o::S~ ...,;.~~ a prospective grievant as well
to the teaching staff to be de- as from his own personal intermined primarily by the !M.c- volvement. If there is such a
gap in the procedures regarding
~o~. fud 1!16f':S~~:enf: the operation of the Grievance
Government of Colleges and Committee, the E x e c u t i v e
Universities was issued with Committee should see that it is
the endorsement of the Ameri· filled immediBI&lt;!ly.
can Association of University
With respect to the procedProfessors, the American Coun- ures of the Review Board, the
cil . on Education, and the AEr administration answer is " that
sociation of Governing Boards there have been no changes in
on Universities and Colleges. the Board's procedures." When
This!
: rep_resentedrk sevalleral years
Uie Prestabidlisential Review Board
o mtensive wo on
aspects was es
· bed by President
of the fac-~r8on,
its
of
ultythe. participation
U .
.
.
be purpose was exm • ruvel'Slty governance.
Jai.ned as
ing designed to
With respect to the role of the protect the University against
faculty, the Statement declares, personnel actions which did
in Part V: '"The Faculty has not assure the employment or
for such
retention of the most qualif•"ed
P,.;~·~ responsibility
fun-dam'
tal
.
en
areas as cumru- person available · and might
!urn, subject matter and method have come about ·as a result of
of instruction, research, faculty the exercise of poor jud~t
status, .. .. On these matters by the faculty or department
the power of review or final de- concerned. There was no indicision lodged in the governing cation that it was inteitded to
board or delegated by it te the serve as a vehicle. for Presipresident should be exercised dential intervention in proba!lveraely only in exceptional !ems of faculty status. Denial
CU'CUmStances, and for reasons of promotion is usually subject
communicated to the faculty." tc challenge only on the ground.
Again: "Fapilty status and re- that the faculty member inlated matters are primarily a volved has all of the accepted
faculty respollBibility; this area qualifications for the higher
includes appointments, reap- rank and has been denied it be-

=-

GREPORTER:,

'

I

cause of imprope~ considerations. 'l}liB is exactly the kind
of issue which should follow the
normal grieY&amp;DCe procedures.
It is of COW1le conceivable that
in rare cases the faculty and
department may decline to take
a persQlllle! action which the
President feels is based on so
poor an exercise of judgment
about the academic needs of
the department that intervention on his part_ is necessary.
In· accordance WJth the Statement, it is most urg""t that. in
sl_ICh cases the P~dent 81Ve
h!".~ OtherWJse .tbl! susPICton ~ hound to anse that
the President feels free to overrid~ _faculty_ and department
deets1ons WJth respect to laculty status on grounds which
are either irrelevant to faculty
status or which reflect merely
a reasonable disagreement in
judgment about the particular
faculty member. If faculty
participation in governance iS
to be a meaningful thing, Presidential overriding of faculty
action on either of those
grounds is clearly wrong.
I believe that the circumstances described warrant a
much more candid and complete statement from the ad· · trati"on than has th us far
m1rus
been vouchsafed.
Sincerely,

EDITOR:

The ouUines of "regionalism"
are still quite vague. We do
not know yet precisely what
the State University has in
mind when it proposes a regional organization. Perbtlps
there will be some benefits: a
loosening of centralized controt and a weakening of the
enormous Albany bureaucracy,
a pooling of local resources
such as computers or some li-

GVJEWPOINTS
The ~'-on-to pravlde • forum for the a·
dwl&amp;e of views on • YIIMty
of the focin&amp; the ocademlc
community. We welcome poo111on p•pers •nd - . ..

.....,. pennlts.
b

rary services. Such changes

are conceivable, at least, if not
very probable (especially the
first two).

u!u~:"'~ ~.;:.~:.

cerning the ''reaional" p 1an,
one is peculiarty";,minous from
the point of view of our own
University. I mean the suggestion that . admissions may become
subject
some sort
of
regional
bias, toperhaps
in the
form of relaxed entrance ...,.
qwremen·ts for local -"didates
~

J. D. JJYKAH

(presumably at b 0 t h undergraduate and graduate levels) •
'11~ 11or perhaps as a wlicy of tying
~&lt;:t.IK,
extra-regional admissions to the
quantity of availshle housing.
QD
. However it might be eJJected, I would regilrd any such
change in our admission policy
as a major threat ·to the University's future . ......:.. • ""~--te
'·-. """""""
ED~\vmiam Baumer's article shrinking of the "pool of av&amp;if('We Shine Ourselves Or Not wle students to ~ ·~ving i!J
t All' ) .
t
t.
estern · .
or_ wo d sen:
a
IS symp om a IC o1 ously w
en
under duchanges which are yet to occur ate progr
and u
l:r.
on ~ campus ~
sur- the gradua and
essional
g commumty,
e ex- schools. The
n for this
:cl,_ce of our teachings, re- seems ·to me ob ous: a first..
~i,.;... creative activity and rate university requires a first.
1
There will be no "excellence ::'d:'~":l"':~ = );t
of our teachings" w i thou t els. And to ensure such a stu:
changes in teaching techniques, dent body a large pool of apeducational technology and plicants is absolutely essential.
learning resources on campus
On this point I am in direct
Cregardless of the knowledge
nil"
"th p
r William"
co
•ct WIwho argued
r o · in the
farulty have in their heads).
Baumer,
We have a few groups on Reporter of Oct: 7 that faculty
campus trying to do things for al
d
·
the quali 0 1
and with the students (C.A.C.
one. e~rmmed
ty
activities for instance). An ar- a uruvettersltyifanthe that it does
not ma arer any good
students
ticle on Sunshine House in the mitted
or notadso
Reporter a few weeks ago did long as ·they are improved
not encourage the response of
llne single faculty member. .
when they leave. This theory
Talk
disregards a good deal of eviand fa.,jty
dence that Prof. Baumer ought
I am of the opinion that the to be 1 acquainted
with. For
1
"creative activity and aervice" ~~P ~· l some very good
is more of the passive, speaker =tti~'J1~la~
bureau variety (more talk!) lit- and Antioch come to mindtie better than PR.
are distin811ished rather more
-DON ROBEilTII
for their student bodies than
. I Assistant Professor,
their faculties,· 2) the best state
Information &amp; Library
Studies
universities, I ike California,
1"1---:U.-Wisconsin, and Michigan, have
UJ.Ulllll~
relatively high admission standards; .and 3) good faculty are·
to some extent attracted by
good students (or did Prof.
EDITOR:
Baumer leave North Dakota
I should like to make known purely for the sake of a larger
~ jh"~J"O:::. commthe
floourur.tyor' salary?) . In any caae, the most
perfunctory classroom experithe Senate on October 5, that ence makes it plain that there
the Senate Committee on In- is a great deal of dilference beformation and Library Re- tween teaching bright, inter80Urce6 is cont:inuiJyr its Jll!ll· ested students and dull, unreeral study of libraiy matters. spollSive ones. The latter may
We therefore would be happy be just as much in need of and
to receive atteful statements of entiUed to education, but their
views and documented · e:q&gt;eri- limitations impose limitations
ences from students, ataff and on their teachers and on the
faculty. s·
entire institution ol which tl&gt;ey
inf;erely,
""l're a part. It is'" a vull!llri2ed
-LOWPLL 9l?UOEN•-u.n
notiou of democ:..i.cy that lead!=
~;;;, ~te
people to suppose "'!! ..tudents
Inf
tion I.
t" be equal or "{I &lt;fur;; mina~
Library :;,~ng them na:&lt;;,,,;aril} •
Professor of Law

Less
More Acti
Is Urged.

=

!!:h

1

c:t;:il:.; :Jl· J!''::

Asks
LibraryViews

There-are other pOints made
in Prof. ·Baumer's report to the
Senate, but they are hard to
take seriously. He says, 1or example, that ':this University is
expected to be a regiotial and
State resource by virtue of the
fact that it draws its support
from the State of New York
and seeks additwnal support
from the Western New York
regwn" (my italics) . Is this an
argument worthy of a philosopher? What if we do not find
what we seek? And what if we
do? Shall our admission P&lt;&gt;licy
then be banded over to those
who, as Prof. Baumer puts it,
"compensate the musician?"
•

If It were up to Prof. Baumer to persuade ~ of the a_dv!"'tages !'f a re810nal admiss1ons po!Icy, I w~ul!l not be
verr lliiXlOU!'. But It IS '!Ot his
lol(lc that disllesse6 me m any
caae; it is his attitude of welcome toward the future debasement of the University that I
find deplorable. It is his emb!"cing of goals for the UniverSity that are far mor;e ~t..
·crung than a. mere dilution of
student quality. Furthermore,
I fear that his is an attitude
shared by the administration,
which has been obsessed by the
phantom of good "~w~uru"ty
relations." I fear that this administration is willing to sell
out anything for the sake of its
relations with the community.
There lies our worst danger,
that for the sake of a few
crumbs off local corporation
tables and for the sake of a few
congratulatory editorials in the
Buffalo Evening News; we will
be Jed t9 content ourselves
·th the · 1· ' · · t.
• •
WI
. . !0 e o, . a Y~ .BeN!f"'
oPI'rati(ln for . the • ~'W~
N"!'f . York .. 'region." - 'nlat~ is
simply not an adequate· prospect for a major state liniver•ty
Sl

•

I hopEi the Farulty Senate
will do everything in its power
to reaist the future envisioned
by Prof. Baumer. I think that

:tand'"~~~~rs/aposscultf­

bilities of the regional plan has
a good chance of succeas. If
not, we will shine indeed, but
it will be with the phosphor·
-~ of decay.

~

GEORGE HOCHFIELD

Depl of En_glish

Latin Amerim

Seminar Topic
'The Latin American Studies
Committee, directed by Dr.
WoHgang Walck, is sponsoring
a lecture series on a wide range
. of topics dealing with South
America. All six of the Tues-

~~"{.,te~~ t;:

4:30p.m.
The first lecture is next Tuesday with Dr. Charles Ebert,
dean of the Division of Undergraduate Studies, speakini on,.
the "Physical Background of
Latin America." Tile following
Tuesday, November 2, Dr.
~ Len!Dek will speak on
"Latin American Geography in
Perspective."
.
'"The Mexican Election of
1940" will be discusaed by Dr.
Albert Michaels, executive officer, Council on International
Studies, November 9. Dr. Silviano San~o will talk about
"Levi-Strauss and Brazil" on
November 16. On November 23,
Dr. Abrahain ~look will lecture
on ·~ce Relations 1:1 Brazil."
The la.-1 lem··c is on Novembt. 3C with Dr. Ke.-u.zth Ra•mus;;en disc.....,"ing the "Fortu·
guo21t ~.:!!:,;-.:.:;;. in Brazil."

�5

- ~21,1911

IsSneezing
A Criticism Ofthe-AMA?
Prol-.

G(J/B
&lt;NOTES·
By "D"
As tb8 ·Reporter went to
press, Tueilday. October 19, the
University's · United F u n 'd
Campaign had raised $71,191.'50-71.1 per cent of its goal of
$100,000. Leading divisions in:
pude: Educatioosl Studies, 100
per cent;_Engineering snd Applied Sciences, 140 per cent;
Facilities Planning, 110 per
cent; Law and Jurisprudence,
104 per cent; Millsnl Fillmore
College and Continuing Education, 116 per cent; President
snd Executive Vice President's
otlice, 182 per cent; Research,
100 per cent; University at
Buffalo Foundation, Inc., and
Alumni, 166 per cent
Subdivisions over the 100
per oent mark include: Admissions and Records, Architecture and Environmentsl Design, School of Management,
Chemistry, Center for Critical
Languages, Cultural. .Affairs,
Environmentsl Health, Financial Aid, Instructions! Communications Center. Mafhe..
matics, Medical · Technology;
Music. Occupatiooal 'Therapy,
otlice of Equal Opportunity,
. Physical Education, Physical
-'Therapy, Political Science,
Speech Communication, University Placement and Career
Guidance.
More than 25iJ people from
99 institutions in 28 states attended a recent University of
Michigan conference on faculty
bargainjng. William F. McHpgli, Sp&lt;icW 'i:ouhsel . for employment r!'l!lt) ons for the
State University ~f ~ew York
(one ·"of' the~ rillili\ ' sP.OOkers) ,
Clte.,i . .Bevera(~,)¥by

~c:

ulty ue mov_mg. to . collective
bargaining· ' •
' .
'
1. "Institution~\ ization of
conflict," wtih a conditioning to
confrontation.
2. "Indiscriminate tinkering
with faculty governance systems," with students being added to "areas where they have
no business."
3. 'The need and desire by
young faculty for more input
at the department level.
4, Public attacks and legislative riders on such areas as ten·
ure and work load, leading to
increased faculty concem for
academic freedOm ,and financial
security.
5. Scarcity of faculty positions. "For the first time in
quite . awhile,'I . McHugh tiirid-,
"job security is a major consideration."
6. _"'The ·pending · econootic
crunch,'' and the slowing down
of aalary increases.
7. Educations! experimentation, including open admissions, off-campus study, degrees by eumination, greater
uae of technology, all of which
alfect the ra~e· of faculty.
8. IncreaSing pressure on
•-tate IQYel1l1Dellt and state institutions, w i t h growiog involvement of state fiscal authorities and executive officers in
the budgeting alfairs of the university. ·
.
9. 'The paa!Bge of public employment refations laws . . Faculty will feel a need to protect
their "fair share" in the interest of higher education, if other
public aedors are organizing,
McHUJh said.
10. 'The carry-over effect ·of
the .pins that school teachers,
kindergarten through grade 12,
have inade through collective
bargaining.
Have you heard about the
l'&lt;"!lege president who died and
went to Hell? It was six months
ly:.t·,~- u :uund cct be u.-ne~ off·
C:lmpus..

By NICHOLAS V. FINDLER
Col:nputw ~

Poor Pooch

U/B's .-y-111rec1 dog c:otc:hers have been octlve ond now
one·fifth of Buffalo's Dog Pound (populltlon: 25) Is occupied
by campus dogs. Once ••arrested" because they are running
loose in violation of SUite law. the dogs have to stay In the
pound until their owners bail them out.

Student-WrittenCampusGuidesC!aim
They Tell~"WhatS Really Happening'
By STEVE UPMAN
racked by political tunnoil in
years. It has also become
After years of college caui- arecent
fine academic institution. . . .
logs packed with academic ac" Buffalo has some unbeatcolades and scholastic syllog- able
assets-good funding, a
isms, students have taken the planned
campus of 40;000 and
business of describing colleges some superb
departments,
into their own hands. The last
English, pharmacy,
few years litudent-written especially
and
the
natural
sciences. And
guides to higher education have
the fact that it is losprung up, challenging the tra- despite
cated
in
the
armpit
the East,
ditional tomeS with more em- Buffalo is probablyof the
phasis on features such as cam- alive of all the campuses." most
pus life-style and political acThe U ndergro.wui. Guide also
tiyity, and le!ls ·on lhe purely comments
favorably on U / B's
il.cadenuC environment.
climate : ~
This year's crop Is in that academic
"There
are many great demold. The Undergrowui. Guide partments, especially Philosot0 lM Co!kge of Your ClwU:e phy, English and Law. The
(Signet, 509 pages, $1.25 ) , English Department has a fanwhich bills itself as "the only tsstic faculty and lots of indehandbook that tells you what's pendent study. The American
really happening at every ma- Studies Department is one 9f
jor oollege and university in the the more radical departments
U.S.A.," tells it under such in the school. It looks critically
headings as: Sergeant Pepper at America through all phases
Section (student body make- of American Society.
up ); Academic Bull (curricu"They also have different
lum cross-section); Bread (fi- colleges which are interesting
""'cial information ); Brothers and different-the College of
and Sisters (political and psy- Ecology, the Poli tical Movechological analysis ); Survival -ments College and the Com( student services, newspapers, munity Organizing Co 11 e g e
etc. ), and Environment. (men- (sic) .
tsl-what people are reading"There are too many popular
and physical-where they're professors here to name them.
going when school is out).
Numerous st uden t initiated
The Under.growui. Guide lists courses for credit-called 'Bul227 schools-by states: two in letin Board' courses. Extensive
Canada: ~ey_ ~ud_d· Cc?llege • .Free U. Good relationships bemade 1t, MlSSlSSIPP• missed. tween teachers and students in
Kent State isn't in there. Neith- the good departments. Many
er is Jackson. Whittier is in; so black studies courses."
is Temple Buell Women's Col- Mental Climote
lege (Denver)·
As for student mentsl eliThe Insiders Guide to the mate, the Undergrowui. Guide
Co!kges (Berkeley Medallion, observes that "the campus is di-

festations of the protests. The
most radical group on campus
is the 'Youth Against War and
Fascism' ( Maoists )."
Under "Survival," the Underground Guide estimates that
"student health has pretty good
service but doesn't meet all
birth control needs. The school
has shrinks and a number of
counselors. There's a 24-hour
switchboard and a Planoed
Parenthood in Buffalo.
"The Buffalo Draft Counseling office is really good. Lots
of people in the Buffalo area
are really knowledgeable about
the option 1&gt;f. splitting to Canada since they are so close....
"The Spectrum is considered
the second best college paper
within the U. S.-considered
fairly radical by some."
The Climate Jokes
The Undergrowui. Guide also
succumbs to the temptation to
be cute about the local climate:
" Lots of snow in the winter,
humidity in the summer. . . .
Buffalo is the second windiest
city in the nation . .. . The nicest time of year is when you're
away. . . ." Nice days in But-'
falo are "2 days in spring and
1'/2 days in the fall." South
Buffalo is singled out for Bethlebem Steel CorPOration and
terrible air pollution and the
Buffalo River is dubbed a fire
hazard.
Turning to the "beauty" of
the campus, the publication
notes "The school was con~
structed over a long period of
time so the ai-chitecture is diversified. Most buildings are
four-stories high. Capen looks

!!~ ~:i· b: ~!1 ~taff''::f~ -::,c!,"!uit:.~ h~:r,e 8.J'afolt!:i ~!~ b~;!'th~~ 1~ll":' =~
1

Yak Daily News, deals with a to be conservative, the New pile. There aren't too many
dozen fewer schools, grouped York City arty kids have that trees on campus. Lots of builderuditely by the editors in the expensive plastic-hip look, and ings and cement."
The only thing the Underfollowing manner: Prestige the real freaks wear over-all
Schools (Ivy Lea g u e, etc.); work pants !lDd tie-dyed shirts. growui. Guide doesn't cover is
Small Eastem Institutions of· The commuters are for the most the speed trap going North on
Quality and Style; Small East- part Catholic and virtuous.
Bailey Avenue to Main.
em Schools of Not So Much
" Fraternities are dropping
Other schools in the UnderQuality or Style (But Still . off fast, only one Greek group growui. Guide don't come out
Pretty Good ) ; Midwestern Be- still owns their house."
looking as good as U/ B, to wit:
Drawing ·&amp; bead on a familiar
Alabsma-'"You even see
hemoths (The Big Ten, etc.);
Sweet,-Small, Secure ·Midwest- whipping boy, the Guide pro- white girls walking around with
em Libei-al Arts Colleges; Arta · nounces Buffalo to be "a no- black boys and vice versa.' Far
Playin', Hard Drinkin', Hard toriously conservative city bor- Out! Hardl,Y any lynchings any
Lovin' Southern Schools; Four dering on the fanatic. Thus the more." Yeai-s in the liill City (or community and school are diSan Jose Sta-"Most stu'lllei-eabouts ) -8~. includ- vided. The radicals would like
dents are al?!lthetic toward reving U/ B, fits in here; 'The to use the campus like a Latin- olutionary thought-they might
Rocky Schools (Mountain, We American campus (to make not have even SUPPa~ the
Mean), and California Schools. forays OQ the city and then first American R&lt;wolution."
Both books take on U / B.
come bsck and use the campus _ UCLA-"A car is .necessarY
AlhM In the Annplt
as a sanctuai-y.)· 'Most kids are and parking is available only-if
'"l'he aimpus at Buffalo, by sympathetic to or intimidated you are refated to God. Public
far , the largest or the four'' by the radicals. Most support transportation? 'The only conSUNY university centers, The the v a I u s ideologically but · venient way to attend UCLA is
Insiders' Guide .;ays, ·~been they won't cond~ne £he maili- by Jl81'8i:hute."
'

e

It has for long been a serious problem of personi&gt;el departments and or people in
charge of reCruiting to present ·
a well-balanced set of meaningful questions to job applic:J.nts.
We have been fortunate in
obtaining the free (?). advice
of the .Chief Psychologist of a
very large management consulting company. In view of
the major hiring campaign envisaged at our university for
the near future, I am releasi'ng
some of the questions to be
asked for the benefit of the
academic community. I hope
the proper use of the material
published here will substantiate the claims associated with
the general technique.
• Talented people should ....
should not .... be allowed to sit
at more than one place at the
same time.
• Frequent sneezing can ....
cannot .... be considered as a
suppressed criticism of the
American Medical Associstion.
• I do .... do not.. .. deem it
necessary that only sportsmen
should be permitted to run
faster than they can.
• I do .... do not .... agrea
with eugenic measures through
prenatsl adoption.
·
• I do .... do not .... believe
in the voluntary curtailment of
sexual inactivity.
• I think the State does ....
does not .... have the right to
classify information on the
maximum velocity of Government owned snails.
• Toilet training should .... ·
should not .. .. be restricted to
humans and animals.
• ·I do .... · do not...: feel that
death must precede after-life.

350 Celebrate
Simchas Torah
Monday evening, October 12,
marked the first Simchas Torah
(JWjoicing in the Law) celebration at the recently opened
Chabsd H o u s e, 3292 Main
Street.
Approximately 3 5 0 J e w s
danced on the sidewalks in celebration of the completion of
the year-long Torah-reading cycle. Small children were carried on the shoulders of their
fathers as the Torah ( Law)
scrolls were taken from the arl&lt;
in the Chabad Houae. ''Not
since before the ·Nazis came to
Lemberg have I seen a Simchas
Torah like this one. It's just
like my father's synagogue,
with the men carrying their
children," reminisced an elderly man. As he spoke, studeots
grabbed his arm and pulled
him into the circle of dancing
University students and professors.
Women, separated by a partition, in keeping with Orthodox tradition, also danced and ·- ,
sang, but most watched and
laugbed as the men danced and
did somersaults.
Seven times the Torahs were
carried and each time the dancing became faster and the singing, louder.
. At the end of the service, the
tables were laden with fish,
cholent (meat and bean casserole), sweet cakes and apple
cider.
Rosh Hashanah arid Yom
Kippur services were equally
well-received. In the words of
many, ''Everyone felt like a
part of the service-everyone
joined in happy songs and
songs of repentance. Jt was
something real-and difierenl"

�~2l,lt1l

=New·Causes
For Laymen

FommJa Grant Finaficing·-...,..-~&lt;~

from -

1, coL 3)
~ . . .

phasi-.1, "if to inswe apinst a continllinl
erosion of fiDanciai s u p p o r t
after the current ecooomic cri&amp;ilo"
SUNY efficiency could also
be iDcreased. be said, "if fadera! research dollars and the
overhead accompanying them
were deJ""'!tad:' directly with
the institution conducting the
reoean:h. "Tbe prment system
of allocation 'from Albany' is
neither. equi~le nor conducive
. to effiCiency.
Tbe fotmula system in Ontario, Kelter notad, bas resultad
in pro-mtad higher aducation
costs which have risen at an
annual rate of five and one-half
per cent, only slightly more
than one per cent above the inflation rate. At the same time,
be ·pointad out, costs in hospitals and primary and secondary aducation, wbere formula
financing bas not been usad,
have increased at an annual
rate of about 10 per cerit.
'-:11lere seems to be no reason
wilY we could not ~ the
asme general results in New
York," be said.
Altbough the formula plan
would strip both legislature and
central administration of their
autbority to determine how
funds are to be expendad within institutions, the president
emphasized, both "would be
able to devote increased 'attention and energy to major ques. lions of the over-all level of
p\lhlic support, the coordination of long-range planning, the
special needs of new institutions and consideration of support of new or special projects.' ..

Tbese central bodies could
also give time to "considerin~ the purpose of the total
system, and to working with
e8ch institution . . . in the .,..
tablisbment of a clearly-definad role which it would be
~ to fulfill effectively
and efficiently with the monies
it receivad through the formula
grant."
Awaidlne Past Failures

Even witbout this type of financing, however, Ketter said
he believes the "current finan-

InstituteViews
New Health Roles
A Healf4 Maintenance Institute is being held in Buftalo today and tomorrow to discuss
implications of the concept of
health maintenance for the al·
liad health professions. U / B's
School of Health Relatad ProfM!ions is host for the meeting
which is funded by the Division of Alliad Health Manpower, Bureau of Health Manpower Education.
Discussion is centered on the
definition of the role of and
challeoge to each of these profellliolls in the maintenance
concept.

cial crisis ... can work in oombination with other ·faclon to
produce an eduCation system
that awids some of the failures
ol the past."
'11llee of these "other" fac.
tors were'citad: (1) t h e meot allocation of appliad research funds according to public need; (2) the development
in this State of the concept of
regionalism; and (3) the rebellion of many young people
against an aducation which
they feel is devoid ·of any human value commitment.
Tbe financial pinch and regionslism, Ketter said, "insure
that we will not expand in the
same indiscriminate manner
that characterized our period of
extensive and pro I o und
growth."
...
Rather, be outlined, we must
now: define institutional purposes; allocate our resources to
the most effective service of
tbol!e purposes; avoid the extraneous or less important by
estshlishing aducatioual priorities; and master the art of selectively pruning rather than
employing across-the-board
cuts. Altbough specific institutions may narrow the stope of
their activities, he
d, the
total SUNY system under regionalism can achieve broader
purposes.
Public Senrice

One of these purposes, be
said, is "public service. By defining more sharply our individual institutional purposes,
by working in the · regional
framework of inter-institutional
cooperation, and through the
government's policy of allocat,.
ing substantial amounts of research funds according to public need, we can create a system that will indeed be more
responsive to and comrnittad to
the solution of broad social
problems."
Most irilportant, however, be
said, by seizing the opportunity, "we can create a system ·of
higher education which demonstrates the precedence which
human problems sbould have
over economic and t&gt;echnological problems."
·
In Ketter's view, "the learnin!!- experience available to students in a system such as this
will incorporate the best of the
uniyersity ideal of service and
devotion to the scientific pursuit of truth. It will also incorporate the collegiate ideal of a
human value ·commitment. In
this case, the value will be the ·
common good."
Pronouncing himself not as
pessimistic 88 Marcuse, Ketter
said be does not believe that
the death wish will prevail, that
the organizational will cannot
be shapad by the human will:
HumanistiC: TecltiKifoey

At the asme time, however,
Ketter cautionad that higher
aducation and science must
avoid the trap that bas helpad
create much current disillusionment, that of creating ezpectations on the part of the public that science and the university
alone will transform anyDf. Edmund D . Pellegrino,
vice president of health sci- one's life.
"The
common good must preences, SUNY at Stony Brook,
delivered the keynote address, vail," be said, "and the means ·
for
realizing
this lie in the po"Health Maintenance-An
Idea in Search of an Organiza- litical JlyStem and in the '-rts
of
individual
men and women.
tion," at the Statler-Hilton last
night. His was a joint prmen- Tbey do not lie in the university
or
in
science."
tation with the University's
Tbe university, Ketter urged,
Fenton Lecture seria;.
must return to its origins! "rad· Other guest speakers include: ical" pwpoee, aducaijon, not
Daniel Patterson, M.D., acting simply with a renewad serkmsdirector, Health Maintenance neas but with new direction.
Organization Service, Depart- ·
"That clinoctioD will adhere
to the traditi01111 of the univer~..J..:. ~ill'~ ~'";tion &amp;. sity
ideal. but it will also inDD.S., 'dean, Schooi ~ . corporate a new commitment to
tisby, SUNYAB; Mamie Kwoh service and to accountability.
Wang, R .N., absiolant profes- Tbe result may well be that acisor, Conlin ·
Education-Pri- ence's ~ transforining efJ:IIU, Comell~niversity, New
fect on the uiliversi_ty-will be to
-yon: Hoepital Scbool of Nws- point the way finally to a true
ing; and Mrs. Ruth Wil.liamjl. reconciliation ol the university
chainnan, Bulfalo Model Cities ideal with the humanism ol the
old rollegiata· ideal."
Health COmmittee.

InP~i&amp;-- - .
By JOHN THURSTON

V..._..,btl....,._...._

Physicists Newton "Snd Galilee, if alive today, might be
somewhat surpriaad to learn ol
two physics COUZ8e8 recently

added to the U/B curriculum.
Designad primarily for the·
non-science major and devoid
of any mathematical principles
and procedures, the COUZ8e8 are
"Physics for Poets," which began this semester, and "Pbysics
and Society," . which is being
offered for the 8ellOIId year.
"Physics for Poets," according to Dr. Marvin Resnilwff,
assistant prof""""r, "presents
an intuitive approach to the
concepts of modem physics.
Unlike traditional or old pby&amp;ics, which employs the use. of
highly mathematical principles
88 a basis, the new counoe deals
with physics through the use of
general thema; in relation to
evezyday experience."
Also featured in the course
are informal lectures, films, and
art plates, as well 88 a number
of gua;t lectures from members
of other discip!ineaResnikoff says that laboratozy experiments will be almost
entirely set up for the students,
therefore requiring no extensive note-taking or intricate
wiring.
'•
"Physics and Society" serva;
as an introduction to physics in
the context of some facets of
Indian dancing was one of the highlfehb of the obse,.,_ of
the problems of society-&lt;:Ur"Diwoli," the Festival of Ught, held In the Fillmore Room
rent and past.
·
last Sunday night under sponsorship of the India Taught by PhySica DepartAssociation.
ment Chairman Dr. McAllister
H. Hull, Jr., the course deals
generally with the infillj!IICI!8 of
science on society and society
on science.
''The basic objective of the
course is to provide students
with a baclqp-ound that will en"Tbe Steel Industry and the speak on "E:rperieiJoe with the ahthele ~uencesto
critiw.callhichy
Environment" will be the Installation of Glass Cleaning
........
~
theme of the second C. C. Fur- Equipment for the Basic ~- basHull.., their lives," says Dr.
nas Memorial Conference to be gen Furnace."
sponsored by U / B's Center for
''The Suppliers ViewpointHe adds that "the esciteProcess Metallurgy, November Reaearch in Progress" will be ment of physics is often hidden
8-9, D1. Julian Szekely, direc- the focus for SM!ion 3. Tbe because of the highly in¥01Yad
tor of the Center, has an- program includa;: Thomas manner of presents~ thus
nounced.
Centi, Cyrus W. Rice Division, the presentation of 'Phymcs and
According to Dr. Szekely, the NUS Corporation, Pittsburgh, Society' is one that makes 110111e
conference will "examine a "A Survey of Waste Water of the ideas of Jlllysics more
broad range of problems relat,. Treatment Techni~- Dealing available to students out ol the .
ing to the theme. In addition with Steel Mill Eftl-;;;..ts;" Dr. ~'i:.:ru:'aco':!:l
to purely technological factors, R. Kaplan, U. S. Bureau of elude tbe
ad limiattention will be paid to health Mines, and Prof. G.W.P. Rene.
_,_......
and economic aspects."
· storff, University of Toledo, tatims ol pbyaieal science,
Tbe operun·g sM!ion on "So- "Gaseous Emissions during the problems aeatad lor soc:iety by
appliaata. ofolacienoe
the
cia1, Legal and Health Aspects Quenching of Blast Furnace CODtributioaa
acienoeSDd
to .._
of Pollution," will feature Kea- Slag;" Prof. E . Weber, Univer- quality ollife.
...,
neth L Johnson, regional air sity of Trier, Kai8erlauten, GerBoth "Ph""'"" for Poela" and
pollution control director, En- many, ''The Treatment of "''tty_aQand~are·_,
~Nironmental Protection Agency, Waste GasesFurnacef~ the Basic to all students, and ~·;- _
ew York; F. E. lrelllnd, chief Oxygen
; Prof. Szete.
-~-- alkali inspector, Unitad King- ly and H. Y. Cohn, SUNYAB, Pcredi~t
~_:~Each carrim four
dom, speaking on ''The Legi&amp;- ''The Oxidation of Cyanides
........._
lation for Pollution Control in Formad in the Blast Furnace;"
the Steellndustry and its Prac- · and Prof. J. F. Elliott, MIT,
tical En f orce men t in the "Some Economic and .T~
Unitad Kingdom;" a speaker logical Aspects of the Steel
from the steel industry, discus- Scrap Problem."
sing !'The Economic Impact of
A fourth, relatively unstructhe Installation of Pollution lured session will flllture a
The ....._...__t o1 _...._ •
~~
...,...._
Abatement Devices;" L A- panel on " Steel Industry and
'Thaxton, Pollution Control Di- the Environment-the Nen 10 atry will 8p01180r a eympoaium ' 11
vision, Tbe Carl&gt;orundum Com- y eaJB."
on chemical tzea-t -ul herp&amp;ny, speaking on "Interaction
Tbe C . C. Fomaa Memorial oin addictioD, November 6 at
of the - Sociaf-Economic and ConfereDCM were initiatad in the Statler Hilton Hotel.
Ecological Environments in ' 1970 with the objective ol
~ ol the propam is to
American Steel Mill Towns;" b~ tocether a number of take an up-to-date look at
and Dr. K. Sprine, ~t academics, plant operators and tnet!able and ott.. ebanXal
of Physiology, Yale University, industrial reoean:hers for the agents uaad in tzeatina heroin
on ''Health e,nd the Steel In- presentation of.papem arid free addiction. Tbe Proenuil will be
dustry Environment." ·
.interchange of i~ on metals _ . to paychiatriata • ·well •
Session 2 will center on "Ex- processing. ·
other conoemad ~ 8Uch •
perienoe with the Installation
Tbe first c o n f e r e n c e, · m physicians, lawyers, jUdpe, SDd
and the Operation of Pollution "Blast Furnace TeclmoJocy," eocial woril:en;
Devices." In addition to two was orpnizad and ·_ . , . !
8pealun will incl.ude: Dr.
other steel industry papers yet by the Center. for Prooeaa Met- .Morrio H. Bemotein, -.ciate
to be determbwl Carl Symons, allurgy and support..t by eraniB c1ini1:a1 pror-- of psychiatry
H"""" Rea!arCb lab, Bethle- from the A. E. Andenon Foun- and· community madic:ine, Mt.
bern Steel Corporation, will tfi.s- dation. .
·
Si!uri Sc:boo1 of Madicine, City
.,._ "Trea- ol Cold Mill
According to · Dr. Szekely, University of N- York· Dr
Wastee ~ Ultra High Rate the ronfereDoeS are alatad to Max Fink, prof""""r of ~
Filtration; and a rep.-nta- be an annU!'l event-with a dif- a.try N- York Medical Colthe of Locq&amp;-Cottnill. Ltd.. will ferent .theole ·~ year.
~.:

DUmli Dancing

Steel and the Environment
Furnas ConferenCe Subject

"::"'..!::

--'·"'ties

•;;._ .

Hero.m
• 11opilC·
Of Symposrum
·"

�(
7

tOll----·
·----__,_
Jur-.
.
.
--;c. . . . . . . .---------ill:=t:::J
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW 'fORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

11111- _,_

Faculty of Arts lind Utters• . . .
Faculty of Educationol - . .
Faculty of Eft!ii~ino ond

B.lMO.oO

$

111013.800.00

........ ..

Bet-. 100 aDd 200 U / B
students -=b year designate
lbemaelws as pre-med majors
with eYelllual ' - of acceplance"into a medical or dental
8Cbool Some switch majors in
time. Of the remaining, {.....,..
than balf ...m their desind

faculty o f - " ' - . . . . . . . .
faculty of

t-ond

Faculty o f - - -

faoultyofSociol-ond

---------

..-.-·-··· ·· ··· -------------------·~:::::::::::::::
~- ······--······

-""-

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

pro{aaioual 8Cbool
r-t ymr, 62 of 130 pre-

medical and dental students
wbo applied for admission to
profl!llltioDal scbools were accepted. That's 48 per cent.
To mise that number and to
assist the ooe Division of Un-

........... •. 1111111111111111111111111 ... _ _
Millerd Filtmcn ~tege end
C.ontinuing Education

. . . . . . . •

-··Off- ..........

~~ ········
~·· ..t ElleCUtive Vice

%'840.00
fc;liOol ........... • . • . • . . . .. • . .
960.00
ond s,....... . . . . . . . .
3,560.00
- . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . ..
:!40.00
Studlnt Atfain . • • . • • . • • • • . . •
4.560.00
~. . . . • . . . ••
,1)80.00
- - -..... . • • • . •
1,200.00
~ M BufWo Foundetion ...t
Alumni _Rolotions .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1901600.00
~

········••!II••••••••IJ

*::.~c::;~ ·- ... -.. .

600.00

lution." Rensselaer Polytechnic

GREPORTS
ON
GJ&gt;EOPLE

Institute.
DIL C. CARL PmELS,

management. with

associate dean,
DL EL. WAL-

chairman, management science. .. A Computerized Management Inlonnation System for Human Blood Utilization," International Federation of Information
Processing Societies Congres..~;,
Ljubljana, Yugoslaviu.
LACE,

assistant

DR. JJERBDlT E. PHlLUPS,

AWARDS
Ulistant professor, marketing, won an HonorOIL ALAN C. SAWYIB,

able Mention Award in the 1971
Doctoral Diuertation Competi; .
· h or tf&gt;e Ame ·
¥arkel\ni

~~---'R!"'!': . :- : .

OFr. CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

Peer Advisement Group
Aids Pre-Med Students

professor. management. with J.P.
''Statistical Properties o£
the Pooling Weights Used to Calculate the Po s t e rio r Mean
in Bayesian Estimatio~" Joint
Statistical Meetings, Fort Collins,
Colorado: with G. M.. nANKFURTEil
and J.P. SEACU:, · ·A Simulation
Model for Studying the Performance of the M a rkowitz Portfolio
Selection Model Under Realistic

SEAGLE,

Conditions.'' 12th American Meet-

ing, Institute CDr Management
Science. Detroit, Michigan.
DR. I..1Z E . PRESTON, chainna.n, environmental analysis and policy,
'1'be Role of Regulation in a
Coherent Economy;· Dartmouth
College. Hanover, New Hampshire.
DR.. CARRY A. RECHNITL,

IJrofessor,

chemistry, .. New Directions for

Ion-Selective Electrodes," 1971
International Congress on Olemi.stry and Chemical Instrumentation, 11aoe1. Swilurland.
DR. EDWARD L. WALLA&lt;Z, chairman,
management systems. ..Collection
Strategies in Regional B I o o d
Management: 'Their Effects on

OIL FaD WUDL, assistant profesoor, cbemist&gt;y, "A Novel "-'Ym·
metric Syntbosis of Second Row
Elemeuts," National ACS Meeting, Washincton, D.C.

PUBLICATIONS

DL

pro-

r-.r. - 1 , with ... oooLU and liUL YOUMCl-, Moth&amp; of

lftlvcily Travel DeiiWDid. Part 1: ·

~::'~c~~

Technical Wormatioa.

. .

·

IlL SOON P. ~A.

~":'::W...:....~w.:!

Eae To Hunt lions
'The guide. which is used by

DUS advisof'!i, Ut B's Medical
School and others .out of town.
as well as by PGA. advises students that it might "be easier
to bunt lions with spears than
to meet head on with the
MCAT's and to move through
the slow and painful application and admission process.
"Perhaps the biggest problem a pre-medical or pre-dental
student will face is deciding
upon which schools to apply
to. Opinion on this subject is
available from many sources;
however, nothing is absolutely
uiomatic. Time and time
again, applicants get accepted
from where they expected to
be rejected. aDd rejected from
where they expected to be ac-

the little tangible
information to which an applicant can tum is to look at
where the students who graduated before him were a&lt;:ocepted
and to loolt at their cumulative
index aDd MCAT 1100res."
'That information is the basis
of the advisement PGA is giving this fa)) from the Underpadualli Medical Society's 364
Norton ol6ce.
F..- inslance:
N"mety-6.., pre-med U/B
students applied to U/B's Medical School last year; 25 got in.
The University of PitbiburKh
Medical School accepted the
_,.,.t - - number of U/B
student&amp;-&lt;!i&amp;ht.
SUNY"s Upetate aDd Downstate Medical Centers -=b accepCed 6, NYU .said yes to 4.
Ovenill p1lde point averages
of U/B students accepted at
medical acboola ranaed from
2..29 at Hawaii to 3.89 at a
11U111ber of oCher acbools.
ScieDoe
t from
a 1.56. which U/B'.s· Medical
SdiOol-found IICili!Piable. to ooe
4.0 ~at this Med' ical Sd!oaL

olt~~Sflu!ia
Femando AI:::'L.. ~ Other~
~tti•• ~ .o1~roacl.

.

planning
"""""""'
"It's gettin'g
bani«

and

harder to get into mediad
schools," SleYe IAzoritz, a
PGA member, 88YB be informed
freshmen then. -rbe number of
_.,... has remained pretty
ooostant, while the nUJilbel' of
applications has increased mp-

Communique-

a-.
.
.
-t

. - r coow, ...UW.t

and dental acboola in the 'U.S.
and Canada, medical joumals,
aDd publications ranking 111111
describing the acboola.·
During the IIUIIIIDel', members of PGA spoke at freshmen

~duate Studies pre-med
adVlBOT, the Under !! raduate idly. Students wbo don't fully
Medical Society is offering its understand the mechanics of
own counseling program. applying to medical schools are
EleYen juniors and seniors are at a severe disadvantage."
now part of this year-old Peer
"Many of the students wbo
Group Advisement (PGA) ef.
come to us for help are very
fort.
unsure
of what they're doing,"
PGA bad its beginnings during the first , term of the 1970- says F r i e d. "Somebody ap71 school year, says Bill Fried, proached me in Diefeodorf-be
its coordinator, when "a group must have recognized my face
of ooooemed students recog- -and asked me what were the
nized the need for sudt a pro- 20 easiest medical schools to
gmm" which would "reduce the get into."
Another student, acc:ording
load of the University's advisor . . . and give students a to Fried, was so unsure of getting a&lt;X!"Pted. that "be applied
different viewpoint."
PGA members worked to 82 medical schools. It cost
througb the Higher Ed~tion him $2,310 in application fees
and Reform Bulletin Boani before be started paying for
Course that term, then organ- transportation or other exized themselves for independ- penses."
ent study credit the following
semester. Under the eye of Joseph Hugar, DUS's pre-med
advisor and chairman of the &lt;con&lt;inued /rom p&lt;Jie 8, col. 5)
Pre-Medical-Dental Appraisal NEW FACULTY ORIENTATION : guest
Committee, they produced The speaker, Richard Siggt&gt;lkow, vice
Next Four Years, a 20-page president for student afTain. Facguide for pre-medical and pre- ulty Club, 3: 30·5 p.m.
dental students.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM • : Dr. Wer-

~=~ ~ee~r1::';:: ~

c:an Aaoc:iation of Blood Banks,
OJ.ica,go.

Office indnde ;. cotnp)ete aet of
cataJosus of all the medical

in the_ Un-

cloqmduale ~ ~s

ner Brandt. New York Univer~
sity, Positrons 06 a Solid Srau
Probe. lll Hochstetler. 4 p.m.
Refreshments ll2 Hochstetler,
3:30_p.m. ..
COMPt.J'TlNC CE..JolTER USER SERVICES

SEMINAB#: COBOL, see Tuesday
listing.
HILLEL

BOWUNG: •

Hillel House,

7 p .m..

International H o u • e
and Alice in WonderU:nd, 147
Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
lntern4tional How;e ( 1933, A.E.
Sutherland) stano W.C. Fields,
Stu Erwin, Bela L u g o s i and
Bunu~ &amp; Allen. It is one of the
FJLMS• •:

:~e:~~rl~C;:

~~=!w!~.
C~ in
Hoo, China.
1

w:

Alice in Wonderland (1933, N.
Z. McLeod) otano W.C. Fields,
Gary c:rr, ~ Grant.YMae

~"' ron~the

fully to -

.:Jria ~

wbo playa what

g'.;;t'~~isM~~~

rather abaurd adaptation of IAwis
Carroll. Not a great film, but a
pricelesa curio.

NOTICES
PHI Bft.l lt.lPP4:

UDivenity fac-

ulty momber.-&lt;&gt;ld and --.-bo
ue Phi Beta Kappa .....a-.
eleewbere are invited to ..ume
aaoci.ate member .tatua iD tt.
local OmicroD c:l&gt;aptar. Tbio ....
be doae by •....W.. YotU ume,
p - 1 ~t and adclr.o.

location ol chapter wbare initial

election made (oloo data of
electioo. if .-ihlo) and a c:bedt
for S3. payal&gt;ie to Omicron C1&gt;ap- . _
ter Phi Beta Kappa. to tho cbai&gt;ter .cretary, Dr. W.L BameUe,

~~t~~:fi!
place

:rou Oil tho membenbip and

iDai1iuc

ol

list for announ-ta

chaPter activitieL

EXHIBITS

,

�~2J,197J

8

=
--to,

capital i n - t and

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

pollutiim.

OOCUPA'IIONAL~~­

Activity Prif.ro•

·l&amp;"TtJD# :

tJ:.f~R~'(k

=

itiel, Pan 1, - - by Re-

~~
'1:f-~:::
..n 88li-O'I28.
2 p.m.

formation

two-day

1::~~ Mnoc~eU:te ¥:::0:.Fot!!
~.:'u!'&amp;...u~&amp;,;.e::~
and the Office of Urban AIJain.

~=,;;~~~t~~nl R ~"j:
0

at Cuill1ll, S p.m.
.CONOIOCII....ai...-: Dr. KilaM&gt;
Sato, prof-. - x o , IN-

=z·;}.'-;~,!;2;;.!,'=

THURSDAY-21
HOUSING INII1Tfll'm#: A
5

CLUII ~·:

8

baum. vice .President for academic
afl'ain; Introduction , Ja.mee H .

Ryan, ...ociate cfuector, ()lice of
Urban Affain; Frank D. Cerahon,
Buffalo area cfuector, U.S. De-

~~~=t.~fT.{:n '-k'!:;

~r::e.tr: :;,e95 :.'!:.~';',.;

1-Typu of Spomon and Government A.uistance Progrom.tJ; 12
noon-Lunch. 1: 30 p .m.-m::BSION
u-Packaging a Project; S p.m.Break; 3: 15 p.rn--8ESSlON m-

ed by a · ~ diocuooion and
audience participation. Fillmore
Room, Norton, 7:30 p.m., f....,_
Pn.M"": KOUJGidan (Japan), 147
Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
A aeries of three (l"'rhapo f~)
gbost \atories made m the penod
of Mothra =d Rodin. The •pecial

~'f=.of.~:i._~~

w

Lea,
p.m.
Room 9, 8 p.m.
LOGIC 00LI.OQIJIU)( 0

~~e=. ~~th;to= ~

OON'I'lNUING DENTAL EDUCATION# :

~p:r-=~~

trowo1ti. Uniwnity . of B a se 1.
Switzerland, tnoc:es the clowelopment of notions of number. apace~
and symbol; for a _.-a) audience. Room 43, 4246 Ridp Lea,

ton Conference Theatre, check
showcnse for times. Faculty and
staff $1.25, students $.75, or $.50
before 6 p.m. Through OcL 24.
Greeting•: There comes a time
when all youn11 men must find a

" devilishly, piercingly funny, fortified with an ac~te
sense of the absurd!"
-N.Y. nmes
" An outrageously, raunchy parody of normal television programming, 'Brand X' knows where it's at
sexually, politically and (pop) culturally. It transgresses the last taboo!"
-Newsweek

8

~~0.!,~·!~;~:

tional Reference Center for OdonLesions, will conduct a ooune on Clinicol A.&amp;pects of Odontogenic Tumoro and Murooal Leoions, 146
Capen, 9 a.m.-S p.m.

toeenic Tumon and Allied

PHAJDU.CY TELEPHONE ucruBE# :··

Dr. Albert Wertheimer, Society's
New Attitudes and Their ERects
on the Lo1111-Range Out/oo~ for

rro=1t!

~"M~
stations, for

.!:rJ:~

further information
call 895-0728, 11:30 a.m. and 10

p.m.
CBEMICAL ENGINEEIUNG SEMINAR#:

Dr. Ralph Rumer, chairman. civil
engineering, Interfacial Mizing in
Stratified Lokes, 5 Acheson, I

p.m.

The discussion will deal mainly
with the phenomenon of internal
seiches in two--layered stratified
lakes and the occurrence of interfacial wave breaking.
DENTISTRY TELEPHONE LECJ'URE# :

Dr. James A McMullen, Modem
Concept.s i.n Periodontal Surgery,

rro= :.r ::::::
1:30 p.m.

Fari'IVAL

OP

POlJSH

!~~=-

CULTURE • :

F i I m s: Innocent Sorcerers, a
lighthearted treatment of aophis-

another is obsessed with the Kennedy assassination, the third is a
porno film freak. With Jonathon
Warden, Robert De Niro and
Gerritt Graham.
Hi Mom! A film ·about the
evolution of a Vietnam veteran
turned stag moviemaker, turned
politically committed actor in a
theatre of cn~elty, turned eventually (of course) revolutionary.
This .film is an anarchic attack
on middle class opti.m.ism.
DiPalma makes outrageous
films with an eye on artistic free-

=:~~~ hlh:_deH,~~:Iean!
~!!llysu~?J:f.lyd~$~': :;.~

eral rumors that he makes•funny ,
dirty films. Of course he likes

Godard.

peasant family. 140 Capen, 3 p.m.,
free.
Dr. Howard D. Colby,

and associate professor of oral

bioloi;Y; Dr. Sebastian Ciancio,

internal medicine, University of

as.socmte professor and chairman,
periodontology; Dr. Russell Nisengard, assistant professor, periodontology and microbiology, Ad-

MBCHANICAL

ENGINIZRING

SEMI-

NAil#: 125th Anniversary Senes,

Dr. Richard L. Fo .. aasociate

tJr::~.c;;;,::.= ~eseAh.~

vanced Periodontal Surgery (par -

ticipation limited to 12), 146
Capen, 9 a.m.-5 p .m. Also Oct.
23 and OcL 29.

:~~~~n~"r'~o~ao 8~rn.:.,'1

NEW FACULTY ORIENTATION: Ber-

10:45-12 noon; afternoon sessions: ) :30-2:30 p.m. and 2:453:45 p.m. Workshop topics inelude sponsorship, ~ublic housing,
:a:~d~~isl ~. construe·

dean of Undergraduate Studies,
will conduct informal meeting.
Faculty Club, 3: 30-5 p.m.
BIOCIIDOBTRY sEMINA a#: Dr.
Mildvan, The Institute for Cancer Raearch, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Nuclear Relaxation

PHYSICS COLLOQtJIUK*: Dr. Martin Klein,
University, New
H aven, Connecticut. Aspects of
the Work of J. Willard GibbB,
111 Hochstetler, 4 p.m. Refreshments 112 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.m.
PBILOSOPirt- t.BCTURE•: Dr. Newton Garver, professor, philosophy,

TllllOJU:TICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR#:

CHABAD SABBATH BEBVIcz•:

chani.t:al Design, 104 Parker Engm134
· eePnna·r"er4
, p_.m.p.m.Refreshments
3 30
:kl

~lba~cece.r:;:Et:~

~!o':J~~

CLi:e c:::~"t";,.:!.

Dro L.C. Cusacbs, chemistry, Tulane University, New Orleans,

La., Semiempirical Molecular Orbitol Caku/atio,..lncluding Heavier Elements and Biological Ap-

~t~~:m_~Z:fr:h.!:t.~~

..,

':f:=: ~f ~~d~:rtpe~J:::'J:;

p.m.
COMPUTING CENTER UBal BIZVJCES

Yale

fs~~=-rud~:'i:::hl~!:· PR_:m
Cbab8d

House, 3292 Main SL, 5:45 p.rn
FILM": Brand X , sporuored by
Community Action Corpo, 140

friGuti~~ ~e! fn~dv~ ':i

at ahowti.me, Norton Tick~t Office. Also on Saturday.
Underground satire on tetevi.aion that is pure entertainment

~~~.~~Ig~;:~~: fndu~ a m.:;.pi':lq:S~~

structor, Tuesdays and Thursdays which turns into all orgy on a
through November 4. Room 10, patient'• bed, Abbie Hoffman as
4238 Ri&lt;f&amp;e Lea, 7-9 p.m.
a cop b a I h i-:n g in a tubful of
1
' .... LI..EL 80WLINC : Co-ed, -Rillel__mc.~ey,.:...a.nd a ~x · pa_nroa.
l ' use 7 p.m.
!01 .ang the ~el on ~ta My

FESTIV~ OP POLIBB CULTUD:•:

RichaJ .;

'lfJ&gt;'..., CathoW:

Dr.
fJniwr-

~~?;~r~~J· ~e~=

of the • bourd."-N.Y. Tima.

'

a&gt;UCATIONAL

8'I'UtD8

SYKP081-

UM:•: Dr. Benjamin Rosner. Uni~
versity Dean. teacher education.

City Univenity of New York,

~~"':~ili2'.o~ ~;.!:"t'9

p.rn, $5. For further information
contact Faculty of Educational
Studiel, 206 Foster.
fiLM" • : Stolag 17 (1.95S, Billy
Wilder), Conference Theatre, 6
p.m., free.
The prison-c:amp film which at·
tempted to instill a bit ~

c:::=- :_.,

into

thingo like Hogan's Heroes, but
the initial concept was a o u n d
enough.
CAC"s .......................

FiLMs•• : Gr eeli ng a and Hi
Mom!. see Thursday listing.
SABBATH SDVJCE•: Dr.
Marvin Blooin, School of Social

BJLLEL

~e~:~;j~ tkiokn;.n~~£b:l:

students $.50. Tickets at Norton
ticket ollice.
·
Vilioru de rAmen, written in

Paris in 1943, consists of seven
movements. This performance is

believed to be the Buffalo pre-

LECTURE•: Dr. P e t e r
Capen Blvd., 8 p.m.
Stern, Cambridge University and
presently visiting professor, Uni- INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING : Inversity of Virginia, Walter Ben- s truction in basic steps during
jamin : Crilic in an Age of Dark- fint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,.
neu, 29 Diefendorf Annex, 8 : 15 8 P~·
p.m .
FESTIVAL OF POJ.J.SH CULTURE*:
Dr., Stern i5 author of studies Concert of Polish and European
and articles on Gennan literature music by Piotr Janowski, violinand intellectual history from the ist and Paul Berkowitz, pianist.
18th to 20th centuries. His books Works by Brahu&gt;s, MozarL Szyinclude Ernst Junger : A Writer manowski, Mieniawsk.i. B a i r d,
of our Time; Re-Int_erpretatiom: 8: 15 p.m., studen ts $1.00, nonSeven Studies in Ninet eenth Cen- students $2.00.
tury German Literature; G.C. _. Mr. Janowski , Poland's youngLichtenberg : A Doctrine of Scat- est violin virtu090, won top honors
tered Occasions.
in 1967 in the Wienawski International Violin Competition when
CONTI:NUING DEN TAL EDUCATION

5:80 p.m.

~be~

GERMAN

SEMINAR#:

Virginia, Gonadal Hormone In teroction with ACTH in the Regulation of Adreno-cortical FuncLion in Rats, B-162, Bell Facility,
3 pin.

''The first entertainment film of the Woodstock
Nation, or the last of the Nixon Nation. Funny from
beginning to end, it's pure gold!" -Village Voice

bat will follow. Hillel House, 40

~:;';,.~ ~~~ :"~~n~~ . .,----F::....::R.:.:I:.:D=-=-A=-Y=---=22=----

of a working day of a Polish

Dr. Nicbolaa

p.m.

selves, involving frightened Samurai and various Japa.ne3e bugaboo, are frightening.
FILM . . : Greetings and Hi Mom!,
the films of Brilln giPalma. Nor-

~e ~%~g~:m~t!~~
!t:Fn7a~~~eS~~~rMr~~ This~
men, one's into computer dating,
Dr. Jens· Pindborg, professor and
chairman, oral patholOfiY, Royal

:

Goodman, prof-.r, .mathemat·
ics, Infinite Proofo in A..WU...tie,
Room 1, 424'C Ridae Lea, 3:80

~~!Ier1 ~~;.uor:I~~ ~ :::dt:'r~

tis Institute or· Music. Philadelphia. His accompanis t , Mr. Berkowitz, is also a student at the
Institute, studying under Rudolf

Serkin.

SATURD AY-23
CONnNUING DE N T .A L EDUCATION

see Friday listing.·

COUKSE# :

T0 RAB

WITH

COMMENTARIES:

Rabbi Hofmann's home, 12 Colton Drive, 4 p .m.

~::~en~r'm=:~':~l~~ol~

:~~i:{gle !te~, :~g ~n~~
presentation by the Wawel Dance
Ensemble from St. Catharines.

.

~:n~ .m~I~~ =~~

$5.00, students $2.00, tickets at
Norton ticket office. For further
infonnation call Office of Equal

Opportunity, 831-5271.
FILM" : Brand X , see Friday listing.
PILMS••: Greeting• and Hi
Mom!, see Thursday listing.

Jf~wynDu&amp;t~n~~Los:i!

Artist Presentation Society
Award, and have performed as
soloists with the SL Louis Sym-

W~n~ma nC:O:!ityaev::thes~

On October .15, the lli&gt;ldts presented Visioru de fAmen at the
Library and Museum of Performing Arts at Lincoln Center.
m.MS*•: Greetings and Hi
Mom!. see Thunday listing.

TUESDAY-26
PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE ~#-:

Dr. Tarik Elibol. F~roptU: Gootrointestinal Endoscopy, sponaored by Refional Medical Program,
40 receivmg stations, for further
information call 835-0728, 11:30

COMPUTING CEN'lD UBD SDnQI:S
SE&gt;&lt;JNAil# : COBOL, aee Thurs-

day listing.

first day, entries due by OcL 21. Sporuored
by Physical Education aod Recreation DepartmenL

HANDBALL TOu.NB'Y:

WE:I;&gt;NESDAY-27
NURSING

'IELEPBONJ:

LBC'I'UIIZ# :

Dr. J o h n Flynn aod Shirley
Carey, R.N., The Role of Amniocentesia in«hUU8 Seruftized
Pregnanciu, sponsored by Regional Medical Program, 40 re-

ceivinc

atations, for further in-

formation call 835-0728, 7 : 15 a.m.
and 7:15 p.m. •
PHYBJCIAMS"'!m.ICPBONB LBICTUI:B#:

:i=';,); Si!:!J;~ ==~we:i

~

..ar.u.•: . Frina ArB" I dl and Kenwyn

J!Olat. pianists, wiU pedorm Ofiy.
ier Meeaiaen~a VUioM de rAmen.
Baird, 8:80 p.m., general admio51.60, r.cult:y and otafJ SLOO, .
·~.-

..

for the CDC 6400, Roger Campbell, instructor, Room 12, 4238
Ridge Lea, 7-9 p.m.
LtNGUISTICS LEC'I'UD* : Dr. Wolfgang W o I c k. associate professor, linguistics, Dialecw/aty, 404
Hayes, 7: 30-9 :50 p.m., free aod
open to the public.
J"EWISB

analyaia of dynamic oystea.. Hio

e.

KY811CI&amp;M AND KABBAL-

~~n '(;=ry~tre~·

3292 Main SL, 8 p.m., puhlic in-

vited.

~

EAJU.Y MUSIC CONcatr• : 100

Yeara

of Fnnch MU11U:{J673-I772,

t;h

wr~~:?:.vi~~-

vio-

cbordist; Donald Weilerstein,
lin; Paul Katz, cello. Works by
Jean-Baptiste Lully, N icolaa
Ciret. Claude Balbastre, ArmandLouis Couperin, Nicolas Geoffroy
and Dufour. Baird, 8:30 p.nt-,
general admi.aeion $1.50,
an d staff $1.00, students $.50.
Tickets at Norton ticket ollice.

faculty

l i! MES

262 Norton,
12 noon; JewWr. Ethica, 262 Norton, 1 p.m.; Hilld mem.berahip
meeting, Hillel Hou,e, .8 p.m.

BroiNNDtS HI'!BKEW:

Dr. Phillip Soou:aro, P•ych.UJtric
Conference: Emotional Component• Ui Emergency Care, sponsored by ~onal Medical Procram,
40 reoei.Vlftg stations, fOr further
SUNDAY--:-24
information call 835-0728, 11_a.m.
WBKN-TY : Univenity of Buffolo
~ORLD CltiBIB BIDION.ut*: World
Round Table, Dr. R o be r t H . Cmia in 50 Yeor•? World DyStem, proleuor, politic&amp;l acience, IUJlftia, the new book by Dr. Jay
and Jo,hn E . bach, Buffalo atForreoter of M~ T ., will he rev i e w e d aDd d..i!lcuNed by Dr.
Lauren B . Hitcboock. proleuor,
Direction for the Supreme engineering. Sponsored by . the
Court?'' 11 u..m.
~
Depariments of Civil and Industria! En~P-ring as part of the
T.U.XUD CLAllS : Hillel Library, 3
!25th Anniwnary, 104 Parker
p.m.; Conver-.ationol Hebrew. 3
p.m.; Opootion GN!en LiBhl, 1 Engineering, 12- noon-! p.m.
Qr. Forrester ia • leader in
p.m.
.
DUG-PIANO

COMPUTING &lt;ZNT1B U8llt sam:ars
SDIINAil# : Job Control Lancuase

F'ENTON

u:crua•: Dr.

Rashi Fein, professor of economics of medicine, Huvard Univenity, Fillmore ~ Nortcm.
8:30p.m.
.
Dr. Fein bolda a B.A. and
Ph.D. in economics from Jolma

Hopkins University. He baa

served on President Traman's
Commission on the Health N of the Nation and oa Praidea.t
Kenn'edy's Council of ~
Advisen. From 1983-1968, he was
Senior Fellow at the 8rooldDa
InstitutiOn in Waahincton. Q.C.
Dr. Fein is the author of three
books on the economicl: of medicine.- the most recent being Tu
Firuuu:Uig of M edU:ol Edwntion.
His lecture topic will he the economic issues of comPrebeaaive
health care.
JruSICAL

INNOV.&amp;DOMI:

WBCE·

FM, a fifteen minute p._.,..
featuring Julius EMtman, iD-

structor in music aDd a IDI!Diber

of the Creative' A.ociateo. Mr.

~tmanaod~ ~·~

newest haUet. Moon Silent Modulation. Michael P. Burke is boiL
9 : 05 p.rn

THURSDAY-28
JDUCAm,.

OOln'INUING D &amp; N T A L
OOUIISE#: Dr. Alan l.

Drinnan
and staff, DiiJtnoou and Trm~­
m.ent of CollaPH in the Dental
Office, 146 Capen, ·g-.a.m_.s p.m.
PH"YBICAL T B 1: R A. P Y TBUa'BOJCW

LIIIC'l'IJD#: Dr. Kyuba Lee and
paneliota Dr. Jam. E . Grillin and
John Nootrant. lmlrummhllion
of Low Frequency El«trical

latest hook presents a world model embodyiDg a l.iup number of
interacting parameters, by wbich
he projects the OYerall l'ftU!to of
controJ.J.ina" one or more, auch as

~i~-~4(\by~­

population, n a t u r a l -

(COIItiluoed 011 -

.

~

....~~,:~
call """"'..... 1 p.m.

7,

coL

5)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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            <elementText elementTextId="1381265">
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                    <text>STATE UNfVERSITY AT BUFFALO.

Changes Considered fir
Faculty ReviewProcess

Price Freeze
Violation
Is Ruled

The review procedures for
appointment, promotion and
tenure are receiving new direc·
tion and definition this fall .
Working together, Vice President for Academic Affairs Bernard Gelhaum and Dr. William
Baumer, chairman of the Faculty Senate, have developed a
new system which incorporates
much of the old and some new.
Their working paper-HPro..
posed Procedures, Policies and
Criteria Bearing on Appointment and Promotion to Tenure
and Non-Renewal of Appointment to Faculty"- was presented to the Executive Committee
of the Faculty Senate on October 6. The paper, now in its
third draft, was discussed by
Gelbaum. He emphasized that
the "underlying theme" of the
procedure being proposed "is to
provide the faculty with a maximum input into the decision
process leading to personnel
actions by the President." The
vice president also stressed that
this is a working draft and that
oomments, alterations and criticisms are welcome. While he
believes these tentative procedures involve the (aculty in as

Tbe Bulfalo division of the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
ruled last Thursday that UIB's
Bookstore is in violation of
President Nixon's 90-day price
freeze in the pricing of some
books. In a letter to Bookstore
Mana~er Thomas Moore, the
IRS diStrict director asked that
prices on the books be returned
to those in effect before August
15. The Bookstore is also asked
to voluntarily refund any overcharges.
Moore bas indicated that the•
Bookstore will comply with the
ruling. An explanation of the
action bas been posted outside
the door of the textbook section
and includes a list of 16 books
which the store sold a L a price
higher than permitted by the
freeze. The subject matter covered by the list is wide and
includes Shaw's Manual of Astronomy and Gibb's Mohammedam.sm.
The IRS ruling was the result . of a complaint filed by
David Stein w n l d, Student
Association's S tu dent Rights
Coordinator. Though not personally affected by the higher
pricing, Steinwsld f i I e d the
complaint becaw:• of "my ob-

~~t~~:

Acting Dean
To Be Named
An acting dean for the School
of Medicine will probably be
named no later than December
1, President Robert L. Ketter
said in an interview this week.
An appointment by that date,
Ketter said, would enable the
acting administrator to work

pi!d,ou~o~:anl.e~,kt;

transition. Pesch's resignation,
to become ,President of Michael

Reese H06pital and Medical
~~hicago, is effective
31.
Ketter said also that a new
permanent dean probably will
be named within one year. The

ElUlCUtive Committee of the
Medical School will meet in the
next several days to pick nominees for a search committee to
screen individuals for the post.
Tbe president will name a
panel of 8-12 · persons fr:&gt;m
u-e nominees, be said, including both University faculty iind
outside representatives.
Such committees uswilly conduct a ''national" search, recommending two c&gt;r three individuals from among whom the
president makes an appointment, subjeci to conJirmation
by the State University 'ITustees.
Salary for the new medical
dean, Ketter said, will •be befween $3Q,OOO and $48,000 annually, ckipehdina Oli qualillca-

, . ~.

many

B¢ U/B Crowd Is Unmoved
A N-• Commentary

By STEVE UPMAN
Yellow Sedita smile buttons
were in abundance last Friday
as New York City Mayor dash
:~jon-Candidate John Lindsay
came to Western New York
and U/ B to stump for the Buffalo mayor who is running for
County Executive. Tbe smiles
were appealing-or appallingdepending on your leanihgs.
'Ih!re were grins on Sedita's
aides. On the West Seneca
officials who hosted Lindsay's
morning press conference. On
Joseph Crangle, Erie County
Democratic head. Lindsay aiao
bore the perpetual smirk of the
species.
Tbe only one who forgot to
smile was Sedita. Throughout
the day of plugs (capped by
Lindsay'• statement that "I've
been in the urban trenches with
him") , Sedita looked as if he
had a piece of shrapnel in his
side.
Sedita stared stoically ahead
while the verbiage flowed; be
gave the appearance of being
accustomed to having such superlatives t h r u s t on himwhich he is.

the Bulfalo mayor raised his
hands and swung at the air,
like he was swatting at a fly.
When Lindsay fielded questions from the crowd, a girl 35
feet from the building stood, a
thin red coat shielding her
from the chilly Bulfalo fall, and
asked him, "As a resident of
Bulfalo and Erie County for
22 years, I want to know how
can you support Sedita for
County Executive?"
A cheer went up. Sedita
wasn't smiling. Lindsay fumbled w i t h his pocket-sized
(Contitwed on p&lt;JIIe 2. col. 4)

ways

as possible,

he

:,~ul:U.~ :;:~to ~t~

: ~ e~~~s se1"':.t Lindsay Smiles for Bedita

ficial."
The Bookstore's voluntary
compliance with ms hasn't resulted in any great financial
1068 so far. How much they
stand to Ioee is based on how
many customers come in for
refund•. Moore estimates that
most of the overcharges ·were
in amounts of 45¢ to $1. To
get a refund, the customer must
(Continued on fJOI~ 2, col. 5)

OCT. 14, 19.71

VOL 3-NO. 6

even more, iJ -someone comes

up with it.

The details of the· proposed
processes differ somewhat from
previous methods but in general follow the traditional format. Reviews for promotion,
appointment and tenure decisions are still started by the appropriate department or unit
and these units are still free to
define their own procedures.
The case is then sent to the
provost for review. At this
point, however, the process
changes slightly and the next
level of review is the Office of
the Vice President for Academic All'airs ( VPAA ) instead
ot. the old President's Review
.Bbard. A1ao new is the plan
to send all promotional cases
to the VP AA inst.lad of only

promotions to full profi!I!IIIOr.
Ale eom.nts

Under the propoeed new system, the VPAA would receive
a file containing recommendations on a case from both the
departmental chairman and the
provost, a current curriculum
vita, and three letters of recommendation concerning the faculty member. Tbe chairman's
letter would include a statement of "the procedures uaed
initiruly to arrive at the deci"ion, the vote (quantitative)
and a short statement as to
what the applicant will do for
the Faculty and department."
The letter from the provost
would cover somewhat the same
ground. The three recommendation letters should discuss the
previously established criteria
of teaching ability and originality and reliability of research.
For the first time, statements
from the deans of the Graduate
Schoo I and Undergraduate
Studies would be included in
the dossier.
The me would receive a
"preliminary screening" at the
VP AA's office for its "budgetary propriety," and would then
be sent to a University Review
Board ( URB). In some senses,
tbe.uRB.-.14 noplace the old
Pr-esidential Review Baud. It
would be charged with "recommending to the VPAA the action to be taken" on the case
and submitting to him a slate
of names for an ad hoc rommittee if expert advice is deemed
necessary. After the board's
recommendation, the VPAA
would review the case. His
recommendation, that of the
URB, and thoee of the provost
and departmental chairman
would then be sent to the Pres. ident for final determination.
If there is any disagreement
on the case among tJ-.. four
review levels, the VPAA would
not forward his report to the
President "until the differences
have been diacusaed by the
parties differing."
(Contitwed on 2, coL 4)

Stsncli"' Boo

Sedita smiled only once on
campus-wben the more than
1,000 people crammed in to
Norton's fountain area gave
him a standing boo. That came
after Lindsay had praised Sedita for the 20th time in his 20
minute~

Sedita had his back to the
crowd therl, as he talked to an
aide. He turned around and
acknowledged the boos.
Lindsay called him to his
side as 1he hooting continued.
''They want~Frank."
Lindsay
the ~
sign-both banda raised above
his hMd in capiW V's. He sug-

g"'!¥ ~t Sedita c1o likewise;

_..._ ...

Mitzvah for Krishna?

=--

• -

,.-ofthe~~-­

the - of--~-- durinl the- "-'!R

-.-

Krlohnll dlodplo Into
n. - h•• with roof

for • - .

�~~R.,

2

80 FroshWhoW&gt;uJdn't Have Made It ~Jrvlsay Smiles-------Admitted Through FNSM.Experiment
(Continued from pqe I , coL 3)

This fall 80 freshmen started
at U/B compliments of the
Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics (FNSM).
They are part of an experimental admissions pro g r .a m
FNSM conducted last year. In
cooperation with Admissions
and Records (A &amp; R ), tht Faculty was given a specified nu.'lber of slots in the freslunen
class and was allowed to pick
studen.ts for theSe spaces using
its own criteria.
idea for the program
emerged several years ago when
members of the Faculty observed that their incoming students generally had lower averages than other faculties' students. Through research, they
determined most hard science
students have lower grades because of the nature of their
courses. The standard admissions criteria, based on grades
and college preparatory tests,
results in a bias against FNSM
candidates, the Faculty felt.
Representatives from the
Faculty and A&amp;R discussed f!te.
problem and worked up a trial
program that was approved by
the Faculty Senate. In the
packet sent to all U / B applican~ last year was a postcard
asking. the person to let FNS~
know 1f he were mte_reste?, m
"':mg a SCI"'!ce ma)Or. We
wish_ to Identify, ~ early as
possible, all potential SCience
stud"'!ts ~ that we can l'rovide
you WJ~ mformation, guula~ce,
counseling and other assist-

n.e

ance," tbe can! saili 'l'be more
than 2,000 students who retumed the canis received a letter from Dr. George Nanoollas,
provost of FNSM, telling them
about the experimental admissions piogram. 'l'bey we r e
asked to submit: a brief letter
sununarizing their science qualifications; their Regents Exam
Scores in Scie!l91'. Math and
En_glish; at least one letter of
recommendation from a science teacber; and any other information t h e y wished. Attached to the Nancollas letter
was a brief description of all
the departments in FNSM.
1,700_ApplicontS

.

This letter went out m late
December. By early_ January,
more than 1,700 applicants had
followed through. Some were
intimidatingly well qualified.
A few had had papers published in ~entific journals.
One was wait'!'g for patent approval on a p~ece of apparatus
he had designed. Another
talked of the Wilson Cloud
Chamber he had put together.
~ut many others "'~ average
kids who were delighted that
this Faculty had given them
a chance to personalize thei r
applic~.tion and say something
of theu own.
Now, the real, work started
for _the. Faculty s 18-mem~r
applications screenmg committee. At least two representatives from _each department
seryed on this volunteer group
which worked from the end of

Ford Foundation Offering
Fellowships to Muwrities
Details on a series of Ford raphy, geology, history, IinguisFoundati6it fellowships for mi- tics, mathematics, microbiolnority students, available for ogy, music, philosophy. phys1972-73, have been rece ived by ics, physiology, political scithe Graduate School.
ence. psychology, religion, soAccording to Dr. Andrew W. ciology, speech and zoology.
Holt, associate dean, "appliFor further infonnation and
cants should be cautioned to applications, write either DOCnote the final date for filing TORAL FELLOWSHIPS or
complete applications and to ADVANCED-STUDY FELmake arrangements to provide
LOWSHIPS (s pee if yin g
Graduate Record Examination whether for American Indians,
scores, if required."
Blacks or Mexican AmericansA limited number of Doc- lfuerto Ricans ) , the Ford
toral Fellowships are available Foundation, 320 E a s t 43rd
for American Indian, Black and Street, New York, N.Y. 10017.
Mexican American or Puerto
Rican students who: expect to
receive a bachelor's degree before September 1, 1972, or have
received a bachelor's degree
since September 1, 1962; have
not undertaken any graduate or
professional study; intend to
pursue a career in higher edu·
cation; are U.S. citizens; and
plan to enter a U.S. graduate
The U / B Student Association
school, in the summer or fall
of 1972, and study full-time for has called upon the Federal
a Ph.D. in one of 83 specified CommunicationsCommission to
fields. Each fellowship will force the American Broadcastcover tuition, fees, books, sup- ing Company "ID make
plies and living costs. Deadline amends" for not televising the
for submitt;ing applications Js Buffalo Marching Band's halftime show during the regional
January 10, 1972.
Ford Foundation Advanced telecast of the U/ B-Holy Cross
Study Fellowships with the football game last October 31.
same benefits are available to
ABC cameras during that
students from these same performance focused on Bailey
groups who have previously Aven_u e traffic rather than on
pursued or are now pursuing the Band's pro-peace, anti-polgraduate study and are now en- _lution show. Also missed by
gaged in, or plan to enter, ca- the cameras were a scutQe and
reers in higber education. Ad- demonstration when peace
•-anced study may consist of marchers crashed the game.
full-time course . work, course
ABC called tbe balf-time
and dissertation work, or full- show " too political," although
time dissertation work. Appli- super - patriotic extravaganzas
cation deadline for advanced have been regularly covered
study fellowships is January in-full as part of football tele' 14, 1972.
casta.
The fields of study covered
SA is asking tbe FCC to proby these Ford grants are:
hibit any such future blackouts
atomy, anthropology, astron- as illepJ C11!118018hip, to req!Iire
"!"Y· art history, biocbemiatry, ABC-'IV to br-oadc8st a fihD or
· biology, botany, chemistry, other ieproductioo, of tbe show
claaaics, computer s c i en c e, to tbe same five.ctate audieoce,
dance, drama, economica, edu- or to ~ time for students
cation, ~ foreign -lanto ideas and informAguages, foreagn literature, 111'01- tion
allllained in tbe show.

SAWants
Amends from
Network

an-

January to March. 'l'bey fust
met with Dr. Norman Hasletter, assistant director for admissions, to learn how to halanoe various test scores and
how to understand the contents
of A&amp;R's file on each applicant.
Then the committee began
meeting in groups of two, reviewing 50 files at- a time.
Each applicant's folder received a score of from 1 to 10.
Every score above six was automatically accepted, fives and
sixes were questionable, and
scores of four and below were
rejected. After the review, the
"questionable" applicants' folders were looked at personally
by Provost Nanoollas who
made the final determination.
After a month of review, 1,130 applicants were jointly accepted by A&amp;R and FNSM. In
addition, 226 were admitted
solely by FNSM. This is the
group FNSM was trying to
reach with their new program
since they would have normally not been admitted to U!B.
Of these 226, 80 enrolled this
fa ll as entering freshmen out of
a class of about 400 FNSM students.
The 80 do not realize that
they are here solely because
of the experimental program
and neither do the faculty of
the departments they are in.
The only place they are singled
out is on their computer canis.
After each semester, Bob Wagner, assistant to the provost
and general coordinator of the
project, will run a computer
program, c o m p·a r i n 1: . their
grades with other FNSM freshmen and the entire frestunan
class. They will . be followed
th1s way from year to year.
Possibly, some type of subjective examination of them might
ta ke pJace in their junior or
senior year.
Special Treatment For All

In ad dition to the specially
adm itted freshmen in t h i s
year's incoming class, the entire group has received some
special treatment.
Special Summer Orientation
programs were sent up for all
FNSM students and personal
counseling from faculty is being
emphasized. The students will
also have opportunities to socialize wiili faculty and members of the provost's office at
informal coffee hours.
Both the experimental admissions plan and Ute new emphasis on closer faculty-student
contact are good for the Faculty, Wagner believes. Provost
Nancollas is happy with the
new system and feels it will
bring the Faculty closer together.
In the past, the provost was
dissatisfied with summer orientation. A pros~ive student
would want to th1k to departmental(faculty and "could only
fm~ a )811itor," Nanoollas says.
Th1s summer, the provost personally addressed the orientabon students and an informal
open house was also held where
representatives of the departments answered students' questions before it was necessary to
fill out course request fonns.
The new program and the
new emphasis will hopefully
foster a "learning rather than
a lecture relationship" between
faculty and students, Wagner
says, and this can "do nothing
but good" for the people involved.
80Y TROUBLES?

Student researchers in the Psychol&lt;&gt;tiY Depa~nt ~-re evaluating
methods designed to help girls
meet and interact more effectively
with men. For !I free seuion, coli
831 -1180, evenlnp, 7-10 p.m.

notes, then told the girl that
Sedita has been a "good
mayor," and that he can do
more as County Euocutive. End
of cbeers.
'l'be crowd appeared overwhelmingly in favor of Lindsay,
if not Sedita, despite admonitions from the sponsoring Student Association that it would
"endorse no candidate" for anythin~. But then, of course,
Lindsay isn't-running.
Someone asked Lindsay if he
would consider running on a
ticket with Maine's Senator Ed
Muskie. "As I've said before,"
he said again, "I am a candidate for no office." The crowd
laughed. Lindsay shook his
head, and laughed. The smile
buttons seemed to laugh.
Lindsay countered questions
about Attica, Nixon, the war
and the economy with phrases
about street people, heavy executive strain and politicians
who are more concerned with
big business than small people
and with some flowery words
·about wars bringing people to

Review(Contimled from pqe I, col. 5)
SkefetonFonn

This new system is still in
skeleton form and several large
areas, such as the URB, still
have to be detailed. In his discussion with the Senate Executive Committee, Gelhaum left
the basic determination of the
selection and functioning of
this review body to the Senate,
with final determination of the
plan remaining in his hands.
Another non-delineated area involves. ~e ~vi~. P.rocedures to
be followed by the d'eP&amp;rtment.S and faculties; the GelbaumBaumer draft simply asks these
units to "publish their person'
nel action procedures."
On the other hand, the working draft fills in areas that have
been used informally but never
clearly described before and
goes on to detail some ' completely new ooncerns. This is
espe.c~lly true of the explicit
outlmmg of the qualifications
and criteria for promotion in
all four of the currently used
academic ranks. Also thoroughly discussed are the "basic review ~nsiderations"-"mastery
of subject matter, effectiveness
in teaching, scholarly ability
e~fectiveness of University ser:
VJce and continuing professional growth," While the need for
individually "balanced evaluations" is IXlinted out. the need
Cor "certain minimum standards" is also noted.
Balanced Evaluations

Review according to "balanced evaluations" is expected
to be carried out in "tenns of
' the responsibilities the person
IS assigned." Because of this
the new system proposes thai
the duties of each member of
~e fa,cul ~."should be specified
~~ W~Ihng, and ~t new specifications be "provided with
each new appoinbnent."
In the draft, the need for a
" mon; solid., assessment of
teachmg effectiveness r a t h e r
than a "random collection of
anecdotal comments" is emphaSized. The proposed procedures also call for a "survey of
students in the classes taught
by the fa cui ty member in reVIew, class visitation by ·other
~culty, assessment of class de:
Sign.· · · and assessment -of
q_ual•ty_ of theses and disserta.
bons duected:'
!bese ()ropnsals are now
be'!'g considered by the Senate s Committee on Faculty
Tenure and Privilege and will
Probably be on the agenda at
Jbe Nov~! ~te -meeting.
memberalf
any indiVIdual fa cuI t y
sug eationsha!"' analy QUeStions or
II
•or teratiou of tbe
p~, Procedures, they are
urged tq contact their Senate
rep~tativea.
.

~ fo~eCt.He

pounded his

Momlnc..._~

It y.oas tbe same way at his
mommg. p,..,. conference at the
West Seneca Town Hall. Only,
the reporters gave him an easier
time than - the ·students.
Respecting an official com"!""'~ tllat " No one Question
him until the cameras are on,"
the 20 or so reporters, some
from out of town, bided their
time, then fed Lindsay questions designed .to make him
look good.
"What do you think· of part
U of Nixon's eoonomic . gameplan?"
.
"Can liberalism still help this
country?"
..
"How do you think RockefeUer handled Attica?"
Someone dared to ask how
he planned to stop the flow of
the middle elass into the suburbs. Lindsay glanced at the
West Seneca officials who
flanked him; they glowered at
the reporter. Lindsay answered
that cities and suburbs are both
important, and that neither
should be sacrificed at the cost
of the other.
A Channel 7 newsman asked
the mayor how come he was
now supporting Sedita when as
a Republican, he had attacked
the public records of New York
State's big city mayors.
Lindsay denied he had ever
done that, then re-praised Sedita. Everybody smiled.
What They Didn't Ask
More important were the
~::f?ns Lindsay didn't get

What's the point of insulting
Agnew when you were the person who seconded his nomination three YearS a-go?
How do you find the time ID
go around the country speaking
for other candidates when your
city is coming apart?
The reporters-who seemed
more like public relations
agents on newspaper payrollsappearing as happy with Lindsay as the West Seneca officials
whose merits be praised in alternate sentences. They weren't
about to rock the boat.
The press conference didn't
last long. It started 20 minutes
late, but ended on schedule so
the mayors could spend an
hour drinking coffee with women down the road.
After ten hours of pass-thepraise in Buffalo, Lindsay was
best described by a U / B student who met him later in the
day outside a store at the
Broadway IIISJ'ket:
'"11lcre's nothing wrong with
him. But he's not so special
as everyone thinks. He's a politician.u

VmJation(Continued from page 1, col. 1)

bring the book hack to the
counter of the textbook section.
The student will . have ID fill
out a form listing the title of
the book and the amount refunded. This is being done to
document the number of books
and the extent of the refunds,
Moore says.
•
Steinwald is worried . about
the efficiency of the process Ill""
since only three Bookstore em·
ployees have been authorized
to make the refunds. "If a lot
of people come in, there'll be a
· real backlog," be notes.
In addition to the actual refund costs incurred, the ruling
will also cost tbe Booksl&lt;lre
bookkeeping tin!e and the time
inyolved in ebecking possible
overcharges, and re-pricing . of
books... Moore says the rise in
prices was 'necessitated by a
price increase by some textbook publishers. T h e s e new
prices were set wfore August
15, but tbe BoOkstore didn't
receive tbe books or start selling them until tbe freeze set in.
Moore iloted tha't other university booilstoral have been hit
witn. the' 88liie plcblem.

�cktober

~PoRTER.:,

14, 1911

.LowModeffite Cost HoUsing Is Topic
For 2-Day Urban Affairs Institute
'llle U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development and the campus Office of
Urban A1fairs will present a
two-day "Institute on the Sponsorship of Low and Moderate
Inc;ome Houaing," October 21
and 22 at the Statler-Hilton.
'llle lnstitute is ptanned for
oommunity organizations interested in sponsorship of the development' of non-profit housing, as well as for builders, developers and consultants. Local
governmental officials and repreaentativea have been invited
also.
'lbe Institute will open at 10
a .m., Tbur&amp;day, October 21,
with a welcoming address by
Dr. Bernard R . Gelbaum, vice
preaident for academic altairs,
and an introduction to the proJames Ryan, director of tho U/B Olllce of Urban
gram by James H . Ryan, assoAllalrs (left), Nelson Divello, Housing Specialist for Marine
ciste director of the Office of
Midland Bank (C9!11lot), and Richard Tyksinskl, urban renewal
Urban AJfairs. Frank D. Cerarepresentative for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
bon, Bulfalo area director of
Development, discuss plans for the "Institute on the Sponsor·
the U.S. De!&gt;artment of Housship of Low and Mode me Income Housing." ·
ing and Utban Development,
will discuss "Housing Needs of
the Bulfalo Metropolitan 3:15p.m.
$25.00 for two representatives
Area."
On FridaY; October 22, there of non-profit organizations, or
'lllere will be three panel will be six workshops d...ting $45.00 for four representatives.
discussions. 'llle 'first, slated with : Sponsorship: Section 236 For profit-making organizafor Thur&amp;day morning, is en- (Housing and Urban Develop- tions, including builders, develtitled ''Types of Sponsors and ment Act of 1968); Public opers and consultants with conGovernment Assistance Pro- Housing; Management, and tracts exceeding $1 million an- grams." Session II, on "Pack- Banking, Construction and Le- nually, the fee is $100 per peraging a Project," will begin at gal Services.
son; representatives of all other
1:30 p.m. and Session m ,
The registration fee. which profit-making groups may reg·~ o us in 1 Management," at must be paid in advance, is
ister at $25.00 per person.

Sub-Board Is Half Million Dollar Budget
Prompts ~Reorganization of Its Structure
This year the budget of Sub
Board I, Inc. (SBI) topped the
half million mark; the organization has an option to buy
1,150 acres of land for $176,000,
and it's working toward gaining the deed to property in Am·
herst worth $2 million. To cope
with the problems of administering an organization of this
size, this fiscal end disbursing
ann of· the student governments
ili undergoing changes in the
basic structure o.f its operations.
This summer, SBI's elevenman board adopted a report expanding its operating structure
from simply a board of directors to a board plus eight specialized d ivisions. These units-Adminisbation, Publications,
General Services, Norton Hall,
UUAB, Housing, Recreation,
and Special Activities- a n d
two new general positions, executive director and business
manager, are slowly becoming
operational this fall . Right
now the board is screening 15
applications for positions as
beads of Publications and
UUAB. The position of business manager
as filled this
summer by Mark Borenstein,
former Student Association
treasurer. These and the executive director's post are the
only positions to be filled in
the near future; other division
beads are not expected to be
necessary for at feast a year.
'lbe Publications d i v i s i o n
head will be responsible for a
budget that has reached $243,199 this year. Under this person's direction will be 10 l!ublications varying from the Spectrum, which received more-than
a third ($98,761 ) of the total
budget, to the Foreign Student
Coordinating ColDlcil Newsletter, which got close to $2,000.
'llle division bead will have to
check all requisitions from the
publications, making sure the
information and signaturea are
con-ect, before they are sent to
sara Oftice for procesaing.
Other duties will include acting
as a liaison between the SBI

boa r d and the pubiications
and making s.u-e that day-today operations of the papers
are functioning smoothly. This
division bead will also explore
future possibilities for the publications and will look into
such questions as the possibility of Spectrum going independent or needs for a new
type of paper.
The other division heads will
function in a similar way.
UUAB's division head will be
the liaison between this organization and SBI's board and
will keep a watchful eye on a
$137,330 budget. This position
was a controversial one because
the current UUAB director,
Larry Stein, considered the job
unnecessary. According to Bor·
enstein, this dispute is now over
and Stein is one of the appli·
cants for the position.
The AdiJlinistration division,
when operational, will handle
general SBI affairs; General
Services will work on disbursing money and services for the
student governments affiliated

with SBI. Rec rea ti on will
handle Poverty Hill, if the student body and SBI decide to
buy it. The Housing division
will coordinate future plans for
the Amherst land. The Norton
Hall division will be responsible for SBI's subsidized activities in Norton, such as the Cre.
ative Crafts Center, Browsing
Library anti the Ticket Office.
Special Acti vities will be a
catch-all department.
This reorganization is tenned
"necessary,. by Borenstein who
has been handling much of
SBI's day-to-day business s ince
the middle of the summer. It
will take some of the pressure
orr him and allow him to focus
on future activities. Currentl y,
he is operating ac; both bu ~ in css
manager and executi ve director
of SBI. The board, however, is
conSidering filling the execut ive
director's post with a full-time
person who has business experience and expertise in some of
the areas SBI will be expanding .into. A decision is expected
within the month.

SPA Holding Election for
Officers~· Board Members
Elections of officers for the
local University Center chapter
of the Senate Professional N;so.
ciation (SPA ) are now being
held with ballots due to be returned by October 20.
On the ballot are:
President: Constantine Yeracaris, professor, sociology; McAllister Hull, professor, physics
and astronomy.
Vice president:· Neil Goen,
buaget control officer; Jean Al~-director, University re.
Secrel&lt;uy: Mary Brady, associste librarian· Edwin Duryea,
Jr., professor, }ugher education.
Treasurer: Bertha Cutcher,
ru:sistant dean of students;
Fran c e s Dietz, institutional
studies assistant
State representati.uu (two to

be elected): Ethel Schmidt,
University conferenoo coordina tor; Robert Fi•k. professor, educational studies.
Executive Board representatives: Non- Teaching Professional Staff (three to be elected J - Larry Drake, associste
director, Student Personnel;
Russell Goldberg, programmeranalyst, Computing Center; Patricis Hollander, lecturer, finance; Margaret O' Bryan,
advisor, Undergraduate Studies;
Faculty (three to be elected) Diane DeBacy, lecturer, instruction, Educational Studies;
M arvin Feldman, . professor,
psycholo!IY; Byron Koekkoek,
professor, German and Slavic;
Milton Plesur, associste profesror, history; Lee Preston,
e_rc;&gt;fessor, management; Marvin
zeten, professor, atatislica.

3

Students Find Its Easier
To Rent Off-Campus P]are,
By STEVE LIPMAN
The doors to off-ounpus
housing are slowly opening to
U/B students. Through a combination of economic necessity
and increased acceptance of
students, landlords and apart.
ment owners are being less selective in whom they rent to.
The tast few years, students
bad been forced to pitch tents
on the front lawns of the University for the first month or
so of classes. This year, however, says Robert Dombrowski,
director of off-campus housing,
"most students have found an
adequate place to live. The situation is tight, but a little better than tast year."
The only hitch is that a large
number of these places to live
are rooms, no t apartments,
which most students prefer.
As the number of students
in need of housing bas gone up,
points out Dombrowski, the
number of available rooms has
likewise risen, while the number of apartments has stayed
the same. "We have an overabundance of rooms," he says.
Dombrowski advises students
unable to find just what they
want to take a room for the
time being, but to keep looking.
Just bow long you'll have to
look, s a y s Dombrowski, de~ds on a number of factorshow far you want to live from
campus, how much you're willing to spend, what facilities you
want, etc.
Dombrowski has found "more
people receptive to renting to
students today than four or five
years ago---e;pecially the apartment owners. Over this past
year, we've had more than 3,000 landlords who have requested students. The landlords
nccust&lt;&gt;med to listing with ns
will take students regardless of
race or ethnic origin. This we
insure by having them sign a
statement that they will not
discriminate against students."
Should discrimination occur,
says Dombrowski, "we immediately take (the offender) off
our listing."
The rent situation over the
last few yea rs has remained
fairl y stable, Dombrowski feels.
"I would say that a room that
would have rost SIO a week
four years ago would probably
cost $12.50 to $13.00 at this
point."
The Student Association receives each week 15 to 20 complaints from stud ents concerning rent, upkeep and other
la ndlord problems. These cases
are referred to S.A.'s lawyer
Norman Effron.
.
Dombrowski's office he I p s
students in these binds by
"talking to landlords to persuade them to lower the rent
or alleviate whatever the problem is. We explain to them
that, otherwise, students won't
be able to use their accommodations, and we won't be able
to list them.
"Usually the ones who insist
on a high price will end up not
renting."
Dombrowski recommends legal action in the case of uncooperative landlords. He counsels students to obtain a written
lease, instead of a verbal agreement
As a sidelight, Dombrowski
remarks that few landlords
have filed complaints about
sturlent behavior.
'lbe effect of Buftalo's socalled anti-student housing ordinance is uncertain, says Do~­
browski, because its enforceMARX BROTHERS

The Marx Brothers' film, D u c k
Soup, will be shown, free of charge,
in 146 Diefendorf, Tuesday, Oc-

tober 19, at 9 and 8 p.m.

ment bas Yl't to be tested in
court. If it doea prove enforceable, however, twice as many
units for off-&lt;:ampua student
housing will be necessary. according to Robert Hunt, director of the Environmental
Health and Safety Ollice.
A potentially bigger problem
will be an expected sbortage cl
off-ounpus facilities in Amherst "As of now there are very
few facilities out there for students," Dombrowski aaya.
'"The only thing we can do
is encourage private developers as well as the UDC (Urban
Development Corporation) to
make housing available. UDC
is ptanning to have low income
housing in its new town. Many
private develope111 have expressed interest in developing
housing for students.
"As far as I know, ptans for
the new town include housing
close to the campua. This would
include not only apartments
but efficiency units and low income homes."

SkiersPlnn
Busy Season
U / B's Ski Team anticipates
its most extensive aeason in
history this year. Men and women will compete in a variety
of sponsored and open events,
according to Bud Paladino, acting coach.
The team will enter both alpine and nordic events. Alpine
racing or downbill and slalom
are the most familiar with amateur skiers. The nordic compe-

titions are the more skilled
events for accomplisbed skiers,
Paladino says.
Mike Kish, Mitch Brown,
Dave Polanski and Paladino
will form the nucleus of the
team. '!bey were the most active competitors a year ago.
Buffalo will ski against such
teams as Army, Cornell, Syracuse, Union, R.P.L, Paul
Smith's, State University College at Corttand, LeMoyne and
Alfred in at least six college
meets. A U/B invitational is
a lso ptanned.
A vigorous training program
has been set up for the fall with
team members working in
handball, soocer and gymna.;tics in addition to running.
Once snow arrives, the team
will be based at Bluemont,
Kissing Bridge or Glenwood
Acres. Training will also take
place at other Western New
York ski centers.
The Bulls would eventually
like to be eligible to join the
major division of the Eastern
Intercollegiate Ski Association.
This organization is made up
of Class A schools such as
Dartmoutb, Middlebwy, St.
Lawrence, Vermont, Williams,
New Hampshire, Harvard and
others.

Rosner to Speak
At FES :M!eting
Dr. Benjamin Roaner, dean of
Teacher Education, City University of New York, will be the
main speaker at the Farulty of
Educational Studies' 125th Anniversary Symposium, October
27.
Dr. &amp;sner will speak ...
"Accountability in Higher Education" at 6 p.m. on Goodyear-

tO.

Contact the Office of the Provost, Educational Studies, En
5449, for reservations and further informatioo.

�4

~

- CiREPORTER,

Area Businessmen Take DimView of

14, IWI

Promotion
- Stir ContiJwes,

Workers-Popping Pills &amp; Smoking Pot Student Hails Ombudsman
EDITOR: .

By GUS PATUTO
A number of Western New
York businesses take a dim
view of workers popping pills
or smoking pot while on the
job. These !inns would probably fire a "turned on" worker
-&lt;&gt;Specially a hard drug user
-with no uifs, ands, or buts,"
rather tban help him lind treatmenL
What's more, rnsny local busi"""""""' feel that even if counseling were provided in lieu of
disciplinary action, the worker
- not his employer - should
foot the bill for iL
How much drug usage exists
among area businesses?
Thirty-three per oent of the
businesses surveyed by U/ B
students said they definitely
have oounted s o m e "bopped
up" workers among their numbers.

marijuana on the job, w h a t
would you do? 28%, ignore the
situation; 5%, tell their supervisor; 24%, refer him to competent medical and psycbological treatment; 37%, talk to the
individual; 6% were undecided,
while no one would tell the
police.
• Do you think hard drugs
(LSD, heroin, speed, barbiturates ) usage occurs by employees on the job in industry?
48%, yes; 18%, no; 34%, did
not know.
• Do you think employee

~~ 0~~o~k~,. ';,"rodU:ci~~

ity or effectiveness to the or·
ganization? 95%, yes; 5%, undecided.
• Have you ever tried hard
drugs? 6%, yes; 93% , no; 1%.
declined to answer the question.
• Assuming you are in a
responsible decision-making position and discovered an em~Ystu:fe~~c~a:k ployee using drugs on the job,
Baxter, Robert Dickerson, Law- w_hat would you do? 10% , fire
rence Munn, and · Donald Ro- him; 14% , disciplinary action
mano, compares the attitudes {fine, ~uspension , etc.) ; 55%,
of businessmen and students refer h1m to competent medical
towards drug usage in industry. and psychological treatment·
Questioned in the survey were 11%. talk to the individual:
109 graduate and undergradu- 10%, disciplinary action com:
ate students and 52 area busi- bined with referral to compenessmen.
tent medical and psycbological
Generally, businessmen and treatment; none of the responstudents seemed diametrically dees indicated they would igopposed on how to deal with nore the situation.
drug users in industry. Busi• Assuming you discover a
nessmen favored a hard line fellow employee (peer) using
stance, students a sympathetic hard drugs on the job, what
approach.
":'ould_you do? 11% . ignore the
Sl~tion; 12%, tell their supStudent Answers
52%, refer him to comHere's how students answer- ervlSOr;
~tent medical and psychologed the questionnaire:
• Do you think marijuana Ical treatment; 2% . tell the pousage occurs by employees on hce; 6%, tell their supervisor
~fer him to competeni
the job in industry? 60% an- and
me d 1 c a l and psychological
di~t 'b~. 11%, no; 27%
17%, talk to the in• Do you think employee
• Who do you think should
usage of marijuana on the job
alfects the worker's productiv- financially support employee
ity or effectiveness to the or- drug .treatment? 25% , governganization? 69%, yes; 15%, no; ment; 7%, industry; 53% , government. a_ n d industry; 11%.
16%, undecided.
• Have you ever tried mari- the m?-iv1dual; 4% , govem~d~.mdustry, and the indijuana? 44%, yes; 56%, no.
• Are you currentl.)' using
marijuana? 23%, yes; 71%, no. Business Answers
Businessmen, meanwhile anor these, 12% said daily; as%
said more than once a weeki swered the questionnaire ' this
52% said once or more a month. way:
• Have you been aware of
• Do you think marijuana
usage makes an individual more any drug or marijuana usage in
susceptible to the use or hard your organization in the past?
drop? 38%, yes; 48%, no;
52%, no; 15%. did
14%, undecided.
• Do you think marijuana
• Assuming you are in a
re&amp;JlOIISible decision-making po- usage occurs by employees on
sition and discovered an em- the job in your finn? 14%, yes;
l'loyee uaing marijuana on the 53%, no; 33%, undecided.
job, what would you do? 8%,
• Do you think employee
fire him; 17%, disciplinary ac- usage of marijuana on the jOb
tion (fine, suspension, etc.); a_fl~ the individual's produc31%, refer him to competent tlvtty or effectiveness to the
m e d i c a I and psycbological org~zation? 75%, yes; no one
tz-eabnent; 9%, ignore the situ- believed s mokin g marijuana
ation; 7%, disciplinary action d_efinitely did not affect produccombined with referral to com- tivity; 25% w ere undecided
l"'tent medical and psycholog- about the effects or marijuana.
• What is the policy or your
·•cal tz-eabnent; 28%, talk to
firm for employees discovered
the indiyidual
• Asiruming you di.scover a using marijuana while on the
fellow employee (peer) using JOb? 48% said this was grounds

:JM::t't;

: foi&lt;io':!:

GREPORTER.,
A _ _ . ---..itr ~ ~ ~
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!lr the lHriMwt ol Uttl-

lluii.Jo, 343S Main St .. llull. .

Roc. 2U, 250 ,.,.....,. . t -

·-..__
""-• ..,.,._ IUJtor

A. W'&amp;srUF ROWUND

nr&amp;ODC&gt;#U V. P£LlUUJIO
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SUSAJf~

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•
=~·ntO aMrOU: J - a. ~..,.,
CXWJWJJHO Alf'rUr, a - M. ......

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for dismissal; 15%, disciplinary
action; 3%, no action would be
taken; 8%, employee referred
to medical and . psycbological
treatment; 27%, some other action such as counseling or some
combination of discipline and
referral to a doctor.
o Do you think your firm's
attitude toward employee use
of marijuana has changed in
the last five years? 20%, yes;
74%, no; 6%, undecided.
• Do you think hard drug
(LSD, heroin, speed ) usage
has increased by employees on
the job in your industry? 12%,

"VVEWPOINTS
yes; 30% , no; 58%, were undecided.
• Do you think hard drug
usage occurs by employees · on
the job in your firm? 2%, yes;
57%, no; 41 % , undecided.
• Do you think employee
usage of hard drugs on the job
affects the individual's productivity or effectiveness to the
organization? 92%, yes; no one
answered no, but 8% were undecided on the effects of hard
drugs on productivity.
• What is the policy or yoUr
firm for ~mployees discovered
u§ing hard dn•llS while on the
J6b? 63% , grounds for inunediate dismissal; 9 %, grounds for
d_isciplinary action ; 0%, no achon would he taken at all ·
10% , employee would be re:
!erred for medical and psychological treatment; 10% stated
they would counsel the employee or that they had no deftmte pohcy ; 8% , ·any action
would depend on the circumstances.
• Do you think your firm's
attitude toward employee's use
of hard drugs on the job has
changed over the p a s t five
~:;'d~d~· yes; 73% , no; 4%,
0
Who do you think should
financiaUy support employee
drug treatment? 36%, the government entirely; 0%, indus.
try; 21%. funded by both government and industry· 40%
the individual should 'finan~
his o~ treabnent; 3%, govem~d~l. mdustry, and the indi-

• Does your firm have any
type of drug education program
~o;. employees? 14%, yes; 86%,

.

Condusions

From the survey, the U/ B
students drew a number of conclusions. Among them:
• Possibly because they are
~looer ~ the drug culture and
mexpenenced w i t h industry
stud~nts favor discussions and
med1cal help while business itself prefers a hard line stance
for drug-using workers.
•. Though favoring stricter
pwushments for drug users
thait students would Western
New York busin.,...;. do not
al!pear to be overly concerned
WIth drug usage as a problem
Tending to substantiate thiS
clah!l, say the authors or the
survey, is the fact that only
14% of the !inns responding to
the questionnaire have any type
of drug education program
. • If business students ~­
lain their present attitudes, industry in the future will be
pressured by them to adopt
.more liberal and more formal
employee use or drug policies
:fu1u~ ~~ter respon• In !'he future. employee
drug use m Western New York
co~J!d be a bigger problem than
busmessmen presently antic;i:
pate. Reason: "Tbe business
student d r u g and marijuana
user or today will he the in~" employee or to-

Since my reply to Professor
Garver appeared in yesterday's
Spectrum, I am sending you a
copy or that reply, in hopes
that you will oee fit to print it
too in the Reporler.

...

Parry's letter regalding the
Baumer promotion was completely accurate, but Garver's
answer, with its mixture of haU
truths and whole untruths, calls
for several Comments.
Garver tries to minimize the
value of Parry's judgments on
the ground that Parry is "an
interested party;" but Garver
very conveniently forgets to
mention that he, Garver, is even
more or an interested ·psrty, in
that his own promotion was just
as "irregular" as Baumer's. We
were in fact subjected to even
m o r e administrative harassment to promote Garver against
our collective better judgment
than we were to promote
Baumer against our collective
better judgment. It is hardly
any wonder that Garver is so
"grateful" for "administrative
muscles:" such muscles were as
much responsible for his own
promotion as they were for
Baumer's promotion.
Garver also very conveniently forgets to mention that " the
previous grievance case in the
Department" that he is so certain "indicated that something
might have been wrong with
the promotion mechanism within the Department" was in fact
his own grievance case result-.
ing from his own non~promo­
tion. Again, it is nO wonder
that he is so certain that something might he wrong with the
decisions made within the department: to say otherwise
would he to admit that he
should indeed not have been
promoted! By the way, what
that grievance case actually
showed was not that ihere was
anything wrong with the decision against his promotion,
' but that the conduct or the
grievance committee was so
grossly improper and biased
!-hat one member had to resign
m protest. At this point, it is
difficul! to see what integrity
the gnevance procedures on
this campus have left. First, the
Garver case showed that the
grievance procedures are rotten
to the core, and then the Baumer case showed that the grievance procedures need not he
bothered w!th anyway, so long
as ~e prestdent is one of your
cromes.
Finally, it should he noted
that Garver's slur against Parry, that is, his claim that Parry
would not be so concerned
about.administrative fiat being
used to help Baumer if he
Parry, -did not believe Baume;
undeserving, is in fact falsified
by Garver's own case: no one
I know of worked harder for
Garver's promotion tban Parry did, yet Parry protested the
high-handed tactics then just
as strongly as he does now in
the Baumer case. Garver is not
onli:Jul~ting to Parry, but ungra
.
Sincerely yours,
LYNN B. ROSE

Profeslfor of Philosophy
EDITOR:

It has reoently come to my
attention that the Office of Uruversity Ombudsrnsn w i II be
l'hased out. The September 16
18Sue of the · Reporler stated
that a caseload of 344 complaints or requests for advice
and assistance was baDdled by
Dr. Robert Stem's oflice (Ombudsman) .
When I was unable to find
an adequate solution to a aeri0'!" . grievanpe, Dr. Stem was
willing to mvestigate the sit-

uation_through the ~ channels and helped solve mY dilemDlB.

.

•

This o11ice serves undergraduates, lf"Bduates, the faculty
and Uruversity stalf members
If the . University """"-' tO
close this office, who will process the legitimate complaints•
The type of service provided
by the Ombudsman is too valuable to discard in these times
of crises and transition.
Very truly yours,
--8HIRLEY KWNEB: .

SPA Reports
On Meeting
Members of the executive
committees or the two local
SPA chapters l University at
Buffalo and Health Sciences at
Buffalo ) held this week with
Dr. Robert Ketter the second
monthly meeting to d i s cu ss
matters or mutual interest.
or primary concern at that
meeting was the issuance of notices or temporary appoint".'ents to non-teaching profes~Jonals on our campus estimated
m excess of 40 persons. It was
agreed that a complete listing
or the names of all such professionals be given immediately
to the presidents or the two
chapters. Such list will include
information on place, type and
length of employment at U/ B
and the criteria used to issue
such notices. This information
will be examined to determine
the extent to which the contract
recently signed between SPA
and the State of New York concerning SUNY has been properly implemented. In this connection, it was noted with apprehension that copies of the
contract had not been issued as
per agreement. These are es~i!'IIY !leeded by those receJvmg such notices of appointment for clarification or grievance procedures and for the
protection or their rights as
members of this academic community. Upon receipt of these
lists, the SPA presidents will
contact each of those involved
to inform them or their rights.
At the request of the SPA
representatives, President Ketter also promised that copies of
the handbook on Personnel will
be made immediately available
at selected units of the' University Libraries until sufficient
copies become available for
general distribution. Changes
in the handbook necessitated by
the new contract will be incorporated as soon as possible.
Future meetings (at least
monthly) will be called as
needs arise at which representativ'"' of both chapters will be
present, each chapter reserving
its right to seek separate meetings with the President for issues unique to its.CIIIIIitituents.
An agenda should be prepared
and communicated to all participants at least five days before the scheduled meeting ' eE·
cept when urgent matterS arise
requiring immediate action. --QON91'AN'I'lNE A. YERACAIDB

Pres., University Chapter SPA

WOlllellS Session

SUNY's Caucus on Women's
Rights will hold a State-wide
meeting at SUNY! Albany this
$aturday. T1)is is the :fourth
annual meeting . and . participants will d.iact!ss day care centers, Women's . Studies programs, the relationship between
the SUNY Caucus and w~
men's. Liberation, a job bank.
and the SUNY al&amp;rmati.., action plan.
The day-long meeting will be
held at Albany's Campus Center Assembly Hall starting at
10 a.m.

,

�- ~

-

~

14,11171

Two Coursffi
Zero In On
(Now' Issues

5

OUR CLASS

GUIB
&lt;NOTES
by "0"
As the Reportq went to

press. Tueaday; ()ctobw 12, the

Talk ol "mcial ablUiatiaus"
and ~ CX1UrBI:!fl' t.md ... III8IIY CIIIIIIJU8I!S todaY bas
Jed to the iDa!plion bere ol at
least two courses which meet
tbeBe criteria Faculty ol
Natural Scieoce and Mathematics (l'NSM) 222 and Hilb-« EducalioD-254. Wbat makes
tbeBe courses unique is tbat
aenior pofeooors and top members ol the Un.-..ity's administration lectUre in them.

Univenlity's United Fund c.impaign bad raiaed $47,814.0047.8 per cent of ita .-1 ol
$100,000. Gifta haw! been received from 1.430 ~ for

:pi~ofdi~..::. ~

elude: President and Essrutive
Vice President's Ollioes, 180.5

per cent; Univenlity at Bu«alo
Foundaticm and Alumni IWations, 162 per cent; Engineer-

ing and AJ!P.lied ~ 110

Hi&amp;beo- Education's "Critical

per cent; Millard Fillmore Col-

Issua; in Hqber Education" is

beins olrered spin this fall
It star1ed wben tbat depart.
IDI!Dt discrm!red a "hostility
gap" the
between
and - of
ower
aims and
purposes
hilber educati o n. Because
aluumi haw! been in the forefront ol !be baUie to put

strin&amp;ent restrictioos ... wUYI!r·
sities and because ~s
alumni are loday's students,
Dr. Robert Berdahl, cbainuan
of Hi&amp;beo- Education, and his
colleques decided to o&amp;r a
course .., important topics mnfrontins this and olhe&lt; campuses. Students are given a
"systematic _ . . . , to relevant information" throuch outside lecturers, multi-media sentatioos and in~ discussicm sessions. Last
visitins speabos raqed from
President Robert Kette&lt; to Dr.
Charles (Chip) Planck. The
question of institutional neutndity was discussed from both
sides as were open admiasioos
and oth« topics sudl as governance. learning theory and
evaluation. Some of tbeee topics are bein&amp; discussed this fall
but otbers ol student i n have been added, including
urban problems and student

8Y Cl91f

-me.

-rights.

Counie structure bas been .....
modeled, too, and more lleDbility built in, Berdahl says. He
sees students in the course as
having two major options they can come to all the wide"' n orinv lectures or foUow an
~ual path and do in-depth
studies of CKle area of intere;t.
Topics to be OOYered were decided by students as a result
of interviews with Berdahl and
the course's graduate assistants
during the two 01
the cowae.
The course is beins taught
on a Tuesday-~ scbedule with the Tuesday ...,.;sioo
taken up by an outside spmlrer
and discuaaion ... ~-

~~~~-

FNSM 222, "Connzoversies
in Sc:ience-CnnOid and Resolution," wiU be oftemd spin
this 8IXinc- The course &lt;ieals
with previous and pnllll!llt "in-tellectual ·c:lasbos 111D1111C acien-

:r-..;.~the~~=
oiac Sir lolm Eccles; Dr. Gor--

~

---

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

-- or

eYerY 100 children born,

three can be eqM!ded to be
mentaUy retarded. That's the
statistic. but the cbildren behind the data are human beings
wbo laugh. cry, fear, bate, and

~::~~

and attention many of them can
get jobs, get married, PaY taxes
and become functioning individuals. Without these, however, the mentaUy retarded can
develop serious eamomie. emo-

tional and soc:ial problems.
To llelp these cbildren get
the care they ueed, Anne Rogovin, a U t B faculty wife, has
written "an iUustmted baodbook-Leaming by ~or
parents and teachers of cbildren
wbo learn slowly." The title
sums up what the book is about
and emphasizes what Mrs. Ro. bas leamed from aJ
'IIO&lt;Jl'k with the mentaUy
retarded: eYi!rything needs to
be rea1
tbeee c:hildren.
"'These kids can't learn from
reading a book cr by listening
to a teacber, they ba"" to ex-

=·

for

t:TI."'~"ol~~i"'
.0:
toudling. The mn-

aeeina and

are applicable to all age
DOt cmly to the 16-18
year-olds the book is primarily
about.
c:epls
-

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

(IIOCiBI

tUillc .....

E

AnneRoguviris Revolutionary Method:
Touching~ Experiencing -and Loving

dcm Hams, ladDn JII"O{esHcw ol - u .., _
dlemislly and Dr. Mc:Allisle&lt;
Mrs. Rocovin feels the IDI!DHull, cbairmsn .ol the Pbysics
Ilopartment, apolle. Topics cov- taUy retarded sbould be develered a wide . . _ including oped to the of their
"Are the CouliDents I&gt;riftin&amp;'!" capacity. Sbe doesn't set up
by Dr. Cbades ea-u and arbitrary limits; ralh«, h« goal
is
to
'
I
IO&lt;Jl'
k
with
tb!m
80 they
"Ethical PraiJiems in Human
Ezperiyr.,tation" by Dr. I..._ can "1loooer into joyous buman
Dicby. While topics to· be disapriilc wiU pnlbforably be diffelad, Dr. Hams ..,... .-.Its. Many ol ~ thB -a tiop-lew!l staff ~ pupils bold recuJar jobs.
wiU lecture. The course bas DO One came by himself from
PI"IHeqUioites and is aimed at F'lcrida to visit h« last month
mrnrmmjcetinc aD understaDd-- and aevsal '-e tabu trip&amp;
iuc ol wbat acieDce is, bow aJciae to New Yadt City. All
acieDtials think and when! aci- ol them ._. uoeful n-.
If« ......... is rather . . _
ence is....._ An ....dacal apPI"I*:Ii is .-1 ill the lecluns lutimw:y'" ....... with ...........
with the .....-1 aide ol the sis ... beblia&amp; 11-. tidl - alaac ill tbe --"1.- Tal ..,.

a-u .-

b L

..... __ .....,.from

reading and arithmetic to health
and citizenship.
Take, for example, the section on health. Mentally retarded children generally have
lower vitality, poor skin conditions, abnormalities of teeth,
and poor coordination. These
conditions are easily aggravated
so Mrs. Rogovin recommends
teaching the children to brush
their teeth and to use a water
pick, to use a nail file and to
wash their hair. Boys should
learn to tie a tie and to use an
electric rawr, she says; girls
should be drilled in posture.
Sex is also discussed because
the ..retarded who are more
easily 'led' and confused need
this infonnation desperately."
A "Teen-age Do's and Don'U."
discussion deals with everything from manners to dating
behavior.
'The book also calls for helping the children get to know
~ -neighborhoods.
Under•tanding street signs becomes a
reading lesson and taking a bus,
a class in arithmetic.
~Community

The outside community is
also part of Mrs. Rogovin's
classroom plan. Members of
area garden ( clubs can come
weekly to he!p the children
with a garden, she says. And
the children sbouJd get out into
the community on regular field
trips - to gas stations, the
· police department and museums. For esample, they might
visit Sattler's and learn how to
buy shoes and clothing. After
each trip, sbe rooommends having the class make a booklet
about their visit.
Teaching the cbildren how to
get along with olh«a is alao
st.-es&amp;ed. Mrs. Rogovin feels
VETERANS 0111'
Monday, October 25, Veterans Day,
is an obsenred academic holiday.
as Mil as a sat&amp; holiday. All Uni·
vetSity otlices should be d - The usual pmcedures apply tor
u._ em~ who must -'&lt;
on clay, tile Pwsonnel Otlioe

--

strongly tbat they should learn
.. those character traits and attitudes that make social livlog
possible."

Accordingly, her

=kHI::'.~/~'L: ~~t

ing'' is emphasized-a si&gt;ecial
time set aside each day to ..examine our own behavior and
that of those in the group." No
one is exempt from class scru~
tiny and even the teacher's behavior may be examined. Mrs.
Rogovin encourages talking
with the children about how
they are different from the rest
of the kids in the world, but
she aloo urges emphasis on
..how beautiful differences can
be and how much we can learn
from them."
Family Project

Compilation of the manual
was an unplanned effort on

Mrs. Rogovin's 1'8fL Every
year her husbaud Milton, who
teaches photography at U I B,
would take pictures of her
classes and she would save the
classes' booklets and other projects. Five years ago, she took
a sabbatical and "saw all this
stuff," so she decided to organize the material. The handbook
soon became a family project
with her son Mark, an artist,
doing the lay-out and her husband taking more photos. AU
that remained was to find a
publisher. This proved difficull
"I went through the rounds of
publishing houses but
wanted to do it my way." FinaUy, sbe sent the book to
Mafes, a smaU educatioual publishing firm, and they sent her
a oontnlct by return maiL 'Ibe
book was publisbed this summer to a favorable reception.
This month the AlbrightKnox ia emibitins the art work
of student Carole ZiU which exteosively iUustmtea Learning
By Doing and Mrs. · Rogoyin
and Carole were guests of bouor
recently at a apecial reception
at the CiaraMle Library. _
Despite this mfnor celebrity,
Anne""Rogovin is stiU leaching
---worlcin&amp; with 6-8 year...&amp;dl; at
ClevelaDd "HilL After 811. she
feels, "it's the teacher wbo
leams the most.."

lege and Cantin · · Educatico,
111 per cent; ~ties Planning, 105 per cent.
SubdivisiOns over cr near tbe
100 per cent mark include:
School of Health Related Professians, 138 per cent; Pbysica1
Therapy, 144 per cent; School
of Management, 82 per cent;
Occupatioual Therapy, 200 per
cent; Summer Session. 78 per
cent; Medical Technology, 120
per cent; Instructional Communications Center, i46 per
cent; Housing, 78 per cent;
Music, 97 per cent; Political
Science, 100 per cent; Physical
Education, 94 per cent; Chemistry, 80 per cent; Placement,
122 per cent; Office of Equal
Opportunity, 170 per cent.
Every member of the Uqiversity is urged to make a
pledge. We are aiming for 100
per cent of our goal ( $100,000)
and 100 per cent participation
(5,000).
At last week's meeting of the
Pilot Organizations in the United Fund Campaign, the foUowing bad gone over their 100 per
cent quota: Aetua Insurance
Company, Western Eleclric
Company, WEBR, Sat t1 era,
Internal Revenue ~t;
New York State Gas and Elec&gt;
tric Company, and County Division of Highways.
· ··

...

On Tuesday, October 5, President Ketter held the first in a
series of informal conferences
with individual students. A full
schedule of interviews were
held on that date, and studenta
who wish to bave such oanferences in the future are reminded that the next date wiU be
Tuesday, October 19, from 9
a.m. to noon, in the Presidenrs
Office in Hayes Hall Mrs. Ruth
East, assistant to the presidenl,
will be scheduling these 15minute conferences and sbe can
be reached at 831-2001. Wben
the president is unavailable, a
senior member of the adminislzation wiU meet with students.
The University bas al""""
supported the Studio A r e n a
Theatre in all its activities.
This column would like to caU
attention to the season which
has just opened with ''Tbe Gingerbread Lady'' starring l o
Van Fleet. This play is running
until October 24. The remaining seven productions of the
seas o n are: "Buying Out,"
"The Me Nobody Knows," "I

nobodr ~~&lt;&amp;~
Niue,~ "'Romeo and Juliet,"

'

. . .

.. Play Strindberg," and "Man
of La Mancha."
Sidney .Muirhead, at the
State University of New Yadt
CoUege at Buft'alo's Centennial
Dinner, described a new drug
tbat has been syutbesized for
adminislzators of coUeges and
universities caUed "Damnitall"
It doesn't r e I ax you but it
makes you enjoy being tenae.

...

It is loteresting to note tbat
two daily papers in Western
New York gave more space to
the hiring of four dog-catcbers
... tbe- campus than to lhe ....
cent •~ level adminislzation

~~

�OciDber 14, 197i

Exercise
Called Key
To Good Life

U/B Guidelines on TuitionWaivers Are Listed
The University at Buffalo above. One example might be
wishes to protect the right of the case in which an assistant
those authorized to receive tu- finds it desirable to delay apition waivers and, in order to plying his tuition waiver (covdo so, is distributing the follow- ering up to 12 credit hours of
ing guidelines so as to ensure work ) until the next summer
that only applications of eli- session rather than in the acagible individuals are processed demic semester of his appointfor such assistance. Unless ment. Such exceptions require
otherwise stated, a provost, the review and prior approval
vice president. or University- of the provost, or vice president,
wide dean is responsible for en- or University-wide dean, as
suring the appropriateness and well as the prior approval of
accuracy of applications for tu- the academic vice president. A
ition waiver in his employing record must be kept by .the acaunits. The specific employing demic vice president identifyunit of the University must be . ing such exceptions by Faculty
noted on each application re- each oome;ter, the reason for
each exception, and the number
quest.
1. Graduate Student s ap- of credit hours of t u i t i on
pointed as Teaching, Graduate waived in each case. ·
or Research Assistants:
c . Those appointed to fulla Those appointed to full time assistantship service dur·
assistantship lines ( 0.25 FTE ing the summer months from
and at least S2000 academic funds in the regular operating,
year salary ) in regular operat- incomt.orrset. income-reimbursing, income-offset, income- re- able, or approved grant budimbursable, or approved grant gets, arc eligible for tuition
budgets of the University nt waivers for the summer session
Buffalo are eligible for tuition for up to 12 credit hours. If the
waivers during the fall and student is cmpl•· r d by the
spring semesters of the aca- Summer Session nself. the didemic year of their appoint- rector of Summer Session must
ment. (These individuals must approve the application rebe on either the State or Re- quest.
searcb Foundation payroll. )
2. Internes:
b. In rare instances, special
Graduate students appointed
conditions may exist which to lines in the operating budget
justify some ·exception to (a ) that carry an interne designa-

HEW Civil Rights Director ro Give
Informal Lecturffi Here Next Week
J. Stanley Pottinger, director,
Office for Civil Rights, Department of Health, Education and
Welfare, wiU be on campus
Monday and Tuesday, October
18 and 19, as a visiting Grover
Cleveland fellow in American
Studies.

dents and the entire University
community. The fellowship provides for the visitor to meet
with students in informal surroundings and in classes where
he can be questioned without
the formality of the lecture
hall
The 30-year-old San FranPottinger's U / B schedule incisco attorney who holds major cludes a meeting with American
responsibility for the N i x o n Studies students and otbera at
Administration's school inte- the American Studies House,
gration program will be the · 124 Winspear, from 2-4 p.m.,
second public figure to visit the Monday; a visit to Latona's
University under the 'Grover American Studies 199A, "Who
Cleveland series. The first was R\IDS Buffalo?," in 46 Diefenthen-Congressman Max Mc- dorf at 4 p.m; and a meeting
Carthy, in ·1970.
with Policy Sciences studenta
on Tuesday aftemoo11- Meetings with other groups are being
arranged alao.
and coord.in&amp;tor of the Grover
Clevi!land fellowshipa, the purLatona says· he .ezpecls the
of the
is to bring Grover Cleveland prosram to
and ...:'="'political fig- sponsor at least two more visures into clOse 0011tact with stu- itors thia year.

~~~~=

l::i

tion (normally at 0.5 FTE )
are eligible for tuition waivers
for courses taken during their
tenn of appointment.
3. Fe!Wws :
Graduate students who are
certified by the Graduate
School as being recipients of
full fellowships are eligible to
receive a tuition waiver for
courses taken while they are
fellows. The application re-quest must be signed by the
dean of the Graduate School or
his authorized representative.
4. Full-time Pro fes sional
Service Employees (inclu.din~
Faculty ) Paid by a State Umversity Payroll or by the State
University Research Foundation:
The.;e employees are eligible
for partial or full tuition waiver
during the semesters that they
hold their appointments or. are
on leave of absence from their
appointments. A waiver may
cover 100 per rent support if the
courses involved a re approved
by the department chairman as
part of the training program
for improved performance of
the employee in his current position. When the connection is
less direct, but useful to the
University and to the employee, .. the waiver may cover 50
per cent tuition support. Signatures of the department
chairman and the provost. or
vice president are required. The
actual decision as to whether a
tuition waiver is allowed or
whether it is for 100 per cent
or 50 per cent is made by the
Central Administration in Al'
.
bany.
5. Part-time ' Facully of SUNYAB :
These appointees are eligible
for tuition waivers covering up
to 6 credit hours per semester
of employment.
6. Full-time CIDB8i(ied Service Employees Paid by a State
UnWerllty PayroU or by the
State UnWerlity Reaearch
Found4tion:
These employeeS are eligible
for Partial or hill tuition waiver during the semesters that
they hold their appoinbnents or
are on a leave of absence frOm
their appointments. Such an
employee is elisible for 100 per
COlli tuition 8 u p p Q .. t if hia
COIO"!II!8 are deemed necea11ny
to fulfill hia pnaent job duties,
75 per COilt tuition support if
the courses mlate clireclly to

job duties and from which improved performance can reason·
ably be expected, and 50 per
cent tuition support if the
CO\IniE6 will improve his general
competence for his present job
or a job he can reasonably be
expected to assume in the future. Certification of the degree
of support requires the signature on the application of his
department chairman and provoet or vice president. The
recommendation regarding tuition waiver and whether for 50
per cent, 75 per cent, or 100
per cent, is made by the department head and is approved
by the SUNYAB Personnel
Office. The approval is subject
to review by SUNY Central
Administration in Albany.
7. Critic Teachers :
These teachers are eligible
for a tuition waiver of 3 credit
hours of course work per stu·
dent that they supervise for the
period of one semester. The
waiver is good for any semester
within 25 months after submission of grade for the student
supervised. Approval of the
provost of Educational Studies
or his designated representative
is needed for these application
requests.
8. Foreign Stud_ents:
Those allowed to have tuition support must be designated by the director of foreign
student.&lt; and approved by the
President. The number included in any year is dependent on a percentage (specified
by SUNY Central Administration ) of the total full-time
equivalent students projected
for enrollment at SUNYAB.
9. Specuu Program Studerm :
Undergraduate full-time students in the Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) are
eligible for full tuition waivers
for a maximum of five Y"!ll'L
Full-time graduate-professional
students in approved professional programs for disadvantaged studenls · are alao eli · "ble
&lt;or full tuition waivers.
,·urrently approved programa
~xist in the Schools of Law,
Medicin., Dentistry, and Education. The signature of the director of the program is ,.;:
quined on each appliqtion and
a record of all those BO-&lt;lertified
must be received and kept on
file_I!Y the associate vice president of academic affairs wbo ~
ordinates ~ special propams.

fuch

Walking, ~. swimm!nl
and cycling - exercisee which
build the cardiovascular and
pulmonary reserves - are the
most beneficial components of
a personal .physical fituess program, Dr. Kenneth H. Cooper,
developer of the ..Aerobics" ez.
ercise system, aaid at the campus Physical Education Symposium thia weekend.
Cooper, director of the Cooi&gt;:er Clinic and Researeh Foundation, Dallas, spoke twice
during the two-day program.
Saturday afternoon, his discussion of "Aerobics" emphasized streas exercises and the
role of pliysical fitness in every
day life. Practical preventive
medicine and exercise, he said,
could greatly reduce the numbers of Americans suffering
from heart diseaae ( 27 million)
and chronic illnesses (half the
population ). In Austria, where
exercise is commonplace, he
aaid, the heart disease rate is
one-third that of the U.S.
On Saturday night, Cooper,
who alao directs the conditioning program of the Green Bay
Packers, spoke on "Development of a Personal Physical
Fitness Program."
Also on the Symposium's
Saturday program was Dr. William Bradley, a member of the
President's Council on Physical
Fitness and Sports, wbo outlined "Current Activities of the
President's Council." Dr. Bradley, professor of physical education at Western lllinois University, is an active· committee-.
man at the national level in
several health and fitness programa.
The two-da;r Physical Education Symposium, part of the
University's l25th Anniversary,
also included : master dance
classes led by Isabel Harper
Brown of Skidmore College,
synchronized swimming and
gymnastics events, square dancing, judo and fencing exlubitions and other sports activities.
The event, first of its kind at
U/ B, was sponsored by the
Division of Physical Education,
Recreation and Athletics which
is directed by Dr. Harry G.
Fritz.

Fund-Raiser Named
H. Keith Mosley, director of
Temple University's corporate
development program, has been
named director of the development program of the University
at Buffalo Foundation, Inc., effective October 15.
The appointment comes at a
time when the U/ BF is launching the University's first major
fund-raising drive in several
years, a campaign for $5 millioDMosley, a native of Western
New York, has been associated
with Temple for the past three
years. Prior to that be was director of public relations at the
Rochester Institute of Technology for 12 years. Foundation
officiala indicate that he comes
to the U / BF "with outatanding qualilicatinns and will. take
over full respoDalbilitY. for the
Foundation's fund raising program with particular emphasis
on corporate fund raising."
The Foundation · reports that
it has been searcbing for two
years for the proper person to
fill thia vacancy.
As the channel for all private
funds given in support of the
State University at Buffalo, the
U/BF is becoming of incn!asing importance to the University's ~mant plans, Foundation officiala say. Last year
the organization ...u-1 approximately $2.5 million.

�Odt1b« 14, 1911

7

&lt;REPORTS

ON

col~ Pro 1 ram Sympooium.

the ~cwalrlan State," Tu
Waabincton, D.C.
,
AmeriCOJ_l Stllliotical ~tioa. SocUJl Studin; ''Worken in the
Czecboolovaltian Sociali.t State,"
CHBIBTINB IL DllGGU:BY, a.uiatant . ~~~~S&lt;;'~e:.;.. ~; Tu lnumational &amp;view of Hu~rofeuor, an_thropology, _"Sta~in Statistico, FL Collino, Colo- tory tJIId Political Science.
tical Analyw of• Relationships rado· Chairman, Panel on the
D1L ALB ERT PADWA, profeaor,
chemistry, with W . Koehn, J . MaSympc;tm.um o~ ~planf;ati!Jn apy, Fifth~ Seuion. Euro- IIIUilccbia, C.L. Oobo111, and D..J.
Ge~etics of _Pnmates, ~~o- pean Organi.r.ation for Retearcb Trecker, "On Tbe [2+2] Tbermal
logtcal lnoti!ute, TNO, RiswiJk, on Treatment of Cancer, Paris, Cyclodimeriution of cilt.l"aaU· l.3The Netherllmda.
·
France; "Logistic Mode I a and Cycl&lt;H&gt;Ctadiene," JournaJ of IM
DR. BOSSlUN P. GIESE, n ., associContingency Tables," M .D . An- Anuri.can Chemical Soci.e~with
ate profeeaor, geological scien- deraon Hospital and 'IU.m.or ID- ~.; G=rp~~nt~~
ees. "Hydro:r.yl Orientation in stitute, Houston. Te:r..as.
the 1,3-Diazabicyclo [3.1.0] hex3-ene System," Clu!mi.cal Com~~~·ua?ie'i!.~ ~e~c1-~~~ PUBLICATIONS
munciation...
ferenoe, South Dakota School of
DR. ROBERT D. A.UENDOERPI'Jl, asMines.
DR.. ALAN I . SOLO~ professor, medisistant professor, cbemiatry, with cinal chemistry, with 1.0. GARDENDlt. ROBERT L. MINTER, assistant
D.B. EUSTACE, " An ESR "and ENprofessor, speech communication, DOR Study of the 4-Formyl-2,6,- ER."Agents for A!kylafinc Sreroid
seminar in "Management by Ob- di-rerlhutylpbenoxy R ad 1 c a 1," Hormone Receptors ID: :\:: -SubEsrers of 17"' -HydroxyErie County Savinp JournaJ of Phy•ical ChernUtry. stituted
progesterone," Journal of Phar·
maceutico.l Sc.Uncu.
ROBERT D. BIZEMAN, asaistant
eo~~~::;.··s:u:~H8to~ DB.
professor, cbemiatry, " A Simple DR. JOHN P. STORR, associate proBuffalo.
and Ine:Lpensive Diatilling Head," fessor, biology, with DIL B.. BWIZDR. JOHN J. PDlADO'M'O, associate
Journal of Chemical Education. NEY, director, Great Laltea Labg_,~fi:'Se~rcl!'icsi :M~~~.: DR.. DAVID A. CADENHEAD, associate

~=~ ~ti~bl'M!~;~/, ~tnrPtion of~&amp;'!~~

GJ&gt;EOPLE
NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
D1L lca:P CADEK, NSF senior fore~ scie.w !sf fellow, Department
of Geolo~ J Sciences. Dr. Cadek
ia from ' 'rague, Czechoslovakia,
and will be: here for one year.

OFF ·C\MPUS
APPOINTMENTS

Ces,"

~~e~~=IC!hegs:.aety Meetassociate professor, speech communication, is
directing a workshop in Alaryngeal Speech, Toronto School or
Medicine, Toronto, Canada. He is
presenting three papers a nd will
d ~ monstrate therapy.
DR. ALBERT S'l'Et)GMANN , associate
professor, anthropology, " Physical Anthropology of North Ontario," 4th Algonkian Conference,
Big M00110 Lake, New Yo rk.
OR. lEWIS K.. SHUPE,

DR. KENTON M . STEWART, aM '..slan t
1

PRESENTATIONS
WILI.JAM H. BARR. associate
profeuor, pharmaceutics, " Pharmacokinetics of Dose-Dependent
Intestinal Metabolism in Animals
and Man," Second Annual Phar-

DR.

s::~~~nw:rmiu!"O: 'D~c~

''The Pharmacist's Role in Drug
Interactions," L a nd 0 ' Lakes
Conferen ce, University of Wisconsin; "Some OliniC'al Implications of Dose-Depen dent Metabolism," Children's H n..: pital, Buffalo ; .. Clinical Implications of
Biopharmaceutics/' University Of
MissOuri, Kansas City.
DR. MURR.\Y B&amp;OWN , professor, ec·
anomies, A Regional - National
Model of ~ taly, Spatial Aspect&amp;,"
European Regional Science Meetings, Rome; with MICHAEL HART·

=

~~~~:= ~~nuo ':!:t ~t~

Model," E uropean E conometric
Society Mee ti n ~ ... Barcelona,

fn~~~iic!&gt;~ ~i.U:~l:k~~~:!

York," Lime Lake Association ;
"Thermal Conditions Under the
Ice of Lakes," biology seminar,

SUCB.

~.fe=·"Medf"~r ~~~eg~

Antonio .

OIL MELVIN TUCKER, •associate professor, history, "Tragedy in the
T ower," TV tape on the murder
of the li t.Oe princes in the Tower
or London, to be presented at
N .Y. SLate Educational CommunicationS Association, Grosai.nger'a,
N .Y.
DR. ALBERT WERTHElMER, assistant
professor, pharmacy, ' 'The Rebiner Fee," 31 st International
Congress of Pharmaceutical Sciences; " Pharmacy's Social Conscience," Univemt-y of Mississippi.

::ni~~~~· .};J~~erPoff:
w~~x~:~-~~ ~~~~~~ and
Its EffecL on He aring,"

metric &amp;, .t•ty Sutm . ' ,. Meetings,
Bo-uder, c_ olorado; ·for a Neoclassicist '~e A ggre ~ ..sle Elasticity
of Subst. i.ion is Less Than Unity," So1~•· ~ rn Economic Association M ~. u ngs, Miami, Florida.
, '&gt;- CONWAY,

associate

profee&amp;o l ,-.hu nnacet.Jt it.:s, "Survey
of Analytical Methodology for
Drug M e 1abolism Studies," Second Annua l Pbanmtcology-Toxi-

f~~~u!~triQu~·r:rrofu:

terfaces," in ChemUtry and Physics of Interface• , vol II; "Hydrogen Adsorption and E:r.change on
Reduced-Oxide Copper and Nick·
el," JourruJJ. of CatalysU; ''A C'..omparative Study of Cholesterol and
a Cbolesrerol-Like · E .S.R. Probe
in Pu re and Mi:Led Monomolecular Films," B iochimica et B io·
physico
book review of Per-

Acta;

?;;i!f'A,ec:nntr:n::cf~onA::fe~

Scientist; edited R ecent Progre..s
in Surface and Membr:z.ne Sci-

ence.
DB.

LARRY B. CHURCH, assistant

Sweet H ome 3unior High School.

~:ti~~ ~~fl~rM:J~1 ~;
6

the Early Detection of Disease,"
University of Tel -Aviv, the Tech·
nicon a nd Hebrew University, Israel ; "Problems in the Early Detection or Disease a nd t he Find ing of Fa u I ts," In ternational

~~~~.~ /:!Y~u~e·o~=~r!

DR. WALTER DANNJlAUSER, associate

professor , chemislry, "Analysis of
Dielectric Dispersion Data," Journal of Chem1cal Ph ysics.
DR. HERBERT L. POSTER, associate

Center, "To Redu ce Violence:
The Interventionisl T eacher a nd
Aide," .Ph i Delta Kappan .
OR. ROSSMAN P. GIESE, .IR.•

ate

associ-

professor, geological sdences,

"Hydroxy l Orientation in Muscovite as Indi ca ted by Electrostatic
Ene rgy Calcula tions,' ' Science.
DR. ELl CRUSHKA, assistant professo r, chemistry, with w.o. COOKE,
" Length- Temperature Time Norm a li za tioo Chromatography in
Capi llary Columns," JouriWl of
Chromatography; ''Theoretical
Plates, Resolution and Peak Ca-

g~~!~/n S~~a~t,~urSeci!n~~tri-

professo r, history, "SvetJana AlJilueva's History of Stalin's Family : An Evalualion," lnt eriW tional Behauioral
Scientist; "Reversal, Retribution
and Repression in Czechoslova kia," Political Scientist; "Problems
of Socialist Morality in Czechoslovakia," International Journ.ol
of Contem porary Sociology; "The
Dilemma of the Intelligentsia in
DR. KAREL HULICK.A,

8;040.00
3,600.00

Faculty of A.ru and Leth•rs.
Faculty o f Educational :&gt;uJdies
Faculty 01 Engi neering .. nd
Applied Sciences
F.culty of He.ltl\ Scienc. s . . . - - .
Faculty of LaW and Ju ll ~o.Jr uden ce.
F~ty of Nltural Sc•~ •es and
Mlthen'\lltlcs .. _ _ . .
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration
Undergraduate Studi e~ . . Gr8Ciuate School . . . . . . . - - - - • • •

Continuing Edue~ti on . - . . . . ••
CommuniCIItion Resources . - - . - .• Presiilent"s ..-ld Executive Vice
Presid&amp;nt 's Offices . - - - . - - • . FecilitieJ Planning . - - ()peratiom and Systems

8,400.00
13.«0.00
1,800.00
360.00
2,880.00

-

--·······

Stuct.nt Affairs _ _____ • _ ••. • - ; •

Uni'IWiity Retationl
. ------. -F.cutty-&amp;:udent Auociation
A~urml Relations
____ •.• and
. _•
Univwsity
at Buffllo Foundation

~-~~~~-

840.00
[~~~~~~~~~~~IIIZ 6 ,000.00

----·--·
-------------

-~-

---------

-~~--

-

--

--

-

---

- - ---

~T~m~~~p:d I:O'f:;~
0

od," Proceedings of the Fourtunth Con feri nce on Great Lakes
Ruecu-ch.
DB. wn.t.lAM SYLVESTER, professor,
English, " Poem," in Contempora,
May-August, 1971.
DB... DAVID TRIGGlE, chairman, biochemical pharmacology, "A Comparison or Adrenergic =&lt;~Recep ­
tors," Journal of Pharmacy and
Pharmacology .
DR. MARVIN ZELEN, professo'r, statisties, with W..E.. SCBOTZ, ."Effect
of Length Sampling Bias on Labelled Mitotic In de :r. Waves,"
Journal of Theoretical Biology.

associate professor, pathology and biochemistry, $123,526, Studies on

OR. ALEXANDER C. BROWNIE,

~:fo~~o~:~s :!JI~h::~~
1u t.!, USPHS.

W~la~edT~~~oh~:n~~~~\:~ RECOGNITIONS

!' TATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

AQdemk:Affairs
Millard Fillmore College a nd

~ra~!YCJ3~ ~~lo=n:

Fa7r~t~bc:u~e~r· ~"!hiso~:ri~
~~:tio0~ a~:OO"'~~v.{Pfo~)r,;[\o{ GRANTS
Inorganic Nuclear Chem U. try.

DR. DAVID TRlGGLE, chairman, biochemical pharmaoology, "Calcium, Membranes and Adrenerpc

to Multip ula r Migrm ;'ln," Econo-

DR. WAL\

- · Amwal Moefinc of the

---

1801. 840.00
~T.

960.00
13,560.00
240.00
4.560.00

1,oeo.oo

1,200.00

·······~111!11···~1111!~!11111!~!11·· Maleoo.oo

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

[]

600.00

acting chairman , linguistics. has been e lected
honorary member or the Linguistic Society of Chile.
DR. GEORGE N. HANCO[..l..AS, professor, chemistry, appointed to eciitorial board, Journa l of S olution
Chemist'ry.
DR. GARRY A. RECHNITZ, professor,
chemistry, is lecturer fo r a new
American Chemical Society a udio
course, / on-Selective /!1embrane
Electrodes. The course, consisting of a manual and audio tape
cassettes, is the first of its kind
on analytical chemistry.
DR. lEWIS K. SHUPE, 8.890Ciate professor, speech communication, selected L1S a clinical fellow for the
National Worbbop in Clinical
Wo rk in Stuttering sponsored by
~e Speech Foundation of AmerIca.
DR. PAUL L. GARVIN,

Cmununique8, cal 6)

(Continlu!d from -

otalf $1.25, otudenta 1.75, or 1-50
before 6 p.m. 'I'hrouch Oct. 24.
·
Grt!elinl•: There cc:.Dee a time
when all YOillljf ..... m-linda

~~~"."t!.~~
men, one"• into oompu.ter- clatizlc.
another io ...__ with the KeDneely assaaiDati~the third ill a

-t

~~.!"'~ ~1hN'-::-~

Gerritt Graham.
Hi Mom! A 8Jm
the
evolution of a VIetnam fttenm
turned stag IDoviemaker, tumed
politically committed adDr in a
theatre of eruelty, tumed .._ta.
ally (of ooune) rewlulioaary.
This film io an IIDIIJ:chic auack
on middle clasa ~

DiPalma make 1

ou..._

films with an eye oa artistic free..
dom created by UDdenm&gt;uDd and
ee:r.ploitation films. H1s atyle is:
often surprisingly impl'erllift tmd
totally political, deopite the 11'011·
eral rumors that he mabo fwuly,
dirty films. Of OOUI1IO he lika
Godard.
FESTIVAL

OP

POLISH

CUL~:

Films: Innocent Sorcenn aDd
Family of Man, 140 Capen, 3
p.m., free.
HILlEL

BOWIJNG:

Co-ed,

HiJJel

House, 7 p.m.
FESTIVAL OF POLISH CULTtJJr:B•: Dr.

Richard Kolm. Catholic Univer-

sity, Washing1ou, D.C., Ethnicity

and the P'IIJoh A,.,rioons, follawed by a panel discussion and

audience participation. Fillmore
Room. Norton, 7 :30 p.m.. free_
FILM,.: Kawaidan (Japan) , 147
Dierendorf, 8 p .m., free.
A series of three (!"'rhapo four)
ghost --lc ries made m the period
or Moth r.1 and Rodin. The special

:r~~=. ~~~

~

tt.:to':
selves, involving frightened Samurai and various Japanese bugaboo, are lrigbrening.

INTERVIEWS
'Ibe
on-campus interviewing program.
running through December 17 in
the fall semester and from Janu-

ON-cAMPUS 108 lHTIZVIEWB:

:e%~1:; ~de~ ~ino!!:~

for individ u:d interviews w i / {
educational. business, industrial
and governmental rep~.rrtatives.
Cand idates from all degree levels
are invited to intervie\11' whether
they wiU complete their coune
wo rk in January or May 1972.
Registration forms are available
from University Placement and
Ca reer Guidance in Hayes Annex

c.

TRURSDA.Y-14: Tr:lvelem Insurance Co.; Price Watetbouae

~!;,A/ ;rn?;~rnl~~c~~

The Catholic University of America, School of Law.
PIUDAY-15 : Prioe Wat.erbouae

(CPA) .

NaTICES

Indian Festjval
Set for Sunday
DiuJa/i, the joyous and colorful Indian Festival of Light,
will be celebrated on Sunday,
October 17, under the sponsorship of the India Students A.ssociation.
An ancient festival which
has been observed for more
than 2,000 years, Diwali occurs
on the darkest night of the
Indian month of Kartiluz, at
which time scores of candles,
usually in little earthen cups,
are set a I on g the courtyard
walls in homes throughout the
nation. 'I1le lights symbolize
joy, but are also said to drive
away the negative powers of
darkness.
The festival can be traced
to the Ramay~ the epic in
which Rams, the hero, alter 14
years of exile, returned home
and was greeted with a myriad
of lights which, it is told, transfanned the night into day.
The spirit of the holiday is
captured by the Vedic hymn:
"L e a d me from darkness to
light, from death to immortal.ity . from ienoraDDe to lzulh."
The festival will he celeln.~
. eel in an ....U., ot mueic,

=~':.Tttf~

See W~ ComtiiUIIique.

FOR NON-TEACHING Pli.&gt;FI:BSIONAL
STAFF : Ballots have been mailed
tD all unctaaified

non-teadiin&amp;

professional staff to elect ollicen
to the local SPA chapter. U you
haven't received your ballot,
please call Mr. J....- Andenoa,
exl 2147 or Mn. Ethel Sc:bmidt,
exL 3904/ 3232.
PW BETA KAPPA : University faculty membe~ld and new-who
""' Phi Beta Kappa momhen
elsewhere are invited to a.uoe
associate member atatua in tbe
local Omicron Oiapter. This can
be done by seodinc your - .

r=~ ~~: !b!re~

election ...... made (aloo date ot
election. if~~ cbeck

~~ fi'w~ta K..~ ~ the~ ..,
rer aecretary, Dr. W.L. Bamette,

~~~t~~:fii

place you on the mombenbip and
mailing list for ~Ia
of chapter activitieo.

EXHIBITS

�I.

Octobor

8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
tiDn to the Meclumiom of Ekcll't&gt;-

THURSDAY- 14
JIOIALA'IIOM orBDAPY ftlm'JION&amp;
~ : FwoctiDru of the Car-

~ta~~ A:--;~

s p.m.

~~~::!. aa Relct«d

~=nr~p,;:~
loca~ 11:30 a.m.

n::snv..u.

......m..c

iow•lti, 5 Acbeoon, 6:30p.m., free.

~--OIIDIIN. . #:

STATISTICS OOUOQtJIUM L&amp;C'J'U"D# :

Dr. Robert B. Deen. Enviromnen-

tal Pootection Apney, National
-.,..tal ae-rch Center,
Robert A. Taft. Water - . c b
Coa._, Cincinnati, Ohio, CoUoitU
iA W.........UO Treatment. 5 Aeh-lp.m.

~the~:::! ~-:a;::.:

du&lt;:ed outside the cells of bacteria
which ~during treat.-

:::""!-...ti::~~
:::tt
that are
flocculant aida

OP P'OLIBB CULTUD* :
~ : ~meandGry,5A~

oon. 3: 30 p.m., free. P011 Wolody-

Dr. Tsu-Teh Soong, chairman.
engineering .acience., Moment Be/uwiDr of a Clau of Stochaatic

=~:eE~~"f;.!""~~:
ments Room A-16, 3:30 p.m.

I'ILK• :

A

M011 Calkd H orae,

f::*f40
bta:::0u:,,- 9A~:.
75 contribution. Tickets in ad$.

vance and at showtime, Norton

Ticket Office. A1ao on Saturday.
Thia is a totally a uthentic mo-

OP

POLISH

out PontroyQilin* Room 24, 4224

Ridp Lea, 3:30 p.m. Refreobments, Room 9, 8 p.m.
BJ8TORY OP MATHDIA.DCS taC'I'UIZ

SEIII8• : Dr. Aleunder Ostrowski will lecture on number. apace
and symbol. See Monday 18 liot-

CUI.'!Ua•:

Filma: Generation, 5 A - .
3: 30 p.m., free. Aaha ond Di&lt;&gt;,.,,.,u, 5 A~n. 7 p.m., free.
1111UL CLASS : Torah with CommentaritsS. Rabbi H o fmann'•
home, 12 Colton Drive, 4 p.m.
INDL\N CLASBIC.U. HUSIC*: _
Prabha
Atre, vocalist, will give a ,private

J:rfcl=~

=d ~tin:::
music. 232 Norton, 8 :30 p.m. For
detailo, call 873-1905.
FILM• : A Man CaUed Horse,

~=":e b~~~~~~. Action

FILM•• : Groupies, see Fr i da y
listing.

SUNDAY- 17
University of Buffalo
Round Table, "The Attica Tragedy and Prison Reform," Part II
with Professor Herman Schwartz.,
WBEN· TY :

ing.

t:::ri,Je'::r!~~6
~-=:
free.

An absolutely chilling aocoant

(!.,~~=.~::n..~~M=

ez:perience.

D&amp;NTISTRY ~ONI: LIIC!'Ua# :

TUESDAY-19

Dr. James A. McMullen, Motkm

PHYSICIANS Tl:l&amp;PBONil LI:ICI'UU#:

Dr. Harold Bernhard, Mtl88i""
Gastrointeltin41 Bleeding, third
Tuesday medical staff conference,
sponsored by Rep ona.l MediCal
Program. 62 rece1ving locations,
11 :30 a.m.
BiXHN NEBS HEBREW CL AS S:

262

Norton, 12 noon. Class in J ewish
Ethics will meet in 262 Norton,
1 p.m. All welcome.
BADMINTON • • : for beginners and

r:.=z
::S~~ihich
bioloc·
::: =app;W::1
":t'ti!: ':::tn;:r.r..=
4
are

efficiency of

dinarily

ical treatment. On the other hand,

~

COMPUTING CENT£3 UBEB SERVICES

HOUSING INSTITUTE # : A two.day

~~~~ M~~:t;L::r:uJo~~

ing sponsored by U.S. DepL of

~dus~ ~c!'~u~elAPffDJ~~
~e~;;~~~tra!,~JORa~l-

PBYBICS COu.oQUWJ&lt; : Dr. Karel
Van Vliet. Universite de Montreal. Canada. Marltouion. Ap-

~ to Demity Correl4tio,..
ua Tr-an.port Pheno--. 111
Hocbotetter, 4 p.m. Ref.....mnento
112 Hochstetler, 3:30p.m.

baum, vice president for academic
affairs; Introduction , Jamea H .
Ryan, associate director, Office of
Urban Affairs: Frank D. Cerahon
Buffalo area director, U.S.
~nt of Housing and Urban

ne:

~ BIOLOGY SEKINA&amp;#:

Dr. H.H. Pattee, visiting profes-

ins N':d.e~] ~ Tu;tat,nHeo
::,:

M&gt;l',

ti.on pictUre. a statement of courage, discipline tmd savagery of

the Siowt Jn&lt;!i!ms aa ther were
prior to &lt;¥. wbite man's ~under-

x-

=-'~~.:;:g~
Nyby ao a ...,-ym.

= .r:G

~UK:

Hillel

law school, and Pro!eosor Richard
B. Hoffman. management; Dr.
Joseph S h i s t e r, moderator, 11
a.m.

advanced players, m a i n gym,

CONVERSATION AL

COMPUTING C&amp;N'I'ZR USER SDVICZB

~ ~n ~~~~~~~':'J; House, 3 p .in. Also Talmud Hillel
clau,
Richard Harris, Dame Judith Ancleroon. Jean Ga.con, Manu Tupou. tmd Corrina Tllope.
m.x• •: Group i es, with Miss

~ta~ go~;:::,. lt'ld\..oweGii~.~teW':i'P~
Patti Cakes, LWe lo Katie, and
usa 8aVJ&lt;ZB

HEBREW :

Hillel Library, 3 p.m. Co-ed footbaH game, 3 p.m., meet a t Hillel
a t 2: 30 p.m. Operation Greenlight participants meet a t 1 p.m.,
Hillel House.
n:BTIVAL OF LIGHTS•: Diwali cele-

bration sponsored by India Students Association features an evening of..-music and dance recitals
followed by a coffee hour with
~= b~ ~k~y
Terry Reid, Ten Years After. . Indian snacks. India'S' prominent
N o r to n Conference Theatre vocalist P rabha A tre, a Balkan
check sbowcaae for times. Facul:
ty and stali $1.25, atudento $.75, Js~~y::n f:~.;.tS:rts~!Fill~
more Room, Norton, 7:30 p.m.
lkL'~- before 6 p.m. Throll&amp;h Gene ral admission $1.50, students
A m u c h misunderstood film $1.00 .
about a terribly misunderstood ~~ : Groupies. see Fri d ay
minority. Exploitation of Rock
stars is the game that theee girlo
play yet nobody seems to mind.

Alvin Lee tmd Luther Groevenor
as two of the esploited males.

an4oot

R!}r! a:!e~ ~)~ ksdF~

Zappa said in his essay on the

:: :=~~:~r:rc!d :.!d
~~=.,._p,henomena of the
INTiaNATION..U. POLK. DANCING:

ln-

~~.in30~~ =~

8p.m.

40 Capen Blvd,

BABIIATR SDVJCB:

Hillel House,
8 p.m.

SATURD AY- 16

MONDAY-18

PJI.M• • : Sunrise (F.W. Murnau,
1927, · German). 147 Diefendorf,

3 and 8 p.m., free.
HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS ltt'I'URE

SDIES• : Dr. Alexander Ostrowski, University of Basel, Switzer·

land, will trace the development
of notions of number, space and
symbol; for a wide audience. public invited. Room 48, 4246 Ridge

~· ~::.S.-'{t~; ~~-

COMPUTING CEN1'I:a USER SZRVICIS
IIEKINA&amp;# : Job Control LaTI/IuotJe

""=::::::;..:.::..:..-

l:.':.~&lt;&gt;r:.:: 1\::~'i =.;

out the semester.

SEMINAll# : COBOL, see Thursday listing.
BlSTOBY J..ECTURE•:
Dr. Jeffry
Kaplow, professor of hiltory, Sorbonne, Pa ris, Crime and Criminals in 18th Century Paril, 146
Diefendorf, 4 p.m.
Dr. Kaplow received his Ph.D.
from Princeton and baa taught at
Colwnbia Univenity and the University of Nanterre. His field is
French social and demographic

l!:o~: rhisqf !tlia!~~nsce:~

book, New /enpectivu on the
French Revolution : Euay1 in

~nisYp~c:;: ~:~:g~ ~dthertiR!:

olution : the Urban EnVironment"
and ''The Culture of Poverty in
Paris at the end of the Old Regime."
F'P.fSTIVAL

OP

POLISH

CULTURE •:

Films: Barrier and selected
shorts, 140 Capen, 6:30 p.m., free.
C8088-COUNTitY MEET• : Getieteo,
Grover Cleve~ Course, 7 p.m.
ISRAELI M 0 V I E•: I mpossibk oh
Saturday, a satire on certain as-

liill~l,oh,~e~n~e,Tr:an::e~-~
p .m., free.

.

•

.

WED NESDAY- 20
PHYSICIANS "f'':l&amp;PBONB ~# :

Dr . . J u lian L Ambrus, He.TJWr-

polium Areo. 10:35 a.m.-liiB8ION
1- Typu of Sponoo,.. and Government Auiltan.u Prot1"ttlrU; 12
noon-Lunch. 1:30 p.m.~ON
u-Packaging a Project; 3 p.m.Break; S: 15 p.m.-liiB8ION m-

!,l:~~:.~k~S~~~r~
DKN'I'IB'I'aY n:LEPBONE I&amp;"!"U'U:E# :

oee Wednesday lioting.

CONTINUING Dmft'AL EDUCATION#:

Dr.. Jena Pinclborg, profe.or aDd
chairman, oral pathology, Royal

E:=r~ o..!,~·t~~:

tiona} Reference Center for Odontogenic Tumon and A1liad Lee~ons, will conduct a COUI'!Ie on Clinical Aspect• of Odontogenic Tu mon and Muco.al LaWn., 146
Capen , 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

PRAJlM.ACY TEL&amp;PBONE

u:crtJR&amp;# :

Dr. Albert Wertheimer, Soc~ty's
New Attitudes ond Their Effecto
on the Lont~-ROIIII• Outlooli f or
Pharmacy, ~noored by ~­
al M_e dical Program. 62 receiVing
locations. 11 :30 a.m. and 10 p.m.
BI&lt;?CHEMISTRY 8 J: M I N A a# :

eo-ittee of the African Studenio Union. SOCCER ubibitinn
B~tu;i St-an, winnen of the
Buffalo Soccer ~ cup, will
play spinet the ..Wting Pitlo-

Dr.

Mildvan, The Institute for Cancer
Philadelphia, Peonsylvama, Nuclear Re.lozotion
Stu t! i e s of the MechtJnUm of
Acomkue, C-22 Capen, 4 p.m.

ru..earch.

MJ:CHANICAL

ENGINIZIUNG

SICMI·

NAil# : _125th Anniversary Series,

Dr. Rtchard L. Foz, auociate

fi:f=rty,'1;t!i:a~~ ~M:

clumict:d Design, 104 Parker ED-

reeepr:f;,r~ l~ p!'freohmenta

=;',;

Bernard Gelbaum. vice president for

NEW FACULTY OIUENTATION :

="b~="c:.J~ (:n,th~~~~to~00Ji!:ger2,~ ~~icinang~~mP":ti:'n".:~; ~~~e!tb:!t".!:~ ~\;

Ridp Lea, 7-9 p.m., Mondays
and Wedneadayo throll&amp;h October
25.
J111SUL CJIDIJIIftli' COu.oQUIUII# :
This seminar will · COller the
Dr. B. ' Budenki, DivisiaD ol
SCOPE oyotarn· control cardo for
~ he ind ~ s..u.-,---l!!ud&gt;A~riealu,Erie Gcma-~• tmd~will.inducle all con~ Academy ol l!c:iel..-, mnnity Collefe field, 2 p,..,_ trof cardo clelined by CDC. It
8a6o,.
DANCE, featuring the Hi811Jit• will a1oo include a deocJ;iption of
tl{ E
• · ,. 822 W'~ &amp;md, cme of Africa'• modillcatiollo and __, control
~- . p.mi -~_ ,,.,..,._ - '-line baDdo tmd. the PittObaqh cardo producecllocally.

FRIDAY-15

see Monday listing.

THURSDAY-21

p.m.

OOJIPIJ'DNG CZN'ID

panel response and audience participation, Fillmore Room. Norton, 7 :30 p.m., free.
BILLE L ~ COMMIT'I'E£
MJZI'ING : Hillel HoWIO, 7: 30p.m.
CBZA.1'IVE ASSOCIATE BECITAL•: I in
the series of VIU recitals, Room
100, Baird, 8 and 9: 30 p.m., free.

SEMINA&amp;# :

~~i~h~~t!:o3~

....,.. .# : COBOL-an introductory ooune. Chris Siderakia, inotructor. Room 10, 4238 Ridp
7-9 p.m., Tueoday tmd
Tlwnday, through Nov. 4.
. , _ . , . , IN I'BAIDUCY# : James
C. Bloomlield. practicing commnnity pbannaciat, Portsmouth,
Encltmd. The BritiSh National
H.UW. Seruice ond Ito Impact on
CoiiUIUUiity Pharmacy Practice
246 Health Sciences Bldg.. 8 ~
I'ILK••: The Thing (Christian
Nyby, 1951), 147 Oiereztdorf, 8
p.m., free.
Unique, in the opinion that
80IDI creature many timea more
in.telli&amp;ent than any earthmen
coald be countless times more
bloodthirsty. The Thing is one
ol _tbe moot memorable tmd frichteDIDC of the creatwe-~-in­
our-midst tC':ij· Howard Hawb

~~~gyM~~,:!~';iful?o~"b~

manpower utilization. Embassy
Room, Statler-Hilton, 8 ::JO p.m.,
free.

Senate Profesoiona.l Association,
will apeak to new faculty. Re. fresbmeats. Faculty Club, 3:30-Q
p.m.
PBIL080PHY LECTUBE•: Dr. H. Leblanc. T emple University, Du-

Sylllhe,_ ond a
~~tory ProUin, G-22

CULTUD:• :

bh=

lUW PACULTY ORIENTA'n:ON : Wil~

'!f. Glutamine

POLISH

cept as one of the means of an -

liam Baumer, chairman, Faculty
Senate, Norman Hostetter, president, SUPA, and Robert Fisk,

....,.. .# : Dr. E.R. Stadtman,
chi_ e (, bioc:bosrDlrtry laboratory,
Natioaal Heart and Lung Institute. NIH, R ..ulction of GlutG-

OP

fu:C,~ n~~o~ :tr~Jv~

p.m.

JIIOCBDIIIJBY AND I'B.UlJU,OOLOCY

1: 30 p.m.

FISTIVAL

Dr. Aleksander Gella, prof._r,

a t Stony Brook, will lecture on
the new health maintenance con-

Doe•

~=~~·r=~~
ceiving locations. 1: 30

biopbyoical ocien-, Evolution B%J)erilrwnt. with an Arti·
/it:iDJ E&lt;:o.y•~m. Room 29, 4248
Ridae Lea. 4 p.m., oolfee at 3:30
p.m.
Tbe teehnique ol ecosystem reC&lt;IDOtrudion provides a mec:hanitm for esamininc usmnptions
~ :!:J!~ 1 eco.yatema and

SIU'Iery~

~=
6"l.!:f.r:;' .~e:f:,
7:30 p.m. A1ao Thunday, 21, at

TUBE• : Dr. Edmond D. Pellegrino, vice president of health
sciences and director of the
Health Scieooes Center, SUNY

HOSPn'£1. JU.NAGERL\L AND SUPD·
WIOft ....WI'l&lt;ENT LBCTUII&amp;# :

Supuvioory 7'rainill/l -

Concepu in Periodon tal

JAMES FENTON AND SCHOOL OF
HBALTH REL.\TED PROFESSIONS Lee-

ceaW

ton ol water

111'11

!!:mU.:r·o=tcf,:!~{Jr;A:

Afri&lt;:Gn Combo, African Cultmal
Cenw. 8liO Maoten Ave., 9 p.m.
Tickelll S2J)O in advaDce or 13.00
at tbe door. For further information call Francio, 882-3497: N\llij·
· ~ VICtor, 838-3382; · ,
..sTIVAL

u,

Onoology Conference, oponaorad _-~:di;,., d",!ill o.;,..!{=~
~~J"'oca~~calif:~ 62 meeting. Faculty Clnb, 3:30-Q

Dmft'nC8 TKUI:PBON&amp;

~#:

p.m.

Current Buecrch in Obuity. FILII••: Gre.eti!zlt and Hi Mom!
!'J'ODOOred by ~&gt;•-'-•' Medical the films of Brian biPalma. Nor:
Program, 62 ~ loca~ Confereooe Theatre, check
2 p.m.
.
sbowcaoe for n-. Faculty tmd
IOCONOMICS J!DIDI.. # : Dr. Clark (Ccmtillued on 7, col: 6) '

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

VOL 3-NO. 5

OCT. 7,1971

Dormitory bulldlnp (left), a llx&lt;OIJeco axnplex (center) , and the Law and
Ju~ llullcllnc. slaiN for occupancy on the Amherst (North) Campus
durl. . 1972·73, .,. taldnc on· nococnlzable shapes. For an elcht·year timetable

of

bulldlnc occupancy, -

-

3.

Organizatio11 Report Draws

Szoprisingly Few Comments
''Written comments from the
University community on the
RePQrt of the Task Force on
Orgahization were surprisingly
few, in light of the hue and cry
that resounded on the ilrruance
of . the .Reporl," President Rot.R L. ltatt.M. said tbls week
in a memo to the members of
the Faculty Senate Ezecu.tive
Committee.
Only 23 oomments were received, Ketter said - from two
vice pn!Sidents, one acting vice
president, three provosts, two.
faculty committees, three deans,
five department chairmen and
~~ individual faculty

creation of four vice presidents
was merely a reduction in the
number of proY06ts, hut not a
solution to the problems as.
sociated with thoee offices. An
epm!!le of such a problem and
repeatedly. noted was the rela·~ he~ a dean of a
-profeoaiollilt I!Cbool and a provost ( D&lt; similar such officer) ."
Ketter said objections were
also made to the multiplicity of

rm·

'"The major recurrent theme
of criticism,'' the President said,
"was that the plan for reorpnization, as proposed, was unworkable due to too many
layers of adminiatration. Some
~ maintained that ,t he

~~e:::fe~.;:,·~~ti~;

he said, "that while the majority were opposed to the reorpnization for functional reasons, few were satisfied with
the existing provostial system.
It might he further added that
the strongest letters were from
thoee individuals and groups
who, under the proposed reorganization, would have what
they viewed as reduoed ststus."
(conliluud on pate 3, 'tOL 1)

'

Dogs, Beware!

ca..,_ dop will bo
wltl!"lha hi~

~to

the ann (or fl,...) altha law

at four part-lima doC catchers. Seo -

6.

Pesch Takes Chicagu Hospital Post;
Report That HeWas .Fired Is Denied
The widely-rumored resigns·
tion of Dr. LeRoy A. Pesch as
dean of the School of Medicine
and director of hospitsla here
was oonfirmed Monday with
the simultaneous announcement that Pesch bas been
named first full-time president
of the Michael Reese Hospital
and Medical Center, Chicago,
which is associated with the
University of Chicago.
Pesch's resignation is effective December 31 of this year.
He will assume the Chicago
post on January 1, but will retain an appointment here as
professor of medicine in the
School of Medicine.
The announcement and the
nature of the position Pesch
will be accepting in Chicago
seemed not to bear out earlier
reports that the dean was
"fired," "forced out," or quitting in a spur-of-the-moment
protest. One administrat ion
spokesman emphasized t h a t
Spectrum reports of Pesch's
being fired were "totally untrue" and that he (Pesch ) was
quite upset by the story.
Both Dr. Clyde L. Randall,
vice president for health sciences, and President Robert L .
Ketter, in acceotinP.' the resignation, wished Pesch success.
Dr. Randall called the dean's
new position "an excellent opportunity to develop new and
innovative programs for health
care." He said Pesch "will be
missed at this University and
in the Buffalo and Erie County
medical oommwiity."
" During Dr. Pesch's three
years as dean of the School of
Medicine and director of hospitals,'' Randall said, "be has
been at the forefront of change
in medical education at the
University at Buffalo.
Flwo Important Procrams
"'l'bere are at least five im·
portant programs in which Dr.
Pesch has been involved. First,
he has developed an innovative
progr1!ID of admissio&amp;ns for
memliers of minority groups
and women to the Medical
School. Second, sensing the
need for a more diversified and
relevant medical curriculum, he
played a leadership role in developing. such changes. Third,
Dr. Pesch was instrumental in

developing the plan presented
to the Board of .Trustees of the
State Univenity of New York
at its last meeting which will
make it possible to budget
· State funds for support of space
and opera~ costs in the affiliated Buffalo area bospitsla
utilized by the Universi ty for
the clinical program of the
Medical School. Fourth, he has
continuously worked to develop
broader and more diversified
ways for the Medical SChool to
cooperate with the affiliated
Buffalo area hospitsla in the
clinical training of medical students. And, fifth, Dr. Pesch
negotiated a program for more
comprehensive health care for
the inmates of the Attica Correctional Facility which has
been aocepted by the authorities at Attica and is now in
process of being implemented.
"All of these activities were
carried on by Dr. Pesch with

the goal of more oomprebensive

health care through an integrated University Health Sciences Center.
"Dr. Peach's record speaks
for itaelf. It is my oonviction
that Dr. Pesch's aooomplish·
ments here in -Buffalo will be
multiplied many times in his
new work al Michael Reese. I
wish him the greatest success."
Elsewhere, Randall called
the new assignment "an impressive tribute to Dr. Pesch's
capsbilities and his leadership
in m e d i c a 1 education" and
noted that he had accepted the
decision "with genuine regret"'
In Chicago, B. E . Bensinger,
currently presidEllt of both the
Michael Reese Hospital and its
Board of Trustees, said that
Pesch "brings to this post a distinguished career in medicine
and planning for health care.
We oould not have found a
(continued on

peg~

3, col. 1)

Mills Says His DeCision
Was Not a Protest Action
"I do not feel I am resigning,
or 11eaving administration to
do my own work,' " Sociology
Chairman Theodore M . Mills
said in his Jetter to Dr. Ira
Cohen, provost, Faculty of
Social Sciences and Administra·
.lion, informing Cohen of his
decision "not to make myself
eligible for reappointment as
Chairman."
Mills' action had been reported as a protest resignation
in some quarters but the sociologist has indicated that this is
an "erroneous impressi9n."
The complete text of Mills'
letter to Cohen follows :
"After careful thought and
oonsultstion with my faculty,
I have decided .not to make myself eligible for reappointment
as Chairman. However, I am
\\illing, if it is desired, to serve
through the .summer of 1971,
so the transition is facilitsted
and my replacement can ·take
over at the beginning of our
academic year.
"My reasons are simple: with
the termination of the N .S.F.

Depsrtment Developmental
Grant program and with University research funds drying
up, the only way we can get
the funds necessary to advance
research and training as outtined in our de~tal
plan
is to design individ
proposals and peddle
m until they are bought. I am 'refer.
ring to five or six proposals
oovering six to eight years. The
entrepreneurship required by
that program is not oompstihle
with the chairmanship. Consequently, I think it best that I
be replaoed as chairman, and
that I beoome free to develop
the research and training program.
.
''In no sense do I feel that
I am resigning, or 'leaving administration to do my own
work.' I feel as oommitted to
our developmental plan as before and see a course of action
through WhiCh we can aooomplisb at least part 'Of il '!bat's
the action I am tsking.
"On a more personal level,
(continued on fX'IO ~· coL I)

�Ocml&gt;or 'T, J9'TJ

2

Boyer Says&amp;gionalism
lsrit a 13reaking-up'
n.e

plan . to "regionalize"
State University does not man
"we are . . . breaking up the
University administratively/'
Chancellor Ernest Boyer said
in Albany last week.
"Rather," he said, "we are
moving to develop a cl.-r
functional relationship between
colleges that are in prolrimity
to each other in order to
achieve greater educational efff'Ctiveness and operational er-

r.·

"

~ emphasized that "the
various regions of the State
have different needs and our
colleges should be encouraged
to work together to meet those
needs."
The plan was approved by
the State University Trustees
at their September meeting last
week, and was spelled out in
detail by the Cbancellor.
Obi- af Re&amp;ic&gt;MIIsm
Grouping the campuses or
the University regionaUy will,
Boyer said, permit SUNY to
achieve tbree basic objectives:
1. 1lle sharing or educational resouroes and administrative
services;
2. Improving the student admissions and transfer programs
in the University, and
3. Coordinating the University's community service programs and focusing more sharply on regional needs.
Dr. Boyer explained that the
Trustees' action in this area
represents the University's response to an Executive Order
by Governor RockefeUer which
caUed for regional planning.
The Chancellor said the action
was based upon recommenda·
tions develoPed by a coinmittee ot Sta~ University presidents aDd approved by the
University's Conference of
Presidents in late September.
The speoi(ic reoommenda:
tions of the plan are:
1. That the State be divided
d1to eight regions grouped together as four regional coordinating areas.
2. That S t a t e University
campuses in the two Wj!!f;tem
regions ( the area including·
U / B ) move immediately to develop_ "a plan of action," which
would describe ways for State
University campuses to deliver
most effectively post-secondary
education and related services
to the region.
3. That the Chancellor convene inter-institutional presidential forums as soon as pos.
sibie in each area to develop
.,lans of action.
.
· 4. That the transfer of students from two-year to senior
colleges in a coordinating area
be guaranteed for graduates.
Tho c-diNIIi"'Arus

Coordinating Area No. 1
comprises the 17 westernmost
cbunties of the State. It has
been divided into a Western
Region aDd the Genesee Valley
Region. For ID06t purposes, the
two regions will be joined.
Coordinating Area No. 2
comprises 11 counties in Central New York State and the
Southern Tier Easl
Coordinating Area No. 3 is
made up of a large area ranging from the Capital District
to the Canadian border. It will
have a Northern Region, consisting of the Black River-Sl
lawrence area, and a Northeast Region, comprising the re-

~...fu.ating ~

No. 4 will
be made up of counties from
the Mid-Hudson area to Long
Island. It has been subdivided
into a Southeast (Mid-Hudson) Region, a New York City
Region and .a Long ISland Re-

~approving the regioJ¥. the
Trustees stressed the ta&lt;_:! that

flexibility is stiU "absolu~y
essential." For esample, an m·
tee-institutional project could
involve but a few institutions
within one region, or could
draw numerous units together
on an inter-regional basia.
Planning ~ focus on l;be
use of the reg~ons as servJCe
areas for students studying for
a degree through the University's non-residential Empire
Stste College. 1lle concept of
earning a degree without attending formal campus classes,
Dr. Boyer feels, can be greatly
enhanced through regionalism.
The area-w ide presidential
forums, Boyer said, will a_lao
consider more effective sharing
of resources such as libraries
and computers; greater utilization of services and facilities;
and more organized efforts to
meet regional and local needs
in such areas as poverty, pollution and health.
Student t ransfer from twoyear to four-year institutions
has been a long-standing problem for SUNY, Boyer said, and
regionalism will make it possible "to regularize the Univer·
sity's transfer program." Speci·
ficaUy, it has been agreed, he
said, that freshmen enrolling in
a two-year A.A. or A.S. degree
program in the fall of 1972 will
be assured admission to a
senior college in their coordin·
ating area upon graduation.
The Chancellor said the transfer priority .may be established
sooner in some areas and that
the transfer status of students
with the A.A.S. degree will also
be studied.
Regionalism is also seen as
helping to " bring further economies in this new period of ~
vere financial constraints."

Polish Fest
()pens on 15th
Wesole czasy (happy times)
are in store during the Festival
of Polish Culture, October 15
to 23, to be sponsored by the
Student Polish Culture Club in
cooperation with the Office of
Equal Opportunity. Films, lectures. a concert and a dance
presentation will highlight the
Festival which will be open to

tbeFif~li~ be shown include
Salome, Gry and Pan Wolodyjowski on October 15;- 6eneratitm I!Jld Ashes and Diamond8
on -October 16; Knife in the
Waler and Akropolis on October 18; Barrier and selected
shorts on October 19; and Innocent Sorcerers and Family
of Man on October 21.
A lecture on Polish thea~
trends will be delivered by Dr.
Edward Czerwinski of the theatre department of SUNY at
Stony Brook on October 18.
On the 20th, Dr. Aleksander
. Gella, professor of sociology,
0

~};.l~h M!'.!~;:'C':d;

a selected response panel and
a u d i en c e participation. Dr.
Richard Kolm of Catholic University, Washington, D .C., will
speak on Ethllit:ity on October
21.

On October 22, a concert of
Polish and European m u s i c
with Piou Janowski, violinist,
and Paul Berkowitz will take
plaoe at Baird Recital Hall.
The closing event of the festival will be a baU featuring a
continental music ensemble,
Polish style bulret, folk dan&lt;?U!g and singing, and a' song
and danee presentation by the
Wawel Dance E~ble from
Sl Catharines, Ontario.
Check next week's Weekly
Communique for times and
places or aU events.

A series of campus conoerns
were discussed by President
Robert Ketter Monday night
as the Graduate Student Association (GSA ) started its
new year.
The president praised the
contributions of GSA and spoke
of the "freewheeling and open"
meetings he has had with its
officers bi-weekly. He also discussed the appointment of Dr.
Daniel Murray to a top post in
Albany. U / B has been trying
to have this position created
and to get someone from here
in it for the past six months,
he explained. Ketter h o p e s
Murray will be able to ease the
"difficulties now present in carrying graduate p Ian s to the
Trustees." He cited the new
regionalism decision as a case
in poinl Originally, transfer
students from junior colleges
were to have priority over aU
other students including graduate students, Ketter said. After
much debate and .discussion,
however, this was changed so
that only students in programs
eannarked for transfer wiU be
given this priority. Because this
is what is happening now in
most cases, Ketter doesn't see
any difficulties in following the
new mandate.
In an impromptu press con·
ference in the ball after the
meeting, Ketter again spoke of
the Murray appointment, calling him uour man in Albany,.
and expressing confidence in his
ability to win money for graduate p r o g r a m s- "Murray•s
never lost a fight for. money,
yet." He confirmed that a list
of candidates for acting Graduate School dean has been narrowed to six and that an appointment c a n be expected
within two weeks.
The president also reminded
the graduate students of the
new Thesday morning program
under which any student can
come and talk to him.
Ketter fielded floor questions
concerning the future of graduate programs and the library
situation with both his answers
emphasizin~ the severe financial conditions in the SUNY
system. The president warned
the GSA Senators that "the
pressure to cut down on gradu.
ate students is most immense."
There's ''not enough money .. .
and (there are) not enough
jobs" open to individuals with
graduate degrees. 1lle financial
squeeze has also hit the library.

T.he tight financial situation
has also caused the. president
to ask all department heads to
outline the goals of their pr&lt;&gt;grams. So far, Ketter indicated,
he has received seven to eight
"extremely good" reports. From
these, decisions will be made
concerning the "six or eight
or ten programs we put the
money · on and expand.'• Con·
versely, these reports will decide the "six or eight or ten
programs we hold steady or cut
down."
In its last action of the evening, GSA unanimow;ly voted
to charge its Executive Committee with writing to Ketter
"expressing deep concern with
the rash of recent resignations
and the issues raiRed by them."
The Executive Colllllllttee will
also request Ketter to clear up
accusations that be and the Office of the President are hard
to deal with. Debate on this
motion centered on how strongly to mention the name of Executive Vice President Ajbert
Somit .wbo, many felt,""' "is the
hard man to deal with." Clarification will also be requested
on the relationship between
Somit and Academic Affairs
Vice President Bernard Gell:~
~the
of po\¥er

t!":

&amp;gimalism Attracts
Interest inU/B Senate
SUNY's new regionalism policy fostered heated debate in
Tuesday's Faculty Senate meeting. The new plan of .action
announced last week by Albany
caused discussion and dismay
in some quarters and many of
these concerns were voiced at
the Senate's session.
Originally, debate centered
around Dr. William Baumer's
repOrt as cbainnan of the Senate. Dr. George Hocbfield, English asked that the second balf
of the report, dealing with the
topic of regionalism, not be
accepted by the group, since it
is a statement of Baumer's
opinion and not that of the
Senate. Baumer ruled that this
was out of order since the document is labeled, "Report of
the Chairman." After some parliamentary scullling, Dr. Robert
Berdahl, Hi g he r Education,
moved that the Executive Committee instruct some appropriate committee to report to the
Senate on regionalism and how
it will affect U / B. The motion
was passed.
Hocbfield did not give up
and in the last balf hour of the
meeting had a regionalism motion of his own passed by the
group. Under the laws of the
Senate which require previous
committee actions on any ma~
ter, passage of Ilocbfield's motion sends the matter back to
the Executive Committee for
assignment to the appropriate
group. The m o t ion, which
H o c h r i e I d characterized as
"double barreled,'' · would put
the Senate oR record as "being
firmly opposed to any. policy of
student admissions based on
geographical 01igin." The statement further ''urges the President to make krJ&lt;I:wn..! to . the
ChimceUor our opposition tO
such a po~cy. " 1'be motion
would also . mandate the establishment of a special committee
to deal with the situation.
Regionalism was also- dis=ed by President Rober t
Ketter in his report to t1ie Senate. In making four majOr' statements on his commitments to
U / B, Ketter pointed out his
goal of keeping this a "national university." While uregion.
alism is a natural organizational move and can be expected,"
he said, this "will not minimi7.e or diminish our commitment to achieving nation a I
stature." There is also a com~
mitment on his part to exoellenoe, and the President looks
to the aocreditation study as a
good time to "rethink and reformulate our academic goals
and priorities." This, he stresses. is "fundamentally a faculty
responsibility." The task of the
administration is to "secUre
funding," and Ketter says the
long range pros~ in this
area are "brighl' This prediction is based on the "relatively favorable" funding situation
SUNY has compared to other
state universities. He looks to
Amberst's large size as a reason
for additional f u n d i n g The
third pledge is to "fund ·those
programs that have a reasonable chanoe of a~ving emi~oe:• lastly, there is a com.
rrutment to furthering minority
group programs within the Uruversity. Ketter c i t e d severalrecent minority appointmenj;s
and the re-constitution of the
MURRAY TO At.IIAHY
University sources have confirmed
that Graduate School Dean Daniel
H. Murray has -been granted a
leave of absence from his post to
assume
position in Albany In
which he will be responsible for
the coordination and development
of graduate programs for the entire SUNY system. Murray will be
replaced by an acting dean durfng
the period of his absence from
the campus.

·university-wide Committee an
Minority Affairs.
In other ageoda items, the
Senate passed a motion
titioning the Senate Pror.....J.:ru
Association (SPA) and the
State of New York to mutually
consent to re--openina negotiations on the statement of academic u-Jom within their contracl 'The Senate sugsested the
current SPA definition be replaced by one formulated by
P r o f e s s o r Marlt Schechner.
This revision reads: "It is the
policy of the University to
maintain and encourage the
f u II constitutionally-protected
freedom of inquiry, teaching
and research. In the exercise or
this freedom, the· faculty member may, without limitation,
discuss his own subject in the
classroom. In his role as citizen,
every employee . has the aame
freedoms as o t h e r citizens.
However, in his extramural utterances, be has an obligation
to indicate be is not an institutional spokesman."
With very little debate, the
Senate also unanimously passed
the resolutions of the Committee on Information and Library
Resources and the recommendations of the Special Committee on Minority Graduate and
Professional Student Housing.
(For more information, see the
Sepl 30 Reporter. ) The housing report was praised by several senators and the group
commended. 1lle li o d y also
urged the President· to "act on
this report as soon as poasible."

NTPStatus

ConcernS SPA

The local University Center
chapter of the Senate Professional Association (SPA ) is
currently investigating a situation in which it appears that
some campus non·tea.ching pro.
fe:;siooals (NTP's ) may have
been given temporary appointments rather than term appointments as specified in the new
State-SPA contracl
According to Dr. Constantine
Yeracaris, president of the
chapter, SPA is concerned over
reports about these actions and
wishes to assure the academic
community that it is looking
into the matter and will make
a ruu report and statement of
its
"tion.
r is a possibility, he
says, that the definition of
"continuing" as o p p o s e d to
"temporary" funds may have
been misconstrued in some 3035 cases on this campua.
Apparently, be indicates, only
those NTP's given temporary
appointments have as yet. bo,len
notified by the local Pt!fll01l[le!
Office.
SPA is also conoemed, Yeracaris saya, that the University
has not distributed copies of
the contract to all 80\DJ!.!oyees.
The contract "covers -..yclearly the rights of the academic
community," be ~ says, and is
supposed to be given to each
employee, especially t"'- receiving these new appointments_

fie e

Chemirnl Award
Edward Mertzlufft has been

awarded the Allied Chemical

Foundation Scholarship, presented annually to the outslanding senior in chemical engineering.

.
The award, consisting of

S1,000 cash, was presented by

Dr. Harry Cullinan, chairman,
chemical engineering, at the
September 27 meeting of the
SUNYAB Student Chapter of
the American Institute of
Chemical Engineers. •(AICbE)

�October 7, 1911

3

Pesch(Continued from

.

paf&lt;

1st Amherst
.:Occupancy

I, col. 5)

more appropriate person to
lead the hospital and medical
center in the future!'
On behaU of the University
of Chicago, Dr. Leon 0. Jacob~ son; deao ofthe Division of Biological Sciences and the Pritz.
ker School of Medicioe, said,
"the oomiog of Dr. Pesch to
Michael Reese Hospital and
Medical Center sustains the
tradition of e:&lt;eellence io health
C8n! leadership at that institution and io the city of Chicago.
His · outstandiog record as a
medical researcher, educ"ator
and administrator will strengthen Chicago's position io the
vanguard io medical research
and medical education."

v..r·Lon&amp;

Next Year
Two dormitories, the Law
and Jurisprudence Building
and some facilities of Colleges
A-F are scheduled for oocupancy on the North ( Amherst)
Campus duriog fiscal 1972-73,
acoordiog to an eight-year occupancy schedule projection issued this week by U / B's Of6ce
of Facilities Ptanning.
The remaioder of the oocupancy timetable is as follows:
Fiscal 1973-74: remaining
facilities of Collegee A-F; Physics I; Pharmacy/ Biology; English/ Modem Languages; Industrial Engineeriog.
1974-75: Administration (business offices); Commissary;
Physics II; Education; Chemical Engioeeriog; Social Science
! Education/Arts and Letters

Search

'Ibe appoiotnient of Pesch,
· Bensioger said, climaies a year
of elfort on behalf of the Michael Reese Board of Trustees.
"Our search for the most appropriate person to do this job
has taken us to every part of
the country, and we are sure
io Dr. Pesch we have found the
siogle most appropriate person
to aooomplish" our goals.
Pesch said that the "worldwide reputation of Michael
Reese as · a 9DUIId iostitution
was the siogle factor which
stimulated my ioterest io the
challenges ahead. To he part
of the forward movement of a
medical oenter so committed to
the future of patient care, medical reoearch, and medical educstion is an exciting prospect.
We shall do our best to have
patterns "Of C8n! emerge from
Michael Reese that will he
models for large, urban university-affiliated hospitels every.w~.'~
.
. ..

Mills(C~nt)rwed

from paf&lt; l, coL 6)

I am -very II8teful for Y9Ul' sup:.
port, your faiimiodedness, your
wise counsel and your friend-

ship. It is rare for a ooordiostor
of acsdemic units to gaio the
degree of trust and confidence
your units have io you. It is
rarer still for the usual forces
of .competition between units
to he transferred ioto mutual
trust and cooperation among
u,._ units - this has been
accomplished under yo(ir lea·
dership.
''While I might not later he
io an administrative relationship with you, I trust our workiog relationship will remain
cloee."
Carbons of the Mills Jetter
were distributed to President
Ketter and to Vice Presidents
Somit and Gelheum.

.Organization(ContilouH from -

1, coL 2)

Ketter summarized """"' of
the recurrent· comments that
appaared acroes several of the
respondents' letters:
- • '-rbere was extensive COD·
Cern that the reepoosihilities
for identifying, allocating, and
utilizing UniVersity resources
would he disperaed too widely
and the general plea was for
a concentration of these activities io one office.

• "There were several

comments which supported
strengthening the Of6ce of Vice
Presi~t for Academic Mairs.
• ''The provostial system
simply had not heeri sufficiently
demonstrably effective to
justify, without further examioation, its continuation.
• ''It was poioted out that
divisional size should he dependent upon function rather
than standard modules across
the University.
• "Current handliog of the
status and evaluation of the
professional schools was a eerious question..,

~~~o~c':i'~

Opportunities &amp; Choices Open toWomen Are
Focus For Discussion at U/B Alumni Event
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Repon.er Stalf

The new opportunities and
choices open to women were the
focus of discussion at Tuesday's second annual U / B Women's Day. 'Ibe event, spon80red by the Alumni Association, featured Barbara Franklin, womenpower advisor to
President Nixon, and the presentation of six 125th Anniversary Awards to outstandiog
Buftalo women.
The day-long program at the
Statler ' Hilton opened with a
panel discussing "Whither Wo-men?·· Prdspects and Promises
for the 70's and SO's." Mrs.
Barbara Sims, attorney and director of the Office of Equal
Opportunity, spoke on "Custonu;. Mores and Laws: Where
It's At." Using a historical approech, Mrs. Sims traced the
''natiOnhl mental state" toward
women. She reviewed the "p~
tective labor laws" enacted
early io this oentury which
have restricted women in their
choice of jobs and employment
conditions and which, in some
cases, have approved of unequal pay for equal work.
Theee discriminatory Jaws and
the social attitudes that go with
!hero are slowly hreakiog down,
Mrs. Sims poioted out. She
cited various federal taws and
executive orders whiCh have
equalized opportunity. 'Ibe culmination of this trend would
he paseage of a Constitutional
amendment e" tend i n'l the
rights of the 14th Amendment
to women, she emphasized.
During a question and answer
period, Mrs. Sims detailed the
provisions of former President
Lyndon Johnson's E"ecutive
Order extending equal rights to
women employed by companies receiving federal funds.
'Which .. Whlchl'

The second speaker, Dr.
Daphne Hare. physician and
biophysicist, spoke on "Biology
and Culture-Which is
.Which," with reference to
myths about sexuality and reproduction. She cited the custom of holdiog the female responsible for the sex of children when, physiologically, this
function rests with the male.
"Social customs are 80 strong
and women are eo brainwashed," she stressed, "that
they ~deny their own sexuality."
Mrs. Mary B. Parke, oonsul_tant to U / B's Adult Advisement Cehter was the last panelist, speaking on "Whither the
Fainily." She asked her audienoe if the nuclear family is
going permanenUy out of the

picture. Mrs. Parke also disMarie Caldwell, associate dicussed new patterns that are . rector of the Department of

emergiog to alter traditional
family ways, such as communes, child C8n! centers and
inter-racial ad o p t i on. New
trends in marriage such as
serial r;nono,amy and experimental mamage are also challenging customary attitudes,
me believes. As an expert io
family life, she feels, "all adults
are i&gt;arent&amp;--all of us are responsible for the next generation." What is important, she
stresses, is to "construct an
environment f a v o r a b 1e for
growth."

Summing up the panel diseu&amp;c;ions, Mrs. Margaret Nevin.
panel moderator and director
of the Adult Advisement Center, spoke of the emerging feeling of brotherhood io this
country and its elfects on women. Mrs. Nevin believes a
concept of sisterhood is hedly
needed 80 women can work
against unequal pay and employment opportunities and toward opening up more avenues
of opportunity. She urged her
audience not to he threatened
by this ooncept but stimulated
by it.
The Nixon R8con1

Mrs. Franklin spoke of the
Nixon administration's f i r m
commitment to the cause of
equal participation by women
io government. She poioted out
that io the two and one half
years of Nixon's term more ~
men-260-have been appoioted to top level posts than
io all the years of the Johnson
administration. Mrs. Franklin
is ioterested, though. io getting
even tnare women into •government and asked the audience for
their help io recruiting top
women io this area. She urged
!hero to send her the names of
outstandiog local women so
that she can add !hero to her
"talent hank." Mrs. Franklin
poioted out that this search is
hard because a ''woman is
sometimes Jess mobile" and
"she risks more when she leaves
sioce her options to return to a
job simply are not the same
as a man's." But women have
a rightful place io government,
she believes, and "it is time for
we women to craft the tools of
peace and create a world of
tranquility and happioess.''
Awords.

Hignpoiot of the day was
the presentation of 125th Anni-

K=.;abl~~
ience of 350 watched, Mrs. Ketter read the citations:

Child Psychiatry at Bu1falo
Children's Hospital, was cited
for her 14selfless s e r v i c e to
others io the field of mental
health,'' and for her elforts io
trying to 14create hannony in
the lives of those unable to
cope with their problems."
Sister Mary Angela Canavan,
president of Rosary Hill College, was couunended for the
"p e r i o d of unprecedented
growth and change" the college has gone through under
her guidance. Sister Canavan,
the award said, has -"helped
preserve the proud tradition of
the private liberal arts college."
U/ B's beloved. Emma Deters,
University regiotrar emeritus,
was praised for ''the exoellence
of your service and the enormity of your devotion to this
University." Dr. Harriet Hosmer, medical doctor, was
siogled out for "50 years of service io medicine which has
paved the w~ and secured a
place for WQmen io that professional field." CouriLr-Expresa
columnist Anne Mcllhenney
Matthews' "efforts io hehaJf of
charitable organizations" were
noted io her citation plus her
"work in various fund-raising
and promotional projects which
have helped shape many of the
outstandiog cultural features of
our community." Finally, Dr.
Katheryne Thomas Whittemore, professor emeritus, State
University College at Bu1falo,
was cited for her leadership as
educator, administrator, and
geographer ''which has touched
and iospired many of the students and colleagues you have
encountered.n
'Too Many ......,...

'Ibe program was capped by
a talk by Dr. Marian May,
Center for 'Ibeoretical Biology,
on ''Too Many People-What
Should Women Do?" ''It might
already he too late," she believes, to stop the ruin of the
world through over-population.
'Ibe crwc of the crisis lies in lhe
ever-shrinking supply of minerals, foodstuffs and oxygen
that aren't heiog recycled fast
enough to meet demands. She
feels women should educste
themselves about the problem
and discuss it with others. ''If
we don't do 90mething, it may
he JleC!!Sil8I"Y for the government lo restrict reproduction,"
she poioted out Time is running out for voluntary edUC8tion and change\ however, she
noted, and she uiged the women to realize the time to act
is now.

I &amp; II; Student Activities.
1975-76: MechanicalJCivil
Engioeeriog; Performing Arts
Library; Music/Chamber Hall.
1976-77: Service Areas; Theatres/ Gallery; Computer Center
! School of Information and Library Studies; Electrical Engioeeriog; Social Sciences I ;
Student Activities II.
1977-78: Field House; Geology; Mathematics/Statistics;
Chemistry L
1976-79: ICC/ Computer Science; Biology II; Art; Social
Sciences II &amp; ill; Student Activity ill; Gymnasium 1/Ice
Arena.
.
1979-SO: Engineering/ Natural Science Library; Student
Administration; Core Food ill;
Gymnasium ll!Natatorium;
Marine Scienoes; Astnmmny;
Chernis~ II; Student Activity
IV; Engmeeriog and Applied
Sciences.

lVB Dental Alums
Hold 69th Meeting
InstaJJation of new offioers,
naming of the Dental Man and
Woman of the Year and the
presentation of a special 125th
Anniversary University Award
highlighted the 69th annual
Dental A I u m n i Associatioo
meeting held at the Statler Hilton this week.
Dr. Edward Kucio '57 ol
Eaat Aurora was named president of the Association, ~
oeeding Dr. Robert Gartler of
Snyder.
Other new officers ioclude:
Dr. Frank L. Graziano '65, associate professor of endodontics, vice president; Dr. Alvin
May '37, Hamburg, treasurer;
Dr. James Guttuso '58, BBJciate professor of operative dentistry and endodontics, ..,....
tary.

.

Dr. Myron A. Roberta '30,
past president of the Erie

County Dental Associatioo, tbe
Eighth District Dental Society
and the Dental Society of New
York, was named lhe 1971
''Dental Man of the Year."
'Ibe 1971 ''W~tist
of the Year" is Df."'"Doroti:Jy
Gibson '21. Dr. Gibson, lhe
first dentist to handle a mobile
dental unit for the Red era.,
has worked on four Indian re&amp;ervations io the Western New
York area. Her husband, Dr.:--~­
Samuel Gibson. who was 8lao a
member of the 1921 dental
class, died seven monthe agn.
Dr. Edward F . Mimmacl&lt; '21
was recipient of the 125th Annivei"S8JY Award, presented by
President Robert L. Ketter. Dr.
Mimmack served on the Dental
School faculty for 44 years
( 1922-1966) and is now professor emeritus, Materia Medica
and 'Iberapeutica. 'Ibe Award
was made "in reoognitioo of
distinguished servioes w h i c h
you have 0011trihuted."

�GREPoirrER:,

4

Oc6o6er 7, 1971

Member of Presidential Review Board Cha.rgffi
Proredures Were Altered in the Baumer Case
fDITOR:

.

As a member of the Presi-

dmt's Advisory Boanl on Appoinbnents, Promotions, and
Tenure, I write 1D insist that

Professor Pany, sometime
chairman of the Department
of Philosophy, receive a fuller
and more accurate reply ID his
searching letter published in
the September 23 Reporter.
And ID protest on my own part
the aDOQymity and surly offhandedness of your reply. And
ID ask why you, of all people,
can take it unto yourself ID
summarize the official Admin~tion response and ID SPOOk
for the Board, ID the deliberations of which I am sure you
are not privy. In any event, I
am as 11pset as Professor Pany
about the procedures, and even
more upset at the tenor of your
response. It is another flagrant
example of the Administration's tendency ID SPOOk
through ftmetionaries r a t h e r
than its own un-fori&lt;ed tongue,
and thus, in the phrase of one
of my colleagues applied ID the
local chapter of the SDS, 1D go
straisht for the capillary.
Deopite your assurance ID the
contrary, the proaidures of the
Boanl were radically altered in
the handling of the Baumer
case, and altered at the Pretiident's insistence, even though
the Boanl has once before, in
the appeal case of Professor
Garver, referred ID in Professor Parry's letter, refused ID
give the President any advice
on a grievance case. In that instance, indeed, the faculty
member had brought his grievance against the Department of
Philosophy ID the Faculty Senate, and in the course of two
years had received first the rejection. of his case and then
5UPJ&gt;01't for it by an ad /roc review committee. Still, the
Boanl refused ID review the ad
hoc committee's review (on the
grounds that the Boanl reviewed credentials, not grievances) , and left it ID the President ID decide between the
grievance committee and the
~t's and Faculty's cJe.
CJSlOD not ID recommend promotion. The President thereupon received the ad iwc report
and promoted Professor Garver
on the spol
'lbe Baumer case was
handled somewhat differently,
though it was, indeed. a grievance case pure and simple.
'Though. whether it was the
President's or Professor Baumer's grievance is the question.
Professor Baumer's Department denied him the vote for
promotion; the Appointments,
Promotion, and Tenure Committee of the Faculty of Social
Sciences reviewed that refusal,
and upbeld the Departmenl At
that_point, candidacies for promotion normally are with- drawn, unless the candidate
chooses ID file an appeal with
the Faculty Senate, for which
there are established proced-

~

ures. But President Ketter in-

ID reconsider its vote, and when
that recoosidemtion was again
negative and the Faculty committee sustained it, the President ordered the credentials
sent forward ID his Advisory
Board, by-passing the grievance
procedure on the grounds that
Bamner's position as vice president of the Faculty Senate and
therefore his responsibility for
ad hoc grievance committees
justUied special consideration.
The rust time those credentials appeared on the Boanl's
~ I and some others sugg'ested strongly that we should
not handle the case, since a
large part of it was being put
forward by the President personally, who had taken it lljlOn
himself ID inquire outside the
University about Professors
Garver's and Baumer's professional ranking, only 1D find that
they, and not the six or seven
other associate professors being
put forward by the Department
for P""""tion ID lull professor,
had ~ stature for the new
r.mk. Over a period of time.
the Boanl had considered the
other Philosophy Department
requests for promotion, had
recommended some positively,
tabled others in order ID get
IJX!re information, etc. Some
time in June we received information that all promotions in
the J)epartment of Philosophy
were being held on the President's desk (that is, those
which had passed positively
through the Department, Faculty and Advisory Boanl ) until there was some action on
the Baumer case. The pressure
here was being applied against
the Department and Faculty.
J n mid..J une, the Baumer credentials appeared on the

Boanl's agenda, on a day when
I , unfortunately, was chairing
the meeting. I and others
urged rejection of consideratiQD, but it was only tabled,
pending more information-especially of Baumer's teaching.
On June 18, I departed from
Buffnlo for La; Angeles and a
six-week stint of summer teachiDI;. On the day before I left
town, I went to the office of
Larry Cappiello, who was serving as secretary ID the Boanl,
to sign some letters ID chairmen in regard ID the Board's
decisions during the meetings I
had chaired. While there, I
was apprised of a letter from
then Acting Vice President for
Academic Affairs Murrav, who
regularly reviewed--our deliberations at the past meetings and
passed along his summary and
recommendations 1D the Presidenl He strongly recommended that Baumer be promoted immediately, on the
grounds of his outstanding outside recommendation s {collected, as we know, with great
care ). Murray had interPreted
the Boanl's tabling of the caae
as a negative vote, and thus,

· ...._..,.,.__......,
sc...u+::,~r-:t~~-=~
__ 2U,.2$01r...... .

~~t

confronting

a

necative vote

terveued. asked the J)epartment from J)epartment, Faculty and

.__

~

L.-arur~

.

~ ~­

-----IOimA..~

,_

-.....:

ProfeBJr William T. Parry
'- "
e ted on the irregu..
larity iDYohoed in the PftJID&lt;&gt;.
tion ol William u..m- to full
nmk. He is ricbt Olboa:t

0:

recommended, in other words,
haYinc been - .•....:.._
an administrative promotion,
I ......Jd not -;i;i~comwhich, I hasten to add, is his
meut eu:ept that in the courae ·
prerogative. At the same time.
ol PviQc this true ~ Parry
however, be reversed the
Board's decision on one or two
has
cast umoammted - candidates which had gone the
""'""' on
JII'OimsiOnal
full review route with positive
-liliaotims
81111 ' ---·
mal.iped Prmideat
~y
recommendations, one of them
Let me start by 1llldedisrl.,g
(later .increased ID two) from
the obvious: that a PI'DCedure
my Department who had received a handful of negative
votes in the Department, none
at the Faculty level, and none
are indeed .iostified when the
on the Board.
~ cbtumels are not func.
The
Rllparter
- ...
... ~
• '
farum
far- the- . ..
Upon my return from La; c:t..npotviews
tianing properly. 'lbe issue
.... _ . . . . . , COIIWS
down, therelore. 1D
Angeles (August 2), I read the
whether the nonoal JII'OIDOtion
minutes of Boanl meetings held ot the t.clnc the during my absence, and communltJ. We we1came bGih machinery in the l'hiloaophy
~t was lunctiooiin&amp;
learned that at a meeting on , - - p•pers •
properly.
Cas I recall ) July 13, the Board
At this point it is necessary
had indeed considered the promotion of Professor Baumer,
to note lllat Parry is an interand with two-thirds of the six political response. I am a frieDd ested party to this dispute,
members voting (one of those and admirer of the man who since he then c:bainn8n of
voting was absent from the abstained on the Baumer vote, the ~t and responmeeting but his vote was S&lt;&gt;- and I know that be did it be- sible for its machinery. It is
licited ID create a quorum ), had cause be truly felt that, in llflCI!SSIIly, 1oo, ID CIOIIDDent on
voted 2 for, 1 against, 1 ab- tenns of slmight credentials, the merits -of Baumer's .,...,...,.
staining ID recommend promo- there was little ID cboose be- tion, since the 9DUIIdness of
tion of Professor Baumer. I was tween 8allllle!" and aome of regular promotion machinery
not asked ID vote, presumably those of his colleagues ad- depeods m lm:&amp;e part on its
because not being present I was vanced by tbe Department. He mmmmendatims being in line
not aware of the ._new support- was righL
with merits. Without his saying
So let's call this promotion so, it is clear that Parry being material" in Baumer's favor and was not privy ID the what it was. It was an admini- lieves Ba~ IIDIIUBlified for
deliberations, though I would strative promotion, and ...,.,)d the JII'OIDOtion that his Depart.
suggest that neither was the ab- have been made no maUer what ment attempted to deny him;
sent member of the Boanl who the committees did. I am dis- he ...,..)d hardly take such vigvoted. When a few weeks ago turbed that my associates on orous aception to irregularities
I requested a meeting with the the Boanl let themselves be ~ ID achieve a just retwo central vice presidents in used as they were. I am disorder ID question the proced- turbed that tbe President cbase
Merit is diScult to jndge,
ures, I was received courteously ID erode whatever credihility especially when one looks at
and,· ID my satisfaction then, the Boanl might have had with one person in isolation. I don' t
was assured that there had not his partisan ( ward-politik) acknow whether Ba~ and all
tion. But it is done, not for tbe tbe pen;ons PJ'(lliJoted 1D full
been irregular procedures. I
had asked, in fact, if I were first or last time in this Uni- raul: in the PbiJoaophy Departbeing blackballed ( by those versity. or any otbei' as I un- ment this year . (seven in all!)
Presuming I would vote against derstand iL Let us simply hope desened ID be IJI'OIDOted this
P':"fessor Baumer, which just that having survived a year, we year. I am. however clear in
nugbt not have been the case) can look forward to a second in my _ , mind that ~ promote
by the delay in acting on the which the Administration has all the others and &amp;ea.., Baumer
paid off the ward heelers. And
~nglish Department promobehind ...,.,)d have resulted in
tions. Tbe vice presidents were that when Professor Ba~ a substantial injustice to
properly appalled that I Would returns ID his intellectual re- Baumer, who, for all his adthink so. But I did ask them sponsibilities, be will prove 1D
of law and order, is an
ID issue a full explanation that be the scholar that all his cre- effective '-'her and has pubthe Boanl luul. not acted ac- dentials say he can be, but as lished contributions ID three
cording ID regular procedures yet, indeed. has not been.
distinct fields of philoaopby. I
but had had special ones forced
Yours sincerely,
. ~ c:ballenge those who
upon it. And I thought I had
~OSEPR N. lliDIJD.
~ otherwise to submit my
received assurance that this exProfessor, Englisb
.iudcment to, say, a committee
planation would be made. Then
Member, President's
of the American Philosopbical
comes your reply, Mr. RowAdvisory Board
Association, and am confident
land, Mr. Who? And I recall at
on Appoinbnents,
~ would be confirmed. (My
that meeting the new vice presPromotions and Tenure
judgment on Baumer's political
tdent of academic affaits, Pro~ I micht ~. is often
fessor Gelbaum, had explained
qwte dillen!nt from my judgID me that in a democracy all
meut ol his ~ merit
members of a group do not al...........t
on many such matters
ways get ID vote, a lesson in
I am much doaer to Parry.)
civics the profundity of which
Baumer npt that it
I ignored at that time.
...,..)d have stained the grievIn any event, it is time ID mrroa:
~ machinery for him, who
apologize ID Professor Parry
_Y~ ~e conce.ming ad- IS its chief ~ 80 to
and the University community.
speak, to ask for and obtain a
The Baumer promotion was, as IDlllistrative shifts in the Reporter of September 30 contains
favorable judgment in his """'
"'!Y?"" ~d know, an ad- an inexplicable error. You state case.
In fact tbe previous grievDlllllStrative promotion pure
ance caae from tbe Departml!nt
and simple, a political debt was that I will be reporting 1D tbe had .w..ly indicated that
repaid. Baumer worl&lt;ed hard Dean of the Division of Undeo-micht have been
and successfully ID secure the graduate Studies, rather than something
1lmlllg with the promotion
President his job. And we have the Vice President for Aca- mechanism
within the Deputdemic
Affairs.
This
is
not
tbe
testimony ID his success there. case.
menL In lhoote 8PI!Il:ilic cin:umIndeed, he is no mean acaslaDces I am paJjiiD to Ketter
Sincerely yours,
demic politician, the more sucfor steppinc in to prew!lllt anVON I&lt;OLTJ&lt;B,
ceaslul as a man of action than
other injustice from dmging
as a ~ of thought, if I may
down
tbe llepartmout for anCollegiaie
System
appropnate the dichotomy of
other yeu-. It is just in cirrumRobert Penn Warren in regard
such as theae that irID Willie Stark (or his histor- The information came
tbe -regularities
are justified.
ical .
H
fortuna7 Profuey Long). l.!n- University's monthly l1!pOrt to
'lben! is, in this controversy,
•
Y•
esoor Parry mtoo much airinc ol wbat !lbouJd
sista on clutching ID an ideal of
be Clllllidelltial, 81111 I wiah the
academic integrity that ' about as much chance of sueamine, of moving from idea
DIIIECJORr DElMJrY
to. actioll, as we do of '!J'Iking Del~ for the combined reply&lt;Bbttheilllaeheincraised
u~ eli- I cannot resist pointinc tbe
this a great univemity. Unfor- ·
tuDately, like "-'~~&lt;. c-m- ~ will be the of - . . . lllllrlll: if 8IIUIIder jadpleJla
liaf in the eye ol the beiJolde., Iter 11. ~ in -made at the r.:ulty level,
8!"1 o..e ~ this u~: orwonizadion - _!lee ......Jd he DO .....,(, OCCilllity ~ . . far ......... them- ' " " " " - . _ , . . pradtoc. ...... lor ......... almiaislmtiYe
aolwe to be DO -ler: IIBD ..... tianot-~--- ........
Ponaliala, t h o s e 11181Hlf-tbe- ly iosuod in miiJ.OctDber.
- ----l"lafMoow ol ~

s..ua--s

'VIEWPOINTS ~~!!!li~~

-.....-.

voc:acr

vonMoltke

Cites Error

n::

.fr.xn

~is~~

-......::.w
r . lf..Ur£aT

aoa&amp;:Jrr

r~ r:....s;;:r;.';",~-

Board, was advancing himself
as an ad /roc committee. He

year types who think it great
~tear~ best ... tbe "N'gra
Professor Parry and his Department, however, are not at
all innocent in this debacle; for
in t'f'li'XWDmeMing for" prmuotiml
at the same time ...,..,.. associate professors with widely varying credentials I some of which
were not altogether better than
Baumer's), be and his ..,._
leagues opened the door for a

t.adty_._

==

~::: 'i:.i ~

�Oc*JI&gt;er 7, 1911

We Shine Ourselves
Or Not atAll'
By WILLIAM H . BAUMER
~ F~ty

5

'REPORTER_,

Sen.te

A Qlatioo which arises freqo&amp;ltly is that of the proposed
status ol. this University, and
this ~ is often phrased
as whether we intend to be a
reci&lt;Joa1 University, a State
University, a natiopal University, or ·an international one.
All ol. us, it would seem, supthat the answer is obvious - that ooly firat class intematiaoal status will do. This
is DOt to be disputed here; indeed. it is a goal which I share
aad...J!!Ipe to see accomplisbed
in the ,._ future. But this
is often tied to various
crmdtwi&lt;ww with reprd to specific University policies which, I
wish to ...._t, are problematic in aevaal ways. Moreover,
I wish to suaest that these
ties are nowhere near as tight
as they are sometimes made
out to be.
The firat factor which is frequeotly introduced concerns the
uudergraduate program of the
University and particularly the
admissiaDs policies for this. In
dealing with th&lt;a! p o licies,
there are .......at factors which
mtG be kept in mind, fcr they
are to a very large extent beyond our control yet shape our
actioos. First, State University
policies with reprd to the provision ol. housing fO&lt;
uate studeuts are anything but
promising here. Such housing
bas proved to be extremely
upeosive both to construct and
to maintain, to be a aouroe of
continual problema, and to constitute a budget drain which is
anything but attractive .in a
period of tight """""""' Secondly, the availability of privately financed housing in the
Bullalo area is not (at least at
present) favorable with regard
to student hOUsing; ·as the report of the Special Committee
on Minority Graduate and Professional Student Housing
maka; quite clear. ( Reporter,
September 30) Nor does there
appear to be any strong move
to change this. Thirdly, it
should be noted that there is
ODIISiderable national presswy
to reduce the amount of student
migration from state to state
and area to area. This appears
in two forms. One is pressure
from various quarters to get
th&lt;a! states which have a high
net "ou~migration" of college
and uniYerSity students to increase their provision of higher
education opportunities, particnlarly publicly supported education ppportunities. The second is the heavy trend of increases of out-of-state tuition
in pubJicly-supported colleges
and universities to reflect actual
operating costs, and thus towards such tuition charges
which are very unfavorable by
CIIIIJPilrison to in-state tuition.
All offlheoe factors, it is here
SUQI!ISted. go together to suggest that there are serious
memaJ pressiues imposing a
nolable weilhting of our underpaduate enrollment -toward
residents ol. Western New York.

Ulldeqrrad-

A ......t factor is the re~ties which the Univenity at Buffalo bas as a unit
in Slate Uniwrsity of N&lt;~W
Yod. It is a graduate and professional ........., is intended to
be that, certainly should be
that, and most certainly should
be the best in the system. But
it will alao, as surely as it is
locallld in Western New York,
to provide ad-

:...:r=
fessional~ua: J::1':.

It will in addition be espedied
to proride continulq educa-

=--~~:'..!.~

this connection, it cannot be
stressed too hetwily that if this
University does not provide
these educntiorwl opportunilies,
other units of State UnilJersity
will. They are willing; one may
question their present ability to
do so, but that can (so it is
held ) be altered by appropriate
changes in bud2etary allocations by the State. ·
As a third factor, this University is expected to be a
regional and State resource by
virtue of the fact that it draws
its support from the State of
New. York and seeks additional
support from the Western New
York relllt&gt;n. There is, it may
be said, an old maxim to the
effect that be who compensates
the musician also has the privilege of determining the melody.

Is the 1leporter'a Cornnuuzity Newspaper?
ar·aHouse OrganLacldngFaculiy InpUt? .
PROPES'lOR AUBEBY:
ter if he had been willing to
At the April 16, 1971, meetThank you for your recent limit his material so that it
ing of the Senate, speaking for letter concerning the organiza- could have been printed on one
myseU as well as for a number tiona! structure of the Reporter, full page of the Reporter.
of conoemed colleagues, I .as well as your suggestion of
I do not see how an editorial
raised the question of the or- an editorial board. We are al- board could possibly have been
ganizational structure of the ways pleased to have reactions helpful jn Professor Jackson's
Reporter. In spite of the claim from the faculty, as well as case, nor do I know what you
of the masthead that it is "a other members of the academic are referring to when you aay
campus community newspaper" oommunity.
that ..several incidents that ocit appears to many of us as a
The Reporter, although fi- curred would not have taken
house organ entirely controll~ nanced__from the Division of place if we had such a board."
by this University administra- University Relations budget, is
It is the feeling of our editortion or pemaps, as one col- not controlled by one man as ial staff (We meet every Frileague told me privately, by one of your colleagues reported, day morning at 8 :30 a.m. to
one man.
nor is it controlled by the Uni- discuss last week's Reporter
I suggested that, in order to versity administration. The Di- and to plan the following issue,
clarify things and help the Re- vision of University Relations and there are at least nine or
porter to live up tci its ideals, has been assigned the responsi- ten of us who participate in
representatives of the major bility for the publication of the this meeting) that an editorial
campus constituencies be in- Reporter, and as Executive Ed- board could not make any subvited to join its editorial board itor, I am the individual who stantial contribution to the Beincluding a representative of must ultimately take responsi- porter, and in many ways, we
the Faculty Senate who could bility for it.
·
think it ought be counter-proreport to this body when the
We would submit that the ductive to producing a quality
need arises.
Reporter has always dealt fair- product which we now have.
I suppose that you realize ly and objectively with all the As far as I know, none of the
that the several incidents that news which it publishes. As far other university newspapers of
occurred last year, involving as I know, we have never re- this type have such a board
for one Professor Bruce Jack- fused to print materials sub- and this list includes the Unison, would have probably never mitted to us by faculty, stu- versity of Michigan, Harvard,
taken place had faculty and dents, or staff. If you were to Cornell, Pittsburgh, as well as
student represenUjtives sat on study all issues of the R eporter, about ten others.
the editorial boalfl of the Re- you would notice that the arThank you for your interest
porter. So far I have had no ticles and viewpoints cover the and let me assure you that we
reason •to believe that my sug- complete spectrum of beliefs. are always open and willing to
gestion has received any at- There have been articles criti- discuss the Reporter with any
tention.
cal of the administration, and member of the faculty.
Sincerely yours,
articles which are supportive.
Sincerely yours,
-PIERRE AUBERY
As you know, we would have
A. WEBTLEY ROWLAND
Faculty Senator
printed Professor Jackson's letExecutive Editor
·
EXECUTIVE EDITOR:

Do these three factors, singly
or in aome combination, mean
that this University cannot be
a first class one? There are
those who will answer this
question affirmatively, and all
that can be said about such a
stanoe is that
is a counsel
of despair. But •-uch despair is
unwarranted.
What makes a university
great, we are fond of saying, is
its faculty _ for they are the
university. But what, in the
present context does this mean?
It means, for 'one, that what
makes a university great is not
the Qllal.ity of the students who
enter .there, but rather the .
quality of the educated persons .

::;:~i'~'iei!a~~~~

'Manu~.ac
.e. t ured' Resinnorh,
.
6.L.ILU.I.Lons er·lS1S
Seen as Indicative of a Real Problem

~~rp~:!:r..!~~dgr~d~:

The current "manufactured"
p u b 1 i c i t y over resignations
within the University, Execu-

reflect and are the measure of
our educational programs,

in fine, this quality which will
be the determinant of the students who choose to learn at
this University.

tive Vice President A I bert

Somit feels, points up a very

real problem for Ulis and other

University administrations.
That problem can perhap;
That the University is its best be stated in terms of two
faculty also means, in regard questiOns : How does an adminto researc;h and creative acti- istration meet the need for disvity, that our attainments as semination of infoniiation in
scholars are the determinant of adverse situations, especially
our quality. Whether tbe region when it must honor commitof the University be one of ments not to speak? And how
cheese, beef, com, and beer, or do you react when you become
wine, cotton. fruit, nuts and a target?
fish, or steel, autos, chemicals,
The answer to both questions,
power, and Oour does not mat- ·Somit fee I s, is still another
ter. U our research and creative question, uwhat do you do?"
activities advance knowledge,
For example, if a senior Uniunderstanding, achievement versity official is negotiating for
and "the quality of life," we another position and he has
will well serve both the Niagara specifically requested that the
Frontier and New York, and situation not be made public
tbe larger community beyond. until the new assignment has
And it will again be the quality been officially confirmed, how
of our attainments which deter- do you deal with rumors which
D)ines who chooses to join us crop up when the story is prematurely leaked?
as colleagues.
Or, w he n allegations are
This University's exoe.Uence made that the administration
is, in sbort, ultimatelv the ex- has enoouraged junkies to ooncellence of our teachings, re- gregate in Norton so that it
search, creative activity and may use their presence as a
service. No excelJence on the pr(etext to cl""e down the Union
part of others can remedy our or as a plot to gel police in,
deficiences. We shine ourselves, how can the University's leador not at all.
·
ership offer a rational response?

with," is a classic example of
a charge not subject to factual
response.
3. Again, an accusation or
report may be so far-fetched
that to refute it would only
se rve Lo give dignity to what
is obvious nonsense.
4. Very often, the accwation
may not even be addressed to
the administration, but may
sim ply appear as a Jetter or
statement in the press. In an
institution as large as ours, and
as often in the news, constantly
to issue explanations and de-

New Course
On C,.omputers

The impact of computers on
people and social s lructures,
both positive and negative. will
be the theme of a new course,
"Computers and Society," to
be offered in the spring semester by the Department of
Computer Science and C.P.
Snow College.
The course, to be taught by
R.F. Rosin. will be listed as CS
312 and CPS 312 and will be
based on Perspectives on the
Computer Revolution by Z. P.
Pylyshyn and on additional
readings uobtained from an up-.
to-the-minute
survey of articles
Why Answers C•n't Be M•de
OUT-OF·STATE TRAVEL
published while the course is
Somit suggests several reas- being oonducted."
The State's Division of the Budget
ons why everything which is
"will most likely disapprove" re·
Previous knowledge of comquests for out-of-State travel un· reported inaccurately cannot be
immediately and emphatically puters on the part of the stuless such travel Is for the pur·
dent is neither required. nor is
denied-why
discretion,
some·
poses of: 1. presenting a paper:
times interpreted as reticence it even desirable. the course
2. service as an officer of an asso·
or, worse, as a ._sort of sinister announcement says. Although
ciation; 3. chairing a standing
evasiveness, must be invoked. technical concepts will be decommittee; or 4. perfonning re·
1. Sometimes a commitment veloped, no use will be made
sorch required by a grant Ar;- has been made not to say any- of computers and tbe course
cording to Leonard F. Snyder,
thinJ
until negotiations in a will not count as a technical
chief accountant, the Universrty's
elective for Engineering and
particular silustion have been
Travel Office will prepare a new completed. Even if the story is Applied Sciences majors. Perrequired fonn attesting to the leaked, Somit feels, the obligaformance will be evaluated on
purposes of a trip f or which ap· tion remains.
class participation and on two
proval is sought. Snyder reminds
2. Other times, an accusation short papers and one long
thllt use of State vehides is by a news medium or bY. an
paper:
.... .
also covei*:t by restrictions on individual - may be stateCr in
Meetinl! omes will be Tuesout-of-Sbte trow!, a&lt; not
such general terms that there days and Thursdays. 9:30-10:50
the troveler riMs -to file a is- no possible way to come to
voucher for ntimbu.....,.nt of out· grips with it. '"I'his administra- a.'E;.:'~~~~
ol-pod&lt;et expe.-.
tion is di8icult to get along to 30 people.

C:;!i

nials could get to be a fulltime job.
5. Occasionally, a story may
be run which is deliberately
wrong ("dead wrong," Sonut
emphasizes) . In this case, the
choice is either to refute the
story line-by~ Jine or ignore it.
To do the former, however, is
to engage in a head~n clash
with tbe offending news medium which might not publish
the rebuttal in any event. Here,
a decision has to be made as
to whether or not the resulting
antagonism might be more costly to the University than simply ignoring the story.
Fortunately, campus developments are oovered by several
media- the campus radio station. campus newspapers and
the Buffalo press, radio and
television - and, on balance,
Somit feels, the University receives .fair and accurate coverage. If the administration feels
a particular news source is giving it a bad time, be says, it is
better to rely on the others to
set the record straight instead
of engaging in a "shouting
match."
You Con't Get Angry

Although it is frequently
temptin~ to do so, Somit says
you can t get angry about false
reports. Frustration is harder
to avo i d, however, for even
when conditions are right for
a comprehensive answ~~..~~
explanation, it is diflk.~
reach all the people who read
tbe first story. A story in the
Reporter may inform a faculty audience, for example, bu t 1t
is not going to reach as many
students as an orhtinal "unfo rtunate" piece in the student
press. ''Truth continues to run
behind falsehood," Somit says
philosophically.
In the final analysis, be suggests that J!""Ple just can't expect to believe everything that
they read in the press. And be
feels further that, despite rumors and false reports, the administration's actions over tbe
long haul constitute the best
evidence of its goals and intentions.

�o...r-

6

·u/BsRoie
In Future
Is Debated
The future of U/ B as a major graduate center and the
move to regionalism within
SUNY sparked debate at the
September 28 meetini of the
Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate.
According to Dr. Thomas
Frantz, the group felt regionalism may kill the entire concept
of university centers and U/ B's
treatment as one. The Executive Committee also talked
about the Taylor Law and its
inclusion ol aU teaching and
professional personnel under
one bargaining agent. The
group was worried about how
this would aiiect the unit's individuality.
.
Dr. William Baumer, Executive Committee chairman,
was in Albany to discuss possible decreases in graduate enroUment and funding and he
reported that "there's a fair
amount of pressure to cut the
graduate population and take
in more undergraduates." Tight
budgetary conditions are caus-,
ing legislators to compare costs
of undergraduate and graduate
training and to come up with
the idea of lowering the latter.
This attitude ''may cause the
setting up of barriers for •.he
future growth of this institution as a first class graduate
center,'' Baumer argued. In an
effort to do something about
these conditions, the g r o u p
passed a motion asking President Robert Ketter to talk with
Chancellor Ernest Boyer about
including more U/ B representatives on the SUNY-wide
panel on the future of graduate
education. CurrenUy, Dr. Paul
Kurtz is the only U / B member
on lh\lt committee.
The.Executive Committee aleo considered the report from
the Senate's Special Committee
oD. Academic lntegrity, headed'
by Dr. Claude Welch. The report detsiled judicial procedures for a student to go
through when accused of academic diabonesty. It called for
establishment of Faculty and
University-wide hearing panels
to deal with complaints. In discussing the report, the Executive Committee noted that no
provisions were made to deal
with aUeged dishonesty in an
informal way. They also suggested instituting an Undergraduate Studies hearing com. rnittee rather than one in each
of the faculties since the executive group feels undergradu·al8s have more loyalty to nus
than to a faculty.
In addition to the Executive
Committee's criticism, the
Welch report waa censured by
the Student Association because
of a lack of student members
on the committee. As a result
of theee complaints, student
members have been appointed
and the report will be re-aamined.
• In other actions, the Executive Committee passed a motion asking the president to inform the group "of the findings
of the HEW report on U/B's
compliance with the non.&lt;fis_,crimination aspects of Federal
legislation." The report requested deals primarily with the """'
sibility of sexual discrimlDation. The group .also discuaaed
fonnation of a separate Senate
committee on Computer Servic""r now that this area is split
from the Library system.
fES GRAD Al'l'liCATIONS
ProspectiW graduate students ' in
Faculty of Educational Studies
are reminded that. as of Septem·
· ber 1, 1971, the application dead·
•• line lor tile Faculty is FEBRUARY
t~

1.

7, 197J

G(JJB

GNOTES

Minority Staff Reception

by"'&gt;"
As the ReporU!r we n t to
l'reas. the University's United
F u n d Campaign had raised
$34,684,-34.7 per cent of its
II'08l Gifts have been received
from 1,071 persons, for an average gift of $32.70 per capita
Leading divisions include:
President and Executive Vice
President's Oftices, 173.5 per
cent; University at Buff a I o
Foundation and Alumni Relations, 162 per cent; EngineerA . . - of 65 members of the U-.sity - - * J turrwd ing and ApP,lied Sciences, 98.8
out for lost Thursdoy'o reception for minority taCulty ,nd otalf per cent; Millard FillmDre Colmembers held In T - n d IUU under ouoplceo of the .OIIIco lege and Continning Education,
of Equol Opportunity. In the photOIJ'Oph at left Dr. - . , _ 99.4 per cent; Facilities Plan-

PuPu,_,.

Adeboyo, oulstonf dlnicol instruc:lor In o . - o o - l c s ,
choto with Mrs. Gerllldine Robinson, University
Senrices, ond Mrs. Helen R. Arnold, oenlor c:letll,
(lor ri&amp;ht).
·

Stpte University Trustees Outline Policy
OnEquafity in Employment Opportunities
EDITOR'S NOT&amp; '/'he foUowU., slate17U!llt of "Equol Employment Opportunity Policy"
waa UIUlnimolJBly adopud by
the St&lt;Jte University Boord of

Trustees on JUJU! 30, 1971.

Resolved that the statement
entiUed "Equal Employment
Opportunity in Stste University of New York," as set forth
below, be, and hereby is,
adopted as the policy of State
University on equal opportunity; and the Chancellor, or his
designee, be, and hereby is,
authorized and directed to take
aU steps necessary and proper
to promulgate and implement
said policy :
Stste University of New
York, in recognition of its educational mission, its social
concern, its responsibility for
the personal development of individuals, and its concern for
the rights of the individnal,
does hereby express and es~
!ish this University Policy of
Equal Employment Opportunity.
It is the policy of State Uni,·~!Sity of New York to provide
'l'1uaJ opportunity in employment for aU qualified persons;
to prohibit discrimination in
employment; and to promote
the full realization of equal employment opportunity through
a positive, continuing P~
!,':d ttr ~c:he'!'.;..ti~!t uni~
· of the University.
'1lrls policy of equal employment opportunity:
,
1. .t\pplies to aU persons
without regard to race, creed,
color, national origin, age or
sex, except where sex is a bonafide occupational qualification.
2. Applies equally to aU job
classifications and t i tIes in
State University and to aU
types of appointments . under
University jurisdiction, whether full time or part time.
3. Governs aU University
employment policies, practices
and actions including but not
necessa.rily limited to: recruitment, employment, rate of pay
or other compensation, advancement, upgrading, promolion, demotion, renewal, nonrenewal, termination, transfer,
layoff, leave, training, and employee benefits of whatever nature.
4. Apnlies equally to all State
University organizational units.
5. Expects each contractcir,
supplier, union, public agency
or other cooperative agent to
support this policy by complying with all applicable State
and Federal equal employment
OJiportiDIIty laws · and "''Uislions.
• ·
Full, immediate and contin-

uning realization of this policy
in State University is to be undertaken by:
1. Developing AffirmalWe
Action Programs which will:
detsil actions designed to realize the University's commitment to equal employment; analyze employment patterns
within the University; set forth
plans to rectify any deficiencies; identify and remove impediments to equal employment opportunity; establish
goals and timetables for aiiirmative action; provide for the in·
ternal and external dissemination of University policy; pursue the commitment to equal
employment opportunity
throughout the institution; and
provide for the review, assess-.
ment, evaluation, and improvement of University action in
carrying out this policy and affirmative aetion programs.
2. Committing si&lt;Jff and support necessory to make effeotive the equal employment policies and programs of the University. University-wide liaison
and leadership in equal employment opportunity shall be
effected through a member of
the Chancellor's staff. Campus

liaison and leadership shall be
effected through a D1el11ber of
the President's stall. The liaison . and leadership function
will embrace such activities as:
developing policy s t a - t s
and Aftirmative Action Pzo.
grams; developing internal and
external communication techniques; assisting in the identification of problem areas and
establishment of goals and objectives; assisting campus administration; internally aaeessing compliance; providing liai.
son among the University, enforcement agencies, minority
organizations, and · community
action groups; designing and
implementing audit and report..
ing systems required for elfeotive monitoring and opemti&lt;ln
of allirmative action programs_
In Sllpport of this policy,
State University aiiinns ita
right to take appropriate adioo
if it or other duly oanstituiBd
authority should determine that
applicable Federal and State
equal employment opportunity
laws and regulations have been
violated, or that the effect and
intent of this policy have been
wilfully or habitwilly abrogeted.

4 Dog Catchers Are HI•~ed
.L '

The hiring of four part-time

that no animal may be in a
dog catchers to patrol the U/B food service or dining area,
campus, enforcing State and whether or not it is leashed or
City _regulaf:ions dealing with mi1Z2led.
dogs m public places, has been
To enforce theee regulations,
announced by Robert E. Hunt, two or three dog catchers will
director of environmental be on campus at aU time&amp;
health and salety.
All dogs found roaming the
~rding to Hunt, the incampus unleashed or unmuz..
creasmg dog population on zled or found in any food aercampus is posing serious heal!!' vice area will be taken by a
and salety problems. He said dog catcher to the City of Buthe is i!' receipt of "dozens of falo Dog Pound at 1250 Nicompl4int letters and innumer- agara St. A person oWning an
able phone calls" from irate wilicensed dog will have five
members of the University com- dsys to redeem the dog, while
munity who would like to aee a licensed .dog can be claimed
the problem solved.
within ten dsys. A dog will be
Dogs in public places on the released from the Pound only
campus, particularly in . the alter the pereon claiminJ[ 1t
Norton Union dining areas, are pays penalty and boarding lees,
not only unplesaant but also a and the cost of a licenae and
serious heslth hazard, be BBys. the required shots.
According to Hunt, dogs are
Hunt said that in addition to
carriers of salmonella, a host pf the leashing and muzzle reo~ whi!"&gt; cause many
quirements, aU dogs in public
d18e88eS aiiecting the human places must have collars wjth
intestine, from food poisoning licenses and rabies vaccination
to typhoid.
tags attached
In addition, there are several
Hunt said that there is bn.d-.
recorded cases of unprovoked baaed support for the enforcedog attacks on students, facul- ment policies_ He points to a
ty ami stsff members on cam- referendum taken last spting by
pus.
the Norton Hall stsff in which
Both the regulations of the - students voted 1.,617 to 588 to
State of .New -York and the' ban dogs from Norton, with or
City of Buffalo prohibit an ani- without OWiii!rs present: "1bla,
mal in a public place without a of courae; ......wd not apply to
leash or muzzle. 'Ibe laws state seeing-eye dogs_ )
·

~~"';,"!,

or near the
100 per cent mark include:
Instructional Communications,
144 per cent; Occupatianal
Therapy, 200 per cent; Medical Technology, 120 per cent;
Political Science, 100 per cent;
Physical E;ducation, !U per
cent; Chemistey, 80 per cent;
Financial Aid, 103 per cent;
Placement, 122 per cent; Office
of Equal Opportunity, 170 per
cent.
Every member of the University is urged to m a k e a
pledge. We are aiming for 100
per cent of our goal ($100,000)
and 100 per cent participation
(5,000).

In a speech last week to a
group of Polish Catholic Clergymen, President Robert L.
Ketter pointed out that the
UniVErsity this year uaed a
novel combination , of admis..
sions criteria in selecting · a
fn!shman class. Thirty..W. per
cent of students were chosen by
high school rank alone; ,a nother
36 per cent were eelectad . on
the basis of high achool padepoint average and performance
on the Regents Scholarship or
other national examinations;
20 per cent were eelectad for
the University's Educatianal
Opportunity Programs, using a
variety of specific criteria for
admiasions and, finaUy, 8 per
cent were choeen almost ezdusively on the basis of their aptitude and interest in the natural aciena!s and mathematics.
Applying theee criteria to the
pool of applicants for this
year's fn!shman class resulted
in an enrollment of 1,124 students .from the metropolitan
Buffalo - - 'lbat figure rep- 1 8 M per cent of the total
fn!shman class of 2,065.
Dr. Ketter aJeo said: "An
even 111018 telling of
tbp edent to which this area's
young men and caastitute the Univmsity'a student
body can be ....., m our total
enrollment fillurea. In the fall
of 1970, the University had 28,783 students in atteaclanql in
all of its ac:bools and CliiiJeps.
More than 66 . - ci!Dt of theee
students---&lt;&gt;r 16,797- from
Erie and NCOIDltiea."
Further~ this year's
oambinati&lt;ln of freshmen admissions criteria, Dr. Ketter
said: '"Ibis procedure was designed -to ensure (1) that. ab!*-

~notfrombe~

apinat; (2) that students best
p._,-ed for traditianal programs ......wd be admitted; (3)
that students in special high
echools or programs would &amp;e

allowed to atteod the University; ( 4) that a group of college.ehle b u t disadvantaged
students would be admitted;
and (5) that an eq&gt;eriment
......wd be COI1ducted to determine wbelber or not the admis..
siODs procedure can be tuDed
findy C!llOIIIh to select able students for ooe academic subject
from IUI10ilg thea! cbmmt on
the basis of pneraJ academic
l!ale1leuce_"

�7

Ol*l6or 7, 1971

STATE UNiVERSITY OFl~EW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

-of---.
.
-iod

hc:ultv of Arts .net Letten •. . . . . •.

IllS

M

I

211!1 3IIS -

I

I

I

60S

I

-

I

111!5 -

I

I

SOS tOO$

I

I

s

8.D4().00
3.800.00

2 Book List Additions
Submitted by Authors

F8culty of Engi,_..ing .net

Scionces . • . . . . . . . .
F-~ot.-1h. ._
. . . .... .
Faaii!Yof
,__ _ _ _

faaii1Y o f - Scionces..cl

-ic:&amp; ............ .
faaii1Y of Sociol Scionces -

·••••••••cr=:::r::::::::r=r:::::J

4,560.00
• 31,440.00
1.500.00
8,400.00

- · ······· · ···

13,440.00
1.800.00

~·- ··········
~- · ··· · ··· ··· ···

Can--on ... .... .

Aadlmic Affalin • . • • • • . • . . . .
Millard FH1....,.. Ct&gt;llogo ond

~-····· · ··

Prtsidlnt•s .-d Executive Vi~
Presidllnt·' s Offices . . • • . . • . • .
Facilities Fbnning • . . • . . . • . • • •
()porwtionl s........ . ..•••. .

-

·· ·· · ···· · ····· ···

·------------------------

-

2.880.00
840.00
6,000.00

173.SJ84o.oo
960.00
13,560.00
240.00
4,560.00
1.0S0.00
1,200.00

----

-----

-..Affain . ... . . . . . . . . . .
u.o-.i1Y. . . . . . . . . . -FKulty-Situidlnt Aalodetion . . . . . .
Uniwnity at Buffelo Foundation and
Alumni Retations

-.-------1.....__
------

38D.oo

---

••.• . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •11&amp;2!600.00

w.tem New YCKk Nudur
~Omuw •••.•• ... .. .

GREPORTS

ON
GJ&gt;EOPLE
OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS·

ll••••••••l[r:::r:::r:::r:::r::J
and historical foundations o! educatio~ ..Value and Existence;•

in RB. Palmer and R Hamer·
ton-K e II y, eda., Phi.lomathu:
Studia and Euay• in Memory
of Philip M er/4n.
DR.

JOTCHBLL PRA.NKLlN,

profes-

~~=":{P~~~'T=i::J

Intercession During a Period of
Social Ambiguity and S o c i a I

Irony;" "The Manclariniom of
Phenomenological Pbilooophy of
Law.!'

DR.

NzwrnN c...Bvia, aSeocu;.t.e pro:

600.00

Iron Isotopes," Physical Reuiew;
with B. ROY, B. RAJ, and C.C. PU,
"Nuclear Structure Calculations
for Vanadium (51) and Chromium (52)," Physico! Review; with
M.H. HULL, JR., H.W. KUNG, &amp;.
RAY, B.A. Nl.SL£Y; "Reaction Mat-

rix Elements and Structure Calculations with the Yale and Reid
Potentia.ls for the Ni Region:'
Ph y1ical Review.
DB.. 8VETOUR BTOl ANOVIC, visiting
professor, philosophy, "Marxism
and Socialism Now:· in The New
York Review of Boob.
DB. CL.o\UDE E . WELCH , aasociate

\;~'!:"'~i:~w~~=~:: ~rJ:r·~~~;t :::rc;~~·J!'i
~aaa~o:U ~~~tein; 1Wi~~

JW..,,-~'0-emcer.nin~y

Vellti:h's :'Two Logico'," Phllo.ophy and PMnr&gt;-M/otical Re·

PRESENTATIONS

oeorch.

.•

aou.o HANDY, provost, educational studies, "A Need Approach
to Value," in Geoffrey A. Petersen. 1«1., Philosophic Esoays in
DB..

Honor... of Martin E.hlemon.

DR. CfJOBGB P. HOUIU.NI, ~rofessor,

~~:l:hii&gt;;=.~,.. 1Ie:!:::
illt.

DR. K&amp;NNr:rlli:NADA,

feasor,

~ooophy,

aseociate pro"Whitehead's

~~ti}r,J:!p~; ~~

West.

Development." in Henry Bienen,

eeL, The Military and Modernize·

tUm; "Cincinnatus in Africa : The
Prospects for Military Withdrawal from Politics," in Michael F.
Lofcliie; eeL, The · Swte ·of the
Natioru: Constraint• on Deuelopmen.t in Independent A/rica.

.

RECOGNI'PIONS
.

CRARIZS

E.

DONfXa.N,

assistant

professor, law, will appear in the
37th Biennial Edition of Who'•
Who in America.

:-hi~=~w~wf:t:w:r~

in America and Who'• Who in
the Eat.
RENATE L. NIZMAN, instructor, oc-

=~~f :..~e~'::riatf,:!d~

the American Journal of Occupational Therapy.

GRANTS
DB.. WWABD L\NPB.J:D, auociate
professor, physiology, High Pns•ure Phy•io/ogy, $32.593, ONR

DR. GEBlU8D lEVY, professor, phar-

maceutics, Kinetic• of Anticoas'-

~~~~Jta;ou:inA?~::
. tion.
OIL RAOUL NAROLL,

profeuor, an-

thropology, Acculturation Sequen-

cu, $27,600, NSF.
DB.. JDU.NUEL P.utmN,

chairman,

statistics, RegWn4l Confervace on

Tesu &amp;ud on the Sompu Di.·
tribution Function, $10,400, NSF.
DR. BAJlB.Ut4 RICNNICX, profesaor,

pharmacoloVt:, Hom.eo.ta.tic Reg~ioNn"/ kuma Choline, $17,·
REPORTS ON PEOPlE
"Reports on People" is open to
anyone with University •ffillation,
faculty, stslf and students. stu·
dents, send us news of honors you
hove received . . . grodu,U, stu·

dents, the •rtlcles you havre

put).

lishod . . . stslf, the 'community
presentations you have made. Stu·
dents, be sure to include your year
and major. Send your reports to
Suzanne Metr8er. University Pub·
llcations Services, 250 Winspear
Ave,, oxt. 2228.

EDITOR'S NOTE: TM followinll additioiU k&gt; tM U.tinR
of "Boolu by t.M FacufiY;r.
pubU.Iu!d cu a ouppl.ement k&gt;
tM Reporter, Sept..mher 16,
have bun oubmittd by members of tM faculty.
J:SLoU0C

&amp;ATlONALISil:

THB

El"Hlal OP ' ABD ~ABBA.B by
Dr. George F. Hourani, professor, philoeopby. Clarendon
Press, Oxford, 1971. 158 pages.
$6.50.
'Abd ai.Jabbar was a Pen!ian
Muslim of the lOth and 11th
centuries A.D. who wrote out
in its most developed form the
rationalistic theology of the
Mu'tazilite school. His voluminous Arabic works, edited in
recent years in Cairo, contain
a rationalistic theory of ethics
that resembles modem British
intuitionism in its main fea.
tures and many details. Professor Hourani has reamstructed the theory from various passages in the texts, giving frequent quotations in translation. n.e theory that emerges
is probably the most substantial piece of pbil060phical ethics
produced between Aristotle and
Aquinas, and brings a new perspective to the history of ethics
in both the West and Islam.

FROM THE FRESH-WATER NAVY,
1861-1864: THE LETI'ERSOF ACf·
lNG MASTEil'S KATE HENRY R.
nROWNE AND ACTING ENSIGN
SYlOlF.S e. BROWNE. John D.

Milligan, associate professor,
history, ed. (annotated). U.S.
Naval Institute, Annapolis,
1970. 327 pages, maps, illustratinns. $13.50.
Though collections of letters
from Civil War soldiers have
been uncovered and published
by the score, relatively few lett.!rs from the men who saw
duty in the navies of that conflict have rome to light and
fewer still have gone to press.
In fact, the present volume, the
third of the Naval Letters series,
brings together the only letters
published to date !rom men
who served in that sizeable inland navy .built. by the Federal
Government to cooperate with
the U.S. Army in wresting
control of the great Western
rivers from the Confederacy.
These missives were written by
two brothers who were officers
in that service. During their
combined wartime careers, they
saw duty in virtually every
important class of vessel, including the new ironclads, that
the navy employed in the West,
and participated in every type
of naval activity that helped
the North win superiority in
what historians are generally
agreed was the most crucial
campaign of the war. Moreover,
the letters stress a type of rombat which many chroniclers of
the period have ignored. Beyond engaging the regular naval
and military forces of the Confederacy, the craft in which
the Browne brothers served
opel'llted 11jplinst land-based
guerrillas in actions that rather
precisely anticipated the counter-insurgent situations that
American gunboats would one
day confront in operations from
Latin America to Vielnam. The
fact is, that although the military and naval means for waging total war have since been
developed to a cataclysmic refinement, those for waging guerrilla and anti-guerrilla warfare
have remained remarkably
static.
In addition to descriptions of
bUlle, the brothers'-letters are
filled with a variety-of socially
interesting and historically
significant themes. For eumple,
of note are the reactions of
these two aoos of a Methodist

minister to the t.emptaliouo of
service life alloat and ........._
n.e letters 1n1ce, too, the coune
of a nineteenth century romance. To the y..._ brolher,
whose correspondence WIIS
chieJiy with his fian&lt;lee, the war
was the oilstade to the .,.....
summation of his love. ~.
despairing of an end to' the
conflict, he lleCOiltlCI leave, married the girl, and brought her
back to his ship.
n.e condescending and times intolerant views of the
brothers regarding the bl8ck
people whom they encountered
along the rivers of the South
are ronlirmative of present-day
scholarship, which sees white
racism of the 1860's as heine as
virulent among Northemenl as
Southerners. Another theme is
perhaps at variance with .-.
tain modern opinion. n.e lDOie
tragedy the younger ~
dent aperienoed - including
the deaths of his brother and
virtually all of his shipmatesthe more the enemy seemed to
become an abstraction for him
and the less rancor he apparently harbored for the South.
On the other hand. a modem
observer might see as . . . _
tive in this regard the man's
growing disillusionment with
the war, his increasing disallection with service life, and his
deepening distaste for his superiors. A final theme of historical interest, in view of the post..
war role of the Northern "Carpetbagger," is found in the
efforts of the surviving brother
to establish himseU as a storekeeper in Natchez, Mississippi.

Communique(Continued from JX11e 8, coL 6)

~x;:;::c:~ali~=ta=

are invited to interview whether
they will complete their oow:ae
work in January or May 1972.
Registration fonns are available
(rom University Placement and
Career Guidance in Hayes Annex

c.

PHIDAY--8: Reifer, Brocb 1:
Batlanca (CPA); Haskins 1: Selh
(CPA) .
wmNESDAY-13 : Lybrand. R&lt;.o

~es~r .rer:;c::b,~~tfJ:

versity of Akron. School of Law.
THUISDAY-14: Travelen In·
surance Co.; Price WaterboaMt
(CPA); General Electric Credit
Corp. ; Internal Revenue Serrice;
1be Catholic Univenity of Ame:rica. School of Law..

NOTICES·
UltB.AN KANAGII::MEN'r

KN~:

new program jointly opoaoonod by

::::
t!'~~~k:t
neering. Sludents enrolled in diis
program will ..,tiofy the requirement. for the B.S. from tbe

~oo~ (iviiM~~-o~

eoted oludents are urpcl to -

:!;{;e~n ::a{.i:':u-u.:!e:t=

career. For informatioo ocmtact
Dr. George Lee, prof_,.,, cmJ

engineering,-Parlter ll6, ert 6826,

~~r:::Iua~~ect;,~~

School of Management, 151 Czoo.. by, ext. 2246.
PA.KJBTAHI IIZI"UGa: ..ua' rrnrD:

Every dollar you will pro.
vide food for 6 !*&gt;pie for .,_

~f.;~~-,u~

Please oend your contributioa to:
India Sludents AMociation. Rofu-

5:,~~~&lt;f~:!i'i:
SUNY/B. Bulfalo, N.Y. 1-t214.

EXHIBITS
Pmlft UBJIIIT :

worb by Nana

~~ ~..=t J:..n;.,.""!;~

ooft -tel colors and makeo tbe
reou!ts compatible . . ." litboJf"Pbo, etcbinp, coUognpbo, oer~gr&amp;pbo. Tbrouch Octobor 15.

,.

�~·

OctdJer 7, 1911

8

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
••Open to members of the University;
#Open only to those with a professional lntanost In the subjoct
Contact SUzanne Metqer, 831·2228, for llotlnp.

•Open to public;

erans

THURSDAY-?
TRENDS IN INTERNAL MEDICINE# :

Morning clinical wor~ope in
cardiology, chest medicme and
TBC, dermatology , endocrinology,
gastroenterology, lfenerf!l m~­
cine, hematology, infectious dlS·

:S~~~~oA~~t~·;~~: ~ :~e:;
Memorial Hospital, 9:30 a.m.- 12
noon. Afternoon workshops in

Administration

HosP.ital;

F~m':!~ifos~~~7a!h~~,.'!.r:.

tice a t Deaconess Hospital Family
Practice Center. 9 :30 a.m. -12

~~Ji·olo:i~Me:~rioj {.i:fj, ~u~
0

0

Building. Buffalo General Hospital, 1: 30·5 p.m.

PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE LECTURE#:
Dr. Irving E . S i g e 1, Pediatric

Conference, Experiences

with

Eb;ic~';~~~a{~:di':i
LS::':ri~e~~· ~thuS~~~: ~;~~
Program, 62 rece1ving locations,
Buffalo General Hospital, I : 30-5
~!x;k ~:.tiG'i,.:.d dinner, The

BREAD A.."JD PUPPET TH&amp;ATRE• :

an

anti-war production, B ird Catch-

er in H ell. Performance jointly
presented by the Dramatic Arts
Committee, UUAB, and the Office
of Cultural Affairs. Fountain a rea
outside Norton (Haas Lounge in

carl.n~~~·; P.~~~"ilieatre."

the group is directed by Peter
Schumann. Masked fi¥'!res, lifesize p u p p e t s, mUSicians and
mimes are skillfull,y Clombined to
relate to social issueR t»f the day.
Ritualistic concepts are used by
the group and culminate in the
0

~~ ~u~~.S:h=~g~

compared theatre itself LO "read:
..Theatre is not yet an established form, not the place of com-

:~~

:fket t~~o~ isiik~t ~

necessity. Theatre is a form of
religion. It preaches sermons and
builds up a self-sufficient ritual
where the actors try to ,raise their
lives to the purity and ecstasy
of the actions in which they pa rticipate."
PODl.ATRY

TELEPHONE

LECTURE#:

Russell K . M i II e r and Harry
Racbinan, Treatment of Simple

:~Rb~a~;:.~~alvM~ciu sr~:
gram, 11 :30 a.m.
KEDJC.U. D:CHNOLOGY n:l.EPHOl'!IE

LECTua:#: Dr. Elias Cohen, Dr.
Bruce Rabin, Dr. Pearay Ogra,

!":e:Ja~~ ~~f!~ ~~~ s~~:

gram, 1:30 p .tp.

NEW FACULTY ORIENTATION: Robert Fitzpatrick, acting vice presi-:lent for research. will speak. Faculty Club, 3:30-5 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM#: Dr. F.

10 a.m.
125TH ANNIVERSARY PHYSICAL EDU·
CATION SYMPOSIA EVENTS • : 2 p.m.

-Registration; 3 p .m.-Soccer at
Erie Community College; 4 p.m.
-Red Cross swimming demonstration, judo demonstra tion , fenc·
ing: 8 p.m.-synchronized swimming, gymnastics; 9:30 p.m.square dance mixer. Clark Gym
lor campus events.
MASTER DANCE CLASS•: part of
125th Physical Education Sym- falo 's Black Drama Workshop.

rnss/~ior l:be~n~t~J !~;:;; ~l:~~~f b~A~~~: ~Yeo~7

dance, Skidmore CoUege, will
conduct a lecture a n d master
class on CREATIVE DANCE lN THE
SECONDARY SCHOOLS , 233 Norton,
4 p.m., free.
Before joining the faculty at
Skidmore in 1969, Mrs. Brown
spent three years as a dance instructor at Smith College. She
also studied ballet with Larry
Boyette and modem dance under
Vera Sears. She has studied in
. New York with the American
Ballet Center and with Lalli. She
has been affiliated with the P e rry ·
Mansfield Theatre School, Jacob's
Pillow a nd the Albertine Summer Dance Workshop of Bar H a rbor, Ma ine.
SABBATH DINNER : sponsored by
HilleL Reservations shou ld be
made at Hillel T a ble, Norton , or
a t the House. Dr. Yair Cassuot,
an Israeli and research associate,

~:;isJ~I~g~f O::~n:iJ'e:: ~7~~

rael." HiJJel House, 6:30 p.m.
Br ewster A1cCloud, Norton Conference Theatre, 5, 7, 9,
and 11 p.m. Faculty and staff
$1.25, students $.75, or $ .50 before 6 p.m.
FILM• : Charly, presented by
FILM . . :

~=~~~k ~ckC"fit;oXo·~c!:
C~kinun'i~~~· R~siSPe~~;: at
CAC office for showtimes. $.75
scopy with Fast Hydrogen Beam ,
Ill Hocbstetter, 4 p.m., refreshments, 112 Hochstetler, 3 : 30p.m.
THEORETJ'CAL BIOLOGY SEMl'NAR#:

Dr. J.F. D a nielli, director, Center
for Theoretical Biology, will report on the First European Biophysics Congress, organized by
the Austrian Biophysical Society
on behalf of the European biophysical societies under the co,.sponsorship of the International
Union for Pure and App1ied Biophysics, held SepL 14-17, at Baden. Room 29, 4248 Ridge Lea, 4
p.m., coffee at 3 : 30 p .m.
INDIAN nt.M • : Khamoshi, star -

~j~!:zir~

:dm:,:

ers. Direction, Aait Sen; story,
Ashutosh Mu:Cerjee. Presented by
India Associa lion of Buffalo. 5
Acheson, 7 :30p.m. Non-members
$1.75; .membero $1.25.
PILM: • •: Night of the Living Dead
(George Romero, 1967). 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
!-fade within a $70,000 budget,
thlS 1.ndependent film has made
history (and over 3 million bills)
as an unprecedented financial late

-~ r~~ilie:; :p~ta~~·~

::rru:

history's most bloodcwdling prod~cts. Currently enjoying revival
11_1 . New York and other major
alies, you can see it here .
free.

FRIDAY--8

contribution.
A sensitive film about a 30yea r old with mental capabilities
of a six-yea r old. Charly is taken
to a clinic where he has an operation that makes him a genius.
The rest of the story deals with
an affai r with a social worker
psychologist, a nd how he wiU revert to his forme r " vegetable"
state. With C I iff Robertson's
Academy Award-winning performa nce, and Cla ire Bloon1.

SATURDAY-9
!25TH ANNIVERSARY PHYSICAL EDUCATION SYMPOSIA EVENTS • : 8 : 30

a.m.-registration continued; 9:30
a.m.- gymnastic teaching clinic;
11 a.~.-cross -country meet with
Brockport; 12 noon-luncheon,
Goodyear Hall , by invitation, $3;
1:30 p.m.-:-tennis; 3 p.m.-Aero-

~{~~to~.r. c!eru;e~i:C· ~\l!:

search Foundation, D a 11 a s, in
main gym ; 8 : 30 p.m .-Developm ent of a Personal Phy&amp;icol Ftt-

:!~/o~ogb;m~JlNy~~~:~

Diefendorf.
Dr. Cooper is the author of the
nationally prominent exercise system, · aerobics, and the autho r of

ci!~d ~f ~:~:o:re:.f.::~:
0

b'ics and New Aerobic•.

DENTAL EDUCATION COUBSt:#:

Friday listing.

see

the Unitarian . Univer sa list
Church. Glessner Hall Theatre,
Erie Community College, Main
St. and Youngs Rd., WilliamsviUe, 8 : 30 p.m. Tickets at the
door with special low rate for
students and senior citiuns.
FILM•• : Brewster McCloud, see
Friday listing.
PJLM •: Charly, see Friday listing.

SUNDAY-10
In Proceu. Zen Meditation discussed by Dr. Philip
Ka pleau, Zen Meditation Center,
Rochester a nd Dr. Ram D 'Sai,
political science, 10 a .m .
WBEN-TV:

~:!~dTab~e~'Th!i'lrs~!or ~ul[.!~

part program on the Attica tragedy and prison reform with Prof.
Herman Schwartz, la w, &amp;Dd Prof.
Richard B. Hoffman, management. Dr. Joseph Shister is mod-

~£~ ~!o::~ ~ ~~dJ::~

nel 4, Sun., Ot:t. 17~ 11 a.m.
Hillel Library, 3
p.m.
FILM •• : Au Hassard Balthazar,
Norton Conference Theatre, 4, 6,
8, a nd 10 p.m. Faculty and staff
$1.25, students $.75, or $.50 be.
fore 6 p.m. Tickets on sale ~
hour before showing at Norton
Ticket Office.
Bresson has two very interesting reputations: first as one of
Fra m:e's leading independent direc tors; secondly, as 1ts most innovative new director. The reasons behind his reputation a re
evident in ~ this masterfully done
film which traces the tria ls of a
donkey as a backdrop to Bresson·ti: images.
TALMUD CLASS:

Medical Program, 62 receiving
locations, 1: 30 p.m. Also on Oct.
19.
nLM . . : The Gold Rush (Charles
Chaplin, 1925, silent) , 147 Diefe ndorf, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
A melancholy masterwork in
which Charles, in rather an innocent quest for gold, pits himself
agairult the violence and fury of

cAb ;eprr

:!:;.;hr;~~ :I:.m:~·
i :~;
longest and largest production.

COMPUTING CENTER USER SEBVICIS
SEMINAR# : COBOL, Chris Sidera-

kis, instructor, Room 10, 4238

Ri~f:is ~~ ~~ucOOry

coune
in . COBOL, a business oriented
computer language. Tasks will
center on data manipulation and
report generation of all COBOL
capabilities up W and including
SORT. Emphaail will be on writ-

~~~o~~~rr:=:n~

Thurodayo through Nov..Dher 4.
SIMCBATH T 0 a A a•: celebration
with traditional Torah procession
led by Sam Prince. Serv:ice, followed by Israeli folkdaneing led
by Daniel Jacoby and Students
for Israel. Fillmore Room, Norton, 7 p.m.
JAMES FENTON LDJTlJRE BEIUES•:

Dr. Mitchell Spellman, dean of
the Charles R Drew Postgraduate Medical School, Los Angeles,
will speak on comprehensive
health care. Conference Theatre,
Norton. 8:30 p.m.
Dr. Spellman's mission is social as well as scientific, and the
Drew School's emergence underscores the growing awareness of
the social responsibilities of medical schools. The Drew School
is at once a response to a social
c risis in Watts and an exciting
oppo rtunity for a medical inati. tution to respond to community
needa. An important goal for the
MONDAY-11
School is to develop the capacity
to train multiple categones of
.UIERJCAN CHEMICAL SOClETY MEET·
health manpower and to conceive
INC : third Northeast Regional
meeting. The Symposium on h~~~~-forms that expand
Wordage Problems: A mount ,
Languages, Acceu will include
250 contributed and invited paWEDNESDAY-13
pers and is part of the Univer- NURSING TELEPHONE L"£C'l'UHE# :
sity's l25th Anniversary celebra- Claudine R Gartner, Btrth Detion. Champagne mixer, Albrightfeels tn Newborn lnfantB sponKnox Art Gallery; for women
members, a discussion, Th e Yin . sored by Reg10 nal Med.i~ Proand Yang of Fashion . Registra- gram, 62 receiving locations, 7: 15
tion and Statler Hilton Hotel a.m. and 7:16p.m.
reservation forms from Dr. Jean

~r:w=H~.~!!r
~~£!}~t~~~~ ~~fat a&lt;:'3:~ :i'~
The Problem Oriented Record'

Statler Hilton.
FtLM.••: Nosferatu (F.W. Murnau, 1922, German ), 147 Die;en.
dorf, 3 and 8 p.m., free.

TUESDAY-12
COHPUTEB

SCIENCE

COLLOQUIUM :

Dr. Bernd Reusch, Linear Realization of Automata, Room 41
4226 Ridge Lea, II a.m.
'

MA8TEil DANCE CLASS •: Isabel MarDr. per Brown will present a m&amp;.~ter PHYSICIA.NS TEIZPRONE LIX:TURE#:
Charles s. Lipa.ni. assistant pro- dance class for secondary educa- Dr. Joseph Mendels, "Treating
fessor oral dm.gnc · clinical
tors. 233 Norton. 10 a.m., free.
Manic-D(rcreuive Psy chosU with
tbolo.iY and radio~g}r, with s~~ TOBAB WITH COMMENTAIU£8: lli1-'
Modern -Rad~BraJ?.hac Techmques lel study group at Rabbi Hof---t r D~ntol H Yilrni"Ut• ana A--.:- mann's h-ome, 12 Co;lton DiiW, 1"808iving- Jocations, 11 :30 a.m.
.
SIS/Onts, 146 Capen, 9 a.tn.-5 p.m. .. 4 p.m.
NU8SING 'miZPBONE l.£CT'UU;# :
Evelyn Barbee, EdM., B88istant
rnr.NDS lN INTERNAL MEDICINE#:
p_rofe980r, mental health nursing
A·toming workshops in ca rdiology
nu c·le:.r medicine, renal disease'
Xreatment Approache&amp; to DruB
Abwe, sponsored by Regional
rhPUJnatology-immunology at Vet:
DENTAL EDUCATION COURSE#':

t::~ M~~·

rro:o: ~~

sponsored by Re~onal Med.icai
Program, 62 rece 1ving locations
2 p.m.
'
CLUB SOCCER•: Fredonia, Rotary
Field, 3 p.m.
PlLM'• •: A Condemned Alan Has
Escaped (Bresson, 1956, France),
Conference Theatre, Norton, 6
p.m., free.
Based upon Commandant Devgny"s own accoup.t of his own

;~~:f ~iM~~tfuc~e

Nazi

NURSING LIX:TtJBE :
7th annual
Anne W. SengbWICb Lecture
sponsored by School of Nursing'
Jessie M. Scott, assistant surge01~

era! opecial 125th anniveraary ·citations will be presented at the
banquet Executive Motor Inn,
4243 Genesee SL, 8 p.m.
CONCERT•: Concentu. Musicu.,
Vienna in an all Bach concert.,
Baird, 8 : 30 p.lil. General admission $1.50, faculty and stall $1.00
otudents $ .50.

THURSDAY-14
INHALATION

THJ:RAPY 1mZPHONE

ux."TURE#: Fun.ction. of tM Car·
dio~ulmono.ry S&amp;stem a. Reltlted

~~ ~..:~nl..li:r~~=~
receiving locations, 11:30

~

HOSPITAL M.ANAGI:IillAL AND BUPal- •
VISORY DEVELOPMENT t&amp;CTUU# :

rro: ~~ ~:

Superviaory Tra.ining -

~~ P~..£~·

Doe•

ceiving locations, 1:30 p.m.
NEW FACULTY ORIENTATioN:

W"tl-

liam Baumer, chairman, Faculty

Senate, Norman Hostetter, preudent, SUPA, and Robert Fisk,
Senate Professional Aaociation,
will speak to new faculty. Refreshments. Faculty Club, S: 30-5
p.m.
PHILOSOPHY LECTUIII:•: Dr. H . Leblanc, Temple University, Di8-

{l'.."',in.f~i~24~~Jg~r:.oa~
p.m.

~~··~e'i:'~~~ ~-

=

real, C a n a d a, M arkouilm Ap-

prooch to Density Corr~lation.
in Tron.port Pherwmena, 111
Hocbstetter, 4 p.m. Refreshments
112 Hocbstetter, S: 30 p.m.
TBBORETICAL BIOLOGY BI::MINAil# :

Dr. H.H . Pattee, visiting profeo·
sor, biophysical sciences, Evolution Experiments with an Artificial Ecosystem, Room 29, 4248
Ridge Lea, 4 p.m., coffee at 3 :30
p.m .
The technique of ecoeystem reconstruction provides a mechanism for examin.ing 888umptions
about natura 1 ecosystems and
their evolution.
COKPtmNC CENTD U8ER SIRVICEB

8£MINAII# : see Tuesday listing.
CURIZNTS IN PBA.B.MACY# : James
C. ~loomfield, practicing commuruty pbarmaCI.It, Portsmouth,
England, The British Nction&lt;Jl
Health S~rvtce and lt.l"if:::t _on

i.:smH:3'Ji ~::.'l(ldg.,SC~'.::

FILM••:
The
Nyby, 1951),
p.m., .free. .
Umque, m

Thinf . (Christian
147 Diefendorf, 8

..

the o~on that

::iu~':tu:hanman~Y ~

could be counUeu times more
bloodthiroty. The ThU., is one
of the most memorable and frightening of the creature-walking-inop~=t g~nrefilm.Hand,owanlmanHay=~~
this

.. _

~Y~Y~~~~ousmcnym.
. Christian
.......-

INTERVIEWS
ON-CAMPUS JOB INTI:IlVIEWB: The
on-campus interviewing program,

~f !:sure~=~ JZn:.

ts~:z,.an~nf=toSia~vis~~li~ ~~~ ~~ ~eino~r:mring
Health Servict!, will speak on

l~plications of Federal Legi8la-

tron for the .Health Service•. Sev-

for individual interviews w i t~
educational, businesa, industrial
(Continued on IJGI• 7, coL 5)

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1381219">
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO .......

VOL -3-NO. 3

SEPT. 23, 1971

·Enrollinent

SUNY Halts
Grad Level

This Fall
Is 22,437

EXMDSi&lt;&gt;~

State U ni versi ty of New
York· has im~ a moratorium on expansion of graduate
programs pending a review by
a University-wide panel which
will develop rec:ommeodations
regarding future growth as well
as present patterns.
Chancellor Ernest L Boyer
said the action was taken in
order to provide the University
with the opportunity "to eumine carefully our priorities in
graduate studies for the decade
just ahead."
For the immediate future,
Dr. Boyer said, no bew master's
or doctoral level ·programs will
be approved, l!l&lt;Cept in unusual
or compelling circumstances.
Dr. Boyer I)Oted that over the
past six years State University
has generated l!l&lt;Ceptional
growth and momentum in the
development of new graduate
programs of high quality. Graduate enrollment has increased
from 16,725 in 1965 to more
than 37,000 this year. Such a
concentrated effort, the Chancellor said, was "absolutely essential in order to achieve a
balanoed program within the
University."
Chancellor Boyer continued:
"Now the time foe reappfllis.
al has arrived. Excelleuc:e in
graduate study continues as
our goal; however, tbeee programs are specialized and costly, and unnecessary duplicalion must be avoided.
"Additionally, some traditiona! fields of graduate education are not as attractive to
students as in the past. In other
instanoes employment opportunities are shifting."
Dr. Boyer also poi ted out
tba the u ·
•ty Faculty
and :':'members of
·
•ty f culty
the S tate U ruverSJ
a
have
urged that the future of
lmlduate education be carefully reasaeoaed.
f
Dr. N orman Cantor, pro essor and chairman of the De-

s..!te.

~ta~f lfft,~,!l~ ~

chair the special University·~ which is to make an
Wl
• • •
rt to "'---~"-r
JDl

.:J:'

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

Bo~r ~~,:. include
Dr. Aldo S. Bernardo, professor of Italian and comparative
•--ture, Stale University at
li ..,.a
Binghamton; President Clifford
,.... J . Craven, Collep at Oneonta;
Dr. Paul Kurtz, professor, De-

'""

poru-f~f....oatf PBhilo«&gt;'tl
. '-'.- pb,·k. ~
·~-J

~•

ter R. Harding, ni~ty profeasor of English. College at
Geneseo; Dr. Phillip Hewitt,
chairman. Department of Geology and Earth Science. College
at Brockport; Dr. Ric!wd ·E .
Pentoney, associate dean. pbysical scieuc:e and research. College. of Forestry; Dr. T . Alexander Pond, executive vice
president, State University at
Stony Brook; President Marvin
Rapp, Onondqa Community
Colll!ge; Dr. Vinoent J. Schaefer, director of Atmospheric Sci~nces Reaeard&gt; · Center, State
University at Albouiy; Dr. Don-

~~ie~

··--'ty at Stony Brook·, Di.
Uru ·~Evelyn Walker, professor, Deparlment of History, College ·at
·
(conlilwcd on,.. 6, col. 3)

,_

The University's fall emollment reached 22,437 as of the
close of registration last ......t,
according to unoflicial figures
released by the Office of Admissions and Records.
The total is down by 2.2 per
cent from the 22,941 who signed
up during regular registration
last fall.
Undergraduate students account for 11,576 of the total
(up 3.65 per cent). 'lbere are
4,800 graduate students enrolled (down 10 per cent from
last year's 5,388) . Graduate
registrations are broken down
· as follows: Graduate School,
2,347; Management, 388; Education, 1,789; Social Policy and
Community Services, 119;
Graduate Library Studies, 157.
The professional schools of
Dentistry, Law and Medicine
have a tot a I registration of
1,341 (up one per cent from
1970) - Dentistry, 309; Law,
556; Medicine, 476.
Total day enrollment is 17,717, down just slightly from
last Call's 17,878.
Regular students in Millard
Fillmore College total 4,7~
faculty member's prerogative.
~=-s
~:~ cent from last
Student Demands
Informal d~ion during
The undergraduate day fiaTuesday also ytelded formation ures include 2,025 students enof an Ad Hoc Committee to tering the University directly
Suport the Demands of the from high school a n d 1.199
Attica Prisoners~This
up transfers. MFC's new ·students
focused its attention n
include 382 directly from high
prisoners' me d · c
e- school and 386 transfers.
mands. On Wednesday momAdmissions and Records has
ing, they met with Dr. LeRoy broken down the total day regPesch, dean of the School of istration of 17,717 by classes
Medicine. The students pre- and by faculties:
sented Dean Pesch with a list
By classes, there are 4,512
of five demands:
freshmen; 3,356 sophomores;
"We demand that the Uni- 4,037
juniors; 3,451 seniors; 940
versity of Buffalo Medic a I
students; 4,800
School accept full responsibil- unclassified
graduate students and 1,341
ity for the health care of all professional
students.
irunates at Attica State Prison.
"We demand a public ststeFa c u It y enrollments are:
ment of all medical treatment Arts and Letters, 2,122; Edua n d examinations performed cational Studies, 2,293; Engisince the beginning of the At- neering and Applied Sciences,
tics Rebellion. This should in- 1,4€0; Health Sciences, 2,768;
elude a listing, by name,. of all Law and Jurisprudence, 562;
inmates, the treatment under- Natural Sciences and Mathetaken, their physical conditions matics, 1, 738; Social Sciences
and Administration, 5,148; no
and their present location.
"We demand the formation preference, 1,590; faculty unof an objective Medical Review known, 38.
Board, including physicians
chosen by prisoners and their
families, to in s u r e adequate
health care and examinations
or all inmates of Attica-immediately.
"We demand that families of
The Foreign Student CoCRdying and injured prisoners be dinating Council (FSCC) has
immediately given full visits- called a general assembly of
tion rights.
foreign students for tonight at
"We demand a full public 8:30 p.m. in Roo~233, Norton
statement detailing the rela- Hall.
.,.
tionship between U/ B Medical
Purpose of the meeting is to
School and the Attica State "obtain the necessary supporl
Prison:''
of everY foreign student on
At this meeting, Pesch said campus in matters which conhe made it clear to the students cern them as a minority ~
that he wouldn't "negotiate in forming part of the total Umresponse to their demands but versity community."
in response to the professional
According to FSCC spob&amp;.
demands that we provide the men, the organization repr&amp;best medical care. possible."
sents all foreign students whethSlt·ln
·
er or not they are officially part
Wben their demands weren't of o~ of the individual na·
immediately met, the students tionality clubs.
began a sit-in in Capen Hall
The agenda for toni 1 h t's
~ lasted into Wednesday · meeting includes: a report on
rughl N~ of sUfdenls at ~present ~tus. of FSCC ~
the demonstration varied, rans- tiVJties; a disc:uasion of fotelgn
ing from a low of 25 to a high student representation in the
of several hundred. Late Wed- new Student Association (SA)
.(continued o n - 3, col. 1) Assembly, and other ia8l-.

Greater UIB bwolvement at Attica Results
From Week of Tragedy, Turmoil and Talking
ers as "infinitely more decent
than the man who was elected
Governor of~ S~te," Kunstler spoke of iheir-kiudneos and-""""""'toward him. He stressed
the desire of the prisoners to
of sit-ins, debate and affirmative "be allowed to walk erect as
actions, resulting in aooeptanoe dignified men," not "as aniby the State of three proposals mals." The attorney described
for greater involvement at the - the National Guard invasion of
prison on the part of the U /B the prison "as a true massacre"
School of Medicine.
and "murder." He questioned
'These were the proposals ac- the t i min g of Rockefeller's
oepted by Dr. James Bradley, move asking, "What difference
director of Medical Services for would four days or four months
the New York State Depart. make if lives were saved?"
ment of Corrections, and by SA Mo...torium
Rll88eil Oswald, conuni.;sioner,
The Stud e n t Association
State Department of Correc- (SA) beld a special meeting
tiona! Services:
of its Executive Conunittee on
• The School of Medicine ~--~-y
and called ,,'or a tw&lt;&gt;•"""""
of State University of New day morstorium to be held on
York at Buffalo proposes· to Thursday and Friday. During
offer immediately an apansion the moratorium, SA hoped "to
of its present surpcal program tum our classes into open forat Attica Correctional Facility urns where students, faculty
to include general medical care. and staff . . . can discuss raAdditional professioDal stalling tionally the issueS which have
will be provided on a volunteer arisen out of the Attica masssbasis starting immediately.
' ere and our role as human be• In implementing this ex- ings in responding to a mass
psJ)ded health care program, slaughter just miles from our
the faculty of the School of campus." 1n an open letter to
Medicine also oilers to provide President Ketter, they "strongf1,ill medical consultative servic- ly urged" him to "issue a statees to the inmates of the Attica ment to the University supCorrectional Facility. We iec- porting this moratorium."
. ognize that the lepl responsiThe president issued a statebility for medical care to the ment of his personal feelings
inmates must remain with the on Tuesday. ''The violence and
State Department of Correc- death which occurred at Attica
tion.
is an· anathema to all that we
• The University and its personally stand for," he said.
School of Medicine further of- ''Instead of succumbing to a
fer to participate in the devel- purely emotional reaction," the
opment of plans which will president u r g e d University
assure the provision of compre- members to ''work to be able
hensive care at Attica Conec- to view this tragedy from the
tional Facility on a long-term perspective of the lessons it can
basis.
teach." He did not include in
.., ~
this statement support for the
On the beeJs of last Monday SA's moratorium, sinoe turning
morning's events, W iII i am of classes into forums of debate
Kunstler, an attorney famous on Attica was an individual
for hia representation of the
Cbicqo 7, came to ~ to
STUDENT RULES
- " of hia .......Jiend inside, tlie
AND REGULA110HS
Jlri!lao. Kunstler, whose ~- · n.,. ollicial Universfty Student
~~ flamboyant U..tric&amp; Rules. •ncl Regulations for 1971·
~....,_ - . 1 tbooMand to 72. - Mlopted by the Council at
Norton, repudiated Gc&gt;ver.- the University .,., included 6 •
Rocbfeller'a deciaion to
In lodqs Issue
1Attica.· n..cribing the prison·.
The tzagedy of Attica prison
awa~- ago~!..,'";!',t sbock
__::
· - of I
· - 8-tbe-n·ation- and- around the
worid. The waves aoon hit U/B
where Attica toucbed off a week

retake_,.,.._

Foreign Students
Call Assembly

�I
I

1971 Fentons
To Focus on
HenlihCare

NewGrievanre Procedures Outlined
For Faculty and Professional Staff

that a member of the review
committee involved is prejudioed or otherwise disqualified from serving. Sucb objections shall be submitted to the
Chairman of the appropriate
Seruite in writing within one
day of receipt of the notice of
the membership of the review
committee. The Chairman shall
i:onsider such an objection, and
if he deems it well taken, shall
strike that person (rom the review committee and draw an·
other name to fill the vacancy.
The review committee shall
meet at the time and place set
by the Chairman of the appropriate Senate to consider the
grievance. The review shall be
informal, but the grievant or
SPA, as the case may be, shall
fully present documentary evidence and witnesses in support
of the claim and witnesses presented may be questioned by
any party. ( See Article vm.
F ) Upon ·completion of presentation of evidence and wit·
nesses, the commitl.e!' shall adjourn the hearings to a time
and place to be set. This time
shall be no later than fourteen
\ 14 ) days from the date of
the completion of the presentation. During this time, the
committee shall review the
· record and compile its reporl
If the committee determines
that furilier hearings are nec,es.
sazy, they shall immediately be
scheduled. The committee review ends with committee ap.
proval of its report. This report
~to~f~t~~~ ~~::
of the re11iew committee shall
Professions Distinguisbed lecimmediately be submitted !&lt;&gt;.
ture); Dr. Fein, Wednesday,
the President. Within seven
October Z7, Fillmore R o o m,
17 ) days, the President shall
Norton. All lectures begin at
respond in writing to all par8:30 p.m.
.
ties to the grievance indicating
Senator Javits is currently in
the actions to be taken.
his third term in the U.S. SenThe purpose of these prooedate and in his twenty-fourth
ures
are to provide prompt and
year in elective office. He is the
efficient
investigation and reso·
ranking Republican on many
lution of grievances. This will
Senate committees and his legisbe
the
sole
method for the reslative interests have emphaolution of grievances. The Uni·
sized health affairs. Author of
versity,
the
Senate Professional
the Nurses' Educational TrainAssociation, and faculty and
ing Program and a principal
professional
staff members shall
architect of the MedicaJe Law,
endeavor initially to resolve
Javits bas introduoed several
grievances
informally w h e n
national health insurance and
feasible. (See Article Vlll, A)
health servi~ bills.
When
a
grievance
is filed with
Dr. Spe11m"8n, who is also
the Chairman of the appropriprofessor of surgery at the Uniate
Senate,
the
grievant
may be
versity of California at Los Anrequired to meet with approprigeles, fulfills in his career a
ate administrative officers in
mission whicb is social as well
an effort to settle the grievance
as scientific. 'The Drew Postinformally. (Article vrn. E &gt;
graduate Medical School is a
Grievances are defined in the
response to a social crisis in
agreement between the Senate
Watts. An important goal for
0
0
the school is to develop the
Professional Association an d
capacity to train multiple catethe State of New York as fol gories of health manpower and committee 'Sii811 not be a mem- low' ' Article Vill ) :
to conceive health organization- ber of this minority. To equalB. Grievances
A grievance is any dispute te.
al forms to expand health ser- ize service on such committees,
vices.
the Chairman of the appropri- tween an employee or SPA and
State over tenns and condiDr. Pellegrino, also director ate Senate (or of SUPA) may the
tions or employment except those
of the Health Sciences Center, reduce the panel from which dispu""'
to which Article XXXV
Stony Brook, bas served as members of the review commit- is applicable.
cbairman of the Advisory Com- tee are drawn by striking the
The tenn grievance shall also
mittee on Education for the names of those wl!o have al- be deemed to mean a claimed
Allied Health Professions and ready served on such a com- failure by the State to follow the
Services of the American Med- mittee, provided however that procedural steps provided by Ar·
ical Association's Council on the number of persons included
M ·edical Education and as in the panel shall be at least
cbairman of the AMA's Com- twice the number of persons to
mittee on Nursing. His lecture serve O'l the review committee.
will emphasize the new "bealth Names shall be restored to the
maintenance" concept as one panel for selection for subsemeans of answering national quent committees in the Drder
A session on tooth transplanhealth needs through more ef- of their original selection for
tation will be one of the highfective manpower utilization.
sucb committee service.
lights
of the 69th annual meetDr. Fein, who holds a B.A.
H prejudice or conflict of in- ing of the U!B Dental Alumni
and PbD. in economics from terest
requires
a
person
to
reAssociation
to be held October
Jolms Hopkins, served on President Truman's Commission on fuse service on 11 specific review 4, 5, and 6 at the Statler-Hilcommittee,
a
further
name
shall
ton.
Co-sponsoring
the tlueethe Health Needs of the Nation
and on · President Kennedy's be drawn from the panel to fill day event with the School of
the
vacancy.
Any
panel
memDentistry
will
be
the
Eighth
Council of Economic Advisers.
who has already judged the District and Erie County DenF.rom 1963-1968, be was senior ber
at the Brookings Insti- case in question as an adminis- tal societies.
A University 125th Annivertution in Washington, D .C. He trative official, a II~e~D!ler of
is author of tluee books on"the a faculty committee, and ao sazy Awan;l. will be presented
economics of medicine, the ID03t on, is diaqual.if"Ied Jrom service· at the annual alumni reunion
recent being TM Finiuu:"
of on the review committee for dinner 'I'I"!8'iaY. October 5. 'The
Medit:Dl Etlucoiion. His ~ that case. Any party to a griev- 00-year class (1921) will also
will cover the economic issues ance mav object to the Chair- be honored at this time, along
of cximprebensive health caJe. man of the appropriate SeDate with nine five-year p1asaes.
Comprehensive health care
bas been offered to all Americans as a righl What are the
implications of such an offer?
Do We have the manpower, the
facilities, the financial support
and the knowledge to deliver
it? What programs must be decreased or abolished to provide
tho6e adequate resources? And
if comprehensive health care is
made available, will we accept
it? Will we adbere to the necessazy preventive and therapeutic measures?
How four nationally-known
lectUers view these problems
will be the theme of this years
James Fenton Lecture Series,
to be given October 4, 12, 20
and Z'l.
'The four speakers are Senator Jacob K. Javits of New
York; Dr. Mitcbell W. Spellman, dean of the Charles R.
D r e w Postgraduate Medical
School in Los Angeles; Dr. Edmund D . Pellegrino, vice president for health sciences, Stale
University of N e w York at
Stony Brook; and Dr. Rashi
Fein, professor of the economics of medicine at Harvard University.
'The lecture schedule is as
follows: Senator Javits, Monday, October 4, Fillmore Room,
Norton; Dr. Spellman, Tuesday, October 12, Conference
'Theatre, N or ton; Dr. Pellegrino, Wednesday, October 20,
Embassy Room, Hotel Statler-

~23,1!111

qwPORTER,

2

The Senate Professional Association and the State of New
York have entered into a contract governing the faculty an~
professior.al staff of State t!mversity of New York. Article
vm of this contract concerns
grievance procedures. It i~ the
responsibility of the President
of !he University at Buffalo to
establish grievance review procedures on this campus as
STEP 1 of the grievance arrangements.
The following grievance prooedures are therefore in order
at this University for faculty
and professiooal staff grievances.
A grievance inust be filed
within forty-five ( 45) days of
the date following the act or
omission giving rise thereto, or
the date on which the aggrieved
first knew or reasonably should
have known of such act or omission, whichever date is later. In
the case of faculty, this grievance must be filed with the
Chairman of the Faculty Senate. For professional staff, the
grievance must be filed with
the Chairman of the Professional Staff Senate-after it is
formed ; until that time, they
should contact the Chairman
of the State Universizy Professional Association (SUPA).
The Chairman will schedule a
review of the grievance within
seven (7) days of its receipt.
The review of the grievance
will be conducted by a committee of tluee persons. In Ule cru;e
of faculty, these persons will be
selected by lot from the members of the Faculty Senste of
the University at Buffalo plus
sucb additional persons as the
President may designate. The
panel from whicb individual
grievance boards will be selected in the case of non-teaching professionals will be one resulting from an election to be
held within SUPA under the
direction of their officers and
with a view to achieving adequate representation throughout the University. The first
person selected shall be the
chairman of the review committee. At least one member of the
review committee shall not be
a member of the Faculty (or
comparable University subdivision ) in which the person filing the grievance holds his appointment. In any case of alleged discrimination, at least
one member of the review oommittee shall be a member of the

:!d a~tieas'f~~!;~b.:'r ~r~~

ticles of the Policies relatiDc 1o
appoinbnent of academic and pro·
fessional employees or ,r:elatlng to

~~te~t ~=ctoemJl~~-~
icy Artic:IM") .

Several matters are subject
to grievance under the provision of the contract between
the Senate Professional A-&gt;ciation and the State of New
York. 'lbese inclu~ as specified in the section of that contract just quoted, the allege&lt;;!
failure to follow procedures
garding appointments, promotions, and terminations set by
the Policies of tM Boord of
Trustees of · State University.
Also included are matters of
academic freedom, discrimination on grounds of race, sex, re-ligion, and political belief,
equal employment, leaves tineluding sabbatical leaves), personnel records, governance, and
retrenchment. On the other
band, certain matters are not
subject to grievance. One such
matter is termination for cause;
this is covered by a separate
article (Article XXXV) of the
contract. A second exclusion
!rom grievance is the exercise
of administrative judgment in
personnel matters, unless this
involves discrimination.
The following provisions with
regard to representation should
be noted care!ully (Article
Vill ) :
C. Representation
SPA shall illlve the excluoive

re-

right to represent any employee
at any step of this grievance pro--

~~diviN~vi!n~o~~W::~·. u~~

nob.ce to SPA, initiate and repre·
sent himself in processing his own
individual grievance at Steps 1
and 2; provtded. 1urther, however,
no resolution of an individually
pl'OCe::iSed. grievance shall be in·

~d~:rn~:~ ~~

receive prior notlce, and a reas·
onable opportunity lo be beard

Dr. Henry J. Ricbards, 34,
dean of developmental studies
at Buffalo State College, bas
been named assistant vice president for academic affairs here.
Dr. Ricbards; duties will include initiating and reviewing
curricula, coordinating programs, and making recommendations to Dr. Bernard R. Gelbaum, vice president for aca~
demic affairs. The appointment
is effective October 7.
Dr. Ricbards earned a doctorate in Spanish and Latin
American Studies from the
University of Minnesota in
1964. He received master's and
bacbelor's degrees in Spanish
and Latin American Studies
and in English froin "Marquette
University.
Since 1967, he bas been on
the faculty of Buffalo State,
first as an assistant professor,
then an associate professor of
Spanish and as a coordinator of
Afro-American studies. In 1970
he was named dean of developmental studies.

on the resolution of any grievance
so processed at Steps 1 and 2.
SPA shall have the right, but
not the obligation. to file initially
a grievance which directly in·
volves employees at more than
one campus at Step 2.

This means that no grievance
not brought by the Senate Pro-·
fessional Association initially
may be appealed to the Director of Employee Relations of
the State of New York, or may
be taken to arbitration.
Finally, the following provision of the contract as to the
filing of a grievance is noted
(Article Vlll) :
D. RequiretM.ntl for
Filing a Gr~VCJ.na
A grievance must be submitted
in writing and ahall contain a

clear and oonciae statement of the
facts giving rise to the grievance,
the provision, if any, of thia
Agreement or the Policies (of the
Board of Trustees of State University) involved, the relief re.

em.

quested, and whether the
pl6yee attempted an informal adjustment or the grievance and
with whom..

Tooth TranSplant Session
To Highlight Dental Meet

reuow

Two Named
To Positions
At Top Level

'The Tuesday program will
feature discussion of too t h
transplantation an d replacement by four faculty members
of the U/ B School .of Dentistry
-Dr. Jack E. Armita'*" asaoctate professor of dentistry; Dr.
George W. Greeae, Jr., professor and cbairman of oral pathology; Dr. Micbael Meenaghan,
~tant professor of oral pathology; and Dr. Joseph R. Natiella, associate professor of oral
pathology.
Dr. William F
dean
of the Dental Schoo~ ..--k
on "'The Nation's Health"ili
the Wednesday luncbeoo.

Dr. lMtM

oo!:·n'=f aR.· ~

provost of the ~ty of Arts
and Letters. Dr. Levine, professor of Englisb, assumes his new
post .immediately.
.·
A member of the U / B faculty since 1963, Dr.• Levine iB
a specialist in Restoration and
18th- Cenblllf Literature and
holds M .A. and Ph.D. degrees
from Columbia and a B.A. from
Tufts.
'The 42-year old Levine lectured at the University of Co-

logne, West Germany, during
the 1969-70 academic year

under a Fnfbright Lecturing
Award. He is the author of one
book, several articles, notes and
reviews and the co-author of
two tenbooks.
Active in University affairs,
Dr. Levine has served on several Faculty Senate and University-wide committees. In his
own department, be has been
a member of-: ten committees
and has eerved as director of
undergraduate studies.

�September 23, 1911

Attica Involvement-----nesfl:;~=.~:. ~~· w~
to the demonstrators telling
them he was powerless to do
anything about health care for

g:
=ds~i~ 2~ b:,.._
pitals and members of the Medical School's ED!Cutive Com-

· mittee.

Pesch began infor:nal negotiations that. night with members
of t be -U / B administration,
Medical School staff and rep..
resentatives of the medical students. These talks were preliminary and conducted in an
unofficial way. One of the medical students at the meeting,
David Breen, president of the
Medical School Polity, misunderstood the informal nature
of these discussions, however.
As a result, he returned to

~':ft a~~:::;..Th:SJi'
their demands had been met
and that U/B and Meyer Memorial Hoseital would assume
full reSPonsibility for the treatment of Attica mmates.
Student joy over this news
was short-bved. Later, Thursday morning, the demonstrators
found that Breen was not an
oflicial spokesman and that the
Medical School was not ready,
at that time, to assume full
responsibility for health care
at Attica.
Memoriol Service

The demonstrators may have
been concerned over the fate
of the Attica prisoners but most
of the campus didn't seem to
be. A Thursday noon memorial
service was attended by less
than 300. Scheduled to speak
were representatives from the
student governments, campus
clergy and President Ketter.
The m o r n i n g discovery of
Breen's erroneous report had
left the protestors in an ugly
temper and :when· Ketter took .
the mike, they tried to shout
him down with cries of "murderer." Other members of the
crowd urged them to "let him
speak." After the 25 demonstrators were silent, Ketter read
a statement w h i c h, by and
large, re-affirmed what Breen
had told the demonstrators the
night before. This time, however, it was an official set of
proposals signed by De"" Pesch
and Dr. Albert Rekate, director
of Meyer Memorial Hospital.
The statement was lhf1same as
the final agreement reported
above with the exception of the
second proposal which indicated that the faculty "offers to
assume full professional responsibility for initiating, carrying
out and evaluating the medical
care delivered to the inmates of
the Attica Facility, both at the
facility and at the Univer;ity's
affiliated hospitals."
Accompanying these three
proposals was a review of the
activities of the Medical School
and Meyer Memorial Hospital
at Attica during the emergency
and for the five previous years.
\See below for complete statement. )
~ Dr. Ketter called the proposals "constructive and forwardlooking." •
·
M~ of the'Ad Hoc Committee weren't satisfied, thou~
They called tbe proposals "madeguate" and returned to
CaPen to continue the sit-in.
With students outaide bia
door, Pesch preeented bia three
offers to the State Departmellt
of Corrections which rejected
tbe'm, ·even though physicians
from U / B and Meyer had been
working at Attica since early
Monday morning supplying
emergency medical treatment.
The students then .issued a
statement calling fa&lt; the continuation of the sit-in "until
the Medical School publicly indicts the State and demanda
the opportunity to implement
their offer of adequate lnE!dica1

care."

Oilers

AcaPM

Friday morning, Peach went

to Attica to discuss the offers
with State Corrections Commissioner Oswald, Attica Superintendent Vincent Mancusi and
Dr. Bradley. They then accepted the first and third recommendations ali drawn up on
Thursday. The second offer,
however, was changed to read _
•"provide full medical consultative services to the inmates of
the Attica facility." The new
wording was substituted because the original version "ap!
peared to the Department of
Corrections officials to imply
that we intended to take over
administrative responsibility for
the hospital itself and the duties of the other State depart.
menta connected with medical
services at Attica," Pesch said.
The care offered under the new
wording is "substantially the
same" as that under the old,.
he added.
Friday afternoon, Pesch presented the acoepted offers to a
press conference open only to
national and local media. Demonstzators, however, found out
about the Hayes briefing and
demanded admittance. Members of the Campus Securi\y
Force kept them out until Ian
De Waal, president of SA, ap..
pear~!~! to tell them they could
come' in because he had acoepted "personal responsibility for
II&gt;eir presence." About 30 students questioned Pesch about
the extended medical program.
Lead by the group's informal
chairman Sa m Abbate, they
asked the dean about admitting
black and community physicians into the prison.· He gave
his word that he would "urge
admittance of any and a ll doctors." Pesch also indicated
there was a shortage of black
health care personnel, adding
that "we will work as hard as
we can to increase the number
of black professionals."
Hl&amp;h &lt;lu-llty

c:aro.

The new system will be one
of "ttigh quality medical care,"
the dean stressed, with the inmates' health c a r e being of
'prime importance."
In a d d i t i o n to Medical
School teams, the D e n t a I
School also sent in residents
and interns last Thursday to
provide dental care. This was
provided on an emergency basis
to supplement the care U t B's
Dental School has been supplying for the past four years.

..

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

,

In concluding, Pe s ch told
students that details of the
comprehensive health care program would be worked out as
soon as possible. The extended
program will add medical, psychiatric and other services to
the surgery treatment alread,Y
supplied. The new program IS
''essentially more of the same,"
the dean added.

This ~t Monday, an emergency call::- for medical assist-ance was made to Dr. W. G.
Schenk, Chairman of the Department of Surgery at the
University a t Buffalo Medical
School and Chief of Surgery at
Meyer Hospital. Dr. Schenk
a nd his f_!!llow surgical physicians along with operating room
nurses, residents, anesthetists
and emergency room c r e w s,
The text of the history of moved immediately to Attica.
the Medical School's involve- Surgical teams from Meyer,
ment at Attica, signed by Dean which included 14 surgeons as
Pesch and Dr. Rekate. referred well as operating room nurses
and emergency crews, were disto above, folJows:
patched to Attica a short time
The tragedy this week at At- later. There were, additionally,
tica State Correctional Facility three su rgeons who had been
has shocked and saddened all at the scene with the National
of us. To physicians, who are Guard units.
Medical pen;onnel from Bufdedicated to the preservation
of life through medical care, falo carried with · them all of
this unfortunate' event had par- the equipment necessary to deal
ticular meaning. It has also with the emergency situation.
mandated from us an immedi- Five complete operating suites
ate and compassionate re. were transported from Meyer
sponse. The Medical School of Hospital to the Attica3acillty.
the State University of New B I o o d was transferred from
York at Buffalo and Erie Coun- Rochester and Buffalo blood
ty's Edward J. Meyer Memori· banks and blood-matching peral Hospital have been deeply so nnel from Meyer were
involved in meeting the medic. brought to. Attica.
Life·saving surgical proced·
al needs of the Attica facilitv
not only d u r i n g the reocrlt ures were started immediately.
emergency. but also in a con. C c r t a i n surgical procedures
tinuing program which has been were performed a t the Attica
in existence for the past five facility, while tbose in more
serious oondition were sent to
years.
Meyer for surgery. The entire
hospital was mobilized on an
emergency basis.
Dr. Schenk said that when
Univerhity personnel left Attica on Monday night there
were no recognized major injuries that bad not been cared
for.
On Tuesday, September 14th,
twelve surgeons from Meyer
Hospital toured the entire Attica facility, providing postof)erative care to those who had
had sur,ery. Those who had
any med1cal problerru; were listed for follow-up treatment. The
names of those who were in
satisfactory oondition as or tha t
time were also recorded. 'l'wo
of the injured who developed
sur1ical complications on Tues• day were transferred to Meyer
for surgery in a Meyer Hospital ambulance.
On Wednesday, September
15th, Dr. Lionel Sifontes was
at Attica to review medical
problems with residents from
the University accompanying
him. A team of ten surgeons
was also at the correctional fa.
cility the same day. The pur'pose8 of the doctors'· visit were
to continue treatment of minor
•· injuries and to assess the seriousness of injuries and to transfer patients to Meyer Hospital,
as necessaryc As of Wednesday
• af~, two more of the injurel! were being transferred to
the hospital for surgery.
Today, Thursday, Septamber

~~ ~s~'!.~A':fca1~
taring to

thB injured

Of the 50 to 60 physicians,
medical students and hospital

!:.:'~ ~v~lved,_c::far ~

Although the ~rsity Medical School and Meyer Hospital moved quickly to meet
the emergency medical a n d
surgical needs during this recent disaster, we should not
overlook our medical relation.
ship to Attica during the past
five years.
Since 1966, Dr. Schenk,
working in cooperation w i t h
, Dr. Selden W i II i am s, who
heads the medical program at
Attica State Correctional Facility, has been responsible lor
a wide range of surgical services. Elective surgery has been
done on a scheduled basis while
the Buffalo physicians at Meyer
we-re available in emergency
situations. as were' the facilities
of the hospital itself.
Dr. Schenk points out that
the 30-bed med1cal facility, the
operating room. the X-ray
equipment. and faciHties for
blood matching and performing
laboratory tests are adequate
for the tLsual needs of the Attica facility. Certainly, there
are few communities of 2,500
population that have such a
facilitr.
Durmg this emergency, County regulations have been modified and security provided so
that at this time the Meyer
Hospital is able to acconunodate any patients which need
to be transferred to the Meyer.
These patients can be visited
by their relatives. _
We would like to point out
that all of this has been made
possible by the volunteer physicians and hospital personnel.
The Medical Schoo I of the
University at Buffalo does not
operate a hospital or health
care service. We are totally dependent for the delivery of
health care on resources which
are only available in cooperation with private as well as
county and Federal hospitals.
We,.would like to stress that
as a Medical School and as a
County Hospital, as -u as
physicians, we will not CODSent
to any prooedures or restrictiollS which mitie-. apinst
the best care of patients. We
would urge that all of those in
authority be cognizant of this .
and recognize its absolute n&amp;cessity..
We feel that at the present
time the situation demands that
we extend present efforts of the
School of Medicine to provide
an expanded health care program lor the inmates of the
A t t i c a Correctional Facility
which • will lead as quickly as
possible to a program providing
full-health services.
-Dr. LeRoy Pesch, Dean
School of Medicine
-Dr. Albert c. Rekate,
Director
Edward J. Meyer
Memorial Hospital

�4

Seplembe,.

GSA Enters Battle to
SecureVoting Rights

23,

1!171

ProTn1Jtion Procedl.u-es~ Lihrary Situntion~
rBooks~ Supplenu!nt Elicit Reader Co~

EDITOR: ~
PRESIDENT KE'ITER:
tio"fl (~keley, University of
Promotions for the DepartIn the Reporter for Septem- Califorrua Press, June, 1971 )
ent governmental system is a
ment of Philosophy were .an· ber 11/th, you were quoted as A monographic study of ~
waste of time.
Young people have recently
The Gmduate Student AJ;w;r nounced in August. As the saying that "no one from the devel~ping national conscious.
been gi~en their legitimate ciation is convinced that this former Department Chairman library's staff bad come ... to ness m pre-communist China
right m a democratJ.c society, disillusionment is not necessary (1968-71) , I feel caUed upon to complain about the library or' and the ways this is refiected in
the right to selec&lt; the people and is determined to use all of make a scatement about one of the shortage of funds." We feel Chinese historiography.
w!w will decide the fate of its resources to try to insure the promotions to full rank, as library staff members that
These books are surely wortheir governmental systems,_ that the legitimate rights of that of Dr. William H. Baumer. this statement deserveS an an- thy of review (or at least men
bom 1oca1 ana uaaonat. rtow- graduate students are pro- I do not wish to oomment on swer.
tion) in your survey. I ci~
We do not feel that it was them only ~use they came
ever, in practice. tbis 1S turning tected. To this end, we are the merits of the case, but on
inw a cruel mockery. '!'be very gathering evidence relating to ·the procedures. The full pro- our place as staff members to to my attention; there may ·well
persons wnom the society is ex- actual cases of discrimination fessors of the Department fol- complain directly to you. Tbe have been othera that I did not
pending sucll great resourceS to in voter registration of gradu- lowed the regufar procedure, financial limitations on tbe li- nol!ce. I do_ kn'!W that you
educate, the ones considered to ate students. There is a possi- examining the record of each brary have been stringent since omitted mention m your urn
be developing the skills and bility of instituting a class suit candidate, discussing the ap- April lst and we took it for Press" section, of several mon~
knowledge which wiU allow to guarantee that pernicious propriateness of promotion, and granted that -you knew about og_rap~ by othe~ coUeagues of
them to provide the greatest in- double-standard criteria will voting by secret baUot. The them. We were certain that you mme m t!Je History Depart.
put into the policical system, not be used in registering grad- final ballot on Dr. Baumer bad knew that positions have been ment, specilically those of Proare being systematicall de- uate students. There is a cer- 3 m favor, 7 opposed, and one frozen since April so that we fessors Noi'ID!lD Baker John
prived of that input. The prac- tainty of making sure that grad- abstaining. Dr. Baumer did not could not fill vacancies sudden- Lar~. a n d . Michael 'Frisch.
tice of refusing to allow stu- uate students do not lose their appeal the deci si on to the ly occurring as well as the un- A~ m press IS a coUection of
dents to register in the area in rights due to confusion or lack Grievance Committee of the filled lines we bad done with- writings by and on Leopold von
which they spend virtually all of information. We are insti- Facufty of SSA, as a colleague out. We presumed that you Ranke, jointly edited by Pro· of their time, in which they will tuting procedures of advise- had done with some success. were aware that the libraries fessbrs Georg Iggers and Kon.
lnstead, President Ketter inter- bad a drastic cut in funds for rad von Moltke. Once again
remain from four to seven
vened, asking the Personnel temporary service, for books, these are works which came tO
years, indicates that the grantCommittee of our Facufty _to for subscriptions. We knew that my attention only by happen.
ing of the right to vote was
consider Dr. Baumer's promo- memoranda bad been sent to stance.
given only on the condition that
But any survey such as yQurs,
it not be used. The issue bas The Reporter hopes on this poge tion. At the request of the Pro- you by Dr. Slatin on July 14th
and will continue to be debated to provide a forum for the ex- vost, they made careful inquiry, and July 28th (copies enclosed ) ~hich purports to be all-inclusat great length; however, there change of views on 1 wide variety but declined to recommend reporting curtailment of library Ive, should surely cite in addican be n'o doubt that studentli of the Issues facing the aademic promotion. The President then hou rs because of shortage of tion to the fine work of other
as a group are being systemat- community. We welcome both bad his Review Board take up staff brought on by budget re- members of the History Deically discriminated against. position papers and letters as the matter. I don 't know thei r stric tions. We e&gt;q:ected that as partment, these equally comdecision: by the end of the aca- an experienced administrator me~dab!e books. Otherwise the
The registration of students in- space pennits.
demic year, their recommenda- you would understand that the Uruvers1ty Commun,ity _might
volves the use of criteria that
are never used for other citi- ment to deal with individual tions had become secret . In stall of the library would have get the erroneous 1mpression
zens and are strongly. reminis- cases, many of which can be any case, the procedure was to work twice as bard to main- that the History Department
cent of the attempts to deprive resolved without the necessity quite irregular, and the pres-- tain the services since more only. complains about gaps in
than 20 per cent of the library's the library, when in fact, it also
other minority groups of their of court action. Moreover, the sure from above extraordinary.
contributes to filling up the liAn honorary degree in recog- lines cannot be filled .
voting rights. The absurd sit- GSA will serve as a clearing
As library professionals we brary's shelves.
uation in which a student is re- bouse for information about nition of services is clearly dis-Sincerely yours,
fused the right to register while bow students should register, tinguished from an ordinary de- did not expect that facufty and
WILLIAM S. ALU:N
his working wife is registered when they should register and gree. I think a University is students would notice a diminProfessor pf History
without question points out the where they should register. also entitled to know if a pro- ution of library services until
a
service
that
they
needed
permotion
is
not
an
ordinary
one.
cruel arbitrariness of these Since they must register in
This is not the first time Dr. sonally was not there, but we . This response is exactly that
practices.
their districts now that general
While the hoax is serious registration is over, it is im- Baumer received an unusual d1d expect the administration mtended when we were foolto foresee that this moment barelY enough to begin publicaenough for undergraduates, the portant that each person be- reward. In the spring of 1970, would
come.
refusal of suffrage to graduate comes aware of which district a request came from Albany to
tio!' o~ "Books by the Faculty."
Sincerely yours,
students is intolerable. To be- he or she is in. Time is also \JI B to give Dr. Baumer a
It ~· if you will pardon us for
ADRIENNE BERENBAUM
gin with, almost without excep- crucial since the last chance to merit raise for his SP.rvices in
saymg so, hell to get an accuMILDRED HALLOWITZ
tjon, they are over 21, and fully register for the fall elections the SUNY Senate. A c t i n g
rate and complete listing of
SHlRLEY HESSLDN
emancipated. Sixty percent of and for the national primaries President Regan consulted the
faculty publications. And, rathC. K. HUANG
them are married, often with next year is the three-day per- Provost, who consulted me as
~r than purpor~ing to be allMARTHA MANNING
c~ildren . The fact that comChairman. Consulting the Dei:&gt;d of Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and 2.
mclusive, we pomted this probJEAN M1U.ER
pletion of their degree wiU reFor these reasons, the GSA partment Executive Commitlem out in the editorial note on
REMEDIOS SILVA
quire a minimum of four years requests aU persons who have tee, I declined to approve, on
page
two of last week's comBEATRICE YUAN
for a doctorate and usually tried and were denied the right the grounds that someone
P!lation, asking faculty to ad(Health Sciences
much longer, refutes the notion to register, to contact the GSA elected to represent the faculty
YJ.Se
us
of omissions. Reporter
Library )
that they are a transient popu- in 205 Norton Union (831- should not be specially restall member Suzanne Metzger
lation. When statistics show 550'i 1. All persons who need warded on administrative inwho put the insert together
.
that the upward mobile, mid- clarification of registration pro- itiative, lest the integrity of the EDITOR:
begged and bounded campus
The b o o k reviews in the departments f o r information,
dle-class OXOC)1tive spends not cedures should also contact the Senate be undermined. The
September
16
issue of the Re- checked with the Library the
more than fiVe years in a par- officers of the GSA. Further in- A~ting President granted the
porter, covering publications by Bookstore and otber ~pus
ticular locality on the average, fonna tion will appear as the merit raise.
it is clear that a double stand- registra lion days approach.
President William McGill of members of the faculty since sources-knowing full well that,
ard. is in operation. FUrtherIn a ny event, the primary Columbia, ·r ecently reporting to last September, were most in- despite this, there woufd be
more, the idea that graduate goal of the GSA is NOT to de- the alumni, said: " . .. it was teresting, but, regrettably, in- some books which woufd go
students, especially with chiJ. velop a JX)Wer~bloc in order to equally clear that the time was complete. Perhaps this is in- ~rted until after our pubthen, are uninvolved and unin- take over local government. past when Columbia's president evitable given the prolific pub- hcation was oul We wish tbere
terested in local issues such as Even if it was possible to con- could decide academic ques- lishing of our colleagues and were a better way. Our hope is
education and taxation is ludi- vince a majority of students to tions in a ·style suited to an im- the limited resources of the Re- !hat in the future, others as
crous. While it is true that a vote as a blpc (which is im- perial l)lOnarcb." Let us hope porter. In justice, however, it mterested as Prof. AUen will
majority (but not all) gradu- possible), 'Jie, as a student gov- the time is also past when this should be noted that at least keep us abreast as books are
ate and professional students ernment, are not in the busi- style can be established at the three of my colleagues in the published.
History Department were overdo not own their ·own homes, ress of partisan politics. The University of Buffalo.
looked, to wit:
EDITOR:
there is no reason to single GSA is. merely trying, as all
- WlUJAM T . PARRY
1) John F. Naylor (ed)
The Department of Spanish,
them out for deprivation of governments should, to serve
Professor of Philosophy
Britain
,
l919-I970
(
Quadrangl~
Italian,
and Portuguese wisbes
voting rights. Buffalo bas a rel- the needs of its constituents
atively high proportion of self- a'lr. to protect their rights. The
Upon receipt of Dr. Parry's . J3?oks, Chicago, New York to empbasi&gt;.e that very signifiTimes
Book)
214
p.
plus
Bibl.
cant
publications
by several
owned homes but there is still right to participate in the gov- letter, the Reporter checked the
Index. A compilation of members of our Department
over 35 per cent of Buffalo's ·
matter with the Administration and
e:,:ewi
tness
articles
f
r
o
m
the
we':"
or'!itted
in
your
listing of
families who do not own their ~h;i,~~a0:k
th:fd~::.~J~ of the University. The followresidences. We are faced with system and we intend to make ing is a suriunary of the re- T_&lt;mes plus a 25-page interpre- Uruvers•ty books which apl!ve
essay
on
British
history
peared
in
the
Reportu
of Sepa situation which, if unresolved, sure that this · system remains sponse:
will merely confirm the opin- intact and that graduate stuAt the outset, Or. Parry from Lloyd George to Harold tember 16, 1971.
All of these have been subions of the young that any at- dents remain individually in- states that ''be does not wish to Wdson. The author bas also
provided short introductory es- mitted by tbe Oepaitment, and
tempt to work within the pres- volved in it.
comment on the merits of the says
for each of the periods I am sure~ departments in
case," and limits himself ex· covered.
the Univeflllly, to tbe various
plicitly to procedural matters.
2 ) Konrad von Moltke SigHe asked why Dr. Baumer did nwnd uon Dietrich-stein' Die Provosts' Ol&amp;oes monthly and
not appeal the decision of his Anfange der standi.sehen Imti- comprehensively at tbe end of
Department to the Grievance tutwnen und die Eirulriggung every year. I am sure that if
your office contacts tbe ProCommittee of the Facufty. The des Protestant~&amp;mus in. Styrien
answer is that Dr. Baumer, as zur Zeit M arimi.llUzns I unJ vosts' Offices they will find up~ Of the Facufty Sen- ~erd!n&lt;znds I, ( Gottingen, Pub- · to-date lists of books, eitber m
ate, IS m charge of the griev- ~bonen des Mrut Planck In- press or already published. It
aooe process for the facufty of sf:itus, vol, 29),-367 pages plus seems to me that this is a much
the University, and such an aP' b1bl. and mdex. A biograpby of more accurate way of achievTOO~~
!ng your lis~ ratber'than rely~ ~d have left him in an one of tbe key administrators
untenable position.
~
of Maximillian I, wbooe life
t!;~~~ty
__,... r . .lf.ORU2'J'
Dr. Parry asks about proced- also .illuminates crucial literary
Perhaps a new· University
ures of !J&gt;e Review Board. The social, eoonomic, and politiaJ
~ ~o;.-­
wide
committee
s h o ul d be
8II8Wer IS that there have ~
!'Jli"'CCs of tbe Reformation Era formed to process· this informaDO changes m the Board's prom tbe Holy Roman Empire.
_
tion
ao
vital
to
tbe
University
. ... cr.ot7nZI!
cedures. In Dr. Baumer's caae,
3) Lawrence Sclmeider Ku
the Board's vote waa alfirma- Chien-K""'f and Chino's 'New community.
-Sincerely,
ft1SIJI OltDJf'WOOD
tive and its recommendation HIStory: Natiol14lillm and the
BRUNO A. AJICOill
--+-,~~:::-...,...------.-----------..,.._ 1 ~;~"f;1 b~
re{lident. Q~t for A#ernatiue Tradi.~Chairman

By JOHN GREENWOOD

Vice f'ru.d•nr

I~

£coem,.J A.Jia.ra, GSA

CVIEWPOINTS

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·. STUDENT

··. RU-LES

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�Ul!l

Paaed by Uroiuersily Council
Se,Umber 13, 1971

AU rules IIDd recuJaU... in tbeae
chapters shall be COII8idlllred as additions to tbe appropriate Board of
Trustees, city, state. IIDd federal law
and sball apply to all students.
In addition, students are llDCOUl'aged to obtain and familiarize themselves with the following University
Regulations: Academic and Departmental Regulations, University Motor
Vehicle Regulations, Residence Hall
Regulations, University Health and
Safety Regulations, Board of Trustee
"Rules for the Maintenanoe of Public
Order."

--..:

A UnM!rsity, espec:ially a State
Uru-sity subject to constitutional
requirements, must guarantee students
the rilbts which the society and its
_ laws protect. An American Uni~ty
guarantees its students these rishts
on a campus only by !resting them
as citiams or a larger society.
Uru-sity disciplinary processes
· take - r i a t e action when student
oooduct directly and significantly interl..,.. with the University's primary
edllCiltional responsibility of insuring
all members of its community the
~ty to attain their educational
objectiwls in consonance with the institution's mandate. These regulations
_ . , ; , student behavior have been
formulall!d to be reasonable and realistic far all students.
When a student has been apprehended for the violation of a law of
the CIJIDIDunity, the state, or nation,
it is the UnM!rsity's position not to
.-eq.- or agree to special consideration for the student because of his
student status. It should be understood that the University is not a
law ~t qency. At the aame
time, the University ~loeB not conceive
of itaelf as a "sanctuazy" for law
breabrs. Tbe University has always
been IIDd should 0011tlnue tq be concerned that wbenever students are
inwhm in lep! problems they be
adequately advised and Jepresented
by~ counsel
Studobta wbo violate a local ordinance. or any law, risk the legal pen'altial prescribed by civil authorities.
Howew!r, violation of law for which
the student pays the penalty will not
necessarily involve a violation of academic standards or rules of the University. Tbe University or college
cannot be held responsible for offcampus activities of its individual students. However, in cases involving
violaU... or the law which occur on
campus, the University may )lave to
be CICliiiBIII!d with the aspects, which
by their naluft!, adversely affect the
University's educational role.
In aoy University disciplinazy procedure, One of the highest priorities
of the University is the ssfeguard of
a student's Fourteenth Amendment
rigbt to due process. Due process is
not an evasive legal concept but rather
simply requires the rudimentazy elements of "fair play" in any adversary
proceeding. To this end, all University disciplinazy procedure&amp;' will at
least alford the defendant \, c 1ear
statement of the charges against him,
IIDd the naluft! of the evidence upon
which the charges are based. Secondly, the defendant shall be given a fair
bearing, be allowed to confront and
&lt;:r06IH!liiUJli witnesses, and present
his own position, evidence and explanation. Lastly, no disciplinary action
will be taken unless the charges are
proven beyond a reasonable dqubt.
Tbe courts have indicated that if these
minimal elements of "fair play" are
fulfilled, the defendant will have been
a11onded due process under the law·.
In summary, the University expects
and asks for its members no greater
or no less !ft!edom or liberty than
existS far the persons in the society.
Tbe UliMm;ity's position, therefore,
is not to request or agree to special
&lt;DIIIIidenttion because of his status as
a studenl Tbe University will not
interlere with the law enforcement
IIDd other agencies. As part of its
edllCiltional mandate, it will be concerned about student rehabilitation.
L GENEJIAL RULES AND

1.110

REGUtATI~S

AU Jaw8 or the Board of Trustees
ol SUNY, City or Bulfalo, Town of
Ambent, State of New York, and
Unill!d States of America inclUding
but DDt limited to the New York State
J?.al .I.w, the New York State Vebide _ .. Tralli&lt;:-l.aw, and the New
Yad&lt; IJIMe Education Law sball apply
... tbe - a D d sball be considered
-part ol tbe Student Rules and RegUIatiaoiL

or

intimidatea

·

1.10

Any offenses arising out of aoy of
the- laws mentioned in aections 1.00
and 1.05 aboVe shall be consideft!d
proper matters for adjudication belore
!he appropriate university disciplinazy body.
1.20

,

There shall be no limit under these
chapters as to punishment to be imposed, such punishment shall be at
the discretion of the judicial body
and shall be limited only by the rules
governing the University disciplinary
bodies. (For specific sanction which
may be invoked, see procedures of specific University Disciplinary Body.)
1.30 DisnJpllon

A person is guilty of disruption
when he:
L -interferes with University activities; or
2. obstructs University activities.
University activities include but are
not limited to: teaching, researeh, administration, public rervices, functions,
or other authorized activity programs
on University premises.
1.40 UIUiuthorized Entry

No person shall break into or illegally enter any University building
or room nor shall any student enter
or remain in any private room or office
of any student, faculty member, administrative office, or other person on
University property without the express permission of any person or
persons authorized to use or live in
that room; nor shall any unauthorized
person enter or remain in any Univer·
sity building or facility at a time when
that facility normally is closed or
after the facility has been c[psed because or special or unusual circumstances. University facilities include,
but are not limited to the following:
buildings, parking lots, athletic fields,
and all campus areas.
1.50 Unauthorized Use of University
Facilities or Services

A person is guilty of unauthorized
use when he uses any University fa.
cility or service without proper authorization.
1.55 Theft and Destruction of Property

No person shall take, steal, bum,
destroy or otherwise damage any property not his own, on the University
campus or on any University property.
1.60 Misuse of University Supplies or
Documents

A person is guilty of misuse of
University supplies and documents
when he:
1. forges, or
2. alters, or
3. uses without authority, or
4. receives without authority, or
5. possesses University supplies or
documents without authority. ( University supplies and doi:uments include but are not limited to the following: supplies, equipment, keys,
records, files, documents, and other
materials.)
1.65 .......,_ of Student
Oopnlutlons

A person is guilty of violation of
University policies wben be violates
University policies or regulations concerning registration of students organizations and use or facilities.
1.70-llloq'-t
of • llnhletslty otllclal

1.75 ...,_ All!.- A parson is guilty pbysica] abuse
and banurlment when:
1. be intentionally assaults, atrikes,
threatens, or
aoy parson,
or
2. be .......,.;s in a courae of COilduct ar repeatedly commits acts which
alarm or aeriously annoy another peraon and which aerve no legitimate

A person is guilty or failure to com, ply when be fails to comply with
reasonable directions of ·Univeisity"of6cials in the performance of tbeir
duties.

P'?:\:._tea a ~tion which un-

neoessarily endangera or threatens the
health, safety, or well-being or other
persons or or other property on University property.
1.80Falle~

A person is guilty of falaely reporting an incident, when, knowing the
information reported, or circulated to
be · false or baseless, be causes such
information to be conveyed to any
University or community authority.
1.85~-nd-

Possession without prescription of
any narcotic or barbiturate or dangerous drug, or of most &amp;&lt;&gt;&lt;:ailed "pep
pilla" and ''tranquilizem" is contrary
to federal and/or state law. Any
student found to be in illegal posaession of drugs must be reported to the
appropriate civil authorities and is
also subject to disciplinary action by
the University.
1.90 Donprous Weapons
and Exploslva
1. It is a violation of the New York

State Law and University Regulationa
for a ·person to possess a rille, shotgun,
firearms, ammunition, firecrackers, or
explosives in or upon the building or
grounds used for educational purpoees
of the University without written authorization. This includes roman candles or similar combustibles or explosives.
2. No person, either singly or in
concept with others, sball possess and
carry, on the campus, any knife, dirk,
stiletto, sabre, stick, cudgel, bludgeon,
club or other things adaptable to the
purpose of a weapon, including baiQns,
Karate sticks, canes or similar articles,
excluding only orthopedic aids, athletic equipment, and project or construction materials and tools on proof
of a proper specific use or purpose on
the day in question.
1.95 Gambling

vancemont will be dependent on tbelr
acienWic campelence and will be in
no wise alfected by the popularity or
unpopularity ol their opinions or ut:terances; that students in the institution are free, insofar as the ·requirements of tbe several curricula permit,
to inquire into aoy subject that interests them, to organize discusaion
groupe or study clubs for the consideration ·of any subject, and to invite
to addreal them aoy speaker they may
chooee; that censorship of student publications sball be t.-1 on precisely
the aame grounds and sball extend
DO further than that ezerciaed by the
United States Postal authoritial."
2.05 Petttlono, Individual
Any person has tbe rigbt and privilege to petition or disseminate information on campua. In the ft!sidence
balls, those intending to circulate petitions must identify tbemsel\&gt;es to
the appropriate House Council before
any individual or group petition is
circulated
(Note: the intent has not been to
deny the individual's rigbt to petition,
and, in the case of the ft!sidence balls,
personal privacy in living areas is
involved.)
2.10 l'lclo8tlnl and Domuoiilb atlalos
In regard to on-campua student aotions and demonstrations that tend to
endanger life, public or private property or to violate local; state, or federal
laws, each student will take the consequence of his own actiona as an
individual before the law, as well as
being referred to tbe Student Court
or appropriate University disciplinary
bodies. Any darnase to public or
private property must be bome by
tboee legally responsibje.
AU members of a .University community must share the responsibility
for maintaining a climate in which
divera&lt;; views can be ezp~ freely
and Without haraaament.
.
Tbe State University of New Yark
at Bulfalo has traditionally supported
the rigbt of its students, faculty, and
staff to ~ proteal Always ·im-

.

No student shall gamble for money
or other valuables on University property or in any University facility.
II. POLICIES RELATED TO
FREEDOM OF EXPRESS!~

2.00 Academic F.-om
The University supports the prin:

ciple or academic freedom as a concept intrinsic to the achievement of
its institutional goals. This principle
implies a trust in the integrity and
responsibility of the members of the
academic community. Samuel P . Capen, former Chancellor of the University of Buffalo, who is remembered
for the tradition of academic freedom
he implemented during his leadership
of the University, said in 1935:
"Acceptance by a., institution of the
principles of academic freedom im·
plies that teachers in that institution
are free to investigate any subject, no
matter how much it may be bedged
about by taboos; that they are free to
make known the results of their investigation and their reflection by
word of mouth or in writing, before
their claases or elsewbere; that they
are free to diller with their colleagues
and to present the grounds of tbeir
difference in their claases or elsewbere; that they are free as citizens
to take part in any public controversy
outside the institution; that no repressive measures, direct or indirect,
will be applied to theln no matter liow
unpopular they may become througb
opposing powerful interests or jostling
establisbed pft!judices, and no matter
how mistaken they may . . _ to be
in the eyes or members and friends
of tbe illstitution; that llleh OOiltinuance
ollice will be in all instance&amp;
governed by tbe prevailing rules ol
tenure IIDd that their ·-an1c ad-

in

SEPTEMBE!t 23, 1971 I STOOENT RULES AND REGULATIONS I Page 2

�plicit is the UDderstandln8 lbat demOIIStraton Jrill not inferlere with or

=·

violate theofrilbls
others.
the
obliption
all toof8S8ist
in
. taining order and to .88IIUI'e
reception of any campus speaker or
visitor.
The fllllowiJJ, pertains to the conduct of lhoae members of the University community who feel compelled
to - - their disaent through picketbil and olhet forms of demonstration:
·1. Pidr,etiDg or demonstrating miiSt
be orderly at all W... and should in
no way ;.ioparruze public order' or
safety or interfere with the Univer-

sity'&amp;Pf01n11118.
2. Pic:bting or demonstrating miiSt
not interfere with enllances to buildings or the normal 8ow of pedestrian
or whicular tnllliic.
3. Students involved in picketing
or ~ting may not interfere
by miDgliDg with organized meetings
or other aaaembliee for the ~ of
harasaaalt, s i n c e this invades the
rights of others to aasemble and the
rights of ~ to free ezpreasion.
4. Pic:bting or demonstmting may;
not obstnx:t or phy;iicaUy interfere
with the integrity of the classroom,
the privacy of the residence balls, or
the funclioning of tbe physical plant.
2.20 ~ or T.....-111 ..,
u-..,-..... or In u~

...-...

Any periiDil not the parent or legal
guardian of a student in attendance
at the UniYenity who loiters in or
about any University building or any
part of University grounds without
written permission ftom the President,
custo.;lial or other person in charge
thereof, or in violation of posted rules
or regulations governing the use thereof, shall be guilty of disorderly conduct. (Section 240.20 of the New York
State Penal JAw.) Regulations on
each campus shall include the manner
by which campus visitations by nonstudents shall be dewloped in accordaDCe with tbe Peaal Law.

Under Section· 240.36, a peraon ·is
guilty of loitering when be loiters or
remains in or about a acbool, coUege
or University building or grounds,

not baving any reason or relationsbip
involving· custody of or responsibility
for a pupil or student or any specific,
legitimate reason for being there and
not baving written permistion from
any authorized to .grant the same.
Under Section 140.05 a person is
guilty of criminal trespassing in the
fourth degree when he knowingly enten or remains unlawfully in or upon
premises.
Ill. GENERAL POLICIES &amp; PROCEDURESSTANDARDS OF STUDENT CONDUCT

3.00 - l c DiollonMty
The developmenr of inteUigence and

strengthening of moral responsibility
are two of the IIIOflt important aims
of education. Fundamental to the accomplishment of these purposes is the
q uty of the student to perform all
of his required work without illegal
help. Cheating on examinations and
plagiarism (e.g. receiving or giving
information on assignments, papers,
examinations; copying material without acknowledging the source) are
acts of dishonesty for which the penalty may be ezpulsion from the University. AU cases involving possible
academic dishonesty are at present
bandied by the academic areas con-

cerned.

3.05AkohollcBeve-

Alrobolic beverages are sold in Nor.ton HaU by the University Food Service under a license issued to the
Faculty-Student Association. Sale and
use in the building are governed by
the New York State Alcoholic Beverage Law, the rules of the Siate Liquor
Authority, and regulations established
by the Student Union Activities
Board. (For specific rules governing
Norton Union, see Section 4.00. )
p._.ion and use are permitted
in the Rel?idence Halls under policy
established by · the inter-Residence
Council and regulations voted by the
residents of each baD.
Rules .governing the use of alcoholic
beverages in Norton Hall and the
Residence Halls are filed with and
reviewed by the Alcohol Review Board
appointed by the President of the
University. Permission for use of alociholic beverages elsewhere on the
campus may be granted for special
occasions by the Alcohol R e v i e w
Board (201 Harriman Library).
3.20 Enterprise, Student

Any proposed enterprises by students or organizations bearing the
name of the University, must receive
the official approval of the appropriate
University authority before announcements are. made of such enterprises.
3.30 Records, Use of

Students' reCords are confidential,
to be released only to appropriate faculty and administrative officers. Release of such re;90rds to any other
college, pros~ve employers, or governmental agencies, occurs only with
the student's knowledge and consent,
or upon subpoena, unless material demanded by subpoena is legally privileged or . otherwise exempt from the
process. (The Office of Admissions
and Records maintains th&amp; same policy concerning the release of student
grades.) The University also does
not compile membership lists of student organizations but the name of
the President of each group and the
Faculty Advisor are required for purpoees of uae and reservation of University facilities.
3.40 lcleootlllcduoi C.rd

A student identification card (1.0 .
Card) is processed for each sl:udent

at the University early in the fall
semester and ".,.tidated after spring
registration. The LD. Card serves
as olllo!ial identification as a State
University of New York at Buffalo .
student and entitles the ·owner to library privileges. U!*l payment of r
fee the validated LD. Card Jrill permit
admiaaion to home athletic events and
campus cultural ewnts, participation
in student apoiiiiOied activities, and
special oft&lt;ampua student diacounts.
Page 3 I STUii&gt;ENT. RULES AND REGULATIONS I SEPTEMBER 23, 1971

LD. Carda are NON-TRANSFERABLE. Carda which are uaed illepUy
Jri11 be confiscated and tumed .,_
to the Oflice of Student Aftaino to be
retumed to the studenL Stndents
aocused of lending their carda to othera or using another's card Jrill be
biougbt before the Student Judiciary
and charged with violating the appropriate section o( the student Rules
and Regulations. · LD. Carda should
be carried at all times. · (ln case of
laos, a student sbould obtain a new
card from AV Communications Center, Room 1, Foster Hall, Friday ftom
12:()()..3:00 p.m.) A $2.00 charge is
made for replacemenL
3.50

PaoiiJnl

~

Errices to a&amp;udonJa ad ~ toD
insure all activities a ....x-'al pletion without _ . illjarils ar
property clamqe • a - a of ""''i......, or encr ar omio11ioD. .
·
Deputmeut ................ .......,.
oo-going activities. Wlal ~.
d.irecti- and 1
W lwlio•• are
issued for ct.azo.,s wbidl !MY iDdade
eliminatiab, "'dod:jtulio., ar alllntiaB
of portiona of an activil;y ar c1o8aite
OeBIII!ticn of a b*l activil;y.
Assistance ia .....,.. ad is eD!rCised in the .,._ of: lltadooat
asaembly, special actirilioa, ........,
propama, edza.cmricular adi¥iliioo, .
housing. food aerviae. ...., _ . .
tiona, fire protedilla. ..,.., adot.y. iD-.
sect control, accident inwldiptiaa ad
emergency .....,..._ trainin&amp; po.
grams.
Rules and ftesalatiaas are Dlt - ·
posed in a ainsle dcoc:umo!m; but, aasist of policies and poocedune ~
ed by the Enviromoental lleal1h ad
Safety C om m i ft e e; ndos ol tb8
SUNYAB ~ Couacil; ndos
promulgated by SUNY; lawB of
federal, state and guf&amp;iiU&amp;ital ..0.
divisions and standanla. pabliobod by
profeasional and tedmical aocietillo
which represent a of Dationwide. and often 'lll'IJdd.wide. ~
ion.
No periiDil shall intentiooally ""'to observe t-lth and safllty pocedures and regulalioao es'.t.!Mivotl for
the protection of per8DII8 ar Ill-""
on the campus.
Advice and aasistance oo iil!dtela
of enviromnental t-Jth and safllty ia
aVailable to all students ftom the Jl&amp;.
partment of Enviromnenlllrlliiiltband Safety, )liM ·~ Hall, 831- ·
5341.
,-

1. Vehicle Registmtion. Each student who drives 1r motor vehicle on
campus must register each vehicle.
During class registmtion there are
several locations set up and appropriately identified (or this purpose. After
class registration. the vehicle may be
registered at the Security Oflice or at
the Office of Student Accounts. Each
student sbaU be bound by the posted
and published traffic regulations. He
will be held responstble for all traflic
violations committed on campus with
any car, motorcycle, or other self-propelled vehicle registered in his name.
A copy of the complete State University of New York at Buffalo Vehicle
Regulations sbould be obtained during
class registmtion or from the Oftice of
Student Accounts or the Campus Security Oflice.
2. Permits. AU students must 00.
lain and aflii a permit for every vehicle parked on campus. Possession
of a permit entitles the holder to park
only if there is available space in the
allotted parking areas.
3. Special Permits. Students who
need special parking consideration (or
IV. ~ · HAll HOUSE RULES
health reasons, miiSt apply (or special
AND REGUlATIONS
permission from the Security Oflice,
4.00
196 Winspear Avenue.
No advertising ma1erial ar other
4. Parking Policy. Automobile parkliterature in any fonn may oo
ing on the campus is considered to be
the exterior surface of Nortlm Hall,
a privilege granted by the University.
including entry ways..
The administration is aware that at
AU private poups or per8DII8 wiobpeak periods there is a critical shortiDg to advertise or self any men:bomage of parking space and is attempt.
dise to students, faculty or alumni.
ing to keep up with the heavy demands
miiSt receive advance pennissjoa ftom
of a growing student and faculty
the Director, Associate Dilectm's Ofpopulation as eflicently as finances
ficeCounofcilNorton HaU and/or ftom Boase
and land permiL ln order to make
parking as equitable as pos&gt;ible, an
4.10 Alcaholc - - Alaolaal
effort is made to keep parking regu- - Caoma ' lations reasonable and to enforce them
AU provisicms of the New Yodo:
strictly. Each student is expected to
State Aloohol 8evefage Ccntnol law
work out a schedule of arrival at the
and rules of the State liquor .Antlxrcampus which will allow him time to
ity apply to Nortlm Unillll and the
find a legal parking place. Ignorance
State University of New York at Bufof regulations is not considered an
falo. Special attention should be paid
excuse for violation.
to the following regulations:
5. Parking is prohibited at a~
1. Any person who misoepuamts
on the roadways ( exrept as posted) ,
the age or a minor person under the
sidewalks, lawns, grounds, lanes, and
age of 18 years for the of
throughways of the parking areas. The
inducing the sale of any akobolic
University may tow away vehicles
beverage, as de6ned in the Alcobol
illegally parked and assess a charge.
Beverage Control Law, such minor, is
6. Parking Fines·and Penalties. City
guilty or an olrense and upon - . .
of Buffalo parking tickets are issued.
viction thereof sbaU be punisbed by
Anyone wishing to appeal a ticket
a fine of not more tban $50, or by
must arrange for such through City
imprisonment for not more tban 5
of Buffalo Traffic Court. University
days, or by both such fine and imcharges may be assessed for the towprisonment. (ABC Law, Article 5,
ing of illegally parked vehicles.
Section 65-A) .
7. Liability. The University accepts
2. Any person under the aae of 18
no liability Cor loss or damage to a
years who presents or o«ers to any
motor vehicle or its contents.
licensee under the Alcobol Be.aaae
3.55 Abandoned Vehicles
Control Law, or to the ..,..,t ar emA motor vehicle sbaU be deemed to
ployee of such a liceDsee. any writteD
be abandoned if left for more tban
evidence of age which .is
seven days in olte spot. The vehicle
ulent or not actuaUy his """shall be disposed of in accordance
purpose of purchasing ar a~
with the Ia~. 'E)&gt;e last ~gis~
to purchase any akobolic bew!nee.
owner of an aband~or vehicle
may be arres'ed or SUii!iDill!ed and be
be liable to the
'versity for the
emmined by a magistrate bavinc iuroost of ~ sto
\etc.
\
~
isdiction on a charge of iiJepiJy _.:
3.60 Clwlp ill a....~
1
chasing or attempting to illepUy purEach ~t1;~ed to keep . chare any alcolohic beosqe. (Article
1
Adm.issioiul, ancl ~ informed r
5, Section 61&gt;-B).
his
\\
No retailer abeiJ pennit ar Sillier
1
thereof.
to as an eo-a.er. em any
3;70 Emil
· ~- , ~ , I
premises liceDoed !!w ieblil sale benoled 1
of the .en-· \ under, any periiDil undeo: the aae of
vironment III!Ci&gt; ~
of Pemonal \ •. 18 yeani. Fai1we to - . i n such a
and
1118 !" ~- po of. the
periiDil ftom .. appmiDc abeiJ be
Department :of
Heoilth
cleeme4 to ODDiti(AIand Safety. Peraomiet of ihe ciepilrt..
llde 8, Seclioa 100. 2-8).
ment provide ~taiM ·~ '. direct
"- No periiDil u..-1 to aell aJco.

--.c

false,=

msiling::r.d' ~any ~

~

En~

\

-

\\.

··\
,(

',

3.

~

�bolic be\leJ"ageS sball sulfer or pennit
aJQ' gambling on the licensed premises, or sulfer or pennit such premises
10 become disorderlY. (Article 8, Section 106, 6) .
4..15 Alcohotic - - Hatton Council RqulaHons

·'

1. Only alcoholic beverages purchased from the licensed FSA Food
Service at the State University of New
York at Buffalo are permitted in Norton Union.
2. Beer will be sold in the Rathskeller only during the posted hours.
3. Alcoholic beverages may be
served "in the Tiffin Room during its
hours of service other than regular
operating hours. Permission to do so
must be obtained from the Director
of · Food Service.
· 4.. Alcoholic beverages may be served
in designated a.reas in Norton Hall
only at events catered by Food Service.
.
5. Alcoholic beverages purchased in
the Rathskeller, Tiffin Room, and
rooms for catered events, must be
consumed only within those rooms.
6. The possession or consumption
of alcoholic beverages in the howling
alleys and pool room is prohibited.
7. The possession or consumption
of alcoholic beverages in other than
designated areas in Norton Union is
prohibited.
4.20 care ond Use of Focllities

Proper care and use of furniture,
equip_m ent, and materials is required
at all times.
No article or equipment belonging
to Norton Hall, such as furniture or
pictures, may be moved or taken from
the building, including the Terrace,
except by special permission of the
Director's Office.
Furniture may not be moved from
one room to another without specific
permission from the O_perations Office,
or the Associate Director's Office. Animals are not permitted in the
building at any time.
4.25 Chedting Areas

Books, coats and parcels should be
checked in areas provided. This includes checkrooms and the special
cafeteria chairs.

Norton HaJi daM not aBDDe the
responsibility for lost articles. A lost
and found service is provided at tbe
Information Counter.
4.30 CCiunler
Tables · .Day be .reserved only by
recognized student g r o u p s in tbe
Lobby areas. Exceptions to the rule
may be granted by House Council.
Amplification systems may . not. be
used on tbe first floor, or the basement except with special permission
granted by Norton Hall administrative
staff and!or House Council.

T-

4.35 Dec:onlllono

Plans for any room alterations (such
as wall fixtures, additional furniture,
drapes, or curtains) should be made
in consultation with the oflice of tbe
Business Manager of Norton Hall.
Scotch tape may be used to attach
material to any glass surface. Masking tape may be used on any other
surface in the building.
·
' Decorations may not be n a i I e d,
taped, glued, stenciled, painted, etc.
or a ttached to floors, walls, or furniture inside or outside of the building.
Organizations must furnish their
own supplies and remove decorations
within 24 hours after an event. Organizations will" be held responsible
for this task.
4.40 Eligibility tor Activities

Full-time students in good academic
s tanding are eligible to participate in
activities.
4.45 Food

Food and beverages may not be
taken from food areas to other areas
of the building, even from one food
service to another (such as Rathskeller to first floor cafe:eria ) .
4.50 Hours

Building hours a rc posted. Announcements are also made prior to
closing. Loitering in the building is
not allowed after closing hours. Special permission to remain in the building after hours must be a pproved by
the Night Manager on d uty, for im·
media te e mergencies, or by the As~
s istant Director for a dvance approval.
4.55 Umitation of Facilities

The Coordinator of Student Acti vities I a lso the Director of Norton Hall )

with tbe approval of tbe Vice President for Student A1l'aim, bas tbe prerogative of limiting any event taking
place in Norton Hall to students and
faculty of tbe University because of
tratlic control, schednling and related
problems. Only recognized groups are
allowed to reserve meeting rooms.
4.60 ...
All posters, announcements, signs,
etc., for tbe billletin hoard must be
submitted to tbe Operations Office,
Room 115 for approval, staff signature, and posting. Material posted
without approval is subject to immediate removal and discard.
Poster making, art work, etc., is restricted to Room 007. Material posted
will be discarded after tbe event unless hold is requested.
4.65 Recognition of Groups

When a group is recognized, it bas
tbe privileges and use of the facilitie!! which accompany recognition.
For a group to be recognized, · it
must officially "register with the Coordinator of Student Activities, listing
the names of its current officers and
must subsequently submit a constitution to the appropriate student government. It must also have an approved faculty advisor who is either
a full-time professional staff member
or faculty member. Final recognition
can be given only by the appropriate
student government.
Norton Hall house privileges may
be granted for a six-week period by
the student government and the Norton House Committee while recognit ion steps are being taken.
4.70 Recreational Area Restrictions

Card playing, chess, checkers, and
other table games are restricted to the
card room in the Recreation Area
l Ground F loor) . No portable microphone or amplification equipment is
a llowed in the area.
4.80 Reservations &amp; Room cancellations

R e q u e s t s for rooms and dining
rooms in Norton Hall shall be submitted to the Reserva tions 0 f f i ce,
Room 223. All groups except students,
ra culty and a lumni will be assessed
special service charge.
Conference rooms and other facili·

ties sball be assigned in tbe order
in whiCh requests are made. Consideration is given to tbe size of tbe
g r o u p and tbe available facilities:
Cancellation of rooms 8ball be made
in tbe Reservations Office within 24,
hours prior to tbe data of tbe evenl
4.90 Sollcltotlons

No private commercial enterprises
sball be allowed to operate on tbe
State University campuses or in tbe
facilities furnished by tbe University
other than those approved by tbe
Board of Trustees regulation of May
12, 1966.
The use of commercial photOgraphers for any function beld in tbe building must be approved by tbe House
Council.
4.95

All · J;U)es and regulations of the
State University of New York at Buffalo shall apply to Norton \Inion.
V. OFFICE OF STUDENT ACCOUNTS
5.00 Poyment of Tuition ond Fees
Reeulotlons

The el&lt;8ct amount of the students'
charges is determined at registration.
Payments should be made by check
or money order payable to tbe State
University of New York at Buffalo
for the amount due. Personal checks
are accepted subject to deposit. Payments forwarded by mail should be
addressed to the State University of
New York at Buffalo, Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A, 3435 Main
Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. The
student number should be used to
identify each paymenl The payment
of additional tuition incurred by a
part-time student as a result of adding
a course subsequent to registration
must be made on the date of the
change of course. Additional fees may
be assessed for late registration, late
pay ment, and inoompletes.
5.10 Tuition Credit

When a student registers it is specifically understood that he will pay
in full for all charges assumed at
registration. Failure or inability to
attend class, formal or informal with·
drawa l, or reduction in schedule does
not change tbe payment due or entitle
the student to a refund.
e However, if a student formally resigns, changes from full-time tO parttime, or on a part-time basis reduces
his schedule by directly notifying the
Office of Admissions and Records within the first four weeks of a regular
(not summer ) ..,mes\er, he will receive a tuition credit. In such cases,
tuition only will be prorated. This
credit can be applied on tbe payment
of tuition and fees for sutlsequent
semesters or refunded at tbe Otlice
of Student Accounts on requesl
5.20 Mllltory Refund

A student called to active duty in
any branch of military service during
a regular semester may receive a refund upon · presentation of his active
duty orders to tbe Otlice of Student
Accounts.
5.30 Unpold University Accounts

A student with an unpaid and overdue university account will not be
permitted to re-register for tbe follow,
ing semester, nor will be be entitled
to receive a statement or transcript
of his credits until his indebtedness
is settled. Tbe University daM not
act as a co1Jection asency for commercial outside groups or indi~
5.40 ,..,.._

-~

· r·

No student is eligible to ~ a
degree certificate of a~lishment,
or honorable dismissal until all charges due to tbe University or to any of
its relatAlcl divisions are paid in full,
and all University property bas been
returned in acceptable conditiOn.
The University reserves tbe riibt
to chan11e or add to its fees at any
time,· ·Official fuformatioo concerning
tuition and fees and tbel1 payments
should be obtained.)roni tbe Office of
Student Accounts. (831-4731)
II a student i5 diamiased from the
University . or any of its related divisions for cause other than academic
deficiency, all fees paid or to be peid
sball immediately beconie .due. and
payable and sball be forfeited.
SEPTEMBER 23, 1971 I STUDENT RULES AND REG-ULAT;ONS 1 P_!!ge 4

�5eptJembe&lt; 23, 1971

&lt;REPORTER,

5

SUnshine I:Iouse ~Competently Cares' About ~eople in Trouble
c--xbe word csunshine' implies
warmth and light---&lt;;o we call
ourselves the Sunshine House
since we hope to provide warm
and compassionare help for
those who need it."
That's the sell-description of
a rescue counseling service for
those . involved in "bad" ' drug
experiences which has been in
operation on i:an)pus sinoo last

May.
Run by a "family" of some
20 students who "care,'' Sunshine H o u s e bas to dare
reached out to 400 individuals
in trouble. Tile service, however, is not limited to drug_ related problems. As the organizers and operators put it, "Our
structure and functions will ~
determined by the needs and
uses to which it is put." And
to dare those needs have included suicide prevention, runaway problems and other personal crises.
24-Hour 'Hot Une'
.
Sunshine House is: a 24-hour
" hot line" (831-4046 ), a walkin service for those who want to
communicate in-person, and a
reach-out service for individuals in emeigency situations
who lack transportation. It bas
also functioned as an uon-site.,
rescue agency at rock festivals
and plans to do more of this.
.,And while not in exisrenoo " to
preach the evils or values of
drug use," -it "provides concrete
information, h o n est opinions
and counseling assistanoo" and
is' developing a program embodying these elements which
can be presented to Wesrem
New York area secondary
schools. All its services are free
and strictly confidential; all its
members are volunteers.
This fall , Sunshine House,
which has won endorsement of
its activities from such agencies
as the Family Service Society,
Campus Security, the Student
Health Servioo and the Stare's
Narcotic Addictio n Control
Commission, is functioning under the wing of the Campus
C ommunit y Action Corps. _
Through that agencv, it is in
line for a budget of $9,100 from
the Student Association, the
largest portion of which will go
toward the leasing of a house
for its operations. 1To dare, Sunshine House bas been using the
second floor of College E's
house at 108 Winspear_ The
Collegial&gt;! Assembly, however,
could make the spaoo available
only for the summer. New
space is imperative if the program is to continue. (Sunshine
House still maintains the
round-the-clock telephone servioo at 108 Winspear but its offices are teroporarily . in 220
Norton. )

'

highly skilled in dealin~ with a didn't know where tD go for
wide scope of some of our most help,'' he says.
pressing and complex problems.
Arlotta, is a former Navy
"Their services fiU a gigantic corpsman in Vietnam who was
'gap' not only within the col- larer stationed at a psychiatric
lege -community, but, in fact, clinic at St. Alban's Naval Haswithin the entire city, with pita!, Long Island, and then
special emphasis u p o n the worked as a cross-country truck
North Buffa lo area, with it&gt;; driver. He decided last March
currently high concentration of to go back ID school. Having
young people ( 16 to 21 years seen drug problems in the sera( age ). This 'gap' is the sense vice and recognizing the probof fear and mistrust which, des- lem that exists here, he says,
~!:'tinn•~:!?tow,:'~w~~~o.:; ~~~~ti!oit~ything I can to
Both young men emphasize
troubled youth and any 'cstablishment' agency.
the notion that Sunshine House
"Being ooUege/community jg designed to serve as a bridge
based and operated, 'Sunshine between the youth of Buffalo
House' is in the unique and en- and the agencies, services and
viable position of not only professionals available to aid
having gained trust, but also ~- It's a cooperative venof having at its disposal the tufl'.
vast professional resouroes of
~'Brien, in fact, says that bethe University and surroundin g fo
the program was funcoommunity which allow it to ti ing, its representatives endeal in an unusually suocessful listed help in establishing opermanner with the peculiar prob- ations and training personnel
!ems revealed to it through that from Suicide Prevention and
trust. Coupled with this, 'Sun- from such U/ B facilities as the
shine House' possesses the ded - Psychiatric Clinic and the Stuication, integrity, dynamism, dent Counseling Center.
and sense of de ep purpose Specific Gools
which today can, perhaps, be
There were three specific
most effectively channelled by goals for Sunshine House: 1. )
members of this same youth to set up a referral file for indigeneration.
viduals in trouble (not just a
Not Romantic Idealists
list of agencies, but a compila"Such a starement, however, tion of s pecific individuals
should not be miaconstrued into within agencies to whom youths
New peraoMel are impor- some notion of an idealistic, ro- might be referred); 2.) to set
tant, too, and all this week manlicized, unstruc;ured group up, in addition to the telephone
Sunshine House is manning a of well meaning students whose service, a physical fa c i I i t y
table in the Norton Lobby in energy will be burnt out in a wbere people on bad drug exorder to enliat 20 additional few weeks. To tbe exact con- periences could come in person
volunteers. 'nlose who are sel- trary, the administration and to talk or "crash;" and 3.) to
ected will be put through an staff of 'Sunshine House' are provide emergency aid for overhard-head, common sense indi- dose cases (first aid; transporintensi~ one--to-one training
session with the present corps viduals dedicated to the estab- tation to hospitals, if necessary;
lishment
and continuation of an procurement of · a physician;
of volunteers before going to
work with those in trouble. Tile organization which can be of providing someone to stay at
immediare
and concrete assis- tbe hospital with the person
20 who worked over the . summer are also undergoing ~~~ tanoo to any member of the' in trouble.) As O'Brien descommunity
regardless of age or cribes it, "We find out about
training," based on the .expera problem wben a person calls
iences pined in the first three type of problem."
Jerry
O'Brien,
20, an en- in; but that's just the beginmonths ol tbe program.
. Tbis intensive and serious vironmental design and psy- ning. Usually we'll ask them
training (in first aid and coun- chology junior, and Greg Ar- orto ~t ~~ ,:ve'll go get them
· - ~..,.,._
seling and intervie\Wlg tech- Iotta, 23, a Navy vereran and
Arlol:ta tells of a call from
niques) is both a hallmark of social welfare freshman, are
Sunshine H~ and a reason typical' members of the Sun- a . suicidal vereran (who had
shine House family.
been an :Army sergeant in Vietfor its auooeas.
O'Brien, who did some work nam and had seen hi.- entire
Tbis [fOJD a letrer of
of
a
similar
nature
at
the
Uniplatoon wiped oul in an amendorsement' from the Narcotic
Addiction Control Commission vemity ol Rochester before bush). 'll&gt;e.c:aller was slashii1g
transferring
here,
has
been
inbis
arm as he !IPOI&lt;e to Sun· ~&gt;Mrs thil out:
•
" '&amp;mshine Houae' bas, in a volved in tbe local propam · shine Houae. Mi.otta tried to
since
it
was
oooceived
last
De·
calm
him a n d u r g e d tbe
abort _... ol !i-r IJI8lle tl defcomber because he feela "it's a tzoubled young man to meet
worthy thing to do.':' "' had him at Emergency Hospital
:ete=~= seen
too many young - l e em (just a abort walk from tbe calto serve. Staff members (are)
- · . tborouihlY profeosional and bad drug e:o:periences who ler's home). ~ rushed

__
1

.,..

down there, saw that the man
got the medical atrention he
needed and offered other assislanoe. Today, this despondent
vereran is under psychiatric
care at the VA Hospital where,
Arlotta says, he is making real
progress.
No Counselllll on Hard Drugs
A local physician, Dr. Ronald Levy, founder of the methadone clinic at Meyer Memorial Hospital, works very closely
with Sunshine House as do
other physicians on and offcampus. And some of the Sunshine House 20 are medical and
nursing students at the University. Because of these resouroos
and the knowledge and experience of other members, SWlshine House is comperent to
handle "O.D.'s" and other medical emergencies, although its
primary thrust is oounseling on
soft drugs and hallucinogens.
"We don 't feel qualified to do
actual counseHng on hard
drugs," Arlotta and O'Brien ex.plain. In such cases, they offer
referral to one of several good
heroin addiction programs in
the city.
Sunshine House goes about
seeking out those who need
help through public service an noWlcements on the popular
local rock •lAtions WV~L one!
WPHD and through advertisements in Lbe w•detground and
student press. 1t has ruso had
referrals frOm community agencies such as Suicide· Prevention,
Family Serviae and a similar
HELP p r o g r a m at Buffalo
Stare. In addition ID helping
young people, workers have
also answered inquiries from
parents having difficulties with
children and {rom housewives
hooked on capsules.
Arlotta and O'Brien emphasize that the Sunshine House
group doesn't moralize. They
help first with the iminediate
problem. They also have factual and objective information
available on drug use and
abuse. But the decision ID do
something about a problem is
up to the individual. "We try
to be as objective as possible,''
O'Brien explains. Only somelimes will they push. An example of such an exceptional
case would be the "speed
freak" who is aware of what he
is doing but is not able to do
anything about it. In this kind
o£ case, 0' Brien says, Sunshine
House tries to provide alternatives and offers moral support.
"Most soft drugs aren't a
s ub st itute for anything,''
O'Brien emphasizes. "They are
simply a tool ID get high. A
problem arises if the drug begins to control the. user- which
can happen with any drug,
from alcohol to heroin. Through
conoorn and trust we try to find
out why the control was lost
and to help the individual find
it again in himseU. That's the
differenoo between inrelligent
drug use and drug abuse."
Future Plans

Sunshine House's f u t u r e
plans call for an emphasis on
more aggressive action. Insread
of waiting for those in trouble
to seek them out, the group
plans to go out to the community ID help where drug trouble
does or may exist and assist
in warding off such di11iculties
through educational programs.
Tile recent campus rock festival provides an emc&gt;ple of how
Sunshine House can be of asaistance in a porentially dangerous situation. Tile group
was asked by the Student
Health Service to set up a rent
to treat an., problems ""'"'Cted
./;,o crop-up because ol tbe nature of tbe eYI!IlL As it tumed
out, tbe Sunshine House tent
bandied all first aid, from
broken fingers to a coronarya total of 40 cases both drugrelated and DOL Three beda in

tbe rent were in full use
throughout the festival as were
four or five beda back at the
house. A local rock promorer
who viewed this work on campus has asked Sunshine House
to undertake a smiliar servioo
at a Memorial Auditorium concert next month. ·
O'Brien explains that rock
conoorts can be drug nightmares. Drugs are usually for
saJe or are given away at these
events, he nores. And individuals, in the euphoria of the IDDment, oftea take drugs with
wbich they are not familiar;
many times they don't even
know wbat they have taken.
Sunshine House, he feels, has
the expertiae to derermine what
drug bas been taken and to
know what to do when trouble
develops. This is a valid service, the Sunshine House
spokesmen feel. Without it, the
drug victim could easily get
lost in the pandemonium of the
event and seri ou s problems
might ensue .
Education•! Pros:ram
Arlotta is working on the educational program with Professor Don l&lt;oberts of the School
of Informacion and Library
S,udies. A packaged multimedia presentation, involving
tapes, film strips, pamphlets,
c.c., is being developed to objectively acquaint high school
sLudents with the drug problem. Arlotta nores that in most
such efforts drug use and drug
abuse rend to be lumped 10gelher. The Sunshine House
program, however, will differentiat.! between the two. One
high school bas already made a
de!inire commitment for the
presentation and Arlotta expects that onoe it is fully developed, there will be a demand from schools througbout
the area.
Although both O'Brien and
Arlo tta are articulare spokesmen for Sunshine House, they
would be the first ID indica!&gt;!
they are not the spokesmen.
The House divides its work
into four areas, each of which
is supervised by a committeetraining, communications, files
and referrals and public relations. Each of these commitrees, in tum, elects a representative to a fifth commitree,
Planning a n d Coordination,
which, in effect, is the governing body of 1he House.
'Competently C.rinc'
John M. Mercurio, director
of the Narcotic Addiction Control Commission's local Drug
Counselling Center, describes
the work of these volunteer students as that of "competently
caring."
He goes on to say what
otbers-both professionals and
those wbo have been helpedfeel about the program: "'11le
presenoo of 'Sunshine House' is
of immense importance-perhaps of absolure necessity-if
we are ever to make any real
progress in the oompledy
problematic areas of our society, which seem to be oo
highlighted among our young
people. . . lts#'rk must not
only continue, but grow and
spread."

Mrs. Palmer Feted
Mrs. Irene Palmer, recently
retired as Faculty Club ._,_
tionist, was honored by tbe
C I u b with a reooptian last
Thursday afternoon. At the
party, the G.-. Room (the
reading room across tbe ball
fnim tbe card room on tbe aecond floor) was ollicially renamed tbe "Palmer Room."
Tbis is the room in which Mrs. ,
Palmer had her desk. It contains maple furniture from the
Old Faculty Club. Mrs. Palmer
served as Faculty Club ._,_
tionist for 17 years.

�September 23, 1911

6

Exec Conlmittee &amp;rrs
About Library Crisis
Discussions of the so-called
"library crisis" took up most of
last Wednesday's meeting of
the Faculty Senate's Executive
Committee. And it was expected to be one of the major
conoems when the body met
yesterday.
On September 15, Dr. Lowell
Scboenfeld, cbairman of the
Senate's- Committee on Information and Library Resources.
presented the Exedrtive Committee with a ~ fCICUIIini on
severe finaocial and stafi problems facing the University Libraries. Scboenfeld pointed out
that 63 out of 245 positions
within the Libraries are vacant
and frozen by the state. or the
opeoinp, ~ are professional
positions, which reduces stafiing by one tbinl Scboenfeld
warned the Elrecutive Committee to expect
~
·"iocluding
high level
administrr.tive stalL ..
In addition to stafiing problems, the. report noted that "it
is the feeling of various members of-. the committee that the
Libraries have not received a
fair share of the budget in recent years and that increased
(liDding is essential" 'The committee, however, "is not in a
position to fully document
either this position or an assumption on completely general
grounds that the Libraries
could make better use of the
funds they presently have."

u- -

'The report concludes by recommending that the Executive
Committee take the necessary
steps to unfreeze as many of
the professional positions as
poosible. It also suggests the
Elrecutive Committee bring the
need for increased funding to
the attention of the administration.
'The Erecutive C o mmittee
took this suggestion one step
further and pasaed a resolution
asking President Robert Ketter
to discuss this ''major problem"
with Albany during the fall
budget ~- They alsO
urged the Scboenfeld Committee to meet with anyone concerned to discuss the dimensions of the problem. This information gathering process is
considered "urgent" by the Executi\oe Committee.
Schoenfeld's comm i ltee of
seven, which includes representatives from all the faculties

and the Library, is now conducting a "general study."
A rapid solution to the problems of Libraries' budget and
staffing is doubtful Curtailed
hours will continue as there are
no plans to change them, an
administration source says. In
addition, attempts to unfreeze
positions have been unsuccessful. "'The Libraries will have to
continue their wide variety of
service as best they can given
the circumstances." this source
says.
A Crlllo

Sbonnie ~ University archivist and a member of
the Faculty Senate, calls !,be
present situation a "crisis within the Libraries and the . University at large." She and two
other senators from the Libraries-Mary Brady and Madeleine Stem-believe it "might
have been avoided had legitimate channels of governance
and communication been available." To facilitate the opening
of these channelll, the three women have asked Dr. Myles
Slatin, director of Libraries, to
"immediately transmit the bylaws formulated by the elected
Libraries' By-Laws Committee
for consideration and ratirlcatioo by the professional stafi."
These by-laws were given to
Slatin in eany July.
In addition they urge Slatin
to "work wiih existing faculty
library committees to facilitate
the resolution of the most urgent problems affecting the Libraries and that effective means
of establishing mutually acceptable priorities be sought."
The financial problems of the
rest of the campus were also
discussed at the Executive
Committee meeting. Dr. William Baumer, chairman, was
instructed to invite President
Ketter to discuss U /B budget
and budget priorities with the
group. The committee hopes 10
provide Ketter wiUl. "infonnal
input on budget matters."
-AIIairs

In other actions, the executive group issued standing invitations to Vice President for
Academic Affairs Bernard Gelbaum and Vice President for
Health Aflairs Clyde Randall
to attend its sessions. 'The
group also decided to allow any
member of the Senate to attend
Executive Committee meetings
as an observer. Meetings are
held ever)' Wednesday at 2:30
p.m. in ~1 Hayes.
Trallic violations at Ridge
'lbe Committee also re-inwill now be subject to stated its Standing Committee
Town of Amherst tickets, Ray- on Student Aflairs. 'The memJDODd Hunt, environmental bership was allowed to lapse .
'-lib and safety ollicer, an- last spring wben Conner chairnounced last ......._ This new man Dr. Larry Green suggested
policy will bring Ridge Lea abolition. This summer, Dr.
under resuJations similar to the Claude Welch sent a memo to
South Campus where Bullalo the Elrecutive Committee urgtraftic tickets are banded ouL ing its restoration. The SenU n d e r the new resuJatious, ate group did so and appointed
campuo -=ity olicorB and him chairman. Wei&lt;;h feels
Town of Ambent -Police are ·' there is no lack of islue&amp; for
the committee to coosider."
:X::'!:tione~ ~
Poosible examples are "more
citations for moving violations. meeningful s t u d e n t involveParking fines are $5 euept ment in University matters"
when a vehicle is not J&gt;f!'P!'I1T and the delays involved in obregisllnd. 'The fine fiX this of- taining transcripts. Welch
..._ ill $10. All tap and cita- hopes balf of the committee
tions must be paid at the Town will be students, with the reof Amherst CourL Village Hall, maining half coming from repWilliamsville.
resentatives of the University
community. 'The new cbairman

Ridge Lea Tickets
x-

r:

~=..~~

. the group's emphaSis. 'The old
Student Alfaira Committee's
charge .,;n prOOebly be re-

tained. ~-u... dutieo&gt; defined

""-By, be .......... In
........... Welch "hopes the committee will "buiid and -a.lain bridJ!"S ~ r.:ulty
and llludoatL.

G(JJB
GNOTES
By 'D'
With the kick-off meeting
last Wednesday, the University
United Fund Campaign is underway. 'The goel--$100,000.
We are attempting to complete
the campaign by October 18, a
mere five weeks to contact 5,000 people. Incidentally, an error in the computation of the
quota for the Law School, actually a misPlaced comma,
placed its goel at $15,000. 'The
comlCI quota is $1,500. Maybe,
the Law School would be willing to go ahead with the original figure?
. •

.

Dr. Samuel B. Gould, chancellor emeritus of the State
University of New York, has
been appointed -vice president
of the Educational Testing Service and president of the Institute for Educational DevelopmenL · lED is a non-profit organization which c o n d u c t s
studies of innovative and developmental programs for the improvement of education.

...

Carl E. Lipsius, former as8&lt;&gt;ciate director of placement at
the University at Buffalo, has
been named assistant to the
president of the University of
Florida. Carl had been serving
as dean of student affairs at
Lake City Community College,
Lake City, Florida. for the last
three years. At U/B, Carl also
served as assistant to the dean
of University College and as
associate director of the U/ B
Foundatio~

Congratulations to the School
of Medicine of the University
and especially 10 Dean Pesch,
Dr. Rckate, and Dr. Schenk lor
the program which has been
carried on at the Attica Correctional Facility for the last
five years. a nd for the tremendolL• job done during the recent
tragedy. - But, even more impor.ant, is the new proposal
which has been accepted by
the State Department of Corrections and Attica officials to
carry out an expanded health
care program for the inmates at
Attica.
Did you hear about the · impudent snob who jogged? He
developed !'thle.te's ~!fete:
Dean Rusk, ex-Secretary of

State, put it this way: "I'm optimistic about our young people. I find in them just as many
individual differences as in older people. '~
The Asiociation of American
Colleges and the American Association of University Professors have announced the establishment of a national conuniHsion on academic tenure in
higher education which will
make recommendations and issue a report .in mid-1972. Cochairmen of the commission,
which is supported by a Ford
Foundation grant of $125,000,
are William R. Keast, r.,.,._
president of Wayne -state University, and John W. Macy,
Jr., president of the . ~
lion :ror Public Broadaoiitilig
and former chairman till the
Civil Service CCJrrunWinn ,

SUNY Halts( contilwd from l ; col. 1 J
New Paltz, and Dr. ,W. W.
Westerfeld, profeMor and chairman, Department cif Biochemistry, Upstate Medical .Center.
Serving as an ts-o«icio men•bo!r of tbe panel Will be Dr.
William Webb. cbairman of the
SUNY Fllculty &amp;mate'o Committee ... Gqoduate Programs.
Dr. Wellb ill cli.ndor of Graduate
8tndim - the Col1e!le of
F..-,..

United Fund CampaignS
Arm Representatives
United Fund drive represen- George Miller, s u b-chairmen;
tatives for the University's cam- Faculty -Student Association:
paign sub-divisions were an- Mr. Richard Cudeck, Mr. Richnounced at last Wednesday's ard Scbnellkopf, Mr. Jobn Falk.ick-olf meeting in Goodyear k.ides, Mr. Edward Saindoll%,
Hall. 'The University goal for s u b-ehairmen; Financial Serthe drive, which ends October vi~: Mr. James !)tamp, sub18, is $100,000.
chairman; Purchasrng, General
The subdivisions and their Stores and Mail: Mr. Charles
Devendorf, sub-chairman.
representatives follow :
President's Office and ExecuAcademic Affairs: Dr. Bernard Gelbaum, vice president tive Vice President's Office: Dr.
for academic affairs, general Robert L. Ketter, presiden t;
cbairman; Mr. James Black- Dr. Albert Somit, executive vice
hwst, Mr. Albert Anderson, president; Dr. LawreRce A
Cappiello, general chairman;
sub-clurirtnen.
Communications Resources Mrs. Edna Thill, sub-chairman.
(University Libraries): Dr.
Research: Mr. Robert FitzMyles Slatin, director of Uni- patrick, acting vice president
versity Libraries; Mr. Chung- for research, general chairman; .
Kai Huang, general chairman; Mr. Richard Duffy, sub-chairMrs. Margaret Crisante, Ms. man.
Barb a r a Goldberg, Mr. Ed
Security : Mr. Jobn Bolland.
Student Affairs: Dr. Richard
Brudy, Miss Ksthleen Finaldi,
Mr. Alexander Jalso, Miss Pa- A. Siggelkow, vice president for
tricia Gay, sub-chairmen.
student affairs; Dr. Anthony F.
Computer Services: Mr. Gor- l.D~, associate vice presidon Lilly, director of computer dent ~ student affairs; Mr.
services, genera I chairman; H o w a r d B. Deuell, general
Mrs. Kristine Johnson, Mr. chairman; Dr. Jerome Fink and
Jobn Hansgate, sub-chairmen. Mrs. Doris R a b e, sub-chairGraduate School: Dr. Daniel men.
Murray, de a n; Dr. .AI)drew
Undergraduate Studies: Dr.
Holt, general chairman.
Charles Ebert, dean; Mrs. LesInstructional Communication lie Schneider, general chairCenter: Mr. James A. Ander- man; M i s s Dorothy Wynne,
son, director and general chair- Miss Diane Duntley, E PIS,
man; Mrs. Marguerite Briden- and Mr. Eddie Wright, physicbaker, sub-chairman.
al education, sub-chairmen.
Facilities Planning: Mrs.
University Relations : Dr. A.
Mary Basebart, secretary; Mr. Westley Rowland, vice presiJohn Volkert, general chair- dent for University relations;
man; Mr. Francis Meyer, Jr.• Mr. James DeSantis, general
and Mrs. Lucy Bianchi, sub- chairman; Mrs. Bonnie Walkes,
chairmen.
Mrs. Marion McGavem, ·Miss
Faculty of Arts and Letters: Donna Braun, sub-chairmen.
Dr. Gilbert Moore, acting proThe University at Buffalo
vost; Dr. Robert Sherk, general Foundation, Inc., and the Ofchairman; Ms. Clara Baideme, fice of Alumni Affairs : Mrs.
sub-chairman; Dr. Laurence A. Emily Ewald, repre:entative,
Michel.
U / BF; Mr. Jobn Carter, repreFaculty of Educational Stud- ::entative, alumni.
ies: Dr. Rollo Handy, provost;
Western New York Nuclear
Dr. Robert H e I I e r, general Research Center: Mr. William
chairman; Dr. E . Perry Hicks Hall, director: Ms. Virginia
and Mrs. Nancy Broderick, sub- Ryan, general chairman.
chairmen.
University United Fund camFaculty of Engineering and paign coordinators are: Mrs.
AP.plied Sciences: Dr. William Emily Ewald, Miss Emily WebGill, provost; Mr. Howard s ter, Mrs. Norma Haas, Mrs.
Strauss, general chairman; Dr. Juanita Monteith, Mrs. Jane
John Medige, Mr. William Be- Golebiewski, Miss Priscilla
rent, Mrs. Sara Frantz and Dr. Cloutier, Miss Diane Yeager.
Charles Bernier, sub-chairmen.
Faculty of Health Sciences:
Dr. Eugene Lippschutz, representing the vice president for
health sciences; Dr. Richard ~turns
Jones, general chairman; Dr.
On October 1, campus parkEdward Marra, School of Mcdi cine; Dr. William Feagans, ing lots will again be separated
into
faculty and student lots,
School of Dentistry; Mr. John·
Coulter, School of Pharmacy· the Trallic Control Advisory
Committee
announced TuesMr. Edward Frisch, School of
Nwsing; Dr. Joseph Nechasek day. During the summer all
lots,
except
Diefendorf, were
School of Health Related PrO:
open to both faculty and stuCessions.
dent
drivers.
This was an exFacultY of Law and Jurisprudence: Dr. Richard Schwartz, periment and caused "nothing
provost; Mr. William Greiner but problems," Raymond Hunt,
general chairman.
' environmental health and safeFaculty of Natural Sciences ty officer, said. A large number
and Mathematics: Dr. George · of complaints from bnth stuNancollas, provost; Dr. Gerhard dents and faculty prompted the
Cook, general chairman; Dr. return to separate lots. "It was
Walter Dannhauser and Mrs. a real fiasco,'' Hunt said of the
~ R. Schaefer, sub- open J&gt;'!!king. 'The problem was
especially bad in the Parker
Faculty of Social Sciences ·a nd Capen lots, be notacL
and Administration: Dr. Ira s.
'The familiar .......ten ~
Cohen, provost; Dr. Richard and key system will again fuiio.
Popp, genera) chairman; Mrs. tion in the faculty lots with the
Patricia Colvard and Mrs. June student spaces remaining open.
McMahon. sub-chairmen· Miss Kenneth Glennon, campus . .
J_uditb- Dinaoeldey, ~ta­ curity director, promises to entive, Schoof of Management; force the separate lot system
Prof. ~Iizabeth Harvey, repre- "as much as possible."
!"'1'-tative, School of Social Pol. The system of assigned spacICY '!"'i Community ServiceS. es ,for handicapped people will
-~•_liard Fillmore College/ also be enforced this fall. Com.J?ivision of Continuing Educa- plaints have been received by
tion: ~- Donald Brutvan, rep- both Glennon and Hunt about
resenting the dean; Mr. Donald people parking tn ·these spaces
HolmwoOd, general chairman· without the proper stickeJ:s.
Mr. Allan Canfield and Mr: Hunt explains that a physiRobert WelleP; sub-chairmen.
cian's statement is necessary to
. Operatioos and Systems: Mr. obtain this tYP!' of parking perKenneth Conklin, g e n e r a I miL 'l'hese assigned spaces are
chairman; PbysicaJ Facilities: given to people with p~sical
Mr. Bob Edwards, Mr. Lee handicaps and heart conditions,
Lemplr.e, Mr. James Smith, Mr. to severe asthmatics and others.

Separate Parking

Oct. 1st

�~23,U1l

G}U:f'(JITER..,

7

Ombudsmen to. Collegiate SystemMu*oa~-Biggest Fall Ever
Continue-on
"'&gt;&gt;r
two
two
Ad Hoc Basis
now
By. AUGUST PATUTO
u~ lnlortNtJon

The UniveraiJii• ombuds-

":!:"'.,; L., ~~oning,
Since September 1, when the

b::'f~

official ombudsman's term end-

eel, Drs. Robert Stem and Ar-

thur Butler have been "holding
the fort" in 10 Diefendorf AnThe holding action is neeessary bec:auae Albany called
for the phasing-out of both the
lludsman and ad
te f
~:S last year. ~~acul~
Sena~ however, urged the
preSident · to appoint a special
committee to 10!11&lt; into the matter bec:auae !hey supported the
work of the ombudsman. In
June, President Ketter appointeel a special committee, headed
by Dr. Georp Bobinski, dean
of the School of Information
and Library Studies, which will
issue a report in rnid-()ctober
on the advocate and the ombudsman.
Until then, Butler and Stem
plan to continue answering the
dozens of phone calls they re. dsil Both
full
::clung }.;..ds .,::"~ no
secretary to answer the pbone
and do the typing. But both
men believe strongly enough in
what the office does to keep
it going.
In a university this Size, they
feel, there's a real need for
DeL

·s .rnc-

The Colleldate System at
U /B bas nearly doubled in size
in the past year.
The colleges.-15 in number
-will offer 166 courses this
fall, compared to only 64 in
the fall of 1970. Enrollment;
too, is expected to mushroom
and top :f,700·
One of the largest increases
will come in the Women's Studies College ( WSC) , the newest
"'!""ber of the system. WSC
will offer 19 couraes in its first
year. Some typical offerings:
Women in Contempol111'f Society, History of Women m the
U.S., Women in Music, Women
in the Welfare System, and
Women's Consciousness in Literature.
Eleven of the colleges, inC
eluding WSC, will offer new
couraes:
o Coli
A 6
includin e~m:,uni":'ti~~
ativity,
Discovery through
Dramatic Techniques, and Interpersonal Process in Families.
• College B, 22 new couraes,
il)c!Uding the Philosophy of Envuonmental MIIIISternent, Concept of Culture, and the Nature
of Religion.
• College E, 4 new couraes,
including Creative Education
and Workshop in Prisoners'
Rights.

Lu

U'.emec:::'!v~at'i~
C:.~~ Co~~~d~=J
problems that arise. Moet of the Political History and Promthe csses the ombudsman's of-

fice handles come from clients
whom Stem and Butler describe
aswbo"nwason-aggressi...!"..:ial" !l umbtlueds-r,
the a~....
0
man during the office's first
year, ssys he approaches these
problems as a "mediator" wbo
doesn't allow himself to ''be
pushed to the point of judg-

::::l:.O~':diin~'!'

C.:bu.:!".i

ise of Political Change in
America.
• Clifford C. Furnas College,
6 new couraes, including Human Growth and Development,
Physical Biology, and Mathematics in Life Systems.
• Law and Society College,
3 new couraes: Violence and
Social Order, Civil Disobedi-

college offered only
courses
with no extra sections. This
fall, it is. offering 26 couraes
with 40 sections.

'Though the colleges are larger this fall, their funds are
smaller, down from ·$205,000 to
$180,000 l;&gt;ecsuse of a loss of
endowment.
Dr. Konrad von Moltke, director of the Collegiate Assembly, the governing
of the
colleges, said "everything possible is being done to avoid
cutting programs. Some of the
departments and faculties are

bodr

helping by taking on some of
the costs we would otherwise
have to carry when the costs
fall within their general area.
A few hundred dollars here.
Another hundred there."
von Moltke said the colleges
are also exercising tight internal budgetary controls to keep
operating costs down. He added
!hat relief may be comin~ soon
m the form of some additional
funds from the Academic AfJairs Office, which must approve all monies for the colleges.
.
A bright spot for the colleges:

DR.

GREPORTS

ON

GlLBERT VARET,

visiting

r=.rgg~c::~h~~tor of

OR.

IORDAN

WARNICK,

r:t-

assistant

professor, biochemical pharm:acol·
ogy; Ph.D ., Purdue University.

GJ&gt;EOPLE

~~~~~~=-J~::
~~
rector of a1umni programs and
the Golden Bull Fund.

DB.. THOMAS I. KALMAN,

assistant

professor, biochemical pharmacol ogy, received the R esearch Career
Development Award from the
N ational In stitute of General
Medical Sciences.

DR. WELLS FARNSWORTH ,

associate

su.~ t:'~~c:· ~}ocJpe::St!~~

Growth Support, Damon Runyon

Fund.

chairman,
computer science, $24,800, R esearch in Approximation Theory,

Oil ANTHONY RALSTON ,

NSF.

assistant profes.
sor, chemistry, $5,000, grant for
faculty development, Merck Co.
DR. FRED WUDL,

NEW CAMPUS
::::;e·o:im~~,:,bot;,~8~ APPOINTMENTS

equitable solution for the par- Order.
ties involved in a dispute.
• Mathematical Sciences oa. ROBERT BERGQUIST, research asH the office is to continue, College, 15 new courses, includ- sistant professor, microbiology;
Stem and Butler would like to ing Recreational Mathematics, M.D., KIU'Oiinska Institute.
see it remain pretty much · the Gambling, and Hormone Dy- DR. PIETRO Dl PRAMPERO, research
same. '!bey stress the retention namics.
·
associate professor, physiology;
of its independent nature and
• Rachel Carson College, M.D., Ph.D., University or Mipoint out that the ombudsman 24 new courses, including Food lano, Italy.
should feel free . to discuss and for a Hungry World, Mathe- ElJZABETHOOTSON, Iecturer,Leampoint out problems to anyone matical Ecology, and Urhan ing Center; B.A., Jersey State
including the president .Anthropology.
College.
• C.P; Snov.; College, 9 n.ew JOHN ELLISON, assistant prores''without causing the feeling 1
that there's a revolt within the courses, mcludmg Information sor, School of Information and
bouse structure" as Butler puts and Government Decision Mak- Library Studies; F.Ed., Southern
it. ~ would aha like the office !ng and Urhan Systems Stud- Illinois University .
to hfive the respect of every- le5.
DR. ROBERT GALLIVAN, .JR., assistant
one and the moral backing of
• Social Sciences College, proresso r, chemistry; Ph.D., Purthe president. Stem feels the 6 new couraes, includinf Pop due University.
ombudsman "should rank as a Music, Indo China Myth and DR. ROBDtT GRAH AM, associate pro·vice gresident in terms of ~ty, and the Press and So- resso r, School or Inronnation and
cloul
CJety.
Library Studies; Ed.D., Univerlf the continuation of the of•
• Vico College, 8 new COUf!;- sity or Michigan.
lice is deemed not feasible by es, includinf Classical and Me- DR. KENNETH INADA, associate prothe special committee and the dieval Political Philosophy and ressor, philosophy, named chairpresident, the two men will Time an~ Histori~ In9uiry.
man, Asian Studies Group.
drop their ad-hoc functioning.
Collegu~te ollicials v1.e"f the DR. JOSEF KADEK, vi.'&lt;iting research
Neither feels an informal om- 3, 700 figure as the muumum associate, geochemistry: Ph.D.,
budsman would be effective in fall enrollment. It may possibly Char I e s University, Prague,
• the long run. "It's not worth hit 4,300. Last fall's enrollment Czechoslovakia.
doing, until it's done right," was 2,047.
OR. RAY KRUG, assistant professor,
Stern emJ!hasizes.
Here are this year's project- fixed lprosthetics: D.D.S., UniverThe -ident's seven-mem- eel enrollment figures for each sity or Dlinois.
ber Committee on the Offices unit with last year's enroll- ANGELA LAUEY, instructor, medof AdYo&lt;iate and Ombudsman ments in parentheses: College ical technology; B.S., U/ B.
bas been meeting since June to A, 200 &lt;614 ); College B, 500 DR. JAMES LEE, clinical proressor,
completely examine the role of &lt;46 l; College E, 180 ! 40); medicine: M.D., Jefferson Medthese offices. They have been College F, 120 ( 74 ); Clifford ical College.
charged with: reviewing the C. ~ ~liege, 240 ( 21); DR. MARJORIE MIX, assistant prohistorical development of the Commurucations · Colle gil eo vast, Fa cuI t y of Educational
olli.--incll!lling the motiva- (2 18); International ,Co eg~, Studies, bas been appointed adtions for their creation and or- 280 (343); Mathematical Sci- . junct assistant proressor, Depsrtganizational pattern· studying ences College, 500 (80); New ment or Higher Education.
the offices' objective's and the College, 190 (213); Rachel 1liL LBONARD POPP, assistant proneed for any Change in objec- Carson College, 190 &lt;31 l; C ..~. ressor, elementary and remedial
tives; and as&amp;e£8ing the success 8J&gt;?w College, 240 ( 1 7); SocUil ed
ti
Ed.D U/ B
to date in meeting needs.
~ences Colfege, 360 (239);
uco on;
·•
·
The committee w b i c li in- V 1 co Co II e g e 200 {20); 1liL soas PRENnCE, visiting assiscludes faculty siatf and stu- Women's Studies College, 735 tant professor, atatiatics; Ph.D.,
dent mem~ is llDl&lt;ious to (no~ in emtence); La~ and Univeroity or Toronto.
receive comments from anyone ~ty College, 35 (not m ex- ANTHONY ROZAK, aasiatant pro=ia.art; M.F.A., Univeroity or
who bas had contact with theae istence) .
two ollioea. They want to hear
The number of courae secviews on both past perfOrm- ~ oft'"!"" by the co!Jeges CAIU. SRI:lNOOLD, aasiatant prores.,..
anoes and future needs. Any- will alao mcrease dramatically oor, ' oociology; B.A., Brandeio
one ~ to ~ to tf1e - 233 compared 'to only 69 last Univeroity.
committee 18 uraed to contact fall. Rachel Carson Co!J~JII' will 1liL IIAIWl K. SUIGH, profeooor,
Dean Bobinski at 3895.
lead the way. Last 1a11, that medicine; M.D., Harvard.

professor,

aa&amp;iatant

professor, biochemical pharmacol ogy, elected chairman of Buffalo
Biochemical Club.
DR . ROBERT L. KE'ITER, president,
elected a di recto r o f the Marine
Midland Bank-Western.

~:U~~o:f· s:=f'tpo~~

and Community Services, elected
to the Executive Board. of the
Intemotional Institute of Buffalo
a nd appointed a member of the
Latin American Committee of the
Anti-Defamation L eague, New

York City.

DR. ERWIN NETER, professor, pedi.
atrics, appointed chairman of a
study group on specifications and
sources for proficiency testing ma terials at National Conference on
Profi ciency T es ting. He has also
l:een e lected first president. Western New York bmnch, American
Society for Microbiology.
RENA'JE L. NEEMAN, instructor, OC cupational therapy , a ppointed to
the editorial board, American

Journal of Occupational Therapy.
HERMANN RABN, chairman,

DR.

~?~~~~·p
'ilien ~~t~n~
Academy of Science's new Institute for Medicine.
DR. DOUGLAS M . SURGENOR, professo r, biochemistry, will he a d a
new Greater Buffalo Red Cross
Chapter scientific committee that
will study the potential fub.lre
.uses or blood.

hai!

PRESENTATIONS
PIERRE

tfniv~1ty~~=~ti;;,r~~

c an Philosophical Aasociation.
Western Division Meeting, Chi-

DR. ERWIN NE"''f:2, professor, pediatrics, " Alteration of Immuno-

research as-

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

sponse to Rubella Virus," International COngress of Immunology.
DR. ARTHUR I . SCRAEFI:&amp;,

1

A U 8 E R Y,

~~:;,~etnet:'{~!~~rfo~o:r:.:;;

tic,~, ~~~ P~O::k~ ~:

sociation, Western Division Meeting, Chicago.
DR. JOHN CORCORAN, associate professor, tmilosophy, presentation
on goals and needs of his advanced research seminar on aem an tics and transformational
grammar, Mathematics and Social
Science Board, National Science

Foundation, Washington, D.C.

~~~ .?p:..S~t&gt;e~:O:r

clinical

:::!:c~ ap=r~n8'::"Xtl~J!j~
p Ia

s t i c lid surgery, AmericaD.

Academy or Ophthalmology meetmg.
DR. SVETOZ.AR STOIANOVIC,

visitin&amp;

professor, philosophy, .. Some ~
ftections on Marxism Today,"
" Vision of the New Men and
Three Models of Post-Revolutiona ry Development," Albion Col-

~is~i~i~~~~~~~ti~
College, Ohio.

'

resea.rcb manager, Western New York Nuclear
Center, Inc., chainnan, session on
Nuclear Methods in Mercury Pollution, American Nuclear Society
Meeting, Columbia. Miuouri.
C.C. THOMAS, IR.,

PUBLICATIONS
OR. PAUL A. BACON,

assistant vice

president, business affairs, "Cen-

tralized-Decentralized Purchasing

in

the

Academic

Institution,"

Journal of Purcluuing.

associate pro-ressor, philosophy, " Review ol
DeLong's Profile of Mathematical
Logic," Mathematical Revi£w.
Dlt. BERNARD GRI:ENBLA.Tr, 8.810Ci.ate professor, School of Social
Policy and Community Servioea.,
DR. JO HN COROORAN,

" Policy Analysis or Federal Support of Day Care and Nunery
Schools," 21st Annual Meeting
or the Society ror the Study of
Social Problems, Denver, Colorado.
DR.

professor,
French, " Montesquieu and the
Jews," read at the Thi rd Intern a tional Congress on the Enlightenment by DR. CHARlES BEYEil,
professor, French, who also presented his own paper, "Mon tesquieu et la philosophie de l'ord.re.''
DR. KAH KYUNG CBO, vi.iiting 85DR.

and Empirio-Criticiam," "Tbeol-

Immunology.

~=~ ofctt;:~~~i Pd:~~
DR. THOMAS I. KALMAN,

or Atheism," Wells College, Aurora, N.Y.; "Lenin's Materialism

DR. PEAB..-\Y L. OGRA,

mittee of Academy of Pharma ceutical Sciences.

GRANTS

~~~::;.~~~=.:'..!

~et~~t~~:O~ o&amp;,!;::£

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DR. TBOM/.8 I. BAROOS,

visiting pro-

DR. A.NTBONY FU:W.

cago.

DR. DONALD WOOps, clinical ins tructor, dentistry; D.D.S., U / B .

AWARDS

residential units are in operation for the first time thia
year. Some 140 students are
living in Macdonald Hall
so they can live, work, and
learn together as members ol
College B and Clifford Furnas
College.
The residence hall provides
a setting where students with
the same programs and concerns can meet easily among
themselves and with their instructors. A small group of
JrBduate students are also livmg in the dorm and will serve
as advisors.

FRANK

I .

HODGES,

aasociate

professor, and DIL MARVIN BLOOX.
associate profeSsor, School of Social Policy and Community Services, " D ay Care Centers?" Hu-

manist .
DRS. C. lUNG, C.Y • .lUNG, L.K. CABL-

~~~ ~;;:J·~~~
tivities in

E~tenaively

Wubed

Human Red Cell Ghoot.o," Biochim.ico et BWphy•ica Acta.
DIL EQWA&amp;D H . KADDCN, prof~'_

pbiloeo~, and ra. PEDa H. ~

'P'!':
.. u:.,~.J&gt;Ijf~~~; ·Canadian Phi.ID.tophical Review.
DIL AJ&amp;UIAM: MONK. usociate~

ressor, School ol Social p .
and Community Services, ••
ity in Community

Consultatio~"

lnternati.onlll Social Work; " Social Policies for the Aged:

A
Panonian Interpretation," Social
Work.
KENAn~ r... NIZILtN, instructor, oc-

Genetic Dioonlera," American and • ~:,~ttJI:::."&gt;::r ·~:S~
Canadian S o c i e t y of Clinical tardateo-Part n. Manipulative

-

Chemiato..

•

DR. IIW1VIH P - , distingujsbed

1::'!.-::J ~:."Ya~jecti~

ism and the Impact ol the Facta

J:btmoo!va,"

Brockport State

Umvenity ~

~

Dexterity and Pen:eptuaf Motor
Ability of Adoleocent and Young
Adult Mento! Retardates;" book

=

;L8'Bf::w,~inJic~

hpecl, American JounuJI of Oc-

cupGtiontJl 'l'herapy.

�8

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

••Open
.Open....,"'--.
"Open to public; ·

-In

mom..,; at the

to
~

c:am.ct -

........ 831-2228, for

THURSDAY-23
KNVJaQNII:DfT.AL ABNCTB OP CIIDT
- • : procram for pbyoic:iaDa

~
the oubjKt

lloti-

~~~~K=r::~
tie number. 'The opecial olrocta
and tbe electronic music - tnock are tbe hill-t poin"' tbe

Jove intereot between Nieloon,
::t...:'::""mt:~ ~=~ r;_~~d~~eK:Jlfi
~~~
~i!i·M~~~~~~=

~~"'!r""a--f'p~.=rt:

t=

itin&amp; speakers

and 22 health oci·

ence prof-.ionala. Devioeo uaed

!!ill~

~ 1~/::;.:

aentatives Tbunday only. In tbe

:Wr:=tio~~~nS~r liur:'~
8

;:::~~T~.
Francis
Tbe Thumla)! Nisht Mooie•
eeries offers the theme, Fantasy
and the Movies this semester.
Features are mostly science-fiction and horror films.. One show·
in.g only, unless there are more
than 500, at 8:00 p.m. in 147
Diefendorl.
L E C T U a &amp;•: Harrison Sal.isbury,
winner of many journalism
a w a r d a including the Pulitzer
Prize, assistant managing editor
of The New York Times, and author of many suocessful books,

=

PllOGBI:B8 IN C A N C &amp; 8 'I'1D&amp;APY:

opecial canoer teaching day pro·
0

~
~w:t!! w~~
Northwestern Pennsylvania. New

developments and changes in tbe
chemotherapy of cancer aa well
as multiple chemotberepy will be
diocussed. Co-sponsored by the
Reponal Medical Program for
Western New York and the &lt;Jen.
e:.ee County Unit of the Ameri·
can Cancer Society. Participants
include Dr. Thomas G. Petrick
of Batavia; Dr. Arnold Mittelman
and Dr. James F. H'!lland of
RooweU Park Memorial IDstitute;
Dr. Richani Cooper of Buffalo
General Hospital; Mrs. Audrey
Tuttolomondo. R.N., R o s w e 11
Park; and Mn. Patricia Hoff,
R.N., of the Reponal Medical

Program. Persons interested in

attending may contact the American C a n c e r Society, Genesee
County Unit, 8 Bank Street, . Batavia, New York for reservations.
Will be held at Holiday Inn, Batavia.
PHYSIClANB TELEPHONE lECTURE# :

Dr. Ross Markello, E.J. Meyer
Memorial Hospital, TB.AID44 CONFmENCE-"Resu.scitation of the
Injured," sponsored by Regional
Medical Program, 62 receiving
locations, 10:30 a.m.
PD..M•: The Black Panthera in

!';::Jcaby A~ilmB:~o'tiuJ::i

Union, the UUAB Film Commit·
tee Directors' Series. Features
include The Murder of Fred
Hampton, ~n!erence Theatre,
p.m.
Stagoke,
interview· with
bby Seale, Conference Theatre, 2 : 30 p.m. Free.

1:00

an

PHYSICAL THERAPY TElEPHONE

LIX}-

TUIIE# : Dr. Gerald C. Kraft, INTBODUC'I'ION

PHY,

aim il a r i ty between this and
Shakeopeare's Temx:;, Starrin&amp;

TO

EL&amp;C'TROMYOGB.A-

sponsored by Regional Med-

ic;:al Program. 62 receiving locations, 1 p.m.

~

C BE M: I CAL ENGINEIJUNC SEMINAil0: Dr. L. B . Wingard, Jr.,

Department

of

Pharmaceutics,
PIIA.KMACOKINETICB : DRUG OONCEN-

fRATION AND BISULTING F.FF£lCT AS
i'UNCJ'JONB OP TIME, 5 Acheson.

1 p.m.

EXP!':B.IMENTAL PIL148 • :

Un. Chien

-~~~j.aj;M~~'(M:,t;'~~: ~~li

Life and Death of a HoUywood

llED CHINA -

ASIA, sponsored by the Student
Association and the G r a d u a t e
S t u d e n t Association, Fillmore
Room. · Norton, 8 p.m.

Eds•r::ef~~,!r u?'~~

as the lint ..-ui innovation in
American newapapers in 20 years,

Salisbury was the first American
journalist to visit North Vietnam
(1967). He returned to Asia in

!: ·to~~ge:rrs~rothemi~Jb~

9

zone-the Sino-Soviet frontier. He
has assessed the critical tensions
between Russia and China along
their frontier and in the listening
posts of Tokyo, Hong Kong,

Seoul, Moscow, Paris and London
and his diopal&lt;:hes have estoblish·
ed him as one of the outstanding
authorities on this part of the
world

FRIDAY-24
ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS OP CHEST
DiSEASE# : see Thursday listing.

Workshops on the following subjects : Ma nagement of Obslructive

Lung Disease. Pulmonary Func·
tion Testing, Blood Gases a nd

~~d v~~to~haJ~~~rt ~dm£:'.

tubation, Nursing Techniques and
Physical Therapy. Lecture on

" Drug Abuse," foUowing dinner.
Statler Hilton.
VARSITY GOLF •: U / B vs. Gannon
and Niagara. Amherst Audubon
Course. 2:00 p.m.
EXPDUME.NTAL F J L Ms•: Cosmic
Ray
(Connor, 1961);
To Parsifal (Baillie, 1963) ; Va/.

ond ViViaan

Di~tio2; t~~m!c~l: ~)~~!
1

Cage (Cluchey, 1967); Rope Trick
\Godfrey, 1967); Pandora's Bottle (Dale, 1967) ; Night Tide
(Harrington, 1961) . Studio Arena
Theatre. See Thurs. listing for
times and prices.
INTERNATIONAL POLK DANCING • •:

Instruction in basic steps during
~U:~m.hour, 30 Diefendorf J.mtex,

Extra (Florey, 1928); Lc Mort
du Cerf (Kinanoff, 1964); Lot in · FILM .. : The Milky Way (Luis
. Norton Conference Tbe~::.d 'Bri,J':'t~it::;{:;:j, 1~: aBunuel)
lre, see showcase for times. Faccle Beach (Strick, 1950); Fro(f- ulty
and staff $1.25, students $.75.
0
Tickets on sale Y.z hour before

=;

~h:·t.~ ~r'F~..:',;

&lt;~i:~2~ !"1J~df.t::: &lt;"~
9

en, 1952); Pacific (Tadi, 1962);
The__Aaignation. (Harrington
195S); Desistfilm (B rakhage,
11164) ; The Wonder RinB (Brakhage, 1955); Looney Tom, The

=

f/::1'
.£:
L=:!:to~1 ~~
SL 3 00 p.m. and 7: 30 p.m. Mat-

inee $2.00, evening $2.75. Tickets
at Norton Box Office. All three
(Thurs., Fri. and SaL),

ff.£"""'

BIOCIIZIOCAL P'II.UlKAOOLOGY BEII-

DrfAa• : Dr. H. Rumuuen, bio-

=·~ll=~ty~~

IN &lt;ZU. ACTIVATION,
G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
PHYSICS OOLLOQUIIJK 0 : Dr. E.K.
Warburton, Brookhaven National
Laboratory, Upton, N . Y., title to
be 8IU&gt;OUilC!Id 111 Hoc:botetter, 4
p.m. Bef.-Junents 112 HocbotetCYCLIC AMP

ter,

S : ~p.m.

the journey of two P a riaian

~eeti!:~ t::f a!dtovari~

Biblical characters. and encountering many of the official heresies
Catholic history. But
Ioven of Bunuel will be more
attracted by his aurreal and UD·
canny images in a pastoral land-

in

:'J:!r 'l';.:'rd~~) ~=~.::1Jine.

· All films in the Wee~nd Conference · Theatre Seriu will be
presented in 85 mm, that being
the fol'l:Jle.t in which they were
made. Sponsored by the UUAB
Fine Arts Film Committe&amp;-meet.
, ings are beld weekly Ui 261 Norton and are opeg to the entire
Univenity community. All fllma
in this series are by admiooion
charge.

SATURDAY- 25

Forbidtkn PIGMt (W"d- • &lt;aoss-oouNftY• : R o cheater.
..... 1956). 147 Diefendorf, 8 : 00 ~~~.;t::..,_rowr
tair-4 -

tbe undiaputed champ

(Kosower,

1967)'; The Problem
(Dudesek, 1966); Genesis (Merglova, 1966); Breath (Murakami,
1967) ; Voyeur Virtuoso (Kanesaka, 1967); Two (Bean/Taylor,
1967); The S w o r d (Stepanek/
Adam, 1966); ShodOUJB (Cassa·
vetes, 1960). Studio Arena The·
atre. See Thurs. listing for times
a nd price~..
FILM••:

The Milky Way, see

Friday listing.

3!~~: : /ellen'~~

::r:

starring Sunil Dutt, Saira
Banu, Mohmood, and o the r s;
music by R.D. Bu nnan. 147 Diefendorf, 7 :30 p.m. General ad..mission $1.50, students $1.00.

SAN,

CML UBERTIES PICNIC•:

on Grand

~~~~~'wnb~ ~dmdil~~ks. ~~:fe';~

ball, softball, swings, grills avail·
able. Featuring The Black Drama
Workshop presenting scenes from
" ll's Easier to Get Dope T)lan
Arrow

Cottag~take

exit off ez-

~~a!J!s~~t~'ilin8~0a~~

on \:Yest River Road and follow
~i gns. Couples $10, families $15,
•ingles $5. Call 883-0946 or 8363398 for furthe r information.

SUNDAY-26

ftLKB•: ~r6rmtz (Neloon, 1966); The Ft~«
~.AL

Amherst Audubon Course, 1:00
p.m.

NURSING

'!'ElEPBONI:

L&amp;Cn11&amp;# :

Dean Woodrich, E r i e County
Health Department, ooNftOL or

~~":is~~

receiving locatioDJ. 1: 80 p.m.
FILM . . : The Blue Angel (1929).
147 Diefendorf, 8:00 and 8:00
p.m., free.
The love story of Lola, a cafe
entertainer and Plvfesaor Rath,
a n aging achool teacher. Starring
Marlene Dietrich. Emil Ja.n.ninp
and Kurt Gerron, and directed by
Eric Von Strobeim.. One of the
ea rliest and moet i.nftuential of
sound movies.
The Tuuday Director's Seriu
of films offers notable works by
an impresaive collection of inter·
national film directors.. Jointly

Department of Information Services. "Who ia to blame for At·
tica?" " Is anyo ne really to
blame?" Marvin Zimmennan, as·
sociate professor of philosophy,
a nd program hosl Ma rvin Bloom,
associate professor, School of Social Policy and Community Services. will discuss the questions.
WPHD-FM, 10 :30 a .m.; WYSL,
10 :30 p.m.
WBEN-TV: THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO ROUND'I'ABLE, Cannelo . A.

Pa rlato, attorney and member of
the Buffalo school board, and Dr.
Arthur Butler, professor, economics, will participale in a discussion

(m.M• •: The Milky Way, see
Friday listing .

MONDAY-27
OOMPU'I'IZ SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM .. :
Dr. Raymond Erickson, IBM Sys.
lema Research Institute, "A Pilot
Project in Computer-Aided Music
Research," Room 41, 4226 Ridge
Lea, 3: 30 p.m: Refreshments to
follow.
W 0 a L D AWAJBB u::crtJBZ•: Dr.
Goldstucker, ambasaador,
minister and U.N. del-te, leader of the Dubcek Movement, former chairman of the Czech Writera' Union. will apeak on BOCLUr

Eduard

IBM AND DCMocaACY IN

czmcao-

BLOVAi&lt;JA. Sponsored by Buffalo
Council on World Affairs, Inc.,
and Council on International
Studieo. 233 Norton, 8 p.m., n-.

TUESDAY-28"
PIIYIIJQ.Uill TII:UIPJION&amp;

~-:

Dr. Donald R. Becker, ClASmlc
AJQI DUOIC&lt;.U.

YOM KJPPUR-KOL N1DRE BaVICB•:

Chabad House, 3292 Main SL
6:45p.m.
WNED-TV'S TALK OF THE TOWN :

The Cleveland Quartet, 8:30 p.m.

ULCDII, IP!&gt;bOOred

Cbabad House, 3292 Main SL,
9:30 a.m.
DIETETICS

TELEPHONE

regard it aa more of an intert h a n an adaptation.

~retation

in;nru:~J:!. f:=~=;
=-:=-~·Jc!t.%\1~
aoundtrack. S t a r r i n g Debo .

Kerr,

Stevens

Pam-

Martin
and
ela Franklin.
P'ILM••: Gimme Shelter. debut.
oolor and 4.-track stereo, featuring
tbe Rolling Stones, Ike and Tina

~~ ~~f.~o~'!"C:'n~

terence Theatre, see showcase for
times. Faculty and stalf $1.25,
students $.76. Tickets on sale ~
hour before showing at Norton
Ticket Office.

EXHIBITS
EXBJBJT OJ' PLASTIC BCULPI'tJIE AND
PAINTING BY DICK GIOI:Ll, Gallery

219. aecond floor, Norton Hall,
throu&amp;h September 30, MondayFriday, 1-4 p.m.; 6-9 p.m.

Nai'ICES
CH.ABAD

BOUSE :

3292

Main

St.

Daily Minyan Services, 8:00 a.m.
00

Ta'tn~d c~::!s ~~dtto:;.nss
~Eternal Torah in ~g

WEDNESDAY-29
YOM KIPPUR- SHACBIUT BIZVICI:• :

THE NEWS AND YOU : radio program produced by the University

_____ _

!'!:..'f~~nr~~s~62 =::r.~~tyWoff~
VARSITY GOLF•: U/B va. Geneeeo,

~ri~~~ bC:ht: ~~·~. aTh:WTf:!: ::.~n,::: ~thJJr ne~-

Mg:~~it;,~i'~!~l~c~e! ~:; !J.h~~U:\tFayan8utf.~f)~tiJ~p~
Shister is modera tor. 11 :00 a.m.

nLJI( 00 :

P'Tiu!':;ry at tbe Krella at Al-

.....

NEW PARTNlZS IN

t.&amp;CTtia# :

Blanche Kurtz, Dr. William H.
Sebrell. Jr., A NEW lltA IN waGBT
CONTROL, sponsored b.t Reponal
Medical Program, 62 receiving
locations, 2 p.m.
CBEMIBTRY COLLOQmUil• : Dr.
James R . Bolton. The University
of'Wes!em Ontario. 7 Acheson,
4 p.m.
m..M • •: Les Carabinier. (Goddard, 1964) . Norton Conference
Theatre, 6:00 p.m., free.
Universal soldien leave their
women to fight for promised rewa rds.

The W ednesday Film Seriu ia
a collection of films preeented by
the. French Department and
UUAB which deals thematicwith cinematic images of war
and prison. On Wedneeday evenings a t 6:00 p.m. in the Conference Theatre or
Diefendorf
147. Check in 261 Norton.

ally

in

THURSDAY-30

is~ M~~~' ~a'bi:iah e:~

Wednesday, 8 p.m.; poUuck on
Sunday, 8 P.JP-

~I:o:':'~o'&amp;,~~ ~
Synthetic Mathematics, Prof. D.
Tamari. Tuee.-Tburs., 10:30-12
noon, Macdonald Hall
PAKISTANI II:PUGIB 11a.1EF · PUND:

For four months East Pakistani
refugees have been lleein&amp; to In·

dia. In tbe beginninc they

were

faoed with tbe proopocts of a
cholera epjdemic.. Now, as tbe

rhe~rr!i: -=~~.fa!.~

=

ease of stamotion. Every doUar
you oend will provide food for 6

r:o:::.!o~~':bteda~

~

l:P
~trua"~~1or'rc!.t-:J'li'fe
for tbe millions of refupeo now

in India. To help, pleue oend
your contribution to:
India Students A.oc:iation

~~~Office

202 Townoencl Hall
SUNY/AS
Buffalo, N .Y. 14214
FACULTY

ology, 1'HI!: NON-BISTONE CHROMOSOMAL PBO'IElN8 IN GI:NE a:GULA-

~""f"~n~te Y':l:: t!,o"f:
f-2re~S~~~

TJON, G -22 Capen, 4 p.m.

CONCEilT OP INDLUrl KtJ81c • • La.l- t

gudi Jayaraman, violin; N. Ramani, !lute; Ramnad Raghavan,

r:.=~~~~.;.!f.:"n.""W'r.

more Room. Norton, 8 p.m. Gen-

ir'formation
.Jo. a;:;t:~ts
~·fu~:.
Call 688-9104 or 833-

8573.

•

.

FILM••: :Z:he l/lflDCDlu (Clayton,

AND

STAPP

&gt;till'-:

BIOCHEMISTilY 8 B II IN A a• : Dr.
Tung-Yue Wang, profeuor. bi-

Loot or gained ~t and have
clothes you can'.f wear? Have

the International Committee of
the Women'• Club, ia held annually to help fonritm students
set up apsrtments
give tbein
an opportunity to buy mezpeJWve
winter clothina'. If ypu have any
warm clothin«, household i -

ana

t!=.
to "t.&amp;!.r:.1:: =
tbe Foreip Student Office in

1961) . 147 DiefODtlorf,- 8:00 p.m.,

free.

~-~~jj~

.~P.:rtJ&gt;!ro~,~~ ~

in&amp;. October 1. U pick-up ia deoired, call Mn. KeD- 8~

Capote; tbe oricinal demoDa have

brary ..tibule
at 68S-7116.

OD

Friday mom-

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

VOL. 3- NO.2

SEPT. 16, 1971

Fall"\tbte on Ketter Calls for Selective Growth

f:tkez~

A New Emphasis on Private.~~

H all goes well, the University community could be voting
on a University~wide governance plan before Thanksgiving.
This is the hope of the Governance Committee set up last
spring by President Robert
Ketter.
-This group, charged with setting up articles of governance,
grew out of last year's Governance Task Fon:e report. The
Task Fon:e recommendations
were modified so that the University's constituent bod i e s
could nominate CIO m m i t t e e
members. This wp.s done and a
24-member committee was
named which represents the
seven basic U/ B constituencies
- faculty, students, professional staff, library, central administration and the president's
office, U/ B Council and alumni.
Dr. Ketter did not designate
a chain:n8n and so a triumvirate of faculty, staff and student
members ran the group in the
beginning. During the first
months, the body discussed
University governance in .general term&amp;--exdlanging ideas
and gripes on the matter. By
early July, however, tbey had
defmed tbe problem and formulated a fmn ,dinlction to "devise a governance system, not
formulate policy." At this time
a chairwoman- Dr. Marjorie
Mix - was democratically
elected and three sub-eommittees set up. The three grou''The Individual and the University,'' "External Constituencies," "Broad Policy and
Planning Functions"-have
been meeting almost weekly
stnce !helL
(
Early next month, the subcommittees are expected to submit their reports to the group's
Steering Committee. This body,
oom~ of Chairwoman Mix,
Vice Chairman Dr. Nicholas
Goodman, and tbe three sub(continued on PDII• 3. col. 4)

ment of the University was announced Tuesday morning by
President Robert L Ketter at
a meeting of vice presidents,
deans and department heads in
Diefendorf Annex.
The president opened a wideranging review and welcome
back briefing session by emphasizing that the University
has reached a level of national
distinction in many areas and
is capable of achieving this
same distinction in still more.
Within the next seve ral
months, decisions will have to
be made determining which
areas
will receive a special
1
' push" toward pre-eminence by
means of priorities in resource
allocations. T he unfortunate
corollary to such a plan, Ketter
said, is that corresponding decisions will have to be reached
concerning those departments
and areas which will not be
pushed. However, he indicated,
if the University is to become
increasingly pre~eminent in
teaching and research, limited
funding makes this selective

.

Ch8r1

und•rwco,... probt.ma tadna Unlftrslty

Local·Senate Urges SUNY Senate toWOrk
To Eliminate Oath as Employment Condition
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Reporter sr.~t

The Faculty Senate passed ' a ·motion Tuesday asking the
SUNY Faculty Senate to work
for tbe elimination of the socalled "loyalty oath" as a condition of employment in the
State.
The oath pledges the signee
to support the constitutions of
New York and the United
States and to uphold the State
code of ethics. The motion criticizes tbe oath as serving " no
useful purpose,'' pointing out
that " no subversive agent would
besitate to sign." Some pro-

lessors, the motion says, may
object to supporting all of the
New York constitution thereby making it hard for them to
sign. The vote on the motion
was nearly unanimous w i t h
only two abstentions. The matter is now expected to be taken
up at the 11ext meeting of the
SUNY Senate.
The Senate's Committee on
Academic Freedom and Responsibility, which prepared the
loyalty oath report, was asked
by the Senate to look into another ethical matter. Included
in the Senate Professional Association's CSPA ) State contract is a definition of academic
freedom adopted from the one
in the Policies of the Board of
Trustees. Members of the Senate found this definition unsatisfactory, especially the sections
dealing with ''encouraging fu11
freedom )Nithin the law" and
the righL• of professors to discuss controversial issues in
class. After discussion Of the
usefulness of the phrase "within .the law" and other parts of
the policy, Professor Mark
Schechner proposed a motion
asking the Academic Freedom
and Responsibility Committee
to find a way to "state the issue
more carefully." The motionalso called for SPA to re-negotiate this issue when contract
talks re-open on November 1st.
The motion was passed with
the committee being required to
report on a suggested new wording at the next Senate meeting.
Other Parts of the Controc:t
Otber parts of the SPA con-

-

tract were discussed by Dr. Robert Fisk, member of tbe SPA
negotiating team. Fisk highlighted parts of tbe contract;
Ba)!ing it contained "subslan-

Chebed-IJonclow -

Joy!

-ofary.-!1.-·11)---

lplrlt of the
'-to ..........
the -

the - - -

~ .--.~~oelnllll.•

~topm.nt. p~fa::tid~ons

far .lewioh

~" ~ r:wtJY ':h:!t ·~

contract provides f o r "more
S)llllematic management of tbe

Univenity" and has serious implications for tbe governance

of the State system. (For more
details on the SPA contract,
see the Reporter, Sepl 9 ).
Following Fisk's report, President R6bert Ketter addre&amp;ed
the Senate. Dr. Ketter discussed
new appointments and the naming of over 30 new department
(con tinued on page 3, coL I)

Attica Service
Set for Noon

on a

plan for development, all University administrators w:ill be
receiving from the President's
Office a request for certain in·
formation with a deadline response date of October 15. Ketter is asking for a review of
what tlle given program or department has done in tbe last
few years to foster its development and a projection of its
plans for tbe future. Each administrator will be asked, too,
to outline how be would go
about up-grading his program
if it were selected for a push,
down to such specifics as tbe
names of individuals be would
like to add to the faculty and
the reasons for these choices.
Private Funds

Ketter also announced plans
to have the University become
more active in seeking private
funds. A goal of S5 million
from these sources has been set
for this year. ''This University
cannot exist solely on what tbe
This personal statement on State will supply in ·t he next
the events of this week was few years," the president said.
issued Tuesday by President Already, some 2 0 0 Western
New York area corporations
Robert L. Ketter:
have been identified as poteo"The recent tragic events at · tial sources of a portion of tbe
the Attica Correctional Facility projected total. The president
have affected us all. The vio- plans to visit the executives of
lence and death which occurred some of these, along with memthere is an anathema to all that bers of tbe University Council
we personally stand for and is and/ or trustees of tbe Univerdestructive of tJ..e goals, of the sity at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
spirit and of the mind for which Hopefully, be said, a number of
this and all other institutions corporations can ..,., persuaded
of higher leanring sland.
to provide from $~$30,000
"While it might be tempting each year for a continuing
for ·us to succumb to a purely period of years.
In order to belp develop a
e motional reaction, I submit
that we should instead resolve case for these appeals, tbe
to work to be able to view this president indicated be w:ill be
tragedy from tbe perspective of asking each campus department
the lessons it can teach.
for a compilation of informaabout tbe community in"I am not a criminologist, tion
nor a sociologist, nor a lawyer, volvement of its faculty and
but I believe thilt society needs staff members. Corporate leadvalue this type of Univerto bring to bear on this problem ers
(contiruud o n - 2, coL I)
all of tbe expertise that it bas.
Certainly tbe tragedy at Attica
s!&gt;ould not be allowed to hapBOOKS BY THE FACULTY
pe!l again. Such events strike "Books by the FKUity," a 12deeply .at tbe moral, spiritual page review of book lencth works
and human fiber of our society. published by University faculty
We must ask, 'Why did tbey and stall members over the past
occur?'-but more 110porlantly ye.r, is included as an insert in
-'What can we do to prevent today's RloporW.
their recunence?' "

A University memorial service for the victims of the tragedy at Attica State Prison will
be held today at noon on the
concert stage behind Baird Hall.

�2
Selective Growth( - . - 1 ,.,,. _.1, coL 5)

sity-eommunity interaction as
hilhlY as the educational services ol the institution, he said.

-lhlt8rs

Reporting on academic matliers before the University was
Dr. Alberl Somit, eD!CUtive vice
pnaident, who presented an outline or coocems developed by
Dr Bernard R. Gelbaum, vice
~t for academic affairs.
bt. Gelhilum was in Albany atlellding a meeting or SUNY
academic vice presidents.
Somit said that Gelbaum, in
· his first two months at the University bad identified these
• -which he (Gelintends to discuss further with members of the University community:
L Tbe Med to clarify pro&gt;
oedlll'BS for securing advanced
approval for undergraduate
courses. In theory, all such
courses are supposed to be approved in advance by the curriculum committee of the Division of Undergraduate Studies,
but in practice this is not !ll·
w8ys the case. Dr. Gelbaum mdicated that it is not clear
whether the problem lies with
the Committee or with the initiating depaitments, and that
further discussion is necessary.
2. The Med for mechanisms
for .{'Oriodic review of all UniverSity curriculums, similar to
the cyclical review of programs
which is practioed by the Graduate School.
3. The need for more intensive involvement between faculty and the University's advi-

t::!'i

all other State units, continues
to be under an emplo~t
freeze imp&lt;&amp;&lt;~ by .the DIVISIO!'
of the Budget. Thia is ~ ~di­
tion to the national administration's wage-price freeze. Re:w&gt;nues for the State ~ ':"""""
S700 million to $1 billion behind budgeted ~itureo. for
the year Doty S8ld, and smce
the Sta~ is niquired by law to
have a balanced budget, no relief in the freeze can reason
ably be expected. Doty echood
the president's statement that
the situation is no~ likely to
improve in subsequent years.
Doty also announoed that
State auditors have recently
completed a preliminary reP'?rt
on an audit of State University
at Buffalo operations. The report must go through sev~
review stages before beoommg
final, he said.
Amhefst

Turning to the Amher!!t campus, President Ketter estimated
that 5125-128 million in contracts have now been awarded,
out of a total of $650 million
. earmarked for constru~li?n
through 1977. The first fac1hties /
to be occupied, he said, will be
residence halls f&lt;~..r 800 students
which will be in ."~ next/fall.
He indicated that s1te-t6'urs are
being planned for this fall for
various campus and off-campus
groups.
Self·Study
Dr. Claude E. Puffer, p~
fessor emeritus and former vice
president for business affairs,
said that meetings will be conducted this week with campus
administrators to initiate development of a University-wide
soz. ~te~ to insure com- self-study.
The self-study is to
pliance with a new policy on be prepared in advance of the
hiring which requires that ad- visit to the campus next fall
ministrators secure advance ap- by· accreditation teams of
proval on campus before mak- the Middle States Association
mg any oommitments to new and professional acc rediting
faculty and staff. Such requests agencies. Puffer, who served
for approval are to be chan- last year as head of a national
nelled through the appropriate study of accrediting practices,
provost to Dr. Gelbaum, for expressed the hope that the
the academic divisions of the self-study will be a "searching
University, and to Dr. Clyde one" of benefit not only to the
Randall, vice president for Middle States Association but
health affairs.for the health sci-. 'also to the University itself in
ences divisions.
planning for future years.
5. The need to develop_ a bet- United Fund
ter understanding of the UniverCampus-wide support was
sity's rewards system through urged for ilie upcoming United
definition and clarification of Fund campaign by both Presithe proper combination of re- dent Ketter and Dr. A. Westley
search, teaching and service to Rowland, who is chairman of
be used as criter,ia for advance- the drive. Both emphasized that
ment.
the University has a responsi Ananclal Allolrs
bility as a major institutional
In a report on financial mat- citizen of Western New York
ters, E . W. Doty, vice president to participate in the drive. A
for operations and systems, em- five-week campaign for $ 100,000
phasized that this campus, as is to be conducted on campus.

College 1\s New Name Brings Change
In Programs, Political Or~entation
What's in a new name? In
the case of "College A, Self
and Community" at U/ B, the
new name is attached to an
academic unit bearing little resemblance to the experimental
college which s~ CO'!troversies over gradmg practices,
curricular structure and faculty
qualifications during the past
two academic years.
As the 1971-72 academic year
begins the new head of .. College
Sell and Community,"
Miss Bambii Abelson, bas announoed the offering of eight
courses, six of which are new.
While m the past the unusually
large enrollments of more than
700 students each semester
have raised questions of the
effectiveness of C o II e g e A
teaching and student evaluation, the unit will limit its rolls
to about 250 this semester.
!&gt;'!iss Abelson, coordinator of
::PJl!llege A, Self and Comm'!"·
ty,'' said that the staff, wh1ch
is almost entirely changed from
last year, wants the College to
be "non-political." She exptains
that their only interest is to
provide a "stimulating and novel educational experience for
those students who wish to participate."
Self-Evaluatio" Gone
Gone is the policy of College
A student self-&lt;!valuation. Miss
Abelson explained t h a t Dr.
Daniel H. Murray, when he
was acting vice president for
academic affairs, notified College officials that their budget
wolud be released only with
the understanding that students
would not evaluate their own
work this year. In addition,
Miss Abelson sa id that the
College's staff will work closely
with the University administration to keep " misunderstandings and conflicts" to a minimum.
All College A courses offered
fo r the I a II a re designed to
make the student more full y
informed of the community in
which he lives.
One hundred students will
participate in Miss Abelson's
two-year old "Communicative
Creativity" course which, to
date, has s e r v e d some 300
handicapped children, teaching
them to communicate through
the arts. University students
work wiili children in "circle
groups" and on a on e-to~ne
basis.
This year the children will

A,

r~

20$

3~

4~

5~

60%

l~

BO!t

901&lt; 100%

Faculty of Arts and Letters.
Faculty of Educational Studies

8.040.00
3.600.00
4.560 .00
31.440.00
15,000.00

8.400.00

Faculty of Social Sciences and
13.440 .00
1,800.00

Adminillration . . . .
l.Jndergr.tuate Studies ..
Gr.t!Jate School . . . . . . . . ..
Aeademic Affairs
Millard F illmore College and
O:.ntinuing Education
Communicat ion Resowrces . . . . . .

F8CIIities Planning
()per:ations and Systems

Pros;dont ·s and Execut;vo v;ce

· ··· ·· ·

·········

Student Affairs
. . . . . . . . . .. ..
University Retat ions
Feculty-&amp;udent Anociation . .
University' at Buffalo Foundat•on and
AfurnrN Relations . • . .

360.00
2.880.00
840.00
6 .000.00

~~~~i~~~~~i~~~~~~~i~~

840.00
960.00
13,560.00
240.00
4 .560 .00

1.080.00
1,200.00

[=:::I=I=:::r=:::r=:::r=:::J=:J=:::r=:I=J

G&lt;io.oo

Western New York Nudear
Research Center . . . . . . .

Annual
S.lal')'

$ 3,600
4.000

4.500

Mlthem.tics . . . . . . . . . . . .

Tom Mardiroeian, an Equity
actor. who haa taught acting at
Stud1o Arena ~I &amp;J:~d bas
appeared at Stud1o Arena 'Jbe..
atre, will teach ·:Self ~verr,
through ~tic Techniques,
~ f&lt;?ur-eredit courae_.
ob)ectiVe '!f the course IS to 1!'8-"'
how to '!'terpret. · .. emoti~ns,
o_bservation an~ charactemation through VOice and hody.
. . . and ~ fin~ tho;, power. of
the actor In """!ety. Reading
and lectures wtll supplement
the actual dramatic portions of
the course.
"Group Dynamics" will be
taught by ;Irwin .Hoffman, a
Ph.D.. candidate m counselor
education at U / B. The purpose of the four-credit course
is to "gain lmowledge of the
interpersonal and intrapersonal processes that take place in
groups."
Helping to administer the
College are five undergraduate
assistants: Beth S. Kassirer,
Leah Ross, Rise Pozarny,
Meryl Roth and Seth Holesman.

Jbe

2 Grad Students
On Fulbrights
Two U / B graduate students
are studying abroad · this fall
und er Fulbright scholarships
and four others will be studying in Europe because of grants
they received from foreign governments.
Students can now apoly for
next year's Fulbright scholarships plus additional foreign
scholarships administered by
the Institute for International
Education. The g r a n t s are
available for research and study
purposes and for prcifes3ional
training in the creative and performing arts.
U.S. citizens who will have
received a B.A. or equivalent
from an American or Canadian
university before September
1972, and woo are proficient in
an appropriate f o rei g n Jangusge are eligible to apply.
Detailed information and applications for the 1972-73 academic year grants are available
in the Office of the Director,
Overseas Academic Programs,
107 Townsend Hall. Applications must be submitted to that
office no later than October 1,
1971.

This is a GUID E for Un lve~i ty s lvlng t o make our University 10al of
$100,000 for the United Fund. This sui de doesn't tell you how much to
gi vl!-no one can tell you thi t . But It Is a suuestlon of equitable
g ivi ng ,with in our University. We hope it will be helpful to you as It is
applicable to your payroll deduction plan In which deductions must be
authorized i n multi ples of 1!)c.

81-weeldy

facu lty of Engineering and
Appl ied Sciences
Faculty of Health Sciences .
Faculty of Uw and Jurisprudence .
Faculty of Natural Sciences and

President 's Offices

be t:zeated to outings at the
Poverty Hill area, which the
University's Sub Board · I controis through a purchase option.
Registration for this co~
will be held September 19 m
233 Norton.
The only other College A
course being repeated is "Developmental and T e a c h i n g
Methods," through which students s t u d y techniques emJo ed in the teaching of read!:./in schools throughout Western New York, from the innercity to the suburbs. After studying these methods, .students devise their own, which ~Y ~escribe in a special publication
at the end of the semester.
Dr. Jerome Fink, coordinator
of student affairs for the University will supervise 25 students in a Cooperative Community course. The students
will work in and study area
institutions, including Buffalo's
Crime Control unit, the Vocational Rehabilitation Center
and various hospitals.
Introduction to Community
Mrs. William E . Clarkson
will coordinate a new College
A course entitled ''Introduction
to the Community,'' designed
to give s t u de n t s first-hand
lmowledge of the many face ts
of life in the Buffalo area. According to the course description, "The community will be
our classroom. We will meet
in homes, offices, museums and
welfare agency offices.... The
community will be our professors, from youth gang members
to the captains of industry."
The non-credit course is de-signed to be a thorough, guided
seminar or cultural institutions,
social agencies, and ethnic, industrial and civic landmarks.
Mr. Do n a I d Kertzman, a
Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology, will teach a four-credit
course on "Interpersonal Pro~
cess in Families."
James A. Phillips, supervisor of rehabilitation oounseling
in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at E .J . Meyer
Memorial Hospital, will conduct ''The Individual and his
Institutions," a four- c red it
course designed to "facilitate
anal ysis of the relationship of
the student. ... to a particula r
institution." Students will visit
and study schools, hospitals,
prisons, and social, cui tural and
chronic institutions.

A SUGGESTED GUIDE FOR COMPUTING YOUR UNIVERSITY
FAIR SHARE GIFT
..

STATE UNIVERSITY 0!; NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
UNITED FUND DIVISIONAL PROGRESS

-

September 16, 1971

GREPORTER,

600.00

5,000

5,500
6,000
6,500

7.000
7.500
8,000
8.500
9.000
9 ,500
10,000
11 ,000
12.000
13.000
14,000
15.000
16.000
17.000
18.000
19.000
20.000
21,000

22.000
23.000
24.000
25.000
26.000
27.000
28.000
29.000
30,000

(26 pay periods= Annual
per year)

.70
.80
.90
1.00
1.10
1.20
1.30
1.40
1.50
1.60
1.70
1.80
1.90
2.00
2.10
2.30
2.50
2.70
4 .30
4 .60
4.90
5.20
5.50
7.70
8 .10
8 .50
8.90
9 .30
9 .60
10.00
10.40
10.80
1 1.20
a~d over 1.5 ~·
$

Gift

$ 18.20
20.80

23.40
26.00
28.60
31.20
33 .80

36.40
39 .00
41 .60
44.20
46.80
49.40
52.00
54.60
59.80
65.00
70.20
111.70
119 .60
127.40
135.20
143.00
200.20
210 .60

221.00
231.50
2 4 1.80
249.60
260.00
270.40
280.80
291.20

BJ-weekty

{21 pay pertods
peryur)

s

.90
1.00
1.10
1.20

1.40

= Annual
Gift

%

$ 18.90
21.00
23 .10

5
.5
.5
.5
.5
.5
5
.5
.5
.5
5
.5
.5
.5
5
.5
.5
.5
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
1.0
1.0
•1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0

25.20

29.40

1.50

31.50

1.60

33.60

~:~

~:~

2.20
2.30
2.50
2.70
2.90
3.10
3 .30
5.30
5.70

46.20
48.30
52.50
56.70
60.90
65:10
69.30
111.30
119.70

2.00
2.10

42.00
44. 10

6 .00

128.10

6 .40
6.80
9.50
10.00

134.40
142.80
199.50
210.00

10 .50
11 .00
11.50
11 .90
12 .40
12 .90
13.30
13.80

220.50
231.00
241.50
249.90
260.40
270.90
2 79.30
289.80

�GD~

..
(
-ft.t'.~R,

September 16, 1971

Senate-

(contintud (rom pagel, coL 4)

or program chairmen. He pplained the seemingly-high
turnover by pointing out that
departmental cbairmen h a v e
three-year terms. The president

3

344 Complaints Handled by Omhudsmnn New Courses
InLangu~
In Offices 2nd Year of Operations

::r: U.:'Pr:id~~~

". . . Although the Office (of
University Ombudsman ) was
estsblisbed
in a year of turbuvieW Board and tbe Hearing
Committee on Campus Disrup- lence and recurrent campuswide
crises,
the disoantents it
tion.
Much of the president's talk was designed to deal with bave
was spent explaining the new not diminished directly as the
grievance procedtfres which be- surface turbulence h a s subsided."
came effective Tuesday. The
That's the conclusion of Omnew process, which uses the
Faculty Senate and tbe soon- budsman Robert H . Stem in his
annual
report for 1970-71 which
to-be-formed Staft Senate as
· formal grievance channels, is details a caseload of 344 complaints
or requests lor advice
mandated by the SPA contract.
The president stressed that the and assistance as compared
with
141
the previous year.'
system will apply only to certain cases and urged faculty to While avoiding ,.the appearance
as
well
as the reality of
continue using informal procedures set up by departments conventional bureaucratic selfand Faculties. (More detsils interestedness," Dr. Stem also
on grievance procedures will makes a valid, if indirect, case
for continuation of the office.
be in next week's Reporter.)
The Ombudsman notes, too,
FThe current severe budgetary an increasing incidence of priconditions were discussed by vate grievances over the year
tbe president wbo noted that and suggests that, while the ofU / B is operating under three fice caseload cannot be considdifterent freezes or constraints. ered a scientific reading of camThe first is President Nixon's pus oomplaints~ a rising num90-day wage and price freeze. ber of reported cases is likely
Applied to tbe universities, this to indidlte an increase also in
means faculty can't get raises
the number remaining undiswithout a "valid promotion." closed. This may indicate,
Albany has ruled that a change Stem says, existence of a pofrom assistant to associate pro- tential caseload of complaints
lessor qualifies, but Washington far beyond the capability of the
is investigating the matter, Ket- _office to handle. However, he
ter said. The J;e&lt;X&gt;nd constraint adds, some individual comis tbe necessity to get Albany's plaints lead to "the discovery of
prior approval lor new appoint- patterns of official behavior
lll&lt;'..Dts. This has hit the non- cjearly aJJecting or likely to afteaching professional positions fect a larger number, and
hardest. Starting today, bow- recommendations by us for corever, this same freeze will ap- rective action accordingly."
ply to teaching positions. Next Complfte Independence
year, Ketter said, tbe Legisla"I::Omplete independence of
ture will only aJI{j9; as many all other agencies on campus••
new faculty members as there was also maintsined during the
are increases in students to year, the Ombudsman reported,
merit the increase. The final and thE Office experienoed no
freeze discussed was the dollar attempts at interference and
expenditure ~g imposed on met with "cooperati ve reSUNY by the
. lature.
sponses from all whose activiThe president
told the ties were the subject of ingroup about the audit of U / B's quiry." In this vein, it is refinancial recorda from 1962 to ported also that the Office deMarch 1970 now being con- clined a request from the Presiducted by the Stste Comp- dent that it investigate and
troller's Office.
recommend action on a matter
HEW Evoluatlon
which bad been directed to the
The team from HEW will al- President's Office. The request,
so be back this month to finish was declined on grounds that:
their Title Six evaluation wp ch (1) a complainant should bave
probes for sexual discrimma- the option of using or not using
tion by the University. The the Ombudsman's Office; (2 )
president told department chair- it is not proper for the Office•
man to.expect a letter from him to undertake an investigation
"'ski ng for ststistics on the on request from a University ofhiring and promotion of women ficer(unless the officer himself is
and minority faculty members
for this team.
The Tuesday Senate meeting
was concluded by tbe customary

fnood ilihthetin':!~e~r~;,..~
~eider, history, d iscusse!l ·

r'

The Department of German
appointment in process, vaca- and
Slavic is offering several
tion pay, salary levels, etc.
new
courses in German a n d
Every faculty in the Univer- _Russian
on the elementary and
sity was represented by com- intermediate levels for the first
plainants, Ombudsman Stem Lime this year.
noted, except the Faculty of
Elementary and intermediate
Law and Jurisprudence.
courses which stress rapid acThree Types of Response
quisition of rea d in g skills
Response to cases brought to should be of particular interest
Caseload Breokdown
This breakdown of caseload the Ombudsman is of three to those who wish to use Gertypes: (1) consults live and ad- man for research purposes withwas reported:
Approximately 55 per cent of visory, (2 ) facilitstive, and (3) in a relatively short time, tbe
Department says.
matters brought to the Office investigative.
AU cases involve the first,
by 232 undergraduates related
Intensive courses, in which
directly to academic programs, Stem said, and many go no fur- the content - and academic
in this order of rrequency by ther.
credit.-&lt;&gt;£ the first two years of
Action is considered "facili- language study is compressed
general category: (1 ) enrollment in courses; &lt;2) course tative" when it involves provid- into two semesters, are degrades and credits; (3 ) instruc- ing a client access to someone signed for students coming to
tor conduct; ( 4 ) departmental who is competent to deal with the University with no previrequirements and practices; \5) his problem- usually with the ous experience in the languages
Ombudsman having first indi- who wish to make rapid progdivisional rules and practices.
Half of the matters brought cated to the source his own per- ress, with a view to doing furby 45 -graduate students per- ception of the matter or a re- ther work.
A new elementsry German
tsined to academic matters dis- quest that something be done
t.inc ..ive to that group : depart- or undone. Facilitative activi- " Language and Literature"
mental decisions affecting ad- tivities have also included the course has been designed to
mission or continuance in a identification for grievants of "appeal to those students who
program; dissertation guidance existing instrumentalities wish to begin studying the litthrough which problems might erature and culture more intenproblems, etc.
sively at an early stsge than
Slightly less than half of the be dealt with.
matters brought by all students
Investigative activities are a a 'standard' language oourse
were classed as non-academic principal activity in only a permits." Initial readings are
in this order of frequency: fi- small number of cases and the in translation.
On the intermediate level in
nancial acroun ts; financial..aid ; term includes "those things
parking; food service; ,health that need to bj! done when a Russian, rourses are now offerservice; housing (on..campus) ; serious g rievance has been ed which separately stress the
on-campus employment; cam- sta:ed, to estsblish facts, prop- acquisition of reading and
pus security; library; bookstore; erly define issues and deter- speaking proficiency.
In add ition, the Department
student organization actions.
mine the grounds for a proper
also offering Gennan diction
or 45 teaching faculty who disposition." This includes, is
for performing artists on an inused the Office's services, 14 Stem said, such procedures as dependent
study basis.
were concerned with matters re- study of documents, conduct of
Estsblished elementary and
lsting to job ststus-appoint- interviews, wrestling with am- intermediate
langt14ge oourses
mcnt, reappointment.. tenure. biguities and mediation.
in German and Russian, as well
promotion, salary determinaIn some cases, the Ombuds- as advanoed tanguage and littions. Several others sought ad- man said, nothing is done about erature courses; are continuing.
vice on difficulties in colleague ma tters brought to the Office M ore infonnation on all of
relationships. The rest included because they are deemed to be these courses and on undera wide variety of matters aca- "slight and transitory" and or graduate major programs in
demically related and other- essentiaJJy fri volous. These, German and Russian may be
wise--for example: difficulties however, are a distinct minor- obtsined from the Department's
in the leasi ng of off-campus ity, he said.
offices, 240 Crosby.
properties for an educational
progmm ; ad ministra tive prac- &lt;1overnance~------------------tices regarding access to cert.a.in (cantinued from page 1, col. 1)
mittee is more concerned with
file materials; a dispute over an committee heads - Professors how it will handle its business.
authorship claim to published Marie Cicarelli, John Sullivan The group is now wrestling
research; a threat against fac- and George Kosanovich - will over the specifics of ratification
ulty member's life by a· fonner try to draw the reports togeth- procedures lor the articles of
student.
er into a preliminary draft of governance. They have decided
Seventeen s t a f f complaints a governance system. This wiJJ to have the ratification procedrelated mainly to job ststus and be presented ·to the entire com- ure accepted before the Unicompensation. Two of these in- mittee for approval and then versity votes on the articles.
volved long-stsndin g matters of sent out to the entire Univer- While the procedure is still
oontention on position clas.&lt;;ifi- sity.
being defined, the group is
cation; two involved an involWhat kind of governance wo rking on a process that will
untary termination; others, an system will emerge from this include opportunities for groups
process is s till vague. It will and individuals to respond to
probably include some sort of the new governance srstem.
" University Assembly" where Feedback and ~ges m the
representstives fr&lt;&gt;m a!l major__!:overnance ar!:!cles ~wei­
University constituencies will corned, Dr. MIX emphiSiZed.
disctL'iS University-wide prob- " We want to listen _and learn
day, October 12, three separate lems.
f-ry&gt;~ ou! constituencies." If retours to · Niagara-on-the-Lake,
Exaclly what sort of prob- =~d ~raf~~ !!'u:d.
Niagara Falls, Ontsrio, and Old
Fort Erie will be conducted by !ems they Will discuss IS also similar procedure was used at
the wom~n of the local A.C.S. up m the a1r. Dr. M1x stresses SUNY / Binghampton Dr Mix
that the new governan&lt;:" gf?UP noted, and they w.,;t u,;..,ugh
chapter.
( Special award s w!ll be pre- w1ll handle On!Y. Umver~ilt~; four drafts before the entire
University approved the syssonted to guest sympos1um handled by enstmg bod1es.
speakers. in recogni tion of out- C?mmittee mem~rs say the tern. U/B's governance comstanding work in their individ- wide matters and n~t .trespass mittee is prepared to go
ual fields. This year's recip- on the 1ssues t~adttlonal_ly through four or more drafts unients are: Dr. Howard Zimmer- new assembly will deal Wltb til everyone is satisfied she adman, University of Wisconsin, "inte r-lace difficulties" -;Prob- ded. The plan will "'en be
for his work in organic chem- lems that cw;ref!tl~ d_on. t fall submitted for the app~ of
istry; Dr. R. J . Gillespie, Mac- under anyone s JUrischctton or the entire University communMaster University, for his work perhaps disputes ~tween two ity.
Complete and fully detailed
in chemical education; Dr. Fred or mo':" groups. ThiS .~ew sysBasolo, Northwestern Univer- tern w1ll ~ore or less _plug up ratification procedures are exsity, for his work in inorganic the holes that now. enst. Just pected to be given to individual
chemis try; and Dr. Donald H . what the holes 8.':" IS also pur- governance bodies later this
Anderson, Eastman Kodak, for poselully undefined by the month.
The full articles of goverhis work in analytical chemis- C?mn.uttee. They feel this question IS one the .As;;embly sh?uld nance will probably be pretry.
Registration and hotel reser- properly handle 1tself. Umver- sented to the University in late
vation forms may be obtained sity governance experts. ~e October or early November.
from Dr. Jean Northcott, AI- group has consulted feel 1t IS Alter Unive.rsity approval, the
lied Chemical Corp., Buffalo. detnmentsl to attempt to de- committee anticipates the sysGeneral chairman of the meet- fi n~ jurisdiction 1n a co"'t:!tu- tern· will be immediately in op·mg IS
· D~. R oll. a nd. J . G'".
tion. ~yw~y, Dr. Wtlliam eration since a review mechanUM.I1eux,
Ken_more Pub 11 c School s. Baumer, Chatrman. of the Fac- ism wiJJ be included in the arChairman of the. sympos mm 1s ulty Senate ... P~ICts that the. ticles of governance. · ·
So, if all goes well, the UniDr. Charles L. . Bem1er, U/ B, ne:w group w1ll di~uss ?,nyversity could have a new sysprogram co-ebaumen arc Dr. thmg they want to d1scuss.
Instead of dealing with what tern of University-wide goverHoward T1ec~elmann, U~ B and
the body will discuss, the com- nance by next spring.
Dr. Frank Dman, CaniSIUS. _
the complainant against higher authority ) because of constraints involved or implied;
and (3 ) no lirnitstion sbould
be plaoed upon the Office's discretion to determine proper recipients of its findings and
whether they should be private
or public.

American Chemical Society Meeting
Will Be Part of 125th Anniversary

The 1971 American Chemical
the problems of Loc~ood Li- Society (A.C.S.) third Northbrsry and the ~lJ?811 Re- east Hegional meeting to be
serve Room. In delivenn~ a re- held October 11-13 at the Ststpolansrt to thdiscusse
Sena~thwthehichSenhe · ler Hilton Hotel, Buffalo, will
P , I?
Wl
•
•
be part of U/B's year-long
ate s ~1brary .com m 1 t tee, 12.~th Anniversary celebration,
S.,~elder o~tlined weak areas Dr' Paul E . Mobn, chairman of
Wl!Jtin the hbr;ruY system and the 125th Anniversary Group
whilt he CORSlders to he the for the Faculty of Engineering
neglect of the Reserve. IW&lt;?m. and Applied Sciences, has anHe told of the res1pation nounoed.
ol !}&gt;e ~rve Room s proThe "Symposium on Wordfess1onal director because . she age Problems: Amount, Lancould n_ot -get enough f~da guages, Access" will include
to prov1de . adeq_ua~ services. 250 contributed and invited
And Schneider mdicated that papers.
probably she ~ not be ~
Highlighting the meeting will
plaoed thus ca~ the service be several special events, into be run by three clerks, . half eluding a champagne mixer at
of t1;&gt;e number be CORSlders the Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
_ sufficient. He also attscl&lt;i!d the Monday, October 11, and a
pro_posed bours for tbe hbrary banquet, Tuesday, October 12,
wh1ch would clOS&lt;: tbe doors at featuring Dr. Frank A. Long,
5 p.m. and keep them .shut on director of Cornell University's
Sun~,ay, Schneider con~~ program on Science, Tecbnol~ f8llure of t~ admlDlStra- ogy and Society.
lion to have the library on the
Special plans have also been
new
campus
of the
buildings
to beone
opened
., first rnad e fo r th e "!orne~ me~be rS
At the end of Schneider's re- . of. A.C.S . . A d1scussoon-;- T,he
port, Ketter told the Senate Y!" and Yang of Fashion that no one from the library's will be presented Monday, Ocstsff had come to him to com- tober ll, at the S tstler _by
plain about the library or thP Mrs. J"!'e Barrett, Commg
shortage of funds.
Commuruty College. On Tues-

1

�4

Gelbmm1 Feels PeopleWill Realize
Cooperation Produces More for All
Bernard R. Gelbaum is "antitension." He believes in "sweet
reason"-in the willingness of
people to recognize tha~ COC?J&gt;eration within the Uruverstty
will produce more for everyone
than lack of cooperation.
Sitting in what was the campus "bot seat" last year (the
position which some feel th;e
recommendations of the President's Task Force on University Organization would ~­
form into a sort of educational
czardom) Dr. Gelhaum views
the role of academic vice president as neither necessarily controversial nor absolute.
"Faculty .and students are
vital partners in the operation
of the University," he says, and
not the natural enemies of the
·academic administrator.
"Students have a right to
expect a University education
which will equip them to make
significant contributions to society." And while this education may not necessarily be the
one that the students them-

~~:.~.!,h~::~ ~ n,::~t

be consulted. Decision-makers
must be willing tn listen to
students. And vice-versa
Faculty rights, in Dr. Gelhewn's view, should include the
unquestioned final say on such
matters as who will be admitted, what will be taught and
who will be certified. Beyond
this, faculty s h o u I d bave a
strong advisory voice in a number of areas.
'Bri&amp;ht Proopocts'

A veteran educator, administrator and mathematician, Dr.
Gelbaum, formerly associate
dean of the School of Physical
Sciences at the University of
California, Irvine, bas been on
campus since mid-summer. D isplaying the enthusiasm traditionally associated with the recently-arrived, he's ''happy to
be here," and sees before him
an "opportunity" and a responsibility to assist in the development of a forward-looking educational enterprise of national
significance. "Bright'' is the
word be uses to de!pibe the
University's future prospects.
His role in moving toward
that future, Dr. Gelbaum says,
is that of "responsibility for the
academic enterprise., - seeing
to it that the University's prOgrams of teaching and research
are carried out to the credit of
both stud"'!ta and faculty.
His first year will be one of
. "review and reapl'raisal" of the
six years, geareil tn
- last five
planning for the next five. We
may see, as a result, a continuing series of five-year plans, to
be updated from year to yaar
aa events suggesl
'!be University aelf-study, to
be conducted this year in advanoe of the upcoming accredr- itation review by the Middle
States Aasociation of Colleges,
is, of course, the obvious vehicle for identification both of

or

a.IMum

weakness to be bolstered or
otherwise modified and of
strengths on which to build.
This kind of study, Dr. Gelbaum emphasizes, is dependent
upon that .. interaction" among
administration, facul ty and stu. dents to which he is committed.
The study will also benefit
from Dr. Gelbaurns' experience
as "a key figure in the academic planning of the Irvine campus," as his background sheet
describes it. He served there
as chairman of several committees related to this development as well as a member of
special committees concerned
with academic policy and -codes
of faculty responsibility a n d
discipline.
'Ch•mpion of Students'

The background sheets mentions also a citation which recognized Dr. Gelbaum as "a
champion of student needs" at
Irvine. Students have very legitimate concerns today, he
says, noting by way of example
a decline in the quality of un-,_
dergraduate education nationally. "They want good teaching
and more personal attention
and should have both," along
with m o r e opportunities for
participation in campus governance and decision-making.
The academic vice president
plans tn make his office and
himself available through regular meetings and other forms
of interaction so that students
.will, in fact, become involved
in " vital University activities."
· Although convinced that under!P:"duate education must be
ennched, Dr. Gelbaum is not
persuaded by the !{"'Wing nnfion that the educational establistunent has gone overboard on
graduate instruction. To the
contrary, be sees the need for
an increased graduate emphasis. The burgeoning development of higher education prOgrams for such previously-ateluded groupe as older individuals a n d the disadvantaged
(exemplified in New York State
by SUNY's new Empire Col. lege concept a n d the urban

eiREPORTER,
-.....aw

ao...rr r. Mot.JU..CrT
W'~ ~,;;",~~&lt;&gt;;,.-

-

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CXWIJiiDVJ'JJifO AJr!Ur:

=r

-~

·""""" - a.-

,~~,MJI3
aDn'OitS:

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--

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1-

a-

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...,., s.

centers) promises to double
the numbers enrolled in college work. ..This in i t s e I f is
enough to make it clear to Dr.
Gelbaum that lsrge numbers of
Ph.D.'s will continue to be required to staff the expanded
faculties that will be required.
A Matter of Priorities
The funding squeeze facing
h i g he r education nationally
(and U / B in particular as the
New York State budget gets
tighter and tighter ) poses future challenges for the educational enterprise, Dr. Gelbaum
agrees. But he feels that the
resolution of financial problems
will not come until our society
puts its priorities in order. It
has to be recognized, he says,
that society is expensive. especially a society which is firmly committed to programs in
health, education and welfare.
The tax b i t e in the United
States, he feels, is really quite .
modest when compared to some
more socially -advanced EurOpean nations. If we as a society
really believe in the concept of
providing vital social services,
then impOsition of the rorrespondingly higher tax burden
necessary to underwrite them
seems the only feasible alternative.
Bearing on this broader social commitment but more direcUy related to U/ B's community relations, Dr. Gelbaum
sees a definite need for extensive efforts in the Western New
York area to make clear the
value of this University in the
education of youth and in the
provision of research that leads
to a better life for all people.
Much of Dr. Gelbaum's work
has been community-oriented
in this sense. He organized and
secured financial backing for a
series of programs to upgrade
mathematics education in elementary and secondary schools
in Orange County, California.
Approximately 150,000 grammar and high school students
are now learning mathematics
under this new curriculum. He
also founded and organized the
University of California, Irvine,
Industrial ASSQCiates Program
which brings together m a j or
industrial-commercial concerns
and the University for mutus!
educational, research and finan- •
c_ial J:M:nefil Members of partic1pating concerns regularly attend a wide series of conferen?'s an&lt;! W?rkshops dealing
w 1 t h SCientific, management
and recruitment problems.
These provide University students with the opportunity to
learn first-hand about business
problems while allowini industries to draw upon the mtellectual resources of the University.
In the Classroom
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate
of Columbia University, Dr.
Gelbaum holds M.A. and Ph.D.
degrees from Princeton. He was
a member of the University of
MinnesotaDepartmentofMathemati~ from 1948 to 1964 when
- - ed the
he JOm
Irvine faculty. At
U / B be will keep in touch with
the clasaroom t h r o u g h the
teaching of at least one course
in mathematics each semester.
Dr. Gelhaum sums up his
feelings about higher education
by noting that the greatest
thine that have happened to
manldnd through the ages have
come through the contributions
of those groupe of individuals
who have sat and thought and
talked in the universities. He is
convinced that there is hardly
a thing that we touch and feel
today that bas not come aboul
this interaction of

~~~

....,..,

Tbat this kind of traditional
interaction will find a renewed
empbaais at U/ B seems tn be
among his goals aa academic
vioe preoidenl

Hochfie/dAsks lVho Picks
Award Recipren~B and Why
explanation by those who beWho ~ the persons stow honors in its name. And
honored by the University? even if one is forthcoming, we
What does such an honor SJg- might nevertheless give SOme
nify? Is it a mark of recogni- thought to the question: To
tion bestowed by an institution what level of prostitution ought
presumed to value _excellence, a university sink in the quest
or is it a cheap devtce of pub- for good "community relations"?
lic relations?
Very truly yours,
I know nothing about the
~EORGE HOCHFIELD
work of five of the ladies menDept. of English
tioned in last week's Reporter
as soon to be "honored by the
Univen;.ity," but every n~ and
In connection with the celethen I pick up a CourUit-Express and I read the columns of bation of the 125th Anniversary
of the founding of ·The
Mrs. Anne Mclthenny M~t­
thews. They possess no dis- University of Buffalo, the Policy
Committee
for the observtinction worthy of being honored. They are written without ance, a Univen;,ity-wide group
of
faculty,
students
and staff
literary skill; their intellectual
content is trivial; they have appointed by the president, established
a
series
of
awards
"to
neither mother-wit nor sophistication. Their whole purpose, in- honor outstanding contributions
to
society,
to
recognize
deed, is to enshrine the banal
and hackneyed, to flatter the distinction in many professions,
ignorarit prejudices of ~eir au- and to single out high standdience. They are a typical off- ards of accomplishments in varshoot of the provincial Ameri- ious fields of endeavor." Under
can press: a sort of parasite on the chairmanship of Dr. Rollo
the common mind, a degrada- Handy, provost of the Faculty
tion of the very idea of free of Educational Studies, an
thought and independent judg- awards committee established
· criteria for the presentations
ment.
The University is owed an and nominating forms were circulated throughout the campus
in addition to being printed in
the Reporter several times last
spring. Several individuals, selected by this awards committee from the nominees, were
cited at the 125th Anniversary
Banquet last spring and at the
Annual Commencement in
By '1)''
May.
Congratulations to State UrnSix additional awards will be
versity College on Elmwood presented to ..outstanding woAvenue on its Centennial. The ment" at the U /B Alumni A£.
University at Buffalo was well sociation's Women's Day and
represented at the Centennial Awards Luncheon on October
Banquet on Monday. This must 5.
be THE ·Anniversary year.
The following were the criAlong with State University
College's Centennial, this Uni- teria set for these awards for
versity is oommemorating its women: '1be recipient of a
125th, Erie Community Col- University Award should have
lege its 25th, and Erie County made an outstanding contribution in one or more of the folits sesquicentennial.
lowing categories:
•
•
•
The University's goal for the
United Fund this year is $100,- Gl.TTEWPQ~"NTS
000 and we have been desig- - V J.
'J.
nated as a Pilot Program. This
column would strongly u r 11 e The ReporUr ' - on this pqe
to
provide
•
fonlm
for the oxevery member of the Univers1ty
oommunity to seriously consid· chonp of views on a - -varietY
fodnc the ocaclemlc
er the United Fund and make of the a contribution to il '!be Uni- community. We -..e both
versity payroll is approximately position popero u
$60 million and the $100,000 pennltL
goal should be realized. This
w i II be possible if everyone
1. 'lbe welfare and developmakes a contribtuion. 'Ibe Uni- poent of the State University at
versity is a major institutional l3ufialo;
citizen of Bufialo and Erie
County, havingthe fOurth iarlr2. Higher Education;
est payrolL The campaign will
3. Her own field of endeavor;
run from September 15 through
4. Her community (including local, atate, national or inOctober 19.
•
•
•
tematinnal communitia~);
Minority groupe account for
5. Furthering world underalmost ten percent of the total standing and peace."
undergraduate enrollment at
A call for nominations was
the nation's atate universities issued by the U/B Alumni
and land-grant coU.:ges. ~ Aasociation to the "Bufialo Fedpo~ ~m 103 ma)Or pubhc erati'on of Women
' •8 CJ--'-·, the
uru
ti
th
h t the
uua
versl es
roug ou
Inten:lub cOuncil' of Western
country showed that there were New York· the •
of Wn132,545 minority students -(9.8 men Vot;r~.;:"'ibe U/ B
percent) out of a !&lt;&gt;tal """!II- Alumnae N 'forms
ment of 1,352,366 m these malso. - ted - the UIB
stitutiona during fall term 1970. - were . pnn
m
Black students accounted for Alumm N_ew.. _ _
the greatest portion of the miF?rty...., DOilllll!'-~ Y"'re
nority enrollmenl '!be 103 par- receJved and the SIX n!ClPienls
ticipating universities enrolled were chosen by unanimous ~­
80,427 black undergraduates sensus of an awards cooumttee
and 12,192 black students WJIIe ciompoeecl of: Mrs. ~e K.
enrolled in the 96 graduate Corcoran; Mrs. Connie Meschools providing datiL
- Manus, pn!Sident, lnterclub
•
•
•
Council of Western New York;
'Ibe ~price frneze caught up Mrs. James E. ~ton. presiwith SUNY this week. An AI- dent;- Bufialo Federation of Wnbany annolincement notes that men's Clubs; Mrs. Connie Gia .,planned hike in application .-icz, president, U!B_Aiumfees (frOm $5 to $15) bas been nae; Miss Emily Welister, cordisallowed bY the Otlioe of ._rung. secretary, U/ B
E_111ergencv :Preparedness. Alumnae; Miss Dorothy Haas.
SUNY, wtili:h had DOtifled all &amp;IISOCiate director of student afhigh school OllllJI8elon of the fairs, U/8; and John M. Carincrease, ~ csending out a ter, esecutive director of the
State-wide'
C8DileiJini il U /B Alumni AMociation. .

EDITOR:

GUIB
GNOTES

--·a

�Asrudy of
the relations
_between
pointing
and the
naruroJ

·

Since SepteDt~er, 1970, lacul~y and stall ol State "nlverslty ol New

�*

York at Bullalo have pubUahed the lollowlng books••••
acetylcholinesterase and lbe cholinergic
when lbe procedures are applied
of Biolotf:Y. The MIT Press,
receptor, lbe book · is directed to
known, active compounds and
Anthropolog Professor
Cambridge, MG114Chusetll, 1970. First
neurobiotogists , pharmacologists,
unknown compounds; provision
THE EVOLt.rriON OF WAR
by Dr. Keith Otterbein, professor,
tutthropolotf:Y. RRA.F Press, New Rauen,
Conn..: lieu~ 1970. $7.00 hardcover,
$5_00 - " " " "·
From lbe lime lbat evolutionary lbeory
cleteloped in lbe mid-aineteenlb century,
~- bne propoeed tbeories tbat
relate lbe evolution or war to tarious
or polillc:al centnlizallon. The
Evolution o{ War nrriews rome or 111lbeories as a ror derivin&amp; a geoenl
outline or tbeir undedylne structwe, and
reporta tbe major results or a
.........study or primitive war
COIIduc:ted by lbe aulbor durin&amp; lbe past

,__

Coltsidoed in broad perspte tioe, 1
tJUnlr Ottobein i study of war can be mid
to hove united euolutionism,
functionalism, and ecology, and to luwe
prodw:ed ~uning resultr thereby.
-Robert L. Carneiro
Department or Antluopology
Tbe American Museum or Natural History

A HANDBOOK OF METHOD IN
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
by Dr. Raoul Narol~ professor,
anthropo/Off:Y, and Dr RoTUJld Cohen.
Conlributo,. include Dr. Narol~ Dr.
Stuart Scott, tznocitJte professor,
Terrence A. Tatie, lecturer, and Patricia
K Segmen, 6"1Jlwte student Naturul
History Presi, Garden City, N.Y., . 1970.
$40.00.
A Cbm- teacber once said to his
students: "Last nllht I bad a dream. I
dreamed I was a butterfly. I Oitted from
bloarom to bl00110m, revelling in tbe
delicious perfume or tbe Dowers and
· sipping from tbeir nectar. . . now teU me,
am I an old man who dreamed be was a
butterny? Or am I a butterfly ·who is
dreaming be is an old man?"
One or tbe topics analyzed in tbis
important collection is epistemology.
How does a faeld worker know that his
perceptions or a culture are valid if be
lite tbe people be studies, is conditioned
by lbe diUerent values or his own
IOdety'! Ir an antluopologist u.ses a
poycholoeicol approach instead or a
aocioloeicol one, is be ISSUmin&amp; tbe
dominance or psychological
detemllnanta? Wbat is lbe place or
method in lbe research enterprise?
In Ibis broad suney or cwreot
mlilfopolocical theories, melbods, and
technique~ .
rorty-rou y respected
mlilfopolopts and oilier behavioral.
seien- attempt to answer 111prolllena,_and many olbers. They discuso
• lbe art and technology or tleld wort, lbe
methods or studylneliterate ctvilizalions,
lbe ralin&amp; or cultures accordinc to
eWIIulloaary ooquence, lbe role of lbe
H11maD. Relationa Area Files in
eomparathe -.ell, method and lbeory
in etlmoodeDce, error in CI'OIIHJational
~ m,__ and antluopoloelcal
- . and many oilier .....~~a~ topics.

Art
BEHIND APPEARANCES_ A
snJDY OF THE RELATIONS
~ETWEEN PAINTING AND THE

' NATURAL SCIENCES IN THIS
CENTURY
by Dr_ CoiiiDd H. Waddington, Einstein
~

Otrtee of Uniftni.ty Publications

8errices wu able to include in this

-pillltion or publicaliona, only lbooe
broucht to our attention by indi•iduals or
lbeir ~t.. in . . _.... to •
reque.t for JUcb iaformation. Becawe
there i!a no ceDtral MMlJ'Ce of such
inCormation, ...., ~ to campus
-~ to oeod us notice (book jackets,
reYaewa, aynopaea) about future
pablicalloaa u theY are releued. Boolu
by the F.eulty will be publiobed again
aa.t ,.ear and we hope to m.ake it u
- - u poooible_ Seod news or
,..........ts to:
U.u-.ity Publications Senices
Books by lbe Faculty
250 Wialpear AYeoue

ATT: Suzanne Metzcer
~ : 831-2228

published by Edinburth Unive,.ity Press,
1969. ·2 56 poges. $25.00.
II bas orten been pointed out tbat
twentietb century painting and physics
share a common tendency toward
probin&amp; behind appearances into lbe
undedying structure or tbines; lbat lbe
"retre.t from lite.-" in paintinc is akin
to science's peering rar wilbin tbe surface
or matter. The results or lbeir probings
are also significantly similar:
extndimensionality connects Cubism and
relativity; and random, indeterminate
processes occur both in recent
expressionist palnllnc and in quantum
physics. But allbough tbe common
culture implicit in tbese parallels bas
often been remarked, not until now has it
been studied in deplb and in detail.
The author provides a concise
summary or tbooe aspects or modem
science that relate to his theme, including
the development of a " third science"
which embraces information ,
communication, automation, and systems
t!Jeory. He also provides in parallel a
concise history of the modern movement
in painting.
The book contains a large number or
reproductions or paintings: there are
some 150 black and white halftones and
abu.ut 70 color plates. There are also

many verbal statements by painters on

bow they see the relation between their
work and external reality.

Behavioral
Science

FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS IN
DRUG-RECEPTOR
INTERACTIONS
edited by Dr. James F. Daniell~ director,
Center for Theoretical Biology; Dr. John
F. Moran, associate professor,
biochemistry; Dr. Dauid J. Triggle,
professor, biochemical pluJrrn11cology.
Academic Press, New Y;ork and London,
1969. 261 poges. $15.00. '
This work contains co-n tributions relating
to the study of drug -receptor
inte~ctions, the term being used in the
sense or small molecule-macromolecular
• interactions. Emphasis is placed on lbe
desirability or multidisciplinary
coUaboration by chemists, biochemists,
physiologists, and molecular biologists in
this important area. Discussions are
included on quantum approaches to
ligand conronnation, biochemical events
triggered by interaction , active
site-directed labeling, isolation or
receptor constituents, considerations or
membrane structure and function,
membrane bound permeases, and the
autoradiographic localization or
macromolecules.
The volume will be of value to ali
biochemists, pharmacologists, and
medicinal chemists.

NEUROTRANSMITI'ERRECEPTOR INTERACTIONS

THE ORIGlNS OF ABNORM AL
BEHAVIOR
edited by Dr. Norrrwn L. Corah, associate
professor, behavioral and related sciences

School of Dentistry, and Dr. Elliot

biochemists, medicinal chemists,
molecular biologists, and neurologists.

N:

Gale, assistant pro(l!S$Of , behavi oral and
relat ed sciences. A ddiso n-Wesley

Reading, MGS14Chu se tts, 1971 . 448 pages:
$6.95 paperback.
This is a collection of empirical studies of
various aspects of the etiology or origins
of abnormal behavior. Its main focus is

upon tbe scientific study or lbe ractors
which produce abnormaJ. behavior:
biological (hereditary, biochemical, and
olbers) ; sociocultural and psychological

(modes

of adaptation, learning,
~nality organization, and family
tariables). The empirical studies are
orpnized according to groupings of
etiological ractors. Ali are based on work
wilb human control groups, lbe aim or
lbe editors being to place lbe role or any •
given factor in u realistic a light as
poosible given tbe present state or our
lmowledge. Emphasis is placed on tbe
antecedent 118Ue rather than the
"symptom-syndrome."

Bloch~adcal

Pharmacology
CHOLINERGIC LlGAND
INTERACTIONS
edited by Dr. David J. 'l'riggle, professor
biochemical pluurnGcol'lfD'; Dr. John
Moran, asrociate professor, biocMmistry;
D_r. Er1c A . Barnard, chainnan.
biochemistry. Academic Press, New Yor/r .
and London, 1971. 218poges. $7.50

F:

This book presenfs a detailed account or
lbe molecular aspects of tbe interaction
or cholinergic lipnds wilb cholinergic
receptors and cholinesterues in normal
and palbolopcal states. Topics discussed .
include lipnd-induced conronnational
c:hangeo in acetylchollnesterue and lbe
cbolinercic receptor, the subunit
character or acef;ylcbolinesterue, lbe
x-ray analysis or cholinergic ligand
conformations, the analysis of
atructure-activity relatiO!llbips at
cholinergic receptors, .approaches to lbe
isolation 11r lbe acetylcholine receptor,
and lbe anolysis and quantification or
acetylcbolinateraae and related eqzymes
in normal and palbol&lt;&gt;eical tissues:
Sold
to be lbe only up-todate, readily accessible treatment or

by Dr. Da uid J. Triggle, pro(usor,
biochemical pharmDcology. Academic
Press. London and New York, 1971 . 610
pages. Approx. $27.00.
Despite the ract that the concept or
ne u ro tr a nsmitter-receptor interactions
has been known for a great many years,
these receptors remain elusive quantities.
The difficulties or defining receptor
structu re and function are related to the
complex nature of the sequence of events
initiated by the neurotransmitter-receptor
inte ractions, difficulties which are
increased by the lack or communication
between workers in various disciplines
who have studied Ibis complex problem.
Tbis text discusoes tbe molecular basis
or neurolnnsmitter-receptor interactions
from a multidisciplinary standpoint, ror
an effective understanding or lbe actions
of neurotransmitters wiU require
collaboration among disciplines.
Emphasis has been placed on two broad
areas, into which tbe author believes
knowledge or neurotransmitter-receptor
mteractions must be incorporated; lbese
areas are tbe regulatory control of
macromolecules and membrane structure
and function.
As a result or tbe emphasis on
interdisciplinary cooperation the
publishers say, lbe book should noi only
be or value to workers researching
drug-receptor interactions, but also as a
euide to scientists from oilier disciplines
who wish to enter Ibis rleld. Graduate
students in medicinal chemistry
pharmacology and biochemistry should
find Ibis a 111eful reference volume.

SCREENlNG METHODS IN
PHARMACOLOGY
Volurru! ll-edited by Robert A . Thmer
and Dr. Peter Hebborn, professor
biochemical pharmDco1ogy. Academi~
Press, 1971. 298 pages. $17.50.
The first volume or Screening Methods in
Pharmacology-published in
1965-described most or tbe better
known methods or screening in
pharmacology. The present volume
extends and updates lbe material in
Volume I, but ~~ inclu~ considerably
m~re . theo_rettcal dtscussion and
emphastzo;s pbarmacoiogical compounds
or special current interest-steroids
~ic agents, cardiovascular drugs '
antidepreosant drugs, immunosuppressiv~
~nts, and sequential screening or
diure&amp;lc: agents.
..
. Fe~tures or tbe book include:
diSCU~On of lbe difficulties in lbe
techruques; description or lbe results

to
to
of
altemati.., procedures which may be
more suited to a particular investigator's
needs.
The melbods are described in enough
detail so tbat Iiley may be used in lbe
laboratory wilbout further rererence to
other books or to lbe literature
Moreover, every method has bee~
examined to make sure tbat it is lbe
simplest and most n!liable avaDabie for a
given screening problem.
Bolli volumes or Ibis work will be or
interest to pbarmacoloe~sts, medicinal
chemists, analytical chemists, inedica1
s~udents and
technicians, clinical
biochemists, and medical researchers.
Contributors from SUNY /8 include:
Dr. Marian May, assistant professor
Center for Theoretical Biology; Robert
Steger, research assistant, biochemical
pharmacology; Dr. Vijay Swamy,
asststant professor, biocbemical
pharmacology; Dr. Hans J. Wilkens
assistant professor , biochemicai
pharmacology and Dr. Hebbom.

Biology
DYNAMlCAL SYSTEM THEORY
IN BIOLOGY, VOLUME 1.
STABILlTY THEORY AND ITS
APPLlCATlONS
by Dr. Robert Rosen, associate professor,
biophysical ~Cien ces. Wiley-Inter5eience,
1970. 302 poges. $17.95.
The rust of two, this volume is
concerned with the application or
dynamical systems tbeory, in particular
stability lbeory, to tbe formulation and
solution or important problems or
biological organization, regulation, and
control. The author stresses the
significance or lbe dynamical formalism
as a language for organizing and unifying
apparently unrelated branches or
biological research , particularly ·lbose lila!
deal with different levels or biological
organization.
Showing bow and wby the language or
mathematics is . important ror tbe
formulation and solution or problems in
!"ology, Dr. Rooen develops typical,
Important, and conceptually rich
examples from all levels or biology, from
lbe submolecular to lbe ecoloelcal. Many
or lbeoe examples have never appeared in
textbook form berore.
Dynamical System Theory in Biology
bas been written for lbooe concerned
witb ali kinds or quantitative
investigations into lbe properties or biological systems-biochemists
physiologists, and ecologists, especially
lbooe scientista concerned wilb regulation
and control or biological proceaoes.

PHYSICAL PRINClPLES OF
BIOLOGICAL MEMBRANES
Proceedings of the Corul Gables
Conference on Phyfic41 Principles of
Biolofical Membranes, ~ Center {or
Theoretical Studies, Unioetrity of Miami,
December 1968. Edited by Dr. Fred M.
Snet~ 'pro{eaar, biophysicoJ. ociences; Dr.
J. Wolken, Dr. G. lueroon Gild Dr. J. LGm.
Gordon and Breoch Science Pl.lblishero,
New Yorlr, 1970. 435 poges. $27,50.
There is litlle doUbt lbat lbe precise
nature or lbe Cuncllonal role
liviD&amp;
membranes conllnu• to elude lbe
probinc inquirer (bolb experimentalist
and theoretician). Tbe appliqal!on or
sophisticated experlinental t&lt;fllluques
and powerful lbeoretlcal melbods bas
certainly resulted in considerable
progress. but a complete description or
bioloelcal membranes remains outside lbe
range or 111- advances. This work
contains up-to-date accounts or
theoretical and experimental
investigations or lbe structure or
membranes from physical and chemical
points or view. In parllcutar, lbe relation
between lbe structure and chemistry or
liviD&amp; membranes and lbelr function in
blol&lt;&gt;eical procesaes such u diffusion and
permeabUity is d*"-1 from a tariety
of standpoints, as are recent
developments in lbe bioene~J~etics or tbe
cell. Attempts to determine lbe relation

or

SEPTEMBER\ 16, 1971 I BOOKS BY THE Ft-CULTY I Page·2

�between the oell ene11etics and the
function of mitochoadriol memb..between the cbloroplat membranes
pbotooynth-, and between the retinal
rod memt&gt;ranes and risull excitation are
deocribed.
•
Since it encomp- such a wide
IBDfO of interdisclpUnaey activity, this
book affords a uniquely valuable
contribution to current nlliealCb In the
field of bioiOilcal membranes, being
accesllibie to oerious students and
raearcbers In biophyllie&amp;, biochemistry,
neuropbyllioloey, pbyllics and chemistry.

and

Chemical
TecbnoiOBY
MATERIALS AND
TECHNOLOGY, VOLUME ill,
METALS AND ORES
A sylllllrl4tic encyclopedia of the
technology of =~rials used in in®&amp;try
and commerce, including {oodstu{{s arlit
fuels. Based upon a work originally
&lt;kvised by the IDle Dr. J.F. oon
0.., -edited by L . W. Codd, K. Dijkhof{,
J.H. Fearon, Dr. Carel J. oon Oss,
associDte professor, microbiology, H.G.
Roebersen, E.G. Sl4n{ord. Generol
Editor, T.J. W. oon Thoor. LongmDn
Group Ltd., London, and J.H. de B...Sy,
Amsterdam, 1970.

Like other voiUIIjOS or the Encyclopedia,
this one on metals has been written by
specialists for people who require reliable
infonnation. Care has been taken to
present the lnfonnation so as to serve the
layman as weU as the engineer or
technologist. The layman, with only an
elementaJy knowledge · of physics and
chemistry, will have no difficulty in
understanding the text and the engineer
and technologist will find it a useful work
oC reference. Students, in schools,
colleges and universities, who are
preparing for a career in science or
technoloey will also find the volume
helpful in providing background reading
in support or the main lines or study.

PROGRESS IN SEPARATION
AND PURIFICATION, VOLUME 3
edited by Dr. Edmond S. Perry and Dr.
Carel J. uan Oss, associDte pro{eswr, ·

microbiologj.

Wiley-Jnterscience,

A

Division of John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc., New
York, London, Sydney, Toronto, 1970.

The science and technology generated in
the struggle to separate fiSSionable
isotopes, in isolation and purification of
marketable quantities or antibiotics, in
the discovery of gas chromatography, and
in the industries tJi{sed on solid-state
phenomena, were important milestones in
producing the current science of
separation and purification.
This uolume was launched in January
1968 and Volume 2 appeared in Marrh
J9~9. The present Volume 3 continues to
Cllrry forth our origiiUli objectives: to
have a forum {or speciDI papers to provide
the expert as well as the newcomer to the
(&amp;eld with a current awareness of the
protraJ being mD&lt;k in this expanding
5elf17Unt of science.
The original in~ntion (or the· Series
was to compile uolumu from submitted
papers irrespective o{ their subject
mDt~r. Thus Volume I contains articles
tkscribing a wide ronge of methods and
techniques. Volume 2, howeuer. is a
colkction o{ papers allied to a common
in~rut and ori#inally presented together
a,. symposium. ...
The present volume, like Volume I,
contains a group of articles on a variety
of rubj«ts within the fWd o{ separotion
and purification. Again, the authors haue
presen~d their particulllr expertise in a
mDnner to benefit the novice and upert
alike.
-from the Preface.

Claulcs
ARETHUSA MONOGRAPHS D :
THE MUNICIPAL DECREES OF
THE ROMAN WEST
by Dr. Robert K. Sherk, yro{esux,
c/Gaics. 'I'M Department of C/Gaic$,
SUNY/B, 1970. 111 pata. 14.25.

ESSAYS IN ANCIENT
GREEK PHILOSOPHY
. edited by John P. Anion with Dr. Ckorge
L. KustGs, pro{eaor, ciDaicL Si4~
Univemty of New . York Press, Albany,
_1971. 650 - · $25.00.
.
The - s in this volume treat a wide
variety of fundamental topics and
problems In ancient Greek philosophy.
The acope of the aection on pre-Socratic
thc&gt;Uibt ranges over the views which tilthinkers have on such ....,. of concern as
reltcion, na~ phllooophy and science,
coomic periods, the nature of elements,
theory of names, the concept of plutality,
and the phllooophy of mind.
The papetS dealing with the Platonic
dialocues examine with unusull· care a
great number of central themes and
cliscwB them In considerable depth:
problems In language and logic, myth,
reason, hypothesis, eros, friendship,
reason, morality, society, art, tbe nature
of soul, and immortality; In additipn,
they offer fresh discussions on a number
of basic morphological, methodological,
and philological issues related to
phUooophical azguments and introduce
new aspects for a critical reexamination
of controversies surrounding tlte
doctrines and the authenticity of certain
Platonic works.
The essays on the philosophy or
Aristotle are closely reasoned analyses of
such basic themes as the universality of
the sensible, the nature of kinesis. the
problem of future contingencies. the
meaning of qualitative change, the
doctrine of phantasia, the · essence of
intelligence and the metaphysical
foundations for theethical life.
The essays on post-Aristotelian
developments in ancient philosophy offer
challenging and well -do c umented
discussions on topics in the history of
ancient logic, categorical thought, the
ethical doctrines of ancient Scepticism,
epistemological issues in the physical
theory of tbe Epicureans, and basic
concepts in the metaphysics of the
neoplatonists.

Computer
Science

AN INTRODUCTION TO
PROGRAMMING AND

COMPUTER SCIENCE
by Dr. Anthony Ralston, chairman,
computer science. MCGraw-Hill, 1971.
5 13 pages. $9.95.

The primary concern of th is book is with
using procedu~-oriented languages on
digital computers. In addition. it
introduces the student to a wide range .of
ideas and concepts in computer science.
The approach is one of emphasizing the
process between buman
puter.
gusges-Fo
,
To this end, four
Algol , PL/ 1, and
bol--ve discussed
with the structu
and corresponding
features of each compared . The book is,
however, not a manual for any of these
languages and should be used with one or
the many available books in a specific
computer l anguage, such as the ssme
author's Fortran TV Programming-A
Concise Exposi(ion published together
with this book. Although there are
numerous examples in all the languages,
tltere are more in Fortran and (fwer in
Cobol than in the others.
There are ~ussions of a variety or
topics in computet science other than the
strictly languace topics, Including:
numbers and number systems; Polish
notation and the compilation of
arithmetic expressions; recursion;
Boolean llgehra and logical design;
hardware clwacteristics of input, output,
and auxUiary memory devices; and,
briefly, operating systems and
lime-sharing.
A aection at the end preient's a number
of problems at elementaJy, Intermediate~.
and advanced ~Is suitable for computer
projoda that enable students to develop
an lntult!Ye undellltaDdlnl of atcorithms.
Problems are preoented after each
chapter, and hints and answers at the end
to aimoot aU problems.

APPROXIMATE CALCULATION
OF MUL1'Q'LE INTEGRALS

DISCRETE-TIME AND
COMPUTER CONTROL
SYSTEMS
by Dr. James A . Cadzow. associate
professor, elec trical engineering. and Dr.
Hinn·c h R . Martens, professor, electrical
engineen"ng and mechanical engineering.
Pre n t ic e -Hall Elec trical Engineering
Series, Englewood Cli{{s, New Jersey,
1970. 473 pages. $ / 5 .95.
This work treats systems in which the

FORTRAN IV PROGRAMMINGA CONCISE EXPOSITION
by Dr. A ntho ny Rals ton, chairman,
computer science. McG raw--Hill, 19 71 .
177 pages. $3.50.

Written to be used with the author's An
Intro du c tion lo Programming and
Co mputer Science (IPCS), this book is,
however, self~ontained and complete in
itself, covering, as it does, almost the
entire range or the Fortran language and
including examples and exercises.
The order or topics here generally
parallels that in lPCS. There, is, however,
one significant exception. This is that this
book begins ' with an exposition or what
tlte author calls "Basic Fortran." Basic
Fortran consists of enough or the Fortran
language to enable a student to write
meaningful programs so that, quite early
in an introductory course in computing,
actual computer problems can be
assigned. By focusing on the bosic
Fortran topics in Chapter 1 of this book
in the second or third week of the
semester, an instructor can overcome the
dilemlna inherent in IPCS and other
introductory books in computer science
which try to treat topics completely and
in a reasonable order and , thereby, fail to
get to the actual ~ing of a language
until later than is desirable.

Dentldry
CONTROLLING mE
OPERATING FIELD BY USE OF
THE RUBBER DAM

- by Dr. Peter R. Cunningham, assisl4nl
by Dr. Arthur Stroud, associDte pro{-ar,-'" pro{euor, operative dentistry and
computer tt:ience. Prentice-Hall, 1971.
endodontic&lt;; Dr. John W. Osbame,

Page 3 / BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I SEPTEMBER 16, 1971

digital ·computer plays a central role.
Specifically,. the authors explore the
employment or the computer (1) as a
means of implementing design objectives
consistent with modem theory; (2) as an
on·line component in a computer control
system; and (3 ) as a computational aid in
tne solution of problems arising io
analysis.
assistant professor. operative dentistry
and endodontics; L oretta A . · Kaye,
auis tant {or instructiotUJI resources,
JnstructiotUJI Co mmunications Center;
tec hn ical advisors: Dr. George W.
Ferguso~ chainntln, operative dentistry
and endodontics. and Dr. Taher A. Razik.
a ss ociat e professor, curriculum
deuelopment and instructional media.
State University of New York, 1970.

This textbook of programmed instruction
is designed not only to tesch a technique
but also to tesch terminoloey. Although
other terms may be considered just as
correct, the student is encouraged to use
the terms presented in the text. SimUarly,
there are other techniques of applying the
rubber dam. This textbook teaches one of
severo! workable approacheo.

Economics
AN ECONOMETRIC MODEL OF
THE NORTHEASTc:;QRRIDOR
OF THE UNITED'\!n'ATES
(PB 184994)
by Dr. Robert T. Crow, assisl4nt
projessor, &amp;hool of Management U.S.
Clearinghouse {or Fetkral &amp;ienli(ic and
Technical Information, 1969. 270 _...
$3.00.

MODELS OF ECONOMIC
GROwrH
by Dr. Daniel Hamberg, chainrum,
economics. Harper &amp; Row, New York,
1971. 246 pages. $9.95.

'Ibis •olume is a lucid and flexible text
whicb coven the Harrod-Domar,
~. and Cambrlclce models;

�-e

IMfyza obotad• to lbe UWDJDeDt of
IOIJC"I1lD equilibrium powtb; eumiDeO at
lenccb Ule DeOCialllcol-equllibrium l'l!lulta
coaeeraln&amp; savinl·in•estment and
powlb; c11scu1tes lbe Golcleu
Rule oC AocumulatloD; ADd p.-nts a
neoclassical growth model with
mdocenous teebDical eJw&gt;ce. Graphs.
Fooloote references.

Education
AFRICA-INQUIRY MAPS
by Dr. E. Perry Hiclu, tuSOCiale professor,
instruction, bnd &amp;rry K. Beyer. ThomJJS
Y. Crowell Company, Inc. New YorR,
1970.

A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO
TEACHER TRAINING AND
CURRlCULUM DEVELOPMENT:
THE CASE OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES
by Dr. Taher A . Razik, associate
professor, curriculum development and
instructional media. UNESCO
interru:tioruJI Institute for Educational
PIJJnning, Paris, 1971. 226 pages.

AN INVESTIGATION OF THE
DETERMINANTS AND THE
CONSEQUENCES OF VARIATION
IN TEACHERS SALARIES
IN NEW YORK STa'TE
by Dr~ Austin Swanson. professor,
educational administration. Dr. Arthur
Butler, professor, economics, and Dr.
Chester Kiser, associate professor,
educationnl administration. Western New
York School Deuelopmenl Counci~
Buffalo, 1970.

BlBLIOGRAPHY OF
PROGRAMMED INSTRUCTION
AND COMPUTER ASSISTED
INSTRUCTION
by

Dr.

Toher

A.

Razik,

associate

professor, curriculum development and

instructional media . Educational
Technology, Englewood Cliffs. New
Jersey, 1971.

CLASSROOM APPLICATIONS OF
REINFORCEMENT PRINCIPLES
by T. W. Frazier, Dr. J. Ronald Gentile,
assistant professor, ed ucational
psychology, and · M.l:. Mo ,·ris .
Kendall/Hun~ Dubuque, Iowa, I f/70. 84
pages.S2.60.
This text provides an introductioD to lbe
principl~ or operant and . clossical
couditioliing with ID emphasis upon lbe
importance of these principles to
understanding and inOuencing behavior in
clauroom settings. The authors
emphasize lbe ueceosity for establishing a
rewarding, supportive environment to
shape positive attitudes and work habits
toward academic conteut.

COORDINATING HIGHER
EDUCATION
by Dr. Robert 0. Berdahl, chairman,
higher education, with Glenny, Palo/a and
Pultridge. Center (or Research and
Development in Higher Education.,
University of California at IkrReley,
1971.

EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY :
THE STUDY OF BEHAVIOR IN
THE CLASSROOM
by Dr. J. Ronald Gentile, assiotant
pro(euor, educational psychology.
lndependeqt Study Course 59:5. State
Uni«rsity of New York, 1970. 89 pages.
This is a study .pide cieaiCJ&gt;ed to be U5ed
in a eo._..,ee.....,. in edueatiorlll
payeboiOCY for eoallnulnc edueatioD
otuclenm. The plde proriclea a pnera1
model for COIIIiclerlnc bebmor In a
eta.room and lntepatea three text.. Into
lbat model. The supplementary text.. are:
(1) Frazier, T.W., Geullle, J.R., aud
Morris, M.C. CIDssroom Applications of
Reinforcement Principlea, Dubuque,
Iowa: KtacWI/Hunt, 1970; (2) Gnacey,
W.J. The hychology of Discipline in the
Claaroom, fo!ew York: Maemillan, 1968;
(3) Dnlkua, R~.A. hycholotlY in the
ClGirroom, New York: Harper ADd Row,
-1968.

EXPLORATIONS IN CREATIVITY
Dr. Taher A. RazW, aaaociate pro(usor,
curriculum development and im"""tional
media, contributor and ~itor with
R.L. Mooney. Swediah edition, &amp;clunGn
Fori 'a 'I Publishera, Stocltholm, 1971.

THE GARY SCHOOLS
by Randolph S. Bourne. Introduced and
annol4ted by Dr. Adeline Levine,
associate professor, soeiolcfY, and Dr.
Murray Levine, director, pro{eaional
psychology. Th~ MIT ~ss, Cambridge,
M....,chusetts, and London, England. 323
pages. Si2.50.
The reader may discover in this book an
innovative school sySt.efn that embodies
tbe concepts of a relevant education. a
community school, an educational park,
and team teaching. Originally published
in 1916, The Gary Schools is a forthright
account or Ute public school system of
Gary, Indiana, under the ~perintendency
of William Wirt. At a time when Gary was
being developed by United Staq,s Steel
Corporation, Wirt initiated a novel
educatiorlll program to meet the
problems of urban life and demands of a
modem vocation. From nursery school to
the first years of college, Ute Gary plan
was to educate the whole child in an
integrated and continuous fashion.
Courses in the industrial and technical
arts were taught along with conventional
academic subjects, and the truly upublic"
school meshed c(assrooms and shops with
municipal playgrounds, parks and
gardens, libraries and museums. Wirt also
introduced the ..platoon" system which
efficienUy utilized a relatively small
number of teacher:s and facilities to take
care of a maximum number of students.
Bourne thus describes a modem school
system that grew in recognition of a
social need.

GROUP GUIDANCE AND
COUNSELING IN THE SCHOOLS
Selec ted Readings-edited by Dr. James
C. Hansen, professor, counselor edu catio n
and Dr. Stanley H. Cramer, associate
professor , c o un selor e ducation .
Appl e ton -Ccntury-Croft5, Educational
Division, Meredith Corporation, 1971.
397 poges.
The purpose or this book is to present
materials giving a perspective on group
guidance and counseling in the school
setting. It is designed to provide a
theoretical overview of groups and group
processes as well as practical techniques
for working with groups. Theory and
practice are shown in relation to the total
school and to lbe small counseling group.

THE MEASUREMENT
OF VALUES
by Dr. Rollo Handy, provos~ educational
litudies. Warren H . Green., lru:., SL Louis,
Missouri, 1970. S/2.00.
A more adequate understanding of what
is involved in the measurement of values

through consideration of the work of
both philosophers and behavioral
scientists is the aim of this volume by Dr.
Handy. Pbilooopbers writing on value
theory have often put their major
emphasis on attempts to clarify Ute
tenninology involved and to differentiate
values from the rest of the universe.
Behavioral scientists sometimes claim to
hav~
mea.s~red
values, and have
emphasized lbe descriptiou of lbe values
held by particular iudividuals or groups of
humaDs. Both the attempts at
clarifiCation by pbilooopbers aud Ute
empirical work or the behavioral
scientist&amp; are considered here.
Several controver&amp;ial isaues about Ute
nature or scientific measurement are
aualyzed, especially lbe view lbat
measurement is only polliible in physical
sc fence areas of inquiry. The
COIIIIdentioD or in meaRJremellt
theory is followed by a critical
deaerlptiOD o( IIOIDe rep....,.,tative
bebavlonl ldeDee attempt.. to meaRlre
Vllueo. Material from Ule areas of
psychology, sociology,' anlbropology,
economlea, pme lbeory aud related fields
is reviewed aDd enluated. Theu lbe value
theories deYeloped by several
pbDoaopbers lflllPaiJietie to tiJ!" DOtiOD
lbat Vllu• CaD be measured are analyzed.
Some writers elaJm lbat values are
.. bjeetlve ADd a speelal subjective metric

is therefore required · tor their
meaaurement. Olben wbo ft!jeet Ule
subjectivist poeition Vlluea u best
JDeMUred through verbal l'l!lpODIOB, aDd
use questloD.Dalre, palred-a&gt;mparls~m,
rauk-onleriJlC, aud poup discuasioD
tecllnlques in lbelr iuvestiptioos. Yet
olber inquiren put their emphasis ou
hWDID behavior In general, wilbout giving
special importance to verbal responses as
lbe key to Vlluating behavior,. aud
attempt to study selective-rejective
behavioral processes directly.
•The view defended iD this book is Utat
no unique metric for value measurement
is · necessary; valuations are viewed as
fonns of human behavior requiring only
the modes of meaSurement appropriate to
the behavior involved.

MULTIVARIATE DATA
ANALYSIS
by W. W. Cooley and Dr. Paul R. Lohnes,

professor, educational psychology. Wiley,
New York, 1971. 364 pages. $10.50.
This is a texUtook for advanced applied
statistics courses in behavioral and social
sciences and education. The book
features practical computer programs in
Ute Fortran IV language for all of Ute
procedures covered. There is heavy
emphasis on examples from published
research to illustrate the principles of
interpretation of multivariate statistical
analyses. Least-nontrivial numerical
examples of all procedures are provided
in a fashion that allows the student to
follow all the steps in Ute computations.
Matrix notation is employed throughout,
and some derivations are done.

POWER AND AUTHORITY
by Dr. L. Richard Meeth, associate
professor, higher education. and H.
Hodgkinson. Jossey Bass, San Froncisco,
1971 .

rupolllibility and in 10 doifvl, the 9uthors
help to remove much of the aura
AUTOUnding the tum "ruean:h. "
.• .. When thi$ writer firat opened thio
text he felt that thU mifht be irut
another OI'JIIInizlltion of bit. of baric
stat;. tic. texts and ~nt texts but
thio was not t1ve for thio particular book.
Both the school counselor and graduate
students beginning their p~ms in
counselor edu&lt;tJtion rhould welcome this
work both as a tool (or learning and "also
as an excellent source of in(onrit.tion to •
be kept close at hand in one '• work
selling.
-R.B. Simono, University of North
Carolina at Cbailotte
Educational and Psychological
Measurement
Spring 1971

REVIEW AND SYNTHESIS OF
RESEARCH IN TRADE AND
INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION
by Dr. AIQ&lt;rt Pautler, tmociate professor,
curriculum development and instructional
media, with Carl J. Schaefer. Eric
CleJJringhouse, The Center for Research
and Leadership Development in
Vocational and Technical Education,
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio,
1969.
This is one of a second generation of
papers which assess Ute "state-of-the-art"
in vocational and technical education
fields. The review should assist in
identifying substantive problems and
methodological approaches for
researchers, as well as pro\ide
practitioners with a summary of research
.findings which have application to trade
and industrial education programs.

SELECTED FACTORS OF
LANGUAGE LEARNING AND
LANGUAGE ATI'RITION

PRE-SERVICE AND IN-SERVICE
PREPARATION OF SCHOOL
COUNSELORS FOR
EDUCATIONAL GUIDANCE

by Dr. Anthony Papalia, assistant
professor, instruction. Western New York
Council of Foreign Languoges, 1970. 122
pages. $3.00 paperback.

edited by Dr. Stanley H. Cromer,
associate professor, counselor education_
A mcrican Personnel and GuicWnce
Association, Washington, D.C., 1970.
This monograph consists o{ {our sections.
The first part presents the findings of a
(our -stale suroey of 1,174 school
counselors regarding their opinions of the
preparation which they had received for
educational guidmu:e. Part 2 suggests
content and process {or implementing
more effective training in educational
guid&lt;Jnce and counseling. Part 3 deals
with non-collegiate post-high school
educational guidance. Finally, Part 4
offers an annotated bibliography o(
materUzls useful in educational guidance
and counseling.
-from the Preface.

SELECTED MEASUREMENT
PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES
FOR TEACHERS

PROGRAM EVALUATORS
HANDBOOK: MEASUREMENT
by Dr. David S. Farr, professor,
ed u cational psychology. and M.
Subkoviak. New York State Education
Departmen~ Albany, 1970.

REHABILITATION
COUNSELING: SCOPE
AND SERVICES
by Dr. Marceline Jaques, professor,
counselor education. Houghton Mifflin
Company, Boston, 1970.

RESEARCH AND THE
SCHOOL COUNSELOR
by Dr. Stanley Cromer. cusociate
professor, counselor education ; Edwin L.
Herr,. Charles N. Morris and Dr. Thomas
T. Frantz, associate profeS$Or, counselor
education. Houghton Mifflin Company,
Boston, 1970. 202 pages. S3.50
paperback.
ln. the introduction to this text, C.
Gilbert Wrenn commented that this book
was "for first-year graduate students or
counselo" on the job who have little
n!Wlrch kn"bwledge " and that it was
written in a cleJJr and st:roigRt(orward
style. These are accurate descriptioiUi {or
the work and this writer would add that
"nothi'!;! ~ been lost by presenting the
materUJI m such a readable (tuhion.
Throughout the text the authors attempt
to convince school counselors that
research is a neces&amp;ary part of their

by Dr. J. Ronald Gentile, assistant
professor, educational psychology.
Kendall/Hun~ Dubuque, Iowa, 1970. 32
pages. $2.00.
This text provides a teacher wilb
techniques, requiring only simple
arithmetic skills and which CaD be
calculated by band, to evaluate his tests
wilb regard to lbeir difficulty, reliability,
and validity. The aulbor emphasizes lbe
importance or recognizing Ute arbitrary
nature or ossignment or grades to
distributions or scores.

STATEWIDE COORDINATION
OF HIGHER EDUCATION
by Dr. Robert 0. BerdDhl, chairman,
higher education. American Council on
Education, Washington, D.C., 1971 .
$7.00.

TEACHING SHOP AND
LABORATORY SUBJECTS
by Dr. Albert J. Pautler, associate
professor, curriculum development and
imtructional media. Charles ~E. Merrill,
ColumbU&amp;, Ohio, 1971. 192 pages. $5.95.
This comprehensive volume shows
proopective and practlclug shop aud
laboratory teacben bow to cany out lbe
instruetiorlll p - more effectively.
Spec"ifieally desi(ned for a
on"""mester coune In abop teaclllng
melbods mct.cbruquea, it features lbe
use of per{Onnanee objective&amp; in lbe
development of Ute course t&gt;f study and
lesson plan. •
Discusoion qu•tioos at lbe eod of
each chapter and illustratioal ADd charts
reinforce aud clarity lbe material.

UCEA URBAN SIMULATION:
THE MONROE CITY
MATERIALS
edited by Dr. Troy V. McKeluey,
associate professor, educational
adtniniot:rotion, with John Blough, Jack
Culbert.on, AIJJn Gaynor and Marl&lt;
Shiblea. Ohio University Council for
Educational Adtniniotration, ColumbUI,
1971. Fourteen moiWfl'DP/u. $1200
approx. for seL

SEPTEMBER 16, 1971 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I Page 4
' ''•' •' ',· • ·-H·: • " ~.t •• •'·
• · .• , · 1,~
~- •-i'' ,._~,
~.
,• •

�The Monroe City Simulation materials are
designed for both pre- and in-service
education of school administrators. They

Corporotion, New York, /970. 144 pagi?Ji.
$2.65.

of background infonnation on

An anthology of contemporary French

CORSISt

one of the twenty largest cities in the
nation, on its school system and on the
UCEA Urban Simulation Project which
includes the simulation of an inner city
elementary school, a junior high school
and a senior high school.
Published as short monographs, the
background

materials

include

the

following major topics: (a) Monroe city:
its setting and demography, (b) the
political environment of the Monroe city
school system, (c) the economic
environment of the Monroe city school
system, {d) Monroe city's mass media, (e)
~onroe city's inOuence structure, (f)
•nter.agency relati ns in Monroe city, (g)
community organizations in Monroe city
and their demands on the school system
(h) Monroe city school board, (i) interru1i
organization and decision making in the
school system, (j) the school system's
organizational program, (k) the school
district's professional staff, (I) Monroe
city students, (m) perceived challenges to
educational leadership in Monroe city
'
and (n) an overview of Monroe city.
Tocether the monographs provide an
unprecedented amount of detailed
dellcripl:ive information on an urban
ochool system and Its community. Such
an arraneement should fadlltate nexible
uses of the case material both within the
context of the Monroe city simulations
and In other lnatructional set:tinp. Each
ol the ocbool simulation ·units contain a
variety of instructional media Including
tapes, run. llld" written in-baalret
atlmulua Items.
' n - materials were deoeloped under
the auaplcea of the University CoUJJcll for
Educational Administration supported by
a $65,000 cooperative -..:h (lrant
from member UCEA inllitutiona.

WORLD CULTURES: JAPAN
AND MONSOON ASIA
by Dr. E. Perry Hid~. aaociote pro{eaor,
inllnlclion, tmd Robert Boll. Keuf{eltmd
Eu.er Corrlpany, Morrlltown, New Jersey,
1970.

French
CINQ NOUVELLES NOuvELLES
edited by Dr. R4ymortd Fetkrm11n,
pro{eaor, FreMh. Appleto~ntwy­
Crofil Education Diuillon, Meredith

short stories with introduction noteS
biographical essays on the auth~rs. and
v~buluy. Includes works by Beckett,
V1an, Pinget, Robbe-Grillet, Le Clezio.

LANG AGE ET FICI'ION DANS
LE ROMAN DE BECKETI

issued last October. Vol. V is in
preparation and is to contain a
and glossary , as well as
laterary, metric and linguistic studies. The
Academ.ie des Incriptions et Belles Lettres
f:~e:. the edition its Prix d·e La Grange
~o mmentary

by Dr. Olga Bernal. professor. French.
Gallimord, Pa'?·s.

SAMUEL BECKETI: HIS WORKS
AND HIS CRITICS . AN ESSAY
IN BIBLIOGRAPHY
by Dr. Ray mond Federman. professor,

LES MIRACLES DE NOSTRE
DAME PAR GAUTIER DE
COINCI, VOLUME IV

French, and Dr. John Fletcher, University
of East A nglia. Norwich. England.
University of Cali(ornW. Press. Los
A ngeles and Berkeley, /970. 383 pages.

by

Dr.

Frederic

Koenig.

professor,

romance philology. Droz, Geneva, I 970.

594 pages. $20.00.
Les Miracles de Nostre Dame by the
thirteenth century monk , Gautier de

Coinci, was at once the most literary, the
most. extensive, the most widely reed, and
the most inOuential of the collections of
Mary miracles which enjoyed great
popularity in medieval France. The work
comprises two books, each preceded by a
prologue and seven (a mystical number)
exquisite lyrics in praise or Mary. The
mirDcles themselves, accounts of
miraculous interventions by the Virgin.
number thirty-three in the first book and
twenty-three in the second. The second
book contains in addition rimed sermons
on the chastity of nuns and on the fear of
death. The bool&lt; ends with a long poem
on the rosuy, the beauty of which is
· marred only by the expresoion given to
the violent antl.ernltlsm which Gautier
unfortunately &amp;bared with most · ot his
contemporarlea.
In the Miracles, the poet frequently
interposes obaervations on the mores of
his time and trenchantly satirizes
medlevol society. His extraonlinarily
extensive oocabulary makes the work the
richest m lne of lexlcorraphlcal
Information avollable1n Old French.
The collllallt ~eeurrence throughout
the work of eertaln dominant themes
aervea to P'"' unity to its disparate
elements.

Profeaaor Koentr'• critical edition, the·
ftrat lnteeraJ one, Is baaed on eleven of
the eilbty odd edant manuocrlpts and Is
to compriae five 'IOiumea. Vol. I, which
Included a ,...... Introduction, wu
publblled In 1955 and 1WPtiDted In 1966.Vol. 0, pubilobed In 1961, ~ reprillted
1n 1970. vo1. m - publl«"ed .., 1966,
and Vol. IV, the Onal volu- of text, -

Page 5 / BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I SEPTEMBER 16, 1971

There can be litUe doubt that Samuel

Beckett is now receiving the sort of

altention given only to great writers. The
response t.o him is reflected in this book
which not onJy describes the comple~
publishing history of every book and
article written by Beckett, but also
surveys the reactions of· his critics over
the years. In a lugely chronological
classification the authors show the
growth of Beckett's oeuvre and the
evolution of critical attitudes to it. This
method reveals Beckett's development
from early dilettantism and preciosity to
the vital experimentation of recent years,
as well as the mowment from the early

journalistic superficiality diatinguished by
some perceptive critlcism to today's exact
and penetrating scholarship which takes
for granted Beckett'slmportaooe.
In the first part of the book Beckett's
works m grouped by ,..;,...,. of
composition, a crul'!al matter in his case.
English works are placed rust, then come
tbe translations into Frellcb. Next are
lilted the works in French, followed by
the translations into Ellfllsb. After that
come Beckett's translations of works
other than his own, and various Items
such u manifestos or letters. Finally, all
known unpublilbed Worts, whether
edant or not, are lfven in cbronolo(k:al
onler of suppoaed compooltion.
The second part, detOted to Beckett
crltlclsm, Is arraJifl!d In older of
d lm inilbing Importance. Flnt come
boob written exduahely about Beckett,
then unpubllabed djooortationa and u.-,
apec1a1 11suea or reviews, boob -.,,..
or chapters, art1c1a, reviews, play notice&amp;,
letters to illllton, paalinc commet~ta,
allllliona, llld 'lli&gt;tea. Special ~ Is
alao ClveD to the ialporWlee ol the BBC
In championing llodtett'a work.
An appendix pnnldeo the lint ten

drafts of Bing followed by the author's
English translation: these should convince
the skeptics that Beckett is neither a
--boaxer nor a careless writer. since it is
doubtful that many p - written by
more prolific authors haw tequired more
labor than the few that make up Bing.

German
HANS ABMANN VON ABSCHATZ, POETISCHE
UBERSETZUNGEN UND
GEDICHTE (TRANSLATIONS
AND POEMS)
edited by Dr. Erika A . Metzger, assistant
professor. Gennan. Herbert Long &amp; Cie.
Berne. Swilzerland.. 1970. 665 pages.

The reprint of the Collected Works of the
Silesian poet Hans ABmann von Abschatz
(1646-1699) is the first since 1704 that
makes all the texts readily accessible to
scholars. In her preface, Dr. Metzger
states that this German poet, a friend of
Hofmannswaldau and. Lobenstein, reveals
in his poetry a genuine detachment from
the wodd of his time which may well
indicate an affinity for the introspective
and anti-courtly orientation &amp;bared by an
Important group ol wrlten In the 17th
century. or particular lntenst are
Absdlatz' translations from the Fleocb
and Italian, especially of the patoral play
n Pallor Fido by Guarini, wblch
delighted contemporary audieDces u a
ltlnd of artiOclal paradloe In t1mea IIWbd
by aodal upbeanls llld the r1ae of
aboolutlsm. Poerna by Abacbatz a1oo
included In the famous
Neulrirr:h -Anth~. Profeaaor llletzteo'
tocetber with Dr. A.G. de Capaa,
prof-.w, ~.}-~~edited the
tblnl 90lume of ..._...,..., wblcb 111,
too, a mirror of the lremeDdOua lmp.ct
poetry bad on the Nading public: UOUDd
1700.

lllstQ~ .
AMERICA'S OI.TI'WARD
THRUST, APPROACHES TO
FOREIGN AFFAIRS, 1866-1890
monograph by Dr. Milton na,,

aaociate pro{eaor, h;.tory. N~
IUinoirl'ru&amp;, 1971. $3.00.
America'• ............... ln-..uoaal
power with a.......,... o.._ po1ey did
not come about llllddenly. Tbe ~
ol expaaalonllm wwe a1...ty ~ In
the ......ned GUded " - of "-lou

�him.ory (1865·1890)-an era generolly ' movement was to receive Its greatest
hearing, marked the most radical
characterized by insular thoulbts and
rejection of liberal and democratic
internal de,.lopment. The American
Institutions by any of the reform or
national mind was preoccupied with
revolutionary movement&amp; of the "Left"
problems arising from the Civil War-the
in the nineteenth century, including
national debt, Reconstzuction policies,
Marxism . The classification of
industrialization, migration to the West.
and a fe""rlsh bulldiDI of raDroads. There · anti-capitalist movements as left and right
first ceased to make senae with the
was a 10neral anti-colonial feeliDI and a
Salnt·Simonians. Here we see the
desire to stay out of foreiiD
lntecration of the conoervati"" demand
entanJIIements In this ~tmosphere of
for order, hierarchical organization, and
isolationism. America, however, could
aristocracy with the socialist demand for
not remain inacti"" in foreign trade and
equality of opportunity and for social
the development of commercialism at
economic planning in the Interest of the
home eventually necessitated the
communal welfare. What emefiOS is the
diplomatic acquisition of markets abroad.
conception of a state which was to carry
In this attempt to examine public
both conservati"" and socialist ideas to
thought during the "quiet years"
following the War, Dr. Plesur traces the ,. the extreme and to foreshadow the
totaliluian
mass state.
·
efforts of farqbted statesmen, wbo,
reco~DiziDI America's need for foreilb
INTELLECI'UAL ALIENATION
markets and involvement in world
IN THE 1920'S
economy, carefully paved the way to the
edited with an introduction by Dr. Milton
ultimate building of an International
Plesur, as$ociate professor, hilltory. D.C.
commercial empire. Intellectual contacts
Heath &amp; Co.. Problems in American
with the rest of the world and a growing
Civilization Series (Amherst Series}, ·
cosmopolitanism in the cities were on t.tae
1970.
side of the statesmen, whose efforts
frequently ran counter to rural putiic
Literature serves as one barometer by
opinion. A number of minor foreign
which the historian can gauge the
problems helped to push America out of
zeitgeist or temper of the time. For the
its isolationism and in the 1880's
1920's, however, Ute quest ion arises as to
whether or not the literature of the day
"diplomacy began to pull clear of the
was an accurate re.Dection of the period
post-war doldrums."
or if the literature itself was blighted.
In his Preface, the author states that in
And two additional questions present
an effort to avoid a mere retelling of
themselves: did this literat ure represent a
diplomatic relationships already covered
sharp break with past tradition; if so, was
by most textbooks, he has uselected
a laudable break?
certain subjects which highlight America's
The often -de scribed intellectual
mounting concern ·with the wider world
alienation of the literary set in the
and which illustrate our expanding
twenties has found many interpreters, the
economic , political, and cultural interests
bulk of serious criticism first having been
o\'erseas." The originality of Plesur's
raised in the 1930's and 1940's. Against
treatment of this theme lies in its
the background of the 1930's, the
synthesis of cultural aspects with the
literature of the twenties was often
diplomatic and economic ones.
viewed as aberrant. In the 1940's, when
CREATING AN AMERICAN
Americans had met the greatest crisis in
history by heroic sacrifice, the li terature
EMPIRE, 1865;1914
of the twenties was adjudged even more
edited by Dr. Milton Plesur, associate
harshly
. With a lengthened perspective,
professor, history. J erome S. Ozer Books,
the writers of the 1950's more positively
Pitman Publillhing Corp., I 971. $8.50
judged the literature of the 1920's fo r its
hardcover, $3.50 pape rlxu:~.
technical skill "!ld clear insights.
ln the half century between the Civil War
Those critics of later generati ons
and World War I, the United States
included in this collecti on who viewed
became a world power. During this period
the 1920's negatively include John W.
of expansion: our increasing involvement .
Aldridge, Van Wyck Brooks, and Bernard
in international issues and problems led
DeVoto. Malcolm Cowley and Frederi ck
to consequences that would vitall y
J. Hoffman were more favorable in their
concern the nation for the following fifty
evaluation . In tellectuals representing the
years.
hi st o ric a l profe ss io n ,- edu c a tio n,
Professor Plesur traces the rise of th e
jo urqalism , and letters, themselves
United States on the international stage
naturall y evaluated their own time. For
from bit player to star performer in thi s
example , Scott Fitzgerald , John Dos
new, provocative interpretation. He uses
Passos, Sinclair Lewis, Charles and Mary
primary sources to focus special attention
Beard , Irving Babbi tt, John Dewey,
on such topics as: new strategic interests
Walter Lippman, and H.L. Mencken were
in the pre-1890 period. the role of
critical . Positive assessments come from
commerce in American( expansion, the
four wri ters included in a Nation series:
Spanish-American War and its legacy})ro
Mary Austin 1 Theodore Dreise_r,
and con, the manifestation of U.S. great
Sherwood Anderson , and Zona Gale.
power status in the Caribbean and Orient.
LasUy , several selections [rom intellectual
Broad In scope and ·content, this book
historians Henry S. Commager and
illustrates America's gradually expanding
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., and literary
concern with the wider world during the
critic Granville Hicks provide a more
Gilded AIO and on through the
balanced evaluation.
Prngressi.e Era of the twentieth century.

THE CULT OF AUTHORITYTHE POLITICAL PIDWSOPHY
OF THE SAINT..SIMONIANS,
2nd edition

THE MONEY MACIDNES. THE
BREAKDOWN AND REFORM OF
GOVERNMENTAL AND PARTY
FINANCE lN THE NORTH ,
1860.1920

by Dr. Georg G.lggero, professor, history.
Martinus Nijhof{, The Hague,
Netherlands, 1970. 214 pag... $19.50.
This is the rmot systematic analysis In any
f"Ianguage of the poUtical il!9.~gbt of a
mo-nt which In the early t830's had
an Impact on a b~ aegment of Frencb
and European thought. It Is alto the rmot
comprehensive acbolarly attempt to
u tllze the extellli"" Saint-Simonian
periodical and pamphlet literature. The
author, editor of the English translation
of the Doctrine de &amp;lint-Simon
Exposition, maintains that the traditional
lnterJ!rebtiolll of the Salnt-Simontans u
utopian aoclallsts or dioclples of economic
efflcleocy b..e o.erlook&lt;ll the central
place of political theory In
Saint-SimoDlaD thought. The central
problem wu the nature of the crills of
modem poA-revolutlonary oociety; the
oolutlon ofttnd wu totallluian tather
than oocillllt iD a nurow ....... The
Salat·Simonlaa social 1 phU~phy,
jMrtlcularly dllfiDI the periOd wben .the

by Dr. Clifton K. Yearley, professor.
history. State University of New York
Press, Albany, 1970. 77 pages. $12.00.
This book advances the provocatl"" thesis
that the mechanisms for financing state
and local government In the Northern
United States from 1860 to 1920 were
deeply enmeshed with tbooe ftnancing the
extralegal-often Blegal-.ctivitles of the
major political parties, complicating
reform or chanRO mandated by the
post-Civil War breakdown of the North's
legal fiscal machinery.
Few reformers then recognized the
Interdependence of government and the
party money machines; fewe&lt; still
acknowl~ the effecti,...,.. or social
Vllue of the extra~epl machines. On the
contrary, bulc fiacal refonn In this period
wu characterized by attempts to exorcloe
"polltlca" In any fonn, whkb, in tum,
provoked counteraction from politicians
wboae .,...UzaUona had the II!M need
for efficient, rellable·revenue .Yatema aa
didgoM111DeDta.

Dr. Yearley demonstrates the failure
of the establlshed legal money machines
to cope with the demands of postwar
go,.mments facing industrialization and
urbanization. He characterizes tbe revolt
of old and new middle classes against
Ctaeal inequity and ineffiCiency and shows
how much of the North's new wealth
eocaped taxation altoROther. while much
of Its old wealth similarly went into
hiding. Because of Its forbiddiDI
complexities tax reform was sustained by
a small group of experts from the middle
claas, whose sincerity and competence
were unquestionable, but whose
reformism evidenced the peculiar views
and prejudices of their class.

Llqulstlcs
COGNITION: A MULTlPLE VIEW
edited by Dr. Paul L . Garvin. pro{..sor,
linguistics. Spartan Books, New York ,
1970. 448 pages. $20.00.
This is the first book to approach the
problem of cognition from the standpoint
of both study and simulation,
incorporating an unusual mi x of academic
disciplines.
This unprecedented text advances two
dissimilar approaches that provide a
variet y of vi ewpoip t s for th e
understanding of both cognitive processes
and c ogniti v~ sy st e ms : firs t
approach-study of cognition by such
variou s · di sciplines as psychology,
linguistics, and anthropology; second
approach-the simulation of cognition in
artificial intelligence.

METHOD AND THEORY IN
LiNGUISTICS
edited by Dr. Paul L . Garvin, professor,
linguis tics. Mo uton, Th e Hague, Th e
Netherlan&lt;h. 325 ~s. $ 18. 00 ({rom
T h e Ne th e rla nds); $2 1.00 ({rom
Humanities Press).
These are the corrected and revised
prooeedings of the 1966 Linguistic
In stitu t e Co nference on Linguistic
Method, organized b y the Bunker=1ramo
Corporation under the auspices of the
University of California , Los Angeles,
held at the Uni versity of California, Los
Angeles, August 1·3, 1966. Co ntents
include: Part I. The Place of Method in
Li n guistics; Part II. Methndological
Pr inci pl es; Pa r t II I. T h eoretical
App roaches; Part IV. Cross- Disci plinary
Perspectives.

Literature and
Criticism
BEHIND THE RI SING SUN
by Dr. S. Okech ukwu Mezu, associate
pro fessor, French. William Heinemann
L td., Londo n. 1971 . 24 1 pages. $4.25.
This is a novel about Biafra-not the
country featured by newspapermen and
broadcasters, but that known intimately
by an lgbo writer. It is a picture of Biafra
at war: its spokesmen abroad, remote
from the suffering, and its people at
home, surrounded by troops and despair.
In Paris, Obiora lfedi and his friends
wine and dine comfortably while
negotiating charter planes for anns for
their stricken country. Countless deals
with European ''businessmen"' fall
througb. Expensive presents get back to
the Biafrans' wi,.. but few vitally needed
supplies. Suddenly Freddy Onuoba,
witness to these futile efforts, grows
impatient~e must return.
A dan10rous entry by night is a fitting
prelude t.o experiences of wu, famine and
degradation. The rising sun, emblem of
Biafra, seems eclipsed indeed. But if
Freddy and the girl he meets on bls
travels, Titi, take part in the sufferibl, .
they, like the people, have little interest
in politics. In all the madness and
destruction, they maintain an oasis of
sanity, and strain to build a new life (or
the dispossesaed from the ashes of war.
S. Okechulcwu Mezu writes of this
immense tragedy with clarity and
restraint , but beblnd tbe almost
documentary nature of the narlatl,.
th-. is a profound ae"bae of sorrow a
bitter Irony.
'
This Is a story that needed to be told.

THE COLLECTED ESSAYS OF
LESLiE FlEDLER, VOLUME I
ANDVOLUMEll
by Dr. Lerlie Fk&lt;ller, pro(esoor, English.
Srein and Day, 1971. Vol. I, 562 pages;
Vol. n, 560 pages. $12.50 eoch.
The first oolu~m conl4ins the complete
textJ of Fiedler's two preuiow
coUectioiU, "An End to IMocence" and
..No! in 'Thunder. " The Jeeond contains
the uncollected pieceJ: a ~«lion on
Jewiih writing and themes, another on
pop culture, a third on miJCellaneous
subjects.
He writes with vigor and style. He ill
contemptuo~a of those who
cannot see whtJt he sees, but he has an
uncommon wit and a talent both (or
satire{ond {or pithy axioms.
arrogan~

...

Fiedler ill rarely boring. To be dull. a
man must be either modest or
incompetent, and Fiedler is neither.

...

Most of Fiedler 's major themes touch
upon in nocence, either in our literature
or in our politics, and the tenacity wi th
which we hold to it.
- Peter S. Prescott, Newsweek , Aug. 2,
1971

THE COUNTESSE OF
PEMBROKE'S ARCADIA
by Sir Philip Sidney. Introduction by Dr.
Carl D ennill, = is14nt professor, English.
Facsimile edition, Kent S tate University
Press, Ohio, 1970. $8.00 hardcover,
$4. 50 paperback.

DON QUIXOTE AND THE
DULCINEATED WORLD
by Dr. A rthur Efron, associate profe$Sor,
Englillh. The University of Texas Press,
1971 .224 pages. $ 7.00.
A new critical view of Don Quixote.

ENACfMENT:GREEK
TRAGEDY
by Dr. A lbert Cook . professor, Englillh.
Alan Swallow Press, Chicago, 1}}70. 200
pages. $8.95.
A discussion of Greek tragedy in the light
of modem literary criticism.

FRENCH TRAGEDY: THE
POWER OF ENACTMENT
by Dr. Albert Cook, pro fessor, Englillh .
A lan Swallow Press, Chicago, 1971.

HEDDA GABLER
by Ibsen,
THE INSPECI'OR GENERAL
byGogol,
THE SEA GULL
by Chekhov
Introductions by Dr. Henry Popkin,
professor, English . . Avon Paperbacks.
1971 .

· HUNGRY GENERATIONS:
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
CASE AGAINST
MALTHUSIANISM
by Dr. Harold Bon£r, 14te professor,
English . Russell and Russell, Divilion of
Atheneum Publilherr,lnc., 1971. $13.00

THE LANGUAGES OF
CRITICISM AND THE SCIENCES
OF MAN: THE STRUCI'URALIST
CONTROVERSY
edited by RichGrd Macluey Gild Dr.
Eugenio DoiiDto, os.oci&lt;Jre profeaor,
comparative literature and French. The
Johns Hopkins Pr-. Boltimore and
London, 1970. 367 pages. $10.00.
The structu)"allat approach toCmanistic
studies-or the more broadly conceived
European "Sciences de I'Homme"-is
probably tbe moat sienlflcant
development In the humanities since
Wodd War U. Indebted to the work of
Hotel, Marx, Freud, and Sousure,
stimulated by speculation In the natural
sciences, structurallat thlnkem have
attempted, througb InteniloclplinarY
dialogue, to redefine t.he bumane reoeorcli
community.
Structurallom Is baaed on the '
-.atlon tbat, In the words of J-f
Hrabak, " .. .every concept In a Jllven
ll)lltem Is determined by all other
concepll of that ll)lstem and baa no

•

SEPTEMBER 16, 1971 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I P~ge 6

�significance by itaelf. .. .The entire
structure is more than a mechanical
SI1IIlDWy
or the properties of its
components since it ghes rise to new
qualities." Although the structural
approach has long been associated with
linguistics ~d anthropOlogy, only
recently has 1t cut widely across the
humanities and the aocw scrences,
penetrating classical studies, the
comparative study of arts and letters
literary criti_clsm, history , philosophy:
psychoanalySIS, aemioloey, and IOCiology.
Primarily a European phenomenon, the
structural approach enriches an Individual
dlsclpllne by revealing those synchronic
features that unite it with work In other
dlsclpllnes rather than by driving each
dlsclpUne more deeply Into its own area
of specialization.
This volume is a fuU record of the
proceedings of an International
sympoolum entitled ''The Languages of
Criticism and the Sciences of Man."
Among the participants were many of the
leading figures in the emerging European
structural dialogue. The book contributes
toward an understanding of the
phenomenon through its demonstration
of the methodological and theoretical

differences,

the

reservations

prophetic matrices pve Spenser a""""' to
a wide range or heroic myth, biblical aod
classical, European md British, ancient
and modem. Whereas many critics of
Spenser have stresaed bis " timeless"
symboiiam, The Prophetic Moment
revenes this trend , emphasizing the role
of history within Spenserian poetics.
Rejecting the ruturism and false
security or millenarian"prophecy, Spenser
holds the eternal and the ephemeral in
simultaneous copresence, balancing stable
principle against unstable contemporary
events. Prophetic utterance, in this view,
manifests itaelf as historicism, a poetic
history which idealizes the Dux of
political happenings, imposing a higher
order upon them without losing their
immediacy. A poet of crises, Spenser
concentrates his larger vision in a periodic

revelation of the "prophetic moment,"
that critical juncture when the prophetic
order of history is revealed. Dr. Fletcher
shows how such moments occur in The
Faerie Queene as an interplay between
two major archatypes, the temple and the
lab y rinth, which thereafter provide
essential my thographic structures of
English romantic poetry.

PROFILE OF ROBERT LOWELL

and

collec tion of essays edited by Dr. Jerome
Mazzara, p ro{e=&gt;r, English. Charles E.
Merrill Co.. Columbus. Ohio, /97I .
$1. 75.

disagreements, that separate individual
structuralists as weU as their critics.

LAST RITES
by Rev. Perry Michael Smith, advisor.
Cant erbury A-s-soc iation (Episcopal
Student Center). Charles Scribner's Sons.
New York, I97I . StJ9 pages. $6.95.
Why are Quasars suddenly blinking out in
the far reaches of the universe? Why bas a
mysterious organizati on gathered deep
beneath a mountain of granite somewhere
in the American desert? What does a
retired ax murderess have in ~mmon
with an alcoholic expert on St. Thomas
Aquinas? How can a man sealed inside a
Patton tank he shot and killed when the
only witness is able to swear that there
was no murder?
Father John Doffenbaron, a soul at
home only when emptying a bottle or
programming a computer, is taken into
the Fellowship, a super think·tank bidden
frpm the outside world, whose members
cultivate knowledge to put power into
the hands of those willing to pay the
price. For Father John , the price is his
loyalty and his soul; his reward is sole
operation ot the greatest computer ever
conceived. Yet even as he embarks o n his
effort to !ill his days and nights wi th
programs, the. universe begins to shudder
and crack under strange physical and
human catastrophes. It is left for John
and his computer-with a little help from
their friend , St. Thomas-to discover the
terrifying answer to what is happe ning.
Last Rites, the publishers say, heralds
the appearance of a brillian t new satiric
novelist in the spirit of Nathanael West,
Nabokov and Amis.

THE METAPHYSICS OF
DARKNESS
A Study in the Unity and Development
of Conrud's Fiction. By Dr. Royal
Rousse~ associate professor, English. The

John1 Hopkin1 Pre n ,
. Mary/Qnd, I97I . $7.50.

·Baltimore,

In an attempt to idenUfy the common
vision unifying the apparent diversity of
Conrad's novels, the aufhor first examines
the body or his fiction In comprehensive
readings or most of Conrad's majo~
worka. He then traces the chronological
evolution of this unifyinc vision through
Conrad '• Uterary career.

PARTHENOPHIL AND
PARTHENOPE
by Dr. Victor Doyno, auociate professor,
EngU.h. Southem Rlinois University
Preu, .Carbondtlk, I970.

THE PROPHETIC MOMENT:
AN ESSAY ON SPENSER
by Dr. Angw Fktcher, pro{e""r, English.
University of ChictJgo Preu, Chicago,
I97I. 326 poge$. $11.75, 1

'The Faui$ . Queene is a prophetic
poem." Developing this premise, Angus
Fletcher ets forth a ~ theoretical
view or Sp......W. vision, whose
resonance lDd radiance are drivtng lorces
within the EDCiilb romantle b'adltlon. Mr.
Fletcher shows bow five Interacting

PROFILE OF WILLIAM
CARLOS WILLIAMS

THE TRAGEDY O!i'
~HILOTAS
by Samuel Danie l. Edited with
introduction tJnd. notes by Dr. Laurence
Michel, professor, English. Archon. Shoe
String. I970.

THE TROPICAL DAWN, POEMS
WITH AN INTRODUcrORY
PIECE ON POETRY AND
REVOLUTION IN MODERN
.
AFRICA
by Dr. S. Okechu k wu Mezu, associate
pro{eiS()r, French. BkJck Academy Press,
Inc., Buffalo, I970. $5.00 hard cover,
$3.00 paperback.
Far way in Africa there is " the Saharan

sun ripping the morning clouds and
courting village shrines." There is a
tropical dawn-after years o f darkness,
nights of fright, sterile frigbt--u relies o f
the past, friends of childhood and loves
of adolescence open a new era of
cre ation , a neo -ge nesis. Over in
Philadelphia, it is a Christmas Morning,
snowy, bleak and emp ty. Up above, the
mushroom clouds o r modem tech nology
threaten li fe itself, threaten " to q uarter
and bli nd ou r in fants with blunt sickles
and invisible tongues of name." Down
helow, Medgar Evers fal ls without a word,
afraid to rouse anyone; his last breath ,
soft, fain t, forgave the race but set forth
detona tions to vibrate and plead in space.

In 'I'M Tropical Dawn, there is sometimes
the slow rbytbm of traditional Arrica;
aometimes the violent notes or modem
Ufe; it sports tHe luscious richn... of
Keats , bu t always the structural
experimentations that remind one of a
Ruben Dario. The involved reader is
invited to rearrange, to reorganize lines,
stanzas, whole poems in order to
rediscover and recreate new forms and
old meanings because quite often within
the unpunctuated poems Ues a traditional
sonnet.
-Take m e back
to the ancestral {arms
of maize tJnd melons
yams and pumpkins
back to my quiet {arm
among the fecund
woods that breed ringing partridges
and yellow com tassels
that lure the butterfly . ..
-from "Take Me Back "
No w rejoice
wand of noble wood
sound y our sacred dru ms
call back to nature
the ptJlm wine drinktJ rd
people o{ th e city
no longer at ease, arise
back to the hearth
(or a short libation
(or tJ mindful toast. _
--fro m ..The Tropical Dawn "

colleclion of essoys edited by Dr. Jerom e
Mazzara, professor, English . Charles E.
Merrill Co.. Columbus. Ohio, 1971.
$1.15.

THE QUEST: A POETIC
TRIALOGUE
by Mary Danielli, lectu rer, Amedcan
Studies. Mitre Pres., London, / 970. 115

pog... $2.20.
These verses derive from the marriage of
true minds, at di verse levels-factual,
symbolic, archetypal . They are for those
wbo can escape the confi nes or linear
thought , and who can see the image
whole.
Laughter is all I have
For my

defense

in

this world o{

un{amiiUJr images.
I am in danger, yes.
or unexperienced feeling and euen t,

_

But not of overthrow,
Not of alienation, not o( sin.
Am I I hen afraid o nl y
disappoin tment ?

of

Oro{ an end?
A human spirit comes into the world

A lmost unmarked.
The buffered life within /he womb,
The tendencies heredity imposes:
These are most of what diuides a child
From th e illimitable ocean o( th e
all·nothing
That is the matrix o( humanity,
Wh en comes a life, on which its
choices
Will finally imprint a liltle more {or
futu re generations,
And which, wh en all .is do ne, {or
better or (or wone,
Will draw us back to keep our p/ac,.
for another cyck (or {or ever),
In that so slow to change and
unknown source and. goal.

SALTO: A COLLEcriON
OF POEMS
by Dr. Silviano Santiago, OS$OCiale
pro{e,ssor, French. Impre1U4 O{icial, Belo
Horizon te, I970.
Vio/Qting the word, dismembering and
agglutinating it, contracting and
contorting i~ permuting and imbricating
sounds and grriphic signs, Silviano
Santiago, an artist conditioned by the
hiltoric 'now,' carries·oui a decoupoge of
old mental structures and coru:eptr in
order to liberate theu siofns from their
normDl associatiotu. All this so that the
poet might open them to the traffic of

new

meaning~.

-Affonso AvUa

ST. MAR'l'INS
by Robert Cr«ley, pro{usor, Englfsh.
B/Jd Sparrow Preu, I971 .

Page 7 I BOOKS BY· JHE FACULTY I SEPTEMBER 16, 1971

Irving~·
THE UNCREATING WORD:
ROMANTICISM AND THE
OBJECT
by Dr. Irving Massey, professor, English.
/ndilma Unive rsity Press, Bloomington
and London. I 970. $6. 75.
Critic Albert Cook has described this
distinguished new work as " one of those
rare specific studies that really does have
general implications." Mr. Massey's
central theme , the gradual
impoverishment of language since the
Romantics, will be of great interest to
writers, critics, and literary scholars. The
first three essays contrast the attitudes
toward nature and the 9elf found in a
body of prose writing (mainly fiction)
from about 1750 to 1850 with attitudes
expressed or implied in . Camus'
L 'Etranger. The last essay deals with the
contemporary crisis in language and
suggests the posoibility of a resolution or
the language·reaiity antinomy, the return
of language to a state of expressiveness
that science and pbllosopby, with their
oearcb ror " reality.'' have stripped away
from it.
At the historical level, the book
follows the movement from the
Romantle identification or oetr with
nature to the objectlvllm of . Camus lDd
Robbe-Grillet, the retreat Into .Uence, the
concept or unnamability, lDd beyond.

Mr. Massey defines Romanticism in a new
and enlightening way, as the midground
between Don Quixote and L 'Etranger,
with their contrasting attitudes toward
the ideal: Don Quixote sacrifices himself
for his ideals, while Camus' hero sacrifices
himself for th&amp; right to live without
ideals. Throughout, he uses Camus' novel
as a touchstone to bring the problems of
Romanticism Into alignment, examining
such writers as Godwin, de Vigny, Sterne,
Hofrman, Goethe, and Hopldns. In
connection with the deacriptlve powers of
the__Romantics, he explores difrerent
&amp;,roaches to landscape
description-those of Chateaubriand,
Rousaeau, Camus, and Rowel~
treats concepts or Innocence In de Sade,
Nietzscbe, Baudelaire, Sattre, Kafka, and
H• fdegger.
At the end or the book Mr. Massey
reveria with renewed vicar to this central
theme-the ' 'uncreating word" born of
tbe gradual impoverishment of
language-and atudles the language-reality
contradiction rrom a fresh point or view.
'lbrouchout the work be draW5 on
fascinating new materlall lDd makes
unUSUII juxtapoaltlona that shed new
Ught on lamiiiar material.

�Medicine
AIJI'OSENSITIZATION IN
PEMPWGUS AND BULLOUS
PEMPWGOID
by Dr. Erml H. &amp;utnu, prof~.
microbiology; Dr. 7'odeu5z P. ChorzeW.i
and Dr. Robert E. Jordon, with
forewords; by Dr. Albert H. Coo"' and
lh~
late Dr. Ernul Wil~bdry,
dirlintUished pro{eaor, bacterioloo and
immunology and dim:lor, ~ntu {or
Immunology . Charlea C. Thomas,
Sprillgfield, /Uinoi&lt;, 1970. 208 poges.
$22.75.
The authors preaeot in Ibis text data
wbk:b sbeds UCbt oo tbe mystery or tbe
nature of tbeae - ·· Authoritative
-ptioos or both priodples aod
methods requind fa&lt; lmmuoofluo....,.,nt
diaCDoois or tbeae bullous enlptions
prorido some baaea for the establlsbment
or lbeae procedures in routine aervices. ru
in the practice or both delmatology aod
-ogy, reliable methods requl!e specific •
bactpound aod IDIDlnc- Tbe boot aenes
as a manual fa&lt; tbe Indicated training

programs.
By utilizin&amp; the technique of
lmmuoofluoreseeuce, It bas been poooible
to show that the ......... or practlcaUy all
patients sufferin£ from tbe active disease
contains dreuiatin£ antibodies aod, as a
matter or fact, tbe antibody titers nm to
some ex~t parallel to the severity of tbe
cnae.e, a remarkable aod important
oboernltion. Fa&lt; that reason the J'reaeuce
or cireuiatlne antibodies can be used as •
diaplastic tool whk:b should be most
welcome to tbe clinician in his frequently
difficult task or mating tbe specific
diaplosis. In addition, tbe preaeoce of
antibodies attacbed to tbe diseased tissue
bas been demonstnted.

CHILD ABUSE: A COMMUNITY
CHALLENGE
edited by Alice E. Glazier. Writers include
EUen M. Thomson, Norman W. Pagel,
Morris Mesch , Doris &amp;tes and l)r.
Theodore 1. Putnam. clinical associote,
pediatrics. Henry Stewart, Publisher, East
Aurora, 1970.
This volume is the result of a four-year
project conducted by professionals at
Children's Aid , in cooperation with the
Children's Hospital of Buffalo. Although
intended primarily for professionals
aerving abused cbildren and their parents,
It is in hi£bly readable form and should
be of interest to all who are concerned
with tbe welfare or children.

CONTROL THEORY AND
PHYSIOJ;'OGICAL FEEDBACK
MECHANISMS
by Dr. Doug/4s S. Rigg&amp;, professor,
pharmacology. The Williams and Wilkins
Co., Baltimore, MaryiDnd, 1970. 599
pages.
This book is an attempt to share with
other life scientists, and particuiDrly with
gradWJte students in the biological
dircipline&amp;, what I learned during twelue
months of intemiue formal coune work.
In twelue monthi I obviowly could not
become an expert in systems GIJIJlysiJ. or
in control theory, or in anything else. But
I did develop a working knowledge of
some ap«.ts'" of control theory, both
liMDr and nonlinur, and I did letun how
to use cermin concepts and techniques of
conJrol theory in tmtJJyzing bioiOBicaJ
t•b«lr mechllllirm&amp;. ~ are the
lhinp I write about in this boolr.
from the Pretoce.
FACING REALITY:
PWLOSOPWCAL ADVENTURl;S
BY A BRAIN SCIENTISI' '
-, . by Dr. John c. .Ecc/a, dialinguished
plryriolicY. Sprillrer-V~
NeuJ Ycri and H~iddbur&amp; W. Gumlury,
1970. 210 /1llllfU. $6.20.

pro(__,-,

1blo JDOIICIInllb, _..unc a colledlon
ol ~ deli-...! by the . .thor aod
addltloall material for eommentary, Is
concerud will! the pbD.-pblcal
problemo ol the Nlatlolllb(p betweeD the
CODidoao aolf aDd the atamal wodd aDd
with a
aceowat of the

-.opll,...,.....,..

bniD
nIll from
tilithe
wodd
aDd ...,or
the ,........ .,....U. .........njpno of
~ (bolla ...... aod rellinal).
!oil

Empballzed -is the investleatlon or the
6aloon between the brain aod the
conadoua aelf wttb meotiool
concepts
of the anui.
Tbe lbst dioculllona are centered upon
tbe newonal machinery or tbe brain aod

or

neuropbysio10£lcal events' relation to
perception, molecular memory, l!fnaptic
properties and memory, erowtb theory of
leatnine, biocbemlcal mecbanism in
synaptic &amp;rowtb aod freq_.cy aod
post-tetanic potentiation.
Discussions then are offered on tbe
concept of self aod the experiendnl or it,
tbe neuronal mecbanlsms aod cerebral
events related to conscious experience,
the anatomical basis or conscious
experience, the reality · and unity or
conscious experience, evolution of man
and his conscious self, the nature of
scientific investiption iad its relation to
the understand.i.n&amp; or nature, the
neuro-physiological problem of flee-will
and Implications of the hy_pothesis of
flee. wiD, creativity and freedom.
Two final contributions offer tbe
author's postulates on the concept of the
soul and education and tbe world or
objective knowledge; mentioned are

problems

of

current

education

considering student dissatisfaction and its
relation to the ventures of science.

GALEN ON SENSE PERCEPTION
by Dr. Rudolph E. Siegel, clinical
assistant professor emeritus., medicine. S.
KaT1fer, &amp;sel and New York, 1970. 216
pages. $15.35.
Galen's visual doctrine has never been
fuUy analysed , although it influenced
later scientists. Galen conducted detailed
anatomical studies of eye and brain. He
explained visual perception as a
pneumatic mechanism, but supplemented
it by a geometrical analysis or monocular
and binocular vision and or pe'"I"'Cti ve.
His ideas on c olor perception,
luminescence and night blindness are also
discussed. A cri tical analysis of earlier
Greek doctrines of vision precedes this
ex tensi.ve chapter. T'.,e second part of t he
book explains Galen's doctrines of
hearing, based on anatomical studies of
the ear, and on the ancient concept of
sound waves. Further chapters deal with
Galen 's doctrines of perception of odor,
taste, toucb and pain , and with some
clinical observations of diseases of the
sense organs. Quotations from Galen's
treatises and - drawings su pplement the
text.
Dr. Siegel of" Buffalo, N.Y.. is engaged
in a reappraisement of Galen's system of
physiology and medicine. Th£ first
uolume. . .giues the best description and
criticism available of Galen 's general
position.
The present uolume continues with a
similar treatment of his work on sense
perception. a subject he considered in
great detail, and to which he attached
great importance.
Ones respect {or Galen can pn/y be
enhanced by this book; the repul&lt;llion of
De. Siegel ceriDinly wiU be.
·· Charles New'man, British Medical
Jouma~ August 1970
THE MATHEMATICAL
APPROACH TO
PHYSIOLOGICAL PROBLEMS:
A CRITICAL PRIMER
by Dr. ~ Shepard Ritfg&amp;, professor,
pharmJcology . The MIT Preu
Cambridge, MIUIDChusell&amp;, 1970. 44S
pager. $12. 50 hard cover, $3.95
paperback.

With its f&lt;;mnuiatlooa derived entirely
from ll&amp;ebra aod introductory calculus,
Ibis primer takes as its centnl purpoee
tbe en..,.._nt or high slandards or
mathematical cooduct. And yet the
author II ..Ot I(&gt; inten!llted in footerlne a
rtcor as in
formal elepnce or impartiDc to the otudent a cue for tbe
definition ol the problem, the choice or
unita, the uo~c~ance or ambi&amp;ulties aod
inner contradictloDa; aod as in inolllling in
blm a feeUnc for dimenlioaality, an
.....,_ or the pltfalla of -.arious
techniques, an appn!datlon for the
babitu.J c:beckinC· or deri...uoa. tbrou&amp;b
numerlcol subl!!tullon. Rial adduces a
lllllllbet'. ol eumploa from the Open
11tera1me in wblcb b1o1otJo1a or the
hilbelt atandlllla or aperlmeutal
are abown _.tine their ·

cueful data in matbematicaUy ineuct
fa&lt;m. ru tbe mathematizallon of the
biological sciences proceeds aod
accelerates, it becomes eten more
Important that dellnltions and derivations
be as doaely scrutinized as tissue sections
and radiation couoters.
In most caaea, tbe -.arlous chapters
develop their material in a general
mathematical form, with applications to
particular bioloclcal problems developed
in thought-provoking exerclaes. Many or
tbeae are based on published papers, and
the student is asked to find mistaken
aasumptions and procedun!S. A lengthy
appendix preaents (and where n......uy
explains step by step) tbe derivation or
tbe solutions.
0 ther appendices concern
approximations, tbe use or logarithms,
and units and symbols.

The subject material is p......,ted •
twenty-five cuefuUy orpnlzed topics in
neurophysiolo&amp;y. Each topic is preceded
by a short, condse re'liew delipled to
summarize the Important underlying
general prindples Cor that topic. Each
summary is followed by suaested
readings which include pertinent chapters
or pa-ge numbers of standard
neuropbysiol0£lcal textbooks, specific
Scientific American Ollprints aod
references to cum!Dt or claolical articles
in the periodical literature.
The multiple-clloice q.-!ons on each
subject are similar to tbooe appearing on
examinations in neurophysiology counes
an d on national board examinations.
Conect answers for each question are
included so that tbe student may ....,..
his own lew! or understanding or basic
topics.

NEUROPHYSIOLOGY SfUDY
GUIDE
by Dr. Beverly Bishop, associate
professor , physiology . Medical
Examination Publiihing Co., Inc.,
Flwlling, N.Y. , 197~. 128 poges. $6.00.
This book is an aid to those studying
neurophysiology. It will appeal to
medical and dental students aod those in
tbe health related professions, including
individuals who are preparing for boanl
qualifying examinations. The student will
find the volume a useful supplement to
any or tbe standard neurophysiology
textbooks.

NURSING CARE OF THE CHILD
WITH LONG-TERM ILLNESS
edited by Shirley Steele, associate
professor, child health nursing.
Contributions by Dorothy Hoehne,
assisl&lt;lnl professor, child health; DollJIQ
Juenker, associate professor, child health;
Carol Ren KnA!isl, associate professor,
mental health-psychiatric nursing; Mary
Norma O'Hara, associate pro{easor, child
health ; Jacqueline ThomPson. assisiDnl
professor, child health .
Appleton-Cmtury-Cro{ts, /971. 609
pages. $9.95.

The Treatment of
Head Injuries
in the
Thirty Years' War
(1618-1648)
JOANNIS SCULTETUS
AND HIS AGE
LOUIS BAKAY, M.D., F.A.C.S.
hof&lt;-&lt;o{Sw..,71~/oM"-­

.U.U

......

-·f~
of,.__ TMI'« ~

Urt~Hrtit:t

~.,

·~.NniY..t

11lc -

. . . ol the -leODth -tury

~lllo-oltbe..adem··­

-

· i t , w i l l l l l l - -.......... -

-.
........... -·trade pattftllilillil
-...y Qlllllllrallca It . . . honlded tbe
- o l d i e ............ pa~~~"caly . . , . . _

r-.

.

THE TREATMENT OF HEAD
INJURIES IN THE THIRTY
YEARS' WAR (1618-1648)
by Dr. Louis &amp;kay, professor, surgery
nei1J'OOUIIt!ry ~ the eyes aod miods
( n e u ro~~U~Iery ). Charles C. Thonuu,
or men of the seventeenth centwy.
Springfield, /Uinoi&lt;, 1971. 107 pages.
Scultetus, his contemporariel aod
$9. 00.
1be llrst bat( or the aeventeentb centwy
repreaents the dawn or the modem . . .
we know It; with its natlooallam, religious
freedom, individual commerce, trade
pattema aod military orpnlzatton. It also
heralded the emergence or the common
man • a j&gt;oliticaUy Important force. It
waa tbeo that modem ldence, including
JDe!liclne, emerzed; leas ls .known of the
beeinnlna or modem neurosurgery aod
the tleatment or c:nniocorebral tzauma.
1blo monop.pb repreaeoll an approach
to the denlopment of modem

forerunners were aelected to supply in
their own words the material
repreaentative of the diiCftOIIIc aod
IUIIical knowledge or bead injuries of
their era. Their oboervatioos, lnatrwnents
aod IUIIical techniques Wl!le IIIIJI'Isinlly
adYaDCli!CI while their knowfed&amp;ie or the
function of the centnl nenous sy-.
waa -atlll meager aod rooted in antiquity.
The ap waa dominated by the .-leas
11zuC11e of the Thirty Yean' War. 1blo
war, ill partlcipanta-tbe soldlem aod
their weapona-il deocrlbed since the
IIUfiOOD 'a Ufe could not be dfaw&gt;c:lated
from tbooe torllulent and ae&lt;&gt;nizing times.

SEPTEMBER 16, 1971 I BOOKS BY TH.E FACULTY 1 Page 8

�-

nn

__

LT

01'

.(t·ruoR,n·
._
"'---~ .....

Music

French-American Philosoph e rs'
Conference, which convened at the State
Uniuen;ity of New York Conference
Center, Oyster Boy, Long Island. October
18-19, 1968. The Conference was
co-sponsored by the French Government
and the International Cultural
Cooperotion Committee o{ the American
Philosophical Assodation, and it was
nuu1e possibk through G generous grant
from the American Council o( Learned
Societies.
The purpose o( the Conference was to
bring into encounter and dialogue
philosophers from France and the United

MUSIC LEXICOGRAPHY, 3rd
Edition, Revised and Enlarged
by James Coouer, pro/essor music and
curotor. music and records. C4rlU/e.
Books, CarlWe, Pennsyluania, 1971. 215
{Xltes. $18.00.
This new, revised edition or a long
out-of-print reference work includes:
A Bibliography of MIUic DictioiUl[ies
numbering more --than 1800 dtations,
with many corrections to items cited in
the second edition (1958).
An essay, Lacunae in Music
Lexicography, with ~ lists of music
lexica published before 1700 as parts of
other works. The essay also studies the
uses of music lexicograpby. It bas been
employed wideJy in courses in music
bibliography and music Ubrarlansbip.
Indexes: (1) to penonal names
(including those in the essay and lists),
{2) to type of dictionuy (terminoloeical,
bio-bibliograpbical or encydopedic), (3)
to topics (e.g. Dance, Violin makers,
Richard Wagner, Guitar, Jewish
musicians), (4) to date of publication (a
chronoloeical index from- 'rinctoris to
1900).
9

SIDles....

-from the Preface by Paul Kurtz, editor.
This conference was the (int o( its
kind. First in what sense? We do not
me4n to SGY that {or the first time
re!Gtions hove been estDbiWted between
Ftench and American philosophen; to
clllim so would be to ignore three
centuries o{ continuous and acliue
cultural exchanges! But the originlllity
resided in the very styk of the meeting.
There !006 G very reG! need {or
communication, cerlJJinly, but upuiD.Uy,
and in a deeper se~ there was a need
(or cor#onf4tion which does not signify
a desire {or encounter between
irreducible or diuergent positions; this
awrmm... o( differences WGS G1UtnJJted by
G
spirit of diG/offue and reciprocal
undersf4nding. (
-from the Preface by Edouard Morot-Sir,
Olairma.n, French Committee.

Philosophy ·
I PROBLEM! FONDAMENTALI
DELLA FILOSOFIA:
ESPERIENZA, REALTA E
V ALORI UMANI
by Dr. Marvin Farber, dutinguWted
pro{euor, social, philosophical and
historical {oundotions, edaC&lt;Jiion. U.
Murlio &amp; Co., Miltm, 1970. 315 pag... A
tnm.lation of &amp;sic lsrues of Philosophy:
Experrence, Reality, and Hunwm VG!un,
Hatper &amp; Row, 1968. 'I'nmslaled into the
114/ian by' Sylvia Federici and Paul

THE PHlWSOPHY OF INDIA
AND ITS IMPACT ON
AMERICAN THOUGHT
by Dr. DGie Rrepe, pro{...ar, philosophy;

LANGUAGE AND HUMAN
NATURE-~NCH­

AMERICAN PHILOSOPHERS'
D,IALOGUE
edited _ by Dr. Paul Klutz, professor,

philooophy. Warren H. Glftlt, Inc., SL
Louia, Misrowi, 1971. 25Lpqa.ll7.50.
The p,....,t publictJtion co-_ the

papers

pre1ented

at

the

Page 9 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I SEPTEMBER 16, 1971
. •,•:•'

t oJ

:: · :

....

...

TOLERANCE AND
REVOLUTION -A
MARXIST-NON-MARXIST
HUMANIST DIALOGUE
edited by Dr. Paul Kurtz. professor.
philosophy, and Dr. Svetozar Stojanouic,
visiting professor, philofophy.
Philo rophicol Society of Serbia,
Yugos!Gvia, 1970. I 65 pager. $4.50.
This volume contains the pi-oceedings of
the second Marxist-non-Marxist
Humanist Dialogue held in Herzog Novi,
Yugoslavia, August 11·16, 1969. The
Dialogue was sponsored by the
Yugoslavian Philosophy Association; the
Serbian Philosophy ~ation; and t.he
International Humanist and Ethical
Union, which conta in s humanist
organizations in some thirty countries of
the wodd.

Physical
Education
ADMINISTRATION OF
ATHLETICS IN COLLEGES
AND UNIVERSITIES

edited by Dr. Morvin Farber,
distinguished professor, social
co--author, Dr. Harry Fritz, director,
philosophy . Charles C. Th&lt;Hn4&lt;,
phyricGI education; editor, Ed Steitz.
Sprilrdield, /Uinoia, 1970. 339 pages.
National Auociation of Collegiate
Directors of Athletics and the American
117.76.
Arrociotion {or Health, PhyrictJI
India, through Hinduism and Buddhism,
Education and Recreation. 1971. 404
bu inllueuced American pbliooopby
pages.
15.75 poperboc~ . Copier ouai/Gble
more than any ~Iller Asian COWlby.
{rom NEA Publicolion-&amp;ler, 1201 16th
American intetest with Indian thoueflt
SL, N. W. , Worhington, D.C.
began aeriouoly with the New Enclbb
'l'rllDacendelltalilta IUcb as Emenon,
Meeting the need fO&lt; · authoritative
Thoreau and Alcott. Its influence was _ information 'in th&lt;;J&gt;reparalion of athletic
tben felt in tbeooopblcal ' elrdes and . ildmlnlatrators, thiS new textbook offers
broad coverqe of the entire fteld .
&amp;ally, befqre tbe tweatletb ....twy. the
Olapters deal with the following topics:
Vedanta Oenlftl .-.e illltrumeDtal in

PiCcone.

main

making Hinduism known . In the
twentieth century , Royce, Santayana ,
Hocking, Sheldon, and Northrop were
among the philosophers most influenced
by Indian thought.
The author has written not only a
history covering two hundred years of
Indian influence, but a compendium of
biographical information , as weU as an
account of the by-ways of Indian ethics,
metaphysics, logic, and epistemology.
Contemporary trends of young people
turning to Hinduism and Buddhism make
this a timely volume.

•

•

_..,

· · ·'::''

-

-:-

t.he role of athletics in education; business
procedures; equipment and supplies;
planning, construction, and maintenance
of (acUities; &amp;cbool law and legalliabUltr,
administration of athletic events; health
aspects; public relations; the director and
the staff; responsibilities to the student
athlete; intramurals; intercollegiate sports
Cor women; professional organizations.
AD ,e xtensive appendix includes
samples of sucb practical forms as
contracts for football and otber sports,
contest management check lists for sports
eve nts, agreements for athletic
recruitment, duty list for assistant
athletic director, eligibility forms,
equipment inventories, team travel
reports, evaluation check lists, and a list
of architects and the athletic facilities
they have designed.
Over 40 well·known college professors,
athletic directors, and other specialists
conbibuted to the content of this
textbook-the first in a new area ot
specialization.

Physics
FUNDAMENTAL LIQUIDS
by Dr. Lyle B. Borst, pro(...ar, phyricr
Grlronomy. Twin Bridge Pruo,
WilliiJmsville, New York, 1971. 110
pages. $7.00.
'
When it became evident in 1961, during a
study of the moderation or neutro.. to
cryogenic temperatures, that spin It&amp;t..
in molecules resembled those of c-, the
idea or free or nearly free quantized
rotation became difficult to uold. How
could one best exploit this prlriJeted
knowledge? Liquid beliumoilllmecl to be a
possible application, and within a few
months it became apparent that the
rotational constant was that of two atoms
at nearest nei&amp;bbor distance. 1be
quantum selection r:ules were thoae to be
expected o{ a bomonuclear diatomic
molecule with zero nudear spin. 1be
application l.r th- id- to belium-3
soon gave rise to a mathematical
repreoentation wbicb accounted f~~&lt; the
low temperature beat capacity, expaDIIoa
coemclent and magnetic ~tlblllty,
but the physical model was tben, and
remains, nebulous. The intenenlnc years
have been devoted to the reformulaiiOil
or theories or belium-4, fint .. a four

and

�dimensional Debye theory, tben os an n
dimensional barmonic oociJiat«, and
finally .. tbe dispenioo and cell lbeory
p.....nled in this book.

PoUtlcal
Science
THE CONDUCT OF
SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY
edited by Dr. Frederic J. Fleron, Jr.!\
GS$0CUJlt professor. political 1cience and
Erik P. Hoffmann, &lt;U&lt;isl4nt professor,
political science, SUNY/Albany.
A/dine-Atherton, 1971. 485 pages. $5.95.
This book coDSists or some or the most

esoa:rs

thoupt provokiDC and informative
on Soviet foreict&gt; policy to appear 10
Jecmt y..,.. It conta!Ds twenty~ven
analytical and interpretive essays by
Western &amp;dlolars that examine the

iDtemal and extemal r..toa shape
SoM ton1p ' policy and bellnl«. Tbe
oraanizational _
atrueture
_ _and
tan
in~to_..

errort to link tbe study or Sotlet rore~p
policy to contemporary ooc:laJ .and
bebA'fionl ocieDee in the tlold of
intematlooal nUtiom. '!be book ~ts
botb revisionist and traditiODal
interpretatiODa or various aspects . or
Soviet foreicn policy , includinl
disculli0111 C0DCe11JiDC the impact or
ideoiOCY and the oriCins or the Cold War.
Eacb sectloa r~ on tbe effect or a
sinp ractor{or aet or factors) on SOviet
actious. So-riet policy and behavior are ' the dependent variabl.. l n eacb -tion,
while the independent
variableo-domestic policias, iileology.
Western diplomacy, .and developments in
the Third Wod~ l'rom section to
section. Each section, tbeftfore, examines
the inDuence of a dirterent set of factors
on Soviet decisions and behavior.

POLITICAL MODERNIZATION.
A READER IN COMPARATIVE
POLmCAL CHANGE.
2nd Edition
edited by Dr. CllJude E. Welch, &lt;U&lt;ociate
professor, political science. Wadsworth
Publishing Compony, Inc., Belman~
CalifomiG, 1971. 373 pages. $4.95.

TRADE PATTERNS IN
THE MIDDLE EAST
by Dr. Lee . E. Preston, clulinrum,
environmenllll analysis and pllJnJUng.
American Enterprise Institute for Public
Policy l!....,reh, 1970. 96 poge&lt;. $3.00.

In this report, Dr. Preston, who spent
several months os a visitiDC professor at
the AmerieaD University in Cairo,
supports his thesis that by liftinl
inter-regional trade barriers ~d
expandiDC international trade, the volatile
Middle East could be broucht closer to
economic and political security. Dr.
Preston proposes intra-regional assistance
among the Arab countries, trade between
Israel and Arab countries, and increased
trade between the Middle East and the
rest or the world.

Psychology
CONTEMPORARY
SOCIOLOGICAL
THEORY
edited by Dr. Fred E. Katz, professor,
sociology. Random H ome, New Yo rk ,
1971.

CURRENT PERSPECTIVES IN
SOCIAL PSYCHOWGY :
READINGS WITH
COMMENTARY . 3rd Edition
edited by Dr. Edwin P. HolllJnder,
p rofeswr, psychology, and Dr. Ray m ond
G. Hun t, professor, p sychology. Oxford
University Press. New York, 1971 . 746
pages. $5.95.
The third edition of this well·known
collection includes sixty-seven articles, of
which twen ty-six are new seledions
dnwn from the most recent work in the
field. The breadth or contemporary
developments in social psychology is
covered in ten sections entitled : Basic
Orientations and Processes~ Culture,
Learning, and Group Identification ~
Personality and Society; Language and
Communication ; Social Interaction and
Role; Attitudes and Cognition; Normative
Behavior, Conformity, and Intra-group
Processes ; Leadership, Power, and
Change ; Organi zational Processes;
Intergroup Relations. Each section is
preceded by an introductory chapter in
wh ich the editors indicate the
contribution the selections there make
within tbe historical and conceptual
evolution or the field .

THE DESIGN OF DISCORD:
THE LIMITED ELITE
by Dr. Donald B. Rosenthm, associllte
professor, political science. Uniuersity of
ChicGio Press, 1971. 360 poge&lt;. $12.75.
This study or Indian urban politics
centers on the limited roles and
expectations or persons elecled to
- muDlclpal bodies. An impreooive number
or party4Upported and independent
candidates compete in municipal
electloDs; yet little real power attaches to
tbe hotly contested positions.
ReplatioDS leave moot decision·makiDC
n!OpOIIIibDity ultimately in the bands or
sta&amp;e-.ppointed local bureaucrats. The
, .. thor condudes that many municipal
politicians are primarily Involved for
of personal or croup status or
aar•"'IIU'II!'!nt. While concemed ftlbally
about their limited policy·makiDC
fuDdioDa, muDlclpal politicians r.n to
make use • of eien thooe opportunltlas
!bey do have.
I'Wd work for this study wos done in
Acra md Poona, tWo tarce dtlas COvemed
......_ the muDlclpal corporation syatem.
Dr. a-&amp;bal inlenlewed neady all of
lbe .........,. of the two muDlclpal

bodies, as well as approximately 250
other persons-bureaucrats, local and
state politicians, journalists, educators,
and organization leaders. Interviews were
supplemented by close observation or
municipal actors at l"ork and by analyses
or national, state, lnd municipal votinc
data and ceDIUS materials.
After identifyinc tbe politically
relevant features or the history. economic
boses , and~~turesofAcraand

Poona, the author devotes individual
chapters to political croups and alliance

COD-

quite reodable.
Publilherl' Wedly, Dee. 7, 1970.

EMERGENCY MEDICAL
SERVICES IN THE
CIDCAGOAREA
by Dr. Geoffrey Gibson, aaill4nt
profusor, sociology, George .Bulb« and
Odin W. Anderson. Center {or Heolth
Administnilion Studiel, UniDel'lity of
Chicogo, 1970. 440 pages. $10.00.

. This systems analyail of emercencY
medical services in , tbe allcolco
metropolitan area was apoDSored by the
Cbicac&lt;&gt; Hoopital- Council, the lJIInois
Regiorial Medical Procram and tbe City or ·
O&gt;icago and ·undertaken by Dr. GibloD,
currently CCH!Irector of the Medic:aJ
SodoiOCY Traininl Procram at U/B, who
was then project director and reoMrcb
ossociate with the University or Chicago's
()enter for Health Admlnistlation Studies.
The study evaluates tbe emergency
medical fadlltias at the 108 genenl
hospitals in the CbicaCO area and tbe
effectiveness or public and private
emergency ambulance systems os well as
describing the emergency medical
behavior and ossociated clinical treatment
or over 300 patients interviewed .. they
received emergency c:are. Several
recommendations or Ute study have
already been implemented by the City or
Chicago and they include the designation
·or regional trauma centers, changes in
licensing private ambulances, the addition
of 12 vehides to the Chicago Fire
De partmen t Ambulance Fleet ,
administrative changes in dispatchi nc and
pick-up procedures of ambulance services,
and the establishment or a co-ordinated
regional commun ication system.

PRINCIPLES AND METHODS OF
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY.
2nd Edition
by Dr. Ed win P. HolllJnder, professor,
psychology. Oxford Un iversity Press.
New York, 19 71. 742 pages, 102 figu res,
18 14bles. $10.50.
The second edition of this introduction
to social psychology provides a unified
view of the field in a presentation that
combines a concern for contemporary
' t op ics · wiili ricorous attention to
methodology and historical backgrouod.
The book's major topics include influence
and adjustment, attitudes and attitude
chan ge , social interaction, culture,
language , personality and society,
intergroup and intra-group processes.
Drawing on new work in psychology,
sociology , and cultural anthropology, it
introduces fresh materials and discussions
on man y subjec~ among them:
-- pro-social " or helping behavior;
attribution processes; deviancy; social
movements; moral development; adult
socialization; international conOid and
war; and legitimacy of leadership. In
addition to illustrative figures and tables,
the book is complemented by chapter
summaries and suggested readings, a
rooster bibllocrapby of over 1,200
references, and name and subject indel&lt;es.

STUDIES OF ANOMIE :
SUICIDE, THE CITY, WAR

Sociology

by Dr. Elwin H. Powell, associllte
professor, sociology. Oxford Uniuersity
Press, New York, 1970. 248poge&lt;. $7.95.
The term "alienation " has been thrown
around like spitballs in grammar school in

LABOR ORGANIZATIONS. A
MACRO- AND MICROSOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS ON
A COMPARATIVE BASIS

recent years. Powell prefers the more
inclusive te~ anomie. QJII it by any
name, it is a phenomenon, as Professor
Powell makes painfully clear in his
disciplined and schollJr/y &lt;ludy, closely
tmoeiated with the co/lap.. of socilll
structures and with faith in institutions.

formation, public behaViors in municipal

War p(Jrticukuly, which some see as an

elections,
for tbe offices of
mayor and deputy mayor, sources or
confllct in muDlclpal covemment, and
admlnlstrative politics. Tbroucbout tbe
study, the DIUif liDkaps amonc natiooal,
state and mullidpal IO""""""'ts and
politics in India are Wustrated.
'!be volume sbeda COIIIidelable IiCht
on probl- or IUbaDization and
modemlzatioD in India and, by IDclnc
the llimlluitils and c l i f f - wbicb
eDt ~ two 1oc:al palllbl S)'ltem&amp;,
mabo a nluable coatrlbUIIoll both to
- a n d to COIIIpan&amp;ift politics.
I

integrative force ·because it unites a ·
people ag..imt an enemy, Powell v~ws,.
hlwing an anomie effect which retJ&lt;:hes far
beyond mere battle COIIUllties. Powell
fOCIUel his study in three QI1!Q(: ruicide,
the ultimate act of anomie; the modem
big city, which he vie"" as a major rource
of contemporary anomie (he notes in
detail the meawiuble inc,..,... in crime in
Buffalo, during war and immediately
after war); and· fintJlly war iiMJf, notably
th&amp;. unleashing of th't ruicltW wre and
,..neral {u/Utp of anomie in GennGny
and elsewhere a{Ur World War I. A
silnificant 11udy, lltJIJdemically 1tyled but

by Dr. Mark IIIJII de Vall, profeswr,
sociology. Combridge University Pms,
London, 1970. 257 P46er. $9.50.
From an opposition movement, trade
unions have evolved into ~
institution deeply rooted in our economic
a nd politiciot system. Trade . union
members' perception of their unions,
their motives for joiniDC and particlpatlnc
o leaving the unions and also the aims
they expect their unions to pursue have
also altered. Professor VaD de Vall
questions what problems pi'OceiiiS or
cbaDCe in society, cbaDCe in the unl0111,
and cbaDCe in their membenbip have
created.
·
Put I or this book, tbe macro-anal)'lil,
llrst conaiders the economic, sociolocical,
psycholotleal, and political dltletenceo
between JUneteenth century society. and
the modem 'W'fllfare state. It coeo on to
colllider the untoao' fwldiODS and bow
they have evolved durlnc this century,

SEPTEMBER 16, 1971 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I Page 10

�u....:

and
COl1lldea; Ulldodyiuc Prof-.&lt; nn de VoB ~ that it is
not pollible to undenland fully tbe union movement ftom tbe outside. Tbe
aeeond part of tbe boot inft!!5tiptec tbe
trade union moftment's• &lt;&gt;&lt;pnizalionaJ
structure and eq&gt;lores both tbe P&lt;&gt;1R&lt; of
IDcle unions to attroct new IDelnbe!s, tbe

dwader of this attraction, and bow it is
chaJiciDc. The authO&lt; loots at tbe size
and structure of tbe group of active
members in any union, 1ofetbe&lt; with tbe
personality of tbe participant and his

-

Aquin( that tbe - · · ties

i~ memhels are cledininc. tbe
mthO&lt; considers why this is tbe caae and
inwestlptes tbe role automation plays in
this process. This analysis of labor's
problems ~ basically upon research in
-

prof-wnot psychoiOfO', and Dr. Adelw
LeuinL,

auociote pro{euor, sociology.

Appleton-Century.CrofU,
f'GIIOS.$6.75.

3I5

Speech

W - Europe and uaes United States
data for comparati..., purpooes.

SOCIAL HISToRY OF HELPING
SERVICES: CLINIC, COURT,
SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY
by Dr. Murray Le·vin~ director.

1970.

AURAL REHABILITATION
by

Dr.

Derek

professor,

Prentice-Hal~

A. Sanders, associate

speech

Inc.,
New ·Jersey, 1971.

communication.
Englewood Cliffs,

This volume provides a sound theoretical
framework for the principles and
procedures used to teach and to improve
speech communication for
bearing-impaired children and adults. The
book is committed to a holistic approach.
This includes a presentation of relevant
basic knowledge about infonnation
processing, acoustic phonetics, linguistics
and perception. Every attempt is made to
relate theoretical concepts to teaching
practkes.

THE PRESENCE OF A WORLD
by Dr. Gale Carrithers, asiOCiatc
professor, English. Prentice-HaU, Winter
197I.

WAKE UP DEAD MAN:
AFRO-AMERICAN FOLK
SONGS .F ROM TEXAS
PRISONS
by Bruce Jackson, associate professor,
English. Iiaruard Uniuersi!y Press,
Cambridge.

WILHELM MEISTERS
· LEHRJAHRE
lronslation by Dr. Stefan Fleischer,
associate professor, English. Holt
Rinehart and Winston, 1971.

STATISTICAL INFERENCE FOR
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHERS
by Dr. Malcolm J. Slakter, professor,
edu~ational psychology. Addison-Wesley,
Spnng 1972.

Books In Press
THE ANALYSIS OF
MULTIVARIATE DATA
by Dr. Jeremy D. Finn, associate
professor, educational psychology. Holt,
Rinehart &amp; Winston, 1971.

C. DAY LEWIS
by Dr. Josepl! Riddel, pro fessor, English.
7Way ne Press, New York .

DENTISTRY FOR THE SPECIAL
PATiENT: THE AGED,
CHRONICALLY ILL AND
HANDICAPPED
by Dr. A rthu r Dauidof{, Dr. Sh eldon
Winkler, associa te p ro fessor, remouable
prosthodontics, School (I{ Dentis try, and
Dr. Mathew H.M. Lee. W.B. Saunders
Company, 1972. 500 pages approx.

Albrechl

Barnett
Griff ·

The text is a comprehensive presentation
or dental care for the special patient: the
aged , chronically ill, and handicapped .

THE SOCIOLOGY OF ART
AND LITERATURE
edited by Dr. MUton C. Albm:ht,
pro{....,r, wcioiOfO', with James H.
Barnell and Maon Griff. &amp;ruJd
Ducllwarth &amp; Co., Ltd., Londmi, I 970
and l'raefer PubiWrero, New Yort, I970.
752f'GIIOS. $I5.00.
The • place of tbe writer, artist and
society is tbe theme of this
collection of 110111e 50 ~ mainly
from American and EutopMD soun:es.
The -~ lnclud\! IOdal history and
antbropoioclcal lb!dies aloac with
OOCioloclcal theory and -..cio~OCY.
They . . . with tbe whole~ of tbe ·

com- In

l""ft&amp;tion of worts or art, literature, and
music, tbe processes of modem
publication, reproduction and other types
of exploitation, the reactions of tbe
public and the influence of art and
literary "establishments." The materWs
suaest comparison with tbe subject
matter of interrelated fields in tbe
humanities, and overlap with
specializations such as public opinioo,
communication, and the popular arts. As
a text, it may be used for courses at both
. tbe UDdergraduate and pduate levels or

-00.

Chapters on all recognized dental
s pecialties concentrate on diagnosis,
treatment planning, detailed descriptions
of treatment, and patient management.
Background chapters cover the
physiology or aging, dental aspects of
aging, psychosocial factors in chronic
illness, nutrition, home care, and dental
management of the aged patient
undergoing medical treatment.
Introduction is by Dr. Howard A. Rusk.

DONNE AT SERMONS
by Dr. Gale Carrilhero, associate
professor, English. SUNY Press, Buffalo.

IN THE LIFE: VERSIONS
OF THE CRIMINAL
EXPERIENCE
by Bruce Jaclaon. associate profeuor,
EngiW.. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New
Yor*.

The following book lists include all
1969 and 1970 faculty publications
listed in previous issues of Books

By The Faculty.
Prea. London and New Yor• . Volume J :
Jlorpholota A-c&lt;&gt;-edited with A . d'A .
The " ' - a t of Cbaace in TniniDI
aod Therapy-l&gt;y Dr. Joma A . Belaoco,
chairman, organization.. and Ht:U"f'Uon Jl.
Trice, Cornell Uni~roity. JleGraw-Hill
Co., Now Yor*, /969. 176 ptrga
·

Bedside Cardiolo.,.--by Dr. Jula
Corutant, aaoc:UJte clirUCol pro(eaor,
medicine. Little. Brown and Co., Bocton..
1970, 347 · 112.50.

Beia&amp; Buatec~--ey Dr. Lalie A . Fiedler,
pro(eaor, Entiiolo. Stein and Day,
Publiohe,._ N ..w Yorlt, 1970. 15.95.
llioioiY of the lleptillor--ftfited by Dr.
Carl Ga,.,, pro(nr'r, bioloo. Acotkmit:

llell4in and Tho""" S. Pono110, 1969.
374 page1. $11 . 50. Volume 2 :
Morphology B-co-edited w_ith Thom.cu S .
l'rrnoM, 1970. 374 _ ...

BreYe lntroduccion a la Computacion
Liocuialtica-by Dr. Po.ul L. Garvin,
pro{enor, linguistic•. Uniueraidad
Nacion.al Mayor de San Marcos, Lima,
Peru, 1969.

Calc:ul~y

Brain

Tumor

Scanninc

with

Radl~ited
by Dr. Louu
ne&amp;~I'OI&amp;I:rz;ery, and Dr.

&amp;luiy, pro{eaor,

David M. Klein. o:aociate pro(e.or,
neuro1urgery. Cluuiea C. Thoma,
PubiUher, Sprin6rrad. IU., 1969.

Bnoil: . _ e

Sant...,,

~

Dr. Siluiand

-iat• pro(euor, Fnnch. lAs

America. New Yorlt. 1969.

Page 11 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I SEPTEMBER .16,1971

Dr. Albert G. Fodell,
aaociote pro/euor, mathematics, and
E.R. Fodell, Un.i~raity of Wilconsin. Von
Not;trand Reinhold Co .. New York,-1970.
832 pogu. I 12.50.
The Calculua o f Pbysica-by Dr.
McAililter _p. Hull, Jr., daainnan.,
Ihpartrru.nt of Phy.;c,_ W.A. Benjamin,
Inc., New York, 1969. Hard couer and

paperback editioru.

Cem&gt;ral Edema-by Dr. Louio Baku.
profe.uor, neurowrrery, and Dr. J~
C. Lee, pro(euor, anatomy. Ruaion
Edition. Mo.cow, 1969.

The c:t...,.. (a book of poema)--by
Albert Cook,. pro(...or, EngiW.. Alan
Swallow Pre.., 1970. 150 pogu.
Tbe Charm (early and uocoRected
poema)-by Robert Cne~y. pro{euor,
Englilh.. Four SetUoru Foundation, 1969.

Cold Turtey--i&gt;y Dr. Mac Hammond,
pro(e11or, Englilh. Swallow Praa,
ChieG/fO, Ill., /969. 17.50 (includ .. a
1tereo recordi"l of ' "The Holiday•. A
Suite o( Poem• (or Three Simultaneo&amp;a
Voice•") .

�Community Prioritia in tbe ADebontao.
AJub Earthquake, 1964-by Dr. Danitl
Yutzy, oaociote profeaor, socioloc.
Disllster

RnNI'Ch

Center

Series No. 4, Dist:uter

Monoi"GG'h

R ~areh

Center,

Ohio State University, Columbus. 1969.

172 pagu
Ezra PouDCI : The Imoce aDd the Real-by
Dr. Herbert N. Schneldo.u. auociate
pro(euor, Eft6li.h. Louisiana State

Universit y Pnu, 1969. 2 10 pages. $5.95.
Faith aod Reason-by Dr. Frederick
Plotkin, assist.ant pro{euor, English.

Philosophical Library, Inc., New York ,
1969. $4.95.
Ideolo&amp;y, Politics, and Political
Theory--edited by Dr. Richard H. Cox,
p ro fe ssor, political science. Wadsworth
Publishing Co., Belmont. Cali{.. 1969.
3 73 page•. $4.95.

Modern Method• of Ba.1iaeerioc
Compgtatiolr-l&gt;y Dr. Robert L . Ketler,
• preaident, SUNY ot Buffalo, and
Sherwood P. Prai«l, Jr., aaociote
profeaor, civil

e."6iMerin6.

McGraw--Hill

Book Co., New Yorll, 1970.

Nathaniel Hawtbome: The Scorlet Letter
and Other ~ited by Dr. Thotnll$
E. Connolly, pro{eucK, E111IW1. Penguin,
London and New York, 1970.
Notbinc But a Fine Tooth Comb: - y a
in Social Criticiam, 1944·1969-by Dauid
T. Bazelon, Rand Distingui.Jhed Visiting
Professor of EconomicJ. Simon and
Schuster,' N,ew Yorh, 1970. $9.95.

The

Nude Croquet: The Collect.ed Stories of
Leslie A. Fiedler-by Dr. Leslie A .
Fiedler. pro{euor, English. Stein and
Day, Publishers, New York , 1970. $5.95.

form erly assistant professor, philosophy.
Charlea C. T homas, Publisher, Springfield,
/11., 1970. 227 pages.

0 Banquete-by Dr. Silviono Santiago,
associate professor, French. Sago, Rio de
Janeiro, 19 70.

Information Processing in the Netvous
Sy.tem-edited by Dr. K. N icholas
Leibovic. ouociate p ro{euor. biophy sical
sciences. Springer- Verlag. N ew Y o rll.
1969. 400 page•. $19.80.

Charles Olson, Selected Writings-edited
by Robert Creeley, profcuor, English .
N ew Direc tio ns Books, Pl1iladelphia,
Penn. . 1970.

Infinite Worlds of Giordano
Bruno-by Dr. Antoindte Mann Paterson,

ln.structor's Manual fOr Introduction to
Compu t e r 'Science and Data
Proce.ine-by Dr. Richard N. Sc hmidt ,
pro{euor, statistics and William E.
Meyers, Rich Products C9.rporation . 2nd
edition, Holt, Rinehart an'd lVinston. Inc..
1970. 196 pages.
Intervention and N egotiation : The United
States and the Dominican Republic-by
Dr. Jerome Slater, auociate p ro{euor.
political science. Harper &amp; Row.
Publisher~, New Y o rk , 1970. $7.95.
Introduction to Computer Science and
Data Proceainc-by Dr. Richard N.
Schmidt, pro{euor, statistics, and William
E. Meyers, Rich Products Corporation.
2nd edition, Holt , R inehart and Winston.
Inc. , New York . 1970. 4 18 pages.
Introduction io System&amp; Theory-by Dr.
Hinricb R. Martens, pro(eaor, elec trical
engineeiing. and Dr. Don R . Allen,
formerly a.aiatant pro(euor. elec trical
engineering. Charles E. Merrill Publishing
Co., Columbus, Ohio. 1969 . 611 pagu.

/

Petronius-The Saty ricon and T he
Fragm e nt s - Tran sla t e d w ith a n
in I roduction by Jolin P. S ullivan,
pro fessor. classics. Penguin Books Ltd.,
Hannondsw orth. Middlesex. England,
1969. 20 4 pages.
R o bert Creeley, pro fessor,
-English. Charles Scribner ·, Sons, New
Y o rk. 1969.
Pieces-by

Posthumous Poems of Shelly~dited by
Dr. Irving Massey , p ro fesso r, Engli&amp;h.
McGill -Queen 's, Montreal, 1969. $20.
Pour U ne Lecture Ouvrise de Ia
Litterature-by Dr. Pierre A u bery.
pro{enor. French . Lu Editions
Syndicolist es. Paris, 1970. $ 2.
·
A Psychoanalytic Study of the Dou)&gt;le in

Lite rature -by Dr. Robert Rogers,
associate professor, Engli&amp;h. Way ne S tate
University Preu, Detro it. Mich ., 19 70.

Quantitative Chemical Analysis-by Dr.
St anle y
Brucken s tein . pro fe ssor,
chemistry. Dr. l .M . Kalth o ff, Dr. E.J.
Meehan and Dr. E. B. Sandell. 4 th editio n.
Macmillan Co., London . 1969.

lntuitioniam and Proof Theory-edited by
Dr. Akiko Kino, a.uociate pro fessor,
mathematics; Dr. Jo hn Myhill, pro fessor.
mathematics; and Dr. Richard Vesley.
associat e pro f essor. mathematics.
No rth · H oll and Publishing Co . .
Amsterdam, 1970.

A Quick Graph (collected notes and
essaysr-by R o bert Creeley, pro{euor.
English. Four Sea&amp;Ort$ Found:Jtio n, 19 70.
Edite~ by Do nald,M. A lim .

Ion Es.ebange, Vol. U-edit ed by Dr.
Jacob A . Morinsky, professor, chemistry.
Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, 1969.
250 pages. $ 12. 75.

Readinp on the Sociology or Small
Groupa-edited by Dr. Theodo re M . Mills,
chairman, Department o f Sociology, and
S tan Rosenberg, Prentice-Hall , Inc .•
Englewood Cli ffs. N.J.. 1970. 24 7 pages.

King Alfred I&lt; Boetbius: An AnalyU. of
the Old Eneliab Venion of The
Comolation of Pbiloeophy-by Dr. F.
Anne Payne, ouociale pro fessor, English.
Uniue rsit y of Wisconain Press, Madison ,
1968. 15 1 pages. $6.50.

Roman Documents from the Greek East:
"Senatua Conaulta" aDd "Epiatulae" to
the Ace of Augu.atus--edited by Dr.
Robert K. Sherk, pro feuor, classics. The
Johns Hopkins Preu, &amp;ltimore, 1969.
396 page•. $ 17.50.

L&lt;arniD&amp; About Politico: A Reader in
Politic:al Socializatioo-edited by Dr.
Roberta S. Sigel. pro{uaor, political
«ience and .acial welfare. Random
Houu, New York, 1970.

Moaic Papen aDd Other Poema-by Irving
Feldman~

pro{eaor, Engli&amp;h. Harper &amp;
Ro w, PubiWtera, New York , 1970. 56
page.. $4.95.
~"'"-

E,WI. Doublert.y 4 Co., c-Jen Cit)',
N.Y., 1969. $3.95.

The Root of the Thine: .lob and The
Song of Songs-by Albert Cook ,
pro{eqor, E ngiWa. Indiana Uniuersily
Press. Bloomington, 1969. $6.95.
The &amp;tyricon of Petroniu.a: A Literary
Study-by John P. SuUiuan, professor,
c lassics. Indiana Univer~ity Preu,
Bloomington, 1969. $7.50.

Marketine Manaeement and the
Bebarionl Envirooment-by Dr. Perry
Bli.. , chairman, Departmen t o{
Marketing. Prentice·Holl, Inc., Englewood
Cliff&lt;, N.J. , 1970.
Market• and Marketine : An
Orlmtation-by Dr. Lee E. Pruton,
Meluin H . Baker Pro{euor of American
Enterpriu. Scott, Foraman, College
DiuWon, GlenuieW, Ill., 1970. 256 page&amp;.
Hard couer and paperback editiona.

Soeial Stratification in the United
State.-by Dr. Llewellyn Groa, pro{euor,
sociology, Orville R . Guralin and Jock L .
Rooch. PrentU:e-HaJI, Inc. , Englewood
Cliff•. N .J., 1969.

Melville's 'lbematicl of Form: The Great
Art of Tellinc the Truth-by Dr. Edgar A .
DrYden, a..ociDte pro{eaor, E111lish. The
Joluu Hopkin.~ Prua, Baltirriore, Md.,
1969. $6.95.

A ·Middle Encliob Antbolocr-edited by
Dr. Ann S. Hukell. a.Utant profeaor,

641~-

Tbeory aDd a-zeb on tbe ca.... of
War-edited ·by Dr. Dean G. Pruitt,

profeaor, P8YChology, and Richard C.
Snyder. Uniueraity of Cali{orni4 at Irvine.
Prentice-Hall, Inc., E111lewood Clif(l,
N.J., 1969.

Moral Prob lema in eobtemporai'J'
Soc ie ty : Euaya in Humaniatic
Ethic.--.edite:d by Dr. Paul Kurtz,
pro(euor, philosophy. Pnntice:-HaU. Inc.,
Englewood Cliffa, N.J:, 1969. 301 pagu.
$6. 9 5 , h11rdcov er e d;tion ; $2.25,
paperbock.
The New Spirit of Orpnisation
Development: E.ap Dedicated to
Doupu MeG....,.-by Dr. Wa,.,..n G.
Bennis, uice praident {or academic
development , and E . H . Schein .
A&lt;lduon-Wesley, Reading, Maa. , 1970.

1be Thine Contained : Theory of the

'J'ra&amp;ic--by Dr. Laurence A . Michel, Jr.,
pro{usor, E nglish. Indiana
Preu, Bloomington. 1970.

Uniuenity

You Too-by Lyle Glazier, pro fessor,
English . Istanbul Matboosi, Turkey, 196 9.

The Zig-Zag Walk : Poema 1963-1968-by
J ohn Logon, professor. English, E.P.
Dutlon &amp; Co., 1969. 123 pages. $5.95.
$2.45 paperlxu:k.

••••

The American Novel Since Wor:ld War
11-edited by Dr. Marcu s Klein , chainn~an,
D e partm e nt o f En g lis h . Fawce tt
Publieatio ns, Inc., G reenwich , Conn.,
1969. 28 7 pages. $1. 25.
Deductive Logi e: A Programmed
Introduction-by Dr. Jo hn T. Kearns ,
a ss o ciate pro fes so r, philosophy .
A ppleton -Century-Crofts, New Y o rk ,
1969.
Dona lnet: (by Azorin)-edited by Dr.
Leon Liuingdone, pro feliSOr, Spanish ,
Italian , and
Portuguese .
Appl eton ·Century·Cro{ts, New York ,
1969.

El Poema de Mio Cid : peosia, bistoria,
mito-by Dr. Cesa.reo Bandera, cwociate
pro{euor, Spanish , Italian, and
Po rtuguese. Editorial Gredos, Madrid,
1969.
Elementary Scbool Guidance-by Dr.
C. Hansen, tJ.Uoeiole professor,
counselor educa tion, and Dr. Richard R.
S tevie, ouociate profeuor. counselor
education. The Macmillan Co., Riverside,
N. J., 196 9.

J ames

The
1920's: Problema and
Paradoxeo-Seleeted Readi...,......,.tited by
Dr. Milton Pll!:$ur, auociate pro{e:uor,
history. Allyn and Bacon, Inc. , BoJton,
1969. 306 pagu.
Organization Development: Ita Nature,
Qricin, a od Proapec:U-by Dr. Warren G.
Bennis, vice pre6ident {or academic
deuelopment. Addison-Wesley, Reading,
Mass., 1969.

The Planning of Change--ed ited by Dr.
Warren G. Benitis, uice president for
academic development , Kenneth D.
&amp;nne and Robert Chin. Holt, Rinehart
and Wins to n, Inc., New York , /969 . 627
pages.

Playbook-by Lionel A bel, professo r,
English, Robert Hivn o r. Ju nji Kinoshita ,
James Merrill c.md I.A . Richards. N ew
Directions Boo k s, Philadelphia, Penn ..
19 7fl.
Readings in Clas~ical Rhetoric--edited by
Dr . Thomas W. Be nson, assistant
pro{eaor, speech communication, and
Dr. Michael H. Prosser, formerly a&amp;~istant
pro{euor, 8peech commiJnieo tion. Allyn
and Bacon, Inc., Bus to n, /969. 333
pages.·$5.25 .
Reviews io Maeromolec~lar Chemistry,
VoL Ill-edited by Dr. Kenneth F.
0 'D ri sc oil , professo r, ehem ical
engineering, and George B . Butler,
Univer~ ity o{ Florida . Marcel Dekker,
Inc., New York, 1969. 430 pages. $ 16.50.

The Roots of American Foreitn Polley :
An Analylria of Power aDd Purpoae-by
Dr. Gabriel Kolka , professor, history.
Be:acon Preu, Boston, 1969. 166 pages.
$5.95.
The Sociology of Underde"eloped
Nationa-by Dr. Karl H . Hoerning,
ouistant profusor, sociology. T he
Uniueraity Press at Buffalo, 1969. 18 1
pages.

A Social Hiotocy of Helpinc Servic:a:
Clinic ,
Court, School a nd
Community-by D . A deline Levine.
auociate pro{euor, sociolon. and Dr.
Murra y Levine, ouociate pro{euor,
psychology. Appleton-Century·Cro{U,
New York , /910.

The Melville Archetype---by Dr. Martin L .
PoJn, ouiltant pro{euor, Entliah.. The
Kent State Uniuer~ity Prea, Ohio, 1970.

StaUaUeal AuiJ* fa&lt; ..._w
Dedoloao-f&gt;y Dr. JOhn C.G. Boot,
pro(eaor, monoeeme:nt .cience:. and
Edwin B. Cox, Botton Univeraity.
McGrvw·Hill Book Co., New York, 1970.

Soldier and State in Abiea: A
Comparative Analyail of Military
lntervmtioo aDd Political Chance-by Dr.
Clou.cU E. Welch, Jr., ouociote professor,
political .:ie~e. Northwestern Uniueraity
Prea, EUOIUIIOn, Ill., 1970. 320 pages.

The State of the U.Di•enity : Authority
and Chan1e-edited by Carlos E .
KruytboM:h , leCturer, o,.,onizalion. and
Sheldon i.. Meail18er. Sa,fe Pu.b licatiom,
&amp;1J0rly Hilh, Coli{. ; 1970. 3 76 pagu.

The Game of Science-by Dr. Erwin M.
Segal, OISOCial e professor, psychology,
and Dr. Garuin McGoin. The University of
T e xas at A rlington . Brooh/ Cole
Publishing Co .. Belmont, Cali{. , 1969 .
178 pages.
Germ·Free Biology: Experimental and
Clinical Aapecta--edited by Dr. NDthOn
Back , chairman , Deportment o f
B i ochemical Phonnacology, and E .
Mirand. Plenum Press, New Yo rk , 1969.
423 pages. $22. 50.

lmpouDded People: Jape-Americana
in tbe Relocation Centen-by Dr. Morvin
K . Opler, pro{euor, anthropology,
socio l ogy and social psychiatry
(medicine), and chairman, Department of
Anthropology ; and Edward H. Spice:r,
Asael T. Hansen and Katherine: Luomala.
The University of Arizona Pres., TucsOn,
1969. 342 page._ $8.50.
lotroduction to Symbolic Loeie--by Dr.
John L . Pollock, ouociote pro{eS6or,
philosophy. Holt, Rinehart and Winston ,
New York, 1969.
Labour '1 International Policy: The
Labour Party in the 1930'8-by Dr. John
Naylor, ouociote professor, history.
Houghton Mifflin, Boston. 1969. 380
pages. $7.50.

Le Cbinoia d' Amerique-by Dr. Leslie A .
Fiedler, pro{euor, English. A u:r Editions
du Seuil. 1969.
Medical Microbioloey-by Dr. Erwin
Nete r, pro feuor, microbiology and
pediatrics. 6th EditWn, F.A . Douis
Company, Philadelphia, Penn., 1969. 556
pages.

~e :~~-:;,e~vf~ut;~h!=.'e::t:!~~
· pro{euor, history. Rondo,m IJouse, New
Yorll, 1969.

Modem American Poetry: ·- y a in
Criticism-editid by Dr. Jerom e Mazz ara,
P"' feuor, Engluh. 11auid McKay . New
York, 1970.

Structure and Mechanism in Vinyl
Polymerization-edited by Dr. Kenneth
F . 0 'Driscoll, pro{euor, chemical
engineering, and Teiji Tsuru to, University
o f Tokyo. Marcei" 'Dekker, Inc., New
York . 1969. 552 pages. $29.50.
Teaching MUJic Creatively in tbe
Elementary School-by Dr. Irving
director, music education, and
pro{euor , education, oiul He'rbert
Cheyette. McGra:u -Hill Book Co., New
York, /969 . 4 18 pages.
Ch eyet~e.

A Thief's Primer-by Bruce Jackson ,
ouociate pro{euor , EngiWt. The
Mocmillon Co., New York, 1969. 243
pages. $5.95.
Thia New Man: A Di8eourle in
Portraita-ediled by Dr. J. &amp;lli&lt;Jmin
Townsend. chairman. Department of Art.
Random Howe, New York, 1969. 217
page•. $12.50.
Tralllformationa in the Re.W.UCe
Encliab Lyric-by Dr. Jerome Mazzaro,
profeuor, ElljJiiah. Cornell Uni!Jflnit)'
Press, lthoca, N . Y ., 1970.

Tbe Uncertain Giant, 1921·1941 :
American Fomp Polley-een tbe
Wan-by Dr. Selig Adler, profuaor,
hi&amp;tory. Collier Boolu.. CoUier-Mac.millon
Ltd., London, /969. 340 pP· $2.95.

Urban School Aclminiatntion-by Dr.
Troy V. McKelvey , auiatonl pro{eaor,
educatWnal adminiltrotion. and iDr.
Austin D. Swon.on, oaociote pro{eAOr,
educational admini1trotion . Sqe
Publica/ions,' Inc., 1969. 224 /XI("Value Theory and
Sciences-by Dr. Rollo
Faculty of Educational
C. Thom08, PubiW!er,
1969. 198 pagea. $8:00.

the BebOYio&lt;al
Handy, prooo• t.
Studie1. Charlu
Springfield, Ill.,

VIaloo ODd Expreoaioo-by N athan Lyons,
viliting pro{euor. photographic studiu.
Horizon Preu and the George Ealtman
House, Rochuter, 1969.
;

SEPTEMBER.16, 1971 I BOOKS BY THE FACULTY I Page 12

.•

�September 16, 1971

GREPORrER..,

Moore Is ~unconVinced' ThteAsked
About Split in Faculty On&amp;y;ng

Chabad House Of(~
A Way of Love &amp; Tr¢11

Poperty Hill

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

who has concern for the whole
l&lt;.,ortar::iw.l
University.
Dr. Gilbert Moore, new actLe.st spring, this Universitying provost of Arts and Letters, wide
Sub· Board I, Inc., is asking
interest led him to run
is ·•not convinced" that the Facand
the office of chairman- the six student governments to
ulty of Arts and Letters "is electwin
hold
referenda on the question
of the Faculty Senate.
split wide open" or is "poles
year, he will serve as. an of whether Sub Board should
apart." But then he does say This
buy
the
1150-acre Poverty Hill
to Dr. William
he "tends to be a bit optimistic "apprentice"
recreational complex in Elliin my approach to problems." Baumer, chairman of the Sen- cottville, on which it now holds
Moore says there are "strong ate; then, next June, he will an option. The elections will
differences within the faculty- take over Baumer's position.
likely be held in late October
Moore anticipates no major or early November.
just as you might expect." But
he looks at this as being char- difficulties Or conflicts between
Sub Board's $10,000 option
acteristic of the vigorous and his Senate role and his position on the $176,000 property exin A!"ts and Letters, though he pires in December.
diverse faculty he heads.
Moore took the acting pro- does expect to spend a lot of
If the property is purchased,
vost position this summ~. un· time next spring running be- Sub
Board is platming to make
der a difficult set of conditions. tween, the Old Faculty Club some
chanies· Construction will
and
Hayes
Hall.
Moore
points
Dr Marvin Bernstein, history,
probably
toilets, runw.U. offered ·the post by Presi- out that no decision-making ning watermclude
to campsites, a GOfunctions
are
attached
to
the
dent Robert Ketter. Bernstein
space
parking
lot,
plus
chlorinwithdrew, however, because of chairrnait-elect's position and ation of the drinking water.
strong opposition from the Arts that he will be out of the pro- Paul Cumming, chairman of
and Letters Steering Commit- vost's -chair before it is neces- Sub Board I, estimates such
tee and other members of the sary for him to take over Sen- development will cost between
faculty . Moore was then en- ate leadership.
$15,000 and $20,000. The exdorsed by the Faculty of Ar!s .
And if any difficulties do penditure is necessary to meet
and Letters Steering Commit- arise, he is sure he can cOpe health standards, he stresses,
tee and appointed by Ketter. with them. His fonnula for suc- 3.nd represents " no capital deThis support was imPQrtant to cess in this area?-"Assume velopment.''
Moore because it "Indicates there are t&gt;roblems, fo r that is·
colleagues feel yo~ behavior one of the realities of life-but
For the future, however, capcan facilitate their work."
always expect the best from
ita! projects are planned. CumNo Sweepin&amp; Chanps
people."
ming envisions "developing difAs a •'facilitator" · he isn't
ferent areas for different activiplanning any sweeping changes.
ties." This may include buildWhen discussing his role for
ing a third lake and campsites.
this next y~he emphasized
These will probably be built
the "acting' part of his title ·
in the .,central spine area" of
anrl described his major responthe land-where
road
and
lodges
are located.the
Even
if these
sibility as a management one
115 acres are developed, more
where he will help ;'maintain
than nine-tenths of the land
and support the current programs.~· He . will also encourThe recent "ping-pong diplo- will still be primitive, Cumming
age others to plan for the fu- macy" with Mainland China notes. Several clubs have shown
ture. Secondly, the acting pro- p)us continuing concern .over interest in the project and the
vost is eager to ·~e · it more the Indochina conllicts h a v e Schussmeisters Ski Club hopes
possible to attract a good per- heightened interest in Asia. As for ski slopes. This is still just
son" for the job of permanent a result, a new a d hoc uni:ler- a hope, however.
provost. As -Moore jokingly graduate major in Asian StudRight now, the facility is
points out, 41l'm working my- ies has been established under open _a g a in, with insurance,
sell out of a job."
the sponsorship of the Council after having been closed briefly
The next provost s h o u I d on International Studies.
in late Au gust when insurance
oome from an area within the
The Asian Studies program was cancelled.
Faculty of Arts and Letters
Because of a series of comis
designed
to
broaden
a
n
d
since Moore believes ._there is
d e e pen the "student's con- plaints and crises this summer
strength in this attitude." More- sciousness
when an estimated 400 people
a
nd
understanding
over, he would like the new of Asia . . . and prepare him were enjoying the Hill's clean
person to have a "collegiate ad- for serious graduate work in
":~"-~'!k:id~S~b
ministrative" approach to the any
aspect of Asian Studies."
job-which he defines as havThe only reql!irements for ! has now instituted a series of
ing a "ooncem for the academ- the 32-h o u r interdisciplinary rules and regulatioru:, for "comic enterprise as well as fo( the major are History 281--an inproblems of management." A troductory Asian course-and muning with nature.
One of the regulations (not
"collegiate administrator keeps one follow-up 300 or 400 level
close ties with his own disci- class in the area of Asian af- being altogether universally ob• pline." Moore adds, and main- fairs. Currently, there is no served) requests users to "obey
tains "direct contact with stu- language requirement; however, the wishes of the owner of Povdents." 'Ibis approilcb is used students planning to do grad- erty Hill and refrain from apby the Ketter administration, uate work are strongly urged pearing naked." D u r i n g the
he believes, since administra- to study one or more Asian summer, many students "skintors are urged to teach at least languages. Choice of the other ny-dipped" in the two lakes.
one course a y.ear and to main- six upper division electives is To avoid offending drivers on
tain a,n academic appointment. up to the , student. 'I'hese can the nearby road, a feed-bag
Moore calla this "essential" and . be selected according to his fence was erected to shut off
the view. Since then, however,
~set~. teaching two courses specialization with credit !&gt;eing some students have objected tothe nudity.
~ti'tu~':.'na'tves'::...andAtm:;
Another hallmark of Moore's
In addition to "skinny-dip"collegiate-administrator" is his present time, cross-registration
ing,"
the rules specifically proability to move back and forth for· Asian Studies courses is
between the world of the class- available with State University hibit "consumption of alcohol1
ic
beverages
by minors, use or
room and olfi.ce. Moore feels College and Canisius.
1
sale of drugs. use of any kind ·
a&lt;bninistrators should only stay
Students will consult with of motor vehicles off the main
in ' oft'ioe for several years and Asian
Studies faculty members road, arid fishing." Minors unshould then' return to their dis- to draw
up a course of study.
cipline. 'Ibis way, the individ- The proposal will then be sub- der 18 are barred unless they
are students or are accompanual ·can "broaden his &lt;lecisionto the Committee on ied by. an adult over 25.
making staDce without .ving mitted
Special Majora for review and
Persons using the property
up the academic spbere..JP'Ibis approval and subsequently sent
iS difficult to do, be notes, sinoe to the dean of Undergraduate now must also register at the
main lodge and secure a paas
many administzators find it . Studies for final approval.
from one of the caretakers. The
bani to return to a teaching
Chairman of Asian Studies land is for "the private use of
career.
. +a alumni faculty
is Dr. Kenneth 1Jw!a and~­ the tuden
U"'-st~J 11M
U/B, ihe rules
Moore has been at U/B for bers of the organizing comnut- and
11 years and has served as tee are Drs. Burvil Gleim, Jobn streas, and anyone else must
Larkin,
Laurence
Schneider
~-t
specis1
permissiOn for
President of his national pro;;;;_fessional organization and and Constantine Tung.
chairman of the Department of
In August, the property. was
the scene of an unauthori-t
Counselor Education. He's also
all-day "free-for-all" allegedly
had a srowing inten!St in UniThe Cleveland Quartet, MWly 8POil80I'ed by Mulligan's Brick
versity-wide concems and has
been intimately involved in appoiJtted residents of the State &amp;r. The ~~ of the event
many "University-wide activi- University of New York at Buf- put . up a !,;;~ brootght in
ties. 'Ibis interest has Jed him' falo Department of Music, will a t-r ' truck, attnlcting some
to an -outlook that is "inde- appear af 8:30 p.m., TuesdaY, 400 people. Ofticers of Sub
Pendent of any department" September 28, on WNED-TV'a Board 1 are aaid to be coosidand given him an· identity as a "'l'alk of the Town." Jayne ering a law suit apinst the
·
"university man" -someone Freeman '{ill host the program. 8poii80rll of the affair.

Major in
Asia Study
Now Offered

:i:;;.

J3::'ci

':.taJr ';;{

Quartet on TV

5

By SUZANNE METZGER
R - Stolt

Chabad is formed from the
three Hebrew words, Chochmah (wisdom) , Bilwh (understanding), and Daas (know!edge) . It is the namesake of a
little white structure at 3292
Main St. with blue roof, whitewash"!f . walls and a _sign of
Chass1dic dancers hangmg over
!he ~oorway- The w?O&lt;f panelmg 111S1de, the s~ed glass
lamps 9.!'d arched wmd~ lend
a moonsh flavor to Uus new
home fo r an old, orthodo:" JewIsh ~t-a sect !hat strives to
unve1l and explain tbe &amp;crets
of the Torah to th~ who
would_ ~es1re to know them.
~hass1diS~ lS a common sense
mterpretation of_ Kab~the. body of ~ewish mysticiSm
wh1ch othe':':"'!"' would ha~e remamed a hidden Jewel for
only a very few to see.
"The Chassidic movement
feels that this is the answer for
Jewis!! students seeking the
truth, expl~ Rabb1 ~osen
Gurary, o rd a m ed rabb1 and
JUdge, the 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld leader of
UI B's Chabad House. Rabbi
Gurary, sent to Buffalo by
Rebbe Schnee~n. head of . the
world commuruty of Lubavttch
Chassidism, will conduct religious services, teach a bulletin
board course ( USB 239-"A
SociOlogical S t u d y of the
Ch~idim") and lead study
sess1ons at Chabad House.
Chabad Houses have been
set up al l over the country ineluding Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Brooklyn,
the site of headquarters. Chabad is especially popular with
university students. "Students
are looking for the genuine
thing- somethin g pure," explains Rabbi Gurary. "They
want..._ to do things the original
way Bill! with love and feeling.
Chassidism is really the same
old Torah and mitzvahs (rules
for a pious life); nothing new
has been added." It is therein
tha t its timeless value and appeal lies.
A Person Is His Feelings

c~·d
~fl
1 _perso'j
ings 00
God g':.nd ':1,~
world, points out Rabbi Gurary.
"What is a person? A person is
his feelings." The Chabad approach aims to change these
feelings from · within.
" Chassidisrn never deals with
how bad a sin is," he continues.
" If a person has a bad feelingsay of jealousy or envy-there
are two possible ways to fight
it. One is, he can learn and
study how wrong it is to be
jealous. He can rationalize that
there is no reason why be
should envy another person. In
this way, he fights jealousy by
seeing it as a negative thing. In
this manner ·he fights negatives
his whole life to become a perfeet person. The Chassidic approach is to change himseU inside by understanding that the
only true existing thing is God.
By coming to this realization be
automatically won't have bad
feelings in the first place. There
is not the question of being rewarded or punished; it is a
quostion of being close to God
or far away. He is not fighting
the dark, but rather is just
bringing in a little light."
FUndamental to becoming a
Chassid is the practice of observing the 613 mi.tzvah8 or die1
tates set forth in the Torah.
Many of the mitzvah8 appear to
have DO practical explanation
or logic. but it is..e:r:plained that
God ~ is beyood Ullde&lt;standine&gt; 'T h e r e f o r e. all his
mitzvalu ~Yare beyood
understanding. "'The reason we
do them is IIDt bec:a""!' we IDI·
derotand them 1111 log~cal, but
because God said so," remarked

':',d; 1

cl:::,

Rabbi Gurary.
Explaining, Rabbi Gurary
"The idea of the Torah is
to unite everything with God
All the mi.tzvalu deal with
something that is part of the
world, so by following them
man unites himseU as well as
worldly things with God."

$1lYS.

The Positive ApproKh

m

The positive approach,
which the idea of sin is alien,
leads to servinl{ God in joy,
Rabbi Gurary says. Chassidic
religious ceremonies are filled
with warmth and spirit and are
marked by singing, music and .
dance. They have gaiety without extremism, for emotions
must be expended sparingly
and wisely and, according to
belief the head always rules
the h:...n.
Chassidism developed in
17th century Lithuania at a
time of great confusion and depression within the Jewish
community. Today it has severa! subgroups. The Luhavitch
Chassidic group traces its roots
to the town of Luhavitch, Russia. Unlike other branches it
stresses that the Chassidic ~ys­
tern should be made accessible
to everyone. Its founder, Baal
Shem Tov brought the Secrets
of the To.:.U, even to the most
uneducated Jewi sh peasants
stressing that even the nono~
servant and simplest of men is
still a J ew and a part of God.
The rich use of stories and analogies is one of the most effective means of tesching and
bringing the Torah to a wtiversal level of comprehension.
Dauening or prayer i&amp; of utmost importance in the daily
life o( the Chassid. ''It is
~ugh davening ~t the JewJsh soul pours out 1ts heart to
God," says Rabbi Gurary.
"Everyday a man•s feelings and
moods change, so that ~e same
words take on a new life and
spirit with each day, and the
praye_rs have new Levels of
mearung."
Choracterlstk: Dress

A true Chassid is unmistakable-both by outward appear-

:';:Uili:!,~&gt;;, ~ t;:~ 0l'm':,~

His dress is characterized by
modesty, with no regard for the
material things.
All intellectual energy is
poured into religious learning
and teaching.
. Rabbi and Mrs. Gurary exemplify the Chassidic way of
life in their home, which is
waun and open to guests who
are treated with complete generosity. They welcome people
to their traditional Friday night
meals, and enjoy explaining the
rituals, from the lighting- of the
th candles, to the abl
~and the breaking df
halltJh bread M' •
Gurary
:;.,""'" from ~ Luba'"'!ftdl community in M 0 n t r e a 1. The
1 has
Abraham.
ooup e
one son.
·
Unt.ord of to ' - Despite what seema a diffi.
cult way of life to the oulaider,
• Chaasidim would " ' - DO
other. "It is almost ~ of
to leave Chaasidiam," cammen
.t • tstoRabhileave. J&lt;;,: ~'just as
1 18
The following are offered by
Chabad House (all at 3292'
Main Street) :
Bulletin Board Cowse, USB
239, "A Socio1ogical Study of
the Chaasidim," Thursday, 7-&amp;
pi'l..nOpenyMiny~~vices­

tJ:;,

mornings Jlt 8 a.m., aftemoooa
at :l!!..~
L_tradi
· •.,__ ,

........

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

.........

Chassidic services, with warmth
and spirit, Sunday, Sept. 19,
and Monday, Sept. 20. Mincha

6:45 p.m.; Ma'ariv - 7:45
p.m.; Sbachrit--9:30 a.m. All
(continued o n - 6, coL 2)

-

�September 16, 1911

6

HowsSARA?

Syillposium
To Honor
Scientist

Better But
Not Perfect

A symposium in honor of
Dr. LU6wig von Bertalanffy,
Faculty professor in Natural
Sciences and Mathematics and
Social Sciences and Administration, will be held by the Philosophy Department at SUNY I
Geneseo, September 18, on the
ocxasion of his 70th anniversar;rofessor von Bertalanffy' referred to as the "Father of
Theoretical Biology," was born
near Vienna, Austria, in 1901
and reoeived his Ph.D. frol!l
the University of Vienna in
1926, where he continued as
professor from 1934 until 1948.
Later, he held the post of professor and director of biological research at the University of
Ottawa, Canada; and was director of biological research at
the Mount Sinai Hospital, Los
Angeles, and a visiting professor at the University of Southem California. He has also
served as a member of the Center for Advanoed Study in Theoretical Psychology at the University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Canada.
Dr. von Bertalanffy joined
the U / B fa cui ty in the fall of
1969.
His work has won world-wide
acclaim in many fields, including theoretical and organismic
biology, biophysics, cancer diagnosis, general systems theory,
and behavioral science. He is
author of twelve books published in several languages and
of more than 250 scientific papsome of his best known
of
leU&lt;elo)orn&lt;ml; ·• ·neor.et_I.Scne BiRoand

Moms and Pops
Freshman parents learned about the University in •

two-phosed Orientotion procrom.

The Parents Need Orientation, Too,
And U!B Workslwps Seek to Provide It

The first few months of the (SA ) ; Andrew Trusz, graduate
freshman year are frustrating, student in Social Foundations
enlightening and crazy - not of Education; Elizabeth
only for the student but for Schachter, editor of the Bufhis parents as well. Perhaps the falo nian and Thomas DeMarexperience is even worse for tino, SA's coordinator of Stuthe parent since tile new stu- dent Rights. A psychological
dent is directly experiencing profile of the U /B student was
everythi ng while mom and dad presented by Dr. Allen Kuntz,
get information only through director of Instructional Servhastily written letters a nd quick ices and Testing and Buerk
phone calls. They have, for ex- spoke on Student Cultural Valample, no idea what Norton ic; ues. In the afternoon, the paror how intricate SARA regis- ents were given time to talk to
tration may be.
others about what they had
To give parents this type of seen and heard and to formupersonalized under s tanding , late questions. These questions
two sets of parent orientation were addressed to a five person
conferences were held this year. panel of representatives from
Three comprehensive work- Campus departments, SA, the
shops were held this summer Student Affairs Office, and the
and a shorler session was con- Health Service. After dinner,
dueled on Labor Day for par- Dr. Richard Siggelkow, vice
ents bringing their sons - and president for student affairs,
spoke to the group.
daughters to school.
What did parents think of
The Labor Day session has this quick exposure to U /B?
been a traditional one but John Most felt the workshop met
Buerk~ director of Orientation,
their expectations. They were
fell the need for more exten- pleasantly surprised to see the
sive sessions so the summer campus so orderly and the stuworkshops were again estab- dent gujdes so pleasant, but
lished after a th""i' year ab- some questioned whether these
sence. Buerk, William Greene, students were really " representdirector of urban extension, and ative.,. T hey enjoyed seeing the
Donald Holmwood, director of
Dr. von Bertalanffy has been a credit-free programs, set up the campus and most of the m
wanted to see more. They exFellow of the Rockefeller Foun- program.
pressed the desire to see things
dation, a founding Fellow of
m action- to watch a class or
During
their
stay,
parents
the Center for Advanoed Study
in the Behavioral Sciences, were given the oppo rtunity to see a science lab being used.
Stanford, and Alfred P. Sloan become familiar with the physi- Dr. Ebert's presentation was
Visiting Professor at the Men- cal, social and educational re- well received and many wanted
ninger Foundation. J"fe is an sources here, and the quality of to get the opportunity to meet
Honorary Fellow of the &gt;\mer- campus life-as expressed by people who would be interacti can Psychiatric Association, students, faculty, and adminis- ing with their children. In fact,
member of the Deutsche Aka- trators. In addition, they had many wanted to meet and talk
demic der Naturforscber, Fe!- · chances to "interact with and to more University people, eslow of the International Acad- get to know specific individ- (JCcially faculty members.
Like the frestunen attending
emy of Cytology and the uals; share with others their exA.A.A.S., and founder of the pectations, concerns_ and ques- orientation conferences, parents
Society for General Systems tions about higher education; were given an open-end ten
and finally , to receive answers question perception s urvey.
Research.
Leading figures from diverse to the perplexities they found." They we!" asked to complete
fie I d s will address the BerThey beard Dr. Charles
talanffy Symposium, including Ebert, dean of Undergraduate
William Gray, M.D., Boston, Studies, talk on "Undergraduwho will lecture on "Bertalanf- ate Education Today." They
fian Principles as a Basis for went on campus tours with stuHumanistic Psychiatry"; Nich- dent gujdes, including Scott
The Steering Committee of
olas D . Rizzo, M.D ., who will Slessinger, second vice presi- the I o ~ al University Center
speak &lt;m ''The Impact of Lud- dent of Student Association Chapter of the Senate Profes..
wig von Bertalanffy on Psysional Association (SPA) has
chology;" Karl Gruber, ambasendorsed efforts to have the
sador of Austria to the United
nation's university faculty a:States; Anatol -Rapoport, Uniempled from the current wageversity of Toronto, who will (Continued from page 6, col. 5) freeze.
lecture on "The Search !or Sim- welcome'.
In a letter to Robert Granger,
Yom Kippur-Y.ol Nidre, president of the S t a te-wide
plicity"; Dr. Robert Rosen, associate professor, biophysical Tuesday, Sept. 28, 6:44 p.m.; SPA. Th-. Constantine Yerasciences, SUNY/ Buffalo, will Sbachrit, Wednesday, Sept. 29, caris, chairman of the chapter
indicated that:
•
'
speak on "Some Systems Theo- 9 :30a.m.
"Study Sessions: Mondayretical Problems in Biology'!'
''The SPA ~ SUNYAB wish-..
Further details and registra- Talmud Classes, 8 p.m.; Tues.. · es to render Its full su pport to
tion forms may be obtained day-Eternal Torah in Chang- the attorneys I for NEA and
from Ervin Laszlo, director, ing Times, 8 p.m. ; Wednesday NYSTA in their e ff o r ts in
Bertalanffy Symposium, Phi- -Jewish Mysticism and Kab- Washington and Albany to eflosophy Department, SUNY/ balah, 8 p.m.; Sunday, Pol fect exemption of the salaries
Luck, 8 p.m.
of the professiofl!ll s t a f f at
Geneseo, New York, 14454.

sentences with such stems as
"the thing that worries me most
about my son's/daugbter's col!ege experience;" uco-ed housmg;" "most college students;"
and the "importance of a college degree."
The survey revealed that, in
general, parents send their children to college to give them
"prestige and. better opportunities." To some, a college degree is a "door-opener," to
others, it ·'indicates a trained
intellect, healthy attitudes and
an open mind." Parents felt
that people who don't go to college "'miss a meaningful experience," and "cannot reach their
full potential." Though one parent replied, "don't condemn
:a~ri~_r-:~ryone isn't college
Most of the parents were
very concerned about drug use
and radicalism on campus.
Some were afraid their children
would uget in with undesirables" and others feared they
"wouldn't take advantage of all
the opportunities." Most of
them wanted " happiness" for
their children and the opportunity to "find their niche and
do their thing in life." Resigned
disapproval probably sums up
the attitude toward premarital
sex, although some parents
called it a " personal thing."
One insisted it "should not be
allowed on public university
property." Drug use was strongly condemned with many in
favor or more education about
its evils and of strict prohibition on campus. But, behind all
these words and attitudes about
universities and current issues
most parents would probably
agree with the Little Valley,
New York, family who said
"We've taught him all we could
and now it's up to him." ·

SPA Asks Freeze Exemption

Chabad-

SUNY and all other institutions of learning from the current economic freeze. We feel
that our profession has been
unjustly singled out by accident of the calendar. We hope
that their efforts are successful.
" F u r the r, we believe that
SPA !DUSt insist that the servit::e increment already being
p8Id to our colleagues who are
on 12-month P'&gt;pointrnents be
also paid w thC balance of the
professional staff of SUNY.
Any turther delay in this respect oonstitutes inadmissible
and flagrant discrimination and
::::'~:. .. be challenged in the '

SARA's been called the way
of the Nture, but many freshmen have found the system
troublesome. This fall, freshmen were the tast ones to be
run through the computer registration system. As a result,
the group has bad more than
its share of closed courses, lecture sections without recitation
periods, time conflicts and
other snags.
Horror "stories abound in the
Diefendorf Advisement Lounge.
There's the freshman pre-med
student who was closed out of
all his courses the second time
around. And the freshman girl
who went to three out of her
four classes, only to find that
none of the instructors showed
up because of scheduling errors.
However, except for these
freshman problems, the registration process went "fine,"
John Hammond, head of day
school registration, said. Although there was a "large business" during drop and add this
week, he feels the process w;mt
smoother. than tast spring.
One impro,-cment was the development of a " force" program
through which a student coulc
get into a course even if it was
officially listed as closed. This
procedure was used only by
Admissions and Records this
semester but Hammond hopes
to have individual "force
codes" for departments soon.
This would enable professors to
personally enroll students in
classes that are officially closod.
Currently, a faculty member
writes a note opening the
course to certain students. The
computer. however, simp 1 y
takes the first· people who ask
for the course and may still reject the very students the professor wanted tO admit. While
this present system is fair and
non-discriminatory, most people find it highly annoying.
Miss Dorothy Wynne, senior
undergradualc' advisor, notes
that upperclassmen are getting
more adept at registeiing.
Departments also became
more sophisticated in using the
SARA system. Last spring
some departments mistakenly
limited enrollment in independent study and thesis gujd'
ance courses. This didn't happen again, Hammond points
out. In addition, more and
more departments u sed the
daily registration print-outs to
add or drop sections of courses.
There are still a few snags in
the procedure and some departments haven't received the
print-outs regularly, but others
are using the process to help
-students get what they want.
One of the largest problems
of drop and add this week is
the three-day wait to find
whether you were able to add
courses, Miss Wynne no:ed.
People who submitted add slips
on Monday had to wait until
Wednesday or Thursday to get
their ciaas &lt;;a~. This is the
worst part of;llllnputer registration, she believes. "People resent the uncertainty, the waiting around."
Within the next year, Hammond hopes to have this problem solved also. SARA will be
expanding to include .J!ll "on
line terminal system" which
will allow students to register
and immediately"find out what
courses they're in. If "a course
is closed, the student will be
able to sign up for another immediately.
ADULT ADVISEMENT MOVES
The University's Adult Advisement

Center has moved from 5430 Main
to 4230 Ridge Lea, 8 ·3. The new
telephone number is -831·1808.

�~16,1911

ta. LAWBNC. A.. Plt:OIUH,

GREPORTS
ON
'¥EPPLE
AWARDS
DR. PAUL L. GARVIN,

guiatica,

Willi

profeuor, lin·

elected president of

the Executive Comm.1ttee of the

Inter-American Procram for LiDguiatica aDd l..ani!Wll" Teaching.
DL

NOUIAN

B'I'BAUSS,

auociate

profeooor, b i o I o 1 y, baa 00eo
awarded an NIH apecial Senior
Pootdoctoral Fellowship to atudy

GRANTS

~~vm-=· ~ tt::
atitute of 1971, NS~

oica1 education for men, baa been

Metabolic l'roceooN, NIH.

DR. ANDIIEW HOLT,

aaoociate d -

~=~1,~,~

Emanuel A x e 1 1 o n. American
F:"oundation for Pharmacy Education.
DIL &amp;OGENI: A. L Z W [ B, asaiatant

~':!f::'.,:;,..,:'~~£=-""~n ~j
Morphology in Vitro, NIH.
DR.

RUTH

T.

lloGROREY,

dean.

B;chool of Nuroin!f. 111,390, Spe-

~5Purpooe Trameeahip Grant,

~~:nbi:i~~:=ttau~~r

OIL .~VEL .. PAB.ZEN,

Study of
chainnan,

statiatica, $28,000, 'Probability
Density Estimation Theory and
Algorithms, NSF.
senior research
scientist. WNY Nuclear Research
Center; OIL E.l. MASS.UW, assistant
professor biochemistry; c.c. THOMAS, manager,_ -:eseat:ch departDR. K.K..S. PttLAY,

ment. and pnnClpal mvestigator

$45,000, monitoring of the heavY

metallic pollutants in the Great

associate
professor, chemistry, $28.200,
Metal Surface Reactivity a nd
Trace Impurities, NSF.

DR. DAVID A. CADENHEAD,

assistant
professor, chemistry, $9,166, Reactivity and Bonding in Transition Metal Organometallic Compounds, PRF.
DR. DONALD DARENSBOURG,

ior ecientiat. W•tem -New York

versity ,_,.m, inatructional - vices, was installed natioo.al vice
preaident of Pi Lambda Theta,

J;:i!P;~r:b~;~· c:L:tb: ~~~~=.taN~Fthe

oratory of Profet1110r J. Szulmajater at Centre National de Ia
Recherche Sci.entifique, Paria, for
the y e a r beginni.ng September
1971.

&amp;IIOCi·

~r:..~rof~iro~~ ~~~f~~~o':~

r!':ne:!~dteWil~lif~f ~est.~

J?epartment of the Interior.
professor

OR. SOL W. WELLER,

c hem i ~ a_l engi_neering, $8,085:
~RF.Stotchiometr~c A 1u m in a,
DR. JOHN Y. YANG,

associate pro-

fessor, civil engineering and sen-

I

t.:~'1~ug~·

3:,:

vironmental Protection Apncy.

NEW CAMPUS .
APPOINTMENTS
DL PAUL .&amp;.NDI880N~

aiatant

reeearch U·

profe..or, microbiology;
M.D., Aarhus University, Denmark; a BI18We!l Fellow.
DIL llAYKOND P. BI8SONJ:I"io.:, former 1 y director of community

planning lor the Greater BuJralo

Area R e s e a r c h and Planning
Council, baa 00eo named lln assistant clinical profeuor of com-

munity psychiatry. Tbe program
is funded throl!lh a $350.000 National Inatitute of Mental Health
grant.

~~~;;tP:.~\fiB.
research i,natructor, medicine; M.D., Wurz:~rr ~~~~ity, Germany. a Bus·
DR. GEORG EISENBACH.

assiBtant
professor, soc i at, philosophical
anU/dBh.
foundations; Ph.D..

DR. M . BRUCE HASLAM,

istorical

DAVID PENDERGAST,

instructor in-

struction: M .Ed., UniversitY of
Pittsburgh.
DR. GEORG PERLE, professor, music;
Ph.D ., New York University.
J_AMES sn.~s. instructor, educational stud1es; M .Ecl. University
Pittsburgh.

o(

QFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
OR. JEAN M . ALBERTI ,

director, uni-

uaoeia.tion for wome:o. in educa·
tion.
DL !lADY G. Plll'I'Z, director. phy.
appointed to aerve aa a conaul-

tant lor the American _AooociatioD

lor Health, Phyaicsl Education,
and Recreation's committee of

aociol

cial

~.=..:..* of~:i

Welfare - . c h , Rotterdam,
The NotherlandaFifteen members of the Department of Pediatrica atteaded tbe
18th International

Cc&gt;ug.-

of

ProfMaional Servioeo lo Ethnic

Pediatrico, Augua_t 29-~r
4, Vumna, Auatria. EiCht preleDted p a p e r L They are: DL

BUitGENOR, pro-

lUTCBICI.L L &amp; U B l N,
IKW'Df
NETEB, IJIL GIDOIIGII B. _ . . . . ,

Minority Groupe.

DR.

DOUGLAS M .

feaaor, health sciences, will head
a new Greater BuJralo Red Cross
Chapter scientific committee to
~filf~e potential future

uses

research instructor, gynecology-obstetrics,
hns been named head of Children'• Hospital fetal care unit to
diagnose, study arul treat diaorders of unborn babies.
DR. MICHAEL RAY,

PRESENTATIONS
DR. PIEilRE )luBE a Y,

professor,

French. ''Communication and
Class Struggle," XVth IntemaStionakinl
. ConPvbeilntionbfor F r en c b
pea
g
osop ers. Montreal,
Quebec.
'
GEOFFREY GIBSON, assistant
professor, SOCiology and asslStant
clinical professor, social and prev e nt i v e medtcme, "Regresston
Equations for Pred1c~ng;, Emer- ·
gency M_edtcal BehaVJor, Ge~esee R_egton H e a I t h Planmng
Councal, Rochester, May 24.

DR

a

with co-authon Marjorie Coonora and OIL WILI..lAK P. DUCJQl.rY,

r:a.

CliAJU.O'n1l 8. CATZ, OIL SUM·

NEB J. YAft'E,
Dlt. IZlKA.

Dr. Jooeph roa-r,

BRUCK with co-author

Dr. Margaret H. MacGillivray
and IIIL 'fADLI. BAUAIL

PUBLICATIONS
ROBIBT N. CJUIDT, junior,

.uciolo-

~~~~~:;.~

essay on experiences and obeervatiom on tutoring in the ghetto.
University Preu at Bufralo, 1971.
DB.. ADELI:NB IZVINI:, auociate prolessor, sociology, with OIL KUUA.Y

IZVINE,
director, professional .-Y·
cbology, "An Historicsl Study of
the Settlement Houae Movement:
A Model for Community &amp;ycho)ogy P~," in Marvin J.
Feldman,

., Studies in Prycho-

therapy and Behavioral Change.
DR. CAREL J . VAN oss, associate
professor, microbiology, is executive editor of Preparative BWchemist.r)•, a new quarter&amp;jour-

~a;o~~~. ~~i::~~RT.·~~~= ~:U,j!~~~~:ceeltor!&lt;k:~
Under the Ice." 17th lnternation- DR . WILL:'RD B. ELLIOTT, professor,
al Congress of Limnology, Lenin- bJoche~1st.ry, and K . Murai, Pfizgrad, U.S.S.R., August 1971.

U/B Adminjstrative Roster, 1971-72
COUNCIL OF THE UNIVERSITY
William C. Baird ( Chairman)
John A. Dale
Robert E. Rich (Vice Chairman)
Daniel J. Fahey
Seymour H. Knox ( Chrrm. Emeritus ) Phyllis E . Kelly
Edward A. Montgomery
Kevin J. Brinkworth
Gerald C. Saltarelli
William J. Conners ill

.-.ur liE VAIL, p...-r.
, "Utilizinr APi&gt;lied So~ce in sOcial- Welfare

IIIL IWIIt

J . WARREN PERRY, Dean ... 4910, 19 Diefendorf Annex

School of Medicine
....5211, 155 Capen
LeROY A. PESCH , Dean
School of Nursing
RUTH T. McGROREY, Dean, 2533,4, 117 Health Sciences
School of Pharmacy
MICHAEL A. SCHWARTZ, Dean 2546, 118 Health Sciences
OFFICERS
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence (School of Law)
President
RICHARD D. SCHWARTZ, Provost and Dean
852-4372, 77 West Eagle St. and 28 Church St.
ROBERT L. KETIER ........... ................. ....... 2001, 108 Hayes
Ji:aculty of Natura l Sciences and Mathematics
Assistants to the President
DONALD G. DUNN ..........
..... ...........5021, 124 Hayes GEORGE H . NANCOLLAS, Provost ......... 5045, l Hayes C
RUTH F. EAST ................. ....
.......2001, 108 Hayes Facultv of Socia l Sciences and Administration
... 1814, 4230 Ridge Lea
HARRY R. JACKSON
.........4923, 185 Hayes IRA S. COHEN, Provost ...... ..
School of Management
BARBARA M. SIMS .. ....... .............. . ...5271, 309 Townsend
RI CHARD G. BRANDENBURG, Dean 3533,4, 103 Crosby
ESTHER SWARTZ ...................................... 2735, 143 Haves
School of Social Policy and_...Community Services
Executive Vice President
R. OUVER GIBSON, Actin g Dean
....2526, 101 Foster
ALBERT SOMIT ............................................5234,5,6 114 Hayes
Council on Inrerna tional Studies
Assistant Executive Vice President
ALBERT L. MICHAELS, Executive Officer
CHARLES M. FOGEL ........... .. .. ,.......... 5021,2,3 116 Hayes
4941, 4247, 107 Townsend
Assistant to the Executive Vice President
LAWRENCE A. CAPPIELLO
....... 5234, 201H Hayes Information and Library Resources
MYLES
SLATIN,
Director
of
Libraries
.... 2428, 5205, Lockwood
Vice President for Academic Affairs
BERNARD R. GELBAUM ........... ...... ...... 5255, 201F Hayes Admissions and Records
....... 21 00, 1 Hayes B
ARTHUR L. KAISER, Director ... ...
Vice President for Facilities Planning
....5353, 201A Hayes Office of Equal Opportunity
Office of the Vice President ................ .
SIMS,
Director
(
Mrs.
)
BARBARA
M
.
Vice President for Health Affairs
301l, 5271,2, 309 Townsend
CLYDE L. RANDALL ... ............................ .. .. . ...3711, 104 Capen
Experimental Program in Independent Study (EPIS)
Vice President for Operations and Sysrems
EDWARD W. DOTY ........................................ ...2005, 139 Hayes SHIRLEY H . ARNOLD, AssL•tant Director
5363,4,5,6, 102 Townsend
Vice President for Research
' RAYMOND EWELL (On leave 1971 ) ............2506, 178 Hayes Office of Computer Services
ROBERT C. FITZPATRICK (Acting 1971) ....2506, 178 Hayes GORDON F . ULLY, Director ............ 1245, 4250 Ridge Lea
University Placement and Career Guidance
Vice President for Student Affairs
......4414, 6 Hayes C
RICHARD A. SIGGELKOW ................ ......... ..4934 , 132 Hayes E. J . MARTELL, Director ··University Counsel
Vice President for University Relapons
...
.
854-2620,
290 Main St.
A. WESTLEY ROWLAND .................... ...........4501, 186 Hayes JOHN LEACH
Campus 'Security
Division of Undergraduare Stu"dies
CHARLES H . V. EBERT, Dean ...................3517, 278 Hayes KENNETH P. GLENNON, Director ............. .4711, 144 Hayes
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics
Graduate School
..... 5037, 230 Hayes HARRY G. FRITZ, Director .............. ..... .2935, 305 Clark Gym
DANIEL H. MURRAY, Dean ..
University at Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
Division of Continuing Education
... .2206, 292 Hayes ROBERT D . . LOKEN, President ........ 4124, 250 Winspear Ave.
ROBERT F. BERNER, Dean .. ..
University at Buffalo Alumni Association
Summer Sessions
JAMES H . BLACKHURST, Director .... 2411, Old Faculty Club. JOHN M. CARTER, Executive Director 4121, 123 Jewett Pkwy.
Collegiate Assembly
•
Faculty of Arts and Letrers
KONRAD von MOLTKE, Director ........3810, 5545, 133 Crosby
GILBERT D. MOORE, Acting Provost
General Information ............................3810, 5545, 133 Hayes
......... ................ ...................5306, Old Faculty Club, 2nd floor
School of Architecture and Environmental Design
Trailer Complex Information
....5386, Trailer 7
JOHN PAUL EBERHARD, Dean
................................................ .. 5264,5, 2299 Elmwood Ave.
Faculty of Educational Studies
ROLLO L. HANDY, Provost ............................ 5447, 205 Foster
Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences
WILLIAM N . GILL, Provost ....... .4624, 128 Parker Enginering OFFICERS OF THE FACULTY SENATE
ROBERT L. KEITER, Chairman of the Vo_ting Faculty
School of Information and Library Studies
Q.EORGE S. BOI)INSKI, Dean ..... ...........3835, 5 Hayes C WILUAM H. BAUMER, ChairiJI!lll of Senare, ~
Vice Chainnah of Voting Faculty ............2223, 135 Hayes
Faculty of Health Sciences
· CLYDE L. RANDALL, Vice President ............3711, 104 Capen THOMAS T. FRANTZ, Secretary ..........2401, 30 Fosrer Annex
WILLIAM
R. GREINER, Parliamentarian
&amp;chool of Dentistry
852-4372, 77 W. Eagle St.
WILUAM M. FEAGANS, Dean ........ 2837,8,9 143 Capen
Faculty
senate
Office .,
···-········---··--2223, 135 Hayes
School of Health Related P rofessions

er Medieal Laboratory.

RECOGNITIONS

=~rsa~di~~~"!~~~

a member of the New York State
Society of Certified Public Accountants.

DR. PEL 1 X M:II.GROM,

chairman.

microbiology, was honored (or a
qua rter century o( research at a
sllver anniversary dinner in the
Charter House Motor Hotel this
past June.
THEOOORE V. PALERMO director

~:~~ ;;:r~:~~o~~a;:

"The Morning Show."

'

WomensClub
S_ets Program
For the Year
The Women's Club of the
University has announced a
schedule of ren programs for
the coming year, operung with
a membership tea and a tour
on Sunday, Sept.\lmber 26, at
the President's lliillidllnce, 186
LeBrun Road.
"
The remainder of the schedule includes:
October 19, lecture-demonstration by Prof. Nancy Belfer,
tapestrist, Youth Hall, Christ
United Methodist Church, 350
Saratoga Road, 7:30 p.m.
November 10, demonstration,
"Artistry in Foods," Spring
Student Cenrer Lounge, Erie
County Community College, 8
p.m.
December 3, Annual Women's Club Ball, Hearthstone
Manor, 8:30 p.m.
January 18, Welcoming Coffee, Carole Calucci, portraitist,
St. John Lutheran Church of
Amherst, 6540 Main Street, 1
p.m.
February 17, Thearer Evening, Amherst PI ayers, 300
Smallwood Drive, 8:30 p.m.;
husbands will be guests.
Mari:b 9, coffee and craft preview, 200 Bennington Road, 1
p.m.
March 21, election of officeiS
and service program, '"Consumer Protection," S t. John Lutheran Church, 9:30 a.m.
April (dat e to be announced ) , Family Folk Fest
and Craft Sale, for the benefit
of the Grace Capen Loan Fund.
May 6, Spring Luncheon and
installation of officers, lOth
floor, Goodyear Hall, noon.

�September 16, 1911

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to public;
••Open to members of tho Unlverolty;
#Open only to those with o professional Interest In the subject
· Contact Stwlnne Metzaer, 831·2228, for llotlnp.
.
FREE

THURSDAY-16
ART DlSPLA Y :

Second Floor

Art

Gallery, 219 Norton.

Center Lounge,
Norton, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
CREATIVE CRAFTS PAIR : Jewelry

IJII.TORMATION PAIR :

~~~~~. r ~S:~t,·t. ~~~~
I P·DJ-·4 p.m.

Dr. Ken·
neth G. Wilson, Cornell University, Itha c a , R enormaliza tion
Group, Ill Hochstetler, 4 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM•:

Refreshments, 112 Hochstetler,

3:30p.m.

1972

BUFFALONIAN ORGANIZATIONAL

Anyone interested in
working on the yea rbook is invited to attend. Those who canMEETING • • :

not attend should call 831-2505.

..

,

R efreshments will be s e r v e d.
Room 356, Norton, 7 p.m.
ClNEM.A: "In the Heat of the
Night." Free - Freshmen and
Transfers. $.50 - AU other students. Tickets on sale in the Norton Ticket Office. Conference Thea tre, Norton, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.
GROUP DYNAMICS AND ENCOUNTER
WORKSHOP: Fillmore Room, Nor-

Head Over Heels
tinue through Sunday.

T)oc' Urich's Return to Western New York
Inspired by College Footballs Headaches

....
•'

HOURS:

(Freshmen

Sundance Kid." (See 9/ 17 for
details). Capen 140.

CJNEMA : Hitchcock Series. (See
9/ 17 for detaihO. Conference Theatre, Norton.

SUNDAY-19
U/ B SPORTS C AR CLUB AUTO RALLY.

12 Noon.
(Freshmen and
Transfers only). Recreation Area,
Norton, 2 p.m.-4 p.m.
Cll'\'E)tA: Hitchcock Series. (See
9/17 for details). Conference Theatre, Norton.

FREE RECREATION:

ton, 8 p.m.

~TE DEMONSTRATION:

Freshmen do get "bounced around" as this group proved at
last weekend's Orientation Carnival. Orientation events con·

got to be concerned with hoth
By STEVE LIPMAN
parts of the team, offense and
Two years alter he left the defense. And in plotting an ofhelm of this University's sink- fense, you've got to be aware
ing football program for a more of the defense. Any coach has
buoyant one at Northern Dli- to be familiar with all aspects
nois University, Richard "Doc" of the game."
Urich has returned to Western
Doc, iDcidentally, discounts
New York- this time as de- the rumor that he is being
fensive line coach for the Na- groomed for the Bills' head
tional Football League Buffalo coaching job. "I'm just working
Bills.
for Harvey Johnson," he says.
After 21 years in the college
In taking over the defensive
coaching ranks, 15 as head line, Urich inherits that part of
istant to Ara Parseghian, the Bills which has look e d
now head coach at Notre poorest in pre-season play. lm·
Dame, Urich says, " the chal- proving on that performance,
lenge of stntight football, with· especially the pass rush, he
out all the problems in college says, will be his biggest chalcoaching like recruiting and lenge. It's also the biggest difgrades, appealed to me."
ference between pro and college
Jerry Ippoliti, back fie I d ball. "In college football," Doc
coach here who made the move · explains," you run up against
with Urich to Northern Illinois, maybe one or two teams each
takes over as head ooach there .• season which have really good
Urich says he gave Northern_ passing games. In the pros,
lllinois officials two weeks n6- every team has great passers
tice -that he was looking for em- and receivers. We've got to imployment elsewhere. At the prove on that pass rush."
College All Star Game in Chi- Player Troubles
cago this summer, he unexpecThe appointment of Urich,
tedly ran into the Bill's ge1&gt;0ral coming only three weeks alter
manager Bob Lustig. Urich Head Coach John Rauch reasked whether new head coach sign~ or risked being publicly
Harvey Johnson had any open- repudiated by owner Ralph
ings.
·
Wilson, was, in a. way, a tumTwo weeks later, he got his about. Urich is very much the
answer. Yes.
same type of coach as Rauch.
Is He Be1111 Groomed!
Both have reputations as
Johnson had Doc watr.h the master tacticians. Both have
Bills in practice for a week be- had player troubles.
fore deciding where he'd fit in
Urich also is known as a nobest. Johnson finally assigned nonsense guy. ln his second
him to the defensive line, or year here, starting c e n t e r
front four. That uprooted ex- Chuck "Speed" Powrie took
Bill standout, Tom Day who part in a campus demonstrahad held that position since the tion against recruiters from
start of tntining camp. Day will Dow Chemical. The next day,
now scout other pro teams, with Doc handed Powrie an ultim·
an eye toward possible player atum-"Stop demonstrating, or
trades.
you're off the team."
After a score of years in
Powrie chooe the latter.
A faculty member asked
which his forte has been offense, the switch to the other Urich a few days later whether
side of the line is a major players didn't have a right to
change for ·Urich. Under Par- handle themselves off .the field
seghian, Doc ooordinated the how!!Yt!r they· wished. "Not on
offense. While head coach here, my team, they don't," Urich
and at NIU, he earned his rep- ba.Jbd.
.
"He (Powrie) was a profe&amp;utation on the strength of his
sional in a way," Doc said after
teams' passing P'!"'Doc says it JSD't much of a taking the Billa' job. "He was
shift. "As head eoech, you've here on a acbolanhip, and he

GAME

and Transfers only) . Recreation
Area, Norton, 2 p.m.-&lt;4 p.m.
COFF'IZ HOUSE: Folk entertainment and a menu of delights.
$.26 discount lor Freahmen and
Transfer Students on l y. First
Floor Cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m.
ROCK CONCERT: "Space Opera."
Clark Gym, 8 p.m.
UNDERGROUND THE At R E: The
Swamp Fox Players. "The Sloan
Trilogy.'' Fi1lmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
CINEMA: "Butch Cassidy and the

owed the team all he could of.
fe r without being distracted by
o utside activities."
Doc indicated he has mellowed · a little, especiaHy since
e n tering the pros. "A man is
being paid to do a job. He
doesn't have to be reminded
that what he does of! the field
will have an effect on the way
he plays. His game perfonn·
a nce is all important in pro
football."
Authoritative Type

A football Bull recruited by
Urich said this of him: "U rich
was a very authoritative type
person. He laid it out when
you came here. He told you
what he expected of ·you and
what you .would get in return.
H e said 'If you can't live up to
any part of the bargain, don't
come. Don't even waste your
time coming."
" But we respected him. And
we put out 100 per cent for him.
I'm sure he'll do a good job
with the Bills."
This saine player remembers
that Urich drew respect from
more than his team members:
"One day in practice the sky
began to thunder and it started
to drizzle. Doc was standing up
on that tower watching us and
lie wasn't finished that day.
Well, he just looked up and
shouted, 'I'm not done yet.' It
cleared up in a minute."
Urich wasn't infallible when
it came to weather, though:
"The next time it started to
rain and Doc told it to stop,
nothing happened, and he got
soaked."
Urich's authoritarian policies
made him unpopular with part
of the student body here. He
had no such problems at NIU.
The sports editor of the NIU
paper remarked that "most of
the students really like him.
He's a lot more open than I
hear' he"uaed to be."
Uridl· says the dropping of
football here, which many feel

Sponsor-

ed by the Tae-Kwon-Do Karate
Club. Haas Lounge, Norton, 8

p.m.

NOTICES
NORTON BALL BUILDING BOUllS -

'7 1-'72 Semestef'

OUTDOOR CONCERT: " Barbara Sincl air and the Pincushions." Bai rd
Lawn (Fillmore Room, Norton ,
in case of rain). 8 :30 p.m.

TI~~~:: ~ef:n'd~·~ ~i'(Ci~k

8

schedule for times of showings).

FRIDAY-17
Center Lounge,
Norton, 10 a .m.-4 p.m.
CRAFTS FAIR : Clay and
Sculpture Workshop. Creative
Craft Center, Basement. Norton,
1 p.m.·4 p.m.

JNFORMATJON FAlR:
CREATIVE

CINEMA :

"But&lt;:h Cassidy and the

Sunda nce Kid." $.25 discount for
Freshmen and Transfers when
purchasing · tickets at the Norton
Ticket Office prior to perfonnance. No discounts at door. Capen
140, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
GROUP DYNAMICS AND ENCOUNTER
WORKS HOP: Haas Lounge, Nor-

Mondey through Thursday
7 a.m.-12 midnight
F-riday .... .................7 a.m.-1 a.m.
Saturday ........ .....8 a .m.-1 a.m.

Sunday ........ 12 noon-12 midnight

TUTORING FOR CREDIT : All undergraduate students interested in
tutoring beginning cohege students for academic credit should
contact Elizabeth Boepple, Townsend Hall, room 168 for applications. Registration can only be
made during change of registration week. For more information

call Mn. Boepple at 831-5366,

ext. 24.

CJVU. LIBDn'IES FUND RAISING PIC·

Nic•: Rising costs have put the
existence of the Buffalo chapter
in jeopardy. Please help now

-:J~ th~u~r:eA:-:o!u~:-gep~~

Grand Island S•turday, Sept. 26,

at 3 p.m. (Sept. 26 in case of
rain). Features The Black Drama
Workshop in scenes from · their

ton, 8 p.m.

JFb!;, ~~t·~ ~as~t ~

INTERNATIONAL P 0 L K DANCING•:

883-9046 !or further information.

Instruction in basic steps during
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
COFFEE HOUSE : Folk entertainment a nd a menu of delights.
$.25 off for Freshmen and Transfers. First Floor Cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.
FREE GAME HOURS: (Freshmen and
Transfers only). Recreation Area
•
Norton , 9 p.m.-11 p.m.
ART DISPLAY : Second Floor Art
Gallery, 219 Norton.
CtNEMA : Hitchcock Series: "Lady

Ji:~:·DC!ir

New Policy
For Music

The Music De~t announces a change m policy concerning the advance sa I e of
tickets for all Music Depart.
ment events beginning with the
1971-72 Fall season.
Music Department ticket
sales will now be handled by
Vanishes," "The 39 Steps." $.50 the Norton Hall Ticket Office,
Freshmen and Transfers. $.75 AU Saul Davidson, manager. No
other students. Ticketa may · be
purchased at the Norton Ticket tickets will be sold in advance
Office. Conference Theatre, Nor- at Baird Hall. Tickets for each
t?n. Check showcase schedule for event will be available at the
hmes.
door (unless the event is sold
out) one hour prior to the per'
CINE&gt;U : "Bedazzled." (Open to
formance. The Nor ton Hall
DonQ. Residents on I y) . To~er
Lawn.
_,. Ticket Office staff will be in
charge of all door sales.
Music Faculty Passes will be
SATURDAY-IS
honored at the Concert Office
CHRlS:t..IAN FELLOWSHIP PICNIC • •
up to forty-eight hours prior to
at Akron Falls Park, 1 p.m., rea: oonoert time.
turing Lon Jonathan and Maran.
Tickets to all events will be
athan (folk-rock group) , 8pollll0r· available
three weeks prior to
ed by the Inter-Vanity Christian
the
date of each concert. No
Fell&lt;?wship. Refreshments will be
provJd_ed. For transportation, meet telephone reservations will be
Refunds will he made
!,~l:::.. Hall at 12 noon. All are accepted.
only at the door and only if
the sale of returned tickets is
EXCURSION TO BUFFALO ' zoo AND
possible.
ALB&amp;JCHT-KNOX AltT GALU:RY : StuThe new policy has been
dents must register for the bus
at the Norton Ticket Office by adopted to assist in oentralizing
10 a.m. on Saturday. Bus leavee the bo1&lt; office operations on
from the front of Norton prompt- campus. Norton Hall Ticket
ly at 12 Noon. Bus picluo up at Office hours are as foil ow a :
the lake oide of the Albriabt- Monday-Friday, 10:00 A.M . •
Knoz at 6 p.m. Lea- Bu6alo 8:00 P.M.; Satun!Qys and Sunhappen, hut it did. It leaves a Zoo at 6 ,p.m.
.
big void on lhe campus at U/ 8 BPORTB CAll CLUB AU'1'0Ca088· daya, variable. For further in·UJB."
12 Noon-6 p.rn.
.
· ~~";~~~ call: 831-3408

~..=. )~J:.:oo~~~w:

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL. ·3- NO.1

SEPT. 9, 1971

Senate Opens Year
With Oath Question

Welame Parents!

incDrnklc fNshmen

Informal-------·..-..------of Mimi--

-

_,. cettina 8Cdlmated to comtheir.,._- lwei a chance to see
U/8 lo . . ~ They touted lbo campus, talked to ad-

lbo

lfe- ..._,

-

- - lwei

~ 1n -

Par·

.

l'rolridina the -

.... President

otudonls.

the

Campus Survey Finds That U/B Community
Falls ShOrt of Being a 1Iotbed' of Dissent
University decision-makers
have 1eamed thst the campus
community, wbile fawrably dia~ towards chanee and in-

::fi"~;=~

.:= ~

attitudes thst the l"'Pular ater
eotype would indicate.
For example, moilt members
of the UniversitY. community:
• disagree Wlth the uae of
extreme tactics in campus protests;
• would support a "tough
stance" against the uae and
distribution· of hard dru"";
• favor joint ~aluatiOn of
oourse work by teacher and student, rather than evaluation by
the student alone;
• feel the collegiate system
has improved in the last year
(rom its stormy beginnings and
will oontinue to do so;
• suppol'\ the estsblislunelit
of a day care center; and
• feel the University should
make special efforts to improw
its relations with the community.
'lbese are among the findings
of an ''omnibus" survey of the
attitudes a n d perceptions of
U IB students, faculE? and stslf

.-

caaducted last spriDi by the
Survey Re-.earch Center
{8BC), a part of the campus

i::"'J.:t"~~

the .......,- was to provide accurate informalico as a basis
for e&amp;diw! decisions by instituti&lt;Jnal policy makers.
A random sample of 300 stu• dents, 100 facnlty and 100 stslf
participated in the .......,- proji!d, wbidt was directed over a
three-month period by Dr. Jolm
Bruce Francis of the SRC. Respoodeuts answered a combinstion of both udosed" and uopen.
ended" questions "" current
campus isBues such as ROTC,
drugs and football as well as
on the general topics of evaluation, the oolleges, campus protest, minority issues, health services and govemanoe.
Analysis of the survey resnits is s t iII oontinuing, Dr.
Francis indicalj18;- and a series
of '"""M!~ Is will be issued.
· Ibis raw data
on bo tb basic attitudes and
questions current last year has
been released:
&amp;poq IJ70 DwnoNAoniiiloilnoalllloiiiiiSoo

· Sewnty-five per cent of fac.

Task of Creating Goes 0,:,

''I do hereby pledge and declare thst I will support the
Constitution of the United
States and the Constitution of
the State of New York and
thst I will faithfully discharge
the duties of ( this) position."
This is the so-&lt;:alled "loyalty
oath,'' the signing of which is a
condition of employment for
every New York State employee.
At its first meeting next
Tuesday, September 14, the
Faculty Senate has a recommendation before it which urges
the body to " work to eliminate
this oath
a requirement for
public officials of this State"
through an amendment to . the
New York State Constitution.
Campus concern over the
oath developed in the spring
of 1970 when yellow cards containing both the oath of loyalty
and a pledge to obey the
State's oode of ethics were distributed to many members of
the University faculty. At thst
time, two faculty members refused to sign, with one seeking
an injunction to halt enforcement of the requirement. The
effort failed because of a previous court test which upheld
the legaljty of the oath. Because the individuals concerned
oould not tesch or receive pay
checks until the cards were
signed, their signatures were
eventually obb!ffied.
The action did, however,
cause the Senate's Committee
on Academic Freedom and Responsibility to look into the
matter. After a · year of research, a motion will be presented at next week's Senate
meeting.

as

ulty, 72 per •cent of students
and 63 per cent of adminiatators who were on campus in
the spring of 1970 claimed some ·
type of involvement in the campus protests of thst peiiod.
or these, however, only 33
per oent of students, 8.9 per
cent of faculty and 8.3 of administzation claimed active inp
volvement in be h a If of the
student strike. In. sympathy
with the strike but not actively
involved were 19.9 per cent of
students, 12.5 per cent of faculty and 6.3 per cent of admin.isb'ation.
Faculty Urged To Sign
Large percentages of each
group reported that they were
"ooincidentslly involved w i t h
no feelings for or against"
Efforts to reduoe the
had the active support
per oent of the involved
and 16.7 per cent of
tration.__Approximately two per
cent of the involved students
and 5.4 per cent of the faculty
were active in the peaoe patrol
Only two protest tactics were
favored by majorities of students: the use of petitions and
the holding of protest rallies.
Picketin~ and boyootting viewed m a "mildly positive
manner," while building tske·overs, disruption of classes and
meetings, and destruction of
property drew highly negatiw
responses.
Faculty similarly VIeWed pe-

Dear Members of the University COIDIIIIIhity:
It is a pleasure to welcome you laS to campus and to extend
a special greeting to those who are .i&lt;Jinin1 us f.,.. the first time. ·
'Doe 1971-72 academic year will be CillO! of intenliive self~y
for the University. We will have to as you know, for the
istrators SUpported only the uae
Middle States Aa:reditation visit acbeduled for Fall, 1972. An of
petitiOns.
equally compelling reason for such a study, loowew!r, pows out of
No single reason for becomour own need to examine where we aze pJiDc, where we want to
ing
involved in protest activiJ!O - and bow best to get ibel'e. Out cl this Jil'ilCli!iiS. I am sure. ties ............,;n•led among the
will come a refonnulalico of oar ..........., priorities and an acti~~tions ~ by
,enhanced capacity to employ o u r - in auaiJoinc our objeo. the survey ~e were
lives.
aeen as havmg usome importAs in the past, we will . S Jli&amp;Oiiioeiw in paduate and (Continued on 6, col. I)
underpaduate education. To _eam ctiotindim, we ....It be as
hospitable to chanee and -iaadadba - - .... to that
CAMPUS MAP DIRECTORY
whidl is ~ and familiar;
and ~ A four._ camJ!!IS guide {oMJIS
imoovalico will be - ............ lis bani. ai&amp;iral llliakina. . and directo&lt;y) is l n d - - ••
I welcome yoa. llal, 1!0 the 111111&lt; cl the ............. C:reatioD insert in toclar'• llopaotor. Adell·
cl the UniWIIIity.
.
- - copies
lloe guide will be

ing the New York Constitution
with little being said about the
pledge to observe the oode of
ethics. The first part of the
collllliittee's motion urges faculty members to sign the oath
because it is legal. It goes ·on,
however, to advocate elimination of the requirement since
many professors "may disagree
substantially with the specifics
of mode of government, representation or administration"
outlined in the State Constitution. Thus, the committee
points out, while faculty may
"subscribe to the general philosophy outlined,'' signing the
oath "in good faith is of pm:·
ticulsr difficulty" because of
these disagreeable specifics.
The recommendation also notes
thst no copies of the Constitution are provided with the csrd
because of its length and bulk.
F)uthermore, t h e committee
holds, the pledge serves no ...,...
fu1 purpose since uno subversive agent would hesitate for a
moment to sign such an oath."
At the ssme Senate meeting
in 147 Diefendorf, the senators
will bear reports from Pnmdent Robert Ketter, lli.. William Baumer and a representative from the Senate Professional Association.

The question of the loyalty
oath won't be the only difficult
matter to come before the Senate this year. Also slated for
the 1971-72 agenda are the evaluation of the Stem Prospectus
which _governs the collegiate
system; preparation for the accreditation review by the Middle States Association of Colleges; and oonsideration of a
solution to the housing problem
facing minority graduate and
professional students.
(Continued o n - 6, coL I)

~~~~whlle~
0

hnooP•••··
~.

-

~--

of

_....,.. from lbo DIJice of Uni·
wnily Publications Senricli\S (Ext.
2126) ~!-last- ln_Seplember.

Welame Administrators! ·

A....._......,.-.,._-. cam- tio maot&lt; an
lliiiDmoalotarttolbolall-'-tlb...-y--

at---

Mrs. -

-

. . . , . . _ al - - - chalmwo
Oil .........

Clrc:IL

�2

Ketter Backs
Funding For
U/BReactor
The University administra·
tion has issued a strong statement of support for continued
operation of the campus West·
em New York Nucle8r Re111!81'Ch Center (WNYNRC).
In a letter to the Center'.s
Director William Hall, Prest·
dent Robert L. Ketter said that
be considers the operation of
the Center "a legitimate ed!Jca·
tional expense of the Uruversity."
WNYNRC funds were initially completely deleted from
the 1971-72 State budget but
were later partially restored,
allowing the facility to operate
through the end of September.
Dr. Ketter said that be "feels
strongly that funds to operate
the Center sbould be included
in the University budget for
the 1972-73 fiscal year and,
further that funds sbould be
diverted to maintain the Center
during the current fiscal year."
He added that be hp.s already
initiated action to these ends.
Approximately $90,000 is needed to operate the Center for the
remainder of this fiscal year.
Ketter expressed the .a&gt;nviction that within the "next ten
years, there will be a ~~
incre860 in the need for mdi\iduals trained in the nuclear
sciences to handle the power
needs of the country, as well as
the chemical processing needs."
While most of these specialists
will require associate and bachelor's degrees, a more limited
number will be needed who
have completed Master of Sci-

September 9,1971

&lt;iREPORJ'ER.,

AdministrationReviewsLast Yew;
Cites Pr ·
Conrerns for '71- 72
What were the a
Iishments of the first year f the
administration of Pr sident
Robert L. Ketter?
And what concern!; should
command priority in the year

~? presideni

and members
of his staff answered botJ:&gt; questions this summer, comm~ up
with this review and preVIew:
-.temlc Accomplishments

In the academic area, the
administrators cited:
• Stabilization of the collegiate system IJ!lder an adJ;ninistrative director and a clar~ed
set f procedures and pohc•es;
• Progress in minority p_rograms including the launching
of the' Cooperative Community
College downtown, w h i c h is
administratively a part of the
University; the success of the
EPIS program as reflected in
its first 18 graduates, bali of
whom w o n academic honors
and three of whom made Phi
·Beta Kappa; and increased emphasis on the employment of
minority .Jaculty and staff.
• Neg tiations with the National Collegiate Athletic As.
sociation oonoeming financial
support and academic average
projections for minority group
athletes, urging a more enlightened NCAA policy in this area
and establishing campus com-

ence programs.

pl~~u.!u~~tedru~A R A

the appointmenb! of ~· AJbe1:t
Somit as executive vtce pres•dent; Dr. Clyde Randall as vice-president of the Faculty . of
Health Sciences; the reappomtment of Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow as vice president for s.tu·
dent atrairs; and the building
of a corps of acti~ president!aJ
assistants .for vanous areas, m eluding Dr. Berkeley Eddins,
Mrs. Barbara Sims (equal opportunity), Harry Jackson,
Mrs. Esther Swartz (cultural
affairs ) and Donald Dunn. .
o Establislunent of The Day
Care Center o~ campus, including arrang~ments for and ~e!lovation of space for the faClhty,
securing of a private donation
for its establishment, incorporation of the oenter into the University structure through the
School of Social Policy and
Community Services, and provision of some funds.
• Winning of a greater voice
for this University in the development a n d programming
for the North Campus; and the
beginnings of major co~truction efforts on the new s1te.
• Development of a plan,
subject to further campus discussion and refinement, for a
major reorganization designed
to provide more effective · and
coordinated administration of
the University as it continues
to develop and expand.

registration system which, for
the first time, tied the tedious
registration process into the
age of the computer. Despite
some confusion and m i n o r
problems, SA R A eliminated
the dilliculties of long lines and
facilitated. elimination of several days of registration from
the academic calendar. 1hlrteen other universities will be
"coming to view the system for
possible implementation.
• The report of the American Co unci I on Education
which rated the University's
English, physiology and pharmacology graduate faculties
among the top 20 in the nation.
In addition, the University was
rated "better than adequate"
in every discipline in which it
was eligible to receive a rating
-25 in all.
• The holding on campus
this summer of the international " Linguistics Institute 1971,''
an eight-week interdisciplinary
gathering attracting more than
500 individuals and featuring
some of the world's best known
linguists.
• The reclaiming of the Uni-

The need for such facilities,
the president said, can be seen
in the fact that at least two •
private universities in New
York State are now planning
nuclear reactors comparable to
the one here and that "similar
reac~rs are continuing to be
built throughout the country."
The WNYNRC facility is
the third most powerful ~ctor
and the most powerful pulsetype reactor on any Artterican
campus. "For any otherlinstitution to reproduce su~h a facility
at this stage would require several times the investment in
funds and considerable lead
time to bring about an on-going
operation," Ketter said.
The Center has served in the
past to fulfill many educational
requirements in conjunction
With · University curricula and ~;:~ ~:.:frei~un~ sci~~
programs. For example, engi- after the State Board of Reneeuaermgof·i:,~~:,.re:::;rJ:e:. gents had initially abolished
,
the position as one means of
ical community draws on its implementing an overall $200,resources to prepare medical 000 cut in the budget for the
isotopes.
ten Einstein and Schweitzer
Ketter believes that the edu- Chaira.
cational potential of the Center
• A aeries of appointments
is ~ greadirectedter
. Fthaorthist
the
. ~aca- bringing "new strength and di'he """
rectioo to academic programs,"
demic placement'' of the unit incluiling those of Dr. Bernard
be. defined. by. a colJm!ittee Gelbaum of the University of
wl!ich he &amp;ald will be appointed California, Irvine, as academic
this fall.
·
vice- president; Dr. Charles lL
Beca~ no _other unit of the v. Ebart of Geography aa dean
State Uruverstty of New York of the Division of Undergraduhas a reactor on camP.us nor • ate 'Studies· Dr. William N.
imminent plans to build one; G i II of Clariiiiim College of
the president envisions the Technology as provost of the
Western New York Nuclear Faculty of En,ineering and
Reiii!81'Ch Center as a rare op- Applilld Sciences; Dr. Hany
portunity for students of the M. Fritz of Western Dllnois as
State University system to ,..,.: director of Physical Education,
ceive education in the nuclear Recnatioo and Athletics; Dr.
aciences. In addition, cooper- Konrad von Moltke of History
atioo with. other local and re- as director of the Collegiate
gional colleges an4 universities, Assembly; and Dr. Rijlhard D.
• both public and private, would Schwartz ol Northwestern as
help m developing the Center provost of the Faculty of Law
"" a regional educational and and Jurisprudenoe.
resarch facility. For this rea- . - - -

=.:~:=.vo; :.""'me!::: aen~~r!: 1&amp;:t

bers of the_ planning committee
which Dr. KeUer bas P~

• ~t of an admlnislmtive team, includ.ina

diciary w h i c h, reconstitUted,
attempted to establish itaelf as.
a viable link in the system of
~P~}unsptrans·=~On of the
""'
Faculty Senate from a town
:::'v'!"~:;:hly~to a represen• The incorporation, under
the laws of New York Sta!e
of SuLBoard L the financi.a.l1
.,.
arm of the student governm";'tsThe
.·
recommendations of

Community Relations

Relations between the University administration and ~
Buffalo and campus commuruties were v i e w e d as being
"greatly improved" throug h
these efforts:
• The various programs commernoratin~ the University's
125th Anmversary year -'- particularly the Founders' Day
Banquet which attracted 1,000
faculty, students and staff and
members of the Buffalo community, the University-wide
0 pen House during which
me m be r s of the University
played host to an estimated
10,000-15,000 Western New
Yorkers, and the active involvement of a cross-section of citizens in an advisory committee
for the Anniversary.
• 120 presidential speaking
engagements during the year,
including appearances before
40 local area civic, professional
and government groups; and a
series of question -and -answer
programs conducted by the
president on the University's
radio station, WBFO-FM.
• Plans for increased University.:COmmunity interactions
developed by a special presidential task force on that subject, made up of members of
both constituencies.
• The provision of "qualified
.laculty status" for community
clergymen working with students.
• Conduct of a survey of
the attitudes and perceptions
of the University community
as a basis for more effective
administrative policy-making
and decision-making on major
issues.
• Development of better relationships with University
alumni, through expanded alumni programs and incleaaed involvement of alumni in University planning and other activities.
.
• The incleaaed visibility
and availability of the Pre&amp;l·
dent to students, faculty and
the community-at-large.
University - . , _

Progress in University goyernance was achieved, the administrators noted, through:
• The reorganizatiQn of the
undergraduate student govern.
ment from a les&amp;-th!UHIUClCli!S&amp;ful polity system to a represeotative llllll!mbly !&gt;a!'I!Cl on
lnteralt blocks and the appar.
ent rebirth of the S~t Ju-

University task forces bearing
on issues of governance (the
University Community, U!Jiversity Goals and Umvers1ty
Govemanoo task forces) and
the subsequent establishment .
of a University-wide committee
to forge new articles of governance acceptable to all involved
constituencies - faculty, staff,
and ·students.
• Use of a referendum opin·
ion poll technique to assist in
decisions on sensitive University questions, such as the Norton Hall crime-drug problem of
last spring.
General Accomplishments

· A series of "general" accomplishrnents were also cited

as being of University-wide significance:
• The development of a professional security force through
both the appointment of Security Chief Kenneth P . Glennon
and his assistant Leon Gritfin, and the recruitment of a
larger, more qualified, betterpaid staff (made ~ o s sib I e
through special LegJSlative and
Civil Service actions) ; and the
resultant improvement in dorm
security, the Norton Hall situation, and in relations between
the security staff and studentli;
• Negotiations with the Air
Foroe for a new type of ·ROTC
program on campus and the
termination of the relatively
unsuccessful older program.
• The "living cell" synthesis
breakthrough achieved by Dr.
James F. Dsnielli and his associates in the Center for Theoretical Biology.
• The decision by the State
University Trustees to develop
two campuses for the University-a plan which earmarks
the present South Campus for
an expanded health sciences
oenter and calls for the remainder of the University (ineluding the health sciences area
of Pharmacy) to occupy the
North (Amherst) Campus.
• The addition of the Cleveland String Quartet to the Department of Music.
• The granting of residence
hall space on this campus, beginning this fall, to two of the
new colleges-College B and
Clifford Furnas College - for
use in a living-learning experiment, such as bad been envisaged for the colleges since their
inooption.
This Year's Among areas deserving pri-

ority in the coming year, the
president and his· staff listed:
· • The increased adminislntive efforts to work more closely
with students and faculty-a
program which will iDclude a
series of open forums with key
administrators; the setting aside
of a block of presidential time
for appointments with students;
continued use of WBFO; more
briefings for campus media; and
an increased number of campus
community social events.
• The need to "learn how
to live with more limited budgets."
• Continued development of
the North Campus.
• 'the ulH'ODling evaluation
of the University by the Midd1e States Association, to be
p.-led by
institutional
aelf-study, and
• Reorganization of the University.

an

UBFReports
$2.5 Million

For 1970-71
"A total of $2,499,732.28 from
non-State sources was distributed to University programs by
the University at Bulliilo Foundation, Inc., during the 6acal
year ending March 31, 1971,
~ olliciaia reported
The total is the largest ever
received and distributed by the
Foundation in a single year
and brings to $13,392,513; the
cumulative amount which the
agency has provided for the enrichment of University progmms since_ its inception in
1962-63.
The UBF annual report also
revealed that the Foundation
is seeking to raise $5 million
during the 1971-72 fiscal year
which began April 1 and coincides with the University's
125th Anniversary. More than
half this amount has already
been received, the report indicated, and the remainder will
be sought from the Western
New York business community,
other foundations, and potential major donors, in addition to
alumni and friends. John L.
Hettrich, president of the Marine Midland Bank-Western, is
general chairman of this 1971
Anniversary quest.
Gerald C. Saltarelli, chairman
of the Boord of Trustees of
the Foundation, indicated that
the 1970-71 .financial position
was "a marked i.mprovemenr•
over previous years but that
umucb remains to be done."
'"lbe Foundation still needs
generous gifta if it is to retl\in its
position of providing the support and assistance to further
U/B's mission in this, its 125th
year," be said.
The Foundation fund total
for the year included these
major distributions to faculties:
arts and letters, $48,642.86; educational studies, $336,301.69;
engineering and applied sciences, $88,016.28; health sciences, S539,621.86; law and jurisprudence, $49,898,10; natural
sciences and mathematics, $33,974.94; and social sciences and
administration, $97,286.12.
Additional major distributions included: miscellaneous
restricted pwposes, $290,475.65;
scholarships and loans, $144,764; and services, $341,542.25.
Other highlights of the Foundation's year were listed as follows:
The Foundation's building in
downtown Buffalo was leased
to the State at the annual rate
of $75,000. The State invested
approximately $500,000 in renqvating the former Remington
Rand building for ita tenants,
the Cooperative Community
Colleg!l. thus increaslnc. the
value Of the ~.
A substantial gift from William C. Baird's FOUDdatioo of
19 acres pf land adiacent to the
new campus in Amherst (value,
$275,000) is being :.....,..;dered
as an Alumni·FBCullr Carter
site.
•
The first porti0118 pf two
major estates ( the Charles Gor·
don Heyd and the Mrs. William C. Joyce estates) were
received by the ~tioo.
The Heyd estate (approsimately $500,000 when 6nally probated) is restricted for use by
the Medical School The JoYce
estate of $900,000 (eventuallY)
is Th.T~~tion has
suroessfully embarked on a na·
tiona! memberahip dues program, and in July it was one of
three out ol 1500 members of
the American Alumni Council
to earn a Citation ol Merit
for imaginative programs and
alUmni administration.

�September 9, 1911

SixWomen To Receive 125th Awards . 23,500 Expected To Enroll.
As More Looo1 FroshEnter
For lhriversity &amp; Community SerVice
er~ Women's Pages e'd i tor,
The U/ B office ~f Admisdrama. music, and art critic, sions and Records projects a
and aviation editor.
total fall enrollment of 23,542
During World War II, she students in all divisions, 989
served in the Women's Army
more than last year. Numbers
Corps as a public relations of- . of graduate and professional
125th Anniversary Awanls at a
ficer, twice escaping serious in- students are e:r;pected to reiD8in
special Women's Day luncheon
jury in plane crashes overseas, relatively con s tant. Transfer
at 12 noon, October 5, at the
She was discharged from the students will be increased from
Statler Hilton.
Army as a major and was 1,200 last year to about 1,350
Dr. Hosmer earned a bache- awarded the Bronze Star.
Mrs. Robert L. Ketter, wife
for 1971.
of the president of U/B, will lor's degree (1918) and a medMrs. Matthews, wbo studied
While the freshman class bas
;,) degree Cl921 J from Cor- at U /B and other schools in'
been e:r;panded !Jy 9 per cent
nell University. In 1922 she eluding the Ecole Beau:t Arts, (from 1,890 to 2,075 ) , the numciation in commemoration of .tarted ber internship at the old Paris, is listed in "Foremost her of Buffalo-area students in
the founding of the University Buftalo City Hospital- now Women in Communimtions." the class bas been increased by
125 years ago this year.
Meyer Memorial Hospitalin Who's Who in the East, and 36 per cent(from 825 to 1,124 ) ,
'The recipients will be: Mrs. until the latter part of that year in the Dictionary of lnurna- Admissions a n d Records reArthur Caldwell, a psychiatric · when abe started ber own gen- tional Biography.
ports.
social worker; Sister Mary An- eral practice. For the next 50
Sbe bas received more than
Composition of the class was
gela Canavan, president of Ro, years, Dr. Hosmer maintained 30 awanls for journalism and determined by a novel combinsary Hill College; Mifl!; Eimna a general practlce, particularly 12 special citations-including a tion of admissions criteria.
E . Deters, the first recistmr at with a great deal of maternity a . Pulitzer Award in 1969-for Thirty..UX per cent of the stuU/B; Dr. Harriet Hosmer, wbo caaes, until ber retirement last her efforts to revise the Penal dents were c h o s e n by high
practiced medicine in Bu1falo July.
Code to tighten up criminal school rank alone; another 36
for 50 years; Mrs. Anne McIn recent years, abe bas been loopholes and to pennit police per cent on the basis of high
Dbeuny Matthews, feature col- cited by Bu1falo General and to use fo~ w~ ~ ·
school grade point average and
umnist of the Bu1falo Courio- Millard Fillmore hospitals for
performance on the. Regents
E:tprus, and Dr. Katbeeyne T . ber long.f!tanding service, as
Dr. Whittemore earned ber Scholarship E:tamination; 2n
Whittemore, long-tiliie educator well as by the Salvation Army bachelor's degree from Vassar
at State University College at for her -.tinUDUS service to College and her master's ~:'t!..:i~~or~
that organization. eapecially to (1925) and doctorate (1936) grams. including EPIS, SEEK
Bullalo:
Booth Hospital, the Salvation degrees from Clark University, and Student Tutorial, and 8
per cent for an aptitude and
Mrs. Cal~,
mother of Army's Hospital for unwed Woroester, Mass.
From 1921 to 1923 she taught interest in the natural scienCes
two adopted cniJaren, a son 8, motbera. This past June. Dr.
and a daughter 7, bas beld a Hosmer received an award from English in Fairbanks, Alaska, and mathematics.
number of positiolls as a social the New York State Medical at Waseda University, Tokyo,
worker since abe graduated Society for 50 years of prac- and at the YMCA High School Reaulor Admlulono up
·
in Manila.
from the Smith College of &amp;&gt;- tice.
'The most dramatic change
From 1925 until 1962, she was in the area of regular ad. cial Work, Nortbhampto~
Mrs. Matthews, a native of was on the faculty of Buftalo missions. Last year, 1,500 fresh.
Maas., with a master's .degree
Philadelphia. bas lived in Buf- State College, beginning first man students entered the Uniin 1957.
Sbe bas been aaaociate direc- falo since 1920. Sbe began ber as an instructor in geography. versity for otber than special
tor of the Department of Child career at the Courio-E:tprus later she was named chairman ~~~of·c pro":;, ~m h~
Psychiatry at Buffalo Chil- as a sports ._,.ter, · then con- of the Geography Departmenl "'=
these
dren's Hospital foJ&lt;e 1969. Be- tinued as a police reporter, City In 1957 she was appointed di- Buffalo area. This year, the
fore joining Children's as a psy- Hall ~. courts reporter, rector of the Division of Arts
chiatric social wotl&lt;er in 1964, feature wiiter, general assign- and Science. In 1962 she reMrs. Caldwell ......tted · as a ment reporter, political report- tired as J:liofessor emeritus.
to 1,700, of wbom 800 are from
medical social worker at Buf.
this area.
falo GeDera1 Hospital from
Statistics show that the local
1958 to 1963.
.
student applying for the fresh.
man class had approximately
Mra. Caldwell atteuded Buf.
one chance in two of being acfalo public ad&gt;ools and graducepted, while his counterpart
ated with a bad&gt;elor's degree in
from outside the Niagara FronaociolotiY · from Talladega
(Ala.). £oiJep in 1955.•
"DemcmssiBBan
~"
on
-sidewalks
is
O.K.
and
no
tier bad one chance in seven.
.equired b
that This is in line with a regionalIn 1967, Mrs. Caldwell, a
"Rights
ae
a
Tenant,"
informspermit
is
r
•
u
t
ized
admissions plan announced
member of theliDcolh Memor- tion . .., the bail fund, and a once you hit the streets, you'~e b SUNY
Cbancell
Ernest
ial United Methodist CbW'c:b, faet &amp;beet are included in the parading and need a pernut.
Y
or
was . listed in Oatotanifing Student Aallociation's (SA)
Other intricacies of .the law are Bo~~~
of fresh.
Young wo:~~
"Aquarian~= mailing cited. 'The use of tables for men in tbe EPIB program for
to all
'
'The in- distribution of leaflets is pro. disadvantaged students was 265,
_8ister Canav11n earned a fonnation pacbae is .a far cry
tected by the First Amend- includin 211 local
'dents
bad&gt;elor's degree ,in 1,944 from from the orioiltation material ment; however, in Bulfalo, you
g
resJ
·
St. Mary of the SpriDp CoJ.. that :.-.-....o ' freohmeD a few . cannot obstruct public streets. For this fall, there are 290
~.
freshman
EPIS
students,
253
...
Jeae, Columbuo, Ohio, and a years aao. 'Then theY learned' If you are ~ for usmg from this area.
.-e.'s degree from St. Bona- about Greek Week, rushing and tables because
Y obstruct
'The 'Upward Bound-Student
College in 1949.
fall mU:era. N- it's what to pub\ic streets; the NYCLl! be- Tutorial Program enrolled 60
Sbe taucbt in scbools in Buf.
do wben arrested and ' where lievtis you cannot be COIIBtitu- freshmen last year, 49 of them
Clinic is Jo. tionally charged. For times like local. For 1971, the projected
~;~~~v~ the Birth Control
;
~ the SA bas enc:l.-1 a ~-L--- tal · 75 61 0 f these
came preeidmt of s.-ry Hill cated.
In tha IMDY ......,......., _ __.. · plain white card with 8 legal '"""'"""" to 18 •
~ .... ..........umber
•
being area students.
in 1953. During ber tenure lets and iniOrmatiOii
in aid n
on 1t.
.Both last year and this, all
there. abe bas led the college the SA's~ youJJiingers
learn that ' Some of the material bas a freshman SEEK students at
tluougb a period of unprece- students can be. denied
rental more familiar ring. A list of U/B are from tha Bulfalo area.
dented growth and change.
of an apartment because tbey interest and bobby groups in- Last year there were 65, this
are •tutknu but - because of eludes such long-time favorites
10
Miall Deten ......,.., as first "'!"'! ..-1, color or national as the Photo Club and the U/B year
·
recistmr cl u /8-4 'post abe oripn. Owninc Pete can also Band, but there's also Gay LiJ&gt;. ~~
chairbeld for 44 years imtil ber retirement in 1960. During her lr.t!ap you oqt, but not having eration "!"~ the. Mutual Aid man of the Faculty Senate AdcbiJc1ra!,r
And
students
are
Decentralist
Society.
And
an
-'-"'ns
Committee,
~lained
4
long tenure· as regislnlr.. abe warned that altbougb it is legal uplanation of fees is followed ~
maintained membenbip m a · for ...-rriecl men and women by a write-up on TOGETHER the process and ra~~
number of profealional
.. ·to live ~. "most land- wbich "is a place for - J e admitting regular
such 81'tue
wbo want, wbo feel a need, to students to tbe University unmtiolls. including the ~­ Ionia frown
llpol1
_
•• communicate -with their peers~ clei the new combination of
cies cl the Middle States ~ tiolls."
. ciation ol C&lt;&gt;Jiegiate RePtrare
'"-- it · ---...... tha
·
direct, honest
"
criteria. In a memorandum to
"""""'
• .....,..._.
t a m a
WilY·/
-~-'-'~"-- •--::,r·'and stuand Ofticers cl A dp&gt; i 881 0 n llludeat'a'
will, in
Finally, there'S the
pjiiennial OOUWUUBWA ........ , _ . . . .
(1947-411 ) and ollhi! Ameriean part, be
' •
the New statement politicians at every dent ol6oers, be
· that 36
AMociation of Collegiate ReP&amp;-. Yodt ..emi
Union's· leYel make-"We have loweJed per cent of tbe freabmen were
trars and AlimiBcms Ol6cen guide OD dimaowtratiolls is in- the mandatory activiliee ,_ choeen aolely on high school
( 1952-53) .
~ It that marc:hing • .. without ~ ~" rank to ensure ''that variations

SU: Bu1falo women will be
booored by the University next
month for distinguisbed lmd
long-irtanding service to education and the community.
'The women will be presented

On ber 25th anniversary at
U/8, Miss Deters was cited by
the Bullalo Junior Chamber of
Commerce for long-standing
service to students and to the
University. Miss Deters bas
been listed in Who ' s Who
Among American Women and
Who's Who in the East.

...

~of~bml':=e~

•

!he

=~ofwi'ii~=

S&amp; Advire to Undergrads·
Isn't What It Used to Be

;:.,n;::tr,ber

!"

...

C:::.

four=

in the quality of high school
preparstion will not discrim.inate against the able students .
from the poorer schools."
Dr. J. Norman Hostetter, assistant director of admissions,
says that this procedure seems
equitable in view of the fact
that standards and grad in g
practices vary widely in high
s c h o o I s around the State:
''There have been cases where
the valedictorian of one high
school graduated with an average of only 89 while the valedictorian of another averaged
98 in his high school grades."
In such a case, high school
grades wonld not be effective
indicators of ability or achievement while high school rank
would, Dr. Hostetter says.
High school grade point average and performance on a
normative e:r;amination, such as
the Regents· Scholarship E:tamination, were used as the
criteria for another 36 per cent
of those admitted because, the

!!::""J:': =..s:ys~P':::

pared for the traditional major
. programs of tbe University are
admitted, and that students in
special high schools or special
programs in high schoo1 are
not discriminated against.
Admissions to the special
all
the U ·
'ty
P.:':::""tbe ~ r.!,':"'tbe
group of college.able but disadvantaged students wbo can
benefit from an initial period
of semi-tutorial independent
study to prepare tbeJn tO enter
the main-&lt;~tzeam University pro.

c; ~::'!rna~

in his
Students were first admitted
to the U/B EPIB Program in
1968. Eighteen from thia initial EPIS class completed their
baccalaureate degree requirements in just three years, instead of four, and received their
degrees this past ~· Nine
of the 18 graduated With bon·ora·, three made Phi Beta Ka~
pa, and 4'ght have ~ on [.;
~
D-graduate study, winning fellowshiP., and scholarshiP";
Ellperi"*"-1 -.p
'The 8 per cent

of freabmen
wbo were admitted because of
aptitude for and i n - in the
natural sciences and matbematics conetitute lin e:r;perimental
adJnlsojma group. Tile \"Jrpp6e
is to see w11e111er such m and aptitudl!"'"'criteria "can be
tuned finely -·-'- to select
.,..........
able students for one academic
subject from among those cho&amp;en for ~raJ academic e:u:elJenoe." Di. Hull pointed out
that admisaiona to Art, Art Education -...... Music are alreadv
"""
&lt;
determined by such special cnhi I e admiasions criteria
""'"' vaiied thia year, and the
""'-' com 'tion of the
~
class
· ~
quality bas been maintained.
1be average 1971 U/B fresh.
man graduated in the top 8 per
cent of his ~school class,
. maintained a •
acbool average ol 90 and IIOIIred 'lJY1 em
tha Regents Scbolarship Examination. 'These are almost the
aame as last yau'a standards.

"'W-

'1:

1

�~

4

Septemlow 9, 1911

U/B Faculty\\eekAverages 56 Hours CommiJtees Estahlislurl For
Of Teaching, Job-Related Activities Self-Study, }#)men, Provost
"' COII8ider it 88 natUral to
work fiOm ll!ven or eilht in the
IMIIling to fiYe in the morning
88 a banker would to work his
eiibt-hour day," says ooe U/B
Enalish prof-. He estimates
!bat his typical _ . , includes
llbout 70 . hours-at least 12
hours a day Moocllly through
Friday aDd a bit lees on Sat.
unlay aDd Sunday.
A prof""""' in tbe Depart.
ment of Statistics says be works
about 14 bows a day on mat.
ters directly related to his job,
startina in his lab each morning at 8 am. On the usual
.......tend, be says, he apends
about 15 boW"S writing, doing
research, planning lessons and
reading.
A faculty member in Educational Studies notes that be is
on campus for an average of
ll!ven to nine boW"S each weekday and that be uses his evenings at bome for reading and
preparing class lessons.
Not Exceptions

Bssed on available survey
informau on, these three faculty
members would not be excep--

tions. During the past year,
surveys of the workloads of
faculties of the University of
Wisconsin and Michlgan State
University yielded results very
close to those obtained in a
similar study conducted at U/ B
in 1968 but not released until
this summer.

Release of the U/ B data
came in the wake of a measure
passed by the 1971 New York
S tate Legislature expressing

of tbell! I!BBelltial, tiJne.conauming activities are ''voluntary."

In

·

this faculty mem-

ber'~'~ classroom contact
oo;,;. ;;:;Jcl also Jle&lt;le88itate his

a oertain perce11tage of professora wbo take advantage of the
system."
Part of the disagreement may
be that a '~?"'feasor's personal

~=~o:'1:=e=
:'~=~-~w:~: !:e.~~~~~""t
be forced to drop his "volun- ton, chairman of the Depart. Ketter.

tary" activities.
ment of Social Fi&gt;undationa in
1'booe faculty with substan- . the Faculty of Educational
tial adminiatrstive responaibili- Studies. For example, is readties also spend leas time in the ing a book "wotk"?
classroom, averaging 5.21 boors,
Thua. an English professor
compared with 7.25 hours for asks, "Is it a personal or profaculty with few or no adminis- fessional activity when I read
trstive chore&amp;.
the New Y ark R e v i e w of
As ana&amp;lJli!le of fluctuation Books"? It's really both, he
in clasSroOri&gt; contact, the aver- argues. An English professor is
age eflgineering faculty member drawn to such publications in
spends a significant portion of his "leisure time." But to some
his time in the lab but aver- degree that activity probably
ages only 6.48 hOW"S in the helps him become a be t t e r
classroom. By comparison, the teacher and scholar.
average education professor is
Dr. Button also notes that
in the classroom 8.08 hours per the Internal Revenue Service
week.
does not dispute deductions
Faculty indicated they spent claimed by professors for " home
a little more than a quarter of I study," and should not in most
their time in instruction and cases.
preparation for undergraduates, Wide Range of Duties
and a lmost 20_per oe!'t (19.3 )
Dr. Wil l iam H . Baumer
m grad':"'te mstruction a n_d chairman of the Faculty Sen:
preparation ..Semor faculty sa•d ate, calls attention to the wide
they spent !' httle over. 40 per range of duties in which pro~nt of theu time [~r. lll;Si":JC- fessors engage.
lion and preparation, JUmor
One is the professor who canfacult y. close to !X&gt; per .c;ent of not engage in "home study"the!r .~Ime. ObviOusly prepa- the professor who is tied to his
ratton for cl~ accounted lab. "I know many colleagues
e.::..~ large portion of the work who S.E!!nd_ eight hours a day,
· ·p~rsonal 0 r departmental s1x days a week in .~heir labs,"
h
d
·r ..
says Dr. Baumer, and many
researc an wn mg account- who work more than that.
~ f~~ ~h~ ~;,x~. 1 ';{~:;';~c;!'~t;.; There are a iS? a lot of profeschores took 16.8 per cen. t.; spon- so
stursdywhoor tug uto'r,dalse mordewpehnodearent
ed
h
am~~f~gn:\r~~~l~.'it?! in~~lved the ~lieges.
outside the University, 4 .7 per
T~en ~ere are ~e ~plecent; other activities within the espectally m ,t he socutl science_:;
University, 3.2 per cent and - who are consultants to bu_s1"other " 2 per oent
•
ness, I a b or and commun1ty
'
·
groups. Many in the Foculty of
Hoi Everyone Is Convinced
Educational Studies consult for
Despite the survey result3, local schools. This serves a
however, not everyone on cam- dual role-it's an important rePl!S is oonvinced that all facul- souroe for the community and
ty live up to these- average it is a means whereby professtandards.
sors can keep in touch with
A sociologist who studies what is going on.
higher education and has an" For all of us the classroom
a lyzed such surveys says, " My is just part of it," concludes
research shows that university Dr. Baumer. 4'Preparation
faculty members are like any grading, counseling, keeping or:
other occupational group. There lice . hours, research, writing,
are the hard-working ones and keepmg abreast of our fieldsthere are the slackers."
all of the&lt;e must be included
At least two department While the charges of 'slothful:
chairmen interviewed agree. ness' may be true to some deOne said, "There is a certain gree, it would be unfair to most
amount of slothfulness that goes of my colleagues who put in
on." And the other: "There is more than a 40-bour week."

~=·~l~s~~~~n\:t :rr
hour standardS should be adopt.
ed for faculty members in the

State University system. The
legislators further indicated
that future appropriations
would be "proportionate" to the
extent to which each SUNY
unit enforced "this expression
of public policy of the State."
Tbe bill, later vetoed by G&lt;&gt;vemor Rockefeller, was generally regarded as expressing not
public policy but the private
pique of some legislators. concerning what they consider to
be "overpaid gadfly fa cui ty wbo
work only tliree or four hours
a week."
Confounding this legislative
opini«?l!• however, and probably
surpnsmg m o s t laymen, the
local survey shows that professors of all nmks average 56.1
hours a week on the job. They
spend only 6.97 boW"S of that
time in the clasaroom, to be
sure; but clasaroom work is
~ply the visible cap of the
Iceberg of academic activity.
Tbe report indicated that l'uii
professors put in an average
of 57.8 boW"S per week; associate professors, 57.3; assistant
professors, 54.9; lecturers, 56.2,
and instructors, 61.6.
a--~
Classroom oontact boW"S per
........, broke down to 6.94 for
fuJ,l professors; 7.23 for aaoociate professors; 6.81 for assistant
professors; 7.61 for lecturers
aDd 6.94 for inatructo&lt;s. .
Tbe Legislature's bill would
have established a minimum
st8Ddard for full-lime faculty
members at grsduate llistitutioas auch as Bulfalo at nine
0011tact hours per week. But it
contained no provision for variation in the standard for faculty members wbo spend a great
dMI of their time in "voluntary". aDd administrative activ-

=--~did0:t ~

CXIIIt8ct hours from 0118 diaciplialuy to another.•
Obe Eu,Usb professor, for
eamp~e, il euneotly direct4Jg
eillht doctoral llludenta, four or
w6am are , _ receiving their
PbD.'a. He . - silil on two
~ oammittees. Bolh

Tbree major Ullhwaity 00111mittee&amp;-for a e 1 f-6tudy pJ.an..
ning, for tbo re=Utment aDd
promotion of WOII81 in campus
· jobs, aDd for finding a provost
for tbe Faculty of Arta and Let.

in

....._,_,.1
D • OpeDS Sept.15
~J;l _riVe

A steerin4 committee of eilht
members will formulate plana
for the comprebenaive s e 1 f.
study of the University to be
undertaken in p._,.,.tion for
an a=editation reView in late
1972 by the Middle States Association of Colleges. Tbe self.
study, expected to take 12 to
15 months, will examine all lacets of University organization,
resources and operation with
special attention " to the quality of the educational process,"
P resident Ketter said.
10-Ye•r Review
The Middle States Association, the regional · a=editing
agency, reviews the aocredited
status of its member institutions every ten years. Sinoe
U/ B was last extensively reviewed, the University's
undergraduate enrollment has
doubled, while its graduate rolls
have multiplied tenfold.
The steering oommittee will
have the advice and counsel of
Dr. Claude E. Puffer, professor
emeritus and former vice p resident for Qusiness affairs, who
during the past academic year
has been in char~te of a national
study of accred•ting practioes.
Members of the self- study
steermg group are : Dr. Robert
F. Berner, dean, Division of
Conti nuing Education; Dr.
q~rtes H .V. Ebert, dean, DiYtSion of Undergraduate Studtes; Charles M. Fogel, assistant
executive vice president; Dr.
~rnard R. Gelhaum, vice pres•dent for academic affairs· Dr
Andrew W. Hoi t, associate
dean, Graduate School· Dr
Barbara J . Howell, assOciate
professor ·of physiology; Dr.
Charles Jeffrey, assistant vioe
president for academic plann!ng, and Dr.. Allen H. Kuntz,
d1rector of mstructional servioes.
Women's Recruitment
ond Promotion
A ~5-member group wil,l help
recrwt and promote women in

jobs.

They are: Dr. Jean M AIberti, director of the ot&amp;e of
Univ~ty Research; Dr. Martha Birnbaum, assistant . research professor, Faculty of
Health Sciences; Mrs. "Mary
Brady, associate librarian· Mrs
V_ivian Dixon, assistant
~
~r of the Equal Opportunity Offioe; Dr. Raymond E
Dynnele
, counselor in Student Per:
80
,Se_rvioes; Charles M .
Fogeld, a88JS~~ executive vice
Pres• . ent; Willl8lll R, Greiner,
assocl8te provoaf, Faculty of
Law and, Jurisprudence; Dr.
Peter H . Hare, asaodate rolessor of p~·
osoph ,· Mrs. P,,_
abeth S.
, __ ,!t~t
~ .....
professor
of
Amen"can.
Stu~
' --,·
Dr All H
u.tW
. ·
~n ' K=tz. director of
!'J8!ructional aervioes and test.
mg; Dr. Harriet Montague
cha!rm_an of undergraduat.i
studies m the Matheuuitics Dent,· u-. M•-;:....-t Nevm, dU"eCr.o;';;;'!L- Aa-,....ult~Adv'-ment Center.~••-. Berni~oe
p
au..
~· lJ:"~ ~ger of U/ B's
Carmen ~RlJiBt!cs
Institute; Mrs.
the director
aais~t to
tal Pro
. tbe Ezperunen.
. gram m Inciepende,t
~tudies, and Dr. Ann Scott, as81Stant professor of Englisb.
On July 12, President Ketter
t
t II
sen 011 etters to the commit.

to

.1.'

. Dr. A, Westley Rowland, ty of La
d J ·
VIae pres•dent for University reFaculty :r
atu':':iPS:,1::;:;:;,
lations, will be chairman or
d M thema
the Campus United Fund CamScenc!"!;.JaA":f!"ni~
paign for this year, President t. mtion; Undergraduate StudRobert L. Ketter linnounced 1es G d te Sch 1
this eek.
; m ua
oo ; Academic
Inw
l
Affairs; Millard Fillmore Colmaking the announoe- l~ge and Continuing Educament, Dr. Ketter pointed out -tion; C ommunications Rethat U /B has accepted the des- sources· P "d t'
d E
.
ti"_on o f a " p il ot campaign," utive
.
•. res•
en s an Office·
xectgna
Vtce
President's
mearung that "the University is Facilities Planning; Opemtio~
to -be a paoell!\ter and, in a and s tems ., cui
11!011! will be an example for
~
k~-~tudent
other' institutions."
Affai
tudent '
Tbe United Fund of Buffalo Univ:;,,.t mvteBrsJutrtY_, RelaFundations;
--"' E . Co
.
y a
wo o
'"'" ne unty has a goal this !Jon aDd AJunJni; and Western
year of $8,782,915, of which the New York Nuclear Research
University's share is $100,000. Center
Rowland indicated that ·the
division will have· its
University's campaign will run own quota Each will also have
from September 15 through Ocra1 chairman
Iober 19. "It is our hope," he
and several
aaid, "that we can have 100 per
rmen who, in tum, will
cent participation from every develop an organization for
member of the U .
"ty"
each of the departments. Tbe
~~;..,;~~':'= ·Row- general kick-off meeting will be
~- r-~
held on W-'---'··· ,_._,_
land aaid that the University 16 t 4 ~....._,. , ...,.......,.,r
will be divided into 21 .clivi- '!'
Bi0118: Faculty of Arta aDd Let. instructions will be given to the "It is desirabt

N

·&amp;c,ial

'lf;· · ;

p
_
artm
•
e

Each

:...f."d:

For

ftrmathe actian procrams for

---

women." Ketter aeJec:t..cl.
b8rs for the committee

......

Pleaident K e t t e r dlreCUy
named only. tbe facnlty compooent for tbe Art. aDd Letters
Search Committee, charging
the appo~ to aelect two
student members 88 w e II as
~ fiOm the COillmunity.
been ached~or~have
October 1 and December 1 on
president aabd the
to aubmit a panel of three to
five nominees fw the position
no later than .JanlllllY. 10, 1972.
~bout 1 t s deliberations
the" group was also directed
make- frequent and regular consultations "w i t h appropriate
representative units of the Faculty of Arts and Letters."
'fhe.omembers of t1!e faculty
named to the CotnmJttee are·
Professor John Barth, English:
Professor Harvey J . Brever:
man, art; Michael Brill, architecture; Dr. Leon Livingstone
Spanish, Italian and Portu:
gu~; Dr. John J. Peradotto,
class1cs; Dr. Jeorg Schaefer
German and Slavic, and Prores:
. SOr Edmond N . Strainchamps
music. Dr. J o s e p h Masling'
chairman of the Department oi
~nt'i~J!i., is chairman of the

Commi:.:
u;

Ketter Opens
Office Hours
For Students
President Robert L . Ketter
announced today that beginning in early October his achedule will be a rranged to enable
him to provide an opportunity
for regular informal meetings
w!th individual students. These
w~ bo; in a~dition to the period1c discuss1ons which are normally held with student groups
Starting Tuesday, October 5;
and oontinuing on alternate
Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to noon,
there will be scheduled 15minute meetings with students
at the University wbo wish to
talk with him; On occasions
when the President cannot bold
theo!e interviews peraonally, a
seruor member of the administrstive staff will substitute. Dr.
Ketter aaid be wishes to use
this type of "'"!""Fement as one
of developmg better rap~ students and adThose wishing to have interviews wt"th "'--'dent Ketter
....,...
should call Mn. Ruth East,
administrative aasistant to the
president, 831-2001, for appointments. AU. auch" meetings
will be held ·in tbe Prerldenrs
Office, ROom "108 Ha
'
yes.
PHI BET•... ._........"'
w•-•
University loculi)' memboJ"S-&lt;&gt;Id
and n--..tro orw.Phl llebr Koppa
membors,t~~ewMrw orw Invited to
assume member ststus
In the locsl Omicron Chopter. This
cs_n bo done by sending your
name. prosent department and
oddrns. location of chapter where
initial election was mode (a Is 0
date of election, If possible) ond
a ~heck for $3. paysble to Omi·
cron Chapter Phi Beto Koppo. to
the clurptar secnJtary, Or. w.L
8
Jr.. Department of Psy·
ch91&lt;Jiy, 4230 Ridge Lea Road.
This will place you on the mem·
borship ond moiling list for an·
nouncements of clurpter · -·
According to Dr. Bometts, the

-

•motte.

·~;,;:-M tn;.t~U: t1=, !:,.,":"t"" ~ ~ to
~=~i
::'~~~: Jd~=· = t i = ~-:!"'!ion ·tn.Stata University of8 New ::,..,~'"o"'n ~~:. ' : : :1P•

ing aDd Applied Sclences; Faculty of HMllh Sclences Facul

;

-

Officials of the United """""Fund

•

will also attend.

.

'::'!

..,_,. Jista of . . . _ submitted by ad hoc committees.

=

at BulfaJo 888Ume poaj. costs of key·purrchlng and moiling
leadership within the 1-la:•
ays!eaJ to establiab al- . - - - - - - - - - - -

~

�.,
Se~9,J91J

s

GRf:PORTER.,

FrOsh, Transfer Orientation Offers
A University Open House, Info Fair

"Communication, A Basis or
Education" is the theme of
U/ B's marathon 1972 Orientation for some 3,200 freshmen
and transfers. 'The program op. ened September 1 with activities for foreign students and
continues through Sunday, September 19, when an Al!red
~~ ~estival rings

School, in particular, he indicates, bas taken an initiative

ference Theatre; Polish Culture
Club, Lobby.
PARKER ENGINEER~~":!~~nsse:;:t~~. of ING
: Mechanical Engineering,
Another portion or the Open Rooms 4, 5 and 8 .
House will involve undergradHAYES C: Faculty of Natuate student clubs and organ- ural Sciences and Mathematizations. ''This is beinjl' done in ics; Room : 1. ·
an attempt to revitahze ·inter· CAPEN HAIL: Dental
est and participation" in these School; Psychiatry.
organizations, A u e ron says.
NORTON COURTYARD :
CoincidentaUy, classes begin "One of the major problems in acade~ departments: Engitoday.
.
the past few years," he con- neering Science; Computer SciUnder the direction and co- tends, "has been the 'closed ence; Philosophy; German and
ordination of FreO:I Aueron, the group' attitude that clubs have Slavic; Geography; Anthropolundetograduate Student Associ- shown toward the University ogy; Miaobiology; History;
ation's student aftairs coordiQ- community." This bas lowered Law School; Geology; School of
ator, this year's Orientation participation levl!ls, he feels, Management; School of Health
includes three phaEes--,a Uni- and can be combatted through Related Professions; Spanish,
versity Day Open House, Sep- the Open House.
Itslian and Portuguese; clubs:
tember 14; an Information F8.U',
A second 'reason for involv- American Society of Civil Endaily through September 17; ing the clubs is that, later this gineers; Ski -Glub; Debate Club;
and a fleneral schedule or 6lms, fall, a new undergraduate Stu- Pharmacy Student Association;
excunnons, concerts, a camival.
German Club; Ski Team; U/B
~~~ ;~.:i Sports
pi&lt;;nics, etc. (See back page
Car C I u b; Brazilian
blocks. Aueron feels that the Club; Amateur Radio Club;
~a =Jete listing.)
AIESEC; IEEC; Ukrainian
Aooording to A u e r o n, the
c
Art Board; Music Club;
University Day Open House is block, however, must bave a Club;
local and national fmtemities
to be similac to the campus- ,membership of at least 40 in- and
sororities;
Women's Ub;
wide 125th Anniversary Open dividuals to qualify for Assem- Karate Club; Korean
Student
House which drew some 10,000. bly representstion.
Association.
15,000 visitors to the campus
At Reporter deadline, this
ANNEX
B
:
Departmental
last May. This time, however, roster or participants for the Library.
empbaais will be directed to Open House bad been lined up:
HEALTH SCIENCES
students and other members of
NORTON HAIL: Informa- BUILDING:
School of Nursthe University community. AU tion and Library Studies, Room ing.
academic ' departments bave · 266; Physical Education, LobHOCHSTETTER HALL :
been invited to particiJ?Bte and, by; M a them a tics, I.Dbby;
hopefuUy. wiU be taking part. Gynecology-Obstetrics, Lobby; Department of Physics and AsAueron aays. 'The Medical U/ B SDS, Lobby; Opera, Con- tronomy; Polarized light demonstrations at one-hour intervals.

r:dt

o't'

~ ~.:t b"i": t'~cl!

&amp;nwreQpemY~------------

propriateness of their relations
to the Senate's Bylaws and
Another question of particu- SUNY Trustees' policy.
lar concern to both faculty and
These special committee s
students is the matter of grad- mark a new and continu ing
ing policy. This received atten- trend for the Senate, Chairman
tion last spring whom the Col- Baumer believes. He feels peolegiate Assembly brought a pie want to "get away from the
grievance to the Seruite against standing committee structure"
Dr. Daniel Murray, then vice and work on issue-oriented
president for academic aft'wrs, groups. "It's easier to get a laccentered around the question of ulty member on a committee
who is responsible for grading with a special assignment," he
-faculty or admini stration. notes. These groups have a
While two Senate grievance "certain efficiency" to them, he
committees last year read the says, and usually co m p I e t e
State education law and found their assignments in a shorter
for the administration, the Ex- time. Baumer says the Exececutive Commit~ considered utive Committee will support
the matter importilnt enough to this trend by working more
set up a special committee on closely with such committees
grading evaluation. This sub- and having fewer motions incommittee of Educational Pol-. itiated by itself.
icy and Planning is currently Mailing List
meeting under the leadership of
Another new Senate proceDr. Joel Raynor and will 'con- dure will stsrt this fa ll. For the
sider policies regarding self- first time, any member of the
gmding, the S/U and letter voting faculty may request to
grade patterns.
be placed on the Senate's mailSeveral . other special com- ing list for agenda and supportmittees have also been set-up ing documents. In addttion,
with Muirges reaching · to the Senate representstives will recore of academic CQncems.
ceive the Executive Committee
A Committee on Academic agenda and unapproved minIntegrity. under Dr. Claude utes. This policy resulted from
Welch, former dean of Underrequest las&lt; year by Professor
graduate . Studies, is to make Connie Frederickson and Peter
"recommendations as io rules a _ . aod a sugges~on by
and regulations g o v e r n) n g Dr. Dean Pruitt. As be!ore, any
cheating and plagiarism for the member may receive approved
student body." Tbe committee Executive Committee minutes.
is also charged with recoiDIIIeDThe Senate this year wiU
dations for the setting up llf a continue to beai President Ketjudicial or quasi-judicial siruc- ter speak at mch meeting, reture to deal with this Rroblem. p&lt;&gt;rtins. on the stste of the Uni'The question of plagiarism by versity and """king feedback on
faculty members' is being ~- various matters. This gives the
larly investigated b.Y'the .Com- president a chance to "commumittee on Academic Freedom nicate with. theJaculty," Baumand Responm1&gt;ility.
er says, and is "1100&lt;1 for both
.sides." Alao i!&gt; continue is the
· A Special Committee on Bac- "good at the order'' section of
c8.1aweate Degree Require- each meoiting. This time for
ments bas been assigned three open discuEion at the end bas
related tasks. Tbey are to con- proved fruitful,
r Says.
aider the p......,t i:listributioo For eumple, as a
t ot
requiremelits; the fOur cowae commenta last year
Dr..
J...a, and the poosibility of in- Charles Planck and of
stituting a geoeral studies pro- queot action by the Senate, the
_gram. This committee is ' president appointed a special
chaired by Dr. Stephen Mar- committee to review the otrugolis.
of ombudsman and advocate.
Tbe Committee on Bylaws, Baumer expects this time wiU
re-instituted under the leader- be "more efficient and functionship of Dr. WaYne Aodenon, al" this year because monthly
wiU examine the Bylaws ol the Seriate meetings wiU bave
Faculties to determine the ap- smaller agendas.
(Continued from JJGI• 1. col. 5)
Grodinc Poliq
.

a

--Requl-

Information Fair
The daily Orientstion Information Fair will be held in the

Center Lounge of Norton, from
10 a .m . to 4 p.m. University
offices participating are: Acad em i c AdviSement; Student
Counseling Center; C a r e e r
Guidance and Placement; Student Affairs &amp; Services; Minority S tudent Affairs; Foreign
Student Affairs; Student Association ; Off-Campus Housing;
and Financial Aid.
Participating offices will have
staff members avai lable to offer
informa tion and adv ice. Aueron
says, "the Fair will add to the
general theme of communication because it bridges much
of the time, e ffort and bureaucratic hogwash that could waste
a n entire day."
The information progra m will
a lso continue into the fall semester, he says, through a series
of a ctivities bringing certain
departments! faculty members
together with students to elaborate on points made during
Orientation.
.
Brldgl~g

the G&lt;lps

Aue ron explains the philosophy behind Orientstion 1972
this way :
The Orientstion program, he
says. is designed to help provide needed information about
the University and bridge at
least some of the campus communications gaps. As he puis it,
''a step toward bridging just
one of the gaps is a step toward
bridging them all."

Two New Members
Named to Council
Two individuals .active in
Erie County Republican aiiaizs
hav.e been appointed to the
local Council of the University
by Governor Rocll:efeUer. Members of the Council. are 'unsalaried.
~
Mrs. Phyllis-E. Kelly of Snyder, vice chairman of the Erie
County GOP committee, succeeds Dr. Edward Mimma'i:lc,
who retired. Mill: KeUy's term
'ezpires July 1, 1977.
Attorney Kevin Brinkworth.
a U/B graduate and endoroed
Republican candidate for lOth
DistriCt Erie County legiSlator,
will aerve a term espiring July
1, 1974.

Over 500 Students Attend
U/B Linguistic Institute
Bill Corsaro, a graduate student, wants to work as a sociologist when he finishes his
studies.
David Bloom, an undergraduate, is interested in history.
Some day he hopes to teach it.
Tom Fairclough, a post-doctom) degree student, runs the
freshman English program at a
university in Texas.
Despite their diverse interests nnd different levels of education, Messrs. Corsaro, Bloom,
a nd Fairclough have one thing
in common. Each spent this
summe r studying linguistics to
further his respective career.
The three, in fact, were
among 500 st udent s from
aroun d the world attending the
1971 Linguistic Institute at
U/B. Sponsored by the Department of Linguistics and the
Linguistic Society of America,
the institu te was one of the
la rgest in the society's 40-year
history . All told, some 60
cou rses we re offered, ranging in
subject matter from the biology
of comm unications to mathematica l me thods in linguis tics.
Fifty instructors - half from
U / B, the others from leading
European and Canadian universities - gave the courses
over a n eight-week period. In
addition, about 20 of the world's
best known lin guists visited
from time to time to give special lectures. In short, the institute offered students a chance
to study the alphabet of linguistics from A to Z . Many students attended to learn techniques for cross -disciplinary
uses.
Corsaro, for instsnce) felt the
study or linguistics could provide him with some-valuable in·
sights about people living in
groups. Specifically, he wanted
to zero in on how socialization
and language work band in
hand - how the way a person
learns a language alfects the
way he fils into a society. Thus,
Corsaro, a graduate student at
North Carolina University, took
courses in psyche&gt; and sociolinguistics.
David Bloom, meanwhile,
was interested in teaching history with an empbaais on the
development of languages, especially Germanic languages.
Such a perspective, he felt,
coUld ' perhaps provide some
new insights into history.
Bloom, then, took courses in
Old Icelandic and in historical
linguistics.
1
Tom Fairclough, was interested in how English is taught
to incoming freshmen each year
at Midwestern University,
Wichita Falls, Tex.

"One of the toughest jobs in
aU coUege teaching," he said,
"is teaclung students when to
use different kinds of paragraphs. You would think it
would be easy, but it's not. It's
very difficult."
By studying discourse ..analYsis at the institute, Fairclough
hoped to be able to make the

teaching of English more meaningful and eftective at Mi4weste m - another example of a
cross-disciplinary use of linguistics.

Among the institute's enrollment were about 150 foreign
students, including students
from En g I and, Gennany,
France, Spain, Holland, Nationalist China, South Vietnam,
and Belgium - to name just
a few countries.
The institute, which ran
through Aug. 27, was under the
direction of David G. Hays and
Wolfgang Wolck of the U/B
Linguistics Dept., and John
Lyons, holder of the Chair of
General Linguistics at the Universi ty of ~clin~urg~.

Some highlights of the institute: Rene Thoin presented a
topological analysis of the principles of anthropological ·and
)jterary structuralism; Noam
Chomsky, founder of the newest and most influential school
in linguistics, spoke on ''Transformational Grammar;" Dan L
Slobin reported on "Developmental Psycholinguistics," in a
considemtion of how children
speaking several languages pass
through grammatically and oemanticaUy similar stsges; and
John Marshall, MD. of the
University of Edmburgh spoke
on the "Biology of Languqe,"
focusing on the genetics, anatomy, and phy iology of speech.

Wilsons Cutback
The Woodrow Wilson National FeUowship Foundation
bas announced that 1971-72
competitions for first year fellowships for 1972-73 wiU not
be held.
"The decision to suspend the
program temporarily was made
by the Board of Trustees." a
Foundation spokesman aaid
'"Hley believe that the pro~~­
~· of 'securing fuiids for the
support or a significant number
of first-year graduate students
in 1972-73 are'too U!lCertain to

wn:,o~'=:~r.::..~

competition, however, wiU be
supported in the graduate
schools of their Choice during
academic 1972_:73.

�S e p - 9,1971

6
Campus SurveyResults - . ; . _ . . . - - - - - - - -

~raJ

attitude of all
three reSpondent groups toward
student governance on campus
is that it tends to be ineffective.
More than 60 per cent of students, moreover, were unaware
of recent changes · in student
governmenL
Questions relating to b '! w
much or how little responsib!fity students, fa cui ty and adi!&gt;inistration should have for e&gt;ght
different decision areas were
also posed; the results. however,
are still being analyzed.

removal from the University of
pet1101l8 with ·a history of soft
ll8e. With reprd to the
arrest of aoft d r u g pushers,
student-attitudes SJe milred
Faculty a)ao tend to oppose
stricter enforcement of s o f t
drui laws and are very opposed
to the removal from the University of persona with a history of uae. While favorably
diaposed to the other suggested
measures, faculty are neutral
on a soft drug crisis center and·
on the arrest of soft drug pushers.
Administrators are, a g a i n,
somewhat opposed to strict law
enforcement for soft drug users
but they also reject the idea
of a soft drug ciisis center; on
all the other options offered on
the subject, they are neutral
or only slightly in favor.
Professional medical and psychological treatment for drug
problems are favored by all
groups. And faculty and students tend to feel that enforcement of federal and local drug
laws in the Buffalo area are
unfair while adm inistrative
views are mixed.

drui

coL 3)
by the entire class also teeeived three ocaleo indicating the past,
litUe support, even by students, present and future "!'ocess ~~
ance" by more than 40 per cent 72.2 per cent of whom thought the colleges in meeting · their
objectives, felt that they were
of each respondent group. 'The
thod
reason indicated by the largest theA~h ~- per cent of better last year than the year
peroentages-75.4 per cent of faculty and 70.7 per cent of before and that they would be
students; 74.5 per cent of lac- administration considered eval- improved in Juture years.
ulty and 69.2 per cent ~~ ad- uation by tests using national Dioc:riminotlon
ministration- was reactlon to nonns to be a satisfactory or
Students, faculty and adminadministrative actions such as excellent method, 60 per cent istration all have mixed views
calling in police, etc.
_
of students thought this a poor . about the amount of racial and
No potential a~on which '!" · method a)ao.
sex di.sairnination which ocadmimstration m1ght take m
Finally, 8 surprising all?~unt curs at the University. "One RO~ sprin g 1971 administraresponse to protest was viewed of support existed for tradition- interesting finding," according tive decision that there would
favorably by students. but the al evaluation by the teacher to the survey report, is that the be no ROTC program on caml£asl un(auorable W"!' !he "!'g- alone. Four-fifths of faculty, 82 administration, 56.8 per bent of pus this year was " pleasing or
gestion that the admintstration per cent of administration and whom are female, report the very pleasing" to 56 per cent
W!'"' any students involved _in 64 .8 per cent of stud!"'ts de- highest percentage of responses of students, 47 per cent of fac"bed this as a satisfactory (57.6 per cent) indicating little ulty and 24 per cent of the
dtsturhances that they face m\.__ temal disci(!line. Studenta.gen- :;c;nexcellent method.
to no perceived discrimlnation administration. T w e n t y per
--.,....lly favor ~temal_rather than
Evaluation of faculty per- on the basis of sex.
cent of students, 35 per cent of
external action agamst prates- formance was overwhelmingly
A majority ·of the admini~· faculty and 60 per cel1t of adtors. ~y "!" op~ to the •-upported by 83.7 per cent of tration a lso felt that the Um- ministration were. "displeased."
idea of taking no action and students 86 2 per cent of ad- versity is doing "enough" to No single alternative to ROTC
allowin_g thin'!;' to _calm dol ministration · and 85.2 per cent
was overwhelmingly supported.
on t~lr own. 'P&gt;ts latter a - of faculty.
.
Day Care
ternatiVe was v 1 e w ~d . more
Views on the quaHty of inAll three groups-87.4 per
negatively lh'!" the Sipmg _of struction at U/ B, as rated py
cent of stud ents, 82.5 per cent
arrest complamts. ag~unst dlS- the largest percenta ges of each The Reporter hopes on this page of faculty and 70.2 per cent of Community Relations
rupters or the calhng m of
group on a scale from very to provide a forum for the ex· administration - supported CS·
The responding groUIJS were
p~s police, whose use was 1. e good to poor, were as follows: change of views on a wide variety tablishment of a day care cen- agreed on the proposition that
th1rd most fa vored alternative
Undergraduate i n s truction, of the issues facin' the academic ter on or near campus for the the University should m ake
among students.
_ moderately good (with 38.9 per community. We welcome both children of students, faculty special efforts to improve its
.I~ gen.eral, faculty and ad cent of adm inistration, 34.8 per position papers and le'l.ters as and administra tive personnel.
relations with the Buffalo com·
mm1strat•o~ shared t.he P.~f- •"CCJai.wo!. students and 2 1.6 per space permits.
Faculty a nd students felt munity. Eighty-one per cent of
erence for tntern~l action, ~1th cent of facu lty rating it the
strongly that m o r e financia l students, 90.5 per cent of facuJ .
~h~ te~~~~m1:ismJa:r!. a i,~h next h~~ category, good to guarantee civH and minority- support for day care should ty and 79.8 per cent of admingroup rights in a ll areas except come from student fees; slightly istration endorsed the nee d.
st~den~s and facu!ty. vi':wed vearagdua~· ed ucation, good to oonstruction
of t he Amher st over one-half of administrative The most favored method of
w~th disf~vor .the brmgmg m of very good l with 63.9 per cent
how to do it was the " fostering
personnel agreed.
and athletics.
Ci t~ pohce; I.n fact, only ~he or administra tion, 53.3 per cent campuS"'
of direct interaction between
Over
50
per
cent of faculty Football
tacll~ of set tmg up a pohce of students and 46.7 pe r cent
University and community,"
Attitudes
on
football
proved
felt that the Universi ty is not
p:eanct on campus would be of faculty so ra ting it ) ; and
both contradi ctory and surpris- supported by 52.4 per cent of
VIewed more unfavora~l};' by
Professional ed ucation, good doing enough in guaranteeing ing. Seventy-five per cent of students, 47.8 per cent of facthese two groups. Admmistra- to very good (with 80.4 per minority rights in the hiring students, 64.7 per cent of fac- ul ty and 44.2 per cent of adh ve personnel, how~ver, were cent or administra tion ; 70.3 per and promotion of non-faculty ulty and 72.3 per cent of ad- ministration. Changing the Uni·
not so unfavor~bly d~posed to- cent of studcnl' and 56.7 of professional and technical staff, ministration indicated they had versity a nd its policies in ways
in the oonstruction of the AmW3f.~: ~{ ~~~~;1,ce~r " the faculty p~acing it in this cate- herst campus, a n d in filling never a ttended a game. Yet, desired by the oommunity was
change in administration." we~e gory) :
.
policy-making administrative only 20 per cent of students, favored by approximately one25 per cent of faculty and 6.5 quarter of administrators (22. 1
not major factors for last year s CoUe.gtate Attit~
campus calm, the survey found.
Ftve q.uesttons were asked pos~~jorities of_ students felt per· cent of administration ap- per cent) but by only 9.6 per
Rather, the consensus was that a~ut attitudes toward the col- the University is not doing proved the decision to drop the cent of students and 10.8 per
•·people are tired of protest and legi.1te system. Most of the enough to p r o t e c t minority sport. Fifty-two per cent of stu- cent of faculty.
feel it does not accomplish its respondent? were aware of the rights in several areas: faculty dents, 39.6 per cent of faculty The President
The responding groups had
ends.'' However, one-third of oolleges, yw'lth s tudents and lac- hiring and promotion, hiring of and 75.3 per cent of adminiss tudents f e It thaf problems ulty feelmg that they should non-faculty professional and tration expressed "displeasure" diverfing views oonceming the
which led to the 1970 protests be funded more substantially technical staff, athletics, con- over the decision. The variety constituency to whom the presremain urlreSOived and that fu- a nd that "co II e g e"- courses struction of the Amherst cam- of reasons given for dissatis- · ident seems most responsive.
ture protest is still · possible.
should be accepted for credit pus, hiring and promoting ad- fac~ion included a se n s e o! Over 50 per cent of faculty and
Evaluation
•
toward existi n g degree pro- ministrative staff, and filling football's "traditional place in students view the president as
The survey dealt with three grams _(70.2 and 81.8 per cent policy- making administrative the University," its "generation most responsive to outside oonphases of evaluation: how stu- respectively of students and JX)Sitions.
slightly over
f~t~~~!f~~it.;:, i~~pu~~fv:: stituencies-with
dents s h o u I d be evaluated; 61.4 and 75.6 per cent of lac- Open Admissions
a third of both group$ identifywhether faculty performance ulty ) . Administrative personOpen admissions was defined sity," and the respondents' ing SUNY's Albany adminisshould he eyaluated, and how nel had more mixed views with as "admission to all without personal enjoyment of the sport. tration as the constituency rethe overall quality of instruc- 53 per cent feeling that the restriction" by 45.4 per cent Drugs and Norton
ceiving the TTWSI attention.
tion at the University is per- colleges should Ml be funded of. students, 32.6 per cen t of
On the problems of drugs, Fourteen per cent of students
ceived.
more substantially and 54.2 per !acuity and 42.5 per cent of v iolence and theft which and 15.4 per cent of faculty,
Six possible approaches to cent favormg acoeplar!ce of cot- administration; as "open to all plagued Norton U n ion last ~gether with 7.8 per cent of
student evaluation were pre- lege oourses for c~~ .
with a high school diploma" by spring, students and adminis- administration, consider the
sented for rating.
Separate analysiS mdicated 13.6 per cent of students and trative personnel agreed in president . most responsive to
All respondent groups viewed that 23.7 per cent of all stu- 17.9 per cent of faculty, and blaming "outside inftuences" the Bulfalo community.
joint evaluation by teacher and dents ( 40.8 per cent of under- as "admission to all qooli(ied while a considerable percentage
Administrative personnel, on
student as the best means; "to gradua_te day students ) had _en- persons" by 23 per cent of ad- of faculty singled out condi- the other hand, regard the presnot evaluate at all" was over~ rolled m a college at some lime ministrators, 16.8 per oont of tions in Norton such as "messi~ ident as most responsive to
whelmingly rejected by all.
or other 'JI1d that, further, 36.3 faculty and 8.5 per cent of stu- ness and lack of conduct·stand- campus constituencies by a
..- Self-&lt;&gt;valuation by the stu- per cent of all students (61.6 dents.
a rds." However, the only oon-- marjlin of 33.8 per cent to 27.8.
Gient - the grounds for lasr-· per cent of under~duate day
Based on these definitions, trol measure suggestion gaining Approximately 20 per cent of
year's highly publicized diSpute students) had considered tak- students favor open admissions substantial support f tom all administrators feel the presi.between the administration and ing college courses. Although by a 55 per cent to 44 per cent three responding groups was dent is most responsive to stuCollege A-was viewed as ex- only very small percentages of margin; faculty oppose the con- that of limiting access to the dents; 14.7 per cent of students
cellent by no faculty, by 4.2 faculty and administration have cept by 60.2 per cent to 39.8 Union so that outsiders are ex-· anll 7.7 per cent of faculty conper cent of the administration, actually enrolled, 19 per cent per cent and administration is eluded. Twenty per cent of fac- cur. Thirteen per cent of the
and by only 5.4 per cent of of fa"'!lty and 13.~ per cent of undecided with 50.6 per cent ulty, 22.1 per cent. of students adminislration, - 16.~ per cent of
students. Eighty-five per cent administrahve personnel have favoring and 49.4 per cent op- and 33 per cent- of the admin- faculty _and 5.7 per cent of stuof faculty, 76.8 per cent of ad- considered en!"ll~. This, the posed.
istration hacked this approach. denfs constder the president
mihlstration and 64.4 per cent survey analysiS J?Omts out, may
The m o s t oommon reason Twenty-five per cent of stu- most" -nsive to the faculty.
of students thought it a poor suggest a potential new empha- given for opposition was that dents favored use of student c.'!'\&gt;'!1- "-pers
method.
sis for the rollegiate system. " not all people are capable of security guards.
··
·
-Among campliS newspapers,
Evaluation of each student
All groups, responding to higher~ucat ion."
With regard to hard drug.&lt;; on Spe~Jrutft-~ found to be "alHealth Services
campus, a ll three groups favor ways rea!!"" by 40.3 per cent.
All campus groups would like both strict law enforcement by of students. Nineteen per cent
the University to offer courtsel- all pertinent agencies (includ- of students "always read" etlws
ing ·services, birth control ad- ing the courts and the Univer- and 16.9 per cent. "always read"
vice and deviCC:$, eye care ser- sity) and University-supporteO the Reporter. However, thirtyvices, ~ical referral services, progrants specifically designed two per celil of faculty and 35.8
a drug crisis center, a drug re- to help the drug user. Such per cent of administrati~e staff
habilitation center and a sui- programs would include a drug "always read" the Reporter
E:nculi... .E4ilor
A. W£STLBY ROWLAND
cide center. Strongest support crisis oenter, educational pro- while only 12.4 · per cent of
is _.,..ed for courtseling ser- grants, a community-wide drug faculty and 18.9 per cent of
Ill~~
vices and !l drug crisis center attack, more research, the ex- administration ''always read"
rHE"ODORE V. PALI!RMO
with ewer 80 per cent of all pansion of existing drug pro-· et h os. The majority of all
IUiror~hiel
groups ~ibing both as im- grams and the arrest of push,
ROBBRTT. ~
portant.or very important. Stu- ers.
.
.
w..klr ~NTr~~R,_,. Btlh«
dents are somewhat in favor uf
On soft dmgs, however, atti- also believe them "sometime,;."
the
University
offering
oborijon
tudes
rlivcrgc.
St
udents
favor
a Overall figures &lt;;ive- .a slight
•krt .-1 Ptoducdon
service, !fie facul ty is neutral drug crisis center, educationa l edge in readership to the SpecJOHN A. CLOUTieR
and the administration is op- programs, research on work- trum with- an P.qua.Uy slight
.t.i6tant Editr;w
~ Sixty-seven per cent of able drug approaches, and exSUSA.N GREENWOOD
edge in credibility to the R estudents are opposed to com- pan.sion f exis ting drug pro- porter. "The differences," the
STUDENT AFFAIRS EDITOR: St•,... u,.,_.
pulsory ·health insurance while grams in the Buffalo metro- report cautions, ua:re most likeCONTRIBUTING £DlTORS: 1 - • R . DeS.ntia-, R~ S. lild:i,.,..,_., Au,._
equivalent percentAges of fac- pol_itan area. They oppose both ly, not of sufficient magnitude
ulty and adm.ini&amp;tration are in stncter enforcement of 1 a w s to .be una ttairiable on the basis
~~;RlBuTINO ARTIST: Swan M. BurlW
favor.
dealing with soft drugs and the of chance."
(COII&lt;ilwed from_. 1,

"VVEWPOINTS

crur;-

0

0

.'REPORTER,

~tim':~ 8~ J:'=~~~

�State University of .New York at
Bu lfalo, founded in 1846 as the
University of Buffalo, is Loday the largest,
me&amp;t comprehensive undergraduate and
gradu~te center of State University,
enrol!tng 24,606 students last faU (i 5, 214
~ull-ttm~). Last year the University
maugurated a new president, Robert L.
~etter, a civil engineer, who was at one
time dean of the U/ B Graduate School
and also served as vice president for
facilities planning here. The University
started as a medical school adding
.departments and schools tru-c;ugh the
years to keep paee witb the growing
demands of higher education· the latest
aildition wu the School of Architecture
and Environmental Design. Tbe merger in
19~2 with State University signalled a
pe~1od of dramatic development. Since
ttus merger, the number of full·time
undergraduates bas increased almost 50
per
t, the graduate and professionat
student p
tion over 165 per cent.
More s.igni
t, perhaps, bu been the ·
change in the character of the Student
body. In the fall of 1960., 27.6 per cent
of the freshmen were in the top one-fifth
of their graduating classes; in 1969, 85
per cent ranked in the top quintile. In
1963, 90 per eent of entering freshmen
scored 130 or better on the Rege nts
Scholarship Examination; in 1969, 90 per
cent of the freshmen scored 184 or
better.
Providing a base for continued growth
an entirely new University campus is
being constructed for an estimated
student population of 40,000. This
University cent.er will be deveJttped on a
l ,300·acre site five mil es north of the
present campu s.

CAMPUS MAPS

performanc~.

DRAMA
An average of three major productions a
year are produced by the Program in
Theatre. Th e shows are staged in the
recent.ly refurbished Theatre Studio in
Harriman. Productions are a lso scheduled
on campus by t he Stude nt Theatre Guild.
Two other dramatic groups are
associated with the University. The
Buffalo Theatre Workshop is a fr ee
t raining program for individuals from all
sections o f the City who work in dance,
mime, theatre and music. It offers a
" learn by doing " theatTe experience and
holds dance classes aa well . This year the _ . .
Workshop will produce an original dance
program plus several plays. The Black
Drama Workshop is made up of students,
University staff and faculty , and people
from the community. The eroup plana to
present several original productions
written by local arti&amp;t.a.

LIBRARIES
The combined University libraries- offer
direct access to nearly 2,000,000 ~·~••r-;
and t.o over 16,000 current and 75,000
bound periodicals. More than 200,000
new items are added each year.
Lockwood Memorial Library contains
reading, reference a nd rese a rch
collections of over ·850,000 volumes,
primarily in the humanities and the social
and behavioral 5eiences. The Poetry
Room on the second floor of Lockwood
houses the famou1 James Joyce collection
of over 4 50 itenu and 20,000 manuacript
paces, u well as workaheet.:, letters and
first editions (some 30,000 volumes) of
Dylan Thomas, Robert Graves, William
Carlos Williams and other twentieth
century poet&amp; writing in English. .
The Ridge Lea Library, serving the
needs of the interim campus, contains a
mathematics collection of approximately
. 4(),000 volumes of books and bound
journals, the Human Resources Area
Music Room , student associations offices,
Files, and a large collection of materials
and University Union Activities Board
~e l ected to serve the basic needs of
offices.
students in the social sciences. Scattered
Educational and social activities are
throughout he campus and Buffalo are
emphasized on the third floor whe re
the specialized )jbraries: A'rt, Music,
conference, committee and organizational
Chemistry, Health Sciences, Law, Science
rooms can accommodate at least 5
and Engineering, arld Bell Science
simultaneous meetings. Th1s floor also
(biology and geology).
includ es offices for student organizations,
lounges, a study room, a large general
The University Archives, located a few
blocks from the Main Street campus on
student activities room for groups
Jewett Parkway, collects a nd preserves
requiring limited office space, and a
the historical records of the University
compl ete setr·service vending lounge .
and th e papers of individuals associated
with it. AI. a source for student papers
and for general informa tion about the
University, the Archiyes also maintains
COMPUTING CENTER
files of officia l University publications
The main University Computing Center is
and reports ; st udent newspapers,
yearbooks, handbills, and magaz ines;
located on the Ridge Lea campus wh ere
faculty and students may have direct
alumni publications; and press clippings.
access to computing services, the
Computing Center Library and periph eral

NORTON UNION
Norton Hall , the student union, opens its
doors to faculty, staff and stu de nts for a
full range of professional and leisure-time
activities. Areas of special interest on the
first floor are the Operations Office; the
Information a nd Ticket Office; a
Theatre-Conference room ( with
cinemaacope screen), .de1igned for
concert&amp;-, panel discuisions and other
program.~ ; a large multi-purpose room
(Fillmore Room) ; the Cafeteria, which
provides food .ervice for 600 and an
additional seating area for special evenlli
lou nge a for formal and informal
ptherings; and the Univeraity Bookstore.
An outdoor terrace is also located on this
Ooor.
The, ground level , primarily for
infonnal recreation, . houses a Rathskeller
(a favorite hangout. with ' ahort"''O'der
food service for approximately 400),
billiard room with ·19 J;ables, table tennis
area, card room, an ail'~onditioned
1 2-lane bowling alley , boobtore and the
Creative Craft Center.
•
The second floor hou.es administrative
offices, the Reservations Office in Room
223, Art Gallery , Browsing Library (with
magazines and a book-lending service),

assi.Jted by two graduate students (whor •
have been awarded special Cellowahipo u
part·time Associates) in presenting eilbt
musical progra.ms and five .. Evenings for
New Music." " Evenin&amp;J for Music
Theatre, " a new aeries featurine original
worb, will also be presented this Yeirf·
The Music Department pl.an&amp; apin thia
year to preamt a series of Cooperative
ConcerU, under tbe aUJpices of the
Grosvenor Society. The concert&amp;, given
on Saturday alternooru at the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library in
downtown Bu!falo, will feature recitals •
by ensembles and memben of the Muaic
Department faculty.
In addition, the Frederick and Alice
Slee bequest makes poaible an annual
series of lecturea and recitals by a resident
diatingui.&amp;hed compo.er. Former Slee
profeuon have been Auon Copland,
David Diamond, Ned Rorem, Charles
Mingus, Leo Smit and Nicolas Nabokov.
Another Muaic Department activity is
the· Opera Workahop. Profeuional quality
o
onnances such u '"The Tum of
e Sc ew ," ' 'Abduction• and
Seductio , " and "Princess Ida •• have
been stag
y lhis workshop.
Each year the Music Department's
faculty, students and music groups
participate in a pproximaUey 200

WBFO

serv ices available to industry, medical
institutions and government agencies on
an income basis.

ROSWELL PARK DIVISION
By agreement with the Department ot
Health of the State of New York, the
University has estab lished a division of
the Graduate School a t. the Roswell Park
Memorial Institute. This Institute. located
in downtown Buffalo, is one of the best
equipped centers in the world for the
study of malignant diseases. The scientific
staff, in addition to physicians interested
in clinical invest igatio n, includes a large
numb e r of scientists e ngaged in
fund ame ntal research in the fields of
bioch e mi s try , bi o logy , biophysics,
chemistry, crystallography, microbiology,
pathology , ph armaco logy a nd physiology .

!~~~~~/~i~h C:e"~~teh::c~ssC~~m~~~~~

for faculty and stude nt research at several
campus · loc a tions . Advice on
programming and computer problems as
well as some direct programming help are
provided by the Center 's Application s
Programming group .

WESTERN NE~ YORK
NUCLEAR RESEARCH
CENTER, INC.
This non·profit. corporation, owned by
the State University, and one of six
specialized University-wide centers for
inter -campus utilization, provides
instructional and research capabilities to
faculty and students. Irradiation services
are supplied by the pulsed/st.eady.-state
reactor-one of the most powerful and
versatile on any ~pus-as wel....,as
elecb'on and - p lon accelerators. A
Re
rtment, with, an
in
onal reputation in neutron
ae
on analysis research and
applications, contributes to University
pJ'Ofi'&amp;IN of instruction a,nd research.
Becauee of ita self-aupportin&amp;" na1ure, the
Center also makes its facilities and

MUSIC
The University is especially known for its
excellence in mu sic and boasts a fine
orchestra , high - qualit.y op e ra
p e rformances , several versatile
instrumental and choral ensembles, one
of the finest electronic studios in the
East, and the Center of the Creative and
Pe!'forming Art.&amp;. The department is
ever-expanding in its musical endeavors,
and the music season i.J highlighted each
year by the endowed performances of the
Beethoven String Quartet Cycle. A total
or aix J)erformances will be given this year
by the JuiUiard Strillf Quartet, the
Guarneri String Quartet and the
department 's new in-residence group, The
aeveland Quartet.
The focal point l or new mus.ic i.&amp; the
campua-bued Center of the Creative and
Performin&amp;!'"'Art.s:. Under the direction of
Lukas Foas , . Lejaren Hiller, and
newly·appointed aaais:tant director Jan
Williams, young professional musicians,
known u the Creative Auociatea, are
selected annually to reside in Buffalo to
focus primarily on the atudy and
performance of contemporary m,ua!c.
This year, 16 Creative Associates' Will be

Reiardless of your taste in talk or music,
· WBFO, the University's FM atation (88.7
mhz.) will be of service to you every day
from 8 a .m. until 2 a.m. Known for its
div ersi ty of proeramming, WBFO
broadcast-5 classical, jazz and folk music,
in addition to timely and controversial
features of interest to the University. The
station is also atfuned to the needs of the
Buffalo community . Through ita
nationally-known satellite facility in the
black ghetto, non-wRite community
residents plan and produce programming
every Saturday. The main WBFO facility
is operated by over 70 students, faculty
and staff volunteers on the third floor of
Norton Union.

ATHLETICS
SUNY AB fields teams in 10 sports:
basketball, baseball , swimming, track,
cross-country, wrestling, fencing, tennis,
golf and hockey . Teams are known as the
" Bulls" and the traditional Buffalo colors
are royal blue and wbite.
~
aark Gym facilities include handball ,
paddle ball and squash courts, swimming
pool, weight training and wrestlin&amp;"
rooms, varsity and int.Tamural baaketba11
courts, a fencing room, volleyball and
badminton courts, an apparatus room,
dance studio, shower and locker facilities
for student&amp;, faculty and atatf and vanity
personnel. Out&amp;ide facilities include
hardball and soft.boll diamonda, tennia
court&amp;, archery 'l'ild hone.boe areas,
cricket, rugby, JOCCer and lacroue field&amp;,
and a quarter·m.ile tnc~ u well u a
football field (Rotary Field). Thia winter,
if weather pennits, the University will eet
up an outdoor akatin&amp; rink for
recreational use. Pbyaical fitneaa and
jogging claues are conducted in the early
morning throughout the temeater for
faculty and staff members.

INFORMATION CENTER
Located in the lobby of Hay .. Hall ia the
Campus Information Center, open from 9
•am -5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
The pu~ of the Center il to aid
visitors in findin.c ofCJee:S and individuala
on campus.. Mapa and printed information
are available there, and staff will be glad
to an.awer your queationa..
The Viaitor'a Par:kina: Lot with
information booth is indicated on the
reverse aide, map coordinates H~15 .

�BAIRD LOT
(SfuOenll

�.. Balldla&amp;ladez

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MAIN STREET RT-5

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Page 3 I CAMPUS MAPS I SEPTEMBER 9 , 1971

17

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�BUFFALO LOCATIONS

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SEPTEMBER 9 , 1971 I CAMPUS MAPS I Page 4

�&lt;iREPORTER.,:;

September 9, 1971

7_

Music Department Schedules 75 ConcertB for 1971-72 Season
The UtB Music Department
has scheduled 75 COn&lt;&gt;!rls to
date for the 1971-72 season.
The program includes the Slee
Beethoven Cycle, faculty recitals. Creative Associate recitals,
Evenings for New· Music, Evenings fo r Musical TheBter,
recitals by visiting artists, concerts by csmpus musical organizations, student recitals, and
cooperatiye concerts. (All per-·
formance times are 8:30 p.m.,
unless otherwise noted.)
Advance tickets for performances for which admission prices are listed will be available
tbis yesr only at the Norton
Hall Box OffiCe.

a number of perfonnaiioes on
and oft- csmpus.
The Orchestra, Pamela Gearhart, conductor, will be heard
On. ' Thursday, December 9 ;
Sunday, March 26, and Thursday, April 27.
· The Opera Workshop, Muriel Wolf, director, will present
two fully - staged productions,
eacb of which will run for four
evening performances. The fnll
presentation will t a k e plsce .
Thursday- Sunday, November
18-21. The spring production
will be seen Thursday-Sunday,
2\pril 20-23. Tickets are $1.50
for general admission, $1.00
for faculty and staff, and $.50
for students.
The- Symphonic Band, under
the direction of Frank Cipolla,
will be heard in concert on
Sundays, November 7; Decem·
ber 12; March 5 and April 23
in Goodyear Hall . The con·
certs are free and open to the
public. The Symphonic Bllnd
will nlso participate in the Buf.

Beethoven Cycle

The Beethoven String Quartet Cycle, made p o s sib I e
through the generosity of the
late Frederick and Alice Slee,
will be presented by the Cleveland Quartet, newly-appointed
to the faculty; the Juilliard
String Quartet; and the Guarneri String Quartet. All per·
fo rmances will take place in
Baird Recital Hall. Tickets will
be $3.00 lor general admission,
$2.00 for faclj) t;y and staff, and
$1.00 for students.
The Cleveland Quartet,
whose members a r e Donald
Wielerstein, violin; Peter Salali, violin; Martha Strongin
Katz, viola; and Paul Katz,
cello, will open the Beethoven
cycle on Wednesday, November 3, and close the cycle with
a performance on Monday, December 13.
The Juilliard Quartet will
present concerts II and Ill of
the cycle on Wednesday, November 10, and Friday, No...
vember 12. and the Guarneri
Quartet will offer concerts IV
ber 1.

and V on Mondav, Noveml::er
29, and Wednesday, Decem·
,
F~ ;ea~ty Concert Series

The Cleveland String Quartet, now in residence at the University, will
appur both In the Beethoven Cycle and in the Faculty Concert Series~
They are: (foreground) Martha Strongin Katz, vJola; Peter 5alaff, violin;
(balckground, from left) Paul Katz, cello; and Donald Weilel"iteln, violin .

will open Wednesdax. Septem·
ber 15, in Baird Recital Hall
with a cello recital by Wolfram
Reuthe, principal cellist of the
Buffalo Philharmonic, assisted
by his wife Karin Reuthe,
piano. The program, postponed
from an August date as part of
the Summer Concert Series,
will include works by Couperin, Boccherini, Brahms, Martinu, and Tchaikovsky.
The Cleveland Quartet will
make its debut appearance on
this series, Monday, October 4.
The program will be announced
at Ona 1!:,_~~-~aayte,. October
, . at
12
, u=u
noon, a •pi;Qgram entitled "20th
Century American Songs" will
be presented by soprano, Sylvia Dirniziani; tenor, W..rten
Hoffer; baritone, Laurence
Bogue; and pianist, Leo Smit.
The husband and wife duo.piano team. ,of Frina ·Arscbanska Boldt and Kenwyn Boldt
will present a two-piano recital on Sunday, October 24. The

been scheduled. Consult the will be presented by Joel Chad·
Weekly Commun!9u.e in the abee on Friday, September 24.
Reporter lor additional con- A professor of · music at the
certs- or changes which might State University of New York
occur. Ticket prices for faculty at Albany, Cbadabee is coming
concerts are $1.50 for general to U I B under the auspices of
admission, $1.00 for facul ty and the University Artists program
staff, and $.50 for students.
of the State University of New
Creative Associates
York.
Recitals will be given by the
Charles Haupt, concertmasC rea t i v e Associates of the ter of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Music Department's Center of and a former Creative Associthe Creative and Performing ate, will give two guest violin
Arts on Wednesdays, October recitals-on Saturday, Novem20, November 17, December 8, ber 6, and on Wednesday, FebJanuary 26, February 23, and ruary 16.
March 8. A nominal fee, yet to Campus Musical Organizations
be determined, will be charged
Ca mpu s musical organiza.
this year for all Creative As- tions, which include the U/ B
sociate recitals.
Orchestra, U/ B Opera WorkThe Center of the Creative lihop; U/ B Symphonic Band,
arid Performing . Arts will also U/ B Chorus, UIB Chamber
offer "Even in g.s .for New Choir. and the U/ B Percussion
Music" on Saturday, October Ensemble, will be featured in
30, Sunday, December 12, and
Sunday, April 30.
A ' hew venture lor the Cen·
ter will be the addition of two
or three " Evenings fqr Musical

0

~itl~b;nk~!~ ~"dmf: Ilt"'!~i:d~wfar;:'p~;!i~':!

jaren Hiller.
performance of Charles -GrifLeo Smit, pianist, will pre- les' Kairn of Koridwen.
sent a recital which will .in- V'rsltlng Artists
,
elude Beethoven's Dillbelli VarConcerts by 'visiting artists
iatiom, on Monday, November which have been scheduled to
1. The recital will be dedicated date -include two recitals which
to Fred Hoyle, astro-physicist, will be a p a .r.t of ' an Early
who will .be visiting lecturer Music Series. The Concentus
here this fall. On Friday, Feb- Mlisicus, Vienna, will present
ruary 1'1, Professor Smit will the first concert of the series,
offer a program en t i tIed an aU-Bach evening, on We&lt;f.
''Roma," featuring F.lides, po- nesday, October 13.
etry, literature and music, all
The middle concert of the
~ some connection with
series, entitlec:t ' 11 100 Years of ,.
£he" eternal -city."
·
French Music: 167&amp;-1775,''
A piano recital will be pre- will be presented by. U / B harpsented by Stephen Mane&amp; on sichordist David F ·u II e r, on
Friday,. January H; on Wed- Wednesday, October 11.
nesday, Mtudl 15, · Prpfessor
The final concert will feature
David Fuller •.w ll.J . preSI!l\t an GarI Dolmetsch, recorder, reorgan n!cltal and a Faculty bee, ~ b'!!ble viol, assisted by
.Composers' Concert has been -Joseph SAxby, harpsichord.
scliilduled far Saturday, April
Tickets for .tbe series are
29.
.
'
&lt; $8.00 I or general admission,
This is only a' partiaHisting $2.00 for faculty and staff, and
of faculty recitals; many per- $1.00 for students.
lormances have not, as" yet,
A lecture on electro,n ic music

Leo Smlt, faculty pianist.

falo Chapter of the American
Guild of Organists' Choir Fes·
tival, Saturday, November 20,
in St. J oseph's Old Cathedral.
The Chorus, Laurence Bogue,
director, will present one concert on-campus and one offcampus each semester. On Friday, December 10, at noon, the
Chorus will present a C hristmas Concert in Baird Recital
Hall. The off-eampus event lor
for first semester will be a joint
performance by the Chorus,
the Schola Cantorum, and the
Buffalo Phifharmonic, u n d e r
ilie direction of Melvin Strauss,
of Brahm's Requiem on Sunday, November 28, and Tues.
day, November 30, in Kleinhans Music Hall. Performances
for the second semester will be
a nnounced la ter.
The Chamber Choir, Julius
Eastman, director, will perlofm
Machaut's La M esse de Nostre
Dame, madrigals and o the r

works, on Friday, December
17. On Monday, May 1, the
Chainber Choir will present 11
program of works by b I a c k
avant-gsrde composers. .
T h e PercuaBIOn Enremble,
under tbe direction of Jan Williams, presents each semester
at the same time of year a program of percussian classics and
the lstest compositions for percussion ensemble. The first prol!f8lll w iII be on Saturday,
:Jecember 4; tbe second, Saturday, Mtudl 25. Concerts by the Orchestra,
S y mphonic -Band, Chorus,
Chamber Cho9:, and Percussion
Ensemble are free and open to
the public.
Cooperative Concerts

Several cooperative concerts
have also been planned for the
year. 1These include three by
members of tbe U/ B Music Department in the Grosvenor Society Series of the Buffalo and
Erie County Library.
The Cleveland Quartet will
perform at the downtown library on Saturday, Janua ry 29,
at 3 p.m. The rema ining two
concerts will be mixed chamber
programs and will be presen ted
on Saturday, February 19, and
Saturday, March 11, at 3 p.m.
Programs for t h e s e concerts
will be announced at a later
date. The concerts a re free and
open to the public. No tickets
are necessary.
Two events are being planned in cooperation with College
B. The first is sched uled fo r
Thursday, November 4, a nd
will include performances by
pianist Roger Shields, a Creative Associate. The s e can d
will be a week of master classes, coaching sessions and rehearsals with Rafael Druian,
violinist a nd newly-appointed
concertmaster of the New York
Philharmonic, culminating in a
performance )&gt;y Mr. Druian
with a student chamber orchestra made up of s tudents from
the M u s i c Department and
other musicians in the area enrolled through College B. The
week of March 20-24 has been
scheduled for tbis event with
the final performance laking
plsce on Friday, March 24 .
Student Recitals

S t u d en t recitals already
scheduled for the coming year
include a graduate recital by
Karen Vogelsang, p i a n a. on
Wednesday, September 22; a
special Hallaween Opera production on Saturday, October
30, and Sunday, October 31;
a graduate recital by David
Gast, tenor, on Monday, November 22; a student composers' concert on Sunday, December 5; and a senior recilal by
David Sussman, guitar, on Sat-.
urday, December 11.

�Se,--9, 1971

8

KetterOK's

-u/B

£rof~W1JOJd, . ·t

- ~OTES

Stn[{ &amp;iuJJ£'"~;n

By "D''
This is a new column which
will be carried on · a regular
basis in Tbe Reportu. Atlelltion bere will be focused oo,
we hope, aome of the more obscure but interesting happen-

Formation of a professiooal
staft senate "to participate in
the governance of the University" has been authorized by
the administration, Dr. J . Norman Hostetter, president of the
State University Professional

~w.::~!:i=~

...

~tionatBuftruo ( SUPA)

from the university community.

announced this week.
Dr. Hostetter has invited all
staft members to participate in
discussions .and deliberations

Elsewhere in this is&lt;rue of
The Reporter is a story announcing a new program of

~~!onlliJ'!. !'sla:, ~=

structure is formed. Hearings
leading to the draftirig of a
constitution are now being beld,
he said, and lilly non-teaching
professionru staff member may
join in, by contacting a member
of the present SUPA eD!CUtive
committee. These members are
Ethel Schmidt, University conference coordinator; Margaret
Lansing, educational stud ies;
Judy Dingeldey, management;
Joe Drew, d a t a processing;
Margaret O'Bryan, undergraduate studies; John Falkides,
housing; Marilla Giles, policy
sciences; Edward Gray, instruCtional communications; James
Anderson, instructional communications; Jerry Fahey, undergraduate studies; Ronald
Stein, student personnel; and
Nancy Broderick, educational
studies.
A vote on the constitution
may be held as early as October, but Hostetter stresses
that this is only his estimate.
In his letter authorizing the
senate, P resident Robert L
Ketter asked the organization
to: "provide advice and counsel

,_

Corwersation and Colree
71'

U/B Day Care Center StartsYear In
Renovated, Remodeled Cooke Basement
The U/ B Cooperative Day
Care Center was scheduled to

open for its second year of
operations today (September 9 )
in the newly-renovated Cooke
Hall basement. Struggles over
a sub-standard location and
lack o£ organization are over,
Center spokesmen say, and this
year, e nergy will be devoted t.o
development of the facility's
progr'am.
While the Center will be operating in the same location,
"things" won't be the same.
Since last spring. a pproximately $22,500 worth of renovation
has been completed. A reading/
library room, a crafts room, a
play area, 'a fiursery, chi I dSi7..ed bathrooms a nd a kitchen
have been set up. Two rooms
have been designated " homebase" for children under three,
with two more rese rved for the
older ldds. A ventilation systern has been installed; the
lighting, improved; and the
kitchen now has an institutional refrigerator, dishwasher and
sinks. These facilities completely meet Department of Health
standa rds.
The Center still must meet
Plarot•'gronsamor(litnheg aEnrd•_estaCcfliunngtyrellegu:
)(
partment of Social Services,
Leta Richter, coordinator of
the Center, says. She is quite
optimistic about this, though,
and several full-time teachers
have been hired who meet de·
parlmehtal standards.

regarding University concerns;

assist in the development of
administrative policies and p~
cedures; provide a mechanism
for joint action with the other
major constituencies of the Uni- versity; and provide a forum
for the exchange of information
7 li!ldnalthe.__~pression ~f professto
Stan concerns.
Said Ketter, .. Within the
framework or State University
policy the president has the
power, the authority, and the
responsibili ty to make certain
decisions affecting the University. However, the abi li ty to
make valid decisions may depend upon recommendations
and advice from the staff and
other campus constituencies affected by these decisions."
Thus, his interest in the new
Senate.
SUPA, the organization providing the impetus for the professional staff senate, was es. . .- ""'tablished in 1969 "to promote
the interests and general weifare of its members in order
that the may mak
rneaninlul contributi'ona tom~
University and hence to its
educational mission." DUring
197(}.71, SUPA was active in
the deyelopment of grievance Ed.-tlonal Program
P"""'!i~ for if:s.members, in..
This year a more complete
e:ramuung conditions of em- educationru program .to meet
ployment for the _professional • the "needs of the children" is
staff and in projecting the de- planned, Bob Bell, Social Polsires of the professional sta!f 1cy and Community Servi
to the SUNY contract negob- intern at the Center, says. Edating team. SUPA members are ucation is defined l!roadly and
currently active nn the Univer- cbildren w.i I I be "offered as
""1') sity Gove~ Conunittee.
lll89Y difte~t kincls of ~ri.
ences as we can ofter. •• , Mrs.
Richter: explaina: For example,

Changes
at Club
.. ·

7

= ..r:

,

ro/'i"~~earp~
Mrs. Ethel Sc:llmidt, Univer- • Scheduled to start this Jall, if .
;:erence -e:~.
library_ liiateri81s can
tor pf thef!e!Vint '" Club. u· F'inanlle'll have been a prot&gt;.
.
1e1n for the Center and will
moved l.ci \ii: ~ ftqOr~:&lt;l probably cootinue ~ be. Half
the Club; Harrimari Library. of ita operating funds -rome
(Telepbone soo.t) ..
from fees, Mrs. Richter says,
Mrs. Susan DiamOod Cartel ..with parents pay1rig .., a slidhas NPI&amp;a!d. MilL Irene T. in« scale balal &lt;m income.
Palmer 1111 Faculty Club _ . ·Hourly ratee ranse from 20-35¢.
~- Mrs. PaJmer Tbe otber baH 'of the 1DOIIeY
retired 1111 of Aupst 6, 1971. comes from outside 80I1I'ce8.
Mri Carrel's telepbone is 3232. Currently, the Center is getting

Scl:unidt'~

conferences between students or
the university and the presidenl These will be scheduled
on a 15-minute basis, from 9
a.m.-12 noon starting Tuesday,
October 5 and continuing on
alternate Tuesdays. It seems
Conwrutlon and . . _ many whld! to us that this is an important
70 forelcn partlclpal8d in this - part of the new program by which the stuFon~Kn 1 . - Entllish ~ The onnual - " · dents can d.iscuss their cooshop helps 1ncom1,. wit!l lhoir EJIIIIsh adjust· cems and problems directly
ments to American life. Duri,. lhoir six .U,, they are with the president of the unirequired to ....... Entllish constantiJ """' ' - ... - · versity. Certainly it should maWhile at U/8, the poup toured llutlalo, Nlapra Fals en· terially reduce misunderstanding about a wide range of
peed In ''lrJ&gt;Ical" American decisions which affect students.

~11e ~

·f:::'tou:r.

money from both the Student
~tion and the Graduate
Student ~lion, but Cenler personnel would like to
find a more permanent source
of financing. One third of the
cost of the renovation of Cooke
Hall came from these two organizations wi•.h the Office of
the President and an anonymous donor providing the larg-est chunk.
•
·
The Center spends most of its
operating monies on ''graham
crackers and crayons," as Mrs.
Richter puts it- two snacks a
day, hot soup for lunch, supplies and toys. Cost of labor is
relatively low since parents are
required to work one hour for
every five that a child still in
diar-ers is in the Center; one
for every six that a toilet trained
yo ungster spends there.

not highly structured-works.
Day to day operations are ban·
died by the Steering Conunittee which is made up of members from seven standing committees. Each parent is required
to work on a standing commit,..
tee and committee assignmeilts
are deducted from required
work hours. All cleaning. clerical work and laundry are done
by parents, Mrs. Richter says,
and she is the only employee
to coordinate activities and
maintain the office in 342 Norton. Having your child in the
C(H)p "involves a lot of time,,
she notes.
Not a laboratory

...

Tbe Higher Education Act
of 1971 (H.R. 7248) introduced
by Rep. Edith Green (D. Ore.)
may be one of the 1D06t significant legislative proposals now
pending in the Congress. The
bill provides for revised student
aid programs, a student loan
market association, CODSel'V8tion, and institutional aid based
on number of students. This
bill proposes general support
grants to colleges' and universities based on the number of
full-time equivruent students at
each institution, in an amount
equal to $100 per student in
each year in lower division
courses, $150 per student in
upper division courses. and $200
Cor each graduate student. If
the Green bill became Jaw in
its present form, SUNY would
receive grants totaling $29,305,900. The University a t Buftruo
would receive $2,984,650.

...

In addition to daily decisions, the Center Steering ComIn a major policy change, the
mittee has finru say on policy State University of New York
and intrusions Jrom the out- has announced plans fo r a cutside. They are the ones who back in residence hall construescreen academic experiments. tion which wiJJ reduce projected
Children Enjoy
While the Center will continue building costs by approximately
Despite the fact that play- i:s tradition of being open for $400 million over the next five
things and craft materials are oloservation and experunenta- years. Action by the Universomelimes make:;hift, the chil- tion the Committee d 0 e 8 n"t sity's trustees will eliminate apdren in the Center seem to enjoy want the Center to become a proximately 30,000 of 36,000
themselves. A wide age range
bed
· · lJ
lanned th
gh
and a good cro&lt;..s-section of the laboratory-"that's a heJI of a
s ong~na y p
.
rou
University are represented. In thing to do to a kid, Mrs.- 1975.. &lt;;&amp;uses of ~ cutback
, hil
Richter says.
are: n smg construction costs,
addition to students c · dren,
Starting this fall, more at-. growing dilliculty in supervisCenler regulations allow for 5 lention will be p a i d to the ing and maintaining dormitorper cent faculty children and rights of the children in lest ies, and student preferences for
.10 per cent staff kids-although
fJ
1
these quotas are rarely filled, situations. Researchen; will be 0 -&lt;:ampus iving or commuting
Mrs. Richter says.
required to file, in advance, a from home. SUN"('s present·
complete description of the ex- S550 yearlv room rentrus to
lntem Bell has noticed that perimenl
students is based on a construe- .
children at the Center seem to
Tbe Center is also clarifying tion cost of $6,000 per bed.
walk and talk earlier and are its relationship with the rest SUNY now houses more than
" probably better able to verbal- of the University. It is now 50,000 resident atudehta while
i7.e." The children learn many working with the School of So- facilities to accommodate anof these things from other kids, ciru Policy and Community other 12,000 a"' under conMrs. Richter, who has a two- Services. The School has prom- "Struction. SUNY by 1975 is .
year-old there, points out, and ised to provide "managerial expected to bouse appromnate" they teach each other an am- and training guidanoe" and will Jy 46 per cent of ita anticipated
azing amount."
place one student per semester 151,000 full-time students.
"Eve&lt;ything is loosely struc- at the Center' for professional
•
•
•
lured for the child," Mn;. Rich- ~g ' ~ work experience.
Quote Du Jour- An anonyter explains, .''but the parents' The school, however, has "no mous "top American economic
interaction is tight I y con- responsibility for what's hap- oflicial :" ''Tbe reforms have
trolled." When a p a r en t is pening he1e," Mrs. Richter wor:ked just 88 well 88 we preworking at ihe Center, be .or makes clear.
dieted - and even better than
she is expec:ed to be a parent J Tbe Oflicle of the President we expected."
to every cbild there. "Children nas aJ.so promised to supply
•
quickly Jearn that they can go janitonru service for the CenHave yo11 beard Adm. Hyto any. one of the big people ter and to leaae- in Coolre inan Ricknver's latest quota-·
and set their questions answer- Hall basement to the Center tion: "A baH troth is lilre half
ed." To help parents work ef- for $1 per year. In return, the a brick:. you can throw· it farfectively; there will be orienta- Center is l:Jecominl! incorporat- ther." .
lion meetings and workshops ed under the t i t 1 e - Child
.• • •
this fall.
~
p.....,.- with repre&amp;O!IltatM!s
Tbe
of --''t ,__- - n
'Ibis training will probably from the President's OC6ce I1Dd
use
....,..._ • .--..y
be low-key and flexible like the the School of Sociru Policy and ~
~':'
rest of the organization. To the Community Services sitting .., it card to pay tluaes. Se\wa}
out s.i de r things may seem the boa r d of directors. Tbe colleses and universities , haft
slightly diso&lt;pnized because Center's Steerina: CommittA!e, jumped .., the bandwaaon and
no one petaon is in charge. furthermQre. will be responsible are """"P':ing a .variety of creelCenter staffers, however, say for "raising all ~ it cards to pay tuition. What
that the organization - while sary" to run the facility'.
nen? Perhaps peen stamps.

U,!':..,

.,.:t

�~- 9,

~PORTE~

1911

• ...

9

·SPA Wins Six Per Cent Raise, But There Are Seqerol'Maybes'
.
.

'The Senate ProfealiODSl Asaociation's """' three-year pact
with the State of N- Y ark on
bebalf ol SUNY profealiODSl
stsft ( t.escbing and DOD-teaching) calls for an a.,.,_.tbe- ·
board salary increase of six per
CI!Dt (COIDIDeiiCing July 1, 1971,
for caleDdar year .,.,Ployees and
effective September 1, 1971. for
~ year employees) in
~tion to the usual. faculty
~~ SPA State. Presi...:.t"'~ Granger told II
~
August 24 that
~tor:" •
f
alfectB both~ s. wage
the increment. ~"':'"House
_,,_
t to be 011
· !lined will
• •
,........,_, ye .
alao determine whether the !"·
crease can be made"'e~~ve
once the 90-&lt;lay fleeze IS lifted
or thawed.
1be contract was agreed UJ?On
by SPA and the execut!ve
branch of State gov~t JUSt
days befo~ the ~lXon freeze.
Membership balloting was conducted through August 27 and
~ contra?t was not actually
Signed until last week.
~·~ Hurdle
.
•
Jiu:on s wage ~licy lS !J-Ot
the only ~urdle facmg fu&gt;al ~plementation of. the salary hike.
Funds for the mcrease for the
current year mus_t he approved
by the 1972 LegJSla~ bef&lt;?re
1! gets down to grapplmg With
the,1972-73 budget. The Gove:nor s Office and the leadership
of both political parties have
pledged support of the fund~g
request but ho~ the LegJSlative
rank.,and-tile will react remams
to be seen (althoug!&gt; SPA's
Granger foresees no difficulty l.
If ~ mcrease cannot be retroacti_ve when a~;&gt;proved, Granger sa1d, SPA will seek to add
the 3 per cent lost from July
1971_to January 1972 onto salary mcreases for fiscal '72-73
and '73-74,
.
EconomiC terms for those
years were left ..open" under
the three-year contract because,
Granger . says, it will be easier
to negotiate .next year. 1972 IS
a State electio!'· year, .l'!e notes,
an~ at that .time oflic1:tls ":"d
legiSlators wtll also , be facmg
~EA ·&lt;\emands for. 72-73 and
73-74. _Apparently, 1t was fe!t
that 811\ce ~ LegiSlature . IS
usually ~ptive to. CSEA mcreases m m election_y_ear,
SPA would. find a si.milaJ:ly
f~vorable climate for the SlgnificanUy . ~er total !Iollar
amounts 1t ·will be ~g.
tha~:,"~f: mddi"!'dteded
.
ve. ""' .
~ IS no ~Y to avo•d. add!tiODSl tax .mcreases which, if
ena~.. will maJre mol'!' appropnations "'?"""' available.

":':d

HNI!h -

_,.

•

~ another ·phase of 1ts eco-

nDm!C benefits package for the

~ years, .SPA bas alao
~~ted '! health benefits
nder, making ~PA-represent"!f. emploY!""' eliglble for partiCiplltion m the S~te Dental
InsUrance P I a n Wl.tb&lt;?nt employee ~t and specifying ~t
any additiODSl benefits negotiated ~ ~
any other
bar~ urut will be automatically extend'ld to SPA employees.._,_ . .
G
:d
On !&gt;us pomt,
"'!'
CSEA will be asking for mcreased dental benefits n e x t
year and li!at the "r;ider,'' i!'
elfect, pemuts CSEA s negoli,.
ating c I out in this area of
fringe benefits to work for SPA

m:

r:anger

n_.:._,....,

n:....-..~

.llU:It:!ll .10 ~wu. Dr. Wallet G. ~ formerly proleosor of biology here,
bas- been named dean of one ol
five coUens which will even.tually make up the University
of M.._muaetts Boston.
Dr. R&lt;.m, a Bullalo faculty
member since 1966, bad been a
le8dinc spobsman for the ecology movement in the Bulfalo
......_

~

as well.
'The economic section of the
oontzact also calls for a joint
State- SPA rommittee ''Whid&gt;
sball study· the adequacy of
salary schedules for full-time
emplorees at the colleges ol
mediane and dentistry at the
U ni versi ty •Health Scienoos
Centers."
Merit 1 . . . . -

While merit increases are not
specifically barred from · ~
agreed-upon 1971-72 e00D"!"'C
package. they are not specifically included, either. The applicsble'llli!tion of the contract,
Arti~le ~X. A.c., ~tates simply, 'Nothing contained herem
shall prevent the granting by .
the University, in its discretion,
of further upward salary adjustments to individual employees."
Granger said that he felt that
SUNY itself was committed to
the merit principle and that
monies from savings and/ or uptilled lines would be found by
administration to make merit
increases available. Merit increases, be said, while ~ndorsed
by SPA had a lower bargaining
priority than increments and
the six per cent cost-of-living
b 0 0 s t. With only so much
money available in this deficitbudget year, Granger noted,
SPA felt it should not cut back
on across-the-board increases to
allow for merit money.
Also on the economic front
Granger said it is his under:
standing that SUNY pratessionsl and faculty employees
are now. eligible for unemployment benefits. He pointed out,
too, that the new contract binds
the State to pay a death benefit to the beneficiary or estate
of an employee who dies while
in service equivalent to three
times annual salary, not to exceed 520000 ( reduced by the
value of,; death benefit payable
u n de r a retirement program
from monies attributable to
contribution by the State) .

menta. According to Granger,
NTP's are now "frozen into''
their positions for a length of
time equal to their · years .of
service in the University, not
to e x c e e d three yeaiS, the
length of the overall SPA contract.
Further, before the end of the
WAGE FREEZE
The University Personnel Department has advised campus admln·
istmo"' that ''within the guide·
lines for wage a'n d price controls,
the September 1 service Increase
Is not permitted." SUNY has advised, Personnel says, that the only

increases that will be pe""itted
are for those who were promoted
in rank. The freeze also prohibits
any salary change for pther em·
ployees, including returning teaching and graduate assistants who
have no change in F.T.E.

current contract period, SPA
and the State are pledged to
develop an evaluation system
and career promotional plan for
professionals. Under the plan,
"there shall be a joint StateSPA committee of 12 persons
which shall study and make
recommendations with respect
to a system for the evaluation
of professionals." The committee findings are due by January

15, 1972, and· sball be imp~
mented by February 1. 1972,

~~~~'!"t'7P~
state comniittee

am

''aball

study and make recommenda-

tions with respeCt to a !IYatem
for the promotion of ·pro~essionala."
.According to Grangei, the
evaluation procesa to be adopted will in all likelihood be a
peer evaluation which will Iead
to lonJI!r term coiltracto. for
proless1onals, with ~t
evaluation at the expiration- of
thetenn.
.
At the local meeting concerning the contract at which Grailger appeared, some dissatiafaction was expressed conoer:ning
wording of the academic freedom policy and the system -of
peer evaluation for NTP's.
One professor suggested that
the AAUP statement on Academic:...f reed om might have
been more serviceable than the
Trustees' statement and a stall
member voiced the strong opinion that a supervisor would be
in a much better position to
evaluate an NTP than a committee of NTP equals.
The Merit Question

The major source of dissatisfaction, however, was Ute SPA
position on m e r i t increases.

Prof....,.. Thomas Coanolly ol
EngJisb. stressing that merit
remuneration was exln!maly
vital to the larger units ol the
State system, sugpsted that
this qw.tion might lMd to a
suit for the re-desigMtion ol
the four SUNY University ..,.._
ters · as ·a
te barpining
unit ~der ~aylor lAw. ~ SPA'~ position~

ment vs. cost-of-livmg, President Granger said that SPA at
this ~t has to be more responsive to the wishes of the
faculty and profealional stsft
of four-year and {wo-year units

~~"l:~~~;

more concerned with cost-ofliv1nf than merit, he sliid, thus
shapmg SPA's stance at a time
wben funds are limited.
·

SP&lt;is::.=ha~t
~
backwards" (o meet the special

-

conceno&amp;. of Buffalo and the
other University centers. He
contended that the key to greater University center input into
contract 'n egotiations lies, not
in what he oonsiders the rather
slim chance of establishing a
separate bargaining unit, but in
the lining up of more interest
and paid membership in SPA
from the University C en t e r
campuses.

Faculty Rights Established

Granger said ihe most important facet of the non-economic side of the contract is
the bestowal of "force of law"
on faculty prerogati~es and procedures which heretofore had
been "privileges" granted by a
"benevolent dictatorship." Faculty now have "rights," be
said. And, at the same time,
nothing in the contract puts
SPA as an organization into
areas of academic judgment,
curriculum or governanoo.
1be contract document, more
than 50 pages in length, ineludes such matters as procedures for academic promotion,
an outline of grievance procedures in which arbitrator decisions are final and binding, an
outline of proceedings to be
follOwed for termination with
cause (calling for judgment by
a committee of' p e'er s), and
rule~ -for D&lt;itice of non-renewal,
leaves. etc.
T h i s artiCle on academic
f r e e d o m is included, taken
from the Policies of the Board
of Trustees: "It is the J,K&gt;liCY
of the University to mamtain
and encourage f u II freedom,
within the law, of inquiry,
teaching and research. In the
exercise of thia freedom the raeulty member may without limitation, discuss h1; own subject
in the classroom· be may not,
howeve. claim ...;, his right the
.privilePs of diacuasing in his
dassroom controversial matter
which bas no relation to his
subject. In his role as citizen,
every employee bas the same
freedoms as other citizens.
However, in his extramural utteraDcell,' be bas an obliption
to indicate that be is not an
institutionaJ -spOkeinnari"
T - Apptl-lla for IITP'a ·
For non-IMcbinl profeosional stsft members (NTP'sl, the
contzact •piOYides lor the ¥
time a system ol term appoint-

r.

Ahonni Offices &amp; the University Archives

Move.toFrank Lloyd Wrrght Home on Jewett
The U/ 8 Alumni Association
and the University Archives
have moved to the Frank Lloyd
Wright house, 123 Jewett Parkway. The house, which was
purchased in 1967 as a residence for former President
Martin Meyerson, was used for
a variety of University tunctions during the last year. The
move was made to give both
organizations needed extra
space and to facilitate contact
with the Buftalo community.
Mrs. Shonnie Finnegan, Uni-

to your home. . . ." Carter
hopes the house will strengthen
ties between University and
community. He is planning a
series of dinners for community
leaders and faculty in order to
further understanding between
these groups. He also hopes to
bring student leaders and alum·
ni together for inlonnal meetings. Carter also Wants uthis
house to be 'a home away from
borne' for the alumni, a place
where they can hold business
or club meetings."

Al~ Association; are both
enthusiastic about the move.
The large amount of space in
the basement, where the Archives are now housed, enables
the collection to be located in
one place for the first time in
several years. Mrs. Finnegan
a1ao feels the location is "appropriate" since it is close t;o
other cultural centers and IS
conSidered to be a historic landmark in Bilftalo.
'lbe new location will allow
the Alumni Asaociation to expand their programs, Carter says. 'The previous C8Q1PUS oflice !iid limited meeting space
and no facilities for inlormal
oocial p.u-ings. 'The Jewett
Jocation is perfect for such
meetinga, be ooints out, since
"it's like ~vi~ 901Il80il8 over

Future. ptans call for continuing education. progranJS and
displays of student and faculty
art work. Carter hopes these
programs will "build a sense
of community among the-alumni" and help them identify with
and understand the U/ 8 of
today.
Alumni and community poopie will alao be able to visit
the U/8 ol yesterday in the
Archives. Mrs. Finnegan feels
the riew location will allow interested citizens to use the collection more actively.
tbi,s. interest will. "lmi!ft"!" our
ability to aoqwre significant
papers" from faculty, comnnmity and administration IIJI!!Il·
hers, thereby better ~t­
ing the' history ol Ul~ and
Bulfalo. Tboi.Archives will atill
continue its academic emphasis

~~=~~~;~~~f

c.:.;

She.,_

oil "gathering significant records which will help the further
understanding of this Univer;
sity." U/8 is "unique in actively preserving its history,'' Mrs.
Finnegan points out.
One area she wants to expand is the collection of Frank
Lloyd Wright memorabilia.
Started liY donations from Mr.
Meyerson, the collection includes the origins! blueprbita
and ptans for the Jewett house.
Also donated were pencil tmcings of the furniture in· the
bouse, a letterbook of conespondence between the contmctor ~ Wright, and a book ol
phodlliapha tracing the history
of the house from its earliest
occupants to the p,_t. On
extended loan from the Meyeraons are sample materials _;;
tiles and bricks-from the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo--,a building designed by Wright Out
later demolished.
The public will be able to
see these items and the bola
in late fall or early winter wbm
regular tours are scheduled to

start. Carter anticipateS a lanle
interest .in the bola oil die

part of the community. "ODe

da7 when I.,... there," he 8II,J1l,
"five people 1'&amp;111 the bell aDd
asked to see"the I:Jausl" Plani
are to retain the original furnilure aDd atmospbere.

�- G

,&lt;REPORTER,

D

SZ

ae

Sept•- 9, 1911

�September 9, 1971

Plulrinacy--Is. Now Otrering

Advanced Pharm.·n Degree
A new program o[ advanced
professional study for Jl1!annacists, leading to the dfi!iree of
Doctor of Pbannacy (Pbann.D.), will be offered beginning
this semester.
According to an announcement made by Dr. Michael A.
Schwartz, dean, S.c h o o I of
Pharmacy, the new degree program is designed to produce
practitioners with a greater level
of expertise 'in drug therapy
than can be obtained in the
School's five-year B.S. curriculum.
Pharmacists, however, must
complete the basic B.S. pibgram before they are eligible
for licensure by the State.
Stressing the "urgent need"
in the field of patient-care for
individuals with a highly developed knowledge of drug theraPY, Dean Schwartz listed these
motivating factors for the establishment of the program:
• Increasing incidence of adverse drug reactions and iatrogenic (drug-induced ) diseases,
directly attributable to drug
therapy.
• Mpunting evidence that
serious interactions can take
place in human beings between
drugs, between drugs and various foods, and between drugs
and certain testing agents used
in the diagnosis of disease.
• Errors l.n patient medica·
lion now occurring at a rate of
one out of every five doses administered
• Proliferation -of scientific
information about drugs.
The new program, one of 15
of its kind in the nation, will
enable Pharm.D. students to
acquire the necessary capabilities for contending with such
problems, Dean Schwartz says.
They will be given an extensive background in clinical aspects of drug therapy and will
aus

SCHEDULE
MAIN CAMPUs--RIDGE LEA
REGULAR SESSION
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY••
MAIN CAMPUS
RIDGE LEA TO
TO RIDGE LEA
MAIN CAMPUS
1:35 -B:25AM
1:45•
8:05AM
8:15
1:45
8:35
1:55
8:35
1:55
8:55
8:45
2:05
2,05' ( 9,05
2:20
8:55
2:25•
2:15
9 :20
2:25
9 :25
2:35
9:05
0:::35
9 :35
2:45
9:15
2:45•
9:25
9:45
2:55
2:55
9:55
9:35
9:45
3:20
3:05
10:05
9:55

a:os•

10:05
10:15
10:25
10:35
10:45
10:55
11:05
11 :15
11:25•
11:35
11 :45
11 :55
!2:05PM•
12:15
12:25
12:35
12:45'
12:55
1:05
1:15
1:25•

3:15
3:25•
3:35
3:55
4:05•
4:15
4 :35
4 :45'
5:05
5 :45
6:30
7:05
7:45

3:25
3 :35
3:45•
3:55

10:20
10:25
10:35
10:45
10:55

4:15
f25'
:35
4:55

11:05
11:20
11 :25
11:35
11:45• .
11:55
12:05 PM
12:20
12:25'
12:35
12:45
12:55

5:os•
5:2 5
6:05
6:45
7:25
8:10 ..
8 :45't•

8:25'' 1:05•
1:20
9:05 .. 1:25
9:45•• 1:35.

9 :25 ..

10:05 ..

'SATURDAY SCHEDULE-Those buses

--

m.rbd with an .-st•risk will rvn on
s.turdays.
"Those buses mat1ced with a double••

srl~o~~ ~~!:' =:~~.d.

Main ~tf'Ht Campus-DI•f•ndorf Anno
Ride• Lea-Bulldlna 4236
ACTUAL TRAVEL TIME ONE WAY
IS APPROXIMATELY 15 MINUTES

MAIN CAIIPUHUIWOOO omct:..SEU

......,, throuch Friday•

Main C.mpus
to IEirnwMd

~M

9:00
10:00
11:00
12:00 PM
1:00
2:00
3:00
3:55
4:45

It

&lt;REPORTER,

Elmwood

Offices

r:2r-~M

51:20
. 10:20
11:20
12:20
1:20
2:20
3:20
4:15
5:0S

..U .to
Main

C::~M

9:30
10:30
11:30
12:30 PM
1:30
2:30
1:30
4:25
5:10

~a~mgus-Oiefendoif Annex

Et~Ent'!~:'~!f ~~of
~~.::·~:Arf!!Sntt!:

directly

THEitE WIU aE NO ELMWOOD aus
SDrVICE ON SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS,
OR HOUDAYS.

acquire most of their practical
experience in patient~re in·
stitutions connected with the
University. Among the institutions that will be used are theBuffalo General Hospital, Meyer Memorial Hospital, the poison control center at Children's
Hospital and the School of
Pharmacy's drug information
center on High Street.
Graduates of the program
will most likely eventually
apply their skills as practitioners in hospitals or in group
practice situations in the com·
munity. They will also be qualified to join pbannacy school
faculties as members of professional practice departments.
Enrollment in U/B's Pharm.
D. program - which will be a
two-year sequence - will be
limited during the first few
years, but will be expanded
later as greater needs become
apparent.

Bicycles Are
Theft Target
A bicycle serial number registration drive launched by
Campus Security to aid in the
recoverr of stolen bikes has met
with very limited success on
campus. A month and one-half
after Security distributed flyers
and had an article in the Spectrum urging members of the
campus community to register
their bikes' serial numbers,
only three students have taken
that step.
Almost 60 bikes have been
stolen from campus since May,
Leon Griffin, assistant security
director, reports. Most are impossible to recover, he says.
" When someone reports tO us
that a bike is stolen, the only
information we get is colof and
make. Not many students know
their registration number. A lot
of people tell us the bike is a
green Schwinn. Do you know
how many green Schwinns
there are?"
Griffin says there are plans
to install more racks around
campus a nd he recommends
that bike owners buy a case
hardened chain and lock that
the Bookstore sells. "Those
things are so hard you'd need
a blowtorch to get through
them."
·
Bikes stolen in the last four
months have been five- and 10speeds, Griffift- says.

GREPORTS·
ON
GJ&gt;EOPLE

:I AMES

OIIEENBERG,

associate

Ph.D.•

DR. PERRY 0 . RANSON, W,

professor, occupational therapy;

M.Ed., SUNYAB.
JUNE BRODIE,

•

·assistant professor,

mental health and psychiatric

nursing: M.S., U/ B.

EDWARD W. BRODY, JR., assistant
librarian, University Libraries;
M.L., Emory University.
DR. DANlEL BROWN, assistant professor, education; Ph.D., University of Chicago.
ORLANDER R. BROWN, JR., financial

aid advisor, Financial Aid Office;

B.S., Tuskegee Institute.

DR. DINA CAROLINE, instructor, Co·
operative Community College;
Ph.D., University of Michigan.
JEFF CARTER, JR., instructor, Co·
operative Community College;

B.S., Grambling College.

ROBERT CASERIO,

assistant profes·

sor, English: B.A., Columbia Uni-

versity; B.A., Cambridge Univer·
sity; Ph.D., Yale University (in
process) .
OR. ELEANOR CHAFFEE, lecturer,
chemistry; Ph.D., Brown University.
DR. BYUNG·KIL CHOE, research BS·

cation; B.A., SUNYAB.

assistant
Ph.D.,

~~~!!,~~· ~:~Ji~;

OR. MATTI HARKO~"EN , research
associate professor, pharmacolofi'~ls~·· Ph.D., University of

ROM H~. visiting professor, phi-

losophy; M.A., Orlord University.
RAINIER HASSENSTAB . associate professor, architecture: Maste r of
Architecture, Unive rsity of California, Berkeley.
KEITH HENRY, assistant professor,

black studies: M.A. Political Sci-

ence, University of Toronto.
tHoMAS mcKS, instructor, soci·

ology; B.A., Michigan State University.

DANNYE R. HOLLEY,

assistant pro-

M.S.W., Univenity of Pittsburgh.

DR. EW A J ABLONSKA·SKWIECINSIU,

profes-

assistant

DR. /OLANTA ZEDRZEJCZVK, re·
search ins tructor, biochemistry;

OR.

GIWGoRY

CHUDZIK,

~h!:~Y. p~=~h, ~toK~:

tucky.

CIFUENTES, instructor,
gynecology · obstetrics, medicine;
M.D., National University of Colombia.
W . DAVID CHAMBERS, instructor,
theater; M.F .A., Yale University.
JAMES CLARK, JR., instructor, Cooperative Community College;
DR. NESTOR

B.A., Hobart College.

TERRY COlLISON , associate profes·
sor, School of Architecture; M.

City Planning and CerL of Ad·
vanced Urban Study.
CHARLES CONAWAY,

·

Dll ROBI'BT F •. EHINGER., ~te
prof~r, IOCial and .P~tive

Ph.D., DDS, Wanaw Medical
School.
DR. HUBERT JOCKIN, associate professor, pa thology ; M.D., University of Amsterdam.
DR. MICHAEL .JURCA, clinical assisa nt professor, University Health

Services: M.D., U/B.

M.~RTHA KATZ, assistant professor,
music; Juilliard, Curtis, Manhat·
tan School of Music and University of Southern California.
PAUL KATZ, assistant professor,
music; M.M., Manhattan School
of Music.

assistant profes.
J.D., Harvard Univer·

PATRICK KELLEY,

:f:y. law;

lecturer,
~~:s~cs; Ph.D., University of

DR.

JUs s I

KETOMEN,

DR. MICHAEL KIBBY_. assi!Jtant prolessor, education; M.A., University of Chicago.
DR. TOSWYA KINO, research 8.8·
sistant profe380r,· pathology; M.D.,
Kyoto University.
oa. CAROLYN KORBME'YEB, assistant
~~~e u:uov~~:.osophy; Ph.D.,
P

u

IL

rP

l.oiXJHNER,

za., assistant

DR. JOHN

ucx. us·

tanl

f

sor, psycholo,Y; Ph.D., ~':r:b:
western University.
I LIp LOCHNER, associate
dean, student affairs, School of

D1L pH

.., Law; Ph.D., Stanford Uo,ivenity.

meeting, a packet of' materials" professor, 9en:J?Scic and.S~vic;
'concerning the University and Ph.D., Uruvemty of M&gt;chipn.
lhQ community will be avail- lWIC OAL.Uml:ll, visiting .f.rof....,r,
!'!~~for each new.faculty mem- ~';.;':'~.!::""; .D., Uni-

D1L JOHAN JIU.I!:LA.ND~ research as.
sistant profesaor, Center for 1m·
munolocY; Ph.D., Univenity of
Bergen.
EDITH MARTIN, asaiatant profeuor,
adult health, School of Nurain&amp;;
M.S., U/B.
ANN P. MCEUIOY, aui.staol_profeoaor, anthropolocY; B.A., UniverSJty of Kanoas.
.... DR.. MARTIN Kc.INTYa, auoc:ia.te
profesaor, . P~cal education;
Ph.D., Uruver~~ty of Iowa.
DR. )(ICBAEL lOIENAGHAN, auistaot
1)':'8T,~t&amp;Y~~ •try; Ph.D.,

oe.. · •o- . GAliCIA, visiting IJIOis.

oe.. BA'l'ISH _,.,.., . ........,m ...a-

m_ediane: M.P.H., Uruvenuty of
P1ttsburgh.

)([LOUD PLOUJtNOY, inatructor,
Cooperative Community Coll~ge:
B.A., M1chigan State Uruvemty.

At the conclusion of the . DL G. uz FUHaTON, assistant

Dr. A. Westley Rowland
will preside at the program.

taol profa.or, philoJoophy; Ph.D.,

e:!::O!f
DR.

SWTANTABTA

OGRA,

reeearch

~=·M~~ue!!:B~

DR. YASUYO OHTA, research aaais·
tant professor, physiology (medi·
cine); M .D., Keio University.
DR. TADAO ONO, research assistant

~~~bruv::i~b~J0¥:fkyo~-D.,

visit:ing 8.180Ci·
ate professor, mathematics; Ph.D., ..._
Harvard University.
·
DR. ROHIT PARIKH,

~~ph~~~ARDsci_::~pJLb~f~~
ford University.

ROBERT PEARSON,

assistant profes·

sor, pharmacy; M.S., University
of illinois.
ROBERT .l. PflCCOUD, visiting lecturer, French; M.A., Sorbonne.
LESLIE PERRY~ assistant professor,

child health, School of Nursing;
M.S., Boston Uni':'enity.

professor,
OR.

BRIAN

PUTNAM,

counselor

assistant
education;

RATCHFORD,

assistant

~~~t!::~f !t~~~~:

~u.vm ~- assis~t professor,
information and library studies;
~ .S.L.S . , University of Wisoon·

instructor, Cooperative Community College;

MlCB.AEL T. RZVO,

M.Ed., SUNYAB.

~e!I.~,f~~e!?s~rm:r~~~: =su:n'f~r:;::so~:~

~~e ~~t:Sf;jJet;!; l.L.~Y~~U:fv~~~prudence;

College.

DR; TOBGN)' NWISO~, reee:atdl assistant-. professor, medicine • tnlf·
gtUY: M.D., Univenity of Land.
Swede1'DB.. SARAH NUNNEr.EY, &amp;llllistant
tr~= MD., Uni·

Ph.D., SUNYAB.

HSIANG,

aaaistant

~~~~;.!&gt;dS":/: ue:=:';

professor,
mathematics; M.S., National Che·
kinag University.
FRANK HUTCHINGS, JR., asSistant
professor, School of Social Policy and Community Services;
DR. FU-CHENG

DR. STEN JANSSON, research assis-

~iJe~·~~~~~~D., Trinity

N--

reee:atdl aa--

OIL SUBHASR C. NAil~

DB. · BABBARA.

research assistant professor, med·
icine; M.D., Medical Academy of
Warsaw.

DB.. SARVADAMA.N CHOWLA.,

vilitiDC

it~J:=ty~D., Ph.D.,

fessor, law: J.D., SUNYAB.

Pt~~ fn~ sU~vr:~{~y~iology;

M .S., State University College at
on Goodyear-10.
Buffalo.
The program will include DR. PURNENDU DUTrA, research as·
President Robert L Ketter
~tant professor, surgery, mt;dispeaking on "The SUNYAB ane;
M.B.B.S., Calcutta Medical

Campua- Today and Tomorrow;" Dr. William H. Baumer,
chail'lDilil. Facti.lty Senate, discussing, "Organization of Higher Edw:ation in New York and
at the State U~tiversity of New
York at Buffalo;" and Dr. W.
Leslie Barnette, professor, psychology, speaking on "Cultural
and Recreational Opportunities
in the Community and the
University."

turer, philosophy; Ph.D., Notre

Dame University.

er education; M .Ed., U/ B.
CA.ROLOfE B. BRAYU:Y, assistant

17th Is Date
For Welco77W

their spouses will be held Fri-

lee·

OIL JOHN GLAN'VIIU visiting

dentistry: D.D.S., SUNYAB.
wn.t...L\M T. BLUE, instructor, teach-

instructor,

·KILtD,

DB.. IWAO NAKAYAXA,

State' University.

professor, education; Ed.D., Syracuse University.
DR. FREDERIC GRUBER, assistant professor, speech communications;
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin.
ROBERT GUERIN, instructor, ed.U·

RUSSELL W. B!SSE'TTE,

BOBI:RT

~~~f=Np~~J~io

DR. JER&amp;OLD GR:EENBDtG, assistant

ing Center; M. Ed., SUNYAB:

DB..

seareh ...istant prof..,r, i:De!li~U~ology; M.D., U..--ty

~~::O{jni~thty~tics;

LINDA- ATKINSON, lecturer, Learn-

Medical Coli- of Jaipur, IDcliL

history; B.A., Northwestern University.

DR.

NEW CAMPU$
AJ&gt;POINTMENTS

assistan t professor, information and library
studies; M.S.L.S., Flo rida State
University.
DR. CHARLES COOPER, assistant prolessor, education; Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley.
OR. ROBERT COWEN, asslstant professor, social foundations, education; M.A., Institute of Education
in London.
JANET CRANE, assistant professor,
instruction; M.Ed., U/ B.
DR. MICHEL OO::UY, visiting professor,
fall semester, French; Ph.D.,
The University's welcome University
of Paris.
program for new faculty and

day, September 17, at 7 p.m.

Univel"Bity of Toronto.
assistant professor,

DAVID GP.aBIB,

taot prof_,r, medicine;

¥D.,

a g e m e n t; Ph.D.. Copenhagen
School of Economics and Social
Sciences.
l"E''''2l SA.LAFF, assistant professor,
music; M.M., Y a 1 e University
School of Music.
DR. GARY M . SAMPSON, visiting 88·
sistant professor, mathematics;

Ph.D., California
Technology.

Institute of

instructor, C'.ooper·
~tv~v':::aunity College; B.A.,
DANIEL BlLBER,

assistant pro-

PHILLlPS STEVENS,

fessor, anthropology: M.A., North·
western University.

~it!~:~ p~ea:~=J!~

ematics; Ph.D., Columbia University.

clinical 88·
~u~~xafessor, anatomy; Ph.D.,

DR. JOSEPH TOMASULO,

DR.

MOTOMICW TORISU,

reeearch.

~~ii:rf:"=u
~a::=
Japan_

DR. J . GBmORY VEBIIEYBCliUJt, g .

sistant professor, chemical en·

gineering: Ph.D., Princeton Uni-

versity.

.,.

JOHN VITEK.. aaai.ltant profeuor.
f:"phy: M.A., Univenity of

~
Ph.D., UnivenitY

DR. DALLAS WBBS'ID;

mathematics;

of Wiaconain.\DONALD

w.&amp;mm*

aaiatant

profwaor. music; M.S., Juilliud.

DR. SCOTT WJLLlAJIS~ uaiata.Dt

pro-

feaaor, mathematics; Ph.D., Lehigh Univenity.
l8. I8NI:st' WOIILIZIIU'I'R

profesaor, political
Univenity of

viatina

ocieDcO; Ph.D.

Cbicaeo.

'

THOIL\8 WOLn,

:,c;rpf~;

auistanl profeoM.A., Univenity

llCIWID ..........

auistant prof--

~r\v;-=:::r; M.A.' Unive~ty
125111 MEMENTOS

Memento peperwelgtrts commemo111tlng the Univen;lty's 125th Anniversary are available In the Book·
store, Norton Union. Price Is $3.00.

-

�Seplember9,1971

12

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
••Open

•Open to public;
to members of the University;
•Open only to thole with a professional Interest In the subject
Contact SUzanna Metzger, 831·2228, for llstlnp.

THURSDAY-9
Represent&amp;·
tives from Financial Aid, Student
Counseling Center, Student AI·
fairs and Services, Foreign Student Affairs. Minority Student
Affairs, Academic Advisement,
Career Guidance and Placemen~
INFOUlATION PAIR:

::-~t I_!_~=ti~:n~

_

\

present to answer your questions
and ...Ut you. Center Lounge,
Norton, 10 a.m.--4 p.m., 7 p.m.-9
p.m.
UNn'DSITY.PICNJC: A summer picnic lunch. Meal tickets available
at cost except to students on
board contracts. Tower Lawn, 11
a.m.-1:30 p.m. ICE C8BAJI BAa: Sundaes, cones,
popo, etc. Norton Courtyard, 11
a.m.-4 p.m.
CR&amp;\'I"'VVC CllAPT8 PAIR: Clay and
Sculpture Worbhop. Creative
Craft Center, Basement, Norton,
1 p.m.-4 p.m.
BOIIBICB.ACK. RIDING: Ezcunion to
Scrahble H i II Riding Stablea.

~~· (~%rta~:.~

EX.CUitSJON

TO POVERTY HILL: Stu-

dents m\Ut register at Norton
Ticltet Office by 10 a.m. Box din-

ners are available at Food Serv-

~ctN~'::o~eap":ni~~ a~~1

f::::

Bus will return from Poverty Hill
at 7 p.m .

EXCURSIONS TO BUFFALO ZOO AND

ALBJUGHT·KNOX ART GAUDY: Students must t"egister at the Norton
Ticket Office before 10 a.m. Bua
leaves from the front of Norton

u.;; d~~naide~:t~ P~bif~

up at Buffalo Zoo entrance at 6
P-~

CRAFTS FAIR : Ceramics
Workshop. Creative Craft Center, Basement, Norton; 1 p.m.-C

CREATIVE

p.m.

.

J"8EEi GAME HOURS:
(Freshmen
and Transfers only). Recreation
Area, Norton, ~ p.m..-5 p.m.
OUTDOOR MOVIES : " Fanbutic Voyage," "Robin Hood." (Open to
dorm residents only) _ T o w e r
Lawn, 8 p.m.

~~co~~~=-~

Lawn (Haas Lounge, Norton, in
case of rain) , 8 p.m.
~t~~
'ts~:are: MIXEQ MEDIA : ..Balloon Piece."
from the front of ~orton prompt- Fillmore Room. Norton, 8 p.m.
ly at 5 p.m.
CINEMA: "Catch 22." Conference
n:Ha:NO IJIDIONS'nlATION: M~­
Theatre, Norton.
ben nf the U/B Fencing Team.
C 1 N 1! K A: ..West Side Story." ART DISPLAY: Second Floor Art
Fillmore Room, Norton. 8 p.m.
Capen 140.
·
Gallery, 219 Norton.
OU'ftlOOII KOVU:S: Sponsored by
the Greek Letter Societies. ''The COFFEl: HOUSE: Folk Singer EnCur • e of Frankenstein" and tertainmenL S po n so red by
TUESDAY-14
"Dracula as Risen from the UUAB. First Floor Cafeteria,
Grave." Tower Lawn, 8 : SO p.m. · Norton.
UNIVERSITY OPEN BOUSE: Exhibits
OUTDOOR R 0 C K CONCZRT: '"The
and demonstrations all over camSUNDAY-12
Road." Baird Lawn, 8 :30 p.m.
pus. 9 a.m.·S p.m.
1'11101 GAKB BOUIIS: (Freshmen and
EXCURSION TO POVDTY HILL: Stu· iNFORMATION FAIR: Center Lounge,
Transfers only) . Recreation Area, denta must register at Norton Norton, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Norton, 9 p.m..-11 p.m.
Ticket Office by 10 a:m. Box din· UNIVERSITY CRD..L PICNIC: HamCJNDU.: "CaU:h 22." Sponsored ner will be available at Food Serv- burgers, franks and other delights.
Bus leaves (rom the front of Norton Courtyard, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
by UUAB. Freshmen and Trana- ice.
fers $...60. All other studenta $.75. Norton at 11 a.m. Bus will Jeave ROCK CONCERT: "Natural." Baird
Ticket. are available at the Nor- Poverty Hill at 8 p.m.
ton Ticket Office. Conference The- CB.EATJVE CB.AFI'S FAJB : C a n d J e ~wnof&lt;=. ruu~:;n~~~nP.:
Making Workshop. Creative Craft
atre. Norton.
Center. 307 Norton, 1 p .m..-4 p.m. CREATIVE CRAFTS FAIR: Ceramics
Aft DIBPLAY: Second Floor Art
Creative Craft Center,
Gallery, 219 Norton.
FREE GAME HOURS: (Freshmen and Workshop.
only). Recreation Cen- Basement, Norton, 7 p.m.·lO p.m.
~ -----=
F1R==~I[)~J\-=1C=----10
______ Transfers
ter, Norton, 2 p.m.·4""j):lh.
FREE GAME H 0 U R: (Freshmen
and Transfers only). Recreation
EltCUBSION TO NIAGARA FALLS AREA :
INP'OilMATION FAIR: Center Lounge, AmeQcan a n d Canadian sides. Area, Norton, 7 p.m..-9 p.m.
Norton. 10 a.m.-4 p .m.
·Students must register by 3 p.m. CINEMA : "A Funny Thing Hap·
at the Norton Ticket Office. Free
CIIE.\TIVI: CIUFI1I FAIR : Belt Malt·
ing .~o~.9.1'· Creative Craft -Freshmen and Transfers. $.50 ~:Fr!hm~:y ~dth~::
Ce\l~'orton. 1 p
4 p .m. -All other students. Buses will $.50--all other students. Tickets
leave from the front or Norton will be sold at the Norton Ticket
oornz _ROUSE: Folk Singer En- promptly at 3 p.m. and will re- Office. Conference Theatre, NortertainmenL $.25 discount Cor all turn at 11 p.m.
ton, 8 p.m.·lO p.m.
Freshmen and Transfers. Ticlteta
must be bought at tbe Norton WE 8 LEY FOUNDAnON ACTJVJTY : KARATE DEMONSTRATION: Sponsor..
What
in
the
World
Do
We
Have
ed by the Tae-Kwon-Do Ka rate
Ticltet Office. First Floor Cafeto Do?" a mixed media evening Club. Haas Lounge, Norton, 8
teria, Norton, 8 p.m.-10 p.m.
.
sponsored ~ United · Protestant p.m.
MIXED JO:DIA: "Balloon Piece."
Fillmore Room. Norton, 8 P.m. ~e~~~U~nUn~~i;, ~~tto:;~ TERRACE CONCERT: Norton Terrat.-e
(Ra
thskeller,
Norton,
in case of
OUTDOOR BOCK CONcarT: .. Rush_" an Churcb, 3330 Main SL, 7 p.m. rain), 8:30 p.m.
Baird Lawn (Haas Lounge, Nor- BALKAN POLK DANCING:A;'F illmore
BUFFALO PHILHJJlMONJC SYMPHONton, in case of rain), 8:30 p.m_
Room, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
E1"TE : Melvin Strauss conducting.
suu. BB88ION: Norton Steps. 9 CINEMA: "Catch 22." · (See 9/10 Fillmore Room, Norton, 8:30 p_m,
p.m.-12 MidnighL
for description and prices.)
ART DISPLAY : Second Floor Art
.I'RIZ GAKB BOUliS: (Freabmen ROCK CONCERT: (tentative) •tSavoy Gallery, 219 Norton.
and Tranafen only). Recreation Brown, AI Kooper, Cactus and
Area, Norton, 9 p.m,_-11 p.m.
Others." Tickets on sale at the
WEDNESDAY-15
CINDU: "CaU:h 22," sponsored Norton Ticket Office. Rot a r y
Field.
.
by UUAB. Freabmen and Trans·
Cera $.50. AU other students $.75. AltT DISPLAY: Second Floor Art INFORMATION FAIR: Center Lounge,
Tteketa available at the Norton Gallery, 219 Norton.
No~ton, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Ticltet Office. Conference Tbeatre,
CR.AFTB FAIR: CandIe Making
Norton.
.Workshop. Creative Craft Center,
MONDAY-13
CINEMA: "Weot Side Story."
307 Norton, 1 p.m.-4 p.m.
Freshmen and Transfers $.50. AU INFOIKATION FAJil: Center Lounge, HORSEBACK RIDING : Excursion to
Norton,
10
a.m.-4
p.m.
other students $.76. Freshmen
and Tranalers must obtain ticlr.eta Ci&amp;ATIVI: CitAnS FAIIl: Belt Male- ="b'~~~ ~t:.,~ld~R~r~
at the Norton "ncket Office. No
0
ing
Students must register
discounts will be allowed at the . ~te~ So'7hrio~to~~a:.:.-4cP~ at the Norton Ticket Office by
...., door. Capen 140.
.
4 p.m . .Bus leaves from the front
BCIENC:Z OOLLOQUJUI(:
1'!IION'ft CAitLO NIGHT AND ltOCit OOJO"tJ'aal
Dr. Thomas Evans, Air Force of Norton promptly at 6 p.m.
'lAND: (Open to dorm students Cambridp Raeareh Labomtory,
CINE&gt;U: "In the Heat or the
only). Tower Cafeteria.
·
Art~iof lntelli6ence Techniquu
NighL" Free - Freshmen and
Applied to Sy•te,.. Prob,.,... Tra.nsfers. $.50 - All other stu1ft DIIII'LlY: Second Floor Art
Room
41,
4226
Ridce
Lea,
3:
30
dents. Conference Theatre, Nor· tallery, 219 Norton.
p.m. Ref-'&gt;ments to follow.
ton, 8 p.m. and 10 p.ni.
CJNDU. : "A Funny~ HapOU'mOOil CON&lt;ZRT: ''Gingerbread
SATURDAY-11
Expreaa."
Baird Lawn, 8 p.m.
r=_~y ,t:dthe~ru:;:
CA&amp;NIVAL: ""*'red by the Stu$.50 all other otudenta. Conference I'CNCING DUIONBTRATIO.N: U / 8
Fencing
Team.
Tboatre, Nortnn. 8 p.m. and 10 Norton, 8 p.m. H a a • _ Lounge,
.
p.m. '
QIIOUP DYN.UOCS AND DfOOUJrf'IWi caU, lliim.u.: Wolfrom Reuthe,
Karin Reutbe. $1.00 students;
WO&amp;IIIIBOP: Hau I..ounp, NorS2-00 faculty and otalf. $3.00 PD·
ton, 8 p.m.
oral admiooion. Baird; 8:30 p.m.
llc:tmalf D.AN~ WOIIUBOP AND
A&amp;'l' DIIII'LlY: Second Floor Art
~AftON : Time and Place
Gallery, 219 NorWI.
tobe..............t
.

.p.:.

1:.

:ft

...,. ....
(Moet et

u. . . a

""~toad.".,.

Center Lounge,
Norton, 10 a.m.-C p:m.

a:

rodl

~

~

......_..

ALIIIIIGB'I'·KNOX AliT GAU.IIrY: Student. must regiater for tl-e bus
at the Norton Ticltet Office by
10 a.m. on Saturday. Bua leaves
from the front of Norton prompt-

THURSDAY-16
INPOitMATION PAIR:

CREATIVE CIUFI1I P A I

..

In this ___.. Communique .,. ~~

\h.
at.g '!l:r:- .~~~~~~
Knox at 6 p.m. Leaves Buffalo

Jewelry

~~~~.r~r::!t. ~.!~~

0

1 p.m.-4 p.m.

Zoo at 6 p.m,_

SpoldOred by the Tae-Kwon-Do Karate
Club. Haas Lounge, Norton, 8
p.m.
CINEMA: "In tbe Heat of tbe
NighL'' Free - Freshmen and
Transfers. $.50 - All other students.. Tickets on sale in the Norton Ticket Office. Conference Theatre, Norton. 8. p.m._ and 10 p.m.
GROUP DYN.UO.CS AND ENOOUNTa
WORKSHOP: Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
OUTOOOil CONCERT: "Barbara Sinclair and the Pincushions." Baird
Lawn (Fillmore Room. Norton.
in case of rain), 8:30 p.m.

U/8 BPORT8 CAR a..UB AUTOalOBS :

KA&amp;ATB DEM:ONS"ftlATtON:

·

12 Noon-5 p.m.

~-=e: o~:)_ ~:
0

·

Area, Norton. 2 p.m..-C p.m,_
UNDI:ItGaOUND T B Z AT a 1: : Tbe
Swamp Fox Playen.. "The Sloan
Trilogy." Fillmore Room, Norton. 8 p.m.
lOCK

CONCERT:

"Space Opera."

Clark Gym, 8 p.m.
OOPPI:I: BOUSE: Folk ~tertain­
ment and a menu of delights.
$.25 diacount Cor Freshmen and
Transfer Studenta on I y. First
Floor Gafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m.
CINE&gt;U : HiU:hcoclt Series. (See
¥ru~.' ci'ef."n'd~·~ S~~~ 9/ 17 Cor details) . Conference TJie.
schedu1e for times of showings). . atre, Norton.
: " BuU:h Cassidy and the
ART DISPLAY : Second F1oor Art CJNDU.
Sundance Kid." (See 9!17 Cor
Gallery, 219 Norton.
details). Capen 140.

FRIDAY-17

SUNDAY-19

Center Lounge,
Norton, 10 a .m..-4 p.m.
CREATIVE CRAFTS FAIR: Clay and
Sculpture Workshop. Creative
Craft Center, Basemen~ ·Norton;
1 p.m..-4 ~.m.
CINEMA: " Butch Cassidy and tbe
Sundance Kid." $.25 discount (or
Freshmen and Tran.slera when
purchasing tickets at the Norton
Ticket Office prior to perform·
ance. No discounts at door. Capen
140, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
CROUP DYNAMICS AND ENCOUNTIZ
WORKSHOP: Haas Lounge, Nor·
ton. 8 p.m,_
OOFFfZ HOUSE: Folk entertainment and a menu of delights.
$.25 olf Cor Freabmen and Transfers. First • Floor Cafeteria, Norton, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.
FREE GAME HOURS: (Freshmen and
Transfera only) _ Recreation Area,
Norton. 9 p.m.-ll p.m..
Aft DlBPLAY: Second Floor Art
Gallery, 219 Norton.

U/8 SPORTS CAR a..UB AUTO IULLY.

INFORMATION FAIR:

~==-~i~~39s.;:~_::ts~
Freabmen and Tranafera. $.76 AU
other •tudenta. Ticltets may be
purcbaaed at the Norton Ticltet
Office. Conference Theatre, Norton.
CINDU.,.. "Bedazxled." (!)pen to
Raidents on I y)". Tower

r:::_

SATURDAY-18
U:CU1810N TO BUPPALO ZOO AJrfD

12 Noon.
FIIIZ --..noN: (Freshmen and
TranaJera only). Recreation Area,
Norton, 2 p.m.-C p.m.
CINEMA: Hitcbcoclt Series. (See
9/ 17 Cor details). Confei'Onoe Tbeatre, Norton.

OTHER ACfiVITIES
Monday, 7-10
p.m., Coed; Tueaday, 7-10 p.m.,
Women · onlli'!, Wt&gt;dneaday, 7-10

SWIMKING POOL:

~: ~y, 'S."to'Yp!_~O &amp;:i;

Saturday, 1-3:30 p.m., Coed;
~=y, 2-5 !?.tn.,
Clark

c..-

NORTON BCRZ.\TJON ADA: Billiards, table tennis, cheao, cards
and bowling facilities are located
on the cround Boor of tbe Union.
Mondal, • Tburaday, 8 a.m.. 11
8

~~~~'i

:::.tf t:t::i:t~

Sunday, 1 p.m.-11 p.m.
(Aa of September
71h)Monday-Saturday, 8:30a.m.11 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-11 p.m.

IIATBBKKLLI:B:

NOTICES
nm ..,.........,... or BP""-- rr.u.-

WIAND~..-to

indiaota that all of ~­
ilh 101 are otill __,.,.,;ouy

f.!'/.~"""~

the Dopa-~ ia' not - . y
to nciater in _lOIC at 10 am.

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 2-NO. 34

MAY27, 1971

Emergency
SPA Meet
Is Called

President
Reports
OnYear
Tbl! - o f SARA and the
Board ol Truoleeo' - - - · ol

a ..-utB vai6e b.~

pl.aluliDI
- y.- Clitedthe
hilblilbts
oflbe
in 1'1-.
idem Robert Kaa'a report to :
the IIDilU8l ....tiD~ of the ina
facutty n-lay .a ftemoall.
Ketter bepn his CXIIIdel-s
history wilb a diaculllion ol
the problems facing him *bell
he started last .July. -rt-, be
BBid, lbe ...-it)' ... .,....
ate an !'onle!'IY, ...........! pro"""" .ot manio....-t" at U/8
and lbe .-1 IDliDd a group of
people to amy out tbia piOCOIIIL
In Jooldng back over the aca·
demic year, the president obeeiwd tbat every action seemed
to haw . the ''word budget attac:bed to iL'.' His JDIIior CXIDcem in this - . u to "operate
the UniwnlitY (in·a tilbtDudset year) with a minimum of
liamaJe ID aeademic Pftiiii'8JDS."
Tbl! year's moat di16euk decision was to eliminate football, 'the president BBid. The
sports area was not all bleak,
This year's Commencement
however, sin&lt;e •.he feels U/B j)n)gram COYer is bloo-bopetook the "lead" in financial aid fully to match the skies for
policieo for diaadvantapd IIW· .......,..,_.s outdOor ceremonieB
dtlnts ,..,.__..,ted to the Na- acheduled b Rotary Field at
=tio~lletllate "Atb\elic A&amp;- 10:30 a.m.
.Appromnately 4,500 January
"SigD;ftcant advanoe8" ...,..., and May graduates will be
made in the area of minority listed in the program and thoupropams, the pnlllident said. aands of them, their parents
EPIS will ~ its first 16 and families, ......!her with Unistudents this spring, three hav- Winlity dignitaries are - t e d
ing earned Phi Beta Kappa to tum out for this 125th rekeys. The future, however, is newal of the graduation ritual.
The first University Commence(Continued, on 3, col. I) -

A Blue Program &amp;Hopes for Skies wMatch
Are Awaiting Tomorrows ~25th Commeru:x!ment
ment, in June 1847; involved
the conferring of 1!1 medical

~OieBt

I. Boy;..,
cellor of. State Uruveraity !if

!i:
f o c a I point of the program.
~'"l"a~t.

Also on the agenda are: the
aymbolic a~ of ~
and the hooding of docfo~
gree recipients; the l'resentation
of the Uniwnlity s b i gbe st
honor, the Cbancellor's Medal,
which bas been awarded an-

Senate Group Studying College A Case Asks
. IncomJieteg Pending Faculty PolicyAction
·

Colleae A students ''wbo do and tbat it will be tmnsmitted
not wislt to • compromise .their to the E_,.,tiw Committee imeducatiaaal nln"lnonnhv regard- mediately tbereafte.r. HopefulinC self-evaluatiiiil.r-ilhould be ly, Baumer said, the report and
g;..,.. a IIJ1Ide of incomplete for its recommendations on a selfthis ·-u.r "peDding prompt' evaluation policy will be an
IICiiaD" .., the by the 8jlellda item for the finlt fall
Faaalty &amp;Dale, the Senate Ex- meeting of the Faaalty Senate,
ecutiw Committee recoin- scheduled fat September 14.
mended MODday.
At Reporter deadline, Dr.
Howeoer, the Executiw Com- Daniel Munay, acting vice
mittee added, "until ouch time president fat academic affairs,
as joint faculty-edminiatnltiw said he bad no OIIIDIDellt on the
action .-.1- tbe iMue • . • Executiw Committee recomaU otudomla and faculty abouJd IDI!Ddations ... he bad DQt bad
.......,.;..e that the PolicY as time to review them 1horoucbSl-.ted by l'reaiaent Xet- ly.
ter sllmda."
FeaoltJ Input . thete
In iia report, the Executiw
....~.:..~ ~!:'r·tbaBenat
~- emnluisi._.
Committee said it~ 1'1-.
,..... w ~- only tba\, ident Katter'a diJec:tive of May
and tbat it could be imple- 12 ruling out self-evaluation in
manted only by ..tministmtiw CQIIeee A and el8ewbere in tbe
action. AU tbe Senate ·can ao-• Unlwnlity as tbe finlt adminq,ally do ia ~ a 180lution islratiw comrmmicat.ioo to tbe
stating its poaltion on self-eval- faculty on the matter. Under
uation. A sub-eommittee on the accepted AAUP ~ the
...U.... of the Senate's Educs- Committee
"the facultY
tion8l Plannlna and Policy . abouJd DOW ~ an opporCommittee Is DOW ~ .a tnnlty to respond."
repoot .., tbe matter, be said.
'Ibe Executi¥e Committee
It is apected that this report comrmmicaliaD ...........t the
will be r.dy in a _., or so ~ ol. tbe ......,_ IJrouabt
by the Colletllate Aaaembly
....m.t Adint Vice l'laldlat
LASt IIIUE ai YfM
It llddr-' to
Todly'a II the I!MI of the Mlll'l:IIY.
.......,for the 1910-Zl..-...lc Munay, to the pnaldent and
yeor. We wiD .......,. _ . , pub- 1o tbe m-a of the CoiJeiiate
lication Thu...,, ............. 9. ~, . pievance, the Executi¥e
Meanwhile, our fllr your

nually since 1925 to an "outstanding citizen of Buffalo," and
the conferral of Ci v e of the
chan- University's 125th Anni-.y

rae-

the respoi,s;bilities of the
ultx and the administration to
fully and openly discuss all
matten; relating ... educstional
poHcy before the necessity for
action is forced on one or the
other by pre!IBiln!8 of time."
8 FThe Executiw Committee
found particUlar fault with its
own actions on the matter, as
weU as with tboee of the ColJegiate Assembly and the actina y;ce
_ president for acsdemic
_ • .
alfaira
o-n,;, present grievance ooold
· not haw' occurred if the Senate
ExecutiO)&gt; Committee bad acllld
positively on the -lions o1.
the legitimacy of self-evaluation as sole gradinc criteria.
The Senate Emcutiw Committee cannot plead i,._..,.,. iD
this matter nor a lad&lt; of appreciation of the various COlicems about Ibis iMue _ _ .
by faculty, students, and adminlsliation.
· "'lbe . . . - t grievaDce could
not haw occurred if tbe Colllciate ABmbly bad tumed 1D
· tbe Senate foe a finding cin this
iBie instead of CXJDiinuinl to
coaduct a two pouty CIIJDWI!Ba•
tion with tbe ai:tlnl; viae pnaident b.........,;., dalra
it b.a lieCc.- ~ tliat ma
I...- Mol blwll-.dwl _.ty
in this ......... 'lbe - beinl •'-1 in the~
~tllle cbuied. .,. • -.It ·the JindiDp cl the
tntarpat and - - - . , . til a lllalfunclioD ol.the Unltw- cammitllle are ol.
ty wide
the )IMr and our fllr ' llity
IIY*m. It ,.... alpll' ..,.. and it Ia app8art
an enjoyable. - ·
llecla a lack ol. IQIIIIeCiatlaa ol. (Coootioolled- 6, CG(. I)

A~

-

Preai~nt Robert I. Ketter
will confer degrees and tbe Rev.
E dward T . Fisber, Catholic
chaplain a t the University, wiU
give the invocation and benediction.
In the event that bad weather
forces the program inside, an
announcement to tbat effect will
be ma~ over local radio and
television by 8 a.m. tomorrow
morning &lt;Friday, May 28).
Assembly areas under the alternate plan are: Faculty of
Arl8 and Letters and Faculty
of Social Sciences and Administration, Clark Gymnasium;
l&lt;'aculty of Educational Studies,
Diefendorf 147; Faculty of
Heallh Sciences, Butler Auditorium, Csll!'l' Hall; Faculty of
Natural Scumcea and Mathemat~ HocbsU.tter 114; Faculty of Engiru!ering and Appli&lt;!d Sciences, A~n 5; and
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence, Conference Tbeiltre,
Norton.

An "emergency meeting" bas
been caUed by the _local chapter
of the Senate Prolamonal Association (SPA) for this afternoon (Thuraclay, May 27) to
disc:uas tenns of SPA's CXJDtnlct
package for SUNY faculty and
staff. Expected to be at the
meeting, scheduled for 3 p.m.
in Norton's Fillmore Room,
are Dr. &amp;bert Fisk, of U/B,
tbe university center re"'reaentalive at ·t he bareaimng
table.
After months of confidential
negotiations, these men are now
free to discuss the terms of
SPA's proposed con t r ac L
SPA's Executive Committee
sent the matter to fact-finding
last Friday. Earlier this month,
SPA and the Office of Employee Relations (OER),
which works with the SUNY
central administration on bargaining, declared an official
impasse over the non-economic
parts of the contracL After
mediation, headed by Thomas
Morgan, a Long Island attorney, impasse was reached also
on economic issues.
D~t centers on
theM two-. Lemard Snyder of U/B, State SPA treasurer, SBys. 'Ibe f'll8t disagleement is over SPA's demand
that DOD-&lt;lCOnomiC matters be
part of the corrll'llcL The second
is tbe impasse over economic
terms.
Non~lc-

SPA wants academic policies
on such mattem as appointments, promotions, sabbaticals
and tenure included in the oontraoL These mattem are already
covered in sections 11 through
14 of the Board of Trustees'
Policies and the State, thus, argues that their inclusion in tbe
corrll'llct is unnecessazy. However, Dr. Patricia Hollande.,
alte.mate U/B repreaentatiw to
SPA's Council (If I.lelegMes,
said that at fast SaturdaY's
SPA meeting, SUNY Cbenclellor Ernest Boyer pointed out
tbat Trustees' poljcjea ean be

overruled by the LeaWa1me
while CXJDtmotuai terms cannot.
SPA is also ~ a "ay&amp;~ .-~- ~----~- Oft. ptWe 3, coL

--a____
. . . . ... _

.a. -- -

ao-n..-

·.

...._,....~Henta.-afiiiiiU.S.

......,_"'"

...... fl .....

___

..,_

of I I I I I - - IIIIa,- polllclpal
, . . . . . , .... ~--

~. afwlllc:llllla .. poaaldant- ......... ""' ......

_ . , . . . . . . . . . ...., . . . . of ...... - - . "

�:~

. 2.

Sub Boord I
Elects Slate
Of Officers

Phi Beta Kap~ Sdurluks lnt1ut:tinn
Of ItS Neiv Members inNorron 1bday

Tbe iDitiatlon of members Into U/B'e OmX:toa ChaPBiectian ol olllcera and allo- ter of Phi Beta Kappa will &amp;e
cation of $6.000 for a 8IIJDIDm held this aftemooa. May '¥1, at
budlet for Poverty Hill beaded 3:30 p.m. In the Coof...........
the ...,.. at Sub Board I. Theatre, Nor1Ga.
lDc.'a atlllU8I meetinr last
On tbe ptOJnUD will be an
Thursday alabtlnlnlductiOD by Dr. John
T -&lt;.. • - ' A - t of tbe {)bapter•
,
At the .-loa, more of a .......,
,.,_
nutlne "'*- ..-t1ng thaD the presentation and lnlzoduc..
atlilU8I f'IIYiew the members tiOD of 1971 Initiates and the
elected Paul
their pteSS~.tal:ion of awards by Dr.
c:balrmaiL Other oll'icets .
Leslie Bamette. secretary;
are 8cdtt ~. Yioe chair· a;Dd an adclreM on "Edl!ca·
-~-""~ ___. Dave Bar- tiDaal Val,_.. ·by Dr. B . Ricb;;;k,~.-CumtniD1 Ia ard Buplald. distlnJuisbed
elao the Graduate Student As- f....... Depmment of
eoc:iation'o (GSA) llludent af- ogyA.
. .,_ for Initiates,
fairs vice praident, 8leslnaer
-~
.
liB!•
is II8CIIIId vice preeidont o1 the enta and friead8 will follow m
Student Alooclatlan (SA) and the Faculty Club, ~ ·r.;.
Barmak i s - of SA.
brary, at .4:30 p.m.
-.

c.

c:.....,;,;, ..

w.

Janice Geus CaumriDe, IDCiolOCY; Betty F. Davia, .ontbropoioC)'; Susan L Diamoad,
opeech eommwtication; Robert
l..ouis Dole, aoc:ioJoly; DeliDis
Lyle DraiziB. biolocY-bietory;
DoriDDe Fuller Ebel, Englisb;
Martha Lewkus Faller, oociology; Slilvatore F'amlliia. biolo-

arda, German....t history; Lenis

·SA Hire$

~fOr i

Undergrads .

J~ Ri!*Zo psycbololf.;
Donna Hue RiMer,~­
oiOSY; . IrviDI Rcambaum. po-

Utical· scieDce· TariDa R. RoBentbal, RUEI8n; Priacilla Jome
Rosa, ~· AdrieDDe J .
Rotbstein, 8puisb;
.
MadeleiDe Ballman. English-.
gy; Linda Jean Darui Fitzhuib&lt; claasic:s; Stanley M. ~
phil~; Jc.eph ZeH For- bioloiY• David EmeliKIIl Scarstat, history; Wdl.iam Andrew ~ pbiloaoJ&gt;h:r; Donna
Fried, biolOSY; · Carl Tan:isio Fleclt Schatt, P8Y.c:boloiY; MarFumaplli, ambropolosr;
- jorie Louise Sdwlte. malbe· ~tricia Kane Gareis. phil- matics; Gretchen Marla

oaoph.y; ~ E . Gew.ond. Scb-..m, chemistry-lllllolba-.
mathematics; Stewm Z. -Glic:bl. matics; Ronald FrsDeis 8eYd!&lt;,
NormaD P. Effmm. '¥1, will
biology; Linda Goliae&lt;. eoc:lol- claasics· Cindi Ann Sio!tiBl. _...... SA's lepl worlt. Aeogy; Paula .Susan Greellhaum. .ma~c:hology; 8!w:i . Clll'diDI to .on
bemusic; J0811118 E . Gnelewski. S . . Sirkin. ecouomica; Dell&amp; SA and Mr. Elfman. be
English; Ruth Lyford Hamma, ·Smith, Americ&amp;D studies;· Aud- 'will bold olfioa baura OD camhi.story;.Lawrence Stephen Har- rey Stein.· JISYdlology; 8uaaD pus _one
a ....-. pfovide
ria, history; Eileen Harrison. 1.evy · Stemerman. psyd&gt;ology- lepl adVJOe to lillY UDCiersi'adupsycbology; Mary Eunice mau-tics; J:.wrene 'SuaaD ate In custody and 1epl reptical eaaay on a topic of im- Harlke. .Frencfl; Albert R. Hat: Strutln, ·Freoch· Eilem Linda reaentation at aucb a student's
portance will be Presented to tam, psychology; Clare Louise Suprane., ~; Sheila ~t,aom.atudentaon
Deborah Woodard for a work HI!Ddra, plill!Jiqlby; Caroi .EI- CodlraDe SW.onaon. hi at o r .y; civil matters lllldl as ·laDdJord
entitled, "Energy and Directloo leD Hoffman.' sPeech pathology; .Bernard Traub, 'p hllaaophy; Ir- disputes, aaalst the Office of
poOOcal sci- Student Rilbta and provide
iJr (MelvilJe'a ) Mardi" WiDDer Alan M. Jacobiion. 8DCiology; . win Bruce
o1 tbe Samuel P. Capen Prize Kenneth Marl&lt; Kahn, econom- ence; Ralph J. Vitello, Freoch; lepl advice to all I'8COIDized
for the undet!lladuate wbo beat ics-ma!Mmatics; David Abra· Robert Edward Wallrer, aeo~- student poupa.
~ free Inquiry and 8l&lt;- ham Kanto.-:i~ ~dl;olocY; ~; Bamaa C . ·v,:ecNJar,
Mr. E1fDiaD received a B.A.
pi'8881011 In &amp;I! eaaay as Robert Barry Jerome Kaplim, history; Englioh; Davtd Ira We-. pay- ln"political scieDce liere In 1965
L. Dole for his ~Fuhion Change ~ Ma'!!f. · Kaplow, computer cbology; Marl&lt; W~ hill- and a JD. -from U/B's 8chool
and 8ocial Change." Both prizes aoence; Bill Howard Katz. po- ~effrey lswis Weitz, eco- of Law In '1.968 He served as
cany a cash award of $60.
- ~tical acieDce-philoeophy; Glo- .
.;-:-] M.'! r y E I i z t~.h e t;h· dlief..juatice at
Student Ju- ·
Dr. Claude E . Welch, as- rJ&amp; Barbara Katz, psycholpgy; Whi""" sociology; Peter Wil- dlciary 1967--,.___;,·
aociate prof_,r of history - is Deborah Kaufmann, .onlhrOpol- liam Wiley, -*&gt;!ogy-politica) . ployed •
was empresident-elect of the local Phi ogy; Balbant Walcher Kelly, science; Laura L.. Wllliama, I'~ ~ wlt'~
Beta Kappa chapter
English; Bonnit a Rifkin Engliah; Tama Wlnotlrad. · so- Lesallaw
__.__,
mg
. New members 8re Joyce Kirschner, psychology; Doro- ciology; Stephen 'Martin Zel............
Donna Alezaon. psychology· thy A. Klein, eoc:lology; . Marl&lt; dow, history; Bobbie S . ZuckerMost .-.tiy, be has been
Douglas H. Altherr history: B. Kofler, psyChology; Jamee man. pay'mology.
asaiatant adwcate on ~·
Jeanette Sender Balkxret, Eng: Thomas Krist; computer . scilish; Cheryl Sue Barbanel ence; R ichard T. KutDick, psyEnglish; Ray
Bergens~ chology;
Jr., biology; · Rita D . Frank
He~ Theresa Labus, philosB e - . polit ical scienCe; ophy; linda Ellen Laufer, hillKaren Ann Berkowitz, eoc:lol- tory; V ictoria Vance Ley, Engot!Y; Marsha Blick, anthropol- lish; ·J ay Lawrence :t.idrtman,
' JUNE~
ogy; Sharon Bob, psychology; politics] science; Andree Dora
Sherry Hope Bowen. chemis- Livingstone, English; Douglas
try-matbematiC2i; Susan Mi- C h a rl es McGave rn. mathechele Brasky, psychology; Gary matics; Ann e ·M . McNulty,
Robert Brickner, psychology· English; Elaine T. Maurer,
.SEPTDIBER 111
Ilpnna M . Brighloi&amp;D, Span: Spanish; J effrey Allen Miller,
ish; Joanne Marie Britton. his- creative writing; Gail Frances
tory; William Brooks Burnett, Moskoff, music; Virginia MuSEI'TDoiiiDI 17
economics; Sandra Lee Bush- Diak, Spanish; . John . Edward
art, eoc:lology; William Keith Nagel, economics-anthropology;
SEI'TDoiiiDI 211
Campbe!l, psychology; Duane Elizabeth Aline Nichols,
SEI'TDoiiiDI 30
Edwm Champion. geology; chology; Judith E . 0~
Stephen George Cheikes, polit- English; Rita Cantor Olsl)an.
OCTOBER
ical science; Joel Aaron Cohen. speech communication; HauOCTOBER
mathematics; Michele Sandra Cbi Pang, ·.mathematics; Gail
Cohen. political science; Nancy Anne Patel'801l, classics; Gerald
OCTOBER
Aim Colemlln, psychology; .Wil- Gary Persch, history-political
OCTOBER H
lism Joseph CoUeran. anthro- scienci!; Christine M . Privitera,
OCTOBER M
pology; Marian Adalyn Com- biology; Steven A. RalkeD. psyweU, economiC2i - mathematics; ~logy; Inez ·Linn Ramsey,
Robert John Cownie, history; history; Annegret Hom RichOCTOBER 11-i3

PsyJ:t

!lavid

pomted

...-.t

!"'hf

of~- ap- M!':.w~ ~~
SWliiD8I' chairmaf! of
Smith

the Norton H.,._ Coomcil.
The poup t..rd a ~
from Milre Beuatas of
ibe Buftalo ~·
lion 'for

rePort

8ocial and T

. · ID·
) OD the
Poverty Hill property. Hqg.ona outlined a ~ awnmer budret which iocludes
mooey for CXIIIbol. IRippliea, lnauraDal and uJariea for
summer haDdymen/caretakenlThe budget of $5,000 was
pa-.1 by tbe hoard.· They elao
decided to put In a pay phone
In tbe lodre OD the property,
to be used for emergencies.
Hacgan reported be is negotiating foe lnaur.once and that a
novation,

Iilc., (

contract should be Sirned BOOD.
Further. devel~pment of the
land will be ~ at the
next SUb Board meeting.
Sub Board I melllbers reill pet11K&gt;D uklng the
State .SUpreme Court to authorize transfer of tbe Amherst
land from the Faculty Student
AasociatioD to SUb Board I.
Inc. Arter ·going over the legal
.document, Mike Nicolau, president of GSA, pointed out that
no mention was made of the
fact that student f!l"S have been
used to pay taxes on · the land
since ita acquisition In 1964. It
. Will! !'edded to add this to the
petitiOIL 'These papers are expected to be flied soon and
transfer is expected to come In
the next few months.
In other actions. the student
govemments decided not to appolnt lillY members to Publicationa Board Instead, Sub
Board I is re-evaluating 1'\11&gt;
Board's role- ~tiotas .OD tbe
funding and scope of some
olber groups fiDaDced by Sub
Board were also conaidered. AB
a result of the diacuasion, Phil
r.f, outcolna Sub Board chair·
man. was a~ to prepare

~r.n=.:~.::u:ethof=

groupo. The report is to In' elude a history ol the past year
plus IUJpstions for future action&amp;. A $150 ·~ for the
report was authorized.

Sub Board is also UDdettaJ&lt;.

lnr a 8Mrch for a buslneaa man-

...,.. The term of the ' curretlt
will apire July 10.
AD. ad hoc committee formed . to "deveeop· a job des, cription for the poaitioa and to
Initiate 4be-.eh · for candidates.
.
PIU. elao fiDaUaed for
tbe ........teliq of the studetit
~ oirioee ill Norton

~~

.;: ':"':.;

ataaee for the last
year, wliJ bnak the three larJe
student aovenm-t ol6cM Into
smaller aectiona. Wad: and reception ..... wDl be
shared by all of tbe ~
menta. Plano for the a-p
........ .dtafted by the OIDae (II
~ Platuiltlr ad will be
-.ted by the Maln......_

platming,

~L

venkk.

i&gt;oiD'.i -.

125th Calendor

w.

Masters in Social Science

Program Being·ReinStated·
A master's program which
has produced atateamen and
colleae edmlniatmtora is being
relnatated"bere after a 0118-year
admiasions 11111111t.orium. T he
Master of Science ln·8ocial Sci""""" is retumlng .follooriDI 811
evaluation by- the Fli&lt;:ulty 'o f
Scicial 8cieoce&amp; and Admlni&amp;-

ence, psymology and sociology.
Studems are reqUired . to take
five couraes In one of the above
areas. and another five 00111'1188
in lillY combination of. tbe other
seven areas. A - " " ' lkill, or
~ is ~. 88 is .Ill
mter-disciplinary - " " ' project.

· Dr. Pleaur anticipates having
The oo-t-year-old JIIQIIID a half fellowship at hia clil!poaal
8tulloDia last ran for a aludeDt In the
year,itsaPialna
MlllalricomPie- . ~
.. ._.__
sur,
cilrec:lm,Dr.
""""-of
_ ,,:e..,:r~~theam
_ ...,..._

OCTQIIER 13

OCTOBER 20-22

tratioD.

IIIDpped admittiq

~ abowD ill it--dUring tbe
admlesloras moratorium, many
Dr. former atudenta amt letters
Pleaur poinla.aut, ...__, tbat 1 -IISkiDI it to be reallarad. and 46
93 per CBlt of the atudenta cur- 1ltld8twrilduat mailed requeeta
reDtly tmtGIJed In a. ~ for lttlannatiaa.
.
0
:-=:-.:~-:w
Of tbe Pf'C11181D 8 47 padu...... .....,.._ that ..u- p..t atea, aaya Dr• .._.., 11 have

plaints

~t

l1a

~

_ , man ·lalleat tt.. ~ of

other

IINduale

priiii8D&amp;

:f.

~~..;.u. ........ :e:'5:~
=::.:
:-_"::':,faof.: · five .haw .,.. Into Cllllepwent
adpinjr-... a I'ILD. The pro- mln~Mntiaa, a
..a. 811bjeat -Uer 1-* to a bilh ~sat
(ll....n.
!a
:t:: ""~-be
hia -.the BlblapiL
""· ............ ...........,,
abtaiDed
tn

011e

II

ay,

~.

....

palitDI .:1-

._Dr.

.._,.at81~4-

OCT08ER 21

~%7

· NOVDIIEit

z.e

·-NO¥EII8E:il 4

.

NO¥DIIEJt . . .

�.10'

_GRE~

21. I911

~ WUlllOnor FiveRetirees

At Frida~ Cornmencernent Luridlron
A quartetoftetiring U/B m&lt;&gt;
ulty millllliers- oril:h nloJe . than
100 yaars com6ined tascbina
uperienoe here will be hoDOred
at tomorrow's Commencement

IUII&lt;beon.

President Ketter will present
-citati_oDs "' Dr. Harold Boner,
English; Mrs. Janet Potter,
Speech; Mrs. Helen Signer,
Secretarja1 Studies, and Dr.
Katherine '!born, Speech Paih-

07r.;. to be honored is Mrs.

~ ~..!.~tlrlni Facul~
recap............

sen~ ~~tothebe P~

ere in - ber
. She began
dent, council · and farul:;"'::f. ~r """""' at ' m 1!146- ~t a
tbe UniYeriity I'8COIIlize. "the time when , tbe Umvers1ty's
acbieYements ~ distinguished rolla were Dooded with retUmlllirvice" of the retiieci's
-.ins G.L's Her ~t "!"'isnment
·
was as an • ~lish instnlctor,
Dr. .
during which" time she helped
Dr. Boner came to U/B in form U/B's Speech DePartl!N7afterbenceivedhisPh.D. !"""t ~ . ~once offefe!! a
from . C o II! m b i a Univmaity ·· jcib em a riidio soap opera.
where Jae a111o tl1olt his
~rs. P~tter 8e!Ved ~ mculty
He received his ~~ at advisor tl&gt; tbe Debating Club
Colonido UniYBIIIity
for 15 years, 1900-1965. In ad. He is author ·of ifohe Gilmt'• clition, sbe_was president of tbe
Ladder tbe story. of a piclrMm N- York State Debate Coach
~ Railroad builder. A ~tion, ·and parliamentsrbe wrote in 196!i 100 G01- ish of the New York StoiA!
muiou, about the MaJthuaian S~ Association. ·
theory of popu]atioa, bas .,..
He.- retire!J time will be occuoently '-i reiaaued. Dr: Booer P~-!&gt;Y domestic work, travel,
plans DOW ID-write about 19th pamting, and a play she's writoentmy AIDeric., J18l"tiCularly mg:
tbe buildlhg of-the iailroads.
Mrs. Sicner
.
Mrs. Signer, with 35 years at
Mrs. · U/B, · is the veteran of the
Mrs. Potter, whose mother · group. When she came here
tauabt Rose Kenned;yo, and from Boston University in 1936,
whose mther was a friend of she recalla, "we parked our cars
Theodore Rocawelt, repr-.ts right on Main Street in front of
tbe seventh jlell!!nltion of teach- Crosby Hall. There was no

ler'a

""'*

parking
tbere then."
Her first ten :Years here,. Mrs.
Signer lectured in tbe Secretarial Traiiting DepArtment In
1946, she storied teaching Business Education.
·
MrS. SiPer estimates she has
tought close ID 10,000 students
at U/B, many of wbom she stiH
Corresponds with regularly. Included 8{'e students in Hawaii,
California, Washington, and,
formerly, one in Indonesia.
Mrs. Signer also served as
facUlty advisor ID the Newman
Club lor 25 .years. Her postteaching time will be devoted ID
bridge and travel.
Dr. Thom
Dr. Thorn, wbo began tesch_.
ing here full-time in 1949, became interested in speech disorders in high scbool ·when tbe
Bulfalo scbool superintendent
asked ber to belp soine fellow
students. ''Tbe .more I did, tbe
more I saw I wanted ID learn,"
she says. Dr. Thorn received
ber A.B. from Elmira College,

SPAE~MMing---------1 (c&lt;mtinued /n&gt;ift _ . I , eoL 6)

or

'·

.,_lc -

iorate, even though it may not
be specifically in tbe contract,"
Enoenio e:q&gt;lains. ·

tem of gr8de levels"
promo- . . While Enoenio declined tore- tiona1 ~ for lion-teaching Jesse the specifics of the ecoproa~~~Philition"·'A~tiO."n' nomic impasse to the Reporter Foc:t Flndina
""""' .,......,
because of "good faith" on the
This matter and all other
1ilds!Dn to SPA, another member part of both negotiating tesms, Ierma of tbe contract have now
of the negotiating team, says. be did say that current Stole been submitted to fact finding.
'lbis oystem would be more Ierma would represent "a re' OER and SPA have worked out .
similar to facuky ca-t egories gression or pay cut in Ierma of tbe procedures for selection of
than ID tbe present system of actual spending." The SPA tbe fact finding J&gt;!Ul!'l, Enoenio
· U-gradeo, II!' added.
goa) is ID bring SUNY ID an . says, and each mde is-now subGovernance provisions are equality besis with the CUNY mitting a list of names.
another item SPA ·wants cov- ' system. Snyder further adds
After the panel is naroed, it
ered in tbe contract.. They are that tbe Stole bas "never of- will bear briefs from both sides
lleeking. inclusion of the pro- fered {lA&gt; SPA) a contract that outlining their positions on the
leasional staff in decision-mak- equals tbe cost of living in- contract Tbe met-finders will
ing procedures. A system is de- crease or even tbe CSEA con- use this information, and addisired under which "decisions ..uact" SPA realizes, according tionhl data, to write.up an adwould be -made· on tbe' besis of· to Enoenio, that 'lit's a bad year visory report While this is
educational inission rather thail for tbe State but it's also a had l;&gt;einj!,written, however, the two
political ezpediency," •EnoeniO year for individuals." Individ- · parties will be free ID continue
comments. Tbese procedures uais should not have ID subsi- negotiations.
would only· deiiJ:with"academic dize tbe State, the negotiator Quick Acfwmont Hoped For
matters, be addold, and budget- adds.
.
·
Enoenio bopes a..--""'»t can
ary ew finaDciaJ matters would
Despite Encenio's besitstion, be "reachea· as qulcldy&amp;;; posstill rest in legislative 1\ands;
there was an indication , that sible," adding that a July 1
O!Mr norHicademic:-t er m s economic issues would be dis- completion date "is not out of
wanted by SPA i n c I u d e tbe · cusaed in ·f ull at IA&gt;day's meet- · the question." To reach agll!eP"!Viaion few a dc!finite griev- ing. ·
·
. ment by &gt;this time would neoesance structure. This struCture·
A1ao being nesotiated are thl! sitote the "State moving mpidwould "provide .an honest ave- . tenns of tbe annual increment--Jy," however, be pointed out
nue . for ..any • individual wbo wb' ich non-CSEA University "The problem of legislative adfeela that be .has·beml wronged · . parsonnel traditionally receive journment before contract com·
ID &amp;ppM) for- aatiafactory reBC&gt;- on July 1. Tbe decision as ID pletion ois giving us gf!lve con' lutlon."" SPA ~ ID 1'\lt a the"" allocations for this incre- -cern," be says, and "we· don't .
atop ID "dlsmilaals for arbit- ment this July, ·if tbere is no know what can be done about
· rary, ~ ew political rea- ·contract, is "still co'nfidential at il" P088iQle solutions are ID
80118,• ~ says. 'Ibe ew- -this point," Harvey Randall,
call a special session of the
pnization Js asking few prooed- director of personnel for SU- Legislature or to have OER
_urea which include due process · NY, says. Enoenio says, how- submit an item in tbe supple'-rinp oanducted in a "quasi- ever, that there"· is a "distinct mental ljudget which could cov· judicia)" manner, in which valid -poosihility that the annual in- er any mcreases incurred in a
and justifiatile I'8IIIICIIIII are pre- crement may not come new contract ·The latter is
aeoted. WbDe the State is in thrcJulh." .
··
"what SPA's hoping for," En- basic qreement em .the' Deed
Tbe "ooe element ·~t over- ceuio says.
.
o~ in t;11e corr.
. s~A's d"'lision to ':' to metfor BUCh prooedurea, Enoi!nio rides
saya tbey are DOt willinc ID giV.. - . Enceni!&gt; says, IB SPAs finding came after 'repeated
binding Dllliotia.lic!n. stidu8 to~. desbe for the "restoration of • flagrant abuses of tbe harpin· them. . , • . •:
, , •
~ k}nd C?f environment that is ing ~ media:~ process by
J:Jr•.._JiloillftC?". S8l!dJe&lt; of tliii •a Ulll¥mlllty . . . that.an aca- OER, as Presideut Granger
Upstate Medil:al tenter, ala!' a . ~ '!" re!ai-1 . . . ·cbarpd in a telepmn ID Gover-

N

:JI

: :::'~~- ~=- ::S:!"t~verm~~~ :':t~eHerran:'~=

: eco.noml-c~llilll! le«iaaatiYeew1inancialconalder- it with aecwate and current
. b;einJ CGIIIlfl1lllil willie• dafini- ..u.-." In order "' "assure a data as "" the salary base and
tion ol fao:uHy and~
staff
The c50Dflict, be
feels, Ia not OYer specific propcM8].a but over . wbetber BUCh
terms should be included in a

nshb..

contraCt.

.

.

spirit of quality," SPA is .ak- other piOiniJIIIL "This bas bam
inl ~a maiDtenaJice of stand- one of the - sbocking~
llrds" clau. In the Clllltract, •lema during ~ Enin addition ID more specif"~e pol- oenio says. The i1_oup Is also
icies. This ·clause will belp en- "criticBJ of tbe State'• 1acit of
.sure that "Dotbint will deter- ' preparation."

and lier M.S. and Ph.D. from worked in 8I!Wl8l ollicos, inthe University of Minnesota.
eluding public relations where
At U/B sbe was tbe first pro- she worked-. unde&lt; Sloan Willessor of spjleeh pathology. She . son, who ~tly wrote
bas served as director of tbe The Man U. the Gray Flannel
Speech and Hearing Clinic, as- SuiJ. Mrs. Palmer then became
·sistani dean of students, a m&lt;&gt; tbe Faculty Club's fust re- '
ulty member of tbe student giw. ceptionist Her duties there can
ernment, and advisor to tbe best be ~jbed as catdHIH,
ranging from bookkeeping to ·
Publicstions Bosrd.
Dr. Tiiom .says that tOclay's minor interior decorating.
students are "much more openA
·
ly chaHenging. They have much .
nati've of Londnn, Ontario,
Mrs. Pl!lmer ·bas seen many
more confidenee in questioning changes in the world since her
. their teschers."
birth neariy 80 years ago. In
· Her brother, .Dt. George· ber years at tbe Faculty Club,
Thor:n, a U/.8 medicltl alumnus, tbe pace of tbe UniversitY bas
received the C h a n c e II o r • s increased and mculty meinbers
Medal in the 1940's.
no longer spend their afterI:.ike ber fellow retirees, she noons tslking or playing bridge,
plans to catch .up on her travel, sbe notes. The club itself bas
and reading, and to do" volun- grown drsmaticaHy. Despite
·teer work with elderly people. · ·
~llj!· inMrsgood.·Psbaalmerpe

Palmer
Mrs. Palmer f"lrBt joined the
staff in 1954 to belp with arrsngements for ChanoeHor Clifford C. Furnas' inaugural. In
her 17 years of service, slie bas
Mrs.

!!:"1cs

now.
In recognition of her service,
the Faculty Club bas also
awarded Mrs. Palmer an honorary memberahip.

~~----~----(c&lt;mtinued

t.O.;. _..,,cOL l)

Following hi1l .......... U&gt;e
president was asked about reorganization plaus. The report
was the work of a committee,
Ketter e:q&gt;Jained,. a n d not a
Progress was noted on other presidential propc&gt;S!ll No Unifronts. Ketter cited the colle- versity reorganization will be
giate system, whose future is done without full discuaaion, be
"encouraging," and the security pledged. "'l'his summer, bowsystem, where a professional ever, small changes wiH be
security force is now b"e in g made to aiiow the deans of the
formed which will "create a graduate and undergraduate
better atmosphere on campus." acbools to make reoommendaThe Norton drug problem bas tions on tenure, promotion and
eased, the PresidenHeels, since termination decisions. It may
no criminal activity bas been also be necessary, be added, to
reported in the recreational area create a management informasince increased security and stu- tion offioe.
dent surveillance was instituted.
Faculty · Senate Chairman
A solution ID Day Care Center
problems may also be in sight; William Baumer then anChancellor Boyer is now seeking nounced that Dr. Gilbert Moore
legislative approval . for funds would be chairman-elect of. the
which would he I p nmovate Senate next year and that nr.
Cooke basement, sHowing it ID Robert Stem bas woo a three
meet Health Department stand- year ti!"'! as a SUNY Senator.
ards, Ketter noted.
Nest year's enrollment will
remain approximately tbe same,
tbe president reported, but a
15 per cent decrease in fresh- (Conliluud from_. I, eoL 4)
men applications was noted,
Under either alternate clr regalong with a significant drop in
female applications for on-cam- ular plans, degree cs:ndidates
are asked ID be present in acapus housing.
· The new registration process, demic oostume by 9:30 a.m.
SARA, was termed a "suoceas"In addition "' tbe overall
by tbe president who considered Commencement esercises, sevthe system's problems ID be "in eral schools will be balding ingeneral of a minor Dature." dividual convocations and
Thirteen universities w i"ll be award Clei'I!1J1Cll1i as follows:
coming 1D eumine tbe system,
Scbooi of Medicine, 'Ibwsbe added, includinJ Purdue,
2:1, Kleinhans Music
Stanford and the Umversity of ~~May
H8ll, 3 p.DL
Chicago.
.
School
of
Dentistry. 'Ibws, The president a111o reported
an improvement in strained day, May 2:1, Butler Auditorium,
Capen
Hall, 8 p.m.
University-community relatioos.
'"lbo.-worst bas peaoed," be sahi.
Faculty of Law and Juria~ aaid that be and the
rest of his administration will
p.DL
80011
"
haYB '!"ived tbe ini~
School of Pharmacy, Friday,
problemobe"u-•-~~.:~willtbe May
28, IUDchecm, Filbnole
......, ~ ......... p .......ew
Room, Norton Union, DOOD.
futwe.
"We will emd in the School of Health Related..
.... UDCiertake," be promiaed and ProfeMions, Friday, May 28,
"tbe --.me ~.,U. the Fillmore Room, N...- Union,
Unlvmaity w i II , •
im- 8:30
eo..,......
J)IOY8."
man adt Kemp.

unclear with "tbe University
mcing critical problems in minwoamedrity _funding," the president

-

Colll1lleDOODlell-

~~~~7~

l..m., _.,.,

�4

.

~

1971 Grads Hold Mixed Opinions on the Umi\ersity Experienoo
EDITOR'S NOTE: The qua-

of

wltal tile 71 f"ldutm
faZ. about IJima!f (or ~/f)
ollll tile Uni»eraUY uper~n~«
pro/lei! .,. 1M Reporter
UlitJa o randoln ..,.,un, of de.,..,.,.....,_ &amp;.cA~ ~,_..
tree ilfllivi4ual alfll IYpreM!n~
:.:OM poW of fMID. OUaen
rtiiJ1 ,.,_ .aid other thin~•;
lltia ;. wltallhae .aid. The IDst
intenlieiD in 1M
wilh
Mra. JohntUe ·Mae Hod,u of
1M SEEK proJrOm, IDOB c:ondueted by 1M UniDersil)"o Offit:e of Publie ln(ormatwn.
lion

.nea,

ByS~~ER
To Mindy Cohen, an English
• r who says she's "not
just picking up an M.A on the way to
a Ph.D.," the U/B campus
"just isn't ~tiful."
Mindy is tuned in, oensitive;
she analyzes ber enviJomnent,
q u e a t i o n s the disbarmoDies
around her. Her statement cavera the apectnDn from U/B's
h .cal surroundings which
ue impermanent
('"The campus lives as transition, even the buildings ue
transitional; everyone is looking forward to the Amherst
campus .. -..") to the psycboJosical temper-'~le tend
to be unstable paydlically...
Mindy, who ia aiarried to another 0/B p-aduate En8tish
student, recei11'8d her B.A.. lrom
Vaasar, has been at Bulfalo for
two yean and feels, "It's very
difrtCUit to be a graduate student here. You feel as if the
rug is beii\g pulled from under
your feet-pollticaHy, academically and socially. Politically,
you never understand emctly
w h a t the administration is
doing. I Jeel that a kind of sec:rec:y is ~tlated. · For in- · at Yale, where my busband went, there is much monl
honeety in the administration,
more communication with the
studenbi. Student opinion is
asked for and used, not just
bMrd. Here, there's a definite
feeling of just not knowing
what's going on until it's too
late to change things...
Disln!s&amp;ed by this "state of
transition," of life here, she
contin.-, "There's no specific
thing you can hold on to. Even
the buildings ue not stable and
I lelid to look towards buildings for a sense of permanence." She cited the case of a
stately Bulfalo mansion which
bad been dynamited to make
way for a new garden apartment and on campus, " ... take
Butler Hut and other English
Department buildings- in ten
years they won't be there. 'lbat
ldDd of ambieoce Jl!!l(orates private lives. It's very bard for
familiee to live together in Buffalo. rw oiJaerved an unusual
number of problems be......,.
- l e who come here together.
Of coun1e, paduate ac:bool .in
anY case ia ememely di8icult
to go through. The majority of
.-ale your aae ue out work-

~p-aduating,

::a,:;eela

a

in and supportinc themsel'W!S."
says she felt~
confused by the campus disturbances tsst "''rinll· '"lbenl a 8I!IIS8 of impendina doom;
something could bappeh at any
moment and from any direction. I found it extremely dif6cult to teach because you
rarely SSW your studenbi and
contact w i t h undergraduatee
was cut oft."
'Though she says she's "llllddened by the kind of divisiveness that I see on the campus
-the instability, the ·conrUSIOII,
the dilliculty ·students haw in
finding ·direction," her philo"!'Pby is "You have to take
things as they come."
She feels sharp contrasts between life at a tsrge urban university &amp;nd Vassar, which hal!
only 1200 students in a beautiful, if isolated, setting. With
one professor to every 12 stu. dents, everyone was well knowo
and more closely supervised,
though you were treated as "not
quite adult; there was a kind
of parental discretion in attitude towards students. Everyone there lives on campus and
it's very easy to oversee their
lives." Also, at V aassr the emphasis was on undergraduate
education. "At U/B," says
Mindy, "undergraduates ue
g;...., short shrift and the emphasis is on p-aduates. This
may be .., because of the tsrge
numbers in the undergraduate ·
lecture classes.~ She finds the
English Department here is excellenl 'Tm allowed to do whatever I wanl Vaasar bad more
cnnwntional expectations. They
wanted students to have a general· knowledge of literature. It
was a fine beckground with a
Jood ·approach to periods, but
mventive thinking wasn't emphasized. There wasn't the diversity of critical approach that
there is here."
.
Stwjenbi at Vaasar ....,.., not
quite .., confused about their
direction in life. '"They tended
either to get married-that was
one way out of continuing
school or going to work-or
else, thoee who really knew
what they wanted continued on
to"graduate ac:bool."

N~b!'!!e~u!,tas1;~
the masses of people overbearing and frightening. "After a
concert of .the lncredtble String
Band, I was literally suffocated
because rm shorl It was an exaggerrion of how I !eel about
passing through Norton."
She has little time for social
l i r e for she leaches, studies
and also is a member of the
dance troupe, The Company of
Man, which reheeraes four evenings a week. ''It's an excellent
counterpart to sitting and readil)g all day."
Though jobs in English are
scarce, Mindy is not worried
about her future because "I
just !'&amp;n't take the energy to
worry about it. rm willing to
do other thinp, outside the academic sphere, though """""

-__
.
--------

&amp;. .,..,.,..... llDWUlfD -

. ~~'iT'n•'&gt;
.

_.,..,.,

JIOIIUrr.-......rr

.,.

-.~~-­
-

... c::&lt;DIIJ"lD

wr11JGtr UPMD......,..,.., . _ . _

QWIJW,_ .KDIT'ODt 1 -

!a:--lfm- ..,....., -

~ and ClOIIfronliDi
the an _.,.,_
tsblish!!Wit -

\:indy

a. .,......._

•. - ·-

Cllrit ~ ......, S.

lty to make yourself heud. The
riots here were -nu ezpressive of natioaai"iiili., wbicb
showed that a lot of people

a

~ they
didn't JlrodUCB policy ~
but attitudes ue changing quite
abiL"
The "draft hassle" bad
caused tensions. ''Now that rm
-through with it rm more .....
lased and sure of what rm.
going to do. Draft unceitainty
alfects a lot of people. Some resign themeelves to it, some
don't want to. It makes you put
of( making decisions, because
you can make a lot of alternative plans, but can't know what
you can punue with the draft
threat banging over your head."

wouldn't sit still.

...

--

times I feel trapped and rather
,strange to . have apent eight
years oo a subject and . then
not be 8ure r.ll be called upon
to do anything in the field.
Then I wonder if I should perhaps have gone into another
major."

."J've grown over ,the P\ISt 4
Yean!· You have to JP'0911, po
inatter where you are," says
Julie Ziegler Zygmunt, who'll
be graduating with a B .A. in

arl

"I didn't find college di8icull
I really did more work in high
ac:bool. I guess I was tired of
working hard."
·~ riobi tsst spring? I was
concerned, but not personally
involved. I felt everyone was
wrong."
Julie's involvemenbi are with
her family-her husband is
graduating this May from U/B
Medical Schoo I. FullaUment
comes with the prospects of
.
d
· September
thear
if ue m
ther
and with eat home toge
•
"My bUiband .likes to stay
home. When we were dating,
I di&gt;n't think we went to more
than a couple of parties. He
doesn't like to go to the movies.
The last time we went to a film
I bad to promise that I wouldn't
make him go · for another five
years. He really prefen; -to niad
his journals---though we dO enjoy~ to parks. the woods,
the zoo. Julie's original gnsls were altered by two discoveries. Enrolled in a bachelor of fine arbi
program at first, she fOUDd "it
was too much art; I wanted. to
aet into the academic 001118e8.
Every day I wortred in the
studio, from 9 until 6. Though
I liked it, I got bored."
Her teaching plans Doundered as a .-.It (II ber practice
IAB:hina _ . _ . "I was sort
of th.-n out;• she admits.
"My IIUiierviaina: le8cber felt I
a thrat tD t . discipUne
and I was aJilOIIIQ8d to leave
the Pft1111111L I Wfirh abe had
me about ber feelinp.
but fDatiMd- - t to my ....

l:1J

...,to

l*the~O::~:t;:~-~allof
·-~
....
the 8tupid
dialll..,..
. ioalnl - abe found aching
to be dulL "Maybe-rn ao back
•ca-. 11114.. t.cb on ' an eleD:adary

tiJiiuch."
'llle 7nJmmta will , _ to
Blnll-- aftar paduation

iewtl,

"'n many ways ·we'n&gt; difterent," ssys Stuart Aiil, one of
a set of triple-the other two
ue Robert and Michael-who'll
be ....dusting toeetber. all with
ma.J;m. in political ac:ience. ''l
don't identify myaelf as part
of a aet of triplets,• continued
Stuarl ''We never d.-1 alike,
we haw dift"""'t' frieDds and
our own ~ We stick toaether because we get along,
we're good frieDds rather than
brothers."
Robert, jovial, good-natured,
spent his first y e a r at New
Paltz, transferred because be
felt U/B .wopld be better academically. Stuart· tzansferred
from Harpur after his freshman
where Dr. Zygnrunt will Intern yeer "because it was too isoin a special program in family lated, too confined. I wanted a
P~ ;
more urban ..,tting." Michael
'
spent
four years here, and
The field of physics may be is presently in Wl!llhinllton.
glutted, says Stephen Serafin, · D.C:, oo a special pofiticaf sciwho'D receive a degree in math- ence project.
ematical phyaica, but "I don'l
Stuart's plans after grsduacare if I make a whole lot of tion-''1 suppoee. rn :wad&lt;• for
money. I just want &lt;!DOUih to a while. I. need another perget by .., rm not starving and spective on life. There's a difmy family isn't starving. I got rerence b e - the IIC8demic
a lot of help and encourage- world and the real world."
ment froiD my &lt;lepartmlint to
"In a way, I ha"""'t realll:
continue into a master's pro- been pnipareci for . anything,
gram."
(Co~ on 6. coL 3)
Stephen. WliOtskes greilt joy
in his courae of study; tells what
;. required to be a physics maU L,.
jor. "An analytical mind, aome11"\1 ff/Una,
1
one inclined to appreciate in• J
't);
terlocking ido!i8s. It's neat to see
Sa~
how everything works together,
from subetomic particles to the
stars and to comprehend the EDITOR:
universal principles oo which
Your article on College A's
allcerlaintl}ingsamounoperatofle. graYoutificagetion~
a summer plans in tsst week's
R
ter
'-1•• _ . _ . . _ .
when you can ~~_,,_
epor
accura-, ..-.~
,._,__
~.. ..........., the prociBI ol reeYIIhlation cur~.......
rently under way in College A.
"rve lesmed a lot, - - We ue now woridng on a reieooed a lot and moderated a ~ Of the Collqe'a goals.
. lot of my ideas over the past acope and ~ However,
four years.':'
·
the article created the fal8e im· Stephen bad begun ·as an en•
that Collqe A •
gineering student at Canisius :::;::" peniat wfth
College, but fOUDd it "stifling."
Uon to the .....
.,i
"AtCanisiustheybadmynen d!~pades.~lulget
two years ~ out for me. for the was released
Here, I could take other couraea
"th _,__ __._...__..__ on
--«&gt;Ciology, English, political :0~7~~
science. rve been tr-. The that all couraea taJiPt ~ Colstudenbi at 'U/B ue more tol- lege A durlna the · summer
erant, more liberal m in d e d. would be evalUated in accordPeople ue stuffy at Canisius ance with the lldmlidatraUon's
and not really ready to 8CC!!I&gt;t interpmtslion ol ~- polipeople. They didn't like lima ciea; that final ~tioo
hairs. Maybe it's c:banlling now, of credit under ~. QIIIem
but when I was involVed in a of 1111Uiina Ia opaatiwi (letter,
peace group there, people didn't StU, written ev.t.uatiool reapprove."
·.
sides within an IIPIIftlllriate
Stephen values freedoiD....-be member or maabenl o1 the Inlleves that wfth a major in phys. structional Sid o1 the um-ics rather tilan ~"'I'll sity. Self-evaluatioo may be in- ·
· have more oppwtunity not to formative in -~ Instrucpomcb. a dock, and to wodi at tiona) Stlift' ~ at the
my own~ not _....t by responsibJe evaluatiotr ail .to
bows.•
what pade -W beilil lil fact .
Of~ on campus-"I ~ . eamed. .
•' . . . • about it m the Spednurt bUt I , This
•
got ~ olf and prajlllllltic: ~ Will!
nninto&amp;n)'Oilllahootingilrm dictated bY. the...,...~-~
not into clmp and my frieDds make
·lll'l!ll't into 8JI,)'tblnJ t..vy.•
.tlle~or
• Duri1ia the
ap.tina ol llie riola "last - .
far the Palfwill
.aprina "" ranarbd. "I c:aD Ill&gt;- be
ted.
A does
deraland the fruttrationl that not lnfald to a in -wven....-l t1aD, but 1z111bin1 the Uon ol deub' .,......._ UniUniwlldty ia D11t the ao1U1ion. vendty wide poliey.
.
Icould-themedtod...am&amp;-MIDD IIAII -sDN

au

Sto

Bambii
. ••

aeit-:.':"

the.---.. . ...--=-

eou.

·

�Jlq_

:rf, 1f11

5

Lams Abound,·
But: Consumer
Needs Help
Tbere are enough laws em the
books to prolect Bulfalo CDDsumers, but manpower abortbinder coosumer protec&gt;tion ellona
'lbat's the conclusion of a
study recently completed by
two BuJfalo students for Elli·
oott District Councilman
George .K. Atdwr.
'lba students, Sam ue I L.
Newman, a junior in the U/B
' School ol u.w, and Susan
Brinl, a graduating senior at
Bulfalo State, bave investi·
gated ezisting agencies eltiPIII'!II
in ~ protection both in·
side and outside the city. 'lbeir
purpose to seenot
.,if es
~
ol
BuJfalo misht
·
a coasumer protection bureau
sueh as tbe one Bess Meyenlon
Grant 1-m in New York City.
In his f!lliOH, Mr. Neonnan
conduded "lben! is ap..-1 for
·another COIIIIUIDer' protection
apocy in BuJfalo ,em the en·
fonleiDIIDt level~ aince "the field can be more elfeotiveiY c:iwered

SUPAPians
ProfessiorJol

StaffSenate
Sts~ u':.'l:.jx,~ ~.!":

Aaooaiation (
Al will establish a .....-tatiw PJGfe&amp;.
aiaaal &amp;a« Seaate in lhe fall,
liocording to plans presented at

· the paup's l1l1l111lil ..eting last
Tlwraday.
.
'Ibomas Schillo, ou tgoi ns
SUPA president, said the exist.iai «JJlllizatiollal structure
would IM!I1tuaHy be ~
by tbe.,.,.. ~ whidJ will be .
a part ol a "tripartite . form ol

'1be autl!ority already. edltls
but there is a ~ abortQwses most of .the
He suggested tbat perhaps
the city could· employ investigators to bandle ciODsumer ODm·
plaints and band their fiDdings
over to tbe State Attorney Gen·
end's office.
Miss. Brint, wbo• will enter
U/B U.W Scbool• in . the fall,
oancluded tbat any local agency established should have'
aome "teeth"-ol enforoiment.
~d "s!&gt;ould not be just
anotbor de8rialbouse-" ·
IJhe 8IJIIII08I8d tbat·if-a -local·
qency is Mtsblisbed, it sbould
be a joint county-city ellort,

==

-The..=.::

b :::"""'-.-:. ' : :
lila IJnlolwollr'o - . _
1 . .. . , _ collectton of~-::!"
1n 1952 bJ ht Thomas, of F - H. Thomas, ......___
-~~
,.."_
~·-- of enct·~·"l- She Prof, Thomas pbonl8d ....

:::...,....

Blossom
_ .. Time

SUPA's Executive ColllDlit,.
tee hopes to bave the Senate
functioning by late September
or early October. Functional
detoiJs 8till mOO to .be worked
out, Schillo said; but lbeae are

=.::: ,:":, ==:, ~'-:~ :!...:...~ :.= ~~:!

:r:~-..;.;:the

=.~

=-.....,

.._

;., .

campus aova:wt." The
otber two CIHiqUal arms would
be. tbe present ...mty Senate
and .a hoped.for StiJdent Senate, 8dlillo said. Membersbip
would be "allllCIIl teaching
professional staff," Schillo explained.
•

!';!,~f!Ddo~ ~ClODCI!Pthe~,::..!i
-~

(~ _from-I,coL3)
recognized practice in an exthat- the Collegiate Assembly perimental program but faculwas aware of this point from
ty tplerance of such a practice
the very beginning.
should not be regarded as pusil"FinaHy, this grievanoe oould lanimous or implicit approval.
not -bave occurred if the.acting
"The Committee finds tbat
vioe president for academic af. the short histor)( ol an experifairs had pointed out to the rae· mental program cannot he
ulty through its elected . repre- equated with the establishment
sentstives; the Senate, tbat of an academic tradition.
.Jac1&lt;inJ a faculty position on . '"The F~ty Senate Eiecuthe self-evaluatiOn issue, an' ad· tive Committee agree in princiministrative decision would be pie with the Collegiate Asaem·m ade. It is incumbent on the • bly on ihe issue of faculty govadministrative officers of this ernanoe._ The Committee is

~

·-

g~ s.%ill.,~ final

Senate Committee Askslnoompletes
thegradingpractieesrelativeto
self-evaluation as specified by
Dr. Murray were clearly announoed · at the beginning of
the Spring 1971 academic term
and maintained throughout the
term for this particular College.
(College A)
'"The Colirmittee does not understsnd the failure of Dr. Mur·
ray to notify aU faculty and
students of his inteq&gt;retation 01
SUNlV policy BO 1!Jat it would
have been possible to uniform.
ly apply the same ~ding cri-

ap-

In addition to discussing
plans for . the new Senate,
SUPA presented its new offi.
oers for 71-72111111 beard reports
from outgoing .......Uttee chairmen.
New officers are: J. Norman ·
Hostetter, president; E the I
Schmidt, vice president; Mar·
garet Iansin~ seaetary; Judith ·
· • ODm!llPDIIdiaa secretary; Joseph
I&gt;.ew, tr-u.r, and Mararet
· ~SUPA. """'"-'"18 .., the 8tste

New CDIDIIIittee chairmen

':!i ~f=~t
::f ..':.~':ffonsno~ ;,"J:;;.;~j;':r·~=d~t, a~! te~~ ;~~~v~'E'!%::': :"~~~~
will have a significant ' impact tel H. Murray, ~11( 1ily !'tated tive Committee has oancluded nomic Status; Marilla Giles,

=o=
outside the city.
Both students agreed tbat
there would be an advantage in
having oentralized files. Miss
Brint IJIIII'I!8ted a oentral phone
number where COilSUJDel8 with
complaints could be directed to
the proper ageocy.,Mr. New·
man noted tbat Cl!lltlalized files
would help coi&gt;Bumer advocates
recognize "patterns of· repeated
violations."
Mirll Brint suggested tbat in
lieu of creating a .,.,.. c~eput.
ment, a -committee be fonned of
·
ol
·
pub-

on academic matters"
The ED&gt;CUtive C~mml ttee
further noted tbat courses outside College A "and indeed outside the collegiate system are
using self:..va!uation as the sole
basis for grading and
tbat
these students ...:ere
i;ven
fomial notioe of Dr. Murray's
interpretaticm of the Commissioner of Education's ""KUb!·
tioos on "demonstrated studerlt
achiewment."

..;,i

Not Pallifll

J.....,._.

'"'-- ,.____ .
C
.
reprall!lltstive&amp;
VBJ:10118
'"". """"""tive !'mmtttee
lie- and private agencies in· mad!&gt; •t. clear tbat lt was not
volved in OOII8UIIli!J' protection. . po&amp;8lllg judgment "on the quesCouncilman · Arthur ·is no9i tion of whether seU-evaluation
IXlllllidel;inJ lili!BtudeuCs' rec- alone is or is not an adequate
ClllllDI!DII!ltions. He recoplizes demonstration ol student
tbat tbe' city's preoent llscaJ achiev.ement" and urged the
crisis probably will not allow · Senate to ~immediately move
action in the area ol COil8WI1I!r . to Mtsblish an eq&gt;licit policy
prolection this year. BUt he is regarding seU-evaluation since
pateful for lhe students' ellorts AAUP guidelines and the Fac·
m studying tbe ·iliner workinp · ulty' &amp;mate Bylaws are in acof COI18U1118r )J1'IJiection ' agen- ·. coni with the Commissioner's
cies. "I 'IIOOUidn't bave bad the D--'·tion tbat 'overall educatime to do if in such ·gieat de- ~policy and determination
._.," ..~ _,_,
ol ......_~·i--n~ · are the
.....,Mr....
k ..._ ,..,;;;:;.ibnb:_.- o fthew
- faculty
project
_
,_t uti;.'ibi Clinic ol th8 , _ . Oft IP.Odflc .
U.W 1Jcboo1, UDder liJe direcOn the specific issuM in distion\ ,jJamee P. Mimak, 1188is- putebet-.theColletli&amp;teAs-_
He also did a sembly and Murray, the ExecuC
study ol NFI' bus -w., for tive Committee, based upon .
CouncllmanArlhur.
. . heeringa conducted and a
Miaa Bring ..orbd UDder the ,..,.,....1111"\ded report prejJared
Ulbm Coops Ptopam.
by a special subcommittee,

N=-·"
-'-'---'
=..-;;:"a;;.;;

ano~I1Cilllenlk·ofticera.·"

tant'Protessor.

..

..,__ fo".....;-'•-··--'
""""...,
tloamrlttee
~-=

"The Executive
MORE JUITIFICATIONS
De~-· to how' pub- has concluded tbat there Ia n.o
ezplic:it State trniverslty of
lk:otlono p r i - ml• New York. at Buffalo faculty
tenals '!lit~ ~,. qian ono color
of Ink Will how to oubmlt policy on self-evaluation as a
"odoq..w IIUpport" J~ns BOle tiasis for grading. ·'lba
for tho ,.. of......,. thon 01111 color, Committee h8s further con·
tho Olllce of Unlvenlt)' Publica· dulled tbat a distinction must
lions hilS - . bJ the be drawn bet-. implicit apStoto Compboller'l Olllce. Such proval and ft!OIIIIlitionof an ex·
noq- muot now be subm._ perimental JlrOI1'811L The phenomeDIIIl of self-evaluation as a
to ~ny for prior •PJI'DVIII.
sole i1111q for padiDc was a

0

the alleged policy vtolation to tbat the acting academic vice
the ~llegiste Assembly. The .president, Daniel H. Murray,
Collegu1~ Assembly · had the as the responsible administrao~ty to forlJ!ally cc;&gt;ncur tive officer, should have formalor reject SUNY policy as mter- ly informed the Faculty Senate
preted by !-he Adm~tratio!' tbat lacking action on this mataud to provtde subetantive ev1- &lt;ter he would be foroed to make
dence for their position. Nei- a unilateral interpretation rether tl!e ~llegiate ~ly garding the policy of self-eva!nor the acting academtc v1oe uation. However, since the Colpresident formally brought the legiste Assembly had been noti1SSUe to the Faculty Senate.
fied of Dr. Murray's position, in
'"The conclusion of the Fac- his letter of 26 January 1971,
ulty Senste Executive Commit· they had ample time to bring
tee was tbat, pursuant to sec- Dr. Murray's unilateral inter·
tion 52.2 ( (b) (6) ) of the pretation to the atterrtion of the
Commissioner's Regulations; Faculty Senate."
·
F1we' D~- Ur.nr.--1
~K-..1:-me·

bylY.lt::Ul(;
.llef,U~ I.LI.n.VfHL

Especially-designed silver · spected mentor of medical stu·
recognition medals were pre- dents. and staunch oolleague
sented ~ five distinguished re- and fellow physician.".
tiring professors at the Annual
Cited for "34 years of deFaculty. Meeting of the School voted service to medicine and
of Medicine last Friday.
this school" was Dr. Randall
HoJoored
Dr or
p
now vice president of health
· were:
· tver · sciences . and former chairman
Jones; Dr, Samuel Ssnes; Dr.
f the Departmen
.
t 0 f Obstetrics
Clyde L. Randall, Dr. W- Yer- :,.d Gynecology.
by J..-. clinical pl:9fessor of
surgery (ophthalmology) and
Offj
1-.i of tbe Department
t''~~·~
James tf. Blackhurst, director
~ .
of Summer a-ions, will _..,
Dr O p J
t'.
againthisOilllliniyesraspnisi· • · ones, re mng dent ol the Faculty Club.
chairman of the IJe~\ of
Blackhurst was re-elected in
~tD!nY· also reoetved .": ata- balloting Monday to 1-.i a
ti?Jt. "m. grateful r;ecogrution of slate of ollioers whic:h will also
~~ 8
include; L&gt;:le B. Borst, pro. . ty
feasor, i&gt;Jiysics and astrooomy,
of :'fedtctne from 1937, as vioepresident;AndrewW.Holt,
chairman off the De!lartmen"t of associate dean, Graduata
Ana~rom 11143-?1." ·and a -~J,. _,tary; and Harriet
new.
of Medicine aca- Montagui&gt;, professnr., mathedemic gown (royal blue and matics, treesurer
hun~ greeri velvet with an
Elected to· twO,yesr Ierma Cll1
~~ caduceus, and an the Club's board wen.: W. Loseight-sided cap).
lie Barnette, prclf-., psydJolDr. Sanes, prolessor of path· 011)'; J. Wam!D Perry, dean,
ol~. reoeived .the two-vOlume School. of' Health-Related Pro''History of Medicine in the feosions; Howard E. Slnuai.
United States" by Francis R. -.ciale .,...,_,., mechanicol
Paduud. He was bailed as a ~; Borst and Mon"iledicsted teacher and re- tque.

~

":

U:, sd':i ·

: Club

1cers

~!,erry Fahey, Pllbty; ..,.........

Gra.Y, M....._.

ship and Telepbooe· and Ron-

Grie\lance:
Dr. . """"- Holt,

aid Stein,

BIBisbmt

dean of the Graduate Scbool,
._ted 'on his activities with
the University-wide Task Force
on GovemaDoe. 'Through his
lll'1linll and tbat ol Olhera, he
said, the idea ol using a lottery
system for c:boosing members

&lt;t:.,•:::l~'!~"!!\~!:~==~-widewas
._ _

rejected. Holt llriiiJBd tt..t sueh
a syatem • · - ' - tbe academic ~ ..
~
....._
............. ...,
most~ for tasb rather
!t::oe,-stif,A~ up to
he llllid, in '--'--"':b..~
ber iJl • ~this
Jts ....,._~ Cll1
,._.....,. paup ....., t..o
to tiDea Rnpne Martall, Ma·
~lies and Marjorie Mis,
ol ..,. ~ c:balrman
tbe cxamitlee.
A ¥!P ...,..._ syatem Ia
.the rMIIt ol-" doae by tbie
year's BUPA ~ &lt;Jam.
mi~ _ wbidJ wmbd wilb a
similar SPA COII1I11i&amp;tee. Marjorie Mis, '-1 ol tbe oommit,.
tee. aplained tbat tt- prooedurea pat SPA/SUP A
11'-1 ol the ...mt¥ S..llo
aince tbe syatem Is 11ft11.
able to the UllhmBilly at 1u11o
and will band I e CIII11PIIIinla
from . faculty, alall or atudonts.
· Leananl ~.
SUPA

,u:.,-ol

. . __

~

=

a

1111!111b.wbola~oitbe

Sts-a SPA, ....,...W em its

CIUft!llt adivilioll. Coa.lnlct ne-

go~ haw! ahlfled from ·
non-eaJillliDic to t!ICOI1Dinic CDJo
sidenJtioila, he aaid. as a lault
ol lht mediator who was
pointad .,._an ol&amp;cial ~
deelared. In 1'llll(lllla to an

~_.,he aald tiJat

tbe SPA Sta-a BDadive
Cllll1111iME t.m!'t yet deelded
'lllllat poaition to taJra in the
ol a CSEA alriloe.

�Gradnafingseaiors BOd Mixed VJeWS - - - - - )'011 1m tbe oullllde world... and
both felt that Co11aae A was
their 008 ','nollly pellt apportunil).' to~ wbU _...
mUDJty Jlfe ia lib." But euch
a
project am
aet a 1-f
name. M A ,_ atud8DIII might

(C-.ed , . , _ - 4, eoL 6)
BGbert ..,.,.. "Four yean 8JO

Jf .,ou bad. a

'2!:: W.,;,c' aet

-Y

~it. hud ' t o - ~

· IN!fuate ~ Maybe rll JO
to law SchooL" He caatlnued,
"'lolleae ia not .. . . - .........
pie make oul In a way,

coUere

Ia an iaolated ezperienoe. You'"'
'with the aort of people
)'Oil with in a aubulban
.Gammurilty. Professors talk
about the real world outside,
but In a way they are the same
88 we are. Their wbble Jlfe is
In the academic community.
E""" wben they travel abroad,
they do reaearch. Tbey -dOn't

=~~w:

· the outside world don't work."
: Stuart too felt that ..lbe college experience ~·t pmpare

Annua1Gra4
Survey Asked

-New
· Waste Plan Safer
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
a1ao the poasibility of landfill
,_
chemicals seeping into the unE&gt;W)' year more than two der(round water supply.
tons of chemicals are dispoaed
Dwnping chemicills down the
of,.., this campua. Tbey vary drain 18ll't any better, Syrafrom simple chemicals com- cuse aaya. Chemicals 110t only
biDed and analyad in undei-- corrode sewer system pipes.
graduate chemistry ~ to they also have the· potential of
complicallld CQl1lPOillldB syntiJe. evolving into rases which ex. m-t eapecially for research plode in the sewer linee.
projeclll. Wherever they come
Tbeee dangers will·be rreaUy
from, thou(h. the real problem lesaened after the new system
is how to t rid Of them.
starts in early July. Tbe only
Up untirnow, they've either 110ticeable change, however, will
been dumped down the drain !:s:'~:l.:i:.n~\:'
or hauled away aeml-annually individual leba will continue to
by a tnder. Tbe trucker uaed
them for degreaaing truck parta separate their chemicals into
or, If that d,idn't work, the three categoriea-chlorinated
chemicals ....... diepoaad in a bydrocuboros, aromatic hydro·landfill.
~~~~~~~:;!,i ~
wi::!'
:;!~ five gallon' cans in each lab.
Wben filled, theaa containers
city aanitsry codes but are they will be emptied into larger 55
really environmentally safe?
The Campus Department of gallon druma which will be
Environmental Health and picked up four times a year,
Safety, the .Department of more frequenUy if neceasary.
Chemistry and the Grad Chern- Gt8duno studJ
iata Club didn't think 80, and
Tbe whole idea for finding a
aet about · to fmd a method of new dispoaal method evolved
disposal "that would do 110 from a stud;y done by the Gradharm to the enviromnenl"
uate Chemists Club last sumRobert Hunt, heed of Envl- mer. This group of 20 to 30
the
rorunental Health and Safety, students was imp........t
!ir&amp;t aent out req~·esta for bids ~
~=m January t? try to~= to home, Pat Gallagher, its
waya !" eolhaYlllJ ~pmsident, says. Studying the
What came l&gt;act, """"""r, were dispoaal of chemicala seemed
~ . the old landfill solu- . to be a IIOod place to starl
tiolls. Since then, the EnvironTbe Club limited its ieeearch
mental. Health and Safety of. to the 4 ,500 aliOill of chemical
flee, With ~ belp of the crad· wasiA!8 or solvents produced in

:',!

J:J: ";:::

%,;

f.:k

:,te ~ofs~~-J:
verslty Enviromnental Health

a.!

one~ by the~!&amp; of
2::!:';!stryor-:::k Med•c~'!al

and Safety Council. have CC?"" 2.~~.;,., is a c ! . ' : " :
dueled -..:h em alternative , ia ;...r"O:..Wy to c1ecm gias&amp;diapoaal methode. Now, MW, ware
more sPecifIc hide are o:&gt;"t
study revealed that
and Hunt feels they will bring many pe~IC8w;;" simply
tbe new kind of prorram be dumpin.l_ c
·
down the
W1111la.
drain. Tbe student chemists
were alao dissatisfied beca.He's looking for methods they found that drums of diswhich dispose of chemicals pc..t solvents _ , left lying
by inciMration or reClamation. around in leba beQa.- of in-

-or-~ ~~

:Onelbe""::
vironmentally aound. In this
~ are bumed
at euch a hillh temperature that
the two end products are carbaa dlazide and water. Reclametion has the baallS of recyclina and ~ return to tbe ·
~~ Old method&amp; o(
the Univeroity was
dealina with a DOieDtial
....._ Puttina cliemlcal
into landfill bas tJ,en pcialedly obown to haft mea,y
P-lblci
Mlctilel BYraa.e,
director of EDviroounmtal Health and s.fety,
referred to a caae In which
dumped chemicals .......,.
with othlr .-..... In tbe .00
· to prod... lode ..... ,.....
-.

=

aa-a.
......,t

n;.,

~~plus the dis-

- ' o f chemlcala in a landfill
led the group to reject tbe "~&gt;!'&gt;- '
aent ~ of !'iaPGeaJ • madequate amce 1t ~~~~ a
potential environmental caalamination." Jnetaad. they , .
com""""""' the Univently - ·

inciU::,:U
~ ::;~
tbe group -rched and wrote

1111 ieport; l88t fall, they beDn
the ...a."for impleo
'lbey found .-ly auppori b
their~ from
Howard
'nedallmmm ~· of the
Cbemialey,.!!:,e.rtmeut. U.
..,_ tbe
felt that thia
ehouJd be a Um-.lty-wlde .tfort, they
the mattar to
Hunt, and to the Coaacll em

.....a.
nr:

""*

~

lfMith.

ba1be what jt hut It
_ , . a lot to me."
Stuart- hia ~ ... realistic. "You can't lie u ldealiat
in this wc,.rld ....,__ Idc!ala
are only JOod to dNam aboul
. ~ . soal ia to develop

JO out into tbe commmdty and
band ·out rewlulblary !eat-

lets," aaid Stuart. ''Tbe com"' IIIM!r dreamed I 1lliOUld be
munity U.. tends te ..........,t, able to come to oollete-"
and there is a _ _ . . , t tenSud&gt; a COIIIIIII!Ilt~-t be
dency to abolish a _ . , . . 1il&lt;e
,_, _. tbe _, ....
College A. which .is really very t;yp;.... "'
,......t
stubeneficial. I tbinlt a qll81'ler of denlll Jl'llduatiDa from U/B
your college procram ebould be ~-But for Jolumie Mae'
this kind of communitY involv&amp;- !!,~= Ira almost
menl. University Jlfe sbouldn't
Mrs. .Hodaes will be. receivbe all 1llructbred. WOrk in tbe log ber B.S. degree in busineo8
community,-travel abroad. ind&amp;- education at Coo • •• ...,..,,l
pendent study-tbeee are aood
motber of
• 1s,
preparations for life."
~ ~ Sbaron,~ ~
For Robert. college J,. been finiahed h e r degree requirea Ieason in livint 'th other ments in just three years by
people,_ ·~ou ' dan't'!!Jheve tbe attending nilbts and 8UJIIIIIerll,
umbrella of '}larelltal authority and by taldna ........ Cledit .
· eWer YOIL 0De. of die bMt thinp emma. While in echool, abe
about college ia ;tha.t it helpe , beld down a full-time job as
.Jead to aoc:ial meturity, throuch a aeoior stenorrsPia' at Ro&amp;developlog tolerance, under- well Park Memorial Institute.
stslldlnr, a ...&amp;e of :raspoasiU "1bat W8111l't enoudl. abe
bility. ft isn't ~ matur- has been an active member imd
' ity, but maturity of attitude SundRy Scbool teacher at Sl
which being away from home Jobn Baptist Church wbere abe
belpa you acquire." Summing .sings in the choir.
up l1is feelinp ~t tbe riolll
"My Saturdays are ftlled too

Continuing evaluations of
graduate programs have been
urged by an ad hoc committee
of ·the Council of GrJI(Iuate
Schools in the Unillld States,
'·lest a oontroveJsiitl report
publisbed last January by the
American Council on Educetion become the ollicial rating
book for the next decade.~
According to the Chroi.icle of
Higher Education, what the
Jl1lduate council coosidered to
ba ''unfortunate publicity"
about the ACE ~ led to
the proposal. Tbe plan asks
"that small numbers of disciplines be evaluated each year
m every institution offering
graduate programs in those
f~elds."
, J
Tbe committee complained
that the 1989 survey on' which
the recent American Council
report was ~ had placed a
premium on "large comprehensive departments or programs."
'lbe committee also charged
that the report tended to give
the impression that it was presenting an objective aaaeasment
of quality. Tlris was so, said the
committee, despite a warning
in the report that the study reOected only the repUUJtio1111 of
the 'graduate departments.
Tbe committee aald that al- .

r..J!':

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

dents wanted to """""'P'Iah m the evenlnr."
that _ , tesically , aood, tiut
HOW did She ~ it?
I don't . _ that the only ~ - ''Solneti..- I felt 1il&lt;e giving
to change tliinp is throuJh vii&gt;- up " abe admits, ''but if you
lencie. Violence- attains more be!;.,.; in. Go!J, you are· able to
proportions thanDon-violent I!&lt;&gt; maintain yoW- drive and your
tivlliies. I am a very 11011-violent · bealth.' rm really · grateful-ao
person, so t.bere _ , thinp I many thinp could have rone
wanted to 11U1JP0ri. but. just . wrong."
couldn'l A lot-of the llolible
·Mrs. Hod..,., entered U/B
had' to do with the administra- through SEEK ' (Search for
tion. And a big miatske ia being Education, Elevation and
made now. A lot of ~ve Knowledge) in the summer of
adminiatratora are alowly being 1968. Sbe graduated from junior
sotten rid of, so tbet OOI\I8Ct . high ·school in Mont~omerY,
with studenla ia pttina ......,, Ala., wbere she .-srborn, aDd
'There is a _ , . ; -thY em from ~ Hirb Scbool in
campus now, ....., 81110111 the Buftalo. Mrs. Hod..,., completed
activlslll, who have come to feel studiee in advanced secretarial
tbet there is just really nolbina science at BrYant and Stratton
to be done em this campus witli Buaineos lnl!lltute in Buffalo in
the p.-nt atmoepbere. rve September, 1959, and became
rone through two student dam- executive aecre~ to the dionstraliobs - ODe during my rector at tbe Neighborhood
sophomore year and 008 dur- House Asan., 76J)ranre Streel
ing the junior year, 011e was I.atei abe became ajunior atenovlolent, 011e non-violent, and grapber at Roswell Park, and
very little was accomplished by then a aenior stenoKrapber.
either."
When abe enlen!il 0/B abe
Was the drug problem afl'ect- was "alienated at first," b&amp;inr? Stuart eaya, ''It afl'ec\ed ··ca.- abe mew nobody on .the
me ·only wben the Norton rec campus and "never wm~t to colwas~ down· I 1il&lt;ed !ere before."
g::~ ';;%~ .~ area
to · uae. the facilities. 'I don't
"To JO from hirb school
stand as [an] invltaticm to all 1il&lt;e
to aee drllll addiclll .., cam- where they tell )'Oil what to do
~to rank institutions on a pus, but lllao f don't 1il&lt;e to aee and wben to do It, and then
-~them kicked out em the r.reel enter college wben )'OU're really
do-it-yo~m~elf basis."
However, the paDel said that, They'll only just 10 bad&lt; to em your_ ~ ..• am be a trau"as far as a "'putational study the rbettos. Irs· a COIIllllllllity Dlll!ic. expenence," abe ..,.,.. .
Unfamiliar with tbe ....semlc
goes,. this aeems to ua to be a problem, not juat a Unn.mty
problem. 'There's a ati(ma that rulee and r8IIUlatiom, abe ODCe
=~
the community puts em tbe Uni- failed a couraa In llhYalcal povey." .
versity that tbe studenlll are ll8llhY ~ iboi and ber
'lbe committee's cOamients ~ and aell drup, hut a dU1dnm '-1 the·8u.."' decided
were contained '.in a tluee-pap in~'t~ achool atudeDIII are
"~
~~
ststement aent to the Jl'llduate
COUDcil's 300 members. Tbe isRobert talb about rettinr time b tbe IIDal - .
sue is espected to be talum up married in a year wben his much of the llllllerial was baaed
Ill the council's annual meeting fiance (raduatea. . "~ to ~ the ~ wblcb I '-1
me two years 8JO well, I ~ Studenlll lbauJd know ·
next December.
didn't look forwud to ll It this. A!&gt;Y JOod ~. &amp;.n't
entered my mind, but only ~ otidt to the boat-be adds
»JJHDCe 'D----l
J.lt:UJ(U
varueiY; it didn't really.,_}. his own mal8rlal"
~--C- .
But now, I ret·aloac - t with
Had abe kno!on tbe rulea,
r H~LIUU.
this lirl and tbe whole atmo- Mrs. Hodps miaht haft bam
~of .. ~= to. able to drop the couraa, .."To protect·
loyeM" who ~
by ~
''incomplete," and not
may not observe~ threatened
from ~ anil. ~
''Since faiJiq tJM: couraa, I've
CSEA ·Strike. if it occun, E . w. away
Doty vice preaideot for opera- ' - from reotrictiana. I dan t dane okay tbouP." .._ ..,.,..
Okay ia rirbl Mn. Hodps
tioos' and ll)'8lemo. hu uqed feel that rm bini lilY rrdid ber JliiiCiim t.chinc In
C81Dpll8 ildmlniatzatora to . . dom; tbe two of lis will be r!Dpther."
·.
shorthand
and !l.P_Inb~
...... tbet "aUendance report;q
"What do I want out of Jlfe?" spring at I:li!pw IIICil
~ are decthie ~ be cant;ln,... "To tie happy, eDchbu. IUaD the taM:ber's
"" alloctive .... , _ 16, contenl That's what a man eamforBulfaJoPubUcScboola.
tbe projected 8lrilr.e date.
atrivea f«--.and to try to do Sba bMillao applied to the Uni"'f tile elriJr.e ill called." Doty llOIIlethinl to make the world vmelty's -paduate )IIOirRIII- in
aald, "the -.nnptioD mey well bettar. I think Irs - ' a ' s at- COUMelor edui:atiaa: 8be bapes
be. ... tbe ~JaR of the State, titudea, not I a w.; tliat will to be able to teach Bd 10 to
.
~/B-and to - . B y comthat a Civil Sarvice omployee change tbe world."
did DOtCDDetowodted tbere"1 want to 811111 up with 008 bine teacbint and CIOUil.e!l.,.: fcxe is not eli1led tii ha paid quotatioa," Cllllltlnucld Habert.
Her ldds are aciled about
unleM our reoonla llive ~live ."The liMia of tbe ~ is . their mother being a -.:bar~ that the eDIJIIoyee was the ca~ be aid and &gt;W&gt;' proud. \Vt.a 1!8'!1*
Indeed ~..-In u author- ~- He abruned hia call ~ aay, ~JnOtbir ;. a
ahoulderS, "Well, I can't - . laadler, Mrs.
relata

78

=g

Att·-..1- ·
Called
In Case ci Strike

bed..._..._..

=

:.=. ...:._

,::t-.

=an

�1 ·

Info Needed

OnUIBstst

..... ..Palley." 8 .. it h Collop.
Nortbalp&amp;oa. Meew'
tk

GREPORTS

1be UaivallltY. arebiviat Ia

~~-Dr.
' Mary BID MoociJ, U/B'o tint

::c.Jy

k

profeaaor,

t:':t~·l ·~rb~~~

StlNY/ Storiy B ~ c1 o·k. Colo~
State Unhleroity, Univeroity of
Colorado ana llllot American
Cbemical Society Meetinc; "Photochemical Tranaformotion in the
Aza-Bicyclic Seriee," Univenity
of Colorado; "Electron Transfer
in the PhotocheiDDtry of Nitro-

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DR. PAUL IIIRLICII, p

r0 f eU

0

r,

cbomica1
•
. • waa elected
cbairman ~"'Jolymers and
PIMtiaa Group, Weotem New
. ~~OD, American Chemical

... ...:r

&amp;. lllAffta,

UIOciate

=::;o:,;~~

of the kDoriCan Society of Metlila for 1972.

wn.u.ui v Alli.tou, programmer

analyot, c:ooqpulinc oenter, bas
!!eon appointed to the Computer

TecbnolotiY Advioory Committee
ol the Bulralo BOilrd of Educa-

Ada c~

_.,Accurate~ Data..

Fli-......L...~..l
~Wl='ll

r.::.rpnic M:'.!':~m:}

LawAnnual

ouJto.~

·p~-

Ill• ,t_,;...,. Chemical &amp;ciny.

- . . , . , C!Ucqo.

w-··

.

and
tbe Electzodanical
Bulralo;·
"A 8c:aanina Electro,;
~ 81Ddy ol c .ry•tal

. .._ AI.-T PADwA.

the~ lnbma~
tera, diarlea, etc.~thet abe

N " ' - TaD-

r!=~~~
~~~=~.~of·

. Growth of liydrol&lt;)'llpatite." International -'-iation of Dental

Tbe arobiviat, MD.

at~

I;=w111tNea~¥~~
Mitchell
"- v:
·
lofrapAieo;

~.:=~~:~

Sbomiie ~ l'I!P'IIta abe
""" .......ruDY tried to ....
cate relaliwli ol Dr. Moody for

Dr. Moody •
Lib foreralua". When abe applied for admilaloD • i.o U/B'o
Medical Sobool. one faculty
member -ned "No t.dv
will wiab to IIIUdy ~
After abe ll8lluated in 1876.
abe became the tiNt member ol the Erie County
Medical SocieW, wbicb • to
that time bad been
male
•
FinDepn says that Dr.•
Moody "'ate r became ....,...
lhinl ol a beroiDe to female
students w h o, by 1888, bad
raised t b e i r Cllii8CiousraB to
the point ol orpnlzing u-.aeiWII into a kind of proto.
women's rilbiB poup."
U/B's- 1900 yeubook, the
lr;., alated that the aim ol the
group wao "to .,.....,.. one another to Mft. .;;(ti"i few timorous individualo upon whom
the wodd should frown diaapprovingly, but as a sisterhood
whoae object should be mutual
en~t, support, and
aid in matters -:ia1, educational, and profeosional.
~turday evening usu&amp;lly
finds the women students ol the
University. qu.izzlna e6cb other,
·or beins CJI1i.-l by 1101118 kind~.•!!'edical woman, or

and

·-rdJ; 1'be Etrect of Stan·
ooua F1uoride on the CJ')'Iital

_,11811aate.flldoneollbe NEW CAMPUS
count:rT• lint female pbyai- APPOINTMENTS.

.-18.

=

Faculty o1 N-..1 -

·oN

W&gt;manGr8d GJ»EOPLE
c:iall8.

Study

D R . - - B. ..~."""""*'

ReeD.-

IL ...!Ction of Oae-Coolter

uoiotant pro-

DR. .... -

f-r, c:bimiotry, "Moximiulipn
Attorney Geoeral .John N.
of Raolution in Lec&gt;llh Tempera- Mitdlell, wrltlns on bobalf ol
ture 'FimO NorroaliAtion Chrom- President Nboan, and Prime
•tocraphy." Anolylicol 'Chcmio- Minister Piette Elliott Trudeau
try.
.. ol C8nada are 81110111 dilniDR. J 0 H If .L HOWELL, a.ociate tariea W b 0 have contribuW
profeooor, cbemica1 engineerinc; letlenl for publicatioll in Tlte
:.~~~~~ AdVOC&lt;Jte; theatudebt~
and DR. RALPH L RUJOB, chair- of the 8cbooi oll.aw. •
man. civil engineering, "CircUJaPenoanal CJllllll'8tulatiouo and
tion Pattema and a Predictive "-t wiabea tO l!l8dl IIDIIher ol
Model for Pollutant Distribution Law's Claso ol 1871 ain Lake Erie," Proc.,.dint• of tM tended bY the AtiDrne)' Geoeral
13th ConferenC&lt; on Greot lAita on bebalf of the President. In
Re-=h.
·
bia letter, Mitchell warned
DL &amp;08£&amp;T KUKLAND, uoociate graduates that the yean 11'-l

~:::~ ~=~., ·;=~

g~n containing Ketones," 16lat
American ·Chemical Society Meeting. Loa AnceJes.
DR. Kn.TON PLr.SUB.., prolee.or, history, ''Univenit:iea, Students, and
Scbolan,'' induction for National
Honor Society, Depew High
School.
IJii. GARRY A. BECBNI'I"Z, professor,
cbemiatry, .. Biological Materiala

struggle to
Jation
Internal Chloroolefino: TrudNu LMtw
A Farile ~ut.;, to. the D-~ in
'The
t (
20-ketooteroula, wllh P.C. Bf!:.mp. from Pri:,""'Mm':~ ~
r~~rnol~
~: was sent just before the kidical Society .
napping crisis in Quebec in ·
RENATE L. NEEMAN, instructor, oc4 ~J!'~=d arrived BBV·

:J

"tm!:.!..

~pa~~h~l'it&amp;n~p= Quoting the eminent Amelimanagement science, " Peroeptual can jurist, Oliver Wendell
Motor Attributes of Mental Re- Holmes and showing profound
tardotes - l"~ 1: Peroeptual knowledge of the American sysMotor E~uation of Mental Re- tem of jurisprudenoe,Jhe Canatarda,\"" -m a Shei!A!red Work-' dian Prime Minister sent words
:~~w!i'ft~PJY~umal..of Oc- of. "inspira_.tion :and ~~....-~
w16be§,:..1locording to ~
DR. ~ ••PJJJWA. p rof': ~a o r, Kay. yearbook editor... . . . . .
l!'~=~et~':l?'~=:o~~ • The '!Ctin' d._..-&amp; the Law
ficient Olefina," with .1. smatan. School. IS W,.Jiliiim H. An~ a
off, Journal of the American. ~- who also received
Chemical...Sriciet~· "Photochemi· ~r"'!~ message !ram the
cal_;l'-niDaforrnati~ns of 8 m.H-t'rime Minister for bia wad&lt; in
·Ring Carbon yl CoiJlllOU)ids,'' promoting the-Law School and
Account., Ch~mi.caJ.-Research; bettering Canadian- American
;;;ha~.:n~ra~t relations.
cyclo -[3.3.1] non-6-en·2-one," Promi~Wrtt.n
,.-with A. l!atti.sti. Journal of lhe
. AlsO sending mngratUlatory
American Chemical Society; ~·1.6- letters and mesiiages to the
Hydrogen Transfer in the Photo- graduating-11ttomeys are Vice
chemietr)' of Aroywiridines,'' President Spiro T Agnew Govwith W. Eisenhardt.. Journ&lt;J! ~I -emor Rockefeller ·Sen. EcbnUDd
th• Am&lt;riCGll Chemical Society. S. Muslde (D-M;,_), Rep. Shir-

Anyone with information
about Dr. Moody should -rontact Mrs. Finnepn at 3111.

HOlDS Bill
7[nprowi' '

?!.:.::~:~t:=:~·~'::

uaistant

Catboayl Compounds.~ A If red
Univenity; "Infrared and Kinetie
Studiel of Metal Carbonyl Amine
Compleseo,~ Univeroity of AJ.
berta. Edmonton, Ca..ada; "The
ReJatnoe lmporbmoe of " and r
8oDdina in Me tal Molecular
~i=-~-="""·~ Univeroity

ence Foundation Lecturer in Sta.

oa.

Carcinoma,'' Annuol Sigma Poi
Lecturer at Univenity of Iowa;

m oaUBBJtA. auiatant profee-

~~-r:.;.N~

Sei:tion of the ~elpbia Sec·
liCJ!l ol the ACS Meelinc.

IlL PKT&amp;a L&amp;H88URY, pro(MeOr.

cbemiotzy, "New AJ&gt;Proacha for.
Synu-ia of Seoqwterpeneo and

~~~~~

ical ~ration; "8~ on
S y n - ol ~ Molec:aloo."
CarletoD Unioenaty. and Unioeroity ol Marylud.

DR. MA&amp;VIN ZDEN,

!.:;.,.

~er!!tT ~ •-t:=~!;.J'..~f;: l:'P~~~..~

in Membrane Electrodes,'' Brock
Univenity, Canada; .. lon-E 1 e ctrode Study of Alkali Metaf Complexeo,'' ACS Meetinc, Loa An·
gelea; "Ion-Selective Membranes
aDd Membrane Electrodes,'' Barton Lectures, Univenity o( Oklahoma.

~';:'~~·~::i

:mw:.:=~!': ~="''None

in
He aaid, however, tbot
Studies of Charxe Delocalization
s~r:.~dusbe~.....:
:=-~=~to;,;";t ~~~~';j for progresa. Let us hope thet
A .K. Colter, Tetrahedron.
laW)'erB will consistently be in

~~f.:':'r 1M":8n~c ~

tion.

.._ DONALD DADNBBOUBG.

In'

Jecular Weight Diotributiollll in
Copolymer Systems I. Living Copolymers," Macromokcula; with
T.L. DOUGLAS and E.W. GODIULVZ,
" Molecular Weight Diotributiono

ley Cbiabolm (D-N.Y.), two
members of the law faculty, Profeasor Angus and W. Howard
Mann, and a prominent Buffalo attorney, Charles S. Jlesmond, former chief judge of the

ronwkculu.

to the
yearbook include the Hon.

ii'..d~~t~:=o~~ fl:: s~ ~=t~~tors

profeaor, sta-

~~~~~.,SenJ.·~X ~~=~;

:;,:. A;.Pa:cta'::;r!'...{'d:= ~~=v.:''l''.i~ ~:,~

Models in Scienoe,'' National Sci-

Trianiphoeu-P~!: f:"'j~:,'..~:nueoCo~~ County Clerk Robert W.

tiatica, Edinboro (Pa.) State
Collep and Marietta and Geneva

Grimm, Deputy Mayor Stanley
M. Makowski, the Common
•~0 :AinS~~~=:,.; Council of .the City of Bulfalo,
~nalytical Chemiotry.
.. the bw Alumni Aasociation,
Dll JULIAN IIZEI&lt;ELY, pro'-&gt;r.
Erie County Bar Asd

atant,~ with M.S. Mohan, Sci-

~~~~~il'"iiio~Y!f~.!.!;

::l.,:t:,_

Screening for Chronic Diteaes,"
Department of Statistics, Univer-

="!h,.

of ffi«her Dimenoional Contin·
aency Table.," Oniveroity of
, Mu.n-to; RUticipated in roundtab I e di:lcuaion. UniYel8ity of
Waterloo, in connection with
~~'tic.o(n ~ture of

School, the Bar Associatioll and
the community ol laW)'erB and
"Dike Filling by M._ Intru- law makers on a 1oc:a1, national
oion aDd by ErPlooive Entrain- and international level, and lbua
meGeonpth?!:!~. Journal of make a lnlditional inatitutioll
Jas a ~ 8el'Ye a DL SOL W . ......... ~ cbaiJ'. K::~':lful ~"editor

"The Mathematical Theory of

~~a= J.!:
vection in Ladl.., u Alfeclinc
oity of Iowa; ''The•Mathematical Tundioh
T
eo 1
em&amp;'.~ M~~
11::"./le!.! ~~.:..Shf'~ Continuous
Rit:al TronoactioM; with P. IIEITAif,

PUBLICATIONS
-

.

~
==~.~~"'!:.
tion u HiP Temperatweo on

Platinum-Afumina and Platinum·
Zeolite." Journal of Catalyoio.

.

IlL ~ ~ • ...._

tant pro(-.r, chanlatry, '"!'be

~=~~~bio.,\Jih~ -=EXHIB=
· ==:::ITS-=-=~---E...,.._

r.::

JOC K. P111C111a. ~r.

MofeculaF P/oyria.

.a: uv•o ~.

--aate

b'= KJC:=·

~=~·!i'~1!

-t

!Umbura. N.Y.

f?'.u., a ~ ~~
00

czeatmo

:"~~"oil~

~

~r=;!~· .lfic- =.a=:~x.u!:!
i.A...,...,_,r,

DR.

L CIIIJIICH,
~ '"l'be

Art Oallory, HamburJ, N.Y.
-~ HOURI
Notton ltd's operatln1-11ours
cklrilll the Sum.- ...... will
be - ,.,._., Moncllly-F_,, 7:30
a.m. - 11 P-m-: -...s.;. 10 e.m. •
U p.m.; Sundey, 2 p.m. - 11 p.m.

r....

===~oi~MeV~~=
1'/oyeieo.

DR. I'BIUP COPI'D&lt;S. -

4

.Jm&gt;-

;;orrlioila ~~~ ~
Part n Neatroa ~

-

---·-·

"It is the Aim of the 1871

Advocate to bring toptber vari;
ous legal .JfOUP8 • the Law

AAUA Meeting
'The American ~tioll til.
U n i v e r a it y Adminiotmlion
(AAUA) will bold illl aecaud
national meetinc an the U/B
campus, .June 8 and 9. Sanbd
M. Lolt«~ oL AAUA'a
Ad Hoc
live CoauniUioe
and aasiotant dean ol the
8cbool ol ~t, oald
that the qooda will induile ....
lldoplian ol a CIIIIStitution, the
election ol
and OOIIIpl&amp;l:'.dolol~-ablp ol tbe
AAUA- aqanilllld in Baffalo illlt year to pr..- the
~ ol the llllmlmatratiaD
ol hJ,her educatiaD.

omc.a

�8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
oap. .. .,.-;

••Opon ID ._..,...., I D - - a . . . - -

of tho ~
In tho IUIIj8ct

eooo-- - - · ISI.zza, lar-..._
FRIDAY-28
JN'I'DirAftlii'&amp;L

POLl[

JD.

IWfaMD:

..... dariDc
lint
llaou. ill80 -Diof-rf
.

8.......

-

SUNDAY--31

Modiaol ~r ol ll&gt;e U.U..roity ol Odord Reoord IMibp
Study, tho larpot .-iaol rocord
linbae oyotem in tho world, 8DII
Dr. Luo Erik Bottipr of DIIDder:yd. Sweden. a COUDtry wbicb

~

=.=:=.:.i=

Dr. H .B. Newcombe, who ill
chairman of a Caruodian ..,.emto improve medical records, and one of the pioneen in the automation of health
data. will join tho diotiquiobed

men&amp; committee

WEDNESDAY-2
OOin'INUING

..aftAL

.ucAftC)Jif:

N--0sido-(hy- IMdalion
(ADII!poi8)-Dr. Williua Ziler,
ol cmollllrpry; Dr. Jolm L uun., diDic.J

--"'-·
-

..-r

olocY; Dr. Alan . .J. l&gt;rimwl; Dr.
Fnmk L ~; Dr. &amp;lpb
MMtJoc:ola, -

~~Ca~Aioo .._

..-r
a.

of
4 8DII

peuel.

~r:~i;~~~S Art ExhibU8, Trips, Films, Lectures, Top
=o'!'"?'ntinuin~::U1fru:!: NOTICES
UliDilTION AND IIALE OP OIUGINAL

Original otchinp,
woodcut&amp;, lithovapba by Picaooo,
AliT:

Baokin. AnuaUiewicz, Downier,

~U:tz~a

tS::::.=:

June 16 11 am. 5 11,111. Room 9
-Art

Buiic!inc, ·424o

TtJTOeiNO

roa

Ridp Lea. '

CBEDrr. Any

under-

paduat.e otudent int.ereoted in
tutorinc coll!'f" otudonlo for academic cred1t abould attend a
~ on Friday, June 4." at 1
p.m. in Diefendorf 148. Tutoro

:;! "S..ne;::t: [:r :oo~'::!W::i
tud v riab1 redit · vailabl
!...t
&gt;;;.ill abo • .';,:'.mod~ tJ&gt;!
meeting. Sb.denta unable to attend the meeting ma contact
Don Mau at tho EP~- Tutorial
Ulboratory • 88 Winspear, ext.
= ).(during the Summer Seo·

Staff MenlbersWife Opens
New Bookstore in Clarence
By 'JUDITH WOHL
man shepherd, "who prefers not
May Day for Susan Weias to be alone. and babysits very
Blumberg fell on the 15th Ibis like a dignified Nanny."
year, the Dpl!llinc date of a new
Finally a reality, The Good
bookstore in Clarence Center, Word is e -forum for paperbacks
called The Good Word, which and also carries posters, used
abe is operating with ber neigb- hardbacks and a few adult
bor, Susan Quaintance.
roloring books. (No l)udies in
Mrs. Blumberg had wanted the latter, just cultural stuff,"
to run a boobtore since ber says Mrs. Blumberg.) There
oollep days ill 1959 at Ameri- are tiUes for all interestscan University. Sbe dropped bestsellers, classics, science fieout after two years there to tion, a very romplete children's
marry Gary, now assistant di- section, cookbooks, mysteries,
rector of linaneial aida at U/B, poetry and drama, speciel inand """t to work managing terests, women's lib, ecology
three departments at Arnold and underground, to name a
Coastable ill Muyland.
few. And, as Susan adds, it Is
In 1963, the mumbergs came - "possible to special-order any~~-::::~~ =.including hardcover
mant, but not Susan: In the
The pbysical setting of the
past eilht years, the B1umbergs shop, at 9440 Clarence Center
bave had three 80118: Brat. 5, Road, ronsists of a four-room
J - 4, and .Joabua; 8 IDODtbe. wiDI at the back of the BlumAnd Susan ba also'-' active berg's 14-room bouse, bought in
ill: drwnmini out the vote for 1969. Preparation, which inSamuela and Flaherty and Job- eluded new subflooring, rinning
byinl for ill Clarence out walls and exposing "cefuni
Center; Mrvinl as president of bo!ams. papering and painting,
the Clarence Center Coopera- was 'done by Mrs. Blumberg
live N~UM~y and • a room and Mrs. Quaintance. This oomotber. at· tbe lfllllllllllr achool; casioned 8ome smiles when a
feeding &amp;trey c:olleee students floor-tile salesman had the inwbam Gary brinp home; writ- nocence to ask who their coning a dlildren's JloWil about traG!Dr was.
Bnt'~w!f ~ (as
The shop is decorated in a
yet
) ; CX1111JtruDtin1 "Georgetown" style, or as the
MCIIlllaori a.teriala for Juon; two Susana' ~ cards put
refwbliJbiac their 140-ysu-&lt;&gt;14 it. the "downtown Clareooe
- - with • llliniaiQI oiiUDdS Center' look, with blue and
and a DiaUnam of talent; liDd alriped walls, sl8te floor,
~ coonpletina two and wblte sheer eurlaina.
a - a ill Engiiab
The Good Word ia "'*'- for
at MJ'C, wblle also taking care ~ n-day-~. from
alia t.Dily.
12-6 p.m. and 7.&amp; Jl.lll._; •Baturhelp. oiOIIUI'a Gary day, from 9-5; and SUnday from
llkaDIB&amp;, ~~ ~~ 1-6. It ia ""-! Monday. To
....... 100 - - - ........ get tlwe, taJre Main Street".... a Saadlly achool to Goodrich lload, where a aipl
at Temple Belb Zion ._., "Ciaience Cenlllr General
~ iJiuoBd·• 1m- Stare" and "Ruth's

a. ...

And........_.

Art.J:I:: exhibits,

to be in-

stalled in the Norum· Hall Center Lounge, include "Images
From the Past." by. Judith
Steinhauser, assistant professor
in the School of Photographic
Arts and Sciences, Rochester
Institute of Technology (June
7-28); Paintings by Judith
Rots chi I d, New York City
(June 30-July 14) and paintings by Nadine Pikas, U/B art
grad student (July 16-30).
Three film series are slated.

Theatre and the sm:..mer Sessions bas prepared a third &amp;1m
series as part of the curriculum
for Modern European Theatre
and Film, French 4690, but
also open to other students,
faculty and staff. These will be
shown on Wednesdays ~ Fri~ys, July 23-August 25, _in 147
Diefendorf. Titles include, "Repulsion," "Elrtenninsting Angel," " Lea Carabiniers,'' and

._....,
• a.-

Anra"
nm::

to the Shaw Festival at

trips

Niagara-on-the-Lake, July 13,
August 17 and 22.
- FNHtjte W~
The Brenzell theatre workshops are one of several ''free
univt!!'Bity stY I e worbbops"
new to the Summer program

aUfi

3:::~~ ~
~

i~ for fun and in a short
period of time, 4hese events Will
"8~."
a:lso include el&lt;Cursions and
Enllloh Llclu,_. \
6eld trips where applicable. ·
English wiH
8pODBOr apOn 'lbe schedule are: other
pearanoes by ei~ intemation- theatre worblxips ( directed by
ally-known vis1ting novelists Coll...., A's Bambii Abelson),
and critics, presenting readings June 2S-August 6 and July 19and/or lectures. On •'-- --'-~- 27; organic gardening; origami;
ule are Dan Ja~ ~ calligraphy; misal media; nat-'
novelist; Jean Beranger, chair- ural foods; table tennis; bridge;
man of the Department of Eng- beginning psintinj and draw!ish, University" of Bordeaux; ~d outdoor ltving.
critic Hugb Kenner; and David worksbopo~~l~~
Hayman, Joyce scholar from bulletin board opposite the Inthe University of- Iowa.
. formation Center in Norton.
~- ~-tu~ M·-~
' .....__ ~ F., ~
M
Registration will begin .June 9
sic ~'tt;.~Zth~~; ~~m 261 Norton, call 831-

awo

J'!!

is the title of a series of public
lectures and concerts (primerily on Tuesday evenings) to be
oflered by the Department of
Music. The musical events and
pre-concert )ectures 'will be held
·

22.
~~ ~~.::=
charge. and tickets will be

available in Baird and Norton.
Programs include works by
Ravel, Copland, Stravinsky,
Weill, Debussy, Ravel, Schoenbet-g. Cage and others. Performers include Frina Boldt, piUUAB Aim ano; the Charles Gayle Jazz
The first. a rnii of Westerns, Ensemble, the U/B Opera
mwricals, science fiCtion and Worbbop; Wolfram Reuthe,
other rontemporary films, was ~oloncetlo, and Karin Reuthe,
prepared by the UUAB Film Pl&amp;nO.
Committee to sup p{ em en t - The ·Summer music scene
special film programs being of- will also inclu&lt;ie._a-tw&lt;Hiay
fered undet the auspices of aca- event on "Polish Contempordemic departments.
ary Music." sponsored by ColThis series, with weekend lege Band the J&gt;rosrBm in Soshowings at 7 and 9 p.m. and viet and East European Studweekday matinees at 3 p.m., ies of Buffalo State, Tuesday
will ~ available for $.76 for and Wednesday, July 27 and
students and $1.25 for faculty 28. Zygmunt Krauze, one of
and staff ($.25 less for after- Pol.8nd's be'lt !mown rompos-noon showings). It begins June ers and pianists, will be fes10 in the Norton Conference , lured in a '-'re-recital at
Theatre.
Baird oil the 28th.
Titles include ''If," "Brew- - 1beatra E ster McCloud," a series of - One of "ronternporjuy ' the"great olil musicals," "2001: A atre's most brilliant directors,"
Spaoo Od~y," "Z." "Elvira Mattin B
ll will oonduct
Madipn, and "Let It Be."
a series. 0~ :..0rksbopo beEnllloh tween June 12 and July 2. For
The Department o( En,lish the past fDur · years, Brenzell
a '"retrospective of the has been director of drama at
doc:ument:ary, aperimantal McMaster University, Hamiland feature film styles to date," ton. Ontario, wbP.re be has dion n-day and Th~ eYe- rectecl 25 productioos' and 16
ninp, JUDI! 29-A\JIIISt 5;m 147 worbbops. He bas been reeiDielendorf.
dent-dqec:tor of the l.aMama
Included in 1ilis eeriea will E&gt;:periria,ta) Theatre' Club in
be E-.stein's "Potemkin," New Yorit and artilitie director
Renoir's "Grand Illuaion." of the LaMama Troupe in CanWelles' "Cilia!n Kline" Ford's ada. Becsuae be · prelera to
"My Darting Clementine," and worit with one poup o( people
- tbe c:locumeoilary, "Point ot Or- intensely ror elrtenlled periods,
der," dealina with the Anny- the worbbopa will vary in
McCutbJr lieariDIS of the Joadh from lolo fo fhe days.
Jail~:~
191i0'L
The Bummer lbeaCnl ofrer~inp alao Include aeunloaa ...
Road. fsTum
Good
Word
baJf aNbt;
Dkic:kThe
dowD,
Clll
The
~t
of French tbe Slratfard Feslival, July 9in coHabolatlan with EJII)lab. 11 and Au,uat 13-15, and tbree
the JaCl

.J:-=.:
l::t--&amp;
5 :::

of o.bo, ...

Art emibits, excursions,
films, lectures, music and theatre will highlight a romprehensive schedule of activities ·
planned for the 1971 Slimmer
Sessions.
-According to the Norton Hall
s t a f f, · "The primary emphasis in preparing this summer's
activities was upon informality, relaxation, and interaction.
Many of the events were especially designed to encourage
a sense of rommunity. within
small groups oontered around
particular interests." Nortonand -theOfficeofUniversity Publications Services
are preparing a booklet on the
entire activities schedule which _
also · includes information on
various campus and area services of interest to summer visitors. 'Ibis publication will be
avaitable the second week in
June.
'
Me&amp;Rwhile, the Reporter offers this survey for those who
wish to plan abesd.

1

1

1

MaiD St., Buffalo. N.Y. 14214.

GIW'IIIC

THURSDAY--3

Ac_,.;,.;_,.;.nn
CJ~l..~,J. .1~,] fo•'~" SrtH'JH'Jflr
CJ~....:~YIC'
f,WfNIA:A) IJ(;I tK:U.UU::{l,
" " ' u K-l -~W r.o

oity of N.W~ at Buffalo, 2211

Crafts

and Othar -

The Creative Craft Center,
Room 7, Nortor&gt;, will a1ao offer
a series of workJlbops in enameling, ceramics, jewelry, casting
and lap1·~·-·. Craft Center
~3

~

in -Room 307 will

It ~ baa mak~=sandal making.
dude ~ :,U"A~

inc!

Falls (June 13 and July 25),
Letchworth State Park (June
19 and .July 31), and the Coming Glass Center (July 25).
The U/B ftidina ClUb
1
3602) also plans an e1f! ~
warm 'IIPe8lher program as do
the Balkan Do-.. who will
ineet every Sunday ....un, in
Norton from 7:30-11 p.m.

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C"

WAY
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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 2-NO. 33

)

Senate Asks
Input On
Shift Plan

College A Credits
-Must Be·Evaluated

A new policy on tuition waivers, the future of the day care
center, a clarification of next
year's budget picture and the
report of the Taak Force on Re-

orpnizaticm were lliDOill lllllior
&lt;topics at Jut Thlllllday's Faculty Senate ..-ting. Several
motions were pa-.1 durinl the
tbree-bour 8M8ioo with Jhe - ators recommendin1 faculty input on all reorpnization proJ...als and
. . the Mad
for continw":'t'";: Senate's
EJeCUtive Committee.
First qenda item was President Ketter's report_ He in• fanned the Senate that the Lea·

=.:~~i

hours per week for each facul.
ty member bas been withdrawn
from the Governor's deek. 1be
biD bas
back to committee
{or
consideration, be
said
Ketter also told of a di!ective
from the Albany office ~­
ing "curtailment of t u i t 1 o n
waivers in every possible instan!"'." This bas causecf U /8
poliCy to be re-drawn, be said.
1be new• policy allows tuition
waivers 1or full-time teacbins,
_- . e b and BJ'B(Iuate 8811iatanta: wbD are lllllkinl at least
$2,000 per llaldemic year or are
on a .25 fuH-time equivalent
line. Individual!! in these aame
graduate catesories are allowed
up to 12 hours of tuition waivers for appoinbnents they hold
during the summer. 1be same
privileges apply to interns and
students on fellowships certified by the Graduate_ School.
Full- and part-time faculty
members will continue to set
waivers with part-time people
limited. to sill: hours of credit,
the president aaid. Full-time
professional and classified staff
members will also continue to
be covered. Hish school teachers supervisins practice tA!achers will set tluee hours of tuition waivers for each student
handle. Foreign students
wil continue to get waivers,
however, -these must be ap..
proved by tl1e director of foreign student affAirs. Students
in special educstional opporotunity protp81DS, , such as the
ones for minority students in
both underpaduate and professional schools, will set waivers up to a maximum of fiVe

f:J:"

ther

years.
~C....Ceo9&lt;

.

1be UIB' · Cooperative Day
Care Center bas been liven a
new lease on life by SUNY
Chancellor En&gt;Mt Boyer, ·Ketter reported. At the last ..-tinJ ol the SUNY Senate, be
said, Boyer aplained that day
care centel's were "a matter. of
local option" but that no State
mc;mar. could be uaad. e t8 had
submitted a supplemental budsat reqDMt for the Center last
YMI: but it was relected by the
SUNY Budset Office. When
the fiacal year bepn, it
......t the policy was to eliminate day care centers on all
~ This new atatement
by Boyer, however, cbanpa the

~ asld
1be policy bas already
been adopted by a child care
cmter at Albany. Thla project
W88 atsrted last September UD·

. picture,

MAY20, 1971

-

for occupancy In 1973, the law and JuMpruclence
units projoctH for development
the COMtnrc:tion lite.

Bulldlrc. first of the FKUI!y
Amhefst. Is boclnnlftl to -

·In

The Office of the President
has directed that "the Academic Vice President work with-the
Director of the Collegiate Assembly to insure that the required responsible evaluation
be carried out" for work done
in College A this semester.
President Ketter has also indicated that self-'evaluation will
not be pennitted anywhere in
. the University.
·
The action aniounts to a rejection of a recommendation
made by a Faculty Senate
Committee la st week t hat
. credit be given for sell-evaluated work .done in the College
Ibis spring.
In response to the president's
direi:tive, Konrad von Moltke,
direcl.or of the Collegiilte Assembly, has formulated an information form which is now
being used as the basis for evaluation of College A students.
' Students are asked to "formulate a written sell-evaluation of
your wark in College A this
semester which you consider
suitable for entering on your
transcript." This portion of the
"exam,' von Moltkepas advised

~r:sbip~fpr
.
. .....

New GoVernana! OJ111111ittee

versity Placement and Career
Guidanoe; D. Rudyard Merrithe responsibility of drafting am, president, Millard Fillmore
articles of governance, bas now Collese Student Association;
been constituted and is begin- Marjorie Mii, assistant proning its deliberations, Presi- vost, Educational Studies; Vacdent Robert L. Ketter said this lav Mostecky, librarian, Law
School; Michsel Nicolau, Gradweek.
Aooordins to the president, uate Student Association; Gerthe articles to be drafted ''will ald Saltarelli, president, Hou- ·
daille Industries, chairman of
the board o f trustees, U/8
University can oooperate in Foundation, Inc., and member
deliberations on University pol- of the Council of the Univericies, can make recommenda"" sity; Jeannette Schsefer, Natutions upon these to the presi- ral Sciences and Mathematics;
dent of the University, and can and John P . Sullivan, faculty
thereby advance the scholar- ( COitlilwed em Z. col. I)
ship of the University and its
concern for human risbts and
personal development."
Articles of IIO\'I!fll8llOI, the
president said, will be developed "pursuant to the p!Ovisions of Article X of the Policies of the Board of Trustees
of State University of New
York."
Members of the Govemanca
Committee are: Mary Brady,
aa.&gt;ciate librarian, Lockwood
Library; Sara ~ Cicarelli,
Medical TeclmoiOBY, Faculty
of Health Sciences; Michael
Day, assistant accountant; Ian
DeWasl, president, Student Association; Robert c. Fitzpatridl, acting vice preajdent for
reaearcb; .Charles M. FoseJ, aasistsnt.,_,..tive vice~
J. Raaa1d Gentile, Education
~. Famllty ol ~
tiona) Studiea; Marilla Gllaa,
aasiatsnt to the direotor, Policy
Sc:ieDces; Nlcbolas Goodman,
Malbematica, Faculty ~ Natural Sc:ieDces and . Malbematicis; Harold Gtibennmt, tint vice
preaidant, St;udent AMaciation;
Geoqa ~ Graduate
St;udent AaaoclatiGD; Ruth ~
lat ~ 8tudl!nt Aaaoclatiaa; 1\oiat Lipp, pnBideat,
General Ahanl AMaciation;
The Univeisity Committee
on Governanoe, charged with

~::!~ ':..:m::'en=~r ~

der a opacial rullni of the Bud(.........,.,.-Z,col.l)
- ~ Uartell.~. Uni/

Abelson's classes as her students requested that she evaluate them at. the beginnins of
the .semester.
In a letter to the Sensle Executive Committee, the· Academic Vice President and the
Collegiate Assembly director,
the President rejected also _
charges of administration vacillation on self-grading which
were contained in the Senate
Committee report.
The report, otherwise favorable to the administration's position on ' th&amp;- matter, has also
been rejected by the Collegiate
Assembly which has made a
further appeal to the Faculty
Senate Executive Conilnitiee.
That appeal is now being
considered by a three-man subgroup of the EJeCUtive Committee whose members are:
Wayne K. Anderson, Medicinal Chemistry, chairman; Sylvia Hart, Nursing; and Stanley
Bruckenstein, Chemistry.
The appeals bearinB&amp; began
Tuesday afternoon, the Senate
Office told the Reporter at
deadline. Senate sources also
(.;.,ntinued o n - 3, col. 1)

~~~!!,.~~~

Doty L"istg
Budget.l.'I\y6.ll.IVt::s
_

it bas 'been reviewed. Studenta
are- also asked for supportive ' ·
evidence of their self-evaluation
and the name and address of
a person "'who is in a position
to assess your work in College

~~

~tt!:~Pv:'wl\f't,., ~~~

This summary of ''budseting
ac;.tiyities ~ date an~, plans for
~ rmmedmte future J_tas been
is unavailable or judged mcom- lSSUed by E.W. Doty, Vtoe preapetent, the student will be ad- ident for operations and sysvised that a substitute evaluator temsW: ha .. Do
tlined
has been used. Finally, the stu" e
ve,
ty ou
:
dent is asked to submit his ad• Identified the azess for
dress for the next four weeks. the $644,000 of budset reducHe is also advised that "if the tion (from the 1970-71 on-soinl
information to be entered on budget) necessary to come withthe transcript differs in any in the _$66,836,000 budset aa- .
particular from that which you signed to SUNY at 8ulfalo by
have requested, we will contact Chancellor Boyer in his letter
you before undertaking any ac- of April 23, 1971. In this protion." This final "exam" does cess we have ideotifled 55 poainot apply to studenla in Bambii tions in Salaries lc W . Regular Which are to be abolished and another- 28 in Temporary Service (unoccupied 01'
to be vacated).
• Determined that, in addition to the $1,1147,500 ol mandatory savinp, - would save
an additional $1,052,500, 01' a
total
of ·$2,900,000
as and
a precaution __
,...,. the later
likely
im ~-of an expenditm8
to evaluate the student's work,
von Moltke says. If the person

~termined

that, to the
fullest &lt;kgne possible, aavinp

:Ucan~ ~

L m:;:

vacated; t b a t "un.lreezinl" a
line will require a Budpt aotidn "freezing" 801118 olbar vacant line in order to -.re the
continued validity of the aav-

ii::, ~vc:; ~"'l:":.:
8udset and
read -&lt;&gt;Uta.

Budiet Coadition

~!~ 't;:PDI!'Y

toproduceadditiooalaa=

, which are , _ , - y as a put
of our reserve spinet the btb-

COillina expenditure calliDa:

·_

( otherwiae the $1,052,500 wouJil
have ~ larpr) .
• A..-1 that tbe....l971-'l2
budpl8, with aasipted ~
factors, will be availabJe for
distribution by Monday 111ay
24, 1971.
' •
•

�GR.EPolrrER.,

2

NewHouse
For PnNdent
Uruler Study .
President Robert L. Ketter
confirmed this week that the
.University at Buftalo Foundation, Inc., is considering the acquisition of a new presidential
resideooe at 186 LeBron Drive,
Eggertsville.
Dr. Ketter said that ''based
on careful and extensive study,
it bas become evident that the
current president's home at 123
Jewett Parkway is better suited
to academic, adminislrative and
library utilization than it is as
a resideooe for the presidenl"
He said, "At a time when. the
University is occupying -ce
at a rate which is 135 per cent
of State Umversity standards,
we must optimize the UBe of all
on-campus facilities. '!be occupancy of the Jewett Parkway
home for purposes other than
residential w o u I d relinquish
valuable space on the campus."
According to Dr. Ketter, the
purchase of the LeBron Drive
property would be achieved
without State monies. "The
University at Bulfalo Foundation, a pr(vate foundation
wtx.e primary pwpooe is to as-.
aist the University in meeting
148 goals and objectives, bas
recognized b o t h the severe
space problems the University
is now encountering, as well as
the desirability of having a
presidential residence more
readily accessible from both the
Main Street campus and the future Amberst c a m p u s. Tbe
Foundation sees this as an opportunity to contribute to the
solution gf these major problems facing the University and

~J:f~fu,.,ne~~gDr~
residence."

Houle Given
125thAward
Dr. Cyril Houle, chairman of
the Department of Higher Education, University of Chicago,
and banquet speaker at a local
symposium on the "Open University System,'' sponsored by
the Division of Continuing Education last weekend, is the
thirteenth recipient of a U I B
126th Anniversary Award.
Cited for his "outstanding
contributions to the field of
higher adult education," Dr.
Houle was called "the single
most influential man in continuing education."
He bas worked with a national advisory council in the
field appointed by President
Johnson, with UNESCO and
with agencies in Great Britain,
Africa, the Caribbean, Denmark, Sweden and South America.
''Earlier," his citation noted,
"the progni.m in adult education which r.ou established at
the Univenuty of Chicago became a model for similar programs in other univm:sities."
In his address at the open
university s y m p o s i u m, Dr.
Houle said that educational
methods developed in ''non-traditional" del!ree programs for
adults may be applied in traditional coUege programs.

Governance-

(coniinued ,_. - 1 . eoL 3)
profeoisor, Arts and Letters.
Listed as "permanent members to be
. ted in the
fulwJ&gt;" are
Overton, P&amp;ycbolOSY, Social Scieooaa and
Adminiatntion; and Howard
Stnua, MechanlcaJ EDP-rm,, Faculty olEDiineerinl and
Applied Scieooaa.

wiG:""

• . , 20, 191J

Seoate~lnputoo~------

CwrtRules
BailFundN&gt;t

adminlatnltive and academic re- further consideration.
orpnization of the Umversity
Earlier this spring, the Sen~
get Olrios. '!be new budget re- should be fuUy dlscusaed with ate bad passed a .JD!&gt;tion callinl
strictions, however, stopped all existing organizational units for aetion on the part of the
.
their money .. As a result, the involved, as weU as with the local and Albany administra- I'D;..]. -~~~--1'
group was incorporated and Senste as a wbole, prior to their tiona to -maintain the current ~Wf«.U
took on fuU responsibility for promulgation and implements- funding level for minority stu- the children, Kettl!r reported. tion; and 1hat actual reorgani- dent programs. A copy or this
Student monies C&amp;DDOt be
'!bey wiU continue to UBe uni- zation he brought about wber- motion was sent to Chancellor uaed fO&lt; bail hmds, the State
versity property, however, and ever possible, through mutual Boyer. In a response, reported Supreme Court ruled 1aat ......t&lt;.
have a $1-a-year lease. This is consensus and consent of the by Chairman Baumer, the '!be court held that uainl stuprobably the course the U / B parties. ThiS sentiment is in Chancellor maintained that dent tunas for bail money is
Day Care Center will " follow, harmony, we believe, with both funding of minority student "stretching the mMning of eduthe president indicated.
the letter and the spirit of programs is being given "the cation too far," Ian De Waal,
'!be Center will use a $7,500 relevant University regulations highest priority in the supple- Student Aasociation president
gift from an anonymous donor, at every level. In addition, we mental budgel"
said. '!be caae' was oriKinaUy
_:._ ·-~~
brought by Mark Huddleston,
$7,500 from the Graduate Stu- ' believe the formal consultation
8
dent Association and the ·stuchi
f
•-~· -·--·-"
fanner sA president, against
dent Association, and, hope- ~a~ !se,etiaJ"":'~ : :
Moving along on its agenda, President Robert . Ketter, Dr.
fully, $7,500 from the Univer- . ful implementation of any re- the Senste also passed an Richard Sicgelkow, vice presisity to renovate Cooke Hall organization plan that might be amendment to its bylaws which dent for student affairs,. and
basement. Rebuilding is needed rontemplated."
,
would allow members of the Ex- the N- York State Board of
to provide a child-sized toilet
Bruce Jackson, English, par- ecutive Committee to serve two T~
and the ru-e alarm and ventila- tial author of the motion, spoke colisecutive terms. '!be amendThe action was called a
tion systems which are required in favor of 1ts passage, pointing ment now goes to the entire "friendly suit" to determine the
by the State health code. It is out that "there is no such thing voting faculty for consideration. legality of the Trustees' ruling
anticipate&lt;' that the Center will in a university as a non-aca- In debate on the amendment, which limits use of •tudent
work with the School of Social demic decision .. . all decisions Dr. Dean Pruitt, Psychology, funda to cultural, educational,
·Policy and Community Ser- are academic." Jackson said the pointed out that this change recreational, aocial and athletic
vices. Final details were motion was developed because would help prevent the Senste purposes. Thia policy ro;qWres
worked out at an Albany meet- or a fear that the University chairman from · gaining too that aU student expenchtures
ing on Tuesday of last week, would be reorganized over the much influence over the EliiBC- be checked by the administraKetter said. In attendance were summer with little faculty in- utive Committee. Currently, tion of the local unil In the faU
Boyer, Ketter, Lee Preston, put. Thoush the motion is the chairman is the only mem- the SA put in a request for
representing the Faculty Sen- "mild,'' Jackson said it would her of the group wbo may serve money for a bail fund which
ate, a representative from the help the administration provide more than one term. '!be bal- was rejected by Siggelkow on
Student Association and mem· an atmosphere where "academic lot on this amendment bas now the grounda that it did not fit
hers of the Day Care Center.
matters can flower."
been sent to the voting faculty into the Trustees' categories.
This motion would help in- and is due in the Senste ollice This rejection also occurred at
Budpt Worries
.
sure a policy of local autonomy, on MondAy, May 24. Also due other SUNY units. Siggelkow
'!be Day Care Cerrter problem may be solved but overall Dr. Gilbert Moore, Education, the same day is the ha).lot for and the SA then agreed to a
budgetary worries certainly pointed out. Acceptance and SUNY senator. (In fhe May suit to determine the legality
. - othisf.thearea'I'rus. tees' regulations in
aren't, Ket.ter told the Senate. "implementation" of the mo- ~~eedd~tite'ono::'•~ Repootrtewasr, them
'"'-"" ballot
This year U/ B is faoing an ab- tion was urged also by Dr. Conas
May
In the future, De Waal exstantine
Yeracaris,
Sociology.
correctly
announced
solute n!duotion of $644,000
Tbe motion passed unani- 20. )
pects SA will gather voluntary
with an additional $2,900,000 .mously.
In other actions, the Senste contributions for students' bail
loss attributable to the savings
discussed the abolition of the as they did during the Washfactor situations. There is a Meeting W"rth Executive Committee offices of Advocate and Om- ington protests the first week
current mandatory savings facTo get further faculty feed- budsman which was required by in May. At that time, $3,000
tor or $1.8 million and an add i- hack on the reorganization pro- a directive from the Olrice of was collected. This and other
tional enforced savings or 1 to 3 posal, the president met with the Budget last October. Dr. money from last year's fund
per cent"is expected to come in the Senste Executive Commit- Charles Planck, Political Sci- was used to gain the release of
September. Cutbacks have al- •tee on Monday. While no for- ence, spoke in favor of retain- U/ B students. The" money is
ready eliminated the so-called rnslized agreement came out of ing the Ombudsman's Office now being returned to the SA
"flexible money" in the presi- the session, Dr. Thomas Frantz,.... .l!l!.inling out that over 300 case.i and a total of $5,000 is now
dent's office-"The hidden pot Senate secretary, said the presi---,;ave been bandied by Dr. Rob- available. This is enough "to
is gone," l.&lt;etter asserted. In dent indicated he would not ert Stem this year. It's a "low carry us through the summer,"
addition, the State is asking move to implement major por- key, ·informal way of taking De Waal believes.
for curtailment of the Library's nons of the report this summer. care of complaints" . Planck
'!be SA will meet this week
acquisitions, a move which Ket- Significant changes will take said. He moved "~t the Fac- to decide whether to appeal the
ter "seriously questions." FiftyC?nly after full .consults- ulty Senste do everything pas- case.
five full-bme positions are being !'lace
lion w1th the Executive Com- sible to insure the continuation
abolisl)ed, none of which is cur- mittee,
reported. He said of the Office of Ombudsman for
rently occupied, the president that theFrantz
ident indicated the 1971-72 academic year."
said . Twenty-eight temporary that the pres
earliest time these Senate members suggested two
service positions will also be changes would take place is in methods of implementing the
eliminated. This is a total or
fall . Until then, only minor proposal. Professor Robert
83 positions which are perma- the
changes will be Fleming, University advocate,
nently lost to the University, administrative
Implemented.
called for passage of a State
Ketter explained. ( See separate
SPA
Neeotlatlons
law which would set UJ! inderundown on budget actions to
At the Thursday meeting pendent ornbudaman offices at
In addition to obtaining an
date, elsewhere in this issue.)
1he Senate also beard from Dr' each campus. Dr. George Hocb- option to buy 1150 acres of
Untverslty RCIOrlanlutlon
Robert Fisk who reported on field asked ~t. SPA ~e !-be land in Ellicottville, Sub Board
The summary University re- • the progress or SPA's negotia- . matter up m ~~ . negotiation I, Inc., the financial arm of
organization report, released in lions with the State. The nego- P~- '!be original Planck U /B's six student governments,
last Thursday's Reporter, bas tiations have started again with motion was Pll;""ed and f!!lerred is alao reportedly conaidering
caused much debate, K e t t e r a mediator following declara- to the Executive . Comnpttee.
various plans for · the Faculty
said. His mail has been running tion or an ,;ollicial impasse" by
After ·the meeting adjourned, Student Asaociation (FSAJ
to the extremes on the issue, he both sides last week. If this ·the senators from Arts and ~t­ land they hope to receive the
added, with very few people in mediation fails, Fisk explained, ters. '!"'t and _elected Diane title for. Thia iand, located in
the !"iddle._.The_president said a. "fact-finding" investigation . CBhr~stian, English, .to f'!'Plaoe Amherst, is several miles from
he. l8 seeking mput from all will follow. Senator Yeracaris
ruce _Jackson who l8 go1ng on the new campus. Sub Board I,
sources and is "openly solicit- also reported that SPA has over sabbatic:st.
Inc., is now cliacuasing the posing oomments." Some reorgani. 340 members on: campus and _
sibility of sell~ part of the
zation is necessary, he pointed that an extensive membership rp
property and buyi,ng other land
out, because of the present dif. drive wiU start soon to increase
~ 1 1 ...d-......,
closer to the D8W Uni\WIIity
Acuity in obtaining budget and the number.
·
~U::l.
site. One plan is to bUild atumanagement information withdent housinJ. Some feel the
in the University. While indi- Who Gets Senate Mall?
Albany decision to reduce
A request from Constance
cating that this "is not my redormitory conatructioo Statewide will ·ve added impetus
port,'' the president said, " it is Fredrickson, Social Policy and
to this pm:
one I find sympathy with." Community Services, for the
Saul '!'ouster, formerly a
n.e group is a1ao CCIII80liHowever, he oontinued, •Tm not ai!C!nda and other materials
in 8 position to stampede the which are sent to Faculty Sen- member of the faculty of the dating its power on campua. In
University into adopting one ate members caused floor de- U/B Law School and a pres;: the past two months, the Pubpattern as opposed to another." bate concerning wbo should be deritial asaistant during the ad- lication Board, the UniYerolty
Copies of the entire report were on the Senste's mailing lisl ministration of Martin "Meyer- Union Activiti-es Boarddistributed to vice presidents, · Chairman William Baumer son, bas been named vice presi- (UUAB) and the Norton
pointed out that adding names dent and provost of The Oity House Council have~ eli~~anjo:!':':.. ~ ~ to the list would strain the CoUege of City University of rectl)!' ~ to.Sub 8pard
1. ~7 deleptaa to
Faculty Senste. In addition, secretarial help in the Senste New York, effeotive June L
Ke~ said, copies ....., available
!*eaddanc!tinuonal·
ght personnel-itate hiDr'rProfessor Touster wiU se""' PubUcationa Board and House
in ~ libraries ,.,. the public.
me
1
• as executive&gt; officer to Presi- Council ......., ct-. by the a1x
Marvin Zelen, ~.tatiatics, moved, dent_ R. E. Marshak 'on aca- student gollllftUIIalt and tlae
FKUIIJ Input
however, that all members -of deiiiiC matters allecting City individuals
~ 1D
'!be propcad reo
· lion the voting faculty wbo wish to • eon- and wiU serve 88 acting their
• were
·
prompted lbe Bena~Esecu­ receive material sent to the preaident durina: Dr Marshal(8
-tuencies. ow, bDwtive Committee to puah (!If ~tors may do so
~
abaencea from tLe aimpua.
~I
ll'ill
adoption by the full Senate mg •the Senate olllce. Zelen s
A: oanber of the UtB facul. is a1ao workina with~ in
of a IMO!ution cUlini for fac.. ~tidn paaaad, but aince a mo- ty f u m J.966.69, pro(_. the aelection ol their ..,_,
ulty input into miY propocii!CI "ti&lt;!D muat JIP. through a '?""'· Touat.er bad moot - t l y 1-. its Cbalrman PblUp
c:bangee. '!be NIIOiution read:
mittee before it can be alllciaJly on ~ faculty of the State Uni- aays. In lbe fall. Leaf ia
"It ia t h e - of lbe Faeulty
11111
~
J::ml"":."": ~ College at Old Weat- m, lJVAB ~ nm a ..,
Senate U..t uy propooalo far
;
~
~
1
_ ! ,
,,
of 1 then .activdieL .
·

Sub Board Is
Coruolidating

10"

Gets

r'ost at CUNY

n

tJt

=

::"•..!::b...._

-=

.r.- u.t

:.:.!t

�Mq :ZO, 1911

· ruiegeAGrades Face Evaluation _ _ _ _ _ _____,
(coniUa~ from p&lt;JBel, coL 6)

University, I am in full agree- self-evaluation." However, tbe
ment tbat the Aeademic Vice group added, University Col"
President properly and cor- lege "knew what it was approvommendations would be consid- rectly discharpd. his duties and ' ing . . . and was aware that
ered as part of the appes)a pro- responsibility aasigned by me College A could interpret this
cess.
to him in aocordance with the as approval of self-evaluation."
At n-lay's hearing, the Regulations of the Commiasion- The University College Cur&lt;Xillelea a~ only the first er of Education of the State of riculum Committee, though, is
tw o recommendations, being New York.
not a policy-making body; that
content with the conclusion of
"2. To facilitate responsible is the role of the Faculty Senthe third. von Moltke felt the evaluation throughout the Uni- ate, the panel noted.
appm) was "reasonably well re- versity, the Office of the Presi- .
The -Commi.t tee thus sought
ceived, with the committee giv- dent will request of each of the Faculty Senate actions, if any,
· ing every indication thst they Provosts and University-wide concerning "overall University
disregarded Ketter's letter." Deans that he corisult with his . guidelines" on self-evaluation.
The Assembly director indi- various Department and ProW i t h regard to arBWDeDts
cated thst the president'• mem- gram Chairmen to determine advanoed by the Collegiate Asorandum is causing studenta to other possible areas of viola- oombly to demonstrate such apseek. redrees in the outside tion of the Commissioner's Reg- proval or precedent, the Comcourts. Ketter's letter has put ulations and to correct Blich sit- mittee Jound that "the Collethe "University in a weak posi- uations as are discovered.
giate group has not proved its
. "3. I find that the general case." Although the Faculty
lion naw," he added and he
hoped the Senate would see fit conclusion contained in Item Senate, knowing lull well Colto take a stand which "is emctly #3 does not follow from the lege A's stance on the issue,
opposite to the P*ident and material contained in the body has not seen fit to "disallow
the first heering committee."
of the grievance committee re- bell-evaluation," this nonetheThe Collegiate Assembly port. First, it is clearly stated less does not imply approval,
voted . May 12 to con teet the that ·responsible eva I ua tion the Committee said.
recommendations of an initial cannot he viewed as a passive
"Recognition that a practice
grievance panel chaired by Pro- action by the administration.
lessor John Halstead of the Secondly, it was clearly pointed exists does not constitute apDepartment of History. Other out that the .Academic Vice proval. Acquiescence in an ex. members of this group were President had given adequate perimental practice cannot be
Profe&amp;SOnl Marvin Bloom, So- and sufficient notice that a re- parlayed into definitive sanccial Welfare, and Kenneth Kis- sponsible evaluation w o u I d tion. Toleration of a controverer, Chemical Engineering, and have to he in effect this sem- sial practice does not establish
Eric Schoenfeld, undergraduate ester for students enrolled in a legitimate precedent.
"At this point, the Commitstudent.
·
College A to obtain credit.
The Halstead Committee Equally important, though not tee can find no established polrecommendations were:
specifically referred to in the icy on this campus which sancreport, is the fact that there tions self-evaluation."
"1. ·1n the absence of a local- was an action of College A
What is the SUNY policy
ly-&lt;!Siablished policy on self- earlier in the semester to the on3.evaluation?
evaluation . . . the Academic effect tbat they Wc&gt;uld ignore
Although
t h i s was not a
Vice President has not acted the directive of the Academic
illegally lin moving against Vice President. Past adminis- point in the g~:ievance dispute,
the
Committee
felt the question
self-evaluation) and is not only trative "acts of grace" cannot
entitled, bu( obliged, to act on be construed as vacillation. In- "cannot be ·avoided." State reguJations
require
"demonstrated
SUNY policy (calling for deed, as the report clearly
'demonstrated student accomp- states, the Academic Vice P resi- accomplishment," and the Academic
Vice
President,
with the
lishment' J • . . College A must dent has shown his commitobserve this policy. Until Col- ment to tbe collegiate concept, concurrence of legal counsel,
bas
interpreted
this
to
mean
lege A does so, the Academic at the same . time he has inVice President is perfectly en- sisted that it, too, as well as that self-evaluation alone is not
s••flicienl
In
the
absence
of
titled to use his administrative other educational programs, be
prerogative to prevent contin- developed within the required any local policy, the Commitsaid,
this
interpretstion
is
tee
· ued vinlation of policy by Col- context of SUNY policies.
lege A. If College A will-agree
"It is the understanding of both reasonable and the only
policy
on
self-evaluation
which
to .confonn to SUNY policy, · the Office of the President,
the Committee recommends the based on discussions with the exists. Since College A "has
inunediate apening of summer Academic Vice President and categorically rejected the reregistration and restoration of others, that the Director of the quest" to establish "an actual
the summer budget for College Collegiate Assembly has indi- evafuative capacity which meets
A.
cated that he is capsble of pro- the (State) requirement," tbe
"2. The Committee 'notes that ceeding with the required eval- Com mit tee concluded that
aelf-evaluation is a 1 so being uation. Moreover, the Academ- "College A is acting in violation
practioed in a few courses else-. ic Vice Presiaent has indicated of a correct interpretation of
where in the Univen;ity and that he is 'willing to provide SUNY policy."
4. Which takes precedence:
recommends that if the A'drnin- supplementary a s s i s t a n c e
istratinn enforoes what it re- should thi s be required. It loco/ or SUNY policy?
"The Committee feels that
'""-'• as responsible evaJua t iOn
'
would, therefore,
seem that
no
.,..._
student
will be unduly
penal- there can be no argument
in the case of College A, it ized, should we proceed as or- 1witlain the context of State·
must, 88 a matter of equity, . . gma
' lly defined."
Education Law ) with the propenforce the same policy Uni- 1
versity-wide. ·
In arriving at its recoiiU)len- osition that in a State system,
..3_ In view of administrative dations, the Halstead Commit- S t a t e policy overrides local
tee raised and answered five policy. Moreover, this has been
vacillation, collegiate faculty "philosaphical questions" :
acknowledged by the local facintransipnoe
and
the
resultant
•- AcademiC
· V ICe
·
ulty in the Stem Prospectus
ambi~•;"- miaunderstandil)gs
1. D oes tne
President, acting on behalf of (setting forth Collegiate guideand misinterpretations which the Universuy AdministrotU&gt;n, lines ) which includes the quailcharac:terize thia is 8 u e, the have the autlwriJy to enforce lying phrase 'within SUNY polCommittee -recommends t h a t
d
lU! · ?
icies.'.,
equity and _...,.;ty rather es!f~~heem:,;t;:· concluded
5. Has the Academic Vice
than leplity should govern the that it is hath the right and President " ckarly established
decision "!' .£"'ffit for thia aem- duty of the Academic V i c e und announced" the S UN Y
ester. It 18 iecommended ~t President "to interfere in the policy on evaluatwn at the beCollege A ~ts ~~ thia internal affairs" of academic ginning of the academic term,
be grven credit m ac- • units as the Collegiate Assem- as required by Commissioner's
cordance with procedures estab- bl char ed ''if
r · be· g reguhltwns, sectwn 52.2 ( bJ
JiBbed by College A. This in
.YJated ~ '
po lcy_l8 m
said that they "presumed" the
president's reaction to the rec-

D_.....,

no way is to be construed 86
a. recognition that aelf-eval!"'tion . Is_ an approved practice,
~ 18 Jt to be regard~ as aet-ting a precedent It 18 recomJlll!lll!ed solely 88 an ad "'!c
sol'!tion ~ an unfortunate situatiOD which M&amp; been allowed
. too lona to develop,"
Tb e Committee concluded
that the whole affair had been
"botcbed by the Adrninistration, the Collegiate Assembly,
and College A, and that the
' students have sulfered as a resnll"
President Ketter offered this
response to the Halstead
group's recommendations: ·
"1 In view of the facts esand baaed on additiona) diacuMicms I have had
with Jep1 counael ' for Stale

tsbJi8hed.

u,;,

16)?

vwOn
other hand the ComIn light of official converH&amp;mittee held, if an acbinistrator tions and written communica• seeks to change established tions, particularly two memopolicies, University tradition randa ! September 4, 1970, and
calls upon him to refer the January 26, 1971 ) calling at-matter to the faculty."
tention to SUNY guidelines for
This led to the second ques- evaluation and academic credlion .
it ( the second of which stated
2. · Is there a locaJly estob- that College A's second oeJII5lished policy on se I f-eJXJlu.a- ter registration could proceed
ti&lt;&gt;n?
· ·
only on written assurance of
Althou~h ttie University Coi- "resp&lt;)nsible evaluation") , the
lege Curriculum Committee on Committee found that the AcaMay 14, 1969, eztended approv- . dernic Vice President has proaJ to the College A course, and vided the' required notice.
allirmed "the rights of the College in determining the require- . so~~u:~u;;;
menta of its' program, including failure to foUow through oo its
... grading procedures within directives and Sliid that the
ovenill University guidelines" Collegiate faculty had been infor the coUeaes. the grievance transigent in not advising stupanel concluded that "thia does dent&amp; of the import of the adnot grant ""'&gt;licit aJIIIIOV8) of lilinistnltion's"stand. '
'

MedentianYearbook Cites
2 (Friends and Teachers'
Dr. Mohamed S. Megahed,
assistant clinical professor of
neurology and anatomy, , and
Dr. William D. Ziter, associate
professor of oral s u r g e r y,
''friends as weU as teachers,"
have been cited by the Medentian, student yearbook of the
Schools ot Medicine and Dentistry.
The yearbook also offered
special appreciations to two
faculty members who will retire this year-Dr. Oliver P .
Jones who is retiring as chairman of the Depsrtment of Anatomy but will retain his professorship and Dr. S a m u e I
Sanes, professor of psthology.
T he Medentian dedication to
Dr. Megahed ssid he, more
than anyone else, uhas been
openly thoughtful, consistent. ly helpful and . has always
treated us with ,respect." The
class of 1971 first met him in
their freshman year during
neuroanatomy and renewed
their acquaintances during their
various rotations in the junior
and senior years at the Meyer
Hospita l. The yearbook offered
Dr. Megahed, "best wishes for
health, happiness and continued knowledge."

Born and educated in Egypt,
Dr. Megahed served six years
as physician to !hi. Royal Palace of Saudi Arabia. Before
coming to the U.S. in 1964, he
continued his neurology training in London. Some of his recent studies include research on
cerebral schistosomiasis a n d
vertigo.
Dr. Ziter, a Tufts graduate,
was presented his yearbook
dedica tion as "a genuine expression of gratitude . . . for
being our teacher, preceptor,
counselor, colleague and friend.
Paramount in his teaching are
fairness, encouragement to the
less gilted, challenge to the
more accomplished, dedication
. . . respect for fellow men be
they colleagues or pstients,
and a marvelous zeal with
which he performs his labor of
love-educating."
For Dr. Jones o!bere wee
thanks " from your first 34
y~rs of medical and dental
students." For Dr. Sanes there
was praise both for his career
of ..dedicated service" as professor and friend to the medical and dental community and
for his ~superb teaching, his
wisdom, and his wil"

Ho,(ors Ceremonies Planned
Four schools in the Health
Sciences will honor 71 of their
graduating seniors at special
convocation-awards programs
May 27 and 28. All degrees
will be officially conferred at
the 125th Annual Commencement, 10:30 a .m. Friday, May
28, at Rotary Field. .
On Thursday, May 27, the
School of Medicine will honor
16 of its senion; at Kleinhans
Music Hall at 3 p.m. That
night, the School of Dentistry
will honor 24 seniors at 8 p.m.
in Butler Auditorium, Capen
Hall, on the main campus.
The School of Pharmacy will
salute 15 graduating seniors at
a luncheon Friday, May 28,
(noon ) in the Fillmore Room,
Norton U n ion. Congressman
Jack Kemp will be the main
speaker for the S c h o o I of
Health Related Professions'
awards 11rogram, 8 :30 p.m. Fri-

day, May 28, also in the Fillmore Room. sateen seniors
will receive awards.
The School of Nursing honored its graduating senion; at a
similar convocation, May 7.

Dean Ebert Lists
Grade Proorlures

The following rules on "correct grading procedures" have
been iasued 'to faculty by
Charles H . V. Ebert, dean, Undergraduate Studies:
1. SfU grades are to be given
on request by students. They
will not be changed later except in r = : t ' cases. "S"
grades co
to A throuflh
D grades. " U'' grades are equivalent to "F" grades.
2. Written evaluations, given
with the consent of the faculty
member, may be accompanied
by either a letter grade 0&lt; SfU
grades upon request of the student.
3. DO NOT give "S" grades
instead of "lncompletes," since
''S" is a final grade. Also, the
removal of an "Incomplete"
does not require approval of
the dean and can be handled
directly by the inslnlctor by
using the Supplementary R'eport of Grades form ( 5-69-SM)
and not the Requat for Change.

P1f:.

of
f=~ of "X" should
indicate thst a student has not
attended. It is recorded as an
UIID(jK:ial resipati&lt;Jn. OtriCiST'
resignations (baaed on a drop
nolice) receive the designation
"R." Pleaae do not uae "X" or
"R" instead of "Incomplete. •

�&lt;iREPORTER,

4

Mq 20, JII7J

Studeit Publicationlbli Changes SUFI' Spokesmen Say SPA .
. ·
,
.
. cy
. (Jrievanc£PliinlsLacking
Urged by Outgnmg Pub Board Leader
m~ pr&lt;Mng=~
EDI'IOR:

1be recent HuddlestonCharles attacb on the Spectrum prompt me to outline some
changes in student publications
policy I feel would be beneficial 1be two principal functions of campus publications
are to provide tbe University
community 1and sometimes tbe
community at larp) with local
information and opinion, and
to provide an opportunity for
students to get journalistic experience. All eapenditures of
student fees for publications
sbould be designed to maaimize these functions.
1) 1be present etlwi and
Spectrum .-.urces and personnel should be combined into a
.single daily newspaper. 1bere
is already a good deal of croesstaff"mg and tbe combined SubBoard I budl&lt;!ta and advertising revenues would be adequate
to support suCh a venture. Perhaps ethos could still publish a
once-a-week magazine supplement under ita own masthead.
2) 1be annual budgets of tbe
ethos - Spectrum daily and tbe
University Press slxruld be submitted directly to Sub-Board I
rather than through tbe Publications Board as is now tbe
case. 'This would leave tbe Student Publications Board free to
concentrate on tbe f"1SC81 prob-

GVIEWPOINTS

Thel'llopooW._on _ _

resentatives from student publications would not have voting
privileges. ethos- Spectrum and
University Press would still
deal directly with Publications
Board escept for their annual
budgets aa noted above. A function of tbe N!fliy constituted
lx».rd not now 'available would
be to provide technical assistance to all publications on a
regular baaia.
Mucb of tbe above has been
.evident to, and indeed suggested by, otbers involved with
student publications in tbe
paal Anotber proposition
whicb should be given serious
attention, especially with tbe
move to a new campus about to
materialize, is tbe pooling. of ,
heavy production equipment
(composers, etc. ) whicb are
presently strewn at random
across tbe campus.
As to John Charles, his case
for tbe selection of Spectrum
editor rests on an extremely
subjective foundation and
SOUI!ds not so vaguely like that
of the New York State taxpayer who wants a piece of tbe educational policy action at the
State University. In short, I
have much less failh in Su(&gt;:

Board I selecting an editor on

tbe baaia of journalistic acumen, etc., than I do in tbe editorial lx».rd of S~ctrum. 1be
likelihood of a political appointment seems more dangerous to
me than tbe real possibility of
stagrlBtion by editorial inbreeding whicb exists under tbe
present system. I personally
feel that tbe editors and staffs
of the student publications have
provided tbe campus community a service well worth their
investment; competence with
occasional brilliance.
1be tendency to inbreeding
prompts me to sug~e&amp;t tbe following proposal for tbe future
selection of editors. A list of
5 candidates, in order of excellence, will be selected through
open interviews by the editorial
board in concert with Publications Board advisors. This list
will tben be presented to SubBoard who will make tbe final
decision.
It baa been an interesting
year.
-FRED EliMINGS

Outgoing Chairman
Student Publications
Board

By HENRYW.
•.=-;!1M.u~"A':'
and JOHN nuuDLESTON
Arbitration at the end of the
grievance procedure "lnvol- a
his_toric ~ of rights: tbe
uruon pve up 118 right to strike
during the life of the ~t
and mana_,t pve up 118
ri.B!tt to make the ultimate deC181on on many aspects of dayto-day operations. In return,
!""""sement was I1B8)ll1ld of \"'·
mterrupted production dunng
tbe "9"tract tenn, and employ,
ees were assured of due proooss
and juat treatment." Praaow lc
Peters, Arbitration lc Colkctive
Bargautin1: Conflict Resolution
in Labor Re/D.tiom, 1970, p. 244.
SUIT feels that unlees there
is1111 impartial arbitrator at tbe
end of sucb an al'peal process
administrators will fail to work
for fair solutions of ~
Years of aperience m tbe privale aector prove this. And why
not delay and pass on tbe grievance under S.U NY operations
as of today-tbe Chancellor baa
tbe_final word with no appeal
available. Clearly, tbe ple8ent
this
system is deeply flawed
respect, yet SPA does not yet
..,., this. And 80 tbey drop tbe
be.ll bere and at Albany on im.

In

Spirit of College A Alive, Abelson Says
But Changes of Goals, Scope Are Planned

College A is still going strong,
despite tbe resigrlBtion of Dr.
Fred Snell and much of tbe
College A stall. And it'll be
of the - . . the ac:adomlc going stJ:ong tfiis BUmm!lr sil!ce
community. We wrek:onw bath Dr. Daniel Murray, acting VIce
president fo academic affairs,
-""&gt;ns and .. released bo!h its funds and com:
puler enrollment· on Tuesilay.
penntts.
What's now happening to tbe
!ems of tbe smaller publications controversial college is a comwhicb are quite different from plete nH!valuation of ita protbe two lar~e&amp;t recipients of gram ·and philosophy. Bambii
Abelson, graduate assistant to
Sub-Board's funds
3) Publications Board pres- tbe oollege, baa become c:oorently functions as a funding .dinator of its programs. While
agency and, in practice,' can she pledges to "keep tbe spirit
discharge ita responsibility to of College A alive," she also
muimize tbe quality and .q uan- explains that "it would be
tity of student publications only wrong to say we're not going to
during the time funds are being change ita goals and scope."
allocated. 1be rest of tbe year The baaic oore of College Atbe board is primarily involved seU-determination and seU-evalin interpreting policy and mi- uation-will remain but as part
nor administrative h a s s I i n g. of a broader program.
Written seU-evaluation will
1be fault for this lies in tbe
constitutional make-up of the be only one of a number of
board with too many journal- lirading options wben tbe Colistically naive members on one lege reopens its full program in
band and anotber sizable group tbe fall, Bambii explains. She
with special interests on the believes an individual should
other. More expert advice is be free to cboose tbe way be is
needed and aince this Univer- graded and if he wants teacher
sity dcies not include a school or group evaluation, be should
of joumalism, we must recruit be able to get il
experts from otber areaa. 1be
Self-determination is being
Publications Board might con- uaed to set up new progr&amp;nlS.
-sist of representatives tiom tbe "It's up to tbe students to destudent groups with advisors fine what it'll be all about," tbe
selected from the faculty and new- coordinator explains, and
staffs of local newspapers. Rep- this summer she and her stall
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.,__________
Ill ~ a forum fcilo the U·
._,.. of . on a -variety

_____·-- _

·

will be asking students what
tbey want.
To facili t ate nH!valuation,
only three College A COUI8e&amp;
~"ill be offered this summer:
Bambii will continue to teacb
ber Communicative Creativity
course in whicb handicapped
and nomml children come together and learn crafts once a
week.
Marc Berger will tea c b a
course on drug problems with
tbe class visiting local crisis
clinics and hospital facilities to
see what's being done.
The third class will be taught
by Don Kertzman and will deal
with bow inter-personal family
relationships affect an individ·
uals' personality.
Enrollment in these courses
will probably be limited-"since
we're not in the numbers routine," Bambii explains. lndependent study w iII continue
also under these three instructors.
P!Bns for tbe fall are slowly
commg togetber. SeU-evaluation will probably be bandied
slightly differently. Students
will still be able to evaluate
tbemael~ but tbere •will be
more opportunity to work with
College A staft members~ on
tbeir projects. "Students will
ha tbe
a sWr memt~~
explains, "wbetber irs just to
clear
robl
rap_ or · -ue P
ems with
tbeu
Theprojects.
group baa already found

Bambii points out. Sbe hopes
to start regularly scheduled college meetings at whicb members can report on their projects and activities.
''
1be new structure will be
diverse and flexible while retaining tbe old College A core
of seU-determination and selfevaluation, Bambii promises.
But all of these plana are based
on tbe belief that Collep!· A
should "meet people's needs."

7\ T.W #fl......:.__~

.1 V«

viU1JFI1~£

T T!'B
ror Two LJI"
D.

!Je'~n...-.-1-n
'}J\.U

ld I

K-1 UA)

Dr. Byron J. Koekkoek baa
been
· ted cbai
of tbe
De~ of Ge=., and
Slavic, and Gordon Rogoff
chaini1an of tbe Program
Theatre, President Robert L
Ketter baa announced.
Both appointments are for
three years, effective Se !ember
1.
p
Dr. Koekkoek, 46, received
his A.B. from Olivet College
~icbigan, in 1949, his M.A:
1950 f
tbe U
m
rom
niveraity of
Michigan and a Ph.D. from the
~Diversity of Vienna in 1953.
cameaaanto '~-y~vennr
m·"tyGerin~-~ ""~
man. He was named assistant
professor
in
1955
and
full
fessor ten Yf!BrB lab. Last profall

U:

aa:t!ll 19'sa

aasoci:

that "unfortunately, students be was appomted acting
do care about credits," and rec- ate
t of tbe
ognition of this fact will be- ~P!:j"'Letters. Faculty of
~ of tbe College's new
Mr. Rogoff, 40, came to U/B
There will also be a new em- last fall aa a visiting aasociate
.:."?.
;.;,,;_ a=.f~
o1 lf!'!!.~od: • avllalo. $U.S .,.,. st.,
pbaais on community pro~
·
professor. He received a B.A
(;.,.,;_ 2121).
~
. . _ . , . '- a - 2U. 2SO .......... A.._
and. comm.unit~ relations. " rs. from yale in 1952, and attended tbe ~~ Institute at
William M. . Clarkson will tbe Uruvers1ty of Birminrbam
.... 1IPD2"La'r a:otnJJfD
serve aa our communi~ rela- E~ in 1952, and tbe
..,J~~o
ti!?I1B
director in the fall, Bam- tral Sdiool of s p
b and
bu lillY&amp;. Members of u.,; ~
·
·
eec
-.cow
LOndon,
1952-53.
.
JtONitT r . .lfAIU.an"
Bul[alo Youth Board and otber . At ale,
I
Mr. Roso1f was ad·~c sm,,n~
u;,_
community groups have also Junct profe&amp;II&lt;Jr at tbe Scbooi
shown an interest in helping. of Drama, 1966 to 1969 and
Beth Kaaairer baa already bee.i 11880Ciate dean 1
'
... Cl.DCITlU
appointed beed of undl!riPadu- that be served ;::xutbe. faBeculfore
SVSUI OlrDinrOCID
ate projects and will worl&lt; with at the New Scbool New y ~
~Communicative Creativity City, 11164-66.
'
tnT1DaiW AIPIUIIJI .El&gt;lt'O"' . _ ~
Internal
c:ommunication
withMr.
Rosolf
is
a
member of
=1==-~...:- Jt, IW.-IIt. Clftl ~...., .. .wco...
in tbe coiJeae will be stnmgth- ~ N = ~umanitie&amp; Fac~
, eoed. ,"P eo pie dCIIl't , know baa ~ucted ~wbdemon.,.,
be
- - - - - - - - - - - - - _ , . . . - - " ' - - - - - what's ~~ to othen." . ..otrationa and aeminata'.
·..

..

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

....

__

--

AllZ'IS"'', ._ •. --...

........

.. ...
~

••We.

een:

f .Wereand ~._tiatlq for a
pro.
binding arbitration In~{;!
two parties failed to settle a di&amp;pule top!ther. And that arbitrator would be an Impartial
outsider, or J)8De) of same, not
our Chana!lfor.
,
Should !l peraon want to liP"
peal a grievance without SUIT
representation, we would respect this, only aalring that a
SUIT grievance person be
there aa an oboerver. Of &lt;Oill8e,
non-tenured per&amp;ODa could uae
this process. And Pllblicity on
sucb caaes would be withheld
until either tbe individual wanted aucb oovera.., and it would
~lp tl;&gt;'! case. or until tbe f"mal
dis!&gt;of!ition of tbe case.
It 1B not only a reasonable
~rocees ~~ it does ~ let tbe
final dec!si"'! res~ ~th one of
tbe parties m disPute. What
more reasonable proooss .can be
developed~ W!' agree ~th. tbe
AAUP prinCiples, .~delines
and procedures ~t 1t 1S """!'"-

.:fure. we=.;;;:;: be~

~·:J:~i~~ ~ ~':

that these · · 1
ill be d
. pnnap es w
a •
bered to m ~ ih&lt;! agreement
or general uruvf!nilty P"'!"!''ures have hee!t V1ol~ted, mmmte~reted or ~nequ1tably applied.
A negotiating agent by virtue of its position baa an obli·
ption to aasist persons facinJl
sucb unfair treatment. And
what did SPA-Health Sciences
recently do liut tum down the

~::!~:i"':;!tr~~~

die it himself. How belpful can
"negotiating agent'' be?

~

.Gr~evance appeals demand time

careful preparation and support
for tbe grievant, not a brushoff.
SUIT knows-from its experience ~ teaching of grievance
handling - that an individual
baa little real chance by him·
self. In union tbere is strength
--&lt;!81"lciaUy in appealing mism:s~ by a bweau~cy
Administrators, of course,

may howl over these remarks.

Yet, today, private industry
whicb fought sucb arbitration
_30_years ago,·~ regards sucb
rne\llliiCe machinery aa an indispensable part of tbe system
of collective bargaining." Thus
concluded arbitrator Peter Seitz
speaking at tbe SUNYAB Law
Scbool-Westem New York Induatrial Relations Research
Conference bere in 1967.
0. consider tbe comment of
Neil Chamberlain, Yale expert
on collective bargaining, on
~ and arbitration pro.
oedure, . . . Cllle of tbe truly

f"'8t accompilahmenta of Amer-

1C8D !nduatrial relatiana . . . it
C&gt;lll,Btitutea a aociaJ invention of
great importance . .. . it is perhaps safe to lillY that nowhere
elae baa it reached the high
stage of develol&gt;ment that it
baa in tbe .Uniteil States, in tbe
""""" it is 80 widely employed
and baa acbieved ao much vitality at the. local level" The
Labor &amp;ctor, 1965, p. 240.
We of SUIT, reprdlees of
disci line and experience, insist
a proper Jf!evanc!e procedure is esaential to insure
academic tr.dom and individual responsibility in a way that
other of11811imtiona are simply
not currently aware of. And we
•tand ready now to ~l' our
colleques who want help in
grievance preparation or presentation. We will attemPt again
to prove s~. awanmem
and militancy for tbe rights df
~AJf.f!lfessionals bere at SUN-

d:::t

. EDITOR'S NOTE: ThU

Viewpoinl ·;. in rapo~~« to 1111
SPA -"ion •tatement on
,WrJtJilCe proced~ which appeared in the Reporter bt

_._

�·~

• . , 20, 1911

5

One Member of the Washingtnn13,000
Says He WoUld cmd Will Do It Again

Natural,Unspoiled Land
Abounds at fbverty Hill
By SUZANNE METZGER
-

SWI

Neglec:ted paths pass into
hazy obscurity, pardecl _by
Buddha-Uir.e toada and dOWii
violets. Da«odils iii sincle rows
nod 00 the alas- abOve a lake
vibrating with minnows and
OOC8lli0nal sunfllih. Hundreds of
fDilllilt; chumed. up by 1I01De
bull~r are there for the
taking-b.llinc the pre-history
of thi» land known as Poverty
Hill - &lt;iOme 1,150 acres of wilden"""' with a scattering of
building&amp; and three man-made
lakes about 35 miles southeast
of B~lfalo.
This is st;udents' land, the
newly acquired p~rty of
Sub-Board I, Inc., which. holds
a $10,000, one-y~r option to
purchase-a drop m the bucket •
towards the total rost of $176,000. H~pef':'lly, however, Poverty H1ll will prosper.
. P~tly,~ ml(:e scamper craz.
dy 1D the raft,ers .of an unused
chalet, mosqwtoes breed freely
by the. waters, .and the dOC?r
to a httle white rottage IS
locked, "'!t. visions for th;e '!"'t!!morp~IS of Pov~'!;Y H1ll mto
Peoples Mountain abound.
Edward ·1. Dale, assistant co·ordinator of student activities
at Norton, initiated the idea of
purdlase and development of
the property, and the Unl--

si~.X Ski Club ~ ~ a J:JK?t!·
vatmg force behind 1ts acqwsition from the owner, David
Dattller. Dattner, who h_ ad
~ to develop tbe '!""' mto
a llk1 resort an~ recreation.~·
ran out of cap1tal. Tile facrtities
he built were used only for the
1961-1962 skiing season. Tile
chalet, a haven for skiers roming off the two trails or the beginner's slope. is romplete with
kitchen, donnitories. with bunk
!'ed•· lav!'t;ones. a large fireplace
m the h~mg room, and. a sun
porch '!11th a forest v1ew. A
mecharucal shed to operate the
T ~ and a ski store-first aid

·~~si:JP~l~bt'/: :=::.,m:;::~

developing tiOurce.'' Hays Ed,
but their enthusiasm extends
beyond its potenbial as a ski
area. "Commercially, skiing is
the most profitable idea for the
use of the land,". Ed remarked,
but the plans for kibbutz living,
orphanages, natural farming, incity camps, hiking .a nd
boating are more inspiring.
"Its real purpose lies in its
rural opportunities- with a
chance to keep the land natural,
unspoiled, affording the specisl
resources which the S t a t e
rouldn't provide us with," says
Ed. "Everyone in the academic
rommunity who understands
the idea and the possibilities is
el"cited by the lone-~ ptans.".

ner

By STEVE . LIPM:AN
medics tzeated rope who were
injured."
Dan Cook is one of the WashIn addition to 1&gt;9lice, Dan
incton 13,000. He, along with recalls,
Anny troops were staa quarter of a million other tioned every five or ten feet in
Americans against the war in his area. But they were just
Vietnam, travelled to the cap- there as observers. None that
ital two weeks ago to indicate Dan saw took part in the haphia feelincs to the nation's lead- penings.
ers. He left U / B the Friday
"Some were pretty nice," Dan
night preceding the week of says. "Many were in sympathy
"demonstrations which were to with us. They talked to us, and
halt the governmenL He plan- gave us the peace sign. One
ned to return that Tuesday soldier said he wished . he was
night, but was gone two extra with us. A jeep with five, or six
days, rourtesy of the Washing- soldiers drove by us. We cave
ton Police Department. He was
the peace sign, and one
one of 13,426 demonstrators them
in back cave us the fist, and
crowded into the city's bleak told us to 'give 'em hell.' "
jails in the largest single-event
The street blockade ended
arrest total in American his- about noon, and the group distory.
persed around the streets and
Dan, a U/ B sophomore, is a universities until a meeting that
veteran of local anti-war dem- night. Some people at the meetonstrations, but had never be- ing wanted to center the next
fore gone to one out of town. day's s it-in in front of the Jus'llle trip was necessary, sayg tice Department around the
Dan, because he "felt morally 4,000 people arrested that day.
rompelled to speak out wiih It was finally agreed that that
my !Jody as well as my words issue would berome part of the
agairl&amp;t the evil policies of the rally's three announced purgovemmenL''
poses: the ratification of the
The buses carrying him and People's Peace Treaty; freedom·
200 other U/B students arrived for all political prisoners; and
in front of the Lincoln Memor- · a basic minimum income of
ial at 10 o'clock Saturday morn- $6000 for a family of four.
ing. Groups from up~r New
The demonstrators roncrecatYork State, along w1th those ed in a park a mile from the
from Virginia, Florida and Justice Department at no o n
North Carolina were assigned Tuesday, then walked there in
to the Georgetown area.
"People were filtering in un- ~u~~~s~m':.'ii ~ ·~.,e
til late Sunday night," Dan stop at traffic lights,'' explains
observed. "There was a rock Dan.
festival going on Saturday and
Tile block between the JusSunday. 'lbere was a carnival tice Department and the Inatmosphere about it. Tile dem- ternal Revenue Se,..ice building
onstration leaders wanted us to -had hardly begun to fill with
have our fun, before settling sit-in demonstrators, when the
police arrived. u~bey spread
doWn to serious business."
Tbe userious business" begah around us," Dan recalls. "They
5 a.m. Monday morninc with formed a solid line at the end
the blocking of trallic-through of.each block, so nobody could
.
use of trash cans, tires, stalled go.
cars, milk cases, or the demon"At about 2:30 or 3:00, the
police moved down to the edge
strators' bodies themselves.
"We kept it rompletely non- of the crowd. One of them
violent," Dan says. " We apolo- shouted through a megaphone
gized to many of the drivers _ three times: 'This is the Washfor the inconvenience. We told. ington Police DepartlnenL You
them we were sorry if we were are ordered to disperse immediholding them up, but there were ately, or otherwise you are submore important issues at stake, ject to arrest.'
''That's all they said. Tiley
and that they should try to
understand. Some were nice to didn't give any reasons.
''Then the police line started
us.
'We weren"t too •successful advancing. I was in about the
third
wave of people to be arat first, · because there were a
lot of police, and not much rested. A policeman walked up
to
me,
and started pulling me
traffic. But later on we blocked
the street suroessfully for about by my shoulders. I went limp
when
he
pulled me. Some peotwo or Uuee hours "
-were pulled by their hair.
The ·police Dan .;,rountered ple
None
resisted.
were members of the Civil Dis"We were put on a police
turbance Unit &lt;CDU ) of the
bus. It looked like a yellow
s c h o o I bus, but there were
Patrol UniL They were clad in screens on the windows. Before
full riot gear, and carried gas I went on, they took my picture,
and filled out an arrest fonn.
containers.
Cylinders of tear gas were I was charged with violating a
launched by grenade launch- poliee line . . But that doesn't
ers; spheres of pepper gas about make sense, since I was sitting
and the police were closthe size of a baseball were there,
ing in on us, and no one could
thrown by hand.
"'lbe · police were unneces- go away if he wanted to."
Tile bus loads of the arrested
sarily violent," Dan recalls.
"They threw gas into groups were taken to the city's jailt;.
Dan
was put into a 21 by 40
of two or three people.
''The leaders of the demon- foot roncrete room, ten feet
strations were given a promise high. Fluorescent lights blazed
by Washincton Police that if around the clock. TIIere was
our medics did not participate one open toilet, a sink, no low·
in the action, and helped people els, and an occasional roll of
who were injured, they wouldn't toilet paper. One hundred peobe arrested or harassed. (Most ple shared hia acrommodatioos.
medics were doctora, or people "We rounted off. so we knew
trained in first aid. ) Tiley wore exactly how many people were
red or white crosses to mark in there."
them, and all were careful not
Dan's cell had no windows,
to participate. Yet they were just a double door on the bar
atteSted, t h e i r medicine was
~ and their supplies were
side. "There were too many
''Tbey arrested our medics people for the benches, 110 -..-t
for practicinc without a license, lay on the ftoor. But it was
for malpractice, and on trumped rold, and almost everybody lOt
up charges like thaL Tiley ar- sick. I got a BOre throaL
''Tbe cell across from us was
rested many people just for

:UrJ

~r.~~~~.?-:~~i

~~u":~ ~"J'!

c..-.._..... - ·_.... - - cendJ

Dey Cera
In the of the old -

-

-

-

, _ . from the ....
... to the Cenllor.

. ':":~. ~ the ,'!tree.l: ,~~- ~ur.

e~ .f!lOre over~. It~ _

21 by 30 feet, and there were
more than 120 people in iL
Many could not lie down.
''Our morale was pretty good,
ropsidering the circumstanaB.
We sang, and clapped, and
shouted at the guards. Moat of
us wrote POW on our foreheads."
Tile only souvenir that Dan
brought back from the jail W88
an 8-'h by 11 inch hand-made
chess seL "A rouple of guys
in my cell played chess," Dan
says. ·''They drew a hoard with
a magic, marker on the back of
a sheet of paper they gut earlier that day. Tiley tore up another sheet, and drew the d - .
pieces on thaL Tile set was
passed a round to whoever
wanted to play. No one else
wanted to play after I f"IIIished,
and we were· moved a tittle
after, so I wound up with iL"
Dan's chess came was indicative of his slay in Waahincton. He lost in a half hour.
.
"After 8 bows they fed us.
They gave us bologna sandwiches with mayonnaise, and
a few cans of pineapple juice.
Everyone gol a sip. There was
no hoarding or selfishness in
the cell. Everyone shared what
the had." Wednesday's menu was about
the same-bologna sandwiches,
and oranges. "Some guys got
so huncry that they started eating food they found on the
floor. One guy began a bologna
sandwich, but the mayonnaise
was rotten.
"After a while, we chanted
for extra food. We yellM for
the .crar,iest IOO&lt;;Is. I myself
started up a watermelon chanL
It caught on in my cell, aDd
within a few minuteS, everyone
was yelling 'We want watermelon.' Tile guards didn't do
anything."
Wednesday night, a report
circulated that medical Qthorities were ooming. "Then we
were moved into cells that were
emptied by people goinc to
court. The guards cleaned up
the cells, so when the medical
people came, it didn't look 110
bad.
''We started going to court
about MidnighL I was taken
in front of a judge-1 don't remember hia name- and I
pleaded Nolo Contendere. (No
rontest) That meana guilty
with explanation. I didn't COiltest the charges, but I had an
explanation. Tile judge was
gnod and let me off. The penalty if found guilty would have
been $20 or two days in jail,
but I had spent already almost
two days in jail, 110 he let me
go.
"I went around the other
rourts in the buil!Iinc to aee if
there was anybcldv I !mew
whom I rould help. l pidr.ed up
the stuff the police took from

I!.;as

::"'ridehen
:""'~'::"'.:
someone I knew at 8:30."
' Despite ' 38 bows of ClObl:lete
mattresses and bol-. full
cells and an empty stomach,
he would go tluouah it apin.
''I didn't go there tobe arrested,
but I knew it was a possibility.
I probably will do it ~

More demonstrations are

needed. There will be more."
• CORRECTION

The Reporter regrets that the front
pogo picture of the University's
birthday coke in last week's issue
was incorrectty credited. The photo
wn taken by Hugo Unger who
worlced until otter 2 a.m. to moke

prints in time for •n early Wednes·
doy deadline. We wish to thepk
both Mr. linger and University Relations photog111pher Ed Nowak
who also worlted ext111, late hours
to meet the deadline for the
Founders' Day photos.
-RTM

�GREPORTER,

6

Enterpr7ses

~

Net $50,477, .
FSA Reports.
The Faculty-Student A.ollociation (l&lt;'SA) Auxiliary Service
Enterprises produced a net incori&gt;e of $50,477 for the flJIIt
three quarters of the 1970-71
fiscal year, according to an Wl·
audited report prepared by ..,.
terprise managemenl
For the nine months ending
March 31, 1971, the four enterprises-bookstore, food service,
vending and the service center
- had sales of $3,680,046 and
total coots of $3,629,569. Sales
were $171,467 less ·t han budll!t
estimates. and coots were $158,951 below budgeted &amp;moWlts.
Net income was 19.9 per cent
($1.2,516) below projected figures.
C o s t s of goods sold was
$2.174,372; wages and benefits
for employees amowtted to $1,149,632 and other expenses
were $305,565.
The only enterprise actually
losing money during the period
was food service which showed
an operating deficit of $13,952
on sales of $1,518,236. The
budp!t estimate for the period
bad projected a net income of
$14,040 on sales of $1,650,000.
The bookstore showed a net
income of $49,982, a figure
$11,479 above the eslirnate.
Sales for the period totaled $1,759,418, slifhtly below the budget projection; expenses, however, were also below estimate.
Also perfonning better than
expected was the vending operation which showed a net income of $13,797 for the period,
$3,347 above estimates. Vending bad sales of $345,872 and
total costs of $332,075.
The service center, expected
1o break even, turned in net
income of $650 for the ninemonth period, on sales of $56,520.

._, 20, IP7I

-Architecture Project Plans Honcina
StudentsWOuld Pick, Not Setti;fu;'
By SUSAN GREENwOOD
R - s.-t
Home-a simple four letter
word which stirs up aU kinds of
images in people's minds. For
many students, however, the
imap! of their university home
brings to mind such descriptions as overcrowded, overpriced and rundown. Buffalo,
not unlike most urban university areas, offers poor student
housing conditions. With a vacaney rate of under one per
cent, students have'to take anything they can gel
But what if students didn't
have. to take the dregs? What
if they could "select not ,settie?"
This year, the second year undergraduate architecture class
tried to find oul Since September, they've been studying the

~':lethemir ~~~':!'.tT::y~yg

and Chris Kamages.
The faU semester was spent
doing research. What kind of
housing do students want? How
clOIII! to the University should
it be? What types of needs must
· it fulfill?
Relying not onl y on published literature, llleJIII&gt;ers of
the class interviewed students
and also sent a housing survey
to married students. Results
.were surprisingly consistenl
For botb married and single
students, the need for privacy
and a simultaneouS desire for
a community living environment were repeated over and
ov er again. "I wouldn't mind
living witb 20 people," one girl
1!8id, "as long as I had my own
bedroombe
alone
· .•:"here I could RO and
Loci&lt; a1 ,.,,..,.., SpKe

Complaints about a lack of

commute from as far away as
Batavia and other areas where
they may live on farms or in
summer cottsges. In addition
to tbese surveys and interviews,
the architecture students also
did research on the various
psychological and sociolcigical
needs student housing fulfills,
as well as on the legal, University and State regulations on
housing.

other · recreational activities.
There would also be an open
meeting area where people
could .hear debates or listen to
rock concerts. FleXlbility is a
•trong point in their planning,
also. They want buildings tbat
don't force the needs of the
architect on the tenants.
Instead of planning to build
something new, the group working . on the Allentown project
fOIW Plonnl,. Groups
is concentrating on renovating
HaUway through the spring what already exists. They feel
semester, the class realized tbat the University could buy or
a thorough research effort was lease several blocks of adjoinbeyond their scope. Ins tead, ing houses in a co-ordinated
they decided to enter the plan- efforl The fences or obstacles
Ding and drawing-board stage between houses could then be
with the backgrOWld informa- tom down to provide open rec;tion they had acquired. They reational space. Students living
divided into four groups. One there could use the existing
worked on housing witbin walk- shops and services.
inging distance of the campus;
The group working on hous=.,the;i,;: ~r
~ru~ sit;v
ing far away from the Univeris also planning to use
old houses; the tbird,- on a de- ODSting facilities for the beginvelopment in Amherst near the ning of their "commune." The
new campus, and the last group proposed site is an old farm
on a commune to be developed near Alden. The bam could be
on an old farm. Each group an- renovated for commwtal living
alyzed numerous sites and se- space and the farmhouse could
lecled actnal locations.
be used for kitchen facilities
The group witb perhaps the and for crashers. If the bam
strongest challenge wa s t hat gets too crowded or if other
working witb locations near the groups want to live on the propMain Street campus. They de- erty, the group is' planning to
cided the existing dormitories supply prefabricated "shells"
might satisfy the needs of some which could be used as addiman
studedn!!:.btsu~ thar
a tdifa'erenlarl!'tekin
de-d tional basic housing units. Each
~ •·
,,
sheU would simply be a 14.x1 4 '
of living style - most often boL The group living in it
found off campus. They began could put anything they wanta search for land near the cam- ed into it; such as electricity,
pus which might be developed rwtning water or plumbing.
for student housing. Alternate Other modifications could be
sites such as the Grover Cleve- made, depending on the "comland golf course, Rotary Field, . mune's" needs. 1be planning
and the adjacent field house group is also thinking of, pr&lt;&gt;were discussed but dismissed. vid ing such tbings as 'movable
Finally, the group decided upon walls which would help the

0

~~m:':.";"d:"m : : : ~reef:' i;''j:;~g~~ :·co~une"

~-

Nirolauls
Nw President
Of The
GSA
eng;.-nn, ·
A civil

atudent
last Wem-lay
night to head tile Graduate Student Aasoc:iation (GSA) DeJtt
year. ' Michael Nicolau, a naturalized American born in Roomania, will serve as GSA president until DeJtt spring. Other
officers are: administrative vice
president, Pat Gallagher, c:hemistry; external vice president,
John Greenwood, psychoJocy;
student affairs vice pn!8ideiJt,
Pau l Cumming, rDilDII&amp;IIlDent
science; and ·t reesurer, Tony
Lawrence, economics.
· 'The· new preaident ~ to
forge a cloeer association between the undergraduate Student Aasocialio!&gt; and GSA in
regard to fWlding. Currently,
many projects and clubs have
botb underllr4!iuate and graduate Dl!'m~fo and go toN~
or"'!'IZB ~ or money. IOI)o
!au 18 also mte"'!'ted m gradUS!" students ~v"!g a stronll!'r
VOice on . Um~ty ~t­
~ 18 p~g a , constnlctive o""'!'~ year for
the G!!A..one "!which the ~;SA
orll&amp;n!zation will . be mo~ re~n;f!1Ye to .~" constitu~oes. In a~dition to acadenuc
!""!ters, ~1colau also wants. a
~J~venatio!' of cam.pus social
life, .and 18. ~~ GSAsponsored. ~I actiVl~ .
In add1tlon to electing .off1•
cers, the GSA heard conuruttee
repor:ts and allocated .over $2,~ m summer funding. Earl
Suller, anthropology, repor~
that research fW1ds were available . to gradua~ ~ t ude n t s
tbrou~ the Institutional FWlds
Comm1ttee. ~~n $8(!,000
an&lt;! $160,000 18 available, S1d.ler
estimated. 'IlM: money, wh!ch
comes fJCOm .dili~t fWldmg
was elected

!":=;!o::f'g,~~~_.!~

adapt
changes
for. It is largely wasted_1&amp;pace, m bfe styles. In addition, more ious faculties. Each faculty will
they argued, and to liave a ~ne t!':!t~~
co~ ~!' grant the money ~ inh o u s i n g development there big or as smaU 86 the needs of diVldual ~"!· Cha~
would bring the Buffalo com- the group
of -the Umver&amp;~ty-Wlde conurutmunity closer to the University. Flnt1nclng
tee is Dr. Morton Rothstein, hiThe group is planning botb
ology
private and commwtal space
Each of the four architectural
·
American Indiana from jwt~r
whom
they
would
live
within
its
area,
-with
additional
planning
groups
is
also
develop~ a:tl'r several reior and senior high schools in
room for stores, and services. ing alternative financing plans. ques •
Y ocated IDC!""Y
Western New York will be atAllenhurst
got
special
praise,
Areas
for
planned
interaction
Sponsors
might
be
the
Univerto
Te~.
the graduate phllO&amp;tending a "New York Indian however, because of the rapid·
fi
ophy iournal. A total of $700
Youtb Conference" on cam.Jl.US ity with which an individual are also included - places Slty, non-J?ro It developers or was allocated to pay for the
Saturday.
can meet a large number of where people could easily meet profit-~g dev~opers: Each coot of 8 spring issue.
people. Students seemed to like their neighbors. The student team will deternline ~ted
The group also fW1ded the
The conference - flJIIt of its knowing
their neighbors and planners are familiar witb the rents based upon vanous de- Arne •
Studies iouma1. Red
kind in the State - is designed
Buff~canand 8 lllDi tlbciut a
to expose the American Indian having area shopkeepers know lounge spaces in the residence .velopmen~ options.
For
some,
tbese
were
the
halls
which
offer
large
rooms
the
~tbir~e~~~:.
WOII1III!
'living
in Cuba. 1be Film
tbem.
youtb to the coUep! campus
and to opportunities in higher criteria which could make or ~~~~~J::l; ~%t,~~~ dent housing project so Inter- Graphics ~lub 1101 $275 for the
education, according to Lyman hreak a living situation.
the sa nobod
tbem
.,.. .ng tbat some of the four ~lease pnnts of a film em ~
F . Pierce, its executive direcSingle undergraduate stu- . ~ ...J;;tectureY s=.ts at: planning groups hope to oontin- !"d anc! o_f !'J'Od!er which 18
tor.
dents reported a strong need. tribute tbis
' to the arti"f"lciall'ty
to
k
the roblem
. this lmPre&amp;8101l18tic:. Glven n!DIIIIil~ freed om and. • for .the a b II - of using the room only for &amp;&lt;&gt;- summer.
ue
worThe
on group
p mterested
·
tion 'W88 the Foreign
Students
b
Coordinatin
CounCillw
h
Main speaker will be Mrs. .or
1
1ty
to
shal?"
the1r
enVl!"~l
cialization
witb
no
practical
in
developing.
the
Main
Street
also
for operating"
Fred ( Ls0onna) Harris, wife
5100
Many
nabve
Buffalo~
said
purpose.
They
hope
to
overlawn
has
rece1ved
a
grant
from
expenses.
of the U. S. Senator from Olde. "tial alloca •
boma, a member of the Com- they moved out of their PI!': come tbis by adding interac- the Millard Fillmore Colleae · An 101
ents' houses because of this: tion areas to places where stu- Student AssociatiOn and is
tion of $500
anche Indian Tribe and presi- "I
didn't
~ant
to
have
.
t
:'
be
dents
come
for
a
purpose
such
working
on
a
-report
for
them.
.had
been
aug_gested by the--Fident and fOWlder of Americans ~ for dmner at ~:00, one as laundromats, day care cen- The pair of students who de- nance Committee
fOI'
, the U(B
Cor Indian Opportunity (AIO) .
Other speakers will include SBid. They also des1red ~ ters or shopping areas. Their veloped the housing survey is Day Care ~tar. M tbe Weddom
to
~eco'!'te
and
make
their
plans
also
caU
for
a
wide
varialso
seeking
fwtds
to
continue
·
nesdayaUmeeting,
-~·
$695
Miss Dorothy David, director a~ts 'what they want- ation in the types of living ar- and refine their questionnaire.
ocated, ~ tbe
of human devel~t, Uni- ed.
Dorms scored low because rangements _ everything from
The
success of the project amount to be spent !'"' cbairs,
versity of Wisconsm; Jolm M&lt;&gt;- of the limi!e'i ~ges students standard apartments to "com- seems to hinge on the fact that ~ and food supplies.
hawk, a graduate student at can make m their .rooms.
mune spsce" where people have it's a "socially-oriented prob- . This was the las~ GSA meetU/B; Alan Abrams, a guidance
The survey and interviews their own private areas but lem" rather than a theoretical 1Dif for the academic: year.
counaelor at Elba N ..Y. High
found
tbat
single
students
prewould share such tbings as design school projecl M06t of 't hhn&lt;Y FJh.,.,.)h,
School; Kenneth Saupltty, fJeld
CliMII'dinator for youth, Olde- fer three different liousing the kitchens and enlertaiiling the students in the claas, which V~ cu.,~".Y
areas.
One
group
wanted
to
live
rooms:
M06t of all, ll1ough. the 'is an evening ClOil11le, ·hold down '11
T~~
homaDs for Indian Opponun~.Y
ity, Norman, Olde.; Alan Nep- witbin walking distance of the group wants a deVelopment regular jobs and are older tban .10
campus,
though
few
wanted
to
where
peop)e
feel
they're
part
the
avera..,
Wldergrad.
'Ibey
The
~
faculty of the
baw, education specialist,AlnericaDa r.,.. Indian Opportunity, actually live "" campus. The of a OlllDDlUnity, where they prefer the difficulty and chal- University will hold 1ts I1Dil1J8I
meeting fii'Xl Tuesday afterWllllhingtoD. D . C., and Grsy- second preferred a sort of "psy- know their neighbors and where lenge of realistic problems.
Their daytime ~tions . noon, May 25. at 2:30 in~
- _, Noley, director, Upward chological distance" between they feel a sense of .freedom.
tbem
and
the
University,
favorl'llln
·
include
architectural~
..,
5. The !lfOUP will '-r 8
Bound l'roKram. Oklahoma
ing an area where they could
The Amhen!t group Started home 1designer, Buffalo city · report by Pres1dent Robert
Univaaity, Nonn8n, Okla.
meet people witb varying in- out witb many of these same planner and facilities engineer Ketter. 1be c h a irrm an of
About 250 students are eJt· but could stiU have the requirements but their pbyaical for Carborundum. But they aU the Senate, Dr_ William Baumpeeled to attend the confer- proximity of shops and serv- plan is very differenl They, have a strong interest in bou&amp;- er, will also talk about the profiDCII,IIQltly members of Amer- ...., and the company of indi- too, feel "todsy's dormitories ing and its ability to fulfill tbe ceedings of tbe ~ and
ican Indian Youth Counclla
:!tu.;:sea':d:J~ are obsolete when built'' and . complex needs of people.
standing committees of the
Wbic:b- - t t y establlahed
·~ areciallloolringrelevan.
~formamoreof~ · ~tlier their projects re- Senate. and the actiona of the .
b.r AIO at .moo~&amp; in Salunan- Student. caU a
• y_ n
~ •
• ......,. mam classroom dreallis or are body 1taell. RMults of Senate
llllf. They enV181011 low ..- (3- someday translated into reality eJec:tjcma will be announced at
~ Gowand' ~ ~ such as in AUen-. 1be
·
Creek. ~ and Buffalo. • group wanted '-Iota of elbow story) houaing witb lots of their dedication is tow8rd ~ this time.
State ofticaa for tbe Youtb room and a natural landacape. areas for ~ cook- ing struc:tures which are truly
An
Some !*&gt;Pie in :t... calegory outs. impromptu parties' and liveable.
open discuEion .-ion Is
~ will ba eleclad.
also acheduled.

Indians To Hokl
Campus Meeting

Many students liked Allenhurst
because of its community atmosphere but disliked the sharing of bedrooms witb two or
tbree others. They also disliked not having the freedom

:..

Ptons

n;:

recei:.J

was

Meet

=

.....

�C}WPaUER,

llq 20, 1971

7

FacultY Unions Growing Corrunitta!Adwns, New Slnt£ of Officers
WrthJob,SalaryWoes EDITO~~~~rtM~~~~~
• ()ol.gCnft Al'I'IIOACII:

~ -

Adwr-

_ ... about

250 ~xclu-

olowinc Ia a ronlinuation of a

run and Carried to receive the Com-

mittee'a report_ It was Moved,

~=::t=~
2~L~~u~-~:owoco~ f~t~tl::t~~::!u"~
mi~udget. Dr. Wil- ~ =rt_~ ~":
are IDnliDa to collecti.e ac- • - like Chatham~
at Geneoeo.
half of thia liam Moran presented. the com- then adopted three recommen-

and

they

Wliaon

linn thiOQih faculty orpnizalinna
to pJOieot their intereota
What bWbles leachin? Two
lhinp. primarily-threato to oalary pial aDd threeta to their job
oecurity. The "-rican Aaoocia-

in Pennaylvania,
Te"'-l!le
Buell in Colorado, plan to stay
that way. "We are detennined to
provide an option for thoae young
women who prefer an alternative
to ~ucation," aaya W:ilaon's
tyres•dent.
C. Cole, .rr. At

two

haa been under ronaideration

Charles

=~Ut::;'::t.r.!.,~~n haa
-For the lint time in at least
clecMea. faculty aaiaries rooe
more' lllowly thla put year than
the coot or livinJ. -A nationwide

ee~~~~rec:":r:n ~ :UU~:~

President Ruth M. Adamo apeab
of "an historit-ol commitment to
the education of women. that, in
was up 5.4 per cent. compared . these timea of heightened roni:" 0~=.:n !:epa~~~~~~i
than for many prior yean."

suney a'-ed that awrage pay

·~Wit;£ ~cHtNc:

GNA-TIONAL
GREPORTS

Fac ulty

~ 8rsccf~~~ ::~~:=d

they don't care enough about
tea~~- But investigators at tbe

g~drsJ!!t
th
f cui :~~r~~~~i~~~£
raJ
. e. a . ty at aeve
kinds of
~~:~?~j~r:!~:~ t~=fa~~
-tion" in their lives. A survey of
complaints from teachen who 1,085 faculty members alao
showed that about the same perr:=a!i'~,:.r._ ~i centage thought that teaching
sbould be a "very important critheir institutions.
"Through moot of the laat ' terion" in decisions about faculty
pay and promotion.
.=ci:t:=.'e.~::.~~r-: •IN BRIEF: The enrollment of
were getting more without havinc black student&amp; has grown apprecito be very militant about it. But
:J~ ai~~Y~~":.,~ ~..~U::i;
:io:!i'Tort'::.na..!. i~~'B!,U; repom to the federal government
the economic aod political cli- indicate. In.. most cases, however,
the proportion of blacks at senior
mates have turned frigid."
.
Th• A A U P. which haa the institutions remains weU below
largest college·level membenhip the 1l.2 per cent that blacks represent in the total population . . .
(90,000) of the major teaclfers'
organir.ations, ao far h.a.li been the
State governments must take
least active in coUective bargain~ greath~ hponsibility £or improving. But that could change, fol· C:me:e eeo=~~o;· :-ljig~~
lowing an internal review this
0
summer of the association's pro- Education. That. despite the
gram. Meanwhile, the pro(esaon panel's own past calls for vast
increases in federal aid. ~ The
have served notice that they will
cornm.ission warns against the de·
press for a greater role in finanvelopment o£ too much "influence
&lt;·ial decisions on the campuses.
The other principal faculty or- and control" by the federal govganir.ations are the National Ed- ernment · · ·
ucation Asaociation and the Amrhe roncept of deferred tuition
erican Federation o£ Teachers hlnd'.!' .::J~J:,",i.~at~~ ';:';
IAFL-CIO). Each bas a strong
the
governor of Ohio. He sug~'Ommitment to collective bargaingeated that students at senior colIng and each
signifileges in that state agree to repay
cant growth. ~
out o( future eamin~ the state's
• ENROLLMENT SHIFT8 : 'College
enrollment patterns will show subsidy lor their higher educa~me important changes if trends . tion · . .
~igher tuition for out-of-state
ugnaled by atudent applicationa
this year are borne out. For ux- !urvf.:i ';: ~:a~ 'U:!,velJ'\r ~
preme Court. The court upheld a
=~ :etra~:t.r hrl~.:,~ rule in Minnesota that student&amp;
Ivy LeagUe institutions an3 pres- have to live there for a year heti~ous women's colleges declined
thi.a year, while public universities lore becoming eligible for lower
attracted nearly 5 per cent more rates . . .
The tradition of tenure, 80 unapplications from residenta of
portant to the professor's job se~ir !'W" atates. Out-of-state applications to public univenities :'~· a:t.c'r/!."~~t
~~:
dropped more than 5 per cenl era! rolleges are reviewing their
The ~ht economic situation is policies on tenure, and bills have
been propooed in at least five
rc.r~~~';.!." ~ atates
to limit or re-esamine tenSimilar trenda may be taking ure at state institutions. . .
acarcity of summer
r~ at.the. ~=tetol":~~i jobsA projected
for needy college students
sch:::f!
.choola have increased d .......tically, enrollmento ~oa:...,wi~u!n af.!J:.'f~~
ID the gad~ ocboolo generally
available in the fall to aid studo not teem to be rding as fut denta . ..Meanwhile, rolleges have
as . they had been. Some major aeen their requests for federal
uruvenitiea are cwtailin3 crad- money tentatively reduced by a
uate ea.roliJDenta. while new pro-- third . . .
~toin~"!:l(collqea are adCampua radio stations that e•pand their operations beyond a
• PluvAft SUPPOII'f: Aa coli- · limited area may lace requireand universities p1"818 for more ments aimilar to those applied to
~~~-::tb~t~ct:-inO:lunt::: ~::::::i'..~ .:,':~~or.;.t!J .f~~ral
CathOlic c 0 lie g 0 s are in a
double crisla. They are · running
such drop in more than a decade, out of money and running low on
students, attracting fewer. gaduales of Catholic hiP schools. In
reaponae, the roll- are looking
:0~ t:~~~~o;:J:\:~ into
ideaa for reforming their curtutions had .W.tautial pine.
ricula arid for providing more hu. An analyala or data from 806
lllltitutiona over a -two-year period ~~'l:r~i.. Oooded
8bowed that -alumni livinc re- • 'th applicant&amp; but unable to a
mainecl about the aame (DOt ~ :1'..J train-'&gt; of them l:;
countlq tlie ea..- or ,t40-mil- ciMe the eountry'o ''doctor pp,"
lion lift to - uniwnity in
•Y &amp;bat what they - ' moot Ia
69). Corporate .tPfts illcreaaed fedelal 011J&gt;P.!!rt for ope...W.. ••idad.Y: - the order or
fouDilatioD ~rt 55.000 - per ,_r · • ·
down 4.2 per ..,t,
the"li..
~!J:~
·
to
oix
ud - . .
•Wo~~~:~~ ONLY:
to m•ke the baJMDitleo
coU- are huddaa the tread IIIII•
toward coed,...tloJL Fiw ,_.. more oocialll ......t . . .
with a 6 per cent rile in consumer
prices.
-The uoociation haa received
an unusually laqe number of

:!.":7
t!:!C::··..

anticipates
U:!

;:"r!.

=n

..

•*

:=~and~~=:...~&amp;"~
!:.."':~"'U'to~=- ::r.:;!:

•=·
...
~

'

1-.

-!f.=~:::

SeYanl-··

:='...u-

The ftnrt

report appeared in the R•port&lt;r
for May 13.

By ANDREW. HOL'f
A~r. o.an. Oraduar• Sc'-1
. (SUNY Senate) President
Frank Erk reported on the
status of several items:
International Studies Conference. The Senate has agreed to
provide partial support for' this
conference. The current budget
difficulties preclude this.
Review of Charge to Committee on Governance. It was de-

mittee's report_ One recommendation which may be -of interes't to the local campuses was
that each campus establish a
budget committee which would
serve as advisory to the president and that the committee
take an active role in its reoommendations for campus budgets.
It was Moved, S...onded, and
Carried to receive this report.
Universrty Fa cuI I y Programs. The c h a i r m a n, Dr.
Frank Wadsworth, had no written report to present.

=e.~u:-"=es~~ha~rift~ aeC:..1~s~Ht,~::S:n':.,~tfi&gt;~!i

reviewed at the general com- report of the committee's acmittee retreat held in the Fall tivities, which to a large de1971.
.
gree are of a "watch dog'' charateStMudeee~m~ •!'s.ttienndva1.encewofobtuSdegne-t ~~\~~~{~
~o~i~~d~:
.
difficulties, this matter was also port.
defe rred until the fall retreat.
Economic Status. Dr. John
Liaison with SPA . Dr. Erk La'fourette had no written rerecommends that a series of port to present but noted tha[
meetings between Senate and the committee s
ready to
SPA committees be arranged evaluate the package negotiafter the current negotiations ated by the bargaining agent.
are completed.
Expanding EducatiDnal OpAt this point committee parUinity. Dr. Vera Farris prechairmen were requested to pre- sented three resolutions which
sent their reports to the Senate. were adopted by the Senate:
(Copies of their reports have U L Be_ it resolved that the
been deposited in the Senate
mvers1ty set aside or petition
office, 135 Hayes Halt.)
the Research Foundation to set
Professianal Rights and Re- aside the sum of $15,000 and to
sponsrbilities. Dr. Donald Sam- allocate this sum for the supson presented an Interim State- port of one or more institutes
ment which was adopted unan- or workshops during 1971-72
imously. In response to his re-- dealing with course and curriequest for further instructions, ulum materials which support
the Senate adopted a resolution the full and equal opportunity
directing the committee to con- programs.
tinue its explorations or the
2. Be it re s olved that the
quest.ion of sanctions. Tile com- University Faculty Senate urge
mittee was commended for its the governing bodies at each
efforts to date.
campus having one or more
Research. Dr. Walter Hard- special programs to appoint a
ing presented two resolutions standing committee whose mawhich were adopted by the jor charge will be to study and
Senate: the first commended make recommendations aimed :
those who supported the Uni- &lt;a I to achieve increased faculversity's Grant-in-Aid and Fel- ty involve~ in the programs
lowship programs and urged and b I to insure the fullest posthem to suppQrt further devel· s ible commitment of their cam·
opment of these programs. The puses' resources to the higher
second urged support of the education of economically and
University Press.
educationally d e f i c i e n t stuIt was then Moved, Sec- dents.
onded, and Carried to receive
3. Be it resolved that a repthe report of the committee.
resentative from the CooperaStudent Affairs. Neil Brown tive College Centers and a repwas uhable to attend the meet- resentative from the U r ban
ing; however, he forwarded a Centers be invited to attend,'
report of activities. It was with the status of Observers, the
Moved, Seconded, and Car- regularly scheduled meetings of
ried to receive this report.
the University Faculty Senate,
Undergraduate Programs. beginning Fall, 1971.
Dr. Robert Getz reported that
It was then Moved, sec:
the Committee will continue to onded, and Carried to receive.
study the following topics: a) the committee's report_
Opportunities for A.A.S. gradGovernance. Dr. Roger Trumuates, b ) Role of the graduate bore reiterated the committee's
assistant in undergraduate edu- support of a University-wide
cation, c ) Redress of academic governance body. It w_as Moved,
grievances, d ) Advanoed tech- ~ Se;conded, and . Ca~ned to !"'
nological training
ceiYe the committees report.
·
Graduate Programs. Dr. WilT
1"1--~~+-.:on
liarn Webb presented a resolu~
\.AJllVUUlW u
lion which was adopted by . the
Senate. Essentially it urged
The Law School's Hooding the acl,tievement of a well inCeremony an&lt;! Honors Convo- tegrated graduate program
cation will be held Thursday, comprehensive of all componMay 27, at 7:30 p.m. in the ents of the University which are
Mary Seaton JW&lt;&gt;m of Klein- authorized to offer graduate inhans Music Hall.
struct.ion.
It was Moved, Seconded, and
Speaker will be Mr. Jack Carried to receive the commitGreenberg, attorney for the tee's report.
NAACP. Guests will incl!lde
Grievance. Dr. Oscar GoodProvost Richard D. Schwart7, man presented his repo
It
the first non-l.owyer t&lt;i head a was Moved, Seconded, and Carlaw school, who will introduce ried to receive the committee's
himself to the community and report_
•
Justices Matthew Jasen and
lnUrrttUional . Studies. Dr.
Charles S. Desmond of the Irving Barnett noted that alCourt of AppM1a. Tbe Rev. thoush funds bad been drastic&gt;
Hqh D. Carmichael will give ally reduced, the conlerence CRl
,the Invocation a n d BenedicWorld Alfairs and the Human
Uon.
Condition has not been abanof ...._ - - ' " - doaed.
.__. .....~
UE - - - I t - Moved, Seconded, and
handliJ!J the convocation ia Carried lo l'llCillve this report.
Sandra Ka,y.
~ R_..,.., Dr. Ru-

-·w

,__,___

dation&amp; made by the Library
Resources Committee:
l. Library acquisition budgets should not be lijlhJJy aacrificed to fiscal expec:hency.
2. Librarian&amp; should have acto information concerning
their salary scale, in much the
same way other colleagues are
informed.
3. In view of the increasing
importance Q.f librarian&amp; in the
learning p roc e s s, librarian&amp;
should be involved in tbe work
or the Panel on University Pur·

cess

""?e;sonnel Policy. No report_
Chairman has res1gned.
The Senate elected the following officers: 1971-73, President, Dr. .Joseph Norton, Al·
bany; 1970-72, Secretary, Dr.
Ian Henderson, Brockporl
·
EXE1CUtive Committee 197172: University Centers, Dr. Andrew W, Holt, Butralo Center;
State COlleges, Dr. Charles H.
Poskanzer, Cortland; Agricultural and Technical Colleges,
Dr. Robert Wingert, Cobleskill;
Medical Centers, Dr. Elaine
Feldman, Downstate Medical
Center; Professional Colleges,
Election delayed until the fall;
Dr. John Vett permitted to
serve in the interim.
The newly elected officers
will meet with President Erk
and the Executive Committee
in Albany on May 21, 1971, to
effect an orderly transfer of
duties. It is customary at that
time for the Executive Committee to appoint Committee
Chairmen and other members
to serve during 1971-72. 'Ibe
Nominations Committee at
Buffalo has been given the task
of submitting local candidates
£or all the oommittees listed
above. Those interested in serving on ~ committees should
contact Dr. Thomas Frantz,
secretary of the SUNY/ Buffalo
Senate.
New Business. The Executive
Committee proposed a modification of the Trustees By-laws
1Article VII ) which would increase those eligible to serve
as President or Secretary by ineluding former elected members .
who had served within the previous three years.
It was Moved, Seconded, and
Can-ied to adopt this recommendation.
It was proposed that a Committee be established which
would be responsible for a
Faculty Senate Legal Defense
Fund.
It was Moved, Seconded, and
Can-ied to adopt this proposal.
It was proposed that the
Personnel Policy Committee
and/ or the Grievance Commit- .
tee review Articles XIV, Title
4, with respect to that portion
dealinR With automatic termination. It was Moved, Seconded,
and Carried to adopt this motion.
It was proposed that the hoot
Senator &lt;Fall; Winter and
Spring meetings) be permitted
to invite four students to attend aa observers, and that the
Senate provide them an oppor~aility. to speak. This motion
• ed.
It was noted that Dr. J. Murdoch Dawley is retiring. It was
Moved, Seconded, and Carried that he be commended for
his efforts in behalf of the Senate.
.
President Erk was given a
standing ovation for his eD!lDplary fulfillment of the eDll!piion8lly difficult responsibilities be faced as President Of
the Senate during the past two .
yt!IU'8.

TbeSenateadipurnedat1 :00
P .M, May 8, 1971.

�• . , 20, l91l

8
--.~we

GREPORTS

ON

GpEQPLE

Uniwraity wheN ho

lectured Oft "Ecooomioo of Pallotion," and " M . . - I c Policy,"

~~~~~roC,'·~ -

It E~t?" colloquium at SUNY/
Albany.
I&amp;. PHILIP 11088, profe..or, Scbool

~M~n~~ f!""t\" of
~

Organized Labor," A..,. and

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
professor, his·
tory, will become profeseor of history at Harvard University in
.July. He came to U/B in 1969
from Encland.
.
.._ lln'IHO BJGI:L, professor, psycbolo«Y. appointed to the Profesoioaaf.Advioory Committee, United Cerebral Palay Aooociation of
W-m New York.
I&amp; DHST BADIAN,

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
a. P'RANaB, named ·coOJ'di.Dator for innovative programs
for the Faculty of Educational
llR. lORN

~=-=~aC:::ntana!ctp~:

March ..Utant in peychology.

PRESENTATIONS
aaociate
prof_,r, poycbo!oiY, " PerceptuD&amp;.

JniNG

IIUIIDKAH,

~~~ ~es:~uy.

collc:iczuium at McM81ter Univeroity,Omada.
I&amp; 111C1W1D ...,.,.,.,VIIIl, dean,
School of M..........,.,t, eeminar

8~~~~~
UDiwnity, New Orleano, La.

M - . of~ on "The CommunicatioiUI Gap Between Man-

t.r:::ie~::: in~e'!naS::J

Mealin«, Institute of M8IUIC8mant Sci~cee. Washington, D.C.
- . ao8D'r T. CII.OW, uaistant profa.or, School of Management,
cliocu.aJit of D.M. Brown, "Sectoral M....._ of Productive Ca~ for a Recional Economy,"
Northeut Re«ional Science Confereoee, Bin.gbamton.
I&amp; BOW.UW G. P08'I'I:Il. assiltant
proleuor, School of Management,
".!Dllation and Controls," Indus:;!!!~':" Reoean:h Asaocia- .
I&amp; BAUY I'IUTZ, director of phyaical education, recreation and
athLitica and vice president of
the American Association of
Health, Physical Education and

=o:i r•s::~J!::mA'S1!.:

A.ociation of Health, Ph.r._oical
Edacation and Recreation, ~"\!?:US­
ton, Teua.
1&amp;. lORN ' p, liALBTEAD, auociate
profeuor, history, participated in
on "Imperialism in the
a

.J:.:.el

~~
'i:!!a':JonO.:t ~n::
Collece.

reeearcb aaeiltant
profeoaor, microbioloq, preoented
peper on surface antigen of her·
aimplu virua infected oells,
annual -tin~ of the American
Society for Microbiology, Minne-

I&amp; MJCBIO ITO,

apolio.

a.

fttANJ[

c.

nr:H*

profeuor, man·

~t: .::="Wo~~:UU'!~

wnity of Toronto; "Some Problomo in Multiperiod Portfolio
Modela," Rutcera University,
N-.rk, N..J.
I&amp; 1'lmXIOD C. X&amp;AUBS, atli.stant
c:liDiaol pn~fe.or, medicine, spoke
at a procnm dewted to the probloiioo of acini". Villa Maria Col-

._

a. aoy L4CB:JUN* profeuor, PlY·
ebolc&gt;a. p-ted a colloquium
•t tbiUmvenity of Kanau, Law-

fi:~~;:'ln:C'1,~~ :~·~Jl;!';
Management Services Administration, New York City.
•·

DR. IRVING BIQI:L,

profeuor,

J?-Y·

~~o::~e:t :f~Tr=

~0

IIOL"mMI,

~reb

imtructor,
School of Management. "Orientation to Management Principles."

C RAIG L. THRASHER,

--

~-

A. ..,..,

aetinc -...

~---apu-

STANLEY Z 10 NT 8, profesaor,
SChool of Managemeitt, with DL

DR.

aseoci-

ate professor, "An Optimal Control The o r y Approach to the
Education Investment Decision,"
Analysis and Optimization of
Complex Systems Seminar.

PUBLICATIONS
asaociate
proCessor, School of Management,
"'A Study of Dilferential Socialization Practices for Members of
0 n e Professional Occupation."
with .L. Hrebiniak and R Alonoo,
.lourMl of H&lt;alth and Social B•DR.

JOSEPH A. AL1JTTO.,

hauior.

DB.. &amp;OBERT T. QI.OW, auiatant professor, School of Managemen~
"Military Expenditures and the
Economic Growth of the Northeast Corridor," Adjulimenr. of
the U.S. Economy to Reduction.
in Military Spending.

TUESDAY-25
PBYSICI.A.NB ftl&amp;PBONS J.&amp;'!'Ua:

:,::~ oohy~'!!JT~ "f:'.!

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
THURSDAY-20
Basil Continelli. SUJOOaTtMlt
IIAZARDS-AND BOW PBA&amp;MAClSTS

~red~ ~~;rc8Is~

gram. 62 recewing locations, 11:80

a.m. and 10 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUJUM•: Dr. M.M .
Shapiro, Naval Researeh Laboratory, Washington, D.C., PIIOPAO.\·

lll Hochstetler, 4 p.m. RefreshmenU 112 Hochstetler, 3: 30 p.m.
MANAGEMENT AND PUBlJC POLICY

~:=~~=p.~~&amp;i~~ 8~

doctoral candidate, counselor education, "Coun.eling Black Col.
lege Studenu in Special Programs," Perscnnel and Gu.idcmu
Jou.rtUJJ.
DB.. .lORN P. H.AI.8tt.AD, associate
professor. history, " Marshall Lya utey," Encyclopedi4 AmeriCOIUJ.,
1972 edition.
CABLOS M. KRUYTBOSCB, assistant

'Richard
J;!'iic;- 'CJ:::#::.e~t
h o:fr ~"!~
G. Brandenburg; •peek-

er: Max Waye, Fortune Map:tine.
In this t~. ree-day conference,
faculty members from more than
50 schools of business administration and management throughout
the United Steteo and Canada
will hear and diseuse presentationll by recognized ocholaro and

. ~)'""&amp;'lilo..;u.~~J"~~~

oant: John M. Thomu. 5: 30 p.m.
-Reception. 6: 30 p.m.-Dinner.

,!l,':'tre"::.mvr::_

Chairman: Dr. Charlea J . Swick,
Miami; speaker: Vi.,pl B. Day,
General Electric Co~ration.

DIL HURRAY LEVINE, professor, PlY·
cho}ogy, with P. DUNN, 8, BJlOCHINSKY, .l . BRADLEY and 0. DON- •
LAN. "Student Teachers aa 1\J.tora

for Children in Inner City
Schools," Child Pll)lchwtry and
Hurrwn Development.
DB.. lAMES A. M08S, acting dean,
international atudies, editor, The
Black Mon in. America, Dell Publ.iabera; contributor to George
Shepherd, ed. Racial lnflu•nc••
B':w~
Foreign Policy,

'B!:.!.c a'a

G. PMUITT, proleuor, PlY·
chology, with .u. m;a, Reply to
Belovitz and Finch'a Com.menta
on "The Risky Shift in Group
Betting,'' Journal . of Experim.ental Social P•ychowty.
[8. PHILIP ROSS, professor, School

DOJUNOLOGIC CONCEPTS OF HYPQSENSmviTY IN MAN •: all-day COD·

...

~ ~~~-~
tion andinRe/==.~ ~

t:::'::
T~ Y - C4ildla,
OLSE, To1011to.
- t .a.-. "Hac:i8

-. ._ a .-.ox, prote.. or,
. . . . fll N=apcc ct..,.. wWt.... aciellot ID - * a&amp; ~

~~:L='l
.it!_:a~ pqH'ertia..
•

r&amp;. ftANLKr &amp;IONT8. ~.

u,.

Teoria Qua u~ La·PraaamaciaD L1DN1 En En.._" 1-I

PBYBlCAL

1'IIDW'Y PaOJl..

~YB~gi=AG~a~

gram, 62 recei.U.. locations, 2:30
p.m.

WEDNESDAY-26
CONTINUING DE N T A L IDUCATJON

~ t:·:~:;,l~"::,c'tf:ta ~·~

l'ltO'ftiMS AND IMIIUQ DBPICIIDrfcy
I&gt;JSEA8Z. Statler Hilton, 2 p.m.

~'f:.i=. !!;~;;._D~:::::f. .

icine, RockefeUer Univenity, New
York, who will speak on KYELOIIA
INTI:RNATIONAL POLK DANCING :

Jn.

atruction in basic steps durinc
lint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annes,
8 p.m.
CREATIVE ABSOCIATEB AT OOKU&amp;• :

~~':. ~~t=rLofBC::'e:
PHYSlCIANB 'l'a.ZPHONJ: I.&amp;CI'lJJIB:

Lucille Lewaodowolti and Bobdana Salaban, SUICIDAL PATIENTS,

rn,~
6~
11: 00 a.m.:

!:r.r..n: J.!!.~=-

In Time and Not, a multi-media FOUIGN 8TUD£NT AFFAIIS COrn:&amp;
experience, by West Coast com- · HOUII• : 10 Towmend, 8: 30-5:30
poser, Dorrance Stalvey. Domus, p.m.
1695 Elmwood Ave., 8: 30 p.m.

THURSDAY-'1:7

CONTINUING D E N TAL EDUCATION

COU1181:: oee Wedneeday

liotin«.

which are interrupted by aucx.-es-

~~i.:Zdf::J'i!rtane::Sts~~

Hilton, 7 p.m.

ticipanU.

THDAPY, oponoored by Rer!ional
~~. ~~m. 62 ....,.;.;.,.

PHYSICAL T HIE a A P Y T'GDBONK

~~~...~~!il~~::

~~:!or o,"e!&amp;~~f ~u!!fol'~
::r·~~or,.;:·rr::
62 receivinc location-. I
~no,~~ '\l:i. -:!"d p =: gram,
~n~~Q~n w~rl~i~iho~~ tiona,
p.m.
spatial diatributioft~ct I i v e
muaicians,
dancen,
pi'C:IClllaKmiata.
:,rm a~~ ~A ~Jo ~rde~ and a number of additional pu- NOTICES
TU.ATMENT OP AB1'1DU...
Statler

PSYCHIATRIC GUE8'1' LECTURE•:

Dr.

tifo~:fte:::~;~:n~:

and Adolac•nu in Edu&lt;atiollol

Lawn.

prof'-or and director of patient
admiaaio1111 and recorda. Capen
Hall. Also on Thursday, May 'rl.

ration of the entire program ia
from 75 to 90 minutes and con.
aists of a IM!ries of events and
multi-events inYOiving tape music

8 : 30 p.m.

YoWII Child,..n; with P. OLIU'ID,
"Generality of Color FQJ1D Pre!-

=

J a meat own Day. Georp W.

~~n~K~~~~ro::.O~f z!i:

terence followed by reception and
dinner, e~nsored by The Buffalo

Samuel B. Guze, profet110r of
psychiatry and aoaociate professor of medicine, Waahin~n Uni·
veroity School of Medicine, SL
louie, Misaouri, THE UHJQUENE88

"r&gt;"".;;:;t ;ft~.\;

PHYSICAL T B J: ll A. P Y 'J'ZLD'BONB
LllC'I'UU: Special Progrom -

'l'a.CPIIONIC IACTtJRS:
~vi':ies S:: t!,~~.::..: In Mf'im~~ve/;~~al:w':!~ f'HYBICJ.AHS
Troumo Serin. Dr. George Readinc. CUUEHT CON(ZPTS OP BUKN
ous occurrences of familiar event.

several
by the School of Management in
connection with the 125th Annivenary of the. University.

I&amp;. I&amp;AH

Mpnthly Lobor RevUtw.
na. IRVING •JGJ:L, profeuor. pey-

TEL&amp;PBONJ: LmCTtJB:

auiatanta), Dr. J..._ Collord,

ference. Ernest Witebeky Memorial "Lecture, oponoored by Center

!~~;: =~c;!I;:S::Xe~~~ ~= ~? ~li~B~r:!k: ~ne~ia ~i:,~ :~~:t~
R o I e of The Re- ing, objectives formulation in the
business enterprise, and mana- Ticketa at Baird Box Oftice, NorTicket Of6ce and at the door.
~a!m~'C::~· :!d"j1: C responses to aocial iaeues. ton
Also on Saturday, May 22.
~n ~Jf.:J.e~:!lofo'rk~r-

NUaB.IB

Eleanor Edman, Marilyn Hale,

IMXUNOLOGIC CON&lt;ZPI'B OP liYPD~
BENSrTIVITY IN MAN• : all-day COD·

"1'008&amp;, ''The

Goldhar, The Science of Man41~

.

~~ ~fv~::t J!!.it.:=. 1:~

corr111 011d M~rial R ..ponod.
Chairman: Pbillp Rooo; ·~­
en: Joeewh L Bower, Harvard:

~~~~;m. A-;;

u : 30

a.m.

Elizabeth Blaclt, CAllE OP TID PA·
TIENT WITH BUKHS IN A 8)I[ALL
COMKUNITY H08Pn'AL, ap:D80red.

•Open tn public;
••Open tn rnembeB of tho Un~Wnitr.
#Open only to thole with a proleAional lnta...t In tho oubject
ContKt Suzlonne Metrpr, 831·2228, fot I~ •

TION OP GALACTIC COSMIC RAYS,

DUNSTAN L. BAE'r"r'ENSCHWJLI.D,

tc:~!;;

Fillmore Room,

·or. Louis Cloutier and Dr. Grecory Tbonell. TI&amp;.\'I'JRNT or BUaNS

PIURMAClSTB TELEPHONE l.ct'UBI::

='..:.,'=~t:!::i:.
.......,.. ~- maetlnc,
"--v
... Qtao. ,
\

8: 30 p.m.

rram. 62 rece•.U.. locationo,

{Vt!te':u~:~ ~kte~.!.b~te~
LAWRENCE SOUTHWICK, JR. ,

teachinc,

110111e

BUG: 7011

;!.."""...::~=r~ f~iN:!~~
tian • Taab," Espen..-tal ~

at the Uniwraity ol GaD.vL
~ the Uniwnity oi
. . . _ ltal,.-, and the Uniwraity
ol Milan, Italy, thia .Jane.

11AL1UN POLK IWfCINO : advonced,

search Project," Merrill Palmer
Alumni Auociation. De t r o it.
Mich.; a colloquium at Cornell
University on Development of
Representational Thought

Ct:, &lt;;rJf:!::~o~-the ~.;~~~~:.=

._

SUNDAY-23

velopment, University of WWcon-

sin; •• A New Look at Two-. Year
Olds: A Description of a Re-

OP THE PATIENT AND THE KI:DICAL
MODEL IN PSYCHIATRY, 139 Capen,

FRIDAY-21·

SATURDAY-22

STUJmrn' I'UBLIC.&amp;TIONB 80DD will
meet on Wedneoday, May 26, at
8 p.m. in room 330 "Norton to
elect olllcen for year. Intereoted lltudenta • h 0 u I d CODtact
either the Student or Grad Student A.ociation to obCain appoin-t.
to
the Boanl. •

ra-ta.
cou- . .

A
titled JIQLUJ:I&lt;&lt;a OP Df·
TaPDIION.U. PllO&lt;Z8II:8 IN P.ur:Dr
ID ON TillE PBYCBOLOOIC&amp;L DniLOPJIDfT
T&amp;aa IIDIIIDI will

or

he olrered thia . . . _ r tluoudl
the Division of Continuinc EcfU.
cation on Mondayo, from 7-9 p.m.
by Don ·Kertzman, pac1ute otudant in clinical poycbolo«Y. For
further information, COD!act Division of Coatinuinc Studieo. Enrollment limited to 20. -

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

VOL 2-NO. 32

MAY 13,1971

Outsider Is .Favored ·
For Academic Post
The Search Committee for
a Vice President of Academic
Affairs bas recommended to
President Robert L Ketter that
an outside candidate be ap.
pointed to the poel
The recommt)nda tion was
contained in ilhe final report of
the group which bas been meeting since last Deoomber. A field
ol over 100 nominees for the
vice presidency was reviewed
by the committee.
The final panel of nomineee
includee three candidates, DOlle
of whom is currenUy a m&lt;m·
ber of the faculty or staff of
U/ B. According o19 the committee's report, submitted last
week, "the Search. 'Committee

the oonstituencies of the university as an institution-ineluding especially tl..- in our
hi~t olfices."
Eleven 125tb Anniversary
Awards were alao presented to
individuals wbo bave made
special contributions to the
University,- 'to puolic aervioe,
and/or to tiM! advancement of
a particular profeesional or academic field, as judged by a

Establl.Shed £or
CI~l-1-~·t•cal Ban E
0&lt;1lJl.Ji:l ]!
Xemp---.._t•o
]! flS

Procedur
.
e

~
committee chaired by Dr. Rollo
Handy, provost of the Faculty
of Educational Studies.
President Robert L Ketter
greeted the group of faculty,
students, staff, alumni, community leader8 and friends in
attendance lind Dr Oliver P.
J~ cbaiaDaA of the Dl!partlnent - of 'Aiiat.O - - ~''Heillth car., ~ties at"Buffalo in -1846," the year the University was founded as a medical
scbool~rtna Ufllld
Ac:aderillc
Linowitz, wbo is chairman of
the National Committee on
Campus Tensions of the Americsn Council on Education,
urged a thorouj!h ~tion and reordermg of priorities
witbin the academic community. Higher education will bave
to get beck to making undergraduate education ita most important business, be said.
He contended .t bat faculties
who bave become increasingly
absorbed in the production of
research and in the pursuit of
BUJlPC?rl funds deserve student
criticism. Students may reason·
ably feel tbat universities lack
concern for their individnal development, he said.
A recent Carnegie Comnlission survey of 70,000 college
undergraduates found that 90
per cent feel their courses
should be ''more relevant," Linowitz said. He urged higher
education "to make clear"
wbat a liberal education abould

. Tbe State's Director ol the feller. The latter empowers "the
Budget, in Cllll8Ultation witb Board of Trustees to regulate
State University, is establish- vehicular and pedestrian trafing a review process for the fie and parking on the camgranting of exemptions to the puses of State-operated instiState's one-year moratorium on ~tutions.. Rules prohibiting or
leaves of abence and asbbeti- controlling vending, bawking,
cals ( Cbapter 124 of the Laws and loitering , and trespassing
of 1971-8.6300) .
are also autborized. Violations
According to a "Report on of tbese rules would constitute
1971 State Legislation," issued traffic infractions or misdeby the SUNY Albany Public meanors as appropriate and
Relations Office on May 4, would be enforceable in local
"cami&gt;us pi8Sidents bave been courts. It takes effect Septemasked to submit recommended ber 1."
~ for paid leaves of abTbese are the only tbree bills
aence for the 1971-72 academic affecting SUNY listed as being
year to the Cbancellor witb ap. adopted.
propriate justifications."
Sixty-one "significant bills of
lnfonpation required for the interest," preslimably still pend·
justifications is as follows, the ing, are summarized as part of
Report said:
. theto·. Report, including measures
. 1) Will the leave of ab. Prohillit inaugurations for any
-add to the operating costs State officials, unless money be,~
\\i:e':'!i":J~tion
of the eampua?
for tbem is specifically provid- sbould give us a feeling for the
2) Would failure to approve ed in tbe'budget or aCJ!' deptb of our roots 8nd a sense
the requested oituation
leave create
an ated exp._.y
- • b'Y the
· - of the s tuff of which we are
I!ILVaordinary
eitber
for the -~~ or the faculty ture · (Assembly Bill 5443, Sen- made. It should belp create
--..-ate Bill 4310);
and responsible citi
Prohibit State-provided and/ t.;.-.;ble to exercise their obli:
as fOUDdation _".., fellow- or maintained bomes for offi- gations witb moderation and
.,._...,
cials or employees of the. Ed- wisdom."
&amp;bipa, .and 110 forth?
ucatlon Department and the
'This kind of education was
3) Will the focus of sabbeti- Sta$e University (Aaoembly never more relevant, liDDwitz
cal -.:11 and study inure to 5769; Senate 4910);
suggested. · And it cannot be
the benefit of the University
Witbbold final payment of prov;ded, be said, "on a _..,
and the State?· ·
wages or ...Ia~ by a State-op. time ~&gt;as;., bv subordination of
m-bere uniler tbe heading erated instit;;"tl'on of ,_, ........ ed- '"""";"a to ~
by
of-"Billa Adopted J&gt;r. the Legis- ucation to : an empl; wbo ~ to s~b · fullr aulature and 'I'iansmitted to tbe bas disoontinued servine, if the · Uionty' to select tbe COUftle8
Govemorl~_f!!e. Albany report employee property ~
. eteriawan
. . wtt.tboufromt•~most"""~
says the liiCUI'Y minimum work belonging to the institution and ....,,
...,
-~
bourB bHl (8..11299) is "await- bas refused to return it and fuJ IIUidance and
•• "
inc .......... to the
1o pnwide ,for deduction from
"If
~~~~r."Italllo....._ablll-· ..,.. or salary tbe amOunt of rilht to apilct ~from
~ ftllll)iliaD of 'VIihlealar maaey owed (.A.aDbly 4261· a collele eduaitiaa," be.e~lllid,
traffic (Aeaembly 889-.A) ' Senate 181();
•
' "It ia the beaelit of -.muwbldl"- baSI lalt to Rodre- (~'"' 7, ooL 3)
(ContiJw.Jd .., 6, ooL I)

:::r

·=:t=:t.!e..n:».:..%

'""'•""lful

ao-.

a-

~a

~"

·'Evi......,.; 'of m-1 ~
in education, outside .tbe candi·
date's specialty """" ... ."
''Evidence ol community aarv·
ice, or intereets of a similar

nature ..•"

Individuals wbo _ . . . t to
bave the . - r y qualiflcati.ona on 1i1e'tJuia of the IDitial
evaluation ...,... -tacted in
writing. The Seakh Committee ilhen beld ..-tinjpl of one
to two hours witb each of the
candidMM. Certain quali......
rellecting the CIIDdidate's views
of admini8tratian and higher
demonstrated great dedication ~~~were explored. n-,
to the development ol .SUNY
"An appreciation of the present and future academic ~
SUNY at Buffalo at preoent lema facing tbe American uniand in the foreseeable future, versity system and,SUNY/Buf.
are best served by the appoint- falo in particular,"
..An ability to listen to other
ment of an academic vice prespoints of view, even 4hose radiident from outside. . . ."
Tbere was no indication as cally different from 11..- beld
.
to when an appointment will by the candidate."
'"'be ~ to evaluate
be made.
Nominations to the post were current and futwe PfOINJIIII 011
solici1ed th!ouih ietten to the the bMia of. ez!s!iq .........,
faculty, ·students and staff in ·criteria, or to develop , _ cnaddition 1o let18n! '!set to se- teria wbere- eo:ist at preslected presidents of major uni- ent."
''Tbe potential, or previous
versities and otber highly placed
practice of mating prompt deacademic
administrators
in New
York State
and throughout
the cisions and accepting remonsibility for these decisions."
United States."
"An appreciation of tbe role
The criteria uaed· by the comof
the student in tbe University
mittee in the initial BCnlelling
governance process."
process ~ the following:
'"'be
recognition ol the J.&gt;rob. "Prior ~c administrative e:rpenence •.. although ex- lems and challenges 88110C18ted
tensiw invol.........,t in major (C~on-7,ool.

A Tlwusand Friends Help University =~~~~
T.
h
. rate 1ts 125t Founders' Dav
:.,s:~.a:~=.:;
Celeb
Tbe University celebnJrted its
125tb Anniversary Tl-.lay
night at tbe I{ e a r t h s t o n e
Manor in the cOmpany of 1,000
friends wbo shared an ejgbtfoot birtbday cake decorated
with a teplica of H'a,yA!S Hall
and lieard tbe Honorable Sol.
M. Linowitz warn tbat if tbe
-- pnlvers•lY isfi)ii&amp;: vive, "We JllUIIt somehow reestablish m,utual reapect ami&gt;ng

university, state or nelional
committees was oanaidered 88
indic:atini the potenlialfor &amp;UOcess at the academic vice preideDtial level"
"Scholarly achievement aud

�2

• . , U,..lll11

GREParrER,

University Organization Thsk Fo:fce ISsues Summary Report
ED. NOTE: Tbo followiD« '
liD ~t of the noport of
tbo , _ y...,. on um..ro;ty Orpaiatiaa. Tbio nport made
ID tbo ~t earlier in tbo
..,.a... Ao a ..Wt oflurtber clio. - . , in the Olllco of tbe l'Noi·
cloDt, tho .-moadatiol&gt;a
Tult FOICO haft t .
in . .... by NOpOCt. Tbo Tult
Force bad
tbe creatioll
io

of ...

D..,.,.-

intermediate and iODI types must be an ellmalt of
activities at every leYel. This
is to include the ~ of
Wormstion collectiOD and data
gathering. as a major oompo-

..!r.J: nen.J.., rincipal elements of the
P model, which are dill-

Acoodoailc CouDcil wbiCb.

further COIIGcleratioD by mmtben of tbe PnoidoDf• Olllco """
two _ . , . , . of tbo Tult Force,
wu 1D daplieaiD in UDifi·
amt _ . . . tbo f1mctioDo ol tbe

011

~..!r...S.:..~ !r'u=:
:.w.
..

Studiao aDd the Gradu·
aiD Sebool Tbo followiDI
....,.._ - - - of tbe ..........
moadatiol&gt;a by tbe - - ... of
tbe Tult Force hao modilled their
nport in lhio """ -~ with·
out, -.....•• iD tbe opiDiQD of
two of tbe ..-ben (Dn. Daniel

~ detsil in the main re-

port, are the foUowing:
1 - 'The approved academic
program is identified .. the reIIOUfal generating device. A
program may be p~ by a
~t. l!chool, oollep. a
center or any ooaJjtion (- r disciplinary1 multi-disciplinary,
or non-disciplinary) of faculty
and students uruting for the
purpa&gt;e.

2 - Evduations and recommendations of approval of academic rograins reside primar·
Graduate School and
H. Murray aDd MeAllioiDr Hull). ily in
obaDaiDc tbe primary thruot of the Division of Undergraduate
tbe TUk Force'• ~­
Studies. Professional programs
tioo&gt;o. Dr. Murray, deeD of tbe are evaluated within
ap.
Graduate Sc:bool aDd acm.. vice propriste professional l!chool
~t ft&gt;r ..-.me atraUo,
foUowed by appropriate recwu tbe Tult Force c:bairmaD.
ommendation to the Office of
5ummaiJ of the Amenclocl ll8port the President.
3 - Provision is made,
through a suggested revolving
sity, the Task Fora&gt; has COD· fund located in the Oftial of the
cemed itaelf first with .the ad- Vial President for Academic
vantages and deficiencies of AlJai.rs, for highly innovative
the present system as it was propooals to receive special amable to perceive them. In sum- sideration subject to a&gt;rtain reDiary; the Dl08t important of striotions on 8lZ8, duration, con·
ditions of Continuing r e v i e w
advantages appMr to be:
1 - Deceutralization of ad- and evaluation.
4 - An academic Informaministration represented by the
division of the ft&gt;rmer College tion developing and data gath·
of Arts and Sciences into the ering staff 18 recommended for
three faculties of Arts and Let- the Office of the Via! Presiters, Social Sciences and Ad· dent for Academic Alfairs to
ministration and Natural Soi· assist it in its planning activities. .
en£eS and Mathematics.
5 - 'The Vice President for
2 - 'The provision ol Uni·
Academic Affairs is intended to
:Orsi~-::.,deDI~o'ftJ~: assume a line relationship to
l!fllliuate Studies, 1he Graduate the President and E xecu ti ve
School, and Academic Devel- Vice President and to have pri"
mary responsibility for developopment.
3 - Creation of a CoUege •i ng recommendations to tbe Of.
fice of the President on acaSystem.
Among . tbe more important demic priorities, programs to be
approved, resources allocation
deficiencies appear oto be:
· 1 - Allocation of resoura&gt;B (budget, lines, spaa!). His prin·
has been disconnectedly dif.

J:

the

...

~=:etheoc:

the

fuae.
2 - 'The line of ·reporting of
high level administrators has
bypassed the University-wide
coordinating offices.
.

~ ~~~o.:v:t'f~

the Graduate School, the Di·
vision of Undergraduate Studies and academic planning staff.
6 - It is suggested tbat the
3 - 'The variation in size of• disciplines, usually represented
faculties and the resuJ~ V&amp;· by departments. be griruped in·
riety of internal organizational to about 18 schools, esch costructures has compounded the ordinated by a dean. It is pro.
diHiculties of perceiving . deci- posed that &lt;these groupillfB "'~
sion loci and achieving Univer- vide the basis for the pnncipal
governance units of the tfni.
sity-wide caordination.
4 - 'The articulation of the versit.Y. ( tenure and promotion
colleaes with the more tradi· committees, curr iculum com·
tional educational organization mittees, by-laws). This recog.
has not been achieved, result- nizes the pluralism alluded to
ing in clebilitatin uncertain· earlier.
ties, inadequate co~ fund.
7 .:.... The l!chools are suggesting, lOBS ol educational oppor- ed to be grouped. for administrative coordination rather
'tunities
In proi-tn, a model for Uni· than geYel1lllflOe p\111)011e8, into
veraity orgamzation to serve as four diY'isiOIIII. each cioordinated
a fOCUB for a broad discussion by a vial piesident with Uni·
throughout the University com- versity-wide responsibilities. In
munity, the Task Fora&gt; has each ~ division, both
had in mind a number of prin- basic and applied elements
ciples or pera&gt;ptions. Among (where the distinction is meanu-are:
ingful) of scholarship are in1 - tbat the University is
not a monolithic struoture but coT'..:"~4be areas of ~t
rather is a plurality of ODliUIIUD· Alfairs and Operations and Sys.
;lies (colleges, a&gt;nters, depart. tems, the relevant vial presimenta) numbering over a Dtm· identa have · responsibility to
dred;
theil' areas for reoommenda·
2 - that with J:eClOillition of lions to
Olfia&gt; of the Prespluralism mllBt come the ac- ident as does the Vial Presiosptance of -lhmty of dent for Academic Alfairs In
. all units to ~j;i;;-in and his.
CODiribute to all University 00ie!c:tives. To this view, departmental ciWrmen, deans, vial ademic priority determinatiOD
presidents are expected to op- and resource allocation ahould
erata as all-University offia&gt;rs continue (and J"'!bbblY exas weU as rep-tatives of pand ita c::apalrilities) • a atalf
disciplines;
lor the Executive Via! Pres3 - tbat reBOUnl8ll lllll8t be ident.
carefully managed to optimize
10 - Fecllities Planning, J.
the oontributiOD of all to the .,.._ of ita ftiiiiJOil8ibil for
1111111Y missiana ol tbe Uni-- providing lor
Unisity - an especially poiJnant versity activities, • au.ched
directly to tbe OfBoe of tbe
Deed in u - tUn. of lmOili'C88, and
Preaident. ~lty lor
4 - that plannln, of shart, tbe allocation
'lo in-

the

~::1=~·~.:

an

dividual acdvitiee~ .. lor be dlaraderi%ed by D8W .and ~~~-·"'"~tyof~-~
o!Mr....,..,..,
wilhdle UlllllqJ8CI.ed diacipliDary IUIIOCI- .......,_..., - g
.......,
Via! Presidents lor Sludeat AI- atioua and adUi:ational tedl- autooomy of ..........,...
fair&amp;, Aaldemic Affaire and Op. niqlaL Such ~tal II&lt;?" the other hand, In arder to
emtioua In tbia ~
. grams obou1d be ~ ""' achieve edequale CIDCll'dlnation
A few ~ obould be . Informal and leis,;,.,_.. it .is . - r y Cll'IIIIDizatio
made by way of I!IPianation. evaluative pr...- than ttx.e to poop u -.optimally lndeFirllt, the deri!lopment of the applicable in the inatlmce of peodeat units In their ideas which led to tbe model pCmanent!y approved pro. natural dlmlen, bere ldeotiis ClOiltained more ezteneively pains. 'The point bere em- lied as Faealtieo (or In aome
in 4be, main r.,..ort. 8ecood, the . pbesimd is that the evalwotioo instances, Scboola) llDd " ' Task Force ....,.,...m. tbatwilh proceas abould DOt take total Facultiee (or Scbools) in liiJ&amp;.
the limited time at ita cDspc.al precedeoce over i nnovative .oise !'J'P!"PasriateDI:,:::-. ..~
and limited points. of ..;.. it thnlsls within the University, deqiHied a
.,.,.,.,
could therefore IDCOrporale, lndudina 011 occasion. unusu- Faculty (or Sebool) ia envis~problems may ba~ been ally inn&lt;M.tiVe thrusts. 'The
~~byby:vr:::n- ~
mused and tbe aolut:iilas to only l'l!lllriclion 011 sudl crea- dent. A
is
~
:::""best~
not~ tive ventures should be tbat seen as implyintJ a further lOYdeveloped N
Joeyve. ·
they be small, abort term, and eman&lt;e level. Rather it · pro.
~:
~~tal, "'!'~ _theref«?re vides the orpnireticwwl vehicle
=~
for coordination of the activifend .,; rationsl, if not politic:al · ~~
grounds the ~I~ have sug- ,::::'It is to be hoped tbat, ~ of Faculties (or ~),
psted for discussion.. At the ~ from 801118 sudli!IP"ri
~as the Olfial of 4be V10e

On

Wlll8
1

:::! Tvision ',!:

..,..jd"£..

,.;..

=

ca': :;;.

~~

:=

lion. I8Ctice will modify
:'d'etsils ~ ita utility will
be determined by the way in·
dividuals respond to dleir opporWnities and responsibilities.
'The Task Fon&gt;e :n&gt;eogni2les
tbat it has DOt adclre3oed itaelf
to questions of needed articulati011 with the several governana&gt; structures (both faculty
and student) of the Universi"ty.
It has perceived tba! questioos
as outside ita charge.
Selec:l8d Com- From the

U:

U:::

~~~re-- ·

menta. there
new programs ww=

~

ceive app"!'val for a more extended penod. 'The Task Force
"""!' sudl • an ~ as a
~J?f cutting edge m ~ ClOD·
tinumg prooeos of updating and
improving the University's compa&gt;ite_ ed~ thrust. A
revolvmg fund m the &lt;llicl\ of
the Via! President for Aa~demic AlfairB would provide
aeed Dl0118Y for sudl e:&lt;periments.
4 - 'The Division of UnderAmenclocl " - '
gradus!e Studies and the Grad·
1 _ The University should uate 8cho?l are ~ perceived
'!"t. be perceived as a lJlQilOo :fJ.J!!"ioi:?'op~
lithid structure, and a~ ally updated, composite l'rofile
to 0 !"'. are unproc!uctive. of recommended academic priIt IS to
peroe1ved 88 Of!~
""~ 1
· _..._ as. a
aRather
plurality
of be
"communities"
.or .~..., U ~ve·~.•J
(usually the ~lines. cur- ~\'!;.=m:=O::n"::
renUy numbermg over a hun- size. needed reeouroes and re~) • esch . of which abould quired -i nterrelation of all of
enJOy a manmum ol Joc:al. au· the academic programs of the
tonomy of gove~ within a University. A fmward academic
necesaary tho~
sys. planning activity will be a ClOD·
=ce~f&amp;-is %'"~ty~ tin)lingandresponsdataibility &lt;&gt;! tbe9eand
most productive "posture" of uruts..
a
.. gathering
~Diversity ~ ~ of sub- . U'.ellag!R:'~~ v~~
stsn.tial decentralization of !'P" dent for Academic Alfairs will
eration and governance, .,.;~ assist them in fulfilling such re=vby !Jt'::::~':'t sponsibility.
contribute to all-University oO5 - A major feature of the
jectives. (We sbould emp'---'- proposed or-nlutional _..a_
here tbat OODBiderations o~ IS the pia~ the offi.;'o1
emance have not been a part of .t he Vice President for Academtbe charge to the Task Foroe. ic Alfairs in a line relationship
Nevertheless, our discuasioll8 of 'lo the orr..., of the President.
organizationsl structure have 'The composite office provides
continued to require a!..taln aS- the DISjor academic coordinasumptions as to desirable gov- tive capability of the Univeremance patterns within an or- sity. In this organizations] arganizational form.)
rangement. the Via! President
2 - An approved program is for Academic 1,ffairs, repft9!Dt..
a resouroe-generating device: ing the President, 18Ceives aU
budget, &amp;paal and per80Dilei recommendations by tJie Diviare allocated to participatin sion of Undergraduate Studies
organizations] units
or the Graduate School relative
to the dimensions of theil' com- to .programs and priorities.
mittee involvements in a P.~ On'1e these are accepted by him,
pam or programs. A parauel· be IS responsible and account11111} _of reeouroe allocation cap. able· both to the President and
ability and programs is en· the academic community for
.~ ........ "--·"""--·t. n.... - · - - all co~-t · lementing
~~~a~~ ~U..,~- decisio;;;;_-n;;;
President
demic arm of the University is has an appropriate resource aJa curriculum leading to a de- location capability to discharge
gree. A number of disciplines this responsibility. He is parwill contribute to' such a Pro- ?cuJarly respollSible for ensurJl1llD•. althouch only one may 'lllg dlat evaluations, reciombe primarily responsible for it. mendations on riorities, and
3 - For academic programs; ~t imp~ting dethe Division of Undergraduate Cl810DS are made . in a timely
Studies and the Graduate manner. 'The Task Force hope8
School are enviaaged in a ma- dlat the Division ol Under
•
jority of cases as the evaluat- uate Studies or the ~
mg elements of the University. School will only rarely find itTiley will OOil8idar and reoom- "!'if unable to arrive at a clellnillleDd on the academic merits tive recommendation, but nevof I!~~ aa weU aa ~ empbasizes the ClODon ..., ..........,. needed to op- tinuing re&amp;l&gt;i&gt;nsibility of the
erate aproved ~ sue- Vial President for Academic
oeosfully. While it is f~ mendaAlfairstiontoensure
• made.tbat a rooom18
tbat most will arias
from tradi~ional disciplinary
6 - Earlier .raference has
ClODBtituencies. and may there- ~.made tothe)Diportance of
fore be reviewOO IICC:IIIl'dlna to Yl8WUll the University as a
the al:andards of tbe Nlevant plurality of llliiiiY communities
~lor in- (such communities are -.1die ly the cl.iacipliDM) "which will
to ~ 4beir all-University compr-. 4be IDIJaiM!rmon~-- of bter- llliiDKmta by ~ •

the

.=:::

""".unum

the

aocorcnn:

v::"

-&gt;.
::r:-aitloiai

~~ ':f7"!!f&gt;',:_ =:::.-~~arOncea£

~-wbichmil;y

0118

hand, i t . deairaiJie that

...J:tJ:..!;~AHairs

l:ic1e
for coordination of the : :
tivities of DlvisioDs. 'The Ire
featwe of this pattern is !hit
the governance structures, ln-

volviug collegial participation
by faculty, students and staff,
is conceived as localized as far
as poosible at the Faculty (or
School) ol' lower levels. ·
.
'The Task Fora&gt; deems it
equally important to urge that
a maximized local
vemanoe
capability be ~:t..f"to a posi.
tive responsibility, indeed a
commitment, for all disciplines
or other academic units to ClOD·

m:ta!1Tu!f~the~

as represented by approved p~

- -.· and the attachment of
-~
resouroes
of budget, spaoe and

::=.::-~~

ters, etc., is COilllistent with tbia
requirement. It is further proposed d&gt;at periodic re..- of
programs occur via the evaluation structures of the Diviaion
of Unc:lergraduate .studies or
the Graduate School, in order
=~~ ::Stnof::
being met by all of the appro.
priste pmticipating disciplines.
In -these connections, the
Task Fora&gt; further perceives
tbat heads of disciplines (1!&gt;21"·

~~t ~~~~)
. "2.,.:!

...,._. ~~ ~
and vial presideilts would be
viewed as all-University offi..,.. rather than repreoentstive
only of a particular area. This
is to say that " ' - officers
should have the OODtinuina rell)lOD8ibility to elliiUTe tbat their
discipline. school or division
does malre ita full and proper
amtribution to all the pro.
grams in which it has a part to
play.
7-An Administrative Coun·
cil. beaded by the President.
has the responsibility for ooordination and implementation
of aU programs in the all-Uni'
versity context. To aid the
President in disdlandna his re~ility for fin8l 8i&gt;prova!
of programs and allocation of
the needed lmOili'C88, the present model enviaages Olfia&gt;s of
Mansaement Information Sys.
terils and All-University PlanDing and R.ource Allocatim.
'The All-University
of
the President's office raqujres
the location there Of a manaaement syatems capobility and
an ultinlSte resouroe allocation
~-

over..-

---------IN£LL~

As the .....,_ went to ~ Col~os~Ma Assembly ..-.
ong to diiCUSS the surprise - • ·
IWltlon of Or. Fred Snail, _ , of
Colleae A. and the flndlnp of the

Faculty Senats"s . , -.... ._rina

on the dispubt - . , Collop A
and the Ollic:e of the Vice for ~lc Allalrs. Snail submit·
ted his , . . . . _ , 1D Or. KDnred
van MoltU.
of the Col· ·
leaiMio Aawnbly, on ~- "l1w
reslcnatlon Is ..._,. the -

ell,_

of

this-.
.I

�3

~

, . , J:l, l97l

~ Faculty Senate Ends Its Year 'Ibday, ._

1b Be Held
· , On!Aay28-

- •

.U/B • 125th Annual r.om~ ~ be ~ !'t
10.80 LDL, ~. May :Ill, m ·
Rotary Fiald With ~
~ Boyar of Stele '!111!lib' of New York • principal
_.,._

•
.....__
At t h e - , lhe ..........-

~· Medal. lbe Uni..aty'a
hiat-t award whio:b- eallibllabed tw lbe bequS of fanner
a..-8or Cbedal P. Norton,
will be caaferred &lt;m an outotanding c:ltbm of Butlalo, and

........U l25lb Ann; vera a r Y
Awarda will be pramllld.
Apjacncinalaly 4,600 January
and May paduatea will be
llaled in the ~ for the
- t which 'lrill be lbe 8ICCIId
alch joint
- - t in
the Um-.ity'a - t biatory.

c .. "'"'

-....,27~ .~
.

Candidatal
wbo
espect w participate ahould
pten to attend • ...mad!al at
9'30 Lm., May 27, and aboilld
be preseot in aeadeiiP&lt;: costume
on May 28 at 9:30 a=
'lbe Uni~ty's ~
ment Committee anhc1pates
that candidatea will recei~
their diplomE through the mail
after July L Candidates whose
addrese will change ~..~
uation are asked to ~~
~ and Recorda Oftioe
eo !bat !heir diplomas will
reach them without delay.
No tickets will be required
for Olrnmennoment because Rotery Fieldandolr~~poflegradroom.
for,.u.......
uates.
·
- - Plen
• inclemen-t
In the event 01
-lber, an 8IIDDUilCI!Ille that
an alternate plan ;, in ellect
will be broadcaat. over local
radio and television by 8 a.m.
011 the morning of May 28.
Assembly areas under the
alternate plan are: Famdty of
__ _. o
1..., f
Aru iuul Letterr "'"' .. acu-,. !"
SociDl Scienceo cnd Admuwlralion, 01ar1t _Gymnasiu.m;

lhe Faculty Seaale for this academie year will be ~ today

at 2:30 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
The annual ..-ling of lhe
entire ¥Ofma laculty of lhe
Uniwnity. -&amp; acbeduled for
May 25 at 2:80 p.m. in Ache9011 5. Under the new Senate
set-up adopted Ibis year, however Ibis aeneraJ mooting will
not have Jeg;slative power.
Main orders of business on
today's Senate agenda are areport from Preaideat Robert L.
Ketter apd consideration of a
motioll 'IIObich allows members
of lhe Esecutive Committee to
serve more then one term.
Tben! will also be a ''good of
the order" period for free disCUMioa.

ContlmiiiJ •

'.:

• ,.,; member of the t!cuJty
;:"'
adminiatnltloo.

•ty

Open Universi
-:-plC•
Symposium rn..
·w
=-~ J:O ~~

,..nn....:! ..R.~ ~

~~--.. put of the
.,....".., ntion of the Uniwrsib"&amp;· l25lb Anniveraar)'.
......~ ·beol beldlbe ~k
·~.....,
a_,, be -

~ ~ .,....

'!'
opea 11111~ty.::!.!:. ~,!: ·

eamme

blPer

edl

rome.

It is not clear what roles
formerly played by .the Senate
wiH be playi&gt;d by SPA. once a
oontract for the faculty and
professiOnal staff is negotiated,
Bawner said.
'"'llat such a ron tract will
deal with the question of salaries in some is obvious
to all. '!bat it will deal with
questiOIIB of promotion criteria,
procedn- and 80 ~ --~ associated;;;Jth these~ issues for reappoin1ment would
also seem a safe prediction. Nor
is it surpns"ing that any negotiatiOIIS carried 011 by a bargaining agency for lhe faculty and
professional staff . . . should
touch upon grievance procedurea and adjudication. But what
is entirely unclear is what other concemo might be included
under the general rubric of
'terms and oonditions of employment.' Does Ibis tne8ll that
the bargaining a~ will bargain for reoogniaon of the Senate 88 8 governance orpnization? Does it tne811.that the bar!llliJring agency will enter in
any way into the determination
of curricula, composition of
teaching responsibilities, or the
formulation of .........,.m inter-?"
Ewoytllinl Can Be ru.On the future of the Universilr., Baumer said that "It is

qwto.~~~~~
~
......,
....... ~
-·-•
paogram can be funded, and
Cliat if adequale funding for it
is not aYIIilable Ibis year, pa-

tience -ill the only requirement
__..._, must •-- be
Thelhe,~
said.
si~ of
lhe State of New York and lhe
rr.n-ortt which Ibis for
Stete UDiveraity.
"Whether we Uke it, or appmve it, or - . New York remains a Slate whio:b il pi'OI»rtiooiatel~ ~le high in it&amp; rale

.....-t year it wiH be better."

The Dlvilllon of Continuing
Educlltioo, will. apcJil80r a 1ooo-

-

11er1ouo - . ,

The problem of &amp;alutive
Committee cootinuitY bea been
termed "very serious" by lhe
group and they feel "it 'WOUld
_ , wise for every standing
committee to have some overlap in terms of membership."
Thus, an amendment to the
Senate Bylaws is . being pro~ which would allow any
member of the &amp;alutive Committee to serve two 001l8ec:utive
terlll8. Current rules caH for
one term only.
In his 1aat
rt for Ibis
year, Senate ~ Dr.
W.iHiam Baumer has outlined
severel areas of faculty and Exec:utive Committee ooncem the rete1ionship between the
Faculty Senate and SPA; and
the goals, ainJB and role of the
University over the years to

a!W:::::,J:.Ian

·

.

·

SUPA ~-

·

ltskfeeting

E~~~!~~m~=~uns?~~aon~ RrMlj20

•FacultY of Educalional StudieS,
DiefeDdorl 147; Fa c u II y of
Ht!Ollh Scieru:6, Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall; Faculty of
Natural ScU.ru:6 cnd MaiMI'IIQtU,., Hochste..tter 114; Foe~
ty of EllfUJUrUIJl cnd.I Applied
Sciem:6, Acheaon 5, and Foeulty of l.mD and.Juruprudence,
Conference Theatre, Norton.
If the
is put
into effect,
· ~ marahaJa and fac:ulty attending the
ceremonies will assemble in lhe
buil~ noled above. A room
for robing will be assigned in
each. Candidates are asked to
..-oble by 9:30 a.m.
Under Ibis plan. degree candidatea of Arts and Letters and
Social Scienl:es and Administntion, in Clari&lt; Gym, will hear
Chtmcellor Boyer's addrese and
w i - the ~tetion of the
Chancellor's Medal and the
1251b Annivereary Awards. At
the olber allemate assemblies,

=-~~~

·

:..,
-:;:-~a~
cor,g:
baa operated
negative lac-

is thet the silwltion will DOt impriM! marbdly over the -

ye&amp;~~~."

·

Thus. Blnum. said, "1f the
development of new _p-.ms
;, desired, lhe c:urtailmen't of
old ODM may
be necessary
88 a ,_,.. to such development.' If the stnmgtbening of
existing programs is -to be
achieved, ihat may well rome
about lbrough the depletion of
other already existi ng programs."
Against Ibis background." be
ooncluded, "perhaps the single
most important ooDSideration
which jt would seem . .. should
be recosnized by the faculty as
it participates in the Senate is

-n

Be Vizcern:::&gt;tueiU
n...,.,..:-1~"At vrir_l:JT1\
TVt.. Newest rtrJl~
1 V .I. :5
~
71 A'~~~ rn..
1Y~ .LU

:pr. James Moes, acting dean
f9r international studies, is
Ie!iving U/B Ibis summer to
beco
·ce p -·d t f aca
me VI
· - • en
or
demic affaits and deputy to the
president at Medgar Evers Coltege of the City University of
!!~edY':.k...!!:',;~~

• --'-'-g
•-·--~'-nal studi-, 18
~~, ... ~
........,
for a ieave of absence from his
U / B position as professor of
sociJti!o~ duties will start
September 1 . when Medgar
Evers CoHege, named for the
aasaseinsled Mississippi civil
doo
rights leader, qpens its
rs
for the first time. The school

~t

=

:'J ..:W:;::~t!!:j

to the poor and non-whites,
MOll! explains. 'Ibis newest sen,·- ~Uege :- ~- CUNY sysv• ~
~ ,...,
tem will I'!' localed in the Bedford .Stuyvesant sec ·t ion of
Brooklyn whose resM!ents requesled its estehlisbment.
As academic vice president,
Moss will be in charge of recruiting faculty and will help
to establish polkies. Plans are
for a "dilferent kind of a senior
oollege." be notes, one that
"functioDB as a part of the rommunity." The school will grant
B.S. degrees in the areas of
education, business and the inner city· Moss hopes students
will ha~e "relaled themselves to
some kind of oommunity service befo"!' graduation." T\riB
concentration on oommuruty
service will ."return dell!""" to
some functional meanmg to
who earn them," he pre- '
The
. .. .,. _ _.,
rtunl""exe~....,. oppo
~
at ~gar ~era ~ allow its
new wee Pre&amp;ldent 'to become
involved at close range with the
!n~Y desperate sit~J!'tion
"!-. wh!ch !"""Y . of out mner
Cities !!' Ibis natioo find themset""oi.s came to U/B in l967
as d&gt;airmtm of the University's
Center for Research in Interristional Development, director
of development m International
Studies and Jirofessor of so.ciology. In January of tbiJ rear,
President Ketter appomted
him ........ dean of Jntemationa1· Stu-dies.._ and head o1. a task
force cbarpd with evaluating
International Studies here.
MOllS expressed ~
with the clevelopment of mternational studies oo UBscampua:
"I leave (Ibis) BMignmentwith
a feeling of having ahued in
acxne way .the accomp~t

:f:

:....,~m,i!l:.,~
..w:?,;
lbe State Univemity of New

York 8)'lllem. It ia my hof!!
tor tn the dellelapneoit of the · that the adminlatratioa · Will ·
o1 tb, State, and this pve -"'us CXIIlllideralio to
~~~a level where , ~tinr the ~ of
•t- - led ........ rollbadt the Task Faroe 00 Inlernatioiiil
~"';.. ~--- ~- Sludlea, and if aucb be lhe-.

:::,};,s:..:f.~ c - - ba

88

-

any program abould be operaled !n ~ University is at
least Unpijcitly a recommendation that lbe.t program bas priority over aomething else. If we
are not prepared to say what
the something else is, then
either we~ ezpect lhe "'9ommendation to be tsken senously or else we cannot complam when appropriate changes
are to be made. If we do take
Ibis OOn&amp;eqlll!ll&lt;le of ieoammen·
dation&amp; seriously-« we do rooognjze ·that to commend programs is to set priorities--end
wish to act upon that, then we
had better be prepared to say
where we tbinlt 1he cub! are
appropriately to be made."

1be future for Intematiooel
Studies, even in this stringent
financial period, 'lrilllle 011 solid
foo"- w."
He~..,also A~.....:--~ his a~

~.-..-.

~

preciation for lhe opportunity
afforded him by 1he University to serve as chairman of its
policy committee for minority
programs for almoat two and
one hall years. "'Ibis was a
&lt;time of unll9Wil stress for both
the Un i versity and it&amp; nonwhite studenls. For the UniVe!Sld·ty, ikt was ~ cha_!L~-~
un erta e major -u"""""
changes. For Black and Span-ish-6peS]cing yOUilg people, it
suggesled a vehicle for seeking
a more meaningful and relevant
education at the college level."

At Impasse,
SB•A
:t1. Says

The bargaining team for the
Senate Professional Association, on authority from the SPA
El&lt;I!Clltive Council and Statewide Negotiating Committee,
has voled to declare an impasse in negotiations with the
State's Office ol. Employee Relati0118.
In a telegram which the SPA
sent to local campuses late last
Wednesday, ·lhe eeven-lllllll negotiating team &amp;Bid, "lhe impasse oocurred before full discussi.on of eoonomic issues. At
issue are job security, profeasional standards of oollegiality,
and propoaa!s ~ if effected
undermine and mvalidate Board
of Trustees' poHciea."
The vote to declare an imwhich was llllllllimous1y
-roved by lhe team. fou....ed
weeks of bargaining 011
these -issues which the group
said are "essential to the "JJirit
and quality of the University."
SPA officials and repftllellta_tives ol
Educetion Association and lhe N~
~ork Stete T~ Aaaoc:iation "!" prepanng documents~
file With the New ~ork Public

:!'!.ru

~.National

~ployment ~tions

.BD!ml

m order to lllllD an official unpasse ruling. the SPA telegram
·
The na&amp;t step in the pre-

said.

~ byprocesePERB~

:t!i::

IIBilDill

~

~tor ~

a

W&lt;J!lkl

fact-f"Jnd!nl". · mvestigation
?"the areas m dispute.

FELLOWSHIP WINNER

The CliUIIpll8 d&gt;apt.er of the
Stele Um-aity Profe.loaaJ
Aaaoc:iaaon (SUPA) will bold
a geoeral ..-tin~ na&amp;t 'l'bm&amp;day, May :1D, at 8:30 p.m. in
the main dining room of lbe
·Faculty Club. On the ....,.u.
will be djrn•ic"!" of: a_ professional lllaff - I a , SUPA
and SPA accompllobmente and
OIJIIBtitutional ~
In ad..,._ of ihat ..-ling,
SUPA is coaducting an 'eleotion for ol6can for na&amp;t year
N~ are: J. N~
Hostetter, aaais- director,
AdrnisoioDa and Records, preai·dent; Ethel E . Sdunidt,
tor, special III!!I'YKlea, Conlinuing Education, vice president;
Margaret H. Lansing, publicatioDs and scheclulini: ooordinator, Faculty of ~tiolial
Studies, recording -tery;
Judith A. n· !dey, llllliBbmt
to the dean,
ol Management, correapcmding -tery;
J._t. D. Drew, programmer
analyst, Data Prooeseing Center, tteesurer; and Mlugaaet S.
O'Bryan, advisor, Undergraduate Studies, delegate to lhe
State SUPA.
Committee d&gt;airmen nominees are: Nancy P. Broderick,
assistant proYOSI, EdUCBtiooal
Studies, ConsUtution; John P .
Falkides, assis- to the ctirector, housing, Economic
Status; Marilla R. Giles, assistant to lhe director, Policy Sciences, Govemance; Jerry P.
Faber. ad~r•. Undergraduate
Studies, pubticitv; Edward V.
Gray, amst-deoi....,., Jnatructiona! Communication Center,
Membership and Telepboae;
and G. ~ Beaver, advlaar,
Undergraduate Studies, an-d
Ronald H . Stein, Student Affairs, Grievance.
Other candidates may be
written in oo the ballot&amp; whio:b
E
are to be returned to . J . Martell, Room &amp;. Hayes Annex by
May 17.
By action of the local SUPA
Executive Committee, all 11011•
&lt;leaciElg professionals at lhe
Univeraity are now automatically considen!d members o1.
SUPA and are eligjble to participate fully in activitieswithout dues payment.
·
Further, the Esecutive Committee is also COilllideriDg tl)e
~ty of restructuring
SUPA into a representative
Senate, one of the points to be
considered at na&amp;t week's ..-tm,. According to a recent
SUPA campus .........Ietter, "'lbe
Esecutive Committee llll!lllbers
feel that, Uke the Faculty Senate, SUPA is entitled to appropriate Slate and local manetery support whio:b will eoable
it to operate as part of a University governing body. To this
date, nncla...;fied professional
staff membere have been rep.-led only putially in the
campus Faculty Senate." The

.un.c:-

=I

=

~~

:::=:.':!,:

olution endoraed by its Esecutive Committee stating that
"the voting faculty abould remain IIIIIIDtially lbe teac:hing
faculty" and sbould include no
~ of ......_ DOD~..._,_
"""""""'
...,
.._........
profeadooal staff..
Such a SUPA Senale miaht
oooceivably become part cL a
new Univeraitr plan for governance """' being
by
a 22-mamber committee 111 coonection with the T&amp; Force 011

~

U~.!...u~~

r::=

week'
Edward S. Grood of Bulfalo :UPt;_
~':d.:: inem~
bas been awarded the 19'70-71 her-at-large status; QU8lificaC.C. Fumes Graduate Fellow- tiona for pnBden~ and
ship at the Univemity.
the elimination of .........I com'n. $5,000 fellowahip has mitteea.
bam awarded since 1966
Sherry will be served and lb!o
throulh euppcri of the Carbo- ~Meting ahould adjourn 110 later
~ Co~ Niapr£ Falla. then 5 p.m.

�SR1 OuiJinRs

ItsStondOn
GrielXIJ'la?S

n.l. followina -atutes the
officiil1 position • ol. the local
SPA : s-ing Committee on
matt8rs ol. criewmce within the
Uni~. It is hoped daat the
Facujty Senate as well as h
Proleiasional Staff Senate will
~ this position and tbat
appropriate details will be
worked out cooparatMiy among
the three orp.nimtions. Appropriate steps ha... already been
tabn to achieve this lllld.

__ __ __
.....

....

....

·Consider THIS.Qu~tion: Why Pollute Pollution?
By .J. F . DANIELLI
D..._, .,__ 1« . . _ • .....,.
For the past fifty years,
IIYaicians and politicians have
topther in an exlnlordinary bocJadoule which bas
now become an enonioous burden upon the nation. This is
medicine. Now we are on the
verge of another boondoggle.
Chemists, biologists, sociologists, engineers, having failed
to benefit finaDcially as much
as physicians and poli~
have now suddenly realized
that pollution can be their
thinf. Before committing ourselves to this racket, let us take
a short bot look at the consequences of backing medicioe.
Tbe pasaage hom worm to
man bas, we all apee, been effected by natural selection.
This aays a lot for natural selection (alao for the worm). How
bas natural ae1ection operated?
By subjection of organisms to
a partly hostile environment,
which bas directi~ eliminated
the unfit, and thereby indirectly selected the fil Wby stop
thia now? Aa a perfectionist, I
emphaaize that natural aelection bas a long way to go. Ii
one looks at one's friends, one
may get the impression !bat
there are only a few mmor
problems to be ironed oul But
even a cursory glance at our
enemies shows at once that
there is much to do.

as Hilier suoceeded with the
big lie in winning over the German people, so now the socaHed "Clean Environment"
;s
to win us
over. Pollution, they say, is
bannfu1, anti-human. W h a t
noll8eD9e! Tbe whole hiDIIBD
race owes ita existence to pollution. It is ignorance of thi.l
basic fact that makes us 80
vulnerable to these sensational:
ists.
Let me then explain. Wben
this planet of ours was in iiB
pristine state, it was only berety able to support life. Tbe reason for this was that the atmospbere of the earth contained no
ozygen. However, by a combination of persistence, d i l i and biochemical ingenuity, the
primitive life forms suoceeded
m pollatU., the. at!"osphere
with ozygen, a vtolent and
dangerous elemenl And the
consequences? Tbe earth became much better suited lor
life. We have paaaed through a
billion
of magnificent
adaptation to ozygen, a triumpbal progreeo which has
now produced man! H one major pollutant can do this much,
how much more could six pollutants do?
Once we realize thet life, as
now found on our planet, can
only exist because of the poilution of the atmosphere by ozygen, our whole mode ol. thinkTrue Coot a! Core
ing about pollution is ~
Now consider the cost--the
sarily changed. We now think
tnJe cost-of health care. It
of pollution, not as an enemy,
is not just -tboee small sums
but as a friend. Tbe steady inwhich we pay physicians, bosa-eaSe in pollution which we
pitals and pharmacies. Tbe
can achieve by careful planning
major cost to this great country
can produce the seleolion presa#. ours lies in the fact that at
sures essential for the nezt step
least 100 million people, most
in our. evolution. By the conof whom, without health care,
scious use of poHution, we can
would have paaaed on to a hapbope to evolve, from our
pier place before reaci:U,ng the
present status as hairleeo BP'"'
age of 20, are now crowding our
wbo wear civilization as a magfacilities and bankrupting our
pie carries a trinket, to a godeconomy by the demands they
like species able to use the new
make for medicare, etc., as a
pollutions )ust as we now use
.-.It of living to age 75 or
. oxygen. Even the food problem
more. Tbe United States is bewill vanish. At present (lellving
coming a vast nursing bome.
ozygen aside) the pollutaniB in
Furthermore, this vast conthe etmospbere . and in our
glomeration of t h o s e w h o
water are ·too mmor to be. ol.
should be heaven-boume not
nutritive value. Concentration
only resisiB the action of naton raising the pollution level
ural selection upon the aged,
can be expected to turn our atbut indirecUy preveniB natural
Bic Lie!
mospbere into a nutritive aeroselection acting upon the • What then is the core of our sol and our water into a soup
_young. This we must realize is difficulty? It is the big lie! .Just of ·~ bacteria, sulphur ox- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ides, DDT, PCB and other eor.
smttials for future mom. No

~ired

Tho

an inevitable cons8quence of
spending money on unnatural
short-term health programs, 80
. that programs promoting natural selection, and so having a
long-term effect on health, inevitably suffer. With the money
pl'&lt;!3eiiUy being spent on medithe N tional Institutes of
~~th an/allied degenerative
activities, we should. not only
be free of anxiety about the
cost of the Vietnam war, but
could also run another small
scale war on the side, and so
benefit from diversification in
the ·field of natural selection.
Innumerable citizens, wbo with
two good wars in progress could
happily anticipete a aatisfactory death in the prime of life,
are now condenmed to a bedraggled old age, part..bliod,
part-diBf, immobile parasites
on the life process.
It bas been argued that as
one selection pressure is abated
by research, others arise. There
is some truth, and therefore
some bope, in this. But it is a
partial truth only, for moet new
selection pressures are trivial,
and the only pressure which
bas arisen to cope with the
consequences of ill-&lt;X&gt;nsidered
health care. in .We9tem Civilization is pollution. This sta~
ment is made expressly, With
intent to force upon the reader's
attention the truly dastardly
nature of the proposals to eliminate pollution. Consider a few
of the alternative selection
pressures. In 1969, only 214
teenagers died in New York
City from overd-s of drugs.
This is a trivial contribution to
the elimination of the until
Tbe automobile program, which
bas been tried out for the last
fortY years, is a little more effective, but is still trivial. Tbe
tobacco program bas shown
promise, but is now under
heavy ettaCk. Tbe combination
of antibiotic-on-demand pIus
clinical laboratory errors could
bold promise. Food additives
are in the aame situation. But
the fact remains that the only
full-scale agent for na~ selection which can cope With our
problems over the next ten to
twenty years is pollution.

Tho

&lt;iREPORTER.._,

~

rears

mined effort to optimise the
rate of evolution of man by
rod:ucing more and better pol-

rutanl&amp;

No doubt the "Cleen
Environment" gang will work
against us, and endeavour !'&gt;
minimise the improvements m
man brought about by pollution. This we can mitigate by
..,tabl.ishing a control group of
unfortunate individuals w h o
will be protected from pollution. This will ao1l for much
aelf-crilioe, -but the leaders
of man have alwaya been willing to display this oobility of
behaviour. We need only consider bow kings, presidents,
prime ministers and chiefs . of
staff have been willing to live
in radiation·free abel ters
through a n.u clear war, to see
an irresistible call for leaders
of the Pro-Pollution P&amp;lty to
'show similar oeH-aacrifioe. I
have, therefore, decided that
my family and I will enter ~
control group, and face the evils
of a life without pollution, for
the benefit of lllllnlrind.

New &amp;:litors
Hedge Changes
An expanded scope for etlwa
and sharpened "leadership" for
the Spectrum have been promised by their respective editorselect for next year in interviews
with the University's News
Service..
Carl H. Roetter, wboee election is being challenged in the
Student J:udiciary~ plans to expand etlwa' dislribulion to Buffalo newsstands and, {'OIIsibiY.
to Syracuse UniverSity and
SUNY at Albany. He hopes
alao .to have the publication,
which is "not a newspaper."
but a feature magazine, pnnted
on glossy paper - "much like
Tin]e."
'"Ibe scope will be ezpanded
much beyond the University,"
~promises.

firs~rB.;r 1:"!.,.""t;!

:i:

Spectrum will be to "beef up
the campus news staff, to provide leadership."
Tbe new Spectrum editor expects the University to face a
turbulent year during his oioeyear tenure. 'We're in a his.
toricallull right now," be aays,
explaining the lack of campus
1 - sball - need to depend demonstrations this apring.
upon the primitive technique of
"But the frustzations, the
agriculture to s u p p I y food.
Each breath will bring • • - feeling of alienation among studeols
is continuing. A lot of
ating solids, each
water will be 88 food for JO(Is.

mou:fuFor

Tho--~~~It is true that the new niCil

ol. man fit for this new world
will differ from ourae1- in
many ~But the difflculdes •o1.
lion wm DOt be
too BJ'Mt
C8D brine .,.....
sol- to take a few aimple
steps to raise ourael- . . . .
the rest ol. the .umals. Any
anJma1 C8D •t -r driDk. lf
""' detennloe to llbalaln tram

=-

-:~olfu!f; ~

)&gt;n!IISions of political f~ing
were greeted last year . . . nightsticks, inmcbeons, leer gas ..."
While students have "re&lt;lumed t6 their books," Mr. Arnold thinks boob won't keep

...

SPA's milin interest in grievance at the local level is to
insure due proceeo in .,-ievance
matters raised by any IDIIIIIber
of the profeMional staff. It is
hoped t h a t - pieyances will
be settled informally at the
int of their origin. However,
this is not poaalble
and a formal grievance is filed,

!:'benever

GVIEWPOINTS
SPA should be notified to that
effect so that the griewnt is
assured that his interesiB will
be protected. SPA will aot to
guarantee the strongest possible local grievance machinery.
This may take two forms: (1)
the development of new mechanisms where none eDst, and
( 2) the strengthening of machinery wben deficiencies become apparent in existing bodies.
It might be expected that
SPA will .alao be a aouri:e of information and refemll about
grievance-matters. Tbe grievant
may, if he so cbooees, contact
either Dr. Constsntine Yeracaris, the cbainnan, or 'Thomas
J. Bchillo, co-cbairman, for further information. Most cases
are likely to be clear cut and
fall within the province of
either the Faculty Senate
Grievance Commlttae or the
new Profesoional Staff Senate ·
Grievance Committee. Some
complainiB, however, might affect both faculty abd nonteaching professionals. In auch
cases, a joint committae ~
upon by ·t he respective grievance committees would seem
-to be called for.
In order for SPA to be able
to carry out iiB proper role . in
local pievancee (in adcfition to
being notified of such grievances), it would reeene the
right to 11J1PMr at grievance
beerings and to recei... copies
of the findines of bearing
groups. Wben ~ropria!e, SPA
will alao be1p to IDlplement the
recommendations ol. the local
grievance committees.
At .this point, it is not known
what the appeal mecbani!!II!S
will be at the Statewide level
On this campus, a-'s hom
the decisions of loc8l llrie
committees to the ~
SUNY Senate Grievance Committae have liMn l'8le. Therefore, it would not _ , to be
a pnaing matter to doMIIop
local !icy until the sau-ide
ap:..fmechani- t.s been cJe.
-!ermined. Tbe local unit ol. the
SPA sbould, ' - • expect
to be a source of inf.....tion,

~and~::.::

form~

what
-.es in
the Statewide Clllltnct..

BEtta- LateThan ...

lAst ear's BulfaiDNan will
avallabJe ,.u 'll'88k.

6nally

l:

Lind&amp; Betts, Ita editar aays,
book delued bec:lua
studeniB' intereet for vel)' Jona. The
ol. PI'Oblema with t&amp;e pabtiober
Amold aees etudeniB 88 be- and intenW delap. It C8D be
ing "turned off by llaldemia" pi&lt;i:ed up the - - ol. May 17,
as it exi8IB -today, a n d aees however, MJ. Beello ...,.. .
uni-.iaee .. beinR alow to
A N08Ipt ill needed to pick
tt.e ~ bollaviour ~t­ c:bomp. "The tzaditlaoial c:ur- up the yeabook ... nmlnda
....... Med fear pollu- ricula, the traditional way of 8ludenta: H a. indMdua1 bea
dolna thinp, 1a simply IDlnt to ~ the book will be'
...
..... ha... to chaaae." II! aays,
Pl8i1ed to him.

~

~jo~Jlina

�• . , l:f, 1911

view of ibe curreat budaet difficult;ea, tbe Oancollor will

~~';!,.,'~~..::;

tbe Boord meets. He ' - to
have lunda to implemeot this
proiram. To do 80, """"""r, it
will be Dea!lll88ry to develop
appropriate criteria. He baa accordingly ~ the apon-

~~ ofro.:n:

By ANDREW HOLT
..,....O....~Scltool

The 38th reJU)ar ..-ting ol
tbe UDiwraity Faeulty Senate
em May 7 8Dd 8 at
tbe State Uni'¥8Nity CoiJece at
a - . As is customary, tbe
f"ll'llt item ... the ageoda """'
·t be &lt;Jumcellor'a Report.
Dr. Boyer bepn by DOting
tbe slatus of Senate Rmolu·
was bold

tiona:

E%PGIIdintl &amp;lumlioMl
Opportunity - 'l1&gt;e Senate bad
1 -

adopted a .-.Jution (7-2-71)
requesting the._ Chancellor to
employ t&amp;e s1a1us of his office
in
.
adequate - to ~ clesigned to
evaluall\ this prosram. Or. Boyer baa provided this eudomement; almoat all campuaea have
now returned the completed
quest:ionnain!o.
2--Undergraduale . Programs
-The Senate bad adopted two
resolutions (7-2-71 ) p~
by this Senate Committee. One
recouunendNI that grant&amp; be
cwarded to faculty for tbe improvement or instruction. In

in
The second resoluaon recommended the resular uae of
student evaluations of instructors and oouraea. Dr. Boyer endoraea the spirit 8Dd intent ol
this resolution, but believes that
implementation would be better carried out through local
faculty senates.
3--Graduate ProtramB-Two
resolutions were adopted (7-271) bearing on graduate programs. The f i r s t concerned
graduate student support 8Dd
at the aame time urged that

~P'=. ~ i~;;!;:!Uo~

noted that the larger question
of the nature 8Dd direction of
graduate study, including the
poasibility ol conaolidating such
efforts, had to be resolved firsl
Diacussions COIIa!ming the University's Master Plan for 1972
are now under way, and this
topic is receiving considerable
attention.
The second resolution concerned graduate student travel
and publication charges. Dr.
Boyer noted ihat publication
charges - ~- costa - have
been authorized (April 1,1971)
88 allowable charges uoder the
state regulations. This authorization applies to faculty and
graduate students. With regard

.

5

('

to approval ollftllluRo llludent ~le's" not·~vavel, Dr. Boyer ba .not auDr. &amp;yeo- belieYs ibe Unithorimd this in -the beliel lhat
other maUera now have hilbe&lt; -mty- not a~ iarpt
8nd lhat, ... haloDce, it ... not
of By-Lou. (loeai) been clisproportioaa harmecL
-The Cbanoallor · • ted out Some l:Judptary i1ema we r e
that local By-U..S
op- specifically identified by tbe
erative Dilly whim they ha.., LewiaJature as~ far
t - ahowD m be •Cillllia&amp;ont
witb tbe TruMees' By-U..S. ~~For~a
Dr. '8oyer DOial tlat if ibe l)'D ~ IDstitule...;
review ol ~ By-U..S deleted. In-lianld 8ludioe
_ , Wlduly loqj_it would have reduced by $liOQ,(IOO, 8Dd
the undesirable ellect of tbwari- Central Administration by
m,· faculty intention. In order $200,000. In addition, a furto avoid this, Dr. Boy~ baa ther reduction ol than
,.,....,._,.,.. tbe following $12 million """' IIPPlied piOprocedure:
poriionately to all SUNY UDits.
a) Within thirty days of local The Chaooellor """' required 110
approval, p~ By-Iawsare report (within four ·days) to
to be forWarded to Central Ad- the Governor the ...._..........
ministration.
of tt..- cutbacb. Dr. Boyer
b) Within thirty to sixty consulted with the ~tive
days a statua report miat tie Committee of tbe Faeulty San- .
made by Central Adminislm- ate 8Dd Ul1ll'Cl campus units to
tion.
avoid dismisaal of faculty, Co
c) Proposed By-Laws are maintain insofar 88 possible
then forwarded to Trustees.
commitment&amp; to academic proCbancellor Boyer then turned grams, and to comply ..,;th
to a report ol activities which budget reductioas tluouch rebad occurred since be last re- duction of ~ positicms

~-

t:::,

:~ tu,.~u:-..!;.~

ties in Albany are but a microof the national struggle:
How much ·of our reiloun:es do
we retain 88 individuals 8Dd
how much do we devote to PI&amp;
lie funds? New York State's

"'as1much
t ~no~~==
!t:;
flexibility as poeaible

to tbe local_campus in rt!IIPOilding to
constrain'!'- ~
was, """""""· no opllan Wlth
respect to tboae eliminated by ~action.
response to aocia1 needs baa Dr. Boyer is hopeful that aome
been extensive, but there now funds will become aYailable
seems ·t o be a loss of faith in tluough a supplemeutal budget
would be primarthe capabilities of Ofllllllized request;
institutions to deal with prob- ily for special pr&lt;lll8Dl8 which
lems. There are many factors were not included in tbe reJU)ar
budget, such as SEEK, 8Dd
support lunda for junior 8Dd
would seem to be that it was senior level students in tbe

OOIIIIl

u-

u-

~~:~~~::: =t=~

Equal Oppwtuaity

~

With _..t to ibe ~
. . . - ! .......... wblcb ID.......... IIIIOIIIIIDrium ... ....,.:
imla t!IIDl!Pl tt.... wllicb . ..tain -.litian&amp;, Dr. ~
belieYs lhat tbe Um-.ll;y'a
will be virtually unaffected a-much 88 such . . _
usually cxmply ..,;th the ~recently~

This law .... ~ alloct
tbe pniClOE ol Q1J10VBL B lo

- - ' tlat tt.... oabbatiaala
8IIPIOWd
• to April 12,
111'71, will ~wilbln fl¥- a-

eluded from tbe legillaticm ...
tbe basis ' of ~ Clllltmctual ...-at. n...e requeated after April 12, 1971, will be
reviaooed by tbe CbeDcollar'e
office 8Dd then fonrarcled m
tbe n ; _ . o{. lha Bureau ol
tbe Budpt, 88 -required by
law. Inasmuch .. oabbatiall re~ eustomarily under1o
cuelul scrutiny, it is not anticipated that the University's aabbatical
will ....,.,._
any~ complyintwith

u- -

The billpronedurea.
'defining c:laasroom
contact hours bas been reco1led
from the Governor's desk. Dr.
Boyer had alerted acczediting
agencies 8Dd private institutions to tbe need for a coocert.ed effort against this ..-sure.
The Chancellor noted that
the Lefis!ature bad 'eliminated

lunda on support of the Uni-

versity Faculty Senate. He
pointed out that there is a laCk
of underatan4ing of the Senate's governance role, 8Dd that
there """' considerable canfusion of tbe term Senate with
that of the negotiating ageucy.
(c:o,.,.,._ o n - 1, c:oL 4)

Reports on the SUNY Senate
By MARVIN J . FELDMAN
SUNY s.n.tor

...........

8Dd WALTER ROSEN

The SUNY Senate met this
past ...,.,.. at Geneseo (Friday
and Saturday, May 7 and 8).
The bucolic atmosphere at the
college contnsted sharply with
the anxioua mood of uncertainty which permeated the assembly. The recent budget cuts, incll!ding a threat to the very
existence of tbe Senate itaelf,
were, of course, the aouroe or
concern.
After a few preliminary remarks. Chancellor Boyer focused the balance of his report
on the budgetary crisis. What
we are witnessing is a fundamental conflict be4lween tboae
who would extend and those
who would restrict the scope
of governmeutaJ activity. W!Hie
this conflict is hardly new, it
comea at a time when serious
queatiOIIS are being raiaed about
tbe ability of institutions to
80lve societal pro6lems. Thus.
in gene.-a1, it would be a mistake to attribute the current
call for economy 88 tbe action
of a vindictive legislature, individual ezam lee of just such
behavior notwftbatandina. The
Legialature is reflecting t&amp;e current PGPU1ar mood which calla
for ilelinite Umita on aocia1
IIPI!IIdina. u abould be noted
that 811NY bas not been Singled oat to bMr -a diaproportiouate &amp;bare of tbe budaetary
cuts.
are ecant CODSOlaUous, yet for 1he long pull it
is imponomt to get an aocwate
- . t of tbe Legislature
8Dd to noa1lm that then! is
much liiiCid will 8Dd undentanding oL public educaticm .-ly
to be t.pped when tbe jJendulamiiWIDja.

n-

~olllle-

a real cut of approximately
$19.5 million.-The figure would
be even higher but, on a onetime basis, approximately $7
million from increased tuition
fees will be credited to the ays-

tem. Normally, all tuition fees
go into the State Construction

Fund.
Tbere are two additional
cut&amp;, -t otaling $7 million, which
do not affect tbe general operation of SUNY. Tbe Legislature specifically eliminated a
number of programs which apparenUy have a tangential relationship to the University,
a. g., a State farm. a forestry
program in Syracuse, our own
Nuclear Reaearch Center. It is
important to note that ~
senior personnel are adversely
affected by tt..- closings, tbey
are not, as we understand it,
considered to be academic employees covered by traditional
rules of academic tenure. The
point is worth emphasizing because the abrupt termination of
services in tt..- instances aeta
no precedent for tbe regular
academic unit&amp;. When later a
question was raiaed about an
off"ocial ''retrenchment policy"
(Policia of the Board of Tr,.._
tea, Artick· 14, Tille E. "The
llt!Tuicu of anx 11l6rlbero of the
tJCtllkmic staff· may be ~
tiled in the euent of (inanciDl
or program retrenc"-nt. I[ the
ChDn«Uor anticipata tht:Jt IIIU:h
retnnchment may be~.
he MtJU _ , the odoi« of the
Focully Sei!GU concemin1 the
policy to be (ofiDI«d in .the

retUu:titin of •lUff-"). Chaooellor
Boy~ said tbere ~ not been
a ~/e dU..U..U of a protecta
,o,iUDn in any rt!lidar IJCIIdemic UlliJ of SUNY. UJiforgj:,:$'Jortbe q.-tlons put to
Boyer not auffldently pointed to elicit a

the prablem? OriJdnally, the
GovM!or'o budpt e.ued far a

clear IIIIIIM!r 88 to how 8Dd
when tbe tetreochment policy
milht became olficially operatM. The Cbanoellor did. how-

now tbe oyatem baa to aboorb

- - · apse with . a queodoner

Wbat are tbe dinwnalma of

$(0 ml11lan iDcreae " ' - -

that it would be desirable to made it clear that be bad asbegin consultations between his surances that the sabbatical
office and the Senate as to how prosram will not· be curtailed
guidelines for retrenchment pol- although the applicaticm procedure for sabba.tiall leave will
icy might be developed.
.
Savings from the specific cuta be more forrnaliad

T-..........

-

stating that his memo on tuiticm waiYer&amp; was merely a reminder ' to review policies Clll
waivers as this is a potential
source of savings. At the same
time, be recognized tbe many
Jecitirnate re&amp;!IOIIS for waivers,
including their use in fosterinl
graduate education. Thus, a
local campua need not chanae
its waiver policy attached to
graduate stipends.
A question was also raised
about Albany's stance on day
care centers. The Chancellor's
8Jl8Wer was that there is no
policy in opposition to them.
He
the concept within
the~ current budgetary
CODBtrainta. M.,..,.,_, be point..
ed out that Governor Roc:bfeller bas indicated a &amp;tronl inteleat in day care CI!IDiers. The
dismetionary
resides at
the local~~
lelt tbe impreaUon tbet while
then! is no objection to the ,_

mentioned above amounted to
$4.5 million. An additional $2.5
With. respect to teaching load,
million was withdrawn from the protest&amp; evidentlY have been
programs within Central Ad- ·l oud 8Dd cogent 80 that the bill
ministration siJch as interns- baa not been fliBned and. intiona! studies.
deed, it baa been reco1led from
l.ocll Guldellthe Governor's office by tbe
Tbe "petty cash" problem Legislature.
the specific isfor the resular unit&amp; of SUNY sue is not quite dMd, it is at
is in the neighborhood of $12.6 lMM much muted. Newa-tb&amp;million dollars. The supple- Jess, both bills raiae tbe hoary
mental budget may reduce this spectre of Legislative interfer-amount somewhal 1be aim is ence in educatiooal 8Dd lldto restore cuts in special pro- ministrative affairs. We ha.., •
grams for disadvantaged stu- problem of making our """" Co
dent&amp; which have been cut dis- the Ledslature which is camproportionately by esrla Ieg- p!icatecl by the fact that all too
islative action. In general, leg- few of our graduates sit in that
islative guidelines are very body.
broad 80 that discretionuy
We woodered whether this
powe!' for the manner ol imple- was to be our last Sanate ...atmentation lies largely within ing as we. too, had come unof Um-ai~ ~~t!::!
theCentralsystem.Adm~i,:um.tra'-'-~haa
· tbede- der the money ..,..,_ Cbancel- !ii:"'ol special funding from
~
termined each campus's abare ~.!iy~~tbeae:::.; Albany at this junctwe 80 that
of tbe cut, only the general for, as be noted, it is his link financinl will have to be done
guidelines were aet forth:
to the faculty and • ~ ' locolly.
( 1 l enrollment&amp; will not be eouroe of infonnatiaa 8Dd fao.
In SUliiiiiiUY. then! was no atcut this year;
~input into admil&gt;iltlati... lll!mpt to minimize the .........
(2) all permanent faculty
· ·
It lo ironic thlt a
ol tbe current budaetary
major , _ for the LePia- should be retained;
(3) cuta abould come from ture'e elim inatlon of limda situalicn N~thetemporary -w.ea 8Dd by leav- stems from • confwlion ' - ing vecant positions unfilled;
the SUNY Sanate 8Dd SPA.
(4) propams. including serv- Thus, it is bud Co CDDVinoe not be violated with the - • an ..,..,.__ Local. admany JePialan lhat they are minilltmticms
ices,. should be reviewal to will have a toalh
if any are obsolete or no lonpr not doina uo a fa¥or
but not impoalible job in viable. (In lilbt ol the Chan- ratinc oat from State
complisbing the reductiona.
cello(s s t a - ckm,yina an what they camidor to be tbe
ApMt from tbe Chomoollor'a
l
off"ocial retrendomoat, - I'll harDinina
The~ which rou-..1 report Oil tbe budaet, there the imp.-ion that be reof - t psamferring to repouplna 8Dd con- hillbllPted • JIUIIIb. ol ~ amtber
80lida~ broulbt about by IeoDa. lt
lhat many al importanos
whoforbelieve
in- llUthe ordinary ~ olfiauru- positioaa are induded under ton.
versity~notbyf t.) ~.me." wblcb are merolocl' may be able 110 aWe are all aware ol ihe llwo tempcniy in title but not tun.&gt; pliaote tbe aecond USUNY 45."
apparant.l)'vindicti..,.ctioas by
"11ae ....ton who in...._ in tmnl to eotablilh
the Le~Wature (or athe Sanate ltaelf 88 the berpin'· acdy by certain indlviclnala
inl 8plllt ha... been named in
within the LeiWature) with m, t.. :X:~ ill
IIP8Ct to oabbatbla 8Dd tellcb- with paduate atipenda. (.:ba- a lawadt far IIDP'lid lepl fees
espliclt ill
ina load. Chancellor Boyer ceUor Boyer ool.li)

u

die",::!!,YicC:::....Iha.!.:i

iL--

"b,m-,;

=~...r:w~
....

.a:.:,:

""'*'
n...e

(___, --1.

�. . , 1:1, , , ,

(~frola-I,eoL~)

Jated judpDant ..... expenoiiC8
as to what kind ol 1111 ...t...
tion will wm out the kind ol
men and women - ' - ' to~"~times, Lmowitz propolle!i "a university muat atand
~Y for faith ~ IIDil rather u- dotp:oa, m rationality rather than inevitability in the free rather than tbe
smdt.erect mind. The uni...ndty
muat be our respoD8I! to the
bigot, the demqogue, the prophet of doom, the tubth~
-no matter bow high bis office.
It must be the ooe place in oar
oociety where eveey mm baa
the commoo=t 1o think liDcommon
and - believe
IIDClOIDIDOD
where eveey
mm can baw the equal right 1o

A . . - l l f _ _,.....,
1,f1110 at t h o lienor (loft) ..

-Dor-

_ S o l ... . . _

-

tho potndpel -

-

=~s-1

bis ~ as
chairman ol the Natiooal UrbiiD Coalition, I..inowitz urged
also "a national commi-t
equal 1o that of fighting a war
itself to root out the. 'deMrt
placeo' ol ignorance, squalor
and pre~ tbat still exist .in
oar nalioD." It is here, be said,
tbat the basic ~gle for the
future muat be ~t a n d DO less tban on a distant battle011

~e

baw aeen too much di&amp;c:onflict, rumblings and
:;:"':; YioleDCe, the IOtmar
cbairman ol the Xerox Corpor.
ation aaid. "It ls eoougb. ft io
time to bind and to baal . . .
to cbarl new directions."
A um.-ity, such as U/B,
bas a great responsibility at
such a time, be pointed out.
H"""""'• be coUDOeled, this
and other universities bave no
i:napc wands 1o ....,.ve over our
problems. "Tbere are no silver
bullet&amp;, 110 bow-to-do-it kits."
In CDPinl: with problem areas,
hiKbBf ec1ucatioli can, however,
"Offer 1111 attitude." It can contribute understanding of the
fact that "the world was bare
yestenlay and presumably will
be bare tomorrow, and that the
grest pmers from a major ed·
ucotiooal eftort are not the studellits on the """"" but their
c:bi1dren, who will grow up in a
world which will .-1 all U)ey
can offer."
A uni...ndty cannot be in·
different to our problems, LiDowitz suggested, "if only because
cami&gt;us turmoil is not likely to
cease unless genuine progres6 is
made."
"''bis generation of students," be said, ''is tha first in
all bislory that believes bave within our
the tools
to abolish poverty, discrimination, Hliteracy and hunger from
tha earth. If they can be -t aught
to use these tools well, then
they will be able to make tbair
protest truly ellectiw."
President Ketter noted that
the Uni...ndty's founding 126
years ago was a community rellpOil8e to a community . - !.
"'lbe particular .-1 was for
batter t-lth care. More sen·
era11y the .-1 was for 1111 institutloo of bigber learning
which would iropart 1111 added
dimension to a community wKh
eqwmding aspirations."
Once founded be said, "the
University i&gt;ecaJM a joint vanture between community and
eel.-" and that_.........._.._
·
·
· .--~..
said 4his An·
•
-'--·u be
"'-- oL
~ ..~to thaa"~m·.

""'"il'

~t

~tuden-"tb:: en·

during interests o1 intellect and
apirit wblc:b remain unaltered
by, ......__...._, passions and
~t"i;tour dedication 1o
U... intmeots, our devotion. to
tbe mind and spirit o1 man, and
1o 88ttinl mind and apirit free
·throulb truth, which c:onatilullla the ~ cbaracter'
ol ... IDiltitution. 'lbla dedica·

=

tloa
~ ~hope
. : , . _bold it desdy." ·
-

ru::,

lll~-f.Jnudling·

1YJLU1(er

-~,. o ' hlstortaol ""'rtcar ln&lt;llcotllll tho lite of

-

ttoe first bulldlr18

. . . . . . - for tho UnlwfwltJ, , _ tho 1ocot1on of tho CothoHc
Union 11u11c11n11 at tho ....,_ of Molin ond Vlralnlo - . were (from
loft) Erie County EacutiW B. Johl\ Tutuolca, Crowlonl Wottlouter,
- - of tho ond Erie County Hlotoricol Soclaty, Pra1c1ent
s. Dunn, Jr., tho Hlstorlc:al SOc:laty'o d l - .

w-

ment of History received the
The establishment of a mecij. previously-announced Alumni
cal department, rather than one Association awards-Mrs. Furfor law or theology, 88 the first nas, the Walter P . Cooke
unit of the Univemity in 1846, Award for service to the UniDr. Jones said, "eHcited criti- versity by a non-alumnus; and
cism from some quarters: It Dr. Horton, the Samuel P . Cawas seriously intimated that pen Award for contributions by
the young physicians and their an alumnus.
confederates were not altoDr. Anderson· was cited for
gether unselfish in their desire, bis service to the discipline and
that they contemplated some profeosion of higher education,
finiiDcial gain or the iroproper including ten years during
increase of their professional which he "served this Univerpractice;" ·
sity as a vice president, a perHowever, he pointed out, tba iod spanning those crucial
University's first students iro- days, wben 1he Uni...ndty
mediately made more baaJth 'went-State.'" He "did much to
care avsilable to the commun- make that iroportant tnmsition
ity br serving three-year ap- a .suoceesful one." the award
prenticeships with I ice n sed citation sa;d. Dr. Anderson was
physicians and by serving as also a distiDguisbad service pro·'interns" at the County aJms. fessor of higher education bare
house. The University also ran before joining Peon State.
a dispensary which provided
Councilman Arthur won ae&gt;
gratuitous "surgical counsel colades for bis fight "for m.and operations" and "medical proved public h!&gt;uaing, for micounsel and the dispensing of nority police training, for 1111
mecticines" · to "indigent pa- end to discriminalory practices
tients and those who did not in hiring and other 8ft!8S." !""~
object to appearing before the for attempts to ''find solutions
claas."
to the irmer city's continuing
problems of health care deliv1
~ Awanlo
ery housing employment, po' Recipients of the 126th Anni· lice' aerviclo!, 'rue protection and
verasry Awards were G. Lester quality education."
Anderson, dirBctor, University
Mr. Baird who carries "a
Center for the Study of High- name distinguisbed in service
er Education, PenDBYlvania · 1o this University" waa recog
State Uni...ndty; George · K. nized for bis role ,;,. ~
Arthur, councilman of Buft'a1&lt;1's of tha U/B Council, in wbic:b
Ellicott District; William C. ca--"- be ~ much of
Baird, chairman of the Council ~tbe, intenl8t and _ .
of the University; the , Very tiae" 1o tbe .institu"- 88 well
Reverend J...,_ M Doimilke,
.._ _,.._
~
s.J., president, CaJtiaiu. Col- llll....-a ......,ranp ... COIIliDUD·
lege; Walter M . Drzewleniecki, ity ~
State Uni...ndty Collele at c.n~o~.. Cbd
Bulfa1o; Sparkle Moono F'1_JrFather Demslre, , te!med a
nas; Wilson Gtea!balc:b, m- philosopher-presiilenl, woo
-.tm ol the first tmplanlable cited "in recosnlt:ioo ol tbe irocardiac pacemaker; cw-t spmk- posuchrtanceas _ol. pri~~ • ~
er Llaowltz; Joeeph Manch; suC8nialus, - ......,......,
perintendent ol ac:boola, City bigber education and in recogol Bulralo; Myroo 8 . McGuire. nition ol your IMdenbip ·at the
Ellicott District dentist; and Colleae." During his Iamie, '2
Alice 8. RoaJi. Gouc:ber Col- . li!"8 ibat has ._, ~
Tho Unlwrolty In 1846

Jeae.Mra. Fumaa and Ptofelia.
Horta~! oflbe J:leput-

Jolm T.

:=u~.:.t.,~'::;

·~ bas grown in numbers,
bar programs and physical
plant bave expanded, sloe bas
deepened bar ties with the COlD·

munity."

Efforts ~on behalf ol the 300,000 Western New Yorkers of
Polish descent," were empbasiud in honoring Bulralo
State's Professor Drzewlenieclo:i.
He bas ....,., "recognition for
the c!ulturaJ coatriloution" ol
bis people "through the establisbmeut of the East EOU&lt;Jpall
studies piOiflllll" at State and

~p~~ol.::

zens groups, meet notably, the

Polish Cultural Foundation."
He Was called "a coot:irmina

=.,:..inst;,iro~Po:!;
york and • . .

nation.,

_

.

-

articles, papers,
and
other memorabilia ol Dr. Clif.
ford ·c. Furnas for a -.oriaJ
library on the new . campus."
This wod&lt; was deocribad 1111 "a
Significant amtribution both to
the arc:biWB ol the University
and 1o tha arc:bives ol American
history. "

Alumnus Greatbatch waa
lauded for in-.ting ''the first
J*BIIIIk·
~_,._was introdueod ~y in1o clinical
pmctice in 1980, since which
time mere thm 100,000 ol tbe

;mnLmtable ClUdiac

devio&amp; baw

'-&gt;

~

and implmted in patients suffering from baart disease. '"Ibis
~ more than baH ol
tha world's eunent production
!'!._ thaoecltation~vine devices,"

,...,
--~ of llaclol Canociouoliooe
"It io a rarity far a ~

_.ad," the dtation a.id. . citbaa 1o have

exa::le :,~

~also~
volvemen.L"

Buft'alo is wondelfoiuy for-

~ofin=:~
respected by tha entize

COIIl-

munity," Dr. Manc:b was told

throucbout the "As a young administzator, you

Mrs. Fumas, !be evening's
dual award winner, was preaented a 126th Award for bar
past service 88 the University's
first lady and for bar ..f!:=;;t
~edi?!l":~· ·the-

ellm.

as you bave been, in the aearc:b
for solutions 1o so mmy ol the
frontier iaso8l ol our time," the
award citation for Mr. Lmowitz
began. Singled out for special
recognition were his services 88
ambassador to the Organization
ol American States, ois chairmilD of tha National Urbin
Coalition wid as c:bairmm of
the Campus Tensions Committee of the American Council.
The award was presented "for
your contributions, 1o be sure,

'-&gt;

inwlved,

were , 88ll8Ci!illY interested in
studeDt toerVlCeB • • • As SllJ'ef·
inlendent, you have remained
sensitive to the needs of students (and have fought for)
equal opportunities for aH," bis
citation pointed oul

Dr. Myron S. M~ hailed for .._ four decades ol
providing "essential dental
baalth services" 1o bis COIIImunity, for his elforts in plaoing bladt worbrs in inoluatriaL
jobs during World War n for
bis leaderioloip in civil 'riibts
groupoo, actiw inwlvemomt in
c:bun:h work, Work with . .
Boy Scouts and advice to .
groups such 88 the Historical
Society ol Buffalo 011 matteno
of locod black histoey.
Goucher's Dr. R.o111i was ooaid
V8JIIIIIIld in
the human .liberation llliM!III8Ilt now gatberina: '"'-an in
America.'' Sbe bao, Ia- 8W8Id
noted, "raised the CXJil8Ciou&amp;.
. _ of tbou8anda" in an "inooefatipble" campaip 1o implove
tha status ol women. A leaderin !be Women's Uharatloa
~ sloe baa ._, "I-·
ticulari, acliw in the ol
~~~status o f 1o be "among tha

�16q U, 1!171

7

FBllhsNot
•

Cleared~

·Studenis Say

CSEA Votes Job Action
UVB La:y -Offs Seen
' v.ew
.l'«

..!1-~ Lawthe SVNI'!:':!
~-

'"" . - - ....

Prolltilr a-ler f1l the Am«il:eD Civil Libeo1ies UDion ..,.
alllrmed Moaday that the Butfalo Pallce fired birdsbot into
otudenlll cm tbe U/B umpus
em May 7, 1970• wounding aev-

era!.

The c:ba..- reiten.ted
in the walr.e f1l _ , alories

claiming that the FBI "cleared"
Buftalo Pallce in the incidenL
'lbe law llludenta CDiltend

that the FBI hu not BDd cannot cl8er anybody in a ciyil
riJbls probe f11 this nature.

'lbat Nopoasibllity, they aasorted, lias with the Justice
.....___. Civil o: ...... Div;;:;;:"~ ia stili~
an analysis of the inc:idanL
Tbe law atudonts reinforced
their cWm 88 a rsult f11 conYe1'lllllions held em May 5 and
6 last -'r; with the FBI and
Justice ~L 'Jbe stu. deniB said that Mr. Ric:baJd
Popilton, auperviaor of the FBI
asblngton Filearms
BDd
:.. ~ 8call,- Civil Ri.bts
Division, Deparlmellt ol Jll8tice attorney, who ia in charge
of Ibis case, bolh advised them
that the FBI could ...,_ draw
suc:b a conclusion, that being
the job of · the Justice Depart.menL Additicmally, the stu•
·
dents said tbat the mvestigation la not over, and, therefore,
no conclusions can be drawn.

um

Cl~.....i-~ _'11-!~~

~~ ll-~

"llbting•
A.......,;,.,...
V{
~a.u.J.
The Faculty Senate will try
again this week to pick a vice
chsirman~lect to becOme Senate chairman next spring. The
previous bellot, due last Fridsy, failed to find a second candidate with a clear majority to
run apinst Dr. Gilbert Moore.
Moore and Dr. Gordon Harris
had been noiilinilted by an earlier halloL Harris, howewr, became ill and decided not to run,
necesaitstm, the ballot dtie last
Friday. Tbe third-round hallot,
aent out Moaday, lists Moore
aod provides room for a writein candidate. Tbe Senate Electiono &lt;'A'IIDIIIittee is encouraging
faculty to wqe write-in campaipls If they- desire, since,
they eay, tbe election' ia by no
lDMD8 decided.
An election for SUNY Senator also wound up undecided.
NODe ol the 4bree csndid•te-

Dr.

a-.,. Hocbfield, Dr. ROb-

k:!.,~~~~:.l!f{!;

top two-Hocbfield and Stem
..u hal
_,.,lot. now on lhe run-vu
•
Both ballots are due May 20.

_::,

~t!"'a1•~

""""'
-~
Marilla Gllea for a one-year
term; Marjorie · Mi:x for two
years, and Dr. Walte"r Ream
for the three-year term.

n.
......!~------v~

.(conJ:iawdfrom-l,col.6)
with 'open admiEions' BDd admiMiano of the educationally

diaadvantaged."

. Dr. 8tsnley Bruckenatein,
PrDf-&gt;r of clanlstry, waa the
cbairman f1l the Seercb Com-

mitltBe. Ita membenbip induded: Dr. Emat Badian, profesear f1l dasaics; Dr. RDbert 0 .
Berdabl, ...,_,. f1l hilbar education; Or. Harold Brody, pro-

p;;,:, ~=;wrcletpaduale
~~
Mary Kai.r,

•--- ...

liD

atudalt; UiciiMI ~ pnol

8ludall

di!Dt ol the Gmduala
AMocialiaa; and ,._., SlewliD aiamnu. 111 U/8.

art,

,

BerviDe employee•
the State baYe voted
"~ in support
ol a "job - " apinst the
State. the Civil BerviDe Employ- AseociatioD ( CSEA)
8IIDOWICed M,_,•••. The voted
"job actJon."if'followed
throush. would probably take
the form f1l a 8lrike, a CSEA
spokJmnan ezplsined.
The decision to haYe a strike
· voteting. waswbi_l"'U8ibas ..'!..~tedgeint cuthet,.
Civil

"""'*

""

""""'

lay-&lt;Jif of iM!r 1.000 State em-

ploy~ to date. with more than
8,000 acbeduled to go in total.
Final decision .., calling a
strike will came at the May 26
meeting of the CSEA board of
directors. CSEA 80UI'008 aaid.
· Meanwhile, CSEA bas gone
to court to prevent further layofts. Last Wedneedsy, it sue.-led in having the State
budget declared unconstitutiona! becaUE of its "lump
~" appropriations. The deCl8lOil also preYented the State
from laying off any more employ-.
The s- Attorney General,
however, appealed the decision
and this move allows the State
to continue its lay-&lt;Jif policy.
The appeal was heerd Monday
by the Appellate Division of
the State Supreme Court. The
five-judge body nB!rVed "ud
ment and is ezpected to
down a decision on Thursdav or
•
Fr'"'A•• of Ibis week....__ case' 18
then~............. to ~..,appealed
to the~We' highest tribunal,
the Court of Appeals.
CSEA is holding up further
court action
the lay lis
until tile~ ol this;;:...,
is clear. Other~ litigatioo would restrain the State
from further lay-offs and have
dismissed employees reinstated
with back pay. Individual
cases for employees who hsve
received notice of terminstion
are also being instituted.
Locally, CSEA President Ed
Dudek will "not commit myself at-this time" about the
strike vote. In a ~g last
Wedneeday night, Dudek told
an audience of about 30 - l e
that local cond"tions
good
i
seem.

J::!lci

7\ T~ • • 'TJJ,....J.,.....,.,

l ~ .JX:,lA;;.}JI £VI tK;

System CJUl[Ui
~~-~-~

The Telephone Company has
completed installation and t.st,.
ing of Automatic Number Ideotification equipment on campus, the University's Chief
Accountant's Office has anc alls dialed direcl!y ·are
·-u
d
now automati.....y recor ed
against the line from which the
call originated These calls will
be identified ;,.;th
asterisk
on a department's monthly toll
call reporL
Wherever possible, the Chief
Accountant's Olfice urges direct
dialing as the method for malting toll calla.
EffectWe May 1, operatorhandled calls from campus are
being accepted by the Telephone Company Ollly wben a
telephone credit l)8rd number
is given as the number to be

"'T.ill"-

an

cbarged.
·
'lbe Accounting Department
cannot review chargas against
credit cards for the _(JIIlPOBI' of
issuing credit for allegled i11egitimate calls. U the depart.meat beljevea 1hat the identi~

of the number'- "leabd out,
they
~~ the • --t,.
may con_.
.._......

~r::r:"7'.!-:\t'\."";!..':!

'lbe old -.1 lboald be ,..
tunllld to tbe Aocoallt1nc ~
~t for pn.p. dlopoaitilin
with the Telepbaae ~-

'

SUNY Smate-HoJt~--( I!OIIfillwd from -

~. coL 6) .

propoeed. but tilat a reviaw f1l

~~~
;:ens ~-=·..:==.1t
it
fulfilling a vitally 1-.led was suggealad tilat the four..
88

role, and pledges his continual year coUeaes. moet f1l whom
support aod relianoe upm iL have JDOYed rapidly to mouat
He will rovide funding through maste.'a prosrama, obouJd be
~ Foundatiob funds.
involved in this reviaw. Dr.
· In response to a query Dr Boyer ClDIICIIlT'ed.
Bo-ver stated that be was a'ware.
Dr. William
of i'be Bosrd ol Trustees Policy msn o~ the Grl!d~ate
that m· a period of re~~- Commllitee, remiDded the
•
ment the Chancellor ~d cellor that the 8eaale t.d reoconsult with the Faculty Sen- ~ the _appointmebt f1l
ate in determining the policy an indivtdual m Caltzal Adto be followed in tbe reduction ministration who would be ,..
of staff (Article XIV TiUe E )
sponsible for tbe ~ proHe pointed out that be intend: ~- Dr. Boyer still aupport:s
ed to meet the demsnds ol a this ~ but CIIIIJI!It reduced budget not by dismis- make auch an appointlpent.
sing faculty but through the
!be ~ DOted lhl!t
reduction ot temporary appoint,. pn~ate insQtutions &amp;!!! ~­
ments and tbe eliminstion of encmg severe financial cliffi.
obsolete programs. He also not- ~ties, and ~ III8JIY are nq&gt;esJ that in view of the Univer- odly app~ t:anJ=ptcy.
Sity's commitments to newly The real ~on JS how the
accepted students, there would state and the s~ts share
be no reduction of enrollments tbe cost of education.
for the Fall 1971 semesler Dr
It was suggealad that founBoyer took Ibis opportunity ~ dations might sUpport academic
indicste his DWn appraisal of programs.TheChancellorpoint,.
tbe current f·iscsl year· While ed out that these funds were
acknowledging the possibmty of in short .supply and in any
an ~ 1-3 per cent saving e"!"'t that . while f~tions
later m the year be is some- mtght proVlde ex11erunental
·what optimistic
lhe fu- f~ding, :ther would not proture status of the economy of vide .continumg support.
( Contiluud (rom P"'l• l, cot 2) New York State, to the point
With "'!'J"'C1 to auppo~ ol
To amend the State Educs- wbere be thinks that these en- ~ro-Al;nencan and lntemationtion Law to require trustees forced savings will not be · al .s~dies, the_se are e9llelll.ially
or other governing hoards of necessary
pnonty questions. The Master
college&lt;; to adopt rules and regDr. ve;.,. Farris pointed out Planning fo~ 1~2 will unulations providing for bearings the need to stabilize financial doub~y a&amp;818t m ·tl;&gt;ese and
of student, faculty and staff commibnents to Special Edu- other unportant questions. •
grievances involvmg purported cstion programs in order to proTbe Chancellor was ~- if
acts or .failure to act on tbe vide staff protection. Dr. Boyer the Gov~mo~ would 1'88lonalize
t ol
offi
~-•
•
supported
&lt;Ibis
concept,
but
be
the
Uruvel"8lty. Dr. Boyer re~ly ~-11. 'lfe'::.ate i.9'2jj) .•&lt;,..... noted that the recent rapid de- sponded by saying that we
Increase. scholar incenti ve velopment of these programs should look "."!Y carefully at
elil!il;!ility to five years for un- was in large measure dile to sum o~rtll!"ties.
dergladuates (Assembly 1482; the fact that the administration
At this f:!lt ·t he Senate reSenate 877) ;
had f u n d e d them through ceased for unch.
Authorize the State Univer- special requests
'E\...~..I
D~--sity _trus~ to provide tuition
In response~ a question re- .rewnnan,~
free courses at all State-&lt;Jper- garding the. reduction of tem- (Contiluud from 6, coL 6)
ated institutions of State Uni- porary servtces and the staff. incurred in the preparation of
versity for persom over 60 ( As- ing of Summer Session pro- a brief. As the State's District
aembly 2759, Senate 6082) ;
grams, Dr. ~oyer suggested Attorney's offioe has precluded
Require that contracts of em- ~t local opti!'n ~~d deter- the,_ of State funds and SPA
ployment bebween State Uni- mme how that lllStitution chose (the presumptive heir ol the
versity and acsdemic employees to function. It was no led· tbet earlier Senate jlclions) at least
contain a clause specifying lhlrt csmpus schools had been forCed to date will not underwrite the
the contract ;,; terminated, not to operate .wi~ red.uoec,l ~dg- expense, 45 unhappy semtors
withstanding tenure, u such an ets, necesBitatl!'g Sigmftcant now find themselves named as
employee participates in a C!Jthacks. In &lt;Ibis case. the ques- defendants in a $100000 law
strike against the University by tion really -turned on whether suiL
'
.
failing to carry out .assigned tbe csmpus school operated 80
Growing out of an extended
duties (Assembly 105, Senate as to evade local school taxes discussion ol this lawsuit, and
&lt;164 ) ;
or ~ulfill ~-University's edu- also arising later on in other
Amend lhe Educstion U.Wto cstional mlSSlon.
.
contexts, was dOscuaaion of tbe
authorize the State University
In. response to a ~uestion con- bargaining currenUy under way
trustees to establish limits on ~rrung the Senates auto"!""Y -between SPA and the State of
annual inoome from all sources With respect to funds provided New York. Numerous strong
to be eerned by instructional by tbe Chancellor, Dr. Boyer expressions of dissatisfaction
and administrative staffs and ~ that the Sensf:e sbould with the conduct of SPA _..,
to provide for treabnent of in- wiuJ:~ ~t'l::;!.i~= voiced by various. ~
come in excess of same ( As- on all state units.
·
However, no coUectiYe sembly 4976; Senate 4019); and
With regard to waivers of ~~
.
Amend tbe State Educstion tuition, the Chancellor pointed
•"" new P"'!'ident of the
Law to prohibit a student gov- out that this vear a portion of SUNY Senate 18 Joe Norton
ernment of a college or univer- the University's operating funds from the Albany Center. Ansityoranelementaryorsecond- ~~generated ~g~ ?D- !':re~:;.:r:'ti:'~
~schoorysU:d~n;.,::.r~:.::t:: po
ti~:u:'·t tbeand watver
~tit of18 tui111!· Committee Reports trom Senate .... ~.a::..
orize theenfeducstion COID1DlS81.
• ·obn- tion be gnmted only after full..........:~ved
and di!,~ ~
to
the
·
"d
·
·~
...,.,....
~e or ~~tionp:d"t:ci~u.i.
enWJ~~ of the respon- in~ted in examiniJ;lB tbeae
ary proceedings (Ass em b I y
Dr. Francis Bonner was
~mm.J::'i
~~
5062, Senate 3898) .
prised thet the Trustees had mg
a
Wl
not spoken out against the in- regard to ~m, are .....Icome to
cursions of their prerogatives conault with mther ol Che au(sabbaticsl and class contact thors.
legislation) . Dr. Boyer was con- ll--AU...J-.h./1.
U/B's Center for the Cree.- fident they would respond. He .Cl.i:lvt:
J.IIJJIJU)•
tiYe and Perfonninl! Arts will pointed out that the actions ~-11l'I.T......-i.be among eight 1971 recipients of the legislators supersede \.XUJ..l ....,n.uu
ol the New York State Award those of the Trustees, and -that
Do you haYe a skill or knowlfor "outstanding oantributions in any event those who haYe edge you want to abare with
to the artistic aod cultumllife" ulti.mate ~ ~ili!Y others? Are you to learn
of the State.
·
are m a pDIIltion to lDlplement something without spending
Gov. ,Nelson A. Rodrefeller legislative policy determinswill bestow the honor in cere- tions.
activities
monies at the Metropolitan
Dr. Walter Ream asked the people are lookins for you.
They're anxious to match up
Museum ol Art in New York Chancellor what his position on
le who are willing to teac:b
City tomorrow aftemoon.
day care centers was. Dr. BoyLukas Foes, former COIJduo. er replied !hat one or two cam- ~ people who are willing to
tor f1l tbe Buffalo Phllhannon- J&gt;U8eB had c:boaen to '!"J'P'?r1 learn.
Right now Connie Burnham,
ic, and contemporary CXJIIIPClMf such efforU, and that Ibis deI.e'-- ~"'- are co-directora c:iaiOn waa a local
assistant director ol student ..,.
o l h &amp;.:; wbicb fea- lion. 'lbe Univer&amp;i;mc:
tivities for Nortou, . is looking
new and
1IIUiic, yet adopted an off"idal policy for both teacbem BDd students.
apoaaora l*fanDing artists-in- on Ibis matter.
U you ""' willinr to tMcb a
n!8ldence at the Um-.lty, and
With respect to new padu- ClOUl8e or ha.., a aubject you'd
holds a aeiies of CXIIICIIrl8 eadl ate JliOir&amp;ll18, Dr. Boyer said like to leam, eall Miss Bum,..-.
·
that no moratorium t.d bam! ham at En 2511.

and ~ employees are
probably s8fe.
He wamed,
"'-ver, that temporary aervice - l e would be laid oft.
• ·--&lt;6 in this haw al;;.dy stsrted, 11a participant at
the .........,__ • - - ' , alfecting
pecip~ b;:be.n "temporary" for 1M years.
To' help CSEA members proteet 'their jobs em this campus,
the locsl board ol directors is
asking {01," input into the pro"""" ol deciding who will be
let go. Dudek exprt!ll8ed ~
that they would be inftuential
in deciding what tiUes aod
P._OSitions would be eliminated,
if any. "Seniority will be a factor in these decisions," be indicsted.
Local members can help by
writing to their State Legislators, condemning tbe current
budget restrictions and asking
for the cancellation of all consultant service and politicsl appoinbnents, Dudek said.

W=Cbair-

Procedures-

:moot

·-

:u'f;"

sur-

':

State Art .A\vard

Hall

~ ::= '=?r

~tal

:;t

�lilq J!l, 1971

8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQ~'

Lehmans Out,
~Says

-1 :10

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

9:40

....
1:211

....'*' ...,
...., " ....,
....
.,..,
.,.., ..,..,
,.,....,
2:211

!i .....,..,.

THURSDAY-13

9:211
9:40

l'ftC1IIAft\' o o -: P la •
·
Gild ~ G Hal/uKJy

u:::... &amp;."::: '!.!~

Tbinf AJuuW Cclllfllnl!""

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

-.....
4:20

"""'
U:ZO

us
11:40

Cll1

tha

!'?'~ectiri;.."~ Eli

GiDobe'll,
prot. . .~ ol .,.,._,jco and cfueotor ol ...-rvatioll ol human ,..
~ Columbia Univenity.

11:00
11:20
11:40

~~::;,

6:35•

LlllftA'I'I01&lt;8, foiJowina d i D De r.
S1atler Hilla&gt;. •
Tbe Coafel'eDCe on halfway
"""- ;. cleoiped for prot-.,.
alo and oolunlaan partimlarly
_..,mecl with oillrtlq or work·

7:211"

~-

1:10'

i:,.!:' ::;"~t.!tel~

for

A Womaa ia a Womaa (J-·
Luc ~-1~&amp;~

Cm~- a

""""'*-'y

"th tha .
":!:.:1ioaobip
by :..u:.. .....::.::

playful....

~ dinlet- It~ a

rue iDoicht J::~!.k!'l:'

::1r-~ and love. 147 Die{•
endorf, 8 p.m., free.

IN'IWUIATIONAL J'OLJ[ IWfCIHO: ~­
otnlction .in buic llliepo d~
llnot bour, 30 Diefendorf AJma,
8 p.m.
"
IOIN'r Q&amp;ADUA.ft ..::rr.AL• : Dcmald
Monlalto. t r u m p e t; Manlella
Faine, piano. Contanpomry muoic. Baild, 8 : 30 p.m., free.

==

Til&amp; BUWALO TlmlD8 WOai&lt;SBOP

liabed
iDdivid~ ~bo. ~ in =~:ro:c:
~~i
the ~ vf l'!"""'J moli~liona ~ a D Brecht"o Till: nwJ1B . . _
ouch .. menlal boopilalo, p.,.,.,., s~. Til&amp; .......... 8 :30
oeboola for tha mentally "'~~ p.m., D'Youville Collep ~lar,

and akobolic tree- ~-!':
S"=""20~Z:rtawillm:;

will
er pepero and ........,r queofrom all """r the OOWllr)' wbo

320 Pol'lar Awnue. ·Ticblo a'Nilable at tha door. AloO May 1.6

FRIDAY-21
IIOIUICOLOCDC OO!fc.ft 01' ~
JU.H•: aU-day OIXl·

smr&amp;:riiQTJ' IN'

feii'8DC8. Emeot WilebM;y M'emorial Lectiue, - r e d by Oonter
for ImmiiiiOiiJcy,
Dr.

f•::'::f

:and=-=1~6·:,.::::===7-;-;-~;-- l!':?'~~~..'::ity,':!
YOlk, wbo will opNk 001 JIIDLOIU

SATURDAY-15

ASSOCIA'ftON 01'
NINO CO.....,

~

PIIOIWH8 4lfD llllllJIU .naJ:HCY

pa.

- . S1atler Hilton, 2 p.m.

lelionaJ JMetinc
booted by DivWoos ol Coatinuinc
Education, lieCond half ol ~
program to commemorate U/B o
125th Anniversary. ·&amp;r:eculive Ra-

SATURDAY-22

"'t,"30~~oyar "!"~

Cryalal Room C; 9 a.m., ."-&gt;cialion ol Uniwnity E~
n Meotinc,

l=,?
CONTINUING

-

Jmft'AL

mUCAftON :

F'ri&lt;bly lioting.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
PermA~~a~t abibit vf

wozb ~

~'Y~~~p.m.

m....-.,.

SUNDAY-16
Sir Wallar Scott
aDr. Philip R&lt;., hibit, faatmiJic f i r • t ac11t1m.,
pro!_,r, indwotrial relatioao, and _ worb by c:ontanporsrioo, - and -tercolol"', lllzoqb
Jamee R. (..'Iotty, lecturer, ec:o-

U/S aotnmrAIII&amp;:

10Students

:::a~~~"'t:?~

Joeeph S b i • t e r ia -moderator.
WBl':N-'IV, 12:30-1 p.m.
8AL1LlN lOLlt IW&lt;CING: advancocl,
oome teachinc, Fillmore Room,
8: 30 p.m.

WmAux:tJW
In Nursing
Ten 8cbooJ of Numina students lxmoted along witb
eilht faculty membsrs at a

apecial bouors and awards CODwcation at Gcioclyesr Hall last
Friday. Fiw of the faculty
nanbers were from outside the

N~1~t

'lWo Cited By
Pharmacists

award win-

• ~-=
School of NuraU., Alumnae

:A ))r8Ctic:lna pharmacist and

a UIB admbli8trator were boDand by the Pbarmacy Alumni
AIIIOCiation at ita 80th IIIIIIU8l

AIDIII'd--Mias Jill Nfbart (senior); Mil&amp; Pauls
g1e (Graduate Student, Adult Health
Numing); Miss Katherine
~ (Gnkbune Studen~
Psydrlatric Numing); Mrs. Susan May (Graduate Studen~
Community Hesltb Numing).

w...

.Juami diDMr last 'l'lw.raday. .
TM Dean Anne Walker
Tbe Dean Willis J. Gftliory &amp;n,bU«:h Uuderahip AwardMaooriaJ Award to Mr. Miss Margaret Ramage (senBoward G. CarJ-tar; a 1932 ior); Mrs. Mary Kornguth
Pbarmacy graduate. Dr. DruUel
(graduate student) .
Murray ..., p.,., apecial "ap.
TM Student COlUICil'a Anile
pnciation awards" for his 16 WalMT ~bwieh Awardyean (~) as dean of the Miss Patricia Macauley (sen8c:boal, 0118 of wbich lzopbies ior) .
was a "Collep A" BWMtahirt.
Sophomore Student Award· Dr. Murray is"""' dean of Miaa
Dick.
the Graduate Scbolol and actiDg
Junior Clinit:Gll n cent i v e
vice preoidmt , . amdemic af- Award-Miss Elizabeth Crouse.
fairs. UDder his leadarabip, the
8. JloucAiy SIMll AwardScbool of Pbarmacy piDed a Mrs. s..-iy Burlre (&amp;aliar).
ulional reputation .., a IMd- · Tbe me faculty" members
iq -'emic CBDter for re- cited from outside the 8c:bool
...m, the student body of Nursing were: Dr. Barbara
doubled. the fa c u I t y quad- 8. a-en, -.date ~.
rupled,
tluee · depart- l1b.YilialoD; Dr. Eleanor Jaoabs,
.
- t sand
- lidded
leCturer,-psycbology; Dr. ReiiMr. Qupenter bas been !ftC&gt; nald lambert, lllliiOclate profesfor 39 yean at the Her- 801", micmbiolot!Y; Dr. on...
Store at 3168 Main Leelisr, ~. paychoJosy;
StreeL
was called "an out.. Dr. Jobll K Warfel, aBICiate
JJIIalcllq pbazmacist wbo p,r- p""-'r, anatnmy.
.
_... the ldeala of
'lbn!e NUIIling Bc:bool facul111111 iatelrity In his poofaBian ty IIIMIIbers- honored:
111111 wbo Ma dlpi&amp;ad bla pro- Mill Judltb BambaJo, a.islant
~ of cbild J.dh; Mrs. .
..... Ill .the 81111 of~ Bliabeth Kalasr, . . . . . pro-

a.-

-wee

~~~iaa)!Mt,._
f/1

.~:I~-.!1

, &amp; ~ A.....tetlm

r..arol..-ts~~

eb:r. Mila CatieeD

....

lililliat~of--.1

m.Jth.

=...

Pootera and b-.teo

mm tha

Poetry Collaelion, 2Dd Door baJ.
cony, Lockwood, 9 a.m.-6 p.111.,

tluouch May.

NOO'ICES

TUESDAY-18
PHYBlCL\NB 'ft:l.KPBONJ: I«!'UD:

Dt. Robert M. Kobn and Dr. AI·

bert C. l&lt;ekate, RaUIIILI'l'A,ON
OJ' TBS c.utDIAC PATIBNT, IIJ)OD80l·

ad by Rasional Medical Pzocram.
62 zeceiving locations, 11: 30 a.m.

Nua8zs

TSLJ:PBONZ Ia:TUU:

Marian Meyen 8Dd Elena Perrone. Til&amp; N tJitSE Wl'rB AN 4880CI·

Aft U!XlD&amp;: BD: PDPALt"DON AJrfD

um.IZATION. Sponoored by Regional Medical Program. 62 receiving locations.. 1:30 p.m.

I'D-JOD AND I'D-IImiT -

appl:vift« for a September 1972
eatranca into prof-..w ocboolo

=p~f~....,....:

ecbOol) ·at tha Olllce ol Admlo-

oiono and Rac:onlo befoN Janinc
for tha OUZDIMr. Tbooe atadoalo
appl:vift« to Ocbooio wbidJ oaJ&gt;.
ocribe to tha AMCAS oenico can
obtain an AMCAS IIPPiication ..,.
~t card from MiL Fcnmaa,
H o o m 106 Diafet&gt;dorf. U any
-tiona or problam arioe dUJ-.

=~U:~-3:i-

ical Society, Boz lJ No.-, for
aooiotanco.

MEMORIAL llo\Y
Memorial Day wUI be -rwd on
compuo MoncUy, Moy 31. ~
-ntiol oenrics Civil Sentice om·
~ who are required t o on that cloy will 1111 e1t111r llollday
PlY or COM-""1' aiL•
.., . . lndlvlda8l, tile lilr-

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

c::an-.

Olllce ..........
Day, Fildey, Moy 28, . . lie

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT f3l.iFFALO

VOL 2-NO. 31

MAY6, 1971

JobFffi?ze
Is Intense,
DotySays
'lbe current State freeze on
per1IOilDI!! ~ "is Ill&gt;
lually more intense than it was
duriDa the last quarter of the
llacal year just eoded aud the
.....,;ty of -this will . CDilDnUI!
until the budget situation is
stabiliz8d aud Clarified ~

out the State," E .W. Doty,"""'
prarident for operatiaas an d
systems, aald this ......
"No new appoinm&amp;liB can
be made on the State payroll,"
Mr. Doty said, "unnta the ap.
poinm&amp;lt is SPeCifically . ap.
proved by the' CbaDceliOr aud j
by the Director of the Budpt.
\Vile.- durinc the last quarter of the last flacal year had the aenera1 II8IIIUiiDce that
those ~t appoint.
menta directly· related to the
educatioDal Pi9Cesa ~ be
approved, we now have no sud&gt;
II8IIUJ'IIIHle aud have been ape.
.The ~- c:orni!rstone laying
-cillcally advised that _each aud for a buildmg on .the. Amherst
every payroll muat ~IM!"o the dedication _of a
have priDr approval of the Di- historical ~~ on the s1te of
the firsL build!ng !' ve r conrector 01 the Budaet."
This requin!ment, Doty said, atructed for Uruvers1ty use, aud
is for all appointmenta to the a ~t . to -he atten~ br
State payroll, whether or not 1,000 indiYJduals from the Uruthe fundS or payment come veraity and community w iII
, from &amp;fate
or hild&gt;light U/B's 125th Anniveraaiy Founaera' Day nan Tt.aday, M8.y ll.
ClOIIIiOffiiii eodoWiDioit )DCome. • -A"t the_~t, Dr. John T .
Employ- of the Research H - abd Mrs. Spark I e
Foundation, t h e Faculty-Btu- MCJ!&gt;~ Fuinas will receive il'!"
dent Association and the U/B two highest awards o£-the UruFoundation are not alfected, he veraity's Alumni Aaeociation.
pointed out.
Doty said that "the procedwe w h i c h we initiated last
Deoemher at the time of the
temporary freeze is therefon!
_atilJ fn .eftect aud will continue
until further notice, but we no
lonpr haV!&gt;.ai8UriiiiCe that any
Budaetary tightening may
particular c1aaa ~
employmake for a bleak but ''not hopement will be approved."
No oommitmenta should be
~ ~~':!!d:
made or implied, he cautioned
administra19ra, until after we Moltke, director of the Collegiate
Assembly, said at last •
have "recei\oed the appropriate
prior approval from the Divis- Friday's meeting. T h e group
was
also
informed that ''inwn of ·the Bud~ 'Ibese ap.
provaJs w i II be tranSmitted formal mediation" had been
conducted
hy Dr. William
our Pei'IIODDI!I Depart- Baumer, diairman
of the Fac&gt;ulty Senate, between the Colletliate Assembly and Dr. ·
Daniel Murray, acting Vice
preaideot fD&lt; academic affairs.
'lbe formal grievance which the
colJeaea instituted apiDo,t Mur'lbe Western New York Nu- ray will DOW be heard by the
clear ~ Center received Seaate'B subcommittee on the
a five month lease 011 life last col._ 1-.led by Dr. John
. . t in the form of a promised HaJatead. The subcommittee
~.000 from the N- York will be holding a heerin&amp; 011
Stata budpt. 'llhe ~000 will the matter tonicht &lt;MaY 6).
'lbe Aaaembly is ar Juinc
allow the Center. to operate until Sap......_ 30, at which time that eatal!lialma&gt;t of academic
another $90,000 will be Meded. pcilicies "is cleeriy. the. re&amp;JlOil·
of the ~·" aud
Yeatenllly would have t-l the
last day of 'IIIOd&lt; for the Cen:e~ ~
ter's 28 fuJI-time aud four parttime emplOy- fallowiDa an the Collesiate ~Y by
two_.,. .... fiiJIIIJD81'ily cloainc the BIIIDIMr
that the State .... cutting the couraea of C o II e 1 e A aud
threaleoing the credit for ail
Center'&amp; budaet by $180,000.
Some ....._ .... loat ciUI'- ftllliatraDIB in Co8e8e A".
M-"'le, Dr. Murrey bu
-inl the .-iod of uncertainty' tnld
the
that "an evalaaya William Hall, ell-a of
the Centa, eo...,.~ uative ~ for Collelle A
couraea
Will
bit_
f!18tablioboil
will have to he let .... ~­ aD those ftiiiUIJ'iDg credit for
for
Other~ aaya HaD, are
paduation or to meet other
looldna ,. - - ..tain. ta."
tbill.........._. topic,
from the State'•
....semic ...t- ·
~11091 Hall pndicta the Ceo.
Ia WID _ . , $1liO,OOO clurinc ....... the main IXJII8idlntion··
the MKt five IIDIIIlfm lbroulb et
1Mt
...,..of.
w~
..~
_._
. . . , .~
..........
-.cb CDD!Nda.
at ftnt -m, to he
(~OA-3,eol J)

~

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

Fl..eU~W....... It ......... &amp;Me.

~2?th F~ders' pay Schedule Includes Banquet,

Fiist CO~rstone at Amherst,
Marker Unveiling
Board

:=:tiaas,

~~t~

~ LoyiiiK ,
of Trustees of State Uni@pening t!&gt;e day • program versity of New York.
at 9 a.m.. wtll be the comerProfessor wade Newhouse
&amp;to~!" laying for ti_Je ~w and will welcome visitors on behalf
Junsprudence ~u1ldmg now of the faculty and Paul Carunder construction on the Am- don, on behalf of the Student
bera~ .,....pus.
Bar Association of which he is
William H. Angus, professor president.
and interim dean, Law and JurOther remarks will be providisprudenoo, will presicl&lt;! over ed by President R&lt;&gt;bl&gt;rt L.
tt. oaremonlea which will fee.. 'Kiitter Pri&gt;-Yo•t" Rieliard· n

County Historical Society, will
unveil an historical marker on
the Catholic Union building at
the southwest comer of Main
and Virginia streets. 'lbe marker will commemorate the Bite
of the first building conatructed for the University's Medical
School which was UBOd from
1849-lil92.
.
~ IIi the- ~ ...,
ture ~taijvea • {rom the Schwaiu &lt;&gt;f·the l'BClllty.of LaW . the _board _., dinJalan of the .
Univera1ty; ' the State ·aud the and Jurisprudence, Charles' R
•
involved arcb:itectural firm.
Diebold a trustee of the State
Principal sPeaker will he University ConstrUction Fund,
U/ B graduate attorney Manly and Harry Weese, architect.
Fleischmann, 'a member of the
Included in the cornerstone
will be such items as a 75-year
history oJ the Law School, ~
ies of the Law Reu~w. a history of the University, current
coins, campus and community
new&amp;paJ("'r&amp;, photograppa of historical mterest, a current U/ B
faculty-staff directory, the Bufthreatened by nan year's ftacal falo Evening News Almanac ·of
outlook. von Moltke told the 1971, and a list of 1971 gradof the University.
~~~: cent ~J: uates
'lbe seven.fltory, $8.5 million
will be coupled
per Law and Jurisprudence Buildcent decrease this September. Ing is scheduled for completion
To enforce aavings throughout in February 1973 and will inthe State, the state Budget Director has prohihitad the inatiBuJfalo and Erie County Hiatution of any new PJ'Oir&amp;lll8. and administrative offices, and torical Society, repreeentativeiJ
von Moltke said. In addition, spaoo for a library of 300,000 of the University, members of
the Governor's Budaet Ollice volumes.
city and cotmty 110vemment,
must sip all new appointments
Individuals a~ the cor- and the-public.
plUB aH UBe11 of temporary serv- nerstone laying are hemg asked IIMcluol 8t B p.m.
ice. This policy will decrease to asaemhle at the U/B Band
'lbe Honorable Sol M. LiDolluihility in planning, YOD
witz, chairman of the AmeriMoltlre predicta.
can Council 011 Education's
r ·'l'be AManhly director pr&amp;Special Committee on Campus
llicled!tbe colleaea would have
Tensions and former U .8. Am.
,tbB aame 'aiiJOUDt available as
hessador to the Organization-of
last year, about ~.ooo. BudAmerican States, will be pringetaJy tightening, however, ·h as
cipal
- -- for
the Founden'
Day Banquet,
scheduled
for a·
.aJreadY Clll18id a to. of $30,000
in eodowmant funds. To make '
p.m. at the~ Manor.
np for the· loea, von Moltke is
A cash bar ~ at the
currently aeeking additional
aame Bite p.-leil the henquat
funds from other areu to belp
at ~tz, former chairman of
~..::,.1~,"~ve~ ·
the Xerox Corporation, is ...,
chairman o£ the NetioDal
8tudlea College .... nan 011
Urban Coalition, having sucthe ............ A report from the
ceeded John w. GardMr in
oolleae's propam development
committee was given which
(Collliluoed on 7, col. I)
for the poup
.. a
· te worbhop, but
FOUNDERS' !MY EVEJml
not aa a
«ale colleae- Thla,
9 a.m.-Cormustone Loylftl. t..w
the committee hoped, would Building directly
'ta the
ond Jurisprudenco Bulldinl. Am·
avoid ~ with the new intersection of~~
hemCompus.
Highway
aud
Renacb
budptary · rulinp. The report
10:30 o.m.-tlnwlllnc of H - pointed out, however, that the edae of the new campus.
lcol Morlulr, site of fint Unl· '
8tudlea "does not .... BUa transportation will be provel'lity buildlftl, now the c.tb·
~t 'a I18W but vided &amp;am there to the CDilolic Union buikliftl. MoTii 8nd
aimply the reallpuaent of an atruction Bite.
Vi'llinlll-.
l1llil1tinJ ....." 'lbe bu
8 p.m.-125th AnnlveJUry FounAt 10:30 a.m. Pleaident Ket.,_,
Amariders' o.y BanqiMt, - - can ludiea lorthroulhthe
~ year. ter aud Crawford Wettlaufer,
M.o-.
president, Bu&amp;lo and Erie
(C....euu-1 .,.. 3, col. J)

Collegiate System Facing_
73leak' Financial Outlook

n-

:::,:

=f"
Reactor Gets..
State FUnds

sibili&amp;
:::!t ;,;

""""'-t

lh,....,..,.

~

,
:!iF3
ec.o-

J:
with~

~~~:

llrii'Od=

w-··

8bT-'

-a;;;r,.t

--

�~

2

Uni-mties have been remias in· UD&lt;Ierlnduate edual-

Saturday.
"I think we miJ8t always act
within our.......,... and capablllties," Ketter 118id, "and -

Crltlc8l-

''ln aenera1. I think the Medical School- well as the UniVersity-must maintain a critical attiwle toward the curriculum and toward the teaching
P.roceas itself. We must be willing to experiment with new
methods and new pattems; we
must be willing to take advantqe of the lecbnology available to us; "" must question
whether or not the time DOW
required to earn a degree is aotuaHy needed. Moreov«, thjj
aitical attitude should always'
be ..,..,_nied by a slnlrig
of edualtiClllal ~
rather thaD shOwmanship.
In medical achools where re8Midl and service are eztraordinarily intepal to the teaching process, the president noted
that """ have been a=-cl of
both teaching too (ew and of
pllllhing u-e we have tausht
in the wrong dlrectioo." This,
it has been charged, has led to
a abartqe of practicing physicians and to • situation in
wbich only 80 per cent of the
nMioa'a 315,000 pbysicians are
in adual pract;ie.
"''be aocial ol toclay's YOUDJ people may prove
in itself to be an Important fa&lt;&gt;
tor in ........mg thlo tnlnd." be
said. And our adlools muot
create ch8nDe1s for tbe eftec.
tive educational dlrectioa ol
this CXIDOI!l'll, such .. thiOugb

Why do children Jeem to
read? Jeem the language their
parents opmk?
and other questiCllls
· will be cli8cuMed at this summer's · Developaa~tal PsychoJ.inguiatica conference, Al!BUSt 2
throufh 6. Dr. David Hays,
. .......,._ of the oonfermlce, exptsina that the peat two. or
thn!e years have ~ !! time
for ~tbinlting in Chis area. New
ideas and a~ to psycholingustiai have come out of
this period and. Hays feels tbe
time is ripe for I'I!II8III'Cher to
come topther ''to apply new
tecbniques and formulate new
kinde of theories.H
Participants in tbe conference
will come from diverse and
wide-ranging areas with outlooks raJIIIing from the school
wbich believes a aentenos structure is genetic to people wbo
feel language is aJ....t entilely
an acquired skill.
.
The idea and organization
for tbe conference ...- from a
graduate course Hays taujlht
last fall in ~tica.
Four pac~uate students. due to
their mterest in tbe area. prepared tbe original grant ·pro.
poaal. One of these, Timothy
Moore, will be serving aa_ a
general administrator dwinc
the aeasions and will edit tbe.
proc:eedinp afterwards.
· One of tbe most widely
known participants in the oon-

n-

tion and overly utravapnt in
their claims to service, President Robert' L Ketter told the
Medic:aJ School Alumni ~
dation dwinc the poup's annual Sprina Clinical Days, last

-----

prebensive bealth care syatem.
"Such model$. tested on a small
scale in an educational setting,
can, if succesaful, be adopted
elsewhere in tbe nation."
'The Medical ScbooJ and the
University must aJao have a
"strong commitment to research,'' Ketter 118id. Noting
that medical adlools aze DOW
being criticized
for bavins
overemphasized
biomedical
science
.14
research to the neglect ol areas
=~ :=.1~ ~~.,!; offering opportunity for broad
·had only nine minority group
..st:"iiJ:;t
members in its enrollmeot in could lead to the temptation "to
1989, that number ia now 37, deny research the 11Dportance ·
.
29 of whom are in the f1111t year it has in tbe educational proOnly one of ten atuclents who
class, he 118id.
cess." '"Ibis cannot be allowed applied to the U/B School
However, he warned, "if fed- to bappen," be 118id.
ol Law for next fall will be aceral and state governments are
Nevertheless, he said, "the oepted.
indeed cammitted to roducing degree of emphasis within our
'rbat'a the word from David
more practitioners,
they research activity, must be cal- Kochery, chairman of the Law
will bave to demoll9trate that culated according to education- School Admiosiaoa Committee
commitment to a much greater aJ and :J&gt;1:1b1ic need. In tbe area and acting registrar.
extent than they are presentl.y of medicine . . . this means we
'The Law Scbool--like its
dfinancialoing
.in -~-tance.area.,!'f student Will have to give increased at- ~ acrose tbe nation
~
tention ~ tbe. influence of en- ~- an· UDeq&gt;eCted
Auxiliary Hulth vironmental and aocial factors 8UIJ" in apPlications t hi a
The total bealth manpower in bealth and to viable methods apnng. Applications aze up 30
situation, Ketter stressed, can for altering these environ- per cent nationally, and the ·
aJao be aided by tbe creation of mental and aocial factors. to the local figure was up 70 per cent.
sound educational programa for benefit of the individual."
Out of some 1,670 applicaDts,
leaching and utilizing auxiliary
In other activities aasociated Clllly About ·200 will be accepted
health personnel
witt. the Spring Clinical Days, into tbe cJasa df 1974. 'The medHowever, he noted, our medi- the Medical Alumni honored ian LSAT ecore for u-e aocal Schools, "can neither nm Dr. Abraham H. Aaron, wbo cepted will be About 630, with
nor automatically transform tbe launclied the continuing medi- tbe Jo....at · · about 560 and
health care system" as urged cal education program in 1920, ttie hilbest"::'r 700. To have
by those critica wbo bold that and Dr: 0. P. Jones, bead of "!')' c:hanciB- cl acceptaDoe, ~
this must be done to overcome the Department ol Anatomy plicants aJao•fied to have a 2.4
current geographic and socio- since 1943, for ''prolessiClllal · averqe for their coJieae wort.
ecOnomic inequities. "F irat, achievement and dedication."
Minority admiasiooa for h
they do not have .tbe resources;
Dr. Louis C. Cloutier1 a Buf- fall will total from 26 to 30
aecondly, tiJer do not control falo reoeral ~ woo is a studealll; ctw-D Jrilm about 80
!J&gt;e.viduala~and ~p...- andfor 1954 graduate
the School of appliamts. But becauae Of LegMedicine, was instaHed as new iBI&amp;tiV.. culbacb, many of tt....
thirdlliea.
uy, tbe real
."
"tical ~ ~t of ~· Alumni ~ students. will piObably ftiCIIiye
eJaewbere
oation, ~ Dr. Roland no.finaDcial support.
Basically, be aaid, "our aer- Anthone. Otbe&lt; new officers in· About 230 woman applied for
vice role beyond tbe adual care clude: Dr. Jolm J . O'Brieri '41, tbe class of 1974, and About 56
our !"!"Pie can dellwr in local vice president; Dr. Lawnmoe -or 24 per --..;n be .aof.acHiGes as put of tbe edual- H. Golden '46, treasurer, and oepted. Mr. ~ poiDied
tionaltbe prpl=;, willandbetes~of Dr. Paui ·L . Weinmlinn '54, pro- out that the bitih rate of~
to
-•
gram chairman for tbe 1972 tanoe Waa not due to 8ny quotA
mocli!l enletprisM within a com- Spring Clinical Days.
or special izeatment. It was just
that
appHcants .......,.JUllCUJn
ly had higher quaJificationo
.
than males. ·
· 'The PftiSideat cl tbe Na- olferi!d the University of AsTwenty-two ' wterana-stutiClllal Uniwrsity of A8Undan uncion IUidanoe with its medi- dents wbo were pnwiOusly aoin Paraguay visited tbe CIIJIIIIU8 Cal achool and nunoing propam. oepted but had to delay alu!IY
last week.
,
From 1966 to 191111, the U/B -wiH lilac? be put of tbe frealiDr. Dioliiaio GClllzales Torrea, School of Education alao acted mao daaB.
. rector of Asunciaa, and tbe Jo. as a Cl0119111tant dwinc a .comKoc:bery ll8id about 20 per
cal ailminlalration h a v e one ~ rellQIIDiiation and revital- cent of appllcatioaa for the fall
thing in COIDIDOD-bolb have IZIItion of AsunciClll.
· -..fromout-of.Statestudeuta.
powing pains with· their uniHI! ll8id t h a t qualificatiana
wrsitiea.
B e - meetinp, Dr. TOI'- being equal, New Yorkers
Dr. T...,. mef wilh mem- ..,. was special..-t at a hmCh- would have Pl'8fenmoe siDce h
bera of the Office of Facilities eon hosted by Preoident and Law School is .._ted by
Plannina wbo ~ plapa Mrs. Robort L. Ketter. Dr. Ket- N- ¥ork State tupeyera
for tbe 11nivenity's cam- t1Jr presmted Dr. Torres with
Aside from tbe lOW tuition
EW' and with members of tbe tbe Um-.ity'a first 126th An- rates charpd by the &amp;hool
l'BrlllluaY Committ.ee, a poup nhmaary Award for bia 'II'Odt as tbe Cllllf ptlblicly~
that for 10 years UDiil 1969 . in edualtioa and ""'"""'of Jepl studlea m tbe

tbe development of the Division of Family Praotice within
the Medical Scbool.
To tbe criticism that medical
Schools · educate too ffiW, the
preaident noted that, in one
year, tbe U/B SchOol has increased its enrollment by 42
and that recent projeotions call
for the eventual doubling of tbe
graduating
c1aas.
The
increaae.
he
noted, has
been
accompan·
· ied by Uni-mty lesdersbip in

felenoe will be Dr. R o g e r
B,_, from l:luwrd. BrOwn,
wbo has writleD tbe lllandard
psychoiotiY of ....._ . - . ia
CU!ftllllly writlni • book Clll
bow c:hlldnm .......d- Jamauap

wbich will ~; 111Dtbesis
ol peat """" done In tbia field.
In addition to a-n. wbo
will be Yf1l'J lrnowiedpable Clll
the .-reb in tbe Dr.

Daniel Slobln, Uoh.alty of
Califanlla, Berbley, will talk
about tbeoriea cl Jamauap
.aoquiaitioo and tbe CUft8lt .....
8Midl be and bia atudmta ....
doing. 8lobin tbinka bia atudents have domaaalrated that
all childreD put aenii!Does together in tbe way.
A ....-tstive from Dr.
Jean Piaaet's laboratory_ in
Geneva. Swi~ Dr. Hermine SinclaJr..deZwa w iII
come to diacuaa .-reb currently being oanducted there.
Other ~ts will include SOCJOJogiat Dr. D o r i s
Entwisle, wt-8 inten!st liea in
bow children Jeem to read; Dr.
David McNeill, wbo believes in
tbe genetic theory of language
and . Drs. Eve and Herbert
Clarlt wbo are ooncemed with
aemantica.
'The oonferenoe prosram will
consiat of eight to ten bours of
public leclmes .hmn• the week
with additional-~ being
planned solely for _participan
• •
ts
to diacuaa their work and ideas.

Only One 1.n rnen Students

:.::p~;

t~

Is Admitted to Law School

S,:

indi

Rector ofAs

•

Acquisition of Langunge
·Is August (]onferenee 1bpic ·

Universities Have Three ObligationS
President Ketter Tells Med Alumni

muot rii5otJnize that fuJfillment
of h educMional process requites IJ8 to act in each of thn!e
roles ( teacbinc. research and
-..ice) but to view •
sincle J'Oie as an end in itaelf."
S!&gt;eakinl! Clll the relationship
of the Mectical 8ebool to the
Univasity, Ketter noted that
the School is probably the ....t
visible element of the University within the communitythrou8h the work in 'boapltals
and Clinica of faculty, afumni
and students. ''One figure indica!es that 65 per cent of the
·physicians in Erie County are
alumni of this School and University," he 118id.
The temper of the times, the
president 118id, "imparts an added importance" to this continuing relationship. '"The Univasity . . . . _ to the contemporuy aocial maJalae which
coofroats this society's institutiCllls and systems will be
judpd upon the. basis of the
reapoose of its constituent
parts."
'The Medical School and the
University, lie said, must answer the prevalent criticisms of
1eaching by 41swing that.. all
students "have access to the
beat minda of our faculty . in
both formal and informal leaniinl aituatiooa." · Also, he. said;
"we mUBt be prepared to recognize and reward the faculty
member wbo is an exceptional
teacher,'' rather than simply
P:"r.ing -lip service to teaching
ability.
But, be continued, both the
Umversity and its critiC&gt; must
reaanber "that a uni-mty is
composed of many elements."
An elrective method of teaching in one area. he noted, may
not be elrective · in another.
And, while research and service
are valuable adjuncts to the
teaching process, they will be
used ''with varying degrees of
emphasis in different disciplines."

11., II, 1971

• Viisits
• Cmnpus

"""'*'

State, Kochery could not exptsin the surge in applicatioaa.
But be did aay, 'Tm .-lly
sorry for u-e ,mo'. couldn't be
aocepted."
. •

A More Vital SA
Is Aim of .DeWzal
New UDderJ!raduate Student
Aaaociation pn!llideat Ian C.
DeWeal aays be ""' for the
poat because he was "dialafis.
fled" with h
~ operation of the SA, and felt be could
''tum the orpnization 8l'OIIDII."
making jt a more vital and respected voice of etudeats.
He
•
that in- his
...;,. ..,:'
be In a "oonflict situationN with tbe UniYMJity llllnlinRaliaa, butaays
be is wiiiiDg to ...,... with eelminialnltors. He aeea the
p . - ~tion as bavinl a "'nnllnb-tion pab1om," not a aedlbillty pp, .,
~ in tbe ~ oonllo-.y over Cft!8tiaD of a clay
care center.
DaWaallilta • bia ..-t 1mportant ~ . . - tbe
"immediate flnaCial Dblllza·
tiooofaclay .care-ter,"wllh
aludant 1lllllliel, and 411e tllllabllabmomt of a drug .....a.wtation _ . _ a.; alilo to
appoint a dbeetor of public infonnation, a J...t he CDIIIIiden
crucial.
lw for long llllll8 pis, DeWeal wants to aaue lhllt tli8
,_ rep-tative atudoat 11&amp;SMDbly, to be elected in the
fall, · pta off .., a finD ·footinl.
DaWaal a1ao taJb about provlding more . . , . _ to alaclenta-birth alnlrol dlnlal,
drug inlonnation -ten and
retail outlets that ..W etudeat
,_.._ But, be adds, "our lint
.,._., will be with .aadlmt'
richts. ~
An antbrol&gt;olotiY ~. be
will be a amlor lil tbe 1oJ( He
aarved this :.-r· p.-ident ol tbe Inter-Reeldonce Councll.

J!"'..;m'

*'

�llq II,

191~

Open Parking
Is Delayed
A t r i a 1 period for IDII'estrided parldnl in campua lola
- that -. m a flnkloale, fin&amp;.
-.ad t.ia - baa 1-. ...
layed at leat 30 ...,. . , _
~ the matllar will be

A.ccardlD&amp; to Robert B. Huot,
obalrmau, 'l'ralllc C...bol AdYiaory Commitlea, the dec:iolaa.... llllllle "after CIU'eful coo~ ol e:dstin1 Clllldllilllla CliJIIIII8Nd to .U..tlafactbl durin~ the fall."
That c:ummt CXIIIditioD, Huot
said, Is 11118 ol ~ oamplaintll about the JIUklnl ~-::!..."' deczeailed ~
Hunt tr-.1 tbe dewlop-

=-~~

the Jllll'kiDI
"'n February 3, the Trdlc
C...bol Advi8ory Committae
.,..,...,I!W!ded a trial period for
UIU'I!8tricted parlina . . - to
"""""""' May 1. Strict ....
forcement of r8fiU}alilllla was
to euaue. b e - February 3
and May L
"As - approached tbe May
1 dale, it was apparent that
stricf enforcement was elfecti""
... more tbau 100 could
be found available in the MainBalley lot at any time."

Colleges(c:onlilluedfrom-1,eol.3)
n.e mly problem ·uea the
committee foresaw was the role
cif !:Den in the college. 'The
prospec:tus ata tea preference
will be giWID to women in

course eurollinent and t h a €
only women will ha"" the right

to vote in the CODduct of the
oollep's a1fair8. At the JMet,.
iug, IDOPiben of Wop&gt;eD's Studies tofd' ~tlie group_ the)i werelooldug into the legality of

tbeir voting prooedures.

Debate on the prop&lt;Mal cen-

tered aroUDd economic prob. .
lema rau- tbau the oollep's

program. Early in the dlacusStudies represiou,
aentetMIB told the "-nbly
they would refuse collegiate
worbbop status. and Wlllltedmly to join the collePllll Byllliem as a full coUaae. l&gt;r, Jolm
Howell, Racbel Carson Colleae.
BPOioo ol tbe need to "separate
tbe q...tian of ............ from
the acoepta.- of the ...... propam." 8iDce money to the Collegiate "-nbby is budaoeted
in 11118 IIDDp sum; Dr. "Fted
8uell, Colleae A, pointed out,

w-·s

DBW

collep.-tus Is slrictly au

in~
-poobibitbl
· tmaftacted
by
tbe
State's
ol new
~·a 8tudMs was fiDally
unanhnnuely

accepted - a new

collep and €hue waaiJUUIIDtead

University Is Host -to ThnuswuJs at Open House

fuDdlnl.
In olbar actb-. the colleps

8011111

voted to ~ tbe dlrector
and plOidlll cleYeiopmeDl
aamitlee to~ the"dis-

~ !:

:::'t=nal
Maltlos told tbe b 0 d y this
~ iDYohoe four colletles BID~ Modsu Colle8o.
Rma I.maaburl and Heaftli

iiDd.n:' ~ tabled ~

dedtiaR ol a motion· Wbicb
~ ba\18 all ~ col-

asaata - ool..... ......_ until funding ,.. llaD Is louud.
.... 1n1tlally

Reactor-

n.e University ·- "at
home" Sunday and 80 tbe
..timated 10-15,000 Western
N- Yorbn wbo roamed its
halls and viewed ita operatiollll
chirlug . the 125€h .Amli-.y
()peb Houa
All ~ ~ in alten4auce
~ BDWe fmnllles
wi€h childrau, hiP adlool students, 0.,-bain, pmfeEiooal
IDI!D, alumni and _ . . wbo
had set foot m tbe campuo before.

came. and viewed aptely 100 educaSonal - pNeidont, had
amdy and ice CleiiiD,
~~:=.!t::: cottcn ~
alliilded lao1-. promised au addWoaal asked
in the ..........tary turea and musical perf....,.:
found a
far apanliolla after Sep- -'View ofandthe_..ny
Unl....mty that
80.
tbey '-ID't apected.
(~,_ JK¥!.1.

They

coL 1)

~met· tbe
.

'lbls~~::tWa
fuH
,.....
I s - at
Armed wi€h mapa and aided
leat piGIIIIsed.
• this by blue and white iDformatbl
~ cWI'end from a lllal)' in .......... IUidee and
w~. COfll'i6.
lice, the tide. of
~

viaie:;:-

and llowOO all o....r tbe campus,
ham Baird to Capen and back
to Hayes and Nort&lt;Jn. 'Tm glad
ha"" these ~" 11118
visitor complained wt€h good
&lt;beer to a IQide, "'Ibis place
is 1ilre a city in itaelf."
It was a -.pas to wbo was
enjoyinl · the day more visltono or Unr:::.t~
nel n.- staff
available for information and tours
in Hayes lr.ept a 1'IIIIDiDg tally
on what was happeaing elaewhere. "' bear they're llbmdiug in line to pt into the denial
clinic," 11118 olllcial told auouwbo had just reported that
Nortm was crammed.
And
Nortm Hall regular
wail ~ talliug IUIOibar
student, '"This is lfML This is
the way it ought to be all tbe
time., .

a

Nortm itaelf was_ amaziDI.
Spruced up and looltiul in ita
prime, as tbe BOlli it was

==y~t~~.: ~'==v!:.:':C

one ham clf-&lt;:ampus was put
elf or ewen intimidated • might
have - . , expected. Tbey had
come to today's atudenta
and tbey did, fiDdiug t h e m
friendly, reop&lt;lll8ive and -very
interesting - if a bit abqiY
forODe
8011111 tastes.
lady wbo had to he in .
her ei;hties marched a I one

throuah the recreation

area

the bowling, billisrds
~-- activities and
probebly WOIIdering to heraelf
imat all tbe recent fuM was
abouL 8be -.ned to appnJYB
all she saw.
As did most ~Je:---wbeuin the Reec:tor, at Ridae 1M or
in Harriman.
"'Ibis is quite a UIIM!raity,"
seemed tp be_.,}~
.

•

From ltbe administrative
viewpoint, the day was MBD as
aD ..__.,..ted,' ..,._..ny
"""'-"'1 attempt to pt the

really m and to ba\18 tbe
campus mset tbe COIIIIIIUDity.
Of ooune, all PIOblema didn't
diaaol"" biif as ~ Vice
President Albert Somit put it
in a Courier-E~ inliarview,
"Some miacouceptioas might
be
up."
_cleared
_ __.;;..
_ _ _ __
OP£N HOUR C11ED1TS
for the Unlwnlty-wide
Open H.,._ c:oncoi..d ond
outlined by , _ , . V. Palonno,
director of Unlve~ p u b l - .
• mombor of the 125th ~nlver·
. .IY Polley Cornmlltao. Tho Com·
mlttM ·~ the concept end
scheduled the ...nt which - · In
tum. dlrecliod ond coordlby
John A. Buork af Student Atlalrs
wltll the cooperotion •nd portld·
potion af hundreds af facul\y, oBtl

The -

==-:-•==m:;
OWJYOM on !'llmpus who ployed
port In the s-m.t wnture.

•

�•... ,,,

·~

Wexler.Says

Universities Fare Crisis, Need Faculty Unity
-.s .....

New'Calendar
'Ibo Taxing

tb.t ott.a
iD
n
...,..al 8Cllllllllllic dedlae; a
blliLU~.-.ol
Thefealllr
B(lod pmt of it Ia also due to
In - t ,..... lbe -~ ·t lwe fonbodiDp ere ClllliiDII
uadoraoiDI the .....- c:riala in ·::.
of the Uni¥WIIity - ._. oplit
!1. blalary. Will it _,.., up the Uni¥WIIity. Surely, lbe U/8 by factioDal diapu .... that b&amp;Ye' ~J.ated~&lt;m
- of last year bas, IlL ....-r L. KEl"'D, l'nlaidlmt
liD lbe atuation? U it ia to sur· administration cannot be ahallllled ita .-,y. FrioDda DOW ' - . s - l Mlatabs
DIWI 118. Kftftll:
moe, lhm certain tbiDp have blamed for lbe flacal cuta DOl" and colleaiuee have '-&gt; J?ltled n o aau11t made em all sides
I am writing tbla leuar to
.,.mst
.at
other
in
fmtriddal
liD be ...._ Tbla appU. to the for the fact that the ac:ale ol
and
intemperate
.
r
b
.utyou on the mauar ol the reStale UDi¥WBity ol New York the Ambenlt campus to warfare. Much of it, in relzo. Wed in the llll1ll*lt of .-..... cent revisioua ol tbe olllcial
lil Bu&amp;lo
..,;n
other in· have been reduced. Yet tJ&gt;e apect, COIIDielproduct. The Uoi¥WBity needs. to c:!:JaDp University caleDdar for the aca~ What- .-1. iD my • "admbllatration has not dciDe For, it has resulted in 1111 un- and the student--.. 1n demlc year 1971-72. Although
~t, Ia first, an edmiDis- eoouah by public statement or fortunate division of the faall.
tndiall willa CIIUNf8 and fare.. ~ to resist the meat ue ap- ty into warriog poll~ blocs
lilbt. wllliDI to darlmd the IIJii. proach by the Legislature. The and this has undeimii&gt;ed lbe the real JIUfi1C* of tbe Univer- be refened to the laculty as a
¥WBity ~ tlae from with- U/8 administlation s hou I d
Jlity be siJoWDed.
whole for opiDicma and approvout who are 88llldDc liD cut beck - " ' up and defend the virtuM
'Ibe real threat ...,. is not aJ, which was not done.
and reduce ita elrecll--. of a peat" university and ilB r.t ~ ll
from
within,
but
from a.~
I am aware that faculty
and II8CCIIId, a faculty who will JePtimate goals, not simply try - V .U:::. VY C V.
tive budget-minded ~ · """"'-" on procedural
...,. came lotlether with the to bJan'&gt;e the internal restric·
and 001D11111Dity, who waiting m ~
~~
unity and determination to tive economic moves on the LegwiDp and _exasperated l_&gt;y
&amp;tlllld up for the university islature. Rather it should forth· essential purpoo~e of the Univer- the
what tbey caoaidered ·t o be If· adopted. My ·own _IJilPOilition to
apiDst ~ _forces who righUy attempt -to~ the sityit' ..
. time !hat the •·-·"'-• ._,.gbJe faculty, now threat- ; : :~lollowing seawould UDdermine it.
1..,;s1ators and the public at
•--"-• with
.ty-_;a
en tbe Y8fY commitmellt of the
Traditionally the Christmas
I
large particularly in Western come """"~
uru
The U/1 A d m l New 'yort, of the ne&lt;e98ity for 'purpc-. Fc;&gt;r if_the Univers;ity University to free inquiry. The vacation period bas served as a
President Kingman Brewster continued fiaca1 support of the IB to SUfVlve m the COIDllll suspension of faallty sabbali· time for students to catch up on
of Yale IJI'III!(I recently that uni- University if it is to maintain decade, it can only .do 80 ~th caJs, efforts to 'incre!!&amp;e faculty course reading, laboratory exversity presidents and their ad· its level of excellence and ful • . a ~trong fa"';'lty dedic;ated to i4B load in the classroom, and to perimen4B, term _..., commioiatrationa be held accouDt- fill its mission iD society. 'The chief purswt-:-teecbing, Jeam. cut back on support for faculty puler programming projects,
able to their conatituen&lt;ies for administlltion often seems ing, scbolarship and_ reeeercb. reoean:h show that there ia lit- etc. To a I esse r extent, the
the policies that they adopt. more concemed with the ' day- ·We can ar_gue and differ ~t tJe· appreciation . and unci!-":· sprmg· vacation period bas a1ao
standing for tbe vital and cnti·
this
fuJ func
The present adminlatration at . to-day runDiDg of the Univer- the many purposes of .the Uru- cal
function of the University: served
same UBe
•
U/8 has been in office for aJ. sity and with cautious, prilg- veisity: Some want it ~ !&gt;e
its
commitment
to
troth.
Ibis
light,
the
otd
academmoat an academic year. 1 he- matk, and bureaucratic deci· relevant ·to the larger social 111lieve that the time has come sion-makirig than with enunci- sues; some want it to take PGFor all;!&gt;ough the University ic calendar w a s particularJy
that its policies be eva!uatec!-:- atini educatioDal philosophy lilical positions or ex11ress needs to -educate etudents and wen designed siru:e it allowed
not for the aalre of carpmg cnti· and goa1a It has seemed more moral concerns; others Wish the educate them well, it a1ao needs persons Who had slipped behind
clam but in the hope that this concerned. with its own sur- University to be the arm of the to continue to contribute to to recover. No longer. It seems
wiD aetribute to aanuine im· viva! than in defining guide- status quo and to tri1in em- medical research, physical and probable that the full import
p . . . - t iD the future.
lines for future giowtb· and de- ployees for the .military-indn&amp;- biolotlical inquiry, the social of the new calendar will not
In compariaon with last year velopment.
trial establishment; a few want sciences, the humanities, and become apparent until early
the University COIIIIIIUDity is
From 1962 through 1970 to make it into a base for revo- the arts. AJtbongb members of December. At that time, stu·
pateful that the violenoe ~ SUNYAD attracted' a ._great !utlon, the mo~ of tbe arts. the faculty may disagree on PC&gt;- dents will find after fourteen
disruption that ae..w-1 thi&amp; number of~ ecbol- a means to_ glorify God, or to Jitical, moral, or religious continuous weeks of classes
Uniwraity has abated. 'D&gt;e reJ. ars, many of theni 'I'WOfld're- preach atheiSm, and 80 em. The 11f011!1ds, surely they should be (notwithstanding the "breaks"
ative peace a~ U/8 DO doubt nowned. As far as we ·can tell, ,Uniyersity is '!"')..should allow agreed about the need to en- of Columbus De,y, Veterans
reflects a natlon!d trend. Ho!v there have been few;. M· any, all of ~- ~ ~- least courage free inquiry. Yet the Day, and Tbanksgiving vacalong the calm will last, DO ODe distinguished appointmenh t.ltooe r.oilhin it as individuals very pursuit of free inquiry tion) that examinations, term
can predict. Many faculty with· that have been made ftiis past and · groups can and should seems in need of justification projects, papers, etc. will make
in this University DOW believe, yeai Indeed /l number of mr· work to clarify and solve oocial to those who don't believe in it. very large and simultaneous
however, that the overriding cell.;n acho~ have resigned problems, train for citizenship,
It is time that the facalty demands. This may not be on~Jem. that- DOW ~ ccx;&gt;- from the Uniwraity, ~ ol pre~ sl!'denjs fo! ~ pro- transcend its division, stand to- reasonable but the resulting
cems the apparent decline "' them beca&gt;Ee of tbe pmera1 feBSJona, discuss oocialism and
lite kvel of _,.jelftic PIJpW· ·iinp1ei;sion that U/8 bas passed capitalism, investigate differing
tiolu of the State University of its moment of peatness and is religious philosophies, follow university.
·
pected to deteriorate.
New York at Bulfalo. At least entering a period of decline. 'artistic visions, etc. Yet none
~ the faculty is castiIt is rather surprising to find
then. is· the widespread impres- Many younger colleagues are of these -goala should be pur- gated from all sides: the neo- that one of the main arguments
sion that the present admioia· exasperated by the recent de- sued at the sacrifice of the McCarthyites think ..., are dis- advanced in support of the new
~z~!tion is doing very li~ to fense of a quota system for ten· l&gt;;osic ~. of the Univ~­ loyal, •ludents believe we are calendar is that studerrts will
nuae our -'-- Indeed, 1t DOW ure and promotions which is Blty, which IB 1ts uncompl'OIIliB- IJypocii'tical and amdemD us "have better chances for IIWD·
aeems that the vision of a great primarily based u~n grounds ing conunitment to tlu. punuil for "not spending enough time mer jobs since the school year
uniwnity that so s~ SUN· of economy rather tb8n aca- of. luwwl£dge and truth. And in clasi!rooms," pollticians he- will. end in early May." This
Y AD from the day it went . demic excellence
this should transcend all other rate .., for "loafing on tiJi! job," . is something cme would expect
State until 1970 has beeJ! serThe ~tion should be goals.
iowily IIIU!OWed and .-Icted. conunitted to the building of
That is, the University ooght
....~though~ ~":t a great "University-the leading f&lt;! be. the P'!'ce wbeol re. men of ipulated. But .many politicians, southwest whose students (and
p-aduates) are of such alarm"""' """"·8en . .
.
graduate center in the State differmg pomts
VJew can students, or administrators
Meyeraon ~tra~ "!'V· Univen~ity. I am not thinking come tog!'ther, argue "!"~ &lt;!is- have i:Jever understood wbet a mg mediocrity that it was imertbele!l1 h 1 s administration simply in quantitative rJSC81 cover, disagree and mquue, university or faculty is primar- perative they e n t e &lt; · tbe job
demonstrated, a ""!""'m for terms but in qualitatiue terms. keep alive dialogue and re- ily about. Indeed, cme can make market before anycme eiE apstature and it ~ great- And I am thinking of the"need search, the free play &lt;It the this case: much of the failure of peared on the ocene.. It ia not
~ · It was IDOI:ivl!ted by a de- to develop bold educational mind, sensitivity and apprecia· the m o d e r n ,_university the type of reasoning one would
expect to beer at an institution
111re . to reach a high level of
programs fused wilh solid aca· tion. ·A colhge is a place wbere
~ ~~
or higher learning. that aapires
achievement.. One can only .re- demic criteria. As far as I can tescbing is the preeminent COilpet that thishas beenforw~.:_~ tell, very few, if any, educa- "!'m of the faculty. A. ~Uliver· ha!1ds of 1DIID8geiDellt.oriented to a national reputation ol aca·
Jeaderahip
~ a-Y "'r tiona! innovations have been ally needs to keep teaching can- administrations, men devolied demic excellence.
Very truly yows,
sent in ~ firs); year of this suggested or introduced by this traJ to its role, but a1ao it needs more to politiaJ than to prinnew admilliatration. All eectors admioiatration.
to nourish and 8U8Iain the rues
="~
of the University, the right and
of creativity, research, and the ciple.
But the faculty should be
,...,._
the left, the students and facul·
U SUNYAD is to becou;1e the quest for truth. For there are
ty now sense the mood of sec- peat center that was projected few if anY institutions in eoEDmlR'S NOTE: The ODd best that seems to prevail. for it, a home of creative ~ cietY wl&gt;eni this interest pre- ship ability,. the Courawe and
It is apparent that the Uni- ing, learning, and -n:b. dominates, but it is the Y8fY
.......
versity is ezperiencing a strong t!Jen it has to take a new direc- life-blood ·or a uni¥WIIity: . . the wisdom to defiDe and cle. port8r ~by ...... fendthe-ofauni-- - - - _..... . • !"
public bectlaah; the COIIIIIIunity tion and adopt a new mood sent and .u-u, COIIformity sity,
then the fal:ulty 8bauld .......... ..__..for . . . . . ...
and the Legislature have '-&gt; aDd it ia ~ that both the and 'cnnocl•am Cllllviction and
itself. In the last analy- - liD ... ......
hlllll7 critical of the Univer- adminlstntion lllld fa cuI t Y IUpticlom all abouJd have a do" so
the slzmdb 01 a ,..,.t uni- - . . , . . , a1
•+mliBIIua.
lity. The immediate effect of work cooperatively to raiae our plaCe iD the u n i - of Jbe free sis,
versity ia and 8bauld be an au- It
o1mp1r a ....,.
a ·
lbla, of - - . has '-&gt; the ee- aspirations, our dreaml, lllld miDd.
toDomouo fal:ulty. ADd if a "uni· ·
IIJtlla - · ·
buQitary cuts that our ' - . and that it enllat
In the l960's lbe fllcuMiea of
baYe IUffaoed. No doubt part tbe ~ ol etudents in thla IIDiversitiM viltuaHy uni·
of thla _ , be attributed to 1be compeUiDg -.e.
tied 88 they etood ~ lbe
_,manmuatbeJllt!lllll"dto - - ~..,........, . .
witdHJJmtiDI McCartbyiam suppcllt it. u ........ to ..,. - ., ... _ . , . ..........
that ..,.tit to undi!nDiDe aca· aamplloh this, tbeD tbe princi- It In ... , _ _ 14 ......, .. demlc freedam at tbe altar of pie that 8bauld
Ia, .. - - ..;;..-..:.........., . . - .
fenalt PMriotiom. In lbe .,.. w...... Boomla laas recoDt1y In&amp; ............... - ·
the facuklea- opllt- lbe ~ tbe ~ of CIOID- , _ . . . . liD ......... .......
issue of lltadmt pcJIIIIlr. Same ity. 'lbat Ia - ' muat leam _....., - .., ....., thought that tbe lliDdoalll . bad
to tnlerate and nllpllet .at . - liD .. priDr
a just aDd they .w..Jded otben diflolwlt attitudes, be- tD ...; ....., lJI!Iii&amp; t.1Jaa. 1n ..,
atudlm clianlptiam ... axal lWa lllld val-. We wbould not - . tile 118poieor ,...._ to grounds. Othon thoucht tbat ,_.;Jy lllrive for a - . .,....... that ..,....... eeld aiJout
.....a.nic freedam and--... wbicb ia UDOblaiDable, but ic 8laDdard8 being -...
policy of "'iwt and Oilllcll It It saulted from within by .a new b
let only
liw."the'nle
~ prin.
millpJaced fenu. We feared dplea ol a lllli¥WIIity that for ........,... tile adthat in CCJDdoniDc ... ~ all llhoald abare are our "!"'P....-c aasaults em academic freedam -live CDIIIIIIituMmt to troth m ID..,
from within, - would· inevit- a free ClliiiiiiUIIity of iDquiry ......._, It -r 1Ji1t 11e ably invite ~ and . . and our llllllDIIJpi'CJ eli&gt;- a- ...., .-t . . - , "811 t1111r
sirlctioa from wilhout; and that ' - of 1111 reclitnde, apiaet ..._ before ~
failure by the fal:ulty liD lteep tlae who neither 8ppi8Ciate ...., 110 ..... ..
illl OWJl bon. in order would DOl" lDientand it.
........ . - llml ....
By PAUL KtJR'n:
The ~IumW.,;ty

as

is

:r::~thatfeel~

as

~~~:.:: ~~-:~=

Tnl"\fNTS
.

W:

tt!"

ao;;;

~ ~p~ tt:.., "f:! !'.':i.~=&gt;~"t:::

~==-:.:::: ~in~Jin::::o'Ol!:

::.r

u.: ':!

:=a:~~\!:.:!:

=..._ :-"-"":. "::
'*

=~ ~rr-u-:":::

.-y-__ ,_- In

:..=-..:-In-=-.-:.:::

-u

'* - ........ .....,_
To---- as..,..,.
••illli-•'• 8t.., ,_ ..-.

/

.

�~

---a..,__

B7n:BBRT~ .

Dr. a..rtoe H.

v.

a-t,

.._of U~Studioo,
Ia 1D be CIJIIII8bdaled on his
~ d "iiDwatioD with - .
CCIIIIIIIIbllit." ·N- ideas 1111111t
JII0"8 tt-1-. As Dr. Eberl
. . . "8ucb cbaDpa will be
clllllcult ud will llllre lime"
but lloaolficisl ilmova'tlon ...
~ taken Jaboriou8 work

IIDd

~

IS,lP11

u-.

To implement Dr. Ebert's
llliDI la
1D ..U.· Ibet we..,... haw

tlaDe, lbe imporlaDt

~ ID-

iDDoft.

tioD aad -"&gt;' lbet educatioual
Ia ..... made. It is
~ It's laborioua, but it
can be doue.
Tbe
of of
educatioual innovations requirao CODBiderable MmaDtic
c:larifiaation and special new
WIIYif of defining -wn key
...,..... which have been burden·
ins man for Cllllturies. UnfO&lt;tunately, we aH have a passionate penistalt em&gt;III&gt;DU8 belief
that many of our inherited,
vague vemaJ structures - intuitiwly leamed as Children,
·provide rneanina. Unfortunatedoes is
ly, all such ewte disaimilar respo.- on
a random basis.
Yet that vagueness can be
creatiwly WQL Becauae it does
evoke random response&amp; it can
be .-.1 to """""""' habitual
verbal rut&amp;. Vagueness creatively .-.1 can help us avoid delri-

dafiuitioll

5

··On'~'Innovation
mental wd.l conformity and p,_.t writtan material8 aDd
get 118 I** ID our dUidisb nm- talk: student&amp; are ~ ID
clclmMs wlwl dive rae re- """"""'· Wiwl student&amp; re~ are needed. It is our apoad in a IMcbera
u n a - of wlwl we are l.ik.e, tMcben aay -nvrt alu·
beiDI vague wbid:l .is teariD&amp; dent ... leamed".
our dynamic democrac:y _.t.
What is "l«&lt;miill(7 It ob~ cliffic:ulty stoma from
vioualy invol- verb a I bea tip t.op biaiDrical secret oao- haviO&lt;. Our formal evaluatioos
ceminl man'o most Cl'lllltive .. of
lbe Bludent bas
tool Moat of 118 are intuitiwly, "leamed" bas always bee n
submnaciooJoly aware of the ae- be-' upoo Oral or written
cret but lew have _ , it ver- even if this vque bebalized. Certoinly our - t haviO&lt; called "attituaea" is in
pbi!IJ8Illlilen were intuitiwly pert determined by intuitive
aware of it but it .,.. ao ob- evalua.t ioaa of nao-Yelbel revioua they didn't mention it. ~ Sad ID relate, our un'lbat is this:
·
derotonding of "leamed" verbel
"The btuic ~ of Jan- behavior bas a I ways been
IIIIJ(le and communicotionl ;. to hamPered by our failure to deahDw. modify and clltmge our wlop a scieDCe of lansuace
own' and othes' behavior and whiCh can predict and oaotrol
upeciollr to improve creative verbel behaviO&lt;.
cooperatiOn."
'!bat failure bas impact.
~ Told Us
.
Lacking a science of language,
But nobody told us. 'lbat we have become the confO&lt;ming
failure ID state the purpose of victims of inberiled, intuitivelanguage bas generated U8eless ly learned, -verbel structures.
debates for centuries. How can Unfortunately, as we talk, so
anyone improve a purposeless we tend to do. And our inprocess? How can we unprove herited veiba1 structures diea process with neither oojective tate our thougbt&amp; much m0&lt;e
nor plsnned result? It can't be than . our thought&amp; decide our
done.
verbel strategies!
But now we know. Now we
Our failure to develop a eci·
csn purposefully gain pUblic ence of laoguages stems from
acceptance of the purpose of man's failure to invent a scienspecific types of language.
tific, verifiable, countable, unit
Education involves· language or dimension of verbal &amp;trueand communications. Faculty lure. PhYsics has its amitrarily

.....,tber

.

led ... h" ........_,..._. bas

~w:!t,~ ;;,;;;~'uw·

but what does ianluaae hll.ve?
No ari&gt;itrary invented, IMBilingful verifiable dimension
wbich - count aDd aay, '"I'Iat
unit does esist aDd does provide meetllng in a publicly ..,.
cepted manoerl" ActuaHy, our
basic trouble stemmed from our
failure to realize that a .......U
by itself bas no meaning and
therefore only a unit of verbel
structure-words in contentprovides meaning.
Now man bas invented such
a verifiable dimension of verbal structure. Its only justification is like the " inch" in physics, it is handy. Like the "inch",
its ll1e8llfug can be demonstrated on the non-verbel level
without using other WO&lt;ds just
as can all basic scientific dimensions.
The verifiable unit 0&lt; dimension of verbel structure is cailed
a "verifiable function". You
can "see" the meaning of verifiAble functions such as "kiss!
Joe", ureuerse/pencif', " underline/noun¥', and "k&gt;sertlkey".
We agree to their meanings.
Their demonstnlled meanings
can gain objective, public acceptance. We invent them to
make the subjective oojective.
They dictate our cooperation.
Without them we mouth vagueness.

fNSAI Group Hopes To Stir Talk About Teaching
Tbe Committee on Instructional Evaluation for the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
.M athematics bas' &lt;:Ompleted its
deliberstions and repo~ to
ita faculty on April 27. All of
our faculty ahould by now be ·
aware &lt;Of tile·evaluation -procedures we have set up fO&lt; this
spring and next fall. Tbe Committee also presented the Provoat; Dr. Nancallas, with a set
of recommendations both for
immediate implementation and
also for future consideration.
We would W&lt;e to share these
recommendations with.. the entire faculty of the University in
the hope that it will stir the faculty to serious discllssions of
the many issues we have_raised.

.
The Committee for lnstructiona! Evaluation of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics was created by
the Provost for the purpose of

versity as to whether teaching
"excellence is IN FACT uaed as
a criterion for any of the rewards given to the faculty. This
committee believes that tbe
Provost mll8t visibly demonstrate his commitment to excellence in 'teaching if the student&amp;
and faculty. are to take this
evaluation procedure seriously.
In order to accomplish this in
the most rapid and direct manner, "Re recommend:
1. 'lbat tlie stUdents, faculty,
and administraiDrs of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
MathematiC3 endorse the principle of a regular and continuing system of -ching and
course evaluation.
2. 'lbat the present question·
naires be uaed for spring and
fall semesters of 1971.
a. '!bat summaries ~
by the Survey Research Center
from the evaluation forms be
distributed ID each faculty
member, depertment chairman

ment to excellence in teaching
we also recommend that:
8. The Provost create 15 annual Summer salary awards to
full-time faculty who have
shown excellence in teaching.
'lbe recipient faculty ·member
could use these summer months
to do research, teach, dewlap
a new course., improve existing
courses, etc. Faculty members
who already bad summer support from researeh grants could
receive a small monetary award
(example $100.00) in. recognition lor -ching excellence.
9. The Provost create 15 annual Summer salary awards for
graduate teaching assistant&amp; in
a manner analogous ID recommendation 8.
10. The Provost create 5 annual Summer salary awards for
the specific purpose of developing new COun!e&amp; or laboratories
or revising existing ones.
Grants of these awards would
be made partially on the basis

~:=:r~f't!:: ::!.!~~~ ~=yf:...=r.!~
FNSM. We prooeeded by: 1)
~ "!"f imp.,r_~~j,~
on ....,.~
Evaluation which was prepared
in late 1970, 2) finding a rea80IIIIble we,y of 8111111118rizin in
the most uaefuJ manner the
1llindreda of reapooses oblained
on the questioouu!ire, aDd 3)
llndinK a valid and ~
wa,y clewlluatinc lbe reapooses
made on1be queoticmn•i"!.

qwstiolmaire

Wilbln lbe last ,_ years,
11111117 large Ulliwiraitiea ouch as

~.::~

=--n....::-..=":;

.u

•ratty

Dllnoia, ·and

administrators may have accees
ID this infonJ!IItion.

4. '111at the IIIIIDJIJ8rY reports
be made a · pl!nnanent part of
each of the faculty members'
dossier for the benefit of all re~ Committees concerned
with questiobs of tenure, salary
adYIIDil8lllellt aDd promotion.
li. ,'!bat evaluation of teach· ability, became required as
and ft!llll]ar criterion,
in addition to other criteria, as
a basis for lllmue, advancement
ud
'
'!bat adequate funds and

::'formal

apromotion~

ber and partiodly on the basis
of the faculty members teaching evaluation record.

Com-

Recommenclltlon to the 1972
Future
an

lnolruc:tloMI Enl...tian
We recommend that:

1. The future committee
cbeck to ..., il any or all of the
recommendations In Section I
ha been implemented. H not,
theve,_..,. for not doing so
sbould be 8&amp;lerlained ud attempt&amp; made ID ~ the matter.
2. The .-1 fO&lt; ud useful-

facilili"!' bee::~ ::,'t..,~uatioll QU5-

found no statistical correlation
between type of response and
these parameters, not all members of the 1971 committee
were certain of the lack of value
of questions of this type. ·
5. The future committee consider specific ways and means
of helping faculty members to
improve their teaching with regard to the manner of presentation, usefulness, content, and
value of their courses. Some of
the ways in which this may be
accomplished are:
a ) a service for video taping
of lectures be made available
upon request so that each Iacul ty member could see himself
as others ..., him.
b ) speech experts be made
available upon request who
would listen ID the faculty
member's lecture and make
constructive criticism of his
talks.
c ) programs for the improvement of teaching by TA's be
organized within each department, since such a - t proportion of the teaching at this
University is done by these
people.
d) ways be found to inform
faculty members of grading
norms within their own depeftmerrt&amp;.
'
e) ways be found ID inform
faculo/ members of the lateot
IAlchniques and services available from audio-visual and teatinc services.

.

Membero of the FNSM Committee on ImtructioDaJ. EYaluatioD are: Fred Albrecht, P*lustudent, "'-lotry; OniDe
!l-bley,
r.cully
-..
try; Cbarlol
a-'*·
- y , r..o,.lty

ewluale ~for lbe pur- ·~fonD liy lbe 8urwy
3. ConSideration be gi_, ID ~·~0~~==:
- o f Improving it, aDd for a-rch .C..ter. Tbe own- lbe dealrability of CIUlY8Einc
the of tnslituting re- mary of lbe evaluation forms ...,._tative o amp I e a of
wam. for the _ . tMcben sbould be nolumed witbin ...., ...Jan aDd .-.t paduateo In ;;u~~~i=t\!":.:
in a ~ anaJot1oua ID the IDDil1hs .tlar lbe 1!1111 ol. the both Industry and paduate wideranoclua.. oludoa.~ ;
man. Wldl!iilpleed syotem· of ..,. ·
schools with repn1 .., the ~ ~~
a-.
wardfnclbe_.-m:.w.
7. 'lbat the Provost inform value, ~ up-to-date oludoa.t, . phy'oica;
Thlo amm~-. In NYiMrlnl the amml....., ClCIDCIIIMd with . oaotent, etc. of .,.,..._ they ~ oludoa.t, - - ;
•
_,...._._. •
the pnljiUIItion of SCATE that have tallien.
the 111-t&gt;. ..,._,_ m ' this evaluation procadUJt! bas
4 Tbe future committee In cloD!,~;~-==
,.... otudenl, phyaiea; ~
Janwuy 19'11z found lbet lbe hem inaalaraled in FNSM. their~ review of the - t Pfeifer, pwluate atudenl, . CDIIIIIIellt most aftla by Tbe SCATE committee may ~ may wish ID in- lica; l01111than lleicheri, r-lly
the ~t&amp; "Wbat
will be wiab 1D COIIIider wbelber It is . Veetipte farther Wbetber q.-. -~ duWman· lolm
18
-'&gt;or, .bioi.i~Y:
:'!o!\':n!'!i'.'!? t t' : atiiJ . - r y .ID eon duet . tiolla relatinc ID class alanding, Storr, s
..-rpw~..... alo!e1aar lbet there ais1a a cri11ia SCATB enlaaliaao in FNSM. grade in coarae, major, etc. ~cloDt. -u-lica; HeleDe
in caa8c1oDoe 1111111111 both lbe
In order ID visibly demon- """'¥ be added. AI~ Tcmer, UDderplodua.. atudenl,
studmt&amp; aDd faculty of 011r Unl- lllrate the .Unl\waity'a commit- studies at other universities chemiatry.

=~h= =-~.Jl.

.

t:

Tbe CXIIICIIPl d lbe_ .._._
able function" sn- 1111 . . , .
creative opputtuidtiiL Willi II,
we am ln...t III8IV' _ . . . . .
definitioos of worda whlda ....
cribe or are -.elated with
-w
otructure. Wllb It, can define worda IIIIa •to
luwul', "l11J1111e", -~ •to
lmrn", ".u.tpk'' on • ~
acientific basis. With it,-- clarify vque worda ..... uo b j e c t i u e''. "iltnootJiiDa•.
"value", "ilwmtinlf' aDd "t:reotiue belttwior". Witb·lbet _,_
cept of a "~ {rutlt:dDA."
we can even start the WJorions
dewiopment of a ~ of
language which will allow 1111
to predict ud oaotnll ..-•a
creative verbel behavior. ~
tuaHy .... will do it by abaorinl
the individual bow ID avoid Ineffective verbal behaWir IIDd
use creative verbel behavior to
reach bis or her human oojectives.
Voritlllblo~

What are some of the advantageous verifiable definitioos
provided by the verifiable fw&gt;ction? A f - foHow.
· "To lulow" can be defined as
to perform verifiable functiolla,
intuitively or consciously
whether those verifiable faDelions have been verbalired or
not. We "know" bow ID rid!! a
bike wben the verifiable faDelions required to do so became
what we call "habitual"
"To learn" can be defined as
the performa:nce of a verifiable
function in response to a specified discriminative stimulus
whicb has never evoked that
verifiable function befO&lt;e.
An objective can be defined
as a "desired" set of verifiable
functions. We define a "desired
set" when a person says, "that
set is wanted!"
·
V otue. can be defined as desire per oojective. People usually use ·that definition of valiie
to establish Gbjectives and
priorities on them.
•
Value&gt; can be defined as objective over the effort of reaching the oojective in lime and
labor, that IS, valueo is oojective .
over its cost. People use that
valu"' definition when they
know the oojective and are attempting to reach it fO&lt; less
coat in lime, etc.
Creative, inventive, innooative behavior can be defined as
responses which result in people reaching fheir human objeCtives in Jess lime or fO&lt; less
effort, that is, creative l&gt;elrtwior
increoBu volueo. It follows that
a creative product, pbyaiad or
verbal, is a unique combination·
of verifiable functions which Ia

'*""'

=

=~"";:::!
calculus, he increased verbal or
mathematical valueo.

~ti;: ~.::.c=

reinforc:iniiDIn

perfO&lt;med by an individual

a group which is

~ v~:::-...:tedhw:tiDW::
group's oojecti-.

EducotitmtJl iNiac&gt;alion be defined - u.c.- In ...
ucatloual vaJ.. ...-: L Bca- ·
colblal vaJ.. Ia defined • educatiolllll oojectiwa .,.. _ . .
m llludeDt-t.cbw tiDIA plaa
materials; 2. BcbwwtimiAI alljao.
~ are defined • -mallie
fuDctbla which atudlmla - leam ID inc!epwv!ent!Jr, tiwly, aDd claDocndaally ....
m- and
valueo ill defined •
lbe studmt'aoo~.,..lbe
coat ol. ~-=bin~ Clan.
Tbe above outlines the Jib.
orioua tuk d crea1iD&amp; ...
countable IDDcwatioa. Only
bard .-It am c:r.te it. 'lba
~ Md situation of ~
lyzinl powrly In the iDidat

;:-.......r,aaaal

a.

~~In~

tive 8II8I'CbY b our parportod
democratic ball 01 billa leaminc aDd the dyuamic apathy d
far IDo ~. all illdicMe lbet
the required bard work mflbt
be ~ ooafO&lt;mity ID the
&lt;JI&gt;porlunitiea - ahare.

�~

6

QSA Approves
Constitution
NominatioDs for MZt year's
olf"JC8lll and the ODDSideration of
a new canstitution wme the
main orders of busUieal at tbe
Gnoduate StUdent Association

.-

(GSA) ..-ting. Wedueocilly,
Aprl128. .
Tbe -tins feH in the middle of a two-day paduate studeat referendum called to decide the fee policy for tbe MZt
four years. 'lbe GSA approved
tbe new COII&amp;titution on Wedoeoday nilbt and then the body
of sraduate students approved
a JD81111atory fee policy in the
election which ended on Thwsday. In addition to the regular
constitution, the GSA also
pasoed an aD_&gt;endment c:allil!i
for the reteqti&lt;m of oomerabip
of capital equipment purchased
by clubs from GSA money.
Following approval of the
new governing iaws. the graduate students nominated MZt
year's officms. Nominees for
~t are: Mike Nicolau.
Civil Engineering and John
Greenwood, Psychology. Chris·
tine Grahl is running for ad-

ministrative vice presidenl
There are no nominees for external vice president Running
for student affairs vice president are: Paul CUmming, Management Science. and Sue Elliot, Pbiloeophy. Candidates for
treasurer are: Tony Lawrence,

Economics; Jim Hart, Erudish,
and Jeff Fagan, Psycho1ogy.
Nominations for all offices are
still open and will cloee at the
beginning of elections at tbe
Wednesday, May 12, meeting.
Another action taken I a s t
week w.is the delegates' approval of"Starting a civil action
suit ag&amp;inst Michael Hawkins.
' lAst year's GSA. lent Hawkins
$3,000 but had !i,ifficult:v. in
recovering the loan. Repeated
attempts by ·t his yeflr's finance
committee. Sam Lawn, GSA
treasurer says, have failed and
court action eeetns to be the
only way to recover part of the
money.
Tbe GSA also appropriated
$15 to the Educational Psychology· Department which will be
used for ·l eaching awards.
Michael Roeen, GSA president, annowiced to the group
that Sub Board I. Inc., has taken an option to buy 1,100 acres
of iand which will be used as a
recreation aree.· Tbe land, located near Ellicottville, could
be purchased by the student
group before the option runs
&lt;&gt;ut in December.
.
Tbe group's final action was
tbe approval of a $200 grant
and an $800 loan to tbe May
Day collective to belp them
rent buses to take students to
Washington, D. C., last weekend.

Rahbilffmann ofHillel Celebrates
25 YeWs ofllbming witJi Students

--

One of Rabbi Juatin Hofmann's most valued pDssrs ·ems
is a Bible, !...-1. down tbrowlh
four generations of biB family
and b e a r i n g an u.:ription
which biB g r e a t grandfather
wrote in 1840.
His mother gave it to him
wben, as a teenager with an
instinct to survive, be left GerDiany just before tbe outbreak
of World War ll.
·
"By 1938 we began to reelize there was no future life
for Jews in Germany. Everyone
had to lesve to save their lives,
but they were unable to do so.
Someone had to give them an
affidavit of support." Hofmann's
uncle, who ~ a shoe store
in South Bend, Indians, guaranteed support for the hoy, and
his family encouraged him to
leave Germany. ,Ha struggled
to help his parents get out, but
then, "it was 1939, Crystal
Nacht-all the synagogues and
Jewisb shops were burned.
Pressure was put on the American Consulate for visas and a
waiting list for immigrants was
establisbed that w a s several
years long.'' Wben, finally in
1941, biB parents received tbeir
visas and purchased tickets, it
was too late. Tbere were no
ships available, and their last
chance for life eluded them by

onld'ne00::!\fa':':Jl'~o~'s

most precious memories is of
his grandmother readipg to him

the weekly portion of tbe Torah
on Saturday afternoon. "It is
a pleasant memory and one of
tbe few vivid memories of my
grsndmothar. Sbe used to say
then, .ra be a rabbi. I forgot
this for 15 or 16 years until
I came to America. Sometimes
u;o~•~nscious come
Morw T"-n -l&amp;k: ~~em..nts
Tbe Bible, tbe old letters
and photographs, and tbe recollections of Sabbath afternoons
with his family are more than
just nostalgic remnants. There
is pain with tbe memories because Rabbi Hofmann never
saw any of his relatives again;
tbey were killed by tbe Nazis.
But his determination to preeerve their traditions and values has led him to
the
Jewish spirit to two
of
students. For biB dedication, be ,
was given a testimonial dinner
by members of Hillel and tbe
University community on Sunday, May 2.
Hofmann supported himself
throullh tbe last years of higb
echool and through c o II e g e,
working in biB u n c I e!s shoe
store, then
·
to Chicago
and selling ~cateooen·on
Sundays. His main income
came from preparing boys for
Bar Mitzvah-tutoring them in
Hebrew teadings. After grsdu. Tbe State University Con- atins from Rooeevelt Colleae
struc:lion Fund will soon let a a n d the Hebrew 'lbeologicsl
rontnct estimated at $'12.000
p!OVidiDg for rehabilitation of !i:le~be~~t
tbe Reserve Reading Room in UniW!rsity of West Virsinia
Harriman Library.
''I wanted to worlr. with PiooPie
Milstein, Witte!&lt;, Davis and cloee to my own - - l Was
.ABaoc:iaW of Buffalo have de- then 25--and I wanted to worlt
at a l{PiW!rsity because of tbe
.;......:~ tbe renovation, which
imProve ......tilation, light.. .........n-tty for turtMr education
ing and acoustics. According to b.;bid, in a
tbe o.-truction Fund, tbe or- would' be cllmcull~stayed
iginal conwrsion of tbe roam there for two years, then came
from cafetaria-dininlr ball to li- to Bldralo In 1948.
Hls own · l"'fP"e8 bas been
11
had with tbil purpo8ll ol Hillel
• t
ita f~ use, such as ...........f wblch b e - "tries to
kitdlen equipment (~ the .Jewilb atudent
berilqe,
trieo
to
..-t
some
ton, etc.), quany tile~ bi
tbe former eerving area. and a tbe ,_.. ol the .Jewiob atudent
......tilaling syAem shared with wblch are peculiar to him bethe kitchen, which provide&amp; air cause ol biB religion. And
r8dolent ol kitdlen odon. Theee ~ bill loyalty and
ol Identity to tbe .Jewillb
c:oadltioal .... to be corrected. and additioaal tatita provided. Cllllllllllnity."
AB
on tbe contzact is to - U f e H a - a - p d
Rabbi Hofmann bee been tha
be compJeted by September 1,
Ieeder ol Hillel at U/B for 28
197L

:!;IDJ!

'd::J:..

Library Renovation

"::!

;;m-

=

~cha~!'!t.::U: ~

won

0111--0n int&amp;marriap, Rabbi Hofmann saya, "the position of
Hillel is negative and m,y paroonal feetinp coincide. Dilfer-

By SUZANNE METLGER

:··::isor

="~~~di=
:::e.=.f~~

survival of the Jewish ClOIJIDIUo
nity and a program of intermarriage would make that survival more di81cult, il not impoesible."
Rabbi Hofmann feels bill
function is to help students
"tblnlr. +h-·ah tbe problems
associa~-;r;b intermarriage
and then leave them to maie
their own decisioos." Ha admits that it is rare that students
contemplatinf intermarriage
years .and says that its funo. wiH give up tbe tdea. "Tbe MZt
tions have not changed over · step then woUld be to see what
these years, although "tbe tbe poesibility of conversion
methods have changed because would be. This is tbe usual
tbe mood and attitudes of stu- solution."
'!be non-Jewish partner,
dents differ from two decades
ago. Tbe focus of Jewisb stu- usually tbe girl, romesJo him
because
she has encountered
dent life has changed.· U /B
used to be largely a 'trolley car' family opposition, wants to
please
everyune,
and hopes to
arrangement Most students,
about 80 ' percent, were local make a go of tbe inarriage. Sbe
wants
to
know
what
is required
Bullalonians. Now, more are
from out of town, tbe msjority of her to become JeWisli
Family
pressure
drives tbe
from the New Yorlr. metropolitan area. Jewish student&amp; have Jewish boy to tbe rabbi. Normally,
his
parents
are
.strongly
become more activist and want
tbe kind of program which in- opposed to tbe idea of biB intervolves them in action projects, marri8ge, althougb be may be
ratber than tbe 'nice' socials satisfied with iL
Tbe major problem, says
and teas, and tbe dress-up
dances. Tbis type of function Rabbi Hofmann, revolves about
!he children. "At tbe time of
is no longer attractive."
their marriage, tbe Couple does
In tbe Hillel program known not tblnlr. this will be .a probas Operation Greenlight, for lem, but as soon as a chilC is
example, students work with born, the feelings are no longer
emotionally . handicapped cssual and emotions b8come
youngsters. Other projects have deeply involved. Bitterness ma,y
included tbe Russian Jewry arise, especially in tbe situacampaigns, tbe Israel Inde- tion of a Catholic-Jewish Dllll'
pendence Celebration, and an riage. Many couples choose
upcoming Fast for Freedom.
Unitarianism as a compromise. n
Such a marriage can "worlr.
Rabbi Hofmann conducts
out,"
says Hofmann, bUt "what
shabbos (Jewish Sabbath) services every Friday evening . is meant by worlr. out? One of
tbe
parties
must CODJDromise
"Tbe style is not always uniform. It dependa on tbe stu- his view and tbe questiOn is-dents; some favor a reformed wbetber this Is tbe most happy
service, a more creative, non· kind of situation they could
traditional one. Otber8 want tbe have in life. Tbere are always
more traditional, more CQDSerV- exceptions--«xnetim it worlr.s
ative approech. Services are not and aometimeoi it ~·l"
hound by any one group." He An ·-lnJud81om
Rabbi Hofmann feels enoourdescribes his sermons as "presentations of an educational aged by tbe interest wblch torather then an emotional na- day's atudenta are abowing in
ture." Following tbe religious Judaism. '-rhey have an inservice is an Oneg Sbabbat, or creasing ~Vl~. not neosocial hour, featuring refresh.. esaarily in tbe
menta, speakers and friendly but in the a
mixing. Rabbi Hofmann has al- tradition. One of the manifestaso performed atudent marriages tions of Ibis tlend is the inand ronduc:ted circumcisions at tereet ibown in couues on
Jewish studies," including 11&amp;Hillal House.
brew libd bill own bulletin baanl
One of tbe rabbi's most im- rourae, Introduction to .Judaiam,
portant functions is COIIIII!al- wblch bas 40 students.
ling. It's always }leen "an oninterest, Hofmann,
going'--thini" and cleels with is Tbe
part ol a .aean:b for and a
atudents' CllDC8fD8 with Iarael redlr:mation of idantity, and
- · bow to get there and what. "tbe recognition that one
Jll'OifiUDII are available - and should .know about bill laiwith the QUIJIItions of inter- tage." On the part of the 11011maJ'I"'iqe and conversion to .Jew, it's "curiosity."
Judaism.
Rabbi· HofmanD boasts that
four memben ol his family are
enrolled at U/B. His wife,
Solie; wbo emigrated from
Germany with her family in
Ballots f~ the election of a 1939,
CODJpleted ber B.A. deSUNY Seaator and three Sen- gree bere
after tbe birth 01
ator Altamataa, dlslributed to their third child,
is now worlr.all nan-healib aciBDce full-time
~
~~';'&amp;le
depee,
prolaBional std. must be - .
turned to the loc:al Faculty
SeDate Ollca, 135 Hayes, by
is IIPI!DIIinll ber junior year at
tomanow, May 7.
tbe ~ UniW!rsity in .JeruGecqe Hochfio.-ld, ~ salem; Rena 8., the --.1 In
Stern and Richard Sioellmw line, Is a freshman and Hann8h
are amdidates for 'the- _,_ s. will begin ber freshman year
t.orial poot f"" a term expirfnl at U/B in l!eptl!mber•
.June 30, 1974. Vying for tbe alFw tha Holmannl, HllJel,
temale posts .... David Hoi- too, Ia a family dalr. Durin&amp;
~ and Marjorie MD (.......,_ ~. "my ·dear wife pre'year -!arm). Marilla Giles lllld pouad 100 - - b lltudoal8,
Pierre Hart (one-year term) Ill,}' two clauihtara waitand Walter s - and Marvin ...... and I the !Julboy,".
Hematein (tine-year term). ·
Rabbi llolJMnn -

--

cu1":f

SUNY SeDate \bte

Tbeiroldeetda\llh~

R&gt;ur Cited By
Management
Three stUdents and a Bullalo

businessman were · honored at
the annual. Alumni-Student..
Faculty Reunion Banquet of

the School of Management,
Friday, at the Packet~
Christopher P. Noun was
presented tbe Outstanding
Graduate Student Achievement
Award and J - B . Wenzel,
tbe Outstanding Undergraduate Achievement Award. Raymond A. Brenner received tbe
WaU Street Journal Medal and
John L. Hettrick, president of
tbe Marine Midland BankWestern, was named Niagara
Frontier Business Man of tbe
Year.
A 1957 business graduate of
Lehigh, Hettrick joined Marine
Midland as a trainee that same
year, and served in various

:'.ei'o~~ .:'ti~~=

In 1964, after a series of promotion&amp;, be was named executive
vice presidenL In September
1970, be became presideD!,, Ha
was cited for his ·inlelrity •and • ·
leadership in civic affairs.
Noun, wbo doubles ·as business manager of tbe U/ B Department of Music wbila still a
graduate student, was cited for
oup tanding scholastic e&gt;rcellence and for utrac:urricular
contributions to tbe School of
Management and to the University. He attended Duke
University and toolr. a degree in
civil engineering from U/B before going to graduate echool.
A Lackawanna resident,
Wenzel bas been active in
many programs involving tbe
School of Management and tbe
University with the community,
including Pilot 100, throu8h
which student&amp; accompany _policamen in patrol cars. Ha wa&amp; •
also inlltrumental in creetinJ
dialogue be-.. various atudeat groups and tbe Buffalo
buslneas community.
Brenner, a MenageaJPnt .,_
ior, was preeented the WaU
S~net JGUmDJ. Sil- Medal
Student AcbieYement Award
for being conaistentl ilamed to
tbe Dean's List
his col-

oturL.,

~':,";; award preeenta-

tions, President Rebert L. Ketter and M•rw.,..._t Dean
Richard G. Bnmdeaburs apoloe
brWiy to the banquet audieDce.
N- officen of tbe Manaae1181t School Alumni Aladation were introduced - Galus
M. l'lilrnef, president elect; Lee
E. Carlson, sacretary-v-anr,
Carl A. BlomtJoq, .Jiapb A.
Bettinger, Fred c. Blatdlly,
I - C. Cox, and Richard
H. LiDtleman, diJectors.

Chisolm Remains
w.

Dr. lawrence
a.lmlm
has- been reappoinled clbeciGr
of the Progr8in in ~
Studies, President Rotat L:
Ketter has amnmoed _
Dr, Chisolm cmne. to UIB
in 1968 from Yale Uru-.ity
wbere he dhected a simllllr JIIO'
gram and was a member of tbe
faculty for 11 yeara.

�7·

. Upportunity' for~Medicine
Randalls Inaugural
Theme GREPORTS
.
.
ON
students in the
personalty provide the
"Today'&amp;

not

ity to the demal)ds of a private
practice," hut today's physician
cannol
Dr. Randall's theme Wll6 the
"opportuiiity" facing the medicsJ profesei011 today. "As physicians we realty do not ;want
politicians, social -planners or
anyooe other than the health
professions -to he developing
plans and systems that are to
provide adequate and comprehensive health services," he
said. But, he asked, ''What are
we going to do about it?"
Scoring a trend towaid supraspecialties in the field of obstetrics and gynecoloiY, he said
that "the concerns of the vast
majority of our patients and
the concerns of !!..- seeking
health care of the · underprivileged in our communities do
not evidence need" for such apecialisls.
''Our patients' major need
will oontinue to he the availsbility of the physician able and

health seritces needed, we will
have need of the ability and
~ to cfuect the provision of Ibis cue," Dr. Randall said.
~alone,!"' aaid,.de;
sp1te an m med1C81
school enrollments. will not m
the near future he in sufficient
supply to provide the increased
health -..ices .now being demandect NOD-physician types
of per8IIIIIM!I most he utilimd
he I11'JI8CI. as part of a toW
team under the aupervision and
directioD of PhYsicians.
But, he asbd, "Are we ready
to share our income with added
numbers of hM!th personnel?
Are we ready to acx:ept the expense of the iishility we will
assume if others become part of
our pract:;ce?"
U we are, he said to his fellow physicians, we should soon
he able to individually accept
msponsibitity for the care of
increased numbers of patients
in private practice as well as
to participate in a group practice or clinic operation open to
"considerable numbers of patients in community facilities."
U not, "there is littie doubt
that the governmental health
corps now being proposed, or
an e&gt;:panded public health
corps type of operation, will he
obliged to help a variety of
trained physician-aasistants b&amp;come licensed, registered and
able to assume varying responsibilities as virtually autonomous providers of health care
at varying levels."
In the latter event, he said,
the medical l(&gt;rofession will lose·
the opportunity to inlluence de-

extatt that · the-•pbysicUui· can-

health care. .·

hMith sCiences and today's
jlracllliilllers can hardly avoid
recDIIIIition of responsibility for
the IIIIIDY who do not have
~to needed hii8.Jth
cue, Dr. Clyde L. Ran1WJ.
vice president of the Faeuity
of Health ScieDces, aaid m San
Francioco Tu.i&amp;y mhis inatellation addNI1B "" 22Dd president of the American CoiJep
of Ohetetricians and Gynecologists:
Today's doctor miiSt he aware
that he has been and is continulag to he educated at a considerable coet to the Pl1blic. Dr.
Randall aaid. "An older ol
ation may have felt ~

restrictina peraonai1'&lt;!11P01l8ibil-

i!J~ :..,~~=~"1: ~.=::i~o!:'..d~an~·

Founders' Day Schedule,_ _ __
(~ troapt¥i 1. &lt;Dl. 6)
. that poet last september.
In addiWin to the .Alunmi
presentation!~, the banquet will
also provide the setting for
eleven _.,;a) 125th Anniversary Awards for service ·to bipter eduCation, the University
and/or a specif.ic profell8ional
or commumty field. Recipients
of these University citations
are not being announoed mad-

vance: ·
Dr. -

Tbe Samuel P. Capen Award
for contributions to the University by an alunmu&amp;, named in
boDor of the former Chancellor,
will he ...-ted to Dr. Horton
"who hall deYOted 45 years to
making history come ali..., for
.....,..tiona of University at
Bullalo students," as the award
citation .reads.
_ Dr. Horton has
served UDder six administrationa since he hepn '-'bing
at Bullalo the 8UIIIIII8r efta his
JII'aduatioll with boDors. As the
Um-.ity marahal, he has carriedthecaremonlalmaoe(wbich
he 8IJIIIIIted and helped deBilnl at the '-1 of~tion and"
• ...._t ~
sions since 1961.
He holdia the M.A: and Ph.D.
...._
,..., Harwrd liDd is
an 8llplll't 011 the hiatcry of the
Niapra P'nlatl.. He served as
~ of the Jlepoo.- of
History lor l!O )18818.
Kart.oft, 88, is known to place
more .....a-;. on the atuay "of
l&gt;ialory titan Oil eummt eWota.
He elated that jf students
leam bow - aved III'Cihlems
mthe IJMt. .,_ will Le hettlllr
able to Cl1lllmd with the riddles
of the ~ His familiaritY
with tbie 11pne and of
the . . . haw IIUide them ..,.
reel to ....,..
. llludonta, hi&amp; award
citation
lliN. F -

Mrs. FurnM, widow of the
former U/B dlanceUor IIDd
~t, wDl receiwt the Walter P. Coci1re Award, p_, from
time to !1- to a DCJD.alumDua

GJ&gt;EOPLE

~~r,';.!{""t'~ty"f~~;

What Socraieo Should Haw Said
to Thntoymachua," Uniwnity of
Rochester.

OFF {:AMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

DIL NEWTON OA&amp;YBil, profeuor~

m.

J'OSICPB A. CAPUTO., professor,
cbemiotry, appointed to the -rd ·
of directon, .General M o d u I e
Corporation of Ladatw&amp;DDa. The
co_..., maDufactwea modular
houoiq.
1:&amp;. )(Al)(QN ll. OOBKN, &amp;.IIOciate
piof-.r, pediatrico, a p =
=~..t~~r of, ~on Ma.
17-June 1 at the'fl'.:i:'nity
ical School. Jerusalem, brae!.

M':l

~~~=~ ::te:~Je::

ed cbairmaD, B o d y Mechanico
Section, Eastern District. American Asaociation for H e a 1 t h,
Physical Education and Recreation. Philadelphia. PeiUISylvania.

PRESENTATIONS
DR. ERNST B.ADIAN,

professor, his-

~.'!.' =:rt;~C::!n~~~:r.

ence of Ancient Historians, Ann
Arbor, Michipn.
DB.. M.ABVIN D. BERNS'I'EIN, professor, history, "Simple Myopia:
Univenities and Historians," keynote speech at honon convocation, State University College,
Fredonia.
D1L IOHN COB.OORAN, associate profetl80r, pbilooophy, "Meaninp of
Implication," Reoearch Group
Conference, University of Pennsylvania; " A Mathematical Model

~;1~tot:~~Y~~~:;e::d

Hammond Society, Johns Hop·
kina.

DR. PAUL DIESING,

professor, pbi-

":2.?£:;
;;.s';l:!~ ~~~
!imvenity of Kentucky symposium.
E. w.

JXYri

vice praident. operationa and system., talk on man-

agerial and administrative diff'erencee between public univenities

whose outstanding service to
the University is deemed by
the Alunmi Association as being ~ ~~=v:t:a~::.· Finanworthy of "the very hiBI-t DR.. IEROME 8. P'INK. coordinator
commendation." Tbe award is of student affairs and servi.ces and
named in honor of the late
Cooke, attorney, member ~t!d ~;;.~~·Jfb;
of the U/8 Council, acting
chanceUor and the man who
spearheaded two successful
capital gift. campaigns during
the 1920's.
Mrs. Furnas will he reoognized for her ''more than 17
years of loyalty to the University," although she is a grsduate of Purdue with a master's
'The 31st annual Spring Clindegree in nutrition.ic and Alumni Day for the
As first lady of the Univer- School of Pharmacy Alumni
sity during her late husband's Association is being held today
12-y e a r administration, Mrs. at the Executive Motor Inn,
Furnas accepted ~ social 4243 ~ Streel
and CiviC responsibilities. She
Two vw'·..:~. speakers are the
has remained acti
..........:.nv
....,.
in her mtereit m"\,~ main features of the &lt;m&lt;Hiay
M. . Furnas Emerpocy lDo!n prosram. Dr. Ernest W. SaFund, which she Mtabliohed ward, a physician, former medwith the University at Qu«alo icsl director for the Kaiser
Foundation in 1966 . to help Foundation, will _ . , at 2
women graduate students at p.m. His topic:~ ConU/8.
cepts of Health Service OrganToday Mrs. Furnas over- :r!..~"~:m~~Mr~
sees the C. C. Furnas Schol- __ _._ -~-••-• Um''--' States
lll1lhip Fund of .t he Foundalion, .-.-........ ..._.,...,
""'
wbidi was started ' - her bus- Department of Health, Educa~3
lion and Welfare, will address
hand while he alive. She the III'OIID. His topic: ''What
is &amp;leo ca11ect1na hi&amp; o111cia1 and ~ Can Blrpect From
peraonal _ . for induaion in Future Govemment Sponsored
a C.C. Furnas Memorial Roam' Health .,____ ..
Oil the campus where ~
• ·-·will he avaliahle to scbolan "of ;.,;.~~~~e~ .
a11
~~
Dr

Mr.

Ketter Talks

AtPhormncy

l}feet Tonight

mtensta.

8lnquot ........

'.;.~

. " ...,
...tent

~.

Tbe hsDquet prosram will ....._.
aJso IDclude: remartat by Pr.f- ~ of pliarmacy at the
cleat Ketter and nr. Oliwtr P. ~~conclude the
Jon e a, chalnllan, ~t
Dr:' Robert L. Ketter, nresiof Ana~-tilit the dent of .the Um-sity, win he
MedlcsJ
the Uiaivw- the main ,_ . at -the evedivisiOil; IIDd IDUiic, nm~
Tbe .._ of If'!"
... . .....
Ray '~Bera School
Pltarmac:y, Dr. MiU/8 llludalt, with _ . u . chMI A. ~ will also
- b y students Patdda Guts- BpMk brlefty. ._'lbis 8l!th anwfllar, piano, Gall MDIII&lt;off, nual Fbarmacy ~~-Aseo-the
t - , and RidiUd BBI, dnnaL . clatioD ctina. w"' .........
Jobn CoriJelt of WBEN-nr ~ of the 50 )'1!111' class
will he t~.
· (1921).
~

:::x.::;

- ml -

ee.;.

Student and the ~
tor," EDtPire State Collotie. , the
new SUNY aperimental open
uni..,..;ty.
DL ANTONY .....W, YioitiJI,J prof...
oor, pbilooophy, "PoycbciaDalyoia
and F.......m," and ''Tbecny and
Falsification." Uniwnity of Oklahoma; "Delinquency and Men-

pbilooophy, chsirman of a oympooium 'oponsored ~the Society

~!1.:.:-':&amp;~~i~ APAli~=:
Chicago.

·
GEORGE BOUBANI, profeeaor,
philosophy, " Ibn Hum as an
Ethical Thinker," conference on

.DR.

!:~\"~~ ~~'lp,~ ¥l:i:

losophy in Medieval bl.am," con·
ference on lelamic Philoaophy
and Science, Columbia Univenity,
New York City.
DR.. ARTHUR KAlS£It. dean, admis·
sions. " Education For All - A
Critical Vie w;• Federation of
Home-School Associations of the
Diocese of Buffalo, annual spring
luncheon.
DR. RlCHAKD KOEHL, BNOciate pro.

~f~ c~~~:o:~~~=

Hu.me," joint colloquium of the
Philoosophy Department and the
18th Centuey Association. Me·
Master Univwoily, Hamilton. On·
tario.
DR. EDWARD C. LAi.mmT, professor,
pediatrics, ..Discu.seion of Sudden
Death," European Pediatrics Cardiologists Association and the International Society.of Cardiology,
Dublin, lreland.
DR. 1 o B N PEilADO'M'O, professor,
classics, "Myth YB. Marchen in

~~Odf'o"::~ ~ ~~~~:

ence; "The Ocfyuey and AriatoUe'a .Narrative Categories," Ar·
istotle Symposium.

AWARDS
profa.or.
medicinal cbemiotry and biocltem-

OIL TBOKAB 1 . BAJIDOS;

~ e~~·~· tb:-.='n!':

Pluumaceutical Association. 'The
prize honors the eenior author of
the best ocienti.6c report publish·
eel during the pteceding y~ in
the APA's Journt1l of PluunuJ·
ceutical Sciencu. Dr. Bardos'
article dealt with the anti.·tumor
activi~ of a series of compounda,
including the experimental anti·
cancer-drug AB-132.
GRACE BLUJIBEBC, junior. School
of Law, West Hornbook Award;
fint prize, Clinton Scholarohipo.
BHEB&amp;Y B. BOWEN, aenior cbem·

=

~~bo~C:rle/i::;, ~

the National Council of Alpha
Lambda Delta, a schol8otic honor

:~;~~·~~CI:: ~e~~~~Wen~eve::~
terpretation of Hi.Dduiam." School
of Oriental and African Studies,
Univenity of London. England;
"Phifoeopbical Views of the Amer·
ican Role in Southeast Aaia,"
Alfred Univenity.
DB. SVETOZAR 81'01 ANOVIC,

visiting

professor. pb.iloeophy, ..T b r e e
M o de ls of Post Revolutionary
Development," Yale Univenity;
" Reftections on Marsism and Socialism." International Conference
on Political Thought and Action,
Graduate Center, CUNY/New
York; three lectures, Booton Univenity.
OIL HENRY W AGNBB, auiatant pro·
lessor, pediatrics, "Subpulmonic
Ot.truction in Tranapoeition of
the Great Arteries Due to Mem·
branoua Aneurysm of the Ven-

!~~~~uroK:i~~~

and the International Society of
Cardiology, Dublin. lreland.

PUBLICATIONS
DB.. WILLIAM

s. AU.&amp;N_;JJrofea80r,

!t".!"~~~~

&amp;,"!:';,

the
Resiotance to Hitler," accepted
for publication in TM Gf!rman.

~= li!{,"J.!::;.::~·
DR. .IAJOI:B 8 . BRADY,

uailtant pro--

feooor, philooophy, " Abolish the
liaaa.nity Defenae - No!", Holl$·
ton Law Review.
DB.. 1011N B. COII:OO&amp;Uf, auociate

the deoipation.

B£BNABD DODBXY, !fOUlAif .L Ia
BLANC, 8AKt.JBL 1. PALIB.UrfO, .IOB!f

c. BPrrzMlLLIZ, otudenlo, School
of' Law• ..bared second pri&amp;e,
Sprague Scholanhipo.
MICHAEL C A L VIC T T IC, ff~Mhman.

School of Law, Weot Hombook
Award; fint prize, Sprague Scholanhipo.
BAB&amp;Y GABSI(JJ(, DANIEL .1. xtJK..
RAY, BRUC&amp; NOit'I'ON, NOitllAN 808ENIIDG, GaGOitY B'I'.DOI, ltudenta.

School of Law, ohared oecond
prize, Clinton Scholanhipo.
D&amp;. PAUL GUINN, aeociate prof_..
sor, hiltory, recipient of eenior

~~~~~==-t

DR.. a.::MtG JOGDS, profe.or, hia-

tory, recipient of oenior f.o-oltip, National E~ for
the Humanitieo. for oompuatift
study of tnmdo in contmnporary
· ru.toriopapby.
,.....,. lliOOUIW&gt;I, ota1f painter,
maintenaace, a w a r d e d Silver
Beever, the hichMt awud for
=~-to tht! Boy
NOIIIIUl&lt; - - . . junior, School

of Law, eo.._ .luril Secundum
Student Award.

EXHmiTS

8

:::!:';r, ~i:!'J'·A·;::ri: ~
MlltMmotica Monthly.
DL

~ _.,INS, auociate
p~phy, " A Pbiloo-

profeooor,

~andc.!':"~t!..,I.fo!~ts!:

ator Harold Hugheo, Ce..ur Ocauional Pap#!r, Center for the
Study of Demi&gt;cratic Inatitutiono,
Santa Bubara, . California.
DR. KBWTOM GAJr¥D, profe.or,
P~J!~"Pantheiom-snd

On·

~~~ ·~· l&lt;halimc
...O.te prof811Dr, pbilooopby, "An Eumination cif C..l. DUc-'o Pbilooophy

DL - - .......,

of Relipm." T-liorw of the
Ch~Jr/a

S. Poilu Society.

.~
. -:.ri~~=·

Etltieo of. Abd at.labbar, Ox-

ford · Uaive..,~

Pro.. -

=-ry~~~-I:i:t
Morality in c:.choolonkia," In-

-rt

10 HEAR PRESIDOIT
President
L ~ will
students and foculty
members of the Fecutty of Hulth
Sciences fnlnl 1·3 p.m., MOIII!Oy,
May 24, In W ~. A preVIously
annouricecl session. &amp;eheduted for
May 18 In cepen, lies been con·
celled.

- k to

�8

GWJ;EKLY COMMUNIQUE
.OCipoft

to

pullllc;

••Open

·-In

to -

lhe ~

oaint, lhe ....... of lhe ncia1

far-.,._
~-::n~-:!rJ:~
In
tlte CowW-y ot.:,{?.'br'' Eye, went
to .ay:
oponeored by the
· J)epolt--

- - Matzpr, ISl-2228,

THURSDAY~

Plot-• ... - -

allhe
8olbaaDe ....... .a-t l h e cullunl eopoda of Son;Jqe, lhe
of lhe om- (Afriema

:r-J.;.ad~~7!

of tho - - .

4tCipon ....,. to--.~

l'.i It: -:.:rr~ ~~

OD

- t and the Office of Cullunl
Affain, 234 Norton, 8: 30 · p.m.,

....:··~ "':..!. ~~ ~ ~

~

-~=:!,~~~"!
Room, 10 &amp;Del 11 : 30 p.m.

c.&gt;LOGIC.U.

8CIENC:ZS

~· :

170, Bell Focility, 3 p.m.

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM• :

Dr. T . D.

~~!~~;Jni!=it;~
SCALING PBOPZRTII:&amp; 1N e-p

SCAT~

=h~!teH~teW~te~

3:30 p.m.

::-e~~ &amp;:"~'!t":i te,.u.:;

a

ad

SUNDAY-9
dou-

Eye-Con0-Sphar, featuring Raindanoe,
SPIUNG A&amp;T8 FI8TIVAL• :

f-'f• ~~·K=" :t.,~~

aculptreee, "Self-Obliteration," aceompenied by U/B Percueoion
Enoemble, Buffalo Stole Quad,
4 f.;.m. Stan Vanderbeek, artiot.

~Z· ;.,r~o&lt;W.[:.~ill!;.,!
~!f.io~~ FJJ;:;re "C,roo1~
~N~==-~o~~~ and
11:,30 p.m.
BIOCBJ:IUBTRY BUaNA&amp;• :
~LM.

Dr.

Vu Deenen, biocbem-

IIIWIII IITilUGYVIII:, G-22 Capen. 4

p.m.

IJU)(AN

nLKB* :

TM"

M~d

Wo"""'

DDUNBIONB INS'J'I'I'Uft•:

Brother David S.K. Steindi-Rut,

IV

..-.u.•: Roc:beoter, doable-

~r,

compao, 2 p.m.

Dr: -

B. Taylor, ~ potbolouSt. Low. u~ Bebool Oi
MecliciDe, M-.;, &lt;a~.

....,..._ or ...... OYAIIY, 218 Ca-.
3 p.m.

roiSIGN 8TUIIDfT APP&amp;aa OOPI'D

BOilll*: 10 -row-ad, 3:8()..6:80
p.m.

acrr.u.• : Manba JIM..
oett, cello. Worb by Bft!'rOi,
Brehmo &amp;Del Bach. Baird, 8 :30
p .m., free.

CUDUA.ft

. CIIEKIBTilY COLLOQtJIIJll*:

E. L

Allred, Uni..,nity of Utah, ' tillo
to be onnoiiJICOCL

THURSDAY-13
B08PJTAL KANAG181AL AND IIJtJPD.
V'I80RY Dln'ELOPidN'I' 'l"a.a'BONJ:

~PL&amp;ru.-:,;;!u!o? w..=t

.rna

8£, IF THn KNOW WHAT'S

~o==~·r.;~
receivinf locations, 1:30 p.m.
VAJtSlTY B48EBALL. : Nia,pra. dou-

bleheader, campuo, 1: 30 p.m.
OOLIAIGrtrK

IIUSICUJI

OONCDT• :

(Jean-Luc GodoJd, 1965) . Tho

Benedictine monk &amp;Del otudent of
Zen Buddhiom, ~ hio

John Thomae, oouduclor. Baird,
8: 30 p.m., free.

ud ber lover; ODd findinc much
tbe oame ootiofoctiono from each.
A oerioue work devoted olmoot

W;~~=
~te~~;
Hill College, 8: 15 p.m.

IN'IBNATION.U. INS"''ll"t1ft OP

~?a: '!J~;rthe~h=

excluoiwly to the intimacy and
excitement of ..love."
Band of Outoidero (Jeen-Luc

~'!1~~~
Frano Kalka," tbio io a
matu!e work by a filmmaker who
clearly knowo not only what be

d:':~ :n.~ "f:.h~~

=!

oouroeo oveileble to him.
Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
DANe&amp;

147

aa::n'AL-IJDIONSftATION •:

.preoented by the · Student Aaoociation &amp;Del tbe Danae Club. Worb
by otudente. Clark .Gym, 8: 30
p.m., free. Aloo May 8.

SATURDAY-8

vi8WI

on a

apiritual meeting

advanced,
oome leeching, Fillmore Room,

BALKAN POLl&lt; DANCING:

8 : 30 p.m.
Clt&amp;A.TIVE A880Cl4TI: lllCITAL

vm•:

In PGIIion, a concert of motion
and oound-. Domuo, 1695 Elm·
wood A:w., 8 :30 p.m., free.
An0-8&amp;\ZILlUf PLAY• : lee Saturdoylioting.

MONDAY-10 -

bock oinpr. Suhtitleo, 140 ~
3: 30 and 7:30 p.m. General admiooion $1.50, otudente $1.00.

1il&gt;larY

=i~=~:~r~%to~~~

PeTIDOIMIDi. uhihit of worb by

Couneeloro and the Behavior
Modification Study Group of tbe
Rehahilitotion Couneelor Education Program. Conference Theatre, Norton, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

:ff.~t.:rtu!':tt f~t~-

TIII&amp;APY

~
J¥ .!:F.:~~=
1: 30 p.m.
IV JWIEIIALL*:

Nialara

~oyrn,~,- ~=

!""rb by oontanporarioe, - ~y. a n d -teroolon, tluuach

TEL&amp;-

IDCA8 WORK UPLA.NAftOK AND
oaauPTION OP DIIOTIVATION AND
-.u.ri'Y OKIENTATION PltOGRAKB,

ad

INTERVIEWS
J'IUDAY 7: Malone C..t:NJ
.School District (Frenklin) Opportunitioe only in
ocience, elementa.Jy and 8e00Ddary
art. Hayeo C.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS

~':i~JaLli:T~iro!:.""~u!'.\::

~~.=;.;. ~~

BUP~

PALO: worb by Mn. Chancbalekha Viowao. 1260' Dela-re
Ave., May 9, S-5 p.m. Ref-'&gt;menta.
•

WORKBHOP: an introduction worbbop on behavior

Schaeffer, BOW. TO llAJit&amp; BIUGBT

The UniversitY&amp; Chief Ac·
c:ountont's 0! f ice has an- INDW&lt; ....... , Aradlocna, otor~ ~procedures for obriDe . Sharmila Tqore, Rajeoh
toiDlDg pnor approval from the KhaJmo, Sujeet K,_.. etc. etc.
Diviaion of the Budget for out- . Produced
directed 1:7 sl.aidi
of-State tmvel.
s.-nt. A . tole ~f ouh1ime love
'Ibis is in line "th leJPs)a
and wonhip; wumer of three
._._ --~--' d _ ""the
• fi1mfare owardo for beot piclwe,
~. ~- l1f!Dll
?J"""t beot actre. and beot mofe play-

ART EXHIBIT

BEitlVIOB

OCCUPATIONAL

~

Uftl.ll&amp;ftiK ~ponoored by ~

VAIC8l'I'Y B.ABDALL• : Colgate,
bleheader, campus, 1 p.m.

1-4 p.m. MUOJC Electronica Viva,

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

. . . . . , . . IJf

Dr. Robert E . SleYenoon, GI088

·=~~-

Inc., "Life CycJ:'i231 Norton:

SONY'"_. . . DiYlDm ol tbe

,...., . _ , - -

f.=z~!~

TllAHBPORT OF SUBPENI&gt;at SED1KENT8 0\'18 OONTIH&amp;H'TAL BHELVI'B
AS AN.U.YJZD F110M GDUNI AND
APOLLO BP.US PHOTOO&amp;APHY. D-

. . . .,:. .

=~

atalllliladDcolmchan~

nJD: -

i - . it io the dnma of the~
-qinal penon two
culturee, the Lotin
the African • • • one can arwue with the
eolutioll, the return to Africa .•.
But from the point of view of
theater, thia return to Africa ia
petbetic; by meano of the drink
of Exu &amp;Del .....tne., a whole
world retumin~ to the darlmof ite eoul. _ .."

FRIDAY;_7

clatlla • - oll'loer.
, . ... . _ tbe - - pnc..... . . ......_... for out-d.... 4laftl WID COiltinue to ,.

,_,_

WEDNESDAY-12

PATIIOWOY IamJD:

liftiNG OIICRa'I'RA•· Jeeae
Levine, conductor, Baird· Recital
Hall, 8:80 p.m., free.

'lbe procedure requires
_ , little modifialtioll ol exist. . pnatb. 'lbe only differ·
will be the requirement
lor • brief justificalioG of the
tnwl to be typed an the Autharialian for -'travel Form, UD·
cllr ~ ol lrl{l-" .
.
Wblla apeciflc cnterla to be
- - lor approval have .DOt
.
_ l8leued ~ AlbaD,y, it
Jadbted that • sn-&gt;1&amp;·
lba ol a paper at a p~o~eaan.
a1 ar acholarly -aatioll
....... N08he fa¥anble CDIJIIid. . . . . . . would .-..laDce

.......

: . - . ~ 82 .-......

U/B

I..epolative ae!lllOD which reqwns that all such uavel be
IIJIIIIOW!d by this central a1ency_.

____

r,;:-p.m.Hall. a-,. HID

a...,...
A8IOCIAft DCifAL m•:
...... 8obl, 'liaiiD. a.iJd, 8:10

manif-tioa of •
wriltell by a Brusilian of color
. . . one am judp the play either
{rom tbe pomt of view of ideM,

free.

Travel Rules
Are OuJJinRx1

=-

~­

ity, douhlel-'er, eompua, 2 p.m.

~ f:ear.~t ~~~~

Moravia'• DOYel" u a bourpoia
melodrema hoe been tronofoimod
by Goilard into o modem trqedy
by , _ , . of on epic pi'808Dtotioa
ol " ' - - n and a pecuJior dre-tic oonotruction that operoteo
oimulm-ly at - r o l Jeve1o.
1•7 Diefendorf, 8 and 8 p.m.,
free.

Pooten &amp;Del broadsideo from lhe
Poetry Collection, 2nd floor balcony, Lockwood, 9 a.m.-&amp; p.m.,
tluuach May.

NOTICES

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 2 - NO. 30'

APRIL 29, 19n

CamPus Open House
Slated for S~day .

--

-In--

........... - - - to .... oprtnc - ' but It

-"t

tum out

tt.t - at - llatunlaY• U/8 ..-t aplnat B.-port State
at - , Flald. lila - · Ed Fuc:ha had to ....... men INn

'Spring' 8port3?

dlata,_ run durtna a naar blizzard.

New Calendar Provi~ for Pre¥ule E~,
Early May Conclusion fdr the Academic Year
Nut.yaar, U/B studenta can
leaw for Cbri8tmaa break with
no woniea .bout aama to came
beck "'- Tbay'JJ ... bawt bet-

OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY CALEMDAR
1!171 SUmmar W a e k - - June 7 -July 16
II Six June 28- Auauat 6
.
• .. Ill J!!~&lt;-- ~- July 19 - Alllll!t- 27
FIIIST IEIIES'IDI, 1!171·72
'
lliiai~Wtion o.y......Miilard Aiimora CoiL W., Sept 1
~Six

!r-.rt;:-..J:-~ ~

...
-.~,. ~- .JC et.naai
..,. the leMIIt of a lt!Yio!ed Uni·

versity calomdar wbicb Grad. &amp; Undera...t.
. T., W., Sept. 7, 8
·
Th., Sept. 9
policy. 'Ciaaaes Instruction Beeins
Columbus
Dey--(lbMrvad
Holidey
M., Oct. 11
will· lilu1 the 'Ibunday after
M., Oct. 25
Labor Day, 8ei&gt;tembe&lt; 9, 111111 Veterans' ~ Holiday
Thankstllvina
Roc:ess
Beains
ot
Close
nm UDliJ mld-llecomber. Exof a w.. Nov. 24
ams will end em December 29.
Resumed
M., Nov. 29
a - will start spin Janu- a..w., Dec. 15
ary 13 111111 BPrinl semester ex- Instruction Ends at Close of Classes
Th .. Doc. 16 · Th .. Dec. 23
ams will be completed by May S e - . . ~inotions
9.
SECOND 8DI£STEJI
1be reviMd calendar entails Rqistration Days-Millard Aiimo"' Coli. W., Jan. 5
simply a ahiftins of starting
Grad. &amp; Underarod.
T., w.. Jan. 11, 12
~~~~~~~ 1be number Instruction Bealns
•
Th .. Jan. 13
of •
•
days will reWnhlngton's Birthday--&lt;lbserved Holidey
M., Feb. 21
main the 8111De, Dr. Arthur Mld·SernMter Recess Beains ot Close
Kaiser, directot of admissions
of Classes
S., Apr. 1
111111 recorda, pointa oul Holi- Classes Resumed
•
M., Apr. 10
days will remain stable also Instruction Ends ot Close of Classes
F., Apr. 28
l includinB BPrinl vacation). Finel Examin11tions
M., May 1 • T., May 9
1be f a J J - even includes COMMENCEMENT
Saturday, May 13
the addition of two loot weekend&amp;, Columbus Day 111111 VetpartlaHy taken aue of by a
. erans' Day.
Other SUNY institutions are
reli8nce on mailing. The also 'turning to a revised forTtie early c1osinJ date of the heavier
of faJJ registration will be mat-for the academic year. The
...,war adiOOI year will also bulk
done this way and much of College at Fredonia will go on
enable 8WIIIDIIr ~ to ln- spring
will be processed during a schedule similar to U / B's In
. . _ ita inatructlonal _..
the faJJ, Dr. Kaiser aays. Thus, the faJJ. And Buffalo State is
from the - · · · · 12 - a to
periods .have been sched14 ......u, ~ it up to par shorter
uled for the registration process: =.:.u~'::CU"'~~t sewith the other """
1beae revlslona are ezpected
to malle for the eft!Cieot
. . of tb. within the academic
for sludomta 111111 faculty
next fall 111111 will continue as

a

.,...,.._t

1be University will open its
doo.rs to the public at 1 p.m.
Sunday, May 2, as the initial
campus-wide event of the 125th
Anniversary year.
V-isitors to this firs t open
house In U / B's history can
choose from over 100 exhibits
and activities which are scheduled throughout the c:!!t1. both at
Main Sln!et and at Ridge Lea.
A minimum of 10,000 people,
"with a strong poosibility of as
many as ..0,000,'' are ezpected, ·
aooordlng to Jobn Bued&lt;, open
bouse chairman.
Most of tbe actlvity ..riJt be
cantered at Main Saeet from
1 to 5 p.m. Activities at Norton
Hall will, however, continue
Into the ewning.
For DOWCOmerS on campus,
lnfoltlllldqa booths staffed by
studen!.J"!des will dis,.ibute

air U/ B Band concert, a drug
Information booth manned by
the New York State Narcotics
Agency, a play and jazz COli·
cert sponSored by the Office .of
Minority Student Allain, a
play by the Nickel
and
other musical, danclns 111111 reoreational evenla In Norton.
At Ridge Lea, the Scbool of
Law a n d Jurisprudence will
host a reception from 2 to 5
p.m. for members of the Erie
County Bar Association 111111 tbe
Univenrity's Computing Center
will be In operation.
Directions to the Ridge Lea
campus will be available at tbe
lnfonnatioh bootba, and shuttle
buses will leave !"""'Y 20 minutes from Norton Hall

n-tre

01'£11 HOUSE GUIDE
A lour-sulda and schedule
lor lha University's 125th Anniversary Open HOUM Is one of two
inserts In todey's lleporllor. Con·
sutt this aukle for time •nd p&amp;8ce
of scheduled aetivities.

ma~denfr:=i&lt;etter will
greet visitors In his office In
Hay.., Hall. Univenrity personnel wiH explain the model of
the new Amherst campus to be
on display In the Hay.., lobby.
All University Jots wiH be
Proopective studetrla can find
Information on admissions pol- open for parking, 111111 the University
Plaza lot at Main 111111
i~ financial aid, 111111 student
servw:es 'In the lobby of Harri- Kenmore baa been re.rved for
any owrtlow. I'Docl -.vice will
man Library.
Dilplays and ahihlta will be be avallable!bom 1 to 6 p.m. at
offenid by Lodtwood lJbnry N..- ~ ca the Rldtlo 't..
(whldr ...tll aJ8D - t a n out- ~ and a~ outalde ..,....._
door poetry reading), the 810118.
• Cbaiimm Buork aald tba&amp;
School of Dentistry (wbicb Will
ofler free eumlnations for oral space •durin!~ the boua8
cancer and periodontal di- . baa been dilitributed to aunpuB
seases), the Schools of Medi- poupe on a "first-come, first.
cine and Nurslnl!, the Western serwd" baais but be wouldn't
New York Nuclear Researdt be surprised if a few "ahihitsM
Center, School of EngiMering pop up that aren't on the schedand the University observatory ule.
&lt;Hochstetter Hall) , a m o n g
"Actually, rd be disappOintothers.
ed if there were no studenta
Special programs will Include around to talk about their idei&gt;a lecture on "moon rocks" by Jogies. 'Ibars what tbe UniverDr. David Cadenhead, an open- sity is."

-ws:

._.._..

ReclatntiOD problema will be

..

· CdlRge o{WomenS StudieS
Sedls Assen?Jiy's-Approval

• The Collegiate "-mbb will
COIJOiider this week eo~
~Collep ol Women's
8tudieo," an interdiacipliiwy
effort to "cbanp tbe way en think 111111 beba.,_"
l'nlpad by 20 aludenta 111111
. ~ mentberB, the mJJeae is
eZpected to pin acceptanoe at
a .._w., of the A!toemb!Y Friment of a

~ ca~~ep •

--t

JII'CIIlClfiOCl "m

~~.,;,· ;.J::'=~
tem wbicb baa .reinforced the

8leleotype imaps of women as
passive, dependent, unintaJieo.

tual 111111 unable to analyze 111111
undemtond (their)
'lion In
IIOciety," the~''8ociology - .tauJIK U8 that
not only .is our role In repooductioo natuntl," the ~
.... tmu._ "but that the aoclal
cleflnitlon of wbat a woman is
rellecta nalwlll lawa • wall."

.Ciiil« that women llhlue In the
type of educational experience
which Ia truly .... ......m,tul
111111 lbaroulb." accordlni to a . Eduatllon
.... -' "'ur education
- ttened
to
dnofted by the llria· IDIIIre U8 CODient in the place
inaton.
.
'
(---~.coL I)

-.

Desert Rat

�April 29, 1911

. GREroRTER.,

2

WorkForce
On Notice
At Reactor

All employees of tbe West-em New York Nuclear Research Center are on two-weeks
notice aa of last Friday as a
result of a State budget cut.
bed&lt; of $18(),000. Tbe $180,000
includes $30.000 for camp_us
radiological safety, which
,_,. that U fB's State license
to
with radio-isotopes will be rewlrSd within 30

_,.,_.t

dar,&amp;Man).

Study AbrOOd
,Applirotions

Techriogenic~ Seen~

Millions·of Injuries &amp; Deaths.Now
from ailport....U... Barsky, wbo
Scientista are now discovering that til~~ very pro!'eas_es

which brought Amer1ca maeaaed wealth and higher ~dards of living are causmg
deatha and a toxic stDlOflpbere.
DiseaaeB induoed by tsclmology, indwrtrialization, and urbanization may account for
millions of injuries and deaths
each year, they aay.
. :
These tecbnogenic d""""""'

:'r=":,'l'J."':

::!m:!.if

of our Clllllncts are
~aJ""Sa':;:
predicated on three shifts," ex- day sponsored
by Rachel Carl'lains Charles 'Th&lt;loitas, the
and the Division of
Center's research manager. "A 800 College
. wn
·
g Education . The
Contin
1088 of even one reactor operator will force us to cut bed&lt; two-day aeminai, divided into
to two shifts, IIDd we would four general aecliOns--aeroools.
lose $60,000." 'lbe $60,000 1088 toxic elements, urban overwould put the Center below its crowding and noise pollution&amp;nancial break-even poinl
featured speakers from across
At R~porter deadline, the the nation. Keynoter was Dr.
Center director was in Albany Jesse Steinfeld, surgeon genpleading the case for an eral &lt;If the United S.tates.
eleventh hour restoration of
Steinfeld , who coined the
term "tecbnogenic diseases,"
funds.
cited' statistics on their prevalence. Over 1.6 million people
are injured each year in auto
and home accidents which are

PerrY Heading
Seardl Group

Are Due Soon

served as " member of the NaU/B'a atu11y amo.d opportional Acildemy of Scienoea' tunitiea Mrl year include Engcommittee on• the SST, con- land, Taiwan,~ Italy and
demned current no.iae level ft!l· Pakiatan. ADd appllclllioaa are
ulations for plai&gt;M. He recom- now beiDa _...s.
mended 85 decibels as a safe
""--- • the
level which would not cause .. 'lbe_~ ~ ~-be said, ~ .,. ... -~
bearin4 1088· H........,., deq plOiftllll8 .bore. It r.atwes an
';h:,a~ ~ ~~
this loud. New restrictions will Parma for IUIIIJIIIIr 8ludy here
only bring the level down to and an Italian ~ usual118 decibels. an ~\ which 1y arr1- in tbe fall. wtaJ. U/B
still may cause OOarinjl oea. •
students are l.aded for Parma.
Tbe cost of redllCIDII .::i:j ""lbe Italian um-slty ia eslewla ' in current P~ _._,_,_ pecially atrooa in· the areas of
be $.5 million per_ p....., wua;u medic:iDe IIDd law w1ae studies
oould be absorbed tbroullh an date bad&lt; to tbe 8th century.
increase of three to four. per Other fields of study include
cent in the oos~ of each ticket art history Italian history and
sold, Barsky eatimatea.timalAnolber literature, 'classic&amp;, genetics,
suggestion was for op
;ua- • mathematics. musiooiogy, phiage of current plaDe CllPIICI;ty. loeopby IIDd physics. ParticiHe pointed out that competing pants in the Parma program
airlines regularly sc.hedule may spend the year attending
flights which take ~ only 40 ft!lularly scbeduled c1aasea or
per cent full. Droppmg some of may pursue il;&gt;depeadent projthese flights. be suggests, would ecta. Tbe J&gt;IOilram ia open to
result in better utilization of both undergraduates and gradand 1
·
space
""" noiSe.
uate students.

8110

' "'""'

University of Tenneaaee, wamed that over-&lt;&gt;xpo&amp;ure to high

intensity sound results in increased blood p~ .~abc?~
breathing, fatigue, mttabihty
and digestive problems. "You
may ignore high intensity
sound," he explained, "but your
body will never forgive you."
Dr. Paul Bo-...., Columbia
•.....,.
University, discussed problems

r:.:!

Canfi&gt;'»V7YYr&gt;n on .. v .

mainly tecbnogenically . based,
.~.~ ~
.h._...
wi~
~~
he told In
his addition,
Friday evenmg
a'!J:,l J:,l ~
u ~ L' mw ~
cation
' m' Mancbester, '1&gt;-8·--~
Dr. J . Warren Perry, dean, dience.
be esti..,.....~...,
School"of Health Related Pro- mated that 5 per cent of bo&amp;s:~
. · .7~-h•,..
one of the largest teacber-lnlinfessiona. is chairman of a new- pitsl aClmissions and 5 per cent
UI~W
.ing institutions in England.
Cowlles offered inclJJde history,
ly appointed University Search of the people in hospitsla have
Committee for a dean for the iatrogenic diseases-illnesses
Imitation may be !hi. sin- Jeon. reported their first sue- philosophy and sociology of
School of Social Policy and caused by the "cure." .Istroeen- -rest form ol flattery, btJt it's cessfuJ reassemb_ly of a Hvinl opmenucation;tal·ed!':cbol~~.artd!'
Community Services.
ic diseases are usually caused ~
amoeba from its _ . . .
~,
~
According to Dean Perry, by reactions between drugs or also a handy way to study sncb
.
-.....-- design; miiBlc;. dram!'-; Euromeetings have a Ire ad y been b the eating of foods which diverse phenomena as tbe pol~synthesis ia ''d&gt;e build- pean area ~; British ~
scbedulad for direct communiwith the prescribed drugs. lution of Lake Erie and the .
of _ __....,_
Euros-n history, mathematics,
cation between the Committee
Tbe crewcu t doctor con- mysteries ol human creativity.
mg !'I' .~oew, sun- scienoea, and physical educaand students and faculty mem- denmed the current practice of
Imitation - or, rather, aim- . ulatinn . IS 1he ~ling ol. tion. Applicants mustbe juniors
bers of the school.
"all or nothing" in regard to ulation - ol the phyl!ical, so- mechanisms or Sltuations for or seniors who are majoring in
Other members of the Search toxic chemicals such as DDT. cial and aesthetic environrnems study·" Parlicipauts in t b i s · elementary or secondary teachCommittee are: Professors Paul There are many less hazardous will be the intriguing possibil- year's conference include U/B er training. Students' will arJ . Edwards and Bernard Green- ~ticides which can be used on ities ...,Ioree! by the Univer- professors in tbe d~ts rive in Di~ in September
- blatt, School of Social Policy food crops, be said, but DDT sity's third annW!l Conference of chemical eng~. arch- and I eave in mid-December
and CommunityServicea;Dean is the
one which controls on the Future, May 4-6.
itecture, music, phystology, after completing one term's
Richard Brandenburg, School the malarJa mosquito. He sugSponsored by the Center for policy sciences, and School of . work.
of Management; Miss . Ids gested phasing out DDT for Theoretical Biology at the ¥-gement, and -~Tlie study abroad propam at
Lindsey, president, Student common pest control b_ut r:e- R;dge Lea campus, the three- tives from Comell· Aeronauti- ·the University of Grenoble.
House, School ol Social Policy tsining it for use in specl81 cu- day seminar will dP.monstm!e cal I.aboratory.
France will be offered for the
and Community Services; Pro- cumstsnoes. This kind of policy and discuss everything from
A speciel Wednesday after.. second• time this fall Open to
fessor Egan Ringwall, Psycho!- must be developed, if the "en- what happens when refuse is noon session on "Simullllion ol sopbomoros and above who are
ogy, a member of the Personnel vironment of the future is to be dumped in to Lake Erie to Unusual ~nvironmenta" ·wi II majoring in all areas, the proCommittee, Faculty of Social totally livable."
methods for efficient job-sbop .._,l&lt;&gt;&lt;e high-pressure and un- :;:eatwes studies in French
Sciences and Administration;
The surgeon general also mlmagement..
deiWBter enV'ironments. WedaiQng with..,...- in
Mr. Chester Brodnicki Jr., ' spoke of the need for a ''balTheidesforthepreseutcon- neaday evening, ""'infonnal history "teiature civilizatiOn,
chairman-elect, Niagara Associ- anoed, rational public policy" ference was an offshoot from buffet supper will feature "aim-. art. snit political ;..,;..,.,._
ation of Social Workers, the on ecological hazards. He cited last year's "syntbe9is" theme, ulation games."
vail
Graduate students w iII be
Psychiatric Clinic of Buffalo; the case of removing phos- said Dr. Marian May, assistCooference tickets are a
• able to ezpand their underMr. John Fortune. social work- phates from detergents but re- e.nt to Dr. James F. Danielli, able free of charge at 1he Cen- standini of Asian cultures nut
er, medical care administrator, placing them with harsh ·alka- Center director and conference ter, Room 29, 4248· Ridge Lea year .by· psrtici~ting in the
Erie County Health Depart- line substances such as NTA host. At last year's conference RDad, Amherst.
study procnun offered at the
ment, and Mrs. Barbara Sims, which cause burns and may be on '"The Age ol Synthesis,"
Tbe complete schedule ia Univaaity of Karachi and SaoOffice ol Equal,Opporilmi~ fatal if eaten by children. "We • Danielli's colleagues, Dr. I. printed in the Weekly . Co'"' show Univaaity. A full year
Professor Ricbsid Popp,
must ba1anoe. the predicted - Joan Lorch and Dr. Kwang W. ,muniqiU!, this issue.
program.t thein W~-_.._......__wHiat
vost's 'Office, Faculty' of Social problems of' phosphates against
be SDeDt
-· ........,....
Sciences and Administration, the real present problems
the "O"'niversity ol Karachi and ·
will_..., sslialaOn officer for caused by NTA."
"ty~-rn· 01-"-~...:1 · the second, at lloocbow Unithe Committee.
Steinfeld also asked scien.L .I.UI;.I.~ O.H:Ua.l
venity in Taipoil, Taiw8i1. StuStudents, faculty and other tista to become more involved
.
•
dents may elect to take either
members ol the academic com- in solving emlogical problems
Tbe Office of Minority Stu- Edward J. Marine, """""tive half however Couraea Will
munity are requested to share and noted the. need for· statell- dent AIJairs ia sponsoring an associate dean, School offo!edi- fm 011 four· a.-: runey of
· "tten O!JIDII81ts and recom
mansbip and "--'-·' reasoned eel
tional
May 1
cine; John u;.ft"'le, dentistry culk·-·, - l i v e educalor this deanShip: statements" wh:.=;;aenting cal'l:j ·~ro.:i'White
student; Dr.'~jorie C. Mlz. tion~~~; and
Chairman Perry says.
solutions to the publiC.
.
pressions," in addition to pre- assistant provost, Faculty ol • art. milslc IIDd daDCe of the
Tbe written recommendations'
'lbe surgeon general also senting a play and jazz con- Educational Stu,dies. IIDd Mrs. bOUDirias. ~will
should be sent to: Search Com- pressec~· for laip scale testing cert as part of Sunday"s Open Florence Burton, law school in Enlllab. Part of tbe ~
mittee for Dean, Schoo I of of common cbeinicala to deter- House.
studenl Charles M. ,~ invoha field wq. to tbe Kb,Y·
Social Policy .and Community mine the efteeiB &lt;&gt;f prolonaed
-Purpeae of the conference ia siatant I!DlCUtive vice
·
t, ber P.., J.aba1e, a n d other
Services, Provost's Offioe, So- and cumulative aposure. One to give interested citizens in will be modentor.
·
t J&gt;laoes of intereoiL Studoats will
cial Sciences and .Adminlstra- former ·biological warfare lab- the Buffalo area insight into Robert L. Ketter will deliwr be leavinJ for Karachi 011 Seption, 4230 .Ridl" Lea.
, oratory .has illready best '"!"· the University's minority pro- welcoming remarks.
lembet 5 IIDd will l8turn to tlie
V.nh...:.m
ver1ed to this purpose.!"' said. grams on both the undergrsdAt 1 p.m. ~uate mi- U.S. either in January, H they
.Ll.I:'I-U "'6
'lbe Saturday ' monuDJ. sea- uate and professional scbool nority procnuns will be the f&lt;&gt;- take oaly the ftnt _..,,or
cus Panelists will be Julian S. In May.
Five retiring facu}ty mem- sion dealt with ~- level.
'lbe program ia also a kick- Pe4s.int Jr director of EPIS;
Students inllnllted In the·
bers will be presented citations human aa well aa animaL In a
at the University's Commence- statistical atady ol three pbpu- off for a fund-raising campaign. Arthur Anderson, director of Parma, I&gt;iclsiJul)' a n d Asian
lations,fnner
city,
ll!biuban
'lbe
Minority
Fund
Raising
C'Aoperative
College
Center;
JX011r8D18
are reQulnod to have
ment Day Luncheon, May' 28.
· Tbay are Dr. Harold A. Bon- IIDd nirai,..Dr. A. B. Ford.·CaM COmmittee of the Office of Mi- ~It Rhodes, director of a "B" pade point..-...;· the ·
Reoerve
~nMntty,
nority
Student
Affairs
is
the
0f1ice
of
Minority
Student
program
at
Greaable calla for
Weslant
er, professor of Enillah. retiJ:in launcbinla drive to help offset Mairs· James A. Miller di-- a 3.0 in FNI1cb IIDd a 2.li GPA.
ing June 30, 1971; Dr. Irving said ·) le ~ an tbe
n....m.
ofdee.tbs
fnim
most
recent
legislative
cutbscb
in
rector
'of
Blaclt
Studies,
'and
Other
~Ia
-ere: ftuCheyette, professor ol music,
retiring 'August 31, 1971; Mrs. eanciia.IIDd COI&lt;II18lY beart.dls- minority J&gt;l'l)tlllllits and will be WiHiam Byrd, director, Up- ent.!_~ -~ tbe ~
·
in
inner
city
dwel1era.
contacting
area
"
"
"
"
and
ward
Bound
Program.
Qpestion
at
•
.
.....,
a
prali:iaacy_
in
Janet C. Potter, associate Pftl'
• periods Will follow
. both - - • ·
n c,.h_~in ~
feasor, speech communications, Ford estimated that 50,000 foundations in tbet effort.
dee.tbs
a
year
oould
be
elimi~
Two
..
panel
diacusilions
will
.
w"""'
..
__.
retiring A~ 31, 1911; Mrs.
Helen X. Signer, chairman, _,. lUlted · if rural atalliltlcs pre. be beld·SatuJday in the Norton ·· A coc:1ttaiJ party will be held 211-212. for Gta1abi8.
All tour ~ haw a
relarial atudiea. retiring June valled in tbe cities. Uving in Hall Oanfelence 'lbestre. At 10 at 7 p.m. IIDd an '·Hooors Ball"
30, 1911; and Dr. Katherine _F. rural areas iaa't aiWtlya beat, a.m., "Minority Students in at 9 p.m. in South ~ May 3 app!lcatiolt deeclllae. •
'lbom, f o r me r profesoor ol. thoulb- Rural dwellers have Graduate Professional Pro- Goodyear Hall. Live entertain- ApplicatloDi IIDd tun1a- 1Dforspeecb COIDII1Uiticatioaa and di- hl8ber Infant mortality IIDd grams" will }Ia dlactBied by ment by "S~Giaas," a matiolt may be ·obliil.d from
•. •
Jacob D. Hyman, profwJi of Bulralo roc:lr.
, will be · Jam e a Mlcbielll, director of
rector of the Speech IIDd Hear- aldn .....,.. In a cllac:uBan of noise pol- law· Otades E. Donnepn, sa- featured. There · be a one .....,._ academic prop1111111,
ing Clinic. wbo retired Janulution, Dr. David Lipscomb, aistBnt profesoor of law; Dr. dollar admiaaion cbarp;
. 309 ~
.
ary 20, 1971.

Wl'ill Consiller•.

n

:1·

and

..;;,ct

"

•

8

onJr

Mmon"

::..m,tions

1m:

be.,-_,

5 Profs

!I,."_,_

�~

April 29, 1911

3

Increased EmphaSis on Good Teaching

Sought·by FNSM Evaluation Committee

--1

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

ous inwBtlgation of what con- lence is in fact uaec1 as a ·cristitutes good teaclling. They terion for any of the rewards
"We must """''Jlize that quickly realized, bowew!r, there given to the faculty." Because
teachins is primary. . . . The is "no answer." Instead their of this, they advised the p~
teacher must never allow the primary aim became ~ "im~ vost to "visibly demonstrate ms
pwsuif of his own intereets to prowment of the quality of in- commitment to excellence in
lead to neglect of the intellec- struction witbin the faculty."
teaching." · This commitment,
tual growth of his students."
They began their study by the committee said; could be
This was one of President Rob- reading the Hildebrand report demonstrated by u s in g the
ert Ketter's c::barses to the fac· on Ef/eclil&gt;e Univeraily Teach- "evaluating of teaching ability
ulty at his February inaugural. in~ and lu EDiJlu.ation and the . . . as a b8sis for tenure, adSince then, the Faculty of Nat- AAUP statement on improv- . vancement and promotion."
ural Sciences BDd Mathematics ing collega tesching. They also
The committee asked for the
CFNSM) bas taken it to Mart devised an experimental evalu· creation of 15 annual summer
BDd bas viJorously examined ation form which was used last t~alary awards for faculty memthe QUMtion cl teachina escel- semester BDd tben assessed.
bers BDd 15 for graduate stulence.
The findings lrom careful dents who have shown an exThe searc:h jo define or eval· study of teaching evaluations cellence in tesching. "The reuate teaching quality was first from several other universities cipient could use these summer
UDdertaken last aemester by a provided some surprising con- months to do research, teach,
16-member faculty BDd student clusions for the committee. develop a new course, improve
committee headed by Dr. JonThese studies s h o w e d a existing courses, etc." 1n addiathan Reicberl Properly called strong correlation between stu- tion, five annual summer salary
the Committee for lnstruction- dent and faculty assessment of awards were requested for " the
al Evaluation of tbe Faculty of an instructor's teaching. They specific purpose of developing
Natural Sciences and Mathe- also showed that good organ- new courses or laboratories or
matics, the group began a rigor- ization of course material may revising existing ones..,
. not mean good or effective
For the future, the group asks
teaching. Another surprise was for continuing review of the
the low correlation between a questionnaire and further instudent's grade point and his vestigation into other areas
By STEVE LIPMAN
(Continued f r o • - J, col. 3)
ZAP and mandatory f e e s
assessment of teaching. 1n
-this society bas designated for other words, people wiUt low wbich may need evaluation . were the big winners in last
One
suggestion
is
the
possibilus. It has .not prepared us to grades don't alway• take re- ity o! canvassing seniors and week's undergraduate Student
struggle to realize our !uJJ po. . venge on their instructor.
recent graduates about the rel- Association elections.
tential or to create a society
By a five to one count ( 2605
The results of the pilot evalu- evancy of the courses to jobs or
which allows women to be free." ation BDd the readings are two advanced
education. Considera- to 455), students voted to keep
The proposed college will 35-question evaluation forms. tion of specific
fees mandatory lor at least anways
or
helping
"provide a focused place within One questionnaire will be used faculty members improve their other four years, or until SA
the University where women .for evaluation of instructors tesching such as speech clinics calls for another election. "Peocan come together from their and lecture courses, the other or
of lecturers is ple realized that if there were
various disciplines to exchange for teaching assistants and lab- a lsovideotaping
no mandatory fees next year,
recommended.
perspectives and develop new oratory and recitation courses.
The two ..evaluation question- Utis campus would be dead,"
ideas concerning the role of
said cur r en t SA President
naires
developed
by
the
comwomen," says the reporl It can
the form range
will be used Utis semes- Mark Huddleston about the
also "aerve as a base . . . to sup- from the standard "Wbat do mittee
and in the fall by FNSM. wide margin of approval. The
port efforts in all departments you think about the number of ter
After
this,
some form of contin- 2605 votes for mandatory fees
BDd profMiional acbools to. im- exams given?" to " Do you feel uing evaluation
were greater than the total cast
is ptanned.
prove tbeir auticu1s with re- free to ask questions in·· Utis
for any SA office.
spect: to the needS and realities class?" Questions dealing wiUt
ln~i~~ed,:Ud~fof women's lives."
speaking techniques, such as
'lbe proposed college would "Does your teaching assistant
dent Ian DeWaal, swept every
also belp women "carry the dis- s p e a k understandable Engposition for which it had a
cussion (of their role in so- lish?", are alsO included. Quesnominee. ZAP winners were:
ciety) into their non-academic · tions on various areas sueh as
. DeWaal, president; Spot Gulives" and "encourage the cre- blackboard and lectUre tech·
The Fa~ty-Staff .Caucus JS berman, first vice president;
ation of a society in which all niques are -scattered Utrough- now conducting a mail ballot '!f Scott Slesinger, second v ice
people can achieve freedom."
out to ensure careful reading. 1ts members to elect ~ year s , president; Dave Barmak, tressThe proposed women's col- The committee bas departed officers: The .Caucus deCided to urer; David Steinwald, student
lege would offer an introduc- from the usual variety o! re- use Utis dev1"'! because of low rights coordinator; Lester Goldtory course, prerequisite for all plies such as "excellent, good, attendance at 1ts Tuesday elec- stein, academic affairs coordiother courses, called ''Women poor'' to include such unorfho. tion meeting.
· nator· Fred Aueron, student af.
Nominees are John Sullivan,
'
in Contemporary Society." dOI ones as "laboratory was
'1'1lat course would "provide a useless" and the instructor was Linguistics, as chairman to regeneral study of the situation "enthusiastic, neutral or disin- place Dr. Walter Rosen; Marof women in the past and in terested." The queslionnaire ilia Giles, Faculty of Social
modem societies" as well as also contained a number of , Sciences and Administntion,
look for ways to alter "those technique questions wbich help as vice chairman (staff), and
u / B students who object to
institutions wbich continue the faculty members pinpoint Dr. Marvin Feldman, Psycbol- spending between four and ten
second Class status or --..." teaching weaknesses.
ogy, as vice chairman (fac.. dollant for record albums now
OlhercThe committee has recom- ulty ) , both incumbents; and have another cboice. A group of
Other courses suggesled in- mended that the questionnaire Christine Duggleby, Anthropol- undergraduates bas formed a
clude Political Economy o! be given during one of the last ogy, as ~tary:~· a Record Co-op wbich can offer
Women's Liberation, Women's Utree class q&gt;eetings of the new co~ined po&amp;Jtion.
.
albums at greatly ieduceil costs.
ConsciousneBB in Literature, semester with 15 uninterrupted
No"!!D""", for the Ste!'nng . The group, with Dave Stein'The ~Iclentif"led Woman in minutes at the beginning of the CoiDIIUttee are: Dr. R1chard wald and Alan Baratz as coLiterature, Women in Socialis~ period devoted to iL After Finnegan, Medicinal Cbemis·
•
·
Countries BDd Non-Western So- completion, the forms will be try· Dr Michael Friacb, lfi&amp;. cha!rmen. IS ~ recorda
· T : - - · • · available at these pnces: $4.98
cieties, 1mperiaHam BDd Its Re- . sent to the Survey Research tory' .• Dr.· p a u1 Garvm.
.......~ albums for $2 80· $5 98 albums
lation to Suism Since 1850 and Center for tabulation. The re- ti~ (an incumbent), and Clau- for $3.40; $6.Ss
for $4,
Women in the labor Force.
sults for each course will be dme Sch~ Koren, Under- and $9.98 albums for $5.60.
The propcMal also calls for produced on an evaluation form graduate Studies. Other ·names
• direcU from
.field worlt ~ties and .... BDd the percentage of students may be written in on the ballot . ~ Co-op bu:ys .
tabliohment of COWIII!II which replying to each response will provided the candidate knows diStributors, .savmg m.Jdd e-D~B;D
costs. A nickel, . bowever, IS
would attempt to provide wom- be given. It is also recom- he is being nominated.
After" deciding to bold the charged for operating ~·
en "some cl the skills cl male mended that the questionnaire
mail ballot, the Caucus held a
"We started the Co-op ID reteclmolog traditionally denied
t~~u!U; diacussion session to talk about sponae to recent price rises," exto them." Couraea in music are
also 8UQil8led. All proposed be inade available to the fac- members' concerns and possible plains Steinwald, who worked
COWIII!II would bave to be
ulty ~ his department, future couraes of action. Sua· for distributors for four years
gestions included helping find BDd was able to aet up an arokayed by the ,C uniculum the proYOilt aDd students.
Committee of the CoiJesiate
1n addition to formulating tangible support for the Dar r&amp;IJ8I!Delt. with a local one.
-'-'&gt;biy.
the two questionnaires, the Care Center, devaloping a po&amp;J· Nmrt :Y""' he hopes to work
'The role of men in the col- committee bas also developed tion paper on the ~ of also w11h out~-town concerns
leae? The proposal states that 16 remm-ndations about im- tenure, BDd helpinJ the col- BDd to i!UY ciliectly from record
"8ltbould&gt; COWIII!II in the ..... proving the quality of instruc- legiate system.
comparuea.
. _ wiH be open to men, worn- tion in FNSM.
Working on these ooooerns
Students can obtain almost
U. only . possible U there are any records in stock Jocally
Crtoloof~
Dwjng the review of the ex- members to deal with them, through the Co-op. Esceptioos
teaching appointment&amp; 1n ad· perimMtal evaluation f 0 r m Rosen P9inled oul Shonnie are foreign labels.
ditioll, all voting repreeenta- used fall semester, the commit- Finnegari, current Steering
Record Co-op BOUght recogtiVI!I cl the college w i II be tee found t h e question most Committee member, suggeated nition 88 a Student Aasociation
often asked by students was that a mailing in which people club, ~~J~t instead became an SA
women."
"What will be done with the would list .their interests could committee. "We're a little more
'The~ also maps out a
governmg stzucture for the Col- information on these question- be uaed to develop staDdlnc official this way," Steinwald
. _ and asks a $36,000 budget naires?" This indicated to the commitlloes.
says. SA gave the !lfg&amp;llimtion
for initial developmenL Bnt in committee a ''crisis in confi·
1n other actions, the Caucua $500 88 • with which to
a tisht budaet Y""' there is no dence 8J110D1 botl. the students decided to submit nominaliaas buy albums. Students don't pa
IIIJili1IDtee that such a level of and faculty of our University to the Faculty Senate for IDI!ID- for the recorda until they p:t
88 to whether teaching escelbers of standing commitlloes. them up.
.
!undine can be achieved.

ZAP Undergrad SlateWins,
Mandatory Fees Also Pass

Womens-

Sa=~

FSCP!ans
Mail Voting

fairs coordinator; Mark Weiner,
student activities coordinator;
and Keith Frankel, national
student affairs coordinator.
Independent candidates won
the other two spots: Bob Bell,
minority student affairs coordinator, and Peter Kong, foreign
student affairs coordinator.
DeWaal's 1341 votes topped
the combined total of his two
opponents. The Wanachi Party's Robert Fields gained 584
votes an d the Foundation's
Paul ~yer, 509. DeWaal's
55 per cent of the vote was
about what moat of bia ticket.:
mates received.
ZAP ran on a platform which
included calls ft;&gt;r increased student input in tenure and University-wide de a n selections,
funds lor "BIG" concerts and
a speakers' bureau.
A total of 3341 ballots were
cast, according to current SA
sec on d vice president John
Charles, who served as election
chairman. 'lbe turnout was
. twice as great as last year's,
probably because of the vote on
fees, Charles said.

Dzsc
• furgains ai SA Co -Qln

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r.

=r'."'d'!..':!r.

:' =.:::.w: r:r~

.J

'L"'

Record Co-op's table in Nol'ton is open to take orders Monday through Wednesday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Records can be
picked up durinc the sa m e
hours on Fridays. The organization provides a list of specials
each week which can be picked
up on the Friday o! the ...,_
week. Other recorda might take
a week or two longer.
''The response bas ._., very
good," says Steinwald. "At
least 100 recorda were ordered
the first four hours ""' were aet
up." He expects to take about
300 orders a week ewntually.
Meanwhile, the University
Bookstore ~rts no ~caM in
record saJea ID!lCe the Co-op baa
._., in operation.
DAY CAR£ MEETINII
SUNY Ct.ncello&lt; EmMt Boyer 11M
agreed to o mMtlng with U/B 1'111&gt;"
rewnto- to discuss the fMsl·
blllty of stote funding lor • day
care center prosrem here. The
meeting, which Is siHI belna sched·
ulod, will Include the director of
the Dey Core Center. . . . . , - .
-from the U/B Faculty Senata
Executive Committee, local od·

K-.

mlnlotrators.

Including -

*ncl represerUtlves from
the student body. " . . -. . with

this rnokeup wn celled l~r In •
Senata ExKutive Committee ....,.
lution of April 21.

�4

~

Allril n,

J9TJ

ProfAsks If New York Really Wants a Great State University
By ERIC A. BARNARD

~.·~ ·
". . . This is my pledae to

you. We set out to create a
State University second to
none. This was our goel. This
is our goal. This .remains our
goal." \Gov. Nelaon Rocbfel·
ler, a t the inaulmation of
Chancellor E. L Boyer at AI·
bany,/wril 6, 1971.) We could
reproduce statements ol this
kind from a · hwwlred sources
over the past decade - from
the Governor, Chancellors, the
Trustees, Pn!aidents and others
ot our leaden. Many of us
came here to become part of
this endeavor, the creation of
"ooe of America's truly preeminent matitutions of hilber
leamin(' ( Chsncellor Boyer) ,
preparing for its future setting
on the colcaal scale of the Am·
herst campus, cited to become
the greatest single act of COD·
struction of an educational in·
stitution in human history.
One .....ek after reaffirming
to us the message quoted above,
Governor Rockefeller s i g n e d
several measures restricting academic h"berty in this same
Unive(Sity. It is hard to resist
an impression of cynicism in
these actions. The bills passed
suspend sabbaticsl leave, ask
for a minimum of 12 classroom
hours per .....ek· for undergraduate, and 9 for graduate, in·
&amp;!ruction "in addition to teaching responsibility 'and educa·
tional advisement'' in making
up a full-time working week for
every faculty member, and (in
the budget bill) abolish the
Einstein Chair at SUNY AB,
for which ' the University has
said (The Re,_ter, April 22)
it baa a binding commitment
to a distinguished scientist, J.
H . Wang.
- Let
-lluclpt
- ...
us be clear
on._m.
the significance of these actions, and
of many other biUs now coming
to the State Legislature. ·They
are not mere budgetary rearrangements made necessary by
the temporary fiscal difficulty.
· They have been brought for·
ward by Legislators as deliberate acts of policy. One of the
bills signed mto law complains
"that greater amounts of the
educator's time is1 being expended upon research and nonclasaroom scholarly endeavors"
and states that there must in
the future be "a fair return in
the form of commensurate productivity on the part of the respective faculties of the institutions of higher education
within the State of N- York"
(S.6299) . It appears that the
Assemblymen have taken it
upon themselves to judge what
is or is not a scholarly endeavor, and to lay dOWJl that the
number of forma I claasroom
hours is t h e measure of the
"produCtivity" of the faculty. It
ignores subtleties such as the
diversity of our faculty positions, the great variety of the
educational activities' pwsued,
and the large number of hours

often Meded for the prepant·
tion of a llinlle claMroom lecture at an adYU&gt;Ced leYel, at
least in a "pre-eminalt institution of learninl." The language
of the billa, and of the debate
thereon in the Leci&amp;lature, reveala a n.inetaeotiKlentury view
of hilber edUC8tion, empbasiz·
ing and mechanicslly counting
the number .of hours of formal
claasroom instruction. The .prescribed minimum hours would
not count, for eDIIlple, the
guidance of graduate studentl!,
or Independent Study programs; the latter propams are
obviously intended to wither
away.
measures, then, do not
have the saving of tax as their
goel. If an individual is prevented from going on a prearranged sabbatical leave, he
must ,now be paid his full salary instead of one-half of it, ao
that the net expense to the University cannot be reduced, and
in overall result is generally in·
creased, by the bill. Since only
tenured faculty are affected,
and since the law is effective in
July of this present year, it
cannot be claimed that corresponding savings by attrition
or non -renewal o f appointments will be produced by this
measure. Similarly, compulsory
classroom contact hours will
not lead to a dollar saving, unless the actual firing of faculty
members is mandated. The language of the bills, as noted
above, and of the abysmal level
of debate on them in the AsSembly (4/ 2/ 71 ), reveals, rath·
er, that they were intended by
their sponsors to control, regulate, perhaps even to punish,
the fa cui ty. Similarly, if the
sum of $200,000 involved in two
endowed Chairs was the pri·
mary consideration, the State
University would have been
told that it had to make its
own adjustments to this, as to
other cuts, in its total budget.
The State Department of Education was, however, ordered to
eliminate the two Chairs specificslly ( The Reporter, . April
22), and Assemblyman McFarland (Rep., Kenmore ) aought
in the debate to · have all 10
Einstein and Schweitzer Chairs
specifically eliminated ( irresoective of the aJ[reements with
their present distinguished
holders ), calling them "frills
that abound in the State edu- •
~tion system."
·
A - Pl1ndple Is Involved
A much greater principle is,
then, involved. Some Legislators are setting themaelves up
as self-appointed experts on academic policy, and seek to dielate the day-to-day conduct of
academic affairs. Coming close
behind the bills already enacted
are numerous other c:xx,cive
measures introduced at Albany
by this group ol Legislators'.
This is a ~ and ex.-lingly
dangerous dei'Bflure. The Legislature cann6t run the daily
affairs ol a University like the
Sanitation Department. The

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OOIIT'al•UftlfO .ta'I'D2"1 a - If. . . . ..

University ia the ooe enterprise
of the State above all that
needs autonomy in order to
Rourish, that cannot have its
members clock-in for fixed
weekly hours or have their
"productivity" ~ully determined by a clerk at Albany.
The principle of University autonomy baa been well-reoog·
nized up to now for aH of the
great public universities of this
country. The system ol Trustees (or Regents) has been set
· up in this wisdom, to act as a
buffer and to oversee the University Administration, without
need for the Legislature to interfere in strictly academic af.
fairs. While the Legislature is,
rightly, responsible for finan.
cial allocations, in practice the
details of how the University
spends them has, in the more
important respects, been left to
the University to propose.
This is not to say that the

~~~~~ =t!,'lra':/it"h:d~

duty to be responsive to the
educational needs of the State,
to work within the resources
that the State can be shown to

GVIEWPOINTS
The Roportwr ' - on this to provide a forum for the exc:hanae of views on • wldo von.ty
of the Issues lodng tho ocodemlc
community. We welcome both

position papers and letters n
space permlts.
Responses to this and to all View·
points ""' welcomed by the edltO&lt;·

i!Khlef, up to on ootobllohod

limit of nine typewritten doublespoced pages. Most con likely be
shorter.
be able to afford for higher ed·
ucation, and II&gt; be answerable
for its use of public monies. But
this is a far cry from the deliberate use of the budget as a
weapon to impose upon us the
particular educational philosophy of a few Legislators. If, for
example, the Trustees, the
Chancellor, and we as faculty
members, all agree that there
is great benefit in the long academic tradition of sabbatical
leaves, IUld that they are designed here to provide profes-

t,o~';.,~v:!,j:e",.!:

fresh teaching capability, then
it is a true invasion of our academic freedom when they are
arbitrarily removed' by a group
outside the University, without
hearing and without recourse.
If abuses are claimed to have
occurred (and no evidence for
this in the Univers1ty was cited) our Legisla:tive watchdogs
could have called for enforcement of tbe policies by the
Trustees and by the SUNY
central administration. Instead,
they swept away, without excuse, the policies themselves.
The same is true for the Ein·
stein Chair in Molecular Biology. Interference at that level
of specificity by Legislal!&gt;rs is
an ominous sign. There is no
difference in principle that I
can see between this and telling
us what subjects we should
teach at all (a course which
bas already been embarbd
upon in this Legislature). owbo
should teach them, and what
they may not aay.
· -llppa.OnoSmaiThe eUent of accountability
and direction imposed upon
Wli-.itiea by . Peron in Argentina or OOtqJbt bY Senator
Joaaph McCarthy in U.S.A. in
the l.950a, obviously .... intol-'
enble and dealnlctive of free
BDqUiry and free instnx:tlon.
Even 01111 small slap dOWJl that
road should be .-.tutaly op..
posed. I believe that step was
taken in Albany this month.

'The actions taken or proposed
apinst this University were a
new departure. Some of the

hind the - - - with llllllllbers
l..eP!ature. Workina behind the has 1-. tried
bills were (as the SPA has and has failed. I. at..., with
complained) not revealed in ad- many othere, cont.cted the
van&lt;e, no public hearings were Oumcellor at Albuly aoking for
permitted at which the Univer· muimum to be applied: his olfice replied that
~y
i~
this bad already .,_, done.
were rushed throuch in one day. The State-wide SUNY Senate
ined . that P_.... The
The contact hours bill, which is ·
of fundamental eduCI!tional sia·
n!8Ct in public, for
nificanoe, received 4 minutes of
conaumptlon, and it is
debate.
unlikely that further private
We have had thrust upon us ~:"lations will have much
the Taylor Law, hailed by Gov.
The hisu.&gt;7 . of State Legis.
Rockefeller and the majority of
the Legislature as the most en· latures in this country has not
lightened bill of rights for pub- been such as lo fill US with COD·
·lic employePs created any- fidence on their suitability for
where. Section 203 gives us 41 the the direct, un-mediated deterright . . . to negotiate collec- mmation of academic alfain;
tively in the determination of In the OklahOma l.etislature ~
terms and conditions of employ- f- years ago, when its State
ment." This Law now is in University was unde&lt; fairly di·
grave danger of becoming mere- rect. control, a bill was introly another weapon against us. duced to permit the Music l)e.
The leaderllh.ip in the Legis.. partment to expand its facul ty.
lature did not prevent delib- Its sponsor was greeted by the
erate interference with those majority huddling together and
terms of employment, when the • rend'ering "Home on the
negotiations with SPA had only Range" : this, they explained as
just begua. If the implicmons they voted it down, was the
of the further bills now be- only type of music they wanted
ing introduced a r e followed in Oklahoma.
·
Michael Polanyi, scientist
through, we shall become a
mere trade school, in which and humanist-has reminded
graduate work (specifically sin- us that uman's most distingled out for diminution in a guished act of thought consists
bill just passed ) and research in producing an emct knowlwill be penalized, and measured edge of the universe: the huhours of instruction-of no mat- man mind is at its greatest
ter what csliber-will be pre- when it brings hitherto un·
scribed.
charted domama under its con·
trot" and that in our society
WhotConWoDo7
What can we do? Firstly, we this flourishes only in a free
university.~
We must insist on
can recognize that only a amalJ
group of Legislators pursue this · the maintenance above all else
vindictive approach. The major. of this fimction of producing
ity of them have truly in the and transmitting ideas. It is
past provided the means to cre- this that the new anti-intellec·
ate a State University of the tualism in Albany or Sacra·
lop class. We must all urgently mento, or wherever, now threatpress the others who have re- ens.
cently stood aside. They must
face up to the question, public- F -:
ly and privately, as to whether 1. The verb in tb&amp; aingular is not
printing error in The Reporter:
they' really want a State Uni· aI quote
from the officially printed
velSity to De proud of, or one (5. 6299) tezL The wording ol the
that would be held in contempt bill obowa, both in laulty Jr&amp;m·
throughout the country. Sec- mar and legal ambigu1tie s,
ondly, faculty members as cit- evidence of ha&amp;ty contitr uctio n,
izens, and students when en· ecarcely reauunnc for auch farfranchised, are entitled to act reaching legielation.
2. Some of tbeae are summarized
in local elections ao as to bring in
the Bulletin di stributed on
home their opposition to the campus
last week by the SPA.
type ol rnpresentation to whicb 3 1 ou- lhio P.?inl because of
I have reierred. Thirdly, we can ita intrinsic aignificanoe. and· not
as a faculty take a firm stand from any penonal involvement: I
on no increase in student ad- penonally wu not due for sabmissions: if t h e Legislature batical leave, and the SchOol ·ol
does not provide us with the
~-:l't"'_ from the
means to.. give a high-quality
education, we should not en· . 1i~tolanyi, Th• Study of Man
courage more and more students to come here to take
away further resources from
those who will already be auf.
fering from State cutbacks. We
would serve these students better by adv~ them to go II&gt;
other institutions where the
About 500 ~e11pondents,
spirit of a free University is not
in danger. We should fight on chmen at random to represent
our side as a faculty to keep the a ClOI8 section of the Univer·
number enrolled each year sity, are CUI'I8Idy beiDa asked
fized, until public pressure for their OJ&gt;inions on drugs,
forces a re-liberalization of the haalth 8el'VIOS, otudent fees;
University. Fourthly, we should campus unrest, and 'other ispress the Governor, the Trus.. sues which were c t - by a
tees and the u /B Council to student-faculty-a' caoiunittee.
'The study, which began
join us in defense of their ;,.,
past public statements on a Monday, April 12, is directed
great State University. Why by Dr. John Bruce Francil!. have the Trustees not spoken Sisbmt pror- ol liilber' ed- .
out? The last major pronounce- ucstion and ,_,m aMistaDt
ment of the u;B Council was profeoaor of peychology, in coI think, on the desirability oi _...tion with the Survey ReROTC. Where are the protests search Center.
Summaries ol the findings
even ~Ia of resignation, that
~ commg attack on their lib- will be released .. - they
erties and our cries out for• are aftilable, with a cxmpiete
The silence is ileafenhig.
. report to be pabUobed '-tar.
Anyone iDten8ted will be able
to obtain data from 4be survey.
I Pl'88U1IIe that this silence Elabonrte precautions have
follows the ..........u., ot our ' - taken to keep int11vidual
Faculty Senate, whidi when it re&amp;poll8e8 confidential, Dr.
heard of these .._._ at its Francis 8&amp;y8, .., that llllder no
last meeting, was shocked, but c:ireu_.._ will names or
~!"d a reaolution ~ a other jdeotifying c:baracteristic
qwe~t ~ in which a of I'I8IJC&gt;DdeDts he raJiDquished
OOIIIDIJttee ,. asked 11&gt; work be- II&gt; IUI,YODe.

.rJ: \'.':"'! "':;..,-:I

of the

.=

=

500Picked
For Survey

llehlncltbo---

'

�April 29, 1911

5

B~~~

pilimW.. in educatba, par- UNWADAN'l11D ACftON liT ()Ol,o warranted auadr.
ticularly the Anaarloan Aasocia- LBAOUD, AIIIIDdlftA'ftOK AMD ~AplnotTMIIft
tion of Uniwnity Prof-, OOKiltlKlft - A L 'nNUIIB AB PR0TBC'rlON OJ'
have been In the forefront ol.
Perhaps tbe need far proleo- 1&gt;100....__
efforts to uleDd leDure provi. tion from IIDWIIn8lllai action
Ia widespread ........
tmUN or ~ oonllac&gt;- sions widely throuihout the by other&amp; is just a cWfelart way at all levels of education, that
tual ..........,.. 'l1le oontzo- pror-lon and to IIIIJIIIorl the .of aaying wbet baa been dis- tenure provieions primarvenylhatt.uiaoDt.aen- ~t and application ol. cussed in tbe """ previoua _,.
gulled ~ In educatlooal acaeptable policies to ad.minls- tioo8, but there are .......,. of
institutiaM at all ....... """ be- ter these proviolons ellectively. prol.ound eipjf!canae bound up from ~ posiW... E.wy anin this pr;Dcip1e. Educational alysis of ""'ure principles and
cauae ol. a pm:tieular Cllllft""""" II. WhotAraTholn many wa,ya ClODCei'D8 about endeavor is involved with tbe p...,._ emphaeizes the disof oonditiam ' - embodied the
publlc, the lellalatM IUid ......
new, the stnuace, the di&amp;rent astrous effects ·of foroed retenemmeatal eoUtlea aa well as
as a matter ol. course. Its cen- tion of per&amp;&lt;XW inoompeCent to
with~-- worthy of continuing relation- tral purpoae is that ol. brealdng discharge their dutlea and reCIU1I4
lqa ahip with an inatitution are pro- through the berrien of CDD\WI· sponsibilities. It'is many times
of acqUirlnl run Jll'ol.eEiooal vided the aecurity of long-term tion, the walls of the """"Pled made to appear that the application of tenure principles instatus in loMil ol. educa- employmel)l. Institutional pattional endeavor are deeply clis- terns are provided for -m,
emrably lesda to an overloadtwbed at the l.ck ol. CJI.IIIIIrl'!· ·~.. protecting thoae ' Education is a recoastructiou, ing of "deadwood" in any ornity becallll8 ol. protlectiOil af- deemed worthy, and for careful a regeneration procais, the ap- ganization.
forded by teDure pro9ialooll for consideration of any violations plication of which must be as
According to this view, in. thooe ahMdy in a.vioo. Ad- of the spirit 01' the intent of the all-embracing as possible if a dividuals achieving a tenured
JDinjstndiYe oU.icers are oon- rules that have been estab- society is to emt in its most status find it no longer ,_..
tendin&amp; that . ""proareaa" is lished.
effective form.
sary to eztend themselves in
But there are many oontzohindered in reclirecllDIIUid ,.,_
To operate in the contort of pursuit of relevant educational
versies
inherent
in
the
actus!
an educational inatitution is goala. Therefore , a glut of
designiDI ed.-tiooal procrams
as a .-.It ol. an owrloading- operation of the processes . thus to continuously tempt the "deadwood" accumulates in
of staJfs with J!OftDIIIII!Dt per- Some of these stem from sup- fateo and question the aooept- permanenUy held positions,
soonel. l.eli&amp;lston. viewing '!'~· port of tenure as a positive ele- . ed. Prospects for this to 'o un- making it difficult, if not imucational budtet reqll5l8 of Ill- ment in educational life, others noticed by the commuruty at possible, for younger, more en·
creasing macnltude. are search- re6ect a view of such provisions large or thoae with· whom the ergetic and enthusiastic prosing for msana of eliminatinc an as having negative influenoo sinoore and dedicated scholar pects to move into places in the
envisioned flnailcial drag of upon various aspects of the works are quite unlikely. A pro- institutional framework.
As a result of this tendency
large numbers of permanently profession. A review of some of tective device is thus necessary
the major ingredients serving to ensure against unwarranted for tenured persons to clutter
ensco~ofh~
~:;;:::,;
to arouse controverily should action by those unfamiliar with the top range &lt;&gt;f the professionAnd,
IUCD "4'
.
voices in a general_ commuruty help in understanding the prob- or insensitive to the necessary al ladder th!'ough occupying
oonditions for true academic the available permanent posithat respond with irifbt at the lems.
prospects of an inatitution in
this society that is ovezwbelm.
ed by individuals who CIIDDOt
be manipulated br the whims .
of employment Cli'CIIDl8tanoes.
In fact. there is currently a
mounting groundswell , for attacking the principle of ten~
service as a means of cunng
most of the major ills of educa· Atpments for Tenure
enterprise. Many would con· tions, an entire upper level of
tional institutiOn&amp; in modern 1. NEED FOR SI'JCUJUTY IN A POSI· t&lt;md that similar "protection" incompetents is protected.
is necessary in almost all areas 2. TE!I/URE AS A PROTECI'ION Or
society.
TJoN;
It is this !l')l't of beckdrop
It is contended almost uni· of modem life and there is like- OBSTRUcrtONlSTS TO PROGJlESB.
that serves • to dramatize the versally by supporters of tenure ly considerable warrant for
As tenure provisions cause
concerns about oontractusl re- provisions, that security in a such a declaration. But it is the upper levels of a faculty to
lationships that are being play- position is neoeesary for the re- abundaaiUy clear that an insti- be loaded with unremovable ined out on the many stages of lease of the full potential ·that tutionalized structure devoted competents, this inevitably reeducational controversy at this an individual represents. Wbere to the search for truth wherever sults in a layer of obstruction
time. The concerns are deep- an ·individual must be· conoom· thst quest should lead is par- to any progress for the institurooted and the problems which eel about his prospects for con- ticularly vulnerable to attacks tion. In this way, the tenure
provisions serve to solidify a
are reftecled by them extremely tinuing relationships with an from within and withoul
Furthennore, actusl breaches changeless character of an incomplex. It is becauae of this institution there is' always the
that little of real iniport is com· detraction from the thrust of of the walls of freedom are not stitution and provide an insuling from the· controversies and his full contribution by the in· required for the constriction of ation through which new ideas
perhsps little of reel Sllbetanoo clination to want to try to in- action within them. The threat and practioos are shunted off.
being injected into the discus· terpret ezpectations of thoae of possible attack and the pros- Obstructionists are protected in
sions .out of which some con· who will make decisions about pect of success in that endeavor their positions and any efforts
structive directions could be his future and tile diversion of in many ways lies 86 heavy up- &amp;tended to redesign or redirect
forged.
effort to meet such. e&gt;q&gt;ecta. on the practioos as actusl in· institutional goals or practioos
cursions themselves. Security are inexorably blunted by an
Perhsps these inadequacies tions.
For some reason, job aecurity in a position is the protection impenetrable layer between the
of input and of ~toutcome are a result of becoming is seen 86 antithetical to full that is necessary for thoae who lower vigorous staff element
obsesaed with the wrong ele- application of potential in are really functioning as true and the decision-making overmen!&amp; in this oomplica\ed. set many spheres of endeav(!r in our representstives of an academic lay thst comprises the administration.
of problems. Perhaps more cru- society. To the supporters of community.
cia! ingredients to a 8DIIIId un- principles of tenure, however, 4'. NEED FOR SUPPORT OF CREA- 3. TENURE AS A BLOCK TO PR08derstandi.ng of-What is at stake aecurity in a position is basic TIVE AND INN OVATIVE ENTER· PECTS DESlRING TO ENTEB THE
are being pasaed over or not to the full Oowering of the po- PRISES.
~ ~ OP 9CHOI.ABS."
Here again, the discussion
oonsidered with the care that tential that Jill individual repNaturally any permanent
is neceasary. It is to these sorts.. resents and ·to the ensuring of may be merely an embellish· cadre, particularly when it
of possibilities that I would like conditions in which a peraon · ment of already stated posi· tends to congregate at '!!'per
tions,
but
there
is
needed
furto address my comments with can contipue to J!I'OW in his
of a structure, makeS enther ezploration of enremely levels
the hope of contributinc to an professional purswts.
try more · difficult for desiring
understanding of the basic COD· 2. N111!:D FOil PIIOTI!JC'nON OF ACA• important conoopts. Education· applicants . Particularly in
a1 institutions in modem socie- times of constricting demsnd,
oems that are involved.
DEIOC PIIBEDOIIL
1. Whot 1o ~_..
More than in any other realm ties must represent the leading an overlay of permanently entenure involves a of life there is a need in the edge of human ezperiencing. In sconced personnel makes entry
ted rilbt ·inn a posi..:- ' - academic community for bee- order to do so they must attract to professional servioo e&gt;&lt;treme: '~ ~ f.;n;;;.;:; dom in dealing with ideas and into their scope the most in· ly difficull For the aspiring
a pen~·
o1.
11aqary serv- concepts, and for applying con- genious, talented, aeative and scholar, a vision of an impene.
•
••
are sequent patterns of action to- innovative individuals a society trable society of academicians
''"'·
y,
JIIOV18IOII8
..... -~'""
•L- all lead. To ·can produce. Not only must provides a distressing and clismade throu1h dearlY stated _w.uu
wwcu ......,
policy to IJI'Oride for diomlsaaJ aay that any oonstrictions or such per&amp;ODS be attracted into oonoorti.ng ouUook. When this
lor ai••- lor .,..,........_ __
restrictions can be put upon in- institutions, but the environ- is magnified by a conviction
~
... - - · vestiptions, utterances or · ac- ments there must support, in
arbitnuy and punitlve discrim- ...__ .... the:.=-tional spbere fAct actually encourage. leve1a that the "society" is populated
with incompetents and deadination in matan ol. 88lary, ~
- - L __ .. dutlea __ .. ._ manin a free
·
is to deal in of tmbounded aeativity and in- wood whose positions are being
..._ ....
auu ,.,.
contradictionS that make fUCh novation.
by permanent 0011datory retU.alt at a apeciSed. statements ~To contend that this can protected
happen where individuals are tracla, the future for creative
a~ the leDwe principle is
Tbe III1I'I'Ofler8 of tenure kept inaecure and rendered prol.essional servioe seems blesk
uaed an Individual in educa· permanent contracts as the ve- open
to the caprioes of la.Y and indeed.
a.vioo who Ia co.wec1
for the fulfill.n-t of ""!'·
4 . 'lmWU A8 A THJIIIAT TO Air
by its provillioM Ia thua .., in- d a - . - r y Ill a oommatlllll&lt;l8l'IIATION.
dellnfte continuin1 oontracl. ~t to~~ofrn::.::m'l: course. In order to create, one
Prospeds far administrative
Such a CIIDiral:t canDDt be nul- · - w - • _.___
must be free to marshal his own ~ and the ~lica­
lifled wldaaut due wbicb scholarly .endea~ m ..._..... uperian!ial and ~t . . .t ion of aJIID8I'BIDSilt techniques
muot be eetablllbed throwlb _ ~f P_rOtecUw ~- of serv- IICliWCI!II Ill tbe parti&lt;:ular maD· are often hindered by a conp....- protective ol. the '"".u.IDI!ft!iy IPY1DI ~~ ner necessary to evolve the fldartly secure population.
T'lae is, in Wesllem aocieties
00111110 ol. action ~t is diioired
rilb!&amp; o1. the qpieved party or
in the circumsta,.. In order particularly, a pervasive feaJing
oollelaa
is - * 1 for to inaovate, one must . be .lm- that ~ in institutlona1
1
1
elaborate ~ are eataJ&gt;. the
t ol. the challenge ......-1 in-tbe condiU... wt.n strocture 1a best initiated and
lishad to ~ lor that ~academic freedom con- the I'MUlts ol. creative l!llldeawlr conducted throulb enlilbteDed
tenure appoin~ and thor- oopt to~ ~ can be broadly practiced. ftiOilla in the administration. It
OUih procied- ~ for al .,.,.... and to ipore ...... u Neither of t t - proepecta Ia is likely that COIIIIidenable ju&amp;the protediaG of the
Ia of to. ipore the ~ ol. the
-ualic wldaaut ~ve in- tillcallon can be fouDd for auch
.,..._ accuaed ol.
linl prind3.pie itaelf.
~ noll sulation from the wbims ol. un- ideM, thenlfole a pnpoadertenure policloa. ~ Ol'-

'There

Ia Ulrely liD . . . . of
greater to educalorll at
the .,.-.t time tba that ol.

on-e

:ft'.J'..r'::..i~

~

::..~~~:.,~

.a:;;;;:;n;ritl!'

~~~~~

renure-Boon or Bugaboo?

~

,ft..

t:ioa81

"!c!e

~- ~ ~

=

~ ~ic~&amp;.

curi% Ji: ;,...ro&amp;e

~~~m.::=

ance of poaitions em a etalf JliO'
tected by a - - ID. alatua to bulla- aUimpta by
adminlstzaliwl . . . . . to -tural deslpu.
In and -lllrul&gt;
IH.- c:--

•lila-

From tbe apllattion ol. the
..... it is evident that there
is a diverp!DOO In point ol. view
about the ellect ol leDwe .....
visions upm educatlooal Life.
No doubt these are ~
ly pertinent concems and lfloely ol. oonaiderable accwacy in
interpretat:ioas of the ~
educational SOMJe. H.,..,......, it
is aJao poEble that they repr&amp;sent a superilcial aspect ol. the
actual problems with wbicb edualtors ought to be really conoomed at this time, 01' at least
an undue attention about concerns that are tangential to
thoae of basic importance.
To these possibilities I would
like to refer at some lensth, but
before doing that a few oommenld ought to be directed toward one of the underlying
conoopts that appears to engulf
all discussions of tenure. This
is the widely held belief that
security or permanenoo is anti·
thetical to deep commitment
and full accomplishment . A
kind of perverted individualism
has appsrenUy pervaded our
attitudes resulting in a complete distrust of an individual's
inclinations or effort unless it
is cloistered within a directing
environment of inaecurity and
manipulation. The "lean and
hungry" caricature of the upwardly mobile organization
man seems to be the ideal that
is held in mind when considering personnel policy. It suggests a maxim that unless an
individual is bridled by an insecurity in his role, be cannot
be ezpected to apply himself
CQmp\ete\y to the enterprise at
hand.
I would like to urge as
strongly as is possible that tendencies to interpret human nature in such negative terms be
dispelled. The human being can
be ezpected to exert his maximum when ends or goals to
which be can commit himself
are the guiding influences in
the operation. An organization
should not be interested in fea·
tures of manipulation to guide
and direct human effort. Rather it should be structured so as
to maximize the potential for
the development of common
goals and ends to which all in·
volved in the enterprise can
give their subscription and toward which they can direct .
their energies.
Saying this is suggestinc that
if incompetency exists, if obstructionists block progresa, if
an overlay of immovable elders
hamper the process of redirectin!!' and regenerating an enterprase, attention should be given
to the internal prooosses for assuring aecurity and for the de-

~~~~

want to direct their ...,pee.
I. is not the aecurity and permanence provided by lanure
that is depri . the organization of its ~ty and vigor. ·
It is rather the organizational
features themselves particularIf thoae wbicb prevent full participation in the formulAtinc ol.
the goala and purposes and the
developaatt o l . - in directions that individuals are •
OODvinced will lead towaJd desired ends - it is these sorts of
features that wreak'havoc upm
an inatitution.
In this reprd one of tbe organizational features OODtril;!u·
1:in1f most directly to a stullifl..
cation of endeavor may be the
prooosses that are used for selection of std members and
those used t o - individuals
for promOtion and possible lienured status. Tbrouchout all ol.
the procedures there is a poemium upon fulftllmant ol. ditiooal scbolarly criteria with
little ., no emphasis upon
(~OA-7,coLI)

;

�-~

6

Al"jl 2!1, JP11

AAUP Asks Publication of _Appellate Decision_on the Hayes 45

DEA..R PROPBfBOB BODDY:

We have indicated to President Ketter d&gt;e sense ol CODcern of the Association regardina the public:ation in the February 11, 1971, ialue ol the
SUNY-Buffalo Reporur ol
the President's report ol October, 1970. Our particular emphasis was witb respect to the
llealment ol the "Bulfalo 45"
developments in HP.t of the
...... p~ culminatina
in. the revel81ll on appeal ol the
convictions of the faculty members. In """'''J'M to our suggestion as to the"desirability as a
result, ot~lic:ation of the Appellate D1vision op~n in the
same forum as the report was

~=~!f::.~~:r

ol the University faculty could
submit it to the Reporw and
I would presume tbat it would
be printed. ft
•
Accordingly, it would
entirely appropriate that 8uch
a request be made by the Executive Committee of the chapter.
We would of course concur in
the requesL
-Sincerely yours,

seem

...

8EHTJlAll H . DAVIS
GENERAL SEC1lETABY, AAUV

NR&gt; Yorlt Law .tournai
23 Nov. l970
pp. 1, 4.
STATE UNIVERSITY OF
NEW YORK, respondent, v.
ROBERT K. ·DENTON et al.,
appellantS.
. Decided Nov. 5, 1970.
Present: Del Vecchio, J.P.;
Marsh, Witmer, lJ&lt;JBtow and

Henry, J.J.

Appeal by defendants Robert

K . Denton and forty-five others
from a judgment of Erie Special
Tenn.

Ward,

J .,

adjudging

them guilty of criminal contempt of Supreme Court, and

imposing a sentence of thirty
days.

Herald Price Fahrinaer, Buffalo, N. Y., attorney for appellants.
John W. Condon, Jr., Buffalo, N.Y., attorney for appellants.
Willard H. Myers, ill, Buffalo, N. Y., attorney for appellants.
John C. Crary, Jr., Albany,
N.Y. (Thomas H. Winfield of
counsel), attorney for reapondenL
Saul Touater, New York, N.

~~otO:

wnity Proleaaors.

to the action "'*f. be bound by
an iniunctioo if they have
know'led.,. of it, .,_.;dec~ they 'are-servants oc qenta ol the defendanta or act in collusion or
combination with them.... But
the underlyina principle in all
caaes uf this class, on which
is founded the power ol the
court to punish for the violalion ol ita mandate persons not
parties to the action, is tbat the
parties so punished were actina
either as the agents or servants
of the defendants or in oombination or collusion with them or
in assertion of their rights or
claims. Persous, however, who
are not connicted in any way
with the partiee to the action
are not resllained by the ordi!r
of the court" (pp. 24-25) .
n...... principles were reaffirmed in People ex rei. Stearns
-v. Marr (181 N. Y. 463; Briddon v. Briildon, 229 N; Y. 452;
Cbaae National Bank v. Norwalk, 291 U. S. 431; Intemational Brotherhood, e t c., v.
Keystone F. Lines, 123 F . 2d
326, and in the ftequently cited
opinion of Judge Learned Hand
in Alemite Mfg. Corp. v. StaiJ,
42 F. 2d 832), in which be said
at.pages 832-833:
·
" . . . (N]o court can maJce a
decree which will bind anyone
but a party; a court of equity
is as much so limited as a court
of law; it cannot lawfully enjoin the world at Ialge, no matter how broadly it words ita
decree. If it assumes to do so,
the decree is pro tanto brutum
fulmen, and the persons enjoined are free to ignore it. It
is not vested with sovereign
powers to declare conduct unlawful; ita jurisdiction is limpus. ited to those over whom it gets
On MarCh 11 the faculty sen- pen;onal service, and who thereate of the university P,assed a fore ican have their day in
·Thus, the only occasion
=J~f otrtf!'gins~tuti"o"ntin~ courL
when a person not a party may
order the withdrawal of the be punished, is when he bas
police from the campus, but he helped to bring about, not
took no such action.
merely what the decree bas forTbe judgment we are review- bidden, because it may have
ing found ap;&gt;ellants faculty gone too far, but what it has
members guilty of willfully vio- power to forbid, an act of a
lating the provisions of the pre- party. This means that the reliminary injunction of March spondent must either abet the
5 in that on Marth 15, acting defendant, or must be 1egaUy
individually and in concert with identified with him."
each other and in concert with
Measured by these criteria,
others with notice of the pre- the appellants were not made
liminary injunction, they en- subject to the preliminary intered the office of the president junction by the language "all
of the universizy located on the persons receiving notice ol Ibis
campus and unlawfully refused preliminary injunction:'' There
to leave the office when asked is no basis on the facts preto do so. Appellants were not sented for the conclusion that
among the named defendants in appellants, wbo bad no opporthe injunction action, were not tunity to be beard in the inparties to the aP)'lication for junction proceedings, were
the temporary inJunction and subject to punishment for viowere never personally served lation of the order of March 5
with the order of March 6.
(Dixon v. Talerico, 217 App.
Tbe threshold question to be Div. 191) . "'The courts . . .
considered, therefore, is wbeth- may not grant an enforcement
er appellants were bound by order or injunction so broad as
the order of March 5, which to make punishable the conduct
was addressed to the named of persons who act independentstudent defendants and "all ly and whose rights have not
persons having knowledge" of been adjudged according to
the order, and whether accord- law" (Regal Knitwear Co. v.
ingly appellants may be found National lAbor Relations
guilty ol criminal contempt for Board, 324 U. S. 9, 13).
its VIOlation. Well settled principles of law require a negative tio!''!.i:i'!,.noJ,.:''!'..,. ~
answer to the inquiry. Tbe quate showing ~justify Special_
rules respectina preliminary in- Term's conclUBlQO that appel'
junction&amp; were laid down in the lanta bad Jmowled.,. ol the prelandmark case of Riii&amp;B v. Liv- liminary injunction because we
ingston (178 N.Y. 20) . Tbere; conclude !bat knowled.,. of a
~ofthestatutoeyau~
non-party alone is not sul!iority for the issuance of such cient without proof of agency
injunctions (Code of Civil Pro- or col.lllllioll with the named decedure, aec. 604, which is sub- fendanta to impoae liability lor
stantially identical in ita criti- a violatioo (accord, Wrilbt v.
cal aspect to tbe P""""'l auth- County 8!)hool Board ol
ority, CPLR sec. 6301), tbe GremJSville County, Va., 309
Court of Appeals said:
F . Supp. 671; Briddon v. Brid"'n terms the Code author- don, supra; Rigas v. Uvinaizes an injunctioo apinst the stoa, supra; 7A W~ defendant only, not the wbole Korn -Miller, N. Y. Civ. Prac.,
world. . . . Tberefore, ., far par. 6301.25). Both Rigas and
as tbe order purported to re- Briddon (supra), involved nostrain all other periiOII8 bav- lice of the existence ol tbe inina lmowledgs ol the injuno- junction on the part ol the
tion, Ibis provision was ·
' pen11111 cbarpd witb conllempt,
alive to en1arp its ~"ft"'~ but the oideJB ol cmtempt
true tbat per80D8 not partlf!a ....,... Olll!riumed. We would

rupted by students demanding
the removal ol the pollee officers. Tbe state. c:oncedeo tbat
the appellants bere, as di&amp;tinguished from the students,
"were. not party to the violent
ami disruptive actions leadina
to the injunctioo."
In an attempt to prevent further acts of violence, the university on Feb. 2:1, by order to
show cause, .commenced an action against thirteen named studenls and John Doe and Jane
Doe for a permanent injunction. Tbe order to ahow cause,
which was coupled with .a temporary resllainina order, required the named students to
ahow cause why a temporary
injunction restraining certain
conduct on the campus should
not W!ue. On Mar. 5, the return day of the show cause orde·r, no appearance was made
on bebaU of the students, and
an order was made enjoining
the students "and all other persons receiving notice of this
preliminary injunction, wbether acting individually or in
concert'' · Cl) from acting within or adjacent to plaintifrs
buildings in such unlawful manner as to disrupt or interfere
with plaintifrs lawful and normal operations or unlawfully to
interfere with ingress to or
egress from such properties or
otherwise to disrupt the lawful educational function of the
university, and 12) from employing unlawful force or violence or the unlawful threat of
force and violence against persons or property.
Tbe preliminary injunction
was served by posting copies at
various locations on the cam-

U:,

point out, ~. ~~ in our
view tbere 18 a _......., q.-.
~ whether postina. . alone,
Mlil!"'l peraonal sery•_ce oc
reading aloud the pr0Y1810D8 of
the temporary injunction, was
sufficient to subject appellants
to the prohibition of the man- •
date and to make them lial?le
to criminal contempt convJClion for ita violll;tion.
.
Tbe record m the mstant
case Is devoid "! any proof ~~
the students VIolated_ the IJ!·
junction and the ev~dence 18
legally insufficient to es~blish
that the faculty members_ either
were agents of or acted m collusion with them. Tbe injunclion was specifically aimed at
the conduct of the students.
Tbe faculty members 'W!'re not
~ ~ the disruptiye_ actiona which led to the m)unclion nor were they charged
with acting in concert with or
as agents of defendants. Consequently, even if they bad
knOwledge of ita pro~isions, ,
they oouJd nc;&gt;t !&gt;&lt;' held m con~P! for _theu ':"depend~! aclion m disobeymg the m)unction.
Plaintiff olfered proof that
after the faculty members entered the president's office o~
of the group banded to a uruversity staff member a paper
which sta"'!f tba! the lrD!-'P
would remam until the police
were removed from ~ campus-and t,ba~ they were m sympathy With the general purposes of the. strike. . Plaintiff
argues that this esta~?lished that
appellants ac~ m . concert
and/ or collus10n WJth . the
named defendants as Bld!'rs
and abettors. Tbe concess•_on
that appellants were not parties
!" the &lt;lisr?~tive _acti?ns lead~g. to ~ m)unction l8 a clear
md}cat~?n ·t hat they were not
acting m concert and/or colllplion with defendants and,
smce there was no Pro&lt;?f that
defe_n&lt;!anta. ~v.es v1ola~
the IDJunCilon, 11 !"""lot be S&amp;ld
that appellants '!'ded and '\!letted them (Gamgan v. Uruted
States, 163 Fed. 16; see also
United Pharmacal Corp. v.
United States; 306 F. 2d 515) .
Tbe mere fact that an actor
may be sympathetic to the desires of one properly bound by
an injunction, or that by his
conduct ·t he former acoomplisbes Yo'bat the party enjoined
wants accomplished, is not suf.
!icient to establish beyond a
reasonable doubt tbat the conduct was carried out in oombinstion of collusion with the
named enjoinee (Rigas "· Livingston, supra). We conclude
therefore tbat appellants were
not bound by the injunctioo
and tbat the application to
punish appellants for contempt
of court aril:ing out ol a violation ol the order of March
5 should have~ denied
For the guidance ol the
court and parties in future
criminal contempt p~
arising out of civil actiolls, we
make the following comments:

~~ ~i:.f!

jurisdiction as oC i Vi { special
proceedings (Matter olLlouglas v. Adel, 269 N. Y. 144, 146;
Eastern c. s. Co. v. B. &amp; M.
P. L U. I..oca1, No. 45, 200 App.
Div. 714, 717), we are bound
by decisions of the United
States Supreme Court to - nize !bat "criminal contempt
is a crime ~ !he ~
sense; •.. conviction~~ for cnminal contempt are indistinguiabable from -ordinary criminal
convictiooa, lor their impact on
the individual defendant is "the
aame" (Bloom v. Dlinois, 391
u. s. 194, 201) . In tbe words
of Mr. Justice Holmes, '"These
contempt&amp; are infractions ol tbe
law, VISited with punishment
as such. If such are not
criminal, . we are in enor aa to
the most funda-.u cbarac-

teriatic ol crimes aa tbat word

baa been undentood- in Eng-

liab apeecb" (Gompers v.
United State., 233 U. 8. a&gt;4,
610).
"In criminal contempts, as in
criminal ...-, tbe presumplion ol innocence obtains.
Proof of guilt must be beyond
reasonable doubt and the defendant may not be compelled
to be a witness against himself
( Gompe.,._ v. Bucks Stove &amp;
Range Co., supra, 221 U. S.
418, p. 444). Tbe fundamental
cbaraeteristica of both are the
same" (M.ichaelson v. United
States, 266 U. S. 42, 66) . Due
process of law requires that the
accused should be advised of
the charges against him and
have a reasonable opportunity
to meet them by way- of defenae or explanation with the
aasistance ol counsel and the
right to call witnesses (Cooke
v. United States, 2fn U. S. 517,
537).
•
We also recognize as lundamental in a proceeding of Ibis
nature the right to be confronted by tlie accuser and, to
cross-examine him. Wben, as
here, a person charged with
criminal contempt bas contraverted the charge through hii;
attorney as be is entitled to do
&lt;People ex rei. Supreme Court
v. Albertson, 242 App. Div. 450,
453) a full bearing is required
at which the disputed issues of
fact may be resolved. At such
a bearing witnesses should be
produced, rather than mere affidavits, thereby ensuring a
party the right to confront and
cross-e:u.mine witnesses. Tbese
rights are basic to a defendant
charged with tbe commission
of a criminal act and we see no
reason why they do not apperlain to 0118' charged with-crimina) .contempt with the same
force as those rights explicitly
assured by Gompers v. Bucks
Stove &amp; Range Co. (supra)
and Cooke v. United Slates
1supra).
Tbe judgment should be rersed · d the roceed"
d"
ve.
an
P
mg lSmissed.
All concur.

Students Are
Opposed to
Dogs Indoors
Stuilenta are overwhelmingly ~ to the presence, of
dogs in campus buildinas and
would ..._,.te with a request not to bring dogs into
buildings, according to a survey by tbe Norton stalL
As prelll!llled to the University Enviromnental Healtb and
Safety Committee, tba survey
ol 3200 students included anIIWI!I'lltofive~

To the question, ''Would you
a II o w unJeu&amp;ed dogs with
OWDers to be ~~ in buildings?", 912 said yes, 1931 said
no.
Five hundred ellhty-eigbt
favored allowing dota m Norton while 1617 ~
To the question, "II y o u
were requested not to bring
your dog into the building,
would you abide by this request?". 2557 said yes, 643 said

=:
DO.

The Health and Safety Com-

~'t.klnO:

in the wake of complaints about dogs, in Hocton partiaJiarly. It baa ....,.
ommended tbat "the admill"
lstzation hire a J*'80II -"'e
ol a.....W....U'"' aniJmllio at
larae,\Or~junct to aad
an end rault ol any publisbed
_ , _ , for Cllllllol of
campus,

~-

....

�~

April 29, 1971

(---froa-6,eoU)
creatHII !If Innovative flair..
U there ... tboae in the
"elder IICbDim" lllllilplry wbo

and muatbe piOieclied with ev-

ery DIMlla ~·
2. CUA'I'B a Tlltla acvJIJ'lT

IN

Grads AskRd to Vote For Maruiatory Policy;
]!'ees Funded 48 Clubs/Projec/B This Yror

IW&gt;nBONAJ. -

::c-'wo!J.I!ooJ::e=e~~ ~j'ty'~!'""~ ;:_ roln.-u;mos~ ~

nurtured ~tbe ~ atabd
by wblcb
the elite

:,wa....:-:. '"the.!' ~
tt:e.':.'t
rather ·than

and

~....~- '1!:d ~

suita OlD come OD!y tbroudt
...........,., of eolid . . _ t tor
the UIIDl'tbodox and the untzaditional The . _ t for latowledse and tbe -..h for re1e-

=

~ ~~~e=U:~ ~~

dent 1 - you ohould have am-

.,r::.,:e~tion~
:.a !b':. S:,dd=.,~tial
~

the
~ a hazardous enterprise.
A niealion lhouJd llJoely also dom to in the punuita
be ....ae of 8IIOibw factor in .. - r y and security in the
the ~ of UDder elfects and eonaequenees of
diaculliaD- 'lbl8 hM to do witb such endalvor ia a prerequisite
the - - I n wblcb_.YOUII&amp; as- of aU profa.ional activity.
p~tlal ldldf members
Tenured status is a requireare beinl fed arplll&amp;lla about ment if teecbera are to be exthe inoompeliollcy and unmov- pected to encaae in true scholability of elder scholan In 'or- arly endeavor. In fact, the need
· ......_ It
·~
for tenure abould not be Q\15gsmza-..- tioned. What abould be Q\15pMrll ao thoulh there Ia a detioned are l"the many '--'~'-·h'berale attempt. to Cultivate _
wt'fh _._,~ ~~stastrife IIIDIIIIII the varioua levels r • w•....,. """"
of faculty (the out group vs. Ius is granted 111111. the llOillle. the in group) In....- to man- Qtll!ll&lt;BI upon professional preipulate more elfectively from dispositions ol policies tzadithe top Aetually cme of the tionally applied in &amp;election,
moat elfdve ....,..;,. of tynuml- pmanenromotiODt
' statusandtoa'~vt:dualsgperm·cal manipulation Ia 1D _....,
"""
an _...____ ot concerted elfort profeseional service. In fact,
on ~ of a total group by perhaps after initial careful aeeultivaling conlliet amoog the lection for creative and imaginconstituent eJementa involved. ative flair, candidates should
l¥. Who! To DD automatically be granted full
At this c:rucial ,_.;,t in the status in the society of scholars
history of educad;;i(in fact, with romplete protection of tenof civilization) It would _ , ure provisions. 'Ibrougb such
tragt'c to become engulfed in arrangements, the fresh. vibrant
~-~
.
and vigorous p~ties of encontroversies..._. upoo apun- tranta into ·educatioilal aetlvity
ous issues. 'There are 80 many
uld be released f
challenaesthatto educaof
_,~~ !"'" ~ve 0011tribution
deavor
are ... ~......... am- ·
d lled
· bl ted b
portanoe that .,._.;... devoted
mg u
or UD
Y arto 1·-•---t - · ---~ be d&gt;aic processes that induce
oonJ::i':"'It ia in d.':iigbt cnaoture.nformation by their very
tha
ttem t bas been made
to \.."; ~t
·elements of 3. RECOGNIZE THE OVERPOWER·
tenure 0011troversies and pro- lNG NEED FOB VABIETY IN EDU·
vide some analysis of them. I . CAT'nONALI
UPEhas
.. ~~Tiarl
.
te
00 ong
- + the • I
""'~
Y en ruld like to
l:.mg lines of~vor. ~~~
1. FACE THE llBAL _,... OF need to p - t a unified ap0 ERN EDUCA'ItON
ch to
tte of
MToo much time
elfort of ~:ric and ':ten~
lseulty bas been wasted on ha- Edu&amp;tion is not and cannot be
rangues related to spurious i&amp;- cc&gt;rVJtrued as a ,process or tJans..
sues. Debating tenure as boon mitting dogma or perpetrating
or bugsboo to educatiooal prot!· an undutnging heritage. It must
res&amp; is one of tbe major d1vertbe, as emphasized throughout
.
·
•·t bas been
·
I ·
mg enterprises. ~
a these comments, a ivtng, growcentral theme of tbla analysis ing expanding process. As such,
that concerns ..,oo.,lt the' tenure it can be nurtwed.only through
issue atem from mlacooceptioos an unlimited variety of means,
of its elfeet upoo professlonal proceaaes and people.
life and mUdn~tatlons · of
Attempts tbroudt promotionits value in application to or- a1 and tenure granting proceganizational pU.radts.
dUres to ensure competence in
What matters at the moment the form of conforming pattern&amp;
is preciaely the nature of edu
of thought and·actinn are antication as an Institutionalized
the
.
f
Whether orpnizad ed
thetical to
-nurtu~mg
prooeoa.ti.onal
d
· · • b • truly needed prerequim.theles or
uca
en eavor IS • 0 e acholaily endeavor m
acastructwed ina viablefubioD in demic community today. Recmodem aocietles imd whether ognition that a wide speetrum
inatitutional forms OlD be de- of approaebes must be reprevelOPelf which will render such sented in educatiooal pursuits
P . , . _ relevant to tbe Dl!lids ' today is a necessity for the
of cODtinnlne dvillzation Ia tbe _ _ .,_ of ,__.,tutions for
major i.;;;;:" .
~_;:;:;: ·;;;;iee !:';.,.,;.,ties of
T0
"~ the ~-'- of • .......,
acoompaion
....,.
which they are a part.
providing the ..,..._.tive and v. FIMI reoonatructive lbrwrt that a so- • Tenure-hoOD or btulaboociety must have within ltaeif, is a OQDtroveray that will likely
and which OlD be ~ted continue to hold academic
only by a vilaroul and viable communities in ita pasp. ' No
inatitutiooalbed edueatlonal great amount of enlightenment
enterpriaa, a ; . . educatlooal OlD be ezpecte.d from partieular
"~ will haw. to be ~ {or moat of the
developed 'lbi8 lllUIIt be a cOD· ~ are too eoibedded in a
~ molded by ton- COIIIICioo- of a total society.
and facton of tbe ti..- and But the__.......,.,. of becoop-

orpnba'da...J

are asked to act 011 faith-not
f8cta ; on promJ806-110t
.
proof.

.....a..

proof
The issue hingeo on whether
the GSA is an effective organization and .whether you, as crad
students, are g e t tin g your
monefs worth out of it. These
~ are raised whenever
lee&amp; are disCuseed 80 this letter
will try to simulate these queslions and our answers.
Q: . _ has the GSA c:tuonpd In
the last _ ..

A The.-GS.A bas been
:
reorganized from the inside, setting
up a truly representative elected council, and has systematically tightened a II financial
procedures. This aetlon was
taken before outside ~·­
appeared, because the
there. The fiscal revisions inelude the bonding of the treasurer, oPeD budget bearings, outside audit of. the books, midyear budget reviews and initiation of the recovery of unpaid
loans and strayed equipmenl
Additionally, n~ year's fees
have been lowered without lowering the amount available to
GSA clubs. The fees have also
been graduated to eliminate the

,;.,;;;r.;;.;;

!tel"o:'= d.;!':::· taxing of part-time stu-

t!su,

:!:=.r==!:!d
"::a:

.;,m

t

=-::~~tua~ !::.:t:'~::::

Two tblnp are - ' Y for
the ~t and tqnanation of a 'MRi OllD'ICinoFirst, there be a dellberate elfort IDilde *t entice in·
dividuals with a creative fta!r
"!"! an iiDqinatlve~-

::' ~...
s-Jl; ~

~-be ...... 80

aecwe
..-.t

that

tbebe~lial

OlD

they

,....,.1-u-l.

C,.tlvity and lmar nati~n,
" ' - put Into "'-atiWt proo- . oflal frilbten tbe ClribodOE. ·on- ... pnclous CQIDmodilieo In modem lnatltuliona

Q: H- . effective Is the GSA In

c:IUinalnc Unlwrslty policies obout

&amp;rHu•m otuclonts?
A An {f
t·
'ttee
s~etu!
c.;.w,r=~hich

w:.

brought the GSA directly into
the University governance systam and bas already produced
important improvements &gt;in the
s"tu
. gbdtsentsan.d resources of grad
For example, as a result of
SchGSAoolpresshasureraised,_
the theGfar duses~
.
f the
. .
t
mate o
mmunwn aooep abhile
stipenAddi&lt;! !o~d U':istr'~8 ps.
tio
y,
ruversity requested 80iile $700,000
in no-string!! fellowship money
for 71-72. While this money will
this ·
not I ike I y come
trme,
Rooky did recommend onethird ofts \t.
t
'U!,ter;;.~
18
reques
se or
years. The Academic Affairs
Committee inid~~ and is participating in
ling new academil: grievance procedures to
be used for appeals above the
department level. They are also
gathering information about departmental d
requirements
d
rk 108edsgreeto 81"d ·
an wo
m protecting the intel'ests of grad
students. The Housing Committee is working on two fronts,
by participating in a Faculty
Senate elUIIIIinat:ion of the probtem and by determining the
li · ·
f the state
legal ob gslions o
ineurredd '~lluse ~f
Impose
co ege ee. .
ee

80 if'

!!'TJ.t4f"·

~~'::J:~d."'!toc1:/~

grad studenta at this University. There have also been GSA
repreaentatives on milst of the
various task forces and llelll'c:b
committeee. Ellpmsi011 of student bealth insurance (State-

paid&gt; is also being investigatfession to ipore. Thus. I .......Id ed.Bi-weekly me e tin g s with
hope tbe comments cODtained President Ketter and Dean
in !Mae viewpointa will leed to Munay were established to a!cODtinued anldysis and rellec&gt; low direct communicatiOD with
tiOD by aU wt..- interests are ' the centers of power and to eninvolved. '!be future of our pro- • able grad otudenta to bv.feaaion demanda no'-mid~ ltotllened&lt;s. This bu
proven valuable.

GE GrantS

uJ/1:
sr.:.lm-= ;!:'"&amp;!:;
tha a-mi Eleclrlc FOund&amp;

!!!_

.......

~" ' : , ~

has tile

lat:ic!aa-

A:In addltloo to the prooedural

.
Ia
tioned abowoe.
~and ~I::,= pnu:b more
of ...__,...... dlacrimin8
. 1'Ia aUocatiOD
8elda -~· of '--~- ....,_,m
allocated
0

...--t

le-

OUDUB.

-~

........

bandting ita own affaira, both
effectively and responsibly
without, and despite, outaide
p..-.re.
Your money bas been used
responalbly and will cODtinue
to be 80 uaed. Our impact 011
University policy will cODt.inue
to expand as we take advantase
of the legitimacy and eq&gt;erience develOPed this year.
For !Mae reeaons, we ask
you to _vote for mandatory fees.
The GSA bas nothing to apologize for and a great deaf to
be proud of. Your GSA needs
each person's conbibuti011 to
provide the collective ~
to bring continui!lg service tD
its members.
Vote YES for mandatory
fees--today.

in~~:f's!,~~~ was
rigidly controlled and C!lft!(ully
.followed, reaulting in an 80 per
cent cut in the budgeta a~b­
mitted. Fee waiver sye:tems
were used to handle individual
hardshi caaes and, significantly, no ifsA officer reoeiWtd any
pay for his work. The· eq&gt;erience gained thia )lll&amp;r will allow
the system to · function even
more effectively next year.
In 8tiiillDIIry, the GSA has
shown itself to be capable of

THB aBA. PIHANCE . 001011'1"1'8Z
8AJI LAWNIIATIIDIAftCS, 'l""':&amp;A&amp;!IUR

in order to best .-ve the needs

JOHN GaBENWOO~
PSTCHOLOIIT
PAUL CUIOIINO-"
II.ANA.CIDODft'

F111!2JCAZDMEDiaNAL CHEIIJ8"nT
.JOAN RA.ftIIUMANITIIIB
'MARVIN IIDLOWI'r7-90CIAL POUNDATIONS
BUIUJB KAJIATH-

PHADIACBUTICS

'O.T--1-1-y 1"',...,.,._,_~....,.....,.---------"~ ~....,
(Continued from pate 8, col. 5)
by televiaion moniton projeciinamulti-images. Their cunent proirison, Center for Theoretical Bi- ect is lhe pub~
· of lhe periology· I 30 P
P lie AnaQ&gt;•u odi-' Radical So tware, whieb
and S~t~'::· Arle YHalacbmi, de~ lhe revolution in popular
policy aciences, 2:30 p.m., clooing use of lhe media.
remarks.

_,...,NmoN DAY : and testimonial LffiRARY EXHIBITS
clinns·
. s·-r_~.~.o....
nor....tan
of tDmr.eclical'l_'bomaadi· - Permanent eoohihi.t of
~
J
P
"'=r'~~·~!1=~~~ ~Y~rary~:;;::; p.m.
U/B Medical. Sebool. Statler Hil· Sir Waltar Scott bicentenary uton.
hibit. featuring fir at eclitiolla.
PODL\'I1WITS ,...,....BONE UlCTUIII: :
worb by contemporarieo, enpavDavid Davidson, PnTAU.S IN Tm: inp and watercolon, thrc&gt;UP
lNn:R.PaBTATION OP &lt;UNICAL LABMay.
.
ORATORY USUL'r&amp;, apoiUOred - by Poste .. and broadsides from the
~= t~"tf~. ~;...62 ~Y'; ~~:" 92nd.._:.':Sr P~:
,. ED 1cAL TllCBNOLOOIBt'B 'I'I:U:· through May.
Paom: UCCTIJBI:: Tbomu A. Re- =====-----jen~ TOXICOLOOY: CLINICAL TOXI· NOTICES
COLOOY
red b ftecional - - - -- - - - - - Medicai
6~ receiving SENIOR PIJUIIUGBNU.YS I'OIOGLU&lt;
locations, 1:30 p.m.
PO&amp; 1972-1.9'73: Tbe Committee
PBYBie&amp; coLLOQUIUM: Dr. R.J. p~..:_te~ceo ~~P.W:.
Weise, Materials and Mechanica
Ha.,
Reiearch Center, Watertown, :::-m:o~o~ve~"f'~
Maooaebuoetta, ocna&gt;&lt;INAftON OP and advanced ,_rcll dllrinc
EUOCniON MOMIOITt1M ..,.lmlll. 1972-78 in over 76 countries are
Ill Hochsl&lt;itter, 4 p.m. RefNOb- now being acoeplad. Tbe '-ldet
menta, 112 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.m. on the propam for thio period
ENVDIONMENT.U. mUCAftON o&lt; TO
!iota approximately 2li per cent
more awardo' tban the booklet for
c~cm.J.:.'"'b.!:l in-if'\~ries
1971-72. It io available on requeot
0
1 1
!.n.!"recl·
rby
~-~~-•uma
~
n
to the
(2101 Conoti:
0
~~·~~
JJevel.
·
A
Wubinct&lt;&gt;a. DC.
opment and IJ&gt;otnactioaal Media: ~~). :"~ be coaoulted 'at
g'fV:O~r o~t.":.'ln!rcc::; lhe ollice o1. the Faeulty Fulti
Phi Delta Ka Coaunio- bricht Advioor, lameo A. Midtion Teacher ~.;.!Mm and elli. 309 T~ HaiL
Prof..;OIUII Standanla. Faeulty
Applicatioa ~ta in
Club,• Harriman Library. 7:30- elude: U.S.· citiaenohip: •for ~
....ru ~~~o:=l
__,,_
· ·
9:30 p.m., free.
COLLOQUIUM ON UTDAn&gt;a AND awanlo. :Z.C:rate or, 'in FAITH' : .PhiliPP F. Vei~ HeiM:
fielclo, l'OCCIIII!zed prof-.1
~Mm
Dief-rf •tandinc u ·clemOnotrated by faePILM': .,. VIDIT o'IBT (ltle8, Go- ~~=--.=. ~­
dard) . Aa See You in Mao and
July 1, 1971 io the doadline for
PI'&lt;JUd4 a poet-May 1968 &amp;1m
ap-'yinc for - . d o awanlo, and
Script 'by DaniOI Cobn--L it :;'the - - ' date for lllinc
Godanl io now tryinc to make a for 1ectuN0bipo.
.
I'8\'0iutioa u well u a ..,.; wave.

worb:;,

'C':o":"rsm.

Commi-.

0::::

::...m:

:":·

~~:=~·~;-.;.:';:: INTERVIEWS

vine, COIIduetor, Baird Recital
Hall, 8:30p.m., free.

nntv.u.•: Eye-Con0-Sp/lear, feotllliq Raindanoo,
IDe., Life Cycln (&gt;ideo eeviJon· m.tat. Room 281, N~r;t-. 1-4
SNINO """'

Tbe 01&lt;-aMPUB ...............
IUJII1inc . throuch May

PIIOG&amp;AJl,

7 in tbe IIPriDc MIDII!IIIter, ol'en

lhe OPportunity for individual interviewa with edUCIItiOIIal, buoi,_, incluotrial and ..,..,rnmental
~~~Roc!!: rep.-ntaU... Candidateo from
all d - te.,elo ant itrvited to inand 1o:ao.p.m.
"T;rN!'~ daily Ill . terview. Re,;ot:ralion ro.... and
additional infcnmation are aftilR_aladuco, oble in Hayeo C.
_

~o-.e

Ill:' ;::.,.

for r::uate

8llid,y in
and lepl and

.of grad students and of the University Community in IJI!III!cal.
The main eriterinn used was
whether the item would provide
oorvices -unavailable el.sewbere
and wo;uld aerve an appropriately large s e - t of the grad
student populatiOn.
This involved funding 39
GSA clubs and nine projects
( see individual liat in Wednesday's Spectrum). The projects,
such as Day-Care, the Food
Co-op, the Together program,
the Draft Counseling Center,
etc., were aelected for funding
because they appeared to aerve
the immediate needs of grad
students and, more significantly, because they signaled the
commitment of the GSA to resolve aerious societal problems

--to
~

p-

ois--ol. . . . . _ _ n

IDe. • a for a -

wt.;

~

video

eadi llalarday N- Y...t'• Eaat 28nl
Strilot. Tho ftVUO!l'l*lt erea'lad inoide a pandmt.=f;Jpe , _

Iliac

OD

AI'IIIL

30 -

Hermoa-De'Kalb

Cen.tcal School (St. ....._)
MAr 6 - OtMIIand Boanl of

=~t!'r~~

City

�Aid 2f,

8

lf1J

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE -

to to -

.. Open to mombera of the UnhMnlly.
will1 a proiMslonal lntarest In the IUbject
Contact Suzanne llelz&amp;et, 831·22211. lor llstlnp.

•Open
public;
•Open only

THURSDAY-29

Spring Ljgh/B

the
-Sprinc-(-to.._--the--the-·--be1blo "'ffht oculpluro" ., Jon -

Breeze for nine playen written

cians by Ohio-hued compoeer,

~ f~'J;-=-!=~ ~

~:,.;: ~':-~e~SI:

videotaped live for WNED-TV,
oo only the fint 400 ~e will
be admitted. Albright-Knos Art
Gallery Auditorium. 8: SO p.m.,

Qoad-

of which the film _opnmg, of hio
own methods as a filmmake~

it ia an interroption which con-

otantly attempto to define the
question and the answer. It ia a
study of man in an intolerable
oituation. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and
8 p .m., f-.
INIIALA'nOH

TBaLlPY

ftLCPBON&amp;

~~~~·~

John Donahue, JIANAGDONT OP
~lNG

free.

A PATIENT

t'J':'O:~W:: \\J'.,';:'I,~P~
~:~.=,j;.~~~:

by ~onal Medical Prognun, 62
receivmc loeationa, 3 p.m.
OIADUAft DICITAL* : LiDda Orih
Lin&amp; Liao, pianiot. Worb by
Bach, Schubert, Schumann, Prokofiev. Baird Hall, S:SO p.m.

A. PUBLIC J'ILJ4·1N OF TD CltUCI·
ftXloK•; eee Friday lilti.nc.

third of the COD•
tinuing conferenca on the future,
Center for 'Ibeoretical Biology,
4248 Ridp Lea. apply for , _
-tidrMo •• the .c-..... -29.
9 a.m. Registration; 9 : SO a.m..
Simulation of the Phroum En·
uironmcnt. Arthur Stein, Comell
Aeronautical Laboratory; 9: 46

cite! Hall, 8:SO p.m., pneml ad·
miNion $1.50, farulty and atelf
$1.00, otudenta $.50. Ticketa at
Norton bent olllco and Baird bos
office. Alao Sunday, May 2.

I"'LLI•• : The Lion in Winter, eee

Thunof!ay liotincONZ--~ PLAYS•: eee Thur.day

liating.

SUNDAY-2

"E~

In
awnta, ~ Communique ._,.. below.

......... Moy 3-9.
....r
.-n. For -

!ro
Wo~~r ~=~ :O~t!:
piece for actor, voice and musi-

IJUAII.

.. pelt of

PROLONGI:D

~aAL VI:NTILA'I'IOK, apoD80red

TUESDAY--4
8011JLA.110N•:

California Inotitnte of the Arta,

YouncbJood io workinjr -on two
boob, Th• Vi&lt;Uoophere, about

"cJol&gt;el lalevioion . . . ao a tool
for c::GNCi.oua evolution •• and Earth
Noua, a novei/IICreellplay about
the new ooneciOU&amp;Iltlla. new lile-otyle, and their relation to tech-

nolocY.

A ft.Uft DCITAL* :

John f!u-.

flute, aooioted by Karin ReUthe,
piaDo; Cbarleo H a u p t. violin;
Jeeae Levine, vI o I a; Wolfram

Reuthe, violinoeUo. W o r k • by

&amp;~""Bu~=m~~~~~

. f~ty g=:t~teWii:i~t.!t~
uo.

WEDNESDAY--5
&amp;DmL.A.ftON• : continu..m,. confer-ences on the future, Center for
1!::"retical Biology, 4248 Ridp

fu"dic~:'t:z. p;:::er;:u:,:n~

DUtribution in La.ie EIW. John
Howell, chemical::r;;.·rinl; 11
a.m., Simulation o Stn01 and
Foa Formation,
rl Baier,
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory;
1: so p.m., Th•o,..tum and E%·
perimenuu Modelillll of ErwirollFluid-M ec1uvii&lt;:al Prob-

. ""'"tol
~.... T.R

Sundaram, Cornell

:.~~~::'.f ~=!:'~o. b~~
derwood.
2

BJ.B~:BALL•: Caniii~,
doubleheader, campuo, 1 p.m.

VA R 8 IT Y

POLn'ICAL BCiaf&lt;Z OOu.oQUilJK* :

Dr. Donald Stokeo will meet with
Dr. Milbrath'• Measurement Seminar to diacuu Error M~
ment in Simul.UJ.n.eou RelatWn.
Mod•linB. Room B-48, 4280 Ridp
Lea, 10 a.m.-12 nooo. Rio coiJo.
quium, The Rok of Ill• Economy
in Polilkal C!uJnB• will ..-t in .
f:.'~
&lt;C238 Ridp

:;,.om.

Dlft'ITIAN8

~Nil

~=

Marion Mika, HtmllriOHAL CAD

:..T~'==r'M":J~
pam, 62

p.m.

.-vine

locatiaao," 2

M:~=·~~ ,

2 p.m.

.

.

.

IP&amp;IMG aft J'IBftV.U.•: Eye..COA-9-Spl&amp;eor, fee~ MicbMI JAy.

- - in_I'Mdinp , , _ 7'/ae

.Bod 0v uu, Collie,_ n..a., -::
Nortoa, 8 p~ fnoe.

THURSDAY-----6

·

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>APRIL 22,,19'71

Albany Seen as Key
To Day Care Budget
authority."
The fact is, Dr. Lawrence
Cappiello, assisbmt to the ex·
ecutive vice president, pointed
out, "that President Ketter has
acted positively on ever-y day
care reque9l, where be bad the
authority to do so. His f"llSt
official presidential visit to Al·
bany last summer was partially
to achieve solution to day care
problems."
Tbe day care center bas been
operating on a self-iiUPPOriing
basis, through parental fees and
gifts.
Tbe University, however, bas
been providing free space in the
basement of Cooke Hall, although the space l.pa. certain
facilities required lfj..Jbe State
(contiluwl on 3 ;,;le 3)

-

.

Day' c.arn Demonstration
.

Tbe disagreement between
Dr. Daniel Murray, acting vice
pteSident for academic affairs,
and ~ A over the college's ~ practices 1-*'ed
a """' intenoity 1tiia week. At a

'!' "

l..t:.m.~c;:~

QUiring a ie~ Of College'"'A
grades as bad been aslr.ed by
Murray, took steps to instigate

a formal grievance action
against Murray in the Faculty
Senate.
.
Tbe fllrmal motion to start
this process was drawn up
Tueaday night by Dr." Konrad
von Moltke, director of the Collegiate • Aasembly, Dr. Fred ·
Snell, master of Collere A and
Dr. Raford Boddy, Social Sciences College. As the Reporto
to press, tb&amp;· cOUegiate
were voting on this moTbe motion cbarps Murray
with ''acting illegaHy" in "jn..
terfaring with the internal af.
fairs of the Col.lePIIe Aalembly . by 8UIIIIIIIIrily cloaing the
IIUDliDI!l" couraes of Colleae A
and dueatening lbe credit lot
all current registzaDIB." ''Redress" ia BflUiht flam lbe Senate by restoring Collep A's
summer course. registration and
budaet and 88ll'inl .,....-.

=
TVProgram
Set for 125th·

=-~~.,::;:;
eoue.e

t~ determined by
Tbe action -

tsbn in ....

"~?"""'!' tAJ Dr. Murray's CXIIltiD~ tbat Colleae A

WDI

must dwlae ita policy of "assl
llr8d.inll" Which he beliewls viola.... State educalion ....
~ of "clemaaatraled
llludeat aainmplisbment." At

the betlinning of 1hia Murray advised the Colleae ~

(~on~:J,ooL6)

�April 22, 1911

2

Mandatory Fees Backed

Security Fo:rre Is Now
Part of Norton Srene
By STEVE UPMAN
"We want campus police to
be aooepted as a oonnal part
or Norton."
Tlat's one Norton Hall offical's reaction to the re-opening last Wednesday ol the
Union's basement recreation
area under a policy or reglliar

~~~a~~y

OIIIDIDIU&gt;ity referendum in
March, there will also be student -=urity - . bet!Uming
this Monday. But, ays Bud
Manninl•....,...tion area direc-

tor, ·~student _,.,my teams
would-be belpiMi wilbout some
kind of back-op."
Campus police started providing tile back-up when the
recreation area reopened after
a month's sbut.down bropght

400mCozuse
On First Aid

In GSA AssemblyVote

about by an inaease in druirelaled crimes. Norton staff
members acco}llpany police on
their swings through IDe bw1ding.
NoNoptift 'Effect

Manning ssys he hasn't noticed the police's presence having "any negative effect'' on
customers. "'The first tiJne&lt; they
looked up and ssw police, they
wondered 'what happened.' But
when they see the poliO!' are
just paasing through they
don't mind."
"U it works, it's all right,"
is the typical student reaction.
"' don't mind," reports undergraduate Steven Alembik. "I
don't think they'll interfere
with anyone's activity."
Manning hopes polioo will
take some time out· during their
rounds in Norton to sit down
and talk to students. ''The police had mixed feelings about
entering Norton. By tsJking,
both aides will get to know
each othar."
Manning reports that Norton's crime rate dropped a
''fantastic amount'' during the
time the rec area was cloeed.
~~,;::::t recall one single in· He S8Y8 that Norton officiaJs felt the polioo patrols
made the aree safe enough to

Basic rust ilid ~
and fire c:onVol melbods are
being shown to OYer 400 people
durinc two trainins sessions in
safety · prooadurell this week
(yesterday and tomorrow) in
147 Diefendorf. The group of
staff and faculty from all over
the campus is learning mouthApplications for 15 studentto-mouth .-.sci1ation, critical
first aid procedures, bow to aide spots were handed out the
use common types of fire ex- l=t three days of this week,
1inguisbers and o t h e r tech- with selections scheduled for
niques needed in emergency tomorrow. They'll start workinK Monday. Aides, who will
situations.
These training sessions, be- wear identifying ties will get
ing sponaored by Environment- $2 50 an hour and will o k
al Health and Safety and the ' 10:i5 hours a ~ until jU:..,
University Health Servioo, are 1,- at which time monies run
out, and the program will be
part or new evacuation and
llllfety procedures which Rob- re-evaluated. Funds come from
ert Hunt, direotor of environ- both Sub Board I and the adments! besltb and safety, bas · ministration, Manning ssys.
Dorm security aides receive
drawn up. The procedures cover such emergencies as rues. $2 an hour, but Norton aides
bomb threats, and mass dem- receive more because of greatonstrations. The new p I a n s er peraonaJ risks. Aid.es will
have b e e n developed o n a cover Norton, mainly the first
floor and basement, from 11
~uilding-by-bui.lding basis with
a.m. to midnight, Monday
personnel in eech building responsible for . basic r.... con- through Saturday. Two aides
trol securify and first aid tbere. will be on duty during the day,
The dePartment or area which and three at .night and on Sunoccupies the greatest space in day. from 5 p .m. to midnight.
Al Ermanovics, assietsnt
.u.e building .i s in char or
director of Norton, who dethe tots! area, Hunt exp~.
Personnel from all depart- signed the program wantS the
ments in eech building will aides to be "the first encounter
in any situations which may
share duties, howev~.
1bese dutiee are separated develop. u they see drug abuae,
or
v·-"·"- they're· _ . _ ,
into four categories: monitors,
...__.......,
--security "'-rvenn, fire con- to in~.
And they're also
trol units and control. Moni- ~ to approach alcohol
04
tors are lf:o eDCO\ll'8ge OCCU· 'No ...,~
pants to leeve the building and
Although Ermanovica wants
make sure areas are evacuated," Hunt explains.- They will aides to be able to handle
themselves
physically, be S8Y8
also check to· make sure everyone bas left and will report this they won't be "martyrs."
Should
YioleDce
develop, aides
to the conaol officer.
Security obeervers will re- will have resort to Norton Hall
...m where money or peraon- etaff members who can lb.al property "is ~-"
out offenders.
Tbe fire conlzol unit 'will
"We just 'WilDt the aides to
work durlnc 'll fire or demon- get known," ~ Ermanovics.
'"They: oboald spend time inter~ They will know the
poai!Oooa of fire extinguisbers, act:inJ with iDdlvlduals to jet
bow to use tham, and bow to acquaiDted as much as pcMBible
report a fire. In caae or a mase with the fuDcdoninl ol. ihe
demonstration, fire control will buiJdina. They obouJd know
''inspect the premises for pos- the _people in the Ratholr81ler
sible Mf-igniting incendiary and rec area."
devices or material which may
· 'lbele • no formal tnlninl
be arranaed to aupport a con- period for aldea, l:oecauE ol the
flapetioa."
time f8elor. Ratla, they will
The conlzol is IDe peraon in pt an-lbe-jcb trainin&amp; aDd
charp or all theee effona with- ..,.,Jar evaluationa l!Y Norton
·
in a building who will notify Hall staff DBIIben.
Campus Security or EnvironTbe rec area's shortened
menllll Heellh and Salety or houn will naaln In e&amp;ct inan emeraency situation.
. . cWinilaly. They from 8
EVIICWition plans .lor indi- a.m. to 8 p.m. Moadoly tlu!Julh
vidual buildings and.the orpnl- '11uu81M,y· from 8 a.m. 1o 11
zation ol lllllety personnel for p.m. em ~ i1 LDL fo 11
eech are now being worked on, p.m. an Satufday, aDd 1 p.m.
fo 11 p.m. ... 8aDdaya.
Hunt expWns.

=-

=..~

The Graduate Student AJs&gt;Fees or $2.50 per aummer
ciation (GSA) unanililous.ly seeaion were ..-! by h
paaeed a motion Monday en- group. Approved for IIB1t yeer
dorsing. mandatory fees. Grad- ;.. a $7.50 per fee for
uate studem balloting, which is etudeniB Cll'l'Y'ini more then
or elections being held four credits and a $4.00 fee for
~bout SUNY, will be held 8l:udenls with four credits or
DeJ1t Wednesdey and Thursday,
'This fee will be split 40
April 28 and 29.
per cent for IDe GSA and 60
...._.....
___ .._._
f
per cent·for Sut&gt;-Board I, Inc.,
AI ........,.. a .............,ry · ee and •· a $1.50 ~..__._,___ from
licy would result in "re.......,......
iike this yeer," Michael last SI!IIIMter's fee.
A new GSA Cllll8litution was
Rosen, GSA president, painted
presented for tbe finlt time
8 dismal picture ol fewer grad. - activities if ·fees become Monday. A re-orpnizllllio or
vobmtary. · A s1atement from o!he prt!80d 'lllnloture outthe GSA -finance committee re- lined under which three specialminded the (ltOUp 4hat 48 clube i2ed vice pmriderlr 8 brinisand projects are now funded tnitive, e:a:teQid and aludent atand tbet cJosi! tto $20,00&gt; is 81- fairs - 'fi'ldd replace tbe curb:atecl VOluntary fees would rent II8CI'8tllry and vice PftiJiprobably lower tile ntmiler of deDtz The ~w vice
projects which could be sup- president would be m dlarae or
ported. The motion by the fi- o.ffice activities !""! coon1insnanoe committee fliJIIpolting a tion ol. all ~ 'l1le exmandatory lee po1icy was t.beli . temal v .p. would serw as a
ill'trocbioed and ~- ·
~ with laculty poupa and
~otina. places f!"' next ~ .r;:,.A.~the
weeks
refeiendum will be the post would _ _ _ . tile GSA
Hall and Ridge
•.,...~.
.
usual Norton
Lee, sites with .additional tabJee on Sub Board I and work with
beirc oet up at ~ Pari&lt; oCher student tp"OUp&amp;. .The ll[eW
and the Bell facility. Students ~ would also include a
will be needed fo man the sta- pre3ident and Ve&amp;surer.
tions, Lawn ssid, and tli8y will
The new plan allows the
be paid a dollar an hour. An.y- GSA to censure repreeentetives
one, including graduate stu- who miss two meetings or the
dents' spouses, is eJisibie to organization. This section
work. Interested individuals would, hopefully, end h quoshould c8Il111e GSA olfice.
nnn difficulties the group bas
Tbe GSA alao voted Monday experienced 'Ibis yeer.
&lt;to allocate $700 fo the 'I'otlelber
Program and $100 to Puerto
Rican Studies for the produc-tion of a play, ''Sorti:lege." The
finance OOIIUirittee had reoommended only $380 for Together
with no funds earmarlred for
Eight hundred and fifty resmedical expenses. At. tbe meet,.
have already heel) rein!f, however, a p p r o v .a I was ervations
ceived
for the 1,000 available
gained for an ems $320 to
cover medical examinations and places at the University's 125th
methadone treatments. A re- Anniversary Founders' Day
quest from Telos, a pbilOBOPI!ic Banquet, scheduled for the
Heertbatone Manor at 8 p.m.,
joumsl, .for $1500 to cover
penses for tbeir spring issue Tuesday, May 11.
John Corbett of WBEN-TV
was denied. A epokesman for
tbe journal indicated this would will be ~oor of ~
for
evening, the Anniver•lot&gt; ~ from publishing a ssry the
l',olicy Committee bas anspnng lliSile.
OOWloed.
Principal speeker will be Sol
M. Linowitz, chairman ol the
Reitan~
American Council on Education's Special Committee en
Campus Tensions.
Also on the program will be
the preeentstion ol: 10-15 l25l!i
JIB. GARY OOBB
Anniversary
Awards; the Samcf 0 VIEWPOINTS
uel P . Capen Award for outDEAR UB. 0088!
standing
eervices
to U /B by an
I will a d m i t to intended
mockery, but not or "students alumnus; and tb8 Walter P.
Cooke
Award
few
service by a
who seem o v e r t y concerned
'Wilh environments! problems," non-alumnus.
President
Robert
as I am unable 1D understand will bring lll'88tiniPI toLtheKetter
Banbow anyone is able to be over- quet
em b8half ol the Univerly conoemed -w i t h environsity
and
Dr.
0.
P.
JCIIBI
ol
the
ments! problems. However, Departmlmt of Allatomy will
lhoee who are sslisfied with _ . . en behalf or the Univercrying or listenini to cries ol sity's oldeet unit, the School of
WOLF deserve to be mocked. Medicine.
Was my letter reelly too subtle
Reaervationa- and debt infor you? Or did it burt you, formation for tbe ...-inJ may
Mr.. Goos, beaou••• it otruck be aeeured from the Ollae ol
home?
the
President for
Do you think me nsnow, sity Ralaticns, 186 H'ayea Hall,
Mr. Goes, because I apecialiJJe ext. 41!01.
'
in the Earth as my &lt;lbjel!t ol
study, i.e., because· · I am a
geologist? Do you criticize me
for euneetinll that the study
or the Earih and its problems
milbt be preferable to simply
crying WOLF? Would yoi1 advocate that environmental
lltudio!s be omeerthly? Are
you, Mr. Goes. a devotee ol
MAGIC?
•
Did You intend to defmd
the practice ol crying WOLF,
Mr. Goos? Don't you feer that
1CIUo Mr. Goes. may 1hen have
helped diH!enailize 80
paople that our firat "...J::l_
cated ...... will be ..._ """
~ eaten . lotletla by the

t.....

:.U,ts

......,...._
UIBJlasa

Professor,
But No Chair
The University's Albert Einstein Chair is one of two prestigious academic posts being
abolished by a I..egisla1ive r&amp;duction of $200,000 in the appropriation for the $ate's $1,000,000 endowed chair program
this&amp;?'':fbe.t Schweitzer chair
in the humanities, which, had
been earmarked for Fordham,
is the othar being eliminated.
· The State Departml'nt of
Education, which administers

::::~~~r~d-l"'~"!tt!l!':

these two when the appropriation cutback was made.
Although , two State legisla-

tors- Senator Ronald B. Statford of Peru and Assemblywoman Constsnoo E . Cook of
Ithaca - are trying to have the
$200,000 cut spread among all
10 chairs, Assemblyman James
1'. McFarland of Buffalo bas
announced his intention to eeek
Legislative abolition of them
all. He views the moves at U /B
and Fordham as the first step.
U / B meanwhile is in the position· of having completed arrangements for a Yale physics
professor, Jui Hsin Wang, to
succeed Dr. Conrad H . Waddington in the local Einstein
chair this summer. Dr. Waddington, a British geneticist, is
returning to England.
A University spokesman bas
ssid that the University helieves it bas a binding commitment to Dr. Wang- a commitment for which it now, emharrassingly, lacks funds.
Dr. Wang told the New York
Times last week that, "No one
ever told me about this uncer. tainty." When he last heard
about the matter, Dr. Wang
said, "everything .eeemed approved '!¢ awaiting the formal
word of the Regents."
The 10 positions, five Emstein chairs in the sciences and
five Schweitzer plats in the humarul:ies, were creeted by the
Legislature in 1964 to lure leading scholars to N- York campuees. Each provides $100,000
a year tor the scholar, his
graduate -asaistants and r&amp;seerch
.jects The
ported
Ythe
are
highly ei&gt;dowed posts in the
cademic wodd.
a
·
·

l::"'be ..;,...,

,.:t

~tAJS:,l~ ':i

education, YiewB the cuta as a

Mrious blow "to 111111 ol the
moet emtinll and ~

acaltemic pro1rams in the
country."
Asaemblyman McFarland
8ll,y8, """""-· that 4t'a hard
to aplain to a bod carrier wily
the State is cutting out
aida for the needy while still
flnancinl Arthur Schleain1er
~r.'s 118110iMnitinp."
SchJeain.,.. bolda a Schweitmr chair in City Um-.ity ol
N..,.. Y ark whidl ia Ullldleclled
by the ~t culL

-.m.

.J!:

125th&amp;nquet
Almost So1d Out

ex-

Goss' Charges -

vice

--PAUL H . IEZI'l"AN

um--

...

�April :12, I!11I

•3

Seriate Acts
On&amp;wrm.,
. Stote Laws ·~

ru~(COIItilwedfro•)?G6e I, c:oL 6)
bring its gradlDC procedures
iuto ·Jine with theae State poli-

cies. Late in Maid&gt;, the aca-

demic vice . pmsident wrote to
von Moltke in reprd to College A's llllllllllel' budget. The
assembly director wrote to Col~ A's Snell advising him that

Dlecusaion about to
funded-tnmt prosx-Ja and of
a State Jaw which placeS a
moratorium on sabbat.ic:als took
up mast of Friday's Faculty
Senate
The SOEion,
which was the second this
month. ClOIIBidered two resolutions left on a fourteen-point
qenda from the earlier meeting, and ended with an open
discussion of the status of women and tenure.
Most of the meelinl{ centered
around the motion 11ving "all
U /B faculty membeno and students free to all fundell-

-w...

r=t.:;:.r!f.!::..~

Uncertainty arose on whether
this information rould be obtained from the funding agencies and whether ihese agencies
would tet U /B release such in·
formation. An alternative plan
which would just allow a"""""
to the abalzacts of the funded
grant&amp; was .discusaed. After an
extended examination of the
matter in which Robert Fitz.
patrick, acting vice president
for .--arch, fielded questions,
the Senate defested a motion
to return the resolution to committee and tabled it, instead.
The represen ta ti ves next
quickly approved a motion asking the SUNY Resean:h Foundation to "delepte to an ollicer
of this Univennty the power to
act for the Resean:h Foundation." This.ollicer would "serve
as the mesns of communication
betwesn granting a(181lcies and
potential or actual holders of
grants, and should , alao have
responsibility· for maintawloe
of the appropriate accounts."
Dr. William Baumer, chairman of the Senate, announced
that the next Senate meeting
will be held May 13 at 2:30
p.m. in 147 Diefendorf. This
year's meeting of the entire
voting faculty will be May 25
at 2:30 p.m. in· Acheson. The
voting faculty baa no legislative power, n.. 'Thomas Frantz,
_,...,tary of the Senate, ex-

J!"J..~· d:'-'1:. ~ ~

President Ketter poesibly be. - t . At this 808Bion, re:fts of the Faculty Senate~­
lions for vice ch8irman-elect
and new SUNY Senator and
alternates will be announced.
A special Bsa:utive Committee poup set up to act as a
liaison between the Senate and
SPA reported on its p.....-.
Concern over the of a
bill which calls for a moratorium ·on sabbaticala nat year
and another which sets a minimum 1m faculty teachini hours

:= ==-aen:e~~

eratioa. The~ 88b that
a axnmittee be 8et up to "ilpprias the members ol the Legislature and J&gt;Utieularty those
from the M'lllpl'8 PrOatier of
the unwise features of this letrislatioa; of the elfOrts whiCh
the University baa made and
iB oantinuiDg to' malre to maintain and improve thete:ty
ol ita !Mdlina. the
•ty of
illi -..:b and the
relatloasblp between these two;
.and to . . .
• te Legis. latiw reviaioa
acts ea
'I_Uiddy as poBble." This mo. tioll ..-eeL
ni

811J:"'*u.:e

The IIIMiinl ended wi~
01*' cliacualiaa about faaulty
.._..... Dr. Peter
0.... spoke to the poup
about tba a1me o1
lJb.
- - . . ADd Dr. Pierre Hart

w-··

~ apm.t a quota N8tric&gt;

tioll Oil IWIIIben ol teaared Jac.
ulty. Dr. Baumer -.red

Hart that a quota would ..n

be lmpJemeDted without full
faaulty diacuMlan.

BUO: ,Oll

Ancient Chinese Exercise Said To Be
~G:ood for Young &amp; Old, Men &amp; Women'
By SUZANN:E METZGER
In a slow-motion, ballet-like
movement, Patrick Chen, me'Chanic:al enaineering gradome
student, may be seen fl081ting
aapos Uoe l a w n in front ol
Aclieson Hall every Saturday
at 4 p.m. throu¥h the end ol
the -tar. His body seems
eo '-&gt;e. for a time, part of
eome 'i nfinite streaJD--.i&gt;ari·
ing of some eternal flow of
en&amp;J11Y.

· Aotwtlly, he's praotioing Tai
Cbi and Chi Kong and anyone
who WBDts io join him in this
"syetem of physical exercise
based on principles of effort)..., breathing, rby¢bmic movement and weight equi)ibrium,"
may do ao. Just rome clad in
a loose fillling garment to al1ow for "continuous rhythmic
bodily movements."
·
Tai Chi ( pronounced tie
chee) is the · movement; an
Kong, the breathing which accompanies it. The more popular term, shadow boxing, is
often ueed in referring to this
ancient exercise which dates
back thouEnds of yesrs to the
Sung I)ynasty ol China.
Chllllllne One'• Centar of Gravity
The graceful, CIJJ'Yina body
mo.&amp;IIIOIIt is based upon the
priuciple ol changipg one's center of pavity by shifting slowly fn;m one foot 410 the otber,
all the while maintaininr firm
stability. The equilibrium that
is gained enabiola one well1)mcCia!d in the &amp;It to' defend himself , apina attack or wage a

anod "
" -·president
But, David
Chen,
ol the
~ Gmdwrte Student Aaaoaiat.ion, and ~ expo- - ol 'I1ti Chi. "ttie main
~ ia to malre people
t.allby. It's aood for young
and old. male and female."
Plllrick and David say the
. . . . . . . . . bem ltnDom to
help prolong llfa. . _ rosy
~ on aid mat, and -invlrorMe - I e ol all .....
Plllrlck otudled T a 1 h 1
8Dd Chi Konr for 10 years in
his naliw Tehran. UDder the
tu1BJ-. ola ~ aptri
wbo Ia DOW telchar to the
Preaident ol G a bon. Africa.
"'t Ia 1al n 1D II jiOpUiuity
~the world;" be...;..
tboalh tt bas be..-n a ..Uknoom lnadludon in China 1m
...wries. UaUke Japatae Judo or :Kamle. 'nil ebrdaila not

e

require force, will not ceuse
the practitiooer to get out of
breath. and therefore is suitable even for the elderly.
The breathing, essential to
Tai Chi, is centered on an area
of the body called the dan tien.
which is two finger widths below U&gt;e nav~. This ares, BBYS
David, should become f ir m
wben air is drewn into the body
end the diaphragm p u s h e s
downward. Rather then the
cheet rising and falling, the
abdomen should expand and
contract with breathing, just
as a baby's does. This kind of
breathing affords a sense of
relaxation and well-being.
·Faithful practitiooers of Tei
Chi perform five or ten minutes before ROing to bed and
upon rising in the morning. "It
is beet done in the moming,
when the air is fresh," ·says
David. It is practiced standing up, and a hurried business•m an can perform in full dress
jll9t b e f o r e 'hurrying off to
work.
Poroble-Un Ori&amp;lns

Tai Chi's i&gt;oeUc origins run
something like a parable. Chang
San-Fung, a commoner of the

Sung period ( 900-1279)

came

upon a crane figbting with a
snake. He observed how the
crane cleverly defended itself
and attacked the snake, all ·t he
while maintaining its grace and
stability. To this day, 8ome of
the movements are mlled the
crane's spresd wings.
Tai Chi ·is represented by the
same aymhol as the I C /tine, a
circle Mth a curved dividing
line, and the principles of ying
and yeng (female-negative and
mal81)08!t:ive) are inherent in
&lt;the exercise. Each time an indiV!idual changes bis center of
gravity, ying becomes yeng,
yang becomes ying. 'Thus, the
movemenls take on some symbolic cosmic signi.fiamce.
Thougb movements are- highl;r stylized and pr_,.ibed by
ritual, style may vary according to .the teacher. 'I'bE:re are
&lt;two patterns of IDO\WJieDt
which are mast widely practiced - the Wu type and the
Y1111g type, named after dteir
respective teachers. Patrick follows the Yang method, and you
are invited to Yang in there
with him, two hours ewry Saturday.

no:.,7Care If""~- _ _ _ _ _ _ __;___
JJJa.3
~c
(conti.lwed from- I, coL 6)
and the l!:rie County Health

Department.
Dr. Cappiello poinled out
that President ·Ketter has been
active in trying to secure other
apace for the center. "He interceded with the University p..,..
b)iterian Cb.urch to consider the
possibility of using a part of
their facilities. And when the
churd1 governors requested hard doHar budget bsclting
prior to consideration of the
space proposal, ·he eought and
gained such support from a private donor." This was a gift of
$7,500 to be .-1 expreaaly at
off..:ampus site for the care
of dlildren of fuH-time students.
A representative of the p..,..
idant a1ao llf1l\led on behaH of
the care .,...... before the Pres~ Church's board, Cappiello said.
In addition, ~ had Univarsity tepJesentatives seek out
an alternative Bite with the resuit tljat -"" was offered by
the · University M e t h o d i s t
ChurdL "This was turned down
by the Day Care Steeling Commlttee," Cappiallo BBid.
The vice· presidential assis-

an

tant continued the chrnnology
of "positive actions" by the admirustration:
"Through the president's ef.
forts, responsibility for professional advice to the Dsy Care
Steering Committee was establiahed in the School ol Social
Policy and Community Be&lt;vices, and in the Office of Environmental Health and Safety.
"It has been the President's
Office which baa cootinually
worked with the HesHh Department in delaying the c1osing of the presently operating
center ·
"A budget for the establishment of a University Dsy Care
Center bas been prepared and
sent to Albany for inclusion in
the 1111pplementary • budget request.
·
' "nne president prevailed on
the private donor to extend the
expiration date ol his grant
from March 31 to the el&gt;d ol
the - . (May 28).
'"nne president baa cootinually aoucht. and contitlu. 410
seek. an enunciation of SUNY
policy CliiiJCeiDina day care.
~ "He simply cannot do what
he is -not authorized to do."

"'I've been instructed not to
process a summer bucl!let for
College A and to enter the Pl'&lt;!poeed College A COUlii8B for tJ.e
summer on the computer with
zero enrollment pending ..,.,.,.
lution. of the cunent grading
evaluation dispute." On Tuesday, April 13, Murray a1ao
asked von Moltke to "establish an eval..Wve capacity that
wiH ensure that credit is given
on the basis of a responsible
evaluation by appropriate instructional staff."
Assembly seutiment at Tuesday's meeting, as expressed by
Boddy, considered the vice
president's directives to be in
violation of the fayulty's right
to evaluate studenls as they
see fit. •"Jbis is an intrusion on
the Faculty Senate and on individual faculty members' prerogatives to determine course
conditions," he said Boddy
pointed out that degrees have
been granted to students with
College A credit and that for
Murray to deny this credit now
would he going against established policy. He read the
AAUP statement on governance of colleges and universities which BBys: ''The faculty sets the requirements for degrees in courses, determines
when the ·requirements have
been met and authorizes the
president and board to grant
the degrees thus achieved.'
Dr. Charles Ebert, dean of
Undergraduate Studies, pointed
out, however, that the faculty
pf SUNY acboola am oaiy
reco~nd the granting of degrees; it has no power to grant
them. The Conunissioner of
Education's Regulations state:
"overall educational policy and
determination of degree requirements are the responsibility of the faculty and academic
officers."

Compensation(conti.lwed from - I. coL 3)
5.4 per cent compared to a 6
per cent hike in the living cost
indexes. With fringe benefits,
the increase was two-tenths of
one per cent more than the living cost riae.
For all 1,345 institutions cavered in the report (repreeentinJ 271,585 faculty membeno),
salary averages were $13,233
for nine months and fringe
benefits, $1,474.

A'_Y_

AAUP concluded that it was
"a bad year for the academic
profeaaioo" and warned faculty
thatbeirt
f~ ::..l'fOVUII_.

'::= 81 18

............"
..
Other factors noted _ _by
AAUP included: that the higb
flgiues for CUNY were olfset
by ~~ hicbar living
costs m New Vorlt City; that
college teachers are beginning
to lose ground """"""'ically
compared to the average AIDerican; and that "the continuing
buyers' market and public
mood provide little basis for ,
QPtlmism."

Frenclt ~Open

,__ Council on Intematiooal
.,h~~ • _...,__ a --'"-t
._..._ 18 -.....
.--.......
director for programs at the
University of Nice in France.
The faculty member would coordinate activities of .(().5()
students and may _.... as a
vjsiting ~- An estensiw
Ir:nowledge of Fnmch and experiomce living abroad are ,...
quired. Applications, which
ahould include an intzoditdory
letter and a relevant -vita.
sbould be submitted 410 Jim
Micbielli 309 Towzwend Hall
by April'30.

1

�~

4

~ 22, ll/71

NewUndergraduate Dean Sets R&gt;licy ProcRxlures Deliriroted for·
Of 1nnovationwithAaruntability' Non UIB Use of the Campus

_
.....

1be foa-lng ''Policy for the
Use of University l'Wlliitial by
Nan-University Group8" bas
been approved by tlae CotmciJ
and adminlatratian and is illsued for the record and for
reference:
•
As a public institution ol
higher education, t h e State
University ol New ..York at
Bulfalo recotP1izes its re6pan.
sibiltty to supplement its underiJ'IIduate, IJ'IIduate and professional Pf0tll8IDB witb ex1Joacurricular educational opportunities. Meetings a n d conferences held at the University
This concept, of course, form one aspect of our total
would mean the modification of · educational program,
Req.- for the . - ol Unithe traditional university, Ebchan1ea" in programs and
ert realizes, but this may be a versity facilities by non-Unistnlcture.
versity
groups must be directed
necessary
adjustment
to
aoci"In the past, we have done with the colleges has been a
and students' needs, he in writing to the Dean of the
too much' innovating without lonB standing Cllle. Ebert helped ety's
feels.
Division
ol Continuing Educaknowing what we· are really in starting Racbel Carson Col1be university system bas tion (Millard Fillmore College and is currently working
doing," Ebert says.
lege)
always
been
reactionary
in
this
.
He
will be responsible
He plans to approach c:hanae toward the development of a
he points out. Most of l or co-ordinating u- reques1a
by Ull1llg a modified reaeerdt IJ'IIduate degree in ecology. His sense,
the
major
contrOversial
areas
in
with
the
following
offices:
model canoept. First, ideas and ecological conscience has led
today didn't start at the
Schedulinc Division ol the
concepts to be teeted will be him to numerous speaking en- aociety
university,
he
explains.
"'The
Olfice of Facilities Planning
developed,
u- ideas will gagements and a desire to "in(for lecture t..Ua, ciaErooms
be tried out as a pilot project. crease the emphasis on ecol- aociety outside changes more
than the university- a n d auditorial ; Director of
1be PfOII'BIII will then be eval- ogy" in society. Nen spring be quicldy
that's why we need changes in Health, Pbysical Education &amp;:
hopes
to
teach
a
new
course
on
uated to - · if it is working
smoothly and functioDing as marine - b y with a strong the university." However, prob- Recreation (for athletic buildit should. U the pilot is a IIUC- ecological slant. Tentatively, be lems arise ~ the univer- ings and grounds) ; Aaaistaut
cess, the fuJJ-acale effort will plans to present the ocean as a sity aociety is more liberal than Vice President for Auxiliary
be begun with oogoing evalua- resource, diJfuaer of culture, general society and controver- Enterprises (f or dormitories
and bio-physical environment. sial topics are "talked about · and dining halls); ~a­
tion as part of it.
with Jess &lt;IXcitement." ''Ideas tians Office, Norton Union (for
Ebert
of this. P"""""' Emphasis will be placed an the find
more publicity, more echo Nortoo Union. facilitiea) ; and
as being able to identify "ve- inter-relationships of u- asin the university, and ~ics Assistant Vice President f o r
hicles •.for change" and , _ _ pects.
are
discussed
more openly.'
Pl&lt;lno
To
Tuch
•
Full
Lo.a
parts of the "vehicle" 8re
Phyaical Facilities (for generTranslating his philosophic al
~ is going to participate in
1be neW dean will lead a
campus grounds).
ideas
into
reality
is Ebert's
the ·program, wbo is going to fast-paced life in other areas,
. 1be request should inWude
direct it and wbo is going to too. He is pJ.anning to ' continue forte and be is already con- the followi!Jg infonnatian~
pay the bill." Past problems teaching-a full course load nen sidering possible avenues for
1. Name and lunotian ol the
have an-n bees.- change oe&gt; year. This will include his pop- c:hanae at u /B.
group; 2. Pwpooeoi of the meetOne -a.ility is a faculty
cuned without the necesselli • uJar courae on physical geograing;
3. Preferred ..-4:ing dates;
major
where
students
could
" vehicle" and critical evalua- phy " and a series of soils
. tion, be beliew!s.
cour..... In the spring of 1972, major in tbe Social Sciences or 4. University facilities, "food
Natural
Sciences
rather
than
in
service
and personnel required;
5urprtM AppalntrMnt
conditions in the Geography
and 5. Budget and aouroes pl
1be announcement of Ebert's Department will determine a specific departmental area.
Doplortmentsl
Evolu.tlono!
funds,
appointment came as a surprise whether he will teach a course
Another consideration is the
Such requests will be reto many since he had asked not on marine geography or climaevaluation of underiJ'IIduate de- viewed by the Dean of the Dito be considered for the post tology.
several weeks earlier. 1be reaIn the late summer of this partmental programs just as vision of Continuing EducaBOll for his acceptance is quite
year, Ebert, the undergraduate the graduate programs are DOW tion (Millard Fillmore Colsimple-"1 c:hanpd my mind." dean, hopes to find time to be- being eumined. 'l'bis anal .
lege) for confonnity to State
1be decision, be explains, was come Ebert, the geographer, he explains, would look at~
based on personal considera- and return to one of bis first ductivity, service, teaching, retions and questions dealing loves - field research. Of spe- search, library support and
with the needs of his depart.. cial interest to him is the rela- many other areas.
ment. •.
Currently, some departments
tionship of the physical condi1be 46-yi,ar-old _.,.pher tions of an area to the economy treat underiJ'IIduate programs
"like
a stepchild,'' Ebert exis interested in solving general and culture of the paople. This
University problema as well as concern bas translated itaelf in- plains, with some professors
hiding
behind a veil of ''proAn asaociate ~ of bioDUS CDIIOBI1I8. He is inlebaaly to research an aoils and .-.
intereated in "beginning to re- He's been studying this rela- fessi nalism,'' working on their cbemiatry at the UuiV8111ity is
own
J:esearch
and
having
limdoing
beaic reaeerdt on the unmove the fragmentation and tionship for several years in
polarization that have ham- various parts of the world and ited contact with students. derstanding of reproductive
Some
departments
are
relucDr Om
pered this campus for the last will continue bis research in tant to give service courses and
processes.
·
P. Bahl's
couple of years." This can ~ the upper Amazon basin in hold the number of majors research, along with that of his
done, be feels, "by establlshini Peru.
down by ra.isins entrance re- colleagues, hopefuJJy will lead
llMrM lnle.-t.
meaningful dialogue 8IDOl1g the
various factions and destroying
A man of variety and diverse quirementa to such a high leYel ~:::i." effective popul8tion
Dr. BahJ will addreas four
the distruat that exists in some interests, Ebert has f~ his that transfer students can't besoientific groups in the United
areas." Ebert obaerved this di&amp;- organized mind on educational come majors, be adds.
. This may have to c:hanae, states and Europe in coming
truat in his work with the col- philosophy and structure.
Along with others, he is I!DID· the dean asserts. ''Unless u- IDOirths on "Tbe Complete
Chemical Structure of a Prom""ain:!ck
ining the possibility of a "dual . departments develop a service
tein Sex Hormone from Human
ultv support for collegiste , ac- track" university. Lightly tap, capability or a willingness to
ti~ties. His aim is to prove ping his fingers together, be provide, on response to de- Presnancy Urine." This is the
there is "no . - f' for fears" by taJb of ooe track foe peoPle mand, a greater service capabil- Bec:oDd phase of the research.
helping to establisb the aca- wbo are here ''for the JOY of ity, they may have to face 1he 111e initial phase, which indemic credibility of the colle- learning." 1be purpose of their -a.ility that budget alloca- volved the development of the
giate system.
education would be the enrich- tians may ·not be solely based tools to unravel the complex
His~ relationship
ment of their individual lives. ~duate teaching and rechemical structure, com.,__ ..._ ___ will municated by Dr. Babl in aevMany of w_, ..._..,_
eraJ "-!'infs aod sc:ienUfic:
be dlllicult and will take time, joumaJs dunng the Jut year.
the dean realizes. Chsrles
"In the third and 6naJ phase
Ebert, ~len~willing to of the rMearch we hope to bet.._t uter understand the biological
And~ faculty members~ function .of the hormone and
~·-~ "Llr~~~ ;t_rz. know
h1m . acknowledge, !"' s ·the mode of action. This will
•. Y. JGJ4. &amp;4leoriel
lotaJM4 ... a - 2U, UO . . . . . . A . . ...._2121).
not one to pve up wlal things . lead to c1eve1opmeat o1 oral
set
rouP.
contraceptives." Dr. Babl said
.&amp;.. JPBSrt.ar ~D .
UN~ STUDits MEETING
"It is just a llllltter of
~~~
before
can be ensinThere wiU be • Division of Under· eered into bonnones' makeup
JtO...,. r . JfA.ItU1'T
pocluat. Studies FKUity -~~~
that znicbt !Jrins about
11'-~N~~Jz.."'&amp;.--·
on Thu~y. April 29, at 3 p.m. found ~ ~
In Dlef8ndorf 147. A - i t fi'om
males and females. In recent
. /OBlf A. CLOVJ"m.
the - n wiD IDuch on - - Y8lll8 there has beml a rapid
students, .,....,_ deport· ezpansian ol understanding of
5USAJI Oumrw'OOD
menta, ....s.ntlc priorities, artie- ~-~ their compla
nvDUr AIPADtS aotrOR: s... ~
ulation with other iMtltutions,
__.,.........,. aod inter-raJatianCXNn'JtlaunllfO aDit'ORS: J - a. .o.s..dl. Clrrit ~ . . . . , s. Ilea~ - r d s , and &amp;r.clillll
lhipa," the blocbemist aaJcL
pollcieL
"'The human ...........,.. bor·.
COIITitliiVTIIfO ~: S... M. - · ·
'
- - - - - - - - - - · • DIODe .bas. similM -fiiOOtlOn .as
Students studying this WilY
would be "entirely on their
own." 1bere would be a Jais
risid structure and fewer requirements in this proc.ram 1
which would lead to a DrOIId
degree, be explains. 1be other
tlack would be for students
desiring a more· professional orientation. 1bey would be in' volved with required courses
and professional standards.
This program would be oriented tOward teaching the lmowledge in various fields needed in
running our complex society,
he speculates.

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

"Innovation with llClOOUDtability" may well become lbe
~ of Dr. Chsrles H. V.
Ebert's term as dean of UnderIJ'IIduate Studies. Ebert, who
was -uy lllllD8d permanent
1-.1 of the Division by President Ketter, ClOII8idera this Cllle
of the major practices he hopes
to establish.
With the logic and attention
to detail many say is typical,
the new dean is DOW reviewing
and evaluating the division.
Ebert bas been __.mg in the
s-t since last October in a
temporary capacity but is now
reedy to start expl"""' "quiet

-..

u-

-a

~ regulatiaao cauceming the ..... of Uoiversity -

sources and will be approved
only if the following conditions
and procedures are met:
1. 1be
ol in
. .•ture
· ing
is educational
and is consistent wilb the ....
eral objectives of the Uni-sity.
.

2.

A~te

mmm.m

o1

the Oniversity faculty or atalf

s p on s o r, puiicipate in

u..;

plannins and~
and " " ' - r-ible, in the .;.
. ·lual instructioD.
3. All net I'8Celpla of any
project, JIIOif&amp;nl. oc wotbhop,
aoorue directly to the University.
.
4. All inf01m8tioo . and promotioo bearins the name ol the
University is reviewal by the
University prior to release.
5. 1be -~ cootains a
statement ·ot willinpMs and a
procedure .t o ft!imburae t h e
University for any direct ..,._
penses involved, inciuding any
damage incumld.

1be University uae of all
facilities shall have abeolute
pr&amp;&lt;!llllptive priority. 1be exercise of pre-emptive priority
in the situortion where commitmenta already have beml made
-to an off-aunpus group shall
require the approval of the
President, o r t h e Executive
Vice President of the University.
Any request that does not
EBtisfy the criteria outlined
above should be' retused unless
there is some ~iding reason {or fU1'ther consideration.
In the latter event, the request
will be referred by the Dean ol
the Division 'of Continuins Education to the Vice President
for Facilities Planning, who, in
conjunction with.the Vice Presidents foe University Relations
and Operations " Systems, will
make a determination regarding b appropriateness of the
request.

Population Cootrol Is Aim
Of Bahls Hormone Resoorch

=

n:f~

ou!r ~

.c:,--t:.·'U,::::,
oiJ._, -.ol•rw:..·.,-::

..

·-___.,..,

An-------

em-

w...;l

the bonnane from tbe pituitary
sland ..tDch causes ovulation.
By understanding the urinary
hormone and ita mode of action
we might be able to develop
of IIUpprellfling ovula-

ti:_'!"

On April 19 Dr. &amp;ht addressed a group at the National
Institutes of Health, Washington, D.C~ and an June 17 he
wiH be at the ComeJJ University Medical C..ter, N- York
City. On July 19 be will addreas .the Gordon Conference on
Prollein ..t the Kimbell Union
Academy in Meriden, CannecW:ut. On 8eptaDber 28 be
will address an intemalional
biocbemista meeting at the University of Lieae. Belgium.

Liwly Renained
Hishry Chairman
Dr. Robert A. Lively, chair-

man of the llepartn:ait of History since '1968, ... t - reappointed io tboot . . . Dr.
Alberl Somit, tiiiiiCUtive - vice
~1, haalllll&gt;OUDCed·
An American hiatoriu, Dr.
Lively lausbt at PriDceloD for
13 years prior to.. C11J111inc to
Buffalo. From ~. be ....
director of ~.. Ceater
for Studies in_ Twmtlelb c--tuey American Statecrd and
Pltiic Policy. He boldo the
........ and doctoni ...,_
~ University o1 NOith

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

�1

April 22, z97

5
/

'71~

Is IJjfferent,
Editor Says
"This ODe ia different," Liz
Schaehtuer, editor-i~M:~Uef of
the 1Ju/Jaltmiluo, says ol her
yearbook for 1971. Her . plans
call for colored paper, · a fleW

="..'7u.:.~~~
the book unique. .
Tbe yearbook will begin with

a section of articles by and interviews with campus people
concerning their area ol exper-

tise. There's an article on resesreh written by Dr. James
Danielli and one on education
by Dr. Charles Ebert, dean or
Undergraduate Studies. Mrs.
Barbara Sims is writing on minority affairs and Lukas Foss
will talk about cultural alJairs.
Earlier this month, the entire
BuiJalonUm staff interviewed
President Robert Ketter. "We
spoke with him on everything
town in the future and, thanks from drugs to the new camto the enthusiasm and attitude pus," Miss Schachlner says or
of our students, we can always the session. Tbe staff also wrote
do that if we so desire.
to President Nixon and Fleury
Gibson for their comments, but
Eodl Year Each year brings 11 new challenge. In 1969 we "enjoyed" winning entries in a photo contwo solid weeks or rain and test the Bu/Jaloniml 18 sponsorcold. Ail participants were ing. The conte&amp;t is OJ?eD to anymiseMble but there were lf!IW one in the UniYenllty who is
complaints and mapping pro- not a professional photograceeded as usual. In 1970 we pher. Subject matter can be
were snowed out of a planfled anything from the scenic to the
three-week stsy in tbe San polluted, Miss Schachtrler exJuan Mountsins in Colorado plained, and is not limited &lt;to
afler only three days. This photos of &lt;the University. First
necessitated m o v i n g several prize in both the black and
hundred miles to a contingency white and color categori.., wiH
area in tlle Shirley Basin or be $26; bonorable mentions will
Wyoming. Vehicles are always receive $5.
problematical even with • fourPlana are. to print this _,.
whMI drive and ~are times tion on colored paper,. "801Dewhen the entire camp effort is wbere in the o l i - ...._H
required to remobilize a stuck
Next comes a -xion on
(and at one time an over- academic matters, senior pioturned) vehicle.
tures and the .administration,
The camp requires year- which will be titled "Direcround planning and organizing, tions." "'bis is followed by the
yet we recognize by the re- &lt;Student life section, simply
sponse of the students who cslled " Life."
"Communicahave participated, that this is tion," featuring campus organone of the truly unique exper- izations, is nexL Then comes
iences which &lt;they have in their "Change" which wiH talk about
University .training. Tbe De- sports. Tbe fleW section on
partment of Geological Sci- "Community" is next and will
ences hopes to provide an ac- deal not only with the Buftalo
tive g'!Oiogy field camp indefi- community, but with U / B comnitely into the future.
munity operations such as
School or Management and Office of Urban Atfairs programs.
Also in this section are plana

Geologys Field Training Is a (Survival Course'
By JOHN S. KING
"""'-· Spring always repnerates
intereet in the peat ouklfdoors and this is perticularly
true for maJOrs-in tbe Depart.ment or GeoJolical Sciences
~~ arem. anthe~~~!"'on~
.,.........,, .,.....
geolosical field training 0011l8e.
8ecauae jbey are students ol
the earth, this course is required ol them typically betheir junior and senior
years, and .i s designed to bring
to focus, tbrough actual praolice and experience, all the
principles w hi c h they have
learned in the claasroom.
Field training means education in the preparation or goo.
lm.ogtoic ~-~mlf;;&gt;l~ "'toingry
....,
terri~
where, with the aid ol aerial
photographs and a pocket transit, dats are collected and integrated to render a geologic map
of the area as the final producL
A geolosic map depicts the surface diatribution of bedrock
units incorporating rock structures such as folds and faults
from which subsurface distribulion of rock units may be inferred. Students learn to interpret these maps in classroom
study but it is a far different
matter to actually bring together dats in the f~eld to make
such a map. Enlarged aerial
photograph&amp; with a scale approximating 1""=400' are Ulled
as a baae in mapping and each
student is provided with his
own aerial photos. Lacking experience, it ;s no easy matter
to locate ooe's position on such
a photo. It is equally difficult
to locate and project geologic
contscts or tbe tines ol demarcation between different rock
units. Tbe student must learn
to appreciate and adjust his
perception ol scale differences
and d-. develop an understanding ol tbe area in oriler to
prepare a map. ·

falo and Wyoming, it was decided to phase out the associalion and in the summer or 1968
we began operation of our own
camp witlL two staff members
and fifteen students.
Tbe Buftalo camp operates
on a much different basis than
most geology field camps in
that it is mobile. This means
that we have no permanent
baae camp such as the one
maintained by the University
of Wyoming in the Snowy
Range west of· Laramie. Instead, we meet in Denver,
usually on the iast weekend in
May, and spend the ensuing
four weeks .at three or four
carefully chosen camp sites
which are in proximity to areas
or
po!ogical field mapping exerases. ~use of our- mobility, we are not constrained to
the same sites year after year.
Also, because we move about
torough Colorado, Wyoming
and Utah, the students are able
to visit several of the Nations!
Monuments and Parks.
ldUI OUtdoor FHillty

Our general 8rea of operation
was chosen because the western ststes provide an ideal out.door facility for the study of
geology. They are semi-arid to
arid; vegetation is sparse and
rock outcrops are numerous. In
addition, the Rocky Mountain
and Colorado Plateau regions
are of appreciable topographic
relief which makes observation
of geologic structures such as
falds and faults easier than in
flat rountry. Beyond the geological significance, however, is
the simple fact that most of
our students come from eastern
cities' and towns. Most have
r~ever experienced a natural environment of such magnitude
before and many have r~ever
been taken into such remote,
sparsely populated r e'l! ions.
Also, our camp centers on tent
living with ID08l cooking dofle
on open fires. 'lbe total of all
.,.... c.mp
this basic aasociation with nsOur PI'Oif8DI started in 1964 lure is a new experience for
at wbic:h time we becaine 8811()- moat studa:J.ts, many or wbom
ciated . with the Univsrsity of dub it their "survival course."
Wyoming Summer Field Camp. In this - · the camp pro'Ibe Wyoming camp Is the old- vides a IM8ningful educational
est established field camp for experience ·for the participants
..,.,logists In the country, hav- wbic:h is rememhen!d lOili after
ing started in 1923. Buftalo . they return to their University
.... footuDate indeed for this lives and/ or jobs.
aasociatlon as it prorided in- _ Tranaportstlon from Den..,.
valuable .._;ence to the ataff is by rental vshicles. This year
In planning and outfittiq 1111 ~.....~.~'~ ~L~
operable C8DlD Until 1967 • ....., .....,. wU&lt;Q&lt; will ...._,
PIOVided staff. and W
·""' lliiiiOKistics ol .moving about a
beld Dla- open for a~~ peat deal easier as well as pro-.
~numher of students viding other benefits such as
from Bulfalo. However, tbrough the carrying capacity to mainthe three year aasociation, as tain a aood supply ol potable
'lW' undergraduate enrollment water.
· ·
increased, there were peat« Four IB'Id peater demands for the
Tbe camp
for an infield training and .;t hecllme im- tensivs four weelal. Bn!Bidast
JIOIIII&gt;Ie to accommodale all ol is served at 7:00 a.m. and dinthe Bulfalo students. 'lbua in r1er at 6:00 ~m. which means

opera•

..

From dinfler until dark, Btu-

dents may work on recording

in ink their observations ol the
day and organizing their plans
for the following day. Commonly some students take a "busman's holiday" in the evenin1
and climb to high vantage
points to enjoy the spectacular
sunsets. Tbe work schedule is
desigrled around a seven-day
week but at least half a day is
set aside each week for a visit
to a town, at which time laundry can be done and supplies
refurbished. .
•
Wben on the move between
sites, we stsy at motels, providing that an ever-harassed
staff is able to negotiate bargain rates for 30 people. This
was somewhat easier before the
camp went «&gt;educational last
year. In very small towns it is
sometinles difficult to find a
single motel or restaurant
which can accommodate tlle
group but tlle motel owners are
usually cooperative and will arrange for overflow with their
competitors at similsr rates. A
group such ·as this is initially
met with suspicion, but each
year We have received many
compliments conoorning student behavior and this helps
boost morale especiaHy among
the staff. It also helps when we
want to go hack to tlle same

-c......._

The Man Wearing Daffodil
Isrit Way Out, Small Says
Tbe Fashion News Service
( FNS) says Bullalo's conservative fashion image has been
swept away ( at least in terms ol
men's wear) and quotes Dr. S.
Mouchly Small of · U/ B's Department of Psychiatry by way
ol explanation.
Citing the lace, ruffled, daf-

Plane C&lt;mtest
As part of the University's
126th Anniversary celebration,

theAme~~"!."u.':~,~~tepteolr olAero-the
·~

._._..~

nautics and Astronautics is
sponsoring i t s flrBt a n n u a I
"Plastic Model Ahplafle Display Contesl"
Entries will be displayed on
the first floor ol Parker Enaifleering Sunday, May 2, as
part of the Faculty ol Engi·
and Applied Sciences
~ouae, which is, in turn.
a feature of the Universitywide Open House slated for
that day.
'""- interested in entering
the contest may do so before
April 28 by writing to AIAA
Contest, ejo General Off1ce,

fodil and mint green shirts
which may be seen in local
store windows beside suede
boots with fringe and orange
braid trim, pastel straw oboes
and patchwork slacks, the FNS
says tbere's been "an amazing
change" locally.
Dr. Small is quoted as saying, "We've gone from a period
when men paid little ·attention
to style to one wbere ther're
interested, yet today's fashionconscious man is no more foppish than the men ol George
Washington's dey wbo wore
rufRes and wip.
"A man's dothes are just an
motension or how be sees himself and the image may be quite
far ~ from realltr.. It's
very much bound up with the
culture be lives in. In fact, it's
diffiCUlt to where an individual's preference ends IB'Id
where the dictates ol his cuiture take ovsr.•
Dr. Small dosl't the
long-haired coJocned. IIIUl in
the lace shirt as any peat advocate of "do your own thing,"
~- He sees him as "IM!lY
bit She conformist that the June
'l!fllduate. clMJ ol 1952, .... in

.=be~~;.:;-~~ ;;:':"';.~ .~~';.r.~ . . :.:~~--~~-~: ..~~~andwblte

~~~~feature

~~~~=~ed~

ucat.ion by Dr. Richard Siggelkow, vice president for student
affairs.
Tbe final -.!ion is the conclusion wbic:h will ''tie all these
sections tosethet."
Also giving a ,_ look to the
book will be the divider - ·
Plana are to {lrint them at a
3().degree angle on colored
stock.

Mias Schac:btDer reporill that
the book. called "Perspective
'71,'' will be available the first
week ol claolleo next fall, and
promiaas that it is DOW 1K1
schedule. Cost of the ~
volume is $7.60 in advsnce or
$10 after it Is printed. Copies
may be pun:based at the Buffalonian ol5ce, 356 Nort&lt;m.
IMPORTANT DATES
The final -

for confirmMion of
rqlotrotion Is T - , . , April 'ZT,
the Division of Uillle1Jraduat.
Studies ha onnounc:ed. Thla 1o
the loot ..., "' clrap . . , -

_no..._....,._...,..

O&lt;dloeqi*IIIJ. In

Mclltlon. Undor·
lll*lulllt Sluclles rwnlnds. April 'Z1
is the loot cll1 to cleor up ony

~ .,._.,._ "II, for
some .....,.,, you .,. not registered for • course In which you
hove been In -ndlnce 111 semattr," DUS counsels, "chock

with Admissions ond Records lm·
med'-tely."

�( .

..., , -

., ;

~J

~

6

Ridge Lea CookFollaa; the;F~
But He AdOs aLittle~Here ~Thire
_ BySU~ ~ER

5

William F. Miller is the bead

cook at Ridge Lea and hun-

dreds feast at his tables daily.
He calls himself "an oldtime
steamboat cook," because of
bis experienc:e working on the
Great Lakes boats run by the
American Steamship Company.
He recalls that one patron remarlted that the Great Lakes
passengers were the "best fed
men in the world," and rumor
has it that Ridge Lea cafeteria
patrons are the best fed on
campus.
"Here, it's all formula cooking," says Miller, meaning that
the rec1pes on campus menus
are determined by price of ingredients, and geared to a nonprofit, break-even market. "We
buy the best meats," he adds.
The recipes are developed and
contributed by all the cooks
working in the campus food
services and are neatly filed under various categories including desserts, vegetables, aslads,
sauces, dressings, veal, lamb,
poultry, beef and so on. Menus
are pfm!ned by the dietitian,
Mildred Def"I\'S.

A111j1 :U, lPTI

Summer~ in the
. Fall
/

For-Blackhurst and Staff
While moot people ba. . . .
reoently been flirting with
apring, JIIIIIM H. BlacldumJt
has been working on aunmer
aiDoe last fall
:As director of U /B Summer
Sessions, be .Yo'Orb on summer
all year round.
'Tm always getting &amp;liked
what a Summer Sessitlns director does in the winter," laments Blackhuist. "Actuelly,
that's our ~t time. II we
do our job well then, there wiD
be llllliling lelt to do in Aug-

ust."
U /8 hes one of Cbe largest
a n ci fastast growing summer

schools in the nation. Last
summer, 11,000 ..Wdents registered for 98,000 credit hours of
couraework in day and evening
courses. Only the University of
Washington, Seattle, reported
more credit hours taught.

~~

__

.:o';r;;,s .,!;~

more of the 900 course sections to he offered 4his IIUIIl·
mer. Registration has already

,

begun, and is open until the
Friday preceding the of
lillY class.

Flotsful and Gollons

Miller learned quantity cooking at the Merchant Marine
School in Sheepsbead Bay
where pinches and pints were
extrapolated \0 fistsful and gallons. In 1946, he fmished ocean
duty and was -h ired as second
cook on the freighters which
carry coal, limestone and iron
ore pellets to aU ports on the
Great Lakes. Catering to a u...,., ,
crew of 43 men and four to eight 1ar first course at .R·idge Lea,
guests of the company, Miller's the Canadian Cheese Soup, bestarting salary was $200 per gins with chicken base, to which
month; then he moved on to are added c h o p p e d onions,
become steward, or chief cook, celery, carrots, water and Cofat $16,000 for a 10-month year. fee Rich. Cubes of cheddar
"We worked seven days a week cheese ,are a d d e d last and
though."
.
stirred until melted. "Everyone
He recalls the 14 loaves of wants to know. how this soup
bread he baked each day-''lt's ·is made. I just tell them it's
easy. Just mix up eggs, oleo, chicken soup with cheese."
dry yeast, sugar and water. We
0
had an automatic kneader. Sat- fo~ ~~":Y bo7on ~d:
wday was steak night-&lt;lome from beef base, water and toof the men could put away mato paste. The Navy Bean
tluee T -bones at a time. And Soup is composed of ham base,
eight eggs each morning. They to which are added onion, carworked around the clock so rots, celery, canned diced tothey needed it."
matoes and rooked navy beans.
"Then,'' Miller says, "the
Here are some more recipes
unions got tough with meal for Ridge Lea favorites, quoted
costs, and you had to buck up with the origins! III!l8Surements
against the crew,'' so he left. for quantity servi~. Using a
He joined the staff at Norton
sis years ago and has been out
at Ridge Lea lor two years.
QUICK BLUI: or IOQUKPORT IJIZBBING
At bome, Miller's wife does
(3 quo..-100 ordero)
1 quart
the cooking. "But, she panics mayOilJUWie
% cup
when there are going to he a lemon juice ·
Coffee· Rich
1 quart
lot of people, so I help."
Blue or

Wbo attends summer. school?
About 80 per cent are regular
U /B students. Yet the remaining number - mostly Buffalo
area residents wbo regularly
&amp;ttend out-of-town schools represent a quarter of the colleges and universities in the
United Statas.
Other et u dies show that
about 70 per cent of the summer s_tudents are in their junChef Mlt•r PNPa,. stuffed ~
ior year or beyond, that summer students tend to he the
ahortening
best -"fled a;tudents - they
mushrooma,
win academic honors in higher
canned. oliced
drained.
peroentages othan the usual mix
#10 can
of students.
5 pounds
onions, sliced
Summer study by graduate
thin
studEnts
h a s skyrocketed i n
bread fiour
21b.,8oz.
the past few years. Five years
salt
3 ounces
ago only 11 graduate courses
popper
2 tableopoona
marjoram
were taught by t be depart1 tablespoon
2~ ounce&amp;
ments which now make up the
/:!',"~k.
3~ pllona
Faculty of Social Sciences and
tomato juice,
3 cano
Administration. This summer
#6 can
those departmeuts will he ofBu(::;"~ wine 2 quarto
fering about 180 ·, r a d u a t e
1. Coat
on all aideo with courses. The School of Law
will be offering courses to its
~=t% t.:.V~fi ~~~- Let professional students this sum2. Brown meat in ahortenin&amp;. mer for the finrt time in hisDrain off oU fat.
tory.
3. Saute onions and muahrooma
in above fat. Drain off oU fat. - I a I t How else is .Summer S.
Add vegetabloo to mest in stocksions different? Blackhurst
pot.
4. Combine Dour, salt, ~r, tbinb students get more out
s u m m e r couraes ~¥~cause
~m~tir =~ of
clasees meet &lt;laily for long petlour io completely aboorbed.
riods
of time instead of two or
5. Add '-f otock sncl tomato
juice. Simmer until meat ia teD· tluee times a week for short
periods.
Hence prof_, !mow
der. Do not overcook.
their students better IIDd a
1- ·6. Add Burcundy wine.
7. Tbicbn. mixture with Dour more intense learning a.periwaah until of cleoirecl conoiatency. ence seems to be the rmuk.
Brin8 mixture to 190" F. ODd ''Teaching and learning ia at
serve immediately.
8. Finiabed product obould be such a scale that ·there seems
a rich, dark bn&gt;Wn. U - . . e y , to be· little time for 8liytbing
add Gravy Muter until the else," commeots Blackhllrat.
The Swmner s-lons direcproper color ia reaebec1.
tor thinks summer abould he a
l.wKLUIO ltiCII PlJDD(NQ . _ _ , .
time for the Uni-mty to try
(for 100)
innovative BPPI_.. to edufnlit cocktail
2 cana
#10 can
"eation. One of the most inno1 cup
.,..tive courses this summer will
~t -from 2 cana be an Enslisb offering called
I)'JUP
"Critical 'Theory." The oourse
will CD11siat of Eries of t1uee
ult
% OUIIC8
lectures each by Biz dlalinbutter or
6 ......,.
guished &lt;ritios from the Farul-

dsrk

l...r

~: ~,;,Yd'~f~: :=·~ ::::t'"::t

'A_T_.

The most important equipment for any cook is what Miller calla "a good taster." That's
where individual talent comes
in and the rote recipe goes Out.
Miller r.nds that ·wiDe and a
little sugar hc!ighten the flavor
of his meat cHsbes, and he fuHy
approves of JDOIIOIIOdium "glutilmafe, otherwise known as Accent.
brings out the flavor,"
. he feels.
Sbup knives are other niloessities, ssid MiHI!J", as he-minced
a mass of onions with the
French I'Utiery rented by the
University and regularly sharpened by the company: He has
his own set·at home.
Other essentials in the Uni~ cafMmia are the soup
heae&amp;--beef, llam and . ehicbn
COIIIBitratas in powdered form.
"Campbell's makes good ooes,
but you can't find tbem on the
a be I v e a of supermarkets."

"'t

Roquefort cheeoe 2 lbo.
1. Blond cheeoe sncl Coffee Rich.
2. Fold in mayoJUUOioe snd
lemon juice.
01&amp;01: OP OO&amp;N SOUP

(3 gallons)
onions, sliced
8 os.
""lY tbiDly
butter or
2 lbo.
marpiine

flour

1 lb.
8 plloao
Stahl.._
1 tabloopoon

milk
ult

pappor

com, cream atyle, 1 can
~HO

can

L Melt butter or marprine.
Add Olliona ODd uute until trana-t.
2. Add· Dour to moks a paate.
Cook about 16 minutoo.

3. Add milk olowiy ODd cook,
~CO:,.,.,~· until•aoo io

4. Add - m p ODd -

atylo com. Bimm8r about 1!0 minutoo ID allow flawn iD cleYelop.
6. s..... with c:hopped puoley

on -'&gt; cap of -llumutn&gt;Y
· (212 ordero-10 pllono) •

'· choico,
62 (ioaDdo
Callie
Rich "" wbidl
In recips
caH ·for . ' -1J,ix1%
cpbeo
milk, Cbel Miller . _ Colfee A...,t(-2......,_
Rich "becanae it doesn't
.oodiam cliatoeurdle." For inslance, a popumallo) _

;:-r

w=~

1. Drain
"rnp.
2. Add

:";:::::;:

a

%plloa

~~=~r;t!

man Holland, · "Mareuoi Klein,
. ~Girard
and Aqua~
to oynap, er will each ~ their ap-

fnlit codttUL Saw

0 .._

juice

adcl _.p water to moks 1 pilcm.
3. Add ri&lt;e, ult ODd butter to
oyrup-water mln'we. Cook cmor
low
until rice io -.lor. Cool'

-t

proach to Hteratme. The 260
. students in the .... will break
down into 10 groujl8 of 25 stu-

weeldJ:J'Ishdioclw
' grad-

dents twice
the leclmas with

in:;~~~~ uite&amp;ludenla.

dr

. 6. Whip
llllppiq .ad told
iniD 1bo ...... .,.__
6. s.r.. a t - or otoro in ,._
friprslor antil ...ty to ...._

-

Mr. Blac:kburat pomts out
that I!Uch a CIIIU8II not only

~ ~undergraduates

and ouiBiaadlnc ti1a'ary crlt-

;.,;, but is ~ tlban 10 individual -=tiona of 25 studanta.

c:wt~

Atwaya coat conacious, Mr.
Bladdwnlt Jdnla out that
while aalariea for professors
have increaaed ovw the past
. r.ve yean, actual iniltructional
costs haw aoae down. At most
universities, IIUIIIII.- ClOUl'8eS
cost t be inBtituticiD roughly
$25 and $30 per credit bour per
student. At U/B the cost has
been" $13.44 per credit hour.
"We can't do much better than
that," DOted Blaclrhtust.. "Tuition here is $13.50 per credit
hour."
With its schedule complete
and registration under way,
Summer Sessions is hiril)' facuity-tting contracts Signed
that specify whet, · where and
when the apJ)I:Orimately 550
professors wiH teach. '!be dep&amp;Jtment is alao arranging for
housing for visiting and foreign
faculty, as well as taking care
of visa problems for the 30 or
40 foreign professors wbo will
teach here this summer.

MFCSets
Registration
For Summer
The summer class schedule
for Millard Fillmore CoHege
students will be available for
distribution by April 26.
In person advance registraotion, open to currently enrolled students, will be · held
April 26 through May 7, weekdays, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Hayes
A.

Regular registration will he
held Tuesday, May 25 (A-K ) ,
_and Thursday, May 'n (L-Zl ,
from 6 :30 p.m. to 8:30 p .m. in
Diefendorf Hall.
According to MFC regulations, a student data form muet
he on file for a registration to
he prooessed. .The completed
data form must he reoeived by
MFC by May 14 for the f"mrt
si:J:-week or twelve-week session,: and by July 2 for the
........! six--week seaJion. II not,
it must be submitted at'lllhe
time of registration.
.
Tbe eilbt-bour I i m i t for
MFC studenCB replering for
both night and day ~ is not in effect this
smnmer, lbe College says, althoullh studeniB must ot-rye
the rule on .m uimum number
of smnester hours. MFC studeDI&amp; wbo wiab to toke bolb
day and l!lll!llinl CDUr88B may
register for bolh -lhrouRh MFC,
but only on the scheduled registration~

If students intend to take
couraes In various _..,.,
"MFC advises registarina for
both at the same time. A aeparata reglalratlon for
the 8BCDIId sis....... of the
MFC 8111N11er ........ wiH he
beld Monday, July 12 (A-Kl,
and n-iay, July 1ll (L-Z) ,
fn&gt;n! 1-9 p.m., in llayee A
Students may chmae ileotions and add ~ Clll the
first 1hree days of tile first
week of classes, .June 7-9 and
July 19-2L
COIIREC 11011
Tho F!eport.r....,.... 111M

at.....,

&lt;

llnolMt-ltNIIod•a,....t
Ill lila - - Courier~ fDr
• IIIIa ........ llllout lila -8cllan .,
lila Callotteta .......,
. . . . . . . . . .lila
C.,.....A ........... Tho •

_....,

In . . .
____--In
.....,_

l i l a - Oil . . . . - . Apol13.

�..,.. 22,1971

'REPORTS
,_

ON

oJosie

:'r::/:f&gt;ii:::t~

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

1-

Football Is
Coming Back,
Fritz Sayg

=loofU~~-~:
wad Wettbild,• in M. Loh·

GJ&gt;EQPLE

OIL

oder Zulall: Syft!m-rie Selek:tion." in Do. rae'" Alen.dt.erabi/d, Wien - Mauact.. • Zurich:
Verlaat F. Molden· -a-raJ S:v-tem -n.,ry and P.V~." in
J.R, Royce (ecl.),-'f_..ro,.;jl-

8CilAina promoted lo

~ral-. Germanic and

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

Koi/Oo!!U&lt;m. Mwacben: Carl Hanaer Verlq; " Leben," in SowjetIs U IB football dead?
oy•tem lUld IHmo~ a-u.
'Ibat was the prime topic ol
ocluJ/t, F..;burc-Buei-W"_,: Herder; arti.cfea in Hittoriflchft Wor- speculation at I a s t Friday's
terbuch der Phu-phie, Baoel- Block B Sports Banquet s:t the
Stuttpat: Schwabe.
Hearthstone Manor. Three
DL rawa 80~BOWKAN, profethundred p eo pte, inclwlinl
aor, Spaniah, "U. IIOIBbrea de memhenl ol evezy U/B team,
pila on Mexico deacle 1540 baata came to see a table lull of
1960," NRFH; book review, Grace
de , _ Alvarez, Toponinaoo en . awards handed out; but the
futwe, if any, ol footbill was
'11':.:!:;'~!:. ~ on everytiody's mind. "This
.._1 bablado en Mexico en el certainly hasn't been a vintage
aiiJo XVI." Acta• del Tercer year," Attdetic Director . Dr. ·
de "' Aoociacio.. l..Ur- Harry Fritz obeerved. "B u t
llliCIOnol de Hioptmijllu, Mexico. foothaH at U /B is going to he
ta. !'WID I:KIB, uailtant profee~
than eome peopJe
.or, atatiatica, and DL IIZYKOUR
o &amp; 1 B B &amp; a. profeeeor, •tatiat:ics,
Fritz said be expects "some
"Bample Diacriminanta w b i c b
Mi.nimiU Pooterior Squared Error I..," Soul/a A{rican Statil· '!:fJ""wminheSJ:~::Wfeo~c~
return of u;s foothall. And
tkal . Jounud.
University Vice President AlIJL &amp;AYMOND FaJiaMAN, profeeoor, French, review of Robeat W. bert Somit said the administraGreene, P~rre Reuerdy, Com- tion is working with the State
pGI'tltWe Literature.
to that end. Somit iisted the

c""'-

!:"'ter

PRESEm"ATIONS

:in~of~~~~

DR. BYilON I . KOKKXOCK, profea-

pro-fe.or, natural eciences aud .ocial
ocieu&lt;leo. " Mind, Bodr and Hu·

DR. LUDW» YON a.RTALUfi'PI',

man Val._"

S~um

on Hu·

man Valuea, SUNY/am-i

"Pwycboanalyaia, Paycbiiatry ana
o-ral Syam Tbeory" Annual

AcaodaUc Lecture, ~of
Medical Pwy~iio-;--New
York: paoel aiember, "Pwycbiatry
and N"ewoiDcY Today," meetmc
of the Academy of PoYm.-matic MediciDe• V'.A. H o a p i ta I,

Shreveport,

LA. .

DR. &amp;AYKOHD ncDaLMAN, profM-

aor, Freoch. "Tbe IJnno-ibility
of Bayiac the Same Old Thill«
the Same .OJd Way," oympoaium

conce~

Samuel Beckett, opon·
aoreci.'!Y.~in Modem Lottera, Uniwraaty of Iowa.
.._ Plmlll IIIIUII, chairman. Ger·
man and Slavic, lectured on Kafka and Nietzache and participated aa panelist in a comparative
literature 8)'IDIJO&amp;i.um at Teua

Tech Univeraity, Lubbock. Teua.
auociate prof_,r, aocial welfare, " Attitudea
and Po I i c i e a Toward Retire·
DL AIIIWIAK llONlt,

:r.:~~ ~f~-=;:;

New York; "1971~te Houae
Conference on AJinc, Iaoueo and
Policiea," Erie County White
HOUII8 Conference on Acinl-

~~"!t..c.~

":''li:e !'S:

lected. M o to r Perf'ormaDCe in

Human M'""""'nt: A KiDMioIOiicaJ Alaai)IOia." Eutem Diamat Aa.Jciation for Health, Phyaical Eclw.tion and Recreation,
Pbiladelpbia,

P-lftnia.

.,r,.. German and Slavic. review
euay, 'The Siebo and the Mouleo..; · Modem Lan81J41&lt; Journal;
"Two Noteo on German Soellinl&lt;
and Morpbopbones," Studiu iii
£in8W.tia; nM.ew of E . Zwirner
and K. Ezawa, eda., Phonowutr~.
z:weiUr Teil in Studia in Lingui.ltia; . review of Eva-Maria
Krech. SpreehwiaeMCiaa{tlichphondiM:M Un.Unucluua#n zum
Gebrouda dn Glottiuclalaleeintatzn in der allgemeinen-deuttche" HochlautUI1/f in Studiu in
LU.,uimco.

four objectives for athletic programs. The others are: keeping presen~ sports &amp;t their current levels, or improving on
them; lifting so-ealled minor
sports to major status; and providing a much better intramural recreational program.
''It was with regret," Somit
said of the decision "we had
to make with regard to ne;r;t
year's football schedule."
Steve Frey, dinector of the
Alumni. Association's Golden
Bull Fund, which raisee money
for athletics. said he considers
football's departure "just for
a year or two." After ths:t, he
predicted, football will he back
88 strong as.
stronger than,
ever.
Main spesker Jim · Crowley,
one of Notre Dame's famous
"Four Horsemen" backfield ol
the 1920's, concluded his addrees by saying ''I hope I
come back in 1972 and watch
one of your football games."
One person skeptioo.l about
the retum ·t alk was Jim Peelle,
who received an award for his
35 years of service as U /B
athletic director. "The money
for football has to come
from the State, &amp;nd I don't
think it's about to chan g e
enough to give U/ B the money.
I'm a f raid football's dead,''
Peelle obeerved.
Nancy Coleman, a senior,
became the first woman to receive a Clifford C. Furnas
scholarship. The award, named
after U/ B's ninth chancellor,
recognizes "outstanding under·greduate performance in scholarship and athletic prowess."
Miss Coleman participated
in women's basketball, fie I d
bockeL and swimming. Other
•Furnas awards' went to Roaer
Kremblas, basketball; Mark
Kolter, tennis; John Faller,
football; and Dave Ql.sattrone,
.....,.tling. Tbe awards are sti-

Dll 8. OKICBUKWU KEZU, profee-

oor, French,- Behind the RU.U.,
Sun, London: William Hein&amp;msnn, Ltd.
BftY&amp;N M08COV, instructor, Spanilia, "Parquay: An Annotated

!.~':!f'~~..s~J!~;,~ter-

OIL IIIZBD'I' &amp;.· PBILUPS,

or

auistant

profeaeor, management ecience,
with 0.)(. P'&amp;ANKP'UK'ID and I.P.
S&amp;AG~A:, ' 'Alternative
Efficiency
Criterion: A Comment," Journal
of Finance.
OIL MILTON PLI:SUil, profeaaor, hil-

to'J;,::::U~1/.Jr/:::'J~w'r;'::::i

the State of Iaroe!. by Robeat
Silverbery. American JewUh HU·
toriccl Quarterly.
DR. LEE E. PBEBTON, .professor,

==:;.·r~~c:.~lj::~
of Reprint. for Antitrutl Law
and Econontic•.
DR. CBOIGE 0 . BCHANZER,

profes-

aor, Spaniab, " Lu primeru tre.·
dUccioneB de literatura ruaa en
Eopana en America," Acw del
Tercer Co111ruo lnkmationollle
Hiopaniltoo. Mexico.
DR. IOHN X.. IJIMON,

chairman..

French, JeYiew of Mari&amp;-Deniae

Boroo, u,. Sequutn. L'Homme
oartrien: Etude du tlume de l&lt;a
...quutratiD.. roeuvre lit·
teroU-e de Jean-Paul Sartn, TM
RomGiltic Review.

pends of either $1,000 or $500

PUBLICATIONS

AWARDS

-=

~·=.~'!:"::;d!l.~!:
···__,

~~..::~CJ?::
lla ~

~

a,;,; -

Llbre." 7'1oc

.._ RICIIAD COL'fAIID, - t e
pral-r, -=io!CJCY, recoiwd an
-Aa.rican Coli- Teotmc Pro-

pam

.-t-doctoral followlbip for

- r 1971 at
"-!eA .~ al Iowa.

tbe State UDi·

..
u..a:. IIJDY, caaarmca muuz.
~~-=-=-~1'!:: -- ~~=.:-=:
eW ""'-.Aller- 11--...

dent' aWUded tmdeqncluate
......-. work-~ followlbipo
faadal by tbe UDited HMllh
IJJIII .11~
'h&lt;(: BeaD FaaDdatloa. 'l'ho7 wiD be -rlt·
Veo!M; "CC
111111 lAw," Ia · U.. for .qbt....,.. thio A. ~ allll J.R. ~ at B-.o s - Boopilal, IU.

.,. ..._ ll1ir llielllo (ealuaed

a.- adlllan al &amp;boa, 11...

I!

~·v.:.n;-::::r-= =~..:li.::f ~

York: M a

for grediiiKe studies.
Phil Knapp received the
John B. Bennett award for the
basketbill eenior with the highes:t academic averqe.
Ed Fucbo, C!OM-COUJitry record holder, received an Eastern College Athletic Conference Medal of Merit, as did

n: -o.ota

tioa ~-

,

:n

=·;!d.~"':f.

teem's Moat Valuable Player
-.rd.
.
Curtis Bladlmore ....,.. the
BaablbUl MVP award, and

Jim McCOubrey ....,.. -!bat booor In booby. Cbud&lt; :oo.a-,

"""""P'ain o1 lest year's foot-

bell feel, and Knm!blaa ....,..
Kl u m n i 8cbolaatic- Athleac
~t awuds.

_,

__

Weekly Com.m1llPque(co,.tinued from_. 8, coL 6)

OIIIKAN

=be~·=c!i,•,::cn~~
8 P £ C I A L OONBUGATION OP Til&amp;
TBE.ATMENT OP TRIC HYf"ERXXNE'nC

C H I L 0,

=~

rnnsored.
1

by Regional

f:lorama.in.62

receivina

NUR!1121 TELEPHONE LIOCTUU: Dr.
Rita. Boucher, USE OP SY8ftllAnC
INQUIRY IN A881::BSING N1ZDB 9P

·r=. ':r2

TBB CmtONJCAU.Y D..L AND DIS·

:~ p~~!t

~

ceivinJ locations, 1:30 p.m.
BEIONAB•: Dr. Menachen Gereon,
director, Institute of Kibbutz fte.

·---

m.u:•: Der Nechfol4u

( 1966) . The caat of the Vienna

Burcti-ter is feetured in thio
adaptation of Raffalt'a clnuna
which cleala with . the circumatancea aurroundinc a Papal eJec&gt;.
tion. 233 Norton, 8 p.m.
Dr. Lionel
Abel, profea8or, Engliab, final
lecture of the aeriel on the theoreticaJ and literary WOrb of
Jean Paul Sartre.. 334 Hayea, 810:30 p.m.
.....,..., AND POLITICS:

=~~·R~An~~:ri:

ano, Beethoven Violin Sonata.
Central Library Auditorium, 8 :30
p.m., admiaaion cbarce.
~UTZ BnlUCI'UB AND 8&gt;1/UTION,
PILX' : P&amp;AVDA (1969, Jean-Luc
co-aponoored by policy l(liences, Godard). Another of the 16-mm.
oocia1 psychology program. an- . political filmo by the D · V

-.cla, Oranim, Iuael, TBZ KIB·

~:"m~~dLea~~~P-~ in~%~':ii~
api~
ubcek'o
PILX . . :

LE8 CA1W11N1128

(1964,

·=:JE

Czecboolovakia.

147

Jean-Luc Godard). Univenaal aol·
dien leave their women to fight
for promioed rewards. Tbey learn

Diefendorf, 8 : 15 p.m.
THEA.Tit£•: THE GREAT .u.Da1C.Uf
DE8IIZT by Joel Oppenheimer and

Royal Fiat-postcards and maga·
zines. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8

Th

=~tTh~ =.~~da~~illb; ~.oo;~~ J'.~ ~
p.m.

WEDNESDAY-28
PHYSIClANS TELEPHONE LECTURE:

P•ychiatric Seriu. Drs. Yooeuf
Haveliwala, Nicholas Bona, Desmond Moleoki and Audrey Wor·
rell, COMMUNITY PBYCBlA.TaY,

sponsored by ReJiona'I Medical
Program, 62 receJYing locatione,
11 a.m.
SOME Lllii:ITS TO uw•: Mitchell

f::J~;.:o~=~, ~~!~IJ!~~f:;

of Chicago. Profetl8c&gt;r Kurland
holds law degrees from tbe UDiversity of P ennsylvania and Har.
vard University. He presenUy
serves aa a consultant to the U.S.
Senate Subcommittee on Separation of Powers. and to the Illinois Commiasion on Non-Public
Schcols. He was Jaw clerk to SUpreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, has worked as an attorney,
bas teught law and served ao a
consultant to the Conference of
Chief JUBtices. Room 110, School
of Law, 77 W. Eagle St., 12 noon.
VABSITY BA.BEBA.LL•: Kent State,
doubleheader, campus, 1:30 p.m.
V.utSlTY TRACK• : ~Cleveland State,
campus, 2 p.m.

I

THURSDAY-29

b M
2 Theatre Studi
Ha~ L~b,.,.ey, 8:30 p.m.
mission $1.00, student&amp; $.50. Tickets at Norton Box Office:

Ad:

EXHIBITS
worb
by Ken Sipl, a.iatant in the art

FUNX ART exhibit. featurina:

~t= ~;a .=er~~

from tbe 50'a, and aell hamburgera

Room 6, Aat De~nt,

~:ug~~Jl2.~·

ntinueo

AND SILKSCRIZN designa by Norine .Spurling, Center
LITHOGRAPHY

Lounge, Norton. through April 30.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent exhibit of worb by
James Joyce. Poetry Room, 2111
Lockwood Library, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

~~i::Vf!~ttf~t~

worb by contemporari•, enpavinp a n d watercolon. throuch
May.
Pootera and brosdsidea from the
Poetry Collection. 2nd floor bal·
cony, Lockwood, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,
through May.

NOTICES -

�April 22, lll1l .

=

8

handicopped

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

-

•OCipoll "' -

I:J.~t.J::~:pf:: ~':!I

THURSDAY-22
~on

•
by Hirulemith and Loca~and for oolo piano by Raw!.
Tillin Room. Norton, 4-$ p.m.
lftWVIIN :a.u.ND ia ...Utant pro·
1.-.r of muoic at U/ 8. Ha bao

~&amp;TtJB :

T........, &amp;ria, Dr. John W.

~

·=

lecki, J'll:lmlWA""G CBIBr WOtJ?!I"'&lt;
by D....;onal Moaiall

e

62 ~ locatioDa,
I
a.m.
~ BIOLOGY SDUNA&amp;:
Dr. Rudolfo Paoletti, laotitute of

:::.r:.

U:.ths::!!!
Pbilharmonic. lbe Roebeoter Pbilbumoaic:, 1ho N a t i o n al Symoeveral awardo
PllllllA IUH8II otudied at the
Melbourne Conoervatory and the
Juilliard School of Muoic. She
bao tauabt at Ball State Uniftroity, MUDcie, Indiana.
DOUGLAS DAVIS won the Hollywood Bowl Competition in 1960
and received tbe Fint Bieimial
Piaticoroky Artiot Award. He won

-

\'!""'.,.,l;;,:e"t;:;o,:"'

Pharmaco1ocY - ' Pbarmllcoc-

DOOY. Uniwl"lity ol Mi1u, lt8J.y,
.::aNT IITUDID OX 8UDC B'I'DOL8.
Room 29, 42C8 ftidce La, II a.m.

RefteobmeDia 10:80

-=rr.u.•: TiliD auamber

Muoic Serioo, with Doqlao Davio,
collo: ~ Me-. pi an o;
Frieda M--. piano. Worb indude muoic for l:ello and piano

"' tho &amp;..-.r.
In tho eullject

'""*' c:ao-...., "' - - -•-~· 131~ for-...

PII\WCIAII8

-x=t

mocr-A.~

OCipoll "' pullllc;

younp- ... •

=r:".:!.f.:..:t.
lliDel -wlunteen otalf lbe

LIIL

80ClAL PSYCHOLOGY LUHCB&amp;ON
CCJU.OQUIUK• : Dr. Robert KJeck.

a.oc:iate profa.or, Dartmouth
Collop, HOH·vaa&amp;L OOIJIKllHlCADOH riP una, B-37, 4230 Ridce
La, 12:80 p.m.

:!\!.~"¥~~~~:

in M o 1 c o w and aubeequently
toured Southern Ruaoia. Re bao
been praiaecl lor "llawleu intone-

~ =~1,;~-;".;i~ ::f~
~ ~~r~:t.!u~ \:!
u ... auperbly talented muaician...
&amp;.lca:D )( U 8 I C J"'Ol VOICIB AND

88A88•: featuring U/ 8

Cbo:d

~~:"~-

lion of Frank J . Cipolla. The
performance will take place in
St. Jooepb'o Old Catbedral. fiO
Fnmldin St., in downtown Buffalo. SL Jooopb't, which io over
100 yearo old, oerved ao tbe fltot
cathedral of the Roman Catholic
Di.- of Weotem New York.
The 8ne aoowotical properties of
thia atone etructure make it
eopecially well ouited for a pn&gt;,ram such ao tbio. Worb by Maroollo, Lauuo, Bach, Gabrielli, Palestrina, de Victoria, Schut... St.
Jooepb't Old Catbedral. 8 p.m.

whlch the Company of Man will
produce from the raw material

~~~ ~~ix l"~:!i

Ave., 8 :80 p .m. s eneral admiooion $1.00, ticket. at the door, at
Norton, and S UCB Co liege
Union. Also on April 24, 25, 80,
May I and 2.

York City. 140 Capen, 1: 45 p .m.4 p.m.
TID 00810C WJa)O[NO•: eeminar,
oorulucted by Arthur Y 011111. inventor of the Bell helioopter and
president of the Foundation lor
the Study of Conociouonoa Con-

:,:,
!I:==.!~~ ll:;
world of thoucht, emotion and

spirit. Human Dimenoiono lllotitute, Wick Campua Center, Rooary Hill CoUep. 9:80 a.m.-4 p.m.
Also SUDday, April 25. For ..ervations call 839--3600.
VAJIIIITY DIACK• : Brockport State,
c:ampuo, 1:80 p.m.
liUIDC aaow•: featuring Kip the
Great with KimUrly and Ky.

~~r:_u6!!';

Student Loan F u n d. Ambont
Community Cbureb. 77 Weobington Hi&amp;hway, Snyder, 2 p.m.,
$LOO. Tickets at lbe door.

ED'I:IUENCI:B OP A PSYCHIC

BKNBI ~

TIVS•: Doualu .loimooll, Britiob

p8ychic aenaitive. Human Dimen ~
oiono lnotitute. W i c k Campua
Center, Roaary Hill Collep, 8 : 15
p.m.
BALIUH POLK DANCING: Aclvanoad,

oome teecbinc, Fillmore Room.
8 :80 p.m.

PILII • • : OB! WIU.T A LOVI:LY WA&amp;,

-

Thursday U.ting.

MONDAY-26

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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                    <text>.•.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

APRIL 15, 1971 .

VOL 2 · N.O. 28

TopLevel -

Tenure:
It Seems

SeareheS
\\WI Along

ToWock
Tenure.
'lbe word is a iighlniDg rod.
Toes it out in c:oo........UOn and
heal' the vetbal boMB strib:
"'t OUIIbt 1lli be abolisbed."
''EJieryone should have il"
"It's the ruination of a univer. sity." ''It lllillda dea4wood-"
"It's a club t-.1 to keep facul.

Three University -.dl .,.,..._
mittees
this on
weelr.
issued
-res&amp; reports
their
activitiea.
George C. Lee, chairman of
the Committee for Provost ol
Engineering· and Applied Sciences, said tbat since his group
was appointed by the President
on November 30, it "has considered the qualifications of
close to 100 names. A list of
candidates was submitted to
Dr. Ketter. Contacts with these
candidates were made by :0..
Ketter and so far two have
shown interest in us. Each made
a two-day visit with us."
Chairman Stanley Brucl&lt;enstein of the Committeygr,Acadl!lnic Vice Presiden_t~ted
that his group has bileiJ meeting regularly each wee1r.. "in
response. to its requests for

~;tin.::: ~~l..'t:

f.-lam."

Whatever it ;. and whatever
it ·doea, it eD!IB. And everyone
has to live willl'il
'lbe livina, bowever, is not
always easy.
• Not only h&amp;ve aome U/B
decisiOIIS to """v tenure been
in . _ . andlltiption &lt;:bannels; the word is 8lao out that
some ~ board appointed
by &lt;the President makes final
decisions 011
8UCh matters
and riaidl enfon:es adminisotmtively~ "quolas" and
"Political polioies."
Two members of this Presidential Review Board, however,
dismilll these IUIDOI&amp; 88 DOD·

au

-.::

lrvina ~~ •. - ~
faculty prof.-6r '(!f ~r-

'i&gt;r

k

and~lled ~

.
!318
taniue 'as a fiict ol ,::_
clemlc life and :0.. Peter Lima-

.The Maoris Here

Or pleeeo of It, • leost. Dr. Dovld c:..n- dloployo the
mom dust ..,.,. which • - thll for his NASA
,_.rdl pfOject and polnls out Ia ~ of orta1n on the
lunar a.m-. (See otory, &amp;)

-~ AAij_P, _Ptl~t:sk~·Protes~
Job Cu!B, rCamterproductive-~Laws .

bury. prot_, ol c:hemiatry. is
iDclined to question it, both
!bat if you have the sysMeasures ts1&lt;en as part of a
~~-ttbenJS
. ~~AtUsurround/8,
~-y- move to keep the State budget
"'"""""
...,
in line for fiscal 1971-72 have
feel, the ~ is a pretty · drawn sharp reactions from
JIDOCI one.
State and University employ..._~~-~~~L~locaRe-l ,__
· - ~ .,...,..._ .....,
Threats to wipe out anywhere
proc8os by brincing to tenure from 4,000 to 1'!i000 State jobs
dec:isiona (and questions of (depending upon_ what Albany
promotion to full prolesBor) an source is to be believed ) have
impartial, advisory evaluation led to counterthreats of strij&lt;e
at a level reJIIOY8II from depart- action by' the 200,000-member
mental politics and pressure&amp;- Civil Service Employees Asa broad, total University out- sociation which also represents
look, if you will.
· clerical and maintenance per'lbe Review Board is a group sonnel within SUNY.
ol six faculty members apThis situation, which CSEA
poiuled by the President to aot calls "the worst public employ•as "consultants• on these in- ee crisis in State history," is
U!mal matters and on appom' t- still un........_,_ however~.- -~
IDI!IIts with tenure from outside ing determination by
bany
the U n i v e r s i t y. In many botb ol the 11umbers of pceischools, :0.. Lanobwy &amp;Uigeats. tiona which will be eliminated

sure dealing with contact hour11.
Some campus sources have
expressed amazement concerning the faculty legislation, especially since the issues involved appear to be thoee which
are subject to negotiation under
tbe Taylor Law. Those negotiations are currenUy woderway
between the State and SPA,
representing the taculty a n d
professiorial staff of SUNY.
8111 att
• 'lbe first.._......, in question,
Senate Bill 6299, declares the
"intant'' ol the Legislature 88
· ·
L--- ol
Lf
to DIIDIIDum """"'
wor.. or
faculty members and "as to the
1188 a( appropriations which
IRJPP(Irt aalaries ol such faculty
members." While only "intent''
is lePslated, the bill mal&lt;as it
c1aar !bat future funds for any
:m~~
~~
institution "aball be~
preaickmt
who consults with tbe
M eanwhile, Le1J1S
· lative ac- ~!:'.:,_~~
.......eztantolthawbicbt
' -·tithetupresident 011 .........,---:-':"-·
auuuuun&lt;a~
...,
from ~t;'"i:d~ lions setting minimum contact tion imJJiemanja Ibis "intanl"
siona.
.
~~~~tyonandss=~
'lbe tun tat ol the IDII88IIN
-This
- ."removeii
. . . , .liYlew,"
.
in (fqr faculty and other State .followa:
"Section 1. 'lbe Legislature
&lt;the .,....... a[ 8baCides and !',~!'lofromY"""}Ll_&gt;a~~~~.-can '!"~: ol the State of New York, rec~
~
..., ,.,._
~
ognizing the need and cleairLanabury, bas 88YI!r8l advanl- ation ol University Professors, ability to make available to
...... It elim~ P.lays the"--~- Prot·-··- --· ·--~filr 'the Uni
s available atiDn~A) ~tber
every qualified student the
,..,..,. llna._ I..lnM can be as- ~·~ includ;na - - ' - - ol higher education necessary to
F ·~
... - .,___,..
prepare him .to be a useful and
~ where they are .-led the
partment ol Biocbemis- contributory member ol his
moet and can be lliOOit elfective. lr)-.
·
ciommunity, state· and COUDtry,
Lanobwy ......,.. further • Four hundred ftfty members bas enacted many prop-easive
-!bat 801118 depulments and!or ol ,t he local AAUP chapter have educational programs. To imfaoultiaJ may ...t set their sent a te1esram to Governor plement these p~ and to
emousl! in terma ol · Roc:lrefeller u r 1 in 1 the veto rmpxove the quality ol higher
'l'hia is more easily ol these "COUDterproductive~ education in this State, the ·
aiiiiiiCtlld at tbe ........., lewl
It is 'believed by leJ.i!!lature has appropriated
wbare •'llat:from_~ • * ' : ' r , that. the Gover- millions ol dollam ol State
fieldB em, ......,.. . - . - 'tted to signing the · funds to higher education.
biiJII, bow a ~
·
part ol a deal for
"While it is important tbat
- lit lhil Uniwraity apinst bud!let p&amp;Ma&amp;e. .
the needs ·&lt;if higher education
~ ~ elseNo one is sure at this point; be satisfied, it is a valid coo. """"'- In fact, Lansbury says, though, bow the leJislation, if cern ol this Legislature, being
• lhla facllor is \I8U8lly tbe major sjgnecl into law, would a1fect a· major determinate ol tbe Jllll·
one in C8llll8 'wbeie a depart- OPerations at this institution.
ei'OII8 8UDI8 ol _public monies
"**t88 or ~ty reoommendaAt deadline _the Reporter appi-opriated mid ~ by
tion;. ..............t by the Board. learned that Roc:lrefeller bad and on bebalf ol the people ol
'lbe Board'a decisions are signed the bill calling for a' this State for higher educationnot aJbitrary, bowever, the t,.., moratorium on sabbaticals but a1 purposes tbat 8UCh mcirues
(~ o11- 2. col. I)
was stiU oOnsiderin, the mea- realize a tsfr retuin in the form

::

_.:;

::!

s,:;:,=.n-

Wa

=
::!fb

u-sur..s.

of commensurate productivity

r.!'cul~~

u:; ~:..""J:'sti-::t

higher education within the
State of New York wbo have
traditionally enjoyed ample
participation in these monies.
" It is a recognized educa-

=~rvtb.,~.!'~P.""t!!

is being expended upon research and non-classroom scholarly endeavors.
"It is therefore the sense ol
this Legislature, as hereinafter
e:r:pressed, that the educators ol
the institutions of higher education within the State of New
York should more judicioualy
devote a greater part of their
work week to .actual IDstruction
and cultivation of the young
minds which have been entrusted to them.
Minimum Ibn

"2. It is the intent of the
Legislature tbat each full time
faculty member of community
1

~
~l5r~=
tact hours per weelr.;' tbat each
full time faculty member of the
State University, City Universit¥ of New York, statutory and

%,d~co:~'fns"::

tutea, aball teach a minimum
of twelve ( 12) claasroom contact bours per weelr. for undergraduate IevelS; and .each full
time faculty member ol a graduate instituti!llt aball teach a
minimum ol nine ( 9) classroom
c:ootsct bows per weelr..
"It is the further intant of
the Legislature that each full
time faculty member teachinJ
at the aforesaid institutions
aball, in additioD to the aforesaid minimum weelr.ly . . . .
room 0011tact hours, WOI'l&lt; a full
time weelr. in completion ol
their professional obliptions
tbat would include a signiftcant
time in teaching ~ility
3lld educational adVIIII!IDeDL
(c:o~d

011-

3, c:oL I)

==..DB,::.asbe~~:!.~ ·~

names ol candidates botb from
within the University community and 'from other institutions
and has considered the vitae of
~roximately 100 individuals.

sent~==~~

PnsidoDt KaW by tbe ead ol
w

The .Ada

ADd~ ~

C':!i:::="~~~

as follows :
"The Search Committee . . .
was appointed hY President
Ketter on December 4, 1970. It
immediately circularized the
faculty and student body for
nominations. 'lbe faculty suggested direc:Uy to the committee about a dozen names, the
student body BUB'ilested none.
'lbe acting proYOSt dlB,'III' up a
list of 80IIIe 10 names. 'l1ie committee, from its own contscta
and with individual members
acting as funnels for other fac.ulty, contributed another 35
names. Of the total, 30 names
were deemed unaooeptable. Of
the group left, about half .......
not interested. 'lbe rest sent in
(Continued 011 7, col. 3)

$1.7 Million

Cut By State
The New Yor1&lt; State LePIature cut $1.7 million from. the
Governor's ~for U/B operations in -f iscall971-72, E. W.
Doty, vice president for operations and "18~ said Ibis
week.
'lbe bUdgetarjo
is still unclear,
Doty ap ·
because this ~ may be
raiaed or lowered by the cen-

t=

tral administration ol SUNY.

'lbe Governor's budaat re- .

=f?:d~W:~

$4.7 milliOIL
Cutbaclai in the budget make
an increase in positions domtful, the vice president said. But
"no perJIIIll*lt employees will
be laid olf."
- The idtal budgetary picture
will probably be known in two
weeks, Doty said. By then, the
central adminis·tration ol
SUNY will have .sorted oilt' allocations for -the various units,
be explained.
'lbe total SUNY system budget was cut $26.7 million out
of a reque:rted $491.3 miHion.

�. . . JS, JJ7J

2

~

m-....u::uun~-

rc~ from -

I. coL I)

members empbasiJJB. Dr. LaDSbui:y estimates · that at least
tluee-fclurths of their decisions

~to ~tions
reqeived tbrouch c h a n n e I s

(from the deparUnental and
Faculty-Provost review BY&amp;tems)

N~ is the Board's .......t final
in aJiy case. Lansbury points
out thst. the Pieeident is the
ullimate iud8e in all such"""""'
although pft!Bidenta have gone
along with the Board's rec-.nandatioos' pemaps tlueefourths ol' the tune.
or course, at a University
this · tbe l'iesidont has final
~~ without having
aU the P"""'""""Tbis simply llilderscores the importance of what the Review
Board members. -the Faeulties
and the ~ta themselves bring to -the evaluation
process.

;;;n;;;;;;i'd

'lbeRevi~~Dr. Lans-

bury explains, . influences ~ep&amp;Jtmental and Faculty .deli!?-

eratians to the m:tent that 1t ·
issues ~ toncerni,ng
dOCUIIllliTiation and supporling
~ for evaluatin"!'- ,.
'Our lll09t useful service, he
!&gt;OOeves. has been ~.thus caus111i lower. ~ decision-makers
to m:tend their Pi'OCB8888 of ..,,_
ection , and evaluation. ''The

~~~~use~:.;

~.ibem

down) · are more
important than those we do."

No Particular Cclnoll-.cy

·

Tbe six members of tbe
Board represent no particular
constituency, Dr. Shames
points out. They represent
themBl!Ioe., bringing to their deliberations their own values,
seerohing -t heir own consciences
to deleiDline ' what is best for
the University.
However, wbile the membere
are not representatives of FacuJties as such, major Faculty
areas are included. Dr. L&amp;nsbury indicates that there are
usually three members from the
sciences and three from the humanities

In addltion to Shames and
Lansbury the current Review
Board includes Dr. Joseph RiddeB, professor of English; Dr.
Harold Brody, professor of aniltomy; ' .Dr. Robert Harnack,
profeeeoll of curriculum developmem , aDd -i nstructional
media, education; and Dr. Con- .
stantine Yenu:aris, professor of
soo;:iolosY.
.
Lansbury was appointed to
the Board, for a non-renewable ·
tluee-year t e r m by foiUler
President Martin Meyerson. It
is his widerstanding that Meyerson ..,lected Board members
after consukation with advisors. President Ketter, however,
has made bis replacement appointments from a list of potential candidates SUfgested by
othe Executive Committoo of the
Faeulty ~ Dr Shames is
one of these, .ikho~gh he had
served on the Board previously
under Meyerson.
Lansbury notes thst MeyerBOll issued guidelines to the
Board insisting that e\oidence
be preeeoted -that tenure appointees be equal to or baUer
than the best qualified ~ns
available oul&amp;ide the Umversit:y
(somelhing eomelimes diffieult
to prove in tenure cases) . Acting President Pelei Regan, he
says, aSked further that consideration. of teecbing .be specifically included. President Ketter, .on the other hand, has issued no directives· to the Board,
prelerrinc to let tbem oPentte '
on their own, while making
known his pbiloaopby through
public atataneDts such as his
1118ugural address in whim he
sln!osed the primacy ol the
• UniYerSity as a leeching institution while in no way dooyngrading the importance ol re~ --'-'-'-'-tion .:. _
• ...., ............. ~a

r~ 81111iotant to ttie ex~
~

who ia coimady Dr.

-

-~--

senCeci only tlnougb a secretary

:=;
and

recorder without vote.
Cbairman81&gt;ip ol the Review

Board~- which ""'
· ·
as aiSI!S build
rotated 8IIQig the vut.-

beld

up-JS

ing llll!lilbEII1I.
At iCs ~ the Board
considels esch c:ilse "on ita
merits," Jelylng on voluminous
~Jk (ielllenl of reference,
,....,.,mendations, etc., ..,nerated from the leYels ~) and
on its own expertise.
u there is a University quota
on either tenure or -full professorships. both shames and
T ........ ~ _,, __,_,_

!mow!

::&gt;:;'ciil ~".:are that
li:re has been tslk of a DOSeible ceiling. But "quotas'' do
not figure in tbe Board's deliberations.
While not applying tenure
quotas, the Bosid also does oot
become embroiled in appeals
Dll8e8 (although it may " reopen" a case on the~ of
additional information). Neither does it make public iCs deliberations and decisions. J.ans.
bury feels, thOugh, that it might
be advisable for the Board to
issue same form of report on
eech case to the provost conoemed who could then release
it to anyone be feels is entitled
to a"""""
s.-111co ;, tho Proceu
'lbeee genezalizations_ ~
the Board and the specifiCS of
what it ~oes not do1 leed!; to
&lt;the ~on of what 1t &lt;loa do,
specifically.
. .
T? answer that _reqwres a retracmg of the entire _process &lt;?f
~ure (!""f promotion) dea81on-mal&lt;ing.
.
Tilat_"!'hole process IS a peer
evaluation-at the depart,mental level, at tbe Faculty
lev~ and at the il;v!'l of the
R,e~ Board. ~Vlduals rev1ewmg ~~ ""'! perfo~ s1t m a .collegial .relationship to the pen;on belllll
offered for candidacy.
Promotion or tenure is initial-ed within a department through
various committee · structures,
with a senior faeulty member
or )he chairman ..,rving as bead
of the review agency. Students
are ?r are not represen&lt;led _acto d~partmental pol}cy.
In line With the regulations
of the SUNY ~ tenure,
Dr. Shames explains, 18 g~ally Prog r am~~ d-..:a time
comes when a decis10n ~t. be
made. However, ~l;y decunon
requests can be DUt:iated. also.
A recommendation for prolllGtion to ·fuH professor usually
comes about as ~ result ol a
departmen~s seruor professor's
'!""ual reVJew of ~ accomplishments of ')SBOCil'te professors.
. .
A departmental deciSIOn,
"yes or no" on either questioil,
is ordinarily forwarded with
complete and carelul documentation to that unit's Faeulty
Personnel ~'lbe documentation covers

coniin'

seve_ral areas.

. •
First of all, oUtaide evalua~ of scholar&amp;hip are required.
•
. ~ the case of a tenure de-

ClSlon for 8 young profeBBOI',
letters are soli!'ited from a list
ol names which should · be
drawn up by~
lis~will~ allclude f
. ad'""!'h a
t
m
onner
YI80rB
and professors ~ _peraonal
~ge of the Candidate and
bis .work. 'lbe ~-- are,
1J881i1, col~ ,
Upon 0UIIIIid8ration · for promotlon to full prof~BK~~, bow!'..,• ~ peiiiOilal ·~l&gt;!nceis JeQUired. A man at
level
shouf~ )).} known far his work
by l!iil1Del1t sci!O~ in his field,
Shames and l.aD!ibwY qree.
~ , _ Cnldal
'
R-m and publications
ue also documented 8nd a&amp;~ at the departmental
lewl
'
At the same Cime, ail ~art.

t¥s

Is made with ........ lo evlll_...,. This~
is 'pi8.yina an inCl'll88iD.tY aip1J1cmt role in the

:.!fu.....,

1Ws'

the iDdividualii from

ol that wte ( laplbm with

m-

~the .Um-aity who ~ ooamaD if delind)
have evaluated the elllldidaal's cooslitute dleir "NcQnnpeyye-

oxupetance in his 8eld.
tion."
Eliiames I8YL
At lhe Review Board clellbIn 811111, a - ~ the·
'For an IIIICkqraduate pro- · eratioas Shames uya, there · P~ "veey JtelpCILWible, OJ&gt;e·
IMchinl . - D t is ...., ~ and· frank IDI:banpa. ~I&amp;~ the time.
U&amp;Ually in the loiDl ol ap- 'ol oplnioD&amp;--ell of whidl are It' !" do,
• J?i'OCI!88
ponded s-tu de n t evaluation -ted· as seriOusly aDd COil· whidl ....._ it
diffieult
qwmt:ioonailes or unsolicited fidentially 88 belits a pi00088 to ~
.
In the
letters. 'lbe paduate proles- which .p icb over a peiiiOil's awardinill olllmuie.
sor's teschinlr skills are likely ''life, his future, his psyche, his
The ~ iillliilben, Bhlun5
to be evaluafed in the form of gu4a."
BBYB. think "-Y bud" about
letlters from dJoee of his fonner
u otbe Board alone is unable to' their declsioas. 'l'o a Jaitle m:students who, ·as· Shames puts reach a conclusion. or, 'in J.ans. tent._ "the futon! ol the Uniit, "have gone on to be succees- . bury's words, when a case is vermty ~ '!" the people
ful"
.
"partiruiarly thomy,'' i~ migbt we. liBCOiiiiDiQi ·01' ~. ~
Finally, the departmental invite a chairmen. a provost, This ibapos_ the inl!'ibrtioo.
cheinnan (and/or others with- faculty members or students to
~ that 18 !l '!"ftOUS responin the University) may make appear before it to ~ !'P sibilithe!r..:_~ ~ ~ conthat_
statements ClODCerning ...rvice.
tte
'lbees individ
.......... ..._.._.. -v
both to the University (com- : ' ~Y testify .in ,..; cemediibauf'othe total QI8Kion
mittee assignments. etc.) and "advocate" capacity, · although !" tenll!" abaYe and bey~ the
to the OOIDJllUIIity (defined as from time to· time a dean, pro- ~ deinaDd!' ofUmverthe prof..,.ional community and vost or cheirman might be sity at Bulfalo ..,.._.,
.
the "academic-community in- called upon to clarify a nega~ roo: example,_ VIeWS
terfaoo," and not simply the tive stsnce.
the practice as one which mRotarians, for example) . This
The Board may also place moves ·the ..P~• . neck
element ls included, Dr. telephone calls -to those who . from.~ guillotine. If the proShames says, because a Uni- have written evaluation letters cessd ts right,of!jlbamesindi~dliual~e
versit:y should expect that a -ifsuchletle!'sare "notcleer.
ang_er
an
Vl
• s
profeBBOI' being admitted to
Both Shames and LansburY sloughing off after becoming
what · amounts to permanent emphasize that the broad-based "!"""""'-:' Ambitions, prof&lt;;&amp;membership should have a Review Board is far-&lt;mOUSh re- 81011!" ind~ "'!U....tis"stake and interest"- in both moved from day-to-day contact faction, be heliel(es, will _keep
University and community.
with an individual as to be ob- a person p~uctive. In biJ? ~
Dr. Cappiello stresses the '-"ve ClODCe~;na political-per- yeers ~ he says, 1t 18
significance of this initial de- ~ consi~~ns which may the ~tion for t.;fure to
partmental evaluation: ''It is
1
level d · ·
''harbor mcompetents.
up to the department to pre- . : . 09/er
8Cl810ns on a
For those who don't get ~npare the best possible case fO&lt;
Nor are ' 'University politics" ure, ~ fin&lt;~!' no excess1ve
its candidate. U the documen- introduced at this level, I.Bns- cruelty inberent. m the system.
tation prepared at that level is bury contends He is aware, 'lbere are vanous levels of
:~ ~;;, ~~ual'• case ~e~er. that ,.;,me"!""!?"" fao- . ~!ned~ :u;.,~
tians feel the .oppo81te 18 true. . the tatus, credentials
abil
Fac:ultr ......, Lansbury emphasizes that same • s
or . •
At tile Faculty level, tbere· members of the Hayes 45 had 1ty for tenure at ~uffalo, m~ght
is additional assessment and in- tenure cases in ·PJ00088 last have talents which would be
put by a Personnel Committee spring which were totally un- wei"""""! at a f"!'f·Year colrepresenting the broad spec- affected hr. their outside aetiv- lege, Fai!lll'&lt;! to. wm_ tenure at
truro of a Faculty. Some Fao- itieS. Politics or other outside a giVen ~on 18 not ~
Wties augment their intemal activities enter the picture, ~ of tbe line. A full Y~ IS
review by cal~ on outside Lansbury says, only when such given to flJl!l another po81~
consultants. Engmeering and activities interfere with schol- Shames pomts ou!&gt; noting,
Applied Sciences, for m:ample, · arly work or with freedom of ~. that the job mar~t
has an ad hoc QOmlllittee on re- inquiry and expression in the has tightened ClODBiderably m
search which . reports to the classroom.
I'Eicent yeers. '
•
Faculty CoDllDlttee.
Cappiello is impressed with
Lansbury, who has had ex- ~ Faculty ~t~ is the J3oard's objectivity in a&amp;- _pefience in indusl;rY, is not
.especially charged With msur- eessing candidates whom many convmoed that unlimited tening that uniform standards 8.re of the members may know per- ure _ is absolutely . necesssry.
being applied from department sonally. When they sit down to "University peopte may have it
to depar&lt;tment,
.
assess a case, Cappiello notes, ..too good," be says: To make
After aseessmg all the mput, the six individuals become the certain that veterans aren't
the Faeulty Committee votes ·Review Board. It's "fantastic," tempted to ahirk their duties,
~ submits its reco~- be says, the way they ·exetcise be says, there might be some
ti"'! to the pJOVost who apm "this awesome" responsibility.. kind of periodic review, every
revleWS. the p _a perwork and
Members of the Review 5, 7 or 10 yeers, with a less
states his po81tion.
Board reach ·individual deci- abrupt teiUlination deadline, if
Frequently, lhe provost's in- sions on C&amp;81!6, both Lansbury an indiVidual fails to measure
put is combined with that of and Shemi!s agree, by combine up
the Faculty Committee.
ing all areas of concern-teach- · The recen.tly-established
According to U ni ve rs ity ing, researeh-scholarahip, Uni- Hampshire Coli!!~&lt;! in Massaground ; rules, a · "yes" recom- versit:y and community service chusetta (a joint. venture of
mendation from department -into an equation unique- to' Smith, Ml Holyoke, Amherst
Faculty and provost ~ ~ each individual and his posi- and UMass), he ·reporis, has
forwarded to the Pres1&lt;iential tion.
·
establlsbed a ·policy of three to
Review Board. A split--vote
Here, researeh may weigh five-year teiUl appointments
"!""DII these. \evels also con- most heavily. · 'lbere, publica- with no tenure (although· pretinues along m channels. A tiona quslity is more signifi- sumably appointments may be
"no," however, means that the canl A case involving p~ ~) .
.
·
case does not proceed beyond - tion to full professor status "" Pl"'-ohljls lmpaftant
the Faculty-provost level. An quires that an Uid.ividual have
Where there is tenure, L&amp;nsappeel ol a ''Degative" decision greet strength ~ bne' area and . bury is not persuaded that stuat this level is not routed reasonably good credentials in denta should be gl'llllled major
through the Review Board; another in Shames' view. At · decision-making a u t b o r i t y.
neither is ·an appeal to a "no" this l.,:.,el national stature · Although students who have
at the presidential level. A Fac- should be involved, he. says.
come 6efore lhe Presidential
ulty Senate~~ may
'lbe most desirable equation· Review Boaid from · time to
beer these appeals which can for this · particular type of in- . time to "testifY have done an
be further appealed to ,a SUNY stitution, Lansbury - lee!s, re- · "exOOllent job," be firids thst
Senate group and to tbe SUNY suits from an individual's com- · tbey have .,.,.,;. ·hesitant to aoChancellor.)
m i - to both teaching and cept thii "Uemeodoua . _ , .
An lndl of " research ·with neither having ·.sibilit;y" Involved. -All kinds ol
'lbe total case input gener- precedence over the other. input are needed, he sa-,
ated up -to the provost level is Teaching should have prece- from students · bu~ also from
distributed to eech member of dence at 8 two-year or liberal University faculty outaiders,
the "Presidential Review Board arts colle$e, be feels. And~ · etc.
. '.
by its secretary. A single case are rt!8eai'Ch inBtitula for inc .
Lansbury feels also there is
may be an ~ thick, Shames dividuals who want to do only : too much lepdency to downilays. And these materia!s thsl However, he IIBYB. despite. grade associ.tite prof~BK~rsbips
usuallY oome to the members m this ideal, the Presidential Re-, · 'within the educational f!Stabeels o(t,wo and three.
· view Board is aware . that re, · lishment. 'lbe ~ feeling
RevieW Board members read search may have been over- is Chat if a nwi has not
and cOrisider t!&gt;e ~ be- .......med in the past. Now he achieved full ~ four
fore a ~DeMing ill echeduled. says, &lt;the Board is ''leaning .;__. · or five years iiftar laiure. he
" 'lbere .is. lll!!!'illY-~ a lead-time backward" to -insure .th&amp;t ~hoSe &lt; has reached a dead-eiil!, This
ol a week to a week and f/D8" who have a dominant dedica- despile the fact that · associate
balL •Board ~ ha'!" to lion to teaching receive at least professors' saJ.ariee oannot at
be '!killed at jUdging the· judg- ~ - ; sort of oansideralioii this time be llDIIIlid8red "ecoments Pft!ll8ill;ed to ~ Dr. ~ -resoiarchers have been nomically depriving." . AsaOci.Shames ""Plains. becirUae tbey IPv:enate pioreeiiOIIIbipe abould,..re- .are obriau8ly not" ~ to·
.Alter arriving at their indi- .ceive more status, be. says. with
jud-"' ~ In fN8TY field: vid1ial equatiOJDil, the Review ''fullM profeBilOJ!Ibips being re· To· asaist" ln this 1 1 - . - t BOard' memliers -then vote .' 'yes· ~ 'far really ou4atanding
ol ~ ~ eech PJ'!l'VI)8t or no," on a 11\ven case. 'l'bP.v · accomplishment; , offering in·
pJOvides ~ the Bolird ~- may also absta,in. ~ resultS cmtive .11l8il b8yood Wwre.
iuput,

1-.

�Jltril 15, 1911

GREPORTER,

3

~To.Fee or Not To Fee' Is Question

·SAVoters Have to Answer Next Week
By STEVE LIPMAN
To tee u not to fee.
'!bat is the question which
U/B undergradwKefl will decide in next week's three-day
Student Aaaociation referen·
·dum. - More precisely, they will
vote on the Board of Trustees'
mandated &lt;JU!"'tion: Should
student adlivity fees be volun·
tsry or mandatory?
All student bodies in the
SUNY system have to present

::.,.~ :th~ ~;

m

Fire at Ridge Lea

A hot pgta
thouctrt to be the cause of on early momin&amp;
blaze at the Art Deportment Monday. The fire, confined to
on art supply .-n at· Ridp Lu, a used an estimated $2,000
worth of damap.

Faculty (Resid~nt Advisors'
Sought for Beirut, France
The Council on International trip transportstion will be paid
Studies is looking for two fac· and a modest account for ex·
ulty l'l¥!mbers to serve as resi- Pense&amp; while in France will be
dent directoni for study abroad provided. An administrative asprograms next year. Directors sistant, probably an advanced
are needed for the program at PhD. candidate, will aid the
the University of Grenoble in director. ·
France and at the American
Applications for the positions
University of Beirut, Lebanon. must be submitted by April 30
Both positions require the _di- to Jim Michielli, director of
rector to teach halftime at the ovel'8e88 academic programs,
university and to serve 8ll ad- 308 Townsend Hall. To be invisor to students.
.eluded in the application 8re an
Requirements for the Gren- introductory Jetter and a releoble job are an extensive knowl- vant vita.
edge of French, ezperience of
To serve as a resident direolivinl in Franca, ability to offer tor in Beirut, a doctorate is
service to the Univer•ity of needed in any one of the folGrenoble in the """' of instruc· lowing fields: business admin·
tkm or research, and a proven istration, oomparative adminisability to advise students and tration. comparative govern·
handle the day-to-day problems ment, inorganic chemistry,
o( the program.
economic development and
planning, education, English,
geology or physics. Duties and
regular SUN
roll with payment will be similar to the
notmal frinpt
ts. Round· program at Grenoble.

di:=::::~::

"f.!.!/.

2 Profs
Wm Guggenheims
.
.
Two U/B English prot_,..
-Robert W. Creeley and
Bruoe·Jackaon-are among 354
acholars, scientists and archiwho hove been awarded
fellowshipa for the coming yesr
by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
Both will receive an award
for a major portion o( their
salary for one year.
Creeley's fellowship is-fot the
purpoee o( writing poetry. He
will probably epend the year
in N'ew Mexico. This is hiS
second Gugaenbeim, the fin;t
bovina been awarded in 1964.
ACconling to a report in the
Courier-EM&gt;rea, Jackson said
his fellowShip will result in a
new book for which he has aJ.
ready ccmpletea
in
Texas. Mls&amp;ouri and Indiana.
He will do tbe remainder, at the
Harvard Library. Jackson's

Ameri&lt;:an Work ·songs from

Tems PrisoTI8 will be published

by the Harvard Press this fall.
According to the Guggenheim Foundstion, more than
2,363 individuals applied . for
the awards.

Math Publication

The Sprin~r-Verlaa Co. of
New Y otk will,_publi!rl1 J&gt;BP"':8
presented- at
international
mathematical oonfP-renoe at the
Yni..,rsity in May 1969.
The cOnference atuacted
hundreds of mathematicians.
Prof. Kazimierz Kurstowski
of the Polish Academy of Sciences served as the conference
director while at U/B as dis-rm
tmguiabed visitin professor in
mathematics. p:f_W iII i.a m
Fleischman of the Mathematics
Wake Up, Dmd Man' Afro-. Department edited 1he papers.

an.

,_,lution of March 24, whkb
rl!lllds:
~ior to the cloee of the
academic yesr . 1970.71, and
every four years thereafter, the
student body (or such oom·
ponents thereof as IWIY be designated by the chief administrative officer, or his designee )
at each State-operated campus
shall determine by referendum
wbetber student activity programs shaH be supported by
either voluntary or mandatory
student fees."
U/B's five other student gov·
ernments, Law, Medical, Dental, Millard Fillmore College,
and the Graduate Student Association, are planning May
referendums on the question.
Buffalo Stole College is holding its vote the same days as
U/ B : April 21, 22, 23.
The Trustees' r e solution
comes as a result or a com·
ptsint by an Albany Univen;ity
student thst his fees were being
spent for " illega-l purposes."
However, Mark Huddleston,
SA president, feels "the time
was ripe" for the Trustees to
make such a ruling (with its
complex regulations for expenditures ) at the slightest provoe&amp;tion in order to exercise more
control over student monies.
SA collects an annual $69
fee from about 11,300 undergraduates for a total of $777,·
000. The $69 includes the $25
athletic fee which itaelf underwent a series of fate-&lt;letermining referendums two years ago.
one -third of the $770,000
goes to Sub Board I which
funds newspapen; and Union
Activities; another third goes
to the Student Athletic Review
Board, and SA gets the remain·
"ing third. One-half of SA's
money goes to clubs and or·
ganizations 8nd the other half
is for SA's own use (stipends
for officers, student directory,
speakers, etc.) •
Huddleston estiniates thst
"at ·the very most, five or ten
per cent," of student activity
fees are spent on controversial
political items such as Bail
Fund, or SDS.
''It would be too bad," he
II8Y8. "if the students hurt
themselves by voting for a voluntary fee. They would lose
an awful .lol Like the papers,
concerts, movies, coffee houses,
and the lectures that SA cosponson; w i t h departments.
There would be little funding
(or clubs, and students would
hove to pay cover charges for
sporis and other events. &lt;Payment or the athletic ·fee entitles students to free admission to all athletic events.)
''The Union wouldn't be able
· to be open as late as iris, since
LAT£ NEWS

As the ll8portet- went to press:
I. the Collegiate Assembly passed

a motion agreeing to evaluate
wor1t done by students in College
A in order to assure granting of
Univel5ity c~lt "for that wor1t

and .2. portions of the Norton
Recreation Area 'Were re-opened,
witho4,rt official. announcement,

un·

der o system of student security
patrols (noon-to-mldnight, , seven
doys
-k) end •other. security

a

meosures.

SA pays many ol its employees
for programs at night. Every
one benefits from mandatory
fees."
Huddleston figures .that SA's
intake will be cut by two-thirds
if students favor a voluntary
fee, but he expects mandatory
payments to p a s s. "Look,
there's more control of spending if fees are kept mandatory.
(Dr. Richard Siggelkow, Presi·
dent Ketter's designee, has to
approve all voucheni. ) If students vote for a voluntary fee,
they'll hove very little control
over how SA spends them.
Mandatory fees can make Btu·
dent government more responsible."
Under present Trustee rules,
all Student government expenditures must be for "cultural,
educstiona-1, recreational and
social activity." Under voluntsry fees, there would be no
such limits. However, student
governments could still ask the

administration fot belp in col·
lecting voluntary fees.
If mandatory fees are approved, Trustees rules provide
for the money to be allocated
by each IIC:l&gt;Qol's chief administrative offiner, or his clesipee,
upon advice from a campus ..,.
view board composed of four
persons appointed by tile stu·
dent covernment, and four
chooen by the administration.
'The Trustees are also recom·
mending thst hsrdship exemp-

=

~::'ti:
blr~:~
former system, SA decided

which students could be excused from mandatory fee pay·
menL
Elections for 1971· 72 SA officers will take place the same
time as the fees referendum,
but Huddleston feels if the
mandatory fees aren't ap.
proved, candidates will be running for "non-existent offices.
~~~~?' is the only power we

CSEA, AAUP Protesting(Continued from page 1, col. 4)

"The provisions or this act
shall be applicsble to non-public institutions of higher educstion who are recipients of Stole
aid pun;uant to article one hundred twenty-nine or the educstion law.
·
Proportionate to Salory
"Any faculty member of the
aforesaid institution who is paid
partly from Stole, county .,.
local funds and partly from another source shall teach a num-

:=.:~=::'~~

appropriated by the S t a te,
county or locality bears to the

sa~ ~g:yr~the~:.~r
the Legislature that future appropriations by the Stole which
directly or indirectly support
salaries of faculty membeni of
the aforesaid institutions of
higher education shall be proportionate to the e x t e n t to
w h i c h the administratoni of
these institutions implement
this expression of the public
policy or the Stote.
"3. The provisions of this act

i!:'
of~lj!Y..!:d f::t~"::
ters.

"4. This act shall take effect
September first, nineteen hundred seventy-one.
-81116300

Senate Bill 6300 amends the
civil service law in relation to
leaves of abaence as follows:
"Section l . Article V of the
civil service law is be reb y
amended by adding thereto a
new title, to be title D, to read
as follows:
"82. Leaves ol absence. l.
Definitions.
:' ( a) As uaed in this section,
the terms 'leave of absence' or
'sabbatical leave or absence'
shsll mean any period during
which an employee is away
from his employment for more
thsn one week at a time wbere
such .employee is receivinl all
or a portion of his regular com·
pensation. However, the tenns
shall not include any or the
following periods: (1) Any
regular vacation period; (2)
Any sick leave authorized by
law; or (3) Any leave of absence or sabbatical leave or
absence granted without oompensation.
.. (b) As uaed in this section,
the · term 'public officer or employee' shall include every person, regardless of title, description, or designation, who receives any salary or ccmpensation of any kind from the Stot.e
or county, city, - . village,
fire district or school district

a

or who is employed in any department of the Stot.e or in the
service or any public authority,

=:~n~~ration, com"2. Limitotion. Notwithstsnding any general, special or local
law to the contrary, and ex:
cept as provided in subdivisions three a n d four or this
section, for a period of one yesr
commencing July first, nineteen
hundred seventy-one, no leave
of absence or sabbatical leave
of abeenoe shall be panted to
any publiC""ollicer or employee.
"3. Construction. This section
shall not be construed so as to
impair any contractusl right to
a leave of abaence or sabbatical
leave of absence wbere sudi
contractusl right was in exist-

tl:'eff~:"~f &amp;%or~

tion.
"4. Application. a. This section shall not apply to any
leave of abeenoe or sabbatical
leave of abeenoe granted pur·
suant to the following provisions:
" (1) Sections seventy-one or
seventy-two of this chapter;
.. (2) Sections 5.2, 21.3, 21.4,
21.5, 21.6, 21.8, 21.9, 21.10, or
21.11 of the New York civil
service rules and regulatioos;
.. ( 3) Sections three tbol.and
five, three tbol.and five-a, or
three thousand five.b of the ed·
ucation law;
" ( 4) Chapter three lwndJed
sixty of the laws of nineteen
hundred eleven, r&amp;entitled 'An
Act to promot.e the health and
..a;..;.,....., of policanen in oer~'&amp;., counties, towns and
villages of the Stst.e'. . . .
.. (5) Section tWo of chapter
four hundred t.en o( the laws of
nineteen lwndJed twenty~
entitled 'An Act to promote
the health and eflicienc:y of firemen in cities of the Stole' as

::r~.:...""':ru...f'i:ws~

nineteen hundred fifty....,.,en.
"b. In addition to the exemptions provided in paragraph a
of this subdivision the provisions of this section shall not
apply in extraordinary situations in which a leave or sabbatical is granted to a Stole

%J~ ~daui!'urelea~~

benefit of the Stole, and tben
only with the ~"""' written
approval of the director of the
budgel"
Legislative sources said both
laws are aimed at oombatting
uspiraling costs" in education
although Senate Bill 6330 is
not directed Solely to educstional institutions.

�. April 15, IP7J

4

rTaskFora(
Course Given
In Education

On The Importance of
Being Earnest (Ernest) ·
the special role of the Uni-- - . . Pqdw»ob
sity Centers in graduate ed'!·
'The new Albany campus cation does not seem to merit
(fully built) was a fine setting more than passing a~tion. 1
for the inauguration or Chan- can't help but wonder if gradcellor Ernest Boyer. To a first uate education lias a low pJCiortime visitor like myself, the ity in the total scheme of~
architectural deeign of the . so that it becomes especlal!y
campus seemed to be both un- vulnerable to an economtc
ifJed and hilhJy attractive. Ac- pinch. At any rate, SUNY
cording to ~ Albany fac- . now has its third Chancellor.
ulty JDelllbe&lt;s, however, the
beauty otends to pale because
of the sameness of design and
the sheer size (moderate by
Amhemt standards) has dys·
functional aspects.
With an austerity budget- in DEAR MR. VIEWPOINTS:
the offing, the inauguration
In your April Fool issue you
was planned on a mode9t scale.
printed a letter from Paul H.
'The guests were all from tbe Reitan, · a professor of GeologState system, i.e.! the Board of ical Sciences. In this letter
Regents, certain egislators, the Prof. Reitan mocked students
college presidents or the var- who seem overly concerned
ious units, student leaders and with environmental problems.
student music groups, and Prof. Reitan concluded his letSUNY Senators (which ac- ter with a paragraph that such
counted for my presence) . If people would be better off if,
the absence of invited dignit- instead of "crying W 0 L F.''
aries from other educational they studied geology.
Throughout most of his letter,
institutions didn't underscore
the modest ammgements, the Prof. Reitan developed, in an
tepid punch surely did. It was imprecise way, an image of
interesting to obeerve that con- people crying WOLF. He sugtemporary hair styles pro- gested that students t a k e a
duced ·a Renaissance appear- course in which the student
ance in the robed choir, adding learns to be "able to ignore
to the charm of their rather being devoured by a wolf."
1 write to inform Prof. Reitan
well rendered mo-.
Mrs. Moore, Chairman of that there is no authenticated
the Board of Regents, set the case of a human being being
killed or eaten by a wolf in
the historical records of the
continent of North AmeriC&gt;l.
Ignorance of the sort presented by Prof. Reitan in his
tone for all later speeches by letter is too dangerous to let
rioting with appreciation how pass unnoticed in these times.
well the leKislature had sup- We do not need more narrow
potted SUNY in its e1JI'Iy per- specialists (geologists who don' t
iod of development. Governor even understand predator-prey
RockeCeller indicated that tem- relationships ) ; we need ecoloporary budgetary limitations gists, men who grasp the internotwithstanding, his goal was
.=:een earth and
still to create the DI06t outGARY Goss
standing state university sysTeachin Assistant
tem in the oountey. We sbould
English '\:kpartment
all remember this pledge!
Inauguration s'peeches are obviously constrairJed by the occasion. Thus, matters of nuance and style became alm&lt;l6t
as importAnt as the exact conJames H. (Sleepy Jim )
tent. .~or Boyer confirmed
earlier impression Crowley, Notre Dame '25, a
that he fully understands the member of the Four Horsemen
problems confronting the uni- of football fame, will be tbe
versity system and can discuss featured speaker for the Unithe issues in an open and non- versity's 62nd Annual Block
defensive way. 'The main thrust "B" Athletic Banquet tomorof his speech dealt with the row night at the Hearthstone
problem of educating large Manor.
Dr. Harry G. Fritz, director
numbers of students in the coming decade. It's a neat trick .of physical education, recreato maintain the quality of edu- tion and athletics, said !!&gt;at
cation in the face of large num- among various team and iri&lt;ii·
bers. He suggested that out- vidual awards to be made durstanding teaching should be ing the evening will be four
recognized perhaps by special major categories of presentatide like Distinguished Teach- tions: the Clifford C. Furnas
er. He also thought that three- Scholar9hip Awards to outyear baooalaureates might be standing scholar-athletes; lbe
appropriate for some .and the Alumni Scholastic-A t h I e t i c
concept of the university with- Achievement Awaid, the Jobn
out walls was an intriguing N . Bennett Achievement Award
(basketball) and lbe Eastern
idea.
In speeches like this one College Athletic Conference
about the entire State system, Medal of Merit.

By MARVIN FELDMAN

!l!f:."ed

Reitan Piece

Said Narrow

GVIEWPOINTS

::.!f:n::r

Athletic Banquet
Slated for Friday

an

eiREPORTER._,
A..

-......
--

wzsrur

JOB.If L

JfO'WUlfD

.....

~p...._JUcl:

.......

OOif'rll18UTllfO ARTIS!':

s-

M • ._,_.

Chancellor Boyers Inaugural Speech Asks

Greater Educational Cooperation iii State
Chancellor Ernest L. Boyer Propams far Conditions
With
respect to new
proof State University keynoted
his inaugural address April 6 grams to meet changing conditions,
Dr.
Boyer
said
the
time
with a proposal for greater cooperation between public and has come "to 'rethink the fourprivate education in New York year college .Program and inState through establishment of troduce more flexibility in
a network of •·Cooperative study for the baooalaureate deCouncils on Higher Educa- gree."
He made t.wo specific protion."
.
Within the University itself, posals:
1-'Ibat one of tbe UniverDr. Boyer proposed estsblisbment of an accelerated three- sity's newer Arts and Science
year bachelor's degree program colleges be estsblisbed as a
and greater recognition of ex- three-year campus.
AB a suggesti!d approach, Dr.
cellence in teaching.
While recognizing ~t uni- Boyer said the first of these
three
Y"""' could be a "Capversities in America continue
to face adversity, Dr. Boyer stone Year' in liooral learning
"which
stresses the meaning
called for a renewal of confidence, ''using our resouroes .and interpretation of informawisely and drawing strength tion and would bridge the tranfrom our tradition." He said, sition from high Reboot to col"ultimately the issue is not tbe •lege work in the junior and
gravity of tbe crisis, but the senior year,"
2-That the University conquality of our response."
sider introducing, possibly as
Dr. Boyer said the ~ has early
as September 1972, an
come to recognize that New
and voluntary
York's public and private insti- experimental
three-year
B.A. program for
tutions are joined in the single
perhaps
ten
per
cent, or more,
goal of providing educational
opportunity. He suggested both of tbe f r e s'h men entering
throughout
the
University
syssectors "move quickly" to estsblisb the serias of regional tem.
Location as Well .. Duration
Cooperative Councils.
'The chanaillor said he visualized sucb oouncils as."work- cation as well as the duration
ing organizations," assisted by of the college ezperienoe.
a networi. Qf regional offices
He said. we must:
and staffs working in a com1-Rethink tbe 0011ventional
mon cause.
noUoJI
~t ''loipg to college"
He.. esplained: "The posai- ,_my me an a -lour-or
bilitieS are peat and, 1 think, ·tbre&amp;-years of pbyaialll MeJl
quite exciting: sbared libraiy lienee 011 a campus, and: ,, &gt;;~
facilities, fa!)uliy ~ 2-Respond f4&gt; the needs of
joint nB!IIn:b and regional oonincreasing
of peiaons '
ferencal and cultural events, beyond
Cbe u s.u a I "oolleae
. to name a few."
·'
yean/' who wish further educaDr. Boyer said sudt collabo- ~ but do not wiolt to, - ration would u . - •· ...._....._ sunply CllllJlOt, relocate on a
educatiollally aDd ~-;;: CDIIege campus.
For sucb - , ba pointed
tiveJY the ........ institutloas
aDd dramatize tbe unity of our out, State Un i ve rs i ty anClll&amp;."
nounced in February the

"umbers

,.,.._
C£0urtalt

Sus.&amp;ll OJtUJnrOOD
BrUDalf"l' UFAl.RS SDlf'ORt S... £,fpMM
OOIITIU•ururo amrou:~ 1 - a. ~ Clrir ~. Rob.r1

Morefrmce at Domus
Potricla BeittJ of the Toronto Dance Theatre II shown In a
scone from "Flrst Music." The Toronto troupe wiH join the
Yorll " Movement Bladt: Dance ~ Theatre"
In two perfonnances at · Domus this Saturday and Sunday.,
(See Weekly Communique)

uJ:n~=:u:~

rB~~HO
"'
~
1
RO.aRr r . ltfAitLlnT
w.-.,.~r:~u,._..~,_

s.

M~

'The Fawlty of Educadaual
Studies
baa
a -will
!aadty-wide
which
I*Dlit studeata to'farm "taaat
forces" to study apedflc prob.
!ems or canditloal in public
education.
Tbe ollering, to ba called
"SpeciaaS&amp;udiee in Education,"
will allow UllderJiraduallll and
paduate students to ·receive
from two to.sb&lt; cndit hours for
sludyinc .,....m, aocial and political' pooblems tbroucb means
other than the traditional
"course."
Uilder the plan, drafted by
the subcommittee on innovative
propams of tba Fawlty's CUI'
riculum Committee, "interest
grollJIII" of student and faculty
would agree upon a problem or
area of study, write a proposal
desigDed to study the problem,
then submit it to a "ooordinator
for innovative studies,'' still to
be named. The coordinator
would counsel with the group
or "task force," and suggest
specific ammgements for implementation, including credit,
class meetings, facilitiee and
educational resources which
might be needed. 'The coordinator might also help draw together faculty members who
could be helpful.
'The proposal, approved by
the Faculty early this month,
leaves open the means of reporting results of the project.
" Such things aa tapes, films,
records would be encouraged as
well as more common methods
of reporting . .. ," the proposal
says.

launching of a new kind of college- Empire State College:
"a coHege with well-conceived
programs, high standards and
its own faculty, but without a
campus."
'"'l'be crucial point," 00..
served Dr. Boyer, is "that the
lorm of· Empire State College
will be st:rikingly novel, while
its process will remain flexible
and its ~high."
Foculty

In the area ·of faculty recognition, Dr. Boyer obser-ved that
as those who have achieved distinCtion in research are recognized as Distinguished Professors, "so the time has come to
honor those who- splendidly
nourish their students."
He~ as a "step toward
that
" the cieatioo within
State Diversity of the academ·
ic rank "Universio/, Teacbe&lt;."
Ot:hi.r "goals" · Identified by
Dr. Boyer included: "the re-

~~i~of.:.?.l:..of.:::!

the University and the oommu·
nity beyond" and '"the sity of kaepinc State Uni-sity's institutiollal structure
truly functiooaL" On the latter
point, Boyer said he would
"encourage divmaity . . _ the
colleges, · protect local Uiitialiw!

=.~te::=~=
campuses."
.

TIJ!

IIULES~

followl"' ~ to the
R u le 1 lleiUiationS
published · in the .....,.. Marcil
25, 1971, has tubmlttad by
t!1e Division of Student A11811S: -

stUdent

3.50.

PAIIJ&lt;INQ ~

3.for
~·--­
neecl
._... pertdlll ....- hMith ,._,. must epply far
opeclel perm- from the Security-. 1!11 . _ - .

�~PORl'liR,

ApUl 15, IP11

5

Student Attorneys (GO To Court' Via LaW 638
The defendant o~ the wit.
ness stand in a theft case looks
tho!~ting attorney in the
estuffye-~ lillY."&gt;· "I boUifht that
The?''attorney asks, "From
wbom
"I don't remember," answers
the a~. . "Some guy at
work."
·

"Oh."

m'!tructor.

Final Exam, Aprtl 24

Its "final eumination"- a
public bearing of six civil and
six criminal cases before profe&amp;lliooal judges-will be held
Saturday, April 24, in Erie
County Hall.
is cominission·
who of New York
er Mr.
of Frey.
the State
Conciliation Bureau for the 8th
Judicial .District, likes to talk
und, the beabout
andbackgro
blossoming of the
..;nnlngthe
•-·
course. the structure of it.
He · begins by citing former
Law Dean William D . Hawkland wbo once noted that many
graduate attorneys "don't even
know which chair to use in a
courtroom."
And all' too often, ·he says,
legal tlrms are appalled to find
that tbeir new employees, recent graduates, don't have the
first idea about bow to prepsre
a case for courl
·
Knowing why and how law
developed and understanding
legal reasonU&gt;g are necessary,
Frey says. This is the backbone of the Socratic method of
legal education.
, But, lie adds, the good trial
lawyer bas to know more. He
bas to be able to apply the law
and rules of procedure, to think
011 bis feet, to take into aroount
the human elen!ent involVed in
a COIII'tr!lom case. And he also
bas to learn how 1o do a lot of
bard, thOughtful analysis and
P!"PUUltioll before trial. .
It's An Art
Trial .;!ec:IIDique is an art,
Frey contends. ,Something that
bleajllluidWl)fdge, ·..........mJ,
peraoaality, Wit: And for tboBe
who· .m.bt ~ bis ''bow•
. to-do-it"' IIPIIlOIIch. h8 insists
that this is-the only way it can
be leamed -through practioe.
You am't leam it only from a
book. ADd· you can't become
1111 ellective trial a~ aimply by ola!rving and. iautatlng
otherB. "A jury can spot a
pbony'a mile away,~ -~&gt;'. ~-

October, Frey and his ...,.,;. which
on the ·Dei'WII of
ates start the Plannirii by sel- jurors; that be bas irritated the
ecting two _actual court cases- "judge" by OOIIBtantly pacing
one 'civil and one aiminal- back and for1h; that he bas
which can he adapted to the turned his back ·on the jury
"America's
as an
needs of the 8ludeDis and . will while addressing them. None
be uaed in all sections.
of 'this is important legally. inteniatiooal power with a vig- .
Once registered, students But, poses Frey, if these little oroull overseas policy did not
(wbo first ml18t liave taken the idiosyncrasies were to .t ake bold come about suddenly. The becourse in evidence) are as- and continue in actual practice, ginnings of expansionism. were
signed to sections of eillht each. they migbt come to have an already present in the so-&lt;:alled
Within a section, they are effect on a client's case. A law- Gilded Age of American hispaired into . four teams. Two . yer, after all, bas to make a tory ( 1865-1890) -an era generally characterized by insnlar
teams are assigned -t o the crim- jury like him.
ina! case (one as prosecution
More important, Frey says, thoughts and internal developand one as defense) and two to is that the process enables th• ment"
the civil case (one for the students to learn "the bow" of
Thls thesis of Dr. Milton
plaintiff and one for the de- what they were taught in their Plesur, associate professor, of
fendant ). Each student re- regular 00\llSeS in evidence and · history and director of the Masceives a complete case file for procedure. Most important, he ter of Science in Social Scienhis role.
stresses again, is the mental ces Program, introduces bis
Then, each student i&gt;i as· and imagins?ve exerc~ whi";h new book, AI7U!rica's OUWJord
signed a witness to prepare for they get while preparmg their ThrUJJt: Approaches to Foreign
testifying, based on the facts cases for trial.
.
Affairs,' 1865-1890; published by
of the case. "Preparation" ;,. a
The procedures explained to the Northern Dlinois Univer·
key word to Mr. Frey. It's the this point, Frey says, are those sity Press.
heart of the course as far as he which fall under the "immediDespite preoccupation ·with
is concerned. He finds a great ate feedblick" portion of the ·
deal of truth in the saying that, class.
~Ci~J'W'.!."":d'::i:.r;.t ~
stay out of foreigo entangle':~au;:;" '::twk.n
the final.
preparation befo..:,hand. ''The
To give the young lawyers a ment, · Plesur notes, "America
attorney mU9t be the master of feeling of actually completing could not remain inactive in
foreign trade and the developthe
12 · !tan
full
every detail," he admonishes.
·
case, . SIDIU
eous
· ment of commercialism at bome
So important is this pre-trial scale llearmgs are held.
.even get credit for it. Today's preparation that Frey would
Now, however, the student eventually necessitated the diplomatic acquisition of markets
six sections, however, offer full like to expand the course to two teams change . opponents, _F or abroad."
credit and are taught by a ros- semesters. This would allow an example, Section ;I's cruninal
Plesur traces the efforts of
ter of well known laviyers from ent ire semester to be devoted prosecutors and Witnesses face
Buffalo representing aU facets to the ·~-~ thinking' and m. court the defender team and far-siJhted statesmen, who, recof trial exper-ience-civil and
"'""
fro Secti
11
ognizing America's need for
criminsl Seven lawyers are thorough preparation " without w&gt;tn""!""'
m
·on ·
markets and involvecurrently participating. In ad· which few cases ca{,_ be suc· . '"I¥,s
up,I~d~tb.; foreign
ment in world economy, caredition to Mr. Frey, they are: , essfully concluded.
~'i:nt of~-" a
fully paved the way to the
Paul I. Birzon ( wbo this sem· M~Th:';:!::.,
~eaNow, too, the judges"!" not ultimate building of an interester is filling in in another ture of Law
which meke it fellow students, but real JUd!!es natiotui! coiJliDei'Cilil empire.
class for an absent full-time
than .638
t
La School from Supreme, County, C1ty, Intellectual contacts with · the
faculty member) , Leonard Wal- mo~e.
JUS a
w
and U.S. District courts, as- rest of the world and a growing
entynowicz, John Ste!\ger, Rob- activity.
sisted by faculty members .ar cosmopolitanism in the cities
ert C. Schaus, George R. Blair,
Some are. P"':'law . students members of the Erie County were on the side of the staa "former district attorney of ' from t,he Uruyerslty With wbom Trial Lawyers Association and men, wboee efforts frequently
Erie County, and Daniel Roach Frey IS P.u t m comact by Dr. Erie County Bar Assodiation ran OOWlter to r.u r a I public
(wbo is substituting . for Mr. Jerome Fink of the ~/ B Place- who act as combination baillfts. opinion. A number of minor
Birzonthissemester) .
"!""tandCareerGu•danceSer· clerkB. The Erie County Trial foreign problems helped lo push
• Frey, however, remains the vice.
Lawyers· Aasociation adds fur. America out of its isolatiorrism
coordinator.
. ~or the past two clears, .the ther zest to the proceedings by and in the 1880's "diplomacy
Reviewing the literature on CIVil cases have ba medical presenting a trophy each year ::~or~.cJear of the peat.
the subject, Frey found two ~ts and volunteers from the to the student in each section
schools of opinion on how trial seru~r . class of the School of of the course who is judged by
In an effort to avoid a mere
technique might be tsught. One M~ICme have cooperated .. by the section's instructor to have retelling of diplomatic relationcalled for step-by-step practice serv!!'g . as the necessary ex· done the best work.
ships already covered by lll06t
of the components of the trial pert Witnesses.
These "final" bearings also te:ctbooks, Plesur says he seprdcess, accompanied oy im·
This year's civil suit inv~~':': have Juries of 12 selected from lected certain subjects which
mediate feedblick. Have a stu· dentistry. Not only are deu""' "outs1ders" wbo know nothing highlight this mounting concern
dent cross-examine a witness, students acting as witnesses on about the cases. These jurors with the wider wor!d.
for example, and then stop im· both sides, bu_t Dr. Richard A. (a total of 144) are enlisted
mediately for a critique. The Powell, assocta~ dean of the through invitations to U / B preother method advocated going School of Dentistry, and Dr. law students who are not · inthrough an entire trial from Jack E . Armitage, associate volved as witnesses, to•studeuts
start to finish, with feedback-- professor, assisted in draWing enrolled in the undergraduate
"Basic Approaches to Clini·
coming in ·a n overall critique up some of the particulars of Law aDd Jurisprudence course
following.
• .
the case.
offerings and to students of cal Medicine" will be the
Both theories made sense to
From outside the University, other riearby co II e g e s and theme·of the 34th Annuai Medical Alumni Spring Clinical
Frey wbose 40-year-plus legal the Erie C o u n t y Sherifrs schools
career bas included trial work Training Academy has proAfW: hearing the ~ the ~J~r~~May 1, at tbe
and appellate practice, service vided volunteer witnesses from jury is charged by the JUdge
as an 11£Sistant district attorney its classes. And members of the and then retires to a jury .room
Dr. John A. D. Cooper, P"""'
and work as a confidential law State, Buffalo, and other police for deliberation. · • The jurors ident of the Association of Amsecretary to three Supreme units from throughout Erie then vote and bring in their erican Medical Colleges, will
Court justices over a period of County have participated from verdict.
.
deliver the Stockton Kimball
20 years. He decided to blend time to time.
..
.
While the juries are out, each Memorial Leoture, one Of the
the two approaches.
Another large contingent of judge critiques the student law- major programs of the annual
aec..use of time conllidera· witnesses is provided by stu· yers whO have pe$rmed be- event, Saturday, May 1, at
tions, the course as he laid it dents from Erie County Com· fore him ' and may call upon 12:30 p.m. Dr. Cooper's topic
out is limited to four aspects 11\ll!'i.ty College's police science the asaisting faculty member will be "Academic Medical
of .trial technique: selection of diVISIOn.
or trial lawyer to do the same. Centers and tbe Nation's
Health."
a jury; milking the opening
Rounding out the cast, stu· Open to the Public
statement; ronduoting direct dents enrolled . in a local train·
This process will start at 9
and cross-eumination; and ing school for court reporters a.m. Saturday, April 24, and ·
summation. In addition, law- and in court reporting classes wi!i 'continue to 5 p.m., with a dress the alumni physicians at
yers-in-training also gain ex- at the State Unive~ity Agr!· -lunch break from 12~30-2. 'f!le noon Saturday. His topic: '"The
·perieitce in "motions to sup- cultural and Technical Jnsti. hearings are open to the public. Relationshi of the Medical
press" evidence and/ or confes- . tute at Alfred also sit in on the And parents and frien4s usual- School to
University."
sions which bave been illegally ~;.~ to -~ect ~- .'!~ ~t~~
Clinical diPol&amp;Sions for the
will include ''Hemorrobtained, as defined by· recent
The weekly c1aas ............ seeing "their" lilwyers and wit·
U.S. Supreme Court rulings.
usually involve two law stu· neeses in ao10on.
a~
ThromboembOlic Di_
.. '"The Hyperactive
Teams of students, in ihe dents and one ~- A law
Maurice Frey is proud, too.
course of a semester, practice student ''not on" that. 1IOI¥!k
He's piOud of Law 638.
· Cbild," "Renal Jnsnf6ciency."
eRch of theee in .a ..courlzoom -..es as judge (and pins an
He~s even more pleased that and "Shock-Myocardial Infarp.
setting and are critiqued ·on the entirely new penpecti~ on the ·the Law School's legal -clinic lion." Participants will include
sjiQt._
law, Frey. notes, ~ baving course ...,.. ~ seDior Bt!l- local pbysicians as well as Dr.
...., ~ ~
to. rule on wbat IS or IS not ad- · dents to ' aCtuaHv appear m Edwud F. Rabe, professor of
Use ·[;f actual courtrooms is miasible, etc.) . Other law I!W· court with rilal dients, in some p.diatric lllllllOiocY. Tufts Unicentral· to Mr. Frey's method. dents and witness vOlunteers ·cases. To accommodate this versity'; School of MediciDe,
He believes "being there" serve on the weekly jury.
program; LaW 638, llllditiooally who will keynote tbe "Hypermakes a difference and bas The Crlllq,.
tauabt in the spring, will be of- active Child" panel
Plllticipants in the eveDt will
made '&amp; rrllllll'lll"ls with the
"Everyone joins in· a crit- fered -in the fall slariinlf nen
Administrative .Judge of the 8lh ique."
year. This way, the legal dinic also bear reports Oil
.Judicial District to use cOurtFrey says that some of the student am be fairly 'Wi!ll along the Center .for liimiunoJocy,
rooms on Sa t u r' d a y s when points covered in the c:ritiqne in trial techniques before taking Laboratory for Environmenlal
• Research Institute
courts are not in session.
.
may be small ones-a student that often terrifying first step Pbysiol
Well before the sppng sem- may be told be apeab too fast; into the real ClOIIl'troom situa- on Alcobo~ and Community
Mental Hygiene Center.
ester course begins. usually in that he bas some mannerism otion.
·

tioas. ''You bave to be your'self. If you're going to imitate
Melvin Belli, then all you'll
be is a . poor imitation."
Thls is "what bw 638 is all
. aboul
..
Frey; •a 1928 graduate..of the
U/B Law School and " parttime faculty · member, was
· asked to start the tl'ial tech- ·
nique program at a time when
few American law 'schools offered such a course.
'The'feeling at U/B.then, and
in law scbools generally, Frey
recalls, was that law · seniors
were bored witb repeating in
their last year the same old
writing-up of cases that bad
marked their first two years of
legal studies.
The idea was advanced by
some prominent law teachers
that senior work ought to be a
little different-more alive and
interesting-and that it ought
to include an approach to the
kinds of things &lt;the students
would actually be doing · in
pmctice.
. Begun on • Shoostrin&amp;
Trial Technique was begun
"on a shoestrm'ng" w1'th one
section. The efudents didn't

The prosecutor begins a new
line of qu5tioning.
''Noi No! No!," thinks Maur.ice Frey as he sits in the rear
of the ·courtroom. "Ask him
wbat does he mean he 'can'·t remember?' Wa8n't the seller an
employee of the same firm? Is
the f'um so large that the defendant doesn't know a fellow
employee?· Couldn't he have
asked llOIJIIl(mi! else at work
who the pefBOn was? Press
him, PreRS him."
Mr. Frey will later tell the
p...-cutor all this. And more.
He will stress the fact that
the prosecutor s!&gt;ould have
been better_ prepared.
It's not that Fiey is a pro,
leo~ busybody wThebo second
""'"""" attorneys.
courtroom in qu5tion bappens also
to be c1asaroo And F)-ey' is
the
m,
The "prosecutor" is a U / B ·
laW senior and the "defendant"
Ia
I
f
the
is a pre- w vo unteeibl·r rom .
campus (or, possi y, a po1Ice
science stud en t from Erie
County Community College or
a trainee from the Erie County
· Sberifrs Academy) .
Irs all part of Law 638
(Trial Technique) which Mr.
Frey, adjunct professor of law,
evidence, ·trial practice and
technique, began teaching some
·t en jears ago. To d a Y the
course, although an elective; attracts appro:cim!ltely 40 per
cent of the• senior class each
year.

grates

&amp;pansionism
Is-Topic Of
PlesurBook
~

fu! '"';;,:•:.,mes

l:i 'U:

J:'hens

s.:;:'

Med Alumni Plan
Clinical &amp;gram

~~~ni~~":J:

J:..

...

�6
t-

WBrosDay

Cqdenheail,
Startirg On

Now~­

EXpenmenJs
.
'lbat'long-awaited· sample of
the moon arrived at the University this week.
Dr. David A. Cadenhead, an
IIBIIOciate professor of chem.istry, wiH perform several experiments on the few ounces ol
lunar dust picked up · du~ing
the Apollo 14 mission.
'The moon dust arrived in an
aluminum rontainer. Inside the
container was a · second, steel
rontainer in wi:Pch the sample
was sealed in dry nitrogen, an
inert .gas which will not react
with the sample itself. NASA
also sent along special "cleaned for service" Wrenches to
to open the sample.
Dr. Cadenhead said he could
run most of his experiments
with just .the five or six grams
of moon dust, although NASA
will later send along rock chips
of a centimeter or less in size.
'The sample will be introduced to a high vacuum system approaching the atmosphere of
the moon-after it has been
inspected under regular and
electron microscopes.
Then Dr. Cadenhead, a surface che!hist, will begin tests
to measure the surface area of
the sample. A sample's surface
area will be measured, then
heated and measured again
and again, until it begins to
change. At"that point, Dr. Ca~d will have a fairly good
idea of the temperatureS the
sample has been exposed to
since its initial formation.
Otb&lt;ir experiments will include testing ·t he effects of certain Earth gases on the lunar
dust.

To receive the sample, Dr.
Cadenhead had .to make spec-·
·i al security a'l-rangements
which include a steel Ba!e for
storage and a door lock that
makes his office burglar- and
janitor - proof.
Dr. Cadenhead says that initial experiments should be
rompleted ''by no later than
the end of June."
He said. the sample was
srooped up by astronaut Alan
B . Shepard about lOIUeet hom
the Apollo 14 landing site.
Dr. CadeniMmd indicated
that his sample was mailed by
NASA hom Houston last
Tuesday and 1ook )ciqer in
ita journey frooi Houaton to
Buffalo than from the lllOOil
to Earth.

AAUW:Bodr Sa1e

Siatm fur April

'The last weeJr. in April briiuls
the 17th annual used book sale
sponsored by the B u ff a I o
Branch, American Association
of University Women.
Hours are from 10 a .m. to
4:30 p.m. each day in the rear
of the Liberty · Bank Building,
. romer of Court and Pearl,
downtown.
One dollar admission will be
charged on Monday, April 26.
Admission ia free Tuesda
thrOugh "Friday.
. y
Over ~.ooo books will be oo
sale, from paperbacks to ency-' dopl!cliaa. Posters, rerords, and
art prints are also included in
the collection.
Doaatioil.s of used books may
be mM8 until April 15 by
ai1liDii the cbainnan, Mrs. WilliMt II: Jarrett; 873-1076.
PJoci8eds -~ used to. provide
fallaowBIDpe for' women students
at file doctonl and post.doc-

Jewla.=
·F.· of English
Payne,
ni.,..;c;y,
an

Ce$1
-.w.t
at lhe

Anne
held

AAUW ~ in 1966.

At8:00a.m.
. Clint Bueblman watch out!
WBFO has expaDjled ita pro. ~g day and now starts
broadcasting at 8 a.m.
On April 2, the University
radio serviCe added six hours
to ita daily -schedule, beginning
at 8 · with classical music in-

1

=d·~~- ~t- ~"p.m.

m-

The , _ of ~··
wtll be the 1ap1&gt;e of - .
Friday colloquium at the Butr.lo MUMUm of Sc:lanci unclar
opciiiiCinhlp of
the U/8 Art~- the
Olllce of Cultural Atlalrs. SpeaMrs for the public awnt arw:
(from laft) John B. H~r. dlrWctor, MUMUm of Modem
Art; Jan van der Marek, former dlractor, Museum of Contemponuy Art, Chlcaco: and Dr. William C. Sturtevant of the

that-·

MusewnMen

Smlthlonlan Institution.

'

.

TechnogeniC Diseases Conferenre To Probe
A
1~ m
. •ty, "-~ N . '
rterosou:s,
~OXICI , vvercni
, OISe

'The move to a longer day
baa -been ' con&amp;idered for a long
time by the station's staff. Approval 'was won from Dr. Robert Berner who, as dean of
Continuing Education, has final
say on station format. Extension of the day Wa.s acromplisbed with no extra rost, Bob
J esselson, WBFO stall member
points out, since Volunteer belp
is used and no additional equipment is needed. 'The extra pro-

~.t.;.;,til!el:S ~ =~~

train new "on-the-air" people
Jesselson explains. All the for:
meraftemoonandeveningtime
slots were filled and the extra
six hours made room for newromers.
The new programs are a mixture of tsJk and music. From
8 a.m. to 11 a .m., "Prelude"
festures three hours of classics)
music with hosts Chris Frank
Dave KarpolJ, Clara Kelly and
Merle Weiss. 'The 11 a.m. slot
is programmed with hour-long
segments of talk and music.
Monday brings ''Pan Am Concert;" Tuesday you hear University of Michigan lectures on
"Sexuali!r : A Search for ParsP!'Cfive;' on Wednesday, it's
"'Through the Looking Glass,"
an. boUI of political talk and
song with Jane Don a hue·
Thursday's fare is "Po!IJourri':
-the "best of CBC programs·"
and on Friday, "Keyboard fu..
mortals Play Again." 'The noon
hour brings iazz - "Spirits
Known and Unknown." At I
&lt;J&gt;.m., dilferent talk and music
programs are scheduled each
day: Monday brings the folk
show - "EDipee or Edi~·"
and 'l'uel!daY, Scot-t FieM's
"History ·of Rock 'n Roll," an
ezploration and biatoriall explanation \)f that musical form.
'The reat of thl! week is tabn
up with folk IDIIIIic: "View

The University will be host program (sc heduled for the
Ur~ overcrowding, which
to a ronference on ''Techno- Conference Theatre, Norton ) produces stress, unnatural and
genic Diseases," April 23 and will include Dr: V. Mohnen of anti-social behavior, will be
24, as part of the rommeroora· the Department of Atmospheric deslt with Saturday morning in
tion of the 125th Anniversary. Science, SUNY at Albany; Dr. 140 Capen by Dr. J. Christian,
According to conference R. Thomas, Department of Ra- Department of Biological Studchairman Dr. John Howell of diation Biology of the Lovelace ies, SUNY at Binghamton; Dr.
Rachel Carson College, which Foundation, Albuquerque, New ,Donald Carson, Pennsylvania
is co-sporuioring the event with Mexiro; Dr. M. Newhouse of State University; Dr. A. B.
the Office of Credit-Free · Pro- the Respiratory Unit of St. Jo- Ford, Department of Prevengrams and the Medics) School, seph's Hospital, Hamilton, On- tive Medicine, Case-Western
a technogenic disease is one in- tario; and Dr. C. F . Muir of the Reserve School of Medicine;
duced by factors introduced in- Department of Occupational and Dr. W. Simon, program
to the environment by a tech- Medicine, Physiology Branch, supervisor of the Sociology and
nological society.
University of Edinburgh, Scot- Anthropology Institute for Ju·
We are witnessing, Howell land.
venile Research, University of
says, an increasing number of
Elemental toxicity, which re- Chicsgo.
.·
what may )&gt;e described as "es&amp;- fers ti&gt; those pollutants, partieNoise pollution, Dr. Howell
ualties of our times." Life ex- ularly heavy metals such as ssys, can damage more than an
pectancy is not going up any mercury, vansdium, and other in~vidual's hearing. Sudden
more; as we learn to cure tra- dangerous elements, which en· nol&amp;eS may aiao csuse serious
ditiona) 'diseases , the unron- ter the food chain , will be psychological effects and the
tJ:olled _technological society discussed in 147 D iefendorf, noise level present in the city
giVes · nse to new ones - both Friday afternoon, by Drs. J. may rome to habitually disturb
physical and emotional.
Vostal and Frank A. Smith, a person's sleep, even thougb at
Teclinology, however, rould Department of Radiation Bioi- the conscious level be is not
be used for the benefit of man, ogy and Biophysics, University aware of this disturbancl!&gt;. \
Howell says-if we could Jearn of Rochester; Dr. J. G. Stopps,
Speakers on this subject (in
to properly pose and define assistant director of Haskell 140 Capen Saturday afternoon)
problems we face. Most tech- Laboratories for Toxtoology will include Dr. D. Lipeconib,
nologicsl problems are defined and Environmental Medicine, Department of Audioloorv and
too narrowly, he says; thus, the E . L DuPont Company, Wil- Speech Pathology, UDr'versity
·in~plinary nature of the mington, Delaware; and Dr. of Tennessee; Dr. D. Blosser,
ronfe,ft!Dce. " Specialiats should Emil Pfitzer, Department of School of Communications,
realize. tliat someone else may Environmental Health, Univer- University of Tens; Dr. J.have an im1!"rtant input to the sity of Cincinnati.
·
Earshen of Comell Aerouiwti- ~ ~ ~~"W~:
problems they are facing," he
cal Lsboratory, chairman of the and. "J~ .App'--' · •r.,.:
88,Y8, so that we may approach
ln!ititnte of Electrical and Elec- "'"'.....
•
the environmental crisis as a
Ironies Engineers' Committee th..r=;;iit:r .~i~- ~ ,
totality.
'
L;~;.,.
on Aroustics; and Dr. P . BorMalit ~ for the roofer- .1. (
U f«,
sky, School of Public Health, . RMction to the extended day .
1
ence. 'Will be 'Dr. Jesse SteinColumbia Universitr. '
.
fetteragood' says J""""'-'- ,." The
feld, surgeon generm of the
'The ronference JS open to
nave been pourinc in."
United States, whom Howell .1.1
professionals
in
the
aoc:lai,
Oneset
haa~y~._:~ 40"the
1 0
credits with roining the theme
physical and natural sciences,
........,..
phrase. Steinfeld's address at
'The dilliculty which sociolo- to 'interested students and to ·station for an early llllimlng
8 p.m., Friday, the 23n1, in the gy majors have experienced in the public at IMge. An esti- alternative to the "noise" from
Fillmore Room, Norton, is one enrolling in classes over the mated 100.200 people are ex- other stations, JeaoelaOn oaya.
of 17' scheduled on the four past few years has resulted in pected to attend.
bi'O(Id areas of aerosols, elemen- new . requirements for majors
'The entire ronference, Howli..T_..__.J
tal. toxicity, urban overcrowd- and a limit oo the numbers to ell says, is keyed to the notion
J. ~
ing and · noise pollution. -Each · be accepted, according to Ade- of Rachel Can!on College U.t
Thlee , _ Ji1embers o1 the
area'.will be discussed by' four line Levine, director of under- education· for modern society Bosnl o1 Trustees o1 the Unlspeakers, followed by a panel =~te ~ies in the Depart- must be broad-ranging. We still versity at Bulfalo Foundation,
dti.~lion..ion, with audience par·
As of Jann•~ , 19'Zl, stu- ellhave to have sJ&gt;ecialists. How- Inc. have been approved by the
opa
dents who ;J;h 13
says, but specialiats who are State UniversitY 'l'rustee..::
Friday ~tnorning '!ill be' de- maJOf status mu':ta::!.&gt;'PJ!: !iw:'o~~ir ~e~ationsbips
They are Mfs. Charle&amp; U.
voted to aeroools,~~te '!""'· --SocioJosy 101 and two .other .
specialists.
· Banta, a U / B -alunmus and an ·
ma~e a tmos.phe-.:tc partic!es sociology cowses · imd achieve . Aware, he says, means know- assistant libnirian at Loctwoocl
wbich, tbough httle . Under· a qu&amp;li~ point average of 2 _6 mg what assistance is available Library· Mrs. Edwaril H. J&gt;os.
stood, ~pear to be. related to in u_, coulaea.and a 2 _0 aver- .from others and knowing how lusmy, 'also a U!B alumnus·
sum -~ as empbyEma. age. overall! • ,
to &lt;talk to and understand other and Northrup R ~ c:bair'
bronchitis,.!'tomach cancer,~
'The: ])epar-.t Will accept specialists.
-- man of the -~live caoinni~
~owell. pomts out that While as new majors iJ25 Of the stu'The papers to be preaented tes of Marine MidbiDd Bank,
indus~ have a"!ed to reduce dents 1lbo meet th&lt;!ee qualifies· . a~ the !"'nference, he empha- Western, the BOll of'loilg-tilliil
the SlZe. ~f pollution p8riides, -tions bet-."the preaent time ~ .will. have a minimla!n,ofr Ul)iversity ~ SeyJik!Ui '
!""" rontinues to move .about . and Sepbember- 1971. This .Iii- , ~entific J&amp;fgDn and IinRO. pre- H. ~
. · •
• s.
!? '!- cl~~y haze of aerosols like ·ure, the ~t says,
' ~y' flecalJ"!' the .participants' 'The appoi~ tments are foJ'
Pigpen -pecbal!l' to the ex- include 95 &lt;:urrently-emolled ~ll.be speaking across the dis-' tluee-year tarms.
. ,
~t of ~.ooo ~ per cu- University stud en t s. and 30 ciplines. ·
,
bJC , centimeter. Engineers and transfers.
··
·
· 'lbe ronference is made poaFSC. MEETING
others need ~ ~ tbinkii!II
B e - September 1971 and Bible by a grant from the United A ' Faculty-Staff Caucus meoitill8
~t pol.lutton m tarms Of Sepbember . 1972; the DaJl811.' States Public Health Servi&lt;le; for the election of neW officers ~
staJidardlj other than the mere ment JVill acciept 1li.O new maj- Biomedical Sciences Division. end stettrjng committee .. will be •
weight of particles, Howell &lt;&gt;1'11::-11~115 I'QI'rently ~lied
for a schedule of the various herd Monday, April 26, In Room
says.
.
Umvennty students and 35-40 speeches, see !be Weekly Co""' 30, D~ndort An".!J&lt;, at 3 p.m.
Speaken on this part of the transfers. ·
munique, nen issue..

Sociolngy
.
mo

T..fs Majo•-rc&gt;

3

wru

to UBF

•

�~

Senate-Discusses Revisro·Caleridai, &lt;iREPORTS
Leehrrerllimk in April! ~ting ON
CiJ&gt;EOPLE

Tbe
\two ~ty Seli- lllifd. 'rbia coo:..mttee will make . ~ on the PCIIIitlon ;, lecturer
ate a.etmp .this month dl&amp;- ~ ~ lor DBW goy
was adopted with aii amend~ with len of four.teen ' erDanc8 D•d•mWns whidi
ment making the natrlctions
points oo ita qanda, leaving be presented tor approval to applicable on1y to future ap- NEW CAMPUS
three to be di8cusaed at this the ~ _ . . t s of the pomtmeitts.· 1'be motion calls
Friday's aecond session. A Uni......,ty.
·
. for the uae of the ronk for per- APPOINTMENTS
thn!e-bour -an; 011 April 1
There have been "many, iods of no I~ than two
beard a I'8IQ't from President many" a.etinp in regard to years, with this time not count- lliL au.-.. _....,. has been
Robert Ketlm: in additioD to the report of the Task Force ing - . . ! tenure, and further :r~ted~~~==~
psaoing liYe motioas dealin·g 011 J]niVersity Rmrpnizstion, restriciB uae of the title to vis- oiOCY and RadioiOCY.
with pedes, a revisM calendar; Ketter aaid. These meetings iting, part-time and wluntsry DL IU.Y B. DUG joined the fac·
minority J&gt;l')tlralils. letters of were 1-*1 -to· bring the plans faculty. Exceptions would be ulty of the Fized Proothodontics
recommendation for students "together in the lll06t ellicient made only in compelling C88e8.
and ·use of ,t he title of "lee- fashion." Tbe President exDebate on the matter am- ~.:!!to';.;!'"t~i. ~
turer."
. ·
presssd hope that a plan whk:b tered around the flezibility of from the Univenity of lllinois
Tomorrow's llliMion will deal can be rusc..-1 " in an open the title. One professor pointed and was in private practice in
with moliolls CXIIIC8r1ling access fashion" will be pteeented to out that his department uaes Denver, Colorado.
to funded1lf8llt~ and the faculty 80011.
the title for new faculty mem- OFF CAMPUS
csllinl for a U
repeeentaImplementation · reports on bers who haven't completed
tive for the S
~ Research the other .task forces will soon their .dissertations. Dr. 'Thomas APPOINTMENTS
Foun1l&amp;tion, in addition to fur- appear in the Reporter, be aaid.
Connolly, acting provost of OIL J&amp;AN A. CORTND, chairman.
ther bueineas.
:
The Senate ond SPA
Arts and Letters, explained,
First 011 the agenda at the
. 'fbi! relationship between the however, that. this practice ~J=·y~ ~t!'p~~
April 1 a.eting was a report Senate and the Senate Profes- causes people to work longer for Children. ·a new committee
from ·the President. Tbe chief ' aional Association (SPA) was for tenure than is recommended that makeo reco_mmendatiollS on
child care to the · Joint Commis-

ftn.t

will

:':!!:.
~ gn~~~ ~:::!. ~i~!~::.l~.=~· ~~~it.......few weeb, il not more, before Baumer explained lhilt under
Tbe last agenda item dealt
we know the full ~"
of the l.elislative. -.et cut.
Nationally, the President painted a bleak flnaDcial picture for
universities, citing the example
o! the Michigan universities
which bave baen told to expect
a five t- cent decrease in their
operating budgets.

sion on Mental Health of Children.
DR. KE!,&lt;IIETB H . l!lCKIIEilT, clinical
instructor, legal medicine, named
chairman .of the ComprebensiYO
HeOlth Planoing Council of West·
em New York.

the terms of the Taylor law a with .a motion to adopt guide"bargaining agent can negoti- lines for writing student letters
ate ·.anything in the relation- of rerommendation. Dr. Robert
ship Of the faculty and profes- Berdahl, one of the bill's ausional staff to the University thoro, explained that the mothat they care to negotiate." tion asks faculty members not PRESENTATIONS
This includes any term or oon- to mention a student's religious
IOS&amp;PH A. ALUTI'O, ueociate
dition of employment. The or political beliefs or 8880cia- DR.
profeuor, management. with I.
chairman warned that a lack of tiona and not to include other .........,.,, "A Typoi&lt;&gt;.gy of Ilecio8udpt · Picture
U / B triembers in SPA rould matters not relevant to the parln regant to the U / B bud- cause the oontract to be deter- ticular academic topic.
~~ca~~~ i:ci!ti~:
get, Ketter exp~ ' that in- mined by the faculty of the
-P resident Ketter ssid be Meetinp, New York.
creases mlll!l first go toward the other types of institutions with- would find it "difficult to en- DR. lAMES A. BELASCO, chairman,
CSEA-negotiated six per cent in SUNY. Tbe blame for an force" this motion since be felt organization, wit b I.A. ALUTTO,
salary increase, rising operating unfavorable oontract rests with a letter writer has certain .. Decisional Participation a n.d
Teacher Satisfaction," "Decision·
expenses and . annualization of tbe people who d idn't join, be rights.
appointments. After these ex- asserted.
• P8888ge of this motion and aJ Deprivation, Equilibrium and
u Variables in Orpenditures are -taken out, the
Dr. Gilbert Moore presented institution of another more de- Saturation
. tiona! R-..:h." "Teacher
President ssid, the Legislature the first motion the Senate was finite letter oode was called· for ~pation
and Morale,•• Amermay decide to impoee a limit to discuss which urged the leg- by Professor Bruce Jackson. ican Educ&amp;tional -reb A.
of spending on the amounf ac- islature, SUNY central admin- Other speakers ssid aoceptenoe eociation. New York; " Perform·
tually budP.ted.
.
istration
President Ketter of the motion would strengthen ance Contracting: Wbat'a New:•
Despite tlie fact tlu!t the cur- to "at least maintein current faculty members' bands in re- American Auociation of School
rent budM is uncertain, U / B support -for minority pro- fusing inquiries for such knowl- Superintendents, Atlantic City;
.. Performance Contracting must begin preparing its budget · grams/' Tbe motion passed un- edge.
Threat or Promise," seminar for
reque6t for '72-'73, the Presi- animously with the President
A vote to resubmit the mo- · teachen1 in the Rye School Dis·
dent ssid. This year tbere will pledging use of certain discre- tion to committee failed and trict.
be a "different format of justi- tionarY monies from endow- tbe motion passed.
I AMES H. CAMPBElL, assistant to
fication," Ketter explained. ment in light of Stele funding
dean. management. .. Computer
"Before departments only jus- cutbacks.
Aided Education Management:
tified jncreaaeS, now there will Minority Housln&amp;
An Integrated Records and Coun·
seling System." School of Busi·
be a justification. of every dolProfessor J. D. Eick asked
ness and Economics, Alfred Uni·
lar." This will strengthen the Senate to set up a sub- (cont~d from Pat&lt; I , col. 5)
U/B's position in Albany, Ket- oommittee on Minority Hous- detailed vitae. Inside candi- versity.
ter 888erted.
·
ing. This oommittee would: de- dates were solicited: tbe acting DR. BNRIOO MIBICH, adjunct pro·
To help departments with termine tbe severity and extent provost and IISSistant provost,
d:e~:be':!:~:
their justifications, each FaCul- of the problem; , ftud possible all department chairmen and Canoer:k~t!O:F
Day, Mercy
ty will receive data on the &lt;:n- solutions; .praJent .a positive several prominent faculty mem- Hoopital,.Teaching
Buffalo.
rollment in their oourses, data prpgrsm of solutions bY. the bers. Only three 'insiders'
DR.
BIUHI'I:I
ORKI,
usistant
pro.
on research •awards, total cred- second meeting of tbe Execu- agreed to be interviewed; one
l'harmaceutica, "Solubili·
it. hours- offeied and "many tiVe Committee in the fRll; and subsequently withdrew. Seven f081l0r,
ties of Pboopholipiila in Water,"
oilier brealidowns." 1bese may look at "other minority prob- outside men have been invited; with T. IIID&lt;IYA; "Stability of
be used
a ·~starting point'' lema with the intent of defining two withdrew before roming, Asymmetrical Phoopholipid Mem·
for justification but "-&lt;t- problems and loolting for solu- three have been interviewed branes," 15th annual meeting of
menls ·can uae other indfces to . tiona "
and two more are scbeduled in the Biophysical Society, New Or·
justily erpenditures il tjley deA :.00tion calling for -!em- early April. Tbe committee bas leans, Louisiana.
sire. 1n lllllll!lllbl ·
this data, porary oommittee to investi- not discussed individual can- SANFORD ll. LOT'I'OR, asaiatant
the President tor::f· ''four-fold gate the matter was passed, as didates, having agreed not to dean,· School of Management.
differences in 6:"£port CO!Its per was an agieement to bold Sen- do so until they have sll been ..Graduate Management Pro-faculty member, and of large ate meetinp on the first Tues- seen and voting is in order. It g r a m." Graduate Management
dillerences &lt;in faailty /student day -of every month next _year. is hoped to have a list readJ: Wives Club.
'
DR. 1. WAIIIIEN l'fZRY, dean, School
ratios . . _ and within -facul- ; ~
for the President in mid-April.
of Health Related Professions,
ties.
. - '· '
'.
A:lso passed was a J;DOtion
spoke at a meeting of the Ameri·
This new fonilat is "not ab- asking . the dean Of Undergradcan Medical "-&gt;ciation Commitsolute zero buclgetig in the wile Studies to "ftud a way to
.tee on Continuing Proferiiional
ma...,._,t ·-.!""the ~ file· both written grades and
Educ&amp;tiol! Programo of Voluntary
dent 8BU'ed hili 8udlenoe arid evahUltions for the 8lline CCllqll8
Health Aaencieo,Rew York City;
no attempt Will be made to wlien requ5ted· by -tlw,! student
spoke at National Health Forum,
find ·the boot Of education ' per and agreed to by the faculty
San Frsnciaco.
Bttident. "This will all remain .member responsible for that
Dr. Warren G. Bennis; form- Dll. lmR8DT &amp;. PHILUPS, aasiltant
in-bouse information," be. said. oourae."
er vice president for academic profeuor, ~t. with 1&amp;.
D!JriDg the next month, the
'!be · proposed calendar re- development now on leave from JOHN P. II&amp;ACIE, uaiafant profeoPresident will be a.eting with form alSo won Sena-te approval a University faculty ~ eor, man.apment. "Portfolio An·
each Faciulty to ._answer Ill""'- · Under the Senate's motion, bas been named president of :}Yt"~.,.~~:t:nJ:~ti~
lionS ClOIIIll!lDing this new for-· U/ B · would not ~ a ·tri- the University of Cincinnati,
variances," Soutlieutera Region·
mat.
·
mester plan but will sJmply be- effective September L
al Conference of the American
TMk F....,. .
gin and end ~ "'!flier dur. He will Succeed Dr. Walter lnatituta for DeciSion Scienceo,
Turning to implementetlon ing 1:be·.regular .academic yeax;. Langsam who bas Deld the poet : ~~-Polytachnic lnatitute,
of the task force f81191111, Ketter . U the plim is aooopted by the for 16 Ye&amp;fl!·
•
• •
aaid that tiillr TaSk Force oo' ;, Ulilvemty, fall classes would , Tbe UmvefBity of,- CmemGovemaooe IS currently bold- helm the Thursday after La- nati bas an enrollment of :U,-,
ing meetbip
the interim' ~September 9, and end 7~ at -whom ~1,679 are full~ of Dr Wanen
· 23. Tbe 8I!CDIId se- · time day students:
Button and .Miss N~ Cole- • .nester Would begin January 12. · While oil leave this year. Dr.
man. Seleciton of members of a • and end ·May 9. Tbe nlllllbe! !" Bennis bas belm writing a~
new 22-man Univmaity-wide ~ days :~ ~ 011 · the. ~t ol higher
Govemaooe €ommittee. by ·the . the same with the-11111111mr - . education under a -grant from DL ..-a; A. . ll&amp;Jrlla8, aMOCiate
various oonstituencies.tO ba ,;p.. . si.on, beginning tmlier and last- tbe 'I)oentieth Centwy FmiiL P.rot....r, ..-n communication.
,_ted Is now tU1ng place and ing lonaer.
•
,.
An ~ from that -~ ap- 'Aural. Rahaliilitaticm: A, New
thet committee sbOuld begin _ .._.,.. ·
peered m . the April 111181111 ol Look at an Old Plooam." National ~- of
funclioning 80011. ~ ~t
A ~ to impo8e limit&amp;- ~ Atlantic Monthly.

ana

Searches _

!Ther,

as

a

Bennis Named
}lrodo{UC

unae..

a....;;.."""

PUBLICATIONS
prof-.r.
aocioiOCY, - - . r editor for Tlu

DR. · IIJL'I'ON ALIIBIICJIT,

~~obu~":'t!~~:

London, and Praecer Puhliohers,_
New York.

~to~~~

llr:J:;

&lt;ry of N.w M&lt;xico, 168G-1594 by

~rs:',.PT~~~~

A11114lo of 1M Soc~ly for 1M Hiotory of Discoueriu.

DR.. IUCIIABD G. lliU.JrfD&amp;NBU2G,

dean.

School of Management, with H.
Igor Ansoff, Jay Avner, Fred E.
Portner and Raymond Radooev·
ich, "Doeo Planning Pay? The

~~~~0:.~~=-~·~

Lo"'f Rani• P/monint.
ELIZABETH 8. DEICIIMAN, iDBtructor,

occupational therapy, "Tbe Way
to a Patient'• Heart.'' Nuni.ng

Homo.
DR. I'BEDDIC I. FU!:IWN,

auociate

N':~~~~ro~'bc:tm=:::e ~:t

i.u of Comnw.nilm, vol IV, no. 2.
ACLS Planning Group on Com·
parative Communist Studies.

~!~~ret!tio~~p=

~d~~~~~=~

ment. .. Labor Low .JournDJ..
lecturer,
iridustrial relations, with ~- DBOT·
NING, and D. Ll'PBKY, "Some Cor· ·
relates of Trainee Success in a
OIL KYRON D. POT'l'LD,

f:Ife~etw~JE~~:faaB~:
......

~~~ME:!~::
five Realm , Sltu!ic Reuiew.

~~HN~j;J~ND;.,;~!.~

ligion • in Reliaion and ~olitica,"
Journal of Public L&lt;Jw.
DIL f'R:a) KA'I'Z.. profeuor, aoc:i·
ology, editor, Contemporqry Soci·
olotical Theory,
Houoe,
New York.
""
lliL LaB, uaiatanl profOI·

Random

;:&gt;:;. ':!t':r~=;~y~

genue by ChlorprOmazine, aw.
ch&lt;micol Pluu171DC0/ofy.
Dlt. ENIUOO KIBJCH, adjunct pro-feooor, biocbemi&lt;:aJ pbarmaoalOCY,
"Principleo of Pharmaool~ and
H

!'"ctio~ ~or.J=ti;:~D~

Emil Ftei m, eda., Canar M &lt;dicine, Lea and Fobiaer, Waahina·
ton S q u a r e, Philadelphia, in
praa.

.

DR. UI8'!D

w. KILBBATB. profeaeor,

.

p:&gt;litical science, with JUDY WIIr

~:!l'li~~1- sro.,~ ;:t

·=
DIL RAOUL HA&amp;OU.., profeaor, ,
Quarurly.

aD·

thropology, with w. ALHor,

1.
CA.PLA.H, l J. IIAH8lf, 1. IIAXAN!',
N . SCID&lt;IDr, "Standard EthJio.

graphic Sample," Curr&lt;nl An·

~'J'~t'fi...bOo.!t ;;..•s::::t;_
lem, Beluwior Science Nota.

DR. 0rm P. ·on~:Ra.m. ueoc:iate
prof....,r, anthropolocy, "C o·m·
ment on '&lt;;orrel&amp;teo of Political
Complexity'," an analyois of Marir;
Abrahamoon'o article, A""'ri&lt;a!o
Sociolollical &amp;view; boo&amp; - ·
N.L Solien Gonzalez, Blaclr Carib Houoelu&gt;ld'Siructuro: A Study
of M igratUm and M -"rnialliDn,
Ame.rican Sociologi.cG.l ReviftD.
DR. A.LBalT I .

PA.UTLIIl,- ueociate

=~~d~~wnoo:t"~r.

·&amp;:t~=. J!':r..~M~
liohinB Company,
Ohio.
/

. .

Columbuo,

�Al&gt;ri1 15, JJ7J

8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
"'pon ... pullllc;
••Opon ... "' lllo 11.-.Kr.
.Opon....., ... - - . ~ - I n lllo~
---===::-::=--=·
=--- Ericben,
ENOIHIIian&lt;G BUONA&amp;: Dr. J.L.
THURSDAY-15
prof...,!&lt; -retical
mechanic~,

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

AP&amp;JCAM ~H .U."D IMia-

JoliDo HopkiDo Uni·

r'04ni~~~D!" -~~

leCture by

Mic:halol Del-Anml&amp;. dia~
vioitiDc praf....r, lllack Stuc!iea,

Ref....hmenta, 109
neerin&amp;. 3:90 p.m.

231 Norton Union, ·s p.m.

~r

/.,., .

Dr.
J""''ueo R. Frt!IK!O, Princeton Uni·
BIOCliDll8ftY

PBYCBOKAT• •: f-ree-form c::ommu-

8 J: ll I N A 8 !

=~ty==.
H~t-~:z·
p .m. .

nica&amp;n for personality 1rowth.
~ Room. S-8 p.m.
P11Y111C8 oou.oQUIUK 0 : Dr: S . Fn·
biDi, ,., ........._
lilotitnle nf
TedmolocY, Cambridp, MaaL,

J.BL,UOC T B 0 U 0 B T IN

IIOia.N

~~~~~Yof~ ~~

DUAUft IN .-.NTA&amp;Y P.um&lt;:U

~.:~'1~:=

~~H·~~

8 :30 p.m.

COOL BAND LUD. lee

J'ILM• •:

'Thunday liatinc-

SATURDAY-17

wat; is the cfuector of the-Domini·
can lnot;tute for OrienW Studies
in Cairo, Egypt, and the editor ~f
ita periodical, Melangu. He ,.
allo the author of two boob on

- . s: Dr. J.
Oalvin ~ praf- c:bem·
iotr)', uni..,..ty nt u~ Salt
Lake City, ClmiiO!IJOJIT, 70
A.._.., 4: 15 p.m., thi'OUI"' April
16.
.

POST&amp;R UICI'UD:

TODAY : telephone
lecture, •r.nsored by Recio1181

~~~em:'Ct"fno~te.~!~

~=!!i:.~eo!:~· 1/:rol:/,';J/:"!

c..oeiving locationa. 11 : 30 a.m.-12: 30

d\'!'~'1 ~~~~~:~::!:

PHYSICS GRADUATE STUD&amp;NT All8().

p.m..

Dr. D . J . BenDaniel, General Electric Teclini-

~cXe~~~~J,;J!f~'t:

ter, 3 p.m. Relreohmenlo, 112
Hochate~r. 2:30 p.m.

M:
=.·=n:=.-:e'p!!k:
3 p.m.

~m:~~r:; crc;r:;~ 1~

Capen, 6, 8, 10 p.m., dOD8t;on to

CAC.

v.usrry 'JRA.CK•: Erie Community
Collep, 3: 30 p.m., campus.

TodaY in KoN!a ,
Invocation., NiTVOIUJ, aponeored by
Koran Student Auocia.&amp;n. 231
Norton, 7:30 p.m., free.
PILM••: CLm DE 5 A 7. Agnes
V•rd. (1961) . A card-reader teU.
KOREAN FILMS•:

.:a==

STUDENT D£CI810N lU.K.JNG •:

vem.·.

c';.::

rout DAMCDfG.: In·

eti"QCtion in beaic. a tepa

·durin&amp;

first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8p.m.
ll.u&lt;iz•: on,in.ol and impJ."OViaa.
t;o1181 worb, presenl.ed by d8noo
atudento . from Brockport State
Univenity Collep and SUNYAB.
Domuo, 1695 Elmwood, 8:30 p.m.,

free.

STUDENT C0)(J1()81t8 CONCJ:&amp;T•:

Baird Hall. 8:30 p.m.
TODAY&amp; KU8&amp;UMS IN TOMORROw"&amp;
CO)I()(lJJrfl'l'y•: Colloquium. apon·

sored by Department of Art, and

SUNDAY-18
DAJIJCZ PltOCKAK•:

eee Saturday

listing, 7:30 p.m.
BAL1UN POLK DANCING:

advanoed.

some teaching, Fillmore Room,
8:30p.m.
PILK• •: COOL HAND LUXE, aee
'Thunday listing.

MONDAY-19
INHALA.TION

TlllllAPY

'I'I:UPBONJ:

LIXlTVB: Marion Siegel, Richard
Buffalo Museum of Science in Nalichowolci, John DoD8hue, KAN·
aooociat;on with the Ollice of CuJ. AGE&gt;IZNT OP A PATIENT ~
tural Affairs. Participanto include lNG PBOLOHGED A.&amp;TIPJCI.A.L VENTJLAJohn B. Hightower, directOr, 'The
Muoeum of Modem Art; Dr. Wil- ·
Jiam C. Sturtev.nt, curator, 80·
locat;ono, 3 p.m.
00
f'IL){
: 1.1! lOLl MAL Directed by
1
atitution; Jan van der Marek,
former director, Mueeum of COnof their fives. He creates intenoely
=~~ra~'; ~-of~: peroo1181 fllma with his reatl...
ence, Humboldt l'a..XW.y, 1!:30 camera and voracious appetite for
p.m.
new thinp to look at. Aloo LA
llmZ, a ocience fiction short by
Marker. 147 Diefendorf, a and 8

:'~c!l"'~~ ~e~~

~=~~~~~J!..U:~~

\

Womeris ClUb Plans Lunch
DDOIL

•

~

will .be Gordon M ,

~::&amp; ~ ol the Gallery.
tours of the Gal-

lory's CliiJecaona will ·follow.
Olllcen to be installed at the
bmcbeon are: pleaident: Mnl.
Herman L Fa18etti; vice
·•
dent: Mnl. Ricbani ~
cordlDi _,.,tary: Mnl. Edward
.J. Marilla; ~ 88C&gt;
retary: ¥rs. Robert I . ..Reis;
~: Mra. Richard A.

Chairman of the lunCbean .Is
Mra. .John P. Seaille and cochairman ia Mra. Danold c.
Wobecball. TbeJr commitlee includes Mra. 'l1leodore a: .Fitz.
water, l'rOiram; Mra. Poaald
R. Brutvan and Mnl. Aalboay
s. GuDao. Hosleaa; Mnl. Lo....n 8. Shaw and Mra. E .
Perry Hicks, s-vatloaa; Mnl.
.James E . McConnell and Mra.

John A. Neal, Catering; Mn1.
Orville T. Beacbley and Mra.
LeRoy A. Peach, Decoratioile;
Mnl. William R. Greiner and
:t,fra. Robert C. Fitzpatrick,

Name Tags; Mrs . Stanley
Zionta and Mrs . Peter M .

Boyd-Bowman, Publicity.

Senate Balloting
BalloiB f.- oomin&amp;ting one
~tative and three ;alternatea to the Stat&amp;-wide·Faculty
Senate illlve '-'&gt; c:iiculated to
all 1100-bealtb acieocoa· profMsional atalf membera . by the
Faculty Senate Committee 011 '
Electimls.
~ ballOting may oominale one full-time Uniwraity
profeeaional atalf member f.each position.
Sealed balloiB (with voter's
name signed and printed 011 the
oufslde of a return envelope)
mtJBt be returned to the Faculty Senate ollice, 136 Hayes,
by April I6.

p.m.

•

-•tiDe Renzi.

SENIOII I8CII'.U.•: Tbomu

percuoaion, and
8rlisto.
Worlco by w~ Colpuo. Di&amp;mer, Laneri/ Sc:hiaHini. Gena and
Rosen. Baird, 8 :30p.m.
CBDUBTIIY OOLLOQUIV)(: G. A.
Jeffrey, University of Pitlabursh.
t;tle to be announced.

THURSDAY-22
PHYBICIANB ftLEPBOD LmC'I'OD:

TNJUma Seriu, Dr. John W: Ko.

teclci, PEHftRATIN:O

CJD:IIT WOt1NII8,

sponsored by fleP.&gt;w Medical
io7~m. 62 rece1vin&amp; locations.

TlmOII&amp;'l'ICAI. BIOLOGY BUON. .:

Dr. RudoUo Paoletti, lnat;tut. of

~~~ty~ ~:

~~,~~~.! =~'='J:;tl: Room
~29,IITUDII8
ON lllWN trraOLB.
4248 Ridae t-. 11 LDL

p.m.
V.DG...; ... _
......,.•• :o.

.. _ •: Syracuse, 3

-

p.m., Campua.
OOIIIPtnwa 8CIENC8 oou.oQUIIJlol:

'lbe Women's Club of the
Uniwraity will bold a Bit-clown
bullet liiiiCbeon in the aculpture
court ol the AJbriibt.-Knm: Art
G8lJery Saturday, Mil)' 1, at

LrrBOOIIAI:HY AND 8ILKliCIIIKH de-

~...,: Ng;:g:7~~iso~ter
LffiRARY EXHIBITS
PeJ'IDIIDeDt ubihlt ol worb by -

J..,_ Joyce. Poetzy Room. 'JJII
Loclcwood Libruy, 9 ~-!i p.m.
Sir Walter Scott bicentenary U·
hibit, feelllrinl f I r a t editioaa,
worb by contempozarioo, - ·
~- and watan:olon, tluOach
Pooten and b..-ideo from the
Poetzy Collection, 2nd Door balcony, Lockwood, 9 8.JD.·5 p.m.,
throuch May.

INTERVIEWS
ON~B

The

IH'I"'Ir\''EWWG

~"":~ ~~nz:r~ ~~

the opportunity for individual in·
terviewo with eduea&amp;nalo buoi·
industrial and ..,..,mmenW

n-.

!jf=~=k ~~ ::0~

for Credit.-Free Propamo, Phi terview. Reciatra&amp;n forma and
Delta Kappa, and the Commia- additional information are availsion on 'l'eacher Education and . able in Hay• C.
Prof-iow Standarda. Faculty
Club, Harriman Library, 7: 30- AP111L 16-New York Univenity
Medical Center; Elmira He;.hto
9:30p.m.
Central Schoola (Chemun,) .
.1&amp;AN PAUL 8AR1'II8 COLLOQUIUK •:
APIUL 16-EPC Servi&lt;:eoo, In c.;
conducted by Dr. Lionel Abel. Averill Park Central School Dis8.Ut'l'llZ A8 BIOGRAPIII:&amp; AND Al1'1'0trict (ReDOM!aer) .,
8IOOIW'IID, 384 Hay•, 8-10:30
AP111L 20-North-tem Mutual

wait from 5 to 7 to find 'out-the
reoulta of the testa. 'The oource
of
individuality is her
training ao a p~iber and

~ATIONAL

panel

r.::-~~=~
&amp;1181 Medi8 Department, otf'ICO

~':~:! ~~u:-.;.r:,.!';

=p~-~'7" b':'erendo

-

elATION LBC'I'UD::

mittee for Religious Studies. 234
Norton, 4 p.m.
P08'I'Eil L E C T U B. E SERIES: See
'Thunday listing.

FRIDAY-16

WEDNESDAY-21
RADIOTIII:RAPY

la Theologie Mwulmou. Lecture

.

hem Playen, Smallwood Drive
School, 300 Sinallwood D r i v e.
Snyder, 8 : 30 p.m.

B.M. Leavenworth, IBM Corpora·
t;on, PllOGlWOOR ..u&lt;a&gt; OON·
TBOL mrocrtJlliCll, ROom 41, 4226
Ridp t-, 3:30 p.m. Refreoh·
menlo foUowiJI&amp;.
GIWIUAft _,.,....• , .Lind8 Chih
LiJl&amp; U.O, piano. Worlco by s.ch,
SChUbert, Schumann and Prokoflev, Baird, 8 : 30 p.m.

TUESDAY-20

Refreohmento 10:30

LDL

PHYSICAL T'BRAPY ft:LI:I'BONK t.a::TUJIZ: Marian F. Kerr, SUPPOIIT·

IVE .....ONldl., •Jl01180red by liegiow Medic:al PrGIJ'IIID, 112 receiving locationa, 1 p.m.
•• f
•

PSYCHOIUT

:

tee-10nD

commu-

~ ~- 9&lt;!·; ~?P!::i

Poot

~ ' (Sieubenf;

~~~~&amp;!ili
f.J!"·;~;:~,!(~~;

Schuylerville Central S c h o o I

~~~)~ cr~~u~.~

Central School (Wye&gt;minl) .

N&lt;YI'ICES
il
pre80ntly conduc:tinc a Uni..nity
Community Survey. Dr. Bruce
Franc:io, hiJher edUc:ation and

'I'D B1JRVBY IIBitUCH CII:N'lD.

~chology, '"a!!.t~=

and ~ nf momben Of tbe
Univenity community, indudinc
faculty, atudenta and . -. q;,.:.
&amp;no cover a broood n.nae of !aBUM of timely COJID8nl to the
Univeroity community. f.Utici.
panto are chc»on 81 . I1Uidcm. U
you are c:Ont.cted by an inteJviewer, wbo will have 8D id. card ·
from the Sinwy a-..:b Cealer,
your coopera&amp;n will be I(N8ti.y
appreciated.•
•
•
.
Uoderuadaate atudeota abouJd
update iheir
Uta fonno
atarlini: April 19, -Jiliu to .tb8
ochooduJe below. (Note: Tlie one tume in the uta form will
114« no l&gt;&lt;urin6 ' em 1M tiMe of

-t

nicat;on for personality powth,
Fillmore Room, S-8 p.m.
plfYIUC8 LIX:1'VB 0 : • Dr. H .a n a
Betbe, Nobel laureate, prof...,r
nf pbyaic:o, Cornell Univenity,
,..._.. or NUCLI!AII &gt;U.T'l'lll, 111. l'f!liotratiott.)
'
Hoc:batetter, 4 p.m. liefrelhmenta.
Accwale uta io
for
112 Hoc:batetter, 3:30 p.m.
a trouble free nciotralion. Tbe
.......••: - YOU IN IWI (Brit;ab eorrect liot:iDjr of 8 lltndoDt'o ~-­
Sounda) ( 1969) A
rete an
r.
· r and dui can tb8 dif.
• alyoia of • ~
oi~
renee ~ a · aood ocbedule
ua&amp;n. 'The reoolut;on is abown and • ~ . - ,
crowinc in En&amp;land ....,111 worklnformat;on on tb8 ~
en, women, atudenta, and bl8c:b. ·P""""" will be h8Dded to
HOirvily iconic; 0.... fiata, and u 'they come in to updoole the
. alopna. 147 Diefendoif, 8 p.m.
uta fonno.
•

-w

-Ia

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8

PILM•• : OBI WJU.Y' A LOYI:LT WA&amp;.

Yo!:P'::.!::~ -

World Wn I muoical oat;re of April 19
the borraiW ol war. Award win· •
20
~~iru.r.:e-~~ April 2t'
ard A-rouP, and 1UaY
Smith. Confoi'8DCle ~ N~
26
ton. cbeck ~ tDn.,
'ZT
admioaion $.75. Th..,...J&gt; April 25. April 29

g

EXHmrrs

May
M8y

:

3
4

5
6

7

A•L
M. Z
A· F

.Junion ·

T-Z
A•F

Sopbomona

SeaioiW

ft·.L
s

~Ul ·

B·Z
A-F
G-M
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Flabmon

Forme are to be picked up in
· the rec:ep&amp;n &amp;real Diefendorf·

Hall

�</text>
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                    <text>,VOL 2 - NO. 27

APRIL 1, 1971

Ministers

'Get Status
As Faculty .

rector of the Council on Urban

and Reaiooal Studies.
Prior tO that be bad, . .....-1
preeidimt of, the R1iode J&amp;.
iaJJd Scbool ol Design ( 19621968) and Oil the faculties ol
Pri!lcetoo. Harvard. Case Western -Reserve and MIT..
UU is a rour....,.pus institutioo .,uh a total enrollment
of ~~ !ln,OOO. Dr.
0

"Qualified faculty" statua has
been granted to _ campus _ .

88

:::..--ui.tituU.::. ....s"":n.:b~

~"a

triumph ol faculty,
atudent, alumni and trustee ro.

auo:'•

-lion."

Timn, BuSh-Brown's chief respoosibilities 88 uu chancellor "will lie in the areas of
hmd-raising and increasing the
reaourcee:" of the private uni·
vasity.
'Ibe university is currently
in the red by $1.7 million, the
TimD said, and next year's
budiet is expected to include
"an even- larger deflcil"
UU students, the Times also
reported, had been angered by

!':
=:li::"b~thew~'F:;:
guson,
president of Clark

-

No ~r has bean selected for the'facilities planning
vice ~. the post res~lble for lxidJ~91!!'!P!W
development •ariil space - a.JioCa.'
tions, equipment, etc., on the
present campus and in temporary locations.
President Ketter himself was
the first holder of the position
and was succeeded by BushBrown in September 1969.
Dr. Bush-Brown joined the
University .in 1968 88 first di-

now

University . An injunction

- against the trustees filed b~ &amp;tu~JiliiU)ted .in their. being

given five places on the con'lmittee which selected Dr. BushBrown.
Former Chancellor Ferguson
resigned last May, the Timn
said, "after a running disagree-ment with the lnlstees over his
plan to dissolve the university
into three autonomous cam·
puaes."

Rathskeller Cuts Its Hours
As Weekend Business Dips
By STEVE LIPMAN
. Reduced patnJnatle on weekends as a J:E6Uit ol the closing
of Norton's Recreatioo Area
has forced the Ralhakeller to
move up its closing hours on
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Starti-n g the weekend of
March 19, and continuing until
business improves, the Rat is
cl08ing at 9 p.m. on Fridays
and at 8 p.m. on Saturdays and
Sunda~Normal
closing hours
moen
bad bean 11:30 p.m.
on
and 11 J!.ID. on SaturdaY&amp; and 8uDdayii. ~
'Ibe Rat at one time was
open until !nidnilht. or

Ja-.

On weekends. However, the

business lost- mostly high
school students -when beer
sales hours- reduced caused
Food Service to adopt the premidnight c1osinf, This move
was also in reaponse to tlie
drug jlroblem which has forced
the closing of the Rae AIM.
Donald Bozek. m&amp;Mf"' cl
Norton'_. Food Servicsoi. tba.&lt; ~ in all-of Norton's
(lJod outlela-----4be c:afeteris, Tiffin Roam and Rathskeller--bM
clroppal about 16 pol' ~t . . Cll!lldy t-ile ol the Rac Area
~and the.._,...~

NcidiJn - ...-.....- ~
slicityestimates
- that ibe Bat,

which used to account for approximately half of Nor ton's
Food Services income, has suffered the biggest cut, down to
about 30 per cent of total business. Business at the Rat is
down about !In per cent on
weekdays and about 33 per
cent on weekends when it is
the only food service operating
in Norton. 'Ibe situation is pt(C&lt;JQtimud o n - 3, coL 1)

18-Year-0/d Vote

Erie County Boord ol Elections perwonnot were on campus
loot "moklne It easy" fo&lt; nowly en-lsed l&amp;,ear·
old Wilen to roc~oter. Mora than 800 sl&amp;nocl up. (See story,

Acconling to the New Y orA!

~2)

Minority Committee Hcpes
To Avert Possible Crises
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

campus and many area groups
R•portw Stall
working in the minority area.
lnstead of reacting only to Pollcy·Moklne Mandate
"crisis situations, now we're reThis is a policy-making comacting to things in an on-going mittee, White stresses. "It is
way," says Dr. Vandon White, not in our power to direct any
chainnan of the University's segment of the campus to take
new Committee on Minority action." lns}ead, .they "studY
Afl'ainl. • '
· existlhg pohcies and evalU&amp;tA!
This advisory group, which them; to see if there is a need
was estatilished by President for change." Suggestions and
Robert Ketter in December, is comments are then relayed to
concerned with formulating a the president for appropriate
"well-thought-out policy" on decision.
minority affairs, one that will
The committee is currently
solve problems before they flare delving into three policy areas:
into emergencies and meet recruitment of minority and
needs before they become "de- disadvantaged students; hiring
of minority faculty; and exmands."
The group has been instruct- panded community service. The
ed to "take as its province the group has been di vi ded into
entire range of minority prob- three permanent subcommittees
lems," and to advise President to study these.
Ketter "on any facet of this
The subcommittee on student
matter which merits the atten- recruitment is looking into the
tion and concern of the Uni- possibility of increasing proversity."
gram quality for minority and
The committee, 36 strong, is disadvantaged individuals.
&lt;lompoeed of students, faculty, They are, as White explains,
administrators and members of defining the term uminority"
the outside community. It in- broadly to include "any student
cludes such diverse representa- who could be considered edution as Assemblyman Arthur 0 . cationally or socially disadvanEve; James Brennan. editor of taged." One of the areas being
the Spectrum, and the Rev. studied is "the direction we
Kenneth Curry of the Commis- should go in reference to the
sion on Human Rights. Also Cooperative College," White
included 818 the directors ol all (Contilwed on page 2, coL 2)
0

tors ·and religious advisors,
President Robert L. Ketter has
announced.
'Ibe new recognition is intended to provide great... access by the group not only to University facilitiee, but also to
the various campus cnnstituencies, particularly the students
and the Univ,ersity administration.
Under their newly granted
status, the clergymen will have:
direct liaison with the University administration; legal sane-•
tion and security force prote&lt;&gt;
tion while on campus; use of
University libraries and of
Clark Gymnasium; permits for
the use of faculty parking Jots;
permission to enter dormitories
after hours in emergency situations; and .the right to reserve
University facil i t ies, when
available and upon request
Those eli¥ible for the new
recognition mclude: all fulltime ordained and/ or commissioned campus clergy, incbJding nuns; all full-time unorcillu.l Uld.JII!l'J:~ ~
- or ool'll'i'nisSlonea&amp;'avisoilw-student religious groups registered with the Council of Heligious Organizations; and national and regional directors or
student religious organizations
and foundations with beadquarters in Bu1falo.
Those who have satisfied all
requirements and have received
recognition are:
Rev. Arlo J_ Nau, Lutheran
Ministry to the Campus, 2 University Avenue, 837-7675.
Rev. James Brewster, Wesley
Foundation, The Campus Ministry of the Methodist Church
at Bu1falo, 410 Minnesota Avenue, 832-4566.
(continued o n - 6, eoL 4)

MutoNamed
Cage Coach
President Robert L. Ketter
has appointed Edwin D. Muto
head coach of varsity basketball at the University. Muto
was acting bead coach during
the recently completed 1970-71
season.
Dr. Ketter, in making the ap-

!:..70::
':.r"""S.eteda~~
partmeut, noting a spirit of op-

timism. 'the 1970-71 varsity
team won 6 ol its last 9 games
and finished the 8088011 with a
9-13 record.
Muto, who received both his
undergraduate and master's degreee at U/B, played basketball
88 a guard under Coach Mel
Eiken. His appo'intment ,.
bead coach was baaed on the
favorable recruiting season under way, in additiOD to the enthusiastic support ol the Student Athletic Review Board
and other student government
officers.
'Ibe former freshman coach
(176 victories 'and 86 defeats)
received the ~ ol
many acdve Univasity alumni
as well 88 the members of the
·1970-71 vanitY -team. He
bandied the freabman program
for 14 years, 1956-70.

�eiRE
. · FOOTER,
. .

2

AlwiJI, 1911

(

Security Appoints Griffin Erie_~
As NeW Assistant Director Registers
By SUSAN· GREENWOOD
Repc:w1w Sralt

New voters~

However, in his introductory
press conference last Thursday,
More than 800 U /B students
Glennon and be· did diacUBa re.no•--~ to vote m
· na~~-•
Norton's drug problem.
e-"'""'
""""'
Glennon feels the use of elections for the first time laat
drugs shows an "individual's week as the Erie County Board
complete lack of iJnasination." of EleCtions continued its new
When a person uses drugs, the on-&lt;:ampus recruiting drive.
security director says, ''be lacks
Members of the Board "have
. the imagination for making visited seven Erie· County colhimself usefnf."
leges and 12 •hi£ """'!&lt;&gt;Is in

Leo Gritlin, the new assistant
director of Campus security, is
known for his "ability to com. municate with young people,"
and. his first day outfit- wide
lapel suit, with an oranae shirt
and wide tie- reflected his
youthful ouUook,
'The 31-year-old. Griffin started his new job, which places
SitU.tlon
~t fsO:OOO
him as aooond in command at
Griffin is "not sure the stu· became eligible under new
196 Winapear, 1aat Thursday.
He'll be conoeotra?nf on prac- dents are aware. of the physical laws. 'The colleges they have
are Canisius, Hilbert,
tical "clay-to-day duties," Ken- · involvement" neceseary in stopping hard drug users. Terming Erie County Community, .Roil "a dangeroUB sitUBtion," the sary Hill and Bu1falo State.
new assistant director is in fa- This week, Board members are
vor of "having armed campus at D'Youville; next week, it will
security in Norton rather than be Bryant and Stratton.
outside forces." From his ex·
A federal law now allows 18perience with t he troopers, year-olds to vote in all national
Griffin points out that sidearms elections. If 38 states ratify an
are used stricUy for an officer's amendment passed by Congress
self-defense and are only drawn by this November, 1S-year-olds
in extreme cases.
will be eligible to vote in aU
The problems of Norton and elections this year. If not, a
the campus were compared to New York State referendum, to
those "of a small city," by ·be voted on in November, would
Glennon. The troubles here are extend 18-year-olds the vote in
"magnified" by restrictions of all State and local elections
space. This makes "trouble starting in 1972. That referen·
radioactive and it spreads to dum is expected to pass, Board
everyone," he noted.
of Elections officials say.
The local campaign has reGriffin's appointment is part
o! the up-grading of the campus suited in the registrati on of
security system. This began in 4,000 students, including those
neth P . Glennon, director of 1969, Glennon explained, with at u / B. Many of these, says
security, explains. This will free larger allocations for campus William Babcock, election depGlennon to work on policy and security programs. Since then, uty, wouldn't have had the time
security has been separated or initiative to go downtown
administrative matters.
Griffin, a New York State Po- from safety, and Glennon, ap- and register. "We're the first
lice veteran, started his law pointed to head up the security county in the State to do this,"
At the same time, the
• ·
mak ·t
enforcement career straight out section.
Legislature allocated money for he says. "Its JUSt to
e 1
of the service. A friend recom- the new positions of campus se-- easier for the students."
mended police work as a good
job for a sin&amp;le man so he took curity specialist. Fo! .the .~t de~:\!'::' f.:'to:b'i"~ .':..~
the Civil service emm. Nil)e year U / B and li!" C1vil SefVl?' . Babcock. "They think it's a
years later, now with a wile have been working .o!'t details good idea." The only unfavorand three children, he's still a t for !~ new pos!hons _and able response has been from
it. His interest led him to an 9uah~ymg ~xams will be g&gt;ven out-of-county students who
can't register here. ''When you
AA. in police science from Erie m m1d-April.
Community College and to his
go out of town for the sole purcurrent work on a bachelor's
pose of being a student, your
degree in criminal justice at
place of eligibility doesn't
Buffalo State.
(Continued from page 1. col. 4)
change. Some kids have oome
He likes law enforcement
up to me and told me they were
work- "If you want to .work notes. The aim is to eliminate not living with their parents,
competition
and
duplication
bethat they didn't bave any conwith problems, there's no better
place to be," he mainlains. Of tween existing programs . · · nection with them. But that
"to
bave
the
programs
compledoesn't
change a thing."
course, "you don't come out a
One thing which surprised
winner," he sadly admits. He ment one another."
Babcock and the other election
places the blame for some cur- Promotion and Tenure
rent dissatisfaction with police
The subcommittee on faculty deputies was that studeniB seem
work on "enforcing old and out- hiring is concerned with such to know litUe about governdated laws that are based on a matters as the terms .used to ment, or the election process.
20-year-old approach."
hire minority members and the ''They ask us for all kinds of
I..Dcal Experience
adjustments necessary to bring information that we th ought
Most of Griffin's experience ·in large numbers of faculty they knew." Many students, he
is local. As a State trooper, he from these groups . This in- said, are especially uninformed
worked out of the Clarence and eludes the policy on promotion about voting qualifica ti ons ,
Lewiston sub-stations. His work and tenure. White feels it is which are: at least 18 years
in Niagara County included ev- important to remember that old; U.S. citizenshil' or posseserything from the Rainbow minority faculty members "need sion of naturalization papers;
Bridge (where he bad some ex- to assume a far greater number three months ollicial residence
perience with drug arresta) to of non-academic roles than non· in New York State, three
the Tonawanda Indian Reser- minority faculty." This " takes months in Erie County Slld
vation, several small cities and them away from their research,'' · thirty days in their election
lots of litUe towns. Early in his the chairman explains. Thus,. district.
..
.
career he started working with White suggests that these inBabcock says. that be and
youthful offenders, trying to de- dividuals should be evaluated other deputies were-"quite worvelop an atmosphere of trust differenUy when tenure and ried" about coming on this ·c ampus. After bearing stories about
with them and being honest in promotion decisions arise.
his interactions.
'The subcommittee on com- U / B, he said, ''we didn't know
RiJbt now he's imlnen!ed in munity service is studying the what to expect." He found,
meeting people and learni ng ''vast range of .activities the howeVer, that U !B studeniB are
about the campus. lAst Thurs- University can and should be ''much nicer than we espected.
day, he was guest of honor at involved in to build a stronger rm glad we came out here."
a ...,.,ption for members of the community_-in the inner city."
StudeniB wbo want registrastudent governments and both White strongly beHeves that tion ·information can call the
he and Glennon promise to there are ''problema in the in- Election Board ilt 846-7760 or
meet with any students who ner city Which the forces of visit ita ollices at 134 West
education could have a. bearing Eagle, 9 a.m.- to 5 p .m.,. Monwant to talk with them.
From -these conversations and on." Some suggestions for , as- ·\lays p.rougb ,FridaYs, and 9
his own observations, Griffin sistanoe include worbbope for a:m. :to noon on Sa\Urdays.
hopes to become involved "in black and Spanish .busi._,..,
.-t zpatri
·
• -&lt;l- ~
- •
•
the mainstzelun of campus life" and~ tutilrina~
U\.
1
There are "many m1nonty
problema that need to liB 1!1&lt;Robert c. Fitzpatrick is _.,_
is important to his woriL "We plored at this University if it is ing as acting vice president for
can only be as effective as stu- ever ~ing to assume the re- reaearch in the alaoce of Vice
dents want liB to be," he poiniB aponsibilities it abould," White President Raymond Ewell, wbo
says. 'lbe three subcommitteM, is on a ten-month aabbatical.
oul
.
'The new assistant director's he says, are Cllll8ideriq only a
A graduate of the University
- prior esposure to campus prob- · part of the problema.
· of Michigan with bacheJar end
• lema has come mainly from
Specific recommendations master's detiN8a in ac1ence,
~and TV. Asare- from" these subcommittees ~ Fitzpatrick joined U/8 in Sepoult, he s reserving judgment he ezpected "in tiiM!r&amp;l ..,;,a,
!ember 1970, as aaaiatant to
011 many aspects of campus life.
White adds.
EweiJ,

Do_.....

:Orne :'
rovered

!t!'.fwb!:

8VO:BiAnM

AutotatAction
minute tune-ups . , . - the ,._........_ ............,.
two-Mction
oplnst time

-

In the. -nt -

Qloeoon, ~ U/8

Enlli"" -

....
- ........,.._
the - - -lndlldlnl
L,..,
BUG,

F~

-

Minority-

F-

~~~~

,.

Zebulon Taiiltor Heading
Health Sciences SPA Group
Dr. Zebulon Taintor, clinical terials concerning medical and
assistant professor of psychia- dental faculty after SPA was
try, has been named interim chosen to be the bar gaining
chairman of the steering com- agent. The Medical Faculty
mittee of the local Senate Pro- Caucus will continue as an orfessional Associati on (SPA ) ganization. It has provided
chapter for health sciences some of the organ izat ional
teaching and profe&amp;llional staff. framework emerging in SPA for
Dr. Constantine Yeracaris is U / B'S health sciences."
The Health Sciences SPA
steering conunittee chairman of
the SPA chapter for the re- had 98 members as of March
mainder of the University- 18, the steering committee also
the "university center'' chapter. reports.
The health s ciences SPA
steering committee also includes Dr. Charles Lipani, assistant professor, oral diagnosis
and radiology, School of Dentistry; Sarah Marie Cicarelli,
Pi Lambda 'Theta, national
associate professor, medical
technology, School of Health honor and professional organiRelated Professions; Dr. Jack zation for women in education,
announces the competition for
Klingman,~ 8.890ciate professor,
biochemistry; Ruth Walsh, pro- two acholirship aWards - the
fessor, School of Nursing; Dr. Distinguished Research Award
Richard A. Hutchinson, assis- and the Ella Victoria Dobbs
tant professor, School of Pbar· Award.
macy, and ·Larry Drake, assis'The Distinguiahed Research
tant to the dean, School of Award of $100 is given annualDentistry.
ly in recognition of outatand
'The steering committee will ing doctoral research. done by
meet weekly at 4 p.ln. Wednes- 11 woman, that contributes to
days in 148 Capen until the the field of knowledae in edu·
chap~ is fully organimd and
cation. It is not ~ tbat
penD(llli!Ilt officers are elected. the ~nominee•s ~ be in
Any SPA member from the education.
health acienoes lDIIY attend. .
To be eliglbie the nominee
A statement fiom the committee notes that "concern for must have completed her .disorganizations operating .Under sertation on .a campus which
the. Taylor Law has existed in has a chapter of Pi Lambda
health acienoes since 1aat Au- Theta within the year begin·
gust when the Faculty "Council ning July 1. 1970, and .ending
·
of the School of Medicine June 30, 1971.
scheduled presentations by fac'The Ella victoria Dobbs
ulty members from other medi- award of $200 is ~ bical schools in the 1!tate Univer- annually in' recognition of outsity SYBteiD. These meetings led standing published research by
to thelormation of the Medic81- a woman wbo is a mo!mber of
Dental Faculty Organization Pi Lambda 'lbeta. 'lbe reaearch
which retained counael con- musf have '-n piibtiahed in
cerned with medical end dental 1969 or 1970 to be elicible for
faculty pnibJems• and aspira- this year's award. 'The winiling
tions. 'lbe Ioc81 Medical-Dental research is cl..- oa: the basis
Faculty 6rganization met ·with of qUality and originality.
representatives of the: other
Material for both a w a r d s
SUNY medical schools and may he submitted to Dr. ..Jean
lormed the . Me&lt;!ical Faculty Al*ti, ·director ol University
Caucus. Tbi8
was able .to ._,-cb, • 316 Harriman Li.
~t SPA~ basic ma- lbrary. (.;..

WomenEligih,jfor
Sd7o1arship Awards

�"REJloRTER.,

Aiwa 1, 1911

Rathskeller'
.
'

~

::r.::=S:.:L~-

U!Bs Law Faculty Le0as The Nation
T.

n,i~.~7~

A~

•

~c::.:t.:t.~=::-= .1n~-utaVp111g ..H:-rt

figures. Faadty...talf defections
have CODtributed Dl08t -vily _
to the reduced ~ in Other
loca. . _ be - - •"l'b8y .___
the ;:;;;ts of iiOObte inN;;;,
and they &amp;gum it's not safe
enough to enter," be er:plains.

~ t:, ~u:t in~

Rat or other food areas sinCe
the Rec Area ~-

ri!.""!i: ~

lloll
location reporting ~ buainess in
•'-- troubled times is the Deli
&amp;;;i.,.,
in the first floor Fillo - Bozek
And
~ •0........,f
_ts .__,_~
• rts.m· ...__
1
~·
........,_
...,
form of lieliveries and takeouts.

18

3

=

TL,J_:._,.nvul ~~
SetsRules
uru..u::15' uu .L , UO' am ·For. Fee
Use
.

Most people know little about be is ·teaching a regular Law
the law.
Scbool ClDW8e.
Moreowr; law schools and
.
thela'ttleleplto
the ''myste~ profession" it into plain English;" be SBys.
. to ID08t
le
Reis linda "no homogeneous
1S Harlan
Ia~ ·chief contagion" in Qis class of more
Justice of the United States,
~7
S:.,~~
once noted that " . .. there are
Some .
certain f\mdamental ..Otioris of group is ~ on.
times
therelatin'!"tilreg
- to at_
fad!
velopment, ~ certain princi- · ly interesting."
I
L'-'derlie . -"'-'--t
Wa' th o•enn·gs for ---~e~d~~~'~'~tio!-"'n -whi:{: s'h.:::id uates wei I under ';";y:-the
auu~ .. a
becom'e a part of the intelleo- School of Law is mulling the
tual equipment of every intelli&amp;ent citizen."

.!'~~""r.!:' 0~

l'S"_;.,

Bozek baa bad to lay off three
1n an effort to let law become
Rathskeller employees and has part of the undergraduate's ~'incut back the hours of others. tellectual equipment," the Fac•
1
ba
1
Full-time empaoyees
ve 06t ulty of law and JUrisprudence
about three hours a week. 'he has been quietly er:paoding its
41&amp;y&amp;,who and_~IUden~L~ployees,on Wldergraduate offeiings.
__,..!!..~ba·~of.los....,t abouworkt an . Fl~~~
..
- ~uate&amp;rstEtlofttune' a law
,._....., ~ and
half
"""
...,
an
oneschool has ..Ver made a !X'D. •L- certed effort to develop a full
M ore , •• ...-. may be m
...., undergraduate program," BBys
off'1111, BozeiCBBys, mostly' stu- , Robert L Rejs, professor of law,
dent employees since .the full- who admits frankly he Will&gt;
time workers' loads have been · lured to U / B by the prospect
- cut as much as possible. ~ . of teaching undergraduates.
SBys be has beard only mild
William R. Greiner, a law
complaints from workers wboae professor- and chairman of the
-hours were slali1ied. Most, ~ Legal Studies Program, recalls
BBYS. are happy to get out or that the effort began four years
Nor-ton 4tBTiier. "'Ibey don't ago when he was asked to teach
want to walk across campus at a single course for undergradunight," be SBys. "We've bad ates "IntroduCtion tO Law and
trouble ~Pol people to work
'
" H d
the coff: 'hou~es on Friday !!:it!:~!,:;:,e::;.~l~gm~
nights, for elllllDple." ·~·
to a basic aocia1 science oourse."
Despite the new policy 1&gt;f
Since 1967 ·the course, also
shortened hours, Bozek says known as Law 201 has been
•
- ·bte offered at least once• or twice a
the Rat's closing
w·ill be 8eii
until the Rec Area re-opens. year and sometimes in Summer
"We'll play it by ear and see Sessions It's been a popular
·what happens," be says. "Like co~last semester about 250
two weeks ago we were fP!ing undergraduates were enrolled.
to close early, but the presadent
With that as a start, other
of the Graduate Student Aaso- courses have been added until
ciation called me and asked me now-at least five undergraduate
1&lt;&gt; stay open since a l~t was courses are offered each year,
going on in Norton. I dad and and some 10 different courses
we took in a whopping $13.50 have been offered since 1967.
in a two-hour period."
Courses have dealt with issues of the day - Women and
Student Petition •
Students have circulated a the Law, Drugs and the Law,
petition in the Rat, urging it to Resource Allocation - as well
go back to its midnight cl06ing as with more basic areas such
on Saturdays and Sundays. as Criminal Law.
However, Bozek says he hasn't
'The law faculty does not at
received any petitions and that the moment contemplate offerthey wouldn't do much good. ing an undergraduate major. Its
'The only way "the students aim rather is to "introduce un·can convince us to keep it open dergraduates to law and legal
~ lis) by using it," be says.
reasoning, to the problems that
Norton Hall Food Services lawyers think about, to the
are seU-supJ&gt;orting, Bozek functions and limita~~ns of ~w
notes, receivmg no funds from 'llld legal processes, expi8.1I1S
Albany, Sub Board I, or the Mr. Greiner.
. .
Student Association, as do oth''The courses are more to IPYe
er Norton functions. If the de- people a feel for what legal iscreases in business continue, sues are; whether or not . the
Bozek says he might bav.e to students are interested in puraeek help from some of these suing law is another thing,"
apmciea.
'
.
Greiner adds.
.
'The Tower and Goodyear Not Pre-Low Coul'lft
Hall snack bars .are remaining
All those involved in the Leopen after the Rat ~ on gal Studies Program agree that
Fridays and Sundays. Both the coui'ae!l offered .are not ·~reare open until 11 p.m. on Fri- law" COI11'8e8. ''I don't think
days T.....,. closes at midnight students ahould expect that
on Sunday and Goodyear, at dMa courses will help them
11·30 p.m. Both are ~ on into law school or belp them
Saturdays. Tower, especially, if' they go to law acbool," BBys
has been doing increased Fri- Professor Robert B. Fleming,day night business lately, Bo- the University advocate. Plem. zeit• SBys, and may stay open ing taught lillroduction to. Law
later then and on Saturdays. · last _semester.
'The Norton Recreation Area'
All 'the professors agree that
might nH&gt;peD after Spring Re- teaching undergraduates is an
oeoa. Robert Henderaon, asais- exciting proposition . ''It's a
tant director of Norton, says beDeat to us," says -Professor
his-staff is tey_inJ to formulate Greiner. "You Jind you're
a aludellt mmty team pro- teaching a pretty .serious and
gram wbid) was approved in dedicated bunch."
principle in last week's Campus
~"" Ol!ioyed it," adds Pro-referendum. · "We're trying .to feii!m Fleinilig. _"' primarily
· determine how many we'lt wanted to get to know some
Deed, whilt 'boors they abould lUlderpaduio~ aDd · grit to
·.work,
I1Dd wbat ~ ~ ~
:..t,;, teaches
8111
M - : = ~ Ralbsllallei- "Ploblems ol ~viromnental
is slated to dose at g:_p.m. 1!&gt;- ~ 7" a . "!'"""". popular
monow I1Dd 7 p.m. Saturday wath enganeer1ntliludents- nilhl It will not re-open until I ftijds that he is "twicle as tired"
Monday, April 12.
after fea!lhinc that coune than

!,"""'week:

-..u-

'k.::

W:i~'!i!i' ~~;

::!"

lah;;.tory~

!

SUNY-Board

';!t2;:

re:

:"ctin"':'!fiffa:...:~y~i~':e:::"'

possibility of offering cletl.to people who do not intend to
practice law. For elllllDple, an
=t
need to know a good deal of
law for a specialty in their profession. Policemen and social
workers might also benefit from
taking such courses, it has been
suggested.
But that's all in the future.
For now the law faculty is
row! to be kn
for its com
!:.itment to un=...duate edu:
cation.

:::.:::

!ci..':.~J: ~on, b;~v~

12'5th- Calendar

APRIL lli
APRIL 23-24

APRIL 30

FOSTER LECTURE SERIES

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

141

J. C.lvln Glcldlnp, University of Utah
BLOCK B DINNER.
Hea.um- Monor
RACHEL CARSON COI.l£Gf SYMPOSIUM.

~=~t!,lel~ ~-=.;!;

United Stoles. Co-sponsored 111 Division
of ContlnuiiJI Ed.-tlon.
ALUMNI DINNER-DANCE.
School of Mo._.,.m

APRIL 30- MAY
MAY 1
MAY I
MAY 2
MAY 2
MAY 3-9
MAY 6
MAY 11

MAY 14-15
MAY 28
JUNE 4
SEPTEMBER
SEPTEMBER 17
SEPTEMBER 26
SEPTEMBER 30
OCTOBER
OCTOBER 5-6
OCTOBER 11-9
OCTOBER
OCTOBER 20-23
OCTOBER 'Z7
OCTOBER

NOVEMBER 2-5

34th ANNUAL U/B ALUMNI DF THE
SCHOOL DF MEDICINE SPRING CUNIC.
Statler Hilton Holal
INFORMATION AND UBRARY SCIENCE
WORKSHOP.
SHORT COURSE DA)'.
DeporllMnt of Statistics
UNIVERSITY OPEH HOUSE
"-·
SCHOOL OF NU""'IIIl.
(E-Ins .._....,)
SP'RING ARTS FESTIVAL
SCHOOL DF PHARMACY ALUMNI SPRING
CLINIC DAY AND BANQUET.
Exec:utlve Romodo Inn
FOUNDER;S DAY
.
10:30 o.m. - Ceremony oncl unveiling
of Historicol Ploque on site of first
building of the University - Moln ond
Vir&amp;inio
12:00 n-odicol School luncheon,
Bu11aio Club
3:00 p.m. - Comerstone-loylng. low
ond Jurisprudence Bulldln~o Amherst
C.mpus
7:00p.m.- Soclol Hour- Hurthstone
Monor (cosh bllr)
8:00 p.m. - 125th Annlverury Founder'o Day llonquot, HeartiJotone Monor
DIVISION DF CONTINUING EDUCATION
SYMPOSIUM.
"Toword An Open University.''
!25th ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT.
10:30 o.m., Rotary Field
U/B GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
ANNUAL MEETING AND DINNER.
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS SYMPOSIUM ''Communlcotlono"
ORIENTATION OF NEW FACULTY.
Gooclyur 10, 7 p.m.
WOMEN'S CWB TEA.
SCHOOL DF PHARMACY SYMPOSIUM
COLLEGIATE ASSEMBLY SYMPOSIUM
C. P. s.SCHOOL OF DEHTISTRY SYMPOSIUM
DIVISION OF PHYSICAl EDUCATION,
RECREATION AND ATHLETICS
SYMPOSIUM.
FEHTON LECTURE SERIES
"Compr-- MediQI Care"
HEALTH RELATED PROFESSIONS
SYMPOSIUM
FACULTY OF EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
SYMPOSIUM.
SLE£ LECTURE - DISTINGUISHED VISITING LECTURER
SERIES-4'oallly of-&amp;
_ _ . FNd tto,to,
F.R.S., of
of ~-

1-

NOVEMBER 9-10

IC8I AolrDnclmJ, u.-.o~ty
brldp
C. C. FU!INAS C0NFERENCL

DECEMBER 4

-EN'S

_

suWYU~~~Offi!t~. !:ill

make it possible for students to
prepare budgets in support of
student activities for the 197172 academic year.
. In announcing the action;
Chancellor Ernest L . Boyer
said there will be a vote this
spring by students to determine
whether fees collected on each
will be
1 t
campus
vo un ary or

li&lt;l,:'~pus

1971
APRIL 12·16

'The State UniversitY Board
of Trustees last week adopted
roced
ning collec
sp&lt;!ndint of
student activaty funds at the
University's 'Z1 State-operated

of Corn-

c.ntar for , _ -.....,.

ewe· BALL

NOTE

other focllltles, ochoolo end d e p o - ore now plonnlna pro1111m1 ond oympooio. ~ will be onnoui!C*I In the Mxl
111ue ·of. the calendor. Groupo ore urpd ID call the Olllce of
the Vlco PNoidont for !lnlverslty Relo\lons ID ochodua, their
ond -"''"" lor the 125th Ann...,.ry. The ..-r
cole!KIIor will be kept In 186 ~ Holl, Ext. 4501.

votes for vo1un
. tary collection, payment of student activity fees at registration
will be up to the individual stu- dents, and students themselves
will be
'bl t b d-t
ing and~~ u e- A more complex system was
outlined for mandatory fees :
If a mandatory fee is voted,
every student will be required
- trs

~o:n~:~~ ~ ~

used to support programs within guidelines specified by the
Trustees.
Under a mandatory arrange'd
ment, each campus pres• ent
will review budgets prepared by
the student government to determine that allocations and
subsequent disbursements are
in compliance with Trustee
po~~cellor Boyer said his ofbe unif
fiscal
lice will prescri
orm
and
accounting
piooedures fees
for
use in
handling mandatory
b ' the tud t
romeo•· in
Y
s
en gove
"" ~~~~df::"yisions for an anA special campus review
board will be established on
each campus to consider proposed items which the president determines are not consistent with Trustee policy.
The review board will be
composed of eight members,
four chosen by the student govemment and four appointed by
the campus administration.
The new· policy · designates
those specific areas of activity
considered to be "for the benefit of the campus community"
and which can be supported by
mandatory fees. These include :
Programs of cultural and educational enrichment, recreationa! and aocia1 activities, tutorial programs, intramural and
intercollegisteathletics,stu~t
publications and other med111,
assistance to recognized student
organizations, insurance and
transportation service related to
the conduct of these programs,
and reimbursement to student
officers for service to student
government.
A student who may be unable to pay the inandatory fee
because of financilll hardship
will be allowed to register subject to later review of his case.

Summer Housing
'The University Housing Office will provide space in campus residence balls for short
periods during the summer for
new faculty members who have
come to Buffalo &lt;to look for
housing.
.
Space will be available 1U1ti1
AlllllSt 'Zl, at which time the
residence balls will be closed
for September preparations.
Current rates are $4 per
day· or $21 per week. aingle
oc:aipancy, including linen and
daily maid service. Rates are
subject to c:bance~ts .wishing to arrange such accommodations for
new faculty or staff members
are asked to call the Clement
Deat, 4140, for rmervations.

�April I, 1911

GREPORTER._,

4

Borst Identifies A rFullMoon Syndrome~·
.More Love, Births; Restlessness, Insomnia

(Wllf' &amp;.(Magic' Seen
As Apt Course Titles
'10

I

ma mrroa:
~th

solicit your support in developing interest
within the University c:ommu-'
nity in the following aequence
o1 COIII'M8 designed to start students on the right track in
studies of the enviroomenl
1. COUBR TITlE: WOLF!
COUEB l"'IUlAT: One threehour I~ per week alternating with three one-hour lectures per week during which
the cry WOLF! will provide the
central theme. The fonnst balances intensity and reinforcement frequency leading toward
de-sensitization to the ,cry
WOLF!
couaa: oBJECI'IVES: De-sensitization to the cry WOLF! by
ex""""ive repetition of the cry
in a setting and manner which
prohibit any effective or rational response or thought. Special efforts will be made to
achieve independence of the
loudness and insistence of the
from the constraints of reality. The cry will be sounded
with diligent desperation, e.g.
upon the showing of pictures
of wolves, foxes, dogs. and rabbits; upon the display of wolf
hairs, human hairs, lambs'
wool, ostrich feathers, and goldfish scales; and upon the writing of the word W-0-IrF, or
C-A-T, or M-A-M-A, or
L-0-V-E . Cry-hollowness enhancement techniques will be
·explored and practiced. After
initial de-sensitization, a cappella chanting of WOLF! will
achieve reinforcement, hopefully bordering on complete immunization. Towards the end of
the semester, "Maat.ers of the
Hollow Cry" will be brought in
as guest sounders. The final examination will consist of demonstrating ability to sleep (o.t
least fitfully ) through a recorded crying of WOLF (tske-home
exam if desired ) .
2. COURSE TITLE: WOLF!
WOLF!
COURSE FOIUlAT : Independent
study and solo concert soundings of the cry WOLF! WOLF!
Attendance at fellow students'
concerts is obligatory.
COURSE OBJECTIVE: Total inWOLF!
sensitivity to the
or WOLF! WOL~ despite
sounder's technique . Course
will be considered sstisfactorily
completed when, under the influence of the continuous cry of
WOLF! WOLF!, the student.is
able to ignore being devoured
by a wolf.
3. coURSE TrTLE: MAGIC
COURSE FORMAT : Lectures.
Environmental problems will be
discussed in detail without referring to the .earth. Water will
be studied as a product of
plumbing systems . Building
collapse will be studied independent of the material surrounding or moving. their foundations. Pollution by ~
of solid or liquid wastes wrll be
studied as though nothing could
happen to them if they are lower than the soles of our feet,

err

and as though there were no
interactions except in man-

~BJ~t~.!-

vince the student that the environment of man is unrelated
to the earth (except insofar as
it supports the soles of his

The""""' w 10M
And the PleitxU iet,

"o

R= ~~~o--7-=.~No-.-7

Millnillhlwnilh:
Time pa-.on

AndAJ!!~LJ.d

-&amp;ppho, 7th ceniiU')' B.C.
According .to Dr. Lyle Borst,

prof_,. of pbyalcs and astzon-

GVIEWPOINTS
The Roponor ' - on .,...
to pnMcle a foNm for the • ·
~ of on a -variety
of the faclna the community. W. - . . . position

papers and -

..

-

permiiL
" - ' - to this and ID all points ara -lcomod by the oclltorln-chlef, up to an established
limit of nine ~n cloubleopacocl - · Most can likely be
&amp;hortar.

feet ), that anything that disappears below the surface he
sees becomes involved in mys-.
terious, unknowable processes,
and that of the elements- fire,
nir, water, and earth- the last
is out of sight and what goes
on there is magicaL
I suggest that these courses
might be taught by the Department of Geological Sciences,
because the indications seem to
be that they would be popular
and would reinforce widely held
convictions. Furthermore, there
may be no other wsy to make
the University community
·aware of the fact that there exists a group who study the
Earth (in addition to being
concerned about it).
-PAUL H. REITAN
Professor, Geological
Sciences

Goldrush Film
The staff of the Instructional
Communication Ce nter's tele-vision studio and Dr. Reginald
Pegrum, professor emeritus,
Department of Geological Sciences, have produced a 4Q..
minute videotape of the "Goldrush of 1898."
Drawing upon local history,
Dr. Pegrum traces the movement of men and supplies into
gold fields of Alaska. The audience is led from town to town
and from campsite to campsite.
A narration, with poems, music
and pictures, depicts the men,
living conditions, and the methods of extracting gold.
The visual material for the
presentation came from original
photographs of the late 1890's
and early 1900's. The pictures
were photographed and then
printed ontO fine-grained positive film for slide projection. A
rear screen projection aystem
was used to project the slides
behind Dr. Pegrum as he sst
·on an elevated stage in the
studio.
·

GREPORTER_,

·--

A.. JP'BSrL.Sr ll.O'WLMID

rs.S:~~JUto
JUI~

ROIIaRt' T. MARIZTr

W.-Jp ~Nt-'/r~:-ple &amp;fltor
A.rl -A..
- Prod.:don
JOHN
CLOUTI.R
~adhor

SUSAN

--

By SUZANNE METZGER

G~NWOOD

sruoaNT .,.,AIRS aDITOR: s,_. z...;pn..
•
CXJNTRJButiiiO •DtroRS: 1 - R. De.S.nd., Clwit J[,yaM, Rob.n S. lld:lnft.
...... ~ l'ahlltO, Ilk* Sdrwab.
•
CONTIUBUTINO ARTIST: SUMr! M. Bur. . .

omy, empmcai evidence dem-

onstrates that man bas a at.ong
prefereooe for love during the
full moon. More babies are born
during the full moon, and, he
adda, some people experience
increased restle&amp;!lllmS and insomnia during this time.
Dr. Borst presented his case
for " Biological Astronomy" at
the Center for Theoretical Bi·
ology Seminar on March 25.
A connection between the
rising and setting of the sun
and human functioning is apparent, points out Dr. Borsl
"Man wakes in the morning,
his blood pressure rises; he bas
a nocturnal reproductive system." And, he adds there is a
yearly correlation of activity in
man. "If there is a diurnal cycle
and an armual cycle, is there a
correlation with the lunar cycle?" asks Dr. Borsl
'
Famous March Men

"An unusual number of fs.
mous men were bom·in March;
and June is the month of
brides." He adda, we shouldn't
discount the Roman traditions
which advised wedding at the
full moon, or the Scottish folklore dictum , "no moon. no
man," which refers to the probability of survival of a child
born at the time of the full
moon. And few poets have ignored the relationship between
a full moon and romanoe.
Dr. Borst points out that during the full moon, asylums put
extra restrictions on their patients (the word lw&gt;atic means
moon-struck ) , and the full
moon is circled on the calendar
of hospital obstetrics warda,
"though obstetricians don't acknowledge the rise in births
during this period."
For centuries, man has reoog~
nized a correlation between the
reproductive activity of marine
invertebrates and high tide,
which occurs during the full
moon. "Aristotle himself noted
this in oysters and clams. It's
probably because high tide ensures the best distribution of
their offspring," explains Dr.
Borsl The diurnal rings of
ocean coral also indicate a reproductive correlation with the
phase of full moon.
Darwinian SUrvival

275

270

265

Chllrt ..... Wrth peak nine rnontM

environmental event that alfecls
man's behavior. Dr. Borst feels
there is good reason to conelude that during significant
social events, man bas a tendency to reproduce. During the
New York City power failure,
Manhattan was in darkness the
whole night, and surrounding
boroughs for part of the nighl
Dr. Borst studied the live births
in five Manhattan hospitals, divided the number by the total
number of births per day in
New York City, and normal·

~ ,..:.',tH~rtaor.

ized the percentage of births in

the Manhattan hospitals to the
number of birtlis in the whole
city. He found that on the 27oth
day after the blackout, there
was a 30 per cent rise in birth
rate.
-.
In another remarkable study
of birth statistics following the
Pearl Harbor attack, Dr. Borst,
using ·published lists of live
legitimate births in the city of
Bu1falo, found a marked increase in birth rate on .the
268th day after the event.

DisadvantagOO Prvgram Cuts
OppoSed by~ aixl SUCB
U/ B
Buffalo State have grants, worlt«udy, and loans
expressed oflicial
about to """""'"*'t their
cuts in State educa- reaources, and a reduction in
and

concern

own

-r

According tq Dr. Borst, the p~
li¥bt of the full moon bas Dar- tional progtams for the dis- the averaae amount available to
them can markedly reduce the
Winian survival implications, in advantaged. .
In a joint statement issued number able to continue their
terms of the primitive situation.
last
week,
Presidents
Robert
L
education
or do so 8\ICCI!II&amp;In the brightness, it was easier
to find one's mate, and the pre- Ketter and E. 'K. Fre~ Jr., fully."
endoraed
"maintaining
at
least
historic mother at term could
more readily locate her lair the current lew! of financial aid
and find protecti011 from the for the students in these pro, gr&amp;ms."
elementa.
•
The joint presidential stateGetting down to the statistics, Dr. Borst cited the study ment said:
Dr. Burvil H.
Univer"Both the State University
of an M.D. who analyzed 11
years of birth recorda in New of New York at Bu1falo and sity manrhal, bas aslr.ed depertYork City, indudjng 500,000 the Stata University Col.Jeae at men'ts to urp both faadty and
live births, and fowld that there Buffalo have found a great students to perticlpete in the '
was a significant rise in the sOurce of pride and eooourqe. 126th Annual
May 28.
.
~t in, the 8I1ClCI!II8 of our sturates during the full moon.
Another experiment, whic:h dents from disadvantqed beckThe Commencement ComDr. Borst calls "interesting &amp;J!d grounds. T!le vast mQority ol mittee, he aaya, ill makiq fN·
indicative," wss conductad m these stude.n ts have demon- ery ellori "to reco1nize the
Florida with lemurs. The pri- strated above averaae ac:hieve- ...m...-ta ol the students
mallls were divided into two ~t, and the communities in and to mair.e the cooduding
colonies- one of which wss whic:h they will reside upon IM&gt;Ilt of their .-lemic year
"""-1 in a building with a graduation will be enriched and one which they i:an be pioud
aoutbern exposure, the other in strengthened by their pieeence. lo participate •in."
"We express great COIICI!ri1,
one with a northern exposure.
During the full moon, thoao! in however, about reff!l'enc:al cur- • 'I1&gt;ere is a .-!, Gleinn says.
the aouthem aJlony cll.l8lllll'ed rently being made in the State for voluntea- manbaia to lead.
topther, wbile the northern Legislature and elsewhere about candidates in the academic prOgroup " ' - ! no such activity, poesibly reducing finulcial aid coasioaai, to "hood" doctoral
"because the moon didn't shine lunda for students in Educa- candidates and to aid in other
tional Opportunity Programs. matters. At least one faculty
into their room."
EconomiC8lly disadvantaged volunteer for eac:h department
EliKb
T!leEmllronmantal
full moon isn't the only students use a combination of is beinJ aoughl . '

Partitipatimln

GroduationAskRxf,
rne.:m,

c-t.

�Aprill, l911

and

GREPORTER..:,

Creativity, Color- Canvas Transform
Old F~ry W~ intol\rt Studio
............,
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

.

Tberil'e D01hing on !lie outaide tD, distinguish the faclury
.. IIJlythina special The familiar large windows are so dirty
tha~ you have tD cup your
haDds tD see IDside. 'nle walla
are paiuled • o8rvlceable 81111 I"IY· And, of course. grimy
asphalt paths CIIIIIII!Ct the several bulldinp on the site. But
apDAA,.,...._. as usual, are decefving-;-..Dd this particular factory on Elmwood Avenue is
actuaJiy an art studio.
When their quarters became
cramped at Ridge U... the Art
Department "lllted space here
lor advanced sludents.
Thirty-two undergraduates
and grad students paint in the
old warehouse area, surrounded
by finished canvases and exposed beams.
The area, at first glance,
wouldn't win any beauty
awarils. The floor is rold roncrete and the windows look out
on a weed filled lot, bordered
by a railroad trsck. Plastic
sheets rover grimy panes of
glass to diffuse the hari;h alternoon sunlight. But then! is
beauty- in . the paintings and
in the atmosphere of the place:
Because of the "large area and
high ceilings, there's a. feeling
of "anything goes." The ·only
reslricti&lt;in which S e y m o u r
Drumlevitch, instructor lor the
group of artists, places on the
s ize of art work is "can you
get it in the door?" As a result,
canvases vary from super-huge
to .small, With an eight-loot
long, one-foot wide canvas in
he tween.
There'o Color

More than anything else,
there's color. One huge canvas
leaning against a wall offers
bands of sky blue, shocking
pink, muted orange, and canary yellow. On another wall,
small flecks of yellow, orange
and blue hi~ght a group of
grey and white men staring out

'
of a painting. In a romer,
a
woman formed from abstrsot
shapes of rolor creates .on canvas a modern-day stained glass
window. The light seems to
come from behind the painting
and shine through ·each section o( rolor. .
There are . shapes in the
studio, too. Large, bright hard
edge acrylics feature h u g e
squares of maroon or circles of
yellow. Other works are rom·
posed of muslin, ironed and
sewn toge ther and then
stretched into hard edge geomelric shapes united by rolor
but separated into rectangles,
triangles and squares within the
frame.
Here Since Thanklglvlna

Students have been working
here since Thanksgiving. There
are paints and canvases waiting to be stretched. Rolls of
masking tape. Each unfinished
canvas has its rompanion metal
cart loaded with half empty
paint tubes and jars, notebooks
and tubs of water. Most of the
tiine t here's a determined feel-

ing, ''Quiet, artist at work," but
without the restricted "hush!"
memories of a library. It's quiet
simply because no one has anything to say-it's more important •to paint.
The s tudents like it here.
Ridge Lea was too ronfining,
they say, "no feeling of space,
only limitations." D rumlevitch
reasons that "artists don' t func-

- .~ r
tion in institutionalized space,"
and the factory, with its "inspirational" ai r is much Detter.
The ex tra room also allows s tudents to keep finished paintings around- to refer to, examine and change. or rourse,
the place has none of tl'le frills
of Rid ge Lea. But these things
don't matte r as much as
to move around in without
brushing up against another

room

Some Lake Erie Fish Exceed Safe Mercury Level
By AUGUST PATUTO .
Some commercial fish in Lake
Erie contain mercury poison in
ex:oess of federal standards.
Dr. K. K. S. Pillay, senior
research scientist for the Westem New York Nuclear Reaeardt Center at the University
made the disclosure yesterday
at the 161Bt national meeting of
the American Cheinical Society
·
in Las Angeles.
Dr. PiJiay is bead of a reaeardt team which is ronducting a five-year study of Lake
Erie. Witlf funds provided by ·
the "Ilepartment ar the Intenor,
Dr. Pillay's team has run tests
on some 700 fish samples about one ton - as well as on
sediment, plankton, and water
sampies taken from more than
a dozen points in the lake since

APril.

1970.

l l .,...,.

s.-o

The fish samples, which cover 11 i:lilferent species, were
chemically broken .down and
made -l&amp;dioactive for testing at
the U /B nuclear reactor. Some
of . the group's initial findings
were: .
• In some fish sam·ples,
namely specimens from the
western and central lake basins.
• mercury leVels were in ·excess
of the federal standard of 0.5
ppm ( parts per million).
• The level of mercury . is
greater in fish from the western
s ect ion of the lake, and de-

creases as you move towards
the eastern section of the lake.
.• At the mouth of the Buffalo River, the mercury level in
sediments, plankton, and algae
was the same in January, 1971,
as it was six months earlier
when one industria l polluter
there was closed down by government order.

• Sediments taken from at
least a foot below the bottom
of the lake contained mercury,
which indicates the poison has
been accumulating there lor a
long time. This also means that
even if mercury pollution of the
lake were stopped today it
would take a long time for the
lake to recover from it.
Dr. Pillay said. in some samples mercury content was 0.8
ppm. But, "he added, how dangerous this might be is uncertain at this time. The governmer&gt;.! standard of 0.5 ppm.; he
said, was "chosen arbitnuily
and baaed on insufficient informatiOn" on mercury poisoning
in humans. ,.,
A greater number of industrial polluters on the western
end of the lake. said Dr. Pillay,
acrounts for the fact that mercury levels are highest there.
At the mouth of the Detroit
River, said Dr. Pillay, one especislly lar1111 mercurY polluter is
located. The river feeds directly into the northwest romer of
Lake Erie.

Br11ln Tissue Studles
The U / B nuclear facility ,
In conjunction with the lake said Dr. Pillay, is one of the
study, s ci e nti sts at the U / B few in the world that can perM e dical School h a ve b ee n form this type of research so
studying human brain tissue to accurately.
In the roming months, the
learn more abou t mercury poi·
scientists will test samples for
soning.
Some of their find ings were: other types of materials, said
• Not one of the subjects Dr. Pillay, with selenium and
tested was without mercury in cadmium getting immediate
priority. Cadmium recently was
his brain tissue.
blamed for a number of food
• The highest level of the poisoning cases in Japan. The
mercury was found in the cere- program will rontinue through
bellum, that part of the brain June, 1975, by a $29,000 grant
which control s the voluntary from the Department of Interuse o( muscles.
ior's Bureau of Sport Fisheries
• The pons, a bundle or nerve and Wildlife.
fibers in the mid-brain, had the
Also taking part in the projnext highest level of mercury. ect are Dr. E. J . Massaro, BioWhite matter in the brain ron- chemistry; Drs . Chester A . ·
tains the least amount of mer- Glomski and Haro ld Brody ,
cury.
Medical School; Dr. E . SweeThe significance or these ·ney, director of Buffalo State's
findings is unclear at this time, Great Lakes Laboratory, and
said Dr. Pillay. However, he · Charles ·c . Tbomas Jr., James
noted a tendency for brain tis- A. Sondel, and Carolyn M .
sue to accumulate and bold Hyche, junior research scienmercury. .
tists• at the Nuclear Research
Some 65 samples of brain Center.
tiasuj! were tested. 'I}&gt;ey were
tal&lt;eli from eillht autopey subSPRING RECESS
jects. all Bulfalo ·'residents, The University's Spring Recess be·
ranging in age "from 50 to 80 gins at the cloa of classes, Saturyears. The "scientists, however, day. April 3. Classes resume Mon·
also tested brain tissue from a day, April 12. and continue through
still-born baby 81111 found mer- Tuesday, May 11. the fall day of
cury. This. said D'r. Pillay , instruction for the spring semes·
tends to support the theory ter. Spring finals are scheduled for
tliat pregnant women transmit Friday, May 14. through Monday,
mercury from their. systems to May 24.
!Heir offspring.

painter.
Then, too, there's the feeling
freedollj. Students rome and
go as they please. They may
work late a t night or early
in the morning. The numbers
of artists usually build on Monday and Wedne s day afternoons, ·t hough, lor that's when
Drumlevitch appears and the
paintings a re critiqued.
o(

Drug Abuse

Play Contest
A contest lor a new one-act
educational play on drug abuse
is being sponsored by the Mental Health Aaaociation of Erie
County and the Erie Cotmty
Department of Mental Health.
Deadline for entries in the
open rompetition is June 15.
The prize is $100 and the winning play will be performed
during September 1971 bY the
Rooftop Players. It wilf also
be published by the Mental
Health Aaaocistion and "advertised nationally with recognition for the author."
.
Contest rula; stipulate that
the play must dramatize the
dangers of drug abuse, illustrste the personal motivations
underlying drug addiction. 81111
raise issues and questions regarding the problem as a stimulus for audience diseuasion
after a performance.
Each play will be judged on
its dramatic appeal and accuracy of information. Judfl'I!S will
include 1ocal experts on drug
problems. theatre rep._.matives and members of the
Mental Health As sociation
board ar directors.
Further information is available from S . L. Perry, administrstor, Mental Health Association of E rie County, 220 Delaware Avenue, Suite 209, Buffalo 1~.

�. . 1, 1P11

6

. A worbbop "to esplore the
relations among and b e poups and individuals in organizational aettinp" will be
held at the Faculty Club, April
U-25, under "-rshiP of the
departments of Psychology and
Sociology and the Policy Sci- Open
Propam.
to anyone who is 0&lt;
will be in a position of responsibility and leadership, the

event
is desicned to help its
participants leam about the na-

U/B tSharesthe Poets' .
With Area High Schools
'""' "share the poets" pro-

~rC:.A~.ral~ 21:. ~

ina poets available to area high
school English classes has
drawn "'responsive, ezcited" re-.
actions from studef11s, accord·
ina to Mrs. Esther Swartz, ....
sistant to the president for cultural aftairB.
The program, under way
since the beginning of March,
has already brought two visiting poets to local schools.
Carolyn Kizer, author of
Knock Upon Silence and The
Ungrute{ul Garden, spoke before two double sessions at Riverside High School March 1,
then gave a public reading of
her works in Diefendorf Hall
on campus the same night.
Last week, Mrs . Shirley
Kaufman, United States Award
Winner at the International Poetry Forum for 1969, preceded
her campus visit with stops at
Bennett, Kensington and Williamsville high schools.
'Ibe series is sponsored by
the Poetry Committee of the
University's Department of
English. 'Ibe New York State
Council of the Arts picks up
the tab.
'Ibe high school sessions, for
the most part, are informal
readings and discussions con-

ducted during a regular class
period.
Interested students, said Mrs.
Swartz, msy work out planned
"r.e lease time" to allow thero to
attend sessions at pther schools.
School ot6cia1s have caught
the enthusiasm. Mrs . Ouida
Clapp, director of language arts
in the Buffalo city schools, has
a waiting list of at least 10
senior high schools who would
be "very happy to have the .
poets." Mr. Buehl Ray, supervisor of English, sat in on the
Bennett session and found response "very favorable. It's a
wonderful opportunity for students not only to bear the poem
read, but also to speak with the
poet to learn how the poem
comes from the bead and gets
onto the· paper."
'Ibe only problem now, says
Mrs. Swartz, is the need "for
more poets."
Un'der the current series,
black poet AI Young will visit
April 21, with one high school
stop tentatively scheduled.· The
New York Citr Department of
C'ultural Affa1rs will sponsor
two other poets in April and
May. In addition , some of
U j B's faculty-poets msy also
be incorporated into the program, Mrs. Swartz says.

CollRge Teachers Gasp As

Instructor Strips for Yoga
Students in the Seminar for
College Teaching were shocked
recently.
When they entered their
da.room, a woman sat on a
J'UI in front of the class. As the
students were seated the woman
stood up and pronounced, "I'm
uncomfortable."
As the class members gulped
and gasped she started to tske
oiJ. her clothes . . . strippina
down to leotsrds. Then she began to lead the class in yoga
eserciaeB. When that was accomplished
she asked class members how
they felt.
_.More relaxed,,. "quiet,"
''!ested," were the replies.
"What d... this have to do
with oolJege teaching?" she
asked.
'lbe c:lail!.- which inc I udes
. . col1eJe teachers, Calh&lt;&gt;~
oollege( teacher&amp; (including
aome nuus), and some Canadl-·
an oolJege teachers, diacwoaed
the~

Dr. Ruth Heintz, a msth inslrul:tot at Buftalo Stats, told
lbe due she
~ to help
._ to terms with ber...,_ 8be &amp;. not u.:h yoga
to -th " ' - but abe
&amp;. aUribule IIIIlCh of ta 8111&gt;
. - • a CXIIIep lea&lt;Mr to her
OWD aelf-awarenees. And be- ill blotter
. . . .able
- ID "draw
·cl henelf
.._
out"
amh ............ to them

m-

ture of intergroup relations.
In any group "people are
faced with problems of rep,....
aenting others; 0&lt; exercising ,....
sponsibility on behalf of others;
or delegating authority; or
drawing and crossing bounilaries; or choosing to lead and to
follow; or not to lead and not to
follow," Dr. Barbara Bunker,
workshop coordinator, says. It
is these processes that will be
studied durina the two-day conference.
There will be no special attempt to prescribe what anyone
should learn at the Saturday
and Sunday sessions. n.e fOCIIB
will merely be on the problems
of "more responsible leadership
and followership."
Participants at the conference
will form groups to work on
tasks. A given task can be
handled either by the single
group or by the coordination of
several groups. While a task is
being performed, groups will be
observed by consultants who
will discuss what · is happening
with individual members.
After two such group tssks,
a mid~workshop discussion aes..
sion will consider theoretical
concepts of group relations .
Late Sunday afternoon, after
eight group sessions, the workshop will be evaluated at a
plenary review. A final discussion group will follow to examine unresolved workshop
problems. Practical applications
of the conference will also be
discussed.
Members of the workshop's
professional staff will be: Dr.
Laurence J. Gould, assistant
professor of psychology, City
College of CUNY; Dr. Edward
B. Klein, associate professor of
psychology and psychiatry,
Yale School of Medicine; and
Dr. Garrett O'Connor, assistant
professor, psychiatry, Johns
Hopkins University School of
Medicine.
Fee for the workshop is $45,
which includes refreshments
during coffee breaks. Partial
scholarships of $20 are available for full-time students. Applications msy be obtained from
Mrs. Joan Kljtz in the Psychology Department office, room C
17, 4230 Ridge Lea. Additional
information may be obtained
from Dr. Bunker at ext. 1386.
Deadline for applications is
April 15.
'

All of tWar and Peace'
To Be Shown by Tolstoy
The Russian motion picture
milestone, "War and Peace,"all 42 reels and sill and onehalf hours of it - will be shown
Monday, April 12, in the Conference Theatre, Norton.
Sponsored by Tolstoy College (College F) , the showing
will be in two parts - Part I ,
from 2-5:30 p.m. and Part ll,
inunediately following an intermission dinner.
That dinner, to be served in
the Fillmore Room, will be a
Rusaisn-style one, featuring
cold borscht with garnishes and
sour cream, cucumbers with
sour cream, red cabhege with
apples, potatoes, black bread
and butter, tea with lemon.
A donation of $1.50 is being
assessed for both the film and

the dinner. College F spokes.
men say the entire event will
be over at approzimately 11:30
p.m. Tickets are now available
at the Norton Ticket Office.
The critically acclaimed Russian film - almost as long as
the original Tolstoy clsasic received the Academy Award
lor the best foreign movie of
1968. It has been called one
of the best movies ever msde.
Produced and directed in
Sovcolor by Sergei Bondarchuk, who is also in the Jilm
and whoee "Waterloo" is now
at the Colvin, the panoramic
Mosfilm production features an
all-Soviet cast of thousands and
breathtaking scenes of the Russian winter.

U&gt;ters For New Gcurnment

Based On Interest Groups
Undergraduates voted overwhelmingly last week to scrap
the Student Association's polity
!YN of government and to ,....
place it with an assembly based
on interest groups. Voting 'in
the week-long referendum were
1,720 students, about 15 per
cent of U / B's undergraduate
enrollment A ten per cElt tumout is needed to validate referendums.
More tban -90 per cent of the
voters• (1,600) a~ that polity should be replaced, and 59
per cent (1,021) favored interest group representation over
representation based on departments.
SA's aecood vice president
John Charles says the vote is

not as high as he had wished,
but that the turnout shows
"definite support" for the new
form of government which will
tske effect after officer elections
the third week in April. Candidate's petitions for that election are due in the SA offices
(Norton 205) by April 19..

A&amp;L Adopts New
Language Ruling

At its meeting of March 23,
1971, the Faculty of Arts ...,d
toward investigatinJI msth conLetters adopted the following
cepts on their own.
restatement of the requirements
of the Faculty :
Dr. Heintz's performance is
"Eve,Y undergraduate degree
not unusual for the seminar,
candidate must demonstrate
which has been taught for the
proficiency at the intermediate
past several years by Dr .
(Contilwed from_. 1, col. 5)
level in a foreign ·~an~ruaae.
Charles R. Fall of the Depart·Rabbi Justin Hofmann, Hil- classical or modern, eitlier by
ment of Social Foundations.
lel Foundation, 40 Capen Blvd., demonstrating that proficiency
Dr. Fall has his "students"
836-4540.
to the satisfaction of the lanread such books as Charles A.
J . Sam McCullough, Campus guage department concerned,
Reich's The Greening of AmerCrusade for Christ Internation- or by pusing a two-eemester
ica, which explores new levels
al, 114 Sunridge Drive, fi94- intermediate language course.
of conscioUSDeSS among young
0353.
Other than departmental re- l e in tile United States,
Father Gregory Kistner, Buf- . quirements, this is the only .....
and Charles Silberman's Crisis
falo Council of Eastern Ortho- quirement by. the Faculty of
in the C /assroom, which argues
dm&lt; Churches, 3920 Pine Ave- Arts and Letters...
for radically different teaching
nue, Niagara Falls, N . Y., 1Tbe restatement makal amethods. Dr. Fall is also plan284-9596.
plicit that for the Faculty's
ning to have an expert on "senRev. Rodney G. Snedeker, language requirement the
sitivity training" .,.Plain that
Protestant Campus Ministry, courae-equivalency of demonconcept to his weekly class.
Scholars~
Council of Churches, Buffalo,
"Teaching is a human enter~P~u;:
'lbe Civil Service Employ- 3330 Main Street, 834-4250..
prise," asserts Dr. Fall. "It is a ees .Association (CSEAJ on
Mrs. Benjamin Dix, Chris- medUJte language .,.,.,._, It
process of providina opportu. campus has 8IIIIOUIICed a aeries tian Science Orpnization, 96 alao eliminates the balance of
nity for others to under&amp;tand of scboll!nbiP awards for CSEA Winspear Avenue, 836-6352.
the 16 hours currently requited
themselves, make aenae out of members BDd their families.
Rev. Edward T. Fisher, "New- within the Faculty BDd outside
their ellistence and thus live
man
Club,
Roman
Catholic
the candidate's major.
Two chapter members will
fully and construc:tively in tune
01 Buffalo, 15 Univern.e eft'ective date .of the rebe awarded $50 -=b to ...,.. Diooeae
with the times.
sity
Avenue,
834-2297.
vised requirements ill Seplan"In order to do this compe- tinue their education. Selection
All ~ pastors and ..... ber 1, 1972. It will apply to all
will
be
by
lottery.
tently, the ~on whatever
ligious adV180r8 are required . to B.A. and B.FA ...._Within
Four cash awards of $100 have on file in the Office cl the
level must come to terms with
the Faculty. '""' applJcatloo cl
himaolf and come to knc!w in -=b will 'he made to c:tx.m President a letter of authoriza- the language requirement to the
- BachelOr ol A!dtitecture degree
the truest human thla! 80118 or dauchters cl C8EA tion from their reoi&gt;ective
individuals for whom he is in- lll8lllboin, with llllleetion ~ BOring church body or ~ olfered by the Scbon1 of .An:blbllldlng to provide guidance on acbOianblp BDd .-I.
Cll'pllimtion. In addition, the tecture and En~tal n..,
BDd • • don."
Appli,catiom may he obiaiDed student rallglous group served, aign cl the Fiiculty is currently
Dr
will ....-t to IDOIIt from the C8EA Scholarship if any, must he rec:opbed by under advisement by the 'Faoanything 'including
to Ca1nm1-, P.O. 8aK 16, Hayes the Council of Religious Or- ulty's Committee on Educahelp ~ilb that~ HaiL .lloadlb)e .. April 28.
pnlzatioaa.
tional Policy.

U/B CSEA To 9ive
Six

':"1.m'

Ministers-

�AIJdl

1, 11171

7

YruthRevdt
·GREPORTS.
Ilits USSR,
ON Speaker.Says GJ&gt;EOPLE
over
"Youth Ia In I'IM&gt;It all
the "USSR," 1l,lrs. Slava Stetz-

~~:.!"~ AWARDS·

Bloc' of Natloas (AB!il), told
a pre. oaaference on campus
Monday afterDoon.

==

1971

::.._::-:.ao=_..=-=t..""=u=,.=,=..,=-.-p-reoid--:. ;-en-;-t.
received the

Award for

Miuouri Honor

Dia~ Service

~~
~~lion~ a:~'!C
of cili!Jons of 23 Bu-n na- ~~""':!":::t."tyf':k,~~ :!:
tiona Who are atrivlna fOr their iDe education or the practice of
countries' _ I n d e p e n d e' n c e. profeollional easineering.

·Among na~M~ns ft!Presented are
the Ukraine, Latvia, · Estonia

and B)'8lonala. Mra. Stetzlr.o,
who is.coordlnator of ABN's information and. bureau, is
on tour of the United -States
and the ~ East to pin support for her cause. Mondath

~~~=.n~.:~

Room of Norton.

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
mL

LAJtaY

B. CIIUitCH,

assistant

fa~-;o~~~~g'f!iJ~

at· La.wrimce Radiation Labora-

tory, Berkeley, California .

DR. . l'f'&amp;'w,:'ON GAfim,

auociate pro-

f:l!~W~t!:!in~:lo~~i

Mrs. Stelzko . told the press the American Philoaophical As·
conference that "Russia is rot- aociation.
ten to the . core." It. has' economic problems, , she s a y s,
coupled with lltudeilt and worker strikes which make it unstable. 1be younger ..,..,ration PRESENTATIONS
is now· "preparing for revolution," she contends. They are OIL .lORN CORCORAN , 8.880Ciate prolistening to free world and fessor, philosophy, "A Mathemat underground radio programs ical Model of Aristotle's Logic,"
and drswlng traditional sym- Buffalo Logic Colloquium.
bols on . the walls of public CIJ.BENCB F. DYE, associate direcbuildings. Tbe youth are also tor, student personnel services,
speaking their traditional na- "The Yoga Tradition-A Path In
tional Languages in public
~ri~~;" A'!~!m":~r'ft:t~gi~
pLsces, silmelbing forbidden by and
the College Theology Society,
the · Kremlin. Groups of youth Caniaiua
College.
are aJso discussing secession
from the Soviet Union by sstel- Dll. ANTONY FLEW, visiting professor,
philosophy,
"Psycho-analysis
lite nations.
Freewill," S mit b College,
These actions are being pun- and
Northampton, Maaa.; "Crime and
ished by priaon sentences and Di.eeaae," Matcbette Foundation
terms in concentration camps,
but "the youths have conquered· ~~!.7-~~e&amp;, ~'tl.ey~:
fear and this punishment only conacioua," Georgetown Univermakes them stronger," ·Mrs.
~~: .. ~ee~!~'&amp;,u~:e~N~:S~~';k~
Stetzir.o reports.
Other groups , inside the DR. MICHAEL FBlSCH, assistant proUkraine are also working for fessor, history, guest speaker on
independence...:..... "there's no social changes and industrialization at symposium on the Social
Ukrainian . group that is not Effects
of Industrialization,
working for independence,n the Northwestern University, Evananti-&lt;lDmmunist speaker said. ston, Illinois.
The move for independence is 08. NEWTON GARVER, associate proa "popul8r maas lind permanent fe380r, philoeophy, " Wittgenstein's
movemen~" she claims . BePantheism," Pacific Division.
cause of this she believes "my APA, Los AngelfiS.
generation will live to see OIL PAUL L.. GARVIN, (l'tofessor, linUkrainian independence." .
guistics, " Diacovery Procedures in
What the Ukraine ·and other Syntax," Languages and Linguisanti-bolshevik nations want' are tics Colloquium. University of
the ability to choose their own Rochester.
form of government and re- OIL B. OLIVIZ GlBSON, chainnan,
ligion and the right to form educational administratio~. chairtheir own army. ''Every nation man of the symposium, " Collective
is an equal," Mrs. Stelzko believes and has a right to have T... ~o,...,.,cJ-.;....c. A 0.,;,.T_,,,,.J
its· "own choice of_jOYemment .Liw::.IIIAY~~'l5'u::;u
and tife." For the Ukraine; Ibis
would be a democracy she
Almost half ( 46) of the cLsss
adds.
'
of 111 senior medical students
In RWISia, Mrs. -Stelzko re- who will graduate from the
ports, "It is not possible to School of Medicine this spring
study national history - only will remain In Bulfalo to do
Riisaian history." The only re- their internships. Last year the
ligion. she said, is Ruasian figure ·was just a bit over oneOrthoclmy; all others are third of the cLsas.
banDed and have gone under- , Results of the National Inground. The Whole propam is ·tein Matching Program, which
"aimed at the enf-..ent' of attempts to match the preferRu&amp;im history, lana!uNe and ences of the students with lbooe
traditiaoa," she :Diain8d.
of tl)e hospitalscthroughout the
Mra. Stetzlr.o~ been in: .roun!ry, llJ'lllOWlCed .M onday,
valved With -ABN since ibi in- indicate that ten of the seniors
Her ·husband was have tieen "matdled" for Unipnme minister of the iestilra- · ve~ty pediatrics internships at
tion UltraiJie government C!ur-' the Children's Hospital; 18 for
ing World War U ~ the' D.edical interilships aLBulfalo
Gennaus · took
He ' was GeneialjMeyer·~ltals; nine
Miteaced to fOUl" years· in a • for "!!'1Ptini general mternahips
COIIIlOIIIratio camp. Sbe tol- at 'Deacon"ss Hospital; one
Joooed him' to West Germany c each for straicht surgery at
and ujion his re~ease· tlie couple Bulfalo General and Meym
becanie active in ABN.
. Hoapitills;' and. Biz for the Mil'Their Ufe has been complex Lord Fillmore Hospital-two in
and 'hectic since tbeli. Mnl. rotating.. medicine. imd Biz for
Stetzlr.o 11111ies i yearl)'. ~ straight surgery.
·
tour ..-ldJJB about thB'."ABN · Twenty...,.; other memben!
and the communist lbrae.L Her of the ·class will do internships
elfona and tba8e of her bus- in New YOrk State- 20 in the
• band ba_,'t piDe ~by ·· New York City 8!1!11 and ooe
the .Knmlln and ' ...-at at- in~- SeW!Dty.:fiYe'seniors
~ have been JDade on her ..-rited tJ&gt;eir fint choice of inhuiiJaDd'a life, abe saya.
ternaliips, while 11 ~eceived

"""·tian.

over:·

Neaoliaticm: ADalylic Pe._.
U..," Ameri&lt;aa ~ Ke-

~ Weotem New
York N,_.. ~n:b Center,

~!-t":"'~:!.:te: ~aa
f:"-~~~""'t:.1
by Neutron Activation

=-=·.

duoirman for the c:l.-1 circuit

tu
Tnmafo,__

OPP, JOfU'ftGl of
AmDiccn
Culllicol SocUty; "l'botod.nical
of Small
Ring Oubmy1 ~·Mo." Ac,
counta of Culllicol R&lt;Ntll'd&amp;.

~~_..a..~::~ ma- ~r~16.e:...~=~
for the cliocuooion group "Hey Society, Loo Angeleo, California. romaJ&gt;Oe ~~A New View
!"rof., Talk to p~ Admin-_ .._ GADY A. IIIICIINITZ, profeOoor, ~~~r.::}:.... :;a~
utratoro and 'l1&gt;0n Update chemiatry "New Directiooa for·
6.~
~~~~=~=:';,( Memb....;, Electrodes," Rocheo- ~ixt'!~~B~~~
Scbool Administrators 103nl An- ter Institute of Technology, Rocb- ColkctioM iA 1M Univeroity of
TorontD Library, Forum ItG!it:wn.
ual Coavention. AtLsntic "'City, ester.
.._ 8000

IIICIIft&amp;,

prof-.r,

r.:rr.;:

'New Jeraey.

0&amp;.- DAVID C. HAYS,

t..o.

w.

profeuor, lin-

ROY BLAUNWBI'l'Z,

m. graauate

~~~~~~·~d p'!f~~

r.:::tico, "Linguistics: Focuo for pathology, "Sequential Study of
a~t.ellCenec~r 0f~tioy
' _n." Gradu- Gluoooe Metsbolism in Adi'"*'
,Tilsue and Liver of Rata with
Ventral Medial (VMN) HypoB.AROLD B. IDLWJG, asaistant director, Creative Craft Center, served

thalamic Lesions," Federation of

as panelist at the 1971 conference
of the Asaociation of College Un-

American Societies for Experi-

ions-lntemational, White Sulphur
.Springs, West Virginia.
DR. K11:NNETH INADA , auociate pro-

fesaor, philooopby, ''The Idea of
Man in Buddhiun." Bi.abop New!¥'!" ~b School: participated

in discul81on on ..The Metaphysical Gap in the Encounter of

Religiollll," Canisius CoUece.

ROBERT E • .1ENNINGS, assistant
professor, educational administration, "State Policy P roc e s s
Change and - Education Interest
Group Political Behavior," Amer·
ican Educational Research As·
sociation Annual Meeting, New
York City.
DR. CHESTER L. KISER, associate
professor, educational administration, "An Operational Model for
Educational P P B S ," American
Educational R esearch Association
Annual Meeting, New York City :
served as counselor for the
" PPBS Co u n s e I i n g Clinic,"
Ame rican Assoeiation of School
Administrators 103rd Annual
C-onvention, Atlantic City, · New
Jersey.
DR. MADELEINE MATHIOT, associate
professor, linguistics, "A Ia reche rce des u n i t e s narratives,"
University of Montreal.
DR. MIKE M. MlLSTEIN , assistant
professor, educational administration, with OR. ROBERT E • .1ENN1NGS ,
asaiatant profeuor, ..Educational
PoJicy Making in New York
DB.

IDit'hl~ Pthr:ef!;:ra~~~! ~=

can Educational Research ABBOCi·
ation Annual Meeting, New York
City.
DR. AGOSTINO MOLTENl, research
assistan t professor, pathology,

:!!~ll:fi~'::~"o~ ~tso~ri:g~;

Growth of the f, Mammatropic
Pituitary Tumor," Federation of
American Societies for Experi·
mental Biology, Chicago.
OR. ALB B RT PAD W A, professor,
chemistry, "Photochemical Trans·
fonnations of Small Ring Compounds," Miami University; "Pho·
tochemistry of Azabexatrienes,"

mental Biology, Chicago.

profeeeor, pi:Wo.o..

RECOGNITIONS
PE1"EK J. BUSH, Ienior, aDd PAUL
F. 8TAVIS, junior. School of Law,
were named the ~ team at

an international law M - Court
DL HENilY LE£ SMITH, .1R., profes80r, linguistics and English, ""The Competition in Albany. Mr. Buah
Nature of Lan~e:• and ..The and Mr. Stavis will participate in
the finala of the .Jeuup lntemaNature of Enghsh Orthography,"
in-service institute in applied lin- . tional Law Moot Court Competiguistics; addressed annual dinner
tion to be held in Washincton.
D.C., on April 30.. In the finala,
meeting, Niagara County Dental
they wiU compete with aeve:n
~:CZ.: on the subject of regional
other teams from Europe, South
America, and the United State&amp;.
Oil. SVETOZA&amp; STOJANOVlC, viaiting
professor, philoeopby, " Yugoslavian Socialism at the Crossroads,"
cid ent, in which a pauenger air·
politics department, Brock Uni·
versity, St. Catharines, Canada. cra(t on an international ftight
DR. AUSTIN D. SWANSON, professor,
educational administration, and
OR. ROBERT E. . LAMJTIE, e:.:ecutive
director, Western New York
Buergenthal.
School Development Co unci 1,
DR. IEROME L MAZZARO, professor;
"Project 1990: Long Range ProEnglish,
TrtJMfornuJtron in the
jections and Alternative Plans for
Renaiuan.ce English Lyric (Cor·
Schools of the Buffa1o Metropolinell 1970). selected for inclusion
tan Area," American Educational
in The Scholar's Library. Spring
Research Association A n n u a l
1971 selections of The Modem
Meeting, New York City.
Language Association Book Club.
DR. (.,"LAUD£ E. WELCH. 8880Ciate
DR. CLAUDE E. WELCH, associate
professor, political SC"ience, •·Hyprofessor, politica l science. served
potheses on the Transition from
as extemaJ examiner for the ColMilitary to Civilian Rule in Aflege
of Social Sciences, Wesleyan
rica.'· Haston University ; " AmerUniversity, March 19-20, in their
ican Policy Toward Africa," a.ninterdisciplinary cou rse on Asia
~our:~gnsy:~i.uEd~bor:Set'!.~: and Africa.
College (Pennsylvania).
DR. WOLFGANG WOLCK, associate
professor, linguistics, "Linguistics
(continued from page B. coL 5)
as a Discipline and as a Career.''
Tonawanda High School; " A So·
of the relationship between genciolinguistic S u r v e y of Peru :
e r a J vocabulary a n d technical
Method , Application and Some
terms, e:.:empli.tied by the terminResuJt.s," 0 n tar i o Institute of
ology
of linguistic stratification.
Studies in Education, Toronto:
··Educational Problems of LanCOLLOQUIUM ON LITERATURE AND
guage Contact in Peru," Trainers
FAr T u •: Erich Heller, visiting
of Teacher Trainers Program a nd
professor, German, and author of
Graduate Linguistics Education
The Disinherited Mind and The

r.,~e=lf:~~=::r-

;..a:~ ~r: n!tlmo:~li~
~u;;~fe~r ~=

Communique-

for Ethnics

Projec~

SUNY/ B.

DR. FRED WUDL, assistant professor,
che mistr y, " Deaminations with
Nitrogen Oxides," Gannon Col·
lege.

PUBLICATIONS

DR. SEYMOUR AXELROD, associate
professor, psychiatry, "Synchron·
iz.ation of Unimanual and Bimanual Response with Monotic and
Dichotic Clicks," with L. T. Guzy,
DR. K.K.S. PILLA Y, senior research
scientist; C.C. THOMAS, research Perception and P•ychophysic•.
manager: I.A. SONDEL, junior re- OSCAR T. BROOKINS, graduate stu~ scientist, C.M. HYCHE, junior dent, economics, .. Factor Analysis
and GNP: A Comment," Quar·
terly Jourrud of Economic•; "Con·
11 K--1
centrated Oligopsony with Lead·
f.o1Yl.t::U
enhip: Comment," The American
second choice and 10, third Economist; with Gustav Schachter
choice. Of the 18 states in which · of Northeastern Univenity, '"The

SUNY/ Stony Brook.

G'rads

graduating seniors will intern,
California received the second
Lsrgest share - 7. Five will intern in Ohio and a like number
in Washington, D.C., while one
will intern as far away as Hawaii. Two will serve in the U.S.
Air Force at Travis, California,
while three others will join the
Public Health Service (two at
Staten · JsLsnd and one in CaJi.
fornia) .
Two of the internship programs at the University were
completely lilled.' They are
medicine at the Buffalo Generai/Meyer Hospitals and pediatrics at tbe Children's Hospita!. Of the 30 requested for
the Bulfalo General / Meyer
medicine program, 18 were
matched from the U / B Medi·
cal School and tbe remaining
12 from other medical achoola.
Children's Hospital, which asked for 13, received 10 U /B
· graduating seniors and three
lrom other medical scboola.
One U !B graduate will Intern in the prestigious MassachusettaGeDeral Hospital while
two olberB will go to .Johns
Hcpkino University.

DR. DALB IIIEPS,

pby, ''The Sycopbanto: The Decline of Graduate Standarda,"
Tu Hurrt~U~Ut.

Role of the Public Sector in Industrial Investment of Developing Areas in Southem Europe,••

Riuista. lnternazionale di Scienze
e Commerciali (Italy).
DB.. DAVID A. CAD£NHIW&gt;, auociate

ArtUt's Journey Into the Int-erior,

LITEB.ATURE AND lti'.SPONSlBILITl', 5

Diefl!ndorf Annex, 8: 15 p.m.
COOL HAND LUKE. Paul
Newman as Luke is one guy who
bucks all establishment as he encounters the marshals of a chain
gang. George Kennedy won an
Academy Award for this film.
Conference Theatre, Norton,
check showcase for n.nes, admission $. 75. Through April 18.
nLM • •:

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent exhibit of worb by
James Joyce. Poetry Room. 2IJ7
Lockwood Library, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Sir Walter Scott bicentenazy uhibit, featuring fi rat ediliona,

worb by contemporaries. engrav.
inp a n d watercoloro, through
May.

NOTICES
-THB

DEPARTIOCNT

OF

COliiPU'I'Ia

SCIEN&lt;Z ia accepting a':l'!.::'tioJu

r~~~~d~,:!1:;::
one and Their Condensation with ~tt~:::~e.:r~:~

Cholesterol," Journal of CoUoid

Program. Applicant. muat be olu·
dento currently omolled at the

OIL ANTONY FLEW, viaiting pro·

Univenity as fl'elbmen or eopbo..
mores and need to have taken or

Interface Scieru:e.

!:""~~~~~:J;,.:n1~ :~~=::.~r~
formation may be obtained from

lems of Freewill in ~les Hanly
and M. Lazerowitz." P•yclwan·
aJy1io and Philooophy.

~~~~J..226~

~=.~~~ 8:!':":i

PASSOVD. DSaVAttONB:

the Secular Scienoea in Andalu·
Ilia," Studia /•Iamica.
OIL PAUL KURTZ, profeuor, pbilo.opby, 1A.nguoge and Hurn&lt;m Nature: A Frt:nch-Amerit:Gn Philooopher'• Dialolw, St Louis: William G.__
·
1:&amp;. CD:8Hr: IC NAHCO.LLA'B*

prof•-

:r·M'!:fia~~,:::ct~~

Formation," Coordintuion Cumi.try Revtew..
.._ Al.-r P.u&gt;WA, prof-.r,

cbem-

i at r y, "PhotocYc:lo-addition of
A~

with EI-.. De&amp;cient Olellna," with 1. DIOLUI-

of Undeq-raduate Studies.

Hi 11 e 1
will aerve Puaover dinnen on

~~ 12.;;J3

: ·t. ·; 6j.~

~~:.:1. A!f3 ~ :.!.!!f~tp:O

Hillel HoUae, 40 C a p e n Blod.
Re.ervationa can be made at the
Hillel table in Norton or at the
Hillel Houae.
80Vlft IEWltY GIIDrDIO c.uD S.U.:

~~m=:=-=
Union are important morale
builden.

-.uriuc

Soviet .hwa

that they ara not fo....- by
their l&gt;l'eth- in the WeaL Available at the U/B Hillel Houae.

�8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to public;
•Open ontr to -

.. Open to mombots of tho UnlwNity;
With a prolftolo!wl lnternt In tho oubject.

THURSDAY-I
ldDICAL T&amp;CBNOLOOI8T8 '1'1:1&amp;-

PBONII t.aCTUD: tDn. Maria Gam-

ana and .John W. Picben; Betty
FrieL CY'I"'LLGY : DUGN08TIC CYTOLOCY, · - r e d by ftecional

Medlc.l p...,._ 62 n&gt;ceiviuc lo-

c:aticmo, 11:30 ......
P'ODIAftiBTI ta.a"BOHI: I&amp;"'''UU:
Cane~ P&amp;OQUIIIVE

.Jeffrey M .

:c~~~:!ID~~·~r::

_.,., 62 receiviuc locatio110, 11: 30

IIOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY LUNCHEON

COLl.OQUIUK: Dr. Tbeodore Millo,
chainnan, oocioiOI)', DILE&gt;OWI, n,.
LUBIOHS AND MOD&amp;LB IN 80CIAL

BCIENCK, Room e-M, 4230

Lea, 12: 30 p.m.

PIIYCBOJUT• •:

IU&lt;4e ·

free-form commu-

oicatioD for peno...tity powth.
Fillmore Room. 3-6 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM:• :

Dr. B.

Maclic. Rutgen Univenity, N~
Brunowi&lt;:I&lt;,.N..J., FAR·OUT PHYSICS
Jm'DIJGNT8. Ill Hocbotetter, 4
p.m. Refreohments, 112 Hoch·
atetter, 3:30 p.m.
PD..M••: ONE Pi.us ONE (SYKPATBY
roo THO llKVlL) (1968, Godard) .
Pa...Uel otudy of the growth of a

:r"~':!~u'ti::. -c!n~cto~

points of view toward the Stones
and toward the Third World.

Godard invents "Maoist concrete
147 Diefendorf, _8 p.m.,

,C~ry."

COLLOQUrt.lJ4 ON LlTEilATURE AND
FAITH •: sponsored by Department

of German and Slavic. S. Oke·
chukwu Mezu. MOSLEM, CBR18TIAN
J.Ni) ANIKIST IN AFIUCAN LITEBA-

TURE, 5 Diefendorf Annex, 8: 15
p.m.
.

• FRIDAY-2
80CJOLOGICAL IMPLJC.\TJONS OF THE
POPULATION EXPLOSION: Confer-

W&amp;EH·TV: Channel 4 Spocial IDCNTITY. Th8 panel euminea
imp.....,....nt p~ within the
black c'Ommunity. Thio propam
conoiden black hiotory and ele·
menta which ,will eventually be

~in~.a p:~ ~~r'::i

artifacts w'llrbe ohown and the
Carolina Four Quartet Will line
opiritualo, whieh will then be (lis.
c-uooed by panel membenl Fl'llDk
Mesiah, director of the black mu·
oeum. Mn. Mary Croaby Chappelle, act.reu and instructor of
gifted children in School 76,' Buffalo, and actor Bill Watkin o.
Hosteu and moderator is Mn.
Dora Riehardaon. 1: 30-2:00 p.m.
INDIA.N FILM•: MUJHS .IJ:EN&amp; DO,

R~h"m':. ~N~~ ~':~0:::.

• tion. Moni Bhattacharjee; music,
Jidev. Sunil Dutt won the Best
Actor A w a r d of 1964 for this
memorable 61m. shot in the Dacoit infested a r e a of Madhya
Pradesh. English subtitleo. ·147
Diefendorf, 3 : 30 and 7:30 ·p.m. ,
students $.75, general admiuion
$1.00. Tickebl at the door.
BALKAN FOLK DANCING : Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
PURLIE VICTORIOus•: a recent au·
dience and critical success at BW·
falo's African Cultural Center,
this play will have a suburban
performance under the auspices
of the Black and While Arts Festival. The fourth event of the fes.
tival conceived by the Black and
White Action (BAWA) group of
the Unitarian Universalist Church
in Western New York, the Ossie

~~1; ::~dJ'm is~':~o~er~

ly of the Studio Arena Theatre.
It features a cast of both black
and wlUte actors. AB such it is
consistent with BAW A's efforts
toward inter-racial communica·
tion. cooperation and under~tand­
ing. Glessner Hall Theater, Erie

~lli:~!.trt~~:l~eP.~unga

Rd.,
Tickets will be sold at the door,
but may be purchased in advance
at both the downtown and the
Kenmore YWCA, all seven Cav·
Rochester. 2 p.m. Ponel Discus- ale's stores, Denton, Cottier &amp;
. tion. New Science Bldg., SUCB/
Daniels, Norton Union Ticket Of·
· ftce, before April 2, and the ticket
Elmwood.
offices in Buffalo State and CaniFILM••: J'ULES ET JIM (1961
College student unions. Re·
Francois Truffaut). In Truflaut's sius
duced. prices for students and
work. ~ue matters leu than senior
citizens.
feeling. Thio treatment of the
"F. Scott Fitzcerald" period is a
TUESDAY---6
fabt:. of the world · as a play.
cround. a work of art as complex PBYSICIA.NS TELEPHONE LECTURE:
and sugestive in ita way as the
Dr. Tarik Elibol, CHRONIC IN·
paintinp and poetry and novels

ence sponsored by Western New

York Bialogist Association. 11
a.m. Hum.tJil Genetic6 and Social
Problemo, Dr. Philip L. Townes.
chairman, genetics, University of

~~i~:f ~; bi~r:tnd'!rl~ ~
p.m., fl-ee.

INl'Eit.NATIONAL FOLK DANCING: ln·
1tructicm in basic steps during
lint hour, 30 Diefendorf Anne,.,
8 p.m.
H U M A N DlMENSIONS IN,STITUTE
LIICTUD' : Louis R Mobley, pres·

ident, L i f e Energies Reeearch
and former IBM executive, UN·
BUSPECI'ED B N E R G I E S

OF THE

BUliAN BEING, Wick . Campus
Center. Rooary Hill College, 8: 15
p.m. For information. call 839.
3600.

FLAMMATORY

BOWEL

D J 8 E A 8 E,

sponsored by Regional Medical
Propam. 62 receiving location.t,
11:30 a.m.
N U R8 E 8

TELEPHONE

.LEC!'U&amp;E:

Gene Brockopp and John RwoeU ,
Regional Medical Program, 62
receiving locations, 1: ao p.m.

WEDNESDAY-7
CIU.PLA..INB

·•p IRS T wa&gt;NISDAY"

SATURDAY--3
SOCIOLOGICAL DlPLICATJONS OF THE
POPtii.A.TION EXPLOSION : 10 a.m.

Gregg Berezuk, INTERACTION OF

TELEPHONE

DlETJTJANB

TELEPHON&amp;

LECTUR&amp;:

New Science Bldg., S,UCB, Elm·
wood. Human Ecow1y in the
Tropic1, Dr. Howard G. Seng·
buoC1i, profeaaor, biology, Stale
Co~ 12 noon: Buffet Lunch·
eon; Moot Hall FacUlty Dining

FOODS AND DRUGS: Ef'PIC¢T OF FOOD

P8YCBOI.OOJCAL AB80CIA.TION lOZT·

HOSPITAL MANAGDiUAL AND SUI"D·
VISOilY DCYJ:LOPMENT 'I'ElDHONJ:

W!gi~~ ~"::!?~ ··w~r:. ~~

receiving lOco.tions, 2 p.m.

THURSDAY-S

Room.

INO: Workin&amp; with Teachers in
Cauaeii Hal~ SUCB/
Elmwuod, 1 p.m.
8chedu1ed epeakers are: Dr.
Bbe!&gt;!ud Goldlierc, chief cJinicaJ
~&amp;, Poychiatric Clinic
Iae., (;roup Thero.py for T&lt;GCh·
.,., Dr. Murmy Levine, pio!eo1
ol. pay~ and director,
dlalc:al community poychol!'fl'

ux.-rua: Ivan Doane and Robert
Stevens, SUD

WJr;

BAVI: A GamY·

::.:~~"J~·rr::

gram. 62 receiving locations, 1: SO

p.m.

c-

Fillmore

UNIVERSITY WOM:&amp;N' S CLUB SQUARE

DANCE GROUP : Mike and Belty
Stark, caUen, Faculty Club, Ha r·
riman Library, 8 :30 p.m.

MONDAY-12
FILM•:

WAR

AND PEACE (1968, Rus-

sian). Part I , 1:30 p.m. Followed

by R us -a ian dinner. (Fillmore
Room) aod Part U . Sponsored
py Tolstoy College. Donation of
$1.50 cove r 11 film and dinner.
Tickets at Norton Box Office.
PILM• • : SHOOT THE PIANO PLA. YER

Pn.M • •: Tl::l:l: GOSPeL ACOOIU)(NG TO
ST. MATTHSW. (1964, Pier Paolo

::~t!!ti~~fmtt~u~~~n~fu:!

Gospel uses non·profeeaional acton exclusively; varied film techniques include hand·beld camera

:rtth~u~!:PS:~rr.

~:~iu:~ .::r~dp~c:~i:lif=
lini'• avowed M~ . 147 Dief·
endorf, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
PHYSICS OOLLOQUJUll•:

Dr. T. Ta·

naka, Catholic University, Waabington, D .C.,, ELBCTRONIC DBNBITY
OF STATES JN DfSORDIBI:D IJ.T'I'I&lt;ZS.

Ill Hocbotetler, 4 p.m. Refreabment.s, 112 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.~
FOSTER I..llCTUR&amp; 8EIUES: aee Monday listing.

Lake City, CHEMJCAL BI:P.utATIONB,
70 Ach.on, 4: 16 p.m., through
April 14.
,

=.:~-~.:O~r:
f::.

?t';."8~p~f~~i

. WEDNESDAY-14
CLINICIANS

fti.EPHONJ:

LII!C"''UD:

lmmunolosical P.roced.ura, Dr~
Richard B. Eisenberg, ANTI·NU·
cuaJl ANTIBODY : CUNJC.iJ.- PA'I'H'( ).

~~~=.··-PJ::='~
receiviuc

MEDICAL

I'!C"~na.

JII)C()IU)8

11: 30' a.m. ·

'IKLm'HOD ~-

aored by Regional· Madical
cram. 62 ....,.;~ loc:ationo, 2
p.m.

............. TIUPBO!Ia LIICTUD:

Jameo Ely,

!.~.:'!i

rn:-:. ~.=

THO ....._ . . .

Dr.
or

:u~~~f~~

~.J!,7:~~~:30

OlaiUX nLM•: DAB . . .UlaN VON
BUl&lt;ll&amp;l(

(liMO). The film io an

~-ot~··~

~~i=!~J.288
Norton, 8 p.m., !rea.

.lEAN PAUL BARTU COLLOQUJUll:

I?r: Lionel Abel, prof-.r,

Enc·

lisb, 8AJtTR&amp; .AS NOVI:LIBT AND PLAY·

WKIOBT, 334 Hayeo, 8-10:30 p.m.
The colloquium is o epecial
coune for faculty and graduate

~?C:f!'~~;p:e~~.=~
l:ldraJ: department.
·
"

of music. cloeeupe reminiscent of
Dreyer's P01111ion of Joan of Art',
and scenes of intenae violence

(1960, Francois Trufraut) . About
a man who has withdrawn from
human experience, who want8 not
to feel, this film is both nihili»tic
in attitude and totally involved in
life and fun. There is tension in
the method; nothing is clear.cut;
and there is a peculiarly Ameri·
can element in it-the romantic
element of a man who w a I k s
alone. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8
p.m., free.
POBTSR I.IX."'rURI: 1118118: Dr. J.

TUESDAY-13

'l'SLKPB'Ola UDC'I'UD:
....... SUNYAB, Group · n ... PHYSICIANS
&amp;rica, Dr. Robert Guth·
...,... IIIith &amp; · · Tetldlero; P•diotric
rie, . PDYDfTiON OJ' )I(S:NTAL DDr. JWwja 8~ &amp;Aistant
paycbol;oly, SUNYAB,.
locationo, 10 a.m.
DI'I'DJ(A'ftON.U. POLit DA,.cnro': ht;
!'~ . . . - , Dr. Abel Fbik.
~--•~ucation. SUCB, otructic&gt;n in buic atepo ~
,...,._ a._,. c-u..u
flnt hour, 30 Diefendorf Aimu.
8 p.m.
1• ,._,.,.. al &amp;/fa/&lt;&gt; SI4U.

R;
' ...""tsJ.=: ~,;::;

Room, Norton, 8 p.m.

CRISIS INn:&amp;YENTJON AND SUICIDE
PREVENTION, PART 11, spo. 'Ored by

LECTURE: Chaplain
Lyle J. Dykstra, CRISIS: THE,_.
MJNALLY ILL PATIENT, sponaored
by Regional Medical Program, 62
receivin~ locations, 10 a·.m..

a-

SATURDAY-10
BALKAN FOLK DANCING :

THURSDAY-15

..

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

·.:voL 2 ·NO. 26

MARCH 25, 1971

No-ROTC Next Year,
1972-73 Undecided
There wiil be no Reserve
Officers Training Corps
&lt;ROTC ) program on campus
next year, Dr. Albert Somit, ·
executive vice president, said
this week. Somit, chairman of
a committee to propose a new
• ROTC program for University
consideration, sa i d that his
group was unable to develop
a program by April 1, a deadline m a d e necessary by tbe
planning requirements of tbe
several armed services.
It is still undecided whether
the committee will try to develop a proposed program for
1972-73. An ROTC class of at
I east 100 participants is requit-ed by the armed services
for an ROTC program and declining enrollment in tbe Uni"EKh must do what he or lhe can," Sister Elizabeth McAlister versity's A i r Force ROTC
MJL And lhe, on Thursdoy, ond Rennie Dovla, on Frldoy, offering these past several years
told . . . - . In Hou Loun&amp;o what they're doing to fl&amp;ht
makes it uncertain that the
the -..moao wor. Dovla woo hero primorily to recruit University could satisfy t h is
~ for the ontl-wor aprin&amp; oflenalvo which bqina April
requirement, Somit said.
·
19. McAllster sold lhe ond her six c:o-dofendonta In the
The University's Survey Re"'8erfleain" ·tnal were "netthl!r bombers nor conspirators." search Center will shortly be
conducting an attitude survey
which will include questions
on student attitudes toward,
and willingness to participate
in, an ROTC program. The
committee's future actions will
necesaarily be inllueDced by
tbe outcome of tbe survey, acida . ~ studellta," Dr. - st:ie'h~ the ri&gt;Ce of the arts cord;n. to the esecutive vice
Boillt says. "We , lael the pur- in education-is concerned with president.
pose of a university is educa- culture, especially the performThe oonunittee to negotiate
tion-&lt;icholarship- and research ;n. "!ts.
a new ROTC program was ap--and this is the unifying prinJonathan Ketchum, acting pointed last August by Presiciple of the college."
associate master (without ap- dent Ketter shortly after he
Coilege B-whose master Al- pointment) of Coilege B, said announoed the elimination of
len D. Sapp just began a two- the resident college will be a the ..presently constituted"'
year leave of abeence to bead place where classes and sem- program effective CoinmenceArts-Worth, a program to (Contiruud on P'l/1&lt; 8, col. I)
ment Day, 1971. Removal of

Vzetnam 0PJ)011e71JB

CollegeB,·Furnas College Assigned
MacdoTiald. tLivhig~Leanring' Use

far

~t Robeit r.

Ketdr
has authorlz8cl 'the aaslpui&gt;ent
of Macdonald Hall to College
S 8Jid CUfford Furnas College
-two esperimental collegiate
units-'--for use as a residential
college next fail, providm. that
the two colleges can guarantee
that Macdonald's 149 beds will
be filled.
The two units will transfonn
Macdonald Hall into the University's first "living-Jeaming
unit,~ where students and faculty can ..-!, where many educational functions can takj!
place, where education in fact
becomes a U-bour-a-day poesiBy JOHN LANE and
bility.
LESTER MILBRATH
"We want to make it much
like the English colleges, such
~t oll'olitbl so.as the ones at Oxford and CainTbe recent election of Facbridge," commimted Dr. Lyle ulty Sen a t e representatives
Borst, mastei- of CUfford Fur- from the Faculty of Social Scinas College.
ences and Administration proClifford Furnas C o II e g e, viiled an interesting first test
named Bfter the late U/B pre&amp;- of two novel features : first, a
ident, is a "college for acbolars s y s t e m of "bullet voting,"
under which each voter bad a
number of votes equal to the
number of Senators to be elect; ed · by this Faculty (21 ) and
· could assign these votes to one

Political Science Profs Say Bullet System
Aids inAssuring Minority Representation

0

•

Each of the factions presented
slates of nominees, 14 by the
COMMITI'EE and 15 by the
CAUCUS. The rules governing tbe election provided that
42 nominees with the highest
number of votes received would
be the candidates for tbe 21
seats to be filled . Five nominees who thus ·qualified, declined to become candidates
and the next five in the ranking of nominees became eligible. The 42 eligible candidates
who consented to run were then
preeented on the final bsllot.
}M:!r80n or among various can·
Two hundred and twenty-nine
didates as he ·chose; and, sec- voters cast bsllots in this final
ondly, the appearance of two round, with 4,780 votes diso\'pniZed slates of candidates, tributed among ail tbe candioue proposed by "The Conunit.- dates. CaDdidates we r e not
identified on the fins! ballot
~U::n!t ~~ty~ri!;EE by
their affiliation with any
alate) and the other by the slate, o n I y by Departmental
"Faailty-81ift Caucus" (here- alliliation; and they were listed
after. referred " ' • ~ CAU- in a randomly determined ae. Tbe Med to ap- .quence. Our analysis showed
"'"'""• • ,.,__ new features of that the bsllot position of canprompted us didates
not a diacernible
to UIICII!rtiW!•• tllilll analysis.
factor in determininJ a candi-date's cbances of wmning.
Doecitpa6n'· of the -"The llist stage ollhe election Bullet .,_., 'Aido MI..,was . a DliDinating round in
Several generalizations
wliicb lillY voting member of emerged . from our aruiJysis of
~ F)lculty was eligible to be
this election:
DliDinated, and where each
Firat, the "bulld 'Yifem" of
,:&gt;tine member could cast 21 voW., -can be efficaciou8 for
Dominating voles. About'iiO_per PIITfK-0 of minority repnoenttmon. An important · reaaon
...t of the elil1hle'Wimll(l94)
·cast 4,032 :,.otea distributed for ads!Ptm. the "buulet &amp;y&amp;tem"
w8$, 1o pennit repnli!I!Dta&amp;mOll&amp; !38 dilfenat ~

was

tion of small minorities which
could concentrate their voting
strength on one, or a very few,
candidates. In the nominating
phase, as it turned out, a single v o t e r casting ail his 21
votes for one candidate could
have secured the nomination of
that candidate. On the final
ballot, 8IIY six voters, e a c h
casting 21 votes for the same
candidate, would have secured
h i s election. "Targeting" of
votes on a few candidates was,
as will be
below, a widespread tactic among voters.
While different voter turnouts,
and a different number of seal8
to be filled, would affect the
above figures, the efficacy of
the ''bullet system" for minority representation was clearly
demonstrated in this election.
When the Faculty of Social'
Sciences and Administration·
discussed election rules, the
centiment was often expresaed
that special allocations of seats
should be ilet aside for per&amp;onll
of lower academic rank or that
there should be ailocationa Of
seats to each department as
devices for further insuring minority representation. The Faculty ""'-• however, to g~..,
fuU rein to the ''bullet &amp;y&amp;tern" to see if it, alone, would
be suocessful in providing minority representation. Let us
examine how the ''bullet &amp;y&amp;(fOntin&amp;&lt;ed
2, co1. IJ

seen

..n-

the current program stemmed
from student and faculty belloting last spring. Earlier in
the year, the AFROTC olfioes
were severely vandalized by
a group protesting its presence
on campus.
The Faculty Senate appointed a committee to study the
s ituation and their report,
known as the Kochery report,
recommended tbe termination
of ROTC. That report also
called for the organization of
a center to "study tbe phenomenon of war and peace." As
yet, Dr. Somit indicated, no
active faculty interest has developed in carrying further this
suggestion.

Linowifzls
125thSpeaker
Sol. M . Linowitz, chairman
of the American Council on
Education's Special Conunittee
on Campus Tensions, will be
principal s p e a k e r for the
University's 125th Anniversary

F~sDay~t,atthe

Hearthstooe Manor, May U.
"n\e -

,.. lhe cliDne&lt;,

one of -the ldclroft eventa--fo&lt;

the Anniversary )111111'. will also
include specia! music and the
presentation of aeveral awards
-the Samuel P . Capen Award
for outstandm. services to U/B
by an alumnus; the Walter P.
Cooke Award for aervice by a
non--alumnus, and several special 125th Anniversary Citations. Other 125th Awards will
be presented at Commencement, May 28, and at the professional -academic symposia
slated for next fall
Linowitz, a former chairman
of Xerox Corporation, is also
chairman of the National Urban Coalition, having suoceeded John W. Gardner in tha"
post last September.
Fonner

Am-

During his 11-year tenure
with Xerox, Linowitz was responsible for projecting the corporation into mternational stat.us in the busineos world.
As u.s. Ambeasador to the
Organization of American
States from 1966-1969, I..inGwitz worked on policies ooncerning food, education, housing and employment affecting
millions of Latin Americans.
He resigned the ambessador(Continued em 8, col. 2)

�-~ 25,1911

.2

elf~infO&lt;JDU;
wlrich ~
and of "bullet wtinl."
slate. Votes for Jndependent with the CAUCUS reccm- and
the 8IICCe8B . of
Our ~ pneralization, candidates were ...ell!- mendations to its SUI'P"~
then, is that "bullet wlinl," cacious, requiring on the· a-- _ but it proved leas efficient m Independent '1:811dldates s u g(C~"""- I, coL 4)
along with slalinl, .rved to are. 326 Independent wtes for . ~_of gaihlng s e a t B. ~ gests that penlllllll! elfnrts were
Since this 'tem.; aDd the """ of organized provide representation of mi- each candidate elected. The wmmng Independent candi- the fu8t e ' under
slates ( alalinl) fuUilled each norities and that special as- COMMITTEE slate, then, wsil dates, like the COMMITTEE new system, our analysis mll8t
signment
pf
seats
to
ranks
or
substantially
more
_
"ellicient"
slate,
seemed
to
be
winning
be. of these 'types cif minority repnecessarily be incomplete and
.._.,tation. Tal&gt;le I allows one departments was not required in tnmalating wtes into ..,..ts. cause a :preponderant $are of our conclusions tentative. As
. There are two possible expla:n- · their votes came from "target- to aiudy:r.e interactive affects to achieve that end.
vQters b .e gin to . understand
ations for this. One, the smaller ed" ballots.
of five variables in this elec- S~tes Are EtrectiYe
bow the system wo r k s they
Second, the use of organized number of candidates on the
tion : department size, academshould be able to use their
ic rank, alate aftiliation, length slates of candidates is very ef- COMMITTEE slate reduced Umlt.tlono In Amllysio
We know little about bow votes 11101'!' ~y. There
of service at the UniversitY, ficacwus. Tbe COMMITTEE dispersion a~d consequent
.
also
should be some guidance
and winnin8 or losing. This and CAUCQS slates urged the "wasting'' of votes. Second voters pereeived the slates and here for slate-maiers and fuelaborate table is worth careful nomination of 14 and 15 per- COMMITTEE candidates at: ' particular candidates on them. ture candidates.
•
study and can be used for a sons, respectively, and aU of tracted a higher share of voters It seemed intuitively correct to
Persons desiring to perform
type of secondary analysis by them received enough votes to who targeted their votes for us t h a t "middle-of-the-road" fUrther analysis of their own
be nominated. The COMMIT- one or a few candidates. It is candidates did better on the
interested readers.
may request from one of the
Electoral success does n o t TEE slate accounted for 28 to this phenomenon of "target- final round of balloting but ~ authors a large table containseem to be a function of rank per cent of all votes cast on ing'' of votes that we tum now. cannot be sure that the candi- ing information 011 several varidates were so perceived by the
or of length of service at the the nomination round and for 'To111etod Votlna'
Fourth, we found a signifi- electorate. The shift may alBo ables for each candidate (not
University. Table ll shows that 33 per cent of the votes cast
by name). The Polonce nominated, assistant pro-- for successful nominees; the' cant amoUllt, and a particular be affected by the fsct that the identified
icy Committee for"FSS&amp;A votfessors were just about as like- CAUCUS slate gathered 30 per pattern of " targeted" voting. final balloting ~ '! d .one-fifth ed
not to rei- information
ly to be elected as full profes- cent and 40 per cent respec- When they presented the i r more voters participating than
sors. The slight advantage lively on the nomination round. slate for the final ballot, the on the nominating round. We that could identify candidates
On the final balloting, 18 of CAUCUS urged voters to "give also know little about campaigo with the vote they received.
shown on the table for full profeilsors, and the slight disad: the 21 candidates elected had this slate (of 18 candidates)
TABLE II
; .v8J!tage shown for associate the support of a slate. Tbe across the board supporl" Tbe
professors, seems more to be COMMITTEE slate was sue- COMMITTEE, when present-.
ACADEMIC RANK AND ELECTORAL SUCC,ESS
a function of the slating pro- cessful in electing 10 out of ing their 14 candidates, asked
"'"'" than a function of rank 14 candidates, and the CAU- that voters "give two votes to
Nominated
Elected
per se. 'l'he COMMITTEE CUS slate, 8 out of 18 candi- seven persons, and one vote to
dates. Of the 7 candidates who the remaining seven persons."
12
19
(N=1
00)
..
Full Professors
had been nominated independ- Both slates encoua&lt;ged a scat4
13
Associate Professors (N= . 95) .
cessful· than the C A U C U S ently, and who continued as teeing of votes among numer10
5
(N=
120).
Assistant Prof~sors
slate, hajl )0 of its 14 nominees Independent candidates on the ous candidates, and both reas full professors, and further- finsl ballot, 3 were elected. £rained from singling out any
TABLE Ill
However, another 3 candidates particular candidates for more
~ore nominated no assistant
. professors. On the CAUCUS who had been part of the COM- concentrated support. Nearly
DEPARTMENTAL SIZE AND ELECTORAL SUC~SS
slate, assistant professors were MITTEE slate for the nomi- one-third of all voters { 72 out
as likely to be electaLas full nating round, but who were of 229 ) violated this advice
El5glbk "' of Nomi,_ "' of Suec:fll ·
professors ( see Tab I e I ). dropped as part of the slate by and cboee to cast their respecful C.ndidM..
Vo1en / C.n- from m Among Independents, one full the COMMITTEE for the final tive 21 votes as a unit, for
Oep~
from theM depts.
dkt.tfl
professor, one associate profes· ballot, all failed to win elec- single candidates. Indeed, only
FIVE LUGE DEPtuTMENJS:
sor and one assistant professor lion.
52 voters-less than one-&lt;juar(f'1vdooJooy, MOI'I~enl, HbiOr '(,
71 ...
71.4
ter of the electorate--scattered
were elected. All the unsuccess- Sioteo Forod Dlflenontly
Soc:lciiW•IIor•, pt, l~ l
N= ~•s
ful Independent candidates
Third, the two competing their votes among more than.
lO candidates, as the COMwere :811110Ci8te .o r full profes- slates differed significantly in
- aors, many of them well-known
I heir electoral success. Tbe MITTEE and the CAUCUS
frv' E MEDIU,..SIZ£0 UNITS:
tPolllicoiSd•row, Sodoktev.
on campus.
. · C A U C U S slate, as noted had, in effect, u r g e d them ..
ll.i
E«&lt;ftfHH''lo, 59eedt COIIIIJI\Ifllc:ollon,
21."
The pattern pf success of above, garnered more votes for Obviously, winning candidates
.t.nthrOPOIOO'Il
Independent candidates leads their candidates on the nomi- were substantially more sueN=106
to another interesting general- nation round than the COM- cessful in attrscting such " tarization: If you're low rank and MITTEE slate. Tbe CAUCUS girted" votes than were -losing
fiVE 'SMAll UN liS:
••
not on one of the slates, you'd continued to poll a higlwir per- candidates.
( G~, U nov iltka.POI~qo
.:
9~ Sd_.,l"t•mollonol Sknh",
better be in- a· bic department centase of votes on -the final
Table V shows bow ''tarilet:~
llod.'Sh.d iM; obo 6 .,.• .,.., not
':1 ~
(...,._Table 1) . As a matter of . ballot as well, 43.8 per cent ed" vo~ in contrast to .(Misoffll&lt;ottidwl th.,eclfkV"Itj
fact, no one .from a. medium or of all votes cast compared with bibuted" votes related tO ·sucN=21
8m'aU depllrtment w a s nomi- 35.7 per cent for the COM- cess or failure on the fin a I
nated as an Independent.
MITTEE slate. But, as Table balloting. On the COMMIT99.9
99.9
IOCI.O
TOTAlS
Table ill shows that nomi- IV shows, the COMMITTEE TEE slate all "targeted" votnees were more likely to
s I a t e was more sucoessful: ing accrued to the benefit of
from large departments than ~lecting 10 of !ts 14 candidates its winning candidates. One can
TABLE -IV
they were to come from med- m contrast With 8 out of 18 _also see in the second column
Nu'"**rot
. ium-sized departments. 0 n c e for the CAUCUS slate. Tbe that unsucoessful candidates
VOIH
Votn!*"
VOIH
· nomjpated, however, t.he-re COMMITTEE s I a t e "lost" had many more "distributed"
Caodldou
didn't seem to be any relation- only 7.4 per cent of its votes votes than did sucoessful canCOMMITTEE
SlATE
ship between the size of a per- on unsuccessful candid,ates didates. The CAUCUS candi10 5v«Hdv\Condldot..
1,354
:zu
10
135
son's department and the prob- compared with 19.3 per cent dates, on the other hand, did
• 3S3
"Unt~&gt;«•nlul Condidotft
ability of bis electoral success. "lost" on the CAUCUS slate. not receive such selective and
COMMITTEE SLATE, 1otol
l:Z:Z
1,707
&gt;5.7
10
171
Senators were elected from 11 An even more striking oontrast elfective, distribution of '"tarout of 14 departments. Curi- is in the average number of geted" votes. · The CAUCUS
ously, small units got approxi- votes per Senator elected: 171 candidates had to rely more
CAUCUS SlATE
ISoin•oduiCondldot••
1, 173
- 24.5
mately t b e i r proportion of votes per Senator for the COM- heavily on votes derived from
10 U~t~~o~a:•uf uiCondldol••
921
19.3
nominees and their proportion
~ITT E E slate, contrasted ballots which assigned only one
of final winners; this seemed to wJth. 262 votes peE: successful to four votes per candidate;
[. CAucus SLATE, To1al
2,09.4
Ill
0 .1
be a function both of slating candidate for the CAUCUS thiB pattern was consonant
1-------....:..-+---+---+----+-=-:..:....--1-_.::~

'Bullet System-

r..

succeesfullr..=-

uJ:

r!.~~:~m=ha~o:' s~

"of

....

...

...

rome

......
. . ........
'·'

--

......... .

"'
,.,

! INDEPENDEt:iT CANDIDATES
'

TABLE I
AFFILIATION WITH SLATE

ACADEMIC RANK Department

Size
lUGE
DEP.UTMENTS

Full

Associate

Professor

Professor

Assistant
Professor

......,.... ,1,

Hull !&lt;II ...,
D. ICotUnJ'l t
Polltt-p (SI
Sd!Mid•rl51

I. Cohen tl fl
HO!oi&lt;OII I I" I

Jvllon fl l
lynn l221
Prvlti !SI

Wolloc:e t231

---------~---~-~-------------... _ 121
. .lotcol" l
..n- 171
~~

....... 1 12.51

91
~ ~::.ca;:• 1
Sfthter ll l

Hovron l
Jvlion
ly nn
Modlno

· P,.v J"

Cotlen,l.

,..,.,...,

IND EPENDENT CANOID.t.TES, Toto!

11.0

176

9~

,,.

20~

TOTAlS:
Svc.uadvl CondldoliH

3,05-4
1.726

63.9
36.1

21

145

Uruua:euf11l Condiclot•a

All CANDIO.&amp;.TES

4,.710

100.0

21

221

D . lot~l n

Schn•ldoo•

91

114

TABLE V

GrHnbkllt 131

f ....kbotl JJ I

~;=~Ill

~:= g,l

l-•

~~'::~:! lSI

,t./len
lorbe•

l•lcnc.o
lve•l.kl

~.;•kbon

~:~~.,

~~~~

~~7.,

HoYor\o

· s-thwlcl

......

P1ond

_

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

Fl.._-nl• ..

St•in

l"ow.tlllll
$M'Inl61

,.,

.......

Ebert t171

"fl.erot~

.......u

......

---~c-.::':~,..~-=.-:.:.·.:::·.::::~=:.:.-::..":,::.'~bolot

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

37 .0
0 .0

CAUCUS SLATE •
8 Successful Candtdates
10 Unsu~essful Ca~~tes

. 21 .3

v-oenved

fyom Balots
Aoalgnlng 1
to 4Yo- per
C._nclldote
30.3
51.5

29~3

33 .0
49.5

,c

INDEPENDENT CANDIDATES
3 Successful Candidates
· 7 Unsuccessful Cand idates'

AU CANDIDATES

A-1111ePer-

~.::!-

..

COMMITTEE SLATE
10 Successful CandK:Iates
4 Unsuccessful Candidates

AI], Successful Candidates
All U'l'"JCCOSSfuJ Candidates

........_.., .......... ._..,...,..,Mr(.:. .. it..u""".rn.y

"'~ "'JNOff'fM)f:Nr ' ~·n. coMid.t..... lto - - •

Aver.ag8.Per-

centage of
C.nclld.tes·
Votes DeriVed
_ !Tom S.llots
Ceotlng 21.
Vo- f&lt;l!' Single C.nclklotn

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

'f•-1•

lJ

Hull
Porltt-p

Independent

Pr••'
Ofl
·woiloc•

P•••tot~l2 t

~j

Caucus

527

P...b

Moo llngl61

~ C

Committee

...,

3Sua:nafu1Condidoln
7Un•uc.c••du1Condldot••

17 .6

37.0
33 o5 ·

34.7

34.1 .

-

-

1i1.2 ,
27.7.·

29.5
44.937 .2

..... if,

·.

�One Idea for Amherst
Blends tTown &amp; Gown'
It may DeYer be built this the pro.ie!cted mile-Jooc campus
plarmeni of the Am- spina
bent campus are studying the
'lbotJsh inlegrated with autoconcept or an urban-rural in- mobile and public transportaterfaoe between the new cam- tion systems, the area would
pus and the new community
be scaled for "pleasant walkpropoaed for COIIStruction im- ing_" It would be a city in the
mediately 8djaoenl
.
.country- "a denae coooentia'The ptan ·IIOUDds like every- tion of housing and serviC81
man's. dieem ol a city, a utopi- that preserves zones or open
an world · where campus and land, playfields · and w o o d s
community are one. It would reached by foot and bicycle
be tbe last pt.., ·or the new paths around tbe lake to retain
campus to be OOD8Iructed, if it the fleedom or rural living."
gains approval from tbe State
Mixing countryside and
agencies concemed, tbe Urban urbsn cultural opportunities,
Development Corporalioli, the the community would aJao mis
New York Donnitory Author- psople. "Students, faculty,
ity and the State University married students, some emConstruction F'wld as well as ployees and children" would
SUNY itaelf.
'
·•freely coexist and int.erminAs reported iii a recent issue gle" in a setting "both peya..
of ArchUectural Rerord maga- ically a n d socially unstratizine, tbe aim ol the concept, lied," An:bit.ect 'Thompson IIIIY"being deYeloped by Benjamin
'The architect proposes four
Tbompaon Asooeiates, Cam- types of buildings: 1. commerbridge, Mea, is to mis living, cial, instructional and student
Jeaminc and cammercial func- activity buildings; 2. 16-26 story
tiona in tbe "opirit ol _ . . a ~t towers; 3. 2.'1 story
community ol livinc psople, ~~~~ or row bo.-, and
not just (in) a deadly chain 4. 6 story parking garaaes_ ·
.of isolated buildings on a bullConstruction nn this pt..,
dozed iita." 'The ...,. would be . or the Amberot deYelopment
deYeloped alonpide tbe IIIIID- ·would not becin until aometime
made Jake DOW ~. C111181ruct- b e - 1976 and 1980, accorded ... tbe .... ~ the alii ol in; to t,be plan_
way but

~
.........
- - - . . . . . , "'""""'- I a - In t h o - - Folklllllw
tho ........ af t h o - - - . . . . . . . _ - - _ , .........

- - - . . - - ~ ,_ ....... - t h o principal
...... ... t h o - - af tho Uttlen .,......_~a · (1)
.,._,..., II'!' .... (to tho left af tho
lit tho af tho main

-&gt; -

aplnaaftho--~--a-mall--(2)-aNal._ facility (3)_
Tbecampuamall _ _ _ ... t h o _
af tho cam- plan, _....,. a ba-thoMW--tho-.,..af
tho campua.. n. mal be a _.. platy,
. • . . . . _ a f - - . - . . ....... - -- ( 2 )that. -..., faculty.

n. .-

- · a ........ ... " - to tho - "' -.... fnlm
brldpa.
on tho
dlapnloiiJ
tho
tho ca,.._
'""A
andlhore
vlalble and ac·
frD!:n tho camp!la, _lt . be - m e OfiOUih ~
............ - - ........ to ...... Tbe · major otruc;tu..
af tho be an Inn af 100 mama. Around
tho 1m be _ , and
and round- - - . lndudi. . a af ,.._
--.(1)
--

-

.qua,.·-

-nmem..

n.-. _ _ _ _ _ _ _

....,__-for
-.,..s _,...
be

Its--

an -

- - lnduda • . , -

a

It-

playpound

- · (3)

.

·The :.4merican Dream World-wide Threatens Ecological Choos
"Planet Earth cannot alford
many more psople, if all of us
insist on the level ol amuence
and technology wbidl we take
for granted in the United
States," Dr. C b a r I e s 1LV.
Ebert warned lh the concluding
spMCb at the ~ Symposium, "'u:r ·:Environment :!:
125, At the GJ:oEroads," beld
on campus ~ week. ·
"'lbe signs ,of an ecological
diaast.er ..., clearly visible today," be aaid. but mankind
still may moe- hii fate. Within ·• few years, howewr, "we
will
tum."reach the point
. of
. no ·
If beca~a ol ",.., unt..rable &amp;f10IIIDCI!, icnonmce or
self1slmeas, &lt;-&gt;choose to
cJ... our minds, - Jrill condemn the future ,.._.tion to
~ ~ and will
pw the ..,...u-1 II!P for global .iuicide,• Ebert a8ld.
- 'The actin~ dean ol Undergraduate 8todiell and c:beirman
ol U/B's ~t ol Geogiapby based his warninc on
sevenl factor&amp;-tbe Malthusi-

·an propbecy of "gigantic in- nihilale man before be has a
evitable famine," the massive cbance to starve. "It is simply
world population increaae of ludicrous" to expect that man
· 70 million people par y e a r, can survive, on an ever-larger
Overaowded and dilapidating scsle, the teclmologicsl develurban concJomerationS, an ever- opment of the past 30 yearo,
.
u.cr-mg avalancbe or ~ be ssid
and the deterioration ol air and
Although vast areas of the
water supplies. .
planet are ' 'empty" and untouched (huge areas of humid
6 _ , "' 2000
World population is spiral- tropicsl 1an&lt;!s such 88 the Amazon
Basin, the arid deserts
inc dramatically, Ebert noted
---.from 250 million at the time and tbe arctic: North), Ebert
holds
that tbi!se areas are "toof Christ -to 600 million in
1648, 1 billion ilt the end of tally UJISl!itable for agricultural
products,"
despite the promthe 19th century and 3 6 bil
· t- ise or modem technology. Tolion today_ With• tbe • day, only about 12 per cent
,._tb rate ol about 2.1 per of tbe earth is -.aiiy Wider
cent per year, he predicted cultivation, be said, and "bow
"tbe _.:inc outlook is thet
ourplaDetwillbaveto~ · much more can be turned into
prodUctiVe I a n d" remains a
a population ol about 6 billion by the year 2,000." EichtY- ~
. fi.ve per cent or this increBse
'The U/8 poip'apber said
will come in tbe underdeveJ, that the - t 81'881 ol prooped countries ol I:atill ""-- duction a n d population will
i&lt;:a, Asia and Afriea, be. said. _primarily have to alllure -the
While the ~ ol foa!l- further ~ 'The stulfa is crave,·enouch, Ebert is not "great frontiers of-virgin
- 8IIQ'IIIIt.ed t h a t ·other popula- tands, but to increaae agricultion-related problems may an- tural productinn tbrouch cham-

istry and plant development" monoxide, 7 million tons ol
Aoother t r e n d which di&amp;- nitrocen oxideS and over 12
turb6 Ebert is the increasing million tons of hyd.rocsrboos
percentage of total population are spewed into the air each
which has crammed itself into year by our automobiles;
the cities of the world- By the
• 30 million bottles and cans
year 2000, 60 par cent or the are dumped on our tandacspe
world's 6 billion psople will every day;
.
live in urban cent.ero. For ex• Each American generates
ample, studies indicate t h a t 4.5 pounds of garbage a day
Pakistan alone w i I I have to for a total national eolid waste
house an additional 10 million .product ol 330 billion pounds
in her cities. And yet, Ebert eech year.
notes, it is urbanization and
With only 6 per cent of the
the accompanying industrializ.- _ world's psople, the U.S., Ebert
ation whlch may "spell eventu- said, manages to consume 40
al doom," tbrouch unbelievable par cent of the world output
demands on raw materials and of natural resouroes, not countenergy and an almost itu!ur- ing food. And tbere is not presmountable mass of waste prod- ent on earth enough water to
ucts.
produoe food '' s u i t a b I e to
·
American standards" for the
American wpresent world population_
On the latter ClOWit. Ebert
Yet, Ebert warned, the rest
cited these statistics from tbe of the world has ita sights on
American e&gt;:perience:
the "American n.-n." " We
• In 1900, the burning ol must be Jess
and &amp;bancoal in this nation produced 3 dnn our ~~renee for
billion tons ol carbon diazide materialistic values," be urged,
each year; the figure may ex- "if we are to save the earth
ceed 50 billion tOns by 2000;
from decay and eventual ex• 6.8 millioo tons of carbon tinction.''

......,..v

�-~~

4

_., __

! \ t~ 4--'\.!l~
~~- 2S, U1J

Criterion-Referenced Grading: Its More Ethical,~ 88distic

By J . RONAW GENTILE
In his inaucural adciNE on
February 16, 1971, President

Ketter reminded all of us that
teaching was the primary responsibility of the faculty of
a univt!ISity. I hope that this
occasion will spark each member of the university community to evaluate current practices and improve them. With
this goal in mind, I would like
to present a point of view on
one of the integral parts of
teaching as we now know i~
the practice of grading.
An analysis of grading practices -is critical for at least two
reasons: first, because much of
!be way students spend their
time learning in a given course
is determined by tbe grading
procedure of the instructor;
and aecorld, because the way in
which grad in g is presently
handled, probably by upwards
of 90 per cent of the •faculty
at this and every educations!
institution in tbe country, is
atrocious.
'The traditiori&amp;J and m o s t
widely used grading system is
one in which the instructor
evaluates tbe students by dif·
ferentially ranking or grading
them on the basis of their differential perfoi'mances, usually
on a test or paper. Thus it is
not unusual for the instructor to
give midterm and final examinations; to combine · the two
scores for each student in some
way to·.arrive at a final course
average; and," on the basis of
tbe distribution of scores on
this final average, to decide
which students should receive
grades of A, B, C, or whatever. Sqch a procedure is tech·
nically known as norm-referenced testing since any single
pengp's score is interpreted in
terms of tbe scores of tbe other
students-tbe norm. I prefer
tbe term competitive testing
for this procedure since one
student is forced to compete
with another in order to be
stamped with the instructor's
and society's seal of approval.
Competitive Grodlnc Is Unsound

To b.e blunt about it, comPetitive grading f.roctices are
sadutU:, unethico , skllutU:oUy
unsound, and irrelevant to tlu!
course objectivea. Competitive
testing is, first of all, sadistic
because it pits one student
against another, ~ttingupa
situation in wbich cooperation
among students is risky. It en·
courages cheating wbenever
the probability of being caught
is low (which is usually always
when tbe students are ingenious, wtuch is also usually always), and it probably contributes to the loos of )ibrary boob
and jouma1 page8. Some people might prefer to think of
these evidences of competition
as providing iiicreased motivation to study hard. I am convinced that they ina-ease motivation to find ways to beat
tbe system, but I doubt that
tbe~ r e s u It in ina-eaaes in

learning courae ODIICBPIL E-.
il com titive testing did increese :Otivation, it is s t i 11
sadistic because it iS baaed on
the assumption that everyone
cannot or should not su..-1
in the course-that is, achieve
the agreed u p on objectives.
Thus the instructor is telling
each student who does not receive tbe highest grade that he
is not as good as tbe other
students.
·
This is also where the ethics
of the pi-ooedure enter, though
it is more apparent if you think
of tbe effects of competitive
testing at the elementary schop\
level. Each student has a rigllt
to succeed in a course. In elementary school, society expects
each child to succeed in various
skills such as the three R's,
cooperative play, etc. In college, students pay for the privilege of gai ning- knowledge,
skills, or degrees. At eitber enil
of tho) continuum the end result
should be the student's success
in these goals. In a competitive
system, however, any time one
student succeeds, at least one
otber studen t fails. Teachers do
not have the right to play God
and decide who should and
should not be successes in life.
Even . were they competent to
make such judgments, making
them is not part of their job,
which is to help and encourage
eoch student achieve tlu! objectives of the course. More on
this later.
89 ... 90

'The third point about competitive testing has to do with
the grades of students which
are d e r i v e d from the test
scores. Distributions of test
scores have been the subject of
a great amount of research by
scholars in the discipline of
educational and psychological
measurement Many concepts
could be invoked from this field
to support an argument that
most tests constructed by instructors have major llaws, one
of the most ~rious being that
tbey provide unreliable measures. HO\\Iever, it is not neces.
sary to argue tbe statistical unsoundness of competitive grading practices on such esoteric
points. Even il tbe instructor's
test were technically aound and
perfectly reliable - which no
test i&amp;-any ditferential grading or ranking of students on
tbe b a s i s of the test scores
would still be an arlJitrary process. It is arlJitrary whe~r
the scores are raw, converted,
normalized, standardized, o r
otbe~. It is arlJitrary because at almost any c u to f f
point tbe score which falls into
tbe area receiving one grade is
not significantly different from
tbe cl~t score falling into
tbe area receiving an adjacent
grade. 'The finer the diacriminatioos in grading, tbe more arbitrary tbe process. Thus, if an
instructor decides that a acore
of 90 per cent correct will earn
an A, but 89 per cent will earn
a B, be has arlJitrarily made

eiREPORTER,

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not to place ~ on tbe side
of 'thooe who · have reacted ao
strongly .against tbe evila of
these procedures 1o have gone
to the opposite extreme-the
extreme of no assei!SIDeDt of
learning. By tbe argument in
tbe last few paragraphs it can
be seen that assessment of
what has been leiuned is an
integral part of tesching. Without it, teaching ca nno t be
claimed to have occurred. Tbus,
s ome assessment of whether
each student has attained the
objectives is necessa ry, al·
though tests are not the only
way of assessing t h i s. Too
many, especially in some of
the free s c h o o I movements,
have abandoned assessment entirely. While this is a neat
solution to the problems of sadism, unethU:o/ity and statistical unsoundness which I raised,
&amp;lld often has the added attractions of letting students participate in the establishment of
objectives, we cannot c I aim
that tesching has occurred until assessment of tbe learning
reveals that the objectives have
been mel
Some may argue that learn·
ing has occurred even if · tbe
objecti
have not been attained. and tbey are probably
correct. However, learning iS
almost a oontinuous process
and does not need a tescher.
Th~ if you want to justify
yourself as a teacher, you must
The Reporter ~ on this pop demonstrate that what you
to provide • forum for the ex- taught to, a given student was
chanp of views on • wide vorlety learned by him.
of the Issues fadng the academic
If neither tbe competitive ascommunity . We welcome both seSsment nor nonassessment
approaches to grading is · appositions pepers •nd letten ••
spoce permits.
propriate to euellen~ teaching,
what is? As I see it, tbe answer
Responses to this and to all View·
points are - - t., the editor· lies in what is called criterionreferenced or mastery testing.
:~~~
to~bll~ed The procedure . involved is so
named because each .student is
opoced pops. con
evaluated in mlation to the
course objectives taken as the
criterion, and he must demonteacher who engages in such strate t h a t be has mastered
practices is not even doing his these objectives. This means
job: that is, the whole practice that each student is judged
of testing and grading competi- solely in relation to theSe pretively is irrelevant to the pro- established c r i t e r i a (which
cess of teaching.
again could have been deterTeaching is an activity which mined by tbe student, the incannot be divoroed from learn- structor, or both) and ind&amp;ing. To parap~ Dewey, we pendently of tbe performance
should laugh at a salesman of any other studenL It also
who said he sold many items means that until a student has
when no one bought any. 'The I earned the material, be is
analogy to learning is perfect: merely in tbe process of learnil any student has not learned, ing. Students who take Ianser
tbe teacher has not taught him. than others to learn should not
It is irrelevant to that student be stigmatized, but should be
il other students have leamed. belped to learn. (Often it is
We can say that the teacher poosible to have otber students
was successful in the case of assist them since cooperation
those who learned, but we must will not harm anyone's class
also say that he failed in the rank. ) ·Individual differences in
case of those who did not rate of learning, of course, will
learn. Of what use, then, is a still exist, but from the standrank ordering of students from point of the instructor they are
best to worst in performance? unrelated to his pwpooe What tbe instructor needs to namely, to have each student
determine is those students · achieve the course objectives.
who have achieved tbe course You StiU Have Gledlng
objectives and thooe who have
The perceptive reader will
not. For thooe who have not, have noted that criterion-refertbe instructor needs to teach enced testing does not elimithem so that they achieve the nate the arlJitrary process of
objectives. Why else are fac- grading, sinoe you still have a
ulty members being paid to pass-fail cutoff and, wherever
teaCh?
you ~t that cutoff, there is
For thooe who would arsue likely to be a nonaignifieant
that .businesaes, industry, and difference between tbe scores
graduate schools depend upon most adjacent to il In this
tbe clasS rank of students, I kind of a grading system bow11rgue that is ioo bad. It ill not
ever, there is"nothing malicious
the teacher's job, but tbe aelec- about the arlJitrary nature of
tor's (employer or school), to the cutoll This is because each
devise ways in which to ae1ect student 18ts other opportuni.
students for t h e i r positiooa. ties to demonstrate that be has
'The 800Der tbe schools pit out achieved the objectives a n d
of the ~ of maintaining
~. ~ is _not stigmatized as
competitive permanent record infenor.
l8 a1ao much easier
files (which aeem indestnJct- for 1.\le It
instructor to a v o i d
ible and available. to almost being defensive about his asanyone but tbe aludent), the - t teclutique, to admit to
betlllr.
its arbitrarineas a n d to his
No~Noh u m a n frailties in ll8&amp;ing
Having - t a d my ....;. aome other person's kllowl..,y.a India.-! grading pro- edae. aDd discuao the maflrial
~ I want to be careful with the student to come to
this deeiaioD, since in point of
fact there is no reliable difference b e - . a score of 89 and
90. In fact, for most tests there
is probably no significant difference b e - . scores of ao and
90.
In a statistical ~. scores
which are not significantly different from one anotber should
be considered to be equivalent,
and students who receive thooe
scores should be considered to
have learned the material equally well. In case we have aome
nonbelievers on this point, I
recommend that the Reporter
invite some statistical expert
from this faculty to describe
the conditions under which adjpcent scores receiving different
grades could be .considered to
be significantly different, and
thus provide us with a ration·
al, non-arlJitrary procedure for
competitive grading. I predict
that, in practice, tbe distribution of scores necessary to sustain the obtained rational procedure will nc.ver occur.
111'1!levont to Toachlna
All of the above reasons are
sufficient in and of themselves
to warrant the immediate (and
even retroactive, if it were pos.
sible ) cessation of competitive
grading practices. Nevertheless,
to add insult to injury tbe

GVIEWPOINTS

::f.,.

-...

II~

. . . - . t u to
:"'~~ study would

some mutual

The single most important
criticism of criterioo-refereo"'lll
aBSe88Diellt techniques is thilt
you 1.-1 to establiall criteria
or behavioral objectives for the
course. For many couraes this
is no problem, especially il tbe
subject matter is logically organized into sequences of material, each level of which is
necessary as a prerequisite for
understan~ the next level
The criticism is more cogent
ior courses in which creative
products or novel aolutions to
problems are tbe goal. In these
cases, by definition, you cannot state a strict behavioral
objective ahead of time. Now
consider a class in which each
"tudent is pwsuing a different
creative project as described.
Usually tbe student (in consultation with tbe instructor) establishes his goal- what he expects to gain from the experience. How, then, should each
student's progress toward that
criterion, or tbe product that
results, be evaluated?
Only Reasonable Recourse
'The way it s h o u I d most
certainly not be evaluated is
through some competitive procedure for tbe same reasons as
given above, plus tbe additiona l reason that there is no reasonable way to compare performances which have different
objectives. Should the student's
work not be assessed? Nonassessment is reasonable only
if the instructor is willing to
take no credit for guiding the
student's thinking, encouraging
his intereSt, etc., in which case
tbe instructor is superfluous to
tbe prOcess. 'The only reasonable recourse, it seerps to me,
is for the inslfficter lind ·alud!mt to .Stablish evaluative criteria as tbe project evolves. In
practice this would involve student-faculty conferences in
which tbe instructor gives tbe
student feedback at various
points in the special project.
In this way tbe asaeasment process becomes an integral par\
of tbe learning-a-eative process,
which is as it should be.
Though the critena are not
stated in pr&amp;&lt;!Stablished behavioral terms, tbe process is
still very much criterion-referenced or, il you prefer, goaldirected with evaluative feedhack from tbe instructor.
One final P?inl Many will
dismiss tbe 1dea of criterionreferenoed . . _ t because
of tbe greater amount of work
it .requires to develop such a
system, especlally for large
c~. Such procedures have
b e e n sumessfully developed,
but tbey do require more work,
at least initially, than either
no PB9PSB'D9"t or competitive
.._,~How­
ever, no one ever claimed teaching to be easy. More important,
euellence in te.:hing will continue to be in tbe same short
supply as it is - t l y unless
faculty members adopt aome
variation of criterion-referenced
8EIIe38lnellt procalural.

Center On Its Own
'The Jeff..- Education
Center, which was founded ·un·
der the all8pices ol U/ B in
1967, is now fuDctioning independently of tbe Univenity. 'II
will be lldministered by mem·
bers of its aurtOUIIding community.
'The move was mquested in
mid..January by tbe board of
directors of ·the Center, whO in·
dicated that tbey had fOUDd alternate 80Wa!8 of (u n din g.
"'Their action ia in keiii&gt;inl "th
the intent of Title I of
Higher Education Act of 1965,
the aource of tbe oo;,inal grant.

1:

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.

GREPORTBR::,
. ..' ..:

1911

Mas/ers'Seeins The LastWJrd on Set,
•

•,

ButHopes Soon rTo f3e 6ut ofStyle'
-By SUZANNE METZGER
....... SIMI

Dr. William H. Masters was
. immediately eocircled by medical .students and bombarded
by questions during the coffee
hour following his claasroom
lecture at the Medical School
on Friday, Maicll 19. Masters,

. ~~ :1':: :.=.:

- and doesn't even want his
·books to· appear in paperback,

declined to have a formal press

ccmference.
Queries were fired at him in
disconnected a r r a y, ranging
from tl..- concerning courses
in sex taught at his home base,
Washington University Medical School, ' tO questions on
ho111081!!luality and on the
mechanics of female orgasm
and male potency.
Sometimes Masters referred
the questi0oer to his text on
human sexual response, or said,
'Til discuas that in my lecture
tonigbL" Most of the time, his
responses were immediate, programmed by years of observation and study. His amazingly
large green eyes stared down
the inte
tors, punctuating
the defW'fv'e quality of his
statements. It wasn't that he
was cold or distant; he was
very busy, f!lPid in deliveril)g
the answers. Even his replies
of "I don't know" -.ned the

school, but, he adds, it must be
in all three. "There is nothing
that teaches about sex ball so
much as Pop patting Mom's
fanny as he walks by her in
the kitchen. Obviously, she
loves it, and the kids watch and
say, 'Boy, that's for me.' That's
sex education as it can be done
in the home.''
Presently, the clergy treat.;
more sexual dysfunction problems than any other group, acrordin~ to Masters, followed by

:,S:{ wW.~ ~"=

last V(Ord-he is interested in
progress towards more knowl-

:ll\"b..hoo"t!:.~e~!;':l:'~ =~
10 years.
No MWal

J.......,.ms .

He provided facts as he's discovered them, not p a s s i n 11

Str.ldMtt

IIUO:B,.._

ocheduled four months in advance;,
Four new units (couples ) are
taken on each week for treatment. The ~week, sevenday-a-week program, begins
with an initial session lasting
for two to two and one-ball
hours, followed by su~t
sessions of one or one and onehalf hours. There are physical
and laboratory tests, history
taking interviews, interrogation
of both mates by the male and
female ~,earn member, and
roundtable discussions. Then,
there. are all-important homework assignments-which in·
volve gradual development from
honest verbal communication
and "sensate focus" experi'll'ces
to consummation. Therapy is
not goal-oriented, J'4astenl says.
Things happen when there is no
pressure to "p,roduce, perform,
and achieve.' 'lbe patient
lloesn't "have to do anything."
Performance fears are removed.
Masters ~epor ts that there
has been "success" with twotbil'ds of theu patients. (It has
been stated to be higher.)

•.tecta

wtth . . . . . . . . .

woman, he never will be a man.

'!bough he might perform well
wid\ another woman."
authority. A man with a very
"How would you advise a
healthy ego, he is not the least
male partner who can't bring
modest when _speaking on the
his wife to orgasm?," inquired
subject of his own territorial a future doctor. "I'd tell him to
domain.......,._
bring his wife into the office."
"'lbe sexual act is potential"What do you do about State
··ly the ultimate communication
laws relating to sex'r' "Ignore
between two people." Masters
them."
emphasw.i potentially. "Fifty
. "Do you get into trouble?"
per cent of marriages suffer
"We haven't. We have litigafrom some sexual dysfunction,"
tion going now, but not related
he estimates. He added that
to sex laws."
the marital problems of the disCurrent Work
advantaged in our own society,
Masters was asked about his
and those of individuals in
current work with homosexuals
other cultures have not as yet
and lesbians. Some wish to bebeen explored.
rome heterosexual, he pointed
Masters and his wife, Virout, while others don't want
ginia Johnson, are dedicating
to change, but just want to betheil' lives to eliminating the
come orgasmic with the partproblem of sexual dysfunctions
ner of the same sex. Patients
-90. per- cent of which, says
are not encouraged to change
Masters, are of psychic origin
if they don't express the deme
and are most commonly manito. Masters says he's not yet
fested in the non-orgasmic feready to publish findings, bemale, the impotent male or the
cause the five-year follow-ups
mare who,romplains of premaare not completed.
ture ejaculation.
"Is homosexuality caused by
Theil' le8pi aPPJ'Of!Ch emsome childhood trauma?" Mastploys' nlile and female co-therers replied that to say it's
apists who work through an ed- Nol!8rtlcularcaused by trauma is to say it's
"What constitutes success?,'' · something abnormal. "HOIIIOucative-paymotbera~ proeM. olfering I! rap1d t.ro-week he was aslred. For one person it sexuality is not abnormal." He's
might be achieving an orgasm in emphatic about this. It just
any . ~-. .F01or another it might i.s---'t ezists. The Judeo-Cbri.&amp;in inter- 6an tradition has ·ven it a
bel c.n ""'
during be achieving
~activity.'.lAboratory ob- . cowae. "We ~h the l_NI- negative moral vafue. · But,
MWV~Jtliln pf the aaual act was
tient "-'rccs any particular Masters ieminds, ~­
done by Masten IIDd Johnson goal. An orgasm is an or- ity occurs throughout the aniClllly in their pnliminary study. pllll." Much is left up to the mal k~nl[dOm and bas been
tbe findinp ol ,which thw pub- patieats. U, after the two recognized throughout hist«y'
llsbed in ibelr' lint book, Hu-- WMb, progress has not been
"'s it more important for the
made, Masters IIDd Johnson female to have an -cbment
manSauat~Masters IIDd Jolmaall· do not give up IIDd refer the _couple to to her . . - in Older to enpuiJICirt to ln!at paycbiatric other sources . for help. They joy aes, tlwl it is for the
Mastth gives an af~ but rather to canect consider that thm 'team has
8aual ciYafundion, -help open failed, not the . patients. Suc- r11'1118tive to this question. '"l'be
up OOIDIIIIIDiell1 be t wee n ceeaful couples are fpllowed up female identifies more with her
matB!I, IIDd tbeNby improve tbe with talepbone call__,__ ~th the total peraon
_mmiat-relatioaoblp.
"'s-the ~ related to the IIDd the total situation."
r......-...~
.problem?, medical student . "''ben would you say a wo~ c:auples are Nferred Baked.. The partmr -may conto them by .~ or pbysi- .tribute to the problem, 11118c:lanL Appliamts are auefully ...ad MaslerL "If a man has came on st1on1 with, "' ·doll't
time know what Jove Js!W
ecremed, IIDd .,_ tab u.... ......, dlffk:ulty _ tbe
which are- illtereetillg .t o ,.,.,.. "he attempts bitercourae with
Masters achocates &amp;ell: eduaays, 'You'll -~
says MalteiL Couplea are lben IUs wife and
put on ali · ~ .list IIDd are ·l!e -a Jllllll!' tbell to thet cation in home, cburcb and

"'moral judgments, l;pl!&amp;king with

=--=~ ~
~ !.:lf.:
,_,.*

male?"

:anm:n .:io.t.::?"-~

roo

she:

•

c

\

::n c~cal~~~~~ ~
least called upon for help is
the me&lt;!ical profession.
The teaching of formal
courses in sexual function is a
recent development in medical
schools, tllOugh one-third of the
country's medical schools still
offer no such couraes. Within
the past decade, Masters points
out, two-thirds of the nation's

medical schools have included
this in their curriculum. Previously '·universities have been
afraid that the general public
would not !lccept sex research."
More Resardlers Neeclocl

Washington UniverRity
teaches a basic sexual function
course in the second year. It
also offers an elective series and
a special three month fellowship, open to students from all
over the world.
The future of sex research,
Masters feels, lies in the training of other male-female teams
~ on the Masters-Johnsou prototype. They can then
· go all over the world to treat
disorders. Presently about eicht
or nine teams are being trained
in SL Louis. They will be able
. to d o both teaching and research. "It is important that
correct material be taught correctly," Masters says.

Arts &amp; Letters Outlines

Evaluation Procedures
When a faculty member is
reviewed by his department for
tenure or promotiooal decisions, a standard procedure is
followed in the Faculty of Arts
and Letters, Acting Provost
Thomas Connolly says.
Review begins at the departmental level where three areas
are traditionally examined
These includa scholarship credentials, teaching ability and
public service to the University. In evaluating these areas,
each department uaes di1ferent
standarda. Connolly says, and
usually the individual does not
appear at an evaluating seaaion,
his record to ~
The case is voted on by the
department and is · aent, with
the """'"'mendations,. to the
Committee ·o n Appointments,
Promotion, and Tenure ol the
Faculty of Arts IIDd Letter&amp;..
The committee goes .,_ the
_.•a dossier and 8ludies it
in r e 1 a r d to the traditional
three areas. Tbey look .....
three letlenl of rerommendatioll
from I'8ClOIDized people in tbe
appointee's field, IIDd two letters from Univwslty ~
outside the dapu1ment ·..aluating the penlllll's ....X. to
the Uniwnlt)o.
.
Beginninc IMt
•
tbe
iDdividual's te.cbing
~iY&amp;­
, _ IIDd public -.ice are also
I1IYieWed by tbe ==tion ol
epecillc • .
...
Is.
The
under evaluation is
_ : r t o the committee by

r!"hl:

the department head. The appointee, while not invited to
appear, is asked to submit ma•
terials. He is also usually notified that the committee is considering the case.
u both the department and
Faculty committee agree that
a person should be granted tenure or promotion the matter
goes to the Presidential Review
Board. U, however, both the
F8!'u!ty committee and department deny changed status, the
matter dies. ~ts between the findings of the Facility committee and u..- of
the department or between the
proyost and department, also
C8ll8eB a review by tbe Pr.idential board
The Presidential R e v i e w
Board considers the .,.. as
preeanted by the · ~t
!Jeliil and provo8t and advi8M
the preeident on its deciaioll.
The preeident then mabe the
final declaioD.
U a facultY "*""- is unhappy With the preeident's d&amp;cision he can appMi it ta the
Eloecutive- Committee ol the
Faculty Senate. A IIIJb.&lt;lammlt..
tee ol the Eloecutive Committee ia drawn by Iota to ' the Cll88.
u the faculty member is 8li1l
cliMatialled with tbe decl8lon,
it can ba appealed to the Slatewide SUNY Senate GrieYance
c-mittee. An apjSial here ....
suits in a ftnal deCision by the
Cbancellor.

�6

~=t~r•

~

.. ,

.If-* 2S,1P11

'?

Student Rules and RegulationS
EDITOR'S NOTE: TheM Sill·
d•lll RaJa and R•tulotioM for
tile Sial&lt; U.UU.nity of NW&gt; York
at . BM/fol&lt;&gt; wcn __ _.d bj th•
Cowocii o/ tile U.UU.raity, May
20, 1970. They an publioMd /aon
for tile firat IUM, for tile rocord
and for nf•nnco. T/aoy tupplo-

':.,..~:::::..= ::•J':f:t:(jrft:~

Pro..U... of Srau.Oporot•d
lutitutio .. of Stat&lt; U.UU.roity of
NftD Yori," a •toUIM'fl.t of the
SUNY Boord of Trwt«o, publiolaod U. tho Reporter, Octobor
1, 1970. Tloo tut of tlaoee r&lt;fu/4·
tione ..- "1'f'(&gt;l!H to tho Reporter by tho Dwwion of Swd•ltl A(,;
oro tho

-

~~,J",!

3.at-:f"u:!.:t"Wd

- A university, especially a
State Universfty subject to cxmstitutioual requiremeniB, must
JU8llllllee students the rights
which the society and its laws
protacl An American university ,....,antaes its students
these r¥its on a campus oniy
by treating them as citizens of
a larpr society.
University disciplinary processes take appropriate ·action
when student conduct directly
and-significantly interferes with
:be University's primary educational responsibility of insuring all members of its community the opportunity to attain
their educational objectives in
consonance with the institution's mandate. These resuJa·
tions governing student behavior have been formulated
to be reasonable and realistic
fM all students.
When a student has been
apprehended for the violation
of a law of the community, the
state, or nation, it is the Uni·
versity's position not to request
or agree io special consider&amp;·
tion for the student because of
his student status. It should be
understood that the University

have been afforded due process
under the law.
In summary, the University
upects and asks for its mem·
bers no greater or no less freedom or liberty tbsn exists for
the persons in the society. The
University's position, therefore,
is not to request or agree to
special consideration because of
the status as a studenl The
University will not. interfere
with the law enfora!ment and
other agencies. As part of its
educatiOnal mandate, jt will be
concerned about student rehabilitation.

I. _8onor8l llulos ond ~
1.00. All laws of the Board of
Trustees of SUNY, City of
Buffalo, Town of A m h e r s t,
State of New York, and United
States of America including but
not limited to the New York
State Pen a I Law, the New
York State Vehicle and Traffic
Law, and the New York State
Education Law shall apply on
the campus and shall be considered part of the Student
Rules and Regulations.
1.05. All rules and regulations in these· chapters shall be
considered as additions to the
appropriate Board of Trustees,
city, state, and federal law and
shall apply to all students.
1.10. Any offenses arising out
of any of the laws mentioned in
sections 1.00 and 1.05 above
shall be considered proper matters for adjudication before the
appropriate university . disciplinary body.
1.20. There shall be no limit
under these chapters as to punishment to be imposed, such
punishment shall be at the discretion of the judicial body and
shall be limited only by the
rules governing the university
disciplinary , bodies. cFor specific sanctions which may be in-

~-n~ta~~o~~ "fJ:: j~..,'j~~;{i~~

versity does not conceive of itself as a usanctuary'" for law
breakets. The University has
always been and should continue to be concerned that
whenever students aie involved
in lep] problems they be ade·
quately advised and repre_sented by qualified counsel.
Students who violate a local
ordinance, or any law, risk the
legal penalties proscribed by
civil authorities. However, violation of law for which the student pays the penalty will not
necessarily involve a violation
of academic ·standards or rules
of the University. The University or college cannot be held
responsible for off-aunpus activities of its individual students. However, in cases involving violations of the law
which occur on campus, the
Universil)r may have to be con·
cemed w1tb the aspects, which
by their nature. adversely affect
the University's education role.
In any University disciplinary prooedure, one of the hil!'&gt;est priorities of the UniverBlty
is the safeguard of a student's
Fourteenth Amendment rights
to due prooess. Due process is
DOt an evasive legal concept but
rau- simply requires the rudi·
mentary elements ol "fair play"
in AltV adversary prooeeding.
To thle end all UniverBitx disciplinary procedures will at
least afford the defendant a
clear statement ol the chsraes
qainot him, and the nature ol
tbe evidence upon which the
c:tuua- are. based. Seoondiy,
the clefelldant shall be giwn a
fair hMring, be allowed to 0011·
&amp;oat and crGII&amp;-f!UJilin wit- : a n d preioent his own pollition. evidence and 'explanatbL. Latly, no ·disciplinary action. will be taken unless the
dlariee are proven beyond a

railliiallble doubl The . ~
.,_, llldiCIIbid th.et if these
~ elalarlB ol "fair play"
are ¥filled• tbe defendent will

Bpdy.)

versity sponsored functions that
threoKens or endangers bealth
and safety.
1.60. FALSE llEPOilTING. A person is guilty of falaely reporting an incident, when, m-ing
the information reported, or circulated to be false or baseless,
be causes such informatiob to
be conveyed to any university
or community authority.
1.85. DRUGS AND NAB.OO'I'lQl
Possession without prescription
of any narcotic or barbiturste
drug, or of moet so-called ''pep
pills•' and "tranquilizers" is
contrsry to federal and/0&lt; state
law. Any student found to be
in illegal possession of drugs
must be reported to the appropriate civil authorities and is
also subject to disciplinary ac·
lion by the university.
1.90. DANG EROUS WEAPONS
AND EXPLOSJY&gt;&amp; It is a violation
of the New York' State Law
and University Reguiatioll!l for
a person to possess a rifle, shotgun, firearms, ammunition, fire.
crackers, or explosives in or
upon the building or grounds
used for educational purposes
of the university without Written authorization. This includes
roman candles or similar combustibles or explosives.
1.95. GAMBLING. Gambling in
any university facility is prohibited.
II. Policies Roloted to FNedom
of Exp111Silon

2.00. .ACADEMIC FREEDOM . The
University supports the principle of academic freedom as a
concept intrinsic to the achievement of its institutional gnals.
This principle implies a trust
in the integrity and responsibility of the members of the
academic community. Samuel
P . Capen, former chancellor of
the University of Buffalo, who
is remembered for the tradition
of academic freedom be i!bple·
- men ted during his leadership of
the University, said in 1935:

petition and, in the CBBe ol the
residence balls, personal privacy in living areas is in·
volYed.)
/
2.10. PICKEriNG ,ANJI DEKON!miATIONS. In regard to oncampus student actions and
demonstrations that tend to
endenger life, public or private
property or to violate local,
state, or federal laws, each student will take the cxmaequence
of his own actions as an indi·
vidual before the law, as well
as being referred to the Student Court and appropriate university disciplinary bodies. Any
damage to public or private
property must be assUmed' by
thoSe legally responsible.&gt;
All members of a university
community must share the responsibility for maintaining a
climate in which diverae views
can be expressed freely and
without harassment. Dissent
and differences are best ex·
pressed at a university on a
s:.a!:'.:rs~:.'r tbsn through
The State University of New
York at Buffalo has trsditionally supported the right of its
students, faculty, and staff to
peaceful protest. Always im·
plicit ill the understanding thet
demonsi.rators will not interfere with or violate the rights
of others. It is the obligation
of all to assist in maintaining
order and to assure courteous
reception of any campus speaker or visitor.
The following pertains to the
conduct of those members of
·the University community who
feel compelled to express their
dissent through picketing and
other forms of demonstrstion :
1. Picketing or demonstrsting must be orderly at all times
and should in no way jeopardize public order or safety or
interfere with the University's
progrsms.
2. Picketing or demonstrating must .not interfere with en·
trsnces to buildings or the normal
of pedestrian or vehicular traffic.
3. Studen ts involved in picketing or demonstrating may
not interfere by mingling with
organized meetings or other
assemblies for the purpose of
harassment, since this invades
the rights of others fu 8B&amp;emble
and the rights of speakers to
free expression.
4. Picketing or demonstrsting
may not obstruct or physically
interfere with the integrity of
the classroom, the privacy of
the residence halls, or the functioning of "the physical planl
2.20. LOrrEIUNG AND TBESPAS-

1.35. DISRUPTION. A person is
guilty of disruption when be :
1. interferes with university activities; or 2. obstructs university activities. University activities include but are not limited to : teaching, research, administration, public services,
functions. or other authorized
activity programs on university premises.
1.40. UNAUTHORIZED ENTRY. A
person is guilty of unauthorized
entry when be enters into any
university facility without authority. University facilities include but are not limited to the
following : buildings, parking
lots, athletic fields, and all

·• Acceptance by an institution of
the principles of academic freedom implies that teachen in that
institution are free to investigate
any 1ubject, no matter bow much
it may be hedged about by Ia·
boos; that they are free to make
known the results of their investigation and their reflection by
word of mouth or in writing, before their c1aues or elsewhere;

1.50. UNAUTHORIZED USE. A
person is guilty of unauthorized use when be uses any university facility without proper
authority.
.
1.60. KlSUSE OF UNIVERSITY
OOCUllENT8. A P.,rson is guilty
of misuse of university docu·
menta when be: 1. forges, or 2.
alters, or 3. uses without authority, or 4. receives without authority, or 5. poasesaes uhiversity dOCUIDeDts without authority.
1.65. BEGI8l'IIA'I'ION OF 9l'U·
DENT ORGANJZATIONS. A person
is guilty of violation of university policies when be violates
university J!o1icies or resuJa.
tiona cxmcerning registration of
student orpnizations and uae
of facilitles.
1.70. REA80NAJ1LE III!IQUE!IT OF
A UNIYBIISlTY OFPICIAL. A person is guilty ol failure to com-

tablished prejudices, and no mat- SING ON UNIVERSITY G.B.OUNDS OR
ter bow miltaken they may ap- IN UNIYER8ITY BUILDINGS. Any
pear to be in the ey.. of memben peraan not the parent or legal
and friends of the 11111titution; thet guardian of a student in attendtheir continuanc:e in office will ance at the university who loitbe in all inltancoo
roed by
in or about the university
the Prevailins ruleo of't:.ure and ers
(building) buildings or grounds

campus areas.

~th~~~P~

university officlils in the performance of their duties.
1.76. PlniiiCAl. AJIUII!8 AND
HAllA8IDO:NT. A peraan is .lllilty of pby8ical aboa or tuument when bepb,fsicslly moor ' - ' - any individual or

'per80118 on ~owned or
oootrolled pt'CJII8l'ty or at uni-

~fr th~be!:!ree.,; ::r~rre:!~

the grounds of their difference in
their classes or elsewhere; that
they are free u citizena to take
part in any public controveny
outside the institution; that no
represaive meuuree, direct or indirect, will be applied to them
no matter how unpopu..lar they

::;e~re.ttro:!:~oe~~

thet their ac:aclemic advencement
will be dependent on their ocientilic competence and will be in
!'0 wUe afl'ected by the popular.
!ty or unpopularity of their opin-

now

without w r i t t e n permission
1rom the president, CWitodial or
other person in charge thereof,
or in violation of po&amp;ted rules

•ona or utterance.; that 1tudenta or resuJations governing t he
in the inltitution are free, ineo- l18e thereof, shall be guilty of

!:!e:
~':laW:':. ~ 'f:.
quire into any llllbject thet inter-

..ta them. to o~ize diocuu.ion
grou~ or etudy clubo for the
oonaideration of any llllbject. ·and
to invite to addn!oo them any
o~er . they may cboooe; thet
cenoorehip of student publicationa
ohall be bued on p~ the
8llllle li1'0UDdo and ohall extend
no further tbut thet exercioed by
llf.._\!nitad Statee Poetal author·

disorderly conduct. (Section
240.20 of the New York State
Penal Law.) Resulations on
each campus shall include the
marmer by which campus visitations by non-&lt;ltudents shall be
developed in aOCO&lt;dence with
the Penal Law.
Under "Section...240.35, a person is guilty of loitering when
be loiters or remains in or
about a school, coUece or universl_ty building or grounds, not
having any reason or relationship involving custody of or reaponsibility for a pupil or student «'any~ legitimate
reason for bemg there and no(
having written
. • !tom

2.05. PETITIONS, INDIVIDUAL.
Any student has the right and
privilefe to petition or disseminate infprmation on campus
In the residence balls, studen~
must obtain permission !tom
the appropriate Houae Council
~- individual or group pe- any autho~t the
.
titions can be circuiated same.
( Nota: The intent ·ha&amp; DOt oo...;
Under Section 140.05 a per·
to ~ the individual's right to son is ~ ol ciiminaJ tres-

paasing in the fourth degree
when be knowingly enters or
~ UD1awfully . . _

prem-

18e8.
2.30. lllllOOilllB, UIIB OF.

Students' records are ooofidential
to be releaaed only to "f'PrDP.ri:
ate faculty and administrative
officers. Releeae ol auch records
to any other college, prospec.
tive employers, or governmental
agencies, occurs only with the
student's knowledge~ and cxmsent, or upon subpoena, unless
material demanded by subpoena is legally priviJeaed or otherwise exempt from the process.
! The Office of Admissions and
Records maintains this same
policy concerning the release of
student grsdes.) The university alao doeS not compile membership lisbi of stUdent organizations but the name of the
President of each group and
the Faculty Advisor are re.quired for purposes of use and
reservation of Univen;ity facil ities.
Ill . General Policies ond
Proc:edu.......Stanclants of
Student Conduct

3.00. ACADEMIC DISHONeJTY.
The development of intelligence a n d . strengthening of
morsl responsibility are two
of the most important ailllll of
education. Fundamental to the
accomplishment of these purposes is the duty of the student
to peiform all of hili required
work without illegal help.
Cheating on examinations and
plagiarism (e.g. receiving or
giving information on astiignments, papers, examinations;
copying material without acknowledging the source ) are
acts of d ishonesty for which
the penalty may be expulsion
from the university. All cases
involving possible academic dishonesty are at present handled
by the academic areas concerned.
3.05. ALCOHOUC BEVEJtACES.
Alcoholic beverages are sold in
Norton Hall by the Univen;ity
Food Service under a license
issued to the Faculty-Student
Association. Sale and use in
the building are governed by
the New York State Alcobolic
Beversge Law, the rules of the
State Liquor Authority, and
regulations established by the
S tudent Union Act i v i ties
Board. ( For speci(U: rul£s gov-

erning Norton Union, see Sec-

tum4.1JO )
Possession and use are per·
mitted in the Residence Halls
under policy established by the
Inter-Residence Council · and
resuJations voted by the resi·
dents of each hall. ,
Rules governing the uae of ·
alcoholic beversges in NO&lt;ton
Hall and the Residence Halls
are filed with and reviewed by
the Alcobol Review' Board appointed by the President of the
University. Perrniaslon for uae
of alcoholic beversges.elaewhere
on the campus may be' granted
for special occasions by the AI·
cobol Review Board (201 Har·
riman Library) .
3.20. ENTIIIIPIIISI!:, STUDENT.
Any pro~ -~ by
students or orpnizations bearing the name of the university,
must receive the off'lCial approval of the appropriate uni·
versity authority before an·
nouncements are made of such
enterprises. _ •

3.30.

UNPAID UN1VEII8lTY Ao-

COUN'l'll. A student with unpaid
and overdue university ac·
counts will not be pmmitted to
ze.resister for the following
semester, nor will be be eJ!tiUed
to receive ll statement or transcript of his credilll UDtil his in·
~ is '8etllea 'lbe uni·
versity dOiB DOt act u a col·
lectioft II&amp;'III1CY for commercial ·
outside poupe ..- lqdlviduals3.«1. Dmft'lftCAftON CAJID. A
otudent idoatificatlon card
( LD. _!md) is ·~ for

�I

, _.,.

. _ . 2S, In.II •

F i• F•r: -~

~ student at the univwsi.ty
early In the fall - . and
validated after spring ..,.;.tmtioD. 'lbe LD. card &amp;erWI8 as
ofticial idaDiification .. a State
Univmsity of New YO&lt;k at
Buftaio student and entitles the
owner to library privilepa.
Upon pa.yment of fee tbe valldated LD. card will permit admission to bome athletic eventa
and c:ampus cultural eventa,
~ •

activit.!." student

sored
and ~:
ClliiiiiU8 student discounts. LD.
cards are NON-TRANSFERABLE. Cuds which are used
illeplly will be confiscated and
turned.,_ to tbe 0Hice of Student A1fainl to be relumed to
tbe student. Studenta accuaed
of leodinl their cards to otbers
or using another's card will be
brought before the Student Ju-

~~~:"~tL~i

times. (In case of !01111, a student should obtain a new card
from the Inslnlctional Communications Center, Room 1,
Foew Hall, Friday from 12:003:00 p.m.) "A $1.00 chsrge is
made for replaoemenl

of Bu&amp;lo TraffiC Court. Univwsi.ty cbarfles - IDIIY be &amp;&amp;- ' foe the towing of illegalJy parl&lt;ed

Yehicles.

7, LitJbility. 'The University
accepts no liability for los&amp; or
damaae to " motor vehicle or
its contents.
3.55. ABANDONEII VBBJa.1111. A
motor vehicle sball be deemed
to be abandoned if left for more
than seven ~· In one spol
'The vehicle sball be dispoeed of
In a&lt;=rdauoe with tbe taw. 'The
last tegistered owner of an
abmdoned vehicle sball be liable to tbe university for tbe
cost of removal, storage, etc.
3.60. CHANGE OF ADDRESS.
Each student is required to
keep Admissions and Records
Informed of his mailing address
and any chanses tbereol.
IV. -

4~

HoW -

Rules

=..:.~o

advertising material in any form may
appesr on the exterior surface
of Norton Hall, including entry

BuiWo are permiUed 'in Norton Union. ·
2. Beer will be sold in tbe .
Rathskeller only f r o m the
hours of 2 :00 p.m. until closing.
3. Alcoholic beversges m a y
be served in tbe Tiffin Room
dtuing its hours of service.
4. Alcoholic beverages JD11Y be
served in deSignated areas in
Norton Hall only at events
· cstered by Food Service.
6. Alcoholic beverages purchased in the Rathskeller, Tiffm Room, and rooms for cstered events, must be consumed
only within ·t hose rooms.
6. 'The pooeession or consumption of alcoholic beverages
in the bowling alleys and pool
. room is prohibited.
. 7. 'The possession or oonsumption of alcoholic beverages
in ,other than designated areas
in Norton Union is prohibited.
4.20. CARE AND USE OF FACILfTIES. Proper care and use of
furniture and equipment is re-quired at all times. No article
or equipment belonging to Norton Hall, such as furniture or
pictures; may be moved or
taken from the building, including the Terrace, except by
special permission of the Director's Office. Furniture may
not be moved from one room
to another without specific permission from the Operations
Office, Room 115. Animals are
not permitted in the building
at any time.

ways.

Literature and publications,
such as bulletins, slingers,
newsletters and the like, may
be distributed in the building
if sponsored by a recognized
group, unless the Publicstions
Board rules otherwise.
All private groups wishing to
advertise or sell any merchandise for students, faculty or
alumni, must receive advance
permission from tbe D irector or
Associate Director of Norton
Hall.

3.50. PARKING .REGULATIONS.
1. VehU:k Registration. Each
student who !~rives a motor ve-hide on csmpus must register
each vehicle. During class registrstion there are severallocstions set "P and appropriately
identified for this purpose.
After claas registrstion, the ve-hicle may be registered at the
Security Office or at the Office
of Student Accounts. Each stu4.10. ALOOHOUC BEVERAGES,
dent shall be bound by the ALOOHOL BEVERAGE CONTROL
posted and published traffic LAW. All provisions of the New
regulations. He will be held York State Alcohol Beverage
responsible for all traffic vio- Control Law and rules of the
lations committed on csmpus State Liquor Authority apply
with any car, motorcycle, or to Norton Union and the State
other. self-propelled vehicle reg- University of New York at
istered in his name. A oopy of Buffalo. Special a t t e n t i o n
the oomplete State University should be "pilyed to the followof New York at Buffalo Ve-- ing regulations:
hide Regulations should be ob1. Any person who misreptained during class registrstion resents the age of a minor peror from the Office of Student son under the age of 18 years
Accounts or the Campus Secur- for the purpose of inducing the
ity Office.
sale of any alcoholic beverage,
2. Permits. All students are as defined in the Alcohol Bevexpected to obtain at no charge erage Control Law, to such miand affilt a permit for every nor, is guilty of an offense and
vehicle parked on csmpus. Pos- upon oonviction tbereof shall
session of a permit entitles the be punished by a fine of not
holder to park only if there more than $50, or by imprisonis -available space in the allot- ment for not more than 5 days,
or by both such fine and im·
ted parking areas.
3. SpeciDJ Permits. Students prisonmenl &lt;ABC Law, Ar·
who need special parking con- ticle 5, Section 65-A)
sideration for beelth reasons,
2. Any person under the age
must apply for special permis- of 18 years who presents or ofsion from the Office of the Vice fers to any licensee• under the
President for Operations and Alcoholic Beverage C o n t r o I
Syslems, 139 Hayes Hall.
Law, or to the agent or em4. Par/Ung Policy. Automo- ployee of such a licensee, any
bile parking on the CBmJ&gt;I!!l is written evidence of age which
considered to be a pnvilege is false, fraudulent or not acgranted by the university. 'The tually his own, for the purpose
adminlatration is aware that at of purchasing or attempting to
peak periods tbere is a critical purchase any aloobolic beverahortaae of perking space and aae, may he arre3ted or sumis altempting to keep up with moned and be examined by a
the beevy demands of a grow- magistrste having jurisdiction
ing student and faculty pop- on a cbarle of illegally purehasulation as elliciently as fi- ing or attempting to illegally
nanoes-and land permil In or- purchase any alcoholic beverder to make perking as equit.- ·aae. (Article 5, Section.65-B)
able as ·poasiljle, an elfort is
3. No retailer sball permit or
made 4D keep perking regula
suffer to appear as an entertiono reaaonabl.8 and to enf~ tainer; on any premises lithem strictly. Each student is oensed for retall sale hereunder,
expected to 'III'Ork out a- ached- any person under the age of 18
u1e of arrival at the campus years. Failure to restrain "'!"h
which will allow him time to · a person from so ap~g
find a 1ep1 par~ place. Ig- sball be ·deemed to constitute
no...- of regulations is DOt permission. (Article 8, Section
considered an .,..,._ for viola- 100, 2-B)
aeii
tion.
4. No person licenaed to
6. Parking is prohibited at alcoholic: beverqes s!Wl suffer
all times on tbe roadways (ex- "'! penmt any_pmbling on tbe
cept- as poeted), sidewalks, lioenl!ed P..,.,._, ?' sufftoer L"!
laWDI, rr o u n d a, lalllla and penmtd~-~(
• ......,_,_
~ of the perking
come ~·Y· ..r......, ,
..__ 'The 1.lllivwsi.ty JD11Y tow Section 106, 6)
,
away Wlbicles. illep)ly -JOUiaed
4.16. ALOOH9fE ........_
ani! a -abup.
HOIITOH BOUIIB COUNaL IIICU6. P"'"'""' Fina Gild Pmtll- LATIOHII.
,
tia. City of Bu1Wo perking
L Only alcoholic ~
ticbta are -.ad. Anyone ~ from tbe licalaed
wishing to appeal a ddoet must FSA .Food Service at tbe State
arran,e for aucb tluoulh City Univwsi.ty of New YO&lt;k at

8

r

4.25.

CHECKING ABEAS.

Books,

coats and parcels should be
checked in areas provided. This
includes checkrooms and the
special cafeteria chairs. Norton
Hall does not assume the re-sponsibility for lost articles. A

~ ·Tbe ptymmt of ac!dltiona! tuitioll incuned by a
part-time student u a nBIIt of
adding a coune . . . _ . , t to
the date of tbe chan1e of
..,patmtioll must be made on
oourae. Additional ' - DillY be
..-aed for late ~
late payment, and i~
6.10. TilmON CIIDIT. "When
a student ,...;.ten it is llpBCifically undentood that b!i will
pay . in full for all charps aaswried at tegistmtion. Failure
or inability to attend claBa, formal or Informal withdrawal, or
reduction in scbedule does Dot
change tbe payment due oc mtitle tbe student to a refund.
However, if a student formally resigns. changes from fulltime to part-time, or on a part.time basis reduces his scbedule
by directly notifying the Office
of Admissions and Records
within the flfSt four weeks of a regular (not summer) semester,
he will receive a tuition credil
In such cases, tuition only will
be prorated. This credit can be
applied on the payment of tuition and fees for subsequent
semesters or relunded at the
Bursar's Office on request.
5.20. KILITABY IIEFUND. A student cslled to active duty in
any branch of military service
during a regular semester may
receive a refund upon preaentation of his active duty orders
to the Office of Student Accounts.
5.30. PENALTIES. No student
is eliJible to receive a degree,
certif1cste of accomplishment,
or honorable dismissal until all
charges due to the University
or to any of its related divisions
4.70. RECREATIONAL AIIEA RE- are paid in full, and all UniverSTBICTIONB. Card ptaying, chess,
sity property has been returned

The Coordinator of Student Activities talso tbe Director of Nocton Hall) with the .
approval of the Vice Piesident
for Student Affairs, has the
preroptive of limiting any
event taking place in Norton
Hall to studenta and farulty of
tbe University because of'l"raffie control, scheduling and related problems. Only recognized
groups are allowed to reserve
meeting rooms.
4.60. P08TEII8. All posters, announoements, signa, etc., for
the bulletin board must be submitted to the Operations Office,
Room 115, for approval _and
staff signature. Poster making,
art work, etc. is restricted to
Room 307. Material posted
will be discarded after event
unless bold is requested.
4.65. III!IOOGNmOH OF GROUPS.
When a group i3 recognired, it
has the privileges and use of
the facilities which aooompany
recognition. For a group to be
recognized, it must officially
register with the Coordinator of
Student Activities, listing tbe
names of ita current officers
and must ~uenUy submit
a constitution to the Student
Coordinating CoJlDcil. It must
also have an approved faculty
advisor who is either a fulltime member of the faculty or
a full-time -professional staff
member. Final recognition can
be given only by the Student
Coordinating Council. ,Norton
Hall house privileges may be
granted for a silt-week period
by the Student Association and
the Norton House Committee
while recognition steps are
being taken.

TIES.

~ld~da~t ~~o=~~nisd.:;:: ~~i~ ':,theJ,~d':
ter.

'

4~30. COUNTER TABLEs.

Tables
may be reserved by recognized
student groups in the Lobby
areas. Amplification systems
may not be used Ol! the first
floor, or the basement.
4.35. DECORATIONS. Plans for
any room alterations (such as
wall filttures, add itional fumi·
ture, drapes, or curtains)
should be made in consultation
with the office of the Business
M an a g e r of Norton Hall.
Scotch tape may be used to attach material to any glass surface. Masking tape may be
used on any other surface in
the building. Decorations rosynot be nsiled, taped, glued, or
attached to floors, walls, or
furniture inside ·or outside of
the b u i I d i n g. Organizations
must furnish their own supplies
and remove deoorations within
24 hours after an evenl Organizations will be held responsible for this task.
4.40.

EUGIIIILlTY FOR ACTIVI·

Full time students in good
acsdemic standing are eligible
to participate in activities.
4.45. FOOD. Food and beverages may not be taken from
food areas to other areas of tbe
building, even from one food
service to another (such as
Rathskeller to first floor cafe-teria).
.
4.50. HOURS. Building hours
are poeted. Announcementa are
also rnsde prinr to cloeing. Loit.ering in the building is not allowed after c I o s i n g hours.
Special permission to remain in
the building after hours should
be approved by tbe Night Manager on duty, for immediate
.,_gencies, and from the 0perations Off"Ice in Room 116 for
advance approval n.e Millard
FillmOre Room- will be used
aolely as a public eating area
b e - the bours of 1Q:30 a.m.
and 1 : 30c:~ tluouch
Friday.
of the set-up
.-18 of this room, DO ~
eYI!IIt can begin before 3:00
p.m. Monday throulh Friday.
4.66. UllfTA"I"ION or r..auTIES.

1

in the Recreation Ar e a
(Ground Floor). No portable
microphone or amplification
equipment is allowed in the
building.
4.60. BESEBVATIONS AND BOOM
CANCELLATIONS. Requests for

rooms and dining rooms in
Norton Hall shall be submitted
to -the Reservations Office,
Rcom 223. All groups except
students, facul ty and alumni
will be assessed special service
charge. Conference rooms and
either facilities sball be assigned
in the order in which requests
·are made. Consideration is
given to the size of the group
and the available facilities.
Cancellation of rooms should
be made in the Reservations
Office within 24 hours prior to
the date.
4.90. 80UcrrATIONS. No private commercial enterprises
sball be allowed to operate on
the State University csmpuses
or in the facilities furnished by
the university other tluin those
approved by &lt;the Board of
Trustees regulation of May 12!
1966. 'The use of commercia
pbo~phers for any function
held m the building must be
approved by the House Committee or Operations Office.
4.95. All rules and regulations of the Slate University
of New York at Bulfalo sball
apply to Norton Union.
v. 0111ce of 6.00: PAYKENT OP TUITION

AND PEEB REGULATIONS. 'Jbe exact amount of the studenta'
charges is determined at registration. Payments should be
made by cbeck or money order
payable to the State University of New York at Bulfalo
for DO more than the amount
due. Pe!IIOII81 c:hects are accepted subject to depoeit. Payf01W81ded by mail sbould
be ~ 4D the ·State Uni-.
vwsi.ty of New York at !JW·falo, Office of Student AccouniB, Hayes A, 3435 M8in
Street, Bulfalo, New York.
14214. Tbe student .number
should he ·. - ! to identify each

in ~t~~: 'f;d!!:~es the
right to change or add to its
fees at any time. Officiallnfi&gt;rrnation oonceming tuition and
fees and their payments sbould
be obtained from the Office of
Student Accounts. (831-4731 )
If a student is dismisaed from
the University or any of ita
related divisions for csuse other than academic deficiency, all
fees paid or to be paid shall
immediately become due and
payable and shall be forfeited.

..

�8

-1.

~~B,~CQI]ege~
(COIIlilweit {rom-•1. col. 3) '

About.86

studeni. ue· ~tly ·

=ty:~·-= ~~:iE·~

ing takes pia&lt;es, where students bly, noted that-the ~t
and professors can interact in- · of Colleae B and Cillford Furformally. More ideally, be said nas College "hiod t-o BU&amp;-but not practical in Macdon- ~for the past few years
aid Hall-a residential college pending the availability of resishould be a place wbere per- dential facilities.
.
sons of different ages and back.•1 feel the further developgrOuDds could "eat, drink, play ment of theee two strictly resiand exen:ise together-an ed- dential collegiate units repreucational b a .c k d r o P against lients a tiignificant step forward
which more scholarlr, aspects in the overall development of
. . . could take place. '
the collegiate system here in
Team-Up
Buffalo," he added.
Tbe two colle¥es "teamed
Students inte""'ted in 88110up" because netther alone
could guarantee the space elating with the residential colcould be filled and both bad a ~~:U~\~7-ta'25~
greet desire to become residen- or Stephen Serafin 1832_1663 ) .
tiaJ colleges.
.
Asked what kinds of student.
he will seek for his college Dr.
Borst said. "they don't have to (Continued from f101• 1, col. 5)
be Phi Bets Kappa material ship to return to the practice
bu they do have to be serious- of law as senior partner in the
ly interested in studying, not N e w York firm of Coudert
just in raising_hell or having a Bros.
good time." Ketchum, himself
Linowitz is a trw;tee of Cora product of the Harvard col- nell University, Hamilton Uni= t e s~~~ ~..,'luf"~e~! v e r sit y, the Consortium of
Washington, D .C. Universities,
mon interest in excellence and the lnstitute of loternational
democracy."
Education, and the Adlai E .
'We will organize a closed Stevenson lnstitute of lnternacommunity of students who tiona! Alfaini. He is a member
identify with tiUs college," said of the advisory co unci I of
Dr. Borst. 'We want a tightly Johns H o p k i n s University,
knit group which operates more School of Advanced Internsor less as a family. We expect tional Studies.
up to half to be science stu- Banquet 1'.-t Soles
dents, and up to half from other
Faculty, non-teaching profesareas."
sional staff and civil service
Dr. Borst also revealed that · employees are being asked to
his college is considering participate in ticket sales for
whether · it should ask for the the Founder's D a y Banquet.
power to grant a new Enslish There is also a communitytype of degree at U / B, where wide campaign for sal&lt;!s of corstudents would be required to porate tables. Each corporation
pass a set of examinations at purchasing a table will be enthe end of each year, or a com- couraged to invite student
\':.~...':, ~~
:,.~ guests.
__ , __ from outside the uru·.
Pre-banquet cocktail parties.
~~·including several sponsored by
versity.
individuals and one at tl&gt;e
75 Students In Fumn Collop
Hearthstone Manor, are planClitJord Furnas College al- ned.
:;:~~ ::r" t=~eli:,.,ital~
Attendance will be limited to
of whom ''have natiorlal repu- 1•000•
tations for their scholarly inThe 125th Award s to be
tegrity and ability in their fields given at the banquet and on
of research," Borst says. About the other occasions during the
75 students are presently . en- year are open to nominations
·rolled and a handful of under- from the University and the
graduates are engaged in prac- community. Nominees should
tical research. One student, for have contributed to one or
example, is analyzing Buffalo more of the following : the weibirth records after the Pearl fare of the University; bigber
Harbor !lttack. to learn if the . education; his or her own field
stress cauaed by that '---'y of endeavor; his or her comw""~
muru'ty· world peace and
led to a signilicant change in
•
unthe number of births. Another derstanding.
student is studying the way Sir
R u I e s for the awards inIsaac Newton presented his elude: current students, faculty
~--ofweregrav~ .anvedd howm.Nethew- or staff of the University at
..._.._
·Buffalo are. wligible; awards
tan's time.
will not be iliven in aboentiD
Cliftord Furnas College is or PDSthumoualy; no individual
also onnruonring a lecture aeries, will receive more than one Uniwbich.~y bas included Dr. versity Award; and the deadJames F. Danielli, director of line for receiving nominations
the Center fa. Theoretical Bi- will be April 1, 1971.
olot!Y at UjB, and Dr. George
A committee of undersradMoore, director of Health Re- uate and graduate students and

LiDOWI•tz -

t'C::

1

''i

1

~
~

1..1-tl

Minority~, Calendar Shifts
•

-

_...,. at jB, will complete
the IPrfnl . . - in ApriL
. Ketchum~ b e - "moe!1y advlmtqoll" fa. the two col-

-::-;

' " - In aharin1 Macdonald
HaiL He DOled. fa. CIIIIIDp]e,
!bet Clillanl Fumaa Colleae
w!J1 be". . . a "8cieDoe and
~- wbile

Colleae

8 oare course..,
B
W...., c ture · w.hich will
·Iiouj:h OD·'the Datura! . ~

Call..- •

,........,. s Day Banquet.

1"'----~ Heads
~~
Dr, w....._ Button. dlair-

· Minority students, the

pro:.

poseil new cale!idar oonoept,
and a resolution concerning
a'!ll""" 110 rMelll'dl: propo61l)sare
piut of a 14-point agenda for
the next Faculty Senate meeting, Thursday, April 1 (2:30
p.m., 147 Diefendorf).
Because of ' the lepgth of the

agenda, the meetmg will be
continued on Friday, April 16.
In a chairman's report to be
presented at the meeting, Dr.
William H . Baumer note&amp; that
the Senate's Esecutive Committeelwitieenmeetingweekly
since the full Senate's last
meeting in February.
Among their actions, he says,
has been the naming of a committee on nominations "to as- ·
sist the Executive Conunittee
in carrying out its task as the
Committee on Committees."
Members of this group aie
Sylvia Hart, Nursing; George
Hochfield , ' English; Joseph
Masling, Psychology; Vincent
Santilli, Biology; Baumer, &amp;nd
the secretary of the Senate,
Thomas Frantz.
A major concern of the Executive Committee over the next
weeks, Baumer says, will be
the determination of membership on standing committees.
All current members of theee
committees are serving terms
expiring June 30 of tiUs year.
While present members are
eligible for reappointment by
. the Executive Committee, it is
also open to suggestions for
new members, Baumer says.
The Executive Conunittee, in
response to questions on the
operation of an external degree
program by Stste University,
has requested the SUNY Facul\Y Seiple to act to "insure
adequate faculty particip8tion
in the selection of the initial
faculty and staff" for that program and in the preparation of
the program itself.

PbilosophicaJ and Hialar-

~...:= ~.
t-1 elected co-c:baimal ol the

University's Task F o rce on

GovmnaDce.

. ·. .

=-

•.

They IIUCCeed Dr, Donald.W,
Rennie. pro~-. ol ~OJY, wtJo ...,_. the chair"! ' ..... --:'~"!:::!.a~::·
ol the ....al fliaialb' laiiDwL Moor-., It
Tbe Task Force .-oy
._ ........ al A~ted In- ,...,.......... the formation ol
adtallaal" .ada 88 the Damua· a 22-111811 Uniwnity-'Mda caman.
Oil Bllllwood A-.
mit8 110 . . - 110 the Uni...... o.blaDe . . _ iD Clarcommunity . poopaoilo
,.. Ceatar, u .._tied~ a:- foor ( Rf!pclt'Ur, 'N&gt;~a-lid ...,. Ketdlum. 1\1111')' 19.)
•
,..

•

·•

Ia

CG1Je11i B ' - '-a. olferinc
· a ..aber ol ........_ Oil JDU8il:.

-a.w

::r:

-alty

- ·
regulations, Ketter aald. An
qiiiiCY. .
Esecutive Committee ....W.
ADOtbor maUor 110 be canlion for April1 calls fa. a t.&gt;- sideracl_... traDifer of c.year limit m the time a faculty tain ...tivitiM 110 U/B fnllll the
member'can.tiold tiUs rank. Tbe Reaelin:h ~of SUNY.
motion f1lrther stip!liate&amp; that In order 110 "lllll'!ldite, oimpllfy
time _..t in this rank cannot · and ...-Jly improve the ad·
apply towaid tenure appoint- minilltration ol .-....c:h put
mente and that the rank should propoaals and IIJIIliOWid lind
not be uaed at all unless t.J:!ere funded resean:h puts" beld
are "clear alid compelling rea- by membera ol this Univenlty,
sons" fa. not using.other titles. an ' Eilaeutive Commi-..pon-.n:h Acc:eoa
· •
sored resolution calls upon the
A policy concerning a""""" Research Foundation IIO ' daleto researCh grant information gate 110 "an olllcer of .this Uniis being ~ed by the versity," the power 110 act for
Senate's Research and Creative it in all such matters.
ActivitY Conunittee with miOther items on the SeDate
· nor modifications requested by agenda jnclude: discusoloo of
the Execu~ve .Committee.
scheduling meetings; &lt;txisideraThe Re8earch · Committee tion of a report from the EDIrecoliUileiide!l that, all faculty _ cutive Committee to the elfect
and stwl'ents'be granted by the that "the voting faculty should
vice piesideDt 'for research "free remain esaentially the teachaccess to abstracts of all fundt\d ing faculty'' and should include
grants." This is amended by no members of the profeosional
the Executive Conunittee 'to staff; and consideration of
read :•access to all funded grant guidelines for letters of fecomproposals with the exoeption of mendation about otudents, sugfinancial information." Tbe gested by an AAUP statement
second part of the propoead which is endorsed for Senate
policy calls for release of the adoption by its Committee on
entire propoeal upon agreement Acitdemic Freedom and Reof lbe principal investigalior or sponsibility.

eraDtinc

L i n g u l $• t l. t :
• •.

T.

•

.LJTlSI-ih ,-#-,.

'7J.•

Summers' T r.-wvrnc.&gt;t
p,..,.,.;..,..,..-w,
5tc':) f Vf5! I"
•

(,c.f,U(.t:;

•

~
--~
_u-~
How does linguistics relate 110 week "festivBis"-a aeries of
other fields of study?
seminars with some Unifying
That will be the focus this them&amp;--will be otJered by a
3Willller when some of the well-known linguist. 'fh,e "festiworld's most renowned linguists vals" are as follows: July l&gt;-9,
gather on.campus for "Linguis- "Structuralism," Rene Tbom;
tic lnstitute 1971." Dr. David July 1..2-16, "Transformational
G. Hays, professor of linguistics Grammar," Noam Chomsky;
and former department chair- July 19-23, "Semantics," -James
man, is director of the event .McCawley; July 26-30, . "Uniwhich is sponsored by the Lin- versals in Language aDd Cuiguistics Society of America.
lure," Charles' 'A. -Ferguson;
Over 400 bdividuals are ex- A,ugust 2-6, "DeVt!lopmental
pected to participate.
P_sycholinguistics,: ~:lap J.- S!oIt is the first time Buffalo .b_m; ,:'UBUSt 9-13, Sociolmgwshas hosted the armual LSA ti"": :o,ill ~yrnes; Au~J'::'t 16Minority , . , . , .
summer event. And it is the 20• 'Narrative Structure; ~
The first Executive Commit- first time a summer meeting Dundefi. and Ausw:~ 23-27, Bttee-recommended motion on has had such a wide-ran_F.g ology of Language, John Marthe April 1 agenda is a resolu- theme, "Linguistics: Focus for shall, M .D.
.
tion asking the State Legisla- lntellectual Integration." As a
Advanced ~mmars ,!or gradture, SUNY Central Adminis- measure of the interdiSciplinaJ:y uate students m?ude Cc,&gt;ntemtration, SPA and U/ B's ad- nature of the institute, 15 de- ~rary Issues m" ~orma­
ministration at least to main- partmen-from anthropology tiona] Gr~. Wlth guest
tain current support for minor- to mat.hemittiar to speech com- lecturers to mclude Chomsky,
ity student programs in the munications--aS well · as Cas- McCawley, Jobn R. Roes and
face of dwindling federal sup- sirer College, will be otJering Jerrold J. Katz of MIT; Bruce
port and diminishing interest course work.
.
Fraser, Language Research
'thin s
·
Foundation·, Charlea A. FillWl
tale government.
. ""!~· some '!f the best known more, Center for. Advanced
Another proposed motion lingws(!;-Noam Chomsky of Study in the Behavioral Scillo
deals with the eyaluation of MIT, Rerie Thom of France ences, and 'lbomas G Bever
student progress. This resolu- and Solomon Marcus of Bu- Columb' U ·
·ty · Also. Ber'
tion asks the Acting Dean of charest, Rumania-will be on
18 ~verm ·
•
•
Undergraduate Studies to "find hand
·
nard yauquOJS, p~-.r of aua W..y to 6le both written
"We definitely tried to bring tomatic ~putation, Grenoble,
grades and evaluation for the together a full~ repre:oentative France, will '!ffer an
advanced
011
same course when requested by -set of scbolani-the bast the ~ semmar
-~~
a studenL"
field ha• 110 ·offer," COIIIIII!"'ted =tics~ Cou!putatillll m
A motion coocernins the new ~· Wolfgang Wf:!lck,_ assistant
lnterdiscintinary seminars,
calendar oonoept, p,_ted to ~r .o f the lDStitul!' lll_'d most ol whid. pair a U/B prothe Senate · at its February a_ssooate prof-.r of ~ feasor with..a viaitinl linguist.
meeting by JarnM H. Black- tics.
include "Semantics and Cosni ·

n.iili~~~ =~te

:.i

be
noted.fromPlrev10U8t
will. be-. Dr. ~'!L
"'-""' to .....-the new ~ pattern un- graduates- includinJ 8ludenta
der which the f l n t - ' - b&amp;- with DO previous esperience in
Jim ' in early September and the fie~ well as tO gradends in December at Cbriatma8, uate and~ studODta.
and the 88COild _ . . , . betlbw
Four.....-..-:;;... 110 the......,
in J8111111r)' and ends In -'Y tuta from Junof7110 July~.;;;
Ma,.., Thill would be foiJowed int:en!Jive _daily course in lin..,. a . _ -'aD fnlllllate gwstics will be oll'ered for lilY
May tbroatlh AQIIJd. s - , student wtJo bas-campletad at
the propoaad - - - . . ""'-t one year at a collete or
!bet. '"Die S..ta aplicitly r&amp;Dr. Jolin Lyone of
jecta a triaaler ~ foor the the Um-.ity ol "'-'""''-~
Um-.~ty; ...t the' .,..__ .Scotland; 881Ciata db;.,.,';
tiaDed •. • Ia DDt 110 be lntar- the Linlulalic Institu~ will
poetad 88.-. ~ aloudL" teach. the course, fOr which his
liD.

uouwowwo

,_.......

~

=

man ·of the ~ ol Sc&gt;-

ciaJ.

.-

Top 14-PointF~ty &amp;nate AgeTJda ·

=~ ~~orJ!:, s~ Ttheen
~Zo::'.!,.~be'b:'!'::.
~~=;
£.~will be aaluted at ___ ...._
-'--ta..of

~iahedUI prof-.r of pby&amp;-

·-2!1,!911

~

";of

university.

~~~~ =.~!ill~
the ...... 110 ............ -

the ...... AJ.2:boui underpad..

• ap!Mt"·I!Oud al '1'niNM'

July 6 110 Aupl8t 27.

_.am. the 111111&lt; , ol · uate minor iD linguistics will
lectuiw'. 'lbe Ciammt 1J111ic:v alao be a&amp;nML
which ...... tiiM llpiiU 1D ~ ....., ........
.
!'-* 110 aliPlY - . d ......., Tbe inlltltuta itaelf NDS fnllll
JJOiky

Each

=~&gt; &lt;!';~·~

and-b Craft o1 Poe
&lt;Enc·
!ish n-.-'--t) ........._......_ .
.......... ~ • ...._~
and PedaaoiY" (J::)epuimmt
ol J?evelopmeotal and Re~ Edw.~) • and "Somant!cs: Etboo hnpiatic and
Pht!osophical ~

=.~&gt;J...,.. H. ,;,_.,.__ diNO-

Summer~ at the
Uni_,.;ty oaid that the IDatitute il 'the ~ .b.p.

110r ol

L-

pr.opam -

7 _. _ _ .._

:,-ve evw -

"'

~=:'b.tereatec~ iD aita..d-

ing lhould ._. • ...,..._ ol
their
wart. piDa JII!OIIIIlmendaliona fnllll . . ~
,_,., 110 LiDJulltic lnatltate
19'11, lfluoea HaiL B~ ..,._
daailcall~ ...... whn
•
be
~
ular Summer s-iana COW'M8.

~t

:c:':n J: ::.1;.

�\tH .~t rt!1"1~

. . . . 2S, 1911

.

•,

.

9."

30%c(Meds
Use"Grass~
About 30 per cent of 1,067
·medical students who w e r e
queried anonymously at four
medical schools use marijuana.
And more than 50 per cent said
they had uaed marijuana in
the past, according to a report
in Modern Medicine magazine.
The schools - two in the
east, one in the west, and ane
in the midwest-were not identified.

Psych\atcists from Stanford,
the University of Nebraska,
and UIB reported the study to
the Asoociation of American
Medical Colleges. They said
t h a t despite characteiization
of marijuana as a "dangerOus
drug'' , by committees of the
Ameriam Medical Asaociation
and National Research Council, "medical schools e i t h e r ·
aren't doing the teaching or
the students aren't listening."
Dr. Samuel Benson of Stanford said sophomore and juniOr medical students were more
prone to use marijuana than
other students. The greatest
correlation was between a premedical school history of marijuana use and current use. Dr.
Benson said the highest proportion of marijuana u s e r s
started in 1965.
More Use, Less Hann

Bawdy Comedy
A "public -uhop" the olllclol -&amp;nation for last
- · · f'nllmn In ~ performence. But " M In I.Dwt, An [...,I. . of 18th Century Smut," Wei octuolly
e fully-costumed production, full of bowdy comedy. Gordon
llolofl'• croup ' porformed thll, their own erronceme"nt of
18th Century; Reltorotlon comedy, Wednescloy end Thursdey
In e fun-filled end lnforrnol way et Horrimen Ubnory Thoetre.
Thootre on c:ompus cantin- this - e n d wtth the Stu:
•·'clent'•Theatfa GolhrS "Orie r-F'Iew Over 1tie Cutluio'a Nest."
~see

Weekly Communique),

Tenure Practices Differ from Ideal, FSC Told
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

argument that tenure "permits
R.,_-,., SU!It
the accumulation of deadwood
Most ..,.,.,...J tD agree it is -the University becomes a
good theoretically, but no one ""rt of Sleepy Hollow." If this
seemed completely happy with happens, it is the fault of a tie·
the way the tenure system is partment for not using good
working.
judgment when granting ten·
This was the- coru,.!ruius at ure, the English profe880r ann·
Friday's panel discussion on rnented.
tenure sponsored by the FaculTenure induces inflexibility
ty-Stalf Caucus.
in the University according to
Dr. George Hochfleld, Eng- the second argument Hochfield
lish; Dr. Peter Lansbury, cbem- cited. However, if a university
istry; and Leonard Snyder , works in a fixed pattern, Hochchief aCOOWitant fill" the Uni· field places the blame on the
versity, discusaed -the question. administration, not on tenure.
Moderator was .Dr. Jacob Hy- "An .inllexible institution is the
man, law.
result of incompetence on the
The session began with a ' part of the administrstion.'' he
summary by HYman of the cur- said.

~t~~~~~=s ~.,:'':;

tenure situation, Hyman said:
concern about &amp;aldemic freedom· the rise of collective bar1
•
· and
·

=.~~

The third B.f~U!'K"'t _claimo
tenure stops the. mfuston ~f
new. ~ledge mto the U~·­
verstty smce prof1!6110rs remam
stagnant in their fields. Hochfield pointed out that good peopie keep up with lhl;ir fiel!i and
a constant flow of tdeas !" dependent on careful granting of
tenure.
Nen spMker waa Lsnsbury
who, as a member of the U /B
Presidential Review Board, sits
in on the caaM of people who
are up for tenure or promotion
· or are receiving a tenured appoin-.t to the UniYI!rsiJr.
The board is coin~ of SIX
members with tJu:ee-year terms.
selected fran a list supplied by
the Faculty Senate. Mainly an
adn-y body to th8 president,
the ~ evaluates the candi-

aecwity.
:,
Hochfleld ~ first in his advocacy of tenure. He believes
''the value ol academic frMdom
is protected by the tenure aystem aQd DO ane baa come Ul!
with a " ' - way of doina il
He bued bla endoraeoatt on
a UNO AAUP atataDant which
baclat tenure because it allows
faculty members the fNedom
to teach, conduct - . d l , and
.,.,..... in --amic:ular activitles as they - Ill Tenure
alao ouppliea a "auullcient d&amp;ol economic .curity '" the
• AAUP - t oaya.
3 ......... - date 8 dcaier - ... bla -=ttTbore are three basic. pointa , iDe. acltolmsbip and ~- to
of attack.., !lie fll!llure ~ the communlty.and UruverBlty.
HochfieJd DOted. Filat is the Their consideration is baaed

partially on letters received
evaluating the work of the C&lt;ID·
didate. There is also documen·
tation of the individual's teaching ability and public service,
Lsnsbury explains. If the Board
deems it necessary the provost
or s selected advocste may also
ceme and speak for the e&lt;m·
didate. Each case is considered
individually, Lsnsbury noted,
and the weighting of the three
factors results in ..different
(evaluation ) equations for each
individual."
•• the Boord Accountoblol

Lsnsbury's explanation of the
Board's work came under questioning from the 30 people in
the audience. Dr. Charles
Planck, political science, asked
about the accountability of thi!
Board to the faculty and if
the minutes from their meetings were available. Lsnsbury
was unsure of the minutes'
availability to the pui;Iic.
The process of tenure was
a1ao questioned by Dr. Joeeph
Agnello, speech communication,
who said he was not granted
tenure by his area faculty. He·
and others expressed dismay at
the way the process WO&lt;ks in
practice. claiming the system
foroes a faculty member to remain silent until after he is
granted tenure fill" fear of never
obtsining il Only people who
don't &amp;pMit out at faculty meetings and do abort range re.-rch get . tenure, Agnello
charged.
&lt;Other members ol the audi-ulty --'iars.
coocemed
with fBI&gt;.
wbo do .obtain
tenure and tJdl stop producing.

The medical studenbo did
not a g r e e with the medical
opinion that marijuana is a
dangerous drug. Persons who
used it most-&lt;&gt;ver 100 timeswere more persuaded of its lack
of harm than other respondents, claiming that as usage
increases, harmfulness decreases.
The survey indicated t h a t
the students were most likely
to .,ooept their pel!r group's
medical opinion on marijuana
and least likely to accept that
of medical authority and medical school teachers.
Dr. Benson attributed this
to authoritarian statements by
medical spokesmen about marijuana and the relatively minor
contribution by medicine to
marijuana research.
Respondents to the BUrYI!Y
were classified into three categories: users, or thooe who uaed
marijuana at 1east once a
month; experimenters who had
tried it but were not using it
at the time of the survey; and
thooe who had never uaed il
Among the four schools, the
rate of past marijuana use
ranged from 17 to 70 per cent
and the rate of cunent use
from 6 tO « per cenl The
highest rate of use waa .., the
east and west ooesta and the
lowest in the midwest.

" It is the procedures themselves that lead to the making
of deadwood on the way
through," Dr. Charles Fall, educational studies, noted. Fall
could see little use in condemning the review system for
granting tenure and then turning around and advocsting review once tenure is received.
Lsnsbury was asked if the
Review Board has ever denied
tenure to a amdidate who has
been approved by both a department and faculty. "I think,
perhaps, we have" Lsnsbury
replied. "I know we've turned MerijiUIIII end
Correlations between maridown requests for tenured appointments, from outside the juana and alcohol and ciprette
use indicated a geographic varUniversity."
iation. Students on the Tenure for Non·Tucherl
coast said that as their use
Snyder, the third panel of
marijuana increued, alcobol
spMker, called for job security and cigarette u ae ~
in a form "similar to tenure" while a direct correlation -befor non-teaching professionals. tween marijuana and alcobol
He suggested a probationary
use emerged on the ...at.
appointment followed by a per- The
survey did not eDIIiine
manent position. A person could
or hard drugs. . •
still be reiJl()Ved with "just theT uae
h e psychiatrists rei&gt;orfiitg
cause," however. Currently nonacademics hold their positions the study concluded · !Mt beat the '"pleasure of the presi- cauae ·of increasing mirijuana
use, marijliana' pbaftnacolocy
dent," Snyder explained.
should be included iit medical
Following Snyder's presenta- school cunil:ula.
.
tion, Hochfleld voiced opposiNoting ·that physicians" are
tion, noting that, "Tenure is seeing only the marijuana uiters
the protaction of academic flee. wbo-bave"bad effects and thus
dom, DOt job protection, and are· malring judgmehts• without
its approach as job aecwity by the bi!nefit of com~ve
non-academics should be re- r:isearch, Dr: Benson urged the
sisted..
medical profession to underThe
Caucuoi is take a broad new propam ol
planni!tlr .,
meet:iDa; prob- marijwina reaeardt. Mus" surably Biter oprinc vacation, veys on an anoeymoua ~
· Walter Rcan. cbairman ol the he ~. could oonelite
group, said. 1bia IM8tina will frequency of marijuani u a e
have an open ...,...ta and 8IIY with the occurreDOe of bed ""
topic may be diliculloed.

-·T-

F:::r..:ta«

feels.

�~,..-....,-,.

·to

!.. ~('\

'lbe Senate Professional Ashas opened
with the State
of
•
N
on neJ&lt;t year 8 amtract pacltqe, Robert Fisk, professor ol educational studies,
told a local SPA meeting last
Thursday. Over 50 peop I e
listened a Fisk outliped the
procedures the barpining team
wi~U':;, selected by the
State-wide SPA to be pert of
the silt-member negotiation
team. Other members include
three
profession•'--ty ·
be
mem rs.
a Is and "'""'
'lbey are: Robert Granger, AIfred; Barbera McCaftery, Genesso; Maurice Sendler, M.D.,
Upstate Medical Centsr; Richard GlasMen, Stony Brook;
and Willard MJott, Maritime
Collep.
Chief ,.,..,tiator is David
Graham from the National Ed·
·
N E A)
ucation Aalociation &lt;
•
Graham ha negotiated many
collep and university amtracts. Fisk eaid.
Fisk pointed out that ''without NJ!!A'o help couldn't
have besun to barpin." Tbe
late data of the electiono for
bargainina · - t cauaed SPA
.
- . - . ....___.
to "stsrt out ~
we
ought to be crawling. This has
sociation &lt;SPA)

~

D&lt;in-leef'.:f

w•-·

~:.:,,l'U.evyN~ta':

Teachers .A.odation (NYS.
TAl f
technical bel
Fisk
or
I'•
ezplained. The relationship between
NEA, )llYSTA important
and SPA
is
a "fundamentaUy
one... he added.

~ ~:,t, :;::_

w'helmil)a approval of ita alllli-

T•m SWorn to Secncy
Tbe bargaining psckage deals
with items em ph as i z e d in
SP.A's campaign material, Fisk
said. Included are fringe benefits, work loads, grievance procedures, sabbatical policy, sal·
ary parity, acadeauc freedom
and tenure questions. Specific
terms and details could not be
revealed, Fisk said, because the
bargaining team is sworn to secrecy.

Aftsr a weekend meeting of
its Representative Council,
SPA announced that periodic
press releases will be issUed
as progress in negotiations is
achieved.
When the contrsct will be
completed is very uncertain,
Fisk said. ''It may be Ap,ril 15
or it may be Christmas. • This
is the first tin&gt;e the State ha
dealt with a professional union
for faculty and - non-leeching
professionals and there a r e
"roadmaps to be drawn and
new rules to define," he said.
·-•

Uouol'

Purin¥ a 9uestlon and an·
......
,.t ~· '~i=a ibedusualtha'~
wuouu""

81

u n t I I the new am Inlet is
settled. He would not speculate
wbelher the contrsct would be
reboactive.
SPA will have two cbaJ?Iere
at U /B - one for the ''univer~ centsr" (the 1roup ~ for
which Dr. ConstaiJtlne Yera·
c:aria lo steering ·Committee
chair.man) and one for the
'-lth fCiences,
-To vote on this yeou!a am·
tnct,; elilible faculty and atd
muBt join by ApriiJ.. 'lbe. d.· J183'1111!Dt deadline has - . , exteadad to April 111. Mtmiberobip information may be CJb.
lalDed frCIII. Dr. Morton Bolb8Wa ar Mlao Marpret O'B!yail
(unhaldty .D!l"tsr cDpier) · Of
Dr. Ja Klinpnan ..-Mr. La!'ry-Dralre ('-lth scianale) .

lbu."

Fa c u It y applicationo for
funds for "health related;" ~in­
tsr·Faculty" - . e l l projeda
to be supported by the National Inetitutee ol He.hb will be
·....,.,;vec1 by Dr. Mortan Rothstein, BioI o 1 y Dopartmint,
throulh April L
Dr. Rolhatein ia cbalnnan ol
the Uniwnity Committee for
the Distribution ol Inotitutional Funda which will haw Nm
moniee available June L
Tbe d:Jinition ol ''health-related" 01' •'bio-acienoe» ia .....
onably broad, Dr. Rolhetein
aays. Qu.tiono in lhia _..t
may be add.-! to Dr. An·
drew Holt, Graduate School,
ext. 5026.

• ..,.,..,ER

By SUZANNE......,..""'
-ofIn a blend
the &amp;Mthetic
and the scienlillc, Dr. Rater
Payne, ..want professor nl
_,..
neurophysiology and behaviOr
and reeearch zoologist at Rocke._.,
__
uru·~~•ty
and
the
N1
Zooi.;;p~ Society, will
p_,t his "Songs of Humpbeck Whales" at Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall, on Friday.
March 26 at 8 p.m.
'lbe .whale songs, recorded on
steieo equipment at - . can be
deK:nl&gt;ed as deei.'I Y moving,
similar to electronic music; an
enchanting, high-pitched caU of
the wild. Tbe program is sponsmed . . tl b the Offi
f
)Omuy DY
ICe o
Cultural Alfairs and the Depertment of Physiology. It is
intsresting to note that at Cornell University, the same program was ·sponsored by the
Biology · Depertment in conjunction with the Music Depertmenl
.
Dr. Payne's cause is to keep
whales from extinction, and to
remove them from their pre_..,_ _ _•..,_
one o1 the

y;;;

""'""'"

-·

81

..,..)d's threatened specieL His
a~ lo to man's &amp;ense ol
beauty and compaaeion, ao -u ·
..- to the beat interests ol

eoolcJiy.

·

NEW RADIO IEIIIES
WKSW will soon 1111 conyinc the
Deportment ol lnfonnotion · Servicn' MW rodlo . . r~os, on
the ~. A portion of MCh
pqnom will be devoted te .llstinc
upcomtnc events open to the ••·
onol public. If you would llka an

scribes Payne 81 · "a curiously available at Baird and Norton
gentle man; a bit of an idealisl Hall Ticket 08ioes, are $1.00
He is very earnest and treats for students, $2.00 for pneral
everyone ao an equal. He is a admission. Proceeds go to the
man who has fOUDd a cause." New York Zoolotrical Society's
on the . . _ . , , Box 'Z7,
Tickets to Friday's program, . &amp;we IM Whale 1'und.

- ·-· plene-=-

~

Holl.

U/B~ 125th Open House Day

Has Something For Everyone

Applicationa for the grants
should be """'-! .to Dr.
Rolhatein, 201 . Health Sciencea.

Dr. Rothstein notes that the
. individual faculties have avail"'- U. c:Moon rocks, 1899 yeatbooks,
"Whaaes," aays Payne, "are and a raftle Of cOurses are : : = t ~~ able NIH funds for reeearch
lib cowa, ....Uy, and _ , to among the scheduled highlights Ctark Gym.
which is 1101 BpecifjaJlly inlume to be the moat be-·"'-g,
Tours of the Nucleer Reac- focully.
centla """'tures on eard..~Ti.e ol the University's May 2 Open
tor,
and of the libraries will be .
For further information, in·
House,
psrt
of
the
125th
Anni' s"·"·"-~ problem m
......,...., them versary oolebration. The Open
ditsct
'vidtheual chairmanProf_,...of~~ ~is ptting ct&lt;.e enoulh- I don't Houae, says chairman John given.
A model of the new campus
...... .,...,.
think there is much )IDIIIIibility Buerk, ''wiU provide an intro- will be on disptay in Hayes u By committee, ao follows :
of being harmed by them."
duction to the Bulfalo commu· Hall, and University stsft wiU Social Sciences and AdJDinis.
·Man, however, has almost ir- .nity ol the diversity, scope, ex- be available to answer _ . trstion, Lestsr Milbrath, 4238
Ridge Lea, ext. 7· 1716; Arts
ci-nt and relevance Jof the tiona.
whi=ch
·
Student Personnel Servioes and Lettets, Seymqw: Fink,
Unive$ity c:ommunit;y." : ·,
u..,..
~
About .400 members • ol the and the Office of Minority Af Old Faculty Club, ext. 5306;
metic creams, paints, marga- University community are fairs will aet up informaw.,; Engineer.ing and Applied Sci·
rine, soap, and as a base for working on the program which centers.
enoee, R o b e it Abbott, 4232
wrures, and for their llesh, which hopes to attract 20,000 people
In Nor ton, the Fillmore Ridge Les, ext. 7·1161; Naturis uaed primarily as food for from Buffalo. Approximately Room
will feature a reheersal aJ Sciences and Mathematics,
dogs, cats, and ranch mink and 100,000 flyers wiU be sent out and performance of the camPl!§ Micha!!1 Ram, 210 Hochstetler,
fox, the hunter has reduced the in the next few weeks to alum- Nickel n-tre; the film, "Uott• est. 5566; Law and 3urispruwhale to vestigial numbers. ni, professional groups, stu· in Winter,'' will be shown in dence, Milton Kaplin, 77 West
Synthetics could easily and dents who have applied here, the Conferenoe Theatre, and . 'Eagle Street, 852-4372; Health
cheaply replace whale oil, Dr. and other organizations.
the Haao Lounp will feature Scienoee, Grant Phipps, 142
Payne says.
Although the Student Asso- gospel singers and I8iaeli. and Capen, ext. _2715; Educational
Whales are the largest ani- ciation is not officiaUy partici- BaUum danoers. For food, there Studies, Chester K is e r, 120
mals that have ever existed. pating (its .lesders feel that the will be an ice cream parlor in Fostsr, ext. 2341.
Ranging from the 100.ton, 100- Qpen House, as weU as the the RalhekeUer, a coJfee house
foot long Blue Whale, to the entire 125th Anniversary cele- in the first floor cafeteria, and
smaller porpoise, there are 14 bration, is "a waote of tin&gt;e and cocktails in the Till1n Room.
species, fa IIi n g into the two money'' ), Bob Convissar, S.A.
In the arts, the Craft Center
categories of baleen whales and public affairs coordinator, will, will exhibit jewelry and cer&amp;m·
toothed whales.
as an individual, coordinate a ice; an art exhibit will take Ul&gt; "'"'"
· The Humpbacks, among the program of student activities. the first floor Norton lounge,
==-------baleens, were called by Mel- Manr students, says Buerk, are the Baby Bl.- will reMar&amp;e
..,.,_
ville, "the most gamesome and working on the .Program through
~
~t"'w\ll"'t'!
=
=------lighthearted of aU the whales." their depertments.
They ,make exuberant leaps out
Though there was cynicism played in the third floor tounae.
of- the sea and '""'m to be mo- about the Open House at first, aDd there will be crafts demonmentarily suspended in air.
Buerk says he is now ''being strstions in Room 81JT.
Dec........ or The Sounds ore Sonp
overwhelmed with the reA Communication Creativity
Though mariners had heard ponse."
Workshop
will
be
Jeaturedin
·R.....,
'"' - - ·
them for ages, whale sounds
For example:
Rooms 231, 233 and 234, and a
weri! only recently recognized
Large maps will be placed drug abuse exhibit will be in
for what they are. Tbe oangs around campus on the day of Room 232.
reach the human ear by the the Open House, outdoor snack
The Alumni Office will hold
process of coupling or impe- shops will be in .operation and an Alumni Reception and President
Ketter will be available
the
U
jB
Band
will
give
a
con·
danoe ·m atching, through the
huU of a shil.'. · Payne recalls, cert on the front lawn, if weath- to speak to anyone.
"As I sat qwetly at the sur· er permits.
. Most campus departments
Dr. David Cadenhead, 11880- will be open from 1-5 p.m. while
face I heard Humpback whale
sounds, coupled directly ciate chemistry professor, will some exhibits will be open
lhrougb the speaker-lib hull of giV&amp; a lecture and demonstrs- til 10 p.m. Any~ about
my rowboal . . _.. Spectogra- tion of his work on JDODD rocb the Open H...- sbould be diphic printouts ~ made ol the in Diefendorf at 2 p.m.
rected to Connie Burnham,
·"~·-oo==-----. -:-~sounds which demonstrate eom·
·.The "Buftalonlan" will have 2511, or Ed Dale, 3602, Buerk
plete and · reJ)Mted MqUeDOeB, on display a colleCtion ol its
aay&amp;
~-~-~------:-~----thus putting them into the cat- yearbc&gt;Qb. dating back to 1899.
egory of eonp. ·
The Division ol Continuing
Whale herda..probably use
· aound to determine behaVior. ~tionfor~ ~:
"'Ibe 1arpr whale species may couraa .. ·
· N!llllinating baUota for the
actually be trsveling in oobcerThe Faculty ol Educational position ol chairman-elect of
ent poups evm wlal individ- Studies, the Cunputing Centsr, . the Faculty Senate were 'Circu-ua1a are aeparalal- by tans or the Medical, Deotal, Nlllllinl ·-- tated last week and are due
perhaps hundreds ol mllea."
and EDP-iioi ecbools, and April 2, Thomae ·Frant:z, aecre:.
Joe Jfendersaa, U /B padu.. the CJa.icll ~t !&gt;-"" tsry ol . t!&gt;e Senate,~ has an- ·
ate student in pbyalalacy, met alao ocbeduled demanstratioaa. JIOUD&lt;led.
•
"·
Dr. Payne while at wooas Hole
The Muaic Departmeat ·is
The .Faculty-Staff Caueus is
Oce!'-phic Institute. They ~ COillbiiiDU8 recitals tiDdorailiJ Gilbert D . Moore of
_,t out on a ' wbaJe.eeelc'iQg and 8SDinan, and cbamher mu- Edul:ationaJ Stiiiliee for chair·
expedition, ~ ran into hurii- sic in the Till1n ·s - , from rnanoelect. Other campus groups
ame. WBlllinP o11. Cape May, Lto 6 p.m.~- -·~
have yet._ to announce their
New Jersey. Henderson de'lbe Athletic D.!'J&gt;artmen t candidate.
-

-·'ft

~~C:thinNE~~!\': t= ~oilly,

who had joined SPA before the
PERB baUoting were eligible
. to vote.

.u

JL..m 25, 1!171

rWhale SOngs' T~ ProVide ~Evening NIH MoneY.
Which Blends~&amp; the Artistic Available

SPA.Begins.
, Negotiations

I

~ ();)

CiHEPCRiEI{,

:!r

JS!e~uaed
. ~ ~m
·

'd!

_
-

=-

Senate Election

..........

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

...._ _ -w.

--tor.--

�itl.c~a 2s, 1911

' CRF;~

Nort0n8 ~lems Still lfuSolVed;
Referendum Favors Student Patrols
area

Nonan ,Hall's recreation·
remains closed ~tely,
awaiting ...,...,RWIC!aticms to
the 'U/8 adminiatnltion ·from
the Student .Alfairs Division
concemina how to combat n&gt;- .
cent problim&gt;s of thefts, harassment and drug tzal6c, much ·of
it involvinc_non-students.
A Uni.....,.;ty-wide ...Cerendum on the problem last Thursday and Friday fmmd students,
faculty and staff voting by a
margin or 30 to one that some· _
action should ·be 'taken to correct the sitUation.
Seventy-two per cent ( 3598)
of the 4!197 voting favored some
·type or security fora!, ID08t or
them preferring unarmeli stu.
dent security teams working
with other students and staff.
The question of limi~ aca com.Prebensive, total packcess to Norton drew a split n&gt;- at
action-2,288 felt access should age of recommendations.
Meanwhile, the undergradube limited while 2,569 op~
ate Student Association bas n&gt;such a move.
leased this breakdown of last
About 30 per cent pf thoee week's
balloting:
voting wrote in the ''Together"
Total votes cast: 4,997. (Stuprogram as their p~ solu- dent
4,408;
faculty 167; stslf,
tion. ''Together" is an educa- 327; unspecified,
95. )
tion and treatment effort bead__
Should
action
be taken: Yes,
ed by a fonner addict-who is
now a U /8 studenl The Stu- 4,772 (Student, 4,218; faculty,
dent A&amp;aociation has already 157; stslf, 320; unspecified, 5);
passed a resolution calling -for No, 157 (Student, 142; faculty,
a drug rehabilitation center lo- 7; stslf, 3; unspecified, 5).
Should there be a security
cated on or near the campus.
According to the Uni.....,.;ty force: Yea, 3,598 (Student,
Information OfJioe, Dr. Anthony 3,098; faculty, 137; stslf, 302);
Lorenzetti, assistant vice P.ft!Sl- No, 1,016 (Student, 995; facdent fM student alfairs.' has ulty, 22; staff, 18; unspecified,
been charged by President Ket- 21).
What kind of security :
ter to make proposals fM defiStudent security teams worknite Univer&amp;lty act;ion on the
problem . Lorenzetti will pn&gt;- ing with students a n d stslf,
sumably be guided by the 2,691 \ Students, 1,921; faculty,
results or the referendum and (;5; stslf, 86; unspecified, 29) .
is conducting with students and
S t u d e n t and professional
other stslf a survey of available armed security teams, 941
llrug rehabilil&amp;tion·l'MOIII'C98 on (•S tudents, · 795;' 'faculty, 37;
the campus and in the commu- stslf, 92; unspecified, 17).
nity. Lorenzetti bas also asked
Campus security r 0 r c e in
individuals for SUJII'Stions and buildin&amp;, «2 (Students, 303;
proposals in an eftoi;t to arrive faculty,. 24; stslf, 60; unspeci-

tied, 4 ).
Should aCalss to Norton be
limited: Yes, 2,288 (Students,
1,872; faculty, 108; st.s11', 258;
unspecified, 31); No, 2,569
&lt;Students, 2,431; faculty, «;
st.s11', 63; unspecified, 31 ).
To whom and how should
be limited?
Students, Caculty and st.s11'
only, 242 (Studrnts, 157; fac~~y, 19; st.s11', 57; unspecified,

a"""""

Students, faculty, stslf and
their guests, 1,955 (Students,
1,698; faculty, 72; st.s11', 147;
unspecified, 38) .
A c c e s s limited in certain
areas of building to students,
faculty and st.s11', 733 (Students, 665; faculty, 29; stslf,
31; unspecified, 8 ) .
•
Limiting access by curtailing
hours in certain a r e a s, 458
&lt;Students, 381; .faculty, 31;
staff, 41; unspecified, 5).
There were 1,437 .write-in
votes •· for the "Together" rebabilitation program (Students,
1,337; faculty, 39; stslf, 35;
unspecified, 26) and four invalid ballots.

CoUegeAdmiTlistrotor8 Polled On Vzews,
Majority Oppose External Degrees, Uniorlf3
111e uextern&amp;l deaiee,"
granted by institutions to pei&gt;who have met some stanaards but have not done COIUIIe
work in residence (similar to
the program SUNY bas . recently pro~), and faculty
unions ( such as SPA) drew
negative reactions from ill&gt;legates to the American A.aoc:iation r.,., Higher Education
(AAHE) Confenmoe held in
pl~

Wasbincton .-tUy.
Theop two topics were part

of a quMtionnaire _.-ed. for
AAHE delegates bY Rarold L. ·
Hod&amp;l&lt;inaon. project diriietor,
Center fM · ~ and 'Devel"P""!!'t, University of CaliConus, Berbley, and chairman

~ ~-=~:i~

culsted to 1.000~
- • • Is m' •
an attempt to
t "attitudes

t;;.;..:..,=.t:..~ ·1 ::

Wide latitude (very few

• Tenure requires major

required courses) is in the best

modification (357 ). (One hundred thirty-three favored abandoning tenure; 95 felt tenure is
sound as is. )
o Teaching and research
are complementary and should
be done by the same individuals (388-177).
o Tbe campus is no different from any other organization
and should not be given special
legal consideration or serve as
a sanctuary (318-261 ).
o Tbe Doctor of Arts degree
is a viable ides and should be
encouraged ( 500-85 ) .
o Open admissions should
be the policy at some institutions but not at others ( 438 ).
(One hundred and ten felt open
admissions are good for all; 40,
that the policy is not gOod for
any institution.)
o Students should participate in moot areas of aovernanoo but not as \ootiD&amp; members of trustees or on the committees that decide faculty promotion and tenure (354). (Two
hundred and nine felt students
should participate at all leYels;
25 ssid studenlil sbould p&amp;rtic-

~

interests of students ( 394 to
191) .
o Tbe external degree is not
desirable (399 to 178).
• Student evaluation of
teaching (affecting faculty promotion, tenure, salary, etc.) is
appropriate (515 to 74).
'0 Some kind or grading system which ranks students is in
the interest of student learning
(448-129) . (See this week's
"Viewpoint" for another view
of this matter.)
o There bas been institutiOna! discrimination against
women in hiring and. promotiona (the positions on this
question were nearly split-'291 agreed, 284 .did not).
o CertifiCation is an appropriate·inatitutional f u n c t i o n
(391-188). . • '

596 _ deleptea,~ predominanUy ~~t·=~~:;

adminlaaiitora (363) : ThirtYseven depaitmeot chairmen, ten

past five yeus ( 225). (One
hundred fiftY,tbree' fait faculty
morale bas imi&gt;roved; 185, that
it bas delerlorate'd.)

trus""'!'&gt; ~ prot_.. ol hilber
educat;oo;; ~ profe•aors in
o.ther &amp;Ida; 26 hilber' educao Regional &amp;Ccreditin&amp; astioa -.do specialists, 49 . sociaticms oerve -ruJ purgraduatutudentsand 12 others (&gt;132-139). •
alaofifty ft!lpOIIded, 'l1aree hundred
o Fedenl r i n a n c i a I aid
-three pUblic,· 131 .inde- sbould be pveo DuUnly to l!iU~t ~ 111 denomination- dents (316). "(Two hundred
inati~...'!""' . . - t e d• • fifty,-&lt;JOe felt it sbould 110 to
8CI"!!J - U.S.
institutions.)
I .

al
lrom
~........:
indicated a- t..s'; ~ '::f":J.: ~
Jl06l
.., various ...._,
ty nor institutions (326). (One
0

Le,y bauds with ultimate

authoritY .in ......_ affainl are

:0
_ ism_~ ........._--· .~
·
....- CX~~~o~pe. Bllli - - Sities (366 to 214) .

hundred thirty-four felt uniolls
_._t faculty -wll, but not in-

sttmtioOs;
felt such unioos
-e 1n lbe,111~JMt
'intereets or ,
both.)

::..~~.=t
ties, food~ aDd dormo.)
HWI ·
-To8otltVOLUNTARY SERVicE. IN THE
COMMUNITY
. _,
COmmunity Adlon
- Of·
.ftce. 218 Norton Ha I, Ellt.

I .

3609
....._
_ _ _ _ __,_ _

, ..

GSA Meets Wlihout Quorlun,·
Backs Bentivogli ProfRst·
The Graduate Studst Association (GSA ) failed again
Monday nigbt, for .the fourth
time in six D~Mtinp, .to attract
the necessary 31 representatives required for a quorum. \
Twenty-four People were
there long enough, however, to
hear a pies from a representative or Tbe People's Coalition
for funds to sup port a civil
rights march on New .York.
Paul Wharton, who was chairing the meeting, pointed out
that the quorum-less group
could not vote funds. The consensus seemed to favor support,.
ing the organization, though.
Gerald Levy, former U / B law
•tudent, spoke on the "injustices" suffered by hilr'elient,
Daniel Bentivogli. Levy was
Bentivogli's attorney for his
hesrin(! before tbe Hearin g
Comm1ttee on Campus Disorders. Levy said this group sentenced Bentivogli to expulsion,
a sentence later commuted by
President Robert Ketter to' an
18-month suspension, for his
part in. last s pnng's disturbances. Levy asked the GSA to
write an open Jetter to 'the
Spectrum, "censuring Ketter's
action." Levy pointed out that
his client's punishment "seemed
harsh to me. Other students
committed more violent crimes
like harassing administral.ors
and they only got n six-month
suspension." Bentivogli, Levy
claims, was charged with blocking the entrance to Hayes Hall
and disrupting the ROTC referendum, which he feels are lesser matters.
Levy feels Bentivogli's sentenoo was a "result of who . he
was" and not what he did. Last
spring Bentivogli beaded the
campus chapter of Youth
Agatnst War and Fascism
( Y A WF ) . Tbe administration,
Levy charged, "felt it would
have a quiet spring if BentivogH was off crui:Jpus."

procedures are just, fair \md
to law," that it is

"aoco~

~=:"'~u!·.::

impartially and independent of
any administrative pressure.)
The GSA voted 12 to 4 to
write an open Jetter to Ketter
asking about Bentivogli's treatment, Tbe letter, which appeared. in Wednesday's Spectrum, asked the president to explain.

Communique(continued from page 12, coL 5)

least one case, a Russian Jeweu
was permitted to emigrate as a

::~=n~==~
The Hillel Russian Jewry Com-

mittee is eellina" greeting cards for
Soviet Jewa. The cardl: will be
available in Packet&amp; of five. In
each paclret will be found !he
JUUDes and addresses of Jewe in
Ruuia. Messages are to be nonP&gt;litical and it is suggested that
the cardJ be sent by air mail in
time to be received for P8180Yer.

:....;~r~&gt;:.~ TI.. ttiia~e1~

The former YAWF leader did
not have a fair campus trial,
Levy claims. A case was pend- EXHmiTS
ing simultaneously in the state
courts, Levy said. On tbese ~p";;'j~~~~=
grounds, be applied unsuccessENFANTB DU PAL\DIB : a ahow
fully for a postponement of the US
of paintings by Michael Sberman,
campus action. When this was Center Lounge Gallery, Norton
denied, Bentivogli, on the ad- Hall, through March 80.
vice of his state court lawyers,
offered no evidence on his be- LffiRAlW EXHmiTS
half at the campus trial, Levy
.,ennanent exhibit of worb by
said.
Tbe procedures of the Hear- James Joyce. Poetry Roam, 'JdT
ing Committee also came under Loc1cwood Library, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
attack by Levy. He pointed out Sir Walier Sco~t bicenleDuy .,.:
that there is no separation of hibit. foaturint. fir at editioaa,
judge and jury sinoo the presi- works by contemporarieo, encrava n d watercol9n, thrOucb
dent selects the chairman of inp
May.
the commission, along with the
faculty and staff members . INTERVIEWS
Tbey, in turn, select the student members, be said. ( See
Reporter, February 11, for the
Committee's answer to thMe
and similar charges. In essence
the Committee holds that its

SaleDaysOn
Academic Garb
The University Bookstore
will have "Academic Apparel
Sales Days" for faculty, Monday and Tuesday, March 29
and 30.
According to a BooJartiJre anllOUDCIIIDent, a company representative of an ollicial supplier
of acailemic apparel will be on
band "to assist in the aeJection
or fabrics and styles. Measurements will be taken and a proper lit will be -.red.M
,
On the Main Sll'eet Campus.
lbe asJe will be held in 266 NorloD from 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Moo&lt;lilY, March 29. The~--. 4236 Ridge
will be
lbe9-a.m. to
...4TuM. day, alao
from
p.m.

r-.

�'- ~ -

cWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•Open to public;
••Open to ,_,...., of the llnlvenlty;
1100pen only to those with • proiHSionol ibiarMt In
~

'!'-

THURSDAY-25
~: prooeeda to
United Jewish Fund Campaisn.
larry Schuster is U I B chairman

ICK ca8AM

1

~ :zf. ';iS. ~ J!!l;'~t=~

student volunteers, in front of
Conference Theatre, Norton Union.

EX'nlA TERR£8TIAL GEOLOGY WORK-

CDA.'I"'VV: · ~ft8 acrrAL•: A
M i :a: e d M e·d i a Collaboration.
Domua, 18116 Elmwood Ave., 8:30

p.m. .

Movm• • : . ZABR18K18

POINT.

Haunting Micbelanplo Antoni·
oni film about Amenca u a~-

:d ~:f.'.= !&amp;.~r. it
his moot lucid, ouperbly blendl

visUal detail, mood and atory Into
a cineinatically articulated atate.

9: 00 A.M., Dr. Dennis S.
Hodge, Introductory remarks;
9:16A.M .. Ronold Greeley, NASA
A.- l!aan:h Center, A GEOLOG·

ment. Conference Theatre, Norton Union. check showcase for
timea. Admissioo $.76. Thro~
Man:h 28.

lC LOOK '.tT TBJ: MOON ; 10:15
A.M .. COPFa; 10:30 A.M., PHOTO·
GBOLOGY OF LUNA&amp; FEATURES
(King, Greeley) ; 12:00, LUNCH ;
1:30 l'.M .. Ronold Greeley, COR·

EXTRA TERRESTlAL GEOLOGY WORK-

SHOP:

RI:LATION OF BASALTIC TERRAINS ON
E.UITII TO LUNAR TEUA!N8; 2: 30
P.M., PH010GEOLOGY OF ·LUNA.R
AHG MAR8 FEATURES; 3: 30 P.M.,

co,_; 4:00 P.M., Dr. Thomas
A. Mutch, Brown Univenity, SYS·

'l"EEUTJC GEOLOGIC MM'PlNG ON THE
MOON AHG MARS;

"""

~

5:15 P.M.,

DIN·

PSYCHOLOGY LUNCHEON

Dr. Joel Cooper,
Pri.Dceton Univenity, THE "CLEAN
COUDQUIOK:

FOil GENE" PHENOMENON: THE 80CL\L PSYCHOLOGY OF ELECTIONEER-

Room C-34, 42l!Q Ridge laa,
12:30 p.m. '
.
PHYBJC.U. TlllaAPr 'l"a.&amp;PHON&amp; ...cTIJIII: : John .J. Nootrant, IIABlC
ING,

PROfCIPUB OP PltOBTB&amp;'!IC APPLI-

tr!:'Cai'W=
~ ~.=;
locatiooa, 1 p.m.
UICTUII&amp; 0

William P. Mangin,

:

anthropoloJY, Syrocuae Univer·
oity, SQUA,.... .....,..._,.,. IN
KIGRATION '10 CITIES IN ROUTH

=~·rtu~eo~~teel.a.!d

the Groduate AnthropoloCY Club,
284 Norton, 3 p.m.
PBYCBOKA.T• •: free.. form commuDi&lt;ation for peroonality lrowth.
Fillmore Room. S-6 p.m.
PHYSICS OOILOQUJU)(•: Or. R.
Rufin~ Princeton Univenity,
BLACKROLZB AND GRAVITATIONAL

&amp;ADIATION, 111 Hochetetter , 4
p.m.; refreohmenta l12 Hochatet·

ter, 3: 30 p.m.
TBKOB.ETICA.L BIOLOGY SEMINAB.:

Dr. Lyle Bont, profeaaor, physico
and astronomy, BIOLOGICAL ASTRONOMY, Room 29 .. 4248 Ridge
Lea. 4 p.m. Ref.,.hmenbo, 3:30
p.m.
Inftuuoe of astronomical periodicity upon animal behovior. The
~ofthelwurcycleupon

human· reproduction. An ootimate
of the rote of Darwinian eYOlU·
tion in human~ cauaed by environmenial c:lulnaa.
CBDOCAL ENGINIIZIUNG IIEKINAB:

Dr. F . A. L

Dullien, chemical

r~~~.u~:::~.;f

;::::

Tll8 or LIQUHJ8, 104 Parker En·
gineerinlJ, 4 p.m.

ONK PLEW OVB.R THE CUCKOO'S

HDT•: Ken Keeey'a tale of revolution in a merital inst-itution,
aponoored by the Student TI&gt;Mtre
Guild, the Student Aooociation
and the Swamp Fo• TI&gt;Mtre. Di·

=·==~~r.n-=

ion Drermer; technical director,
Peter Polilanofr. 1'hrouch M~
28. Harriman Library Theatre
Studio, 7:30 p.m., otudenbo $.76,
~.:,: =~.60, tido:ebo at

xoVa••: 1.11 QAI SAVOIR (1968,
Godard). A model 1-.m..U..:U.
oiaD In IIOUDd and imap. A atwiy
of the faociot media and the -

===~J!ty~~~

8::d.mfuciat:l)

cooperate• with

Cl8DIIOrir&gt;&amp;of-;.rol~
-.obo:r
p~--:
ota~

and

POlitiW
-~ --llctional. The" Ameri-

..... diatributon have NWDed

the "bbipo" but provide IIUblitleo
ol .orillnal, 0111100red mo~ oo

- ~~.~n;.'f~~.~
r.ClOUAIQtlliJx
7.t.I'J'H 0

-

· li
p.IIL •

ON UftUTIJIII: A!ID

. _ r e d by Depart-

:

a........ and

- ' ol
bert Cook,

IWQILIIOII

SJovic: Alor -..a~~~ua

IK KOla!&lt; OIDUN PO- .

~rf
•

- . 8:16

a--..

He ba publiabed numeroua lll'tideo on ftrioaa pm... of music,
u well u • -chod bciok for the
auopbooe. Hia...clinica, lecturetecil&amp;la, and oolo
mode at all edacationo1 leftlo
thro.,.hout the u.s.
Dr: - u is a member of
the foculty of the School of Music
at Incliano University whore he

~":foJ!"~:!'d:
f!:!""J:· ~nd~ "'~

Europe, whore he wao featured
ooloist with the BBC Orcbeotra ·
·and was the firat •11xophoni1t
ever to present a full recital in
Paris. Other European recital.
and broadcasbo hove been mode
in Amsterdam, London, Vienna
and Berlin.
CONCERT:

The Yo:.flooda, with .

~~~cl ~:"Ho..!&gt;'~

tee, Clark Gym, 7 and 10:30 p.m.

FRIDAY-26
9 :00 A.M., Lunar mapping
exercise; 10:15 A.M., COFFEE;

SHOP :

1:30 P .M., Dr. F .
All.Rn Hills. SUNY I AB, DATING
12: 00. LUNCH;

LUNAR SAMPLES. ME"nX&gt;RITES AND
THE EARTH ; 2: 15 P.M .. Dr. Rooa·

man F. Giese Jr., SUNYI AB,

~~~:J!~\~'1&amp;':' :t~~~
man~

$2.60.

ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO' S

NEST* : Harriman Theatre, 7 : SO

p.m., see Thunday listing.
Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
BAL.KAN FOLK DANCING :

OF THE MOON AND

SENIOR RECITAL•: Ellen Lang, 10-

MARS; 3: 00 P .M .. COFFEE; 3 : 20
Dr. Dennis S. Hodge, SUNY I AB,

prano. Songo by Sartorio, Rosoini,
Schubert and othen, Boird,.8 : 30
p.m. , free.

MINERALOGY

llESin.TS OF GEOPHYSICAL EXPERl·
MENTS ON MOON AND MARS; 4 : 00

P.M., Concluding remarko.
sor, statistics,

GAMBLING AND CLIN0

~ =~~:!'b!o!vJ~!~i tb:
~fb~:an:: sblie~:~u~~

Diefendorf, 10 a.m.
BIOCHE.'liSTKY SEMINAR: Dr. Michael Garrick. biochemistry and
pediatrics, TRANSLATION OF mllNA
POB HEMOGLOI!INS: Ac:ctJJlACY AND
RllGULAT(ON, G-22 Capen, 4 p:m.
ONE PLEW OVER TBZ CUCKOO'S

NEST •: Harriman Theatre, 7 : 30
p.m., aee Thursday listing.
CllEATIVE ASSOCIATE RECITAL

v• :

Mark Sokol. violin; Roger Shielda,

~anwe:~u~~::C~C
BoUd. 8 p.m., free.

~-~da~:a-~dl ~~:

low, empty people going nowhere

ih't.ckl6lman~ ~~':t~~~=
gram Piclurel, producers of all

thole 30'• and 40'• cbeapy gang·
ater flicks. 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.
FILM••: ZABRISKIE POINT , eee

Thunday listing.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: lnat.ruction in basic stepe durinc
lint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annell.
8 p.m.
SABBATH SERVICE AND OHIC BlUB-

~iiiel8~o=o~ J~~ J~~

8 p.m.

Wlf.u.l:s•:

Dr. RogerS. Payne, UAatant pro-

l:r.o~~~~~ ~

feller University and New York
Zoological Society. Public lecture
with alidee and underwater 110und
recordlnp. ·~Uer Auditorium. 8

=io'!.~oct :~:~&amp;!

the Whole" fund. Ticltebo at Norton and Boird Hall Ticket Officeo.

SATURDAY-27

eee

SUNDAY-28
QuettioninB
N e w Scientific Di.acoveriu, Dr.
James Danielli, director, Center
of Theoretical BialOCY; Dr: Rich·
WBEN-TV : IN PROCESS,

~~~~~ t~~~~'?yo~

Dr. Robert Rizzo, religious otad·
ies, Caniaiua College. Rev. Dr.
Trevor Watt will moderate. 10·
10: 30 a.m.
WilEN-TV : TilE UNIVDtSlTY OP BUP·

PALO ROUND TABL&amp;. two atudenta,
Dennis Arnold and lan De Waal,
will give their answers to the
question of How Real Is tM Generation Gap1 )Jr. Jooeph Shisler
will he the moderator. 12: 30-1: 00
p.m.
.,
OPDtATIOJf QltJZMLIQBT :

FILM•• : BRE.ATIILEIIS (1959, God-

BONGS OF HUMPBACK

FILM••: ZABRISKIE POINT,

Thursday listing.

PBOB.UJU.ITY AND 8TATIBTIC8 SEMINAR'•: Dr. Marvin Zelen, profes-

cou..t)aelon

"fered by Profeuor Roser Kempi.
Anyone interested in meeti.ng Mr:

~~~~~=~D~
parlment of- French.

and younpten to ptber at U/ B
Hillel House at 1: 30 p.m. From

there they will be taken to a
movie. This will be the final pro·
gram prior to spring vacation.
JNTERPArrB BEDilR: Lutheran Student Group and Hillel; an ex-

~=~~n&amp;'! ~ td:!.~it~a~

committee headed by-Donald
Burnstein; participenbo Include:
Mira Holden , Debra Kamesar,
Kenneth Ledennan, Ita Shoolrin
ond Dale Goldatein. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will offer interpretations of the ceremonies. 5 p.m.
ONE FLEW OVER TH8 CUCKOO'S

NEST• : Harriman Theatre, 7:30

p.m., ... Thunday listing.
U / 8 CONCERT BAND•: Eugene
RoUS8e8u, saxophone, aoloiat ;
Frank "J. Cipolla, director. Good·
year Hall, 8 : 30 p.m.
PIL)(••: ZABRISKIE POINT , eee
Tbunday listing.

MONDAY-29
PILM• • : LES COUSINS (1958 ,

Claude Chabrol). City Mouae,
Country Mouse - which one will
get the cbeeoe? Chabrol, in a
shrewd, almost omorol view of the
oompetition, anawen, "nobody.••
For one thi.q, for all the competition, no one ia really aure what
it is they are after. Tbe film hu
a remarbble collection of facee
and aome remarkable principala;
and Chabrol hoe a IDOl! profoo·
aionol command of the medium.
147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p.m., free.
POLlTIC.AL BCIEMCZ COu.oQUltJ)I( •:

Dr. Terry Nudln, aaaiatant profeuor, political ecierace, VIOUI:NC&amp;
AND TBJ: tn'Aft IN' DIPDliCAL POI.mcoL ....,_,, A CllmQUZ, Room

9, 4238 Ridae Lea. 3: 30 p.m.
PIANO ..:rfAL0 : RualaDa Antono-

wics. WOib, by MOAZ!, Bortok,

Schubert; Rnel. Chopin and Pro:!'"~ - 8:~ P-!1'-, Jldmia.

TUESDAY--30
PHYSICIANS

TELBPHONI: t.llC'I'tlD:

Dr. Louis Z. Cooper,
CONGENITAL

lltJIE.L.\

RtJBI:l.LA.:

.um

DIAGHOSJI..

~.:.;=r-.;y ~!!t·":.!:l

Program. 62 rece•vin&amp; locationo,
11 : 30 a.m.
,
. .
BTATISTIC8 FILM• : P,reJkW.., Ill
Random, with Prof. David Blackwell, preaeniA!d by the Mathematica and Statiatic• Graduate
Student AMociationa. Room A30,
4230 Ridge Lea. 12 noon.
NUBSES TELEPBONI: LBCTUU: Dr.
Gene Brockopp and Lee Ann
Hoff, CRISIS INT&amp;RV&amp;N'f'ION AND

:'~""'by~~·,!4~~~

gram. 62

p.m.

receivinc locationo, 1:30

(1962, John Frankenbeimer).
Melodramo of lntema~Xin.l intrigue, pbumed p,&gt;JjtiW ~·
ation and an o.iaipal complez twist of moot fantutic lnwmtion.
The prodici9ua minure of mill·
bory, mediCal, political, oocial and
familial melodramatica moy oeem
a bit thiCk - but it is okillfully
blended aDd viewer lnvo'-nt .
is total. 147 Diefendorf, s and· 8
.
p.m., free. ~
AN OP'EU. POTPOuDJ.•: -. An eMelllble of acenea from o nlllllber of
opel'lll p.-eniA!d by tho UIB Opera Club, CoJ!f,.e rt!:nce Theatre,
7:30 p~ ~ .~

WED:t:ffiSDAY--31

Fn.. CYTOLOCY: DIAGKOIITIC CY·

~;~62~~

cationa, 11: 30 a.m.

roDlA.nUBI'S · nu:PBOIU ta:"fUD:

Jelfrey M. Carrel. PROGUISIVII
~IQUD IN PODUT&amp;Y • apon·
oored by ~ M~ Pro- ""
gram. 62 reoelvillc locatioDo. 11:30

......

.

~

COu.oQUIUJt:

Dr. 'nleodore Millo,

cbairmon,·oociolocY, ~. Dr

LUSIOH8 AND KOD.LI IN 80CU.L
SCD:HCII, Room

C-34, 4280 RidP

Lea. ·12: 30 p.m.
niCIIOKA'f'•.: fne.follll

-

CDIIIIIlU-

for peroonality powtb,

Fillmore Room. S-6 p.m.

P'ILll••: OlU PLUI OlU (SYJIPA!'BY
POll ...... D8V!L) (11168, Godard) .
Puallel otudy of the aowth of a
....-olutionary
lbe aowth

reoo1.::! ....r

of the
Coaimllidory
polnbo ol view lbe s &amp;Dd toward· lbe Third W.orld .
Godard lnwmbo ~~­
~-" ,-!47 Dief~rf, 8 p.m.,

.

.

.

OOUOQUIUX ON ·LIIadOD ~

ot

Random.

Room 43. 4246 Ridce
Leo. 12: 30 p:m.
BIOLOGY Jlli.i:CTUU: Dr. Clifton .
Poodry, Depe-t of Developmen&amp;ol Cell Biolot;y, U.Pvenity of
Califomia, Irvin8, PA~ ..,..

JfA.TION' IN Tim.. mcuLOPMKNT or
l*l801'111LA, 246 Heolth Sciencoo
~.3:30p.m.

arro and John W. Picben; Betty

80Ciii, PSYCBOLOdY LUHCimOK

PJLM• • : KANCBURIAN CAKDWA.ft

STATIIIftCII _ ,

• THuRsDAY-!
ldDIC.U. T&amp;CHN0LOGI8T8 '!KL&amp;PBOQ Ia:Tuall: Dn. Mario Gem·

PATI'II 0 :

aponoored by o.p.rtmoioat
of German .and 8laftD. 8: ()b.
cbukwu Mesu, ... . _ CJWnWf
AND AHDliBT IN~ loftWaA·
TIJIIII, 6 Diefeodorf A.Jmh, 8: 15
p.m.
'
.-~

NOTICES
OPKH

lollir!Ncs for !Nibmiiia &amp;Dd

oophomo- lnte....t.d In _,....

• edUcation, MCIIId8,t.,'loludt 29, at
-8U&amp;R8ALI8)( Aim PAINTING: M.
10 o.m., 4 and 7 pli1.,·1140N-.
·rooaiJoN 8TIJDKHT APPAIIIII COPI'D
Marcel " - an bioJorian. liter- Houa•: 10 TOWIIOOIId Hall, 3:30- 80VIft lZwaY- CAD MUI:
.,y critic and author of the de- 5:30 p.m.
GaJUH rtt.&gt;~•: D~ lotzte11 Tqe
lme with alideL 146 Diefeodorf, der MerJM:IIMU (Ul64). Thia 111m Ullir:m. are important morale
8:30 p.m.
of aelected ecenea fram Karl builden, -m.rBoYiet Jew•
Mr. .~.... wBl illoo """' put In ~·. c~nmo- is • recordlnl of · they are not fonottoia by
-lbeochuiced pwlnote- on.' the lll64 Vieana Feotiftl perfor- their brethreol in the W".t. In ot
lbe FreDch IX*~ ol.- In the Theater au a.. (COIJiinued 011-11, col. 6)

~~~).~

:~~=

:- =-==

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>, MARCH ts, 1971

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

Referendum on Norton
:Is Open to.AQ of lVB By STEVE LIPMAN
The University-wide referendum on what to- do about Norton Hall, being conducted by
the Student Associstion today
and tomorrow, is the first in
history to be open to faculty,
stslf and all students, but no
one is estimating what the turnout may be,
.. The Union's recreation area
has been shut down since midnight last Friday following
complaints by Norton officisls
that drug crimes were making
the area unsafe.
The referendum is an at,..
tempt to find a consensus answer to the question, "Where
_do we go from lw.re?" ( See
• separate story. )
Bolio! Questions

Nortm Traflic Diminishes in The Wake of
Unsettled Situation Following Roc Closing
'The olgn said, "SORRY . . .
Cl.-.1 Until Further NoUoe."
ADd the pool tables, card
room and bowlina alleya were
~-

T'bat was !tie -Norton recrea•

tiOD ana Saturday 'IDIII'IIinl
after tbefta.· '-~ baraao.

clec:reaaal notably.)

'The Union staff's plan for
reopening reoeation witb the
protection of anned outside
security forces seems to be ac-

ceptable to no one.
'
It has failed to win support
eilber froin administrators .,.

curity force is reported to have
renewed its request to carry
sidearms to help rid the campus of "disruptive non-student
elements."
'There are also reports that
even if the anned ll\llll'd strate8Y
is adopted, tbenr would' bo!'-dif-

-=-~- nljht. ~ , =~m-=~~ ;!,tybo~~~~- ~t·~dJi
Tba~s 8leo tbe -.y u.·- may be for aome time as the
campus 11"!1""' fO&lt; a 'solution
for ...._un, 'it. (Other Nortoo pui!Jic facilities remain
DDIIiL biJt ~ trallic has

-

that oomet~
done.
- - - - - -·
'--Today'a l'!!ferendwn is an attempt to achieve a conaensus
on that "something,"
Meanwhile, the cam
. pus se-

·. laws Prohib!l•t
State
.us
_
.
-.
on
'CamP
'~'
--- X

~ tbe ~·or tbe .

~ yw.r; IIIM!rlil · -

by --all persons occupying the

vehicle, Glennon points out. In
ben of tbe Uniwnlity -commu- addition, the pooaell8ion of the
Dity, inc:ludina atudellta, fac&gt;. weapon .is, in itself, preswnp' ulty and -rttal£ ......_., lw.ve tive evidence of intent to use
-"-&gt;. threatened, -..lied ·or it unlawfully against the per118ri9ao1Y imured by individUals aon or property of another.
l:llJT)'iDa and ...._ weapons,
~ of most firearms
' aiiaonfiDI to Keanath P. Glen- or UJ&gt;Iosive devices is a Class
- . dir8ctor of security. GuDs, D fek!&lt;IY, Glennon said. pun• Jmives aJid 11 wide variety of ishable by imprisonment of nat:
otber iD&amp;tnmalts- lw.ve- been · leas tban ooe and not more
.-1 in such eiiCOUilfllla.
· tban four yw.rs and!or a fine
8evwa) iDdivlduals tw.ve ap- which can be tirice the v!'lue"
. - - ' to tbe admbdltratlan of of money -or p~ pined
)he' Uoiwnlity to deal witb tbia ~ the COIDIIWIIIIOD of a
increlllliniiY _._ pooblenL
~ of otber i,yp.. of
. For
Glennon weapons, such as knives, nizon!,
~,tbaty::m~ imitatioli pis!ola and otber

.Campus reaction to the problem •PI""'!" mi&gt;:ed, awaiting
crystalhzation in the referendum returns . A few want
anned sua rd s; others don't;
some tbink the cloaing is a good
idea; others fear that the "crimina!
simply
fOCII&amp;
theirelement"
attentionwill
on otber
C&amp;mJ11!S
areas.
Fontastlcl-

A junior girl from Kenmore
tbinks the idea for armed

guards is "Fantastic - I think
it's about time they did some-

thing to protect the workers in
the Recreation area from attacks &lt;by students and P89Pie .
from outside."
I
- ·
"From lln employee's point
of view," Gary Klaw said, ''I
feel that Norton and the Rec
ares are no looser a safe plaoe
to work, probably not even to
(continued on JKl/1&lt; '3, col. 4) -·

Questions on the ballot,
which SA President Mark Huddleston says "were kept simple
to give greater freedom of action to those who must implement the policy,'' are:
• Should some action be
tsken on the Norton Hall problem?
• Do you favor a security
force of any kind in Norton
Hall?
• H so, what type of security force do you favor : student
_,..,ity which will work
witb studenta and- staff; atudent
and prof..,.ional anned security teams; campus security;
professional armed s e c u r i t y
(not Buffalo or campus police ) ,
• Should access to Norton
he limited?
• And, if so, to what degree
should it' he limited: students,
faculty and -staff; students, facul(}&gt;, stsU and tbeir guests; acCI!IIB in certain areas of Norton
linU1ed to students, faculty and
sts!P, access limited -by curtailing houi-s in certain areas of
Norton.
All security alternatives, except for student security teams,
wpuld provide for arresting
power. However, John Charles,
second vice president of SA,
expects that the student alternative wi.!l be favored by moot
voters. He also expects the
'vote to be against-limiting access to the building.
SA leaders lw.d the cooper-

a-_- ,

- -.to --•La'!'• ia addition
~ II"V·
emllll State Umvermty campo.- and tbe UfB oampua,
~ ~t tbe carry::..:...::, that ~US:

._. ~

'1be CIIIIIP!ete ten of "RuJea
Reculation&amp; fO&lt; the Mam........, of Public Order on the
Prem1aeB of State-Operated Instltutious of tbe State Uni-sit)' of N~ Y orit" publlabad in tbe Octcber 1, 1970
• IEua of tbe Reparw.
'The N- York Penal law
pdlblbita the carrying of weapoiiB ... tbe J*80II8 ol iDdividuals em tbe C1J11P11L 8udl weaJIOIIB fouDd In • autamoblle
and

ex-tltate~tiveevldeooe
of ~ of thoee w.pons

deadly
or~is a ClaE
A misdemeani&gt;r punishable by a definite ..itenoe
of impriaooment not to 'uceed
one year imdlor a fine not to

uceed $100, botb of which are
determined by the court. U a
person found guilty in such an
instenoe 1w.a previously been
conVicted of any aiiDe, the of-·
fense is a Class D fei9ey. •
Any person wbo laiowiogly
baa in his possession a rille,
sbolfun or firearm in or upon
a building or the growxls used
for educatiODal ~of any
acbool, college or um-mty
-without linitten autborization
of the educatiODal institution,
is guilty of a - Class A m.i&amp;deJManor and cuilty of a C1aas
D felony. if be has prevlously
· been ooovicled of any crime.

JuiJo in the Gym

ation of Bud Manning, recreation area director, and Dr.
James Gruber, direct... of Norton, in writing the referendum.
'They also bad President Robert Ketter's "O.K."
However, the results of the
referendum are not binding
upon the administzation. "It's
just advisory,'' explains Dr.
Richan:l Siggelltow, vice president for student affairs. But he
adds, " We'D give great weight
to definitive results."
Clrc.ua.r Issue

Charles agrees, saying, "H
tbe results are clear, the administration will probably_ fpllow.
It's such a circular issue, that
whatever the administration decides to do, someone will say
they're wrong. The admiriistration .doesn't want to _go out
on a limb."
·
Charles says the referel)dum
is open to the entire University community because "we
feel Norton is a University
building and its problems are
University-wide," He adds that
SA's Coordinating Council,
which established the referendum, hopi!d the widened eligibility would induce more stu-

~b:.':les~ wt: ~~IaU: ~~

turnout, bo- that students
will be motivated to vote wben
they ·realize tbat-tbey are not
the only OD!'S participating.
"There are over 1500 faculty
and God knows bow many
staff," be points out as a challenge to students.
However, he also notes that
the rule ststing that at· ~
ten per cent of studenla
vote in' 11!1 election 'f«&gt;&lt;be
valid is' not iii el{ect-1n' thiS
case. ·Charles ti!rin8 -the balloting "more of' a poD tban a constitutional change."
In addition to tbe referendum, a poD will be conducle!i
outside the voting s!atiims, witb
longer and more specific questions tban the referendum.
Voting booths will be open
today and tomorrow from 9
a.m.-5 p,m. in 'Norton, Goodyear, Tower, Hayes. Acheson.
Clark Gym, Diefeodorf Annex
and at Rid&amp;e Lea (probably in
Buildlnl 42811) •

�GRErolrrER..:;.'

2

Alon:ltllf,l971

Teach-In at Canisius ToView Laos,
Effects of theWar at Home, hi Asia
A war correspondent who
just retur.aed from covering the
lAotian invasion will he among
the speakers at a Teach-In on
lAos Friday (March 19) at
Canisius College.
Fred Branfman, a reporter
with Dispstdl News Service,
Washington, will spe8k on
"What I Saw in lAos," describing the incursion he fol·
lowed from South Vietnam into
Teach-In, from 2 to 10 .

u.;;.,

p.m. isinbeing
the Student
Auditori·
um,
sponsored
by the
Committee of Concerned Aaian

Cataing{or
Summer Is
rold&amp;New'
This year's U/ B Summer
Sessions bulletin will combine
both the nostalgic and the new.
What's new is that the bulle·tin will be produood paperback
size (4 x 7) without photographs. It is one of the first
wtiven;ity bulletins to be produood in the format which is
viewed as being more convenient for pocket or purse than
·the traditional catalog s i z e.
Making use of cold type composition, this method for cata·
log production is both less ex·
pen8ive and faster than the traditional approach. Production
time is cut by half, providing a
more up-to-date, accurate bulle-

tin.

.

Tbe nostalgic feature of the
bulletin is the cover (above)
by University Publications Services artist Susan' Burger who
captured the now popular
1930's look in bright orange.
Tbe paperback catalog is exJ&gt;e&lt;;ted to be ready for distri·
bution by the end of the month.
Meanwhile, Summer Sessions
Director James H. Blackhurst
has indicated that, .despite re-

~:

=. ~ ~~l~taC:.:~;

summer program, U/ B expects
a slight budget increase. Black·
hurst foresees no reductions
· from last year's level of 98,000
credit hours, day and evening.
Blackhurst noted, however,
that student-faculty ratios are
on the rise, goirig from 18 to I
-to 30 to 1 in the past four
years.

Druggists Reooiw
Agency Directory
Free copies of a 40-page directory, listing over 200 social
service agencies located'· in the
Buffalo area, were recently distributed by the -School of
Pharmacy to every community
pharmacy in Erie ·eounty, as
a public aervioe.
Funded by the United
Health Foundation of Western
New York, the directory info&lt;·
mation ·was compiled as .p art
of a research project conducted
by Miss Margaret Nowak,. a
fifth-year pharmacy student,
under supervision of Dr. Albert
Wertheimer, assistant professor
of pharmacy.
The directory is designed " to
provide concise data regarding
the Sources of such local social
serviceS as the Red Cross,
homes for the aged, day-&lt;:are
centers, nursing homes, rehabil·
itation oenters for the handi·
capped, area hospitala .and the
various agencies offering assi&amp;tance to victims of cbronic and
debilitating diaeaaes.

Scholars in Bulfalo. Professors
from U /B, Bulfalo State, Cani·
sius, and Niagara Communit;y
College will take part in the
program.
.
A spokesman for the group,
however, said the Teach-In is
bein~ held 90 that the general
public can attend and listen to
speakers, and then give and
take with questions and answers during an open forum
Town Meeting to learn more
about the situation in lAos.
Two other speakers will also
give first-hand aocounts of their

Other speakers and. topics
experiences in Souu-&amp;t Asia.
Troung Buu Lam, a prot- will he: · Prof. David Marr, a
of biatory at State Uniwrait;y" specialist in modem Vietnamat Stony Brook, will speak an ese biatory from Cornell Uni"My Vietnam - the Long wraity, "At War With Aaia";
Struggle.• Miss Cynthia Fred· Raford Boddy, a profell80r · of
rick, a freelance jouma1ist and ecooomics at U /B, "'The Waz
Ecoi&gt;omy"; and
national coordinator of the and the
Committee of Concerned Aaian Walter Rosen, a professor of
Scholars, will speak on "Report biology at U /B, "'The Ecolotli·
cal Eftecta of the War."
from the Front: Saigon."

·u.s.

·
·
c N F
Departments an . OW ill
Two Openings om
· of F1our

Universit;y departments may can be filled until the budget
n&amp;W hjre two people for every picture from the Legislature is
four replacement positiona, Dr. clearer, Murray says.
Whether any more of the reDaniel Murray, vice president
~demic aftairs, said this

~"fill:"~~~~.;:.~

This is one more position
than permitted under the origi·
nal policy of limited hiring.
Murray aiao notes that il one
of these tWo positions is f"llled
by a minorit;y candidate, the de~estion is entitled

may not be" poss1ble to fill all

replacement positions in the

new budget year beginning

SPA Offers
An Automatic
P.a:yment Plan
A ayatem of automatic dediJc..
tion of dues for memhenhip in
the Senate Prote.icmaJ Association (SPA) will he impJe.
mented July 1, Robert B. Granger, State president of the organization ' - -"¥'"d
SPA has cirqllated to eligible
facult;y and stall members a
payroll dedu!:tion card a¢ a
notice of iDaeaae in dues far
the coming year.
n- electing to sip ·the
authorizatio1nrill he hilled $10
for membership from DOW until
July 1. Altar July 1, thea! .....
turning the form by April 1
will he ahle to pay dues through
bi-weekly dednctic!IVI
The amiuaJ. dues atruoture, IIIISUIIIini, aa President
Granger p u t s it, "alliliation
with NEA/NYSTA or at least
·an equivalent amount of dues
if there is no alliliation," will
he: under $15,000 annual saJ.
ary, $88; $16,()()().19,999, $93;
$20,()()().24,999, $98; over $25,·
000, $103.
SPA is a Is o circulating a
questionnaire, asking for a rank
ordering of a aeries of proposed
contract demands. The re_sponses will be tabulated and
uaed by the neaotiating team
"to guide them in their thinking and their prioritiee."

April 1, the vice president
warns, aince
State may en·
!oree a· large "savings !acfor"
on the Universit;y. Another
problem Murray foreeeea is that
next year'a nat ·budget may not
he any larger than this year's.
Minority
These conditions and the
in this policy, ~cb,e~­
to Ricans, Chicanos, and Am· over--commitment of existing
erican Indians. Women are not PJOKI"8IDS will not "allow the
currently included although University to mount any new
Murray hopes that all positions programs next year," Murray
. A Facult;y..Stiolf Invitational will be "equaiiy aocessihle to says.
both
men and women." MurBasketball Tournament, involving teams from U/ B, Buffalo ray indicates that be reserves
State, Niagara Universit;y and final determination on who is
Niagara Community College, a minority candidate.
A seminar commemorating arrested, many of whom were
will be he I d at Clark Gym,
Frida¥ and Saturday ( March
These policies, he aays, ap- the centennial of the 1871 Paris ultimately deported. The
19 and 29 ).
ply only to faculty jobs. No Commune and studying its im· French working ~'lass was poTbe
t 18
·
red b
non-instructional staff positions plications will he offered this litically silenced for 20· years."
summer by Professor Pierre
The seminar will iriclude
U t B's 6:,~en B::l\"~ an~ n-.:..~ D--l..
~,% of the Department of readings by biatorians, poets,
is open to the public. Admis- IJUIVUI.I:iiJ(J(Jff,.
novelists and dramatists such
sion is $1 per family.
'Unp':.....~-'--1'
The course, "The Paris Com- as Lisaagaray, Rimhel.ld, VerTrophies w~arded to
'ft:U:t.U::Il«:U
mune In Literature" (French laine, Hugo, Valles, lind Zola
504), will ·he taught June 7- in order "to bring heck to life
July 30.
this momentous epiaqde." Ac·
Tbe Department provides cording to Prof. Auhery, "It is
,:::,~ ~~urnaDr. Paul L Garvin, professor
this
background
on
the
semhoped
1hat such a study y.oill
Pairings for the Friday night of linguistics, is editor of "the
help clarify the connection beopener are Buffalo State vs. first book to approach the prob- inar:
"Between
March
18
and
May
tween
literature
and politics."
Niagara, 9 p.m.; U/ B vs. Niag- lem of cogn i tion from the 28, 1871, the Parisian working
1boae intereated in :the semara Communit;y, 7:30p.m. , . :::.:ti~."of hoth study and class rose in arms and took inar are asked to contact the
Saturday night's consolation
over the government of the Department of French. 212
game begins at 7:30 with~
Called an "unprecedented Cit;y-not to pave the way for Crosby, 831-2:J91.
championship round aet fOF 9 tezt," Cognition: A Multiple another professional political
p.m.
View ( Spartan Books, 448 team, but to establish an en·
TEIIIJM ISfUEI
Members of the UJB team P!'i""• $20) advanoes "two dis- t~ly new style of so$:iety in The Foculty·Sblfl ~ will hold
include: James Ryan, associ- s!mllar apJ!roaChes ~;hat l;'ro- which Wf?rkers..~ves apaneldiscuuion:o,i"-sur·
ate director "Ollice of Urban .vtde a vanety of vteWpomts would he "! a p08ltion to . talr.e round•ns tenura lit"'3 p ~ Friday
Mairs; ~ T. Frantz, as- for ~ understanding of bo~ care of their own aftairs. The
· ···~
'
sociate professor, counselor ed· - C!'I!Utive P~ and cogm~ movement waa hailed by Marx Man:h .19 In 30 Dililuclort-Annex.
ucation; James Hansen, profes- tlve sy.stems. The first. ~p­ and BaJrunin ,.;, the first trul ~oderotor will be - . o r Jacob
sor, counselor education; Wil- proach 18 ':he.s~&gt;;~dy of cogmtion proletarian communaliat reV:. ~n, School of Law. Participants
liam Monkarsh, assistant pro- by su!'h d!"":'plines as psycho!· lution in the world. .
Will include: Georso Hochflekl, pro·
lessor, physical education for , ogy, lingwstics, "!'d an~pol· . "Repression was in P
r- fesoor of English: f'el8r Lansbury,
men· Norbert Baschnagel assi&amp;- ogy. Tiie second 1S the sm&gt;Ula· tion to the scare of
profesoor of Chemistry; and Loo·
tant basketball coach; Rick ~on ~f cognition in artificial class. During the j)Joody nard Snyder, chief accountalrt end
Wells, assistant to the director mtelligence.
week,' at least 20 000 Parisians • local dellpta to the SDte Sen·
Among areas "never before were shot in cold' blood, 40;000 ale ProhssionaiAslocl.uon.
Admissions and Records; Keith
Johnson, asaistant to the dean, treated" in a aingle volume are
continuing education; and Rob- the relation of the semantic
ert R. Anstett. coordinator of and the cognitive domains of
language; the semantic study of
tranafer admissions.
kinship systems; and the role
of language in the computer
Grad~
simulation of cognition.
Graduate students working
The publishers bill the book
toward lhe M.A., M.S., 0.. as a first and second text in
Ph.D. d - must observe couraea on both cognition and
deadtiries" for submission of a artificial intelligence and as a
program of· .studies, the Grad- complementary text in ciepart..
uate School has reminded.
ments· of psychology, computer
.pence and anthropology.
Programs for PhD. · candi·
Contributors represent a
dates must be s_ubmitted to the
Graduate School two academic ~on of these 6elds. .
aematers prior to the antici- · Bi!fore joining UjB, editor
pated_ receipt of the degree. . Garvin spent nine yeara at the
· Summer Sessions are not con- Bunker-Ramo Corporation and
sid~ an academic aeQ!iis~; its predecleoaM companies as
manager of 'language analysis
Maater's candidates must file
translation, Worlring on retheir prosrams with the-Gradu- and
search problems related to the
ate School one academic aern· proces8mg of natural lanlruaae
ester prior to the anticipstejl data by. computer. He has- pubreceipt.oJ .the degree.
l.i8hed extensively in ·the fields
Any-&lt;ltudent who has ~ !&gt;fliiqpiimcs 8Dd languqe data
the deaclline for submitting bia pi'Cllll!llaing, and has been actiYe
progr8m should contact. the in the application of artificial
Gra~ School Office, 200· intelligence principles and
Hay~ 831-5087.
methods of 1ingujstics analysis.

::=n:

the

~ps, ~ined

F8culty-Staff
To Host Tourney

Paris Commune Seminar

=:

~~d:~ ~~":: In Linguistics

the·=.;

�• ' ' ~J
·-13,1971

3

Operp,Needrft_Be a 1/o-Hum:.A/friO;
SirysWJrkshopDirectotMurielWolf

New Campus Security Job
~To BeHeld in April

Euminations for two · typM Genesee St. Phyaical ~
of State camnus security posi- menta for the positions are .at
tions - securlty specialist and least 20/ 40 ocirrected vision; at
security officer~ will be given least 5'7" and weight ol 145
"Ma,ytie isn'lthe moet
MXt month by Civil Service. pound&amp; with no physical depopular form of communialtiim
Both positions require two . fects. Women and students are
in the 'IIVWid," J'eiiiiU'b Mwiel
years of college training and a url!ed to apply, Glennon says.
Wolf, aoaisllmt prof-.r of muknowledge of New York State
Areas to be covered qn both
sic and director of U/B's Opera
law.
eums include : using good
Worbbop, "but it coulc! be."
The
job
of
campus
security
judgment
in the law enfmceWorialhbp productions have
specialist is new to the Civil ment field, understanding and
shown lbat iJpera ...tn't be a
Service and is part of the interpreting State and federal
''bo-bum" alfair. When YOUilll
State's attempt to up-grade se- law and preparing written mapeople are involved, it can
curity forces oh campuses. The terial.
have "a marvelous, spontanerequirements for security offiSucoessful completion of the
ous quality," with the kind of
cer have a1ao been up-graded. exams puts the candidate orr •
excitement that coines from
U / B has five of the security list, with top ranking going -fo
their enthusiasm. U / B stu~
specialist positions to fill. How- the highest test grades. After
dents have performed in the
ever, it is not known whether this, the applicant is required
community, at clubs and
there will be any new openings to pass an oral test and a medischools, reaching to all ages,
for security officers here.
cal exam before an app:&gt;intnient
even malting a . bit with the
The new positions will be in- can be made.
.
ltindergarmn set of P .S. 22 who
cluded in the ~· Blue Blazer" pa"loved Mozart," especially, in
In addition to the openings
trol which Kenneth P. Glenthe words of one child, the
non, director of security, plans at U f B, jobs for campus securscene "where the airl wore a
to initiate. The idea behind the ity specialists and security offipink bonnel" The appeal of
patrol, Glennon ssys, is "to get cers are available throughout
opera can lie-on many levels.
people out of the uniform that the State. Starting sslary at
Mrs. Wolrs Workshop is a
gives offense to some." The U f8 will be $8,523 for officers
full-credit course, with an enchange in costume will, hope- and $10,505 for specialists. The
rollment of 26-30 peop_le who
fully, change reactions to cam- salary varies in other parts of
meet fonDally every n-lay
pus poliQe. Glennon is also the State.
for 3 ho11111, and informally at
planning a uniform switch for
many small rehearsals. Alao,
other members of the force.
there will be a swnmer..session,
Security specialists will be
open to undergraduates and
required to have more educagraduates for .credit, from June
tion than members or the se27-August 8, . followed by a
CUrity r orce have previously
stage production.
•
needed. In addition to two years
All DopllrtJ-a Partlclpoote
Dr. Robert S. Fisk, professor
of college , these investigative
The classes attract majors
officers also need a year of ex- of educational studies, has been
from all department&amp;--di
perience with an organized law appointed a member of the sixtry, anthropology, educationenforcement agency. The job man bargaining committes of
"our principal bass is a Ph.D.
will consist or "conducting ap- the Senate Professional Associ- .
candidate m Enl!:lish." They
propriate follow ~ up investiga- a tion (SPA ) which yesterday
work together in a spirit of
tions ... interviewing victims, opened 1971-72 contract negocamaraderie and commitmept,
complainants and witnesses and tiations witli the State.
rootivated and rmanced by the
conducting the necessary invesDr. Fisk has also been electOpera Club, a Student Associatigation of criminal and secur- ed the university centers' reption group. Opera Club memresentative 'On the SPA Nego' ity matters as directed."
bers are dedicated -"they've
New aecurity officers will also tiations Committee, the larger_
goDe ·Out to -earn extl'a nioney" be required to have two years . group w b i c b -blisbes the
-and will be solely responsib1e
of coUege. All present officers program to be negotiated.
for financing a March 31 "Evewill remain on the job, howThe· local SPA plans an open
ning of Soenes" in Norton have such quality of voices. . especially comedy. To give stu- ever, Glennon assures. The of- meeting at noon today (ThursUnion and a production at They remarked on how profes- dents experience in language, ficers wlll be ugive n · assign- day ) in 362 Acheson. Dr. ConBaird, May 1 and 2. The latter sional the students are in their we also include some scenes in ments involving crowd control, stantine Yeracaris, chairman of
program will feature scenes approach to music and staging. ·t he original language."
and foot nnd mobile patrol in the steering committee, ssys
from such favorites as Pellhu Students made a fantastic hit
Mrs. WoU has some further all areas of campus . . . con- the meeting will include a proand MilUande, Boris GodDnov, in oommunicating with individ- plans for the Workshop. "I trolling and directing traffic and gress report on SPA's activities
and The Rahe's Progress and a uals in the schools. One prin- would like to see us have two parking on campus roadways to date as well as an appoial
one-act version of Prokofiev's cipal remarked that it was so or three programs on tap at and in parking areas .. . and for membership. Y e r a c a r i s
points out that the larger the
The DueM4.
great that the kids could talk all times- for children and investigating complaints."
The campus program jg sel- with other young people about adults." Also, "I would like to
The examinations for these · local SPA membership, the
ected, directed, costumed and opera. And our students are have more campus involve- positions will be held on April more representatives U/ B will
22, with applications being ac- have on the State-wide Council
. staBed by studenta. Says Mrs. getting first-hand experience."
ment."
WoU, "opera is a natural comThough tbe Workshop is not cepted until March 22. Appli- of SPA. Larger membership
munication link. It's the origiThe community perform- exclusively oriented aS a pro- cation fonns can be obtained at means more local input into the
nal mixed media, combining ances, or lectu.re--demonstra- fessional program, several stu- the Genesee Building, 1 West negotiations process, be says.
drama, art, music, language, -tions, are centered around dents have gone on to competiliterature, dance, and especially themes such as "Musica1 The- tive auditions and to college
psychology." As suc:b, it "has atre as Drama," and "Famous teaching positions in which
me. I never use the recreation
great potential for interdisci- Letter Scenes in Opera." They they are directing their own (continued from p&lt;lle 1, coL 3)
walk. People noticeably carry area."
plinary activity on campus," have included scenes from sev- workshops.
weapons
around
and
threaten
"While we have a problem
and -can belp "to develop the eral Mozart favorites, Cooi Fan
With further development, it
individual student in terms of Tulle, The Marrioge of Figaro, can be hoped that the Work- to use them. Until such a threat here," another Rec ares emis
removed,
I
feel
the
Rec
area
·
ployee
said, "I think armed
his own capabilities-wham- the Magic Fuue; Beethoven's shop programs will attract a
they may be." She empbasizes, FUUJio; Puccinrs La Bohe~M; number of people to the Uni- mu&amp;t be closed." He said of the security is an ad /we solution."
"They
finally
got
someO,.onlzdoMI
closing,
"the sinaers are not DDly &amp;ina- Verdi's La Traviata; and from versity. "It could be a valuable
A meeting of the (underera but· are involved in all as-· AmeriCan opera repertoire, recruitment vehicle," oomments thing done in this school."
"The
solution
is
to
get
out
in
graduate)
Student
Coordinatpects of musical thMin!." ~ Vanessa and The Ballad of Mrs. Wolf, "drawing a good
a1ao serve 88 pianists, staae di- Baby Doe. "We like to do as conglomeration of people and the city and community and ing CoWlcil last ...,.,)[ took no
stop
the
drug
problem,"
counstand
on
the
matter,
calling
rectors, tec!mritns, and desipl- much as possible in Englishtalent."
tered another Rec area ell\- only for the referendum. The
ers.
ployee,
a
senior
girl
from
New
Graduate
Students
Association
Olf~-York.
· favored a one-day closing and
Word-of-moulh reputation
Alan Leach, a Ft. Erie sopbo- an educational program. Orand a lilrlinl in the SpMkers'
more,
was
hesitant:
"I
don't
ganizations representing black
Bureau directory lms brought
want them (armed guards ) and Puerto Rican students......,
the Worbbop invitations to
around
but
so
much
stulf
is
reportad
ready to protest use
pel'form before such diverse
SONY's Middle East Studies Stony Brook will again offer a going on.... rd go along with of any hired guards, armed or
groups 88 the Piano Teacliers
Faculty
Association
will
sponstudy-abroad
program
in
Nice,
some
sort
of
enforcement
but
unanned.
_
Forum of ~. the New
not arms.... They should apAt RepprU!r deadline, hopes
Scbool of the PerforminJ Arta sor-during the academic year France.
1971~72-a
new
program
·
a
t
the
This
program
features
a
six~
peal
to
the
students
firsl
Give
for
an
eerly
solution
to the
in Willlamsvi11e, Brock University. in&lt;Sl Catberines, Ontario, Ameri""':' University of !'Jei!"t, week presession of I an g u a g e them a chance to do some- dilemma - considered imperative-were
brightened
somethe Twaltieth Century Club, ~. fo! SUNY .Juru'?rs and civilization - studies in thing."
what by the prospects of the
and ~elementary and and 111!1110':,8 mtereoted m M•d- -.Paris, followed by an academic Roo-.ry Atmoopllerw Fearod
A
junior
from
New
York
was
referendum.
Noting
that
the
~ ~- No o:ompe~ year at the .University of Nice.
ID ArabiC or French 18 ~
SUNY juniors, seniors and even more concerned. "I think problems of crime and drugs
it's
going
to
cause
a
very
reare
not
unique
to
this
csinpus,
munity Center, the Rotary An SUNY faculty member ~I graduate students with compet, Club. and Mohawk Colleae in BCCOIDIJ!'DY s~ts to P~•de ence in French are eligible to actionary atmosphere ... The the Courier~E:rpress said ediHamilton. Ontario.
academic and~~- apply. Courses are offered in solution should encompass a torially this weekend, "Surely
.The Amer1can Umvers1~, aU major disciplines.
Mn. Wolf reports thet these
more educational outlook in a community such as U/ B,
that the people in this Univer- com~ of some of the greatolfoCIIDPI!B perfonnana!S have WJth an enrollment of appr&lt;mmately 3,800 students from
information and applications llity should finally realize that est intellects and outstanding
~t •a great deal of'JOOd"
to the Uru-alty imase. "Re~ nearly 60 countries, is reprded for both programs are avail- the University is not a haven, talents· of all III'Der&amp;tions, can
in the Office of the Di- but rather a microcosm of - with reel elfort - arrive at
percuasiDno from the programs
u:'~~t:~~ver- able
rector, ~ Academic Pro- wbat'a outside." .
a solution involving neither auhaw hem sipllficant. Malzy
a1ao, U/B along grams, Council on International
A junior &amp;irl from Bu1falo tboritarianism nor the upeP!"''*! told me they bid no with theyeer
University' ·centers at Studies, 309 Townsend Hall, •aid the whole alfair is "a clients. They must try. And
idea this .,.. goin,c m m campus and ......, amazed that we Albany, Binghamton, and phone 831-5554.
matter of peat indilference to they must succeed."
By SUZANNE METZGER

-- ~

Fisk Serving
As Bargainer

--TherMO

Norton.Afrer Bee Closing-

Study Abroail Opportunities
Next Year in Beirut, N~

:=..include&amp;!~

!r

text

�GR.Ef'ORTEI(f'

4

..,_

lll, •lffl "

AAUA PropOses A ~Code of Responsibiljty' for AdminiStrators

==

.we

plezity, the number and types limited to frontal oaslaupta. tia, and to inlial 011 their
of adm.inistnttive ol6ces haWJ Tbey may oocur in a variety of
allJo increased . Moreover, guisal, and may e\Wl be. unin- •
Evi!n as these Canons .,..
whereas it ·was oooe feasible tended lnaamuch .. the adtoeiation of Univeraity AdmUail- for faculty to assume adminis- ministrator muat interpret and logical extensions of the Printrilton (AAUA). AAUA i1 a
ciple
of AcademiC Freed9m. 80.
implement
policy,
be
is
often
nationwuu or,..,.w.tion foiUilhd trative responsibilitieS' for a
im- lbo .... the standtuds ...tab- .
by a froup of profusional ad- brief period or on a· part-time nnw-ly quaii1led to 1isbed
by the American . As&gt;jili;llt
threats
to
academic.
fre&amp;.
basis,
the
demands
of
both
prominiltrator• at U I B to ''pro.
fessions virtually preclude ex· dom in proposed policies, and socialion of University Prole&amp;- •
a~:r:;:'::t'!on'~~
to identify erosioos which may sora. On that basis, the)' both
tended dual commitments.
e:thu:Gb.on," rmu:h 01 the American
Administration is thua being develOP from managerial pra&lt;&gt; merit eodoraement and adiWJ
A.aociction of Uniuersity Profutices. Tbe obligation to prevent support. Perb8ps it is in order
recognized as a professional
.ora promota the: •• proJeuion of
these encroachments is clear to ~ that adminiatraprofaoor." AAUA feet. thil alate· career with its own stringent
tors and faculty are prole&amp;and
unequivocal.
1
qualifications. Tbese encompass
With regard to institutional sianal colleaguas committed to
'b:~n"'t:u"r~iJ:!~ :;;::,m~ tbe highest administrative posithe furtherance of the edUCII'
ltJie:d canont for teachert and the
alfaira,
the
administrator
cleartion, president or chanceUor,
1967 Joint Statement on RifhU
ly has the right to di!lagree with tiona! enterprise; they lll8
and Fr'fttiotM of Student•. Con- down to the assiStant to the policies and practices. Indeed, jointly engaged in this endeavaidered with thae earlier •tate- dean, with a wide variety of · it is in this context that be or. The standards appropriate
responsibilities and interactions
'!j,:;~~:Ja'::f.~ t:~:::ibfii:~ among faculty, students, other should be completely free from for faculty and administrators
for the total academic community. administrators, and the public, real or implicit restraints which are not simply matters of proan of whom have dilfering pri- might hamper the introduction =~co=~
of his professional judgement.
The privileged position gen- orities of concern, different cusduct of their professional oblierally accorded universities and toms, and even dillerent styles
C:tTTEWPQ
.
gations. Unequivocal endo.,.,.
of
oommwtication.
colleges is based largely on
y
J.
'J.
ment of these standards would ··
Since administrators o ft e n
society's acceptance of the prodo much to dispel some of the
serve
as
the
interface,
they
position perhaps best stated by
The,
llepoftar
'
an
tills
misunderstandings which unthe American Association of must be capable of understand- to pravtcle a forum for the ex· fortunately aU too often charUniversity Professors: '·Institu- ing these values and concerns, chanp of views on a wide variety acterize administrator-faculty
tions of higher education are and of translating them to tbe of the Issues facinl the academic relatiOns.
conducted for the common good other oonstituencies. Because community. We welcome both
Inasmuch as faculty ·rights
and not to further the interest they often serve as institutional positions papers and letters as entail faculty responsibilitles,
of either the individual teacher spokesmen, administrators must space pennlts.
it
is incumbent upori adminisor the institution as a whole." be scrupulous in their repre- Responses to tills and to all VIew- trators to insist upon faculty
Furthermore, the ''common sentations. This en!.slls the ob- points are welcomed by the editor· fulfillment ol their professional
good depends UJK!n the free ligation of being as fully know- In-chief, up to an established ' obligations. Administ:nltoftrcof.
search for truth ind its free ledgeable as possible of the limit
of nine typewritten doubleten assist in the development
issues involved. Inasmuch as
exposition."
paps. Most can IIJ&lt;ely be
of academic policy and are
AAUP developed its well- many of their decisions are to spaced
shorter.
usually
responsible for its mainknown 1940 Statement in order a large extent irreversible and
tenance. As a result, they
"to promote public understand- the consequences irreparable, it
develop
insights into the ramiing and support of academic is incumbent upon administra- 1n the same vein he has the fications of academic policies
freedom and tenure and agree- tors to exercise the, utmOBt care obligation to entertain similar and the practical consequences
ment upon procedures to as- in the discharge of their re- expressions from those under of their implementation. Howsure them in colleges and uni- sponsibilities. l:lecause of their his jurisdiction. 1n b o t h in- ever, regardless of the . quality
versities." This statement has o.ttice, administrators are often stances, there should be no fear of their judgement in such matsince been endorsed by . virtu- privy to confidential or private of reprisal. It must become ters, administrators have . the
ally every major educational information. This confidentia- · clear that administrators fully obligation to insist that faculty
lity must never be violated. understand the principle of acaorganization.
for academic
The recent emergence of a What emerges from an analysis demic freedom, recognize its responsibilities
policies· be· observed; moreover,
new campu.s' constituency, the of administrative responsibility central role in higher educa- that aU pertinent data, concareer administrator, gives rise is tbe realization that adminis- tion, IUld are dedicated to its
siderations, and probable conto. questions c:o~ his trators have fiduciary obliga- preservation.
sequences be made known to
· role vis-a-vi&amp;... the princiPle of tions with respect to faculty
tbe faculty in their · deliberaacademic freedom. It there- and students, an
t this re- C•non 2
tions.
Administrators should inUpon
appointment,
adminisfore seems appropriate for ad- sponsibility
rsed institutrators assume a responsibility sist that academic policy not
ministrators to affirm their com- tio
personal conce
derive
because of Jaculty defor
the
progress
and
weU-being
mitment to -this basic principle canon 1
of the institutwn !hat employs fault to act timely or e v en
and to such other statements
In recogni!wn of the funda- them. They must underlitond through ignorance of the necesof professional responsibility mental necessity to protect and
which may derive from it maintain the principle of aca- the organization's educational sity to act If administrators
Moreover, it seems appropriate demic freedom, it is incumbent misswn and be diligent in its prefer collegial confidence to
criticism, they mUBt obviously
to do so in.a fashion which un- upon college and university ad- implementation.
merit faculty support and conderscores the professiOnal as- ministrators to discharge their Commentary
Obviously an organization tinuously earn it Anything less
pect of administrators. There- responsibilities so as to afford
has
the
right
to
expect
loyalty
than scrupulous insistence
fore, the AAUA Committee pri.J)vuy consideratwn to this
and a concern for institutional upon due observance of rights
on Ethics and Standards rec- principle.
welfare
from
i
t
s
employees;
and
responsibilities cannot be
ommends the adoption of a
however, it would seem reason- condoned.
Code of Professional Responsi- Commentalry
C.non4
able
for
Tbe
obligation
of
the
chief
it
to
expect
this
even
bility. This code would serve
Administrators have !he ob- ,
administrative officer to be ada- more when the institution is
two purposes:
1. It would provide guide- mant in facing direct onslaughts the means by which the indivi- ~lwn to be fully aware of the
lines for members of the ad· against academic freedom is dual participates in the educa- n.ghl$ and freedoms of stuclear, and those who do not tional enterprise. Aside from denls, and to insist upon their
ministrative profession.
2. It would provide stand- meet this responsibility deserve .the idealistic aspecta of indivi· due observance.
ards by which to judge trans- the abbreviated tenure which dual and institutional mutual Commentary
usually follows closely upon objectives, the institution proStudent rights and freedoms
gressors.
Vtdes
a
focus
for
the
indivithe
revelation
of
their
fatal
are
perhaps
best
explicated
by
Tbe cannons which comprise
the rode have oommentaries tlaw. What may not be as well- dual's professional expertise. the 1967 Joint Statement on
appended in: order to provide known are the extensions which and a status derived from the Rights and Freedoms of Stuinstillltion's standing. Even as dents which was drafted by reflow "from this example.
explication.
Tbe rust is that the obliga- the institution has the obliga- presentatives from the AmeriCharxmr!Stlca of Administration
tion to uphold and defend aca- tion to ensure the mainten- can Association of University
Before riioving on to the code, ~emic freedom extends to every ance of the quality of its staff Professors, U.S. National Stuit may be useful to note some member of the administrative - through sabhaticals, . travel dent Association, Association of
of the characteristics of ad- · staff.
to professional meetings, etc. American Colleges, National
ministration. As universities
Tbe second is that attacks - so too does the adminis- ~tio_n .of Student Personhave ·- .· in size and com- upon academic freedom are not trator have an obligation to
. Administrators, and Naconduct himself and his ollioe tional Association of w.,_,
so as to enhance the organiza- Deans a n d Counselors. Ention which be repreventa.
dorsement and active support of
The AAUP 1940 Statement student rights and rr-1oms are
cautioned faculty membel8 to essential. Even as the faculty
"exercise appropriate restraint" and administrators need ciodes
A _..... ~tp - . . , - ~ .ach Tltunl/llq by tire Dmaion o1 Unibecause "the public may judge of conduct so too do the stut:."'?.
~~·~ron.J'":a=.t7.:! ~-~ _, Bu/I.Jo, j4:J$ ~~~ St., Ball.,
his profession and hia institu- d":"!&amp;. Those proposed have ....
lP'- 2127).
'" R - 2l.J, 250 W....- A tion by h i s utteranoes." &amp;- ""'"!"~ ~ review and have
.nccd~N Uilor
cause ·they· often serve as in- mented national endorsement
..... WESTUI" RO'WIJJID
stitutional Rpokesmen adminis- There would appear to be no
TB~~~R/110
tra.tors mUst be
cir- further need to 8rJIUe the merits
~
cumspect with regard to their
students' Joint StateROBifRr T. lfAJtl..BTT
public utteranoes. All of which
,
w.-~,. CSu~N~~~JUmw
sbould not stlfl8 expressi.oo and ear-s
!J.
An--'~
disaent, but simply clarify the
. ~mini.stratora hlwe the obJOHN A.. Cl.Our'UUl
special ob)iptions which ac- . lillation to be fully OlDGI'e of
SUSAN O~IIWOOD
crue · to both faculty and ad- the ril~ and responoibililiu
ministrators as institUtional of. of admuustratora, and to insist
STUO.IfT' AI,AlllS aDlt"OR: s .... ,.,..._
..
ficenl. •
on their &lt;We obse•w"~~= =-~~-;.ofi. ~. ~ B•,..,..,_, Robwt S. C:...3
c:omn_,
• - -·
PBOTCJORAI'Br: ~ .L. If~, BUIO B. u._.
..
Ad,.UU.tratora hlwe the obIf administrators are to elicit
CONriU'!_rn:_IIIO Alt'r'IS'r: ~ II. a.;..
from
others
the
courtesies,
•
li6atiDn to "" fully GIDaTe 'of
{al!ulty rifiiU and respon.ibilf- ileges, and~;EDITOR'S NOTE: The follow·
;,.. il the propoud code of prof-"&gt;ntd ruP'?"',ibiJity for the
MWly. alllblilhed AIIU!ri&lt;:cn .U-

::::oar

w::;

':tu!.":!:

:jNTS

&lt;iREPORTER.,

even.:-,..,

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

:...if

richta which 111111 elaimelt ...

~=-.!':u...~
fellow administrators the con-

sideration espected from
Adminlalraton abouJd ....:::;_
the rua-t ataDdarda of ~
feoaiooal . caaduct, avoidm1
even the ~ of substandard cooduet. Only by insisl:inl u p on CODduct which
measures up to strict standards will - be abJe to _,..,
the acoeptance.of the adJninis..
tration of institutions ·of hi3her
education as a profeeaion.
-G • - • - · - - · - ';'"-..N
PennsyiVIIIUil State U.
-DoUGLAS S. CHAPIN
National Science

..Foundation

-~W. HOLT,

State University of
New York at BfUo.
E . 1Pun&gt;mt
State University of
New York at BfUo.

-CLAUDE

Innovate}'
Or Fail!
Unless some American companies become more innovative,·
they could face the future dan·
ger of losing more jobs and
markets to outside competition.
This word of warning was
&lt;!Ounded on campus recently
by Dr. James Economy, manager of research for the Carborundum Co., as be spoke on
'·Resistance to Innovation in
lnduatry" under sponsorship of
Clifford C. Furnas College and
the Department of Sociology.
As examples of foreign economic encroachment, Dr. Economy cited the auto, textile, and
computer industries as ones in
which other nations, especially
Japan, have made substantial
inroads, partially because of
technological innovation. Other
industries, too, he w a r n e d,
could lose some markets and
jobs unless they change.
Dr. Economy noted that during tough business times research and development people
are among the rust to get the
a x e. He cautioned, however
that drastic cutbacks in thiS
area could liubstantially weaken a company's future comP.,titive position.
What are some hindrances
to technological innovation? 1n
addition to a lack of corporate
funds, Dr. Economy listed
these:
• A basic human.instinct to
resist change and to fear new
knowledll!c,
.
.
~ Unwillingness by some
buame:;smen to take personal
and capital risks on new technology.

• C:ompetit;ion instead of cooperation among ....-rdl people.
.
• Traditional education.
The last ~ these, be said,
tenda to stultify innovation by
stressing lOgical and
tia1
thinking.
sequen
"But much innovation is the
result of just the opposiillogical and ~tial
thinking," be aaid. Sometimes
a reaearcber will came •m with
a new idea bY inlzocludDg infonnation to a problem that
does not even seem relevant to
it "Such thinking," be said,
"can be taught by example."
More American bmi!!MN!MiliJ,
be urged, abould tllll&gt;l?"rl research and developmeitt programs to help their firms in the
future ~ to belli the cC!Imtry
keel&gt; pace with other nations
and maintain a favorable bel·
ance of 1&gt;8.YDBll&amp;

�~

·~ 11,'1971 '""

5

Healih Problems Six:ia1 ProblemsIn The Delta, They're All the Same
'J

....

enough to treat medic:al problema. You also have to attempt to solve the social prob"When they asked me to lems that go with them, she
says.
ODID8 back, I knew that I really
Miss Hayes spent seven
·=~~~home to prac- weeks at the Tufts Delta Medicme.
.
c:al
Center in Mound Bayou
To Maxine D. Hayes, a softspoken, diminutive sophomore where she worked in the clinic,
the
environmental
health divimedical student at U / B, the
past .summer, spent doing com-. sion, and· the parasitic service.
Most
of
the
adult
patients on
muruty health work in the
Mississippi- Delta (her home), whom she worked up case histmies-about
20
per
day-&lt;rufhnl\lght a sense of greaU!r commitment and sensitivity. But fered from either intrinsic heart
she found that it was not disease, kidney ailments, diabetes, hypertension or ear, eye,
nose, and throat problems due
to pesticides. Under Dr. Joanna Roberts, U/ B Medicine '64,
she learned the shorthand of
pharmacology, went over symptoms, physic:al diagnoses, and
pathology.For the Mound Bayou north
delta area of 14,000 population,
of whom 90 per cent are black,
the federally-funded .health
center has spelled social change
and hope for a brighU!r future,
Miss Hayes said.
By
MARION MARIONOWSKY
B_,llt

~

l,.,orm.,._, St./1

Settled By Ex·Siaves

0

,.

.

_

. .

A high school student in Buf- ever, the su rintendent simply
falo was reeently thrown out does
ve ·
to conduct
of school. He was "dropped
reviews; an "hearing offrom the rolls," according to ficers" are appoint.'!d.
school-authorities, even though
The superintendent's (or
Stare law requires a hearing hearing oflioer's ) decision may
before a student is suspended be appealed to the Board of
for more than five days.
Education-and to the Stare
This is not unusual.
Commissioner of Education, if
School boards and school of- the board does not change the
fi.cials frequently violaU! "!"'- decision, Remedy may also be
tions of .the ~taU! Edu"'!tion sought m the stare or federal
Law dealing With suspensions, courts.
say~ Norman S. Rosenberg, a
U a student is suspended for
seruor at U / B Law School.
· being " insubordinaU!" or "dis1n a sympathetic effort to orderly". (the U!rms are not
assure that sus~d~ students defined m the law ), school ofare a""!'f'fed · their fights . and ficials must a~ take ~iaU!
place&lt;! m the best educational sU!ps to prov1de for his educaset t! n g., Mr. ~berg !'as tion at home or elsewhere.
~ mstrumental m establiahlots al Complaints
mg 'llle Advocates, a group of
Once Roeenberg's interest in
prof'!f"''rs, students and com- the problem was stirred, Wade
muruty . workers..
.
~ewbouse, professor of Ia~ SJ'!d
His mterest m suspenstOII8 instructor for the education m
~ out of ,a "'!"!"" on '!'lu- Ia~ course, pu~ ¥ro in touc;h
cation law. 'I Vl81ted V8flOil;'! With tJ.le ~tion _for. C!W.dren With Learning Disabilities.
BuiJalo and suburban schools,
r e c a ll.s R&lt;amberg, a -f""'!"'r "I found ~Y had l!'ts and lots
~ m ~ e w Y ~ r k C•ty~ o~ ""!"Plaints agamst school
~ With supermtendents d1str1cts . . .. Frequently,
and their rep,_tstives, it be- schools wOuld throw kids out
.:'t!:.!rofthatt!., ~ ;::::_ d:f'~:::: they couldn't
~ from diatrict to d.istrict
"They pve WI- lliM!l8i cases
varied peatly."
'
• , 1 to work on. Most involved on1
Basic:ally, the law I!IIY8 there a phone call to oct;ool ~
are two kinds of BllsPension&amp;- and were su~ly remshort term imd 1oog term. 'llle edied."
school principal DillY order· a
About that time a VISTA
short term IJI.UIII"D8ion-not to worker, Mary Hoban, contactexceed fiVe days. On req.-t, ed Professor Newhouse. She
the {',I'Pil and his parent or reported that there was a se~ muat be granted an · vere problem of students being
iafonnal conference with the suspended 'l)iere _,. aome
princlpal, at which time the ..-tioga With commUnity work- t . C!'D ask questiOIIB of era and a "Sdo&gt;l Law Clinic"
oompl"'"'"l wi"'-.
grew out of it. Mr. Roeenherg
.._ T..,. • ·~ 1 - ·
found six law students interLaaa tenn ~ ested in working .., the pro0.
tban ilwl cla,ya--&lt;:an take plaai lem--,.tbree with much ~only after the student haa had ence in dealing with younpten
a ho!arinf, at which an attorney and all wit b ezperienoe in
can·......-t the pupil and his studying education law. 1n mid- I s and ask questions of J an u a r y · they adopted lbe
!""1'\'laining witnesses. 'llle name, 'llle Advocates.
~ Ia auppcad to be car'llle Advocates recehle, via
ried out by the auperinteDdent MiaJ Hoban, oamplaints about
of acboola, the law states. 1n school suapensions. They flrat
large cities like Bulfalo, bow- 't. look into u.e· lacts of the cam-

=

.

must be solved along with medical

ones.

For a family such as thia, · .._,.
there is now a ray of hope. A
c:all to the environmental division at the Tufts Medical Center can result in a well being
dug near their home; a medical
U!am will atU!nd to their sewage problem.
·
Field nurses from the Center
also follow-up on home patients
to insure that medic:al ~
tions are understood and can
be followed. Questions are answered ahd patients are taught
to help themselves. For ezample, a diabetic is taught to
check his own urine.
To counter malnutrition, the
Tufts Medic:al CenU!r has organized a farm co-op. Many
patients treated at the clinic
have only one physic:al problem - malnutrition. And the
prescription is food. These patients can now solve this problem by joining the co-op, another example of social change.
Non-patients inay also work in
the co-op and share both in the
food and in the funds derived
from the sales of surplus.
He•d Start Centers
Maxine s p e n t two of her
weeks in Mississippi with Dr.
Aaron Shirley, now clinic:al director of the Jackson - Hinds
County Comprehensive Health
Project. The only black pediatrician in the State, Dr. Shirley
is responsible f 0 r examining
children at Head Start stations.
Most of the four and five-year
olds in Head Start had never

Settled in 1887 by ex-slaves
and then the largest black community 'in the United States,
Mound Bayou has in recent
years watched its young menages 18 to 25-leave. One mechanical cotton-picker replaces 70
workers and weed control
chemicals have made 70 per
cent of the black labor force
obsolete. This exodus of the
young men led to separation of
families.
1n the 400 square mile area
adjacent
to Mound
Bayou,
the
l ~ average .family
of 4.5
persons
.
~~ , has an mcome (1960) of lesa
.
than $1,000 per year and a
plaint. Then they contact Pro- median education of 4.3 years. ·
feasor James P . Manak, who The infant mortality rare in
directs clinic:al programs at the 1960 was three times that of
Law School, to discuss whether the national average and it has
a lawyer is needed for the case. continued to climb over the
U not, they try to resolve the past decade.
case by negotiating with school
The Tufts Medical Cen~
officials.
emphasized staffing with loc:al
When a 1a er is needed help. This means establishing
Professor M~ serves in that traming programs for nurses
role and the students work with aides and borne health guides.
him on the case. The students Young college_level P!"'Pie "!"&lt;&gt;
also have an agnsement with become associated w1th seruor
the Bulfalo Legal Aid Bureau staff in social services, comInc. That agency will provid~ munity organizations, sanitary
an "attorney of record' if the ~cience, X-ray, and laboratorsuspended pup i l's family is 1es. The result has been more
within certain economic guide- jobs for Mound Bayou citizens
lines. Professor Newhouse helps and, perhaps, a return of some before seen a physician. Maxine
with "substantive law prob- of their young college people.
had to constantly assure them
lems."
Today, 40 per cent of the that "if I touch you with the
A Guide for Porents
trained professional staff of the bell or diaphragm -of the stethThus far, The Advocates have CenU!r are black and work- oscope it won't hurt you." Each
hand 1e d a half-dozen com- study trainee programs are con- child also receives a dental
laints The ha
1so
k
tinuing to attract loc:al young hygiene package supplied by
~fore ·PTA{ ande.:ve.:.rco'::- people toward health-related the
Federal government and is
munity groul\'"o;..,T hey stand careers. Part-time semi-profes- taught how to, use i~ At these
read
be
"
sional ~itions are also availStart Ceriters, open daily .
~ ~s probl~ r~la~ "::; able fo;.-those continuing their Head
from 8 a.m: to 3 p.m., bot meals
pupils' rights in school." The studies in loc:al colleges and are fumiahed, along with arts
students meet once a week to U!chnic:al schools Members of and
crafts, and le&amp;sons in the
discuss education law and hash '!he community Participate in
alphabet and in communication.
over pending cases.
wheal
. licyth decisi?ns regarding the Each child also receiV!'S a preliminary medic:al examination
Mr. R&lt;amberg, with the help
care program.
of Professor Newhouse, has also Poro~ Teoms Vl"!t at the Clinic.
written a pamphlet, "School
While. many patients "!"'
'I:here are now 35 practicing
Suspensions: A Guide for Par- treated m the health center It- black physicians and 26 black
ents." He has asked BuiJalo 84!1!, .others are ~pendent on a d"'!tists in Mississippi as well
school officials to send it
VISiting paramedic:al U!am for as 46 black medic:al students,
with students whp ·are suspend- trea~D~&lt;;nt and followup. T ,he Maxine pointed out.
ed. No agreement has been doctor IS actually the least liD"Over the summer we atreached on this, however.
po&lt;!""t peraon for ~Y .rural U!mpted to get the medic:al stu'llle law students in this pro- patM;nts whose ~ mtimaU! dents together, to try to engram . . _ that, in 1006t in- med1c:al contact IS m the home courage them to return to
stanceo, students' rights are ne- with the viaiting nurse 0&lt; social Mississippi to practice. We are
glected bec:a.- educational ad- worker. Muine HaY~"! .went all needed," she said.
ministrators -do not knOw the along on"'!""' of u-e Vl811s to
OespiU! some strong loc:al oplaw. ..I'bey are ill-informed," poverty-6tricken homes. 1n one
_says Richard Sleiow-, one of household, she found six shar- position, Mississippi today has ,
Tile Advocates. "'They do DOt ing a single room. 'llley, were five federally funded medical
apply tfle law as it is."
suftering from malnutrition and projects and the "pride" that
Mr. ~ eXpects that were dependent.., food stamps. accompanies the patient/med....., the wood pta around of 'llleir water supply had to be ic:al team relationship is a new
the poup'a uialleoce "we'll be carried from a ..-m a mile experience for most of the black.
inundated with Cll85." And be away. Their lack of plumbing Mississippians. . •
"' guess it is jiist knowing
uPeCts also thatacbool ollicials created additional medical
will then becolr.? more aware of problema. This situation, abe that someone really cares that '
their emtl!lnce, and becin to feels. is an eloquent eDJnple makes the difference.': Maxine
.
apply the law, "as it Ia."
of the social problems that ' ClOIIduclea.

•
Guard L
High sc
hoo
Advacates
aw m

suo: 7o•

.

home

�Campus' Student Press
Is a Unique Facility

........

By STEVE I.JPMAN
With the University in the
midst of its 12Sth anniven;ary
celebration, one of its student
branches marked its own unofficial-anniven;ary last ,..,.,t_
University Press, U / B's student--run publisbing orpnization, the only one of its type
in the country, celebrated its
first birthday.
Actually, University Press
has been around for three
years as a largely ·overlooked
group, but it was "last year that
it came of age with the addition of mM cold type-setting
equipment.
University Pn&gt;ss was started
by two s tudents in 1967 for the
express purpose of publishing
Tlfe Anatomy of a Riot, a study
of Buffalo's 1967 inner city disturbances .w ritten by Dr. Frank We're trying to ·get an idea of
Besag, then an assistant profes- what direction we should take.
sor ol sociology. When the two It's nice that we're the only
co-founders graduated, they student-run publishing group,
"sold" University Press to the but that doesn't mean a lidFaculty Student Association dler's damn in the business
for a dollar each. ''There would world. One hundred small pubhave been tons of paperwork, if lishers start each year, and 101
they . had just given if away," go under."
explains Brian Marsh. present
"Money,'' says Marsh, "!&amp;
office supervisor. of the Press. always a problem." But he 18
As a publications division of quick to point out that because
FSA, University Press came of ·the increased respect Univerunder the control Of the Pub- sity Press has gathered, it was
lications Board and of a series the only Pub Board-funded
of leaders. Its officers, in addi- group to have its budget inlion to Marsh, are now Frank creased this year. Everyone
Krisnowicb, production coor- else took a cut.
dinator; Don Bergevin, business
Marsh and the leaders of
lD8D8ger, and Randy Brinson, University Press say they have
sales and promotion manager.
received numerous job offers
,.,..., Umltecl
from local media because of the
University Press formerly op- success of University Press.
erated under the p~ident-vice "Even I can't believe how much
president system, but Marsh I've accomplished already,"
changed it so that no single says Marsh. "We've been told
person can assume too much that the last year we published
power. An advisory board of more than the State University
students, non-&lt;~tudents, facul~y
Press
lbany. It's a hell of
and staff sets editorial policies. a
mg." ·
The work of University
has been varied---from poetry n,.~ ...... y ~ Q...-....
collections to a children's story .L a.o.~ .I..AJI, .:&gt;UJ. Y~:f
book, to the student sports
Q.w,......,.
magazine, Pro-Am. ''We're
~
looking for other ideas,'' says
A
survey
of
campus
parking
Marsh. One thought Marsh is
considering is a Niagara Fron- lots during the week of February
22
revealed
that
the
Maintier literary magazine to include works of local students. Bailey student lot (with a capacity
of
1177
)
was
never
full,
"Right now we want to stay
primarily with books,'' he liays. although "interior" lots were
filled
to
capacity
and
aisles
The advisory board will review
manuscripts submitted by any often blocked. At the peak
student, faculty or staff mem- hour of 11 a .m. on Monday,
ber. U it doesn't accept it for February 22, Campus Security
publication, it will suggest im- reported 250 spaces a vailsble
provements and offer counsel in the Main-Bailey facility.
An intensive check of all
on where the work might get
published. So far the board has parking lots that morning inditurned down around 75 per cated that 37 faculty and staff
cent of works submitted to it. were parking in student lots,
Still, Marsh wants to receive that 119 students were parked
more manuscripts, especially in faculty-staff lots and that
1,417 automobiles parked on
from faculty. ·
campus bad no permits.
Since Publication Board's theThe
lot-by-lot count .was confunding 'only covers operating
ducted
between 9 and 11 a.m.
expenses, money to publish by personnel
Physical Facilbooks must . come from the , ities, Campus o(
Security and Enprofit of other books. The maxiHealth and Safety.
mum number of copies of a vironmental
The team reported this inforbook University Press now mation on illegal parking, lot-prints is 5,000 but Marsh hopes by-lot: Baird (capacity, 380):
to raise" that figure to 25,000 by 8 faculty, 181 no permits; Canat year. _
_
pen (capacity, 576) : 36 stuUniversit}' Press also bas dents, 110 no permits; Diefencontracts wtth party favor man- dorf (capacity 428): ·24 stuufacturers, and can &amp;UPJ&gt;IY stu- dents, 53 no permits; Lockwood
.deDta things such as inVItations, (capacity 216): 24 students, 1;3
napltins, and matchbooks at no permits; Main-Bailey (cap"reduced prices""
acity 1117) : 249 no permits;
Michael '(capacity ~ ): 12
AL.atof'The main problems Univer- faculty, 183 no permits; Parker
llity Press suffers are time, in- Engineering student lot (capacity 248) : 9 faculty, 100 no
~ and money. "'rs a
hell of a Jot of work." says permits;- Parker Engineering
Manb- 'Tve been working an faculty...taff lot (capacity 237) :
18-baur day, five-&lt;~ix days a 12 students, 40 no permK.jl;
Sheiman student lot (capacity
"We're just Jike. a foundling . . 557) ; 8 facUlty, 2m no permits;
Sherman faculty. Jot (capacity
224) : 6 students, 64 no par~­ . mils; Townsend &lt;capacity
186): 17 students, 165 no per........., tlwDUah Friday, next mits.

11IIIYIF

Finds Open

..... ......
- --ntal-..,.-

o

eiRE~'·

6

lJtdian Group

.. ,

a

'

· - J8, 11111.

·Regents APProve D.A.,

To Present
Film Series

u;B- I~rio~nohn.rr Jt,
Lvo;:J~J6a.lA.U~

A series of outstanding Jn-.
dian films sponsored by the
India Students Aasociation has
been acbeduled for the spring
semester Most are award winners and offer an opportunity
to view of
some
of the best aamples
Indian
film techDiques as well as an insight
into Indian life and. feeling.
F i 1m s to be shown are:
March 20----Rat Aur Din and
Madurai, followed by' a Holli
festival observance; April 3Mujhe Jeene Do; April 17Kanoon· May 1 - Aradhana,
and a OOte&amp;ration of the birthday of Rabindranath Tagore·
May 14-15----Shake•peare
/ah · May 21-22--Kanchenjuno
g/.d Consult the Weekly CommW.ique for ~ of showings.
Though Western filmgoers
came to know of India" as a
film-prod~' nation through
Sstyajit Ray"s many internst.ional successes (the Apu Trilogy were among his most popular ) these were by no means
the first Indian - films to win
foreign recognition. N ex t to
Japan, India is the largest film
producing .nation in the world,
outrankin~r tlii! United States
and Europe in production of
feature films.
Indian audiences had their
introduction to a motion piclure less than three months
after the first public showing
in April 1896 in New York
City and by the mid-1920's,
the Indian film industry was
outproducing G rea t Britain,
tuming out films in more than
a dozen Indian languages, and
offering the public there their
primary """""' of escape and
entertainment.
The Indian film is unique
in its extensive use of dance
and song, often in operatic
form. In this, Indian film is
part of a theatrical tradition
that goes back to Sanskrit theatre, when the idea of drama
was inseparably linked with
song, dance and music. Songs
from the films ·are Afro-Asian
favorites and a few have been
hits in the Soviet Union and
tl)e Middle East. Stars and
songs are the essential ingredients for box-office success and
only a few director's names,
Bimal, Roy, Ray;Abhas, Shantaram, are mentioned with their
movies.

wai

The Board of ~ts, the
governing •body.· of tha .State
Educa~ Department,_ w italll
authorize, .on !Ill _ _ .
besis, the granting ol a , _
Doctor ol Arts depee fOI' -the
~ September 1, 1971, to
~
~97lines~ em ts lguide,
size,
ver, that only
institutions which o!fer other
doctoral programs will be permitted to confer the new
"W.cher-or!"'!ted~ degree. 'The
Regents distingulSI_l the P:A.
from the PhD. by cate~r';Z'Ilg
the latter as ''research-onent-ed."
The new degree, the Regen~
said, will. be regis~~ !'nlY !"
fields all1ed to disciphnes m
which institutions have doctoral
programs with fa~~ies, librar""'• !""""feb fac&gt;li!i"" !"'d financial reeouroes 'to msure
high quality."
l.oc8.lly, the U/ B Graduate
~I reports that. the ques?on of the D+ be'!'g o!fere;d
m fields at this Uruver81ty 18
~ studi"!i by the Ed!'cationa! Planning and Po II c Y
Ollmmittee of~ Faculty_!!enate. 'The ~t.ive Co"'!".'t\00
of the Graduate SchoOl 18 "investigating .&amp;be merits of the
program."

C

bpnt Pollcleo

Meanwhile, the·Regents have
adopted t h e s e guidelines for
State approval of any projected
programs:
"In order to qualify for the
degree, each candidate must
show com~tence in a subject
field, as d~nstrated by examination, dE!UIQI\Strated skill in
classroom pertormanoe, and
competence in the methods and
practice of research. The proll""" will be designed so that
1t may be completed by three
years of f u 11-t i me graduate
study. A teaching internship,
not less than one full term m
duration, will be an integral
part of the ~;&gt;ro!l_r8IIl."
These gwdelines, according
to the Regents, are intendea to
insure that Doctor of Arts programs maintain doctoral-level
quality while producing an even
more competent college teacher. Applicants will be admitted
only after satisfying requirements set by a committee au-

by ~ Ira au ate
acbool, which, in tum, will COD-

tt.orb.t

~theta ~lo_c!o~ ~ '
........., '"" ...,,

~in eccordance with pro-

feaaional demaDd.
E.....-, In a7J.,.
ofOneinBti
. .-tu~......., the~~the-de-t
gree,· the Repnta - will- be
their willingness to employ its
holders at all ranks. 'The program will include provisions fOl'
communication between the
U/B CAMPUS EXHIBIT
An exl)ibit concerning the new U/8

campus in Amherst . will be pre·
sented by the State University
Construction Fund at the College
and Universtty Conference end Exposition, in Atlantic City, March

26-28.

An estimated 3,000 col·

lege administrators are expected

to attend the event.

university .and its D.A. graduates. This will be for the pur·poee of collecting information
likely to be of .assistance to
doctoral aiDaidates aild to D.A.
degree holders in their first professional Positions. Evaluation
-of the D.A. cu.rriculil wjll !~~lao
be aided in this manner. In the
1977-78 academic year, the
S t a t e Education Department
will appraise D .A. programs for
evidence of the effectiveness of
gradua • .
. In a related matter, the Hegents have also .approved a
policy statement emphasizing
the im~rtance of communication skills for Ph.D. candidates.
While reaffirming the Ph.D. as
a re:earch degree, they assert
that holders of this degree have
an obligation to acquire skills
making po6Slble the effective
communication of their findings
both to students and to the
public.
The Regents will require that
continuing recognition of existing Ph.D. pro~ be coo. tingent upon ev1dence that the
communicative ability of candidates has been developed. Such
evidence might be the candidate's findings presented in a
public lecture or in print, or
the successful teaching of an
llndergraduate course, the Hegents said.

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

'Future' Is Topic
For May Sec;sims
The Center for 'Theoretical
Biology is sponsoring a third
annual conference in a continuing series of conferences on
the future. This year's sessions,
scheduled for May 4, 5 and 6,
will deal with the subject of

~im'tl!ti~ar::! i~J'A~::l

humanistic disciplines.
Some of the topics that lave
been suggested are: Logiatical
Flow of New U/ B Campus;
Simulation of Lake Erie; At-mospheric Simulation; LaborManagement Simulated Situs·
tions; Socio-Eooilomic Systems;
Simulation of Contlpl ol Large
Population and Large Resources; Compute~ Simulation
Models in the Visual and Musical Arts; Conflict Groupe Simulation· and Simulation GamM.
'The
committee wetcomee oU.. suggeatians and ateiida 8b invitalioJ&gt; to {licultt.
students" 01' staff who would be
interested in participating. 'The
deail!ine for prilpo8aJs or abatracta is Wedneedliy March
24. Pleaee send them t.:, 01' call,
Dr. ~ ~. Center for
'l'beoretical BIOlogy, 7-1421, or

pla!uiiq

:r:...~~

fairs, 143 Hayes Hell; 2735.

Q,....,nnh

'11eam.Wms" Title

IJ\{ua.-:::lll ~4

UIB's faculty-etidf Squaah
Club captured the tillil m the
Claas "B" Squash league of
Bul!alo by defeating the Univeraity Club, ~ in ...,_ in
a recent playolL'The •
, _ _ . which
the
wmter :"':"6- malao •
team participates _
mdude&amp; teams from th8 Bul!alo
. *='~I u b, Sa~~·
vmaity Club,~ Center
Buffalo and the M011!116ore

"c:f

Club.
UIB compiled a ftliXlrd ol

53 wins and 10 loa!es through
the _ _ , in winning its 11rst
~

The team iDcJude&amp; (from left .
to right in the
•
·
pboto) : (front) ~ ...ustant prot_,. of pbysioloIY· Irving; F(e!'_!?L")" di~of EngJiah
,.....
..,....
man, aMistant prot_,. pedodontb, Len ~ '....,;.

~te ~. educatiol;i81 etud·
-.AI Reynard,.,-te ~

· =......~·p:t-•
pbyaiad education fOI'-. -

�..
~-

M-.ltl11,1911

&lt;NATIONAL State Legislatures Seem Reluctant
GREPORTS
GREPORTS To Pass Laws Dealing Wrth Students ON
Pom a..oaar.:
leclalatures
Jesislatures were
GJ&gt;EOPLE
=::.t:":~~

a

The recent

forCDIInllaDdiDIIDena!inAmoric:aD hilber ...___ Now ......_ at 11&gt;8 acadomie -.e
think a
Ndiotrihution of

:t•

~ ~ -:.ki~-:

out:
-The tnldltioaal autoaomy of
~ e'=ity fac:ulty
-The pablle, throuch ito elect-

!!:...""'=:..

=

:a.n"":
;:J'!..a;!7!"1,%
am-.

At 11&gt;8 lnel,
ect.M.tion o6:lalo - r t that
iolaton ·
·
inlenoled
in
"""""""t-~"'-"-a
~~-t
._,.,._
.......
,
.... :-o:-:c:ber - tww .,._

~-=

how-11&gt;8

11&gt;8 JoCiola-

!"".:::-_u:::
oaneoUopo opeod

aDd Wliwr'tieo to - r traD income ohr
.tate ,.,..._ And at 11

quiro public

:lw.
otateo are eoooiderinc wayo to ro-

orpnioo the . . . . . . . . oyotem

l'!n~~n':t'i~u:r~ri~ .C:

hoarda.

abowed

State

roluctance. to -

8

Jeclalation

dooling with student umest

durlnc

19'10 aaions, a nationwide 8UlYey by the National
Association- at State Universi~ Laud Grant Colleges
Of a total at 39 states bolding legisJative ai!ssions during
the year, only 12 actu8Uy ~
ed ·Jaws that directly relate to

::::.-~~ ~tr,;

of the Ollice of Research and
Information of the NASULGC.

There was a total of seventeen
, _ laws.
.....
...,_ two most
common
t;ypM
of •legisJation,
each
enacted in
live states, were concerned with
the estahlisbment of penalties
for those found gui)ty of various cbarps of d.istulbance or
interference with activities of
sc:bools, colloges or universities
and the revocation of fi.nancial
aid to students convicted of
various cbarps related to campus disruption. The seven additional state laws passed during
the year dealt with a variety of

The erooioo of fac:ulty autonomy hao - . tied moot prominently to the role of ....,. faculty lopia1.
mem6en io proteoto and
The seventeen new laws compolilical aetivitioo.
pue with 64 pieces of student
One univerrity admioiotrator . uruest legisJation which were
thiob that .faeul~i.e~ ha!e loot enacted into Jaw during 1969.
~~~U: The fa&lt;;~ that 11 state le~lamake " bard deciaioaa" durin&amp; tures did . not cxmvene durmg
eampuo en-. Another analyot, 1970 probably had some elf~
. _ r pula of the blame on the small amount of legu;pn e.te.Dai foroeo, eopocially law- lation passed in compar is on
~~~~ry
with 1969, when a11 buf three

-=

= ::.aw:

'1:;

caw:"t

RebelsWrong,·

';:.;'!i::-.?;::o tt~~~v~~
cbanp the way• they covern

s!~_

~aipi6cance of .uch
d...elopmento for coU- and uni-

·J
.
..n.,.

Say.s

~I
"The major!~ of .student
H~r Education, which hao movements are m error today
. pleaded with the cempuooo to ;;;c. b.oos:~ are based on a
of them are~r!t,~ blste"&gt;: has proven
The old informal conoenouo
The opinion is that of Josh
won't. work any ~re. ~;he ~ McDowell, international trsv:W~da t!::,.:,n~!:::J' 0a~~ e1ing representsti~e of Camp~
p.-:h to diocipline that takeo Crusade for Christ, who will
account of the .,.hto and reopon- make three campus appearoibilitieo of aU their memhero at """"" ne:rt week.
the oame time. The oommiooion
McDowell will speak on ''The
hao pro~ JUidelioeo relatinc Basic Error of Revolutionary
to the "whole -campuo"'- ~ty Movements" and "Sick of HY!&gt;memhen. otudento, admioiotra- ocrisy?" at noon on Tuesday
!\::.J:!~~-::p~t and.W~y, March 23 and
aayo, io that "one penon'• richto 24, m Norton s. Haas ~unge:
are ODiy elroctive u other people . A College Life meetmg will
recocnize them and accept re- be held Wednesday at 9 p.m. in .
apoillibility to guarantee them." the main fioo&lt; lounge of Clem• Sw.r~No CHANao:? A federally ent Hall with McDowell airing
initiated taU: force hu ·dioputed the topic, "'lbe Midnight of
the "conventional wiodom" that History-Why'&gt;"
many of ~r odU&lt;ation'o prohMcDowell is continuing a
!.':'"~of ~vod=~~ national campus tour which has
1u a report.~.!:~ ODdoned by included UCLA. Harvard,
the Socretary"~i'rfoalth. Educa- MIT, Berkeley and Stanford.
lion; ud Welfare, 11&gt;8 psDOI caU- During the psst five years, the
od for an entirely~ oew kind of locsl Campus Crusade says, he
~ It oaid coli- ud uni- has appeared on 400 campuses
venitieo ohouJd break away from in 35 countries returning last
~::\.:::::~...:;.:;:7~~ sp~ from au.;,. of Lalli! Amulty prepantion. The Nixon Ad- enca. The present tour 18 remioiotration '!"'1. promote IIUCb ported to have attracted more
reform throu2h tlo propooed Na- than 100,000 students.
Founilation for Richer ·
McDowell's presentations are
Ed...,.tion, for which it hu altod in the fon'n of a challenge to
~ to provide S100-million students to consider Chrlstian!IQtJJa~:: JUnior col- ity !"' "~ power., to change
lege olllcials are worried by a: man s basic nature.
lharp jump io the number of •toINT£RIIATIONAL STUDIES'
denio who want to enroU io their
FUTURE
iootitutiono.. The iocreale io atThe
futunt oouroe of the Inter·
tributed laraely to ruper f - at
nlltionol Studies l'nltll'llm at U/ B
Is clel&gt;endent upon ·a comprehenare ohort at !undo, ud they don~t siVe Statement now In the proc:ess
of belnc dr11wn up. Aulstance In
:ii".l::~. ~i::= preporinc ·this statement Is urthat -11 he able to haDdle them
..U.M ooyo a p.-inent jUDior col- ~Y .nq.-. Everyone - de·
lep pnoidoDt. He a "ftrit- partment- head, faculty member,
oome. lnHerwd" •ituation in stall member or student - who

~~'C!!::~::"':

:-= ==Y.

..

:'.f:.1.v'!.

=-~ ~~--::..U:D'e:

-- .

:.J:...S:·~-=

curi!)l - - io 11&gt;8 , _ of.

~~-==·J:'::::

Is

1..- ·;.; • tJ&gt;

or Bl'llnt related

PfOII'IIm, project

lntamationol

Stuclial Is'. - to ratoy infonna·
t1on to Misa· J e a n Wlacllel'llth,
Council on lntanwtional Stuclial,

police ro.... 1o - . aDd TOWMef!d Hall, pr can 831-4941
ll8'l'ellll in•titutioaa an .m, ,or 4942.
trainod- atadent-~ . ·- .

. ......

study concludes.

in session, the

Stales passing uruest Jeci&amp;Jatian (with the number at bills
~ indi¢ed in parenlh&amp;-

ses) included: Arizona (1);
Florida (1); Illinois (1);

Maryland (1); MichiiPm
N - Mexico (2); Ohio
Oklahoma (2J; Tennessee
Virginia· (2) ; Washington
and Wisconsin (2 J .

~~U-..Jty
Functlona

(2);
(1);
(1);
( 1)

the orderly conduct of the ac&gt;
tivities, administration, or
classes of any puhJic sChool,
college or university within the
state."
Michigan- House Bill 3800
makes it a misdemeanor to refuse to vacate the premises of
public institutions of higher education on order of the chief
administmtor or his designee,
to occupy a bull~ unlswfully or to enter a building with
the intent of disruption.
New Mexioo--Senate Bill 39
defines as a petty miwlemea!M'If

Laws setting pens) ties for the
distmbance of or interference
with activities of schools, colleges or universities varied in
complexity. The most detailed ·ways as to impede or interfere
legislation was passed in Ohio, with normal lawful operation.
Wisconsin-Chapter 296
including an addition to the
criminal oode under the bead- broadens the definition of campus misconduct to include
CARNEGIE I'ROI'OSALS
building sit-ins which develop
To prevent "repression" from out· into building seizures.
side, the Carnegie Commission on Aid To INvuptoro l'rohlblled
Higher Educetion this celled
Legislativl' clamps were
upon the nation's colleges and
placed on aid to students conuniversities to adopt a b i II of
victed of various campus disrights to protect dissent and conruption charges in Illinois,
trol disruption. Headed by Clark · Michigan, Oklahoma, TennesKerr, former president of the Uni- seo and Wisconsin. At least 11
versity of California , the Commls·
states now have such Jegislasion suggested a model bill of
tiotL
rights, called for development of
1n Michigan provisions were
effective emergency consultation
added to the Appropriations
and contingency measures, and
Act for State Institutions of
urged creation of speedy and ef·
Higher Education which profective campus judicial and griev·
hibit the use of state funds for
ance procedures. Police should be
". . . the education of students
accepted as an integral part of
convicted of the offense of incampus life, the re"port said, and
terference with normal operacampuses should consider "tem- tions of any public institution
porary closures" in situations of ol higher education . . ." Andanger.
other provision prohibited the
use of funds for the education
ing of "Offenses Against So- of students who possess any
ciety," making four specific acts firearm or other dangerous
involving disruption of activi- weapon in the univetSity un.ties on any college or univer· less the firearm is registered
sity campus within the state, with the institution.
One condition of the appropublic or private, punishable
priation provided "that a stuas misdemeanors.
Public colleges and universi- dent who causes wilful damage
ties were also authorized , to public property on a campus
through their boards of trustees or other facility of a college or
or presidents, to declare a State university and subject to all
of Emergency when there is a other legal penalties shall be
clear and present danger of dis- expelled from the college or
ruption of orderly conduct of university."
The Illinois legislature atthe institution through riot,
mob action or other substantial tached a section to the state
disorder. They were also given appropriations bill that would
the power to take a number of deny payment to faculty memspecific actions to preserve or- bers or other university emder and discipline during a per- ployees convicted of the offense of interference with a
iod of emercency.
A special procedure for rapid public institution of higher edsuspension and dismissal of stu-· ucation as well as for the edudents, faculty or staff membenl cation of students convicted of
from public universities for cer- that offense. The offense with
tain offenses was also set up by which a person is charged is of
the wide-ranging new legisla- paramount importance in this
tion. Twenty specific · offenses legislation. A student charged
are subject to the new proce- with disorderly conduct is not
dure ranging from Ihainung or subject to this Jaw even though
disfiguring a person to the new the act he committed may be
general charge of campus dis- enctly the same as that of
someone else specifically
ruption.
The special suspension pro- charged with interference with
cedure involves granting a bear- a public institution of higher
ing to a person arrested for any education.
of these offenses within live
Oklahoma and Tennessee
days to determine whether or passed similar lef!!Sl!tion renot he shall be immediately lated to student 81d. ln Oklasuspended from the college or· homa, Senate Bill 367 stated
university. The bearing must that: "Student loans, grants,
be conducted by a referee, who fellowships, teaching fellowis an attorney appointed by the
Ohio Board of Regents. U the
referee tlnds that the arrested or federal funds may be revoked
person did commit the offense or terminated for such activiof which be is charged. he shall ties as rioting, and selling il·order the person suspended legal drugs." A , _ law passed
from the institution. A suspeil- by the General .Assem&amp;ly in
sion is in elfect until a person Tennessee . requires the termiis acquitted or convicted of the nation of student IOIIIW&gt;and ascrime for . which he was arrest- sistance programs supported by
ed. U convicted, .in addition to state funds to llbJdents oon~
ciim ina I penalties determined ed of any ctiininaJ offense growby the Court, the individual !:t':t ~t riot, promust be dismiaasd from the college"'or university,
The W'IIICOIIsin legislation set
· Other Jeclalation sei+IM pen- an inelisibility time limit of
alties for di&amp;iuptive ";divities from one to two years
for state educatiooal aid to any
iDcluded:
a private or jlllblic
Maryland- House l1ill 1T7 student
was passed prohibiting "the dis- achool who ls convicted of a
turbenoe - or intsrfereace with campus disruption dlarp.

=.:=.rru:.:=

~~~=f=:!r~

at

AWARDS .
I&amp; LAUDK BJTCIIOOCJt.

t.::

.,..,_r,

~..=-r :J:"p~
~ t-:.ml:~:

of the American Wtitute of
&lt;llemical EnJU-ra. The awBnl
aclmowledpo outotandinl&lt; coatributiono ud ..m- to tlio cbemicol encU-rinc prai-DL DAYm B. IIEIB'I'D.

-a:tat p~

=r~w~:Jfac:t~=ohip for the period June 1 to
AUCU~t 3~ 1!!'71

io oupport of the

~ ;=.,.~und Uoiog
DR. CHIA·PINO YU,

profe.or.

enai·

neerinc ecience, baa been awarded

a Faculty Fellowohip for the
period July 1 to Aucuot 31, 1971

~ Co~:! ~Hbro~ow:_~tudy

GRANTS
DB.. A. 8CO'IT GILKOU8, 1&amp;.,

profes-

MW,~~ricden~~.awa~-

r:rlion"..fura;.t
~~~~':., Aw:'.;..':
Study."
MILTON KAPLAN, professor of law

~ ~~.!;roJ:; J!:~

~= fn'P~~:C&lt;:~ra:d
Policy: ludia" hu been awerdod

$16,000 from the Oflioe of Edu-

cation.

DR. LA WII&amp;NC&amp; KENNII)y,

director', ·

SUNV';n:'n~~:i~f~r~&amp;t t!
tegin studiet on Com.buation Generated PoUutanto.

PRESENTATIONS
OIL BBIOEil PUIITA , profes&amp;ol',

physico, "The Transport Equa-

tions of the Boltzmann Particles

in Terms of One Body Green's

Function~,''

American Physical

Society Meeting, New York City.
DR. ROBIZT GAYLCY, MIIOC:i.ate pro-

fessor, phyaics, ..Obeervation of a

Kink in the Current-Voltage
Characteriotics of a Metal Contact at 4.2' K." American Physical
Society Meeting, Now York City.
aoGJ:R MAYNE, lecturer, mechanical engineering, "Study of a Flu-

idic Extremum Controller:· ac·

S:..,~d r;~re;r..:=n s;!,.,!:

ium, P...,...,, Czechoolovakia.
HOWAitD

c.

811lAUB8,

•••iatant

d e a n. mechanical eqineering.

:~~ ~~~~ri~ ~.::.~ ..

c;b;;;;~.New York State Society
of f'rofNiional Encinoero.
Dlt. SIGMUND P. ZOBG., lecturer,
iodu.otrial
. rinc. :'Machioe
Proceoo ea~;· 18th Annual
Quality Control Forum, Toronto
Section, American Society f o r
Quality Control, Toronto, Ontario.
~CATIONs ·
DL ~ WDIDT,

a.iatant pr"~r

fouor, electrical encioeerinc, "On
Struclufe!O of Microprogra!n Control Unito," Euktroni«he Re-

ch~ell.

RECOGNITIONS
ANGELO BA1"l1S'I't GL\NT DU 8018, .

CA&amp;OL HYm:, PDD LAS.K.Y, and wn,..
LLU&lt; SHatWOOD, graduate teacb-

:re:wiJI~ta ~t~~::

their departmenL They were eech
preoented with $50 checb foUowluncheon in their honor at
the Throe Coioo ReotauranL

mg a

eoiJhomore ceD·
ter, was voted U/S baaketball'a
MVP by hio teammateo at the

CURT BLACJOIORE,

clooe of the -.em.
OA.ftla. BALVJ:NDY, uUatant
pro_fouor, iodu.otrial enginoerins.
mvtted to conoultant by

Da.

::W,~~J..ofu~'!::

lily of Illiooia Medical Canter to
orpnioo and participate io. a two
day "Paychoinotor SiiUo Talt
Force Worbhop · ClUcago io
'May. Alao iovited to participate
io a taU: force on "Taok AnalyliiM io Wuhiocton. D.C.

�• •4

Godanl

•Opon to pulollc;
- •Opon oniJ to -

A DAY IN aDfJCAL OAS'I1tOENTIROLOGY: in honor of A.H. Aaron,

M .D., BJ&gt;OI!OOred by tho l'toi!YBJil
in Continuina Medlcal Education,
Statler Hilton Hotel, Bu«alo.
Participants include " ten of
Am eric a•a moet diati.nguiahed
e I d e r atat.-men of meClicine,..
· DrL Wallar C. Alvarez, J . Amold
· Borpn, Henry · L. Bockuo, Ruo..,u S. Boleo, Sr., B u r r i 11 B.
Crolm, Leotar R Drontedt. Aodnrw C. Ivy, Wallar L. Palmer,

~~~.wa:..,?.fi~~

Wmi F. Lipp and Leonard A.
Katz.
Till: POTuai OP AIOBICAN POUcY
IN T1JaUY AND PDB1A •: lecture
oponoored by Committee-for Mid-

dle Eutam Studieo, with Dr. Walter Weiker, political ocience, Rut-

.~~~=~or~d~~
~-=
Studieo, Unive,.ity of cru.:a.o.
Room 29, 4224 Ridp Lee, 3 p.m.

PBYCBOKAT••: free-form commu-

.nication for peroonality powth,
Fillmore Room, 3-6 p.m.
CKDIJCAL &amp;NGlNDIUNG SDONAB :

D r. Carel Van 0... prof....,r; microbiology, UL'IIW'ILTIU.'ftON and
eHAGOCYT08IB AS A SURFACE PH&amp;-

NOMENON, 16f

Parker Eqineer-

ing, 4 p.m.
IUIITD CLA88": Yona Ettlinger,
clarinetist, in an informal muter
duo to be
a question

foll-l:l,
.-:.
~ro.= ..;;!~J:
::..T:~~~~~
harmonic Orclieotm since 1947.
HO w.ia Dominated to tho pool of
flrit Clarinetist by Serp' Koua..-.:ltaky ii1 1960, after Whicb be

=

\':~~~
Baird. 8 p.m., free.

.:1\!'e~

:·a:d :=ms1 ~u.&lt;t
1

~.

"Godard obows uo a
world tbat i.e diointacrating •primarily from ita own perverted
viciousnea and debuement. Thia

~===n o~~
8

~flli!)ma.,:t:l!," =~ u:

t,_

juot about eoerytbing

. e.,~t'l~7 ~~~~: p8~~
free.

PROGRAM

.

IN THJ:.\'1'11:•:

•
Machia-

velo · in Love, An Er&gt;eniitf of 18111

Century Smut, amiDpd by tho
Worbbop in Propeoo and Gordon Rogoff. Harriman Studio,
8: 30" p.m., free.

TEACH-IN ON LAOS:

Canioiuo Col-

lop ,Auditorium, 2-6 p.m.

SOCIAL BCD:NQI:S OOU... nuDAY
DI8CUBSJON salE• : AJtcr the
Revolution -So~ e Po.t-8e110lu·

. visiting
!:'n~ ~~~~~~
profeooor, political pbilooopby, from tho UniYeroity of Belg.-. Trailer 1!, 2 p.m.
PHYSICS COu.oQt11UK•: Dr. Ana;
to! ·v o I k o v, SUNY at Stony
Brook, and McMaster Univeroity,

.NUCI&amp;\a ~

ns&amp;lON AND

~

NUCLI:I,. 111 Hocbotettar, 4 p.m.;
relreobmenta 112 Hocbstetter,
3: 30 .p.m.
mOCIIJ:)(JllftY SU&lt;INA&amp;: Dr. Irwin
- _ Inotituta for Cancer Re.attb, Pbiladalpbia, Pa., IN'I'I:II,..rA'l'IONB
CIIDIIBTilY,

or

aDd abort -

. can di.etributon b a v e

BllznD , _ , _

G-22 Copan, 4 p.m.
~~WA&amp; IOZTING: AD open in·
Yitation to the home of DR. IONA-

Prof•·
10r, pbyaicl: and a·• t ron o ~ y,

TIIAH •CBDT. 8110Ciate

c~ byAe~'f' &amp;:- t:fr"":

tiii!!IM WAft, prof..or, Millard
I'UIIilole"CoUetl'! and prof-r of

llltlalau, Canioiuo CoUep, who,

.....
-a... Re;cbert, - t l y re~ a- Paris wbere thoy at-

t...aod a.e am-. CoofereDCO 1o
BDcl lhe War in IDdocbina. Home

DOU.ORUIUll ON

AMI&gt;
by l)reput..

ment of German aDd Siam Albert Cook, IWIDLINO or ODMIIOU8

KA.'I'aiAL IN KOiaN Olall.&amp;l( J0..
ft&amp;Y, 5 Diefendorf~ 8:15

p.m.

&lt;aA.~ ASSOCL\'118

.:rt£L•: A
M i z 11 d M e d i a Collaboration.
Domuo; 1695 Elmwood Ave., 8:30
p.m.

Movm••: MIB'IDl PIIIZDOM. (1967,
William Klein) . Out of the mytbo

or America's maaa culture-Sup.
erman, Batman, the Supercomica
-William Klein baa fashioned a
devaotating oatire of " Silent Majority" America. Diapatcbed to
aave France 'from the Red Men·
ace, Mr. Freedom acts out the

MOVI&amp;••:

ZAB&amp;ISKI.E

POIN!'.

Haunting Micbelanplo Aololli-

-~ 'F. ~ar:&gt;e&lt;i'"l,"n:,~·=
and f:f.;., valueo. ~ director, at
his moot lucid, superbly b1anda
vi.uai detail, mood and otory into
a cinematically articulated otatement. Confe......,.. '"-tre. Norton Union, cbeck abowcue for
timea. Admiaaion $.75. Througb
Marcb 28.

l:'J~~~~.:J ~~s .!:·

nipotence that view a the final
Big Bong as the fitting climai of
a weekly television series. 147
Diefendorf, 8 p.m., free.
·

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

SABB.\111

FACTS AND FALLA.CD:S OF HUMAN
BKXUAL DBPONa•: Dr. William

Uft&amp;l...,..

.r A· 'I' a• : SJ)CJMOred

I.NTIJUrfA'!'IONAL POLK DAHCINO: In·
1truction in basic •tepa ·durin&amp;'
lint bour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m. ..

partment of Inopection and Li-

SUNDAY-21

cenaea, City of Bu«alo; and Wil-

~=~crcoi::~~tyaotuii!:

lei House at
AND ftLL

1:30

p.m. for

program.

BROW
/

lard Myers, practicing attorney
who is oounsel for the ••auJfalo
9."
Fint Amendment rigbts and
public demonstrations, eapecially
political demonstrations, will be
the f o c u • of the aym~w:n.

EXHIBITS
D. MC NAMA&amp;A SCULPTtJJtE::

o~­

ing March 22, 7-10 p.m.; tbrOugb
April 2, 4240 Ridge Lee GaUery.
LE8 DFA..NTS DU PA..JlADIB : a show
of pointing&amp; by Micbael Sherman,
Center Lounge GaUery, Norton
HaD; througb March 30.

!f;.=':;J'=o~, CW~
ington Univeroity, and director, ~'::ie' I~tw:ne~: ~0~~,!;
00
=~ty~ G::e~ thdi!::!io~ will LmRARY EXHIBITS
Reproductive Bwlogy Reoearcb
0
8
8
Foundation, St. Louis. B u t 1 e r ~~~·Jflk': ito? B:.~; 'M:
follow an .initial five or ten inin- Auditorium, Copen H a II, 8 : 30 Haooett, c e II o; Bob Jeooelaon,
r=j:;c:.~~'R:
~p.m.
oeUo. Works by Prokofiev, Giuli- ~~ ~'::tio~f-:o!?' th:~.Ji::
Lockwood Librery. 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
11PPIN CILUIBI:R MUSJC SI:IUIS•:

Dr. Muten ia lecturer, reeearcber and co-author of Human
Sexual Rapome and Human

~~ ~~k:~?'::";..~li=

of more than a thousand representative people bated on penon·
a! atudy ancf reoearcb. :Aithougb
the Maota...JobDOOn team wao
married in January, profession·
ally thoy wiD remain Maotaro
and Jolmoon.
Tbio lecture io one of tho Harrington

Lectures

created in 1896

br. the will of tho late Dr. Devillo W. Harrington, profeoeor of
genital and urinery dioeaaeo, at
the SChool of Medicine.

ani, Chausson. Dvorak, Boccber·
ini and Saint-Saeno. Tiffin Room,
Norton Union, 4 p.m.
BlLLI:L sUPPER': spec i a 1 home
cooked meal to be served; reserva-

tions obould be made by calting

836-4540 or at the Hillel -table in
Norton. Hillel House, 6 p.m.
MoVIJ:• •: BUIU'IT, a e e Friday
listing.

MONDAY-22
(1965, Reanaia, Godard, et al)
This was originally intended to

c

~hi ~uu.z :cB:d~ ~;t~

m:

=·~.t~~~~Jl~~t

ceUi.et. AU were otudenta at the
Tel Aviv Music Con.ervatory.
Formed in 1959, the Tel Aviv
Striog Quartet• quickly became
one of the outstanding featuree
of the muoical life of IsraeL In
!962 the Quartet atartad ita
world-wide tours in Australia.
tho Far Eut, South America, and
Europe. They are presently tour~
ing North America for tho tint
time. .
.

Stu~ Co u rae and Teacher
Evaluation meeting. 343A Norton,
7:30p.m.

G&amp;ADUATI: 8TtJDKNT A.880CIA.TION &amp;X·
IICU'I'IVI: C011Ncn. MEETING, 283

Norton, 7:30 p.m.

·

SATURDAY-20
starring Nargio in a role wbicb won
her tb8 oovetad Prollident'a Award
for the best actreu of the year,
directed by Satyen Boee, muoic
liy Sbanker Jaikiaben. Abo, XAINDL\N FILKB•; RAT AUK DIN,

~~:! ~th"~~-

oiNCIHG: Fillmore
Room. Norton, 8 p.m.

BALltAlf J'OIX

..moo ·acrr.u.• : Pauf Mouradi-

an, percuooion, Boird Hall, 8 : 30
p.m., free.
•·
,

xovm• ~· : aULUTT. 1 e e . Friday
lilting:

Dr. D.
Seyfertb, Mauacbuoetta Institute
of Technology, title to be an-.
nounced..
'

PHYSICIANS Tl:l&amp;PRON&amp; LIIC"J'UJJ:&amp;:
8

{;·~~~~ H~:~tlwai!!. ~~'1:
PBYCBOP~

MACOLOCY-oUB UPSGDfQI WITH

PBYCBO'I'ROPJC

by

Re~onal

62 recetving

aponaored

DRUGS,

Medical Proi!YBJil,

l~tiona.

11 a.m.

FOREIGN STUDENT A..I'FAiltS COF'J'a

aoua• : 10 Townsend Hall, 3:30-

5:30 p.m.

. COMPUTING CENTIZ U8l:ll SERVICI:B

Dave Grzankowaki. inatructor, PLO'I"I1HG, Room 10, 4238
Ridge Lee, 7-9 p.m.
lEAN PAUL 8ABftl: ~ : Dr.
Lionel Abel, profe.or, Engliab,

BEMJNAB.:

SAK'I'RE'B

CR.l'tiQUJ: OP

D~

R&amp;ASON, third in a aeriee of aiz

meetings on the theoretical and

literary works of Jean Paul Sartre. 33' Hayes, 8-10: 30. p.m.
VOICE RECITAL• : Patricia

ores:

~.~=!d~..\)e~=

Hall, 8 :30 p.m., free.

TUESDAY-23

Sir Walter Scott bioaotenary •bibit, featuring f i r • t editiou,
worb by contemporaries. enpavin.p and watercolon, throuch
May.

INTERVIEWS
The ON- CAll PU 8 IN"''DVDn''DfG
I'WGLUl, 1"llODina through Azjyi)
29 in tbe apring ~ara

::e..=~ty~ .....:::
- . industrial and
tal
repreeentati-. .~ftllll
aU degree levela are ilivitad:lo IIi'
terview. Regiatration fonno aDd
additional information ant - able in Hayeo C.
TBU&amp;IIDAY-18: Travelen lnour-

~~~6.~=..\u!'~~
Scboola; . Union Free Scbool Dio-

trict No. 24; Ruabford Ceutral
SchooL
nmAY-19: HoUand Patent Ceotrill School; Homell City Scbool
Di.etrict; Olean City Scbool Dio'
trict; Bureau of Indian A«ain,
U.S. Dept. of Interior, ~
que, New Mexico.
TUIIBDAY-23: Aetna L if • and
Ceoualty - Life Diviaion; Boat
Syracuoe-Minoa Centnolo.Scboola;
Ramapo - Central Scbool" Dietrict
#2. •

THURSDAY-25

L"J~·:~ ~p~~

Larry Scbuoter ia U/ B chairman

%.
1~~ ~J: ~ ~:~=
student volunteers, in front of

Movm••: ,Buu.nT. There are bad

copo and there are gOod copo
and then tbare'a Bullitt ... Pity
tho guy be wotka for. Stave McQueen, Robert Vaughn and Jacqueline Billet co-star. San Fran·
· ciaco i.e beautifully pbotiograpbed.
Coofeterlce Tbeatre, Norton Union. · cbeck showcase for times.
Admiaion $.75.

WEDNESDAY-24
CHEMJII'ft!"( COLLOQUlUK :

and Susanna Rey•.

MOVIE . . : FAR J"ROM VIETNAM .

Worb

will be aocepted.

Hattangadi, Borkatullab K ban

tiona would remain anonymous
include Bortolt, Quortel No. 3; and be inextricably interwoven ·
Mozart. Quintet in A Major for by the editing, but not surprisingC/arinel and Slrinfl, KV 581; ly in view of the · marked penon·
Schubert, QIA4rter ut G Mt9or. alitieo of the directors involved,
Opuo 161. Baird, 8:30 p.m. GoD- the film fallo into a number of
enol admiuion $3.00, faculty and · distinct epi.eodeo, despite the unistalf $2.00, otudenta $1.00. Tick- fying effect or Chris Marker's
ets at Boird HaD and Norton commentary. 147 Diefendorf, 3
and 8 p~. free.
Union Bo.1: Offices..
0
, cMemben of the Quartet
Cbaim Taub, violiniot; Menabem :~I"Z:te r::f:~.!~~Ef~~~
members are urged to attend this
TEL AVIV S'ftUNG QUAllTBT•:

Vietnam. OJrero an opportunity
to meet with a sYDNU ~ na·
tional orp.nizer of anti-war force~ - are oubtiUed. There will be a
symbolic BOlli festival obeerv·
r:J&gt;".dw!'i11ioli-Jc.r;'~~~v!: ance. 147 Diefendorf, 3:30 and
_ . _ of tho Cblca&amp;o 7 and re- 7: 30 p.m., atudanta $.75, othen
$1.00. Tickets at tho door.

=~
~~~th~'::
tile · nleue of POW'o; av. oa.

~
~4~x4...=.'s-=:
free.

of Dr. and Mro. Reichert, 872
Parker AYelluo (olf Hertel), Buffalo, 5-7 p.m. Minimum coatri·
bution 16.00. R S. V. P. Mr.
Georse Rieppel, 842-3057 or Mra.
Rooemarioo Stablka, 634-2862.

-VJCI:: sponsored by
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation.
Dr. Justin Hofmann, TW: -.u&lt;ING OP BEVJ:L.lTION, Oneg Shabbat
will foUow, U/ B Hillel House, 8
'p.m.

reiiiiDecl

tho "blipo" but oublitloo
of origiDal. ~ malerial, oo

••Opon to , _ . ol the Unlwnllr,
o . , . , . . _ , lnte..t In the subject

THURSDAY-18

by .;....;;.. - . . ! .._

ol the -..a
- . p~apolitical
ota•
- t ftlnl-&amp;Uoaal Tba ~-

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

- Y - 2 4: RooweU Park
Memorial Inotituta; Lancutar
CeDical Scboola; W e o t Iroad&amp;quoit School District.
TIJUaDAY-25: Erie County Dept.
of Penon.n el; Hem~
Central School; Palmyradon .Cantnol Scbool; Rome Public

Conference Theatre, Norton Un· . Scboola.
ion. ·

a.m.
Audrey .Tuttolomondo, R.N., GDX

NURIII:S n:LBPBONI: UlCfUIIIO :

PHYSICAL TBJ:ILU'Y n:l&amp;PRON&amp; ~
TUBE: John J . Nootrant, RAIIJC
PR.INCU'IMS or I'R08TBZTIC A!Tu·

;:;-~~ N=~ "I!"= locations,
~:r~·w:.
~ •~=
1 p.m.

62 receiving locations, 1: 30 p.m.

Kova• •: D&amp;AD OF NIGHT (1946,
Alberto Cava 1 cant i, Cbarlea
Cricbton, Basi d Dearden and
Robert Hammer) . Tbe fi.e ghoat

~•: William P. Mangin.
anthropology, Syracuse Univeraity, BQUATftll IIIOY'IUOMBII18 IN
MIGRATION

ro crriES

IN SOUTH

:=~~~~:;~~ =~·s==.t~~teeLaa:d

Imp clooeo in tho aurrealiot eli- tho Graduate Aotbropology Chlb,
tho encom.J&gt;&amp;U.ing ghoat - ~ Norton, 3 p.m.
•to·ry. The sc~npJay ia !I com~ pgycifoHAT••: ' free:.fonn commu·
poute ?f ato~es ~rom different nication for peraonality growUi,
~to~ 1!':!:n.~
Fillmore Room. 3-6 p.m.
mation niglibnariab. 147 • Diefen- PHYSICS COLLOQUIUll 0 : Dr. R
dorf, 3 and 8 -p.m., free.
R u fin i, Prioceton Univeroity,

max -

:::!:

BLACXBOL&amp;S AND GllAVITA'fiONAL
IWII4'110N, 111 Hocbotattar, 4
p.m.; rel~ts 112 Hocbetat-

ter, 3:30 p.m. .•

=;:A""~"i:-d\!::::

NOTICES

CAMP .JOBS: Hi.l1.el. maintaiu a
file on openinp for COUDielon in
aummer . campo. Intareoted otudenta may consult tho file in tho
Hillel House.
PAssoVIS ~A'ftONS : Students
wbo will · be in Bu«alo for tho
lint two daya of P1111110¥er will
be able to receive invitatioae to
the Seder in a lOcal home. Hequesta for invitation&amp; abould be
made by March 81. Hillel will
aloo provide Puaover food darDc
the week of April 12. a-.-tiona will be taken at tho Hillel
Houoe and at the Hillel table in
Norton. Deadline for aU reeHV&amp;tiono, March 31.
BUlDIE&amp; IN IBIW:t: A number"ol
opportunities are offered

collta'lt:

::f-:.t;,~~rr=~ r.."f.rae~.

Tbey range from touring tbe
country, working in a kihbulll, to

:n~~w~n:.
1;: ~::ci=
tion ia available, a~ ..oa iD· .

ai'oo in oound and image_ A atw:ly

of tho fiaciat media ·and tho

=~~cti=liti-.:ft/'~T.i!:
(the faociota) o0opemtae w i"t b

traVel ~Ia fO&lt;
students ·to Europe and Ionel

ezpeoai

during the 01liiiiiiR.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>'VOL 2- NO. 24

GSAWmts
One Day.
Closing.

SPA ME£T1NG
.
A ..,.,., momberohlp mMii'!l of
the IQQI chaplltr of tho ...--1Aolocl8tlon (SPA) will
tre hokl Thurm.y, Maich lB. 81
noon In 362 Achelon. On tile
. . . . . wiD be a - - ,.IIOit_
~ "*"lierohlp -rdllll calberplninl ft08C&gt;IIetlona cur-

""**

""". _.... ~ -

SPA

W
tile UnMrolty. All ~11-.
-paltlasa,.I-ID
-.

~Brllll

_ , lunch," SPA

~
wiD
be • allhourih
lhort ........· - maatilll

•. MARCH 11, 1971

RecArea:
Closed, Or
Guarded?

�2
SA Bempnization(COIItimMJd In&gt;• 1, coL #)
iqoists on a State-wide referendum in April in which each
student body can determine
whether it wants voluntary or
mandatory fees. If U/ B undergrads vote to keep mandatory
fees, then the new student government ''will have more power
in deciding where the money
goes," Huddleston says. This
misht prevent the squabbling
OYe&lt; certain expenditures, such
88 the Bail Fund, which happened this YearHuddleston predicts that the
new fonn of government would
result in more administrative
and community support because of the greater percentage
of students represented. ''U
there are 41 assemblymen, if
you want to call them that,
and 39' vote on a measure at a
meeting, that's over 90 per cent
representation. People can't
complain that only five or six
per cent of the student body
wp represented, 88 they did
With Polity."
··
Olher ~ Besides, he sdds, "if students
are to participate in University
governance, they have to show
·they can sovem t~mselJies."
Otjler cbanses. tll!!t Sunday's
group approved were the dropping of five elected coordinator
posts: ' public affairs, student
rights, intems·tional student
alfa.irs, and the two new student affairs coordinators.
The group appro&gt;ed the addition of a student activities
coordinator who will oversee
·t he activities and expenditures
of the almost 80 organizations
"t,U:~ti~!,{~ent _,._,_

the last two years. Huddleaton
this is the result of a lack
and of disappoinMa!.t
in lbe small nUmber of underll'Sdilates wbo usuaHy tske part
in such elections (about 10 per
cent).
Huddleston, wbo doesn't plan
to run for any office ·t his spr~,
says that an additional benefit
of the new type of government
is that it "will be helpful in
bringing the six present student governments together." Although plana for ·t he asaembly
call only for underll'Sd_uate
representatives, Huddleston
says it can easily be. cbansed
to include members of the
Graduate Student AssOciation,
Millard Fillmore College, and
the Medical, Dental, and Law
Schools.
•

:r......,

GSA'II't..-•~

Yfti.UUI

-

(contilwedfrom-J,coLJ)

Gru!Je&lt;'s solution to "·g etting
the market out of here" is to
hire armed security guards who
would patrol the recreation and
other problem areas. He
stressed that Norton now is a
"junkie's paradise- where he
can do his thins and set away
with it!' He pointed out that
"the students• and the stsff
can't handle the problem."
Tronscondlna Polltlcar· ldeoi"'Y
The drug problem "transcends all political ' ideologies,"
Gruber said, and explained that
his plan already bad the support of EPIS and other groups.
Severru members of the GSA
were opposed to use of armed
guards. Stories were told about
alleged police brutality during
the strike last spring and many
coordinator will be replaced by students felt the same problems
a new elected post, minority would result if security forces
student affairs coordinator, patrol Norton.
which will encompass all miConcern for the rehabilitstion of the addicts was another
nority campus groups.
Part of the duties of the stu- area explored. There was disdent rights coordinator ' will be cussion about setting up a reincorporated with .those of the habilitation center on campus.
present student services coor- Dr. Ketter pointed out that
dinator in a post to be called · Brooklyn Colleie is successstudent a1fairs coordinator. In fully running this type of proaddition, a student rights ofH also ff red to "
f•cer. a pub c information offi- port a request 0for funding'' of
.
li
gram. e
e
supcer, and an election and candi- a rehabilitation program.
dates officer will be appointed
A survey of University opinby the President of SA, with ·
ted b John

=•

the~lr:s~t=~~n
post ~=d'~suJ~u~ou,:
(formerly public affairs ) was U ·
'ty ·
the d

cbansed to an· appointed one,
says HuddlestoQ, because "the
president should be able to appoint someone professional or
semi-professional in that area.
Some people who have been
elected there bad no idea what
·~~es,~?~;;;, Huddleston,
"the students won't necessarily
elect a group of candidates who
·can work with each other."
Each coordinator will be a
~a sotanf·dingll?easaecomnum"!Yttee
. • andof
._..
tbat body. In addition, the SA
=r-~ besd the Finance

.

-

Comm-

Since the plan calls for

metmbers of ·the ·assembly

p~= andVl:!,wsfind o~t !hs.~
solution would be acceptable."
This motion was tabled when
the chairman of the meeting
ruled that a quorum was no
longer presenl
Earlier in the meeting, the
group passed a motion by Pat
Gallagher, asking the University to "eliminate environmentally unsafe practices!' The moti0 n called upon the administration to "rapidly institute the
following ·proifama: one, ·to recycle .,.. mcinerate waste solvents which are used by varioua deperbDents (both academic and maintenance) and to
safely disp&lt;al of the solid
waste; secondly, to recycle
glassware; . and . thirdly, to zecycle the large amount of
peper which is used by some
depertdoents. . . ."

to be elected nen fall, the ezecutive committee-the olfioers
d SA to be elected in ballotins the week after the referandum-will be in cbarse until then. -T his includes the
pn!llideot, first and oecoru:1 vice
presidents, tmasurer and the
·aisht coordinsfall,
··L-~:_-Lly will · · Sc:ccer may be ad.ded to
ln
...., ............,
U/Ba fall propam ol mlaroal·· elect. a number of its members, lelriate athletics as. a replac&amp;as yet not determined, to serve Da~t for fooCball, aicaordlnc to
llll the ezecutive committee.
Dr. Han:Y. G. Fritz, dinlclm of
· · Once the aaaemlily is elected, pb.yaical 8ilucatloa, recnatlon
the 1!18Clltive committee will and atbletlca.
lelliala.te only in emergencies
Fritz IBid that a petition,
wllicD · nli{Uire action .., vary oipled by 100 IDiaated
ahart notine, and its actions studellta,basbem~to
will· be 81ibject to assembly ap- • bla alb. 'lbe petit:iaa ea1Ja for
p1VW1L ·
the lmmedlata lldditlon.Jll·•
lncldentali,Y, the- upcomiilg - to the fall 11PCJ118 lfiiiiup. "
110

UIB SoCcer Bulls?

Main Stree
"·····""'··"t,.'s'·D
. - aily
J~.. ..
PrQb.~e~Enono-h
Garhnn-e
'""'b·
JJ&lt;l.5 to Fill Haas LonnOP
·

-

'

1

''-4.&amp;'"t)'V

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
s..o
It starts on Monday with the
distributinn of 15,000 Spectrums and continues throughl&gt;Ut the week with sacks of ref.
use from cafeterias and papers
from vending machines. In a
given week, the campus produces enough solid waste to fill
the Haas :Lounge from top to
bottom seven times. This
breaks- down to an estimated
17 000 pounds of ao)id waste
' diJy from the Main Straet

~

alone.

~does it all come from?
Five students from ·RacbeJ
Carson College studied the
problem last semester to find
oul They limited their report
to solid waste which includes
paper sla8s. food, metal and
piasti~ trash. Even within this
D&amp;rtowed ranae, the amount of
debris was startlins.
The llfOUP found that total

~from

offices · amounts to
3 050 pounds per day. This
...;.,..,. that e8dl of 8,486 non-=tlina . staff members produes lllichtly 1aoa than 0118
pciUDil of paper and associated
waste each dliy.
•
~ .ild ·....,. ·
- ~ ~- lab. "PPli!"'
'!!818 ewm lllllll!""· Total solid
waste produotioD from · tbM!
..., the Maia CllllliiW 4,910pcllllldladay.
· ~wufa also come

~ =\~':iF~~e ~7:'..:'.:i ~·~=-!Jatc&amp;;a. :=-~-~

4;000 pounds. This figure is reqcling some of the solid
actually a littJI.e low because waste from ·t he campus.
Clement Hall red u c e .s 600
They estimated that there .is
po\!llds of -waste to 100 pounds a total of nine tons of peper
by burning.
waste from ..,ch week and that
Norton is probably the "most this would bring $7 a ton from
productive" spot studi!&gt;d. The salvage companies, amounting·
Food ~ apeces, including to $3,150 a year. 'Ibis, ' howthe Rathskellar, Tiffin Room ever, would be Olfaet by the
and all cafeterias; produce 150 need to buy a $300 bailer to
ro-gallon plastic bap of pr- com~ the paper and by the
base eveey day. This is joined additiimal COflt of llloring it.
by another 35 plastic bags, each Staff wOuld ba · ~ 1D 8i1rt
wei&amp;binB 80 pounds,. from the the paper out 61· the prbqe
rest of the Union. The weekly and to nm ·the-bliiler.·
distribu,tionofthreenewapapers·
Anolber- .~ - d- the &lt; scilid
sdds to the total. . Not all of wasfe that coUld -be l'l!'i:yi:led
the 15,000. copies . of each Is is · c:aqa ftoai .8oft dril!k· ~
left in NOI'Ion, •but many find cbinea: - 'lbe R8cbe£ • c,u&amp;on
their way to the floor there.
, poup estimated a ·l'lllum Of·$1,Another source fO&lt; the cam- 080 per ye8r · if machines
pus' daily prbqe output is the . Stocked drinb · il;l aluminum
• vendins machines. Whether it's cans: Curreneiy, the 111'8
the cardboard backing from a · a mixture d llkiel and alumipastry a&lt; a · paper rup from num which amnot be re-cycled.
coif~. the waste from tbM! The'_veoding madliDeoi ....Wd
machines amounts to over S.,- bave to be.ODIIIIIIeleiY NP~
ooo pounds a year. The ~araeat to use pwe atumbium caDI,
part of this conies from cans; however, aDd the v~ Sermilk cartons are ·8eccind..
· · viq; is reluctant to do tbil, the
The campus )"'Illte 18 col- . J:ei!Oit 8llyll:' •
.
• •
I e c ted by Maintenance and
A IIXII8 pactical. s o lution
packed into two -'f~ · might ·be to aimpl,y urp people
trucb that campect tbe origi- . to use '!aoa paper, lh!l studellts ·
nal 'Wllume by a third. The conclude._ Use d the t.cb of .
two trucb have a total capao- memos for iDter-(lftice ,DOles , ..
_)ty ol ~ cubic yards (8110111h . acnp paper ia 0118 Wll1' a(-9
~lllliblaeio C01111!..le~ • ~ down .., &amp;.cb ~~
ly fill a . dorm-roam~. EacQ ~dwaste.perdlqr,
i ·, ·
maDi! ,lili 'tripe ·a
tbio ._ tJIB'a probliin
Lall"ca·ater landfill with Its waste ill -n, ~.
·
bdL · '
• • ·· " ~ with Bulfalo'a..·
·

..,.."iil

·wlub
\ ' ..

..1\:'~Racbel ear: ~~-,::'::i-~':1~

wl8 d fta ldDd tbla year: there CXIIIIp8led .., a · ~ .-ted to two· pcllllldl 01 SOD ~ their ftiPOl't by waste ill ooUectad doU!Y wflhiD
fmi to 4m ftlfereoduma In • level In - ·
..,.... JB' naldeDt - d8y, or CXllllliderins the pcadhllitles of tbe city limlta.
,:

�~I'ORTER,

MardJ IJ, 1911

~Prof

Grad School Is Evaluating Prcgrams,
(Mainte~oo of Quality' Is Goal

~Fidd

Siinp/if1ed
By SUZANNE

METzGER

Offering~aps;;"roe.cb that
would make physics ''more un·
deistandalile and easier to
learn and use,•: Dr. J. Gibson
Wmans, profe11110r of physics,
preeented his idees 011 "A More
Sensible Physics" at the annual
..-ina of the American Pbysi·
cal Society in New york City

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
In~
the Grad·
uate School passed a motion ..,.
quiring aH its current depart.
ments and programs (and pro! - ' ones) to be evaluated by
an outside tesm s ometime
within the next three yeers. The
policy was Utitiated to "insure
the attainment and maintenance of the highest academic

J;.

qU&amp;lity.''
.
In addition to this goal,

in J~field of mecbanics
to iH~ his more ".....U.le" Theodore Hullar, associate
-'-ted
the "'-- dean of the Graduate School
( c:lcaoly """
to
u"' and preeent-coordinator of the
.termiDoloo, Dr. Win- .evaluations, has - found tbem
ana would nplaoe the lnlditioo- beneficial to the departments In
al ........ k11ftb and ·with otber ways. It's a cbance to
the more basic oooceptB of .U.pia«nwlt and force. Tbeee, he "pause in a program," Hullar
feels, mare. accurately COIIvey says, and evaluate where the
tbe -uaJ: ideo. or im- de_partment has been and where
preaaion. lncludina a lJiird it-should go. He also points out
coDcept, ·
Dr. Winans
that a positive evaluation puts
"All of :h.nw;. am be~ the department on stronger
cribed in · terms of only disraquesting addi-

-&gt;·

::J::"
~
· -·•-

~~

.........
:.::::'tu;;,~.'::. enefiY., un....~
.•.:
But, he ~~it"::i':'&amp;; Vf/Jey'
incoovenient not to use tbem.
'I'bese otl&gt;er words - t
combinations of the three basics
hicb "
freq
tl
w
occur 80
uen Y · • •

:::....U:: COil~"

special

CF,:

Clmently, the evaluation
procedure (although required
before late 1972) is initiated
from within b the department
or program r..;:d. They approech Hullar for a variety of
reasons, he says. . Usually it's
because a program is going to
be evaluated by somecne else
(usually an otltside accrediting
agency) and they want to
couple the external and internal
evaiuatiOIIs. Otbers seek evaluation when ·the department is
changing .direction and.II\IU'ting
Sclme •• t ..

"For IWIIIlple, the name work
is given to the combination
w .= Fa where F is a force during the diapl.!ioement s with F
paraJieJ to a. The coocept of
work is thus not a necessary ~u:"gram
.P&lt;&gt;~tj ~~ii'-:
concept since it is possible to
te ~
use Fa In place of work In any
desaiption."
Wbtrtever the motivation,
Eneri!Y is_ defined as stored mucb herd work goes- into the,
work. ID:IpuiMl, u&amp;DOther- com- preparation of the eyaJ.uation.
binatiOII of · displacement, time Tite department must bring toand force," am be exp.-1 by gether a variety ol materials
the equation i = Ft where F is for .t he visiting team: This
the average resultant force on packet inciWieS a statement of
an object during time (t) · Mo- the currem and prospective
mentum is defined as stored im- status of .t he program, a ''nupulse. Mass is defined as mo- merical indication of the need
mentum divided by velocity.
for graduates of the program"
With this system of physical and a disculllion of why this
quantitiee def'med as combin- · · --""- unit of SUNY should
ationo of undefined impre&amp;- .....,.......
displaoNuent, time and offer the program. Other needed
t='
ccxtfusion betwem
inform&amp;ti011· deals with admis-·~
..._.. sions and gradwrtion requireand maM dialpPMfS and some ments and anticipated future
~~IJIIII8Cis of pbys- enrollment. The department
•---- _ _.__.
also usually includes a detailed
. Dr• W....... .......,18 to one listing and description of
disadvantqe in his more 11811:- COiliBM, with vitae of tbl peo· aible IIPProecb. ". · • the oubject pie teaching theee ClOIIn.. In~ ~be.!ill*::"'-~ formation about library boldfrom or -·m~. the ..rue...- inp and additional details on
-:-;:,
other special eervioes the dementa made Wlth loE aeaible, partment usee may also be subpb;ysics. • It · .will · iioly make mitted.

:.uch ;,.op.,::;.. :: ::_:;; ·:·'

gram quality, faculty scholarship, sufficiency of resources
and direction of proposed
growth. The teem also must
consider how the program relates to local, state imd national needs. Another criteria
is how well the program interacts with other programs of the
University, especially in utu.:·
izing resources from other departments.
Following this briefing, the .
tesm is taken to meetings with
the department or program in
question. During their stay,
the tesm usually see graduate
and undergraduate students
and meet with faculty and staff
members In the department.
Titey also may talk with faculty from other departments
having interaction with the one
being studied and with the provost. Usually the tesm is on
campus for two dsys, but some
evaluations have been done in
a hectic whirlwind one-day
tour.
After its visit with the department, the tesm prepares a
written evaluation following the
guidelines of the "general
charge." This is submitted 1x&gt;
the dean of the Graduate
School, to faculty members of
the program, and to the Divisional Committee of the con·
cerned faculty. This commit-

tee considers the report and
gives the program approval,
provisional approval or nonapproval. The report is then
forwarded to the central administration in Albany for further
consideration or approval, in
the case of a new program.
Members of the evaluation
tesm receive small honoraria.
Pn&gt;s •nd Cons

Most departmental chairmen, Hullar says, consider the
evaluation process beneficial.
There is division, however, on
whether the massive paperwork
acrompanying it is worth the
large amount of time faculty
must spend preparing il Some
department heads express
doubt about the value of the
evaluation itself, because of the
"fleeting impressions" the evaluators develop when here for
only one or two days.
With only five programs fully evaluated through these
means and seven otbers in process, the Graduate School stiH
hall over 70 departments to examine in the remaining year
and one-half. The School is not
planning to use aity "ooe.rcion"
on these departments, Hullar
says. He does not anticipate
any problems in evaluating all
programs and believes the October '72 deadline will be mel

• Senin~ C!~7",.-4~...1fior
SlX
c C Fl nonrte&gt; Q,...J..,..l~~o
UJU..U c:J1 UjR:)
I UVI 0

~ltll,

l

•

•

CAl I IUO I..JL,I

EbertAsks '

-

NotToBe
Considered
Dr. Charles H. V. Ebert, acting dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies, does
not wish to be considered for
permanent appointment to that
post.

In a letter to University
President Robert L. Ketter, Dr.
Ebert cited "imperative . personal and .professional reasons"
for his decision.
Ebert was one of five candidates recommended to Dr. Ketter by a search committee for
a dean of the Division of Undergraduate Studies. The
names of the other candidates
have not been released.
Ketter acknowledged Ebert's
decision with "profound ..,.
gret," saying that he has "done
a superb job as acting dean.''
Dr. Ketter said, ''Your exemplary dedication to teaching and
to this institution has been

u;:;ro:= :

SUr: U/B eeniors have been
Mr. Webber was the fuat ~~es;.!' ~
awarded C. C. Furnas Scbolar- ~. scholar i,n 1968 at well. I know I can rely on
ships for the 1971-72 academic which time he recetved a three- your 'Unusual administrative
year, a University committee year $3,000 stipend for medical talents again in the future.''
has announoed.
stud!es at U/ ~. The J?"Xt acaEbert has been a faculty
The awards, which are made detn1c year will be his .fourth member bere since 19/K. He
annually to graduates who are under the program. He bolds became the first chairman of
outstanding in scholarship and a master's in physiology from the Department of Geography
athletics, are designed to en- the University. As an under- in 1963 when the Department
courage graduate school educa- graduate, · he was a member of of Geography and Geology was
tion. Recipients may attend the the intercollegiate football and split.
graduate school of their choice track teams for two yeai8.
0...-~ O....:.J!_
Mr. Quattrone was 1970-71 ~ ~
and are not restricted to U/ B.
This year's winners and the co-captain of the wreatli_ng ~ TT....!.-:..amounts of their stipends are: tesm. A transfer from Corning \..1~1; UJ.llUlllS
Nancy Coleman, $1,000; Mark Community College, he has a
·
A U / B student will use a $3,Koller, $1,000; James Webber, two-season record of 17-11 in
$1,000; David B. Quattrone, . wrestling and has been a 000 grs_nt . from the Credit
$500; Roger B. ·K remblas, Dean's List student here .for Unillll National. Association ,.
$500; and Jobn C. Faller, $500. · four semesters as an aocoun~ ( CUNA) to study bow minority groupe .., . --cooperative
Receipt ol the stipends is ing major.
Mr. Kremblaa, a ~ - aedit tJDion11 -to be1J? themcontingent upon enrollment in
management
major
and
a
threeselves.
.
graduate school
Patridt -Dexter, of Lockport,
season etarter In basketbell,
Fl..t woman ~
Mies Coleman, the first wo- was tesm captain In that sport will viait Chicago, Detroit,
man to become a Furnas schol- for 1970-71, averaging 18.5, .MadiaoD, Wis., N- York City,
points per game. He has been and W.lllbiaqton, D .C., in the
desaibed as "the anchor next four IDIJilthe·to study bow
around
which the baskethall UDion credit-CCMJpe have hem
;,~~ :
from a list the departmeDt aug- uate student, she has particiorganizal in ~ cities, and
Ull:llll.-...aJ
gesta. Hullw cbecb· the list pated ·1n women's besblbell, tesm is built."
bow they may possibly be im·.
• ·
· ·
with an outside source to deterhockey and swim min g. Top -.nd4alnor
One of U/ B's top foothall proved.
~May28 '
people and ·COII- ~hils..::. ~at~ ground-gainers,
Mr. Faller, a
Dexter is a lirst-year gradThe ~6th Annual ComA vioitation acbedule for the summers. Active in campus af- physical - education major, uate student in the School of
meiiCIIIIIIIIlt will be he I d at evaluators is then worked out fairs, she is a member of Cap rushed for 506 yards and five Social Policy and Community
Rolaly Field, Friday, May 28, with the clepe.-. Usually and Gown and an honor stu- touchdowns in 1969 and gained Services. The grant was givmt
at 10:30 a.m.
hectic and fuH, the acbedule denl She has been a member 568 yards in his eenior season. to the School's Olf'lCe of TechCandidates participating - w i t h a briefing by Hullar of: lite Task Force on Aca- He led tesm scoring both yeers. nica1 Assistence and Communabould plan to attend a rehear- and members of the esecutive demi R f
1 t
ear'
The Furnas Scholarships ity Planning. Prof. Clyde L.
sal at 9:30 a.m. on May 2rl and administration, includina, usuc
e orm; as y
8 were established by the late Giles, director of the Office,
be pram~t in academic coetume ally, the vice president for aca- SUNY""::'~ execu~t;;,: chancellor and president in said the CUNA grant repre011 May 28 at 9:30 ll.m.
demic affairs. 'I1Ds aeasion cowtcil;
COII1DU
- 1965. Dr. Furnas original gift aents a new direction the School
" -· and
~ the
._.__ out conditions at U/B for a director of the health, for the fund was augmented by is trying to pursue with lnternfrom : ; ~~ ID budgetary restrio- physical education and recree- $100,000
subscribed by alumni ship programs.
~
otiooa and otber problems. Here li"!' ~i,~....Studenand
utruver!'&lt;th- and friends in a special cam"In addition to placing atu'It ,_ --....,pated that __ .. ,_ . . J - the "~• ....___" of letic ...,._ ~
• ...,.....
""""" .._
• - - ~...
sity-Wide Committee 011 Ath- paign at the time of his retire- dents in state and welfaJe agendalllB will receive their eli- whet to eYaluate is - t e d . lelics; and tovo of this yeer's menl The fund, administered cies, we want to get tbem out
p1omao tbroud&gt; the mail after The "cbarp" as a rule calla presidential taU: f - , Uni- by the University at Bulfa1o working directly with groups in
July· 1. CaDdidatee ........., ad- upon the teem to COI18ider pro- versity ao-nance and Uni- Foundation, Inc., bonors Fur- oppressed communities."
-cbeali will change after graduayersity Goals. Mi8o Colanan is nas' "long and devoted
At the same time, he said,
to the University.
the grant is indicative of a
z~ =..the~
also credited with CJrillnating
Members of the C. C. Fur- growing trend towar4s joint in............... . _ , . . ....L....I.. ~
'
•
"t1: J
gramthebulletinln
1968..
boerd ClDilJII8 pronas Scholarship Committee are terprofessional sponsorship of ·
WIU , . _ . . . . . . . . . .
Dr, Francis J. ~ .....
ciate ~ of mediCine at
Mr. Koller; a paycbology ma- Gilbert Moore, ed uca tiona I soc:iai welfare programs.
The Offioe of Technical As- ot" the C8l*'itY Ol. u /B. will as a faculty
jor wbo plans to enter medical studiee, chairman; A. Weetley
~ )"ie1d; ~-to Com- member fqr
combination ecbool, was a member of var- a-land, vice president for sistance will try W. aet up sim,i~t will DDt be Nquired. South AlmricaD tour and medi- sity lamis .teams for u- -- Universitv relatioaa; Andrew lar internships ~both m tlje
An altemate CIIDIIW •••t cal
NOV8Diber 2&amp;-De- 80118. Aa a sophomore, he Holt. Graduate School: ~ U.S. and in otber counlrie&amp;-plan for iDclement ~ will ....,... 17 '111'11, 8pCIII80Nd by
p~ No. 4, 5 and 6 singlaJ. Tieckelmann, chemistry; ·and for other graduate studentil,
. be. pabllabod.,BDII. :.Did ca · Modlm. MelticiDe'.a.&gt;-MEDl,._ _ .,.a junip&amp;; he. ~ . No.1 Arthar..Bu t.ler, _..._..,;nt. . .said Giles. EYentually, lJDiiEir. .
(011 lllbtitatical):
graduates will be included.
bulletin boards at a "later date. TOURS.
llinlleo_for

.u....

--''""t

·==~e
1.25th

...
.

. ..,_...

1:.r~~= ~~ll:~~
field

=::..._Ilea

tJ!:,.,d

.moe"

Klocke-Heads!Jbw
a

....m.r

the-_,,

�GREPoRTER,

4

Norton Troubles Prove
~Sanctuary' Is a Myth
By .PAUL KURTZ
,..._ol,.~

ing and worlrinjl together in a
coopemtive spuit. But what
community do we now have
when intimidation and haraaslnf1llt. violence and fear, stslk;
when it comes not from external authorities, the police or
the state, but from those who
use the facilities of the univer-

The Specvum is to be oongratulated for ita ezpression of
outraae at the epidemic of drug
abuse, assault and harassment
that has invaded Norton
Union. Ac:oording ·to reports in
the student press, the 9ltuation
has reached crisis proportions.
What is happening here ;s not ' sitemories may be abort, but
unique, for other campuses are it was only last year that thoee
experiencing similar probleJil!'. who condemned the resort to
Yet firm measures may have to violence on campus by individbe tskei. to restore a semblance uals or groups who held themof dignity and safety, so essential to a civilized community.
The breakdown of community is, in part, the consequence -v ~J:, YY CV
of two principles that have been
wijlely proclaimed recently on selves above the law were
university campuses by well- labelled as "law and order oon·
meaning people. Both of these servatives." But can the civilprinciples may now have to be ized campus community sit idly
reexamined.
by and not condemn in the
The fimt principle is that a strongest ·t erms possible the
university campus ought to be pattern of addiction and asan autonomous self-governing sault now going on?
community and a sanctuary FNr of Beinl 'Ruc:tiono,Y
from the restrictions of the
.What paradox that many
greater society. This means,
a&lt;=rding to some of its pro- ~f'i:~ an~ :;:~niW:r':;,~
ponents, that police ought not Union becsuse they cannot
to be permitted on campus ex- stomach what they see, and
. cept in dire emergencies and that many admit privately that
that campus police ought not
~S'~.~
be allowed to bear arms. It ~
was only a short while ago that they are fearful of speaking out
many faculty and students for fear of being labelled as "recried " pigs off campus!" They actionary." A vacuum in moral
inaisted that police busts and leadership has developed on
drug raids w.e re repressive and this campus and on other camthat the problem was not the puses in Americs. Yet educsbreaking of the law by students, tors have a responsibility to
but police harassment and bru- protect other people's children
talitr. The narcotics squad in with whose csre they are enparticular was attacked for en- trusted.
trapping students on trumpedTwo conclusions seem clear.
up charges.
First, that the university csnSh- for lllepl Conduct
not be a sanctuary from the
The sanctuary principle laws t h a t apply everywhere
makes sense when it applies to else in society. If assault is
acsdemic freedom and the pur- illegal elsewhere, then it is ilsuit of truth untrammeHed by legal on campus. If trafficking
outside authority. It makes no in hard drugs is illegal elsesense when it is extended as where, then it is illegal on this
a shield for any and every campus; and the narcotics laws
form ol illegal conduct. To should be enforced. Why should
what state of affsim have we not those students and staff
now come if thoee who use the who have been assaulted he
facilities of the university csn- protected? Why should young
not expect minimal guarantees people be exposed daily to
of safety and dignity. Should pushers and addicts? WhY
the -university be- exempt from should campus police not be
the protections afforded to all permitted to bear arms? let
other citizens of society?
those carried away by their
The second moral principle own emotional rhetoric crY
that was advanced was that the Y'olf. But who will protect the
students ought to be allowed to mnooent?
.
run their own lives and be perThe second conchJSion. that
mitted to. do their• own thing. ~hould _now !"' pa·tenUy eYld!'nt
This, it was ssid, meant an end ts that mdl'1d.lJ!Il freedom Withto in loco parentu, and an ex- out respoiiSlbthty spella cba:os.
tension of freedom to students, lf ,the studen~ ""!"'ot gwde
who were adults, and who thetr own aff~ With balance
should be allowed to make and responsibility, nor formutheir own individual choices in !Jite, and enforce rules governregard to their sexual and moral mg .d'!"""t . conduct, then the
behavior, without undue repres- admuustrati~n ~d the facul_ty
sive rules and laws imposed by have an obligation. to .step '!'the university or the outside Not to _do so. at this time will
community.
!ll'denrune still further the serThe above two principles 10~ i"'!" of confidence that the
~that the university
~verstty .has already_ suffered
18 a community of scholars livm the larger commuruty.

l:t:TTn'ti.Tnr\fNTS

chllt!

'

A. _ , _ . c:ornmunii'J' ........,- f'UbiUited eet:h T~ bF tM Diri1ion ol Unl-.ity RelatioN, Stat. Uttlnnitr ol N"' Yotk .t Bulfllio, J4.JS llain St., Bulf.Jo.
.., N. Y. 14214. BtlltorW olfiou looltW ... .R-. 2U, 250 .,......,_,. A....,.
(P,__ 212'1).

·--

A. W'.sr'LB'I' ROWLAlfD

J~~lfO
~
ROHil'l" r . lfA.IU.BTT

......,. ~,;-',.~anZ"..,.,.. ....

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

}OBJf A.. ctOUJ"lU
SUSANO~D

STUDaltf' UJI'AJRS lfDIT'OR:

s..... ~

~~~~ ~~~..6,.-;.~ n.s-dl, CA.r7f
PBMOO~HY: Uw.rd L. ,...._ ll._ B .
COltTIU.uTilfO ARf'lST:\ s.._ If. • ,.,_. .

11...... .

B.,.,.,..,_,

.

~Wen S.

Ketter Gives
Answer To
TefUJ!fi Query
PlloPm!OB Pnwu: R.

HART

DBPr. or GBilliAN AND
Dear Professor Hart:

SLAVIC

Mticb. 11, 1971

FSC Undecided as SB\.
Seeks To Add Members::·
By the FACULTY-STAFF
CAUCUS STEERING
COMMITTEE
The Steering Committee of
the Faculty-Staff Caucus has
not been able to reach a decision about the advisability ol
joining the Senate Professional
Aasociation (SPA). We, therefore, (ll'e8eDt to our . membership, and to other colleagues
eligible for membership, the
following considerations to
guide ·t hem in reaching their
individual d~ioos:

In your letter ol March 1,
you raised a number of questions with regard to my suggestions that the University
might seriously consider a
limit on the percentage of tenured faculty. These are cer&lt;tainly ·questions which should
be answered, and I am only
sorry that I csnnot respond at
greater length.
First, ''why" a cmling? ScienSPA DEADUNE EXTENDED
tific knowledge expands at an
Senate Professional Associa·
ever·increasing rate. In a mat- The
ter of five or ten years, a dis- tion (SPA) has extended the dead·
line for eligibility to vote on next
cipline may undergo a near- year's contract proposals to April
complete intellectual revolu- 1. Previously. SPA had announced
tion. It is imperative that the that only those joining the organ·
University retain the Oexibility that will enable it to appoint lzation by March 15 would be
f cui
t1
eligible to cast ballots on the pro':no.ttyreoe~d{ -posals.
velopments, as well as to bring
here middle-level and senior
There are two main reasons
scientists who have made sig- for joining SPA.
nificant advances.
First of all, membership, if
So far as picking an aotual secured before March 15, enties
you to vote on the conratio, our range of choice is limtract to be negotiated by SPA
/:' ~
fa~tythewi~":; with the State of New York.
over the 70 per cent mark by Since all teaching and nonthe close of acsdernic 197(}.71. teaching professionals will be
We csnnot, by some stroke of subject the terms of the conmagic, roll this figure back; a traot, it csn be argued that
membership is essential if one
~=~~ ~,~re!&gt;.:; wishes
to have a voice in rati'-'-"'-r
- it fication ol one's working con,_.... figure. At this "
~
ditions.
would seem to me that a sort
of rough common sense would 11 ' 1• the Apnt
Secondly. sinCe SPA...- like it
suggest a ceiling in the neighor not, is our bargaining agent,
horhood of 7().80 per cent.
it
has been argued that memSecond, you suggest that,
rather than impose a ceiling, bership is· impOrtant ilL that it
enables
us to have a voice in
the "granting of tenure be completely abolished." My an- the goY&lt;!f1Ulllce of SPA and
swer would be that this remedy thus in the formulation ol ita
is disproportionate to the problem and that we csn achieve
our objectives by less drastic
means.
Your third point is that the
imposition of a quota system EDITOR :
would change the nature of the
In releasing the text of my
present tenure decision process speech, "Communicstion Pollu-Le, merit would cease to be a tion: Symbols in Man's Ecolconsideration, and departments ogy" (Colleague, February 25) ,
would simply rush to fill their the footnotes and acknowledge"quota." I would argue that a ments were iriBdvertently omitlimitation on tenure appoint- ted. The concept of "communiments will make departments
pollution" was first de. more, rather than less, con- cation
veloped in presentations by Lee
oerned with quality and merit. Thayer,
Gallup Professor, DeLasUy, you ask whether this partment of Speech, University
proposal does not circumvent of Ibwa, and Donald W.ashAAUP standards. I am rather burn, Department of English,
p~led as to how you csn East Stroudsburg State ColJ9ise this questio11 and simul- lege, at the conference on ueop- taneously propose a total aboli- ing with Increasing CompleJ:tion of tenure. In any event, let ity," sponsored by the_ Society
me assure you that there is for General Systems RAlsearch
nothing in this proposal wliich and the General Semantics Inin any ·way contravenes either stitute, Denver, Colorado, May
the letter or the epirit of the 8-10, 1970. The full te:rts
existing AAUP tenure provis- their papers are currently in
ions. The records of b o t h
SUNY and .of SUNY / B have
indebted to my friend
been extraordinarily good in and colleague, George Bradley,
this respect, and we intend to Department of Speech Comkeep it that way.
munication, SUNY Bulfalo, for
-Sincerely yours,
applying the concept of commurucstion pollution to KenROBEBT L KErrER
neth Burke's analysis of guilt
President
and victimage, and for the con· EDITOR ' S NOTE: . Prof. cept of the demonstration as
Hart's letter to the presuunt a public confessional.
appeared in last W&lt;!ek's ReportThe anecdote .of the coach is
er.
reprinted from Loren Eiseley's
"Man, Time ·and Prophecy "
in Man and' the Fuuu'e, tfrtiversity
Kansas Press, 1968.
The parable ol the speckled
motb was adapted from a
A tastimonial dinner for Pro- 8P!"'ch presented by Anthony
r - .Janet c. Politer who is . \Yil~ P.rofessor of ComnniletiriDg after 25 yt!ll1'll in the rucstion, San J&lt;B! State Cal~t ol ap.m Com- lege, at SUNY Bulfalo, May
llliiDication will be held April 10, 1970. • .
:U at tba Lord Amherst Motor theT'be O!&gt;IDlOnS ~ in
Inn.
JI8PI!&lt; are oolely thoae
The _,t is beil1t IIPOII80I'fld the author. ,
_
by lbe StUdent--hculty Allairii
~ yours,
Committee ol'lbe dopmtmeot .
Dll:!oos R. " - which ia iEaina imitations to
Aaaistant ~
frioada IIDd , _ studenta.
ap.m Coaununication

=.Ji::"n,.,

t!"u!r

to

Footootes for

Pollutiofi Paper

of

. P'f'am

StudBiB,Facillty
Hmor Mrs. Potter

of

of

policies. For tt... of ,. who
supPorted ooe ol tba other Ollllendera in tba eledion ol a bargaining ....t tbis would .._,
an nnnnrtnnn, if we joined
SPAr~~ numbers, to
make it 01/W into the kind of
bargaining .......t - would prefer to SPA as it presently
eaista. To criticize SPA's action&amp; IIDd policies from the outside would, according to this
argument, be uaeJeas.
Given the foreaoing OODSiderations, why abould anyone refrain from joining SPA? Some
members of the Caucus Steering Committee feel that Caucus members should not merely refrain from .ioinint but
should encourage a boycott of
SPA becsW!e: a ) anyone join.
in' SPA su'-!uent to the bargaming agent election of last
Jantlary will be ineligible to

~3n..ft~fo~;rr ~~

the National Educati::J Association (NEAl . Alfiliation with
the NEA seems most likely •
and can be expected to be a
dominating influenoe on SPA
in the (uture; b ) dues must be
paid again in June, so .that one
pays now merely for the privilege of voting on the oontract.
These facts csn be seen as dem·
onstrating SPA's reluctsnoe to
accept input from faculty and
staff who did not join before
the election.
WOII&lt; for Its

~!

It can be further argued that
SPA's poeture bas been set for
the foreseeable future by the
elections and appointments
whlch ·have alresdy taken place
within the organization. Those
advocsting a boycott of. SPA
would urge that to join .is to
give SPA both financial
strength and strength in numbem. Inatead, they 811ft11!6t. we
should work fO&lt; the replacement ol SPA by another bargaining agent, especially since
a challenge can be made alter
one year aooording to the terms
of the Taylor Law.
To join 0&lt; not to join? We
regret that the M81'llell8 ol the
March 15 deadline did not permit us to organize a meeting on
this question, and - hope that
the brief summary of argumenls presented beJein will
hell? you to reacb
informed
declSion. •
.., •
,

an

Dlwt Cou..BAGUE:

Are you allowing other acsdernic units to determine your
terms and ronditions of employment?
We may be the largest unit
in the State University system
but our present input into the
contract to~ted is
• on
- minimal. Our
the Representative
· Olllsists ol one "amdemic" "'l'resentative 8Dd oite "profes&amp;IOilal" representative. When our
chapter mombersbip exceeds
150 in either catacorY, one additional representative f r o m
that category can be elected,
and a~·tativewben
the
in that cat&amp;gory reacbei
.
As a D1eDlber you should also
be involved ;.; deciding local
iasum. SPA inteods to provide,
where poaaible, the mechanism
f:.U~ tba Ollllnct to
To vote em the-· nepltiated
Ollltract~muit
be an SPA
member
. L 'lberefore,
your
·
• card must b8
.-ived ...
by 'lllunday, Aprill,~'110

later l&amp;an that

~t

~~3;A~

your card to ~ortql Rothstain, 201 Healtb Sdillilllia or
O'Bryan, 214 Diel-

to::=.

~A ~ Co1DormB

�.5

· - 1 1 , 1911

U4._1'h .. ~ Film
~·~uo

-

Portrays

:mn&lt;lo. includinR his bas fiddle,

wait to be carted away.
~· lmplic8liono

~Man~'
Chiriie MlDiua

\

l

IIIY8 ''they"

dida't p'WI him any education
talk. He p~

110 be C81l't

And yet, as the title of his

u!H'OIDini biopaphy, &amp;ll«&lt;tta
tM UndDdot, reoeals, Minlua

how .be playa.
doesn't quite "beeong."
But be tlllb, ~ with .
'TWI suffemd in tbis And, , ciety," Mingua says in the" film.
as be aays, be 8PMb for """" ADd without an education, be
tban .;..t bimaelf: "Most. Ne- lament&amp;, "it's a bitdt" to get ,
groes feel the aame."
back in tbis system.
·

a~ eloquence.

The talkinl in question was
So be playa.
.part of the · film. ''MinJUS,"
Why do·you 110 to school, be
shown on NET Fanfare last asks his then five-year~ld
Sunday.
daulhter Carolyn.
.
.
The 1966 film was, as NET
. '11ecauae it's important," she.
admonished in the Ojal!ng. a retums.
film of ''atzoag" laDguage and . ..., ....
.
circumstanoes. And thant was.
"Blood's not my beg," MinIt was a portrait of Mingus's ·gus tells the cameras, returning
eviction and a.rrast in a New to the question of getting beck.
York City housing incident "Broads are my bef.."
which Vinoant Canby of the
Sex, ~. isn t what you
New Y orA! Times caUecb "very see in Playbo)l-"witbout pimpersonal, very moving ~t pies." It's a source of survival.
of, a man dispo6aessed - dis- It comes natural. "Everybody
_.,.,.t from more then the should settle down and kiss and
Greenwich Village loft of the love."
ftlm.
"What are you f'nn&amp; do
Tbe incident, NET says, was whe!l you grow up?' he asks
a crossroads in Mingus's life- Carolyn.
an event which led ·t o a three"Love one man," she replies
year self-imposed retirement ~r "?""!' coa~g.
for "one of America's great jazz
Solid, says Mmgus.
musicians."
"Remember the good old
That was then.
~ays?" be ·as~ Carolyn, standIn Good eomp.ny
mg m the littered loft. "ReMingua is beck now. And he's mem~r Fif~ Avenue? Miss It?
at U/B tbis semester as Visit- I don t. · · ·
.
B~t ~!yn does. She nusses
ing Slee Prof....,r in the Depal'lment of Music-a post the ·qwet.
graced in the past by the greats
Well, ~ tells he~, tha_t's
of modern music _ Copland, where you re gonns hve. Fifth
Rorem, Nabokov Diamond
Avenue. Sutton Place. What- pean tour when in Germany
ou name them '
' ever he bas to do lo get her he "felt not wanted " when he
Y
.
· .
there, "I'll do it."
"couldn't eat or drlclt or nothM~ belongs m tha~ oomMingus talb about;.-. the ing," when his Jewish manager
He bas played ~th all Nazis.
. .. ·
found a swastika on his door
~ J8ZZ gle!lta, Duke ~lmglon,
ae talb ·about the people after he complained that the
Lionel Hampton, Charlie Park- who did&lt; "nothing''! when one - group's hotel rooms weren't
er ~and AI Ta~.. and was. grc)up after another met with clean.
eleCted D"'1!11beat • ~AZZ Man Hitler's repression. "Then one The White Flaa
of the Year in 196(.
day they carne and tbolt me,"
Of here and now, ' Mingus
More recently,I'/Dyboy mag- he quotes. "But I oould say says: "I pledge allegiance 1o
azine's 1971 reader's poll nothing bequse " l~' guilty the flag, the WHITE flag ...
elected him #3 bassist in its as they were for not ~ a prestige badge worn by a
annual "All-Star Band;" a mu- out." You ptotbe~ 1re W!m't profitable minority."
sician's poll the previous year · be guilty of thai:.
• • •
"When they say black or
ranked him among the lop five.
He tells about a recent Euro- Negro, they mean you're not

pan:r.

The trouble ~ to the
eviclion is fuzzy. But 1ts implications to Mingua are clear.
It's some kind of bureaucratic red-tape snarl Mingus
feels they're after him. . I&amp;
"they've" always been after
him.
The City's throwing me out,
he says. 'Tm not gonna make
it easy."
.
" All of my life is in tl-.
boD!S. I'll start a war if they
lake my stuff."
As the oops ix&gt;me to lead him
out, they're laughing.
One official looks at the cameras and says, "Get the hell out
Dl here."
/
"What do ynu
of America now," a newsman asks
Mingus.
He answers, "I think America's beautiful" because you can
see what they're doing here.
The oops shoWI him. He
doesn't resist.
"I hope the Communists
blow you people up," Mingus
cries, enraged.
However, you remember him
earlier in the film, quoting:
"This mule ain't from M0600W;
tbis mule's from the South."
And tbis mule's stubbornworking, learning, Planning,
standing fast.
As the police push him into
the car, one says, "C'mon Charlie. You're getting a million
dollars worth of publicity out
of tbis."
When the film bad its theater release, Newsd.ay called
it "a documentary of mood ...
a small tragedy that Thomas
Reichman has pholographed,
made quite moving by the ignoring of any irrelevant
tbemee." Variety noted its "remarkable degree of insight."
And the Village Voice called it
"the first jazz film about jazz.

thlhk

-

American."
But, I will pledge allegiance,

he says. I'll pledge allegiance

lo see 1o it that the day comes
when this country will live up
to its promises to its victims,
when there will be no ghetloes
-black, white, &lt;&gt;&lt; Japaneee.
Intercut with his monologue

;';:ce~ofin ~inb~ o:.,~

~='bU:u!'l~t

ol the
You can hear the music this
spring.
Mingus bas already presented one jazz workshop in
Baird and other appearances
will follow. They're not to be

phony orchestra, and with a
female companion. And the
program concludes with Mingus being led away by the polioo, while all of his worldly missed.

('Foot Stomping Jesus People' Offer a Hooen for The Hassled
HOLLYWOOD-Alo'i/1 IM
SIUUiet strip, CaliforniJJ's microcosm of pop cullure, longhaired kids in faded beU-boltoms and letltMr-(ringed vests
stop rxu:anl-eyed junkies and
teenyboppers from IM suburbs.
" Do you bow JesusY" IMy
ask. "He's coming soon . . .
Jesus Loves You . .. Praise IM
Lord." . . .
. A new fundamentoli81 relillious movement is spreading
throUIIh tM Cali(oriUtl youth
culture and is begr.nning to our-

which now bas a circulation of

our very h"earts and lives.
Labelled the "Jesus Movement'' by Look magazine and a
"foot-slomping Bible revival"
by the WaU Street Journal,
this revolution started in Cali~
fornia and bas spread rapidly
across the country lo such cities
as Atlants, Pittsburgh, and yes,

some 30,000 and is distributed
by band throughout tbis area.

In the paper is advertised our
holline which is open for anyone to call at any time if they
have a need.
· As a community in Christ,
we believe in the Bible as the
inspired Word of God, and that
it is true in its entirety. It is
our inspiration and rulebook.
We move in acoonlance with its
commands and warnings, and
live under its supreme law of
love established and exemplified by Jesus Christ.

even Bulfalq.
Many-focel8d Ministry

Tbe New Community in
Christ located at the House ol

Lifi&gt;, 2798 Delaware Ave. in

KenmOre, is only a small part
of tbis nationwide movement
among yQUilg people to share
""'- the "Jesus peopk'' or the love and peace they'..,
"Je~~us freolt¥' nnd tl,eir refound through a personal religion is of tM revivalUt, foot- lationship with "their Jesus."
stomping, tambourine -shaking,
At the House ol Life, we
Bibk-toting oariety. TM Jesus live in " 100 per cent Ghristian
peopk· toke to tM atreets, guv discipleship." This simply
tan on IMir baclu and Bibles means that e'WifYtbing-money,
in hand, attempting to conliert poseessions; and time-is gi...n
everyone IMy come acroa lo lo the community. Everything
tMir atem verrion of Christian- that is dooe is. for the benefit
ity.
of the ccimmunity, and thus ,...
-TM WaU Street Joornal,
suits in the more etrlcient
March 2, •1971.
spreading of the Gospel We
try 1o practice 24 hours a day,
The Re(&gt;OI"ter asked .a Bulfalo seven day&amp;·a week Christianity;
~ livinl at the "House .of serving God whuever ·- .are.
Life, u.out tbis IIICM!m8llt We aren't a church in the· inhere. The folloorinc ..,._t by a stitutional - . We are a
Bull'alo Slate atudout describes body-&lt;1 body ol believers
ttie pcap, wbl&amp; includes some united by the power and love
~ U/B:
ol Jesus of Nazareth. ~,; baWl
.,' ' By BOB STAINS
banded -toaether to .....,.,....,.
"'ib..N ua tooo "youth revo1u- ooe another in the Faith, to
tic/ai''~ . . in America . provide a plam wbere
face in olhu lllates acraas w
nation. 1ts followen oall rMm-

...r.::!:

~:~::r::·
r.:..~=:=a~
sdtute aolher. Tbe olbor is .a CbrisCians a plam to come.&lt;&gt;&lt;
ndically cllffenmt reYOlutianit's splritual, aDd eim c:baDie

rooa

spiritual
their .-a.

Modified

.

---.

Tbele are many facela of lbis
ministry that beWI .been deoeloped to......, as meana to these
end&amp;. The booM itself is .a-"di·
scipleabip ""'-" Di8cipleebip
studies and -=t&gt;-ins are held
fNWY ~ and 'lbunday
8WIIlin&amp;-at 7:30 to be&amp;p Christian&amp; to . . - in Jmowledae ol
the Bible. On Wednesday

mpt,...,.

baye a p n l ) ' e r - .

toptber w•th ill&amp; at 7:30, and m Sunday
tiiOIIIiaa - haw a 10:00 war-

____ .......

ship service. In our beaement
there is a free coffeehouse, the
"Power lo Light Co." Its purpose is to provide a neutral atmospbere that s t i m u I a tea
thOUI(h t and diocusliioo. 0n
band 18 a. ol disciples ol
J - ilocll of whom is aVailable to ~ who needs belp
&lt;&gt;&lt; would "}Uilt liloo to find out
more ebaut Jesus. A major
part of
• outreach is ati11 in
the form "' our paper, totelhu,

Ea~y

Christianity

Tbe House of Life and all of
.today's Christian· communities
are only a modified version of
the first fellowship ol believers.
This body bad its genesis over .
1900 years ago in Jerusalem,
and its growth was chronicled
by the authors of the New
Testament. The blueprint for
our community is found in Acts
of TM Apostles, chapter 4, verses 32-35:
"All the believers were of one
heart and mind, and no one
felt that what he owned was
his own; everyone was sharing.
And the apostles preadled powerful sermons about the rESUrrection of the Lord Jesus. and
there was warm lellowsbip
among all the believers. And no
poverty -fO&lt; all who owned
land or houses. BOld them and
brought the money lo the apostles lo give to otfiers iJI.peedj"
We have, as the early church
did, "oounted nothing as our
own" and joined to&amp;ether as
(~on-6,c:Oi.6)

�--.u.tnl

6'

•

FSJfslnixXne

Falls&amp;ww _
ExpeciationB
A net income of $39,721 for
the first halt of the 1970-71 fiscal year (July 1, 1970 through
December 31) has been reported by the Faculty-Student Aasociation Auxiliary Service Enterprises.
· The figure is $38,-488 or 49.2
per cent less than the· net income projected for the period.
The report was _prepared by
Enterprise Manaaement and 18
unaudited but has been ap~~ the FSA Board of
Four enterprises are covered
in the report llgwe&amp;-the Book-

·~~~~ending

Varying .most from the budget

&amp;"'~a:.:to:~:=

net- income of $38,591 on sales
of $1,1801012. Sales of $1,284,684 .bad oeen prejected with a
net income of $81,859. Bookstore expenaes on the actual
$1.18 million
sa I e s were:
Coats of goods, $930,690; wages
and benefits, $152,151; and
other - . $58,!XIO.
Showing the sharpest
A
cen..,_ ~-'·~ce from the
-.~ · - - ·
budget was Food Service which
l 0 s t $809 for the six-month
pen'od-11$.2 per !lent under
the Pro :.......... m'come of $8 a"".
,...._
"'""'
6
Food Service had sslee of $97 ,·
~ ~ the ~od~
~786; ::..,.. ~ be..:fiU.:
$479,774 and other expenaes of
$97,654, for a total outlay of
$977,214.
• Vending was 81.3 per cent
under budget expectations, re. g an actual net income
turnm

Propose
'
Less Monev, LoinO'Pr Hours

8"-"""-"' T

~nlni-.n

Bee Area

-.

(continued from - 1 . col. 6)'
guardad.~ He has authori2:ed
arted thet the group would Gruber to close any and all
probably pass a vote of coofi- problem areas immediately, if
dence for Gruber's program at neoessary. The dosing· of the
'Jl
'"'"'b~
lbr meeting .today (Thuraday). recreational area, however, is
.
Ia
call
The Norton HaH staff has not permanent, and is only a
Two Bu1falo area lawmakers State, some 1ejllS tors are
· been discussing the drug prob- stop-gap measure until another
are involved in measures af- :::~a ,.:b~to~o~ lem since laat summer. l''tan- solution can be found
fecting the University in the
. . J M
.
"'-~- f
S te I.e · lature One
uld F. McGowan has proposed a ciS . annmg, =-~ o recta
liB
.
bwod
work condition feature which reation, has not scbe!!uled wocut the State University u ¥'!t
ork ......:- the
.
and the other would establish obviously is not part ot the men toW
u~.....
evenmg ( continued from- 6, coL 6)
minimum classroom hours for SPA package. McGowan's hours since September. An ed-. one becauae of the abundant
faculty
bill is aimed at "meeting stu- ucstiooal program for the staff life we've ezperienced through
Asaeinhlyman James T. t.:fc· dent complaints that they are ~the~dos~- ..starteddon'ts
knowing Jesus Christ as a perFarland, Town of Tonawanda being shortchanged on educs- , _ _
"""
sonal friend, Savior, and Lord.
Republican and a member of tion and taxpayer complaints- the problem,~ Gruber said. An He offers this life to _everyone.
the Aaaembly Ways and Means over the rising cost of the State ex-ad&lt;Uct was hired and mem- All we have to do is realize
Committee, reported last Fri- U'¥l!rsi~~uld ~·;- !:::t
..&amp;.,~~- that we've gone our own way
dsy that the Committee was that a p' rofessor teach ·c~
Earlier' precautionary meas- rather than God's; and accept
considering a poasible cut of a minimum of eight to 12 sem- urea were.JIIao taken. For ex- the fact that Jesus died that we
$19.7 million from the P~ ester .hours a week. · Lecturers ·• --n•• resliooms on the second might be forJiven for following
SUNY budl!"t of $436
on
~...,
..... ., ..... _ our own deeirell.
for the commg year. The sug- ahd instructors. would, have to and thinUioom of. the ............_
The Bible ssys that God
of $1,184 against a budgeted gestion is part of a total plan teach at least 16.
. and the · elevators have been loved us so much that He gave
figure of $6,330. Vending's sales to pare a minimlllii0f~200 miJ.
As McGowan put it in the clcad on Weekends. Beer sslee ~'- only Son so that whoever
totalled $219,446. Its expenses lion from the ·$6.5 billion re- Courier E:rpre80 "In a society """!:8'~.in the·Rathskeller """'
were listed as: cost-of goods, quested by the Governor for where
aven:ge worker. and I - ~~·after State liquor "believes in Him doesn't have
$91,394; wages and benefits, 1971-72. U / B's share of the prof'!SBional man must pu~ in AUthoiUY.' ~ reported to suJrer spiritual death, · but
$94,002; and all otiJ!&gt;r - . $436 million being asked for more than a 40-hour week juBt aaeiq·'lllug uatfic.in the BleiL can commune. with God for
"'$32.886.
SUNY is $86.4 million. . The to make ends meet, it aeems un- Tbia 'lileasure has-had '\,.bene- eternity (aee Jobn 3:16) · God
The Service Center had sales Legislature must act on the COIISCionsble .... not to reQqire• .ficia1 eiJect, Manning reported, ssys if we believe t!&gt;iB we beof $39,510 and a net income of budget· prior to April 1, the at least aome aemblance·of_per· in' Jess8ning the DUmber of
~sp·iri'::Jy.and
$756. Tbia , was 37.1 per cent · beginniog of the State's fiscal limal perfom_&gt;8I1&lt;18 by a college high acliOOl s'tudents.-'However, His forever family 8Dd receive
under the anticipated net in- year.
•
,facher."
the~ IIUIIIber·-of ··assaUlts· and
,,._ "''- ,,. of, ____ ..
come of $1,200.
Meanwhile lis the Senate
As a State senator, ·McGowan threats continusd to riae.
a new ......-nm 111e
"""'....,.
Overall, FSA noted, sales Professional Association is in earns $15,000 por year for his
Last 'lbundsy the months · pesos. , •
·
1
,., wereta"--~-11"~tsosnof~soled~ ulthety~~ ocofnegontraettiatinJw'tihts fathec· three-four month stint in Al· of incidents ·and 'worries came We're .Elocllold Abaut ~-.
•
1
~ '-""
.......auu
"'""'
\!!my.
to a bead. anltMamling aen\-a Tbia is what today's ·"Jesus
a_n d benefits were reto Gruba• ting out People'' are ao aciMd· ahoul
duced from ll&lt;ldP,ted figures by
D.....:~~~~,
::""'crisis~ recom- They .are~ this new
9.4 an4 7.1 per cent -'ive~
mending the hirinc of outside full . life · with Jesus and lbaY
ly. Other ~ were 5.4 per
ascurity· _apnts. The. 8taff is want to liel1 ._..._ what 1'18
cent above expectations, how- .
7\.r~~,]~-3
114.(}}.0'~
"nervous . .. ocared .. • and has dooe for them. Many hs¥e .
ever.
l \'~
1 l Y.l(
1 a
conslautly being haraaaad. ~ been puabers.and junkiea. Some
.
•
.
Mlllllling reported and be told acid--.m or ,iuic&amp;-freeks.
'Dnllrw-.'IC'th
_ ~
•
An undergraduate must now dergraduate Studiee Committee of stslf members qUitting be- Moat have bemllnvolved In the
.l'ta.lunOl.l..lf-'l"
have a- 2.3 overall 4fade point has been diacuasing it for three csuoe of the conditions.
polilica1 revolntion. . •·
average and-a 2.6 m. psychol- months now."
.
Tbli enlbe staff 8IQJIIOrtad
Noov; howevv, all liaw · a '
:.:..~ ~;l
ogy ·coWa.s. .10 become &amp; psy- .
Tbe di8cuasions_~wt_. Manning's ~Uia~Jrsis · of !be si~ ..........,.. danaminatiar in · the·
~
chology ~- • These new 8Jl' 'underpaduate complained ualion ..and· Gruber. iaaueol ;a~ Ir.onl J..,. Chri8t. -n.y 11ave
rules, adopted by the. Depart- " about cmwded lactures which "1 "miimo on &lt;the conditions to -the all _ , that cbup,' - etc.; .
mental Senate of Psychology, o~ little studellt-fscu1ty in- entire ·university.
are~ c:bMp l!ilbelitulador
were proposed by the Under- teraction.
This solution is being- sup- the filling ~_and ~' of ·
graduate Studiee Committee.
· eour- for DOri-majon will ported .by. Sinelkow-•because ~esus Cbrlst. ~ nMiiu:
• -•~'- be continued!"' people can have
Allocatinn of 92 graduate
.......: ...:., policy 18
"the~ aDd safety of thoae lions 8!ld &amp;y81.ema, '!'ill ullin;&gt;- .
fellowships for next year has . • '"' . - - - .,...,..u.u 8Jl opportunity to tlludy P"r.· wbo wish to use the Norton alialy fail without opiritual revbeen made· by the Graduate denimmediilts
~.!!!llyandenroafflledllclsm
· ~: chology without majoring in 1l facilities . . . . must be sal&amp;- olutibn becaUE .1111!11. just natScbool, Andrew Holt, associate chol ~-207 'I'ranlfer ~Is
Visiting"
•
uraJiy are out tq atiafy themdean, ~~
en~ the University this
"
..,w.,. first. We feel \WY '*this year's total of fall 1IIU8t alao meet the new reA foriner African civil aer- -&lt;;enos in the adminisln- :
186. The 92 fellowships come quirements. '
Vent wbo helped hia COW&gt;try tive .and educstion problems of Hoooev. the only noel ~
from a variety of f u n d i n I - An additional 25 stucienla win independenos will lie a _ forming new states.
that ~ any lastinlr ef.
~ are. from State will be accepted annually,~- yisifing profeaaor here for aix
Dei-~ alao took part. in feels 18 the chanp of mind and
~ 11101lle8, the remainder from the . ever, on the hssis of other en- Weeb. ·
the .,...,tioo of Ghana's fol'elgll heart that Jesus . PJ&lt;IIIIisecl to
· lnslitutionsl Funds Committee teriiL This poup is to inClude
..Michael Dei:Ansng, former .aervios, playing a I.ding role give us if - aa1t ltim iDio our
and NDEA and NSF grants.
students"from'~ti! pro- ilo!petary to- the · ..-nor-aen- in the -.b!Whnwlt ol the Min- lives. Without this, all o1Mr
Division of the felloonhips _gramo, fm!&gt;iln .and · disabled era1 of Ghana, will )ec!ure and iBtry of f'oreiln .Mairs. Most atll!lllpta are futile. •
8IDOIII fsculties was baaed on 8tudenta WliO can document conduct 'informal lllmiDar8 on .-tly, he ' - beml a -.ch
Tbia is our_,... Snmmwl
the peroantage of the total grad- abilities greater than thoae ilk African independence move- associate at the lnslituta oi · up in the s1opn, "8oouuioauate· Students each fsculty "!""' dlca~ by the two grade point menta tnm March 12 to ~ ~_-!th Studies in Lon- Spiritual Rewlution• .Is the
rolled in 1970. The faculties reqwremants.
23, aa part of the Black Studies don. - ,. .
.
answer to all of the qjrbooita~
dlstritlute their share of
Incresasd student intenolt in program. .
.
An ~ty 011 African cUI- and public prOblema- thllt
lellmnbipe .....,., the depart- psychology ·without -pany.AJJ a . 'civil ~t for twe, cdalllms 8Jldi foJ1dore, Dei· aaek to aoiYe. Spiritual R8MIII~
IIII!I1IL
-::fl
· mg funds to
tile ~ than a quarter 0111tury, Dei- ' ~~- publiohed -.a! tioo, -made pcaib1e ~·
The f8Uowahip8 are for $3,. ing staff fonied the ~t· Anang, 61, took part In and p~ hooks of postry and his- death and .............., of·~
000 ......a. with Arts and Letten! to CDilSicler this . altamative,- wi~·- ~in hiil fllric:a1 won.. notably Afrit;o is what ha8 giwn our~lliet
- ·
' --..19, Eclucstionsl Stud· sPoJ-men say. The decisiori C!I!UI'IIY. including ita ria8 from Sileolra, a ooJiectioD of poojmo; - · ·'lliid' -hur.
.. · d
.0 raise the
oolon,y ao
Gold 1'UJO l'oea of A/rU!a. a poetry ·
to
"tnth.
Sc:ieDc8 17, Natural Sciences - "not arrived at Jighlb;_ Dr. ·Coast DatiCIIl. •
cxi1lectian co-authooeil with hls one of the many
on
aDd M..._,.ticil 15, Health Jobn Bhra.:-;.::::,w~.=;::
Pl&lt;aal,lll63 to 1957, b e - - ' son; and GhtmtJ R_,.,.,.,, an campuo, s1pp in at'.the ~ 8clilllcM 10 .-.8ocial Sc:iences· man· m·
a . ~clbodor-of ~ · l1loloaricm llblch:.ol.the -.try or- ..U .8'l3828i .1111!1! iima. God and ~ 25.
in psycbology', Mid. '"lba Un-. momt and trainina. gathering from earliest tin:Mm to 1963.
be with yw!! ·
.

m

'L&lt;:l~ ~.a.ru.au.Jr8

i:J"

Jesus People _

8

::f

"!,!::"

the

=

.J::'':;

4

PSycholngy
2. .3 Now

All

...

fio:r

fu
. '.

- ties
6 F13cul

~from

Ex Diplomat· from Mrica

suhstann.::

!:.":d!.!: ~ :::l:.l:'

......m

!lit

mer-

~and~

oVerall&lt;~~

~t

fD:" know-~ ""

�••

1

· - 1 1,1911 .

125th Calendar
1f71
MARCH 1!1-17

APRIL 12·1&amp;

''Chomlcol Soparotiono (April 12-14)
ond "Envt"""'*\t'' (April 1!5-16)
J. c.Jvln Gldcllnp, Unlwrllty of Utah
ECOLOGY COl.l£GE SYMPOSIUM. ''T-

EXHIBrriONS

-Iciii-"~.Jeaae
~Ilfeld,
_ . 1 of the Unl)ed

iu,._, _

PUBLICATIONS .

APRIL 30

profe..or, biJ:..
tory, Roman lmporiiJ/Um in ,1M
Late Republic, publiahed aa a
~;'~ 8nd aJoo a Cor-

Dlt. lllNBT BADIAN,

na.

I.UO:S BUNN,

MAY 2
MAY &amp;

liuiltant pro-

~~~~~~;;..!'£:,.~
Menial Landacape;" E"'I!Uif Lit·
eTOI'y Hiotory.
DL AlmiUil G. CBYNS, uaociate
prof-.r, oociaJ welfare, "Dogma-

MAYU

~~~ &lt;t~~ya:r'~~te~

Peneverance and Openmindedneaa," Jount&lt;Jl for the
Sc~nli~ Study of •Reli4lion.
DR. CABL08 PEAL-DEIBB, associate
professor, · Spanish. "CromRole

-PERFORMANCES
LAUBZNCC BOGUS,

uailtant profes-

IOt, mUsic, ooloiat in "A Recilal of
Poems &amp;Dd Soop" by rontempor-

~~ Co~~~ Lili!!&amp;7:t!t

ist in "Cole P&lt;&gt;rter Night" witb
Buffalo Philharmonic; boat ...on
WBFO's ..W b a t'• New.'.' series
every Thuriday at 9 p.m.
LBO BMn', profeuor, music. 1'A
Recilal of Poems and Soop,"
Garrett Club, Bulfalo.
MURIEL WOLP, instructor, music,
opera lecture...demonstration at
Brock University.

~EES;ENTf.TIONS

uaociate
profeseor, pathology and SUSAN G.
TH.RASBBB, graduate student. ..The
Effect of Carbamylation on tbe
Cyto bilic Binding of -Antibody
to i\Tacropba~ea," Jnint Meeting
ot' the' Amencan Auociation of
Neuropatbologiata and' tlili-'·Qm. ·
adian Aaeociation of Neuropathologi,ts, Mon~
.JOAN PIBB, instructor, occupational tbe~ "M"""""""nt of tbe
Quadri-r;;;:-;c Patient in Occupa·
~oifoepital~p~~~ Memoriprofessor, Freuch,

;;.,~c ~:!!.~Yo,~ti:
Literature C i r c 1 e sympoaium,
Florida State University.

graduate

PA!'IIICU. HI&gt;WJI:LL,

MAY 14-15

~)Co~~";Stdfe.~·x;,~fJ::.

MAY 28

Btu·

,

7:00 p.m. - Social Hour • Hearthstone
Manor (cash bar)
8:00 p .m. - 125th Anniversary Foun·

:.=~·~de:=~o~, ~~i

tioru of Beluwiorolly -Oriented Po-

Utical RueCJTch on the Soviet
Union and E08tern ·Europe, The

SEPTEMBER

Free Preaa.

DR. NORMAN N . HOLLAND,

AWMNI DINNER-GANCE.
School of Monapment
34tll ANNUAL U/B ALUMNI OF THE
SCHOOL oF MEDICINE SPRING CUNIC.
Statler Hilton UNI,VERSITY OPEN HOUSE
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY AWMNI SPRING
C.UNIC DAY AND BANQUET.
Eucutlw Ramadl Inn
FOUNDER'S DAY
10:30 a.m. - &lt;:erwnony and unvelllnc
of Historical Plaque on alta of first
bulldlnc of the University - Main and
VlJ'Iinla
12:00 n~ecllcal Schoc&gt;lluncheon,
Buffalo Club
3:00 p.m. - Comerotone-layln&amp;. law
and Jurisprudence Bulldln&amp;. Amherst

Campus

melynck y Lorca: Variaciohes
aobre un mismo tema," Revue de
litterature com~e.
DR. Plt£DEIUC 1. PLERON, associate
profesaor,~litical science, "MO-

SEPTEMBER 30
OCTOBER

profea.

!i::'i... ~f~·s:~':!.Fs~

.

DR: stAXL£Y M. co~.

DB. II:EN&amp; GIRARD,

.

GEOLOCIICAi. SYMPOSIUM. "Our Envtron·
ment ± 125, et the CroaroedL"
FOSTER LECTUIIE SERIES

~~~

Film as Iconography," in Renai6-

i&lt;J11Ce of~~

Filp&lt;, Collier cB9o!&lt;o •. DR. GBORG .laG!BS,· iproteasOi; hi§'. ;
tory, D'euuehe ' Gtiicl.ticltUWiben-.
scha{t, Deutacber ..:r'asclwitbuch·
Verlag, Munich.
·
DR. CHANTAL .JENNINGS, visiting
aui8tant professor, French, "Lee

OCTOBER 5-11
OCTOBER
OCTOBER 20-23
OCTOBER
OCTOBER

..

~:nJ iR:v~~--;~~ .!':~·· The
~i.bf. Jlthixsll'. 'iinir..-.

DR.

f~r. piimo_ ~ ~- .

~-.~octouu,.polilical

IICieai:&gt;o. "Tbe

~.of

McNam-

~-~=.,.~~
eoid.._ of lbo International
Stadieo Aloociation, San .Juan,
Paettn Rico.
lliLIOCIU&amp;IIAY,~te=

-=:.....
=...:t
of~.

"Ref.,on~noda ~

lOt,

..,..;ty of Toronto.

=

- s--..

lliL . . _ IICIWCSIR,

Uni·

actinc c1Jair.

Italian &amp;Dd ·Porto-

"ln some departments, it is 8
few atudentB wh&lt;&gt; are frustrated
in their ~ttemptS I&lt;&gt; meet re-

Chicago P"""'; "Cute &amp;Dd Politi·

:=tL~~~o~~

Indian Politico, Orient)Longmana.

~~~\~:lil~A~tJf::

May Go
Mansions
'lican • ---'-lyman
.

M~ Review; · "Educa·
lion, Engliab Studiea, &amp;Dd Social

A Repub
has ' introduood ; t l o n tn
enjl tbe practioo &lt;&gt;f providing
&amp;Dd Ilemyotification of Au- "ltizurious homes" for Ed.uca~~:;,.=..~· New ~~t and SUNY
The measure, authored by
GRANTS
Edwyn E. Maaon, 113th DislliL WIOifUD lUTZ trict, would sell . tbe •"~vish
·
__..,...,
- . -• ..,. PIO-a·
status •3~
_......._,_.. and return
• -·· -__
.: N

~.,:!tiY~,n~:..

~n::=r~:'~~
~"'.o.J!'!:"ei,M~~ a
- - Ceatat for Studenta in

~ Litaratwe,

~~;:!~..J'.'B.
~in

l a t i n - . · .........

Clinical

Mocfk:!De. ·

RECOGNrriONS .
DOifAUI IOCIIOUI .

proto.or ut,

-D!!I" ~N by lbo joamal cnioted .a deoip 'of ..muarY norfmpl; N- Yen Ci9'.
~
r.:-rillo~~..;!:'
- - - - Cbilol.-'•
L. - · s-RtaL
._,,
~

~- of 'tile ,Ciidml

,1t&amp;'!Z!"
;.
-.r.a_......,._
N

'

~~~~

" " ~"-riilo,, , _ _

~.u.:....-~

:.-

·•

~

• ._,.,_. ...
&lt;7 wllli U.tal .-1tDt .............. with . ..,. lliolaD::a1 m.-to in tbo

- . . ')lellildlb; -

.- ·

\ .LL.\,; J .. J: \1' :...•t.•

will.

~ro=~~~"::tstnfu~

interns -not covered by a university-sponsored health program.

Inquiries should be addressed 1&lt;&gt; Miss Rina A. Pennaccbia,
drrectorof~tingandpla~

ment, The Urba n In sti tute,
2100 M Street, N.W., Wash·
ingt&lt;&gt;n, D .C., 20037. Telepbone:
(202) 223-1950.

NOTE

GSA Seeks Academic Gripes

~~~7~~
~~.­
~ ~·£J:~'tf:t..::~t
......... " " - · -t-profM&amp;Dd n!CIW on

tbe on-going reaearcb programs
of the Institute: Black Economic and P&lt;&gt;litical Development;
Inoome Distribution Simulation
Studies ; Housing; Income
Maintenance EJ:perimanta; lA·
bor Market Studies; Edueational Finance; Public Finance ;
Econometric Studies of Tran&amp;portation; Evaluation of Social
Programs; Studies of State and
Local Government Functions. The deadline for applicatioas,
is March 31. Criterie for seleotion include: personal rommitment I&lt;&gt; tbe ""lution &lt;&gt;f urban
problems; academic w&lt;&gt;rk relevant to tbe research programs
of the Insti tu te; acade mic
standing.
Students accepted for tbe
program will be paid $170 I&lt;&gt;
$200 per week. Transportati&lt;&gt;h
I&lt;&gt; the Institute will be pro'Vided . The Institute
also

DR. KJCB.ABL RAY, associate pro-

!;.~~~~=

AmaricD mDDe "at lllUiic, forum

"'&amp;.~~will ......X In

11\e following areas related I&lt;&gt; '

other faculties, schools and departments are now planning pro·
grams and symposia. These will be announced in the next
issue of the calendar. Groups are urged to call the Office of
the Vice President for University Relations to schedule their
dates and programs for the 125th Anniversary. The master
calendar will be kept In 186 Hayes Hall, Ext. 4501.

dent, bioiOI)'; lliL ROBDT 8. · ' feaoor, pography, ''The Location
aaoociate profeaoor, phyaiology; of United Statea Suboidiariea in
DR.. DAVID B. II:IS'Ia, ·a uiatant proSoutbem Ontario," in Geojraphical Approachu to Canad ian.
Problenu, Prentice-Hall of Can·
The Academic Affairs Com· quirements and in other deNuclear Power and tbe Environ- ada.
mittee of the Graduate Student partments, many,'' the GSA
ment," Sierra Club Meeting, Buf·
DL 108a'B &amp;IOOBL, Profeuor, Eng- Association (GSA ) has asked • rommittee says. "Most of us
faJo. '
•
liob, eight abort entriea on mod· all graduate sludents having would not know how I&lt;&gt; appeal
lliL . . . - , prof..or, hia·
em writen in World Book Ency- troubles "in making academic for a redress of academic grievclopedic.
.
·
progress towards their degrees" ances if we wanted tn. But it is
..,_____.__..• . American Hiotor· DR. DONALD B. 808ENTHAL, aMOci- tn contact them in the GSA our romm&lt;&gt;n problem tn work
Office, 215 Norton.
for clarification of appeals proIOf,· ~-..,

Urban Institute in
WllllhiniJtno, D. C~ a privaiB,
non-profit .-rdr CDOj)Oittion
devoted tn the stud)' of urban
problems, is ·curtentl)' recruitIng &lt;&amp;raduate studeats to participate in ita 19'71 Summer In-

brid&amp;e

·~rt ' r l:Jo'wi!wll"'"l'lll!'
Old Gl~ry : Cyde•.ind EPiCYCle;~

Engtub

Wutem Humanitie1 Review;
"Ransom's New Seluted Poems:·
Poetry.
DR. lORN D. MU.LIGAN, associate
profeaoor, biotory, "The Dark and
the Liaht Side of the River War,'"
Civil War Ti.mu IlltutraUd.

der's Day Banquet, He•rthstone Manor
DIVISI ON DF CONTINUING EDUCATION .
~
SYMPOSIUM,
"Towa rd An Open Un lve~."
125th ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT.
10:30 a.m., Rotary Field
UNIVERSITY RELATIONS SYMPOSIUM ' 'Communfattions"
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY SYMPOSIUM
COLLEGIATE ASSEMBLY SYMPOSIUM
C. P. Snow
·
SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY SYMPOSIUM
FENTON LECTURE SERIES
"Comprehensive Medical Care"
HEALTH RELATED PROFESSIONS
SYMPOSIUM
SLEE LECTURE • Recitals
DISTINGUISHED VISITING LECTURER
SERIE~acull)' of Natural Sdenceo &amp;
Mathematlca Professor Fred Hoyle,
F.R.S., director of Institute of llleoNt~
leal Astronomy, University of C.m·

UrbmUnit
Offers Jobs
For
Summer
The

&lt;:m.·oflliodoat u~· ~

....._

oodures University-wide." ·
In addition tn oeeking aut
students iri lfOuble, tbe com·
mittee asks that studenm "help
us gather information about appeals procedures. We are aerving as a center for ,graduate stu-

::.~~~a~~

standings f&lt;&gt;r whatever tea·
sons."
"Too often," tbe committee
says, "academic standards are

=

.!::.m~.,;:·anJ'~~

fusion both m
' tbe minds of
oommi- and e~uatnra: The
~ 'g~~~situation is even more confused
.,..._.._.. roun-. in the area 'of appM!s. It is no
~\.!:...
u:~
wonder students do not know
P ·
what their n,hta to appeal zeal.
since 1!H6· 88 ....e..tial' facili. ' ly consist of: often DO ODe else
ties witb ..,_ for public func. does either. · Nevertheless,
lions.
• • '
-there is a pawing..........,_ of
The Frank lloyd Wright-de- ~-. ~-_._. ..:..o.tB and ~•nv ~aiP*I
bouaew at l2S = t a · r . e ref;;;;;i~
.Jewett
· waa acguired ......... ...,student
t. In ......X·
by ~ State !"' fonnei U/8 i;;it:;' a bettat UDdanllandiDI
.President . ~ M._...,
of appM1s,- hoPe I&lt;&gt; piomole
It is occupiad by the b8tt.r definition of lllaDdarda
P&lt;-t
administration.
.• wbenMir -~ 8D -that ....
, 'l1lae bas bam 1111 of5cial cleat . - - are I'8CXIIInized ..
....... ... the fumm of the bDuaa. wall .. tbla_of the~-

'$'

.

--·--·

mpu'

. G.:.I ~ ..

t._Ut u • ·

t,

l! t ,

�· - 11, 1911

8

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
• Opon 1D public;
•Opon ....... -

_.,............-Ill -...r.

000pon ID .......... fll . lho
..
tho ....... .

MONDAY-15
m.K••: i..A Gt.J1811&amp; D'f ftNR
(1966, Alain Reonaio) . Reanaia'
masterwork about a contemporary
man'o atroqlo with the ~ty
for commitment. A prof.aional
revolutionary for 25 yearo,-Diego
(Y- Montend) ia a Spenioh

=:: f~e ~t1~~un~

t:w:"!t
'ti:! ~ty~00:.!
and thia film ia Diego's olnlggle

with re-evaluation of biudelf and
his role. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8
p.m., !iee.
PATBOLOOY LllC'l'UiliC : Dr. R. F .
Barth, asaociate professor, Department of Pathol~ and On-

~B~mAN&amp;

...a.iraon urirva::

Dr. Jimmie HolboiiJ, IIUJI.UI DY·

!:."!f"b~;.:'!!Jco~~~

aram.
p.m.

62 reooiviajr locatioaa, 2
.

PATHOLOGY LllC'l'UiliC: Dr. G.

C.

~~~~!,ofoti:,~

ledo, QUANTITATIVII .I L &amp; C T R 0 N
MICBOSOOPS At1TOilADIOGBAPHY AND
I'I'S APPLICA-TION TO KOUICtJLAK

CYTOLOGY, B156 Bell Plant,11 p.m._
P&lt;&gt;REIGN STUDENT ""AlliS cons
Botlll 0 : 10 Townsend Hall, 3: 305: 30 p.m.
POlJTlCAL SCIENCE OOILOQOIUII•:

~"!~n~k{\",;;~ ~~:

M~~ ~':~~L~~~

EXHIBITS

gan- and co-author of .everal

8 ahow
of paintings by Michael Sherman,
Center Lounge Gallery, Norton

LIB J:NPANft DU P.uu.DIB :

Landmark Boob on votinc be-

JC SERUM INDUCED ENHANCEMENT
or THJ: IMMUN&amp; RESPONSE TO TYPE

havior, THJ: BO~ OP TBZ IIOONOKY

Coun·
trieo with Mature Party Syate~)' Conference Room. 4238
Ridge Lea. 3: 30 p.m.
GBOLOOICAL SYXPQSIUM.•: J o h n

W PNJ:UMOCOCCAL POLY8ACCIIAIUD&amp;#

IN

213 Capen, 3 p.m:
GIIOLOGICAL SYMPOSIUM•. sponsor·

ed by the U / B Geolo~ Society,
with support of the Student A.- ~

POUTICA.L . CHANG&amp;

(in

~:fin~~ ~-o~";,

March 16, 7-10 p.m.
Shennan, a student artist. offoro "special thanb to my teacher
Seymour Dnu:nlevitcll and to Andrew Holt" of the Graduate
School. Hi!! "manifesto"' fo·r the
show ia poetic JU&gt;d.. enda -with
the8e line&amp; from Roethke: "knowing I am not a ~yet I dare
to beat my ~gains! the
immense emptineea of tbinp."

=:.n ~ -li:fara~:J!!~ ~:~nw-::;~en:=.r·N'!;

York State, WATD ·a:sotJaCI:B AND
JUNAGDmHT, With a color film.
"Little Rive!",': 148 ~efendorf,

in. connection with the lJniverlity'a 126th Ann.ivenary celebralion. M. Kin&gt;: Hubbert, reoearch
' pophyaiciat, U.S. Geolociral Survey, MAN'S COHQUJ:BT OP ENBIIGY:

~ p:m.
.
,.
OOHPUTING
tJ8D •samca
BDO:NAR • DaVe Grzankowaki. in-

cmiDa

ITS BCOLOOIC.U. AND BUKAN CON-

otructor: PLOTTING, Room 10, 4288
Rid__p Lea, 7-9 p.m.
Thia aeminar 11 an introduction
to the CALCOMP 470 off-line plotting eyetem with a description of
the 6400
IUbroutinel and
their UB&amp;ge. Some consideration
will be P""" to basic plottinc
techriiquet such u rotation of
am and pen movement optimiza?on. So~ .e~tience in rolmlAN
18 prerequwte.. ~ olfe~ on
Man:h 24.
GEiilli(AN PILK•: 3 NOVEMBIB, 1918

IIIIIUKNCZS, 140 Capen, 8:30 p.m.

. Thio 1B the fint m ~ ~Y.
'81I-l~ture senee- entitled. Our

En"'"?,nme~t±l25, At T'!e ~roads, !!'hich will.~ve. mto . the
presen.~ abnormal penod
h~man history and the cultural dilemma ~ by a r e t !' r n to
~ormalcy, ~ need fo-; m~~tiona! and regtonal cooperation m

--- . -

of

lowed by an Oneg Shabbat. Hillel
HoU88, 8 p.m.
BOBPITAL MANAGaiiAL AND BUPJIB.VIBOtY OCVI:LOI'Jrl&amp;NT LKCTUitZ:

IN'IaNA'I10NAL POLK. DANCING:

Richard· W. Muoc:atello, Kenneth
Shavalier, Je.mea Wynne, WHAT
DID YOU BAY? OOJOCUNICA.TE?,

PSYCIDC DISCOVERD:S 8&amp;BIND THE

1:30 p.m.

r:n blc&amp;~~. ~::~e~, ~~

~ 6"/ :.:~~"3.:~ =~e:t~n:~~.b~:

free-form ~U·
nication for penonality growth,
.., Fillmore Room, 3-6 p.m.
PBYBICS COLLOQUIUM: Dr. R. Davi., Jr., Bro okhaven National
Laboratorieo, Upton, L .l., TID:
PSYCBOMAT... *:

eta at Norton Boz Office.

Shimon Amdur, research associate, chemistry, OSOMETIUC MEAS-

SENIOR ReCITAL•: Michael Collier,

UBEMENTS OF WATER VAPOR PB£S..
BUBil LOWDING IN VERY DU.UTE
SOLUTIONS AND ITS APPLICATION IN
PBI:PABATION OF MEMBBAN£8 FOR

8 : 30 p.m., free.

Room 29, 4248
4 p.m. Refreohmenl!l,

DEBAi:..INATION,

Ridge Lea.
3:30 p.m.

Dr. David H. Greegor, DETrJCTION

Dr. Marvin Zelen, prostatistics.,

BCIUTUB&amp; l:'l" DANDY8ME DE BALZAC

~"£,~f:nd~~e tO~t required,

'l'El£PBONJ:

LECTURE:

MON RESPIRATORY DISEASES, IMPLI·

:~NbyUG~~~{=~Bw~:
gram, 62 receiving locations, 10

a.m.

BEMIN AR:

Dr.

. ~~ of~=::ns~g~:

TION OP THE ACTIVE SITE OF DNA

POLYXEIWIE, G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
(

FILM* : BONNIE AND CLYDE, spon-

.aored by CommwUty Action
Corpo, 140 Capen, 6, 8 and 10
p.m., donation $.75.
PILK* *: THE MAN WHO

REASON. second in a series of ei.z:
meetinp on the theoretical and

PROBABILITY MODELS FROM EVERYDAY lJFE AND SCIENCE, no previous

coune for faculty and gmduate

t.IJ:8 ( 1968

p.m. ·.sl'J4itosluM• : Charles
H .V. Ebert, profeooor and cbairpum, !JI B Department of Geography and actinc dean, Undergraduate Studies,' BOOM POll BOW
MANY M 0 R B?, 1-46 Diefendorf,
8:15 p.m.

FILM••;

NORTH

BY

NORTHWEST

(1959, Alfred Hitcllcock). The
title is from Hamlet's ..I am but
mad north-northwest . . .;.. the
plot is improbable, the action
moves all over the country. It is
amusing Hitchcock with tots of

AWn Robbe-Grillot) . Robbe-Grii-

Jet eayo, "It has a lot of humor.
Booidao I find my work in pneral
wry funny. In The Man Who
~. there ia nothing to under-

=r~ is~~J.:! :-! ~der:.

Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
ELLY AMELING: soprano, works by
M o z a r t, Faure, Debussy and
Schubert. Baird, 8:30 p.m. Gen-

Paceo, U / B Department of Geological Sciences and former chief
0

m! ~n';,i=~~ec~ ~

logical Survey of Czechoslovakia,
ENVIRONMKNTAL P R 0 B L EM 8 IN
eral adm.is8ion $3.00; faculty and , CZIICH08LOVAKL\, 148 Diefendorf,
stafF $2.00; studenl!l $LOO.
3 p.m.
Elly Ameling, Dutcll soprano
and the recent sensation of the GllOLOGICAL BYMPOSIUM..• : Grover

~yle::!,i:OO:=~!tgiso1
~~~C.::C-t,th~w';,"J'~th"'J::Tr Health,
GllOLOOIC.U. IONVIBONMElml

.:d

Brahma-lied.er. Her awards have
inoludea the Ediaon Prise the
Grand Prix du Disque. and the
:Z.:1cn~ Deutachen Scballplat-

~:~x:F;t. cr.:.;'\'!.':

IIIIIDd. blrt "to tead That ia to•aay ' ~lark,~.,.., Faculty Club, Har... t the 111m, like the nOYei, de- nman Library, 8:30 p.m.
• Jlle.ately r.ejecto pJycholOIJ'."
1(1: .Diol'eDdait', 8 p.m., free.
. ....,.. _ , . . .anao: Dr. Juotia lfolmlla,' IIAI'oa nwiBH.III&amp;AIJ
, . ~ Df ftlll - · fol-

Gren-

studies at the Univenity of
oble; accommodation in FreQch
homes; air charter tranopollhtion; available to .opbomora,
junion aod eenioft at a ooet of
$850/ oemeoter pluo· tuilion. o-1line: March 15; appticatio111 in
~saP-':~t. 21~ Crooby

GEOLOOICAL

GEOLOGICAL .SYMPOSWM•: Tomas

!iu~:d.~£'~~

=~:~S:..~r G!ri:~L!i

depaitmenl 334 Hayes, 8-10:30

p.m., donation $.75.

brilliant recitals and appearances
with major orch88traa. She bas
recorded eome so·albums, ranginc
bi&gt;m Bach cantetaa and oratorios

for

~rc:r:.;w~:=.t.~~

. THURSDAY-IS

~
~· 140 Ca- 8. 15 p.m.

BNVmOmUNTAL 'l'llAIZ

AND

UNTVIBSITY OP BALAIUNCA., SPAIN,
for
further information coutact

Participants:. include .. ten of

Dr. Leon ~ J&gt;opuf.

;!..:.s~~~~t

Dis. Walter C. Alvarez, J. Am;;ld
Bargen, Henry L. BoCkus, Ruo8ell S . Boles, Sr., B u rrill B.

5282.

~b.r.r~r :al~~"'i!!i:;,

L&amp;BANON,

contact
Overoeaa Academic~ International Studies, 881-66M.
UNTVIBSITY OP NKZ, I'ILlNQI,

Katz.

fOr

further information contact alllce
at 107"'To..- Hall, 881-1
or 4942.

PHARMACJBTS TEiEPBoN£ l&amp;"TtJBI::
Dr. Albert Wertheimer, NATIONAL
HEALTH INSUitA.NCZ AND lT8 IIIIYACT
ON PHA&amp;JrllACY, spomored by Re-

BUPPALO AU.\ CONIIOKTIUII&gt;OM :111-

NOIUt'r OBOUP _ , _ , . will oPoo·
eor a ten-week c:ouroe on - the

.~nal Medical P~ 62 re-

CJ:o~t!:na16at:"~

cetvmg Jocatione, 11 . 39 a.m. and
lO

.

aaim.
for further iilformation.
Office Of the Director,

AM181CAN UNTVIBSITY OJ'

~~=~~~~~
. liam F . Lipp and Leonard A.

bueineee adminiatn.tion. P808- ":
niCT8 .F08 IICONOIO.C OOOISU.TION '
IN TID: KlllOU: IWIT, 231 N orton,
8 p.m. AU are invited.
.

EbeDa,

5554.

~ ~~d:~i~t!~!:t oT-~

POll PLANNING, 148- DiefendQrf,

Sn.roaru..•. Richard
us Geol.,.;cai Suney

~t.~T.~~-~

in honor of A. H. _Aaron,
M .D ., sponsored by the Propam
in Continuing Medical Education,
Statler Hilton Hotel, .Buffalo.

OLOG~:

4:30 p.m.
OONPLIC!' AND CBANQJ: IN !'HI:
M:IDDY &amp;AST •: apoMOred by Hillel, Dr. Lee Preoton, profeooor,

GmOI.OOICOL

UNTVIBSITY OP P.UU.U., ITALY, fo&amp;:
further information, Office of the

A DAY IN CUNICAL GAS'!BQI:NTIIl-

=;
b~~NU!m~:T~ :ron~ h:ai&amp;; d!! :£~~~~~47
Corps, 140 Capen,' 6, 8 and 10 Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p.nL, free.
BALKAN F-OLK DANCING:

Louis Bertucelli, Michel Drach
and Marie-JOIN\ Nal Showinga
through March 1~. Conference
Theatre. students $.50, non-etudenta $1.00. Conauit Norton Ticket Office
times..

f~1-hew:~~~~ ~~~

noon,

OP

.

~:r::·1:::l:;;: ·"i~"~
Terre," "Le Samourai " "L'Eden
et AprM;" in penon will be Jean-

Dr.

Lionel Abel, profeooor, Engliah.

=

Dr. Almen L. Barron and Dr.
Erika Bruck, I:TIOLOGY OF COM-

BIOCHEMISTRY

EXAMPIZS

of

8.UlTRB' B CIUTIQU&amp; OP DIAU:C11CAL

SATURDAX-13
INAR•:

FRIDAY-:-12

.J&amp;AN PAUL 8ARTD UDCTUD:

ical Program, 62 receiving locations, 11:30 a.m.
poems and eonga by
contemporary composers and poel!l, Leo Smit, piano, with Sylvia
Dimizi.ani, soprano; Warren Hoffer, tenor;_ Laurence Bogue, baritone. Baird. 12
free.
BllCITAL •:

·

fessor,

PEDL\TRJCB

n&amp;'I'[VAL*: SUNYAB F=ch Department, UUAB,
and the Office of French Film
present a French Gala-&lt;l look
at the art
the French cinema
~~,;:;,;:•by~ OJ.::...del!'J. as eeen in the worb of outat&amp;ndin coc:iperalion rwith tbe Student . ing filinmakero. Filma to be shown
include:
"M
Comme Mathieu,"
Asoociation. 233 Norton, 8 p.m.
PUNCH PILl(

which treata the conllicta between
nationalities in the Hapeburg Em·

PHYSICIANS 'IZLEPRONB t&amp;ICTUU:

PROBABILITY AND 8TATlSTIC8 SEM-

NOTICES

v:&gt;-~or~~r·~

TUESDAY-16

he~- :::a~ b~~~~ena:~:

PBENCH .LBC'I'UBE• : Dr. R o g e r
Kempf, continuing the series on
A BAUDaJdlll:, 22 Foster, 8 p.m .
Continueo through the semester.

tance of eolo ·cal input into eoluti01111 of i:Sth problema; and
the spectre of the Malthusian
Millenni"{D.

OF S~T BOWEL CANCI:B BY MULTIPL&amp; OCCULT BLOOD (S'I'OOL) TI'ST·
lNG, sponsored by Regional Med-

book by the same name. Wick
Campus Center, Rosary Hill College, 8: 15 p.m.
DANCE•: L'HlSTOIRE -DU BOLDAT, the
Toronto Dance Theatre directed
by Martin BrenzeU, sponsored by
8IWlCH FOR 80LAB NEimuNOS, 111
Office of "Cultural AfFain and
Hochstetler, 4 p.m. Refreobmenta, · UUAB Drama Committee, Dom112 Hocbstetter, 3:30 p.m.
us, 1695 Elmwood, 8:30 p.m., tick-

T'HJX)BETICAL BIOLOGY SEXINAR: Dr.

plotter

:;e~..:!~;d~o=~

ln-

atruc:tion ~ basic 1te~ during
firBt hour. SO Diefendorf Anue•.
8 p.m.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS

p.m.

stoa

Sl, lieginning March 1L· ~
Moyer
Billralo
'tliiUch
apo111.0red. bl' Committee fbr Mid- will teach the ,-.
die Eaatern..!ltudieo, with Dr. Wal::-- meet.from 7 to 9 p.m.
!""&gt;' ~· t
ter..wc,:&gt;;,ti~~ !b!"~
$6. .
~'T-1:- ,
Center for Middle
"'
Studieo, Univenity o1. Cbiao&amp;o•
Room 29, 4224 Ridce Lea. s·p.m. INTERVIEWS TID: FVTtllll: OP .umuCAN POUCY
IN TtJaBZY. 'AND PDsu.•: · lect:we

·'£:ru.,

of

-m

..::='"

17
- WEDNESDAY
-'-'-'="'-'= == =,.---'"'-~~S..::~:. =-.c::.-r:;·~ ,~ --~-c,u~mc-•Deth NeloaD, ma

_,~ ""

Fillmore RooiD, 3-6 p.m.

-

(-=~- 1, .!!1}

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

VOL 2 · NO. 23-

MARCH 4, 1971

Amherst-MaiD St. Use Plan
Not Yet Firm, Ketter Says

�ltl-. 4, 1971

2

Cbanges, Apathy~
S.Ns '71-72 Elections
paying people for doing noth.
ing."
Student governments in State
University schools are authorized by their chief executives,
in this case, President Ketter,
and Jackson believes U/ B's
Student Association "has shown
itself to be impotent. It's only
done what it was created to do
-nothing."
"There's a large difference
between what people say they're
gonna do, and what actually
gets done. The only case in
which I would • make an endorsement is if some party or
Only 100 signatures (of day- individual discovers a viable
time undergraduates) are need- means of effecting student
ed for a place on this year's power."
ballot. Five hundred was the Independents Hurt .
old figure. Only two sheets
The candidates most hurt by
with 50 signature spaces each the endorsement withdrawal
are available to candidates. will be independents who often
Unlimited sheets used to be depend on the papers' support
given out. The regulations for votes. SA elections rules
were changed so that each
limit the amount of
, .... IINf.r-. clrnM ~ (and *'P) .. U. Norton FounUin.
candidate has to do his own don't
money that can be spent on an
soliciting of signatures. He election,
candidates running
can no longer hand out signa- on party so
tickets
can
pool
their
ture sheets to be circulated
for him by friends. "This way,'' resources.
about a year and a half ago. representatives then caucused
The strength of party lines (continued from page I , coL 3)
explains Mrs. Mar~ Palisano,
In September, Ketter said, Ter- for 20 m i n u t e s with some
SA office manager, "voters get was shown by last year's elec- new and replacement instruc- rett came to him wi tb the An- groups electing representatives
to talk to the cancidates and tion. The party headed by tional positions to minority nual Report, along with an- at this time and others setting
Mark Huddleston, the eventual group members. The minority
get to know them."
of his intention to up another meeting time: ( For
winner, won every spot except groups used to meet these con- nouncement
• More Time fOf" campalgnlnc
leave the University. After ac- the list of members of ·the Exone.
ran the traditional ditions have been defined by cepting Terrett's offerings, Ket- ecutive...Committee, see separate
Besides, adds John Charles, race,"" Mark
explains
Charles,
who
the Committee on Minority ter said he read the report
story.)
SA second vice president and
Faculty-Staff Recruitment, as :'changed 30 or 40 words,'' sent
election chairman, reducing the ran on Huddleston's ticket.
Last year's elections in the blacks, Puerto Ricans, Ameri- Jt to the provosts and several New C.Jendar
number of required signatures
A presentation · of the new
faculty members for comments.
makes it "easier for a candidate midst of spring disturbanoes can Indians and Chicanos.
From this group, the president calendar concept was given by
to run." Not that he thinks and with student paper endorse- Tenure '
James
Blackhurst, director of
ments
drew
about
1,500
voters,
500 is a prohibitive figure got one negative · reply from a
The president also asked the provos t .and "Feveral violent re- summer sessions, following the
very few, if any, candidates approximately 15 per cent of Senate
to
consider
the
matter
caucusing.
The concept would
all
e
I
i
g
i
b
I
e
undergraduates.
plies" from the faculty memaren't able to raise that amount
tenure, noting that the Uni- bers. He nexl discussed the · organize ·the scbool year into
---but candidates can now spend Charles isn't sure how the of
versity
has no written position matter with University attorthree
18-week
semes'ters. Under
papers'
non-involvement
and
more time on in-depth campaigning, platform-making, fly- the political stillness of the on the matter. He pointed out ney John Leach, who advised this method, the year .would~
campus this year will affect the that 70 per cent of the total him to submit jt •.. Afte..-sending : then stal&gt;t earlierl'in..Se~r
er-diatributin&amp;, etc...
faculty are tenured, ranging 1t t9 Albany in -OctoPer, Ketter ana · !J1!i: fi.' l't. seiriestA.r ;. w&lt;iuld
tlmiout.
·
One Post Dropped
"It's not the student mental- from 32 per cent to 94 per cent didn't hear about the report end at ChnstrilaS. .'J'he" second
The internstional student
in
different departments. There
would .begin in Janaffairs coordinator post, now ity to vote. They think elec- is no University ruling, how- again until a week or two be- · semester
IU!ry and end ·early in May,
beld .by Edgar .Rojas, is• being tions have· little relevance to ever, on the percentage which fore his Inaugural when "two w1th
the
summer
semester run·
dropped. Fore i g n students, life ·on campU.s." He would like ""!' be tenured at one time, he students came and asked me ning from May to
August.
about it." At this time, he resays Charles, make up "a small to see 5,000 students vote, sa1d.
A
percentage
which
has
Blackhurst
also
discussed
a secminority (less than two per W?uld be happy with 2,000, but been suggested to Ketter was fused to release the report but ond part of the concept which
cent) of this University. It will probably have to settle for 75 per cent; bowever, he said further consultation with his would
es~!!blish
two
eight-week
caw;ed him to print the
was a position without ·a am- less.
he is asking departmental lawyers
sessaons sunulta.neously w i t h
report without any oomments, each
stituency." Charles adds, howchairmen, provosts, and the as
semester, enabling faculty
a report of the previous ad- and students
ever, "we can see the need for
Faculty Senate to address minishl!t.ion.
to decide whether
a minority affairs coordinator."
themselves to this matter.
to teach or take an intense
SA's Elections Committee
After Ketter's report, the Sen- eight-week course or a ··longer
Another. aspect of the tenure
considered eliminating the stusituation, the president pointed ate _proceeded to other points Hl--week one. ( For a more comdent rights coordinator, or
out, ill U / B's violation of the on 1ts agenda. Dr. William plete description of the'"new
making it an appointed office
Board of Trustees' ruling that Bsumer, chairman, asked the concept, see the RepOrter, Jan-"it requires a great deal of
the position of lecturer is a members for.suggestions bn the uary 14.)
oompetence in that area," says
The membership of the new qua)ified tiUe and that time in best day to hold meetings, but
The~;;,· poinis of-discussion .
Charles-but decided not to.
Executive Committee of the this position ~cannot apply to- the group was unable to reach
National student affairs co- Faculty Senste was announced ward . tenure. Tnis . must be a consensus. On the basis of about . the concept" Were. its .fiordinator and new students Monday.
votes on the best days, Baumer nancial implications and -the
corrected, the president said.
affairs coordinator were also on
The officers are William
Ketter expressed . alarm at decided to scatter the two re- avail!&gt;bility of reSources. The
the cbopping block, but were Baumer, chairman, Thomas reports that "segments of the ~ining meelings of the group Senste was concerned about the
spared. Two new student afthis year and suggested that implementation cost and aboUt
. w_illiam faculty" felt his inauguoal ad- Thursday
fairs coordinators are elected ~r,secreparliarnen~·antardl&amp;Il
and F r i d a y after- whether . there are enough labdress signaled the end of reoratories and support .facilities
-&lt;m upperclassman in spring,
noons
would be most likely.
The representatives from the search · at U/ 8. ~'This is the
to run the University all year .
and a freshman, in fall. "'The
State SUNY Senste are: Mar- ~t u:mg from my mind,'' Executive Comm~
long. Some questiOned the efElections Committee felt it vjn
F .e I d man, Psychology; he . said. 'I· am not sounding
was an overlap," explains CharThe nert problero was bow fect the concept would have em
George Hochlield, English;-An- ·the death knell for research."
les, "two~ple were doing drew Holt, ·Graduate Scbool· He did inllicate, bowever, that to apportion the membership of teaching a course. Still others
the same · .""
the Executive Committee. After were worried about faculty cohesion in a . situatiOn under
Tbese
ges weren't enact- and Albert Rekate, Medicine. ' he is "co~ to ·teaching," several formulas ·were discussed
Representatives from Arts and that. this IS a ''very imw!U&lt;;b ~c;u,lty. ~uld bl. on cam-."
ed, says Charles, "because peo- and
Letters are Thomas Con· portant part of the University." the group unanimously pasaeci pus at staggered intervals.
ple thought we were going too
a
proposal
by
Dr.
Donald
Renfast without considering the nolly, English; and Bruce Jack- He hinted at a change in the nie in which faculties with 0The Senste voted 1o send;lhli .
son, English. Health Sciences way teaching was evaluated
total effects."
150 members have one repre- calendar concept · tiu:k to .tJiie
The position of student ac- members are Wayne Anderson, saying he is workinlk "on a sentative, thoee ·with 150-299 Executive .Committee - for ·furMedicinal
·
Chemistry;
Sylvia
draft
of
1t
situation
which
will
tivities coordinator will be on
n:w&gt;mbers have two representa- ther consideration, with !special ·
the ballot for the first time Hart. Nuraing; and James P. ~ further than we have gone tives, and thoee with more than consideration to the- questions
111 ihe past."
March 16 and 17. The new post Nolan, Medicine.
300 have three representatives
raised at the meeting. _
will overlook the activities and
The rep,_,tative from Edu- Annual 111oport . • .
This .WOI!III. increase the mem:
budgets of all the clubs (almost cational Studies is Gilbert ·
After completing his formal . ~1-q(,Ulft , ~tive , Com­
80) ~ting SA funds.
Moore, Counselor Education,. ~.rt, the president ~ --•--~ ~lml~"l!r.!""'~l:ll!.lt )1!11':!1&lt;!.
and~ and ·Applied · •.....,..
--"""""
NoElis John Mediae, En- to COIIJIDI!IIt on ·the Annual Re- f rth . ;-~ . , ~ .set
Two of the organizations Sciences•
gineering ScieiM».
port. '"J'bere is 8 great mis- ~:!t_
· By - . 8aUIJII!r
funded by the Student Associ• .understanding as to bow An·
Courtesy ~ of cilia 'by .
ation aren't playing their usual
The repr-.taliw from Law nual Reports are prep8red."
The chair then ruled that the Maintenance Department,
part in elections this year; and ~~ is Robert Kette&lt; said, explaining that he elections for t h e s e positions
for ~ purpose of C,ing
.,,_ and TM Spectrum both Fleming, ,tJniwrsity Advocate. did not write the report-"It w o u I d be held i.mmeiliately
tinhaw dec:icled not to endorse Re_preaentiltiWIB from Natural doesn't match my style at all " This rutin was c::ballenged anci parking Ioiii, is being ·
amdldatee. "What have they Sciences and Mathematics are: • This · SUJilllll!&lt;, . the · presiru..:.t ~by the body. In- ued, Robert E. Hunt, cba1nnan
of
the
TraJ6c
Control
Advillary
doae?" aaka .I im Brennan, Stanley Bn"*'!nstein, Cbemis- said, tbe central SUNY admin- stead, theY passed a motion by
~; and M8.l'Vlll Zeleo, Stati&amp;- istration. had specifically reipctrum edltor-in-dlief.
Dr.. ;Jacob Hyman that all· ae- Committee, bas 8IUIIIUIIOBIL
The ~ II1IJilbers •
MOre J.cboo, supervising ti_cs. ~tatiWIB from So- quested an annual report sinci!" Jec:tions WOUld haw to be in by
editor ol f!tU, continues, "I ¥ Sciences and Adminl&amp;lia- they had not received one since
CUll which """" to be· moved
lion are: Lee Preston, Manqe- ·the end ol the Fumas admindon't 1111,)'0118 doing anyand the accamJI'III.)'ina time and
thirur dilferant from what they ment; Dean Pruitt, 1'8ycholoty; istratioa. · Former J&gt;r,oident members anytime b e - the .·involved ....... ·it 1m- .
did last year which was noth- and Emst Thompeon, ' Speeeb "Martin Meyenoa had hired Wem-day . "*'ting · and · the ~ to continue tbla .rv· ·
• Mr. Dulany Terrett ali a writer Friday ~ The . faculty. we, - Hunt laid..
• ·. · ..1 don't the point of Communication. •
By STEVE LIPMAN
The election campaign for
1971-72 Student Association
officers is in full swing tllis
week - with altered election
procedures, different offices, and
wilhout the endorsement of
candidates by both student
papers.
Petitions for all offices were
available starting Monday in
the SA Office, Norton 205.
They are to be returned there
nert Wednesday by 5 p.m. One
half-bour later there will be a
:H:t;.t_"ry ~ting of all CBl1;

New.Faeulty Senate Hears Ketter-

.

New &amp;nate
Exec Group
!sElected

still ~-Parlring·

Now Ticlreted _; .

~~vo~:tJ!:

:,-ms.

..i

�GREPolrrE~

MM:h 4, 1911

Mankind at the Crossroads iS Topic
For 3-Day_U/B Geologi~ SympOsium
The present "abnormal" period of human history and the
cultural dilemma posed by a
return to normalcy;" the ~
for intemational and regional
, cooperation in the management
and deW!oprnent of natural reSOW'Cll!6; the importance of ..,.,.
locical input into solutions of
'-lth problems; and ·t he specIre of the Malthusian Millenniwq. -~'Dieae - llle among themes to
-~. aciopld!lcf at a three-day cam::,~cal symposium this
Entit!ed "Our Environment,
±125, At The Croosroads," the
symposium will be held March
15, 16 and 17, under sponsorship of the U/B Geolocical-&amp;ciety, with the support of the
Student Association and· the
geography fraternity. Gamma
Theta Upsilon. Flrst Ann- r y E...,t
The event is the first of the
professional and academic symposia planned for the University's 125th Annivel118ry year.
Speakers will include M.
King Hubbert, research geo.
physicist, U.S. Geological Survey;. Tomas Paoes, former chief
geologj.st, · ~try of the
Life Environment Project, Geological. Survey of Czechoslovakia; Grover Emrich, environmental geologist, Pennsylvania Department ·of Health; Richard
Ebens, geochemist, U.S. Geological Survey; John McMabon, regional engineer, Division
of Water Resouroes, New York
State; and Charles H . V. Ebert,
profeasor and chairman of the
U / B Department of Geography
and acting deaJ!, Undertp11Ciuate

Slate~...fol..u'in(at"'M&gt;Jo

v,,-~
-u"
tua1 advances in human history."

Tuesct.oy, March 16

3 p.m., "Environmental Frob!ems in· Czechoslovakia: The
Geologist's Role," Tomas Paces, 148 Diefendorf.
Mr. Paces, now a faculty
member in U ; B's Department
of Geological Sciences, was educated at the Technicai.School
of Geology and Charles University in Prague. He also holds
an M.S. from Stanford.
He will cover eiJorts of Czech
geologists to solve environmental problems, ~ch aa depletion
of natural raw rna teria·ls resources ; disposal of s olid
wastes; protection of .surface
and ground water; and the effects of industry on soil quality.
"Increased and closer international cooperation," he feels
"should heir . to s horten the
time neede&lt; to solve the accumulated .&gt;acklof of environlllf!ntal pr blems.'·
4:30 p.· ' ·• "Geological En viStUdies. 1r.....
'
• ' • • · ' ro~tf for..Planning," Grover
'nie''s~ltuhi •-fdr ~ - free Emrich, 148 Diefendorf.
· ·p)ibllc''eYeoilf.S'·il; as ·foll&lt;iW!i : ··:·· .1H/Yo p.m,; ·" Environments!
M-.y, Morch 15'
.
· ·.
Trace Eleinents and Health,"
8:15 p.m., " Man's Conquest Richard Ebens, 140 Capen.
of Energy: Its Ecologi""l and
Holding the Ph..D. from the
Human Conseq u ences." M . University of Wyoming, Ebens
King Hubbert, BuUer Auditor- has taught at Emory Univerium, 140 Capen.
sity and has conducted geologiMr. Hubbert, who holds the cal research in Wyoming, GearPh.D. in geology and geophys- gia and Missouri. He will preics from the University of Chi- sent findings from studies now
cago, has tsught at Stanford in progress to determine
and Jcihns Hopkins . He has amounts of trace elements in
done .. research on geophysical soil and bedrock s u-rface s
pi-qel'l'l#ng for oil and natural throughout the United States.
"With knowledge of this progas, -~ ..p&gt;echanics of geological structures and the human vided by earth scientists," he
and ecological implications pf says, and · Jlll accompapying
the exploitation of world min- knowledge of ·"minimum needs
era! and ener~ resources. He and; or toxic levels of trace elewas a member -at the Commit. ments in -animals- including
·tee·on Natural~ of the humans- provided by health
National Academy 'of Sciences scientists, an understanding of
advisory to Preoident Kennedy some of tbe causes of geograand a meinber of the Commit- phically related diseases may
tee on Resources and Man of be achieved." This, Eben says,
the 'National Academy of Sci- "serves as an e x amp I e of
ences - National 'Research the necessary input from geoloCoUnci.l. · · ·
gists before solutions can be
His """""'tation will S)lbmit found to apparently non-goothe theory that the period of 1 oems~ical
_ .. · environmental probrapid population and industrial
~ that has prevailed durWod-y, Morch 17
mg the last centu{y or two is
4 p.m., "Water ReSources and
"actwlll::f the most abn o rmal Management," (with a color
phase
human history."
film, "LitUe Rivers,") John
. The era, Hubbert holds, "rep- McMahon, 146 Diefendorf.
._ts·tbut a brief transitional
A graduate of the U ;B
episode between two very much M.B.A. program who holds an
1 - periods, each character- M.S. in engineering from the
ized by a rats of c:banp so slow University of Michigan, Meas to be regarded -tially as Mahon is a (i.,.,._a professiona period of non-powtli" ..
al ""'ineer. He ~ddi.Jcuas the
Hubbert feels "It is pe.nidc)si- · deveJoPil!liftt. and ·~··
ca! that,,although this perioc! of : of~'• ~r~
~ _ - no msupera"
usmg -!hoi accompanY!iig film to
!'le ~ or bi91ogical prob- illustrate the regional plan.
Ieins, rt will be hilhJy incom8:15 p.m., "Room For How
Plltible with thea&gt; ~ of Many Mor~?" Charles H. V.
c:urrent economic and social Ebert, 146 Diefencloii.
.
fhil!l&lt;inl which stem from the
Drawing his text hom Malt. .
asaum'p'tion that the growth hus's "gigantic •inevitable.. fam- ·
rata&amp; -prevaillnc during our ine," Dr. Ebert &lt;Will~ the
~t temporary epiaode can
"a.-, Revolution" and new
-m.. be made permanent. productioo methods, 1llking if
It a_.., .•. that one of the -can, indeed, eeca=the
byproduct&amp; of this tranai tion Ire oL artastropbe liD
by
will be a cultural ~t of "the problema of su y, a rna&amp;sudr a moipritude u to consti- siW! population inaeaae of 70
tuts one of the IDIIior intalJeo._ · mi)lioo people ~ · year, ower-

1

Alums Say They lfereAlnne
In Trying To AidFoothall

"Of all the groups now becrowded and dilapidating ur- moaning the fact that the Uniban conglomerations, liD ever- versity has dropped intercolincreasing avalanche . of waste legiate football, the Alumni
and the deterioration of our Association is the only one that
supply of water and air.''
tried to do anything to save it."
"While we do not know the
This comment by M. Robert
exact limits of population which
,this planet can support," Dr. Koren, past president of the
Ebert says, "we know that man- Association, who adds that "we
kind has already exceeded talumni I can hold . our heads
many limits of environments! high," sums up a three-page
common sense. Absolute limi- outline of the organization's eftations do exist . . . and man for ts to assist football , prepared
has to use his intelligence to for a press briefin g at the Satstop himself from global sui- urn Club Tuesday.
cide.~'
Alumni have been assailed
Officers and representatives for lack of support and interest
of the sponsoring student Geo- in some of the local media's
logical Societ y are Gerald ruminations on the subject folZimpfer , pres id e nt ; Steven lowing President Rob e r t L.
Berg, p as t pres id e nl ; Chris Ketter's decision to drop the
Woods, vice president; Ronne sport.
Hoffman, tr e a s urer ; ..A i leen
The Alumni Association not
Wojtal, secreta ry; Dan Kosciel- only rejects these charges, but
riial&lt; and Cathy Merkle.
a lso emphasizes t hat it is con'Dr. Paul H. Re itan, professor tinu ing to work for inclusion or
of geological sciences, is faculty foo tball funds in this year's
coordinator for the symposium. Sta!A! budget t Reporter, February 25l.

Our Files Show,
Ketters No.ll

46 Activities

From 1968, when·an "Alumni
Athletic Fund Rais ing eiJort
What number U / B chief ex- netted 572,975.86," 1o the presecutive is President Robert L. ent, the Alumni Associa tion
Ketter?
lists a t least 46 separa te activThe R eporter said he ·was ities and meetings in behalf of
the eleventh in its recen t In. football.
augural cove rage while some
The report reveals that as
other m e di a n u mbere d him ea rl y as November 12, 1969, a
twelfth.
group of a lumni 1 including Dr.
T he difference seems to stem J ames J . Ailinger: J ohn M.
from a University publication, Carter, executive director of
"Facts," which lists 11 chan- the Associa tion; Past P resident
ceJJors a nd presidents prior to Koren; Robert E . Lipp, current
Ket ter.
Alumni presiden t; and J ohn G.
On close r ch ec k , however,
gh I met to form a comthat list includes Mr. George Rombau
t tee Lo work for Legislative
Gorham who, aCCX)rdin g to a ami
ction on a proposed five -year
University history, "served as $1.5
million football building
actin g chancellor" fo r a period progr am
.
in the early 1900's.
At
the same time, the report
Elimina tin g Mr. Gorham and
a ll other "acti ng" chancellors say!), the Alumni Association
or pres ide n ts, the count for won approval from the Board
of Trustees of the University
Ketter would be 11 :
I. Millard F i ll m ore, 1846- at Buffalo Founda tion, Inc., fo r
"a oonstant organi1.ed cat hlet1874.
2. Orsa m u• H . M ars h a ll , ic ) fund-raising effort" among
private sources. That effort be1882-1884.
3. E . Carleton Sprague, 1885- csme the "Golden Bull Fund,"
announced
in December of
1895.
4. J ames 0 . Puinam, 18951902.
5. Wilson S. Bissell, !9021903.

Year's Efforts

On December 17, 1969, the
alumni report oontinues, a com·
mittee met with Lieutenant
Governor Malcolm Wilson to
determine his ideas on how to
go about securing funds in the
State's budget for the fiscal
year beginning April I , 1970.
The group followed-up with a
proposal to officials on February 5, 1970. Support from the
campus administration, faculty, students, County officials
and individual legislators was
enlisted and a series of meet·
ings to provide "additional
data" to the State was conducted throu gh June of last
year.
D urin g this time, the Golden
Bull Fund was organized and
the Alumni Association sponsored a cocktail party at the
National Collegiate Athletic
Association Convention in
Washington, D.C., to assist the
Athletic Department in making
contacts for future scheduling.
After the first attempt to secure State support failed , the
report say!:i, plans for an ap.
proach for thi s y ear were
stsrted last August. A 21-page
proposal for 1971-72 was submitted to officials in December of 1970.
That effort has been continuing, through last month's Budget hearings, despite the decision to drop football.
The latter action has, in turn,
led to another series of ·efforts
with the community, the adminis trat ion, the Athletic Department and students to ..clear
the way for a sound organization s tructure to return football
to UIB," the rei&gt;ort says.

U/B Wife Joins Peace Tour

6. Charles P . Norton, 1905A U / B faculty wif~. Mrs.
1920.
Joyce Reichert, is amonK 170
7. Samuel P . Capen, 1922- Americans from 41 states who
1950.
left from New York yesterday
8. T. Raymond McConnell, for a week-long conference with
1950-1954.
principals in the Paris peace
9. Clifford C. Furnas, 1954- talks and othen:. Their objec1966.
tive is "finding what the requi10. Martin Meyerson, 1966- sites for peace in Southeast
1970.
Asia reslly are."
11. Robert L. Ketter, 1970Mrs. Reichert is married to
Including acting chancellors Jonathan F. Reichert, associate
and presidents, Ketter would • prof.,.sor of physics. She is a
be 16th:
Girl Scout leader of Troop 833,
1. Fillmore; 2. Marshall a member of the Faculty
tthere was no acting chancellor Wives·Women's Associ&amp; tion ,
between Marshall and Fill- CAUSE, and the BuiJato Peace
more J ; 3. Sprague; 4. Putnam; Council and is on the coordi5. Bissell; 6. George Gorham, nating committee of Clergy arid
"acting" between Bissell and Laymen Concerned About VietNorton; 7. Norton; 8. Walter P . nam. She is a professional singCooke, "acting" between Nor- er and a member of the Colton and Capen; 9. Capen; 10. l"'"um MUSICWD' of the U/B
McConnell; 11. Seymour H . -•·
Knox, "acting" between Me- Music Department.
The Citizens Conference on
Conne11 and Furnas ; 12. Fur· Ending
the War in Indochina,
nas; 13. Claude E. PuiJer, "act.- 88 the Paris trip project is calling" while Furnas was on leave ed, is sponsored by the Amerias assistant secretary of de- can Friends Service Committee
fenae; 14. Meye1'80n; 15. Peter (AF'SC), Clergy and Laymen
F. Regan, acting while Meyer- Concerned (a 34,000-member
son was on leave during.l969- inter-religious anti-war group)
70, and 16. Ketter.
and the Fellowship of HeronAs for the presidential num- ciliation (a 51&gt;-year-old interber, Furnas was the first presi- faith association devoted to us~:~~ ~"t!r c::n=. ing love and truth to resolve
ger- with State UniveJSity. n.at human conflict).
would make Ketter the third
"Tbe conference will alford
president. , •
a large number of American
At least that's what our .....,.. citizens &amp;ea!l8 to and thoughtords indicate. We'll be Nippy ful discuasion with many perto bear from anyone with an- liOIIS long familiar with the Inother oounl
_ dochina struggle.': according to

=;

1969. 1Tbe fund raised approximately $20,000 in its first year
- an impressive amount in
light of past giving records and
a total better than the first year
of a similar eiJort at Indiana
University, Carter points out.
He feels that in five years' time,
the Fubd could have attained
the current level of that Big
Ten school's program, approximately $100,000 a year.)

Stewart Meacham, peace edu- ,
cstion secretary of the AFSC.
Participants expect to meet
with representatives of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South
Vietnam I formerly the National Liberation Front), the Democratic Republic of Vietnam
1 North Vietnam l. the Republic of Vietnam (Saigon) and
the U.S. Delegation..
Meetinr: . , also being arranged Wlth representatives of
the National United Front of
Cambodia, the L(lotian StUdent
Union and various independent
South Vietnamese groups opposed to the war (including
Buddhists, Catholics, students
and groups supporting dissident members of the Saigon
Administration's National Assembly ).
Tbe object of the trip, ac- .
cording to AFSC, is for the participants 1&lt;r become "new and
creative interpreters, in their
respective communities, of what
they understand the requiaites
of peace to really be."
Other Bulfalonians· on the
trip are Dr. Trevor L Watt,
director of the Religious Studies· Center, Canisius College.
who also teaches in Millard
Fillmore, and tAe Rev. Kenneth E . Shennan, Upstate field
staiJ member for Clergy and
Laymen Concerned, 'who is co- .
ordinator for 10 project participants from the Upstate 11!gion:

�· GRE~R:&gt;

4

Jlan:h .4 , 1971

Zweig Makes a Case for AppointingA Minority Dean in Social Welfare
By FRANKUN M . ZWEIG
o.~ .

Soi:i•l Policy and Cornmunily SerYiee•

When the Reporter recently
ran an extract of an article
appearing in the Buffalo Evening News about the process
of search and succession in the
School of Social Policy and
Community Services. the new
name of the social work .school
at this University, the story
lacked essential context and
depth. It was incapable of conveying a sense of the change
that has occurred in the School
over the last two and a half
years. An earlier story about
my resignation did include ex-

:&amp;ot;..:'~~~· f~e~'sd~~~fo~

communities; an emphasis on
training the professionals of the
future which meant becoming
much concerned with the substance and dynamics of social
problems and reducing ritual ism in favor of more exploration of effective profe3Sional
practice; and innovative educational programs which would
be concerned with the delivery
of social services to the populations, black and white, which
do not receive them currently
or which receive low quality
social services. This meant a
new emphasis On the consum·
ers of services, on being concerned with their needs as they
view them and their wishes.
Our efforts in technical assistance in the Black community
and student training oriented
to the inner city have taken
many forms. In Black RockRiverside our new teaching center is being built from the
ground up by faculty and •tudents in conjunction with the
community, for example, and
we have Federal hacking to
fund the effort.

and programs of the School,
but did not develop the implications for the future of professional education in soc ial
work. Combining t h e s e elements with a view to the future
-succession of dean and direction of school-is the purpose
of the article.
It is curious - apparently
characteristic of the times at
this University- that the pro- Consumer Orientation
cesses of politicizatiou have so
To so~. nothing is more
consumed so many "f the cre- threatening than a real conative resources of tlH Univer- sumer orientation. Thus, we
sity that we pay almost no have received criticism for our
attention to the future of the interest in we I fa r e mothers
academy, to its educational phi- groups. For a long time w~
losophy, educational design and experienced resistance to emeducational delivery. We hear phasizing minority student en·
very little about the future of rollments in the graduate pro·
the University, about its near :;ram. Yet the people who are
term and long term prospects. most affected by social probThis tendency seems to go so lems, who need more op tions
far beyond the current fashion to become more part of the
of "keeping a low profile" that economic and s ocial system
it ~enerates a climate of de- without having to give up the
spalr.
uniqueness of their cultures, are
Promising Developments
the underdog gro up s - the
Yel a number o{ develop- Blacks, the white ethnic groups,
ments at the University which Puerto Rican, rural poor, Amer·
have emerged through the heat- ican Indians and migrant labor·
ed past few years point toward ers. This focus is now the one
more promising and hopeful area of solid consensus within
prospects if accompanying op· the School.
portunities can be seized. I
This is not to say that we
served as a faculty member hav· should not be concerned with
ing some administrat ive respon. the life problems of the •ubsi bility during the transitional urban middle class. Many of
period, and the prospects and our graduates are so concerned
problems of the School of So- and will continue to be so. The
cial Policy and Community School has effected a greater
Services seem to represent in balance between established
microcosm the potentials and services and the more vigorous
the dilemmas confronting many ooncern with the most neglected
departments, schools and pro- groups.
grams at the point of our genIn speaking out about the
eral administrative transition.
school, it is clear that the rapid
In 1968 we had a mandate changes of the past few years
to re-direct this school from a have created frictions within
narrow focus to one with a na· the faculty. It is convenient to
tiona! face and one in which think in terms of two factions,
the academic programs would but a realistic examination
be modernized and broadened. would disclose that we are fragThus, we began to build the mented along a number of varoommunity organization, policy ied diinensions, some of long
and research offerings, in both s tanding, according io age, poclassroom oourses and intern- litical postlll'e, academic focus,
ships, to "balance the profes- professional methodology. Lasional program, primarily ooun· bels have been distributed and
seling in orientation, which had accepted accordingly; some
developed. From the start I put most unusual forms of bitter
a high emphasis on three fac- conflict have occurred.
tors: producing minority group AdmlnlstraUve Healer Needed
professionals to serve minority
'What so obviously is needed
p

GREPORTER_,
!n.?-,_~z,. u,.:;;;;,~y= .r":::f:L. ~,'J-,tt

::.~ ~~~~t

Editorial ollk-.. -

:ulr.=;

blltt..t .. R_, 213, 2SO W....._ A.....,.;.

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

A. W£STUY ROWLAlfD

2'8~~~.10
~
ROBBR'l' r. MA.JU.onT

..,.....UJ..

W'aeA:J,.~,;;,.~

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

JOHN A. CLOVTI.R
SUSAN OUntW'OOD
S'TliDBN'T AIFAJRS EDITOR: S,_. Lipman

c;:&gt;r:;~~ ~~~~:Wc!i o.s-dl,

a-,1 Bar,_._, Roberl S.

PHoroCJRAPHY: U.,ard L. NDWI'aJc. B'*' B . Vn4W.
CONrRIBUTINO ARTIST: s - Jl. Bur,_.

in a position or administrative
leadership for the next several
years is a healer who can continue the thrusts that the
School has begun. Such a person should come from outside
the University, because everyone within the University.
seems to experience and reflect
the divisions manifested in our
&amp;hool- in spite of the call of
a number of leaders Cor an end
to academic politicization.
The prospects for the future
of the School, then, rest with
a dean who can implement and
extend our one area of basic
internal consensus-the need to
e d u c a t e professional social
workers to serve the most alienated populations of the society, those most affected by
social problems . That basic
consensus has begun to become
implemented in a wide range
of academic programs appropriate to professional education.
In these efforll; to provide the
social workers who can relate
to the excluded groups, we are
somewhere between where we
started two years ago and where
we need to be a fe w years

"VIEWPOINTS
hence. The best way to serve
both purposes of healing divisions and perfection of educational implementation would be
to appoint a dean from a distinctly minority population.
The University does not have
a Black or a Puerto Rican or
an American Indian anywhere
vested with chief executive responsibility in a professional
school. 1 Neither does it have
a woman in such a position
aside from the School of Nursing. J Yet in terms of 'a number
or explicit indications, concern
for minority groups occupies a
high priority in ad ministrative
concerns. Now woul d be the
time to move beyond words and
to. consum mate such an appomtment. The transition wit hin the School of Social Policy
and Community Services from
a succession of middle class
professionals to a dean of mi·
nority origin and experience
would demonstrate in the best
possible way our commitment
to the communities most profoundly experiencing health,
1 nco me maintenance, corrections, and community development difficulties.
Finances P11y • Part

Finances certainly p 1 a y a
part in appointments, and the
only place where faculty lines
are available in any abundance
is the pool of lines reserved for
minority faculty . Thus, a useful oonvergence has occurr'ed
between the desirability of attracting a. minority dean and
the feasibility of employing
such a person. And while I do
not have a single candidate in
f!llnd , I was encouraged by the
spectrwn of possible candidates
evident at the Council on Social Work Education Annual
Program Meeting held last
month in Seattle.
.
Furthermore, the University's best interests would be
served_through such an appointment m terms of financial supports from such external
sources as fedenrl and state and
foll!l~tion grantsmen, the great
ma)Orlty of whom have elevated
minority concerns at the top of
their priorities achemes in a
period of dwindling financial
resource3. Social work education faces 1088 of revenues
across the nation. Yet, as a
recent letter to top University
adminiatration from the Director of the'"National lllstitute of
~ental. Health regarding a re~ ?I .this School disclosed,
mmor1ty problems will con(Conti.riUd on PG/1&lt; 8, coL I)

Open Letter Re: Terwrc
I...ETTER TO
PRESIDENT KE.TrER :

OPEN

As a nontenured facult y
member, I am naturally most
concerned about the implications or your recent remark£
before the Faculty Senate regarding the percentage of tenured staff at this University. I
am addressing this to you as an
open letter in the hope that
you will find it appropriate to
respond in kind, thus clarifying
a question of importance to a
large se~ent of the ,academic
commuruty.
I must admit to -being perplexed by your apparent concern for the relatively high ratio of tenured to nontenured
faculty . 'I1le reference to lower
ratios existing at other inatitutio"'! S&lt;!l!ms -of dubious merit,
parlicula'rlY: ¢ ,n ning from an adminialrlitor Of' a University system whiCh professes to lead
rather than follow in academic
practices. What relevance do
particular ratios
the
establ.ishmt:nt
mainte
f overall eJ&lt; ence~ in·~tion?
t
a 50:50
o more
·
than one
of ,
· g a uniformly high degree of excellence and
a relatively stable academic
po~ulation, might nol a 90:10
ratio be acceptable? If, on the
other hand, there is real concern over the &lt;juality among

those presently tenu.red, might
not the granting of tenure· be
completely abolished and a periodic review instituted for ev·
ery teacher's and administrator's performance?
The more particular issue
raised by the suggestion of qudlai! is, that of the profound impact which may be felt on the
process of tenure decision making itself. If the ratio is already
deemed too high, it is obvious
that the established pidelines
for such decisions, namely, relative contributions to administration, teaching, and scholarship, must be disn!garded or
deliberately manipulated to
achieve the desired eftect. In
.....,.ce, the individual teacher
may no longer be considered on
the baSis of merit but, rather,
as an object for · satisfying
quotas.
Abuses in the granting of
tenure have been regularly documented over ~ years by the
AAUP. I trust that it is not
this University's intention to
contribute to that dismal record by circumventing the only
basis which haa thus far proved
acceptable for decisions of such
importance to the individual
tea~r.

�~PORTER...,

·Garden ofGlobal Delights
By SUZANNE METZGER
R•P«t«Sr.Lf

International Week bloomed into a
garden of global di!lights in Norton
Union on Monday, March 1. Displays
gradually took form over the period
of the day, in an informal atmosphere
pervaded. with wafts of incense, the
drone of a sitar and the casual drift
of onlookers.
Iranian students ronstructed the
replica of a strsw hut typical of those
to be found in the northern part of
their rountry, where fisherman and
farmer glean their sustenance beside
the Caspum Sea. Bina Ghatan, spokesman for the exhibit, explained that
Persia and Iran are one in the same
rountry - that the name Persia has
Greek origins, while Iran derives from
the word Aryan referring to the inhabitants of the land. On display were
exquisite Persian miniature art works
"and examples of the elaborate inlay
known as klwtam . Within the little
cottage were a samovar and tea serv.
ice, the Koran, a round Persian style
rug, and, in a rorner, a typiCally
American trophy which Bina said had
been won by the lrlillian Student Club
for their displays in previous years.
Slippers •nd Sportins Goodo

Juxtaposed to Iran was the Pakistani Student Club exhibit- replete
with artistic articles including heavily
embroidered _mirror work fabric s,
meant to be Worn as blouses, fine carv- •
.... ings of rosewood and sandalwood,
brightly encrusted slippers with turned toes, brass vessels and - looking
somewhat cumbersome and incongruous beside the beaux arts - leather
sporting goods from the city of Sialkot. Flanking either side of the Pakistani exhibit were two photographsone of the poet-philosopher Mohammed Iqbal - the inspiration behind
; tbe. \lnifying of ·the Muslim pebples
thfough the Pakistan roncept. The
other was of Mohainmed Ali J innah,
founder of the Pakistan Movement
which made the rountry a Muslim
state separate from Indian. For more
of the flavor of Pakistan, the exhibitors announced that there will be native dances and songs during the Saturday night festival , as well as slides
included in the international slide
show of Saturday.

Several students from Hong Kong
organized an exhibit on China, and
were eager to tell you everything
you've always wanted to know about
Chinese life - from the practices of
ancesCor worship through the mysteries of Chinese cuisine. A stringed instrument, known as a zilher, whose
origins .are traced to 800 B.C., lay
mutely on the table beside an explanation saying it was developed upon the
philosophy of the five elements-gold,
fire, wood , earth and water. The only
visible element, however, was the rich
dark wood - possibly the others quintessentially hovered over it. Within a
showcase were the pieces of a Chinese
chess game, an enlarged replica of a
patinaed roin, carvings of household
gods, an incense burner, and tiny lanterns whose noble origins can be
traced to the emperor's palace. Edward Tse distributed an excellent
booklet which he had rompiled, Chin ese LUJUZr Year, explaining the legendary and religious significance or the
moon festivals with a little divination
and astrology thrown in.
Orientll Court

Korean students displayed a stringed instru men t, A kayakeum , along with

objects of carved wood, vibrant red
silk, lacquer and tassled items reminiscent or some orientAl oourt.
There was much in the exhibit of
the India Students Association which
he ld the attention. On the ftoor, a
saricd gi rl created before the eyes of
admirers a fine example of rangoli,
art work of powdered paint mixed with
cream of rice, which she deftly spilled
through her fingers to compose a stylized Indian maiden bearing a steaming thali. Though one quick whisk or a
broom could carry it away, the artist
painstaking ly worked for seve ral
hours. Rangoli decorations are traditionally found at the doorways of Indian homes during weddings and festivals. A handsome display of batiks
made the exhibit a virtual art gallery.
The Indian exhibit extended to the
worli::J of oriental sou nds. Class ical
ragas, folk songs and a couple of snake
charming refrains were presented in
concert by performers, among whom
were Mamta Bhargava on the sitar.
The wife of a post-graduate student
at U 1 B, it is told that she will study

Sir Walter Scott at 200
Is Theme of Library Show
To rommemorate the bicentenary of
the birth of Sir Walter Scott, poet,
novelist, historian, lawyer and Scottish ·patriot, the University Libraries
have arranged an exhibit of his works
and times til run through the end of
May in Lockwood.
The first two cases in the Main
Floor Lobby illustrste Edinburgh and
the Scottish landscape in the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, with early books on travel, such
as the first editions of Samuel Johnson's Tour of the Western Isles ,
Tilomas Gray's Letters, and Wordsworth's Scottish poems of 1807. A
third case is devoted to Scottish law,
the Church, and the schqols, with pic:1ures of Edinburgh High School and
Edinburgh University as Scott would
have known them, a latin grammar
written by Scott's teacher, and illustrstions of the Cburch of Scotland.
The-Rebelllon
The background to the Jarobite Re-

bellion of 1745, which figures in Scott's
Waverly, is illustrsted by conte;nporary accoun~ and the tartan revival
to which Scott contributed is rolorfully demonatmted by a tailor's book
of tartan samples.
Scott's politiCal activity is represented by . his life of Napoleon, his
pamphlet on the currency, and other
items. This case alao contains a full
acale reproduction of his portrait by

•

Allan from the National Portrait Gallery.
In the center cases are a facsimile
of the Declaration of Arbroath, 1320,
a kind of declaration of independence
of Scotland to the Pope, and the Acts
of the Scottish and English Parliaments of 1707, by which they united
to form the United Kingdom.
Cases on the gallery contain works
by famous Scotsmen in literature and
learning of the eighteenth century,
with first editions of Smollett's Humphrey Clinker, Macpherson's Fi.ngol
("Ossian" l, the serond Edinburgh
edition of Bums's Poems, and other
items.
A book with local associations is a
history of Rome by Adam Ferguson,
a friend of Scott's, from the library of
Millard Ji'!llm.orj... sCott's book on folk
biillads. ' MfiH~r.elsy bf the Scottillh
"Boi-der, is a CcOmpanied by eilrlier
works on the ballad, such as Bishop
Pei"C)&lt;'s Reli11ue• of Ancient Poetry,
in the first edition, some rontemporary rollections, such as Ritaon, with
woodcuts by Bewick, culminating in
the great work by Francis Child. Finally, a small section shows Scott's
own literary beginnings: first editions
of his first work, a translation ftOJD
the Gennan with an autograph dedicaticin; of his translation from Goethe;
and of his first original poems rontained in Tako of Terror and Wonder.

N-u

~n~~

this summer under the famed sarod
player, Ali Akbar Khan. Acrompanying her on the tabla was Subhash Nadkami, an Indian-born architect who
lives in Niagara Falls, and Kanti Patel, who played a drum called the
bulbul (he shyly translated it to mean
"beloved" ) . A short episode of Indian
folk song on the American mandolin
yed
B. D . Radhakrishna.
was pl~

'No Exhl ·

Exho

In o her rorners of Haas Lounge
we~e Israeli panels and posters and

Indo esian and Latin American dispia:.; · just budding.
&lt;!.._
he Arab students had a "no eXhibit" exhibi t - "only the Palestinian
fta g is here," their circular read, for
they had determined to put their energie!; into a ''Palestine Week" which
will feature guerilla speakers.
The International Institute had a
central spot for display and sale of
international wares - including jewelry from India, intriguing perfume
vials on a chain from Pakistan, and
hand-carved toys. A brochure explained that the International Institute is a "nationaJity community agency for service to foreign-born peopls
and their children .. .. a non-sectarian agency .)Yhich .. serves people of
all races, nationalities, ethnic backgrounds and religions."
The displays in the Haas Lounge
continue through Sunday.

Gf'EATURES ...

Witdlc:roft -.nd Crown J - 1

The cases on the third floor give
examples of his historical and antiquarian studies, such as his edition
. of Dryden, first editions of his book
on witchcraft and his pamphlet on the
Scottish Crown Jewels. There are alao
a few items illustrsting Scott and the
rise of old Scandinavian studies in
Britain. His ronnection-with printing
and publishing is shown by examples
of the work of the Ballantyne Press,
which he helped to found, and the
Edinburgh and Quarterly Reviews, to
which he rontributed.
Works by his rontemporaries occupy the cases devoted to "Friends
and Fame," including a first edition

--

of Washington Irving's acrount of a
visit to Scott's home. Finally, there
is a case devoted to some of the operas based on Scott's works- scores
and libretti from the Music Library,
Baird Hall.
On the walls of the third floor are a
number of engravings m:tt1 waterrolors
showing places made famous by Scott.
Throughout the exhibition are many
of the first editions of Scott's poems
and novels from the Rare Book Collection in Lockwood Library.
An illtllltrsted caallog, rontaining a'
romplete listing of Scott items in the
University's·Rare Book Room; will be
available.

�GR:Ef.'OR'I'ER.,

6

F0l01ders' IJavV Schedule 11~nrt
Set·.,
About s rts
f6
Bows Fdday Luncheon,,Plaque Ceremony Included

New.Magazine

.LA;U

By STEVE UPMAN
The tentative schedule or follow under -auspic;es of the
Move oller, Sports IIW.troted. . Foun&lt;;ler's Day, May 11, one of School of -Medicine.
Sport Magazine, ~watCh out. the kickoff events for the UniAt 3 p.m., a cornerstone-layPro-Am is coming.
versity's 125th Anniversary eel- ing ceremony will be held at
. Pro-Am, a sports magazit\e ebration, has been outlined by the Law and Jurisprudence
fonned by three U/ B juniors, them•'tteeAnni.·versary Policy Com- Building on the Amherst cam'll mak · firs
fficial
pus. The' provost-designate of
WI
e t •ts
t 0 T apThe placement of a historical that Faculty, Dr. Richard
~::f,.ckom~rrbt' .,dj~r- · plaque on the site of the Uni- Scliwartz, will participate and
~! _ -an. -w te tabt•'!dn, versity's first building, at Main an "outstanding" justice will be
10 ' B• and Virginia, will
1088Yon U/
awill
....-page
day asked
featuresellll-g
articles
Theopen
. the
. tha
Th to speak.
football, the Buffalo Hockey at 10 : 30 a.m.
s•te ts
t
e Founder's Day Banquet
Sabres, the Buffalo Baslretball of the earliest Medical School will be held at 8 p.m. that eveBraves, and fencing. Elan Cher- building and a luncheon will ning at the Hearthstone Manor.
ney, one of its three co-founders, describes Pro--Am as u 8 E:n~ell
Sabl-~...:cal
magazine to promote pro and
1YY'
llJGU.,J!
'

AmhetstPian(Co:Ubued from pa:-&lt; 1, coL 5)

in the earliest planning

f~

Ambenlt.
Then, in May of 1967, fol.
lowina a study by a Task Force
Faculty, non-teaching profes- appointed by SONY Chanoel-

sional staff and civil service employees will be asked to partloipate in ticket sales for lhe
event. There will also be a
community-,Wide campaiP, for
sales of corporate tables. Each
corporation purchasing a table
will be encouraged to invite student guests. The Policy Com·
· sti'II ezpIoring aelec-m1ttee
lS
tion of a principal speaker for
the banquet.
Pre-banquet cocktail parties,
including several sponsored by
individuals and one at the
Hearthstone Manor, are

lor Gould, it waa 8llliOilDiled

~;!,.;!"' ~';!=!;~

r:ru.:

veloped on the Amherst site
along with the other academic
divisions of -the University."
There ·would be a Univeraity
hoopital, but continued cloae
cooperation with and reliance
on the contributions of cliriica.l
facilities and teecliing personnel in the present afiiliated bp&amp;pitals would be maintained.
Juat this fall, plans for a
series of towers on the Health
Sciences sub-campus in Amherst were '!JUlOUilced and conamateur
planned.
Frontier."sports on the Niagara
~
The Anniversary Policy and traclti were awarded for the first
It all came about, ezplains
·L
Conununity Advisory commit- phases of the construction.
Last Friday, however, Dr.
' Steve Lazoritz, the magazine's
~- Raymond Ewe!·!, vice the world's rapidly growing tees are also working on plans Clyde
L. Randall, vice presi-.
production and graphics editor, president for research, will be population, especially in the for the day-long University
of Health Sciences, told
because of his group's "concern on . sabbatical leave from the less developed regions."
Open House, May 2, and an dent
his
faculty
that the Amherst
with the de-emphasis of sports Uruvers1ty from March to DeAlso, Dr. Eweli will serve as Anniversary Awards project.
plans· had been postponed "inand sports coverage in Univer- cember 1971. He and 'Mrs. a consultant to the United NaThe Open House, for which definitely." Plans for a University publications. We felt that Ewell will make their headquar- tions industrial Development John Buerk of Student Affairs sity hospital have also been
a publication produced by stu- ters in Vienna where Dr. Ewell Organization l UNIDO J in Vi- ;,; coordinator, is being de- cancelled, be sa i d, although
dents who have a great interest' will carry out a program of re- enna on several projec)s in fer- signed as "an introduction to clinical facilities on the present
in sports could remedy this search on the production and tilizer economics. A major pro- the Buffalo community of the campus might be expanded and
situation."
consumption of fertilizer in all ject will be planning t·o r and diversity, s cope, excitement Univer.;ity space might be inFormer ethos Staffers
countries in the world, utilizing participating in the Second ln· and relevance of the University cluded in new community hosSo Lazoritz, Cherney, and ~a~ ava!labl~ in various organ- terregional J!'ertilizer Sympos- communitY." Plans call for sev- pitals.
Mark Lumer, all of whom held tzations m V1enna, Rome, Zur- 1um which wlll be held in Kiev era! categories of activities to
Randall !laid it would be 1980
editorial positions or etlws, de- ich, Geneva, Paris, London and U.S.S.R., September 21.0.:.0: be involved: academic; Univer- at the earliest before the Health
cided to form Pro-Am . An edi- Hanover.
ber 1 and in .New Dellii India sity research resources; student Sciences cou!d be mov~ Ito
. tion, under the auspices of . Fertilizer is the key factor October 3-12. The symj,osiu...; interests; student affairs; mi- Amherst while Dean I.;eRoy
el/ws was published last month, m the sucxess of the "Green will be attended by some 200 !'ori~S' s_tudent affairs; general Pesch of Medicine was quoted
but, because of 11persona1 oon- ~yolutio.n" _in agricult~ m~w participants trdfn ~ oowttries. mterests and community rela- as indicating that it is "obvious
fiicts," ezplains Cherney, was m ·~ .begmrung_ phases ~n Asl&amp;, Dr. Ewell will give the keynote tions.
that Amherst is not the place
not distributed.
·
Africa and Latm Amenca, Dr. address opening the sympo6ium
Approximately 10,000 awards to develop health ~iences now
University Press then took on Ewell .says. '"l~''!rld-wide con- on September 21 and will par- nomination folders have been or in the immediate future."
Pro-Am . One of the few stu- sumpt!O!' of fertihzer was about ticipate in its management printed for circulation to comSpeculation wru; that the
dent-run student publishing $10 b1lhon_ m 1970 and IS ex- along with United Nations per- munity groups, student clubs tower.; to be constructed this
concerns in the country, Uni- ~ted to me~ to S20 bil- sonnel and representatives of and organizations, the- Com- spring
in Amherst' for Health
versity Press handles mostly h?n by 1980, m order .to pro- the governments of the Soviet munity Advisory Council, etc. Sciences would be assigned to
books and .pamphlets, but "it v1de enough food and f1ber for Union and lndia.
There are two students from other units of the University.
Dr. Ewell recently returned the Undergraduate Student Asdecided a sports magazine
The official University- rewould be a good way to broadD
•
7l tf:
from a meeting of the sympos· sociation, two graduate stuen out into other areas," La,zo:
lV.l.ee
ium conunitt.ee held in Moscow dents, staff and faculty on this swru;e, whic)&gt; cal,l)e this M!;&gt;n; ,
ritz says. where preliminary plans were . C?IDI}l~t~. ·Thej.r · ~Poris,bili- j. d~Jol Jo\lowing..a lengtAyilll')"t, ,.
With University Press ban- 'Tll..:~ T:f ~nl.~nd
worked out.
· lies Will be to ·screen the nomr- ing ~tween Presfdenl. Jteiter dling layout, printing, and the .1. I Uli
t'tLI~
nees anti ultintately decide on and the Health Sciences admm· other ,l!lechanical aspects of the
UJB will be host to the 21st
the recipients lor 30 awards to istraton;, was that these .anma'g(ti'ne, all that the editors Annual North Atlantic lnterbe given. Ten will be pre- nouncement~:; were, in effect,
have to concern themselves with
~
sen ted at the Founder's Day premature.
are advertising, distribution, collegiate Fencing Champion_
Banquet, live will be g1'ven at Several Pl•ns
'• and assigning articles.
ships. Saturday, March 6. BufCommencement and one at
President Ketter said followAbout 10,000 copies of. to- falo's veteran coach, Sid sepThehNd.eaRearthdoofnPo"lfessoWedrnJeso-- each of the academic symposia ing that meeting :_
oil
being planned for next fa II.
morrow's free edition- Cher- Schwartz, will direct the meet
"Last week the Board of
ney hopes to sell them in the at Clark_ Gym.
day, February 21. was a shock Nominations must be received Trustees
of State University refuture_ will be printed , but
Approximately twelve insti- to the Department of Art and by the awards committee by
affir~Jle!~ . its intent to ezpend
"University Press can only af. tutions will fence three weap- the University Community. April 1
650 mdh?n dollan; for capital
ford to print one, or at the most ons epee, sabre, and foil, begin- Professor Reardon was associ:&gt; 'I •,
conslruchon and rehabilitation
two, editions, unless we find ning at 8:30 a.m. in Clark . ate proiessor of art in the Com- r - - - " - - " - - - - - - - - - , during
the years im!Mdiately
ad ..·ertising." Cherney, Lumer FenOEHlffs will continue through munication Design Option of
NOMINATION FOR THE
ahead at the University at'Buf125!11 ANNIVERSARY AWARD
apd Lazoritz have approached the day with the championships the department.
!alo. Since that time; many
many )ocal businesses (pro to follow by mid-afternoon.
He had been teaching at the
people, both on and off campus, .
sports clubs, beer distributors,
Montclair State (N.J. ) is the University for the past 16
Nome
have made suggestions and prorestaurants, etc. ) about ads . defending champion. The meet years. He was also a practicing
posed, plans in an elljjrt to ob"Most have appe&amp;n&gt;d-'very in- waa held on the lndians' cam- professional designer, having
tain the best usage of all the
Add rna
terested,'' Cherney says, "but pus last year~
previoUSly held positions with
space that will beoome availfirst they want to see what the
Four major awards will be several advertising agencies and
able. To insure the greatest
~
pNreaenorthtedAtlantoti'cchamBroapdioSwons
-rdtheto printing
efficiency at all times is not a
_ _ looka like."
He wascorporations.
a f~t exhibitor
simpl_e ~ Moreover, many .of
Oecupaticn
or
Professlo~
'"The whole future of Pro-Am the three-weapon team, the and an award winDer in Westthe md•v•duals and agencies
depends on advertising. Next Buffalo Trophy to the foil er;n .New York Exhibitions at
that must grant approval are
year wto want to come ou•·With · team. .the Syracuse Trophy to the Albright.-Kno'!' Art Gallery.
Rea~n for Nomination•
located .outside the Buff a I o
48 pages, and hire editors for the epee team and the Santelli His work was also included in
area.
the New Yoik State Exposition
hockey, baaeball, and football Trophy to the ~bre ~- ·.
"It is true that we have been
and one for college and pro
Each team will "!"'""'\ of SIX lnVitatiodal at Syracuse, and in
examining a number of optionS.
basketball"
fencers, two competitors m each University· Artists, 1967. CalliHowe\'er, none of these ever
also want&amp; to pub- of the three !'vents.
graphic work by bia students
considered the placement of the
liah - Pro-Am on gloss,y paper,
:Early entries bave been re- -was recently reproduced in
entire Health ·S cience Faculty
like other ma~ but that oe1ved from Cornell, Syracuse, Graham Colijer'.s Form, Spoce
ai Amherst. ln all of the plans
is more ""l""""ve uW. the pres- R~T., Hobart, Pace, Newark and Viaion, by Prentice-Hall.
the contributions of the various
ent aeml-cJossy stock.
College- of EnJPneering, PaterFuneral aervii:es were held on
afiiliated bospitala a n d olbor
Cherney plans to distribute son &lt;N--!.) State, Se~ Hall, Saturday-at St. Paul's Roman
U!'its have £-n fully_.,reqOJ·
.Pro-Am to all local colleges, Montclair, Johns Hopkins, Rut.- Catholic Church, Kenmore.
nized.
. - '
sporting goods stores and gers at Newark and the host
-DoNALD NICHOUI
"One of the proposals that
sports ticket offices, as w'ell as Bulla.
Profcasor of Art
has recently been re-adVBDOed
Pre3Ulll83 the development of
•' a concentration on the Main
-~ a~M'::o ,;4-~tg1':;j i :-!~
SUMMARY
Y.; OI 'f.' l ~ .H;•)= •C:t.
' . !J•
Street Campus of a greater proU it really · gets going, CherTUITIOfl SCHEDULE
·T)'Ii!llJ :-lrlJ 10 ~
gram capacity for the Health
ney envisions selling Pro-Am
1V71 ·1172
OUT OF iTATE
JN STATI.
Sciences.
1bat proposal is being
in Westem New York, then. FULL nME " ' " ' _ ,
$450.00
$275.00
T!l!phoM Number
studied in detail. A more de500.00
400.00
New York State, and possibly
~=•uot•
750.00
plan will soon be availthe nation. '"lbere's a tremenDontol
750.00
doua market for a quality sports
.......,
750.00
450.00
publication," he says. \
275.00
-~
.
Meanwhile a spokesman
for
f · hasThe
only problem Pro-Am P.uT nME " ' " ' _ ,
encountered 110 far is stall'.
30.00 &lt;(a)
11.50 (II)
NOMINATIONS sklULD BE
the State University Coastzuc.33.50
(a)
27.00
(II)
RETURNED TO
"We don't have enough writ.tion
Func!
Amherst
project
told
30.00 (a)
11.50 (a)
l~rNryA. .nt,
era," complaihs Cherney. uAnd
Mna.nt FJIImoN Col....
~e~:=-E~ - tbia week,
St.te Uftfv. of N.Y. et Buffalo
we .-.! a copy stall. We have &lt;•)-h• •'""" hou•
d'•stoppmg anythiDg,
116 ...,_ Hall. 3435 liMn at.
to l"'t a huge number of hours NOre lllo Otlleo of ......,. . . . . . not - . '""" Alben&gt; ._,.,,.,.
•' t's
a ....erent way of doing
Bufbllo. New Y_a4 1Ul4
_,fn.
....
~" and the Buffalo EveON OR UFOR£: April J, 1971
' ' But if the articles keep com- NOre ... - . . ......., • - .... ..,...,. • - _ . , _ - ... """',_,. _ .
!""1 Netm reJXWtec1 tM build- ·
(for tiM . . . . . . . . .rdl)
- ln. and tl&gt;e adS star:~&gt; Pro.... of ....... - . . ............. · - · No lnfonnation ...
planned
~will' be out eYIHY two weeks.
_, ,__, to "!'"·
• be
!&gt;uilL . for ..Am~

GoeS on
Studies FJertilize"

reflCll1g

r

usage

t

Reardons' Death

Dept.

111

Chemey'

..........

1

:=.,,.,PI-.,_
G,..,.,...

u_,..,_

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

Col- ....

------------~--~--~------

.

=::"

=

just'

i:t

�GREPoR'fER.,

M~ 4,1971 ,

SBpp Goes·On Leave, Swartz Named
Presidental Cultural Affairs Aide
When be returns to t1/B in · nation get its full impact." In ready she's been able to line up
February 1973, Allen D. Sapp, approaching this, influential people who are interested in
director of cultural affairs, leaders in the arls, education oomputer art and music.
I hopes to bring with him "the
and busmess will he recruitea
or course, the new cui tural
front wave of all that's new in in communities throud&gt;out the affairs organization will oonthe arts across the nation so nation to.provide the lejidership tinue to fund and coordinate
that •.. . we can ... really do in their ~ ~·~· ". j : • " &gt; events people traditionally exthe things of our time."
peel
.
Sapp has taken a qvo-year
By susA.N GirE:Ii!iiWoon ·
A new poetry reading proleave of absence from the cui·
ReportH St.ll
gram has been established for
tural affairs post and from his
Esther Swartz, newly ap- this spring in which poets visitposition as proieBSQ.r of music pointed assistant to the presi- .ing U ; B will also visit local
to be director of Arts-Worth, dent for cultural affairs, doesn't high schools. They'll meet ina new national effort "to like the name "cultural af- formally with students at the
~trengtbe':' ~ roles of the arts fairs.'' The phrase makes peo- schools to "show that poets are
m education . .
ple think of her as a booking alive and human," as Esther
DUring his absence, the func- agent for literary and musical puts it. The response of thl!
tions of the University Office of programs, she says. And the high schools, incidentally, has
Cultural A1fairs will be at· narrow definition stifles.
been so good that there are
tacbed direcUy to the Office of
She thinks of cultural affairs more requests for the program
tbe PreSidenl Esther Swartz, in terms of man and his whole than poets to participate.
who has served as assistant di- world and his interactions with
Esther is also interested in
rector of cultural affairs since others.
providing outletf.i for campus
1968, has been named an assisFormerly an ass istant to Al- talent. R e c e ntl y , she helped
tant to tbe president with re· len Sapp in the Office of Cul- Bruce J ackson of the English
sponsibility for conceiving and tural Affairs, Esther will now Department set up his first phoorganizing cultural programs.
'Sdminister th e r e orga n i ze d tography exhibit. And she is
Professor Sapp, at the re- functions of the Office, report- now looking for student work
quest of Acting Provost ing to the president, while Sapp to display. Helping people put
Thomas Connolly of Arts and is on leave.
on their own displays is an imLetters, will serve as an arts
Even before this, however, portant part of the job, she
consultant to that Faculty the petite brunette has applied says. And she wants to be espewhile on leave. He will have her own unique definition to a ll y responsive to FOtudents.
new offices in New York City her activities . This fa ll she
The n ew a ssi s t a n t to the
and Washington but will main· helped organize a series of lec- presiden t .has talellts or her
tain 'hiS' Buffalo residence.
tures on American Indian af- own. She will receive her -masTwo-Veer Procr.m
fairs. And this is the type of ter's in English this spring and
Arts-Worth is a concentrated event she wants to c011tinue is locally active in acting and
two-year p r o g r a m receiving sponsoring. The series involved music groups.
funding from the National En- not only the University oomHer new apPointment is imdowment for the Humanities munity but peopl e from the portant to her for two reasons .
and the active support and par- area. American and Canadian First, it will enable her to help
ticipation of the National En· Indians got together and dis- p rogram~ she feels are needed.
dowment for the Arts.
cussed mutual problems, she Second, and more importantly,
It will be, Sapp says, "a dra- says.
she thinks the new job demonmatic ·a ction program"' to re~
For thi s s pring , Esther is ,;trates that "President Ketter
orient "our society to the val- working on another oonf.erence endorses and is involved in the
ues of the arts." He expects to in an area wider than arts and arts."
be en11aged in "evangelical music. . This time, it's a symCurrentl y, Esther has only a
worJ&lt;l.' · " We know a great •dea~
oecretary tO help her but she is
of 1"1'J118t'.ftl ')!li tbotlt"'-tlle ''arts ·
hopeful tha t work'study money
in eduCation," he points ·. out, retical ·Biology but with finan. can be found to support a s tu" but we've been t.alliing to our- cial aid and assistance from dent assistant.
selves."
With .tjlis.add itipnal help, s)le
cultural affairs. The a im is to
He plans to transmit "his bring man y departments to- hopes to create adivi ties that
message" not only through the gether so they can apply their will "touch many areas of the
system of education, where be expertise to the s ubje ct. AI- community.''
sees the most OPpOrtunity, but
also through exJSting .governmental and institutio!l81 organ·
izations concerned with the arts
and through the leadership of
,
business and Labor.
"To ,e pitomize and dramatize
the significance of the problem
"Unfortunately for the revo- ators have had an opportunity
for A~ican society, we'll tum lutionaries, the kidnap tactic so to read the Carnegie Commisto the mass media,'' he ex- much in vogue in Latin Ameri- sion Report on financing higher
ca just wouldn't work on the education, you will know that
ti:~"ffiliea~0f:u!"!~e~!i campus," James M. Shea, vice most schools and oolleges are
"recognition, appreciation. and president for university rela- experiencing fiscal difficulty.
enjoyment Qf cultural situa· tions, Temple University, told Our University is no exception.
tions" which are now foreign to a meeting of the American Col- {For your informa tion, a copy
many segments of society. lege Public Relations Associa· of this valuable report is enclosed. 1
"Restoring of the quality of tion in Rochester recently.
"Despite the long hours and
Consider for example, he
life .-is what it's all about," he
asked, what might happen if a hard work by the Trustees and
says.
Educ8tlon'a Coopemlon Cruc:lol
group of student guerillas spir- administration to cut costs, the
Prot · Sapp stresses that the ited away the President of a University still faces a sizable
cooperation of the educational Large university and held him deficit this fiscal year.
"Because of recent fiscal resystem is crucial to the success for ransom. After the trustees
of 1he venture. The way he received the ransom note, he verses, the Board feels its responsibility
to balance the budsees it, ''The arts must be said, the following correspondget far exceeds the real, and
brought into a more
ence might take place:
sometimes
sentimental,
attachplace- in the educational system
''TO: Chairman of the East
of this cciuntry, from earliest Coast Conspiracy .to Kidnap ment it has for employees.
"The
various
University
conchildhood through advanced University Presidents
stituencies here regretfully feel
and ·professional schools."
"GENTLEMEN;
,
that
in
light
of
the
University's
-He, ~ that demonstra· .
"Thank you very much fOr
your note of January 25th in present fiscal crisis, we cannot
tes":i which you request funding in fund your group in the amount
in a wide range of school set- the amount of $100,000 by to- requested. For the record, howtings, from kindergarten morrow evening to insure , ever, the Executive Commit1hrough graduate school Blid against the ' perrnan&lt;!nt libSence 1 tee of the Board of Trustees
from the smallest tyPe of rural from the campus of the Univer- • doos want the President to
know that it unanimously apl
schooHl. the Largest most com- sity Presidenl - - plex wbai1 school system.
· . ''The vital questions raised proved a motion to continue
It follows, then, he says, that in your commwiication have the University's contribution to
Arts-Worth will psy a great been fully discusaed by '·the his · Blue Cross and Major
deal of attention to youth and President's Cabinet, the E:rec- Medical Plans.
"U .the fiscal picture should
the interests and ideas of youth utive Committee of the Board
in the arts. ''We hope to get of Trustees, as well as the Ran· improve in the near future, you
som Committee of the Faculty have our assurance that we
the young people into
shall review our decision via,
.
situations where all barriers Senate.
-can be broken and where we
. "As you know, all requests of course, the appropriate concan get their ideas and preserve for funds must so fll"St to the stituent committees.
"In the JDe!llltime, please exFinance Committee of the
and diffuse tflem."
tend to the'President the warmHe "" the most difficult Board, and then to the full
~ problem that of keep- Board which meets next on, est regards of the Trustees. fac·
ulty, stuilents and staff.
•
"" .the procram national, en· April28. .
Sincerely,"
"U you and you&lt; co.oonsp1rsurina that ."cities acrooa the

Fan~{~~~~l':.~~

Ransoming a President
Might Prove Difficult

central

~:d:~~a!rwill~

-.=w

7

SPA Has M~mhl?rship IJr:Ux!
As Contract Talks Begin
The present steering oommi"tThe greeter· the SPA memtee of the local Senate Profes- bers, the less a small group
sional Association (SPA ) is · (presently about 150 members)
expected to give way to a regu- will speak for the whole camLar executive body around Jwte pus, SPA says.
Membership dues are cur·
1, according to an SPA membership campaign letter now rently $10 for those earning
being circulated to faculty and under $15,000. Those in the
non-teaching professional staff. $15,()()().19,999 bracket will be
However, SPA notes, only assessed $15 while those in the
paid members will be entitled $20,()()().24,999 ione will pay
to vote or run for office. And, $20. Individuals earning more
only those who are paid mem- than $25,000 are charged $25
bers of record by March 15 will for membership.
be able to vote on the contract
Margaret O'Bryan, Under·
package for the coming year graduate Studies, JS in charge
which is now being negotiated. of non-teaching professional reIn future years, those who cruitment; Dr. Morton Rothjoin SPA will elect and in- stein, Biology, is handling the
struct delegates to the State- faculty campaign.
v--ide organization for purposes
of contract negotiation with the
ANNIVERSARY CALENDAR
State.
The Office of the Vice President
The membership appeal notes for University Relations is attempt·
that, "it hardly need be stated i ng to develop a calendar of events
that the more members Buf- for the 125th Ann iversary year
falo has, the more influence it wh ich officially begins May 11 .
will wield at the State (SPA l
" All events which can fit into
level. In fact, the number of this commemoration should be
delegates we have will depend listed in the calendar." accord ing
on our membership. For exam- to a memorandum fro m the Office
ple, a large membership could now being circulated to all de·
strongly support the idea of a partment heads. Un iversity adsubstantial 'local option' sec- ministrators and others sponsor~
tion in a oon tract, in order to ing progra ms are urged to send
reserve certain decisions for the information to 186 Hayes Hall.
Buffalo campus.''
DR. SVETOZAR STOJANO\'IC,

'REPORTS
. QN

visiting

M~~~r 'P~~~~R~e~f'Jt i·~r:;

Development," Princeton Universi ty, Department of P olitics.
DR. AUSTIN D. SWANSON, professor,

e du c ationa l administration ,
··Quantitative Analysis and Edu-

GJ&gt;EOPLE

~n~oN!gaO:~~{~~:f·~~rir:

~~~~t~~~ii: i~;~~· ~~
em

New York Association of

School Businep Offici.al.s.
PRESENTATIONS
~..;,~=~~ :'!:f.;u• •~;:;;:,:.~ PUBLICATIONS
rology. lectured and examined re-

DR . MAR\. IN H . FARBER .

ve rsity , Argentina.

~~~.~·~iu~:a ~ial~~hr

sea rch programs, Depary.rrtent ~ f
Biochemistry, Buenos Atres Uru DR.

ANTONY

visiting

FLEW ,

pro~

{esso r, philosophy, •·A Quest fo r

Scientific Inquiry," in

distin-

Phenome~

'inolo//e':::r~~:/ ~;~:~'/: fchS:i:,

the Meaning of Life," Ca rleton edited. by Maurice Natanson. pu~
Un i v e r s it y, Ottawa. Canada; lished by MartinU!I Nijhof!, The
" Theology and Falsification,"
Hague.
Ohio University, Athens, Ohio;
" Must Morality Pay?" Ma!'9uette DR. SHINPEl OHKI. assistant proUniversity, Milwaukee, WlSCOn-. (essor, pharmaceutics. ··Effect of
sin; '"A Linguistic Philosopher
Looks at Lenin's Materialism and

Empirio-Criticism: • McMaster
University, Hamilton. Ontario;
" Miracles and Methodolgy" and
" Must Morality Pay?," Univer~
sity of Saskatchewan, Regina ,
Canada: "t:f.choanaly s i s and
~~r:.:~naf:.ry Univ e rsity,

.

DR. PAUL GARVIN .

professor,

Jin-

~rac: :·~~ :n~:.ti:

colloquium, 1Jnfvenity of Rochester.
DR. lES8E KALIN. assistant pro~

~~~ral'~~..:·~~~f-

lege.

DB. MADIU:INE MA.THlOT.

professor,

lingustic:s, "Discovery Procedures
in Textual Anslyois,'' languages
and linguistics colloquium, Uni~
versity of Rochester.
DR. ROBERT L. M:lNTER. assisthnt

profeuor, speech communication,

"Organizational Communication,"
American Society for Training
and Developmenl
DB.. .JAKES xoss. acting-dean,
Council on International Studies,
guest speaker at the mid·winter
meeting of the Vaaaar Club of
Western New York; "Racism and

f.:'
.!~7~~ ~~ug:
Rise in the World? ,"" Bulfalo

~a~e':s~.f!S~!!c":e !i~:os~rolff~~

0

physica Acta.

DR. CHARLES A. PLANZ, .,graduate,

educational administration and
DR. R. OLIVER GmSON, chairman,
educational admitnstration, " Per~
ceived Equity 'lind Its Relation-

E!~~M~~!".fle0:Ch~.'?1u~h
in Education.

DR. DENNlS R. SMJTB_, assistant

pro-

fess:ir , speech communicatton,
" Effects of Four Communication
Patterns and Sex on Length of
Verbalization in S~h of Four

Year Old Children, ' ERIC/ ECE.
DR. ALBERT WER1'HEIMEil. assistant
professor, pl"uirmacy, "The Pric;.,.
of Professional Services," Journal of the American Pha.rft'l4«.uticol Auociation.
OIL M.utCEL E. WINGATE, profeuor,
speech communication. "Phonetic
Ability of Stutteren,'' .lo!U71&lt;Jl of
S~ech-H&lt;4rinlf Ru..,rch.
0&amp;. MAJtC£1',. E. WINGATE, profeaor,

speech communication...Effect

~~~~~_;_,~;~:.."'!:;
Stuttering," ASHA.

RECOGNITIONS
.JOE M. FISCHEil, director. Creative
Craft Center, had a drawing oc-

~,=~~n• w~~n:.~ :~ti~0: :P;~~~~u~
Relations and the Quality of
Life," Toronto, ODtario.

DR. lORN POU.OCX, asaociate prol..ar, phi17~r Minds,"

~;.!;"C!toqC:Uum.

DR. IIBli"N1ll L BltOTB,

ter Philos~

-istant pro-

aeum of Art from April 16 to
June ZT.

OFF-CAMPUS
A,PPOINTMENTS

feiiOr, apeech com:municat1on , GEB.ALD .J. sum:rn:, named Admin'"n&gt;e Relationahip Between Com- iatrative lwociate .lor County
aiunciation Pattern and the ~ Committee. for ~ Regional

~~urU~ni~~~: tJ~.f~a ~~~"J!~

delpbia.

man.

/

�·· - , ; 1971 ..

8
(lnternaiional Week): clemDDitralion

J A P - ftA .,_,.010'

&lt;WEEKLY COMMU~IQUE

by the ' Japaneoe Club ~ HaM
Lour!p, 1 p.m.
-

80C1AL 8ClENCZ8 OOLLIIGZ DIBCU8-

' •Open to publ~ ••Open to ............. of tile u~
•Open only to those with a ~I 1 - In tile oubjocl

THURSDAY--4
CHILDREN,

THEtll

PROBLEMS

AND

~~:~o-:r: p~~~. b§cfc!i

of Medicine. Professionals such
as physicians, educaton, psychologists, eocial worken and related
health professionals as well as
parent members of the Associat'ion for Children with Leaniing
Disabilities are· invited. ft1orning
program: Raymond F. Coleman,
assistant professor of pediatrics
and aS80Cl8tt! professor of social

:'s~~·Sc~!t ~rniMedf~e~ w~:
1

CUSS

THE

HYP ERA C TI\' E

CHn.D.

Afternoon program: Dr. Gordon
K. Farley, chief, Children's Diagnostic Center and assistant professor of child J:ychiatry. Unive r-

~~ o!,;~o~0o ~:iC:~n~~·~:.
CLUMSY CHILD.

DIAGNOSIS AND ~lANAGEMENT 0 F
HEMORRHAGIC AND THROMBOEMBOLIC DISEASES: for physicians w ho

want to learn about the latest
developments in this area: co-

~n":rre:c ~F:e ~ee~~:aitoJf~

Coagulation Reference Lab of the
Regional Medical Program for
Western New York Continuing
Medical Educatior1. SUNYAB.
and the Roswell Park Memorial
Institute. Roswell Pt.rk Memorial
Institute, through Friday, March
5th.

W!~ ;r~::~f: ~:~r:~~~

.l

featuring members of the Music
Department, Haas Lounge, 1 p.m.
COLUX;E OF MATHEMATICAL SCI·
ENCES LECTURE: David Rothenberg, A MODEL FOR PERCEPTION
\\"JTH APPLICATIONS TO THE ARTS.

·10 Foster, 3 p.m. Also Friday, 10
Foster, 3 p.m.
PSYCHOMAT* *: free-form communication for personality growth ,
Fillmore Room, S-6 p.m.
MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES LECTURE*: Dr. David Rothenberg,

f~i~n.!n~~~~~u~:~!r-;,~~

iPo:::~ UPR£SENTATJON, 10
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM : Dr. T. Tanaka. Catholic University, Washington, D . C.. ELECTRONIC DENSITY

_.

OF STATES IN DISORDERED LATTICES,

111 Hochstetter, 4 p.m. ' Refreshments, 112 Hochstetler, 3:30 p.m.

ECONOMICS 8EMINA&amp;:

The Amateur Radio- Society and
the Student Allocia.tion are
sponsoring a tour of the G.E.
semiconductor plant here in Buffa1o. Interested persons are asked
to meet in 334 Norton. 6:45 p.m.
Transportation will be provided
FILM**: LA CHINOISE, OU PLUTOT

A LA CHJNOIBE (1967). Brechtian

:u ~:ti~~-=dJe~

=~~

class Paris flat. 147 biefendorf,
8 p.m., free.
FRE."i'CH LECTURE*: Dr. R o g e r
Kempf, visiting professor, French,

ECRJTURE £T DANDYSME DE BALZAC

A BAUDELAIRE (Writing and Dandyism from Balzac to Baudel·
aire). delivered in French, 22
Foster, 8 p.m.
ISRAEL-A SOCIETY IN CHANGE {In-

ternational Week): lecture by Dr.
E . 0. Schild. professor, New York
University. 231 Norton, 8 p.m.
CONCERT

(lntemationa1 Week):

~~.e:tp~J~h ';!"{:· ~c:.

:d

FiUmore Room, 9 p.m., Students, 52; non-students, $3.
FILM **: ZAGREB FILMS, Confe rence Theatre, consult Norton
Ticket Office for times, $. 75.
The UUAB Fin.e Arts Film
Committee is presenting a series
of short films featuring those from
the Zagreb Studio of Animation.
Thursday, March 4, through Sunday, March 7.
The purpose of the Zagreb
fi.lrm; is "to animate: to give life
and soul to a design , not through
GOLD,

;~~fi~~g0~u~~~~h ~eg~~;

films are distinguished by their ·

satirical

~it,

experimentation with

=ti:.g_:fo~ictJ:nyan:Od~
use

advanced
of music and sound
effects. These films are clearly
little parables with a messag~
about the dignity of man as an
individual, his feelings a&amp; a tocial
be'.na,

,ru. lrialo, omall comfona,

drives and weaknesses. They have
added new dimensions to ani·
mated film for they are social·
minded cartoons which offer

~~T~tswA~~inm:~a:~~~~

ment.
The message conveyed by the
films is relevant. The social commentary is s u ch that it transcends the bounds of one nation
~he ~o~f!.lied to all throughout

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SE.1ot:INAR:

J . D. Eick, assistant professor,
dental materials and Ph.D. candidate, chemical engineering, THE
DEVELOP?olENT OF A DENTAL ADHESIVE, 104 Parker Engineering, 4

p.m.
The· factors influencing the
development and permanency of
an adhesive bond will be discussed
and the pioblems peculiar to the
development of an adhesive dental material will be emphasized.
THEORE"I'JCAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR:

Dr~

Robert Rinaldi, physics, New
York University, PROTOPLASMIC
MOTION - THE PHYSICO.CHEMICAL
PROBLEMS, Room .29, 4248 Ridge

Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshments, 3:30
p.m.
Protoplasmic motion in a variety of protozoa will be demonstrated. The physico-chemical
parameters required will be discussed with the perspective of
theoretical requirement&amp; for contraction.
GENEB.AL

ELEC'I'RJC

PLANT

TOUR :

(Continued from /)Ole 4, col. 3)

CHILDREN, THEIR PROBLEMS AND
THEIR WORK: symposium on chil·

~

1

Room 47, 4224
Ridge Lea, 3:30p.m.

BJOCREMJBTRY and PIL\RMACOLOGT
Bi:MINAI!: Dr. John Daly, chief,
0

h:~~~ry of c~~~Jur»~

BOLE OF ARENE OXIDES lN THE METABOLISM OF AROMATIC SUBSTRA.TES,

G·22 Capen, 4 p.m.
FILM * : THE SEA GULL,

.sponsored

by Community Action Corps, 140
Capen, 6, 8 and 10 p.m.• . donation, $.75.
INDIAN FILM: *: NAYAK (HERO, by
Satyajit Ray, 1965) . The story ?f
a film actor who wants to mn
with ave r'age people in their
everyday lives. 146 Diefendorf, 7
and 9: 30p.m., students S.75; non·
students $1.00.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Instruction in basic steps during
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
LECTURE AND FILM (International
Week): A film about the Peace
Corps in Latin America will be

~~~=~b~dr~:· ~~~~e=~~

Corps discussing the work of the
Corps there. Fillmore Room, 8
p.m.
FILM u : L ' IMMORTELLE (Alain
Robbe-Grillet, 1963) . This is the
first film that Robbe-Grillet directed himself. \Yithout unusual
camera angles or lightin$', without
photographic manipulation, with·
out recou rse to the fantastic decor
of the expressionist or surrealist

~~~~e ~ubt~~~k{4f ~'::}::.

dod, 8 p.m., free.

~~BAS:~~~~h itll~1 F:u~j;.
80

tion, Dr. Justin Hofmann will
speak on MAJOR IDEAS OF A MINOR
HOLIDAY, Oneg Shabbat will follow, Hillel House, 8 p.m.
PILM• *: ZAGKEB FILMS, awardwinning animated filr:Ds of aobia1
conscience, Conference Th eatre,
consult Norton Ticket Office for
times, $.76.

SATURDAY-6
FENCING*: North Atlantic Cham·
pionships (host, Buffalo) , Clark
Gym, 8 a.m.
PLANNING OF SCIENTIFIC EXPERI·
MENTS 0 : First in a series of sem·

~~~u~~rb~~~~t~~~~taz=.

FU.M •

*:

ZAGREB FILMS,

listing.

see Friday

.,

MONDAY-8
FILM•• : MURIEL

(A lain Resnais,

1

~~)p 1fc a ':~~ti: fitti!"'C;e qsu~c?.

cross-cut editing. lots of symbol·

ism. inserts and overlapping &amp;ound
tracks . .A counterpoint between

the son's love, blighted in one

::%th~~~:!: r:;~er;sri~fh:=J~
147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8 p.m.. free.

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SEMIJJAR:

Dr. Wemer Wenzel. Institute fur
Eisenhuttenwesen. Technische
Hochsc.hule, Aachen. West Germany, WHISKER FORMATION IN THE
REDUCTION OF IRON OXlDES, 109
Parker Engineering, 4 p.m.
COMPUTING CENTER USER SERVIcEs
SEMINAR: Advanced FORTRAN ,

Roger Campbell and Harvey Ax·
lerod , instructors, Room 10, 4238
Ridge Lea, 7 -'9 '!&gt;.m. • - GliA'nUATE

lifx:rr.U. • :

Ka1"~ Vo"'l-

sang, piano. with assillting artists

!~Ch~~~~e::O~ri_:&gt;:Bo'ldt

piano. Works include: Poulenc,
Sonata for Clarinet and Piano;

:?,.::

g~:~M'~~~~~s:CD~~o:::y
s:r~ f;a:~~: ~:,.~a~~a:;n:::e~

Theme by Be e tho ve n , Op. 35.
Baird, 8:30p.m ., free.

TUESDAY-9
FILM * *: THE THIRD~
1

(Sir Car·

free-form communication for personality growth,
Fillmore Room, 3-6 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: Dr. R. Da·
vis, Jr., Brookhaven National
Laboratories. Upton , L.l.. TKE
SEARCH FOR SOLAR NEUTRINOS, 111
H oChstetler. 4 p.m. Refreshments,
112 Hochstetter, 3:30 p.m.
THOORETIC~ BIOLOGY SEMINAR: Dr.
Shimon Amdur, research · associ·
ate, chemistry, OSOMETRIC MEAS·
PSYCHOMAT* •:

\IREMENTB OF WATER VAPOB PRESLOWERING IN VERY DILUtt
SOLUTIONS AND ITS APPLICATION IN
PREPARATION OF MEMBRANES FOR
DESALINATION , R o 0 m 29. 4248

BUlLE

Ridge Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshments,
3:30 p.m.

~ri~=~~:O~~ '!f::titr::~~

of
measured very carefully, down to
10-mt and found to be far away
from expected values by · estab-

l~h:ts:=1e:tJc~n:8of~~~~

der Jayer of solutio)\&amp;' -and..- indi·
cates so·me new.· directiohs 'fdr
preparation of membranes.
FRENCH LECI'URE* : see Tuesday
listing; continues through the semester.

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent exhibit of works by
Robert Graves and James Joyce.
Poetry Room, 207 Lockwood Library, 9. a.m.-5 p.m.

INTERVIEWS
The

ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWING

~:~o~reS;::r~h=~~br~t:::!~ ~!~ ~~:.~m3!~~ro?:i!~ ~Df~~ r;:;nri~:'S:!=::. ~le~
146 Diefendgrf, 10 a.m.

the opportunity for individual if!·
terviews with .-educational, bull·
ness, industrial and guviPnmentaJ

RECITAL * :

ert E. Valett, professor of education, Fresno State College, Fresno. California, will di.sruss THE

~~ Dirr:'d~J. ~~dts'.i:. f:!: :ir~r:~:!l. ~= t,roi!
C. FURNAS COLI..roE ~- ~dd!tio;w~:ro=:~n f~:wa:.:it
1
~~~-n'tidc~~i~:trab}:d!~1i~·,; CLIFFORD
.
and at Baird Ticket Office, no fc-~RE~~f~~e 8~~ ~;o~J !ij: ~ble in Hayes C.

~e~~ci~!.o~~!nj~~~tf&gt;r~;~!
CHILD WITH PERCEPTUAL PROBLEMS.

Afternoon: Mrs. Elsa Miller, di-

~fl~r~~- t'W!~~~~ ~~.~r~i1l
talk on THE DISADVANTAGED
Statler Hilton Hotel.

CHILD,

ENDODONTICS IN DAILY PRACTICE:

continuing dental education
course with Dr. James Guttuso,
associate professor of operative
dentistry and endodontics; Dr.
Frank L. Graziano, assistant professor of endodontics; · Dr. Bnice
H. Seidberg, clinical assistant Professor of operative dentistry and
endodontics. Capen Hall.

Ruslana Antonowicz,
piano, and Allen Sigel, clarinet.
Works include: SzaJowsk.i. Sona·
tin e; Saint-Saens, Sonata . opus
167; Hindemith. Sonale. Central

tale- background music ia played entirely on a zither- a social
commentary on war's aftermath

dren who suffer from sPecial problems of l ea rning , sponsored by

would be well served by the
appointment of a minority
dean.
Nearly tw\) months after my
Directions Pose Problems
resignation there has been no
This School faces many movement toward a search for
problems as it attempts to im- a successor. The lapse of time
plement the directions it has . certainly presents difficulties;
chosen for itself. It is typical but it also presents opportunthat new academic programs ities. For a search committee
take five years to prove or dis- can now be appointed with the
prove themselves, to iron out minority directions ol the
the "bugs". Many" establiabed school' cleariy in focus. And its
programs have taken much work can prooe00 with dispaldl
longer. We are mid-stream. The in locating a lllOUP .of candifaith
to 8U8tain the dates wbo fulfill lbe sense ol
directi~ school as well direction aud content approas -lbe technical and adminis- pria!Al to our fcx:us on lbe di&amp;trative requirements to do .0 advantapd and lbe alienated.
tinue to attract a lion's share
of grant money.
-

POSSIBILITY OF A PUBELY QUALITA-

TIVE IIOONOMIC8,

professor, statistics. The talks are

FRIDAY-S

Zweig~
I

Eric Ieralow on POP MliiiE,
Trailer 8, 2 p.m.
Trout Rader,
visiting profeseor of economics.
Univenity of Rochester, THE IM-

8ION:

charge.

INDIAN FU.M * : NAYAK (HERO, by
Satyajit Ray, 1965). 146 Diefendorf, 4:30 p.m., students $.75;
non-students $1.00.
FILM 0 : THE SEA GULL, sponsored
by Community Action Corpe, 140
Capen. 6, S and 10 p.m., donation,

$.75.

and FOOD
Week): A
talent show in the Fillmore Room,
7 p.m., will be followed by foodtasting in the first floor cafeterias
at 9 p.m., donation, $2.
BALKAN. FOLK DANCING: Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.

INTERNATIONAL FIESTA
1'ASr!NG (lntzmational

HUMAN DIMENSIONS INSTITUTE LECTURE : Dr. Georgi Lozanov, Bul-

8

rector, Public Heal~ Research,- MONDAY~ 8: Cranston School&amp;,
State of New York, CELL CULTURE Rhode Island; Dep38it Central
AND CANCER, Acheson 5, 4 p.m.
Schools, Deposit, N.Y.; Middle
Island Central Schools, Middle
CONFLICT AND CHANGE IN THE KIDIsland,-N . Y.; Patchi&gt;~ue- Medford
DLE EAST: Dr. George Hourani,
School•,
(Sul!olk): Yorktown
philosophy, INTELLECTUAL FER· Heights Schools,
(Weotcbeoter). MENT lN THE MIDDLE EAST, apon·

sored by Hillel, 231 Norton, 8
p.m.
FRENCH LECTURE* : Dr. Roger
Kempf, continuing the series on
ECRlTURE ET DANDYSME DE BAL7.A.C
A BAUDELAIRE, 22 Foster, 8 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-10
FOREIGN B.TUDENT AFFAIRS COFPEE
HOUR* : 10 Townsend H8ll, 3:30-

5:30 p.m.

PUJUM: ....VICE:

oponsored by Hii-

TUEBDAY - 9: CUba Central
Scheob; Hartford Board of Education, Maryland ; Niagara
Wheatfield Schools, Sanbom,_New
·
York.
WEDNESDAY-10: New York Stale
Banking Depl; Consolidated
Freightways; Arthur Andenon &amp;
Co.: S.S. Kreoge Co.; City of Gary
Schools (Indiana) ; Sachem Central Schools, Holbrook, N.Y. (Suffolk); Westbill Central Schools,
SyrtlCUOe, N.Y. (Onondap.) .

C~t:f:n:rst s~:i~~f : : ~~JI' ~.~~~aZ.T. ~~:.:...-~ ~ ~&amp;:
Gouverneur, N.Y. (St. LawParapeychology in Sofia,

TOLOGY -

SUGGES·
BEMAilK.ABLE SHORTCUT

ro LEAI!N1NG, Wick Center, Rooary
!iill College, 8: 15 p.m.
PILMu: ZAG&amp;EB FILMS, aee Friday
J.ioting.

~~=h=:"'JITii~ffio:!:
1: 30

COMPU'!'[NG

ciHn:a

U8I:R SERVICIS

=~~da':t~·~~

Jerod, instructors. Room 10, 4238
Ridge Lea, '7-9 p.m.

SUNDAY- 7
p~

Jlrrf'I'RHATIOMAL P.i&amp;BION

Soc1al hoUr, with hamantaacben,
will follow service. Hillel House,
6:3p p.m.

siiow

CIIEA.TIVI: A880CIATE .II!ICITAL IV*:

mil&lt;ed -media
p.m.

procnun. Baird, 8:30
•

THURSDAY-11

rence) ; Medina Central Schools,
Medina, N . Y. (Orl-).

N&lt;YriCES
STUDY

PIIOGB.ul

IN

ORJ:KOBLB,

PI.ANCE: A aemeetei or two of
otudierat the Uuiwnit)&gt; of
oble; IICCOmmodation m ~Fnouch
homeo; air charter ~na:­
lion; aftilable lo ~&lt;~Ph--.
junion .ADd eenioa at a e.t of

a--

f::'M::r t't:QI·-==-..!!:"t;

(lntemalioual Week): Red Room,
Fac:ulty Club, Harriman Ubrary,. CBIUIISTRY COLWQliiUI&lt;: IL A. Freuch ~1. 214 Crooby
2 p.m.
Scbtnp. Comell Uuiwrsity.
Hall, 881-6467. '

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

VOL 2-NO. 22

FEBRUARY 25, 1971

'-- ·

~ bt}elJQiversity. ..OurC
3-5Names
•

.
'

The Search Committee for
the Dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies has
recommended three to five candidates to President Robert L.
Ketter. Additional information
on the rec:ommended candidates is now being secured.
Their identities remain confidential.
In keeping with its charge,
the Committee's report to the
president listed candidates
from both inside and outside
the University who it feels
are "suitable for this position."
The Committee reported assessing the credentials of more
than 100 prospects who were
suggested to it, includiug. ·
twelve from the University faculty. The finalists recommended were among those who
were invited to he interviewed
by the .Committee, after considerable documentation had
been obtained about their credentials, and who were ultimately approved in 1~-bai­
Jot voting. The Committee began meeting ·on'_l'{ovember 30, ·
1971, and _has_~- met
twit:e weeJdy since.
The Committee was chaired
by Edwin P . Hollander, professor of psychology. Its other
members were: Bruno A. Arcudi, acting chairman, Department of Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese; Dennis B. Arnold,
undergraduate student; LuciUe
Bowers, undergraduate student; William R. Greiner,
chairman, Legal Studies Program; John A. HoweU, 11880ciate professor, Department of
Chemical Enaineering; McAllister H . Hull, chairman, Department of Physics and Astronomy; Anthony F. Lorenzetti, assistant vice president
for student alfairs; Emmitt H.
Lyons, greduate student; Marpret O'Bryan, advisor in the
A design by John O'Reilly
total design is also considered
Di~ of. Undergra~uate ffiiiO, of Cheektowaga has
weli-8\Jited to a variety of uses
Studies; Vandon E. Wbite, as- selected 88 the official symbol (in publications, on lettersistant dean, ~I of Health for U/B's 125th Anniversary, heads, posters, etc.) and lends
Related Prot""""""" and Ste- the Policy Committee for the itself to reproduction in a vaphen W~ter, director of teaCh- observance has announced.
. riety of sizes and in a number
er edUQltion.
O'Reilly's desiiP). was !lei- of graphic techniques ( embos.
ected from a field of 55 entries sing, reverse images, etc.)
Entries were judged by the
from both University and community in a contest spoD801'ed Committee on . a numbered
basis with the .members being
by the· Committee.
The prize is $50..
unawareof~identitiesofthe
An amateur artist, O'Reilly artists.
is. a gtaduate of Bennett High
AU other entrants in the
A _ , cliacwBiaa an Pbei-- Scbool ·and is employed by competition have baen advised
•~ ,.r=-;_....___,__ a JapPrinting Prep of Bulfalo.
of the flelection and thanked
"' """"' ......,._......
The design, he said, was in- for their participation.
Tea Ceremooy, and a spired by the Anniversary's
Although the contest entry
lecture an the PMce Corps in theme, "The University-Qur
Latin America are among hlcb- Livinl Future." That future
-lilbts ol this yaor's Interna- has to be the world, he aaid.
tiaaai~Week ~.
••--'O'Reilly vieWS the Univer_........, """""' sity 88 a very good institution
1,
!&amp;r cancert and. end- wtx.e greduates seem to him
ing SundaY, March 7, With a to he the "key to world imfaabillll show, the week prom- provemanl" The University,
~! wide:r&amp;JIIing look at the he said, ~t doesn't "push out
.........
• students, but is edUQlting in'1118 two co-coordinators, stu- dividuals with a deep conCern
dlala ~ DeMar and Fi- for human problema.
dele Dionou, want the ...,..
The ·winning symbol was to apen ~ minds to d&gt;e lected, the Committee noted,
world outatde the · United because it incor.porated DOt
Slates. We "want to CNilte anly the required Anni-.y
new .attitude&amp; and respansi- · informatim, but alao the pre&amp;. _· to the ftrioua countriea ent Uni-m.~ IIBIII ~ Ibis
ol the ....nd," Dionou expJaina. C011011Pt of UI·B 'a wid8-ranlinl
.(COfttinued on Pfllell, col. I)
canlributians to eociety. The

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
R~rw

125th 4NNIVERS4R\'
1846-1971

~tate lJI)iversity of ~w_YO~ at Buffalo

Anniversary Symbol Selected
ree.:

-WrldWeel{
Opens Monday

-

S,_l

Assignment of final grades
in College A will depend on
evaluation by an independent
review board, Dr. Daniel Murray, acting vice president for
academic aJfairs, said in a Jetter read at Tuesday's CoUegiate Assembly meeting. The
open Jetter to the Assembly included an "open invitation to
any fa cui ty member in the
. CoUegiate Assembly" to he on
this committee.
No action is currently being
taken by the Faculty Senate
about College A. A committee
of the Senate, Educational
Planning and Policy, had a
meeting with Murray about the
matter, but is not planning immediate action, says Dr. Carmelo Privitera, chairman. The
committee will continue to
watch the situation, however,
he adds.
The establishment of the new
review board climaxes CoUege
A's year-long battle with Murray over grading procedures.
~ September, Murray sent
a .letter-to ·t he Asoembly"......,_
sing -that grades could only he
given on the basis of "demonstrated student accomplishment" During the fall semester, Murray met with College A Eeveral times to work
on this problem, and in a November · meeting, the CoUege
was told there would he ''no
self-evaluation this semester."
The matter flared up again
in January after Murray read
52 student project reports and
found himself at odds with the
grades given for many of the
reports. At this time, he wrote
to Dr. Fred SneU, mastao ·of
College A, and told him College A's evaluation procedures
do not meet State Education
Law Regulations. In order for
blanks did not ask for informa- CoUege A to continue giving
tion concerning the entrants college credit for its courses,
(other than name and ad- Murray said the CoUege must
dress) , several individuals ap- establish "an actual evaluative
pended' notes. with their de- capacity'' and "participation
signs, identifying themselves in an evaluative proceas ol a
88 members of the community · much wider range of faculty
with no special University af. input."
filiation, other than "a keen Col1op A Rlf.interest" in its activities.
The CoUege refu9ed to 4o
Black and white reproduction proofs of the winning sym- this and voted at a meeting an
February
9 to continue their
bol will he available for U9e aelf-evaluatian
procedures.
by individual ~ts "!"i
Murray
9eeB a sharp distinomembers of the Uruvenuty tion between
self-evaluation
Community from the Office of
University Publications Ser- and grading. Currently, College A requires a student to fill
vices, 250 Winspear.
out a "final emm" describing
his project and assigning himself a grade. This grade . is
then sent in to the Offi&lt;e of
Admissions and Records by
College A.
This doesn't meet State ,.._
quirements, Murray notes.
''The University wants to know
the basis for the student's aelfasaessment," he says, and the
lack of information in most
of the reports hampers an independent evaluation from
either agreeing or diaqreeiu
with- the !lfiJdent's evaluation.
''The issue turns squarely an
the questiOn of the UniveJ:Sity
insisting that there be a dem( continued on IKJil• 3, coL 6). .

-

�P - - , 2S, 19ii

( cordii.aft from 1, coL I)
"We want (Americans) to
know tbllt other counlries· lire
just all exciting and beautiful
as the United Statee."
The_emphasis this year will
shift from dispJaya to penlOD·IiopersoD. communication. Panel
discussions, films and an en·
couragement of sitting down
and talking are all part of the

P~change

won't excluc:te
the traditional displays from .
foreign countries, however.
Twelve foreign student clube
will still offer displays of
handicralta and products from
various countries, in tl- • lfaas
Lounge. In addition, slides and
travel films will be shown in
the evenings in Haas Lounge
and an art display will occupy
the Center Gallery of Norton.
The scho!dule of events includes:
Monde)', Mardi 1

Cleveland Quartet Th Join U~ Next Fhli;
Mischa Schneider Finds Them Very 'Gifted'
When the Cleveland String

At U/ B, each of the four will
teach private performance and
chamber music and participate
in faculty recitals.
With a concert schedule completed through December, they
will perform the "first (November 3 ) and last ( December 13)
of the six concerts in the Beethoven cycle, ta1r.ing their place
among other. old friends such

Quartet takes up residency at
U /B nut fall, it will be a time
to renew old friendships and
make new ones.
The four will arrive on campus this September from the
Cleveland Institute of Music,
Dr. Albert Cohen, chairman of
U/ B's Music Department, has
announced. And in Mischa
Schneider, another member of
the department, they will find
an old friend.
Schneider . is the last of the
Budapest String Quartet to remain on campus. He came to
know the four young_musicians
An assistant professor of
-Marths and Paul Katz, Peter
Salalf and Donald Weilerstein pharmacy at U /B is directing
-when they were performing a new program to give pharmat the Marlboro (Vt.) Summer acy students an opportunity
lor clinical experience. He is
Music Festival in 1969.
In fact, it was his brother Dr. Richard A Hutchinson, a
Alexander (Sasha), another 1967 graduate of the Univermember of the Budapest, who sity of Michigan.
The director of pharmaceuarranged for the newcomers to
tical services at the Bulfalo
make their New York debut.
U / B's Schneider is very im- General Hospital has approxpressed with the "highly gift- imately 25 senior pharmacy
ed" four. "They are Serious and students in a clinical setting
they want to work- and that" at the Hospital in a program
is a very important thing to which began in January. Each
student is spending about 21
music."
Weilerslein, a Juilliard grad- hours at the hospital during
his
last semester. In the next
uate, is the organizer of the
group and is its only member academic yeat, seniors will
over 30. He captured highest probably be spending about 60
honors at the Munich Inter- hours at the General.
· Dr. Hutchinson bases the
national Competition in 1968,
and was on the faculty of the the new program on the "pa·
Cleveland Institute of Music in tient-drug team" which in1969 when be was given a "free cludes physicians, n u r s e s,
hand" to assemble a permanent . pharmacists, and patients.
One of the most important
string ensemble at the school ·
He choee a trio of fellow per- .benefits for the pharmacy stuformers Wbo shared his enthu- dents, he says, is communication. For the first time they
siasm fbr their craft:
Sala1r, a student of the East- will have an opportunity to
man School of Music, appeared talk to patients, physicians,
as concertrnaster and soloist of and nurses in a clinical situathe Yale University Collegium tion. The pharmacy students
Musicum. Serving with the will attend conferences, make
Peace Corps in Chile, be taught rounds and be an integral part
· ·
at the Umvarsidad de Concep- of the "team."
cion and performed in chamber
"This app!OII"ch will help
music recitals• throughout that make the pharmacist a drug
country.
expert and motivate him to
Mrs. Katz, (&gt;&lt;!tile and dark- higher professional responsibilhaired, was higbeet prizewinner itiee," Dr. Hutchinson said,
at the 1968 Geneva Interna- The students will also learn to
tional Viola Competition and
patient records, something
soloist with l'Orcheetze de Ia that is vital for good patient
Suisoe-Romande. Sbe and her care.
husband, cellist Paul Katz,
.Assisl:ing Dr. Hutchinson is
were members of the Toledo a clinical ~ Dr. KenStrlni Quartet and the Univer- neth Kelliclr., and Mr. David
sity of Southern California Vogel, assistant director of the
Strlni Quartet, an international De~t of Pharmaceutical
prizewinner in the 1965 Munidl Servioes.
competition.
Aloog with this teecbMr. Katz, wt....list of teedl- ing Dr, Hutcbinaan
ers reads li1r.e a.musical "Who's has initialed SOllie major iJmG.
Who," performed in the Pablo vations in •pharmaceutical .,._
Casale Master Claal at Berk- vioe for the patients, phyai'
eley and before the Violincello clans, and nurses at BuftaJQ
General, including aiowld-tbeo
Sociaty of N-· Yod&lt;. - - - ·

as the Juilliard and GUIU!Bi
quartets.

In addition, they will per·
form October 26 as part of the
Bulfalo Chamber Music aeriell
and may also appear in the ,.,.
cital series at the Bulfalo Public Library auditorium.
A Baird Hall concert will introduce the quartet to the community, October 4.

Buffalo General Program
Enrolls 25 from Pharmacy

•P

1 p .m. Sitar Concert: India's
MUSIC, Haas Lounge. •
3 p.m. (}peninJ. Ceremony:
An open house, WJth coffee and
donuts, Haas Lounge.
7 p.m. Film: "Fire Bulla" , a
Chinese film, 140 Capen, admission 25#.
7 p.m.. closing. Follr. Daneing: Sponsored by the Iaraei
Club, Fillmore Room.

r.-.y.. Mardl 2

1 - 6 p.m. Film: Several films
sponsored by the Arab Culture
Club, Conference Theatre.
3 p.m. Panel: A discussion
of Puerto Rtcan independence
by students and faculty, Haas
Lounge.
6 p.m. Demonstration: The
Japaneee Club 'will demonstrate origami and floWer arranging, Haas Lounge.
7 p.m. Lecture: Richard
John, an American diplomat
in residence at State University at Albany, will discuss,
''The Cold War and Beyond,"
231 Norton.
8 p.m. Panel Discussion :
Sponsored by the Arab Cuitural Club, Fillmore Room.

~-- Tea c-ma.iy will
be ..........led ~lap.
-· s p.m.
Club,
HaM
Uc:tme anc1
:.A
film about tbe p_,.; CoOps in
lAtin .AMica wi.ll be followed
by sludaniB, faculty and rep-tativee from the Peace
Corpe diac:uasina the worit of
tbe Corpe theoe.
Setun18J,
I
7 p.m. Talent Show "a nd
Food-Tasting Party: An international talent. show in the
Fillmore Room will be followed
by a food-tasting party in the
first floor cafeterias, donation
$2.

s.....uy, -

7

2 p-.m. Fashion ShOw: A display of international fashions
will be held in the Red Room.
Faculty Club, Harriman Library.

Hesse, Segal
Top list of
Best Sellers
U /B's book taatee range from
philoeophic to romantic, an in·
quiry to the Norton Bookstore

reveals. The two best sellers
are Love Story by Erich Segal
and books by Hermann Hesse,
Mrs. n.elma Barrett, book·
store buyer, says.
But U /B readers also buy
the perennial favorites such as
The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran.
The current interest. in Eastern
philoeophies and religions may
account for the continual good
sales of this book of poetry and
aphorisms but probably the big·
gest factor is Gibran's beautiful verse.
Books by Kurt "vonnegut,
philoeophic sniper at society's
mores and morals, are also popular. For many years, Vonne·
gut was regarded as an ''under·
ground" writer but his large
and growing audience ha s
caused critics to .....,valuate his
works and give them the mantle
of legitimacy.
Other current Bookstore favorites are The French Lieu·
tenant's Woman by John
Fowles, and Cancer Ward by
Nobel priz&amp;.winning Russian
author Aleksalidr Solzhenitsyn.
Moving up the list of best sellers is Up the Organizalwn by
Robert Townsend. Tbe book,
just out in paperbaclr., takes a
mocking look at American in·
dustry and "We Try Jlarder"
Townsend de)ights in needling

clock "aalellile pharmacy
units, •t and a new ';mit dose"
system of dispensing drugs.
When the new seven-year
Doctor of Pharmacy program
begins (hopefully in Septem- Wednesday, Mordl 3
ber 1971 ) students will .spend
1 p.m. Electronic Music Conapproximately 1,500 hours over cert: " Musical Creations" by
a two-year period in the "pa- members of the Music Departtient-drug team" clinical ap- .ment, Haas Lounge.
proach at Buffalo General and
1 p.m. Film: Several films
in other clinical settings, ac· sponsored by the Arab Culturcording to Dr. Hutchinson.
al Club, Conference Tbeatze.
7 p.m. Film: ''The Dreamer,"
presented by the Israel Club,
147 Diefendorf, admission 25#.
8 p.m. Panel Discussion:
Sponsored by the Arab Cuitural Club, Fillmore Room.
Tile low bid on an estimated Thursdoy, Mardi 4
Amer"
"talism.
$67,000 contract to rehabilitate
1 p.m. Electronic Music Con~cansalescapl f this dero ·
e
~
.
gathe Harriman Theatre was cert: "Musical Creations" b
$26,000 above that estimate, members of "the Music~ tory c;har~ct':rl~ation of one
,. ~ncan mstitu~ are on the
the Stale University Construc- ment, Haas Lounge
8 p.m. Lecture: ·Dr. E . 0
!"""'• ih!' popularity of another
tion Fund reports.
18 wanmg. Readers at U / B
The Fund has 45 days in Schild, professor at New York
which to accept or reject the Universio/. wip discuss "Israel
~d~
1
bid .
N~~~ m Change," 231 Mrs. Barrett also ~ thai
The purpose of the work is
9 p.m. Concert· UuAB
Knot. by R. D . Laing 18 very
to develop existing spaces im1lhe "can't keep it
proving facilities for the 'uni- sents "Black and. Blue," a).~ popular
versity Progn!m in Tbeatze. 1iah rock group, and "Gold " m stock.
..
in
conce-+
admissio·
n,
·$2
t'
The
political
and militant
The project ,covers oonversion
•.,
or aid!! of
society 18
•
·
of the existing auditorium into students, $3 for non-students,
reader'· ~ too ~
a flexible studio workllbop; de- Fridoy, Mordl 5
•
militarism and the. black aDd
velopment of the atage mto a
1 p.m. Demonstration: Tlie female liberation mo·vements
presentation/instruction area;
are moving rapidly from book·
conversion of the balcony aree
store ahelvee. .Sezutd Polilies
into an audio-visual control
and standards li1r.e The Auto,
booth· enlarging the scenery
X and
shop by ~ former office
Dr. Gerhard Levy, prof.;.,.,r bwpaphy of Malt:olm
boob are
areas; and creating a la~J!ldry of pharmaceutics, School of Elcfrid&amp;e Cleavw's
I
.•
and dye room. Shower and toi- Pharmacy, will be honored as aelling well.
U/B students have similar
let rooms will be refurbished· allliimus of the year by the
foUr existing classrooms will ~ Alumni Association of the Uni- taatee to other uniVM!ity read·
0011verted to serve as mea's versity of California School of ers &amp;ClOSS the country. A receilt
and Women's theatrical dress- .Pharmacyd at San Francisco ~ done by The Chronicle/
of H111he EduaJliota sives the
ing rooms. a model shop and
urlng the Amerij:an Pharmatheatrical worlr.shop. Milstein, !"'Utical ~tion convention ten at 28 other c:ampuaes as:
Love Story, Everylhill/l You've
Wittelr., Davis and Assoc:iateeof m that city on March 30.
Alwaya Wankd to KrtOfll Allout
Bulfalo are the architects on
Sex
bf David Reuben,, The
the project which is acheduled
The award wi.ll be made at
for completion by July 1, 1971. 8 . luncheon in the San Fran- GreeiUII/l of ~by Cbarleo
A Reicb, 'rite Seuru&gt;u WomCISCO Hilton Hotel
ZWEI8 iTATDIEifT DElAYED
an by "I", Future Bltoclr by
. The Association annually Alvin Ttilller, Crisia in .the
The-~ of Dean Franklin
by Chadell SilberZwelll of Socilol .... oc:hecluled (lives an award to "one .of its c~
for the .,.._this WMk, de· outstanding alumni . . . in rec- man, CWiiUJation by Kenneth
ognition "of his contributions to Clark, Knot., The Prophet and
~,~- .of. lll~
'the prollllliion."
.
.

Bids Too High on
Theatre Project

';'!:d:J ';U,;

eoo

Award for Levy

...

'l'lte

Godfdlwr.

- - ---

�~

P - - , 2!1, 1911

MarchStort
PlonnedBy
TV Project
The world ol. ezperimental
complete with airinli ol. student films, on-'lhespot local . _ coveraae and
in-depth interviews with cam,
pus leaders, is llOIIlinJ to u /B.
Within the .-t month, a lfOIIP
of sta1f members and students
hope to be on the air for two
bow!1 every Friday in Norton.
The program will have a
mapzine-type format, similar
to "First Tuesday" or "60 Minutes," centerlni around campus activity. The group, which
calls it.eelf U /B-TV1 wants to
provide an outlet lor experimental student work while
IIBrYinc as a source of instruction and information for the
University community. In the
future, they plan to broadcast
ouch thinp as play readinp,
panel discussions m front of
live audiences and reports on
student JIOVemmenl The first
show will probably include an
interview with President Ketter.
Originator of U / 8-TV. is
Steve Breslow, a speech communications major and "!"'rations director for Instructional
Television, a oection of the Instructional Communications
Center (ICC) . Part of his job
for ICC is to help depruto;ento
use television equipment However, he says, moot of the time,
the equipment liee idle. This
led the young producer to the
idea of uaing the cameras and
monitors for a closed cireuit
television program.
He brought his idea to the
Task Force on University Community and outlined a daily
one.· to two-hour program "designed for instructional and educational use." Although the
proposal has not been acted
upon by the University, Breslow thought it over and realized
he coul.d use volunteers and
live coverage to avoid the $40
hourly videotepe COBt. He sterted talking it over with friends
and, after much discussion and
help, U /B-TV was bol1),
Ten people, mostly volunteers from other campus media,
are currently, working on the
project. They are qualified to
run the technical end of things,
Breslow says, but what he
needs now are "people in the
creative end- to run all over
campus and do the interviewing and make the ftlms... Also
in demand are ftlms or projects
already completed that can be
shown on TV.
·
U/B-TV will be using ~p­
ment froil;l ICC when taping
events or projects. The Center
has portable TV equipment in
backpacb and studios in Foo_ter and Parker.
When U /B-TV goes ·on the
air, it will be fed into either
the Haas J:.ouqe or the Fillmcri Room of Norton. With
additional funds, the group
could IIJIII8lld to daily broadcute. Allotbm draam is to *m
UfB-TV to the dormitories.
But that would involve ...-a!
tbol.....t do1lara.
U/B-TV's moot immediS:te
...1. Breslow . - . is for
. people wbo are willing to belp.
He's widting in Room 2 Footer
- for voluntaera.
~

Alumni President Urges Legisla~.
To Include Football in State Bu~
The indualon ol. lunda for
u /B foothall in the State budget "by way ol. on- appropriation to on appropriate agency
. • . ouch as the Department of
Commerce" was urged last
Thursday by the UnillmlJity's
General Alumni A.ssociation.
No· spec:ific level of (undina
was ""''.-ted.
·
The plea was conteined in a
statement prepared to be preaented peroonally to tbe Senate
Finance and Aaoembly W.S¥8
and Means Committees' public
budget bearinp at the BulfaJo
and Erie County Downtown Library, February 18, by Robert
E. Lipp, president of tbe Alumni A.ssociation. Lipp said the
loss ol. the foothaJJ Bulls was
.,one more in a series of blows
to the prestige of Buffalo and
Western New York, already the
subject of ridicule by the national press for what is called
ito 'bush league status."'
The cir&lt;:us:Jike atmosphere
which prevailed at the budget
hearinp prompted Alumni officials to abandon the idea of the
in-person presentation. However, the Lipp statement was
submitted in writing to each
legislator on the committees
·a nd follow-up activities are
planned.
The Alumni A.ssociation has
also scheduled a meeting with
local news media on March 2
at noon in the Saturn Club to
provide further information and
background on negotiations
with the State for footbell sup.
porl
Til- Put Alt8mpts

John M. Carter, executive director of the l\Jumni Association, says that certain State officials and legislators have attempted to have Ui/B foothall
funded on three pasl occasions
-in last year's regular and
supplemental and this year's
regular State budgets-only to
meet failure. The current move
is aimed at the 1971-72 supplemental budget, pte§umably for
funds for some sort of foothall
operations ( recruiting, etc. ) to
be conducted during the .-t
academic year. As is well
known, however, the State is
facing 'a t.upayers' revolution
over projected increased expenditures and taxes.
Meanwhile, prospects for aotuaUy fielding a varsity team in
1971, even it State funds should
be forthcoming, seem remote.
The University's Athletic Information Office ·in a news release last week ollicially pro,
nounced footbaJI "buried . . .
for 1971."
Some of the best performers
and one Cl08ch have already
taken up new ~gnmento, the
release said: "defensive back
Gary Strieclier to Miami
(Fla.) ; running back Bob &amp;rlette to Syracuse; defensive
tackle Bill Ellenbogen, split
end Tom Grys, ~ back
Dennis Johnaon and tight end
Bob Miller to V.P.L Strlecher
and Barlette, both freshmen,
are already ~lied ot their
new achools. . .. . ( Coodl) lrv
Wright recently resigned to become a defensive aaoistant at
Toledo."
Kent State and North CoroJina Stete have contzaeted to
play Mch other to fill the Buffalo ppa on their 1971 acbedulaa. And ay,...,._ appllftllltly
unwill" to put much atocl&lt; In
CANCEit I.EtTUII£
the ~Is Will Retum" talk,
has substituted VillaDova for
The Clifford C. Furnas Collep lec'U/B
in 1976.
tures will _ . r t on add.-.. by
Or. Goorae E. Mooro. clinical pro- Clork a,m E..w
Clark
Gym, boooewr, holdo
of suraory ond dl-r,
Public Hlllth -.-ch, of out hope for the futura. "'t Ia
poaaible.
that
the Bulla will ...
~Y~T~.~~4 p.m., I n - 5. Dr.-·~ turn .. early .. 111'1:2." Ita reJM.
pradicted,
addlna. boortopic will 'Jie "Coil Culturw · ond
..-, that "at what J8ve1 111
Conoor."
wpetldon Ia All!.UIICiirti(IL"

That aame news release proyided this editorial comment:
u A major void and serious
Joss of a powerful public relations vehicle is being experienced at Buffalo. The Alumni
Association, including the recently instituted 'Golden Bull
Fund,' must chart new direction.
"Despite the void, the outlook is, nevertheless, optimistic. How long the void will last
is questionable, but some. say
the Bulls will return in '72. The
State U.giolature and SUNY
itself have not yet examined
the ramifications of U/ B football.
" (Coach Bob ) Deming who
has devoted his life to the game
remains hopeful.
"Helmets. game uniforms
and the seven-man sled are not
for sale."
In urging S t ate s upport,
Alumni President Lipp noted a
loss of benefit to the Western
New York area- a loss which
has been publicly decried by
news media, City, County and
State official.s. A loss of ties for
40,000 alumni and the disappearance 'of "one more outlet
for the energies of the 20,000member Universit y oommunity" were also cited.
Text of Upp Stotemont

The comrlete text of the rernoinder o the Lipp U.giolative statement foJiows:
"In addition, the State of
New York itself has no source
of prestige or prominence in a
field where almost every other
state is deriving benefits, that
is, intercollegiate foothall. All
states except Alaska, and now
New York, have representatives
from their state university system which are of national or regional intercoJiegiate football
prominence. There can be no
doubt that this type of prominence is a moot effective press
agent for the state.
"Whether the comparison is
comfortable or not, one AllAmerican football player brings
greater prestige to his university than five Rhodes scholars.
Private schools which have
dropped their {ootbell program
are reviving il The values of

(contilwed fro;,. - 1 , col. IS)
oostrated student ~­
ment," Murroy ...,._
The viae preaidmt il DOt
against aelf-evaluat:ion. "It is
IIUch a program are obvious to to be llDClOIJr88l!d," be '!",VB,
everyone except, apparently, . "that tbe student keeps asking
the State of New York. The himaelf how well am I doiD&amp;
student body at the Bu1falo and it becomM porticularly edcampus, in the iargeot vote of ucational .when his perceptiao
the students ever achieved of how be do5 dilfen -with
there, voted a mandatory fee that ol someone e1ae wbo loob
to be paid by themselves for at the whole thing objectively."
the st.ipport of athletics. This ThroUghout his coJJege car.r,
was far in excess of the ntim- Murray remembers practicina
ber who voted for the election sell-&lt;!valuation .and -.rlna
of the student government rep- himself apinat the grades his
resentatives. Student interest is professors gave him.
Murray also distinguisbeo
there.
between grades College A can
Fundlna a.cld.osh Furwd
give and grades the UnillmlJity
'"The University at Buftalo records. "College A pan grade
Foundation, through gifts of exactly as they see fit," the
alumni and other members of vice president says, "but bethe cotnmunity, has provided fore theae grades are accepted
funds for the obtaining of dis- by the University, they must
tinguished faculty and for other be as the University sees fit."
very worthwhile additions to And this Murray defines as
the University's total program. "responsible evaluation of
These additions would be im- demonstrated . student accompossible otherwise, and the dis- plishmenl"
continuance of foothall, accordIn many cases, Murray is
ing to the president of the satisfied there is demonstrated
Foundation, wiJI have ·backlash student accomplishment. In
in that the Foundation's ability January, he re-graded 52 stuto obtain funds and provide . dent project reports and gave
these worthwhile cultural and
A's. However, in 14 cases
scientific additions to the over- 24
felt the "accomplishment
all University structure will be he
was
conspicuously less than
significantly reduced.
adequate,'' and failed students,
"To restore what has been or gave inoompletes or irrelelost, to regain for the entire vants.
state· the great potential fer naBecause of this wide differtional publicity and promi- ence in grades, Murray is setnence, to provide a 1;hot in the ting up the review board. "The
arm ·to the reputation of Buf- most logical and natural infalo and the Western New York ·s ~ructional group to carry out
area, and to provide to the stu- these evaluations are the facdents a very needed outlet, all ulty members identified with
that would be required is a
ideas,'' Murray says.
modest investment of state Collegiate
Membership will not be limfunds to bridge a short period, ited, liowever, to regular faoprobably five years , which ul ty members; instead, be views
would allow the football pro- it as "feasible" that undergradgram to complete ito growth to uates could be on the committhe point where revenue would tee. He is alao inviting the ingreatly reduce the need for structional
staff of College A
alate funds input.This is .,.,.,. to be on the
board, " if they
cially true in prospect of the agree to carry out
a resP&lt;&gt;noible
population which would then be evaluation."
housed on the new campus in
A
number
of
faculty
memAmherst, a population that will
exceed that of the City of Ba- bers have already volunteered
to
serve
on
this committee,
tavia.
"In all the State University Murray revealed, and the memof New York system, only Buf- bership wiiJ be announced in
falo has the base for this type several weeks.
The creation of a review
of program in the foreseeable
future. Only Buffalo can at- board for College A will not
be
extended to the other coltract to its schedule teams such
as Penn State, Army, Pitts- legiate units, Murray explains.
He
feels that in these units,
burgh, Syracuse, Navy, Cor·'self evaluation is backed by
neJI, and the like.
responsible
review...
"The amount required is
miniscule compared to the total budget of the state, and in
the total budget for the University. The benefits, immedi-

"::f

.&amp;.t. ':;

~ J::n"t.'e
appropriate investment. I urge
ito inclusion in the budget by
way of an appropriation to an
appropriate agency of the
State, such as the Department
of Commerce. The time to act
is now, while there is still any
time at all"

Library~ Library Has Rare Holdings
Rare and eaoteric materials
not owned by Lockwood Li-

brary can now be obtained
through Lockwood's member·ship in the Center for Research
I..ibrarim. A "library's library,"
the Center's holdings begin
where moot reaearch collections
end, o!rerlng material not Irecpmtly handled by mool
Any member of the Univeralty can order materials from
-the Center through normal
inter-library loon procedures.
Materials ordered wiU arrive
within three or four days, says
Anthony Tusa, aoaociate Jibrarian. .
·.
Within the .-t week, the
Ll!lrary will aend out oopaeo {!/
a pompbJet dMcrfbllia the Ceater to -every faculty member;
addltloaal c:oplaa will aJao be
-"to ~to!« P!ldu,:-

~A-

ate students. The pamphlet will
be available to all iiiter-library
loan stations in the branch hbraries.
A complete listing of lhe
Center's holdinp is available
at Lockwood. The coJiection ineludes microftlms of major undergroUlllt newspapers, 600,000
foreign doctoral dissertations,
micro61ma of archival material
and microprinto of every existing book, pamphlet and broadside published in the U.S. from
1649 through 1800.
.
U a reaean:her doesn't find
the material he .-Is in the
catalotrue, the Center has a
limited policy of purchasing
ouch items. Alao, the Center
wiU microfilm material from
any archive not in their collection t&gt;rovidina the archive will
penmt il__
'. ~-- - · -.

Jazz Pniessor
Offers\\bikshop

Charles . Mingus, noted jazz
composer and musician, will
conduct a jazz workshop from
5 to 7 p.m. today in Room 101

Baird Hal!.
Mr. Mingus, visiting SJee
professor in Music, has played
with ouch jazz areata as Duke
EJJinlton, Lionel Hampton,
Charlie Parker and AI Tatum,
and was elected
"Jazz Man of the Year" in
1964.
More recently, Plllyboy maaazine's 1971 reader's poU
elected him •a baaaist in ita
annual "All-Star Band."
All musicians and/or interested listeners within the University are invited. Later work~po may be open to the pub-

Dow"""""•

NON-R£SIDENTIAL

c:ou.EG£

Until the admlnlstrotiYO staff of
the SUNY Non·Rnldontlol College
is identiflod and dotallod lnfonnll·
In·
tlon pieces can be
quirin should be diroc:tad to the
foiiQWina eddrwu: N o n - 1
Collep, .state Unhlersity of NYorl&lt;, P. 0. Box 6096, Albeny, N.Y.
12206.
\
•

-lopod.

�Pebn.ry 25, 1971

&lt;iREPORTER:&gt;

Profs Say Cancer Quest Freihman Sun:eyRevrols ReVersed Trends:·.·
Has Been A Flop,-AlsO Ckiss Is Smarter, Backgrounds Are Changed
,_,zy
'

it may hurt the cal~tions which we have alfeelings of ao-caJled "cancer ready shown to be irrelevant,
eJ&lt;perts," it is time to admit their purpoee can only be to
that cancer ''research" has been serve as another grantamanshlp
a Bop. The evidence for this is giJ:ilmidl: to Increase the total
becoming overwbelming. Per- budget of the operation. Corhaps the moat obvious aspect roboration for this may be
of this is the increa.sing volume found in a local ''research" esof claims over the past few tablishment where the comyears by "experts" that csncer puter is administnlavely COil·
is cauaed by viruses. Now trolled by that part of the oreveryone """""' what a virus pnimtion ~w for adis. It's something a doctor
blames an m- 011 wben be
doesn't really k n o w what's GtTTEWPQ:n\TTC
- y .l
.11, .l ~
wrOIII· As a nest step after the
claim that cancer is cauaed· by Tile lllopootor hopeo ... a virus, we may confidently ex- to . . . - • fanlm for the ....
pect predictions that Vitamin
nrlei;J
C otfers greet hope for a cure. - - o f - .... f8dn&amp; .the The mystique which tltlf· of the rounds "researd:t" on ca.nper community. We - . . . . has facilitated the process or
..
getting money for cancer "re- pooltlons pennltL
search" but this mystique has been a major obstacle to getting ministering grants which has in
anything of value for this the recent past been accused
money. It is now oommonplace or certain questionable pracfor directors or large cancer tices.
"researd:t" establishment&amp; to
compare unfavorably federal V-lnterests
What then can be done to
expenditures for napalm prothat the inadequate perduction and cancer '"research". see
formance
of the past quarter
But, as any demographer
.of
a
century
is not perpetuated
knows, production of napalm forever by these
"experts" with
has much more desirable byyested
interests?
Very little,
prcxlucts than cancer ureseem.
Since
commun1t
would
aearch" even when it is a fiop. ication with the "researchers"
Parkinson's Law
involved
is
about
as
possible
as
Another piece of evidence oo~unicating with a mathat cancer ·'research" has chine,
one can have little hope
reached a dead end is the
tbe foreseeable future.
Parkinson's Law which results forBut
perhaps there is one
in building large edifices when hope implied
by the source of
the establishment is about to this arti.,re. Some
you may
oollapse. Nowhere is this more be surprised to findof.an
article
evident than in cancer "re·
on
this
'!"b~t written by comsearch" institutes. One ex- puter scientists who might norample is the increasingly large mally be thought to be incomstaffs of statisticians one finds petent
on this subject. But the
at such establishments. What interdisciplinary
of
Purpose these staffs serve is computer scientistsinterests
are wide
and their belief in independent
study is enormous. Thus, we
MAYBE WE NEED ONE
may hope to solve the mystery
Or. Irwin D. J . Bross 's "Viewpoint"
on computers In last week's Re· o[ canc:er by .bringing some out.
~1de v1ewpomts, competent or
porter was marred by a slip in the
moompetent, to bear on il
typing of his byline. The Roswell
NOTE: The above oommuniPark affiliation was correct (director of biostatistics) but the Uni- cation represents a breakthrough
in our research toversity title should have read "re·
w~ natural language prosearch professor of STATISTICS."
by
computers. As data
cessmg
The editor-In-chief typed it himself;
maybe he should be r11placed by a for our, at present classified,
program
we
have used an arcomputer.
ticle, previously published in
this paper. All we had to do
obscure since, if one thing is to the result was to change the
clear, it is that statistics play punctuation at a few places
no part in the cause of cancer ( there are still some bugs in
and that number crunching will the program ) to make it less
not serve as a cure for cancer. offensive.
After all, is it not certain that
-ANTHONY R.usroN
God does not play dice with
NICHOLAS FlNDLEB
human illness?
PATBIClA EBEilLElN
An even better exampre or
GABOR ·HERKAN
the empire building tendencies
GlLIIEIIT BERGLASB
of cancer ''researchers" is the
GmroN FarmER
large cOmputer facilities which
RlCHARD EcKHOUSE
grow up at cancer ''research"
JONATHAN Wltl&lt;LEB
institutes. Since these machines
RoBERT RosrN
cannot even have oommuniDepartment of
catec! !" them the statistical
Compute Science

Althouih

'

A new report on U /B's 1970
freshman class indiartes a reversal of aeYOira1 trends noted
throullh tbrile previous studies

of entering c1aMes. •
The report, based on questionnaires given to l,OIW freshmen attending a planning ccmferenee in the Summer of 1970,
calla partic.u lar .atte~J!:i&lt;!tl to
changes in students' background: their parents' education, employment and inoome.
Compiled by the Division of
Instrw:tional Services, University. Reeearch 001oe, the report
suggest&amp; that the "inaeeeed admission of minority eludenta
into special University programs may in part acoount for
ftuctuations in these areas."
Other major findings abstracted· from the report in·
elude:
• Attendance at the 1970
Summer Planning Conference,
like the 1968 attendance, was
evenly divided between men
and women. This was noticeably different from the 6-to-4
male-female ratio in previous
classes.
• In 1970 for the first time,
3 per cent of tbe rre.hmen were
married. A similar percentage
reported that they were over 22
years of age.
Chanee In Guordlanshlp

• A oonsiderable change in
guardianship was noticeable.
Eighty-eight per cent of the
1970 freshmen reported their
father as male guardian, compared with 98 per cent in 1964
and 94 per cent in 1968.
• The largest percentage of
fathers ( 29 per cent in 1970)
and mothers ( 44 per cent in
1970) were high school graduat.es.
• A reversal of trends in 1970

with six or more children (5
per cent in 1964, 11 per cent
in 1970).
.
• A reversal of trends in 1970
showed an increued percentage
of families earning lees than
$5,000 (9 per cent in 1970) and
a decreued percentage of families eeming between $10,()()().
$15,000 (30 per cent in 1970).
The proportion of families
earning more than $15,000 has
1ripled since the first study was
made (25 per cent in 1970).
• For the first time in the
biotory of these fn&gt;sluaen studies, the largest number of fresh.
men (56 per cent) reportad
high school averages between
90 and 94, oompared with 25
per cent in 1964 and 38 per
cent in 1968. TI&gt;ere were decreases in the 80-84 and 81&gt;-89
ranges. Only 10 per cent of the
students reported averages between 70-84, oompared with 24
per cent in 1964 and 14 per
cent in 1968.
• Since 1964, the number of
women reporting high school
averages of 90 or higher baS
nearly doubled, while the percentage of men in that category
has nearly tripled. Women,
however, have oonsistently out.
numbered men in higher average categories during the period.
Decre•se In Athletics

• There has been a oonsiderable increase in the number of
1970 freshmen who belonged to
high school honor societies42 per cent in 1964, to 52 per
cent in 1968, increasing to 69
per cent in 1970.
• For the first time, the per-

S'f"UDaN'T UPMitS aDlt'OR: S....

each"'-

~

£. , _ ,.,. IL -

001177lnUTllfO AJn"'8t't .__ 11• . _ , .

"'-'
- · - ,_
·

• The occUpational prefer-

enoeil of men and women have

remained decidedly different
and quite stereotypic. Tbe most
popular vocational fields for
women have oonsistently been
el~tary and seoondary edu·
cation ( 19 per cent) , nursing
(7 per cent) and psychology
(5 per cent) . Areas most frequently choeen by men were
eng!'!eering (17 per cent) ,
med1cane (14 per cent) and the
natural and physical sciences
(8 per cent) .
• The choice of Buffalo as a
place to work has fluctuated
from 26 per cent in 1964 to 14
percentinl968,in~ingto
19 per cent in 1970. New York
City's popularity has also var·
ied from 15 per cent in 1964 to
28 per cent m 1968, decreasing
to 19 per cent in 1970. A total
of 62 per cent of the "freshmen
indicated a preference to live
in some area of the Eastern
United States.

SWden:t Fiinds RepG!ft
1naccurate &amp; Bi a coed'

indicated an increased number
.
of parents with, at most, a
·
graDliD8r school education. The
trend reversal also revealed
that fewer fathers in 1970 than
!.I.UO
in 1968 had graduate school EDITOR:
is written. Such verbiage would
education and fewer mothers
suffice to occasiOn howls of out·
attended (not oompleted ) high
After reading the "Report or rage from Mr. Agnew if it could
school.
the Presiat:nt" as printed in full in
any way be oonstrued as lib·
• Generally, it appeared that in tbe Reporter, I find myself eral in sentiment. It is amuswhile more mothers than ra- asking two very serious ques- ing, occasionally clever, genertbers completed high school, a tio!'". First, who was the report ally biased: in short, something
larger percentage of fathers wntten for? Seoona, who actu- &lt;that H . L Mencken might have
oontinued on to higher levels ally wrote it?
produced. ("Yahoos" was one
of education.
If this report was intended to of his favorite words, too.)
• Tbe three largest occupa- be read, as the heading indi- There is one significant differtional categories for fathers in cates, by the Board of Trustees ence, however. Mr. Mencken
1970 were general labor and and the University Council I had the good Belli!' to let everyfactory worker ( 18 per cent), would suggest thet it is the ..;,.,. one know that Hi&gt; wrote from
skilled tradesman and crafts- ~emic ~quivalent of yellow a particular point of view. He
~ (11 per .cent) and mana)Oumahsm. Neither of these did not attempt to slip his prei·
gerial, executive. ( 11 per cent). gro!'ps is present on campus. udices into unpublished reports
The t;wo profess10nal categones • Nrutber will probably have the intended foi high level comoombaned, however, totaled 14 inclination or opportunity to .mittees and forwarded over s
per cenl
check the facts alluded to in university president's signa·
. • There was a trend reversal the report for accuracy. (Tbe ture.
m the number of employed account of the Spring 1970 disWhich brings me-to the next
motJ:!ers ( 4:! per cent in 1964, turbances leaves me ;..,ndering point. Every public official
!K per cent an 1!J6!1, 51 per cent whether the writer and I were se"ems to have a aemi-&lt;ionstitu~ 1979) at the tJ.me the ques- at the same univers[ty at that
ti~ right . to emplo y ghost
tJOnn&amp;lre was oompleted. Sev- time )
wnters. He aJ.oo has a oorreenty per cent of the mothers in
·
spondfng
. duty to piclt tbem
1970 had spent more than half
• More important than occawisely. And choat writers have
their married life as a house- S!Onal factual inaccuracies
a
duty
to
raa1iae both the im·
wife, i.e., working, if at all, full. however, is the overall sty~
or part-time for (e~«r than half and tone in which the report portance of the doaunent they
!"""
~ · 011, and the elfect
her married life.
1t might haw 011 its intended
Cleric* Occupations
audience. While the autbors of
• For the so·per cent of the
this doaunent 111117 hew had
the aeoond point in mind, theY
mothers who spent """" than
half their married life working
~and to my mind. irpart. or full-time, the most
• nePected ·the llrsl
oommon occupation was c/ei..
If my Intuition is canect. Dr.
Electinns for next year's Stu- Ketter will be bearing about
col (13 per cent) . A total of 8
per cent of the mothers worked dent Association officers will be this report, and 80 be abouldan semi-professional, technicsl h;eld on March 16 and 17. Peti- but not alone. 1 would like to
.tions to get on the ballot will suggest that -the real autbors
or professional jobs.
• Consistent with their high- be available in the SA office in receiw aome .of the justly deNorton, Room 205 starting served plaiidita for 81111-'t
~· levels of education, 14 per
~Oiiday, Marchi. At least value, as well as the even more
cent of the fathers were in professional jobs, compared with ~r.atures are required to juatly deeerwd bridlbets for
.4 per cent of the mothers.
style and CDilt&amp;Dl Maybe tben
• The largest group of freshPetitions must be handed in nest year's ''Repart ol the Pres. men in
a~ by March 10, on which date ident" will be WOI1by of its
lv 0111&gt;-tbird, "'--hom fami- ~ will !Je a meeting of all qjllll8, objectiw, and in the best
lies with two . children. - TI&gt;ere ~an
the SA o111ce. Any 'intermts of tbe Uni_,.jty it is
wu, r - , a DOtioeeble in- Q.-tione on election procedure ~to~ .
a - in the percentqe of iltu- sbouldChar be directed to ~obn
-.J.uoa ~- CAJIPBEl.l.
deota wbo came hom tamllies
les (6607). .
Graduate Studellt

5:':

p~,....,.

m

Reports from
- Readers-

SA Elections
In March

~~ ~.J.,--,;.Ji-.

~tqe of men in honor societies was
equal to that
of....,__
• The four moat popular high
school activities of the 1970
freshmen dubs (73
cent), inUamural atbletica
per cent), pubJJcations (31 per
cent), and - t (38 per
cent). ~ has been a steady
decline an participation of men
in both ~ and intremural
athletics in hill&gt; aci&gt;ool.
• TI&gt;ere has been considerable mer- in the mnnber of
students wbo are undecided
about tho!k vocational goal ( 10
r;;~t anl967, 25 per cent in

�5

Febnary 25,1911

Dent Schoofs Clinics
rl Miss It;'
8ervice The Community Gouk1 Says
'lbe Dental Scbooi at U /B
is "patient aue" and community oriented in iiB daily clini.cal adivitieo.
'lbe dean of the &amp;boo!, Dr.
Wtlliam M. Feagans, points
out that other aspects of the
J)entisUy propam - teaching
and .-rc:b, prevention and
belllth education-share the
aame orientatloiL
"Our dinica are a two-way
street," be aaya. "We take dentistry to the community through
.our neigbborbood and hospital
-"~'- and at the same .._
.........,
......,
many ~ts. visit' our ail&lt; clinics in Capen Hall" '
Last year, the dental faculty
made 57 876 patient contacts in
on and off the csmpus. Tbe main Capen Hall clinics are devoted to oral 81111111'ry,
disgnosis, operative dentistry
and endodontics periodontics
and prosthodontiO.. In addi- .
tion, there are special_pedodontics and orthodontics clinics .
And the student health dental
clinic on campus bas about 2,000 patient visits per yaar.

mJ•clinks

Hospital In~

.

•

The ·IJ!SJOr d~tal '!'put mto
commuruty hoap1tals IS for oral
surg_e ry at~ E. J. Meyer Memoria! Hosi?1tal. Oral surgeons
also see patients at the Bu!f&amp;:Io
General and Veterans AdmlDIStrsti?n hospital~.-~ Chitdren s Hospital cbruc IS exclusively pedodontics.
The Dental School faculty
train 209 sophomor~, junior
~d. sen!?r studenn;; m these
clm!cs. ln _the neighborhood
chmcs, es~IBIIy, the stl!dents
get the _f~lmg of the_social respons1b1bties of d!"'tistry, . . .
of the many social and eoonomic problems of the irmer
city," Dean Feagans says.
There were 6,760 patient visits to the two neighborhood operative and preventive dental
clinics in the inner city last
year, according to Dr. G. Donaid Bissell, cliniail associate
t
br health ) f be
kvi=r~e':,CO:cand di~r o{
the Dental Division; Erie
County Health Department.
Last. year, 3,120 patient visits

were made tO the three-d&gt;air
Perry Clinic. This clinic, in
operation two years, is co-sponaored by the County Health
I:lep&lt;u-.l It is open two eveninga a week under supervision
of dental faculty.
Tbe four-chair Genesee-Jefferaon Clinic oPened in March
1970 and bas had about 70 patient visits every week. An adviaory group, the Fruit Belt
Home Owners and Tenants
Aaaociation, is oo-oponaor of the
facility along with the Dental
&amp;boo! and the County. Junior
and senior dental students and
five faculty members alternate
88 the sta1f.
Allk:a State -

Tbe dental faculty also provide consultant service 10 etsff
dentists at Attica State Prison
and they offer ao!D!' course
work for dental hygtene students from Erie Community
Co~ege and dental .assistant
trainees from the Urban Center.
. As a part of the Dental ~
lie ~ealth course at the Uruverslty, sophomore dental students give health talks and carry out examinations in the city
schools. Other dental students
are talking to mayors and town
hoards in Akron, Silver Creek
and Fredonia about fluoridation.
During the last two summers
senior dental students with laculty supervision brought dentistry into homes in the Buffalo
core area through 8 person-to.
person dental education pro.
gram. The students inspected
the teeth of approximately 2 ,.
000 persons ranging in age from
five years to middle-age. The
students ·offered advice on the
work each needed and the lamily was referred to 8 practicing
dentist or clinic.
''Educating the public on the
values of seeing a dentist regularly is a round-the-clock job
for the entire profession-students, faculty and practitionA the
t·
t

:h.;... :-~~~t''U,~yw~a:~"do

at home to help prevent serious
dental problems," Dean Feagans said.
C.pen Hall ctlnlc at wortt.

Q{· Q[d Job

At a meeting of the AmeriCouncil on Education
fol"IMr SUNY Cbancellor Samue1 B. Gould admitted that he
missed aome of the activities
in his daily routine as cbanaellor. As reported in TM Chronicle of HigMr Education,
the things Dr Gould
moat are:
·
• "Tbe glow of physical
well '-:~n that
f
~...
comes rom
leaping
hack
and
forth
across
the generation gap."
• "'Ibe deep sense of satisfaction at the end of a long
night when all the broken window glass bas been swept up,
the fires put out, and the damage neatly totaled."
• ''The exhilarating challenge of fighting chaos with
one hand tied and the other
weaponless, while phrases like
'due process' and 'rights of the
individual' acho about."
• ''The intellectual stimulation of the daily sparkling
correspondence with anonyd ·
d
mous a m~rers, an not so
anonymous, but all united and
unanimous in agreeing upon
the high degree of idiocy and
cowardice I have attained."
• "The surge of creativity
felt each day as one prepares
tomorrow's statement expressing firmness in the face of
every student threat and, at
the same time, the most sialwart defense of academic freedom and supreme faith in
youth."
• "The eye-watering happiness that comes of walking
through the haze settling over
the student lounges, where
hospitality is king and the pot
is always simmering."
• "The brilliant prose styles
of student newspaper colurnnists and editorial writers as
they skillfully improvise on
four-letter words, making every
verb irregular, every tense imperfect, every noun peculiarly
singular and possessive, and always arriving at amazingly
erotic, unlikely conjunctions."
• "The wonderful pause in
the day's occupation, otherwise
known as the 'children's hour,'
when the legal injunction bas
just been served and the offices
are once more quiet. with only
the debris left by passionate
environmentalists."

&lt;l8ll

=

(SUNY F.:ulty Sen.t• Bul/lttinJ

21 New Senators
The Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration bas
announced results of its balloting to elect 21 representatives
to the new Faculty Senate.
This brings the Senate to full
membership ( See last week's
ReporU!r for the list of other
members) .
The Senate held its first
meeting yesterday, after the

R~~~~d~ce. and Ad. miniatration aenators are: David Bazelon, PoliC)'__ Sciences;
Marvin Bemetein, History; Ira
Cohen, Psychology ; George
Hourani, Philosophy; Elaine
Hull, Psychology; James Julian, Psychology; Daniel Katkin,
.Social Welfare; Dorothy Lynn,
Social Welfare; Joseph Masling, Psychology; Nell Murray,
Psychology; Charlas Pailthorp,
Pblloaopby; Carl Petrels. Manqement; Charles PlanCk, Political Science; Lee Preston,
Management; Dean Pruitt,
Psychology; Michael Ray, Geosrapby; laurence Schneider,
History;

Ernest Thompson,

Speech Communication; Edward Wallaoe, Mana&amp;ement;
Marion White, AnthropOlogy;
Coaotantine Yeracaris, SociolOIY·

-~

Woman On the GoWants
To Help Young People
By JUDITH WOHL
Juanita has since been a
She's a "Buffalo gal," hom clerk, a nurse's aide, a 6\Ugical
and raised here. She's worked, technician certified by New
wed and parented here, and York State, and a secretary to
mostly she wants to help here. the Western New York School
She's the "Woman on the Go," Development Council. She bas
Juanita Young.
taken courses at U / B in EngIt began, she says, at 14, lish and journalism, and took
when, as one of the first black part in the Jefferson Educa"Y Teens" from the Main and tional Center's secretarial trainMichigan YWCA, she heard ing project, which was in coold-time activist Sparr Hall operation with Ute University
speak. He posited, then, that (a "beautif ul project," s h e
there is "only one race, the says ) . ln October of 1969, Earl
human raoe," and " in my small Sinclair, then director of
way 1 wan!ed to help young WBFO's Sate II it e Studio on
black people," says Juanita.
Jefferson, asked Mrs. Young to
Her mode has not been mili- do the talk show - grot is. Only
tant, unless by "militant" one later did she receive an honomeans being intensely involved. rarium for the very professionHer way is to volunteer, to lis- al job sbe was doing.
ten, to talk, to seek out comBut her career doesn't end
munity problems and their so- with WBFO. The list of her
lutions. Juanita's parents were memberships in various groups
wise; she says. "They taught us is too long to list and it would
to work, taught us compassion. seem that she does much more
They told us about the good than just ''belong." Among oth ·
whites, and kept me from going er things, Mrs. Young is a
off half-cocked."
building representative where
WBFO Procram .
she lives; works at WestminsHer cuirent claim to the ter House on problems of young
limelight, of course, is the Sat- black groups; is an Old Jefferurday morning WBFO pro- son Education Center volun-..
gram "Woman on the Go " teer; teaches grooming to black
whidh she hosts. The tide girls in her neighborhood; is a
comes from her peripatetic life member of LEAD ( Let's Edu- always at meetings, always cate Addicts Drowning); and is
doing. Each week, Juanita con- a prison reform group volunducts interviews, essentially on teer. On the light side, sbe even
black and community prob- models for Painter George Pallems, and essentially "live." mer t in African dress, she is
Among her recent guests have quick to point out). Things get
been Margaret Mead on blacks' so hectic at times, that her
problems in America and daughters (C heryl, 21, and
Jackie Robinson on his son's Marcia, 19) protesl But they
drug addiction.
.
dutifully man the incoming
In the fall of 1969, sbe did calls on Sundays, when Juanita
a series on black ~· talk- · locks ·herself in her room to
ing with a black
·ceman, "replenish."
gang members and ocal poliAnd what of the future? Sbe
ticians. In 1970, there was a would
like to continue in eduaeries on the bussing of school
radio. In June of last
children. one on drugs, and an- cational
year,
Juanita
won, as one of 18
other on what responsible peo85 national applicants, a
ple are doing to beautify the from
grant
from
the
Corporation of
black Ellicott District. Her latBroadcaating to study
est series was on prison reform Public
problems
of
the
inner city
with law Professor Herman
Schwartz of U / B and Social through the medium of radio,
and
her
show
bas
already
merWorker Joan Clark.
•
Topics on ber program have ited a DuPont Award for "best
urban
crisis
coverage"
during
included schools, churdles, the
arts, health care. housing, the the racial disturbances here.
law, children, teenagers and Juanita, one of the original
£dull:&amp;. Thougl) primarily about. members of the Satellite Studio
blacks, her broadcaat bas alao and currenUy " research assisaildreased Itself to tbe ills of tant," is being trained in administration.
~ Indians and whites.
In sum, the ''Woman on the
How did her caraar develop?
Go" is a vary doing woman.
Well~ at 12, Juanita was writing
''plays and things" for her And if she d...,'t reveal her
cbnn:h. After high school, there ·lovely "Afro" in the accomwas marriilae and her two chil- panying photo, it's only hedren (her daughters are cur- cause 4his week bas been like
ren1ly enrolled at· State 'l'"'.i- every other- too busy to beautify the - t i a l
versity Collep) ..

�P'*-Y 25, Jf1J

U/BClasses
124 Years Old

-

.

�Febnary 25, 19?1

7

GREPORTS

ON

~!c;::,;'~ta u

~t j,-:re.o~. -:~

:t

~.:FE~~:

visional Committee of the Gradu·
ate School.
OR. EIUC BARNARD, chairman. bio-

~.:tt!?'Cala~.:::~ ~"F~i
MecliciDe.

aaaistant

::'~:'~~'t:.;,?t:

tee on Minority Faculty and Staff
RecruitmeDL He waa aloo appointed to a campus-wide Committee on Minority and Staff Re·
cruitment.
OIL UI:WIS B . GEYD. auociate pro-

~.;:'1!!",::.;~ ¥o~~~=

term.

DB.. .JOHN A. N&amp;AL, aaociate pro-

=~ cji~:,t"c:· c!~:

etruction and Rehabilitation, Of·
lice of Facilitieo ·Planning.
CH.UU.EB B. NOTIBS, appointed U·

aistant profeMOr, engineering and

applied tciencea, Department or
Engineeriq. Dr. No-.

Civil

~f:jrl~ l~r~~~cti':n
!rom the Department of Socio(.

ogy.

I!ot!~e;U:U~ip:~

asshltant
profeuor, chemistry, with CAllOL
HYDE, "Infrared Intensities of the
Molecular Nitrogen and Carbonyl

DR. DONALD DARENSBOURG,

~f)~p~e~:~r:on:~i/3~~
lltry.

chairman, pharmaceutics, "Role of Surface-Ac·

DB. MJLO GIBALDI,

"Mathemat·
ical Methoda in Pharmacokinetics I. Uee of the Laplace Trane·
::t~E~roun~ of Phar-

MICHAEL MA YIZSOBN,

:= ~.;:~ti~is~At M~:

dent Experiment in Phannaceutics: Characterization of a Poorly
Soluble Complex by the Solubility
Methnd," Amuioon Journal of
Pharmaceutical Education .
DB. GORDoN HAIUUB, professor
chemistry with T. P. DASCUPI'A.
" Kinetics and Mechanism oi

:rq~lt trftri~toln7fu~:!!z~
0

OFF-CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

Ligand Geome~ on the Acid·

DR. DOUGLAS HOLYOKE, uaistant

professor, experimental pathology, named chief, Department of
General Surgery, Roswell Park
Memorial lnetitute.
DR. GERHARD LEVY, professor, biopharmaceutics, appointed to the
Pharmacology-Toxicolo~ Pro-

~ta~~ti~~d:r t:~;~!:=*%t"~:

amine-carbonatocobalt (!II) Com·
plexes," Journal of the American
Chemical Society.
DR. DENNIS 8 . HODGE, &amp;MOciate profeuor, geology, with B. D. SMITH
and S . B. SMITHSON, .. Geology and

~h~i~ s~~~os~{¥~

TQ~~ti~ti;~iba!:nh !fcalfeS1~l~
f:tim&lt;f:r:r~~e~ t~ic:r&amp;i~ of
Petrogenesis or §'yenites Re·

ences of the National Institutes
ol Health.

associate

DR. ERNEST T. SELIC ,
prof~r, civil engineering, e lected

lated to Laramie Anorthosite
Wyoming, U.S.A.," Lithos.
'
DR. RICHARD HUTCHINSON , assis-

acting secretary of the Buffalo
Section, ASCE for one year.

::'aitcf~esr~!'~od:r~~J~~

PRESENTATIONS

cists," Drug Intelligence.

f'RA.."o'K J . CORBETT, associate pro~ial policy and commuil-

psychology and associate profes.
sor, industrial engineering, " A
Simulation Model of Short Term
Memory: Parameter Sensitivity

fessor,

~ira:~f:· fu~'\o·~!1if~~~
Meeting of the

Orleans

\f.~ty NAACP Branch, Medina,

Clinical Education for Pharma-

DR. KENNETH LAUGHERY , .professor,

~~~~t i:Sdu~p~~~~ro~0M!';h~

ematical Psychology.
FLORENCE 9. DALUISO, art librarian
Lockwood Library, ·•Art Librar:
•es m Italy," illuetrated lecture
'S\}~JBc;]J;~~~ Burchfield Center,
DR. IUEIGEN

HEBDLE, auociate

professor, physics, and

Ba

ucE

~~f ~~~e~Y~:

nance," annual meeting of the

~rican Phyoica) Society, New

DR. lORN V. HU1JOLE8TON profes·
sor, civil enaineenn,, ••Behavior
ol a Steep Preotreeoed A r c h
Made from a Budded Strut,"
~~ ';t_mter Annual Meeting,

0

Dll. _CI'O~

c. La:, profeeaor, civil
ellglDeenng, -.. Biomechanics of
~·". School of Engineering,
ruvemty of M-.:hueetta.
DR. IO~ ;-:tHAD, associate pro-f~r, civil engineering. .. Fe,asibil•ty of Inflatable Forms for Con·
crete Dome Conatruction," eemi.nar at Drexel Uniwraity .

U

~ ~· profMO&lt;&gt;r, bio-

f::'W.::

lormation v~~
Non-naJ&lt;:otic klalceoico" .....,;·

~on~inDrueM~

oliem.

Milan, Italy.

D&amp;. 9. 8 •. V41DHYAMATIIAN, a.oc::iate

prof~r, pbarmaoeutic:a. eemin.8r

~lnflu8nce of Cbaaical Re·
pott," ,.::.. Maobraoe TramHoUlton.

Medical

~~~=~f~!

I. Principles and Light , Microhe~~~~l~::z:~ lnkmotional

=~.:~en:,m~d:: ~:de~:: frc!!~~~:OwTJ:~

CeDier,

DII.WIU.w.~-·

ate Prnre.or, biochomical i&gt;hann'
aco~osy, "MatbomaticU ·SimUJa.

~~H~vi'F:O:~=a~~t~~~

T. BllAMLETTE, ''Finite Element
SOlutions to Differential Equations," Journal of Engineering,
Mechanical Division, ASCE.
DR. ALBEKT PA.DWA, professor.
-chemistry, with 1. SMOLANOPF,
" Photocylcoaddition ol Arylaz.
irenes with Electron Qeficient
Olefina," Journal of American
Chemical Society; with A. BAT1'18·
Tl, "bolation and Chemistry of
the Invertomers of N-Chlorobenroylaziridine," Journal of Organ·
ic Chemiltry.
•
0&amp;. HOW4RD TIECKELMANN, chairman, chemistry, with P . P. TOR·

~J:i~~,:jos~=~ ~o?e~

ties ol Thiamine," Methods in
Enzymology, Academic Press.
assistant
profeseor, pharmacy, with D. E.
f'DL&gt;Wf. " Podiatriet Drug Pre·
IICribing Patterne," Journal of the
A~Mrit.'fU1 Podiatry Auociati.on;
" A Society Journal Library:
What Are We. Waiting For?"
New York State PhartMCilt;
"New Dimensions in Undergraduate Education: Social and Behavioral Sciences," .A m e r i c a n
Journal of Phari'IOtJ«utical Educction.

.._ry Hinkson of the Marttw O...hlm

Co~ny.

(continued from fXll• 8, col. 5)
I&lt;ONDAY-1: Chi""!!" Pneua.atic
Tool Co.; Metropohtan Life Ina.
Co.; Arlington Public Schools
(Virginia); Greece Centra I

~hoo~c~!!~n(J,~:!'!)~rkp~:;.;

George Count~ Board of Educa·
lion, Maryland.
TUESDA.Y-2:
Metropolitan Life
Ina. Co.; Niagara Falls Gazette;
Canaeeraga Central School (Alle·

~l C:,un~~ca~:O~ ad~ usn~~

~.;;;!;..~rd. Prince William Co.,

National Cas b
Baldwineville Central

WEDNESDAY-3:

Regiater;

~lkls ~C::,J.dag(~h~n=rd);
Solvay Schools (Onondaga): Yfar.
aa.w Central Schools (Wyoming).
THuaBDA.Y--4 : Aetna Life and
C..ualty Co.; Service Systeme
Corp.; Baldwinsville C en t r a I
Schools (Onondaga): B a t a vi a
City School District (Genesee);
WallkiU Central School Dietrict
~~h:f(&gt;~ri~~t Seneca Central

LIDRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent erllibit of works by
Robert Graves and James Joyce.
Poetry Room, 207 Lockwood Library, 9 a.m.·S p.m.

NOTICES
A

COOPERATIVE

WORK

ENVIRON·

Domus, open to all com·
munity and Univenity artists and
students interested in performer
a nd performance event research
and presentation.
MENT :

Schedule of workshops: Mon.10 a.m.-1 p.m.; 7 :30 p.m.-10:30
p.m. Tues.-12 noon-4 p.m.; 8
p.m.- 10: 30 p.m. Wed.-10 a.m.·
I p.m.; 6:30 p.m.-10: 30 p.m.
Thun.-10 a.m.~-4 p.m.; 8 p.m.10:30 p.m. Fri.-10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Sat.-10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sun.- 2 p.m.·
10 p.m.
For further information, call
Mr. DWUl or Mia Koljonen, 8779068.
ANYONE PLANNING TO BE IN MAN·
CHES1'12, ENGLAND before Febru-

ary 28, please phone Mr. Mich-

ielli. 831-5554.

~...=;;;:~~~ . !he~~

plan's chief critics, leaden of
public ¥Jher education, warn

~Communique-

~~te:~~:,~~ 'r:a! a:.~

The OFFICE OF THE OMBUDSMAN ia
open every day from 9 to 5. It is

our business to look into complaints and grievances on behalf
of students, faculty and staff. U
you l:elieve you have been unfair·
ly dealt with, come and aee ua.
10 Diefendorf Annex, 831-4103.

...

THE OFFICIAL NORTON HALL BUILDING HOttBS• for this Spring Sem·

ester, 1971, are as follows:

to the student.
The critics fear that deferred
tuition could lead to reduced

~~dsso~:.g~~:~r~ p~
8
:e:m':t=e ~rg~ ~~e:a~~~

Ford Foundation assert, however
that other foriWI of aid must con:
tinue and that deferred tuition is
no C'Ure-all for the collegeS money
woes .

MONDA.Y-

7:00 A.M. until 1:00 A.M.
TUESDA.Y-

7:00 A.M. until 1:00 A.M.
WEDNESDAY-

7:00 A.M. until 1:00 A.M.
THURSDA.Y-

7 :00 A.M. until 1:00 A.M.
FlUDA.Y-

7:00 A.M. until 1:00 A.M.
SA.TUliDA.Y-

8 :00 A.M. until I :00 A.M.
SUNDAY-

12:00 Noon until 1:00 A.M.
• Subject to revision for spring rt"·
~~. holidays, and special OC"C&amp;.II·
I ODS.

PERSPEC'TrvE PHtLOSOPH\' AND THE
NEW IMAGE OF JIL\.111' , 88 A-518

class ·of Dr. Von Bertalanffy, held
Friday afternoons, 3-5 p.m. will
be continued .

...

PREMEDICAL AND PREDENTAL STU·

r:!I:~h~h:lsap&amp;1iin/ept~r:;:;

1972 can arrange an appointment
for an appraisal interview with
the premedical advisor, through
Mrs. Pat Forman, 105 Diefendorf.

• FEDEa.u. PRoGRAMS: President
Nixon and the 92nd Congress
have started a debate on the

h~her S:u:OJ:n~y~e~~~!t
in

ru.

Tuesday, February 16, Campus Security ticketed all illegally parked and student cars
in the Capen Lot as they usually do. ..But instead of the
owners taking the tickets from
their windsbields, someone else
took them off the cars, tore
them up, and placed them Mally in a pile. By the time Security came to investipte, both
the pile of over 100 tic:kels and
the unkDown culprit were .....,.
What misbt, at fust, have
-.ned a aood joke is baddiring on the people who aot the
tickets, Security aa,ya. Ol!ili8ra

budget for the next ftsca.J.

r::~tu~n~~
res:~ ~t0 l~
~n~~~~:: :uld1:P~

slight increase in funds. There
are signs of strong opposition in
Congress to Administration plane
to restructure rather than extend
existing forms of student aid .

~~r:r~eni'n l~~a!~~= '!:~~~

smce authority for many U.S.
programs for students and col·
leges is ~e:heduled to expire on
June 30.
a CoLLIXiE PRESIDENTS: Academic
institutions work so hard to find
sensitive and imaginat1ve presidents, says the Associati on o(
Am ~ rican Colleges. that the in·
stitutions would be wise to help
them "maintain those qualities."
The organization recomm ends
formal policies for gi'olli»g presidents periodic leaves of absence,
perhaps every three to five yean.

RUSSIAN JEWRY COMMITTEE: Hillel
is Qow in the process of forming c,~e;~is::~is:~w:~~~hli~~
a HUS!ian Jewry Committee. Stu- that they have held their current
~ents. inte~ted in participating p.&gt;sitions for an average of eight
m. this proJect are urged to call
Hdlel ror further information.
~i~~ldA~J!r::nt~f
Kent State Univen.ity:
-The average age of presi·
ler. A Ruasian Jewry Faculty dents is 53.
Committee is also in formation.
--85 per cent of them held jobo
education immediately prior
!~tei:i~mr:J~b~f=~ in
to their presidencies.
lei.
'--About half the preaiden!B at
one time had been full professors.
One college president today is
'VE'I'Eit.f.NB COUNSELING SERVICE for only 2-4 yean old. He is Leon
veterans who would like vocation- Botstein of Franconia College in
al or personal counseling, spon- New Hampshire. Student. caU
eored by Student Couneeling Cen· him by hia finot name. He aaya
ter, every Monday, 262 Norton.
3-5 p.m.
.
pooition you hold, not becawoe ol
yo~ &amp;«e."
• IN BaucP: The American mill·
tary invol........,t in Laoo came at
a time when le'Yeral peace

~bbf:~= :'!~ ~a~dd~

!':J;·.

::1: ::~:to"·::.~= :ru:;

Tags Gone, But Fines Stay

DL ALBDT WI:&amp;THEDIP.Il,

RECOGNITIONS

:;:

years, would enable students to
postpone part of their tuition b)
pledging to paY.· back a fued portion of the1r future annual income for up to 35 years. Many
other institutiona are said to be
interested in such an arrange·
ment. and the Ford Foundation ia
spending $500,000 in the next
year to study whether a broader
test ehould be made.
The idea is highly controversial Proponenta talk about making it easier for fmancially
pressed coUeges to charge higher
fees. "Unless something is done,"
says Yale's presiden~ Kin&amp;man
Brewster, Jr., .. either we fower
our quality or we clOR our doors

ity of· Two-Point Method of Velocity Sampling," Journal of Hy.
drog~ flivilion, ASCE.
DR.. ERI~AKD. chairman, biochemietry, "Location and Meae·

C:Jbeb!

TuttiON: A plan that

menta!f. at Yale Univenity next

~~~~vii~p=~~i~!V!lid:

=:r

~

=-~n::oore::~~=
financed will be started experi·

Exam~ 'The Tri-t-butyl Phen:
~~rl, R..;,~:.:'oornal of MOl·

aouaT AnUNN, director of

OIL NICI'OLAII l . OAaa,

•

t.!n~ ~0~~=

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

nual

GNATIONAL
GREPORTS

Cbeuio-

PUBLICATIONS

.'PEOPLE
oa.

~~c:nf~~

aren't sure what tickets were
tom up 110 all tickets issued
are still valid. This means that
if they are not paid within ten
days, the $5 fine will be
doubled to $10 and the owner
of the car will be summoned to
rourL

U you parked your car in
the Capen Lot, February 16,
Kenneth Gleonon, din&gt;ctor of
Campus Security; ~ you
call the Buftalo Police 'nepiutment (856-7000) and ask for
Lieutenant Campbell who can
~J_~. }f. YO&lt;Jr ,car . was f.io.

J:f!
anl

~c:es~~~~nathe

war movement. Within a week
there were outbreaks of camlJUS
violence, and major demonatra-

tio~~ ;~":l'rJ::~ .:.UOci
for a new voluntary eervice ~-

or:

iJ'eatri=~~heusete~u ..
of America's moat prioeleaa asseta.•• 'nle ~ would combine
the Peoce COrps, V1ft.. and aimi·
Ia% federal p~ •..

haa~~~~~Jo~l'o~

=

rooms should be as eecure from
unwarranted ee&amp;rcbes in criminal
~~- ~ a~nt or a hotel

�, . _ . , 25, J!FI7J

WEDNESDAY-3

&lt;WEEKLY CO~IQUE

KAJl'I'HA

"'pen 1D pullllc;
•. •"'pen 1D of tile ~
•apon ..,~y 1 D - - e . . . - , . . In tile oullject
ber people (ello) 8re etbori&amp;ed
(ELLE) . 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.,
THURSDAY 25
IU.NAQ811&amp;NT OP TD

CB:aONJCAI.LY JLL: a one-4&amp;Y

con~

t : ·~-Nd
}':r ~te~
~ntinr::f

Medi·
~.~~~offu:':""l o Medi·
Invited to ettend ere all fam.
ilieo and rela- of individuals
New York

who ouffer from. a chronic

ru-

ouch u arthritio, diabeteo, heart
or pulmonary dUeue or perbapa a

J!'!.,de~~=.:.:..n=

bealth profeuionala and eocial
wo·r ken. Tile aim of the program
is to show the audience how phyoiciano, allied health peroonnel,
IOCial service workers use a team
approach to solve problems..
Morning o~n include: DR.
BUSSEI.L BABTON,

director, Roch·

ester State Hospital; DR. EDWARD
LORENZI!, medical director.
Burke Rehabilitation C e n t e r,
White PlaiiUI, N. Y. Program

1.

moderaton are:

DRS.

SAMUEL

and EDWAIID F . &gt;WillA, U/B •
School of MediciDe.
MEASUREKENT REMINAR : Dr. HayBANES

10~::r~ 111

~:=y:t:=

of WediJeoday, Thunday and Fri·
day, he will lint dMcribe the tiJe.
oretical foundationa of the work
and then the applicationo to .tho
and abotract

:~~f ~=~.::t.ctbe~~

=fil!.."'uoic

aemeoter. H e has taught in \'Jpp.
aaJa. Sweden; Bonn, Germany;
Buel, Switzerland and at tho

P081:11N BTt1DENT APPADtB OOI'PD
BOUR0 : 10 Townoend Hall, 8 : 3().

~~;ve:r Nfo~!= aL:e~~:

5: 30p.m.
COMPUTING CEN'la USER BEIMCES :

sity.

Seminar in ADVANCED POR'nlAN,
Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7·9
p .m.

FRIDAY-26
~IA~ur~g?NJeaT:,c~:~

AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY MEE'I'JNG :

New membeno especially urged to
attend. SS4 Norton, 7 :30 p.m.

CARE DELIVERY IN NEW ZEALAND,

~~-:.:~

THURSDAY-4
CONTINUING DE N T AL EDUCATION
COUilBE: D r. James Guttuso, as-

SEMINAR •:

Dr. R ufus P . haacs, p rof.....,r ,
operations research and mduatrial

sociate professor, operative dent-

~~ce~Mts:ci:=• /:.~~C: :e~;e"B!iJ.:~. HM~t_!ln't
of Technolo&amp;Y, A PROCESS MODEL

ANALYSIS (part of Dr.
Milbrath's student-faculty seminar, Room B-48, 4230 Ridge Lea,
1:"15 p.m.
OF DATA

.POLLUTION CONTROL SYMPOsiUM • :

Air, thermal, water and solid
-,·,astes will be discuued; co-sponsored by U/ B Engineering Stu·
dent Assembly and the Erie/
Niapra Chapter of New York
State Society of Professional En·
gineeno, 147 Diefendorf, 2·5 p.m.
THEORETICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR•:
Dr. June A~rille, pootdoctoral

ill~:is,ptr~:;· ~~;~~IOO~
AND PARTIAL CIURACTE.RIZATION OF
N UCLEI FROM. EUGLENA GRACILIB,

Room 29, 4248 Ridge Lea, 2 p.m.,
refreshments following.
EuBleno baa been shown to pos-

=

:a7~~?~ea ~f:~::ti;

useful system lor the study of
nuclear protein-nucleic acid interaction. A method bas now been
#

~~o~~ors~!!,h!h:u~I~i

have been chemically fractionated
and in uitro uptake of various iso~
topea into TCA insoluble products
bu also been studied.
PBYCBOKAT••: free~ form communication for peraonality g~
Fillmore Room, 3-6 p.m.
EBYSICS COlLOQUIUM:• : Dr. J. M.
ICLBCTIION TUNNELLING--A

PHOTON

TIONA!. M 0 D E L FOR ASPARTATE
TRANSCARIIAMYLASE, G-22 Capen,

BALKAN FOLK DANCING :

4 p.m.

'

f:!iJi:/e ~fi ~~ot!::.-==

FRESH MAN BASKETBALL • :

B rock-

port S tate, Cla rk Gym, 6:30p.m.
E ric Clapton, Steve
Stills, Led Zeppelin, a nd Atlantic
recording artists, COWBOY , Fillmore Room , $1.50, 7 : 30 and 10: 30
p.m.

SUPERSHOW :

F n.M•• :

RULES

OJ'

THE

GAME

(J ean Renoir, 1939) . Withdrawn
from general circulation a few
days afte r ita fi rst showing and
banned by the censor a few weeks
before the wa r broke out, this
film was not re-released until 30
years later. It is valuable as the
only French work that coven the
period from the days of Munich
to the early months of the war.
Two classic sequences: the rabbit
hunt and a masquerade foreshadowing the finale. 147 D iefendorf,
8 p.m., free.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: In ~

atruction in basic steps during
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex.
8 p.m.
D a.Yid

G~t,

S ereruule, op. 31; Dvorak.
Gypsy Sons•. op. 55. Baird, 8 : 30

Bntten,

p .m ., free.

s:s~
. ctaS:~ ~ : Bprockpo.m.. rt
Conference Room, 4238 Ridge
'~
Lea, 3: 30 p.m.
•7JLM• • : FIREMAN's BALL, from
Prof.,or Alker is the author Czechoalovakia, by Milos Forman,
of Mothematico and Politico. He Conference Theatre, consult Nor~
would like to meet in a luncheon ton Ticket Office for times, $.75.
poup With otudento and faculty
mtereoted in causal modeling.
SATURDAY-27

ING INTERNATIONAL INTilGI.A.TION,

a:;er:!:ct
C.

Penona
r~el~
Science Measurement Cen·
ter, ut. 17,16.

'I'IDCtii&amp;"J'' BIOLOGY BEMINAR•:

Dr. Devid Cadenhead, auociate
prot_,r, chemisfry, MOLII:CULAII
IN'ftaACTIONS IN PUBE AND X1XED

nLMll, Room 29, 4248 Ridge Lea,

·~~~~~

IIDd dipole-dipole i nteractions,

.*"".,..,.,dicta.:~!=.~~

be evaluated. The role of ouch in·
tedctioDI in mixed monomoleculer lilmo will aloo be diocuooed.

CBDIJC£L KNGINa:IUNG SDIDfAJl:

Dr. W.. H. Geuvin, Norande Re.
OMrcb Cenhe, Pointe Claire, Que·

bee. I'LA8Il.\ TIOCIINOLOOY-A NEW
,,..,.,.., OP CII.DOCAL &amp;:NGINJZil..

......

11118, lOC Parker E.,.;neering, 4

.U..••:

pen Blvd., 6:30 p.m.

Fillmore

Room. N orton, 8 p.m.

TOOL TO · tenor. Wlth ~l8tmg a rtists Edith
Gardiner, ptano; Don Factor,
hom; Paul C oh nell y, piano.
Wo~ka include Schumann, D ich·
ter.ltebe, Heme, op. 48 (1840) ;

Dr. Hayward Aliter, professor,

==

~~
!::!s~~fio~
by a roller skating party; rides

~~ ~=~~iilef:o!e~~ /!:a~

Dr. Ga-

SPECTR.A 111
Hocbstetter 4 p m.. refrea~ents
112 Hocha~tter' 3; 30 p.m.
•
POLn'IC.U. SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM• :

...rtt. . . . . m'.

bor Markus, biochemistry, A FUNC-

:ri':?·M':.~YT~hN:W~~: GRADUA~ RECJ!~•:

lBAStfRE

istrY and endodontics; Dr. Frank
L Graziano, assistant profeuor.

DIFFERENTIAL GAMES: THEm SCOPE,
NATURE AND FUTURE, 104 Parker

Engineering, 4 p.m. Refreshmen ts
t=:~lllJJlAr, 109 Parker
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR:

8 30

from
Czechoslovakia, by Miloa Forman,
Conference Theatre, consult Norton. Ticket Office for timoo, $.75.

FILM • •:

PIKEMAN'S

BALL,

SUNDAY-28

FIREMAN' S BALL, f r 0 m
Czechoslovakia, by Milos Forman,
Conference Theatre, consult Nor~
ton Ticket Office for times, $.75.

FILM * •:

MONDAY-1
FILM •* : LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD

(Alain Reanaia, 1961). This film
takes ~ place in a deluxe hotela man meets a woman-he tells
her they met there last year--ehe
says n~nd there follows a complicated series of flashbacks, real

dfcf!;·~\~~?~~!~~ ~~~gh.

director ResnaiB says yes ; collaborator-screenwriter Alain RobbeG rillet says no. 147 Diefendorf,
3 and 8 p .m., free.

'CaVIl of the

tt.rt.'

TYescl8y.

THE 80CIA.L RESPONSIBn.ITY OF
THE SC1ENTI8T AND THE SURVIVAL

MOVEMENT, 5 Acheson, 5 p.m.
D r . Grothendieck is interns ~

MARTHA

GRAHA.M:

DANC E
0

vi~of:h~f ~~;:or:~

SCIENCE

COLLOQUWM :

:;:m~}n.:=en":.:df:uo~g 1!
ture.

MARTHA

GRAHAM

DA NC E

COM-

PANY•: M aster Class, Fillmore
Room, 4 p.m.
COMPUTING CENTEil USER SERVlCES:
Seoiinar in ADVANCED FOBTilAN,

Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea, ·7 ·9
p.m.
CHAMBER MUSic• : Jesae Levine,

viola; Charles Haupt, Rivka Mandelkem , violin; Frank
vi~

ReillW,
o;!d

b~; ~~::e~a"1)~~ll:~Y

Brahms, Baird, 8 : 30 p.m., admis·
sion charge.

TUESDAY-2
PUBLIC LEC'I'URB•: sponsored by

the

of

~"=·~oeco~'i!:...~

~e~%tS'..J;n:.:,e~.147

diridul ~~ mer-.ea
willa lba ._...,. before your eyeo
. • . Puio (Elle) ia poeticized ..

aao-.u, Room lrT, 4248 Ridge

Grotbendiock will deliver 2 !alb:

POl.llfDA.TIONB OF ALQZB&amp;AIC

Lea, 4 p.m.

~~~t: ~Co"rd [r· ~~

as.soc~.ate professor of social
work, The Univenity of Roch ~
ester School of Medicine will dis-

and

cuu THE H Y P E R AC TI VE CHILD.

A fternoon program: Dr. Gordon
K. Farley, chie f, Children's Diag·
noetic Center and assistant professor of child J:ychiatry, Univer-

~~ o!~~o~0o ~:iC:wx~.:.
CLUMSY CHILD.

COI..l.ECE

OF

MATHi:MATICAL SCI·

ENCES ux:TURE: David RotheJi~
berg, A MODEL FOR PI:ICCPTION
WITH APPLICATIONS TO THE AltTS,

10 F ooter, 3 p.m. Also Fridey, 10
Foster, 3 p.m.
·
free-fonn commu~
nfcation for personality growth,
Fillmore Room, 3·6 p.m.

PSYCHOHAT• •:

GENERAL

ELBCTIUC

PLANT

TOUR :

oociology, wil speak on

===s=-----

'::::

~u::::.~ ~~t:p::- !:.tusom:r

COLLIIIII Or · JUTIIDU,.,.... SCI·
DICIB UICTUIII:: Dr. Alexander

of Medicine. Professionals such
as physicians, educators, psychologists, aocial workers a nd related
health professionals as well as
parent members of the Asaociation for Children wi th Learning
D iSabilities are invited . Morning

her

Company, UBISTANCZ TO INNOVATION IN INDUimlT, 147 DiOfotndorf,
1: 30 p.m.
.

HawkB, 1946) . From Raymond
Cba.ndler'e novel about a private
eye 6ilned Philip Marlowe, this
film fealureo Humphfey Bopit
aa the detectiw who me""- wit.

AND

k..;

iee, spoDIOred by Hillel, DR. RUBau, A.. STONE, ueiatant profeuor,

FILM.• • : TH&amp; 100 8LIZP (Howard

PROBLEMS

The Amateur Redio Soc:iltY and
"EI Penilente" preoents, through the Student Aalociation are
the mediuni of a typical MeDcan~ spoDIOrin.g a -tour of the G..E.
Indian fiesta play, a profound yet semiconductor plant here in Buf- .
simple picture of the life of man.
The music is by Louia Hont. one ~~te:~
:~-:.~
of the fint Jiiodern composers to
TI'IUlllportation 'Will be pJOVided.
work with Mise Graham.. " Cave
of the Heart" was the start of the PILK• • : LA CHINOIS&amp;, OU PLU'I'OT
Graham G""'k cycle, detailing A LA CIIINOlllll: (1967) . Brechtian
legend
Medea and
ter· leuoDI on rewlution-maki..u: a
rible vengeance .apinat Juon: Maoist cell in an upper-mMidleThe IICOre ia by Semuel Barber. c1aoo Paris Oat. 147 Diefendorf,
A late addition to tho tour's rep. 8 p.m., free.
FILll• •: ZAGREB PILMB, ""To anie z:tory is "Ernmd ~to the Maze,"
With a acore by qum.Cado Men· mate, to ,;... life.and oouJ to a deotti. Ito theme ,. .bued on tho lliin not through tho copying. but
myth of tJ.&gt;e laby=th of Crete · through the tlanoformation of
and the mmotaur wtth the pro1'08!ity " The8e are ~ win
!agonist (Mia .Graham) be 1 n g nina .;,;,.,.ted fi1mo of JJ0Cia1 con:
!!"Y human being who muat 10 science, Conference n-tte, con·
tbrowd1 tho maze · · · ~ """r· auJt Norton Ticket Ollice for
come ti.e monster of fear.
timoo, $.75.

Clifford C. Fumu College and
Department 0 f Sociology' DR.
lAMES ECONOMY, m.a.na.&amp;er of re-

=-..-:r""~e!~=

THEm

:e:~~: P!;cl:.~. b~i

~~~ Aff:i:.t!lem ~Ue;.

COMPtn'£B

Robert Taylor, University of
Michigan, DATA S TRUC T U RES,
3

CHILDREN,

COM·

wh ich begins March 1, are listed
in a separate story elsewhere in
today' s issue.

INTERNATIONAL WEEK
Events for In t er nat iona l Week.

e ndodontics ; Dr. Bruce H. 'Seid·
berg, clinical 8!18ista.nt profeeaor,
operative dentistry and endodontics, ENDODONTICS IN DAILY PRACTICE, Capen H~ .

tionally famous for his work on
t he foundations Of algebraic geometry for which he received a
Fielda Medal a t the International
Congress of Mathematics in 1966.
This a ward is the mathematics
e:Ju ivalent of a Nobel P rize. F ollowing a long·standing commit~
ment, Professor Grothenclieck has
increasingly devoted much of hU
time to publishing the need for
social commitment and responsibility on t he part of scientists and
their role in the survival of this
planet.
wo~s BWIMMlNa•: Fre donia
State, Clark Gym. 6 p.m.
WOMEN'S BA8ICE1'B.ALL • : Fredonia
S tate, Clark Gym. 7 p.m.

T he Black Dance Worbhop and
College B, in conjunction with
Niagara University. Niagara University Student Center, 8 : 30 p.m.
General admission $3.00; students
$1.50. Tickets at Norton Ticke t
Office. Free bWM!I· for students
will leave from Norton at 7 p.m.

..UX OU ftOIB CBOIIB

~~~~--ri...mr::

...

oriN of perception, IJdas&gt;tift pet.
tem repreeentation and recopi-

~~ l~~!F: ~~1&gt;11~

10:00 a.m.

reoitlen;

.1',::'1::;

~~·~-~ork~':

Foet.er. 8 p.m.
Dr. Kempf is the author of a
number of boob ·on European
fiction and philooophy and ia

ENGINEERING SCIENCE

io

of Inductift Iaforeace

(Writinc and Den.

rro= t!.!:r:

BCI·

WJTB .APPLIC.A.ftOHa '1'0 TID Alrl'l1

I:C&amp;ITl1D BT JlANDY8)D: DE BA.LZAC
IL\UDELAlJII)

0011·

KO'IIDU'I'E&amp;L

OOLI.IIJI: OP

PaNCH ~ · : Dr. Ro1er
Kempf, visitinc profeooor, Fm&gt;ch,
A

DA!fC•

DICIB UICTUIII:: Devid - ·
berc, .. More. .-noN

f -.

J'AJIILY

oaAIIAJ(

rANT' : Mater Claa, FillmDN
Room, 10 LI"-

INTER~;;;;;;:;;~vmw-==
.
The

IIW'IIlU-

ON · CAIIPUB ~

runninc tbrough ADril

:e~.:e~~fo~~
PIIOOIW(,

=:.r~will~INa:
·
f
ti
d

terviewo with ecluca&amp;iolllll. .,__

neea, industrial

utd ~rzm-.tat

· =~~~:~~= !,jf'=r~~~
atructure.

Confereme TbNtte,
Norton, 8 p.m.
TlmW'Y and FAMILY
THEaAPY WOIKBB.OPS : personal
&lt;Qnouitationo 11ven by DR. JtAm. ,.,
BUJ&lt;IB1'0N Tacoma, Wuhinctnn,
paychia~t and fonDer auociate
of Fritz Perla, developer of Gettalt tborepy. Throud&gt; Much 6.
Human DJJDeDAiono 'Inatitute, Ro..
oary Hill CoJieae. For information
and. reptretion, call tho lnoti·
tuta, 83£1..3600.
GESTALT

r

terview. ~ additional information ue ...n.
able in Hay.. C.
1'H11RSDAY-25: Colpte Palmolive
Compomy ; Eutman KodU: Co.;
RCA Corp.; Norfolk Shipyud;
~ A wore Public 8 c b 'o o h
(Ene) .
1'111DAY-21h Bore WII1'DH'-liloChain Division; SylvaDia Inc.;
Eutman KodU: Co.; W....q
Valley Cantrel School (()pDp) .

(contiluud oa-7. coL 3)

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                    <text>.STATE UNIVERSI~ BUFFALO

'FEBRUARY 18. 1971

Task Force:Ricominends President Ketter Is Invested
New Goverruuu:i_Study. As the Eleventh UIB Executive

'The Taak Force on Uni-aity a - - baa - "*''led lbe formation of a 22man IXIIDiiUUee which would
·~ aDd present artides
ol aUvemauce" to all ae-ta
of tbe Uniwnity "at the earliest PCIIIIIible dl!te."
,
'l1le res-t of lbe Task Force,
cbaiJed by Dr. Donald W. RenDie, profeuor of physiolojry,
was releaaed tod!lY .by President Robert L Keller. It said
thst new articles of ..,..,.anm
sbould be considered adopted
"upon approval by lbe majority of thoae' responding from
each ·ooostituency."
"Constituencies" which
would hsve to approve a BOY·.
emance system for the University include faculty, students
d nbn-teaching professionals
8nd other stsft.
In releasins the Task Force's
recommendations, Ketter also
relesaed the text of a letter to
Task Force Chainnan Rennie
stating thst be is "in basic
agreement" with lbe Task
Force's call for lbe e&amp;tsblishment of this Constitutional
Convention-like committee with
authority to p.......t ~

pus. I would apect these reoommendations to be made direedy to lbe fUture University
Committee on ~ as
PI'OPI*CI in your rePort."
· 'The Task Force called for
formation of lbe p~ new
22-man committee on lbe basis
of " ·lottery from "intereSted
perilons" who "indicate a comm i - to serve by register·
ing" with tbe Task Force. Tbe
lottery system of selection
would provide one repreeentative from esch of the seven faculties, t h r e ·e undergrsduates,
two grsduate students, one Milian! Fillmore College student,
a professional student (from
law, denti9Uy or medicine),
two non-teaching professionals,
two classified Civil Servim employees, two administrative officers, one alumnus, and one
representative from the Ubiversity Council.
On this point, Ketter told
the Task Force, '"'be proposed
details of selection of the Ubiversity Committee, I assume
can be modifieil without detracting from the main thrust
of your propoeal.
Procedure

Ketter
also with action.
a aec- To "I
. . , like to request
pI
an sagreed
for Univer&amp;lty
Bewould
ond ~tlah"'that • the theta four to five· ne.-,~
'Taiik "FOrCe Comimle to exist- fiom themi&amp;k~on 00\leras the initial OOIIIIultatiV.. body nanm meet with me and the
for this University committee. presidents (or chairmen) of the
~ llloc:ommencbotlons
principal campus constituencies
"To impleinent your recom- · identified in your report to dismendations," the p resident CUl!8 lbe selection promdure . . .
wrote "' would like the Task While the Task Force advoForce' on Govemsnce to devote cated a lottery mechanism from
itself nen to recommendations among registrants, othen; hsve
on the substance of University- argued for a more conventional
wide Governance that seem selection process. _There may
most aPPlOPriate to this cam- (continued on 6, col. 6)

...........,_.....,
:,__
*" .,~:-.-=.:-""........,.....___
__.. ...........
.....

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

....... -

.. . . . . . . . . . . J. . . . -.~

By ·su~~NWOOD
Sellen IDOIIlths after be was
selected for the job; Robert
Lewis Ketter was ofticially inaugurated mr Monday as the
president of the State Ul)iversity of New York at Bulfalo.
In a simple mremony, lasting
slightly longer than an hour,
Ketter received· the symbol of
oflice a medallion inoorporating ih8 seat of the University,
and becanle U/B's eleventh
chief emcutive olllcer.
The traditional promssional
of delegates representing more
·than 180 universities and professional societies began the
morning. Hesding the march to
the platform was Dr. John T .
Horton, University marshal,
carrying the ceremonial mace
in grey-gloved hands.
Before the actual investiture
came greetings to the president
on behsJf of the academic com-

INAUGURAL TDCT
complete text of President
Kette(s Inaugural Address, " Repression by Default." is printed
on page 2 of today•s issue.

The

·-~M~~~~~=~~i~
was Mark Huddleston,
president of the undergrsduate
Student Association (SA).
Huddleston did not "represent"
thst organization because its
coordinating council voted last
Friday thst he could not do so.

u.,.

Throe Presklonts

Other Remortcs

. Huddleston told of his 1,000
days as a student at U / B and
of three dift'erent presidents
with three di!Jerent sets of policies. Now be said, the Uruversity has "lost sight of the idesls
thst set us in motion." He challenged the new president to
answer question s thst are
troubling students. He wanted
to know if President Ketter
would "lesd an administration
founded not in homogeneity,
but in the diversity necessary
for creativity." He asked if the
president would "represent the
entire University .. . in interactions with the community,''
and if he would maintain the
"principles of openness and due
process so essential to . . . free
thought and expression." Last,
and "most importantly,'' Huddleston asked, "will you have
the vision to revive the spirit
of exci~t thst gave us the
breadth and the energy to Pll8h
at lbe bounds of higher education; thst helped l o r m thst
curious bond, thst, for a time,
united us, and gave us pur- ? " Only a positive answer
to these challenges, he said,
could ···erase some of the
doubla."
.
Presenting greetings from the
aaademic community was Dr.
Jobn S. Toll. president of
SUNY at Stony Brook. In a
warm and personal address to
Ketter, Toll "rejoiced" in his
selection, but asked if the new
president could rejoice since his
job / 'has become an almost impcalble" aae. 'The Stony Brook
preaident noted tbere "remains
th.t imall freedom to rn.ai*JV,
w and to imlovate," but warned
lbU · this ..._., "wiil seem Dllri,'Oil' as • 11111Dr's edae as you
Ollllfroat lbe cn-.o:o

Other remarks were given by
Michael Rosen, president of the
Graduate Student Association;
Dr. William H. Baumer, chairman of the Faculty Senate;
Robert E . Lipp, president of
the General Alumni Association, and William C. Baird,
chairman of the University
Council.
Rosen asked the new president to promote Ji"'rBOnal dignity and to realize thst the
"dignity of one person is no
higher than the rest of humanity."

'B~::.r::"'d~~:%:~"'fi:ite~s

presidency as "characteristic of
beginnings . . . times of hopes
and dreams, fesrs and uncertainties." He proposed an effort
on the part of the U Diversity

community to develop "a com·
munity of scholars in every best
sense of thst phrase."
Alumni Pres ident Lipp
praised Ketter's actions during
the first seven months of his
term. "You hsve led capably
and we are most plesaed," he
said. However, he warned tbe
president thst he may be called
upon to make difficult alkl "not
popular" decisions.
Ketter was described as a .
"vigorous, imaginative and
hard-working young man,'' by
Council Chainnan Baird who
predicted the new pnisident will
lead the Univen;ity "to an even
higher rank among univer&amp;ities."
The Investiture
After a musical interlud!&gt; by
the University Chorus, Chsn(con tinued
ptJ6&lt;, 2 coL ~)

o,.

Senate Meets WedneSday,
Calendar, SPA on Agenda
All Faculty Senate representatives h a v e n o w b e e n
elected by the seven faculties,
and the first regular Senate
meeting is scheduled for next
Wednesday, February 24.
The meeting, to be held at
3 p.m. in 114 Hochstetler, will
hesr reports from President
Ketter, Chairman Baumer; and
the SUNY Faculty Senators,
and wiU elect an Executive
Committee. T ics to be discusseif include
relationship
of the Senate to . the Senate
Professional A 011 o c i a t i o n
(SPA) as well as lbe new academic caleDdar proposal
Repm!entati- to .the Senate
from lbe ._tive faculties

"tC

are:

ARTS &amp; LETTERS-P.ierre ·
Aubery, French; Olp Bernal,
French; H a r v e y Breverman,
Art; Diane Chris~ Enliish;
Albert Cohen, MU81c; 'Ibomas
Connolly, Arts and Letters;
Jeremy Cook, French; Leo Curran, Classics; Sylvia Dimiziaoi,
Music· Pierre Hart, German
and Siavic; Ronald Hauser,
Arts and Letters; Bruoe Jackson, English; Marcus Klein,
English: Bryon Koekkoek, German ;;;:d Slavic; George Levine,
English; James McKinnon,
Music.
EDUCATIONAL STUDIES
-Robert'ilerdabl, ~ l:ducation; Charles FaD, Social
Foundations; S. David Farr,
( COI&gt;tilwed

on - ·

6, coL l)

�2

~~

, . _ , II, 1911.

~RepressiOn by Default' PoseS Threat to Camws ~~=-·)

-s NOTE: TIM followEDlron
'
1
ill8
u
the
full
1m
of
·the
,_.
1 ruo1 add.- of Prauunt RoMn
L. Ketur, deliuued Mondtly at
Kleinhono MrUic Hall.

ia imperatiWJ that-. ~
define our respoaeibilitiea and
de•---''-..,......., to meet them. 'lbla
is ooe of the primary opportunities the future holds for each

By ROBERT L KET1'ER
L---"- Boyer, Mr· D-'-'
c............,.
oauu,
members of the Council of
State University of New York
at Bulfalo, members of the
Board of Trustees of State University of New York, Distin·
guished Visitors, Delecates,
members of the University fa&lt;&gt;ulty and student body, ReverendCiergy,Alumni,Ladiesimd
GentleaaL
,
ThiB ....,._t reviWJB .or me
a faelins I~ wben I
was first appomted to ~ and
whidl I am aure all of lQY pre~ shared, for 1 am
standing now, as they did, at.
the c:rossroada between tndition and innovation, b e the impenltive to p.-ve an
··--- from the .-•
--+ .....,
--~
lnheri ~
the sense of the cipporlunlty to
give a shape to the future.
For each of lQY predecessors
the interplay between tradition
and innova~ bas bad a uni-

of us.

::~·= ~~

n

'The mission of a university Is
to contribute to the welfare of
society - through educatioD.
This contribution has tradition·
ally been 'made In the areas of ·
teaching, research and public
service. To properly serve In
these areas the university bas
required .that it be given the
autonomy whid1 insures free In·
quiry into the trutb of all pbenomena, and the free dispenaa·
lion of the results of that in·
quiry.
..
Samuel Capen, chancellor of
tbis University from 1922 to
1950, wrote that what we have
asked is "to be protected apinst
evay form of reprisal" that
·..., prov......
_,__ This
the trutb nn,...t
is to be .nven a uniquely~·
vi•.
leged status, one which
t
Implies abeolute freedom. Judge
Learned Hand pointed to the
danger in this and other such

=n: ~re=ns~

to devote. more time to lndividual students, but to pwsue our
own inten!llts, whether or not
these intenlats are of benellt to
tboee whom we teach. Our offices are more often cl.-d than
~-..._~
--~ m......
...... of
open to s....__
..., .....,
our tea..._,_« bas beml left to
........., rienced Our
the least e&gt;:pe •
•
research interests lw.ve often been
dictated by available funds
which have led to an eager re-

edJo K..u.r "tar , _
tba .U of tba Slate Um-.ity
of N- Yad: at Bulfalo." ADd
e. =~ lumed to
.....,.;..., a
ovatioa from
the audimce of
at KleinbaDe Mualc HaiL
d udllls
Ai..• --=ldcllp£
larieo,
tario Frank
In•
'a U..,..
Sedi"" lialaled.8 e. tblnl _
ideat"7, SUNY at Bulfalo "ib;;
deli-..1 bi8 lint major~
His topic, ~ by Jle.
fault" dealt wfth tba Nliotioaabip ~ "ac:ademic fn&amp;.
dom and academic ftllpOIIIIibil.
ity." Ketter opalre out In
meuured- apjnot letli&amp;latioa dellip8l to 0011trol campus diaonler

18Ylnc it-"-·

1
tsin t o e. inatitutioual
autonomy wbJch Ia a P18'1Q1lisite ~ tzue ac:adamic freedom."
Inatead, be W. "it ia impem.
tiWJ that - . ouna!YBB, d8fine
-"-"...__ and deter

our ,___......._

•

. mine to meet a-_"
He chided
~ for
sbirldng
tbeir bi8
._;bilitiea
in
the.::::r,...:....."-".-•
- · - more ~
to
than to teaching.
!-nd alll:!'O often, the"!"' Jll1!8•dent said.,, the ~ was
baaed on ~ autocratic lecture

~~,:f · Th.,ton::;.,~ msnd~ by "!"!olarsl!iP· ~ ~n':l'~ts ~~

generation to generation. In lQY no check upcin tbeir freedom," wealth that bas mushroomed
· ·
the area of crucisl con
he ·d "
beco
·
our research bas been matd&gt;ed
:'~t:;.., and now Is the rela: ty
::'!om i s " : , = by our hubristic claims that
tiOn between academic freedom sian of only a savage few .. . ." have created unrealistic eq&gt;e&lt;&gt;and academic responsibility.
'The academic profession bas tations among the students and
Therefore, 011 this occasion, I recogni1Jed the validity of tbis in the community.
want to make that relationship warningandbassoughttoavoid
Not everyooe is guilty, but
the focus of my remarks.
the abuse of its freedom by self- to whatever extent these charI
imp&lt;&amp;&lt;~ precepts: a reliance on ges are applicable to instibJIn an article which appeared scholarship rather than opinion, tiona and individuai&amp;-to the
last AUgtlBt in one of the na- reason rather than power, in- University at Buffalo and to
tional dailies, it was reported tellectual exchange rather than you and to me-tl*l to that
that thirty-two atstes bad en- dOgtnB, and above all humanity extent the institutions and
acted legialation designed speci- in its relations to others.
the individuals have abrogated
fically to control campus disBut academic freedom is now tbeir responsibility to the purorders. 'There bas not yet been threatened. It is true that the pose of higher education. This
sufficient time to analyze fully university is one of many llOCial denial, this arrogtmce of selfthe imPlications of these roo&amp;· institutions confronted today by interest, must be accorded its
sures; nevertheless, I would sub- a loss of confidence. It is also own proper role as a factor in
mit that such laws are repres- true that dissatisfaction witb the erosion of confidence in the
sive at worst and at best, they the university bas been height- academic · profl!ssion. For it is
111'8 regressive, for they are cer- ened by changes in other sec- a pervasive sense of disenchanttain to erode the institutional tors of society. But ·we are still ment, not alone a reaction to
autoooJQY w!Jicb is a prere- faced ultimately witb the reali· campus disorder , which bas
quisite for true academic ! . - zation that the atmosphere of created the current threat to
' S o m on campus bas been autonomy and academic fn&amp;.
dom.
Traditionally, universities · va
. It bas been invaded dom.
~ve opposed an:.; attempts to
.'t'
whose impatience and
m
cucwnscribe theu autonomy, iii-&lt;X&gt;nce1
goals demand the
There are many who now
' clio
f the university as recommend that research instireasoning that an attack against d~
theconditionsunderwhichaca- the only so 'on to the prob- tutes, separate from the unidemic freedom exists is in fact lema
an
'tution which versities, be created; that unian attack against academi.c reflects many of society's d&amp;- versities' no longer act as certifreedom itself. In general, theu ficienoes and justices. It bas fication boards for employers in
oppoaition bas not. been mis- been invaded,
, by tbose wbo business and in the professions;
placed; for the puvilege of wish to supp
expression of and that the public demand for
autonomy bas rarely been unpopular , wbo do not the services of higher education
granted without a struggle, and distinguish betWeen violent re- be limited. Tbese recommends·
even then, society bas _demon- volt and pesoaful dissenl The tions- which come from withslnlted a reluctant aoqwescen!"' university bas been peculiarly in the university as well as
rather than a poaitive comnut- vulnerable to these invasions from without - suggest that
ment to the concepl
because its commibnent to ! . - tbere is a widespread belief
Unfortunately, our concen- dom and to · the complexities that the univenity bas overtnltiOD On preventing external of trutb bas often paralyzed its extended itself, that it bas atinterference bas dellected our ability to act.
tempted to fill 'too lDI1liY roles.
attention away from internal
In reviewing recent educaTbese proposals may have
responsibilities. We lw.ve looked tiona! history, it must be some merit, but I do not b&amp;outward at the expense of look· concluded that less vis i b 1e, lieve that we are going to reing inward, and now find our- no doubt because it was 1ess store the trust we have lost
seiWJB faced witb an uncomfort- volatile, serious .abuses of aca- aimply by proposing remedies
·able paradox: our very preoc- demic freedom begtm to a1llict dependent upon elements QUtcupation witb external threat universities in tbeir early years side the university. 'The teachbas belped to bring that threat of burgeoning allluence follow- ing, research and service func..
aboul
ing World War-n. Tbeee abuses tiona haWJ been part of the role
Nor hp the intern&amp;! neglect were caused by arrogance, an of universitiea amce tbeir Cl'e&amp;·
resulted only from our atrugJie . arrogance which bas dooe much lion in medieval times, and I
for autoooJQY and academic to provoke the diSorder whid1 do not fareaee a time wben
freedom. It also bas come out lDI1liY have cited as the justi- one or another of them will be
of arrogance and fear, an arro- fication for the preeent threats abandoned: tbey are too intergance whid1 bas placed us to our autonomy. Tbi8'baughti- related.
above responsibility, and a fear ness bas been manifeated in
I believe first we must recwhid1 bas paralyzed our will the impoaition Of an autocratic ognize that teaching is primary,
to adbere to the delllands of 1ecbJre syatem which too fre. and that .-.arch and service
responsibility even when "" quently bas denied students are valuable 10 the university
have perceived a-.
the freedom ot inquiry which in the !leiPee to which they
LewisMaybewandnumerous we lw.oe claimed~ ClllllllliWJB. facilitate tba former. It ls
other educators have wamed us We lw.ve expected our own con- through teaching that tba uniof the gravity of the crisis that dusioas, expounded at length, versity and tbe individual in
tbeee attib.ldes have created. U to be returned dutifully at the the university will make tbeir
the university does not put its end of the term. We iw.WJ thus broadest 0011tribution to the
own house in order, the political displayed in ClllllllliWJB tba clc-.1 welfare Of society. 'The teacher
allow tba punuit
establisbment, in response to minds which "" iw.WJ beml ., muSt public pressure, will attempt to quick to condemn in others.
of bi8 own intereata to IMd to
do so. We will haWJ squandered
Our .-.arch, and 8CX118timee nePect of tbe ·· intellectual
our lnheritaDc:e of both autun- our ............... to reaearch, ..-til of bi8 aludeats.
omy and freedom.
'-"" interfered with our fleadi:.
A. the larpR padUate -.a
We cannot continue to in- ing. Lilbt courM 1aada baWJ m tba State Um-.ity of Nvile ~ by default. It beml u.l as oppodunitiea DDt . York, this lnatltutioo'at Buffalo

=.,;.,

has a . puticular obllption to
_....._ But, if ..., ,....._. ..__t
_.....
. . _ ...
·our
activities in both tbatopure
--~ __,.._. ~-ube
""" .......-.. """"' are
carefully aelscted to ,enhance
the ~ proceao, ll*l ""
1ll!ill
maintain
our of
lntecrity
as
a tzue
Institution
.Jeamlng.
Realisticall this selection will
have to beymaoo 8lDCllll lnla'eats which Individuals, buai, _ foundati!mi, .- and p !
ernmei.ls are willing to llnaDoe.
It WQuid be foolish to · argue
that social utility · Is no\ a ·
----'-·' institutionallnlluenos.
~~careful selectian
8lDCllll our optioas can ..-ve
our right to deilne our own
rinritiea .while aimultaneoualy
~ societal ad\'IIDCilllll!ll
Public eervioe, apart from e.
service inherent in teaching and
---"- bas -·nied during
·~--.In
the last several years an' •
creasing amount of time and
..,
.•
,_,_
the
Uilivenlty.
·~-..,...
It 18 obvious by now, 00.........,
that the university cannot be
boned intq a cutting edae for
llOCial change. 'That role would
~·;- attributes that are antiiJ;;~ to the objectivity de-

fore, m exercwng this function
"" must make aure that our
proJil'Blll8 of _service have a
broad educational if~"!"i
that an advocacy 0
"!·
~rests does not usurp ~
ticals~ that the ';'I'l~ty
at all times must mamtain.
~-·"-'" .
f
Can . the • ·~......,........l;ie&amp; o
the uw~ty commuwty be
obeerved Wlthout a f0111J:Bl and
enforceable oode of ethics? It
is tzue that our universitiea
have become more legalistic in
nature as a result of campus
disorders. Nevertbeless, the disciplinary oodes and due process
measures that have been drawn
up to deal witb these problems
have not stilled the public outcry for yet more stringent regulations:
Reacting to this external pressure and out of a genuine concern for the viability 1 of fn&amp;.
dom 011 the cam~ many educators have suggested tbe need
for a well-defined code which
includes an enforcement mechanism. 'The Association of
American University Prbfesson
recently releaaed a statement
on freedom and respoosibility;
the American Association of
State Colleges and Universitiea
bas issued its own atstemeot 011
"academic freedom, reoponsibility and tenure"· and at hotb
Bertudey and Stmdord the fa&lt;&gt;ultiea have been ~the
strong enforcement of "codes."
I feel very strongly that this
concern for professiolial ethics
is ~thy. ~ all too of~ in
the piiBt we have emphasimd
freedom without su16cient regard for responsibility. It Is lQY
personal bope, however, that
Calif~ is not,~ ~t bas beml
labeled, the nations weather
vane." I do not slw.re the view
of lliO&amp;e persons who feel tbet
the consensual and unondified
guidelines for_ academic fn&amp;.
dombili'ty ":~dtooacaill~e&amp;poii8lto
~
useful---~-~ I do
....,
. , !""'
"?t want tbe
t[mver&amp;~ty_ placed m the poaition oflw.Yllli to create a formsl
code and enf&lt;&gt;rcel&gt;:alt p~
dures as '! meens of avoiding
that creation by others.
U tbis possibility can - be
averted, ~ wi!l ~ dooe., CIJ!iY
~ lnatitu_tianal and., m~"'!' COIIIID!Iment
. to · aelfdiacipllne. It . 18 this quality
which "!Jabbes usc to aublimaie
our self-mterests to the adVIlllll&amp;IIBlt of hwnait good and to
thereby fulftll the ~ of
biB!- ~ucation and of this
U!"~ty. 'The quality ia in~«:....,echolarsblp; it is both
our
and our freedom.
~ time
.t. has ...,. come to

c:n·

1

dom of inquiry which we have
claimed ~ owae1
"
Tuchlnc ::l'ltrnOIJWJB.
To belp solve the problems
of the institution, Ketter said,

"we must recoenize that teach·

ing is primary, and that research and service are valuable
to the University in the degree
to which they facilitate the former." To slop repreesiDD within
the University by outside forces, the president urged an "in·
dividual commitment to seUdiscipline." "It is this quality
which enables us to sublimate
our self-interests to the advancement of the human good
and to thereby_ fulfill the purpose of higher education and
of tbis University," he coneluded.
Through the snow, which delayed Clw.noellor Boyer's plane
and held up the ceremony for
20 minutes, the gtlests made
their way to the Ridge Lea
Campus dining room for the
luncheon.
600 at tile l.uQcheon
After a meal of..chi:ken
breasts witb champa- sauce,
the group of 600 heard·messag·
es from members of the com·
munity and the central SUNY
adminiatratioD.
Chancellor Boyer, who bad
to leave early, gave Ill""~
not only to the ,_ ~t
but also to bi8 family, ..-I&lt;inl!
. of the "family_ commitment''·
that must be made as ....U as
the presidential 0118.
Buffa!~ Comptroller
~ta~ of the =t~
falo" to "Preaaccen Bob"
b&amp;half of ~
President Ketter was ~p·ven
a "gold plated letter apimer"
witb the .U of tbe Counwty
of Erie • ,._ ...._ __.,_ by B
m ,,. "!"""""
·
J~ Tutuab, Brie pouaty •·
ecutive. Tutualla .aid tba .U

s.J;ta. ..,

=-~!t~appnocia:

J:: ,_

for
pneidaa~
Gn!e!,inp to Ketter- also
extaad8d by Dr AJJ.t Berrian, IIIIIOCiate cWm,~eo~now for
higher education, Stele of New
York, the Very~ .James
M. Demab, s..J - pneidaat of
Caniaiu&amp;
a n d Allell
.....,.......__ _..._..__ of e.

eon...,;:

:r;;;;-;,~·Tbe simple, aputaD aellilntion ~ tbe .___..__ of
was ~~to
"extravqanza" held for Martin
Meyei8DD four years qo. 'The
two men, one who led tbe Univendty into an era of lllpBII8ion,

x..u.r
e.

and the other who bepn ,mat
is termed a "period of 0011·
solidalillll,~ 1 are .aid to be.,..
llected in a.e type of inaupua~ Cli!I8IIIOD,Y each chlal to
,.._

�1''*'-ry 18, 19'11

3

College A Contro~
.Seen Headed for Senate

......... ..,.,Ill .........

uia .......,_
Its lblnl - - In fow. ,..,. on Mo.,.
.,__
..........., In Klolnhons Music Hall

a,, -

__ __

.Day of Festivities

,.,

• Ill Ridp Laa. Vlsltilll dlcnltsrln, foculty,
alumni, - . cOmmunity ....... and family joined to
- - the olllclal bociMIIII of 18nn.
- -.........
the ...-.,...suate
Studont
·
- aof
n
antl-lnaupralln
Norton,p-na
the-'
.

-..a

'lbe ronttoversy over aeHgrading in College A seems
beaded to the Faculty Senate
for decision after last Friday's
iiction by the Collegiate Assembly .to support the College's
decision to remain as is. (Rec
porte, Februaly 11.)
College A decided Tuesday,
F~ 9, to rontinue student
self-grading despite notice from .
Dr. Daniel H. Murray, acting
vice president for academic affain;, that it must change · the
practice in order to romply
with State Education Law. U
no solution can be reached between the Colle~ and his offioo, Murray SSid, "the issue
will be ronsidered by the appropriate committee of the
Faculty Senate."
The Collegiate Aasembly, in
support of College A:
" Affinned the rights of students currenUy enrolled . , ,to
be graded for this aemester under the aeH-evaluation procedures which they assumed they
were registering under;" and
"Affinned the right of College A to assign grades on the
basis of student self-evaluation."
The Aasembly also voted to
~ the opinion of Robert B.
Fleming, University Advocate,
on how another· seCtion of the
State Education Law· affects
the issue. That section states
that grading practices announood at the beginning of an
academic term will be maintained throughout the term.
College A spokesmen rontend
Murray's notice about the
• change in prooodures came after registration for this semes-·
tar's College A rourses was
already under wa,y.

a positiv&amp;negative scale.
"These _ . . . . . will be statistically analyzed this -ter,"
~J...r
Sanders, College, A stalf
, says. 'lbe information will then be used by the
staff to reevaluate what they
are doing for the students.
- The information from the
analysis plus the staff's evaluation of the student's project
are available to the individual,
Miss Kaplan sa,ys. And many
of the students come back for
the romments, she adds.
Not all students get the grade
they thought they deserYed, "Dr.
Fred Snell, master of College
A, ssys. In about 10 per cent
of the projects. grades are
changed, Snell said at last
Tuesday's College A meeting
and about 1G:l5_per Cl'llt of the
students originally e n r o II e d
don't fill out ''final exams."
However, other staff members
can't re,m ember changing
grades, and Sanders claims
grades are never changed.
College A's staff iso't sure
what form this semester's "fmal
exam" will take. It may be
enlarged again or made even
short..r. Usually, .decision s
about the form of the questionnaire are made at the end of
the semester when the staff
considers the best way to find
out about the students' learning experiences.

SUNY Guidelines
For Computer Use

No employee of the University will be permitted the use
of any campus romputer facilities to develop systems or to
• I
•
run programs prepared by him
Ask almost anyone and he'll as ronsultant or part-time emtell you College A allows stu- ployee of an outside firm or
dents to grade themselves. But agency, recenUy disseminated
what this actually turns out to SUNY policies on computer
be is a written report by the use stipulste.
student about his project and
Gordon F. Lilly, director, Ofthe completion of a ufinal
fice of Computer Services,
exam"' form.
the guidelines, outcirculated
The "final exam" differs from
semester to semester. Last lined in a letter from Chanoollor
Ernest
L. Boyer, to all
summer, the questionnaire was
several pages long; in the fall, campus offices.
In general, the SUNY policy
it was down to one yellow sheet
with ten questions. But each states, " All computer equip.
student must fill out some sort ment . , , is to be used prinuirof form each term to ·get a ily for the internal needs of the
University. This would include
grade.
administrative processing, student instruction, probll!bi solvthe
the project itself, first asking ing and academic uses ·by the
students for the grade "you faculty and students, and re-.
think you deserve," and then search activities sponsored or
calling for a description of the contracted by the University."
project which is ','as romplete
Other specific regulations
as possible." Also asked· for are:
were any "relevant reports or
• Computer services will not
·papers on the project" and be provided, free or at a fee, to
"any letter of evaluation from any commercial or industrial
staff, faculty or supem.ory organization.
personnel," if the student de• Occasional, periodic ·BUJ&gt;sired to do this. 'lbere's also port services may be offered to
· a general questioo asking for other educational. government
"any other tidbits you feel may or non-profit organizatioos as a
be of value!'
public servioo. Howewr, this
'lbe final ·. three questions type of servioo may not be used
were about College A and the to justify an·increase in sta1f or
student's experience with it: equipment.
"How has College A affected
• No services will be proyour life? your psycbe? your
manner of relating to others?'' vided to outside organizatioos
or
agencies which would nor"How could the staff have been mally
be provided by other
more helpful?'' ''Do you think
public
or private agencies.
the College A ezperienoo is
• Any funds received as rom. worthwhile· in the field of education? Has Co II e ge A pensstion for legitimate servclillnged your ouUook on edu- ices must accrue to the State
University Fund. Normal budcation? How?"
gW!:J,g prooodures must be folAnswers to the "eum.. are lowed to regain these funds
read by staff members of the through an Inrome Fund reCollege and tnmsferred to a imbursable request.
long pink ~ that is filled
• Interinstitutional, rollaborout fo,r each student, Rose Kaplan, staff member, explains. On ative ellorts of benefit to the
campus
would be appropriate.
this sheet, the staff member '
According to the SUNY
writes his romments· and sugstatem4!1lt,
questions relafing to
• gestions ·Qll the project and also
cOdes the student's responses this policy are to be sent to
Office.
to his College A experii!nce on the Chanoellor's
J !OI -~--I
' ~V~ 1• ·..;t ~(,
•

~/~:::.'m~...:J:'!.i:

.J-1

, I

•·

�'*-T ll, 197l

4

Prof Says Computers~ Been Flops in Science MrssCdemon
Dissents On
-"'"

~
1x&gt; be polite. Unleai we frulk.
ly adalowleda'e that the prmmt
systems are a .fiop, we are aoinl
ol lo aet Dbthing but miDor vari..::.~ ~y~ :,ts
lex
and tedmical journals b ave
Now in my department we
been filled with slowina ac- are directl ~ with the
counts of all the marvelous major pubtc bealth problem of
thinp that electronic comput- human cancer. I am peraoners were soins 1x&gt; do for acience. ally very muCh coucemed with
But when we take a cloee look the broader question: How can
at what tbeae ao-called "siant we develop effective scientific
bramslished·" m'havethea~..2:.,~ approaches which can mpe with
P, __ ~'cal -~m
· --+&lt;cu- the major pUblic problems of
b--...
~·
.-our era? Electronic computers
lar-it is bard lo name a ainsle are pountiaUy a workins tool
majo_&lt; discovery or advance in that misht be very useful in
which computers played any scientific approaches. M a j o r
eooentisl part.
problema often involve massive
All sorts of slamorous 11808 of bodies of data that could, in
computers have . been. hishly theory, be handled with compublicized~puterized dissputers. But this tool bas been
noais and computerized boo- of very limited value in the

By - ~WIN D. \J~BROSS

-

ol "' ,...
,..,_.., l.rwli,... .., R.....-dt

:Inu:: =systems

.J:

li~u: - : J: ~~ ::r"!~ !:! :fue~Ytt!' l:.

read the whole slory, it usual- ture unless some drastic
ly bas an unhappy endins- cbanse&amp; are made.
About five years aso, a whole
So let us consider two ques-a of computerized hospitals · tions: Why have computers
were announced with sreat fan- been a flop so far? And, when
fare. 'But despite a flurry of en- we have some answers 1x&gt; this
thusiastic preliminary reports question, we can ask: What
in Sc~TICt! and other suppoeed- can be done &lt;to make computers
ly reputable journals, every an effective working tool m the
sinsle one of tbeae systema bas sciences? How can we get some
beeri junked. There are a few use out of computers in scienbrig!lt &lt;!Dli!Ptions- notably in tific attacks on major public
-Y proaaic and unglamorous problems?
jobs. But I believe that it is
Let me start with the quesfair lo aay: So far computers tion elf wh,Y computers have
h4ve been a big flDp.
been a · flop. Now that people
While I wouldn't expect con- are startins to ask this quesfirmed computerniks to agree tion, there are various answers
with me, I don't think that ooins offered. Tbe first answer
there is any sensible person is an old standby: Tbe bardwith f1r11t-band experience in ware bas failed lo live up lo the
the use of computers for actual promises of the suppliers.
production of scientific reports Shlftins the lllllme
and papers who would consider
Another popular aplanation
that the current performance of is the inadequacy of system
computers is anywhere cloee to soft.wear. There is a good deal
aatisfaclory.
of justification for this comIn my department, we have plaiot since the present soft..
probably had as much exper- ware is often pretty awful. But
1ence in scientific production even so, I don't think that it is
as anyone in this country. We the limiting faclor. I suspect
have P.';'blisbed more than 100 that both these explanations
scientific articles and reports are popular with "computer exin which some use was made perts" because both explanaof computers. Nevertheless, in tions put the blanle on the venalmost every instance, carrying dora. And "computer experts"
a job through the nine major are very good at sbiftins the
steps in the process from raw blame to someone else--&lt;!ither
d a t a lo finished report bas down the line lo the suppliers
been a struggle. Each step is or, in devious ways, up the line
beset by difficulties, delays, 1o the users.
On the basis of what I have
frustrations, and failures. No
one in his right mind, for in- learned from seven years of exstance, would dream of giving • perience as a user and software
any guarantee that a job will producer, I would say that the
be completed on a tisht scbed- maio obstacles to the effective
ule - something always goes use of computers as a scientific
wrong. Indeed our t r o u b I e s tool do not lie in the hardware
were so serious that we were or system software. In the usual
forced-very reluctantly-inlo manner of speaking the obthe software business.
stacles could be said
exist in
We line To Do Somethlns
our own minds. In other words,
So I think it is time that we the worst roadblocks are tboee
come risht out and aay it loud which arise from the myths
and clear: To date, computers and misconceptions about comhave b.len a big Oop. We have puters which are currently
put up wjth inadequate per- prevalent.
formance and worse for the
Indeed, in my view, the root
past ten years but I don't think of the trouble with computers
we should have lo put up with today lies in the language that
it f~rever:- This may burt the is currently used in talking
feelings of some of the so-called about· them. This is a highly
"computer aperts" in the stat- anthropomorphic language. Tbe
istical area and elsewhere. They computer is spoken of as if it
'-ve a vested interest in cur- • were animate-as U it were hurent computers, computer sys- man or super-human. People
lema, and programming ian- talk about "siant brains" or
guases. But I think it more im- "communicating with coniputportant lx&gt; tell the truth than ers." This leads 1x&gt; a picture

to

rt
r.r.::
r,.,...;. ~ s~ u,.e:,.p~y-::: ."::::%."L3'r-~
wm.-r
~~~~1:

·--

&amp;dhorW o/la. -

___, irt Rooe~ 213, 2$0

_
--

.... 'WBSTLSY RCIWLAlfD

r•.:~~ltlfO
~

......

ROaaltf' r . •AJU..nT
W'.MJy~r',~u'*""'..,,_

/Oil1f ... CI.OI111D

SUSUfO~

A..._

of the role and fuDction of come~wblcb
Thlais,completely
. . picture misc:r&amp;-

gramminc ·Iancua&amp;e U'8 ..tbely ~- InatructioiUI
can be 11- much- eally

Goals Report_-

and aci:urMel7 in • Datura!
tan,u.aae o1 the lllier-in EDI·
lisb, for instaDce.
...!!..~£!. ~~
At this point, computer alaid to 110t
pert&amp;~ object that EnPleh comoliddo4 Ill final nparlll of
is a chaotic iazJsual&amp;--but tbia puape dMiiDI with Clllllplax isis an ancient superstition. The ....; ~. tha mqnitude of
syntactic structure of Eliglisb the quSiaD of Um-.;ty .-Is
is a remarkably effeCtive inatru- demanda the clear _ _ . . .
ment for transmisaion of infor- ol many viewpoint. 80 that the
mation---.nd it is bmltifully - - lnwlwd milbt be better
COilfltruoted and OOIIlll\1l8bl8. appreciated and CllllfnlDied. I
r.1[Tn:"1;1l~INTS Anyone who wants lx&gt;- bow feel that the CJilllllllaity of the
- y .1£, yy C V
· English atructure- can be dee- task and tha clrcll-DOI!8 sur.
enDed with matbematical pr&amp;- ~ the Talk Force on
, ---~-• _,_,..., •
cision should read Zellig Har- U.u-.ity Gaala warrants this
very ~w ...........- ·m ris' recent masterpiece, Mal""' lllbmty report.
grantsmanship !Jut a very un- · ematiall Str~M:turu of LanTbe COIIIIIOGiilin of the Task
~ workins tool m the gUD(le.
Force. and it. mode of operaIIClences.
I think we will see a traD&amp;i- tion diacredlt any attempt it
~ Is - . . o l
.
tion 1o natural language com- may make - . . ! fulfillins its
Few people_ have any 1dea of puter systems in the seventies. charge. Attendance at meetings
1he powerful infl~ that the I basE, this prediction on the was sporadic, minutes were not
language _exerts on 1ts speaker. level of performance which we kept, the repreaantation on the
Few realize that the language have achieved in several pro- Task Force was unrepreaentaof a speaker often controls what totype systems that we have tive of the larger University
he will say "';'&lt;~ . even what be developed. Let me s - that and community, many reprecan d!'· Specialized ~ges r am talking about actual up- sentativea were not representa-&lt;&gt;r J&amp;rgons-have a parti"':'· ~d-runnins systems. ~ are tive of their constituencies, the
larly sreat power over thell' systems that have been written, size of the IIJ'OUP was unwieldy,
~- . Thus the an~ debugged, tested, and evalu- and consideration of the charge
morpbic J&amp;rBOns used m ~ ated-they are not hypothetical was inadequate.
computer world have led thell' dream-flystema. ·
In general, 1he Task Force
speakers down dead-end roads
of M'-on University Goals acted as
time after time. let me give n. oocmas
-~·
the a t d To al, dysfunctional
just one example of how speakLet me '!""'tion two of ·
~~ ~ not as a Task
ing of computers ~ human bas :!:i=lewlf:'
~ Force confronted with a serblocked pro~!"'"'! m the area
. .
who ha tried 1o
ious and pre&amp;Sing problem. I
=~:. in the
Tbe
feel that manY of the chairof P~sra;mmms languages.
Artificial languages fl1:lch as dogma is that you need 1o know man's preconceived ideas have
Fortran have J;&gt;een a maJOr ob- all about computers in order 1o severely biased the contents of
stacle to ~ective use. Altho~sh use them. 'Ibis is a seU.-vins the final report of the Task
hllll!"" ~mgs b a v e 8ID8Zlllg dogma. It is bandy in arguing Force. Allhoush I was a parabi)i~ Wlth natural _languages, for more computer-oriented ticipant in subcommittees of
artificial languages giVe them a COll1'8e&amp;, but it is entirely false. the whole, I lind that my ideas
sreat deal. o~ trouble. Tbe rea- Tbe new systema will be-in are at too sreat variance with
son for this 18 that natural ian- the Ia- jarson of computer- those of the chairman and the
guages have evolved for _human dom-"tnnsparent." That is, majority of the 'task Force to
use. They can cope With the the user on a remote terminal accept their report even as a
" fact of ~!'" that human beings would DDt "see" any specUic workinl paper.
make miStakes. Natural ian- computer-he could · not tell Un....,._,td ..
guages have enough redlJ!ldan· what equipment was on the
I find the premise that their
cy lo allo:w for automatic er- other'end of the line--and so be report is merely a working
~r~JTI!Ct!?"- In the ~ _of clearly doesn't have to know paper to stimulate further diseffiCienCY , howe;ve~, artif1~ anything about it. It is a lot CUSBion unacceptable because
languages have eliminated this more work for the computer the membership and ideas emredundancy. Hence.. h~ expert 1o build a "tnmsparent" _ bodied in this Task Force are
cannot operate effectively m a system but it takes a lot less lo my mind extremely unrep~ "':'~as '!'ortran where work for ·t he user of this sys- resentative of the CODBtituency
a smgl~ trivial mistake can be tern-and tbis is the way things and ideas of the larger Univerfatal. But. w~ I have su~- should be.
sity and community.
ges~ g&lt;!lling r1d of tbeae artiAnother d
h. h 18
.
In addition, no mechanism is
ficial languages, I am usually
~ .w •c
suggested for the actual identi
!old that this is impossible. equally seU-&lt;IIlrVlllg 18 that ~ou fication and formulation oi
Why? Because "the only way need. to know ~ _progranmung
oa1s • this U ·
'ty I
to communicate with comput- details of. statistical or other g
,or
ruver&amp;J · recers is in an artificial language programs m order 1x&gt; use them ognize that this is an extremely
which the computer can unde&lt;- correctly. All sorts of horrible complex task wblcb is further
stand "
examples are offered by com- coafounded wben this· Univer. .
.
.
puterniks 1o ·'prove" this point. • sity is viewed lis a pa!'t of a
. Now. U you are m the habit But what tbeae examples ac-larger
tablish:!.temtof
; ':l:riti-·theshoes-rt
of talking ~~t coml!ut.:rs as tually demoostrate is the inhuman then 1t 18 convmcms 1x&gt; credibl
desi of
and lonc ranse .-Is on a local
speak of "communicating with
Y poor_
gn
"'='"""t level Qlisbt have multinle benecomputers." Once you get out softwear. With well-desiJII!ed, fits. Such adioD ;rp.t aid
of this habit, the statement be. ~~~ ' : : t ' = = significantly in ~ t,he
comes pure and unadul~ted which includes having· , _ _ autonomy of this University
·-,.
lain ~ while providiq llirection for
nonsense. 'lbe computer 18 a
machine. No one bas ever ~
the~ m P
the entire State system. Tbe
communica~ with a computer wo~'t ~ Tbe b.':er~ process of formulating tbeae
and no one 18 about lo do so.
be able 1o sPecuy what he wants ~ mid&gt;t also ~ ~y
''We"-"'- Calls
in a natural language conven- feelins ol comm~ty .w!ucb
We don't make this mistake ient to him. He should either m&amp;.!' ~Y. ~ ~ the
with other complex systems- set back what he asks for or a yruvennty ~ ~~ our
aay the dial telephone system. ~ ap~on of ~Y be A~
~lationsbips.
We say that we make phone didn .t get his output. This dogA first tep . lL _
f
calls. We don't aay that the ma 18 merely another device
s
m - process o
dial system "m a k e s" phone which is used 1o shift the blame iden~ goals milbt '!" the
calls. Humans are active. Ma- fa&lt; inadequate soft.wear from appom- Of a coordinalx&gt;r
chines are passive. Computers the maker &lt;to the user
or coordinators of University
are just as passive as a dial
I sup·~ that 1't · · -......:~•
goals w"'-e job would be lx&gt; de18 ...,...w&lt;Bl
system.
~
sign and implement a mecbanlo argue about ~-and ism which would -...:vely .soWe don't say we "communi- other- dogmas which are aac- lici't 1·deas --~
---~
·
concate" with the lelephone dial red lo
-·
...... op
when dial a number. We
some ......,.e. Tbe best· oernins short and long~
'!fAY to ~ with them, I think, goals from the broadalt
~
~ ~"".:: 16 to BlmPI¥ demonstrate an CODBtituencies both em and off
redundant language like For- ::"!u~ computer
sya- canlpua. Not only IIIUit lbese
tran. We use a telephone 1o ........... In ex p 1 0 des tbeae (&gt;pinions be broadly solicited,
~my department, we but 1he task o( fonnulating
communicate with other human hav!', m faot, d~veloped an ex- goals must also IUs plaoe em
beinp and 1101 with the tele- P!'mmental archive system de- several levels and in many
phone equipment iteelf.
SIP&gt;f!d for a user who has no ways, and tbeae elfons must
.A nyone who bas answered a detailed knowledge of com~ be coordinated

- - ol ot.l8dea which
don't a:ist and masb the real
probloms that IIIUit be solved·
by a liUCC08Iful computer syatem. This , . . piCtun&gt;-diis
mystique- bas facilitated the
process of gelltinl .,._y for
computers but it bas lam a
major obstacle lo getting anything of value for this .,._y.
Thus computers have lam a

on..m ._

==
';..t.,

......

fu:

u:"""

::"'m'!:t.~:e:::!:':;: ~

::::=:o'7:.::::::

have even with a very simple
artificial languqe. _ And tbe

ents of the system. He ' - on1
to follow 13 simple~

lx&gt; learn and uas

lo get the specific information
that be wants.
It can be dooel

~.~ fromitis ~lba~
iillln'!!:
.......,..
·

·

pro-

wt!:.
ezample. of *=-"1o!
.
• • the ~t
.
18

.failinJ by 11&amp; operation •

an

:!~"f'
m:.-:e~
the role that tha "-.ciales"
fcontilwed .,.. ,.,.. 6, coL 6)

�p~

- ~­

18,1971

5

Legal He!p:FurniShet;l
By Adoorotes Office

ZweigSays
Extract Not
In Context

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
-su~~

EDITOR:
I was _ , much surpriaed to
find that the Reportu had extracted out of conterl a very
few of the many comments r&amp;ported in an interview by Mr.
Daniel Hertzberg of the Buffalo Euening News, in the
February 4 issue of your paper.
It would aeem to me that journalistic practice would be carried much further ahead if reference to ' the original story,
noting the by-line, bad been
made.
.
The Buffalo Euening News
bad requested the interview of
me and bad sent Mr. Hertzberg to oonduct il Since the
occasion of my resignation bas
stimuliited a number of inquiries, I would al90 be happy
to provide a statement for the
Reportu under the same professional and appropriate circumstances w h 1 ch pertain in
Mr. Hertzberg's reporting.
Sincerely yours,
-Franklin M . Zweig
Dean, Social Welfwe
sio/.," Miss W9011en answers,
astde from the fact that_ "people EDITOR'S NOTE: D«m Zwe;,·,
expect me to have special moti- statement for the Reporter htu
vation because rm a girl. Tbe,v be e. n submitted for publication
wonder why I don't want to stt next week.
home and be a dumb bousewife. That's people's first- reaction. They don't question a
man when be goes into engineering. I just have to prove EDITOR:
To all you readers who want
myaelf as an individual."
Miss Woogen offers this ad- to make an issue of grsding
vice to any girl oonsidering en- yourselves (in College A, or
gineering as a career. HJust wherever-):
How truly objective can an
don't think of yourself as a
special case. Prove yourself as individual be?
An artist, a musician, a
an engineer, not as a lady enwriter-anyone of these may
gineer."
_ Oh yes, one last bit of ad- think be or she is "the greatvice for men whO don't want to eSt"! But does the audience.
arouse the Women's Lib in the critic, or the purchaser alMiss Woogen. Don't tell her ways agree with the creator of
anything like "you're pretty the piece of work on its value?
Looking back more than 30
smart for a girl."
years to my student days, I
recall my rude awakening in
freshman year to disoover that
my inslructors did not always
evaluate my work as being
The Department of German "better than average," as I did!
and Slavic bas announced two In the ensuing years, the faculty's judgment of the quality
courses to begin in March which of
my work was more than once
will be offered by a visiting proat
variance with my self-&lt;&gt;valufessor, Erich Heller, professor
of German and Comparative ation. In fact, a few times they
rated
it higher than I did, to
Literature at Northwestern.
Professor Heller will teach a my surprise and el&lt;lreme gratification!
oourse in English on the "ProbTrying to bridge this · gap belems of Modem Poetzy with tween
what I thought I knew
special attention to Rilke's and
what others thought I knew
DuinO Elegies." This oourse can challenged me to put forth
be registered for either in the more efforl This was good . ...
German Department (German
The point I am trying to
449) or in the English Depart.. make should be obvious. . . .
ment (English 449), and the Every student deserves evaluareadings will be in either langu- tion of his work by those of
age. Graduate students may deeper knowledge and expertake German 449 for graduate ience in his field, whatever it
credil
is! .
The other oourae being' of-CoNCEilNED STAFF MEIIBEll
fered by Professor Heller, "Goe- _
the's Poelry" (German 634), is
restricted to graduate students.
The courses begin March 8 and
!Land will be given on an intensive basis ( 449: Tuesday
and Thursday- 1:30 to 4:00;
634: Monday- 4:00 to 6:50).
Erich Heller, the Department
says,· "is probably the best
known and most distinguished
Gennanist in this c:Ountzy. He
bas inlroduced a new ~
aw on . German literature, and
in his widely-acclaimed books,
The DWnheriUd Mind, The
Arti&amp;fs Journey into the lntoior, and the monograph on
ThomM Ma1111: The Ironil: Ger111411, be bas shown blmaelf uniquely qualified to interpret
German literature from the
b.-oader perspectioe of compareaw studies. He bas t-o called
'a master of the essay, a literary
artist in his own right, a man of
~range and depth!"

r:HlDYll11tElement' Attracted

Female EnginEer tn.Major
By STEVE LIPMAN
Doreen Woogen is a "silent
supporter" of the Women's Liberation movement. She doesn't
belong to the orpnization, al~ she attends many of its
meetings. And while she
doesn't espouse the rhetoric Qf
its leaders. she believes it bas
its place. "It's dealing with a
problem that exists; it's not
made up of a bunch of frustrated women."
Miss Woogen's way of furthering the movement is
through action, not words, and
last month !lOme of her work
was recognized, when ·the Erie
County Chapter , .,( - .the .Professional Engineering Society
selected her as the first-ever
. woman recipient of its ustu~
dent Engineer of the Year"
Award. Miss Woogen beat out
half a dozen other students for
the honor.
Aademlcl..-nont

"The award was baaed on
academic involvement and
achievement," the 21-year-old
Levittown induslrial engineering senior says. As examples
of her involvement, she can cite
her materials-handling study
work last summer at General
Electric, with two U / B faculty
members and two grad students. or her work for the Westem New York HO.P.ital Aasociation at· Millard Fillmore Hospital, where she studied outpatient billing procedures. In
addition, she is doing computerpi'OIJ'8IIIIIlin for E ·
•
this term, and is in~
model cities study.
Miss Woogen cboee induslrial engineering over other
branches of the field, because
it "involves the human element." "It's the study of systems," she esplains, "and people are one of the elements."
Miss Woopn transferred
here from State University at
Stony Brook because of the
"Cbanoes for more interaction
with my prof-.rs." Besides,
Stony Brook doesn't offer industrial engineering. There are
approximately 30 senior industrial engineering_ majors and
six profeaaors in the -U!B cJe.
p&amp;l'lment, 90 Miss Woogen bas
rome to know them all. She's
C8.J1Ying just under a 4.0 overall a .....age, 4.0 in her majo&lt;.
She plans to go to graduate
school for a IOII)or in urban
studies. After that, abe's considering e~ practice with
a public planiling agency.
Prablmlsr

What tY.P" of problems does
a ,.aman m a male-dominated

field face?
''I haven't bad any problems
since rve '-:I at this uru.....-

On Self-Grading

Heller to Offer
2 UIB Courses

/

Bob Fleming and Norman
Elfman are specialists in " legal
first aid"- specialty that bas
them answering questions all
hours of the day and night and
giving advice to evicted tenants, .
oouples with marital problems
or people who get busted.
Fleming as University AdvO.
cate and Elfman, his assistant,
operate in a new legal ares that of student rights law.
Knowing the campus legal system and its due process procedures is their job. Together they
work ou.t of a comer office in
Crosby, answering each month
more than 100 inquiries for
legal help. Answering these
questions may take as little as
two minutes or as much as
two l:lontbs, and finding the
answers carries the lawyers
over the entire spectrum of legal cases.
The Advocate's Office, pro-.
haps the only one of its kind
in the oountzy, was set up last
year to defend and prosecute
students in addition to giving
legal advice to the University
oommunity. This September,
however, the prosecution role
was Jiven to a new University
appomtee, attorney Howard
Meyer, and the Advocate's Office shed its ''bad guy" image.
They Hondle Eve.ythlnl

Fleming and Elfman's services as lawyers are open to
the entire University commun·

ity. They handle everything
from a clarification of the State
education law, recently re-cently requested l,&gt;y the Collegiate Assembly, to assisting
some Computer Center staff
members in getting regular psy
checks, to working out a bearing procedure for a student accused of cheating.
Most of the cases are "simple
questions about the law," Eftman explains. The most frequent problems are with landlord-tenant relationships, followed by undergraduates' entanglements with the outside
oommunity. But as Elfman
quickly points out, faculty
members oome to him with
their share of problems, too.
In most cases, the Advocate's
Office acts as a "friend of the
oourt"-helping to straighten
out things outside of the oourt
room and to refer clients to
outside lawyers. Fleming and
Elfman never appear in oourt
as lawyers for anyone, instead
they keep a list of 12-15 attorneys who will handle cases. If
a client is unable to afford a
lawyer's regular fees;-the Advocate's Office refers him to
the legal Aid Bureau.
The men are al90 helping set
up defined legal procedures

A -

-

-

within the Unill'erllity.

=

They

::..:':i"~ythe~~

of grievance procedures.~

:.!"!i!i:"'J::llruJes f.,;

such matters are being written.
"That way, we can get the bugs
out before llOmeooe's life is at

stake," Fleminl says.

Grocluat.-Tbe two lawyers are al90
helping develop a standard acceptance letter for graduate
students. Right now, F\eming
explains, onfy inforiiU!i contracts and "verbal obligations"
are made. But this can lead to
misunderstandings later. Fleming_suggests standardized-letters
to inooming students explaining that funding is affected by,
forces outside the ·uniwrsity
and that the department may
not be able to mai!ttsin the
promised stipend level.
Elfman isn't limiting himself
to these two quasi-legal activities. He points out that there is
no place where all the University's "ground rules are available," no place where the requirements of graduate dejisrtments '&gt;r grievance procedures
are listed. He would like to have
these regulations on me in the
Advocate's Office.
In addition to their work in
the Advocate's Office itself,
Fleming and Elfman al90 teach
oourses in the Law School. Last
semester, Fleming taught an introductory law oourse and this
spring, he's working on one in
oorporate law. Elfman is oonducting a seminar in Student
Rights Law, a new oourse which
utilizes a work/ study approach
to the ares. The class members, · in addition to attanding
lectures on the subjed, will
work in the Advocate's Office
and in the Office of Student
Affairs. The twelve students
will deal with the Student Judiciary and Inter-Residence
Hall Judiciary, researching
cases and helping with procedure. Elfman hopes they will
also form a defense pool to help
students appearing before these
bodies. And if the students are
willing, they can al90 prosecute
in these same oourts, says Ron
Stein of the Office of Student
Affairs, who is working with
Elfman on the oourse.

£XADs

SECURITY
The State ·Civil Service Depart·

ment will gtve examinations, at· 9
a.m., April 24, in the Genesee
Building. for 10 new U/ B security
positions wh~h have been unfilled
since the Legislature approPriated

~~:~: ~=~~;;u': ;!~.~!;

current State Untversrty employ·
ees and another open to anyone.
Deadline for applying for the exam

is March 15.

drap 1n . . _ . . , . . . . _ bllndlnc . . _ swirls

the U&lt;-..tJ last _ _ , - · lefttna:
h o i o - d - ,_to fllht t h e - on llahy

•thor-for•-

.

�- -~

6
Faculty Senate(continue! from - 1 . coL 6)
Educations) . PaycboloiY; Rob-

ert s. Fisk, Educatioaal Administration; Myron Milstein,
Administration;
Gilbert D. Moore, eow-1or
Education; Robert H . Rossberg, Counaeidr Education.
ENGINEERING lc APPLIED SCIENCES- Robert
E. Mates, Mechanical Engineering; John Medige, Engineering Science; Robert E. Passwell, c.ivil Enain'!""in'; Davi!J
B. Reister, Engineermg Sci~; ~meet T. Selig, Ciyil Engmeenng; Howard E . Strsuss,
Mechanical Engineering; Sol
W . Weller, Chemical Enginee•ing.
HEALTH SCIENCESMurray Andersen, Medicine;
Wayne Anderson, Pharmacy;
Harold Brody, Medicine; Maimon Cohen, Medicine; John
Cunat, Dentistry; J . David
Eick, Dentistry; Solon E11iaou,
Dentistry; Richard Finnepu,
Pharmacy; Stuart .Fiaclunau,
Dentistry; Thomas Flanapu,
Medicine; John Fopeano,
Health Related Professions;
Peter Gessner, Medicine; Robert Gumtow, Pharmacy; Sylvia
Hart, Nursina; Marguerite
Hays, Medicine; Barbera Howell, Medicine; J.-ph Lee,
Medicine; James Nolan, Medi···cine; Ric:hard Powell, Dsntis.try; Isabel Reed, Nursina; Donald Rennie, Medicine; Jeannette Spero, Nursing; Zebulon
Taintor, Medicine; V a n d o n
White, Health Related Professions; Roy Wilko, Dentistry.
LAW &amp; JURISPRUDENCE
-Kenneth M. Davidson; Robert B . Fleming; Jacob D. Hyman.
NATURAL SCIENCES &amp;
MATHEMATICS-By department : Charles Cazeau, Geological Sciences; Gordon Harris,
Chemistry; Juergen Heberle,
Physics; Vincent Santilli, Biology; Lowell Schoenfeld, Mathematics; Norman Severo, Statistics, and at large : Stanley
Bruckenstein; W a I t e r Dannhauser; Nicholas Goodman;
McAllister Hull; Marvin Zelen.
SOCIAL SCIENCES lc ADMINISTRATION- (Although
the election bas been conducted,
ballots were not to be counted
until Wednesday afternoon
after the Reporter deadline. )
UNIVERSITY LIB R A RIES-Mary Brady; Shonnie
Finnegan; Kent S c h r i e fer;
Madeleine Stem.
Educa ~ional

Now is the Time ...
Passage of the 18-year-old
vote bas sparked a number of
voter registration drives and one
sponsored by the Democratic
Action Registration Committee
is being conducted at U / B this
week.
The campaign, which will
end on Friday, is taking place
in the lobby of Norton. All stu-

=

:"~:~ t:.,~ ~~or~

:if
3!.~tilin
~
Erie County Board al Election

office IUid the final ·forms will
be filled oul Completed fOimS
will be brought b8cll: to campus
for student llignat;wea 1n three
places. Once these forms are
signed, the student will be rea·
istered to vote.
U/ B is the second sc:hool to
be visited by the Democratic
Action Registration Committee. The fust was Canisius
.
College. .
ROBBERY ARREST
v;ncent Foster, 17, of 475 William

Street, was arrested Friday in connection with the robbery of two
individuals in a campus parking
~ tbt last November. Foster is al'-&lt;1 to be one of • trio 'Who held

up the pair.

'*-718,1,11

Yera(XJlis Named Head·ofLocal SPA;

Says Staff Needs. a 1lowerful lf&gt;ice'
Dr. Constantine Yeracaria,
profeasor, aocioJocy, bas been
elected chairman of tbe steering ootnmittee of the loca I
c:hapter of the Senate Profe&amp;sion81 Association, the - t ly-designated bar~ aaent
for faculty and non-inatructionsl profeaaionsl staff.
Mr. Thomas Sc:hillo, atisistant vice president foe housing,
was elected co-d&gt;airman in the
balloting conducted by charter
members of the campus SPA at
a meeting, February 11.
Other members of the steering committee are the c:hairmen and co-chairmen of four
task forre groups.
Task Force A relates to the
State SPA and is c:haired by
Mr. Leonard Snyder, chief acrountanl Dr. Gordon Harris,
professor, chemistry, is cochairman. Among its primary
objectives will be to: a. establish basic lines of communication among the SUNY AB
c:hapter membership, the State
SPA Council, and the Governor's Office of Employee Relations; and b. propose appropri·ate arrangements for the maintenance of local autonomy in
appropriate areas.
Task Forre B, on the organization of the local c:hapter, is
·c:haired by Mr. Eugene Martell,
director, University Placement
and Career Guidance, with Dr.
Elwin Duryea, professor, higher education, as oo-chairman.
Its objectives are to prepare a
drsft statement of purpose and
bylaws and to hold open hearings on such statements. Such
drafts are to be submitted to
the SUNY AB membership for
ratification, no later than May
1, 1971.
Task Force C, on membership, is headed by Dr. Morlan
Rothstein, professor, biology,
with Miss Margaret O'Bryan,
student adviser, as co-chairman.
Its purpose is to launch a ''vigorous" membership campaign
with a deadline of March 15
and to propose for action by
the steering committee appropriate procedures for incorporating new members into the organizations) development o_f the
local c:hapter.
Dr. Robert S. Fisk, professor,
educations) studies, is chairman of Task Force D, on campus negotiations. Mr. Allan
Canfield, assistant to the dean,

The local SPA poup tu. al8o
named Dr. Harris IUid Mr. Suyder 88 ~ to the State
SPA Council, ......-ntin&amp; fac.
ulty IUid staff J811'8(l1iWJ!y.
Aa chairman of the , _
steering COIIIIDitlae, Dr. YBIBcaris noted that "Althouah
many of our coiJeques may be
reluctant to· accept the DOtiau
of oollective barpinina IUid negotiations, it is to tbe beet interest of the academic OOIDIIIIDlity 4bat- a powerful ~
~,:~of ita mteresta

,......,.

~~~a!'~o! ~

develop procedures for rommunicatina with faculty and
other professions) pe1'8011Del on
all matters subject to rontrsct
negotiations for ·the local cam·
pus. It will also prepare guidelines for campus negotiators
and develop materials and position statalnents on substantive
matler!l ptOpoeed for campus
negotiations.

(_,._,_/roM- 1, cOL

:J)

be _..._._ al aida melbod, . . . . . a lotta7 fnlln a r&amp;o
....,..~...... tbat
-.Jd ........ tbe abjeo-

tn..-.u ...

"'lllflf/f-,lfeoltbelem-

enal..,_.....,....,_.._

m, ~ llboald pafticipale in

tbe ,_....._ a[ tbe lllilection
~ 110 . . . the ~­
Univenlty Oommillliee on Govemmce -.Joya a maximum of
~ and ODIIfi-

:::::'=

n.e '1'11*itloif
Force's report did
to the type of

not~

tbllt milbt IMilve
at U/B ~tbllt- nolits
~

cbarp. Dr. Ramie - bas said
privately 1bat tbe _ , for
''The mandate' of the State- recommeadiDI that the Task
wide election l1!lll1lts is clear," Force remain in e:z:istence
he said. "SPA bas leplly won. would be 80 his JPOUP could
The ....anHatina power IUid ita maie such recommendations to
credihilitY:its strenath IUid its the new 22-man committee.
direction will be deterurlned by
thoee who· in it.
images m~ and will give in
to the welfare of all the '-'bing and nonteaching staff of (contiluud from 4, col. 6)
our University. What issues to the Taok Force would play
will be neaotiated at whim in respect to the final report.
levels, what nstionsl alfiliations · The cbainnsn wanted to write
SPA will maintain can be de- the final report and then refined only by the membership. lease it to the 8B80ciates before .
Let us all join hands for the msking the report public 80
creation of a powerful voice for that the aaoociates would have
our interests."
the jump on criticism of the

~

GoaJs Report-

repCJI'l

SUNY Receives $1 Million·
For Off-Campus Degree Plan

This was despite the fact that
the Task Force bas not proposed any mechanism t h a t

would consider any criticism
generated by its reporL It
seems reasonable tcY think that
at an absolure minimum the associates who have indicated an
interest and desire to engage
in the task of identifying and
formUlating goals should at
least have some input into the
final drsfL It would not be

The State University of New SUNY's Boyer. "Under this
York and the New York State concept, the teacher becomes
Education Department have re- more of an advisor and acaceived grants totalling $1.8 mil- demic counselor helping the
lion from the Carnegie Corpor- student move toward clearly
ation and the Ford Foundation defined educations) goals."
to help initiate two new offHe also said the State Unicampus college degree pro- versity program will provide
grams.' The programs will per- · for more 11enble scheduling and ~~be:U:!.!ft ~fi'"J!l toT~
mit non-residential s tudents, for 1nore effective means of Force's report to the associates
many of whom will be adults, s tudent evaluation, including asking for comments. These
w earn degrees through inde- assessment by the student him- comments could then be incorpendent study and examina- seU.
porated in the final reporl This
tion.
The new college, now sched- would add credibility and most
The two foundations each uled to begin during the 1971- likely rubstanoe to the reporl
provided $500,000 to the State 72 academic year, will have its tAd&lt; of Communication
University and $400,000 to the own president, faculty, and adFor University goals 10 be
State Education Department, visory council The administrato be disbursed over two years. tive center will be located in identified by various constituencies
on a brosdly based level
· Dr. Ernest L. Boyer, chan- the Capital Districl
necessitates the development of
cellor of SUNY, said that the
an
efficient
communications
million dollan; the University
network. Decisions usually filwill receive will permit it to
ter
down,
sometimes
laterally,
accelerate its plans to establish
~Llw
and seldom up. We can no
a non-residential undergradulangei'
afford
the
c:hronic
lack
ate college. Students of the new
of c8mmunication among
college will, under faculty diJIIOUPII
IUid
individuals
within
rection, pursue individual pro"President Ketter bas to pay
grams of study through rorre- .. lip service to the right to peti- our society . and J&gt;llrlicularly
spondence work, telev isiou, tiou," undergraduate student within our UniYel'lllty;
munseling or occasions) sem- AI Donahue says, and, as a re- - During a periOd of COIIIIOlidainars at one or more of the suit, be's started a petition ask- tion I fear that our time aenaa
University's 70 campll906. Suc:h ing for the re-instatement of may be __,ly truncated. I
programs will be available in Terry Keegan, AI Roaenbeum, feel that the Tallk ¥orca bas
Two students from the U/ B
Law School won the lop award various combinations suited to Bob Cohen and Dan Bentivoa- taken an extmme1y myopic
at a moot court competition individual needs and circum- li.
W.,.. of the University IUid ita
held recently in DetroiL
stances. Students who .successDonahue started this cam- goals, wbieh may be fine as an
The students, Leonard Ber- fully complete the ~Is paign in December and now academic amciae but is wholkowitz, of Buffalo, and Ric:hard of the ""!" college Will receiVe bas 2,000 signatures in band. ly IIDII&lt;Xleptahle as a way of
Evans, Tonswanda, received a the 88SOCIBte or ""'clM!Jor's de- During Ialit 'Ilnmday'~ ..-ling viewing . its task. n.e
of the Student Polity be pth- !lity IUid lbe mtire ed....w..l
trophy as the victorious team gree of State Uruvennty.
Tbe $800,!JIX! received by the ered at least 50 ~ IUid had system are rapidly becaallDa
in the fourth annual Niagara
Intemationsl Moot Court Com- S.ta te Education Department several people offer to circulate ola&gt;lete IUid are in deapnle
petition, hosted by the Wayne will make possible_ an earlier petitions for him. The petition need ·of re~tion. It i8 unand more substantial start of reads: "We request that the fortunste lbet tbe Task -Farce
State University Law School
Other participants included the Regents' dearee aDnounced trespassing~ against Ter- bas been 80 ~ .IUid
!&gt;Y
Ewal&lt;! B. Nyquist . a~ his ry Keegan, AI Rosenbaum, Bob passive in ita ooafrontatlon of
teams from Western Ontario
Law School (London, Onl), manguration as ComJni"!"ioner Cohen, Dan Bentivogii brought suc:h an UJ'88lt and aicnifiamt
last
September. UndeJ: this, pro- by this University be dropped task.
.
.' .
Osgoode Hall (Toronto). and
the University of Detroit Law gram, ih!' Regents will aWard and that they be re-adDiitted if
PerhalJ8 the most abvioaa
8880CIIlte or bac:helor's de- tbey 80 deaini"
·
School
.
. an
place ,to begin to really come to
gree . to persons who paaa the
.
'lbe competition involved a required number. of college level
The undergraduata student grips with lbe qtatilm al...JII8la .
fiCtitious collision be-. an emminations, regard1esa of the isn't connected with any orpn- is the 1980 Master Plan. ~
American yacht IUid a Cana- manner in Which they prepared izatian and is just doing it to effort should be made to .-wt
protest the "arrestina of pea- input from all areas of the Unidian merchant ~. which f\)f these I!DIDII. _
were sailing in- the Detroit
The foundations granting the ple because they were oo cam- versity IUid community that
River. Evans IUid Berkowitz ;.,.. money say that the new pro- pus." "Bannipa people from will be effected by the aOa1a 1181
presented the owner of the grams Will be the largest off- campus is .ridiculous,' he adds. forth in the Master Plan for
fictitious American yamt, who campus degree experiments yet
When be bas 2,000-4,000 Big- 1980. This would he a first step
sued the Canadian government tried in this courltry.
natures, he's going .to present whim misht oave. as a tab-off
f&lt;W damages and appealed the
"Tbe idea of non-residential the petitions to _Prtiiiident Ket- point for further participation
ilr the task of Identifying IUid
1[0. ella-~ Court of studY. recognizes that lesming ter. And, "if be ianores the pe- formulaling University pia.
the
"States.
takes place within the individ- titions, be's aposing fJie conThe two are juniors at the ual. and the highly ·motivated tradiction of being able to--rl&lt;
U we don't know where we
Law School IUid members of student does not require· reau- abueiiOil-vtOfeela..
lently for cbanJe," Don- want to go, bow are we ever
the Moot Court Board.
Jar clasaroom instruction," said
going to pt then? • .~- - -~

Studentn..c4-:0ll
s·igned by 2,()()()

~Law Students

Wm in Moot Court

um--

u.utec!

�CREPORTE'R.:,

,..a-y 11, 1911

7

Flack Appo
- mted Head of Task Forre·
.~
..

days at the Charter H o u s e

executive oommittee of ASAHP,
Mr. Fladt saya.

gram for equal opportunity at
all levels and to devise ways in
which such programs c:ould he
stsrted nationally.
'The msjority of committee
lnembers ""' black and Spsnish-apeaking peoples at all levels of allied bOOth and .repreaenting aU areas of the Uruted
States. 'The medical and dental
professions, schools of allied
health professions .and the Na·
tional Urban Coalition are represented.
Stmtegies developed at the
Buft'alo meeting will he implemented: after a report to the

meet:i;"tt

=ting
all":l
bOOth
the inclu·
sion of predominanUy black institutions in allied bOOth education; and the design of
stmtegies to encompass allied
bealth problems as social problems.
Buft'alo members of the committee in addition to Mr. Flack
are Drs. J . W&amp;m!ll Perry, dean,
and V andon E. White, assistazit
dean, School of Health Related
Profeasions.

dw:ted a two-day aemin&amp;r for 50
Dutch executives on "M.an.aceZeemen.t ~~eN7o.·tbe·
... ~~~.wij~anhde

oa. F'BANK. c. lEN, p r of e 1 1 or,
School of Management, co-author
of ''The Effect of CaU Riai&lt; on
Corporate Bond Yields;· to be re·

tive~n:~ ~f

Health Related Profeesions, bas
been appointed chairman of
a task force for equal opportunity in the allied bOOth
professions, the Equal Repreaentstion in Allied Health committee. .

theM~"::o~P= ':rr

Allied Heslth Professions
{ASAHP) which selected Buffalo as the national site for de- ·
veloping models to involve mi·
nority g r o u p s in the allied
·bOOth movement, the first in
the nation from this viewpoint.

AloolrlisniCenterStudies
Gmse;, Effects of Disease
"""""'is

By

at8o

'The committee met for three

c)=

important. ln a
search for an animal model of
addiction to match
man''!,..hebavior with al
several different animal models
are heing studied by Dr. Jerrold C. Winter, assistant prolessor, pbarmacology. These
model sy-..s hsve the poten.
tia1 of providing a means for
understanding the nstural dis-state as well as an efficient
way of te9ting the effectiveness

c;onpQRTS
-ftL

Motor Hotel (February 10.12)
to put together a sample pro-

MARION MAlUONOWSKY
Aloobolism, a disease, takes
msny forms. Allecting a l'III1Je
of viotims from the binae drinker
the continuous user and
abuser, its related disease states
run the gamut from cirrhosis
and vitsmin deflcieDcy to fam.
il disrupUon. Hicb sCboolers,
OFF-CAMPUS
~uaewives, b&lt;vri,_..,., and
skid rowers are all dected.
APPOINTMENTS
'The problem in New York
State. where some 8(X),()(K) in· of -new treatment systems. Some ~BRsu;.c:,i,:C~=~ ~:
dividuals are alrected, led three of the differences among ani· gueae, appointed director of
years ago to the establishment mals and their responses to al- Teacher Placement Olfice for
of a Reoearch lnstitute on AI· cohol msy he explained on a American Asaociation of Profea·
genetic basis, researchers feel. aora of Italian for the United ,
c:oholism at the University.
Today, the collaborative New While some stmins readily con· States and Canada
York State Department of sume alcohol, others do not and · DR. CIIARLEB L. BERNIER. profeaaor,
Mental Hygiene and ' Univer- this may he the basis for fa. School of Library and lnfonna·
sity venture is beginning to milial tendency toward alcohol- tion Studiea, named diviaional
make progress. Over the !IWil· • ism. Recent twin studies also chairman of the Literature Divi·
mer, a full·time director, Dr. suggest significant inherited 11Mioeen ~?! thef thNoertAmhEaaen·cantRepbem
·ona!
Cedric M. Smith . (on lesve predispositions to alcoholism.
-... 0
C~
from the Chairmanship of DeOther research, proposed liy ical Society to be held in October.
partmentofPharmacology) was Drs. Edson X . Albuquerque, 1971; named editor of the Ab0
appointed. Three additional associate profeBBOr, pharmaool- ~0~ r8th=~=-~an:n~e:i-.
positions hsve since been lilled , ogy, and Jordan Warnick will "'Wordsge Problems: Amount.
wliile four others, approved, delve into bow alcohol selec- Languages Acce&amp;a·" appointed a
await the lnstitute's physical tively aftt&gt;e1a certain nerve cells .continuing' conaulbont for Inter·
move in the spring to ita interim while leaving others relatively national Flavora &amp; Fragrances, to
home at the Meyer Hospital. uninfiuenced. Drs. Smith and conault for them on infonnation
Multldlldpllnary A Jan Kuchera, .-arch assistant aod library sciences for their
· theThe ~tutefw!Jl ·draw u~ pstudrof«!ssochanr,pba~cology, in i;ri!!dwib!,e A~=ti~f
expertise o Ita own Swou,
~
~es m muscle co- phia to serve aa consultant on the
and that of other members of ordination caused by low levels National Criminal Juatice Refer·
the University community and of alcohol ooooentration, hsve ence Service project of the Law
outsiders. Poychisby oociology, found one poasible mechanism Enforcement Assistance Admin·
biocbemisby, physiot.;BY, pbar· for this ~tion that Pf!&gt;" istration.
macol?fY, and laW will be in· duces mgnifican~ changes m DR.. FKANK c. lEN , profes sor,
volved m an attack on the vari- sensory nerve discharges from School of Management, invited
ous aspects of problems that the muscles. 'They feel that this
be Milia Bee Lane lecturer in
occur with the use and abuse msy he one of the factors that the School of Busin... Adminis·
of alcohol and other chemical trigger ataxia, the Ull8teadiness tration, Univeraity of Georgia.
subatanoes. Research by some produced !&gt;Y alcohol.
Dll. DMHG MABBEY, profeasor, Eng·
pharmacology faculty is ready
Dr. Smith says the strength lish, - appointed to the Summer
to be Initiated and sociological of the Institute is its ability to Inatitute in Engliah, Sir George
and clinical .-arch will 80011 serve both as a focus and as a Williama University. Montreal.
·m sjor l'e!IOUroe for studies of DR. PETER STAPLE, aaaociate profes·
follow
Onoi of the primary tasks of alcoholism. Rewards to both aor, oral biology, on leave this
the lnstitute is to identify areas University and lnstitute are re- semester in the Department of
in which .-arch is required· ciprocal, he says-there is a - Oral Biology, Univeraity of Bnt• What are the factors that abaring of sta1f and involve- iab Columbia.
initiate and produce continued ment o~ most ~or faculty in =-p-=E=R=-=ro==R-=-M""AN..,..,."'c=E=s-=-uae and abuse of alcobol?
acadenuc education.
• What are the mechanisms
Many concerned groups and STEPHEN )I(ANES~ 8.1J8iatant profesof the disease and their effects individ'!"'", both local!Y. a n d IIOr, music. 10loist with Lynch· on both acute and dJronic us- State-wide, worked diligenUy burg, Va., Fine Arta Center Or·
ers?
for the establishment of the
~ What are the elfeo- lnstitute in Bulfalo. And for ~~~ia~~ ;ufl:n=~:
tive ways to prevent a1cobolism the lnstitute &lt;the Master Plan monic, Beethoven's " Em'J)eror
and to treat and rehabilitate ~ ~or an ultimate 40 senior Concerto;" aoloist with Ken-Ton
the aJcobolic?
8Clelltific stalf members) and Symphony, Kenmore.
• What ~ tt..; relationship
University with which it is af.
if any, between alcoholism and fi!iated, the ~ can he Bigother dnq abuse in our society? . nificant,
Smith feels.
Dr. Bailth empbasj- the fn-

.

to

QN

GJ&gt;EQPLE

..

Phit:fej:

to

~'!.,~===

pr.
Premiums Cut -

Many State employees wbo
alcoholism and its bsve Ststewide or G.H.L health
van.bilities among individuals insurance """""'P' will A10011
and ~ All bactgrouDd for hsve a decrMae m the cost of
lonptudinal atudiee, the Insti- their covenJC10, the Persaanel
tute will undertalre - . c b on Ol6oe reporl&amp;.
drug ,_ patteme, iDcluding alTb&amp; State will continue to
cobol, baioed on family atruc&gt;. pay the full coat of' iDdividual
tuJe, 8DCial intencliooo, per- coverage and will pay 75 per
aonality, ete. ·
cent (rather than 50 per oent)
lmpootant also, Dr. Smith for family coverqe.
~
Ia a nHMiluation of the
'The rate cbangas do not ap-..ot:ypee of the a1co- ply to non-State employees 11«
or dnq ablar. "8 It i d to tt-e pr&amp;-merpr Stste emrari" or "hippie" bum ldentifi.. ployees wbo elected to retain
~hinder ratber than help - their "old U/8" bOOth imur1 ~ develop pod patient cue
8DCe _ _ , . .
dell.wy ll)'8tilml, be iaya:
'The ll8W bi..-ldy ralal will
~ ........
"lltart with the pay period Flll&gt;'1,1le IDRitula'a clinical , . -' nwy 25 - March 10.
tory

ot

·~
~ "'I'
Changing Job of the Corporate

Planner," Planning Executives In·
atitute; "The Manager of. the Fu.
ture," Data Proceuing Management Aooociation.
uo~ ---·~.pro fea ao r,
~··· -·-~
e~ drawing and

.g:,a~~;· EG!':i'Ci;f. a~':'
:;, ~.;:,.~.=;:·".::
aeminar entitled, "'Effect of Ran-

doNo~•:-~~teS~.~YPaCrametereep,"nOhi~n0
•~

~

director, Uni·
venity Reoearch, "'Correlates of
Self- Perception - in·Schoo~" · ao·
nua1 ..-ting of American Educa·
lional Aooociation. New
York City.

OR. l&amp;AN M. ALBBilTI,

~in~

::,'fessions;

printed in the reviAed edition of
Elemenu of Inuutmenu.

~~
=~:-:!l~
ogy, and DB.. EVELYN J'UNG, profes·
aor, oral diagnosis and radiology,

"Idiopathic Resorption of the
Teeth," Bulktin 8th District
Dental Society.
professor, electrical engineering, '"'The

DR. H.INRJCH B.. MARTENS,

Digital PID ControUef'-A Laboratory Study," ASEE JourML
DB. C. C.UU. PIXOELB, 8S!JOCiate pro--

State Univenity.
fessor, ma.nagement science, ''An
JAN GORDON, aaaiotant profeaaor,
English, participant in sympoo- Evaluation of Blood Inventory
Policies: A Markov Chain Appli·
ium on H. Marcuse. Skidmore cation,"
with A. E . Jelmert. OpCollege.
erotiona Reaecrch; .. A Stud)' of
WILLIAM F. HALL, director, Weat·
Two Blood Crooamatch Potictea,"
em New York Nuclear Reaearch with the aame co-author, AllE
Center, Inc., moderated panel dia· Traruaction.1; textbook, Operation~
Analysi6 and Facilities
CUS8lon, "Nuclear Engineering
Education,'' Niagara .Finger Planning. to be published by R
Lakea Section, American Nuclear D. Irwin.
Society, McMaster Univeraity.
DR. SUBBIAH R..\M.ALINGAM:, associspu:;:!,rltAMALIN.
mec~ ~: ate profeuor, mechanical engineerinc, with J . T . B\ack, .. Fine
--·
eeri.ng, seminar on "Effect of Sur- Structure of Machined Surfaces,"
U mational Journal of !.lachine
l3:'ha~o7 F'.:'bri~~C!'::U~~ /n
ents." Apptied Reaearch Labor· Tool Design and Research.
s tory, General Dynamics;-. Fort DR.. THEOOOR RANOV, pro { e 8 &amp; or,
Worth. Texaa.
mechanical engineering, and E. S .
Kordyban, •·Mechanism of Slug
DR.f-.:_ro,HmanaN
P . S&amp;WgemeLEnt' 8S!IIIC1·eisntance.· t. prohe.
Formation in Horiz.ontal Two'T
Phase Flow," TranBO.ctionli of tM
Univenity'a Role in fnfonnation American
Systems," Buffalo Chapter, Asao· Enginee,..,. Society of Mechanical
ciation for Systems Management.
MRS. MUILIEL WOLP, aasistant pro·
DR. W. HARMON RAY, auociate professor. music. opera workshop fessor, chemical engineering, with
demonstration at Buffalo Public M. A. Solimon. "Optimal Control
School 22; lecture-demonatration, of Systems Having Pure Time
"'Opera Dialogue in Deception,'' Delaya;• Chemical Engineerinl
New School for the Performing Science.
Arta.
ALAN G. SAWYER, &amp;81i.stant..:profes-- - - - , - . , -.,.,,...---- aor, marketing, co--author with

:ate

PUBLICATIONS

OK. JOSEPH A. ALUTTO, auociate

professor, School of Management.

"Line Staff Conflicts: Some Em·

pirical Insights," with DIL .J.UO:S
chairman, Department
of Orga.nir.ation. included in•
Readinp in Managerial Procu.
and Organi.zat.ional Behavior,
Seott-Foreaman and Co.
oa. PETfZ BOYD-BOWllAN, profesA. BELASCO.

~i;'d'i~ ~~·: ·;re~;:.nto; .

Techni:aue, Journal of Marketing
Re1earch.
·

:~~,!:I.· wfthr~D:

~,T~'Th;a~~bi:tf!':vi!;[

to

Me!fl Spheres due
Thermal
Rad1ation at the Boundib.c Surface,"' CMmical E"'/ine&lt;rU., Sci·

sor. Spanish, Italian and Portu·

•nee.

Mexico (1540-1950)", Nueua Re·

ger, and DIL K. K.. 8. PILLAY, senior

guese, " Los Nombres de pila en
vWUl de Filologia HiApan.ica.
OK. ANlliiEW E. CHEN, School of

~~M.:..,;~~ toBIJ!i:,~

eluded in a book of readings

i!::n!f'
~i{:;:"~fSa~:~~~
Technology,
~ngland.

professor, music,
G&lt;!110mttuui/Gb&lt;n: A Checkli.t,
Diatant Pre..
DIL NO&amp;liAN L. ~. uaociate
profeaor. behavioral and related
8cienoee, and Ia. ELLIOT N . GALE,
.-iatant prof....,., TM OriliM
of Abnorm&lt;ll BeNwiDr, AddiaonWealey Co.
.
.JAMES COOVI:Il,

PRESENTATIONS

~ling.

A.mon« areas diacuBaed at the
were: the problems of

C. C. THOMAS, IR., research mana-

research ecientist. Western New

York Nuclear -

Center.

Inc., " Activation Analysis of Airhome Selenium u a Poaible In-

~gu~~n~~..

!t:hoa/!;!!c A.S~

del, Environrruntol Sc~nce on.d
Technology; with C. M. Hyche,
" Neutron Activation Analysis of
Inorganic Constituent. of Airborne Particulatee, •• N u c l eo r
Technology.

RECOGNITIONS

�Welch Edits
Updated Book

~__...M:rr.;:at r.n.:=~-=:-r.i

CWEEKLYCOMMUNIQUE

~-a-,

~• .-.-.;Dr. IWpla L
- . viol~~
- - ......,... l&amp;'ftiD: .Ia- • ~~-...!..-a dl·
dlth Bambalo, R.N., ..... ....... , . s. ..,.,.,
12:80 p.m.

.Open....,

._... to .........
•OOpon to ~ "' ... &amp;-...,;
t o - - • . . . - - _ ... the . . . . .

Dr. Claude E . Weldl, ...
ao.ciat.e profesoor of political
acience, bas edited a MCODd

-

muNIJD

'

of politicsl c:banre • . . mostly
in terms of 'Westernization'."
His new book attempts to analyze politicsl c:banre as a "uni·
versa! process, not linked with

.

one of four

byweocue mid
. ~:~.::..in.:J!': of ~• .f.Zii[.l

girl of twelve and a war veteran
suffering from amnesia. Even the
amnesiac's m.iatreu comes to un·
derstand their n.e e d for each
other, u n t i 1 convention· bound

::...~:~k&amp;~=ro.f.~ :.:.~ f:O~

JNTBI.HATlONAL FOLlt DANCING : ln·
atruction in basic steps during
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.
OKADUAft Plti:SENTA'ftON• : Peter

~:'"~JJer:,u~ ~~

I'JLil• •: KACBZTB, 01'80n Welles'
award w i n n i n g adaptation of
Shakeapeare'a moat celebrated

~Jo ~n;~re.r:u~o:oe i:;
timeo, $.75.

SATURDAY-20

and hiatory. Althoud&gt; much of
the conception wu "'Eiaenatein'a,
tbe editing· wu done under the
IJUpenision of becken and Sol
0
= . r V:,~ th":it.., ":tef.!'tu!::
lencfh, 147 Diefendorf, S and 8
p.m., free.
8WDOOHG 0 : Hobart, Clark Gym,
8 p.m.

0

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

dilesaeL

&lt;A TiiM · NOTICES

central evento Of IIlia 111m ~·
er with material OD a Co._
Christi Feolival, not obown here,
were to have fom&gt;ed the climax
of the unliniahod 111m qua VIVA
KJWCOI Acoordinc to the Eioon· ,
atein plan, -this oeclion would have

run 20 minutes u

sociology

• epedalist in genital

ova MDJOO

epioodeo framed

'Westemizatiml'."
Intended for politicsl sc:ieDce
and
students, and persons with an interest in devel·
oping nations, the book contains four -uons dealing with:
transition of traditional societies, models and measures of
modernization, the development
of a national unity and identity
(called "soc:ial integration")
and modernization, as it alfects
politicsl institutions.
Seventeea reading• are in- --.._.,..,..=::-==:--,....--cluded. In a aeneral introducTHIJRSDAY-18
tion, Dr. WeiCh points out that PSYCBOJUT•• : bee-form commumodernization is a dynamic nication for penonality crowtb ,
process, a process often subject Fillmore Room. 3-6 p.m.
to disruption, and not always
FOREIGN 8'l'tJDENT APFA!BS OOPI'ZE
peaceful. He adds that the .book aoua•
: 10 Townaend Hall, 4-6
is, intended "to help claiify p~
several appi'OIICMs to politicsl tJ!rfiVDBI'I'Y D.UO:B: diacusaion on
modernization in the hope that international wives, 266 Norton,
broader - understanding and a 8 p.m.
clearer theoretical formulation
will eventuslly emerge."
FRIDAY-19
Dr. Welch bas written a short BlOCHDOB'l'8Y AND l40taCULAil BI1ntroductlon to each of the four OLOGY IDIDU&amp;: Dr. T .T. Tehan.
·-uons, as well as an adapts· chemistry, Wayne State Univerlion from his book on military sity, MJ:TABOLISII AND FUNCTION
rule in Africa, Soldier and OP POLY.ullNI:B IN A. PSEUDOMONAS
State (North-tern University . . -. G-.'(2 Capen, 4 p.m.
Press, 1970).
An e:&lt;pert on African politics, =~'!~B\".;,!e~r o~:J:~
Dr. Welch is currently on a New York City Ballet, perform·
sabbaticsl. He intends to b'avel ing in an informal program, Dom1696 Elmwood, 8 p.m., refreob·
to Gbana in the spring where uo,
menl&gt; to follow. B..- to and
be will oanduct a study on the from
Domua provided for stutransition from military to civil- dento, $.1i0. Bus ticketa at Norton
ian rul~. Soldier and StaU deals Ticket Office.
mainly with this transition from P 1 L M.• • : SUND.A.YB AND CYBElZ
. civilian to military rule, and (Serge Bourguignon, 1962) . A
its political, soc:ial and eoo~cr!l:~':~iu~~~:fa~.::f;
nomic eftects.

.EI&gt;r.

LIBRARY EXIIIBri'S

ncime-

ia availabJ, abounds with inade-

lectures are

- · ·: VIVA ZAPATA (Elia Ka-

~.:"ns~i~"'r'~

quate descriptions of the Proceas

~:_._..._

eap.

Hall.

--------~~----

::rl,lj. l:"~::j!::notbeZ.C

• 'The new paperback updates

-J~
under a beDevillo w. Har-

AJID . . . _ _ ~ -

~~

Tab..
U16Jl.ri!'t:..!..-== "J
tbe life of the M - -.,.

a 1967 edition, also edited by
Dr. Welch, but includes about
40 per cent new material · ·
"Political Modernization"
foc:uses on the politics of devel·
oping c:ounb'ies. Dr. Welch contends that "the literature that

.8clrMil Reoponse (1966) and
W year's Human SeJW4l In-

'rllnnOilft 011 · - . . . .

62 .-vine locatioaa, 1:80-

edition of the book, Political
MO&lt;krnizaliDn: A R«Ule in

"Facts and Fallacies of Hu·
man Sexual Response" will be
the topic 'for the 1971 Harrington Lecture in the Scbool or
Medicine.
.
The lecturer will be Dr. William H. Mast.ero, """ researcher
and author of. best-eelling books
on sexual problems.
.
Dr. Masters' lecture is ached·
ut.ed for Butler Auditorium,
Capen Hall (140 Capen), at
8:30 p.m., Man:h 19. 'The event'
is open to the public.
a - to prment the lecture
by students in the School of
Medicine, Dr. Mast.ero is a prot-lr of clinics1 obstetrics and
gynacalogy at Washintton Uni-.ity School of Medicine as
well as director of the now·
famous Re!&gt;roducti-.e Biology
~ Foundation in St.
Lauia. .
Hil oootroYersisl and widel
read books, written with ~~
wile of a month, psycboloclat
Virlbda Jpimaon. are Human

a.m.·

::l":~M:~ .DUUL -

Comparative Chonre (Wadsworth Publisbina Co., 1971) .

Masters Here
In Mid-March

11:

•

WEDNESDAY-24
PHYSICIANS 'l'l::t&amp;PB.ONE I&amp;TUD:

Poychiaqic Serieo, panel includeo
Dr. Yooouf Haveliwala, Dr. Vic·
SUNYI Ioria
Beoaeghini, Dr. Deomond
Stony Brook, Oark Gym, 8 :30 Moleski
and Dr. Norman Winkel·
p.m.
stein, ICP1:18810N-18 MY PA'I'IZNT
·&amp;OCK&amp;Y • : Oswego State, Amhent
Recreational Center, 1615 Mille,.. ~· ;~~Yr!:f!l:
port Highway, 9 :SO g.m.
locations. 11 a.m..
FILM • •: TBJ: LADY ntOK SHANG-- PATHOLOGY UDC1'tJiirE: Dr. Peter
Schur, Department of Medicine,
v•ISITY

~W~K~m~AUo 0 :

~ ~a~'\'!,":~ ~1'ha.mL::

oome famous aa one of the moet

~~. ~n!:if"S~.e:.nt~
Office for timeo, $.75.

SUNDAY-21

~ IOLK D.UfC!HO : Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
·

~~n,BL~u~:;..r:

Capen, 8 p.m.

~ty ~3'!!aft'd$'l:i':):o~~

$.1i0 .
nLK• • : TD ftlAL, Onon Well•'

adaptation of the Kalka 110Yt!l
concerning the trial of K, who
never waa accuaed, but was exec u t e d nonetheleu, Conference
Theatre. consult Norton Ticket
Office for timeo, $.75.

to all C&lt;llll·
anmity liJ&gt;d UDiwnii_Y artioto mid
otudento in--.1 m performer
and porfol'IDIIIICe ....,t .-rdl
mid pnooentali&lt;m.
Jmlft: Domao, open

Scbodule of worbhopa: MOIL10 a.m.-1 p.m.; 7: SO p.m.·10:SO
p.m. Tuea..-12 noon-4 p.m.; 8
p.m.-10: SO p.m. Wod.-10 a.m.·
1 p.m.; 6 :SO p.m.-10: SO p.m.

~~-;~ ~~1c~~ pp"!.:
Sat.-10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sun.-2 p.m.·
10 p.m.
For further information, call

~Dunn or Mila Koljonen, fn7.

The OPFICZ OF THE OMBUDIDl.Uf iJ

open every day from 9 to 5. It is
our business to look into com·
plainta liDd grievances on behaH
of atudenta, faculty and atafr. If
you believe you ha~ been unfairly dealt with, come and ua.
10 Diefendorf AnDex, 891-4108.
P'BaiENT.U. ITU·
tlCNT8 who are applyinc to pro·

PRDOI)IC.U. AND

!Miional achoolA for SeJ?Iember
1972 can arrange an appomtment
for an appraisal interview with
the premedical advisor, thnlu&amp;h
Mro. Pat Forman, 105 Diefen·
dorf.

WOMEN,S SWDOIING• : D'Youville,

Clark Gym, 6 p.m.
COKJ'l.J'nNQ &lt;ZN'I'a U8IR SIZVJCI:S
IIEI&lt;INAJI : oee Monday lietinc.

THURSDAY 25

CIIARUS CA.YL. a~ •: A

Malcolm X Memorial with worb
by Charles Gayle. Performen are
Charles Gayle, tenor and eoprano
saxophones. piano. harp, violin
and flute; Jooeph Ford, piano;
Na888.ra Abadey, percuta1on; Vir·
Jil Day, pon:uuion; Darryl Waah·
1ngton. percusaion; Daa·houd
Adejoule, bass violin. Baird, 8:30

::r.:m

~~==,...=--.-o.-.._...,._-...,-,.-.

::.;A

PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE YCTUD :

Pediatric Series. Dr. A r t h u r
Schaefer. OCut.Aa TL\UlU. A.B BaM

:!:ty''';:~= ~~·~

cram. 62 recelving localio111, 10:SO
a .m.

PHYSICAL TBBRAPY 'J'I:tZPBON'C YICTUIII: : John P. McKenna, attor·
ney, Til&amp; LAW AND niYBJCAL 'I'BD·

t.;,1· ~ ~; !:'.:! ~0::

lions, 1·2 p.m.

8YIIPOBIUJI•:
Air, thermal, water and eolid

POLLUTION CONTROL

:"'...1~ 'u'is~~:

1

dent A-'&gt;ly a n d the Erie/
Niapm Chapter of New York
State Society of Prof-..nal En·
MONDAY-22
gineero, .147 Diefendorf, 2-6 p.m.
PILK••: BDOIBJliU XON .li(Oua
PSYCBOKA.T•• : free.form CODIDU•
(Alain Reanaia, 1969). With
nication for penonality powth.
'lfu.reen~~t!'~':f!":=~ 'Fillmore Room. 3-6 p.m.
French nowlieta into the
cinema. It thruot ~ for· ~~~~~D~::
merly ·a hia:h!Y reopocted director toriea, Murray Hill, N- Jeroey,
of lhort fifms~ into tbe forefront Iitle to be announced, ~11 Hoch·
of the ROUIN!!k IICJ#U&lt; and French atetter, 4 p.m. Rer..bmenta, 112
cinema. 147 Diefendorf, 8 mid 8 Hocbotetter, 8: SO p.m.
p.m., free.
I'ODilN lft"UDrEN''' APPADB OOP'fD
DANCZ J'IL)(• • : NIGHT lO'Ua!IKY &amp;oua•: 10 T0W1110Dd Hall, 4-6'
featwinc Martha Graham mid p.m.

modem

~:""~~.:l::::a:;

cia-. Diocuooion will follow, led

~!'.,~~~~~fd.P,;a·~

5:SO p.m.

~

J:NmooucnoN TO

IUC'l'80C.UI.'I·

Myocardial infarction -ria

IW'HY:

~ v~;t:· Telephcme

~~

Reoional Medical
well P a r k Memoriaf Inalitute,
The Cha~fourth lloor; Doecoo·

:ri.!'7pb
hi P.i'~ .Y-:"W~~
Kinch Auditorium, 5: 86'11: SO p.m.
PILili•:

DKUJ: 00 'IWll8 CBaa.

Ct~IWB~~--.J.."'r::

cliridual ~ mer

a••

~~~"(;l\!)~~~

be~ (aile) an

~-

etheriHd
). 147 Diet~, 8 ~•

WIEXLY~

COPY DEAIIIJIIE
To pubUcla - . -

....

&amp;MI.......,,U~,._.

JD.M••: IPDIDU!f's aou.: A 111m
hom c..a-!OYal&lt;ia by M i1 o a
Forman, Coolennco TbMtn, .....
aalt Nortor. 'J"ickat ~for

-

- . ..76.

Thu~--...-"'
frld8y tlu'oulh ~-

OOJftllfUDfO D. N !' 4 L .uc&amp;DON
~: Dr. A1fnd -M. St.in,

~ 2!10 . _,- .
ext. 2228. Copy Will ... ..
lltonder for'tln ...... .........,. 011

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>. STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 2-N0.20

FEBRUARY 11, 1971

�'

.

.~..., 11,

GREPORTER:&gt;

$491.3 Million Asked for SUNY,.$68.4 for U/B
EDITOR'S NOTE: The informat;on in the~ article is
abstzacted from the proposed Executive Budset for the fillcal year
April 1, 1971, to March 31, 1972, as submitted to IN! State
Legislature by Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller on Febnlary 1.
Financial officers of State Univeraity at Bul[alo point out that
the Exect:tive Budget is premised on additional State reven.of $1.1 billion. The final budget for the State University and
for State University at Buftalo will not be · known until the
Legislature acts-which- will probably be around April 1.

I
STATE UNIVERSITY-WIDE BUDGET REQUEST
The total budget request for State ti'niveraity of New York
for 1971-72 is $491.3 milliQD, an increase of $45.3 million o the 1970-71 allocation.
'
For the year, an enrollment of 166,873 is projected for the
University system, exclusive of COIIIIJ!unity rolleges, an increase
of 6,990 full-time and 4,414 part-time students. ·
The breakdown of those enrollments, which form one of the
bases for the budget, is as follows :
FALL HEADCOUNT ENIIOLLM~.::r~T£ AND QltADUATE STUDENTS
..

Fal 1170 (ActuaQ
Full
hrt·
time
time
Tobl
117,210
....
39,032
l.t,310 .
9,721
3,519
.. 5.611
1,617

Unlwrslty Colleen ....

·~~

~:=

49,625

16.884

66,509

~~r:
t~

~:~~i

::dfr~.
~~~: . .

Geneseo .

4,257
5, 121

New Plitt:: • ... ...•.••.

:··· ...

8!!o::st~:..
osw

...u~
~:~:;

o

3-~~

HMtth Scle.ncn
Centers ...... ...

3,682

ug

1,151
2,521

,n

~:~~

·~::ra

~:~~

19,382

.~:~~g
~·.'rJ

~:~rs
~:1~

s.~
~:~~

4,310
5,495

~::~~
•.~~~

2,060
2,450

...
~:m

1,150
2,052
1,303

4.369

435

5,408
7,642

··~~

153

3,835

25

742

~

__.!!!

Statutory Collq:n

6,026

Aartcultul'lll and
TKh . Collqn

16.621

.........

Upstatli

CoUqes

Specl allz~

72.211

to;22s

9 ,930
5,330
5,267
6,370
7,~
5,820
8,700
5,5751
4,975
920
750

3.m 1,=
--..
750

.

---wr
18

1,1 24
87
717

m

442

--r:7si

Buffalo

Downstate······

Stony Brook·· · ···

.

~

r~

442

FaH 1171 (Estlm.tad)
FuU
hrt·
tltM
tlrM
42.,103
16,064
4,727
2,092
21,554
11,088

124,%:70
39,423
10,091
5,935

-r;&amp;Ss

1,893 .

4.804
1,988
1.300
704
812

1.280
416
710

20
2. .
;2

~3

2.338

....E!

2 ,567

~

___!&amp;!6

~

_!!I

6.092

6,613

~4

17,429

6,483

23,912

1.142

9

1,800

1,800

Study Abroad

•Ezc.'udet HWih SciencN c.nref" .rucfent•.
••.StJICIJ' Atwo.d included in entO!lDwr!r ol incfi..iduaJ ~··

FISCAL IIEQCJIREMENTS FOR STATE UNIY£RSITY fi'ROGRAMS

197'0-71 Comp8red With 1971-72

Central Admlnlstl'lltlon
UnlwrsUy Centers

:;:~mto~·::

~8~

$

14,984,400

_ _ _ __

-----n-:3

~

~

Cortland

F~o n la

11.
10,

Old Westbury
Oneonta .

2,
12.

~~~tti -_

8.9

8 .8

7.9
6.8
0.6
7.2

....
9.2

~6

Pobdam ..
Purchase ...
Rome Utica
Heatth Science C.nte"
Downstate
Upstate ....... ___ ...
Specialized Collqn
Forntry
Maritime ........... .
Contr~~ct

6.5

~~:

~~~~r&amp;h

11.2
10.2

1

39.8
--g-]

-ra
9 .0

-...

-u
14.5

eou ....

---.:3

~
-4 .6

Aaricutture
Ceramics . ......

3.9

rn~':t"rt.~~

vet.~~ :.~~~: :·:: ~:=:~
neral Services

3,819,000

3.158.000
3,565,000
4,378,000

160,000
199,000
559,000

Expertfnental station
Aaricuttural and
Techniet~l Collqes .
Alfred
canton _

3 ,602,000

~

~

36,275,400

~

Cobleskill

Delhi

Percent

Cho1.:
-v
-n
12.3
7.3
12.5

Stony Brook .
Collqe5 of Arts &amp; Science 1

:~~rt--

5.9

12.3
6.5
15.1
15.0
10.9
16.8
17.1

. :::...............

~~i~~:••
5;021 :100
Unl.,.ralty Wlda Proarams
7,735,000
Ed~onal Experimentation
_ _ _

='f:ment -

5.3
14.6

---rt:2

- - ---- .

lnt~=~l
r.:~Y W~~A~I"~r.·Rb

2,829,000

3,254,000

425,000

15.0

1,731,000
400 000
•
150 000
'
60,000
726 000
•
90,000

2,097,000
400.000

366.000

21 .1

754.000

28,000

..,.

92,000

2,000
6.000

...

~;;:::_.:: 1~:=

753.000
35,000
37,000

62,000

0.0

116,000

106.000

1~:~

4!0,000

Consurtllnts for

~:."n,Tc~~~~~"rvices
Ad~.'!J~.R~,::..~

....

~~.

cUttu·ra, ·-.-nd ·-Prof..slonel Prucrams

5uh~s

. : : : ::: ::

60,000

1=

~ =r:~-;8;M

111.000
Loen Funds -------700,000
G,.nd Tobl ................._$446,007.200
Amount Anenced from -

528.000

=
~...:..""1'...;;·······-···-·120.000

14110296:700

-172.000
545.211,$00

-~,971-.000

--20,158,000

-- - Pu~ Fund ... .$311.117.200

S411.3U.~

$24,431,$00

-Adl-ol
_ 1970--71

Approprtat~ona

Appropnated - 1170-71

';!- .......

~ ~

.-

•
-to.-,200

Aid fa Brooldrn Poly ....

J,ooo.ooo

..

----~

••.u

.n

.3

3,ooo.ooo

~~r ~.:ttY··a.nters ~~:=
"Col
-....
- ~l'llm . ~

~:=:=

.101,000

'lbe State Uni-mty of New
York bas reacinded ita policy
nepotism, Cbancellor ErneSt
~~....1~~ - ~~
L Boyer lllllliiiiDCIIC last week.
'lbe
· Uniwnity's Board of
au-~--AlloQtlans
In addition, the Budge~
request estimates that another $102 Trustees bas atrldren from polmillion will be available in the form of grants, rontzacts and icies enacted in 1.964 a aaction
aid for students from the following 80\UCI!S: '$55.6 million from" wbicb b!&gt;mld from a....,lnlment
the federal government; another ' $22 million from other N- to 8D,Y collele ~ imY ork State agencie6 and $24.4 million from gilts, grants and nlediate relatiwos ol 8D,Y member of the aeedomic ex 11011-acarontzacts from foundations, non-profit organizations, private in- demlc std of that coiJeae.
dustry, and endowment funds_
The 'l'rulote.' action, which
These monies, the Budget request notes, are utilized in: Cbancellor Boyer deacribed as
1. sponsored researdl programs ($36.3 million ); 2. other spon- "an enlilhtened move toward
sored 'programs ( $15.9 million for instruction and tzaining grants, equal employment opportun$8.2 million for extension and public service, $0.8 million fot . ity," followed a recommendalibraries and $11.9 million for administzative and _general .,.. tion by the Faculty Senate and
penditures) ; and 3. student aid ($19.9 million •fot Regents and several antidiscrimination
Scholar Incentive awards for SUNY students; $7.9 million· of groups which bad asked tbst
the nepotim1 policy be abolfederally-supported work study programs, educational opi&gt;Ortunity ished.
,
grants, etc., and $1.1 million in gilts and grants ).
Dr. Boyer said that the old
II
I&gt;OiiiiY eetabllsbed a criterion
STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO BUDGET
Unrelated to peraonal qualifica'The requested budget for State University at Buffalo tion and kept the University
$68,841,800- includes an increase of $4,708,800 or 7.3 per cent from access to a significant pool
over the present year. 'The increase is sought on the basis of of talent. Removal Of· tbe polworkload, witb only $63,000 being asked for program improve- icy makes it poesible to base
ment (the general praclioe program in medicine ): No new employment decisions entirely
programs are projected here (or at any of the other three on profeesional abilities and
qualifications.
Univeraity centers) .
Under the new procedure,
'The following statistical infonnation was included in the
section of the Governor's budget pertaining to this instito· ·: · · =~vi~~~g~
STATE UN.IYEitSITY CENTER AT •UFFALO
•
tipo11 _e mplbyn)imt s_tan!ls,rds
E.atmated FutJ..nme EqulwaMnt Enrollments
which l!ach campils, Iinder tbe
70Inc,....
Dl~ jwisdiction of its president.
•
19 71
1971 72
1
1
TOUI
__ .. 17,661
18.550·
~
Per:"'
'
r
AD"l
wi~~Pf
Y·
~
- had made
Underar~~duate:
.1. La= 10nner po
Lower Division
.. 8,434
8,275
-159
- .2
44.-6 variances poss1 e, however,
G~:=:.: Division
.. 4,090
4,336
246
6.0
23.4 under a waiver procedure in·
Master's ' and
YOlving 8 decision by the £ hanD~~~ional
~;J:~
~}~
ff-J oellor of the University.
-..d;,f.:; /;!·;:th-=:::." 1~~~rw::'U:B~:,"urt.rhl.M ,!!,.!~&amp;~o__..:_or,.::r~ In addition to ~- Fa~lty
on thl ..,... bAtil wed m d-.IOf'IMl {he 1970-71 tx.d..t e•um.tu. In onJ.I" to Senate of . the u n 1 y e r 6 1 t y
~~.':;, ~~~""'~' r::c'r;;:_;ro',::n::, 'C:.r~•= ;;:"r,!ul::! . il"?ll~ which _had requested _reu~r!, 16,821, hat , ~ ..::'for bvd,.rm, ~ and ~~ ,,_ ~ . ~4-ing of ~ -~P9~ pohcy
......_..... ,•.,__ .
mcluded tbe C1V1l Servtce EmTM propo.H ~~:~o:~~'br'';,..::~o;'"41acton:
ployees Association, the CauTotal
--· .............. .. .. ... ..... .. ..... . ---··
cus on Women's R i g h t s of
wo~~f!t~ry :1ne;.eme·ntS -·:·::·::::: ...: .::·:::::---State University and the Na·
f9ff-~~z~!Y~ryofaJ;~:.Z:!.~sposttl~n5 . .
tional Organization of Women.
Faculty posiUons----enrollmant ir\c:n~aSH"'.
Dr. Boyer also announced the
-~=~~~:~ :~g~::...r=;!~i': arid "8qUIPmerrt··.
appointment of Dr. C. ~ugene
Summer session---enrollment increun .. ___
1as:ooo Kratz. fonnerly an assoctate for
~t~~t •:::vl~~'::~nd "SU port·---·---- __ _
79,500 academic pers~mnel on the cen·
Plant m~~lntenance staff and fncre..Sed · uimties··-- ::·
1 ~:~ tral staff, to ftll the newly--cre-~~:;:are~u~::!~;:r~~~sr 'Rm~ L':! ~:c:pace
a ted post of director o.f Equal
General administrat ion-computer urvlce char&amp;es
·
·
- ·
32 400 Employment Opportunity Pro~ra~~~~~:n""l~..~~ffm&amp; computer l'llntal a nn UalizatiOnS ~~:~ grams 0~ State Yniversity. Dr.
~r~~~e~ --~-~-~- ~d uctlon •n tempo,..ry urvtc• i. nd ·s upplies
_ 125;000 ~ratz _will coord~te a Univ~rNet Adjustments of

2,889,000

46,000

1.6

---

011

H3

1:-:

'ln:ggg

omt~~~~ .. ,-p~~fgt~~~ ~~-~~:.;;~~ :

AI-...

. . . "fl~

ea:;:~~~:·~nd

$64.133,200

o~~z'!de~~.,:.:aarct.

.

3

Oraanized Research
Extension &amp; Public Servk:e
~t~~~ Servk-es·-·:: :·-Maintenance a nd
Operation of Pla nt
~:~ Administration
Institutional Services
~:!:td~~~alls .......... ·

s t = t sArr.~ ~~--.:
Income OffHts
Rentals
.
Inconvenience

~:

...

~~

~

39,724,700
1,703,4

s3:5

~~ 600 ~
2,520,300
128,200
28,500
37,200
295,600
370,000

5,177,600
3,8518,300

5,815,200
4,244,000

~l:~

2,135,200
1,822,300

2,382,800
1,835,700

247,600
13,400

-200,ooo

-

Pa). .......... ··

~rtl~i ~~r:u~!~~~-:·:·.--1

~~t-=~70-71 ·: .. :· -----:--· ii:
POSITIONS

'S,100
225,000
2.800
8,600

.H
H
8 .5
10.0
123
8 .9
11.6
.7
-15.7

:~r;w:!~l~=.,~ :::!~ti:tWc,..l . ..--..l Beer'h __
~~

·nan

Students will have to look ·
beyond campus for a beer on
the weekends.
The University's Alcohol Review Board, a University-wide
rommittee, bas banned ·sale of
beer in the ·Ratbskeller on Saturdays and Sundays, and sbortened the imbibing hours week-

1~
~ move was made in re7.6 sponae to conmm spressed by
7 .s

the State Liquor Authority over

~~inu:...~th~

skeller area. The SLA on Jan- - nary 18 asked University of55 ficials for an informal bearing
34 on the matter since drug tzade
10 could lead to revocation of the
liquor Iioenae on campus.
The AlcobOf Review Board
felt the "allesed.diaorders may
be a teSUlt of tbe preaen&lt;e of
DOD-&lt;!tudents- in the Ratbskell·
er. Beer sale is beinl stopped

150,000

tftggg

SUNYOlanges

........~vet.=.,~
~. ~.""m'"-"='"-~ ~.... ... Its Dw .'l:.n~
:r:o
.~ - - ~ ~ 15.0
.J.ww'C
cJ:"'.,"=-;;··~-~ ~=
7,~
----m:= ..:•...o On J.]\~.,.;.,......
'ft:;.f'lJCII.ti:JII It

I

'The total budget request will be distributed as follows:

.._.m

1!171 .

2.2

. Sta!&lt;&gt; U?iversity at Buffalo will also abare in some of the when DOIHiudent ,_ of tbe
UruYerlllty-Wlde and special programs listed in the secti0
~.lrat
acbedule, beer
Sta~ _U~~ty-wide budgets, but the - t of tbiB ~~ will be aold_2 to 10 p.m. MonpartiClp~i\ion _m ~ ~ for these is. nol specified..
day tbroulh 'lburaday, 2 to 7
-44.6
.
'Ibis UmYerlllty will abare, too, in the total $102 million p.m. ~
~'
~
10.2 m grants, rontzacts and student- aid projected for the entire
A spokeaman-for -the Alcobol
IU ~ from ~ State and private IIOUlalll. $64.6 million Review ·Board said tbe Board
ol tbiB fotal 18 ~ fo~ university centers anci medical I&gt;os- t!la "voluntary· dlJtriou centera. The only specific estimate for U/B is a nota that this tioua -will not oaly 8afeluard
·campus is ezpected to receive $16 4 million ol that
.
-the 1ioanaoB in tbe Ratbskeller
_ the to1a1 administered by the ~ Folmdation ~ ~ ~
nmaiDder of' fba

U:.,ts:

. .;... ·liM-

~·

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

~

.!~k.

\..~-

tt.&amp;IJs!iJMIMt" f.i r.t:o1

0

:~~ tis-:;;.1;;.-~-,.-~;,n-.i:'i~c'l :t~~~itif~1: &amp;;;;,

�" c;o.,.....,....,.~D~
-~•n~~

"~ 11, 1911

,. Powell Says the Campus Hmring Committee
l;srit the Administration's Kangaroo Court
'lbe University's Hearing
Committee on Campus n·
tioas "is not a kanproo
presided over by a hanging
judge." Nor does the Committee feel any administrative ·
p.-ue fO&lt; it to become such
anqeney.
Dr. Ricbanl A. Powell, aaaociate deen, School of Dentistry,
who cbairs the Committee,

:'.':t

=

:'~£:\!.!:'
~
impertial bearings. He says

.

.
)r

.
&lt;

there have been ''not guilty"
findings on some s p e c if i c
charges_ browdtt before the
Committee, although the defeadants have been found guilty on othel" counts. And certsin cbarges have been thrown
out altogether becsuse they
were unwananted.
The accusation that this leniency has led the administration to d i - the Committee of
certain of its powelS is also rejected by Dr. P ......ll.
Tbat allagation, Powell Mys,
stems from the recent bearing
which considered whether or
not Allen RosenDaum had violated the terms of his suspension. In this instance, Powell
explains, . the Committee waS
autho_rized by Presi4&lt;int Robert
-x._ Ketter al~nJy to make a
findina &lt;!f~ ~ty or not-guilty," without recommendations
as to llllnlitions. (A fact whicb
was incorrectly reported in last
week's Reporter article on the
expulsions of both Rosenbaum
and Terrance K"eegan. )
Ketter's charge to the Committee in this particular esse,
Powell says, did . not alter its
rights and responsibilities. The
Committee retsins its original
mandste' .to recommend sanctions in initial bearings.
Not An 1n111a1 Heortnc
The Rosenbaum esse, however, was not an initial hearing,
but rather a bearing to determine whether or not prt;viously-imposed sanctions luJd been
vw/ated. It was the first esse
of this nature to come before
the Committee, Pow e II explains. He says that Ketter's
charg~,
rathe 1ban diluting the
Co
·
' authority, simply
laid out
icies to be followed
in this type of esse.
In response to charges_made
against the Hearing Committee
by Rosenbaum, Powell emphasized that his bearing was held
"in strict aooordance" with a
ststement outlining the jurisdiction and procedures of the
Committee. Tbat statement was
issued" by the Regsn administration last May in compliance
with a policy statement
adopted by the Bosrd of '1)1lstees of Stsle University. ('lbe
policies and jurisdiction statement appeared in ·toto in the
Reporter, October 1, 1970, and
was 8llllllll8rized again in an
article appearing, October 22.)
Parqraphs 3- and 4 of Boolion m of the statement,
P......U says. indicate that the
Committee is required to provide 10 to 16 days notice to a
student who is facing a bearing.
Paragraph 4 specifically ststes
that the data of notice is to be
interpreted as the date of mailina in the event that a student
m.mt be CXllltacted by mail.

was returned to the Hearing
Committee with ·t he Post Office's notation that Rosenbaum
had left that addrees and that
his present address was unknown. p.....,ll adds here that
he understands a student has

!i..u~~ili~keeal:..!:i

of his cutrent address. ·
'lbe second packet was
mailed the same dsy to a second addrees at which the Committee had learned Rosenbaum
might be reached also. Tbat
packet was likewlae returned,
Powell says, but with the notation that an individual at the
~~~fused to accept
Powell says he also bas documentstion ·th&amp;t, on January 7,
Rosenbaum called two University offices, including the Otlice
of the Hearing Committee, to
· request copies of the deposition.
Material was supplied on that
dste to the Department of Philosophy where Rosenbaum
picked it up on January 8, according to Dr. Powell's records.
p.....,n feels that the actions
of his Committee, thus, fulfill
the advance n o t i c e requirements of the applicsble rules
and_regulations.
Names Not 'Tumbled'

Rosenbaum is slso alleged to
have said that the composition
of his Hearina Bosrd was determined by "tumbling names
out of a barrel" until the rigbt
people were found.
Powell explains that a hearing board is a sub-group of the
Hearing Committee wbich is
appointed by him to hear a
specific esse. The entire Committee consists of 18 members
-six fal:uity and six stsff appointed by the President and
six students appointed by this
group. From this pool, seven
members are named to bear
each esse. Each individual
hearing board, Powell says,
consists of a minimum of two
faculty, two stsff and -two students.
The seven-man board for a
given case, Powell says, is de-termined by him on a rotation
basis. He checks over a lisf of
those who have served recently
and makes ssaignments accordingly. However, he says. it is
·entirely posaible that one of the
individuals selected may be
unable to serve· on a particular
date becsuse of some other
commitment. In the Rosenbsum bearing esse1 !"'_points
out, two faculty onginally appointed had o t he r commitments. One was "out-of town"
on a teaching assignment and
Biii:&gt;ther was "on his honeymoon." Others bad to be appointed becsuse of theee reasons, Powell says. and for no
other reasons.
To thi. associated argument
that the make-up of the initial
pool of 18 members bad no student ~ut, _P......U responds
that, although the faculty and
ststl membership were, in fact,
appointed by the President,
the SUNY Boerd of Trustees
required the ~ Commi&amp;sion to be set up this way. As
fO&lt; -the sb: . students, Powell
says each student government
orpnization on campus was
cont&amp;cfed in early fall to, recommend student members fO&lt; the
. Committee. 'lbe ...,q.-t, be
8ll)a. waa ignored bOth by the
Student Aaeociation and by the
Graduats Student Aaeociation,
presumably ... lllOIJDds that to
- " ' ....wet be to recognize
~J!:"'Y of . the Hearing

ing group. Alao needing clarification, Powell feels, is the
statement that a student who
waa on the panel has taken
eight years to earn a B.A. c1e-·
gree. Tbat student, Powell
says. finished high school in
1963 and attended college for
two years. He then served four
years in the Armed Forces and
returned to college in January
of 1970. Thus, Powell emphasizes, he is not an incompetent
who can't finish a degree program in reasonable time, as
the Rosenbaum statement infers.
Powell also challenged the
statement b;v Rosenbaum that
the legal otltcer of the Hearing
Bosrd was appointed by Ketter. Buffalo attorney Robert E .
Lipp who served in that cspactiy for the bearing has done ao
for the majority of bearings
conducted by the Committee
since last fall, Powell says. And
he was appointed by Powell as
chainnan of the Committee, not
by the President.
The Rosenbaum Hearing was
closed "to the public." Powell
.said, becsuse the guidelines under which the Committee operates require closed bearings.
However, be added, that "on
request" of the defendant, the
csmpus press could have been
invited. He said that, to his
knowledge, no such request was
made. Also, he said, an "observer" of Mr. Rosenbaum's
selection was in attendance and
Rosenbsum was represented by
defense counsel of his choice
lnc:identslly, Powell said, the
Heanng Committee did not
conduct a bearing on Keegan's
alleged violation of BUBpension
sanctions as Keegan had
pleaded guilty to the charges.
Only Relevant Information

Also according to prescribed
procedures, Powell said, was
the fact that the Hearing Bosrd
limited the presentstions before
it in the Rosenbaum esse to
"violations of specific situs. lions." Rosenbaum is correct in
noting that other discussions
(such as the Vietuam War, the
.cui tural revolution, etc.) were
ruled ~ out as "not relevant to
the esse lit hand."
Powell had no comment on
the appeal bearing in the esse,
as that was conducted by the
Otlice of the President and not
by the Hearing Committee.
He said, too, that no records
of any of the Hearing Committee's cases have even been subpoenaed by any other group.
One school of csmpus opinion holds that the Hearing
Committee as now constituted
should be replaced by a "legitimate" csmpus-wide judiciary,
composed of faculty, stsff and
students, elected by their peers,
and empqwered to bear all
cases of Complaints- facultystsff VB. students and students
VB. faculty-stsff.

- C . . Only

On this point, Dr. Powell
noted simply that the Hearing
Committee which be heads has
as its mandate "to bear student
csses only." He feels that if
the Student Judiciary could be
"reconstituted" ao as to be
~ and if it were
"willing to meet its responsibilities," that parbspa some of
the csses that have come before
~ has been quoted
the Hearing Committee could
as charlinl that be was "delibbe
beard by them.
erately" given less than the
Opinions on Where and how
m&amp;Ddated tO-days' notice. Howother ~ of csses should be
ever, Dr. Powell points to
beard are beyond his "urisdic&gt;
records of certified mail indition, be feels.
J
catin&amp; that """' copies of the
Powell noted lw.o that the
depoaitioa CCIIlCB1ling the beerpreeent Hearing Committee, al' i n a - mailed to~
thoucb Do looaer "temporary,"
on January 6, for a bearing Two an - . l'8nol
data of January 16.
'
Rc.mbaum is aiao" in error has at this point dispoeed of all
"One padret of matarials was · " ' - b e - that OII!,Y one·stu- csses brou,ht before it. ~
mailed to R.-.baum's ad- dent •t .oa his -...... panel, · one csae · on the, Committee a
drees ol recOrd, provided by PiMell notas. There two docket is P8DCiinll, Powell said,
·the University's Admissions students 6n the board, be l8y8, and the delimdalit in that ...,_
and a-.:d8 ~ 'l1lispao:bt juat !II' ~ are on --r .. .. -lion is "not avallable."

T---

CraftsSiww
Occupylnc the HIJM IIIII l..obby dispiiJ c:aa U,. k 1
· billie, cenunlc:s, _ , _
dlzzllnc exhibit a1 JewelrJ, silk ollnc,
lapldaiJ,
· - · .....,..
... . Pictured
.., - •
llurientl
from ....._..
Clutlve...Craft
c.m.r.
Is
white ond ..,_, ceremonial , _ _ _ , lnd ~ with
1111C11lme WllhelmiM GM!reJ. Joe M. , _
1s dii'Kior 01 the c..tt Cenlar which prwp~ntd the exhibit In
caoperotion with Un!verwitJ Publlcltillno -

--llr

125th Awards Group Seeks
Outstmuling Contributors
During its 126th Anniversary
year, which begins May 11,
1971, the University will honor
outstsnding contributiDI18 to society, recognize distinction in
many professions, and sinale
out the highest stsndards of
accomplishment through a series of University Awards, Dr.
Rollo L. Handy, provost of the
Fa cui ty of Educational Studies
and chairman of the awards
committee, bas announced.
Awards will be presented at
the Founder's Day Banquet,
May 11; Commencement, May
28; and at esch of the proposed
acsdemic symposia, most of
which will be scheduled during
the fall of 1971.
In his announcement, Dr.
Handy listed the following criteria which have been estsblisted for the awards:
The recipient of a University
Award should bsve made an
outstsnding contribution in one
or more of the following cstegories:
• The "welfare and development of the Stste University at
Buffalo;
• Higher educstion;
• His or ber own field of
endeavor;
• Hisor.hercommunity
( including local, stste, national
or international communities);
• Furthering world understsuding and pesce.
Dr. Handy pointed out that
the awani is not limited to alumni of the University, and
that there are no geographical
limits w h e r e contributions
!""'i!i ~e a!:'i:i. made which
for the awards include:
&lt;lWTI!Dt students, faculty, or
staH of the University at Buffalo are ineligible; awards will
not be given in abaentio 0&lt;
posthumously; no individual
will receive more than ooe University Award; and the deadline for receiving nominatioiis
will"be April 1, 1971.
Nomination forms are available by writin&amp;: 1261h.Annlversary Awards Committee, Ststa
University of N _ _York at Buffalo, 186 Hayes Hall, 3436
Main Street, Bullalo, NYork 14214. (A form is included in this
ol the Re-

~es

JIOIWr.)

u.ue

Dr. Handy emphasized that
nominations are aougbt from •
many individuals 88 poa!ible.
Members of the Awards
Committee in addition to Dr.
Handy are: Dr. J . Warren Perry, dean, School of Health Related Professions; John M. Carter, execufive director, University at Butlalo Alumni .A.ociation; Miss Barbera Riecbardt,
representinJ the Graduate Student Association; Miss Lenora
Cole, 888istsnt to the vice president for student atlairs; Dr. A.
Westley Rowland, vice president for University relatioas;
and an undergraduate student
yet to be appointed.
NOMINATION FOR THE
125111 ANNIVERSARY AWARD
Nome
Add ....

Occu!,!tlon or

~

Re•son for Nomination•

,........
No meW
Add ....

.........

-

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

....

__

T•leoflol .. Number

. ........................ MD.

NOMINATIONS SHOULD BE
RETURNED 10
125th Annlvef'Uf)' . . . .. .

.,.,.,_

State Univ. of N.Y. ILl ........

1M HQM H8H, 3435 . . .

..........

-Y-~14

a.

_
ON Clo&lt;
Oft ....
BEI'O-£,
- _
1. D7l

�4

PebnJttwy 11, 197'1

GREPORTER.,

SUNY Senate Has An Identity Crisis- ~~CensorEJUp;
Conrerning What Its Role Should Be
Rowlmu1 Says It Was Not!

EDITOR:
Jacboo would make his state'lbis note is submitted f« ment in approl&lt;imately nine
publicatioo in your "View- we ......!d print it. I a&amp;
pointB" column. Ita purpose is mit that this ia not C81811111bip.
to protest the dec:jsinn of ~
5. The Rttporler, or any other
utive Editor A. Westley Row- ,.,..,_._, CIIIIDOt become a
land not to publish Bruce Jackfor~ individson's Jetter in the RttporWs ua1 Our
"ViewpointB" column. Tbe-ree- · ·
..,._.. ru ia that
son given, in a Jetter from Row- ViewpointB ahould be limited
land to Jacbon published . in to a sincle' pqe. It ia true, as
the S......,.um
(1 Febrt~~~ry),
Profeseor Rosen
out. that
.,.....
occasiooally
thepointB
Rttporte
has
was that the letter was too loot- ..-1 ViewpointB or Features in
Jackson was invited to reduce excees of one pqe. Whm this
the letter to nine typewritten was dooe, it was - becauae, in
pages, double _.,ed with the opinion of the editors, the
standard margins so that it topic was of auch overwbelming
~1,!d P~t: ~":it!"':! importance to the academic
ception to the content of Jack- community that it abOuld be
son's letter but insisted he did f.:::k::!.-~Th.:"·~
so. as ": coll~gue and not as Environmental Criais" did reeditor, unplrmg lhl;refore ih!'t ceive more than a one-pag
no censorship was mtended m treatment.
e
the decision not to publish the •
letter as submitted.
6. The Rt!porter has published
AB recently as 7 January, the 39 issues since its inception one
Rel"'rler pub I ish e d in its year ago. In that time, it has
"VIeWPOints" department an printed 76 VieWPOints covering
article by me which occupied the complete spectrum from
two full pages (seventeen type- left to right and in between. In
written pages, double spaced every case, there has been no
with standard margins). Thus censorship.
there is indeed a precedent for
In conclusion, we can give
publication of an article at Professor Rosen and the entire
crease.
least twice as long as what Row- academic community the firm
land was willing to aooept from assurance that we will continue
Jackson.
to publish the Rttporler bonThe conclusion is unavoid- estly, objectively, professionalable that Rowland was exercis- ly, and without censorship.
ing an editorial judgment on
-A. WESTLEY RoWLAND
The Executive Committee of the content of the JaCkson letExecutive Editor
the SUNY at Buffalo Chapter ter. In the case of a column
and nature,
of AA UP condemns the action which, by its
taken by the Executive Board is intended to communicate
of the Senate Professional As- VIEWPOINTS to the Universociation to restrict eligibility sity community, this is noth- EDITOR:
lor the vote on affiliation with ing less than capricious and arThe workers for the Planned
the National Education ~ bitrary censorship.
Without commenting on the Parenthood fund drive in the
University community have
content of the Jackson article, been
victorious in meeting their
-: Y J.
l.
indeed without even waiting to
read the second half of it in the quota. Moreover, we were the
first
group in the whole city
ciation to a small minority of Spectrum on 3 February, I area to go over 100 per cent.
the faculty and staff of State must protest this action.
Our
quota
was $1, 780; we have
The only conceivable grounds
University.
raised $1,794 or 100.8 per cent.
It has been reported that the for refusal to publish Jackson's We're proud of our workers.
Board of SPA met on January letter would be the possibility - and proud that so many peo30 and decided that only those that it contained materia I ple in our University rom.mun·
members enrolled in SPA on which would make the R eport- ity have put their money where
the previous day (when the er liable for perpetration of li- their convictions are.
final results of the bargaining bel or slander. This was not
However; the quota assigned
election had been announced) claimed by Rowland. The arwould be eligible to vote on the ticle was critical of certain ac- to us was only the amount a&amp;tions
of
certain
members
of
the
signed
last year, because we
question of affiliation with
NEA. Thus thousands of fac- University -eommunity. Open failed last year to meet it. We
ulty and staff who will be rep- criticism, whether or not Row· have, therefore, determined to
resented by SPA in collective land finds it distasteful, is a lot go over our QUI!,ta and raise at
bargaining- many of whom healthier than censorship. We least $2,000, which is proporvoted for SPA- will be un- need firm assurance that it will tionate to the" increaaed goals
able to vote on what may be be permitted, if not encour- of other groups in the city.
the niost important issue ever aged, in the pages of the ReThe f1111(1 drive goes ,onto confront SPA: . whether or porter in the future.
University-wide, c i t y -wid e.
-WALTER G. ROSEN
not to affiliate with NEA.
Members of the University
Professor of Biology community who haY&lt;t.-not yet
This action was taken without prior notice and it violates
been approached, but who wish
•.
the promises repeatedly made
to contribute to the Planned
by SPA during the elections of
Professor Walter G. Rosen Parenthood Center of Buftalo
a bargaining agent. It is a bla- in his letter printed on this or to International Planned
tantly undemocratic maneuver page expresses deep concern Parenthood may telephone
which exhibits a profound eli&amp;- about alleged censorship of either of the undenip&gt;ed.
trust by the Board of SPA of · Bruce Jackson's manuscript.
Many, "'!"'¥ thanb tD our
the very people it has been For the record, I would like to
elected to represent.
make several statements which workers, and right oo!
-MRS. RICHAAD W AaNIICl&lt;B,
We urge the Board to rescind. I hope will conclude the disCaptain, Tel ~
its action and to open the vote cussion of this matter:
-MRS. GoiUI()N Sluma.
on affiliation to as many mem1. The editors of the staff of
Co-Captain,
Tel 632-M3&amp;
hers of the faculty and staff as the Reporter attempt to treat
posaible. Such a vote should be profe8Sionally and objectively
taken ooly after a well-publi- all the material they receive or
cized membelsbip campaign write.
and a full public discuasinn of
2. We do not censor articles EDITOR:
the issues involved. We urge we receive.
The headline, if not ·t he arthe Buffalo Chapter of SPA to
3. No newspaper can or does
~~z..~Z.. u..=:,.~;:t .r~. ~,':-.~
f"p.;. ~~~~t U;ton.J olfb. . . __.,., bl Roo.r~ 213, 250 ......... A__; seek the reveraal of the Board's print everything that it receives ticle itself, in tile January 28
Reporter,
Cooceming language
decision.
And
we
ask
that
all
at
the
lengtb
that
an
individual
•noa:m. ·&amp;dltt.
A.. wasrur RCIWLAlfD
other faculty groups, including thinks it should be published. requitements within the Faculty of Ana and Letters was unthe
Faculty
Senate,
make
Certain
objective
judgments
rzn:~~~~o
fortunately misleading. The
~
~- ~Boerdofwhaof SPA ~~L';'e made, but this is not Educational
PoliCy Committee
ROIIIUlr T . ltiA.lUZfT
disaPP
t ll18y .....p.
W...tiT ~_,,.,_,.On ,._,. adhor
of the Faculty is not attemptprove
to
.be
a
~
un~Bruce
Jackson's
manu·
SUZAJIN&amp; 1'. JL&amp;TZGJrR
democratic ~t m the scnpt, as received by the Re- ing to remove the language reCOIIduct of 81&gt;A.
porter, Willi ' the equivalent of QuirementB of .the Faculty but
JOB:.:.:..~IU
-RAY BolmY
22 or 23 doubl..._.,a type- rather to make them more
SUSA.If O~lrWOOD
-&amp;roNNIB Fnoo!c:AN written pages. To have Printed meaningful withip the sixteen
STUDifNr Ul'AJRS lfDiroR: S,_. ~
-MAavm F'BLDlllAN
it, would have ftquired three '"hours required by the Faculty
~~~=~~-;.a:;_ · ~ a.ry1 s • ...,__,, Roberl s.
--GB08GB HOCIDD:U) and Jl(lllsibly four·pages. It was of Arts and I.etters.
-~
KAn:
the professiooal judgment of
I'HOTOOR»HY: u..,4 £. llg.M. Ba4t1 B . Un6ar.
8incerely yours,
-GBoiGB L1MNB
the editors that this was exCONTRIBuruto AR'f'Jsr: s - 11. •-.-.
-THOIIAS E . CoNNOLLY
-JoBM Stn.uvAN
cessive and that, if Professor
Actiq l'nmlat nighted legislator who is not
SUNY S.W..
supported by any responsible
The SUNY SENATE met on Legislative leaders. Therefore
the campus of tile State Uni- the Senate took cognizance of
versity College at Buftalo on the attack in the form of a mild
February . 51 1971. It was the resolution which would not infirst official meeting for both .flate the stature of the attacker.
George Hochfield and myaelf CommlttM hporto
There were a large number of
as newly-elected aenators. We
want· our colleques to share committee reports, some of
our observations and imp_. which may be of special intersioos becauae, of courae, some est.
1. The Committee on Exof the actions of this body bear
panding Educaliooal Opporupoo our own campus.
The meetina bepn with an tunity is attempting to evaluaddress by Chancellor Boyer. ate the effectiveness of the
In his prepared statement be special programs set up in rediscussed some of the current cent years for dissdvantsged
issues facing the Univendty, students. It is especially imnot the least.of which was the portant to gain this information
financial outlook. He indicated in the light of proposed budthat the University was not getary cutbacks in these probeing singled out in the cur- grams. It was brought out that
rent economy drive but rather while the 1971-72 budget will
the University shares the same be extremely tight for everyone,
flSCAl squeeze with all State nevertheless this is the only
agencies. Both George and I program which is a c t u a II y
were quite impressed by the being cut hack. While Central
office in Albany is highly con~han~~~-·~:~~ cerned and is fighting these
siveness in fielding questions cutbacks, it seems to me that
from the floor.
those who head the programs
There were two issues which should also make representa..,_ durinlf the course of the tions to SPA to consider their
meeting which deserve special special needs in the upcoming
comment.
negotiations.
Tho - a n d SPA
2. The Committee on EcoIt was Jesrned that the Exec- nomic Status seems to be sufutive Committee of SPA had fering from identity confusion.
decided at its last meeting to It would have been the key
restrict the vote on affiliation committee in preparing neg&lt;&gt;with NEA and NYSTA to tiating demands had the Senthose members on its rolls as ate stayed in the race and beof the PERB election of Janu- rome the negotiating agent.
ary 29, 1971. 'Ibis would mean Thus, the committee report
that only a few hundred pro- sounded like a negotiating
fessional stall members would package, a v e r y attractive
deciae this crucial matter. package, indeed, but largely
George Hochfield (on Friday ) irrelevant. This committee, esrequested that the SENATE pecially, would seem to have to
Executive Committee consider define itself in relationship to
a resolution asking SPA to de- SPA if it is to have a meanfer the vote until after an ex- ingful existence. There were
tensive membership campaign. suggestions that the committee
On Saturday the SENATE Ex- concern itself with broad prinecutive Committee reported ciples rather than specific bartheir conclusion not to inter- gaining points.
fere in the a1fairs of SPA there- Triportlle Plan Rejec:md
by defining the Senate's role
3. The Committee on Govas an impotent one in matters ernance had considered a reof collective negotiation. George structuring of the Senate which
Hochfield introduced a resolu- would have made it a tripartite
tion asking SPA to rescind its organizatioh bringing in nonaction and defer the vote on teaching professionals and stuaffiliation. His resolution was dents. The new body promised
defeated as indeed it is very to be more of a forum for exdifficult to muster support for changing ideas rather than an
resolutions opposed by the Ex- action•group; hence the change
ecutive Committee. I was very was not adopted. There was
dismayed by the stance of the some sentiment for such a forSenate, for it establishes the um but not as a replacement
unwholesome precedent that for the Faculty Senate.
the Senate will not try to serve
4. The Committee on Interas a check on SPA.
national Studies plans to hold
a conference in September on
COlUM ·~ ReqThe other issue dealt with internatioual education. Those
recent requests for information with interests and/ or ide as
about course material, especial- should contact the new dean.
ly for those courses dealing Edgar Thomas, or the chairwith revolution. 'Ibis matter man of the Committee, Irving
has been featured in some Barnett, Department of ABian
newspapers as a major issue Studies, College at New Paltz.
between the Legislature and
·5. The Committee on ReJbe University. It t11rns out to search noted that Audit and
be (at least at this point) Control, as of Mareh 1970, relargely the efforts of one be- f..-! to allow payment on
By MARVIN J. FELDMAN

page charges to scholarly journata. The Senate adopted ..
resolution to rescind this , _
policy and in eftect to return
to the old policy which permitted such payment at the di&amp;cretion of the departments. It
should be noted that each department has to decide whether
or not it wishes to allocate
some of its funds for this purpose.
ldontlly Crt*
The Senate, in general,
seems · to be undergoing an
identity criais as a repetitive
theme seemed to be, "What
will be our role, now that SPA
will be negotiatina these same
matters?" I believe the Senate
will define itself b its actions.
If it behaves timi:by, in a few
years time, questions will be
raised as to why such a body
should exist. If it boldly 11&amp;aerts its will, it can inform
SPA of broadly-based concerns
of the faculty as well as to
serve as a check on our nego.
tiating agent. In its tirst test,
the Senate did nQI. behave auspiciously; hence - migbt expect its current agooies to in-

·'VanitY'Io-preos

AAUPOppa3e3
SPA Action

name

Drive '11ops GoaJ

GtTTEWPQ:rNTS

'Misleadini'?

'REPORTER,

:u1r;:,·

:=n .

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

I'

~

�GREPOR'ir:R..?

, , . _ , II, I971

L

.

.

.

Sta~ University ol NewYork at Balfalo

.5
(

REPORT

OFTHE PRFSIDENT
EDITOR'S NOTE: This annual
report coven the year beginning
April 1, 1969 and ending July 1,
~970. During this period, President
M..,tin Meyerson wu on leave as
Chairrn4n of The Assembly on
University ·Goals and Governance
and "Dr. Peter F. Regan served as
Acting President. Inasmuch as this
period occurred previous to the
present adminimation which began
July 1, 1970, it wu decided not to
publiah the report, but to receive it
for the record. It is now being
Jl:Ubliahed verbatim here because it
has been circulated in bits and
pieces, in incomplete sections, and
because when quoted out or
context, "ii may give false
impressions and create undue
anxieties which the publiahing of
the full text can dispel.
TO
The Board of Trustees and Chancellor and
The Council and Faculty
A visil9r to the campus of t...,. State
Unlvenfty of New York at Buffalo early
In April 1970 wrote, just before his

#

arrival, "Let's hope the students give us
all a chance for oome worthwhile
converations." Not loog afterward, a
Provost began his report for 1969-1970
with a melanchol)• shake or his head at
"this most difficult year." Vice Presidents
and Deans, similarly reporting, recalled
that _"normal functioning was suspended
on many occasions ," deplored "disruption and · violence leading to
greater polarization," and ohaerved that
customary locations bad frequently to be
changed "because of physical danger,
blockaded facilities and other
impediments." What they all had
reference to was tbe turbulence and
dlscootent which 10 swced throucJt the
Unlvenlty as to coliatitute its unwelcome
imaee of ltaelf Cor the past year.
Or, In the view of oome, Cor aeveral
years past. This oecment of opinion held
that Buffalo's aecond lilajor reoort to
,Prine twmo11 (the !irst bad"occurred In
1969) bad only brought to !he swface
emotions which the Intellectual preaence
of the Unlvenlty community bad been
thinly co.mne o -. At the '111110 time
that. the fllltor was writing his letter, one
of the student newspapers, The
Spectrum, was scotnnc that the basic
trouble wu limply that "the citizens of
Buffalo tone Cor the fOOd old days of
Homecomine Queena and rooting Cor the
teom, tbe days when It wun't oo tough
Cor their acmi and daupten; to get
aocepled ••••" There was no doubt In the
minda of many otudenta, nor among oome
of their lllltructora, that by - - w i t h
their p..S-ra they were superlati'ft!ly
rlgbt and briebt, that ·tbey """' mc.n,
eli~.
_
1n this view, the Unlvenlty, which
unlll a few yeara before bad been a
prhate, .mod eat, locally focused
lnldtullon, bad a1ao been a lrilllne one.
Few U... wbo beld It, the view bad
wldeDed with bewlld. . ne ..nttno. to the
claim that a unltMilty Ia oolely the
cnatloD of, and the Cftlllture of, Ita
student&amp;, md ol a wry few ltudenta, at
that. But dlnqent or eaullcmary opinion
wu umr1111ne to stiJid aide. n c:mne
' ""''~...'\.: l:,£•..- .. }h

glut or talk, letters, books, memormda,
aeminara, rap aaoaiona,lectwea, prop6oala,
living outside the city limits and sending
announcements and media panola; but
their children to private schools. The
with few exceptions, people were talklnc
Unlvenlty campus, beautifully green andand writing put each otbe&lt;. The cliche
brielly flowering In good weather, lay
words at Buttalo, u everywhere elae,
bleak and deoolate for most of the year,
were communicGte, diGli¥ue, and
its buildings m:;.;-lted with adolescent
muningfu~ and tbey pinpointed the
comments on capitalism, Imperialism,
trouble. Conununi011te, for.example, was
justice, vengeance, the police power and
used without an object, either direct or
the customary functions of the anatomy.
A nearby store.front became a stench In
Indirect: It became enoueh to talk or to
write, without needing to r:ecognlze a
suapicious nostrils when it announoed
ltaelf as a college of the Unlvenlty and its
listener or reader. There was no
expectation of a return communication;
activities were cloaked behind looking
glass
rather
t1wi
window
glass.
It
seemed unnecesoary to communicate
D
Unleashed dogs roftd, unmurtled can;
something to someone ; and a
'!'be era which wu cio&amp;ing bad begun
clamored, unheard-&lt;'! things were heard
communicator wu usually put ott
in 1966. For many years prior to that
of. Politicians could readily build the
balance if his Immaterial partner
date, the Univenlty
then and still
ladders for their own riae from suooea&amp;ive
materialized with. a reply. Thus, ditllogue
known by the simple Initials UB • bad
rungs or accusalion: that tbe University
bad no meaning of twones. Fifty or a
conformed to an academic pattern which
wu Communistic, Indifferent to the
hundNd peroona could .-mble to have a
taxpayers' burdens, and dope-ridden.
bad appeared to be uncballengeable. Such
dialogue, where the competitive...,.. of a
renovations or alterations as Eliot's
This last accusation wu the most
public meeting smothered the Intimacy
introduction of the elective system into
succe&amp;Bful of all. 1n a city which
(and persuasiveness) of a conversation.
tbe nineteenth century cwriculum or as
organized crime despotlzed with the cruel
Flnally , and all too often, little which was
Hutcblna' curbq tbe ensuing excesses by
narcotics trade, it was easy to believe that
conununicated in any dialogues was
prescribing a basic education In great
eighteen-year-old pushers were prime
rmaningful •• except poa&amp;ibly to the
bonks bad changed the details or the
corrupters oft he public order.
speaker.
pattern without modifylng the accepted
As for the charge that the Unlvenlty
As a result, !.be campus moveil farther
broad norm.
was lnd!Cfereo t to tbe taxpayers' burdens,
and farther from reality. Falling to
Everyone seemed to agree that
a charge baaed largely upon the
establish communication with Ita
whatever elae a unlvenlty might be, it was
accuation that a new campus was being
fountainhead, the taxpaylnc community,
- .an lnltltution fo&lt; the elention of .elected
planned· to cost two-thirds of a billion
Ignoring the fact that in that codlmunlty
young persons. Some interpreted
while the existing campus was being
were the progenitors of Jts "kids" ,
elevation In the French style thinking or
casually vandalized, the Unlver&gt;ity bad
oblivious to reaeotment and, beyond
the cultivation and civilization of the
little opportunity to rebutt it. It was
reentment, to reprisals, the campus
mind. Others, while partially allowing this
much too complex Cor a simple " You're
appeared to looe ilaelf.
aim , redirected it toward material
another!- No, I'm not" argument.
To be precise, only a small part of the
elevation: cetting onward and upward in
To the indictment of Communism the
campus did. But it was that part, both of
the world. As for tbe other distinguishing
Unlvemty was not vul"''rabie. A vague
students and faculty , which sidesteps
mark of upper education, its primary
and somewhat sullen feeling , it came to a
expected behavior for slogans and
attention to the late teens and twenties, it
head only IS the agents prouocateurs of
armbands and which thus becomes the
was and still is aeidom broadened. That
the central headquarters provided crude
part which is taken for the whole. 1n an
span of years appeared to be
evidence of theirpresenc:einthestandard
earlier era, it was indeed the football hero
pre-determined , bracketed between
acavities and fnyed vocabulary with
and the yearbook queen who bad
compuloory childhood Instruction and
which anyone over thirty had had the
occupied this position; and anyone who
adult e ntrance into businesses,
occasion to become wearily familiar. To
could remember that, grinned . The
the young student it was new and
Intense aeriousn..S which bad once been
, professions or rnarrilge.
It was aelection which was the x In the
exciting, however, and many of them
directed toward "tbe team", the mass
unlver&gt;ity equation. Society selected its
further antagonized the community by
devotion , the roaring rituals, now'
unlvenity stude nts by sex. by nce, by
behaving like the Red Guards or the
characterized the equally !IOisy and
grades, by geography, sometimes by
Chinese Cultural Revolution: humiliating
equally untyplcal priests or the new
caprice or Inheritance, and above all by
their elden, agglutinating their followers,
conformity~ It became 11 obligatory to
economics. The sienlflcance of economic
shrilling and marching and elevating
say rhil as it bad once been to say ruh. A
status, long known, had to be
anti4nteliectuallsm Into holy writ.
" kid" would stamp his foot and say it In
acknowledged everywhere when a
It was only the fact that many more or
nervous defiance. A faculty member
weU-Intentioned draft act succeeded only
them - many, many more - did none or
would couri favor with the "kids" by
in aeWnc up the nation's unlvenities as
these tbli&gt;ga, whether Cor reasons oensible
saying it. No student review of a !DOvie
refuges Cor thoae who coul!l afford them.
or lnaensible, that corrected the picture.
got Car without it. And, sprayed In paint
The caae was ao plain, Indeed, that it
Large aegments of the Unl.v enlty were
on the campus buildings, it became one
vitiated most daima by students to be a
still adherent to the sober, lower-middle
or the moat relevant thoughts of
class views or the community or to the
people's party; Instead, it embanusingly
Chairman Mao.
SUPported their other claim that they
Crail tradition of scholarship In the
academic balla. The average student, tbe
were special.
m
ln Buffalo, their distlnctneol from the
average faCility member, tbe average
administrator was spared contumely. The
The last four yeara of the
rest-of tbe community wu obvious. The
city ts· still not too large to be clearly
average classroom or office was
administration of Prelldent Clifford C.
defined: it knows how old It is (a century
undamaeed- Many unbumt bonks were
Furnas, from 1962 (when the Unl...tty
. and a halt), where it is (aelf...,mclentty
stiU on the shelves in the libraries. Many
of Buffalo merged with SUNY) to 1966
alone at one of the world's junctures of
reaearch projects continued there and In
had broueht the acboolllfely acrooa the
water commerce and Industry), and who
the laboratories.
bridge of transition. The three yean from
it is (a large wortlnc population and amall
But the situation was uneuy, unstable,
1966 to 1969 wben Furnas' succeaor,
proprlelary popolation, both dating more
misunderstood. Even hindlight falls to
Martin Mey..,.,n, bad directed the
or ·te. from tbe Civil War). It ia an
clarity many of the misconceptions,
University bad mo..S, altered and
because the problem 11 a whole
opened it In a auftlclent number of ways
Industrial and lnduatrloua city, largely
with limple tast.; for example, a citizen
continues, here u at every other large
as to constitute a reconstitotioa. Theae
beinC
what might make Buffalo a
unlvenlty In the country. As If detY1nc
antecedent years were preaent In the
better city would p-.e a very acceptably
the physical Ina of balance, the IIDliler
Interregnum of 1969-1970, as any
a--ce reply If be propoaed a stadium
~t toppled the larger, and SUNYAB
Immediate past must be; yet the !mJcular,
and another major Jeacue team.
""'n to the most aympatbetic
lroubleoome or frlchtenlnc character of
To tbla community, the Unlvenity
eye, ~befalling apart. Tbehllbbot-of
1969-70 caucht the Unl...tty by
aeemed to be a bad.nelehllor- Ita studenta
1966-1968 proted illuaory.ln 1969, they
surpriae. It plllhed it oct balance, It
were likely to make o-my
began to dilappeer. And In the lint halt
expoal pretenstons and ....me- and
apartments and rooming-be&gt;.- Into links
of 1970, they w. . all but completely
addi!lt of all, It wiped away the lllowiDC ,
of iniquity (which W.re tolerable) and
replaced by contention and anger.
lmap of the Unl-..nlty- which both town
not pay the rent for them (which was
Prot.bly ooe ol the st&amp;lkeot NaOnl
and cown bad been p2lnc upon.
not). Ita well-paid faculty and
for.tbladllmaylnccbaneewllthatnoone
Studenta,facultyandstaff,andDOUand
edmlnlstratom ovedlaianoed the """"
wu apeakln&amp; to anyone .... There was a
tar community, bad come to take a broad
!.~o.'C.'I:f\lv-i~j. CJ ~·,·.r4 cue:; 6"-ll.."i:.'''*
• ~~~!!.·..a.·~ V..lltH r - ·
~ ;:;.:_-;:; __ =:_:.·=~:::::::_____ _.____~---- - ··- -·----... --..from othw elements on the campus, from
tbe Buffalo community, and from tbe
State, both large and 111110 s. It ranged
too wide and variously to reconcUe itaelf
with this sharply narrowed concept. It
crisped it with ~on. From time
to time, it swamped It with logic.
Tbe result was &amp;Uch a aeries or
diYillons u shook the Unlvenity and
continues to &amp;hUe It while its friends and
devoted advocates have been aeeklng to
protect, smooth and shape its passage
into the next eri.

acale, and compounded the lndi&amp;Dity by

"*""

-mod.

�,...._,. 11,11171

JIIIIPeCihe of lbelr UDI-ty whleb they
bod Dot been coiled upon to take before.
'l1le moot ardeDt hailed a unloertiiiJI
nJdioiec.
•
.. The modern, urban unltenity
muot. . .be a Yltal, moviDC, dyoamlc
coDtrlbutcir to, IIDCI le.ter of, the
commuDity In whlcb It u-". wrote Dr.
Fllmaa, aDd at the ame time he endoned
the wlodom ol empbaolziDc the unl'ft!flal
ID the wiltWIIty. Hla wamiD1 that tOtal
ud autcl!alful merpr with the State
Uni-ty would "require maoy yean to
....,mplilh" wu teiJiDcly joined to a
"peat villoD Cor hlcber edlltltion...the ·
punult of ldeaa IIDCI the teotiD&amp; ol
truth ••. to coDiribute fulty to the
adl'aneement of humanity ". 1be
Unl"'nlty of Buffalo eDterad Into the
mer&amp;er fraDkly ackDowlediiDI Its
dllleieDdeo In cnofuate IIDCI prot-nal
~ ~ but couotiJIC on the State of
New York to aupply the noources with
whleb to enate ereat- out of them.
Ptoml- w..., fortheomlftl IIDCI, aa the
yean went on, became ., CODYIDCIDI aa
to tremble on the edp of ....uty. The
UDI-ty coiled ltaelf "a rUDDer polaed
aDd waltlnt for tbe ~tarter's aun".
AI l'nlldeot Meyenon took o"'r tbls
maebblery, he put It Into hleber par. The
moat dramatic of the UDivenlty'a
expectations wu a new campus, now
eatlmatad to coot two-thlrda of a bWioo
dolllra. There wu uraeot IIMd for it. The
exiltloi (and atiU the oDiy) plant wu
- - aod In a larp part obmleaeent.
Bat wbat wu more erlticol wu that It
wuburotlnc at the...,., At the time the
merge&lt; took place, SUNY·Buffalo
projected a UkeUhood of 10,000 full-time
lllldeqradaate ltudenta by 1970, 5,000
full-time cnofuate atudenta, and 7,600
port-time
otudenta. For a numhe&lt;
of reuons, the actual enrollment or 1970
leas than validated theoe c - :
llllderJraduate full-time enrollment was
.10,816 but the graduate wu 3,071 and
that for Millard Fillmore College 5,981.
Statlltlea helD( ltattstlea, however, and

""'DiDI

these

particular ones requiring

supplementation from the prof-nal
aebooiJ, from.J!IR-tlme reclotrations, and
from sueb admirable oodal aenioes as
non&lt;redit COUI'IeS, there was and is no
· queotion of the need for the new c:ampus.
ilesMreb alone would juStify it. The
traiDID(, te.tlng and community oervlce
which are often inherent in It eully
pro~ the point by layiDI convindng
claim to the "old", or Main Street
c:ampus primarily for tbe five health
odences, then staldng out equiValent
elalma on the new suburban site In the
townahlp of Amherlt.
·
CalliD( upon Dr. Rohert L. Ketter,
who wu Dean of the Graduate Scltool
and Ptofeaaor of ED(Ineer!ftl, to be Vice
l'lealdent for FadUties Planning, Mr.
Meyenon moved toward maldftl tbls
dream quite UteraUy concrete. Neither he _
nor anyone elae Imagined that It would he
u lllllllbotantlal at the end of bls term as
at the bellnDIDI·
l'nlldent Meyenon made his other
principal mo•es In the realm of
orcanlzatlon. and there l(aln be
Nlnforced the aenae of exdtlnc growth
wbleb trpaflpred the Unl-slty. He was
at bls moot aueceaoful In percel"fiDI the
oature of the paaoiDf moment and In
ldentlfyiJII the UDitWIIty with It, so that
It ......t aiQya ahead of the root but
out or breath In belni m. The
- · · guo had been fired aDd the racers
were runDID&amp;. With Faculty Senate
cooCDDence to bla plan for academic
NOipllization wbleb ea!llor that summer
bad been dneloped by a '-joint
faeulty..Smlnlotration committee that he
had appointed, l'lealdent Meyenon ralaed
the eldotlnl SchooiJ to the rank of
Faculties headed by Pto'fOits, and
almllady divided the Collece of Arta and
Scienca Into three: Arta and LeUen,
Soda1 Sclen""' and Admi~D, and
Natural Sciencea IIDCI lofathematlea.
TcJcether with the Faculty of Health
Sde-, whleb compriled five aebooiJ,
aDd the Scboola - DOW Faculties - of Law
and Jurisprudence, of Educational
Studies, aDd of Engu-riD( aDd Applied
Sde-, be had the otrac:tme Cor blvltiD(
ID· the qualtty of proCe.lonal inatruetlon
wbldl alone can eatablllb a uniWIIIIty '"
wartby. lfoN than I hundred penona
..me la&amp;o the upper teaehiDc body of UB
durin&amp; Mr. Meyenon'a thNo yeen. At one

otaae. Time c:nditad thotm with helD(
"lmpreaahe aDd otten biCbly
--tlollll."
Other orpolutlonal and curric:ulu
• expanaloDa broucbt Into . helD(: a
structure ol•""' Vice ,._nts, he.ted
by Dr. Peter F. Rep.n, the Esecutl"' Vice
President who later heeame AttiDc
l'lealdent durill( the 1969·1910 yeor; a
propoeed ayotem of inltltutea or whleb,
dlaappolntingiy, oDiy one or at molt, two
........,.. CMtation; a aerlea of ehalleDIIDc
lma&amp;iDatl... apec:lal programs designed to
advance UB'o •mce to the eeooomieally
otruaJin1 or aubmeraed parts or the
community; and, moot boldly of aD, a
conpries of "centers of ld!ntlftcation" or
radk:ally new eoUeps, eaeb rotatlnc upon
the axis of Ita own Interest. The CoUeges,
at Cirat Identified with a tentative
leitertng from A through F, were to
heeome central In an unexpected way as
the coming ilaues, both true and falae,
· manlCeoted themselves.
"A shift In student
attitudes ... ushering In an era or
activism" had been shrewdly noted as far
haell: u five yean; hefore. In the many
changes of the succeeding terms,
however, it had been lost sl(ht of. In any
cue, It grew so Irregularly and Its
ultimate ripening wu such a forced
.growth that the University started
1968-1969 with no anticipation of
rampaging diaaent. The arademic
opened wltb 23,567 students enroUed
and a CuD-time professorial faculty of
1,308. The Library had reached to over
1,000,000 volumes; the Law Library had
doubled Its holdings; and the Sdence and
Engineering Library subscribed to the
utoDiahlng sum of 3,000 scientific IIDCI
technical journals . The University
administered $14,600,000 in sponsored
.....-eb programs during 1968·1969. Its
e xpenditures for the year came to
$62,169,739.
Both hope and pride were implidt In
the most prornlslll( program of the year,
EPIS. The Experimental Program In
Independent Study, which was created by
the Select Committee on Equal
Opportunity, gained adrnlttanC. to the
Univeralty for 151 non=whlte, lieedy and
academically ill-prepared -- even
unprepared - younc men and women. A
combination of scholarship crants and
work-study funds provided the vital
flnandal aid. in tbe aftermath of the
murder of Dr. Martin Luther King (who
had leetwed at tbe University less than a
year before), EPIS was genuine ehaiiOftle.
Whereas two per cent of the Uni..,rslty's
students and five per cent or its faculty
and other employees were non-white, in
metropolitan Bu!falo the percentap was
doae to eight. Partly as result of the
stlmuills of EPIS' establishment, eight
blacks entered the Law Scltool under
private resources not hitherto available.
Yedidne, Dentistry, Nurltng and Health
Sciences Faculty memhers generally
shaped proposals to he reviewed with
minority- groups, the professional
community and fund-&lt;Ources. Most
strikingly of aD, the School or Social
Welfare committed Itself to a ratio of at
least one to three, black to whites.
Another innovation along wltb EPIS
was the Freshman seminar . In
conventional. tenns a puadox, it was a
practical and popular concept, Introduced
aa a result of a pneral feeUng that
tenwed profesoors should not he remote
from students, even from F)eshmen, but
should offer at least one undergraduate
cow.. Eaeb aemlnar wu as carefully
Umited to eprollment as a graduate
aernlnar and deslfned. to respond to the
mutual bltereota of the lbotructors IIDCI
stujlenta concerned In them. Three
hUDdred were enrollee! In the !in;t 25
oemlnara. Furtber exemplifying tbls
trend, the Executive Committee · of the
Faculty Senate let It he known that the
faculty were seeking much more
cooperation, understanding and
pertinence with ltudents than hefore.
Smaller duaes and better teaeblnc In
good dasooma made the subltanoe or
the Committee's reeommendatlona - ·
whleb, admirable though they might he,
bod Uttle ebance of altering the prevaiUD(
conditions. Freshman aemlnara took root,
however.
Meanwhile, the UDitWIIty, air.lady
opread from Ita eltabUabod CIDIJIUI on
Main Street to temporary qaartera on

year

flklle Lea lloulrtard and to atiU otha'
quarters, mostly rented or ..._,
prepued for
upanaioD, durin&amp; a
decade to come, to 1,200 aeraa olland ID
the suburb of Amhe&lt;lt. On ()&lt;.'Iober 31,
1968, Governor Roell:efeller, In company
with Chancellor Gould, Preoident
Meyenon, and maoy others, """'monialiy
broke eround for the plaDDed
$650,000,000 construction. The
Governor was later reported to have aald
that he "otruck water with the flrlt
lhovel"; but that embarrusment, If It
occurred, wu only an omen toward
difficulties whieb loog pre""' tad a ...,nd
sho.• elful'a belnc tumod. Emphatic
objectioDs a~oae amDDI the blaell:
community to their heine excluded, In
terms hotb or jobs and of oelf.rospeet, by
the construction companlea and bulkliD(
trades untona of the area.
The prote.t won aueb a rapidly
wkleDIDI and symp~hetlc bearing at the
University that it produced the cloalng
IIDCI climactic e•ent or the 1968-1969
year: the moratorium, or· work otop..ae.
Propo!ll!d by otudent petition, endoraed In
tbe faculty, wged by PleaideDt Meyerson
and finaUy consented to by Go.....,or
-Rockefeller, all work and work
negotiation oeued late in the spring of
1969 under what waa considered a
temporary auapenslon. Resolution of the
dispute remained espedally with four
of the bulkliDI trades unions.
N ei t ber the moratorium nor the
fornalk&gt;n of a Minority Coailtion to help
arbi trate It wu aebleved without threat
of violence on the part of student
activists who now • definitively - had
emerged . The threat ramified Into
dramatic...,.._ By Decemher,.when the ·
publicized ground-breall:lnc had- heeome
an awkward memory, the Student PoUty
expressed Itself. Polity wu the newly
introduced one - man , one-vote
town-meetiD( student government. lt
endorsed "equal opportunity In the
construction of the Amherst campus,"
the lodging or aU curricular designs and
requirements in the Faculties and
departments with student partldpation, a
shift from a five~urae to a four-courae
load (in approval or l'lealdent Meyenon's
suggestion that tbls reform he made),
adoption of the pass-faD system of
grading, and (the • ine qua IWn)
immediate acceptance of their proposals.
Tbe Faculty Senate Executive
Committee's responoe, already dted, was
oblique but approviftl: Tbls was In
January. February was the month of the
New World Drug Symposium, which
Timothy Leary, AUen GlnlhHg, and
Abbie Hoffman attended aloft~ with the
Director of the Federal Narcotics Bureau.
It was also a month or extended
''teach-Ins" and "rap" (rapport) sessions
on ROTC, racism and "relevance."
On March 3, th. . expreorAons erupted
into the customary non-negotiable
demands and deadlines. in a awlft
counter-move, however, President
Meyerson called the University Into a
general oession at the eymnaslum (the
University's oDiy large meeting-ball) and
there presented )lis own "'demaDds"
which proved to be aound ~Cor
popular reform. They were
enthllllastieally received. Deploring tbe
excesses, c'the authoritarianism and the
mindless obscenity we
have. . . . wiloeaMI," Mr. Meyerson drew
attention to the desirability or a form or
bicameral fe&amp;islature for tbe Univenity,
curriculum review and openness of
sponsored reoearcb. In addition he
dtst!D(ulahed auch values u opposl~n to
radim IIDCI ohedience to law.
Ha•lng thus a•olded a violent
confroDtation aod havinc been widely
·praised for it, the· Unl•erslty
administration was underltiiDC!ahly
dlaappolntad to have to confront It
anyway two weell:a later. Conotruetion
shacks at the site of the Department of
Defense Project Themis were destroyed,
and the rioters who burnt them entered
Hayes HaU, the administration bulkliD(.
Their occupation laoted ovemlebt, then
11&gt;mewhat Inconclusively ended under a
court order. For aD thai It waa In the
C""'fi?nt or the night's diaorders, Project
The1ms wu prohably a leaae&lt; ia&amp;ue to
almoot e....yone oo the c:ampus than a
Uty-whlte bulldlnc or the Amherst plant.
Themla haplessly lent Itself to a
melodrama. Actually a Jepulahle

Ita'"'*"

oeientltlc otudy ol. one ""'*'t ol h-.,
pb)'liololy. It Would .,...,. ha... .....
welcolllld for the Jlll)llllot It .... of
wldenilll the borlm• ol ............ 1D a
raw and o-"-ied allnolpbere, " " - ·
aD that could be cliotlalulabed lbout It
... that the om.. of Naftl
supported it. 'l1le Pea~aFD, the VJet.Nam
War, and mliltarlam, inlporlallam, fudam,
colontalilm, the ~ of bobloa aod
the draftiD( of youog men billowed
upward In the amoke aDd Dame whleb
d-..yed the . eonotruetlon ......... and
thereafter a rational examination or
'l'l!emls waa u ~le u a rational
eumlnation ol the a-te "''!ffcers'
'l'I'alnl.ng Corp&amp;.
Yet Cor aD that, it wu not Themis, but
the unCalrneaa of barrlnc colored
taxpayers (whether blad&lt;, Puerto Rlc:an,
or IDdian) from worltiDg at a
tax4Upported UnitWIIty's bulldlnc site
whleb aroual the otrongeot opinion .
Nothlnc could better prowe that tbls was
., than the fact that poUtleal. antennae
Instantly bummed, when followlll( a
montha·long campalcn by both
community and c:ampus _groupo, the
students' demaocla or the Hayea HaU lit·ln
foeuoed on a work-moratorium. In a
telegram to Albany, President Meyerson
asked that the work at Amherst otop until
the labor Ioree could he lntecratad. The
telegram wu •nt under a threat or real
dancer, but was properly not a
capitulation to the threat. It dtad ohiy
the lsue of mdal Injustice. A peaceful
demonstration before Governor
Roell:efeller .at a neighboring college and
the Introduction by State Asaemhlymao
Arthur 0. , Eve,· ot a . bDi. providlnc for
minority lraiplng relnforeOd the clemilta; "
IIDCI on March 20, Dr. Antliony G."'
Adinolfi, ceneral manager of the State
University CoDJtructlon Fund, agreed to
impose the work..toppap until the
minority groups and construction unions
could work out a solution. On March 27 ,
he Ufl8d bls order, dtlng their expressed
willingness to work !or a conciliation in
good faith. The l'lealdent Issued a
statement explaining and supporting the
nature of the Themis work, aod refHring
to his havfni obtained an inj.llietion
against the Hayea HaU 1reapasoers
foUowing the f"ll'O, declared his Intention
to tum again to &amp;
'outside authority" in
the race or per&amp;Onal Injury. property
damage, threat , theft, sit-downs,
lie~owns, and attempted intimidation of
teaebers or students. The faculty's point
of view did not emerge clearly. Student
Polity, however, voted not to oppose
either ROTC or Thernls, and Dot to '
expreas support for tho• who had ''
burned the conslntJ:tion shacks and
Invaded Hayes HaU. The moratorium
appeared to he auhstantlal enough ..
although It turned out to he shadow, not
substance - to allay Immediate concern.
With this, and wlth the _..ard of the
degteea at the 123nl Commencement in
June, the 1968-1!!69 academic year
ended, everyone pzlnc at the stiU
"unfinisb~ business (ani!) otlll unrealized

a-.a.

(Oils .. .

IV
The trouble ltarted l(aln almost
immediately upoD the reopenlll( of the
regular academic y.., In the faU. Within a
month or fe1151ratlon, the main lasues
were all defined. Some were real ,
d . .rvtng or ~ul c:onalderatlon.
Others were spurious, dust thrown into
the eyea or the uowary. Amonc the real
iaouea w...,: open admllalon; attention to
the neglected or diaC..ored parts of the
~ commuDity, eapedally to the
blacks; the muroes and extent or
subNDtion for .-reb; the
and
extent of aubNDtion Cor athletlea; the
level of toleration for milltary otudiea,
lndudlnc both the ROTC CUil'lculum and
couraes In (1H!fr1Ua warfare otr.red from
the opposite end of the scole; revaluation
or the whole courae of study or any part
or It; apportionment of liwel In the
Unlvenlty'a gOvernment amc&gt;DI otuclents,
faculty, adrnlDiotrati"' ota!f and the
poeral pubUc:; the formation, style, coats
and atandarda of the propoiOd new.Collecea; freedom of )IPinlon IIDCI
dlaeaaslon,-.pedally ol the'IUlwelcome
klnda; parietal rulea, dlaclpUne and
clecanun; &amp;radlnc and doer clefinltion or
exiltiDiiaw on hard aDd ..Ct druCI- AD of

""""*

�p~

Jl; 1911

u- ...,.. 111bjo&lt;ta moved o - into the

in fa 'lOr or the much more appeaUnc and
fll
forthwith, takJac ap lint lbe twenty atadents that bad .,_ ......,.
inflammatory outcry that pip were on
IUipl!llded and ........ wlllllll . . . . .
the campus. Many penoos were attracted
.........,,fudom(lntblsareraa~
For _,Y . .a, nanM1 ~
opoaodlcanpy......._,~,andby
to a meet1n1 at Clut Gymrwium on
patlerDI.-1 and
--til
alwaya opellod "fadlm") and ~­
late Februaly, the aeoood term bavinl
Mardll, and on Marcb 3 a peaceful strike
dhjoloted lmpreslloaa: ''rcn·lq
A tblrd poup IIDddled the lint two ,
......,., the outbunta alao bepn. It bad
apiDst tlie Unlvenlty bepn, but wltb
tandallaai";
......................
float .
beiDI both real and fictitious. It
been !mown (or a' month that President
Utile oupport at 1lnt- Ao tltlmated 200
or c1oon to block ...ay;· &amp;lipped 11re
comprlal the peat, _., contlnuq
Meyeroon weuld not Ntum to campos
to 260 pick~ were cll_.;ed in ama11
alarma; ........ edmiD ......... _..,.. ...
urcencles of life: war, hunger ,
after 1111 current leave of abieoce u
poups at eie.en iocatlona on the Main
Street campus. Clul att.endanoo was
ae-eret hideaways; boot-baroloc,
Director of The ~ly on Unloenlty
injlllllce,the profuatlon or natwe - all
Goalo and Governance, but lnateed wo·uld
reported to be about ellhty per cent
record·bumlaC and OU. · tonal fll
real, terribly real, but not more Utely to
become President of the Unloenlty or
normal. The prlndpal strike demands
mind'-'-; oboceoltilland ~both
yield to •n a_.emlc community's
were for the "otr"-inl of pollee;
lllllltenee that they dllappear than they - l'ienDiylvanla. The Actinl President, Dr.
obouted and painted a~ ~walland
Peter F. R.epn, bad not concerted a
autonomy for A, F, and other Colletea;
walk; and,~. for dap oo l!lld,
had to re1111on, philosophy or
procram or his own. The . - to aelect a
aboUtlon ot tile ROTC; rePudiation and
acrupuloully earrect rioWqulpped pollee
otateanaoship.
new pn.ldOot acitated 'demands for
el&lt;plllllon of Themia and other reEarch
A .. pop" m&amp;Dlc concert In tbe
marcbinl In aqueda or patrolllq iD the
participation
&amp;moDI
every
faction,
most
projects
not
approved
by
tbe
dialldents;
.
mal n bulldlnp ap1D1t oulbrab fll
I)'IIIIIMuin ftllllllnd the lint warniDg,
vocally uDoftl the formlnc student
total operi admlaoions; reinstatement or
stones and ~mba. Lel:lera from the
wbl!ll pop tumiJd into pot and the
dissenters. SWipelliO and uncertainty
certain faculty members who bad been
public pound in. Local, state ~
bulldlnl bad to be denied to further
national 1ep1aton iiiUod statements and
nouriabed more disaent. Dr. Regan's
denied ten we; llf'tlnc or the restrainlbg
C&gt;C&lt;M~oD~ or the aort. Sabotale directed
.civilized ~ons that the Univenlty
order which Dr. R.epn bad been obu,ed
at ROTC then piOducod "revolutionary
bold in-lp!lon&amp; &lt;Jo11eCea A ~ F
·a ct Ute a center or learniftland dlscua its
to ask the courts for; the Immediate
arouaed the antipathy of the commulilty
daftoo" IOIIIoDI inlllllded to thwart the
to .the point or fury. Group al'tei faculty
problems in a aeries of campuHrlde
replacement of Dr. R.epn by a committee
drill, and a damaPIII biWnd-run raid
group met and aiiDOilllcod that tbey
forums weie trampled before tbey
mede up from among his opponent&amp;, both
upon the ROTC ~ in the IYJD.
would · "do no more teachlnl unW the
a..,.. were bloulbtoplllll but. few or
sprouted. A riiiD( faculty diopute on new
students and faculty; and or oourae,
poUce bed been removed, then broke
the nfteudlin. 'l'bere wu a cautious
by-laws for ' the Senate opened, and
amnesty. No one called theae demands
ranks at tbe reallzatlo.D that lf tbey
rMuo, that many amoftl the studl!llts and
student activillla · put toeetber a pian
inaolent or wooUy-wltted or broadly
faculty were Wlbemootly oppoal to any
withheld their aervlces AlbaDy milbt very
which would constitute them as balf or a
unpopular or bypoiozltlcal; it was believed
prosecution, and In any event
lelllllatwe, with no executive or judicial
that the situation was too tenae and
weU witbbold their jiay. Efforts at
padficatlon acbleved only exacerbation.
branches propoaed.
dancerous to do 10. Sort words would
Protest real(natlons attained one day's
At the Faculty of Engineerq,
tum away wrath, or surely ought to in an
did inspire the IWIIIDC of a Unloenlty
inteUectual order. In dozeos or instances,
students belan a boycott of c1uoes to
fame, then lapaed into oblivion.
Ad..,..te and a Unloenlty Ombud.mlan, .
make Dr. Regan give an IB&gt;Ciate
the belief wu justified. Moreover, the
It ..... in Ibis period that a faculty
however, both from the nab or the
profe1110r the tenure which the Faculty
effort at dignity, tolerance and patience
member checked out a State-owned
faculty. Neither bad mum or a chance to
Provost and Tenure Committee bad
did credit to the University u sbowinc
station wagon and turned It over to
eBiablllb bls p-..ce before the violence
refuaed him. And Governor RockefeUer
what a University's standards ought to be
student&amp; to uae u a "strike" veblcle. State
of laler events aweP..t them Ulde. Their
ended . the construction moratorium
and why they are maturely admired. But
pollee overtook It on the Thruway
credeollala were viewed wltb indiJicence
without complete reconcUtstion or the
wldt was overlooke:l, sometimes wilfully
heeded east from Buffalo. At the aame
by the edminiltratlon and wltb hoatllity
lene&gt;ted, was the evident fact that such
protesting minorities. A controversy over
time, the camp,. chapter of the
by tbelt potential clientele.
_
who bad asked for the Amherst
values were little esteemed by aome of
American A1110dation of University
ROTC wu probably u defeDEiess ·a
work-atoppage in the f"ust place cropped
tbooe to whom they were ext.en&lt;Jed. It
Profesaors caUed In an o~ from the
tint -~~~ eo.ul!l' have ,been dtoaen. It
up and became diaagreeably contentious.
was plain to be oeen that tbeae persons
organization's national beedquarten, with
attrai!flid feWer ~'a " bd~ earnest
Curiously enough, the University failed to
bad become YAhoos and were not
a IUbaequent resultlftl condemnation or
and fodonl YOWII men, and apart from
edvance its strongest point or defenae,
members or any acedemic community at
the uae or pollee and o( aeveral other
them bad oo constitueney whatever.
w bleb was the belief that fair
aU .
aspects or tbe upheaval. Climactic
Moot elements of the Univenlty were
employment and labor practices were
Dr .. Regan and Dr. Bennis joined in a
violence swept the campus on the night
muoively scornful or or indi((erent to it.
esaentlal to a pubUc erit.erprUe in a
statement of dismay and shock and
or March 12. By the best, though
Findinl it ·an euy victory, the student
democracy.
plainly pointed out the immediate causes
unverified, account, fifty-el&amp;bt persons
.n.ent (aU too apparently mducod, too
were injured: balf of them Unlvenlty
Arid then, on the night or February
of the trouble, but their words were
evidently insienlficant • in numbers, too
students, high school students and
24, a thoroughly unequivocal, Joe
whipped away In the turbulent
dearly proPIIandized in the captivo
byotanders, tbe other balf policemen. The
CoUeglate activity, a basketball game,
atmosphere. A aecond bulletin from them
student new.spapers) moved on "to a much
fight aut'IOd from bulldlnc to bulldq,
vainly pleeded for self-control and broke the strain. The ostensible Issue wu
with the administration center, Hayes
. ~~on qf the bite!\ players, and In
equally vainl'y as It turned, out - pledged
monr,J~orta.!l! ~et: .t!ie "C oliepa..!&gt;!·
Warren. Benrus, Vice President for
the UnlversT~fls "trust in ita own students
Hall, an apparent but unattalned target.
thett name a crowd of wblte students and
non..tudenta occupied the floor and
Acedemic Development, bad prepared a
and faculty to restore calm." The strike
Property damqe wu extensive. CbarJes
Prospectus on the CoUege pian w.bich be
prevented the game. The black athletes,
now gripped the campus. Many buildings
or dyiWIIitlnp, Molotov cocktails and
bad placed before the whole acedemic
however, were conducting at that time
were altogether blocked off. The def11nce
sniper shots crowded the newopeper
their own negotiations. It is significant
community for scrutiny, modification
or the court order was open. On Sunday
columns, many of them never a-.1 as
the excitement moved past them. The
and ultimate approval or rejection in
that although the issue of racism was
morning, March 8, the pollee moved onto
repeatedly ralaed during the 1970
the campus in force, at the request or the
University at Buffalo's CouncU releaaed a
December. 'f:he Prospectus wu liberal,
enlightened and true to tbe original
Acting President. It bad been apparent
vigorous statement supportlnl the
troubles, the blacks generally dld not join
the whites in the whites' definition or the
continuation or ROTC which the Faculty
coucept of "centers of identification"
from the beginning that the extremes Senate and students bad voted down;
with which President Meyerson bad
issues of protest. In the precedinc faU
outraeed community and bard-core
Themis; the presence or city pollee on the
inspired the • campus to enthusiastic
quarter, black students bad energeticaUy
student agitators - would require this
campus; and t.he extension or the slttinl
Plarlalnc when be introduced it. It wu
disrupted the Health Sciences briefiy by
decision, but the Actin&amp; President bad
March grand jury for the purpoae or
expected to pus tbe Faculty Senate. And
pointinl out (which was true) that they
been reluctant to take It in the face of
conducting an investigation of the UB
it did pass . The passage was
were etrectlvely "barred by the admissions
certain and deep division. Dr. Bennis,
campus dlaorders. The General Alumni
simultaneously vitiated, however, by a
po Ucy from attempting to win
among others, resigned a part of his
Association aJIIned ltaeif with the
holdover amendment, puttinl the whole
edministrative responsibilities in protest.
professional d.,.... in medicine and
CouncU and in effect with all others
tbinl orr to another .vote in March.
dentistry. They conducted their protest~e center fed both extremes, and tbooe
depiori'nc the turqoll . Led by
With Ibis vote, the Coll"1"5 emerged as
and eotablisbed their point quite apart/ '
~o hoped to remain in It and preoerve It
"-emblyman Albert J. llalllbeck, state
the hardest laue'o! tbe year. The original
• distutbln&amp;ly apart - from the' whil"&lt;.
round themselves attacked from both
pian bad been for poups or students and
le&amp;lslatora of the area warned fll fines,
sides; charged with aeverity, cbarJed wltb
Now tbey were unllat.eWly confront)ng
bud&amp;etiry
cuts and other fiacal reprisals.
instructors with similar in~, to come
the administration with their own
weakness. There was still enough of an
together, in numbers possibly up to a
tntlmately, exbaiiiiiQn and the approach
sports-subsidy demand. One of t heir
inteUectual baae left in .the situation 10
of IP'inl vacation made retirement or the
tbouand, in an uaoci.ation which would
major req ulrements was that their
that this contradiction milbt have been
provide identity. concern and belonging
police polllble and, unW the final
athletics IUbventlon be the same whether
eaploited for the absurdity it wu, but
eruption in May, the olow indrawlftl of
in a university world otherwlae so 1arce IS
it came through EPIS or the Department
events prevented that. WJtbin a few hours
breath a welcome neceallty. The poUce
to swAllow up all ind\Yiduallty. The
of Physical Education. The University
of the arrival of the police aeveral
pbyllcal form which the Polle&amp;es would
were withdrawn on the lillbt of Mard1
officials were in a dUemma because they
thousand peraons marched aero• tbe
take in the Amherst construction WIS
25, after a preRDce of eilbfeeo days.
Were obU,ed to acknowiedle that EPIS
snow from one end or the campus to the
Oominloaioner Feiloetta and Dr. R.epn
ea&amp;erly awaited, each to be a quadrangle
provided a larger oubventlon, but one
other. The activist l_.ers conducted a
mede a joint anoouocement and Dr.
wblcb the National CoUeelate Athletic
"funeral" of the Univenlty on the next
or oasJs or other self-contained unit
growq within the whole orpnlsm. This
Aaaoclatlon would surely repudiate as a
day, Monday, and a "pig roast" on
Regan e~ his thanb.
aspect O( the CoUeges 'II'U effectively
tlolatlon of tbe wage scale. After the
Tueoday. A Rumor Control Center,
Several lillY lepcleo remalnod to be
sit-In of white non-atbl- on, the
established during t he lit-in and
frustrated so lone IS the moratorium WIS
paid. One wu the ruin of Dr. R.epn'a
in force; and it did not eaae the
gymoulum noor bad captured the Issue
demonstrations o( a year before, was
year, with its eapr-.1 hopea 10111
frustration to aee that both were -.!&gt;le
in prbled form and bad brought about
..,.ctivated and a Studl!llt-Faculty Patrol
extiocuhbed . Another was the
the ·caoce~~atlon of the- game and the
formed. For the edministratlon, notbinl
but oaly one wu possible. With pby.lcal
eatrantement of the Unloenlty from moot
diJpenal or the crowd by campus pollee,
worked. Dr. Re&amp;an appointed three
reaUty in abeyulce, the curricular form
of its pubUc, wbetber in Buffalo, Albany,
an aU-day IIIOI!tlol of a committee of
comparatively yoUftl faculty members to
wblch the Collepa would take pined
New York ar Waablncton. A tblrd wu
Unlvenlty officials wltb them achieved an
a committee to ln-ipte and report
lint iJ!Iportance. MoVing swiftly to ftll a
~ of funda which could have been uaed
apeement with the blacks; but It wu no
upon the "nightmarish violence" of the
vacuum, two of the embryo Collfces, A
for ·bulc and worthy educational ends,
more than announced than the dillldents,
lint riotinl on February 25 and 1ot back
and F, preaenled tbemael- u matured
but which were ....nowed up lnateed In
anpy at the preaence or camp,. pollee
a stronc condemnation, not or the riotlnl
damage and delay. Yet another wu the
and lOin&amp; opentlons. 'D&gt;ey claimed larJe
the night before and -mbled · in
but of hlmlelt. He clealgoated a loJIItlme
inexorable couq or the law and the
enroDmeots, a full starr or iDIIructors, a
courts -a bout those who bad
relatively amall numben in Norton
Buffalonian, William B. Lawl-, Dean or
rich and varied course -or study, and
underestimated the dvil power. Notable
iocalloos - just otf campus. The most
Unlbn, refuaed to reUnqulab the laaue and
the Law School at Notre Dame
JIDOIII lbeae were forty.flve ~ or
elementary probq into t.._ claims
aut'IOd toward Ha~es Hall to put out
Unlvenlty, to the chairmanship of what
/the~
faculty.
more
than
alxty
windows
wltb
rocks.
The
wa
callad
an
"at(lborltative"
bearing
showed them to have Utile IUbltallce Probitily no other laue in the weJt.
camp,. poHce, unable~ cope' wltb the
commission on campus d-015.
except for the off-camp,. iocatlooa; and
or ' 'violent" and "cn.entin(' and
lltuation, callad for oupport from the
Notbinl wu beard of it apln. Through
th"'!! quicltly became -a niiiDinc aonf
"radical" and "polarizlftl" and ''fuclat"
Tactical Unit of tbe.munldpal poUce, and
the UniYersity Council, there wu aet up a
which the community could not forebear
and ukidn contrownies of thee bitter
the courae or the next three montba was
Temporary HeariDC Commlaaion on
ocratcblnl. Hated, picketed, raided u
montba produced IUCb an Irreconcilable
thereby
dellermlned.
tampus
Dlaordera
as
a
dlaciplinary
device
unsanita ry, they not 1IJIIUrllrialnCY
di~,.. or opinion u "that or the
The ...,. or the black atbletea, wblch
ureeotly od hoc, and Ibis worked better.
turned into CIIIUil lobbifs for ftoutinl
Forty-Five. With most of tbelt number
even If It bad not been aettled ~
Dr. K'etter ' acreed to bead the
everything that Invited ftoutlftl.
mede up by uslstant prof..,... and
Dttle popular drawlaci&gt;O'*er, dlaappeared
Commillllon and it bepD its work
The Univenll;y stood at the brink, but

IICODd, opurlo• poup when they were
blumld and "--lld llllde&lt; ouch tem. •

:!~!:t -.:~~-=..:st.:

.. . reprieved for a mootb and a hal( by
01ristmu vacation and-a ""Y loai at~
and eumlnalloll perlod. Tbere were

life..._.

�I'~JJ,

8
lecturen damagingly paot the . .,. of
thirty but freobly free ol that of forty.
tbe poup m.ed Into Hay• HaD OD
Ilardi 15, a Sunclay In tbe mldat of the
wont peril to tbe Unl..aty, UDtll tbelr
complement r.cbed appenlllmately fifty.
It was a non-bane. day; the butldlnc
wu locked; It wu pabollad by pollee;
&amp;Dd Ita doon were poated with tbe
lnjua'ctlon notices which ·~ literate on
tbe campus bad been reading for a week.
EDterlng with tbe keys of one of their
IIOUP who bad aa oflice In Hayes, aad
eaplalnl.ng to tbe pollee lnllde the doors
that they were go... to tbelr om.,.., they
went Instead to the large office of the
Pnlldent, Martin Mey...,n, wbldl ID his
abaenee bad been unuaad euept for
ocbeduled meetqs. Two of the VIce
Presidents of tbe Unl..aty, be...
IIIIIIIDOned, lilted them to leaft. Upon
tbe refuaal of all but four or n.. to do oo,
tbe remaining forty.fhe w e r e - aad
taken downtown . in pollee vans to have
tbeir names entered on tbe blotter.
There was much publicity. News
ltoriel., news photos, teletision, r.dio ,
columna of letters to tbe papers, and
above all a paaorama of puj&gt;llc meetlnp pro, con, and lndlenant - tonk space In
print &amp;Dd air for many days. The
oueoessive stages of the court proceas
against tbe Forty-Fiw cooled thinp off
with delay, heated them up again with a
flndlag of criminal contempt, and, after
another interval, broucht the matter to a
boD with the ~ of thtrty-day
oentencea &amp;Dd fines. The effect "lfU
electrolytic. Penom - aDd tbey were the
majority on campus and the majority In
the community - who bad tried to keep
their view whole found It split aad
tbemsel...,. altogether on one side or the
other. "When a Court of this kind makes
an order, tbose abow all that ought to
comply with it ""' th- who are charged
with the responsibility of teacbtng· our
yoq people,'' obserwd the Justice who
puaed sentence. ''Tbe punlabment so far
exceeds what offense • If any . there was
u to be incredible," replied the then Vice
Chairman of the Faculty Senate. Further
delay for appeal of the sentence put the
matter oft further, to tbe general relief,
and the social fabric began to re-knit
itself a bit. Everyone remained keenly
aware , however, that academia
confronted both itself and the
community In a situ.ation of this sort. To
say that the matter was cut and dried,
open and shut, and that the challengers of
the Law must bow to its yoke tonk no
account of the Jeffersonian motives
which the Forty-Five claimed. To praise
the group as bold young idealists Ignored
their mature years, their indirect
methods, and the dependence upon legal
. counael and hat-passing. The outcome
seemed to make manifest, however, that
no statement of altruistic motiyes, no
appeal to abhorrence of police control,
no campaign of lapel buttons and
fund-raising overbore the fundamental
mistake of judgment: an intentional
flouting of a court order. Only those who
bad not watched tbe same thing
happening when other campuses
challenged the courts could have been
surpriaed.

Gradually it began to dawn on many
that the Uniwrsity might have come close
to extinction. It began to struate to its
knees, then to Its feet. Chancellor Gould
of SUNY o fficially appointed a
committee drawa up by .the Acting
Plesident to tonk toward some resolving of
- . bealtng of wounds, and renewal of
common. alras. Tbtrty deans, department
dlalrmen &amp;Dd profesoors put together a
SurviVII Group to try In its way to readl
dedllom &amp;Dd make recommendatlona. It
took a misstep, however, In challenging
the Temporary . Hearing Commlasion on
Campus Disorders, for the Ketter
Commission, u it wai known, wu ooe of
tbe f'"" - 1 : ; which bad put out to
OD tbe heaving -len which WU still
alloat. Tbe SuniVII Group subaequently
broadened both Its membersblp &amp;Dd Ita
comment, t.ulng llatementa on the
p1ter1a It held to be ault:able In the Mardi
for a ai...-x to floeoldent Mey...,n &amp;Dd
ezpreaalng its bewilderment at cbuJoa of
coatempt, eltber civil or crlmlnal, aplnat
tbe Forty-Fiw. Many-of Ita llllllo&gt;..era
olpad both llatemeata, Nnad only
or tbe other, a fi1W neitber. In
.x&gt;t11er eftort at pouplng opiDion, a
Taak Force _9D Academic Reform

•a

appeand; aDd 1D otlll aaotber, a SUNY
Oommltjee for a UDIM'Iity pabllallad a
long ~...-. . . . . . .-u... to
the lmprovemeat aad ~ of
• academic e:a:elleooe. It wu a commodity
In dlscour"'hhCCY abort supply. By
IDillllfeotlng lbelf at tbla momeat, tbe
- • or the C.len at tbe Unlwraity,
the enter for Sdeatlflc Meuurement
&amp;Dd Instrumentatloa, appeared to .......,.
to tbts appeal; It looked forward to
....... u a point of common meetiiiC In
the .-reb actltltlea of the pbyolcal and
bio-medical adencea.
Now op1n tbe Interminably pending
matter of the Colleges came up, for the
vote which bad been compromlaed by
amendment ID December. Becau.. of the
strong permnalltles of both tbeV faculty
leaden and their student leaden, OoUeces
A and F had aewr loot tbe momentum
and limelight which they bad Initially
secured. Rather, they bad lncreaaed them.
For their defenders, they had the wladom
and nobility or Socrates, continually
haruoed by a demand that they drink
hemlock. For their opponents, they
suggested the need for a Conimittee of
Public Safety with the guillotine all
ready. Curricular reform and faculty
Independence were bound up In every
conalderation of them; so were civil
'\-disorder and moral reprobation. Given
theae terms, It wu hard to bold a vote on
them and possibly even, harder to in&amp;llt
that the vote would -be Vllld, memories
quailing at tbe recollection of packed
racutty meetings - aad this time one
mo..,. the historical scene for tbe third
time - turning their thumbs down and
calling for the liona. The Faculty Senate,
now voting upon four proposals for tbe
organization of the Colleges, chose the
one most acceptable to Colleges A aDd F,
least acceptable to .the administration.
The plan supported full autonomy for the
Colteges, forbade review of their
programs or curricula, &amp;Dd put In for their
share of the Uni-ty's budget "in
proportl&lt;fn to the contribution of the
Collegiate units to tbe Unlwrsity's
educational goals." No one was so unkind
as to suggest that in that case the
Unlwrsity would be gettlug oft very
cheaply. Five Colleges - A, B, D, E, and
F, - reported themselves as in existence,
together with ten workshops which were
expected to be preliminary to other
colleges. These workshops defined their
interests as: law and society, international
affairs, A fro -American studies,
socio-tecbnical systems, comparative
historical studies, ecology, modernity
"the redemptive processes whereby the
individual and the University may recover
the sense of 'self' lost through psycbtc
alienation and spatial dislocation,"
communication, mathematical science,
and health and society. An
unexceptionable list.
For many undergraduates and for the
professors giving instruction to them, and
e1en at gradualie and professional levels,
the normal work of the University, which
had been diverted, halted and shattered,
now falteringly resumed. But another
heavy stroke lnterwned, this time one of
the strokes of tbe unexpected which
make history so Inhumanly capricious.
The dispatch of American troops to
Cambodia dangerously sharpened the
almost universal opposition among
academics and tbe young to the United
States' involwment In Southeast Asia. At
the same time, four atudents at Kent
State Unlwrsity, Ohio, were shot to
death. Unrest &amp;Dd outrage bural out
again. Both eyents seized tbe public's
attention In sudl vulnerably and directly
human terms (the white public, that is;
blacks bltliedy pointed out that no-body
-mOd to be proportionately borrlfied at
the shooting to deeth of black students In
Jackson , Mlsaiallppl) • bad Decharacterized tbe &amp;Dd e-.eats of two
mnntba before. A mock funeral for the
Uni-ty oeemed a strong
In

eeaure

March. Now tbere wu indisputable cauae
ror moumiDg.

Once apin, however, tbe ca~ eemed
to

ran

Immediately Into the banda of
those who permitted It no "dlplty or
eloquence, but who turned It Instead Into
tbe familiar dreary pattem of maidleo,
aboutl, almleu window-breakiDI,
ultlmaie obacelllty. lllopDa and -~
coafrontatloaa with the pollee •
Ptedlctably, the commuDity ~ with

dlatalte aDd the UDIM'IIty loa yet more
poaDII. tiDdo&lt; the lmpa&lt;t ol the lleODd

.... of troabla..-... ...,, .......... the

U.u...~ty doaadJY ~uad In mott
1 - , It all ' but ...cl ID otben.
Students who bad opeDt tbeV time away
ln&gt;m boob aad llbantorloa were DOt
prepared to take examlnatfo!ll: Under
reluad rules, they did aot baw to. The
choice of a limple paallng p1lde wu
widely permitted, altboup ltudeats
de... enoacb to - what tbla ..t of
record would do to tbelr future oamla&amp;
opportunltiea ulted to try ror aometbiDg
better. Res:ldence balla emptied, laJie
numben of students departed under .a a
omclally decland aate of "'lpltlcut
hazards" wblcb followed ..umptlon of
violence, &amp;Dd only • f - of tbe more
determined clefacera of -u. remaiDed to
repaint them with tbeV sentiments In
time for Commencement. 'lbougbtful
admlnillntorl, prof_,.. &amp;Dd students all
tbat a unlwralty Ia an orpn of the
social body 'and ·dra;.. from aad
contributes to the same d.rcutatory
system. :J'be eveilts of May made dear, u
th- of March bad .,....,. .been able to do,
the urgent need to tiD~ common and
reuooed intellectual staedards, aa
unforced recoCnttlon of me~m &amp;Dd tuuin,
and abow all a protecllw routine,
unaltered by ewry change of wind.

JrTJ

........... pride bilt ... the..,......_
.............. Ill the llleet _ . . . . . ol
- . : b lllndol wlddo Loellwaet_.ID

aaaeua &amp;Dd braaclaea laolll. Tile

1J1e-bo1Dba olthe N- Oodla...,.......,

JDUdl boolt-laemlat; bat the Ualwalty'..a
role Ia DOt to- dOipllr ol _ . . tbla
..,....,., but to dool...s It • the -..&amp; of
ICbolanblp aad the 'fital ol tbe
lnotltutlon.
AI Ia a llal8mellt, the floeold...t of the ~ .... daer,
tbla Ia the mle 'Wblcb _,. l'rloDo1 aad
.....,t of tbe t1Diwnlty muat Jlllly.
"Primary among our CODCirlll . . . tboae
of aelloi8NIIp • • . 'l1lroulh It . . IDlY
at&amp;ala the ability to ~lrllute to aad
. plde eultura aad d"IIIJzatloaa wbldl ...
both eomplex aad ledmlcal, piDIDc &amp;D
................ ol wbldl penDita ...
to ~ a lwmiDe culture••• "All four
elemeata of the Uaherllty muat
coDliDually t.p ID mled tbelr duty to
d.rillzatloa, tbat - 1 wblcb Ia"., frlcile
tbat It caa lbatter ID a bubalous IDilaat.
Li&gt;enl educatloa muat be aal"fllled to
lad aad moderate tbe ratber lfllbby
proddiDp wblcb p.-tly determiDe tbe
purault of IDOit d..,_. . _
Hoaeaty demaads that we
ackaowledce tbat yoq people at a
contemponry uahmity ""' of two
ltlads: th- who - k leamiDg &amp;Dd those
who reject lt. The latter poup muat In
v
tum be rejected; In favor of aame of the
four-fiftba or AmeriC&amp;DI wh- oge
Those who could endure· this
qualifies them for. coUece training, but
sorrowful year and then look at the
wb- circumstances do not. Among
Unlversity with hope are rare, but their
tbNe millions are, of c:oune, any who are
numbers must Increase If tbe University is
• kept from unlwrslty study by lack of
to surviw. At a clobal range, · their
lliterell, by the - c e or a family ·
numbers must lncliaae if civilized life Is
tradition for It, by Immaturity,. poor
to surviw. How bleak a victory Is mere
health or Inadequate aecondary scbooliilg;
survival, one may well say; and In • world
but tbe ere·~ part ... excluded by
of only ordinary adwrsity, one "lfould be
poverty. A · university's greatest socW
right. It the Forest of Arden were altthat
oervlce caa be 'to these pe..,as. The
the exiled and reviled plll1RIIt of truth bad
fortunate one-firth 'who ""' enrolled caa
to fear, then, along with Its mild and
perform their own part of this civic
gentle duke one could persuade oneself
oervlce by meeting tbe standards to whidl
that adwrsity, venomous and toadlike
good fortune has admitted them.
though it be, wears yet a precious jewel in
This In oo way requires that tbey
Its bead . In a scene of belllcerence and
abandon ihe natural geDlus of youth for
contumacy, mildness Is • .dlfftcult quality
collin&amp; their elders' attention to boles In
to preserve, and In any case it may be
the world's morality. Great historical'
only the gentler surface to the hard road
reforms haw been made, and will be
to recovery which a society that has spent
made again , by young people eager to put
the past year in maiming itself must fmd .
Into effect the thoughts of the
This, or whatever other predous jewel the
philo.,phers tbey haw read and the
past year's ugliness may conceal, must be
visioas of the poets. In the last quarter of
looked for - looked for, set and polished
the eighteenth · century - " Bliss was -it in
- by Inflamed students, polarized faculty
the dawn to be alive!" - those which
members, harassed administrators, and
took place involwd the university
bewildered citizens of the community
students of the entire Wesl2m world.
alike.
Like most things iD Ufe, howeverl&lt;' the
Let the community remind ltaelf, for
enormous changes of that era had ~not
example, of a uniwrsity's potential to be
only their bright side - the brilliant"and
one of the graces and greatnesaes of the
dazzling young men joining George
area, along with the Falls, the elms, the
Washington &amp;Dd tben attracted to the
orchestras, libraries and art plleries, and
founding of a constitutional democracy ultimately the repurified air and waters.
but their dark one, with equally young
The Falls haw been commercialized, yet
enthusiasts preparing tbe way for
their gplendor persists. Tbe elma ""' dying
Bonaparte.
..
from the Dutch disease, but thooe which Can the Uni-ty aene both the
remain may be .rescued by a last-minute
Immaterial and the material alms of
discovery; In any case, their extirpation
learning, the pre-lion of grace and
from whole nelebb6rhoods points a
practicality in tbe same dtlzen? Without
lesoon of what any kind of plague caa do.
exception, ao matter ID what country or
By admired contrast, tbe principal
in what oge, unlveraltlea uy to produce
gallery, with Its related attractions, Is so
citl2eas who caa oupport the,_.-. At
vigorously healthy u to attract tbe praise
the same lime, tbe or them wlab to
of many foreign visitors wbo give It an
ohape civilized inen who caa ihe In
equal paragraph with Niagara Falls in
contemplallw harmony with others. To
their homeward letters. The Philharmonic
put It another way, tbe aim Is to produce
Orchestra, now tbe recipient of a large
a man who can earn his bread In the
grant, looks at its Immediate future with
sweat of his brow &amp;Dd who will a1oo cast
a confidence bolstered by excellent haUs
it nobly upon the waters. The conflict
and a devoted public. Music, Indeed, may
between tbe two moll- Ia llwp, liut
be tbe foremost of tbe attractions In
perfectly reconcilable. Unheraltloa do
Buffalo, and if eo, owes much of its
br... forth
surprlllng number ol
strength to tbe Uniwrsity's Music
creatures who can mow on both tbe Ideal
Department's setting a stan- of
&amp;Dd tbe tactual levels, the humane aad ,
performance which has survi"fed the
the human, In the euipyre&amp;D aDd by tbe
vandallzlng of Its buildings aad the
light of common day.
dlstreos of Ita Caculty.
. In a .,lemn way, a report on tbe Stale
On an equal scale, tbe Uni...,...;ty
Unlveraity of New Yort at Buffalo at the
Ubraries, aloo vandalized &amp;Dd deCaced
end of ouch a year u tbe one tbrnup
both In &amp;Dd out, gro• steadDy u one of
wblch It baa juat p.-1 Ia a proapectus.
tbe major ...,.....,.. of tbe community. It
'lbia Ia not to say that It now fDfiOll the
Is probably not true - Dot yet, at aay rate
ewats of tbia all too - t paot; but It
- u tbe dlallluaioned poet-prot..,. Karl
retelh them In tem. of tbe future. In the
Sbapl.ro tbiilb, that the typical
titerai-&amp;Dd appeellng aenae of proipechu;
"studeut's" attitude toward a book Ia to
It looks forward. Hardly a d.,... Ia
tbrnw It to tbe floor and rwi out to his
granted, • prot..,. naulted, • atudent 1
car, baaafooted. Hundreds of studenta•(oo
admitted, a ceremony held, a llloDe
quallfylag quotation marb needed) go-to
turned, except In the lllbt of wbat the
the !.lb.- ..... day to read, mark,
Unhenlty Ja to mean.
leem, &amp;Dd lmrardly diCeot the fruits pf
wladom they ·rind tbere. A community
Rob!rt L. Ketter "
wbldl baa a D0tewortl'Y public library
October, 1970
Prelldent

a

''.&amp;ll;.C~J;?\ ;t.r;!\L1"!~1io

~h (

'.'1\"t:t

~·1.-:-n'l' .1nsmr.+v om ·tm

-iS-l!scl't \,~..Bd f": ld! Mit' 1 1t:8•l

�p~

ll.l91l

'REPoRTER..;,

9

Kay Mazzo Danres an Eight-Day Week '71 GradNeedsTelescope
By BARBARA GAIL ROWES
On the -eighth day of the
....,t, following SUnday, the
memben1 ol the New Yorl&lt; City

Ballet Nllt.

"We stay as far r- the
theatre .. - ......" Kay
Mazzo.
the COIIIIIIIII.Y's youngest principal dancer. '"'be
tzoub1e is-most of us live
around the conll!ll'."
GiYe artistic director George
Balsn&lt;:biDe a claDcer ~his

=r~ wr:. tha~
is. sltbOush his disciples admit
U:ere•s aworld beyond his foot-

steps,. few take actbe roles in
anything aoept his balleta. His
danre company beccJa8l ~
pulsion, not .career. It is a
world upon which daDcera lean
for emotional, as well as tbMt-ricsl fulllllmeot
"We're tmined to see everythiog in terms of feet, good feet
and bad feet," Miss Mazzo. "We're . not deDyiilg it's a
limited perspective. But we're
not expsnding it either.•
Miss Mazzo will be .dancing
at Domus, February 19 and j!O,
8:00 p.m., along with Tony
Blum and Peter Martina of the
New York City Ballet Admission to the ,U UAikponsored
· performances I, free_ .
"This has been my world
since age 12. Competition
makes friendships in it hard,
but dancers share a bond,"
Miss Mazzo says. "It's an obsession with our work. It exeludes non-professionals and
makes mingling outside the
company dil6cult procedure .
Even at social parties, I'D!. con.stantly putting my foot in my
mouth."
Although it's been projected
with a chsmpagne film, focusing on midnight suppers and
European tours, that image of
ballet is shot. Forget the romantic idyll. American ballet
is a business, a booming busin..s. Last fall box office re-·
ceipts surpassed those of a David Merricli hit Broadway

To Disrover a Job Opening
By STEVE LIPMAN
"On the campus of the State
University of New York at
Buffalo, a big manufacturing
company's recruiter scans the
file nf one student H£, is, the
dossier says. a teaching fellow
and a straight--A student, beading for a Ph.D. in English, with
a strong secondary interest 'in
science. A rare catch for any
big company: potentially a
high-level salesman, perbaps.
or public relations executive.
This student, this talented
young man, can hope for halfa-dozen promising job offers before he grailuates. He can pick
and choose.'' ( Playboy, April
1970)
Jay Sincoff is a senior majoring in business with a B average. He is president of the
Professional Business Association, president of the B'nai
B'rith Hillel Foundation, a
member of the Student Athletic Review Board, and a fundraiser, chairman, or member of
half a dozen other organizations. He has a flashing smile,
a salesman's disposition, and
his friends consider him a
"sure-fire business leader." A
fine catch for any business in
need of new talent. To date,
Jay has received almost 60 employment rejections. (SUNYAB, February, 1971 )
The 1971 college graduate
can do all sorts of things after
he leaves school-join the Marines, or the Peace Corps, or
a commune. About the only
thing he can't do is get a good
job. With the job market tight,
and getting tighter, today's college graduate almost has to use
a telescope to spot an opening.
AB more war babies, especially women and returning veterans, seardt for positions, auto-mation and a floundering economy shut the doors. This campus's Placement and Career
Guidance Office has experienced "close to 25 per cent
cancellation Of on~pus interviewing programs," says
Larry Drake, associate director.
During the first week of February alone, at least seven of 19
businesses cancelled scheduled
interviews. These !J»:luded giants like IBM. ~al Motors
Acceptance Corporation, and
General Foods, as well as amaller businesses such as Lincoln
Rochester Trust Co., and Niagara Machine and Tool.
''They just don't have any positions to offer," explains Eugene Martell, director of the
Placement Office.
While there are fewer openings, the number of applicants
jumps each year. In 1968-69,
Martell's office helped prepare
resumes for 18,600 students.
Last year, that number went to
21,000 and Martell expects it
to go higber this year.
The situation on this campus
is better than on most, howeYer.
Recruiters find multi-disciplined schools more attractive
than technical colleges or strict--

ina and, consequently, overly fine an artist- how well she is
conscious of my immaturity," able to project a mood. That's
she says. "After rehearsals, I'd always my goal, it's every danestudy the older dancers, then er's. That is. to project your
model my personality after spirit upon the audience.
them. Unfortunately, frequent"The trouble is-spirits ftucly I crossed my cues. When we tuste. There are some nights I
performed at the White House look at my partner and think:
for the Kennedys, I assumed ·Oh no, not him again' Let's
such a complacent air that I face it- a performer is predidn't even smile when the dominantly human. AB much
President cracked a joke."
as I love dance, if the washing
When the Robbins' troupe machine breaks down, if my
disbanded, she was invited to date doesn't show, if I catch
join the New York City Ballet. cold, it's rough to ftoat on stage
It was the beginning of a pri- like a swan. There are some
vate obstacle course which ran nights when I feel like a crow,
for three years: daily subway and I have to tum my spirit
trips between the Rhodes Pri- off and superficiality on. A lot
vate School and the theatre. of times the audience doesn't
While most ballerinas quit high catch it, but sometimes they do.
liChool to devote total energy
"After a performance, a dancto ballet, Miss Mazzo's father er is left alone to evaluate for
show.
forbade it. •
herself. We're all our own
A veteran nf nine years in
"He believed in education," roughest critics. In fact, this
this business, Kay Milzzo re- tihe says. "I believed in the bal- year, after a performance of
ceived her due recognition· two let. We have mutual stubborn 'Midsummer Night's Dream,' I
years ago when prima ballerina · streaks."
became hysterical in my dressSuzanne Farrell suddenly reWhen New York magazine ing room. Mr. Balanchine acsigned, leaving an impressive editor Clay Felker criticized tuslly came to the door to cheer
repertoine unassigned. Although her literary performance for me up. 'Not bad at all,' he said.
she doea not dance all Miss Carson MacCullers and F. 'Oh, I · know that,' I replied.
Farrell's former roles, Miss Scott Fitzgerald, she replied, 'But the point is, not very
Mazzo has stopped- into many "What does he expect? Marcel good.'
"After most performances,
of the lyrical ones, earning gen- Proust? After dancing six hours
erally favorable comparisons a day, woUld anyone proceed I'll shower, change into a pair
with the former star.
to exercise her mind? It's not of slacks and walk home. So
About such comparisons she that dancers are dumb; it's just where's the glamour? True, that
says, "It's illogical to dissect that we're tired!"
walk home is 11 regular advenan individual's performance 'Interviews Bore Me'
ture, but rm sure that's not
with analogies. I ani whateYer
But not today. Suddenly, what they mean by the in1 am at the moment of the bal- without apparent cause, she trigues ,of the theatrical life.
let. It makes me uncomfortable bounces out of the nondescript
"Years ago the company used
to be compared with anyone. coffee shop (after insisting up- to go out every night for hamI\ut more than that, it makes on paying for our cokes), and burgers, but it's changed now.
me mad."
leads the way into Central We'll all go our separate ways.
Rarely is she as outspoken; . Park. With a Mary PopJlins Me? I usually have a piece of
in fact, colleagues deacribe her impertinence, she explains, Schrafft's chocolate cake. at
as a silent muse: "She'd rather '·'Illeae interviews bore me to home and chat with Johnny
die than curse you out," they death; I can't stand listening to Carson from the tub, that is,
say. Confronted, abe denies my own w6rds for this long.. . . he doea the chatting on telesuch deocription.
.
"Dancers exercise their feet vision. Then I read a bit to
Althouch abe is clasBical on- much better than their minds. unwind, and go to sleep. Claas
stage, the o«-atap Kay Mazzo . What I bave to say is articu- .the next morning begins at 11
(ler8I&gt;Djfles the aimplic;ity abe lated through movement It's
a.m. and I've only missed one
Praises. She breezes through the only expression with which session in nine years! I'd bate
the tbMtre, usually alone, with I'm comfortable. We become to break the record."
a Pleasant but dietadlad air. as dancers becauae dance offers
She paused.
if she had -.red out her us an expression, a Janiuage
"You know, I think that's
life in tablespoons and l'l!ll8r\'ed more agreeable than words. • just about my life. I've taken
partjculu ingredients for the Yet, ironicslly, audiences 81- about two dozen trips to Euproper occasions. In othen, ways search for an inte1Jectual rope, twice to Russia, dined
such .......,. Ddjht .be alfecta- meaning · in the dance. They with -Princess Grace in Monte
tion. But Miss Mazzo carries it congratulste me on an 'intelli- Carlo and obeerved Richard
off like a sby thoroughbred: a gent intarpretation.' But the Burton in person.' But tlll8l
1r1tJfP1a cum laude from-the best Yery essence of dance'is emo- are flashes m an aU-work, ingirls' flnisbing school with a tioo, not mind. You don't baYe frequent--play pan. It's an eight-to understand the dance; it hour, eight--day job, with unModigliani poise.
Sbe bepii to develop a 8()- isn't ultimately an intellectual employment cbecb paying the
IJhisticated aiiuplicit;y 88 early proc:a111. You haw to feel the rent about ten weeb a year.
as age 15, ""'- .Jerome li&lt;Jb. dance, as one responds to 'lbere's no material resson ..n bins introduced her as the music.
·
the world for doing' it IIi fact,
YClUII&amp;IeBt member o1. Ballets:
'!1 don't want people to un- I don't know any other !JuliuUSA, a modern jazz troupe derstand me on stage. I want where a llirl can work eight
which tou•ed tbrou8bout tbe them to feel a perfonnaDce, to days a ~ for nine years, and
United Siatal and ~
recognize the emotional tone in suddenly be proclaimed an
"But I the beby bailer::_• my movement '!bat's how I d&amp;- overnight .....,..._"
·

ly liberal arts colleges. "We
like the diversified program
U / B provides," says Dam Carbone, geoerai J)eftiOIUII!i supervisor of New 'York Telepbone
Company. "We've had good
SUCCI!lBB here."
Carbone advisss this year's
graduates "to be more auressive Wben you're loolWur for a
job. You haYe to seardi for a
good job. It W~m't come to you
anymore.'' One of the major

::~~:=
ity, Carbone feela. Twenty..UX of 40 recruiters on campus the
last two weeks listed some d&amp;gree of mobility as a job prerequisite. "If you W~m't travel,
you W~m't get hired," Carbone
counsels.
.
Other traits in interviewees
that recruiters like Carbone
look for are: above average
grades, varied extra-eurricular
activities, and a knowledge of
type of career wanted. "Wben
he walks into an interview,U
says Carbone, "a student should
know what he wants to do, and
more importantly, wbat he
doesn'~ want to do." In addition, Carbone advises the jobseeker "to be very well prepared on the company that's
interviewing him. It's a waste
of both people's time to spend
half an hour discussing a job
the conipany doesn't offer."
There might he a change for
the better in the future. Drake
feels that the "economy should
get stronger this summer," but
there will he a six to eightmonth delay before the job
market gelo back on its feet."
After that, perhaps, a graduate can pick and choose again.

Bulls' Fans ,
Still Hoping
No one is willing to speak
"for the record" but rumors
persist that alumni, student
and community boosters of
U/ B football bave not yet given
up on a behind-tbe-6cenes move
to pers-.wle the State to save
the SJJOrt through a direct appropriation of funds.
Whatever firm base exists
fur the continuation of these
efforts is not knowll. but apparently no one con~ with
the movement has been given
a firm, final "no." Contacts
are reported to still be 110inll
on with legislators and State
officials.
Meanwhile, the Buffalo Evening News reports that a petition asking for support, with

~~en!, "t"~~
colm Wilaon and that another
is still being circulsted.
Athletic Director Harry Fritz
reports that 8100011 many other
"quiet efforts," Alumnus Gerry
Philbin of the New Yor1&lt; Jets
(and a Rockefeller worker in
the laat campaign) "has ..,.._
tacted several people who know
the Governor personally."
Mesnwbile, a former U/B
coach-James B. Wilson ol
Buffalo- has proposed c 1u b
football as a "fair substitute,"

~~t ~~t!."\.!U.:

club programs that would make
for crowd-pleasing rivalries.
U/B's Fritz seems cool to the
idea, noting that club foothall
might be an ''interim thing,"
but that equipment and traveling eqJeD8e6 would be stiff.
.

'What are yw &amp;ollie te
be -ployed at wbea
yw ~te?•

-

HEI:PI
-ToGotlt-

LEGAl INFORMATION AND/OR

ASSISTANCE
Oflice of the - · 114 Cr-..·
by Hall, Ext. 4442

�1'--, II,

~

10

GSA Turns out Qunnun, World~k
To Feature
Passes Series of Items
(New Look'

The Greduate Student ABI»ciation (GSA) was finally able
to muster enough members for
a quorum Monday night after
a aeries of three meetinp where
the minimum of 31 members
failed to appear.
The main order of busine88
was to p8lll on propoaals dis~ at these previous meetings. Included in the actions
were lli&gt;PI'OVal ol funds to retain a-law firm, a motion
strongly recommending that
the l'Ublications Board give
$2,500 to the pbii08QI&gt;bic journal TeW., and a resolution add.-! to the Graduate School
Esecutive Council aa part of a
drive by GSA to raise the minimum graduate stipend~
A study conducted by the
GSA Stipend Committee showed that a student without cJe.
pendent&amp; needs at least $3,000
to
in the Buftalo area. A
previous GSA meeting decided
the $3,000 figure was too low

and asked for a $3,450 stipend.
Monday's resolution asked the
Graduate School Executive
Council to have departments
include in their aeceptance letters a statement advising a student that if his stipend is below
$3,450 for ten months, he will
need extm money to live here.
The GSA also voted on several reeolutioos or political im-

By SUSAN G_REENWOOD
,.,_.,. Sc.ll

There'll be some chanpo

tional Week. The Man:b 1
through 7 celebration will have
a new emphasis. Gone will be
the traditional "show and tell"

:r~"!t:Uu;~

ask foreign students if they
wesr shoes at home. Instead,
the Week will try to break
down stereotypes through films,
lectures, literature, d is p I a y s
and panel discussions t h a t
show ~ foreign cultures as
they really are.
The theme will be ''Yesterday and Tomorrow-Politics
and Culture."
The chairman Kathy DeMart and her co-dlairman, Fidele Dionou, !"'!"' the new look
festival will bnng together as
many departments and people
as possible. The activity bas
received funding from the Student Association and ~ from
its International A1fair8 Coordinator Edgar Rojas.
The coordinating committee
already bas the English Department sponsoring a series of
French filma during the week
and AnthropolofO' has promised
to conduct panel discussions. In
addition, foreign fsculty members have volunteered to speak
about their native lands.
Not all the events will be
new. You can still plan to go
to the traditional food-tasting
party. It's scheduled for Friday night as part or a talent
show-fiesta that promises to
last all nighL
On Saturday, the keynote
speech remains but the traditional dinner and ball have
been dropped in favor of a reception for the keynote speaker. This yesr, the proposed
speaker is U Thant, secretarygeneral of the United Nations,
but &amp;rri!Pgements have no t
been finalized.
Traditional displsys w iII
have a changed emphasis, and
the tables will also have takehome I i.te rat u r e about the
countries. The displays will be
in Norton's Haas Lounge since
the group has outgrown the
Center Gallery.
In the Center Gallery during
the week will be a show of art
work by three U / B foreign students- photography by Bina
Chatan, Iran; oil paintings by
Cecilia Loper, Columbia; and
sculpture by Robert Chou, China. The work of a Palestinian
artist from Washington, D.C.,
will also be on displ&amp;y.
Food Service will also participate, by serving international dishes m the cafeteria
during the week.
Not all events have been definitely scheduled .yeL "We're
still looking for people to do
tbinp." Miss DeMart 88ys.

po~~p· voflaSilpport for

the ROTC 19 and the Hayes
45 in 41their continuing attempts to maintain the principles of free speech and political freedom and to applaud
(them) in their resistance to

!':~eif~~

vote on this motion was 15 for,
7 apinst and 5 abstentions.
Much of the meetin' was
taken up in the discussion of
a three-part motion introduced
by Roger Cook, SociolO£Y, concerning the expulsions of Alan
a.-nbaum and Terry Keegan.
Thi! finJt part of Cook's motion
is "'lbe GSA demands the reinstatement of Alan Roeenbeum and Terry Keegan to full
graduate status, effective immediately." This motion was deBy SUZANNE METLGER
fested by a 2-to-1 margin due
• SIMI
to the repreeentatives' wish to
"I don't know whether the focus on the process uaed to exstudents su1&gt;conscioualy or con- pel the two rather than the
sciously knew it, but scatology people involved.
is the study of animal dropThe second section of Cook's
pinp." remarked Dr. Laurence motion was amended with the
Berlowitz, associate professor final wording being: "The exof biology.
pulsion of Keegan and RosenHopefully, they didn't know baum appears to have violsted
it at all, but, in any case, the due process ..In light of this, the
Biology Department bas a GSA demands reinstatement,
SCATE. Two biology majors, pending review by a legally
Bany Fisher, senior, and Eric competent group outside the
Herman, junior, felt that their University." The group pessed
· department needed its own this resolution with a vote of
COW1le and teacher evaluation
22 for, 2 against and 1 ab-apart from the University- stention.
wide critique. They instigated
The third section of Cook's
a questionnaire and compiled motion reads: ''The GSA joins
·the data for the 25-page docu- the Student Association of the
ment which should he ready in State Universiiy in its Federal
about a month, according to court action requesting that a
Fisher.
'Tluee-Judge District Court be
Biology's SCATE so far bas convened to rule upon the conbeen supported by department stitutionality of ~ Board of
funds, but Fisher bopes to get Trusl.ell&amp;' resolution establishaid from the Student Associa- ing hesring commissions on
tion for the final printing, campus unresL • " The final vote
which, be 88YS. will be done in on this motion was 22 for, 1
the least expenaive way.
against and 4 abstentions. This
The questionnaire included final section was a motion of
specific and di88ecting ques- "moral suppbrt" and did not
lions regarding the department, give the State Student Associasuch as "Wbo is your lab teach- tion any funds.
er?" "Is your lab overcrowdThe final political motion
ed?" And, of particular sig- was the approval by 13 to 8 of
nificsnce to majors in the field, a motion putting the GSA on
''Do you feel that all the record as "condemning the lst.COWIIOII which you have been
est incursion in Indo China."
In other actions, the GSA
required to take are necessary?"
In addition, graduate teachers recognized the following clube:
wrote deecriptions of their own Developmental . PsycholO£Y,
courses which will be included Engineering Science, Chinese
in the document. Generally, Graduate Students Association,
COIIIIDellt&amp; Fisher, student rea&lt;&gt;and the Mother Language Astiotls indicate a feeling that the sociation. The GSA also voted
department is disorganized, but to Jive its $5,000 lliM Comhe adcQ, faculty are aware of po&amp;Jtor to Sub Board I with the
the situation and anxious to understanding that they would
remedy problema.
take over "any and all out"SCATE will ·probably be standing debts on iL" Debts
.-1 more by faculty than by include payments worth at
students," and "some members least $2,200 and damages costof the department are already ing $500. The composer was
requesting ..Wts of the study purchased 1sst year for the
for aid in prcmotion decisions." Graduate Studen~ Media Club
and - ~ m the badt !"
A -'L~
the ~Boobtore Oil Main
.tUllllt:n;l. .
- Sa-t.
· the .summer. the
A $18 million contract for store - mto and. the
_ _. _._......_
'- ·
machine was damepd. Smce
..-. ~-~- ~ par.l'!g that time, it bas been at the
~ject and installation of util- mM oftlc:e waitirig decision 011
1tiee on the , _ Amherat cam- 1"ts fate Sub-Board I is ..._._
pua Ia DOW helna hid by the
•
•
•
-......~
State Uirlwndty Construction !'ci to let U"'vermty p,_ U8e
FIIIId.
1L
'lbe llinlle project contract
IEU'I
IDdudM an eodimated $7,061,- T o Clot l t 1100 far
IIDd
and RED TAPE, FEEL I HAVE BEEN

live

Bidogyllas

SCATE,Too

New

...a.

New Survey_
(Colllinued from -

=

:.-.....~ :r:, ::d.:;:.,

lor

10

Dlel..,clcwf-An-. Ext. f103

•

I, cot 6)

tribute
final vera11
port
after thea and of
year and will end.vor to publi8b
and analyaes in
the scholar literature; the lat.ter step • facilitate a detailed
• of ~and
fWV!BW
11&gt;!' companaon of
ts •
tained at SUNYAB with resuits ol similar Btudies at olhe&lt;
universities, Dr. MDbrath IIIIYB-

e

Bids

r..-..f':~-~ TR=~N=~n.

Interna-

made in this year's

-

Uua ....d:..mc

Jnaugural-

IP'Tl

SPA To_ Limit Balloting_
OnNEANYSTAQuestinn
The Esecutive Commilllee of
the State-wide Senate Profe&amp;.
sional Association (SPA),
meeting in Syr&amp;C:UM the week
of January 30, acted to restrict
voting on the question of affiliation with the National Education Association ( NEA) and
the New York State T-=bers
Association (NYSTA) to thea!
wbo were members of SPA as
of · January 29, the date or the
agency's certification as negotiating agent by the Public Employment Relations Board
(PER8).

The decision bas drawn fire
from various campus 80}\lfCe&amp;,
including the American Aaaociation of University Professors
(AAUP ), and a move to have
the SUNY Faculty Senate ask
SPA to rescind the decision was
defested at the Senate's meetin~ last Saturday. (See Viewpomts pqe for a report on the
SUNY Senate and a position
statement by AAUP.)
Meanwhile, with only a short
time in whicb to work, SPA is
beginning to asaemble its negotiating packsge which will be
preeented to the State's Office
of Employee Relstions (0ER).
The proposed contract, after
negotiations with OER, must
then be ratified by the voting
members of SPA. In order to
have as many members as pos&amp;ble to vote on the contract
question, the SPA Executive
Committee has decided to
lsunch an ,all-out membership
campaign. There will be a cutoff date for the campaign in
late March or esrly April and
only those who have joined by
that date will be eligible to vote
on the contract.
An SPA committee , composed or nine faculty and nine
non-teaching professionals from
throughout SUNY, met last
weekend and will meet again
this weekend in Albany to finalize bargaining propcisals. Leon-

Tripsf.o'J6

ToErulSoon
Those unplessant excursions
to Precinct 16's station hoUS&amp;now necessitated by a ticket
for a moving violation on campus-will end soon. Campus
security officers are now learning how to issue this type of
ticket, K. P . Glennon, director
of campus security, says, "and
in several weeks everyone will
be trained."
No moving violation ticksts
could be given on campus until
three weeks ago when Albany
decided moving violstions were
part of the traffic code. Since
then, campus police have been
forced to take offenders down
to Precinct 16 and have of!"Mll!nl
there write the tickets.

This has been """""""'·
Glennon explains, becall8e a
moving violstion ticket is more
complex than a parking tickeL
It is actually a summons to appeer in court and as such requires more information and
thought to complete.
Last Tuesday, however, several officers took a training
COUllle and leamed bow to
write tickets. They are DOW
teacbinlr their fellow officers

·~ ~~·.:::,.,:
sary.

PIIOVOSTMOVES

The Office of the 1'nMIA . of the
F...,lty of Social Sclenceo. •nd M-

ard F. Snyder, chief IICCOUI1tant
at U/8, - is a - " * of the
group. Subc:ommi- for various iMoea beft ' - ' lll!t up,
Snyder aaya, and NYSTA and
NEA are providina -.ch usistance. An NEA ~ta­
tive will be chairman of the
final bargaininc team. SPA expects to pre81!1lt 118 _ . . . to
OER next ........ lor a review,
after whlch a barpinina team
will be aelected and fonnal negotiations will begin.
The Esecutive Committee is
also meeting with NYSTA
&lt;NEAl to work out the alfiliation proposal But a date for
that vote is not yet certain.
On the local level, Snyder
has been elected campus nonteaching-&lt;~taff SPA repre81!1ltative, but the faculty have not
choBen a spokesman. Dr. Gordon Hsrris of Chemistry bas
been acting in that role in the
interim. Both Snyder and Harris are working to strengthen
the local chapter. A meeting or
registered members will be held
soon to report the results of the
State-wide meetings, e I e c t a
fsculty repreeentative, and publicize the negotiating team's
proposals to date.

College A(Continued from page 1, coL 4)

After debating the various
options for about an hour, the
group voted to "go down in
style," and to "stay the way
we are." Snell 88id be would
write to Murray telling him the
results of the meeting.
College A's grading practices
have been under fire from Murray since September. Tuesday's mass meeting was the result of the latest exchange of
letters between Snell and Murray on the subjecL
On January 12, Snell sent
Murray 52 student project evaluation forms.· These were all
the forms from students whoee
lsst name bepn with an M
plus addition81 ones Snell selected All theoe evaluations
had been read by College A
and the grades the students
gave themselves had been recorded.
Murray read the evaluations
and gave his own Dlllliis, 24 A's,
3 B's, 10 C's, 2 Fs, 1 pass, 4
incompleteil and 8 irrelevant&amp;.
Theee figures. Mui-ray said in
his letter, show ':the nature of
the chasm that rlividee 118." He
told .Snell that "you and your
staff are not following through
on your evaluative ~il­
ity." His condemnation was
based on State education lsw

~tions~:.U"'t.

=

only upon the completion of
the requirements for the COUllle
and demonlltrated student ac-

complishment N

This J:elll)ation cau.l Murray to demand that Snell and
his staff "move expeditiously to
establish an actual ·evaluative
ca~ty which ..-ts the reqwrement," and to "move . . .
likewiae expeditioully to aeek
the J!Brticipation in the evaluative prcGM ol a much wider
flll1l'8 of faculty input than il
currently . vislble." Mmray
asked that these aolutioll8 be
given to him aa "fonDal writa1
888Willlllllll.• U no ealution am
be readied, Mmray nmed, in
the letter, the "'IBle will be
c:oilsidered by the &amp;ppl'lllll'iate
committee ol the Faculty Smale."

-uw.....,

C01Iep A faced 08lliUN by

Munv 1sst
be
a- . . - from tho withheld additional . . cardL
In
a
November
9
..-liD&amp;
be
Ole! . at.culty Cl~b . on . t11e . lhin
St...t campus m· 4230 Rtdp Lu, rellioMd" 1M additiDDal auds,
mlnis¥8tlon

R_, B-&lt;49. The , _ -phone
numbor Is 831·1814.

but also &amp;tr-' "there will· he
no self eval11ation this . .
mesll!r."

�,.,._, 11, 19,1

&lt;iREPORTER,

Separate Faculty/Student Lots No~

GREPORTS

But S~er Starts Open Lots Policy ON . By SUSAN GREENWOOD

includes a number of business

._.,. s..u
· and professionill people w h o
Wt.. there ue 23,000 cam- come to campua to teach a
pua par11iq pennits and only course for an hour and· then
4,960 apaoell, there ue lOin~! leave.

to be problems and, obviously,
Of course. such a policy igno eesy """""""
nores the special needs of stu8Q wb8n lbe Trallic Control dentswbohavecouraesatRidge
Advisory Commitlilie recently Lea. on the main campus, at
8IIIIOIIDCed lbe compromise Meyer Hospital or other locacontinuatioo ol aepuate fac. ·tions.
ulty/atudeot jlarkiJq lots with Sbtct EnfoR:ement
strictenforcemeutof this policy,
Tbe p~ salvation for
no one was~
this group will be the Strict
This oomproauae was tern- enforcement of t h e separate
pered, howewr, by the pn~mise parking lots. If a faculty memof an open lot experiment to ber is parked in a student lot,
begin the first of,Msy and con- he will get ticketed, just as a
tinue through September 30. student parking in a faculty lot
~this period, all lots will will. And if there are any combe open to both faculty and plaints about the enforoement
students on a first come - first of the policy, they muat be
served basis. At the end of the taken up with the City of Bufexperiment, the policy will be falo.
evaluated by the Trallic ComHunt says the theory of K.P.
mittee.
· Glennon, director of campus
Tbe separate parking lot. pol- security and enforcer . of the
icy was continued because a traflic laws, is "if you get a
"great many of the faculty have ticket, it's yours, and you got
an obligation in certain loca- it because you had a violation.
tions at certain times,'' Robert -T here's only one way to appeal
Hunt, environmental health and it and that's downtown." ·
safety o8ioer, explains. "We lDl Attendol)ls
have to take care of people wbo
This hasn't stopped comcome and · go,'' be adds. This plaints from coming to Hunt,

lli&gt;n't You Help?
Dear Colleagues:
Many members of this academic oommunity at SUNYAB
have had an enriching relationship with the programs and activities of the Buftalo Philharmonic. This level of coon!ipation
has been a great asset to the. community and to this' University
for our students, faculty and staff.
Our past record of giving to the Philharmonic Maintenance
Fund Drive has scarcely refiected the many benefits that we
-have· individually--and collectively receive&lt;t- from "its nationally
respected programs.
.
I urge you to join other aeademic personnel here on this
campus and throughout- the Niagara Frontier who are being
asked to "Give the Gift of Music." No matter how small or
how large your contribution, it will be appreciated as a measure
of your sincere involvement and oonoem for one of the cultural
gems of this community. Won't you help?
-ROBERT I. KE'ITEB
President

· niE GROF IUIC
The gift you give yourself.
Give any amount. and you and your community benefit
from one of the top ten orchestras in the nation.
Give ten dollars or more, and we'll send a voucher
worth at least eight dollars for two seats at the symphony or
pops concert of your choice. For this season . Or next. Except
April 18 or April 20, 1971.
Send twenty five doUars or more. and we 'll add a
voting membership in the Orchestra Society.
Give a liHie. You'll get a lot.

GJ&gt;EQPLE

though. ·His most frequent complaint is the length of time it
takes to find a parking space.
"People -tell me it takes them NEW CAMPUS
30 to 40 minutes to find a place
to park." To alleviate this prob- APPOINTMENTS
lem, Hunt would like to bite
HAR&amp;Y A. WIIIT.AKJI:R. 888iltant
parlling lot attendants and DR.
profeaor, lin!l11istica and poycbol''spotters" within the lots to tell ogy.
Univenity of Rocheater. apdrivers when the lot is full or pointed visiting pro(eoaor, linguisto guide them to open spaces. tics.
"This saved an awful lot of 0 F CAMPUS
tempers when we did it last
F
year,'' Hunt explained, even APPOINTMENTS
though the attendants worked
DR. &amp;NRICO MIBICH. appointed dionly from 8 to 11:00 a.m. on rector, Department of ExperiMonday, Wednesday and Fri- mental Therapeutiea and direcday.
Hunt . has proposed other ~!ric~=o~~:~. Roowell
changes in the parking situs- DB.. FRED ROSEN, appointed auoci.tion, such as the substitution 8~ chief cancer research acientist
of the Lockwood Lot for Die- anci aasocia te director, Cancer
fendorf as the visitors' lot. He Drug Center, Roswell Park Memorial Institute.

PRESENTATIONS

enforced. He called· the Security
Office to comptain about students
parking illegally in faculty lots.
Security's answer, he says, was
that they didn't want to antagon·

oa. IJ:ROME s. FlNK. coordinator of
stucl.ent affa.irs and services, ~The
Role o£ Minority Studenta in the
Executive Suite," Caniaiua College; •'The Failure of American
Colleges and Universities." Crosa
and Scroll.

ize the students so they weren't

DR. BERNARD GRIZNBLA.TT, as&amp;Ociate

professor, social welfare, "Future
Strategies for Social Wort&lt; Edu-

~oFa:hilf=:: ~·~c:.

late Conception?" Annual Program Meeting, Council on Social

Work Education, Seattle, Washington; "Seed a, Figs and Title

hopes to get funds in the next
budget to have the information
booth moved from Diefendorf
to the Lockwood location.
Chairman of the Traffic Advisory Co~ttee; Hunt w_ould
also like to use Amherst parking tickets at Ridge Lea, just
as Buffalo tickets are now used
on the main campus. This matter is currently being negotiated
with the Amherst Police.
Hunt and the Committee are
also oonsidering more permanent changes.

!~~~0~~ =.~':.::t.;. Ger-

aaaiatant
profeuor, art history, "Functional Aapecta of Haida Art." American Anthropological Association
meeting; organized and chaired a
symposium, "Approaches to Material Culture."
DR. J"AMIS MCCONNELL, assistant
professor, geography, "Trade, IJ:ldustrial Location, and EconoDlle
Development- Some Ideas on a
Spatial System." University of
Illinois.
DR. ABRAHAM MONK.. associate professor social welfare, chairman of
confe~nce sponsored by The ReDB.. CABOL&amp; KAUFMANN,

ott-campus Port&lt;lnc

Under consjderation is the
leasing of additional parking
spaoes off-&lt;:ampus from which
people could be bussed onto C:~t~d o~~~~J~un~~~
the main campus. Proposed ter, Buffalo.
areas are the parking lots of DR. MILTON PLEBU&amp;, associate proCinema I and ll, Scotch 'n Sir- fessor, history, "How Sick Wt;:re
loin, or the Central Park Plaza. Our Presidents?" Current Afr&amp;J.n
These are just being discussed, Group 20th Century Club, BufHunt explains, and no negotia- falo· ·!.roday's Universi~ Studenbo-A New Breed," Tatter
tions are underway.
A more drastic solution is Club, Niagara Falla.
also proposed. Hunt is talking DR. GEORGE 0 . BCHANZICR, profesaor,
about a graduated parking fee Spanioh, "Lo Mod en el Modembased on the proximity of build- ismo: De sobremua," XVth Conings-in other words, the closer gress of lberoam.erican Litera.the buildings, the higber the ture, Tucson, Arizona.
fee. Tbe amount charged would DR. RUBBI!:LL STONE. auistant probe limited by a State law re- fessor, sociology, •'The Dj~r!&gt;ian
quiring afl revenues raised from &amp;~~rre~~::,t;.~.S~J.n!
servioes to be used on these East Studies Aaoociation Fourth
servioes. Hunt is now discuss- Annual Meeting, Columbus, Ohio.
ing this idea with the adminisDR. AUSTIN D. SWANSON, proftllaor,
tration.
educational administration,
All these plans are still in "Quantitative Analysis and Eduthe future, though. Right now, cational Decision-Making,'' Erie
Hunt admits that during the and Niagara Chief School Officers
Monday, Wednesday and Friday 8 a.m.-2 p.m. crunch. there · ~~~~!n"J:~nF:~:!~· ~e!i~
are probably no spaoes on cam- em New York Association of
pus. But that's something peo- School BuoineM Official&amp;
ple have to get used to, be says. MURD:L WOII, aaistant profeeeor,

.

New Health Book

-

........ .
c all-·5454.

A new booklet, "Health Inswance For Yoil and Your D&amp;-

pendents," bas been distributed
to all State employees with the
Statewide Health Insurance
plan by the Peraaanel OffiCe.
Tbe booklet d5cribes Blue
Cross,, Blue Shield and Metropolitan Major Medical ~IL
Harry w. Poppey. director
of IJIIftiOIIII8I. advlatis that the
book "updates and . . . . . . 81&lt;•

=

Bar·

v-.

&lt;:JWila
CIA&amp;TOJ&lt;,
-- .
-.
sor,
a-iel,
"A Relioler
ol. .Au-

Acto-ra," Au.f•tiel r&amp;lut

Be~~·~~

edy of Luociuo Lanuvin...," Alneriam JouniDl of PltilDID«Y; "U..

cius Lanuvinus: Tbe UJIMIIJI!Id
Piayo," Lclto"""DIL N~ HOLLAIID, ~r.

English, •-n.e -u~· ol
Literature: 'l1le Poy"'-nalytie
Approach," Contomponuy Criti-

l'!:"'i2,Se:!r.=;U~-~':::r!r~

Alcoholid wilh Morria ~

r::. r:eo~reM..::r~:u;
No. 1, Sandoz

~ticala.

CHANTAL l&amp;NNIN08, ~r.

French. "La Dualite de .Maupa-

sant: Son Attitude Enven Ia
Femme," ReUIU du Scionca Hu-

; ,: ;~F~): : . :

de

lecturer, ceocrapby, " Population Aggregatioa ao
:1.?fn_,~.=_
Cru-I&lt;JiraDONALD KILBIIIG,

"Lea Textes Litterairee Francis," Lu M ir·
acles de Notre Dame.

DR. V. PBIDJQC KOBNIG,

tor has his doubts about how
strictty the continued " separate·
but-equal"· parking policy is to be

swers that "no one has come to
me personally to complain and
until they do, I wouldn 't comment
on the statement."

~Gtwo·
liab,
poemo
inPI'Of-r,
The Nell Yon
Ti.ma .&amp;olt of

Swface,"

HE HAS DOUBTS
One Heatth Sciences administra·

ticketing them. K. P. Glennon, dl·
rector of campus security, an·

nual - . , . , Detzoit. M.idllpD.
D&amp;. 'VICI'Oil DOYNO, a.x:iate p~
r_,r, EDdioh. "'Ol - .
dationo," The EdM&lt;JatioMl F - .

T::~~~~: tt~~:
~.oo.;:.~~·=

DR.. MA.DIUiiNIC lUI'HIOT,

auocia.t8

professor, linguistics, ..E.ngl.ish

~t:,~T.:"~~;=~ i~...::
tic•.

~~gtf:.'~..!'tf~ ..P'lf:J::':;
"Off St. M~~·a 8Quare,·:. con~e~
pora, 1:2; First Poems, Unwer·
sity of Windsor Review, VI; '"Tbe

North Oak,'' Shenandoah ; "A
Modest Critic," Nation; Tramformation,ll in tM Renai••ance
EnsW.h Lyric, Comell University
Press.
S. OKECBUVWU MEZU, profesaor,
French. Behind the RiBinl/ Sun,
William Heinemann Ltd., London; The Tropical Dawn {poema),
Black Academy Press. Inc.; "Sen-

..

ft~~= ~~ ~~}l.:!:

Culture ll e Camerou.naiu; 'The
Seventies : Age of Realimn in Af.
rica,'' The Afriam Scholar; "Die
Uberaschuung," Entf/ammte Rioa/en, Munich; "The Origins o(
Modem African Poetry,'' Afriam
Literature and tM Artl I, T . Y.
Cromwell Co., New York.
RENA"n.: L. NEEMAN, instructor. occupational therapy, ''T~ue of
Preparinp: Effective Ortbokinetic
Cuffs.'' 3ulletin on Practice,
American Occupational Therapy
Association.
OR. GB2AU&gt; O'GRADY, auistant proff".saor, English. "Alice's Restaurant. (M)eoa, Mein Kindt! Eye-

ili~~Mtier!:rT~~~/is::: ;~'::,:

nal of Authetic Educatio1!DR. c~ A. PLANZ. graduate of
educational adminiltmtioU, and
OIL L

OUVIB GIBSON, chairman.;

educational administration. " Perceived Equity and Ita Relation-

~:'..e~M~~-l~'J-=

in Education..

BILVUNO SA.NftAGO.

8810Ciate pro-

fessor, French, "The Romantic
Movement, a Selective and Criti-

::..:JI~"'Uf!':a !~rre~E!;J:h

LansUOII• Notu.

DB. RUDOLPH E. smGBL. clinical U·
aociate, Medical School. Galen on
SenM Perception. 8. Karger, Basel and New York.
OIL RONALD ZDUN, aui.stant pro(euor, classics, The Phono/a6ical
Baoio of Latin 1'roM&gt;d, Mouton ~
Co., The Hague.

EXHIBITIONS

and J:lemocrapb.y,'' ~ ol
Social 8cien-. ll:amilton Oollep.

PUBLICATIONS

istinc

contrada. 8eparal!l con-·
lrada will DO JaaP,r be t.uecl"
Wl..- · tx!I/X:I'fimA~~

...

...

----~ ~ ~

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

l o&lt; •
' ••.•
"
...... .......... ...... . . ...-...c ..........
-...
•.......
.!.t'. 'iY·t :£ l:tln:. -coi'.it,."\"t~tW,nt..~ ~
~.

...

�12
SIDIDI... :

~ &lt;WEEKLY
OCipM lo .,.-;

.

COMMUNIQUE

•oas- lo

........... of 1M ~ .

• ~ 1 - In 1M oubject

fJCipen """ l o - -

THURSDAY-11
f~form. communication for peroonality growth,
Fillmore Room, 3-6 p.m.
PHYSICS cbt.LOQUIUll• : Dr. Gil·
bert Brinlt. auocia te professor,

PIIYCIIOau.T•• :

SWIMMING•: Waterloo, Clark
Gym, 7:SO p.m.
WHEN &amp;ADJO SHOW: Marvin Bloom,
auociate p rofeeeor• .ocial welfare,
~ !:it.~·
will dia·

p'=.t,

DANCE •: COMPANY

OF

MAN,

see

physics and astronomy, LABORA-

Friday listing.

TOilY

UNIVDBlTY WOMEN'S Q.UB SQUARE
DANCE CROUP: Faculty Club, Har-

8TtJ1')IE8

OP INTERSTELLAR

»~.

111 Hochatetter, 4
p.m. Rebeshmenta, 112 Hochatetter, 3: SO p.m.

TJIIIIOIIETICAL BIOLOGY SDONAR•:

Dr. Marion Namenwirth. pott-

doctoral rellow. biochemistry,
Univeroity of Washington, Seat·
Ue, Til&amp; OONTROL OP DIBitYONIC
r.v'ELOPIIEHT BY FACTORS HYPOTHIBIJ:a) 01t JDBNT'IPIED IN AXPHJBIAN

..a

CYTOI'LAS)(, Room 29, 4248

~P~ 4 p.m. Relroobmenla

~ that

cello located in dilrerent em-

~:=t=~~~~~t:ri::

uted to tba non-random distribu·
lion in egg cytoplaam of molecules which control pne expres·

aion. Controll.ing elementS' known

=.=:C. SC!-~~::.::l:
the

:U~:fo.es:'e:n:,~~roacb

to

POR£1GN -B1'UDENT AFFAIRS COFnZ

uoua• : 10 Townoend Hall, 4-6
p.m.

COKPU'ftNG CII:N'rD. USER 812VICI:S

~::T!:~u;.rh~"{Q~

4238 Ridge Lea, 7-9 p.m.

MOVIE A CONCERT•: Flash Gordoia

film.

PliilPU: DEATH FROM OUTER

;"d'!ic,~p~r-c:=r;. ~r!
Room, 8 p.m., $.76,

FRIDAY-12
BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR•:

Dr .

Yasb P . M yer, SUNY/Albany,
BTRUCTtna:: AND CONPORMA110NAL
ROLE OP FUNC'J'IONAL GROUPS IN
CYTOCHROME C, G -22 Capen. 4

and Stratton, Clark Gym, 6 :SO
p.m.
BWIMXINo• : Rochester Tech,
Clark Gym, 7 : so p.m.

'='

PRE&amp; PILK • •: BIDE THE HIGH

'i.':::w~sw
..;,.,~re;,
gunfighters reunited after twenty

yean to deliver a gold shipment.
Direction. action and ~togra­
phy are exceUenl 147 Diefendorf,
8 p.m.
BABBATH SERVICE : sponaored by
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation,

~s:mb~~~n r~ou}~

Study Miuion to hrael, Hillel
Howoe, 8 p.m.
DANcE": ~KPANY OF MAN tbe-

L~h-= ron'Xtc~r~:U~ '!J
:l"i~~!!"'~en':. ~~~

the Bulfalo Philharmonic. Domus,
1695 ·Elmwood Ave ., 8 : SO p.m.
General admiaaion, $2.50; students, $1.60. Tickets available at
Norton Ticket Office; Student Ac-

~No'i~e ~~~ ~~=~
listing.

~~oNco~YUOCTmw: T~~

cine, Roswell Park Memorial
Institute, PROSPBCTS ·FOR IMMUNG-

PILM • •: THE PASSION OP ANNA.

Norton Conference Theatre, consult Norton Ticket Office for
times, $.75.

SUNDAY-14
DAN cr.:•: COMPANY OP MAN , see

Friday listing.
followed
by lf'OUI;&gt; discusaion on Reconstructiomsm; Dr. Justin Hofmann
will be discussion leader, Hillel
House, 7:30 p.m.
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC•: Worka
HILLEL DESSERT SUPPER:

lrr'ad~!~~.leifot!:;.;" ~~e':f:

Projection for ViolinceUo and Piano by Joji Yuaaa; Sacrifice for

~:;!:~e fl~~~r.pe.r::'iTak~

~uF~~:£~~~:Pf:!!~~~=
~~~~~c:r~~~~:Ji:~~

menta by Dutch composer, Peter
Schat; and Concerto /or the Vio-

~ar~so~f~:nru:Ma:kr,So~o'i

and the U/ B P.ercussion Ensemble. Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
8:30 p.m., free. Because this program will be taped for broadcast
by WNED-TV, only the ~t 400
people will be admitted.
FILM • • : THE PABSJON "'o r ANNA.

Norton Conference Theatre, consu1t Norton Ticket Office for
times, $.76.

MONDAY-15
for
veterans who wou1d like vocational or personal counseling, spon-

VETERANS COUNSELING SERVICE:

:~~:,:~~~:U.C:,u262t~o~~~
3-5p.m.

COMPUTER SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM:

Thom&amp;ll R. Wilcox, Cornell .Uni·
versity, A PRACTICAL MODEL FOR
GENERATING CODE, Room 41, 4226
Ridge Lea, 3: SO p.m. Refreshmenta to follow.
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL•: Buffalo
State, Memorial Auditorium,. 7
p .m.
V~ BASKETBALL •: Buffalo
State, Memorial Auditorium. 9

p .m.

.

TUESDAY-16
CONTINUING NURSING EDUCATION:
PERSON TO PERSON lNSTJTUTE on

"Care of the Aging," through Feb.
17, Statler-Hilton Hotel. Advanced
registration at School of Nurai.ng,
46 Winspear or at Statler Hilton
on Tuesday morning.
6uest speakers include Dr. Irene

~l'!.~~~ti~!J·~Je~1~~ ~U6~~~~== Ih!~IJ~Wy

Statler Hilton; or call 888-9043.
Wayne
State, Clark Gym, 8 :SO p.m.
PILil'* : THE PASSJON OP ANNA.
- ~Demar BeJ'IID8:11'• most recent

WEDNESDAY-17

Ithaca,
Clark Gym, 8:SO p.m.
HOCKEY•: Brock University, Atitherst Recreational Center, 1615
Millersport Highway, 9:30 p.m.

VARS ITY BASKETBALL•:

p.m.

FRESHMAN BASKETBALL•: Br ya nt

r-.

7-9 p.m.
.
BWDOONa•: Fredonia State,
Clark Gym, 7:SO p.m.
WOIWl APFADIJ ~·: Ian M.
Smart, &amp;IIIIOCiate clirecto&lt;, lnsti·
tute for Strategic Studieo, Lon·
don, TBZ ARMS llACI: AND A&amp;MB
coNDOL, oponoored by the Bulfalo
Council on World Alrain. Stu·
dent Center, D'Youville Con-.
8 p.m.

riman Library, 8:30 p.m.

Althouch all the cello of a ver·

=.~ 71!"7.ill ":m\:r:! :.!
pnatic information, it ia ol.o.rvecl

Doovid )4an&gt;b.Y, iDotnJe.
811DfAii. Room 10,

tor, 4Til-T.J8
4298 Ridge

Penon;" Dr. Virginia Stone, pro-

~·~~~~:tn;!.':'':!i t~:

THEllAPY IN LYMPHOMA AND LEUKJ:KL\, spons ored by Regional

Medical Program, 62 receivinglocations, li : S0-12: SO p.m.
CONCERT: STONE'S RIVER, Haas
Lounge, 12 noon-3 p.m. Free.
Dll:TITIANS 'Jtt£PHONE LE CTURrl:
Dr. Robert M. Kohn, CURRENT
THEORY. IN PRJ:VENTIO ·N OP AND
TREATMENT OP ATJD:RO..SCLER08JB,

62 receiving locations, 2 p.m.
Fn..M:•• : WCH NOON (Fred
Zinnemann 1952). Director Zinnemann has integrated fine photography, acting, music and aome
distinguished editing into a suspenseful character study. The
plot io simple (a U.S. Marwbal
awaits a showdown with gunmen)
and is secondary to the camera's
study of each or the major characters and their reactions to the
situation. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and
8 p.m.
FREE

SCHOOL OP MANAGEMENT 8£MI•

NAR •: William M. Capron, auociate dean, John F. Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard
University, THE "DELl\'ERY SYSTEM' ' FOR PUBLIC POlJ.CY (or WHAT
WENT WRONG WITH THE GREAT SO·
CIETY?), 110 Footer, 3:SO p.m.

Over the U..t decade , !Nblic
In Norttln ttllt ..........
awareness of new problem areas
-ranging from poverty to the ur- Chapel, fourth floor; Deaconess eou&amp;ht. Mr. Don Maaa. director
ban crisis to the pliysical environ- Hospital, Doris Young Auditor- of the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory,
melnt-jave rise to a host of n
ium\ Children'• Ha.pital, Kinch will aru~wer questions and explam
public policies aitd programs, at Auditorium, 5:30-6:30 p.m.
registration procedures durinc the
Jeast on the books. Now the hope FREE FILM• •: MADE IN U . S.A. meeting. If interested but unable
and enthusiasm associated with (Jean-Luc Godard. 1966) . A po- to attend , please co ntact Mr.
these developments have turned litical gangster movie, made in ~· at Ill Townoend Hall, e:rt.
to ~rustra~"bn, disappointment and
time. Godard attempt&amp; to
- m some cases - anger. What record
tell a story for a change, and
has gone wrong? Why have we "takes
his rejection of narrative RUSSL\N J"EWRY COMMI'I"l''J:E: Hillel
been unable to translate legisla- disciplines
to the limit. . . . The is now in the process of forming
tive intent into effective action?
a Russian
Committee. Stu·
lot
ia composed or units of vioHow can we identify and then ence . . . (based on the premise
;ci&amp;:~
learn to avoid , the sources of in- that) . . . political power grows ~n~in~ject
adequate performance? In deal- out of the barrel of a gun." (Ian Hillel for further information.
ing with these questions, Dean Cameron) . 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m. The Committee will be ~('
Capron will consider aspects of
Debbie Stenzel &amp;Del D~
government organization and bu- PREVIEW PDFORIUHCII•: Work&amp;
reaucracy, federal-state-local in- by Lejaren Hiller, Domus, 1695 · ~~!u~s~a~ei':rlormatio~
teraction, citizen participation and Elmwood, 8: SO p.m., )ree.
centralization, sources of financ- CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION !:'..te~~ ~1,~r
ing (reven u e s haring. block COURSE: Dr. Sebastian G. Cian· lei.
grants), and executive-legislative cio, asaociate profeaor, periodonrelationshipo.
·
tics; Dr. Ruosell J. Niaengard, as- INTERVIEWS
CHE~Y COLLOQUIUM: Dr. John sistant professor, microbiology.
The ON - CAMPUS ~G
R . Huizenga, University of Ro- DRUGS IN DENTAL PRACTICE, Dental
chester, A REVIEW OF OUR PRESENT School, Ce:pen Hall.

...

J::::::a

r.

a::

!lfi!;"l'J%

UNDERSTANDING OF NUCL&amp;A.R FISSION, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.
DIMOV STRING QUJ.It'IZ'I'• :

Works

\!fik~\:~':i':ie~~d~':j:
jiev.. Baird Hall, 8: SO p.m., ad·

DU8810n

charge.

THURSDAY-18

~~=:=~:,:,~
:Ji..:l

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPIDC EXHIBrr: by Bruce
Jackson, auociate profeuor of
~lisb, oponsored by Office of
tural Affairs, Center Lounge,
Norton, February 3 tbrouch February 17.

PHA.IlMACIBT8 n:lEPHONE LEC"'"URE:

Margaret Quinn, J.D. in Law,
THE Pll.UlMActST'S LIABILITY IN
DAY-TO-DAY PIWPZSBJONA.L PRACTICE-SOME LEGAL ASPI'CTB, 62

receiving locations, 11 : 30a.m. and

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
~i:•• n~~~ya=~no~~ 10 p.m.
URBAN PLANNING LBCTUa:• : David
F. Parker, doctoral candidate, Permanent exhibit of works by
~!;,.,
""'*~~
n°d
o
~~e
W~'t.;
~c aclmiJjiatration, SUNY1AI· Robert Gra- &amp;Del Jamea Joyce.
Care of the Elderly."
.
'
film in:"!:itr~el,;'~P~l~
Par~~~~.,';,J:, ~0={.. 104 {;:::; 9~5 ~1,Lockwood Li,
t,a;s~~:n~~!~E~~
M:~on Sydow otar. Norton X•llAY CONFERZNCIS, 62 receiving
Conferenoe Theatre, consult Nor- locaJions..
li :SO a.m. - 12: SO p.m. ';J:;:J~:'t::~":!i:'g~~~:_NOTICES
lon Ticket Ollice for times, $.75.
VAISITY BABit&amp;TBALL • :

SATURDAY-13

NUJt81:8 112ZPB010: ~: Mary
L: Lorich, R.N., GENI:'I1C PACT088
IELA.ftCD TO EPIDE.MlOLOGY OF DJS..
EASE, 62 receiving locations, !:SO

p.m.

.

~ YO.JDOO (AJdra
KW'OIIlwa, 1961) . Tbia atory of an
unemployed samurai played by
Toshiro ..Mifune whoee services
are available to the highest bidder is grim and probing with an
abundance of violence, aatire, humor. Kuroaawa is a masterful di-'
rector. 147 Diefendorf, 3 and 8
p.m.
FR&amp;&amp; FILM. • •

COMPIJTING CII:NDR lJ8D 8IRVICIII

Fillmore Room. 3-6 p.m.

Dr. R. A.
~tern. Bell Tele~one Laborator1~, Murray llill, New Jersey,
tlUe to be announCed, 111 Hochtetter, 4 p.m. Refreahmenta, 112
Hochatetter, 3:SO p.m.
FOBEIGN STUDENT An'ADIJ COrFBE
Houa•: 10 TOWDieDd Hall, 4-6
p.m.
•
.
JN'I'aODUCTION TO a.&amp;'IC"l"R'CAIOGIW'IIY: Telephone Lecture Net·
work_. • ponaored by Regional
Medical. Procram. Bundle branch
block VIS vector ru1eo. RooweU
Park Memorial Inotitute, The
PHYSICS COI.LOQUIUJ!(:

·-Tbe
- -o-wt_CI:_o"'r-1'111:--0-KB_UDS_MAN
__
ia
open every day from 9 to 6. It ia
our buainMs to _look into com~
plaints and (rievanoes on behalf
of atudenla, faculty and atalf. II
you believe you line been unfair.
ly dealt with. come and 111.
10 Diefendorf Amon, 831-4103.
•

-•

•

All underpaduates interested in tu~ beginnin_J college studenti for credit
abOWd attend a meeting Tueoday
February 16, at 4:00 p.m. in 239
Hayeo Hall. StudoDta with okillo
in accOunting 203 and !"!!""P~
finance SOl are eopecially tJein&amp;
TU'I'OIUNG COIJIIS:

tba opportunity for
in·
tervieww with educational. buai/ ~~~tausti~. ~ ~~from
- tal
repa--..
..,._ Candidaall &lt;!egree l..elo are inoited to in·
· teJdi'ewM!Re~tra~ """l"~JlDd
_ !ble ~ Hay..o~tion are a...n.

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>VOL 2- NO. 19

1

Knowledge Pursuit
Must Be Unfettered
Goals StudyUrges

"Little thinp a..n a lol"
Tbat, In a 'IIO'IIy,- lllliDIIIIIrize

The "unfettered pursuit of
knowledge" - its discovery,
conservation and dissemination
-is tbe summum bonum of the
University, according to the
Task Force on University
Goals.
Tbe group, whose report included an """'"":'ded definition" of academiC freedom, was
chaired by Dr. John C. Eccles,
professor of physiology.
Including 17 faculty members and 12 stu dents , stall
members and community representatives, the Task Foroe was
subdivided into six subconunittees covering academic freedom, teaching, evaluation of
faculty and students, resesrcb,
University services, and the
University's role in bringing
about change in society.
The group's report, admittedly "the most complex of
tasks," included a summation

oome of the recntnmenclalioas
of the Taalt Force oo a

ae.-

of Uniwraity Community, releaaed today by President Rob11rt I.. Ketler.
The Taak Fol'lll!, beaded by
Dr. Alan Drinnan, c:bairman of
-the ~t of Oral Diqnosis, School of Dentistly, was
appointed In September to
identify activities, orpnlmtions, groups and prOil'ams
which may be used "to
•trengtben our familial aenae
and our common respect for .
each other's integrity and privileges as members of the same
University family."
The Task Force found that
even trivial matte1'8--11Dpaiilted
rooms and dingy corridors can have an important effect on
the weU-belng of the University community.

--Mro il.

Aside from the little material
odditiM thet alienate. Dr. Drinnan pointed out In a cover letter
t~t
on IM Taak
F_,
icaat

...
au. ;;;;m;;uJ'~
wao IM

··-

ports, and an appended list of
unreaolv~ and thorny quejltions requirinc "further study
by the- entire University com-

reqiUmtly

encowite«&lt; difficulty in detemi'!#JI who would l7llllu a decision concerning a porticultu
problem." There is reason to
believe, be ssid. that "the fewer unpleasant aspects of campus life there are, then the IDOI'B
likely members of the University community would develop
a desire to 'belong' to the community."
The Task Fol'lll! was divided
into four subcommittees, each
of which made aeveral specific
recommendalioas; they foUow:
La... _ _ .
The "Campus Communications Media" subcommittee recommended that campus newspapers exPand their editorial
pages to provide more room for
comment from members of the
University community; that
WBFO, the University-operated FM radio station, increaae
the Jengtb of its broadcast day,
- ~ and eXpand its existing
~or!iifi Hall facilities, and lldvertise propamming in b:aJ
newapapers; thet the campus
lnlitructioaal. Television Center
to include a
dallv m
ol panel diacu&amp;~
admlnilltrative
_ t s ,_etc.; tbat a 24bour lnformatioo line be estaJ&gt;.
liabed, and that a booklet,
"wblch deLaila the 'chain of
COIIIIIIIIIId' and liata facta about
tbe ...........-tal structure . . .
b8 publlalwd • soon as poealble."
,...., Adlloon
.
eacb _
atudent
a
...m.er, instead of a
M~ 8dviaar" from tbe
DlviliaD ol Under1raduate
8tudiM, 1--.s up tbe - ......... _ al tbe "U~

_,.....,.tiona
r:=.,

m

Submucturea Subcammi-.
A r-!ty adYioemmt .,.._ ill
....... a t - collepa and uni. vwaitia Tba aubcomiDiltee

eDifM!.~a
~
a.riln
milbtbelln .......

0

i!nsfn!!'nti:~~ i:di~JU:f:

Tba
~ profeaaioaal advillln
_,.,...... with tho 1111derpd( cortlilawd . . ,... '· eoL J)

muftfty'."
-mleF-

'"''"'

An expanded definition of
academic freedom was "enthusiastically endorsed" by the
Task Fol'lll! at large and recommended for "possible adoption
by tbe entire State University
system."
"Integral to the concept of
the true university are the freedoms to teach and to learn, to
engage in research, to question
and to debate," the report noted.

Cdd Weather Wror
Crauinc In this - · · ..., oncl oorty mom'"' 18m...,.Wroo coiled lOr o complela ....,.r-up oa Chudt
~. phpk:at oducotlon atuclent, -10bola. Todoy Ia
ouppoaod to brinl o "more , _...... 30 ~-

Rejectinn ofBail Fund Allotment Causes
SALegalActinnAgainstAdministration
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
ion that the appropriation did
a._.. swt
fall within the guidelines, be"They left us no alternative," cause of the interruption to his
Mark Huddleston, president of education a student would auf.
Student Association (SA) says. fer if he were In jail.
- Jiuddleston, in behalf of the
Dr. Siggelkow, howe v e r,
SA, has brought a suit against chose to rely on the SUNY
President Robert Ketter and counsel and now the matter is
Dr. Richard Sill&amp;"lkow for their being clarified by the courts.
"unreasonable rejection" of the
In seeking tbe court's opinorganization's proposal for an ion, SA is asking that the judgappropriation fD the Bail Fund.-.· men! of Sigglekow and Ketter
The case is a result of the be found "arbitrary, capricious
Board of Trustees' October rul- and unreasonable," and "erroning that "oo State•operated eous as a matter of law." They
campuaes where student ac- are also seeking tbe approval
tivitY fees have been allc;ptea.
ol aaid appropriation" .a nd
tbe chief administrative olficer asking the court to "grant tbe
or his duly desipated assistant • petitioner such otber, further
has to review and certify that aDd different relief as to tbis
the p . _ t appropriations of court may seem just and
said funds were for educatlooal, proper."
cultural, recreetional or IIOCial
The case is !:.em, watched
purpoeae."
cloeely by Albany becauaa it
Dr. Sjcgelkow, .as President will affect policies oo oiher
Ketter's cleaicne8. ruled that SUNY campuaM. According to

datory or voluntary. The
Board of Trustees is debating
tbis matter and is expected to
make a ruling within the next
few months.
'
Siggelkow feels SA is starting the suit at a bed -time because of the impending Trustees' decision. The suit may be
unnecesaary if the Trustees declare student fees a YOiuntary
matter, be points out, or if a
special ruling about bail funds
is handed down. Huddleston is
aware of the case's timing but
is more concerned about "students sitting In jail."
"The present arrangement is
an unhappy one," Siggelkow
notes, "and irs just as weU all
tbis is out in tbe open."

tiona! aocia1 or recreetional

All
will be closed
doy, e&gt;o:ept for - l o l sorvlce em.,._. No ctHsos will be

:::...~fall~tbin~em'!:. ~ ~~:..=
~~th..and~

w.;

chill
deci8iOa
tbe lepJ
opiniaae ol two SUNY lawyers
Oil

wbo felt tbe Bell Fund Pl'll*&gt;witbiD _#Mi IUide-

lY dldia't faD
0....

SA tetalDed lawvss to re....:h tbe caae. Tb.e SA atlomeya presented the opln-

oflioe. wants to know ita

FEIIIIUAifY HOUDAYS
Monday, Februory 15 (Washing·

ton'a Birthdoy), will be oblerved os
o fuii1COio holidoy by the Uniwr·
slty, the Peraonnet Oflic:e hos an·

leal" nouncod.

~u~~ac:::~"t.::
guiclelini!a, various-~ units

omc.s

--·-.depo-..

- · On Uncoln'a Blrthdoy, Fobhad no lepJ or moral supervi- rvoty 12. the Unlvefslty will be
.-y role CMil' abiiloat ,__ 1be
ru1ial cbaqed thla and _ t o _ o _ f o n : e
poacedurea are bay.
- r y to mointoln Oftly the
Tba caae ill furtla oompll- m l - Mrvico rwqulrwd to hove
c:ated by tbe Ql8tion ol wbelh• eludeat . _ llbauld ba man-

-----

"Academic freedom on the
campus extends beyond the expression of current views to the
open discussion of ideas which
are controversial and unorthodox . . . . Academic freedom
is license wben the sanctity of
the classroom is used to forcibly repress freedom of expression; persistent reasoned complaints on the part of students
of being propagandized should
be investigated by lh£ University community with the same
regard accorded alleged violations of the academic freedom
of faculty."
ClviiF-

Civil freedom within tbe University was also defined. "As
citizens, members of the University community possess the
same rights to freedom of
sPeech 'aad asaembly, and to
petition, that all other citizens
enjoy." Tbe University must
respect u-e rilbts as long as
they "do not interfere witb tbe
satisfactory performance of academic duties," and as ' - as
~ individual identiti- 1lia ac"'!!d~

....

hill-.

d nOl"'tliOsi- or the University."
. Included under academic
freedom was the righ t of faculty members and students to
carry out research "'in the spirit
of free inquiry" and their responsibility to disseminate findings openly.
The Task Force's conunittee
on research pointed to the
"strong symbiotic relationship
between teaching and research,"
a relationship which "'should be
1eoognized and defended by the

:,.,tireofu~~~~=~:
temal pressures.

Quolltr Toochl111
It was strongly recommended

that "quality teaching be identified and rewarded appropri·
ately within the University."
The subconunittee on teaching
reported that '"although faculty
resesrcb is often given much
higher priority and attention
than quality teaching . . . it is
the teaching-learning process
which creates the basis for independent research."
The development of potential
quality teachers is """""""' for
the future of quality leeching
and therefore "teaching-learning at this u rm't!rauy nwal emphaaize tM 'upper divi.ion' and
,.,t-baccalaureate dep« /et&gt;eli,'" with "lower diuWon teoching-/earning supportive of tJu.
goal."
The subcommittee on eValuation focused its attentions
"on those situations in which
the teacher evaluates his own
students, although much of
what we say is aiao a~licable
to student aelf-ftaluation aad
to evaluation by outside examiners.

Evat...-,.,_

"Central to an evaluation of
a sludent's performance in a
couraa is lhl! set of objectives,
~ or desired outcomes for
tbat course." These objectives
"should be clearly specified, be
open to crilicism, be reason(Continud on 3, eoL 6) '

�2

Pre-Pharmacy Planned

For TwoYeafCollegBS
Young people who want to

became~who

viant to &amp;judy for the profesaioo at U/B's School of Pbar·
may-are """' being informed
that tbey can tate the requind
pre-pbarmacy COWIIIIII at junior
and -..munity colletles across
tbe State.
U/B is already setting up
tbe buic: pre-pbarmacy cumculumo in~ two-year colletea - in Batavia, Bu4alo,

Tbe tWo-year roiJeaeo will be
able to after their students a
valuable DeW tnnsfer program
-&lt;JOe wbidl will lead tbem in-

to a promJsina aDd ezpandina
career opportunity.
And, students will ba ve a
chaDce 16 pick up the 1-.led
'pre-pharmacy COIIlSM rilbt in
their own communities, without
havina to 'incur the additional
_..... of attendina an out-of-town scbool .
.
Aocordini to preaent upecla·
~.J.-n,Ni­
tioos, the School of Pharmacy
apra FaiJa aDd Roc:best.er.
But, tbe School of Pharmacy ~ to have formalized prereport&amp;, this ia oaly tbe beiin· pharmacy programs operating
nine- In tbe future, aimilsr in at least a dozen community
colleges in New York State by
pr&lt;llr8lJlll are ""'P"Cted to be
formalized at many more two- the fall of 1971.
year inalituta..
.
On the national acene, prepharmacy P_..,. are being
introduced at two-year colleges (conlimud from fXJ1•1 . coL 1)
by other pharmacy schools uate division would be assigned
~part
of at nathetionOOWlwidetryrecrw
. ~- to departments and would work
v
directly with students majoring
ment effort being encouraged in each department.
by the American Association of
Tbe subcommittee also recColleges of Pharmacy.
ommended expanding the colIn New York State, a pre- legiste system, "as it providee
pharmacy Prosram is already a one of the moot useful mechanpart of the formal cwriculum isms for students to develop a
ofterings at Westd&gt;Mter Com- se.n se of ' belonging' to the
munity Colle&amp;e. in Valhalla.
University."

Decisions" _

Ott:erbeinS Stzidy of 50 SocietieSRevools
That Efficient WarMachines WUlBe Used
By SUZANNE METZGER
-

Slalt

"- .. As political communi-

?es evoltraliz.ave
_in ti~theof inaeas!"' ""!'

-·

~

~~;:..~ .!, ~::
110

ciety, but rather the elf'JcieDc:y

on,
manner of its military orpnization
m which they wa~ . war 1M;; which will bring suoceso in war""'!"'" more. so~hJSt1cated.
fare. And he notes that having
nus ~nclus10n w_reached. by · a good military orpnization
Dr. Ke.~th Otterbem, asoocl8~ does not prevent attack from

professor of anthropology, m
his recent!:( published book,
The Evolulwn of War, HRAF
Press, 1970.
In_his study of_ 50 societies,
"'!""'I from hunting and gal&amp;~rmg groups to more cen~ized cultures, Dr. otterilein
de"!"'!"trates. ~ ~ul
statistical ~l'sis, that'! '!irh
d_eifl!" of ~ihtary . ~What is a pre-pbarmacy proTbe "Facilities and Support,. tion JS 8680Cl8ted w1th a highly
ive Personnel" subcommittee "!"Jtralized poli.tical o~ganizagram?
Baaically, the U/B School of recommended: painting rooms, lion; ~t a SOCiety w¥ch h!"'
Pharmacy ezplains, it is noth-- corridors and providing staff an effi~t war '!~&amp;chine w!ll
ing more than a simple realign- lounges; constructing a large most likely use 1t, and Will
ment--with aome minor relabel· University facility at which probably be militarily succes&amp;ing--of oertain courses wbidl · large meetings could be held; ful.
are being offered at the present attempts to make Norton Hall
Military success--that is, a
time at most two-year colleges. n University Center rather than "win"-is measured by territor·
It is not a llaining program just a student center; estab- iaJ ezpansion. 'Though most
for ''pharmacy technicians."
lishment of a day-care center;
Tbe whole idee of the pre- opening recreational and 'ovpharmacy curriculum is baaed emmental activities to clencal,
on the fact that most commu- administrative and maintenanoe
nity and junior ooUeges are aJ. personnel, and orienting new
ready teaching COIIlSM in liberal Univenoity employees to the
arts, mathematics and the basic overall structure of the Universciences. And these courses, in sity.
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

IB

anthropologists have traditionaUy believed otbeJWise, Dr. Qt,.

--

...

other societies
Dr. Otterbein uaed 13 "warfare variables" to determine
degree of military sophistication. 'lbese included military
orpnization, subordination, initiating party, initiation of war,
diflomatic neJOtiationil, tactica systems, weapons, armor,
field fortifications, cavalry,
fortified villages, siege opera·
tiona, aDd cauaes of war.
Is war inevitable? Dr. Otterbein points out that not aU societies eiigage in warfare, but
that isolation is the common
denominator of the non-com·
hatants. The Dorobo isolated
on the peak of a mountain in
East Africa; the ~. a
Polynesian society inbab1ting a

four~ isi8Dd, hundreds of miles from neilbbono;
and the Tocla, who inhabit an
isolated plateau of South India, never JO to war.

bowever:: ..

Otherwise,
"the
development of an efficient
military organization appean;
to be a neceoaary C)()ndition for
a political community to re..
main viable in intersocietal
conflicts . . . (and) the development of a centralized political community which · is not
supported by an efficient military organization will not prevent a political community
from being engdlfed by militarily more efficient neigbbono."
According to Dr.. Otteroein,
thele" is nothinJ inherent in
man's nature which cauaes him
to fight WBnl. Neither genetic
flaws nor population pressures
drive · us to deetruction, but
rather we have, in a sense, become victims of our own military organizations. U they are
efficient, we use them effectively.

Dirt from Amherst Lake
Excavation Covers
.
.
Profs Archaeological Find from 2000-B.C.

meanor to appropriate, eiCS.·
R•port• St.JI
vate, injure or destroy" any
The fourth subcommittee, on
The flood plain of Ellicott archaeological a r t i f a c t s. U
the three-year pharmacy pro- "Co-Curricular Activities," saw Creek contains more than the someone discovered what they
grams at U/B and other phar· tbe need for more recreational site for U/ B's new campus. thought might be an artifact,
majrw"'!":~tudent takes these programs; a "student services It's also the plaoe wbere In- they were to notify both the
on-site representative of the
required courses - whether in ~,.,:~ ~~ ~~~~:d~~v!: disns fished and made arrow- architect and Mr. Donald E .
the U/B Division of Under· ment center" for non-academic heads over 4 •000 yeano ago.
UreU of SUCF, the directive
graduate Studies or at another advisement on problems of a
On the sandy knoll where the said. However, "this was the
institution - is not a critical more personal nature; travel slow~moving creek bends, Dr. · extent of their interest," Dr.
factor in determining admission opportunities for students, fac- Marian White of the Anthro- White says. During the sumeligibility, the School says.
ulty and stslf; better State ::~~ts ~~d~t ~;::!heahedr mer, she was not allowed- on
-•~~
·on""m.ursestotherequiredU.
/ B fSchooor
ad-1 funding of oonoerts, sports pro- and flint chips they believe to the site.
~
grams, theatrical productions,
~ds
~th~d~ca
·C:
of Pbarmacy...,.a&gt;urses which a etc., and increased participaIn September, a permit was
granted and she, some students
prospective student must com- tion of alumni in Univenoity
plete during his first two years programs.
lions led Dr. White to think and membeno of a local arch·
m·elude m·or~n;c
As for the dem'oa of inter· that, perhaps, this might be aeology group began digging on
0 f COllege ~
the oldest archaeological find Saturdays and Sundays. 'They
~ ?i-~~,.!f· biol~'i; :~e~te.!':se~~ ~- J!~ in Western New York. That combed
"":" for flint chips
~f ~~ves inusthe h~ties Force was that""such sporting was last fall. Now the area is or dark the
orgaruc spots on the
or the soci8l sciences.
activities were not significant covered with fill and, the site is earth which would indiCate a
r - Obifactono in developin' a sense of ·buried under dirt from the cam- posaible find. Of special interest to them was the sandy knoll
There are two major objec- Univenoity oommumty at u / B pus lake excavation.
lives of the current effort to at this particular time. HowHow the site was buried is area and a £reshly-e%C&amp;vated
establish and identify pre-phar- ever, additional facilities for probably the result of a bureau- sewer line where dark red lines
macy courses in the community participation sports for faculty, cratic foul-up.
not native to the area could be
staff aDd students would be
Last June, Dr. White applied seen. On the right h8nd side of
00II
(~.f., make tbe students at most· desirable."
to the State University Con- the sewer line, they laid out
these institutions aware of tbe
struction Fund (SUCF) for flagged wooden stakes to indi·
permission to look for arcbaeo. .
to ez.
many caieer ,~ties open
logical remains on the site. ''It's cate areas the~lanned
to dig.
·to tbem in pbarniacy; and
a natural site, being located cavate. 'They
Over
the
course
of
two
(2) To let tbem know that
near a slow-moving creek," she
months, they were able to ell:·
f:m~sct':,1
Former U/B Dean William says. She baaed ~ a{'Pl!ca- cavate eight 5 x 5-foot,.squares
even tbouch ~ are not 811• D. Hawkland, now a professor tion 01i the State archlleoloiical and llix 10 x 1&lt;Hlquares doWn to
rolled in the Umver&amp;ity at the of law at tbe Univenity ol Dli· law prohibiting destruction of the depth of about a fool
time.
nois, and tbiee alumni will be "any object of ~cal F..-~ It ~~
-N
,_
Tbia information, once thor """-ed at the law School inle.\'est, iltuated on or under
pre-pbarmacy·_....,.areun- Alumni'aMid-WinllllrDin,MUt land owned by the State of
der way, will be tnnsmitted to tbe Statler-Hilton, February
=~t!:..,'i!!: bepn to brlnjr in fill from the
11
~~c!"~via
~~ __,
~
will receive an · er ol eobatiaa.• 'lbla law l...t late ....,.vation. Dr. White
.........
...... .....
•
to tbe ~ IIIIDafuJJy ~in Dr. ubd tbe aile foreman to have
a well a in
. mn,..llina awouu ...,.. ..,. &amp;erYJCe
Whit.'a apeoiaiw&amp; wlat 'OII'Od&lt;- the IDOil pile OD!y on the left
of the 80 that the
and beoeftta .....
to he """-ed iD- ina with tbe ' Jloputment of aide
poop could looep diuin&amp;. But
likelY to ..-.e to all pertles dude .Judp .Jolm L a-lar· ~~
~ ~
w.Jreud,
tbey_
tOimc1 their
involved once tbe couimunity · ..., chief judp of tbe reder8l Anlbent aile.
prbed apot filled ovw, their exroiJeaeohelina&amp;riii&amp;Pr&amp;-pbu- dlatrid - ~ for...~.'!~
-e ~
Diatrict o1 H... • .....; -men -.y·
· E. ~ ftlthd clerk for tbe
SUCF did - . . a directive Camp!aiats- ...-,but "no
The' ad.oaia ol ~- federal Caart; ,and William Oll.Jliii8291DAnlbentaile.,..... apecial
Blllpa tsba to ..,_
and the ,.~ beoeftt l'!yun, .Jr~ ,__. Pl'e8idoat ol t r - . and ardlitocts l'eaJind..
froni m.:.-1. .nlllllberll of iD- the Brie Coullty llu ~ ina .._ of tbe State Jaw, and force the law," Dr. White aa,ya.
to '~·- .._,_
1ere1ta1 atudeats.
tiaD.
~ that it is a tJnisdeShe _,:._
_..
......... .....
most cases, are the ones which

More Recreation

are required for admission to

0

!fi:.,

"'!:!d

Four LawAwards

!!:.:"'

=

~lqea

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

~-

Tbe burial of what may have
been the moot valuable site of
all was a result of lack of sup\"!rt for the foreman of the
job, Dr. White believes. "When
he reports a find be needs l&lt;l
feel that he has i.l..; support of
higher-ups" to "alow down or
halt work.
._

Hillel Named
m
Center
.

~our

Tbe B' . B' 'th Hillel F
.
rw. n
o~· dation at U/ B has been designated an Israel Travel Center
~y the Israel Ministry of Tour·
lSIIl.

Information on trips to Israel,
especially during the summer
months, baa ~ compiled and
is being made available to all
interesteil studenta. Included
are annoo-ts of camping
opportunities, yOath hostels,
me-;ve student flilbts. aDd
a variety ol tours in lsrMI and
Europe. A pat 11umber of
educatioaal PIOiflllll8 are also
described. AIIIOIII these m
worbhape in ciNma and folk
.. _ ..... __
-·~ ' - - - .--~

~~~-= and
~~:.;..:::
Hebrew lallpqe llludy

..:'.:li

.•.

spring to excavate other sites
but before she does she intends
to make "some more efforts" l&lt;l
clarify the situation

=~..::. ~

(tnpa). Blper.._ in Kibbutz livina areaftllable • well.
Alnoac tbe PIOiflllll8 ila w.k sparta -m.r aDd a ad·
...., -m.r at W........,. J:n..
for blah ~ ... Hillel alao ____._..__ ~afar~~.-

=
tiOD

Oil

~-aM!y

in lR8el ·~or a __.. ar a

year. ~ c6nd at
I:WJnw o~. Tel 'Aviv

u~;
aiiiJ Bar n.n Univenity, aJIIOill oll8a. .

�~75Sending

~Study-

Delegates to

(~rom-l.eol.6)

InaugUration
One. hUDdred &amp;nd seYeDtyfJVe co II e 11 e s, universities,
leamed aocietiee 8Dd foUDda- •
tiona will Bend delegates to the
lnaiJIW1ltion of U/ B President
Robert L Ketter, Fetiruary 15.
'lbe InausuraJ c r e m 0 n y
will be beld at Kleinhans Music H811, beginning at 10:30
a.m. A coffee hour will be held
in Kleinhans' Mary Seaton
RoQm fi'OJil 9-10 a.m.
.

e

~~~~r:ru~

Ridge Lea Dining Room at 1
p.m.
Speekers at the luncheon will
, include: Ernest L BOyer, chancellor, Stste University; George
. D. O'Connell, coniptroller, City
of Buftalo; B. John Tutuska,
Erie County executive; Allan
Dekdebrun, supervisor, Town
of Amherst; Albert H . Berrian,
associate commissioner of higher education, Stste of New
York; and the Very Reverend
James M. Demske, S.J., president, Canisios College.
For the conv~ience of delegates and guests who need
transpOrtation, buaes will leave
the Main Street Campus 1from
Norton Union) at 8:30 a.m·.,
will proceed to Ridge Lea to
pick up passengers at 9 a.rri.
I lot adjacent to Building 42361,
and will arrive at Kleinhans
Music Hall at 9 :30 a.m.
Immediately following · the
Inaugural, buses will · leave
Kleinhans for the Main Street
Campw; and will continue on
to Ridge Lea. Buses will return
to the main campus after the
luncheon.
Members of the University
community may secure tickets
for the Inaugural ceremony at
186 Hayes Hall.
·

U/B stuclonts hllve _ , titles In recent Table Tennis Chlom·
plonlhlps. In Phil-phla, John 01-. (left) _ , the Men's
Sin&amp;les A title and Manf""' John, a vlsitln1 student from
Gennany (rlcht), tool&lt; the Men's B SlncJes crown. Last
Saturday, Dixon beat John for the title at the Buffalo Open
Tournament at the Boys' Club.
·

Par_linfs Responsihk for Drug Abuse?

"A breakdown in parental re- first marijuana cigarette, toke
sponsibility and authority are their first trip on LSD, mainthe major causes of drug abuse line for the first time methamong teenagers."
amphetamine or heroin . We
Tilat's the view of Dr. Gerda must make parents resume their
I. Klingman, an associate pro- responsibilities of parenthood;
fessor of biochemical pharma- school administrators and
cology at U/ B.
!eache'rs have to reassume their
The educator-scientiSt does ,-esponsibilities, a n d children
not fault teenagers for the in- have to he given a chance to
crease in drug abuse and the he 'children agsin!'
rejection of society.
Pseudo-Adulthood
" It is not an American di"Children today can still play
lemma, but really a Western as hard and as wild and as
one. It is largely our fault, the exuberantly as children ought
parents , who haven~t paid to play. The trouble is, we do
enough attention to certain not give them many chances
aspects of child rearing . In to do so. Fathers and mothers
many ways, we have been too push their boys .and girls at a
ambitious for our children; in much too early age into a s tate
ot~r ways we have been very
of pseudo-adulthood. This is
negligent. For instance, we where drug abuse starts and,
want them to havto the best
I
E'..---J.. .... ~~
education money can buy; we
.£.ovt'Ul.IS .I. .1 \J}JV'X'U
approve the increased school
1\..-n...
bud~et without looking into the
'-'~.1
currJculum beyond the glamorMore than 50 events have ous phases. We must realize
been suggested for the Univer- that money doesn't buy everysity-wide open house planned thing,'' Dr. Klingman said.
An unauthorized, unsigned
for Sunday, May 2, as part of Worried, Frustmed Parents
''The attitude of many parents policy statement issued last
the celebration of the 125th Anniversary.
'that Johnny doesn't do such spring by Undergraduate StuAccording to John M. Buerk, things' still persists, but parents dies (stating that students
coordinator for the project, the are becoming more concerned would not he penalized in terms
suggestions include:
shout drug abuse and other of the 25 per cent restriction
• Department .demonstra- problems and increasingly re- on S/ U courses because of S / U
lions and exhibits;
cephve to the jdea that some- grades for that semester ) has
• Arts and crilfts demon- thing has to be done. Right now been given official, binding
strations and exhibits·
they are worried, frustrated- status by the new administra• Concerts: clB88i;,l, avant dbu~, don't know just what to tion of the Division.
garde rock folk·
·
The original memo "has no
of
As a mother, teacher and binding force,'' Acting Dean
•
ours .
_campus, scientist, Dr. Klingman has a Charles H .V. Ebert said. But
cl~ti
of special UruyersJty fa- few constructive ideas that it has resulted in a number of
1 es;
·
might improve the situation :
• Performances by the
• Make perents responsible
u"'
Black Dance ~orkshop, U/ B again; they should be interested
Biues, -~ m Theatre;
in what their cbildren are doing
• Carnival, fueworka; 8Dd
in school as well as in their
• • Student symposia and 'leisure time;
Fire evacuation drills will be
panels.
.
.
• Keep the lines of commu- held in various campus buildBuerk-aays chairmen will be nication open·
ings, February 8-12, the Envi• Keep children busy with ronmental Health and Safety
appointed for each or· sev~
areas; 8Dd that ead! pi'OYOSt 18 ''wholesome activities," such as Office has announced.
beiDJ asked to appomt one_ per- swimming, tennis, track. golf,
Robert E . Hunt, director of
"""' ~ p~te ";"'~ coordmate - drama, art, reading, etc.;
the Office, has ouilined these
ezhibJts Within his farulty.
·C'-n-- cbildren
procedures for the drills: '
Buerk has asked csmpua ad•
~
more
1. Wben the alarm is soundministrators for. their support !n ~ c;laasroOm; parents_ muat ed, 'proceed by the n:ost direct
in tile endeaV« 'l!fhich..he ~ instill m !hem the ~ t_o means, in keeping with equit"has the polelltial of - l i n g . learn; the idea that leamJIII 18 able distrillution of traJiic, to
to the. community a new po&amp;i- fun; .
the nearest exit and atsnd at
tiwf impression of wbojt we are · • Harsher puniahmeot for ~ least 25 feet outside the build-·
doinJ."
.
the ~.·
ing. (Each ·school or departDr. ~ also believes mentis ~lefor complete
«;1TY 1U£S SUNY
that "we muat lauDcb a co- ~persons asThe City at Bulfalo hils. the ordinaled nlltioniil elrort ..,.U.t si8Ded to ;.,.,....ty positions or
_stjta un~ . of N~ .vortc .for the~ of drop." Sbe'believe&amp; engaged in ezperimenfs which
-S.,430.10 ---;the cost at last. that such a m-de could be cannot be .interrupted or left
spitna's. cam- patrol by City a1 led succeasfully by the ·""""' unattended may remain.)
Bufflllo l'llllc,. The City . . . . . - media 8Dd coocerned c:itU:ens
2. Leave all lilbte on.
the SUNY T,.,._ failed In !hair in a.-y 'wallt of life.
3. Cloae all windows: •
lagjl obl~ -to ~ the c8m-· · "'We IDIEt launch ~ aun4. Cloae doors to corridors
pua, c:aus1111 the IIIUAiclpallt;i -to paip immedia~. Tbe ittpacy but leaW! dan Ullloebd.
spand $3,29,530.10 tor ~ is olwiiius: eYI!rY day buncbeds
. OIX:upaDta may ie-euter the
and $59,90!) for. ~ · of' Y.,.,.,. li- are ~ · building,_ H~t aaid, wt.l the
and su~ ~ ' - ps; by drop. Every-day hunllrada "All Cle8r" 18 IIJIDDunced ovw
'
of )'OIIDI ~ IIIDOke, their the pcilice ~ pimetratoi-.

·50

S/U Overload Last Spring

House

For U/B

rest

I believe, the
of the problems. They are all interrelated.
We don't give our child1en a
chance. lo be children, 1o grow
up in a wholesome atmosphere.
''The conduct of childrenwherever they are-should be
the responsibility of the parents.
" Life is not a one--way street
as many people would like to
make us believe. With rights
&lt;-orne responsibilities and obligations. We must acknowledge
these responsibilities and obligations and our children will
learn through our example.
"I am sure we can overcome
our parents! complacency and
re-&lt;!ducate our people before
too many young Jives have been
damaged or even destroyed."
Dr. Klingman concluded.·

Won't Affect Total Record

T '

the

0

CampusFJ;.,DrilJs

Set for!Vext Week

onJr.

students havirig a higher percentage of St U grades than
perli!issible under University
1egulations.
Because he does "not wish to
see students become victims of
circumstances in part brought
ahout by the administration in
office at that time," Ebert said
he has cleared "this urgent situation" with the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee.
The following policies have
now been authorized officially :
"A. Any student who has ex,
ceeded the permissible 25 per
cent limit of S/ U grades as a
result of St U grades given during the spring semester of 1970
may request that such grades
be changed into letter grades.
The request for such a change
of grade must he done on the
regular Request for Change .o f
_ Grade Form bearing the signalure of the instructor 8Dd deparlment chairman, and be submilled to the Undergraduate
Division Dean's Office for approval and transmittal to the
Office of Admissions and Records.
"8. U a student wiahes to
keep his excess l;I/ U glades incurred during the spring sem·
ester of 1970, he may do so
and is hereby assured that those
grades will not count toward
thi! 25 PI'J' ces~t limit:" .
·
Changes of 8/U ilrades not
relaled "to tile spring semester
of 1970 cannot be made unless
a documented hardship situalion eDsts, Dean Ebert said.
Such a situation, he said, muat
be explaiDed in full, attacbed
to the Req...t for Chanae of
Grade Form and brought to his
peraonal attention. ·

able and Attainable by more
than the majority of the claas,
8Dd ohould take account of1he
. dilferm, needs 8Dd interests of
the studenl"
1}&gt;e final report recommerided, then, that "the various
evaluative procesaes of the University be delineated 8Dd examined for lairrieas," retaining
only those "careful 8Dd profes•ional evaluations which aid in
the attainment of our primary
goals."
Qesides its primary services
- the creating, correlating,
storing 8Dd disseminating of
knowled-the University also
offen; services to the oommunity requiring direct or indirect
oommitment of funds or facilities. Educational televiSion or
radio, concerts,· plays, and the
professional, academic a n d
&lt;!Ommunity services of members
of the UniversitY are only some
of the examples · of suCh services.
·
The Task Force as a whole
agreed with its subcommittee's
report that these services "must
contribute positively to the
pursuit of our primary ioaJs.'·
Commitment to Ideas

In the final statement, the
subcommittee on the Univer ~
sity and change in society defined the University's central
role as '*complete oommibnent
to oomprehensive analysis of
ideas S.nd their implications."
The University, it explained,
influences societal change in at
Je""t three fashions-scholarly
research, the equipping of individuals for a variety of pur•uit&amp;, and the example set by
individual members of the University in their personal and
academic capacities.
The report concludes, "The
changing of society is an inevitable resuli of the pursUit of the
primacy goa\s &amp;lreaay defined.
In itself it is not a goal of the
University. We believe that the
entire University community is
responsible for being aware of
this result of its academic
work.''

Rosenbaum, Keegan
Receive Expulsions
Allen Rosenbaum and Terrance Keegan, hoth graduate
students in philosophy, were
expelled from the University,
January 26, for violating terms
of suspensions meted '~but to
them last fall for activities connected with the sludent strike.
last spring. Both were accused
of entering Norton Hall in November although their suspensions stipulated that such visits
were not pennitted. The Hearing Commission on Campus
Disruption recommended expulsion after a session which reviewed, among other evidence,
alfidavits signed by eight members of the Norton staff verifying the presence of the two in
the Union. President Ketter
after "hearing the arguments on
both sides" went along with the
expulsion recommends tion.
Ketter had no further comment, saying it was a "'personal
Jn8.tter."

Advisory Meeting
Brainstorming and "mystery
prizes" for ideas will highlight
the next ltle'1ting of the Community Advisory Council for
U/ B's 125th Anniversary, February 11 (Goodyear-10, 3:30
p.m.).
Dr. Sidney Pari.es of 'the
Buftalo Stste-baaed Creative
TJrinkinjr Project will conduct
the 11&lt;!81,1190.
According to M . R Poummit of the Colad Co., Inc.,
chairman of the advisory group,
othet "surprises" will be on the
Procram for the meeting.

�&lt;iR:EPQRTER, -

4

,.,_, 4, 1911

Arts &amp;.tLettersVoting Process Lets
GeokJg{m1 CmtribJtifJns·
The ~e' Dominate the 'Minnows' To.ErolngieaJ. Questjons .
By BRUNO A. ARCUDI

~,.;::~

At this crucial time when the
humanities are again undersoing crude scrutiny from pedestrian interests of both the
far risht and the far left, they
need most of all to be staunchly
united. Unfortunately, any semblance of such unity is sorely
lacking in our Faculty of Arts
and Letters where the interchange between the two factions has made the meanings
of such words as liberal, conservative, · excellence, as con~~ and unrecognizable as
the various interpretations for
the term socialism.
Though it seems hard to believe, most of the present difficulties in the Faculty of Arts
and Letters derive from two
very' innocent accidents or
quirks: 1. The composition of
the Faculty which grouped together one immense department 1tbe English Department) and tep quite small ones,
each, however, with specific
and unique needs; and 2. The
peculiar v o t i n g procedure
spelled out in tbe Faculty of
Arts and Letters Bylaws which
speCifies Faculty-wide elections
for all of our standing committees .rather than elections by
departments with accommodations for larger dePartments, as
in all other faculties.
-and I l l Though, indeed, four years
aso the Faculty started off in
an atmosphere of innocence and
goodwill, it did not take the two
factors of Faculty imbalance
and at-large Faculty elections
very long to generate the usual
hlatorical vii!"'! of special interest, power politics and inevitable stacked committees. The
needs, financial and otherwise,
of the English Department are,
of course, considerably greater
than those of any other department; after all, a whale tossed
in with tan minnows knows tbat
it must eat .immensely more of
the common pie than they, so
you have an understandable
over-kill on the part of the
English Department and frustration, not to say undemour·
ishment, on tbe part of the rest
of us.
The obvious conclusion is
tbat such a disproportionate
set of districts ·should never
have been combined into a
Faculty. However, since it was,
very concrete steps should have
been ~ to protect both the
whale and, especially, the minnows. The Faculty-wide or atlarge voting procedure, unfortunately, sides with the
whale. In fact, in all of our
elections for standing committees we cast two ballots (all
Faculty-wide), the first of
which elects nominees and the
oecond of which elects the fmal
committee members. It is easy
to see what a solid caucus of
seventy votes can and does

achiew in IIUCh eleCtions. Not ·
Dilly . . _ the English Department ...,..Jarly elect its "maximum allotmept of three members per committee, but it aJao
elects members of its own preference from other departments
and thus, by the sheer weight
of its numbel:s, effectivety controls the business of the Faculty. Tbeee preferred members from otber departments
are very few and, in fact, their
lll,lmeB recur again and again
on ballots. Indeed, since tbe
political machine runs more
and more smoothly, during the
past two years no candidate
! from any department ) not
designated by the En~lish Department has been elected to
our committees.
Bad Fruits of At-Large Yotilll

The National parallel would
be a situation in which the very
large State of New York both
nominated and then voted in
·representatives to the Congress
for the State of Rhode Island.
This sounds preposterous and,
indeed, the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution prohibits it, but it is a very accurate description of the Faculty
of Arts and Letters voting procedures and an undeniable documentation of this deplorable
situation is evident in the
present composition of the Appoinbnents, Promotion a n d
Tenure Committee of the Fac.ulty of Arts and Letters. All of
the bad fruits of the at-large
voting are there present, where
representative government has
been virtually eliminated.
A careful look at tbat Committee reveals' tbat only four
I 4 J out of a total of eleven
I 11 ) units !departments and
programs) are represented .
How can anyone in the faculty,
or indeed the University, view
the future deliberations of this
Committee with anything but
alarm. Can we really accept
th~}! future unrepresentative
opm10ns as swtable and applicable for, say, seven replacements which we face at the
chairman rank in the Faculty?
All of this takes place in the.
background of guarantees by
the Constitution and the Supreme Court which permit minorities self-determination in
the election of their own representatives. I can almost see
Galileo shaking his head and
speaking under his breath.
It is a gratuitous exercise to
add tbat this bas caused widespread frustration and demoralization on the part of a great
number of disenfranchised
members of the Faculty wbo by
now have given up and neither
vote nor attend Faculty meetings. Although in Cicero's
phrase we in the Humanities
have a· strong community of
interests; on the other hand as
individual departments of Art,
Music, Theatre, Foreign Literature, etc., we have very pro-

nounced differences and needs,

many_ of which have been
ignoied or trampled upon.
~Effort

• Tl)e present occupant of the
Provost's Olficeif P r o f e s s o r
Thomas Conno y, more keenly
aware than most of University
structures, is making a very determined and courageous effort to eliminate the unsalutory
effects of the imbalance in our
Faculty and render the Bylaws. more equitable and fair.
He bas propoeed tbat the Faculty be divided into three equal
districts or tribes, each of approximately 72 Faculty mem-

ct~ITDf"\Tl\.TTS
- y J..l:t yy r VJ.J.,
The ~ , _ . on this to l&gt;f'O"ldo a forum for the u dtanp of on a var~etr
of the 1.._ ttldna the ..-.n1c
community . We welcome both
~papers

and

lelterw

n

opace permits.

.
Responses to this and to all VIew·
points are welcomed by the odltorln&lt;hief, up to an established
limit of nine ~n doublespaced pages. Most can likely be

·-·

bers. Esch district will elect il8
allotment of representatives to
the committees and, in an effort to pacify the whale, he is
;-uggesting some at-large representation beyond the tribes. In
a recent meeting of the Faculty, this division into three numerically equal districts ( I.
English and Comparative Litera ture, 2. Art, Music, and American Studies, and 3. Foreign
Languages and Classics ) was
erroneously termed gerrymandering by 'three professors of
English, ' whO should certainly
know better.
Is i1 odd tba t Professor Connolly'\; redistricting should...remind us of the Warren ei&gt;ur
!-s
reapportionment d e c is ions
which have saved representslive government in the United
States by reapportioning the
country into equal districts not
only at the Federal, but State
and County levels. It would
certainly be a blatant violation
of the principles of equal apportionment and self-determination if Professor Connolly's
proposal sbould fail. His proposal could restore some harmony and peace to the Faculty
of Arts and Letters. However,
if his proposed revisions to the
By-laws are not successful, the
disenfranchised members of the
Faculty will be driven to a re-

tl:,''Thc:J~~ extenda beyond
I have taken it upon myself
to write this, by now, very tong

B~..!.?,~s£l',!N
Geologists, to 1a large extent,
suffer from a kirid of inferiority
compleL It is liaaed in a perceived failure of non-geologisb;
to understand ·t:!Je contributions
geology is able .to make to the
solution of envitbnmental problems _ scienti6c questions of ,
life and death, ;...nnrtant to so- .
-~
ciety · The reaction of some geologists has been to ·withdraw
unto themselveS and grumbler
about how !itt!~ they lire appreciated. I would rather force
the issue and ask you wbether
you do know enough about the
nature and range of the poten·
tia! contribution of geologists
to understand where and when
they are needed and where and
when they are not. Do you, in
fact , ouerlook geology out of
ignorance?
Take a look a~ the following
questions; you may determine
~t;!t ;~:::. aru;wer to the last

Wlinto.

-__ ... __
-.
.
.
.
-·-L.-----· .

:!..:f.

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

. g:a:w,•:

.,.......

. . . , . o f _. _ . _

Natural E'*V

Criolor ·

.

Are you· aware that we -face
,. natural energy reooouroe crisis?
Do
you know about how many
tens of years the world's present industrial energy conswnption could be sustained by
foo;sil fuels? •
Are you aware that economi·
cally feasible natural concentrations of oome metallic elements are now so rare and
small tbat known supplie.; will
be exhausted within a few tens
of years at present rates of conDo You Know Why?
sumption? 1H that not, in itself,
Disposal of solid wastes is " sufficient urgument to accept
necessary. Some methods of dis- a cost, even if not insignificant,
posal may be worth using, even to re-proc:es.s and recover merif finite, but only if properly cury ratht.r than dispen;e it in
used. For example, re-use of a wastes?
former sand and gravel pit, fin;t
In some regioru; there ure
as a sanitary land fill 1with very high correlations between
daily covering over of wastes bedrock geology and the incidby compacted earth and final ence of some human physical
covering, compaction, and plant- ailments. Knowing ·this to be
ing l and later as a park, might true, don't you think it would
be thought to represent good be worthwhile investigating th~
practice. But a geologist throws nature of this correlation?
up his hands in dismay. Do
I could go on, but . . .
you know why?
GeolbtiY Important to
A geologist might urge that Environmental Sc:lenc:e
certain subsurface strata be
Yes, you knew that geologist.'
saved for deep well disposal prepare the ''black light" min·
of radioactive wastes rather eral displays in museurru;. You
than industrial wastes. Can you knew that geologists help to
imagine why?
lind ""d produce oil and tbat
As a result o( petroleoim pro- recently 80me'Of them have .had
duction salt water encroach- moon roc:lu; to study. But were
ment rendered subsurface water you aware tbat these questions
no longer .pi&gt;taole and subsi- are the sor~ tbat a geologist is
den"'l was so great tbat ""me naturally able to answer even
parts of Long Besch were many if hiH scientific interest is as
feet below sea level. Someone L..oteric as the crystal chemical
proposed that water be pumped factor.; governing chemical !raedown holes to force the surface tionation of elements between
back up. A bright idea? Maybe, C&lt;H&gt;xisting phases dlH"ing metabut a geologist would know tbat morphic reactions at great
re-elevation would be limited depth in the continental crust?
to a few centimeters ·only. At
Now, tbat geologist would not
some cost this knowledge was expect you to be aware of or
verified. But it seems to me tbat interested in his geological speit might be just as important to cialty. But he might be a little
understand why re-elevation of put out by your failure of
no more than a few centimeters awarenessltltf the nature of the
could be achieved. Do you oontribution he can make to
know why?
environmental tteience. He
As a geolom•t, it is no lon~r would find it especially regreto•tab! "f
had
"ousl
a puzzle to me tbat rivers keep
e ' you
prevt
Y
running so long after the rain failed even to be aware of the
bas stopped. In case you've ex~ of "the area of enviever• stopPed to wonder about ronmental ocienoe exemplified
that, have you understood why? by . thelle q.-ions.
:i!::J.~u see 9": relationship to ~~ ~,j;
Can We~ of
More than anything else the
Pplluted Wat8r U-'-----'1
. following: Don't foraet that"'"In wbat 11Dportant
· ·-•·-·..l
ways ·is' 1..., you've included him you're
the self-cleaning potential of not· fully justified in Claiming
water in rivers greatly different to be ..._.,__ wfth environf
the If _, ___ ,_
~...
rom
se .........W.g potential mental sciences. Remember,
of underground water in aqui- environmental ac:ienoe without
fers? How extensively can we geology is .....rthy!
.,...
dispose of polluted water un~f aspo.n::"t!iparedwater "th

statement in answer to inany
calls, and particularly in answer
to Professor Logan's
· ·o(questhe
ti·on at a recent meeting
Faculty of Arts and Letters.
It js my hope and wish tbat
Professor C .o n n 0 II y • s suggestions about our By-laws rev~ prevail. . They certainly
reoe•ve support from a long tra. dition of United States justice.
However, whatever the outcome, I am reminded tbat the - ? (We've learned although Dante inaists tbat "ready of measurable oceanic
"tizens of this
ld firs
pOllution; the earth's ground
recommend :Ite a b~ water volume is lees than 1 per
~t
leCOUI'tle to hilbar . .iur&gt;water volume of the
.. warur R.CIIn.AJfD
lice. '
'
Montmorillonite, illite and
1"BJIO~~­
PAIIKINQ TICKETS..FOMIVEJI
kaolinite, while similar in 'many
~
~DT r. lfAa£BT1"
Prolklont Robert ·L -bas ap- . ~ bebavedilferentlypbyprowd •lvlrw traffic .n- ........, Slcally when wetted by water
SUUJIJQ ' · JfaTZOU
~--,~- j
·,
from 5epCamber 30, &lt;ol9tlll, to o(:. Ul)detground. Do you know
Art ... l'rotlwtiJoe
(,
tobei 1, 1970. wtt1t the _ _ . : something about how they re}OIIIt .... c:r.ounD
,_of
the - - · late _to ~il stability? Their
aUSAif OJlUirWOOD
The Ollice of StutiMt Accounts WiN chemical interactions witli
&lt;~Mit all f i - levied for the period water are aJao differenL Did
-An~...,_,you know they may . bie ' - '
~.Jr.-;~
Cll.7l ...................~ - befqre the he~ of the lpllnc · The made be- to help clean polluted water?
.,....
of
·
.
.
..,
the
o1c1
What
e1ae do you
about
GWIJ&amp;WIJW AIII"Jn'z . _ 16• ......

l'.:," .iJd

n_o t, slope stBbWty detennina.
lion by moment analysis is
baaed upon a fundamental
error. What is the error? What
might be the ~ of
making that error?
Coastal California is more
plagued by landalides than a
lot. ot plaoee tbat are equally
hilly. Why 00. California have
this problem?
.
Did you reelize the last two
questions are cloeely related?

mow

U.O?
In about as many .,._ as

.Z~ig~
.School Split

. Dean Franklin M. Zweig,
who has announced his resignation as "-1 ol Social Welfare, effective A1JIU[It 31, aaid
laat week that a. facuiW split
exists in the adtool which can
be healed Only bY. .the appointof an outsider ari.~ · He tracad the rift to last
spriJJi's 4iaonlera 'lbe
of. seJec:tinc a ,_ dean, Zweil
said, should" not be of the
"cloeed, ~N Jl&amp;iure•which
was· evident .in Keliar'a "appoinU...t ud which ,be himself candemned,N

=

s-oc:-

�cn~Dno-r.::-o_
-nr,... vn. .l~

P~ 4, 1971

Calm Only 'Breathing Spell'.
Fiedler
Wtrns In Speech_
u,..,_.,

o1 Cincinnati
two. 'llle "non-materialistic"
. Fiedler, currently on ~
"A war has developed be- new culture. .he charged, made batical in Paris, noted tbat
tween the old and the young in them into "saleable commod- oo-ailled "cultural revolu · "
this COUDtry, and it iB one of ities," thus turning ' the "mu- in Europe iB just another
the moat atrocious wars that tants" (Fiedler's tenn for the erican import-the ........,,....._
any nation can undergo," Les- adherents of pop culture ) into type" clothes of the ~
lie Fiedler, author and profes- the "businessmen" types they 'Uiutants have t-Il adopted:a:t
most of the attitudes have
sor of English at U / B, warned began by protesting against
"The new culture has become
'llle cultural and poli .
an audience of about 500 at
the University pf Cincinnati a commercial succees." he said. revolutions which began as oae
you spit in the establish- force, according to Fiedler,
last .....k.
ment's eye, they'll aell it back have now splintered.
~ on "the cultural
1
revolution in a two-part lec- to you for a thousand dollars."
''Political revolutions beooGie
Tracing the origins of the more
ture, Fiedler desCribed the conpuritanical and moar ,._
flict between the generatioll8 "" new life style advocated by today's "hippie generation," Fiedboth "civil" and "genocidaJ.".
"It iB a war agaiJ&gt;st the new ler characterized the vanguard were two prime qualities of the
man," ' he charged. "Parents of the cultural revolution as cultural revolution."
are sending their servants-the "committed to joy" and "radi'llle appearance of the wocope-to ftght their children." cally opposed to the notion of men's liberation and black pow'lllere iB currently an "un- maturity." 'llle group adopted er movements, he continued,
anti-rationalism,
he
said,
as
a
comfortable truce," F i e d I e r
further served to sever the posaid, in the battle between the kind of "cultism," and sought litical revolution from the culto redeem insanity &amp;; a poe:;old and new cultures.
sible way of life. Thus, the use tural one.
"We're in the midst of a of drugs became a "Lour" into
"'The flower has been rebreathing spell,", he no ted. insanity.
plaoed with the clenched fist,
"People~are beginning to realAlthough
parallel•
to the and the love which was the
ize that a 'culturaJ revolution' youth culture exist in other center of the movement has
is not going to be simple."
countries, he noted, the cultur- been countered with hate, anFiedler noted that the twin al revolution is essentially an ger, and wrath,'' he declared .•
"Power is now at the center of
spectres of disease and death American phenomenon.
the struggle for the advocates
have come to haunt the cultur- Mochlnes C.n't Croato Joy
of
the political revolution."
al revolution in its drive toward
"It can occur only at an ad·
change.
vanoed stage of technological The Laft vs. The FloWers
The Flrot M•rtyrs
.
progress, when boredom beAs a result, Fiedler noted,
"Janis Joplin and J imi Hen- comes one of the chief prob- the ultra-leftists are now among
drix, two rock stars who died lems of daily life. The only re- the primary enemies of the
from drug overdoses last year, sponse to this boredom becomes "flower-dllldren" who choose
are the first martyrs of the cul- a life of hedonism-joy is one to make their revolution by
tural revolution," he said. of the few things machines dropping out of society.
"They are different from polit- can't create."
Despite the commercial exical martyrs, because the weapWhile some e...tem Euro- ploitation and inner friction
ons of death were held in their pean countries have also made of the cultural revolution, Fiedown hands."
rapid technological progress, he ler lriewed its total impact as
Built-in oontradictioru; in the said, the other primary ingred- positive.
new, or .. pop," culture, Fiedler ient, ennui, has not been
"The mutants are what their
added; caused the deaths of the present
parents really wanted to be.

lnl_,_s.n.-.

·:u

=:;,c!.J~=~

and if there's anything people
fear, it's their own liberation,"
he asserted.
"There has been an extension of the limits. or tolerance
in this world-the co-opters in
society can only end up by
being co--opted," Ji'iedler con·
eluded. ''The new world is not
a Garden of Eden-in many
waytt it it; a miserable placebut the world has changed and
is changing. The cultural revo-

. lnt£mational Studies Cause Inventory Urged
By JAMES A. MICHIELU
Director,

O..W•• Ac:.demk Pro;-

Looking through the indices
of the -current undergraduate
and graduate school catalogs,
it is not possible to grasp a
comprehensive picture of our
courses having international dimensions, because of alphabetical listings. With some exceptions, it is equally difficult in
thumbing through the text of
the catalogs to obtain quickly
an accurate count of the international oouraes given departmentally, since they are often
interlaoed with others having
little or no apparent international content A cJ.-r reading suggests, however, that a
broad spectrum of oouraes does.
indeed exist
Beca.- of the amorphous
appearance of our storehouse of
internationall y oriented
00111'81!6, I contend tbat this University should aplore ways of
undertaking a thorough inventory of its international offerinp, which could provide a
basis for eetting clearer direcin connection
tions and
with study on Clllllpus involvCehool
__
..._
ing other
cultures.

-w

A deliberate compilation of
oouraes lOOI1Id lend oobMive, _ to our ~t olferlnp
(and lltrt!qtben an ......,..._
of our -a-&gt; 10 fuller
consideration could be..=.:
bOth the forma and
of international lllull8 in
which - may chaooe to ....
gaae.
.
.
Opliona could, for ~
111J118 from an individual llludent major or minor conoentra-

tion in a foraipl in one
~ to formaJiad sludial propaJIIB Which could
offer a,ti&amp;Ues or depeM to
mu,y ~-- 'Our Africon
and Ulln Ameriaul fllculty doweloping &amp;npea.he foNip
-

ln-tional

BludisprclpiiiDL
are aleo rallectad in

comparative education, litera·
ture and politics. There are
other kinds of programmirig
being offered or in the offing,
as welL But how many of us
know fully what our internationally minded colleagues actually offer? Are we nearing
the optimal utilization of existing courses within a collaborative, academic design&lt; s), for
both students and faculty?
Moreover, we naturally cannot know what new undergraduate and graduate courses are
desirable until we know clearly
what we have. .
·
It would . seem appropriate
that the University Task Force
on International Studies should
deliberate the matter, as it begins its work.
Because of what still needs

::'ur~~::'ti!J~~!, f.!

readily aiSCeroible focus. the
value of comparative and foreign area studies iB discussed
in order to enlist continuing
and irlCreaBing Clllllpus support
for both approaches to structuring our mternational curriculum further.

~Cqmparative studies represent the investiption of similar .
institutions or other - " ' of
dilflllrent cultures from a di&amp;ciplinary standpoint. ·Sudi
methodolotiY broadens oonceptiono, . . . . _ definitions and
dlatiJJa _ . principJea. Compualheo lllull8 involve not
only an eval~alion of the relative value of foreipl cultures in
relation to our own, but aleo
an aamination of MCh cultural element in the OOD!est ol
tbe mtire oociety 10 tbat ita
functiono CIUL be conaidend in
-the IIcht of tbe culture's ~
r-1 aimll or. ideala. ot..ving bow 8lmilar cultural ele11110' IUe on diffaalt
functiono ud CJOpllizationa ......
~d~e~~

tween cultures concerning their
problems, changes and development
In contrast, foreign area
studies forcus on a particular
area of the world that could be
a continent, a region; a national
state, .or even a local community. 'llle method of study iB interdisciplinary, bringing various academic disciplines to
bear on the study of an area.
'llle essence of foreign area
studies iB not to consider a
single facet of a culture in isolation, but to treat an area as
a socio-&lt;:ultural whole. To do
80, one studies the geography,
economy, social institutions,
history of the people, and its
beliefs and values, as reflected
in the philoeophy, religion, literature and arl Area""'tudies
stress the interrelatedness of
these major cultural aspects 80
that at least the anatomy of an
area iB comprehensible.
A principle aim of area
studies iB not 80 much the
learning of infonnalion as it iB
the acquisition of a general
technique for studying and un-

=~~~~Thissoc:.:.=
the development of appropriate

traits of thinking, intereats and
attitudes on the part of students. Hopefully, such mental
app~ will last beyond a
course and remain with the student I refeo- here to area
studies beyond survey 00111'81!6,
which sweep the _,....... ol
an area's oxnpleDon in a &amp;~~~Do­
ester or a year. In t t - instances, only I.ming at tbe
level cail be a-

---IJI·-··
=-tional

courses give students a deeper
understanding of our own so-ciety, a keener f)e"rspective of
our problems and their significance in contemporary world
affairs. Students also become
more cognizant of the special
oontributions of Western civilization, and are able to evaluate them more accurately.
An increasing number of un·
dergraduates, in addition U.
graduate students, now have
the opportunity to undertake
foreign area programs on American campuses. including language study. Thus far, area
programs, particularly undergraduate, have tended to be
limited to the large universities. having the necessary resources. Certainly, undergraduate teaching by foreign area
specialists and an expansion of
related Library holdinp, at
more universities and colleges,
are highly important for the
pre-professional preparation for
specialized, graduate training in
foreign a r e a s esperiencing a
continuing shortage of experts.
University would do well
to reflect seriouSly on expanding both its Undergraduate and
graduate area programs, as faculty talent, student interest and
fm.nclal f1!90W'ceS permit.
Should foreign area or comparative studies take 'precedence over the other? Both app~ to internationalizing
the .currii:ulum are complementary; the Bllength of one iB
the ........,_ of the other.
Wbersa foceign area couraes
acel in taaching students bow
to UDdentand and approach the
study ol any foreign eociety in
its totality, OOIIJIIIlflltive studies,
dealing with similar - " ' of
dilflllrent cultures, are more
likely to maJr.e OODtributiono to
Regardleaa.
which
a campull may
becin .. -.lually it must
aleo e m p I o y the other for
achievinc tbe fu1lellt of aca-

This

tbeoryE.

Area studies aleo help studenta to appreciate the rich
OODtritJutiooa. ol other peoples
to ~ biatory, and to ......
derBtand t be bacltcround
apm.t which cultural inlenll&gt;
lion tabs pboce in the world.
demic..WIL
At tbe same time, foreipa -

Jution cannot be prevented-if
it does not take up the sword
it will not perish by the sword."
The mutants of the new culture, Fiedler said, have now
passed from an era of confron·
tation to a period of "long,
litrategic ret rea t." Many of its
members have gone in tu agri·
c-ui tural communes and other
small Jiving groups where they
will "keep and nourish the
faith."

SPA Endorses
Competitive
Pay Schedule
The major goal of the Senate
Professional A s soc i a t ion
tSPA !, recently elected a.s bargaining agent for SUNY professional staff, will be "to retain our competitive salary
schedule so that we can be the
best state universitY svstem in
the nation."
· ·
That Wllb the .a.sesstne~ll of
Dr. Gordon~- Harris of chemh;try, a camj!Us SPA organizer.
in a neWHpaper interviPw fol ·
lowing the election. Harris noted concern over
the slim' margin of SPA's victory. "I wanted a clear-cut decision," he said. Nonetheless.
"We hope everyone will fall t.e:
\lind us in our attempt to provide leadership."
'llle losing contender, the
State University Federation of
Teachers, has meanwhile given "notice that it intends to stay
around and possibly seek a
new election as soon as legally
posaible 1 see separate story ).
SPA, · Harris said, will not
lieek a single salary schedule
for all of SUNY. "You have all
different types of people to recruit and we must have a competitive salary schedule,'' he
said.
'llle new agent will not "destroy the good points of our
present tenure policy" or en·
danger "the rights and privileges the faculty now has, just
for money."
HELP!

-TolletltBtLL IS INCORRECT
Offic:e of Stude nt Accounts,
Ha)!eSA
cashier, Ext. 4731
State Schotllrships, Ext. 4735
-Records, Ext. 2041
Moll Box - next to Ollice of

--nts

�~

-~

Rep&lt;rts fum Rmders-

KeepLanguage Studies!"
A Staff Member Urges
Dr.

n-.u E. Cormolly,

Acting Provost, .

Faculty ol Arts a Lettars
Dear Dr. Connolly:
Let'o DOt consider dropping
the Lan,uaae Course Requirement for Arts lo: Lettars!! ( Reportq, January 28.)
In this modem age of airtravel and atomic -""""- improved international understandinl is a ,_ity. It is a
time for bridging c:ommunicalions gaps, and what better
way than learning to speak and
read another's languaae instead
of expecting other peoples to
. learn ours!
In fact, it would be wise for
other faculties to pay more attention to language studies.
Openings in ·business, commerce, enpneering, health and
e d u c a t 1 on a I fields occur
throughout the world!
Although I am a staff meml&gt;er,
a. small oog in our great Univerliity, I nevertheless feel im_ . pelled to speak out on this matter. On a • four month's trip
. around the world last year, my
husband and I were really con. scious of "the Lenguage Barrier," and vowed to tell all who
will listen, ''Please study a foreign language." We noticed a
distinct thawing in the attitude
of everyone we contacted during our travels whenever we· attempted to use a word -or two
of their native language. Everyone· seemed most anxious to be
helpful and friendly.
On Tokyo's tower we were
surro'!llded by smiling Japanese sChoolboys who clamored
lor our autograph and address.
We learned that English is now ·
a required language in Japanesoe schools in addition to their
own tongue. Do we want our
SUNYI AB graduates to be less
well-eqwpped in communicsting with foreigners than Japanese high school students?
True, one can lind Englishspeaking waiters, guides, taxidrivers and clerks in major
hotels and cities around the

;::{~d~n~ut,"':,~~"':.r~ta:

dictionary! At leaSt we JOIUid
one E~g waiter
who could · ·t ranslate that our
re"!tives wanted us to come. fo
tbei[. h!Rne the next day "for
tea.
Or the hour and a half we
spent in Amsterdam looking
for the Auto Club for road information to Italy (we were
looking for "AA" initials when
we sbould have been looking
for other initials ) . When we
found the club headquarters
and received tour information,
we discovered later on that it
was all printed in Dutch!
Lucky for us our daughter bad
taken a short course in Dutch
offered for servicemen's wives
overseas.
Please forgive me for taking
so much of your valuable time
but r hope my coiD!i&gt;ents ,.,..;
pertine_nt and. worthy of cons1derahon as your faculty delil&gt;era~ on t~ future of the Lan~uage Reqwrement.
, Yours for high •-tandards
for graduates,
-GEJITRUDE SHELTON

Facilities Planning

Make It Clear,
Rothstein Asks ~
Editor:
I was distressed to be quoted
in the Reporter \January 21,
1971 ! as planning to ask the
graduate committee of the Bioiogy Department to cui graduate studerit stipends. I stated
that it was my personal opinion
that we would have to cut the
number of graduate students so
that we could increa"" the slipends, which are terribly small
for these inllated times. I am
making this proposal to the departmenL 1 made clear to your
reporter 1 twice) that until the
department makes an official
decision on this policy, I was
~xpressing my personal opinion.
In any case, I am for increased
stipends and, if necessary, less
students.

Could you please make this
rant, and he or she happens to clear while I duck the bricks.
be gone when one needs help and so forth, flung by enraged
or advice. These days, many ' justifiably ) graduate students.
Sincerely,
travellers prefer to avoid "package ·tours" and try to "do their
- MORTON ROTHSTEIN
b:"~" :tead~l CS:u ~
Chairman, Biology
bahns, stopping to eat and ll~....: m '
sleep where they choose. This ~~ J.O' 1
is when most language prot&gt;!ems arise.
In the interests· of brevity lor
publiC{Ition, I will just outline
The Executive Committee of
a few of the humorous '·com- Local 2134, AIT ( AFL-CIO),
municstion gaps" we met. The State University Federation of
embattassing lateness in keep- Teachers (SUIT), has taken
ing a beauty-shop appointment the position that the heavy vote
, in Holland because the .hotel for SUIT ( 47 per cent) in the
receptionist told me the shop run-off election lor collective
was located "on the first floor, bargaining agent is a mandate
behind the Radio Shop" . . . "to stay in the struggle for true
viben actually it was a half a collective bargaining lor the
block away, on the opJ)Oilite pSroUNYfessional." e m p l·o y e e s of
side of the street on the second

g+LC::ly,
. .,
SUFT Says

fi~ the time the airline clerk
Prof. John Huddleston, presat the Marseilles airport almost ident ol the SUFI' Liicai at
sold my husband two tickets to B_uffalo,_ sai~ this week, "A gen1\mis, instead of to Nice . . . - uine UDlOII dis"!onetinc
.
ti~ont canbe~~
the anxieties we felt 'stopping . clear, the
"""'"
at oervice stations througb Ger- "'!'P_Ioy""!' and Uni~rsity admany and Switzerland trying to mmlBtration. CollectiVe barexplain we needed something to Jai!ring is a cballenging job
stop a small teak in the car which can be done only by a
radiator . . . or trying to get genuine union a¢ in which
road information through the ~ :~ ~=
Alps in January with storm sionaJ atall PERB regulations
clouds building up and snow giw the Senate ProfessioOal
· on the ground · · · · Association &lt;SPA) two years
0r tly.ing to ConVenll! ~ith to ..-t the cballenge before a
relatives in the French part of new election """ be called for.
U· SPA does not do the job
Switzerland who did not
Ktand Englisb,· while I was try- properly in this P!lriOd. SUFI'
ing to ClOIIIIJUIDicllte oo the be- will orpnim a petition for a
llio ol some $-ye&amp;rs..,o college new election for .collectiw barFrench with the _aid ol a pocket _gaining ._-tation." ··

18

under-

NortnnHall
May Consider
Shorter Day

Sub-Board I Is NoW l:ooorpmoated
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

is also enviaqed. This "will
R.,_,.,. SU/11
provide a ol J'I!IIPI-.ibllAfter two to d)ree years of Ity and cdaqieteDce DOl pn!Y· .
~.Sub-Board I, the.Jj&amp;- ioualy available," LMf says.
cal arm of the Student Aaaociation (SA), was incorporated ~~I Inc. byBy STEVE UPMAN
Drup, lhefta, high school last week as a non-profit edu- laws call for an anmal ..-tina
cstional
organization.
in May ·at which ollicem are
students and anticipated budThe new corporation will elected from membenbip ol the
gets cutbacks are. prompting
Board
of Directoro. Tbe boald
Norton Hall officials to con- have the name "Sub-Board I,
sider reduced operating hours Inc." and will provide umore
nc:ntt..:.:t:~
~
flexibility
and
independence
for
beginning this summer.
According to Robert Hender- the student body.'' Phil Leaf, 2,500 stuileniB in a constituency,
a
breakdown
which
chairman
of
the
agency,
says.
son, associate director of the
Union, "nothing is definite yet, The organization will attempt should .xield four underp-adubut the Norton Hall &lt;profes- "to have studenta supply aome - ate directon, two gradualllls,
sional) staff, and the House of their own needs. The stu- two ni httime students, ana
from medicine, dent.f'A&gt;Uncil 1an intra-student gov' dent body has grown so large one
em mental group J will probably that •tudents can no longer rely .istly and law. •
The present officers . will cat-soon be discussing whether we on the University administracan afford" to maintain . the tion to supply all their needs." ry through until the annual
Leaf feels that some possible meeting.
present schedule.
The, move for incorporation
The Union's ~operating hours areati the corporation can work
are 7 a.m. to 1 a.m., Monday to in wou)d be: recreation; com- was initiated last spring when
Mark
Huddleston was elected
Thursday; 7 a.m. to 2 a.m., modity supply, such as a bookFriday and Saturday, and from store and gas Stations; and SA president and Leal becsriie
Sub
BOard
I chairman. By
housing.
noon to 1 a.m. on Sundays.
summer. · papers were
Changes will depend on what
Leaf, alw vice president of early
drawn
up
for
incorporation 'in
happens in Albany to the sub- the SA, pointed out that the
mitted U/B budgeL This year, strict provi.t;ioru; of ~the not-for- Delaware bec.a u se of New
York's
prohibition
of people
a~rding to Dr. James Gruber,
profit corporation law• of the
·director of Norton, the Union's State "will allow for a more under 21 serving on corporate
boards.
While
the
papers
were
temporary services b u d g e t careful scrutiny by the student
1which covers all part-time stu- constituency and the judicial being processed, C on g res s
passed
the
18-year-old
vote
and
dent employees- about 250) bodies of the State of New
New York followed suit, exreceived about $80,000 of an York."
tending
full
legal
rights
to
18original request of $811,000. For
A new organizational structhe coming fiscal year, starting ture may be part of the new year-&lt;&gt;lds. In early September,
April 1, the request is for $90,- incorporation; and the hiring SA filed incorporation papers
000. Henderson feels that of_ permanent managerial help in New York.
First Under-21 DinK:to&lt;ato
amount won't be a II o c a te d
Sub-Board I .is possibly the
&lt;"the budget cuts are affecting
first New York corporation
everybody" ) , but that at least
with
people under 21 on its
the $80,000 of this year will be
board Of directors. The new Of·
matched.
ganization. because of its educstional as well as non-profit
DRUG WARNING
An experimental seminar on nature, had to receive endorseIn a recent memorandum io the
the "Origins of Nonviolence" ment from both the Depart- .
University conimunity, the Norton
is being offered this semester men! of Educstion and the AtHall staff stated that they " . . .
as a sort of hybrid credit-free- torney General. After these
will not condone whatsoever the
bulletin
board endeavor.
steps. the papers were signed
violation of any drug laws in
The course is the idea of by a Supreme Court Justice
Norton Hall." " Our primary conand sent to the Secretary of
"
Mr.
Benjamin,"
a
College
F
cern in "the University is the welState lor filing last Monday.
fare and well-being of all students student who organized it .. too
Sub-Board I is now free to
late"
to
gain
oflicial
status
un--it is because · of this concem
begin the legal process of getthat we take this position and der either heading.
ting
title to the FSA land,
However,
he
say~.
students
ask that it be respected. " In re·
valued at $1.4 m i II i o n two
issuing this statement of policy wishing to register for col!ege
years ago. This action will soon concerning drug abuse, the staff credit may contact John Riszko,
begin going through the courts.
advocates an analysis of the drug undergraduate advisor. DiefenAs part of the incorporation
problem , which can be seen as dorf Hall, 831-3631.
process,
Sub-Board I must draw
·.. _ .. a symptom of broader probThe class, which meets on up a statement of goals and oblems-such as the alienation of Tuesday from 7-10 p.m., Februjectives.
Following is an outlarge segments of our society." ary 2 through May 11 , costs
line of these items by Leaf:
They c ite the urgent need for Sl5 for full-time. college stuGoolsond~
" meaningful, remedial research in- dents and sao lor others "with
• To engage in, the funding,
volving clinical action and social visible incomes."' It is meeting
sponsoring, and regulation of
reconstruction, " a n d stress the temporarily at t he Newman
litudent run activities, proimportance of exploring the Uni- Apostolate, 15 University Ave.
grams, special events and serversrty's role in relation to sodol·
The course is "intended tb vices designed and created for
ogical, biological, legal and clinical study secular and sacred apthe express purpose of helping
aspects o! drug abuse.
proaches to .the moral philos- to meet the ~f students.
ophy of peace-related topics
• ·To include in-ita on-going
Assuming that the entire and to apply them to the operations all members of the
amount isn't allocated, Hender- future."
student body at large as represon says that the professional
Accordiflg . to "Mr. Ben- sented in the governing oompostaff would prefer to cut back jamin," the seminar will ron- sition of Sub-Board I Inc.
operating hours and services, sider sacred literatures of an- Board of Directors.
such as the recreation area. cjent religions, art, commen• To oversee, coordinate, as
csndy counter and browsing li- !aries, the sects themselves.
brary, rather than let employFormal lecture-discussion required and in a pruderft manner, the functionli. ol all student
eesT~· most likely times for classes and subgroups and in- organizational activity falJin1
cut-backs would be late at night ~eJd.::ti::t J':'=.e~ all in- . under its..,_· of jurisdlction.
• To· identify, aacertain and
on weekends. Those are the
Subgroups will be eetablished help
meet the needs ol students
hours when, Henderson says:
to apply the theoretical. know- and
in this 'respect, aerve in the
• more high-sChool and non- ledge and to treat oontemporary
of reoouroes which
University · studeDts than U!B problems. The class, as an in- providing
meet these needs.
students use the Union;
formation and ...-reb center best
J
To serve 88 a center and
• the drug traffic is,the higb- for nonviolence, might also· mechanism in the fllltablished
est; and
• the most thefts and van- spolisor forums for BOcial ' con- governance ol s!Udeiit alfairs.
dalism occur.
ta~i:,:y~lities in- In this regard, to Mnie 88 a
Henderson said thought .is . elude guest speakers, field trips, "voice of students" ill the oogoin' alJaira ol CBJJipua c:omalso being jpven to closing the
Union on additional bolidays. and printed media. The main muruty life.
• To cooduct resean:h, surChristmas and New Year's are =ofinU: ==:senunarbe."!""veys, etc., in areas qanc:erniq
now ihe Olliy !1M&gt; holidays ot&gt;-'
served without question. This lor the Insti.tute. for · the Study student concerns, problems and
.
will be done, explains Bender- of Nonvioleo&lt;e in Bulfalo and, needs.
son, "if it appe8rs that few · possibly, .published. ·
. . ·• To evaluate the "develOpI will be •
the
Students ol the course will ment, progress, perfOliii8DCO,
~' eon
· a given"!"'!¥··
COme from .· •'pua
holiday. cam·
..., U/B campus and eflicacy' of student prpD1bree yeilrs 810, Norton wiiB and the - • commUnitY. "tO izatiOnal activities and make
shut~ oil weekends in 8UIIl- develop .a ~," Foreilln ~tiona~... apply
mer.
·
students are partiCularly en- st:rictures and sanctions &amp;o'
. .
COUI'IIIi!d. as are people in lbB cordingly.
ariB and in the sciimcee. 1be
• To coonlinate ita elforta
-IELPI
-..inar structunt respoods to and _.atioola with elementaol
WMiiToa.tlistudeDt iie8ds imd eDCXJIIrllgell Uiol-. University confmunitY at•
liEALTH SERVICES
~ education, Benlarae in Blrivinl to tbe
Ulllvirslty Senrice Ceo- jamin JI!IIYB. 'I1Iare are noj,rere. o..,alHat
inlleresta olll)e
~· MiciiMI 1i811 ~ quioilllls, .
.
&lt;klat bocl?.. - ~

=.,.

ea:f:

Norwiolence
Is Studied

�7

"REPORTS

ON
GJ&gt;EOPLE.

tion Coliferenoe for Allied RNith
=..~· Uniwmty of Norlh
~r.nwn.~tp~

feuor and 8CtiDc cbai,_,., hNlth
sci....,.. education and Oftluatioll.
"'Allied Health ScieooH P and Teecber Preparation at State
Uniwnity of New York at Buf.
falo," Statewide Teecber Plepara.
lion Coofenmee for Allied H"ealth.

~;';~~~ity
. of~;
IUCilAIID A. PASK&amp;,

way radio network.
I&amp;. BODO r.:o. aJCil'IR. _profetBOr.

DL aoBDT o. B&amp;RDABL, profeaor,

''The DiJem..
mu of Euro~ ,Petrarohiom: A

ical~OD

em-

m-..

y

ro-.._. ,.,

~~~c:!ter fo:'"~.!:{ :Z
~~ t=i~~!:t!!ce Studie•.

. :.:Sn!:e~~B~e:k

Drama Workohop. SUNY !BiOI&lt;·
hamton.
.
lOAN STAMPER. auistant professor.

director, Mt;er ..g,os pital , ap~~t
unty Health

College.

S:rd.

"*

COil·

fo . -.

f!ecional Meilical Procram'• two-

:~·=·

c1'::"::

ted

clinical
profeseor and anistant medica]

D1t.. THOMAS 8 . BUMBALO,

llllmbli~
Western New York. He has
Bambii . AbelaoD was bailed contributed his time, his learnfor her "inteiJ.igenre ... com- ing, his compassion, and his
passion . . . exhuberance," for dreams.·taking ·'time in hei life to com- Bullolo Slot. Winners
municate with the OOIIIDlunity."
Dr. Sweeney of State was
As evidence of this, the Mu- saluted for his work in the
seum cited these accomplish- Great Lakes Lab and in the
ments: "She devised a system establishment of the Environof teaching deaf and dumb chil- mental Clearing Kouse where
drentoread-asystemofcards he makes "our survival . . . his
that bas been published and is business." The "Clean Air Car,"
widely USI!d; she teaches chil- designed and built by Bulfalo
dren's classes at our Studio State students and entered in
A rena Theatre school; she last August's National Clean
teaclies a course called 'Com- Air Car Race from Boston to
mwiicative Creativity' at one Pasadena, " bas brought honors
of the colleges (A) within the to our community and bope for
University-part of this course our enviroriment." its citation
is an afternoon play school for said. Dr. Myron Lewis, chief
100 handicapped, retarded and facul ty advisor, and John Schifnormal children of our com- ferle, chairman of the commitmunity, run by 100 students tee that designed the car and
. . . led Sunday afternoons by drove the race, were singled
Bambii. And she still had time our for their eJforts on the prOto make friends with the lea"cler ject.
of the Mothers who picketed Community lbldplents
College A last year, getting
The News' Karen Brady was
them to talk .. . inspiring them called a '·shining example of
to listen . . . She is a shining the genUe Power of the Press,"
example of the gifts that so one who ·'makes a career of
maey students bring to our introducing us all to each
Department
.
community."
other."
According to Mrs. William Pn&gt;feuor Sllve"""n
Rev. Carnes was lauded for
M.E . Clarkson, chairman of the
Prof. Silverman was called hi. intellectual vigor: "He bas
Galuy event, the awards ree- '·Ut B's and Bull'alo's chief 'go- discussed often-and openlyogllized individuals wbo have be.vleen' tor many years." !&lt;'or the problems of the University,
contributed . to better relation- example, ·"During the forties as they affect all men. He perships between the community . he had a weekly radio program, sonified meaningful contact beand area colleges and univer- reviewing books, and tater, he tween young and old. con.servasities.
was one of the fin;t -members live and liberal. Along with
'of the U/ B Round Table. He many students, he has chosen
The citation for Professor was one of the founders of the to confront our grave moral
Sapp noted that "the debt that Members' Advisory Council at problems, honestly and oourour community owes to him is U!e Albright, and, later, was art · ageously. He embodies the
incalculable," for his contribu- director for their fin;t exciting leadership that is essential for
lions to 'the Philharmonic, the ],;uropean Tour. A moving foroe the survival of our humanity."
C""'tive Asoociat.ee, the Festi- behind the Chamber Music SoArchitect Coles, his citation
vaJs of the Arts. " There is cieo:y, author of a definitive noted, "became known to the
hardly a cultural iliatitution booklet for the Children's Aid, Ulliversity community when he
here that has not had his 'help literally dozens of community led the eJiorts to build the new
as mentor, catalyst or friend- needs have claimed him, been campus on the waterfront in
always with SMI&amp;itivity and enriched by his supporl He put !k~· !:L,":,~he
style. Ia ~ times. his ' a high value 011 living down· tact with all phases of Ullivera w1oe of sanity and rea- town, took the Main Street bus sity life and, in 80 doing, he
.., and pliople of aood will to campus every day; for Ye&amp;l8 has served both the University
liataned. Ia troubled times, he and Y"""' accepted &amp;pMking
a ~ Over ·Troubled ""PII""""'IB all over the city; and the community with courWatera."
invited town - l e and Ulli- age, humor, -vitality and ftair,
~ people to cline t.o&amp;ether unique in Westam N- York."
~at hill home ••. loai .before
Capl Edwarda booored
The - t ol M.U.. Banta, anyaae ..u-t tbia oittll. for belnc tbe first man in the
her citation ....t, 11M heal He is, as much today as - · Bu«aao Police ~ to
"quiet 1M D'P'P4orPhle&gt; The the c:ivill2llld, distln!uisbed liYe specillc_help to Unl~~
ol her - t lllilll heal tbe Scbolar in our Midst.
ol..,~~~~-~th~tbe
.....
Locboaod J:.illau7, bat: her-...................... ....
118.10trillatlam ~ lice. CapL Edwmds ... ,......,
and ilhDiaated by her appolll~
Profueor Flit, hill "award -.diD&amp; ol tbe needs ol all
- ' • a apecial ~ to .ad, .,_bad, tbe ,_..,. • miiKriiM, iaduding lltudeDt8,
. . _ _ in tbe ,.. tbe . . . . . s-ceptiaii of . tbe the cltatloo reed: ·"He iDYiiBd
veraity GoUt ~, .....,_ fllcial (aludmla) to hill prec:iact
Ia tbe ~ edlMstiaa. No("~ ....._, let. daD with hill
~ . . . . . . . . . .,... ..... iiileiy to .,q .,_ problema --.1 the iwpora.- iD
~ IIIIi ~ . with hill ......a; . . . --.. all ol tbill ..•• Floyd Bdwnil
tbe UllhaJdty wilh.iDailbt ed ~ _. 6lltoliili:e'l with 11M liwm atudeata
ol
. . . . . . . all wbo cared to ......... ........,,.....
the poiice they ciD both tzuot
lialaL•
~ tbe -.tire ol ..... ~'

-

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

for Risher Education.

Five of the Town and Gown
awards presented Saturday
midnight at the fifth annual
Galaxy of the "Women's Committee of the Bu«alo Museum
of ScieDce went to members of
the U/B community. Several
others ..,re related to UIB
activities.
Campus award winners were
Allen Sapp, di!ector of cultural
a1fairs; Melissa Banta. assistant
librarian; student Bambii Abelson; Oscar - Silvermlin, dilectoc
emeritus of University Libraries; and Robert s. Fisk, professor of education and former
dean of the School of Education. ,
,. .
.
.
Award recipients from Buffalo State were Robert A. Sweeney, di!ector of the Great Lakes
Laboratory, and the "Clean Air
Car" project.
Community awards went to
the Rev. Paul N. Carnes of the
Unitarian-Uiliversalist Church
on Elmwood Avenue, architect
Robert T. Coles, Bu(falD Evening NeiDI columnist Karen
Brady Boland and Capl Floyd
Edwards of the Bull'alo Police

r,

ical ledmoiOI)', p
tiDulac education

higher e ducation , named chairman of the Eaatern Re,ional
Council, American Aaaoctation

U/B Wins Five Town, Gown AwardS·

ma

-inted adminiotrati"" aaojatant to the director,
Ollice of Equal Opportunity.
VlVL\N DIXON,

associate professor, pediatrics, appointed associate editor, Can«.r Research.
FRANClB.V. HANAVAN, assistant pro-fesaor, health ICiences education
and evaluation, if:pointed to serve
OIL MAIMON COHEN,

A':.!i.,:;,u:.~.1o~":!r~;;
Educil.tion.

ELIZABETH K.UBEB.., assistant pro-

feooor. maternal health, elected to

the Board. of Directors of the new

Amherot-Ciarence Hoopital.
DB.. EUC£NE R. MINDELL.

profetJSOr.

:~~ S';t:.:e~~r?!n~!d.
=.,o~~~~=~~ ~

oeareh Society Annual Meeting.
DR. JEANNETTE SPERO, professor,
School of Nuning, appointed to
the St.eer:.f Committee. Nuning

~t·~~vz:~~~ !1-w::~

New York. Dr. Spero also accepted an appoinbnent u an act"reditor for the National League
of Nuning.

PRESENTATIONS
DR . MIL 't,ON BROWN , chairman ,

fixed prosthodontics, presented
two slide illustrated lectures be-fore the District of Columbia

Dental Society. Washington, D.C.
chairman. oral

DR. AL4N ORmNAN,

diagnosis and radiology , " Medical

Education for the .Dental Stu·
dent,"
University of Southern
Illinois.
research assistant professor, pediatrics. " Psy.

DR. ANKE EHilHARDT,

~~I'.rl~:li;~~r:~~= ::~

havior," loith Graduate Seminar
for Physicians, Barren Founda·
tion. Association Cor Reproductive Research; '"Transerualism in

the Human Female B.nd Male,"
SUNY Medical Center, Syraruse.
DR. STUART FISCHMAN, a.uociate

profesaor, oral diagnosis and radiqldgy , "To Biopsy-Or Not to
Biopsy;• Niagara County Dental

~.e~o~j•A:.d~h F~~~~

at the Faculty of Dentistry, Univeroity of San ADdreo, LaPaz,
Bolivia.

black studies, speech in honor of
Martin Luther King. CanisiWI

PUBLICATIONS
CHISTOPHER EHR.ILUlDT. graduate

assistant. classics, " Xenophon and
Diodorus on Aegospotami,'' Ph cx·nix, Journal of the Cla.s.sical A~ ­
sociation of Canada.
DR. sn.'ART FISCHMAN. associate
professor, oral diagnosi s and ra -

f:~i-~l~f!"~ n!~aiMelfb::C.o~~

ogy and Placebo ~ffect... Pharma-

cology and Thrrapeutics in DentUtry.
DR. ANTONY n.EW, professor, philosophy, An Introduction to West ern Philosophy . Bobbs-Merrill .
DR. XITCHELL FRANKLIN , professor.
phil050phy. contribution to FeMt liC'hri(t in honor of 90th birthday

of Hans Kelsen.
provost, educat ional studies. The Alea.ur-e.ment
of VaJuu, Wanen H . Green. Inc.
DR. K.E.l\"1\"ETH JNADA. as.sociate pro-

DlL ROLLO H.U-"DY.

~-=~~ P~i':P.h~~J.b~n p;~~:

national Journal on PeaC'f'. Hap·
pineu and Prosperity.
DR. CHARLES LIPANI, assistant pro·
fessor. oral diagno sis. and DR.
E\"ELl'N' J L'NG, professor, oral di agnosis, "'Idiopathic R ~rption of
the Teeth," Bulletin of th e Bt/1
District Dental Society.
DR. ROBERT OGLE. instructor. reo.
movable prosthod.ontiC'B, and DR.
SEBASTIAN CIANCIO. chainnan. periodontics, ··The Effec-t of Anti·
C'holinergic Agents on the Periodontium." Th e&gt; Journal of Pe&gt;rit&gt;
dontolosy.
BETTY Mt.'RPfflr. assistant profeJ·
sor, medical technology. prepared

:h!lOO~dofe&amp;,:~~~::'o~'u~~

t ion. S UN Y I Albany. PATRICIA
instructo'r, medical
technology. participated in
film.
DIL DALE RIEPE. professor. philosoo 'coNNOR.

the

~htit'u~"=~Potf:til:~0rnhi::~

Mainstream of American Phil~­
ophy," Radical Currf!nts in Con·
temporary Philosophy; co-editor,

Contemporary East Europ ean
Philosophy: ''India. Terrifyi ng
Land:' Dickilllon Reuieu•.

~:::.0:'~p·~:.~=r~:~t RECOGNITIONS
Atheism," Univenity of Arizona. PATBJCIA GORE. aasiatant to dini-..
oa." HIIIIIIBitT L. ros-n:a. uooclat.e.fltor, blaCk atudieo, New York State

~:"'J~;b':.f'~:J' ;;~:~~rt':J /~"c::' 8'hil'X:::

Communication Problema - A
White Educator·• Perspective."
Di.tin•uiahed Lecture Seriel

C'':f &amp;,~r::-E'.t:i:"'~

spec{Aj .sem.. Scboo~
!~~~~ 011
pa!l~c~~

~:~emc..

Howoe Confer·

NOUUN,BCJLUP, auociate profeMOr, removable proahodontica, .
inducted- into the lntemational
~~of Dentisla, Lao Veps,
DB..

IIEPOirTS ON I'£OI'lE

. - - ..-.~
'""-~"Reporls on Peopla" is opon to
of ~...,.'i:.; anyone with Uniwralty atllliation,
of ~~ Miooion foculty, alafl an&lt;' -stud ants. Stu·
of the
te Voqin, StaleD - . sand us r.ews of honors lolaad, .N.Y.
../f1a1le rec:eiwd • •• lf8duata stu·

::!.PJ-tioD.

--IS-

the
-· the·--have..-.
Include-·
lisii8CI • • • alafl,

community
pub·

Stu- . be sura to
,_r
and !Mjor. Senll - r raporto to
Suunne -..er. otfic:e of Unlver·
lily Publications - · 250
Wl-r Ave., or call 2228.

�8

Psychanat Is
Cmtinuing

·I n Norton
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
-s..n
Psyc:h&lt;imat is alive and well
and living in the Fillmore
Room or Norton from s to s
p.m. on Thursdays. Yea, the
people wbo last semester
brought you this cbanc:e to aet
topther with olheis are doing
it apin. Best ol all, they're
still eerving free colfee.
U you are 8JD0111 the 40 to
50 "retiUiars" or ooe of the
50-70 "drop-ins,» you'll find
everything just about the 8lll1l8.
'The groups still do what the
participants want and they still
talk about people's feelinp. It's
still a place where people can
go and do more than just talk
-where they can relate to each
other. And the philoeophy, is
still the same - "take it or
lellve it or -make it what you
want it to be.»
Actually, there have been
some changes but they're small.
'The location bas been cbanaed
to the Fillmore Room to allOw
more bleelhing space and also
to giVj! groups an opportunity
to stay looaer if they desire.
'The other cbaDp is in terminOIOIY. 'The plOiliiiD is now caJI.
ed "fteiible,» rather than "experimental,» just to indicate
that Psychomat's been around

&lt;WEEKINCOMMUNIQUE
00
00pen ID pullllc:
0pon ID .Open Gilly .... llioee- ............... -

THURSDAY-4
lAM ~H•: .Jaek Filcher lllld
J e l r S -. _....,red by UUAB
Music Committee, Huo Louap,
12-3 p.m. F'leo!:.
PSYCBOJIU.'f••: free-form CDm:mU·
nicalion for penoorWity crowth,
FiUmore Room. 3-6 p.m. .

F'OUJJN 8Tt1DCNT APPADtS COPPIZ

aoua•: 10 Town.end Hall. U
p.m.

'I'HBOitft.lCA.L

BIOLOGY BDUNAR•:

Or. Charles Kovacs. reees.rd&gt; uoociate, BrookMven National I.ab-

or.tory, Upton, New -York. BYNCIU:ONOUBLY J)[YmlNC PLANT CELLS:
PltO'I'EIN 8YNTHE818, IONIZ[NC ltADI·
ATION AND DNA SYNTHr.SIS. Room
29, 4248 Ridp Lea, 4 p.m. Ref..,.hmenls 3:80 P-~
SOVIE'I" JEWilY I"'OlUK • : aponeored
bv Studenls lor lame! and the
Student Aooociation. Rabbi Meir
Kalw&gt;e. foui&gt;der and leeiler of the
Jewish Defenoe Leque, will he
guest speaker, accompanied by
Dov Sperling, a Soviet Jew now
residing in Ia...L Fillmore Room.
8 p.m.
The Jewish Defense League
was founded in 1968 and has~ act­
ed upon wMt they tenn, "the

~i ~oftu!n~~~~

foreground of recent incidents
the plight of the

&amp;:!;':t"':l:n

FILH O : CHJLD&amp;E.N OP PAB.ADISE,

(Marcel Came), ro...idered one
of thio moot beautiful films of all
for almost a .....-ter.
time. It deals with the agonies
Psychouiat bas been around and ecstasies of love: a clasaic
long enough to start attracting fi.Jm about 19th t.-entury Paris and
regular groups. ODe such group • the French vaudeville. Consult
sometimes goes as far as meet- Norton Ticket Office for times.
ing in a separate room..Bob, the Conference Thelotre. $.75.

group's facilitator (oomeone
who may, but does not necessarily, help provide direction! '
says they just 1ilre to pt top!ther and t:aliL
Other groups aren't as regular or non-&lt;lirective. Some facilitators know exactly what
they want their group to a&lt;&gt;complish and set about orienting it in that direction. John
Wipf, aaeociate director of the
Student Counseling Center,
wants his group to "help pe&lt;&gt;ple talk toaether in a more
feeling-orientjld way.»
Sometimee a group ·is domi,
nated by one member and talks
about what he feels is importanL One even got trapped into
serving as a recruitment center
for a religious organization.
Most of the time, however,
the a~here is good and the
air is .fairly free of tension.
Psychoma ts have been 110
popular that Ann Hicks and
Dr. Wipf, coordinators of the
program, are looking for more
people to serve as facilitators.
The program, which started
[rom a suggestion by Joan
Claar, · bas outgrown the original core group and Dr. Wip[ is
beginning a facilitators' wor!.sbop to hel train addi~
people. He ~ looking for peOple wbo have attended the Psy. cbomat sessions or have some
·~ in group work. U
you're interested, contact him

at :r717.

Physiml Fitness

fill lila ~
In ............

FRIDAY-5

SATURDAY~
WIIE81LINO .: Cortland State-JV's.
Clark Gym. 1:80 p.m.
~H~ BASKETBALL* : Erie
Community Colleae. Clark Gym.
6: 80p.m.
WBEH &amp;ADIO SHOW :

Dr. Theodore

Friend, profeuor, history, and
Lou Douglu will dioa,.. Southeast Asia, 7:35 p._m
. .
DANCE* : COKPANY OP lU.N,

Friday listing.

see

\ "USrrY 8.\8KJ:1'BALL •: .Point Park
CoUege. Clark Gym. 8 :80 p.m.
HOCKEY *: Rochester Institute Or
Technology. Amhent Recreational Center, 1615 Millenport Hichway, 9: 30 p.m.
.

medium. ATS-TJE io a test edit-

~~·~~~te~~1,!:j
to -enter and trande.r 8lee to a
permanent disk •torace area on

the IBM 360/40 for auboequent
transfer and proceeainl on the
CDC 6400 computer. A previoU15
knowledge of programming is u.eful. but certainly not required.
wa&amp;STLJNC *: Caniaiua, Clark
Gym, 7:30 p.m .

FILM • : C R li.DlE N OF PARADISE.

(Marcel Came), consult Norton
Ticket Office for times, Conference
Thelotre. $.75.

SUNDAY-7
DANcE •: COXPAHY OF MAN,

Friday listing.

aee

FILM • : CB ILD REN OF PARADIS&amp;,

(MaK"el Came) , consult Norton
Ticket Oflic.e for times, Conference
Theatre, $.75.

MQNDAY--8
a film
hy Ann Halpirn f~turing the
Dancers Workshop Company of

. DANCE FILM•: PaOCESSION,

San FrancUM:o and" CEBTUK£8 OF

SAND, by Allegra Fuller Snyder,

~~t.!itu~T'C~~ t.~

rael. These fi.ID'IIf will be ahown aa
part of Billie Kirpicb•s dance 392

~:i~~~-a~3:t~on..:n. t~~nP~:.
FD..M • : CONPBONTATION,

a docu·

mentary _study of the s tudentfaculty strike at San Fra.n&lt;"illco
State College (1968-1969) , 210
F08ter, 7:15 p.m.
This film is being shown in con-

rt!:ri:. ~:::~u~~~~ =~

meets on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday from 2:00 to 2 :'50
p.m. For more infonnation contact: Dr. Robert Benlahl. De-

roo'1:"~,::!.~~~[ ~~~-16

ucrr.u.• : Stephen Mane., piano,
works _by S.rtolc. T!ochsikowoky,
Curtis, Ravel · &amp;ird. 8 :80 p.m.
Geneml admisoion $1.50. faculty
and staff $1.00, atudenls $.60.
EltNBBT WrrDSK:Y KDIOIUAL LECTURE: Dr. Werner Henle, profes-

sor. virolOI)'. Uniftnity of Pennsylvania. THE V11AL J:TIOLOGY OP
INFECTIOUS IIONO.Nucur:o818 AND

:~J..;.":t":t ~

'!liY and the Center for ImmunolOCY~· Butler Auditorium. C.pen
HaD. 8:80 p.m.
·-

TUESDAY--9

film.

PUIIPLB DtiTH FlO)( OUTEII

:f.:i!io -:!Pi:r.L::bu~. ~~,!
Room, 8 p.m.. $.'15.

EXHIBITS
PHOTOGRAPHIC EXBmlT: b y Bruce

Jackson. auodate professor of
English, sponsored by Oftke of
Cultural Aft'ain. .Center Lounge.
Norton. Fl'bruary 3 throUJ&lt;h· F•bruary 17.
Th~ pictu~ w~re tdk~n uvt&gt;r

~7'"t~:S~:h.yi:7..!"At~l'!af::-hi:

WEDNESDAY-10

roothilJII, at Washinl{ton IU'O~t

ma11:h~

and in

tl"n~nw-nt

apart- . . .

mt!nt&amp;.

MEDICAL RE008DS 1'ELEPHONE UX&gt;
TURE:

Dr. Elemer R. Gabrieli and

Maey W. Floss, WESTERN NEW
\ 'ORK HEAL TH DA'f'K NETWORK .
spofUIOred by Regional Medical
Program, 62 receiving locations.
2-3 p.m.
WOMEN'S SWIMMING• : Brockport
State, Clark Gym, 6 p.m.
WOMEN'S BASK.£1'BAU. •: Brockport
State. Clark GYJCD. "7:30 p:m.

THURSDAY-11
STROKE: a prolmm for phySici.ana, presented by the Regional

~=l~ort~~he'

J::rtw~ia~

tion of Western New York. Inc.,
and the School of Medicine. Em·
baaay Room. Statler Hilton, 8: 4S
a.m.-4: 16 p.m.
The program, geared to all

~=~oi!t m:.,:~eEdu~~ncr~ ~:.·i=y~~ ':!!~ ~t!!t ~:wred;;
254) , and ia open to the public
without charge. This co urse is
open to all undergmduate atudenb interested in the CUJ'J"ent
1

Hoepital, · Kin.c h Auditorium.
5: 30-6: 80 p.m.
MOYIII &amp; CONc:8T•: Flub Gordon

in diagnoeis. treatment and rehabilitation of stroke patients. It
will also offer .information avail ·
0

=~=k!~e ;ro~~~= :!
}~~~f;":hY~~cT:n~~hy~:Sr:i.;

neurologist., neurosurgeon• and
vascular surgeons -of needs of
stroke mre.
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY LUHCIDON COLLOQUIUM•: Dr.

Joel Raynor, 818istant profeuor,
psychology, RESEARCH &amp;&amp;PORT :

FlELD AND LAB BI'UDI£8 ON THE EPFEC'TS OF DIBTANT FUTURE GOALS ON
IJ&lt;MD&gt;IATE MOTIVATION, C-34, 4230

Ridge Lea, 12:80 p.m.

.

HOSPITAL MANAGERIAL AND BUPiaVISORY DEVELOPMENT TELEPBON&amp;

...:ruBE: Richard B. RuaaeU, mo:
WORKED -

4ND NOT WORKID, AU.

aponaored by Regional Medical Prognun. 62 receivins locations, 1:80-2:80 p.m.
PSYCBOMAT• •: free-form Communication for pe""'nality 1rowlh,
FiUmore Room, 3-6 p.m.

PAID,

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent edlibit of work11 by
Robert Graves and Jam~ Joy,-e.
Poelrv Room. 207 Lockwood Library: 9 a.m.-5 p.m .

NOTICES
DANCE WOHKSHOPS. .11pof\!Wred by

the Dance Club ·.¥ill be lwld weekly 8lf follows:
Monday. 4-6 p.m.: Contt!mporary Dam-e Cl.ass. inte~iatt'
te.:hnique and improvisation.
Monday. 6-8 p.m.: Performa.nt..~
Worbhop_, ~nning. intermediate and advanced.

w~=:: t:J,;~~:.·i~:.!d'i:

ate and advanced.
Wednesday . 6-8 p.m.: Dance
Thempy.
Thuraday , 6-8 p.m.: Performant.-e WOTkshop. beginning, in·
termediate, and advanced.
Friday, 2-3 p.m.: BsUet Workahot&gt;, in~ediate, taught b y
Gl1lham Smith, small lee.
For additional infonnation. contad Miss Hocks, Dance Club, ext.
2941.

INTERVIEWS

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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                    <text>SARA Problems Seem To Be Small and SOlved
Butfrop andAdii StillRerrwins for Monday

--

By J;IU&amp;UI GRBBIIIWOOD

/

All . . ._ pua:l at UIB
ud .moat students think it'a
just • - " . Gone are the days
of manual can! Jelistration in
Clark Gym with iiB Jonr lines
and hqgles over class cards.
SARA hu uobered in a stream·
lined ..., of ahortened lines and

cooler tempers.

•

At least it like a good
- . John Hammond, director
of day oc:hool registration, says
tt.. .,..., t-1 no major
........... far. But this bam't

•topped •tudeDIB from being
doaad out of majors-only
COUI8I!8 w h e n they actually
were majors or I.-ned the
frustnltions of freshmen regis~ on the last day and con·
fn&gt;nting a many-pe.pd list of
cloeed couraes.
All in all, though, most people have found the computer
registration procedure surprisingly easy. Lines in the Gym
for d&gt;eddng registration canis
were short and total runthrough , time averapd five to
ten minulell. The gieatest de-

lays -.1811 to center 8IOUIId
the list of cloeed and added

But • Tueoday afternoon ..-tina of representatives
from the·_ . faculties helped
shorten the ·c I o a e d list by
dlangina rooms to increase
class capacity and by opening
up new class -.tions.
Diefendorf .AnnP.x was quiet,
·too, after a buse tie-up at noonon Mooday when an estimated
3 000 - l e showed up at
oi.ce for their class cards. This
was the spot where students
picked up canis after the com·
puter had acted on their registration forms. Class canis were
later hulded out in three loca·
tiona wilbin the Annex, making
for less confusion and chaos.
After the change, there were
few delays,- although many
didn't get computer approval
for a)Ilinimum load of 12 hours
and had to spend eatra time
filling out an add forin to bring
themselves up to minimum.
Throughout the entire procedure, the only thing really
wrong was that students found
out you couldn't Wheel and deal
with SARA. Tbe computer
granted special favors to no
one.
The DI06t trying of problems
-.aed to be with the oooa.whicfi de,.-ts had desig,.Dated as· majors-&lt;mly. SARA
was programmed to accept for.
these -courses only those stu·
~-

(contitwed on page 2, coL I)

.Task ForreUrges
Implvved Dialog\}e
With Buffalo Area

Greater UDderstandina be- the community and u..Jation
tween. UIJ,l ~ the com_munity from (the community), dependof which 1t JS a part will only ing on what it judpe to be in
result ~m . greater effod:s at iiB best intarests." """!"'lll!'cat.ion by both ~he Value~-~
On tbe other band, "the comUruver&amp;lty and the commuruty.
This is the essence of a re- munity a~ to want educaport to University President tional, cultural and eponomic:
Robert L Ketter from tbe Task benefits from tbe University,
Force on University-Commu- but does not undeiatand or
nity Relations which recently tolerate the value systema and
coq&gt;pleted more than three life styles necessary to _ . t e
months of. study, discussion and maintain thme benefits at
and deliberation.
higb levels of quality," tbe reThe Task Force, composed port says. '"'be community has
of community representatives failed to evaluate tbe value it
as well as members of the Uni- receives in comparison to the
versity's faculty, staff and stu- costs of the development and
dent body, was one of five such operation of a Uniyersity of
groups appointed by Ketter to national stature."
recommend the future direcTbe Task Force pinpointed
tion of the University in key a number of underlying themes_
policy areas. Tbe group was which "have ~ for
headed by Dr. Ralph W. Loew, future constructive coeaistenoe
pastor of Trinity Lutheran and interaction between the
Ch urch in Buffalo, and Dr. community and the UniverRichard G. Brandenburg, dean sity." These included: """''nizol the University School of ing that "relations" is an on·
Management.
·
going pi:ooess, that there is not
1n a prelude to specific re- much value in a~ to
•
..... .... tbe - ' - CJb.
serves that the University has ·;=:r~~
taken a "dual position regard- as a "W....way street," that the
ing oommimity relations" in University must ..seize more ~
that it "ap~ to want both initiative" and that "key ininvolvement and inlluence in dividwlls and organizations"
from the community must help
the community become more
attuned to the University.
Further, the Task Force saw
a need to build "mutual confidence and appreciation of the
full range of priorities and
problems facing the University
• The development of the and the community;" the need
Urban Studies pr~gram be for constructive aiticism, and
given high priority and be im- a recognition on the Univerplemented as expeditiously as sity's j)&amp;l't that it must address
academically and administrs· a "wide variety of audiences"
tively poesible.
in"lhe community.
The 15-page report specilie!l
Maulwa Funcll"' Not Required
According to Ryan, the study areas in which Univennty polindicates that the urban pro- icy must be clarilled for the
gram could be set up using · community, and where the Uniexisting faculty and curriculum versity must convey more conresources and would require no cisely iiB concema, intentions
and priorities. It alao ~
massive new funding.
Negotiations are currently a number of cooperative venunder way with proYOSts to find tures for Uni-..ity-commu(Conlilwed on - " 4, coL 1)
(Contin ued on - " 4, coL 4)

NewReportRerorrunerz4s
Urban Studies Program

__
___
., ... _

COLLEAGUE

___ ,__ ....,.......
---...................
....................
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....... -

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-m.
_.._.,

UIJM.
apon•ored paalwn&amp;KA by

..... a -

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.... -... ...._

... In Elolloh 81
U/.. llwn and ltraathaa

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

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,.,._, INI9: • ' - - '

. . . . ,_,Celluaua,

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

IIJU/1-..--.
lalllrplcll (231 ......... -

,_Giallailndlolall• w:. . .Aiaat tar Dance

~
falo Pllllllar•enlc (IIJaln.

maa of
UUAI Dance
_ _ a ... ....

-.,....., 12)-

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

B1J :44Q, la Taroata, the

.., ............... a

.

...... ....,.. ........
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O'IIMI. Flllll;. . . .....

==:z.......:a·~a•
...........
....., .cammunlque.)

.

Establishment of a comprebensive Program of Urban
Studies with an undergraduate
msjor and minor and graduate
work- first at the master's
level and then at the doctoral
level - ~ among major recommendations of a study recentiy comple~ by the Office
of Urban Aftairs.
The study wao; conducted by
James H. Ryan, prQject coordinator, and Frank Corbett, director of the Office, under the
ailspices of Dr. Albert BushBrown, director of the Council
011 Urban and Regiooal Studies.
It ,........,nwmds also that:
• 'lbere be established a
Uni..aity-wide Committee on
Urban Studies (com~ of
faculty, students and &amp;tall)
which would be responsible for
tbe clevelopment and guidance
of tbe plOiliiiiL
• The Program develop a
atructure of its own ., that it
hu lldllcient resources and
8CJDII8 to attract· IMdina scbol-

~

'lbere be c:niated - '
in urban studies

.......,. COUI8I!8

t ._.._ tbe ·-'---'-te and

a _,

SUNY ~Planning
Boost In Tuition Rates
The State University Board
of Trustees were expected this
week to announoe the boosting
of tuition throuchout the State
system, beginning in September, 1.971.
·
At an informal ~Meting with
student leaders Monday afternoon, President Ketter explaiDed bow the increase is
likely to affect UIB:
• Tuition" for Ne111 York
State underpaduates, now $400
a__,.....
by $150-$250
,_...--~,_-_
;state
under..._
• ·
to be

Jeandlll pro1ramo ialapated

·•-.a•
iiiBliF ....mttod to bod&gt;~

ate .ad UDdeqnoduatellludollts
in ~-of atudy.

said.

. Tuition for disadvantapd
students probably won't increase.

Tuition revenue to tbe
capital da&gt;elopaa&gt;t of State
University - CCllllltnlc:tiO rather than to _.tinl funds.
The ~ ~ JI8ClB88!UY now,
aooording
to ,V1011
AIbert Somit;
, _Pnaident
_ the Uni..,.jty Constructiaohnd can't
aaifUala..........__ ~and $1000 ·
be·--' iiB revenue.
iililed ..._. 1800 ancl
;bid. is in ~ti;d to tuition."
a ,YI!IIr under tbe fee ~
apiral.ing inDation ' - ca.-!

..~n!.~ modilleation in
_,.
of
.
tbe
exiotina
..._, -•~ to ........_ ~--''~
... ,_..,
........ ~
iDclude relevant,~ urban - - - • ' n - be aated lleld •~ ar olbllr , . _ - lure.
with IIDicala In ..... llludila.
• ..,_be
lla-

' * - $800 and $1000,
Uni..,.jty ......,... indicated.
Additional iDcnlll8es are likely within a year, lhMe......,...

up at

willE

~....._,

••

• Orailiutte _ . tuition

will riae fram $800 annually to
~ $800 and $1000.
• Mediaal and~~~ tuilion, tbauch not . . . - at
tbe meetinl.
jiiObably ,..d

wil

,_...,bonds

• ...._ , _
__., ~coals.

m·

-~.....:-.

~M-•

.

~&amp;:.,of..!:.:J":::

as ~~"- 'are
..........,
Albany.

·-~'--'-g
'"'M"""""'

from·

�] _ . , 28, 1911

2

Care Center
Fares Same
Difficulties

Drmn: A ManExplorfug
llie, lnvolvOOWithlt
.
.
.
Projec:tiona will CIM!r the entire room, oller -tbing for
each person in 1be audieooe to .
relate to, and will be aocompanied by I'OIMf 110iaee and music timed to l8llfJrY frame
dlanae. ~ tbe experienm to a ''polyaensual" level
Tbe feature is a 51-minute,
lim&amp;-la!Me film, lak8n from an
automObile trf11Velling at 50
mpb from MaMachuaetts to Big
Sur oouittry. Why "oil· spills?''
Well, says Drum, ... car runs
on oit" Why toiler paper?
"Well, ..."
,
Who -

•

F.i EcakJclol!

Drum feels that in order to
alleviate some ecological problems, people muat alter tbeir
lifestyle. They must dq more
than just decl&amp;re a change.
"Most universities authoritatively declare, but this is ineft'ective. Who's giling to believe a fat ecologist?'' People
can set _u p new standards, but
then must have '"the courage
to adjust to them."
A tnming point ih Drum's
own life came after be graduated from Iowa Stste Univ.ersity with a doctOrate in cell
biology, and wenf to work as a
chemist for Shell Oil ..COmpany.
"I used to finish my work by
Tuesday," he recounts; this did
not please felloW wo.kers and
-did-not fit into the system.
He left industey and his ac-·
complishments since have included his being the first to
have petrif"Jed wood.
An expert on diatoms;. which
he says are the most common
form of life on earth, he explains tl;lat their glass shells
are to be found throughout the
human body. "You eatsardines
oysters and you're .Wiilli&gt;wing a whole wad of them." DialomaOIIOUII earth is used in plastic manufacture, as filler for
spices and as a food extender.
Mexicans, Laplanders, a n d
some Central ~ mix
the soft J&gt;(iwcl"!')' earth with
other foods, such/ as corruneal.
Drum, himself, in onlf rather
sly experiment, whipped up a
betch of cooiUes from two parts
of flour and one .part diatoms
and served them to an unknowing group.
Man should celebrate life
and participate in joyous holidays •t the times of ~­
DOll: and the solstice, says
Drum. 'He seems clii8e to hBving
reached .a· 81ate of joy himaeU,
in total psrticipa~. with the
COIIIDOS. It is DOt a fool's paradise, but rather a thinking

or

SARA(Continued from 1, coL 3)
denta recognized by the ~
menls as majors. Departmental
lists ........,•t cunent, bowewr,
and some were not able 'to register for .-led courses.
Joint majors were also a ·
problem.

man's sta.te. ·

To.cstecoricsllY eliminate the
inputs of valuable and dedicated individuals to educational
policy~ hecauae ol .title,
source Of pay -' leyel cil educil • ."
• 'N" . tbe Yalidity
CODOePt;
this I '~t; Dr. Hays
must reoo8nbe that be is a
member of a COIDIIIUJlity as
firemen, po~ and industrial ........,.,. are members of
the total community . .. . each
segment dependant upCIIl all of
the athera for survival and each
playing a part ·in the decision~ proc:esses.
.It IS my hOpe that.tbeJaculty
will riiCOfiDize that what - ad- ministratora want most is for
SUNYAB to became oae of the
greetest centers of learning in
the OCJUDiry. ADd furtha', that
crltlcal campetaDoel!

of~"-

- haw

.-led f!'f'thia. ~

-

.

Sincerely,
.,--CIA¥:.1.. TaaAIIIDII
. . Dir.of~t
• S!ilOCil of M!I!MI....-t

�~~

~

21, 1!171

3

(hde$e3dof~to COnmrl

Analysis of ~

14]mm &amp;ropes

, Some cl. the IUD8l '181Dplea
from the Apollo 14 miaoian will
.. ~ at U/B, the NatiaMI Aeronaulial and Space
Adlnlni.uatiOD (NASA) bas
IIDDOIU'M&gt;id

Art.Sllrovost
Will Resign
Dr. Thomas E. Connolly, acting pcovcet cl. the Faculty of
Arts and Letters, will Jetum
to full-time leM:hins. effective
Au,ust 31. Dr. Connolly bas
submitted his
•
tion from
tbe

actina

:..=.

While~ ptitude to
the University administration
for its "cordial alid full suprt," Connolly declared in his
t'tter of reaiplation, "' do not
deriVe any ebjoyment from the

~;~~=~:

stances, Dr. Coanolly aaid be
found it "dlfflcult to be cre-

ative" in tha administrative
poat.

He added: "' abould like to
return to full-time teaching in
the English Department nut
fall and to reswne work .., my
nut book em Blake."
President Robert L Ketter
Pr:aiaed Connolly . as a "most
iible, ._.mve and creative
administratOr who is to be COIIl·

· ll8lded for tbe .......U....t Job he
bas done as actina
t."
The University ~said
he aoceptad the resig!Wtion
''with reluctance and regret.·"
Coanolly was named to the
acting provostship in Septem-

::do!97~ f~~

seardl committee ol faculty,
studenta and staff uanbers is
curn~~tlv in the procae cl.
ideo~ candidates to fill
the p 0 It pennanently. - The
committee is ezpected to forward a list of~ to President Ketter in the .... future.

Spare for sn..s
To....__Be.,....._,
Increased
cl. ._...__ •
•"" .......,.

............ticll

11114 I.ibrarf. Studies.&lt;~&gt; Ill&lt;·
~facul~ac!!.~n=-~

C

f,-u by
_.a .......,_ ..,..
1973, the
Scbool's January MWBietter reimpi,ct. to occupy up
to 14,000 square feet on tbe
Ambarst campus by 1973 and
26,000 square feet by 1971&gt; or
1976.
·. "PPans
fur tbe Sdlool
10 ~y most c1. the Poimd

'i:iis.

·J'"!P

floor aDd para c1. •ttie meaanine and. 1IIIOOIId floor c1. tbe
Jndustriai Engineering

bulldina beiDa atarted thia

year."

iha·--u,r saya.

uWhan Sil8 lliiiVI!II out to
the Ambarst aunpus in the laJl
c1. 1973, it will '-ve under one
roc1. ••• cl.lica .•. ~
amninar and· conference 1001111,
a faculty-etudeut ~a camputatian lab, t1uea media laba,
a 1arp Library 8tudil!ll Liblary
and ....,.J -.m and
- s l y - - .•
'Ibis,..__, will
be
"aalY ~-· Sometima in
1975-'18, Sil8. will iDto
_.-tan "in
a
Clllllllla ......,_

...m

Wl

~ the

8clooCe :0.

c-nm. c-.

ter, and the llaolndl&amp;wf Cam.......... c-tar. the
malo libnry fadlitlea.•

temporary, proviaimW

the oiunpleo in April. U for
some l8ll80il Apollo 14 abould
fail, he ezpecta to receive IUD8l

oamples from previous Apollo
missions.
The tiny-one centimeter or .
les&amp;-rocks or rock chips will

is u.asure the surface areas-

~­

cation in the f"oeld, aioa, with
8b: hours graduate credit. The
certif"IC&amp;tion will be ~
yearly for five years if the student makes p - towards
the 30 graduate hours .-dell
for permanent certification.
With part-time study during
the regular school year, the program c a n be completad in

day-Cadenbead will receive

Tile H~olltlle­
"'lbe type of thing we'll do

:::c-.:.:

.a~:!k''!..:l:, ~recei~

rock samplaL
1

l~"t: b~~

arrive inside plastic baas,
pecbd in dry nitrogen ......
They will have to be baudled
carefully. CaclenOOad said, in
order to avoid band contacts
which could leave g r - and
alfect certain properties.
''Once we have tbe rocks, we
will transfer theae aamples to
biah-vacuum systems, wbere tbe
residual atmospbere is a very
·small fraction of the Earth's
. atmosp~ but still greater
than the atmospbere of the
moon.~ CaclenOOad ezplained.

~a:--=:

in haalth acbsticlll will balln
...JIIID08
aunpus
E.lblo
l!imall,
- .,
_ _cllnatolllnlin the Faculty ol Bducatlanel
Studies, aaya that a ..-Ina
.-1 for ..titled haaltb ~
en is beblnd tha P'CJIIIIIIl
which will bNin. J - 28 with
two aections ol26 lltudlaiL

'Dr. David A. Ceden'-d oociate p r o { - of cbemially.
bas '-en awuded a $61,801
NASA pant to inveotipte the
surface 8lell and pores of the
-

Training Set .
In Health Ed

requested propossla for studying Apollo 14 amples. "At that
time I responded with a pro- ·
poaal and 'oiometime in midDecember they called and aaid
my propoaal would be funded
as requested."
Asked if he bad any idea as
to the value of the moon rocks
he would be studying, Cadenhead replied, "I have no idea

8nd the amount of surface for

----

three years.

The State will provide tuition and fee support for those
8C06pted into the program.
Designed to meet the needs
. . . gram for gram they would of those entering health educabe far more valuable than dia- tion with little or no background, the program is open to
monds."
Dr. Cadenhead received his individuals with provisional or
B.S. degree from the University
of St. Andrews, Scotland, and ~~ U:.,~:hnwf.o ~
hls Ph.D. from tbe University currently employed as school
teachers.
of Bristol, England.
Apf.licants must not have
He came to U / B as an assistant professor of cbemislly in competed 18 hours in health
studies at any level and must
1960.
be accepted for admission hy
Educational Studies.
A letter from the individual's
principal stating that be will
be responsible for a minimum
of 10 weekly periods of health
throat, ezcept wben I am drink- :t.,uca~uring 1971-72 is
ing and eatiDa.':
Further information may be
obtained from the Department
With vitality, Rampal m&lt;&gt;-. of
lnst:ruction, 122 Foster HalL
tioned to hls students as a
conductor, reacting sometimes
as a father, at times as a sym~
pathetic friend, always as an
involved listeuer.
Calming a nervous student,
An 18-man advisory board of
he said that in France, children, ·from the very beginning civic, educational, business and
medical
leaders has .... named
of their musical training, study
in groups. They are therefore for the Rehabilitation Medicine
Engineering
Laboratory of the
used to playing in front of
others so tbey are not nervous School of Medicine. The an.,_
nouncement was made by J .
in performance.
When asked about his golden Sam Miller and Dr. William
flute, he did not ftaunt it, but P . Walsh, director and medical
remarked that it was not extra- director, respectively, .,;. the
ordinary. "It's cheaper than a
of the new adviscar and besides you keep it all
your life." He uplained that ~inis..!.al.:JiJ~~
he preferred gold to a Bil- or
platinum flute, because it pro- =:.d=.:i:::
duces a warmer, more mellow,
darker tone. The silver flute,. bas basis.' They-are ~ '
JIIIDOII G. Dyett, chairman of
a sparkling tonal quality, and
as Jor platinum, "' bate a plati- the Hard Company; Harold
num ftute. It Is too cold-just
as it loob."
anoe Company; Robert B. Fleming, U/ B advocate; Cbarlea F .
Lisht. executive vice president,
Bulralo Area Chamber of Com.......; William Moog, president, Moog, Inc.; Joseph R.
O'Connor, MD., acting ditector, Department of Rehabili-

Be Free and Full ofLife
hllher
temperatoree until
the surface area begins to
RampalAdvisesRUJtiBts
This indicates the

~v:..,.,~p.:e :Uhl:i:

and

=

change.

maxi-

=:-~ e~p~s~~811~

_ By SUZANNE METZGER
aiDoe their initial formation. U
You ~b!r;'~ to be a
a ' amall rock bas a · pore or flutist to like J&lt;18D-Pietre Ram- l i k e . texture, the sizes pal's master class on Wednesof the ·holes and their nature day, January 20. There was
will tell us something of the something there for everyonehistory of the.aample, and !here- . humor, human interest, tine mufore of the history of the moon sic, a bit of philosophy: "Flute
itaalf."
playing is like livmg . . . be
.Other experiments to be con- free and full of spirit . . . imducted include to aee what provise . . . this gives more
effects, if any, typical Earth spice."
gases have on the rocks. Water
A master class is a small
vapor and carbon dioXide will group of students and a teacher
be used, for example. .These who conducts a lesson before
are directed at the ques- an audience. ln this class, five
tion, "will moon rocks weather flutists from U / B's Music Dein Earth-like atmosphere?" partment performed individu"Such experiments will also ally and were then criticized
give us a f!!eling as to wbeiber . and · guilfed by the master..
· or not emaust gaaes from 1UD8l Baird Hall was filled 'The idea
landing vehicles will 'be re- · is, of course, to learn by the
talned for any lengtby period mistakes and the suoceases of
of time," CaolenMad aaid.
eacb student.
"Very little surface cbemisRampal is a maestro of mutry" bas '-en .-1 in earlier sic as well as of life. He a~
~YBM of moon.MMples, "and to eni9y both with zest and
the little data that is prMently elan. He reacted with joy to a
available is franldy contrever- good musical display, "Beautisial,"· be. noted.
ful .Playing! Bravo!" and with
· ' Most cl. the _work on the a constructive cut, "You're lazy;
moon rock's will take place in you want to take it too easy. •
tbe c:hemJstry laboratories in You must tire youraelf when
A"'-on Hall Cadenhead will you play!" .
alao be usinl tbe electron mi- ~ ,..,...
.,._,.,in the Health Sciences
He- fond of tbe studenta.
COIIIPiex ~will OOllduct Other ~ in his .striving towards
liiUdli!l! ·USIDI a 8C8DD8I' electron their perfection he was alwaya
~ probably at • tbe · warm and human. Freqlaltly
Unlvaalty cl. Weetend&gt;ntario. be reached out to touch the
-arm; when._ clemonstratad a
The dlemist ezpecla that the _,.,he -.ned to be_...
IDOOft rocks retrieved by Apollo
ing to the student ratber ' than ·
14 will ._ much older then performing before him, and his
tlae from Apollo 11 and 12 playing was eloquent.
bacauee the tar set is
· As he tllqllained, one· muat
~J~ouP.t to contain material play any instnmalt aa one
ejacfacl from a .-.by meteor - " " - The instnmalt Is DOt
_ . . n.e-oldalt aampia yet an iiltra thing, but rather a
brooqb&amp; · bad&lt; from the IDOOft part ol the playar'o body. You •
il 4.8 billian yeara old, much come to tbe lltqe with a tec:bolder than any material .., niqua and a fluta, but you 11101t
EutiL
.
forpt about them. When you
'l'be NASA pant .....,. • · play you ~ luieo, euppliao, travel, publicaAnd the piano """"""'JU
tiOD cneta and computer cneta meat lo DOt aput from the
tar~ and two - . d l flullt ~ they are inoaparaaalotauts owar a thra&amp;-year able. .Alwaya liltan to .the plano,
l*iDI1 flaclnaiDI Nlruuy L
.he adYiaad the llutlot; and coaCede~~~-' aid ._ DDt aider it a part ol the .,tile
~ lnlillollle4 In IDDOil perfonnmlca. Farpt, too, that
iacb until NASA last May you have a throat, "' beve no

V-lllon-

· ·-~

Advisory Boord Set
For :New U/B Lab

c~

::rw.::

!r-=in~~.=~

tation~

E. J. Meyer

Memorial Hollp•tal; Albert C.
Rekata, MD., director, E. J.
Meyer Memorial Hollpital; 1ra
G. Roa!, Erie County eoooomic·
coordinator; Cora G. Saltarelli,
Ph.D., director, Bioentit-rins Department, Roswell Park
Memorial lnstitute; Edpr F.
Scbiller, ezecutive director.
Niapra Frontier Vocational
Rehabilitation Center, Inc.;
Paul A. Schoellkopf, Jr.1 d&gt;airman of the board, N•acara
Share Corporation; Mayor
Frank A. Sedita; Charles E.
8Wwart, executive director, The
Bulralo Foundation; :11111108
S..t, _ t i... director, Buffalo Goodwill Industries, Inc..
Nid&gt;olas D. Trbovich,
....., and president, Servotronlca, Inc.; County E:mecutive
B. John Tutuska. •

c:hail::

�' - u. Jf17J

4

nuK~~~~---------- . Thbm~-----------~to~ '!:tO:
as cable teleYiaiDD." was urpd (~ '"'"'-I. coL 4)
(..,..ruu..d /roM 1, coL IS)
~
nity ~and ......,.ted
ways

to

~ the

um--

aity's . . - t metboda ol pt,linl ita to the public.
---·-1·1·-·

AmDill

the

wicle-ranlinl

n&gt;-

commendatiom ot the - '
are· the followinl:
• The University ebould
clarify the meaninJ ol "academic freedom" and'"_. campus';" ezplain its policies Oil admiaaion proc;odures. en tr a nee
atandarda, permanent residencas ol atudenta, and other
Steta-imPcad policies and reculatioaa.Elucidalinl etaten.&gt;ts
are also .-led 011 the University's view of the "di«erences
be-and~of
Jepl . _ _ illapl behavior."
At the same lime, the "commu-

nity ebould J'I!COII1ize the right
ol individual members of the
University community to take
political positiDilB as citizens,"
the report said.
• The University must ''define unambiguously" its policy
for admission of minority students ''in language whicl\ makes
sense to the general pub lie
rather than to the professional
educator." The University must
also help the general public
understand the "scope, purpose
and results of various University programs designed to provide educational opportunities
not only for disadvantaged minority groups but for disadvantaged whites as well;" infonn
State legislators of the "exemplary academic performance of
minority group students," and
·'explain criteria, amounts and
rationale for assigning financial
aid to minority students."
• The University should
"ana\yr.e.. evaluate and translate into laYman 's language
studies of the tax revenue im ~
psct and social impact of the
new UniVersity in Amherst;"

"assess and communicate more
fully arrangements for student
housing and the anticipated effects of those arrangements on
the Amherst community," and
"continue to clarify the issues
involved in Amherst campus
construction. . . .'" These suggested measures are intended to
improve relations with the Am·
herst community.
• The University should increase its efforts to inform the
coqununity about education
and research activities ._.t hat
have a broad public interest;
"evaluate ... information from
oommunity activities undertaken by various parts of the
University, to cspitslize on . . .
past experience;" "give greater
recognition to inliividuals and
groups in the inner city who
participate and assist in University-sponsored research and
service projects,'' and "spell out
realistic limitations on what
the University can do and cannot do in solving practical inner
city problems."

--

by lbe Tult Force as a way
~ ':.t_lbe pro- .................... 111111 - cl ~ inbmatian
DOliiB that bucJioiB tedmical : - : ~ : : : : : :
about lbe Um-.lty. ,
.
FlnaJJ.y the Talk Foree called
mendatiom that would lbe Um-.ity'o educational for M~ Rudy l":"jed8" to ciety to ftnd oolutiom to lbe f11:Y ~ a- - - - .. -'eeL
ftnd .._.. by whid1 um-. urban ..........,. ~ "poo1uttaa.
~ ca. to lbe OOIIIIDU•
6. GoD~r••~"'• lAID .....i
nity. Par eample, lbe - ' aity 111111 .....-inflY can ftnd p&lt;M!Ry, " ' - • c:rlme, m-, Public Ad•i..Ulralioll- 37
~ pride and jomt .-d tnD~p~Wtatiaa, bauaina 111111 urpd ............lie ~­ a (20 Ullderpaduate, '17
lbe DlviiiDD ~ Clantinulnt Edu- in .... olhw:" to cllocoow "the cial pn~judice."
....... ). , _ ... ,_pubreal nature ol lbe Universitycation
n •mlty ....,_
Mimy callepo 111111 unlwnl- 8c policy ... lbe UDderCommunity
interface,"
and to ties have noaetheleMreopoaded - .,........ ....... few couraes
ben
111111 belln to
ciMl With ']IIOblemo 111111 tnmds underaland lbe "attitudes 111111 to tbaes lbe - ' 'with IIIUIIiclpel....... arimtafears
ol'
groups
in
lbe
Univeraffectint the Ollllllllllnity· aabd
saya, throulh interdiacipllbary tiaD 111111 ,_ ... criD. 111111 deU/B to ....nt ......, Cii*(y with sity toward pollee • . . ."
studies 111111 lleld -ieacos linqueDcy Old1llde lbe UDderSpecific _.mendalilllls With tbree broad liaDM:
the acbool lyalema to "improve
J1*1ua1a or~ml1jle by the ,.... Force _ ,
"D1881118 for lludenta to make
1. The .-d for a aynlbelia
8.
Pltilt»oppa.
the tranaitioa from high acbool not - - n l y a _ , . 111111 coordinatiao ol ei&lt;istin1 it:al P~ - e to colletle. "and eiiCII1ln&amp;8d the opinion; often ,_..,nwytatiOils b&gt;owledp related to urben (211 ~ t1 lllducommunity to draw more stu- were confticting. = r e
ort problema;
ate). While U8llful - - •y,
dent. into community problem- said this was done
2. The desire to educate cili- ist in the bacqraund ~ urban~"'-t
rena for life within an me... izatiaa, few attaapt to make
solving ..........ts ... ·"' The in order to give
report also urpd u /B .to "in- a "fuU Jist ol -posi~-.;;;d ingly urbanizing ....odd; 111111
projectioos about futwe man
vent ways to use the college proposals" which oouJd be .-1
3. The preparatiao of prole&amp;- baled Oil that bec:kpouud.
Faculty .-n:h to date was
oancept tO the CODIIIiu- "for. the ~t dealcn of sionals who will be CODalrDI!d
nity," to help the community
with providioJ aolutWns to ur- found to be ODilCIIIIIIated 011
to understand college innova- a~~.,.:., said it was ban problems.
j&gt;ublic syatems, particularlY in
tions and thus prevent "indis- attempting to counteract a con- Local - educatiao · 111111 bealth. 'Thirtydition summarir.ed by John
c::riminate oveneacticm.."
Many major cities have · at five recent studies _ , ~tiCooperative ventures which Gardner in his recent book, TM least one institulillll of hillber fiad, despite a much hicher
Recouery
of
Confidence.
education offering such studies. lewl of faculty inlen!et deterthe University and community
"We find our institutions
The report contends that mined in a 1.988 study. U.clt of
could share in were aJao recommended. "Community leaders caught in a savage CIOBSfire be- ''While the Western New YOrk funds and Jaclt ol a coordinatin residence/' advisory com- tween uncritical lovers ,and un- area and its 1.5 million people ing vehicle for urban .-n:h
mittees, adjunct faculty an d loving critics," Mr. Gardner are served by more than eicht were · suggested as poosible reapanels of resource people from wrote. "On the one side, ·those colleges and universities, there IIOD8 for this. ·
the community might be who Jove their institutions tend is probably · only one institu- -• brought in to share their ex- to smother them in an embrace lion that bas the vast resources
The growth of student interpertise with schools and depart- of death, loving their rigidities already • in existence that are est in urban all'airs, which the
ments, the report s uggested. more than their promise, needed to develop a (compre- report cons~ as the justifiRegular briefings might be shielding them from life giving hensive) urban studies pro- cation for any new program,
scheduled to achieve two-way criticism. On the other side, gram. . . . This is, of course, was found to be manifested in
communication betwee11 the po- there has arisen a breed of SUNYAB, which, as a majOr several ways:
lice and the University commu- critics without love, skilled in ·state university center, bas the
• At least 40 master's theses
demolition but untutored in the responsibility for both regional and .doctoral dissertations in
nity.
. Also suggested were displays arts by which human institu- and State-wide response to .1969 and 1970 were related. to
urban problems as compared
and exhibits that the Univer- tions are nurtured and strength- community needs."
sity could make available to the ened, and made to flourish."
The 78-page Urban Affairs to only seven in 1968.
community . regular reports
• Sixteen of 26 students who
report examines the campus's
from 'the University president
a'
Pro~
existing resources in the field have taken advantage of the
to the community ; a campus
a
11
and sets forth a proposed core U~versity's new ad '!or: major
tour and luncheon program
curriculum which would pro- option ~ve done so m the urgeared to tbe community, as
au-ic. D....
,, ·-- ~·1
vide both Buffalo and the State ban stud1es field.
weJJ as new "ceremonies and
u.v .LO r ,c tl.J.el
with the neceSsary program .of
• Forty-three p•os~ive
rituals attuned to the current
Charles Doneg...;, UI B law study.
,
student requests for informas ty les and values, requirin g professor, has been named to a
The survey identifies · 400 tion on urban st;udies programs
joint Univers ity -community panel of 12 black law profes- ex isting courses broadly re- were receiVed m August and
participation."
son; to assist in the trial de- lated to urban problems and September, 1970, alone.
Some recommendations di- fense of Angela Davis. Done- the delivery of -public services.
• Betw~. 500 "!'d 700 sturected at the University's pre- gan expects to serve in an adWhile this represents a d~ts ~1c1~te m Commusent operat ional structure and visor.v capacity to Howard_ major development since 1965- mty Acti&lt;?..n Corps programs.
• The new coUeges have atorganizational procedures were Moore, Jr., Miss Davis' coun- 66 when only 100 such coUISes
also made by the Task ·Force. sel. This will involve doing re- were identified most of this tracted overflQw numbers to·
For example, it was recom- search on existing laws, writing activity was found to have their .; community-oriented
mended that the University "in- legal briefs,-and perhaps actual- been "on a unilateral depart- courses.
mental basis as opposed to in• More underpaduates. ~
sure that individuals applying ly assisting at the triaL
Donegan worked with Moore volving more than one ·disci- ever berore are mvolved m mto the University get a timely,
ternshipe ·and independent
clearcut response;"' "stop fur- during the summer of 1968 in a pline."
ther delay in permitting U/ B esse against the Georgia Em- Cunent Progroms
study.
to hire additional campus se- ployment Agency. At that time,
Grouping urban· problems
The repo':l 00!'tends furtJ:ler
curity pers onnel . . . ;" and the National Association for the into six major fields, the report tha~ the Uruvemty bas a Wide
expand both publications de- Advancement of C olored offers this analysis of current variety of other ~the
signed for general readership People &lt;NAACP ) was suing programs, based on cUrrent JIBrar1~, researcli mstitu~, a
and the scope and activities of the agency because of alleged graduate and undergraduate CoWICil on Urbari and Regtonal
·
Studies, !'!c.-which both "atracially discriminatory hi ring catalogs:
the Speaker's Bureau.
·
practices.
·
-·-• Q---"
test to 1ts conmm over the
1. E nuvonme,~
.....tty - . nOOds of the community as weU
New Oraonlzotlonol Mochlnery
The legal panel for Miss 40 courses presently oft'ered as 'lialitate the _.won of
Also seen by the Task Force Davis
was
chosen
from
the
(
17
undergraduate,
23 gradu- response to urban problems and
was the need for neW adminis- ranks of the National Confer- a\" ). MOB\ of these are tech- the mel.rc!politsn delivery of
trative, organizational and opof j!~c)&lt; Lawyers. pone. m~y !'nented ~or advance public services.•
erational machinery. E;stablisb- ence
gan, a mem&amp;er of its board of m&amp;JOrs m a specific faculty; 1•ment of a "Community Liaison organizers,
was appointed by survey courses dealing with the
In addi .
•
tha
Office" to ljDSwer questions and Haywood Burns, executive di- broad spectrum are Jacking
lion, Jt notes
t
respond to grievances addreased rector. The twelve professors particularly tboee witbin u..; ~ ~ at Jli8!18Dt an instit;uto the University was suggested, from various univennties were realm of the social implicatiolls ti~ mleralt m urban ~
as weU as a · bi-monUily press chosen because "of their Cc.n- of the problem.
ac:tii!D propuoa as well as m
club.
mitment and experience in
2. Urban and BttliontJl £con- ~":..:! ~
Use of new·teChnology; "such Civil
Rights litigation.• Four omy - 62 courses ( 29 under- __._ ._,__ dMJoled . 10
of the S!fesaors haw served graduate, 33 graduate) .
!'7.........,.
. on the
Defense Fund of is a high coocentratiDD on man- m ... III'I!IL
the NAA P and some -gradu- wacturing, trade, 111111i&lt;e1ina.
While ~ that tiliilpt
ated from Howard University etc., but few courses in sudi Jll'llbleiDI lilr -daD ol
U.w ScbooJ with ~ The critical areas as food proc1uo. a new JIIOIIBIII. lbe . _ t does
group is weU known to eecb lion, poverty, public finance, point outl;bat---~
other and I:loMpn bas cooper- blaclt ~ etc. There ia a in urban plablema me u-ty
ated with ....., ol them 011 .-d for studies 01\ the urbani- funded 111111 that lbe 1971-72
..,_ before.
zation of economy as It can- bUdpt leQUMCa Mdltiaael fa•
~ ....paCt. tha iiOuP cems social orpnizatiao 111111 culty Jl'l'E'a in lbe ~ enwill "" ~called
in the behavior.
virclaDadaJ· aludle8. ao--.
DMr1uture to deCide ol:nllecY,"
3. Detno«rffl&gt;&gt;ay and Bwnt~~~ ~ opecilc to wbil:h
• and divide ._.n,rutiea,
Behtwior-= 58 Cow- (36 un- tbaes IJC)8itialla will be allocated
Aftao graduadaD £rom How- derpaduate, 22 graduate). So- have._ • yat t-a dMipalard in 1967, ~ - - cial orpnizatiDD and . - and ed."
.an illilllllmlt COODal at lbe etlmic relationl are stron.tY
The __. _;,_,.__ --n.e
NAACP. · He --a~ao ' a 1e181 - t e d but tbere are t8W ia a ~ ~~
COODal to lbe Poor P8Qplio'a courses 011 ~lillll or 011 "**t to .w.lflb a t1nhalllt;yat _ 1IDderllldu~ .fram tbelr roil1iiloocy 4. Pdlic Syatc,p&amp;a - 141 ezia11iDt
- a new
.m ~ gty. 'lblo fall, couras (94 ~ 41 ~
pnclical
betea • an· ..-. graduate). A~,...._. ·
·
...r...........,lta
at U/B'a JAw -' ~ in cultuz&amp;-111111 e.t-lillll-· .......... ~ . . S - •
ml welfare•llldat8; but-lbini • - nity Jrijecla in a -mal plla."

::-.amdemic

=.n;..SF"'
f~:'.!':i:.':

Outlllde lbe policy .-1m, the
Taalt Force made~ recam-

~_-:., r;:-deliv.

2L:

B....,. .,.

L
D

W

On

n-

IDIIell-

='= ::: ~

~

-=

=. wm•••·•~
..._t

�/~21,

~

l97l

it"s always- In a p r ocess cl
breakdown and dia&gt;luti!x&gt;; ...

5-

Arimerst.Planners Biggest Headache?
Providing All The Needed Supplies

How do you provide supplies
lbe other hand, -·ve aot lbe
proclla cl Creation and eraiOon aobur an."
Powell-ia that llniahini his them?
A -tly-reported study by
book after 11!11 years is like
".....W.,· a lcmg ru.-." While Cornell Aeronautical Labora-

War~b~~~

Detrv'!!

writing it,· thou&amp;b. be's oo11ect.. tory (CAL) ·bas provided some

ed larp amounta cl material suggestions for U / 8.

about Bulfalo. With this, be
· ' - to write a aoclal history
cl the city tbrou&amp;h actual blopapbies. He plaris to foc:ua ...
tbe "'lberal YeiiiU8 the rebel,
the people who are "flcbting the"
social structure... Puwell Wllllla
to cover the time from Tom
Nlcboloa, a crusading newspaperman In the early 1800's,
to MaJ:Iin Sostre, jailed .bladt

As preaented In the Winter .
issue · of CAL' s R eoearclo =~!!!!!!!iiiiiii~
Trends, the etudy yielded theae
results:
To operate the . .. (new Amherst) campus about 2 million
cubic feet of supplies will be

~train~~~

more than 5 miles long.
Warehousing this material,
and delivering it as ·needed on
18Y01utiollary.
While be's writing. Po we II a csmpus extending o ver 2
will ocmtinue teeching under- 9QU8re miles, will be a complex
graduates and graduate stu- task. The requirements were
dents about urben s oci olOJY worked out by a CAL group
beaded by Projects Engineer
~~Vi with the Social Morton I. Weinberg.
Planning was based on the
Peihapa,
even write
some more articles too vision- storage and movement of more
than 1,000 d ifferent items
Revolution at Home," it died a ary to find publishers.
needed to keep the University
quiet death due to lack of a
functioning. Typicsl of the dipublisher.
versity are textbooks, computer
Finally, next month, Oxford
paper, caged animals, chemical
Press is bringing out his book
flasks, hospital gowns, lawn
on the historic roots of the revmowers, light bulbs, mail,
olution .be talked about five
mouse food, and pest moss.
years before. The book, The
Some of these items will be
Design of Diacord: Studies of
State University College at needed In very great volumes.
Anomie: Suicide, The City, Oneonta, in cooperation with In one academic year, deliverWar focuses on the collapse of universities· in Israel, Turkey, ies to 12,000 dormitory stusocial structures and the loss and Iran, and the Department dents would include 530,000
of fai th in the existing com- of Education and Culture of pillowcases, 1,060,000 sheets,
the Jewish .Agency, is offering and 1,600,000 white towelsmunity.
Anomie is a sociological tenn two summer academic pro- fresh linen enough to cover a
defined by Powell as " loss of grams In Israel this July and basketball court to a height of
community, . . . breakdown of August.
40 feet.
mores f socia l laws ) ." Ever
The programs are " Modern
Just to move the material
since his college days, he's been I s rael : An Interdisciplinary about will require a fl eet of
interested in the phenomenon Sucyey," and j'lslamic Civiliza- about 100 trucks, up to the size
and its companion, alienation. tion: A . Comparativer Study of ' of a 16-foot van. The CAL proIn his desire to und e r s tand the Middle Eastern World." ject even included a separate
these" forces and contemporary Each course wil l be for an study to verify the fact that
society, he was "d rawn· to probe eight-week period and will their traffic would not clog the
into the past." And so, since award nine semester hours of road system planned for the
1958, he's been slowly working credit to student• completing campus. . . .
his way ba&amp; in Buffalo's his- the academic work satisfactor- Why CAL Began the Study
tory to 1810.
ily.
The problems of materials" Modern Israel" is for stu- handling posed by the new
His search has y ielded severa! interesting findings. Gen- dents who desire an intensive campus are not unique-they
eraHy, crimes of violence de- study · of Israel's economic, so- resemble those encountered in
dined in Buffalo from 1900 un- cia!, political, religious, educa- setting up many large industi l the 1960's when they started tiona!, and scientific institu- trial or military facilities inrising again. Powell also found tions; . an opportunity for ie- volving complicated interrela'
that crime rates inCrease durin g search on a particular aspect tionships. Over the years, C AL
times of warfare.
of the country; and a humaniz- has developed capabilities in
Suicide statistics were also ing broadening contact with systems research for solving
such question&lt;.
studied by the sociologist. The old-new Israel.
The Laboratory in 1969, usr a t e s here went drastically
''Islamic Civilization" is a
down, as _muc~ as ~ to 40 per comparative, inte/disciplinary ing its own funds, began study cent,. durmg .times of war.
study of Middle Eastern civii- ing transportation requirements
Usmg find•.n gs ~uch as these - ization and institutions. It fa- for the proposed campus. The
and other histoncal patterns, cuses on Turkey, Iran and I.s- emphasis at that time was on
Dr. P~ll began to work out a rae! with in-country field trips moving people, particularly stutheoretics! framework about the to religious shrines, A r a b, dents changing classes. (See
necessary_ cucumstances !or • Turkish, Iranian, and D ruze accompanying drawing. )
The State University Conwar.. ~ his boo!&lt;. ~ starts With villages; archaeologteal "'ites,
a detailed elCBJilU\IItion of World and an ·opportuni ty for individ- struction Fund asked CAL to
War I and slowly winds up to . uaJ and group research on par- take over the materials-handWorld War II and beyond.
ticular facets of Middle East- ling study, as a prelude to the
In making the point that ern Society
more comprehensive task of de''war is collective sui~" he
Partici~tion is limited to fining the total csmpus system
leads the rea_der up to V'!'tnam teechers and undergraduate for transporting both personnel
and all'!"'" him to draw !U!' own and graduate students who can and materials. While this maconclUIIIOnB. Puwell ~ meet the entrance reqnirements terials study was In progress,
had a chapter about
m ol the State University of New and even before the highly dethe book, !Jut 11..- 1t out when y orlt and who have a serious tailed final report was combe 8J!d his_ publisher ~ pwpoee f 0 r participating. pleted, the University began Inthat 1.t "raised more ~ There are no language require- corporating CAL's findings into
ita planning.
than 1t seemed to . . _ .
ments
He does, ' -• Wllllt the
. y-.:... • ,__ _,_
Eotlmotlnc Demand
reader to think about the curDr. ~ ~....,r, proThe deciaioa as to which
rent war, terming it .- "kind ol f'!"""'" of mlern!Jtional and for- materialS should be etudied was
suicidal war In 1011tt..&amp;t Asia."
:""the~ ~~ baaed on experience at SUNWb.Y are wua '!VAPd?, Pow- procrama for the 'ruth conaecu- YAB's - t campua. Data
oor~piled for well
ell
asb.
"Soccety war to ·
n. •..:... the 1.968- sb8eta avoid
N\IOlution and In dob,g. live summer. ~ .... .
over 1,000 .items described as
so it ofll!ll crata lbe ..,_ 619 and UH!B-70 ~years to annual usage, aize and ·
lution it
._..__ to
id,w be was resident director for ~ · weilbt of package, "price
avo
full-year SUNY procrama m
he .I!IIJWM. The ~t ..,_ 1.srae1 at lbe Hebrew Uni...,._ breaks" alfecting order size and
lutiaaary 1 18 a "- sity In .Jeruialem and Tel Aviv delhwy, warebouae atackin&amp;
sbelf life, and other relevant in·
IIPOIJ8e to lbe _ . cl war, a Uiliversity
·
formation.
·
=.,:.to t!Je ~ of
Coals ~ tuition are $1,066
Futme demand was estieor;!eiY• •In tbill -- for "Modern I.sraeiN and $1,11;6 ,mated
by multipl •
-t
fDr ~. Civilization." • COIIIIIIIIIplio by = t e d ".,...
out to crate a , _ 8Dciety.
8c:bolanbipa are ~calation factma. w Tbeae took·
Poooell ~ tbill Ia a part
For further lnformatioo. COD- into account - cmly lbe to1a1
of the Ufe cycle of socfety tact Dr. _ Aleander at State PQWth In a1udeDt p1pnlatlon
which ill '!lib a Jnm. orpDillm , Un.hwsity . Colleae. Onecmta, !Jut aJao cbanpa In the mm_:
for ~ a IP'Mter propclll
· in-wa----~ .N .Y •• ~. ·

-

~j

SummerStudy
Set in Israel

Yietnam

:;m'

- w,...,.

::':' :.:.=. :::t:;

CAL oloo augestec~ • campus tronolt system for studento
and sblll, n - thoucht to be too expensive for lmplemen·
bltion. The pion called for • series of stations (such n the
one show!&gt; obcwe) alone • three-mile loop to serve stUdents

changing duses. At puk times, the plan Clllled for 40

vehicles t o move along the route. A slngte station would
have to accommodate 2,300 students durin&amp; the busiest
break period. Tbe vehldes would travel in excess of 30
m.p.h. and allow 30 seconds for Joad end unload at uch
stlltion. Those whose classes were leu than 1,000 feet

apart would walk. Now beina: considered are shuttle buses
and staaered dass breaks.

tion of students on the new
campus are expected to live in
dormitories.
To arrive at reasonable estimates concerning warehousing
and distribution, the analysts
found themselves foroed to ant.icipate many other characteris tics of the proposed University's operation. One typical
task was to determine how
much floor space the Book
Store should a llocate for starage and how much for selling;
to do this, however, it v.:as first
necessary to settle on a standard configuration for the store's
display cases t which combine
both functions l. Or consider
the handlin g of waste resulting
from the nea rly 60,000 meals to
be supplied daily on campus;
using d i s p o sa b I e service
I paperboard tray, paper plates
and cup s, plastic cut lery )
would add 12 tons a day to the
a mount trucked away.
Where experience on t h e
existing campus was sketchy
or atypical, field investigations
were made.
Some University materials, it
was found , are in fairly steady
demand; others expe rienc e
peaks and valleys. Such variability influences both how
much stock must be kept on
hand, and when delivery services must be provided. Time
distribution profiles were drawn
by week of the college year ·
and, where necessary, by day
of the week. Consumption by
Health Sciences, for instance,
peaks in February and April.
The bookstore needs its biggest
stocks In September and February. Use of roller towels in
October is 50 ·p er cent above
the yeiu's average. Delivery of
mail is heaviest on Mondays.

w.-,.
. With the volume of materials

determined, their physicsllocatioo-temporary and long-term
-became the next concern.
Goographically, the csmpus is
to lie built al
a mile-long
eeat-w.t
containing
the library, student union
buildiDp, cultural center,
plaza, and several ol the col....... . Other academic buildinp are clustered to, the Dorth
and IIOUib, and at both enda·of
the llpine.
The Admini&amp;Vation • Servioas site is to the southwest.
The aludy team recommeaded

"spi:J.

a Central Wareho u se here
about nine-tenths as large as a
football field ....
ln one concept for material
distribution, t~.is Central Warehouse would be supplemented
by 26 "satellite" storage locations designated {or high-usage
areas . ...
SuppJit!s for maintaining the
Unh•ersity's planned physical
plant would require additional
area of about two·third.s the size
of a foo tball field. Indoors
wou ld be supplies such as sand
' 750 tons a year I and s torage
space fo r seasonal equipment
such as la wn mowers and snow
blowers. Outdoors would be material such as baled pest moss.
Specialized Facilities
A centralized off-campus facility is suggested for the 132,000 laboratory animals expected to flow onto the campus
a nnually. ! H ealth Sciences bas
also submitted a requirerfltnt
for 158 human cadavers a
year ) .
Special freezer and refrigerator facilities will have to be
established to service the army
of vending machines on campus. Ice cream sales alone, for
example, are estimated at the
equivalent of 5,000 quarts a
week.
The State's plans for the
SUNYAB csmpus envision it
as a major center for advanceddegree as well as under-graduate education. As oile Index of
this-and, again, a materialshandling reqnirement -the new
csmpus' library is expected to
be increased over a period of
10 years, from an initial size
of 1,300,000 volumes to 2,250,000 volumes.
Continual refinement of.csmpus logistics is likely as the
planning for the new csmpua
becomes progressively more detailed. At present, for Instance,
the type of building conalzuction remains undetermined. It
bas been decided In general,
however, that the sbuctures
will be heated by direct electric
resistive units In air ducts, and
cooled by circulating chilled
water.
•
To maintain the buildings,
eight type~! ol tradesmen will
be reqUiied;' from J&gt;l~ to
loc:kamitbs. The CAL anaiyata
fJgUred they'll make 52,200
worlt-trips annually, requirina
a Beet of 57 vehicles.

�} _ . , , .. Jf7J

"6

Coed llousing
Study Result
'Surprising'_

Be Strict
WrthFunds,
Jury Urges

LaS year's move to CIHIIl
bouaina raised quMtiona and

"No dlanae," is ooe student
IMdor's predil:tion about the effect ol Monday's baDd-elappina
reorcnmendation by -the bold.,_ March Gnmd Juey l n ~tmg student funding at

eyebrows about What the re-

~a-.· ~tol

the Graduate StUdent Aaaoclation, feels that the Grand
Jury's decision supportin1
"strict ,uidelines" tor fees m.
tribution "W&lt;IIl't have an effect.
We'D so on spending our mcmey the way the majority of the
graduate students want."
Repreeentath• ol the Undergraduate Student Asoociation withheld comment peDilin,
a meetmg TuMday afternoon.
In its report, relea!,ed by
County Judge Frank R'. Baygar, the Gnmd Juey also SUI·
gested that "donations to
groups wl:..- espoused soals
are the destruction of our 'SOciety should .-se." GrouP!
named by the Gnmd Juey include the Black Panther Party,
the Nations! Committee to
Combat Fascism, and the

y~=Juey based its decision on "a strong suspicion
that some of the funds were
uaed, at least during the achool
year ·1969-70, to foment revolution on the SUNYAB campus, and to pad the pockets ol
the fearless few who were bold
enough to take them."
The report contmued, "We
are distreseed that aome immature, radical students were
able to rommaud the control or
at· least' blecome the recipients
of 80 many tbauaands of dollars
without. '!"""' ln,!erference by
ao aciministrator.
,
The Gnmd Jury also labelled
"improper" the uae of student
funds lor a bail fund ·to peraons whom it feela were "violatmg a State or federal law"
and recommended an end of
payment· to private attorneys
and of donations or gifts to eocalled "defenae funds."
The report espec:ially criticized the funding of the "Buffalo 9," the "Chicaao 7," and
the "Martin Soatre Defenae
Fund." Sostre is the former
the lowest level of moral
owner of Bulfalo's Afro.Ameri- By SUSAN GREENWOOD fairyland but of contempoiary There's a picture of a cop bad
judgmlljlt of all the !D a I e
cao Book Store, who is .serving
R - sta~t ,
America- Teus priaons, radi- playing a ·1.2-string guitar in grcjups.
. a jail term after conviction on
The poster ·for Bruce Jack- cal Americao movements, pov- Saltville, Virginia, and one of
Moreover, an- the freshmen
DIIICOtics and aassult charges son's pbotograpbic exhibit looks erty, change and bitterness. He soldiers with bayonets at the tested. includina -tbooe who did
which aome students felt were all wrong at first. The lines goes out in his blue worksbirt Pentagon. ~
not live in co-ed ~•
Jacltaon started t'alting pic- sCored lower on the aemal eli..~ Sigge)kow, vice representmg .00 flag are fuzzy and jeans, records the 80!!1 aod
and grainy, and the portrait speech of these people, tapes
lemma in the test thao on the
president for student al!airs, of the Appalachian woman with their stories, takes their pic- lures when he was doing gradu- other dilemmas, _ . } ethica
who has worlaid ciOHely with her malnourisbed child is much tures and wr ite s the whole ate field work in sociology in or value of human tife. While
student leaders on the fees is- too sharp and clear. Tbe whole thing up for Harper's or the a Texas .prison. Becsliao of his aU subjects had owraU ocorea
and is a member of a cur- thing doesn't come together.
Atlantic.
"lousy ni!mory," he st'iuted in the up~ three levels, ...,..
rent SUNY-wide committee to
But a second look tells you
But the mnvicts, the prosti- taking a csri&gt;era with him 80 ual judgment ac:orea were alrecommend a new permanent tha! Jackson is saying · 80me- lutes and the embittered won't he could uae the pictures 88 waya lower thao the owraU
policy on feM, bad no oomment thing's wrong in the American be · the ouly faces in the show. memory aids.
.
score.
on the Grana Jury report.
Dream and y,o u realize that his Jackson will include pictures of
Recently he's gotten into fUm
Of ClCIW88, thia may or may
Student fj1811 are being ffi&amp;. show
of
"Fifty
Americao
Porthis
family
aod
friends,
loci
And
and
is
currently
editmg
a
movie
not u..n that a freshman's 88:1:·
peraed thia year aooording to rails" will have more thao pic- the "faces" of objects-photos on prisons. In addition, he's ual
maturity is lower than his
interim
\icy eatsblisbed tures of cute babies and haPI'Y of ao abaodoned car named written a book about priaoo life, owraU
maturity. KobiiJaog bas
~ the stat:' Trustees which
You think that mayr;&gt;e "Tooter" and a bike called Wake up, Dead Man, which found that wben a ~ is
requires each 1ocsl administra- families.
there'D
be
pictures
in
it
of
cops
"Veronica."
will
09me
out
this
fall
l'lllldy
to
~ to ,. liilher
tion to "certify" that funds are and. poverty and protest. And
level'of moral judgmentspant fir "educations!, cultural
you're
right.
.
~
......
-.?
ina.
he
willa mucbJa••
and aocial ~"
'lbe pictures in the show were
~t ..1. ~~ .• lwhilee~.ol""'~heiwilln'
for a _!hortto
'lbe only conboversialappro- taken
over
the
last
five
years
.,.,.,
JII'OINE
• tiona to date under tbooe
the priaons of the South, in
All members of the Faculty taking oourses in a foreign Jan- the ~ level. So theN is lbe
~were relatively small in
the
Appalachiao
foot.bills,
at
of
Arts
and
Letters
have
been
guage,
either
claasical
or
lnod·possibility
that
co-ed
IIIDOUDts to SDS and Youth Washington protest marches asked to submit their opinions ern, unless intermediate pro- may cauae a peraon .to bouolng
became _
Apinst War- and Fascism for
and in tenement apartments. on the educational validity of ficiency ceo be demonstrated to more aezually mature in the
The
collection
will
be
baoging
the
present
foreign
language
rethe
satisfaction
of
the
language
long
run.
.
~tical" ~~-Fund.
'lbe study has BOql8 00. inUDder
guidelines, is in the Center Lounge of Nor- quirement to Actmg Prov&lt;&gt;st department COII&lt;lerDBd. 'lbe reton from February 3 through 17. Tbomas Connolly before Wed- m'aining eight hours of the re- teresting results. Femalel livstill pending.
Don't ezpact to see quality · . nesday, February 3.
quirement, or the total ol 16 lng in co-ed dormitoriea P_rints with ezcellent oomposiThe present regulatiOn on the hours where proficiency has more politically l.ibaral thail
SPA THE WJNN£R
The s.n.ta Profeulonal Associ~~ · lion and graceful form. The language requirement of the been demonstrated, is to be ao- any. other group tested. ADd
both malea and females Jiving
t1on (SPA) has been elected as ·pboloc.r&amp;pbs will be dooe in Faculty in the context of the lected by the students."
The Educations! Po I icy in co-ed boualng loc!k..more coithe a.rplnillll •sent for the SUNY a straight documentary ~le. 16 hours WI' thin the Faculty
Jacbon 8IYB they are "witDess
tside the ~-~--t'
· 18
·
Committee of the Faculty will leKiate ayatsm COUl'88l thao the
~I still, the State Public
beoring." that they give . t.eati- ou
. ......,.. s ma)OI'
consider the language
·
other t.. poupa.
Employment Rol1t1ons IIOIIrd moey to the placea he's been 88 follows .
ment at its nen ....tin~~
'lbe report from the study
(PERil) 1nnouncod T-~· AI!·,
._......
he'
known.
''E'
·
d
d
t
deions
ol
the
educations!
validity
.concluded
''that
..ttbaulb
ooc:an11n11 to 1 PERB spollalmln, andAn~b, p~ofessor of
":i..iid'at!r~
16 of the' ~ requirement, educations! bouolng maylied&amp;8PJII .-Mel 5,491 to 4,795 Engliall, Jacltaon bas known
of COUl'88l outside his ma- possible modifications, or ....,_ sirable and justifiable lor fDr the Unlwrslty Federation Jots ol people' and been .loa of jor within the Faculty of' Arts aonable al.,....tives are baina - . a , 'enbancinC ~
. of T!ISCf*S. PERB said 10,664 of
laco&amp;. His area of in~ is and Letteia. Eight hours Of this 80licited' in order to ald the_maturity cannot 6e Olllllited .
151746 eUalble volarl CIS! bllllotL ~ not of a medieval ~t io to be met by Committee.
.
•
lllDIIIIII them.•

:JackiJn:s ShUtier Eye Vzew of~

Is Language

~

/

sults would be ol aemal integration in the donna. Most ol
the speculation ...,. 1-.1 on
aasumptiona, ~. and little ... bard t.ct..
Last January, t.. poycbology students, Sally Geol!mer
and Mike Mora-tam, brouiht
their speculationa to Dr, Victor
Harris ol the PaycbolOIY Jl&amp;.
partment. Topther, they designed a study to test tile assumption that co-ed housing
· would have a more maturing
effect on freobmen thao living
in a singJe-&lt;lex dormitory. 'lbe
investigators , ieceived funding
from the Houaina Olfice and
the Undergrailuate ~
Council in order to pay their
subjects.
'n&gt;e group uaed the Kohlberg scale of moral judgment as
their testmg instrument. In this
test, the subject answers q\81tions about a series of hypothetical moral dilemmas. These
deal with dillerent areas such
as politics, sa, peraonal property and ethics. The answers
to the questions are then read
by a scorer wbo grades each response into one of Koblberg's
sis levels of moral judgment.
The subjects were 232 freshmen who bad been living in
donnitories for almost t.. semesters. They were divided into
three major sections: tbooe living in dormitories who didn't
request co-ed housing; tbooe
wbo .did request co-ed bouaing
but didn't get it and tbooe living in co-ed housing. The last
group was theh sub-divided by
their different living arrangements. Qne group lived in alternatmg female-male winp of
Goodyear Hall aod the other
group lived in alternatmg malefemale suites. ·
The results of the study were
· surprisingly complex. Women
living in an ali.ernatini malefemale suite arrangement responded . . predicted aDd bad

r.::,.

I

'::J.:

~~=":£:'=

·

�1~28; 1911

~

State University Researcb.F~Undiition
Grants Total $254~
.
.

;-

fellowollipo ~

- . F. Joyce. Tho U~- Un·
clu the 1989 Tax Reform Act.
• FACULn 01' NAfti&amp;AL SCIDICI:S

Tbo 11171-..lo .oerieo indudeo

~.::!Y~~~~

1.40 U/11 fac:aity -'&gt;om have
been awudod panlll-in-«id and
_..cb

=ty~~~J:~ ~~~~=:

c~:~-:-~"'i'::
·•tead.y Flow.

~-up to $1600 . ~ 3.""~e~=

FACULn OF li&amp;ALTB SCSHCI:S
--JliocM.ntit:ol. Plaarm.ccolofy:
Thomao L ~ Studioo on
the Mechanism of' Tbymidylate
Synthetaae; Medicinal Cltemidry:
Robert A. Coburn, Proton Trano,
fer Within Nucleic Acida-Model

~~~~~·~~~~

~MA~TICS . - B~f~i

~......&amp;nf~~~
:h'&lt;Pra.1). cnmto"in-«id
for

APPLIIII SCSH~hemical En-

Cbarleo

J . Ca-. Geolocical -

Cluono!lf. Applied to An:beolog-

(~ 2) .- and a combinotion
of a pant..in-«id and a leUowship DOt to - - t. $3200 (Pro-

'Poinla of Cenlral NOIK!OIIJP&amp;Cl
Convex Seta; Herbert A. De

availoble - . the - . . : h

abe Functiono for Tonion-Fiee

~~'!':""~

Fajtlowicz, Rational-Valued Yam-

!:,~.,..!i.i.-r:: ':It·~"3 ~::r..fb!=lu~yo~

•-n!..~...

Pral'ra'm 1
awardl and lbeir project&amp; are:
FACULTY OP Al:r8 AND ~Srnas.
-C-I.CJ.Iticl : Tbomaa C. ~·

n-g_of Conotmctiono; Stuart
~~ue p::r.;,...S~ ~
Fluid Mochanica; Robert A. Lee,
Di.ata.nces Between Elements of

adotto, Myth w. Man:ben in the

otructive Mathematics ~ Bruce 01oen, 1otegral Ecjuationo and the
~~~:..~= &lt;f.':::b\':;...Mil;;,_
Unifonn Distributions; J ames L.
Thompoon, A p pI i c-a t i on of

=c

~::t'Y~~";'t'ol:ninJ~ei.

~~-~~r,".~r::

of"f:ew Od_. _ play; Charleo
F. Altieri. Poot-Modemiml in
~~c:a::.:.~':d Di?'o'!.i~;
Arthur Efron. Aeothetiao a n d

l~syo~:ot C:n~

r.!.U:cig~ffe=rd \f.,..~!:te~
~=.h~NS.W~~~ ~~yo~o~~:~tu~r~:
0

er'a Use of BotaJiical Symbols in
the "Caoterbury Taleo;" · John T .
Ogden, Growth and Structure
in WordowOrth~o Poetry; Gerald
L. O'Grady, Arthur Miller -

:Or:t,foSetr::~

ezny, Q-Hypoelliptic Convolution
Operators; Physico: Bruce T .
CleYeland, Line Broadening in
the Moeosbauer Effect of Tantolum-181; Richard H . H~. Be-

=: !"~

18th Century Novel; David W.
Tarbet. Ratoration u... of History; French.: Ralph Howard
Block. A Structural, AnaJyois of
L4 Chanaon De Roltmd; 1'homaa
Jefferson Kline, Literature of tbe
Priaoil; Mruic: Frank J . Cipolli!,
Performing Editions of Baroque
Music for TIUIDpet and Strings;
Spanish , Italian and PortU/Iuae :

~;:;,~~ ~j;.~~ ~~N:!

1

£t!n~~Ereacnt :: :ib
1

Structure of Alkali Hydride Cryatala; Mendel Sach, Inertial Masa
and Interactions in General Reiativity.
FACULTY OF SociAL ~CES

Studiea.
.
FACULTY OF NATVIIAL SCIDICEB

it::mo"f~'i:Yi~

Manuscript Sources.
FACULTY OF EDUCATIONAL STUD-

IES-Educotiono.l Poychdlot y:

~~o~':~u~~roior.:.
~~;:~ ~
fineerinf : Paul Ehrlich, Struc-

.of

Lipids

on Selected Subotratea; Mathe matics: Ubiratan D 'Ambrosio,
Dynamical Syatema With Memory; Physico: Gft!IOry Breit, Nucleon-Nucleon Scattering and lo·

::'.:;~; ~~ Ga'J~ Mr~
Superconducting Loops.

·

Sor.L\L SciENCES

FACULTY OF

AND ADMINIBTR.A.TJON- A.nthropo/-

Cf~n~l:"~ rppll:'~~~~

logi&lt;'&amp;l Problema; Geography: Edgar C. Conkling, Trade, Location
and Regional Development in
Central America; Charlea H. V.
Ebert. Development of Lateritic
Soils in the Amazon Basin, P e ru :
James E . McConnell, Trade, Location and Regional Development in Cent ra1 Ame rica; Politi-

-=

0

~~::,n. r::.:;~:c .'!:rto~,::~ :r:.il~k. ~t,'p!~:

merce, 1917-1934; Th e odore
Friend. Imperial Rule and Na·
tiona! Culture in Southeast Aaia;
Richard S. Humphreyo, Sources
for the History of the Ayyubida
in Syria; Georg G. Iggera, The
Impact of Mantiam on Recent

folio Selection-Uncertain Veriancea and Co-Vaiianceo.
Dr. Martin Fauoold, chairman
of the Division of Social Sciences,
State University College at Geneseo. is the chairman of the SUNY
Awarda Committee. A Joint

T echnological Change in AnteBellum America; Leo A. Loubere,
Sociological History of Wine
P roduction in France Since 1789;
John D. Milligan, Revolution to
Counter.Revolution - American
Gunboat Poli~olitiool Science :

'tee, waa established in 1967, It
is chaired by Dr. Schuyler G.
Kohl, aaaociate dean of the College of Medicine at Down1tate
Medical Center in Brooklyn.
The total amount awarded
th~out S UNY in this year'"

g:~P i!~.a~~r:a:P¥~!d

lm~t ~~J:~A ~ ~
alysis; Psychology: I rving Bied-

~..,!~{S~~~Rot;~ s.0 ri~~

Youth; Psychology: bhiruko Izawa~ Continuous vs. Discrete Echoic P resentations in PA Learning.
Program 3
P rogram 3 recipients and their

GREPORTS

ON

Pi!=.::e~F
L£rrER8
-Art: Harvey Breverman, Series
of Shaped I ntaglio Printa Deal ing with Human Dilemma; Seymour DrumJ~itch. llluminations
for the 21st Century- A M acroMicroooam; Anthony R Pater- PRESENTATIONS
son, Creative Sculpture; E nglish :
Frances A. Payne, Chaucer and DR. PAUL KtiRTZ, professor, philos·
Winston W . Chang, Structure of
Boethiua--Chaucer'a P hilosophi- ophy, " Ethics and Reason," two
t:::.\~~~~J~ri\.~'!c"f­ cal Satire; Mark E . Shechner, lecturea delivered at Union E xJoyce's
P aycho- perimental Colleges Graduate
Knife Variance Estimation in J.Dgic of" Ulysaes"-The
College, SaraComposition; French : -School· and- New
imaltaneoas·£quations; Geograsota, Florida; 4"The Moral Revo·
phy: D . _Michael Ray, Canonical · Chantal L. Jennings, Women as lution,'' Cleveland State Univer·
a Poetic Myth in the Works of
·
Analyois of Spatial Data-Method Emile Zola : Sebastian Okechu k- sity.
1
wu Mezu, Idealism and Revolu- DR. J . BAM MILLER.. research 8..1·
tion in Black Renaissance Liter- . sistan t profess or , rehabilitation
-A Biography; David A. Hollin· ature; Bodo L . 0. Richter, F rench m e d i cin e with DR. WILLIAM P.
ti~n~1de!t. i~~:OOO~rJ;: Renaissance P a mph1ets in Lock- WALSB, instructor, "Weak Muac~e
wood Library; German an.ii Slau- Control of Powered Orthotic De·
A. Larkin, What Keepa Poor ic : A . G. DeCapua, Critical Edi· vices" 23rd Annual CoQ.ference on
t!.'::'re~r~sJ;::rd~~a~~: tion of Lyrical Anthology of Ger- ~~f~~~e~::~~~~8.C~; ~
ism and Tradition_ the Ch'u man Baroque.
Yuan Legend in Modem China;
FACULTY OP E DUCATION AL S TUD- MILl,ER . " Control of Powered
Orthotics," University Hospital,
Melvin J. Tucker, The Rise of ~Educational A dmi.n.istration : University of Washington, Seattle,
Robert
E . J ennings, Frank Moore Waahington.
the Howards, 1400-1572; Phi/oaoand the State Univenity.
ITiJ;illty~~-A~ra~itJ=:~~
FACULTY OF ENGINE£1UNG AND OR. GJ:ORGE H. NANCOLLAB, profesCo
A.P"-I'£0 SciENCES--Chemical En - sor, chemistry, " Nucleation and

ARTS AND

AND ADMINIS'l"RATION-Anthropol-

.

o~e~;

Polyaaccharidea

AmmllllftATIOM-Anthropol- ezman, Tho _l'eftloption ol ObOf)': 8arunaa Milisau.okaa, ·aa. --jecta in 'Their a-1 Wodd : ~
earch-on the Neolithic in Poland; tiDe; Roy ~ ~t
Marian E. White, ~live 8Dd Permanent a..- aa. the
Wufare in an Unknown lrociaois Subjeclift Lexicon; ~:
Inaian Tribe;·Ecorwlllia: Milton Co-unA. Yeraauia, NetionA. lYoba, An Econometric Model a!ism and the Communist 'Party
of Ntpria; Naaeab S. Re.ankar, of -France. 1819-1936; Speech
CE8 and VES I;Unction&amp;-A Dis- ConuouuUcation: Derek A:. Sud·
crimiDant Anal ylie; Hi.tory:
e ra. Lin,cuiatica Coutrainta ia..Bi·
David Abooch, Imperialism and fuuNal Speecp Perception;
the Emergence of the Modem School of M-rrutnt- o,.,_,.
State in Japan; William S. Allen, ization and HUIIIGft
A History of the Socialist Uoder- Thoma G. Gutleridce. Study of
l&lt;lOUD&lt;I in Nazi Gennan)'; Ernst Job Search Activity of Graduate
Badian, Alexander the Great in Busineu Studeuta; M~nl
Iran; Nonnan Baker, Politic:a of Science: John P. Seacle, Portfolio
the City of London; Marvin D. Selection- Uncertain v.....,_

AHD

GJ&gt;EOPLE

Ofy: Carole N. Kaufman, Human
Figure Portrayal in Art; Keith F.
Otterbein. InflUence of Beliefs in
the Supernatural on Child Training; Econolllia : Raford D. Bod-

*'haft:,,:

~~?f:.':teds~

=~e~:c~r~wS~'i.p:".:la: ~o!~.J: c;.l!~3.'r ~~

Thennodynomica of Ion Catalyota;
Ciuil Enlfineering: Nicbolaa J .
8w'!ri~eA ~~..!,;l~n~t~.':l
Enfinurint: Jam.. A. Cadoow.
Alogorithm for Minimum Fuel
and Minimum Time Control;

~~ taing~w0~=
mm.,; Er~~~ineerint Science.:

Chih-Lan Su, On Application of
PLK-Method to Elliptic PDE'o;
Chia-Pina Yu, Study of Conveclive MHI:l Flow.
FACULTY OP LAW AND Jumg.
PRUDBNCE- Louis A. Del Cotto, .
Social and Econpmic Aopacto of
the Taa Raform Act of 1989; Ken-

ParzenHeads UIB
Statistics DepL

~ &amp;.nt~~~~~E
Polloc:k. Knowledge and Juatifi·

cation; Political Science : Terry
Nardin, Phil0110phical Analy-

w.

Ilia of Rulea in Strategic loterac-

tion; Donald B. Roaenthal. Dis_trict Politics and State PolicyMnw in lodia; Robert G. Samberg, Decision Solutions 1o A

!:.,4;1 s=~ sept·~{
the Military-loduotrial Complex;

Dr. Emanuel l'anlen· bas J...- A. Stimooo. Decision-Makbeen ll8IDIId 1-t of the De- ', inc in, the U.S. Houae of Repre-

of .Statistics by
NIIDCOilaa, pt'CJ\'08t of
the Faculty ol Natural Sci"""'"'and .Matbematka. Dr.
P817.e11, formerly prot_,. of
statislica at 'SiaDfol:!l, 8BIIIII!d
his,~ at .the bePJmiN of
~t

e-...

the Dew ..........,. -Dr. SeYJiiour
Geiliaer, former • dl8irm8n, is
~tly .at. Tel Aviv Univer81
chairman. of stat:is- .
tica holds an ·A.B. frilm Harvard (milgna cum laude) and
the M.A. and Ph.D. from the

T~.

•

.

uiews.

witi. ~~~~~

¥~ s:~w~:tiC:~

Thermodynamics of Formation of

eation.

AmiDe) Acids in Pol~."
25th Annual Calorimetric Confer-

{;$~~:.:. f~=~ ~~ ==~~'i:;ii
erometer Using P&amp;Biive Com.pen~ lnveeti.ption of Metal Bin:fi:DJ' ·m
..,!~~ 0fi 0r:~""f:t~;

P~~~pby;~":J:""~o~;~

&lt;&gt;-·~;
Gall A. Bruder, Word ·,~-

=

~~;thes!!~:of~~

Albrecht. The 1oatitutionaliza·
.lion of the Fine Arta; R..-el A.

tc.

Fear.

"''1'.:;..!
2 recipient. and their
project&amp; are:

~

~,:;.!':1!=

Righta; Lee

and Am·

FACULTY OP NATtJJW. SciEMC:ZS

MATBDL\TICS - Bioloiy:
Peter S. Gold, locubetion and
Prenatal Behavior in the Laugh·
iDg Gull; John H. Parker, Energy-Coupling Relationships of Radistion Repau; Jamea E. Tavares,
Membrane Stateo - P&lt;*ihie A,c·
tion of Plant Hormone.; Chemu· try: Robert D. , Bereman, ~"!'"'
urea of CovaleDcy . m Tranailic!n

loniall&gt;o&lt;:umODta.,

FACULTY or_ EHjllllaaiHO AO.&lt;ID

Calorimetry of Metal Complex
Formation.'' 6th Sym~um on

Tbe.J"mo·Pbyaical Propertiea,

American Society .of Mechanical
Engineers, Boaton;"lnterpretation
of the Thermodynamic Properties
for Metal ~ Formation."
Amerjam Chemical Society, Local
Sectional Lecture. Brigham Young
Uni'ft!roity, Prow, Utah.
oa. ALBilllT PAD'wA. profenor,
c:bemia~. "Orbital Symmetry
Control m the Photochemistry of
~.!t ~o":i~~ He~trieaea." Univeroity of _MiArtemeoia Ketoneo· Eli -Gruahka. "!"' at Co~ Geblea, !'I'd pruver·
Utilization of ~iaed Chroma· uty ol Florida at GaineoYille.
4ograpliic Peaks; ;J'oaeph J . Tufa. .._ MO&amp;IIUH 8TUV88, aaaociate
AND

"ofro~r~~·Z7.?.:.:l.,!

s hared in the grants.

on Granular Metal Surfaceo Uaing a Vacuum Microbalance,"
Proceedings of the 8th Vacuum
Microbalance Symposium . Plen·
um Preas.
DR. LARRY B. ' CH U RCH, aaaiatant
professor, chemistry, with Y. W.
YU and A. A. CABE'ITO, ..The Angu·
lar Distribution of Recoil· Products from Some Simple Reactions
of 400 MeV Protons ~ with •Ni
and 1t7Au.•· Nuclear Ph y1ics.
DR. DONALD DARENSBOURG,

nual _Mtoelilljl, -American Society
for Microbiology, Boaton, and Annual Tranaformation Meetina•.
Eat. Part, Colorado.
-

~::=;.,'1':!J;. ~f.:i':.": PUB~ICATIONS

1oteractiono; John G. W'maua.
Spectra of Laaer Prod1Xed Elfecta
in Mercury V -.
' FACULTY or Socw. S&lt;DNCI:S

assistant

f~f~[ii~~e~tt:?;~ · ~::b:~~1

Stretching Modes in Trigonal Bi·
pyramidail Cobalt and Iron Tetra·
carbonyl Compounds," lnortanic
Chimica Acta.
DR.. PAUL KURTZ, professor, philoeophy, ''Nee-Behaviorism." Pensiero E L inguaggio in Operazioni;
"Humanism and the Sexual Rev·
olution," preface to The NewSez.
ual Re volu ti on , Prometheu s
Books.
OR. GEORGE H . NANCOLLAS, professor, chemistry, with M . S. !.tORAN,

"The Growth of Hydroxyapatite
C rystals," Archives of Oral BioiOf )'; " The Tbermodynamica of
Formation of Metal Complexes
and Ion·Pain in Solution," Croa·
tica Chemica Act.c; "The KinetiC'S
of Growth of Seed Cryatala in
Solution." Croatica Chemica Acta:
"The Thermodynamics of Metal-

~fleCoo~dtna:z,~·P#he !'J~;
·

Rev~w1.

Dll. ALBE&amp;T PADWA, profe11or,
c:hemiatry, with W. KOEHN and S .
)(AIOIAIIACIIlA, "Thermal Dimerization of cis, trano, 1, 3-Cyclooctadrene,•• Tetraltedron Utt.era.
DR. NOaMAK BT&amp;AU88, auociate
prof..O.Or, bi~, "Early Ener-

Annealing Raaolved Complemen·

tary Strando," Genetia.

RECOGNITIONS
aailtant
profeaaor, School of Pharmacy,
elected Fellow of the American
loatitute of a.emiata.

DR. THOMAS L K..&amp;LJIAlr(,

DB.

A.

\\'Dft.EY

aowt..um, vice

pre.ident for univenity relations
and asaociate profeseor of higher
education. awarded the 1971 Ci·
tation of the Middle Atlantic District of the American College
Public Relatiopo Aaaociation.

80
E::!~.
Fred w!lL't!': :='::"J.;,.;'lt!~;~o';": GRANTS
brid DNA Molecules eo":fn.J.
~J!=~~~~~=
' ed by Annealing ' Reaolved ComDEPAK'I'IrlmNT OF
Ira! Theory of ~r {)per- 1'1-tary Strando,• 70th An·

FACULTY OF ·AI:ra AHD iJn'miB atora; John W. Duokin, Non. · Triple CobomolcicY; Har·
-Arl:· Willard R Harris. Co_ina, Abelian
Tokeno and Symholo; Er~~~liah: . iharaier Subramanian. RiDp of
Fundi- and o-ralisationo;

~,.J~;"~~~

:'tat

':x,=

:r-~-1,.te8N~,l!'jo=
:{~~iu~'H:=
~~::=in~=~~~ DNA
Moleculea Conatructed by

Fundamental

He 18 cunently aiii!ICIIIIe edi- Spanitlh Italian and PortU/Iuue:
tor of the Sl:AJl.ConJrol ./our- · Peter if. B&lt;!Yd-Bowman. I;io:
rull and Ia a referee for IDIIIIY IIUistic Anal,__ of Spanish Co-

ioumabi iDdilding Math Be-

~t_!;,~•

litical ReiiPn in Plato and Spinosa; Dou.-1u B. Whatley. Book

Jlrilbab!Jitf

f_,. at Imperial Colleiie. Loll·
don, and Yisl.tlna prot_,. at
the M-.buset:ta IDsliJ!!Ie of

ence on the Chemistry of SoJ.idl;'!

Li uid lnterf
Y
ata'
!ia; with ::"i.r..Rovinj
iiEDDY, ·~

Social Context Natiooalizini ence, National Bureau of Stand-

%.., ,_

analyms.
Durin&amp; his stay at Stanford,
Dr. l'anlen was a gwm pro-

·
·
S te
E · e ·ng
A. 1:'::n~y.
Combustion Generated Air Pol·
lutanta; lndUAtrial Engineerint :

sentativea; Glen E . Thurow, Po-

. !,~~a.:-~;
Speech Commanication: Dennis
R Smith. Relation of Communi·
~~; Pjr,"..,:t
F.fi::."pao~
The Penuaai.., Effect of StrucUniveraity of California at • ture -in Oral Communication;
Berlteley. He has wril;ten '&amp;8Y· School of Maniv!ement: Alan G.
era! -boob, primarily abou:t SawYer, The Perauaaive Elfecta
modem
theory and of Repetition and Appeals to

time -

~':f:~n~( ~= ~r:· t!P2~: g:;=..~f ~~~ti~natPboec!!f!~

fc':= d.:re~

:e'::i ~U:li!~ ":ohi~e

CIIIDll8ftY, $2.·

500, Du Pont Company, to ..main·
tain U.S. reeea.rcb and education
in ecienee and engineering at a

peak of excellence and increase
::::.:;.tiona of graduate&amp; ~
DR. NO&amp;WAN BTRAVBB. associate

~=i&gt;J:!:'OSiJ!20s~.:w~~!;

Genome.

�.

.

'l1laro. -7-10 p.m. coo-ed
Pri.-ll·lll L11L '-hy, ltlllr,

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

~

7-8 p.m. facalt7, olalr,

Pri. -

..... •tylente ,__ r...ilY

Pri.-&amp;-10 p.m.........
'
'
Set.-1-8 J!:'L ........ r.fulty;

-.f.r..~

THURSDAY-28
80CB1 ·p•UO'H&amp;Ll'I'Y LO!fcs.lK
COLLOQU1UJI : Howard Tamler,
D'l1alftlc P&amp;OC&amp;BS&amp;B Df. 8Yll"hh

a.lOONft'JON, C-34, 4280 Ridce

I... 12:80 p.m.

~BIOLOGY IDQNAII•:

Dr. Jb1on Drum. lecturer, Fairhlna Collep, Bellingham. Wuhia,pon. IILICIPIC4TION, IN VIVO. AN~

Rooai
28, Ridp I... 4 p.m. RefNobmeato 3:80 p.m.
llf VIUO (......,.AC!'ION),

o•OLOQICAL BCD:NC:Z BDIINU.•:

~. ·u~~r~U~e.:r·~
8

Norway, o•oca•:w:rsTaY ow TID:
...,...•• catlft, Room D-170, Bell
F.aJity, 4 p.m.

Tickets at Norton; Student Activitieo Office, State College; Feotival
Ticket Office, Statler Hilton.

5:-:80 p.m.
.How tbo ECG machine mabo
vectora; unipolar and bipolar
leads; nomencl&amp;ture of measurement; tbo heuxial oyotem. Note:
U this ....Uon it misaed, tbo subsequent onea will be inoompreheDiible.
cua&amp;N'I'8 IN PRAC'ITTIONIIt JmUCA.·
TION AND LICI:NBUD roa ~­
ct8"1"8: H. F. Bevis, executive 1«-

reteey, Florida Stete Board of
Pbannacy; Dr. Albert Sica, oecretary, New York Pharmacy
Board; Dr. Michael A. Schwartz,
d e an, SUNY Scboo1 of Phermacy. Dr. Albert Wer.t heimer ,
moderator. 244 Health Sciences
Building, 8 p.m.
DANC:Z wn:NT•: TRZ COMPANY OP

XA1C, 'premiere benefit peltormance of TRIBtJ'I'Z TO A LIGHTNING
CONDUCTOR, Domus, 1696 Elmwood Ave., 8:30 p.m. Admiuion
$2.50; otudenll, $1.50. Tickets at
Norton ' Box Office, Baird Hell;
Student Activities Office, State
College: Festiyal Ticket Office,
Statler Hilton; or call ..COmpany
of Man Office, 883-9043.
HOCKEY* : Canton Tech, ~rot
RecreatioDIII Center, 1615 Milleroport Hwy., 9:30 p.m.
FREE FILM•: SATYRIOON, Federico
Fellini. consult Norton Ticket Of.
fice for times of sbowinga.

FRIDAY-29
8
~c~i~~r~~ a~:ba~~nRl:!i

lege, Washington, TOILET PAPER
AND OO..; SPILLS: A SURVIVAL AP·
PBOACB. multi·media presentation

sponsored by the .Student Aaociation in cooperation with Ecology
College, 147 Diefendorf, 3:30 p.m.
INTDNA'ftONAL FOLK DANCING: lnatruction in basic steps during
tint hour, .30 Diefendorf Annex.
8p.m.

·-

BUI SCHEDULE

-Y.Interlm ca.,._)
llolnCo--

,. tht'u FrW.r
MAIN CAMPUI
RIDGE L£A TO ..,
TO RIDGE LEA
MAIN CAIIfiUS
AM
PM
AM
PM
7:45
12:05•
8:05
12.."05
7:55
12:15
1:20
12:20
12:25
• 8:25
12:25•
8:05
12:35
8:35
12:35
8:15
12:45•
8 :45
12:45
8:25
12:55
B:SS
12:55
8:35
9:05•
1:05•
8:45•
1:05
1:20
1:15
9:20
8 :55
1:25
t:zs· 9:25
9:35
1:35
9:05
1:35
9:45•
1:45•
1:45
9:15
9 :25•
1:55
1:55
9,:55

The -lbltlon of palndnp by New Yofk ortlot John Fonl,
now on dlsploy In tbo Nofton Cenu. Lounp under _...,.
ship of the UUAB Arts Comm-. his dmm . . . student ....ponse, Ny5 Joe Fischer, dlrK!or o( the C Croft Center end coordlnltor of Norton -lblts. The futur·

lstlc show runs throuch r.-.r

of

next -

TUESDAY-2
8E8SMENT OP RENAL AND ADIIEHAL
0

~~ rn;~:,t s?~:/n°g 1~~

cations, 11:30 a.m.· 12:30 p.m.

THEORETICAL" BIOLOGY BRKINAR• :

Dr. James Danielli, director, Center for Theoretica1 Biology, ARTI·
PICIAL SYTHESIS OF IDE, 5 Ache-

son, 4 p.m.

DETE CTION AND SIGNn"ICANCE OP

:;~Mb~ ~L~o~SC:Sedfc8J. ~~~
gram, 62 rece1ving locations, 1:302: 30 p.m.
AMATEUR

RADIO

SOCIETY • :

first

meeting this semester, nomination of officers, refreshments. 242
Norton. 7: 30 p.m.

EXHIBITS
Works by John
Ford, Center Lounge, Norton Union, through February 2.
This study Offen, in the words
of the artist, " a fresh approach to
visual perception; an understanding of the infinite proliferation
that stems from ita intelligent
use; the .opportunity to ezpand
the choice of ima~ry techniques;
ART EXHIBIT •:

WEDNESDAY-3
CHAPLAINS TELEPHONE LllCTUR£ :
Chaplain Robert Brummel, CRJ·

=~~y A~:~!!~ p;.~c!'l sr~~
gram, 62 receiving locations, lOl l a.m.
COMPUTING CENTER USEH SERVICES
SEMINAR• : Lloyd Uhler, instruC·
tor, COMPUTER METHODS FOR SOLVING DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS,

Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea, 7-9
p.m.
A survey will be given of

andrce~~~~~f!Jan~ ~

:!f.

f:t
by an inner and cerebral per·
cepti.on which illumines the un·

:~~yntbeois ,of all things

~~..x;:.U~,!~:,: l;r n:ri~ INTERVmWS
~~~s~~a!:am7e!~~

- . Poulenc. Brehmo, S - oky. Baird Recital Hall, 8:80 p.m.

THURSDAY:--4
POOL\ftiiiiTB

.....,01111 YCnJD:

Fellini, .CODiult Norton Ticlutt Of.

~~r~eo.J&gt;-~r,.:

Jkefor-

TAIIBAL KIIIATOJIA,

SATJ]RDAY-30

~/r"~~.o{O:o~

York. Applications must· ~ re-

ceived by February 15.

WRESTLING • : Guelph Univenity
(Vanity) and Erie County Community (JV'o), Clark Gym, 6:30
p.m.
GRADUATE RECITAL•: Kathleen Cassidy, piano. Works by Scarlatti,
Schubert, O.opin, Rachmaninoff
and Stravinsky, Boird Hall, 8 :30
p.m.
SWIMMINc• : Guelph Univenity,
Clark Gym Pool, 9 p.m .
HOCKEY•: McMaster. Amherst
Recreation Center, 1615 Millersport Highway. 9: SO p.m.

PHYSICIANS TELEPHONE LECT U·RE
Dr. Ivan L. Bunnell. TBZ RO~ OF
ANGIOGRAPHY 11(' TBK CLINJCAL AS·

_..,cl by

=r.!=~~:ar=:.~:~
p.m.

a0cw. PSYCBOLOG1' oou.t:IQUIUJI*:
Steven l;;ewio, OIIIKNT.lftON .......
.lftON ........ AIID~IH
ornoa.t~ ................ Rents c.
34,.4230 Ridce I... 12:80 p.m.

='=:~ :&amp;~

The ON-CAMPUS INTE&amp;VIBWlNG

~~~

the opportunity for individual in·
terviewa with edQC&amp;tional, buai...... induatrial 8nd aovemmental
re
Candidet. -from
degree reWi. are inYited to interView. Regiollation fonDS and
'a dditional information are avail:
able in Hayee

:Ifre....ta-

C.

.

P=Y~,u~::'x ~':

poration; Albany International
Cor·p oration; Teaoeck ScbooJa
(N- Janey). ·
• PIIDAT-29: B . f'. Goodrich
Company; . Allatate lneurance

Erdman and Anthony; Auburn
City School Diotrict; Gateo Chili
~::f (~~~j. ~81J!plon_ Beys

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent exhibit of works by
Robert Graves and &lt;lames Joyce.
Poetey Room, 207 Lockwood Li·
brary, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
TIMES OF CIIABLES DICKENS :

=·

EZRA POUND

85TH BIRTIIDA.Y B·

~:~~~,hnJ~~:

NOTICES

in·t er.ted in = o n tbo
Music Depertment'o
.
lilt
to receive news of eventa
831·
;woe or write to:
TBOSB

-N.:Jt
S~~~J:.1o.~
York 14214.
0

~~fl':!::.).Forb ~trel

.

Tll8&gt;AY-2: Lucidal Dmlion·

~...;~A~'\:.5-.o:J»~~~~
Afton O...triiJ Scboolo; Paimym
(Wa:v-) •

WID-Y-3: " A.T.AT~Goocl­

Tire ana Rllhller 0ompeny:
TmJall.lY-4: Buffalo, Forse

10:05

10:15
10:25

2:25
2:35
2:45•
2:55

10:20
10:25•
10:35
10:45
10:55

10:45•

3:05

11 :05*
11:20

11:05

3:35

10:35
10:55

3:15
3:25•

11:25

11:35
11:45*

2:05
2:20
2:25"•
2:35
2:45
2:55

3:05•
3:20
3:25
3:35

11 :15
11:25*
11:35

3:45
3:55

11 :55

4:15 -

4:20

5:05
5:45

s:os•

11:45

3 :45•

3:55

4:05

4:35
4:45•

4:25•
4:35

6:25
7:05

.,

11:55

4:os•

7:45

8:25
9:05
9:45

4:55

5:25

6&lt;15

6:45

1:25

8:05
8:45
9:.25

10:05
•SATURDAY SCHEDULE- T'hoM- buMS
'marked *lth an asterisk will run on

THE OFFl&lt;Z OP ·FINANCIAL AID is ,
now accepting financial auistance
:rf~l:tr:.. No e.u..s. sehedu'-d.
applications for tbo 1971-72 academic year. Forms may be ac- · eu:..~,.. Campus quired at the .Financial. Aid Office,
01.,.,., Anna (Loop)
216 Herriman I.ibraey. Completed
Ri~~ 7'236, Interim C.mpus
applicatioDB are to be retumed to
ACTUAL TRAVEL niU ONE WAY
the off'J&lt;e no later than Mon:h 1,
IS APPROXIMATELY 15 MINUTES
1971 and financial o~e-..to to
be proceeoed i&gt;y the Coli- Scbola.rahip Service are to be for·
warded to CSS no later than
February 1, 1971.
.

JIOIIDAY-1: · Ciatco .IDe.; New
YOrk Stete Dept. al Ovll Service;
Cuba CelttniJ Scliool (~);
=::u.~ Scboolo (Mao·

year

2:05•
2:15

9:45
9:55

to:os•

illus-

~rn":.:.::;. -t':~~:

Maatib&gt; 8obool

9:35

trates his life and times with
photographs, drawings, portraill,
first editions. Main reading room
and second- and third-floor gal·
lerieo, Lockwood Memorial Li·
brary, . through January.

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

-_
.... - - fullowa:
Comr!o!l; Sladlpole'Ouboin Oom- -Moo.
- ?·10 p.m. eo-«1
PBOHa ...,..,.., .Dr. WilllaaD Bar- - peny; Pi-.p. Plate' GlOM In·
Tneo. - 7-10 p.m. WRA
Wed. - 7-10 p.m. &lt;0-fl!l
Dr. a - Babin. cluoUiao; .........Prioo Toyo Inc.; '
liDDICAL T8CBNOLOQl8T8 - ~

..

.

.--.loh.

POPULAftOlf mJDDB aamua at
Comell U.uv.nity. Comell Uniwroity ond '11&gt;e Fopulatioll Council have IIIIDOUDCOCI a 6 ......,
-~ in J&gt;&lt;&gt;pulation· otwlieo for
undercraduate teachero of oocia1
.cieDce, biolOCY or humanitiel intereeted in populatioll instruction. Participants will receive a
oubotantial stipend; allowance for
travel, boob and dependento. Interested faculty membero llhould
apply to Profeoeor Parker Mill'

MONDAY-!

I::,J.:t:: ~,::J:,c~~~~ ~
~:"'~~:.=:.,::. '!i!.h

, _ I'ILK*: BA'I'Y&amp;IOON;,Federico

oratory,

Fellini, consult Norton Ticket Of.
fice for times.
·

COKPANY OF KAN tbe·

Free.

ohoald atteDil a - - , 'l'aoool.y,
Febnilr)' 2, at 4:00 p.m. ia 238
Ha:r- HelL Mx. Daoi u- clireeiDr al tbo BPI~ LabwiD -tioDI
ond Gplala
........... dudiuiJ¥ tbl
~ If Ua·
te..ted bat ......... to •ttead.
Ill-.
. . _ a t 111
'l'--...1 Jbll. En 11888.

FREE FILM•: BA'I'YB.lCON, Federico

include subroutines that invert
La Pl_ace t~foi1DI ..and ~lve·
non-hnear difference ~tio.~,
plotted output, .and an indication
of the capabilitieo of SYMBAL _
. for . formula ma_~_i12_ul_a_tion. A
the Buffalo Pbilharmonic. Domuo, ~wl~ of FO~ IV 8nd
1695 Elmwood Ave., 8:30 p.m. diJferential equati~ will be asGeneraladmitaion, 12.60; ltu~~~n~ l:':rlr..!.m...:l~
dento. $1.50. Tickell available at
Norton Ticltet Office; Student Activitieo Ollice, Stele Collep nn ~ ~·: N~ra _
Elmwood; · Feotival 'Ticltet Ollice, U!J!Ye1111ty, Memorial A~tonum.
7 p.m.
Stetler Hilton; or call 883,9043.
WRIOSTLING*: Rocheoter T~
....... ..,....:...•: . L«mard Luar(J.V.'s), Clark Gym, 7 p.m.
.... c:larinet, auioted by Elle.n
· lAne. ooprano; John Hei'l man, l'AIIBI'fY BASKJ:TBALL,;; .Niapra
- flute; Pbyllio Rooen. viola; Carl ~~-=mtY. Memorial Auditorium.
Benner, piomo. Worb by Schu·
DANCE •:

llinaiJw ~ ................t

Society, 25 Nottin.3'.am Court.
2:30p.m. Free:
DANCE • : OOKPANY OF MAN fhe...
ate.r-danee group in Tribute . to a

work, oponoored by RecioDIII
Medical Propam, Dr. Jul• Con·

f=

All .............
-iD!eNIWialalloliaa ...

~·&amp;::!;ve:f 'A!.~c~toil'i
~::.,~F~'!eTi~~de~to~

.~1.::::1
x~~~;,·~m~
edmiuion, $2.50; otudento, $1.50.

:dl;.;::.-~ M'..=.i:i
~r~i~~Ji;.· ~~.
?i::tat~u~:!~~uA~d~r:!.~

8aa.- 8;~ p.m. -

TIII&lt;I8DIO ~·

SUNDAY-31

DmiODUCDON TO IUICT80CAIIDIOG·

IiAna: Telephone Lecture Net-

...

SuD.-'-2-8:80 p.m. r.:alty, ltd,
.-14&amp;1iiloDio.6io. ~

~ A-e., 8:80p.m. GeDenl
admioei9n. S2.50; otudimto. •uo.
Tickell at Norton; 8 - t Actlviti• Ofllco, Stete Collen; F•tlval
Ticket Ollice, Stetler RDtma.
, _ FJLM•: SATYIDCON Feclerieo
Fellini, oonoult Norton Thbt Of.
fice for timel.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>JANUARY.:21, 1fJ7f

VOL 2-N0.17

SUNY Faculty .Senate
Asks Higher Pay Rates,_
Cost-of-Living Boosts -

DeanZuxdg
· ToResign ·
August31
'lbe nlllicnation of Dr. Frank·
lin M. Zweig as dean of the
Scbool of Social WellaJe olllcially annclunced this week
by President Robert L Ketter.
The nlllicnati011 is ellectiva
-Auguat 31.
. According to the University
p r e a_a release on the actioo,

Without waiting for the outooli&gt;e of the Slate University-

wide bargaining agent election,
the SUNY F a cui t y Senate
Committee on Economic Status bas prepared ils annual
slate of demands, calling for a
seven per cent cost-of-living increment, a tw&lt;&gt;-year salary
package to insure a minimum
11\Structional salary range of
from $13,739 for instructors to
$24,043 for full professors, a 30
per cent increase for non-teaching professionals, and a special
fund to provide salary parity
for women.
·
It is as s u m e .d ·t hat the
elected bargaining agent would
at least take these demands
into consideration for a negotiating program.
The plan was alated to be presented by John E. L8 Tourette,
chairman of the Eoonomic Status Committee, to the SUNY
S e n ate Executive Committee
this week.
I t is broken down into three
categories: be nef its for all
members of the professional
staff; benefils for instructional
staff; and benefits for non-in-

~7hiohio~

&gt;live responsibilitie in order to
return to scbolarly activities as ·
a oontinuing faculty member
in the SchoOl of Social Wel·fare."
In making the announosment,
Dr. Ketter said, "During Dean
Z we i g's tenilre as dean, the
Scbool moved in a number of
innovative ways. Particularly,
Dr. Zweig bas been _,.;live to
the needa and problems of the
minority community, as evi-.
denced by the recrui- of
minority group faculty members. One-third of the graduate
student body of· the Scbool is
also from the minority community."
Dr. Ketter oontinued, "Tbe
Black Rock-Rivers i de Community Servicea Teaching Center, the joint degree program
· in law and sociaf welfare and
the Wasbington_Policy Center
have been initiated during Dean
Zweig's tenure.
"In addition, there has beeii
)&gt; a substantial increase in training granta in Social WellaJe
which have likewise cOntributed to the growth of the School."
·nr. Ketter ooncluiled, "Tbe
broadening horizons of the
Scbool are also reJiected in the
proposed change in its name to
that of SchoOl of Social Policy
and Community Services,
w h i c b I have recently approved."
was appointed to the
deanship in September, 1968.
_
,

z...:;,

fAlV (}ererrlf)

Set for May ny

·- -·-

'Tale of Hubbub'

The ~ ;, ·- · neat .;.~.,;,.
Domus Is a
film and lift ballet _.gtion deplctlnc thio " hubbub" at
U.. Fou'a departure as hNcl at the Buflalo Phllhannonlc.
Crtst,rle Lawson, c:o-dlreclor of the Company, II shown here
boinc pl&gt;ulucJaphod In the Albrf&amp;lrt·Knox'• " Mirrored Room"
lor • po&lt;llon at the film presen1atlon. (For detolls, Weekly ~munique, 8.)

The University's SurVey Research Center will, during the

com i n g semester, ihitiate a
study of belief patterns and
their influence on social interactions among all elements of
the University commUnity.
Pre-testing intended to refine
the survey :ns~t will be-

Day, May 11, as one of the
openina events of the 126th
Anniwrsary year.
.
'lbat aame day a bonquet
will be beld witb a p!ODlinent

man.

mn,. -

'lbe U,IB Foundation

in4i-

oates that it will begin PftiiDO'
lion of a major fund-raiainJ

. . _ . . . in late February, with
the lnaln ..... scbeduled ...
May and .-t fall. While 8oal
dataiJ8 of the . . _ . . . haVIII
not bean ..m-1, 1t~
iS
lhet lhe p i will be
mateJ,v $6 mlllioDhalf
(-ainued .... -

/J, coL 6)

wil

8

;

Adoption of an agreement ·

theu=.:e~~~g; ~~~~~
the professional otaff;
A fund of at least $500,000 to
adjust the salaries of women
pr ofessiona ls to their male
oounterparts, where inequities
exist. ·

Instructional Stafl
For members of the instructiollal staff, the SUNY Senate

calls for :
An increment system, separated from cost-of-living adjustments, which P.J'OYides $1,000
annually for alll'llllb... as in the
salary scbedule for "the -City
University of New York;
A cost-of-living adjustment
of at least 7 per cent to main(continued on -

·a, coL I)

Camp~ Prove 'Easy Marks' for Criminals
By STEVE LIPMAN
December 10,1971}-Tbe Underground Store in Goodyear
Hall was robbed by two armed

PQlicyCommittee
raporl&amp;
guest
-· the Anni"""""'Y
· Preoent plana call for the
Anniwrsary activities to begin
~. May 2, with a Unkwait)o-wide open bouse. Jobn
Buarlt of Student Ablrs, cbalrman of lhe &lt;JP!!Il bouse planthat 64 ldeoia for oociated activitieo are under
ClOIIIIideratiiiii'by bia committee.

·~ ~· stall.

AII·Sboll Benefits

An annual State budget for
the SUNY Senate on the basis
of $10 per Univ.ersity professional stall member;
Waiver of tuition charges to
dependents of University employees;
.
A non-rontributory term life
insurance package equivalent to
gin in the near future, follow- three years' salary or a mini~l wbehiannoch
. deuncedtails _of the stud)" mum of $30,000;
A fully-paid family health inTbe Center staff will greatly surance plan, including dental
appreciate cooperation f rom care·
faculty members, administra~ oounael for service-relive and staff personnel, and lated activities of the pro{esfrom students who may be ap- sional staff;
proacbed by its _interviewers
A six-months sic It 1 eave
during the pre-test. ·
credit to be made available im-

(J.Jmpus-wide Survey Slated

A cqmerstone-b.,ying for the
Law and Jurisprudenoe Building 011 the Amherst campus is

scbeduled for U,IB Founder's

.t ·

mediately upon appointment to
a professional staff poaition;
Provision for -one .....-tm
sabbalical leaves .at full salary
after three years of. ...vice or
two semester leaves at full salary after six years, with the
policy that ni&gt; eligible profe&amp;.
siooal staff pemon· abould be
denied sabbatical for pur!IUinl •
worthy professional goals for
lack of available funds or replacement peJ:&amp;Opllel;
The right for all present
members of · the professional
s tall to transfer between the
S t ate Employees Retirement
Sys tem, the State Teachers Retirement S y s t e m, and the
TIAA-CREF option for a period of one year;•
Increase of State oontribu- ·
lions to the TIAA-CREF retirement option to 20 per cent
of full salary;
.
Sufficient budgetary rupport
to assure that at least onethird of all secretarial positions
are staffed at the level of senior
stenographer or higher;
Extension of grievance pr&lt;&gt;cedures now in effect to all
members of the pl(l(eosim&gt;al

December 1&lt;1-A Semal deviate robbed and inenaced two
dorm girls.
December 20-A student'
walking up the stairs to Tower
Hall was robbed by a of
youths.
If you're a student living in
a docm 011 the U/ B campus,
then the odds are good that t&lt;&gt;nigbt you, or ODe of · your
lrieDdo in the dorms, will:
• find 11111118thing mioaing
from your room after you leave
it for a while·
· ·
• be ac~~sted, ~ or see a
stranaer llll'ki!ll in the balls.
Crime 011 . . . _ _ t. U / 8,
and lhrouP&gt;out the aation'a-col.....,._.. bit ~ , today.
ADd as lhe abMe rundown •
(au- from Culpuo Security'a
pec.aber repad) abaon, it
..,•t CllllfiDad to .wd&gt;Inp. Oae policeman - " '

~ ~ ~ more thefts
The drug-addict, hildt school
student, and vagrant find open
campuses and trusting students
easy marks. Thefts at :Washington University in St. Louis
have doo&amp;led this year; at
TuftS University, near Boston,
theyve riSen 25 per cent, and
such crimes .at Harvard have
run into the hundreds. A thief
caugh£ operatinl in Harvard's
dorm&amp; •Jed polici to his booty
of aevan• ...........,_a television,
a stereo set, a watch and ott~ mOre tban $8000, marly enough to send
.10 Harvard for a year.

&amp;QC... _,

WhY do criminals

find it. ao
to pt into the colleae of
and to sneak out,

::r .d&gt;P.ice
-

Ali David Gwnpert reported
in Jbe WaU ·Strm-. .IOUl'IIDJ.,
~ loot ia plentiful, and it'a
8Jao - - to pab. Iloxmi;lrieB
are ofll!ll _ . to anybody wbo
wants to *'*• and • . . IIIDdenla . . . livinl ~

·witb ott- students . . . often
feel a false sense of security.
They are often careless about
locking doors and windows."
Rich Scboellmpf, asoistant director of housing at U/ B,
· "There's probably more
stereo equipment in the dorm&amp;

=

~~ ~~equi...t=~

knows this... 'lbe crimioal alao
knows that the dorm student
will leave hio property unguarded and hio doo&lt; unlocked
wben be goes ~ the ball to

the lavatory, or to see a friend.
This is wben many - thefte DC- ·
cur; it only takes a MOODd for
a room to be cleaned out. Campus security of.fioera 11M oount:leas complaints of "I was just
out of my room for a few minutes."
.
.
"We can't help it if students

dor!'t · take ._..mmw tor

their peraooal 'property. says
'Ibomaa· Gulley, assistant director of housing. "'f you Con-

sistently leave your door OpeD,
-you're aoinlto pl hit."
(~on,..;ell,col.3)

�-2

Grad DepntmentsPlan
To Admit Fewer·in Fall

~
.RepOrts fr&lt;mRemers-

_1 _ , 21, 11171

Trustees in SUNY Senate Would Pose Threats.
Mr-

a- K

Trumbore,

Chairman, Commitlae an

~.

Faculty Senate
State University of ~ew Yorit
Deer Mr. Trumbore:
A university copsists of a
faeulty devoted to the education of a body of 'students and
&lt;to the adVIliiCI!III8Ilt of tnowledge_ A university's p a select trustees to guarantee that
its business is ·transacted in
accordence with their wishes.
To facilitate conduct of the univeisity's buaine11s, administrators are appointed; custom bas

to give the faeulty a forum in
which to debate and proclaim
policy concerning the education
of students and the advanmment of knowledge_ Since these
matters of professional re-

ing assistantships _"Chemical
Engineering is thinking o f
changing its policy to admit
fewer students, making sure
spansibility, none save faculty
have a right to speek on them
they're of higher caliber-except -that patrons may reIn Natursl Sciences, it's the
ject professional advice, for
loss of .-reb grants which
good or bed reaaons, and so
normally support graduate remay
clients, i.e_, students.
search assistants that's cauaing
A llllioenity senate can adsome of the fiacal problems.
mit
students
as ~ ih edChemistry is planning to admit
ncation-profeosionally unqual75 students instead of the norlified,
but
interestedIt caluiot
mal 95 to 100. Dr- · Morton
Rothstein, chairman of the
Hardest hit are the faculties
:t.:,d:::::rs
Grsduate
Allairs
Committee
of
of Natural Sciences and MathBiology Depertment, is ask- that custom -is in jeopardy. matters except as faculty mem-ematics and Engineering and. the
ing his committee to consider
Applied Scilmces (EAS). Of cutting
stipends_ He estimates
the five departments suneyed
are available to fully to faculty,' and-in limited !"'uldinfact~tthep""""'!iin EAS, all IDe planning cut- that funds
mgs. To admit the patron, m
36- 40 students; the ways-to students:
backs with JDII6t or them ex- support
A (OI!ulty senate is organized the guise of trustees or council
depertment
currently bas 50
pecting to cut admissions by a
.
third to a ball. Several depart,. graduatesTraditionally, the faculties .o f
menta also report 1..., of teadl~
~~~~:i...Edu~: (Co~ from r&gt;G&amp;• 1, coL 6)
lThe only t.binf that dsmuate support because of
The s - Isn't Liable
ages its success 18 other aturesearch grants in their areas_
Gulley reminds students that dents- "A girl let three guys
As Dr. Robert Berdahl, chair- New York State isn't liable for in a dorm one nigbt before the
man of Higher Education, says, losses, u n 1e s s negligence is aide could check theoi;" Schoel"we've always had it bed. but proven on its part_ "A clean- kopf recalls. ~'When the aide
Recent ~ in American now it's worse." Educational ing lady was working in a stu- asked to see their passes, they
educatian-includinlr a decline Psychology will be unable to dent's room when &amp;Omemle ran laughed and walked away_ The
of administrative auihority and offer any support to incoming in, grabbed the TV set, and - same girl who let them in
a lzeDd to get rid of young, students. English is planning a ran away. The State paid the wouldn't even ride up in the
highly qualified instructors- second year of cutbacks- Last
tudent beck f that, beca
elevator with them_ Campus
were cited b;y Dr. Harold L
year tbey admitted 30 students,
TV woul~ · Security had to get them out."
Hodgkipaon m an address at down from 70 tbe year before, t,.,Y figured
have
been
stolen
if
the
cleaning
.m2ether
cira!~~o~e E:=
the Ollianizational .,_ting of and in the fall of '71, they may
the ·American Association of halve the admission rate again. . ::~ U'.e~~:!'":'~~'l:v~ son College in Boston recently
University Administrators on Not all the depertments are pay a cent-"
installed an electronic system
campus last mootb.
reporting absolute cutbacks,
Gulley says, however, that in its women's dormitories.
Hodgkinson, project director though_ Counselor Education despite tbe trends at other lobby .entrances can be opened
of the Center for Reeearch and
schools, reports of tbeits here only by inserting a special
Development in Higher Educa- ~~~C:J::'~weA,fu!'i~s{;:i;,~ are down this year. Reported identification card into a mechtion, University of California " not planning any basic thefts of common property- anical device_ Even so, an
.
at Berkeley, is the ex-chancellor changes.''
drspes, chairs, sofas, etc--are Emerson oflic:ial complains ,
Cutbacks extend to-the Fac- down about 50 per cent. Re- "We - have more stealing now
of education at Simmoos College and former dean of Bard. ulty of Social Sciences and Ad- ported thefts of personal prop- than we ever l!ad."
Some students are taking seNot unezpectedly, his studies ministration . Some depart. erty taken from rooms-walshow thjot
are gaining menta are encouraging their lets, stereos, TV's and the like curity into their own hands. A
an ~ voice in college graduate students to get outside -have dropped '75 per cent_ Columbia Univenrity underaffairs, and that "school spirit" altl. Others are thinking seri- Gulley cautions, however, that grad instslled a second lock on
as well as administrative au- ously of cutting stipends, or these are only the reported his door after be returned £rom
thority are declining, espec:ially admitting students without aid. cases. About on.,..rnth of the a weekend off campus and
The ·only optimism is report- robberies aren't reported. "Stu- · found his $200 stereo set gone.
at the large, public schools.
Commitment by faculty to ed by Physiology which is plan- dents won't report something, Here, Glennon recommends
that chain loCks in all dorms be
public institutions bas declined ning to increase the number of if they know thin will
incoming students_ Several oth- ' of it-" ·
no
g
come .."immediately installed."
er Health Sciences departments
Gulley estimates ·that most
Meanwhile, dorm residents
as
college presidents
asked to liSt the changes they say they'll be "holding the of. the common property is live with the constant fear of
feel are JDII6t significant in higb- _ line," next year. Medicinal swiped by students themselves, robbery. Ronnie Karlin, a
er education, they ranked tbem Chemistry is the only one of and eventually returned. "If Goodyear Hall coed, reports
as follows: first in importance, the six departments surveyed you want another desk, or sbe bas to "sii with the launwhich may have to cut their cushion for your room, it's easy dry," or sbe will lind pair of
increase in student authority
(ball the college besda consid- in-coming class. Dr. Robert Co- to take one irom the lounge.!' slscks, or two, &amp;toleo-someM06t of this coiDjllon prop- · thing which bas already haper it a good thing); second, new ·burn, director of graduate studprogrsms for minority groups ies there, says they're "not ac- erty turns up at the end of the pened
of
and the disadvantaged (though cepting as many students as we year back. in the lounges, or- in T
";.0 rut, down
~ of
Hodgkinson found little full have labclratory space and fa- the rooms.
commitment to these as yet); cilities for."
Aa For Away oo Toronto .
.
future thefts and other crimes,
Actually, 1971 will be the
lllird, change in the composi'The second kind of tbefm- the follOwing ten commandtion of the student body; fourth, first year in which budget cuts. personal property-is less Ire- menta ofr personal Safety are
change in institutional con- really have hit the majority of quendy recovered. - These are · sug~ by campus officials:
cerns; and fifth, changes in fac- depertmenls; only a few cut usually. taken by outsiders;1- Make snre your valuables
beck last .fall Many_ depart- m a n y times by prof.,ional ue insured on your parents'
ulty composition,
Who best initiates major ments haven't actually bed criminals from oUt or. town- homeowners' policy.
2- 'F'ake purses and wallets
changes in institutions? It their budgets decreased, in- "We've had stuil tum up as
-th
if
ste
seem&amp; that administrators, oth- . stead they're on "maintenance far ~y as ToronlO," reports
out_
er than presidents, are JDII6t budgets" which Dr_ Almen Bar- Campus Security Director Ken- ~ y~~""':or
• •
3. Leave nothing lying in tbe
IIIJCillaful Hodgkinson con- ron, Microbiology, calls, "a neth GlennoJL
The property mnvered most qpen_
tands that presidents cannot be process of retarded growth."
. 4. Report . any "suspicious"
"too far out, because for every_ . This is hard enough an estsb- . frequently consists of TV's and
.-umbehars.ve_ Tbeseregi&amp;- strsngers to student aides or
giant ~·s a giant killer,''· lished depertments because it ~riseriall.er!'whidln
limits
expansion
but
it
may
""""
Campus
Security_
Probably m · the form of t:rust.mean a alow cWth for depart- often tum up at pawn shops_
ees_
5_ If you have to walk · ments just beginning to grant
Wallets and purees are found
t nigb ha - frequently-&lt;&gt;ut- campus a
t,
ve somePh.D.'s. Soc:iaf Fowidatiaas, a a Iitde ~ ..__ t
One body go with you-and stay
Ph.D_ department, had to ~-de
... _~ .....
li.,....-..M_mmpGoodyy.ear nears Hthe ligbts. '-----~
abandon its IIJ'DWth projeclioall,
Dr_ Warren BUtton, its diair.,
ber
purse in tbe
ata:r:::
man, says_ Cummdy, it is ex- hasement---«nd only one--ball · you know who it is lielore openThe University bas achieved
- - . ball ol its _.m of the money gone_
ing
the
door
100 per cent oi its 1970 United
8ealrlli Aldoo
- 7Givem Fund quota of $79,000, ~is also suf- - The reducticm
in .:....00.,. of
~ 1a r g e ..bills by
ering from the problem_
President Robert L Kettm, "Status
Quo" budgets come at thefts- this year is -largely at-~ · ~· dan t have lartlelifuounts
booorazy campus lund drive the time heby boom children trlbutsble to the year-Old 1 -mooey around. And 'enchairman,. bas IIDI10UDCOillll'lbe are ready for graduate school denHDitiated ~t" s..a:;rty • do..,.."all chec:b. "Pay only to ·
1970 total contribution . _ the As Dr_ Oli- Gibaoa, heed of Aide
•
Whendonns
·
· (Hinstead
the 81118$1'
gets that
lots
~
_. - _
of checb
of cash,
hiJhest in the .....~ of the Educational Adminisllatian,
Uni\W&amp;ity's ~ik, in the expleioa, u JUBt to admit the =.,at~midrii~t~mc: ~ceP:{"~robbed. ei~-l
united campaign_
anyone with- ab~ in a aalety
number or paduat&amp; Stu- an duty to
Anyone who has not yet dents is a cuthsdt- and _.,. out an LDor ll1le8t , __,_.~ .
9 ' Report all .............._
made a contribution but wishes DOt- abla to admit t h e - out of tbe dorm. Tbi!y don't
to do ao may still forward a
,_ ~ ;force, but can· call _ And 10_ Loci! aU doors_ Euen
pledlle card or gilt to the
'1!/B's Gnllluata School illl't. an plainclothed security olficers . if )IOU arr out of your room for
Fund 8 ~ aoonlinator, Dr- the only one losin1 Ianda.· ~CbW he I p. Se- a _secondht- If you're &lt;iloM at
Rohert W- Lo111m, president of Manyol ~
~ Murray "" .• ....U.. IIUl"e your door ;.
Leuueaeboola -••.1
the u /B -Foundatioo, Inc-, 260 are liJao
" 2ir to ao ... cslis1he Security Aide program closed and loclre&lt;L
Winopesr Aw_
.
... ....t help_.
Good luok! .
coat auiL

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

-s..a

In a suney of over 30 graduate departments following up
last week's story an the sbatp
decline in suppoJt for graduate student funding, the Reporkr found that almost all
are planning to admit fewer
students next year and that
many are ocrambllng for ways
~ those aheady .en-

are

~~~~~&amp;.'b::t

;,re ==:':t.aa:

~

f.:er

t!:

students

W'b!J,

were

a

c.;..,....ncl

mer:..

,i:.,::r

Uiriversity Hits

~

UGF Fund GOal

~~

doo~

-MAKEs~

l!'ay

-·

: ; . : : : - ; ::.

,.,

public

op,_,.q. "'

~"!i

the Reporter

=ts~t, n:=~~~- OutragedbySPA
..-t-_
~·

f'lo-....,_uses aDd Crimjna)s-

Cal Educator
Notes Change

EDITOR'S NOTE: A otory on

1M SUNY s-u'• pro~ to

dep:if' .;:u-

EDITOR:

.

Despite the fact that I did
not support SUFI' in the first
round. I was outraged by tbe
Oyer I received tram SPA,
dated December 30, 1970, which
stated that the election can be
considered a defeat of ·~AFL­
CIO trade unionism and dominatioil by labor bosses."
The implied slurs are malic:ious, ugly and false. I have
studied internal labor government lor many: years and.let me

~~ 'U:t~...'!

unions are highly democratic
and responsible orpnizations.
Indeed, the major fatilts of the
labor movement are largely due
to the inability of its "bosses"
to lead its members more forcefully.
And how can any educator
know so little about labor histor:y or current pol tical events
as to consider association with
the AFL-CIO a badge of
shame. There is not a sinfle
important domestic issue mvolving tbe nationB.I conscience
in which the labor movement
does not play a leading, if not
dominant, role. Without labor
there would not have been any
civil rights legislation, substsntial aid to e ducat ion,
health. and houaing and Carswell would be sitting on the Supreme Court_ -

~ university is always a vulnerable place, a state university
more so. ShHts in political currents will pose - threats which
can only be met politically_
Since or~ labor is a natural bulwark for ..,_ campus,
I will v~te this time for SUFI'_
Sincerely,
-I'Hwp Roas
Profesaor ollndustrial
Relations

Mail Your Ballots!
Open letter to the Profe&amp;sional Staff: ·
· At the end of the first phaae
preparation for the profe&amp;sional staB to mter into negotiatians under the N- Yorlt
State Public EmployeM Rela~ Act, the ~ Board
and - t a t n . of SPA
wish to ..__,__
- ....... appniCIIl

·or

!..'ti!:to~~
:":';
establish
effort

tzue majority

rep"'"""-tatian_
All bellots should be mailed
by ~. or at the. latest
Friday, to _ , their arrival
in A1beiiY for oaunt on January
26_ Ballots not delivered " ' the. Cliii!DtiniJ
startS become

voltG.iay is the .Jaat clay! If
anyone has not malled a ballot,
we hope he will do ao immediately; and, ol .,.,.._, we trust
thoughttuJ coadderation- w iII
mae it a vole for SPA,.,___,_

,............,.,
-:aIIAaT, President

=.:::.:.ofH+jonaJ

�~

, _ 21,1911

.BAW4Brings
B!ackAr~

'3.

-SARAProvesEffective
InMFC., v~~.

S ~~~~~~~ol
um·""'• ...,. .,... ..., ........,

To Suburbia
Black artists -

SARA's not a bad old gal
and 4,600 Millani Fillmore students can p r o v e il · They've
sucoossfull.Y registered u s1 n g
the' new · system of computer

musicians,

- ~~~~

~Openness' Seen as Key··-

To BlackWhite Harmooy
When Martin Luther King, which had been made in this
Jr accepted the Nobel Peace eociety foward aCilODlinodation
Prize in 1964 be said tbat be between black and white. As a
accepted it •:.nth an abiding _: ~I, _highel: .ed~tion, - IIJ!il
faith in America and an auda- the ' opportunities inherent m
cious faith in the future of man~ sueh an education, were opened
kind"
,
·
to a greater extent than ev,er beBut, said President Robert L. fore to peraons who preVJously
Ketter at the Univetsity's had been denied those opporMemorial Service on Dr. tunities."
- •
King's birthday last Friday,
Tbe president said be used
King "knew the distance be- the word "Dpell!ld" intentional1 - . faith and its realization." ly, "for - it . is onlf through
Dr. King continued his ao- 'openness~ ~t we wi,ll find the
ceptance ._,t. by stating _that accommodation desued.. All
''Man must evolve (or all. hu- persons must have equal access
man conflict, a method which to 8ll opportunity.'
re~ I'I!Vj!llge, aggression and
''We must have on a personal
retaliatiorL" Fur!M., be said, level, also, the same openness
''Tbe foundation of such a which we seek on a societal
method is love" level,'' Ketter said. "We · can-

suburll8 this year in a Black
8Dd White Festival of the ~ re~~tioo.
COJII:eived by a u..,.itarian- Hegistzation is. going "not
Universalist Church alliliate, bad at all," Richard Guenther,
BAW A ( Black and "White Af&gt;. director of MFC registration,
tion), llnd - supported by the reports. However, M warns stu~
New York State Council on the dents, who bave yet to re"gister
Arts.
against making the three most
Tbe unusual featore of the eommon mistakes.
seven-event series, to be held
F i r s t, make sure you use
in the Town of Amberst, is an pencil to fill out the computer
audience "talk-back" .which !onns sinoo the machine cannot
will follow each program_
scan ink entries.
Tbe idea k&gt;· implement interSecond, fill out the f o r m
c u It u r a I understanding by completely, making sure things
showcasing primarily black art- like social security number and
ists in a substantially white the first character of your last
suburban setting was an out- name are filled in. Without this
growth of the eiJort of BAWA's in!onnation, Guenther says, the
Western New York Chapter to computer will not process the
"develop non-threatening ways form.
of encouraging integrated acThird, be sure wben registion and to stem the tide of tering for a laboratory course,
racial separatism."
to register for a lecture, recitaBAW A, 18-m on t h s-old in tion period and a laboratory
Western New York, say&amp; it bad section. n you don't register
little more -tha n enthusisstic separately for each of these,
members and an ides wben it you won't get the complete
sent the festival proposal to the package.
Council on the Arts last sumGuenther urges spending a
mer~ However, the State group "little extra time" on the form
was impressed by "the unique the first time you fill it oul
cbaracteroftheprogram,"particularly the talk-back featore,
SEMESTER DELAYED
and provided initial funding.
On the recommendation of the
Tbe festival will debut at University Calendar Committee,
8:30 P.II\·• Satorday, January President Robert L Ketter has ap23, with a joint program by the ·proved a change in the beginning
Rochester A Capella Chorus, date of the second semester from
directed by Samuel McCullum Wednesdey, January 27, to Thursof BuiJalo, and by H a r 1 e y day, January 28.
·Flack, Bulfalo pianist and com·poser. This introductory con- This way you increase your
cert, to be held at the Unitarian- chanceS of getting the course

=

In~~dio~~ ::~=~~~ vi~~e=~~"St,hwft~
~~w;"~ :_~;::.
~
II e, illustrates the BAWA a mistake. It's important to

Dr
. an- accommodation of &amp;imilar- enjoy the 111X11"Y of nothing but
ities and differences-for such our own com P a ·n y. Instead,
is the accomplishment of love." those d i f f e r en c e s muet ~
Ketter said tbat Dr. King's brought together openly, for •t
desth in 1988 "made many of is with openness tbat accommous aware of the slow progress dation begins."
~""-mmittee
Se-~•1..
~ \.AI
(Continuedtrom-1,coL6)
An additional increase of 7
tein real income;
per .cent as a cost-of-living adA minimum of 5 per cent of justment;
the total amount for profession· An extension of the increal aalarii.s for merit/diecretion- men! s c h e d u 1e from 6 to 8
ary increases for outstanding steps;
penOI'IDBIICS and other purpoees (only 1.6 per cent of proSalary parity for those nonfessioa.al salaries were made inStructional professionals who
available for this during 1970- are equivalellt to teaching pro71);
fessionals;
Minimym salary goals for
Conditions of employment
1971-72 of $12,840 for in&amp;truc- &amp;imilar to those tbat apply to
tors; $14,980 for aasistan~ ~ peraons with academic___rank,
fessors; $18,190 for aasociate to include:· term appointments
professors; and $22,470 for full of one to three years; notir1C8professon; ,
!;ion of non-renewal ""' months
1972,~ .minimum sa I a r Y befoie ezpiration of initial apgoa1s of $13,739 for ~rs; pointment and twelve months
$16,029 for &amp;Mistant j&gt;rofel!8tlr8; • before ezpiration of BUbaequent
$19,463 for 118110ciate. J&gt;i'ofes- apPOinblatts; continuing apsors; and $24,043 for full pro- pom~ts after se""? years of
'-'nl;
--.f!ll!-time employment, and proEstablisbmilrit ol special sal- VIsion for professional leave for
ary acbedules f&lt;H' .inlllzuctional · educational purposes 8fter
per8011l11!1 iii midiml- schools seveo years of liervice.
and for appointments a8 distinluisbad. unhwsity CH' leadm, ~ .applyiq the
esistiq dllr.rentisl8 l« u_, e.Q,..
D!;!......,.
.
1
-'ea to the--~ Diinima; 1 .. n.tuc~
BudaetarY -support for a ratio
The time schedule for the
of. inlllzuctional ataft to secre- Main Campus-Ridp LM bus
tarial ataft of DD DXIftl than will ba modified from Moaday,
5 to L
January 25, through Wednes~~·;:;,.... daY. January 'n. Durinc this
....__, _._.., ~ . SUNY Seaate period, the ~ will nmbusf!WI9'
- - - • ...., ...,
40 minutes. The fbat
s will
Eoanamic Status · Committee leave Main Campus at 8:05
111ys, t.a J-l ovedooked in
a.m. and the laat _bus will leave
com~ and CODditioa.s Ridp LM at ,10:05 at Dicbt.
of employment for a number of Tbe nonnal time acbedule. ol
~~~~ -""- ~viDa flllery 10 mhwlll8
..., ."";""""'.... ...,......-·from Diefmdod Loop" will ...
Mbiimum aaWy ol '!1.500;
aane 011 'l"buradooy, J......,. 28.
An
--tbMJoard
of 30 per- to -restore Jlllri!:Y - The ..,.w.r ~ for the
with academic ~ • Allealmrst-Malll CampUa ' - with apec1a1 aoUuato-ts if re- will - t o d a y JIIIIUal)' 21,
- ' - '· to eatabiJIIh "'the mini- with
from NortloD
;:;;;;.,-a alary;
.
flllery 2D llliiluleL

SUNY

Schedule.AJtered
Lea_Bus

tx..Jeavlrai

versity Information Systems
are planning a thorouch crit i que ol the _.tion this
opting. After all, it's "still 011
Iris! as a registration system,"
Guenther says.
Graduate students pt to
"try" the system today """
undergraduates on Friday,
Monday and n-lay, at preassigned registratioa. timm. -

Campus Repairs
The State UniverSity Construction Fund bas awarded
Lattanzi Tiburzi, Inc. of Amherst a $125,000 contract providing for rel!abilitation of of.
fices· and classrooms on the
Main Street campus, Governor
Rockefeller announced recently.Designed by Milstein_ Wittek, Davis and Associates of
BuiJalo, the project redevelops
existing areas to provide some
new, some improved and some
relocated facilities. Tbe major
part of the work will tske place
in Capen Hall, but alterations
will also be made in the Health
Sciences Building and Sherman Hall. Completion is scheduled for this May 3. Electrical
work on the contract will be
performed by Keroack and
Jones, Inc.; beating, ventilating
and air conditiouing by Frank
R. May, Inc., and plumbing by
A. A. Gareleck and Sons, Inc.,
all of BuiJalo.
1"1--

L

aw ~~OilY-.

(Continued from -

1, col 1)

of the total e&amp;r1l11lrbd for_.

cific projects ~ programs_
For ne:rt !all, the Annivernumbers to see that all the sary Policy Committee is also
numbers are correct. Tbe sys- considering a 11111dleon hooortern is set so ~ the last digit ing women who hs..,- made ''imtriggers ·the computer to check portant contributions" to the
the other five and if any nne University. A suggestion bas
cui~
is wrong, ·the course simply is been made tbat this luncheon
Memf&gt;ers of -t he Rochester · - not acted on.
be named the Mary Blair
group belong to the Church of
The system bas most of the Moody Luncheon in honor of
God BethEl Temple, a black bugs worked out of it by now the University ' s first woman
Jewish sect which considers it- and if you think you can trick graduate.
self one of the lost tribes of the computer into something,
Other awards are also planIsrael, and will present an Old you'd better be a graduate stu- - ned for the Anniversary year
Testament theme. Mr. Flack, dent in computer science, reg- as are 'creative work&amp; and, posa Ph.D. candidate at U/'B, istration officials say.
sibly, a memento. "'
plans a contrasting, varied proThink you can. get a course
A campus
to design
gram, including one of his own more easily by listing it under a ~I for the Annivmaary
compositions.
alternates as well as first bas iesuJted in 96 requests for
Futore programs will festore choice? ''That doesn't buy you information. February 1 is the
live theater and dance (Feb- any more,'' ssys Bill Kenefick, deadline for submitting entries.
ruary_13, April 3, and June 12) associate for system analysis, Tbe Policy Committee will ..,_
and nne film showing (May Office. of University Informs- lect the winning . design on
16), all to be b@)d in the tion Systems. All that happens February 19.
Building "A" theatre of Erie is that the computer rejeols ~----------,
County Conununity College, that course three times and
Youngs Rd and Wehrle Drive. you're out the alternate you
Tbe U/B Black Dance Work- may have gotten into.
shop is : on the April 3 pro- ·
Some of SARA's advantages
gram_
.
have already_sbown themselves
RoiiDding out the series, the during the MFC phase of regUnilariBn Chuich will host a istratioo. Ta\e the computer's
jazz concert March 13 and a ability to record bow many adcombination reci!ntion fine arts ditional students asked for a
sbow, "soul food'~&gt;-diiiner, and course after it was
,
cloeed. The
Afro-American style sbow Ap- computer printed out this inril 24.
formation each time 300 MFC
BAWA says it recogniz,es students bad registered. D&amp;-that suburban- residents have pertments were notified and
few opportunities to see the some added new section&amp; to
Our Symbol
work of black professionals and meet the students' needs. Guen1~ &amp;o the man. woman or chUd who
tbat rarely do they have cban- ther also uses the computer to
desicns the bat symbol for U/B'I
- ces to question and con- make a ti&amp;t of courses that 8l'8
126t.h Aanlvenary Ce:lebratlon.
With black persona The talk- cloeed plus the ooes with new
back following each perform- sections. 1'bis list is tben given
I
want to know more about thb eom·
anoe, after an interval for col- to the . - t group of registering
petition. Send me details.
fee, will help fill the latter \IOid, students so they, can ba keP.t
--planDers aay.
abreast ol the curreqt availN~•---------------Tidrets, witti special prices ability ol courses. Anoiber adfor students and -uor citizens, vantage is that the computer
Ad~---------------me,y be-pun:bued at the church runs all drop ali p s , through
01Y-----------------flllery Sunday IIIOI'I1inl ,. first 80 the group of reg.....
____
cured ·from M~ or -Mrs. Fu- -""-'-~ students can take ad~- ol oPen seats
• m
- a
l8llpr (Phoae -~) who_ vantap
. . . this form to:
will alao hsve"~tion "" coune.
.
Unh'e:ni&amp;J' Publications •
prding other commumty loca£-. thoulh SARA Wortad
250 Wlnapear Ave.
tiooe wbon tickets may ba ..,_ out wall for _MFC, o-tt.
BuHalo, N.Y. 1421&amp;
c:wed.
8Dd ibe 0 f f 1 c e ol Computer
goal-"rebognition of ·our common humanity" _ and the
group's emphasis on the "Beauty and Worth · of All,'' its al. ternate name, by providing a
blend of' racial and religious

0

check over things like course

IXID-

~

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

~

.

Zip~

�~

4

Standard Foreign Language Courses
Are a Drag to Students &amp;Faculty
By .WHN K. SIMON
~~-,,...

Tbe ._....,t necessity or
-..ora for- ·
....
lbe coUeae
......
101, 102,
113, 114- io a drq to many
otudoato. 1be facuit;y, too, are
•
til!lnt with il
~tilqr often two;&gt; full
--..;., years or t.aic study
before one can ewn take an
inlloductloo to literature or
ciYillzation much . _
an advanoed courae in literature. a deftnite obstacle io eotabllobed: few students who
haw not a jump on lbe

...,_ bi"bi8h

acbool betlin

Freodi or Spanish in
with lbe intention or
takina advanced courses in lbe
ajecl
And, furlbermore, lbe long,
drawn-t proc:eE or four l1lllllln, with only 50 minutes
Mda "day four or ftve days a
week (wben one can be studyina IDOI'e intelJectually atimulatilqr material in other areas)
and with lbe 8WIIIDel1l and in- - - - inter\wling,.ia hip.
lY inelreclive.
Even il someone survives lbe
srind or 101. 102,· 113, 114,
c:bllbcea are that he will carry
aioa, with him a rather shaky
to atudy

oo~~ep

~=i~ -~ ~ !:.::!::,a~

~and

writilqr abilities).
Iniac!, lbe truism has been

perceived for some time that

lbe m,h school student who has

already taken lbe equivalent of

these basic couraea IB generally
better prepared than lbe fresh.
men and~ who have
waited un · college. 1be reaBODe for thio are numerous: lbe
leornina proc:eE may be euler
at an earlier qe; courses in
Ianpqe as part or a full day's
curi1culum with a 1anguqe Jab.
oratory operated in lbe same
bui1clin!l and a good deal or
auperviaion would seem to have
an advantqe over lbe more indepeadent, dispersed college
system; m,h school teachera
• are far more willing to devote
tbem.tvea to lbe training of
students to master a linguistic
tool. while at lbe college level,
teachera are moie impatient to
apply a relatively mastered
abllit;y to tbe discussion of
ideas.
-

the

·..-.s.p·

N~ since there are
still II8ClODilary acboola where
rour years or ~anguqe study,
ewn in tbe most popular foreip languages, are not yet
available, and since there are
students interested in learning
a second foreip 1anpqe wben
they come to lbe Unfveraity,
we must continue to olfer basic
courses at lbe college level. 1be
object, however is to break tbe
"loc:k-etep" ~or 101, 102,
and 80 Oil and to provide options which foil- lbe motivations ol tbe students electing
to 1eam a. r....wm. language. n
should be aRid""1D paaaing that
lbe .........t ol lbe foreip ian~ requirement on a Uni~-wide basis has beon a
~ve c:hallenae for lbe

!'::.~

.=::::

an ........,._ ol lbe slubhom
ine8lcieocy or four - . . as
a monolithic- 1be
"abolition" ollbe ~t,
88 it io often called, olfera lbe
opportunity for a real liberation indeed.
1be mcitivatiODB or atudenta
in 1anguqe courses are not centered in thoaa classes themselves. To lbe extent that lbey
are inspired- to 1eam, it io not
due to lbe facial and guttaral
C1;TTJ::'Xll~~~

- y .u:;, yy C Vll, .1. ,;;:,
e:sen:iaes that are performed 50
minutes a day, four or five days
a week. Rather,
general
gna1a could be made out:

three

1be achievement quickly of an adequate knowledge of
lbe 1anguqe 80 that one could
take more advanced courses in
literature, civilization, etc. (lbe
courses in Montaigne, Racine,
Moliere, Rousseau, Balzac,
Stendhal, Flaubert, Baudelaire,
Proust, Sartre, Robbe-Grillet,
etc., which parallel lbe English
courses one might take in
Chaucer, Shakespeare, and 80
on) ;
(2) 1be achievement perhaps more quickl,y still of a
level of ability in lbe language
sufficient to be able to enter
into a study abroad program
for a semester, a summer or a
full year and to follow regular
couraea in foreign universities,
whatever lbe subject matter;
(1)

and

( 3) 1be efficient achievement of a purely reading knowledae or lbe language permittilqr
one to read apecialized tens
.that have not yet been translated into English. ·
5eriesaf~

n.e J:lepartment or French
at U / B is beginning thio spring
semester a series of experiments
that will provide options, aside
from lbe traditional 101, 102,
113, 114 sequenoo, correapouding to the particular gna1a
above:
( 1) An accelerated course,
French 105-106, offering tbe
equivalent of a year's study in
a aemeater. Offered also under
lbe numbers, French 401-402,
it is avaliable to graduate students as · wall as undergraduates. Taught b_r. a ~ of specially trained linguists, lbe quence will~utilize a series or
fi1ma recently developed in
France, as well as other modem
audio-visual techniques. Two
hours a day of claaa, 8 credit
hours a semester. Small claaaes.
( 2) Plans for a system of
" total immersion," French 107108, a deveiQpment or lbe accelerated course which would,
in the space of a week's
"plunge," provide the equivalent or an entire semester of
language, a period of two
weelai providing tbe
"valent
or a year's study.
an option might be oftered as part or
a _ . . t orientation period, a
pr-&gt;on for study abroad. In

s.::r'

thio contut It micht be available during periods ol inter-

.......... priot to lbe - .
tbe
or IIPl'inl
- · &amp;in
May,fallAuguat
ar Januazy.
many as eilht hours a day ol
claas in am8ll poupa, with eating and aoo;ial activities
Ual, and a period ol
or rest (films, records and radio programs in French to u.
ten to) between lbe two twoweek l8ioda. A total ol 16
credit hours far tbe complete

I~ 2l,liK/l

UIB's Pharmocy Sclux
RatedAmong theBes1

three"':;;

-· .
(3) A

two.eemeater-

concentrating upon readina.
with little or no elfort to teadi
aural-oral facility (as it has
come to be called durin&amp; a period when it was heretical thus
to divide motor proftcienciea
from a more abatZaet knowledge of language) : French 111112, with the first semester of. fered at all time!;, and available
to graduate students under lbe
number French 411-412. Speci6cally designed for thoaa prefering a written approach in
comparison with lbe spoken on.
entation stressed in lbe ttaditional couraea and in lbe aocelerated ones mentioned above,
thio sequence will not need
small classea, and meetings will
be for only a few hours each
week.
Othor-..
Other problems alllict language departments. They are.
often 80 hamstrung in thejr
preooc:upations with 101, 102,
113, 114, 80 defensive about
these couraea and thejr unique
ability to teach them, 80 bent
inward in lbe posture or protectiDII themselves, 80 dis-,
traught with an _implicit inferiority compleJ: concerning thejr
relative strength in intel1ectual
matters where it may be compared wit!&gt; other departm.;ilta,
that lbey have often not taken
advantage of developiJia new
programs beyond tbe language
B SUZANNE METZGER
couraea while atickiJur with unY
productive traditional metbods
U you
~ll Park was a
of language instruction in lbe park, you we'll out of your"tree. He
language couraea lbemselves.
was a professor of surgery at U jB
";.,gin_to~weu!\!~~ School of Medicine, and in 1898, with
looking outward: problem-on- a $10,000 grant, established lbe New ented advanced courses and York State Pathology Laboratory on
seminars in film, women in lit- the campus, the first laboratory in lbe
erature, contemJ&gt;Q!llrY French world devoted to lbe study o( cancer.
politica, special seminars in The present canCer researd{ institute
Flaubert, French theatre; is named in his honor.
:~~'ii=h!(J:': Dr. Park's interests went heynnd
lations where neceosary) and medicine, however, as is evidenced by
filma; a fleldble program or lbe volume, TM Evil Eye, T/umatoL.
study abroad (in Grenoble, OfiY and Other Essays, a collection or
France) for lbe llemeBter or lbe articles and speeches published in
year, with options in social aci- 1912. For Dr. Parl&lt;, medical and genences, education, independent eral acience should not be ioolated
!_tudy, 88 well ·aa tbe traditional studies, but must be seen in relation
!IT.:t~~:aU:: to anthropology, biology, philology
meater, at a coet comparable and history. In his preface, be ezplaina
with reaidence in Buftalo; a his philosophy: ''Too close confin&amp;.
program of French COUl8e8 or. ment in thio field (acience) may-result
fered in lbe evening for Millaid in greater commerclal yield, but tbe
Fillmore College as an integral fragrance of tbe dover detracts not at
part of lbe Department's m- all from tbe value or lbe hay, nor c1o
sponaibilitiea. .
·
borderland studies result otherwise
Thus, in lbe conterl or un- than in enlargement or lbe boundaries
dergraduate studies, we would of one's storm center or work."
like to aee lbe Department
Park's clover-picking led him into
~':.,tn;,ftionai~ ouch fields of study 88 "'lbe Evil
~ with
limi·t ed Eye," . "Serpent-Myths and Serpentviewpoint,
• • tbe betlin- Wfln!hip," "'lbe Foundation ol Chrisnina ~
.........
.,...:,., trainina . tianity," and "Student Life in the
of 1!'rtmdl Diajon. And, in tbe - Middle Ages." A couple find him !&gt;ad&lt;
contut of belna something in lbe "hay," with '"lbe Diacovery o1
more than a languqe depart.. Circulation," and "Anesthetics in Surment, hope that lbe gery."
and varied optioos for betlin· Evil Eye
~ languqe aludy, by pro,.,.__ Evil E
viding more immediate •..., .
ye," first offered as a
to intereatinc u:jJper lave1 eour- Presidential Addreaa before tbe .Buf.
- in tbe ~t, and by falo Society of Natural Sciena!e,
o&amp;rfnll a periodic elfectiW en- fracee lbe belief in a peraona1 evil
try into pr_ol(r8JI!S ol atndy inftuenoe from prebistoric times to the
abnal, "'!!.belp WI~ our proc&gt; Present, covering its a~ in - ol abolitioll, freeing us from v8rious creeds and religioUa be1iefa
~~...:taor!: ~ ~-~world. Writes Parl&lt;, it was
sla.._t.
~ that from the eyes of enVIOUB or angry people there was pro-

Evil Eye &amp; Snake

tho:

it!

GfEATURE~

�s-

] - , 21,1971

Tbe School bas . .,_, from elcht
pam," be uplalns. "Now - want to
· '-dty aaaben a diad&amp; qo to about
deYelop an equalJy llmnc ~
40 fuD-tlme '-dty ........ ~.In
practice Our abn lo to lnlin
that tbne, ifa budpt- ..... twaltythe pbannaciat to be patiollklrlented.
lold. Today, the School emoiJa 175
We'll train him in tbe cllnlcal setl:in«
lllllleqmduates aDd about 90 smduate
-ley to make him more a
ol.
studoafa.
the 'health team.'"
Why U(B's ~ in pbarDr. Schwartz ezpands 00 this DeW
mai:y? For 11118 t:hina. the School is
role of the pbannaciat: "In the' past,
enppd in a IOOd deal ol.
product _.atiaa Maned most imOOII8idored to be "llipdllcml" A look
portant But bacsUE of the compleJ:ity
at the awards ....,.m,ct during tbe past
of new drugs this role has beOillarpJ.y
diad&amp; is proof, . UDiYBr&amp;ity a8lcials
taken OYer by the lllllmlfacturer. We
asy. Tbe Ebert Prize ol. tbe American
now see the pbarmaciot'a role 88 that
l'hara8attlaal .A...matian (A.Pb.A.)
ol. protecting the patient. For emmple, .
the pharmacist sbould bep a cka&gt;
WCIIl by U /B prot_,ra in 196"4,
1966 aDd 1.9611. The A: Ph.A.'s Foundacheck on !IBtient's ~ By doing
tiaa ftMMrch AchieYI!ment Awaid hss
that be can spot C88lll " " " " ' more
than one physician p...,.;J,es the same
' - ' ..... 8Yf!!ey year, ezcept 1967,
drug, or be can perhaps prevent a
from 1966 on.
~
ADd the latuels have not only come
harmful drug interaction or an allergic
to prot_,..- studenta have ..... the
reaction to a drug. In other words he'll
Lalislord Richardson Award lor no- - be doing ·a drug 11Ul"V8illance job, both
in community and bospitsl practice."
-.ch six limes in tbe past six years,
liYI! 10ing to undergraduates..
Dr. Schwartz thinks that pharmaThe School of Pharmacy's research
cists hsve been ''under-utilized" in recent years.
granili, about $700.000 !sst year, have
topped $1 million in several years.
Puttlnc the • - Into The School might hsve received more
'Ibe School's new curriculum re!sst year except for the fact that rellects that feeling. But, the School is
-.ch funds aie not 88 availsble 88
doing even more than teaching ita stqthey were in the pasl Regardless, no
denta the role they ought to play. It's
other school ol. pharmacy hss come
l"'tting the ides inti! practice.
cloae to the $700,000 figure.
Bulfalo General Hospitsl in the 1a11
of !sst year opened their "first deCNnclnc With Tho Times
Despite the long list of lamels and
centralized pharmacy on the ftoor"
nations! status, the School is changing
which the School will be using for
lnlining. In most bospitals, pharmawith· the times. Tbere's a new emphsand the pharmacy itself are in
cista
ais on stwlenta and on the role of the
practicing pharmacisl
BOme central location. •we've never
before lnlined pharmacisfa where they
Last lall saw the inception of an
could do the most good . • • where
entirely new · undergraduate curricuthey are best able to provide patient
lum deoigned to provide gieater llexicare," Dr. Schwartz says.
bility. "Each student can now adjust
To underscore bis point, be cit...
bis progr11111 for bis own individual
recent studies done at two well-known
needs and profeosionai gos1s," explains
ho6pitsla At one, ihe deatbs attribDr. Micbael A. Schwartz, 40, dean of
uted to drug reactions totsled 0.4 per
the School since April of !sst year.
cent of the admittees, at another, 1.55
"'lbe empbasis in the past--&lt;md it's
per cenl ''Even if 0.1 per cent of all
obvious by the awards -has been to
develop a st.oaa basic ~ jm&gt;- . ~- died . from fatsl drug reao-

.-m-

-m

jected 801118 malip in1lueol:e which
could inject the air aDd peoeb:ate
aDd corrupt both liviD&amp; ceatmes aDd
inanimate objecls."
In EnclaDd, at tha time of the Blad&lt;
Death, it""" suppoeed that the plague
""" "cammunicatod by a glaDce from
the distorted ey111 of a aid&lt; man." In
our countey, the Salem Witch 'J'rials
illustrate the of this belief.
IDuatratin« the univeraality of the superstition, Parl&lt; followa ita path from
Roman aDd Greek antiquity, to the
tales of 8cottiab hicblandem. through
Polish folklole, aDd down ,to the pn!ll...t day Italian belief in the jeltlJtore,
11118 auspected of pcJII8I!IIBing the evil
eye.
Amulefa, charms, or apecial words
have t.m1 used through history to
ward elf -tiYI! 88 in
the case ol. tbe ancient EgyptiaDs aDd
tbe E~ tbe amulet """ itaelf
m e,e; painted .., aome object such
88 a abip IW bui1diq. Otber cbanns
tbe dolpbiD, depicted ... tbe Ro:.
li;IBil aoldier's sbield; m a bom...baped
object, used tbiOuab tbe early Cbri&amp;tian - . l"tl6!ned to in the New, Ta!ts118lt, aDd lllill. to be _ , in Naples,
aDd 011 tbe baaddi- of aome Dutch

or-.

- ..

--t

Tbe bmd, ~
prolloclar, a.y be .... impdDted ... tbe

~ ol. ~ .. &amp;lblaaed in-

to .leweJry ill tbe . . . ol.llaly. Otber

........ ca.- far ludt .... opit-

tinl. wbich • . .. - ..... in all belief," aDd tbe recitin« ol. ..taln

m~ol.adeep.toolad papular

" " ' " - ""'"' 11118 , . , . . _ too mach

pralea. llelievinl that a too pooitiYI!
sta"""-'t will aUiact tbe aiti!Dtian of
the Eye, tbe Turk,..._ a
will asy "Masballab " tbe ltslilm,
"Grazio a DiD,• _ .
Elllliob .-ant, "Lard be ..r .....

....,.inwat, '

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

ih.1

Of~BIId-.idp,Parl&lt;

relates that, tbrouahout bia~ry,

anakes have "been regarded . , .

88

the object 'of wonder, admiration and
fear . . . connected with numerous
superstitions," and with earth, life and
fertility. He speculat... that the an-.
"tluai sbedding of the skin, the springtime emergence from lethargy to activity and tbe "suppoaed rejuvenation
of the animal Willi that.which first connected it with the idea of eternsl suc-

~,.oo"=~t reproduo•

' Tbrougbout ancient Greece, Egypt,
Rome and Phoenicia, Persia, India,
. Great Britain, Central Americs, even
to the Mound Builders of the U.S.;
the snake "symbolized and indicatod
the invilllrating energy of nature.':
Park mentions the Old Testament serpent, and believes it """ antedatod
by the pagBI\ festivels of Bacchus, in
which partic1'pants carried aerpenta
and ......ned "Eva,.Eva," a word akin
to the Greek Epha, and cloae to Ophis,
which in Greek ,_,.. aerpenl Dr.
Park does not miss a chsnce to lnlce
the possible origins of a word and the
...are volume is full of word etymoi"'Y·
The'~'

- StudOilt life in the Middle A.., the liDplc of a 1902 addrllis before a
Unl..mty ol. Peoneylvania studoat
poup: Herein be COVSII the evolution
ol. tbe UDiYBr&amp;ity from tbe 18th _,_
tmy "uniYBrSitas," refening to tlaee
peat .wdi4 ol. tbe 13th c...tury, Paris
lor ihealatl:v aDd aria, Bolocna far law;
aDd Salemum lor medicine.
Diaelpllne in the ....m-.ltas" slricl PlaalnP and fines or. laldaJ
tbe clfOildor to buy wine lor larp
Jllllllben ol. students. COIDJDCIIl
.-puaiolunOilta if restrlctioas not
adlaed to. For insfancs, a pelll]ty
~ far not~ LatiD
in tbe Baclill&gt; ~tiM; aDd . . . .
plantod 8lllobg tbe atudenfa to
~ tbem from slipping into their
motber ........

Students attended only three lee&gt;
tmes a day, but lectmes often began ·
in the darkness before a winter's
dawn, without ligbt or warmth in the
classroom and may hsve lsstod for
three hours.
Begging was not frowned upon 88
an indignity and poor studenta financed their education by this means.
Food was meager. There was no source
of warmth or comfort in lecture rooms
or in student apartmenta; wind!&gt;ws
were of linen rather than glsss, and
candles were a luxury.
Games, including tennis, cheos, and
ballplaying, were considered insolent
and students were forbidden to participate or to attend sporfa emibiticos.
The tmvelling scholar or the no.
madic professor mqving from school
to school, living by beQing and stealing; was a "marked feature of medieval life."
In the ~~~say, "'Ibanatology," a word
of bis own creatiaa which ..-no "the
study of the l!lllure and causes of
death," Parl&lt; asks the question, "what
is da!th?'' He distinguisbes between
somatic (or pbyaiological) da!th and
OOiliiC:ious da!tb, and, refening to the
surgery of transplontstion, wonders if
in this case, the ".dead cu:ne to life."

tioas, that would -

a

year,~

•.ooo
....
ADd,~

be....._....

wbera tbe pbmmaciot'o job ol ....a-

lance-ln.
Dr. ~-a~~a-..

..

the ~-illctn,. ..........
lor 8IIUIIple. U/B ~ ..........
hsYe voluatsdl.y tslbd to hllb .....
students about ampbelliiDIDM .........
biturates aDd
potOilllaiJy - lui drugs during the pMt , _ ,.....

au.

MlnorltJ _....,.

.

&lt;&gt;u- """' _.,.. at tbe Pbu-

macy School include recruiting and

minority recruitin«. Dr. ~ -plains that the School reoruifa BIDdents for t..o reasons: 11118, to aplain
the DeW dimensioaa of tbe School, to
project the """' imqe ol. tbe role ol.
the pharmacist, aDd secondly, "to, ..t
better selectivity in our applicants, to
seek tboae studenta wbo are motiYBtod
toward a.,.._ in health care aDd wbo
are .qualified lor a rigorous ecientific
program." The · School is attempting
alao to inaease the qumberol. studoata
from minority groups in ita IJIOtlrBIIIII.
ADd the number of .....,., studying
pharmacy is rapidly inceasing. .
There are tw:o other DeW programs
-one which graduated- five stwlenta
last year, and another still .., the
drawing board.
'The first is a B.S. degree in health
sciences, geared mainly for studenta
wbo intend to do graduate work ..,
research in the health field, and tbns
do not need a license to practice. The
second is a p~ doctoral degree,
geared to train individuals with a higb
level of ·expertise in drugs. The School
is awaiting the go.ahead on the program, which it hopes to initiate in fall,
1971.
Man-r

5hor1alce

Will more pharmacists be needed in
the next few years?
It is predicted that the number of.
prescriptions written will double in
the next decade. Alao, tbe u.s. is .,._
periencins an inaease in the number
of persons far wboni cliuP are- being
paid for by a third party-a.!th care
plans, medicaid, medicare, etc. Further, mare pbysiciana are prescribing
more drugs lor mare ailments.
In short, Dean Schwartz 8llYII. there
will be a great demand far pbarmacisfa in the next few years. One study
shows there will be a 1arp manpower
shortage in the field by 1976._
The U fB School of Pbannacy plans
to "do ita sbare in meetioB the need,"
but the dean notes that expansion will
have to wait far new faciliU... in Amheral
Presently, U fB granta about 50 B.S.
degrall! in pbannacy 'L.Y""'· Plana call
for a doubling of gralluates by 1975.
Currently about. ball the graduates 111
into "community pbarmacy"(the term
"drug store" raises backlee with pharmacy prof-). 'The ou. balfiO
on to llftlduate proarams, M.D. programs, doctm ol. pharmacy and bospitsl practice.
•

'Ampi--

Dr. Dllniel Murray, dean of tbe
School from 1.954 until 1989 and now
dean of tbe Gnlduate School aDd acting vice pn!l!ident for academic affairs, dismiMIII any notion that Pharmacy at U/B moved to ita emiDo!lllt
posiU... accidentally. Tbe buildinc
process be J.pn, aDd "wbich baa carried on, be calls an "ampliflcetlan procedure."
The tbamy Ill'"' like tbla. You atInlet to tbio UDiYBr&amp;ity bigiH:aliber
ecsdemiciaM aDd others will lollow.
Among key pecjple biOucht in in the
early IKI'a, be lisfa Dr: Gerbard Levy,
Dr. Howard Sc:baeffer, Dr. 'lbomas
Bardos, Dr. Nathan Bact, Dr. B. R
Babr aDd Dr. .r- Dulielll.
"'n tboae years - lortuniate
to atb:act such people," asys Dr. Murray, "aDd - becsme a team, a '-dty
family, aDd it as a team that developed further. Once tbe team a!tabllobed, tbe ~ ol. the
School&lt;becsme relatod tb tbe extamalJ.y percaived visibility that - .......
IOOd ~ people to wad&lt; with,
aDd - able to atb:act other higb
calfber acholarL"

�6

J_., 2J, JffJ

&lt;iREPan'ER.,

Ac1oocxd.e8 Jnterim &amp;port
OnHisRe-Defined ~

Will Bulls Still See-Gridiron Play?
There's a feelinl in....,
- - ... campus md olf
cbU i,lolball at U/B IDlY DOt
be dead yet.

'IJ::

to
:.r~~ point
• Lt. a-..or Malcolm
Wi1loD said ... Tbunoclay ti)at
be and ...-.1 others _..,
eae1dDI an .._ . . State
appropriation to fund the team
for 1971;
• A parley ~ ao-oor Roc:bfe1Jer md aome lee·
islatonl was """"rtedly held this .
week ~ the situation;
• Community J:I!IICtioa to
~ football has been pn&gt;dominantly -tive at a time
when the U/B administration
bee been -....rking bani-with
.....,appanmt......,..-to
mend Univwsity-community
f......,;
• ·No """"'- have yet aocepted other positima md no
players haVe announced firm .
plans to tranafer to other inatitutima;
• 'lbe Slfte aays a "spartan" stadium with 20,000 seats
iii still planned for the Amherst
campus;
• 'lbe Univwsity early this .
week had DOt "oolic:iaaly'' noti6ed scbeclu1ed oppooents of its
decision (A list of lhoae schools
to be notified was submittad to
President Kettar just last
Thuraday by Atbletic Director
Harty Fritz);
Peaimists, however, bold
that the Univeraity decision is
firm md that U/B is not aimply playU., a "Ralph Wilson"
p.-ue game to set legislative
fundinl. They read the same
omens dillerently:
• Lt. Gov. Wilson also tried
"for an "emerpmcy" appropriaticm last year, to no avail (In
fact. Wilson, himself. in Pleds·
ina this year to do "all I can."
noted that the State faCies a
tilbt budset y e a r. .Funding
football would have to take a
bact to "feeding starvinl
people," be said) ;
• Rockefaller was also supJ..-1 to do aomelhing about a
stadium for Bulfalo, but hasn't
acted as yet;
• Even if the State were to
fun d fpotball, the legislative
doesn't move quickly
enoagb; by the time an appropriatiotl is forlhroming, there
would be few players left to
participate; the a tbletes are
still here now cm1y because It
tabs a while to work out policies for their tranafer with the
N C A A (NatioDal Colleciate
Atbletic Association) ;
! A $250,000 appropriation
this year wouldn't .......",_
tbe future-a $2 ~;;;::

.=~~: :S..~

=-theis
• Even if the money is_"""
propriated for U /B f~
the question remains whether
it can go for atbletic acbol8r• sbipe where it is .-dad as this
would be a contmvention of
SUNY ~ policies;
• Even tboucb U/B hasn't
olllcially bmllm acbedule con~.~..~leces-~th ~
...._ ..,..,...,..

-·

....,._.

guaran- and J11te receipts at
~ ;::.~.,J.,..,~._ 8toupW::

fu!

trainin""'::

,.. .... ...,.hr

._,_
of the Bulfalo Rotary Chlb, initial donors of the present Rotary Field, bas also pledged
help. Thomas M . Klepfer of
Rotary, sales manager of Klepfer Motors Inc., says be is attempting to organize a committee to seek funds lor football
support.
Meanwhile, as the University was taking pot shots about
dropping the sport from the
Buffalo E v ening NewB and
Courier-ExpreBS, Mrs. Willie
Dando, wife of assistant coach
Bill Dando, came to the defense:
' 'I would like to Sliy - thing to somebody in praise of
Dr. Ketter for the consideration be showed all of us, consideration over and above any
I ega I bounds ·t he University
had,'' she told the Newo.
''Everybody on the staff at
U/B," Mrs. Dando continued,
'"bas a job , on the faculty at
the same salaries they had as
coach, if they want to stay.
''They all were sent to the
NCAA Convention in Houston

at the University's expense to
find other jobs if they could.
"We've been around football
long enough to know this isn't
the way it usually
dooe.
'"This (elimination - of football ) didn't come as a shock
to us or as a peat surprise.
' ''Everything we· have in life
is due to football but we like
it so much here in Bulfalo and
at the University that we are
seriously considering s tay ing
on."
'lbe U/ B Faculty Senate Executive Committee had this to
say:
·''We regret the termination
of intercollegiate football on
the SUNY/ B campus, and...,
regret the laclr. of community
and alumni support for thiS
football program; however, under the circumstances we support the president's decision to
-terminate the intercollegiate
football program, and we look
forward to an improved athJet..
ic program,in other intercollegiate sports and intramwal ath-

is

letics."'

· T_ ;ime Sheet Uisunders+rn-1rhnn'
Causes New Memn
«-U fUU '5
Concern over the recent Per-

sonne1 Office sta te.m en t on
Time and AttendanCe whi&lt;:b
called for faculty to submit
regular abeenoe ·records in accordance with the Policies of
the Board of 'l'rJJBtees (Reporter, January 14) has resulted in
a further memo on the subject
from E . W. Doty, vice president for operations and syatems.

.

·==:,

did not msJce them stand out
adequately. On that it ...
-

~~~

• · The coach e s' iDactim ~ any chanae in ol6cial
daeiim't prove anythina; their UniYerlllty policy or practioe,
job&amp; 88 faculty are secure n&gt;- ..., -nevertbelela abould have
prdleM of the outcome.
t - more oeasitiw to--the fact
Whit:b view is the conec:t that this would be a chanae in
11118 remains to be_,_
. practice far some and alao to
s..:ldu the move to pt U. the fact that III8IIY 1i!I!U1d not
811118 to clo sometbinl is alum- readll_y - the lalefit to all
Dill Dr. J a me a J. ~wblc:b • cloea aocampany the
"'Od
aJaami halle t11a1t.- - maintenanoe of accurate .-.
eel a ~ campalp to orda.
·
A•I buy to ~ actiaD
"We tried to indlo:ate tlae
llaa.
benefits oa paae 4.2 of (U.
ll'be CiYic .Aetlma ec.mnitlee ' sta-t} but .... IIJIPIIftlllti.Y

Sdequate records, however, if liifficult to prove any entitlement."
a twelve-month appointee
reDoty said that tbe reoonls
whi&lt;:b have been asked for ue
quits, be will receive payment "as simple as ..., can msJce
for any unused V&amp;altion. If be them and have .-.!ted from
dies, his widow or any other many hours of negotiatioao md
designated beDeliciary will ,rewith ~ in AIc:eive payment for any unused
vacation.
He pointed out the buic clef.
"Unuaed sick leave, aecrued
by both ten-month and twelve- initiona againat wtDcb the decision is made by
individfllculty ........... reprdiDg
:th...C~::V::: ual
wbeu-...or DOt be bee talral
~
~ ~ ....... , "Pidl-time
ance premiums that the Uidi- &lt;0118iata o1· l8lll1ar teaching
vidual would
during his re- loeda, research. ~
tirement. If
member committee and Univenlty asbelanga to the Employee Re- signments. Minimum hours Per'
a~ ue nilt
. m - t ~ any 1111.-1 week
aid&lt; leave IB alao con-u.d to specified • . • (becauaa) varyyeua-o~-moe credit for ild=..~~::..~
ditional ~t bmofita.
"A1tboucb Vlll:8tion ~- be elude a ft!IU)arly acbedUied
accrued cm1y to a toiU o1 thirty work ......"
(80} ciQa, aid&lt; leawt IDlY be
Dot,; anpbuj..J that u.
accrued to a toiU ol cme bun- ·recorda ln...-tlon "Dial&amp; tie
clred fifty (lliO) clloa. BuHet bpt" but tha( "they - .to be
ine ....,.._ the am-.·of a ~ln-.b~ol­
pcialtive reoonl RuJd
it , &amp;e., DOt in _tm¥ ~ llpDl"

~ ~,;,.;"'unW.:::e.r~:a~

able upon use, ttanafer or termination, reoonls must be kept.
Such records may report absence only.' 'lbe lack of a positive reporting SYBI&lt;m and the
lack of an individual record can
result in the ooocluaion that all
sick leave and all vacatioD ·ue

~topponent;;'
co=~a\:'~U: =f';~~
in~~·=~ ~~.:!:~~i~ reWement. if there has t-1 no
P&lt;a. other than football;
said thet "while ..., are not an- !riiflt:' :Uti!': ~~=

,.r

EDITOR'S NO'I'B: Tlv ~ ROTC dMmnlim..,., ...-f;. .... uu.ri'a ,.,n - tlv actWi- . lnp, . . Moi&amp; ol 11.- have
tia of llv O(fW of tlv U~ t-1 bmldled ar CDIIl)&gt;1eted auc&gt;
~. tlv ,...,_,u,ilitia of ~; olhers _nmain pedwllicl&amp; were re-U/flwfl 1/Uo faiL
1111To: the University community.
:b. the way ol ...... 1epl
L ReapoMibilitia-:-F'ollowing asaiatance, the oll&lt;e bee ...,_
the recnnunenc!a.,._ of a re- dered ..W. in auch ,..tten
view committee last summer, as _,.ation ol the llaf·
all on-campus prosecuting funo. fie and parking J!OIII)atioll8, , .
tions were removed from the activation of the Inte~Reai­
Advocate's Of1lce and made a . dance Judiciary, and the Jlloe.
part of the p!81ident's reapan- None ol the taak tor.. ..-Sibility. A decision was also ently .mnslderina Unlvwsity
made that the Advocate could problelm has called em the Adnot appropriately act as de- vocate's Ol1lce for .......,__
fenae OOilll8e1 for lhoae aooused
3. SUJ(f. Durin&amp; the . . - t
by the University before the &amp;aldemic year, RObert B. PJem.
Hearing Committee oa Campus ing, the Advocate, bas t-1
Disru'ptions. 'lbe office was en- teaching one course oa eampus
oouraged to expand, its legal aid for undergraduates the- first
functions, however, and to con- semester, and will offer;ooa .
tinue its other aervioes.
course at the law School dur·
Accordingly, the Advocate's inl the spring. Rcma1d Stein,
Of1lce presenUy oft.,...: A. Lep1 the Associate Advocate, baa left
flrst..aid in oft-campus criminal the office and returned to Stuand civil matters to students. dent ·A1faira. Norman Elfman .
faculty and staff; B. Counsel continues as Aasistant Ad.and aiivice to studen1.s, faculty cate. In addition the!e is Ol)e
and staff involved in campus _,.,tary; and two undergradadministrative disputes and
=mtsthe~h a. partproblems; C. General legal asaistance to all members of the
4. DeVf!/oplrU!nt.. During the
University community.
next aeii&gt;ester, Mr. Elfman will
In the case of· students a.,: offer an experimental eampus
cuaed before the Hearing Com- legal aid course to 12 selected
mittee. the Advocate's function law students, under Mr. FJem..
is limited -to preliminary advice inl'8
··
This
and belpinl the student obtain will ~~
0011118e1, if ~ In the the IDnds of problems brought
case of campus administratiw to the Advocate's Office and
problems, an effort is made to • elaewbere. and ·the students inrefer to the Ombudsman lhoae volved will PIVvide ,_,..,.,.,.
cases where no legal rilbts are for mee~ the needs Of the
at issue and where there Is lit- campus m tbeee areas.
tie likelihood of eventual hearOtberwiae, the work of the
ings or the like. 'lbe Advocate's olfice can be espected to senOffice does not initiate ' com- erally increase as the availabilplaints on its own· rather · it ity ol its services oontin.- to
acts only on co.,;plai,;ts becomeand
~~ ~.._~,.!
brought to it by members of
w!.,.. '!"!""! oor ~·.....,the Oniversity. ·
men~ m UmYerlllty goYerll8JIOO
2. Experietu:e. During the provide ~ch ~ lz"!bunals
period from S e p t ember 1 lor ban~g administrative and
through November 30, 1970, academically-related problems.
the Advocate's Office rendered
During the first semester ,of
legal flrst..aid, primarily to stu- 1969-70 there was . an underdents. in 1.26 civil mattars and standU., that before Campus
63 crlmina1 matters, jncludm, Security olficers arrested a stuviolations. T he s e are cases dent or brought charges against
where the pereons involved eo- him before the civil authorities,
tually came to the oftioe and they would consult with the
Illes were made up. Beyond Advocate's Office where postbeee, advice was given on such sible. No such W&gt;derstanding
matters by telephone in some presently exists. In such caaes
200· additional cases.
this office would, if ""'U"''ted.
In the campus "administmtive give preliminary advice to the
area, a variety of matters- "!"dent. and aasist _him in get.
were presented d u r i n g this ~ hal! and finding .,.,.,_.,
time : grievanoes against de- JUSt as m the """" of ....,. off.
partments. cheating accusa- campus arrest.
tiona, tenure problems, fee
, Respectfully submittad,
paymeilt disputes, financial aid
-.-ROIIEIIT B . "FLaoNo
difficulties, grading methods,
Univwsity Advocate

1eawt -ADd no VIICiltim accrued
to the credit of the peraoa in-

valved.
"A poeitiw, ~ eyatem
._, 88 a minimum require111a1t, l8lll1ar N(&gt;Ol1iDg and,....
CllldiJII. PiUng a n!pOit cm1y
. . _ an Incident occura (!,e.,
....wn, a IOIPDri Clll)y If ._..
liaD ar lick leawt b. t-1
Ullld) 18 DOt CXIIIIidared ad&amp;quate ........ it 18 too -.y to
o-loalt ar lcqat.
'1Vfth the lllllin.__ ol

::.:.7"""

..a.

:::;,is:J,
:t:Jty

-.a

in

�.~

·7

45 Slated ToAttelKI . · T~May~ . NewPJ;ogram in.Family
-~·~
lnsJ~ ~!!:!:"
PractiCe Set for Fhll·
OOu

spedal eciiM8tlcm ~ from
New Yadt State are ~
to attend an IDstitute on Libraly 8erviaas for Handicapped
Cblkba&gt;, February 1-4 in Buf.
falo.
~ by the New
Yorl&lt; State &amp;ecial Education

grams in );IIOBn!lll! at the Ba-'
I; .IJ(UIR
tavia Sc:bool far the Blind
'BuJralo Public Sc:bool for U.:
Some day a patillllt with a
Pbyaically Handicapped, the missing tooth may be able tO
Campus Sc:bool of Bufralo State walk into a dentist's ofliae and
University College and St. bave the tooth replaced an tbe
Msey's Sc:bool for the Deaf
• spot ~ a "bank" of mel ar
.
synthetic teeth.
~ Material CeDtera
8pealrers from the New York
Two · U/B oral pathologists
Networlt and U/B'o 8cbool o( State Ed111:11tion Deparljnent, baY!' been condi.ICtioi '-ic reInformation and Lihrluy Stud- tbe U.S. Ollia&gt; of Education, search aimed at brincina that
ies, the IDalitute is receiYina Bulfalo State 8lld U/B are day ""-r.
..,._.~ fram the Divisioll adleduled.
·
Over the past three years,
for Rand~ Childnn of
Spec:ific: topics inc 1u de: Dr. Joeeph R. Natiella and Dr.
the State
dan Depart. "Media- the World in Reach- Jack E . Armitaae. both IIIIIIOcimont, Bull'alo State Unlwrsity ing Out," given by Don Rob- ate professors, bave been exColletle and tbe Bull'alo and erts. assistant professor, U!B·, perimenting with mel and synErie ~iT· Public Library. "Cooperation-the Word in Ac- !betic tooth transplants in both
Each ~t will recel.., a oome_liabing Wonders," "by Rob- bumans and baboons.
$45 stipend.
.
•
ert Harron, Sc:booi-Public fj.
"We're trying to devise a
ToplCII 1111 be covered will in- brary Liaison, Division of Li- method for the relatively simple
clude natiaaal and' State re- brary Development, ..New York repiaa&gt;ment of 1a&gt;t teethsources; the JGie of the public State; "A Brief Look at the some!hlri&amp; applicable to general
schools and IP8Cial libraries in '1100Is of the "'-•- " RaJ
pr&amp;aice, something that woul
. d
service to the bandicapPed·,
• .......,,
pb not require extensive -·-'-'
chara..._._.._ of 81D!pti--' Dykstra. project associate-; Re- ba..!.-und to uti!iz:::'...-Dr.
chiJ~~ted 1111 the"'; =~a~ti~.:: N.rti:'U:. explained
of l.ibrarieo; the 11M of multi- BSUC; ".Nationwide Servi....
Beginning with the Rbesus
media in teoching the bandi- for Handicapped Children," monkey and baboon "patients,"
cappad; library. &amp;cillties and Manlaret Haoninn. coordins- the reoearchers extracted .teeth
special equipmeat, 8nd biblio- tar, Title IV, LSCA, u,s. Of- bOlD the ahimaJs and slored
therapy.
6oe of Education.
.them in a preservative. Tbe
teetb were then transplanted ·
into another aninJBl of the same
species. Such tiansplants were
evaluated by clinical and histological means 1o detemiine success or failure.
Tbe reoearchers also implanted metal and ceramic
teeth into monkey and baboon
subjects and evaluated the re-

..,.;;,tly.

&lt;NATIONAL
GREPORTS -

sults.
2!5 Human lmp!anb
Tbe reoearcbers have completed about 25 metal implants
in humans \0 date, as well as

several transplants. For transJ?.Ianls, teeth taken . from patients undergoing orthodontic
therapy were stored and later
transplanted into suitable recipients who had lost teeth.
Tbe ·~ts were evaluated by
x-ray and clinically-that is,
tested for firmness, hardness,
iqflammation or discomfort and
for general appearance.
Tbe dentists bave also completed about 30 transplimts
from one part of an individual's
mouth to a "mora useful site
in the same patient," and found
several such operatiOfiB (called
autograft&amp;) to be suocessful.
With assistsna&gt; from other
departments in the Den tal
8cbool and from U / B's 8cbool
of Medicine, the dentists have
also been investigating the immunologic considerations in

~.!inMp~a..~

tensiollthe
c_~ hoapitalNar
.. ~ ·-into

PJ'0118111 in (amily practice may
be aeen in a c:urreDt special
seminar emphasizing family
~ ':f'de!::~~ stuDr. ~--~ R.~·
._

PJ'0118111 ~~&lt;~dna ita!lf to the
whole area of neigbborbood
'-lib centera « other institu!t::ii!.!,i!..,.~ of depoadeat

•v

""""""

.......,.

~•

Dr. Marra aeee the family
practia&gt; aequeoce as a way of
introducing all uude&lt;pad•te
medical students to tbe "wb!IJe
patient"- against the beckgiOUDd of his family and of his
community. "All medieal BIDdents will thus now be ~
to and involved in tbe of beollh care delivery at the
PrUnarr 1ew1 early in their undergraduate years."

cal pri&gt;fl!980r of
pi'8Ctice
and director of the
H~ital Family Practia&gt; Center, JB the instructor.
Dr. Edwud F. Marra. profeasor and chairman of the Department of SOcial and Preventive Medicine,
that tbe
full-ecale Ptosram m family
practia&gt; will be initiated in
September 1971.
"Tbe new program will be
required for .freshman and
sophomore students and will be
elective for seniors," Dr. Marra said. "It is based on the outof-hospital population of patients. It in no way pre-empts
the development of community
medicine programs besed on
the bospital patient or an ex-

sara

'"There is- en1husiastic OCICIPeratioo on the part of the lamily prac!:itioners of the. commumty in the development of
this program which. in a Vf!1ltY
real sense. is the culminatlan of
the enduring interest of these
physicians over the past several
years," Dr. Marra said.

fesoor, chemical engineering, with

GREPORTS

• '"'- A.. P. OOUNYB,

'The optimal

Control of a Cyclic Reactor Sldfering Catalysio Decay," Annual
AICbE Meeting, Chie8f0. DL

ON

UIJOCiate
pro{....,r, speech eommunication,
"Aural Rehabilitation.•• Peanoyl~~~{ili._School for tbe !;leaf,
IIIL DD&amp;K. A.. 8ANDI:B:8,

GJ&gt;EOPLE

aaaistant professor, speeCh eommunieatton,
"Communication Pollution: Sym·

'"'- llCNN1B L 8lollTI1,

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

bola in Man's Ecolop&lt;.'' Canisiua
CoUege and tbe Kiwanis Club,
Garden ,City, :Kan.ao.

DR. SIDNEY ADOELHAN, a.s&amp;OCiate

DIL DENNIS &amp;. SMITH.

assistant professor, speech communication,
with MBS. Wl.NlPRED BBOWNEU.,

profesaor of abitiatica, haa been

~r!nu:up:: ~!~~

8

~':.~n'i~!\ i~~~p~'We~ o'!

can Statistical Auociation. to be

Lenstb of Verbalization." Speech
Communication Auociation An·
nual Convention, New Orleans,
La.

held August 23-26 in Fort Col-

lins, Colorado.
DR. 1UN A.

COB'I'NJCR,

chairman,

pediatrico, appointed an official
euminer of the American Board
of Pediatrics for a 3-year period.
8111RLEY B. BESSLI:[N, associate li-

~~~J:!~EL1~~:=

ing and Gravity~uoed Partial
Ablation of ·Metal Sphereo Due
to Thermal Radiation at the Sur-

8

!ia=-k~~e~:~fo~ llb~

face," -rhe Elfect of Natural
Conveietion on Unidirectional Solidification," Annual AIOIE
Meeting
'
Chi~~
'
~-,
.
DR. JrUJtCZL L WINGA'I"&amp;, proaeeaor,
communication, "Word

Jounllll.
OR. THOMAS 1. KAI..MAN, assistant
profe11110r, pharmacv, elected a
FeUow of tbe American Inotitute
of Chemists.
.

.

tJ::!'

te=.. m::.l~~~ ~::

~...,:rs..!g;.,~ ~

member of tbe board of ~"' ' tures of Stuttering," S_,b Com·
~:,en:oe: York Astronomical · Y~~ Convention, New

PRESENTATIONS

PUBLICATIONS

~="'l}ta~ ~ lliL GIILW&gt; P. PBANCIB, chairman.
·~jection factor" is evident. =:~i~~rn:.· r~
For example, they bave examined the lympb nodes ·wbidl
drain the transplant site.
Comparing tooth transplants
with metal and ceramic tooth
implants in both humans and

...,_ ,....

'"'- XAJrY B. KAliN, a.ociale profeaaor, apeech communicataon,

"Measwement of Sequential Vel- . :-!!=:.':,"';·~;~~W:
OCJ197.ty0 ~opmenASMEt
in tbe..MeAeotrta.,.n,", a{ A~Patioato, Ellecta em
~ua1 AS
-0'*1'
. ," NtJD Yor• BIGU
New York City. ·
.•
Joumal of odicine. DR . ROBi:RT I . GOOD, ~euor,
DL l m:roH PU18tJa. u.oc::iate pro.
~a{~ee~
f_,r, hiatory,l~ AliDJ..
ing,'' T~de :.::J..ce a-.iatry · oli&lt;&gt;n in 1M 1!120'., -Heo.tb .UJd
Club, Encland
~~i~~ ~a!.,~
llR. LlWDNIZ ·.._ UNNJZJr, .....,. _ ~ Corpo~
.
P.~=e/nJf!di::J:: ::;!j 1.ual8 w: ~ -.ior deS.
Conduction .in an Aboorbina' Gao Jib"";91;- " The ,9~mmon VilmlLayer" American Phylical So- tiOIJ. B_dwol bibi'GT)I .JDW'7141.
dety bi~n a{ Fluid Dyi\amico ,.._ JII.UQJ:L 11. WINO.lft, prof-r,
Meeting, Charlotleoville, VJqinia. o.,_,j, ~tion. ~ect "!'
i:Jmro-sm uu
· te
-lftutlering a! Chancoo m Audi}'!..,r -'"-""~
~ ~ .Joun111l'o/ Bpuch H«Jriit6

Sp!:d:

monkeys is still tmderw!iy.
u..::,r=.:,.. ba.., been
working under the direction of
Dr. George W. Greene Jr.,
chairman of the Department of
Oral Pathology Both cited'lhe
"unique" facilities U/B'• o&amp;n
for their research - -a lab
equipped . to study the repair
and ._..,..tian of booe material, for example. Alai&gt;. taleDt
~A;;;. . . Pi.y.i.;I ~
can be drawn from oU.. de- ~~a!= l)ynam. - - - - - - - - - - within the 8cbool of . iao M•ting, Charlotteorille, Vu- REpoGNI'lJONS
and from tbe 8c:liool cinia.
:· -;;.
,.._· i.omo JWt&amp;Y, piof_,r a{ ..,.._
providing a 001&gt;- ,.._ BJMIIICIIJ:. ........... profpry wbo abo ~ tbe n..-ttralized interdhiclpllnary electllcal·en,ineerinc. "~ond mellt a{ N - r y at tbe 'Bufappr.-ch 1111 ~
G~ADal;yoilft.S~Gftopb falo G~eaeral.ChildreJJ'o ud
While the doalillto.qree 11/at
• " Uniftnity ol Wate,.. !\{oyer t-pi . hao '-n olec;tod
all the technlquea they """'" • •loo,
into
I' a{ tbe Society
.-ad are "ado~p~Uie llo811y- .... ••¥"- - - - :r~~
era1 ~-lind "J&gt;ro!ida the • ~~
tioD to ... -...,-=r,;.nhiJ&gt; o1
,f1Ublic With II1IOtber acijuoct "" ~:O·Diolzihatkm llariDit Or- 75 "to . _ _ - tts aral beollh," they alllo ~ ~ I_ Work of oulotaiJdiDc 8hllity
other ..._ tbo1r , . PieCe sa---Diotribotiaa;Put D - - . , . iD their -rk ud
....m
may be ~ par- - l'looiD-l'lalio:ib' ~--· - - ... . to 11.- wbo haw
ticulariY In the of liilae 1970 Winter Aanaal Yeetina. devotiolf opecJal otady to tnmoplantalioit, .bone pbyalol- ~ Soc:iob- ol M~
of-~ted-=
"'f and ~ In the whole Eqiaiien, Jil- Yadt Clt;y.
..._ in lhlo by o1 tboh
field of palboiOIJ it8elf."
llR. ll.dKOl&lt; Jr. ~Y,-pablbtlliao."

!'C:

=::.

·

Y:nW::

s':t

=

.

�]~21,

-8

CWEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
.
.Cipon...., .. - - •. . . - -.......~-...,;
~

OOpon "' pullllc;

•OOpon "' -

"" . .

THURSDAY-21
u.cru.•: Dr. GUrieJ.

to be - - - - Lilht
-willbeooned.
. ....

- . Columbia Univenity, ctTO'

PBO~ ta:TUD : Sponsored by
Re&amp;ioDal Modical Center, oubject
to be announced, 62 receiving Jo.

PA!'IIOLCICir

~~~:

TODC2'1T OP AC'l"'NOIIYaNB
. . . . _ , . .UGS,

8:80 p.m.

-

catio111, 2-3 p.m.

:;..~r·u!~~r~

OO!I'nM1.1INO DCN'I'AL DUCA.DON#:

4 p.m.
IIIOLOGY III&amp;IONA&amp;•: Dr. D. L D.
C..pu, Qrildren'a Cancer Reaearch FoUndation, Bootoo, KAO-

Dr. Mird&amp;a Neiden a.ociate
prolea.or, oral pathology; Dr.

William Ziter, ....utant profe.or,
oral mrpry, IWELY ORAL CA.NCD

a.mcftON BIOPBY AND KD'OLI·
A'l'lft CY'I'OLOGY PROCIPUJ:IB. l.S

aolioLIICVLAR A88DIBI.D8 IN &lt;ZLL

BIOLOGY, 134 Health Sciencea

Capen, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

~~=-.:.:=

uu.nc

..

~::·Y:':.!'"rtl;.C:"'::m:~

COMPUTING C&amp;N1D U8D. 81:8Yl&lt;ZB
S&amp;KJNAI : Harvey Axlerod., in·
structor, OOMPU'ID LANGUAGE OlD·
I:NTATION, Roam 10, 4238 Ridge

I&gt;O'LANTS, Capan. 9

a.m.-6 p.m.

Lee, 7-9 p.m.
The ael.ection of an appropriate
computer lancuage ia an integral
~ of aolvinJ
computer prob-

Dr. Mi·
chael A. Bafteey, California Inatitute of Technolgr., Divioion of

·BIOClmiiJ8'ftY BDONAB• :

.;t

='=~~~~~=

lem

Il'rf'ftRNA'I'IONAL POLK DANCING :

=~

J!J:'":=J.':!:i

language typee (and eumplea)
will be preeented.

SOZ'YJB CAI'AliYSIB: A SUitVKY 01"
CliDDCAL APPIIOACHI&amp;S, G-22 Ca·
pen. 4 p.m.

raoc•••••4280 Rldae

JX trnftAX

PHYSICAL TB&amp;&amp;4PY ~
UICI'IJIS:

S-red by

.

~t~t~

--IIODND, 62 &gt;eCOiving locatiODI,
1-2 p.m.
'l'BmllllftC.&amp;L BIOLOGY BDOifA&amp;•:

Dr. Ryan Drum, lecturer, Fair·

haven College, Belliogbam, Waab-

ingtou, BIUancATION, IN VIVO AND '
IX VITRO ( .......ACnON), Roam
29, . .f248 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m. fte.

m.bmento 8:80 p.m.

Building 4 p.m.

denlilt, New York City, ..,._.

smus .....,..

Halpttal, Kiaeb Aadhori1Ua.
1:-:80 p.I1L
How tho BOG --w.e _._
.,_
- . - c o a o r m a J.da;
IQII(OPIIIWC, 112 ...ma, loca- _,&amp;: lb. - . 1 ..,.-. Nak:
a.-,10:80UIL
u
thlt-..
il
~ tho-_, will be 'iDcolnpl'eIOC2AL Pa&amp;IOJU,.LI!'Y UJJfCIImJt'
COLLOQUIUK: Bowanl Tuaier, beiloihle.

"'vector~ aod llipolar

ADDI'ftONAL CUlfiCAL U8l8 OP UL-

ANALYTICAL CBIDOBftY OOI.LOQUI"

FRIDAY-22

! : - toudltorhami a.lld.l'l

Lee, 12:80 p.m.

.II'VI&amp;OIUl&amp;lfTAL DAL'I'B '1'11&amp;-

AlQ)

213 Capen H.olJ,

-r. o-..- llalllitaJ. Dada

THURSDAY--28

~ftUPBOif•-:

II800GNI'n0J&lt;, C-34,

WEDNESDAY-27

James

in

~r;!n~• ~~~

and rra-) .. related
to petrificatioa; p-led with

light and elactron micrographs.

Q&amp;OLOOIC A:L SCWf&lt;Z BI:IONAil•:

~~.s·u~ei~r~ft::;r,&amp;';,
Norway, GIIOCB.lUS'I'&amp;Y 01" "TO
IU&amp;TH'8 CBUBT, Room D-170, Bell

FacilityJ 4 p.m.
INDOoUcnoN TO ll:l.ICI'IIOCWtOG-

Permanent eshibit of worb by
Robert Graves and James Joyce.
Poetry Room, 'JJl1 Lodtwood Li-

IW'HY: Telepboae Lecture Net-

~tbo!';,r~~Ba!f ~"::,~ ~:.t;,.r~;,dD~.YJ~~

SENIOR BIICITAL•:

Jn.

atruction in basic atepa during
lint hour, 80 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m.

U7l

Kosnik,·

Ville Maria College, Recital Hall,
8:80 p.m.

bnuy, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

=I;,,:~~~~L~

TJJ08 OP CJU.IWI:S Dlcx:&amp;NB : illua·

In stitute, The Chapel. foUrth

trateo hia lifo and limBo with

~J:,':. ~~rn:=

SATURDAY-23 '

and """"""· and tbird-lloor gallerieo, Lodtwood Memorial Li·
bnuy, tbrouch January.
IIZ&amp;A roUND Slim . IIIII:!'IIDn u-

· CO~G DENTAL IDUCA.ftON# :

Dr. ·Leotw:d I. LiDI&lt;ow, vim~
denlilt, New York City, ...,.,.,_
smus .....,.. I&gt;O'LANTS, Capen, 9

:1•m"'~~u.'.!":!bl.:..~:

a.m..-6 p.m.
BlB'T'OBIC.U. FILKB• : .. Caravans of
Trade," "A Trip from Chicago,"

NOTICES

~...::i'rJ!.oh!'.:U~t!'~s!

rif&amp;

ciety. Society Auditorium, 25
Nottingha_m Court. 1:30 p.m.;
aiM&gt; Sunday, Jauuar:v '24, 2:80

OPPIC&amp; OP n:NANCIAL AID

ia

!;u:aCC::n.tmro~~~~

demic year. Fo.r:ms may be acquired at the Financial Aid Oflice,
216 Harriman Libnuy. Comi&gt;leted
application~ are co be retumed to
the office no later thau March 1,
1971 and financial atatemenlo to

p.m.

~P "1:".\.l:;. U:.,eo:;,"«j,.~

..

watded to CSS no later thau
February 1, 197L

All undergrad·
uateo into-ted in tutoring be-

TUTOIID&lt;G C01JRD.

C'a==ra~~

SUNDAY- 24

January 26, at 8:00p.m. in Dief.'
endorf Annez-11-a 1. Mr. Don
Mau, dilector ol the EPIS Tu-

OON'I'INUINQ Imn'AL DUCA'l'ION# :
Dr. Leotw:d I. Linkow, vim~

::::\i:: ~tyc.::."'9
a.m.-5p.m.

::.r:tiont~':~ ~!!..=

-una.

.

p - during the
If
mtezwted. but 1lll8ble to atlaad,
~ contllk .Mr. Mau at 111
'l:ownoend H.oll, En 5868.

lflAG.UtA ·1'80N'I'IIB J'OLK. JJft n81'1·

VAL•: Bennett High Se!Kd, 6-9
p.m. Fr. admilai.on.
Elevon ethnic groupo will take
put, iDcluding Americans of Afri- ·
am, Puerto Rican, Gl'Mk, Gorman. Hunprian. Italian, Iriab.

Polioh, Mez!can, Scottiah ud
Serbian heritage. The will be made up of IIODp, ~ p.-.ted by

_
: ;:

fl\K~~i-u'

~f=

TUESDAY-26
.

·

,

":~~.lliJ

Diato
•
.
ms Lecture
- m~OplC

.

~·

A "mifl!ty''. l&lt;ingle-&lt;lell shell
plant which contributed to the
~~~~;,:,';~~ formation of the . White CliHsTIIIO lfUitBDIG CAlla OF ,..... ~ ol l)over· and which moves beWTI'II CYimc ·PIBIIOBIII 62 receiVIna ceuae of Uie l&gt;henomenon which
• ' locatilma, 1:00-2:80 j,.rrL
_ . • ceusee a cendle to bum will be
moLOGY IIIIJIIINA&amp;•. ' among the subjects of a CamDr ~ Colacicoo, padiai. pus ac:ience lecture next '!burs~ Albert Einstein Q.llep 0£ .day. (Room 29, 4248 Ridge
Modiciae1 Yeshiva University·~ Lea, 4· p.m.)
.
N- Yom,
IUW CONQIPTII IN BID- " NU881&amp;8 TI:LI:PHO'!fll LIOCTU~&amp;:

......,..,CA.L

..

..

~i"i&gt;!"Wer~= ~ tion~ ~u!tl:.:d r.:~

p.m.
-

. .
tenaion~ free and atnoc·~wee~ aurf.ce water, - . . , Ylll·
ell&lt;!'&gt; owface potential•. ~~ ~ mec:h•n'""?" ol l!Pid·

.~h:v~·~e
cbopbobic.

(Petrificetion).. and the lee-

turer is&lt;. Dr Ryan Drum of
Fairllaven Q.Jlege Bellinllham.

WllllhiDgton. ,

. ,.

•.

The j,iant, the diatom, • .n
of a superstar among - u
orpuiams and the 1ec1urer ill a
multifaceted individual wbo em
January 29 will ~- to .Ecol·

=

at';:iu;~A s~~·

proac/L

.

.

The dlatoin Is an ~
both in ita daaicn anlf claBiilu'-

Usually It lives aloDe

;~

than in a colony, and divides ulty of Natural Sciences 8lld
down the middle to give rise to Mathematics, and Dr. Drum
two daughter oells, .o!'f' ~r studied their movement and
than the other.' This diVJBWn ha'(e develqped a new theory
continues, always with one ·o( outlined in "A Capillarity
the halves smalter, until the les- Mechanism for Diatom Gliding
ser liaif lleooo!es "too amall" by Locomotion," Proceedinp of
diatomiC staitdarda. At this the National Academy of Scipoint, the cell crawls , !rom its ences, vol 67, p , 338, 1970. ~
• sbell, eEJ)IlDda. and forms a new principle may be compared to
silica abe1J which will protect it that of a burning candle, explains - Dr. Gordon. As the
shifting sands and preda- cendle's flame bums the wax
.
out of the wick, inore molten
The lalgest diatom grows to wu moves up the wick by the
1/10mm. (a few thousandths of process of capillary action. This
an inch) in length; the 8l1lll)lest • upward flow contin\15 as loog
measun!8 about 1/100 mm. But as the flame burna and wax re.
i~ . • . ~~y mighty; lllllina.
-..fot to lltlrViYe, a diatom may
In the diatom, a fluid moves
need' to li!t ~
IIIIJ!d a aloni·a
alit or rapbe in its aida.
~ •Ill own weighL
The alit fills with lluid just aa
it "lifts" SUIIlicht and there- --the
cendle'a wid&lt; fills wilb """Some JnyBterioua dJemical ...
fore:m~ remain,_, the sur- aclioa,
a I*JIIIbla).
~
mud or 88Dd.

=

ol

ol-•·

_.....,to

fl-. ... · lbe tJdid 8lld t&amp;

diatom leaves • ~­
ly dell!ctable trail .., 111a oojecit
aioac 1rbldl it ia aawliDi-

INTERVIEWS

..

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

JANUARY 14, 19-71

_ VQL 2 • N0.- 16

Shift of Billsto Seattle Won't Affect Bulls
'

.

.

University Says Loss of Pros
Wouldnt Solve Money Problem
Even if the Buftalo Bills are
shifted to Seattle or el&amp;ewhere,
the U /B Bulls won't he brought
back to 611 the locsl footbaU
gap. As a University spokesman put it, "the Bills' leaving
wouldn't automatically put
money in our pockets." And
JllOI)eY was the reason U /B
{ootbaU was dropped. Insufficieot financial support, both
in the recent past and foreseeable future, forced President
Robert Ketter's Monday announcement that next ran U/ B
not compete on the grid-

a televised game reduced the
deficiL "H owe v er," Ketter
noted, "the Univezsity CIIDDOI
rely on income from te~
games eacb year." Additiooally, be said, ''student support,
while significant, bas been decreasing eacb year and Ibis
trend does not appear to be
leveling off or reversing."
''Therefore, and with peel
reluctance, we are today notifying eacb of our scheduled footbe.ll opponents that we will be
unable to fulfill our commitments to play in 1971 and beyond."

Beyond ne"t fall, Ketter
said, be did not rule out the
"possibility" that a level of
footilall whicb "we can finanoe"
-through Stste, alumni and
~o=_ive eJfortsHe did not seem optimistic
about this, however.
Starting with the 1966 season. Ketter said, the U/ B footbe.ll prQgrlllll has incurred losses at an increasing rate eacb
year. This ran, receipts from

Morol Oblicatlons

r::!_

=
ToUThSpeak
At Inaugural
Of Ketter

_New, ~ooser.'.Calelu14r. ~r; Study

::If
:f!::~nf.":=
community at the Inauguration

:"~they=~~

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

oess whicb include 11 week-

R•portW St&amp;fl

ends. Under the new concept,
this would cbange to 40 days
of receas with only 9 weekends.
Blackhurst, however, promises
an additional tbree-&lt;lay weekend in eacb semester because of
the legal ·holidays declared by
New York Stste.

How about taking winter semester off to go skiing in Sun
VaUey? Or droppiog out for
President John S. Toll of eight weeks and being able to
Stste University at Stony pick up part of the semesters

of Dr. Robert L. Ketter as
eleventh chief administrative"
officer and third president of
the Univezsity at Buftalo, Mon- ·
day, February 15, at 10:30 a .m.
in Kleinhans Music ·Hall
Other ~cipants on the
program will be: Mark Huddleston, president of the Un&lt;l;~te Student ~-

g:.\.!.,~~~~

.
H. Ba
..__, ___,
William
umer, ~~
Fac:ulty. Senate, repreeentmg
tJmvennty. faculty.; and WJI- .
liam q. Baird, ~ of the
Council of the Umversity.
Chancellor Ernest L. !!ore&lt;
of ~- Uni~tY wiU officially imefl!' President Ketter. .
MODIIIgnOr J.-ph E. Scbieder, P .A., paator, St. Andrew's
Churcb. wiU provide the Inaltion and Reverend ~ph W.
.Loew, paator, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. the Inaugural
Prayer
Music wiU be preeented by
the University Brass Ensemble,
Frank J . Cipolla, director, and
the Univezsity Choral Endirected by Mrs. S I •
semble
Dimlziani.
y ""'
The ~ wiU include
ollicia! deleptes, the faculty of
the University, atudenlil and
community repnB!Dtativa
Special mvitatioaa have been
-.uad 1o oelected ..........a 80-

'!
·t hat you can get hacbelor's and

masters degreea io four years?
Sound like part of a pipe
dream? It's not, if the new calendar concept of the University's Caleodar Committee is
approV\!d.
'lbe idea is to divide the
scbool year into three semesters
of 16 weeks with eacb eemester
also subdivided into two eightweek ~ons. The plan cal_ls
for the first semester to he~
right after Labor Day, wtth
exams coming before Christmas. 'lbe second 'Semester
would start at the beginning of
January and end the first week
· M
·th· week'
tion
W1~
the
third semester would begin
early in May and and in Angust.
J. Blackhurst, ciinlc:t« of
Sessions and cbairman of the Calendar Committee, sees Ibis. OODCePt as ·
..,._,._
ing the structure of the acbool
year for both faculty '!Jid students. 'They could - VJeW the
Y~ '!"three 16-week_terms or
8J][ eight-week terms or any
combination of the two "t hey

:::.U-.:y

n:::::"

S.U::::...r

might dtwelop. .
... af For administraton,- the prognam would permit nmrly oon&lt;tinUOUB _.tion of the Univeniity--48 ....... "' inalruc&gt;
cietiea, prolaBianal orpnlza- . tioo I * year as ~ to the
ticno and oollep and uniWr- preeent '"- The '--·
sity pmaidomts m the State of would be with "no additional
N- Ycd: and CODtiJUOua time~ fram eitmr
-- etudoDts 01' faculty," BlackMemben "' the community lwnt aaya. 'lbe inalruc&gt;
and Univenity are Invited to tional time ..,.,. mainly fram
atllmd the Inaupral. Ticlrela \ a drop in days ol - . Cur(Co..-ora-J.coL3)
nmtly,"tbere are 1!0 days of re-

This concept "uses time and
pa~ as an organizing variable."
Blackhurst ssys. Under the
proposal, a student could pace
bimseH and cbocee between

tsking an inteusive eight-week
course whicb would meet daily
or spreading the course out
over 16 weeks and attending
only three times a week.
Blackhurst would like to see
departments offer required
·course sequences every eight
weeks. "This would permit
easy entry, easy exit," be explains, "aUowing a student to
he never more than eight weeks
away from a major change in
(Continu&lt;d o n - 3. coL 4)

~~~~""....~lllllllflllll....

Ketter said that the announcement was made at Ibis

time because of moral obliga-

tions to the coaching staff,
players and high school athletes now being recruited. The
ooacbea are this week attending the National Convention of
the National Collegiate Athletic Association where they
would normally make known

=tw:::'.~~ f:ti:"=.g

Those players elicible fo&lt;
varsity competition would be
required to begin making other

~·tl:;"J:urei'romwl~
to other coUeP." and univezsities and participate in spring
pnlctice.
Ketter said that up until the
last moment, the University
had esplored every possible BC&gt;-

~theto~!,~~

ment had to be made at Ibis
time in fairness to- an ciitcemed.
The presi den t emphasized
that the Univezsity will meet
aU existing legal and moral
commitments to the student
at.hleles and -.c:bes now involved in the footbaU PJ'Otll1lDL
$400,000 Dellclt

The deciainn to

droP footbaU

cspa a decade of declining sup-

port for the sport at U/ B evidenced in part by the fact that
in the past ten years Rotary.
Field's 12,000 seats have never
been 6lled for a Bulls game.
The 1970 season drew an average attendance of slightly more
than 6,000 per game.
The footbaU program bas run
a deficit of appro"ima tely
$400,000 over the past five
years, Ketter said, despite efforts by Univezsity administration, alumni and U/ B fundto achieve solvency for

r

Ketter related a series of
past eJforts to make footbaU
aolvent.
During the winter of 1967-68,
the Uniliersity initiated a fundraising campaign for intercollegiate athletics with a goal of
$150,000. Long after the original deadline for terminstion of
the campaign, contributions of only $80,000 had been received.
In November, 1968, admini&amp;faculty, students and
of the Univezsity met
;·--------- _Univezsity ChancelB. Gould and his
esplore _ , . , of supinteroollegiate sports
SUNY. This meeting
no aignifiamt results.
in late 1969 that the
· c~--3.coLIJ

�~

·~

·~rsqnnel Says Time Records Memo

~pl-e$ents No~ _jn UIB Policy

A ''P~ Policies and
Procedures" statement on time
and attendana! records, issued
Ileoember 15 and circulated to
Univenity administlators last
· ~ repreoeots no c:banae in
Univenity policy. according tof
Harry W. Poppey, director o
peramnel.
1be statement indicates that
faculty and profeosiooal stall
aa well aa civil aervioo employ=
submit time "'-Is to
tbeir departments.
Accord.ina to Poppey. the
policy is an old one and the
procedures statement merely
brinp totlether in one place
all rules and regulations conoeming records, a~
and leave licies,
· rs'
ralpODIIiburiial, etc. ~le

·-must

tiona in the profesaionsl aervioo

cannot be limited to a 40-bour
week. 'After hours' work is frequently necessary. Base anoual
saiaey is considered total compensation. Overtime or compensatory time hours need not
be reconled; as professionals,
such time is not acicrued, paid
or creilited."

1be regulaiionsalso note.
&amp;IDDDI other tbin1s. that "State
offices cannot be
for
weather conditions -except as
authorized by the Governor."
A supervisor may, however, release employ- to leave early
and "charge such time to personal lasve credits" (where acaued).

cloaeil

SUNY Senate Plan Iru:ludes
Staff, Public; Students

Exteosion of membership in offers a possible solution to the
the SUNY Faculty ·Senate to trapc lack of communication
student$, non-teaching profes- which could lead, and bas led,
sional stall, cantral administra- to b i t t e r misunderstanding,
tion and "representatives of the power struggles and even bloodpublic interest'' bas been pre&gt;- abed."
- ' by the Senate's Commit1be Govemanoo Committee
tee on Govemanoo.
realizes, Trumbore said, "that
Under the proposal, the Sen- there are areas which the facunder il
While ..............nts maY use ate membership would include: ulty or other constituencies feel
o ·n.e SUNY CbanceUor;
tbeir own~ti;;; cooceming
to be their prerogstives primarwhat report forms will be used,
• Two cantral administra- ily, and we believe that this
the reports tbemaelves ~ re- tors appointed by the Cbanoel- can ,!Je solved by structuring
lor·
·
· the committees of the Senate
~ Poppey aaid
~ One elected representative in such a way as to bave the
Dei!Pite the fact that the polmembership weighted in favor
of
central
administration;
icy is' not new, faculty in the
• One representative of each . of the constituency most inpaat bave not be8D called upon
volved."
the
five
types
of
administraof
to keep time recorda.
tive ·units pf SUNY · ( grsduate
Edward w. Doty, vice presi- c e n t e r s, four-year colleges,
For the plan to become efdent fa&lt; operations and systems, etc.),
to be selected by the fective, first the SUNY Senate
and
then the Board of Trustees
'""""""" some faculty concern . appropriate chief administrabut hastens to point out the tive oflicers;
would have to approve il
importanoo of sucb records to
• Ten representatives of the
the individual Vacation and! public interest (including memor sick-leave credits are dillicult bers of the Board of Trustees
to upon retireJnent or and local Council members) ; to
termination, he says, if no rec- be appointed by the Board of
ords bave been kept
Trustees;
Faculty, be says, should re• One student representaThe State University Confer to pqe 4.10 ' of the- stete- tive, one faculty representative
Fund is now acceptment, whi ch says, "VIUYin&amp; and one other professioual stsft struction
bids on a contract estimating
schedules . . , preclude a regu- representative e I e c t e d from
larly scheduled work-"'" each State-operated unit of the ~:t0~l~l~ ~v~;r~
Mm.imum hours in attendance University. (With health sci- Health Sciences Center towers
by faculty are therefore not enoo canters being considered for the AmherSt campus, the
specified, states Doty. 1be time sep8l8te unit$ whether or not Gov-ernor's Oflice bas an"'-t iteelf, be adds, does not they are alliliated with other nounood.
ask for the number of hours put units, U/ B would bave two
Two contracts related to conin, but only time chargeable slates of sucb representatives).
struction of these towers bave
apinst accrued leave. Finally,
The proposal, which is a rethe forms are not sent to Per- vision of Article VII of the already been lel (Reporter,
aonnel or to Albany, says Doty, Policies of the Board of Trus- ~r~~=,:t
but are kept by the depart- tees. also defines the role of the inss, the second, for the purments.
Senate as advisory to the Cban- chase, fabrication, delivery and
Aooordi.na to the statement, ceUor and the Board of Trus- erection
cif structural s t e e I.
faculty must submit montbly tees.
Under this contract, the third
records of abeenoo. Twelve- •
of the series, completion of the
mDDib faculty accrue both vasheU which consists of roof and
cation and sick leave credits; Governance Committee which exterior walls is required. Also
academic year faculty (10- is circulating the proposal included are installstion of eleJDDDth) are eligible to accrue among Jbembers of the Univer- vators and main distribution
only sick leave credi\8. 1be sity for comment, " Academia ducts for the mechanical sysstatement says that "although bas moved in the paat years tems.
the laculty role and their 'aca- from a completely autocratic
towers are the first of
demic obligation' frequently in- administration to a sharing a 1be
P.roiected group of modular
volve participation in a wide of administrative responsibility buildings
designed with flexi- .
variety of T.:Jnivenity activities, with the faculty to the broader- bility to accommodate the
sick or vacation leave must be based community """""Pt in growth of the Center.
which
the
administration,
facc!w'ged, as appropriate, even
Sill: ~ and basement in
though formal classes may not ulty, non-tescbing profeasional height, and generally square in
be scheduled on the day in stsft, students, and now, the plan, the two &amp;tructun!s are loqumtion." H"""""', "faculty interested taxpayer all bave the cated next to each other at the
a'-&gt;ce during periods of aca- opportunity for an input of be · · of what will become
iriformation and ideas into the
demic ·-as vacation,"
need not be re- decision-making~­ a ~:J:l!,' row of similar modported
ules, each set diagonally in the
1be faculty work week re- Admittedly, ·govemance is m row.
various stages of development
qulnment is deftned as·~ at
Sealed bids will be received
varioUs .....,_; however,
teaebinB .loads. .-reb, deat ihe Albany ollices of the
partment, committee and Uni- we feel the University Senate Coostruction Fund u n t i I 2
should
move
toward
the
comversity assillllll8118. Overtime munity ooacept of..............,." p.m., March 1.
is not recorded or paid."
In this p~ Trumbore
The sections of the regulatic-. pertinent to nqn-teacbing sees"no~of
administ:rative
aulbority and (C~ from pa«&lt; I, col. I)
pror-ional staff call for a
no forfeitbe secured "&gt;.' writing the
IDOIIihly "'1"'0 of "abeea&lt;e l88pODSibility, I ure
of
the
lepi
rights !11. facul- may
lnaUJIU8) Committee, State
cmly," althouift supervisors
ty: I do - a IIDique opportun. University at Buffalo, 186
ity for State Uni~!11. New Hayes Hall. 3C35 Main Stzeet,
Yodt to . _ a
in the
It thal "overtime and nation in !Dfl8lina' the soYar- Bu&amp;lo 14214.
records need not be nance needs of an academic
kept," that .. 'peraaoal' time is
~
not .nm in the profeasional S:.,~~'":, ~i;jr.sity
-To-It..W.., 8nd (that) personal body in which the view&amp;
CONFIDENTIAL COUNSEL ON ~­
SOCIAL QUESTIONS: SUCH
:=..-=~be cbarpd ~ oonstiluencles of the aca- SONAI.
demic COIIIIDUDity are abared, AS, SEX. USE Of' AI.COHOL AND
.The ..tt week for this 11'!'11'
DRUGS, ETC.
.
molded,
-the .,.,._.,.
fermentis defined • "37.5 or 40 mim- ed,
lifterinwhich
c:our-..
c.ar, Hermum hauno I*' week; addition- • lack !11. it would be 1111'1-'
UlnfY, Ext. 3717"'
l's)dloloclcal Clinic, 4230 Rkllo
al - , _ , to .......aplilh to the Chancellor and
~". Tbe ~ti.. us ·'!Oil- Board !11. Tn~a~e. fer their ..,_
..... - . . C-22, Ext. 1187
finue: "GeosBJJY......k oblip- tion or reaction. This Seaate

I:*~~ !:t~~~

Tower Shells
Being Bid

bo~~~~~

Toii-

:lt.t'=:..:i t=.., ~
w.u-

::':.!
tbe

.-n

/~

u,

197!

Local Studies Are Part of
Fight Against Dystrophy
U/B is one of oenlian
where medical ·reSearcb is making progress against muacular

d~tal research in the
biocbemist:ry of the disease is
being carried out in the laboratory of Dr. E.A. Barnard, prof e s so r and chairman of the
Department- of B~try.
Barnard is assisted by the Muscular Dystrophy Association of
America which this week provided him with a second grant
of $10,000.
Using a strsin of dystropbied
chickens, Dr. Barnard is studyins enzymes known as the
cbolinesterases in the muscles
of chickens that become dystrophic. Chat!lled enzyme pat·terns are characteristic of muscular dystrophy, both in chickens and in human cases, 1be
high levels of oortain enzymes,
technically known as aldolase
and creaf:inol kinase, in the
blood of patients is an early
sign of muscular dystrophy.
Dr. Barry Wilson of the University of California bas recently shown that a genetically
distinct type of cholinesterase
-occurs in the muscles of the
chickens with the disease. Dr.
Barnard, in Bulfalo, is collaborating in this research ellort by
trying to. determine the exact
location of this enzyme, whether it is at the site where the
nerve joins the muscle or at
anOther site inside the muscle

...u.

By special techniques already
developed in. the Schoo I of
Medicine for lagging these enzyme molecules in single oolls
of muscles, changes in the type
of genetically-determined cbolinesterases have been shown in
cases of muscular dystrophy.
While Dr. Barnard is pursuing changed enzyme patterns,
Dr. Edson X . Albuquerque and
his collaborators in the Department of Pharmacology are
measuring functional alterations in dystrophic muscles by .
recording from electrodes inserted at the nerve-muscle junctions. These studies together
with electron microscope findings indicate that before ·muscular dystrophy develops to its
fuU extent, there is an early
alteration of the neuromusailar
transmission.
"'lbe aim of our work in
these laboratories is to traoo
the earliest ellects of the destructive work dO!)e by the

Cancer 'freatment
Topic of Meeting
Four specialists in a medical
field that is enjoying rapid and
· significant advances - d r u g
treatment for cancer-will participate in a Scientific program
sponsored by the Bulfalo Academy of Medicine January 21
in the Embassy Room of the
Statler Hilton Hotel.
1be four specialists are Dr.
Richard G. Cooper, associate
in medicine, Buftalo General
Hospital; Dr. Abraham Goldin,
associate chief for Laboratory
Reeearob, National C a n c e r
Institute, Bethesda, Md; Dr.
Jerome D . Block, associate· director, 'l'be .Clinical Center,
National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, Md; and Dr. James
F. Holland, director of the Cancer Clinical a-rcn CentH of
the RoaweU Park Memorial In-

=

cl~ica&lt;f::~.,: =:

U/B faculty, will as
moderator.
I n t e r n s and residents of
Bull'aio ..... boopitais will be
gl..ta of The Aaodemy for the
"-tins. with a ltmcbeon plan.
ned for 1 p.m. and
ilciantiftc prDpiiiD for 2 p.m.

tbe

defective tlae," Dr. Barnard aaid "If the fundamental
changes in the lllUicle eeUs can
be analyzed, the task of treatins this disease sbould come
into the realm !11. the ~~ .
Muscular
is a progreosiY.,

.._.__,.,v

wastb.i-~ !11. the

musclee W"lri c h a8Jicts about
20,000 persons in the United

States.
'lbe actual incidenoo of the
condition is IDUI:h higher than
this, sinoo the ClODI1DOIII!6t form
of the disease usually strikes
before five yeus of age, producing a very ~ rate of early
mortality. Certain other forms
often strike in y.oung adulthood.
Muscular dystrophy is not
infectious or caUsed by any organism but is always an inherited ·genetic &lt;!&lt;'feeL
The actual cause of the disease is unknown and there is
no drug ellective against il

Haase Remembered
As 'Outstanding'
Arthur Baase of the Chemistry Department suffered a
fatal beart attack on Tuesday,
January 5, 1971. Mr. .Baase
bad been in charge of the Machine Shop in Chemistry 'sinoo
1964 and was directly responsible for making this facility an
invsluable complement to the
research and teaching programs
of the · Department. His high
professioual Standards and his
abilit,Y to translate ideas into
working pieces of equipment
were outstanding.
Prior to'-bis position in the
Chemistry Department, Mr.
Baase was for 12 years associated with the U/B Chronic Disease Research Institute. He
aided in the design and fabrication of artificial organs as
weU as more prosaic types of
medical equipment
· His work at the University
bas encompassed an enonnous
range of equipment, from miniature electrodes to hidl pressure apparatus, and ol materials, from plastics to steel. App8l8tus built by him bas been
utilized in research projects as
diverse as the ...,wdy of fast
chemical reactions and the investigation of the nature of surfaoo lUms.
·
1be fact that Mr. Baase was
able to maintain sucb an outstanding degree of personal and
profeosional accomplialu!W!t in

.

~~ofina:,-"bands~~ c;.

1ribute to his couraae and persevereooe. Mr. Baase will long
be remembered by the stall'.
students, and faculty of the
Chemistry Department as a

!i'fi~~~~able

acien-

~D. . . . . . .

"'--7-

Ketter Wrll Speak
To Law Officiols

President Robert I. Ketter
will speak on "Uni......mw-:Community Relatiiiosbipa" at the
o6icers inatallation tMeting of
the Erie Cotmty .Tudps and
Police Eucutive Com"""""'
tonight at 7
in the Polish
FaicoDs H a I, 883 Sycamore

y.m.

Sln!et..

State 8uJ&gt;reme CoUrt Justice
ftopr T. Cook will introdnoo

Ketter.

_ Chief City Couft Judae Sebastian J. ·Bellomo will De instaUed aa president of the Coo-

~!:;::;"t'mertbem!i'«

Tbamaa w. Ryan.

.

�t;:Y;,f:,f student ...:tion to

(Continu&lt;d from - I , col. 6)

um..mty laancbed the

-3
,.

~

]~ 14, 1!171

Gold-

. One student wbo didn't wish
en Bull Fund aimed at ral&amp;ina to give his name said simply,
fuDds specifically for intercol- "It's horrible."
·
lesiate athletia;. Howevar, the
Garry Klaw, New York 913!r
fund bas DOt produced -enough
said
'1
followed
U/B
f~
lo keep the pn!lleDt level of
for the last four years. I don't
footbell a1iw. ~ said.
Uke to aee it"go. ·I thought footOn several
•
Ketter hall and all. other sports are
said, the UJB"""..d:'kation part of a rollege education and
sought State support through I'd like to see it remain."
U/B's bucl&amp;et by a direct. Sf.&gt;" ·
"I .think -it's utter!~l~ti~hofof~h~:;,te ~ ing," commented
MecaL "We have enoug
failed.
.
For the last few months, Ket- money for every other sb-. I
ter has BOUfb.t a solution to the think. SJ&gt;?,rlli are a part of camproblem. with State .legislators, _pus life.
Another wbo found the move
State oificials aDd repn!lleDtatiY88 of the State UDivendty of "outrageous" blamed the situation on the coaches. "If we had
New y~th~~wi'U; a new coaching staff, it rould
=...nty alumni groups, perpetuate the team. This ODe
again failed to produce a rem- didn't do the job. It's created
diasension among the players.
edy, he said.
A new COBching staff would
To continue, Ketter said, the mean
a good teem, and a ~
UDivendty needed a firm com- team would
bring revenue.
mitment for $2 millioo in ema
suppOrt over the next five hal
-:'~e~re
"foul~
years. This would b8 in addition to State funds preaently schools and not give scholarships,"
still
another
rommentprovided for COilC:hlng staff.
ed. .
In recent years, the hull&lt; of
"It doesn't bother me at all.
support for athletic bucl&amp;ebi has
rome from student fees. Last I hardly went to sny . gsmes,"
year, theoe accounted for more said Jerry Perch. "I wasn't
than $200,000. The student r e a 11 y interested in it that
athletic fee, however, can be much."'
Agreeing was Jay Berman
voted out by the student body.
who volunteered, "I think it's
And, in fact, the whole tion of student r- is DOW un- a good ides. It's '-" a long
c!er review by State UDivendty. time roming. I guess the money
could oo for more important
things.''
LMtT_In_

Pot Still
Choice of
Students

(Continu&lt;d from - 1 . col. 4)
his life. ... aiJowin.g for acbeduling changes due to
chsnge of major or personal

m-.

~"~~;;,~

of c:boice" among the nation's
rollege population over heroin
o• sny other habit-forming
drug, and ite use is increasing
about one per cent each month,
Professor Erich Goode of Stste

problems."
The people working on SARA
have also taken part in creating the calendar conce~t
They've worked this ~ility

=den~~":1,., P!J:f:: ~

more than"""" ~a­
ester. Ha also poable
problems when '-'lty_ .....
the clioice of '!ri&gt;i&lt;h two esters to leech In l:lecau. toa
many may elect to leech in the
same two semesters.

-~
.
Blacldrurst acltnowledses
that there are problema to be
overrome. "One of the hlgeat
crunches is that it'll . malre
things b8rder for depertmeDtal
chsirmen-tbey'IJ be ·needed as
12-month administrators." He
sees running a dual psttem of
a 16-week eemester and two
eight-week sessions as bringing
on scheduling probleins plus

registration information with
the University only once a year
and then arrange course enrollUDivendty at Stony Brook has ment by the chsnge of scheddisrovered.
..
ule process. This process has
He reported his findings to a alresdy worked durmg Summer
Sessions
and Blackhurst feels
tw&lt;Hiay intemstional roDierit could . work on a year-round
ence 0.. drug abuse at Stanford •basis.
in December.
~~~rk.toT~=
. Dr. Goode, associate profes- Sche.dull"' Euler
.
sor of sociology at Stony Brook,
Scheduling courses them- offiCe temporsrily set up to
reported that his survey of the selves would be easier with the help the depsrtmental chairnation's oollege campuses re- 16-weekltwo eight-week split, men through the period of
vealed that at )lis own campus, Blackhurst predicia. This way chsnge.
for example, 70 per cent of the a depsrtment head rould ·schedIf tbe Faculty Senate and
students had tried marijuans at ule a trailer sequence for a
course that was over-enrolled,
·least onde.
His survey sbows that the by giving the rourse intensively hurst estimates it would still
normal student user of mari- for the serond eight-week h81f be the fall of 1972 before it
juana is "episodic," or a "week- semester. And he feels that this roul&lt;! be implemented on a
ender" wbo uses the drug for type of scheduling wouldn't straight tri-semester basis and
euphoria and reluation. Most cost any more. Instesd of of- the fall of '73 l'&gt;efore the dual
students queried have used the · fering multiple sections of a psttem of simultaneous ~­
drug !&lt;'88 than ten times over rourse, a depsrtment rould of- ester and two eight-week r.esler both a 16- and an eightthe last few years, be said.
sions rould be part of the UDiStudent use of marijuans week version. Faculty, too, versity yeer.
would have the option of Iesch·
seems to have no - effect on ing
a course intensively for
grsdes, be rerounted. l:J sers
weeks or retaining the 16seem to maintsin the same eight
grade--point average as non~ week program.
Other
advantages would be
users.
the possibility of using visiting
Laws against the use of mari- professors all year round for
juana, be declared, are " archaic eight-week rourses. Blackhurst
A Minority Hifirig Cominitand unenforoeable." Atty. Gen. has found through his Summer ·tee to serve as a llaison beJohn Mitchell and his staff Session .experience that he can tween the Faculty of Arts and
Alumni Ruction
"lose credibility" when they bring noted people in for an Letters and the UDiversityRobert E. Lipp, president of say that use of marijuans leads eight-week .rourse at a · lower wide
·Comuiittee on · Minority
the U/ B Allinini Association, to the use o.f "hsrder" drugs.
cost than using regular facultY. Hiring has t-o appointed by
made the following statement :
In general,. Professor Goode
The same opportunity would Tbomas E . Connolly, acting
"President Ketter msde the said, he found that:
exist for seriding students else- provost of that faculty.
only decision that rould have
• The larger the number of where to study for eight weeks.
Members of the group, are
'-n made· at this p6int in students
uDiversity, the The Summer SessiOIIS director Bruce Jackson, English, chairtime, even though that decision greater is.inthethe
says you rould send law stu- man; Roger Isascs, French, and
use
of
drugs.
brings• about the cessation ·of
• The h!gber the quality of dents to Ottawa for eight weeks Charles E . Gayle, Jr.,- Music.
interrollegiste foothall at U / B
to s t u d y parliamentary I a w
In liis announceroent apwhich we deeply regret Now the students, facul ty and the cheaper than tesching the same
we pledge ourselves to work uDiversity itseU, the higher the course here.
!;f~~g
'{!'~·. D~':'~
with the UDiversity in estsb- use of drugi;.
• Drug users tend to be Two Ye•rs In pt•nnlna
Murray, acting vice president
lishing a viable foothall' proThe new calendar concept for academic aftairs, endorsing
gram to be operated within the those with no religious affiliacurrent limitations. Finally, tion, rompsred to those who has been· in the planning stages a rommitment by deans and
for over two years. The Calen~ provosbi to assign 20 of next
we intend to use our influence profess a faith.
• More men than women dsr Committee originally year's estimated 100-140 facare users, in the ratio of 3-2, started working on it in the fall ulty openings to minority can:'~o~~nofloa ':!'jo~
terrollegiate footbell program and men will also try a much of '68. They spent last year didates.
wider variety of drugs than refining the roncept and last
sometime in the future."
Murrsy noted that ·most of
women will.
spring the Executive Commit- the lines would become open
Another alumnus and long• More Jewish studenbi use tee of the Faculty Senate voled through turnover, but that "at
time booster of the football pro- drugs than Gentiles, and more to present it to the entire fac- least a few new lines" were a
gram, Dr. James J ! Allinger users rome from liberal homes ulty. '
possibility in the 1971-72 bUdblasted the move, noting that than rome from authoritarian.
Dr. William Baumet, vice get. ""
.
'
• the UniYersity had money for
• ' In bomes where parents chsirman of the Faculty SenTile academic vice president
other activities, including a are not only liberal politically ate, promises that it's " the first
listed other points rerommend"trashy" student press.
but are also abnormal users of substantial thing on the agen- ed
by the provosts and Univert.ob&amp;cro, alrohol and drugs- da" of the new Senate. Howdoons, which he
such a8 diet, pep, trsnquilizer, ever, be voices some doubts sity-wide
dorses:
sleeping pills or other prescrip- sbout the plan and points out
"The proVosts and Univertion drugs-the more likely the that the Executive Committee
Researchers at U /B this children are to be • drug- passed it with the reservation sity-wide deans are agreed that
recruitment for all such lines
year can create more theories, oriented.
that the admiDistration study will
benefit substantially by the
"Drug use seems to be more the feasibility of its impl~­ advice
and attempt to cure more disand rerommendation of
of
an
extension
of
parental
intation.
eases and solve more social ills
the
Permanent Committee on
fluence thsD rebellion," Profes.
. ..
than ever before. That's be- sor Goode told the ronference, Qwstlons Rominority recruitment lor ibi
The man appointed to study suOcesilor) ... .
cause the UDivendty has re- which was co-sponsored by the
"'In the interest of facilitatceived an all-time high in re- U.S. Bureau of Nlircotia; and the proposal was Dr. Charles
Jeffrey,
assistant vice president ing the recruitment process, the
Dangerous
Drugs
and
the
Stansearch grants duiing the sixprovosbi
and UDiversity-Wide
.
for
academic
affairs.
He
cur~
month period from early June ford Institute for Public Policy rent.ly is "analyzing all the im- deans enroursge the l;'ermanAnalysis.
to esrly ~ 1970.
plications." His study isn't fin- ent Committee to expand its
Since the rollege-level use of ished yet, but he's raising.such membership by the inclusion of
According to Dr. l'!aYmond marijuana increases about one questions as: Will an increase minority faculty members from
Ewell, vice~ president lor re- per cent per month, '-'regularly in tescbing stsff and rourse of- each of the seven faculties
sesrch, the $8.5ro,751 received and stesdily ," acrording to his ferings be necessary? And, will wherever this is feasible. Each
over that period is $1,008,118 -flDdings, "arresting the users
the faculty 'o for tescbing a provost has agreed to establish
more than came in during the would mean putting about 50 oourse
his own three-persori ro~J~mit­
intensively?
·
same period of 1.969, the pre- per cent of the rollege populaDr. Baumer is 81sO looking tee to insure that there is· posivious high. The hulk of the in- tion or about four million at the roncept for possible tive attention to minority faccresse, $1,364,827, was DOted young persons in jail."
flaws. He sees the idea as em· ulty recruitment within each of
from July to September.
bodying two basic shifts: one the departments of ·the faculty,
being the chsnge in timing of to help in the orderly assem-:
Most of the money· (93 per
the first and serond -tars; bling of information·ronceniing
cent) came from ·the federal
Individuals in c h a r g of and the Sj!COnd, the lengthen- · the professional. requirements
government
clasees or other campus events ing of the summer school ses- for each open positiori, imd to
Helllth Sciences, including involving public assembly have sion to a full 16 weeks and provide liaison with ·the · Per~
the Medical, Dental, Nnrsing, '-n asked to limit the number ruruiipg eight week sessio.ns manent Committee. Each proPharmacy and Health Related of persons in the gathering to
vo3t will regul8.rly amveqe· a
88
Profeesions schools, accounted the number of seats available.
meeting of this romm!ttee and
for the largest share of·the toDirector Robert E . Hunt of rsises fmancial doubts Th Dr. extend an invitstion -to· rei&gt;retal, about 66 per IBll
EHS said that classrooms, lec- Baumer's mind; he- thinks a sentstives of· · the Permanent
to attend silch meetAdditional new grante of $1.- ture halls aDd theatres have larger budget may be required Committee
ings for appropriare exchsnge·
392,587 CBql8 in during Decem- legal -cities which must be to provide for more faculty and of
infonnatioa~ ~,.oo h' • ;-..J.; •• l
complied with.
'
for. leeching a given course
ber.

- ~~':u.w::rin~ ~~~

i:J",!

The U/ B footbell team is the
last major rollege team on the
Niagara Frontier and the oDiy
one within the State UDiversity
of New York.
The dismal rerord · of the
team this past 8e880n (2-9-Q),
Ketter said, had nothing to do
with the decision announoed
·this week. · Even if we had ilad
an undefeated season, he said,
the fiDIUlCial facts would have
dictsted the same decision.
Altemati""" to dropping football outright, Ketter said, were
a gradual pha!le-down or establishment of club footbell.
The former was rejected because it 'NJ)Uld involve almOst
the present level of expenses.
It was felt also that it would
he unfair to both COBches and
players to ask them to perform elfectively under a deempbasiz.ed situation.
The club footbell alternative
was rejected, Ketter sail!, because it seemed too late to line
up a club schedule for the fall.
DropP.ing footbell in Ketter's
view will not alfect plans for
athletic facilities on the new
Amherst campus because theoe
have t-o justified on several
other bases related to academic
and teereational activities.
.The remainin 11 intercollegiate sports
not be adVI!IIIely alfected either, the president feels. The major part of
the footbell deficit was attributed to athletic scholarships
and there are ft'.latively few of
theoe in the other sports.

Ju

" ll!llra*~

There was an indicatibn that
the UDivendty might begin to
significantly upgrade its basketball .or hockey program as
a substitute for the gridiron
sport.

However, c:ontinued student
fees would he important to that
elfort and there is no way of
knowing at this point if· studente will rontinue to provide
theoe funds.
Asked about j&gt;oasible student

...:tion to dropping football,
Ketter said that it seemed to
him that the move would "be
' DO big deel" as far !"' studente

-are concemecL

The Reporter, in a spot

sur~

A&amp;LNames
Hiring Group

.,!:o

::

en-

ResearchF\m;ls Up

CfO\\d Liniit Asked

e

=~ ~~on o'rd!r·roJo!'p~

�~~

4

Prof Asks.for Bro~er.
Use of NewACE ~tings

~
Overstnl£d

EDITOR:
departments at U/B by show- EDITOR:
I am writing what will 8111'&amp;- ing the ~ percentage (30
ly be one among many letters !!:...~g t)-u:~t
..... ~-~~
I would hope thathet Wa.lter
which you will receive from ·-~~
~··"""""
Roaen's article on
envuonv a r i o u s departments in the to the query about changes in mental crisis with its soulwake of the news release of the five years before 1989. From searching message of failure on
January 4 c:onceming Buftalo's that one may infer a number the part of P""""'t day BCI!showing in the evaluation of of ~ depending, I suppose, demic institutions to rommumgraduate programs recently on ones bias, ·as, for emmple: cats to mankind the rapid appublished by the American (a) that Classicists tend· to be proach of dooniSday is not left
Council on Education. This let- \:~~~insti~Jon.~ uncballenged. Years ago, the
ter is not meant to correct the other scholars-a likelihood I Federation of American ScienCouncil's report, or to carp at
tists began to publish a monthits subjectivity, or to moan am much inclined to discount; ly bulletin. Its cover contained
about the time lag between the or (b) ibat Classicists lend to the outline of a clock with hour
survey and its publication, or :,~~f =~ and minute bands approaching
the great distinction between likelihood' 1 am I~· inclined 12-the final hour. Between
the five-year-old memories, on
covers appeared many incisive
which it is baaed, and the real to discount; or (c) that change articles, much devoted to pro!&gt;state of departmental programs. in the Buffalo Classics Depart- lems raised by lWeen. I find it
My purpose is rather to point ment in the five years before bard to avoid the conclusion
out oertsin ways in which the 1969 was so dramatic as to give that those scientists and public
published information concern- it re/ntively greater national figures responsible for these
mg my own department, Clas- "visibility" among Classicists messages did not also communsics, could have been. and I than other departments at U/ B icate their ideas and views to
bope may still be, aploited to am 0 n g therr respective col- students and colleagues.
greater advantage.
leagues. This may seem less
First and most important: As insignificant if one considers
you well know, in the rating by that, for example, in the case ctTTEWPQ:rNTS
'.l
quality of graduate faculty, de- of the Physiology Department, - Y .l
partments are given explicit ranked
national(~, :;: The lleporl8r hopei on this =g
to provide a forum ior the ex·
range. Below that range, insti- tion~' on the quality of its grad- wrce ol views on a wide variety
tutions are listed in two furth· uate faculty and 62 per cent of the Iss.- fadnc the academic
er groupings (2.5-2.9 and 2.(). claimed "insufficient informs- community. We W)Oicome bcith
2.4) in alphabetical order, but tion" on the quality of its gradunranked. In Classics, there- uate program in the five years positions popers and letters as
fore, institutions are ranked na- before 1969. Curious.
space pennlts.
tionally first through fifteenth.
Someone-! think it was G.
~uffalp ::.., ':::fg :S.i.z ins(~~ ~ ~Jd;.d:'o~r::;aU:,.,o;=.
damned lies, and statistics . . I
I would argue that many, if
2 9j ~
~t this me&amp;riS {; that
do not, therefore, want you to not most, of those in our acaFAW'S CLASSICS DEPART- take my ·"findings" any more demic institutions comprehend
'ousl than I d
If As the problems raised by lWeen.
~~o~J'~N~N~ ::'Act report ..;.~~ ·sur- U they failed in their efforts to
' TWEEN 16TH AND 21ST, vey's purpose was not to infiste arouse mankind's conscience reand I e s s biased odds-makers or deflate institutional e go s" garding misUse of natural rethan myself would place it clos(page 33). But if, unfortunate- sources, the failure is one, not
er to 16th than 21st (though I
ch thin
to be
d
of their making and probably
a telephone call to the ACE 3',;, ".::m.tsncfof~ ~~ out of their control. The pro!&gt;niisht have given--might still dialogue with those who do take lems Roaen describes are very
give-the exact rank) . I hope them seriously, and on whose real and we should all do what
this is not taken for pretentious continued support we rely, then we can do individually and colhornblowing. I am quite frankly by all me&amp;riS let us fully ex- lectively to ameliorate them.
diaconoerted, if not humiliated, haust their possibilities. . . . · However, it is difficult to see
by the 2.5-2.9 rating. But still,
Sincerely yours,
how a moratorium on scientific
when a department has in fact
-JoHN l'BRAuorro
research, basic or applied, will_
ranked 16th or even 20th in the ·
Associate Professor
reverse or help these problems
country, the pragmatist in me
Classics
witho\'t creating greater ones.
cries out in no unoertsin terms
that much bay could have been
There seems to be a basic
. made of it!
[I"
misunderstanding of science as
Second: In response to the
a basic discipline and the ways
que!'l' concerning change in the
it can lead to relevant knowlquality of the Classics graduate
edge and understanding. Sir
program in the five years before
Peter . Medwar, addressing an
1969; Buftalo received a hid&gt;er
Professor Newton Garver of audience at the University of
percentage (66 per cent) ol re- the Philosophy Department has Pennsylvania (Jayne Lectures,
sponses in the ''better" colqmn
replaced Professor James Coov- 1968) • said ''The .purpose of ·
than all institutions listed in er as chairmari of the Arts •. ~ntifi~ inquiry is not to CO!"the same discipline. On the and Letters Search Committes pile an mventory of factual msame issue, though it is a mat- for a chairman of the Depart- formation, nor to build up a
ter of more parochial concern, ment of Art.
totalitarian world pioture ot
the Classics Department reProfessor Coover bas re- natural Ia~ in which ever;!
ceived a hid&gt;er percents~re of signed from the committes
event that IS not compulsory 1B
responses in the ''better'r colThe first paragraph of 'last ~orbidden. W'l ~d ~ of
urnn than aU tM departments week's Reportu story on the 1t rather as a loiPcal articulated
on thi8 compus ( 66 per cent; four Arts and Letters search struoture of justifiable beliefs
closest contender: English -58 • groups incorrectly stated that about nature. It begins with a
per cent) .
·
.
one of the four was for the De- · story about a Possible WorldThird, also of more parochial partment of Music. As was a story which we invent and
interest, and perhaps verging , correctly stated later in the criticize and '!""illY as we. go
on the negligible: Classics dis- story, that fourth group was for along, so that 1t ends by ~.
tinguisbes itaelf among all the the Art Department.
as nearly as we can make it, a
~-------,-------------- story
about real life." I think
Sir Peter speaks to the heart
of this matter of - . d l .
Quite reoenUy, Edward H.
Levy, president of the University of Chicago, stated in Science. "A university which
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Garve Heads
Art Search

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Seek Campus Backing
Within a few days the ~
nioat important event al!ectma;

tiie (&gt;l!&gt;fessiooal stall of ,sUNY

will occur. Tile event is of
the election of an organizatiooal agent to rep""""!t
this group of employees. It IS
imperative therefore that e""'!Y
member of the group """""""
his franchise and cast a ballot
for the representative which be
feels can best serve his needS.
The outcome of the election
will not be determined by publie testimonies or J&gt;rivate opin·
ions but it will be determined
by those individuals who vote.
In the initial election, 5162 individuals (over 1,000 of tbose
at U/ B ) either did not vote or
mailed their ballot too late to
be counted. It is of sincere concern to SPA that nearly 50 per
cent of our staff do not again
miss their opportunity to infiuence the decision.
.
SPA is the only organization
in the election thaf has provid:
ed a specific structure for input
from b 0 t h the teaching and
non-teaching professional staff.

b a II o t by the U.S. MAILS
ONLY; at the eerlieat possible
data.-GolmoN HAD.
.

COWIIe

(Chemistry)

8NYJJa
(Accounting Ol&amp;ce)

lmNAm&gt;

T AIN'l'OR
(Paycbistry)
.

Zatn.oN

CoNBrAimN YBaACAIIIS

&lt;~op&gt;.

By the FSC
STEERING COMMITTEE
In the first election to determine a ,....tiating agent for
the professional staff of the
University, the Stsering Committes of the Faculty-Staff
Caucus ( FSC) endorsed the
AAUP: As we know, that group
was not selected to be our representative. · A run-&lt;&gt;ff election
is now in process to choose
between the Senate Profession·
al Association (SPA) and the
State University Federation of
Teachers (SUFI').
In reconsideriilg the positions
of these two groups, the Steering Committes has concluded
that the best interests of the
retain the academic governance professional stall, both teaching
and
would be
system, and to protect and im- servednon-teaching,
by the election of SUFI'
prove the .t enure concept and as
the negotistiilg agent.
practice for all members of the
The main reason for preferunit. SPA is committed to the
defense of academic freedom ring SUFI' was our somewhat
greater
confidence in the leadand the rights of due process.
ersbip of SUFI' being sensitive,
For emmple, thro~ its under- as well as appropriately responstandings with
STA and sive to threabi to academic free'
NEA, it has been able to assure · dom especial)y fu the form of
the availability of legal re- political attacks. by legislative
sources and know-how in deal- or other governmental agencies.
ing with the threat to the
Thus, we recommend your·suppus school personnel at Buftalo port of SUFI' in this important
~tst::.:~~geio ~ election.

~ :!:d~nl~ o~n:;:.;~t~

cam-

protection of constitutional
IIUBrlllllees for all members of
the Negotiation Unit.
NETheA ~urcesalso beof NYav-~t eanm
.d
a.ww

1

the negotiation process. 'Those
reso~ have produ!""f !DO"!'
negotil!ted contrl!cts m hig;bef
education both 11) New York
and across.the na~on. than have
~ined.otherThisom_rgaci::d"!.tiothens cor;n-

. .

The president of the SUNY
AAUP Council, Dr. Leland
Man;h, has joined Dr. Ray
Boddy, president of the Buftalo
• Chapter AAUP, · in endorsing
SUIT as his choice in the run-

off election. Other AA UP
chapter presidents in Weetern
New York who will be voting
for SUFI' include Dr. John
Bruno (Buftalo State College),
Iais- Dr. Charles Goetzinser (Genelative Conference of CUNY, seo), and Dr. Richard Mayer
Central Michigan University, (Oswego). The SUNY LibrarHudson Valley C.O., etc. The ians Council has voted 62
Erie County College Faculty per cent to support SUFI'. We
Assembly (formerly an AFT now also have the peJ80II8( enunit) are now using the Edu- dorsement of the president of
cational Association resources. SUNY Librarians AliBOCiation,
Because of SPA positions, ~ Mary Cassata (Readers
because SPA is truly represen- SerVioes, Lockwood Libraiy,
tstive, but particularly becaw:e Buftalo) .· ... Join the growing
it has no ties with non-educa- support ftom Qtber organization organizations, all profes- . tiona-vote for SUFI'.
sional staff of this University
-JoHN R. I'IITas,
are urged to cast that important
SUNYAB 1.ocaJ No. 2134
vote for SPA and return ~
(SUFI')

rWhitey Test' Slwws Gaps
A "whitey test," a test of
black lexicon designed to show
a white audience "how little
they know" a b o u t communicating with blacks, will be administered by Dr. Herbert L
Foster, director of teacher education at U/B, during a lecture
sponsored by the Nassau County Board of Cooperative EducatiOnal Services (BOCES) . in
Wantsugb, LL, F!!bruarY 22.
Foster will be '
. there

white teachers by their first
names and his black teachers as
'mister.. The principal is still
~ black and whits - and
bending .,_. to tzy to iil&gt;ow the
black teachers be Is not preju-

or.
"Problems often develop beCRUSe
a white educator cannot
or both." With refaniDce to his
own m.titution be wmlt on to dillenmtiate between ghetto
say "; .. Its greateat aervice is rhetoric and a real' threat," Dr.
in its commitn..t to ~ in
its aearcb for basic knowledge,
in its milllion to ~ and throuch verbal and ncm-verbal
to • continuity to the vaJu.
their prejudice toof =kind's llliii!Y cultures."
"Whites who protest verbally

byc:biDginghis
- t in the auditorium so be
will not have to sit .-t to a
bladr. child.
"Teacher&amp; have to look intro-

"';,;.•r:t

~~-

~A, SUFT Supporters

as a disti:ngu.isbed~eetur;

~be-;" :«.=i~ooil:J:

diced.

ot:!:·&amp;t.·":~

not wanting to be dose to a .
black child. by .,.-tine that
under&amp;tsnd the black
inability to touch

~will~howwhil&lt;s, whether
==y~f~:-:
they are
preju-

:.:::t:=

Amlin.

-t'i:!"..yoan,

Jlepartmsil of BioloiY

t.~~t!"':.ttf

his studmts."
their ~ &lt;&gt;! preiudief! often · ~ Foster hill! doae much
~.prejudice by 1beir noo- I r:eamcb in tbe of bladr.
acts," Dr. Foster Ollll- lexicon and Is curreDtly comlioDda. "For ezample, a JlriDci- piling a dictioaary and handPill_of a acbool !"8Y addreas bia book on tbe liUbject,

�. tt 5
:

~

.....

...

Human Rights-AWoricl-Problem
By

SUZANNE 'METZGER

of everyday lif.,....._., · game in
which it was "fun" to outwit
the Nazis. When a Polish division of the Russian Army liberated him, '"Tommy," then
ouly 11 ye&amp;r!H)ld, became their
"mascot," taking p&amp;lt in the
final conquest of Berlin . A
book, Tommy, by Odd Nansen,
wbo had been a fellow prisoner,
recounts the cbildbood e:q&gt;eri-

the U.S.? The panel will attempt to answer these and will
determine the efficacy of existing human rights organizations
by studying specific cases in
which human rights were violated and actions taken.
For emmple, the Council of
Europe is now acting upon a
complaint by 25 East Africans
of Indian or Pakistani extraction, all citizens of the Comto this monwealth with United Kingspiled the U.N. to adopt the country in 1951 at the age of dom passports, wbo were deUniversal Declaration of Hu- 17, completed a year and a hall nied entry into England, even
man Rights, and more recently of high scbool, entered Bethany detained in English prisons, on
the International Convention College in West Virginia and the grounds that they did not
on the Elimination ol All went on to earn a Juris Doctor possess employment vouchers.
Forms of Racial Discrimina- • from New York University Law Tbe applicants charged that
tion. Organizaticns following School and an LL.M. and Doc- " refusal of admission to the
the U.N.'s emmple were the tor of Juridical Science in In- U.K. amo'unted to degrading
Council oY Europe, com~ of ternational Law from Harvard treatment within tbe meaning
18 western European countries; ~w. He is a member of the of . . . the European Conventhe Inter-American Commis- board of editors of three inter- tion on Human Rights.'' They
sian of Human Rights, an in- · national law journals and has. had been "denied the right to
stitution of the Organization published widely in his field.
carry on their family. life and
of American States; and the : Dr. Buergenthal explains maintain their homes." and
International Labor Organiza- that .his study panel on hu- "had suffered . . . material 1008
tioo.
man rights will be co~ of .· . . spiritual, emotional and
But proclaiming laws is not a number of international and psychological injury in their
the same as enforcing them. constitutional lawyers, scien- family and married life,.. which
Tberefore, the Ame.r ican -Bo- tists, social scientists, and gov- represented a violation of the
ciety of Internatiooall.aw, with emment officials. One· of the 'Convention.
support from the Ford FOUDda- members already cbooen is the
Another case involved a
tioo. bas DOW aet up a study director of the Legal Division
panel to determine bow to im- oflbe Council of Europe; an- father who bad attempted to
bring
his son from India. The
·PtoYe llie enforoement of inter- other is the aec:retary _ . , ]
national human rights.
of the Inter-American Commis- son was denied entry and had
Dr. 'lllolm8 Buercenthal, sion ol Human Rights. Their to return to India. The case
prof- of internatiooal law COIICI!l'ted purpose will be to set was appealed to the Council of
at UB's l3c:hool of Law and a up goals and· recommend im- Europe which onlered England
leadinl authority on human provements for "international to admit him.
~
righ~ has bem named reaearc:h
protective systems."
ooordiDat« of this panel
Pullllc •.....,_
In anotber case, the governments
of
Denmark, Norway,
Y~ A pertiDent issue to be inAs the ~ silrvi- of Yl!lltipted Is bow to •......_ Sweden and .the Netberianda
the Auschwitz oooceatza6on tbe public _ indicnation" felt instituted an action against
camp, Dr. a.-aenthal's inter- wlal ......u- country vio1atea &lt;;.._., before tbe European
Repon'• sr.u
The World War II aperienoe demonstrated that neither man's oonscienoe nor his
enssure·ting lawsdominan~onecewo
· ulfdgoodasthe
0
ova evil. Out of this realizalion grew the concept of international laws for the proteclion ol human rights. The Nur-

~~~m:..'=!': en:.:~!':.T'::!;.

...,._

::.:=

~-=tbebey.:;t., ~
inwl._t and eqiOrieace.

To have
camp -

llllVi~

a Nazi death
miraculous, but

Bumamlbal attributes it to
luck and intuition. He cloM
DOt reaill bavinc bad an ,__
wbolminc IMr &lt;II. death, but
ra!Mr tbe fJICt that tbe lllruale

lor llllViftJ bad become a put

==

~ "!

country .-tty ..,a-~
wlal RUMia ~ tbe ,_,..
• lion of J - ooavicted ol plot.
ting to hijadt a Soviet ailplaDe.
But bow can ktlalJ.y eDd
relicious peraecutioDs In anotber 001Dltry1 a- can end diacrimlnatian against
bladla In South Africa, or in

~m:;.t J!.~~

emment w it h violatine the
Convention "by promulptinc
the Royal Decn!e &lt;II. April 21,
1967, which declared a state of

=--~"'C:,~a::k

eou.J:"U:::!"'&lt;;.._., bad im-

IP"" uarbilnry amlllt and deII!Dtion ~

itltarfem!d

with a

person's private and family life,
his home and oorrespoodence
. . . tr-lom of thought, conscience, religion ... tr-lom of
expression." Dr. Bueraenthal,
in his article on the ~­
ings, which was published in
the American JOIITTIDl of International Law, atates, "Whatever the ultimate outcome of
this case may be, the mere fact
that these proceedings have'
bem instituted is a very significant ~" For so-

=--

~

,::nin=.t_
ault W88 that &lt;;.._., did release
some of tha political priMo!rs
and ......,acl on some ticbt

.._....

The theory of international
lawa to . . - buman
is ~tYnable and
ized. What then atanda in tbe
Qy 'of ~and ~ acceptance and -wlic&amp;tion?

__._,Ia
-;:;u.

-----

Dr. a.-aenthal ~tea
the obstacles: " . . . Many of
these ilistrumenla (for carrying
out the laws) have bem aubacribed to by only a very small
number of states. Often the
states who do belong do not accept the enforcement . ..-...
ures . . . often the enforcement ·
mechanisms are not adequate."
The United States has bem
ooe of the countries moat reluctant to support these ellor1a.
It bas thus far not ratified any
human righta treaty, puttinc us
in the same cateaory as South
Africa with ita 8parlbeid policy, and Portupl. with her colooial policies. Tbe Genocide
Conventiou, which wouJ4 make
pnocide an inter.national
crime, to the
u.s. Senate submitted
in 1949 'and has
DeYer bem ratified, mainly b&amp;-'

: ' : ' ~ --Loonaerv-

�~

}~14,19'11

OVerall ACE Ratings Show U/B 41st
By RAYMOND EWELL
.... ,_.,_, lor - - -

SUNY at Bulfalo made a
~ pin in the quality
oi graduate edualtion clurinl
the IIYe-year p e r i o d 1964 to
19118 IICXlOrding to a statistical
analysis of the -tl_y-~
report. "A Ratina or Gradliate
Programs." Aooord"
to this
analyais, SUNY at
u f fa I o
moved up in rank order by 24 plaoos in the 1969 survey oompared tO our rank in the 1964
survey - moving from 65th
place in 1964 to 41st in 1969.
This degree or improvement
W88 exceeded only by the University of Maaaachuaetta which
moved up 31 places from 84th
to 53rd. M any institutions
moved down significantly in
the "pecking order," including,
· for example, Columbia, Johns
Hopkins, Syracuse, Tulane,
Pittsburgh and Ohio State.
The new
report was

'if

Its Not Shear' Nonsense ....

"L.onelr' Roll* and OM of the 'tloften 15."

'

.

Council in

the

1966.

(~~:!:r '~ie ~~: =~:nW~ ~ttl~~,:r::~ m.1J:~= ~e~~~u::

"

,,..
tt.nk IMtttuUon
C.llfomle,

m--country visits designed to
highlight aspects of Israeli life
and institutions of interest to
social scientists.
It affords facuJty the oppor
tunity:
·
-

a buoy abop. The five or six
harbera who worked here Julltime ... used to cut at least
20 heads of bail a day, apiece."
N09t"adays the lone barber avl!rllge8 15 custo111eiS.
And DY.I6t of theee customer&amp;,
Rollek notes, don't want their
hair cut.they
''They
get haircuts
be- •
aiuae·
have
to-reserve

at
top-ranking laraeli government
and trade union ollicials 88 well
as leading members of the Jewish, Arab and Christian oommunities;
•. To visit and participate in
~ at ~ inotitutions o(
higher
in Jeruaalem
Tel Aviv, Haifa and Ramal
Gan;

=~~~~~

Theseminarisat.en-daypro-

li

• To tour religious siteS and

raeli . authorities include: "Israel m the Middle East," ''Israel and America,'' uHistorical

!!:re
report from one on down in
order of their numerical scores.
Ao an example of the method
if there were 20 top-ranked

paned

because his hair · was in his
eyes. Then he C8l1lli in the abop
and said 'Cut it out of my

-~~::::

~~ ~ri~~U::':::

.&amp;

ea .

Wuhl,.t:on (St. Louis)

328

9

u-• Cit&gt;?

283

14
14
1
:

3
11
1

Mk.hlpn Sute ..
North C.rolln• ·

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

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

towo

• ·••·••

~;::,~- ...

·EE:~::::::~:·

80lne kind

6

:
10
9
1r

260
25
6

m

·· ····:

lli :

Southom Collfomlo ......

~':: ~·.~~ tAm..) · ·· ·· ··· ~:!
Syr~~cuse · ...... .
... 185

45
46
47
:;

Y•nderbitt '\·-..

""'""" ····

7
9
11

17
11
a

2
2

~ ~:..~- · -··
55'h Orqov: Sht~ · .............: ~~~
55'11 Arlzon• ... .... · .~::.~~:·::· .. 125
~ · :;:-!l~oml•. Rlversl~ . . 122
50 flo"do Stot0--·
··· 117
120
60 Tulone
. -.
•..
3
!;
__ ·.;;;;.-· ··· :1gs
00
64
"
Bryn M•wr · · ·
95
05

~

2
1
21

~f.:.,&lt;:"_;;..·_,_·._~

:!

~ ~=~~ Polytech

71\cl
71

~

.... .....

::.::::::::::~::::::::
~ M. ........

Oktohomo

'AI To.•• A..

Cba,_
Muuc:=

.....

:~
:~

sJ

!

65

65

:.

1

60

~~~-~ 1 "-~~.+31

:

-·
-.
+1
+ 3

11
14

1~

+•
+7

~~

-4

~!

28
3221

29

29

- 7
+1
-2
0

39
;:

+
+ •1

~:

0
,

:
1

:
IO

0

~~

-2
-4

+

16

~~

'1i'
24
10
23

~=

26
22
21

!

1~

11
11

:i
u

2

+3
. +.

+2

21

-1

0

i~ ~

21

11

2
2

+3

26

5

~

0

-4

::

17
1:
17
14
17
13
1: 7
10
14

6

2~

24
26
30

101
3 1:
6
7
135
72
5
1
6 ..:.7
3
4
45 -.· 4
•

:

In Rank Order fn1m 1914

-~lei

-

+•
+
1
-'1

21
23
30
25

~:

~ I;12 ~18

4
5

:

+2
+2

~;

.i : :;

80

LDutatono Stoto • ·· • ·•·•

~

1

12
6
62

.2
2
2

142
· · 120

:! ~~·~-··:····
~ =~!'"~ ...
68

5
5
:
1

:;
::
1
o

m:

' ::·:

...••.•.••••.

1~·

~

1
12

!

183
181

....

·

~~

3
8
2

217
210
201

suNY. BUFFALO ..•..•.•
C.llfoml•, San Diqo ....

!!

1~

~:

... - . .
ReMrve ....

C• litoml•. D•vts .............

41
4,2

~~

~~~!t~r· ~-: . :. :.:~:.·::: ~~

c. ...westem

!i

8

1~

1

:

~ ~
4
3
2
6
1

~::::

~
36
37

~;

Ina...
0
0

..,.

71

+

~~

42
6

~.

48

36
41
37

4

-·
-.-.
+
+

-7

2
f24

+•

-8
-4

..

+•

43
54

.
55

40

47
58

....

69~.

63 \cl
60 \cl
75 ~
52
70\cl

+

5

+5
-11

- 6
+31
- 7

+ 2\cl

;t-14
-

8

+ 4\cl

-10
+ 1\cl

.. .
.
~

75
57
75
01
75
60\cl
53

+13

-12

-+15Y.r
't 3%
+

7

-16
-13

+ 3\cl
+19Y.a

+2

-14%

7"

sur.., to lM!I s..r..,

Tufts

...... ......,.·.•• . . _

- ···--........ ...

:;."f..:

"A~y,lget~ ~~~J ·,!,.~rtation, "'t::!.~ ..!"'~~were

~~ ~-:Ji' .

~

4
o
12
12

H•wail --·-.....

Fore1gn &amp;lations," "larael's points equal to its inven;e rank
"!'conomy," "laraeli Society," + 10, i.e. the first inotitution
"larael- Ideological Aopects" !""".i""tf 30 points, the second
and ·~~l's Labor."
'
!""l!tut!on 29 points, the -20th
Institutions to be visited in- lDStitution 11 points, etc. This
elude: Hebrew Ul_liversity of me~ of scoring pla·ce8 a
J_eruaalem, Tel Aviy Univer- · prem1um on top quality. Also,
81ty;_Bar-Dan Univ~ty; Uni- 1t. Pl;a"!"' a P!"mium on "large"
vemty Col_lege at Haifa; Weiz- disciplines, 1.e. those which
"!""" .Institute · and the Tech- have many top-ranked inatiturucon.
.
, .
tiona. For example, chemistry
Preference will be accorded had 38 top-ranked institutions
to .SUNY facul_ty and adminis- so the first institution (which
~:" ~ thetr spouses; other
(h.v:!!, d~u:"'= ~
cod ge · · university faculty "small" d18C1
" "pline like R·-~-~
an a~tora and their
-·
s;&gt;ouses will be accommodated had- only 7 top-ranked inatituon a spaoe-available basis.
tiona eo the r i r 8 t inotitution
The ~ fee, including (whim was Harvanl
spin) re7

g

~

33
34
:

14
13
12
12

ey~o'ruy
8 few students oome Securi~~tyL~IBib~~u=~~: ~chtitu%'::"~in ~~ 2~a~\~: ~i ~=~~~::~:::
in for regular haircuts."
.
•vu ems," "Israel's
1nstJtutlon was given 75

But if customers are scarce
in Rollek's abop, so is trouble
Despite the disturbances of tt..i
last few yeara whicl3 have seen
windows smashed rurni ture
broken; and walla'litt.ered. with
graffiti Rollet• shop baa remained an oaais8 or quiet. The
only thing on hia walla is yellow paint.
"' . "I'm sort or the live-and-letlive guy,'' Rollek saya of hia relations with campuo bot-bloods,
some ol wboee offices are just
around hia comer. "Ao long aa
they don't bother me, nothing
happens I've neve bad
trouble in· the ~ ~
--'lllL '~'here's never been p a
picketing.
-~. well "!','th some o1 the
radical typea. ·
' About the only annoyance
that Rllllelt aiD remember happened a lew years ago. "A Jap" * - student who couldn't
~ ·.~ •..,.;ne IIi here

·

:

T4ltlll
~

ll

361
350
3!55
345

Purdue ......
..
Duko ..•.•......................

Mo.,-tond

tution by the following simple
mathematical formula: Composite rating = Inverse rank in
the top-rll;Dked list + 10 points;
+ _10 pomts (or. each Good
rating; + 5 pomts for each
A
. dTheequatetop-rerankedting. ms· ti"tuti"ons
m each discipline were · those
receiving scores or 3.0 to 5.0 in

~~-or
8...,theftul,f~~ a:'p- ~~d cultural events of interto fall down the staira
~ to be given by Is-

meetings, or if they have to gb

:.~~ti~ns t.c=~lhe ~ 33~~
No~~~~-":portpresented

;:

.:
12

:; ·';:,'::;:!t::h
:::r.~.Hopkl~ . .::::::m ~1
..: . . :!:

2

the results of the survey in the
form of separate ratings for 36
disciplines, but it did not provtde any overall ratings for
e!lcaltire institutions. The statisti
ana.Jrsis which we have
made dunng the p a 8 t week

29

~~?.~~~~::·~~::::::·: ffi

isJ:li ':!e::..a~~= r.;':"~as~=~
:~s: ~ ~~.~eiton
composite rating for each inoti- 52
leamm~

T.,..

w.=~~-·(S.~itl~)··~:::

13

-

· -....S!',!!1- .,.._

Cornell ···•·········· ········-····

vey were institutions w hi c !Y'
awarded 100 or more PhD.
degrees in the l~year period
1958-1967.

1

· ·

g g::'tor:'•· Los Ana•ln ·· 692

The State University of New
York and the tmiversities in
Israel are sponsoring "Facul8
:t ~=.r in larael,"
· April

pam or lecture-discuaaiona and

Rath'P o1 Quality In 1
· ·• ..._ ..~
,,..
Ratlnc ran11 8oOII . . . Berkeley _ .... 1052
35
:~::
~
~

In u. s Ph D Granti

look marched out the window
the campus barbershop bas ~
come one of the few places not
the population uplo-

. Take U / 8'8 barhezsbopbasement or Norton Hall. Has
the JoD,.baired tren'd in men!s
fashion affected its business?
.n "Only 90, or 95 per cent,"
answers Robert Rollek. campus
barber Rollek used to be one
of six Norton· barbers, but
be
88

bon in the ''pec:t;:ing order"
are Pittlobunlb. Kamas, Uni...,.sity ol CaJllOrDla at San Dieao
and Soutt..n Calirornia-not
bad C&lt;JIIIPIIIY. Hopefully the
next time this ~~U~WY · is - t ed in 1974, SUNY at Bulfalo
will be even bisher on the ladder or quaility.
The oompoa!t.e rating method
described above is• meed entirely on the part of th A.C.E.
survey OIIIIQI!rlled with "quality
or graduate faculty."

Composite

SUNY r\..CC..
v uers
Israeli Tn•p

:1_eel

achool4. Our imllallate nelch-

discipJu- in the top-ranked
JisiB - EDIIiob. pharmacology
aDd pbyaiology. English WBB
tied lor 19th, 20th and 21st
pla01!6 with N.Y.U. and Northwestern; pharmaoology was tied
for 20th aDd 21st places with
Florida, and physiology was
tied for 7th to 11tli plaoos with
UCLA, M~T., Pennsylvania
and Yale. In addition, SUNY
at Boftalo had 10 disciplines
in the Good category and 11
disciplines in the Adequate
category.

or fields of study. The 1969 ~
survey included 130 institutions 22
and 36 disciplines. In the 1964 23
survey, SUNY at Buffalo 'J'e-. ~:
ceived ratings of adequate or 26
better in only four disciplines 27
whereas in the 1969 survey, it "' 28,
r~ived ratings of adequate or ~

(e~, ~,!;,.: ~li~::;

Ja~

:=~n::~~

at Bulfalo bad tluee
- SUNY
c:omp.n,'

lis"), "is the campus barber.
The last time any undergrad
10t hia hair cut was during 1be
tragic dandruff epidemic of
1963. Since .t hen campus bar·
bers have bad nothing to do ex·
cept sit around the shop and
wait for the new Playboy.''

the bottle were written in
aneae."

The table """""' that. 81CXX11dthis ~SUNY at

ina to

rating
~:.~o~ . . . . . · · ·- . .
ru
.
~=:!~Er~ i~ ~~::::::~;.:::::::_:.:: ffi E !
~!~eQ:\f:-U:'1fra~ 10; ~:=o . :..
···::695
~~ : !
ate Education," issued by
28
4

J une
The
Narron's furber Is Lonely
earlier report was based an 8
cam~~~"J: =~~~~j,:~i: =-~~!~~~~

=

8lld 5 points lor each Adequate
rating.

visits and Cultural ..,;:~tr;Y
••so
_VI
• 18
..,..ln'~indi
· . -duala
·
•
a
- - t o....._. VI
may
1
~
: ~-""- Y. Alex-

tiona!'~&lt;&gt;f;Jf'l.en!&amp;~-

Co"- "'----- _,..
ver&amp;1
New Ya.

1a8il~

'7""ta,

thoae receiving eoort!8 of 2.5 to
2 9 aDd institu ·
•
tiona rated Adequate were those receiving

N.a.: TheM

plners end

6oMn cherts

:::r!~kll.: ':!~.!r;:tt~":: (
found In the •bow cMrt of the top

75.

T Ia Schoof for Soc. Res. ......._-10~
su ne .... ···-·--.. - .....

·-··-·-·-·--10
U:: ~to~4. J:ut:!t.;!
were J_K&gt;t
ranked_
. numerically eo !':': ~":::C,:..""'Fbers-4%. 8~. 15%, c.'.:::.·;;;·;;~··;;;;;·~ !ur -~~tu.
&amp;IV.."; :~~ :~
~
.

,.__

;::'ts'(;. each

"G:f':'~

Mdl school is

-

3

-

Institutions .,. tied for 95th end 36th

�~

7

-Fraudulent Independence Draws Fire
11&gt;e "outright overthrow of
ruling c:laaaes" in aome 30
tropical African natioua is seen
as tbe key to b:ue indeJ)elldence
on that continent by l'eter K.
Palana:Yo, a IIII!IIIber of tbe U/B
BladeStudies faculty.
In a n!CI!Dt addteos at Sl
John Fisher Coi.Jere in ~

the

By

anyone who was
80 inlenlaled in other people
__.. ba ~--•t ~his
· · · ~
.,._.. ...,...,....
famEnilyth.U818811l' __, __.from Bar.
.bara Sima, director of tbe !)f-

flee oi £q":al Opportunity,
~ ~ 8lllistant {for Span-

~~.J:l 'at.":/:

was ~ surprise luncbeon Moo~ m .bonor of tbe fact tbat
Olivencl.&amp; has. been ~ a
Buffalo E""~ Ne~Dt~ 'Out-

standing Citizen for 1970.
Pucho (poo' zbo), as be is

• &lt;

a!fectionately called, is a voy
ruce man, who seems to truly
love everyone be meets. In
oonsequeme, ba truly makes
their l i - more livable. With
good reasoo, be has been called

~

"father" ~the Puerto
RlCIIll commumty here.
It is fortunate that Pudlo's
first dreams didn't come true.
From 1940 to 1945, ba served as
an enlisted ....., in tbe U. S.
~ Forces, and after a year
at oolleae studying agriculture,
be was planning a ~ for
bimaelf. But tbe illneso and
death of bis mother, and tbe
fact that bis first dilld was on
tbe _way. de!!leted bis ~
making a I:Jusu- wnture

=-

probable.

Instesd, be came to Bu1falo
in 1961 with 42 farm laborers,
whom ba placed wi~ E. P.
Gardeners and Scma m North
Collins. His CXIIIljlatriot8 haYe
done well, it - · "Some of
lhem haw two and tlueehouaes
cl their own DOW1 ~ thay
nmt out," aaya. OliWIIlCIIL ~
haps tbe _.....,., of belpmg
tbem with jabo, with ~
. - t problems, etc., Bot bim.
in-...1 in community 1lll&lt;ll'k
as a - · but one ~ it
has alway~~ been a way of life
with bim.
'
The Montor tile Job

Before IXIIIlinl to tbe Uni-mty, . ouYellcia pzeaented the
first Pu.to Rican edu&lt;:atiooal
'IV JIIOPlUD 00 Cbannal 4, and
worked CID tbe Concentrated
Employment Propam oi the
Community Action Organimtion at Main Stteet and Midl-

~

_,_ to oar Office oi
Equal Oppwtunity with "Y8ry
bilh ............ to bis inlelrity

place" (esalble
under
$2,000. Men from tbe oommunity came
~
on Sa!urdays to contnbute ~
labor, as they DOW come With
their families for tbe best
parties this side of San Juan.
"Pucho practically built (tbe
Centro) with bis own bands,"
asya Mrs. Sima and bis wife
says sbe. even ~Y aug~ .,.!.,~b:;3U..::,.
most late to bis eldest son's
wedding

!f.

"-rlpa1811C

MlnstNI

GREPO TS

ina! Human Seruni," 16th Interim
S c i e n t i f i c Session. American
Rheumatism A.uoci.ation, Washington. D.C.

ing.

.

..

..,._.tor

--.t

h
~-=...,.~after~
-'ous leg injury in Vietnam,

Mra. Sima.

"''in':;iawa-with ~

-s

w-

GJ&gt;EOPLE
OFF CAMPUS
INTMENTS
APPO

counaelling for druc addicla.

cbainnan, microbiology, appointed a member
of the Advisory Committee on
Reaea.rch on the Etiology, Diagnoaia, Natural Hittory, Prevention and Therapy of Multiple
Seleroaia, Multiple Sclorooia So·
ciety.
DIL I"':UX MILGROK,

Chicago.

assistant professor, psychology, talk at a departmental colloquium, Department of Psychology, Univenity
of Utab, Salt Lake City.

DR. CHIZUKO IUWA,

Wlllft,

Ontbe~-Pa­

lan~o sees tbe ereatioD cl a·
::;;ci.,ty within • aoc:ii1Qr wbil:b
exists on ita own .....,.... • a
viable solution -to tbe problema
of tbe black llllllL

Both intepation and - tion are "baDkrupt idell8." ba
said.
.
Palangyo said intepatian Ia
something that whites haw to
initiate. "We want IIIOV8Dellta
we can conti'OI, not . -;to,"
ba said. .()n aeparatist - .
Palan!Q'o said tbeae are "hanltrupt 1deas beca..- tbe blado:
man's strength here DOW is-that
he is all over . .. so penuasive."
Palangyo alao ~· tbe
"back to Afiica" movement &amp;&amp;
"not a functional solution because there's too mudl black
blood bere already to giYe up
that easily."
'
'

Y eorboo~

ticlu.

of PI'OClU'eliiDil Ar-

OIL DWIN H. IOBNBON profe110r,

anthropology, " Land Tu and Ita
Impact on U• and Ownenhip in
Rural Japan," in Econ.omi.c Dev•lopnumt cuul Cultural CllanB&lt;.
Voll9.
DIL KEITH P. OT'!DII&amp;IN,

auociate

fu7!e::J'
w:rorh~;. TC~~
Study, Human Relationa ArM
Filea Preao.
DR. DOUGLAS 8. RIGGS, profeaor,
pharmacolo~. and DR. ALAN avNA&amp;D, asaoaate ~euJOr, pbar.

:SJ:o~~!iOCY ~C:O~t!i
Stu-

a tion," American Society of Med·
i c a 1 Technologists. Groui.ngera.
New York.

~t:;a:!i:~o~~t.J:li:

research aa-

Helmuth (eel.) DUod1XUJ148&lt;d
C h i l d. Bruner-Maze!; with a.

DR. PEA.B.4 Y L. OCBA.,

siatant professor, pediatrics, and

research

DR. I . KENNETH HERD.

assiatant profe u or, pediatrics,

"Arthritia Aooociated with In·
duced Rubella Infection.'' 16th
Interim Scientific Session, Americ a n Rheumatism Auociation,
Washington. D.C.
KATIDYN

A.

BAWNI:a,

instructor

and director, clinical education.

:i.~=~·~=:.:y~~!~O:;
auistant
dean, School of Health Related
DL VANDON &amp;.

our atruu1ea are tbe 8Dd
there's a-fot we can ~eun• fraiD
each other.

=."m~aa!\~,t;:.t w
1£':!I-:: ~=.~~u!:"zn!~

principal instructor in a five-day

OliVliDCia acta as a social Pn&gt;fMOiona, aolected chairman·
of the Council on Baoca·
worker, too, among otber things. elect
laweate and H i g h o r Degree
11&gt;ere is tbe story of a sick man Proctama of the Aooociation of
who called bim for asaistance. SchOola of Allied Health Profeo·
OliYellcia rallied women to aiona. 'l1:aia polition aho place~
cook for him, and teenaaers to Dr. Wbite on tho board of direc·
look after him, and tbe Welfare tore of the Auociati.on. He ia alao
Department to pve bim a case- ~rma:r ~~ram Comworker. 8w:b activities are
just a routine part of bis clay.
PRESENTATIONS
•..... of tile
In ~
n.e pat year or 80 has been
significant for tbe 63-year-&lt;lld
of good will for more
""""""' than tbe Buffalo E...,,._
i1lf Ne~Dt~ cites. His eldest aon,
Pucbito, manied a lovely llirt
from Ecuador, whom bis moth.,. is gJowiDgJy proud of, and
is .....,.,..{ully
of bis
union's local at Bu1falo China
Co. ~ in the mUiillA. has
been drawmg stzalshlAia in
social 8cience at U/B ~ plans

y-

WGLEY~ coordinator,
b e a 1 t h sciences education and
evaluation, "Accountability 1970
-Evaluation: A Must.'' " Interinstitutional Cooperation-A New
Look for the 70'a." 3rd Annual
Meeting, Aooociation of Sc-boola
of Allied H e a 1 t h Profeuiona,

PHYLJ, JS

..W.:.tzeL

is due home this IDOilth.
Pudlo and bis wife celebn.ted 25 )'1111111 toptber last
on a list auhmitted by: summer. On their ~
~tbellbo! feJt ba tbe trip, bis home - . . cl Honni- tbe jab.
...... made tbe occuion ......
He . . _ . bla IMderabip gayer by Dalllina bim "Man of
fouDder cl the Puerto Rbn- the Year," to the tuDe clan ~
Am.k:u Community Aax:ia- dcMW feolival with all tbe
tiaa, to wbieb bla lll08t .laDiible food and llllllic Puerto IUco
CCJDtrlbutiall Ia prahably tbe .... after.
.A.ociation'a Ceabo 8oclal at
It's been a .,ad life for
281 Swan 8ln!eL His aollcila-' AucuatiD Oliv..da. May ba
--tiam for ~ _ . ba ~ tbe ..m 100 yeus
and loaaJ
for the ~ be . . . for, to fiDd oi tbe
lltNcdan made the "'llauttful Jooe.wadt that be doel .. well.

and •
AfW

ON

on~ W:est S~ ~renading :!'.'!.1~f,,";~:,t~Yn :i: r;~

atlnlcting a retinue of followera oo the way. 11&gt;e tradition
has become 80 mucb il part of
Christmas Eve, that people
phone in · advance, inviting tbe
group not to miss tkir house,
beca..- tbey have prepared "a
very nice feasl" A group of up
to 00 daKlends upon tbe last
bouse on .the route, wherever
that may be, and spends all
nisht singing and dancing until
it is time for Mass in tbe mom-

'"'lle -u.d interest of the
ruling class runs very deep,"
be said. "11&gt;ere is no alternative """"''t outrisht overthrow
of the ruling classes."

~~=~=~~ln~
yo ljaid.

Wbile dedicated to tbe Puer- -. ..- .-lll.U.:.;,_;c..o:._c_lllLCO'
_ _l"l'_
B' -:
cl:-;.7;,.,
--:1p
-,.,.
to Rican's intagration into tbe feuor, biocbemiatry, new director
life of Buftalo, Olivencia joy- of Erie County Laboratones.
oualy preserves tbe best of bis DR. SOSEPH K&amp;ASNI:II, biocbemical
natiYe culture. At Christmas, . p!&gt;armacol~gi&gt;~ Children'• Has·
for example be acta 88 a peri- p1tal, appcnnted IX&gt; a aeven·mem·
patetic
He and bis !&gt;er Nan:o~ Guidance Council
friends go from ho..- 1o bouse m the. Town of Tonawanda and
families Wlth their g:wtara, and

running them.

Palangyo, in a bistorical portrait leading to !be current African political situatiOll, lnlced
tbe roots of to d a y'a African
problems to the 1882 Berlin
Conference wbe.e the European
powers agreed on the rolonial
distribution of Africa. Palangyo
described it "as a gathering of
European gentlemen sipping
sherry and poring over lines on •
a map . .. not ronaidering wbere
people lived. n.e only person
not tbere, of rourae, was the
African."
He said there now is a ..tremendous misunderstanding" between blacks in A f r i c a and
America. But, be said, ''I tbink

ter,.. Pa.langyo, a native of Tanzania and author of DyintJ in
1M San, said that independ.
eooe is "tbe greatest frllud ever
perpelnlted" in Africa.
He ·said only four of tbe 41
tropical African states have ~
independence. In tbe others, be
said, tbe break from rolonial
status of tbe 1940's meant "ba·
sically you got people in bigb
places who were black replae&amp;menta of those who were there
before" without a ch&amp;nge in
governing structure.
"11&gt;e liberation of the African

. He's Eyerybodys Choire
.nJDrrH ~OHL
for well
" I - met
after apd

He said that DOW ten per OBDt
of tbe countrie&amp;' populations are

t::~n Q!..Co~~~.~

:

..

r:~eorn:: sg~::,y~

School..

.
·
lR. , aui.atant.
profeuor, anesthesiology, and DL
BOBIZT J . M:c JS.UC, actina chair-

DR..

ROBERT

WEIS,

=~~.,~~~
Venom from Coral Snake. Mi-

cruru• FulvUu,'' Tox:U:on.

011. JONATHON D. WEUa, &amp;Miltant

profeuor, computer sciences. :"In·

proaches to Treatment of Hemiplegia as Advocated by Bnmn·
atrom," New York State Rehabilitation Hotpi.tal, West Haverstraw,
New York.

formation Networks in Generative ·
Computer · Auiated lnatruction."

cbairman, modi·
c in a 1 chemistry, .. Progesterone
Analop," Medical Foundation of
Butralo.

GRANTS

llR. ALAN S . SOLO,

OIL ZIUOU) C. WIN'na,

'ft:C~!!s;."::s.tUJu

on

aaiJtant

profeuor, pharmacology,.spoke on

~'::lfat~~-c!'.::!':;

and to dormitory advisors at

SUNY/ Geneseo on druga and
their abuse.

PUBLICATIONS
DL DNIT BEUT'NIIl,

profe.or, mi-

A.u.ta.eruitizotion in
P&lt;mpilf.. cuul B..UOU. P&lt;mphiI/Oid, c.c. Tbomaa.

crobiolOC)',

d.istinguiabed profeuor, peycbology,
"Warda, Thinp. and lmqea.''
A,..rioon Poych.U..ut.
Ia. KOBD'I' K. DCNTAN, auoci.ate
profeuor, American Stud i e a,
"Some Senoi Semai PI anti n g
Techniques," in Economic BotIa. B. &amp;lCIWtD BUGa.BJa,

':::.:Jt::&amp;1u!:.t~ Bol4ny
Ia. K. IIIAilAJi(tJJ(tU laU,

auoci-

ate prof-r, atatiati&lt;a, "A Selec·
tion P"""-" Annolo of Math•·
lfUJtical SUJ.tittlc..

DL IAIOB CAB:AGAN,

reeeardl u-

aoc:iate, PIYcbolocY, with

UNO·

and ~.
"Dowlopmootal " - of - to Poaitiwl laclaoom..to.''
n.u./o,_,.llll P.,~.
II&amp;. U.J'IIOMD o. IIUIIT, p~r•
poyc:bcJioc,, with P.
L.
aum&lt;,"l!'ecSem!.......,_t: A
BltOUt, CULL8N

,_...and

~y~:-~":"~

Gtuup ol au.;- Orpniatioao,.

RECOGNITIONS

MaA-

�/~

~

8

14, IP71

.GraduateFellowshipF\mdingCut 50% _&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQuE
As Federal Monies Begin to Decrease
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

,.__s..n

On the Mels of the -tlyreleaaed report of the American
Council on Education showing

that U/B's graduate propams
have improved si~tly,
come repol18 that the fin8ncial

situation lor the G r a d u a t e
School is grave a n d aetting

wonoe.
This year's graduate student
funding is estimated to be down
at least baU a million dollars.
And nen fall, Graduate Dean
Daniel Murray expects another
baU million dollar drop.
The major reason is a decline
in State and federal higher education~

port. The amount for 1971-72 to Increase the amount of fund.
,. estimated at $3 mi1lloD.
ing per graduate student while
Unfortunataly, hope lor im- changing the natme of the rouprovement in the situation isn't tine service obligation. Known
clearly in sight.
as the P - Formula, the proThe -..y&lt;o - -...uc
· posal is based on the current
Dr. Theodore Hullar, aseoci- practice of uaing the aalary
ate dean of the Graduate allocated lor a fai:ulty position
School, suggests part ol the to provide support for up to
"problem lies in the belief ol andfour greA~sua
. te students as GA's
many that "large amounts of
TA
money have been available arul.
The Porter Formula is based
will rather automatically con-• on three sources of money. tinue to be available." He ex- some GA and TA support curplains, "the Con~ and the rently co m.i n g !rom faculty

~ sti~er"lfea'ith ~mH'f !',j
~!i~~(~'t\'~sf::~
abandoned their greduate fund-

~n!'Jrorc'i'!.!: 8ad:~~""Ja~:~

CNSF) and National Defense

Educa~ve1:.,&lt;~f:.,~ ~

~I

NASA was a double

=~
u::::ar~~-::
port in addition to funding stu-

=ts~w~si::.\T!.:!;

increasing its number ol lellowahips.
This fall, theee cutbacks resulted in a 1088 of 88 fellowalJecting not only new
studenlll but also those with
advanced standing. The Graduate School requested aid from
t h e University's Institutional
Funda Committee, which normally gives laculty and students small amounts ol money
to start research. The group
gave the Graduate School almost their entire budaet $286,000--to support the studentll. But the understanding
was that the Committee would
be tmable to provide such relief in the future.
The fall ol 1971 is expected
to bring further cutbacks in
both the.NDEA and NSF pi"O'
grams. The NDEA program is
expected to be cut almost 40

ships,

~~~~~~~ti~ ~t~ ~.,!.. ~b:X:

technicians, etc.; and ·a new

to be far more energetic in
convincing others of the absolute necessity to increase the
amount of funds rather than
let "them slide."
W hi I e one eection of the
University community is having
difficulty believing the tightness
of funds, legislators are looking
with jaundiood eyes at the necessity of constantly increasing
higher education funding. As
Or. Hullar says, "there is no
statement which says the government, either State or federal, 11UJ8I bear the responsibility lor providing support
monies to students for going to
school."In the post-Sputnik
yesrs, a desire to fund higher
education flooded the country,
but now, this tide is receding.

would be combined in approximately equal amounts to provide I u n din g lor "graduate
trainees,'' a new greduate student category.
Under this plan, the " greduate trainee" would receive a
stipend ol about $3,000 for 10
months. Any obligations ol the
trainee would be part of his
education and academic program. Tbio might involve teachmgun·d·era cotheuraegw"danceor
doinog aresearchfaculty

M:t.~~ ."'ih:.~~~s~ ~J:nfl.:'~~ ~rrx:

-

HYCIJCNlBTS, 146 Capen, 9 a.m.-5
p.m.

Permanent eshibit of works by
Robert Graves and Jameo Joyce.
Poetry Room. '1JYI Lockwood Li-

HOSPITAL HANAGJ8UL AND IJUPD..
VI80RY DCULOJ"JONT mlDHOQ

TOO'S OP ~ DICJCDft: i1lua·

brary, 9 a.m.-.5 p.m.

DUCI:D! 62 receivinglocatione, 1: 80
p.m.
PIIYBlOLOGY UIC'l"UD•: Dr. George

lerieo, Lockwood Memorial Li-

a':,d ~::'!f ~=- ~7':, ::!:!it &lt;~&gt; ":~

.uaaf.U. OO&amp;'I'SX Am:NOBTPOPBYlDB
AND COilPU8 LlJTlru)[, 8152, Bell

associate

dean ol the Graduate School,
is currently working on a long-

=-~n y:r~::aW;:';;

~"'=to':;.
tr~ra::=
=:u~"'fol.':'l~~~: and
oecond- and thinl-lloor galCOURSE AB8ENTEEISll CAN BE JIE.
brary, tliroush January.

IIZa4 POUND

851'11

IIDI'I'HD&amp;.Y B.·

f:'de~ts1fo~~ ~~ku~!&gt; d".:~ ~ ~W!te~~~~==: =·~~~~COD~.;.,~:
effeclll of varying amounts ol duction in ou tside funding. BTUDmS ON IBOLADD cm.uJ
1'80)(

:

':,

graduate studentll supported or
the total amount o( student
monies !rom this IIOUICe, beca.- ol oanstant chanaes in
research grants.
However; Dr. Murray eatimates that jn the past approXimately $4 m i II i o n from all
80Unle8 baa been available each
;...... for graduaiP '"ludent sup-

co.,_: Dr. Euc- Kaaper,
Bullalo dentist, oonca JUKA~a­

KJ:NT FOil I&amp;N'T.U. A88J8l'AlfT8 AND

is being requested, with U/B's
share coming to about $600,-

fun~g~~:'U':::t

oMg

~~~~~,::r:...~

OON'T'lNUING D J: N T A L JDUClftOlf

trateo hia life and- timM with

=a5'to~1~:.~

IIOil1'Cb P.'!'!ts. No euct f!lures

-.,...., rauca. 218 Capim. Hall,
3:30 p.m.

THURSDAY-14

..,..,..., Sponoored by Regional

':Js'#;

..,. are available on the number of

I

member. Whatever the activity,
however, it must have the
"maximum education value" to
the student, Dr. Hullar says.
Thisplan, whichwouldbopefully aid some of the Graduate
School's funding difficulties, is
also running into trouble. The
Seeldna Evidence
formula was first presented to
This change has caused ad- Albany in ;January 1970 for
ministrators to seek evidence discuasion in the budget-making
proving that graduate student process. An initial allocation of

ing the doctorate. He is now
in the fifth year of this sevenyear study and some results
are in.
·
ly ~:,:;e;?:m.hftJ-!":.:,~:
ing assietant provided relatively inexpensive instruction; bow~ ~PK.~gw~'::
ever, the study demonsb"ated
that this assumption does not
take into account all of the
'costs' associated with this form
~fn
l~e/~ ~~U: of
student subsidy. The study
that the higher the num;~~tce~~~':'"!~fe~• found
ber
ol years of TA assignment,
lowahip program.
the longer it takes to achieve
Total lludcet
tbe doctorate. Similarly, the
What does this deficit mean
in terms of total budget? The lower the number of years of
~~~
picture is clouded because ol :'~t~ciafo ~%i:,~
the different types ol funding !orate. In other words, a relative
for greduate students. There I a c k of alternative greduate
are two major types.-fellow- student support coupled with
the effect of substantial TA asshiCu~,:Uu!"'"on as- signments results in a very
'ine.flicient' operation. s 0 me
students take much longer to
obligation~!"to be·fulfilled, such complete the doctorate, while
as teaching or doing research others in the program have a
for the department in return higb rate ol attrition: No atlor a stipend. People on this tempt has been made to analyze
type of grant are usually given the educational effect of a prothe t i t I e graduate assistent tracted program of study, much
(GA) . or teaching assistant lees the financial and personal ·
(TA) .
cost, but it can be reasonably
The second type of funding assumed that they are real and
is the fellowship--a "no strings significant. Clearly the extendattached" vehicle.
ed program reduces the number
Over $2.5 m-illion of the ol potentially productive years
money for GA's and TA1s and, unfortunately, cuts into
those :oery years which usually
:::::,.~ s~ federal are
the most Productive."

=r"·, ":..":~·~:

=::

leged position it had five years

istration;'' Holt says. "It does,
however, begin to look as
though the concept will be generally apr,roved, while the
~ or funding are very

NOO'ICES

Facility, 3:30 p.m.

W1Ql:81UNG":

TID OPPI.CK OP FiNANCIAL AID

Oaweco State,

Gym, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

~16 Harriman Library. Complei;d

FRIDAY-15

tff!c;;!:r:o
'i:te*:
and financial

CONTlNlJlNO DB N !'A L JriJUCAftON

p.-

cou.a# : Dr. Robert Genco

Februaey 1,•

.t=

is the concept of "througb-put."

19'7!.

='l:'te':!.':f :Utu~n:::

=.'i"t!:r.
-:::.: ~~
Januory 26, at ·a:oo p.m. in Diet-

WEDNESDAY-20

endori Annex-Room 1. Mr. Don
Mau, director of lhe EPIS Tu-

. . . . , . CLASa" : Jean-Pierre Ram-

pal, ftuti'at, in an informal master

Dr. Hollar explains the process claaa, lectwe-demoDlllntion "'be
asceedseeaintgthethafast .:~tul.radentelllwP!O-ch
~
hi
is consistent with the educa!tiZdonH!k~.ti~
tional and developmental goals and at lhe door.
of the department and of each
. Jean-Pierre Rampal, considerstudent. And further that the eel
to
be
one
of lhe world'o tineat
degree be completed when the ftutiota, returns to lhe U.S. tiUo
optimal education experienoe is
gained. · · · The result ol this :"!~~oR!/:'::,~~
acceleration is that students aoloiat with on:bestra and with
will likely be supported for a his by-board partner Veyron
aborter . period of time, thus
each will ~ lees stipend !::~~r-~
in three concerti with the
money, makiilg more money and
Juilliard String Quartet in A1ico
available lor more students."
Tully Hall One of tM golden
Solutions that involve more ftutel be UMI8 comes from tbe
drastic chan,es are also being fWamousillism. AmeS.Hari~flofuteD~ton.a
lr: e r,
considered, such as changing
,_
~
graduate lundinJ !rom a grant
He ia one of the u:w:.t recorded
instntmeDtal.iata
of
the
qe.
sa
to a loan or givmg support for
only a portion ol the time of of hia recorda have '-n awatded
Grand Prilt du DiaQue and
graduate study. The· federal lhe
Fonnula
government is considering fund. have WOil him a tnmendOao folThis study resulted in the ing only the top 75-100 acbools, lowinc.
formulation of a proposal by leaving the rest to fend for I"'::BBD(.U( B.Ailt&amp;TBALL• : Erie
CommUDity, Clark Gym, 6:30
p.m.
the alternative,
Gra!fuate School leaders agree VA &amp; 8 ITT B.U~KmBALL• : Abon,
that a solution to the financial Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m. ·
HEl.PI
probleme must be found 80011.
' .. -ToQotltTHURSDAY-21
TRANSCRIPTS OF MY RECORD TO ''Unlam alternative 80Unle8 of
ANOTHER COLLEGE OR EM· money can be found quldd,y," PATBOWQT ,.,..,... : Dr. Gebriai
Associate Dean Holt lliiY8 "the
Pl.OYER
0
Admloslons ond bcordo Ofllco, Graduate School may . find it- &amp;,u&lt;;;!"'!f ~ ~:
soli in a more aeute financial pons, Columbia Uniwnity, cno1 Hoyeo B. Ext. 4824
- t h a n the- of U/B." 'I'OXJmT OP AC"'''NO.JrYQNI' AJfD

=:= *f.

atalemenlo to
1971
be
by lhe Collep Scholanbip Service are to be forwarded· to CSS no later than

Other SoluUons
. and atalf, DIAGNOSIB AND "l'BAT·
Other solutions to the finan. MENT OP Aet.rm LIBlONB OP 'I'JU
cial decline are being looked at ~~T'~.m.TIBSUE, 146 Capen,
by the Graduate School ExeculN1aNATlONAL FOLK DANCING: ln·
tive Committee.
One thing they're looking at
is a resolution asking faculty ~~.inso ~.,:'~
t:r ';!!ud':!temsstuxidmenumts osun pporttr
.
8 p.m.
•·the

~rkJ! l:l:'~

is

:~:':J&gt;!"Jo~ntteci~:n~~
~ ;:-u.-e ~-k~

Clark

='-!.abO..:~~

~~~ri~~~.:r~ . r..==~':"~ .

!!J:.ble

~-

contact Mr._Mau at lll
~•Ext.• 6868.

-

IITlJilDITll lN II&gt;UC&amp;TlO&gt;I

who

may

be in-ted in lhe Will-.uJe
TeacbinJ Con tor. 'The Callier

~tb:....~ '!\!'!. ~

0:

. . _ and oociaJ oludia~
Callier Coano in TED 410 and

t;!t";".,:::.:.::..."":;,!';t

ematica.
ahoald

Inte..a.tecl •tuaenta
contsct
Mr. Barloo, 819

Footer, 881-4NS.

•
•
•
moa intereet.d in ~- lhe

Muoic Departmont'o

'

to receive newt of eveDta
3408 or write to:

liot

881·

Muaic Deoartmont, 108 Baird
York 14214. AB, Bulfa1o, -N-

Hall, SUNY

==

WEEKLY coto!MUIIIQUE

~~ ~~er

ccrt DEADUIE
To i&gt;ubllclza .-to, contact Suz·
lhlzaer. u~ Publlcationo S.'""'-. 250 wr...P.r -..
ext. 222jl, Copy will be duo ~
Monday for an d - on
Thuroday
nenta of

anne

·

_.nd ..,.......

Friday

thi"OI.IIIh Thurodly.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFF LO

24 Grad Faculties
Cited in ACE Study

MossActing
As Dean and
Review Head
Dr. J8111M A. M- ' - ' - '
named IICtinJ dean of International Studies and Dr. AJ.
bert L Mid!Mis, aetinc I!Dell·
live olllcer, President Robert L
Ketter 8llllllllnCed this ......_
Dr. Fred G. Burke recently
8llllllllnCed his realcnation froai
the deanabip to become Rhode
Island Commissioner of Edu·
cation.
Dr. M- will aerw as adnt
dean only durinc the oontinJ
semester, at his request. He will
chair a Task Force on International Studies which will recommend both the futwe directions of International Studies at the University and the
~ of achieving those directions,
In charging the Task Force,
to be com~ of representatives of the University faculty,
staff and students as well as
the surrounding community,
Dr. Ketter asked the group to
undertake a broad review of
the entire program. Dr. Mary
Stephano will serve as executive secretary for the Task
Force. Other members of the
· special group will be announced
at a later date..
In its deb'berations, Dr. Ketter asked the Task Force to
bear four points in mind:
• "What should be the major objectives and diteetions of
the intemational studies program at this University?
• "What chances. if any, in
p - t - and objec-tives -.n desirable?
• "What orgll_nizational
structure would be moot conduci.e to the achievement of
the objecti.es identified . . . ?
• ". . . What would appear
to be the moot desirable way of
relating our international studies procram, both suliotantively and organizationally, to
the Statewide (State University of New York) dort in this
field?"
Dr. Ketter ' - asked the
Task FOI&lt;le to submit its final
report to him no Jatar than
April l. Becau. of tbe orpniza~ ~ which tbe

=·=

:"'.fe!!r~o!"_ . _ t

made ~~ a

rep.__,t for Dr. Burke.

Dr. M-. the new actinc
dean, came to U/B in 1967 aa

cbalmwl ol -the University's
C...tar for ~ in International n........_t, ~
ol ~~International
Studieo and proloBw ol ..,;oj.
(~

• ,_..,,col.

I)

JANUARY 7, 1971

VOL 2-NO. 15

U/ B's English, physiology
and pharmacoloi!)L graduate
faculties are among the best
iD the nation, a new study of
graduate schools issued by the
American Council on Educelion (ACE ) reveals.
·
'The three are rated in the
highest cstegory in the survey.
. In addition, the University is
rated "better than adequate" in
every discipline in which it was
eligible to receive a rating in
tbe study- 24 fields in aU.
U/ B was among 130 colleges
and universities studied by the
ACE in its report, "A Rating of
Graduate Programs," issued
Sunday in Washington.
The new report, which updates a study done on graduate
schools in 1964, shows that
U/ B made great strides in the
five-year period. For example,
only four 4isciplines were rated
as having a graduate faculty of
"adequate" or better in the
1964 report. Then, physiology
was rated 20th in the nation,
pharmacology was rated "good"
and hscteriology and psychology were rated ~'adequate."
'The 24 disciplines rated this
time represent a net gain of 20.
Pby~iology at U / B ranks 7th
in. tbe naUoDJn the new report,
up from 17th in 1964 and
ahead of such institutions as
Berkeley, Michipn. Comell,
Columbia Wid Princeton.
English- rated "less then
adequate" in 1964-ranks 17th
in tbe nation in the newly-released report, above Duke,
Penn State and Ohio State.
Gre.oteotlmp-lnNatlon
U/ B's E':'Jilish program was
the only discipline at any
school in the nation to make
such a quantum jump in the
five-year period.
In pharmacology, U/ B
ranked 20th in the nation in
the new study, again higher
than its ranking in the earlier

By STEVE UPMAN
the conviction that reasonable
- "Liberty IIIUeJU)ated by Jaw men can together regulate their
degenerates into aparchy, alfairs through the exercise of
which soon becomes the ID06t reason rather than power. We
have become increasingly
horrid of all despotisms."
These worda of Millard Fill- aware that if the principle of
more, the nation's thirteenth academic freedom is to survive,
president and the University's then -~ University must insist
first chancellor, were the crux that 1t JS no place for those perof a~ President Robert L
sons who are not committed to
Ketter deliV&lt;Ved this moroing the principle and who do not
at the fonner chief executive's . accept the responsibilities
graveaite in Forest lawn ceme- which that principle . . . im~is :d~=:~s~
tery. Today is Fillmore's 170th plies.
birthday.
(ContinU&lt;d on pt110 6. cot 3)
Ohio State.
Ketter told onlookers at the
commemorative ceremonies
that Fillmore's stalemellt "is
pertinent to our own eociety,
. . . (end) ia ~Y appli~~:._~tutiaaa of highwas designated special assistant
den~~ tl:"~ end
a member of the Council
"~."Ketter aplained,
woman
were
named
by
the
of
ProvOsts and Vice Presi"or, in the cue of the Univeradministration shortly dents.
sity, .........UC f.-lam, must Ketter
A 1954 graduate of Canisius
be protected frOm penllJils with- befure the holiday reoeea.
College, Dunn is a native of
in 'tbe Uiilveraity who would atLockport.
He has been asaocitempt to subowt tbe inotitution
ated with firms in the BulfaJo
into a mere political tool wieldand Los Angeles areas, included by tbe most clamorous of
ing Macy's of California and
various factlaos. For ..,...,..,...t
the J.C. Penney Company. Beby clamor rather than reaaon,
fore becominc a full-time gradand devoted to politics and
uate student in 1968, he was
power rather than the truth,
the Ubhedlty woald indeed
....__te into an anarchy intute. He received the MBA
~-~ rule from withfrom U/ B last May end has
in or repreMian from without."
been serving as assistant to the
Protei:tioll from the latter,
dean of Social Wellare.
Ketter CDltinued, "or in the
....orda of Fillmore, the 'reJU)aMrs. Sims was an assistant
district attorney for Erie County f r o m 1964 through 1968,
~ of that pel'80IIal re~ P~'!~w~ ~ri~
IJIX)II8iblli!T which any commft....,t implies. In tbe C8l8 of ...
~raduate of U/B Law
ciety, the commi-t is to regulatiall by Jaw rather than man.
Active in community ~
"'n the University, tbe eomMn.. Sima is a past president
mi~ is to IICbolullbip rather
of Women Lawyers of Weatem
then opinioa; to a tolerance ol .
N- York, a past member o1
m-.dty rather than an insi&amp;tbe board of directol8 of the
National CoofereDce of Chri&amp;... obared belief; and to

Of 13 disciplines in which
U/ B was rated in 1964, the
University fared better-actually improved its standingin 12. U / B was also ranked
among leading institutions in
11 d~~~ that were either
not s
·
in the 1964 report
or in which U/ B failed to qualify, not having granted PhD.'s
in those disciplines at tbe time
of the survey.
In the new study, the editors
decided to drop adjectives in
rating graduate faculty and
substituted a numericsl designation. Essentially there are
three cstegories: 3.0 to 5.0, 'COr·
responding to "Distinguished"
and "Strong" in the 1964 report; 2.5 to 2.9, corresponding
to "Good" in the '64 report;
and 2.0 to 2.4, corresponding to
" Adequate plus" in the 1964 report.
Eiplicit national rankings
were given only to those disciplines in the 3.0 to 5.0 cstegory.
In the other cstegories, they
were listed alphabeticslly without rank.
U / B had 10 graduate disciplines listed in the 2.5 to 2.9
or " good" range--dassics, Gerlt!""• pJ;illooophy, psychol!&gt;i)',
b~try 1 developments! biology, microbiology, molecular
biology, zoology and chemistry.
In addition, 11 fields were
ranked 2.0 to 2.4 or "adequate
plus" -linJujstica, anthropology, economics, history, ·sociology, mathematics, ph&gt;.'fdcs,
chemicsl ...,.u-r;ng, civil engineerinJ, electricsl .,u-r.
ing and mechanical enJineering.
-

In Every Dllc:lpllne

In another section of tbe report, where the respondents
were asked to estimate how the
school had changed in a !i.e
year period,
was seen as
better in every discipline surveyed by a majority of those
wbo felt !hey had sufficient in·

"''B

(Continued on

pt110

8, col. I)

Sims, DunnNcorled Presidential Aides
S:,ts;;:S u.:.

Past

tians and Jews and
president of Black Women UnJim.
ited. She - t l y is a member
of the bOard of directol8 of
Western New York Blue CrossBlue Shield.

siti~: !~"'o'Fthe~

Opportunis:I.ooand
lecI.

of F.qua)
turer in the Law

:.esli~l~

::; ::...=f~'::

J:

-

�~

2

3 Contracts
Awarded for
New Campus
Award of DODBtnlction contracts for three Amherst campus projects and a call for bids
on a fourth were announced by
the State University Construction Fund (SUCF) this week_
.,. 'The John w. Cowper Company, Inc., of Tonawanda received a $7,347,800 contract for
construction of the Law and
Jurisprudence ·building and related site work.
·
'Three subcontracts will be
carried out: Quackenbush Company, Inc., of Bulfalo will perform heating, ventilating and
air conditioning work; C and C
Plumbing and Heating Corporation of Cheektowaga will
do the plumbing, and Frey
Electrical Construction Company, Inc., of Bulfalo, will meet
the e~cal reqUirements.
'The Law and JurisprUdence
building will be the first in a
sub-campus group to be occupied alao by the faculties of
Social Sc:ieoce and Administration and Edua~tional Studies.
Arcbitecb; Hatty Weese and
Associates, and Anthony L
Carlino of Bulfalo are the designers of the building, which
will be the first major academic
structure on the new campus.
McKaig, Rupley, Bshler ·a re
the structural engineers and
Cosentini Associates, the mechanical and electrical engineers. Completion is scheduled
for February, 1973.
Util,_ -

PIUnp

Stimm Associates of Bulfalo ·
received a $862,000 contract for
site utilities and pilings for
buildinp for the academic core
of complezes (formerly colleges) A-F. This iircludee preconstruction work for a library;
instructional facilities which include claasrooms, faculty offices
and supporting facilities; study
cimels; lecture hall; drama
workshop; crafts center; an interaction laboratory, and administration facilities.
Water, storm and sewer line
work will be performed by
Freeway Contracting Company,
and electrical and communication duct work, by Industrial
Power and Lighting Corporation. Both are Bulfalo firms.

--

A $199,302 contract for continuation. of a sanitary sewer
along the "apine" of the campus was awarded to Herbert F.
Darling, Inc., of Williamsville.
Approlrimately 2,750 feet of 24inch sanitary sewer, together
With necessary manholes, will
be installed under the contracl
Execution of this work will
complete the sanitary sewer
line from the apine to the
sanitary service of the Town of
A,mherst. All work is to be completed oo or before September
1, 1971. 'The enlineera are Dublin-Mindeii-Bioome.
.__ Project

Bids are being accepted on
a contract estimated at $2,150,000 covering site work to be
performed as Phase U of the"
campus Jake project.
'The propcad excavation will
provide fill requirements for
future=·
"ties planned for the
11011
portion of the campus.
Among
are Arts and Letters and the cultural center
complex, portions of the future
loop road and future parking
area, and the Millersport and
future loop road interchange.
Sealed bids for the Jake site
work will be received at the
Albany ol6ces of SUCF· until
2:00 P.M., Febo'wuy 3.

, _ 1,1911

BritisherS Have MiXed Opinion of U/B ~Df!:':us
Many U/ B students "!"!"'
politically naive and anti-mtellectual and courses bere tend
to be "disappointing," with too
much "rapping'' and show-andtelling.
1bose were among assessments of life at U/B offered by
six British exchange students
wbo were on campus for the
first semester.
Members of the group had
more positive reactions also.
Some thougbt that American
students are more socially
aware and that campus life is
mpre active. All agreed they

valved in clubs

onii organiza- Britain with a greater

tions because their stay was so
brief.
--'tSo'Bod'
Most of the students are
going away from Bulfalo with

the view that campus radicals
aren't all the press makes thfm
out to be.
Said Mr. Warner, ''I was
very surprised at the naivete of
many so-&lt;:alled radical s\Udents.
'There are very r- sincere radicals-it's a romantic thing to
be considered a radical, l guess.
'They complain that America is
not a fair and just society, and

under-·
standing :of America's problems. Mr. Warner finds tbe
situation in the U.S. so crucial
to tbe world's welfare that "in
the next U.S. presidential election, the whole human race
should vote."
"I l!"t the impression that a
majonty of American students
have a distaste for the President," be added.
~

On Cutbacks

EKoplot l'hllooophy .

First, Doty repeated for University administrators, "No hiring of anyone will take place
from December 11, 1970, on,
without prior approval of tbe
State director of the budgeL"
According to Doty, the director
of the budget "has indicated
that he probably will approve
those hireS necessary 'to maintain essential services at minimum levels consistent with
existing law.' ..
Second, "All overtime must
be eliminated effective December 23, except for those urgent
cases where advance approval
has been obtained in writing
from the executive vice president by the vice president re-

While Miss Spieker detected
among U/ B's students an escapist philosophy ('"They either want to go to California or
get out of the country completely") , Mr. Warner saw the

~::.: =~ J! ~,.,;;:o::;

-

would profit from the Bullalo
experience.
'The six, from Didsbury College of Education, Manchester,
England, are: Karen Sinon&amp;,
19, of Rhyo, North Wales; Alison Jones, 20, of Chester; Susan Veness, 19, of London; Nicole Spieker, 20, of NewcastleUpon-Tyne; Jacqueline Beacon, 19, of Liverpool; and
James Warner, 23, of Blackburn, England ..
'They arrived in Bulfalo in
early September to participate
in the first exchange effort be-tween U/ B and their college.
All are second-year studenta,
working toward a three-year
certificate which will allow
them to teach in most British
schools. Here they studied American history and literature, as
well as sociology of education.
Electives included, for some, a
course called "Women in Contemporary Society" end one of
the women participants took
bowling.

·-

-

point to the Black Panther
leaders and the Kent State
murders. But they don't analyze situatiOns beforehand.
'They must expect reperc:wr
sions from authority, but seem
surprised when it occurs."
Mr. Warner alao has perceived that only the Black Panther Party can unite the radical left, but be's not so sure it
will happen because "I'm not
so sure the Black Panthers will
welcome the white radicala."
All of the visiting students
ssid they will be returning to

their . particular society'' than
their British counterparts.
Miss Beacon saw U/ B students as being anti-intellectual
to a degree, demanding relevance in their couraework and
"doing things that are more
profitable" outside of the classroom.

All the students returning to

eau=

!ri~meb..~~

States, though not all want to
return to Bulfalo. Most of the
students talked of traveling to
''mythical" California.
"We've all ~ from the
experience," aaid Miss Beacon.
"I think we'll realize the
change when we get back home
and look at our experienoe in
retrospect," added Miss Sinon&amp;.
Mr. Warner added that the
social awareness of U/B students has ru~ oil on him,
and will probably make him
"more Conscious of Britain's
problems" w1wt he returns.

Community Sepomlon

'The students enjoyed campus life, especiaJJy tbe idea of
having everything centrally located on campus. In Britain,
they note, most universities are
not so physiciuy-Bepara ted
from the community. But Miss
Jones thought the sepaiation

?.!,;:f;" d:: t!~'d::'u.::~~

for campus-community rela-

tions."-

Size-wise, U/ B dwarfs Didsbury which, with 1,500 students, is the sec;ond ~t college of education in Bntain.
Tbe Britishers adjusted easily, they thought, but they
found that class size varies
greatly between the two institutions. At Didsbury, class size
averages around 20, a rarity

bei-e.

'The students alao found differences in academic work. One
noted that while at Didsbury
she could ''bend it a little" and
put off writing a paper for a
course, "here the professors
want their papers in on time,
probably because they have so
many to read."
Mr. Warner ssid he was
"disappointed in his courses,"
but was "impressed by the
wi4e range of subjects" offered.
Miss Beacon found ber two
French courses ••a lOB&amp;;" there
was "too much rapping, too
much talking about one's own

~.a:.':tenta.

the group
found, ru- lees conservatively
than their British counterparts:
NEW AND REPLACEMENT 1.0. "More girla wear jeans."
CARD
•
'They found plenty to do on
Audio-VIsual Aids, BaMment of campus-COIICel'ts, lectures,
movies, panel di""!f!!!ims HowF - IUU
ever, they did not become in-

Four Department Chairmen
Sought by Arts &amp; Letters
Search conunittees for four
departmental chairmanships in
the Faculty of Arts and Letters
-German and Slavic, Spanish,
Italian and Portuguese, English and Music-have been announced by Acting Provost
Thomas E. Connolly.
Rene Girard, Faculty professor, is cha1rman of the German
and Slavic conunittee which
alao includes Professors Carl

Buffalo Savings
Aids MAP Group

Weitlanner, German and Slavic; Joerg Schaefer, German and
Slavic; Pierre Hart, German
and Slavic; Bodo Richter,
French; Wilma Newberry,
Spanish, Italian and Portuguese; Konrad von Moltke,
History, and Karel Hulic:ka,
History.
Jerome Mazzara of the Department of English is chairman of the co
"ttee 1 a-mnu 0 .or .,_.,.

:l:iJ~ ~ ~==

Leon Livingstone, Spanish,
ltalian and Portuguese; MarYin D'Lugo, Spanish, Italian
and Portuguese; GeQrge Kus. tas, Classics; Philipp Veit, German and Slavic; Abraham
'The Bulfalo Savings Bank Monk, Social Welfare, and
has given a one-year grant to Federico Gaeta, Mathematics.
help students in the Manage- .
ment Assistance Program
Heading the .~ De~
(MAP) with some of their ex- ment search group is Leo Curpenses. MAP is a volunteer ran, Classics. Other members
organization of graduate stu- are ~fesaors Angus Fletcher,
dents in management wbo of- ~; Edgar DrYden, Eng~
~!::f
Iish; Olga BernsJ, French; Robinner city.
Rossberg, Counselor Edua1-

=

:!""£:

=.._

Further Information on measures taken at the University •to
comply with State of N- York ·
ezpenditure reductions for fiscal 1970-71 · was provided by
Edward W. Doty, vice president for operationa and sys.
tems, shortly before the holiday reoellll.

~~:~m~\!':"id'l:rif

it is a legal or cootractual requirement to do.so."
Third, ''Out-of-State travel
has been prohibited . . . except
for that abeo.lutely essential
travel that has the specific written ap~!""al of the Chancellor. . ..
Fourth, "In-State travel is
alao to be reduced to that
which is absolutely essential."
Doty ssid, ''If there is no significant reduction in in-State
travel, we will be foroed to set
up controls similar to that for
out-of-State travel."
Fifth, :'Equipment purchases
have been ordered stopped."
However, Doty ezplained that
if there is an "urgent need to
purchase certain equipment,"
the purchase requisition should
be accompanied by a letter explaining why the equipment to
be purchased is essential.
Sixth, "We have been directed to re~ from signing
any contract for consultants
and any other contractual servicas.'' Doty added that "We
are moving to close out all'"' arrangements with p e r s o n n e I
agencies that supply temporary
help for the University.
With regard to consultants
and ~~~~e&amp;t speakers, Dr. Daniel
H. M~acting vice president for academic aJfairs, is
compiling a list of commitments made prior to December
11. No· new commitments can
be made without prior approval
from the director of the budgeL
A reduction of tbe purchase
of supplies as part of reducing
inventory leveJ8 will take place.
Doty aaid that ''there must, of
courae. be a reappraisal of our
l""""t priority l'ropams and
low priority activttieo which lire
not programs in a-lves."
Doty told campus administrators, "You are all ._,...
ible for tbe most effective tme
J!'furisdi~ction.-Most underof
theseyourresources are - l e . If a resignation tabs place, the first action you should take is a review to -..., yourself that a
realignnBrt of peraorme1 could
not reasooably well fill the void
in work being created by the
. . . n!Signation. No authorizalion for employment will be
made without the -.ranee of
l:t ~ ~~ ~

MAP, which was initiated in ' Profesaor James Coover of' made."
- 1
1969-70 thrOUIIh efforts of the the Music_llep8rtment is chair- - - - - - - - - - B I a c k Devefopment Founda- man of the Art Department
HEI.PI
tion and Management Dean Committee. Alao Mrvin&amp; are ·
- T o Got K Richard G. Brandenburg, has Albert Cohen, Music; 8e}'IIIOUr PART-l'IME JOB
about 30 students currently in- Dnunlevitch, Art; Ca10Je KaulJob Board, Nerton Hall by Donn
valved in nine projects. In the mann, Art; Paul McKenna,
exit, Unlvwsfty PIKament ond
past, students m the program · Art; David BazeJoo, Policy SciC.roer Ouldllnce, Hayes C,
have · had to pay all their ex- enoes, and RObert Buck, AIExt. 3311, 3313
bright-Kno..: Gallery.
.

�Jenuary 7,

GREPORTEi,

1971

3

University Offering 11 CentrolBal:y FNSM Asking Students
WUlReview
_Study Abroad Programs PromotiOns
To Evaluate Teaching
central review
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
R.,...._. $,_1

·

'lbougbts of escape to foreign
countries run rampanl as the
Bulfalo winter dnogs on and
now is the time to start looking into foreign study programs
:'::a~cti:_t.er finds you
U /B currenUy offers 11
study-abroad programs, with
three more in the planning
slqeo. At least 125 students
are now studying - · Jocall!d anywhere from the American University in Beirut to the
University of u~ in Sweden.

Most of theae activities Bl:e
coordinated by Jim Michielli,
director of academic
p.....,..,.._ His olllce was created
this fall to help develop new
prop111110 and auperviae the old.
Michielli views the programs
as helping people develop a

tranSnational perapecuve .

'-EcoloPcal, population and
racial problems .,... only be
fully ....-red by oollaboratiqn

with foreipl countries," he says.
This ....... belief has lead
him to help develop an envi........,tally baaed independent
study project for pw~uate students in the ScaDdinavian COWl·
tries
this
- "And
is
just
a -springboard
for this
the
future," he promisa
His olllce alao has facilities
to help students and fac:qlty
create individual programs. A
file on foreign employmenl opportonitieo and a list of overseas fellowships and assistantships is available. And the office is lined with catalogues
from foreign universities. MichieUi encourages students and
faculty to· talk with him about
their qualifications and desires
so he can help aet up a program for them.
Sprina

Pracroms

Selections for the spring programs have just been completed. From the middle of
January on, students will be
headed for the University of
Parma in Italy, Didsbury College in Manchest.er, England,
the University of f3renoble in
·
France and Scandinavia.
The exchange with Didsbury
is one of two true uexchange
programs" where students and
faculty from both universities
are swapped. This fall six students and one faculty member
from Didsbury came to U/B
(see aeparate story, this issue )
and this spring six U/B students and a profesaor will go
to Manclalter. Usually, this
opportunity is open to aecond
year students and has its major
thrust in educati&lt;n
-~Pracrom

The program at the University at Parma "ia the granddaddy of the ac:hange effort,"

~:,ue~~~~·

history; literature; claasics; art;
or medicine. It is uaually taken
during the sprin1 - ·
This year one student will be
10ing. Italian students oome to
Bulfalo for the Summer Se&amp;sion.
The new ScaDdinavian pro-

:=,.: :m~,.!:nr==

aocial acieDces with an interest
in environmental problems and
./or archi-..al desipt. Four
students will be enrolled in the
University of Upaala in Sweden and are free to .....nt there
or in any otber ScaDdinavian
country on an independent J&gt;TDject. Going with them is a U/B
pbiJosopby . . . . , _ wbo has
"numerous DOD-." Micbielli
says.
At Grenoble, l8lected underpaduatee will talre CIIUl8M in
French la"'&amp;Uale, bumanities

A form of
for
promotions from BSIIOCiat.e to
Evaluating teaching quality
throu1h lhe
President's Review Board-was has long been a subject of disalfeed upon by the Council of cusaion at U / B but now the
Provosts and Vice Presidents, Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics rFNSM ) has
December 28.
According to Albert Somit, 10ne beyond the talking stage
executive vice president, the to action. During exams stugroup "upanimously a~ dents will be asked to fill out
that it would be most desirable an experimental instructional
to have a University-wide pol- evaluation form.
The two-page form includes
icy governing promotions" in
this cat.egory and "that this questions on lectures, oourse
could be best accomplished by content, examinations, grading
having a single agency review and general matters. In addition, there is a section for ·data
surh recommendations.'"
'I11e .President's Review about the student. This includes
questions asking why the
Board has been asked, Somit
said, to apply to these "inter- oourse was taken; the student's
grade
point
average and year;
nal" promotions "the same criteria which it would apply to a and bow often be came to clasa.
ings.
The
student
is also asked to
that
an
aprecommendation
Year-Lone Pracroms
Opportunilies for year-long pointment at the rank of full evaluat.e his instructor's knowland
attitude
toward the
edge
given
to
an
outprolessor
be
study Bnl. available at several
courae, as well as his lecture
sider."
places.
Somit has advjaed prov06ts and blackboard technique.
People fluent in French can
The questionnaire was develstudy at the University or Nice and University-wide deans to
in France. The program, which process recommendations for oped by an ad boc committee
of
faculty, graduate and undersuch
promotions
as
follows
:
bas a mid-Mateb application
"1. Follow the present pro- graduat.e students. Dr. George
deadline, is open to students
N.
Nancollas, provost of Natucedures
dealing
with
departin any field. This year two stumental (proJIRD1 ) and faculty ral Sciences and Mathematics,
dents are studying there.
felt
"a need to design an evalureview;
The American University of
"2. Aller appropriate faculty ative approach to tenure and
Beirut in Lebanon is also a
promotion
decisions that gives
all
such
proposaction,
forward
&lt;~""""long opportunity. It ;.
open to sophomore through als to the Review Board, just proper weight to research,
aenior level" students with a as is preaenUy done with tenhumanities or social science ure proposals. Documentation,
etc., should be consistent with
major.
.
For graduate students, there's that provided in the case or
a program based in Paris tenure recommendations.
"3. A(ler the Review Board
which aUows study anywhere
in France. A U/ B professor on has acted, the proposal for promotion
wiU then be forwarded
sabbatical is currenUy working
there and advises students on to the academic vice president
The Search Committee for
for his recommendation to the Academic Vice President is
available opportunities.
At least two programs sched- president. As you will I)Ote, this seeking nominations for this
uled to begin this spring were latter involves a slight change post from as wide a representacancelled becauae of a lack of from the procedure discusaed at tion of the oommunity as posthe rpeeting. {)n lhinking the sible.
funding.
One opportunity was to be matter through, the feeling was
Recommendations may be
split between Pakislan and the that it would be better to have sent to any member of the
University of Soochow in Tai- the Review Board act hefore1 Search Committee in care of
wan for graduat.e students in rather than after, the proposa1 Mrs. Rose Levin, 115 Hayes
education, the humanities or went to the academic vice pres- Hall. Nominations sbould be
"as fully documented as possocial sciences. However, mon· ident"
sible and accompanied by a
ies from Albany weren't avail·
brief statement of the nominaable and the program was
tor's reasons for believing the
dropped even though students
nominee qualifies for the posi~
had been selected. Micbielli
tion."
hopes next year to work out an
The Committee ha s sugAsian study program in Ceylon.
A runoff election to select a gested these crit.eria:
and Malaysia.
agent for the State
"Ideally, the academic vice
Lack of funding also stopped bargaining
University
teaching
and
non~
a program at the University or teaching professional staff will presidenl should be someone
Bahia in Brazil. Known for its be held this month with the with both an established scholarly record in his own disciAfro-Latin American studies,
University Federation of pline and a deep concern with
flahia specializes in pre-co- State
(SUFI') and the the problems of encouraging
lonial and post-colonial infiu· Teachers
Professional Associa- and rewarding excellence in
ences in Alrica. Open to gradu- Senate
tion (SPA) conlending.
ate students and junior and
SUFI' and SPA were the two
senior undergraduat.es wbo are organizations
with the highest
fluent in Portuguese, the pro- vote totals in the initial Degram bopes to receive money cember election conducted by
next year.
the Public Employment RelaTentatively, a program for tions Board. None of the five
The int.erim procedure which
German majors has been estab- contenders in that balloting relished with the University of ceived a majority of the 9,424 provides for review of stUdent
Cologne, Germany. Scheduled vot.es counted in Albany, De- activity budgets by presidents
of the State-operated colleges
to belin in the spring of '72, it cember 29.
would be a full year program.
The vote breakdown an- of Stat.e University of New
1beae international programs nounced by PERB was: SUFI', York will be continued for the
are made poosible b)l a new 3,287; SPA, 2,974; SUNY ;remainder of the 197G-71 acaState University funding pro- Council of the American Asso- demic year, SUNY announced
gram for study abroad. The ciation of University Profes- December 16.
The University's Trustees,
SUNY system provides money sors, 1,912; the Civil Service
for the student's foreign tuition Employees Association. 705; acting upon a recommendation
of Chancellor Ernest L Boyer,
but the student must still pay and no agent, 546.
his loc:al tuition.
There were 469 challenged agreed to continue the present
arrangement in order to give a
ballots and 101 void ballots.
PERB provided no vote committee reviewing the
breakdown by individual cam- Board's student activity fee
policy further opportunity to
puses.
(Conlimud from _ . I , coL 1)
Ballots for the runoff eJec. discuas permanent alternatives
DIY· He became asaociste dean
with
students and administration
will
be
mailed
January
7,
of International Studies in
and wiU be counted at the tion at the various campuses.
1968.
PERB
center
in
Albany
on
the
Boyer
noted that the existing
Dr. Michaels is asaociste
review procedures "will enable
prof01180r of history with inter- 28th.
student
BOYemmeDts to conests in the Mexican Revolution,
FINK, TOO
duct their activities in an or1910, and the twentieth centhe December 17 iuue of the derly manner" while the comtury history of Bolivia, Cuba In
Reporter, the n.1me of Jerome Fink mittee prepares a recommendaand Costa Rica.
wu • lnadwrtently omitted 'from tion to talre effect during 1971Dr. St.ephano has been as- the n•mes of M.UA'I co-founders.
aociated with international stu- In en ertlele on pep: 3. We epof· 72.
The committee is compriaad
dies at Bulfalo since January 0111ze, since ho certllinly holpod
of members of the centraf stalf,
1970 as coordinator for pro- raise tho "phoenix."
campus administrator&amp; and stugram development.
dent aovernment leaden.
and aocial science plus independent study. John Simon,
director of the Frencb department, reports 16 students have
signed up.
Summer will find U/ B students at the University of Salamanca in Spain. Spanish language and literature students
use Salamanca as a starling
point for a .tour of Spain during which they trace the route
of El Cid, the medieval military hero.
Six to eight students will be
in Mexico, also, belping dig
archeological ruins. The program, beaded by Dr. Stuart
Srott, is several years old now
and quite successful in its find-

full profesaor -

teaching and aervice." The
Faculty-wide evaluation was
developed partially to meet this
need, being designed to "help
evaluate both the courae and
the teachina: potential of the
faculty member."
The evaluation form will be
handed out to students during
the final examination with an
addresaed envelope attached.
Students are aaked to fill it out
and either drop it oft at the d&amp;partmental ollice oi~uae campus
mail to return it to the ollice of
the Faculty's suiHmnmittee 011
t.eacber evaluation.
The sub-committee will then
put the data on computa cards
and statistically analyze it. lndividua1 faculty members will
be able to get the answers to
questions given by students in
their couraea.
In addition, the committee
"ill evaluate bow well the form
worked and will change it for
use next aemester.
Alter this semester, Dr. Nancollas hopes the questionnaire
will become a permanent part
of each FNSM courae and that
it can be used in asaessing a
faculty member's teaching potential.

Academic VP Committre Asks
For C3mpus Recommendations

SUFT, SPA
In&amp;owff

teaching. Ideally, too, be should
be someone capable of developing new ideas of his own and
of stimulating creative thought
on the par,t of his coli.,...._. As
one of the University's I8Dking
administrative olficem, and the
senior academic officer, be
sbould also possess to an outstandinl degnae the capacity to
translate educational ideas into
organizational reality."
The Committee says that its
"time schedule is tight'' and requests that suggestions be made
prompUy.
Members of the group are:
Stanley Bruckenstein, Chemistry, Chairman; Ernst Badian,
History; Robert 0 . Berdahl,
Higher Education; Angua Fletcher, English; Mary Kaiser, undergrad\lllte student; Donald
Rennie, ,.hysiology; Michael
Rosen, graduate student; and
Joseph St.ewart, ·community.

'Interim' Procedure for Fee Review
Will Be Continued for Rest of Year

MossActing -

1be interim arrangement

now in force aasigns to each

president at the Sts~ted
campuses the responsibility to
develop procedures by which
he or a duly-assipled adminiatrative officer can review the
proposed student activity appropriations and certify that
theu uae conforms to 'rnBuidelines.
It was adopted as a IDMD8 of
complying with recommendations of the State Comptroller
without confiictinB with a court
order or last September which
enjoined student funds at Albany.
UKRAINIAN COURSE'
In the spring semester, Buffalo

State will offer e new course in the
study of the Ukrainian languege.
U/B students can cross-resister

for the course (Ukrainian 101) and
receive three credits. Ukrelnian
101 will be oflerocl from 10·10:50

a.m.,

Mo~.

T.-dlly, Wednes-

day and Frii:ley, and an be resis·
t.rocl for durinc tho nsignod U/B
registration period. For further In·
formotion, a~ll 862-4811.

�/~ 7,1971

the photosynthetic efficieDcy of the
marine phytoplankton on whlch the
entire aquatic food pyramid is de-

By WALTER G . ROSEN
h o i - ol lliolofy

Until we develop a true senae of
the unity Of na~ we are destiDed
tD fail tD respond effectively tD the
possibly mortal perturbatiops which
we have inflicted on her. Science instruction at every level must take
much of the responsibility for mistakes
of the past and for defining attitudes
for the future.
We solve our acute shortage of fossil fuels by turning to nuclear power
--and thereby create thermal pollu-

pendent&lt;JI.

The ultimate problem, of oour88, Is
many people. I will not bore the

tDo

reader with a. repetition of fatts and
figure&amp; whlch by now have become
familiar to all. Suffice it tD say that

the hest estimates ol optimal world
population are less than 1 billion, that
we have at present 3.5 times that
number, and that total world population will double again in 30 years.
And of course we all know that the
hlgh material standard of living which
we enjoy generates ever-increasing per
capita consumption of the f.,Uts of
our technological genius.
'
It has been estimated that in terms
of damage tD the environment (garbage production, consumption of energy and of non-renewable resources;
removal of land from primary productivity, etc. ) each American can he
thought of as heing the equivalent
of 25 tD 250 Indians, i.e., each of us
does as much damage tD the environment as that many of our "underdeveloped" brothers&lt;•l. So proud are
we of our standard of living that we
want more of the same for our growing

tion and a staggering radioactive waste

problem.
We reprocess waste reactor fuel and
thereby pollute air, water, and soil.
We find .substitutes for our rapidly
disappesring forests and thereby create non-biodegradable wastes. We dispose of the wastes by land-fill and
thereby destroy wildlife habitats or
by incineration and thereby pollute
the air.
We place scrubbers in the incinerators and thereby save the air but
pollute the water.
We create, by breeding programs,
new high-yielding cereal crops (the
so&lt;alled "Green Revolution" ) tD alleviate the food shortage and thereby
generate vastly g rea t e r fertilizer
· needs.
I could go on but the point should
have been made by now. The problem
is somewhere else. No amount of
technologies) tinkering is likely tD get
at the root causes of the crisis. Indeed, it is probably safe tD say that
thus far every apparent solution to

population and we export our valloiii!!S
and thus generate similar appetile6
abroad. Our population is increasing
at a "modest" l.5 per cent per year.
Our power needs are increasing ten
times that fast and we are already
confronted with an urgent power crisis. Some countries are growing at 3-4
per oe.nt per year. Has anyone calculated the power needs which must be
met if we are to gratify their "revolution of rising expectations?"
We are thus faced with the obvious
ne&lt;lessity for a halt to the population
explosion. More specifically, we are
in urgent need of world-wide zero
population growth; in some places, of
negative population grow t h. And ,
equally importantly, of a reexamination of the wisdom of unfettered economic growth. This implies a redefinition of our concept of what oonstitutes
a desirable standard, or style, of living.
· Why have we blundered info such a
serious situation? Where has our individual a n d collective intelligence
failed us? Let me offer some tentative
thoughts in an effort tD diagnose our
ills.
.

an environmental problem has gener-

ated one or more problems as serious
as the problem it was designed tD cure.
Why has the western world, the industrialized world, the portion of !,he
world with the highest literacy and
the greatest scientific and technological sophistication blundered into this
crisis? I am not enough of a historian ,
social psychologist, economist, political scientist, anthropologist or phllosopher to answer that question adequately. I do know, though, that the
answer is not to be found in a simplistic castigation of capitalism. The
western (and eastern ) industrialized
world includes the socialistic countries
as well as the capitalist. What both
seem tD share is the growth gestalt:
the "oowboy" or "frontier" or "fiat
earth" world view as opposed to the
''spaceship" or "finite s y s t em" or
"round earth" world view.
The latter view is derived from the

totally new fact that we have nm
out of frontiers, run out of space,
and nm out of resources. It is based
on the fact that, suddenly, there are
too many of us. It is based, further,
on the shocking realization that our
environment does not provide U&amp; with
diluents, either gaseous or aqueous,
of infinite volume.
Even were the volume infinite we
now know that some noxious substances simply do not dilute but rather are concentrated as they move
through food webs. Still worse news
if one thinks of our planet as the
balanced bi06phere whlch it is (or
was) : the DDT in the ocean, even
before it enten1 food chains, is present in quantities sufficient to impair

The Tinker's Assumption

It occurs to me that we have made
the honest, thoughtless mistake of
transposing from English common law
a precious value when applied to pe(i::pk and made of it a pernicious precept
by applying it to things: "innocent
until proven gullty." It seemed, until
recently, reasonable to apply this rule
to "things," including synthetic molecules, combustion products, food additives, pesticides, medicines, packaging
materials, hlghways, airplanes, explosives, dams and rockets. By now we
ought to have learned otherwise.
The fission products of nuclear bomb
testing ought tD have taught us if radi-

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WhJ Do We Persist!
Why do we behave in this way?
Why, in the light of overwhelming
evidence that we are on a oourse of
species suicide, do we oontinue our
rape of the biosphere? Let me suggest
aome fragmentary answers.

&lt;iREPORTER,

......,..,_

um did nol 'Thalidomide ought to
have ta1Jibt us, and DDT. But all of
these experienaB notwithstanding, we
continue to 888UDle that damage must
be demonstrated before restraints are
invoked. 'Thus 2,4,5,-T has been Wlequivocslly demonstrated to be teratogenic and its uae in Vietnam and in
this country has been restricted. But
as Thomas Whlteside pointed out in
his recent book on defoliation, 2,4,5-T
had never been tested for teratogenicity, or for any other form of human
toxicity, before the first birth defects
were reported from Vietnam&lt;31. And
the present restrictions permit its continued use in this country while the
case is appesled by the manufacturers. I visited a garden supply shop
recently and found not only 2,4,5-T
for sale as a garden herbicide, but
also sodium arsenite, IH!thyl dipropyl thiocarhamate, 7-oxabicyclo (2,2,1 )
heplane-2,3 dicarborylic acid, 3,6 dichloro-&lt;&gt;-ani.sic acid, and 2 (2,4,5-trichlorophenyo~ I) propionic acid in a
variety of liquid and powder preparations for garden use. It seems reasonable to assume that these compounds
are subject to the same restraints, or
lack of them, as 2,4,5-T. Innocent until proven guilty. And this is probably
the case.for most, if not all compounds
not intended for direct internal human
consumption.
The application of the "innocent
until proven guilty" oonoept to thermal pollution, defoliation, irrigation
systems, hlgh rise buildings, supersonic transports (the skeptical scrutiny to whlch continued funding of the
SST is being subjected is a hopeful
sign of change) , etc., is tDo obvious
tD require elaboration. It is also too
obviously wrong to require lengthy
analysis. We have tinkered with the
environment recklessly, with occasional dire results. We continue tD tinker
in a manner that invites disaster.
Tinker is a most inappropriate verb.
We have intervened massively, tD the
extent of upsetting ecosystems, destroying species, altering the· composition of the atmosphere, the depth of
the tDpsoil, and the climate of vast
regions of the earth. (Remember that
the eastern Mediterranean was once
a "Garden of Eden" and the Cedars
of Lebanon were not fictional. Our
role in changing the face ol the earth
has ancient historical roots. It is as
old as our agriculture. However,
thanks tD machlnery and new chemicals, the pace has increased vastly in
recent years.)
What constitutes an appropri.ste
amount of testing, and how tD determine the degree to whlch we can. or
ought tD attempt to anticipate the
oonsequenoes of our actions is, of
oourse, a major problem. One can
reasonably argue the impossibility of
anticipating the unanticipated. Perhaps this concern, with historical examples (e.g., from the work of Einstein tD the development of atomic
weapons) belongs in the science curriculum. But this is a separate problem. The present difficulty is with our
unwillingness and/ or inability tD alter
present practices whlch are of already
proven danger.

Robert •.

Filst of all, I would contend that
we have failed to teach objective truth
as we have discovered il As scientists
and science teachers, we have been
derelict in our duty. The fault is not
entirely ours, since we ourselves have
been the victims Of a faulty system.
Unwittingly we have perpetuated as
teachers the faulty science which was
in1licted on us when we were students.
I have developed this argument elsewhere&lt;4&gt; and will sketch it only briefiy
here.
Science as it is tauaht, from grade
school through graduate school, is
basically. geared to the pte-prof,...ional. What we call science in liberal arts.

TheE
Thro
or science for the non....:ientist, is
essentially a watered~own version of
the encyclopedic view ol science whlch
we expect of the professional. Science
taught in this way ia probably badly
conceived even for the fu~ scientist,
but that is another story. For now it
is only important tD note that, in spite
of loud protestations tD the contrary,
we do not teach science as inquiry.
We teach science ·aa history: a collection of facts, figures and terminology. We do not team, for the most
part, the skills of data collection, theory building, criticism and interpretation. We do not teach the development
of a critical faculty. We do not allow
students (prior to graduate school,
and often not even there ) the thrill
of discovery; we do not permit students tD "fail intelligently."
Perhaps most importantly, we do
not examine the sociology of science:
the impact of science on humanistic
and religious thought; the responsibility (or non-responsibility ) of ·t he scientist for the application of ~is discoveries; the relationship of &amp;"itmce to
government; "free" vs. "planned" sci·
ence; pure science, applied science,
technology. In short, we ignore, in
the curriculum whlch claims to train
scientists and in the curriculum which
claims to make non-scientists at least
moderately literate in matters scientilic, the entire complex of qu !Stions
whlch examine the relationshlp of science tD society and culture.
This includeo, of course, the question of science teaching and research
vis-a-vis the environmental crisis. The
present discussion is admittedly quite
general. The textual materials needed
tD come to grips with the specifics
are, however, readily available&lt;SJ , The
result of these sins of omission is that
non-science sb.Jdents are for the most
part merely bored and overburdened
with an unmanageable hodge-podge of
facts. At the same time they, along
'l'i.th future scientists, are denied access tD insights and skills whlch would
aid them in confronting the world in
whlch they live as organisms, whether
or not they wish tD practice science.
Over twenty years ago Fairfield Osborn exp~ a similar concem(&amp;J:
"It is extraofainary that with a few
exception.a there is· no aucb thing as
the general ~chine ·of ooMervation
in our ecbools and oollepe today.
The stW!y of history would be il-

luminated if emphasis were placed
on the fact that conditions reaulting
from man's mistue of hia natural
re&amp;OUI'Ctll were defmite facton in the
movements of ~-. and in the
ol"igim of wara. Likewi.e oounes in
econonUcs, engineerinc, chemilt.ry,
bioiOCY, oocioiOCY and own philooopby would be vitalized if they included consideration~ of man'• relationohipo to the natural pbyoical
world in which be~."

Have we heeded this advice? Regrettably, we have nol And yet we
have seen, in this country, considerable preoccupation with "modernizing'' instruction, particularly in the
sciences. What has been the ...Ut?
Well, we recently saw the complete
revision of the biology curri&lt;:ulum
through the agency ol the Biololical
Scienoeo Curriculum Study. The result was largely a set ol new terminology to replace the old. Instead of
memorizina the names of muscle&amp; and
organs our students now meiiiClri!e
terms like endoplasmic reticulum, mitochoodrion, A TP and the inamediates of the Krebs Cycle. In chemistry
and physks, they are teaming the
- n a m e s ol nsYt subatomic particles.
But where do they leun about the
cbemistry ol ooil and air and water

�Jonrary 1, 1911
Some · - Commandmonts

nvironmental Crisis:
llgh a Glass Darkly
rather than ·lest tube reactions? Where
do they Jearn about photoSynthesis as
an organismic or biotic process, rather
tban about the light and dark reac-

tions, phosphoglyceric acid and the
Calvin Cycle? Where do· they Jearn
about comparative reproductive physiology rather than the names of the
stag.., of mitosis?
Show me the book, high school or
college, that stresses the fact that aU
of the oxygen in the atmosphere is
the product of photosynthesis, as is
all fossil fuel. Indeed, where is a student to Jeilrn shout biogeochemical
cycl.., in a manner that ~ meaningful the consequences of ecologically
unsowid fanning, mining, and manufacturing?
Where is he to Jearn about primary
productivjty and trophic levels in a
manner that relates to animal protein
consumption and the U.S. standard of
living? (There is an interesting parallel between our failure to teach science and our failure to teach other
important social valu..,. Think, for ex· ample, of how poorly most Americans
perceive the basic instrument of our
constitutional law, the Bill of Rights,
despite the fact that courses in civics
and history are required of all students in the grade and high schools.
We teach terminology; the anatomy of
government. We somehow fail to teach
the meaning. Thus when the Bill of
Rights was circulated as a petition in
Ohio during the 1950's most people,
of whatever background or walk of
life, refused to sign iL A recent news- .
paper article ·reveals that this attitude
oontinues. And numerous polls indicate that a substantial portion of the
populace, often a majority, favors one
or another legal measure which would
amount to abrogation of a constitutionally-protected right.) It is a pleasure to acknowledge that the "green
version"' of BSCS biology is a notable
exception to this general indictment.
I have the impression, however, that
this is the leasl popular version, especially in urban areas where it is
perhaps most urgently needed. College
conservation courses often preach the
goapel but quite evidently the message
has not prevailed.
Thus, we have generally failed to
teach s c i e n c e as inquiry, we have
failed to teach meaningful relevance,
and we university scientists have also
failed to separate ourselv.., from our
narrow research preoccupations in order to teach science as the mode of
inquiry which permits us to peroeive
man in nature and of nature rather
than manipulating nature.
We must learn this dilference ourselves, and then we must teach it. Our
survival is in danger. John Fisher has
proposed that survival itself must become the pervading theme' of education at the college level&lt;7&gt;:
". ·. . Let'o call it Survival U. lt will
not be a multiversity, oft'ering coursee iD every conceivable field. Its
motto-emblazoned on a life jacket
rampant will be: 'What mUJt we do
to be uvecl?' If a ooune does not
help to &amp;DeWer that queation it will
not be laU«bt here ... Neither will
our prol...,n be detached, diopasoionata ocbolan. To pt hited, each
will-have to demonstrate an emotional commitment to our cauee. Moreover, be will be e&lt;pected to be a
moralitt; for thil pneration of stud•ta, like no other in my lifetime,
ia buap~ arul lhinting after
ri.Pt.eoum.a. What it wanta ia a
moral l}'lllom it can believe iD-«ruu
that ia what our Univenity will try
to provide. In ...ery cia. it will
pnac:b lbe primordial i&gt;lhic of ourviva!."

. If our survival is indeed in danger,
we must act rapidly aiid radically.
Not only in college, but at every level
from kindergarten through graduate
school we must teach relevant science,
ecological awareness, and the responsible kinds of behavior which follow
therefrom. Charles Silberman has stated well, albeit in very general terms,
the principles which underlie the kind
of edueation I am trying to describe&lt;•&gt;:
'"To be practical, an education should
prepare a man for work that doesn't
yet exist and whOAe nature cannot
even be imagined. This can be done
o n 1 y by teaching people how to
learn, by giving them the kind of
intellectual discipline that will enable them to apply man's accumulated wisdom to riew problema as they
ariae, the kind of wisdom that will
enable them to recognize new problema as they arise.
Education sh~uld prepare people
not just to earn a living but to live
a life_; a creative, humane, and sensitive life. This me an a that the
schools must provide a liberal, bu. manizing education. And the purpose
of liberal education must be, and indeed alway• bas beeD. to educate
educaton - to tum out men and
women who are capable of educating
their families, their friends, their
communities, and most important,
themselvee."

According to William Arrowsmith
the chances for meaningful change are
slighL Though he speaks specifically
of graduate schools I suspect that his
indictment appli.., equally well to all
other levels of formal education!9&gt; :
..Our present aystem of graduate education is eo much lhe creature of
vested interests and dead tradition,
contaiN 10 much .abeer automatism.
snobbery, and prejudice, and eo little
pertinence to the real needs of men,
that any ·conceivably effective antidote would be too radical to be
tolerated by its CUitodians and beneficiarieo."

ArrOwsmith's skepticism notwithstanding, we must act rapidly and
radically for our survival is in danger.
We must change not only our education system,_ but our very life sty]..,
and our morality. We need a new code
of ethics.

We hear talk of an "Ecological Bill
of· Rights." I submit that the very

phrase reflects our mistaken peroeptions. Rather· than rights (freedoms
for aur!lelves), we need a new set of
''Thou Shalt Nots," an ecological Ten
Commandments, with the emphasis on
restraints rather than on freedoms.
The original ten commandments require little alteration to make of them
a set of ecologically sound behavior
precepts:
"I am the Lord (radiant energy and
the primary producers which transform it into chemical energy; clean
water; mineral elements in · limited
supply; earth on which the green
p 1 an t s can grow; microorganisms
which fix nitrogen, decompose complex
organic matter, digest cellulose, stabilize soil ). I have brought thee out
of the land of Egypt, out of the house
of bondage Cthe inorganic state; or,
if you prefer, pre-conscious life).
'"Thou shalt have no other gods
before me (the balance of natural ecosystems must be preserved; you shall
not create a technology which shall
upset the balance of natural systems).
''Thou shalt not make unto thee
any graven image (do not worship
your machines; they cannot replace
your limited stores of energy, materials and space).
''Thou shalt not bow down before
them and serve them; for I the Lord
am a jealous god ( U in your arrogance you build a high dam at Aswan,
it will· become silted up, and the fisheries beyond the dells will die for lack
of the fertilizing silt; and schistosomiasis shall ravage the river valley ).
"Thou shalt not commit adultery
(synthetic molecules in iood or medicine, can be dangerous traps; they can
disrupt food chains; worse, they can
lead to the conceits which will cause
you to violate commandments two
and three above. Fake foods and plastics are graven images if they come
to rule your lives) .'"
p!early, the injunctions against killing, stealing and covetousness are also
ecologically sound precepts.
Now let me innovate a bit to he
certain to include one of the most
essential considerations:
"Thou shalt stop at two children
(be fruitful and multiply; but remember you are part of an intricate food
web and if you deny other creatures
their living space you are depleting
My kingdom and upsetting the food
webs on which you depend ) ."
Now think about this. After the last
commandment, in Exodus XX, Verse
25, the Lord says "And if thou \vilt
make me an altsr of stone, thou shalt
not build it of hewn stone; for if thou
lift up thy tool upon it, thou hast
polluted it."
Do I believe that? Literally? Well,
not quite literally. I'm not a Luddite.
I don't believe we should smash the
machines or reject our technology.
Rather, I believe that we must control
it, and soon, for now it controls us,
and it is destroying us. We must get
off the back of nature, which we are
breaking, and back into nature, of
which we are a part. We must consume
less and recycle more. We must begin
with ourselves We must struggle along
without electric toothbrushes. We must
not use the internal combustion engine (or any other engine, however .
less polluting, since their manufacture
requires so much energy) when we
can walk. We must live lower on the
hog, which nutritionally means lower
on the food pyramid. In a world short
of food, burning protein for energy is
perhaps immoral.
And so forth.
Con Wei Yes. Will Weill!

Can we do it? Yes. We will need
at least a two year moratorium on
our prof..,.ional activiti.., as scientists
while we restructure our educational
system, revise our cod... of personal
behavior, suspend much of our gloriously entertaining and sophisticated
research in molecular biplogy, theoretical chemistry and physics and address
ouraelv... to such urgent problems as

rational land management, city planning, transportation, and reproduction
control.
Will we do it? Probably no.
A few voic... will cry out for drastic
change. The rest of ua will pretend to
listen, make a few token ..,.~urea and
continue life essentially as usual. And
for a very sound, perhaps UIIODDtrollable biological reason. The change required of us is too great for us to
contemplate seriously. '!he am&lt;iety
generated by confronting these obYious truths is too much to bear. We
cannot give up ao much that we cherish, however spuriously. We cannot
change ourselves, to say nothing of
changing others. And we cannot at the
same time admit to ourselv.., that failing to change will bring our demise, if
not as individuals then as a species.
And so, in blind response to the sln!s&amp;avoidance demands of our individual
physiologies, we will tum off. ( PSYchologists refer to this phenomenon of
stress-avoidance through subconscious
distortion of major, unmanageable bad
news into minor but manageable dimensions as udenial" - See Frank,
Jerome. Sanity and Survival. Random
House, 1967 ) .
We will not turn off totally, of
course. After all, here we are, changing detergents, yearning for lead-free
gas, supporting planned parenthood,
pretending to meet the crisis. But a
moratorium on business as us u a 1?
Abandon our economy? Return to a
less technological, I e s s consuming,
more nature-directed life style? Hell
no, we won't go! Because We can't
hear the thought!
A colleague of mine, exhorting people to wake up to the approaching
apocalypse, quotes Dylan 'Ibomas exhorting his father not to give up life
without a fight: "do not go genUe into
that good night ...".
But I think he's wrong. We have to
go genUe (or with a nuclear bang, but
individually genUe) . It's stress-reducing. It's the only way to keep our
psy~ from shattering. Or is theie a
way to face th...e awful truths, to act
appropriately; to save the species and
the rest of nature while we save our
individual selves? Perhaps.
The total mobilization for World
War IT may provide a model. In that
situation civilians willingly (for the
most part) undertook a reduction in
standard of Jiving and academics applied their expertise to solving the
pressing and immediate problems of
modem warfare.
The threat to the environment and
thus to the human species is certainly
no less serious than that posed by the
Axis powers¥Jld requires an equally
profound and.sustained response. But
the threat is certainly more subtle and
less clearly peroeivOd. The duty of
science education is to heighten perception and guide the response.

-

1. Wumar. Chari" F. DDT .-.due-. phataQtno
thHla by m~~rlna phytoplankton. Science,
Man::h 29. 1968.
2. Davis, Wayne. Owrpopuleted ArrMtrlca. .._
Republic, Jan. 10, 1970.

3. Whltnlde. Thomu. o.tollaUon. Ballantine.
N- York. 1970.
4. ROMn, W.ttar G. Crutive tuchlrc and the

bloloey curriculum. BioScience 11. 214. 1M&amp;.
5. Thera Is a rich. wried nd ,.pldly arowtnc
literature, only an artllitr~~ry sample of which
can bl rnentiOMd here: U. boob of Duboll,

EJslay and

Bron~k.l;

anthotocl.. audl u

' 'The SubwBIWI Sc:Jence•• (Shepard and McKinlay. eds.). ''The M)'Stary of Matter" (Louise
Younc. ed.) are certainly suttabla for under·
&amp;raduat.. and perhaps atso for hllh .cftool
students.
6. Osborn. Fairfield. Our Plundered Planet.

UtUe-Brown. 1948.
7. Fisher. John. Survival U: Prospectus for a

r..u,. relh'ant university. Atlantic. Ncwetnbtr
1969.
8. Silberman. Charles E. Murder In the school·
room. I. How tha public schools ldll d....,..,.
and mutilate minds. AUantJc. June 1970.
9. AJTQwsmlth. William. The shame of the crad·

uate

sch~s.

Ha,.,.rs. Mar 1966.

The llloportw ' - on tlllo to provide a forum for the U·
d&gt;anp of views on a wlclo varlaty

--Its.

of the faclnc
the communltx.r,
We welcome
both

.,..._ -

and -

••

�J~

6

7, l91l

Free Trade ·
Seen as Help
For Mid East

Public :Need
Results in
New Programs

By SUZANNE METZGER

Public concern about the
quality of life and the ~
raiaed by science and technology will result this spring in
both a new "open" scientific
ClOIU8I! and a lecture aeries
which is available to inten!sted
members of the U/B community.
The first program, a credit
course, "'Controversies in Science - Conffict and Resolution," is being offered as a cooperative venture of aeveral of
the disciplines within the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics. Listed on the registration achedule as FNSM
222, the ClOIU8I! carries four
credit bows -and.. has no prerequisite other than "an interest in the subject." There will
he tests and term papers.

l&lt;•pt:W1« Stall

bo~[e~::t"t"'J:'rM'fJj;
East.
According to Dr. Lee E. Preston, professor in the School of
Management, by lifting interregional trade barriers and expanding international trade, the .
· volatile Middle East could he
brouJht closer to economic and
political security.
Dr. Preston, who spent ""v1

;:!,;n:r::
Am:=trru~!:::
sity in Cairo, prepared "Trade

Patterns in the Middle East,"
for the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy, in association with Karim A. Hashashibi, a specialist in Middle
East economic development.
Dr. Preston feels thst sources
of insecuri~y and conaequent
'-tilities in the region are economic imhalance between countries, poverty and lack of aelf-

sulllciency.

ths~ :Ster~x::; t;.t!ti~ts 31;~

ferences have aggravated tbeae
conditions as has the Arab boycott of laraeli foods which cut

-

Buffaln's Zoo in Wmter May Seem Passive
But .L"U.:~Wt£'\1
A ...,.;. ,.;,. eo..,..~.,,.,,., Behind
. , the &amp;enes
1 lUI
'J.

::!~f~
~~ By SUZANNE
METZGER
world.
Re,_,., St~t
T o counter these problems,
The Buffalo Zoo in winter
Dr. Preston proposes intra-re- seems calm and passive but hegional aasistance a m o n g the hind the scenea there is someArab countries, trade between times crisis and fennent, waitlarael and Arab countries, "and ing .and preparation for the
increaaed trade between the spring thsw:
Middle East and the rest of the
• Two student workers dig
world.
out the foundations for a new
"- . - ~ most appropriate tropical rain forest. (Scheduled
~_urces of ";Jd for the trad~ffor a spring opening, the forest
IClt countries of tb_e ~d!De__.,will he a aound and light show
. E'!'st ~Y he theu 01l-n9'&gt; featuring thunder and rain,
ne1gbbors, comments Dr. ~ tropical birda and lush foliage.)
ton. ~us far, .most Arab')_oil
.• ..l'he-&lt;:o&lt;!k in the bird kitchcounf!'lell.have giVen _only to~es seed for the parrots.
contributi?ns to therr less foro The gemsbok jealously
tunate ~gbbors.
.
.
guard&amp; her week-old infant.
o The lions wait with a fixed
. ;l{uwaJt has ~ mnovat!ve
"! 1ts recent ~licy of sharing stsre always majestic and paoli revenues With other Arab tient
countries. Another promising
Ra N 0
the
raJ
0
new development has been the
.Y
~·
gene
formation of an Arab common mechanic and pamter for the
market linking the u .A.R., Su- zoo, pre~res s1gns to replace
dan, Libya and, hopefully, ones which have ~n wellSyria. In this alliance, Sudan weathered or vandalized.
• For the keepers there are
would be paid in hard currency
· for meat supplied to the other schedules and work as usual.
countries which produce rice, Friendliness Discourapd
cotton and oil for export.
Though there are· fewer . visOr. Preston sees thst eco- itors to· the zoo during the
nomic, political and military winter months, cages must still ·
disruptions a r e "inimical to be cleaned, aninulls fed and
Western interests." Advocating areas patrolled to protect both
a U.S. policy of economic aid, animals and visitors. John TraPreston advises a "return to vale, acting director, recounts
the patterns of grant and loan the incident of a visitor who
support;." ~ aU countJ:ies !n began boasting of his friendthe regJOil. • • • Reductions m ship with Eddie the monlrey
Weotem support inevitably ·with whom he claimed he oftan
produce internal political and shook hands! Mr. Travale
economic repercussions in the points out thst the animals are,
countries involved w h i c h in after all, wild and patrollers
turn leadrelationsbl'ps
to chan""" both
in international
with mus t wa tch" out for peopI e w bo
the Middle East and beyond."
to get too friendly with
" ... The suppott of multiple
Some animals prefer the out.mter...ts and development paths doors during the cold months,
(is) the only appropriate pol- others are kept inside. The
icy if the gnal (is) regional hoofed animals, such as zebra
and integrated, rather than na- and gemsbok, live in open sheds
tiona! · · · development."
and may wander in and out at
Citing Rusaia's economic as- will. H one should become jll,
sistance1 Dr. Preston calls it however, he is locked in ·his
''both divisive and dependencyh d t
h· b ·
o prevent IS e1ng
inducing." " . .. Soviet aid has s e
' - intimatelr tied with mill- molested by other animals, and
tary 811pport, 1t is plainf'l not kept warm with a heat lamp.
av8ilahl8- to countries of dlverae Heat lamps are a1ao installed
political orientation. Such aid for the baby animals, and prethua l'l!llpollda to and strength- senUy a two-week-old baby
ens international divisions with- llama and an infant gemsbok
are thriving under them.
· the Middle East
m
· · · (and
Other animals which enjoy
~~~tO~ staying outside are the buffalo,
·
d · te tio
" hyena, raOCOODS, bears, water
~
~~la~Ps fowl and the coador. Elephants,
should involYe countries from ~res and emu re- '
every s]! h e r e of the Middle
Ea8t palltical and ecooomic ac- ~• livfty, tbe oil countriee, the
Twice a week Dr. McClellan,
Ani&amp; tnld&amp;de&amp;it countries, Is- the 2lOO Yeterinarian, makes his
rael and peripberal statao."
rounda and heeds any reports

':i::

tUJ::A)

of unusual behavior such as
loss of appetite or moping
which could signal poor health.
In the .zoo's sick bay huddles
a wombat, his cost patchy and
his mood sullen from being
clawed by fellow wombats. An
aged Patas monkey withdraWII
into the oomer of his cage~ re-cuperating from an attsck by
his cagemates. "They're here
for rest and relaxation," comments William Letimer , zoo
curator and one of the busiest
men on the grounds. Here, too,
is Rusty, a year-old orimgutan,
coyishly wrapping herself and
her playpen in yarda of muslin.
Her mother died shortly after
giving birth and Rusty has
been raised on Similac, Gerber's mixed cereals, and advice
·
from a regular pediatrician.
The inJinnary has a complete laboratory fitted with
centrifuges and sterile equipment for blood tests, urinalyses,
and parasite checks. Guns

which inject medicines or tranquilizers from clooe or long
range are essential equipment.
Two incubators, an x-ray machine, operating tables, and a
morgue and autopsy room complete the '-Pita!.
Nothlnc But the -

. flours or prepahitiqn go into
feeding time which is between
2 ·and 3:30 p.m. ''Nothing but
the best for our animals," says
Leumer. He emphasizes thst
all foods, including fruits, vegetables, fish and meats are of
top quality, purchased wliolesale for the several kitchensno rejects, no bruised fruits or
second-rate vegetables. Shiny
apples, fresh eggs, perfect bananas are stacked on inunaClliate
tables and prepared with gourmet equipment. Large walk-in
freezers are stocked with cartons of maclrerel and smelts,
turkey necks, chicken backs
and a zoo staple, ground horsemeat.

t::_

..::d

To Crltk:lom

.In . _announcing the course,
SlJ: faCldty members involved said they are responding to the frequent criticism
that scientists are making no
effort to communicate an understanding of scieqtiftc philoeophy and content to the general public. The six instructors
are Gordon Harris, chemistry
.course coordinator; Charle~
Cazeau, geology; James Dickey,
statistics; John Duskin, maU&gt;ematics; McAllister Hull, physics; and Vincent Santilli,
biology.

. the

~~--------(Continu&lt;d from f'OI&lt; 1. coL 3)
new University.
"I am not saying, however,
thst one must cease to work
within aociety to change the
law, or cease to work within the
University to change even the
senae of the University. In both
instances, the mechanism for
change, and our commitment to
freedom makes it imperative for
l:,.~ rely upon that mechanKetter also spoke of Fillmore's role in the founding of
the University, which marks its
125th anniversary this year:
'"Ibis essentially prll11matic
man told the 40,000 citizens of
Buffalo in 1847 that they could
'establish· an institution eminently uaeful' to themselves
through their support of this

"He urged this creation in
an educationally minded community which in 1839 'claimed
the distinction of being tbe
State's first community to establish free, tal&lt;-i!Upported elementary schools.' "
Witb an eye on today's

~ u~v:ty==~
Fillmore "was unable to mobilize the community support thst
was and is ao vital to the crea-

bo~ or'c=be~i:'Ji~

duals or groups of aciegliJts
and of schisms between the
scientific community and the
contemporary aocial order. "An
effort will he made to show
bow these controversies have
affected the advance of scientific learning."
•
The course is not part of any
visualized major program but
is aimed toward developing in
students from any faculty and
at any level an understanding
of what science is, how scien·
tists think, and where science
is going.
Specffic topics in the FNSM
course include "The Nature of
the Earth,'' "What is Combustion?,'' ''The Germ Theory of
Diseaae,.. "Does God Reali
Play Dice With the Universe?}:
"Are the Continents Drifting?,"
and "Genetic Sasis of Life."
CMI Enct-rlnc Loctute A lecture aeries is being offered by Civil Engineering in
order to provide information on
the role of technology in environmental problems to students
in other disciplines.
A group of the faCldty bave
prepared
state-of-the-art lectures rellecting their special
areas of teaching and -..ch
interest. They are willing to
preaent one or aeveral of the
lectures to any group of students in class, outside class o.
to any group in the Univenity
community during the spring
semester. The taJ.b aeneraiiY
last 30 minutes with 20 minutes
reaeM!d for diacuasioo.
Available topics and lecturers are: "W11ter Supply Systems," and "Wastewater Treat.- '
ment," N. E. Hobaon; "Chemical Pollutants in tbe Environment," J. Yang; "Water Resources - Conservation and
Utilization," R. Apmann;
"Technology of LDw-Cart Housing,'' J. V. Huddleston; "TransJICirlstion and the Urban Enviromnent," R. Paaswe11, C.
Noteas; "Particle Deposition in
the Human !Jrways," K K.
Chang and "Techno~ of Air
~ Control..
Hitch-

tion-of a comprehensive University."
Ketter placed a University
wreath on Fillmore's giave, and
Colonel .John E .- Blewett, depAny groups interested in the
uty COIIliii!IDCier of the New aeries 0&lt; in individual lectures
York Air National Guard, pre- are asbd to contact the indivisented one from President dual lecturer or Profeeeor
Nimn.
Georse IAe at Ext. 6325.

�~

/ - 1. 1911

.

7

-

'NATIONAL _Farmer Sees Revolution
GREPORTS
• N- Ornon: It ia time to

:!':?or~~~':.:.~
~~it.'::!~.~~~
cluce a whole new eet of optiou

for education beyond tho high

:;"';:'~I:: oUm~~

:::t ~

movemea.t for academic reform,
the OCJIDID.i.IUon baa put ita con·
oiderable preotip bOhiDd thMe
idea:
-Studento are _,cling too
much time in """-· Require"""'to for tho boehelor'o decree
could be cut from four yaro to
three "without oacrificinc educa·

~ =~a:a y:w;:;-=:

could be oaved on tho way to tho

Pb.~~.:b.....~~d

be given more oportunities to
-&amp;pone or bypuo formal coUeae
work. to ..,top-out" from college

for job experience, and to chance

directions in college.

-Much peater uoe ohould be
made of two relative!~ new deo( to ":!,~h~
hilh ochoolo, community coD-.

f:'"tb.!" =:..

arid tbe lower diviaion in collep~J ;
and tho Doctor of Arlo, 1111 tho
standard de 1 r e e for ..non-re--rch" coUep teachero.
- Tbe elq&gt;IUJOioo of coU...,.IeY!II
teoto and otf.aunpuo inotruction
can lead to coUep docreeo earned
without odwll coneae reoidence.
Some coD- already are mov-

~ toward

.uch reforms. In one

cei~ f~e!:rti~to ~;:tere~

''univenity without w a 1 h ," in
which atudentl: or varioua &amp;gel
will be ' ven wide llezibility for
indepe:..C::t otudy and "oeU-di-

rection."

'!"be oommiaaion'1 proposala
could have an important aide ben-

rfiLaa~a.tbe.J,~"'ecf:!a~o': ~!i

d!\i:! -: ;:.": .;"i~.billions of
• ·FlNANCI.AL WOI'B : The extent
of higher education's crisis in finance bas been outlined in dra-

matic fashion by the Carnegie
Commi.uion. Bued on a study of
41 colleges and universities of different types. the panel baa concluded that about two-thlrdo of
aU inotitutiono today (1,540) are
"in financial difficulty.. or are
beaded in that direction. The situation is IMifm as the wont in
history. amounting to what the
1tudy term1 a ''new depreuion. ••
For many institutions, the cris ·
ia bu ,one beyond mere ~ "belt­
tichtening" and hu led to cuto
in important eervice1. Oark Kerr,
the co1Jllllia5ion' 1 chairman, say•
the inltitutio01' peatest nee d

may be to restore public confi-

dence.

a ENIIOU.MENT TII£ND8: Projec-

tions of college and university
enrollments point to worri.ome
trend• for private inatitutiona,
which bave been hit particularly
bard by the current &amp;nancial crioiL Tbe projectiono ohow that, ii
the e~ence of the p a 1 t 10

:::'·!~::

:=

=-.to
about 16 per .-t of the total by
1!1116, compared with about 25 per
cent - - One analyot predicts,
mortMMH", that u many u 300
private inlltitut.ions may be foroecl
to became public--&lt;&gt;r to clooe entireiy--dunng the next 16 years.
• 8cBOLAII8 ALAaKD&gt;: A hundred
.cbolan from nine nations, in-

fo'
:!:J ~Intte=.!:~~
tee on the Univeraity Emergency

p~ the righto of teachen
and ltudenta to 1tay together in
peaoe and freedom." The committee laYI it is worried about " the
growth of a politico of intimidation within univenitiM, and the

"to

elforto, often clumoy, of poople
outoida the ac.demy to reotore
order." It plano to publish a newoletter oa c:riMI and to .ad group1

!"~i::'c~.:_rce &amp;rm

~~t~a:..~:.i':'!t
women in aclrniniatrathoe and fac-

ulty pooitiou, reporto the Americao A.ociatioa of Uniwnity
W - . But a ourwy by the
...a.tioa Iindo that oel-

*="--~:i:': ~

-

-the r-Jty ..••

fu the Minds of Blacks
_s..,

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
A "psycbological revolution"
is taking place now in the black
community, James Farmer,
former assistant secretary of
HEW says, and Washington
bad better berome aware o( this
fact.
Farmer, who was here on December 18 to speak to a Law
l?cJ&gt;ool class, used the opportunity in discuss his ideas on
America's ills and how in cure
them. He ...,. one of the big. gest problems as dealing effectively with America's minor-ity groups.
"We have· underestimated
the impact of racism in society ,'' Farmer said. And becaUBe o( this "the federal government hasn't really sue-.
.-led in desegregation though
it's spent billions."
He claims there is more "de
facto segregation and less de
jure" as shown by the fiight of
the white race to the segregated
suburblk Cities, he said, "have

Students Provide
HealthCareTips

a bladr. core with a white

=; u!:~U.:=...~

from their Northern cousins, be
added.
W...-.illloiThis has led to a -worsening

of black-white relations. Fanner (eaiS the poosihility of "IN&amp;·

riJia warfare between yqung
blacks and police . . . the nation will beoome an anned
camp." Fanner warns " if it
ever romeo down to fighting in
the streets you know the blacks
~II be exterminated."
Tbe possibility o( this ron!:JJ.'t-~on "keeps me awake at

Yet, Farmer is ''no longer a
pacifist," for he believes violence can accomplish something, but "it can't win."
Because of his fear of the
upooming revolution .Farmer
quit his HEW post: "We're losing a fight agamst the clock-1
need to help from the outside."
He added, "I got few ~
done during my 20 months m
HEW."
Farmer has now embarked
on a speaking tour o( U.S.
cities and universities to "feel
the pulse of the nation," and to
try to discover the direction o(
the black movement. 'The former head of CORE doesn't feel
the leadership will rome from

The handout booklet,
" Health Care Services,'' is their
own small rontribution in the
medicaUy disadvantaged rom- ~~~~ ,:a~;·
munity.
''They" are medical students rommunity.
'Think Tank'
Arthur Go6hin, Elliot Dacher, Richard Cemiejewski, lsmil IsFarmer hopes to rontribute
mael ( who graduated in May ~~~ ~eme~~ H~~
1970) , nursing students Linda
Dorr, Btubara Maryan, and so- tap black doctors, psycbolocial work student Angelo Conozzaro.
After a summer working in
the First Ward of Lackawanna r.!,.;:.;!"F~~.;!~ck experto learn first hand about its
During his two-hour lecture,
health and social problems, the
group found that there was a Farmer spoke of other solutions
lack o( information about exist- for the problems o( minority
ing health agencies - a void groups. He would like to see
which prevented the First a " revising, reforming and reWarders (rom utilizing these shaping of institutions toward
responsibility and aocountabilservices.
Tbeir booklet, which is now ity," with a strong emphasis on
handed out to each patient accountability.
treated at the Lackawanna
Tbe Clark Plan in WashingClinic (which they were instru- ton, D .C., is an example of this
mental in helping to get under- principle, Farmer explains. Tbe
way ) , explains the "what, schools in this project use " perwhere, how and why" of health formance rontracting'' where
teachers are paid on the
care in unromplicated terms.
Preventive medicine, they achievements of their students.
spell out in the cleverly-illus- Ma believes the educational
trated booklet, means immuni- ...field s hould realize that
zation ''which prevents you ''You're not a good teacher i( ·
from getting sick" and detec- your kids d on't Iearn."
tion, "tests to find out if you 'Re-1111 the - ·
Fanner fuUy supports pilot
bave diseases which bave not
yet made you sick.': Tbey de- programs like the Clark Plan.
fine a aeries of medical terms However, he feels that recently
in the same everyday language: "there's so many pilot proemi!Tgency, "an accident, pois- grams that we seem in go on
oning or severe bleedin«;" med- re-discovering the~.. Tbe
ical services, help ·~ you reception IDOSt reports get is a
are sick but not in such a hur- file drawer and oblivion, Farmry for belp as you are in an er pointed out, and he wants
emergency;" dental .uvicu, better use made of the reports.
"you need to talte care o( your
Better use could also be
teeth . . . if the rest of you is made of the millions of federal
to be healthy;" and counuling, dollars going to scbooJ systems
"when you have a problem and to improve minority education,
you don't know what to do, Farmer claims. He says the
when you feel very unhappy or
if you are having trouble in the
family with money."
o( improving the quality of edTbe booklet also offers in- ucation.
Tbe lack of quality education
formation on how you pay (or
these services, whom to can in the scbooJ system for minorabout Medicaid or Medicare, ity groups has also caused the
how to sign up for these aer- failure of Head Start, Fanner
says. "Children go from an .,.
:...
~a~ cli~u:; citing program to an unrenthan the government.
ovated, unimaginative school
'lbe summer' program in - - - this incn!ases their frustn.which the students pouticiPIIted tion," he says, and defeats the
was directed by the Commun- programs.
For all his pessimism, Fanner
ity Reoearch and Development
sees hope in th.,..fa c t tbat
''blacks have it toptber enough
cine and supported by fellow- to 'deal with whites." And he
ship grants from the United ...,. this as "the first step toHealth Foundation of Western wan! involvement in a pltualistic eociety...
New York, Inc.

a

&lt;REPORTS

ON

_,_

GJ&gt;EOPLE

l'llbliabinc Oom-

IlL 101110'

-

~,.~=·=

~...--...~

M..-umRm-.

Tboucbt."

......................
......
~.t'.:.'"T'..!i'ty~~

PRESENTATIONS

dor of tlu: Liar.

IlL ....... """"·

-.~e profeo-

eor. cbemiltry. with lt.C. PAN,
"Gaaoaian Gominalo for Electnm
Pair Correlation," .loumal . of

C'-'i&lt;al Phy.;c..

IlL PAIJL

EUII!Ssi.a\'.rof....r,

phi-

!':"C&gt;'·~~~MpD:

-·-

,....... .......... lecturer, plli'-

.._..,y, "-n.. SemaDtic Element

~et~tuul~~yntu,"
oa. PHILIP COPf'aCB• ...a.te prof...,r, chomiotry, "-n.. St.b' al
~= ~lk D • ~
poet of X-Ray CeystoJJop.pby,"
Mc:Muter u~. - .

J::

Ontario.

Friend. World Oollep.

soa. _ . . , -

diJeo&gt;

tor, computinc center, "All Ap-

ft'::t~ =·~~

~~~~!F!~(~~ e~~~-~

~~~~~

violdac -

=~:a..:.=.t ~...s~
s-1 -

r::m ":: .._~·echo":,
IUW10"......., _._...,..

=e~ 'l"~ :tn!' ::t'!:

11W1 1tYU10G CBO,

:. ::t.u:.·.:"t!.(t:e:.i.

a. IUOUL M~ proleeeor, aD·
throcdoo. aDd &amp;OHAW OOBKN#
A lltuuibool. of Metlwd in Crdllual

Alllluo~,

tooy~

1&amp;.

CodaY

Natwal Hia-

.:&amp;:HI.IZ.

prof_,-,

~wi~ 't:r~ ~:

Solocthoe Membrane Electrndeo,"
Aaalytieal Let~ra.
DL ~ ~

NEW CAMPUS
:-e..u.~ P~taf r s!:!:.':,~ APPOINTMENTS

Control ..; the f'lx4 '
· t , al
1,3.5-Hesatne.-," Yod: U.a-oily, Torooto, Caaada.
DL WJl.U.Ul Y. r...,., choi-.

::U~l'.;,p,~~

can Philooopllical M~ Phil-

adelphia, Pa.

DL &lt;lADY UCBIUY&amp;.

~

chomiotry, " Pollutioa Moailoriac

Networlt UaiDC Io....Selec:ti,..
Membrane Electrodeo," u.s. o.partmel!t a1 the IDterioc, W...,_
mcton, D.C.
" " - pbil&lt;.o-

~...:;: ~ a-.

mittee For Aoia. Board a1 FCII'IIip
ScholanhiJla.
tute of EduCatioa.; chair••-.
mee~ al Society ~the_ l'lliloaophical Study ol Dilolectic Mate"'·H- "LeDin .. ...._,._.,.
~phia, PL "-n.. RlilatioD
of Zen to , . _ ~Brock Uniwnity, St. Catllan-.
Ontario.

Interqatioloul -.

-----------

PUBLICATIONS

IJ&amp;.aoeal'~--­

.1-

taot p r o f -• . - . , . . , with

Ll. P.&amp;ra,~althePlee
~Aaiaa..,.BN­

OOR Induced ESR,"
of
~~u AmerieaA c~ Socidy.

India

pro(ee10r, pbi.1oeo..
pby, "-n.. l'lli"*&gt;phy o(
ad Ita I m. p a c t on American
~
Amerioan Lectnre Ser-

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

�8
24 Grad Faculties C i t e d - - - - - - - - - (Contilwed from -

1, coL 6)

formation about the ~rsitY
to make a judgment.
In a third section of the report, where "effectiveness of
doctoral program" waa rated,
U / B was ranked in numerals
roughly corresponding to
"good" in the 1964 report, in
English and physiology. Numerical ranking roughly corresponding to "adequate" in the
'64 study waa achieved in almost all of the remainder.
To qualify lor a rating, an
institution bad to award more
than 100 doctorates in the period 1957-67. For a given discipline to be rated, the institu·
lion bad to produce at least
one PhD. in that discipline in
the ten-year period.
Dr. Daniel H. Murray, acting vice president for academic
alla.irs, emphasized that the
_ 1 ACE report deals with disciplines as such and does not
deal with departments. For example be explained, pbarmacolGd at lJ t B involves pbann·
acology work done not only in
the School of Pbamfacy hut
also in the School of Medicine.
It also involves the Roswell
Park Memorial Hospital mem·
hers of the graduate faculty, be
said.
Dr. Murray also pointed out

that

DO

proleoaional schools

were rated as such.

The vice pnlSident said that
in 11 disciplines· where U/ B received no rating, the University was not eligible to be
rated, not having offered doctorates in any of the disciplineo
in the period studied. Since the

survey was taken, however,
U/ B bas added Ph.D . programs in French, Spanish. geology, geograplzy, political science and musi~ ·
. "Some disciplines that were
not considered this time will
certainly emerge as adequate
to good in a later survey," he
predicted.
Furnas CNdtt.d

What factors explain the dramatic rise in quality of graduate Iacui ty?
Top administrators are giv·
ing the late Dr. Clifford C.
Furnas much of the credit.
Dr. Murray said "the figures
reveal the development that
Dr. .lo'umas stsrted in the main.
The study covers the period
1957-68, and that means people
were responding in tenns of
where the University was in
1968. Dr. Furnas recruited the
faculty who led to this perception."
"A later report, in 1973-74,
will give a feeling of further de-

New York Stale ACE Comparisons
NOTE: "FACULTY" refers to the rat.d qua lity of &amp;l'llduate faculty i n each diKipllne

at • ~rticular in1titution. "'CHANGE" refers to the a1tlmated chan&amp;• In Quality of
araduate education at each Institution In a • iven discipline. The uri• of numbe~
is to be read as follows: the first Is the percent••• of ,..ters who felt the discipline
at a particula r lnstilutlon to . be ' ' Ntler than 5 y .. rs aao"; the sac:ond, ''little
chanced In five years," and the thinS, ' 'woBe than 5 years aao: • Often "CHANGE"
was not listed in tha rapo'rt for disclplinn ,..ted 2 .0 to 2.4 and 2.5 to 2.9. In most
cases that means that less than 20 per cant of t he respondents felt the discipline
to be " better than five years aao." In other cases the re ware no fi&amp;Uf'M at all for
Institutions scored 2.0-2.4 . It will be noted that U/ 8 consistently scored well on
" CHANGE'' - In no case did the University ~a i va lass than 20% on the "batter
than ti..,. years a•o" tally.

-

.......

CLASSICS

.UFFALO
Columbia
Cornall
N.Y.U.
Rochester

•ocuoty
2.5-2.9
3 .0-5.0
3.0-s .o
2.0-2.4

66-3-2
5-41-32
7-29-31

Syrac:UH

.

.......

UHGUimCS
Facutt)o

aUFFALO
Cor:.~mbla

CorM II
N.Y.U.
Roehntar

2 .0 -2.4
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0

29-20-6
9-30..t2
4-50-22

SyrliCUM

......ALO
Columbia
Co moll
N.Y.U.
Rochest•r

.......

£CONOMtCS
F-.:utty
2.0-2.4
45....
3 .0-5.0
10-39-25
3 .0-5.0
14-47-4
2.0-2.4
3.0-5.0
31-29-1

,.......,.

........

£NGUSH

3 .0-5.0
3 .0-5.0
3 .0-5.0
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2-0-2.4

58--2· 1
5-32-33
10-39-11
ll.J2-6
26-23-3

P'HILOSOI'HY
Chonp
48--16-1
13..t2-2 1
8--57-9

'"""""
2.5-2.9
3 .0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0
2 .0-2.4

34-27-2

,..,....

HISTORY
Chonp
2 .0-2.4
41-8-0
3 .0-5.0
5-38-36
3 .0-5.0
15-39-14
2 .5-2.9
3 .0-5.0
16-25·12
2.0-2.4

....... ........
·......
.........
Syrac:.UM

SOCK&gt;UMIY

MIFFALO
Columbia
Comoll
N.Y.U.
Rochester

2.0-2.4
3.0·5.0
3.0.5.0
2.5-2.9

39-12-1
6--41-35

2.0-2.4

Comoll

N.Y.U.
Rochester

.........

2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9

......

24--9·2
10-28-7
16--19-3

.......

PMYSIOUMIY

_,ALO

......._
Columbia
Cornall
N.Y.U.

RoeMster

SyrawM·

3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9

21-16-1
5-21 ·11
7-27-5

3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9

6-16-12

..

,_
~

···-

...

--·-Col-

Comoll
N.Y.U.

.
.......

2.0-2.4
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.0-2.4
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4

29-13-3
6-44-16
12-45-6
9..t7-5

CIVIL
._lftDIIIOII

,....,.
2.0-2.4
3.D-5.0
3.o-5.0

2.5-2.1
2.5-2.0

2.0-U

33-8-3
5-30-18
45-19-0
2-29-6

--

MOU:C:UL.AR
IIOLOCIY

2.5-2.9
3.0.5.0
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4

3().10&lt;)

17-19-19
26-29-2
3-26-6

--

ZOOUMIY

2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2..9

21-5-0
2-23-23
20-:104

3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9

3-11-3

.,...

...

AHTHROPOLOGiY
F.c:utty
2.0-2 .4
44-12-6
3.0-5.0
14..t5-23
3.0-5.0
17-48-15
2.0-2.4
36-10-3
2.0-2.4
28-25-2

.......

PSYCHOLOGY
F.c:utty
2.5-2.9
46-7-0
3.0-5.0
11 -24..28
3 .0-5.0
12-36-11
3 .0-5.0
9-29-10
3.0-5.0
24-28-2
2.5-2.9~

,..,....

-

DEYtLOP'MrNTAL
aiOUMIY

2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9
3:0 -5.0
2.0 -2 .4
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4

25-7-0

18-.32-2

.,.......

P'HA.IUIA.COUHIY

'"""""
3.0·5.0
3 .0-5.0

33-9-2
23-16-5

3.0-5.0

' 14-21-3

.,...,..

CHEMIITJIY
FacuttJ
2.5·2.9
51-6&lt;1
3 .0-5.0
12-44-20
3.0-5.0
31-38-3
2.0-2.4
2,0..2.4
3.0-5.0
19-26-8
2.0-2.4

-- ·- -- ....... -.......
........... ...... -- --

MATHDIATICS

"""ALO
emumbla
Co moll
N.Y.Lf,
Renssetaer

2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4

....... ....... ......
UICitOIIOL.OGY

"""ALO
Columbia

atoCHDIISTRY

.......

GERMAN
Fac:utty
2.5-2.9
41-9-2
3.0-5.0
6-28-30
3.0-5.0
14-30-18
2.5-2.9

..,

~YSICS

2».4
3.0-5.0
3 .0-5.0
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9

31-10-0
3-40-23
14-41-3

18-37-4

nt:c:nttCAL
U.NUJtiNG

2.0-2.4

3-26-14

3.o-5.0

23-9-o
3-27-11

27-3.2-3

J-0-5.0
3.0-5.0

6-24-9

2.5-2.9
3.0-5.0

7-32-5

.......

2().30.8

CHDitC.U

ENQINUJhNG

2.0-2 .4
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9
2.0-2.4
2.0-2.4

40--10-1

MICHAHICAL.

........
2.0-2.4
3.0-5.0
3.0-5.0
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.9
2.5-2.!1
2.0-2.4

25-5-1

3-25-14
10-37·5

l61TIIIM7 7, 1971

velopment in the Meyeraon
. years," Murray &amp;aid.
Similarly, Dr. Raymond
Ewell, vice president lor reSMn:b, said the pins abould
"parUy be attributed to President Furnas' work." •
Both vice pre8idents asr-1
that the lunda that became
available alter U/ B "went
Stste" in 1962 attracted topnight scholars to the University. SUNY's master plan callB
for UIB to become the largest
graduate center within the
Stste system, enrolling between
15,000 and 17,000 graduate
students by the late 19'/0's.
Dr. Murray noted that developing graduate programs ia
a "slow process." Also slow, be
said, is the time it takes for a
University's reputstion to catch
up with its achievements.
liOO ""'c-rt I m p All told, Dr. Murray saw the
resul Is of the new ACE survey
as "providing an indication of

the extent to which the University bas succeeded in improving its composite programs ..tt
the post-baccalaureate I eve I,
which was made possible by
substsntial increases in the budget which occurred subsequent
to UI B's merger wi the State
system."'
"Since the national survey is

Dance Planners
Dr. and Mrs. R. Oliver Gl-., taft, and Dr. and Mrs. And,_

:YrMU:l:'w':n·:,.C:"u.:'
~:":.. ea~
Inn tat' month. Mrs.
chairman and Mrs.
Holt . . .

Gl_,, co-chairman. of tho awnt which marllad tho 25th
_ , of tho Club.

~d=~
aby~·~f ~ - &lt;WEEKLY
groups m each dlSClpline, 1t
provides one of the most objective measures of how well

~~'::t;: 0,:. o;r~~~

0:

national scene."
" It should be emphasized,''

COMMUNIQUE

~d=t.e~~r ~f:~ ~\~
~u!falo_

has made an already .

VlStbl~ Improvement-a 600 per

cent unprovement."

Late Drop··
Ru1es Set

·

J!':"'.!

srron;r::

Dr. Je»epb T . English. prendent,
Fein, Dr. Geor1e

Silver.' NATION·

Medical P

F K

f

an~ Je'ndr!~~~:

Sowers

12 noon and 7 :30 p.l1
THmOBI:'I'ICAL BIOLOGY 8EMJNAB•:

oucao! 62 receivip.(locations; 1: 30

Dr. Giuseppe .Colacioco, pediat-

wasruNc •: Oswego State, Clark
Gym, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

EinStein

Albert
College of
Medicine, Yeshiva University,
New York, "New Concepts m
Bioourfaces," Room 29, 4248
~;rp_!:'• 4 p.m. Refreshments
rico,

:=.

Surface tension, free and atruc--

:U~= ;~':~"E::~

ics and mechaniama of lipid-lipid.
lipid-ion, and lipid-protein interactiou-Hydrophilic va. hydrophobic.

FRIDAY--8

if:

p.m.

AL HEALTH JNBUL\NCE-18 rr
ENOUGH?, 62 receiving locatioDI,

Fritz

w==tin!eto~
have to take a bald but
look at the practice ol dropping a whole semester of
courses," Ebert said.

~~~~1AL~~";'~~g

HOSPITAL M.ANACI:IJ.AL AND SUP£1 :·

~W. Yc!~~ti~~altt:"do~:!; ~uyu~r!o~Tb~;~ri::~

i'IIIZ PILM•:

Undergraduate students attempting to drop . all courses
after the official drop date will
be subject to several guidelines,
Charles H . V. Ebert, acting
dean, Undergraduate Studies,
bas announced.
1. A student who wishes to
drop all courses at the -end of
the semester must a Division of Undergraduate Studies
adviser who will bave to authorize such a drop .
2. The student will bave to
provide dtxumentation if be
feels that the reason for his
resignation is beyond his control, ie.. a true hardship case
(death in the immediate
family, severe illness, accidents).
3. A student who resigna all
courses, with the exception of
the hardship C88ell listed above,
ia no longer considered a student in this University and
mU/It formally apply for rv:udmisaion and cannot expect,
to be placed "'-&lt;! of others
who have already . applied for
admission to this Uruversity.
"In view of the thousands of

•

•Open to public;
.. Open to membo"' of tho Unlverolty;
#Open only to those with a profeulonal intern! In tho subject
THURS A y
Buffalo den Wt. OFFICE MANAGE·

D -7
~~u~~ s~!~on~ ·~: ~rl!~~nal~~

to perceptions of no later than
1968, it dof!s not take account
of programs which have im·
proved substantially in the ensuing two • years - programs
which certainly will be nationally visible when a later survey
is carried out."
He added: " While nationally there has been a ten per cent
improvement in graduate laculties-as judged by 70 per
cent rated 'adequate' or better

Ann~

~).

( 1926,

:= ~~~in!f::t\:S.~

brilliant studio work, particularly

the architectural conetruction of
the city of the future, ia ou.tatand-

inc even in a period DOted for its
aDd

p .m .

·

LIBRARY EXHIBITS
Permanent exhibit of worb by
Robert Graves and James Joyce.
Poetry Room, 207 Lockwood Li·
brary, 9 a .m.. -5 p .m.
TD08 OP CJIAIUAS DICKENS: illus-trates his life and timel with
pbotocrapbo, drawinp, portraita,
first edibona. Main readinc room

~':""'~%~~'d:
brary, through January.

IO:l'IIOPOLIB

147 Diefendorf, 7: 30
p.m. to midnicht.
This abbreviated American version of one of the moet ambitioua
of the German silent fantuioa

imp.-iWJ -

COURSE ABSENTEElSM CAN BE RE·

licbtini-

MONDAY-11

IDA POUND

s8hJ

8111I'Bl&gt;AY lOX·

HJBJT, eecond Boor balcony, Lockwood Library, th....,P . January.

NOTICES

..

TD OWKZ OP ftNANCLU. AID ia

=~~~o~ ~;t~~

demic year. Forma may be ·ae--

at

quiNd
the FinaDcial Aid Ollee,
216 Harrimaa Library. Completed
applications are to be retumed. to
the office DO later than Man:b I,
1971 aDd fmancial alalloiDenta to
bo p""-&lt;1 by the Collep Scbolanhip Service are to be forwardod to CSS DO later than
February I, 1971.

couaa. All UDdeqnduates inte...W in tutoriq be--

TUTOIDNC

TUESDAY-12
PIIYBICIAJf8

Ta.&amp;PBOHE ~ :

Sponaored by Rep&gt;nal Medical
Program, Dr. Ivan L

Bunnell,

TD COHftiBtm.ON OP ANWOG&amp;A·
PRY IN TB&amp; &lt;UHICAL .ulllai8JBNT
OJ' COIIOHARY A1t1DY DI8&amp;AS&amp;. 62

.-vm.
loaotiono,
12 :30 p.m.

11:30 a.m.·

WEDNESDAY-13

:1:;:\~'a~a ·:.:--~ ~

January 26, at 3: 00 p.m.. in Diefendorf AnDe•-Room L Mr. Don
Mau, ditector of the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory. w i 11 AMWer
questions and ezplain resiotralioo •
procedwes during the "'"liDg. If

mtereoted

but unable to altebd,

pleue contact Mr. Mau at 111
Townsend Hall, E•t. 5863.

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1380653">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1380639">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1380641">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1380642">
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFAlO

. VOL 2 - NO. 14

.. - ... - ·DECEMBER 17, 1970

TwG-Towers

Job Freeze
Instituted
On Campus

Planned For
.Health Unit
Two six-story "modular"
- towers to be constructed as
part of the I:lealth Sciences
Center on the Amherst campus
are included in two contrads
for the Center totalling $3,424,400, soon to be awarded by the
State University Construction
Fund.
Tbe Fund is now receiving ·
AMHERST

All further .eotmnitments of
employment by U/B (in State
funded positions) ' have been
stopped as of December 11 as
part of a multiple local response to a State-wide drive to
balance the 1970-71 budgel
Says E . W. Doty, U / B vice
president for operations and
systems, "It is well to remember that Albany runs the paycheck machine. We have been'
clearly told what not to do. If,
in spite. of our instructions, hiring commitments are made,
they will be and probably remain the personal commitment
of the individual who makes
them-a personal commitment
which he will be unable to
honor."
The State ·hopes to produce
$100,000,000 in savings between
now and the end of the fiscal
year, March 31, 1971. If the
first-step"additional
cutbacks are not
suf_...,.,r;.._ ____________,., • ficient,
require-

WftAP.U!' .

For o progress roport an -all Am· ·

herst construction to date, see
separate story, page 3. '
·

bids for plli'Cj)ase, fabrimtion,
delivery and erection of structural steel for the -..rs and
for earthwork and footinp.
At a later dste, the architectural. shell will be bid and, still
later, interior patterns will be
drawn up.
Tbe Construction Fund says
these towers are "the tlrSt of a

~ ~gs~":"~

Can fie who made -the Lamb make peace?
No. Peace must be man's unique creation.
So far he has only made ~ymbols; he can only draw
a picture of a lamb. - .. ·
.
- -~ ...
fn' the New Year, ina ll the'years ahead, let us "'
use our power to go beyond the symbols,
To make peace a reality.

adequate fleDbility for changes
in interior conatruction to meet
requirements v il r y i n g with
physiall ~ of the Health

Sdences Ceritei-."

-

'Ibe struclulal system-of the.
towers will be steal frame with
metal declr. ~ _are suj&gt;poited on columns loCated at
the perimeter wall, the truas
system and columns to be of
structural s tee l lDdividual
members ol eadl truas are to be
separately fir!lproofed, thus
''providing ll'l!llierous J1i!!as ••of
free penetratloli for meChanical
services and for reuiQdelinl as
!-sed for updating purposes
to bep p8llB with scientific

The Seven Faculties an4 the Libraries Set
~ t0 Elect Senate RepreserlkitiveB

By JUDrni WOHL
With a new set of Faculty
will be Jo-. Senate BylawS' ratified, each
Faculty and the Libraries now
(continued"" ptJ6e 6, col. 4)
have the task of electing their
senators. NominatiOilB are to be
in by December 22 and electioils completild by January 20.
Nominations and elections of
senators will be by mail ballot
and will follow the "bullet" systan. According to the latter,
....,.. vOting faculty member has
• aa many votes as his Faculty
luis Senate -ts to fill, and he
may distribute those votes, both
in lllllllination a¢ election, in
any way he chooises. For eJ&lt;8JD·
pie, a member of tbe Arts and
Letters Faculty, which has 16
-Senate·-to, may cast 16 votes
for Dr. X. or one vote for .-It
ol16 candidates, or 10 votes for
Dr. X 'IIDd llil&lt; for Dr. Y, etc.
Aside from the basic procedure. ~• .-It' Faculty1
maY conduct the election in
lillY way IIJ'Pf'.'Pl!ate to itself.
The~ to date, bave not
88Uied ... -their . mode ol election, but the Faculties will act

·medical adVIIDC88.".
Tbe two

towers

- followl:
~Stutli~IIBi­
ll«riit« ad lAD will
tbe
FacultY 8eaa1e Guidellms for
votinL umnodlfled They will
..... lie "ncwninl&amp;ina CIIDdidat.
at 1arp, In allllllllliw twice that
wl&gt;ldl will be elected, { tbouilh
Jar~DO-tban
liO ~ C.t c:aDbe elected from

==-. .

---lu&amp;d).

'-·far ........ with tmee

ol

lllllllinA!IIil&lt; and
H.-ItA 8eiellea, with a lllll
wtilll facalty ol 400,

will accept an unlimited num-

ments" will be imposed on U f B
and all other State agenctes
shortly after the first of the
year, Doty: says.
Tbe State's "first-stage" cuthacks, outli.!&gt;!d December 4 in
a memo from~~
T . N . Hurd and cin:ulated to
all SUNY units :Decemla- 9,
call for these ''belt-tightening"
measures:
1. Freeze all existinf and fu• .
ture personnel vacancJeB. ( Requests for eDleptions for "essential services" may be made.)
2. Postpone implementation
of new programs and the eJ&lt;·
pansion of existing ones, even
though such programs have
been autborimd and funded.
3. Cut out-or cut backIowes
_ CutPtri~~~to"-- _..__
4
u...,.~
an......lute minimum.
5. Drop as many provisional
and temporary appointees (a-cept plOvisional promotees) as
possible.
6. Eliminate out-of-State
travel """"''t that .which is. absolutely necelllllly.
7. .Cut down Oil regular inState travel eDlept wbeze eosential
8. Cut communications ez.

ing faculty group, will probably nominate 42 and elect 21
at large. Tbe decision, however,
on how many candidates will
appear on the Socisl Sciences
ballot, and whether they will
be on an "at large" or departmental basis, was unofticial at
this printing. Tbe Faculty's
Policy Committee was not to
be taking a vote until Tuesday
aftemoon, after the Reporter
desdline.
Over the past several semesTwo Faculties have departed
ters, .n ot more tlian 50 per cent from the simple, deciding to
of Uhiveisity instructors have split their COilBtitueocies. They
submitted ollicial grade slips at feel this will give them better
the time requested, Charles H . representation. Arts and Letters
V. Ebert, acting dean, Under- will elect 16 senators divided
graduate Studies, said in a into two -voting segments. Tbe
memo to faculty recently.
-first is a "tribal" grouping of
He urged that faculty return three roughly bomogeneous and
graded cards to Admissions and numericaiJy equal departmenRecords three dsys after final tal units: English and _comparexams or three dsys after the ative literature ; foreign lanend ol inslnJction if there is 110 gusges and classics; art and
final.
.
music. Each "tribe" will nomiEbert emphasized that it is nate eight persons and elect
the student who can be injured four, one of whom will be a .
- in terms of Graduate School woman. 'lbe second division is
admiasion and/ or admiasion to on the basis ot,three orders of
a major department:_if pades rank. Those of' "professor" and
"81110ciate prof__.. will each
are not ft!IXri8d on time.
"'f rio one delinquen~" lllllllinate three persons, and
Ebert Mid, -"all grades could be elect one. Aasistant prof_,.. .
produced throUch Data Proc- and instructors will together
- imJne4lately
subSix, and elect two.
.:;:..:, the glade :._~ • to lllllllinate
NaluraJ Science• has also
Admioaions and~ - sectioned its vote; though with
some d u r - . Of its 11 Fac-ulty Senate 8M1a, it has.allotted
HDIJDIIY IIIIEM
one • each departmeat, and
Tod81'• Is
8ve to the Faculty at Ia,.
poitor until ..._ry 7, 11171, . . will ....., pUbllcetian. Tbree ...... the departmeatal
_.., will be lllllllinated {18) ,
The belt . . . . for and twice 1be nlllilber o1 those
the~-at larp (10).
ber of nominations at large, and
elect 25, with not more than
half coming from one depart.
ment or school. SociQI Scieru:es,
which also has a sizeable vot-

DoonWants

Prompt Mruks

the-- the..._
'

penditures.

9. Cut down on publications
and printing costs.
) 0. Slop all equipment purcliases, eDlept to meet emer~11. Slop all ._us acept to
meet emerp!DCies.
12. Reduce inventories.
13. Reduce 1970-71 deficiency req...ts.
,.
14. Refrain from signing new
contzacts..
.
15. Review all i?caJ assist8Dce
programs for savmp.
- 16. Avoid making capital
project contracts. .
~ach State _agepcy is -required to submit to Hurd by
December 21 the steps it has
taken to imp--t ~ - owes.
other steps projected and
an estimate o1 dollsr savings
these steps will produce by
March 31. SUNY units are requlred to file their repor1s with
the SUNY central adminiatralion todsy ( llecombm- 1'7) •
Vice President Doty has advised UjB President ·Robert
( - " " - 8, -cot 6)

~

·

�~

Next Years ·Transfers
·To Find·Things Easier

'Voiceprints~

_Under Study
InUIBLah :

Study in'Asia Progmm
Open to Grad StudentS

Grad students will 'ba"" an """' __._ o1 tp'8duate atudy
opportunity to gain firstbaDd with a 41B" avera1e hi all
appreciatbl of cultures in East .,.,...._, and Will fwi acremed
and South Asia in the Uru....r- for their ebiJitY to adapt to livLni'.....- s.msity's ''Rotational Study Pro- il!l in a fonllp culture.
The University is one of gliiiii .in Asia" whidl bagins 'in
. Further detail• can be ..,.. .
the spnng' - t e r .
cured....._......_
••;...... A. ...,..._,
three institutions in the nation
iYal
~...,... • .....,....
attempting to find out just how • Four atudents..w!ll ~ tra .- · elli, dlrectDr ril OverEas Am' voiceprints vary from person to mg to Soochow Uruvermty, Tai- demic Propama. 10'7 Townsend
person, from word to word and . j&gt;ei, Taiwan, the first site of the HalL
hom utl.ei'Bnce to utterance of · program. Thereafter, about l!O E'l~. ~AkJs
the same word.
·
will be invo!ved each academic UJUI~
~tly, voi~~ are_not year, ~ '!"" oemeater at
.
a valid means of identification, a South Asian Site, a aeccmd in - T-- ~
o
Dr. Robert E. McGlone, ·asao- East Asia. ~ Yll!ll ~ts ·.lJUU:~I'
cite .pr:ofessor. of speech com- will he sent to ~t ll&amp;tion&amp;.
munication and director · of
The Pf0111'8Dl 18,~~
A "person-to-person" pl'l)o ·
U/ B's Speech Communication lished under the _
_..., · ' gram· that in~ws University ·,
Research Lab, says. There is Dr. ~les R. Fall .and Dr. students and 300 elementary ·
By STEVE UPMAN
"very little evidence now" that B~ H. Glenn, both £j'fes- llfllde acbool. ddUireD ia paying
The Blue Whale, say the exvoiceprints-"pi~" of the "!""' ~ the_Faculty of _ uca- dividends. Tb111t's Whilt -Mias
perts, is:
voice produced on sound spec- tiona! Studies. · . • . . .
Sara Clcarelli. aBICiate pmfes1) -the largest animal in histrographs-are as reliable. !Ill . f!tudents spena!•!mg m edu- lloJ:, medocal1eclmolotiY, and
·,
•
fingerprints.
ca~n,
~
bUJDil!lltieB,_arts
and
·'
pJ'OP.IUII direc~r •. aaya about
tory
"'Ibe research in this area social 8CiellCI!8 will ~ mvol~. "'nvOlvement in Motivation of
2) extinct.
.has been very' bad," he thinks,
A~ Soochow, a ~vate um- fnDer. City Students." .
. youmlgbtgetafightonboth =:re~~ :e:!'~~ "and until we get evidence we verSlty, _stude,nta will take a · Currently, theire 'are 36 stupomts from _J oanne fo!elson, transfer admissions with the don't think this is a legitimate sury&lt;'Y ""'!"!". m .tho;~ of dents~~ visit chil-'
however. MISS Nelson IS coach Office of Admissions and Reo- technique." Dr. McGlone ex- ~ aviliza~,.. history dien in two inDer city'lleboOls
of the U/B girls' ~ team, · ords.
pects the search f~ such evi, of Chtnese pbllosophyJ ft!1d · (Nos: 37' and 74) one day .a
the Blue Whales. MISS Nelson
All these d partmental repre-' .dence now being conducted at ~t, a. course ... ~' -. week. They spend abou~ tWo
doesn't know where, the team sentatives,.p.d...t,lytohecilled , Ridge Lea to -~e c:ompl!'ted tion oft~and~~ . hours with· the chi!dren in
got its name-certainly not transfer evalua.tion directoltl, probabThe~~~~~onA~al ~...:-· m'Y areas ~• individ-· ~ five ~'-~thet;,, ___ _
from the team mascot, a toy . would work wtth A&amp;R to es- . . . """"""'~.......,
ual...-~""'!"
"' .
OWe WIUl~ to ........,
""""'
whale, wbi(:h is black----but she tsblish an effiCient evaluation stgnificsnoe· w•t.h the recent
mtereSt.
. • .
city Children aware · qf -career
does claim this year's team "is . procedure Bob Anstett, direc- bomb tlireat '!'hich WJ'S follow- .
Next !alJ. particil!"ting sthetu- opportunities available. We
the greatest bunch of girls rve
·
• .
ed by an explosion of the Hum- dents will be studymg at .
think t1iis
belp them get
tor of tr.ans.fe~ admtsston.s , . ble Oil refinery in Linden, N- University of Karachi, West . .
mayhi..&amp;. school
ever worked with.'~
Mostofthe16Blue .Wbales !'&lt;&gt;pesthiswiJ!mvolve~hir- Jersey Linden police h&amp;ve a Pakiatan.Othernationa .Where mto~~C~
. pl'l)o .
• year are freshmen w"'-·, mg of full-hme. professionalk
·
tape .:..COrding of the threat, contacts haVe been niade for • ~ · · _,..;;.
d ~'pel"
this
•~
evaluators wbo will wor wtth
.
the
· · 1 d .J
~
• ...,re •JS ......, a oee
Coach Nelson says, "don:tknow the · d' 'dual departments.
and their imnouncemerlt of that
program lll!'. U. e a pan, relationship developing bew~theyareyel"Mostswam
m lVl
fact led lll8o/ P.!'J:8011S . to be- Korea, The_l'hilippmo;s. Hong tween · the U/B ,Students and .
. These evaluaton: would ~t Jieve that votcepnnts nught be Kong, ~. India, Mal- the childien· ··'On- ~ we
on hilh school teams.
....,__ I d.
ils . this Judge ~ students ~pt used as evidence against a .sus- BY.&amp;, Ceylon, Indonesia, Nepal,
. s.: ...~ts to ""-'-.. the
'"" ea mg pup m
to.~ if he meets Uru~enuty peel ·
. .
.
.. Pakis.
• tan and Afglia,nis~a.n.
encouregechildrento......,..the cam~pu...,.a. (in
year's scbool (of Whales) are cnteria and .then~ wtth the
lndeed, it nuiJht happen.
!'Jmce.. many of the "!"verSlt!"" ' small
of seven) .to bowl,
~'::j~~i~ttP:!~~ department to see if they have
But in two famous legal c&amp;ses mvolVed are connected wtth
vent, ViSit the Anibroken team records already space for the transfer.
.
to date- one related to the their· governments ,- the U.S.
a
ore'attend IIODie other
this year.
·
·
.
Next, the student's cred•~ Watts rio_ts · and _ another-which ~ State ~t _ or. ·l;be .Ful- _ Univei-s.ity ~Others
·Why do they join a girls' ~ould he evaluated to see if ~ m N- J!"""'y-&lt;X&gt;UI'Is bright CoJnmias•on wil,l have to ~ hav,e formed' special icieoCe
swim team?
. "?urses would transf~ aa eleo- have !"till!"te!y rejected 'the uae help .~ out ~taila.
' cl""""- The children 'reaJJy,.en"It's good therapy," Coach tives. or could be substitute&lt;! f'!r of vo1cepnnta In Watts, a JlOil- . • ~rding to Dr. Fall, _w!lo joy ~ 1!P8i:ial attention · and
Nelso
lains
reqwred U] B courses. This IS viction baaed on such -evidence vwted most- of the potential cloee ·fiii.ndahip.. . ·
ea;..i!"Barb..ch addS, "It's the J?rocedure ~t Anstett is was -later ov,ertumed and in host-institutions dlll!inJ - ~
Uillv,ersity stUdents 11!8 sup. good exercise when you're frus- wor~g toward, but a lot . of New Jersey the ~upreme ~ llUIDll&gt;et;• the program probably". plementing the. existing pi'o• b'ated. Besides, we get to meet details must he worked out wtth ruled that the evtdence was "m- would not have been possible · grams -;n the. two• achools with
the boy swimmers, and . .. ." the departments."
admissible."
·
except for the contacts that c~ in poetry- folk· music,
The girls practice at least
If these procedures are adoptDr. McGlone is dnwilling to have been developed over the rock formation, ~ts dothree bours a week in Clark ed,_ closer .ties with the ·other ~ a "pro or co_n" position Y"'!"!' through the Yisi·t ing ing blooa fyping anii taking
'Gym Pool, sometimes against umversthes and two-ye¥ until the research IS ~plet;e. . As!&amp;n Professors Project here. blood pres8!ll'88, Working with
Law !'llforcement of6cials will Ainan .professors who have iricUbated feitilized !laa. studyintramural squads. Last week scbools would he necessary m
the Blue Whales competed order to he able to evaluate the he interested in ·the word from taught at U/B and oth!!r U.S. ing bacteria, ana deu'ionstrating
against four intramural· boys' le~el &lt;;&gt;~ their courses and ap- U/ B, cc;&gt;n6rming or denying the institutions will he · ~le blood circulation. The colleteams. The Whales won.
phcsbtlity to U /B, Anstett elfechveness of the tool. If ·for the PfOIII'8lllS of the VISlting gians registei' for independent
These Blue Whales almost notes. He feels that this evalu- voiceprihts turn out to he as · ·students, along with a U/B Pl'O;- study ana receive four hours of
became extinct following a meet ation information is' necessary, reliable as fingerprints, they fesilor who -will accompany th!i University credit. .·
·
earlier this winter. "We ran in- thOugh, for a "student to make could he an invaluable t&amp;l for students each year.
Tbe ~ bepn in Januto a blinding blizzard on the an intelligent decision on a wide range of law enforceApplicants to the Program
1970 With.42 students from
Thruway," Coach Nelson remi- whether to go to UfB."
ment activities.
·
must have completed at least education, English, m.e dical

u /B

will he
a little easier this fall when students 1will he accepted into the
University and into a department at the same time.
Under the new policy, an
eYaluation of a stUdent's transfer credits and an estimate of
how long it will take birD to
p1l!luate will alao he included
m his letter of acceptance.
Transferring to

Blue Whnles .
Still Swim

Previously, a student was aocepted only into the University
and when he arrived, he would
talk with the departmentCredillh&lt;l'!~
being accepted there.
evaluation a1ao took a long time
since the students' records had _
to go from Admissions and
Records (A&amp;R) to the Division
of Undergraduate Studies. to
the individual department wtth
evaluation of different courBeS
being done at each step. UsUally the process took two to three
months, but.sometimes students
would have to wait from 12 to
18 months for the entire process. (See Reportu, December
3, for a full discuasion of the
dilliculties.)
- To eliminate these delays,
Charles Ebert, acting dean of
the Division of Undergraduate
askin d partment
Studies, is
g e
f

By '
CHERYL HARGESHEIMER

u-.

C
.
i t y

poll,.:'
:!. i!b

.zy

niaoea. "One car almost ran into

::..::~

car of the swimming
The Blue Whales have eilht
· ~ts scheduled this winter. So
far they've held three of them,
and have been harpooned ,just
once. The Whales swim mostly
against local teams- Fredonia
State, Brockport-State, Rochest8r, BQd D'Youville-as well118
Waterloo (Ontario).
The Whales will· enter both
an international meetjn WaterJoo in -January, and the NYoritStateChampionshipsbeld
at Fredonia State in March.

• S'~
A. D A. 'D ~~ tecbnolocY. oocupa\ional
A&amp;R Helps Students m
...~.aowawuu. .
SARA has finally come! And
for those · of ' you -w ith doubts
about what to do "with "her,"
Admissions and Records is conducting help sessions to guide
you throuiJh the maze' of regi&amp;tering by computer.
Sessionsareheingheldtoday
and tomorrow in 233 Norton, to
answer any pre-regisb'ation
questions you might liave. And,
starting January 4, there will
be continuous advice available.

·

·
•
·
Close to , 500 . students have
Since the forms are neW and
used this service to date, A&amp;R may he c:ooitplex to fill out;
estimates. Answering the ques- John Hiun!nond, assistant to
tions are students who reg- the director of admiasiona and
istered by SARA this summer. records, ia ·planning to have
. _These '·"veterans" will he · ~re people· at other ~·t here to actually help fill out tion P'!'ces.' Student aides will
the regisb'ation forms · when he assigned .to ·CJar!&lt; Gym to
students begin picking them up answer Ql!88tio!"' dunng the ac• after the hOlidays. At -that tual registl:ation process . on
point, the service will be avSil- January 21 (graduate), 22, 25
able from 9 a.m.-9 p.n• in and 26. Others will be in DiefRoom 240 of Norton.
"endorf to help clear up any
cornputer mistakes whe!n stu•
'
dents receive their completed

therapy, pbyalcal tJaapy. and psy~··cicar8m said that so
would lib to participate during
the spring ........
·
In tile fu~ abe said, "We
must pt to the ebildren at an
earlier qe. ·We' l;!!pii to move
down one · pa11e iiM::b of. the

nan foUr yema until

we reach

the flnit~ grade. By that time,
we hope also to haw -tinu-

ing pr,pgrama for t,he other

lll'8dea ~ ~- thrculh

hilh ac:bool"
' •
'llae ~ tJl """'· U.ni-

....nit)' coed . _ ~
in the pro'J::.f'e typical:

.MApplications
athDepartmenttoMakeResearch_
Awards ~~...~to~: ~n-=
..... now
Upon espiration of the
Materials should be directed _up regisl:n!tion materials. and stimulus to my aocial con'baing
_apaccepted for the ·George Wil- poin........_ the Department
d Emm N .,__ _.;., ~ity" ---'-'-tion for
liam Hill
reaearch u:::'tructorsi!l'ps
~:;..~tasasGC
Sistan~-·
will "" p'~
U/BDepartmentofMat:be~
"" · matics.
~~=,.:::;;
Tbe two awards, _granted and teaching."
yearly, carry two-year appoint111811111 and have been incepted
APPlicants must have cornto enable young' mau-ti,· pletecl all requbaDonts for lhe
cians with doctorates to carry Ph.D. by~ 1. 1971. A
f..-d a research program. · sumznary &lt;J!. p~st-hiJll•scbool
The stipend fot 12 months be- edueat:ioa bllclrpoUDd as well
ginning September 1971 is $15,- as ri sketdl ol put and project300, lndudiDC "pnerous bene- ed - . c b activity abolild aoJlfa." T.mln&amp; load ~ will total C!JIIlP8DY lhe eppllcat:ioa along
two ............._ COUllll!ll dur- - With !etten oltN"' • =tet:loa
ing the 12-maath pedac(
'from thn_oe -ltwnedc:imw

:''ii:

!:

to the Chairman, Department ~ appomtments to f!'IIISter.
of M thoimati SUNY Buf listed by c:lasa, m last
a
.ca.
at
- Monday'sSpeetrum.lfyouare
fal1'2260,.f246andRidshouJdgeLea, Buflalo, unsure about the assiKned " •
,
arrive~ '- caJJ•DiviaionoilJDder-7
by Jan~ 15, 197i. Appoint- • uate Studies for inf.,;;;;"~
~16~ announced by . Re,istnllioa timee foil' padI!Bte atudeilts will be assigned
The fellOwablps are named by A A R ' * - 9 a.m. and
for outstandinc matbem&amp;ti- 5 p.m:, ;January ~20.
cians. Hill (1838-1914), an
The aftic:lal University class
American, is ClDilllidered uaae of adledule for the . - d - .
the pea'test mau-tical as- ter will . be~ publiabed .as
tronomers of all time." Noet:ber sPedaJ fldit:loa of the Reptrtu,
(1882-1935), a German- who to be lalued after the fint of
emigrated to the U.S. after the the year. This will also be disrise of Hitler, was· one of the tributed with registration incr.tors of'~ alpbra."
format:loa. •
·
\
0

•

a

science. It ia e&amp;V to· llit bad&lt;
and paaa ~t aa J1110P1e
withwhoinyauliawl-r8al·
Jy' .___. •ftv - · 1 -tad.
.... __, , _
·

~ t~tdwr:: :0:

Many said they wanllld to bs
what - '!
0

HDI'I
-~lllt ..1 HAVE A QUESI10II foR WHICH
I CAJiNoT GEl' -A SATISFACTORY
· ANSWER
.
()lllc.

-

of

st.i'Cient Affeln.

:lOl

Ulnly, &amp;1. 3721

..

�o.c.nr-

'3

J7, J970

Dust~

AsArnh£rSt
Takes Shope
It's full llteamllbove!s u-1

METZGER
8ouDda ':ri".U~~ but. there

out at Amlast with the dirt
really Oyina. Since the start

By·stJZANio:

are two SCATES, and tbay'nl
each'bealli,ni in a dilferent eli~ 'l1je' projects of two inclepeudent,groups, their BpP.Uent goal is similar: to eYIIIuale
~ and te.:ber&amp;. But their
approacbes to the problem ...
different.
A student group (Reporle,
November 19) ~ ita
survey by an in-daM ~
118ire oo Monday, 'I'uelclay and
Wedneeday of last week and
will """" compile the resulta.
The end product will .-.It
from boilina clown studeat opinions 80 88 to yield the - t i a l
flavor of a wide sampling of
undergraduate co u r s e s and
teacbinc- This
is ex~ to be ready this spring.
T• Th&amp; "other" SCATE, whose
date bf isauanoe is as yet undetermined, rapn&amp;!Dts the efforts of a seminar group on
course and taacbing evaluation
'-dad by n.. Robert Rott, director of the Olfice of Evaluation in the Division of Undergraduate Studies.

ran.

of
truction this
lb.pro= have been finished and
seven are well under way.
According to a report issued -'
by the State Univwsity Construction Fund this week, over
$110 million in cousUuction
oontracts will have been -arded by March 1 and another
$125 million is expected to be
let between March 71 and
March 72.. Pro~ estimated
to cost an additional $310 million are still 011 the drawing
boards.
•
Most of what is going on at
the new campus, locstinn · infrom used coffee cups. Of eot,~rse, with four ....,.. volves site preparation 'M&gt;lkclecoratlnc clays, there's still time for • clartt horw. moving of dirt and clearing of
Moybe one of the colleges will be oble to find • vegetation. But some buildings
holldoy use for the 26 tons of paper the University are starting to take shape. The
throws •w•y every month.
first Door concrete is being
poured for a dormitory that
will house 824 \1us have dining

surver

.tEnth.usiastic
... • ' Respo
.· nse Greets fh.n.n
.... ~"~
'-'.loCU.u.,uc;.Lo
1 As . . . . ,.:~On Q.C Administrato"
.
Of 1\.T~O-~
J. ~ !l.li:ll
~.li:llrJ!
!l
;woe.

By JUDITH WOHL
"Response bas been s6 enthusiastic that we've been
amazed - not at the enthusiEVIIIWition form.- that we,. distrib- asm, bat at how much enthusiuted in cleUH Jut - k shoUld be asm. It goes right up to the
returned to 176 Winspur Ave. "
very top of the University."
ible-·- - - = - - It 'WB8 Sanford I,ottor speaking, assistant dean and director
The impetus for their atody or gladuate stude!)t affairs in
is the Executive Committee of the School ()f Management, as
the Faculty Senate which in well as co-founder and ad /we
September 1969 went on record Executive Gommittee chairman
". . . in support of careful eval- of the newly formed American
uation of data concerning Association· of University -Adtaacbing eflectiveneoa with a ministrators (A~ ) which
·•·view IOwlud the rewarding of held its organizational meeting
excellence in teaching."
·
on the U / B campus last weekTaking a highly scientific· end
and organized approach involvAdministrators from all leving months of swdy and auth- els, all over the country, are
oritative advice, this SCATE rallying to the call for support
group prides itself on its exper- of AA U A, somewhat a counter~- They expect their end pert of the American Associaproduct to be a statistically ac- tinn of University Professors,
' curate, "fair and objective in· '"but not a countervailing force."
strument," with minimum bias- "We are not a collective-bares.
gaining agent; we hope to have
Their survey will alao be con- a liaison With AAUP, and such
dueled by .means of in-dass groups as the American Counquestionnai.res but they feel cil on Education," Lottor says.
their questionnaite will be a "We hope to set up: ethics and
sensitive devios which - ~ standards policies to be subinto account individual van- scribed to by institutions; a
ants. For instance, a low-am:- forum for administrators ; a
iety, relationship-oriented stu- scholarly journal and a newsdent may. react unfavorably to · letter· tbe dissemination of ,pola s~ulat!n~J:""'!" profes.sor ic:y at8tementa. nationwide.
"As adminlatratora, we do
while a higtHmxiety, relationship-oriented student may have dedication," be 88&gt;"favor him. ~ will be "Wbether there is a body of
designed so tbst such inherent knowledge ca II ed 'administrabU... ..., mlnimbed
,
tion' is open to question, but
Dr. Bolt's SCATE p-bups there;. a new m-1 of profeastated purpoee is to aiooal- the career university
an eluaive quantity, &amp;OOd teach- ·administrator-who is not looking. If this can be feasibly ing for acadernic rank, but who
evaluated by a widely 'accept- dCJM have a ~t contribution ·
a b l e - this SCATE ~ to make to higher education.
feel&amp; .-dta could be validly We are lrvirur to gain fl!!»&gt;lliUiled for dellisiana in reprd to tion of th&amp;?
·
promotion and aalary for their~
One tends to agree with Mr.
ulty. In .....-.1. they feel
Lottor's aims. ~ admini&amp;SCATE C. belp "! "improve trators have doctorstea, do PUbthe dlmate of learning on the Jiob and taacb, often without
ClllllpUL"
tion. They do so,
Which SCATE shoulcl you .....U~ growth,
comult before 1altinl a -clua?
not mciaey. As career profeaIt all depmlda what you J!l"' aioDaJa, they stay on lonaer
fer: a well-boDed, prec1ae than faculty, and often take a
SCATE or one that may be a 1onaer-nmae view of J1i1ms for
little roocb. but -.fy.
an lnllitu&amp;D.
.
- - MT
Deapite all this. 801118 AAUA
--.
_.._.. feel. they haw '' - '
Aft (Utt.ppr ......,..., - · tbrown "tram pOlar to post." 80
dr.winp c:e-..1 - . . . ,. to spMk. As 'lioell 88 baviJ11 no
lions) by ~ child- in
tawre and no voice in. aover~.....;...-c.:
tbey .... often vietied ..
SCAT£ FORMS

The Student Cou~M end Tuc:her

· _soo_"_"___

:::..=

diNciDr "' (he - · In - with Unlvenlty l'ullllc:etlonS

-.

-.

~ ~~i=~ "fin~AA~

Ia on ollli*Y In the
Lobby. The .,..
........ by ' a.mllll Allellon.

!I. 0

!I..L

tbey haw 11M no natiomride.
............ ilrpDbatiall. ~

tor - tbe........, ' * AAUA
and tbe A.M.A. In that,
rather than beloaiinl tiD 1181"

row specialty organizations, all

administrators can now join a
general association which will
address itself to their common
~oals
e The.
t meetm' g of AAUA
was called in October 1969 by
Mr. Lottor with about six administrstors on band. But due
to the concurrent founding of
the State University Professional Association "and other
interests,'' the group faltered
temporarily. Then, last spring,
Lottor, joined by U / B's Albert
Berrian, Andrew Holt._Marjorie Mix and Thomas Schillo,
rnsde the phoenix rise again.
The group bas obtained support and enthusiastic commitment from the "top" at U /B.
with such names as Ketter,
Bennis, and Siggelkow and former President Meyeraon. On its
27-member Board of Directors
are others, such as Brandenburg, Murray and Puller. But
the group is truly nationwi~e;
its 90-member charter group meludes such well-respected men
as John Blackburn, vice chancellor at the University of Denver,· Harold Hodgkinson, research educator at the Center
f. i r s

for Research and Development
in Higher Education at Berkeley, and Douglas Chapin, graduate program director at the
National Science Foundation.
M be hi IS' open to "any
em rs P
full-time employee of an' institution of higher education or
other non-profit institution, who
is primarily engaged in, or concerned with the administration
of higher education."
The Executive Committee
will meet again in mid-February to work out a full interpretation of the definition, as well
as a constitution and bylaws.
Among other things it will
continue to work on long-range
plllns and projects. "We have
high ideals and a lot of golden
plans,'' Lottor says. "The problem for this organization, for
any organization, is to keep
those ideals up and not bog
down in just collecting grievances. We should be as professional an organization for administrators as is AAUP for the
faculty. We should be capable,
for example, of sending in an
im partial investigatory team,
not afr&amp;id to condemn adrninis- ·
. called for."
trati·on, if that IS

.The GSA Requests Minimum .
10-Month Stipend of$3,450
App_roval of a d~ for a
minunum ten month stipend of
$3,450 plus acceptance of a proposal supporting the ROTC 19
and the Hayes 45 were the
highlights of Monday night's
Graduate Student Association
(GSA ) meeting.
Because of a Jack of a qaorum, the meeting was conducted
88 a session of a committee of
the whole. AU propoaals adopted rap,_t only IJle approval
of this committee and not of
the entire GSA.
.
Even without quorum, the
meeting was marlu!d by healed
diacusaioo over the stipend iasue. The GSA along with the
Graduate School. Executive
Council ( GSEC) has been considerint tbe ~ of a reoOllllllllllded minunum stipend. ·
I&gt;iacuEioo at Monday's meeting centered around the question of wbether' $3,000 is enough
to live on. ou- caocems that an increase in stipends
wotiJd ....-departments to
lower the llUIIlla of llr&amp;Chiate
etudellta acceplied. The paup
111na11y voted to ask for tbe $3,460 minimum for ten 1111111tb8
with an 8DDU8l coat cl livinl

a

increment. This proposal would
require departments to tell
incoming graduate students
when the stipend tbey are being offered is less than the minimum suggested by the GSA
and GSEC. ·
'The motion "expressing our
· support for the ROTC 19 and
Faculty 45 in their resistance
to the oppression to which they
have fallen victim and which is
symptomatic of the repressive
direction in which our society
is moving" was paased by a
vote"of 12-9.
.
The group alao allocated $50
to the Biochemical ~­
ogy Club and $2.500 to Te!c»,
a graduate student magazine,
for its summer issue. The poup
stipulated that their funding of
Telc» was "an l!lllllllp)e of the
kind of funding tbe GSA ax~ tbe Publications Board to
Clllltinue to provide."
'Ibis is tbe secood GSA meetlq wblcb bas f:ailed to~
also

:=gfo:n:x'bo..si:!~~=·

this ares bas no instructiooal
or social facilities designed in
it. This section was planned by
President Meyeraon so students
could have housing as quickly
as possible. However, in the fu-.
ture instructional buildings may
be erected in the complex. ·
The foundation work, includm
' g pilings and piling ca~, bas
~
been completed for colleges A
to F. Utilities for this complex
also have been done, with this
section of the work completed
ahead of schedule.
The campus lake ares is another scene of activity. Approximately 50 per cent of the
earth-moving necessary to the
.project bas been completed.
The dirt being removed is going
to raise other sections of the
site above flood level Plans are
to s tock the lake with fish and
also to finish off a small ares
for swimming.
Work is 8Jso being done that
will event1,1al.ly help supply the
campus with water and sewage
facilities. The engineers are relocating two water J.ines.......&lt;&gt;ne
the east, aitd
1.q the est.
to Amherst is o,:t the ~nly
place people are working on
the campus. Two transformers
now being constructed in Sweden will eventually become part
r
tr'
L ·tati'
0 an e1ec IC power suv-o
on.
All projects at Amherst have

been competitively bid on by
private companies. Surprising-'
ly enough, most of the bids
have been coming in at an average of 10 per cent below estimate, with only one project exceeding the expectation. SUCF
attributes this to the- slight recession in the private sector of
the 8COI_llllll¥· Also, more bids
are coming m than expected.
Other surprises are turning
up during construction. Enlrineers _baye found over 4ff diiferent soil tn- 011 tbe '1,201Hocre
site, with the poorest ty_pe Jo.
caled in the area of the colleps.
They have alao dug test wells
but haYen't come up with
water. This, they feel, is surprising due to the -tness of
the ares ani! the proximity o'
Ellicott Creek.
Parts of the campus are DOW
expected to be occupied '7
September 1972. Two Collegiate units will be among the
first group of completed structures with the law School following in tJie Spring of 73. In
September of '1'3, Part of the
Health Science complex will be
occupied.
~ ·

aquorum.1baail~t,_
WI-. To 8ot l t - .
a motion to "ellecthely publish RESERVE A ROOM IN NORTON
a lilt ol deleptea in aUimclance HALL
at tbe ~ to be dllaominNorton ReMrvotlons, 223 Nor·
ated in IUch a lll8llD8r 88 to
ton IMII, Ext. 4631
Clllllact thalr ~"

�4

~

-

~

l1,ltmJ

Western New York Newsmen Outline Their
Attitudes ToiWrd-UIB
radiawsm
u man

What attitudes -.rei tbe the averqe !B
baa an
Univemity pJeYilil UDOIIg me- -unbalanced view of Bullalo.
dia prof-a..~&amp; in Greater Tbe problem is that -.b is livBullalo? And what are tbe rea- ing in a different kind of world,
with widely dilfen!llt views of
SODS behind these attitudes?
Armchair opinions abound, of the nature of things. In this
coune. but a group Within tbe sense, many cilhens of Western
Media Committee of tbe Presi- New York do not have a baldential Task Force on c-mu- anced view of the ' Univemity,
nity Relations recently went to becalllle their conception of
the MWIIIOOID8 with a question- things makes it diJiicult for
naire to elicit these feelings, as them to understand ideas and
a background to the prepara- ways of doing things that aption of recommendations for pear reasonable on campus. change and improvemenl
Does the "'Y natura of As John M. Carter, executive
media ...-.... .....
dilector of tbe U/B Alumni -the Association who chaired tbe ..... of .......... prDjec:ts, which
......-t the paelquestionnaire sub group, says,
aepecls of the U~!
these selected comments serve •
Not
in
our
newspaper.... I
only to report tbe positions
shared by a majority of news- believe ' (positive) stories are
muCh
mote
credible
in this
men.
Recommendations. for poasi- newspaper because we do not
protect
or
favor
anyone.
ble solutions to problems identified bere will oome later.
• Not so mYch as some people
Student Robert N. Conviasar suppose. Although there has
is cbairman of the overall Me- been a Jot of negative news on
dia~.
camPUBeB lately, and this gen·
erally has been of a dramatic
nature, there has been a great
Q~Msiion: Do ,.,.. - the cltlof the w-.n Yorll a.... deal of neutral or positive news
havea-vtewoftheStata as well. I sense an increasing
Unlverllty of Yorll at -.1o1 amount of space being given to
educational news, as contrasted
• No. . . . Only time they get with institutional announceinterested is when there is ments and happenings_
trouble on campUB.
• Not at all. Tbe news lnedia
• No. Mostly what they see on has the responsibility of cover·
TV- violence on the campUB. ing events of inmiediacy- the
• Unfortunately, Western New riot, the incident, the statement
Yorkers have a very stilted of a radical group or adminisview of U ; B, probably fostered trative spc&gt;lr-man But this in
by the disruptions of late. Al- no way precludes coverage of
though I have been in WNY the positive elements and asonly slightly over 10 years, it pects of campus life.
is my understanding that U jB • No. Plenty of news (is renever has been a (avorile aon. ported ) about the progressive
• In terms of "campus activ- things being done at U / B. But
ism," probably quite a bit; in not enough people read this.
terms of academic accomplish- Bad news, as usua I, spreads
ments, etc., probably much tess: much faster than good ..
• No. The average WN'l'er has Q. Is disruption more Important In
very little knowledge of the vast tenn, of news c:overaae than ocien·
scope of the University, of its tific •chlevements;- community
resources both physical and in- services ond educotional assets of
tellectual. Tbere is awareness the University!
of the exis~ce of some of the • Not in terms of coverage, but
bigger units such as the Medi- in terms of "audience appeal,"
cal School, Law SchooL But yes.
very few lmow of the specialized institutes and programs • Not more important, but it
under the. roof of the Univer- seems that it is more widdy
sity. They are aware that the read.
University is a troubled com- • Again, this unfortunately is
munity. In other words, the the truth. Hard news is the
negative aspects rather than backbone of news work. Howthe positive have gained the at- ever, U / B's achievements in the
tention of the community.
aforementioned fields receive
excellent treatment locally.
• -Not really, for two main
sons: First it is so large and
• Disruption, by its very deficomplicated; it's diJiicult to see nition, makes news. Tbe media
and know the whole of il Sec- are in bUBini!SS to diaseminate
ond, the general community news. The immediacy of dis·
tends to see the University in ruption makes it Page One
its own light, and to judge it by news. Major scientific and eduits own values. Tbey tend to cational achievements can make
evaluate the University by its Page One, too, but these are
superficial signs and sYJnbols, rarities in the context of the
rather than its educational and daily news events.
human credentiala.
•
• This question has no real
• My impression is that the av- answer. Y~, disruption is more
erage U /B man feels the aver- im~t if it precludl"l the
age Bullalonian has an unbal- other things, or threatens their
anced view of u !B; and that orderly progress. Disruption is
the average Bulfalonian feels also- important, in that it is a

o.

..

~ factor in tbe public's attitudes -.rd tbe scbool-and
that would lie true even if tbe
media did not mdst.
Q. HM tt. occurrence Df "bll
- "· ... t h e - - - the .

...-lmillet

(are) blown all out .. attention and by tbe time it is
of proportion_
~~ anb hope it
• ComprebensioiL Both town
and gown miliunderstaDd tbe • niiat will Ju-aely depend 011
other. Understanding; There wb8tla tbe Um-.ity Ia orderly or dieorderJy -and that
&amp;eeiD8 to be a lad&lt; of will \JoY
both to Wlderstand. ~and sbilald Jarpl.y be left to tbe
Univmaib' it.elf. Let ua pr8i.
symbols. Some dislike
some dislike tbe flaa.
- • Not - n l y . 'Ibis all d&amp;iion. Much of tbe Uniwnity penda on what ia done out
hostile and threatanina- there, and bow it relates to tbe

• u "big DI!WB" .,_,.,. demon·
stratioas and such, yes; also
U/B involvement in such
things oft-campus. ·u ;B •"'denu are aluioy• identified ..,
•uch in drUI biUiu for illst&lt;Jnce.
·No other students are.
• To a great eztent, "big newrl' ,.....,.... ............ P,IWI
bas done considerable damage . . _ o f _ fonl{l!
_ ._
for .the
...
...
,
to U (B's image asi a place of
learning.
of -the ..... t h e - ......
• Certainly. Tbe continuing cammunltJ . . . disruptive practices of certain
paoltlan
...
elements 011 tbe campus in the
past few years generate an im- · - - - - - - - - - - age in the community- an im- • Crime 011 the c:slnpUB. Unage of virtual chaos rather than .Oiicited interference with the
the old, establiabed image of a ideological patterns of churches
quiet educational institution. and families, by student organiThe old U/B image was quite zations, under U /B Mgis. Indifferent from that of the pres- terfl'ft!n"!' by students, whose
ent state university and the organizations !Ire funded by
dichotomy is ever-present in compulaory fees on students,
the community mind.
with patterns of lea~ and
Holf .-ou1c1 rou . _ t build· order in public and puvate
schools in this area. Encouragelng •n aeeurata pooltiw 1.....,.1
ment of assault, lli1IOll, and
• Brielly, get off the defensive, murder of police by student
quit answering, start ezplain- publications, funded from coming, get on the offensive with pulaory fees; e.g. the oft-lllled
tbe good things. Person-to-per- slogan "oft the Pigs" which
son contact is tbe real answer. means kill tbe.police in the argot of revolutionary youth cul• First of all, set the school ture. Promotion of health-linstraighl At the moment it pairing druga and destructive
would be diJiicult to build both behavior by. student organizaan "accurate" and a "positive" tions and certain faculty.
image at the same time. No
matter how tbe media "manipu- Q. Is the routie of the , _ media
late or are manipulated, a rot-. the 1TIOSt lmpootMt tor -bringing
ten fish will still stink.
· about an _ _ ...,,. of the to-

to . . . . .

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

o.

communit;y.

.

• Tbet ahould be a major goal,
and it can be reaJi.d if tbe
Univmaity pi8CBI ite llrst emphasis 011 beiq a 8rst-mle educational institution and Jets
that fact be known.

SUPAEstaWshes
Grieyanre Systan
EDITOR:

Tbo Stille Uniftroity Profeoaioual Aooociotion .would lib to
outline temporuy prOc:edw. for

~.:_.~ ":'8~!.-:.:

memboro of the Prof. .ioual Slalf
until ouch time u the SUPA orpnization ond the SUNYAB
central administration eotabliah
appropriate" procedures in detail,

·;:;::.. :r-J:ebi~iati':,~~
upon between ataff and administration.

We the"'fo"' niCOIJIIIII!Dd the
foU&lt;&gt;Wina:
1. We encourace that the oettling of all grievanceo ond complainla dealinc wilh the "'"""
and conditiona of employment be

==·

and.:.~&lt;·f~~~

ever POelible.

2. ln the event that aucb aolu"lion .;. not aooompliobed in the
fint i.natenoe, we recommend that

.. Ufl!
:=,~::·u:..
G~
• Some dramatic progress has tal Institution been made at U / B in recent e ~0. Tbe I""""'P&amp;Per&amp;' first !'IU· :!,":bl~":i. ~
months, but tHere is no ques- ty 16 to report the news raqty _ be forwarded with or wiu-t tLii
- tion lllat much of the bouse re- and factually. Tbey can pro- auppo_rt of cleoirlnated memben of
mains to be set in order. When vide avenues for University SUPA Grievance Committee u
the process of politicizing and achievement to be known to deoired by the g r i e" • n t. to
radicalizing the University is their readers, but they can't CbaJ:Ieo FogeL deaignoted _by
halted, or reversed, much of the make them read. The lJniver- Prea1~ent _Ketter .u the ·~image problem will take care of - sity may feel it mUBt be a Pl,a"" :!::1::~.!."':~ll':f:7.,:!
itself.
for free thought and express10n, will act to- aettle the problem ac• U fB must keep peace in its but it must also realize it is a coniine to his determination
own bouse. It mUBt intensify its part of the community in which in light of SUNYAB l&gt;olicy.
3. In the e.ent that· dela,. or
demands that top-ranked facul- it is located and therefore subty teach freshmen, as in Ivy ject to certain responsibilities. other SUPA or odminiotrati"" acLeague colleges. It must inten- • There is no doubt that the ~=te~ ~r:=n:r ~
sify its demands for scholar- publis: communications media problem, the ombudoman will be
ship, and scientific ezploration. are the best means for brincinc conaulted to intervene to -ist
Faculty members and student to the people the full story of in the ProceuM of aettlement and
leaders mUBt lend their SERV. the University. It cannot be :·~ci:f=ty~r by ~ in
ICES - ·not jUBt their voices- adequately done through stu·
4. In the that the aolu·
to the community's problems.
dent-oriented media.
tion .-:bed at tbia te.e1 (8) io
• U/ B's image is an accurate • It's one of the important deemed inappropriote by Jrievanl the - - ' with or without
one. If it wants an improved
routea. It should be given as the •cmmpt'njmMt of SUPA
image, it must work for it.
much cooperatiOn as possible
• Dr. Ketter has made impor- in getting the story out to tbe ~~p.=u:~
tant contributions in the pll.st people. But all of the otber ave- Ketter for detenalnatioa within
few months toward building a nues of greater understsnding a reuonoble time.
positive image. However, be is should also be lllled. Tbe Uni- ~tl_&gt;e~~(4). io
starting from "ground zero" versity itself should tell 1ts ant. it ~ forwudeil ~!":;;.;
and his task is almost impoasi- story as much as possible. One piBYilllt ond the SUPA Grievble. H.is words and those of of the things that turns the ance Commi- to the 8 - Facotbers in his administration will community off is that many of ulty Seute or the Cbaaoellor, cleli8ve to be augmented by stu· the students and faculty who P&lt;mdiD« OD tbe nsmn of the
dent conducl One -disruption diacuas the University run it =nplalat, with or without bene·
will obliterate all the good be down. It would surely help if fit of COUDMI, .. de--.1 · - has accomplished with his that little matter could be re- ~~=~~A
many talks to community versed.
The
r"tropri·
groups. ' .
• Not ,..,.,.;.,..ruy. Tbe best ref- ~~Apia,
erences ~ from eyeball-to- will ......, u lalel:im piocedarea,
eyeb!JJ relations. But we can aince we antieipate a draft - ·
on the piut of tbe· adminiatra- ~P U /B project a positive aion will be !'lild:Y ~­
tioo in dealing with its . .
unage when it develops one. • .
of ~
•lrltJahers (is llllll88llllry).
~·:::-5':.
."'::;t%. "l.:t".-. s~.,
. 'ty of
~~::~j
~ au. 210 •......-. . &amp; . - would help if the
t h e - Amhli'at.......... 1970 - tbe student body
assert Is c:amplet.d do rou 11e11ave -~,..:;}'&amp;
itaelf against what it refusee to It""' . . . . - . . . . . - faA.. .&amp;S'I'UY at:IWUIID
identify as ~ters.
the UnMralty!
SUPA GrienDce ~
r~..~
• Where? Educational commuQ. Mention or four -....c::w.t
~
...,...... r . .lfAJtU1T
which the -*': commu- nity-yes. In Buffalo-no.
ITUPID FEl.LOWl
Cilhens will jll8t be thankful
nity r•letlans pralolems for the
~7,~~,_,..
it's 8QIDeOI1e elae's problem, un- ~--1-tohis
~copyist
Woblnek.
But rra plObably
leSi present feeling is changed.
JOBII A.. c.&amp;.ounar
• Violence on campUB. Prejuwhat he would have written· to us
In
some
ways,
yes.
In
othels,
•
~
against
new
types
of
edu·
sus.ur GaDifW'OOD
last ",!ft had he heN tii read
cation being tried at U /B. Dis- ~- f?tuden~ probabJ1"WiJI .con- our br. . thle .. account of his
ft'VDBifY' urAIItJI ·.D(f'O~ s,... U , . .
of students for commu- tinue to alienate the commu- "300th" •nnlvenary. It Is, of
'ifrf::::,:'#:. ~~:..{;=:-;:!;. ~ a..yr H • ...,.._, JWwt a. regard
nity outside and gaining respect nity but that's juat tbe way counre, the 200th"lln.,._ry of
things go.
l'IIO'TOORAI'IIl': ll-.4 L. 11-.Jc. Bu~t~ B • .,,.._.
tbereof. .
his blrtll. We are, In fact, botching
"COlrTillBUTIIIO ~IU"t S... ll. Surfer.
• Communication, knowledge ~ ~reJs ev~ry ~ to hope scribblers, poor historians and reelfaced
reporters.
of what U / B really is. Dru~, 1t will. Certainly 1t will attract

Si".:'.\

:m

•and

rea-

above.,-

~~-=~~

t..,r.;;

. .._....-u:C,":'/:':r-:t
.,._ .. ....., •
......

·-__
.......__

..,.

..,_

U"!f:
o. ..::id

---to

:!::: :.':" J:'::J

t/!;

·M,

�s-

~

We Need To-Think MOre Rffilisticaily UIB f~idsts Call for ~The Way_ We Evahiate Teachers
Cuthadl in PhD Trainirg_
uThe

''Diffusion

of ·Escel-

lence" piinc:iple of tbe NilCiln
tzatian will
pncticas
on~y
this IBIIImoclliy
UDiesaits
it most of tbeae reports - . . to administration ( the idea ol
founder-...1 CD admit bo~M.t­
'lbe - '
of at 18 • eftectively - - . 1 Into ly that the 11101'8 funclan8ttal pbyaics PbD.'s worklnc In DOn·
teut ~ more aamitllees on doinl110. How eactly one can -tion Ia the ~ 10 pbyaics ...-) scored by
lelldliDI lilffedi- (one a - the p . - admlni&amp;- commit oaeaelf to the ideci that Steplal. Paley, and 22 other
By GEORGE R. LEVINE

_.,_

...,......._t

suboomllliUee ol lbe Fllculty

Senate Oammittee on BducaUoaal Policy, lbe oCber a IUbcommittee ollbe 'I'IIIk Farce on

Univwail;y QoU) IQIIC!IIIa tbet
we will 8DCII1 be a--tad with
more ...U.Inlaltioned ~
on the -..lty ol l'fiClOIIIizlng
and .-rdinl elrec:live teaching. U .....W.O.. ...,.;.mce Ia
any ~ lbe 1111t effect
of lhoae reports will be to make
some ol 111 feel ROOd becala
the report8 will echo wbat we
have been 8ll,)'ina for years.now,
or the reports a.l CMII1 make
110me of U8 feel alipt twinp!s
of gW!t becaUM - have DOt
been taking our . teacblng wry

seriouslv Wha~ect tboae ie&lt;. • have
ports will
tboae ~
in the present ildmlnlslration
wbo have the authority to im-

=

tzation into aoceptinJ the
.
aity of .-ardlng ROOd
~ Ldo DOt !IJiow. I -IIIISpeOt
this coulcf be. accompliabed if
there ClOII8iderable facul.
ty support bebind BUCh a move,
but it bas been my experience
!bat there are few thlnp as
lhrecttenin&amp; to teacbers as talk
about effective teaching. Without BUCh eupport, DO report an
teaching-no matter bow elocpartly ~ budge
thisiiiiiUS:
-~~"~ univenity ad·
wawuu.
..._,. Prompts . , _ _
I hope this will DOt be interpreteCI as preaching defeatism,

but UDiesa I can see greater

siiD8 of faculty supPort and
some indication of adminis
" ~wu

ti~ willingness to take this
matter as seriously as it does
plement committee .recommen- publication, or the recruitment
elations remains to be seen. It of minority faculty, or the reis to this ~ of implemen- eruitment of women (both of
tation that I would like to ad- the latter, I might add, illus·
dress myself.
lnlte my poinf. that the adminln the more lhao aeven years - istzation will ~ act in
that I haire '-'&gt; at lhia Uni- unique ways when pressured),
versity, I have beard a ROOd I see DO ~ In issuing yet

~~talksinceabou~~~!
begun to overcome their pasaiv-

ity and to demand that the Univen~ity pay as much attention
to life in the c1asaroom as it
does to publiabed reaeerc1r.
What is signif"IC&amp;Dt is that
little is ever done about it---at
least in a way lhilt would lndicate that the administzation is
openly willing to asaert ita Intention of • rewarding ROOd
teaching in as tangible ways as
it rewards published research
or responds to attempts by
other Universities to lure away
some of our more distinguished

~-!!ea~E-E-nca
of
·-•

During the period wben I
was chairman , of the Faculty
Senate Committee on Tenure
and Faculty Privileges, I discovered (through one of Presi·
dent ·MeyerBOn's assistants)
that the President's Review
Board bad In 1968-9 reoommended tenure for at least five
faculty members whose pri·
mary qualification was teaching effectiveness. What was significant was that u., documentati
tJ
on was apparen Y impressive enouch to convince the
President's Board to JlCI8B theoe
people without .now. ........-va·
ti
I ._._,
the •
"'~thew
,_, ............,...,...,.,
~L,_,~;~ conto·~
publicize this fact, because for
the first time we appeared. to
have tangible evidence of their
willingneSa to reward teaching.
It seemed to me that publication of' this fact would not only
enbaDced lbe sta
of
ba
tea~•-•L'- u · ·tuabut
· ~ ...... m ...,. mYS~~~ty'
might evm have encouraaed
PfOY08ts, deems aDd depcmment
¥rmeD to ~t for prcmolion aDd tenure candidates
whoae ilitellectualcifts aDd re-.-cb 80IIIelimee more
profitably cbannelad into teachmg rather than into the production ef boob aDd articleL
Whatever their motives, the
MeyerBCIIl administration did
!'Ot JIUblicU,e Ibis fact nor did
·~ modify lbe existing published c:rilaria for protDotion
and tenure. I could . only condude that, for whatever reii8CIIl,
the admioistradau felt tliat to
!"fmit its wil1incnMs to OOC&amp;IIioaally - . . ! a IQOd teaching
record ~ DOt be oonsaaant
with_ what it took to be ita ac:adenuc goals, or would evm ·
so"""""" su"-1 thoee ~~"'~isI cannot believe that lhia or
any other university adminis-

·

=

f.='.:W::~t J:, J:
ROOd intentions of its authors.

. ~ spite of my obvious slreptiaam, however, I think it
would be manifestly unfair not
to give the present administzation the benefit of the doubt.
Perhaps one """-Y of overcoming faculty aDd adminislnl·
tive inertia is to pe&lt;suade them
to deal more realistically with
the question of evalua ti ng
teaching-:-tl_le rock upon which

elfective teaching is as relevant graduate aasistants, research
to our OCIIICel1lll aa a univenti~ associates and faculty at UIB,
aa elfecti"" .-reb aDd publi- itt a letter In a recent issue of
Phy•iu Today_. .
cation.
•

The mode of evaluation is
really secandary, for we all
know that thei-e are a number
of procedures avaUable that
would allow us to make some
...timates of teaching ability.
'Ibis year, for eumple, the
Danforth Foundation presented
the E . Ranis Harbison Award
for ezcellence In ~ to
ten teachers at Tufts Uruver·
sity, Brown University, the
University of Florida, Alabama
Agricultural and Mecbanical
University, the University of
Pennsylvania, Tulane Univer·
sity, the Catholic University of
America, Dartmouth, and CaJ.
\jn College. Each recirient was
given a cash award o $10,000.
Now, if the Danfor+.h FouncJa.
tion can be oomlortable enough
with its criteria to give away
$100,000 a year for excellence
in teaching, I find it difficult to
believe that we could not find
same criteria upon which we
too could agree.
It was Nietzsche who said
that "the advancement of learning a t the expense of man is the
,most p,ernicious thing in the
world. ' It might be well for us
to remember this as we con·
sider the loss in human poten·
tial we are willing to accept as
the price for measuring excellence in ·t he limited ways to
which we are presently committed.

The L'~.,rD.rv.rn ,T+.. S'+rrl+ f'f~ · - ·IA.lf/ u.aa.:u1i
&amp;.cJzsBAAyUP ln PERB \i)[e
·

r

the

established reoorrl of responsi·
FACULTY-STAFF CAUCUS ble and active concern for the
· STEERING COMMITTEE
welfare of professional univer• The professional staff of the sity personneL
Univen~ity, both teaching and
2. The AAUP has a consis·
tent and long-standing record
non-teaching, is about to vote in the defense of academic freefor a 'negotiating agent to repre- dom.
sent us under the provisions of
3. The AAUP is the only conthe Taylor law. As all must tender which.is free of any pasrealize by this time, the choices sible problema of confiict of inwhich confront us are the Amer- terest in the representation of
ican Association of Univen~ity its professional constituency. It
ProfeBBOrs (AAUP) • the Civil is not affiliated with any ether
Service Employees Association
1
(CSEA) , the Senate Profes- emp oyee group as SPA is af61.
sional Association (SPA ), and iated with NEA and NYSTA
and SUFT is affiliated wi th
the State University Federa· AFr and• AFL/ CIO. Noneth&lt;&gt;tion of Teachers (SUIT) . A I
the AA
fifth choice on the ballot, which ess
UP bas proven it.
seH an effective
bargainin~
18 to be caat during the month agent at Rutgers and at St.
of December, is no negotiating John's.
agen~ the Faculty.Staff Cau·
4 . The AAUP, both lhrougb
the local (SUNYAB) chapter
cus bas not llpOII80I1ld any meet- and the national office has clearings for its membership to hear ly demonstrated its concern
the contending parties, mem- and effectiveness In defending
bers of the Steering Commi
.
"ttee the professional staff of the
have attended meetuqp; spon- .
aored by .other -~~•• ~·~ · University. AAUP ·actiOn&amp; in
.......,.- •·--~ the matter of the Feinberg law
aDd have carefully eumined and the case of the Faculty 45
the available literature. The are esamples of this oonoem.
Steerinl Committee bas con·
5_ 'lbe AAUP, while previeluded that the best interests ously not including non-teachof the profecllional staff, 'tlolh ~ profeasiooals In its membetteaching and non-teac'liiii'k, ship, bas aatisfied ua that nonwculd be - - ' by the election teaching profeasiooals will be
of the AAUP aa bargllining welcomed to full "*"'&gt;erahip.
aaeot. While we make 00 claim
6. The uperience of the
as to bow our members, or oth- AAUP In protectinr the interent, will vote, wish to !!'l" eats of 0 t
d teaching
your support of the AAUP m staff will_ '1,;, ~'::.bJe In barlhia important election.
gaining In behalf ol all nonSpece doe&amp; DOt pennit a de- tenured proflllllional staff, Intailad analysis of the po8itions cludinJ tboae who do not hold
aDd claims of the various 0011· teaching appointments.
lendc!rs. Brielly, ~. our
7. The AAUP bas adopted
support for the AAUP 18 based what we consider to be a fully
'!II f!te following major oonsid- aatisfactory po8itian with reeratiob&amp;:
.
•
pnl to women's rights, aalaries,
L TheMUP is the only con- friqe bene6ts aDd other astender which, combines a na- pecta of the oonditions of emtiona! membership baae with an ployment.

Responding to an article by
Wayne Gumer, "Why There Is
A Job Shortage," the UIB
group said the diftuaion COD·
cept is a stopgap measure, at
best, and that " there are indi·
cations that it won't work in
practice even as a stopgap
measure on a large enougb
scale to be useful.''
"'lbe crux of the matter is
this," the local physicists said:
"Physics until recently has
'-'&gt; funded at a rate somewhat
greater than twice that at
which oui economy as a whole
was expanding. Evidently, the
stage of ezce88 growth bad to
ciome to an end at-110me point
since support for physics was
taking an even larger share ,of
an even larger economy . .. .
"'The inescapable conclusion
is that we muat now severely
reduce input to graduate
schools to balance the supply of
Ph.D.'s with ·the sharply decreased future demand for
them. Consider the consequences if the needed con·
trolled cuts in physics graduate school enrollment are not
carried out. The uncontrolled
cuts that will surely occur
when prospective graduate stu·
dents learn of the crisis employment conditions in physics
will be much greater than are
necessary or desirable. A cut
in total national enrollment in
physics graduate !icbools of 30
per cent at the very least is

needod.
Cuts ln Flrst·Yur Enroll....t
"A dozen of our largest phys-

have been avaiWJie· to
wilh a becbelar'a or muter's
depee---blcb 8Cbool aDd Junior
collep faeulty poaitlon8, for ex-

~ U/B poup coaduded:

.on. American ~
Aaaoclation, without bavinc
tried CD ~ .ucb mtarn.·
lion, can clocu.-t &amp;0 Instances of pb.yaics Pb.D.'a who.
for the aab · ol 8ClOIIOIIIIc survival, have taken per7IIGMIIl
jobe aa barteader, cab driwlr,
newapeper vendor. aDd 80 an.
They. are employed but their
special lnlinlng or problemBO!ving ability is hardly being
utilized. 'Ibis ft!P.--nts an
enormous waate to the lallpclyer
as well aa a aevere hardabip to
these individuals. Furthermore,
UDiesa substantial cuts In pbys.
fcs graduate school enrolfmiint
are carried out, theoe will ......,.
ly be the vanguard of 1118!1Y
more to follow."

Dean lJrgBs
Newtlmage'

InOTField
Occupational therapists must
actively dispel the image of
"basket weaven~" and make
their role in health care more
visible, Dr. Vandon E. White,
assistant dean, School of
Health Related Professions,
said at the recent national
meeting of the field in New
.
York City: .
Members of the profession
can no longer wait to be utilized by the physician, White
said, but "must asaert" them·
selves and be prepared to offer
leadership to health teams.
Occupational therapists can
demonstzate thei r usefulness
through projects in a variety of
settings, White said---particularly in community health cen·
ters and nUrBing homes. The
projeoted universal health program and/ or guaranteed national minimum income, be
said, will lead to a greater demand for varied health care ·
and "occupational therapists
(can) get in on the ground

ics graduate schools have aJ.
ready cut their fin!t-year enrollment from between 10 per
cent and 30 per cent each. This
will effect a decrease of 10 per
cent in total national enrollment provided that small floor."
•
schools refrain from creating
The profession, White urged,
new physics Ph.D. programs or must take the ooncept of coopexpanding existing ones. Aside erative work by different health
from the moral questions In- professionals to "the doorstep
volved there will be no market of tbe medical schools."
for Ph.D.'s lnlined in amall
The profession must alao acschools. Similarly the. attempts tively recruit students, he said,
by Senator Kennedy and Con- by holding conferences on oogressman Daddario to supply cupational therapy careen! with
additional traineeships to small high school and elementary
scboo~ to increase the rate of
counaelon1; by contacting parPh.D. production is either ent groups; through summer
based on a mistaken picture of programs for higb school stuthe present crisis or elae is dents; and through clinic visitotally irresponsible. . . .
tations and Saturday seminars
"If technical people are for the same age group. Minorneeded in the future for 110me ity students sbould a1ao· be acspecific crash program such aa tively recruitlld, White said, in
pollution control then they both inner-city and rural areas.
should be trained for the task.
It is wasteful, expensive and
UNDEIIGitAD IEAIICH
unfair In terms of individnal
COMMITTEE
expectations to require physics
The
Searcll
Comm- for • DMn
PH.D.'s to go into other areas,
except as an emergency stop- of The DMslon of UndwJ.-.ducrte
Studies
wishes
to -ln MmctS of
·PP measure In response to an
employment emergency as is persons to be conside.-.d for tills
post
from
as
wide
• rwp-n
now upon us."
r
·
Pointing out fallacies In the of the community n poaible. This
is
one
means
the Commit·
notice
diftuaion theory, the group
notad that there is little room tee Js uslns lo soliCit namctS and
reeders
•nt
lnvttect
to
send recom·
In the PbD.-producing system
for the pbysk:a overflow, that mendailons to , . , _ . Edwin P.
Hollander,
CommCllaliTNin,
at
engineers have taken over
Pl)lchoiOSY Depertmertt, 4230
some physicist positions In In- the
Rid&amp;e
Lea
Road,
or
to
any
member
dustry aDd that other tecbnlcal
areas are becoming 80. over- of the Committee . The n•m•
should be accomP!'nted by - aowded that "there is
.
little room to diffuse." prectOU8 qua~· ldentlfic:ation and by a brief
stotemant &lt;kthe nominator's ru~
sons for believing the nominee
In addition, because they are qualifies for the position. The ti,.
considered "overqualified," schedule Is tiaht: pie... make your
physics PbD.'s have not been suggestions promptly.
able to obtain jobe that would

.... -,_.-

�Pro{ CUes
~'

lnPhtirnwcy
BJooulola edst in ihe practice ol J&gt;barmacy today, juet'as

they dO in

ou-

piura.iubi,

Dr. Albert L Wertheimer, pro,_.. o1 J&gt;bermaey, said m a
,_.t artiCle in the Ne111 York
8ttlle Pltarlflllcl.t.
But, be said, sueh aborlcom-

inp in Uviq up to proleasional standards uare· more tolerated when done by other practitlooen. ..
''Pbysicians and nurses may
practice deeds that are considered· unethieal, but because of
scarcities, sbortaii!S and status
ramifications, little is normally done. In addition, it iS Car
more dif&amp;c:ult to detect deception when only a service is involved. Phannacy deals with a
service as well as the transfer
of tan.nhte items with specific
WQrth.li
Amon "aCts that tarnish the

"-.-........
-.--they'-·
ftll!llc.l ' ..........
tilerou
_ ___-lo.
. w_ _ _

Is

NJ ,.This Is

·~"-..IDIIIe.,_.o

_ , (plcbnd - ) .

tWhat Happens, Happens' on tThis_ IS
• D.,....J!
'
.t~o ...

i m a g / 1 of pharmacists, Dr.
Wertheimer listed:
• Generic Brand Selection"Do you dispense a product
that YOI! would give members
of your own family? There is
no glory in being able to buy
\!rioed reserpine on
• Credit ·- The case or a
perfect ttranger asking Cor credit Cor a needed prescription "is
an instance where the pharmacist will make a friend Cor liCe
or lose, at most, the cost of
drugs."
~
• Patient Contact-While it
be the "easiest solution"
to et a clerk talk to 'a patient
about a problem, "the patient
doesn't know who is a Clerk and ,
who is a pharmacist and uiunCormed answers are lethal."
• Advertising-U one pharmacy advertises it has licensed
pharmacists on duty ali the
time and uses only fresh and
pure drugs, "does this mean
that the ~petition does not
adhere to these tenets? The
l'ublic doesn't know any better.
There is no Mod to cast these
doubts."
• Refill Policies-"When
refill a prescriptioh without authorization, you demonstrate to
a patient that you can break
I a w s at will, and therefore
should not be surprised when
patients ask you to violate oth-

:: =l

A conce t like this is Galled
~SWI
"radio wi~t walls" by the
..What happens, bappena. ..
professionals, meaning there
'lbat, in a nutshell, is the slt&gt;- are no time slots for certain
gan. motto and general attitude events. Music, lectures and disof the "Tius is Redio ..." stsJJ cussions simply happen when
toward their show. The attitude · people can be scheduled for
produces the infonnal, informa- them, when they're ready or
tive and interesting program when it's "right" for them to
that's beard every weelulay af- , happen.
ternoon from 2:00 to 6:()() on
This, of course, is not the
WBFO.
type of radio program Buftalo
Content of the show, as its or any other city is used to and
large Buftalo audience knows, it's fairly new at WBFO, too.
is dilferent and special. One Last year, during the '"'bis is
day it's students who have Radio ... " time slot a program
cycled here from India, the of classical music called "Connert time it's Lukas Foss of the cert Hall" was scheduled. But
Buffalo l'hiiharmonic: Last during the riots of tast FebruThursday, Steven Rowan.. news ary and March, the stati on
anchor man for WBEN-TV, found that it "just couldn't condiscu8aed his work in one stu- tinue this aort of thing because
dio while a folk group was re- we couldn't break the music !or
cording in the other.
word of what was goint_:,:
The team that pulls this Cor discuasion, ao JW8
alightly acbizoid show together very loooe."
is in itaslf special. They're a
This ''looseness" as Bob Jescombination of talent, person- selaon callS it, was liiOOd by the
ality and personality taste. ·
University and Buffalo commuThere's Mickey Osterreicher, nity, ao WBFO continued the
the main engineer, who has the program after the riots. Many
biggest redheaded "natural" stall mem hers also welcomed
this side of the ~ladt Paathers. • the change. "Before 'This is
Then there's Bob J_,esselaon, • Radio .. ·.: many times I'd feel
c:laaaic:al buff and the self-etyled like I was the only person liscoordinator, who constantly tening to the station," Mickey
sports his
and narrow Osterreicher remembers. After
tie. s.m;..t~;;; during the the programming change, be
afternoon, you'll problbly also saw "people huddling in corlwu the mellow of Mike ners, during the riots, listening
Waters, WBFO atafr member to WBFO and when I'd do a
and another of the aboW's pro- show I'd feel people outside the
ducers. Other voices miJbt in- studio were listening."
clude the hip A. Scott Field, lt'o·~·
During last spring and sumwho ia currently producing a
aerias Clll rock music and the mer, the station kept experiubiquitous Ira F'.atow, science" menting with format and proeditor fll' '"'llis is Radio. . .." duction. They tried having a
Of COUIII8, the COiltributing stsJJ different producer every day
ia much larger than this and but this quickly became too
includea Wally Gajewski, Juan-_ rigid. Eventually, Bob became
ita YOUIII and Don Blakely a sent Of "coordinator" with everyone heine invited to eontfib.
AnAkofTute. This f..--t ....ned out ao
and
-· oiMrs.
All oof them , at one time or well that the station's c!Mcripuotber, can be 888ft up in the tion of the~ ,....,
...... control I'OCIIll of WBFO haperimmtal"~"
But even with a coordinator
wmli!ll Clll the show. A feelinl
111 llllbt lellaiOII ia atw.ya in to provide sort of COiltin• tbent
the air wbea '-n.is ia Radio . .." uity to the
-lnly becauee DO Clll8 ia 1118 alill ~~":b:t ~
certain what the air, how laal it ahould Jut, arid
.,.a
edulin1 will be. U
mualc:.
8lllllllbiD&amp; importaa1 bappena. the...._"'
After much esperimentatid..,
the .... will 10 Clll the air to
. ...... i&amp; ..,_,.. not wailinl tallt and the 1188 " ' intuidou,

these rules are based on a prin- - produced a show that Ira Flat..
ciple that Mike Waters has ow deecribes as· a "collage." To
found from experience to be create that effect, the stsJJ is
true: "A listener will listen for always on the lookout for proa short apace of time to aome- gram ideas. Input comes from
thing that doesn't interest him everyone and everywhereas long as it's done fairly well, from hunches and suggestions
and as long as he thinks some- and from people coming up to
thing is coming up that will in- the station with their own ideas
terest him. But if it's going on for programs.
.
Cor too long and it's not interAfter the stsJJ comes up with
esting, !him he'll tum the dial a good idea, the· hard worlt b&amp;· and be might not tum back." gins. "Something that takes 15
The practical applicatiollf of minutes on the air milbt take
these rules and principles are two hours to put together and
heard every day. WBFO is one that's just production and edit..
of the few stations in the coun- ing time," Ira explains.
try to broadcast live folk conBut the stall agrees all the
certs and press conferences in time and work is worth it- as
their entirety. They also use Mickey say,s ''when you finally
the "library approach" of mak- listen to it you feel a peat
ing available things people sense of accllmplishmenl"
should hear as the Buffalo ComAU this work, of course, isn't
mon Council and the Faculty for their own personal gratificaSenate sessions. However, these tion. The audh&gt;nce feels it's
meetings are aired in their en- worth it, too. A recent survey
. tirety mainly because of their by the Corporation for Public
special interest; other things Broadcasting showed that dur- ers."
'
have to be opretty fascinating ing May and June one out of
• Pharmacy's Image - The
to rate more than ten to twenty four aree FM radio owners bad
phannacy
w
i
t h "overflowing
minutes.
listened to WBFO- and the
A CoUap
.
largest audience was for '"'bis Wastebaskets in the prescription
area,
alonJ
with
returned tranThese considerations have is Radio •..sistor radiOS, leaking shampoo
bottles and the halC-eompleted
ftSIII!!'lb!1 of a """' cosmetic
is claDiqing to the

.
. . ~·- tm. .Jot Par- p - what . . think iaa't ...
. . . . . .. why the atalf ia 80 1111 ..-ntecl eiMwben" but

otber~aud~

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

rea

s.._,...,,

=

,_the.-t-~ar

. . . . . . . Clll DUttilw three dota
.,.. ~-- ol_llae llbow. •

discuBan--

u-

"ruuee" evolved -

"We

that's tempend with "COillimt
cleleru!u- lentth." Both ol

tnar,

yau

New AdinisiiOnPkin Set
.In Natural &amp;iences, Math
The Faculty Senate Executive Committee says the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics "should be- allowed to implement an experimental admissions plan" for the
Fall 1971 freshman class.
ACDDrding to _a resolution
pa-.1 ~~ve Committee,
9, the plan
"would allow the Faculty . . .
to make poaitiw remmmendatioa&amp; concerning the admiaaioo

~~lm~~

to be made by . . . (the) Ad-

.m.ioas Committee (of Natural Sc:ilmaw and Math), adlllinlallnd by the pnMl8t and

mission of sullicient numbers of
high quality science students.
"It was understood that the
experimental plan would indeed be expenmental and that
data would be collected ao that
the experiment could be evaluated by the Faculty Senate
which has authority with r&amp;gerd to changin'g the freshman
admissions policy."

Two

,.,~

J.lo,,.....,.."'

Accordh•l to Thomas T.
Pr8l!lz, lllllfttary "' the Seaate
E1lecathe Committee, '"l'bia"aperiaa&gt;tal adJDiaoicww pia .. .
the leellni that the
. . - t admW!cww pOUey -

-out"'

~ apq.t the ad-

-

(continued from- 1, eoL I)

to

cated' next
each other at the
beginning of what will become
a double """' of siJni}ar modules. Each will be set diaaonally in the """' with a main
connecting the comer
of ODe with the opposite corDel" of the other.
Hellmuth, Obata and Kalalbaum and
.Juetin lmbe
and Aalciateo of Bulfa1o 1118
the archltacts Clll the Health
Sciencea Center. CompletiCIIl
of the ~ and steel can- .
Inlets ia acheduled lw May

::-~:isoo~ibe~ entrance

tor "'adm~ and the ....
ol Underpaduoite Studiee."

"'-lay"'

~plofeadon:

n-

1973.

What can the eocially-amscious pharmacist do to demonstrate his concem Cor public
welfare?
Dr. Wertheimer lists t t -:
• He should offer full eonsultation a.vices and advise
patients on proper administration and storaae of drup.
• He should try to 'MX'i&lt; with r
communitr "'I'88ICiea in planning, advisintr and running
health eare Pf01r8D18, sueh as
O.E .O. osnters.
He might CIDII8ider nJIIIIing
for political alice.
• He a h o u I d 'MX'i&lt; to
strengthen his local pboumacy
society and.. ma11e it a ...anin1fu1 body.
• He 1111111&amp; price .bia _,.,_
on a fair, llllitc.m -bMia to all.
• He muet do what be can
to defend his pr"'--aD to otb-

•

era.

• He abauld do ......_ ia

poaalb)e to~~.

c:arema lw .,__.,~

• He abliuJd try to CDIII*'ate with consumer_.......,

in

ilaplament;q

m-ative

c h a n 1 e a In the predice ol
llhumliCy•

�15 Applyfor 2l? Pfaoos in
GREPORTS
Glenoble French ~ram ON

Filuian U /B students have · The State University of New
already filed preliminary appli- York is underwritma the incatioos for the 25 places avail- structiona) and · ~tive
able in a new lllldersra4uate costa under ita new plan for
study-abroad program at the overseas. study. The eo&amp;t to the
University of Grenoble, France, individual student for the -aeavailable in the spring semester. mester, c:overintl travel and liv- NEW CAMPUS
Dr. John K. Simoo, profi!IIIIDr ing expenses, is not expected to APPOINTMENTS
of French, wboae Department aceed $1,000-$1,200, exclusive
is orpnizing the prosram along of tuition and fees. Scholarship DIL C8.AB.LES L. BI:B.N.II!lR, profeaor,
with otbet- coUeaes in West- awards, loans and tuition waiv- library and information studies,
em New Yort, uqei inlen!sted ""' are applicable in the llBIIIie
students to malre applicat&gt;ons way as if the student remained Faculty of Engineering and Apas . soon as pmaible. App!ica. at the home institutiori. Special plied -Sciences..
•
tions may be filed during the funds are being sought to meet DB. IUCHAIU&gt; · A. "P Owa.t., a.seociate
holiday recer5, be 88yll.
aceptional financial needs on dean, operative dentistry and. enOther · ~ wiD al!lo be the Part of interested studeilta dodOntics, apP.,intecl director of
forwardiedeat applica- wbe may oonnally live at home clinics.
tions, Dr.
. 88yll..
•
::&amp;:ir~time d!Jrlng the
Open to qualified sopboCharter plane .arrangements OFF CAMPUS
mores, juniors or aeaiors, the
program features a special in, wi~
made tu talm the group APPOINTMENTS
'dependent_atudy compon~nt. to
on or around, Febru- Dlt: ,.....,. ENGUSH. prof-.r, oral
- Since the CIIW'8e work in Frimce • ary 1. The semester be.g ms Feb- bioi
· tecl chairman f
will be the equivalent of U!B's ruary 15 a -n d ends 1n early Pro~~ 'if:ai::'ation Project &amp;,
300 or 400 leYel couraM, all ap- June. . .
. .
view Committee, Western New
Preliminary application rna- . ~,o..'!'.,,?_o~.:,~enaive Healtb
plicants must demonstrate a
proficiency
Fiencb Clllllliara- terials are available with addi~......
ble witb tluit lldUeved in FJench tiOna! information in the Otlice Dll. . Ho:NaY uz SMITH, 111.. pro211-212 . "Introduction tn of Undergraduate Studies, De- feaaor,linguiatica, appointed peelFrench Literature and Civiliza. partment of FrenCh, 214 Crosby ~~b~~wtoa~!:u~~ ·
tioo," or the equivalent (third- Hall, 831-5457. ·
in tbe Department of Linguistic:&amp;.

BUHLO:Y ZIOHYB, "'l11e

"~~aadUDiwr­

DR. · JURy B.

ueociate pro·
fesaor, speech communicahon,
IUJ(}f,

"Speech Problems in Medical

Family Practice," Deaconesa Hoa.
pi tal Family P rae tice Center,

Buffalo.

~w·:o':"!:~J.,":""~2=

~~~~e=nne~mftt~~ td'ua=Re;;~:.:=...:~-

Yk ~~

to indel!endent
study, participants wU1 take an
advanced CIIW'8e in French language '(leading to successful
completioo of one ol the · nationa! French oertillcates for
languageandculture),andlwo
~J~~ture_wboaad

SoouJ. A ...-v... ,_..,...
.

~ t.Jt....t:A)

T T.
( 1\ T;,_.,.·~
lJ8e
Q 1.. YUIIU::

Dll. 1'E'l'l:ll

u. sTAPLE, associate pro-

fessor, oral biology, appointed

r:~'Pa~~f ~~. ll:ti:

p;.,__

onl
hioiOD' M~ QD •the .Bta•
tuo Of' Dental Practice," Na»
Y orAr 8 - , DmlGl JOIU'IriJL
CA.I:L08 a. &amp;aUifi08Cii. ledllrer,
QI'IBDbatloa. with . . - a : .....
IlL~-----

GJJEOPLE.

·m

()ptimei

Portfolio Rerioloa Polley," Journol ,of . . . _ ,

llity Badpta:. A

c.e

8ludy in
At:1181'icma Univeraity Gi:Mtm·

- t , " MiltDv&lt;J.

DR.

DAYA!Qrf XC aD'ATilAiif, 1&amp;-

::s.=i.r:=.':io...~s=
Ele-., Boolaaarlt Reedinc Series

;'!!a'._

Harcourt, _Brace and

xAu KO~. aaeoeiate
sociation meeting;, "The Impact ~":".!;.:'.::'7%:,=t,.
0
~!":ti!:;-! Ex~ti~&amp;.w,~~~ Boo'h. National Council ot
the Buff8 I Cba ter of Phi Delta Teac:ben of Enlfioh; ClailtlNn'•
Kappa.

°

1

P

aasistant
professor, industrial engineering,

DR.

GAVIUEL

BALV£i.roY,

~~n u!ato':.~mcfi:Mi~g

IlL

':

Lite'!'-tun in ~~- Elemento,.y
~.:· William C: 8~
.

:1: - ~ P~:::'·.We!.,....,~~

Job to the Man." Niagara
~n- ~Uective ~.· l&gt;roc:ucttier Society of Incluatrial Engi- "''• of lndlutnm 1&amp;14..,.. A..
neers and the American Institute ~Uiti6n _of Wutun New Yor•.

of I!!dustrial · ~ngineen joint

DR.

GAVIUBL BALVDIDY, aaei~tant

.
r.roresaor, !ndUJtrial ~~~.
aaeoeiate pro- Set Yo_ur Own Pace, 110 daily
fesaor, elemebtary and remedial · papero m the U.S. tb~ · the
meeting.

DR. BICIWID . . . . . -,

education, '' British Primary · Wort_d ~Encyclopedia Science
Scboola " New Ieney School SeJVJce; Handedn- and HuBoard ~tion. Atlantic City ~n Performance," Science
and Dunkirk-Fredonia Joint In- DCIJut.
ServiCe group.
DAVID F. llftU(OU:, student, Jin.
8

~~.~=·t -==~ P.fu: ~0:: -~n!tA,!'~.:r;~ ~!~

formation Systems and Statistical I.anguage Queotion-Answering
Analysis." Niagara Frontier System for SW'(ical Reports,"
Chapter, Data Procesaing Man- Co}Jlputen and At.romation.

. :::----------~versity of British Columbia, Van- agement Aalociation.
DR. DAVID T. SHAW, associate pro- . RECOGNITIONS
couver, B. C. ·
C. ·J;&gt;• •Snow has written to - - - - - - - - - - - fJ!Ssor, encineerinc science, With
F. T. WU, "Effects of. Nonequili- DR. THOMAS I . BARDOS, profeSsor,
"C. P. Snow.'' saying tbat: a&gt; PRESENTATIONS
brium Electron Energy Distribu- medicinal cbem'ii try and biohe fmds the whole concept betion in Low Voltage Neon Distri- chemical obarmacology, elected a
DB..
IOSEPH
A.
ALU'M'O,
asaociate
_,
. hind· the U/B collet!"" to be
bution;" with P. 'f. wu, "On the Fellow of The New York Acaare capable of .integrating com- "deeply imaginative; • and b) professor , management., " Deci- Spatial Electron Relaxation to demy of Sciences. Dr. Bardce
pletely into 'the French· system tbat be is "exiremely happy aional Equilibrium.. Deprivation . Equilibrium Near Plasma Boun- was .elected for hQ ..outstanding
and Saturation in Organizational daries;" 23rd Gaseoua Electronics work toward the advancement of
may elect regular lectures or about the use l&gt;f" his name.
Researcb," Northeast Region Edseminars at the University of
The British author was ..,_ ucational Be3earch Auociation, Conferen'be, Hartford, Connecti- Acience" in · the field of cancer
He is also a FelGrenoble.
sponding to a letter from C. P. Liberty, New York.
~~ ~~~r:u~ni~~n~~~.: cbemotberapy.
low of tbe Cbemical Society &lt;&gt;f
Thermionica Converter Speci.a.li.ats London, the American Institute
DR. ' lAMES A. BELABOO, chairman,
Conference
of
IEEE,
Miami,
Fla.
.of
Cbemista,
and
tbe American
o~tion, " Leadership in a
he tully in~Mn~ted into the.ma- that ~~ last spring ~ _have Voluntary O.,.aniultion," North- DR. u:wrs K.. siiUPE, as8ociate pro- · Aaaociation for the AdVancement
jOr. 'reqiiliemeiita o("a .Dumber been l18lllg yOW' name without east Regtonal Meeting, Society of fessor, speech CQmmunication, of Science.
of departments in Arts li.Jd Let- - even asking Y'!W' permission." Mechanical Engineen. .
"Therapeutic Proceduiea U ei ng DR. Cl1lOIIGE W. ,._,USON, chairtezs and Social 8cieacea, Dr. . "We are even brub eDOJlgh,". .D1L JUCIUBIJ C. IIIW&lt;Il£NBUIIG, dean, Paper-Pencil Taakll," Wright man, operative dentistry and enSimon says.
·
Slilit,h said, "to believe tbat you School of Management. "The State University, Dayton, Ohio. dodontica, inaugurated as president of tbe American Academy
Participants will remain in might enthusiastically support Manager of tbe Future," Mobil
Gold Foil Operators, Loo AnOil. Corpora~_on aeminar.
l!..,~~"'J'cs~!:'Z~ ~ of
continuous registration at their our name choice."
geles, California.
guistica
Tbe
New
StructucalDR.
ROY
CAU..A.BAN,
associate
prohome institution. They will live
Smitb supplied Snow with
iam,"
University
of
Edinburgh,
mainly -with' FJench families in. background materials on the fessor, elementary and remedial Scotland, and University of Hul~ Seven U/B 'Air Force ROTC
cadets received awards at the
" P"roduct and Prpoesa
Grenoble, taldng their nieala at controversial collegiate system education,
cadets' annual military dinner on
Outcomes of the Elementary England.
10. They included:
~~~=='!.!tli . in general and about his unit School Mathematics Program," DR. WAYLAND P. SMITH, professor, December
LA WRENC:Z I. KLDIENTOWSKI. aupermit them-to join various stu- in particiilar. He also invited gp~fe~w==~~L:Z:
perior performance ribbon; wn.dent clube and benefit from · Snow to visit the campus and ing Di.flicuJties in Elementary ~~~=n:.'~~~v··~= LLUI W1I:I.8D m , outatending comence, American Inatitute of Inmander ritibon; PI:'I'IR T. IUCIIABDP!lrlicipatiilg iii fairly inexpen- til!!~. "I sball be more School Mathematics," City of
. wtata.Ddingotaffo~r~
.&amp;.~: ¥~~o,~~~a;~=:: SON
sive extracurricular activities . than interested in hearing how Buffalo Plua Program.
Central Park Metbodiat Cburch, bon; l.uo:&amp; P . nBaA8Tito .econd
such· as cinema clubs, dances, ' t
rks L I
tty
MYRON D. F01TUia., lecturer, inhonors ribboo; NICHOL.\8 'A. .uu.Buffalo.
sports activities, ezcursions and
tbat,
wa:S[;, dustrial relations, uThe Labor
OOIU, e:r:tr&amp;-cu.rricular activities
vacation trips, Dr. Simon says. get academic · things really Market for Teachers," labor rela~ CltAJG L. TIIB.ABRICB, instructor, ribbon; LADY A. DC B&amp;UIN, ex.tra8
part.iC:ipatj.on ribltOn;
f'1.nll~AAdds
linked with society, this is tct:a~&amp;ta tio:O~ ~~ rnariagement. with IAMJ:B CAKP· curricular
ALAI&lt; &amp;. C&amp;\BIHC, outata.Dding atalf
~
.
probably aomewhere near it."
aociation of Western New York. ~~~:r~;:t!:.~ R~~ of!ieer and first bonon rihbono.
l""...;. __;,__
Snow mentioned further tbat . D1t. ROBmT GENCO, aasociate pro-- . munity CoUege.
~
it might be poesible for him to

:::r'

18

p.JJid.,~=t!...~::!! ~~~~~:.t:~.!3~

w::" "'tr the:::':

TwoNew
"Commtmialtive Creativity"

.

fesaor, oral biology. "Role of
Bacteria in PeriOdontal Diseue,"
''Role of· Immune Phenomena in
Periodontal Disease," Univenity

DR. ~ WBBIJl,

asaistaitt profesaor, organization, ''Manapment by Objectivea," DunkirkFredonia Penonnttl Mana.gen As-

visit the campus briefly in the
and "Qevelopmmt Of Reading fall ol 1971.
Methods for a.Iidreo" are two
of .Rochester School of Dentistry. ~lion,
new CDI118ea ~ A wiD be
;._ VJNCZNT E. GIULIANO, director,
DR. BTANI.&amp;Y ZION!'S, profeaaor,
offering next - - .:
information research, "A Futur- management science. chairman of
"Cammtmlcative Creativity"
~:~ ~f~~ ~1f".:t.,~o,=.:; ci.J~::,.,.;=~t!~~
( CA 302) actually is an old
P"11111U11!11tly approved oourae
·
;~o~::!d'!l:
~~ bRB~a:J::: ·~~i~~~~
but Ibis Ia the fllllt - - it .
Culture," Soutb-tem Library gan; witb DR. A. CIII:N and oa. F. c.
will be c6nd aput from "ConA.ooociation meeting, Fort Wortb, lEN, "o..timaJ Policy for · Portflict8ad ~ (401). E~
Texas.
folio wiih Stocbutic ' Cub DeSunds,y afternoon this c:laaa
IlL wALTIII un;:.,s,:;feuor, ele- · mand," TI!ofS ~ling, . Loo An·
meets with a poup ol haudimentary and re
· education, ~elee, Califorrua. ~em1nar o_n
capped c!hlldreil, iastructing
"Cha.racteristica of Secondary linear programming, Graphic
them in ..... and cnfta and
Readinat P rams 1940-70," Na- Controls.
'
tional "'Re:t'ing Conference,
other actmlia EDrolimeDt for
the ClOI1nle is limited to 50 stuTampa, Florida.
PYJ3LICAT10NS
dents and an intervieW with the
•• DR. IOBa'll A. ILU'n'O, aaociate
instzucto, is neoa8oary for adprofeaa~r, ~t with L.
miaaian. .
lUII:IIINW&lt;, "Tbe Effective Cor"Development of Reading
Metboda for Cbildnm" is a new
!rt!"~~ecu~.ir ~r~ft;
Students," Public Opinion q_,.
ezperimeabil ccwrse being
terly.
~t fai the &amp;not time next
- . . The claaa will reIlL 111C1W1D 0. - U I I G . dean,
-.di ¥llrioali readinl melbods
Scbool of Maaacement, with
LAWDH&lt;Z L. IIC1IJUDo:, "Computer
used in this country and
abroad, Cl'itiqa8
and try
~N~t-~
to de!:!.T..~tter a.lbods.
.tUne~ot Colle..w be able to
giate Sc:boola ot Buoi-.
work wllb childrm 'lritb IMIIra.
.&amp;lCiaW
JioirNo.-YBI
CIIDf,
Ming=ma.~tis
U.tant p rofeaaor, ,Jiaaace.. "'A
a1ao
toiiO.
_Mllclel ot Warrant Priaq ·in a
The lnst'r vctor for both
D,Yn••le Market," ,/ountiJl of
FutaiiCe; with IPit.UQ&lt; c. ..rand
Cl011r111!8'1a Bamb1l AbelaOa:
•

"=:

a-.

a-

=:c-

Parlring Tags

At Night, T&lt;&gt;o
Robert E. Hunt, director of
environnaJtal bealth and safety, has ialued a reminder that
parkiiJg tidrets are now being

given out ' oa campus on a 24bour baia.
.
In previous years, tickets
were DOt given out alta 5 p.m.
However, Hunt said that "at
that time tratic iii the evenings
was DOt heavy 8I10t1lh to ma1re
tbat much diftereace:" He'noted
that there are IMIW_peater numbers of C8lll Oil .camP\18' in the
evenings because ol ali increaaed emollment in Millard
Fillmore Collep and a heavier
l18e ot the . , . _ for IIWII1ing
activilia This bu neceaaiteled
giving out the tickets around
theclockinonlertokeepthe
roadwaya cleared, be ·said.
· Hunt said that ~ ticketing applilil to all streets, service dri-.,s, anid til the Lockwood and Diefendorf lots,
which are .-icled after 5 p.m.
t o = He pointed out
tbat
OD ithe lOIIdways
-Ia probibl ;
,""

'

~

�,_,.,.,. 17, 1970

to-

-m--ad_...

la..bip 8etWlo ... In be ,_
wardea to CS8 DO later ·tban
February 1. 1971.

lnformaticm about tile SUNY/AB
Law~ A ..,..,u.Jiy _ . . t
-ty-tbree · pre-Jaw Information KUide will be diRri-

=!dby~~~

With tbe
new computer reciatration. it ill
nior&amp; important tbaD ever to clear
your aa:ouDt at IMot 10 clay.

IITtlllmft ACCOUNT8:

preeent to explain ita proper UH.
Plan to etay lor an "informati.onp&amp;ckod" meeting.

prior to reciatration. Payment.
made IIDY later, eitber~ or

in penon. may

DOt be

011

your llCCOUJit In time to avoid

:o.::~o:=:..;.u.:Jt~- ::;

Recent./ Scholar Incentive
amount. if tbe Award Certifieate
is datod after NOvember 18, 1970.
To ..,.;.ter for ll)&gt;liDa you will
have to ioclude tbe above amount
in your payme~~L
. ' '\

Higher Ed~ Courses
'J
On ~es for _Undergrads

tn&gt;upe, which startlid In l!Hi8, Is under the diNCtlon of C.role Welsh and curiently hoo nine female
dancer~. They are
with the problems of
tuday'o black -.npt to tranlfonn loolatod In·
otanceo of p81'101181 piof Into dance forms.

-"*'

BUO:,oz

l"BBZ

King

CVVEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
00pen "' pu1o11c;
• Open """ ... -

••Open "' with • ...-...... -

p.m.

PILM*: HAU£LU1All (1929,

Vidor), 147 Diefendorf, 8:30

wi~anis..t.N= ~'t''aCe,~

man who accidentally shoot. hio
own brother in a crap game and
"get. re~on." His deterinination
to oave hio ooul b,Y preaching tbe

af the . u-...r,
In the oubj8ct

:lf~ u.~ i!~
. THURSDAY-17
~- :!.,time~:,.of;w.:_r ft ~:S-:tee:
intensely interes~ eliample of
_....:=====~-=-'--. traoea the adventures o'l seven skillful blending of cmoma.tic ideao
'ftii.&amp;PI!OHI: ~~ ::.U~J.~
IIOLI: or TB&amp; PIIMKACIBr IN POl·
BON COHTIIOL, 62 J8C8iWic Joca.

PllADUCI81'8

ticma, 11:80 a.m. ad 10 p.m.

YOIJDI boyio who eoter the .Im·
perial Army in 1914, 8lld learn of
, fear, filth aod cleatruction during

four years of ~L

INTIIIHATlONAL POLX DANCING:

ln-

otraction in buic otepo during
fil'lt hour, 80 Diefendorf Aonex.

.8 p.m.

~Q=~~~-~;.=1r;;

I , in C Minor; quartet No. 17,
Op. 135, in F MaJor; Quartet No.

. c:.AL BIOLOGY 811Dl.Aa•:

Dr. Her·

=~-:!;..t
venity of Miaaouri, School of

M.ldicme. TB&amp; cuaarr STATUS or

~-.um~om.ur­

IBXB,

Room 107, 4610 Main

Street, noon.
la"''BrB

'!'RaPIIOQ

L&amp;CTU&amp;•:

S_.ad by Jleliou) Medieal
~ 3. l:lmil Eict, Dr. .Roy
A. Wilko, HEW AHftmOll ....,._..
...... ~. 62

tiolll, 1:80 p.m.

.-..ma Joca••

Pll'll£8 AND - O X Y COUD-

qmux•: Dr. 3.

Helaanbera. ~

~ -TB&amp;
- BTI!UilrUIS
af Tec:lu&gt;olocY.
Cambrldce.
or

-.--a

111 Hocholetter, 4 p.m.
112 Hocba-..
8:80p.m.
PIIYCIIOJU.'I'••: free-form OCJID-o

~

1D11Dication for p e r 1 o D alit y
powtb, 118 No- Cafeteria, U
p.m.
CB&amp;IBTXAB

coma

BOU&amp;: party

aponoored by Ollte af Forejcn
Stodoat Allain, 204 Townaend
H.u, U p.m. AD are umtod.
0/8 ~ Cll-·= cfuected by
~ W.Jbr, Bmrd, 8:80p.m.

FRIDAY-18

with oound effecto and dialogue.

TUESDAY-22
PBIZ FILM•: TID OBGAHIZIZ (1964,

Mario Monicelli), 147 Diefendorf,
3 and 8:80 p.m.
.

· m!~'&amp;on~ oft.?'~~T_h"
WEDNESDAY-23

" llH1P111D FA&gt;OLY" JOII1'1H0°: Leo-

aioo $3.00, faculty and atalf $2.00,

ture-discuuion of spiri~ oyn·
theaia for a new culture. AD weloome. .266 Norton, 9 p.m.

PUD'I'O RICAN CliRIB1'KAS PES'TI·
VAL*: free food, music and enter-

PirlzPlLX* : X (1931, Fritz Lane),

~- :~~~2~!J=

otodeDio$1.00.

tainment; dancing to the muaic of
"'The Weot Siders" and "Mike
and His Im~eo. " Everyone
invited: Goodyear Cafetena, 9
p.m. ·2 a.m.

SATURDAY-19
...... PILM*: APAB.Urro (UNVAH·

MONDAY-4
147 Diefendorf, 8:80 p.m.
The maturity of thio early ooand
film, and its intelligent uie of

new auditory devices for dramatic
effect. eamod it its taotlns repu·
tation. It a1eo remain&amp; one of the
clauicl among films of crime and
detection. Unuaual tension ia
creatod by the akillful cbaracterj-

1t'=W.~s:,!XSi~;!(')! · :!~by"~themo~c;.T!"'~PJ:"C:
Ravi Shankar. 147 &amp;efendo~ -on the part of lhe townspeople

·'Jbe Department of Higher
Education, recognizing · tho!t
most &amp;tudenls pursuing fhl!ir
own majors haVe few oppcrtunlties to learn about the nature
of a universitY ilself, lis hislory, purpooes. stnJctures, processes and problems, will offer
in the spring semester a course
for non-major undergraduates
on "Critical Issues in Higher
Education."
Tbis course will ekmine the
relations between universities
and the society that they are
expected both to serve and to
criticize, the special .degree of
freedom which the universities
need to perform lbeee roles, the
tensions gei1!!111ted by this need
for freedom, the complexities of
internal governance, the most
reoent findings from reseerch
concerning the teaching-learning process as it takes place
within a university, and various alternatives and innovations which are currenUy being·
tried and considmed.
Tbe course. DUS 254, will
carry four unils ol credit and
will be otfered Monday, Wed·
DI!Sday and Friday from 2:00 to
2:50 p.m. Normally, two sessions a week will be devoted to
presentation of the material via
lectures, panel discussions,
filins, etc., and one lll!lllion will ·
be conducted as a . small discussion section.
Most of the departmental
faculty :wbo represent the fields
of paycbology, t!Ociology and
pclitical science as well as that
of higher education itaelf have
been involved in the creation ol

PQ•nPD
.
XmasParty
~

Open £V
.f.~ E
veryone
All of Butfalo and the sur-

rounding area are invited 1o an
7:30 and 9:46•p.m.
and tbe uoderworld ao well ao
In tliis, tbe -=ond part of tbe · the police- for the murderer.
old-fashiOned Puerto Rican
Apu trilooiY, cliJector-writer Ray
,."'""'S
Christmas Festival, to be held
curiaathe~LrokenBrahmanfamily
· WEDn.c., DAY--6
bemnn;ng at 9 p.m., Friday,
from tbe modieval vi1lap life of
ePATIID PAHCIWd to the modam
~"::1"'~~~=~ December 18, in ~year Hall
70
p.m. Caf:':'-estival- orpnized to
~·the"'t,~ EXHIBITS
''bring closer the relatioas beenvironment at tbe Univeraity of
' tween the University and' tbe
Calcutta. Like PATIID PAHCJULI, PlliHTIUJ&lt;DIG All AN ART POUl*: community" -will feaiUril free
~ ha
• "!:.~.=::!!._.ofwatbey •fiimt
•
• aelf-inatractional 11Dit in the "food, music and entertainment
.._
otudy f1l ~ Hamman Art Puerto Rican style.~ according
10 ....., f1
1 11
told, the lender ad ioYinc devel- Library, ~ December 18.
to Agustin Olivencia, aaaitrtant

~~~.!rA':r. '!.?'.:.!..~

fi:

A~n, 4

;:.:~~==-= LIBRARY EXHIBITS

director of ttie U/B Ollloe of
Equal OppOrtunity and coorPe11118l1e1i't exhibit of wol'b by dinator of the Festival.
Roben G,... ad.
Joyca:
Two bends. "''be Weat SidPoetrY Room, 2!17 Lodtwood Li- , eni;' a Buffalo IIIUUI&gt;.f'!d "Mike
brary, 9 a.m.- 6 p.m.
and }tis ~"hf..A from fto.
=Ill~~-~
m
..~
~. will turllillh' music f&lt;!&lt;
GIWIU.lft D(2TAL*: Judith Bber_,..
"' dlmcing throuab 2 a.m. 'J'radi..
. ..praDO, Bainl, 8:80p.m.
~.=. ~= tional ~ lll'Cbriatmas
ad .......S- ad lhiid-8aor aJ. CIIIOis" will be 8Ulll and food
SUNDAY-20
. leriea, Lodtwood Memolial "lJ. will iDclude paatelee. a biDanaJW.IUJf-'---=IOUt==IIAlfCDO==---=,:.:Fillmo:___re_ brary, lhrouP J.,.aary. ~
baaeil dish, 88 well 88 chicken
Room, N - . a p.m.
:,,
and imported pink

moo"'- inddent Into a - t
of revelation. APAB.Ul"IO ..U
awudod tbe Grand Prise at ·the
Veoico· Film ' F-...I and the
t!:':~tur
ward at ·San

1.....-

:;:=.=:;.t.::

MONDAY-21

:=.....rice

~ Library, ~ ihrouP anauy.

Dr. Fnmciaoo Pabon, direc&gt;

to

tor of ~ Rican 8tudiea,
will ~!de~.- the pthsfnc.
Oli-.cia
300 to

- .•::&gt;

~

the course and will cooperate
in ils presentation. In addition, several ,graduate studenls have
been helping lo compile the
bibliograJ!hy for the book of
readinp BJ,d will assist ·in the ·
conduct of discussion sections.
Dr. Rollert Berdahl who will
nominally be in charge of the
course observes· that it will not
avoid controversy either in the .
issues discussed or the outside
readings selected. "We will
hope lo take issues ol inlmediate concern to studenls at Buffalo and relate them lo the
broader picture of higher edu·
cation," he said. "Eaclr of UB
inevitably has his ~ value
position on the varioi1B issues
lo be considered," Dr. Berdahl
noted, ''but our goal is not to
convert students to our pos;•
tions-for that matter we do
not' agree amongst ourselvesbut rather lo make students
more sophisticated in their own
conceptualization of the extremely complex p r o b le m s
which lao!! higher «&lt;ucatlon."

Job:Freeze(continud from
1, eoL 6f .
pGIC

Ketter that lbeae actiOIIS have
been Ill' will be taken on ,campUB:
A. Determination ol all employment commitmenls (complete, finn, and outstanding~ as·
of Friday, December 11.
. ·
B. Stopping ol all further
commitments of employli8lt as
of December 11.
.
C. Preparation of a list of
commitments ol employment
whicih mllllt be made in the future to staff esaential functions
which would otbenriae be lDlstalfed or inadequately atalled.
'!"- iDclude: 1\DC second semester appointment&amp;; otber aec&gt;

ond - appointments
seDtial
to~
oparatioll&amp;teaching aaaitrtanta, graduate
118istanta, Admilllioua and Rec&gt;
orda employees fill' registration
only. tbe revolving tamporuy
Library l!lllployem, etc. A list
of already-committed internal

l:f"'~~ =~=

fective elates fill' which
wodt has been r~
thoee fill' which J,;~
not the pay mte baa been _,_
mitted and the paper wodt Ia
incomplete.
D. Prepouation of a ~
dure for~ otber~
tioaa. to tbe hirinl ,__
Doty said that the otber - ·
tiCJils listed by Hurd will be IDitiated bere .. rapid),y ......
sible.
r

t.d

WEEKLY COIIIIIIIIIQW:

To .,.. 111:

~

,.

Suz·

anne

~Wzaw. U~ I'Ubllr»-

-

s.mc.. 2!10 ~ - ·

ext. 2228. Copy Will 118 due by
Monday for., lliilua ~ 011

'"Thu.-y -

._... -

af

�</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>Reporter</text>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1380630">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA043_Reporter_v02n14_19701217</text>
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                    <text>·,
; • Ill

VOl:. 2 ·. NO. ·13

~R 10; 1~

1 •1

11111

·planning Firm Suggests

Innovative Concept for
Alumni-Faculty-,Center

Dr. IJaiUdli's Cell MeetB the Press
AsVatican~lfis rer~n:
for scientific work that would
advise scientists when they are
gettihg into pathogenic areas.
'He feels scientists shouldn't be
And al~ L'Oaerual&lt;&gt;re part of it- ''too much vested
Rommw . didn t eend a repre- interests."
sentative, the Vatican journal's
A question asked bow one
crack that "a horae will build . should advise a scientist who
an: airplane before· man baa .,...,., was leaVing the field because of
ated a living call" provided the his fear that his reaearch would
lnllodudion for Dr. ~- F. be put to cleBtruct:M!
nan.
Daliielli'a bitemati&lt;liml pn!86 ielli said that, while every case
. canfereoce ad ...u•·. -m.ty is cillferent, a_ny scientist should
By SUSAN GREENWOOD

The B.B~w':. ~. C.B.S.,
A.P. You name il
5

uses..

~~n Goody~ar-10

have thought about those problems before he started his ez.
periments or before he even
chose to do research. ''It's a
little too late after the research
is finished," Danielli said.
Danielli baa been thinking
about the applications of his
team's research. "Instead of using the accidents of evolution,"
Banielli says, ' 'we now have
the capability to synthesize the
(con.t.inued on page 3 , co·L I)

A facility that would house alternative, a single biKh-riae
not only the proposed alumni- structure would house alumnitaculty center but· also retai~ faculty facilities, a hotel, pe.rt.
parking and professional office ing and professional office
space is envisioned for the U / B space. ''It would be like anFoundation's Amherst property other Main Place," Chalmers
by the Bullalo Organization for points oul
Social and Technological Jnno.
The second p~ calls for
vation, Inc. (BOS'n).
a cluster of s!nlctures. Smaller
This concept is part of tbe specialized buildings would
feasibility study BOS'TI is con- share utili ties and parking
ducting lot the Foundation to space and be within short disdetermine how a 19-acre land stances of each othlir in a sort
gift by tbe Baird Foundation of plaza eflecl
can best be used. (See ReportBoth ideas call for a sharing
er, October 1. )
of utilities and parking space
An interiro report was pre- which would save on costs. In
sented Tuesday to the Alumni- addition, the BOS'TI planners
Faculty Center Organizational point out, a percentage of the
Committee which is working revenue from the retail. and ofwith BOSTI on the project. fice space plus the income from
Jack Hennessy, project mana- the hotel could be used to ,..
ger and masters' candidate in duce the building debt and
architecture at U /B, and Dick eventually help further endow
Chalmers, consultant and re, the U / B Foundation.
search director for BOS'TI,
This concept is new to alummade the report
ni-faculty center planniog and
BOSTI is advocating a BOS'TI believes that there is
change from the original idea of curren tly no center in the
a traditional alumni-faculty United States which is similar.
club with ivy-&lt;lDVered walls to a The planners hope it will suofacility geared to the total needs ceed in elimillating the "ezecu.
of University, alumni, faculty tive club - members only"
and community. The consulting -=~-:! an alumni-faculty
· firm-belieoal that-the- ''tmJivinr
nature of faculty-alumni relaThe planners are also sugtionships is pe.ralleled by the gesting that within the cent...
relationship between the Uni- rooms be set aside for continuversity and the community." ing education PlOP"""':" as well
Because of this, they have de- as for dining, BWliDDling, card
signed a center which will in- playing, etc. Other features they
tegrate this wider range of propose are meeting rooms;
needs.
.
squash, handball and paddlehall courts, and rooms {or pool
Moln PITwo major concepts for and billiards. Space will also
buildings have been suggested. be incorporated mto tbe buildThe ~t is for a single build- ing to house the U/ B Foundaing- a "center." Under this tion and the administrative of.
Iicea of the center.

Mauday• •
.Before a forest of micro' - and television cameras,
l;:anieUi confirmed for the
wOrld's preos that tbe U /B Center for Tbeoretical BioJocy baa
in fact SUCilOIIIfuly .-bled
a liviq and ~ 011&amp;The University will abandon the terms vary from campus to ticed a drop of about a dozen
os11 orpDilm.
one more of its in loco parentis campus. At Bullalo State, stu- in the number of doctors on his
Methods .-1, polllible appli· practices next ~ter and not dents deal directly with the in- list of 76-100 community phy!rlcationo and ethics of tbe ez. require '-lth insurance fot suraooe agenl Here, students cians who have volunteered to
perimentl _ , fully discuaeed undergraduates.
·
get insurance when registering accept student patients with
N - from tbe 30
At the same time, however, and the fee is part of their rec· problems the clinic can't hanaource11 ~ questions about p-aduate students are considerords. As a result, if the insur- die. A major reason for the
tae aoiiatiat's rBJBC1ions to the mg making health insurance ance fee isn't paid, a student'~ drop, he says, is that students
ifllltbtillm of tbe . - I l l y mandatory for that segment of transcript can be withheld . without insurance have a repuGf "'lfa."
the student population . And Doty can find no Trustees' au- tation for not paying their bills.
DIIIIIelli ~ tbe ......tt' as Dr. Paul HGlfman, director of thorization for this policy. He
one in a loai eeriee of tbe Student Heal.th · Service, also feels making insurance
...,.tmmiB wt.e t.1c orpn- thinks tbe insurance should be mandatory for only full-time
!'!,._then:::,terare""a':;i .;,~~
. _ llrie ......, ....,rated. He mandatory for all.
imdergraduates is unfair- ''if
poin1ed to ...,._
The decision concerning lin- there's an option, let's open it era! aree pharmacies which re1111 Ill!- and ·
and derJraduates was made by Ed- up to everyone."
fuse credit to students, he says.
ezplained tbet duCIIIlOiiOilW ward Doty, vine presiden,t for
"Albany and the Board of
The shortage of doctOrs on
and 'a n ea still la-ve to be PcfOo ilperations and systems, and Trustees are also concerned the roster is limited to aeveral
dnoed by 111811. Tbe lllOR 4lfll. Charles Balkin, assistant vine about the alamce of rulings areas- general practitioners;
cult llep In ~tbMis proc- PNSident and CCillzoller. They about ihsurance. The Trustees ear, noee and throet specialists;
QIIUalli
is . from loobd into back records and ha-ve been CObBidering the - - ~tedoctorstricianswandho .~t
_Jogists;
:::....... unicellu ar Orpn· could 8nd 110 1, ruling by the tion for two years,•but no ac- """
w- venereal
l.na to~ multioallu- Board of TruRees requiring tion baa been tabu. 'lbe·.cen- ru-. ''In oome caleftories, we
lu OIIIIL
mendatmy '-lth inauruce.
tlal administration baa also have 110 tzouble; in others, we
OID't get anyone." H.olfmaJI ez.
Ill - For tbe ~ ..-.1 yean. loobd into the matter.
Danlelli ..,. thse is a , _ all full-time under1raduates
Dr. Ho6man IIUJ'Il(&gt;rls man- plains.
- t ln bloloJy, away la-ve been - . 1 for '-lth datory '-lth . insurance heHo6man cites three other
from ~ and ink! ayntbe- inaurance with the c:harp being cauae a lack of funds and fal:ili. reasons doctors are turning stuala.
clroppedoalylfaatudentaiped ties prev.ents tbe University denta away:
Tbe dlaDp 111- tbe eCien- a WU.. card. 'lbla fall ovw dinic fnim serving students'
• Tbe doctor is too busy to
tiat new ftiiiPCIIIIIIbltioli. the 4;000 llludmiB aiped wal-., complet8 medical . - - . Thus, - take any more patients.
.u.tB ..., ....niDI em tba proj- bul cbe to 10,000 lllllleqnodu- one patient out of ten needs
ecit ...-. They feel that IICim- , ate, poodaate and _jli ' • I oulaide '-lth - . Dr. Hofflilda~.-··• !~. MlllllaiB baaabt ·- . . .
· • man eatimateL Ho«man is COil·
.,.UC or
orianilmL
a.-.1 SUNY uniiB (lndud- .-ned about the availability of to pay billa.
• Tbe students' "1!fe style
....t further to ad- inl Bu!Wo) ....., mendatory this oulaide '-lth aue.
1
(co~d.,..- 3, col. 2)
' - - · a,_~ ........ hoard heaJth
~
But
'lbla fall, Dr. Ho«man 1&gt;1&gt;
.
4 polidoa.
.

-afAm_..

University Eases Rule on Health Insurance,
But Dr. Hoffman and the GSA Don't Concur

Ideas for the .center came
from a BOS'TI study of tbe
economic and demographic
needs of the Amherst aree and
the planned UDC developmen'ts. The IJI"oo.l'. also studied
zoning and building codes to
detect any changes which milbt
be~ if a center of the
~-size is to be buill
A final report on the cent...
proposal will be submitted to
the Alumni-Faculty Cent... Organizationill Committee on January 12. At that time, the Com-

....,.w;

="il..,H~=r "':{'~~ :f,.,~4:!

.,.:,.."iJ!..ttwwi""

.

..

=t

=

c!J!c~

~=ns inof ~or..,!

u,';.'

arriving at a final reCDIDIIBidation, the Committee will ·sent a pfOPOilllll-:lil tbe bomda
of directori of tHrlJ /B Ahmmi
Association and of tbe Faculty
Club. After theee two organiza.
lions acoept or change t6e proposal, final approval must oomie
from the ·Board of Trustees ol
tbe U/ B Foundation which·
owns tbe land.
The group from BOSTI is ·
COlli~ of three architectUre
graduate students and an archilecture faculty member as COil·
sul~l Tbe members are Hmnessy, Chalmers, Charles Rush

~inu.:::...,-m.,:;.':~it:d and~·~tt.;! U/B
.

t.::::.-r~~ni~JO.:

Carter, U/ B Foundation vias
president for alumni alfalrs.

�2

~~0,1910

GREPORTER,

Danielli,ASsociate_Offer.Vi~ on
Future Direction, Ethical PrOblems

Student Engineer Describes
_B~ ·Centers ProiectB

EDITOR'S NOTE: Pauline heredity?
_
.~
.
DNA hail beeri found -- tbe
and to incorporate these genes grain plants, culminating re- Groot u a .. nior chemical &lt;n/lin- .
eerint=ior
who
in
tM
pad
has
mitoc:bondria,
which
are
the
into chromosomes or other cell· cently in new Species which
ular organelles. As this is have collectively '-n bailed been concerned thot ru Reporter "Yt9Piasm. Is 'this what carries
11
and
tM
Univeroity
have
not
kept
.
the
heredity
of
the
eytop~asm?
achieved biology must also de- as the greeD revolution."
Are the "letbel factOr&amp;" -'
v~wed in pru. briefing• this
velop a technique for adding
The tecimiques or cell syn- ru comnwnily abreaot of O&lt;Unweelf) ra'i.u a whole aeries of these synthetic chromosomes to thesis reoently developed, to- ti/ito dilcoueriis on campus. She amoebas similar to our "~
how
qau•tioru and iau~. Two of thue living cells. When this has gether with cognate studies in at.o feels thot much of whot u mtme reactions"? U
-where the work u headed and been done, it will be feasible to ·•genetic engineering" and re- written about sc~nce u far too similar? -Do - h&amp;ve di-:;se rethe ethical problenu involved- transfer both synthetic and nat- lated areas. merely provide an- uninUUillible to tM layman. And sistance in our cells as 1liJill as
on ad.druud in th~.e paper~ by ural genes into a considerable other, perhaps more effective that holf of it io done by people in the white blood ~~
Un.ive,..ity ~~nti.6t•.
variety .of organisms.
means for -the production or who don't know whot &lt;My are and antibodies in the blood? es
•
•
•
·
By J . F_ DANIELL!
What use will all this be? new and beneficial organisms. writing · about. Her method: " I
. Drs. Richard Gordon 8Dd GaDiNe~~, c.nr.,. frN T,_..rie.ril Biolob WJuit. benefit to ~? ~y
It seems to us that the ethi- atUmpt to lutow whot I'm writing
about
and
to
write
accordingly."
bor
Hertnan
and
Robert
Bender
In biology we are moving- minJ canno_t ~ wtth the liD- cal criteria to be applied to the
from an .age of analysis into an ~ postilbihties and I shall devel~ment ol new organisms Howeuer, she adtU with a grin, "I have found a way called ART
age of synthesis. Within a cen- pro"!d~ . ~nly a few examples of by these techniques are essen- ·don't alway• •uccud." Theu aie (for Algebraic Reconstruction
tury we shall prObably be able posstbilities we are ro"''tde~ing tially the same as those appli- her commentorwi on the dillcou- Techniq,_) to figure ou£ threeto synthesize artificially any at_ the Center for TheOretical cable to the older methods of erie. in the Center /or Theoreti- dimensiOnal strucbiie "fioin "ten
hybridization and selective cal Biology-The ceU re088embly or twelve electron mia-oscope
biological system or entity- By Btology_:
.
- .
.
system or entity I refer to vira ) B_tologtcal ftXation of rut- breeding, and involve no really and IM new &lt;)!stem for u~winl photographs. (Similar-methods
:::J:.ct&amp; on a three-dimen- oould be U9ed on Xaray.s or
wtes, cells, animals and plants, rogen ts often _more _effi&lt;&gt;;ient new ethical principles.
ecologies and societies. Some ~ the use of mdustrial fixed
or course. just as with' artiBy PAULINE GROOT
things like that.) . 'l'he pho'toi!"Pha are described by :equaof these we can synthesize-now rutrogen. At present only a few ficial organisms produced
Drs. Ault, Danielli, Jeon and !tons and the equations -are
~an _ more types of synthes;,; plants Ce.~. bl':'e-green algae,_ le- through breeding, and even as
Lotcb
have
continued
the
work
solved
by -iteration. 'Ibe equa.
wtll - possible even within 20 glllDes) fU&lt; rutrogen. The un- with natural organisms, moved
y
.
~rovement of existing nitrogeninto new environments, care on the synthesis of new life tions are fieroe .and.tbe ilrithmeby
fiQding
out
why
so
many
of
?c
takes
a very long time, ·but
Some biologists do not real- ftxe~, and transfer of nitrogen must be taken to discover any
· ·ize that this is happening, prob- ftXatiOt;t to f!"'C! Pl!mts should undesirable or harmful new the new life forms did not live. 1t can be done.
This is a-f9111-step forward.
ably because they work too have high prtortty,
properties appearing in such It turns out that the cytoplasm
close to details. However wben
b) The development of new orgtlDisms, and to detertnine of an amoeba contains "lethal There were methods of -getting
we put tog~ther some ~r the crop plants for semi-arid areas. 'What the effel:t of the new or- factors" which are usually ra·tal 3-D structures before, such as
remarkable events of recent
, c ) The _developmez&gt;.~ of ape- illlli.sm will be on existing eco- to any nucleus that does not scanning electron microscopes
years the trend is evident We cud organtsms for envtronmen- logical conditions (vice versa) rome from an identical-twin and the use .of two · ordinary
have seen the first synu,.,;is of tal control, e.g. for desslination helore introducing these organ- amoeha. Approximately ten fa- photographs .from an electron
a gene, the first synthesis of a of water, and for more efficient isms into the environment at tal doses are spread out through microscope in stereo; but .those
the cytoplasm. This makes the lw&lt;! are mostly useful for surlarge.
virus, and recently the first re- treatment or ~age.
"'!""mbly of a living calL At
d ) The partial replacement
These considerations are es-- amoeba inunune to most dis- faces._The new method -can fighigher levels we have seen allo- of ~ p~t methods of sentially of a technical charac- eases in somewhat the way peo- ure out structures· that the old
phenic mice CAllophenic organ- ~nucal en!P""';ring _~y biolog- ter and will be of the same type pie are inunune to most. dis- methods can'L - . . . · - .
What Gmdon,- .Bender, _abd
isms have been obtained by teal SlfD~ us!"g tatlor-made as those currently in use. How- eases.
U these lethal factors eould Herman fii!lred out this way is
fusing early embryos of differ- ,organtsms ~ desuable on many ever, it must be feoognized
the structure of' .Orne· riboent strains, or species) and re- grounds. First, whe~ almost that, as our capabilities to de- be understood and outwitted
markable s uccess in plant- all present-dar. chemtcal plants velop new organisms improve, as seems likely from the work somes. 1bese are tiny bits of
breeding. Our new concern for pollute the P anet, !he by-pro- so too must the scrutiny of the U/ B scientists have already cytoplasm that manufacture
the environment merges with ductlons or bio.logical ·synthesis these new forms improve to done, we could breed single- proteins according to instrucour developing capacity to un- are seldom tox1&lt;; and oommon- prevent the accidental ~tra­ celled animals as effectively its !ions they get from messenger
derstand, control, modify and ly are ~ful either as food or duction of hartnful properties. we breed bigger ones. This has RNA. They themselves are
synthesize complete ecological as ferhhzer. Second, when With appropriate care, then quite a number of possible re- made of protein molecules arsystems.
&lt;JC?mpl\"' products are needed, there is no reason why ~ sults.
ranged in a very definite patThe work at Buffalo on cell btologtcal synthesis is im- more effective techniques for
One possible result is that we tern. Electron microscopes can
synthesis must be seen in this mensely more efficient than the generation of new species might learn what kind of life if see objects 11s ll1l1B.)I liS a _protein
context, and in relation to the standard industrial chemistry.
molecille, but c&amp;nnot sr,e cify
s~&gt;?ul~ _not be of as great a any, could exist on Mars. Arier
s\'ooesses of many other biolo~ ) The transf~r or the cap- sctentific and material benefit that, we would be much more which protein niolecu e · they
gtsts. We owe a particular debt a_ctty _to synthestze human an- to the world as the earlier tech- lt"ly to recognize it if we ssw see.
to Dr. Ernest Pollard of the tibod!es and human hormones niques have been.
The next question, of course,
Biophysics Department at to !"'C~rganisms will enable
Other poss ible results are is how do ribosomes work? Drs.
However, over the next 20
Pennsylvania State University anbbodtes and hormones to be years the capacity of t:natl to that we might be able to breed Gordon, Bender and Herman
(and chairman of the Extemsl made by cheap processes and so· develop new viruses, new cells a much better sewage-eating are now busy trying to find out.
The next qu,..tions will probAdvisory Committee of the •mm~"!"'IY exte~~ the resouroes and new organisms will be bacteria, or a water-desalting
Cerlter for Theoretical Biology l of cliDlcal ~Jl!"i!cme. We have greatly extended. This means cell, or cells to replace some ably ~:!&lt;! along these lines-what
whose energetic exploration of made a prehnunary study of that not only can we synthe- chemical plants to cause less structures do other parts of the
the field over the last eight this together with M. Y cas of size valuable things : we can rwllumedtion,
_..:~~cells to make usecell have? How do these work?
1-~~
Syracuse and some of our col- also_ synf!&gt;esize had (pathoyears has been an inspiration
How are foril) ' and funCtion
- In general, artificial synu.;,. l"'!gues a~ Roswell Park Mem-· geruc). things. Moteover, m·
There are some bacteria that oonnec!ed?'Wbat sorts of -things
sts of cells is being explored onal Instt tute.
some ftelds Cthough not in our make nitrogen fertilizer. They can gn wrong with these parts
along several different routes:
_ f) The development of new ~ha work ) pathogenic or- grow on the roots of leglllDes of cells? What effeclll do these
1) For simple cells, e . g _ hfe forms for other plants may
gantsms may arise by aCcident. ~~ is, peas, beans, clover, and problems have iln the cell?
bacteria, by bringing a' genome vastly extend the value of these
•
•
•
I~ is our view that a special stm1lar plants. U they could be
together with minimal support- planets.
.
Right now the two dillerent
group should be establiahed made to grow on the roots of
ing systems. Students of this
~Ill! one cat;t ssy, without e.g. by the National · Academy ssy, rom, wheat, and rice u.er.; ~projects don't overlap
particularly include E . Pollard ~•ta!='on, that munense bene- of Sciences or N.S.F., which would be more food in some much; however, it is quite likeand H. Morowitz.
f!ts wtll ensue from the artifi- will keep a watch on this sit- hungry countries.
ly that they will. U Danielli's
2 ) Artificial reassembly of cial synthesis of new life forms. uation, and will be able to adJust adding gene&amp; to a living team learns . bow to 'transplant
However, the rate at which vise research workers in this cell does not do the job, as a· smaller -parts of cells than the
cell components (organelles)
which gives cells of all degreeo; such i?enefi!" will beco!!te avail- field of the sli$s that should general -rule, because a cell ia nucleus, they could perhaps
of complexity. This has been abl~ ts _ strt~y dependent on be taken to protect the com- a complex organism which must move ribosomes around and
the field of tbe Buffalo team.
baste btologtcal research. As munity against .risk.
be well coordinated and all-of- help study bow dllferent ribo3 ) Fusion of existing cells to Lederberg recently ~ed at
a-piece to survive, and just ,.,.,_ wodt in dillerent cells.
give more complex cells Pion- a press conference, the present
dumping in a new gene ia likely Conversely, if ART methods eseers in this include H. ·Harris cut;ha~ in !ederal funding of
to dillrupt the functional unity tablish a gnoc1 matdi' between
with animal cells. and E Cock- baste btolOgtcal research cuts
or the cell.
structure and functiOn of the
inLwith plant cells.
·
·
off tbe hase of future benefits.
Even if these things can be perts of cell8. it would be pas'Ibe first two methods offer
•
•
•
Members for four suboom- done, there is a real reason to sible to predict bow a new life
By R ROSEN
complete control of oomposimit~ of the Faculty Senate worry about whether they form would behave before th1;
tion._unit by unit, or the syn- ........... , _ _.:.,-..... sa.-. Committee 011 Educational . should be done. The moral prin- new life form was Cftlllted. This
u-ized cel.L The fusion
J . F. DANIELU
Planning and Policy have been ciples involved resemble those would make the creation -or
method is much more limited.
'Ibe directed production by announoed by tbe Faculty Sen- ol breeding anything else eJ&lt;- really Ulleful new fonns -of life
cept that the precauti~ to much faster and much safer,
Over the next five years we mat;t !'r new organisms, which ate Executive Committee.
keep singl~ cells from "getting also much more lB!ful.- Obvi'!bey are: '
can expect to see: the artificial exhibtt novel and des irable
--..bly of cells with compon- properties not found in "natCont~ Ed~tion: Bar- away" have to be much strong- ously, if it is impoasible to preenlll from the most varied ural" ~ " - '
bara Howell, chairman, David er.
diat bow a new cell will behave
_,.,., including plant-animal --''"'~~ -sind!
~_
Francis.
~ work. raises some inter- outside the teat tUbe, it is unmiD!&amp;; tbe rust artificial asoem- U""'
...._ Ahosch. Gerald
Eff«tWeiU!U: Bru- !"'ting questions. For instance, safe ever to let it out, or even
blies of egg cells (to which the
ntil recently, however, the noTeachin«
Arcudi, chairman, John m_ the days before moving nuc- to keep a whole Jot of such cells
work of BriaB. King, Fischberg techniques ·for accomplisbing Fopmno,
Orville Murphy.
lei was )lCI881Dle, it was thought in teat tubes. On the other
and Gurdon bas '---- an - - - thja_ _have ""'!n quite a-ude.
II
The Colle,a: John Halatead that the nucloos canta:lned all hand if the beha · of
""""'
- · · utilizing selective b r e e d i n g
the beredity of a cell. Danielli can be predicted,VIOl"
then aU:.,
tial.,...,...,....); the syntheitis of techniques super-imposed chairman, Marvin Bloom,
•
new orpi1iamo by cell fusion· ei~ 011 natural variability of neth Kaiser.
~~thLorch have
things can be dane.
the oyntt..is ol new ~ 8peCieS
·
the
lol
!tukpot&lt;knt Study : Wanen . 't WJ'Ibe~les, tbet that
'Ibe lntuble with this ia that
by fusion of embryos; and of of ~ :'uta:.::f
BUttolt, chairman, Robert 1811 !"':
amoebas made by cells behave one way in test
counoe. a continuation ol the It bas only '-n within the Haas, John Howell. J . Sidney ~ the nucleus of ooe tubes and other W8,YB at differformation of new organisms by last 75 years that the bioloeical Sbraupr, Tbomaa Shuell.
~~_:!_be.cytoplasm and cell ent places in an eooJocy. 'llte
tbe clatltical techniques ol " - - of these ......__,___ have
~"'""of~ have in- .ability to pmdict what a new
~
berited characteristics that were cell would do to our ecology is
~and pnetial.
becun to be ~E-..
- T o Clot I t _
pot~ the~ as either .., ability that J!Obody ia IlkelY
~ in parallel With the- so, the .--.1111 have o(teo ·" - '
• · ~L Heredity is not en- . to have for quite a While. So.
marupulative l!f'Oil8IJI8, men- ~. as _ , in tbe pro- ACTIVmES AVAILABLE ·
Student Aoood&lt;ltlon Oflloo. 205 tin!ly in the nucleus,· ,_ yet even if new
of life are
tioned -'-'"
in the
- - -• liferation of many · tiallY
_...._
be previous
a __,_._-::::_-le,
Norton Hell. Ext. 5507
~ ou~ iL 1!1&lt;&gt;. bow does de\&lt;eloped. they will not be
•·-...~ '"'-'
....,..._..., ·new. llPOCiea ol domeaticated
the mteraction of the nucleus taken oul:ilde tbe laboratories
effort to synu-ize new - . animala (doc, cattle, ej;c.) &lt;1- o1
and the cytoplasm ~ for llOoiJe time.
EDITOR'S NOTE: TM e.U •ynthuia war• bring carried on in
tM Un.iw,..ity'l Center /or Theo·
,..tical Biolot/y (which """ re-

J::

:,u::::/

Senate Awoiirts

4 Subcommittees

earliest _..

Ken:

.,.!,tt:'

demon:

ron..

-

�-JO,J910

3

CiREPoRTER,

Psychological Arts Center.
Probes !Hidden Recesses'
By SUZANNE METLGER
sw1
. The hidden reoesaes of the
mind have long fascinated earnest scholars and dabblers

alike.

))anie11i's. Cell-

(.:...m..-.tro•-

1,~ 3)
Orpnilme that are clceier to op-

timal"

.

• Practical applieatioos of this
........Jd be piOducins plants that
would be able to absorb atmoapberic ni......... break it down
and utiJill8 it within their ownsys8M- a sort ol. "llelf..fertili-

zation."

• ADothar aspect would be synthesis ol. specillc orpnisma for.
specillc induslrial tasb. Rather
than ha · an industry bued
on
prllCI!B!II, artificially produced
would
be able ·to do~ things
without hllrmfuJ chemical byproducta The by-produda of
&lt;SUch "biol.ogjcal factotiea"
would be food for stock-or fer.
tillzer, Danielll says.
ElMo-til Cantral
He also envisions .xne forms
of environmental control bY us-

d..:J:f

ing tailormade orpniarns. A
poesible usage on earth could
be micro-or~ to reprocess
sewage more elliciently. But
Danielli also dreams of creating artificial atmosphere on
other 'p_
lane#l by UBIIlll organ... 'tli&amp;i ~ pJOcJuce
::"oroth8r elcimimts~
for the survival of man.
A fourth application -wd
be the synthesis of human antibodies and hormones by microorganisms, Synthesizing hormones and antibodies - in this
way would be ine%pensive and
would inlmenselY extend the
resources of clinical medicine,
Danielli maintains.
The onlY block DanieJ1i forefar . the . reaasembly ,technique is a la'ck of research
funds. He condemned the current cutback in the funding of
basic bio)ogicaJ
and
lauded the British system that
gives extended linanciaJ help to
re-rchers.
.
The series of e%periments
that culminated in the reassembly of a one-celled. organism has !;,_, a . Jong-terpl project for Daniell\. ~ 1945. he
has been interested in .the pee.
sibiliti&lt;la..b.ut it was ~ 1967 that ·
he and. his IAlam ach¥illY embarked on the project. At that
time he thought 1t would lake
five y.,..... but the IAlam was
able to projeCt a viable ilell in
18 months with .the.rest of Ole
time spent "filling in the ~
taila:"

-rm

• Now, this interest is being
pursued as a discipline at the
Center for the Psychological
Study of the Arts at U/ B. The
only institute of its kind in the
world, the Center his ·started
its first ·year of operation with_
minimal funds and a little oflice in Annex A. Dr. Norman
N. Holland, professor of EngJi.sh, is its founder and director.
The purpose of the Center is
was responsible for much of the to probe the relationship bereassembling tecbniques. talked ·- tween the artist's psyche and
about the procedure. She ex- his art and to formulate degree
plained that firs~ an amoeba's programs in the psychological
nueJI!usisremovedby..-nsof study of the arts. The Center
a miCroprobe. Secondly, cyU&gt;- gathers faculty from various deplaam is removed ~ sec- parlments Within Arts and Letond amoeba bY a cen
ge or ters and is in touch with orthl&gt;tiny pipette. N e:rt, t e cell do%-medical psychoanalytic
membrane is removed frcm a groups such as the Western
third one. Finally, the reassem- New York Psychoanalytic Sobly begins. The cytoplasm and ciety.
nucleus are re-u-rted into the
At present, the focus is pricell "**lbnme, all three basic marily literary because the
structures being frcm dillerent largest group of faculty interested in applying psychology to
cells.
Dr. Lorch did over 1,000 such their field happens to be in the
synu- of amoebas and she English Department But the
found that in 85 per cent of the dream is for expansion into
cases where Identical. stzains non-literary fields and thus. far
were used, the cell lived and re- e%perts associated with the
produced. Over 100 rells are ter have applied the psychologstill living and reproducing, she ical approach..to aesthe~. anpointed out However, when thropology, b1ogrsphy, history
dillerentstrains of amoeba were · and ·law.
involved, less than one per cent Monthly GAP
'"""' able to reproduce over a
~of the ~riogs of the
period of time.
U/B'Center IS the monthly colThis ted ecientists to discov- loquium,. known as the G~p
er what the IAlam terms a '1e- for Applied ~sychoanalys.•s
thai factor," roduced bY the · (GAP~. Meeting over cocktails
amoeba. Dr
w Jeon, and dmner, the group, com· ., of
posed ol regulars from U /B
~ned~ 0
IA!am, and cc&gt;ntributors from elsee:rp
where, discusses papers and
The '1ethal factor" is actual- works in progress. Included in
ly a high molecular weight pro- the ranks of distinguished extein manufactured in several temal associates and advisers
dilferent forms by the cell. The to the Center are Irvin Child,
"!"f.f makes only one form at a Yale University, working in the
time, yet can switch to another psychoanalytic study of the vistype without notice.' Dr. Jeon ua1 arts; Frederick Crews. UnihU found that an enzyme that versity of California, Berkeley,
inactivates the protein can be outstanding in litersture and
used to combat the "lethal fao- psychology; Simon Lesser, Unitot" and allow the reassembly versity of Massachusetts, autecbnique to work.
thor of Fiction and the UnconThis discovery has shed light scioru; Leonard Manheim, Union the reason some transfers of ~ty of ~ord, founder of
artificial organs are rejected, the iourhal, Literature_ and PayDr Jeon noted As further re- $hology; Bruce Mazlish, Mas....irch is done· in the area, a sachusetts ~titute of T~olmethod of counterscting the ogy, a leading psychl?hist?nan;
"lethal factor" may be found. Morse P~ Uruvers1ty of
·
•.
South Carolina, famous for psyThe tsam's future IS. hazy. choiOjlical studies of music,
One ~r, Dr. J~n, '!I now painting, and architecture as
working at the t!ruvers1ty of well as litersture; Frederick
T~ Knoxville. "Where Wyatt, University of Michigan,
we're gomg now, depends on teacher of a generation of literfurther findings," Danielli says. ature and psychology students.
Diverse and intriguing topics
have sparkec\ discussions at
GAP colloqwa. AI Katz, aaso:.
(conlinu•d from page 1, col. 4)
ciate professor at U/B's School
and behavior" disturb other pa-

een:

kwang u..;

Insurance-

~~.be feels. manda-

tory Malth insu.unce would
T•m Efrett
help:
Dllnielll says that because of
Dr. Holfman's other reason
"the risht' combiilation of peo- for supportinc ' mandatory in~-t ·'..;_,~~ able "': make suranre is his feeling that the
..--Hisa~~tors . ined ·
cost &lt;&gt;I ClClVel'llll" wilf go up if
""""""'"'
JO
m the number of students enrolled
the ~at the press con- drops. as it likely will onai covference. Dr. L Joan Lorch. who erqe is entirely volimtary. He
says that .the pre&amp;~~~~t policy is
CAitiiELS AYAJI.ABI.£
. a bargain and wants it to reLoctcwood Umry !10 30 5 main that way.
owlleble in ' ~ cllrrels lor tac· ·
Membars of the Graduate
ulty membeiS oiid stude,nts who Student Ailsociation (GSA) are
ore wortdnc on their dl-n.tlons. l;!acking Dr Hoftman. The Ex~~ will be eccept8d
on ecutive
the lelialative
Friday, Decemllllr 11, 1970•· at body of the GSA, now has a
the Clrculotlon Dell&lt; of Loctcwood, motion before It to iDake .xne

- ell,.

,_wiD

pology from a psy.chological
standpoint in .his studieq of cuiture and child-rearing. And
Drs. Murray and Adeline I.evine have applied the psychological approach to their study
of the culture of youth. Dr.
Holland's The Plll'rUlox of Pornogrophy shows that pomography, though it seems to be a
liberated kind of writing, is in
fact restrictive and limiting to
responses.

Dr.-

Dr. Grosof Was
Valued Colleague

Classical literature has rereived its share of psychologi- . Dr. Elliott K Groeof, 39, as. cal probing, too. Professor John sociate professor of sociology,
P. Sullivan, faculty of Arts and died at his home at 77 Nottingl.ettei'B, analyzed . the Latin ham Terrace Friday, N!)VI!IIlber
poet Propertius in terms of' the '1:1. Memorial services were held
well-known Oedipal themes. Monday, November 30, at the
Even President Nil&lt;on has Westminster Presbyteriancome under the disaeccing eye Church, with interment in
f Dr. MazJi.sh, his thesis being Forest Lawn cemetery, He is
~t acting is a dominant motif survived by his wife, two sons,
in the li!e-etyle of Richard M . two step-eollB, his parents and
Suicidal and seH-dostructive brothei'B, and other relatives.
authors provide good subjects
A grsduate of Columbia Unifor analysis and Dr. Melvin D . versity, with advanced degrees
Faber, who comei! to the Center from Pennsylvania State Uniunder the auspices of the Sui- versity, he came to the Univercide Prevention Center of the sity of Buffalo in 1958. He was
National Institutes of Mental promoted to associate professor
Health, has put on the couch in 1964-. He taught courses in
such notables as Virginia Wolff, sociological theory, social orHart Crane. Ernest Heming- ganization, and medical sociolway, Sylvia Plath and Dylan ogy, and had attracted national
Thomas.
attention in the latter field. ·
Obviously, the Group for ApHis major work was as coplied Psychoanalysis is wonder- author of a survey of three Buffully eclectic. Says Dr. Hoi- falo hospitals, entitled Social
land, "GAP can, I think, fairly CaU&amp;eS of Labor Turnover in
claim, it is the most inter-disci- Modern HQBpil4ls, 1965. From
plinary activity on campus."
this research he published 8
The English Department of- number of articles, in which he
fers a regularly established developed a theory relating the
Ph.D. progrsm in literature status systejps of organizations
and psychology. The Center to the class system of the sokeeps a list of all courses with- . ciety, with especial concern for
iri Arts and Letters~D&amp;- the behavior and motivation of
partments of Psycho
and persons in organizations.
Psychiatry, and o
partIn recent years Dr. Grosof
menta of the Universi
'ch was
an .active, enlightened remight be relevant to
- presentative
the University
chological study of
. in the BuflaloofCommunity,
hopThe Center will provide aca- ing to Mal the breach between
demic residency for holdelS of the two groups and to secure
fellowships in this field from support for University policies.
sources other than the Slate Despite his conaervative pollUniversity of Buflalo. It may tical viewpoints, he was liberal ·
also be poesible for holders of and innovative in educational
graduate fellowships in Arts practices, which he exemplified
and Letters to be 888igned to in his own s tuden t-onented
work with Center faculty.
claasroom teaching.
In addition to GAP, the CenHe was a friendly, urbane,
ter plans to slart another series
and
sophisticated
person.
whose
of monthly colloquia for faculty
who do not now use psychology intelligence and humanity were
ued by his col.lesgues, stuin their work but would like to
to, and frieDds. His death is
read in psychoanalytic' theory.
068
to his department and to
Those interested in joining
these new monthly colloquia the discipline of sociology more
largely.
should contact Dr. Norman
Holland, 21 Annex A or 831-JoHN SnuAIIAKI

~

4804.

R.eJax
Coffee Hours are
ing

By SUZANNE METLGER
R.,_,. Stall

The Foreign Students Coffee
Hour, every Thursday in 10
·Townsend Hlill from 4 . to 6
p.m., is refreshing in more than
one sense.
The weekly gathering is an
oasis amid the cares 'and pressures of college life. Evetyone
wa1ks in smiling and when they
leave they're relaxed and in
good spirits. That's because
there'a nothing tense or formal
about the situation whidi attracts large numbci'rs of students
who want to 11188t, socialize and
refresh themaeJvea. The hours
will be...,.. on form of hMlth ~ mm~- ·are eo pOpular that 10. Town• fi,.t . ~- . . . - - . datory for all 1raduate stu- 'seail is gettinc ~small to conA. $2 ~ ,_ lo!r Jooya dents. 'lbia modoo haa !;,_, tsin them, but Maly Loinaz, cois_requll'l!',.liUtthe
be,. tabJed at the last two GSA ordlnator of the Co«ee Hours,
tumecl ilt the ¢;1M_.term of ~ -w.p and will Clllll8 up for ·' wants even more people to atthe ...,.-.
. a vole apin &amp;bla ~laid.
·

eo.mcn,

of Law writing on The Concept
of Conspirtu:y, theorizes that
Conspiracy is considered a apecial crime because it plays on
certain universal infantile fears
of the dark. Dr. Marvin Opler,
professor of psychiatry and
chairman of anthropology, h8s
approached the field of ·anthro-··

Pro(etUIOI' of Sociology

She's especially hopeful that · ant in the Foreign Student OfAmerican students will come to fire and tstudying for a degree
intersct with foreign students in counselor education.
that faculty and staff memThe Coffee Hours draw peowill lake an interest. About pie from India, China, Pakistan,
20 new invitations are sent out Latin America, France. Italy, r
each week and regulars faith- Germany,-Taiwan, Greece, Vietfully return.
nam, Africa, Japan. Even the
Maly is reason enough to go trests are international and
to one of these mixers, Hospit- you're likely to find Gennan
able, charming and bubbly, she pfeilerneuse joining crunlbs
greets everyone by first name, with traditional American cboointroducell' IIBWCODlei'B, replen- olate chips.
ishes coffee, discusses plans for
Maly encourages a different
the next Colfee Hour, and is foreign student -club to 8pOil80I'
even ready with the mop should the hour each Week. She pra;.d
someone get intD hot water.
the Pakistani students' aaJa
From Puerto RiCo', where abe event at which Jbey fee.tured
earned a B.A. in psycbolotiY, native delicacies and colorful
Maly baa~;_, at U/B for 0111y decorations. And abe and Shitwo months, and is already in- . zuko Yonemura, orpnizer of
volved in - . 1 foreign stu- the_JI!~Club,areenthusi­
dent actlviti8s ~ worldq asticaiJy pJanninc liD authentic
part-time aa a snidw!te aaoist-- Jape~~Me tea cereimolly.

�4

AdministrationViewroAs
Persecuting·the ~eges
By EILIOT SMITH

~IO,~P70

~

~Appointment ofNon-Lawyer~

Change the Role of fhe.Law &amp;!wol?

local community asking for
By
to cover them as well as pcai0....... ~. U---..J Shld;..
their removal!~
. RICHARD D SCHWARTZ
ble for the client be ....-111.
The motlO Ol the State UniObserver: "Would you re,_;.._
He must be alert to the rele_,.;ty of New Y orlr. is "Let sign if you received 12 letters
·
ute &lt;- ,._,
.
vance of all the p!OYIIble facts
...m become all be is capeble a day asltina: you to do 8o?"
Some members of the Erie and be adept at siJowina t!ae
of l!eina." Tbe fJfTIC~ of the
Ketter: "No oommenl"
County Bar have asked wbeth- facta and arguing their re1eStaie Univenity of New York · Septembor,1!1ner the appointment of a non- vance. Thus far the beat methis. to "prevent one from beoom- · ConverNtlon pa...... rued
lawyer as .dean means that the od for developing tbeae skills
• :-r--hie u•
_. being."
'""''
• with
-ina all be 18
Dan Murray
: I agree
Tbe State Um~ty of New the procedures of the Evalua·
Yorlt at Butralo, for eumple, tion Committee of the Collep- a reasonable .question, and de- · a master law teacl:e-, it is a
is more lntereated in the "needs ate Assembly, but Rosa Luxem- serves a aenous answer. The superb device for teaching. law
of the State," rather. than the burg and its courses shall not answer is no.
.
.
students how to "think lite a
needs of the studenl President exist!
Tbe Law Faculty II dedi- lawyer "
K-.. admitted this at a reEvaluation Committee: But cated to the training of emel·
.
. ·
cent Student Polity meeting.
the Evaluation Committee ap- lent lawyers. So is the new dean.
Good la~f! . teachiJ!8 P!""'des
In the near future - perhaps proved of Rosa Luxemburg's u the job bad been oft'ered with another a~ility which. 11 .aiao
next year if the computers can course, according to its evalua- ·some contrary conception in ~ if-~ profeBSI.on _11 to
be adjusted In time- a paten· tion procedures, which you said. mind, it would not have been ful1ill 1.ts IUI8Sion. U law .JS to
accepted.
!Je '!" mstrument of order and
tial U /B stu&lt;Jent will have .to you approved of!
declare his major, -at the time ' Dan Murray: Too bad, you
JUStice, legal .f!11es must con·
be applies for admission to the lose.
ctTTI:'"lli.~Tli.V'rC' stantJy be subjeCt to ~e.
Univenity!
.
September, 1970_ y .u::;, yy CVll" J..;:, Each case prov1des a potential
test of the adequacy of a rule.
Quotas will have been set up Conwrutlon paraphrued.
In the vast majority of cases,
The ~ ' - on this out and limit the numDan Murray (to the Collep- to
the established precedent" is reprovide • forum for the_ ~stud_ents i!llerest;ed !n ate Assembly): If you don't
affi.rmed. Yet by an almost in·
of on a voriety
su jects which are not m tlie have an acceptable director by c:honce
of the ~ fKinc the -.n1c visible process, the common law
interests of t!&gt;e "State": ~Y- tomorrow night, no colleges
·We welcome both permits incremental change.
chology, soc1ology, English, will get class cards for this community.
This was demonstrated in the
positions papare ond lettars u
philosophy, and other areas of semester'
Court of Appeals decisions
.,...pennlts
.
. social scienoos and humanities. Septem...;. 1970
starting with Thomas v. WinAlready the English DepartCollege' A: ··w'\ need 100
chester and continuing to CarGood lawyers are needed in dozo's masterful opinion in
ment and ~chology Depart- more cards for Ollf course."
ment are setting up obstacles
Murra . "Sorry ..
this countzy at least as much Mcu:P)Ieraon v. Buick. In more
~or students d~ of PUISI!·
Colle~ A....ru,.;.,rdlng to the as they have ever been needed recent
years, doctrines of war~ thes!' subjects. EmphasiS Curriculum · Committee meet- before. This is not to minimize
ranty and tort liability have
ing of May 14, 1~, our!"''!""' the role of the legal profession u'ndergone a new and creative
:J!!l ~~ue
gineering, as well as the think was appro~ed With unhm1ted in our past history. Lawyers expansion along similar paths.
provided the basis for our Con- 'J,brougb exposure to instances
tank of the Military-Industrial enrollmenl
stitutional order and played the
Murray· "Sorry"
complex at U / B, the School of
FACT: · The .,.;llepate sys- crucial roles in the interpreta- of this ltlnd. law students must
become aware of how the law
Managemen~.
tem has been allocated 8 rae· tion of the .Constitution. They can be adapted to new economic
~ colleg~~te system '!t ~.uf. ulty equivalents TOTAL-for conceived of a society in which and social conditions.
falo IS, perhaps, that diVISIOn 18 colleges
the claims of all parties could
Perhaps the best place to
of the. University which best
FACT· ·All 18 colleges col- be hesrd and in which con1licta
symbolizeS the motto of SUNY.
·
.
I
than among lllese claims could be learn this is through the anaWithin the collegiate system lectlvely have ess space . .
lysis
of cases, but these must
resolved. Lawyers have
attempts are being made to of- ;th~ Department of Pohtical justly
played the major part in this be taught in a manner which
fer new areas of content: eool· SCience, alone.
. .
.
connecta
legal doctrine to the
then and now.
.
FACT: The adminiStration process,
ogy, communications, interns·
Dispute resolution is the busi- .social contexts. -This under-.
tiona) studies, etc. - and new "":" ordered that no &amp;e!f-&lt;&gt;valu- ness
standing
is
important not only
of the legal profession, not
types of processes of education: ati~e grades be used m comonly in the highly '\'ublicized for the occasional student who
student course initiation, self. puting student averages.
will
go
on
to make (some
cases that get to the Supreme
evaluative techniques, under·
FACT: Description s for Court, but also in the day-to- might still say "discover") law
graduate instructors, extensive some courses have been cen- day
as
a
judge,
or
produce some
business of the attop~ey's
experiential learning, group sored from the collepate cataoffice and the local courts. U wholesale change as a legislator,
projects. etc. Colleges are often Iogue (by Daniel Murray).
but
also
for
the
majority
of stuthese "law-jobs" are to be acgoverned collectively by the
FACT: A request for collegi- complished successfully, we dents wbo will argue their cases
students and faculty llSSOciated ate repre!lentation on the search need skilled lawyers to analyze and do their office work more
With them, and flexibility of committees for academic af- the issues in instant cases and effectively because they underpurpoae and method. allows for fairs vice president and dean of to resolve them - without the stand law to be dynamic, probchange consonant With the de- Undergraduate Studies, was re- court's
help if possible and with lematic, and sensitive to cursires of the members of the col- jected (by Albert Somit).
rent social ronditions.
it if necessary.
leges.
I could go on and on, but
All Sodety Must Be Rep-.tecl
lawyer Doesn't Glomorize
The !'dministration o_f the basically the colleges are get- TheGranted
important as these abilities
that
the
working
Universlty-Ketter, Som1t, and ting screwed by the administraare,
their transmission through
does not ordinarily
. Murray - have pl¢licly pro- tion. And so is the Psychology lawyer
law school training will not
glamorize
his
day-to-day
work
claimed their support for the Department. And the English
colleges, but have pretty much Departrnenl And future U / B in these terms. Perhaps he is alone guarantee that young
are prepared to help
screwed them in private. Some students. And present U / B stu- wise to practice his craft with- lawyers
constant reference to the the legal" profession meet its
dents. And even the liberal fac- out
quick examples:
full social obligation. To maiJi.
larger
contribution
he
and
his
July, 1970.
ulty members. All for the needs
brethren make to the social tain a sOciety based on justice,
Somit: "Tbe colleges will or the ~ ·state. "
.
order. Rhetoric of that kind can
iilterests of all segments of
get no money unless Colleges
What to do? Get rid o the become rather tiresome. On !'&amp;- the
A and ..F move out of their fascist triumvirate that runs flection, however, most la:wyers the society MUS\ properly be
Main St. storefronts."
this University. Get rid of the realize that each job can in- ~=~ ~ =~ ~
College A : "But that's black- trustees. Open up U/B to ail clude a contribution to the at- shown its concern over the in·
mail!"
members of the local commun· tainment of justice in a manner
terests of some previously unSomit: "I didn't say it was jty. Set up collective student- that minimizes unnecessary con- der-represented
segments of our
blaclanail, but I guess. I could faculty governance of the Uni· flicl A well-drafted will, em- population. It is a lelitimate
agree with your perception of versity. Redistribute University bodying the intention of the
function of law training to prothe situation."
reBOwa!8 to areas of student . testator, can avoid litigation bevide them with opportunities
July 15, 1970.
interesl
tween heirs; a well-negotiated to study the legal needs of the
Ketter (to the Collepate As-And learn the real mean· contra_ct anticipates and avoids entire population and to ·deaembly) : "Colleges A/and F .i ng of a relevant educati&lt;?n. possible SOwa!S of bittemeas velop the lawyer-client skills
must leave their storefronts."
Join a college next semester. between businessmen; a pro- which will permit them to comObserver: "Why?''
Refute the factory-like produc- perly-drawn zoning code helps municate eft'ectively with ali
Ketter: "I have received a tion line of Robert .Ketter, ex· -to shape the ecology ol a grow- kinds of potential clients. Our
doun letters a day from the enlineer.
ing community in line with the Law School bas an emellent
intention and interests pf its opportunity to meet this need.
residents; adequate representa- Law students come to Buft'alo
tion of parties in a divorce ac- from· very varied backgrounds,
CDT"'PQRTED _
tion may make it possible for a representing a Cl08IHieCtion of
-~
._'-.7
reconciliation to occur or for this ~ted State. As a State
.
separate houaebolds to develop law school, we particularly wei·
.,. _
_
,...,._ - n...-. "[.;:" "' a... without OYVWbelming the par- come their diversity.
~a.,_
ra
•
.
•
•
"'·
.
ties and their children W1·th
fr!;..'::~).
..._ .. '-""r1 .. . . _ 213, 210 . . . . . . . A . - bitt:emeal.
In Erie County they can lind
1
in microcosm all kinda of in._
The skills needed to accom- terests that they milbt wish tp
.L W"8S!'U1" llOIIrUJfD
pliah such tasks are not eaay repreaent: manufacturers and
~~
to acquire. Mere reading of a worlr.ers; stockholders and man.. Cl&gt;lol
hombook doea not adequately
agers; blacks and whites; .farm.
JlOUitT r . 16AJUZJT
oonvey the OOIIlJi&gt;leldty of any era,
distributors,
.._ ~,~,...,_ . _
liven rule. .Ambiiuities in the and farm-~;
retailers; consumers and
merchants; alleged aiminala,
victims, police and prwec:utors·
....._ the lawyer muat be trained to. disaentera and defenders; ~
amblluities In
"chauvlnista"
t::::.ration of the calle and erators;"
wardeiis, JIW'ds. "libpri-

·

- - . aad prabatioo oo111cen;
erediton and debtors; laDdbda aad teDan ta; w8lfare
clienla, aocial worbn, and adtnini8tnators; aad eo CIIL With
the help of the eabJNiabed bar,
we am pve
atudents a
chance to learn Uout ~ en-

a-

!,;~t!;~=:.!,;~;~ =~t'd:"~ =-~~'T.:"i:

S:e!!.:'::E:-

-

"' ,_

~1ft~

........ -

r...:::..~ta~::
. a-

and-··

School will c:all upoo ~
attorneys as CXIIIIUltants; ilpeJikera, and potential employ8rs in much the III8IIDI!r tbet the
Medical School draws on dootors to ilid in the trainJna of
physician&amp;. One objective .will
be to provide good young legal
minda from around the State
8nd be ond to fill pOsitioris 88
in Erie COuntY taw
firms. Equally imPQrt!int; the
ScboOJ will aeelt the ·&amp;avice Of
cti ·
ttomeys ·
pra cmg a
. m Prep&amp;r·
~g a future generati~ to prov1d~ legal rep""!""tation for the
entire co~umty ~ tha~ '!&gt;w
can full!ll Its historiC IUI8Sion
as the ms~t &lt;?f freedom,
orde~, an~ JUStice m our dyll81JliC SOCiety.

associaks

No Agent
Seems ToBe
No Option
EDITOR:
Profeooor"&lt;ia....,r'a statement on

~~;:-oca~=~.::P::.~

ticularly because of the defiClen·
ciea it espoaeo in the propams of
tbooe groups actively contending
for recopitton. ln particular, the
erlravapnt :4ilit;acbeduleo pro-

-:=ti: ~

~...::!!~..C:nomic

higher education and Profe.or
Garwr quite properly queations
the velidity of ouch propoaala.
Neverthel. ., it......,. te me· thet
his otatement quite definitely faiJII
in what I muat uoume wu liB
primuy intention-to define what
he intenda te vote for and not
merely what be will wte apinst.
Whoever il ultimately pe!ected
to deal with the many· !aceta of

!:c'f~bltha~~.:"~,!:

linuin&amp; problema te be dealt with.
Given thil altuetion, Profeoeor
Garver's vote for no bargaining
agent becoms an espre.ion of

=d=~

u:r =t!,'Y.;

which faculty. local adminiltralion, and State officials play vorl·
oua, at time&amp;, oonflictinc roles.
The determination of 1 a 1a r y
=l':!l:.,,io·a temaU:.rre:
there il DO &lt;fuect faculty diocus-

"!..:b

aion. Promotion and pievance

::=:-~.:::.....
~

judcmenun
. --~~ """m
· te'• peee2thobyughad·
-~~lfen..=t=::t r=;;,~
,__,_,__ ·-t. te ~•-- the
- ........... - ·.-.,---obould
to
all faculty momben for dealinc
with queotiono related te their
intereorlll.
Whether aucb .., agent proves
atrong Qr weak .-ina ,., be _.,_
I cannot accept Prof-.r Gar·
ver'a oonlelltioa that an,y· ~t
whicb d - not pin ecc&gt;lJ()IIIlC
oo-ona will -ui.Y be m·
eHectwJJ. in other - - . l would
point oat that the orpnisotion
whicb I ~ the AAUP, bu

0

:= :=,:;.!'-.!.!am..

:::""U:. :n.:l!"S~.-mun::

;:r_.

_.

~~ antiim
. ·•
~
bavy·
,.. infiuenco
..-ldetalioDoI do not boline the 110 bar·
agent
te be a P"'"

""""""*'

C: .,r.
·=
= =
would

~:

. _ to ,;... cuefal ..,.;.;deration te the _..... offered by
O'•u,.._-

=::.._orpniratioao oooldDI - ·

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-.

.......ol Ruililn
A
- . ft.
- Prot

f

�~10,1970

Sick Presidents Are
Great Presidents?

By STEVE LIPMAN·
Bad&lt; in ihe late 1940's, p11p11r11W1 Walter Lippman
. wrol8 that the Chicago :oem...
cralic Convention of 1944
which picbd Harey s. Ttwnan
88 Franldin Roaoevelt's nm- ·
niDI mate was "almost certainly dlooaing a ,_;.t...,t Of the
United $lates.,p~ ..,._
80II8d u..t the delep.tes knew
that Roaoevelt, '""'- hMith
was cpatiouable.. durinJ his
tim three terms of office,
would not survive a fourth.
~ wbo was later, of
courae, proven right, was merely ep.oing ~ for a problem which bas been in the public mind, if not in the press,
since the days pf the first chief
BlllCUt.ive-Pft!llidential hMith.
Fr-. Wasbington, wbo suffered froin. pneumonia, rheumatism, small~ dysentery, and
cbronic Dia1sria, down to Rich'""'- physician dehim in "top condition'~
after · last emmination, the
~~ pul~t bas been
But aside~times of
pn!lllidential rn.-, or death in
office, the issue has received
scant publicity. Until nioently.
Since Lyndon Johnson's decision not to seek a second term,
due in part to medical n!jiSOn&amp;,
the press bas been iasuint more
and more on the subject. Parade Magazine bas nm two features in the last' few months,
and other publications-have followed auil
An authority on the subject
is Dr. Milton Plesur, U/ B history profeaaor. Dr. Plesur, author of ''The Problem Within:
Aspects of Presidential
Health," an article in American
History Il.llJstroud, delivered a
report on the to11ic in September at a ·ConfereBce •on the
Presidency at the Center for
the Study of Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara, California, in which be offered some

~

-.

not well-known insights into
the ellect of presidential hMith

on the decision-making process.
The -

-

-

One of the most surprising

~~

·s

"Boo::nn. jujitau; the 60-miJe hike- adPnated by T A" But .U of IIIia
activity, Dr. ~ notes, "did
not lftCiude his dyiq llllldl

fh..~tsp~":f =....ru~ ~·t~::. ~

is unrelated to hMith; in fact,
One of the aicloest presidents
our sickest pn!lllidents have been in olllce was Woodrow ,Wilaaa,
our best leaders. Four of the wbo ''WM unable to ,;.- on
five "-test" (according to a legislation for about silt weeks
1962 Schlesinger Poll) presi- and did not ·attend cabinet
dents were ill, and died before meetinp for eicht months. For
their "expected death da!.t!;" silt weeks at a lime no one but his
of the, country's seven "fsilure" family and ckMMt friends were
or "below ·average" presidents· granted audieDces, and. the vice
were in good bealth wbile in president and cabinet, to say
the White House.
nothing of the public, were not
Plesur suggests this is be- provided adequate information.
cause "sickness and even a per- Dr. Cary Grayson and Mrs.
sonal struggle to avert death Wilson probably determined
elevate a man's strength of many issues of policies by character and hence he becomes lecting thoee topics ttiat could
-a better president." He cites as be discuased with the P""'ident
the best eumple of this, Frank- wtlf.thohisu_:_~l'!temoacti~
­
lin Roosevelt, "whose B""'t em.......,
·~
pathy with the masses came as it did-certainly his emofrom his bout with polio, (and · tional balance was in question."
whose) .. . optimism in_. the
Wilson's emotions .were belface of severe economic depres- anced enough, hoWever, to alsion and ·gruesome war migbt low him to make one of the
have been in parl due to his moet famous quips of his adpersonal experience in over- ministration. As he lay sick in
coming an illness ·that would bed one day; a· Senator came to
have felled a lesser man!' The Wilson and told him that Conhealthier man, in tuin, may not gress was praying for him.
have built up his emotional "Which way?" Wilson wonstrength througb personal dashered. without ba~g an eye-_
struggles.
.
1
Many ·presidents b8ve taken
That power gap with the
an active interest in their · president incapacitated could
bealth, and some, says Plesur, never happen today. '!be 25th
were "health nuts.'' President Amendment defines clearly the
Jefferson wrote that "Health is circwnslances under which a
. the first requisite after mor- president caimot continue decitality," and almost-president sion-making.
Humphrey stated "vigorous
'!be vice president, wbo
bealth is a B""'t asset in the would take over according to
endless activities involved in the 25th Amendment, is, accordthe election p~.''
ing to Dr. Plesur, "the most
Presidential pastimes have important factor in the presivaried. Eisenhower's golf game . dent's ,ohealth." '!be vice presiwas famous, as was that of dent "is generally selected on
Taft, who weighed in as our the basis of political expedibiggest president at 340 pounds. ency," Plesur feels, but his
Harding was a holl!e-riding probable performance in office
bull, and Coolidge rode a should also be a consideration.
'!be Democrats' "Just a Hearthobby-horse.
Tile most athletic president beat Away" campaigning in the
was Teddy Roosevelt, who was last presidential election (aldubbed "Public Energy No. 1.'' luding to Spiro Agnew) played
"You name it, he did it," Dr. heavily on thal

The Woodlot Seems Spared
But What About the Rest?
Brown says. Plans are to hardBy SUSAN GREENWOOD
Report..St./1
,
pack the banks of the creek
Last summer Gregory Inskip after relocation is done and to
and three of his high school plant new vegetation to replace
friends started a camp..;gn to what was tom out.
aave-« wooded area an the new
'!be second "new. addition"
Amherst campus and to preserve 88 much of the site's nat- of a contractor's road was not
ural environment as possible.
Now, more than five months
later, a fence has been erected
around the 37-&lt;~Cre woodlol .
But whether the victory is com- - - - - - - - - - plete and the natural environ- planned. In all construction
ment of the area will be pre- contracts, limit lines and access
served is still debatable.
routes are defined, Moranville
Wben Inaldp started his cam- says, and contractors are limpaign the woodlot was the bome ited to these areas. '!be woodlot
of deer, red fox, racmons and' a was not defined as an access
.-tina pair of red-Wl ha..,. route. But whether the conNow, It's alao the site of a wide tractor is being ~ for
,_ cbanDel for Bizer Creek cutting a swath through the
and a 100-foot road that a con- protected nature area is not
trsctor built to drive his trucks known. It is alao not known
tbroullhwhether or not that area will
Jade Mannville, public re- be replanted.
lations officer for the State
Meanwhile, jpe woodlot area
University Canstnlctian Fuod has a1ao ·been,eiilllrged through
(SUCF), says "we planned to
rel " - of the double loop ~~p . _ it (the woodlot) .right
encircles the inner woodlol Severs! faculty mem- from the ~ but other core of the new campus. '!be bers, includinc Dr. Larry
=~
taken into con- road was originally planned to Cburdl and.Dr. Theodore HOl._
cut through a comer of the lar, are DOIIOIIrDed about ·aavm, existing bees and other
' 'Jlle relocation of Bizer Creek woods.
vacant areas. "We don't want
was alwa.ys one of the "other
SUCF is planning other a campus lib Erie County
faclon" Maranville spoke of. "improw!ments." '!be "under- Tech," Dr. Hullar asys, "where
Campus p1annen had orfclnal- . powth will be cleaned out.. . . all the bees _.., cut down and
bsrren paM fialda lefl"
theno:!li:g
on the aile. The cree1t is now ''up-grade" the plant life in the
'lbe status of these other
bo!11J1 re-cbannl)led to the south iirea; however, no plans have natural features is laB firm
oi ita orfclnal locstion to nm been made to up-lll&amp;de the ani- than the woodlol Mannville
says that bees will be saved
·rllbt tluuuah the woodlot. n.e' mala.
proaeaa involved cutting a path '
e-n about the ~­ ''whellevw posoible," and tells
~Chi wood--100 teet at
tion of -natural .,vironment at of plans to replace thoE thatita widMt, Dr. Alben Bulb- Amba8t "'-a't atop with the are lost. ~.It'• Wiry hard
.

Gf'EATURES

!..t":at

~~ ~

..

::::msbs~ann"';

.

=u:fu

T--·-

. . . . . _ _ _ --.&amp;.

to replace 15'"to 20-year-old bility and Was told meetinp
eDolo,ists point oul
were scheduled; how&lt;!ver, no
More than aavinc specific recorda were found of the of land, Cbun:b and Hul- sioos.
lar are DOIIOIIrDed about what
Now, Cbun:b ia preasing for
Hullar calls "the difference in another public ..-tmg on plans .
mentality." 'Ibis boiJa down to for preaerviJic the natvnil ..,_
concern about aavinc the natu- viiOmnenl He bopes that on
rsJ .,vironment before con- some Ssturday morning a leoslluction atarte rather than re- ture can be ~ted about
canstructing &amp;rell8 after con- the campus, foll.-1 by an
struction,is finilbed. Both mAll 1• '«(ternoan tour of the site.
· feel that the "Canstnlctian
Certamiy, the SUCF is makFund should feel oblipted" to inl an effort to _ , . . . some
ezplain their plans to the pub- · of the natural features of the
lie. Dr. Cburdl bas talked to Amba8t tzacL But Dr. Hullar
the SUCF Puhlic IWata. asb i1 there Js still time to
~t .OOO.t tbis Jll&amp;i· 88W 1111118.
traal,

�~

6

The New Vet Qu£stioJ{S-,
War, Militnry PoliCies

Glenhon Cites
Security Gap
The Campus Securi~orc:e
is shorthanded and .
to
remain so for some time,
neth Glennon, director of security, says. He blames the situation on the State Civil Service's
failure to authorize hiring and
aet realistic sslaries for ten
posts already funded and approved by the Le!dslature.
Last spring, Glennon explains, the Legislature authorized $112,000 to U / B for the
·hiring or a director of security,
an assistant director, five campus security specialists ~ five
campus aecunty supervisors.
Since tbeu Glennon was appointed as director and the appointment of his aasistant is ,
pending. The other ten positions are cauglit up in a Civil
Service tangle,
Glennon ssys that Civil ServJce has failed to: •
• Establish a set of written
tiona for tb8 positions.
a data for written exams
establish a list 11f qualified applicants.
• Give him authorizatiQn to
hire additional security personnel in any Civil Service _pade;
These steps must be taken
before the posi tiona csn be

10,1910

system is responsive to· the
ll•porlw Sr.lt
J'8Dk-aJid..fUe GL
They weren't in uniform, the
' Bees... o( the liiaed for edu. veterans who were in Washing- cation about the draft ayatam
week. And the
and the militiry, the U/B Club
ton.
D.O.,
last for a VFW cony IS. ~· draft _ . . .
weren't
there
vention, either. They came to center in orion this January.
report on Vietnam "war crimes" The Club . _ t o - - - pathey had witnessed and parti- ent room - Norton 260- for
cipated in.
the center. Aln!idy 15 men are
The Winter War Crimes taking a draft CX111118111in«course
Hearing of the Citizens: Com- from the A.,erican Friends
mission on U.S. War Crimes Draft Counseling C41otar in
was the setting for the reports. downtown Buffalo. Another
• These ''ni!w veterans" are service would be ~_y tri}"!
part of-a new movement among into the black ghetto JlreB_ of
ex....,rvice people. There are • · Bu1falo to counsel Plaris are to
DIIIIIY. groups with many names train black veterans to make
- Vii.tnam Veterans Against these weekly trips'.
•
the War, Movement for a DiemThis sp!ing the Chili is, h!&gt;Pocratic Military-but the memc ing to sponsor a rePmai ~­
bers are all socially and politi- end workshop for. -~~ to
cslJr active individuals who are • discuss common ~Ienis and
against the :Vietnamese 1VIIr and the possibDity of setting up a
wbat they feel are de-humaniz- new national organization. F1ritz
ing procedures of tbe military. feels one is needed aince all ,t be
· One such .group has sprung other groups "are politically
up at U;B-the SUNY Vet- orientedtoa'partyandwewant
erans Chili. Actually it's an old· to stay away from that"
The ~nts.
tlerrs and tho downs · ••• who can folpt
club with a new philosophy.
MembershifJ in all the new
_ , first trip to tho dn:uor Certainly not o1 - The change began last Oc;tober "!'terans clubs js growing, ~­
cltllclren who are part of a Go~'- A b.....,..ldent atudJ
wben a group of veterans· tried tially because of the ~
Thoy Mfll to tho ltlllllllita lln&gt;llters, Bamum and
to analyze "why we never take number of veterans. U /B alone
Cln:uo rec:entiJ with tho aMI 01 Dr. Samlt ·a
led tho 50 tlclletS and Dr. Fred Snell Who paid for tho
part and let everything go by has close to 3,000 veterans curus." Out of these discussions . rently enrolled and the number
:s-U.:":au!J:r"~veafle~~~~A~~,ll
came the' new philoeopJiy.
is swelling every semester. or
-has tho--·
provisionslly, Glennon would
TestlmonJ About Clime · tliis number, 100 are active
not do 8o because be feels it
Since tbeu the Club has been ~ it! the Ve!S Cl~ ~d
would be unfair to the emgrowing in sizi! and activities. F1ritz. ssys that nuinber IS • ~ployees, He emphasizes. bowLast spring tbey' sponsored a
cn:s"'theseg
.
the traditi
ever; that, contrary to local
war crimea bearing with 300
ror
men,
onnewsp&amp;Per reports,_be does not
people showing up. At that time al role of lill'!"t GI and memAU full-time faculty and re- Buffalo and, Erie County Pub- vetarans came forward to gi~ ber o~ VF'f!IIS changed to '!"-"
have the, authorization to hire
search
staff
of
U/
B
may
now
lic
Library;
Bu1falo
'General
provisionslly.
,
testimony about what they hlid o! active disaent and ~ cntiBecause the positions in ques- use and borrow materials from Hospital; Bu1falo Museum of seen. While they tsllred, they ~ The new veteran has
tion are new, Glennon 'has sent the Western New York Library Science; Canlsius College; Car- were "interrogated" by other · arnved.
his own recommended criteria Resources Counc.il (WNY- borundum Corporation; Chau- former Grs to "make sure the
for qualifications to Albany, but LRC) affiliated libraries, the tauqua-Cattaraugus Library evidence wasn't hearsay or figthey have yet to be accepted, Libraries' newsletter, Tieline, System; Cornell Aeronsuticsl
of the imagination," Bud
Glennon would like a basic reports. The Library Access .Laboratory; D'Youville Col- ments
F1ritz, a member of the group,
qualification of two years of Project ( LAP) , an experiment- lege; Erie Community Collage; says.
Tbe sesilons were taped
college. The supervisorY posi- al program wljich went into ef- FMC Corporation; Genesee and tbeu
transcribed The _tastitions were also pven experience fect October 15, 1970, allows Community College; Hilbert (ying veteran
signed a typed
requirements,
usera to go to any member Ji. College; Jamestown Communcopy
of
his
which was
As far as salaries are con- brary to obtain books, which ity College; Moore Business witnessed by~ks
a notary public. ,
Faculty and staff have excerned, Glennon is seeking a · they may then return to their Forms, Inc.; NatioDal lead
Other sessions have taken pressed opposition to the idea
, beginning saleJy of $8,773 for own library.
Company; N i agar a County place aince last May's bearing of first-cdlne, firsWerved parkcampus security ollicer and
ID cards, which are valid for Community College; Niagara and the Club was able to send ing on the campus, the Traffic
$10,959 for the new positions. 90 days, are obtainable from University; Niagara Library 15 testimonies to the national Control Advisory Committee
He has been Wl8UCOBII8ful bere U/ B circuletion librarians. AU Systain; Rosary Hill College; bearings in Washiilgton.
was told at its latest- meeting.
users are asked not to lend Roswell Park Memorial Instiala&amp;.
What is "a war crime"? ·
Tbe Committee' hiid decided
This saleJy proj&gt;osal Was re- books to any other borrowera; tute; Sl Bonaventure Univer- ,
Tbe
new
veterans
are
·Using
to look into the matter at its
jected by Civil Service with the
srty; Sl John Vianney S!!min. first Noveml&gt;M aeaaion..
·
s ubstitution of $7,3'75 for a =~~rrowin:mto.!"'j'/: !llY; Spencer-Kellogg Div. of tbe UN definition. It is:
" Murder, ill•treatment or deAt the present time, the
staJ:tinf officer and $8,773 for a return booJ:""::romptly when Textron; State University Colportstion to slsve labor (or ro~ Committee learned, tbere are
beginnmg specialist or super- due or recsUed.
lege, Bu1falo; State University any
other purpose) of Civilians 1,891 spacss in faculty-staff lots
visor.
.
WNYLRC affiliated librar- College, Fredonisi Ststa UniGlennon says this is much ies are: Airco Speer; Bell Aero- veraity at BulfBJo; Trocsire . . . murder or ill' treatment of while approximately s,opo raeprisoner&amp;
of war, killing of has- ulty and -staft hold vehicle _pertoo low to attract qualified per- space Company; Bu1falo and ,College; Union Cs!bide; and
tages, wanton destruction of mils. Tbere are 17.000 student
Erie County Historicsl Society; Villa Maria Co11eae.
8011118L
cities, towns, or, villages or permits lind only 3,0ll7 spaces.
( other) devastation. Murder,
The Committee also illsextermination, enslavement, de- cussed tbe issuinJ _of tickets for ·
portstion or other inhuman acts unauthorized parking under the
against (civilians) or peraecu- present 8)'8limL . It was mention on politicsl, racial or re- tioned that if students are to be
ligious grounds.•Pianning, prep- ticketed for parking in ·facultyaration, ipitiation or wag~ng a staff lots, tben ·tic:kets should
war of aggression or a war in also be issued to .fBculty and
violation of intarnatio~ trea- staff who piirlt in student lots.
ties. . . . Complicity in crimea AU peraons parking in either
against peace, war crimea or a faculty or• student lots without
crime against humanity is a stickers should also be ticketed,
crime under international law." the Committee said.
r
or course. F1ritz is quia&lt; to Environmental Health.:ancl
point out, not everyone wit- Safety, with the cooperation of
a war crime. And be Campus Security, is to conduct
feels it is hard to aclmowledge a survey to determine the numhaving witnessed one because ber of violators iii each .of these
"to say it was a . war crime is categories.
to say that you are also guilty." :
Members of the Committee
D111wwtt ~
are: William BaUIIllll, Faculty
Yet. the new veteran seems Sensta; Jan DeWaal, prellident.
more willing to.,do this than his Inter-Residence Council; HerPft!decesaors fiOm World War bert Foster, Educstion;· K. P.
n or Korea. F1ritz thinks it is Glennon, Campus Security;
because kids are "growing up Dorothy Haney, Civil Service
a lot faater•••. Tbev're really J;!mpJoyees' Asaociation; Robnot into this
thing, ert E ; Hunt, chainnan, Entbey'~e not into saying the ~tal Health and .Safety;
8ians are bact because they'~e EIII!'!De Murray; Campus S.
Communists. They're into: curity; Charlse No-, .traffic
.Who are YOU?; What do you 8lllineering advisor; ,Ethel
~,.#AN U-. :__
· believe in?; Can I trust you?" Schmidt, State Um-aity Pro'V1J/Ja:- IliJUlile
'Ibis t.a produced a f89llional Asaociation:. C bar lea
·
who viewB tbe--military aa a. "Soontag, Pbyaiqd, P1lmt; Roll
ol tile C..... AMocldle ' - ..... lloalied " "de-bumanization procea," who Stein, Ad!IOC!Ite'S pllil;e; Sta-;
In ol
lllrthd8J-. ~ wbetbotr military pol- pben ~ ~ Associa~
~ IC)' ill racist or not. IIJ!d !'*&amp; ~and Dou,IIM ~ ~~
,... .......... .,. 711 _ , . , . . . - .
wt.tt. the military judicial . cDities P1anniJ1a.

~~~~1:.-::"~

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

--·=--

tile

~

Parking~ "
DrawS Fire

ideolotiicsi

.
CampJs

tile_.........._,
==::f!"",_-;..=...

·

�~----------~~---------------~~------~------~--~--------------~------~-------~---~----------~----~
~IO,If10

7

~·

&amp;mch Canmittees Named
For.FWr Open U/B Posts
. Four aeuch oammitteM to
idolltlfy candidates for the
poets of vice preaideat for academic al'ainl, dean of the Divisioo of Uadtqraduate Studies,
and .......... of the Facalty of
Arts lllld Letfers, and BDP-ring aad APPlied Sclencea have
been apj)ofnted by President
Robart L Ketter.

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

ProfeBir Stanley Brucbnstein of the ·Depar!ment of
CbemislrY wi1l • chairman ·or the Search Committee
for an Academic Vice Prallldenl
In die c:barp to tbll Commit.
tee, President Ketter listed the
eaaentW qualities of a suitable
candidate 88 "an _eatabliabed
scholarly record . . . and a
d e e p - with the problema.
of. ~ ~ rewarding
~ ln

leaching. Ideally,
too, he llhOuJd be . . . cepable
of dev9kiping new ideas • . .
and of stimulating creative
though - the part of his colleagues. Ketter said further
that "he iihouJd also' po.- to
an outstaMing delree the capacity tu muwlate ·educaWmal
ideas into organizational
reality."
While Ketter ezp.-1 hope
that the Committee would conduct a naWmal -.cb f~~ pm-,
didates for the vice presidency,
he said that such a search
"should· nOt preclude careful
and 8eriOWI conaideration ·.of
anyOne Blready a member of
the SUNY faculty and/or ad-

McAllis~ Hull, cbaiiman, De-

~t

of Physics; AntJv.nv
Lorenzetti, a.istant vice p;;;i.

The revised Bylaws for the
dent for student alfairs; Emmit Faculty Senate have been
H. LyC11J8, a IIJ'Sduate student; ~ by a vote or 552 to 203.
Margaret O'Bryan, an adv8x, In what became the -largest vote
Division of Undergraduate Stu- ever recorded for the 1370dies; Vandon E. White. assist. member Senate, the town-meetant dean, School of Health lje- ing form of decision-making
lated Profeosiona; and Stephen was replaced by a representaWinter, director, Department of tive body of 100, to be elected
Teac:Mr Education.
in January. The new Senate is
expected tu go intu effect by
- Chairman
-Lelllors
first week in February.
.
or the Search Com- theNinety
of the -100 senaturs mittee for Provost of the Faculty of Arts and Letters is Pro- will be drawn from the seven
f_,r Marvin D. Bernstein, Department of History. Other
members of the Committee are:
MUITIIY Brown, Department of
Economics; Albert S. Cook,
Comparative .Literature Pro- .
llfiUil; Peter Heller, chairman,
Department of German and
Slavic;V . ~cKDallg,De­

partment of French; Kathleen
McCarthy, undergraduate ;
James J . Pontillo, graduate student; J.-ph N . Riddel, De.partment of English, and Robert K. Sherk, Department of
Olaasics.

En&amp;tMertnl

end Applied Sclenc:el

Profeoaor George C. Lee of
the Department of Civil Engineering will chair the Faculty
of Engineering and Applied
Sciences Provost Search Committee. Alao on his Committee
are: Michael Brill, School of
An:hilecturl! and Environmental Design; James H. Burghart,
Department of Electrical Engineering; Dennis Heslink, an unminisb'ation...
He asked the Committee tu dergraduate; Hinrich R. Marpresent at least three candi- tens, Departments of Mechanidates but no more than live cal and Electrical Engineering;
and 8et a "target date" for pre- . Edward T. O'Neill, School of
sentation of the list of nominees Information and Lllnary Studies; David B. Reister, Depart.
of February 1, 1971.
Other members of the Search ment of Engineering Science;
Co~·'fo II¥ ' ~ Daniel .A. Roblin, Roblin InV ic~e ~ Yrestdeb t ilie: Einst dustries, Inc. lind a member "of
Badian, Department of History; the Board of U/ B Foundation;
Robert 0 . Berdahl, chairman, William R. Trautman, an alum•
Department of Higher Educa- nus; David Voss, a graduate
tion; Angus Fletc:Mr, Depart. student, and Sol W. Weller,
Enment of English; Mary Kaiser, Department of Chemical
.
an undergraduate student; Don- giqeering.
ald Rennie, Department of
Rll-~
Physiology; Michael Rosen,
t(UU:j
p~t of the Graduate Student Asaociation, and an alum-

Art

nus, Joeeph s~

u-..-In

naming members tu the
Search_Committee for Deen· of
the Division of Unoleqraduate
Studies, Ketter ""Pnaed the
bope that persoaa recommended
for this position "would be indiViduals with ,. demonstrated
record of acbolariy adlievement
and teec:bing. I would .hope
even moce that they would have
a deep and abiding OIIIIC8nl
with the CJIIality of uncllqraduate lallching and with !he importance of, relating the educational aperieuce olfer to
the iweda of our 1111111qraduate

students. N...o- while not
neceaaarily young in body,
sbould moat ..wnly be yeuthful in mind." .
l!ror- Edwin P. Hollandet
ol. the lleputmmt of Payc:bolDIY, will a.:oe is dlairman of
the Cammittee which wi1l aubmit a u.t of DO than three
and DO- than fi.WI ~
aieo by Pebnwy 1. Aa in the
cue of the -.dl for an academlc vice pnaidalt, Dr. Ketter
hae uloecl the Cammittee to
CDiduc&amp; a naliaul -.dl without poeclud1ng "anyoae a1.-ly
a ......,_of the SUNY faculty
and/or 8limlnlltntion.•
011a _.,..of the Underpaduate Dem 8Mn:h Commit. tee
an- A. Aleudl, -=t-

-=

iq cMinnan, Deputmeat of
9Danilb. Italian lllld Partu-

ti-e;

Deania B. Arnold. an

ilndlqradaate aludent; Lucille
a-., an Ulllloqmduate studlllt; Wi1J11un ~. 8cbool
of x-: .felm Howell, Depart..
-l
c&amp;inical ~

oi

Faculty~ Okays 13ylawsehr!nge
By Sizable Majority of 55~ fQ 2Q3

Free Lecture
By Sculptor

GREPORTS
ON
Gf&gt;EQPLE
OFF-CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

DR. THOMAS WEBI:It,

PRESENTATIONS
DIL

ROBERT C.

ABBOTT,

asaocia.te

prof8880r, electrical engineering,
with VA MATBICARDI, "Study of
Dimorphic Adsorbate Diffusion
Using a Pulsed Field Emission
Microscope," Seventeenth Field
Emission Sym~um, Yale University.
DR. C. MICHAEL AIU:N, assistant
professor, electrical engineering,
with ERNEST G. ZAVIBCA, IR. , "Synthesis Techni&lt;~.ues in MultipleValued LoP.c Systems," 4th Annual Hawarian International Conference on Systems Sciences.

DB.. DAVID M. BENENSON, profesaor,

engineering science, ''Crou-Flow
Plumas," and "Nonsteady Plas-

Sym~um. Weotinghou.oe Reaearch Laboratories, Pittaburdt;
..Experiments o n Magnetical.Jy
Balanced Croos-F1ow Area," with
u. BAKER, and "Analyaia of Mag.
netically Balanced Croos-F I ow
Arcs," with V.&amp;. MAWIIAN, 23rd
Gueoua ElectroniCI Conference

=;::,.

tained individuality and aea- oolloquia at Adam Midl:iewicz
t.heic re-lnspiretion of the view- Uaiftraity, .Pomen, PolaDd, aDd
ers of. t.e. work, Fuller has said. ~ UDiveraity, Cambridge,
A critic of much of. the ezper- DR. IIWKON Ill. COHEN, uoociate
imentaJ work by young scuJp- prof-.,r, pediatrico, "Oiari Seintors, Mrs. Cunlille feela that msr aDd p.,_tal Cyiocenetico,"
while innovation ~thy, the Intemetiobal Sympooium OD Hutexture of the Wlli£1&amp; "ao-j.m- man ~tico, Co I or ado
per...al-.Jiced with the lr:nife, 8priDp.
done with the welding torch.. .,._
c:hain..an,
Nothing really hMts the old pedia'::., .o."A:,*~";j Detecaoa
thumb on the clluo."
of Oooolic ~w Rocbeoter
Mrs. CunJille hM had .,..... o-r.! H.,..Xtm.
man aculP.t~re eddbitioqs in IDINNiml 111. DAYIQION, uoiotmt
_ _ . ~ and muaDD8- p""-or, ...... "Employmomt Dioin Encland lllld . ~ and crimiDetiGa' Oil the lluio of 8ez,
hae had t . worl&lt; induded in B.. aDd Other ,_n," U/8.
moce than 150 poup ahowinp. .... ANKa .._ ........., Her ~ for indu&amp;l:ry
uoiatut
Pec!;atrico,
dude l8ldDeo, tilea aad~- .,_ of
.
t," American
for procluctiol1. Her •
- Urolodcol "-&lt;iatioo -mar,
ry ..,..._ baWl hem
·
N- York Qty..

ill the Victoria and A1bwt MuLcadaD.

.

Loniituc!inal Analysis ot A.l&gt;Oence PUBLICATIONS
Behavior," Annual Convocation,
Northeut Regional~~- DR. w. lauB BAII&gt;IIm'll, ~.
oociation, Groosinp•"s, N"ew York.. =:~..u.;:t~..=tu
DR. A. 8CO'l"T GIL)(O?fl, 1!1-, p~fee~ catioDSl Intereat Inventory,"
~i~t%":,'!,."':,'ti:n&amp;".:S~iliti':r . Jourml of Applied Poyt:Jwloly. .
Microwave Generators," Air Force 1:&amp;. U!BOY H. ~~ za., P~.
~~~ · Seminar, Colorado ~~~.X. 8 ~
pnnp.
for YOWIII auJdren,~oumal of
PREDERICK IIENJUCB, aaiociate li- Conoullinlt Prycholofy.
brarian, "The Fallacy of Corpor· DR. HIJIIIU.Y LII:VINE, director, pro-

CV:

!~..,A~:=.,r::'EJI.:tiv!~~o= =~ -~~!"'lib.!~r:~

of Government Documents," A· Black Power in Negro Educam.erican Society for Information tion:• The American H~torioal
Science.
R euiew.
DR. CHIZUKO IZAW~ assistant pro- DR. MYRON )(. lllli.BmlN, aaaistant
f
cb 1
.. p
·
pro(euor and IZNORA OOL£, grad..
:_y F~~ciesre:f~~~ uate student. educational &amp;aminforcement (Study) 8 n d T e 1 t istration, "A Federated MetroTrials in Paired-Associate Learn- politan Ed~~&amp;ationsl Plan," Eduing," lOth Annual Paychonomic cation and Urban Soc~ty.
Society Meeting, San Antonio, RENATE L. NEEMAN, instructor, occupational therapy snd IIDIIIBT
Texao.
£.

auociate pro-

f e • so r, chemical engineering,
named chairman. Education Committee of the Technical Societies
Council of Buffalo.

The Anglo-American sculptor,.designer Mitzi Ounlilfe will
preaent a lecture with slides,
"Sculpture for An:hitecture,"
'l'IMBI8y, December 15, at 3:30
p m in 5 Act-on.
~~ 1.l:'YI~C':. of the
·The free event is sponsored
by the Art Student Board of 1&amp;. IRVING IIII!IJIIIJUN, uoociate
pror:;~.c~cbolotY, "Stimuluo
the Art Department,
DiJc · ·
ility and S-R ComMrs. Cunlilre, ·whose commis- petmility: Evidence for Independaioned sculptures have been in- ent Etrecta in Ctoice Reaction
atalled on 15 buildings in Great Time," Paycbonomic Society
Britain and the United States, Meetin&amp;, San Antonio, Texas; .
has been hailed bf !luclaniit- "Recognizing Pattenuo aDd Recater Fuller 88 havmg Bucoess~~~Diversity of
"-fully integrated mass-p~uced
ceramic sculpture components DR. 8. &amp; I C B A a D Bt1GI:UIJQ, di.with architecture. She has at. lincuiahed prof-.r, poycholOfY,

aeum.

SUNY senators will retain
their seats.
The breakdown of the.90 faculty sena~rs is as follows: Arts
and Letters, · 16; Educational
Studies, 7; Engineering, 7;
Health Sciences,· 25; Lew, 3;
Natural Sciences, 11; and Social Sciences, ·21. Both the fao.

ulty and IBxary ~tives
will be nominated lllld elected
by their 1811118cliWI Ollllllliluslts,
in' whatever way they ~
Nominatioaa are expectad before Cbristmaa.
Dr. Frentz stated that the atension which ano-1 wtina
until laa Friday rmuJted in 100
addiWmal ballota cast, but that
the Bylaws wme pe..t by a
deer majority, oounting. either
the original vote, or those which
ilrrived later.

R:.:!'

mas;· Westingbou.oe Reoearch An:

m-

laculties; an additionaffour will
come from the libraries. Senate
Executive Committee Chairman
William H. Baumer, Secretary
'Thomas T. Frentz, and the four

x:;:,•,::.r,

DL a. ouva OIMON, ""'"1~"
educetiooal ..mwu.tre~"'"A

Pan.t.IPS, 818l8tant profeuor,

:!:d'A~~t

at:; "~;rQ!~:=

Adult Mental Retardates," Puceptual and Motor Shil/.r.
DR. CHESta L. KISER, a.seociate pro· OIL WILUB P . OVERTON1 assistant
lessor, edw:ational administration,
"Design of an Operational Model
for the Al'plication of Planning, r,~~= ~~OC.L;~:
ProgrlliiiiiWlg, Budgeting, Systems (PPBS) to Local School Districts," Northeast Regional Research Association Convocation, of Intellectua.J Development and
Grossinger'a, New York.
i:lr:uPnJ~=og,;:,c!:~er

=.:~fiJ'",.r.:r~"'.T~o~~

=~~f=~~:r.c~~

and DR.
assi.stant pro·
lesson, educational admini.stra·
tion, " Perceptions of the Educa·
tiona! Policy-Making Proceoa in
New York State: Education In·

DR. MYRON M. MILSTEIN

ROBERT B. IENNINGS,

DONALD L. ROBIItTB 1 uaistant professor, library and information
studies, " Black Information Pow.
er," Choice; "Listen Mr., Miss &amp;
~~rarian," School Library

nL PZftR D. SOOTT, assistant pro~':\a~';!/P ~tanR!.J'!:J fessor,
electrical eqineerina, with
Research Auociation Convocation, I . THORP, "A Deocimt Alaorithm
Grosainger's, New York.
for Linear Continuouo a.ebyabev
Approzimatwn," JouTMl of Ap-

proximation TM&lt;Jry.
IlL B1'IMI:N 'l'VLKIN,

aoaiotant pro-

=~"!:"~~g::

~~ ~!t Y;;:~'u.,O,.~~~

demic

~

::-e..z::.,.·.~~·M:8&gt;
:;'J:J~~.. Ap-

�~

acmKCZ

••mua•:

~tJ!":J.,w~

..:mn' D&amp;V&amp;LOPMSII'TB IN TID

'l'8mK1' OP lfON-LJNIWl 8Y8TIDIB.

~~:::::"'= ~~gi:~
eerinl!, 4 p.m. Refreohmento, 109

Porker· Engineerinl!, 8:30 p.m.
IIIOCJDD(I8t'll 8IDOHAJI 0 : Dr. Robert Schulman, Bell Laboratoriea,
Munay Hill, New Jeney. NlD

8'I'UDliS OP BJ:MOGLOBlN. Q..22

Capen, 4 p.m.
: DAY OP WIIATB (1943,
Carl Drey'!'), 147 Diefendorf,
7:30 to midnigbt.
This extraordinary film creaiDd
on· the screen the living image of
early 17th cenlwjr Denmark. In
that time of puntanical repres-

• I'IID PILM 0

:f~ ~ Jd!~;s=~~~=

of being a witch, finally comes to
believe the horrible accusation
beroelf. Dryer unfolded slowly
and for&lt;efully. his theme of tho
power of evil to corrupt the good.
IN'l'DNATIONAL rot.it DANCING : Instruction in basic stepe • during
fint hour, 30 Diefendorf Anne K,
8 p.m.

CBOD AND IOCIAL M~,

MONDAY-14

::"" 47, 42K-~ . La. 8:80

LlNGuurncs LIIC'I'UD•: Dr. .Joan
G. Fickett, JdiiJC,\H . 402 Hay.o,

11 a.m.
scii!H&lt;Z COLLOQUIUII• :
SU88D L Graham. Courant Inotitute of Mathematical ~

OOMPU'I'D
~

PIIIICIIJCNCZ, BOUND&amp;D.
IIIGBT CO!Iftft, AHD J8laMIIQftiC
LANGUAQI:II, Room 41, 4226 ftidce

Loa, 3:30- p.m. Refreshments to
follow.
pOLITICAL SCIENCE COLLOQUIUM•:
Dr. J . P. Jones, political ocience,

LAYMEN IN LITIGATION : THE 8KALL
CLAIMS COUKT, Room 9, 4233

Ridge Loa, 3:30 p.m.

AMADEUS STRING QUAR'I'I:I'• :

Bee-

~Fn~i~,;;.7;!:~i ~~ [' J!:
0

18 No. 6, in B Flat Major; Quartet No. 16, Op. 132, in A Mim&gt;r.
Baird, 8:30 p.m. General admission $8.00, faculty and 8laff $2.00,
studento $1.00.
The Amadeue Quartet ba8 been
one of America's favorite chamber music ensemblee since ita de~
but in 1952. Although their home

PlmiiCII

AND

~

OCIU.O-

c;:N-~~
"'Xt'::
Mexico,
~

que,

maJWHUCI.&amp;Aa r.u"ox: WBT,
11011' AHD 'lniDf, Ill ~r.
4 p.m. ~to 112 Hocb-

- · 8:30 p.m.
OIIG.lHic cmoxmrn oou.oQU1Ulll0 :
Dr. W. M. loneo, Uniwraity of
Florida, ~ DAJtILUIIllllftll'l, 70 Acheoon, 4 p.m.
WIIZ8!LIH0° : lthaat-.JV'e, Clark •
Gym, 7 p.m.

BWDOIIHG• : St. Bopaventure,·

Clark Gym, 7 p.m.
DBN'I1BT8

'I.'II.E'BOJO

LJ:CTU&amp;a: .

Sponeored by Regional Medical
Program, J. l&gt;avid Eidt. Dr. Roy
A . Wilko, NEW .lNft&amp;IOII III8TOII·
ATIVli'&gt;DTDIAL. 62 teeeivinc lqcations~ 7·;._80 p.m.

LIN!lUIBTICS ucrua:•: Dr. David
G. Hays, IDfGUIBTICS: POCUS FOR
IN1'SLLI)CTUAL IJrf"''mRA.TION. 378
Hayee, 7' 30 p.m.
~ :~bt,n :J!i~
~; AIWJEUS muNG qumft•: · &amp;eSHAKESP&amp;ARE HEAVEN• : A Feasto! the Quartet is a noli.., English- thoven'•. Quartet. No. '5, Op. iS,
in-Progress, preeeniDd by - the man, Martin Lo...tt, celliat. His No . .6. &amp;n A MaJor; Qwukt , No.
Program in Theatre, cli.reciDd by coUeaguea, Norbert Broinin, Siog- 13. Op. 130, in B Flat Major.
the Company and Gordon Ro- mund Ni.Beel and Peter Schidlof, Baird, 8:30 p.m.~ General admisgoff, Theatre Studio, Harriman, are all riginaU Auetrian. Tbe sion $8.00, faculty and 8laff $2.00,
8: 30 p .m. G e n e r a 1 admission latter th~, bo.i in varioue parts students $1.00.
•
$1.00, students $.50. Ticketo at of Austria during the eame year, , u UNIPIBD PAMILT' MJZTING•: Lee·
Norton ticke t office.
all began their muaic studies ture.diacu:uion of spiritual syn·
POETRY READING•: F ree and open
there at the age of seven and were thesis for a Mw culture All weito all. Poeto include Neil Bold- all brought by their families to come. 266 Norton, 9 p_,:,_
win, Adam Berger, William Jun- England_ dur:mg H1tler's o~pres­
gles. Judith K er man. Steven s~ve regune m 1938. In sp.lte of
THURSDAY-17
An "orgy,'' festival and multi- three as s ociated concerts. ~e:yers, Jayne Stahl. Both Eods such pa~el event&amp;, tbey did not
Gallery, 224 Lexington Ave,, 8:30 meet until 1941 . when .an four PHA&amp;llACIS'l8 'I'EtEPBONI': ra::nma::
media presentation are all part cBaird, 8 :30 p .m .)
Tuesday brings · ano t her p.m.
--·~ ::!'di:~:M~t!L musJc Sponeored by Regional Medical
of a scheduled campus celebration of the 300th anniversary mixed media preSentation and GRADUATE BECrrAL •: An: :w;S: ?
- , In 1946, with the pressures of Program, Buil Continelli, TBB
of Ludwig van Beethoven's a concert by the Bu1falo Phil- ler, Baird, 8: 30 p.m.
the war relieved, they began to BOU: OP TBIC PIL\BJilACIB'I' IN POl·
CONTROL, 62 receiving loca' birth.
harmonic Orchest ra . and the COFFEE uouSE•: The C
.1
_ conc;ep.trate eerioualy on the for- BON
The festival opens a week- New York Rock Ensemble- a t sociates, 1st floor cafeteria, Nor- mation of a permanent q~t tione, 11 : 30 a.m. and 10 p.m.
lonJ run Monday. Scheduled at ~~30sal~ ~e= Tickets are ton, _9 p.m. Students $.50, general ~ :.!!"~::'t::'yiDdmaS~'ir URBAN PLANNING LIX."'l'lJK&amp;•: Dr.
Gerald M. Stwma.n, director, advanous times during the day
Wednesday is Beethoven's of- admission $.75.
fin t public appearance in 1948 in VIlllCIBd technology division. Parwill be a mUed media presentaBrinckerboff, Quade &amp;
tion about Beethoven and his ficial birthday and .the day for
SA'l'URDAY -12
!:~n~WCA':,..~ ~i . eons,
PLANNING AHD THE EN·
music in Norton's Conference another concert by the Ama- .
been in its contribution to mueic ~.
VIIIOHXENT, 104 Padter Engin0
The8tre. Presented by Roberta deus Quartet. WBFO will also PENCING : Syracuse, Clevela n d m England and throwthout the
Friedman, Grahame Weinbren be broadcast ing Beethoven's Stete, Case Western Reserw, world, that in 1960 t!ie Queen eering,. noon.
of EJIII)and invesiDd their leader, DENTlBT8 TELEPHONE LECTURE:
and Jon Baer, it is billed as work "orgy-fashion,'' s t raight Clark Gym, noon.
being "full of surpriaes." Its through from Tuesday midnight ' FRESIDL\N BAS K E T BAL L 0 : U/ B Norbert Brainin, with 'the Order Sponeored by Regional Medical
Alumni, Clark Gym, 6:30 p.m.
of ~ritish Empire to honor the Propam, J . l&gt;avid Elcl&lt;, Dr. RoY
creators want to "ezpJore what to midnight WedJ1esday.
A. WilkO. NEW AN'I'IBIOa USTO&amp;A.·
Robert Commanday, music F'REE FILM•: P ATHER PANCHALI entire group. ·
type of person Beethoven was,"
llATIIIIAL, 62 .receivinc locaGrahame ezplains. To do this, criti~ of the San Franc isco ( SONG OF THE RQAD) (1956, Satya· PREE P I Lx• : THE PA88IOH oP .....
tione, 1:30 p.m.
they plan to use eight slide pro- ChrOnicle, will be the featured jit Ray) 147 Diefendorf, 7 :30 and 30AN OP.AIIC (1928, Carl Dreyer),
147 Diefendorf, 8:30p.m.
jebtors, three movie cameras speaker on Thursday n ight. He 9: 45 p.m.
PHY81CB AND AS'I'R:ONOKY COLI.OQIJIIJll0 : Dr. J. Heisenberg, _MaooTbe first film of the celebrated
and a tape recorder. The group is expected to speak on Beetacbueetto Inetitute of Technology,
is working with the Creative hoven and his music.
TUESDAY-15
~P.:t.,Trilry· 0°gyan
, P%~'If~~
Cambridge, TBB STRUcrua OP
Associates and has already- put day recently returned- from a
f
NUCUCI, 111 Hocbetetter, 4 p.m.
PBY8ICIA.NB 'l'ELU'BOQ UICTUJtl::
on -another mUed media show tour of Europe, visiting various family and their struggle to SpoDliOred
by Regional Medical Reheehmento 112 Hocbetetter,
at Domus called "A Visual Cir- places of musical interest.
!"!:!:'~~t_!:e t!toJ;;, i::~cw.!'.:'J Program, Dr.
Jobn M. Lore, DI- 3:30p.m.
cus." Exact . time8 for the preThe last day of the festival, compuaionate way in which it is AGNOSIB OP KAS8 IN 1'11:1: l'f'BCK., 62
PBYCBOIU.T• •: free-form comsentation will be shown on Friday, will have a final con- told. Ito lyrical development is receiving locations. 11:30 a.m.
munication for per•onality
posters in Norton. Rwming al- cert by the Amsdeus Quartet, further enhanced by the exquisite,
and often etunning p.hotogmphy. NUBSIS Tl:lDBON&amp; L S C T U R J:: growth, 118 Norton Cafeteria, 3-5
ternately with the multi-media again in Baird at 8 :30.
Sponeored
by Regional Medical p.m.
Throughou
t
the
week,
a
In
international
festiVIila,
Pother
piece will be "The Magnificent
Program, Eleanor Hall, R.N.,
Rebel" - the story of Beet- photogrsphic display of por- '~:::f ~~,illn~~A.:.':! M.A. JftNTAL II&amp;TAJIDATIOH, PAJIT P'ORIOON BTtJIEN'I' API'ADS COPI"'Z
hoven's life.
traits of Beethoven and copies othen, ito awarde include Moot D-BOKZ CAD A.8PIX.-rS ANJl Til&amp; aous•: 10 .:J'owneend Hall, U
Monday night, the Amadeus of his work will be on display Human Document award at ao~ or 1'IIS NURS&amp;, 62 receiving p.m.
Quartet will present the first of in the Center Lounge of Norton. Cannes; Best Film and Best Di- locatione, 1:30 p.m.
u/s ~ caom•: directed by
rector awards at San Francisco; AliT ucrua:•: Mitzi Cunliffe, An- , Thomu Walkerj Baird, 8:30 p.m.
glo-American oculptor-deeigner,
8CtlLPTVIIZ roa AIICIUI'ECrlJII, with
EXHIBITS
Edinburgh.
alidea, 5 Acheoon, 3:30 p.m.
VAK81TY .. BA8XE'I'BALL • : C e n t r a I
8IXTB ANHtJ.AL BOUD.lY KDDBITJON
Michipn, Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m.
AND IIWl of otudent arlo and
811AKEBPB.ABE. HEA.VBN• : A FeastNaples, Italy, DIPPUBIOH API'IIOil· crafts, Center Lounce. Norton,
•Open . 1D public;
••Open 1D ...,...,.,.of the Unlwnlty;
in Progress, preoeniDd by the Pro- MA.TION AND FDtB'I' PASBAOJ: T111B tbroach December 16.
#Open only ID wltlt • .,.,.._, lnteroot In the oubjoct
gram in Tbeatre, directed by the" PROBLEM J"'tl A. )(()IJBL NKUaOif,
FBI'BBll.tN ~·: Ca.nisius, Company and Gordon Rogoff, - preaeniDd by Center for TbeoretiTHURSDAY-10
Clark Gym, 6:30 p.m.
Tbeatre Studio, Harriman, 8: 30
~P~~=r·&amp;:~~u.e!,~
VARBrrY BASXETBALL• : Toronto p.m. Geneml admiaaion $1.00. atuOOifTINUINO D&amp;NTAL IIJUCA.TION
deoto $.50. Tickoto at Norton tic- ics and Stetietice. Room 29, 4248
00ll88E# : Dr. Alan Drinnan, Uni..,raity, Clark Gym,· 8:30 p.m. ket office.
Ridge La, 4 p.m. Refreohmento
chairman, oral diagnooio and ro- BllAKBIIPIWIZ 11&amp;4VEH 0 : A FeastINTERVIEWS
diolOBY, and etaff, ornco: DIBR- in-P~. preoeniDd·by the Pro- PIIICUSSIOH ENSIOIBLIC 0 : Jan W'd- 3:30p.m.
. ,
GBMCIIB FOR DENTAL ASSISTANTS
(11UD in Tbeatre, directed by the l.iama, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
PRIZ PILM0 : LEII COUSIHS (1959,
AND HYGIENJ8TS, 146 Capen, 9 Company and Gonion Rocoff, UN1VEB8ITY woKEN's CLUB BQUABE Claude Chabrol), 147 Diefendorf,
a.m.- 5p.m.
Tbeatre Studio, Harriman, 8:30 DANCI: GIIOUP: FIICU!ty Club, Har- 3 and 8:30 p.m.
p.m. General admiMion $1.00, riman Library. Beginnon 8 p.m.,
A country mouee ~ his city
TA8X. PORC&amp; MII&amp;TlNQ••: TR &amp;
8IDIIIE OF A UN1VEB8ITY OOKKUN· etudento '$.50. Ticketo at Norton advanced 8:30 p.m.
ticket olf'JCe.
=~ !e~ ~~
co,..
aoua•
:
The Creative A..~U:,fa;:
O&amp;CB&amp;BTRA OONcar'l: P~ela
let Ooor cafeteria, Norouboommi-, 233 Norton, 3:30 Gearbart, conductor; worlao by IOciates,
ton, .9 p.Di. Studento $.50, pneral
p.m.
'Hindemilh, Purcell, Holet, Bach- admiM10n $.75.
.
Stokowaki, Brubeck, Brahme.
~OLOGY SIDON.G• :
Baird, 8:30-p.m.
SUNDAY--'-13

i!!

Beethoven's 300th

COrnman-

&lt;WEEKLY CO~MUNIQUE

:s~-=v~~;~= IJ:'"w!ro~

~~;..!!~-7~~

The":•,

:J"'O:T::Fo::

~~~rai~.~~

moat of Biopbyaica, Baltimore,
DVmO!flll:lft4L IUIGIBT: ITS AP·
PLJCATIOJ( '1'0 srtJDY OP TID: PBft.
IOI.OOICAL

~

~Y·

om VI810H, Room 29, 4248 Ridae
La, 4 p.m. Refreohmento 8:30
p.m.

1'08D;N 8"f!UUIafT .AJ'I'.ADS 00,_
Botllt 0 : 10 Towmend Hall, U

p.m.

PJLJII•: BXTBRIIlNAThrO AJII'GI:L
(Luio Bunu~l), preoeniDd by

Sponioh Club, Conference Tbeatre, 6, 8 and 10 p.m.

CON~*: CMOTIOKAL LIPI: POBCZ,

-

~ 9 p.m. 'Free

FRIDAY-11

DOWDY DOODY ftiD•: . with But.
falo Bob Smith and the Doodyville G@ni. Spc&gt;MOred by Procrome Toward -~ • com·

ucrua:• : I on . Rol,y mnnity-orieDIDd.poap- purHamann, theoretical biology, ,.... l"'"" .. .... iidtiate oelf-help pro-

LDIGUIIIftC8

8TRUC!'OU OP LAJfGUAOII: AND 'rllll
S'l'lrucruU OP 8Cl&amp;HCI:8, ~

Hay-. 11 a.m.

8LACI&lt; .....

ucrua:•: Samuel w.

Allen, vioiliq prof_,r, b1adt

otudieo, .....
AftJC.&amp;H
·
PAftDNB
IN '1'111:
AniC.Uf AD'l'BI:T·

IC, 288 Norton, 2 p.m.

~ ~6~

Generaluai,!l:

miooion $1.50. Tidtelo at Norton

ticket ol6&lt;e.
BALKAH POLK DAHCJHG:

'

WEDNESDAY-16
ea1e of itemsfrom oational_., orpnizatione.

OUTS CW NACZ• :

Lobby

!&lt;.

Dlft'ITL\lfS

Norton.
'I'BLD'BOIU

I&amp;TUD:

Spc&gt;MOred by Reaional Medical
Propam, Dr. Gemkl P. Murpby,
Dr. -Jacobua Mootert, NaDCy Moo-

mer.

DIJ:TARY T&amp;&amp;ATII&amp;NT OP

-~~ :"'.:"~ ~ADp'::·

Room, Nort5ii, 8 p.m.
Clii&amp;DU.Oft aar.u.•: John HOilman, flute, Baird, 8 :30p.m,

62 ....

Dr. Charleo
Pott, , Purdue. Um.enity, aocw.

IICOHOIIIC8 _

_... :

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

DECEMBER 3·, 1970

VOL 2-NO. 12

PERB ~ting Now Underway
Among SUNY.Professional Staff
Ballots for the election of . a
Faculty and staff, who have but "would vole ' for AAUP"
bargaining agent for tbe State been inundated recently with and another is undecided....heUniversity professional staff- campaign literature, are urged tween AAUP and the Senate
teaching and non-teaching- by PERB not to mistake the . Profession'al Association
were mailed from Albany Tues- ballot for another throw-alway. (SPA). The ESC report apday to aU fuU-time employees The ballot is being mailed in . pealS on page 4 of today's issue.
in these categories.
an envelope with a PERB reThe State University ProfesA spokesman for the Public turn address and will be the sional Association (the organiEmployment Relations Board, only mailing to be received zation of non-teachil!g professionals) .bas endoraJ SPA .
which is ronducting the elec- from that agency.
tion under the Taylor Law,
A letter of instruction will
BARGAINING MEETING
said that, in order to be rount- accompany each ballot. While
ed, ballots must be in lhe AJ. the ballot is to be secret, tbe Representatives of .the Yllrious pohany Post Office by 9 a.m., De- return envelope will require the tential bargaining agencies will
cember 29.
signature of the voter in order present their positions to the facand professional sbiff at a
Ballots will be rounted by that PERB may certify lhe va- ulty
meeting sponsored by the Facutty
PERB which will release the lidity of the vote.
Senate on December 7 at 3 p.m.
results on tbe 29th.
As the election gets under in Room 5, Acheson Hllll. Included
If no contender receives a way, aU rontenders-including in the groups represented will be
majority of the votes, a run-off those hacking lhe "no agenr• the American Association of Unibetween the top two vote-get- · option -are step ping-up the versity Professors, the Civil Servters will be ronducted, probably campaign effort.
ice Employees Association, thti
in Jariuary, PERB says. ApThe Faculty Senste Execu- Senate Professional .Association,
pro:rimately 14,000 members of tive Committee - which has the State University Federation of
the SUNY profes s ional staff officially backed no rontender Teachers, and those supporting
State-wide are eligible to cast -has arranged a: campus-wide " no bargaining agency." The proballots.
open forum to hear all parties gram will incl ude a brief presentanext Monday. In advance of tion by each of the representatives
that meeting, the Executive and then an opportunity for quesCommittee has issued a back- tions from the floor. The Senate
ground statement on the elec- believes th_is is a matter of major
tion and ·has solicited for "'91'- importance to the faculty and propus consideration summary fessional staff, and all are urged
statements from each of the to attend.
An open meeting of the Task contender&amp;. These statements
According to some campus
Force on a Sense of a Univer- are printed on pages 5 and 8
sources, oomputer problems
sity Community Will be held on of today's Reporter.
have
arisen in connection with
The
Eronomic
Status
ComThursday. December 10, 1970,
mittee (ESC) · of lhe Senste tbe ballot mailing. SUPA a:sks
at 3 :30 p.m. in 233 Norton.
has aJao issued a report review- any non-teaching professional
Short reports on tbe activi- ing lhe positions of the four or- who does not receive a ballot to
falo Bob romes on-stage (along ties of the various Task Force ganizational rontenders. While rontact Phyllis Sigel, ext. 4301.
with ClarabeU) to ask what s ubcommittees will be pre- making no official endorsement SUPA will, in turn, notify
PERB. Faculty members who
time it is. And from there on, sented by the chairmen: Mr. the members of that group be'U be doing "the regul4r RObert Jesse ls on, "Campus as indivi.dUJJ/.8 - favor AAUP. do not receive ballots should
Howdy Doody thing," accord- C ommunications Media" Four definitely back AAUPj rontact the Faculty Senate Office, ext. 2223. ·
ing to Roosevelt Rhodes, of (Spectrum, ethos, Reporter, one is for "no representation'
Programs Toward Progress, WBFO, C. C. T . V. etc.) ; Mr.
Philip Henry, "Facilities and '
sponsor of the roncert.
Support Services" (Need for
Programs Toward Progress, " Lebensraum," Faculty, Staff
a group organized to initiate and Student Facilities, etc.);
self-help programs in the black Mr. Jolm Buerk, uuniversity
rommunity, is sponsoring How- Substructures" (Future of Coldy Doody as part of its ron- leges, Departments, Degree of
tinuing effort to raise money Autonomy, Faculty-Student Infor rommunity projects. The teraction, etc.) ; and Dr. James
group sponsored the Unity ' Gruber, " Co-Curricular ActiviFestival in War Memorial Sta- ties (University-Wide Athletics, Cultural Affairs, etc.).
dium in August.

TaskForce
PlnnsFonon

It'll Be ·Howdy Doody Time
In Clark Gym, December 13
"Say kids, what time is it?"

"IT'S HOWDY DOODY
TIME!!!" At least thars the
time it will be at 6 p.m., Sunday1 Dec. 13, when Bullalo Bob
Srmth1&gt;rings his Howdy Doody
· Show to Clark Gymnasium.
Bullalo Bob, who once deli_Jhted millions of yoUJ18Bters
VJa television, is now touring
campuses delighting those same
youngsters once again-&lt;!Xcept
this time around they are college-age.
Bullalo Bob's roncert will begin with a film of Howdy's lOth
anniversary show, a show filled
with some of TV's biggest celebrities--ClarabeU Phineas T .
Bluster, Dilly ·O Oy and The
Flubedub. After the film, Buf-

Tickets for Howdy Doody
went on .sale Tuesday at tbe
Norton Hall Ticket Office.
Price is $1.50.

All interested members of lhe
University rommunity are invited to attend and express
their views.

Nigerian ·Conference .Opens on Friday
Ed,..;._tion in the •'transition-

Ill" nation of Nigi!ria will be
the subject of a two-day conference this weebod. Entitled

"Educatiooal Development in
Nigeria." the interdisciplinary
international conference \1riiJ
lly to analyze the -ging
f....., within hiBber education
there and their possible implicatioaL
'The oonference will examine

such areas as the current path-

ways that are open in Niprian
education; bow ftiiPOIIIIiw the

univMiity ay8lam ill to the ecoIIIJinic, 80Clial, cultmal and ~
litioal . . . . of tha CXJUIIIly; and

the role hiP- education bu
in clevelopiaa a count'l'y, ac&gt;cardilla 10- Dr. Claude Welcb,
.... of the ClOIIfenace plunera.
H - . Dr. Welch aoteo' that
a- q...aoa. ""'his own and

other speakers and participants
may raiae many others.
Among the participants who
will be raising iasues are two
prominent Nigerian educators.
They~· u. Bakari,
acting
· · advisor on
EducatiOn, the top·civil -me
role iJr education, and Dr. Baba
Fafunwa, dam, Faculty of Education, the Uru-aity of He.
Both of tbeae men have had.
broad~
wrious levels of N'"- -""-education. Bakari ...... ~tal in devi&amp;ing the Dlltiooal dewlopDmt plan for education which
for1h N" .
edutatiooal
pia from
He wiU
~ 011 -rbe Becood ~atiooal
~t Plan auol~IigMr
EducatiOD." hfunwa will~
011 "Criteria lor J~ the
· F i - ol Higba- Education in
Nqjaria."

at

:97..

Other topics include •'li.s.Nigerisn Coop,eration in Higber Education' by Dr. Henry
Bretton, professor , of political
science at SUNY /New Paltz;
and "A Note .on the Financing
of Higher Education in Nigeria" by Professor C. A Akinyele, professor of erooomics
and African studies, Howard
Univeosity.
These are th~ scheduled
events; bowvver, pa!Ucipants
probably wiU take an actiw
role in the I)Oilference. '"This Ia

not a serieS" of set pieces:•
Welch noted.
'The canference Ia open to the
public. ~ to tholle with
&amp;Dd bacqround in African alfairL A II even to ·will
take place in 233 NorbL There
is a $6.00 ....-..tion fee !hat
includes the coat ol a Friday

IMIIlinll

banqUet.

On YOlO'Mark!
n.-~----·onl-..
•-trsiiott-iamo~--- .........

-.....-.-IDbn-........---

~-..r
l tho -----ID-tho
-IDlt-..lnc
_ _ Wl
.......,...,....,
n... .....
.,._
3ft! -

af - b e

tum ODid

�f
-3,1910

~

2

Ketter Says Hes Commi~ to Empha~s on EqUfll Opportunity
EDITOR'S NOTE: T/Uo poliey

eo...to Equal Op,_iW' ,_
- - .,.. "TM

Uniuordly

p.......ud before a worlt-

• W.p on 1M l..bj«t .,.,..ond by
1M Ur6an ~of Bu/folt&gt;, No'!"BiflkyRO'
!OBERT. L KETTER

........,
1
At the tum of the century,
the chaDcellor ol 01111 of our
major atale "uniwnitiaa WlOie
that:
.
"What. the ~ .-1 and
demand 18 that their children
ahall have a c:t...nce- aood a
chaDce aa any other c:bildftm in
the !"'rid- make the moat ol
tbemaelvea, to .rise in any ~
every oocupetioa, includtng
tl..- oocupetiona which require the DI08t thorouah traininJ. What the people want is
open paths from every comer
ol the state, t~rough the
acboola. to the ~ BDd beat
things which men can achieve."
~ State Universitr ~ New
York~"'?"" s_pectflcally,
the S
lJruvena.ty at BuHalo
are
"fled to opening those
paths. Our motto, "Let Each
Become All He la Capable of
Being," is a -~ of !-he
dream that each of us inhen!-":
that man can create a social
.8J:!&lt;l gove!""""'tal system that
will PJ"O\?de every ~ the
opportuni~ to devel1dhia \81·
enta to theJ.r full~
!'cation
should not be availabl:e JIIBt for
the affiuent or !he gifted few,
but for all indiv~d!JBls. 'The
programs and pobCleB of the
Univers_ity "!ust c:ontinue to
emp~ this belie!; "':'d as
pre&amp;ldent _of the U';"vemty, 1
am COllliDltted to tl';iB task.
Su~ an emphasiS . on equal
edu_cati~nal opportunity at ':he
UnJYers1o/ ~~!'derwent a !""-JOr
aooele!"tion m 1968. ~0! to
that time, we had mamtained
three modest programs on the
undergraduate level: Ul&gt;W8!'1
Bound, SEEK, and a conurutment to ~ College Bound
Corporation of Nf!W York.
H?Wever, when Martin Lu!ber
Kmg was ~urdef!!d, American
educators, mcluding those of
~ at Buffalo, clearly recogmzed and_ ac:knowledJed the
~ct that higher ec!ucation, d!"'"
Pile the d""!"""'tic !lura which
~eel tl, was ll!deed unequal m oppo_rtumty. Too
many of !he disadvantaged:and especially the black disadvantaged---:-had been excluded. They will not be excluded
any longer~d .:::..,f.'if~
we have
. Y m
~ put two years-will continue apace.
.,.,_ , _
,_,_,~au" on • ..-..

•wa 0............-

''

---...--

that the Uoiveraity'a offioea,
ollicen and faculty will be
both responsive ed reapo1U1·

ib~ty~ area of equal oppo

ln -'&lt;in~ of this progress,
1 must agree with a statement•
recenUy attributed to the chairman of the Law Scbool'f Minority Student Program Committee. "We've pro6ahly made
mialaluis," he· said, "&amp;Dd we'll
probably make more. But the
only people who don't make
mistakes are those who don't
do anything."

--Not-AIIW.-

Althouch we at the University cannot be accused of m.otioo, we undoubtedly have not
dOIIIl all ol u- things which
we oucbt to have done. Errors
in this catepy can be a~
uted varioualy to finance.which have been ticht and unfortunately . are pttiq much
tilbter, to the II-' in which
propama have been CN&amp;ted.
and oometimea to nolhini more
or ' - than IIC*Iomic _ . , _
atiam. .
ln reprd to ~ : ~.it

abould be clearly UDderBtood
by all that this ailminislration
impeciB that the Uni..,.;ty'a
offioos, ofticera, BDd faculty will
be both _,aive BDd ,.._ '
spoosihle in the area of ~
opporiunity· BDd that this ,...
apoosi__; BDd responsibility
will reflect the beat of the Uni· ....,.;.ty.
·
The beat, 1 believe, baa been
-..d will continue to he-the
Univenity'a effort to achieve
quality and its steadfat emphasis ~ educating individuala .ather than acting directly aa a primary aocial a&lt;&gt;lion aaency. 1 am oonvinaod
that a ahift of atreaa -.m this
latter ~ility would lead to
a politiciz.ed and propagandized
institution, and as such the institutioo would not be able to
act objectively in the broad
area of equal opportunity. Educational quality under such
conditions would be an impoasihle achievement. Therefore,
we will continue to emphasize
and ·refme those aspects of our
progJ:&amp;IIl8 which are beat suited
to tile University's primary
roles of teaching, research. and
related public service.
lt is iiDportant to note that
our concern for program quality is a1.oo shared by students in
the programs. 'They have indicated repeatedly that they do
not want second-rate diplomas;
they do not want graduation
requirements waived. They
wish to be assured upon graduation that their educational
attainments are as valid as
those of any other student at
this institution, and hopefully
better than their attainments
would have been at m08t other
institutions.
'To Do leu Would Be • Hoax'
To be able to give the types
of assurances desired, remedial
courses, special orientation programs, and tutoring are now
and will continue to be available to those students. ln addition, we have done. and will
continue to do everything we
can to assure every disadvantaged student accepted tha:t an
appropriate measure of asaislance, both financial and academic, is available to him when
he comes to the campus. To do
l&lt;HI would he to participate in
a monstrous hoax, for,these students do not have the financial
resources to attend this or any
other university. And though
talented, their tal~ have
gone unnourished m the deprivation of poverty.
ln regard to finances, the
University will ·continue to
push for adequate funds for ita
programs. Tbe money problem,
however, as 1 pointed out
earlier in this tall&lt;, is very real
lf
are to he as
au
as we, and 1 am sure
you, want them to be, the mi-

!:::.fu\'rograma

nonhave.tyto~wuadequa·tyw:1! ~
.........,

ing of equal Of'P"rtunity programs one ol tts primary political C011Cl81118.
Tbe newly -.hliahed Cooperative College Center in Buffalo, which was created to asaiat both public and private institulioaa ol higher education
in dealing with the educational
problema ol the disadvantaged,
18 adminlatared by the University, and Ia -=ted to be
an important faeltii'&gt;in ~ fu-

-=

lure plana.

The Center _.uy has
four broad caletloriea of purinformation, eYIII.uatioo,
referral. and IMdtlna. It will
serve as a centraf;asency
charged with ·dlaaemina
, information about educa .
opportunitiea for tha diaadvantaaed in WM~o!nJ N"" Y~ it ·
will eYIII.uate the IIC*Iomic potential ol lntereatad llludenta;
it will refer theae ~ to
the lnatitutiall; and it
,.WolleriiC*Iomic....,._pre-

~ to ftiiiUiar colleae en- 8IDOWit lot t ' - ~ Ia 8tajf
traDoe·
therefore -$6.8 _mdhon_ (1
ln reViewing BDd eYIII.uating . abould add, 1· believe, that the

our other prosrama at the UniYmSi.ty, it is essential that ~
effect o1. the creation of this
Center be .taken into account
Orily by emphasizinJ the cooperative BDd complementary nature of all our ptOir8lll8 can we
maximize their """"""" in aolving the educational problems of
the disadvantaged.

n

ln 1968, a "Select Committee" of faculty, students, and
adminiatratm;s at the Univeraity at BuJfalo was appointed,
which was· to act aa a ~~
group fo~ an O!fice of . E&lt;i!J81
Opportunity: This orpruzation
was given the task of helping
the University direct its efforts
toward increasing the proportion of minority group persona
in the student body, the faculty, and the ataH. As a result,
the University baa created a
number of very worthwhile programs, 80"'!' of which have
been established as necessary
ingredients to the achievement
of educational equality.
' ' Tl&gt;e University baa created
a nwnl&gt;er of very worthwhile programs, some of
which have been establiahed
as necessary ingredienta to
the achievement of educalional quality."
'These programs include. in
the instructional area, a Black

Studies Program, a Puerto Rican Studies Program, a Learning Center, an Experimental
Program in Independent Studies, and various extension and
public service undertakinga.
This latter cateeory, extension
and public service, includes the
Secretarial Training Pro_gram
the Storefront Educational
Center, the Urban Aftaira Office, and now the Cooperative
College Center.
Service to minority students
and to the University has heell
given by a number of programs
and offices, including the Office
of Equal Opportunity, the Committee for Minority Faculty
and Staff Recruitment, and the
Office of Minority Student
A1faira.
1,015 DioocMintopd
UnclorlrHuotM

As a result of these numeroUB
BDd auhatantial efforts, 1,015
undergraduates are now studying at the University · in programs for the disadvanlaged.
ln the freshman - class alone,
(()6, or 21.5 per cent of our day
students, are participating in
these programs.
This figure of ,015 does not
include the 705 students now
enrolled at the Cooperative
~lldenege &lt;;!".!"llredorm
. thoaeadditional~ther

18

""'
-v
extension and public service

programs of the University.
To place this 1,015 in per·
apective, it should he compared
with last year's OOm!8pOilding
figure of approximately 650,
BDd to the projected minimum
1971-72 enrollment of 1,150 disadvantaged students. Clearly,
our commitment in the tmaerpaduate program baa growo
and will continue to grow.
ln financial terms, the University baa ·budReted for the
academic year 1970-71 $1 milllan for equal opportunity propama. This d.- not include
another $1.9 million, for the
Cooperative College Center.
ln addition, it should he reoOIIDized t h at the Uniwnity
aihniniatera $1.6 million in fill8DCiaf aid from federel. State,
and ~!~~dowment funds. ·The
ooat ol ataft BDd lnatructiona1
~ to theae at u dent a
Clll1lM, at 1eaat, to an additional
$1.8 million. The~ .~

UniYmSi.ty at Bulfalo is one ol.
~ few inati~ in til!' entire ayatem which baa diP.Ped
heavily into its own ~t
funds to provide financial aid
for the diaadvantqed.)
..
Mthoush much of our actiyt!Y
baa been at the undergraduate
level, we have aloo bee!' a,&gt;·
cemed ~th ~ m ~
graduate BDd profeaaional diVlfli&lt;ml!. particularly in medicine,
dentistry, and law.
~ Glull)l
Tbe shortages ol minority
group members in these profeasiona is glaring; in medicine,
for eumple, only 2.2 per cent
of American physicians are
black in a national black POPU·
lation cwrenUy eatixnated at
12.9 per cent; in dentislry it Ia
the rule rather than the ezception to find OO!y """ derrtiat
per 10000 or 50,000 or even ·
100,o00 persona in diaadvantaged ...-; in law, only 5,009
of some .t95 000 attorneys .are
black.
'
To place these f.iguies on a
more personal level, let me
point out that in Erie County_
the percentage of black pb.ysiclans is probably closer to 1
. per cent; in the 1ep1 profeasion, only eight or ten members
of the approximately 1,700
members of the Erie County
Bar are black. These statistics
should serve as a continnal ,.._
minder BDd prod to the educational system and to the public
which finances that system.
ln our Health Science a
schools, medicine BDd dentistry
have led the ~ in the development of an imaginative approach to the problem of training disadvantaged minority
group members. They have aP:
proached this problem on
broed base, and have created
a comprehensive Career Development Program. Simultaneoualy, the schools have continued their direct recruitment
of minority students, and this
activity baa had a significant
impact on the composition of
the incoming claaaea. For instance, the School of Medicine,
which had only nine minority
group members in ita entire enrollment in 1969, now baa 29
out o1. 124 in its first-year class,
and 37 in the School's total enrollment of .t63. 1n the School
of Dentistry, the flgJlre for minority group students in the
1969-70 freshman class of 75
was 3 or .t per cent· today one
year 'later fhia n'umber' baa
been in~ to 5 in a freshman class ol-80, or 6 per cent

(ledml from "minority
ln 1969-70 tbMe .....
376 milaity employeM ol the
Uniwnity. The lotal lot this
year is 509. This . - ~
includes 162 faeulty llll!lllber8,
or about 11.5 per 0011t ol our
total faculty. 1t aloo includes
128, or _about 21 ~ 00111, of our
prof.-ional lllatl; and 219, or
about ~-5 ~ cent, ol our non-proftaional ataft.

' ' Legal educator&amp; conaider lbe
BuiNlo ~am for diadvant&amp;!ed minority llllld...m
to be the moot prosr-ive of
• any in lbe natioo.7 •
..,__ · ..., ... ,_ · - must

-;&lt;_':"' ,.:-..:;:__, __ly

--~ •..,.will.__
m!'-"'-'the _=.;=:~

.-.,--;........,

·---•
-···•
faculty members for positions
which "!"' lead "to ~- C?r· reapoochngly,_ the Uruvm&amp;;lty
must .......,..., that tseching
and service to the UniYmSi.ty
a!'lf die ~unity mUBt _be
pven full weight.. a!ooll With
~ BDd J!UI&gt;Uca&amp;D, as a
haaia for granting tenure.
~ we BPMk of ~ opportunity, we mUBt also refer
to equality for ~ They
ha"!' m~ to caotrihute to. ~
~Dlvm&amp;;lty, BDd a more po&amp;Jtive
Y1BW_ will have to be taken of
the unportant ~ they ""!'
~t which they ,traditionally have· been derilea. At
present, ·about 11 ~ cent of
our faculty members are womea ' Approsimatelr 50 per
cent of- our prof.-ional staff
are women. 1 . ~ that in
the future an ~ numher of~ will have '!"' opportunity to co!Jirilrute ~Y
to ~ acad'!""c and aciDJ!nis~tive functions of the UruverSlty.

m

a

These, thet!. are some of the
hare figures tha:t are indicative
of what the University
Buffalo has done and is doing in
its commitment to insure ~
opportunity in American higher education. But these figures
in and of themselves are like
the figures that are often used
to describe new buildings. One
knows, for example, how much
a particular building coSt; ·What
its Bq11llre footage is. and what
ita inunediate use will be; hut
he does ll!'t know, BDd can
never really measure the intangible influence of the realizatioo of that particular structure.
ln like liMW1Ure, we hope, for
instance, -t hat the inter-geoerational cycle of poverty for disadvantaged students Who compie~ these ..........,. will be
· broken. We bope that some of
' ' Bulla!0 11
.
f
lbe
£
.
these
students will lead in the
one 0
ew m- economic development of miatitulions which h.u dipped DOrity communities, and that
heavily into iiB endowment · each busiJ-.. or proleMionfunds to provide financial al will provide omployment for
aid for the diaadvan••wed."
ousthera.this
.. .W~!'!!!.!""t,thafort
-..
~· ........-.
the particular henofila that will
Our recent efforts in law are .-.It from our piUir8lll8 will
most impressive. ln filet, 1 was , be felt larply in the Niapra r
told by our provost of Law BDd Frontier for ~!ely 90
Jlirisprudeuce that DI08t legel per cent ol our dlaclvantaged
educators caosider the Buffalo minority studeniB haft - their
propam for disadvantaged mi- permanent reaidencea here.
nonty s\'Jdents to
the DI08t
Finally, - very mucli hope
ProgreBBlve of any m the na- that the Uvea of all diaadvant- ·
tion. For instance, only one aged will he infl"""'*' by the
black freshman was enrolled in achieYemenla ol theae llludents
the Law School in 1967; this -..d that many will he enyear's freshman
baa 39 CllJilr8&amp;led to lift. their own asminority atudents out of a claaa pirationa. This lnlaiJIII&gt;le fa&lt;&gt;
of 202. This increase can be at- tor, to me, is one o1 the most
)ributed in large part pot only important . _ t a ol all our
to ~. ~ ol the faeulty BDd • propama.
•
administration, but aloo to the
O!ps*"llool
c1ilipnCe of our i:bapter ol the
Since - Inlaid to ~~~(Dec! in
Black American Law Students these undertaJdnp, it· Ia _ .
AaaociatiQD..
tial for us .., iJeterm1ne the
F"ocui!J, .....,_
"""Jplenw!tuy role Mdt ol our
ln addition to these student- propama have for the
educational JII"OPII-. one DDJSt
n a1m ill essential that
· elao mention the ~ the - have a 11troa1 and reapooState Uniwnity at BulraJo has sive mane.,._.. to ...,-e the
madeinrecruitingfaculty, UJ4 (~Oil-ll,coLI)

,t

18

"!'

a-

M••-ou.r.

�- J, J970

New SARA ·System ShnuJd
Ease .Lu:;s""u
v~~,.YI
litoes
(..(,(,~,
UlbeSARA_.terresi&amp;lnlian .,......
llludenta
aboald be able to ~equeat
quiddy aDd mo.. within 24 baan whet lbeir ecbedulee look Ilia
SARA ateDda for "Student
Aclldemlc Recorda Adminislmtloo" aDd will be instituted
Um-.ity-wide for IIPrinl "''I·
istralian.
Bealdea ftllilterlnl studenta
8IJciadly lbe 06le of Admi&amp;..... ad Recorda aayo, lbe
SARA .,.._ ._ a DUIIIber of

.....u.

olber ..!vantqee:
• 'Jbe Um-.lty will haft
for lbe t1rat time CDIIIIiatant information about students. Up
to now, studenta have bad to
fill out about. dozleD computersize cuds each EID88ter with
the same kiDde of_... information - Dlime, add rea a, telephone, major, date depee Is .,;,.
pected, etc. 8ometimea information Yllried from 0118 mrd to
the uat. NIJ!t. a student will
be asked to au out anly 0118

form, and ltal apdate a

Clllll-

puter print.&lt;&gt;ut of !bat information each time be regiatara. All

the 15 ollices wbic:b .-1 info.malian about atudents will
draw it from that same information fonn.
• 'lbe computer can llioep
track of ;the "deli&gt;and" for all
cJaasea. Ewn w'- a claM is

City Hall
Meeting Set
ByUIB,CAC

puter. He. can continue to

cbanp his schedule for two

Dr. Ccilin Wr!Pt. ~
of 8CIIIIIIIDica at.Nai~
Um-.ity aDd a~­
~ apecidot In arbaa
pr&lt;lbleom. will caaduct an ..,..
..maar ... locU ......
ol6ciala, atudenta aDd .....
ested citiJala ... ~ n.
comber 8. Spoasored by tl-tB'a
Doctoral Propam • lbe Polley
8ciencea, the
will ba
held from 2 to • in lbe .,._
noon in the meeting rocm of
the Buftalo Cltizl!laa Advl8aey
Committee on Community Jm.
provement, 430 City Hall

-a,

until "Drop and Add
Day," lifter wbic:b be ..
teiD faculty _......,., to add

a courae.
Aa soon aa all the bup an;

7

worked out, a student obould be
able to teem bow be fared with

the computer within three
bounl after aubmitting a couraa
requeat. Ewntually, termiDa1a
may be iDBtaJJed which will allow studenta to deal with •
computer Jlrst.hancl aDd get ..,

.....J::..

inunediste u/B ia not the first uni-sity in the nation to eat8bliab

......ib

Dr. Wiigbt'a
will
deal witb specific urban problems from ... ~s point
of view. He bas developed approaches to such matters aa air
pollution oontzol within the
framework of limited municipal

a computer ayatem for ~~
tion. Tbe system here is similar
to 0118 at the University of Ten-

- . Mid&gt;ipn State Uni-sity, the University of Dlinois
and IndiUia University haw
also uaecl computer regialntion.
U the aystiom worb well at
u /B in JUiuary (back-up systems will be ready should there
be a major breakdown) , the
University will continue refln.
ing the program. One day, rega pain!..,.
istration abould
procedure, Adm iuions and
Recorda says.

End of \\brld?

A· lectUie-discuasi on "the
pn!lll!llt-day fulfillment of many
of the Biblical .
relating to
end" will be
wbo requested it. nn., aca- bow the world
demic dfviaimm can be more in- held in Cleuatt lounge, Monformed about what kinds of day and TIMalay, December 7c:laMea studenta want to take, s,._at 7:30 p.m.-; under aponsorand . can, perhaps, adcl atra sbip of the CamnuA Crusade for
sections. Under lbe old l)'1llem, Christ. AdmiaslOD ill free.
students stopped ~ a
J ody Dillow, stsft worker
rourse once it was ~ 80 with Camp(is Crusade at Corthere was really no accurate nell U ni verai ty;-will discuaa
way to tally demomd.
"what the Bible aan concern'Scaf!&gt;lnl•
ing pn!lll!llt world conditions
• Tbe SARA ayatem elimi- and what we can expect in the
nates "ac:alpinl" of claM c:srds. near future."
Some enterprising students
Dillow bas done extensive re.
were grabbing up popular claM
into the subject and, accsrda aDd then aeJiing them to .arch
cording to . local Crusade orothms.
ganizers, will "clearly reveal
• Tbe SARA ayatem llioeps wby it may .be aaid that we
tradt of bow many students a ·
given claM can """""'modate are on the tbresbold of the most
and, ooce the claM ill ~ fantastic and aciting event of
moves to \he student's ......J biatorY-"
choice. No claM cuds are used,
thua none are wasted. Preriously 150,000 cJaas cuds were
produced and anly 90,000 or so,~
tomed ilL
• Admlaslona aDd Recorda
will be able to provide quktiy .
and accurately nporta !-sed
by . admlnistralian, varioiM d.
~ta aDd SUNY contral
aclminiatratioll in Albelly - reports on enrollment, claaa
ochedulee aDd ll8ta of .........
in eacb ,;... .,._ ,f« ......,_
pie. l'revloualy. ...... of 11.nporta took ...... t o _ . . .
and a pod deal o f - ·
How does SARA work?
Firat a ll&amp;udlat fllla out lbe
date form. wblcb liWIII the Unitv all It
to mo..

~':..."':~~w:.n...:::

!ifi'

.-.urces. Following his pared remarks be will enpge
m a question and answer sion with seminar partic:ipan.ta.
ICC: s.._.

With The Help 01£

- ' -~ theScbedulin&amp;
of offices
the aeminar
in
City 1fAll
of the

r rleuu~,

By STEvE LIPMAN
''You know," be
at
"Witb some help from God, Head U/ B Coach BOb Deming
we'll have a be.tter season."
seated next to bim; "the Bi&amp;
'!bat appeal for 'a little help haven't been setting the world
from his friends in Father Ed on fire lately, but after I looked
Fisher's opening ~rarer set the at your statistica, I thought we
tone fo. Monday rught's fifth were world beaters:;
annual U/B Football Banquet.
Simpson's talents prompted
Over :ax&gt; people attended the two responses from tbe onlookm,a-plate dinner (tbe $20 ers-bis footbell skills made
also paid for a team member's U/B's coaching staff wish they
meal) in the Hearthstone could ..,. bim running sweeps
Manor. M8Dy came to hear in a mue and Gold uniform,
guest ·speaier 0. J . Simpson, and his joke-telling made the
running back for the Bullalo others think be abould be on
Bills, wbo earlier -t hat day was the stag&amp;-Wells Fargo.
Simpson's main competition
tqld his ·1970 season was over
because of a knee injury.
for laughs came from Master of
It was fitting that the injured ~ Dr. Ed Gi~cz.
Simpson, member of a losing G•"!'W'cz s_tarted off by mtroteam (3-'7-1), sbould address dllCIIIg ~ters for the newsthe injury-riddled and 10118- pepers m attendance-the
decimated Bulls 'The 1968 News, the Courter, the SpecHeisman T!ophy ·winner didn't lrum and Reporter, and 80 on.
overlook tha fact.
'We couldn't get anyone from
t
Cold Steel," be apologized.
Discuasing the team's injury
prone-ness, Dr. Gic:ewicz, who
doubles as the Bulls' physician
quipped, "l don't want to say
·t hat we bad a lot of injuries
this year, but the people who
supply my surgical equipment
gave me a

~~- --

':1: ~
.:.~-=
............................... 'llllil'l

~

U/B back on the food:J"'map.
Deming ·banded out four
awards, two lesa tbaa Ia a t
year's 6-3 team got. Senior
haUbaCk John Faller won the
''Oftensive Player of the Year
Award," senior defensive tackle
Barry Atkinson aot the Defensive Player PruJe, junior of•
fenaive tackle Bill Winnett was
aelected tbe "Most Underrated
Player" and .junior linebacker
Bruoe Fruer won lbe "Most
Valuable Pla.ver" award
Fruer also awarded a
N- York State 8porU Writerrl Asaocialian cortificate. aa
' was -.lor defenaive· ond, Tom
Viplaaa.

....

=
=-:..:
':'___ _ ..
..............
....._ ...............
........ .., ...............

Cadillac."

Coach Deming, the night's
last speaker, apou in a serious
vein w!len be told the audience,
"aa of 4 o'clock this afternoon,
we m•t 1970 to bed. Now we're

~ting oumelves to

.

c·tizeos Ad ·
Committee
w!.
ammged~ of a
=~~and~;o~

IIJlh,-

U/B Football May ImprovenUin.d

....-...c

.....

cu.
/ - ~ -..l~ '

tual aaaistanoe program being

ernment, ~to Dr. John
'Thomas, aotiDg director of the
Program. A ~ hour will

follow the semmar.

-Nuclear Direct:.cr
-Offers 1'1-....C\ ..

AJ.n:~LlUU

EDITOR:

�~

4

~3,1970

Senate EConomic Status Coriunittee Co~ The 4 Contenders·
EDlT'OR'S NOT.6: Tltc Eco-..ic s - Commiuft &lt;ESC&gt;

~ .,..
.......... Unit

=-

• *cent. 'An ..,.._.'t!Je.board tional Reguloliono on ACG&lt;kinic
;...,._ for all fac:ulty
both intanBl and ""
Free8om Gild Tenure. ~
-andPI'OCedper CElli. An iidditiooal procedural standarda for .,. lo '!-ttain the lllal ol tbe
defined (WeT alicz) in • - - 12 per Clllt ollba ~budget newaJ and DODreiJeWIIl of ep. ~~ and -ticm ol cfis..
p:::::·::a.__~ ~,!:, ol court IICtioa8 lo be~ "'--d be aet aaide lo reward pointn18nts. Proleclinl academ- crimination
Oil the basis ol sez.
II ,.._.,. ~ eommmtr Oft ol four-yeu acboota, ..m-.ity ~ ....... in acbolarIC fJeedom of tenured and nair
•A: ~ in principle the
,...., 1M c....u.u- ~&gt;elM- are contera, medical acboota, ""'in- lblp. - . . , and Institutional tenured alike.
achool8, agriculture
cammumty aJrain. Salaries SPA: GrieVance procedure wbidJ PfOIIl8IIJ8 adY8JJCed by SUNY
,.. . ilo ......:
for Women's Rights
IICboola, etc. This unit CXIIItalns ol non·ai:bfni ~be
-· .. ..........,.eo...,...,;will achieve justice and reeolve
. at ending dlacrimin8tion
~ in t.olerably be""-"" made """"""'WB.rate. with u,_
con11icte at tbe local Clllllpu&amp; apinst w6men at" SUNY. ·
:L:-:3:~~ . a&gt;llection
ol groupe, not only of instructional 8lalt
level; grievanoes lo be initialled
in terms ol intereAI but in
am&amp;: See C8BA Ste~en~&amp;nt.
functions, capebjlitiee and ab- •A OP IIIJNY: Uniform mini- locally, going 1o a statewide
mum aaJarie8 by rank for all
and ending in bind- Available
r.lllr evldeace illdicallll&amp;
It IS certainly DDt a units ol SUNY, reauJar annual structure,
ing arbib;ation. Tbe key is "due
[tiiM'80WI unit in any
that DO cirpairation ol public
IJI!II'ClODiale mo-ta, summer process." Agrees with AAUP'a l'fON-TfACHI. . P110fESs1oNAts
Ia 111111e effective - . At tbe IDOIIII!Ilt there Ia 8l!llinna aolaries oomperable lo 1940 academic freedom and SUIT: AU profe11ional sta«
little
cme
can
do
lo
alter
lba
lban "" altemative in achievina
.......... ._;.., salarlea, a regumembers are en t1 tied 1o the
-·tbe·boud.economic composition ol tbe barpining lar cast oll.iving ;...,._ above :;.,m:.i~~ but only as a 88DI8 or equivalent profesaionaJ
pins. au- ... Ia poll!nliaiiY unit but we wish 1o ..,.;star a aulomatic me-ta, and ade~ conditione. All ap..
llbout .. aood ... another, clla- proteet and reclOIDIIB&gt;d that a quate fimda for cliscretionary CSEA: See CSEA Statement.
pomtments ~ be IIJ!Ide 00 a
c:riminatioG ~ them Oil cballenge be ~
merit'
mo-.
Salary sbould
...
~tina
bas1s. Time
that baia Ia DDt feMible. Rath- .......,.._oiEBC
FRINGE BENEFiTs
"""" be allowed- oil with
~ ~th tbe CUNY
er, their .-;tM.. em _ .
for
Clllltinuing
education.
~
Our readinp Oil this aJ)d 8fN·
brariana
u........ worltini .....titXma, and ~eraJ olbar Clllllpu&amp;ell . iDdicate .,..., Demands lo be included sorr: Stalf members entitled 1o demic .... ~ pert ol lba acs•
sabbatical
leave
at
full
pey,
Sb[
...,...ty,
and
sbould
be
lba elimmation ol
that cme of tbe four ~­ In tbe ""''Iiations· would be months terminal leave at .full treated the aame as far as
~
Oll8
tions will probably WID lba eolicited from all C81DpU8e8 and
pay
prior
lo
retirement.
Salary
·ranb,
pey,
work-year
and
all
from
all
profeasional
cata
·
.
With raipect in """"""'""" election, if not em the first baJ.
Speci1ic positions on ~ and pension credit for service otber bel!eftta. Eve•ything in
·
and WDddna condiJO.ia,
iti8 lot, then in a nm-off.
After a detailed examination several other items are not in tbe armed forces, Peace tbetbe ~~jPPstalflies. to
-~o
ol tbe relative positiobs ol tbe available. See CSEA statement ,S::Orps or VISTA. A nollCODtribwuuld
barpin away but four orpnizations ani! DODSid- provided elaewbere in tbe Re- ulory pension plan with iJmne. AAuP: Term appointments.
diata veslinl permitting refire. Adequate standards. for notice
'eration ol volinl 81zateiy, tbe porter.
ment at ball pay after 20 years of DODrelleWIIl. Fair termination
and
ESC members voted to eq&gt;re88
of service. A fully paid bealth procedures, For professional lic:urriculnm,
&lt;XIII· tbeir individual views. This is
dltM..
and _ , .WDddna
. . policies.
and
hospitalization plan. Waiv- b~: academic year ap.
GOYEIINAHC£
AND
GRIEVANCE
not "" enctor.ment by tbe
er of tuition at SUNY units. pomtnaJts; aalary oommensu'l'baulh - l'eCCIIIIiJI8 tbe im· ESC nor by lba SUNYAB BenAJ!!D ACADEMIC FREEDOM
perfectiane in lba ~t . , . ate. Tbe ft!IIUlts' are as follows:
Legal counael provided by SU· rate with instructionaJ stalf; en18m ol faeulty and lltaff CXIIIUoJ 1, no repreeentation, but for SUIT: 'lbere sball be fac:ulty de- ~ "!;.,~"':ji!
~t of professional
. and in lba ay8lem ol judpment reeaons of strategy would vote termination of curricuJwn, acafor SUNY AAUP Council demic and admissions stan- asM a !""'Jlt of
by . DO CJI'IIlllization bas
SPA:':seeb lo
lllD.lllum cla8s contact bOOrs ·
•·
~ •.,....,. ~ ......
(aince it was felt that tbe dards, staff election of chair~""alternative system.
To emaculate lba ~t aya- "1101l8" bellot would probably men and stalf pcwer of advice of 9 hours per" week for under!- meqwtiee,P..-nuy ~ered by
tem without inslitulinl a well loae); .(, SUNY AAUP Coun· and oonaent in tbe final aeleo. graduate ucl, 6 boors for grad. non:teecbing I?~ stsl!:
tbooqbt.out mplaoemeDt is ir- cil; 1, undecided between su. lion. of tbe cbancellor, a&gt;llege uate leeching. Abolition of in- · salaiy IJD!I fnnse J?anty for
PresJdents ud deans. Depart.. equity of state CODiributions 1o non-teecbing Pf0f8Eionals, due
._mle and lba probable NY AAUP Council and SPA.
TIAA vs. otber retirement P~ and'!- aystem of career
ClOII8BqUeD&lt;le is a reduction in · . u "" agent is aelected, jt is mental autonomy must be made
plans.
. &amp;eryu&gt;e appo1ntments. Seeks
quality,
~t upon. ~t organiza, a reality and new departments
.
uniform benefits for all prof.,..
Tbe relative positions on in- lion lo approach 118 very diffi. sbould be established 1o proAAUP: qroup life insurance.
sional staff, teaching and nonvide
full
rights
lo
all
profesequitiee such as U.... asaoci· c:ult task &amp;Jgreasively but in a
fully peJd bealth and dental leaching alike.
ated with women, noo-teechinl sta~ike lllllllll8r, one that sional stalf members. No cfis.. msurance. Increased retirement ·
prof-mnals, medical faculty, doeS not inc:reeae divlsiY8118118. cipline, nomenewai of a&gt;ntract, benefits. Tuition waiver pro- CSEA : See C8EA Statement.
etc., abouJd be of more concern We abouJd also nota that it is discharge, or reduction of bene- gram. Funds for travel and pro1o tbe membership volinl for a possible lo change ( recall) tbe fits sball be made without just
development. Sound
MEMBERsHIP
barpining agent than their bargaining agent that is cause and full due process. fessions!
leaching loads. Adequate reAND PARTICII'ATION
poeJtions on straight economic elected; hence this fll8t attempt 'fl?ere sball be a fhree.&lt;ltap search
~cilities
IUld
grants.
Imgaina. There are ·
'tiee in at organizing SUNY faculty gflevance procedure with bind- proved Sabbatical program.
"!""''. Broad:b'!sed particips·
lion m negotiations by repretbe ,.._.,t system~a bar- and steff could be a&gt;nsidered 1o ing determination. PenooDDe!
files m~ be open lo inspection SPA: lnc:reased retirelDent bene- sentatives from all campuses
gainmg agent is lo be aelected, be an experimental one.
that agent which concerns itU additions! information is by the individual and tbere fits. Earlier vesting in refire. and. special groups of tbe profe&amp;SJonal stalf. All professionals
aelf with tl..- inequities while requiied, call one of the ESC sball be no secret files. With menI. Fully paid life insurance
respect lo academic freedom, Additional life, bealtb, acci: are eligilile-for membership.
attempting in atrenathen facul- members:
ty and steff &lt;XIIItzol is, in our
Barbara Bunker, 831-1386· general policy is that threatlr dent, dental, liability insurance AAUP: Propoees a system of proview, tbe appropriate bargain- Herman Falsetti, 836-6807: in it are usually manifested as -all fully paid. Regular pbysi- portional representation on the
ing agent for SUNYAB.
Frank Jen, 831-4513; Robert tlireats lo job security; wishes cal checkups, tuition allow- bar-;";"~ team wJ'th SUPA
_......
Mates, 831-2215; Jobn Drot- in secure procedures which pro- ances. A credit union esteb~--oell).
ning, 831-3228 (ex officio); teet academic freedom. A local lished with stele support. l11l- ~U.::~s:;aal groups such
.
caucus.
~g team in conjunction proved sabbatical leave policy.
Murray
Brown,
831-1511
-r-...Laeila
With state-wide bargaining Redu""\f workloads.
SPA : Any member of tbe pro(chairman) .
Informal evaluation of tbe
sbould simUltaneously negotiate CSEA: See CSEA Statement. v fe&amp;SJ~ staff who comprise the
ESC with regard in merit saJ. Summary Comportoon
local and stele' issues.
prof"!"'!onal bareaining unit
ary increeaes relative lo auto- of Orpnlutlons' Positions
may·JOm. Both "ecademic'' and
AAUP: Advancement of faculty
WOMEN
matic increments: tbere are on Prtnclpol 1 "profeasiooal" representatives
oome differences between tbe
and s~ role. ~ ~ocal and SU- SUPT' ,Atlirmati
·
Tbe following are presented NY-~de decJSIOJ!-making. gram. which Me ~on P~ must be 'on tbe rep-tetive
and 011 tbe JIIIIOtiating
in tbe order in which tbe or- Adoption· of lbe Sl4lement on goal
'table
ve !"' Jts
ganizations appear on tbe bal- . G~m of CoUeges and
~
feJ'!""''!DietiOD of
lot:
~f J::-"!~t.:::.
Un• versitiu. Support and : " ~tb.,an""!' academic ~: Separatect..pters for proSAlARY
strengthen faculty senates: Fa·
·
· !"
VllflOU8 salary • •"'-ioaaa employee~ in be estsbequally well ~~t-out. This
Within each l'llllk. Rules lisbed. All proleaaionaJs are elitiee at lba heart the problem IIVPT: Muima and Minima by c:ulty aelection of department steps
00
chairmen
rank
for
all
units
of
SUNY
and
P&amp;rl&gt;dPetion
in
~
system.
Establish llii&gt;J&amp;. for membenbip in tbo8e
of betero..,neity; that is, it is a
StaJf mem- chapters. · Neiotiatina teem to
fact that ~18, faeulties, ~ be: $14,000 lo $18,000 aelecting key admiiiistralors child care
for
ilultructonl;
$18,000
1o
-$24,.
Timely
grievance
Procedures.
,
bers
.abould
be
~titled
lo up be eelected by lbe JIIIIOtiating
acbools, and even individuals in
::,_::,JXand
~':!a
ma~ty . conmuall'ttee, which Is elected by
tbe """"' f~eld differ along eev-. 000 for assistant prof"""""': t!'!~t by prof~onal
eraJ climensioUa and that tbe $22,000 lo $32.000 for asaociate - - Adeqwita l'8Vli!W of un- tamity I
N • P8l JIB·
lll8lllbera.
of eave. o job 1088 benumber of people ~ " " " - ; and $26,000 lo $36,- fair administrative actions.
The UniDUEl
tbeae attributea also differ. U 000 fw prof-.. Distinguisb.. Adoption ol tbe 1!140 State- caus;ety
ed
prof"""""'
may
be
paid
at
a
tbeae d i f f . - are not remeAt on A&lt;:ademic ~m
subocribe lo
~t du. lllii.Y DDt be a
flected in tbe reward atzucture, · rate above prot-. Salaries Gild Tetwn. lmplementatiOD of diacriminatepo .... _ beaiset;c., that .. _ .__.,_.,_ ol ...__ dues one
Oil...,
ol aez. uau ._....._...
...,
lba "cutting edp" o1 quality is aball be u.cr-d in aocordance AAUP ReoolfliMntkd Iiutitu,.
AAuP: Tbe eliminetion and
lllii.Y ""f"Cl &amp;11m the elected
blunted. 1bio leveling ellect with " " " - in lbe Bureau ol
Labor
StetiatiaJ
Consumer
veution
ol
policiea
and
apnt,
ainoe
liD
increase
will
aJao 111&gt;111* lo tMcbing ioada,
IN CAI'TMTY: A COif1'IIACT
tices wboee purpoee or
probably be ~ 1o initi·
for It l8-libly lbat "" orpniza. Price Inda. Pramotion abouJd
be
buacl
em
merit.
EadJ.annual
To
""''peroonnel,
...
bor
is
1o
..Wt
in
diacriminatiiln
ate
and
lllBintain
Ilia
proa!llB
of
tion wuuld . . _ fiiU8l t.dlaulomatic increment will be ~ arw otnonae and unuoual ~ em- in lba atetus e1 collecliw.t.rpiniaa (ESC}.
inl '-Ia for all unila ol lba $2,000.
Salary
for
llUIIllll8r
work
.......
n...
..
,_
.......
ble
for
UK:Wty
and
other
stalf.
11da
IIUft:
Natioaal
.,..
a1e1e
dueo:
unl-.ity system. ....... dlf.
abauld be pro
buacl upon your - - In the Harriman ~ indudee appnin~t and Nil per ,_.., x-J cbapter ex·
-.:11 fllnctb. Oil
10-maath-...alanr and ~UblaryaCOPJolthe-· •'!appointment; ea1ary and . - ( I f - ill chartered)
lba varioua ~ require ..........
boura warDd. ~- •
lilt ~ In Sop- frinj8 "-'tits; PI'Oil&gt;lltiaN and would be in lllldltiaD 1o lbe JiaC
At lba """"'
llllNY AAUP OOOifCIL
SUNY 1 - b; the lac:ull,y lAIII· leluue; and termlnatiiJIL It
tional4ele duea and would
wide ea1ary ~
-Council o1 the CM;r u~ d~ al8o the ....,.__t o1 ftiY. from ....,._ 1o CJI!llPU8·
Olnition
ol
....tt
...__.....
..0.....
ol
New
YOII&lt;
(alllllawoJ
With
the
-and
~
llldl
_ . . SUNY t.:u~ty.
feollianaJ ~~- New Yoot&lt; Slolit r-...s· ~ diild care ~
•
AAuP: S.. ealary ol $12,000 or
the vlH·vla altemative ..,.. tion ol apeclalh:ed meda ol - and the 'National Eel.-, leave, and beaJth; ~ aiJove. 126; 1(),0011.11,899, $20;
~~ ..... lba .... ..-eluate and . pn6aa' -~ fa.. ~&gt; with lila Board ot and atbee.~ ~ ~-· $16; below 8,000,
c:uJtieL Tbe ~ SUNY- . Hlllw Eclucallan oiNew Yoot&lt; Cll,y. •.lfr!' ......_,. in~.._: .,.. •
•
l:'!...Cf:.:l~ wide
ealary miDima far the T1lll Ia tlla ~ in fact A po)ia. ••: Salar7 ol $li&amp;,OOO ar more.
-lbainlfleclalba
..':':.
oltloe.....,...~ lli'I0-7l _ . . . . ,... .._... :
pj~ - . I f - ' - - .- petion ~in oa111ie and SPA 11111F . . . . . With 1be Na·
- . _ ............tlbal
........ ........,.tbeflnt 8illtant _,.___ '•••--. ·~ II#IY what Ia In that rnuch1IJI- ~ ~........_ • tiaaaJ. Bdaeatloa ~Doll
~."iiiiio:"~
_ ( op- ~in~
"""' &lt;NBA),IIlwNdt-tbetattype ol - - II!Duld be . . baerd . . . o l l h b i r - - ol ~to-~.,........ In~ • Oil . . .tin.: bodloe. An • ..... . . -1100 per,..,.
minded ollba ......
·
·
am.tlve actbJ propam m. ~: .. .,_ ,_.,
,

:!..::, Bef.~~ ,:,::;.

.

•

Tbe ~ pnit '-bee ,.

:':f'

-u..

-...._-.

.

c:.-

-ao-

ell::

= =-.

c-..o

:Jr

:.,.~e::r~

==-tal.

~~~

t,!
performing~~.

·"-~·•a -~•-

- ..

--~-

...

:u

:;m~":;ve~~~

""7'

=

S:

quota a:nters.

..,1:

=.....,.l,nregnancy·
U:..,

=

--tlal
lim:'..t ......_

rata

-tic~•=•d~

m.

a.,:

'*"~--­

::;:. w=.,

:..-=-:.; ::::::

~-=.:-.:.::..~

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

=

.=: .fr.si-.:ao:= ~..:m:

=ta't...~

�~·
Faculty~

Election Statement
In tbe

IIPrinl

ol 1967, tbe

New York State Le1islature

~·a .... doetiDed to alter
tbe tam ol hili- education in
tbe 8ta1le more tben lillY evmt
In tbll C*llury. ThouJh the
Public Employees Fair Employmait Ad, more commonly
knOwn - tbe Taylor Law will
dect aU _..,., ol ~ and
uni-..itY life, ita immediate and Jura.~ will be
11J*1 tbe-facufty and proiee111aaa1 ata«.
'1be Taylor Law (Mined at-

· In view ol: a) 'the mllapae ol
tbe . , . _ , t ~ tbe Faoulty Senate and C8EA, b) ..,.
CIM&amp;tions tbat tbe Senate , a :·~ llllioa." and c) tbe
Senatils ladt. of a llllll-State
. budpt fiDaDcial base, iudlvid~ who unit "'''!"'!"'Jt&amp;?vea in tbe _Senate cleclded durlllll.tbe !IPI'UII ol ~970 to form
an m!"ependent 1 mcarporatad
oqpuuzalbl to . De caltad tbe
Senalie Profamonal Aaooc:ialbl
(~PA.): Tbia. 1roup baa bed
diacuEiaaa WJth tbe New York
State TMdlera Association
(NYSTA), which is tbe Stalie
unit of tbe Nalblal Educalbl
t-ocia!i&lt;!n (NEA). NY ST A

:,_~~~e u~-~ ~~~~~e""SP~

:..=-draft

ship '!ill be ~ to CXIII8ider
an allionca With NYSTA.
M.......tille in AIJIUiit, 1989
· does four major tbinp:
PERB ioBued three rulinp 0:
1) It paniB PUblic emp...,_ liB consideration ol tbe pro. tbe rqbt (whlcb they moy .,. posed barJaininl unit for
IDlY not~ to IIIIIII'Ciae) ol SUNY'• professional staff
o_r1anlzation and ~ta- which were challenged by
~
SUFI'. In October, 1989, PERB
2) It lllltharU8 and reguira1 . upheld liB original rulinJS.
II0\'8ftiiiiO!DIB and otber political SlJFr tben appealed to tbe
""""'J'bo, 11810- courts, chaU.,,-Jing PERB finden!"' into writ- inp that: 1) the SUNY Fao18 With employee ulty Senate is a leJitimate emconcerning the ployee orpnization within the
"terms and canditiona ol em- lM8Ilina of tbe Taylor Law· 2)
pioymaat'";
tbe unit fo. mUectiYe berPun3) It cr.liel a Public Ein- ina ahaU be tbe entire profesployment Relations Board aioaal atalf ol SUNY, and 3)
(PER8) t o _ . in reoolvinJ tbat assistant and aaaociate
disputes between public em- deans are employees, not employera. '1be CXlUrt ruled on this
ployees, and
. 4) It ~ poop !""~ in- appeal in N""""'!-, 1970, and
dividual penaltieo fo. Yiolato.a completely 8U8tained tbe original PERB 6ndinp.
of tbe law.
Moat crucial of aU tbe alB!&amp;'lbe finlt balloting for tbe
meniB In ~ Taylor ~ is tbe rep,_,mti.., 8JellCY for tbe
one CXlDtained &lt;fn eection 203: SUNY prof-'&lt;mal &amp;taft' will be
''J'ub!ic employ- ahaU have amail beUot beginnin Decemthe rflht to be. r&amp;J!,_.tad by ber 1, 1970, which will~ CXIUDt"!"Pioyee "':J"DlZB!iOD" "! nego- ed on December 29, 1970. 'lbe
t!&amp;lle collective!-Y With their I?Ub- five alternatives on the beUot
lie employers m tbe determina- will be: SUFI' AAUP SPA
t!on of their terms and CXlndi- NO AGENCY,' and cs'EA. H
tiona.&lt;&gt;! emp~t and the none of theee receivee a majoradmtnts~rahon of tbe ,piev- ity vote on tbe first beUot, there
ancee arialna thereunder.
will be a run-olf
Thou1h final determination
As
det!t&amp; beCXl
ail
!!f what is incl!'!"ed under able
make ::::':~
terms and CXIDditiona of emf
them. M
h
·
y
if'
ployment" must await tbe start o
_eanw tie,. you
.
b
. .
.
have queshons reK8111.irul tbe
of co II ec t ave argatnJng, •t Taylor Law situation, please
~ plausible that not only caU the Senate Office (831~ -:!~bu~ teach- 2223) and we will try to answer
~~ ~·~ them for you from ou! ·own
cal and otber J.vea, and ro- knowledae or by mntscting tbe
molbl and tenure, commi"'l:; people who can answer.
-w., conaultinr time, and ·
CXIDlmunity and public service,
8JilOill otber lhinp, will be subject to mUective bergainlna.
'lbe question before the UniDeapite ita elfectiw dalie of versity &amp;taft' is not unionization,
Sepliember 1, 19671 tbe Taylor but which union will do tbe
Law b. yet to be tmplementad negotiating. Which union will
in Stelle University of New most elfectively rep,_.t the
York. '1be for this, 88 ·• te Is f tbe U ·
with ewrythinJ about tbe :uni~? o
ruversity mmTaylor Law, are complicetad;
'lbe answer to this question
but to brinJ tbe eitualbl up to reeta on three others: What ex~a brief review moy be in perience, program, and commiteoileclive barpining cannot • ment toward mllective bergaintake place tmtil tbe 12,000 to ina do tbe competing uniOns
15 OO(j msnbenl of tbe proleo- haYe?
oiciaal atalf (which includes
As for experience, tbe State
faculty) ol SUNY ~ a UniversityFederationolTeecbbarplninJ ...,l 1m election is ers and iiB allllialiel tzac:e their
..,.. beina -.ducted by PERB _ . . . . , . from 1916 when the
in which tbe - - . . of tbe philoaopber John Dewey and
SUN"t profe..ional atalf will otbera organinod tbe first naelect their t.rpinlnJ ...,l
lblal IMcbera union. We have
It orillnaUY appeared tbet · Included 8JilOill our membertbere ~ be live cboicee em ship academic men such 88 Altbe ballo&amp;: 1) tbe SUNY Fao- bert Eineteb&gt;. and Eupne Moulty s..te; 2) tbe Amalcan Carthy and Paul Douglas dur"-''albl ol um-.tty Pro- ina their lieechln&amp; yean.. Since
, _ (AAUP) · 8) tbe Civil: that period~liaatqU!red
8ervloe
• A8ocialbl lldJI and
CXIIIec:
(CSBA)~State U.UV.- live barralnin1 hat other
llfbo. .......... ol Teachers, uniaaot do not haft.
A9LCJO (SUFI') l-and 5) DO
Furthermore, tbe SUFI' baa
qllll ·1118 Taylor . naaolialied a DUIIIber ol CXIDthat tnPioYeee · - I n blat- edumlian. We
IDlY
not ID ba.. ail,y oo- liave brourhl dramatic improve.
lllllldal qiDl On June 3, 1989, mmt to IIGD-teaured atalf ol
ibe Faculty Somate and tbe tbe City Univereity ol NCSBA a1reed to .-.o and York, and tbe "parity prlnd........ . . _ _ _ ., UD- pie" -which tbe aalarieo ol
dow
tbet e&amp;el In . llemDed old is bioed is tied to
tbe late faD of 1989, ...__, tbe uniaD .....,. IICbedule for
tbe CSBA withdre'lr bam tbll N- York City tallcl8a. We
. . , _ t , IIDII In January, have also nep&gt;tlalied _ , _
1&amp;'lO, tha SUNY "-'1ty Sea- for two-year ~ We do
ate ...,..... .the arreement not:biove to aK, "How dovaid.
10 ilbout .Jllllllllialilll'l Do tbe

ol tbe bill)

which Nplaaad tbe 1m1181Y unWlllbble Caadaii-Wadlb1 Law

:'"'abaU

SUFI'

1

....

...

I),

PERB
Vote .
Views

haYe IIDYOD8 (rom wilhin tbe
SUNY system who knows bow
to bergain? What can we e&gt;:=~ tbe ~ side of tbe
'lbe 88CXlDd question for ..,_
lecting a bergaining aaent is
~tis liB prop-am? 'lbe SUFI'
distributed to tbe University
atalf last
•
••
8p'lllll PDIIltion papers
and this fall baa made available tbe bigbliJibtB of its program tbrouib Uniueroit&lt;u and
tbe SUFT N ewa. Sbortly, tbe
final program, arrived at by
graaa roots participation of tbe
University &amp;taft', will
in the
banda of University personnel.
'lbe prop-am is realistic, baaed

be

ife': y~~ktr~i~s!'dgn~be!:

by tbe SUFI' and its alllliates
U its CXlYerlge appears
ing, this is because the Stete
Unive;iilty bas lacked mUective
.__,_. _ , ten
and •
-s.......,g
yearsof New
IS
far behind .or
tbe City
York. Maximum aalariee ranging from $18,000 for instructors
to $36,000 for professors is mnsistent with tbe preeent salary
of the City University and CXlntinued inftstion. Departmental
status and academic rank for
non-teaching stalf is basic to
our program. The strong wom• n,..,
·-'-ts pomtion
··
· c1
ens
m uding
day care' centers, maternity
leave, etc., is mnsiatent with
SUFI' history and mmmitmenl And no organization bas
b!!:'o':'r position on academic
Finally, 8 union commitment
toward collective bargaining
and .adversary procedure is importent. 'lbe SUFI' believes
that this is healthy and points
to the accomplishment of adversary procedure of AngloAmerican law and in union contracts in protecting and ex~~g individual and collective ng~ts. ~&lt;:have a!ways
held this pomtion. It did not
result from the recent Taylor
Law
For the most experienced ,
ag~ive, and progressive bargaming agent, vote for the
State University Federation of
Teachers
·

aurpm:

AAUP
The SUNY AAUP Council
seeks tbe rights of&lt;x&gt;Uective
bergaining to advance tbe economic status of SUNY faculty
and . non-teaching professional
staff and to guarantee responsible univen;ity governance and
academic practice. It is mmmittad to &amp;tn!nJthening the role
of faculty and professional3talf
in internal decision-making and
in tbe operation of elfectiYe
grievance procedures, and will
not bergain away or usurp for
itself these eaeential proff,!881onal preroptivea.
t
'lbe AAUP bas been CXID·
cemed nationaUy with the
ri£tto of faculty. 'lbe Council
will insure that the non-~
ina professional staff is adequately and fairly repreaeotad
in tbe deYelopment of negntiatina propoialo and in the actual
neaotiations. A statement endorsecJ by tbe SUNY AAUP
Co\IDcil baa s u - I that tbe
abeeDoe ol appropriate terms of
appointment, of fair otandudo
of notice, and Inadequate )110viaiona for partlcipalbl ~ col~
in decisioua ... lbl and promolbl baa tied· to
inadequate niCXJIIDIIbl bf tbe
profeMioDal rilhiB ·or t h Is

,.,..P.

5_
'lbe AAUP baa been ""-n.:.
ina with univssity ~­
lora for 55 yean.. In tbe vsy
new aree of collectiYe betpinina 'the AAUP baa been cerlified 88 tbe berpin.ing llJI!IIlt at
.five universitieo .,. eolleaea in-

~ R:~

t:: tfi!

year) and Sl Johns (25 per
cent increase spread OYer two

'lbe progrem previously
approYed November 19 by
SPA's 11Hnember Ezecutive
Board. 'lbe Representative _
~ also approved in prin:-

r.:Jr'k?lr CXIDtJ:actB P!O"ide
'lbe

"AA~

City University of N- Yorlt,
reduclbl in workloads, a
beefed-up peckqe of frinae
benefiiB and •a to vitalize local~-­
proved by tbe Seaate Profe&amp;.
siooal Aaooc:ialbl'a (SPA) 52:
member Repreaeotative Council in Syrac:~Me, NOYelllber 20.

vigor-

~t !;"aU~~

slJMrog:.

adr;a;.:!-:
tbe academic mmmunity. 'lbe
evidence is ·t hat no group bas Rights aimed at ending ili&amp;lillY substantive claim of su- aiminalbl ~ women at
periority in achieving economic SUNY.
gains. 'lbe danaer is that a
'lbe SPA barpining pro...Uective bergaining aaent moy gram calla for:
•
aUow prof-'&lt;mal "4bts to
Salaries fo. SUNY staff em a
lapee or actually bergain them
a-v 'or ill•~ - " ' parity boaia with aalariea CDII&gt;-~ ''
- • -~
parable to faculty at N- York
gains.
Baaed upon industrial or pri- City's CUNY system. CUNY
mary and 88CXlndary school col- ·.prof_,.,. moy eem • much
lective bergaining practices, tbe 811 $31,000. 'lbe SPA proalam
bergaining ezperience of tbe mnsiders geocraphical and
otber ~ups bas not lead nor otber factors in determining
is lilreiY-to lead to an adequate parity.
model for higher education. At
Boston State College, tbe union
'lbe SPA Representative
bas established an AFI'-admin- Council, in addition, urged uniminimum aalariee by rank
istmtion curriculum mmmittee, form
for aU units of SUNY, reJUiar
pre-empting tbe jurisdiction of annual
increments,
tbe Faculty Senate. At CUNY, summer percentep
session aalariee mmunder tbe mntmct negotiated parable to regular aeasion aalby the NEA-af!ilialed l.eJialative Conf..-~
faculty _,_,
...u.v. ariee, a regular coat-ol-livinJ in-~
ancee are no longer adjudi- crease above automatic increments, and adequate lunda far
cated by faculty. Should dis- discretionary
merit i.ncreaaes.
CUBBiona with adminiatmtive offleers prove unavailing, tbe lacAdditional benefits sought into"':'b7~ "teCOU.r8eCXl"-- clude increased benefits un......- der aU three exiatinf retirement
tive bergaining representative programs on a haaia of equalbas aUowed grievance after ity, earlier vesting in retiregrievance .to linger \111.-&gt;lved.
ment, earlier retirement at inUnder tbeagent
Taylor
the
bar-;n;ng
will Law
'---me creased pay, fuUy paid life insurance, additional life, accie--'
"""'
tbe e:rclusi.ue rep...,..tative for dent, health, dental, liability
aU terms and CXlDditions of em- and major medical insumnc&amp;f.:~U\. ~
~ aU fully paid, regular physical
gotiating agent if the fuU foroe checkups fuUy paid, tuition allowances, not merely tuition
of AAUP principles is to be up- waiver or reciprocity agreementa with other institutions,
~ AAUP . tbe nl
. IS
o y group a credit union eetabliabed with
that~ VIgorously pro~ a State supporl
well~~ set of P':"'C.ples
'lbe SPA program also seeks
pertaining ~ acadenuc free-.
- dom. .Ef!ecti~ supl'!"rt _for an improved sabbatical leave
policy
with sabbatical leave
such Pfll!Clples lB. especiaUy ID!po~t m a pertod when uru- granled in fewer years wii.b fuU
pay.
SPA
eeeks guaranteed
li'i!~~tt!:. under strong po- funds available
for replacement
At SUNYAB tbe AAUP aiBlf on each campus. SabbatiIa
'
·
P .Y~ a fundamental !Ole. m cal leaves, aooording to SPA,
striking down state leJialation should be granted by a commit~prelisive of the _Conatitutio~ tee of coUeaguea on local c&amp;m~tghts of fa?I~ty .m tbe KeyUJh- puaes. Other leaves abould also
Jan t;ase. Financial support "(''S be p_rovided for, says SPA, in~rovtded to tbe faculty plain- cluding research, t rave I ·or
tilfs. The AAUP persevered UP other work that will accrue to
to and through ·t he Supreme the professional benefit of tbe
Court decision.
individual and tbe institutiun.
In the instance of tbe 45, tbe
SPA's p~or reducing
AAUP suocessfully moved to
quash the subpoenae that worltloeda suggests that differwould have been a breach of ent levels of ~tion for
the CXIDfidentiality of personnel different OOUlll08, tbe amount
files and acted as amiciUJ in and nature of reeearch required
taken into consideretion in
mnnection with the successful
appeal in Rochester. 'lbe addition to aasip&gt;ed committee
AAUP mntin.- to preea for work. student adviaina. student
the dismissal of tbe remaining CXlDiact and laboratory work.
City Court charges against tbe
SPA seeks a grievance pro45.
cedure which will provide an
'lbe AAUP baa, alonS with elfectiYe fnuneworlt fo. achievotbera, successfully challenged ing justice and reoolvina CXIDthe QePOtiam rule. 'lbe Council fiicta at the local campus level
aupporta the develOpment of 'lbe SPA plan caUa for grievservices such as child care ancee to be Initiated locaU
centers and maternity leaves going to a Stat&amp;-wide ~
in bindinJ arbitril~'::"'i:1J: preYent

i::.7

The

:r::ti'...

be

=-ending

'1be AAUP bas demonatmtad
ita commitment in aU three
crucial . , _ of university govemance, economiC adV8111C&amp;ment, and tbe proliection of the
basic rights of members of tbe
university. 'lbe AAUP SUNY
Council will ._.ably -.collectiw barge,ining to
~ tbe poailbl of tbe
pro-

=.-:!rr':"'"-teac:bina

0

SPA
A~propamcallina

,.,. salary panty

cxMniiUible to

that

facu.fty in tbe

!'8ftled l:iY

Tbe lray wonlo in SPA's
grievance procedure propoaala
in Ol'lflrythlna. SPA._ fo. e:amp1e,
with AAUP's 1940 academic
freedom and tenure propcalbut only - a bare mininwm.
SPA eeeks also to· alleviate
certain inequities -.t:ly suffered by IIGD-Iieechlnlr proleslliaaal atalf. SPA -'a salary
and frinae parity for nao--=t.ina profeBoula, due - eeeks
IMVice
a~:.:..te. olSPA
uniform bmiftiB for aU ............
al llteff, tooodllna and - -

are "due

p..,._..

t.dtlna allloe.

.

(co-..., 011 -

I, coL I)

�GREF'oRTE~t,

6.

Perhaps The Time Has Come To Ask

Need A "Dnnn
~T Se-.
. .+;. at ·All ·
If 't'll
vve
£(:u.,Ul~~
~~

DodomborS,J970

What m Say about Nlgeria
Has
Re/evanm for Us~
By MARY STEPHANO
the

=
has bad

_._.,_as

ously doe&amp; not obtain today. pointed administrative hierar~:.,-,:=..,-.:::st::"'
:•·.,;f:"'~";d~~
. . - ,...,._"' N....,.
This cbanae bas been a rsult chy.
At the oonferenee to open cat:ional system in the deVel
'Ibe · oposal bas recently of "what might be called the _ , o- the Pieoldent S.Wf
here tomorrow on the develop- ing world will orive lip ~
been ~ upon by the faculty professionalization of deanship.
In addition, the question of ment of higher eduarlion in Ni- to -the idea of
an eelto cbanp the nature of the Fac- This is based on the view that how the president of the Uni- geris, Dr. Bsbs Fsfunwa will ucational system to its particulty Senate. It is perhaps ap- the only high-powered dean is versity should best be cboeen present a paper on "Criteris for uJar society. More often than
propriste to examine the whole a "professions!" dean. An an· might well be discussed. In the Evaluating the ·Fitness of High- not, however, be is either or
question of a Faculty Senate in alogous argument is applicable case of the State University of er Education in Nigeria." In both (a) burdened by a veiy
terms of what it seek&amp; to ac- in the case of the departmental New York at Bulfalo, final im- the advance eopy ·of the paper natural and 1l!liiY times unoon- .
oomplish.
chairman. 'Ibe term, chairman, portsnt policy decisions aJe Dr. Fafunwa, dean of the Fac- scious bias toward his own way
Universities these days have pl1!SUID8.bly means the chair- In&amp;de by eilber the Board of ulty of Education at the Uni- of doing things, toward the auvery well defined and some- IDSn of the .faculty, in this esse, Trustees. or by the central ad- versity of lfe ·and perhaps the periority of the educations)
what oomplicated adlninistra· the departmental faculty. There ministration in Albany. n is most renowned figure in Niger- system of which be is himself
live structures extending, in the' · is then an implication that the then appropriate to ask wbetb- ian education, states unequivo- the product; and! or (b) iQad.,.,
case of State University of New chairln&amp;D of the faculty sbould er the faculty and students on Cally that first priority must be quately prepared to help his
York at Bulfalo (rolb the prESi- represent the faculty vis-a-vis the local Cam.pus aJe not best given to the evolvement of a hosts ljdapt, rather than adopt,
dent of the University upward the administration and, if he is served by a president wbose '\truly African pattern of high- his ideas, his methods, his manto Albany and ·downward to to truly represent the faculty, oons•.•tuency is the faculty and er Iearnirig."
ner.
departmental chairmen. What, then he must serve at the plea- students of the University of
At first glance this appears
The oonference opening tothen, should be the ~ of a sure of the faculty of that de- Bulfalo, rather than being an ·a mild and innocuous enough
Faculty Senate? It seems that partmenl This situation rarely .agent appointed either by the ststement--&lt;&gt;f oourse an Afri- morrow will offer a valuable
the ~ sbould be to act as a obtains, at least within the oon- Board of Trustees or the cen- can oountry should have an At- oppor'tunity for those -with a
counter-balance to the admini&amp;- text of medical schools.
tra1 administration.
rican pattern of higher learn- serious interest in the relationtrative structure, an alternative
Again,_this may be viewed as
ing. Why betsbor or even men- ship -~ an educations!
route for decision-making with- having oome about because of
This proposal does not point tion the obvious? The fact is system · and its society, and
in the Uni""*. If it doe&amp; not the professionalization of de- the way to the mechanism of that historically this bas not partiCularly between education
offer an al~tive routs, but partmental cbairiDSnship in f o implementation of such elected been-&amp;td even today in many and nations! development, between eduai.tion and social
~~::"~~of"'U:
:;::le~~ ~ offices and this procedure would circles is not-obvious.
change. 'Ibe partici
tS will
be scbotsra ~!~cl,osev
regular administrative strue&gt; more modern method of ap.
lmpooed Pottems
lure, then !hoi QUE8tiOn must be pointment of departmental
Many of the problems inher- for their acad~unds
and professions! experience in
aeriously asked whether the chairman or dean is the most - V l.
l. '
~t1fri:!:' s~=
Nigerian higher education. But
Faculty Senate is Superfluous. efficient way of building depart. The ~ hOpes on IIIIo It is perhaps clearer · to put ments or scbools. But, in a ats- to pnw1c1o 0 foru{n for the .,.. tstion of educations! patterns the discussions will be relevant
this in the framework of indus- bilized department and univer- clionp of on 0 vaitelf originally evolved in societies beyond the Nigerian context,
trial relations. If the admini&amp;- sity, it is not at all clear that of the focl"'l the oc:odomlc: far different eooDQmically, SG- and even beyond the oontext
b:ative lines represent · the em- the. appointment method of ae- community. Wo _ , . llc!lh cially, and politically from the of the developing world. There
ployer (and this is not oom- lecting administrators is the poo111on _ . . . . ond lettl!rs .. . African societies on which they will he lessons to be learned
pletely true in the State Uni- best on a continuing-basis.
.....,. permits.
were imposed On one level tomorrow and Saturday approthis is today a generally reoog- priate to our own elfoits . to
versity arrangement), then the Should the Senote Be Abollohedf
faculty below . the level of deWhat does this view of adnized truth. Julius Nyere, for better relate higher education
psrtmental chairman !1!preaent ministrative structure mean for
example, bas long extolled the to our own rapidly changing SGthe employ-. One oould bard- the matter of Faculty Senate? be somewhat oomplex. 'Ibe need in Tanzania for an edu- ciety.
ly oonceive today of the situs- If the purpose of the Faculty :es~~! w:od=~ · cations! system consistent in
tion where management organ- Senate is to be a parallel arm
every way with Tanzanian SGizes the unions. It is obvious as regards the conduct of the matter to treat But, the goal ciety-with its . roots and with
that employees (faculty) would affairs of the University, then here is a highly important one, its goals. Dr. Fafunwa is 00.
need to have a separate struc- it is clear that the Faculty Sen· namely the choosing of the ad- viously ooncemed w i t h the
ministrative figures wbo have need fo tsil · ed
ti
·
lure, completely unrelated to ate must be completely re- control over budgetary and
r
or~
uca on m
the administrative hierarchy . moved from any participation other matters of significance.
Nigeria to the Nigerian student
And, if the faculty is to be rep- by members of the appointed
and his society.
resented by a smaller elected administrative staff. This is renOn .the other band, the FacOn a very practical level,
Lockwood Library is again
group, this smaller group must dered di16cult because members ulty Senate, regardless of how however, this is not well reoog- faced with the problem of lack
be quite clear as to its oonstitu- of the adlninistrative staff still it is oonstituted, is somewhat nized by two elements very im- of space for its burgeoning
-ency. It also must be clear as consider themselves faculty peripheral to the management portsnt to the educations! sys- books and bound joumala oolto its authority. It seems likely members in many caaea. On the of the University and IDSY best terns in the developing world : lections. . . . (Earlier) Lockthat the authority of any Fac- other band, if, regardless of its be viewed as giving a type of the general poputsce of the dif- wood attempted to solve this
ulty Senate must, perforce, be mode of oonstitution, the Fac- democratic facade to the work- ferent areas and the expatriates problem by shifting parts of the
severely limited.
ulty Senate is really - an un- ings of the University. In addi- attached in various ways to journal oollection to the Bell lo • - l y Worthwhile?
wi.eld;v body with little-ooncrete tion, ..the existence of a Senate these educations! systems.
Annex of Lockwood Library,
If the value of the Senate is function to perform, it might be oould reduce the flexibility of
Ten )'ears after lndepend- from which daily retrieval is
limited, then the next.QUE8tion suggested that the Faculty Sen- adm i nistrative personnel in ence, In&amp;ny of the peoples in available. However, faculty and
that needs to be asked is wheth- ate be aboliabed.
dealing with ticklish situations. Africa aJe still saddled - by student outcries pressured the
er the whole undertaking of setWhat alternative mechanism An elective mechanism would choice- with educations! ·sys- Library to give up student aeatting up a Faculty Senate, .with is available for faculty partici- mean that the administrative tems which aJe in many ways ir.g, jam-in bookstscks, add exits committees and 8\lb.com- pation in the oonduct of Uni- personnel would only have one dysfunctions! with their needs trashelves,decreaaeaislespace, ·
' mittees and oflicera and the rESt, versity affairs? The simplest oonstituency and that would be as they themaelves perceive and decentralize parts of the
is really a worthwhile endeavor way to do this may be by re- their electors, not the local them and their goals as they oollection (mainly the, Library
for faculty members wbose pri- • introducing .the ooncept that at newspapers, the Governor's of- themselves express them. When Stud ies Laboratory in Harrim&amp;ry respoDSlbility and inter- least the lower adlninistrative fice, local political figures, alum- I say by choice I mean that the IDSD) to keep the oollections at
esta lie in academic areas. What positions should be elected by ni groups , demonstrating stu- students and their parents still Lockwood "intsct But we have
alternative is conceivable in or- the faculty with which they aJe dents, or other such prESSUre perceive formal education-eo- now run out of options.
der foe the faculty to make concerned . 'Ibe departmental groups:pecially of an acad!'lnic typeknown its views and, indeed, chairman should be 1'esponsible
It may be argued that this as the route to success in life,
We must face-up to the fact
have a more substantial role in to and serve at the pleasure of would merely be returl)ing to a with success viewed in terms of 1 that last year's hysteria did not
decision-In&amp;king? This calls for the departmental faculty. And, more antiquated sl&lt;ltus quo 8nd the white-roltsr job which dur- solve anything; it merely posta re-anslyais o( the rol'"' of ad- simitsrly, the dean of the fac-· that the professionalism re- ing colonial times oonferred the · poned the problem. And once
ministrative levels of the Uni- ulty should have as his con- quired in today's administra- higbest status possible for a again, due to the 1lOriDal increversity.
stituency the faculty of the tive world w.ould be inoompati- "native." Those who have mental growth of the ~s
Take, for eiiiiDPie, the ad- achool of whicb he is the ad- ble with this type of arrange- "made it'' this way 6nd it in oollections, we-are at the pomt
ministrative desisn!'tion of ministrative bead. ThiS would ment. But, in spite of the their own interESt to perpet,. wherewemustmakesomebard
dean. In the psst, the .full title . be more efficient and would proliferation of administrative uate the system and its reward and fast decisioll&amp; 'Ibe Library
was often dean of the faculty. avoili the problem of having a
personnel, the need for faculty structure. There aJe valid rea- is attempting to pt a dialogue
This implies that the dean rep- duplicate but independent participation i•. patently deni- sons why it is "better" to he a under way !'!"""'f faculty, stu,_ts the faculty and is elect- structwe, the Faculty Senate, oostrated by the feeling that a civil servant . than a farmer dents, and librarians in an efed by its members. This obvi- in addition to the totally ap- new type of Faculty Senate in In&amp;ny areas of Africs.
fort to came up with a workmust be a-eated and institution- lmplicriono for ·
able solution. So, "'let'o throw
alized. Perhaps the time baa
More important for us on out tJ:le h_Yster;i"'! and input
oome to ......,valuate the wbo1e this side of the material gap- some ra hon!lh ty to ..tve a
~on of faculty participa- 'widening at an increasing rate problem that IB a commonplace
between the rich and poor of !""'.theae days " ' - all libra!"this world-is the role we. play lea SOOill!r oc later outpow their
in perpetuating these dysfunc. quarters! . .
.
-T~e.line .&lt;l'ubl.lcaP.on of
tiona! educational systems. It
is more ~P!'rtant for us simply
UmvaB~ty Libraries)
"Printmaking As all Art because it IS more appr'opnate
Form," a seH-instzuc:tional unit to our endeavor&amp; to change our
in the study of graphics, will be own attitudes than to attempt
lll!t up in the Harriman Art Li- to change tbose more rightly
brary December 7-18. The In- the concern of their own people. ·
'Ibe Faculty Senate Execustructional Communication It is important for us also be.r6entsr invites everyone inter- cause it bas implications for tive Committee voted unanimously last lldlth to urge the
) eeted to participate.
Ainerican education. There aJe
Among the graphics used tbose who balie\oe that educa- SUNY central administration
with lhe unit are woodc\l,ts, tion in this ClOillllly is rapidly to talie no. further action in the
~ UPAUIS aDIJ'Oit: a.... ~
etcbinga, and lithopapbs. 'Ibe. ~. ·if it is not aiready, case of tri'a Hayeoi Hall 45.
~..t,.-;~ ~ a-y, a-._...,.._, .._, •··
clysfunctionai in terms of our
'Ibe approved motion was inl'flfn'OOIUJ'ITr: ~ L. 11--., B . . B.
"''''l sooietaJ development:
troduced by Prof. Marvin Feld·
~urntO .urt"DD"1 s - II. . . . ..
be on , _ at the Art LiAny American with any de- IDSn and secondecl by Prof.
brary Reserve DeslL
gree of sophistication at all who J'l~ Garver.
By. FLOYD A. GREENE

.;.tcmn,

:;::=.1':""'.!';

ctTTEWPQ·TNTS

u:'i.U:

LockWOod Has
Spare Worry

·Gnqmcs EXhibit

Support fior 45 .

:;aa:u•:

u..,.

~~':'~~

�_,_3,1910

A
·New Kind Of .
Shakespeare
By~~ER
Sbabapeue's art, like ideal
loWI, bu beml "en ewr-llsed
mark that loob en taDpesls

andis_llhalooa._But_
kMI bu beml ·reinterpreted
throulb the caiturlea. So,. too,

Sbabopeue can be node8Ded
and recreated inlo a form more
conaenial to &lt;iur time.
BelieYing that Sbakespearean
drama can be used in a new
¥lay to expre118 the feelings of .
today'&amp; world, Gordon Rogolf,

visitiDB associ11_te profeB&gt;r of
u-tre. and director of the
n-tre w~ production
"Shakespeare Heaven - A
Feast-~" has stripped
century theatriciility
away 1
like
Victorian 'laciDs,
freeiDs the actor and the· audience from physiall and psychological confinement
The result is an unconventional, refresbina~to
u-tre and to
a
kind of "continuiDB
"
in which the audience will participate - an invigoratiDB theatricalevml
The event will be staged
Wednesday, December 9,
through Saturday, December
12, at 8:30 p.m. in the n-tre
Studio, Harriman Library. Students. $.50; all otbers, $1.
Sprinpoonl to IIMII...tian
'"lbe u-tre arts have been
slowest. to allow themselves the
privilege which the otber arts
have, of becoming a spring·
board to imaginative expresaion," aays Rogoff. Preparing
such a fertile ground for imaginative expression, he has ereated an unsbuctured environment, freed from the formalities
of the three-act play with its
imposed interpretations, in
which the actor is ting. Looeely
speaking, the "theme" o~ ~
goff's Shakespearean evenmg JB
"the rulers and the ruled,"
which to bim suggests that the
actors' feelings and wbinJB will
contlol the situation. How the
aud\ence will respond to their
"tyranny" remains to be seen.
Interaction is the key wordthere will be give and take
among actors lind between actOrs end audience. Spectators
can freely mingle with the players, walt about, and exchange
words. At a couple paints dur-

so much

-

able as life itaelf end will be a
warm. vital pagMDl
" " ' - o( tho A;l;lfNc;h
What is the pW'Jl(8! of this
new approach? "We want to
deal with the problem of group
ensemble inventions by findiDB
things the actor wants to say
and do and giving tbem the
support of a great text," says
Rogoft'. What greater text than

Shakespeare, and what better
place than "'-campus, a "learning situation, where there is no
interest in 'suocessful' production ~in work which will help
the actors develop more perresources in acting?"
As a leaining situation, Mr.
Rogoft' sees this as invaluable.
"Students will be far better
equipped to deal with a straight

By JUDITH WOHL
"We tried. We tried every whi&lt;:h
woy to bring peace to our land.
We protuud; we marched; we

':'i.t1L~e~~e':ie a:~J'~~

th:

Droft. We tried everythina but
· ·t · th Pr ide to din
""!.'w"'!u have ':, e one1 e too, ~~
women with one foot in the kitch·
en and oru foot in the world.
We're impatient with th.e hcuh

W;!,e"r.te~~/:,~n;ee.,:;.,

----

BUO:'o.

t=

pouibk ... to •tir thing• up, to
stew about what moue,.., to go on
seruing Peace."
Peace de ~':"ce.Cookbook II

Mrs. Joyce Reichert, wife of
a U/B physics professor, is lzying, top; it's the whole idea bebind her "Send Gifts of Peace"
bible of wares in Norton Lobby, any Wednesday in December. Her enlelprise, Lt! DOVE,
is Buffalo's only non-&lt;lOIDIDercial peace boutigue_ and is offering good·quahty stationery,
posters, jewelry, scarves, decals. etc., at low cost.

sonal

petition, sponsored by the Buffalo New Mobilization Committee to End the War, and invites them to take free pempblets on the draft, civil liberties
and peace. She is also selling
inexpensive copie's of The
Draft?, a . report prepared for
the Peace Education Division
of the American Friends Ser·
vioe Commission, which argues
against conscription, and In the
Name of America, a "record of
y .S. military behavior in Viet.
nam com~ with the laws
of war which are binding on all
Americans," commissioned by
Clergy and Laymen Concerned
about Vietnam (CALCAV) .
Symbols used on the ptt
items were donated by artists
around the counlzy, and many
manufacturers and printers
have either _given their work
free, or at nominal oosl For
example, Thomas Benton, son
of Thomas Hart Benton. has
proffered a hand-tiCreelled post.
er, suitable for framing, which

play of any playwrigbl" As for
Shakespeare, it can make bis
works more accessible to the
20th century audience, and in
a real way, the new approach
comes closer in epirit to the
original Elizabethan productions.
Rogoft' calls this "theatre at
its happiest . . . highly serious
and highly oullageous, inever-

~Bl,"i~~."but theatre
· The actors include Sam Abbate, Maury Chaytin, Margot
Fein, Rict Jacobs, Jeffrey J-gi, Ava Kaplan, Barry Koran,
Carol Laverne, Tom Mardiroaian, Michael Schwartz, Karen
Shave!', Michael Sldarolf, Douglas Woolley, and Jc&amp;ph -Zavisca.

'Telephone Lecture NetuxJ~
Is Educational Party Line
U, with sidelong glanoe,

from 36 hospitals to the prMeDt

the Weekly Communique,
you're not alone. The medical

and Northwestern Peomsylvania.
·

:f.~~:!~ so.~I·~~::b~ ~&amp;':t :'tf~ ::,!~~i~~ ~'H~'NE~~~~ ~~!:n~-se~~

audience, ~WI by such Association; end various groups
cn.• .._-~ fare •• "We'll around the city, such as the
~to'drint
ae you Quakers, Ethical Culturists and
depart." and ''l ·tbink, sir, you Unitarians,. have ~ted to
can eat DODO of this homely have her bring the Ji!t 1lems to
meal"
·
their meetings. Cricket Ticket
Acton will ~ at liberty to on Main Slzeet has a full line
c::boc.e from an~ of propo. • of the peace things. and Mrs.
including belts, .knives, coats. Reichert will also sell tbem at
hala, ID1lCh in the way a child her home by appointment (call
-in 8D 1lll8lrudiued ..... is al- 836-331111).
1-.1 Ill c:boca! the toy wblch
beat ...U..bi&amp; mood at the me&gt;Profit&amp; are to the Bufmml
falo Peace Council and WILPF
1
511
• 1
.. __.
H!~~"1''•.2_n_!er.uand
. ati~l
. Tbe oalY .rule of the pme is ........ - .... c_,
.,,_..
that Shateapeare be~ dom), for suc;ll:::;'peaceful"
Linea have beml c t - from ...........,. as 1!!-M fare. for
and 801111e~a,oftal at speakers and mailinp. As Mrs.
_.__.__will
came not Reichert-- commercial com•by the IJtend
._ of warda and panies are-~
llling peace symbols
their Cllllllat, but rau- from f.,. profit, and "so can""'" tnthe way they are~ timately, obe hopes. Buffalo
' l b i a - a peat deal of free. will have II&amp; _ , peace Cll!llter.
dom, but - . , are "not totaUy Students can: meamrbile use
~from the belp and lllP" t t - Bifta to a mare .Jl"'"!'"'al·
port of ~"
profit, obe feels, b)' sivinll them
Tbe ~ too, is at IJb. to - I a a Cbiietuias .,. ·
erty Ill oe11oct and reopCIIld at Chem1kbh - t s . thereby
will Tbey can moYe lbroulh QOIIDillllllcating the ideal of
the-m, Jib~en peace in en eilectiw way..
old European •
~
WhileabeeapitalizMCIII~"'-vvng. buiin11 but
the loola of peace. the pntty lady
are mmian activities -.tly moved here from
and emotion&amp;.
Cleveland also .... _,my
Tbe evming is as llllPftlllict.. Ill elcn her "nlpeal the draft"

deep

-for-

~

«..,....
\

for $.15, and a gold iiletal pendant m· the •0
of the poster
"War is not ~ for children and otber living things"
for $3.00 An attractive wall
hanging is printed with the
aame in 17 lanjluages ($.25).
Heotts, - . , . _ "-bol

v,...

A jigsaw puzzle of a black
and a white baby playing togetber
in the shapes
of hearts.
and the peace
symbol. There is the PetJCtJ rh

has.=

~Ce&gt;M($3~',

ttn-:r
f

series aeems quite fori&gt;iddiDB to ·

the lay reader. But the idea.
behind the p ............ ~ not aS
esoteric as misbt appear, and
they are beq generated for
the benefit of all

mE
ATURES
r n.l
-

TURETbe TNETWELEP HRKON.E

0

18 8i~lc;.

quick. good-taatiDB meals or to en old-faahioned party-line;
the housewife wbo also demon- what is aaid at one point is
strates, writes letters to Wash- heard at .all points. The Net.
ingtoo. and otlwwiae spends wodt a11owa ---..~ communher.18.time Clll -,........_
. . . ....... pur·-~-.....
icatiCIII betwes
medical and
8111
paramedical _ . t s and health
For men. tbere are. tie tacts per11011De1 wbo wish to update .
end ai1t lies with the pe&amp;oe their ~ tDowledge
symbol, six-foot -.ves. and and akiiJa.- ListeDen can query
key dlaina. There are Christ- the _ . at any time from
mas cards, bUmper stickers, their receiW., location. The
window deca1a, pana, earringa. ContinuiDB Education Departcaleodars, potiWS, buttoos and meal&amp; in the Health Sciencee
date boob. ~ a ~tful Center ol SUNYLAB recruit
........... ostenaibly anti-war, · the speaten for tliii proplllll8,
wblch llllllliiiM to «aave· the which are~ by the R&amp;childnm," too, with ita mea- gioual Medical ~ for
apinst !Mving childrea WMB~l N- York. Participaalone and beiDs ciiabonMt with tiCIIl in the - - . which ~
them.
in Septanber 1968, haji pown

Since one medical C888 can ·
p,_.t many problema requirIDs the services of ~
from diverse diaciplinM, some
of the programa olfer en .....,._
lap of fields. For inllancl-, a ,

_._

011

"Multi-DIMliDiinarY

Care of the patient with
aimed at the pb.yaiciao, nurse, dietitian, . .
cal therapist, occupatloi:aal
~ and ~ ~
Thus, the Telepbone Netwadt
is help'-- foster a temn ~

s~n~~oe· is

proach ;;"medical care.

·

. ....-

·

ADOtber function of the .)let..
~ is to alford cnodlt for..._. .
"-'-~ta
.~
__.. !"' . ........
-:r ~
.~
memberahip

m

respec:tiw 1110- '

f~ organizdiona, P!8_ , liceusure, .,. be OODiidered for recopUtion awards. '
In the ·Austnlian outbect;
where it is impoasihle for chiidrea to 118! to achool, radio!ld
communicltion 81DODII teaebar
and· c:bildrm belps break the
harrier of isolaliCIII. And similarly, the isolatiCIII ol the medical ....m from olbon in his
_ , ·and ancillary fields can
be dioaolved by the Telepbone
Leclure Network.

�8
PERB~V~--------~----~------(c&lt;mtinued from

pGI/0 6,

col. 6)

. will alfiliation with a larpr
stall
•
• Each•chapter will decide union maire much difference.
its priorities and make its own
· Collective barg'ainina is a agreements in campus-level neway of life ' today. Whether 'gotistions.
workers, autoworkers, or even
you're a machinist or a mathe• Decisions in state and clerical civil service employees,
matician, you are not aoinl to campus level negotiations will . will he greatly concerned with
get what you want without ne- he decided by SUNY profes- how the. Lesislature tzeats
ptiating for it throuch an- exState University of 'New York
perienced bargai.oing .apnt.
sio~~
will provide professors.
'The Public EmplOyment Re- whatever is necessary - legal
Much has been said of the
lations Board hils created a bar- help, negotiators, research as- alleged 8\ICa!88 or the uninn at
~ ·&gt;mit or 13,800 faculty
sistants, etc. -to SUNY pro- the City University of New
and profeaional stalf of the fessionals in both state-wide YO&lt;k in bringing about an unState Uliivenlity.
usually high salary structuni. It
and campus negotiations.
Baaiatlly tms ..-... that
is not clear to what extent the
profl&amp;i&lt;mal employees will no
union was responsible for this.
. _ take a "wait and aee"
But, in any event, the record
attitude towards their aalaries,
does not aeem especially imretiJ:ement, health iiisurance,
pressive, quite apart from New IIVG: Po.
By NEWI'ON GARVER
tenure, merit iaises. and virYork Citr living costs, when
tually every other coodition ,....
We have recently been in- one considers: 1 ) the heavy
dulged with much mail about teaching loads at that- univerlatin&amp; to their work.
It alao m.ns that the Chan· the fa&lt;thcoming PERB elec- sity, 2) the total ahsenc:e of reoellor and his administration tion. 'The mail has 80 far all search facilities, 3) the very
will he required to hilatarally been partisan, and four oiit of slow proinotions, 4) the salary
discuss these items and enter the five choices have been structure which is )lased on seninto a binding apeement with urged upon us (each in its own iority rather than academic perBy SUSAN GREENWOOD
your bar~ repreaentative. envelopes) with all sorts of rea- formance, and 5 ) the non-transRe~StMI
- Bargaining is debate, trad- sons and slogans. 'The fifth aJ. ferability of retirement penA "jack of all trades" is pering, compromise, one--upman- ternative, since it will fill no sions.
haps the best way to desCribe
'ship, clevemess, knowledge of one's coffers and create no new
On the other hand, our aver- Mrs. France Pruitt and her
your subject, patience, frustra- political force, has not received age salary levels at SUNY at dual job as foreign student
tion, conflict, penonalities.
promotional support. 'The fifth BuJfalo are very good, and re- and foreign scholar advisor. She
Developing demands, pre- alternative is to choose- at cent performance p r o b a b I y sees her job as being a "mother,
sentinc them, and reoearching least for the present; We """ could not have been improved legal advisor, emotional and
the subject is only the first vote differently next time if even by a strong union. Salar- marriage counselor, confidante
step. Facing your adversary need b&amp;-to have no bargaining ies here for 1970-71 are in the and cultural translator" for forand making these demands a agent. This alternative appeals top category according to AA· eign students and-foreign visireality is what counts. Here is to me as the most sensible for UP ranking for every rank
wherJ! you need people who a university center, and in par- other than that of instruotor, tors.
Being foreign-born herself,
have developed a specialized· ticular for faculty at a univer- and the average increase for Mrs. Pruitt understands many
skill after countless hours of sity center.
'
the current year over the pre- of these problems first-hand.
consUltation at the bargaining
For a long time it appeared vious year was better than 10 She was 16 when her family
table. 'The Civil Service Em- as though the alternative of not per cent (about 50 per cent came to Ardmore, Pennsylployees Aasociation has that having a bargaining agent above the national average rate vania, from Brussels, where she
kind of person. CSEA does not · would not really he available to of increment).
was born. And after two short
claim to have a complete know- us. The reason was that it apWhile the uhion is most un- years of high school and accliledge of the problems facing peared as ' though the PERB likely to influence the average matization, she started college
SUNY professionals. We have would follow the NLRB policy level of our salaries, it may well at Swarthmore.
.
not taken positions on matters of not including the choice "NO allect the relative salary struoEven though her college maallecting your work. 'The feel- AGENT" on a run-off ballot. ture. Relatively little power is jor was biology, her interest
ings of one group of SUNY With such a rule in effect, we needed to do that. Here the
career have always been in
professionals on a particular is- could avoid having a bargain- pressures will clearly he in the and
helping foreign students. She
sue may not he shared by '!"· ing agent only if a majority of direction of salary uniformity started as a part-time foreign
other group. This principle ap- those voting voted for no agent both across campuses of the student advisor at U / B in 1966
plies to all areas.
on the first ballot. Fortunately, State University of New York
brought with her experience
The other organizations however, PERB has not fol- system and within this campus. butthe
University of Delaware
through their position papers lowed this rule, and JNill in- It is likely there will also he at
and
the International Hospitalover the last several months clude the choice for no agent in pressures for promotion based ity Center
in Chicago.
have put .t he cart before the a run-off election, if that alter- on seniority ratller than aca·
In 1968, she started working
horse so to speak. CSEA feels native should he one of those demic performance. While per- full-time
and added a new title
that positions taken on cert,ain receiving the first or second haps harmless at a college, 1and jobscholar ad·
issues by the other orgaruza- highest number of votes. With such salary uniformity would visor. Her foreign
dual role gives her
i.ioils have usurped the prerog- this rule the option of having seriously compromise the possi- two bosses, two
offices and many
ative of SUNY professionals.
· no ~gaining agent is a genu- bilities for recruitment and for duties but brings her close to
The time to take a position, ine rather than an illusory aJ. recognition of intellectual dis- the world of the foreigner comtinction that are a prerequisite ing to America to teach or
in CSEA's view, comes after temative.
If an agent cannot improve for achieving escellence at a study.
open meetings of all professionals on all campuses to develop fa cui ty salaries, the other &lt;en- university center.
So I, too, write as a partisan,
ideas and solicit problems, and tative arguments for having a
talks with familafter a mail solicitation in union are inoonclusive. The de- and urge my faculty and staff iarity about the
1,000 foreign
whi_ch every member in the bar- cisive argument against all four colleagues to vote for .,NONE" students and 200 foreign
scholgaining unit is given the oppor· contending organizations is that when they get the PERB bal· 8I8 on this campus. Most
of
tunity to make known his feef- . they cannot do so.
lot.
them
have
worked
closely
with
The principal determinant of
ings on any issues. Then and
her and many are her friends.
only then, does the negotiating faculty salar1es on this campus
She always is available for adcommittee of SUNY profes- will he the national salary
vice, information or simply to
sionals elected by the members levels for faculty of comparable
;-lend a listening ear. This inquality,
whether
we
have
a
in the unit review each SUfge&amp;cludes weekends, too, her hustioo, eliminate duplicatiOnS union or not.. National salary
band is quick to poipt out, but
levels
and
the
employment
aland develop a uniform set of
he accepts this good-naturedly,
demands which are promul- ternatives of professors constiThe Millard Fillmore College as do her three sons.
gated to all members for com- tute our most effective defense
Mrs. Pruitt finds both groups
the
spring
seclaas
schedule
for
ment before they are presented against being underpaid. Econwhich she deala more comto the SUNY administration. omists are not agreed on what mester is expected to he avail- with
mitted
to stUdying than most
able
for
general
distribution,
·The prooedure may; he time- effect unions have had on wages
Americans. "Tbey•remore
7.·
consuming; but it does satisfy and salaries. Contrary to pop- December
achievement-oriented,"
she
Advance
registration
(reptscthe vast majority of members in ular impression, in industries
with uruon and non-union set· ing mail registration for most says, and, perhaps, more mathe bargai.oing unit.
terialistic. F&lt;&gt;&lt; this reason, she
students)
is
now
under
way.
tors,
wages
for
both
have
genCSEA- as a bargai.oing agent
Currently enrolled students
has not and will not "f""' to a - erally moved hand-in-hand. But may pick up- registration ma- ~t ':"rn~':i'!~d s~=
contract without havmg first whatever the general effect of teriala in Hayes- A from 9 a.m.- ments 0&lt; as socially concerned.
submitted the provisiooa of the unions on wagea may he, all 9 p.m. on weekdays through "We have a hard time getting
contract to every member for economists agree that weak
them involved in other things
11.
ratification. SeU'determination ~ve no effect on the December
RegistratioD materials may besides their studies," she
has been the key to CSEA's Jevel~ges. And it is Virtual- he returned according to the notes. rcertain that a union such as
as !III employee organ- ly
She and her ol6c:e are trying
that contemplated for State same schedule, through DecemUniversity of New York facul. her 1-4. If materiala are retumed to work on the student's wboJe
CSEA takes the followinll JX&gt;- ty will he weak under all com- by mail, they must he post.. education rather than just the
aition on organization &amp;tl-ucture peting alternatives for repreaen· marked no ' later than Decem- academic aspecla. One P1011f11111.
for SUNY .profMBionala:
ber 13.
.
tation.
· • Separate and au!AlnOmoUS
Students newly accepted for
It Will he weak f&lt;&gt;&lt; several
can famllies. 'The lnternationaf
• chapters or SUNY profM&amp;ion· reasons. First, i\ CiUI exert no
Group of. the UjB Women's
ala at eac;h campus.
direct economic _ . . , on the
-Club
which has a program
• Each ~pter w1ll nomin- souroe of ultimata _ authority ary 11, at which time they will
ate and elect its own olficers over wap8-1181111!ly, the State receive priority resistzation ma- where American families adopt
foreign
studenb! and have them
and coaduct its own ~; J..ecialature. (A strike would
..-fOP-dinner at least llboe a
eood&gt; chapter will recei.., a ctu. he illepl.) As a polifical lobmonth
"""""
closely with her
from
3-&amp;
p.m:
on
Janliary
14
rebolte .from CSEA and u. the by. it will alao he weak since
·oiiJco.
the. masimJun IMIDhenlhlp of IUid 16.)
lunda aa it fit.
MFC
~
begin
MOD&lt;Wy,
• Each d&gt;apter will! include the union is far 1oM tbul one
.,., lllolum
Most fore.ip , otudents haw
both faculty . and prof.mooal per cent of the electorate. NO&lt; January 26.

CSEA

~r~~==r.

g:t-

No Agent!
_ol,.,._

Versatile _Foreign Advisor
Helps Students &amp; Faculty

Alwo~-~=-

MFC Slates
Registration

i':a':

::...:.:uM=.:. f.::

~~~==ti

!c:..=.m!:.~t=wi~ ~

found .AmeriCa to he a aood
place, Mrs. Pruitt reports. Only
5 to 10 per cent or them return
to their native counay immediately after o b taining a degree, thoul!h many others ,....
tum after working several
years. S o m e of those wbo
return at once are required to
by the terms or the governmental programs that brought them
here oril(inally. Reasons for
staying here differ but mainly
have to do with better living
conditions a n d aalaries, Mrs.
Pruitt believes. Some of the
students are also over-trained,
she has found, and have no outlet for their specialties in their
home countries.
Very few fail to get their degrees because they don't like it
here or can't succeed. One reason, Mrs. Pruitt says, is that a
specisJ effort is made by the
University to accept only people they are sure will he able to
make the grade academically.
After all, the student "says
goodbye to his f a m i I y and
friends and comes to America
to get a degree, and it's a terrific blow to everyone if he goes
back without it."
Many times, Mrs . Pruitt
says, it's the family wbo saves
to get the student to the U.S.
In recent years, fewer students
have come over on grants from
their own governments. How-·
ever, most of them receive an
assistantship from our government when they are accepted
into graduate schOol.
Afrbn Clllp

Mrs. Pruittalao notes a trend

toward more students from Af.

rican nations. These people
have ~ a gap in her education, she says. "I went to
good high schools and collegee,
but know nothing about Africa
or Latin America." To bridge
the gap, she is taking a course
.in African ~ and
finds it fascinatinc.
Every semester she tries to
take a COWIIe, with the ~ or
gettinc her mas.t er's degree.
HCIWil\'el', she finds llil her BUbjects very interestinc and had
a hard .time decidina on anthropology. Currently tboullh. ohe
is' just taking ..,....._that interest her and can fit into her
schedule.
.

Fulbrights .Open
Information and rePf;ration
forms for Fulbridlt ~­
ties abroad, incfudint university lectureohips and J)Cl8tdoo.
toral - . d i , are avaliable at
the Olll!&gt;e or the. Paculty FuJ.
brillht Advm, 306 'I'oorn8ld
Hall. or may he obtained from
the
Fulbright-Hays Pro2101 Conatitution ~-.
Wasbington, D.C. 20U8.
· • Lectureablps_ are available .in
. biOlot!Y, cbemisby. IICOIIOIIIIC8
and lluslnesa administration.
engiMerinc. the teachln, .ot
Eqlieb aa a foreign Jan..-,
Ulerature, mathematics IUid
pbyalcs.

a.;;.;

�---3,1910

\

WmtActing?

ThreeWm

You'D, Have .

-~In

To Gamble ·

MootCaut

u you .....t-. take Adina in

the lprina you will have to
pmble Clll ·lt.
a-- al the blab demand
for 8diDa _.._ lllld the amaiJ
abe al lila U..tie faculty, the
Plopam in 'I'Matre will flam
D11W GDMiiln P*- in n-tre
108 (BAS[C ACTING) by
_ , . alaiottay.
Dr. Wmd Wlllimnaoll, chair- •
lllllll al the~ aplained
that be hid UUI8 diOice. "'t's a
deopelatioa-. nUiy. 'lba-e
• - - " " " - - - eoot. ,_., . . . _ are atudenll GD .-mpua wbo - '&gt;11-'71 have beaD tryinll -l'CCeMf!•lly ll::!'·- to . . into that Goune 1m three
__..,..,running. It is DOt
pcaible to IMcb thaD 16
people ell'eclively In one aeoUjB's Basketball Bulls products of Coach Len Serfus.
tiCID, lllld - bne been
able to have than three hopefully having resolved the tini's program (Steve Waxman,
term there will black athlete problem wbich Ron Gilliam, and Guy Vickers)
be two. Eaob year- tum aw&amp;,y plagped last year's campaign- have transferred to other camopeDed the -.on last night puaes.
~ 500 atudeDIB."
'th s
· M"""?rial
·
Captain Roger Kremblas
...:.~tboulh the Program in WJ • rracuse m.
'11ielltre will UIIIP its own up- Aud!~· .'I'IJ!!Y ~continue (6-2, 190, Bulfalo's Bishop TiperdaM majora to the COUI9e against 'b11-time opponents mon) ·returns the best sooriDg
where . - . , . , all other stu- Maryllllld (College Park, Sat- punch. 12.8 Junior Larry Willdents will have to palt;cipote in urday) and North Carolina bur (6-0 100 Chittenango) will
a game al c:blmce. To do. ao, a ( Ch_arlotte, Monday) before start with Kremblas in backatudent .-cl aaely register bia p~g the ca~pus_ opener court. Sophomores Tim Lennon
name. ~ lllld local address against patsy UruverBity of To- (5-10, 160, Buffalo's St. Jowith the n-.tre alllce in 28N ronto (Clark Gym, next Tburs- seph's High) and AI Delman
HarrimaD before Wednuday, ~ius maiden
bead (6-0, 165, New Hyde Park) will
seeson as .
be the back-ups. When Muto
Dc«mber 9. Successful students will be DOtified after the coadl, _Ed ~uto bas been sati&amp;- needs a ~ressing defensive
lied With bia p...,._.,n camp - ··-' · ·
B
H kl
but "realizes thathls rebulldiDg a-~ JU lOr ruce uc e
program will take time."
(5-11, 165, Leroy ) will come
able to mnleDd with during
The Bulls were 11-11 a year on.
regiatmtion.
Senior Tony Ebner ( 6-7, 210,
"No one is happy with this ago during tbe campUll oonllicts
and
only a few of that squad Allentown, Pa. ) will start at
anancement." OOIDIDellted Dr. are back.
~ of the best center with relief help_ from
Williamson, "but I am afraid it
will ~ until we have substantially more faCulty than we
have now, as well as more
The clevelopment of the,
'Thelitre laOOratory during the
coming year will alleviate matters somewhat, since a number
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
students about departmental
R.portw St.JI
of lhe people involved in it will
teach achng, but the space
Arriving at a university with ~:ra~sr: ~~~~.;!:~
problem may be harder to a student body of 23,000 when hers showed up.
solve."
It's with the depar tments
your old campus. bad only 1;500
is a shock. Tbe masses of peo- that transfers have the most
trouble,
STAB officers have
ple, quagmire of red tape and
problems of finding housing found. These problems begin as
soon
as
the students are ad- and friends can be bewildering.
But this is the situation faoed mitted because a letter of acceptance
is only an admission
by the 1,230 transfer students
"To protect students from UD· who started at U fB this fall. It to the University, not to a spewarranted changes concerning is one wbich will confront more cific department. This fact
the date of fiilal examinations and more transfers each year.
catches many transfers by surand to clarify some questions,"
Under the long-range policy .Prise when they try to get into
the Division of Undergraduate at U jB, for every student who il department, especially one in
Studies bas ~ the fol- reaches the junior year by in- the 90cial sciences, and are relowing regulations: ternal promotion, another will jected.
1. Once a flDal eDmination is be admitted as a transfer. This
Credit evaluation may be the
scheduled, all changes of piltce year 1,500 fre$men were ad- worst" problem of all. Most
must be approved by the Oftice mitted and 1,230 transfers - a transfers enter the University
of Scheduliftg, 2 Hayes Hall.
long way from the 1,700 fresh- at the beginning of their junior
2. ~ for a change of men and 300 transfers of three year ~ to gmduate in
.another tw&lt;f.Tbat is, until they
date al a achedukd flDal eDII1 years ago.
.
will DOt be CIJII8idered by UnTo solve the transfers' basic have their credits evaluated.
derpaduate Studies "unleoa the problems, a student-t&lt;Hitudent
First of all, there is a long
ina tructor, after ClDIDIIUltetio!t group - Student Transfer Ad- delay in having this done. Some
with bia chalrmaD. can after a viaory Board (STAB) -was students haven't been evaluated
valid , _ aa to why the ex- started two years ago. It re- for more than a year after aramination canDOt be given at ports many suoceoses in helping riving here, though this is an
the date ecbeduled. Further, new students adjust.
extreme; most get the results
IIU&lt;ba ~-include the
This past year, for eDIIIPle., d . their first semester. Deinformatioa that aU students STAB avcceeded-with tbe la~AB says, are the result
~do ..,.,_,t to IIU&lt;b a
help of tbe Campus and Oft- of all the steps in the ·evaluacbanpl."
Campus Housing ollices - in tiGD process. First, Admiaaions
In regard to flDal eDilliDa- placing 480 trensfers in dormi- lllld Rea&gt;rds puts the transcript
tioa amftlcl8, Dr..a..rtea H. v. toriee lllld in helping others find · info'rmation on evaluation
forms, then those are sent to
Ebert, acliDa deiD. bas " ......... ~Ia. .
ly" ~•acuity to raolve
'lba-e waa also a ''meat lllld the Division of Undergraduate
Studies. Undergraduate Studies
adied
problema which
pots,:::"..J'i.;!.~::i aeaaion evaluates all the ·non-major
foroa
ts to take three
this
•
.
to fit into
nala Oil dq. "It may be the bu8y livee of transfers, COUl8M lllld tben ships the eval.-lble to Mliln a atudeDt to many al whom normally bold uation kwm to the major department for Us reactions.
a dlhast I8Ctba al a a&gt;Une, down a job.
Mcmtbe can be lost in the prooto live him • --..up - ' ·
- . ADd atudento oometimes
lllttiCID, "" lind oCMr ioaluticma
..,.,........ to both the ~
fiDd
taking COUl8M
The orientation, however, they dCID't .-d.
tor lllld the atudent," Ebert
· didD't 10 aa plaDi&gt;ed - a fact .... Tiler~~
Wbm the evaluatioa is ClDIDl·
"In tha ~ that an eDDii- wbkil ..... to • dilcuBaD al
lllltiCID Cllldliet, lmalving three oome al ~- ..-;n,prob- JJieted. tbae
. may be mare probI +tl •• 8Cheduled Clll ODe lema fldDg tnmafln: lllllDJ.. lai.. Aa Taylor GPialna. . "the
U~ty ·tt'Jl ~all
dq, - - - be ...... the lllu- - - lllld Credit evaJuatiCIIl.
A"ccordlng to Joel Tayb, your credits lllld It dole; 6ut !n
dialnnaD allft'AB;tbe ~­
wbkil will ......_ to ~ daD conference pUnlaa In." -r.,yJar Ia a vic&gt;
tha "" Ill lind ......... vited ....-tat~wa flam .m Ia '
with the~ lnvol..a." ...... - t o tUk to lDaJmlng tim al ~ pndice blnwelf. At

Three UiB' a atud!mt. ceived awards for their particill&amp;tioa In a ftllloual round of
the lli'IO NatiCIIllol Moot Court ·.

~-~held In~ in

The Bulfalo team received
""" award for bMt writteD . .
. aenbjjl
brief. The
- withatudents
five vol...al_a
qal treetiae lllld a p~
their brief, which superior to the entrieo
eeYeD
._ - : .._ other law schools flam Nc.... ~~and and upatate New

-1"-.-....,..
-·---•-·
Basketball Bulls_AreRebuilding.

seclious--

~w:t-ww:.=~

sophBill Stsrk (6-9, 225,Nortb
Canton, Ohio).
Tbe key to Buffalo's succeas
in '70-'71 is soph center Curt
Blackmo
(~ ~ 245 a-"·'..._)
re .,..,,
• ~
who strained a left ankle in pre-.on. His movement is still
limited and a return to full.
time playing status msy take
some time.
Up front, Muto will call on
juniors Neil Langelier (6-4,
195, Moira) and fbil Knapp·
( 6-2, 200, Plainview). Junior
Eric Rasmussen (6-5, 180,
Chittenango) will serve as first
relief in the forecourt.
. Buffalo's chief asset will be
Its team speed, Muto says.
Prior to the holiday recess,
the Bulls play on campus only
next Thursday and next Saturday (Central Michigan).

Bureaucratic Tangles of Transfers·Reduced
· By Actilx! Student-to-Student Committee .

-oe.

Undergrad

Exam Rules

fi.

...,.__

t::.=:.r~

--[-

tbolmeJ-·

=.i2:....: ~tooltotC

~~fi~~J!
~~~~o~

Board at the Law School

In addition to writing the
brief, the students _ _..__._ted
. -......in oral a~Jumenta -before a
mock pellate court, 011 behalf
of a Gctional ciient. In the .
quarter-final round, the Bulfalo
team defeated Boston University, but in the aemi-flDalrouud
the team was defeated by C:rnell. Cornell was the winner in
the final round of the competition.
The b . f
d
fie s. an ora 1 argu~ts dealt With the case of a
fictional newspaper reporter
who was cited for contempt for
refusing to testify during a trial
regarding the identity of bia
news sources.
'The primary is~ues were
whether the newsman was entitled to conceal the identity of
bia informants becauae of the
Constitutional freedom of the
press and becauae of a fictional
ststute which protected the
newsgatberiDg activities of journalists.
The Bulfalo team argued, on
behalf of the reporter, that the
contempt citation was improper. According to their brief, the
reporter did not have to reveal
bia news sources in this particular case becauae the information was not relevant or material for the case being tried
and becauae the reporter was
protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution and
by the fictional statute.
The oral arguments were
held in the Federal Court
Houae in Boston. Judges included members of the Maasa_chuaetts bar and judges of tl!e
Massachuaetts stste courts.

bia junior college, be took a
year of accounting but the
School of Management here
didn't aa:ept it so now be's retsking the whole sequence. "Is
there a real difference between
two-year college COU1'886 and
U(B's or is U/ B just trying to
say there is?" be asks.
STAB, in trying to answer
such questions, hopes to "help
in developing and smoothing
out the system," Taylor says.
Chon~H In the Oflin&amp;
And changes are in the offing.
For next fall's transfer students
Admissions and Records hopes
to be able to provide the nondepartmental evaluation of
transcripts. Bob Anstett, coordinator. of trensfer admissions,
plans that a transcript evaluation will be sent along with
each student's aa:eptsnce letter. ''This way the student can
make a better decision about
whether be wants to go to'U fB
or not," Anstett notes. In the
The U /B chapter of the
future, be also would like Ad- Stste University FederatiGD of
missions and Records to do the Teachers (SUFT) bas elected
deJ""1me!etal evaluation, but a slate of Interim" ...,_ with
this step is still in the planning
""""'"' r ·
stages.
Dr. John V. Huddleston, proSTAB also wants to clevelop ~;,11,::t civil enginoaing, as
a visitation program to twoAlso elected ......., Dr. AnD
YST~dentall bas be- Scott, assistant prot_,. of
come a!lliiated with
Student Engliab, vice preaident; lllld
Aasociation, rather than the Di- Marion Dicbon, assiatsnt to
vision of pndergraduate Stud- the chairman, anthropology,
iea, because this wa1. they ~taryother·tre:,:;. the ...__
"have mare...autonomy. ·
""
..._What TBYicx would like to ter orpnized a committee to
see eVI!IItually ia a separate Of. write a CCIDStitution. This camlice al Tranefer Studellta. Ha mittee will ba chaired by Dr.
eovisiGDa it as a clearing bolwe Stefan Fleiacher lllld co.chahed
for iDbmatioa about tranafen, by Dr. ~ a - . SUFT
for atudent qwwtiGDa lllld ClDIDl· also beard a repod flam their
plain..!!~ aa a ciiDtral plaa! ~ committ.,&gt; on
lor..
with problema. Such sian inequities . . All
an ·alllce cauld aliJo 'lftldt GD tbe TIAA
are receiving a ,
Stsle4ide elfan to help pull Stste ...,..lribution to their '-- lllld four-year i n l l i - tiremslt all2 lllld &lt;JO&amp;.half por
toeatber. He- points out lbd • cent as compared with :16-22 .,
wil-mtiM In aevezlal alala, por cent far the other ............, . ~
including Florida lllld ...__ plana. Correcting
..... ~ . •; ,
ctw.tta. beve ~~~e.a cilba lllld equities is part ol rum~,_-,.~.
they are bilbJy ...,.,.,..rw.
gram for collectiw ~ " ·

Huddleston
Heads SUFT

J'.:.

....men

'

slJNY

�10

NewMadline
!iids·Study

O[Stuttering •

�u.

~ -3,1970

Healtb~Safety~Foc . . ~PORTS
Hazard-Free.Conqitions ON :.· ,_ ,
~~:UD\:'~
-:e..~ ':u~~~ mEOPLE
tb8
C
-;e
._..n,;lity io

"in

::lltC"-:!'::!. """~

walk, eat, wort&lt; or live on the
campus.~ 'Ibat n!Bp(JIIIJibility
will esteDd to .!be:uew Amhenlt
campus, but Without the oppor~ty 1or ·the ~ ~o. advise_
imd ~ """"""-•lions before facilities lbere are put io

E. Hunt. ~ o1
the Division, this c:apoule
deacriptiaD ol hi&amp; Ollloe at a
- t worbbop -xm, lOr

uaeliobert

Coaammlot Stndieo," Inoti- of

~c.:i!..
~m!.m~O::::
~
.
'

IlL lftXODa . . - , chaimlan,

otaliltim, -rbe hlfenmtial Uae of
PNdidiwo J&gt;iotriba.tiono," Deput.
ollltatiotico Seminar Serioo,
Yale Uni..,..;ty.

mabie materi8ls must ueceosar-

DL lofof

~~~fulfill the eel-

-

NEW CAMPUS

llilpolta

Hu¢ reviewed with the man-

ceming ezit doors, empbasizing
that em8rpncy .mts sbould

pied

IIP8CB,.

= : : xr::t. ¥::

.,_;.,. Group· fo.-dy of Cali·
He DOted also that fomia Slate
St. looeph'o

c..n-,

-~~':.Just~~ 'd ~U.oti~~u=.!
~ ja .,.,:.... Ha?!., . Ioduotri~.

for Workmen's Corilpeoaation, .
the Slate lnawance Fund and
campus ~ • •
C&gt;thor insuraDce ageociaL 'The
'Iba Ollic8 a ~ Uniwraity Health SeMce in
for eliminatinc bazarda, Hunt . Mid&gt;ael Hall j&gt;roYidea emersaid, vary from ~ 18CD1D- .,....,y - t -for all perIDI!IIdatioll8 lor palntln1 ol aaua1 irijuriea and forwardS
CUJba, lilbtinl! o l - tbet are preliminary accident n&gt;ports to
too dark, faoil inlpec!lona, .stu- Enviroomointal
e a.lt h and
Cleot houlinl ~ aDd .
buildini ~ to cansidfurther investiption,
erationa em ~ piOiecl:iw
Coacemin1 tire drills, Hunt
d&lt;Mcea ~tzafllc oafety.
said that false lilarms have
Foi U/
in wblch haz.
used
• N . rton to
ards ai8t
' C8llld be elimina'-'
eaid. the Division
aiata
'"bybe~
poocedurea
BillY practice. False alarms
aDd by uainin&amp; peraonnel to
~
adjust aDd _.,te safely. As buildinp. Administnitors, he
said. must eocouia,e all personnel to evacuate buildinp within · two minutes if all persons
are to. pt out safely. Also, on
(co~ from- 2, coL 6)
' - PJ01r111D11 witbin the avail- the subject of fire prevention,
able fUnds. 'Therefore, I am Hunt said that matters pertainto fire extin8uishem should
creatiftl at the University the in~ refened
to his Oftioe. This
followin8 administmtive OI'JIIIIl- he
includes
selection of proper ·
ization:
• An apanded Presidential typea to be used, location of exAdvisory Committee on· Minor- tinguishers within the buildings
ity Aftairs, wblch . will replace and maintenance and inventhe Select Committee, imd will tory.
Hunt's Office checks offadvise me on matters of policy
in our pfOII'IIDIII for diaadvant- campus housinl facilities which
apd. Commilitee membership are to be occupied by students,
payinl particular attention to
heatiftl systems; electrical wirinl and safe egress from occitizens.
• 'Iba Office of Equal :Op- cupied rooms. This activity
portunity will continue to be applies only to those apart..
the administrative arm of this ments whose owners wish to
have theit facilities listed with
Presidential Committee.
• 'Iba ·IIBBlatant e"ecutive
Olf~J'.uso!H~~~
vice presiden~ in the President's Office will have l;&gt;udaet- inapactiona of such facilitieo,
Hunt
said, have on occasion
ary responsibility for iill minority pfOII'IIDIII. He also will been used to defend students in
court
cases
brousht by landooordinab! these IJIOIMIDB in
Io'rds. With houaing in such
the area of equal opportunity.
short BUpply now, Hunt said
his Office no Ionpr uses the
"" Man ""d hio oociety can be deoilnation "approved ." It
better than they are. I know either accepts or rejects facilithey have to be! I believe ties based on the criteria that
the housinl will be safe. He
they can be!" .
noted also that the Office has
been called upon to advise stu-

=
.!Jd.

i:c.-,

=...

a

=:e '::, tJ. -

tt:.ti!..a ::.,'!s,t.;

~. :W::~8riil~romm~~

!:u.

F-.... ,. .

.:=,.c:=-

~~M.:,n~ ::i~ on:u"'.U::
tora of the various equal opportunity P101f8111B. will be availFood service inapactiona by
able to COIIBUit with the aasia- Environmental He a It h and
tant ~ma~tive vice presidenl
Safety cover 118 items, Hunt
• 'Iba Amdemic Viele Presi- ·said, indudinl p~tion and
dent's Office will be reapollllible holdin8 temperatures, personal
for the content · of academic clothinl, and food supplies. He

o . ...........,., appointed acting ..,...rai maDapr of WBFO;
'!rill continue u manqer of tbe
oatellite otatio1,1 of WBFO.
oa. ,....,. 11. IIIW&gt;Y, uaiotant profeooor philooophy, appointed ao
oiatant chairman
director
UDderpaduate otudiea, pbilooophy,

OON

oi

;,m

' " - elforla will not in and
ol ~equate the reality
ol equal opportunity with the
dream ollt, flw the parfectibility ol that equation w i l l -

are as far away as Pennsylv8nia. Some proce8IIOIS in the
local · area have been refused
cimtnicts because they do DOt
..-t University standards.
Hwit, who deals with federal,
state, CDUDty and city health
and safety apociea, finds them
coopntive but UDible to pro-

will h!llp. 'IbaY will help in the
ol a aociety
wbich warb lor the betterment
of ita indiviclulll memben; ·and

muruty.
· ·
Campus procedures in .t he
area ol safety follow cbely the
staDdardl eet by the National

cruiluall

.

.

~-~~....'!~-

·r.::::!i ~as.:",..:,!':

- - al~~~ibi; u!ationa,"':;id'.

- ..

--

~~tion,"Yale

Univenity

Linluiltico

Club.

phila.opby, appointed program

vision of American Philoeophical
1
Asaociati.on.

PRES! NTATIONS

Rocheeter.

x.. .u.sam:, director, Univenity Reoearcll, "Self-Perception m School." annual convoca-

DR. SEAN

tion.

Northeastern

Educational

Reeearch Asaociation, Groeainger,

N.Y.
ALUTTO, &amp;880ciate
profeuor, management, " Variation in Hospital Employment and

D1L .TOBEPB A.

Influence Perceptions Among
NW"'ing Penonnel," Fall meetinp of Medical Sociology Group,

~~E'.!~CI: ~i~~

Deprivation. Equilibrium and
Saturation M Variablea in Educational Reoearcll," Nortbeaot Region Educational Reoeareh Auo·
ciation meelinp, Liberty, New
York.
DB. IZNBT RADIAN, profeeaor, hie-

::!topi::f':rin=l.~

·g::

~:t'.:'.t ~Y:t~raa.f::J't:

anon: Trade Diversification and
Spatiel Alignments," annual
meetiua of tbe Middle Eut Studies Aseociation.. Columbus, Ohio.

ohip of Erythrocytooia and Elevated Erthropiietin LeYelo in Pa·
tienta with Liver Dieeaeea," XIII
International Co~ of Hema·
tology, MUnich, Germany.
DIL GBRAU) O'GUDY,

uaiatant pro-

feuor, Enclilh. ''The Teaching of
Film," New Yorlt Film Council;

~lb'~~ ~-M~rlts~~~

Medja Conference; ''The Cellu·
loid Curriculum." National Council of Teachen of Enclilh. Madi·
son. Wiloonain; '"The Birth of a
Wired World," Te:r.aa State
Teachers... Auociation. Auatin.
DB.. SUBBlAR IU..KALINGAM:, aaaoci·

ate profeeaor, mechanical engin·

eering, "A Photo-Elaotic Study of
Stress Diltribution DuriDg Orthogonal Cuttino. Part I - Worlt
Piece Stress Diltribution; Part ll
- Pboto-Plaoticity Obeervationa,"
1970 Winter Annual Meetinc,

!:li~li":~·~

profeo.

eor, hiAory, ,.Adin Ballou'• Hope.
dale Commwlity and the n-1·
ogy of Anlialaftry," c~wn:~o· Riotory.
&amp;. P8181'0H,

Profe .. or,

:=r":"b:~..~!::

en," ·st. lob7. I.w ll«iew;
Troth Potkmo in 1M Middle
Eaot, Ameri&lt;an Enterpriae Inotitute, Waobin&amp;ton. D.C. .
DB. 108D'B H. JUJ.-., profe.or,

Enclilh. "'The Wanderer and tbe
Dance: William Carloo Williamo'

~.P~; J:'NX::..:"f:/::~

ature ill Honor of Fretkriclt. J.
Ho61ftiUI, Louioiana State Uniftraity Pre~~; " Apinot Fonnaliom,"
O.nn.

DB.. ROaaTA n:;a., profe.or, IOCial

welfare, "'The Newopaper and tbe
Urban Reader," JoiU'IIGliom Quorterly.
DIL AI.BiaT L WD'I'IIEDIIZ, ..ia-

!':i: r:,~-~~·
·~
"A~
Coometic lnduotry;

Hoopital Pharmacy - Why Not?"
Hoopitol Pharmacy; "A ThUd
Party Payment Propooal," PM.
DR. BOW AltD WOLI', aaaistant profeooor, Engliob, " E. A. Robinson:
Relevance of Character," Modem
American P&lt;Httry; "Go To Altimira: For Anna..'" Anon.

EXHIBITIONS

~if:a~ee~:in.A.aoclation.

t:i".:!~ to" u!-P=o~~'u:!

=-

twy-Crofto.
IlL . _ , ...... aooiotant

==·=\o&lt;i~~~

Huwrd.
D&amp;. mollAB 1. IWtDOS, profe110r,
medicinal cbemiotry, with G. sza&lt;.
Bill&amp;, "Syntbel.ia of 5-Mercapto2' -deoxycytidine," ACS Meeting,
L. VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP,

"Nonerythropcrietin - dependent
.Rel&amp;dofioll of

E~."

He..-poiaio, Appleton-Cen-

auociate professor, French, 'The Word of
God," annual meeting, Midwest
DR. lORN P . BEAQLI:, . . . iatant pro-

Dll.

f-r, biocbemico1 pharmamlov,

Sn.VIANO BANTIAGO,

tory, " Roman Provincial Adminiotration Under tbe Republic,"

Cbic:aao.

Hall.
.-ociat:e prof - r; hiltory, From 1M FraloWGier Nauy: 1/161-64. TM, Letlero of Maoler• NGie Hmey_ R.
B"""""' and Enoip S:ywurta -E.
B.........,, U.S. Nllftl Inoti-.

I&amp; IOBif Jllt,UG.l!f#

oa.." . -

Ulia-

:.:~~·==r~
•Jii: Relation·

profMeOr, history,
' 'The Isolationism of tbe 19SO'o
Re-viaited," Annual Meetiua of
N.Y. Civil Defenoe Commillion,

l. ...

='(5!1::,~~.~=

fornia.

with G. P. KURPHY,

Dll. 1IEI..kl ADLD.,

A-'"

IlL IIII'W1I&lt; L .......... adjuDc:t pro-

DB.. NEWTON GA&amp;VD, profeesor,

committee member, Western Di·

~~~1M

aelectrical
alxu::s a. JO&amp;'IWlf8.. pro&amp;.or,
...,meorina, with

a. IWNI:, lecturer, art hil·
tory, eeri• of lecture~ on art
reotoration and tbe flood of 1966
in FloreDCe to tbe Dante ~­
ieri Cu1twaJ Society of BuJfalo.
DR. anntiCB a. JriiAE'ImfB, prot.aor, electrical engineerinc, "Suboptimal ·Control with Control
Ma&amp;nitude Conotrainta," 1970
Aailomar Conference on Circuie.
and Syotems, Monterey, Cali·

80BIOIT

moclity Trade of Iorael and Lebanon: 1953, 1960, and 1967," New
York·New Jeraey Division. Allo-

feuor, ma..o..ageme:nt .c:ience, with
DL IIDtBDT B. PllllLIPB, "On the
1

~r~~~~~tu~~i

Manapment Scienoeo, Loo Anf{!ee; "Deciaion Implications of a

~0 ~orp~Y.aa!th P~or~:

- ~a;.==~~

Nortbeutem Po'liticaJ Science
Aooociation meetinp, Pbiladel· of America, Detroit, Micbipn.
phia, Pa.
•
DR.

SQTOZ.Ait BTOIAHOVIC,

vilitinJ

~i:'t!;n:p=by~~~:~

'"Three Modelo of Pootrevolutionary Development (Stalihiam.
Maoilm, Titoilm) ," Deportment
of Polilical Sc;ieDce, Univenity of
Dlinoii,Urt.na.

PUBLICATIONS
..._ &amp;AI.PII T, CIIIINO, aooiatant pro~~:;:,:.._"'f7~:r

RECOGNITIONS
1&amp;.

JaVIKG

CBSft'l"fa,

profe.or.
in Eda-

muaic, lilted in Leodero

cotion 1970.

.._ ann!&lt; A- IIOIWm, adjuDc:t P~'~&gt;- ·
1-r. biochemical phazmacolocy,
.....,.,;.ed D. Sc. hononuy clepeo
!rum Niap.ra u.memty.

man DyDamk:o- Applied to

Fluid DyDamk:o DmoioD, AmericaD PhyoiaiJ Society, Uai...mty
o1 V'lfliDia.·

..._

IIICIWID

a. cox, .-t-r,

lilicaloa-, "OD il&gt;e

pe-

on.;..

ol

-- !:;"'~~of~

CN&amp;don-the reality and tbe
Hunt'WUtheJint-"""ol
hope ol lt-18 the buia lor the the Yf1!1Z lor the Mane-t ·
ol cammunity wbich is Warbbop Prop-am wt&gt;icb will
- t l a l to the um..-ty, to . continue each month lhroulh
the dty .ad to the •tiou It- May. ~tiWIII ol varaolf. It •1 a c:raliaa wblch poo- loua . cuapua ~ will
cWal8 lbat man and bla ~ 11ppear to outline ~
.... be batter tt.n lbif are.
and . . . . . apendiaa8 ol thlllr
I know they have to bel
unlta. 'nola _.. Ia ~
And, I........., they aai ~I
bY the ........... ~l
.;
..

DR: ~vm~a.. Rl!B·. p~e.:t~

DB. IA.Kir8 &amp;. KCOONNG.L,

l:.:k.n;:.:::.~~...;: : ~~.;,~,d~..,:: l:.!:..- ~~~~!..!:

.....tvinl cna&amp;n

Columbul, Obio.

c:-=:=-=c-.,-,~=----

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

~: ~ ~~ ~ur.!..f·~·.::.=

and atudenta. His office will be
asalated by the Committee lor
Minority hculty and Staff Re-

JU.unaT, a.ociate

~~~:i:"A~o:t!:

aaers rules aDd reiuiat&gt;oos con- APPOINTMENTS
DOt be &lt;Jbstnlcted in any. occu-

a.

~';r~;;:~:

p""-r.J•.-:h. ~ et
Peno:iE5
·nil~rea dam lee "'Recita
d' Andie . " An:.\iua da Let-~~
.
.
DL ~ P. BOUUlfl,. profei.or.
~.): "looeph Schacht,

II£POIITS ON I'EOI'LE
"Reports oo People" II __

to

onyone with University ofllllation,
t.cuity, ota11 and otudents. Stu·
dentl, send ~ news of honors )'OU
hove -

• . .

IVBdlleta otu·

s a - - - . , . , At-

· .
the
- the
)'OU community
publllhed
. .·
ltafl,

18. 111C1W1D L - · p...,_
..,,;,'modicillal
~.:OS-..

dent~,

lula, GL

- ~ Syalheolo (Caf•
-)&gt;" Sc:hool ol l'llarm.ey, UDi...;ty ol l'llllbaqh.
.

p...mations jou llhe . - . Stube su .. to·lnclude )'OUr ,.ar
'nd ....... Send )'OUr rwports to

SU&amp;a..,;;: """"'-·

Ollk:e of Unlwrllt,y Publication&amp; Servlcea, 250
WI _
_- .. or caH 2228.

�~3,1910

12

. A I - W-.n. BrilliaDi,
with .....!do iDot-1 of •

~EEKLYCO~QUE

DAHCZ

er..4as:

PCdL NOIU8~ .t.i~

~~~o...:'S~:
clio, C1ulf Gym, 4 p.m.

~ OK L!l'D.lt't.m8 AND

••Opon to ............ of the ' ~
with o ~I • - In the aubjec:t
F8DPILMS 0 : OIIPIUUII (1949.1..,.
Coctoau),
4lfD Tid
THURSDAY--3

*Opon to public;
•Opon on!)&lt; to -

Till:..........,

OO!f'IINUING D S N T A L JDtJCA"irON

ooiJIM•: Dr. Robert Ferria, aa·

.ociate prof_,ar, periodoD.tolOCY,
W•tem Reeerve, N.ACTICAL

c-

ftCBNJQUD IN PIRJOOOHT.U.

TBD~

AFY, 146 Capen, 9 a.m..-6 p.m.
PODL\TIUBT8 TEU:PBONE LIIC'I'Uit&amp;:
Sponsored by Regional Medical
Procram, .David Scltlllefand, CO&amp;· TIOOSTDOIDS IN POOIA.ftY, 62 receiving locations, 11 :30 a.m.
CoM c 8 a T• : PAilK.BIDE, H a a 1
Lounge, .5 p.m. .Free.
.
1
K &amp; D I C A L UX::RNOL()(JIIft 'f'I:U.PHONE LIDCTURE: SpoMOred by

Rocional Medical Program, Betty
Murphy, R1:D BLOOD CELL MORPB-

OOOGY, 62 receiving locations, 1:30
p.m.

.

PATHOLOGY lECTURE• :

Dr. Doug-

~~~c.r:.·~~:~J:ti=
ULAll IXMUNITY,

213 Capen, 3:30

p.m.
J:DUCA.TJON IBC'I'URE• : Dr. Vincent

Glennon. ~r. Mathematics
Education ~nte r, Univenity of
Connecticut!' :MATIIDlA.TICS A N 0
PBOGJIE88IYE EDUCATION PBIIENT AND FtJ1'1JIIZ, 231

PAST,

Norton.

4 p.m.
TIIBORE'nCA.L

BIOLOGY

POUTJCS"&lt; ·S-red b)' tho JJe.
p a - t ol Go.-n aDd Slavic,

axiNAil• :

Dr. Richard Gordon , techni&lt;:al
specialist, natural sciences and
mathematics, and R Bender, research assistant, theoretical biology, DETDMINATION OF THI': SHAPE
OF THE RIBOSOME, Room 29, 4248

Ridge Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshment.

I.n.ATUIII: AND POUI'IC8 IN 80Vlft
IIOCI&amp;T!', led by Kate.

m:.i.~ ~:..r1::

:;::"~D\~~.::t?%' :;';;.
to midnigh~

8:15 p.m.

~·wce\~'!t~~t!Uit

CONCIBT• : TBI: INaiiDIBtl: 11'1'8DfG
!WID,· Fillmore Room. Norton. 7

=: f :

Cocteau'a liJm. depicta lbe love

tween thia world and the neK.t.
He reveals a poetic fucination
with the power and conflict of
the reel world with the world ol
i.m8.gination and the unknown.. A.
the legend unfolda, Cocteau'a pbo-tographic mastery pulla the audi·
ence into the fantasy of truly
~~~~ touch with both of theee
Dulac's waa the firat full-scale
surrealistic film and called forth
this once-famous ban by the Brit·
isli Board ol Censors: "The film
is 80 cryptic aa to be almost
meaningless. If there is a mean·
ing, it is doubtless objectionable."
Could they have read it, the British cen&amp;ars certainly would have
objected to the phallic, castration,
and Oedipal symbolism packed
into this film, made at a time
when the surrealist movement
was heavily influenced by orthodo.: ,F reudianism.
IN'TERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Jn.
atruction in basic steps during
firit hour, 30 Diefendorf Anne.:,
8 p.m.
CREATIVE ASSOCIATES AT DO MUS • :
MAP, directed by Lukas Fo ss,

Di&gt;mus, 1695 Elmwood Ave., II

p.m. Students $.50, faculty and
staff $1.00, gene r a 1 adm.ission
$1.50.
This will be a preview perform-

J_tudonta $2, ......

WEDNESDAY-9 ·
IIODICAL BIXX&gt;BDB 'I'ElDBONE UIC-

n':lcJr= 1':..!"/;.d!~~
receiving locations, 2 p.m.

Dr. Mac
Hammond, prof00110r, E n g I i a h.
AZ8THETIC8, 378 Hayes, 7: 30 p.m.

. AIIEBJCAN STUDlES lEC"''UUI&amp;•: Teo.

do.ro Rivero, senior Fulbright Fel·

low from Peru, THE INDL\N PKESENCE IN LATiN AMJ:BICAN CULTUBE,

The Bruno Room, 124 Winapoor
Ave., 8 p.m.
''UNIPIED FAMJLy'' MJ!E'l'ING•: Lee·
ture-diacusaion of spiritual syn·
thesis for a new culture. All we}.
come. 266 Norton, 9 p.m.
trator at a large university; James
Blackhiiftt. director, summer sessions, d.i$u.sses U/ B summer ses·
sions, the second largedt such
program in the country; Dr. Robe rt Bellah. professor, sociology
an~tive studies, University of Calilomia at Berkeley,
discusses the relationship between

==

QuarteL They were joined by

~~~is't o~~ ~~
Symphony Orchestra from 1958
0

.

New mathematical methods,
cnUed Algebraic Reconstruction

:r::e't:L~mr!~::nm=:~t

f!sJ:aroi! s~ t:n ,J:~ce~
=~ w~~~~~ France, in June 1970. MAP will be
reconstructions of translucent ob-

~~~ta~ti:~~Ct~~

su;::;t::

~r~ s~U:~·wi11i!!s~ ff-

·rum.

!:ie~g:rthO:~!}: =~~ !

a;!

n'..

~..!\"D-=~ A~lt:!

7

Faahion Show, food and refresh·
mente, black muaie. African Cui·
tural Center, 350. ~.ten A..,.,
~·:-.;::•raJ
$2.00.

aamJ-

ANTHROPOLOGY

~'tt: ~ODM::.~J::::
ton. 8 p.m.

qu.unsT• : Works
iDclude Schubert, Quarld in E

CZIICH

B11liNG

~~"h;: Pl:"E I:t.;,-:::!:
1

SUNDAY--6

hoven, QIUirlel in B F/4JI Major,
Opru 130 with GrooH FUll#.
Baird. 8: 30 p.m. General odJnia.
oion $3.00, laculty ,and otaff $2.00,
otudonta $1.00.
'The c-:h Strine Quartet waa
formed in 1988 after ita memben
woN. forced to ....,. C!sec:'-lo-

)rqWB .urn vmwa: Rlldio pro.::a.&amp;..~
::rKo:u~·
rram. Dr. Albert Somit, ....... - · and
¥ioliot, ,.....,. Karloooky,
vice )_&gt;.-t, U/B, -

u/a

wha~

ita like to be an ldmiJUa..

=

iA".{h!:o':'

~~~~~P~o"' el:'c:k~~:oo~le=~~wi?i
~~UAft

are former 1DOIIIboJo of 1bo Pncue

THUP.SDAY-10
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION

coURSE#: Dr. Alan Drinnan ,
chairman, oral diagnosis and ta·
diology, and staff, OFFI&lt;Z EMER-

to 1968 and a member of the
Czech Chamber On:hestra and
FOR DENTAL ASSISTANTS
The Prague Strjnlf Trio, and GENCIES
AND HYGIENISTS, 146 Capen. 9
Rudolf Kalup, violimst, a member a.m.
.
5
p.m.
o! the Slovac String Quartet, Slo·
vac Piano Trio and the Haydn HOSPITAL MANAGERIAL AND StJPE&amp;Quartet. They accepted a reei· VISORY DEVELOPMENT TELEPHONE
dency at the University of Can- LECTURE; Sponsored by Regional
terburv in Cbristchureh. New Zea· JV!edical Program, panel discus·
land, whe re they had time to work sion, Dudley Ericson. chairman..
on their new repertory. In the READY Oil NOT, SERE IT COMES -

re*~sn p~~r:~·~riu~by the
following local stations: WYSL
at 7 a .m.; WXRL a t 9 a.m.;
WKBW at 10:30 p . m . and
WADV -FM at 8 :45 a.m.
lf~~edof alrt~e~ei~:k~~~ tsRA.ELt ART t~YMPOSruM •: Fred
jecta. ART bas been a~fully
applied to electron microfl'&amp;phl of on December 14. Combatants in Berk, choreographe r of Israeli ada and the United Stateo and
ri.bo.:lmea.
the game include: Stuart Fo.:, folk dancing, will lecture and were received with highest praise
plucked instruments; Jim Fulker- teach new Israeli folk dances, 231 whe rever they appeared.
ft)U:IGN 8TUDENT APPAIRS COFPa
brass; Jesse Levine, strings; Norton, 2-4 p.m. Folk dancing
aoua•: 10 Townsend Hall, "-6 son,
FREE FILMS•: ENTR·Adm (1924,
J a n Williams, pel'CU88ion; Ed party, Fillmore Room, 7: 30p.m.
p.m.
Yadz.insky, winds; George Ritsch- rNSWE NEW DANCE • : P earl Primus, Rene Clair) , 147 Diefendorf, 8: 30
AMEIUCAN STUDIES LmCTUJZ•: Teoer, electronic operation.
world renowned dancer and an- p.m.
second film by Rene Clair
dora Rivero, senior Fulbricht Felthropologist, in DANCE AND AFRICA, is This
one of his most i.mpQrtant and
low from Peru, Till: PKOBLEM OF
SATURDAY-S
with Cimber, a drummer, and On- influential
works. Infwwil with the
.TJU INDIAN, second in a aeries of
win, her son who is alao a dancer.
tluee lectures on TIU INDIAN IN EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN Nl· Domus, 1695 Elmwood Ave., 3 typically Dada apirit of mockery
and unreality, produced to serve
LATtN AliiDliCA, The Bruno Room, GEIUA • : continuation of Friday'a p.m. General ad.m.ission $.50.
pro~ Papers by Mallam S.
as a literal entr-acte to the
12A WinJP,Ur Ave., 8 p.m.
M iss Primus will present an - Swedish
Sabri, Federal Ministry o! Edu·
ballet Relache, it is a
P8YCHLU'BJC GUEST LmC"TUREt : Dr.
cation, Lagos ; C. A. Akinyele, anthropological lecture-concert in- kind of "dream without a subject"
Harold I . Lief, director, division Howard University; Dr. Henry L . tended to "888i.st in understand- whose characten act on motives
of (amity study, Univenity of Bretton, SUNY / BrockporL 233 ing · the people of African ances- the reverse Of those of real life.
try."
Pennsylvania. NEW ftNDINGS IN Norton. 9:30 a.m. -3: 30 p.m.
UN CHIEN ADALOU ( 1929, Luis
HUKAN SF"UALITY, 140 Capen,
llALK.AN FOLK DANCING : Fillmore
Bunuel and Salvador Dali)
I.SRAELI ABT SYMPOSIUM•: spon8: 30p.m. •
sored by the Students for Israel, Room. Norton. 8 p.m.
~~;,~~~k·~r~
G&amp;ADUAT£ RECITAL•: Joyce Petit,
EVENINGS FOR NEW MUSIC• : The
Norton Union.
produced from the subconscious.
piano; works by. Bartok, Beethov·
1 p .m.-Discussion by Rachel
Bunuel baa written, 'TbiB film
en, Rachmaninoff, Chopin. J . S. Eitan, Israeli author of The S euBach, Debuaay; Baird, 8: 30 p.m. enth Heauen, Conference Theatre. bn., ht-Knox Art Gallery Audi· haa no intention of attracting nor
pleasing the spectator; indeed, on
2-4 p.m.-Film The Dnamer, tonum, 8:30 p.m.
to
FRIDAY--4
Israel's official entry in the 1970 FOLK CONCERT• : VAN MOII&amp;l.BON, the contrary, it attaclta
Cannes Film Festival, Confer· M c KENDREE SPIUNG and HICHOlJ.S
:o:-~10~~~ ~: ence Theatre.
HOLMES, Clark Gym, 8: 30 p.m.
war .. .. The motivation of the
4-5 p.m. - Aurya Rappaport, Students $2.50, general admi.uion at
iJnagm was, or was meant to be,
Israeli movie and theatre critic $3.50.
~mae:::t:ro:=.n::m~t: will
discuss
trends
in
Israeli
the:
education in Nigeria. SpoDIIOred
=tZrioi=ti~':f· in~cahle
by members of the U/ B African atre and film-making, Conference
MONDAY-7
the two oollabor&amp;ton as to the
Studi.. faculty, and the Ol!ice ol Theatre.
spectator. NotJW:I. in the film.
8
p.m......()hella
Ha'Levi,
IsraeLINGUI8TICB LBCTU'RE• ~ -Dr. Peter
lnlemational Sl!ldiM and World
symb:.lius onythmg. The only
M . Boyd-Bowman. director, criti· method of investigation of the
Affairs, Albany. Pa~n by David li folk singer, Fillmore Room.
BLUES CONCERT•: TEN WHEEL cal languages proJ11Un. BPANlBH·
symbols would be, perhaps, poy·
. f&gt;rM~eUA~~~:.'"S~o~ DRIVE with Genya Raven, BUDDY A.MEB.ICAN DULECTOLOC Y , 402 choanalyais...
BLOOD OP A POET (1932, Jean
Un!""ro!ty; • Dr. Baba Fafunwa.· GUY BLUES B.AHD and 1 U N I 0 R Hayes, 11 a.m.
Umven1ty of Ue. · 233 Norton, 10 WELLS, Clark Gym, 7 and 11 p.m. ORA.L BIOLOGY SEMINAR#: Dr. Ben· Cocteau)
a.m.·7 p.m.
Students $2.50, general ad.mission jamin F. Hammond, profesoor,
$3.50. Students' pockage deal-$4 microbiology, Univenity of Penn·
TUESDAY-8
IDIGUIBT!CS LEC'I'UB&amp;• : Dr. David
G. Haya, profeaeor, lincuiatica, for Dec. 5 and Dec. 6 (Folk Con· sylvania. GLYOOG&amp;:N 8YNTBI:818 IN
cert) ahowa.
DOCUlOI:HTAnON : lNPO&amp;lii.ATION
~~~=~t. c:;a~m ·107, ~c:n;;;·~::· ~~n~ot:r.
~AND IIETIIIKV.U., 402 Hayoa,
CEANYS and the BUffalo Tooch·
: : : ~E~v~in~o;:tuSer:t COHPUTEB SCJI:H'C&amp; CoLLOQUIUM• :
Union of Buffalo. Film. llALCOLM Dr. Donald Michie, University of
';:n~
4 ~be,
X, followed by a diacuoaion and Edinburgh and visiting profeuor,
A convenation between the
Syracuse Univenity, TOW.uDB ;.
3:30 p.m. ,

.

W"'~ ~~:"a:::.. .r.;

LINGUISTICS Lf}CTUBE•:

UNEMPLOYMENT IN SURANCE, 62

receiving locations, 1: 30 p.m.
FOREK;N STUDENT AFFAIBS COPPIZ

uoUR• : 10 Towmend Hall.. 4-6
p.m.
SEMINAR• •: Dr. Edward Kline, department of pey·
chiatry, Yale University, THE UBI:
SOCIOLOGY

OP GROUPS FOR TllAINlNG IN THE
UNIVERSITY AND THE COIOruNITY,

Room 24, 4242 Ridge Lea, 3:30
p.m.
LINGUISTICS LECTURE• : Dr. Paul
L. Gorvin, acting chainnan. Jin.
guiatics, LINGUISTICS AND THE
LANGUAGE A.B1'8, at the firat meeting ol the Niagara Linguistics
Frontier, Williamaville Inn, 5547
Main SL, Williamsville, 8 p.m.
ORCHESTRA CONCEitT•: Pamela
Gearhart, conductor; worb by
Hirulem.ith, Purcell. Holst. Bach·
Stokowski , Brubeck, Brahms.
Baird, 8 :30 p.m.
CONCERT•: EMOTJONAL LD'I: POBCE,

Haaa Lounge, 9 p.m. Free.

INTERVIEWS
The ON·CA.JIIPUS ~
PBOG&amp;.U&lt;, J:UlUiin« tluouch Decom·

ber 18 in the fall - r and
from January 25 to April 29 in

::~":r~.f.i:Z•:t!:

with educational, oom-, ind,..
trial and governmental - - ·

::!J:· !':;nd~~m:~=
whether they will complete their
m'f."
~lra~o~"1= :r:l
ditional information are aftilable
in Hayel

c.

TBUISDAY-3: General ~
r.bone Co.; Clew~land Electric n.
li:,S~·;C:.urlitzer Co.; ReJ&gt;Uh:

ll::· ~~~ a-:c:le~

I"RRDAY--4: Niagara Mohawk
Power Col)&gt;.; Buni&gt;uah WeUoomo
Co.; Weatinghouao Electric Corp.

PHY8lCIAN8 't'ELEPBONI LBC1'UB:

u!:""ci;;bUe
~":"-~t
Lederle Laboratorieo; Eden Can·

Sponsored by Rocional Medical

::fcras2!ov=. !;~
receivinc
CUUZNT CON CBPT, 62

locatioaa, 11: 30 a.m.

=~'!!J~~sr.::

pam. E!MDor Hall, RN., M.A.,

=:.. :'~~~=~;:
J:PIIml(l()LOQY, 800PB .llfD

IN~

: :· 62 ~viDe locationa, 1:30
, _ JilL)(• : 'TID liiAO'ilPICSHT
IEV&amp;Jf (I&amp;YIIf IUIU&amp;I) (19M,

Akita Ku.-wa), 147 Diefeodorf.
3 and 8: 30 p.m.

~~f.E~~~=
Verona-Sherrill Central ~
(Oneida) .
TUJ:BD.\Y--8:

.
Union Carbide
Herculoo, Inc.;
New Y.o n: Slaw ~ Dept.;
Scott Paper Co.; s-...cadoon Corp.; Co....U Uni-fonity School ol IDdmUial and Labor
RelatiqpL •
WDJtaDA.Y--8: Peter Kiewit
Sons' Co-y&lt; mM Corp.;
~ .S. - Dept. of M .
Corp.-~

c.L.I::l

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>VOL 2-NO. 11

Local Funds
Fer Projeds·
Uniwailable

!.

The University Committee
for the DistrijJution of Institutional Funds has no monies
avsilable for this year and cannot consider requests for suport, its chairman Mortoo Rothstein said this week.
'Jbe non-availability of funds,
Rothstein said, Is accounted for
by two factors:
.
"Last sprin&amp; the Committee
"""''iDized the desperate financial situation existing in the
Graduate School, and agreed to
ina-eaae the previous year's alloc:ation from approximately
$125,000 tO $262,600 for support of sraduate student fellowships throughout the University. 'Ibis decision was voted
WIIIDirilously by the Committee. It was tmderstood that the
increment was to be im a one-·
.Yf!M basis and
. -: Widerstood that 88 a 18Ult of this
action, relatively little money
would remain under the Committee's ClOiltrol ·
"O(the remainder, the Office
of the President bad yet to take
its alloc:ation, which typically
bad been around $50,000. This
year, because ol preasing """'milmenta,~ropmalely

$70,-

.000 was
The amount
remaining to the C ommittee
was $15,000.
_
"At a meeting of the University Committee, Tuesday, ()cto.
ber 'ZI, 1970, it was agreed that
the entire $15,000 would be alloc:ated to the elected committees of the individual faculties
on a pf'l&gt;--rated t.sis."
"Informaliap~ding the
availability of
· was c:pmmunicated to
proyost and
each faculty repreaentetiye to
the University-wide Committee
on October 12, 1970,". Rothstein
said. " Hqwever, wide appreciation of the situation does not
seem to have been achieved."
(cont~d anptJI/e

3. col. ·l)

NOVEMBER 19:19

SUNY Medical Schools
Urge Chancellor Boyer
To Up StudentRmding

hullrc at Dlefendort.

8UO :W~

The Controce~ial Pauling
Has 'Cure' for OJmmm Cold
By S0SAN GREENWOOD
R•,c.ter Stall

Dr. Linus Pauling, nationally-knoWn cbemlst and pacifist,
is about to receive national notoriety in connection with the
common cold. The Nobel pri%ewinning scientist, who is concluding his five-&lt;lay U/ B visit,
is now advoc:atiqg the use of
Vitamin C as a natural remedy
for colds. He will discuss this
theory during his speech in
Diefendorf 147 tonight.
Pauling's visit has been a
series of suooesses.
On Monday night, he filled
two auditoriums with excited,
enthusiastic people. His repu·
tation and the speech's title,
"Science and World Aflairs,"
. brought out over 1,000 people,
. completely . filling Die!endorf

147 and requiring closed-circuit
TV to be piped into 146. Pauling spoke on a wide range of
topics includinj the war in
Vietoarn, military research and
living by the Golden Rule.
Throughout h is presentation,
both standing-room-only crowds
were enthralled.
The pacifist's speech blended
gentle humor with scsthing
condemnation of the use of defoliants in Vietoarn and the use
of tetraethyl lead in gasoline&amp;
at home. He told of his long
campaign against these Chemicals. Pauling started 44 years
ago to advise Congress not to
allow tetraethyl lead to be
used as a uno-knock" compound in gasoline because of
(c:;;;;nued on page 3. col. 2)

Administrators from the four
SUNY medical schools have
written a letter lo Chancellor
Ernest Boyru; urging him to increase the amount of ftinds
available to professional health
s~ents. The deans of adJnis.
sions and student affairs from
the statewide medical schools
met in Bullalo last Friday to
draft the Jetter which was subsequently reviewed and endorsed by their deans.
The executives agree that
"the laek of adequate student
fmancial aid has rapidly become our major problem., Reasons for this are the increasing
number of students who need
financial aid to complete a
medical education and the decline of governmental spending
in this area.
The letter states that available student loan · money has
decreased from 40 per cent to
13 per cent of funds needed in
the past three years. The· declining funds are attributed to
the ·new governmental policy
which causes professional students to use 10811 money ralher
than gnants to finance 'their education. The deans feel that
the "terms of the loans are Jess
favorable; the schools have no
effective voice in their distribution; many studeJits cannot
qualify; and the amounts available are inadequate."
Because of this policy, the
officials are )Jeing forced to
"concentrate their admissions
among students from higher income families," the letter notes.
The men recommend the following actions to relieve the
problem. First, they ask that
professional health students be
eligible for funds available to
disadvantaged students through
one of the State Equal Opportunity pro Jl rams. Secondly,
they call for consideration of a
. ''broad and long-range prosram
for direct aid to professional
students."
Twelve medical school ad-

FlapBrewsOver~y'Recnrlters
"Do you want Anny recruiters on .campus?" the posters
shout. Obviously, the answer is
no for the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). They're
sponsoring a rally 10t 1 p.m. today to picket the ..Army" recruiters who will be on campus.
This action was sparked by
~ of the Materiel
caiiiDand ol the Department
ol the Army which Is interviewina job
licants today. Al&gt;
cordfng ~.......... M8rtell, eliof Pla~Bnent and Career
~ the Materiel Command is ac:tually a c:ivilian or. pnization that services the
Tbey 88 a .n of
.

becmee .._

qont.
.• being oponaored

tbey baWl a

(SDS) tloa't think
rilbt q, be em our

- t o ._.m--Into.
............ ..._ wbi&lt;b will be

..,......,.wodti.,._.
d tlludiBia uauad the Wodil."
1'lla SDS claima !bat "the

Army is one of the most blatant
examples ·or all the oppressive
forces in this capitalist society.
. . . It is murdering peasants
and workers in Vietoarn, crushing the rebellions of the super·
exploited blacks and third
world peopte , and repressing
the militant expressions of students."
As far as the Placement and
Career Guidance Center is concerned, it'll be ''business 88 U&amp;usal" today. They informed the
Materiel Commarid yesterday
about the p&lt;Biibilitiao of a rally
and de'monstration by SDS.
" " - - · the recruiters decided
to come and interview interestad students an)'W!IY. Martell
that severa1 students hilw
ai..-1 up but that there aren't
""""'h to 611 the acbedule.
'"-.the ~iJ¥ that the
inlervineis will be &amp;nlahed be-

ror.r:eJ.~~ will

be interviewinc BA,

~s

and PhD candidates from the
areas of physics, and chemical,
electrical, industrial, mechanical and aero-space engineering.
Opportunities in these areas are
for positions in research and development; desigii; procurement and production; quality
assurance; and test and evaluation, according to brochures
put out by the Placement Center. The Command aJao c)aims
nationwide loc:ation opportunities. '
The last big recruitment rally
on campus occurred when Dow
Cbemical Compiny was interviewing three years af' and
students were protesting its
production of napalm.

NO ISSUE IIUT WEEK

B«:aU.. of the ThlnuCMIIII. holl·
day, the ........... will not be publiohod nut WMk. The '*II will IP~r ~u~, December 3.

I
ministrators signed the docoi'ment including the following
U/B officials: Dr. LeRoy
Pesch, dean, School of Medicine; Dr. William Feagans,
dean, School of Dentistry; Dr.
Edward Marine, executive associste dean, School of Medicine;
and Drs. Thomas Cummiskey
and John Robinson, assistant
deans, School of Medicine.

Randall Is
·HealJh VP
Dr. Clyde R. Randall, on the
faculty of the School of Medi·cine since 1937, will be named
vice president for health affairs
at U / B ne:o:t week by the State
University Trustees.
The appointment of a vice
president rather than a provost
for the Faculty of Health Sciences. University officials say,
recognizes the important role
of the Faculty within the University .
Founded 88 a Medical School
in 1846, U/ B has long been
recognized for its strength in
medicine and the health sciences. Today Health Sciences
-&lt;&gt;mbracing the schools of
Medicine, Dentistry, Phe:macy, Nursing and Health &amp;lated Professions-account for
approximately 64 per cent of
University research funds and
enroll 2,466 students. Las t
year U/ B graduated 94 medical doctors and 62 dentists.
Thirty-four of 212 Ph.D.'s conferred at last spring's University oommeD.oement were in
health sciences fields ..
Dr. Randall, a graduate of
the University of Kansas, has
been in Bullalo since· the 1930's
when he was a resident at Buffalo General Hospital. ,
He has been professor and
chairman of the Department of .
Gynecology.Qbstetrlcs in · the
U/ B School of Medicine since
1960. He was a professor in
the Department for 18 years
prior to that.
Dr. Randall has also been
head of the Department of Obstetrics-Gynecology at Buffalo
General and director of the Department at Meyer Memorial.
He il; University head of the
same area at Children's Hospital.
In order to serve as vice president, Dr. Randall will be resigning these posts and retiring both from the U / B departmental chairmanship and from
private practice.
Dr. Randall will be aasisted
in his new office by Dr. EupDe
J . Lil?pscbutz wbQ will serve 88
~ vice p~t f~
health affairs. Dr. Lippecbutz,
a catdiologist, had been smvins
88 88110Ciate provost for Health
Sciences and is a poof-.r ol
medicine.
Presi~lect of .the' American Collep of OiJstetriciaD&amp;.
Gynecologjsts, Dr. Randall is
a past preSident of the Buffalo
Academy cl. Medicine, the American Asaociatioo ol Obstetricians and G~ the
American G~ 'CI'ub.

�~

-eiRE
• .
.. ~

.

N-19,1970 .

Hochfield Sa~ New Plan for-Senate . Schwartz Wants 1b Blend
May Result in Gossipy Conservatism The Legal Wllh The Social
ihe
By JUDITH WOHL
'The representative Fa cui ty
Senate "will not be neoessarily
better, and may be more gossipy, conservative and too re.
sponsive to the opinion of the
president," Dr. George Hochlield of the Departmen~of English said at a Faculty-Staff
Caucus (FSC ) meeting Friday.
Hochlield said that the points
made in favor of the chai&gt;ge
were 14 trivial and untrue."
'The "mail ballot" is neitber
a very wieldy nor democratic
system, he ·said; moreover, it
will be difticult · to muster the
25 per cent of the Senate required to call for such a ballot.
Hochlield charged further that
the initial Senate ballot on the
Bylaws - which waa aent out

~=.,..a:,.~o~~~

ministering Senate elections
"can't handle it competently or
hooesUy." The Bylaws were
supposed to be available in the
libraries but, Hochlield said, "I
w'ould be willing to bet that not
live people went to either library." ( A lloor comment at
this point indicated that orie
faculty member had gone to the
Reserve Library but was unable to locate the Bylaws.)
Dr. 'Thomas Connolly, who
was also to have spolcen against
the Bylaws, waa uoable to attend the Friday meeting.
Dr. Leo Loubere, who was to
have spoken in favor, spoke
against. 'The apportionment
system will make a joke of the
new Senate, be claimed, since
it is a proportion in favor of
the sciences, especially the
health sciences who already
have special privileges, such as

their

own SUNY aenator.

Dr. Lester Milbrath gave the

C8!"' in favor-of the Bylaws. He
regretted that the controversy
had become "we against them."
Under any system, he said, it
takes vigilance to ward oft corruption. 'The new Senate would
be neitber a town-meeting nor
a urepresentative" system. He
explained the latter this way:
Using the example of R&lt;YrC,
Milbrath said that a committee
of the new Senate would offer
·several propooala from different
viewpoints, instead of one .
'These would be brought before
the Executive Committee,
which would act as an operating, not a policy group, and
would bring the several views
before the whole Senate for debate. Non-voting members and
students could speak to the
Senate on the various proposals. Then, a mail ballot, with
full particulars of each proposal, would eliminate the idea of
representative vote, providing
for a referendum vote instead.
'The new system would get rid
of "parliamentary roundabouts," Milbrath said.
Hochfield countered that. GS
a plan, tbe new Bylaws 8l'e
"aesthetieally pleasing, but m
the actual political life of the
University, ( the plan ) won't
resemble reality." He predicted, on the basis of what he has
seen of otber institutional senates, that the new U / B Senate
will play the role of "elder
statesmen along with the president. People won't come to debate sessions of the Senate if
they can't vote." Under the new
sye;tem, he said, ' ' we'll never
have a censure of the president

again, or a Vietoam resolution."
In response, Milbrath asked if
the ROTC vote, for example,
really rellected faculty opinion
or was simply an intensity of
feeling under the old townmeeting system.
Dr. Walter Rosen, chairman
of· the FSC, pointed out that
under the new Bylaws, the nonteaching professional staff
would not be represented. But,
be ![Bid, the Faculty Senate will
want to study the matter, and
work on it. ''We 'have this concern for their stetus,'' be stated·
"I hope they don't feel
doned by us."
. It waa noted by a non-teaching professional UJSt several
aenate models in SUNY now
include. staff, and that, if approved by the Board of Trustees, the new U / B Bylaws
would make any parallel stodent or staff group dependent
upon approval of the Faculty
Senate. As the new Bylaws now
read, tbe staff member said,
non-teaching professionals
could be admitted to the Faculty Senate after recommend&amp;lion by the preoident.
On anotber matter Chairman Rosen noted that on November 8 the FSC Steering
Committee sent messages to
SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer and President Robert.Ketter
of U / B, asking them not to
pursue the Appellate Court decision on the Hayes Hall 45
Ketter, who responded the nert
day, stated that he was advised
by legal counsel to await the
trial transcript before making a
decision. Chancellor Boyer had
not been heard from by Jaat
Friday
·
·

aban:

v~ on Bylaws Extended to Deciiniher !4,:··
Cl~~~-..1 D~11~t lYJ.UUtlL
71.K....:1~..1Wi':.l-l.PropoSal's
un

~UL LJUUU

Balloting on the proposed ecutive Committee, if the pronew Bylaws for the Faculty posed Bylaws pass, election of
Senate has been extended representatives to the new Senthrough December 4, the Fac- ate will begin early in Decemulty Senate Executive Commit- ber. . 'The elections will be untee announced this week.
der supervision of the Senate
All members of the faculty
will now receive a second ballot
plus copies of the complete pro- ·
pdsal. However, the 500 who
· have already voted need not ·
:;tmi~_ne.v ballots unless they
The first ballot had been
criticized by SOIQe faculty both
How might t6e challenges of
because it waa to be returned change facing higber education
by November 15 and because throughout the world affect unitl)e complete Bylaws propdsal versities in Africa's most popudid not accompany it. 'The text lous state?
the propdsal was supposed to
To analyze the emerging
on reaerve in the library for forces within higher education
those who wisbed complete in- in Nigeria, members of the Afformation. But aome faculty rican Studies f!orulty at U jB
complained UJSt it was not and the Office of International
available even theni.
Studies and World Affairs, AIThe Senate Executive Com- bany, will sponsor an interdismittee, noting that the enabling ciplinary c1111ference on camclause of the proposed Bylaws pus, December 4-5.
called for completion of ballotSpeakers will include David
in~ by November 15 and also C. McDowell, assistant profespomtinf out the imp&lt;IO!!ibility sor of education, State Univerof duplicating and diStributing sity College at New Paltz ·
1,400 copies cA the' entire pro- David A·bernathy, asaociate
]&gt;OS8l by that date, moved laat professor of political acienoe,
Wednesday to invalidate the Staoford; Baba Fafunwa, dean,
entire first ballot
Faculty of Education, UnlverOn Friday of laat week, sity of Ue; Mallam M. Bakari,
though, the matter was ..zecon- Bureau5Extemal Aid to EduN " · Minissidered and a motion was cation,
adopted providin': ( 1) that try of
ucation,~; c. A.
the period cA votinJ be ex- Altinyele, prof_,. of eoonomtended; ( 2) that copW!S ol the ics ud African Studies, HowBylaW!! be distributed to all; ard Univenit)'; and Henry L
( 3 ) that anyone who has. cast Bretton, Univenit!pro(_,. of
...,.__
te uru·~
a ballot but wishes to ...... ~- political ~
may do ao, and ( 4 ) that tl...e aity ,Co1Jep at Broci:J&gt;ort.
who have alreadY voted and do
Accord inc · to Cfaude E .
not wish to chanae may have Welch, chairman, SUNY Afritheir orilinal bellot counted. can Studies Faculty CommitFaCility w!ahinl to· alter their tee the conf-.ce, ''Ed111:11tioa- _
vote should mark '~" .., al Development in Nileria,"
the llllCOIId ballot envelope.
will not attempt to relolve
According to the ~te El&lt;- broad problema auch as ''fiDinc-

I

Ttett

Elections . Committee which
"will have responsibility of
completing all the elections by
the dates which are Si&gt;ecified in
the enabling clause of the proposed Bylaws."

.......,g

·--

ing, relationship of higber education to national goals etc"
It will, however, "set f;,rth 'a
range of possible alternatives."

1i'rv-.1~,

ChJrses

Racbel Caraon College is initiating "mini" couraes to de&amp;!
with the "maxi" . problems of
ecology this spring. 'The College will be ftering six new
9 that may be
one-aedit couraes
taken in any combination from
a minimum of two to a maximum of six.
. Topics of the six are: · Env_uonmental Law; Air PoUution; Food Reaowces and Nutrit!&lt;&gt;n; Urban Systems; Internati!""" Problems: Developing
Natio.ns and Demographic
Stud
and a--:-•
the ~....X::,ca;,..ill
be taught by the staff of Rachel
~ College ·and haVll a
maJamum enrollment of 50
M ting a.._ .ha
.
~
Y!' yet16to be
' according
Dr
~~owall,
mentor cA Racbai

All"'".i,

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

'The OOWBe8 will be offered in
l.our ODe-bour _.....__ allow11111 studeats to..--..-.
take one' courae
that betlins at the start of the

.!:id p~up~

:;::nerUJS~

- a into tbe period

• ·

to ~

behavior UDder-

ground where it cannot be ac

tivel_y dealt wiih in a problem:
solvmg fashion.
~ feels that in less
formal social systemo, deviancy
JS not always-dealt with by at!e!"Pts at control but by examllllllg the tenets cA the system
being violated . . It is up to the
legal system and the society to
determine the aourcea of present "deviant" ' behavior. While
not overly optimistic, Schwartz
~ are trends in
His own role as Law School
dean and provost of the Faculty of Law and .Jurisprudence is
the embodiment of this goal
He seeks a marriage of
legal and social sciences to
mate practice with intent.

=:

u,.;

10 Carrels
Up for Grabs
Ten locked carrela in Lockwood Library will be assigned
on a first.come, firat-served
basis, Monday, November 23
to interested faculty and Ph.D:
students working on ·their dissertations.
Applicatio011 may be filled
out only on · November 23, at
the Circulation Desk of Lockwood:
John 'Theall, circulation librarian, intend.• to assign four
persons to a carrel, since there
is desk space for two persons in
each. An equal number· of carrels will be reaerved for faculty
and Ph.D . students.
Carrel assignments are normally made for one semester·
however, Mr. Tbeall repor~
~t this year, since carrel asSignments are so late, holders
may keep their carrela to tbe
end of the spring semester.
A $2 deposit fee will be required for a carrel key. Tbe
fee will be refunded when the
key is returned at the end of
::;.::""" of the carrel assign-

great flexibility in the law as
it is written, be feels that there
is a tendency to use the law to
protect the values of the privileged. 'The sociologist sees a
tn,n1! to allow a small group of
experts with these values to
regulate the validation and in~relation of the law accordmg to these values, even when
this is not intended.
'rhen! is, !&gt;e ·feels, a necessity
to morutor the application of
!zow to insure that the expressed
gf ' : . 1aw is not contrament. Y
action of enforceF&lt;?llowing from the lack of
CODSJStency between the intent
"!Jd effect of laws is a strong
d~S&lt;:"ntent among those who are
denied equal treatment.
~wartzty ,feesufferingls
lh:at. in a 9I!DSe
u:~ !'&lt;:cause of
1' b; .~~-~,
~u.....,., .:~nties are
learnmg and seekiriJ the ·"4bts
UJSt are promised m prinCiple
but ~enied_ in l!r&amp;c;tice.. Tbe increasmg VIOlation cA the law
does not reflect rejection of the
system as much as a rejection
of laci: of fulfillment of its
stated goals, Schwartz commented.
.Ref~ to the unequal aP:
plicationo laws,Schwartzfeels
that the increase in laws ~
ifical!y designed to rep~ the
reactio';l cA those denied equal
protection under law produces
two further counterproductive
.-.Its. 'The act otprohibition
~as "an inducement to deVl&amp;te" and, furthermore, tends

aome will

DropDay,Dec.B

U::tinJ!on.

:n=

Is Theme of Two-Day U/B Meeting

~

:'.=x~~r eq~U:.I:nten:ta~

utes. Stating that there is a

'Nigenan" EducationalTL--lopment
~

g!,

By JOHN GREENWOOD
Dr. Richard D . Schwartz,
slated to become dean of the
Law School in the fall, demon· strated laat Thursday how he
integrates the social sciences
and the practice of law.
Spea]dDg to an interdisciplinary law and social sciences
group, Schwartz drew heavily
on sociology and social psychology to suggest that the
. causes of present deficiencies in
the. legal system derive from
SOCleta,l pressures ratber than
from inberent defects in the
system itself.
Schwartz pointed out that
basic behavioral norms develop
out of similarities in society
and therefore grow strong without the need for specialist&amp; to
interpret and enforce them.
Tbe aocially-derived norms are
self~orced by the pressure
of universally-shared values.·
However, as the society becomes more complex, differ~ in ~ences proiluce
differences m valued behavior.
'The system then functions only
as !ong as all groups reco'gnize
their mutual dependency,
Schwartz notes.
Equality and reciprocity are
generated by necessity,
Schwartz feels. A formal legal
srstem evolves when the aooety can not depend on social
P.ressureLato mamtain equilibnum. . WS, then, are only
needed m a fragmented cullure and enforcement is only
needed when individuals do not
sthehare ~ goals and values of
SOClety. . .
r.--:SchWil!lz md1cated Ul&amp;t the
defects m the present legal
fl'lliil!'wo,rk are the results of the
application of the laws to fill
"latent functions" which are

TeacherDemand
At Low Level
'The demand for teachers at
all levels of education is lower
~th the most acute oversupply
m the flelda of social science
!'Jill EngJiab, the summer 1970
JSSUe of Occupatiolllll OUllook
QIIDT/6ly reported
l'roap8cta are '-t, the QutJt'·
~~~ly said, in mathematics and ·
SCieDCie and other specialized
fields, such as """'*''s physi"!'1 education, apec:iat educationob and ilislrumental music.
J
proapecta are alao affected
by J'I!Oir&amp;Phlc location, t he
magazine said. Rural schools
are having the moat difficult
time fill.ini ._. while suburhanli~ haWI a mult:itude of
app cants.
'The Univasity Placement
and ear- Guidance Oft:ice
says it has many 8chooJ sys~ visitinj oaiDpus lo inter-

Whli..~"h!.:~~:

duct interview8 in the
be 1we tbill
ftl~ November 31; South
DecaDber 7, and
~DecaDber 14.
. and
Guidance ........., tt.t proopective
IMcbers ......... with them in
0~ to pou1icjpeto in. the in~ to became familiar
Wllb testing dateo, ud to cxxiipile a c:ncleatiai file far futore
. uaa. Additional ·il!lformation
~~tained by 8loppinJ by
~....... 6 Ha,yo. c.

..::;::;!

ear-

The final date on which stu~ts may resigli from COU1'IIes
Wl_thout academic penalty is
tldo, .._.. prior to the end of

:;:,.,.. the Division ot Under..-uate Studies reminds.
. For t:hnurrent lli!IDMter
IS Tu.lay, December 8. '

lhis

:=-

�Ncwermer 19. 1910

Co-opC'roter
Dedication
A dedication-convocation
program for the Cooperative
College Center at Buffalo will
be beid at 2 p.m. n-day, JJe.
cember 1, in the Golden BalJ.
room of the StaUer Hilton.
Principal speaker will be Dr.
Hugh M . Gloster, president,.
Morehouse College, AUanta,

Georgia.

~"P.M house will be held at
the ~Center 465 Washfob..wm, the

_...,_

ington Street,

1be Center, for which U/B
acta 88 the fiiiCai and adminis• trative Ulllbrella. mone of a ..,r.
ies of IIUCb facilities under the
auspice&amp; of the Stat.e Univer-

."1jnder tbe

direction of Dr.
Arthur S. Anderooo, the Cen·
ter oJfen remedial or "develop.
mental" programs 88 "a linlr. between the urban area that haa
been educationally· deprived
and the established educational
institutions."
Some 550 du.advantaged hiRh
scbool graduates are currently
enrolled in programa designed
to prepoire them for regular ool·
lege acceptance.

Goals Group

Report·Near
Sir John E&lt;:cles, chairman of
the Task Force on Univen;ity
Goals, stale\! that the group's
provisional report is not yet in,
but trusts that it will be TMdY
by the deadline of December 1.
To data, the T88k Force bas
formed sii subcommittees :
E:-aluation, Dr. Rollo L Han·
dy, chairman; Service to Community, Dr. Calvin D. Ritdlie,
chairman; Teaching, Dr. Theodore L Hullar, chairman; Research, Dr. Carl Gans, d&gt;airman; 1be Univenity's Role in
Bringing About Changes in Society, Eccles, chairman; and
Academic Freedom, Dr. Irving
Sigel; chairman. Reports from
Drs. Handy, Ritchie and Eccles
have already been p~t.ed.
with the rest to follow shorUy.
1be Task Force will meet
again tomorrow to consider
subcommittee reports, and to
draft a final report rom~ of
some general statements and
itemS from each aubromrnitt.ee.

Local•Funds (contilwed from JIGIOI. cot 1)

In 1969-70, the University
Committee itaelf awarded $320,·
980-including the $262,000
for the Graduate School (which
was taken from funds available
for this year) and 26 individual
grants ranging from $200 to

$14,000. .

Mother Goose Leaves Nursery Hits the Streets
By SUZANNE METZGER
~tvStaJJ

Mother GOose haa migrated
out of the nu....ry and into the
streets, in a sense "fiy(ing)
away home," for many scholars
have speculated that the
rhymes of the Mother Goose
rollection derived from earthy
atreet ballads and bawdy songs.
1be University. ~ 'Theatre Workshop, under the di·
rection of Billie Kirpich, will
pre...nt an original dance work,
"'lnner City Mother Goose," 88
part of the ..,ies "Inside New
Dance" at Domus. 1695 Elmwood Avenue, on Sunday, Ne&gt;
vember 22, at 3 p.m.
1be scenario was inspired by
a rollection of rhymes by the
same name written by Eve
Merriam, a New York City
poet.ess. 1be setting for these
poems is the urban center, with
all the evils of pollution, over·
crowding and spiritual deprivation. Here in the city, Mary
cultivates a sidewalk garden of
"chewing gum wads ,' ' "cigaretta butts," and "beer cans."
Jack is "nimble" and "quick"

ing. Now, he is in the position the chemist feels the scientists
of seeing his prophecy rome ,should work to bave the source
true.
· of funds transferred "from the
Yietnom-£ncl ttl ·
Department of Defense to some
His campaign against the · other department."
Vietnam War haa also been
1n replying to other audience
long and bitter. With the ac- questions, he also advocated
ceptonce of the Diem govern· that the use of medical and
ment, Pauling said, we "repud· dental X-rays be kept to a min·
iat.ed the principles of demoo- imum. He feels that the field
racy." Pauling ronsiders Pres- of medical research is a neident Nixon's October peace
1 tad
and that the tud
plan "a fraud," finding in it g ec
one
s Y
"no mention of the National ~::fh=se~~.ilid ~~';;
Liberation Front ( NLF) or the top priority.
'
provisional government of
South Vietnam." 1be chemist ....-,.auling haa long been inter·
not.ed that the only restriction est.ed in science's relationship
the North Vietnamese bave in to health and disease. 1n 1934
the peace negotiations is that he started studying sickle cell
they won't bargain with anyone anemia. J.ater, he worked on
from the pre...nt Saigon gov- mental disease from a molecu·
ernmenl Yet, he said, Ni&gt;:on Jar viewpoinl llis new book,
refused to recognire this. "The soon to be published, will destime haa rome, n he said. "when cribe his controversial research
this crime against humanity on the mid-preventing qualities
audit to be brought to an end." of Vitamin C.
Our nudeer testing policies
1be 69-year-old scientist is·
also came under fire from the
Nobel scientisl He feels the D - 1 - 1
Federal · Radiation Council's I't:ueftu I' LUIA:J,
recommendationrad1,~~
Four rol)egea ~ univerai~~ otatisties from · ~ .tJ:uee of w~ were not

c!:-

llleoolil

-

ACTION (See ..,_... column)
call "Adlon Une" - 831-6000
(All allis ... hiold In -)

city youngster feels.
The progrem is divided into
three sections, depicting scenes
in the house, in the. streets and
general scenes of cultural poverty. Although not closely programmed to the text, .the ....
quences bave some parallel to
Trqi-Comlc Comment
the rhymes of the "lnner City
1be new dance, which repre- Mother Goose" book, and
sents the rollsborative artistry ropies of the scenario will be
of Miss Kirpich and her Work· distributed to the audience.
shop students, spins off from ·
One of the major elements of
the written word into a mediirr~ the work is the music !=fellt.ed
of ''movement. design, sound, by Jeff Silberman, a music stuspace and oolor" to become, in dent with a multi-sensory maMiss Kirpich's words, "a tragi. jor. He haa romposed a romcomic comment on city life." bination of rerorded electronic,
Its performance should give a vocal and instrumental pasmoving picture of some twen- sages and live performance.
tieth century realities which Contemporary costumes were
confront the urhan child, not designed by Debbie Campagna,
only the inner-city child. On a Workshop student and art
the subway, for instance, be major. Dans Wolfson, also a
must tolerate "four and 20 peo- dancer in the group, haa defUy
ple, in room for one." And he transformed the designs into
can only wonder if "star bright" · attire.
really exists aft.er all, because
it can't be seen through the Slides of the City
Visual backdrops, black and
ceiling of smog. The dance at·
t.empts to bring to the viewer whit.e slides of the city, were
these fru strations which the produced by Sheila Feldman.

1be t.echnical detoils of light,
sound production and environment are being handled by Ed
Cox of Creative Associates and
Bill Vallianoo, an English major.

1be University Dance Theatre Workshop is romprised of
students earning credit lu•:ards
a course in dance produ&lt;:tion:
Students meet two or three
times a week or every uight if
they're preparing for a performance. The dancers in this
Sunday's show are: Bob Bartolomey, Michael Benzing, Johnna Drummer, Cliff Entes, Donna Genese, Janet Hamburg ,
Coryn Mark, Monica Polowy,
Margie Schwartz, Eric Sabin·
son, Jeff Silberman and Fern
Bartoer.
The roncert, a big idea leaning on a litUe budget, is in part
supported by minor funds from
Arts and Letters. Tickets; available at Norton hox office, are
only $.50. That's $.26 less.than
the Sunday New York Times
and worth as much towards an
afternoon of social rommentsry.

The Cmtroversial P a n l i n g - - - - - - - - - - - BUILD, NAACP
rrontirw•d from page I . col. 3)
it should be gott.en rid of." If int.ereot.ed in more than elimin· Sp1 I"t on LaWSUI"t
'1
the poesibilities of lead poison- the work is unclassified, then ating disease, however. He is

Individual faculties made
u- distrihutioal of institu·
tional funds last year: Enci·
MeriDa and ~ Sciences,
23 p!Ults totaJJina $30,610; Social Sciences anci AdJninilltra.
tion, 130 p!Ults totaJJina 184.·
3116; Arts and Lett.en, 74 p!Ults
totalling $58,656; EducatiOnal
Studloe, 44 PIIDts tnta!1in1 $23,·
730; JAw and Jurioprudence, 10
PIIDts totalling $7,845; Health
Sciences,. 54 grant&amp; totalling
$67,946; Natural Sciences and
Matbl!matic:s, 109 p!Ults total- !J&gt;dependerit reeeard&gt;era abo:-·
IDI baekground radiO·
ling $66,676.
, tion could cauae 88 many aa 16
A complete report of last
~~
year's diobursemen ta will ap- ~~to
pear in a future iaaue of the rniilloa c:biJdren to be born genetically-damaged.
/Uporle.
HEll!
. To twit-

but destructive, for now lie must
"grab the blade and give it a
tlick; grab the pu.... ..." and
"just for kick&amp;, just for fun,
plunge the knife and cut and
run." Mother Goose haa lost
innocenoo and acquired a sardonic, sometimes brutal wit.

-;

-

the F..-r

In the balf·hour 9U08tiOn·

and-anawer period followinc the
apech, Project Themis waa
"""'cht up. Pagling said be
.... not familiar with the project but felt that "if it is a defeuae ~- contract, ~

n-...1J3an

.

~~"::JjBU:, :d

alleged diacrimination against
womeil tluough affirmative ac:tion plan&amp;
Affect.ed by ~ ban, .an·
liOWICed last week m Waahing~· ~~ and construetion aw..._
Althouch f e d e r a I olticials
said ~ were pn!Yellt.ed from
identi{yjq schools affected,
they Oantlnnced • .report that
the Univmsity of Michipn .,...
one of the four.

1be civil rights organization
BUILD will go aheed with its
pton to implement the Bulfalo
Affirmative Action Program for
minority ronstruction workers,
despite NAACP and Bulfalo

also vitally roncerned with the
type of world the ne&gt;tt genera·
lion will inherit. It is our "duty
to future generations to leave
a good world for them to live
in," he says. To acroll!PJ!sh

!::"be~:~~i:~r·~~~~ ~~1~ ~ti:n!=':

William L Gaiter of BUILD
said the suit by u- two organizations "rep~ts a rour...
of action they bave me-n for
tbeir own p~"
"It is our intent to move on
this iaaue now," Gaiter said.
"BUILD feels that the· blac:k
community cannot wait for a
whit.e aavior, draped in blac:k
rhetoric, to figh~ our battle in
1970. H minorities are to be
ready for ( ronstruction) jobs
in the sprint of 19711. the training must begin now.
1be NAACP ,and the Minority Coalition are -.king the
c:onstruclion halt becauae they
· charge job diacrimination in the
local ODII8tructioo induat&gt;:y.

the wealth and beauty of this ·
world . . . and a 1"Striction on
the individual for the welfare
of society." He would begin by
ouUawing the supersonic transport (SST) . It's "bard to see
a need for the SST," Pauling
notes, for it would "introduce
additional dangers" such 88
pollution and increased traval
hazards.

~o~oo~....-

The manned space program
is another project be's skeptical
of. "It may be alright because
people like to get involved in a
rontest," be said. But "largely
it's a waat.e of money." He feels
this way about the propooal to
land a man on Mars, also,
tanning it' ............. "
So-called "radical" ideas
auch aa u- have gotten Pauling into trouble before. In the
President Robert L Ketter is
early 50's he was blacklisted by e&gt;:peded toaa:IOW to malra a
major policy statement 011
"!1;'en!~veier~..f~
equal opportunity propama at
:;:,rr~ ~~tJ~ U/B.
1be atatement will be pre.
or revolutionary speakers" put ~tad
88 an addreas at an
out by the H""'"' Internal Se. curity Committee. Pauling COli·
siders it "demeaning even to of Buftalo at the Hotel Statler
oomment 011 the list." However, Hllton.
be-~ Ricbard
K lchord, chainnan of -the
1be s.-ch will - - a
Committee, ... fool, ........ and luncheon which follows a mom.-mdNI or be tiOuldn't be ing-Joq ~ -m.
1be Proliram is open to the
chairman of a committee with
public.
.
this reputation. H
•

Ketter ·statement

:.."":

c::

~trrt!=

~·

•

�N..,__J9,J9io

~

4

rcreatWe CollR!ie' Called ..
Best Plan.Advartmd So.Far

Using Law to_
Drder' Certain Peop~e,

Is Not the Same as ~wand Order_
the aegmehts of the community
By THE CONCERNED
which the establisbed legal proLAW STUDENTS
fession has long overlooked,
FOR PEACE
and is willing to provide legal
There is a difference between services never considered belaw and order and using the fore, at no cost. He is willing
law to keep certain people in to voice his disapproval of the
a special kind of order.
existing structure and of those
It is the distinction between who direct the enforcement of
the two which helped prompt law. From this uruque vantage
the establishment of the Con- point, be seeks change where
cemed Law Students for .Peace the existing institutions are
( CI.SP). A group ol about 50 bankrupt of objective and imlaw students, the Cl.SP was partial standards.
set up to help insure that no a- Contact With the Mochlnery
The nature of the -work that
one's rights are violated, no
matter how' .unpopular their the students have done has
cause may be.
brought them in close contact
d.!:O:::~e~~ ~; with the local and State politigrouP,. which society finds "dis- cal machinery. In September,
tasteful" time and again have f--~~J:I B~..C :,"; ~
their civil rights violated by '""""'
those in authority under the tiona! news agencies disclosing
guise of law and order. Until the findings of intense research
recently, there was a general into the "birdshot'' shootings
f.. what"
on campus last May. The rebe
f~£de::':..
so
aroong port, which was an effort to· get
Now, however, _Jaw students a thorough official investigahave realized tbat they "!" in tion and public report of the
a unique position, not just to events, was met with official
promote dialogue on the pres- disapproval and inaction. Eyesing problems facing the local witness accounts, physical eviBuffalo community and the dence of police firing birdshot
American people, but to use and a photo of the allepd potheir knowledge of the , leJal lice car from which the shots
system to help the legally- were fired were part of the eviabused understand their rights dence presented. The response
and the law.
from local, State and federal
The Cl.SP, which grew out of agencies was total inactionthe disturbances that followed save one request to "forget" the
the . invasion of Cambodia and birdshot report in return for
the deaths at Kent and Jackson official recognition of the legal
State, set out to provide a uni- OOO':eF):idsy. October 23 , a
lied vehicle through which to
voice dissent. Contrary to skep- legal 0 b s e r v e r wearing an
ticism that the group would die identifying armband was ar-

mit and ·to act as obeervers for
a Halloween danoe. The application for the permit was ~
mitted a roonth before the
danoe: The decision by the
State Liquor Authority denying the permit was beld back
until three days before the allair, 'effectively barring any ~
view or appeal before the affair.
Thus, the Mattachine was
relegated to a coke and coffee
party. It should be noted that
fraternities and other accepted
social organiiations bave little
trouble obtaining such permits.
In working closely with the
Society, o~e can hardly av!'id

0

:rest,aca:O~!~

ofourtlaincktheo!
have become even more active
this year in eftorts , to initiate
reform in the legal institutions.

=

~=!.'f~

=-

~~~~:~t';-'b~~~~

forced to remain underground,
often using pseudonyms, and
are constantly in fear of arrest
by entrapment or simple harassment. Because of the continuing harass ment, the _So.

·

dy

~~:?' ~dmislj~ ~

r

extin

walk C,:
tightrope at all times. Although
New York State has abolisbed
its ~ statutes, catchall statUtes such as loitering
. and disorderly conduct are essily. substituted.
.
· The U n t - Pe'l"'tuute Abuse
These are only a few of the
more subtle forms of repression
in which the law is used to
keep soCial disaent and aberration to a controlled minimum.
There are countless examples,
but these should suffice to open
the eyes of the non-believers.
It is a relatively simple matter
to convince students that actua1 and abusive repression is
coming down from officials in

?Ontrol. Btabut1 it jobis anto almoeb
• t
e
rmg
be r of two police officers who msurmoun
that message to people not achad requested a group of six tually involved. 'lbo6e citizens
obeervers and two others to dis- who aren't involved and have
· be'
·
1 ed
perse. The charges were imDraft Counsellnc
mediately dropped at the initial no interest m
mg mvo v
The group now has several arraignment.
perpetuate the legal abuses. A
different programs active under
The . T
f this ent great share of the blame be.ts gw'dance. Law students are
t besigrutedicanceTheo
,. ev of longs to those liberal thinkers
l
mus
no ·
po Ice · occupying places of social esworking with attorneys on draft ficers in question resented any- teem arid prestige who see what
counseling and related litiga- one observing their perform- is happening and do little or
tion, and on several cases de- anoe. The observer in question
fending students and others in in no way broke the law nor nothing to prevent it. •.,.,y
drug, disorderly conduct and provoked the police. He was are a sizeable number-faculty,
.
char
In the I ture
b · 1
doctors, laWYers, clergy and
s imilar
ges.
u
• merely performing an o VIOUS Y businessmen. Tacit disapproval
it is hoped that the program necessary function in a po- has the same effect as tacit a~
can be expanded to cases in- tentially explosive situation. proval and so long as no 0 ;;.,
volving civil rights and tiber- Thecausecharthegoesff_wceersreandrod pthepedll
_ be-su- yells "stop"-&lt;&gt;r even questions
ties, indigents, prisoners, and
1
mental inpatients.
periors realized that there were what is happening-there will
Several black Buffalo coun- little or no grounds for an ar- be no change.
The people of Buffalo just
cilmen have requested the as- rest. The arresr appears to bave
sistance of law students to belp been
warning to obeervers elected Jack Kemp. The people
research wel!ar'e laws. Thirty- that ri'uffalo Police would not of New York State elected
five to !orty,egal obeervers are tolerate such activity.
James Buckley. Their camnow available to any organiza- The Mattachlno Sodety
paigns were of the lowest form
-appealing to hiiJil811 emotions
tion which feels the need for
objective reporting of poesible
Concerned Law Stud en t s rawasthelredthantobeliev~en.thaThetdP.~,?t-c
problems with law enforcement also worked closely with the
~
officials and they have been Mattachine Society of the Ni- ing youth must be stopped, and,
called upon .many times for agara Frontier, an organization mo,.,--serioualy, that their distheir services.
of homosexuals seeking to bring sent was un-American. Coupted
In fact, the law student who the status of homosexuals to a with President Nixon's and
until recently was noted for his level of respect and acceptabil- Vice President Agnew's attacks
quiet conservatism and non-in- ity in society.
on diaaenters, the Cot)aervative
volvement has been involved.
The Mattachine contacted ticket was made to aeem to be
He is involved in that be is now Cl.SP to ask. their help in ob- the American ticket. A vote for
interested in reac;hing out to taining the required liquor per- them was a vote for the Amer.('OL._

------------~------------------------------- ~~s;:~~~~

GREPORTER:&gt;

n'UD•IfT UPA.JRS •otraR: S,_. U,......
OONT'IUaUTINO aDITORS: 1 - - .lt. o.s-d8, CM17J H•.,.,..,_• Rob.rl S.
ltlt:Or.,..,.,.. IUdr Scmr.b, }fiJIIJch Wohl.
rBOTOOIUI'IlJ': lfflwer4 L. IIOftr._
B . v,.._.
COII"''IU.UTIJIO .&amp;Rr~: s - M . ......

H._

little understanding . of what
democracy is ID5llt to be in
America. American democracy
is not ID5llt to be n-lom to
think the same way as thoee
who are in pol.er_ It is freedom
to think and act as your conacience dictates. Cl.SP are just that: concerned students. They are concerned about the misrepresentation of wliat democracy and its
laws are and sbould be to the
public. •The mushrooming activities of the group are demanstration of the inaeaaing
concern about the misuse and
abuaa of law by thoee enforcing
it. But it is thoee in power who
are capable ol the magnitude

~~Jll U:v~~-r:
must join the &amp;lruggle.

By ·D.AVID R. KOSlUR .
U#tdM;aduar. Stutl.nt

Although little recognized as
such, society is baaed UJ&gt;OD human artistry and creatiVIty. The
strong coupling between tbeee
two fundamentals is purportedly more evident in the humanities than in the sciences. But,
both the humanities and the
sciences exhibit the same degree of artistry and creativitrTheir difference lies only m
their subject matter.
The Creative College con·cept is perhaps the most significant and the most vital contribution to the educational

GVIEWPOINTS
The Reporter " - on this .,_
to provide 0 foruin for the OX·
c:tuince of views on • wide vorloty
of the taues foclnc the ococlomlc
community . We wek:ome both
position popero and os

spocepormlts.

process that our "institutions of
higher learning" have so far
proposed. Being strongly baaed
on democratic principtes, it allows for a previously llllhMrdo! degree of !eedbeck from the
student. More importantly, this
feedback does not assume a
passive form; rather, it takes on
a very active form.
Although active participetion
in the governing processes of
learning is not a corequisite to
learning, it allows the student
to determine the relevancy of
what be learns. However, the
impetuousness and idealism of
youth must be allied with the
patience and experience of
counselors. ( I use the word
counselors instead of inslruc&gt;
tors or teachers because no one
can "teach" a person something
with any certainty that be is
" learning" it. "You cannot
teach a man anything-you
can only help him find it within himself." - Galileo )
Eve&lt;yone Hos Crootivlty

A basic attribute of man is
creativity. Everyone has it; not
everyone uses it to the fullest
of their ability. Whatever creativity and imsgination is evident in childhood is often ~
limated by the present educational system. People thJ not
IDse tlu!ir creatiurty, rather,
they IDse tlu! ability to use
their creativity. Thus, one cannot learn to create, one can
only learn how to be creative.
The Creative College is an
attempt to reawaken the creativity dormant in students Gnd
·counselors. A learning process
baaed on such a J&gt;recept is the
most useful form of "education
for living." Unfortunately, sucb
a process has been sadly and
cruelly neglected in modem
education. Ssdly, because of the
far-reaching oonaequences (or
disasters or catastrophes) that
have arisen from the p~t
educational system_ l..'ruelly,
because the participants have
been cheated and manipulated
without regard for their humanity. We now live in a world
where a largely uncreative mob
is 'unable to cope with lt8naelves and the object8 which
creative individuala have made.
As I bave just hinted, the
individual can be creative. It
is much more dillicult rO.. a
group to be creative. The basic
distinction between individual
and group does not .depend directly on education. It depends
largely on a physical-mental
process called communication.
An individual finds it eaay to
"know" what be is thinking. A
group of individuala cannot be··
creative. However, a JP:O)lp acting as an indiVidual c8li be Creative. The difference between
the disjointed group and the

coalesced group is communication. Thoei! individuala who can
communicate with one another
have a far better chanoa of util-

::'~t!J~~~.3;.

jointed group.
No Uniform Communlcotlon
Unfortunately, society does
not possess a uniform form of
communication for. all of its
subject!.fiefds1 Specifically, uniformity refers to the precision
of communication. Out of necessity, the sciences developed a
very precise form of-communication.
Everyday, speech, which is
largely baaed on humanistic '·
(as opposed to technological) ·
communication, suffers from a
lack of preciaion, upon whicll
the humanities aeem to thrive.
One aim of the Creative College
is to attempt to remedy this
situation. It .hopes to intensify
the development of a science of
language (other than linguistics) ao that everyday communications can ll8liUIDe precise
IDMiling. It is probably more
precise to call this objective the
development of a science of the
linguistics of communications.
This proposed analysis of
communicatiQns is of little
worth by itself; every theory
must rest on ~tally
verified facts and must be alated
in a form wltich Ieoda itself
eaaily to application. Thus, the
Creative Collep looks forward
to applying the theOry of the
linguistics of communications
to . the many problems which
modem-day (lack of) commu- ·
nication has prodUC?e&lt;f.

Blood Flow

Measured By

U/B Group

A technique to measure the
speed of blood as it flows
through the blood vessels in the
body was reported laat week in
Atlantic City at the 43rd scientific session of tbe American
Heart Aasociatiun by a collaborative team of U /B investigators.
A small "hot-film" probe was
used by a medical/engineering
team to study: certain fundamental characteristics of blood
flow in the aorta. that vessel
which carries !lie blood from
the heart to the other parts of
the body. T'beM flow character·
istics have bi9I obeerved to
change with di«erent disease
conditions ol the heart and the
arteries; for eumple, diseased
aortic heart valves produce
ayptical flow ratee.

Thus far, the investigators
have examined only healthy
animala to mmblisb "normal"
conditions ol flow. u specific
atypical flow CllrWl8 can be related to specillc .u- atstes,
the ''bot-Alm" prolle will prove
to be a valuable instnlment for
diqnosing c:lrculatory illnessesCoauthors ol the paper 011
"Sequential v.~Development in the
• Aorta"
are Dr. ~fan~*~ L
·.assiatant .,....,_ ol medicine;
J. w. Amyot, graduate &amp;ludent,
mecbanical en1ineering; Dr.
G. P. Francis, associate profe&amp;aor of rnechaniceJ EJDiineennl;

~~ or~r::.:x~

and Dr. Francis J- Klocke. associate prof-.; of medicine.tti'
"These .atudiea," Dr. False
said, "emphasize ~ advantages of measuring detailed pizedroflles in vivo with a miniatur ba
hot-film probe. They furnish !ric infonnatioo 011 opening anthed
Cloaing of heart valves and
influence of pulse - - on the
circulation."

�Nav«nber 19,

tho

5

Fillmore Fans
Seek Essays
On Millard.

·New Issue·
Of SCATE

Is Planned

They're at it apin!
· "America's two foremost
-upe. dedialled tD the mem~;.y of Millard Fillmore," the
Millard Fillmore Birthday Party Society - the poup which
brought Mill~d's memory tD
Johnny Carson's couch and
desk last year-and the Millard Fi!lm~n~ul:.,".!.'i

By

R.poner"'SI.JI

~Fillmore Memorial Essay Contellt and Research Fellowship."
First prize is $78.15; second
1

P~~h$~:~ ~m

be no other

prizes," the coo- slinger ssys,
.._
all applic:ants will be
awarded
honorary
doctorates by .the Millard Fill-

.ineretnclous

more Institula"

~~u;~ Class of '74 Says They're r'ljtpical,'
;;re~=~~~

They Just Want·a Peaceful Edueation

"FOR EXAMPLE: Millard
Fillmore abolished debtDts'
prison. Had he not done so, perhaps there would be no credit

By STEVE LIPMAN
"They're a lot freakier than
last year."

'"Ibis year they look a lot
"ANOTHER EXAMPI.E: straighter."
Millard Fillmore sent Admiral
Depending on whom you ask,
Dewey tD 'open up .Japan-' Had this year's freshman class is
he not done so, might Japan either the next wave of campus
still be cloeed?
radicals, or a poup of apath"AND ANOTHER: Millard etic individuals who come out
Fillmore signed laws which of hibernation only for finals
may have delayed the Civil and vacations.
War up tD eight Y"'!"'· What
Ask the freshmen themselves,
might this have meant, Abra- and they will tell you they are
ham Linroln-wise?
"typical .students who want tD
. "YET ANOTHER : Millard get a peaceful education."
This is among the findings of
Fillmore's wife installed the
first indoor plumbing in the interviews of over 40 first-year
White House. Consider the al- U / B students conducted by the
ternstives. AND SO ON AND Reporter.
SO FORTH!!!! CONSULT
Many freshmen came here
YOUR PUBLIC LIBRARY." · apprehensive about the politiThe "competition" is open tD cal atmosphere. Because of
students and faculty at all U.S. newspaper reports and family
liigh schools and colleges, and grapevines, they thought the
to others, including employees school "would be all SDS and
of the sponsoring organizations Niagara Liberation Front." Qne
(no favoritism will be shown). student expected "at least one
Essays must be typewritten, building burned down a day,
no longer than 500 words, in and four cops and twelve kids
English. and should deal with machine-gunned down, or
only one aspect of Millard Fill- smoke bombs and gas bombs
more's accomplishments, c'not blowing up about once or twioe
the entire magnificent gamut," a day."
as the contest sponsors put it.
The political vacuum on camAll entries become the joint pus so far this term has surproperty of the Millard Fill- prised a number of freshmen,
more Biithday Parly Society but the reasons for it are apparand the Millard Fillmore In.sti- ent, they feel. "Nobody is realtute, and none can he returned. ly behind · the radicals any
"If any are ~tly pub- more," says a coed from Long
lished, full credit, hut no mon- Island. A Brooklyn coed feels,
ey, will be given."
''Everybody is waiting for
Entries must be received by something tD happen. but nocards fDday.

~~·:AJ:dFilf
more's birthday, .January 7,
1971. SOnd entries U&gt;: Millard
Fillmore ~ Contest, Box
308, Sprina Valley, New York
109771be. _
,_.~ that 1 ,~,~v

........

......

compelitiou is 1loo5t, real and
genuine...
'
.
Also ·oo .January 7 the Unl--'ty _.,, _.._.~ its b:adi-

·-- w... .,...... . .

~

• tional wrealli:-laying cereiDCli1Y
at tlie Fillmore gravesite, Few-

eat IAwa.
For thaae who don't: rememher Fillmore was the flnlt chenol UjB. Maybe that fact
would liUib a "what if" ·

;;n.,;

Burke To R.I.
Dean Fred Burloe ol Internatioaal 8tudleo will I'OIIign his
u jB post to become oommis...._ ol education for the
State ol Rhode Island, elfeclive
January 1.
.
Burloe who came tD the Univenity In 1968 from 8yracuae
is an ~ in Afriqm allain
who baa -dwwded 'a marlred
elJP8Diion ol the Univenitfs
tranooational ~-

suZAlo!NE· METZGER

=:·--about

n.,

to _start any-

Didn't See the Union

The reports of violence here
last
·
didn't discourage
many"':,;:::t,.;ts from applying
("most colleges were having
trouble") but some parents
were ws.Q.. Joan Vick, Far
around t h .
Roclaiway, got
•s
problem easily. "I brought my
parents throuJih Amherst so
they got a re81ly nice view of
the place, and they didn't ~
tbe Union, so they thought 1t
was pretty IQ!ll."
The m.;m:fty of parents
either bad no say in their cbildritn's choice of rollege, or sup-

pot~~ the class of .,,
cbooae U/B? First ol all "it is
~- ~tof.

~ that~ were~

first .-sideration.
Curriculum was ano~ important ri!ason. Many freshmen
were attzaded by U/B's aca~ "'P."~· especially by
~~ Biology deTile OniJ
· Other.
ts came for'-

llOble reasons. A boy from WhotBupThom!
What bugs this year's fresh.
Brooklyn recalls, ''I wasn't accepted at Princeton; I was on men? Well, there are the usual
the waiting list at Cornell and complaints of bad food, big
never made it; I applied late classes, and terrible advisors.
for Stony Brook, and so this The whole academic structure
was the only one left. I didn't of the University bothers some.
"I think the entire idea of the
want to stay in Brooklyn."
A coed from Pennsylvania University, and the idea of
came here because "it's a long schooling is ridiculous," feels
way from home, a long way!'" a young man from New York
City. "I went through 12 years
The social life here also drew of it, and for some stupid reamany students. GirlS, especial- son I thought it would end when
ly, . were swayed by reports of I came up here. But I see that
around-the-clock dates. A it's exactly the same. You still
Flushing girl remembers "the have the m a r k i n g system;
social life was built up like un- there's still lots of competition
believable: "'bere's nothing for grades."
~ U / B. Everythin~s boomThe •ize of the school threw
ing at U/ B, there's so much tD many rreshmen at firs~. Surdo.' But there isn't really." pri::
.y, howe ver, students
Most of the girls interviewed from &gt;mall towns like Rochreflected this disappointment, ester, Plattsburgh and Cortland
but the males bad few com- were less awed by the size than
plaints.
those from New York City.
Many freshmen find the stuOne enterprising male from
Brooklyn finds he "can crash dent body very cold. Ellen
Friedman
from Queens is anintD a different girl's room noyed "when
people get in the
every night, and thereby drop elevator with you, and no one
says anything to anybody.''
my room altDgether."

Ex-Priest Wants To Serve
The Students' Human Needs
"Students at a school this
large feel that they are lost.
Within about one we e k of
school many want to drop out.
Nobody pa s attention to
them."
Clarence Dye, 201 Harriman
Library, new associate director
of student aftairs, hopes tD help
these students by doing "that
which is the human thing."
Dye, a Catholic priest for 15
years before he left the pulpit
this year, explained that his office "meefs the human problems
of students, whatever they may
be."
"One of tbe problems is that
students are not sent to see people, but are sent tD sie offices.
And offices are pretty dam impersonal. Therefore·, we send
students tD see -le."
Dye knows about the musical offices pme many students
play here, .becaUIIe he has made
the rounds of a registering student.
·.
Dye left the priesthood becaUIIe "the otganized church

-=-~~~~
there is too much of what you
call 'Saving the Institution,'
and not enough of Pfel!!'hing
the gospel. I once - read ·or a
rabbi who left the rabbinate, I!J:·
plaining that he didn't think
the good - ' " needed him,

and that the had people weren't
coming to him anyway."
The Papal decree on birth
control was the "strongest factDr
in influencing Dye tD leave the
church. "I thought this was a
very wrong decision on the part
of the church, and if you violently disagree with a pc)licy,
then you resign, isn't that
right?''
Why didn't he try to change
the system from within?
"Changing the system means
that you can re&amp;l!Onably ezpect
to have some power to change
it, sod in a monarchial structure, which the church is, there
is no way of changing. The
Pope iules' by divine right, so,
therefore, he can't make mistakes . How do you change
that?"
One fault that the University
shares with the church, Dye
feels, is that both "have bMutiful........,.,. tD -tiona nobody
is asking any more."
A native Bulfalonian, Dye received his . B.A. and M.A. degrees from St. Bona venture,
and worked for his doctDrate at
FOrdliam.

Though SCATE bas been out
of circulation this year, it still
lives; lllld the document is apected to be revived sometime
before fall 1971 registration.
· SC~TE. a publication whose . _
initialS stand for S t u d e n t
Course and Teacher Evaluation, appel!red in 1967, 1968
and 1969 as a -rather unwieldy
but pithy critique of classes and
teachers.
·
It was a composite of student
reactions and opinions on
courses which had been recorded through a 45-i~ questionnaire, the results of which
were:fed through a computer to
be summarized: The 1969 issue
evaluated some GOD-700 undergraduate courses-that is, about
half of all undergraduate offerings.
This year, students will receive a form with only three
general questions and space for
more extensive statements.
Again the comments will be
compiled and condensed, but
the new SCATE will emerge, a
trinuned-down version of its
former self, more useful and
more readable.
1be idea behind it . is the
same as that underlying similar
publications at Harvard, Syra- •
cuse, N .Y.U., Berkeley and
City College. It is to serve as
an aid to students during registration and tD · help teachers
see themselves as others see
them.
Does SCATE really cut ine?
Marv Freedman pf SCATE
says that in the past both student and faculty responses tD
the final document indicated it
was useful in choosing and improving courses. It even bad
some influence in making tenure decisions.
SCATE has met with mUed
emotions-it is, after all, an
opinion poll and, therefore,
subject to controversy. Some
faculty members refused tD distribute the questionnaires tD
their classes, though; in such
cases, students often completed
the forms on their own. And
some students reported that
comments on courses were not
always valid. But mostly lsvorable feedback and a little faith
have kept the SCATE people
interested in generating another issue.
. SCATE is an organization
composed of 12 students who
meet at an office in Vico Coll"ie, 176 Winspear. The operation is financed by a grant
from the Research Foundation'
which was acquired~
efforts of Dr. Peter F.
and Dr. Warren G. Bennis.
student group enlists help from
the departments which hand
the forms tD individual teachers
for class distribution. December 7 and 8 will be SCATE
DAYS this year and it is hoped
that students will give ten minutes of enthusiastic attention to
the completion of the forms.
Original student c!onunents
will be kept ori file in the Viro
office, so if ·anyone Wants tD
delve more deeply, he may.
This yJ'&amp;r's issue will he distributed free of charge and if
the computers shape up, it may
: . .~ ..:,~~ pre-recistza-

New LaW Office

The Black American Law
Students AssociB.tion (BALSA) of U f B baa established a Commumty Law Office (CW ) , at
HELP!
241 Monroe Street, which will
-oo.tltRIDGE LEA BUS SCHEDULE
belp provide indigents with free
Arst Floor, Norton Holl. lnfor· legal assistance, legal education.. legal counseling and a
m~on Counter
beil-borid program.
.

�•.
Nove~r

19, 1970

Bid OpeniilgThday for
$8,500,000 Law School
By
HERYL HARGESHEIMER
· v~t7 lnt-rion s.rnc..
Bids on construction of a new
seven-story Law School structure, expected to cost $8.5 milion, will be opened today in the
offices of the State University
Construction Fund in Albany.
Scheduled for completion in
February 1973, the Law and
Jurisprudence Building will replace the present facilities at
77 West Eagle Street and
rented space in the Prudential
• Building in downtown Buffalo.
The building, designed by Harry Weese and Associates and
Anthony L. Carlino of Buffalo,
will feature expanded library
facilities, an actual oourtroom
and several large lecture halls.
While the Amherst move initially raised concern that the
Law faculty and studenl• would
no longer be near the courta,
the new facilities, it is now said,
will foster closer ties between
classroom and bencb. On the
grade level of the building will
be a courtroom in which actual
cases wm be tried, provided
they are of legal significance
and the parties and counsels involvP.d grant their consent. This
will be possible through arrangements made by the Law
School with the Fourth Judicial
Department of the Appellate
Division of the State of New
York. The courtroom will seat
about 90 persons and can be
ei&lt;panded tO aocommodate up
to 350.
In addition, vis i t i n g attorneys will come into contact
with students and faculty members in a lounge and special
rooms provided for them. Large
lecture rooms with capacities of
300-350 will facilitate an expanded continuing legal education program for rracticin' attorneys. None o these Sltuations' is possible in the present
Law School quarters.
The second level of the building will house problem rooms
and seminar rooms as well as a
librarY chec:;-out. Located on
the third through the seventh
floors will be faculty offices, library stacks and study carrels,
administration offices and suppcirting facilities. Faculty for
the Law School will eventually
-total 781amal&lt;ing it . one of the
Iaraest w acbools in the nation.
The library space planned
will iallow the Law School Libnlry to grow to a level of

300,000 . voiiiiDI!II by_ the b!te
1~

,.....

making it ODe of the top

ten · in the United States. Its
current holdings of 150,000
rank it 28th among 130 law
school libraries.· But, some 65,000 of the boolis now held cannot he shelved because of the
shortage of shelf space. Instead
of being used, they are stored
at several locations throughout
the city.
The current enrollment or
530 students will eventually
grow to 800, a number which
Law School officials feel is
Buffalo's appropriate s h a r e
based on population projections for the State of New
York.
Recognizihg the importance of a consistent supply
of attorneys to the inunediate
area, School officials say the
emphasis will remain on Western New York students.

Libraries Set
Holiday Hours
All University libraries will
be closed Thursday, November
26, Thanksgiving Day. .
The schedule for the remain-

der of the Thanksgiving recess
is as follows: ·
Art Library-Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday, Nov. 25,
27 and 28, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, Nov. 29, 2 p.m.-9 p.m.
Bell Science-Wednesday,
Nov. 25, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed
Thursday through Sunday.
Chemistry - Wednesday,
Nov. 25, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ; Friday,
· Nov. 27, 1 p.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, Nov. 28, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Closed Sunday, Nov. 29.
Harriman Reserve-Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, Nov.
25, 27 and 28, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.;
Sunday, Nov. 29, 2 p.m.-12
midnight.
HeaUh Sciences- Wednesday and Friday, Nov. 25 and
27, 8 a .m.-9 p.m.; Saturday,
Nov. 28, 9 a .m.-5 p.m.; Sunday,
Nov. 29, j! p.m.-9 p.m.
Law- Wednesday and Friday, Nov. 25 and 27, 8:30 a.DL5 p.m.; Saturday, Nov. 28, 9
a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, Nov. 29,
I p.m.-5 p.m.
.
Library Studies Lab- Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday,
No~. ~~28, 9 a.m.-5
p.Loc~W~ and
Friday, Nov. 25 and 27, ~a.m.5 p.m_; Saturday, Nov. 28, 9
a.m.-5 p.m_; Sunday, Nov. 29,
2 p.m.-midnild&gt;L
MUiic_:CJc.d Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday. Open 2
p.m.-10 p.m. Sundar, .Nov. 29.
Ridte :Leo-WedDeoday, Friday and Saturday, Nov. 25, 27
. and 28,' 9 a.m.-5 p .m.; Sunday,
N
29 1
-5D.11L

PIIOIIIIEIS ~
·
·
campus 0111.- of Facilities
_ , . -announced that It will
bolln tsaulnc mOnthly PI08·
· . - _.ts an Am~ constnleScie~ ~
- · n. ,_rts, nott.nc -... of W.....,_.•v Nov 25, 8 a.m................,._
war
and of ---.;:'!'J__
p.m.and beini ,_ied 6 p.m.; · ·•"'""'V.'
N27' 1 28
9
will be
rriid In tt\o ... 6 p.m.; Satuiday,
ov.
'
ca
.111 ble . a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 29,
,..... a !My arw "'!1'18 awn
. 2 p:m.-7 P.DL

n.

'l,.,ineerinl-

N;,

far-·

Help Asked in Fund Drive
EDITOR:

co~:f':t.:r t:;..u;~~~~t;.

entbood campaign, we want to

publicize the fact that we are
working bard right now on· our
organization so that the yearly
in January will be a auc-

dri~

""""·
Our choice of Januuy for the

Planned Parenthood Fund drive,
as in previous yean, gives us an
advantage in not C!&gt;mpe~
·
at
that time with any other
campaip. It alao gi- 111

f.':t

advantage of working in·

r"-ll&lt;Yriafa ,-.~

easary to our orp.nization becauee
of ito rate of growth: we are in-

Ought Not SPY'

p~~ ::~oo!..lann...: UJl.l~~ '-"-¥0

:.~ncy~ ~~~ta:':!:

part·becauoe of our independence
as a eeparate orpnilation in cam~ for lunda, we ncny etaDd
m

sixth place in total oupport

revenueS m the field of national
heelth qenci•.
,
Here in the Univeraity community, we are this year exteodinc

!,~~fro!:'~':,:' bJ,! i!.:\'g
•
bo to
the
:t~ ~';
~;;:"Uni-

=.talf

venity more thorouchly than ever
before. Any faculty wife who
want. to help ua in January .

EDITOR:

!h.~~.~·Coourpo.~rtidQ.=!

•-.au,.
· Jll
of
which appean in the - . .

~~t
partici~!-2PII•J.::"{:
~~
--.

r=:
lftW

fall terved previoaaly •

an

=:
UD-

~~LEn;=

this educational '!'hicb
can only be of benefit to the
Univeraity and the _,mty,
will be compromised if theN are
participanto enrolled who mild&gt;t
abo be eervinc U UDderaJYer
acenta of -law enforomDeDt au-

=

pleue call ... now.
:l:r:i:"u~&amp;J
. vof:nt::~
~ a declaration ~ each particiatudent body. We Willi! your en- P'U!t that . be will not. 10 ...,..
eq;y especially. Laet January while he 11 .en~Ued 1D ~P.
· Plinned Pa~e~~thood ..!11 a oinpe :::;..: o~oJ1=.:'tythis~
Jetter to the Spectrum ~ _ forthwith institute . , . - _
~~ ~:.~i:fc~t
againa~ the individuaf CODOilD8d

w':k:!'fr:.:

S:

apontaneoualy coftected by aDd
from studento. Aloo, atudento ..,1unteered for ,..,rk with Planned
Parenthood on ..~ .._...;t-

aDd bia aiJOI*)r.

-Peter H. Staple

"-&gt;c:iale PJofe.or Oral BiolocY

�November 19,1970

7

-4 Bargaining COOtemers
Outline What They Offer
By JUDITH WOHL
Tbe first campus panel disCW!Bion on co~ec.tive bargaining
was held NoVember 9 by the
Caucus on WOI!"'D'• Rights at
SUNY, Buffalo Chapter.
Preeent were representat!ves
from each or the four organiza.

~{';Y·,~~g ~ r=--~~~

ing professional stalf: Senate
Professional Association
(SPA) , State University ..Federation or Teachers (SUFI'AFI'), Civil Sai'Yice Employees
Association &lt;CSEA&gt; and the
Americsn Aaooc:iation or University ~ (AAUP).
Moderator Dr. Daphne Hare
first introduced David Kochery,
professor of labor law, wbo defined collective bartaining
rights of-faculty and professinnal staft under the Taylor Law.
A repreaentative or each organ,
ization · was tidl given equal
time to preaent his caae:
"AUP

Raford Boddy, aasistant professor of economics and -presi-

DB. RAaOLD L

SPA

Gordon Harris,' .Larkin professor of chemistry and interim

=pusthaT''::"~~:;e~!i~~!i
staff" Gf SUNY (faculty and
non-teachin~ ) should not need

outside bargaining agency,
especiaUy when it is comprised
of membeni who do completely
different kinds of work. (This
would be the caae with CSEA,
and the SUFI'-AFI' which is
&amp;lliliated with AFL-CIO, Harris
said.) On economic issues, SPA
has p~ a list of minimum
salaries for faculty, accordinj
to rank; for non-teaching staft,
a minimum salary of $9,000,
opportunity for tenure, a 1-3year con tract, and notice of
non-renewal. In order to represent aU groups, there are (or
will shortly be) separate faculty and staft chapters at each
campus. Representstives from
each chapter would -take recommendations to a Committee on
Tenns and Conditions of Employment, consisting of equal
· numbers of faculty and nonteaching professionals, who
would select a negotiating team
81)

-;-';:;:;=;-;;:-;-;;-;;==---

r.p-·

thE Seftata " h wfthdRI W from fur·
the&lt; c:ont.nt1on In the effort to becor e the bo rgalninl _ . t for the
prr -..a! --taft of SUNY •nd requ t th8t the ,....,. oi the F8CUity
Set &lt;t. not • - • on the bollot In
the l O - i n &amp; - - " The lephty of the SUNY - · · flllftl
u ' c:onllonder hed ~ upt.e~c~ In 1 court dldaion. ;-

I

electioiL

• SUFI' and CSEA both asid
their oalary acaleo will aUow for
"~tal autonomy and
discretion" for prof.-irs wbo

are conductina "significant'
work.

'

siety of Mechanical Engineen'
Conference, Chicago.

DR.

School of Social Wellare; formerly a director of tra.ining in the

New York State Department of

Social Ser-rices.
DIL Bl'U.urr L. f18CB.TIUN, 881iatant
dL&amp;D for academic development
~=~ties planning, School of
DR. PIU.NK L. GRAZlANO, director of
continuing educatiOn and public
relations, School of Dentistry.
DR. RICBABD A. POWELL, director of
clinics, School of Dentistry: formerly an aaaociate dean. ·

g;::

ALBERT

PADWA, professor,
DR. STUABT c .

chemistry, and

DR. GA&amp;RY A. RECHNITZ, professor,
and DR. MYSOB£ s. MO-

brary Aooociation in Columbus.

chemiatry,
RAN,

poet-doctoral research aa-

oociate, "!on-Electrode Study of

Alkali Metal ATP Compl..ea,"
JourntJJ. of the. American Chemical
Society; with M. BRAND, " Fast Response Differential Amplifier for
!..lee with Ion-Sere c t i v e Electrodes," Analytical Chemistry.
DR. SIDJPBIED T. WENDT,

assistant

professor, electrica.J engineering,
with H.K. LIPP and P. MUTB, "Ein

Relation~hip

of lilformation

official publication of the Japan

Library Aaociation.

twy Crofto.

...

KtXJDf&amp; .L

L8WJII,

a-.iltant

profe110r, ortboclonticl, and l .T.
DmHO, " An Aulontdiop8phic In-tipti&lt;m
Bone · Remoclelinc
iD. tbe Rat Calvarium Grown in
Orpn Culture," ArdUuei of Oral

or

• AU four contendar._
aentati¥eB akirted the iMue of Bi;&gt;/ofy.
govem8D01! U it relates to non- I&amp; I,_.. L IUtm.LA, ....O.Ie
~ prore.ionalltall.
prof-r, oNipUbolocy, 1.11. ...,_

profeuor, removable prosthodon-

tics, .. New Developments in Maxillofacial Prosthetics:• Weetem
New York Dental Laboratory M·
sociation. Buffalo Dental Inc.
RJCHA.BD P. BRAW, profeuor,
engineering science, "An Integral

DR.

~dr.~:n Z:S~te~~?l~

sea Ap~licationll," De~t of

DR.

ROBEKT ALLENDODtfEB.,

assis-

tant Professor, chemistry, with
P.\PEZ, " Detection of

RICKABD J .

the Free Durosemiquinone Rad-

~':J t:lo=~!r:;~M!~~~:

American Chemical Society, Providence, Rl.
DR. PHILIP COPPENS,

associate

pro ~

fesaor chemistry, " Study of the
Charge lJiatribution in Some Organic and Inorganic Molecules by
Diffraction Methods," Chemistry

Depl. Ohio State U.; " Determin-

ation of the Charge Distribution
in Small Molecules by X-ray and
Neutron Ditrruction,' ' Chemistry
Dept., University of Michigan.
DR. DON M . FLOURNOY, as&amp;OCiate
dean , Division of Undergraduate
Studies, "Higher Education Reform," Technical University at
Twente, Holla.nd.

DB.. ELI GRUBHKA,

~~~~~ ~:.Im~~~

tigations of Structures for Deep

assistant profes-

DR. GORDON M. HARRIS, professor,
chemistry, .. Kinetics of Electron
Transfer Between Chromium (II)

~aii. ~~· 0~yeni_ty

:r=
of

Lecturer Series, 1969
"The Response of Narrow
Mouthed Harbors to Tsunamis,"
with G. Carrier and M. Miyata,
IUOO, InternatioMI Symposium
on Tsunamis and Tsuna.mi Research, Honolulu. " On the Shape
of a Two Layered Wind Driven
Subtropical Gyve," with K. Wyrtlei, American Geophysical Union,

National Fall Meeting. San Fran-

=~-~~~~~=~7 u:e ~:
rubt!:fc:i
'1nti.~~ni~~~
to a Variable Wind Stress," with

!i· J:r0~e~~::Jri~;:.P~:h:

~:!ol:PD~~~ ~~eo~::
tion

Pro~lems,'' 6th U.S. National

~= ?.~P~~~I:.flli::

vestigation of a Weak Link for a
Deep Moored Instrument Cable,"
with W. N . Dong and G. Gilley.
Marine Technology Soc i e f y,

Washington. D.C. "Tranomiaaion

of Plane Harmonic Wavee
Through a Layered Linear Vilcoelastic MediUm." eeminar, Hawaii Institute of Geophylli.ca.
OIL Luaus BIND. reeearch a.x:i-

prof-.r pediatrics, "Olemo~'l:'&gt;"'&lt;~h':o:u"!..mmi &amp;:".!:~~ ate
tberap,y in Pediatric Solill Tu·
~:~::;;;. ~=.!.,~r;1w ACS i:~-~~~'i;~~=

DIL LAUREN 8. HlTCRCOCK,

profea-

aor, civil en.gineeri.1g, spoke on air
pollution at Kenmore East High
School u part.of a series on "Environmental Crisis.''
DR.. SOKN V. HUDDLESTON: profea-

aor, civil engineering, •• A HyperRoof Coocept for Low-Coot Housat Rolla.

NELSON M.. I&amp;ADA, profeaor,
mechanical engineering, " Design

Alberta, ean.da.

DB. &amp;mGniD

wmmr. auiata.nt pro-

!;~t~~s~
Synch..,_.. Machines," oeminlor,

~~.t!r~~ter Scien&lt;e,
ANN&amp; waJ&lt;Bmlla, uoiatant eli-

rector, oomputiJlc center, "Micro-programmed~rating Syotema,"
=.:,oBwr:f.._on Mjcro-pro-

OR.

and Fabrication of an Aircraft
Seat Crash Simulator," 41ot Shock
and Vibration Symposium. U.S.
Air Force Academy. Colonodo
Sprinp.
DR. LAWRENCE A. KBNNEDY, asaoci-

!!~~!:S~~~~:ti~

DR. lllJBAT LKVJN&amp;, director, profeaioaW poycbolosY. and AlliUHE
aiociate profe.ior, .aciolosY, A Social Huwry of Helping Servicu: Clinic, Court, School
o"d Co,.,.,.,.;ty, Applelon-Cen-

OIL NOUUN G. SCHAAP. auociate

PRESENTATIONS

at SUNY Buffalo," annual meet-

c. ~ .

:,.";;C:::~~'i!;~o~':'tl:

~r~::k~i~~A:bJ:~-: ~

Computerentwurf,'' Elektronische
Richenanlagen , Munich.

~:~:OJ:'.!eU:tyonof ~~O:J

"The

DR. GA&amp;B.Y A. IECHHITZ, profesaor,

Interaction of Acouatic \Vaves
and Elastic S1ructures," " Scattering of Water Waves." ·•Forced

professor,

Science to Librarianship - Problems and Scientific Training," to
be tran.lated into Japanese . and
to appear in lkndai no T011holean,

KAlliO C. RATTAZZI, reaearch

assistant professor, pediatrics.
"Limitations of Amniocentesis for
tbe Antenatal DiaiJlosio o( TaySoa c h 1 Diaease.'' 23rd Annual
Meeting, American Society of
Human Genetics, lndia.napolia.
chemistry. "New Directiono. for
Membrane Electrode," Eutman
Kodak, Rocheoter: "New Took
for Kinetic ~Ia," National Conference of Aelociation
of Analytical Chemisto, Detroit,
DONALD L.. 808ZRT8, e.aiatant profeuor, library and information

sor, chemistry, '"Two Approaches
to Chromatographic Resolution :
Computational a n d InstrumentaL" Caniaius College.

library and information atudies,

D&amp;.

cheinistry, "Orbital Symmetry Control
in tbe Photochemistry of l, 3, 5Hexatrienes," Journal of t.M
Aml!rican Chemical Society; with
£. ALEXAl&lt;DER, "Thermal and Solvolytic Studies with the 2-phenylbicyclo (l.Ll} pentanol System."
Journal of the AmeriCan ChenW:al
Socidy.
CLOUGH, research associate,

Control. SeU-Observa't ion, and Reaponse to Aversion Stimulation."
JoumtJl of Penonoli.ty and Social Psychology.
DB.. CHESTER DE LUCA., assistant professor, oral biology, G.B. VALLS,
and s. A. MASON, "Drug Effects on
Catalase Activity in the Mammal,
ian Cell The Role of the Cell in
Drug Action." Biochemical Phormacology.
D1L ELLIOT N . GALE, uaistant pro·
feuor, behavioral and related lei·
encea, ~-KABSHA B. lACOBSON,
''The ReJatioDllhip Between Social
Comments as Unconditioned
Stimuli and Fear Responding,"
Beluwioral Ruearch and Thercpy.
DR. VINCENT E. GI'ULL\l"(o,

f!D4ineeri.oc,

~rau~rta~::r_:r:~ ~

assistant profeeaor and director, Commwrity
Service Teaching Center Project,

~ =nJ.en~':i!:.'t:t

Fl-~

prof e • eo r , civil

MITAGE, and G. W. GREENE, ' 'Tooth
Tranaplantstion - A Review,"
sp";ft.k;s~-ral Medicw, and

dent or the u /B chapter of
AAUP, asid that organization
OFF CAMPUS
believes in "Responsible Academic Practice," and its emAPPOINTMENTS
phasis is more on conditions of
employment than on dollars draft contract to the member- DB.. GEORGE 8. BOBINSKI , dean,
ship,
for
ratification
or
rejection
School
of Library and Informaand cents. AAUP would bargain for both faculty and staft by referendum. U approved, the tion Studies, appointed to thP
Centennial 1976 Action Commitcontract
would
be
taken
to
and would permit small groups
~aeocl~t.i!e American Library
to define their own interests. SUNY for negotiation.
AA UP feels that non-teaching SUFT·AFT
Gene Welborn, professor of PUBLIC A 'riONS
professional stalf should be
"freed from the eight-hour day sociology at Buffalo Stste and
in order to have the time for field nwresentstive in Western DR. CHA.RLES L. BERNIER, professor,
r
New
York
for
SUFT-AFI',
said
library
and
information studiea,
professional development which
faculty enjoy at present It be- his is an "experienced, expert, . ''Terse Literatures. I. Terse Congroup."
AFI"s
policy
clusions,"
JourTUJl
of the Ameridedicated
lieves in day-care centers, and
Society for Information Sciother benefits whim woqid af- speaks for itaeU, and just has to ccn
ence.
be
read,
be
said.
(For
"Highford equal opportunity to proJAMES A. CADZOW, associate
fessional and faculty women. It lights of the SUFI' Collective DR.
electrical engineering,
has no stand 88 yet on the issue Bargaining Program for the professor,
Dfl. HlNBJCR R. MAKTENS, proof tenure for professional non- Stste University of New York," and
fessor,
electrical engineering, Disteaching staft. AAUP, B&lt;iddy see Reporter, November 5. )
and Computer Control
After the panel had present- crete-Time
said, takes academic freedom
Syste1'1U, Prentice-Hall.
seriously, not just 88 it applies ed its cases, Kochery comment- OR. LA&amp;RY B. CHURCH, assistant
ed
on
the
problem
of
choosing
to the written law of university
professor, chemistry, "A Note on
administration, but also 88 it a bargaining agent. Tbe size of the Formation and Removal of
applies to "common law" prac- the Stste-wide unit, he said, Anodic Aluminum Oxide," Jourtice at the various colleges and makes it dillicult -to satisfy all nal of Inorganic and Nuclear
universities. As an example, parties. "We are saddled with Chemi&amp;try.
AAUP acted 88 amicus curiae the largeness" of the unit. OIL NORMAN L. OORAH, associate
"Which agent, if any, can do professor, behavioial. and related
in the trial of the Hayes 45.
the job?"
&amp;eiences, and 1. BOFFA. " Perceived
CSEA
James D. Featherstonhaugh,
In response to questions from
attorney for CSEA, said that the Boor:
group, with membership of
• SPA held that faculty and
200,000, has the "clout'' to effi- staft would not be '1ost" among
ciently represent both faculty its members 88 they would in
and non-teaching professional CSEA and that it wouldn't be
staft. It has no ''Package," but swayed by outside considera..ll'Ould and coufd represent tions as AFl' might be, in light
whatever issues the group might of its affiliation with the AFLwant. A ,_,lutions committee, CIO. CSEA and AFT countercompoaed of members from ed by saying that their units
each campus, would submit for faculty and staft would be
reaolutions for bargaining to autonomous.
CSEA A negotiating team
• Both SPA IIJld AFl' indiwould tidl be aelected - com- cated their interests in women's
prised or faculty, non-teaching rights with SPA saying that it
prof58ionals and CSEA spe- has a large number of women
cialista - to !lecide what issues members from the non-teaching
should be barpjDed for strong- professional staft, and AFl'
ly. After negotiation with pointing out that a member of
SUNY, a ~ haUot of the NOW is a charter member of
whole memberahip would ratify their U/B Chapter.
or reject ..Wts. l&gt;arta or every
• Both AAUP and AFl' said
negotiated contnct, BUch 88 sal- that non-teaching professionals
ary ....-. require lelrislatioit to ·would be able to join both oreffect. CSEA feels 1t can get ganizations. AAUP indicated
BUch lelrislation, based on its its awareness of the need to
record of actiw lobbying for give-faculty and non-teaching
other State employees.
staft equ@_ repreaentstion. .
• ltl""'!l pointed out that
professtonal stalf who are not
The~-:.~~~~N the State employees (~
SUNY FKUII)I hn notified Foundation, U /B Foundation)
- r d A. Rube.-n, director of would be . . _ t e d " by the
Public Employment winning organiza~ -although
Rel: tiono Board, of th·• Oftlre of they cannot vote m the PERB

cedurea," VA Hoepital, Bulfalo.
..:date

DR. IIOBBRT B. PAABWI:LL,

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

CAaOLYN DA.UCBTBY,

CJa"f)(.U(, prof~r.

~L~:a-~
!':=1-'a~n ~"i:~...;.!:,~

'REPORTS
ON _
GJ&gt;EOPLE

~~,;'!":( 18~1l.ntario,

.

~;:,· ~,:;:.eao~
tbe S)'Du-io of Natural Producto," 8)'ft&lt;WO Univeroity.
Dlt. IITa'B:D JIMOOLIB, a.oc:iate
profe.or, e:a,a:i.Deeri.nc • e i en c e.

RECOONITIONS
DR. GaAW P .

:a=
=r

.z:r.;;.:~:=~

Your Eavirom:Deat." N i a r a r a
8ocio&amp;y

or Ind,.trial En-

chairman.

~':-:!r•it~u~t~~ ~!0':(
A.S.E.E. annual meeting.

This

certificate and cuh awsrd of $1,000 were given in reoopition of
hia contribution made in the field

of engineeri.q education.

D1L GABS.\' A. RECP irrrl ~

pl"""'fe.Gr,

c:bematry. oamed ''· &amp;rtun U!:tu.nr at the University r Oldahoma; lecture to be P""" .eel in
Spri.nc 19'71 under "'-msc Up of
biochemiltry and
o'!mit
v depart.menta.

~-~~rot~~=~ ..0:
...

can Nucleu Society.

PRA.Ncis,

mechanical engineetin&amp;, recipient
of tbe Weolem Electric Fund

CIIAI:lR8

a.

Nc.. • .:sa,

civil eaai.Deeri.nr. ~ee~ion. o.
· and 'fice-cbain:Dan. Joint

.uer,

:Ur.er

nma·

=.!tE:=~~':!"~~:

eace and TeclmoloiY FounJation,

. Chlcoco-

·

�' '

, -

'WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

the lndiaD villapo. He hao been
the literary _,..,tary~ to Nobel

·-~~~~ ':;d-,!. ':;

ofticial advisor to the IDdiaD Delegation to the UN in 1.960a61.
The president of India conferred on Dr. Cbakravarty Padm&lt;J
Bluuan ~ a national award for his
"peat service to scbolanbip and
"litenlture both in I n d i a and
abroad." Ill 1967 be received the
WatuQJull Award for promoting
intemiltional undentanding . and
peace. Dr. CbaJcravarty was educated at Patn.a University in India and earned a doctorate in the
humanities from Oxford Univer:
eity. He has taught in India and
England and later in the U.S. at
Boston Univeraf!y and Smith College. Ill 1967 he began teaching
at New Paltz.
PREE FILMS• : TilEY DIED WITH
THEIR BOOTS ON and DAWN PATROL..

147 Diefendorf, 7: 30p.m. to midnight.
THE GANDHIAN REVOLUTION •: Dr.
A m i y a Chakravarty, Fillmore
Room, Norton, 7:30 p.m.
CREATIVE ABSOCIA'111:8 WORKSHOP•:

100 Baird, 8 : 30 p.m.

SUNDAY- 22
U/B

NEWS AND VIEWS; Radio pro.

gram. Dr. Wilbert J . McKeacbie

THURSDAY-19
CONTINUING D E N T A L amCATION

Dr. Robert Genco, assistant professor, oral biology and
periodontics (and staff) OCCLUSAL
THERA.PY, 146 Capen, 8 a.m..-1
p.m.; 145 Capen, 2-5 p.m.
COUBSB:

CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION

OOURSE: Dr. Charles Lipani, assistant -profe880r, · oral- ·diagnosis
and radiology, RADIOLOGY FOR
DENTAL ASSISTANTS, 148 Capen,
a .m.- 1 p.m.; Oinic, 2-5 p.m.

9

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PROGRAM: MODERN CONCEFI'S IN
CORONARY CARE, Sisters of Charity
Hospital; 2157 Main Stree~ 8:15

a.m.-5 p .m .

·

THE BEALITIES OF PLANNING LEC-

TURE BER.IES*: Kees Nije, senior

traffic engineer, Alan M . Voorhees &amp; Associates, Buffalo, PLAN-

discusses innovations in teaching
an"d how they affect learning processes. Dr. Julian Szekely dis·
cusses the steel induatry in the
U.S : Ruth Blakely is moderator.
This program is curried by the
following local &lt;stations: WYSL
at 7 a.m. ; WXRL at 9 a.m.;
WKBW at 10:30 p.m. and
WADV-FM at 8:45a.m.
THE SPIRITUAL MESSAGE OP INDIA*:
Dr. Amiya CbakJ"8.varty, Amherst
Community Church, W_!l;Shingtou
Highway, Snyder, 10 a.m.
CONTINUING MEDICAL DJUCA.TION
PROGRAM : MODERN CONCEPTS IN
INSIDE NEW DANCE ... : The Uni·
CORONARY CARE: Sisters of Char- versity Dance Theatre Workshop,
ity Hospital, 2157 Main Street, INNER CITY MOTHER GOOSE, p~­
9 a.m.·5: 15. p .m.
miere, Billie Kirpich. director,
Domus, 1695 Elmwood Ave., 3
LINGUISTICS LECTURE*: Dr. B yron
J. Koekkoek, professor, German 'fi~kets~e~~~m.;:;io:ffice~.SO.
and Slavic, COMPAB.A.TIVE METHODS, 402 Hayes, 11 a.m.
BALKAN FOLK DANCING: Fillmore
A demonstration of the com- Room, Norton. 8 p.m.
parative method in Germanic reconstruction.
·
MONDAY-23
MEETING: to hear the positions of
the various groups which desire
to represent faculty and professional Staff in collective negotiat ions under the provisions of the

LINGUISTICS LECTURE• : John K.E.
Hitchcock, lecturer, linguistics,
BANTU, 402 Hayes, 11 a.m.
Structure of a Bantu language.
SOCIOLOGY COLLOQUIUM: Dr. Aleksander Gella, profNSOr, sociology,

Diefendorf Annex 29, 3 p.m.
POLITICS SEMINAR: Dr. Morton H .

~:6::r ~F ~IG~IA~F~~
24, 4224 Ridge Lea, 3:30 p.m.

8

!:;:~n~&lt;!f bcfus:ri!1b~~ti!:~

~=~· o~~U=~~~tu!~~

TICS AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS,
Room 9, 4238 Ridge Lea, 3:30
p.m . FacuJty and graduate stu·
DENTISTS TELEPHONE LECTURE:
are invited.
Sponsored by Regional Medical dents
BIOCHEMISTRY
SEMINAR : Dr. VicProgram. Dr. Bruce Seidberg, tor Ginsburg, chief,
biochemistry
PitS-TREATMENT AND ENDODONTJC
section, National Institute for
THERAPY, 62 receiving locations,
Arthritis
and
Metabolic
Diaease8,
1:30 p.m.
•
NlH, BIOCHEMICAL BASlS OF BLOOD
PoREJGN STUDENT AFFAIRS COFFEE
TYPES lN MAN, G-22 Capen, 4
aoua• : 10 TownSend Hall, 4-6 p.m.
FREE FILM • : MOTHER (1926, V.I .
Pudovkin), 147 Diefendorf, 7: 30
THEORETICAL BIOLOGY SEMINAR :
Dr. P. Demetrious Papa.badjo- • p.m. to midnight.
poulos, associate cancer research
Whereas Potemkin developed
scientist. Roswell Park Memorial
NlNG IN AN URBAN AB.EA, 104 Park-

er Engineering, 12 noon.

lnst.i.tute, STUDIES WITH PHOSPHOLIPID MEMBRANES :

INTERACTION

~~H~~lEI~=~~

29, 4248 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshments 3:30 p .m.
TURKEY DAY TROT; jogging race,
open to all faculty, studenta and
staff. Prizes: four 20·pound tur·
keys. Clark Gym, 3: 30 p.m. Application forms available in Room
5, Clark Gym basement.
VIBn'ING LECTURER• : Dr. Linus C.
Pauling, VITAMIN C AND THE COMMON COLD.. 147 I)iefe~dorf, 8 : 16
p.m.
P8YCJUA.'r'IUC GUEST LBCI"URE• : Dr.
U.nel Oveoey, clinical professor,
Ileputment of l'llycbial:ry, Collep of Physicians and SurpoiUI
of Columbia Uniwnity, PSIWDOBOK08EXUALrrY IH MAN, · 139

pon,8: 80p.m.

.

Ca·

FRIDAY-20
COiftDft.JDfO D E N TAL DUCATION
oo..-: Dr. Robert Genco and
otalf, CIDCLUIIAL T_IIILU'Y, 146 Ca~ 8 UD.-1 p.m.; 146 Capon,

p.m.

..

OC*'IBRIDIG

D•Jf''l' AL

.
DUCA.TIOM

--Dr.~ Jt.=-~

_ , . ""'zmrr.u.

year

petition the roUowiJa&amp;
and PROM ADUL'I' ou.rD KaLITUB,
shortly thereafter made ita debut 62 receivinc locationo, 1: 80 p.m.
in Paria. It has .moe eetahliabed ,... Kovm• : nm roua...~~
its reputation in moat Euro,P!!&amp;D BLOWS ( 1969, Fnmcoio Truft'aut),
countries. ·
147 Diefeudorf, 8 and 8:80 p.m.
l1lBE FILK•: 8TOilll ova A81A Growing up abounl in Pario.
(1928, v..,..,Iod Pudovkinl , 147 COKP'UftMO aiH1a US. ~
Diefendorf, 8:80p.m.
SIIIID&lt;A&amp;: Ru.ell Goldbers, proSubtitled THE 1DD TO II:NOIIJII.. grammer-analy~,.... R oo m
KHAN, this drama of the early 10, 4238 Ridce
7-9 p.m.
years of the U.S.S.R and of
This il an m
ry (X)UJ'M:
f o r e i g n intervention has been in OOBOL. a I:Jul;inMa-o r iente d
widely prai.ied for-complex cut- computer ~- Taab will
ting and careful editorial con- center on data manipulation and
struction, the naturalism of the report generation including all
acting, and the freely experimen tal nature of the film.
~~ca=t~ ~ ~f.;
on writing conciH. aelf-documentTUESDAY- 24
ing COBOL propa!QL
PHYSICIANS TEU:PBONE Ll',.~Cl'URE:
WEDNESDAY- 2
Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Dr. Gerald P. Murphy
ar.d Dr. Robert S. Bourke, CAN- PHYSJCI.ANS AND N1JRSI:B CONn:BCER OF THE PROSTATE, 62 receiving
locations, 11 : 30 a .m.
·
Ruacb '• Reateuran~ 296 LakeNURSES TELEPHONE LECTURE:
shore Drive, W:est. in Dunkirk, '
SpPnsored by Regional Medical
Program, Beverley :I'ucl&lt;er, RN. ; ~~·!::t~~':..~.!:id't!: Elizabeth Maraball, R.N.; Col- strom, Chautauqua County Unit,
leen Quast, R.N., Ptrlq.IC H&amp;ALTR American Cancer Society, 5 Lester Bldg., Dunkirk, N .Y.
SERVICE FOR THE DlABETJC PATIENT
t.T HOME, 62 receiving locations,
cO-sponsored by the Regional
- 1: 30 p.m.
Medical Program for Western
PREE OLM ._: BREATHU.:SS (1959. New York and the Chautauqua
Jean·Luc Godard), 147 Diefen- County Unit of the American
C a n c e r Society. the Cancer
dorf, 3 and 8:30 p.m.
This is not a mouthwash com· Teaching Day is open to all inmercial. Godard innovates the terested physicians and nurses in
French new wave and represents
a breakthrough in film .technique. ~a'W"urgi~ ~J:~
Treatment of Breast Cancer" will
be presented by Dr. Bernard
WEDNESDAY- 25

..

:'~~-~~C~~~ ~

a:''U!

COMPUTING CENTI:Il UBal SERVICES
SEMINAR : Harvey A:derod, pro-

~e1ro:m.=t. rii3,: T f:a~ 7~9
p.m.
FAMn.Y'' MEETING •: Lecture-discuSsion of spiritual synthesis for a new culture. All welcome. 266 Norton, 9 p.m.

' 'UNIFIED

FRIDAY-27
FREE m..M•: ARSENAL (1929, Alexander Dovzhenko), 147 Diefendorf. 7:30 p.m. to midnight.
This first masterpiece of the
Ukrainian cinema, inspired by
the freedom and force of the pio·
neer Rusaian directors, was and
remains completely original in its
substitution of poetic continuity
for the usual story structure.

SUNDAY- 29

COMPUTING CENTEa UUR b:RVJ&lt;D
SEMINAR: Harvey Axlerod, pro-

r;g

Jt!,":nme{O:u'~C.r[Jg~Tf:a~ 7

MONDAY-30

monly used scientific languaJe.
This seminar is a comprehensiVe
introduction to the language and
its applications. Topics will indude : computation, branching,
looping, ba.Bic declarations, and
subroutines. Emphasis will be on
documentation, debugging tech·
niques and readable output.
GEORGE E. HOLLOWAY, .IR. ~
TURE~ Dr. Jack A. Culbertson,

lJNGUlSTICS L£CTURE•: Dr. Wolfg_anngug,.·Wti.~,ckQ, UaEC8110CHUiaA, te proHfesaoayeor,,
li1
"'"'
11 a .m .
The present-day representative
of the Inca Empire.
FOOTBALL BANQUET: Speaker o . 1 • SIMPSON. Hearthstone Man·
or, Dick Rd., Cheektowaga. Cocktails 6: 30 p.m. ; dinner 8 p.m.
$20/ person.
COMPUTING CENTER USER SESVICES
S£MINAR: Harvey Axlerod, pro-

~ ~~ ~f O::di~!j~~~ti~~ ~~~~· ~~~~TI~:o_u:~
~~td~:~ ~f th:wr~ro:Voi~:,a~ ~ ~!~ ::mEdu~tiO:OnaJredAt;{.

:=r Frr;:;~he~)~ :l~ Di~::~:

~~:~ ~~ asan:d=~o:.ra£!!':

.!e"::.

P·-;oRTRAN IV is the moat com-

402

!!:ssre::r_~~~~(h~d:!'::eorth:o';~~ · ~~~tfordid:~ti~;wut:t;. ~r:ne{O~~t.J:i3_g~Tf:a~ f.g

=

0

as well as from Gorky's novel.
Its direction and cutting derive
from the American school, not·
a bly Griffith.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING : Instruction in basic steps during
6rat hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8
p.m .

SATURDAY-21
U/B GQQ!\U8° : Directed ·by Sylvia
worb by Tomas Luis
de Victoria, John Dowland, Orlando Gibbons, Tbomu Weelkes,
Bela Bertok, G.F. Handel. Tho
U/ B Blues and the U/B Baby
Bl- will ouiat in this concert.
Conference Tta.tre, Norton, 12
noon.
GlNDHJ AND -HOH-VIOLENC&amp;*: Dr.
Amiya Cbakravarty. univenity
profOMOr, SUNY; prof-.r of
Pbiloaopby, SUC/New Poltz; lectweo
by the Olllce of
Cultural Aft'alra, lndia Studeulo
AIIIIOCialioa and the BuJrolo Council of Cawdloo. Baft'olo Cow&gt;cil
of Caurcboo. 12'72 Delaware Aw.,
2 p.m.
. A ~ acquaintance of GoDdD~ ;

·-reel

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

F&lt;ji ~CaPen. 9 a.m.-1 . hi. Dr.
Up.m.

~

nov

penjed

ministraton and the Department
'Of Educational Administration,
Conference . Theatre, Norton, 8
p.m.
Dr. Culbertson has co-.authored
six books and written numerous

19, I9iiJ :

p.m.

30

~~~:~~ ~;o~e::bur:1. M~~

School. Other participants include
Dr. Walter Murphy or Roswell
Park Memorial Institute, who

=:r,;

r::~ sca:t n:a~~n
~h~~/A'B~f=r wo{llm~ru;,~

chemotherapy; Dr. Douglas Holy;
oke, assistant chief or surgery.
Roswell Park, who will discuss
contralateral breast problem; Dr.
Taku.ma Nemoto, Roswell Park,
who will discuss hormonal therapy, and P,.atricia Bums, RN.,
M.S., Niagara University School
of Nursing, who will speak on
nursing care and rehabilitation of
the mastectomy patient.
Dr. Benjamin Custer or Dunkirk will act as moderator for the
panel discussion. Dr. John P.
Shutt is program chairman.
SEND GIFI'S OF PEACE: sale of articles from peace groups around
the country. Proceeds from sale
go to Buffalo Peace. Movementthe Buffalo Peace Council and
Clergy and Laymen Concerned.
Campus sponso.t'-Student Aaaociation. Norton Lobby A, 10 a.m..4 p.m. Gift articles also on sale
at Cricket Ticke~ 3266 Main St.
DIE"'''TTANS 'I'ELEJ-HONE LECTURE:
Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Dr. Margaret A. Wil-·
son, TRENDS IN DIJ:'I'ETIC EDUCATION, 62 receiving locations, 2
p.m.
COMPUTING CENTER USBR BEIMCZS
SEMINAR : 1-ljl_rY.ey Axlerod, pro-

f{=e{O~~t,~~ T f:a~ .{:g
p.m.

Dr. Anthony Papalia.. assistant professor,
instruction, F 0 R E I G N LANGUAGE
PEDAGOGY, 378 Hayes, 7 : 30 p.m.
SLEE LECTt!RE 0 : Nicholas Nabo·
kov, SYMBOLISM IN MUSIC, Baird.
8:30p.m.
"UNlPJED FAMILY" MIZTI:NG*: Lecture·discussion of spiritual synthesis for a new cu:Jq,are. All welcome. 266 Norton, 9 p.m.
LINGUISnCS U'JCTURE* :

tralian, British and New Zealand

dorf, 8: 30 p.m .
The fourth and last silent film
of the director, EARTH is concerned
with the struggle between the
kulaks or peasant landowners and
the collectives, but what · Dovb?ser::n blif~g~n::m~~
orable in it-" the fact that old

~~fn~th~
~

and currently eerves as an adviac&gt;r

and--t4at the young men are born

;!~tgf~Jd~e~~

;::;:~J:'ca"J'.J!.J""!~~l:,':.: ::;,ea:;,_,di:-.,~..th~:a~O:: t'::::

INTERVIEWS
The ON-CAKPU8IHTD\'1ZWIHG

from Janwuy 25 to April 29 in

and life is continually renewed." with educational. buainees, iDdus. ~~S-~pooalofa,~~~ SOUNDINGS
IN &amp; ELI G I 0 N UCC· trial and g
tal
~:~gtfo':,_undation and the Ford TUllE'.. : Michael Novak, ....GCi- tatives. eandJ'd."::f':o.,
a~ro
. fSeoaoUCr/, 01pldhu-Wpehaytbandurythe,•; whether
levels are invited to interview
...,.... QUAII'Ift 00 : . Featuring O.....,.
they will complete their

.:;r.; .

Jean-ClaudrBemede, violin; Guy
Chene, viola; Gerard Montmay,
eur. violin; . PaW Boufll. cello.
Worb include: Faun\, Strill6

s:::•·

Qucrtet in

llou.el,

E

minor.

TBZOLOGY P0R RADICAL POLIT.ICS,
Fillmore Room, No.rton, 8 p.m.
General ad.m.isBion $1.00, atudents

$.50:

O__piU 121;
m&lt;Jjor,

TUESDAY-I

ia D

~/~- JO. ~~ ~..:. ·

Generaladmiooion ts, laeulty and
otalf 12; otudenlo IL ·
Tho Bemede Qila1'11it which
macle ilo biPIY ....,.,..{ul Ameri..., debut tour in Februuy 1.11119
wa foomded in l!MU by ,1...,.
Caudo Bemede.
award
at the Mamida ~~~-~ ·Cam- .

It.....,...,

PRY81WN8 'l'l:taPIIONK UOCTUD::

courae wor.k in January or May
1971. Registration formo and od~
ditiQnal information are ivaila~M:
in Hay.. C.

20

PIUDAY-

:

H.J

•

H ·
"Co
ems
.;

~'\;'~;~~~n baa.; Ylica

Sponaored by Recjooal Medical ·· &gt;&lt;ONDAY-23: Diamond SbamProgram, Dr. Hertzel Rq._tenbel'lr, rock Corp.
TIJDDAY-:U: Comell Uniwrlocations, ll: 80 a.m.
lity, School of lnduotrial A Labor
N u as 1: a .,.._BONK UOCTUD:: RelatioiUI; Mead Jolmoooa lo Oo.;
Sponaorecl by Recicma1 Medical Sylvania Electric Producta, hac.;
Prouam. Mary .Loricb, .R.N. ~~ Worb; /i!-!t~ ~TID: . - t'IIIIOA7, 62 recoivinc

·M.A.,

·1o..m.,- -

,_._, · . -..~·· ,,, ,

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

VOL 2 - NO. 10

Co/kgeA
WmsCards,
Fares Probe

:Open House May Kickoff
Anniversary Events

-Sal/

By sUSAN GREENWOOD
Additiooal claal cards will be
reJea.d for tbe students em
CoUeae A's waitinc list, Dr.
Daniel Murray, acting vice
president for academic affairs,
- announced Monday. But tbe
problema of tbe experimental
collese aren't OYI!f yet.
Dr. Murray also stressed
"there will be no aeU-evaluation
this 118DM5ter," and that &amp;aldemic competence of the Collap's faculty must be decided
by Dr. Charles Ebert, acting
dean of Undergraduate Studies,
before credit can be given to
Colleae A students.
Tbe latter actions, Dr. Murfi!Y said, are baaed on his reading of the academic policies of
the SUNY Board of Trustees.
This announcement came out
of a marathon three-hour meeting witb College A on Monday.
Tbe group discussing the matter witb Dr. Murray also included Dr. Robert Stem, University ombudsman, aod repre- .
aentatives from tbe Advocate's
Office, tbeir p....ance being requested by College A.
Tbe current conllict centers
around the vice president's ret..al in late &amp;ptember to ioaue
more claas cards to College A.
To meet ezpected registration
demands, College A arbitrarily
asked for 600 cards, according
to R&lt;a! Kaplan, Colleae A staff
member. As registration proceeded, however, demand exThe come-on was a put-on. Tbe Kennedy tbing? Well, it's
oeeded tbe supply of cards aod
Andre Kole in his Ca~ happened to American presimore were reques ted. People Hall appearaooe Monday rught dents every 20 years since 1840.
who didn't receive cards were didn't conjure up apparitions
Kole al s o ass ailed Artbur
put on a waiting list, Miss Kap- of the floating heads of Chur- · Ford's supernatural claims, saylan ~lained. College A ex- chill and John F . Kennedy. No ing Ford's alleged contact wiih
pected more cards to be issued skeleton draped in black tapped the spirit of Houdini, whicb the
becsuse of tbe course's unlim- him on the &amp;boulder as he de- medium describes in his book,
ited enrollment policy. This bwtked mediums and miracle was publicly exposed as a fraud
policy was approved when the workers.
decades earlier.
course itself - CA 401 - was
But be did produce a minor
The Dead don't return, Kole
given permanent approval by miracle of his own.
concluded. "'But if they did, it
the Cuniculum Committee of
A full house of 500 sat still
the Division of Undergraduate and enjoyed it as Kole moved ~ g~::~~~~
Studies.
deftly from corny magic to ESP in whicb the spirit of ShakeAfter the waiting list was to the S\!pernatural and, final- speare wrote on a slate, and
s tarted, however , Andrew ly, to business - a pitch for assorted "spirits" materialized
_ Trusz, assistant to the dean of Christianity.
- a giant liquor bottle am&lt;ing
Undergraduat&lt;! Studies, reTbe crowd wasn't stacked ei- , th.em. Tbe spirits also obligingreoeived a letter from Dr. Mur- ther. All types were there-you ly sounded horns, whistles and
ray telling him not to issue name it. And on a campus as tambourines.
more cards to College A. Trusz Iough as this one is supposed
Before the intermission, Kole
gave a copy of the letter to Col- to be, this close-to-revival meet- invited those who didn't want
lege A but a misund&lt;!rstandillc ing came olf witbout a protest- (continrud on _ . 6, coL 3)
arose as to why Dr. Muiray re- ing boot.
fused.
,
s.tln Suit
Millo Kaplan claims "that the
Opening the program, Kole,
Colleae thought Dr. Murray in a white satin double-breasted ·
was waitinc to see if all the suit witb bell bottoms which
cards PV'I!ill out were actually looked like sometbing the Suuaed. And Dr. Murray claims premea would wear, did card
that he was question in' the tricks, punctuated by much apatalf's "inatructiooal capability" plauae, a line of vaudeville patio bia letter.
tar and the music of Bert BachIn early. October, the arach.
lion ol CoUeae A's extra cards '--Nezt was a bit of hokum callwas brouiht to the Co1Jeaiate ...-1iit'eyeleaa sight in which the
""'-!nb~Y. Tbey ~ a moillusionist, eyes blocked witb
lion asking for the release of • quarters and taped, blindfold in
tbe cards and. alao for an a - ·place, gave ·'visual evidence ol
pluation ol _wby . Dr. Murray a fourth dimension." Waving
withheld than. Wlwl the cards his banda over objects supplied
- . DDt releaaed, the "-'&gt;- by members of tbe auda- be
bly .-.I a ..-d motion, de- identified MCh witbout touchrrttlltdiq both tbe cards and .
it. .
.
Murray'a
"\y way ol debunking, be tore
'lbie tbe way tbe aiW.. into , _ DiDio, ~ """
tiaa ataod · belan Monday' • aut.eribM to a prediction ..v~
ioe and ..... , _ . . tbat tbe
Maat ol Mooday'a ~ Ru.iaos would . he flmt witb
revolved around the twin points IDI!Il 011 tbe moon. She pn&gt;ol additional . _ carda and dieted tbe end ol the Vietnam
the cp.atlon of the l!i.i.Ud:ion- War few three YMnl running,
(coratinwd .... col. 1) .
before pving it up, Kole aid.

TheDeadDidn!t&amp;tum,

But Andre Was Vnusual'

.

.-_lion.

r.

NOVEMBER 12, 1970

.,:::.;:

- Can you imagine what might
happe n t o University-&lt;X&gt;mmunity relations, if all of Bulfalo
and Western New York were
invited to the campus someday
and encouraged:
• to roam around offices, labs
and class rooms and ask the
people there just what they do;
• to wander tbrough Norton
Union, slopping at tbe Rat, the
game room, the Spectrum ollice,
or the Haas Lounge;
• to walk in on and Participate·in urap" sessions on drugs
and sex and militarism, witb
students and faculty.
• to attend concerts, light
shows, interpretive daoce recitals, poetry readings, rock
concerts, and scientific paoel
discussions.
Can you imagine what that

First-Glme
Parking Plan
UnderStudy
A recommendation to have
undifferentiated first-&lt;X&gt;me firstserved campus parking lots-rather tban the present system
of sepa.rjlte lob; for faculty-staff
and s tudents--will be investigated by the Campus Traffic
Control Advisory Committee, a
group of faculty, staff and students.
Tbe Committee, meeting last
week, voted to undertake tbe
investigation, but no session has
been set on the subject.
The Committee also beard
that the impounding area for
lowed cars will be shifted from
the Parker Engineering lot to
the Main-Bailey lot. Tbe Maintenaooe Department was requested to corisider any area on
the campus wbere a permsnent
impounding area can be constructed.
Tbe problem of parking in
parking lot driveways was also
discussed and the Committee
concluded that tickets sbould
be issued for sucb violations.
Tbe issuing of tickets started
'I't!esday of this week. The
Committee will meet again November 20 to discuss the elfectiveness of the new policy and
also reaction to it.

might •do to students, facqlty
aod the Univennty staJf? .•
Well, the Policy and Community Advisory committees
for U / B's 125th AnniYen!ary
celebration have been imagining it and think that - despite
potential risks and problems sucb a gigantic Univennty-wide
open bouse might be just the
tbing to foster ''real communication" among various seg.
ments. of tbe University and
community.
In fact, tbeae groups are beginning now to plan such an
event for eitber the last Sun&lt;iay
nezt April or the first Sunday
in May.
Suggestion and outline for
the open house came from
Tbeodore V. Palermo, director
of University Publications Services, who felt that preliminary
planning for the 125tb Anniversary - witb its emphasis on
. banquets and symposia, geared
to a few on campus and in the
community- might not be
headed in directions that would
make for maximum relevance
and student involvement. Initial student response to the Anniversary planning reinforced
his view.
Wbat Palermo suggested, and
what the 125tb committees will
now ·try to enlist Universitywide support for, is a threephase program in whicb all
students, faculty aod administrative stalf will be asked to
participate.
Phnel

Phas e I would la s t from
around noon to 3 p.m. on the
date selected. Everyone on the
main campus (and at Ridge
Lea ) would be asked to be in
their customary places and peo.
pie in the community would be
invited to come in, move arot.od
from place to place, and talk.
No specific directions would be
given, but lour guides, a Cf068section of volunteer students,
faculty, staff aod alumni, would
man strategic information poata
to answer questions and to direct visitors to facilities and offices of interest to tben1.
Tied into this phase might be
tbe annual campus open bcJuE
events of various faculties and
schools, guided lours of apecia1
facilities, and, perhaps, some
student events such as the
Spring Weekend carnival.
PMMII

'

Phase n ot" the open ....._
·would be more au-uctured. Talk
sessions woUld be acheduJed
from 3-5 _p.m. in various Jeo.
ture and meetinc rooms. Eacb
room would be scheduled few
a specific topic and atudenta, ~
faculty and staff~
about a given area woUld be
asked to participate. 'I'opial
might include such tbinga as
the collegea, drugs, open admi&amp;sions, the new campus, _.,_

ment·sponsored research,

ROTC, Blaclt Studies. athletics, etc. Guests .could attend
and· particil"'ta in 11DY -&gt;ona
they wish. Guide mapa and programs for this P'- .......Jd be
available at tbe varfous infor- matiaa conten.
~ of such -xma
( witb !lie"aoawera to queationa
asked by the community) might
even be compiled and later distributed as a booklet em Uni(oon~ on _ . 6, col. 1)

�,.,..,., lll, 1970

2

af-- ..

af ...

U/8 hu 811 ldnds
ldnds
-1potl. Tills
past Fricbly, for uample, ''Geoflle ...,.... ond tlie Cry Bobles"
filled the Hooo lounp with flosll rod&lt; bulls. But ....., who
couldn't heor the 'muolc were contont just tD be outlkle -~~~
ln. At Bolrd, meonwhlle, more troclltlonol muolc ontlluoiOib
enjoyed o thrw concert "Muolcol Viewpoints" orronpcl ond
conduc:tecl by lAo Smlt. PictuNCI Is Suncbly niCht'• blrthcbly
tribute to Aoron Coplond, once • Slee profeuM ot U/8.

Rosen Reports on the SUNY Senate, AsksWhy Others Don't
By WALTER G. ROSEN
AJrwnate SUNY S.Wor

The faJJ meeting of the
SUNY Senate was held October 23-24 at the Agricultural
and Technical College at Canton. My participation as a senator from SUNYAB resulted
from the fact that I was elected
RS an alternate to the seat occupied by William Baumer.
Baumer resigned his seat as a
oonsequence of having been
elected vice chairman of the
Faculty Sen a t e (and thus
chairman of the Senate Executive Committee).
Because short nodlle of the
meeting ( see below) created
scheduling difficulties which
were oompounded by travel delays due to had weather, I arrived late at the meeting and
missed the report of Chancellor Boyer. The report by Senate President Erk was brief and
general, oonsisting primarily of
a resume of .t he events leading
to the replacement of the Senate by the Senate Professional
Association as candidate for
bargaining agent . under the
Taylor Law.

Comm- Reports
The bulk of the meeting was
devoted to reports by the following ~ttees: Eoooomic
StatusrE!Jianding Educational
Opportunity; Governance;
Graduate Program; Grievance;
International Studiea · and
World Alfairs; Library Resouroest Personnel Policies;
Profess10nal Rights and Responsibilities· Student Alfairs·
Underpaduaie Progiam; Uni:
venlity Budget; University Faculty l'rocra!ns~ and University

Planning.
Many of tbeoe repori!J, and
Senate actions thereon, were ,.,..
stricted to definition of the
oommitleea' c:barp and en-

mer, a time when it is often
dillicult to oontact people on
the campus. Nevertbeless, it is
disturbing that no response was
forthooming from any of tbe
three offices to which the invitations were addressed. A second oooference is being planned
for April 23-24 and it is to be
hoped that Buflalo will show
itself in a better light at that
time.
•
The COMMITTEE ON
GOVERNANCE submitted 11
reoommendation calling for a
far-reaching revision in the
membership clauses of the Bylaws of the SUNY. Senate. Tbe
thrust of the p~ changes
would be: 1) to add ten representatives "of the [lublic interest" (incluiling members of the
Board of Trustees and local
oouncils) to be appointed by
the Board of Trustees; and 2 )
to add one student representative from eech SUNY unit
(with health acienms oenters
oonsidered independent units) .
This recommendation elicited
vigorous debate and it was decided to publish the recommendation in the SUNY . Senate
Bulletin. A poeition paper oo
the rationale behind tbe recommendation will be prepered by
Senator R6tler Trumbore, Comters sent aeveral delegates ex· mittee chairman, and distrib.,.,Pt Bulfalo who did not ,.,.. uted to all _,.tors. Members
of the Committee indicated
spond .•••"
At this point, I took tbe their ~ to visit the
Ooor to express my 'surprise various campuses to diacuas the
and dismay ,at Bull'alo's failure matter with interested groups.
I will be happy to &amp;Upply tbe
~~and~.,(~ poei!i&lt;in paper, tbe
Committee, that I would make visioas ·a nd a list of the Cominquiries wben I returned to Diittee members to interested
my campus. During a break in
the ptoeaedinp I learned ..that ~ Conduc:tq . . Tbe remainder of my report
Bulfalo had oantributors to the .
oonf-.ca, alli)ouch ·no . dele- CC1DCB1118- not. the Senate meet- .
inc
iteelf but some problems I
~ .I also learped ~t the
mVI~ ~ •
!"""" .-ceive in tbe ooaduct of busi-

dorsement of the charge. Other
reports wei:e of a t.eehnical nature. I will not burden you with
the details in these cases. Interested members of the oonstituency are weloome tO examine the relevant documents
in my office. My oomments
here will be restricted to a few
matters which I suspect to be
of general interest.
The COMMITTEE ON
PERSONNEL POUCIES submitted a resolution calling for
repeal of the nepotism clause of
the Policies of the Board · of
Trustees. The resolution passed
with only a few dissenting
voice votes. It is my understandina- that the resolution is
merely' advisory to the Board
of Trustees.
.
TheU&gt;MMrM'EE ON EXPANDING EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUNITY reported on
a oonference, "Tbe Institute on
Innovative Teaching and Counseling," held in Binghamton,
September 9-12, 1970. Tbe ,.,..
port stated that "letters of invitation ·were sent to tbe "presidents, senators, and educational opportunity directors of all
CII)Dpuses . • • asking them to
send participants. The ,.,..

Oni':i;"~~ ~

p"""'"*' ,.,..

.f!I:.,W

ness by the UI B Senate Executive Committee and by some
of the SUNY Senators from
here.

Senators do report to the SUN-

y AB Senate Executive Committee, which does not elect

them. Nor has the Executive
Committee transmitted the ,.,..
When I learned, through a porta to us, tbe constituents. I
letrter from the SUNYAB Fac- believe that SUNY Senators
ulty Senate Executive Commit- should report bedt to their en·
tee Secretary, Tom Frantz, tire campus constituency. My
dated October 9, that I was to elected replaoement for the
attend the SUNY Senate meet: seat YBQlted by Bill Baumer,
ing as Be.umer's alternate it oc- George Hocbfield, has aasured
curred to me that if I am his me that he intends to maintain
alternate to the SUNY Senate open oommunicatioo · between
I ought also to take his vacated the SUNY Senate and the
seat on the U/B Executive . BulfaJo ~pus. So too does
Committee. r therefore p,.,.. Marvin Feld!nan, just elected
aented myaelf at the next meet- to tbe vacated by the resing of the E:o:ecutive Committee ignatioa of Albert Somit from
and ,..... seated as a voting · the SUNY Senate.
member. The at-large members
or the SUNY Senate are also .
members of the local Senate
Executive Committee. I (be,...
fore ought to have been sittins
oo the Executive Committee
A "Curacao .J~" aponfrom the time that Baumer's aored by the~ "-&gt;-

Profs CanJin ·
Ctuaaio JlDiket

=tia.:'fli:u_s~!:=.: ~s.~is open also

resignation was never made

~u;. ~~~~

tho.......t about the alternate
......
Senator .occupyinJ tbe vacated
Executive CoiDIIllttee chair, I
was excluded- from participation from several Executive
Committee meetinp. But at
leest .'! precedent has now been
eetablisbed, and in tbe future
such lapses can be avoided.

Finally. there is another type
of lal'f!ll which I hope, with this

~

J: =.verafiu!.,";:f ~

Senators to report beck to Y&lt;!1J.
their oonstituents. In seerdlinc my files and my memory 1
find no evidenoa of any kind
of report from 1111y of my
elected Senators over tbe oourae
of tbe last four years. Yet u-e

:r.!::

hers of tbe faculty and &amp;taft.
The tour, which ill priced at
$381 per person, includes :
round-trip air pallllll8e via Ca:pitol Airllliays DC-8, Nlapra
Falls to~uracao; round-triP
transfers in Curacao;nillbts at tbe Holiday Inn-Cura·
cao; rum swizzle party on ar·
rival; full AJnerkim bnaldast
aM gourmet dinner daily; free
cbaiae longuee and t-:11 equip-.
ment; patuililrl to bellboya and
::.~oocldall party; and
Space may be ~ now
with a $75 minimum ·deposit;
full payment ill clue 45 days
prior to do!parture.
For additional information,
contact Howard Flaalar, Alumni 08ice, 250 WinolpMr, ext.
IDL

·

�·&lt;iRE~

N - 1 2, 1970

Management
Plans Giurse

.

A special seminar on the
Pollution Problems will be offered in the
spring - - by the School
of Manapment, in, cooperatioQ
with the depermwJts of Civil
and Chemical Engineering, Racbel Caraon (Ecolotor) College
and interested members of the Buftalo community.
Other schools and departments wiablng. to grant course
credit for student work related
to the seminar mat _,., further informatiaa bun Prof-.r
Lee Preatou, School of M811qement
The seminar will consist of
three inter-related activities:
1. Weekly JMelinp in which
individual _ . . . . and puaelials bun Cimpus ·and community will c1isc1a aopects of enviroamenlal pollution bun a
lllllllllaerial -penpec:tive. These
will b8 _ . to the
ty at large. Seminar
•
alone, ...__, does
not carry oourse credit.
2- Field trips open to seminar
participants ... a space-availability bulL
3. Opportunity for oourse
credit projects cxt an individual
or noun study basis. These
~ for which credit will
granted hr. cooperatiDJ departments, will deal with managerial aopects of specific pollution problems, such as organizing and administering a
clean-up propam for the Buffalo· Riwr, or cxt broad claases
of problems (federal, Stole and
local ""'P""Bibilty for air pollution control, etc.) • ·
Projects will involw .field
work and interaction with individuals and groups outside
the University. Only advanced
undergraduates and graduates
will be accepted for u- proj·
ects and acceptance will be
baaed on the content of written
pro~ and interviews.
Mansgement students interested in developing credit projects should contsct: Professor
Preston ( 343 Crosby, ext.
6377); civil engineering stu·
dents should contsct Professor
George C. Lee (119 Parker ,
6325); and chemical engineering students, Prof11ssor Jobn
Howell (312 A Parker, 3913).
Students In other departments should work out arrancements with their Olftl departmental advi8on "if appropri·
ate," Dr. Preoton aaya.
A tentstlve list of the aaminar -x.na and tapics followa:
February 2--"---n. Pollutiaa
Problem and ~Re­
- " a puael cfiacuaalon
~t of

E
I:'

• By DONALD W. RENNIE
As a service to the voting
faculty, the Special Bylaws
Committee of the Faculty Senate here summarizes the principal features of the pro~
Bylaws as linally amended and
·now before you for approval or
disapproval.
Membership of the voting faculty will include:
1) All full-time members of
the academic staff with academic rank. e.g., professors, associate professors, 888ialsnt pro,_,..., instructors, librarians,
8880ciate librarians, and assistant librarians with no restrictions on time of service (for
purposes of transition, lecturers
with three._..,. service or more
will be considered members for
.... calendar
2) Administrative officers
who are jireaently members of
the Faculty Senate plus the
director of the Collegiate Assembly, and
3) Members of the full-time
.non-teaching professional staff
who shall be recommended by
the President and approved by
the Senate.
TM powen and dutia of the
voting faculty remain the same
as at preeent but are delegated
to the repreaentstiw Faculty
&amp;r!GU, subjeCt to referendum
and mail balloting by the voting
faculty .. a whole.
· TM committee 1tructwe and
t¥1viaory ropomibiJity, except
that of the present E-=utive
Committee, remain the same as
at preaent. Committee membership sb8ll be expanded to
indude students and may also
indude others. 'The present
Executive Committee would be
dissolved.
.
TM officers of tM voting
faculty 8haii continue to be
elected and serve as at present
TM proposed. representative
Senate would be coro~ of
the officers of the voting faculty
(the President who shall be
chairman of the voting faculty,
~ vice chairman, a secretary,
and a psrliamentsrian) , ninety

(90) memJ:iers of the voting
faculty elected by and from the
sepl'rate faculties, four (4)
members of the librarian staff,
and the representatives of the
voting faculty who serve iii the .
SUNY Senate. 'The grand total
would be 102.
The ninety faculty representatives ·would serve two-year
stsnered terms and would be
ineligible for ~n after
two terms for a period of one
yeer. Representation from faculties would be proportional to
voting faculty membership in
each faculty, except that no faculty shall have less than three
( 3) nor more than twenty-five
(25) suci1 representstives. The
allocation of repreaentatives
:within faculties to academic
rank and academic units shall
be the responsibility of each
faculty, except that no depart.
ment or scbool may have more
than 50 per cent of the representatives in those faculties contsining more than a single
scbool or department.
Minutes of all Senate meetiJip shall' be sent to each voting
faculty and shsll include the
roll call vote on all subetsntive
issues.
The Executive Committee of
IM Senate shall function on
behalf of the Senate, subject
to Senate approval, between
meetings of the Senate. Membership shsll consist of senators
elected annually by and from
the Senate representatives of
each faculty in numbers proPortional to their Senate representstion, e &gt;: c e p t that no
faculty shsll. have more . than
three ( 3 ) such repreaentatives
on the Executive Committee.
In addition, there shall be an
annually-elected representative
from the Division of Information a n d Library Resources.
The representatives to the
SUNY Senate and the officers
of the voting faculty shall serve
on the Executive Committee
throughout their tenure in office.
Meetings of the Senate shall
be open to all stsnding and

A mail ballot- to be completed by NOI/ember 15- will
provide the final determination
oo whether or not a repreaentatl.-e Faculty Senate will bees-

tave Senate, he charged, will be 25 per cent the number of total
' ·quiet, decorous and decent . . . faculty members needed to call
but contemptible."
a special Senate meeting; estabA number of crucial amend- lished recsii prooedures for senments were introduoed and de- ators; a,nd given legislative
beted at Wednesday's meeting, powers, under certain condiincluding OIJII:Which would have lions, to meetings of the entire ·
token away the guarantee that faculty.
students serve on Senate standA summary of the revision
ing committees. The amend- package now being considered
ment would have replaoed the in the mail ballot appears in a
provision that students "shall separate article in today's Resit" on special and stsnding porter.
committees with the language,
"non-members" of the voting
faculty "may" sit &lt;in such coron..~LJ:...
mitlees. The amendment was
LIUIAA.IUf&gt;
defeated, first 116-117, and on
'The national and state units
~t, 1.25-128.
of the National Association for
Other amendments which the Advancement of Colored
People &lt;NAACP ) w1' ll anwere approved: incn¥lsed the
size of the representstiw Sen- nounce thiS morning the filing
ate bun 70 to 90 members·, in- of a oourt action to seek an increaaed bun 20 to 25 the DlSlri- )' unction a~:not
~- the State of
mum nlllllbe&lt; of senators al- New York's construction pro•-~
'
facul
and
-~
"""""•or any cxte
ty,
-bun two to three the minimum
A press conference for the
nmnber; established two-year announcement is to be held in
terms for senators aDd ..,...year the Governor's Room ol the
terms for the Eoecutiw Com- Stotler Hiltoo at 11:30 a.m.
mittee; inaeased bun fkoe to
In attendance will be Her25 per cent the qiMWiliD bert Hill, NAACP national Iaauy at a maeW., of the entire bor director; Nathan JCXMM,
VOW., faculty; and provided for NAACP general counsel; David
a roll-&lt;lllll on all aubatantiw Collins, New York State labor
U.U. voted.., the Senate floor. ~and Donald R. Lee, ·
Defeated- ......m-te ~~t.y
8Ytte NAACP-·
·
....,..
that WIIUld he..,: mandated a
Also invited to attend is RevCJII&amp;oye&amp;r trial period for the erend JIUIIM T . Hemphill, presnew Senate; raiaad bun fkoe to ident, Minority Coalitiaoi.

year&gt;.

~ l\..~=

~

....... ao.

~

u;:.,:

. . ---..t.
~

-Tellotlt.

u~ 5e1v1ce cenEd. 3316 (24-hour _,...)

U..,_,,

-~~.tt.r·

rl,..n

Ed. .3717

,

special committee members,

who shall have the privilege
of speaking on the floor of the
Senate. Voting faculty who are
not members of the Senate may
have the privilege of the fioor
of the Senate and of speaking
on the Boor of the Senate upon
recognition by the chairman of
the Senate. Others may obtain
the ssme privileges by written
request to the chairman or by
resolution of the Senate at any
meeting.
A mail ballot to the voting
faculty may be chosen by the
Senate as a means to present
alternatives to the faculty for
final action by a majority of
the votes cast. Such a ballot
is mandated upon reqUest of
twenty-five (25) per cent or
more of the Senate present at
any meeting.
A referendum- (a yes or no
vote on a proposition adopted
by a majority of the Senate)
is mandated upon request of
twenty-five (25) per cent or
more of !he senators present
at a meeting, or upon petition
of five (5 ) per cent of the voting faculty.
The a1Mndment procedure to
the pro~ Bylaws is similar
!" that ~ at present, requirllll ma)Onty approval by the
senators present at a meeting
and a subsequent approval by
a majority of the voting faculty
responding to a mail ballot.
To enable IM proposed Bylaws to go into effect, balloting on the proposal shsll be
completed nol later than November 15, 1970. H approved,
the present Executive Committee will determine the nmnber
of representatives allocated to
each faculty and the Special
Committee on Elections shall
conduct the initial elections to
the Senate, to be completed no
later than January 15, 1971.
The present Executive Committee will convene the Senate
in the last week in January
1971, for purposes of electing
the new Executive Committee
of the Senate. Upon completion
of this election the pro~
Bylaws would become effective.

Mail Ballot .NJWlJnderwa:'¥ Will Determine
Whether Representative Senate Is Set Up

tablished.
The motion to put the plan
(which is contained in a com=::.~~the prebensive amendnient to the
Febrmry 9- '-n.e Econom- Bonate's Bylaws) to a vole of
the ..,tir!' faculty was approlled
ics c:A PG~futica•
by the 8enate last Wednesday,
2,\;: 186-61.
..___,, __ to the Um'-'ty's
pacta ol Pollutlan Control,:' in~•......,.
·~·dudlnc: (a) jurloodictiall and Information
Oftice, "there is
Jeclalatiaa, (b) .......... lm- ICXII8 reaacm to
belieYe thet the
ploaaatatlaD and dlfooCMi&amp;it DeW Bylaws . will pin aocep~and (c) . . - ex..__ A - poll taluln in the
~ abowed ~t faculbodty pre9, 18-"Pollutlon •...,._tstive
Contini In ct., Firm." coat and the atown
maew., almostY OW!r
two-."
llamcill ......
•-~
facult member
April 13, 3 ) At -·~
Y disap-•
sharP
"8peccal Problem " ' - and a-ver, v
ol
plan at· \Vednes. . . . _ . . Alrpel$l." iDdndinl
meeting. Dr. George
1Dd191ila.llnduatry prabllma,
and polladan In specific madia Hocblleld of the En,u.h [)e.
~taald thet the aew rep-air............. etc.
. ti s
t
._,__
April :n. May .. - Repal1a pnahed t:c..:.:a
'd;;,'l.
... llludoll1 Wd projects.
like . to
to meetinp" and
~~ he
been
EMOTlONALLY UPSET

..

SenateBylawsCommitteeSummarizes · SitnriBt ·
Perform
PrincipalPoiTJts ofProposed Bylaws ToOnCmnpus

On Pollution

.

3

twbuJent."

""

He aid the new Senate WIIUld
be "......culated, clocile and unproductive," eYell "pusi..,."
"JJ in the pMt there bas boOm
....._,.__ ~ he _,.,. -, he-- . 1•
the Benale "'et:poudinJ to .-1 crioes." A ..............

NAACP Wiill Ask

F1or

.... Halt

.

T)ebu Cbsudhuri, Indilln sitsrist, bas delighted the audiences
and music critics of many cities
and campuses in his world-wide
concert tours during the last
three years. He will be performing at State University Col·
lege at Bufl'alo, Upton Hall, oo
Tueaday, Nowmberl7 ( general
admission $2, students $1), and
in the Fillmore Room, No@n.
on Wednesday, Nowmber 18,
at 7 and 10:30 p.m. (general
admission $3, students $2) . Accoropanying him wilL be Manjushree Chaudhuri on tsmburs
and Sita Ram Sharma on tabala

·( drums) .

The 35-yeer-old Debu received his training from Ustsd
Muston Ali Khan, a name to be
reckoned with in Indian music.
He plays in Senia style, a tmditional school of Indian music,
founded by India's great musician Mian Tan Sen, doyen of
musicians in the Mugbal Emperor Akbar's court.

During his early tr~ ing,
Debu won a whole string of
prizes, but it was not unti11958,
when he played in one of the
all-India music conferences in
Calcutta that he estsbliohed
himself. A year later he went
to Delhi, where he presently
teaches instruments! music at
Delhi University and at Bharstiya Kala Kendra, an Indian
art center.
Debu was the first Indian
musician to psrtici!&gt;Bie in the
world famous Montreaux-Vevey
Summer Music Festival in Switzerland in September 1969. He
will be one of the first prominent sitsrists to perform in
Buffalo. (Ravi Shankar was
scheduled to perform in Itutralo
on December 6 and 8, but the
engagement has been can·
celled.)
Alain Danielou, director, International Institute for Comparative Music Studies and
Documentation, says, "Debu
Chaudhuri
is one of theofmost
brilliant musician.
the
younger generation. His lmo·N-

l:~!~~l ~':.'=

masterly. . . . His 8UClC8SS in
Europe and 1 believe in the
U.S. has shown that ewn a
Western public can a~reciste
the great musical tradition of
India in its purest form when
preaented by an artist of Debu's

!=ft~i~r·:~~ ~s

'1::!i

!"':i:
u.-- holD re
~iall. neaco Ant llY of tM

Debu is being preeented by
the Ol6ce of Cultural Alfairs,
UUAB, and the India Students
Association. Apart ~the
Tuesday concert at Uptcm Hall
and the Wednesday concert
with Poco, a country rock
group, at Norton Hall, Debu
will give a Wednesday afternoon workshop at ·t he Music
~

LOANS AVAILABLE

The Office of Finoncilll Aid hes an·
nounced that It Is pmantly able
to accept financial oulstance ap·
plications for 1971&gt;-71 from stu·
dents who hove not previously
filed on application for this year.
Students who have not applied
may contact the Financial Aid Of.
lice ot. 216 Harriman ll b r or y.
Whera· the . - criteria ora· met.
:""-~will be oppi'IMICI• within ,the
tmow of available funds. These
new oppllcMions will be reviewed
in the order of raceipt.

�~

4

N-12,IP10

Unified ~ily~Cure for Social-Cancer?
''U you haw a cure for

CllllCler,

you

ities, beca!Ee ila to
appMI to the young aDd danchanted. In BerW!ey, for "eumple,
there are 50 adherents aDd three communal ""'-. In Washington, site ol

tell people about it," says Carl Rapkills, an MFC student who came to

U/8. hun Toronto this fall.
And if you haw a ciue for "man's
fallen human nature," a c::ancer which
produces the symptoms of war, poverty aDd racism, you might even devote
your life to spreading the word.
Rapkins belieYes he is &lt;;mto a remedy lot the social amcer-the Unified
Fa m i I y Mowment. Its principles
~ lot him wheit he was drifting,
at loooe erids, in San Jose, California,
in 1962 aDd since then hr!'s ~
telling others "about it-in San Francisco, Los Anples. Tampa, Washington, Toronto and · now Bulralo.
But the thlrtyish Rapkins and his
wife, who is teaching school in Buffalo, go beyond the
telling; they
hope to instruct others in the "Divine
Principle" of the movement and to
bring them into its practice as part
of a community of believers.
1beir proselytizing lacks the zeal• ousness of streetmrner meetings and
.door-to-door canvassing. '111ere is no
-passing in Niagara Square.

the national ~ a similar
beginninJ is underwily.
In both u- loc:atioo&amp;--accordin
to accounts in the &amp;rlu!ley Daily
Gazette and the Washington Star,.the communities are rather looeelyoo-ganized, are centered around shared
religious practices and housekeeping
· duties, and have neither group coercion, nor rigid rules of conduct,
except on the rounts of drugs and
sexual permissiveness.
Not all members of the group liw
together; most follow a work-a-day
pattern of life; private possessions are
not "given up," but are shared "as
the individual member sees the advantage of so doing."
Unmarried members of each house
live as brothers and sisters under the
direction of a spiritually-m a t u r e
rouple.
ThU, would be the basic outline o!
the Butfalo Family which the Rapkihs
hope to develop.

mere

the br!J Chriotlano

ir community, while essentially
a commune, has nothing to do with
free love, drugs or any o! the other
stereotyped notions about group living-today. Far from it; it's more like
the early Christian community.
And Rapkins' appearance wouldn't
turn any heads, either. There is no
uniform, conventional or otherwise; no
badge of apartness; no glinty eye. He
could pass for "straight," as could
most members o! the movement.
Yet, t.'&gt;e Unified Family which he
represeniS (or the international Unification ChurCh as it is known worldwide ) is perhaps the most far-!lung,
fastest-growing "revolutionary" movement going today- in the senae that
it's had it with modem society and
actively seeks to replace it with something better.
The movement began in Korea in
1954. Since then it has spread throughout the Far East and into Europe
and North America. Estimates are
that, today, it can rount almost 500,000 members in 27 countries.
In the United States, the Family
is admittedly small with a membership of somewhere between 500 and
1,000-rnainly in University rommun-

. attemplll at creating universal bar. moay (aDd there haw ~ many
~t history who ha"" heud
the '"I'rumpets ·of J u bite e") ha-.e
failed tO grasp that a tnJe understanding of man is the only solution to the
perfeclion ol man's i n n e r nature.
Without that perfection, social dislocations will c:ontinue to run · rampant, the Family philosophy holds.
Man Is viewed as a unique reflection ol his creator, able to create his
own personality, to give and receiw
love, to expand· his love beyond himself and put it into positive action.

Rebuiklinc tho World

The rommunal form of living, however, is not the end; it is viewed
simply as an environment which· enroursges spiritual grtJIYth far more
effectively than the biological family
or simply living alone.
The central thrust o! ·t he Unified
Family is rebuilding the world-fostering "a truly unified family of all
mankind."
The history o! the movement is the
history of Sun Myung Moon, a 00year-old Korean, who, accordin"g to
one account, had at age 18 "an experience in which Jesus Christ appeared
to him on Easter morning in a vision."
The revelations made at that time,
the Unified Family holds, went beyond the truths ol the Bible enabling
the Korean philosopher to .develop
the "Divine Principle," a synthesis of
Judea-Christian and Eastern thought.
Briefly and sketchily defined, the
Principle is that utrue peace'" is not
externally-imposed but rather "romes
from the rerognition in the heart of
each man that every other person
is as vital a part of the world as his
own life is to him."
The message rontends that previous

_,.,.,n-

tenelll are to guide individual growth within rommunities.
As the numbers ol rommunities increase. it is hoped that "energy and
"""""""' (will be) multiplied to make
the Unified Family a potentially-powerful social force." Eventually, the
whole world would !Jerome a aeries of
such rommunities, interacting according to the ''rhythmic give and take"
of the universal order - "day and
night, male and female"-in a New
Age of Man.
Despite the somewhat grQndiose
implications of the message, Bullalo's
Rapkins are beginning very simplyat the beginning. They are not promising "lemonade eeas" or instant panaceas. They have sought, and gained
rerognition by the University's Council ol Religious Organizations. They
are inviting individuals at U IB to attend weekly lecture-discussions of the
movement's philosophy each Wednesday night at nine in 266 Norton. They
are also attempting to make one-toone individual rontacts as their work
and study schedules permit. Their
home, 153 Shirley (g arage ), is a
"center " and those interested are invited ~ stop by.
.
The Unified Family, Rapkins says,
is open to all-blue rollar workers,
students, blacks, whites, long-hain;,
rich, poor. The rub is, however, that
the individual bas to want to practice
the principles. Rapkins feels that once
the basic ideas are reviewed-a threeto five-hour reading of a b o o k of
Moon's---and discussed, the individual
should want to try. And, i! he tries, he
will find them so successful, he will
!Jerome a dedicated member.

Ha~r~ are some

ltbrlds First Erwironmentalist Was UIB Grad
Who Founded the US. Weather Bureau in 1870
One ol the earliest graduates
of the U/B Medical School
who founded both the u.s.
Army Signal Corps and the
U.S. Weather Bureau will be
saluted at tonight's joint meeting of the Military History
Chapter and Civil War Round
Table groups of the Bulralo
and Erie County Historical Society.
"Brig. Gen. A. J . MyerBullalo Ga..., The World Its

First Environmentalist" will be
the topic ot an address by Ber-

nard L. Wiggin, recently retired c h i e f of the Bullalo

Weather Bureau. Wiggin is
author of a study of Myer soon
to be published by the Smithsonian Institution. · The ...,.ion
is scheduled for 8 p.m. at the
Historical Society Building, 25
Nottingham Court. The meeting rommemorates the centennial ol the Weather Bureau ·

~~ uw~=:::, ',)'Jf!.'r=t .,n;:;:x 'fn'rM'::.'t::, a'.J.Z:
a4iforial .mr:.. .. ......., • a - 2u. 210 .,....... . l i -

If. r . 14214-.
e,..._
Jt.nJ.

__
......,_

.t.~~D ~

~~
~

..,.

JIOURI"

r . MAIU6fT

.... . . , ~,::',~,..,........

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

/OBit .... CUM7J'ID'

--~

UPADIS &amp;DlJ"'Ot:

~

~~ " - " £. 11-.11. . . . . ..
c::t»iMMIIIHO Allft6f': . _ M.

-.w.

.
._.. - - · - ..

u....

-u-

.-uno.

.

s-.. u,.-

aDmliltS&lt; / - .. -

b

which is being obeerved this
year.
Gen. Myer, who graduated
from U/B in 1851, was an often
rontroversial figure who entered the ~Y as an assistant
surgeon. During his rollege
years, however, he had learned
how to operate a telegraph instrument and while servmg in
Tems. he became enthusiastic
over the possibilities of visual
signaling. In 1856, he succeeded in having a inilitary
board consider his ideas. Two
yean~ later, an Act ol Congreas
added to the Army one position
ol signal ofti&lt;er to which Myer
was appointed. l"..&amp;tK1 he supervised the buiJdina: 01 telegraph
1iMs (aome 5,0001 miles of
them) to fraatier posts.
For same time prior" to the
Civil war, the Smithsonian had
iloaual - " - pradictiona """
stonn wunlnp 1 - ' ... telepapbic
npcwta. n .._..ted daring the war.
In 181111, Myw ~ tbat
the
8ctivitles ol the
. 8ip8l Corp. be ......sed to indude the amdlnc - ol stonn
.......... end, . in Fol!ruuy,
18'10,
....u..u.t the
eatabliohment ol the U.S.
Buren
.....
the dl·
ol the 8iploll
eaq..
..
..,_ ......a • ecbool for

eon-

:.:au:r

bang-ups.

Gf'EATURES
While the Unified Family .cthe1y
promotes full integratioll """ inter-

marriage, it findo that bladr:a are IK&gt;t
often
to ita ideas ol love

._,ti...,

""" brotherhood. They'"" '-nl all
that before end, Rapkins 1111,)'8, the"
realities ol our - t oociety mab
them mistruBiful.
Today's hedaaistic youtb, -grssping
wb&amp;tewr pleasure it can fiDd, may be
put-off by the Family's strict IIIIIIUal
regulations, Rapkins ...,._ Brothers
and sisters who wish to IDIIny muat
undergo a ~year periOd ol tzying,
~ """ building their peraoaal ..,_
lationship before they may be permitted to do so. No pbysicaJ nlatioos
are permitted during the,period.

As another of the ~s spiritual directors bas_.put i~ the individual "should be spiritually mature in
himaeU before putting his love on another." The couple should '1eam to
relate as individuals to each other
and pl&amp;yand worship toBether."

rnovernent

'Ibe
also Ieana to maas
weddings which fwtber underscore
the mutual interdependence of all
men. Last month in Seoul. Korea, 700
coUples from seven nations were wed
by the founder, Mr. Moon. Last year
Mr. Moon came to Washington where
13 American couples were married simultaneously.
Another soJqeWhat unorthodox feature of the Family_ is its intereat in
psychic phenomena and supembrmal
experiences which are viewed as fur- ·
ther keys to disrovering the innate nature of man. This interest in psychic
understanding carries with it an uneasiness with the pop-occu}t.-witchcrafl, spiritualists, etc.-&amp;J)d the chicane.
Finally, the promise of an "eaateminfluenced" new social order or eventual world government may make ewn
the most liberal and loving a bit chary.
But, says Rapkins, "when we talk
in these terms we are talking about
a · natural, spontaneous evolution and
change, not about any violent owrtbrow." After all,- he notes, if the principles of the Family are as worthwhile
and vital as he says and believes they
are, no one-once he understandscould possibly want any other kind of
world.

�~PORTER:)

N~12,1910

New Pfi)'clw-Mat Project
*lcomes the Alienated

---

relate lo ..tbers.
that 8IIUDds vague"
lo you, it's IM8Dt lo- because the
are without fonD. 'I'bey aet
their structure from the indMduals in
the fii'OUP. Besido!ia, relating lo your~and otbenl is a hard thinclo '\flU~&gt;
~

hycbo-mat's first aeaaion Willi last
week but already - l e are relating
lo eaCh other - b y ..,tting to..,ther
and diacuaaiq what bappeoecl
Tbe idea far the hycbo-mat. aune
from AJme llicb,
director of

--who

She brought the Idea back with her
to U jB and thought about it in referto the situation here. Working
for ae:venl years in Norton, abe haa
observed alienation flrat-band. She haa
DOticed the polarizing of segments of
"the University and the fear that ~
pie have of talkina to otbera. She
hoped lo create a situation where ~
pie felt relued and tansion-free. Maybe in this situation, Miss Hicks felt,
- l e could relate and talk to. each
other without fear.
She took these feelings to Dr. Jobn
Wipf, associate directot of the Student
Counseling Center. They talked and
asked others lo come and talk about
their plana. What evolved was the general conoopt of the hycbo-mal
But how the general conoopt became
real last Thursday was different for
every one of the 40 to 60 pi,ople who
participated. One group became involved in diacussing religion. Another
began by asking why they were here
and talk evolved into their problema
in communicating with each other.
Each of the five groups of people
who sat hunched up on their chairs
decided how they wanted lo attack
the problem of relating lo each other.
And each method of attack was different. There were group leaders present
for each section .. Sometimes their
wishes were followed ; sometimes they
were challenged.
e(IOO

u

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Tbe sip~;.., of Nortnn's
lint &amp;or caleteria aaya, "Hi, You're
Wllllcame, came in!" Tbe - l e inside
amlle a Jot and try lo make you feel ·
welcome. Moat ol them ·are sitting in
cirde JI'CIUII8 ol eilht lo ten, taJkina.
Tbe aiDIIIIIpba1! Ia aoaual, relued and
• filled with the lllllllla ol coffee.
Wbat'a J0iD1 .., bare Ia the Paycbo.
mat, a diobe ~ far a ......Uy infarmal
ol
talk about
~- _ . . and ataempt lo

..u-u.

student activities in Norton, who attended a natiollal conference where
this activity ..... augeated.

--...t

Nobody's the Some Twice

According to Wipf, each session and
each group will always be different be-

cause people are never the same
twioo. Depending on the desires of the

5
fii'OUP, he is plan!Jing lo h&amp;ve administrators and farulty ~lIn­
vitslions heve already been iMued 1o
many ol u- 11111&lt;1,.. them to a-..1
when they can. Wlpf feelll it II ·important far students and staff .... pl
top!lber. He's hoping PnaideDt Robert Ketter CUI come 1o aame ol the
8E0111ions oo that he and students can
talk a b o u t - problem8. And alan
ao student&amp; cau lind out about the man
and not his pc.,;tion.
Wipf wanta the poaps lo footer persoDality growth for the participants.
He feela that through fii'OUP interaction, ,'!"here feelings are freely ex-

cbanJed, communication~~
pie will come to have r....... resllainta.
People are loo tied up being _polite,
he claima, and wind up blll'ting ....
other more.
Our !!OCiety 811182e8' Wlpf becauae
- l e complain of wanting deeper relationships with each nther. Yet DO
one takes the first step forwanL He
claims never lo have been turned down
by a person when he related lo them
as a person. "Even in a supermarket,
rve been able to talk to others."
Most people, however, have trouble
thinking of ways of tallring lo people
they don't know.
This was evident during Thursday's
session. People seemed to have dilll·
culty relating their deep feelings.
Members of the groups were willing
to talk about their problema with the
University and other people, but quite
reluctant to tell others in the group
how they felt about them directly.
or course, the problems of our 8()ciety can't be solved in one two.bour
session on a Thursday afternoon. But
an attempt is being made, and as the
sign says, ''You•re welcome. come in."

Cop~
•

Ln

College?
Cops in college?
quality of teachers at the University"
Some are literally LEEPing at the
and haa gained "a deeper understandopportunity, with the aid of a U.S.
ing of the students."
Justice Department program which
'"l'he vast majority of students are
started two years ago.
very sinoore, very attentive to their
It's called LEEP - Law Enforrestudies and classwork," he observed.
ment Education Program - and at
U/B 56 law enforcement officers are
Larry J . Gla s cott, 31, a State
participating this fall.
Poliooman for the past seven years,
One, Captain Kenneth Kennedy. 50,
echoes much of what Capt. Kennedy
a 28-year veteran of the Bulfalo Pe&gt;aaya about the quality of education
lice Department, says the LEEP proat U/ B. Glasoott, with Troop Tgram is "an escellent opportunity,
the Thruway detail, first attended
U/B in 1961, after his discharge from
""P&lt;'CialaY becauae the main problem
in law enforcement today is t h e the Marine Corps. He joined the
sity lo communicate with the public."
State Polioo the following ye&amp;Ybut
haa bel!n going to Millard Fillmore
"a..- relationa with c:i,tizens will
come about tbroulh hilbe&lt; education
since then. Now LEEP is picking ttp
ol law enforoement officers," he aaya.
the cost of his education.
Capt. Kennedy, who is commandA sociology major, GlasooU hopes
ing ..._ ol the Bureau of Vioo Into obtain ·his bachelor's degree by
veatiption, feela that the COWIII!8 he
June, 1972.
He says sociology is "dOIIely ,.,.
haa tabn in eriminolbcY. aociology.
a-imina~ law, Clllltltitutional law, paylated with polioo work" and that by
cboloo and phiJoaopby help him digoing to the University he haa "gained
rectly in his - t role.
.
new inaights," especially about such
Capl Kennedy attlmded the FBI
areas aa poverty and race relations.
"All ol my teachers have been pretAaodemy in Wllllhinlrton in 1968. He
ty &amp;OOd," Glaacott continued. •rve
... "innpired" lo I'D badt lo acbool,
he aid. "They ~ upon us the
hMrd ol the radical eJen.tts on cam- . but the .,._ who have instructed
impartauce ol hill- education-eopecially in the bebaviond ............ " ~have .been fair in "their approach."
DOtes that in his barracb a1one,
8 i n c e he. atarted takint counM.
nine ol 50 ..._. are perticipeting
Capt. Kennedy J,.. lectund at U/B,
Bdalo State, D'Youville, Erje Comin the LEEP propam at U/B and
lllllllity CoiJep,. and befOre . various
other Bullalo-area co II e g e a, even
-wee clubiL "Collep , ; - me a
tboufh "it'o not easy, aoinl to ocbool
two or three nighta a .....t."
~ I CUI ~ upoo ""- ·
I ....... belont poupa," he aoya.
Capt. Kennedy aaya he iDtaldlo lo
ADDtbar LEEP atudeDt, Gecqe LymQar in crimlnolocY. but ~it ia DDt
fanl, 25,· in the Deeective Bu-.. of
vital that I pl a deiree--if I CUI I
the Erie County lhrifl'o ~t,

-T-

ue

- ..

will-

"' feel. I'm ..W.., a lOt out ol the .
........ alaae,- he aplaimd.
He f'lY8 he Ia ~ with the

-""" u

an~ apnt

durinc

the tmmoil laat oprinc.
~. he ' - been llttendina
Nru.rd ll'illmole Collep Iince the
/

....................... ....,.
spring of 1967, and is presently in
his junior year as a sociology major.
He learned of the LEEP program
thiS spring and the Federal government is now paying his ~tion and
covering the cost of his books. "'This
gives you that much more inoontive
to go," he says. ''You only have to
invest your time."
Like his roll......-, Lyford feels
the quality of education at U / B is
"very good." He thinks the COUI9eS
he tabs "heep you better understand
what you're facing, why - l e react
·
the way they do."
As f!'&lt; his ubdercover work-he haa
testified before the Grand Jury probing the spring turmoil-he says, "I
feel a majority are being led by a
bandful, and moat ~ dcm't aet
that picture. A Jot ol - l e see or
read about the minority at U/B and
their minds pl cl&lt;-.1 to il It ian't·
one bi&amp; turmoil at U!B aa some are
led lo believe.~-......,_

Twelve ~ are taklnc c:ows• in the . . . Sc:bool - part ol a
twelw-bour CerUfkate l'JDiranL They
: take . auda ........ - .....titutional
law, erimlnal law, fmnily law, lepl•
aid dinic, lllinlkltorlnc drup and .

~

Jaw and problems in the

ClDm!C&gt; ,

tion prooeos.

In addition, 34 are enrolled in Millard Fillmore College, 22 of wh&lt;xn are
full-time students. Six more go fulltime to the day ocbool, two attend
Graduate School and two are fulltime student&amp; at the Law School
The ..._. come from the Bdalo
Polioo Department, the State'Palice, .
the Erie County Sheriff's Department, Cheektowaga and Norlb Touawanda Police ~ts, Cusloms
and the District Attorpey's Olllae.
Two are parole ..._. ·and another
participant is a special agent with
Internal Revenue.
LEEP will loan up to $1800 . an
academic year to cover tuition, te..
and related . , _ _ lo student&amp; wbo
plan lo .. into law~ work,
or for law ..._. em academic leave.
Tbe loana are cancelled at the rate
ol 25 per oent a year once the ps,jae is BMYinc in .... enforcement. G . - .
ol up lo $300 per are available lo penons alrMdy in ~ . .
f............t work, with the stipulation
U&gt;at .the puticlpant coo;&gt;tinue • a
full-time , law flllforcement ...... far
at least years after COIIIIIIetinlr
the CDUl8IW pUd few under the pant.

~

�...
GD...,~

Naveri&gt;« 12,1970

~.~~~

SUPAViews SPA As tlie:Best'Agency
To. Represent Both ~tyandStaff
By JUDITH WOHL
V.v-nit J' Pvb&amp;.a.--

East Meets ~t
East mMis West IIIII ~ Poco, o countr)' , _
Qobu ChouthJrl, the lncllon olbrllt, c:onjuct • joint
- . t In tho Ffllmoro' - . , of HoH ot 7 p.m. -

10:30 p.m.

UIB Leaders Ask Buf{akJ
~ To Be More Understanding
Pleas for community patience
with the University were issued
by two administrati~ spokesmen during local speaking engagements last week.
President Robert L. Ketter
spoke at the annual meeting of
the Bulfalo and Erie County
Historical Society, and Richard
A. Siggelkow, vice president for
student affairs, addressed the
Buffalo Consistory of Scottish
Rite Masons.
Ketter told the Historical So.
ciety that he is "fully aware
there may be times wben you
find it diflicult to respond to the

Open House(continued from page I , col. 6)

~=Yjfmmunity interadi'!JI.

University." But, h·e added,
University-rommunity ~n­
ships could become ''mu1!1iiliy
dillicult if the community refuses to hear the University's
position on issues, fails to understand what a university is,
rejects innovation and resents
altering habitual practices."
'lbe University's involvement
in urban extension and programs for the disadvantaged
may well help the communjty
to solve more swiftly ita very
real minority group problems,
Ketter sail!
Siggelkow in his speech had
praise for the new president:
''This administration has gained more ground· than any other
one rve seen during my 12
years here.,
Ketter had been scheduled to
make the address to the Masons also but was ill,
'The Ketter policy, Siggelkow
said, is ·•strong," a sign of courage and not of repression which
"would play into the . hands of
the radicals."
"Give the administration time
to clean house,'' Siggelkow asked, noting that 10 radical students have been tried and expelled.
Siggelkow also praised improved student leadership on
campus and cited "a swing of
the pendulum back to normalcy."
Black students came in for
special credit. 'They "did not
associate with radicals in any
demonstration," Siggelkow said.
Yet, he said·, blacks on campus are frustrated. He urged
understanding of "the "';f' of
blacks in our society.' He
pointed out that the University
is making special effprts to,
among other things, fiJI the
need for physicians in the black
commuruty.
'There are only about 100
hard-rore destruction-bent radicals on campus, Siggellr.ow estimated, and only about haD of
these are studenta.

'The third phase of the 00.
servance would be varioUF kinds
of visual and audio happenings
which would take place simultaneously with the other phases
or might begin later, at 4 p.m.
These might include: an art
shew and a light-and-music
show in the Gym, a rock band
on the Harriman steps; a string
quartet on the Library steps; a
poetry re'ading inside Lock-..·.~-d; a -Creative Associates
ooncert in Norton; a piano recital in Bair~ etc . All the
eveni.E would be open to the
public free of charge.
ThrOughout the afternoon,
food service would be available
in several locations; perhaps,
box lunches would be served.
In addition to providing campus parking for guests, the University might also hire buses
to run back and forth from several off-campus parking locations.
A variety of promotional
methods would be used to encourage community attendance.
The projecfhas been approved in principle and the Anniversary committees are expected to move soon to set up
.aome sort of University-wide
mechanism to seek cooperation
on the idea among studenta and
!acuity.
.
'The -125th Arin.iversary Pol- ~WF · ­
icy group is also continuing
plauning an:d consideration of
a variety of other Anniwraary
SDS and Youth Against War
projects-a ~'ounder's Day banquet, a souvenir- memento, and Fascism are 8JD0111 the 36
awards. selection of a Founder's campus organizations wbicb
Day ~r. a possible Am- . haY!' received Student Aaaociaherst Campus comerstone-lay- tion funding under new procei.!la. waya to gtimuJate student dures instituted in accordance
iftfenat ·and a possible mara- : :. a State UJI.iversjty direo~ Ullhersity te1evisioo proFunda approved for BpS and
~ 126th Anni
cele- YAWF, $5,780 and . !~~ ,._
tim
bndiaa beglna of~y on spectively of ll total
Foandet'• Day, May 11 1971. of $60,000, are for ~
and will boo observed ,in the cal" activities-~ pillya
spring and faD .of. nat year. · or lilmB.

Share in FUnds

.s.nc- _

'The Senate Professional Association &lt;SPA) was the topic
of a general campus meeting of
tbe State University Professional Associa t ion (SUPA)
last Friday.
. "S PA, endorsed by SUPA, iS
one of four conienders which
will be on a forthcoming ballot
to elect a bargaining agent for
SUNY faculty and non-t.eaching professional staff• .
Friday's meeting, with approximately 100 non-teaching
professionals a ttending, beard
its first speaker, Dr. Andrew
Holt, associate dean of the
Graduate School, speak on the
history of the Taylor Lsw as it
applies to collective bargaining .
for SUNY faculty and professional staff. 'The Public Employment Relations Board
&lt;PERB) has ruled that the two
groups are to be considered as
one State-wide unit for purposes of negotiations. Dr. Holt,
a member of the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee and a representative to the SUNY Faculty Senate, took the position
that SPA, jointly incorporated
by faculty and staff, would be
in the best position to bargain ·
equally for both groups.
Robert Granger, from the
A &amp; T College at Alfred and

• 'Unusual'
Andre IS
(continued from. P"'l• I , col. 3)

.
to hear t he pitch -to leave.
Threeaud•"en.quartece
ren!'!i.:'!J.more of the

SPA's vice president for non- and representatiVe for the lac- ·
teaching. professional staff, ulty, along with .NEA stall ze..
spoke next. Tracing the history presentatives, will head SPA's
of SPA, he noted that the in- election campaign. Aa the only
corporators were basically the price for NEA's support, SPA,
SUPA Executive Committee if elected, will hold a referenand faculty who felt that th,i.s dum to determine whether the
kind of bargaining agent meets general membership wishes to
all the faculty-stall require- affiliate with NEA. If the memments. He staled, as well, that bership votes "no,'' Granger
SPA-has acquired the minimum says, then -"(NEA bas) lost
number of authorizations {10 money!'
per cent of the State-wide facSUPA's f&lt;lle, it was explained,
ulty-staff group) to permit its is as a professional association, •
inclusion o':' the PEI_m e~ection not a bargaining apmt. It has
ballot, which election 18 ex- a vested interest in presentin.g
~ by Christmas. S~A of- · the professionals' needs, hoW'
ficial!y opened a S_tate-wide of. ever, and feels that SPA Would
fi&lt;;e m ~ ~ week ~ be its best bargaining apmt.
w11l begm •Ia. election cem~gn ( ln a mail ballot sent out re!"' soon as 118 ballot po8ltion · cently, Granger stated, the
lS announced. Such~
membership of SUPA voted 10
~t, ~gh, and the election, tO fin favor of SPA.) SUPA
•?!I aWBit an appeals court de- will also continue to deal ·with
CJSlon !'n whether faculty and non-rolleci.ive bargaining issues,
p_rofe881onal staff are_ ~ be ""!'· such as governance etc.
.s1dered as one negotiating umt. .
'
It is expecteil that they will be • 'The question, "whether or not
so considered.
to bargain coUectively,'' Mr.
Meanwhile the New York Granger said, "is academic. ColState Team:.rs Association lective bargaining is coming."
CNYSTA), affiliated with the ·· The' only real question is, "how
National Educational Asaocia- · do you want it handled?'' AFT
tion (NEA), has pledged its &lt;S.UFT) and CSJ;:A, he said,
support to SPA. NYSTA-NEA ~not understand 11!" bargainfunds, as well as their legal and · mg needs of professwnals and
public relations staffs, have faculty; "everything isn't 'b&lt;ead
been made available to SPA. and butter' and 'terms of emRobert Hart, president of SPA ~=-.:e.T!hl'J,

!".::..

another of the final prophecies
which has come true within this

=

contracts with SUNY; AFT
isn't responsive to the individual, but to AFL-CIO and the
teachin"g staff." CSEA, he said,
is ·only concerned with money
issues.

Changed into a traditional
tux, K-ale, who is a magician
not a minister, told of his con·Version to Christianity -emphasizing its substance, not its
form. He echoed Marx's stand
on the ritual aspects of "religion."
_
Kale stressed that the only
real miracles were those of
Christ, particularly the prophecies.
Christianity is the only hope
for man in this troubled world,
he said. And the return of
Christ is at hand.
Twenty-seven scriptural signs
of the second coming have been
fulfilled, Kale claimed-increased incidence of earthquakes, famine and wars among
them. There bave been more
killer earthquakes in the twentieth century than in the previous.three, he said.
Also, he noted that one Biblical pfOpbecy says the returned Messiah will step on the Mt.

generation, Kale said. ·
Known as the magicians' magician, Kole has appeared on
Can SPA come out with a
national television in the "package" as AFT .has? Not at
United States and Lstin Amer- present, Granger says. SPA is
ica. At the age of 13 he was unwilling to present a stateknown as the "World's Great- ,;nent until the members themest Junior Magician." Several selves make known their wants.
years ago he decided to investi- For example, do they Want a
gate the miracles of Christ from single salary acale for the entire State UniversitY, or not?
8 magician's JXlint of view. He
says he became convinced that Such q u e at i o n s should go
Christ" was no illnsionist.
through the membership.
Kale, a professional magician
What will result if the facfor the past 15 years, is now on ulty vote for "no agent'' ·i n the
the staff of Campus Crusade upcoming elections? Bulfalo
for Christ. He makes personal and Albany already bave a
appearances at universities and movement in this direction, says
colleges across the nation- . Granger. 'The result, if the "no
quite successfully so, judging agent" number is sizeable, will
from Monday rught.
be a run-off election ~n
SPA and AFT. Collective bar'T\,.,..L.....,.,Trot
gaining cannot · be eliminated,
.1. UJ.n~t;.Y
because the smaller unita of
11. _
11.
SUNY will he votiilg for an
IUS Jll
.tU
apmt in Jarae numbers. Surveys
'The first annual "Turkey which SPA baa been faking
Trot," being held November 19 make Granam- confident that
b the In
SPA will win a rwHllf. At preY
tramural Department, !lent, he stated, SPA has a
under William Monkarsh, is greater paid membership than

Dead Sea. A recent article in
Scientific American, he said,

partment's activities.
Starting at 3:30p.m. behind

cause eDctly such an oocurrenee.
One of the meet important
signs, he said, is the nation of
Israel which figures prOminently in the apocalyptic :holocaust
piedicled for ther time of commg. 'There was no Israel for
2,000 years, he said. Another
sign, he said, is that the Bible
says larael will p088IIS8 Jerusulem at ·the end- aomething
the laraelis pulled off just two
years 8110•
·

finishing at Norton Hall. 'There
is no entry fee and any student,
faculty or staff member may
enter.
A 20-pound ~y . will be
awarded to the wmner of each
of five catesories - male student, female student, faculty
and stall, women's orp.liization and general organization,
including fraternities and

Rul Mlrodeo

Seen

T--tramurai :d

i~liu:·~..::~~':! =~ :-=..~~u:J:

AFT, and their membership is
growing rapidly.

~~the~un~'::t:!.J:i ~k!f"~r:e~-45SeekDismissal

dorms.

·

Monlr.arsh hopes the contest
will ~aet student aiv:l UniverTriurnphlll ~
sity respcliiM (for IJ:Us) inteAn!!, he •continued, Jerusa- gral part of campus life (intraJem f811 to Israel just as the muraliJ) ." He especially wanta
Anaba were planning to unbrick to draw studenta "awsy from
the Eastern Gate lor the tri- the dorms to make full uae of
umpbaJ mtry of King HUIIIIein · - the facilities." F - than 2,000
of Jordan. 'The Gate has been studenta of an enrollment of
cloaed for centuriea and the owr 10,000 full-time Ullder·.
Bible that the · MeBah graduatei took part in intrawill be the first ·to , _ throudl mural activities IMt year, Monit after it i8 _,ad again, KOle karsh said. In IDOI!t schools,
contended.
more than half the student body
Widi!BPned uae of drup · i8 . participates. ·

•
• •
'The Ha
Y."'! 45•
wmnmg
one battle m the lepl war
growing ~l_c:!_,1!!_~!.!"inl' 8

~in,-;:;:..~00::

missal of furtbOr chargee
...-.o:-- . Cl Court.
still

...,........ m
ty
Lsot week, the Appellate Division, Fourth Department,
State Supreme Court, threw out
an ear her conviction of .tbe
group. That, conviction, 011
~ of
con_tempt of a

ci.vi!

~~~ ~:n-tted

!"'lllJJIl8 ~- ..

·~

,_...

m 30-day penitentiary - tences for Mch. 'The sentences
had been stayed pending the
apJIMI.
~
Attomeys for the 45 inllmd
to move for dismissal o1 the
City Couri contempt chargee
on the basis ol thia declaiOD.
'The defense will argue a1110
that the trespass chargee be
dropped.

�N,.,.,_ 12, 1910

.Prummit of Colad'to Head .
GREPORTS
CommunityAdvisory GrouP- ON
Maurice Poummit, cbairman

~!:"'~=-~
~tr Advisory Council
for the Umversity's l25tb Anni-

~Couocn held eleCtio..s at

its meeliDa on campus I a s t
week. Other officers are Donald J . . Holzmul, attorney,
Jaedde, J:l'le!adnnann Kelly,
Swart and AlJIIIPUl'lll!r, vice
cbaimum, 8lld Mrs. E8tber

Kratzer ~ repr-ang
the l1!B AlttnmAA. _,_,._
- Um-mtyOiiiCials view the
Council bolh as an adi1le .,..,._
ticipent in plans tor
sary """"ts and as tbe prot&lt;&gt;. type for an on-soinl 110\11!
which will reflect communitY

Anniver-

op~-nine

individuals
have qreed to serw on the
Council
At last 'Wedneeda:Y's meeting, tbe CoUncil t-rd plans for
and mede IIIIIJII9Iions concerning the p~ Universitywide open house for neJ:t
spring. (See separate story,
this issue.) ~oD&amp;-were
made to work WJib off-campus
service clubs, hiJb s c h o o I
groups. etc., to make the proposed event a "community relations day."
-Members of the Advisory
Council are:
Rolarid Anthone, M.D.; Mn.
Marion Anthony, president. Tat-.
Jer Club of Niap.rs Falla; Leslie
G. Ania, lr., c-ral manager,

College A(continued from -

1, coL I)

aJ cspability of the College A
stalf.
'The only course College A
offers is CA 401 - Confiict and
Change in the Local Community. 'The course's OODtent is determined by the students and
usually OOil8istB of an independent project: Some of the current projects are: a creativity
workshop for baodicapped children, a tutorial program for
hiJb school students and various health-related clinics.
'The course is supervised by
the core stalf of College A which
includes two full professors, a
graduate student and lib: undergraduates. In addition, students
working Oft independent projects are aided by the people
in their project such as hospital
supervisors and. faculty mem-

•

bers Whom they OOD8Ull
Dr. Murray questioned
whether the projects ''being done a~ an ._nate university level," and if the faculty-student ratio was lfdl!ci.enl
Mia Kaplan 'WIJIIdei-ed how
students oould be admitted to
the University, and not do
work on their ,projects "at a
uniYerslty level.
No deer definition of these
terms eYOiwd, however.
Dr. Snell 8llplained . tbat the
entire bodY ol the faculty is
used to stslr College A and that
llludonts may oaasult any fac:
ulty member about their proj-

ects.

· 'The OOIDpi'OIIIille which was
hammered out permits claas
csrds to be relessed to the additional llludonta. However, Dr.
Ebert is to bePn a study of
College A's prDII8Dl to determine "university level work"
and 811111 competency, as pre-

=

olbyor::.__
J&gt;olicills

~

the

Dr. Murray alao stopped the

College A practice ol lettinc
llludonts' IP1Ide u-IW. be-

..... "aalf evaluation is not
within the terms ol the Policies."
After the ~ Dr. Snell
lllbd Dr. Murtii,Y if he -would
mind College A ~ in
• lepl ~ apinst your IIUIIIplima Dr. Murr_.)' 11'&amp;pUed that It Ia. hla ~t to
doao.

~-1:t!'t't!t~~:

necie-Mellon Univenity; Graduate School of Buom- Adminiatration. Harvard Univeni.ty;

~::.,chs;:!,;! ~ti~~~

nology.

WBEN-TV; Mioo Mupret l.
B&amp;ny, preoident, Zonta Club of
BuiWo; Allan M . - . , ., presi-

GJ&gt;EOPLE

P . B.........., preoident, ' the BaDk
of Bulfalo; Millard C: Bl'OWD8,
editor, the BulfalD EvenUo, Newo;
Mn. Edward. H. Butler, put
U/B Cowx:il member; M.n. Mildred ~ Mn.
ra

ina! Nerve," Eishth Institute for
Advancad Edw:ation in Neurobiology, Chicqo, Dl
NEW ·CAMPUS
OIL RUTH ELI:D, aeeociate profeaAPPOINTMENTS
sor, nuning, ..Social Facton AfH.UVEY .AXUIZOD, procrammer an ~ . fectinc the Cl&gt;ancing Role of the
alyst. \1881' aervioee group, com- Nune," 60th Annivensry Homeputer center; previoully an in- oominJ, Univenity of w..tem
atru~r in COJI\puter
science, 4Jntano, London, Ontario.
SUC/ Brockport.'
DR.. 0 . W. GltiZNB, lL, cbairman,
DR. DONALD a. B&amp;UTVAN, auociate
clean,
of Continuing Ed- ~ra::u.r.!o~~:!,':,~ o!f CQ:j
ucation; (ormerl.y a.istant dean
and director of credit-free progrsma in the Division. Dr. Brut- tist'a Role in Cancer Detection,"
van baa abo been elected vice
president, Niapra Frontier Chap- ~;:~alDi!t.i:~L:!n~ew
ter, American Society for Train- Society, Syracuoe.
·
ing and Development.
JOHN BAUC, associate director,
JOHN Dt.I'!'.KI:, programmer analyst,
computing center, "Emul8ton for
data processing group, computer Sup,port of High Level LanguagAnnual Workshop on MicrO~~~ %::rl§~-'t.~~ es,'
programming, Buffalo.
·
Computer Task Group.
DR. SYLVIA HART, associate dean,
CIIARUI:B B. WJLSON, appointed adnursing, ..The Emerging Image
junct a.sai.ltant professor, educa- of Nu~· "The Dissp~ring
tional administration. Mr. Wilson
is -a senior research analyst with
~~~ing ueo~~~.?o~.o League
the New Careen Training CenOR. ROBDn' L. KETTER., president,
Buftalo, " You and Your
~:· !~~~oP:,u~~· ~!C: SUNY
University, .. 109fh annual meetat the same Univenity.
ing of the Buffalo &amp; Erie County
Historical Society.
OFF-CAMPUS

r.:::..::-.~'E~J,!!!~

. K. ci:!'m:::J.

=~
~tiona
pr, Co~IOIIIlntiaol IAbora-

toJY, IDe.; Robert T. Coleo, an:hitact; Mn. Marie
CoiCOran,
CoiCOrSD RM!Eatsle; l. Michael
Collino, otstion JIIIIDII&amp;'8r, WNEDTV; Charla eo._ """"JIIIIDII&amp;'8r,
8esn, Roebudc and Co.; Allen E.
~run. .upervieor, Town of
Amherst; C h a r I e a Diefendorf,
- t UIB Council member.
Mn. Rosslind Droxelius, president, Buain- and Prof-ional
Women'a Clubs of Buftalo; Jack

~':: ~Tr"'K.~~~~~!~

H. Fonda, preoident, Liberty National BaDk and Trust Company;
James W. Fuoon, Jr., Department of Public Relations, General
Motor&amp; Corporation; E d m o n d
Gicewicz, M.D.; Rabbi Martin
Goldberg, Temple Beth Zion;
Samuel Green; Daoid G.

!~;i,~f.~t~ ~~~

cese of au.ffalo; David Hammond,

W'ilf:
M:~:.G~-~~'::
Buftalo Savinp BaDk; Richard

~~U:ec't!!:.oi.T~:

Division

=~~..tv&lt;:~~~:

c!:

APPOINTMENTS

R:,i!:!t

I':.;

~-.::....~.':i::W~~~

~~=r!a=ti=--~~~&amp;::

~~~:=P-::dP~~~

~::!!,.~~: l:e~~t:.

JAMES MARKELLO, SS!Iistant
professor, pediatrics, " Youth and
the Family in a Changing Society," symposium. Rochester Acad-

DR.

Heath, attorney; Mrs. Francis V. DB.. AKIB.A ISIHARA, professor, phyHerr, president, American Also· sics and astronomy, currently on
ciation of University Women; leave from U/ B, appointed visit~ professor of physics, UniverDonald J. Holzman, attorney.
J....- Home, State Depart- Sity of Rochester.
ment of Civil Service; Leeland N. DIL J . WAB8EN PERRY, dean, School
of Health Related Professions,
itpointed chairman of the Rural
dent, Amhent Chamber of eom:
merce; Mn. Milton E. Kahn,
~s:licaierp~=tt;:;
president, United Jewish Federa- Western New York.
tion of Buftalo; Mn. John M.
Kerr, president, Twentieth Cen- WILI.LU( SIEMI:Il.ING, general mantury Club; Mn. Lucile M. Kinne,
preoidenl, Zonta Club of Am- !fef;ro~~~ti~~~
bent; Cy Kine, executive editor, Radio, Wuhington, D.C.
Coun.er·Erprea; Mn. Herbert D.ANDL Bn:INBDO, assistant proKnilht. ..,..,mDr, Zonta Club; M. fessor, physical therapy, appointRobert Koren, attorney; Mra. ed recreation director and research project director, Recrea=u~~P~l';!:';!':;.
tion Programs, Auociation of
York; DsWI l . Laub, president. Marine Midland T r u 1 t ~~~rw::'m~~o~{"biliCompany; Mrs. EIJ81!ne E . Lenahan, p..,.;dent, League of Women
Voten; Cbarleo F. Light, exec- PRESENTATIONS
utive vice president, Buftalo Area DR. THOMAS ACETO, Ill., asaociate
Chamber of Commerce; Miss prof....,r, pediatriao. "The Effecto
of Human Growth Hormone on 79
Hypopituitary Children," Amerilipp, attorney; Rev. fWph Loew, can Academy of Pediatrico, San
~r. Holy Trinity Lutheran Franciaoo.
Church; Jooepb Mandt, superintendent of Buftalo ochoolo; Frederick M. Manball, justice, New
York State Supreme Court; maoeutics: A Review and PreGeorp J . Meuer, publilher, the view of Development," 1st SymAm/tent Bu; L. Halliday Meiabwpr, MD.
Mrs. Robert Millonzi; Edward kinotico, Czecboolovsltia.
OIL GD.AilD BUCHal, uaistant profe.or, French, .. La Categorie du
Moore, -tor, New Hope Baptist Church; G. HenJY Owen, ad- ~~~~re
C.~

~/r·MJ:~ ~rer,ec;,=

cbai..rma.Jt.

DR. ALAK l. DRINNAN,

emy of General Practice. Medical
Society of State of New York,
Rochester, N.Y.
DR. ROBmT MOLS, associate professor, music, ..The Participating
Concert Audience," Cheektowaga
Central High SchooL
DR. ANIL B. M UKHEBlEE, research
assistant profesaor, pediatrics,
"Capacitation of Mammalian
Spermatozoa by Human Follicular Fluid," aeminar, Betheoda,
Md.
DC. lOHN KULIIEBN, assistant professor, phil0110phy, "A Range of
Theories C"{ Ide as," Creidtton
Club, Oneunta, N.Y.
DR. MIRDZA. NEIDEBS .. J.&gt;rofessor, oral

l::'~~l'£U::i~y::.'f ~!":'~

teractions," s eminar, Eastman
Dental Clinic, Rochester.
DR. DIWJN Nl:'n:ll, profeoaor, pedi.
atric:s, "Antibody Response ol Patients with Pyelonephritis: Aid to
Pathogeneaio, Diagnosis and Prognosis," .. Im.munogenicity of Enterobacterial Al)tigenll," Max Planck
Institut, F rei burg, Germany;
" Heterogenetic Bacterial Antipno

lT~v!:~ ~f ?f~:~c:Jm'~
8

1

mune Respon.e of the H01t,"
Northeaatem Branches of ASM,
Yale Univenity.
OIL PEA&amp;AY L. OG&amp;A, J"eee8l'Ch u-

~~~~.::~:l:f "~

&amp;!u!!

sponse Followm, Natural tJection with Enteroviruaes," XI In-

lated Profeuions, guest speaker,
Trends and Teaching Seminar,
San Joee, California.
mL KADI.ON Ill: COHEN, associate

Inotitut, Freihurg, Germany; lodian College of Allor~ and ~-

l:·

=~- BN~~ A:a.w;.:.nu~~=: :llo::: ~':i:~~N;:"C;, i.tte~
reoident, RotaJy Club of BufMrs. ClsJence Obl.etz: Kent 8.A.&amp;A llAIUI: CICARELU, asaociate ~Lo!es~~ti::;M~Pi:!t
r.0alo;
. Pannincton, P"'"ident, Nia- chairman, School of Health Re-

c:

Frontier Bank of New York;

a."...!~.= of~'t,.~;
0
~w~t~....&lt;:"JT.Os~ P~J"&amp;:

Rohrclan&amp;, p-ident, the !Oeinbano Company; Mrs. Howard T.
Sapenton., Sr.; Mn. Nancy
Schlcaer, preoident, Advertioing
Women of BuiWo; P au I A.
Scboelllropf, lr., .-1 U/B Council mem&amp;er; Frank A. Sedita,
miiYOr oi.Jiulfalo; Mn. lameo E.
Sbenloll;1lftlaident, Bu«alo Federation of Women's Clubs;

Rich-

:!r,ST~ ~:.,-;:

Shuchter, president. Manuf..,.
luran &amp; Tmden Truot Company;
Mrs. Dean C. S t s - . presi'
dent, lunior Leuue of Buftalo;
Mn.· Raymond ri.
lr.;
Harlan J. Swift, preoident, Erie

s-.

:;:::~~.

=:.rr:-c:::

cil member.
Mode)' Townoerld. attomoy; B.
lolm , . , _ _ Erie County executiw; Weltor 8coCt W.U.. M.D.

~~8;~""s.::.2'!'~TX':

chromooome Inactivation," 23rd
Anoual Meeting, American Societii.,of Human Genetics, Indian-

tl;'~n::.fP:ru:: :.!~

Effecto of Environmental Hazarda," aympooium, New York
State DeJ&gt;artrnent of H e a I t h.
Birth Delecto Institute, Albany.
DR. I.UOS .&amp;.. CONWAY, aMOCiate

=~dm"/!?:"~~ ~m;~:.=:

~~==o~;~;

Schoolo of the Dioceoe of Buftalo.
chsirman, daaUce, •"Tnmlformation end AntiAupataniam in Ovid'• MetD.morplwou," Colloquium on Revaluationo of Aucuotsn literature.

I&amp; LIIO C. C1DL\N,

~.0:. =-~~.:r~:

l:."'w~~~o= ~"~i~~
... l.um.
atCae, aMOCiate
~~~~
pro(-r. otstistica, "Scientific
ll8dio.
I(..

GRANTS

:-r. NE= ~i.~~Mlf::Ot::
~~r ~~~ ~F":.i:~ on be-

D£. FRANCIS l . KLOCKE, asaociate
~rofessor, medicine, $1,000 NIH,

b!~s~p D~~PR!,Ybe~E.anM:~.

DR. DANIEL J . KOSMAN,

assistant

~f{~":A&lt;:s. b~c;f:,"id:~;y ~:
butions in 7-azabicycloheptyl-Noxide Derivatives.

t!ao~~p:~:f:i :a::.~

395, NIH, Generation of Pattem
and Form in Biological Syatema.

RECOGNITIONS
uaistant professor, operative debtUtry;

DR. P£'I'D B. CUNNINGB..A.K,

lORN w. "'SBBOUfE, asaiatant
profesaor, operative dentiJtry; toin instructional resou.rces. Awarded
DR.

RBTrA A- KAYE, aaociate

~:n.Di~=t!~llDO::::tal't~

Festival for the film, "Controllin«
the Opersfinc Field by Uoe of the
Rubber Dam." Tbio film wu produced by the School of Dentistry
in cooperation with the Inatruc.
tional Communications Center. ·
DR. ~ 8. aaNB, a..-.ci.ate
C:feuor, "philoeophy, invited to

'S~~ ~:tc":::ti:~

the
tions at Santa Barbara, Calif.
chairman,
oral pathology, elected oocretarytreaourer of the American Board
of Oral PatboiOC)'.
·
DL T. IG'FDSON KI.INa, UliataDt
prof...,r, French, reoei-.ed 1970
Anoley Award for hio W..rtatioa,
Mel4phoric LontlU1180 in 1M NO&lt;&gt;•!o of Andre Molrowc. The award
includes publication by the Columbia University Pre-.
08. G. W. GJIIZNE, IL,

~!f!i·M~eal ~• • ~: ~~·o~':fT{::
hiana, India.
.

S. IIOS&amp;NFI:LD, clinieal
aoaiatant profeuor, pediatrico and
Oil. Wll.U.U( H . :MUllPIUY • reM8J"Ch
&amp;L GBOIIG&amp;

~~p l!~ts'!.e::'&amp;cf.

ucaton of America."

a..alista.nt profeuor, pediatrica,
" HereditaJY Angioneurotic Ede- PERFORMANCES
ma: Detection by Mua Screea- niNA BOLDT, aaaistant profeeeor,
ing, Management and Treat- ·
music, .-rded So1UJI4 No. 4 for
~!'.;~.:,e~o~n!'~~~onal PimuJ by Lejaren Hiller. pr-.ted two piano recitsla with KODwyn Boldt under the auspicoa of
~~~t=~P.i:
formation Syalemo and Statiatieal the New York Public LihrBJY at
Library and Muoeum of Perform~=-·"~U: .,.!!!in!~~ ;_;..
Arlo, Lincoln Center, NapmentAMociation.
York City:
PUBLICATIONS
BlVIIEN IIANI8, a.iatsnt prof-lOr, -music. waa IIOloiat with tbe
DL TIIJOY DUNIUS, viliti.nc profeooor, philooophy, ''The Aoothet.- NatioGal Symphony Orc:MotJa.
ico of Roman lnprdeo," Philoo- \l!aohincton. D.C.
ophy &amp; Plleno,.,no/ofkol EU- D&amp;. IAN WJLI.U)(8. aailtant proHar"CA.
......
fe.or. muaic. eolqiat and com1 .uaa coova., profeMOr, Dllllic.
" Muoic 'lllooJY m TraiiOlatioo. A ~Jr.~
F ranee; first performance of
IIWiioauhY Sup..-.-t, D,_,.
at thia festival;
69," JorimiJl of- li...OC Theory. ooloiot,
Harvard Univenity aum.._......m.r-~ mer eerieL

-

Po:ul F:"'te:::

c-,.

•

;;&gt;n J.I.it , l)

�&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
•ap., to

public. rtl - . . ;

••Open tD pullllc,, adm-. .......

THURsDAY-12
I'IIAUUCISTB Ta.BPilONZ

~;

Sponoored by Recional Medical
Procram. Dr. MilO Gibaldi. DOSAGE UCDIENB, 51 participating
hospitals, 11:30 a.m. and 10 p.m.
CZN'I'IBPDXZ•: musical group, preoented by U.U.A.B. Muoic Com·
mittee, a... Lounp, 2 p.m. '
POaiGN STUDENT AFFAIRS cx:)rnz
HOUR•: 10 Townaend Hall. 3-5
p.m.
BllAZO..IAN FILM FESTIVAL ; GRANDE
~- adventure in Rio; TllOPICI,

bacldand family ·struggles to Sao
Paulo. Student Union Social Hall,
SUCB, 7: 30 p.m. Coffee hour following with F. Tuten. critic-inresidence. Free to members of
the University community.,
MARX 8808. FILM FESTIVAL: HORSE

FEATHERS (1937) , Conference
Theatre. Norton, every 2 hours.
Faculty SLOO. student&gt; $.50.

· FRIDAY-13
BRAZIL: CULTURAL TRENDS ·IN LIT·

all events
on SUCB campus (Elmwood Avenue).
9:00-3:00 Registration Moot Hall: State Room.
12:0Q-Cafeteria Lunch-Moot
Hall. State Room.
2:00--coN\"ERSATION J: LITERA·
TL1!E- Rockwell Hall, Burchfield
Center; Host: Silviano Santiago,
Department of French, SUNY·
AB; Modi!raiDr: Halas Jackim,
Department of Education, SUC
at Oswego; Panel: Heitor Martins, Department of Spanish and
ER.ATl"R£ AND THE ARTS.

Martin Kahe, Some of thew d4yo
l'l'lia me hoMy; ~a I ph

fll:~u

~ r~ee;...!:; "f:;:
ADdrew

IMlW from Emp&lt;doclu;

Sliller, Cadr.,. and Co,.,....,...;
J ..tua Matthews, Four Minia·
turea for String Quartet; Robert
Brainerd, Piec&lt;!l••t. Baird. 8:30
p.m. Genenol admiBSion 11.50.
faculty and otsfl $1.00, sludenlo
$.50.
M.U.J: BROS. FlL)I( FESTIVAL: KONK·
EY BUSINESS (1931) . Conference

Theatre, Norton, every 2 houn.
Faculty $1.00, stUdenlo 1.50.
MOVU:: ME, NATALJE,

preseotea by

Community Action Corps, 140 Ca·
pen. 6, 8, 10 p.m.

BRAZIL : CULTURAL TRENDS IN LIT·
ERATURE AND THE ARTS, all events,

U/B campus,
9: 00--cot-'VERSATION U: PLASTIC
ARTS- Norton Hall, Conference

Theatre. Host: L!opoldo Castedo,
Department of Fine Arts, SUNY
at Stony Brook; Mode raJ.o r:
Edith Berner, Department of Ed·
ucation. SUC at FredOnia; Panel:
Jacqueline Barnitz, art critic, Art
New$. New York City; Rubens
Gerchman. Brazilian painter and
sculptor, New York City.
10: 30-Bra..zilian Cof/ee-Nc.T·
ton Halt
11 :30--coNVERSATIO N

PER·

ill:

Norton Hall,
Conference Theatre; Host: Ab·
dias do Nascimento, Puerto Rican Studies and Research Center,
Cepartrnent of American Studies,
U/ B; ·Moderator: Karl Scheibe,
Qepartment of Psychology. Wes·
1
r~:~e::~t. 8~ r r::enrs:~i leyan University; Panel: Joanne
Spanish and Portuguese. Univer- Pottlitzer. Theatre of Latin Am·
Prica, New York City; Marcos
• si~: ~~::il"ian Coffee -Rock- · Caetanos Ribas, Brazilian actor.
New York City.
well HaU. Burchfield Foyor.

=t:OO-Cinema NOvo in Brazil-

Communication Center, Lecture
Hall " E," Frederic Tuten, film
critic, New York City.
5: 30--Sherry Hour - Moot
Hall, Faculty Lounge,
6 :30--Dinner-Moot Hall,
St&gt;te Room.
8:30-KEYNOT£ ADDRE88 (public
invited)-Upton Hall Auditorium.
Host: Ubiratan D'Ambrosio, Department of Mathematics, SUNy AB; Modera!Dr: Manuel de Almeida, Department of Foreign
Languages. SUCB; Speaker:
Maestro Eleazar de C.rvalho, director of the Brazilian National
Orchestra, " THE v.rPORTANCE OF
MUSIC IN BRAZILIAN CULTURE."

BRAZILIAN FIL.'l FESTJYAL: vtDAS SECAS, semi-documentary on the
arid autao and its poor, 230 Upto" Hall, SUCB campus, 10: 15

Free to memben of the University community.
LING U L.~ICS l.JX"I'UlE•: Dr. Raoul
S. Naroll. professor, anthropology. CROSS- CULTURAL METHODS,
402 Hayes, II a.m.
Bl.4r.K J.JtTS ux:TURE• : Samuel W .
Allen, visitinc professor, black
9 t U d i e S, LANGSTON ASKS YOUR
MAMA; includes readings from and
diJcuuion of the works of Langston Hughes, 233 Norton, 2 p.m.

H.,m.

SOCIAL SCIENCES COLLIIC£ OOLLO·
QUIUM • : Discussion on the zco..
NOXICS OF THE CUBAN REVOLUT10N.

Topica to be eovenld include pre·
1959 hi story, preseJJt rovemmental otrueture, -post-1959 JOV·
e rnment policy and problema with
tbe ten million ton harvesL TraiJ.
er 8, 2 p.m.
DrftuliULU.

Cllrk Gym

swnomic

poo~

PIN ALB:

3: 30 p.m.

BIOCJtJ:KlSTRY SEMINAR* :

Dr. Jer·

ard Hurwitz. Albert Einstein Collep o( Medicine, IIICULATION OF
aNA 8YNTIIBSIII, G-22 Capen, 4
p.m.
IN"!'a.NATIONAL FOLK DANCING: lnatnlction in basic stepa duri.nc
firat bqur, 30 Diefendorf Anne•,

8 p.m.

•

1'IIIDCa'nCAlo BIOLOGY BIDI'IN.W:

Dr. Donald M. Roao, dean. natami . . - _ UniW!roity of AJ. ,
berla. CaJaada, ANDUL .............,:

-.noa PAT'I8H8 OP OOIDIJaf·
...a.. with ·of Dr. Roao'
--.
tl••. wodd in.-tipticma,
s - .. - Rid&amp;e Laa. • p.m.

SUAL . . . AJIID(OHBI AHD RJaMJT

..,_,.

~

OOJfCDT•• :

w... ........ - - .
=.!:"'~~-;;

FORMING

ARTS -

12:45- CONVERSATION

LUNCH·

EON-Goodyear Hall ; Host: Marvin Bernstein, Department of
Hi&gt;IDry, U/ B; Speaker: Flo""'tan Fernandes, Department of
Political Economy, University o(
Toronto, ..CRITICAL RESUME OF THE
CONVERSATIONS.' '

BRAZD.JAN

FlLM

f'&amp;CJTJVAL:

BLACK

~~d· :~!:C::-IL~ hilinegeba~1.
surrealistic
work on political extremism. 146
Diefendorf. 2:30 p.m. Free to
members of the University community.
FREE FILMS • : SERGeANT YORK with
Gary Cooper and C&amp;NTLEMAN JIM
with Gregory Peck, 147 Diefendorf. 7:30 p,m.
LAND OF A N G U 1 S H.

t:NlVERSITY WOMEN 'S CLUB SQUARE

DANCE CROUP: Faculty Club, Harriman Library, Beginners 8 p.m.,
Advanced 8: 30 p,m,
MARX

BROS. FILM PESTrYAL:

THE

COCOANUTS (1929), Conference
Theatre, Norton. every 2 hours.
Flr"'ty SLOO, students $.50.
MOYIE: ME NATALIE. presented by
Community Action Corps, 140 Capen, 6, 8, 10 p.m.

SUNDAY-15
Radio program. Bambi Abelson, senior,
speech communication, discusses
the commUnicative creativity center f o r "'handicapped children
which she set up on campus. Kelvin Ferber, technical manager,
Buffalo Division, Allied Chemical
Corporation. discusses whit Allied Chemical Corporation is
doing to help clean up poUuted
rivers.
U/B NEWS AND VIEWS:

foJob~n~rol~ :.c:::~ $v~L

at 7 a.m. ; WXRL at 9 a.m.;
W K B W at 10: 30 p.m. and
WAD~ at 8:45a.m.
INSIDC. NEW DANCE* • : Richard
Bull with THE NEW YORK CHA.M·
BEll DANCE CROUP, 8TUDEN'T8 at
SUNY at Brockport, tJNI"fD8ITY
DANCZ TBEA.'IU WOIIXSBOP at Buffalo ud pest artiot. G.UTH rA·
OAH. Domus, 11195 Elmwood Aft.,

~ ~o':.nadi!';~.~.50.
BALIUJf POLit DANCING:

lloo!n.

Fillmore

Norton, 8 p.m. ,

I.UZ aa:~TAL•* : Til&amp; C H .&amp;•L&amp;I

I:HIIDOI.&amp;, f e a.&amp; u r i n 1
Charla Gayle, tenor and _......
. . . . . , - . piano, harp, 'fiolin
ud flule; .1-'&gt; Ford. piaDo;
N - Abadey, pe,_;...,; Vircil Day, pe~ Darryl

GATUt

Charles Gayle, aaistant professor of music. atudied at Fredonia
and the Eastman School of
Music. He tMchel history and
theory, but io definitely not
tradition.alist when it comes to
his own music which he describes
u "!ree-lorm, post-Coltrane." "II
I must categorize myself," says

a

g:;;~. ZM:.~

r&amp;t ~~!"'~~

very much 1tis own man.

Marx Brothers made together.
Conference Theatre, N o r ton,
every 2 hours. Faculty $1.00, students $.50.

MONDAY-16
L E C T U R &amp;•:
John
Hinds, graduate student, linquistics, JAPANESE, 402 Hayes, 11 a.m.
ORAL BIOLOGY LECTURE: Dr. Max .
Listgarten, associate profeAOr,
Department of Periodontics, University of Pennsylvania, MORPHOLOGY OF THE EPITHELIAL A1TACHM&amp;NT AND GINGIVAL SULCUS AREA
IN MAN, Room 107, 4510 Main
Street, 12 noon.
FREE SCHOOL NIGHT • : Conference
Theatre, Norton, 7 p.m.
With the aim of informing
Western New Yorkers of .. various
LlNGUISTlCS

~~~~t!d:rdto fo~~ e::.~ca~Ue~

of Modem Education, one of
U/ B's 18 collegiate units, wiU
sponsor this program. Represent·
ativ'ee: of four area free schools
and one free university are ex·
peeled ID be on hand ID describe
expe rimental forms of education.
Free schools are generally
schools which are cooperatively
run, with parents, teachers and
students involved in decision-mak·
ing. The schools usually have
few rules and are not so rigidly
structured as public schools. The
schools to be represented are ~e
Independent School of Buffalo,
Williamsvil le; The Community
School, Buffalo; U It i mat u m
School, Buffalo; Everdale Pllee,
Ontario; Rochdale College, To-ronto. ,
Dr. Fred M. Snell of College
A and Dr. Char!es R Fall -of the
Department of Social Foundations will keynote the program.
Timothy Block of the College of
MOOem Education is coordinator.
COMPUTING CENTER USER SERVICES

~r!::n":~.!:F;:t, ~~~~T~~~~

Room 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7-9 p.m.
· This seminar will be an introduction to the statistical NYBLIB programs and Fortran sulr .
routines available on the CDC
6400 computer library. Topics
TECHNIQUES,

;~;::: ~fta :hi:'r:::.fu'ti~
pr~ to use and procedures involved in us inc the library.

SOUNDINGS IN REL IGION · LEC·
TUBE . . : Dr. Robert N, Bellsh, di-

rector, Institute of International
Studies, Center for Japanese and
Korean Studies, Univenity of
California at . Berkeley, THE REDIMENBJON OF OUB N A·
TIONAL &lt;CB.ISIS, Fillmore . Room,
LIGIOUS

Norton. 8 p.m. General admission
$1.00, students $.50,
VISITING LECTt11tER• : DR. LINUS C.
PAULING, Nobel Prize in chemistry, Nobel peace' laureate, proIOIIOr of ehemiotry, Stanford University. sct£N(Z AND WORLD AP·
PAIIIB, 147 Diefendorf 8: 15 p.m.
Lectunoobip aponoored by tbe

0anwra

L&amp;CT U&amp;&amp;:

~:

PHYBICL\NB 1WUCPHONJ:

B-red by Recional Medical
Program. Dr. Ridiard N. Terry,

t;:,::::

RePmal

Mecli&lt;al
Bruce Seidbers,

1"11&amp;-'laA.'I'IUNT

TUESDAY-17

DfDODOlft'IC

AlfD

........... 51 puticipat;,. pilala, 1:30 p.m.
PORZIJH 8Tt1DCN'T API'AIU

~

Sponsonld by Regional Mecli&lt;al
Program. Franceo Wollner, R.N.
and Beverley Tucker, R.N.,

HOUR•: 10 Towmerid HaJl. 8-5
p.m.
1'UIKEY DAY ftOI': ioaiDI' race,
open to all faculty, atudenlo ud
staff. Prizeo: four 20-poomd turkeys. Cluk Gym. 8:30 p.m. Ap.
plication forms available in room
5, Cllrk Gym buement.

TEACHING THE DlABETIC PATIENT, 51

VISITING

NEW ANAWESICS AND ANZSTliETICS,

61 participating boopitals, 11: 30
a.m.
N1Jasr:8

TII:IDBONB

L E C T U il E:

participating hospitals, 1: 30 p.m.
JlltD

MOVIE•:

LA. N'OTra (1961,
Antonioni~ . 147

Michelangelo
Diefendorf, 3 and 8 : 30p.m. Bore~o;h. in Milan among the very
DANCE CLASS:

PEARL

PRIMUS,

visit-

ing guest teacher, AFRICAN DANCE:
STRUCrUR£ AND STY'LE; D a n c e

Studio, Cluk Gym, 4 p.ni.
VISITING LBCrUREB.•: Dr. Linus C.
Pauling, MOUX::ULAII. 018£.\SE--TBE
HEMOGLOBIN MOLECULE, 147

Dief·

endorf, 8 : 15 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-IS
CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
COURSE:

Dr. Robert Genco, assis-

!:Jocfo~~e:,or~~~o~:.
146 Capen, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY LUNCHEON
OOLLOQUtuM•: Dr. Alan Teger,

:r~o:,~~~":.~!ty ~f ~=
OONFLICT, Room C-34, 4230 Ridge

Lea;'l2 : 30 p.m.
DIETITIANS TELEPHONE LECTURE:

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program; Richlrd B. RU880ll, THE
par·

PERFORMANCE APPBAJ8AL, 51

tic.pating hospitals. 2 p.m.
INORGANIC

CHEMISTRY

COLLOQUI·

t:"M• : Dr. D. F. Shriver, · Northwestern University, METAL COM·
PLEXES AS BA.SES, 70 Acheson, 4
p.m.
COMPUTING CENTER USER SERVICES

=m~~-~::t. ~~~~T~~~

Room 10, 4238 Ridge
Lea, 7-9 p.m.
DEBU CHAUDHURl and POOO: Indian
classical and country rock groups,
Fillmore Room. Norton, 7 p.m.
and 10:30 p.m. Students $2.00,
non-students $3.
TECHNIQUE,

DENTISTS TELEPHONE L E C T U R E :

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Dr. Bruce Seidberg,
PRE-TREATM&amp;NT AND ENOOOONTIC
THEIW'Y. 51 participating hoepitalo, 7: 30 p.m.
LINGUISTICS LEC'TUBE•: Dr. Erwin
Segal, associate profe.or, pay·
chology, PBYCBOLINCUIB1'1CS, 378
Hayes, 7: 30 p.m.
VISITING LECTUJIER•: Dr. Linus C.
Pauling, ORTHOMOLECULAR PSYCRL\TRY. 147 Diefendorf, 8:15p.m.

. THURSDAY-19
CONTINUING

DENTAL

EDUCATION

couRSE: Dr. Robert Genco and

staff, OCCLUSAL THERAPY, 146 Capen, 8 a.m.-1 p.m.; 145 Capen,
2-5 p.m.

.

CONTINUING
COURSE:

DENTAL

.

EDUCATION

Dr. Charles Lipani, asais--

!:dforor::~~;~yd~~~ ·
148 Capen,
p.m.; Clinic, 2·5 p.m.

ASSISTANTS,

9

a.m.-1

CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
PROGRAM : MODERN CONCEPTS IN

Sisters of Charity Hospital, 2157 Main Street,
8 : 15 a.m.-6 p.m.; aloo Friday,
9 a .m..·5: 16 p.m.
OORONARY CARE.

al.t.~~.,c.::;:n~~

of the latest developments in the
care ol acute coronazy diseue.
THE lt&amp;ALITII8 OP PLANNING t&amp;C-

:""
·"~~~ ol!t~:
do:r.'8:30 p.m.

NINC rN AN UIIBAN .DZA., 104 Park·

..Potemkin" ~- the apirit
of the 19015 JeYO!ution in Ruasia •
tbrouch tbe depiction of one of
ita iDcidenta. It introduced a new
film lecbnique, pfO'ridinc a newlyeonaciouo conception al tqo manipulatioa of f i I m malariala to
COIIIIIIW&gt;icate pbyoical ae-tion.
Ito i n l l - on .w.q,_t film.
makinc hM been ~ to nooe.

TIUIPIIOJO:

8 - N d by
Procram, Dr.

~u!'..:t;:·~ 0~ ~

Dr. Michael Ram, uoi&gt;tant profeaaor, pbyojco.

~-

~-p= ~tot!

D.C.

11.00, otudento 1.50.
The lint faculty-- juz
croup to perfonn · at Baird. the
CIIAKU8 GAYLE CN8IOOI.a includes
three Bulralo ud two New York

=-=~-r:=i!i!:"lo~~
San F'raDc:iaoo-«D in ·Canada.

.-....m.

imoloed in

·=io~~t:s:-~.:A

MABX BROS. FILM FEST[VAL: LOVE
HAPPY (1949), the last film the

SATURDAY-14

Delft Ullivetoity al ToclmolotiY.
The NothedliDda. ud hM 'been

Wahin,cton. percu .. ion; Daaviolin. Works
inclnde Geylo'a o.....ipotent, Af·
ri&lt;Gn Monaokry, MGrCIU Gorvey,
Surviual ud John Coltrane's
boud Adejole. -

~c~r~it( v:~~
bees ol Aaoociatea, Bulralo, PLAN·

er Encineeri.nc, 12 noon.
The lec;ture aeriea, coordinated

!&gt;)' Dr. Robert E. Paaawell, ...,.
ca.ate profe.or of encineerinc.
aims to obow tbat "oqinMn are

eonoemed about tbe environment.
that encineen have i IOcial .oommilment-that ..... beyODd Ill&gt; ....
~~ invol........t in aociaJ
Mr. Nije holdo a maater'o d&amp;in cmJ. e:ncineeri.nc from

cree

.urcTURI8•: Dr. Linua C.
Pauling, Y.rrAlWf C AJrrfD TID COK-

MON row, 1.c'l Diefendorf, 8: 15 .,
p.m.
PSYCRL\TRJC GUICST U~CTU~E•:

Dr.

Lionel Oveaey, clinical profe.or,:•
"Department of Paychiatry, College of Physicians and SUI"ppns
of Columbia University, PSEUDOHOMOSEXUALITY IN IIAN, 139 Capen, 8:30 p.m.

INTERVIEWS
The ON-CAMPUS

IN'I"'ZVVEWWN~

r:"~in~tbro..=~ci

from January 25 to April 29 in
the spring semeater, offen the op-portunity lor individual interviews
with educational, bwineas, industrial and governmental repreeentativeo. Candidates from all degree
levels are invited to interview
whether they will complete their

~9?~&amp;:is~ra~o!~= ~"!.':l

ditional information are available
in Hayes C.
MONDAY-16: Pratt &amp; Whitney
Aircraft: Union Carbide. Div. of
Mining and Metals; Northeastern
University; National Lead Co.;
Aane Electric Corp.; Peter Kie·
wit Sons Co. (civil engineering);
American Express Co.; New York
Coty Board of Education (Kings
County), Brooklyn, N .Y.
TUESDAY-17: Syracuse Univer·

~~~ti~~eite~:O:!,ti;;:Sw~~

Co.; Pennsylvania Depl of Highwaya; Comptek Research Inc.;
S, S . Kresge Co,; Vestal Centnol
Schools (Broome County) , Vestal,
NY
.
WEDNESDAY-IS: Buffalo Forge

Co.; Travelers Ina. Co., Systems
Division; Mobil Oil Corp.; American CS'cinamid Co.; Mohawk

~:!~ ~~~of"~~rta~~~~

Stauffer Chemical Co.; Reiter,
Brock &amp; Bellanca (accounting
firm) .
THURBDAY-19: Materiel Com·
mand, Dept. of tbe Army; A. E.
Andenon Construction Corp.;
Erie Cowity Depl of Personnel;
Great Lakes Carbon Corp.; Fairport Central Schoolo (Monr oe
Co,).
nuo•v-20: H. J . Heinz Co.;
Agway Inc.: Travelers Ins. Co.;
Utica City School Di&gt;triet.

ART EXHIDIT
Paintinp and drawings of IIAilVEY
IIIIEVEIDlAN, prol...,r of art. U/ B,
and printo by Georse O'Connell,
State Univenity College at Ooand Ruth Weiabers. Eastem Miehipn Univenity, Ypoilanti. · Gallery Weat. 311 Bryant
SL 7-10 p.m., Tueaday tbrouch
Friday, 1-4 p.m., Thursday, 1-6
p.m. Saturday and s u .. d. y.
Through N&lt;M!IIIber 29.
Breverman'a "paintinp a n d
drawinp inclnde a poup ealled

..

~~~u;:.: :~

experience taken out of contest
and reintroducod in a - h a t
unfamiliar way to the -.iewer,' in
the artiot'a wordo.
"Tbe mode of p..,....tation ..•
might be eompenld with tbe oimultaneous imqea of lilmmakinlr.
"An nhibition of UD-»Y
hid&gt; quality by three .,;,otafenta ... ·~y IDOUilted..n

}t:, ~· 1~1'-Glo

EueroiAI

LIDRARY EXHIDITS
Permanent ahibit al works by
Robert G - ud . 1 - .layce.

Poetry Room. 207 Lockwood~ Ubrary, 9 a.m.. 5 p.m.
or CJtWa DICKD8*: il·
l u o - hio lila ODd,. with
photopaplw.
portrait..
firot editioJW. Main ......W., 100111
ud _..nd. and third-Door oal·
leriea, Lockwood Memorial
brary, tbroucb January.

·TtiOII

d--.

u-

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>·-STATE .UNIVERSITY
AT BUFFALO
.
...
. -.

-=-· ~ . . •

VOL 2-NO. 9

NOVEMBER 5, 1970

(Clear.'.'Consistent'
Procedures Set
.
For Universitys Search Committees
.

Future · searches for candi·
dates to fill administrative positions at the University will be
. conducted through "clear, consistent and uniform procedures
not tied to individuals," according to President Robert L. Ketter.
In the past, seard1 procedures have varied widely due to
· their ad hoc nature in each
instance. 'The new prescribed
methods are intended to increase the i n p u t which goes
into each search . and, simul-

taneously, to keep interested Comm- constituencies informed of the
The first step in the pre-deprogress of search committees. fined procedures involves forOr. Ketter saicj that the new mation of the search committee.
uniform approaches will be ap- Nominations to the committee
plied in searching for candi- can · be made through the ap- .
dates for administrative posi- propriate designateil UniV&amp;&amp;ity
tions presently not permanent- body or ollicer. Each DOIDinaly occupied, including the aca- · tion, Dr. Ketter points out,
demic affairs vice presidency, should be accompanied by supthe deanship of the Division porting materiaf in the form
of Undergraduate Studies and of a curriculum vita or a letter.
two provostshi-those of Arts
Stude n t involvement on
and Letters and Engineering s e a r c h committeee is to be
and Applied Sciences.
achieved "through ·the appropriate student channels." Dr. Ketter mentioned that student
put is needed in many areas
of the University and that a
wide distribution of responsibilities among the student body
is essential. This can be acnance practices at SUNYAB, ~~'::.t:':hed by having a larger
of students serving in
co-cbaired by Dr. W. Button n
and Mr. D. Arnold; Unil #3, the many capacities for which
are
·needed, rather than
they
existing governance practices
within SUNY otJ..,.,pus, co- having a amalJ group serve in
&gt;~everal
areas,
Ketter said.
chaired by Dr. A. Lorenzetti
Search committee memberand Mr. M. Borenstein; and
ship,
Dr.
Ketter
said, should
Unu #4, Utopian models of
i n c I u d e representation from
(continued on pate 6. col. 5)
other than the area o! immedlate concern, in recognition of
the interaction which each area
of the University has witb all
others. This type of feed-in also
''makes the Unillersity feel like
a- real community," ~
to Dr. Ketter.
All nominations to a search
committee received by the de&amp;By STEVE LIPMAN
Despite the belated start . of ignated office or officer will be
transmitted to the Office of the
~~"!tto~ ~ :~r;:s: President for final approval. In
feels that they can still "make s o m e instances, the nominavaluable contributions to tbe tions can be reviewed by an
officer other than the president.
future of Ibis University."
these cases, the officer would
Dr. Ketter became president In
forward the list of
of U/ B July 1; he announoed together
witb recommendations.
tentstive plans for tbe task
forces later that month; official Periodlc"-D
Dr.
Ketter
views a search
announcement of the ·g roups' committee member
as an .
formation came in September; individual than as a more
repreMDtaand they started meeting in tive of a given organimtion
or
October. Final reports are due unit within the Universilf.. For
in December.
Ibis reason, he said, it will not
Ketter bad originally hoped be necessary for penans on the
that the task forces (Commun- search commi- to report
ity Relations, University Gov- committee activi~ to an.y parernance, University Organiza- ticular g r o u p s. Ins-, the
tion, University Go a Is and search committee will malre ....
q~ periodic reports to the

m-

Two T~kForce Groups Tell

Of Their Progress to Date
'The Reporter has asked each
of 'the presidential task forces
forprogress.reports on their deliberations. This week, information has been supplied by the
Univer8ity Governance and
University Community groups.
T- Fon:e
'The Task Force on -Gover-

Gowemance

nance, since its first meeting
October 7, has been occupied

T_..,_ Here

principally witb expansion of
its student.membership, defini.
- -tion"1ll·its charge and pWa, and
~ Is.::""~~ ,=:-tloowll~':i
its own internal organimtion.
-. -, 11e _....,._ In' u to ..., :1uyo.
'1'w? undergraduate students,
capluu lie .....a- _ MMinl - , _ In
Dennis Arnold and Nancy Cole. t1oo ....., ........,. ...,. In t1oo Olllcu.
man, and two graduate stu.LUi

The-t-n

...

Uwluoolll)

~-(llotln&amp;- ~

!!:~"!-;:::.,~ U : - ,
·

-

l'ubllcallono-

Insuranre Loss Is Threat
To Art and Other Exhibits
Jlalrance.., tbe Universitf.s
bo,ob and aome scientific
instnaaalts bas aJao been dropped anol'o6:ials are investigatmg . - methods of coverage
for these itema. S o m e rare
boob Mn! damaaed in a fire..
bombing of the library I a s t
aprina, and insurance carriers
reluctant to submit bids
on Ibis oover&amp;ll8 alao. This ia
aaid to be part of a natiCXlal
reluctanoe to i n s u r e cenain
items em cam~
r:lft!

~"fal:f L~~8t~l ~i~

and Father Christian Puehn. of
the Department of Higher Education, I:,.~- been add!&gt;d J.o the

original published membership
to bring tbe total to eight students, m· f8culty, three stalf
and one alumnus.
'The membership has formed
itself into four working units, or
sub-committees, the cbainnen
and oo-cbairmen of which constitute the Steering Committee
of the Taak Foroe.
'lbe four units, their areas of
concern, and their cbainnen are
as follows : Unil #l, principles
and pl!ilosopby of campus-wide
govei'Dilll&lt;e, including a bill of
rights and responsibilities and
a campus judiciary, co-cbaired
by Dr. A. Holt and Mr. W. Lyons; Unit #2, ez:isting gover-

Groups Vital,
Ketter Says

nominees

~r~~

:"6'!1'=~

mendations by tbe time school
started last September. How-·
(continued

em-

7, coL 3)

Wmted: Campus Birth Control Clinic
A birth oontrol cliiliC m8y hi.
COIIIinc to U /B. At Ieut, tbiot's
wbat an iilt'armal coalition ol
nurain&amp; and medical llludimta,
cloc:ton and PlanDJ!d Panotboo:l hopes to briDil 8bout.
'Jbe met~ Tburalay
to ~ the .J"::IIIIemo otudent. ¥ve in liUinc birth oon~ lnlcon...tionaDd ummlol_ . help,

'Jbe u~ a.ltb s.viCe c.fa ..... 1111 ~

..-.r

- ita
aDd ~ Pwti
- a l i l l t.olcloc:tonwboare

willinl t o - . . ........ . .
...sly - - . . . IIIia 11at I .
.._~·~cordial to
lk. ~Aioiio; ....... ol

n...

tile~~
.-~._-far

=--the~.:!,t=

..J;=

•
'""'- AJao tile doctor• p•e
'tioallle ool!edinlleea ,._ lliD-

·.

doln\11 and they complain that $40 a year Per patient, includsome students ( witb their "un- ing cos~ of treatment, medicaortbodoz"
·
) disturb tion and """"'-~.
If U /B were to start a birth
their other~
Since :..C:t women are un- control clinic, however, the cost
able to aet birth oonln!l infor- ' would probably be lower, Dr.
mation from the U /B clinic and Hare estimates. She maintains
often bave a bard time finding that such a clinic wouldn't have
a ~ many 110 to the to pay ~- costs or full
1'1--' Parenthood Clinic doctors' salades because it
(l'PC) ... J.Pr.nklin 8lnJet. lle- "!JJ..)d be part of the Health
•
caillit o1 tbeae aanditiailo; tbel Service.
PlaDs lor the U /B clinic are
dlllic Ia . ~ witli studllllta, Mrs. .lean flatcla"-, now in the negotiation stage
liUblic relatiou director of witb the adminiolration, Dr.
Harellddo.
l'J:umad Panolhood,' aaya.
'lbe poup io ~ a
taba a -.tb or to
aet llll appaiallamt and today spaabro' botteau ol lectllftllll
10 out o f l 6 - .............. ...... will ~ birth a:JDtrol,
ourcn.tatiall--..areotu- ~.-...aDd topico ......
Hu~· aaya.
...... - - -.lity:Tbay
llle llloo ~a llyw with
, _ and
ol people
budl:ot. lannad Pll..thaod ...... will ~ in
- . . . . . tbel ...ta nm $30- tbeas-

"'t

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

a=~=-~

..w-

=:~'II~

by the
Such reports would iDclude
the number of individuala in!&lt;'rviewed for a giVI!Il IICIGtiaa,
information .., how doae the
committee ia to a ............,_
tion for appoin-t, cw Itarelative II\IClCE&amp;! in attnctinc ID~=:f the type aDd cal-

In all caaes, from the vjce
president tbiough the cleput..
ment chairman level; tbil
pointment would be ..... ~
·the
after dati&lt;Xla ....- received from the
aearch committee. All ~
ments w o u I d be 8IIDOUDOid
from tbe Oflice ol the J&gt;r.ideat.
'Ibis a t e p of the J!IO(!edure
would indic:aie "that
positions are important to the Of.
lice of the Pr.idlnt." .
(conti....U o n - 8, coL I)

--..t

a-

vute ..ns•

HOLIDAY IHlFT
Dey, " - -

u,

w11

notlle-...:ta•~on

tloo - . . . . Olllou ha
ulll:ouncud. lnote•d. Frloi8J, Novumbur 27, wiU bo' tloo holiday,
thuo ...-... .. tuu:Hiuy Tlw!DIM"'bowulo. " - - 211- 'Zl.
CUJ!iiiUa,

�.....

SlJFf Reveals

By RAYMOND
V~t

· ~-__.,..~ ..... T....... ,...._..,, ,•,•,

E~

for R-..rdl

During 1969-70 State University of New YQrk at Buffalo
expended $16,150,000 on sponsored programs, iriCiuding research
grants, training grants and several types of pre-doctoral and postdoctoral fellowships and traineeships. ThiS """""""' with $1~.800,000 expended on comparable • p~ in 196S-69. 'These
figures tefer to actual expenditures during the year (including
accrued overhead), not to new grants rereived during the year.
'The 1969-70 total was divided among the several adminislm·
live mechanisms. as follows : •
AdminiStered by SUNY
.........$15,150,000
a-reb Foundation ....... ..
Administered by University
850,000
at Buffalo Foundation .................... .
Administered" by SUNY
150,000
(grants from N .Y. State agencies) ..
$16,150,000

During the year 527 proposals totalling $32,129,502 were
submitted to sponaors, and 431 grants totalling $18,078,369 were
rereived. ,.Many of the grants received were the result of proposals submitted during 196S-69, of course.
'The 1969·70 total was divided among the various categories
of activities, as follows :
Reaearch .... ..........
..:.......67%
Training ..................................................29% .
Conferences/ public service .................. 2%
Facilities ...... ..... ....... .................... ........... 2%

Increases and decreases in expenditures in 19fl9.70 com·
pared to 196S-69 by the seven faculties were as follows :
Faculty of Engineering &amp; Applied Sciences ........ ..+ 39%
Faculty o!.Social Sciences &amp; Administmtion ..... ..+20%
Faculty
Faculty
FacultY.
Faculty
Faculty

of Health Sciences .................................... +12%
of Natural Sciences &amp; Mathematics ........+ 2%
of Educational Studies .....
...... - 2%
of Arts &amp; Letters .......................................... -62%
of Law &amp; Jurisprudence .............................. - 89%

University total .......................................................... + 9%

In~ and decreases in expenditures by other units o( the

University were small.
Sources of funds were divided by category of sponsors, as

follows:

Federal govelllii¥'Pt .. ..... .....
.......93%
Other IOVernments ......·················.········· 1%
Private non-profit organizations .......... · 5%
.
Private industries .................................. 1%
A nlimber of statistical tables ate appended giving details
on sourceS of funds and areas of expenditure.
On the basis of grants received during 1969-70 and the current flow of proposals, I am forecasting total ·expenditures during
197()..71 at $16,500,000, of which $15,500,000 will be through the
SUNY Reaearcb Foundation.

•1

Source. of Funds -

lndhridulll lfMIMOts

(listed In order of maf~~~ i n 196~~

Public Health Service
}
National Institutes of H. . lth 1
H ..tth S.rv. &amp; Mental
Hutth Adm.•, 1
Consumer ..,rot.c:tlon &amp; Environ.
Hutth S.rv.1
National Sc:ience Foundation
U. S. Off"~« of Education
OepartnMnt of o.t'anH
Soc:lal &amp; Rehabii;Qtlon Service'
Atomtc Enef&amp;1 Commlulon
NMional Aefonautica &amp;
,Jpaca Administrat ion
American c.nc.r Soclaty
~:;g-F~nd~c Opportunity
Otrtee of Saline Watar
Acancy for lntamational DeveloPment
Control Oat. CorporaUon
u.s. Depart!Nftt of LAbor
F.:&amp;eral Water Qualtty Administration
H. Y. State o.p.rt!Nftt of Education
American Chemk:al Society (PRF)
American Hurt Aasodatlon
National ·University of Asuncion
H. Y. Stat. Science &amp;
Technotocy Foundation
Eria County Hulth Depart!Nftt

8

8,9/2,063
(7,247,344)

(1,502, 174)

(1 ,724,719)

1969-70
10,146,071
(7,238,627)
(2,743,692)
( 163,752)

l .~~:~r~

1,062,711
594,588
615,149
447,467
229,286

~:~~
60,998
54,407
18,877
24,474

......

fr~=:: ::r~l Rr::;ar:,;' '1und
LAver BrotMrs
.
ArthrtUs &amp; RMumatism Foundation
Damon Runyon Memorial Fund
W. K. ~~~ Foundation
All other apoMOrs
UNIYEitSITY TOTAL

8.347,075
(6,844,901)

217,085
78.717
229,210
21,602
60,981
142,503
.0·
.
.().
47,191
45,732
27,9S7
10,951
38,662

41 .504
47,131

51 ,911

...
.().

.().

1~,576

608,114
471,086
229,938
185,227
136,915
104,392
86,178
77,144
74,365
73,204
65,039
•

52,606

51 ,635
47.399
41 ,435
39,817

28,261
23,963
22.300
20,613

4,031
11.195
8,707
- a.076
44,376
443,7S8

17.508
45,248
619,152

10,137
5,753
421 ,441

12,616.151

13 .~ 1 . 187

15,154,564

14.141

~::m

NOnS
1. " National Institutes of Health" Includes the nine. N.tional ln.tltut.. of
Hulth, National Utw.ry of M4tcllclne, f~arty lntamational Center, and other
units.
2. "H. . Ith S.Mees &amp; -Mental Health Administration" Includes National In·

::~::..r~n~=·J:ah:t-:::'~7· ~~ H=~sc~r::

arty Chlkl.-n'a Bu,..u) and other Uftita.
•
•
3. "Consumt~r P~ and EnvlrcM'UY"'fttal H.. lth S.rvtces" lncludn Food
&amp; One AdmlnlstmJon, Environmental Control Administration and National Air
PoMutlon Control Administration.
4 . "Social &amp;. RtlhabUitatlon S.rvfce'' fonnel'ty catted Vocational R-.bllltatlon
AdmhtiatraUon.
. ·~

IM7...
$12.111,957
221,514
310.269
35,411

$1

. "Program for
·Bargaining

·-

206 '

1111-10
Sl4,b9J.ots
146,123
115,462

......

(lncludlnc only 1rants •nd contrxtl .dmlnlsteNd
by R.... n:h Found.UOn of SUNY)

'-=rit~~ tc~

1157-11

.

..,ii
~16

rStud...

D••n.

...,...

:=m ~~-

.......

a:!ru

C3 department.) •

4f:~P.

---

Otber procrams

l-70

12.821
3,114
4.468
3,=
33,971
14,119
11,475

.....,

~ 4,15 1

62,784

253,976

Applied Sd..-.cea4~.104
Schooe of Information &amp; Ubrary Studies

441 ,828

517.174
67,851
23,601
3,279

441,S::8

~12,bl2

l ,S87.9%

1,601,263

1,628,983

FKUfty of Soda! Sciences &amp; Admlni...Ntlon
M-..aaement. School of
61 ,080
Social Walfar11, School of
379,750
Anthropoaoey
50,809
Economics
18,214
c;.ocraphy
2,431
History
3,907

251.363
335,867

..,,....,.r.

176,810
249,024
22.264
30,375
5,963
14,021

12,727

21 .964

~~

136.i87
354.5-«1
53,346
37,731

222.144
335,205
83.985
52,086

1,110,730
530.854•
61 ,436
502.320'
59,829

1,213,841
740,001•
64,261
620.268'
112,869

TOl:fl

!~f'ot~":!'1nc&amp;.

=~="'~ Computar .Sdenc.

. Total

430. 104

FKUitJ oil "-lurlll ld.nc:H 6 lll8tbematk:s
BiotOCY
703.no
cMmlstry
·
524,252
Gtokci~i Sciencas
13,886
Mathem~~tics
135,636
Physics &amp; AKtronomy
163,800
Statistics
46,652
Other procrams

Total

.Uncutstlcs

Polley Sc encn
Poltt;tcal Science

Speecf\ Communication
Other procrams
Toul
Fecutty of Educatlonel StudiH

Faculty of Law &amp; Jurisprudence

Graduate School

~~!~:~ :~ ~~~u:."lua~~~~~Zs

478.i51

Computlna Center
Ubrary

.....

137:149

166,383
5,214,690
38 %

Total, Other then Health Sciences
"-rc:ent, Other than Health Sciencu

F~'!'!fc ~•=tthSc~:~partments
Anetomy
Biochemistry

......
52,703

2~=
16,592
47

61:1.20 • 57,181
4,509
1,463,154
722,275'
8,552
607,6331
76,230
1.354
165:102
73,116
5,456,U4
36%

70, 755
463,639
234,987
741,070
287,486
256,295
397,556

79,089
512,998
222,242
714,433
352,733
292,729
677,146

Total
2,451,788
M.ciidne,4 School of-Clinical Departments
=,!:•y.Obstetrics
t . :~~:~~~
Neurotosy
Pedietrics
Psychletry
Soc:let &amp; Preventlw Medicine
s u ..ery
Raalonal Medical Proara m
Other departments &amp; procrams

2,851,370.

Total
3,313,218
Dentistry, School ofCIIniCIII Departments
607,789
Health Related Professions, School of 110,113
Nurslna. School of
207,791
Phermac:y, School of
971.828
Center for Theoratical Blol.,.y
112.656
Paraauay project (Medicai/ Nursi nl)
86,764

3,768.416

4,401 ,997

742,507
178.590
157, 779
722,133
212,724
53,576

682,000
201,554
283,596
885,994
136,640
5.367

~~~~r:~~f:~ ScienceS

Patholoey
PhermacoiOIY
Physioloay

Total. Health Sciences •
Perc:ent. H"lth Scl ~ces
UNIYEJtStTY TOTAL

7,~i947

-

$12.686.151

3.100,362
129,630

1.7~~~;

599,344
217,711
443,568
310,868
877,992
29,871

8,687,097
6 2%
$13,901.787 .

$15.1 54,564

. 1. Data . In this table are actuel expenditures under cranta and contracts
dunna the f1scat year (July 1-June 30), includin&amp; direct costs and accrued over·
hea d. Expenditures dunn&amp; • l iWin year hava no necesAry re:latlcnlihip to new
~:::~ rwceived durinc the year nor to the bKklo&amp; of u ~pt:nt &amp;rant funds on the

2.Thls table includ.. only 1r11nts and contracts a dmln lstet'tld b)' the R.... n:h
Foundation of SUNY. Other &amp;rants are administered by the Unlvetsity at Buffalo
Foundation, Inc., and &amp;rants a nd contracts frem New Yortt ~tate aaenc•.. ara

==

ra~~~n~!'::t.:!,~Ya~~O ::~~=~~.5 G;n~it~~rr: t::!
tabte, i.e . apprcuclmately $900,000 In 1968-69 and }1,000,000 In 1969-70.
3 . There are a number of blenks a nd apParent inconsistenci.. in this table
because of a .,.c:h•n•• In account1n1 proc.cturas In 1969·70 c:ompar.d to 1961-69.
Pro~ ~~~~~u:~. Edueatlonal Studies" Includes the Educational Development~
5. Funds Indicated for tM Graduete Schoo$ are various types of pre49ctoral

;::::::::~

:::: :i:i•::=,'::.a~efu~~t::n:,',~:da':-:~~.;:~ ~

lous departments in the Unlwrsit}'.

•

Religious &amp;undin~-Set
"Tbe Religious Dimension ;,
Our National Crisis," and "A
'Theology for Radical Politics"
wil be the subjects atf lectures
b;r a nationally prominent aoaologist and a philooopber of
religion at this vear's "Sound·
inp in. Religion" lecture - - Dr. Robert N. Bellah, cfuec..
tor of the Institute of Intematioual Studies at the Center for
JapanMe and Korean Studies,
University of• California at
Berlreley, will lecture oo "Tbe
Relipous Dill8l8ion ·of Our
Natioual Crisis" at 8 p.m. oo
NOW!IIIber 16 in the Fillmore
Room, Norton Union.
Micbael N o v a t. a.ociate
~ol~ancl

tbeDioiY at tile. Baili! Uni-·
llity at Old Weetbury', curraKiy

on leave to serve with the committee on "Congressional Leadership for· the Future," will
lecture on "A 'Theology for
Radical Politics" at 8 p.m.,
November 30, in the Fillmore
Room.
.
• 'The aeries is llP&lt;Jil80nld by
the University's Oilice of Cn!cf.
it-Free Protmuna. Each lecture
will be followed by a panel
discuasion which will include

Uni=.:tudeata, faculty
and
ol the cleriY. AdIJiisl!iOII to each is $1, UiO for
students.
HEUI
- T o lilt I t - FINANCIAL AIR
..,
Olllc:o of FIIWIC!al illd, 216 H8rrin!M Ubni.y, Ext. 3724

'The State Um-.ity Fed·
eration ol Teadlen (SUFTAFI'). ODe of tbcal 'IIIIBDcies aeSkina designation 1111 the collective t.rpiniug a aen t for
SUNY faculty and JIOIIo.teacb-ing profeaaioaal 8taff in the'
forthcomiua PB RB election,
baa 8llDOWlC8d hiablllbla of
its basic barpining 'These induda:
.
Equitobk ~ - 'The
s a m e "0&lt; eqUivalent professional 1IIOlltina oaoditiaas for
"all profeaDonal 8£8ff members," including aeademlc rank,
~tal status, participa.
tion in poli!'l.·m&amp;king bodies.
fringe benef1ts, workloads,
work-year, vacations, salary,
promotions, tenure, .etc;
Gooer11411Ce - Faculty determination of 'curriculum, academic and admiasions standarda, staff -elections of chairmen and staff power of advice
and consent in the final aelection of cbancellor, college presidents and deans.
Departmental .Structur&lt;&gt;"Real" departmental autonomy
and establishment of such "departments" as library services,
student personnel and business
Services in order .,to provide
full rights to all professional
s t a f f members b;r including
every profesai9nal m d!lparttnenl"

-

a
.

.

Promotion- Peer judgenient
within the department_ based
upon "objective criteria and
fair evaluations," IIUbject to
grievance procedUte appeal to
"an i mpartial arbitmtor."
Tenure- To be awarded
after an initial probation period
of not less than one year nor
more than four, del&gt;!"'ding upon
prior aj&gt;erience. "
Due Process- No discipline,
non-renewal of contmct, discharge or reduction of benefits
without just cause and full due
process; a grievance pf'OC:Biure
for expeditious handling of
complaints; union representslion and final and binding determination by an impartial
arbitmtor.
No Discrimitw.tion-No discrimination because of race,
creed, oolor, national origin,
seX, marital status, age, membership or non--membership in
any employee organization.
Day Care C"ntera- Facili·
ties on each campus for c:hildren
of profi!E8ionallitalf members.
Salluia - Mu:imum and
minimum aalary scale proposals
ate: instructor, $14,000 to $18,·
000; aasistant p""'-'t, $18,000
to $24,000; 811110Ciate prof-.r,
$22,000 to . $32,000; pro!-.r,
$26,000 to $36,000. Distin·
guished . , . . , _ , . under the
plan, would be paid at a rate
above professor's maximum.
Each annual inaemeot ....Wd
be $2,000 and pay for 8lllllll&gt;er
worir. would be pro-mted according to the reaula ten·
: , s a l a r y and hours

Frinfe &amp;ne(U. - Sabbatical
leave at full pay for- aU· atall;
montha' tenniDal leave at
flill pay prior to retU.alt;
lilaternity leave with maintenance of filll tenure and lll!lliol'·
ity rights; salary and pell8ion
rights for service in armed
forces, Peace Corps or VIBTA;
non-contributory pea8illll plan
with immediate
permittina tetirement at half--pay af.
ter 20 yead a.vice; fuJI--paid
health and hao!litllllza'Jan and
health and weiiare pl.- to in·
duda life. cliabilltT and dental
~ preacnption cb'ui ,
·and ~aid; and waiver
ol tuition for ..... and their d&amp;paodoDta at SUNY' aaita (to
eDmd to '""""'
wat ol tni·
tiali Cll8ta for atteadiaa aDOiher
...u-.ity) .
.
~

-ma

�3

l'olltlc:s and

-H

mboed

at Rotary Field

Satunla~ the dellcbt of - - of
- - AIIIHstabllshlllfilt c~em...from a rally, _,. greeted by
dub-owinatns pollee and inarllns dop -

.....

p-

::/ ~c~~~ J~":..!~~

the demonstnolo&lt;s jOined forces for a marc:h
arolind the tradl in
of ABC's ref\aal
~~~~ the problem-oriented halftlma

·to

~==~- =~=

fans who otherwise seemed to enjOy the
blind's smokey, anti·bomb, anti-pollution, p~
peace · -· ABC, lindina the halftime fes·
tlval ''too political," kept Its cameras tightlytrained on ftOIH:OI1tl'overslal aspects of the

afternoon-the same

-If. a larp .oranae

=..'-:n J:m~S:.f!c:'l~~~":;n~o":y
more fun-toving undergrads.

~

(1bt Ffrohkms?
{fhJe
{)f 3 O{fil:es May Be Helpful
.
.
...

....

. by SUSAN_ GREENWOOD
lleponier Stall

years·a&amp;O

if a student
loli!U advice 0&lt; was
havinc~a plijblein with tlie University, the_only place be oould
go was the Of6ce of the Vice
President for Student AflairS.
Today, after establishment or
the ollioes of. Ombudsman and
Advocate, he and the entire
University oommimity have a
much Jarser choice, The real
problem is decidins which of6ce to go to.
The three men: t..ding these
ol6oes, Dr. Richard Sigselkow,
vice president for student affairs, Robert Fleming; .University advocate and Dr. Robert
Stern, University ombudsman,
admit to overlap· in their roles.
But their functions are diverse
enouch ao that their basic roles ·
are dilferenl
Take·Student Aflaira. It has
. the Iinlitaaon of bandliJ!g only
student alfairs. The other two
Two
needed

~~

:::"'"r:"tJ!reeen!i're
COIIIIIIUDity.

•

~

It waa Studimt AJfaira whidl

waa oricinallY in the business
of pving advice. "We aomebow
had to act 88 judae, jury, proaecuting attorney and defeMB
attorney· at tbii 881118 time,"
Sigellww .-ben. "We got
out cl ttwt uqboly alllaDce eeveral ,...... aco." But
oGioe
otil1 maintains what Sigellww
IanDI a "pcxw man'a Ombuds-

ru.

olllce, the Action LiDe.~
n-, the UniversitY AdvoI'Bte'a 08lct waa cnided. Flemins viewa ita role 88 that of
pving Jepl 6rat aid. : 'People
eall ua fO&lt; advice on ~ what
oj&gt;dona ..... opeel to them and
what e&amp;ct variou8 1esa1 proc:ecluNa have em them.'' Hla office al8o maintains a list of
altomeys: However, Flllmins
limits his roli to edvislnc.
111811'&amp;

"'!•

can't defend studenta or fllculty
II"!mbers who are prooecuted on
the campus," and this goes for
the dO\\!lltown courts also. The
University decided. on this
policy because of a "conflict or
interest. Since we're paid by the
University it wouldn't be right
for us to proeecute against the
University."
The advisory role is very
briefly defined by Flemipg ,
though. He acts as a friend or
the oourt in grievance cases and
in other actions such as tenure.
"I try to belp both sides get
something going."
Fleming's ollioe doesn't limit
itself to giving advice from 8:30
to 5:00. An answering service
operates wben the ollioe is officially cl.-.1, giving home phone
numbers of staft members. " We
have specific arrangementa to
always have someone on call"
The same year the Advocate's
Of6ce began the Ombudsman's
Of6ce opened its doors also.
This year's ombudsman - Dr.
Robert.Stern - feels the ollioe
is to· "ai!rve anyone who -reels
he's been ile&amp;lt 'with unfairly,
arbitrarily or rudely by a person in authority." And' ao the
main activity of his 08ice is to
·"receive and act on complainta
and grievances. H
Stern's a~ch to the problems brou~ him is to listen3 SURRENDER

Three men souaht in connection
w;th campus ROTC vandalism

charaes surrendered voluntarily on
·Mondey In Erie Co•nty Court. Ar·
nold SIBI\tOfl, Donald SuMivan, andJames Berlin rapoitedly Mel been
traveling in itMr Middle East and
Europe and mumod - r INrnlna
worrairts Mel been issued for
their anem. SuiiMin and Berlin
_,. held In lieu of bail and Stlln·
ton onlered to be&amp;in a 45-dey
penitentiary~.

and then advise the person on
where to seek action on his
complainl "We try to tell him
where to test the thinJ- at the
point where some administrative official can ·say, •rll do

SOJDethina: or, 'No, I won't.' "

· He also advises people about
the grievance structure available in their school or depart.
ment. And in • one or two in·
stances, we had to prod the
grievance group into function·
ing."
However, Stem feels it's important to realize that the Ombudsman's Office was not "aet
up to supersede already-existing ollioes and committees." Nor
does he feel that the office
should function as an "in-house
trouble sh60ter" by solving
problems for departments.
He mainly pursues problems
where: 1) there is an issue to
be pursued and 2 ) it's the kind
of issue on which his ollioe can
plausibly be helpful. "If either
element is lacking, we feel no
oblisation to pursue a problem
simply bec8use it is brought to
us."
If the Ombudsman's Of6ce rejects a problem, however, the
person can always go to the
Advocate's Of6ce or to Student
Affairs. Of OOUnle, this isn't the
only type of interaCtion among
the three. Actually, both advocate and ombudsman mainlain
rather cloae oontacts with Stu.dent Aflaira. The Advocate's Of6ce even shares a ·staff meinber.
Sigselkow looks at the interaction this way: "It's a basic
principle or administration that
you don't do someone elSe's job.
So I always ask who could do
this job better than I ·and if I
find that 110 staff member lias
jurisdiction over the area; then
I send the student to either
Fleming or Stem - whoever

would do the best job in · the
case."
Getting the best man for the
job doesn't apply only to the
student. Members of the faculty, staff and administration
have also used these ollioes.
Both Stem and Fleming report
that many faculty members
come to them with tenure grievances. Staff members have also
complained to both ollioes about
arbitrary treatment from supervisors.
Handling these complainta
and grievances is quite a job,
the men claim. Stem says that
most or his problems take two
or three phone calls to clear
up but· "some have lasted for
weeks." Intercession in some
cases can be a long and ticklish
aflair, all three agree.
But at least, there are now
places wl,ere the entire Uriiversity can go with oomplaints.

Ecology Takes
ANew Name
It's been eigh'\ years now
since Rachel Carson's Silent

Spring was published. But because of that book and the hard

work of other people, the ecology movement really. got rolling
in the United States. As a tribute to Miss Carson's contributions to the movement, Ecology
College has decided to change
ita name to Rachel Carson College.
The College, started last
spring, is now in the midst of
rapid growth. This fall, it became the first collese to otler
a full major in its area. Currently, ten students have been

~=-~".:':.!":~~

be accepted until the middle of
November.
The ecology major is perhaps
one of the most difficult on campus, Dr. John Howell, mentor
of Rachel Carson Co~ 811aerta. The student majorins in
this area must take two courses
in each of four major fields or
ecology : social and cultural;
geological or physieal; technological or man-made; and biological or natural After these
Want to win a Thanksgiving - background courses ; the student chooses at least two of the
turkey?
A "Turkey Day Trot," a jog- areas to develop in cleoth. He
ging race open to all faculty, is required to take at least 32
staff and studenta (men and hours in these areas. The ecolwomen) to be held Thursday, ogy student must also complete
November 19, will ofler four a University requirement of 32
liours in specified areas. All
20-pound turkeys as prizes.
The race, which will cover these courses must be taken
approximately one and three- while he maintains at least a
quarters miles, will begin at 2.5 average in his ecology
3:30 p.m. at Clark Gym. · The work.
Rachel Carson Collese is inroute will .croes Grover Clevelanct Golf Course and end at terested in more than graduating
students in ecology, howNorton Union.
Applies tion forms for the ever. The College is also active''Trot'' are available in Room ly pursuing research projects in
5, Clark Gym baaemenl ·For various ecological problems in
further detaila, contact Willilmt-· the Western New ·Y ork area.
Monkiorsb, physical education Dr. Howell hopes that the Colinstructor and intramural sports lege will eventually aerve as a
research center.
director, at Ext. 5238.

Want 1hrkey?
1ry '!rotting

�N~S,J910

~

4

~College Pi-Why

Is It

Bucke&lt;lAtEverYTurn?·-

Mayhew Again; rw~ Prodl.u2
More Ph.D.s
tJum ~Need?'
.
.

~- u~ ,._, the """""""' ftnancia1 suping; Haberly;·Headatart; Indian
In spite of a current over- port."
Reeervation; Friendship House; supply of Ph.D.'s, many Amer'!1&gt;us by 1980, Ptof.-&gt;r MayI've felt that motivation is Maslen Cu1.tural .Center; E. J. ican universities are planning bew believes, "there rould be
the great key to 1"(111lin,. By Meyer Memor,ial Hospital; to expand their gr,aduate pro- in sigbt an oversupply of 811· ·
motivation, or aelfOinitiative, I open housing; Lad.Y of Lourdes, gr,ams to produce even more, vanced degree ~pienis, many
do not think of work towarde Sl Bridget's, Sl-.Rita's; Urban a study by a prominent Stan- of .whom will have been educat,the B. A. degree; that is synCenter;: Westminster; BRAG; ford educator reveals.
ed in developing institutions
thetic, a symbol that bas be- CAUSr;; community stores;
Professor Lewis B. Maybew, without wide experience or repcome an overwbelming instltuCerebral PalSy Center; creativ- who describes his findings as utation in graduate work.
tion for such a large percentage ity in children; experimental ''horrendous," bas updated a Wbether Ibis will be supported
Of students. .
church school; film documen- 1967 survey of 156 colleges and is moot"
Rathe I f
thing • tary; urban renewal; ghetto universities with a new and
"~nd equally" unknown is
cliarcovering 800 insti=t.~
r"":~ m the ghetto; effects .of . His stud)·, made for the Car- and masters degrees. If the
the wish to team f&lt;&gt;&lt; teaming's rel&gt;r.on; SEEK frogrl!Dl; ~ negie Commission on Higber history of other oversupplies is
sake, a baSic intelleCtual curios- wei ~; role 0 SOClOIO!JY !" Education and published by repeated-that in engineering,
ity. And with Ibis curiosity, Amenca; surv'!y of ""!'ffict. m McGraw-Hill, garnered 368 re- for e:rample- it seems likely
there musf be an outlet, some 1 he ""!""'um~; Uruverstty~ turns from lin extensive ques- that there will be a substantial
m.nnet that could be taken cou;unuru\)' ~tions; yote 18; tionnaire sent out HUring 1968- upgrading of teacher training
which would lead to a personal white raC181Il; vtolence m Amer- 69
for lower levels of schooling,
fu11111ment of the need to learn if'g~t?&amp;n~.:,:m ~ty teEdr; Greenti•
the trend works out as and an upgrading of educationand experience and grow.
--,.., •
tu '!"' .
uca on predicted, Maybew said, "the al requirements in business and
'The com~ ~versity s.rs- Imt.='men~~::,o~r _current oversupp!y of advanced government." ·
_
tern bas esbibtted 1ts blunt mLincoiQ Memorial Cburch· S .• degree holders m ·some fields
''Developeil" institutions sUCh
ability to ~ such an aim&lt;&gt;- cide Prevention· West ~ coul~ splf!Sd to all fields."
as Harvard1 · Yale, Princeton,
· Hts estimates, based on ex- Chicago and Stanford, with exsphere of learriing through per- State Scbool •
aonalexperience, and a creative
·
pectations by the responding isting graduate prograniS and
ge of ideas. College A, Why Are We Bud&lt;ecl?
institutions, show tbst by 1980 established P.rolessional schools,
ver, iB such an outlet.
, The )DeCbanisln of College A U.S. colleges and universities probably WJII no! expand much
401 is a courie whose ini- reflects directty its persoQB.iity will produce 67,000 doctorates in the cooiing d&lt;\cade, Ptofestial design was worked out with and character. It is student run. and at least 360,000 masters sor Mayhew said.
a _group of students. Its prime Coordinating the many projects degrees arlnqally.
feature was to give interested of &lt;;allege A students is a staff
This compares with . 26 100 ' - - - - - - - . - - -.....students an opportunity to gain of gradUates and undergradu- .doctorates and 186,000 maSters
, !urtho!r knowledge and . under- ales, and a College master, a ~egrees actually conferred dur- - f t
'ft
standmg of the commumty and faculty member of the Univer- mg 1968-69.
·
society by participating indi- sity. A system of project files is Oversupply of Teochers
ro~oM
vidually or in groups in a "great open fO&lt; .reference to all in'There already is an oversup- va':iety of ~ty affairs, vol~ in College A, and to all ply of potential co11ege teach. ,"
·ers, and too many ''new I yprojects, orgaruzations, and ac- otbenl interested.
tivities. Since College A's birth,
Co11eg A · "tiall 0 ff
,
hatched" Ph.D.'s are seeking
'
the scope of its educ;aj:ional ex- semestere~crelt. H~~:. iol1e in fields which bad short. '
perience bas grown to affairs of due I?- the size of unJiertaking agi.s of Ph.D.'s as late as 1967,
- . ·
learning outside the commu- and time consumption of some Maybew noted.
nity.
. ·
~ pro~ expansion of
To have first-band expenenoe
professional and advanced dein a project of one:s own c~ c;t
gree programs casts some doubt
mg, to.be~ome.mvolv!'d 1n -y J.
on the quality of graduate
something. m which one 1S f1:e!! The ~ ' - 0!1 this teaching d u r i n g the coming
• · &lt;to d!'termtne the o;xtent and m- to pnMclo ,o fonn for the a· decade, Professor Mayhew ob- EDITOR:
~tty, to ~gruze the 1"."":'· wnp o f - on 8 Yllriety served;
I have juot read of.the death of
mg p~ m oneself as ·~ ts of the Ia.- faclnc the aCademic
Historically, . he said, there Dr. ·Ricluud Hofatadter, DeWitt
self-1n1tiated are the education- community. We welcome both 1ufs been a very slow evolve- Clinton Profesaor of American
~ advan~' that the students poOitlon popers ond letters 85 ment of professional and ad- History at Columbia Univenity,
mvolved m College A are of- spoce ponnlts.
vanced training, rather than a In my opinion, Dr. Hofatadter
fered, and . take ad-:antsge of.
rapid transition inside a decade was one of the l:lniversity of ButThe ~g of thts mvolveto high quality gr,aduate edu- W.,o!..,~ '!:::=~.:.!;:;:%
n:'~t S!ld lts C?nsequent ed:uc:a·
the
cation.
. his profession as a historian-as
!Jo'!"! tmpact !5 ?f .course qwte of . bplroj~, more credal its! are
'J'he infiW&lt; of younger oollege well as receiving Pulitzer Prizes
md.tvtdual, as
.. •t. 1S mothered.u- ava• 1a e wtth approv o the teachers wt"ll produce •--·'ons fo two f his bli ti
vanes dean of Undergraduate Studies. between older and
facthe l:no;:
wtdely wtth the mdtvtdual.
The 'College does not work ulties in expanding institutions at Columbia University and elseIs Itt .
.
by students simply stepping as well as tensions within the where. Dr. Hofstadter attributed
B'!t how ':"le~ant 15 a!l Ibis, into its current and being pulled statewide coordinating· educa- ~.J:•:;."ff,!"~"::n: o't'P~:!
anddemi"!calexpelnenal~d? F~tmlg a~- along. It keeps itself alive by tion agencies, he pointed out, sor Julius W . Pratt, in wt....
a
y v 1 • us y_, m self-propagation, and it must to say nothing of the financial classes he wllll a student•at the
te"'!" of relevancy, s~ 1t to feed itself with the interest and burden on tax-su
rteil · ti- Univenity of Buffalo.
realize tbst these projects are concern of its students. The in- tutions
ppo
ms
I regret tbst I never knew Dr.
of the students' own choosing. terest and concern is there, and
In hls report, a short but Hofstadter penoonally, although I
And •. sec:ondly , "'e are n'!t motivation and imagination are fack:rammed book titled Grad
~as working as a junior &amp;Mistant
Charles Di:...-·, who made a tenspeaking m terms of'acaderruc building it; quite a step when
.
• m tbe Univenity library while be
"""""
vaiidity but rather of the ex- students become as their own uau and Pro{eJU~ronal . Educa- .was a student. However, I came day tour of .one-night pubUc-reading
citement of learning; education- guides for learning. Yet since Iron, !980, Ptofesaor Maybew to know him through readina" his stands in U!18tate New York in the
al A~riAnce, not institutional College A's conception, notice- shows that. w!&gt;&lt;'reas ten .Years books, beginning with The A mer- 1860'S: · ;. the subject of an exhibit
- . -- ·
ago acadenuc )llterest Ia m. the ican Political Tradition. Later, I
""
experience.
able cogs seem to be consistent,
.
~.
had tbe good fortune to bear him in Locl&lt;wood Memorial IAllrary, now
Facts. Tbe groups and proj- ly thrown into its practical ma- ~lied ""'!&lt;! SClences, · there deliver a series of lectures at tbe through January
18
ects, past and present, are as chinery; recently, the move out
now.'\ m&amp;JOr ul"!urge .in the University of Cbicqo, which were
'The exhibit&gt; ~rates the
follows : American Civil Liber- of the storefront and no more humarutif!S al\if social sctenoes. publiohed in Th• AI•· of R•form ,A_.__,
3 of Di..._ ___, -'··th and at.tempis
ties Union· brain-damaged and class cards for some· 100 interThere 15 also a trend toward and won a Pulitzer Prize in Ul55
~" " " " " ...,..
emotionally-disturbed children; ested students. We do not speak
This ties
books
. n. in.mY
to
illustrate
his life and times.
00
Buffalo General Hospital; Buf- of destruction; we are students !" wtth
Showcases in the lobby of the main
falo politics; Buffalo State Hos- taking a band in our education. mterest m problem-amtered te'?i: ::..'!io':!.
Lockwood reading room are devoted
pital; Ca!VI!IY; Covenant; Elli- I cannot understand why we dell!"" progr,ams"- ~ pre- conununity of American biatori- to a variety of toPics:
cott· Depew Higb School, tutor- are being bucked at every tum. panng people to serve m urban ana .and in the ranks of the Uni''Dickens' London" features photo'
•
areas and deal with big-city vemty of Buffalo alumni.
graphs and drawings 'ilf. famouS lsitdproblems. 'There
bur-'Thomas S.llludhu&lt;
marks in his novels· ·' '
geoning interest in interdisci(B.A., 1933: B:S.I.S., 1937)
. ''Dickens and
Raform" points
plinary courses and progr,ams ·.
Univenity .Lih&lt;arian
out the · aociaJ evils with which the
~f."duate and professionW~ Univenity ol
·au!bor ...,;, aaiuainted and his bandl~ Ellponslon
.
ing of them in his wprlt;
Mayhew's respondents showCRIME WAVE?
"Dickens n d Parliament'' illused that universities eJ:pect Twenty -s ix ."c~mes", during the trates his career as a sborthsnd rerapid
in graduate and post - k bnng to 959 the tot.l porter in the House of CommonS. and
profeosional -enrollment, pro- :1:~: ,:'~ %~~~~~:f; electoral ·practices cir'bis time;
grams, co s t s and "hoped-for
l'ltsan Ute olthe Enl
:.gnt!:::i~J:t ~ ·=~·~.=m~nd
l~mi ''Dic:kens, tbe law and Penology"
doJ: rather than innovative cor, ond • $390 residence hell illilstmtes prisoa life of tbe era. con·
ways _ "in
to
theft .,.,. among the m11jor inci· ditions which play a peat part in his
BUreB 1 n
-, de/its repor1ed for tiMt ·per· nowla and ....._ I'!JierG, one of
0 rnl1ieu."
1
American
iod. For • communlt)o of ....,.. then his prime llCIIICI!rh8;
··
30 000
•
' n - educators be found;
- · t.cui!Y •nd -'·Dickens and the 'I"-tle;" ranges
''believe they are ~ to •nd ol -.s. the ,... fnlm an· e "amp 1e of a IO)t theatre
$TVD811T' AI'AlRS aDITORJ s .... ~
clear demands for - . c h and ~rd tot ..the yur II about th- which the y o u ag boy would bave
~~ J..- lt. O.S.dl. a-r1
~ S.
for ~ - eopeciaiJ for
crimes per per narth. pia~· with to reconl jlldrela of musPBOTOOIUJ'Bl': u..rl L. lf-M. B . . B. u..,.
(certain) urban ~ - r . Bull81o Pollee ..-icali of lllday ~- his novels;
811
1eotrr/llaunlfO .uanr, - 11• .._..,.
and ~. that In .._ w.y · · ~IIOt
are - - ' '
"Diclraw' Life" ........ portraits of
.I
or oCbir -=iety will provide
rsity olllclolo d....,_.
bla family and ~ of his llomeS
By RICHARD FElT
""""" A

that~~{; ?:tr'i::,":
::;.
::!

!

:~/;\~f tu~ :rtfo~~ne

~~~';i! :f~ ;b1}.

it

l':DEPQD'TS
r

.

GREADE.RS
Hof'stadte[ Cited

TTEWPQfNTS

By Alumnus

~tiona! !&amp;cihti~, ~n.d

youn';~;u

bespi:;,

h:~ived

- -•nt

oen-

~·~ uni~ersities."
~":fO:::,';;:l ~L~
~ ~~ aca~emic
~
lf,:S~l~~

u.-aJao

. Ci'REPORTER.,

SocW

:f

a

e .x p 8 1 1 8 •1 0 l l

ole:

=::., in"':

ljf,::;::::lz.

Btir,.,.._.

�5

Nov«ttt:»r 5,1910

It's Tough to Teach,
~ougher in the Ghetto
Being a new teacher is t.ou8J,.
Buddy s,-n Crlllo SeiVIce
Being a new secondary school
In addition to 888igning _,., . _
teacher in the inner-city is even toughghetto school teacher a ''buddy"er. So U/ B, in cooperation .with the
second-year teacher-the J!'Oif8lll alao
Bulfalo Public Schools, is doing someOffers a "crisis service." "'If a teacher
thing about helping new teachers behas a problem, be may call upon any
come m o r e effective in inner-city
member of the staff or a fellow aeooadschOOls.
year teacher,'' says Dr. Foeter. ''Uist
Now in its second year, and funded
year one teacher walked right out of
to the tune of $66,307 by the State
a classroom at 11 a.m. We talked it
Education Department's 0 f f ice of
out, pointing out the positive things
Urban Teacher Corpa, the programshe was doing, and sbe retw:Ped. In
called " New Teacher, Second-Year
fact, we lost no teachers to the profesTeacher and Teacher Aide Project"sion of the 65 who were enrolled in
is designed to minimi2e the teacher's
last year's project. Usually 30 to 90
"cultural shock" and help him develper cent of inner-city school teachers
op an individual style and technique
leave in the first year, depending on
relevant to the urban disadvantaged
wh.9"" statistics you are looking at."
child. Dr. Herbert L . Foster, associ~te
The second course in the program,
professor of education, is director.
"Teaching in ~-City Schools," is
Two courses, each worth three hours.
geared to helping the- teacher develop
of graduate credit to the 65 new teachgeneralized techniques for preparing,
ers and 40 second-year teachers enstructuring and organizing the classr o II e d, comprise the program. The . room to meet the needs of the cbild
first, · called " Mental Health in the
"so that discipline becomes a sec- ·
Classroom," is attempting to "improve
ondary and teaching the primary func.
human relations between students and
tion."
teachers," explains Dr. Foster. "When
Both couraes are taught after class
teachers are helped in the understandhours at the two participating innering of their own problems, they are
city schools-Woodlawn Junior High
better a b I e to respect students as
School and East High School. Teachhuman beings . . . to accept them
ers lor the couraes are high school
·without any value judgments."
teache;:s who have been given "in·
structor" rank by the University.
Foul and Obocone

--fes Dir:kens' on View

_..,v
at Lodmxxx1

Bruldnc-up of the Ye:-- LeeR• SemiNII'l'

with notes on their use as inspiration
for his characters and scenes;

Finally, "Dickens and America"
illustrates his two. visits to the United
States.
The visit which included Western
New York prompted these descriptions of the local area, Dr. Alexand~
M. Cairj, rare book librarian and coordinator of the emibit, reports:
No lleouty In Bullalo

...... .,_

Bulfalo: "This Bulfalo has beoome
a large and important town, with
numbers of German and Irish in it.
But it · is very curious to notice, as
we touch the frontier, that the Ameri·
can female beauty dies oul .. ." -·
Syracuse: "A moet put-of-the-way
' and unintelligible-looking place, with
apparently no people in il"
Niagara Falls: "Great God, cotild
any _man be disappointed in this!"
The Lockwood Dickens emibit extends alao to the ....,.,.,.r.floor .gallery
where a case on "Dickens and Medicine" illustrates something of the
history of the medieal and nursing
professions of his time, his interest in
mesmerism and the PiCkwick Syndrome, namecl" after his DOWil
In the CII8M Oil the third floor displaYed fine lint editions of his
10IOib, ....... with periodicals in which
his novels and talerl ......... lint published. .

~

A week blifpre school began this
fall, as well Bli last fall, a week-long
orientation was held for the 65 new
teachers and for teacher a i de s. A ·
panel of students-some with reputations as discipline proillems-told the
teachers how they oould expect to be
"tested" in the claasl:oom, especially
in their first days at the blackboard.
Second-year teachers related some of
their experiences to their ''buddies."
On the last day of orientation, the
teachers were given a barrage of foul
and obscene language to "desensitize"
them for what they might expect in
the classroom.
A panel of parents and a panel of
principals was also part of the orients tion. Both groups told new teachers
what kind of behavior they expect,
Finally, Dr. Foeter gave a lecture on
the slang or lexicon uaed by ghetto
youngsters. He stresaed to teachers
that they should know the slang so
they can better communicate with and
understand their students.
Through the year the teacbenl will
meet once a week in group&amp; of ten
with an instzuctor and a clinical pay- ·
chologisl Tbe group leaders are alao
available for private discussions. In
addition. four all-day Saturday 'IOIJI"k.
shops are planned.
The program seems to be working
well. Dr. Foeter thinks the retention
of all who were involved in last year's
program is something of a natiaoal
record.
But only the teachers who face the
kids on a day-to-day basis can know
how effective the program is. And
every so often there is feedbadt.
'lllow;.op'

"They blew up at us once last year,"
Dr. Foeter related ·with· relish. "But
that's goo d. Aa DeW . teachers they
were un~er tremendous pressure from
their students. They had to let it out
somewhere. By letting it out Oil us
it calmed them down. Once it occurred
we realized what· was happening and
let it all come oul So there was no
negative effect as there micbt ba,..,
been, had they blown up at their
students in the ·claasroom or in their
homes with their familiea."
"Besides," added Dr. Foster, .._
want to taadl our student&amp; the way
we hope they teach their studenU..
That is;" il we provide the claasroom
..atmq&amp;pbere where they will feel free
to show their emotions without us aet.
a.., mad, thea, bopefully, they in tum
will do the ...... with their student&amp;."

�6

SUNY Dialogue S~
To Brazilian Culture .

State will discuss Brazilian literature. On Saturday, Conversation II will deal with the
plastic arts and Conversation
lii. will discuss the performing
arts, both in the Conference
Theatre in Norton.
Interdisciplinary and intercampus in nature, the "Conver·
sations" programs were estab-lished by SUNY to fund events
of interest to a large number
or people. Brazil was selected
this year because of the "growing group or SUNY faculty
from Brazil and a riaing inter·
The University this week Engineering and Applied Sciest in Brazilian culture," says
ence, will not return to the Uni·
Ubiratan D'Ambrosio, a U / B gained two presidential assis- versity. He has been named di·
tants,
but loot a provoot.
associate professor who is coDr. Berkley B. Eddins, asso- rector of the lnstitute for Apchairman of the event.
ciate professor of nbi1080phy plied Technology or the U : S .
The program, he hopes, will and assistant dean, Undergrad· Department of Commerce's Naspark interest in Brazilian stud- uate Studies, became the first tional Bureau or Standards, ef·
ies -and perhaps begin a major black faculty member to serve
1
in Portuguese here. The Uni- on the immediate presidential fec~il~e='for 1he past six
versity currently sponsors a stsff. He will be special assis- · months has served as special
study-abroad program at the tant to the president until De- advisor lor engineering educa·
SUNY ENROLLMENT
Full-time enrollment this fill at
cember 31 when he will begin tion to the chancellor or the
SUNY!$ 69 campuses is 209,000,
a semester leave of absence. State University.
an increase of 29,000 over last
In his new post, Willenbrock
While on leave, he will be a
year. According to Chancellor Em·
visiting feUow at the Center for will direct a range of activities
est F. Boyer, 60 per cent of the
the Study of Democratic lnsti· witb broad impact on many of
i ncrease was accounted "for by two·
tutions, Santa Barl;&gt;ara, Califor- the nation's leading problems:
year institutions. The increase: the
research and development of
nia.
largest in one year in SUNY hisHarr y R . J a ck s on, former performance standards for elec·
tory, is attributed to the State's
editor of alumni publications, tronic technology; building·
new "full opportunity" program.
Duke University, has been ap- technology; vehicle systems;
pointed assistant to the presi- paper and textile technology;
dent. At Duke, J a cks on , 35, voluntary industrial standardi·
was editor of the Duke Alumni zation procedures; conduct of
Register. a feature magazine is- the National Metric Study as a
sued eight times a year; the guide in d e te r minin g future
. (continued / rom page 1, col. 5)
Duke Alumni N ews Regillter, U.S. policy; technical work on
The prescribed procedures
a quarterly newspaper, and the toy safety standards; fire rewill go into effect immediately.
Duke Alumni N ewsletter. He search and safety ; flammable
In the s€arch for a permanwas with that university for ten fabrics ; policy studies on plOODS
ent vice president for academic
years,
winning several awards of encouraging invention and
affairs, the provosts are acting
innovation; and provision of a
for alumni publicationS.
as a committee through which
Dr.
F.
Karl Willenbrock, now central basis for weights and
nominations to the search com· University of Bahia in Brazil,
. measures in all the 50 states.
·as
U
/
B's
provost
of
on
leave
mittee
_ ati_
rensbewtil!g ga~ redrwarded.
The he says.
II be ,,
With the caliber of talent aJ.
nom1118 0
by the provosts directly to the ready present in the SUNY
president, . who will make the syatem, it should be easy to
final determination as to the start a program in Brazilian
composition of the committee. studies, D'Ambrosio says. Many
nance before the Task Force
Because vice presidential posi· of these individuals w i II be
disbands.
T
• '
tions are of concern to the en- speaking at the two-day contire University commUnity, the fef'l!llce.
Twenty-three per-cent of the sidered important- to get a mea-Donald w. Rennie; '
Chairman,
~ ·
search committee, when formed,
Leading the panel 011' litera- BuJralo area FM audience tunes sure of a public f&amp;dio station
Task Force on GoU&lt;'nUJ11Ce
would be expected to m a k e lure will be Silviano Santiago, into th(, University's radio serv- prior to establishment of the
University-wide reports !'n its one of B r a z i l's outstanding ice, WBFO-FM, at least once National Public Radio Netprogress.
young writers. Leopoldo Caste- a month, according to results of work in the latter pait of 1970." University COmm~fty
Underaroduote Studios
do, a foremoot Latin American the first study of 'national pubDr. Alan J. Drinnan reports
·Based on professional inter:
The acting vice president for art specialist, will head the lie radio ever undertaken. views of a sample which yielded that the Task Force on a Sense
academic affairs, Dr. Daniel conversation on the plastic arts.
The study, prepared for the 1,262 completed contacts, the of University Community has
Murray, will receive nomina· And Abdias do Nascimento, an Corporation for Public l!road· survey found that one· in •five me{ three times to date. 'At
tions to the search committee
casting ( CPB). set out to deterpresent, the group is compiling
for a dean of the Division of originator of the Black Theatre mine the size of the station's who tuned into WBFO at all, a list of special areas for disUBdergraduate Studies . •The movement in Brazil, who is now audience in BuJralo and the spent one to five bows a week cussion, each to be handled by
list of nominees t.&gt;ill be forward- at U / B, will be host 'for the number of listeners to the satel· listening to the station; one of a sub-group or the Task Force.
ed to the president who will conversation on the performing lite station ( whicb operates on ten listened more than 20 bolus Two · possible areas, Chairman
again announce the member· arts.
Saturday from Jefferson Ave- a week.
Drinnan says, are the role of
ship of the committee. This
Keynote speaker for the pro- nue ) in order "to get some perThe most popUlar listening the coli-. and the role of
group's reports would also be gram will be Maestro Carvalho. ceptions of the use of public penod was from 2-6 p.m., Mon- campus-based media, such aa
widely disseminated on cam· Carvalho, formerly director of radio ~the Spanish-speakihg days tbrougb Fridiiys, will! the WBFO, a TV service, and the
pus because the undergraduate the Brazilian National Orches- commUnity in BuJralo and blue 6:30-10 p.m. slot, the second student and University deanship affects a student con- tra, has directed most of the collar workers."
moot popular.
papers, in establ.ish1ng and re~rid's lea~ing' orc~traa and
"Additionally it was constituency of 1~,000.
or commUnity.
Ih terms of progiam cate- dclining a In the formation of the search ts a leader m presenting avant
'
gories, one out of every five Tihn.nn
_ DJ~
oommittees for the two open garde music. D'Ambrosio, who .
listeners said they tuned to the YYIJr•~ni"IUI£
provootships, nomina tiona to UJe · will be host for the keynote
'lJJt:rac;
station for music. Most listenem
~
search committees will be chan· speaker, says that, as Lukas A neled through the respective Foss, Carvalho has strong in- .n.:s
&lt;eight of ten ) said there was
~ 1 t.S' Ul,f"
executive committees of the teres! in new musical forms.
The Caucus an Women's
Liberal candidates endorsed nothing about the station ttiey
Faculty or Arts and Letters
Summarizing the t w CHI a y by the Faculty..Stsff Caucus did not like. More than aix of Rights at SUNY wiU sporisor
and the Faculty of Engineering conference will be Dr. Feman- won both SUNY senator' posi- ten said they felt the station a question-and..,_ aession
and Applied Sciences.
des, who won the "Anistield· tions in the recenUy conducted should cover riots and demon· with representativea of the four..
strations, arid eight of ten said agencies which are "YinJ for
The new procedures,- it is Wolf Award in Race Relations" campus mail ballot election.
hoped, will result in as broad a with his book The Integration·
Filling the two-year une&gt;:· they thought the station had desi""'tion as faeulty...teff bar·
tange of nominations to search of Negroes in a Cltwl Society. pined term of Dr.t Albert S01nit done a aood to excellent job gairung agent in the fortbcom·
committees as possible a n d
is Dr. Marvin J . Feldman, pro- :;"=-las spring's campus in'ri:~be held N~
should ultimately increase both
fessor or psychology. who won
)t!!&gt;ADMITTANCE
the quantity and quality or inelection over Dr. Howard Tiec·
The study revealed that 64 vember 9 at 3:00 p.m. in Dief.
put from a larger number or AU c.mpus maintenance and cus- kelmann, professor and chair· per oent of blacks. surveyed endorf Annex. Room 29.
interested individuals, the presman of the Department of listened, as did 17 per cent
Dr. Daphne Hare saya brief
ident said.
~!!Je~!tt~nu~ ~:~ ~~~ Chemistry. Dr. George Hoch·
Dr. Ketter said that- tbeae to admit anyone to a buikflng or field, professor of English, de- of Spanisb-spMking individuals, talks will precede the ...-tlon·
·
13
per
oent
of
blue
collar
workin~
Harris wD1 resn-t
approaches will also be applied room, unless the individual is per· feated Dr. C. Carl Pegels, assoin the search for department sonally known to them or can pro· ciate Riofes8or or management ers and aix per oent · of at'- the a--te p,_._.__, "-occ·
.,.....
.,._.......
chainnen. In these cases, the .vide . proper id!ntification and is, sciena!, for the remaining year white. middle class reepondenta.
provosts can fO&lt;Ward· their own to their know~ge . entitled to ac· or a three-year leml formerly Non-high &amp;cbool graduate&amp; and ''tion (SPA), Gene Welbauftl
laborem 1ell the education-level Nill .-1&lt; for the Stet. Uniwrnominations for the search cess to the space being entered.
tiona! breakdowns or _sity tede ration of T-=ben
held by Dr. William Baumer. ·and
committees, in addition to those Burr C. Folts, assistant vjc:e prni·
~--. (AFI'..SUFI'~t Raford Boddy
SUNY senators serve on the WBFO
they receive from the constitu- dent. Operations and systems, says
"""""""'
.
will talk. for me AD*icaD »
ency involved. The fimJ ap- adherence to this procedure "ia es· Eiecutive Committee of the
Most people started listailng . aociation of Uniwnlty PrafeB.
proval announcement .of ap-. Mntial . . . In order to j;nMcJe U/B Faculty Senate, .in addi- to WBFO because of "dial-hoi&gt;- aon (AAUP&gt;..t_ lll1d , _ PMtion
to.
representing
the
Univerpointments to departmental normal security required by thole
chairmariships would also em- 1ndividuals working on this am- sity at SUNY-wide Senate ping'' ( .4() per cent) ; 21 per ~·lmeba- wDl ~ the
~~~ ~
..-tings which are held several cent of first tune-ins anate from the Presidentls Of. pus."
caused by word-of-mouth.
oa
• • ,_._
times each y.,ar. fice.
•
A State University · wide
"Conversations in the Disci·
plines'' prograril-aimed at lift.
inF some of the myths about
SOuth America's largest country, Brazil - will be held in
Buffalo, Friday and Saturday,
November 13 and 14.
The two-day seminar w i II
center around trends in Brazil·
ian literature and arts - and
will feature, among others, Eleazar de Carvalho, director and
conductor of the Pro Arte symphon"y of Holstra University,
and Dr. Florestan Fernandes,
profeSsor of political economy,
University of Toronto, a wellknown Brazilian sociologist.
Symposia, being beld both at
U / B and State University Col·
lege at-BuJralo, will be divided
into three major sections. Conversation I on Friday at BuffalO'

......

University Loses Prooost,
Gains Presidential Aides

Procedures....,:.

0

23% of Area FM Audie~
'Rmes into WBFO Progra,m8

L!l...-1- Elected
SlJNY Senators

"J

7

(C&gt;OIIIimu!d (Tom- I. col. 4)
~wide governance, co-Cbalied by Fatmr Puebn and
Mias Nancy Colamen.
•
The Task Force was not
ebarpd to draft actual ArtidM
of Governance and .It ..,_ not
intend to do ao; . _ , it ia
evident from the above thet the
memberahip feels it Cllll and
should develop suggestioaa on
several features of campus,wide
governance for use by a· later
C.ommittee on Governance.
Our principal taak and immediate concern is to devclop a
set of recoi!U!Iendations that, if
followed, would: (1) -'&gt;~ish
a kgitimote University Com·
mittee on Governance drawn
from faculty, sfudenta and stalt,and (2) establish' lefilimate
procedures that could lead to .••
acceptance of a syatem of governance by ..,ch of the major
constituencies of the University.
·
In de-veloping these latter
recomuiendations the Task
Force plans to lean heavily on
the maior governance bodies on
cainpus for aClvice "and eno;»ur·
agement. It also plans to utilize
the advice or campus leaders
elsewhere who have suocessful.
ly coordinated faculty, students
and stsff. LasUy, it will foliOill(
general guidelines suggested in·
the Policies of the Board of
Trustees and advice from the
SUNY centra I administ:nitiQn
to assure acceptance at that
level.
'
lf past experience i$. any
guide, it will be some time ,before the University commUnity
can agree to recommendations
on the above committee struc-·
lure and procedural "ground
rules." Howeve'r , '"'u ntil such
agreement is reached, no definitive progress in drafting Arti·
cles of Governance can occur.
During this interim period,
the Task Force can COIJill'ntrate
profitably on the four areas
covered by Units #1-4- mentioned above. Recodimendations that arise from 'tbeae latter

~~ ~::.::&lt;feo:=

PERB

�N~5,1!110

GSA·Okays New Budget
Of More Thall $35000
.
The Gtaduale Student ~
ciation (GSA) . passed its $35,823 budpt Monday night at
the tall-end of a record twoand-&lt;JDe-half-boUr oession. The
meeting was marked by lengthy
discuasions of the apnda items
and,Tbeat'"~l-~byof~- ·
..... ~
-~
the matter of GSA l'800tlnition

~~ =-:-re:::~

Discuoaioa centered around restriclioas 'll'hich limited membership in samo! of the dubs to

students in BPI!Cific departments. Sidea were quickly
drawn. One side held that aince
sll graduate studentB pay for a
club, all should be able to join.
Tbe other felt that opening a
cluli to all graduate students
would damage itB credibility
with the faculty. The issue was
resolVed with passage of a motion calling for "the provisional
f!!COinition of these four clubs
with the strong urging that
these clubs pass a mo.Jion mak. ing at least asaociate 'tloembership open to all graduate students."
-

•·
Diacussion next revolved
chael Rosen, GSA presi®nt,
that "the GSA fsvors the requirement of a mandatory
hi! a I tb insurance plan for all
full-time graduate students to
maints.in adequate health. care.
Membersl!ip in any recognized
health insurance plan shall fulfill this requirement"
.
he
~of"'the~.:i:::
dling number of doctors who
wiU trest studentB. Many Buffalo doctors, Rosen claimed,
lind. they )lave a hard time ·collecting fees from students not
covered by insurance. Passage
of this policy statement would
allow the University to keep issuing its student health insurance plan, Rooien said. The motion was passed.
The focal point of the meet·
ing-passsge of the budgetWIUI finsjly discusaed at 9:30'.
The group heard two pleas for
extra money. The School of
Social Welfare asked for an additional $500 to recruit minority students. The finance committee had denied this request
on grounds that this was a de-

around a motion made by Mi-

a;:r

Edooltim Seeks
l:kdt Drive Aid
For Asian Nations
In?.:.~~=~~

Faculty of Educational Studies
i_s asking inembers of the fac.
ulty for asaistance in its over. book project.
•
The project, Wider the chair~
IDIIIIIIbip.of Dr. Charles R . Fall,
' - .,_ the past few years di&amp;tribulad daaatiolls from U /B
faadty&lt;lllld the Bookstore to ....
lected oiillepa lllld goiversities
in such places as Ceylon, Taiwan lllld India. OYer 2,000 voltlmes- shipped duririg 196970.'
.
Tbo.-Committee asks faculty
to: .
1) R8comn-vt ......_ (and
~) of univaaitiea and
oil.- orcani&amp;ations abroad
...... r.l8teriala obouJd be 8Sit,
topRhar with information on
the ......... dlaciplines of par.ticular mt.eaL
.
2) Donate materiaJa for di&amp;-

'

(continued from - 1 . coL 4)

ever, be said, he

~ices

. ~.. ~~or

cided that having increaaed input' outweighed the disadvantages."

NoW that the tsslr. foroes are
· p
·
meeting, Dr. Ketter is anticisomething the GSA should
"I was discouraged by the
pating important results. He
fund. The entire body ?f .the ·(Undergraduate) Student Asfeels that "the p r o c e s s the
GSA also defeslad the motion. sociation and the Graduate
groups go through ma,y be as
The student First A:id group Student Association ( who felt)
important as the final recomalso niquMted and was denied that ·vie shouldn't start when
mendation&lt;~ they come up
an additional $300 for commu- we didn't have all the students
~ite this opposition to
with." These recommendations
nicatiolls equipment
in session." In addition to stu- e a r h ·e r appointment of the will be in the form of a series
The entire budget was then dent leaders, many department . groups, Ketter himseU takes of documents ."which will depassed and the meeting ad- heads approached by Ketter full responsibility for . waiting fine for the University present
until September. " It was entire- alternative ·paths, and assess
joumed.
~~ut"' =~!, g:~d':~m,::: ly my decision. I had to weigh their relstive worth." llutlllet fs,culty, . unless he selected the on one hand the advantages of
an immediate start, and on the
The dOCIUI¥!Ilts will be disThe $35,823 GSA b u 4 g e t membership in September.
other hand, the drawbacks of tributed to the University com- ·-:·
breaks down as foUows: $4,600
Ketter
said
the
circumstsndecreased
participation.
I
demunity
for "full discuasion."
for old expenses; $6,860 for
operations; $7,678 for contin- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - :·
gencies and $16,685 for clubs
tional Imperative," SUNY Com· Walb sn Economic Tightrope,"
and projects. A $6 mandatory
mittee on International Develop. Soci&lt;J1 Educalion.
·
fee f r o m 5,200 students acment Studies, Albany.
DR. fRYING BII!ZJBRMAN, aaaiatant
counts for $31,200 of the funds
DR. ROBERT CROW~ assistant pro·
availsble, the remainder comes
fessor, School of Management, OIL bi!~rurmo!:r· ;~~=
from funds · on hand ( $1,625)
ROBERT B. REEVES, 8880Ciate pro- patibility: Evi:f'ence for Independand· from 811D1Qier allocatioruf
fessor, physiology, and DB.: DAVID ent Effects in Choice Reaction
by Sub-Board I ($2,998) .
B. R£lBTER, assistant profesaor,
Time:" Journal of Experi~Mntal
' Old expenses include: loan
electrical engineering and encin· Payclaology.
·
eering science, "The Power Cri· DR. BARBY FRITZ, director of ath·
repayment, $2,000; a $2,000
sia·Prelude to Disaster or Millen· letics, "A SllM!y of Special Cerpayment to Jerry Rubin for a
ium."
Sierra
Club
Meeting,
Bufspeaking engagement (to fultification Requirement. for Athfalo .
fill a _pf&lt;!vious commitment) ;
letic Coaches of High School InDR. ANTHONY M. GRAZIANO, associ·
and $600 for a syrpposium on
terscholastic Teams," Jourrud of
ate professor, psychology, partici· Health, Physical Edu&lt;:ation tllld
genetic ~ing (previOI!I&gt;pated ' in two television programs Recreation; CO·&amp;Uthor, Admin.is·
Iy appropnated) .
on ."Racism and Prejudice."
tration of Ar.hU!tics in Colkgu
Operational expenses include
and Univeraitiu.
$3,31\0 for secretarial assistance,
~~:sy~~~~~~~~~:
,500 f
li
d . $ ooo
DR. SEYMOUR GEISSER, chairman..
$2
or supp es an
1,
nostic and Psychotherapeutic Ap· statistics, .. Discriminatory Prac·
!::ft::. GSA Convocstions Comproaches to the Physically Dis· tices," Proceeding• of Symposium
a bled," F i r s t Ibero · American on Bayesian Statiatics.'
The contingency fund is to
Congress" of Physical Medicine
be appropriated only by action
and Rehabilitation. Estoril, Portu· DR. SEYMOUR CE.lSSER, chairman.
Talntor
statistics, "Bayesian Analyais of
of the whole body of the GSA
gal.
Growth Curves," Sankhya: TM
for such purposes as suppleDR. KAREL HULICKA. professor, his·
lrulian Journal of Stau.tico.
menting budgets and granting NEW CAMPUS
tory, " Planned Proportional Eco·
emergency tunds. Part of the APPOINTMENTS
nomic Development a nd the Role DR. ANTHONY M. G&amp;AZIANO, associ·
money is 'earmarked for a hail
of CMEA : Complexities and ate profelSOr, psychology, ' 'The
AlEXANDER, administrative
Prospects," School of Ecoilomics, Consultant and Agency Politics,"
fund once the question of such .JUDITH
Mental H e a I t h Consultation;
associate, systems development,
a fund's legality is determined. Regional Medical Prog ram for Prague, Czechoslovakia.
" C I i n i c a 1 Innovation and the
~tal 'functi o n' and not

GREPORTS

ON

&lt;;pEOPLE

Activity Appropriations

as A:'ot~!i'.: al(f:J'~:o~~
pology Association, $265; Bio-

~~ G~#i5 ~1~:iw~a,;

Gallery, $360; Chemical Engineering GSA, $940; Graduate
Chemists Club, $110; Graduate
Classics Club, $175; Computer
Science GSA, $100; Gl'aduate
Economics Association, $250;
Elementary and Remedial Education Student Group, $685;
Graduate Geological Society,
$120; Higher Educstion Student Association, $280; India
Students Association, $925.
Graduate C en t e r for the
Study of Language. $440;
Grsduate Management Association, $835; Mathematics GSA,
$475; Music GSA, $315; Graduate S t u d e n t Occupational
Tberspy Club, $260; Pharmaceutics Department GSA, $100;
Grsduate Philosophy Association, $850; School of Information and Libnuy Studies GSA,
$475; Social Personality Psychology Club, $250; Sociology

Western New York; fonne rly of
life acience department, Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratories. Buf~
falo.
MICHAEL G. SYRACUSE, assistant di·
rector, environmental health and
safety; formerly of the Hooker
Cheinical Corporation, Niagara
Falls.
.
DR. ZEBULON TAINTOR, assistant
professor, psychiatry, U/ B School
9f Medicine, appointed director

~ti~!~~~Y~'hfat~~tiD~/ai~t!;

is an assistant chief psychiatrist
at the Meyer M~morial Hospital
and headed a mental health unit
in Erie County. A gra duate of
Cornell University Medical Col·
lege, Dr. Taintor received his
psychiatric training at the Payne
Whitney Psychiatric Clinic of the
New York Hospital. He served as
Lieutenant Commander in the
U.S. Public Health Service Re-

s::::n:! Go~ ~d ~if.~~a~;
1

and Neurology. He has published
work on the use of computer eval·
uations~ social psychiatry, the
development of a therapeutic com·
munity, relationship of birth order
:

'd~choJ:~J~cy~d

research

~~~~J.:~~t OFF-CAMPUS
Student House - School of
Social Welfare, $750; Day Care
Center, $600; American Studies-Education Coalition1 $300·
Real Food: The People s Food
Exchange, $2,150; Clean Air
Car Exhibition, $100; Cognitive
Studies GSA, $100; Student
First A:id, $200; Molecular Biology GSA, $160; Microbiology
GSA, MaQ; CaW.yot (publication), ~; Statistics GSA,
$185; G r a d u a 'te Film and
Graphics C I u b, $750; Draft
eo.u-Jing Cent e r (Buftalo
FrieadB Meeting Houae), $500;
N- Co11e1e of Modem Educati
~; Medicinal Chemistry
$225. .
.
The ~t Student

·G':J..

:7-ZW::..t:'~,:j

APPOINTMENTS

HAZI:I. RJJlVEY, · associate profes.
aor, School of Nursing, appointed
president of the Boanl of Examineia of Nunes of the New
York State Education Depart-

menL
oa. IIZNI:

Huuc:KAt adjunct pro·
feasor, psychology, appointed a&amp;·
eociate director, Center for Study
of Poychotherapy, Madrid, Spain.
DIL ·W. DAVID LEWIS, auociate pro·
f-.or, history, appointed a rec·
ord reviewer for Muaic.
DL JOLVUf l. TUCICD, auociate

r~~~o~'M'!X'~~~:

iei.

C·e n t e r for Medieval and

~Jy ~!_~~:;.:.e Studiea,

aoked

DR. OLIVE P . LES'I't.2t. professor, psy·
chology, "Decline: The Younger
Generation," American Institute
of Bankin~
·
DR. W . DAVID LEWIS. associate pro·
fessor, history, lectu re and organ
recital on Baroque mu sic, North·
umberland, Pa.
DR. JAMES M.ARClA., associate pro·
fessor, psychology, " An Expectan·
cy Manipulation Interpretation
of the Results of Systematic De·
sensitization," APA Symposium.
DR. JAMES A. MOSS, professor, SO·
ciology, " Race as a Factor in
U.S. Foreign Policy," Strategy
Board, New Yo_rk City.
DR. MJLTON PLESUR. ossociate pro·
fessor, history, ••Presidential
Health," Center for Study of
Democratic Institutions, Santa
Barbara. Calif.

::-y:gy,

L=8frfceer:::.
G...

:::ioJ:{A;:

Semce Institute.

~~=

DENNIS R. SMITH, asaistant
professo,, speech communication,
"General Systems Approach to
Communication," 2nd . lntema·
tional Colloquium of S p e e c h
Sciences, Hattingen, West Germany.
Dll aAUD£ E. WELCH, asaociate
profeeeor, political science, "RevTendencies within Af.
rican Armies," African Studies
Aaoociation, Booton.
Oft. D. KENNETH WILSON, profesaor,
speech communication, "Voice
Problems of Hearing-Impai.Jed
DR.

olutionary

?nil~ru~=ti~rru~oc
Stockholm, Sweden.

PUBLICATIONS
DL IOBI:PB C. AGNELLO~ a.iatant
profeuo.r, 1peech communication,
"Durational Differenceo in S.-:h
Production Under Normal and
Delayed Auditory F-n..ck."
S~ech . MoMifraph..

DL I8H8T

!!''Y·

BAIJLlN:

A-

Mental Health Power Structure,"
Social Policy a n d I mtitutional
C~nslraints in American Soc~ty.

~~y=:::=l==~

d•l Deficumte Mental, Madrid:
Editor i a 1 Cientifioo . Medica;
..Modem W om a n 'e Conftictina
Roles," International BeluwiorGl

Sci.l!ntUt.

DR. RAYMOND 0. BUNT,

psychology,

" Federal

profeeeor,
l'l&lt;&gt;cure-

;:~r!!,tupl:li~esSo~ ~~~=

of a Group of Business Organizations," NatioMl Contract Man-

asement JournaL

DR.. [EAN G. PRUITT, profeaaor,
psychology, editing' special iuue
of Journal of Penwru:Uity and

Soci&lt;ll Psycho/ofy.

DB. J . SlDNEY SHRAUGIB,

chairman

~~~~e~~c:::ao~~· ~:

Evaluation ae Determinant&amp; of
Attraction," Sociometry; '1' he

=~"!'! p~~~~::-to'!!:

us of Control.'' JourMl for
Scientific Study of ReU,io11.
DB.

DENNIS

·

C;.;'.J:,~~ ~~= -

.._ .....ur D.__,.,, prol.eo801', history, ..Latin AmeDca

~

a. Dam, auiatant

professor, epeech communication,
"Fallscy o( the ·Communication
Breakdown,'' Quartt~rly Joomal
of S~ech ; "From ld to lnforma-

~!;:~~try~;!

Spuch; edited " A GeDeral S~­
tems Model of Communication,"

BiophilUt.

OL WllLIJ.M W. B'l,'EIN, UIOCiate

profeuor, anthropology. " Semili-

Co!bi:a;.:c:.:r:n lc:~:;::.

Ameri&lt;on lndi8014.
TULKIN, aeaietant
profeooor, psychology, "Coinitiw
Components of Separation Anxiety,'' Developmental PsycholoiY·

DL 8ft\"BN L

pro(e.nr, his~
"Luciua Su11a, Tbe Deadly
~ormer," Seventh Todd Memor·
PRESENTATIONS
ia1 Lecture, Syc!Dey Ullivenity
p,_; "The Sempronii AoelliaD·
IlL ~ aUJ&lt;J&lt;~&amp;,.aaoialallt profe.or, poycbolocY. ':The u- and·
.u.u.. of Seaaiijvity Traiainc." N - OD Rcm&gt;an Mqiotrlleo,"
Unitarian a.wdl ol. AmbenL

Freot:h GSA could not juatily
their ao both tributiaa.
.
dOllied fuad8. SIDCe .... $84Re
:lafblaandmafe. 000 worth of flmda rlaJa ohould be farwanled to and aaly $16;685 was avaibble, - . , _ c. luu:&amp;. ciMn, inter- nalioul otwlieo, "'I1&gt;e Ullivenity
Papalia. 202 Footer. moat of the appropriations ... than .........,.s.
ud Dewe&amp;.-t. • Trazlma·

twtthaoly

oes of his assuming the presi. dency .&lt;many student and faculty groups were opposed to
him) made him move cautiou&amp;ly. "If I had moved coldly and
forcibly during the summer, I
would have been accused of
not roosulting anybOOy. By
waiting, I demonstrated I wanted complete involvement.'·'

RECOGNITIONS

�8
eoboq. Utrecht Uoiwnity,

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQ~

--i&gt;

THURSDAy

~L-w..-

matical modell for eome orpn-

Dr. Lloyd DemetriU.. Department of Mathematics, Uoiwnity
of California, BeJireley, IIVLTIPLI·
CATrft

Plt(J(Z88I8

IN

BIOLOGY,

COHDI'I'Iql&lt;&amp;

Room 29, 4248 Ridp IAa, 4 p.m.

Goodyear, 2 p.m.·
2:00 Registration; open ins · re-marb. Dean Richard G. Brand·

ecology. and genetice involve no~ona of poaitivity ~ ~n­
eaty. A mathematical bum. for

IIEMIN. . :

IOOOI&lt;OilOC

:ra:\\~ U:97~'~.s~~N n=. Re~~n!~~ modele in

....tawi.

2:80 Worbbopo
.
t. ENVJaONMENT: ~rman. Dr.
1.ee E. Preatoq, chairman, Department of Environmental Analysis a n d Policy; diaeuuanta,
St
I
Friedmao.
Spauldinlf Fibre Coip., Kelvin
Ferber, technical manager, Allied
Chemical Corp.

an e'"

preaident.

2. P1liiLIC m&lt;AJ&lt;CE:

chairmaD,

Dr. James Bone.. a.ociate pro-

=t. o~:~o;...!t:P~:

ler, Erie County.
3. -.wm:" cbaiimao, Paul Wil-

~ceif.':k;"'-.;;;,,!:t. ~
~~~:.raJ

COWUJel,

Domed

4:
Closing remarb, Claude F.
Sli bier,
MU Truat
Co.
5 : 10 Cocktail hour
Fees: Alumni aud faculty, $7.60
(prereciatration). $8.50 (at door) ;
studenta, $3.50 (pre...,;.triltion) ,
$1.50 (at door).

preaident,

THBORE"'''CA.L BlOLOGY SEMIHA.a:
Jamea Rabinowitx, IUCT808TA'I1C
lNTDA.CTJONB IN BIOLOGICAL KOL&amp;CULB8, Room 29, 4248 Ridp Lea.

4 p.m. Helreabmenta 3:30 p.m.
A general diKuaion of n:pansioDJ of Coulomb'• Law and how
a new metbod of calculating mo-

lecu1ar mullipole momenta abows
bow the.e expai)Sions ea.n be ap.
plied to biological moleculea.
MOVIE: DYNAJO'I'I: CBJCKJ:N, Conference Theatre, Norton, 7, 8:80,
10, 11:80 p.m.
COMPUTING C£H1'R SEMINAR: }lar..

Ridp

Room

r.-. 7 p.m.

nus tAlk

10.

4238

is inteoded to famil.

iarize the new uaer with the Com{',Uiinlf Center, ita function in the

nef"!~i~-::f'~.:l."non-

Jako&lt; Lind, eli·
reeled by Saul Ellrln. 'l'hMtre
Stuclio, Harriman, 8:30 p.m. Goo·
eral admiaeion $1.00, students
$.50. 'l'icketa available at Norton
Ti&lt;-ket Ofrace. Perfonnaracea nightly through Sunday, November 8.
TH&amp;ATU: DllO by

FRIDAY~ .
Joaepb D.
Agnello, JN8TB.UMENTAL PHONICTICS, 402 Hayea, 11 a.m. •
KOVIB: DYNAKJTI: CHICKEN, Confereoce ThMtre, Norton, 2, 3: 80,
6, 6: 80, 8, 9: 80, 11 p.m., 12: 80
a.m.
IIIOCIIEKIIJI'I BD&lt;IN. .: Dr.
do"' Hofmann, Uniwnity of ToLINGUIBTICS LIICTUIE :

to
growth and cell dilferentiation
will be diacuaaed.

JHTI:RHATIONAL POLK DANCING: Instruction in basic stepe du.ri.na
first hour, 30 Diefendorf AnDex,
8 p.m.

RBCrrAL• • : KUSICAL VSWPOINTB I,

arranpd aud clirected by Leo
Smit, featuring Sylvia Dimiziani,
soprano; Patricia Oreskovic, mez-

~eof..n::h!'a&amp;;u~o~~;

Hatry Taub, vinlio; Rualana Aob?nowicz, piano; Melvin Strauu,

CONTI.NUING K£DICAL .IDUCA'I!ON
PROGLUI FOR PSYCBIATBlBTB: NEW
TREJrrfD8 IN PSYCBOPB..UtJlACOLOGY.

~ ~~;n~tedth.!"fi~l'c!i

psychiatry, will consist of one
day with two seaaiona..· Each aession will consist of a lecture by an
invited speaker and a lone question and answer and discuuion
period. The atmosphere ia com-

pletely informal

RECJT.u.• •:

MUSICAL

~O::~ar;.~w;,J:~,P=:

kovoky and Stravindty. Baird,
8 :80p.m.
THEATRE: EIIGO, Theatre Stuclio,
Harriman, 8:30 p.m.

... .
-

publiea... ..ather aud cloud pbys-

~ ... ba~lathe
....... booluda the of at-

.:!1
tt.'::!::
..............
...
~~ ~

.... ......... ,.._ air pollatioD.
L

iWL IIIOIAln" 88liiiJU.:

7

F111Z MOVIE: lJH..aWOIIUl (1927,

tbe

~ ~ ~~..: .rr""~ ~:t

TUESDAY-10
PBYBICIAHS' TZLEPHONE LICTUBE:

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Dr. Leonard A. Ketz,
MALABSORPTION, 51 Participating
Hospitals, 11:80 a.m.
NURSES'

TELEPHONE LECTURE:

~pooaored by Region&amp;l MediCI!)

Th;.~st:~eyG~~~~~
51

Participating Hospitals, 1:80 p.m.
DANCE CLASS: Pearl Primua, visiting cueat teacher. APIIJCAN DANCE:
BTRUCI'UIIB . AND STYl.E, Dance
Stuclio, Clarlt Gym, 4 p.m.
Pearl PrimUI, internationally
lamous Amencan dancer, choreographer and anthropologist. ia
guest teacher for the class in African Dance. Mia Primus is cur-

Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, auociate profeaaor, pbiloaopby, will dis·
cuse civil disobedience: what it is
and how it is used in testiq constitutionality under the law. Ruth

veraity and a member of tbe faculty of H~ter College. She was

the

ll:eEtJ!::'SO:J:te o~
Children and Youth, and clirec1ed
the New York State Office of

~ncf3:~~o:e~ttyCi!l ~efor~
ad~ct ~=r:: :J::
=t~ o!n~i:r U!eth ~t= ~~r
School of Arts of. New York Uni·

~ p~':to~

followinlf local stations:

c::.

ericao aud of Aaron
Copland at his home in Paebkill, N .Y. Worb include, "Bil·

8 : 80 p.m.
.
,....,.,_, DD!!.- 'I'bNtra Studio,
Harriman, ~.m. . .

~

-r : .occur·ao

~.::~~

often in tbe
COIIUD1Uiity that
a collection of pre-pecbpd workina programa &lt;NYBLIB) baa
beeo o1118Dized. This tAlk will explore wno ahould , _ NYBLIB
and what procrama are aftilable.

Arts for the New York State Qf.
lice of Education in Albany. She
also teaches Ethnic Dance as Hu-

ar..:: - . ~ . Baird,

· He Ia the author of mote

cliocuMed.

COMPUTING CZN'ftR IDONA&amp;: Harvey A.xlerod., m.uuctor, computina center 111er ~ervicee, PIIOGILUI
LJBil.UlY OB.IEN'TATION, Room 10,

Radio pfogram. Dr. Herbert Footer, 118110ci·
ate professor, teacher education.
will diJCUM violence in the classroom and on campus, covering

tralian Weather B urea 11, !)lo
R.lio f!lylial Laboral"&amp;.!::Yd-

~~-:,=~~

OL-bm·

U::tlbi~isi:,':~rnJ~-:uan'd

SUNDAY-8
U/8 N£\\"8 AND VIEWS:

%!'" e::,:·~ ~~~

-

are

LOGICAL DU'ACI' OF DIABETES,

VIEWPOINTS

~a':.w:' =-·~.J~na:J

.... t-*7

w::

t:Tu
:e:~:::rt.!re:i
the claes of OL-~ will be

=·.!i =~~ti':w.~
•trans!•

~ ~,;,~::t:..= ~.k ~:"'..:..~

Colondo. Dr. Squiz.• ia a lellow
ol the Ameriam MeteoroloP:al

!:.!r"~y~o:mk!"::;.;

parallolism ,there

!:r:::neftee

MOVD:: DYNAMITE CHJCX&amp;N, Conlerence Theatre, Norjon, 4, 5: 80,
7, 8:80, 10, 11:80 p.m.
p.m.
BALKAN POLK DANCING: Fillmore
IDfO~G BCJ&amp;NCI: IDUMA&amp;:
Room. Norton. 8 p.m.
_,.
Dr: Patridt Squirw•• .-reb pro- • ..:~TAL•• : MUSICAL vmwfOII&lt;TII
flaaor of atmoapbenc J&gt; bY • 1 c ~· m, featuring Leo Smit, piano;
~rt -n:h lnotitute, .Um· Melvin Strll,..., piano; Job n
wnity of· Neftda, ReDo, ....,...
Tbomu, narrator. A -tietb

:;._-=:: ~ BoaJt!::.

=

Smit..

I'ODto, Canada, EVOLUTION OF nIIOGID&lt;S AND Till: IIOICIIANIBJI OF
11IKia ACTIVATIOI&lt;, G-22 Capen, 4

==ud!~J.ii"tbe

tiala' point-of-view, they ano bm·
, _ which ..., -rated by
cont.erl-free with tbe
diffe.- that a JUle can aud

J01ef von Sternberg) , 147 Diefen·
u related to ~ oocioiOCY of law.
dorf, 8:80 p.m.
p~; JoM TOOmu, ~Wr.
This forerunner of the pubUc PHYSJ.CAL-IHOKANIC CB&amp;liiBT&amp;Y
Leo
piano. WOLfGANG AMA- enemy mmo appeared at a mo- COLLOQUilJ)( : Dr. Ronald G. 1.4wDEUS MOZART~ A 8ELP-P08TR.Al1' IN ment when the tate for crime . ler, Brown Univenity, CIIDUCAir
...,.,..... AND MUBtC, Bainl, 8:30 and violence bad been whetted by
LY-INDUCI!:D DYN&amp;XIC Htla.&amp;.\8. POp.m.
~caro!r~~ LAIIIZATIOI&lt;, 70 Acbeaon, 4 p.m.
THEATRE:. EIIGO, Theatre Stuclio,
COKPUTING CKN'ISR o11DDN4&amp;: Har·
Sternberg's
striking
feeling
for
Harriman, 8:80 p.m.
dramatic u·• e 1 of atmoepbere. vey Axlernd, inatructor, computing center uaer .ervicee. COJO'tJTEil LANGUAG8 OIUENTATION, Room
SATURDAY-7
ather than to
tbe story 10, 4238 Ridge Lea. 7 p.m.
MOVIE: DYNAMITE CWCKEN~ Con- aa sometimes happened in his
The selection of an appropriate
ference 'l'hMtre, 2, 3:30, 5, 6: 30, later work.
computer la.nguage ia an integral
8, 9:80, 11 p.m., 12:30 a.m.

~SL
~JB'W;at~i} -.!.~ :-:"J
n-. WADV-FM
at 8: 45a.m. .

ar E...u-maa. 4 p.m. -..Ja.
menta, 109 PUller E..,u..rinc,
3:80p.m.

iama. From tbe - t e r acien·

=

• will
~~~P:hl.
".:1!. ~~
be provided. Applications

vey Axlerod, !oatructor. comput- D, featuring Patricia ON&amp;kovic,
ing center uter .ervicel, uaa . mez.zo-aopi'8.Do; Rus1ana Anton-

O&amp;JKHTAriON,

r.-.

Room 41. 42211 .Ridp
8:80
p.m. ~Ia ~ lecbaft on.;ully
llrioeD from the atudy of mathe-

•apon to public, no c:IYrp; ••open to public, - - ·" ' JII.AHM.."EJONT ALUIINI A880C1ATION

OM
80K&amp; PIIOPia'IID,. OL-L&amp;HOU.a.,

MONDAY~

lem areas aud their asoociated
la.nguage types (aud examples)
will be presented.
LINGUISTICS L&amp;CTUIIB: Madeleine

Mathiot..

J:rBNOLINCtitsTICS,

378

Hayes, 7: 30 P·'lL
llLEE L!ICTUIIE: Nicholas Nabokov,
K4SPUTIN, HYTB, liYSTI:aY, BIBTORY, MUSIC, Baird, 8 : 80 p.m.

Nicholas Nabolrov, Slee Profei·
ll!Or for the fall semester 1970-71,
was born in RUMia in 1908 and
has been an American citizen
since 1934. Educated in Stuttprt,
Berlin and Paris, be baa taught
composition and literature. Since
1948 he baa devoted bimaeJf to
wrilinlf and teacbiD&amp; muaic at the
Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, Qllumbia Univenity and
New York Univenity. Hil worb
include "Ode," a ballet-oratorio
written for the Ballet Ruseee de
Monte-Carlo in 1928; the FUot

~tlfo=n atf'::!...~:t!

the curriculum of primary ICboola

:~~~~~TAl~

;:;ca;~~b~~~e.:ri~
ment through Ethnic Dance."

...... KOVJB:

I VlmLLONI

(1953,

Federico Fellini), 147 Diefendorf,
3 and 8: 80 p.m. Growinc up absurd in Viterbo.

WEDNESDAY-il
80ClAL PSYCHOLOGY LUNC..B&amp;ON
COLLOQDIUK 0 : Dr. Barl&gt;ua Bene,

clict Bunker, profMAOr, paychol·

~
Ro!::~~~ lid: I::
12:80 p.m.

IJirf'ftA)((JUL

8WDDIINC t T&amp;IALB:

Clark Gym pool, 3 : 80 p.m.

.&lt;:r~~~=
in Rooai 5, Clark Gym: E-ta in·
dude: 100 yd. _..,. ralay, 50

~J.~rooy~:

nal ...a.,., 100 yd. freaatyle, 100
yd freeatyle ralay, 50 yd.
alrqb.

.,_1-

COLUlQtJIIJJI : Dr. Kwan
W. Lai, Broollbawo National
I..boratories, BOSON lti'80NANcaB
IN Till: IIEVEKTID, 111 Hocbatetter, 4 p.m. Refreahmenta 112
Hochstetler, 3:80 p.m.
LINGUIBTlCS LIIC!'UII&amp;•: Dr. Ben-

m~=~r0!
UNIFIED THEORY OP Til&amp; LI'IDARY
TII:XT, 340 Norton, 8 p.m.

Tbe text ia le8D u a higher-order of organization of ......_.
'The theory deocribea tbe ways of
linking elemenb in a literary text
on two levels: tbe level of t8rl.
continuity aud
level of
recooatructed "world." A ~
network of pattema of a lajotero.
geneoUI nature (eound, aemantic.
,plot.. "ideas, attitudes, character,
aesthetic qualities and ell'ecta) un·
folds when readina a literary text.
The theory ~ the oatnre
of elementary unit&amp; in literature
(u opjaooed to ...........). the na·
lure of patterns and the modea of
their. eilltence in a literary work;
the co-existence, interrelations
and interdependeoce of aw:b heterogeneous patterns, their linguistic forms and literary rei......,..
PIIARIUCY SD&lt;IN. .: Dr. Paul Lof.
bobn, CUI!RENn IN COIOIUNI!'Y
PRAcnCE, 244 Health Sci.....,., 8
p.m.
In tbe first of four aeminan,

tbe

tbe

~ &amp;:~?"'~~~ Ia:

Greenbrae,

~..

will be joined

~=':X·~~
c~:,mr ~ ~:...=~. ol.,.;;;:.YB~:fr. ~
phony_ under the direction of Q:_

gei Kouuevitzky in 1981; and
operatic, chamber m u 1 i c, aDd
symphonic piece~. From 1960-51.
Mr. Nabokov was director of music at tbe American Acadeiiay in
Rome and until 1966' be served u
secretary general for
Con·
greaa of Cultural Freedom.

the role of education:a.I dance in

PHY81C8

tbe

CULTUIE, 286 Norton, 9 p.m.
The Unif'aed Family, an inter·

national · movemeDt of

le'V'eral

to=in~
J.:l: &amp;:
nide

and offers a

to

ove~

individual and world problema. It
is concerned with everythinlf from
God to paycbic phenomena; hom
a just eocio-economic order fo
world goftmmertt.

THURSDAY-12

Donald Knab. The moderator for ·
the aeries is Dr. Albert Wertheimer, . .istant .profe.or. ~­
acy.

INTERVIEWS .

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT-BUFFALO

--

By SUSAN GREENWOOD

day 111111 will cootinue throulh
Saturday with ralllaa, feativala

of~=·in~~

at Dooll Wednesday with a
ra1J • tbe fountain ._
with ..-ken,_,
/B ....._ Club, Youth
apJ.t War 111111 Faadsm. Ni-

=:a~~~= -

,Dr. Frwtd . Snell. The- :day 8d&gt;ecluled to be~ Olf with
a "Featmal of Ule~ :tliat . ~ tbe Haa .I:.OWJee ol
~· activities start at
8:30 tblo momiDa with continUDUI cHac:u.ioila about tbe war,
I'IICi8m 111111 aeDam, aiiO to be
bald in tbe Haa ~ ...
tbe afteraooa; various work-

:f.'
-oo"!J!..~&amp;:~
ebow 8lmo 111111 beve a peael

.u.:u.ion of their in
342 -Nonao. .A ...... ntrl:mt
· bum will be beld at 2:00 lp
342 "NariGD. 'l1IN8 ....-tau-. ........ .-Cblcwoommlt ia tbe Baa PNacillco Bay
Alee will~ at 3:301in 342
Nortoa. Aad at 7:30, Judy
Gumbo, a IDIIIIber ol tbe Yippies, will . . . . Oil ber ~
...... inHuaila.t-.
Friday io the day ol tbe
youth natioG rally at Caaiaiu8
aduled for DOOD,
c8crlbed ae a "joy-

~

"'~~-:;

::tb:'l.~ilieai, .......

collectlvao, commuaeo aad

-~=-~~
~u=~~
food.. music. ......
fticb, en-

et"IY 111111 ravoiu~ low."
'Ibe ptberiaa, which io.expected .by ita orpiijmn to 'laot .n
du. io fNe. .
lilioturday marb tbe day for
aa .Jl.«at COOIIIIUIIity ellari. At
..., a ~tian aad rally
wJII .. beld ......,_in NiqSquare ia froat ol CitY
8all. s.-.1 ..._ aad cMc

=::,-:~-E;;:r:!
_.
-

..ny

.........

~
lllllblliattial!in~

OCTOBER29,
1970
.
~

New
Provost
.
. Schwartz
Is First Nqn-Attorney
To Head a Law School .

4-Day-I;.ong
War Protest
Is Underway
.'Ibe ~froaram of tblo
yeei'a na •
fall mabilizatian
to atop tbe war started yester-

.VOL 2-NO. 8

'Ibe appointment of Ri~ initiated and urged jOint deD. Schwartz, professor of ·soc:i- Pee programs. aa underpadoloav and law, Northwestern uate college devoted to law and
university Law School, as pro- social prOblems, interdiscipliavoet of tbe U / B Faculty of Law ary courses and the like.~
and Jurisprudence and· dean of Phi tbe Law School marks what is • A na'tive of N~ New.
believed to be a fu:st in Ameri- can legal education.
Law SchOol sources indicate
that Schwartz - who was "enthusiastically endorsed~ within
tbe School-is "probably the
first . . . individual without a
law degree (to be) nominated
for such a poet."
'Ibe appointment was confirmed yesterday in Albany by
the State University Trustees.
Schwartz will join the University, February 1, 1971.
'Ibe Law School S e a r c h
Committee which recommend- ·
ed the appointment notes that
Schwartz has spent his entire
professional life working with
the law, with lawyers and with
law schools. He has taught at · Jersey, the 45-year-old
both Yale aad Northwes~ Schwartz holds the B.A. and
law schools aad is co-author the Ph.D. in sociolot!Y from
(with J.-pb Goldateia and .the Yale. He 'aid. raiearch oa col~te Ricbaia'Doanelly) of,wbat
lective IIQCiety in Israel _leading
•·llie Search eo-ittee des- ...toA1is diasertatioa aad wae a
cribes as "one of the most sig- Ford postdcictoral fellow in benificant" books in American W,. havioral acienceo at tbe .Insti'\.gal education, CriminiJJ. Law tute of Human Relations. He
(1962) , "a unicj!l'e attempt to is a member of Phi Beta Kappa
merge law and tbe behavioral and received the Bishop Mathsciences in teaching."
ew Simpson Award for the
'A Zest for Dlalocue'
"most outstanding cootributlon
Also cited by the Committee to Northwestern University
were Schwartz's "respect for through teaching, scholarship
the traditioos of the legal pro- and service" for 1969-70.
fession; obvious zest for good
Schwartz has served: as
Total University enrollment _ 551; Medicine, 464.)
. hard Ilia!'!~; and in~~t _in chairman of the major in hufor the fall semester is 24,625,
TotaJ.Day Divisions-15,214 •
aens11ivtty to ~ !:'dlvld- man cul·t ure aad behavior at
Yale; as associate editor of
an increase of 3.62 per cent - full-time; 3,346 part-time.
ual s personal qualities.
over laat fall's 23,764.
The MiUard Fillmore College
~wartz will heal! a faculty Social Proble1U; ae a consul'Ibe fi1urea. releeaed Monday (evening) figure is 6,()65.......all which has. come to vteW the le- taat to the UN Aaia. and Far
by Dr. Arthur L Kaiaer, direc- cOnsidered to be part-time.
pi education approaches of the Eastern Institute OD tbe Pretor of admissions an4 records, a...a- .., s.x
~t 100 years "'! "not ~ vention of Crime 111111 Treetment of Oftenders; ae director
iaclude all studen-full- and
By aex, the · total enrollment sarily wrong ~t inadeciu!'te·
Law aad J~rudenc:e "': tbe of Northwestern's Council for
part.time, credit and_!21ldit- of 24,625 breaks down into 15,free.
461 men and 9,164 women.
Search Comm!ttee oaid, ~t lateroocie4ai Studies; • aa inTotal underpaduate enrollDivision totals sort out by only (attempting) to pJ&lt;?vide corporator 111111 trustee (111111
ment (day 111111 eveaing) il sex aa follows :
the. !"'* uaeful. profeaoioaal cunent via! prsident) of the
16,5.'!6--« 4.76 per cent increase
Under~ (day) _ 6,- tralaing but to ~ Ia"!' Law and Society Aosoc:iatioa,
~ 1aot fall'ol6,785. 'Ibe lf&amp;ll- 312
5;02i women. The- aad _lawyers to tbe en~ Uru- and as editor-ia-dJief ol Law &amp;
uate total is 5,912, up 4.56 per lower divisioa has 2,298 men versaty . world · · · to. ~tegrate Socidy Review. .
He is co-&lt;iirector of tbe -Proceat from laot yeu'o 5,664. 'Ibe aad 2,322 women; the upper prof~ JepJ tralaing_and
profeaoioaal ochools of L!ow, division, .f,014 men and 2,699 and.......,....m le~ noa-p~essionaland gram in .Law 111111 tbe Social
Sciences at N~ aad
Deatlsley aad Mediciae show women:
DOD- .,... •t r a 1 n 1 n g
?, coL 6)
a 10.5 per.ceat increase-1,315
Graduale..-.3,881 men and study . • To thil end, we have (collfillwd
ao compared to 1,190 laot year. 2,031 women. ('Ibe full-time
'Ibe only ..,.._ aoted is a lf&amp;lluateo iaclude 2,129 men
24 per ceat drop in credit-free and only 822 women; the part..
reaiatrationl. from 1,135 laot time breakdown is 1,752 men
fall to 862 thio year.
and 1,209 women. )
Full- ...,._,_
Profe.,iofllll School&amp;-1,221
Brolrea down into full- and men aad 9.f women.
part. time regiotntion, the fig- . M il!ard Fillmcre College
urea oort out tblo-way:
(evenlag) --4,047 m,en and
Under~ (day ) -10,- 2,018 women.
967 full-time~ part-time Faculty Enrull..- ( leoo thaa a'il!=liOur load ) . 'Ibe
The Admissions aad Recorda
lower division t.s .f,547 full- ligures iDdicate thil distribution
time, 73 part.time; the upper of total day enrollment by
divia'.on, 6,420 full-time and 293 faculties :
part.time.
Arlo and Lettera: 2,289 total;
Gnduate&amp;-2,951 full-time; 1,615 undergraduate; 674 grad2,961 part.time ( leoo thaa a
uate.
9-hour loail). ('Ibe paduate eaEdlu:cliofllll Studiu: 2,797
roJJmeat by divisloao il broken total; 555 underpaduate; 2,242
down by total enroJimmlt ~.Y lf&amp;lluate.
aad il: Glllduite SchoOl, 3.J;23;
E~U., and_AI&gt;P~ SciManapment, 379; Education, encu. 1,634 'total, 909 under2,045; Ubrary Studies, 143, 111111 lf&amp;lluate; 725 lf&amp;lluate.
Social
122.l
·
HeoJlh Scivu:ea: 2.446 total; .
Prof-*"" School&amp;-1,296 1_.252 underpadtl!'te;· 430 pildfull-time; fil ~time. (Again, uate; 764 ~
the profeiiJoaal erlrOJimmlt
Law 11114 JIDUprutknce : 561
brealliklwa by ocbooJs io by to- total; ~I Pl¢eMional.
ta1s only : Dentistry,
300;
law,
{conrinwd
" " - 6, coL 6)
.

Kll-

-

24,625 Enrol1e4 for Fall;
Full/June Total Is 15,214

""'!

men,

on-

w.uam.

.

~

�I

S.D.S. Alive,
Plans March
On Detroit
S.O.S. is not "dead."
On the contrary, it is alive,
well and planning a jpint stu·
dent-worker march on General '
Motors world headquarters in
Detroit, November 3.
At least that's what Ed Golash, :m upellite New York coordinator for National S.O.S.,
told a meeting on campus last
week.
·'Thoee who remained at the
SD.S. national conference in
.June 1969 after the national
leadenhip and others walked
out, Golash said, have forged
MW strategies for a studentworker alliance against "imper-

="

~ d:'e r.:eo'f":;

SD.S. chapters have sprung up
acroaa the nation, he said. in·
cludinJ'units at Comell, SUNY
at Binghamton, RPI. SUNY at
Alban,y, Rusaell Sap and Skidmore.
'Thoee who walked ou~ of
SD.S. have not grown or organized, Golash said. He cJes.
cribed the "struggle" of the
Weathermen as lasting "as long
as it takes a bomb•to go oft'."
"About all the Weathermen
have accomplished," he
charged, is to pve the national
leadership a "handy excuse to
use against all radicals."
SD.S., on the other band
&lt;and despite the death notices
in the New York Tima, Newsweelr. and Time) , is viewed as
gaining ground with thooe who
feel the student-worker alliance
is the key to winning the battle
~t the preaent leadersliip
v~~· society.

worJ'::hinsai~~~s=fta~

"great idea" that S.O.S. will be
marching in their support.
He sees the plans for the Detroit action -which · S.O.S.
hopes will include high school
students also-as having tremendous potential for solidifying the student-worker allisnoo.
"We can't depend on the
Goodells and the McGovems,"
Golash said. ''We have to organize the peop!e" to win the
anti-war struggle and to stop
" the screwing'' being given to
workers around the world by
the ''big businessmen, bankers
and lawyers" who control society.

ColumtiaMwms
Noted Alumnus
A - . i a l S&lt;'rvioo for Richard Hofstadter, a University
alumnus whom the New Yorlr. ·
Ti.ma deMlribed as "one of the
~historians of American
dairs, will be beld at 3 p.m.
tomorrow at the Columbia Uni\Wtlity chapel in New York
City.
Dr. Hofstadter, 54, who died
ol leukemia 'in New York last
Aatu ... ov, was twice a Pulitzer
-.-~ TM ARe of
~orm (1965) and Anti-l..ullectualiom in American Life
(1.964).

~29,1!170

~

2

.

He had taught at Columbia

since' 1946, serving as~
Clinton Profeaaor or
·
History since 1959.
· Of Dr. Hofstadter's days at
U/8, his Ti.ma obituary said,
.. (his ) interest in American hislo&lt;y was awabDed by reolll.iDi
Charles and Mary Beard'a TM
RiM of Americoli CioilizrltWa
while be was an undoqnoduate
at the University ol Buftalo. He
.... almost detoured ,._ hislo&lt;y, ·however, by his faa-'s
~ that he- study law.
But.be dropped out after a year
in favor 01 ,.aduate histo&lt;y
atudy at Cc!lumbia, from wbidt
he got an lof.A. in 1938 and a
Pb.D. in 1942."
.

NeW CoUncil

New U/B Kidney Center to Provide.
Treatment, Educatioh and Research
The University's MW · Kidney Disease Center, established
under a preliminary three-year
$100,000 grant to the School ol
Medicine by the New Yqrk
State Kidney Disease Institute,
further expands U/ B's commitment to Westem New York
health care by providing both
patient treatment and a focus
for education and researCh.
According to Dr. Mitcllell L
Rubin, director of the Center,
patients with kidney disease or
sw:~ected kidney disease will
be studied and treated, a oonsultation aervioo will be provided to physicians, and a program of Gducation for medical
students, hospital staff members and area physicians will
seek to increase the number of
speCialists caring for kidney
patients.
Many patients, particularly
in childhood, are overlooked by
the usual methods of urinalysis
and, th~ reooive treatment too
late in the course of the di·
sease, Dr. Rubin said. A screening program, Mo. detect early
and imsUspeCied mfection and
other forms of kidney disease,
is also planned as part of the
Center's future effort. This will
encompass broad, collaborative
efforts with community facilities.
A d m i - T..m

Administrative headquarters
for .the Center ,will be at the
Children's Hospital, under the
direction of Dr. Rubin, profesSor of pediatrics, and an administrative commi t tee of Drs.
Evan Calkins, professor and
chairman of the DeP,Srlment or
Medicine, Felix Mtlgrom, Profeasor and chairman of the Department of Microbiology, Robert McGJuskey, professor and
chtiirman of the Department of
Pathology, John Boylan, profeasor or medicine and physiology, and James Brennan, professor or pathology.
"Our MGdical School," Dr.
Rubin says, "was among several selected throughout the
State for such a oonter because
its faculty are qualified in both
clinical and investigative aspects of kidney diseases." He
pointed out that faculty in the
fields of pediatrics, medicine,
pathology and microbiology
are already involvGd in projects covering the causes and
management or these diseases.
Center activities will focus at
specialized clinics at Children's, Meyer Memorial and
Bulfalo General hospitals and
at research laboratories in the
participating Medical SchOo
departments. Bulfalo General's
Pathology Departinent will also
be the site of a research laboratory.
"Team e(fort," said Dr. Rubin, " is, perhaps, the best way
to describe the approach. The
Center will ~ing IDJ!ether specialists from the vanous departments of the Medical School,
the basic icientists and clinicians who care lor both children and adults. It will provide
a Jona-range approach to renal
dlaeo.ae to bDver the lif_.. o(
the patient, as .well as an opportunity to 1aam more about
the ·en- and methods of

--L"

"We will collaborate with
tt... divWaao o1 the Uni-oity when auch etuillea are unfunds ' become
col aboratlve pro....... with eWI ott.. dMolana
will be encourqed," Dr. Rubin
aaid. 'Ibere will be cooperalion
with the RetPanal Medical Pro.
pam ol W..-., N- York

~and, r.

:: ~=-~~u:

Formed In

MedSciwol

detecting the exact anatomical-

-·

of community education, po&lt;otgraduate seminars for health
professionals, and !mining for
young physicians.
ltiahl Tlma
The time, Dr. Rubin feels, is
right for estabjishing the Center. Development of new instruments, such as the electron miCI'OflCOPe, has aided greatly in

terations in the kidney during
the diseaae state..
. Also, newer laboratory/ pro-.
i:edures involving t.eclmiques of
immunology. offer insight into
the previously mysterious
causes ol kidney diseases, Dr.
Rubin said. Improvement in
techniques . of dialysis and kidney transplantation for both
adults and children have permitted many suffering from advanced failure of kidney function to live longer. And the
dietary management of patients
with advanced kidneY · diseaae
is now· better understood, adding to their comfort and aurvival. Finally, use of . _ drugs
for disease control has also
helped to 'brighten the hopelessness of the past, Dr. Rubin
said.
.
Collaborative research efforts
or the various disciplines of
this Center and. other reBional
renters acroes the State should
further improve the · situation,
Dr. Rubin feels.

VetJ:erRRj'nr&gt;fs
T
L.:~n T,J~~
LJIUU
.Ll.U::U

.l\.1

As WOt Necessary'Here
The Student Association propo6al that the Uf B administration establish a pattern of col-

lective bargaining with students has been rejected by
President Robert L. Ketter as
"not necessary" and, perhaps,
"inappropriate."
The response came in a letter sent Thursday to Mark
Huddleston, president of 'the
Student Association.
Ketter argued that many of
the goals of the Student Association's proposal "can be accompli.sbecrin ways other than
through formal unions and collective bargaining." He pinpointed- the iasues as "movement toward the creation of a
broadly-based and widely..,coopted student representative
orgaDization, an exchange of
views on issues and aolutions,
and some effective devioo for
having student views translated
into institutional policy."
He also noted that the Taylor Le.w "deals with relations
between employees and em·
ployer-and students do not
fall into either of these categories."
Agreeing with Mr. Huddleston that "the basic question is
that of determining the appro-

f~s~~~fv:!..~~~

versity decision-making,'' Ketter said, ''I would be more than
willing to sit down and review
the respective roles of faculty,
students, staff and administration within the University."
. ElQ&gt;reasing the hope that "we
can develop an effective, democratic and .repreaentative organization which can BpMk for
our students." Ketter said he
would "enthusiastically welcome any initiative from the
stuaant body toward thlo end."
He added thAt the - u y appointed '1'-* FOl'CII on Uni-

1111'1\ -AICD
'""' a-nco ~ of ""'
local u-.- ...__
(IUI'A) II - , .
. . . - .. Tho

•-Of.,_,_

~ w11 Mar·
lnp ... . - . . . . . . - . . from

lila ~ ......-.....

In ...

to hll ~ ~·· ...,art wtn ba Mnt ..,
Robart L _ , aa
1D hll a pp a ( n I ad llai&amp;Oii,

-

=--··
m -

-&lt;

with the Weo.tem N- York ~M·=·~~
Chapter of ~ !'latlonal KidMix, Exte~alon 5447.
ney ll'oundation m iiiiJ)I'Oir8JIIS . - - - - - - - - ' - - -

~"d:tythis~

''will con-

Ketter said he would be
''happy ·to talk" about any issues or problems with "any
group of students."
"Such discuss•"ons," be 881.d,
''need not and should. not wait
upon the· creation of a representative s~t
altbOugli the exiBtehoo of' such an
agency would rreatly facilitate
both the discussion and soli'tion of our couimon problems."
Just because the University
cannot use collective bargaining devices, he con c I u de d ,
"should in no way obstruct our
efforts to work out alternative
and possibly even more fruitfuJ mechanisms and proced-

-."!!CY.

ures."

~ prajpu, is

representative have one vote.
The pro-tem ollicers are: Dr.
William Chardack, president;

Dr. James Nolan, vtce presi·
dent; and Dr.. S. M o u·c h.l y

Small, secretary. · •
A Bylaws Conin\\ttee of . the
Council has been ~iituted
- to ,&lt;leVlllojr "liitt..llStiOO. for a
lll''erliint bOdy for die. Medical
· School.
· · ·
'Ibe 70 representatives and
alternates on the Faculty ('.oun.
cil are :
Anatomy-{)liwr P . .Jo-. Jo·
oepb C. Lee, J?,. - l l Hayes• :
Anuthuwlo1y - Kenneth A.
Kol.ly, ~rt .J. Schueler, .John

U!uw~~B~Elli'~~~ ~:

L. Bunoell, Norman a.-in.
David G. Greene, Murray S.

The Continuing Education
Division will be offerlnJ a pilot
program during the sprllll semester for. about 26 adults who
want to go~ colleee;-or think
they would like to gJve college
a try·
Called the "Part-Time Mature Student Pilot Prosram," it
began this - . with 25
enrolled
Adulb; aooepted will take one
or two cour&amp;es for one _,_ter
in Millard Fillmore Collece to
get an indication ol their aliility to ~ regular college
counoesSome. limi'ted "---~- •
.
uuaocuu 88111&amp;tanoe will be available for thoee
who could not otherwise afford
to enter college. Preference
will be given to applicants who
have no previous college train· inf: Adulta who have attended
college, but not within the last
three yeara, are.aJ.so eligible.
Studenta who &amp;pply lor the
procram muat meet nonna1 admlasioaa lltandanls ·far Millard

Tbe

11J[;:· dean of the Medical

~ ~.'1:~io~

~':r~-~,:..,~p:,;

Try f"'-11
\..AJllege

Flllmcn.

0

Moran, J a c It Kli.ogmaa. • ; Bio-

Mature Students

f"'-\....tll1

There is a new "faculty
VC&gt;We" in the School of Medi~ Faculty Council of 54
elected repn!81!11tatives ol all 16
basic science and clinical departments, plus 16 alternates.
B o t h President Robert L.
Ketter a n d Dean· LeRoy A.
P1a:h - . that this new Faculty Council is the first truly
democratic poup to represent
the entire Medical faculty, the
School says, 'Ibe OODCll!pt has
the unaniinilus aupport of the
Executive Committee,- of the
·
Medical School. '
Dean PeSch said, ''This ·is
an important mileatOne in the
development of the School and
its. governance. It is my intention to bring before the Council
a wide spectrum· of issues for
advioo and action. It is my
hope t h a t, working together,
we can move the School forward toward cominon goals and
purpolies, which re8ect the urgent needs of the School and
the community it serves."
The major functioos of the
Faculty Council are to participate in the deliberative and
policy-making proce&amp;oes of tbe
Medical School and University
and to promote more ellicient
communications be-.. facul .
ty, students, and administrative

' Howlancl, .JaiDea P . Nolan, .1!!111""

F. Phillips, Martin E . P-laut,
Albert C. R e kate, .J. David

Scbnau• .. ·

.

.M~J~~~ .J~' ~

~~~~N~,2:

olD~&gt;' - Donald L. Ebraueich.
Beman! H. Smith. William R.
Kinkel•; 06otd~ &amp; G:yrteCOlol&gt;'
-Carmela 8 . A~ . Vincent
.J. Capraro, David H. N'Jchola.

Morrio Unher, Robert .J. Patter·

;:.:;..,ro~ J"cm!'-~:;

Pediotria- .Jelm CortDer, .John
Dower, Beman! Eiombarc, MarMacGillivray, ~- Mar-

Curet

eob!;,P")l",..=:-=

8 . rucP; p e te r JC: a-e.•;
Phyoio11';fy-Leoa Falhi. Olarleo
Paanelli. Werner K. Noell•.
Poydaiiwy - .Jimmie HGIIaDd.
.John Robin a~ n, !!- Moucbly
Small, No1m811 ~ .J~
man. ZebuloG Tailltor".i..
,.,.......,erald P. K,aba. water .
M=, Vlldo! ~ Pa!'aro,
~....,.,_~
Matta, Harry A. Sala, -Midlol
A. .I brahim•;. s..._,.......oa;r !1AilADo, William M. ~

f

~t~l'D.w~....:=
.Jr.WWi11Ma .J. 8i8a·

sup- G.

=-trn,v.::':::-':"'"~ ~:!i-.,~

alo, Manl17 N.
Foundation, with the
- 0 Altemate
alion ol the ' Otrice ol S:Ct - - - - . , . . . - - - -

Affalra.
.....
Furtller
- T o Qat l t c:iaticilio and~ "PJ'li- P~~PORT MD/OR INFORMA·
"*'t ""''*tB ahouJd be~ TION ON TRAYELo
eel to tbe Adult MviMnmlt
. :~"':.tbllc
.....:'':c.u.

~ber~~;IIi~

the

oa:-

' Rm. 323, Ext. 38)2, 3, 4

�~

Oclol&gt;er 29, 1970

Whats With U/B Football? ·Wheres.It .Headed?
By e'l'EVE LIPMAN
It was ten years ago that the
- U/B Football Bulls stepped into the realm of inajor, or University Division, football. Tbe
Bulla, playing against CQllege
Division competition bad post.
ed two straight S-1 reoords and
bad IWn a Limbert Trophy in

But a coach has to work with
the _talen~ at haiid, 'and this·
year's players.aren't producing.
"Good errorless ball" is what
Deming looks lor, and isn't get.
ting.
Besides, as Dr. Fritz pointed.
out, ..Ibe boys doo't like playing before small crowds" and

3

-

FotMJmzys
Split as usual by con~.

~it:=&amp;=
of opinion
Friday. Tbe body
Oil

voted 11 to 5 to a for the res;,Dation ol Deniel Murray, actinJ _vice president for -anic
alJairs, because of his decision
to limit CoJ1eae A's claas cards.
Tbe dinactor ol the Assembly,
Konrad von Moltlr.e, aaid that
be rould not defend this proand that be would mereit to the administra-

mBr.:c;:tb.llro~~;.:, ~ =b.!:":'mru"'i'~ a~

rv"'!
Jn:-

- Bob Deming, 'lliB'~ · head
football CO!Ict&gt;. thinks the proiP'am might be on the W&amp;y back.
0

·n.e bulk of the Depsrtment's
fees were under·
revenue, about $250,000, 11Q1De8 dent athletic
scrutiny. Tbe administra·
from mandatory student ath- going
tion then rouldn't risk schedul"I wouldn't be here if I didn't letic fees. That money l"'ds a iilg top rompetition lor the
think we're improving," be said. minute-to-minute existence, Bulls, if there would be no
"We were lucky for a while, but since a student referendum money to bring in those teams.
the breaks have finally caught rould change or eliminate it.
The scbedule for the :&gt;ext few
up to us. Our ·bad season is
How will the Department yesrs is being made now, and
showing us what our weak- continue or improve its opera- at this late date can't include
nesaes are."
!ions if anything happens to the strong opponents wanted.
What are weak points of the student fees?
Tbe most obvious draw, of
team and of the entire athletic
''We're just going to have to
program here?
look for other sources of revef::OC
·First of all there is personnel. - nue," Dr! Fritz answered. Tbese feels tbey Will have one next
''We can't get the blue-chip other sources might include yesr. Nine of 11 starters on deplayers right oft the bat," Dem- Day Camps, such as the foot. fense will return, but only about
- mg complained. "'There "lin! so ball staff held last yesr, vend· lour on offense. (Tbe roaches
many other schools·· for them ing machlne revenue (which aren't sure yet aOOut a few
.
'" '·to'·_go ·td."'=" •
. •- ·-- - .
• fJmdll -the Uriivi!l;sitY o(Massa. .players.)
This lOBS on offense will have
· ··- MiQIY,' .P,ri&gt;8\&gt;ectj,v e !Jthletes ... ~~tts· .athlehcr.rogram) ,
to be filled largely by -fresh.
- Ni\-e' lWlM')I(!8.red ·;.w&amp;y b 're- - aiid f~cility rentsl ees.
·parts of ti0ul&gt;le8. Dr.·
One solution to bigger auwds men, and this year's freshman
Fritz, athletic -director, painted and enlarged support would be
out that" "some bois who had to scbedl,l)e more attractive upsigned to rome bere changed ponents. But football schedules tbeir minds wben they beard are made seven to ten yesrs in
about the troubles last spring, advance, and the schedules lor
and some motbers wouldn't let the next lew years were drawn
their BOnB · ~ here."
up in the mid-si.xti-:s, when stuJohn Case, U / B English student and former treasurer of
the Graduate ·Student Association, pleaded innooent on October 22 to Erie County charges
of theft of $15,883 in GSA
funds during his term of offiCe.
Case, wbo was expelled from
oftice and accused of mishand·
A pilot program wliich may College of Forestry at Syra- ling funds last spring by the
result ih a · Faculty Resource cuse, and Alfred .Technical In- GSA Council, was released on
Data Bureau· lor the entire - stitute. Rationale for the selec- $5,000 bail pending trial, by
State UniversitY system is cur- tion of the initial survey of County Judge Frank R. Bayrently being reeeard1ed by the these schools involved ronsider- ger. A date for the trial has not ·
U/ B Council on International ation of both the type of insti- l&gt;ee!:ulet.
tution and its location.
Studies.
The indictment of Case by
Aalonling to Dean Fred M .
"The need for a Faculty Re- the holdover March Grand
Burke of International Studies, souroe Data Bureau within the Jury investigating U/B campus
the aim is to establish by some- SUNY system is beroming in- disorderll and related matters
time in 1971 a central .-.uroe creasingly apparent," the Inter- includes three rounts of grand
file covering all faculty on the national Studies Council says. laroeny in the -.and degree,
70 State C81DJ'UIII!6- 1be file, "In terms of faculty reaources, ten counts in the third degree,
which will ~ly be located SUNY possesses one of tbe and one count of _petit Jaroeny.
in Albany, would inventory greatest potentials of any ec:u- Tbe 14 counts allege the foJ.
everyone, but would mainly be cational institution in tbe lowing unauthorized payments
ClODCIII'IIed with people with in- world. Yet, attempts to locate of GSA funds, which are drawn
ternational interests. It would individual faculty for partici. from mandatory graduate stube the first .-.urce of its kind pation in tranonational pro- dent fees:
in a .multicampus university ~ the de\oelopment of ideas,
• $3,200 to William Yates,
system.
or the esd&gt;ange of knowledge identified as manager of the
W'- in operation, the 'Bu- and views, are, at present, People's Bookstore.
reau will be able to "locate ~~ an informal or ad
• $2,000 to R. L Mead lor .
peraonnel" f~ opecialized
purchase of mm production
.,.,..... .,..! -.cit
~
Tbe ~for the ini· equipment.
am-y and
tial' pilot project is being de• $3,600 to the Graduate
S t u d e n t Media Club which
)JIOiflllDI, etc. It would
. . . be able to provide inter- - =.,leto n:f=~a~hi~ aims "to provide for the Buflllltianal or1aniutions with _ . , ) types: 1) peraonal data, falo area student community an
.....,. ol Individual faculty including experience abroad; alternale means of aoqwring
with opecialtieo in a·reaa in · 2) """"'of academic expertiae radical information and litera·
wblda they ... in-.ted.
and related capabilities; 3) in- ture, as well as an outlet lor
Under the dlrectiob ol Dr. dicators of professional and providing inexpensive m e d ~a
comMmy 8tapl•on, opecia)ist in peraonal prefereD&lt;:e oonoeming facilities to campus
dodewlopmeialfWIIIom-tal. education, the apecilied transnational projects; munity ~ orpnizations."
• $375 to Sapenllon Real
pilat .......,.~ma~wa ~ and 4 ) a .Jist of, tbe major
acbolars, auu-itie&amp;, and books Estate for rental for, the Peoconaidared'I&gt;Y the faculty mem- pJe'a Print' Sbap aDil the Peofaculty at UtB. ~ umv.. bet quaied to be the bast in Ple'• Boobtore on Main Sb'eet..
• $400 to Michael Hawkins
aity C6llep at BUira,lo, the his f!8k1.

=·

~ult.ebe

~~

1-farry:

team is probably the best in
the school's history.
Back to Saturday's game,
Holy Cross' reoord is 0-6, tbe
only team the Bulls lace this
yesr with a reoord worse than
theirs. Holy Cross' entire team
was felled by a bepstitis out.
break last fall, and their loot.
ball program hasn't rerovered.
Since 1968, the Crusaders have
lost ten games in a row.
It's too late lor the Bulls to
finish with a winning rerord.
But if the Bulls play good
ball Saturdsy, as they did tbe
second half of last season, then
Deming's faith in them will be
justified. If not, hand them a
blindfold, and hope they go
quietly.

John Case Pleads Innorent

To GSATheft Allegations

Pilot Study Underway
For SUNY
Data Bureau
.

:::'.:aF8118ist-

ana

a.o~.:tr'!!::;.f~:

Colkges

Ask

Resignatiori

Bulls were ready lor the step- age of 2,1169 students ssw the
up. -:
Bulls' first lour home ~ an
Now, ten yesrs lau;r, the improvement over last year's
Bulla are playing as if they 1,872; but hardly in the range
plan tb return to scheduling of mosf major rol~ges.
schoola like Carnegie Tech and
A good crowd for the televiI..ehigh. 'I'be4 1-6 record as they sion cameras on Saturday, say
prepere to host Holy Cross in 10,000, would be an improvea televised game Saturdsy is ment, but it is not too likely.
the worst at this point in any An indication of that was shown
&amp;e880il sinoe 1954. 'That yesr
by Ed Brown, a student wbo
the Bulla lost their first six 'tried to organize a card section
~ and 6nisbed 2-7. Tbey
lor the game. He needed -300
lost that year to powers like people. Thirty signed-pp.
Hobart (45-{1) and Brandeis
Tbe Athletic Department's
(52-20). Tbe Bulls' worst rec- financial situation is none too
ord as a University Division good, either. Tbe Department
team was 4-6 in 1960 wben they operates on an annual budget
played Army and Vjrginia Mill- of about $350,000. Many larJ.e
tsry Institute.
schools have budll"ts of $1 milWhy have 'll/ B's football for- lion, and Dr. Fr1tz points out
· =~en,and~~they ~t!,=~~ $3 million are _

=

..

lor reimbursement lor a speaker from the Mideast.
• $1,000 to mM Corpora·
tion.
• $1,000 to Bulfalo Photo
Material Co.
• $300 to Charles Powrie,
identified as asaocisted with
Buffalo Educational Media and
the People's Print Shop.
• $1,000 to ''Young Black
People" and Leon Phipps ( wbo
.died .-.tJy).
• $11)0 to Radical Tbealle
Repertory.
• $1,600 to mM Corporation.
• $275 to John Watson,
former ..,pk&gt;yee· of tbe People'o I Jnt Shop,
• ~ to SlioppU., Newc in
oonnection with the printing of
an edition of Cold St«l, a radical publication.
• $40 _to Leon Phipps.

Fa.rka$-Set For _
~Lectures
Dr. Adalbeit Farkas, piOMer
in the chemistry of ortlw&gt;parahydrogen and deuterium and
developer of many catalytic
prOcesses, will be on camPu&amp; as
distiioguished visiting lecturer
in catslysis during the week of
November 9.
His visit through the Department of Cbemica1 Encineering
is being 8pODSOred jointly by
the American Institute of

~~·.;~,::t~

Dr. Farkas will~ three
f..-1 lectures durinttbe ......
MCIIIda,y~t
4 .m. in 5 .Acbeaon and on
and Thunda,y at 4 p.m. in l
Pubtr.
011

Tbe demand for resiplation,
of the academic vice president
was part of a larger .-.Iution
~ by Elliot Smith froin
New College of Modem Education. Tbe entire ~ was:
''Wbereas the uni.wmty Col·
lege Curriculum Cominittee in
May '70 gave Colleae A - the
right to aelf-detennination roncerning both the process and
rontent of CA 401-402, 8nd
wbereas these rights of aelf-&lt;16termination were violated by
Daniel Murray, acting vice
president lor academic affairs,
by limiting the number of cl.iss
cards in the fall of 1970 to 600
snd whereas Daniel Murray refused to satisfactorily explain
this violation to the Collegiate
Assembly and seek redress of
this grievanoe through the normal academic channels of tbe
University; be -it tberefore resolved that the Collegiate Assembly : ( 1) re-aftirm the right
of tbe Collegiste Assembly to
determine its own rourse procedures and rontent in acrordance with the SUNY regula.
-lions and ( 2) furthermore demand the immediste resignation of Daniel Murray as act.
:.?am.~ president for academic
Smith, in speaking for his
motion, said. "People-tell us to
go through the proper channels, and so we follow tbe
proper channels and get
screwed."
During the previous week's
meeting, the Assembly had
passed a motion asking Dr.
Murray to release the class
cards and to explain his actions
to the Asaembly at the next
mee~. He was not present-at
the Friday meeting, however,
with von Moltke explaining
that be was out of town. •
Dr. Murray is currently refusing to issue more than the
600 cards that were given to
College A prior to registration.
Rose Kaplan, a College A staff
member, ssys that an additional 97 students need claas cards.
Before -Murray releases the
cards, von Moltke claimS, the
academic vice president wants
further information about the
Collep A projects and a cJar.
ificatijlll, of the faculty..,g,dent
ratio in the c1aas.
In other actioba, the Assembly refused ~ tbe student strike
by the Stu·
dent AMociation a Fall Mobilization Committee for w...mda,y through Saturday of this
week. Tbe motion, failing to
pa811 in a 7 to 10 vote, ststed,
'"Ibe Collegiate Aaaembly endorses the strike and urges
units to participate to the extent that they ase fit."
mLL WAITING
As the 111oport11r -nt to press,
Unlwrslty o111clals _,.. still ..,.It·
Ina • response .from SUite Univer·
slty on whether the $10,000
allocated by the Student Associa·
tlon for a boll fund vlolotes new
suldellnes established -by the
Uniwrslty Board of r...- for
the use of - . . t funds on all
69 State ""mpusn. John Chllrtes,
vice -ident of the Student Associatlon, sold the IIJ'OUP will con ·

s-

t.st a ._ttve l'Unns.

�..
.Jt'BCUlty Coalition Feels

Smates ~- Improved

Compromise Plan Spus Senate IJebG!e
A compromise plan to change would also insure that such tactics as packed meetings, parlia- !n'd':!r:n'~~=~-reports
the propoeed Senate Bylaws mentary maneuvers or emotionThe "full and ·fair debate"
amendment, which was drafted al appeals could not be used section of the compromise proby a Coalition of h'berals, mod- to 'steal' a decision away from posal was amended by Mac
Hull, and tben approved. The
erates and otbe·:s, drew most of """' will of 'tbe majority."
tbe attention at last Thursdfly's lUll Bollot
approved version specifies that
The heart of its proposal, privileges of the floor and· of
Faculty Senate meeting.
The Senate meets' again on the group said, was the move speaking on the floor shall be
Wedneeday, November 4, at to alter Section 10 of tbe pro- extended to voting faculty who
3:00 p.m. in 5 Acbeaon to con- , _ j Bylaws to provide for a are not members of tbe repietinue its consideration of the ,;g;~~e mail ballot" for use sentative Senate ·"at any anrevised BylaWII which would, on important policy questions, nounosd r e g u I a r or special
essentially, establish a repre- rather than the simple. referen- meeting upon recognition by
sentative legislative body to re- dum as proposed by Dr. Donald tbe Chairman of the Senate."
place the present town.meeting W. Rennie's Bylaws Commit- Others may obtain tbe same
deliberstive · format. A motion tee.
privileges by written request to
The mail ballot proposal- tbe Chairman of the Senate or
to submit the revised Bylaws
package to a mail 'ballot is ex- su)jsequently approved by the by resolution of the Senate at
pected at that time.
Senate---&lt;:an be summarized as any meeting.
Last week's five-point com- follows :
Executlvo Committee
a ) In the' course of normal
promise was adopted in part
The Esecutive Committee
and amended in other sections, deliberations, t h e representa- memb!!rship plan as suggested
but at least served as a medium tive Senate may choose to pre- by the compromise was also
for discuSsing "'\d making de- sent a ~tion to tbe voting adopted - with one m i nor
cisions on: m a 11 ballot and faculty·on a mail balloL Twen- amendment. The approved proreferendum proosdures; Senate ty-five per cent or more of posal for the Executive Comdebate; constitution of the Ex- Senate merilbers present at a mittee includes: a ) representsecutive Committee; the inclus- meeting may mandftte a mail tives elected by and from tM
ion of administrators in a rep- ballot, on which there shall Senate representatives of inresentative S e n a t e, and the appear also an alternative jeSO- dividual faculties in proportion
"buHet system" for electing lution-if that alternative has to faculty -6ize (except that no
representatives.
the support of more than 25 per faculty shall have fewer than
A proposal from tbe floor -cent of Senators presenL Such one nor more than three) ; b )
settled tbe issue of how reP.. an alternative sball be limited one · representative elected by
resentatives will be apportioned · to the ~era! issue of the . and from the Senate represenamong various faculties - a proposition approved for the tatives of the library staff; c )
point on which the group au- mail ballot by the majority.
tbe four SUNY senators and
b ) A referendum (yes or no d ) the officers of the Senate.
thoring the compromise could
not agree, according to member vote on a proposition adopted
Automatic inclusion in the
by a Senate majority) is man- representative Senate of certain
Lester W. Milbrath.
Others on tbe compromise dilled when requested by 25 high administrators was opposper cent or more of those pres- ed by the compromise plan as
group - which included
bers of both the Committee for ent at a meeting or when pe- '.not consonant with our aspiraa University and tbe Faculty- ' titioned by five per cent of tbe · tiona for genuine faculty govStaff Caucus- were Leo voting faculty within 20 dftys ernance." The Senate agreed
Loubere, Ira Cohen, · Herman of notification of a Senate ac- and struck lines 157 through
Schwartz, Paul Kurtz. Michael tion.
162 of the proposed Bylaws.
c) The mail ballot will 'be Administrative
Gort; John l ! ubbard, Calvin
oflioers will,-&lt;&gt;!Ritchie and C&lt;onstantine Yera- conducted witliin 15 dftys by
be eligible for election
caris.' Newton Garver. endorsed tbe Standing Committee on course,
to
the
Senate
in
same manthe compromise um principle.u Elections; an affirmative vote ner as any other the
member of the
'The group said it hoped "to of tbe majonty of votes cast is
voting
faculty.
enhance tranquility and cobes- necessaJY to approve a mail
·ion within the faculty" by en- ballot or referendum question; OPTbeposedcotbemprobullmiseet sgroystemup "f"or
and all matters may be submitted to eitbe&lt;- process, except electing senators within faculAfter defense of that
and fair ~ ~f all im- questions of order -and privi- ties.
portant iss.ues . : . and which lege, and motions to adjourn, measure by Bylaws Chairman
Rennie, however, tbe Senate
voted to retain tbe bullet syscertain controversial portions of

mem-

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pubMtlhM ...._
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3-U.S M ... St., Bali.SO,

bt Room 2U,

250 Wa.,p... A--

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TH.:oot'v~MO
.._.....,_
Cl.DUTIU
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&lt;:'~'::! ~: 1 - . ~ ~ Clwrr7f

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PIIOf'OOilAftll': , . , . . £.
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ties may c !J.S t for just one
candidllle a number of votes
equivalent to t h a t faculty's
total representation, rather than
casting one vote for each of
tbe positions to be filled).
'The~ Bylaws section

three important proaU~
for a' rep~v"o
•~
sentative Senate. Elected reP.:
resentatives of tbe faculty will
be charged with the careful de~tiona necessary for tbe
!2!!"ulation .of University poli(a) It

~

of the' ~n!ilen- . (b) It allows for the full
voting faculty to have the fmal
ommendation - was chanied, say, if it 80 wishes, on all questhrough an ilpprovecUioor mo- tiona conosming University
tion, to provide for a "cme man- policies by. means of moil bal· one vole" or '-&lt;! count ratio· IDt and re/erendtl proosclures.
alloc:8tion of representatives to
(c) It allows for an annual
each faculty. In the initial plan, town mufill6 of the full voting
S.
this apportionment was to be ~faculty, ancf 'it PI'OVid!!s that
'-1 70 per Oiint upon faculty speciia) meetings of theiUU vot..
bead count and 30 per osnt ing faculty may be convened,
upon student contact hours for if requested by 5 per osnt of
each ,faculty.
' '
the faculty.
.
on the

.aa.aw
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.

=

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GREPORTER,

We believe that we are mov'The Faculty Senate has debated the proj&gt;ooal for a repre- ing well along toward a , Senate
sentative Senate for two ses- we all can live with. We urge
sions of three and one-ball and -you to come k&gt; the lle%t Facfour hours eedL 'The proposal ully Senate meeting, W e'dneshas been amended several times dtly, November 4, 3:00 p.m.,
to improve iL Indeed, at the Acheson 5, 80 that we may conlast meeting of the Senate sev- sider any added amendments
eral compromise provi9!ons and move to a final vote on the
were a d o p t e d and reoe1ved revised Bylaws as amended.
Lester Milbrath
wide supporL Among the im- Paul Kurtz
Leo Loubere
portant new features that have Michael Gort
Calvin Ritchie Newton Garver
been added are:
John Hubbard Ira Cohen
(1 ) The provision for a mail
Constantine
Herman
ballot and referendtl. H 25 per
Yeracaria
Schwartz.
cent of the members of the representative Senate or,5 per cent
of the faculty wish, they may
request that any question be
put to the entire faculty fOI" a
vote in a referendum. In addition, if 25 per cent of the memFour U/B profesaors-memt:1:TTD't..a.ror\TNTS bers of the fiCtion group
-y lDVV J. Vl
CAUSE- charged Mondfty
that Niagara Mohawk Power
Tho Repo&lt;ter ' - on this Corpor~~tion is one of the major
to provide • forum for the Ox· polluters on the Niag~~m Fronchonp of on • vo~ tier and challenged ..,me of the
:'o::::.::~.'"::' ~ company's recent statements.
position popers oncl !etten "
Speaking in Norton Hall at
. _ pennlb.
a press conference . Cfl!Hled buy
CAUSE, Dr. John A. owe ,
assistant professor df cbemiCII!
hers of the representative Sen- engineering and mentor of Ecol·
ate .., request, a mail ballot ogy College. said that with tbe
which PJ:'e!!ellls alternative pol- temperature inversion over tbe
icies may be put to the voting Niagara Frontier early this
faculty. Thus, the new Bylaws week, Niag~~m Mohawk's sulhave liberalized proosdures for phur dioxide emission could
conducting referendft and mail have been serious.
ballots.
He said, under the condi(2) E:u:lusi.on of nan-teach., tiona, tbe power company could
ing profeSBi.onal staff and ad- saturate a 100-aquare-mile area
mmistrak&gt;rs. The amended By- with concentrations of aulphur
Jaws now exclude repre;enta-· dioxide heavy enough to in·
tives from tlie non-teaching pro- crease the death rate up to 20
fessional staff (except the li- per cent.
·
brarians, who are considered
Dr. Howell, along with Dr.
faculty ) and the administra- Kenneth Spring and Dr. Robtion (except .for ~president). ert Reeyes, ·boi9-!!( UJ B's DeAccordingly, tbe representative paitmelit of Pb)!J!U&gt;lQgy • and
Senate has' been transformed Cliarles ' Thomas;':' riisearch diinto facully Senate made up rector of the Western New York
e:rclusively of faculty members. Nuclear Resee.rch Center, fur.
Of course, administrative offi- _,!her charged Niagara Mohawk
cers who are faculty members with making misleading statehave the privilege of voting in . menta about tbe amount of
elections and may be elected mercury emitted from its Huntto the representative Senate as ley Power Station in the Town
other members of tbe faculty.
of Tonawanda.
( 3 ) The Eucutive CommitThey charged that while Nitee is more representative of agars Mohawk claimed that no
the facully . The amended By- trace of mercury pollution has
Jaws now apportion member- been detected, tbe equipment
ship on the Executive Commit- used in testing,could not detect
tee more nearly in accordance less than 10 Pflrls a million of
with the present voting mem- mercury- an unheard of level
bership of the faculties than for coal.
"
did the earlier version.
''If tbey were emitting . five
( 4 ) Head count. The prin- parts a million of mercury,"
ciP.le of "one man-one vote" said Dr. Hbwell, "that would
will now govern elections to tbe be 80 pounds a day. We're not
representative Senate. All saying it is that high. We judge
members of the faculty will be that they are only emitting one
entitled to equal vote; and rep- or two pounds a day, but we
resentation will be apportioned have no definite dftta. 'lbat is
on this basis, except that no a medium to low mercury level,
faculty will be -permitted more but it is more than cbemiCII!
than 20 representatives.
plants are allowed to emiL"
. (5) Open_ faculty J:'tU:ipa- ~ 'The group called ior Niagara
lion. .MeeSenatings of
repre- Mohawk to invest a port!on of
sentative
te are open to all its reported $50 million in exmembers of the fa~ty who will 0888 profits to ~ tn tighthave an opportunity to ~e en up on its emiasioois of merits proosedings arid to spi!ak cury aulphur dioside and flyfrom the floor, if they 80 wish. ash. 'They also called for a
The new Senate accordingly study by Erie County.

:!,v;.:¥~on~:::.

NotOn~l,

Miller&amp;;s

EDITOR:
Tbe Reporter of October 22,
1970, baa ernmeouoty reported
that I q.- 10 oe""' on an ad·
.;..,ry oommi- to review otu·
dent fee upeudi!urel. 1 .....,r did.
r!~~~ their money
- J - A. Miller, Director
Black Stwlieo Procrom
•
•
•
EDITOR'S NOTE: The illfo""'!·
t~_,..,/rom
.,· tMterr.roME~L~
~" /rom " k
-Vi«~ Alber! Sorrtit /rom
StrukAr A/1rlln .Vi« Preoident

1

~"":i:'.'t.t~·,::C ~
~.

.

-

�Oc:tub« 29, 1910

.~

Huge Lecture ClasSes Am Just Fine
If a Head .Full ofFacts Is T.he Aun

New Look Alumni Program
Seen As Key to Suwort

The U/B Alumni Asaocia- million dnllars in private gifts
at a time.
tion's "new look in purposes to oolleciate institutioos In one
si% found discussion methods
'lbe teaching profession, be and programs" was unveiled be- year. I wish. your legislat.o.s
more ellective.
ssid, cannot be subjected to the fore members of the adJninis-. would ·acrutinize, institution by
. Thus, M~cbie suggested, corporate "increased prodoo- tration, the U / B Council and institution, the breakdown of
if you are 101111 to have a lee- tivity" standard. 1n Michigan, the U / B Foundation Board of the aowces of voluntary supture, have 01111 section· of 500, be pointed out, the legislature Trustees at a meeting at Good- port to the 179 reporting •kite
colleges and universities. I parrather than five sections of 100. has tried to mandate thac un- year-10 last Thursday.
Then· uae the money saveil to less two Per cent more students . Keynote speaker for the. ses- ticularly wish that they CXJUld
be lll8de aware that the ol&amp;cial
provide instructors to lead are taught per faculty man-. ston was .John B. Full"!'-~­ · compilation
showed only si% of
Friday.
smaller discussion-group sub- hour each year, the universi- tor. ementus of al~ affam;,
the State universities and colBut, be sa¥!, if universities units of the 500-member class. ties should take ·budget cuts. Ohi? Stat;e, who
that ~ leges
of
New
York reporting
have in mind such goals as
A combinstion of lecture and This he ssid is clearly no Un•vers1ty should gear-up,
stimulatinl critical thinking, other methods, he ssid, is dethad b hid. ·
·
"organizationally" and ''poli- voluntary support amountini
creatini motivation for life-long cidedly more effective. But :."Juctioruil ~ty~ tmprove m- t!cally" to .develo~ ~ "eJfec- to $2,751,000, of which more
Students often pose barriers tive. alurnm orgaruzation . . . than half was naalized here at
leaming, chancinl student atti- again, he stressed, the most eftudes or simply fostering the fective method depends on to the uae of new teaching baste to . '!"Y sound college B,ullalo, principally, because it
a tradition of fund-raising.
loD,-nmge retention of facts-, what you want to achieve.
"!ethods, McKeacbie em~ha- moWhilne~-l1llBUm
/ Bg proJ!fBDled.'$'
_ has Ibis
connection, it was en1591
McKeacbie cited studies sized, because of the aruo.ety
. e
reoe•v
• • In
they'd better look at other
couraging
to learn that the '69forma and metboda of instruo- which tend to indicate that free and aggression prompted in 113 m voluntary suppo~ ~ear
tion.
discussions in which the in- them by new t.echniques
ago, Fullen satd, the amount '70 total reported bY the Uniat
Bullalo
is $1,957,850,
versity
Speaking at a seminar spon- structor serves as a consultant
The freshman year in col- ~&gt;Uld have ~ two or three
gain of $366,000. And yet,
sored by the Department of En- . only are superior to either leo- lege is the best time to experi- times as great 1f · · · ten years aonly
$35,826
is
listed
from the '
~-Science in 5 Acheson, tures or regular discussions in ment with new non-lecture ago, you _had ~ up tborAlumni Fund.
Dr. McKeadlie, considered to developing thinking ability and metboda, he suggested The oughly .for the ~- .
"Question: How much should
freshman, he -said, is mo;.., wil- aJ Trac;mg ~ ~tory hl~
be an ·authority on 1eaming r&amp;- in causing attitude change.
it have been? How much could
search.. preeenied an overview
A Colorado study, he ssid, ling to cope with change as part
urnm organ1ZB on ~
have been? What will U / B
of studies on college teaching, has even indicated that stu- of the transition from hi h helped develop at Ohio State, it
be reporting in ten years? How
concluding that no one teach- dent-led diecussions are super- school to college
g Fullen. noted that 30,330 OSU about
of the instituinJ method is best for all situ- ior on all counts, leading one to The new, free ;,.,lieges or uni- ;' ~mil'ftt year contributed tions inthetherest
.higher educatioaal
atiooB.
ask " if we need teachers at all." · · versities, McKeacbie ssid, have WI . 1 ~-the An~
system of the richest State of
Variety . . . _
However, he reassured the not been the subject of evalua"""I
''hiw•.
.
country in the_
"We need a variety of meth- group, in these "student.di- tive studies because most of . The eftec_:t .of
pptes, .Y1p- the richest
The answers must come
ods and ~" McKeachie rected" discussions, the instruc- the people associated with them P!es and d~tdents. on umver- world?
from beads, hearts and bands
said. And most teachers, he tor did not sllqp!y abandon the tend to be anti..,valuation.
~nw:w!:i' ~~0
like yours."
suggested, cpuld stand to in- students. The lnBtructor preHowever, the con c e p t of AI
· Associati
which has U/ B Notional Procram
crease their repertoire of class- pared "'!"lBrials for diecussi?n, b~g down the big univer- he:;:ddissemins:.'bonest and
U/ B National Alumni Asroom skills.
.
was available for consultation s1ty mto sub-grou~ or colleges f tbright
lanations" of Cam- sociation Executive Director
The Michigan psychologist on problems and worked out where students live together '::'. unresr"This Fullen ssid John M . Carter outlined the
took exception to the nasulta of me~ of ~l This and take classes I?BPther ~ ~ help ''win bad&lt; many angry organization for alumni a1fairs,
a recent Oregon study which ~even more lim!' than seem · _to .be effective, ~ BBld. alumniwhowentoffbalf-cocked emphasizing alumni activities
found that it doesn't really preparmg lectures, he satd.
At. Mtcbiga,n. St\!dent;s m such and alight have been irretriev- and clubs, the constituent alummake any dif[erence bow an in- Media
hvmg-learnmg sttuations have ably lost ..
ni association programs, and an
structor teaches . " We know
Research_ studi~ show ~t done better than o~rs who
While · "I. personally despise e:q&gt;anded program of alumni
more about teaching than we the· new lnB!'ructio'!"' .lJle!lia are rand~ m I y~~~ !'&gt; the weirdos I see running publications. The Golden Bull
get credit for," he said.
have. proven . meflective m Im· course ~echons and. hve m around," Fullen said "they are Fund for athletics, Carter ssid,
Admitting that research-to- ..prov~g learnmg, I;&gt;r. McKeach- dorms wtth persons wtth whom only a part, and a small part, has the potential to becoine as
date shows f""( statistically sig- •e SBld. But \"' suggested that they do not take classes, he re- of the 1970 student syndrome. important to the U/ B athletic
nificant dif[erences in learning the new media may not have ported.
A great deal of current college program as similar organizaamong difrerent teaching meth- been used proP&lt;;'IY.
\
disaffection comes from long tions are to those of the Big
ods and class sizes, Dr. MoEarly ~xpenments, Ill; .rewaiting lines, lousy teachers, Ten schools.
Keacbie nonetheless argued ported, Simply used ~eYlSlDn
'.l.
gargantuan classes, and the rnaNoting that the U/ B Alumni
that results of the studies seem as a means to multiply the
jor and minor vexations of im- Ass ociation has five professional staff members as oonto point in the same directions. number of ~tudents who could
personality
and
of
computerized
1
trasted to more than three times
He simply tabulated those di- ~ a straight lecture. Tel&lt;;1
assignments and grading.''
YlSton should be used where 1t
Alumni can be helpful in as many at Ohio State, Carter
rections, he said.
Class size, McKeacbie said, · has been., successful (such as
Another proposal for a new getting Ibis point across, Ful- was nonetheless optimis~c conis the oldest topic in learning !or exper~ts an~ prooed~ collegiate unit, Creative Col- len said, and they "can play a cerning a projected five-year
research with studies dating m the phystcal SCiences or m lege, is being circulated on csm- significant role in relations with program to fully develop an
back to the 1920's. Research at medicine and _dentistry), be pus by 'Bert Decker, director of the Legislature," in addition to alumni organization here.
A vital need for the Associathe University of Minnesota, he su_ggested, !lot SlmPll' to trans- Project 3000 in the Office of helping with direct fund-raisssid, was perhaps the most.,.. m1t the sw;ne old thing. If.~ou Credit-Free Programs.
ing. Alumni can also cultivate tion, he sa.ia, is a director of
· According to Decker, "After corporate and business donors,
tensive. There, results of per- are not gomg to_ use televlSlon
formanoe on standard final eJ&lt;· properly, he SBld, you uught attending the Collegiate As- he ssid.
ams overwhelmingly favored just as well use radio or dis- sembly meetings for some
Fullen scored the SUNY at- ment and loyalty . among curlarge clasees.
tribute mimeographed sheets.
months, some of us are con- titude toward alumni programs. rently-enrolled undergraduates,
More recent research on othProgrammed I earn i n g, he vinced that there is a need for "Not much of a climate has yet "tomorrow's alumni.''
AlUmni Association President
er than final exam criteria has noted, tends to bore students a college which would be much developed for State appropriasbown other results, he said.
with its step-by-step prooed- more an integration of the best tions for alumni work or fund- Robert Lipp, a Buffalo a!).
Studies at Miami of Ohio and ures. But, he ssid, it has still ideas of all SUNY departments raising. The few local university tomey, cited the IOal (ami the
Purdue indicate that large proven better than lecture or and disciplines than has yet to administrators who sense the progress that has been made
clas8es are inferior in terms of diecussion for some things-if appear.. . ."
possibilities are chi£elling on the to date ) of involving alumni
developing-criticsl thinking, the not for whole course objectives.
All faculties have ·been asked rules and improvising to get in the total_program of the Uniability to apply and retain
Computer-aided instruction to comment on a 19-page out- started. Buffalo, with its long versity. and of opening up betknowledge and motivation.
seems to have a greater poten- line of "basic assumptions" for • tradition as a private university ter channels of communication
What IODd is knowledge, Me- tial, as indicated in the only the College, before s pet: if i c is using income from endow- between University and alumni
Keacbie asked, if it is not re- three studies which have been plans are drafted.
•
·
ment and presidential discr&amp;tained, applied or uaed in a conducted. This method olfen;-,
The proposal -ass umption tionary funds.''
uaeful way?
more variety than rigid pro- paper is available for any stu- A 'Pitiful' (continud frOm- I, cot 3)
The amount of knowledge grammed learning and student dents or interested faculty .
This, Fullen ssid, is "pitiNatural Sciences and Ma!Mthat can be transmitted in one interest is maintained because
According to Decker, those ful," for ••if the educational and malics: 1,«3 total; 957 underclass is small anyway, he said. the student doesn't know what proposing Creative College be- political leaders of New York .
So we should concentrate on to expect, McKeachie ssid. In lieve that creative cooperation do not start soon to appropriate gra~u!i':SC~:..:~d...W..
curiosity, inl.en!st and skilla one experiment at Stanford, he 1illlong students is the essential meaningful money for alumni !ration: 5,290 total; 3,935 unsubject matter attitudes, not ssid, students even csme to aim of education and that Ibis relations and fund-raising, they dergradua~; 1,356 graduate,
just facts. '
·
class when ther. were ill be- aim Can be defined in "verifi- will have -denied to their fledg. Divi•ion of Uniler,aduale
It is a fallacy, McKeachie cauae they didn t want to Uliss able, scientific terms."
ling institUtions untold millions Studia (no lllllior faculty 8eld
~ lbat institutioos neo- anything. However, he ssid,
The p r 0 po sa 1 lashes out in voluntary supporl It's lil&lt;e selected, associa·t e degree,
-nly improve the quality of we don't have the aoft_wear, the against "destructive vagueness" the ICBM race with R"!"'ia. .a EPIS, . etc.) : 2,089, all Ullderunderpaduate instruction by programs, to lllBie Widespread in society and education, and hell of a lot of lead time lB graduate.
There are also 21 high IICboc!l
replacinc graduate student in- uae of this mode of instruction. holds that creative cooperation going to waste. And the sad
stnJcton with regular Jaculty.
Some instructors, McKeach- verif"Ulbly defined and arrived ·thing about this is· it is unr&amp;- aeniors taking day . , . _ .n;,o
The ecooamic8 of the situation ie noted, have incepted the at, can "create a heaven on coverable. Ironically enough, are not otherwise classified.
dictate.lbat when this happens, technique of using Ul\its of earth."
current legislat.o.s and regents
Another Admissions and Re~laaael mu~t be l!'rger an'lb-. study which have to be masEvery course must be inte- will have denied their ....,.,.._
quality" of -.ction may,1ii ~ ~ . (as ~tra!!'f1 through graled into creative education sors the means to. .keep ·New cords tabulation shows lbat
~
an mterview or qwz) before and not viO&amp;-versa, Declrer says Y~ State apace_ m the ex- there are 3,031 undergraduates
l..ec:bn ,., the student lOeB 011 to another
.
· ploding 8eld of ·higher educa- new to the University this year.
ln studies IIIM8IIling lecture uDit. Ia. 101ne - , the stuOnce -tive, the CoU...., tion, StatA.4mnnnrtNI education This includes 1,8T7 eniAirinl! di- - m.c...ian as an iDIItnlo- dent has to pass a quiz before would be noo-gradecl and """" · in particiiiar:,.~--- ·
rectly from hilh school and
tiona! lllic:bnlque, McKeachie being admitted to a lecture. ~tudent would proceed at his
Thus, he said, U/B should · 1,154 filtering with adVBDCecl
•
cited t1-. ...Uta: in termo of However he said, there is no own pace DD
rat~:- not only invest in a """'P""'-· standing.
The ..-n hilh acbool a-the trm.ru.~DD of facts (tat- reliable 'data 011
tech- ~~tar~ be -~ sive alumni _.tion, it should
hook infonnationl 16 studies niquea.
•
....,..,
•
•'!·~'"':':':: encouraae the stata to do so.
age for entering freslimen ~ the ~ to be 111•
The !JI:IIIlte&amp;t stumbling block
,d e m o c r a t 1 c pnnop"I wish," Fullen said, "that 91.38. Their me' n peramtile
perior,elcbtra-.d.u.cu.iDD; in teac::hine, Dr. _McKeacbie
stricti~" by 1he stu- evmyusnberoftheNewYorlt rani&lt; in their high' achool gradin clevelopina critical tblnkinl. said, ia not the liBchnoloiY to dents
veB.
. . General ~.Y 1IIIOUlAi l'8lld
uatiJ!I rciaMM 94.30 (up
teD JlludiM fouDd .u.cu.iDD IU· naach ·atudealll but the
er-tive Coilep would ba- the Annual lWIQ:t 'Dil Volun- from' lMt year's 88.6). Mllllll
perior, 110 IIIUdioe ra-.d the fact tbat the inatruct.or can CXIIlC8rlled 'with' providing more tary 8uppwt of Education, ~ SAT Verbal and SAT
lecture melbod· in terms of at- lisUiD to but one studeot at a education per at u dent hour ahowinl an estimated grand to- Math ........, however, were
titude and .. ~tlvation, one time cw can lf8de but one paper andlcw per dollar.
tal of one billiOD, elcbt hundred lllilblly . _ than last year.

Larra

lecture CI8saes of 500
students cw even more are just
fine few instruction if the only
~ is to a-am a student's bead
lull of facts for a flnaleum, Dr.
Wilbert J. McKeacbie, chairman, ~t of Psycho!CliY, Umversity of Michigan.
told a campus audience last

study found the lecture better,

8811,

t

2

'mJ

Decke,...Urges
Ne'W College

!"£'b':1~:ti~ !~.:

EnroJJment-

F--

r.ct,

.....k-!:,.\

u-e

!!&gt;'

�Ot:lx1Mr 29, 1910

6

A Seri~ &amp; Bitter 1Ago'
Opens Fall Th~tre ·Season
By SAUL ELKIN
A..-::i.lte~. r,..n.

The PrQgram in Theatre begins its
fall schedule this year on November
S-8 with a production of ErBO by the
, Austrian playwright-novelist ilakov
Lind under the direction of Dr. Saul
Elkin, with scenery desisned by John
Ammirati, C06Iwnes by Esther Kling,
and an original !J(lOre com~ by
John Morris. This play is an adaptation by Lind ol his own novel of the
same name, first produced in 1968 nt
the Public Theittre of the New York
Shakespean. Festival where it attracted wide and enthusiastic interest.
The theme is a serious and bitter
one. Lind is concerned with the savagery, the brutality, the insanity that
produced Nazism, and that could
aiJ8in produce a similar horror. ErBO=
the great ""therefore" of Western rationalism, and for Lind this is a condition in which the best traditions of
Western humanism produced a revolution of irrationaliam that flared from
Munich to Auschwitz.
.
Maalc and Fantasy
To express tit's impossible equation
Lind has constructed a marvelously
insane farce in a style that might be
described as a combination of the "theatre of the absurd," the Man: Broth'
ers, and the theatre of magic and pure
fantasy. The relevance of the play to
the illogic of contemporary international affaire is unmistakable. One
of the characters in the play expresses
it this way: "In this world you're
lucky to lose your reaao&amp;, cause if you

. dOn't, you get crazy!'
In this production, the first since
the play's premiere in NI!W York, designers John Ammirati and Eether
Kling have responded to the fullnessand intricacy of the plsy by combining the fantastic and the reel, preeent
day Western ·Europe and a world out
of space and time. MiSs Kling's design
concept is baeed in pert upon the
drawings and etchings of German
painter ant! caricaturist George Groez,
whose collection ol paintings reproduced in the book, Ecce Homo, r&amp;create in bright pastel shades and
grotesque figures, a pre-war Germany
already caught in the mad whirlwind
Pres:e&lt;ling the '!"'&lt;·.All of the costumes
for Ergo are constructed of white cottons painted with bright mottled colors; the actors wear coloied wigs and
hair and bright stylized makeup. An
unusual addition to the ''cast" will be
a number of life-size . dummies designed by Miss Kling, and built by
her costume construction class.
Mr. Ammirati's set for the production is, in effect, a giant constructivist
sculpture of steel and wood, scrap
metal, and !ouqd objects. The actors,
both real anft fabricated, will move up,
down, and through a network of pipes,
ladders, tunnels, platforms, swings,
and poles, while unseen musicians provide a background of music in the
style of Mozart and Richard Strauss,
electronic sound effects, and snatches
from World War II newsreels. The
effect is a vivad collage of movement,
ocilor and sound.

Shakelpear. .n Revue In Decamber

Ergo is the first of a busy sche(!ule
of events for the Program in Theatre
this fall semester. Two more public
performances are now in preparation
for presentation in December; both
are being developed in workshop
coll11les conducted by Mrs. Sally Rubin and Mr. Gordon Rogoff. Mr: Rogoff, former associate dean of the Yale
Drama School ar.d a widely published
critic, is a visiting professor with the
Department this year. Mr. Rogoff's actors, investigating the theme of uthe
rulers and the ruled" in Shakespeare.
will · produce on December 1(}.13, a
"Shakespearean revue," employing
sonnets, scenes, and characters from a
number of the plays. The approach
is particularly interesting ~ that the

Allentown Food GJllectU.:e Aims to Provide
Top Quality Nutrition at Ecorwmy Prices
and sar8aparilla root in addition not like it. When the BerloR•port• Stall
• to the common varieties of
witz's go to a retail manufac~
As the recent Senate hear- cloves, cinnamon sticks and turer they are told that the
ings disclosed, most food isn't black pepper.
food achange is too small for
quite wbat we thought it was.
What's most amazing are the a big factory to· deal with and
Our cereals are in a sorry stste prices- 35t for a dozen jumbo are told to trY a jobber. They
and our bread isn't nutritious eggs, 6t a pound . lot potatoes go to the jobber and now the
enough for rats. •
or 33~ for 2 oz. of bey leaves.
story is the opposite. ''EveryDown in Allentown, a soluAll this is possible because thing's on a trial, Ibis-time-only
tion appeared a month and a the store is operating with a basis." Marvin claims, and both
half ago in the form cf a "non- profit margin that covers only he and Kathy are getting exprofit food collective." 'The col- rent. People working there do asperated with the set-up.
lective is in the form of a food so on a volunteer basis and 'Hair' Doesn't Help
store- set up to sell "high qual- customers are to bring lheir
Besides the world ·or busiity wholesome foods."
own jars and paper bags.
ness, the Health Department
The store is located in the
Usually, the one behind the - and landlord bave ~ probback of Bpth Ends' Gallery at counter laking orders is Kathy lems. In trying to settle the
224 l...el:irigton and is called Berlowitz. She has a BA in hassles, the Berlowitz's find
"Real Food-the People's Food English but has become inter- themselv"'i caught in the rnidExchange." And just as the ested in nutrition and has "read die of bureaucratic tanglesides for a food oxchange is un- lots of books" on the subject. ''You go to one office and they
usual, so are tl " shop and its With her reading came the tell you you need this license;
proprietors -· Marvin and realizstion that most stores and !ben another office says no
Kathy Berlowitz.
weren't selling ·really whole- yml don't need that license
Hanging in the window of. some f()(Jj!. She talked to her but this one." And, of course,
the Allentown sbop are bright- husband and others about this Marvin's full curly hair and
colored wide ties and interest- and in late September the food long beard don't help in these
ing paintings and prints. The . exchange opened its doors.
4ituationa.
.
sbop itseU smells of good apple More Than Nutrition
' Whether they're combating
cider - the kind that ~·t
But the ideas liehind the food capitalism or not, the customers
have any preservatives in it and store go deeper than just good of the store are happy with
turns hard. 1n the back, behind nutrition. Kathy's husband the prices and service. Curyellow and orange streamers, is Marvin is a graduate student rently the store is serving over
the store---&lt;pllte different from in Social Foundations of Edu- 200 a week and more are coma supermarkel NowhMe are - cation · and is interested in the ing in all the time, Marvin sar.s.
there any foods on display Ol' currently-occurring IIOCial revo- Most of these are UniverBlty
bright-colored packages. In-· lution. Marvin, a M~ feels people who are not the type
stead there's a counter, some that the food ezchange is 11!1 the Berl~tz's bad hoped to
benches and a huge W&lt;JOdim keg alternative to the options being attract In the beginning, they
with a sign ·asking someone to
by today's society and wanted the store to be set up
buy it. And, usually, there is a
ol thinp to come.
as a place where the working
way the store's run is man could come and save
line of about 3-5 people waiting
to be · served. The ~ an ezample of that. It's a col- _money. T ·hey asked social
procedure is simple. you 1/0 to lective so that no one penron workers what type of food peothe counter, ask for the Item. is so completely in charge that pie in the area Meded and, as
and if they have it you can buy he bas total over the a result, atockad \)into bMns
it tlwn; if not, you place an desires of the ott- members. and herbs and- apiCI!II which
'Order that can be picked up in. Labor is al8o, divided 8JD0111 lAtin PeDIIIool use. But so far,
the various moimbera.
these Jieop1e haYM't t-1 fel\1·
two..U.
Because of ita ~t beais 1ar c:uatomen.
Amulnl Yarioty
Whether such a store can
From four refrigerator&amp; and and the fact that lt'a a coiJeo.
&amp;helves come an amazing vari- · tive, the store iii bavint trouble eDst in Bulfalo is still up in
ety ol fooclstufta. All the atan- flttina into a wodd that isn't the air. 'Ibe Berlowitz's have
dard _ . , are there- whole ba-t on u- priDcipleL "We had probloaa. But probably all
""-t and rye flour. 'lbere are are set up fo combat capital- their c:uataner11, at 1eut, are
al8o the emtic bertla and spia!s. iam," Marvin aaya, and the capi- unanimous in wanting them to
They olfer you 1fman t.laam talistic world ol buoi.- does stay - .
' By SUSAN GREENWOOD

problems of verse drama and Elizsbethan style are being confronted b)'
improvisation .and current acting techniques. Mrs. Rubin's group is working
in a similar style, however with con- ·
temporary material.
Perhaps the most encouraging news
for the Program is "the fact that the
long-awaited renovation of the u-tre
facilitil!S in Harriman Library is at
last scheduled to begin in earlY. February with completion in June. As a result, the present "improvised" conditions will give way to a flexible Theatre Studio which will allow for a
variety of arrangements of stsge and
audience space, as well as enlarged
office, shop, and rehearsal facilities. In
the meantime, tickets for ErBO may be
purchased in Norton Union.

New Representatives
For GSA ·committee
The Gmduate Student ~
cistion has releaaed both a list
of newly elected representatives to its Executive Committee and a rundown on departments which have not yet
elected representatives.
The repreeentatives are:
Kyle Steenland, American
Studies; Emil Liddell and Earl
Sidler, alternate, AnthropoiOID';
Richard Frederick and Herta
Kane, alternate, Art; E. Jameo
Seidman and Daniel Tutaa, Biochemistry; Richard Di Ciooc:io,
Biology; Jameo Felton and Pater
Lalley, alternate, Experimental
BioiOID', RooweU Park Memorial
Inatitute; Fted Emminp and Michael Levine, alternate, Oro! Bi·
ology; J,_pb POYeromo and .Jack
Storton, alternate, Chomjj:al En·
gineerinc; Arthur Bayer and Patriel&lt; Gallagher and .J._pb O'Grod,nidt, alternate, Cbemiatry; Ftedericlt Cazer, Medicinal Chemistry;
Michael Monell and Michael

chsel Rooen. Biochemicsl Phsr·
macology.
Anthony Kirkpatrick, PharmacoloJ_Y, Ro s well Park Memorial
Inatitute; Su11an Elliott, Lynn
Swanson, alternate, Philoeophy;
Donald Lee, Pbyoica; Gene S. Tobias, Sylvia Chriotakoo and Victor
Stevens, alternate, Physiology,
RooweU 1'ark Mmmrial Inatitute;

~::.W&amp;u= !'.:'Ji"fiill~=:

Political Science; John Greenwood, Jeffrey Facan. and Wynne
O,.leoby, alternate, Psychology;
Marvin Berlowitz, Social FOUDdationo; Barbara Libby and 'Thomao
Dinan, alternate. Social Science;
Leolie Townoend, Rocer Cook ,
and Ed Jobnoon, alternate, Soci·

o~ Tino Villaneuva, ~·
}~tti -::dpJ'~. alte':. .
nate, Speech Communication;
Howard Thaler and Ricbanl Kry·
ocio, al.temate, Statiatico.
Departments which have not
elected repl'ftelltativea are: Aero-

:co~"d.,&lt;:,vt;::.:=~; ~::~~~e!i:~r;Ji!:

~~~~cC:::~;e:;n= tt=ria~t:."=.=~~
Com.,.rative Literature; Counoel·

Gub, Educational PaycboiOID';
W.illy Muller, E~rinc Science: Kapadia Bipmt, Electricsl
Encineerinc; Suoan HoimM and
Don Milas, alternate, Elementary
and Remedial Education; Jim
Hart, .J~. Holland, Ricbanl Mooa

n:-~tt'o~~~~;

a;;;;k Sweeney, Geolorical Sci·

encoo.
Cbriatian Puebn and Pbyllio
Herclenclay, alternate. Hieber
Ed""*tion; .Joan Hart, Humanitia; Ann Butler and Patricia Mc·

f:,~n~"'Mr..~"~

don. alternate, Uncuiatico; Paul

~ Paul CummiDc. Neloon
Coopvve and .Jolut Noll and StanJoy ~ alternaleo, Man·
- t so-.; s.m u..n and
Georp Painter, Mallanatico; Sal - Jaliwalla, Mecbanicsl En~ Eliaabetb KfJIIDedy,
Micrabictlou; J'Gie Holcombe,
. J - Fardoll.• 11lle-te, Willie;

2:
....a.r.:.-4.~n!ubry,
Bwdoo K11mat , ~":!!;

Alan Soble, l'bumacology; MJ.

or Education; Educational Administration: Ec:J.ueational Research and Evaluation; Eqineerinc Mechanics: Epidemiolocy:
Experimental Patbol~; Geopa.
pby: German I.anguqe and Literature; Hiitory; lnda.trial En·
gi.n.eering: Laboratory Animal
Medicine: MicrobioiOID' . RooweU
Park Memorial Inotitute; Natural
Sciencee; Nuclear ~:
'Nuning; Opera tiona "'"ReeearCh
Engineering; Orthodontico; Path·
oiOID': SchoOl Poycbolocy; and
Systems Encineerinc.

War Protest(oontimud from-'· col. I)
9e%iam and racism, in addi.tion
to protasting the Vletoam war.
The.._~ on the U/1} campus
is '...w,. orpnized to as
a warning to Ket1er and his
trustee beaM that atudeota and
faculty still demand that the
war machine . get oil this campus.",
.

�Octr»« :Ill, 1910

"'·

GREPORTS

ON

GJ&gt;EOPLE
NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
. , _ . OORJ:N,

dlainDan. Dep. rt-

=:tyM~J.or,:::rl~l~
Muoic:.

OFF-CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
.._ oo:oaco: a. _,..,.., dean.
School of laformalloo ud Library
Studioo. _..,;ntocl chairman of
the Editori81 Boanl, CHOICE,
J&gt;U(Jijcalioll ol the American Li·
brary -'-'&lt;iatiaa.
DE BAlKY_ T. cuu.IHAN, IL, chair·
man, Deputment of a-ical

DR. WILLIS OVIZT'ON, asaiatant .Pro.
feuor, poycboiOI)I, "Social Cluo
Dill'e"""""' and Tao1t Variableo in

:!
~~..orc~~f!i~t
opment.

~~~e:r=:;:j
E.,.ioeers.

DR. U.YJ(OHD KW1LL. vice preei-

~~iM~
National -'-&gt;dation of S ta t e
Unioetsitieo ud r...d Grant COI-

l -.

~a~=
Ad Hoc Commiof the Board
~~~':..:~:~ ~~::::

ud recommend future plana for
the aaen&lt;:Y prorram in .._tiona!
~ in data p....-inc.
01. LAUBDf IUI'CHooc&amp;, profe.or,

civil ~ . • elected p -dent. N-ra~tier Aaaocia:
lion of Reoean:b ud Development Directon.
DR. &amp;08IaT PAASWIU., UIOCiate
profe.or, civil eQiiDeerin&amp;'. elected vice P""'ident of the Bulralo
S e c t i o n. American Society of
Civil Enaineen; appointocl adviaor to Mayor Sedita'• Committee

on T...,.portatiqn., ,
DL

aA a •

.-:&amp;Nrn. Prote.or.

~:-~~='!:!

~:C'i."m;:aurn't:t "t~a~E,:&amp;:~~n::J
Biochemiotry.

DL DAVID T. SHAW , awoci.ate pro-

=~ o':t'Te!:"!'f U:~o~

Institute of Tecbnoloey in P-·
dena. Dr. Shaw baa a National
l.n atituta of Health S p e c i a I
Faculty Fellowobip to work in
the Deparlmont of Environmental
Health Enaineerina on a variety
of problema in the area of aeroool
.::r..:.n-;~cation to air
DL THOMAS W.

~.

.-ociate

:~~t!i
~=1 ·~
Board, Chemicol E ...in«rinl Educo:tioft.

.._ PHILIP

WIU, cliDical pro-

::""~~~~rAt

:::Or M~ Fillmo.,.'hlpH~:!.;
School of

pita!.

:=...c:r~...:~

ver.
OIL CHIZUKO IZA.WA,

8.98istant pro-

feuor, psychology, "List veraua

Items in Diltributed Practice in
Paired - A..ociate L e a r n i n g,''
American Psychological Aaoocia·
tion, Miami.
DB.. ROBERT L. ltE'M'!lR, preeident.
and DR. GBORGE C. LEE , prof8110r,

~~ e~_:~~:.ign~~~

Society of Civil Engineero, Boo ton. .
aaociate profeuor. peycholotlic, and in·
DL K&amp;NNETH R. LAUGHERY,

tr~~~i ~~:!l:

sus Serial Recall on the Serial
Pooition Cune," American Poycbological Aaoociation. Miami.
DL GBOI:G£ c. LIZ. profeaaor, civil

Pngineering, .. Lung Elasticity:•
BiomechaniCI! Symposium. Uni -

venity of California at San Diego.

DR.. i.ruaaAY LEVINE, professor, pey-

~C~· V'a~: Jni~~i::

end

WILUA.)( AYIZ and I:OBDT
craduate atudento, poycboiOIY...Experience~ in Working
with Priaon OCiicen at the Erie
County Penitentiary," Yale Univenity P.ycboeducational Clinic.

1088,

CIWil.&amp;8 NOTI88, lecturer,

c i vi 1

~ee~iC:F':nctolte BG~~-~

American Society of Civil Enai·

oeen.

Booton.

aoa.T PA..\SWII'U., ueociate
profe110r, civil eDJineeri.nJ, .. Plan .

r&amp;

a.

M.Z:::: ud the Roo-

PRESENTATIONS

New Provost -

(conliluu!d from- l, col. 6).
an advisor to sudl .......,;e. as
the Council Oil Diapoaia and .
Evaluation of Criminal Defendants, State ol. DliDoia; the Center foe Studies ol. Scl:ial.Juatice,
UniVersity of Cbicqo; and the

.

nina Special Tranoportation Servjceo,"

Highway Reoearcb Boanl,

:~~·1;;:;-:;bl':m~.r.

American 'Society of Civil En-

ff.:·
!;to~~~ ~t:.r.
-'-&gt;dation for Computina Machinery, ~- York City.
DR. W. ltAUlON RAY, ....aciate

.Jii:

~~~-~ton Sulrerina Catalyot Decay,"

Uni.enity of Rochester~
oa. IUUAN BZCI[SLY, prof8180r,

~a~~~~~

Solidillcation." International Conference on the Scieooe ud Tech! Iron and Steel. ~~;
Con-n ud Solidi·
tiaa. Tokyo Reoean:b t.bor-.

~

~~~icJ'.!:-

=:r:i

the State Uniwnity ol N- York .
at BuiWo," Kyoto Ua.iwnity,
Japan.
... TUL1&lt;Jif, ·- p r o • f - r. poy~. "Motber-Cbllcl

~=Y~i~;

A - . o Poycbalolical -'-&gt;cia·
.
DL C. H. WAIIIIIJIQ!OII', bolder of
the Albert Binolloia &lt;:hair in the

'lion, Miami.

--·-"""Pros·
uu. Bio...... l7tb

~ ~

the~

ol

ol

=~ sc.:-~row.w::=:

D .C.

Laws. He is a ....mer ol. the
Committee Oil Reeeudl in the
Sociology of Law ol the International- Sociolosical Asaocia·
tion and of the Committee on
Legal Protectioos in Social Research of the Ameriam ~ logical Asaociation.
'
In addition to Criminal Lllw,
Schwartz is co-author of &amp; h=im ThaN-y and Soci4l Sci.ence (1955), Unobtruoiue
Mecuure~~ :

N onreactiue Re-

oearch in tM Social Sciences
( 1966).._ '!"'i Soc~ty and tM

Leeal

UNJer (1970) .

New Systan&amp;my
1be machiDe re11iatration

8)'8tem ( SARA) will be fully
implemented for spring rePs-._

tration, Dr. Cbarlee E . .Jeffrey
ol the Olfice ol Academic Af.
fairs aaid in a ......, to depart.c:bairmen&amp;Dd- di•rectors this """*Reoulta foe the partial fall
semester .-of the 8)'8tem J&gt;ave
been critiqued, .Jelbey aald,

=

f:l
~th =:.r ::;
modifications will be ...... be
~-

step, .Jeffrey said,
will be to nm a full nlllistra·
tion .....- the "181em
"be-

ana

sin all~ol·
ana modification."

· eva~uation

1be .-1. be laid, "is to lreep
the S)'Stem" - f1aibla - possible while provldiJII 88 UDCOID·
plicated a m.~ leliatmtion
proceal . .

Jl&lt;*ible...

LawTeamJn
BostmDebate
1be Moot Court IMm ol the
U/8 Law Sc:bool will trawl to
Boston to debate .,.;nat ...
Harvard Uru-.ity counterpart in the fint round ol the
R.,.;on I Natblal Moot CoUri •
Campetition, Novaaber 11-13. ~
1be U/8 IMm is one olll
CCIIIIII8Iin&amp; in the rePonal cor.opetition, 'lbe debate, which will
be held at the Pedara1 Court
ro-e in ao.toa. will be Oil the
fictioiW cue ol T. T. Notrub
v. Samuel GudcuY- 1be Cll8e
inval- a aomplaint ol llbel ..
booulbt by the ftlllidst ol a ·

=~":!~~=
'lbe Um-sity will be

_..... by tm. 8l!llior ~
llludlala: .Jellnty R Frank,_
BaiWo; Peter s. GlUI11an, ~- ~
f8lo and Wanlalb; and David
s. Bldnlclp, Bu&amp;lo.

�~-

8

&lt;WEE~Y

Oc*&gt;6w "· 1910

COMMUNIQUE

10 public, no ...._ ••Open to ...-, -

•Open

..._

~J;,!i!:.t!rJ~"!ii~ri~ ;~~· ~

te

required (available at Library
or Baiid 'l'lcket Office).
IIOVIIII:
STtJI)KIIT

NKW, NOW AND H .Y.U.
P'ILIIII, 147 Diefendorf. 4,

6:20 and 10 p.m.

SUNDAY-I ·
~.

KOVID:

MOW

.\MD

K .Y.U.

Conference Theabe, Norton. 4 and 6:20 p.m.
B.U.KAN FOLK. DANCING: Fillmore
Room. Norton. 8 p.m.
I'ILIIB,

STtJI)KIIT

EVENINGS POR NJ:W KUBIC•• :

. Worb by Hiller, Muwoli-Davieo
and Sapp. Albright-Knox Art
G&amp;llery Auditorium, 8: 30 p.m.

MONDAY-2
FB!Z IIOVU:: SUNRISE (1927, F . W .

Murnau) , 147 Diefendorf, 8:30
p.m.
Ill IIUHIUSI:, the Germanic tradition ia much in evidence, poe·

:~&gt;l6

TlmOIB11C.U. IJOLO.GY SEKIN.U:

Dr. Lenanl R. Troocale, IDtenlis·

' ~~mi=-"'1:.~tio~
P088IBLI: CONTROL 8I'I"E J"'R DIP'PD.I:NTIAL DH4-IINA. IYNTJDIIB AT TRI:
NUaAU KNnmi'&amp;,'Room 29, &lt;1248

Ridp Loa. 4 p.m. Refreohments
3:30p.m.
•
Dr. Troncale will preoont a
molecular-lew) model of systemslevel phenomena • for which no
adequate model preoenUy exists
and propose a set of feasible u periments to test the model

li.OVIES : NEW. NOW AND N .Y.U .
STUDENT PU:.MS, Conference The-

atre. Norton. 6, 8:20 and 10:40

p.m.

xACBIITH•: SUNY CoUege at Buf·
falo'o Sbaltoopearian production,
di...wcl by Studio A,.,..'o War·
ren Enten, with scenic designs by
Millo Eqliab and cootumM by

..-, l!~
[!:,::';.'~~~ . ~;
ton Auditorium, SUNY College
at Bul!alo, 1300 Elmwood AWl·
nue, 8 : 30 p.m. Admi.laion ia free
but NMrvationa required (8625531 or 862-4831).

FRIDAY--30
LINGUIITICS ~:

Harry Whit·

aker, NEtJ&amp;OLINGU:&amp;STJCS, 402

HaYoo. 11

a.m.

.

Oefinition and its place in the

lanpqe sciencee;

ana data

J;l¥.potbelee

in. neurolincuiitic: current iiRiel of reeearcb; approii-tioDI to a model of neurolin-

JUiati&lt;s.
m.&amp;cJt ..... UIC'I'UI&amp; NO. 2• :

Sam-

uel W. Allen. vilitina profeoonr,

Blacl&lt; Sludieo, ...,_,. 11LAC1t
PO&amp;'ftY, includi .11 ~ of bioi

own and other worb, 233 Norton,
2
~ Allen, professor of Afro-American litera,ture at Wesleyan

this semester. Former co-director
of the Afro-American lnotitute at
Wesleyan, Mt. Allen ia the author

lf..~. o:!i ~ ':'~ /::ii-

=-

BIOCHEMISTRY SEMINAR:

Dr. David

~ioioin~r·w~~nt U~!!;:

sity S c'l: o o I of Medjcine, Sl

6 15
'

8:30

NOW

AND

N.Y.U.

SATURDAY-31
MOVIES : CUUE OP nANX&amp;NB'I'EIN

and soaoa or DRACULA, Confer·
ence Theatre, Norton. noon.

~;.' ~:!;· M:ll c:;;
p.m.

LIB&amp;AKY CONCERT• :

PBDJB"'''NN8

~na D=~wYn '&amp;~~r~

=.v~~o~=~~

baritone; Pamela Gearhart; violin; Alta Moyer, ceUo. Worb by
Robert Schumann, Clara Schumann. Jobannoo Brabmo, Richard
W-r. Giacomo Roooini, Henri
Hen. Bul!alo and Erie County

~=to~i::::lO::.

P;t:

bert Einotein CoUege of Medi-

cine, .Yfllhiva Univeni.ty, JXKUNOCENICITY OP

PU8JJ'III)

DEX'I'&amp;AN,

Room 107, 4510 Main Street.
noon.
....,ICAL
LIIIC'I'UD:: TIOCIINOLOOY
Sponoorecl byTa.EI'BO""
Recional .

~~~re~;

BASIC ELECTRO-QPI'JCAL INiftUMENTATION , 51 Participatina Hoo-

Great White Way with

SteW~

Bainl R.otal Hall with commentary by Bob Jeooelonn
No. 12, ~- 127 in E flot; QIUll'tet No. I. Op. 18, No.

10:00 ;,:; ~~~~~;,~'!:: g.rformed by Bul!alo

I::;d'c."i".:-...
Proctuio1141 in E flot-/~ymoua, VoluninC; RGI!ert Elmoro, p...,..,..,; Samuel Wesley, Tlbo l'Kcet
IGr)'

in F; WilliaiD Mathiao, P..-ioll4l
~-Y~
nl 1aolcal

·
urrara;:
=~~o~U ~5393' or !'~c~.f::S
C SU.t. Bul!alo. N.Y. 14214.1 Your hoot Bob J-loon
t

is

10:00 TOWN(GOWN-Loctu- and po.l&gt;ti cliocuuionr bJ'. faCility and
viliton to Wootam Now York'o ooUegoo and umvaiOibeo
12:110 - N

qu......,._Boelboven n Li... Concert ~
BaiJd R.otal Hall; with COIIIIMIItary by Bob J-lonn
QIMJ!'ta No. 10, Op. 14 in E !lot "Harp"; _Qwuut No. 2, Op.
18 No. J in G; Q""'Ut .No. 14, Op. 131 m C tluJrp
'
10:00
00011 IHOW- "'nne Miaoin1 Boa Conrtridor":-A OKNt
-·
ooupriM JHUII1I!II w'-e contlonts - are not a!Jow.d to rooeal
a.-pt to .., that wbile ,liataning. to thio p_....... it ia advioahlo tD line • inDar lllbe, a piCturo of a lico.- ,_ry,
and • _ . . pair . of pants
11: 00 ,-..,no WOIIIAK-Folk millie with Roberta FriadmaD _

$7500 Gift

OOeroo FlorDay
,

Care

pitalo, 1:30 p.m.

1

mACBER DllCISION·MAKIHC coNn:aENCE• : Sponoorecl by the Univer-

sity's Chapter of Phi Delta lUg&gt;pa, Department of CUrriculum
Deoelopment and IDo~

'lbe UIB Foundation · discloeed Tuesday than an anonymous donor, had given $7500 to
the UIB Day Care Center. Tbe
gift was given with the proviso

individualized for each student?"
will be the subject of the second

'lbe Day Care . Center has
"-n faced recently with the

research a.iatant. curriculum

'lbe child care facility is now
operating in the basement of
Cooke Hall but in a recent
election the women of Cooke
· voted them out. And the Department of Health has also
ruled ~ basement area
cannot be used by the Center
because of its limited toilet and
fire protection facilities.
Because thOle is no other
spare avaiiable on· campus,
the child care group is eJ&lt;ploring the possibilities of an oft'campus space. Negotiations are
cunentlr being beld with a
chun::h m the area,
University spokesman, says.
To further ease the Day Care
Center's financial problems, a
budget for the Center is now
' being submitted as part of the
1971-72 U / B operating b'!dget.
No Stste funds are available

~~?!:ftiob~~~ . ~ttheu.e......
~~~f ~r.
~~== !:,.~00 be time students.
·J.!:il~;!i{;t =~::t!t!u~r:l
acti

~

TUESDAY-3
1970 QUJ.R'l'EilBACK CLuB WEEKLY
POST-GUIE LUNCHEON : Towne

House Restaurant, Main and

Hich Streeto, 11:45 a.m.-1: 30 p.m.
n:D MOVJE: BICYCU: TIIJEP (1949,

poor.
ART EXHIBrr OPENING: AJ'BO-BRAZJLIAN PAINTINGS BY ABDWI NASCI·
&gt;lENTO, Sponoorecl by Norton HaD

Minority Cultural Aflai{a, center
G&amp;llery, Norton. 7 p.m. At 8 p.m.
Mr. Nucimento will be in the
Confeten&lt;e Tbeabe to diocuoo the
·~t hiotorical, social and

:ee:::i:coo~r!F'=licof:~:

Ellhibit contin,_ tluoll&amp;h November 14.

WEDNESDAY--4
DII:TrrtANB'

ftLI:PBOlQ

UDCTUU:

SpoDIOrecl !!}' Reoi&lt;mal Medical
Prnpam. Rlciuud H. Waring,
GaTING

I:MPLOYIZS 1'0

A.CiCSPT

51 Participatina Hoopitalo, 2 p.m.

CB.UIGD,

O.O.UOC CIIDOBTliY COLLO&lt;jUIUII:

!:'-r~~J:,~ti~

will .be Andrew Parke, 4th ~
teacher at the Ledgeview Ele-

:.;_~ta'§J:f,h~~::;"J..~~i

Heim Elementary Scbool, Williamaville; John Slattery, English
teacher in the Amherot Central
High Scbool
IDformation coDCeming the conference may be obtained from the
Univenity'a Olfice for CJ"CCit-Free
Propams, 831-430L
THE DRUG PIIOBLEMII or mE WOIILD
-IN'It2NATIONAL PORUM•: Two

repreaontativeo of the World
Health Orpnization will be diocusaa'\ts• opoDIOrecl3.1: Buftalo
~~':.':.:'0~edical ;::::;:
Featuring Dr. Dale C. Cameron.
chief. Drug DapendeDce of the
WHO, and Aicher To"""" esocutive director, International.~
ci1 &lt;m Aloo_boliam and Adc!ictiono.

~;,!~ 0,!D~b'.,~m:!i

!lOree! by the School of PbanDacy.
The oorieo, dealing with ol!!&gt;tbal·
m.ic care and treabnent. will con·

=

~otfi~=: J~a=.

bead of tho Dopa.-t of Oph-

~0:.':"~ ~eo.::

eral aspeCt. of corrective and protective devioea
the
tueb
ao eyeglaooeo, -~ and con·

for

eyes,

tact leDML G-22 Capen, 8

J&gt;.lll.

GUA&amp;lfl'.&amp;l 8ftiNC QU.AilftT"B BDT·
BOVDf COHCDT n.. •: Baitd, 8:30

p.m.

THURSDAY-S

UUs year•

As part of the move to get
funds for the Center, President
Ke!'f:er is going to gi':" responsibilitr for the operation of the
facility to im academic department. The department has not
been announced but negotiationa are in the llnal stage.
Sponamsbip by . a reJUlar dQ:partment will hopefully ease
both space and funding dif&amp;.
culties.

~:S:-~w:!~

SUPA Plans

!."~::'V:,'"'~~'i!..:

Mr. To"""" .-ociate editor of

AlcolooliaM, bao 1ecturecl througbout the -rid in addition to oorving ao coDOUitaDt to tho World

Health Orpniation'• c-ittee
. IfNDW~:Lto . \t
(otudont otpnisa.tiOD) TOua OP u:r G....
bao been the directo and
·
IaY: All atudent wive.. are inaer of 16 8DDual int!ma::.:r::
vited to tour the Albricht-KDos at otituteo on the p......,tion and
7:30 p.m. For · further i.Dforma· trea-nt of alooboliam oince 1965.
or a ride to the Gallery, can
Mn. Betty Percifti. 837-7457.
· POETRY EXHIBITS
...._BD PltOOLUI. 'roa J'&amp;ACD·
CING PBADIACm'IS: TD ftJ:8 AND
TJD PRA.C'i'laNG PBA&amp;M.\CI8T, Spon·'

a

Druc Dependence of the Medical
Society, will oer... ao moderator.
Caniaiuo Higb Scbool. 1180 Dalaware Avenue. 8 p.m.
Dr. Camei'DA be ooned with
WHO in Geneva oince 1987. Prior
to that be wao a clinical profaooor
of poych,iatry_at Goo?" Waoblng-

UN...arn 1W011

W.~u~ !t"pe':1!~tra-.
Enoch Arden
GD...,._ ftmiG QU...... Boetboven I Li.., Concert from .

m

p.m.

Vittorio de Sica), 147 Diefendorf,
3 and 8:-30 p.m. Claooic of Italian
neo-realism; life among the very

NEW,

procnm of public alrain aild tho arts.

II'I'&amp;ING

expreai~m.

Jttovu:s:

STUDENT FILMS, Conferenoe Theabe, Norton. 6, 8:20 and 10:40
p.m. •
lNTIBNATJONAL FOLK DANCING: In·
struction in buic steps during
lint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8 p.m._

;.::~l.:.t:/ of' tho

~~!;;'_

of German

GUA&amp;HEIU BTIUNG QUA~rrzor'S BIZT·
HOVEN CONCI'&amp;T I . . : Baird, 8:30

Single luncheons on a non·re·
served basis are $3.00.

Q~t

6:15

te~ ~:r-~~~ Ge~

fijp». A pamble of noble love
venus eYil. SUNRISE rugpots tbeoe

Louis, THE KET:ABOLIBM OF MDI·
SENGI'&amp; RNA IN E . coli, G-22
Capen, 4 p.m.

&lt;::2ioia.-Relevaney aDd tho Broadway ot&amp;Je

una~-A
IIOifllt.T-2

MAN.UZ..

~~- co~tainsoce~c ~--: \ :ri!.~ i Mr~~tio~ .co;::,r.:;: ~'1.J;..."'!,~ of lack of money
0

tionship of Africans and AfroAmericans and tranalator of
French Weot African poetry.

•:y-;~ or OPDA-With Jolm FarraU
6:00

PATHOLOGY AND

51 Participatina Hoopitalo,
11 :30 a.m.
OIW. IIIOLOCY ODm&lt;A&amp;: Dr. Jack
IIZI&lt;'f,

at!d~=~:o~ ~.;d'!::li~i!g ~~im in
:!r~i:e~~~U:n~~ae:;: .li~~~
a way that recallo the heritage their claurooma. On the panel

WBFO PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

10:00

=:a':: ::.=~ ~ue~

POOT:

Sheiry llt.OlU'
!Vext Frrl,_,
CU.U.J

I
'lbe State Um-.~ty Profl8ional ~ (8UPA)
Buft'alo Chapter will aponaor a
Sherry Hour on Friday, November 6, at 3:30.J!.DL in tha
dinina room of the F a c u~ t y
Club. Tbia will be u CJIIIII
~for

all~

staff members on tha CIIIIJilUll •
and will CODCerll tha Seaate
Profeesl&lt;mal A s s o c.i a t1 on
(SPA) , one of tha orpnizatioll8 ..,.kina to rep_,t fac.
INTERVIEWS
ulty and profl8ional staff in
The ON-CAMPUS IH1'I:IlV1EWING collective bargaining.
PROGIWI , running throuch DecemRobert Granger, vioe ~­
ber 18 in the faD ......,.ter and dent of SPA and also vice
from January 25 to April 29 in president for a~tural and
;:~":r:.'l:ti'!f.i~e:te~ tecbnical rou....-of SUP.A,
be the mam s:-J&lt;er. He
Wl. th ed··-~-naJ. buo'-. '-L..
u- .,....,.. will
will discuss the impact of tha
~--ang,~::,~
forthcoming Stele-wide election
le...lo are invited to intemow to select a barpinin1 apnl
whether they will complete tboir Granger, who is rqistrar at AI·
courie wo.rk in, January or May fred A.frlcultural and Tecbnical
1~~1. ~Irati"!' foliM an.;l ad- College, will also 11118WW"'IliiY
ditional info.-tion are aWJable . q u e s t i o n s about SPA and
•n :o-::Y~2::-Price Watert-.,. SUPA and the relationabip b&amp;(CPA); Now York State Civil ~the two.
·Service..
For information on memTUI:SilAY~: Aetna Life and benhip, contact Margaret
Casualty; PriCe Waterbouoe O'Bryan, ext. 3631. ·

.:ll".;

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

Vat. 2·- NO. 7.

ToRev.iew
Fee Outlays

--

,_.,_

The Fall Campaign Stirs Up
A Rash of Student Apathy
"Even if U/B students
__,•t 80 apatbetic about this
~~f'P"ip, I don't know

detrimeotal~=~-be
'lbat'i how ime o( , the few

U /B atudenla actively involved
in fall campaigning recently

summed. up the situation on
·
'
._campus.
I.wrence 8. Lewis
21
o1
Amherst, eat behind .a iabk, in

NarUm stadaoct-biBh with•Sen·
ator Charles E . Goodell bumper
stic:lull8, b u - and Jiteralure.
An unoblnlsive paper cup stood
ready to accept donations.
Uwis, a senior history major,
ezplained that the apathy that
seems prevalent stems from
many tbinp: • "The students who worked
for Eugene McCarthy were
tumed off by the result. Others
haw been turned off hr' the
Cbicaao Seven, or Prea1dent
NO!on ... Cambodia .. . Kent
State. They don't care about
tbe candidates. Their parents
inflht say, 'All politicians are
croaked.' Studenla are saying
politician!' are all the same,
that the
of the cam-

011-

.,.;so will make litHe ~"''erence."
wu•
He added: ''Radical causes
- seem more relevant to them
• than &lt;;!ectoral politics-type
cauaeo.
.
N Next to ·the Goodell table m
su~
~.n::::::::r· where
-18ther· M r. Fl a h erty 18 the
Democratic candidate for the
3lltl&gt;.C.J!nU.liSVP-!lal District,
runnmg a~ former Bills'
guarteriled&lt; Jadt Kemp.
There are other tables for
other c:auses in Norton - a table collecting money, food and
clothing to aid Puerto Ricans
stricken by a rec:ent hurricane·
another prging students to buy
aeason tickets to the Buffalo
Philharmonic; another heavy
with radical literature, staffed
by members of the Students for
a Democratic Society, Youth
Against War and Fascism, or
the Niagara Liberation Front.
But aside from the Flaherty
and Goodell tables, there are
few signs of politioal work or
political support.
(continued o n - 6. coL 6)

~

An informal advisor)' com--mittee of students and- staff/
faculty members bas been established as part of U/ B's implementation of the administra·
tive review and certification of
student fee apenditures mandated rec:ently by the SUNY
Trustees.
'The advisory committee will
"~nsider the meaning and significance of apenditures 'of an
educational, cultural, recreational, or aocial nature,'" Rich-·
ani A. Siggelkow, vice president
for student alfairs, said. "Another related function of this
group is to consider new budget items that may not fall
within presently-understood
guidelines," Siggelkow added.
Students will be in a majority on the committee.

ti~nd:., U:resi~f ~

SUNY campus or an administrator delegated by the president must assume review resjlonsibility for the apenditure
of student fees. Vice President
Siggelkow bas the authority

here.

Review •nd Appronl

'Ibis primarily _involves, Siggelkow says, "review lind ap-

J!.I&lt;1Y~_.of

the ·bu!III&lt;W~ted

by eaCh rep.....entative stUdent
organization,: provided s u c h
budgets are 111 sufficient detail
to permit a determination to
!"' made. It is our understandmg tliat the responsibility of
the. J?res!dent does not require
verification that each disbursement made by the student or~tion is in acrordance
'!'th. the !'pproved b~;~dget. Obligations 111curred pnor to Oc-!'&gt;her 6, 1970, e"!"' though not
'!' acrordance wtth the guide~ of the (Trustee) ijesolulion of October 6, 1970, should
~ honored provided such com·
JDJtments are ~ligatioll!' and
not mere_ expreas1o~ of 111tent.
The~e 111terpretations were
(contiiW&lt;!d onfKJJif'7,coL I)

Powell Hearing Group
Now Has Responsibility
For ·Disruption Charges
. By SUSAN GREENWOOD
While J':S~t Asaocia?o'! _is still trying to -get its
JUdiCJary to~, U/B's Hear·
ing Committee on Campus Disruption is well into its year's
work. The Committee a permanent version of last' spring's
"Ketter ~JDJniasion," ollicially
started 118 current session in
August when Dr. Richard Powell, associ_ate dean of Dentistry,
was appo111ted acting chairman.
Since then, the group bas heard
five cases and is currently hear-

Moss CI"tes
M1nor
• · ity Gap

. Tbe Uniyerslty should be
disabused of any notion that
progress in race relations on
campus over the last four years
is to its special credit, Dr.
J"'!"'S A.. M068, professor of
soaology, and aasociate dean
International Studies, said in ~
letter to President Robert L.
Ketter, made public this week.'
_. On !he contrary, Moe8 said
· what prognjos hils been ~
was !"'t only long overdue, but
proVJdes benefits to the University itself as well as to the
black community. "The initialive for the changes " he said
bas _come "almost ,;;tbout ex:
ception from within the black
community."
Dr. Moss, until this past
J'!""o chaired the Select Com·
m1ttee !'n -Equal Opportunity,
t)le policy group reporting to
the president on all matters
relating to minority alfairs on
the campus
He said lbere bas been "no
evidence of any effort on the
part of the present administra-tion to move positively for(contituudon -6.coL 2)

Faculty Senit~Resumes Bylaws Discussion Today
'The Faeulty Senate last
'l1wrsday did not vote on the
~

Bylaws changes
wbich would eatablish a
sentative ~e~Wative
it did pt tbrcuch part of the
debate on tbe i as u e---&lt;1 o me
three and 01111-balf bows' 'MJrlh
to be Consideration of
the JIIOIX*l ClCIIltim8l today at
1:80 p.m. in 147 Dieflmdorf.
With a crowd of approximalaly 500 ....,._, in attend-

bod;"i:t

........,.recan~~recent.
Jar ..-tinp-tbe Seaate
...,..t.uda ·
· and
aametimell '-lad diaCiJJ&amp;on ol
tbe Bylaws.

.,~....~· J:tj;
-7ii:"plan- ~.~
tbe Bylaws Committee (Don-

al!~ W. Rennie, chairman)
would lead to 8eaata ambol by
aliprcb.y ol .mar r-Jty
tied Ia tbe ~ .

llll

HodlfWd

..-I

...:r:

(w

•

lion If r-lt7 ..........
ol apin..
iolland~
IICf!aa. Tbae .-a
be
no n- ,far - u i c , dlla-

(...,.,_, 011,.,. •. eoL

:t)

OCTOBER .22, 1910

ing more from ita' l-• -"'~•

list.
---Tbe' purJl(8l of tbe Committee ( which was m&amp;ndated by
the State) is 1o hear c:ases of
alleged studeut misconduct.
'The ateiiS of misconduct are defined by the Board of......,._
and consist cl. 11 sepamte typas
which might arise duriRg a pariod of campus disorder Prl&gt;hibited col\duct. ranges from
:'n;maininl in a building after
Jt 18 normally cl...!," to "willfully causing physical injury to
spy other P."""""-" (For additional details, see Reporter,
October 1.)
'These rules are part cl. the
regulations paMed by the Board
of Trustees which apply 1o tbe
entire SUNY system· """""UIIder Trustee .......,~ .
• •
'dual hearing.....-&amp;ns, mdi Vl •
board&amp; may be
modified to adapt to local amd:itions. Several U/B znodi&amp;a.
~ons were made, illlcluding raismg the number of Committee
members from nine to 18.
'These 18 are d - . eGuaii.v
from_faculty, studenta and. etaJt
· President Ketter appointed the
twelve '!&gt;culty and stall, who, in
~will appoint ' tbe Biz stuStudent~

Acrording to Dr. Powell, four
studenla have already blal appointed and the Committee is
111 the P"""'""' of naming two
more. Candidates for the positions were selected from lists
submitted by various student
g!'vernments. In early September, Dr. Powell said, letters
were sent out asking for stud_e nt government reconunendations. Several o( the gowmments replied, but the UJ¥1ergraduate Student Association
declined to send a list Dr
Powell maintains.
'
.
The actual work of the Committee begins when the chairman receives a complaint from
the president, the University
p~tor 91' ,the president's
~~student'~ a!-

~ cbainnan then sets up a

hearing and sends written notice of the " ' - and time
and place of the '-ring to tbe
allepd. offellder. 'Ibis notice,
according to the official -~
cedures of the Hearing Commi~, "shall fix a date for the
hearing not leas than ten nor
DIO~ than 15 days" from when
the notice is Mrved.
Becall8e ol the n~
complaints that have
!here is a delay before a
mg can be set up, Dr. Powell
ezplains. Further delay&amp; may
be call8ed by the allepd offenders' inability to attend at
a ~c time and' place (for
valid reasons) •.
. WI"'!' the day of tbe hearUlg arnves,.a panel of si:l: members hear&amp; the case. 'The panel,
a~inted by the chairman, is
ew!hly divided ~ students, faculty' and staff: Dr.
Powell has set up a rotating
system foo: the Committee
lbllmbers 80 that all nf them c8n
all on hearing- panels an equal
number cl. m.-.
. 'The hearing&amp; do DOt fpllow
(~OA-7,eol. l)

.

-

�Odu6iar 22, 1!170

~

2

Equal Opportunity
Group Urges An Inte~i~ion ofEffo~
.
~

EDITOR'S NOTE: Tile~ - - t o l y a four-fold - . ; hculty Seaate 011 May 21, 19'70.
ia 1M rqort of 1M Select Com·
(4) makinc • ~ ~ !!~~ ·~~lbf.,-"':t:,;
miUu "" Equol Opportunity oub- . IDOIIt for the Spaniob-~ - .....--·- u&gt;
-'-·-· •••••
u..we-'~ ~-'-'·'·· miDority in oar. ~Jity;
(6) port
which .... ...... rocom·
~·ty
ty •· -~;
--~~ EPIB bowewer ---~
-•'-l&lt;ut
op-&lt;·•
·
CommiUee
din·~
·
mmoPuen
~
_ 0 , __
- .
•
..........,
t
~r JtXOb "iJ~Hytr&amp;OII of t1ae
adinc black.
·~ • ......., ~ "to·-. ~ryton_,..,.,.lial
depoeof'm
· meean~
School of Law feel&gt; that the female, pra{'Ortiaaatoly aDd at
e&lt;fnporl ,..,..W limely and of im· a more rapid mto, with the coal ucatioGally -.&gt;11 way, the com"portance .,. 1M new admin..-. of about ton per cent black facul.
m i - t to enlarae the participo·
1ioft 1or1eo ;,. policia IJ!Id p~ ty. He caliod for
re- • ::..."!.u":";!ty~~:!:.
!."!':!!_U:.
T~ ~ocu".!.e"'nt'"
, 0w',!,~Y
~~~t- P~t 0 of ~~ demic ;,....,_
of . the Univer............~. ·- ,. u
•••
,..,.h UAAAG Wllllll
..-·-.·noiewl two yean of effort on 1M goal • .,_;hie; (6) eurlinc the oity.
por1 of 1M Committu, waa ciUd . Univemity'o efforto Collectively
FoUowinc tbia major effort at
~-·
· .-.c.~l.!.~J~!!..~t. CMo_,.. and individuaUy in a variety of the W&gt;deqracluate 1 - . there
_
~- - · - n
wayo to help .-identa of the muot be further c»&gt;rdinated otwly
. ...au., publie hia ~
I city do what they felt to be ea- of the admiooian aDd _ , _ of
U..W.nity ~.:
oential in order to create a city otudenta· in tbo..prof-onal and
areo. (See .,.,..,. ,atqry.) .
in which the entire community of paduate procnlliiL The baolth

.,.._,.

·-r ,...,__

.

.

experiiDOII,.:'

.

~

tontial role. It baa

bocun a .en.·

~ ~ ~':\.-~

with tho Uaiwnity to clioculo
both thoi1'
baolth
oervicoa u a
--•
.L~•
whole """ ...-&lt; nunmc propamo. One major tuli ia to in·

~.

: = , r ~to~~
than follow dfnr'fi a-la.

f lD tho ....... al tba - ·
m· ·- · -• •~-- ~ ~- um··
~ ""'""""'" ,..
' th tba

"'::..-~ ~":,;
U: :'..""'"ry~ ::/""~ :
::t...tt'&amp;::
.=!...tAdbla) ~
odl the -~

~to the provision of baolth
care. _ 111 the ~rinr of 1969 a

comprehonaive m for rocruitinc
and ............ DUDOrity ponona for
-worlr. in the baolth praf-wu developed "r anbo~ ~com·
mittee rop,_,tilla "' - profe.ioD&amp;J ~ aDd l;be ~threlated. P~_.....; .•ta
mentatioa 11 '!"" hein&amp;- wo .

=

alioa of an - . . of Vice Pn.;.
dent' fo&lt; u . - Alfain. A - t
for tbe Mf:eNf •
t of the of.
fice baa ....., .....S. to Albany
aiul fawrable actioa ia antici:
patod. F,_ IIDCb an omce can
come both tbo OOiltiiniiDc otimnlatiOG of pra,ia* aDd
the ~ al ..,. ao
aeed io abown. n.. ~ of ac-

th:.
~~.=,:..:r.J:t:! WJd!'m.J'~coul:, ~· =:,~.=.,:•: :m=~ ::,t;.t ~~::! 't, ~J; . :!,vi::..,~~~ J.:

::C.nt

Select Committee•
Equal ~
portunity aDd the OiliCo for

~ later in• connection with
the Health Taolr. Force. Satiafactory coordination of tbe r.

and ~th-telated J!iOf~UJOnl
aDd wtth ot!Jer .Um.ero~ty procrams f~r mmona; etuaea.ta ap-

iiJ CC&gt;iiiJ8Ciiaa' with PJ:
impiOYeiDOIIt of elementary edu·
catiwr to IUP,POrt the expe.oaion

"etJiat-oe oubotontiaily tbo prapor
tioa Of DOD-white aDd Spanish:
~ oludenta a-..liq oar
l)ni1renity." 8ecoDd, to "review
oar ~t;::,.~

such facilitieo aa Univemity of
the Streeta; and to c»&gt;perate in
the creation of a Center for Black
Art aDd Culture; aad. (7) to

':";
::=:..: of
health related prof-.n. hu not numhen of healtli worken aDd
yet been achieved, but is bein8 their traininf, the inadequacy of
worked on.
health care m · 'l""' city ueaa ia
While tbeoe propama are ail OCJaJin&amp; to be _ , 81 ot• major
tboucht of in termo of increasing problem of American life today,

ali~ levelO ol our employment
roater." Tbitd, "to eJ&lt;plore chan-

WJ.J Dr. Robert S. Fiolr., then
director of the Office of Equal

of Spaniah-apeaking atullenta ia
being made thrauch the Puerto

....-:

:;;..~

CMI

~

Equal Opportuuity be .tated that

=

~~~ :~
rr.:.~ty~!
gramo within the city, thrauch

a:

=

of'th.su=~rtoa:J

6:::':71
1lf traininc. ~aDd u:'f"ab:: ~~ :z'J::f::.:t': ~;!"';',:OU.J?;.,'"~ :::
uppad.irc DOD-white wotken in tiona of learning.
pbuis on increuinc the number
=-~u.:e =~

momben of oar faculty." Fourth,
"to uplore aDd doWilop other
channelo throuch which .tho Uni-

=:t:&amp;
~t;:":,r~o~
Committee aDd tho Office, he

IDOIItioned ao develwed prajecta
pltheo~t a~ty~ f~ :;:::
of a Blaclr.

_r

~twJ~f.:::. -:'~Ef~

u:

~..:-

::;J!!i':, ;:!y ~~ ~e ':

~~:oranyjoha,....:.
p - . m . eaua1 &lt;::.urtnnity procram. the Select
~ a Taalt
H~ Under the
ohip of ~~-Ryan

ttee eady
Fo_n;e for
diainJwt.
tho Taok

..

the Amhent . , . _ No 6nal
oolutiana haw hom anived. at,

~ha'!: :=.F~~in"':,.tin~

lect. Camilli- • etrona. The eatahliahment. ~ a Human Reiationa Council m Amhent ahoald
be
helpful

:.;. str.:.

.r..u::-r.: .:.:::.:uJ!:: .deJi'~theiowu1a':n
~the Schoo~ 'd '"w.:i&amp;.:. =~ ~~~ ~
:=n:..:.,"J:,~;fo:.,to~m:= !~ ~~.:~ ~T:: ~u!~".fb: ~~ ~; ~~ai=t ;:~
=-~

faDctiaaa.
c. B"""'Pizinl tbat hou•inc.

~arometonl~of·~-- ~~-i-ldllyaa·
~ -~th-

;_
_.:!";;"""'"oyf
,
...... _....
~
LDUU8
~·
erinr health care to our populalion. The Select Committee · aDd

becun. A oub- ciesiCninc new ayotemo of baolth
otantial rocruitmeat aDd support care clolivery. They can. however,
prawgramSchooial, ~~~pedad-~-~ enco~ the Umvemty aDd ita

lDdiano have been

Olfice for Equal Opportaaity to

cliac:barp -

oignifica~~Uy

-=-:~roaicleD~

:~ =..:"~ :=ti::.vitiC::t!.:""~~~ ~ c:J"':!~~te~·..,~~ =:.~ ·~~:":!~ ~:.::.':':::~a:· 8:...~

:"';m:.i:a
~~!,l*1. or~wf!t ~to· ~-!"'theup
~·-

~u-

uu"6

satellite ntdio alation. Ongoing
efforto were being made under

help make available the experi·
ea~ in the propama re-

tioa of the Amherst campuo; increia.si.n&amp; minority employment on
the campuo; incrouing minority
repteoentation in the faculties;
aDd plano for ofl-campuo bousing.
Taolr. forceo wete then in tho
proceu of organization. on coopotation with tho Puerto Rican
community, on pub1jc education

feb
admiaoions policy
m~t be reexamined. A Task
Foroe may be able to contribute
a apecial awareneu of the interest of minOrity otullenta.
2. With reopoct to the recnritment of minority faculty aDd
atalf memben, a permanent com·
mittee baa :taken over tbe earlier
work of tho Oflice, aDd hu maintainod ito momentum both in ob-

~~n ~~tli=:!f U: nority
:=f'~
~~;::.,~~ riw'orken m the co110truc-

fean of a white community which
ia juot beginning to oenoe the ur~ and impOrtance .o f e'!J.ieving undentanding aDd rapport
with our non-white bratben."
The wotk of the Committee
over the put two yean hu indi·
cated toe accuracy with which
}'roaident Meyemaa identitied
the tocal point&amp; Durinc tbia time

av':mu

tion. . . .

lated to tbe attiblde of otrain between the white aDd the miDority

edbee~n·ca~!~o':to~oara:.:~*~an
; , ;_ =~:-..:.:-of~
maa
.,..,.. meiit in tbia roapoct baa been the
mentary Educatioa. Task Foroe,
one of them involving a model
oducational parlr. u prapc»ed by
the Citizeno Council for Human
Righta in January of 1969. Here
spin, the problem ia eno........,
and far beyond the resources of
tho Univemty to oolve on ita
own. Neverthel-. it would ....,.

inc!Jvidual efforto of the chairman
and toe .~ cluecto.... in
dealing with opocific problmM u
they were p.-tod. No orpm·
ized reaponoe hu ' - fonnul.oted to the increasing otrain in
the oomr:p.unity outaide the Uni·
vemity or to the problaM c-ted
bj the Univenity'o in

g:..,.Sel.:: ~=in':!':!.d: ~ ~~0~ ':'lud"::"on"7.! :.:::::..roaon.,=tio~w':lh :::J. tooe,:~ff:~rot! ~ ~~to 'r'~~r~
the Select Committee and the Of. ·this area to provide aome of the aeriOO. and inexcuaahle.
8

and academic unita of tho Uni- campuo. Among prajecto which
venity bave been worting inter- were identified as neceuary but
auttently or oontinuoualy on one not yet orpnir;ed be mentioned
or more upectl of the five major the e.tablilhment of appropriate
topics mentioned above. From the curricula for minority atudenta,
very nature of the prablemo, it tho problem of ntciam on C8Jillllll,
wu evident f10111 tho outaot that and the .-rdination of faculty
no permanent .alutioos we r e participation in campus and com~;n• to be teachecL M ~
munity ondeavon m tho equal
·-~
r·~· waa made in any one area. opportunity area. He auggested
chan&amp;ed c:ircumotoncea would in- that the moot important aspect
evitallly create DeW problema. of the work ahead wu to . in·
ADd even were thia not the cue, crease the opportunity for poorly
the amount of Prosr- made, ~~papredrof!~~~-/" ~~. ur,:~~
however oubotaatial, would nonn· -·d 1 ,_..,.....
ally fail oo far abort of the ulti- the wwle'Cduate aDd paduate
-·•
u to .roquiore
an m
· ton· 1-el.o,
m
·
th - with .;_;..,_
mate •
than
••
""'~
otiifioncaoftioll raiDI
. ~tialr ·•o~• rolaxa- ca~~Uy increaaed
re&gt;f the
- ·~
""""*• but with emp · on
Acting Proaident Peter F. Re- Cllrricular neodo aDd guidance
pm .. . in manY
indicated aDd
faculty uaiatance.
Durinc the peat year in addi·
his whole-hearted commi-t to
the chatp of the Select Commit. lion to carrying an U..: wotk of
tee aDd the Olfice of EQual ~ · the Olfice. the ditector hu been
pommity
Proaident 1\ieyenon invo\ved.· .'with oll'!'r. Univemity
oatabiiahed them. It ia porhai» official.o m a mediatilla rale m
· well ti&gt; ba l8lllinded that tbia
·
' pecifi
·
· vo1 ·
commitment ii not an abenation ::::;"~;po~~~~oa the part of the Uniwmity Medical School ~ aDd
C..ter at Bull'alo, but nllecto a the haabtbelJ diaputoa -re ex, _ t a l policy commitmeat amploa. It ·likely that the
of 'the Blate \JaM.mity ·of N- 0!'10 will
tinue to be effective
Yorlt. . . _
in ':;. rolecoa. . - oimilar prab~1-· a,.;- m· the tu~----- ·~When Dr. 1 - A. M-, tho - - a1
Apinat tbia ~ tho
-chairman of the Select Commit.
toe, reviewed tho wod&lt; of tho following 110toa indicate the ~- &amp;!"~ the Oflico in his · ent ota!'JO ol· activi9' ~ the
OJ&gt;!IiW'I the
!i"" mam hea&lt;k
m Proawith tho _ , t y ~ idoat MeyenlOIII JDJtial Ita!&amp;~~~ 16, 11168, tho ID&amp;JO* -ment:
.
.
atep. be men1. ~~I'!". of
t!cnificant tionedtheE..:!!i~taloatahliahmen~
t
foofr
~--~~~-a
-_ _
~
~t Study (
) which
a. Tba J;:PlS p_... hu,.....,
put into _..,lioa that inotitutlooialiaod. ito directlon
fall ·
PMOinlr into tba hanclo of a - ~ aMad. be _,tioaecf \y-croia&amp;ed adtDiniotiUiw otaff
priadpal poq.ta for tba fu. u - r tba cliNcliaa al ;Julian
ture ~ of the Committee.
which
n..e _,, (1) that . - fnD to lime In tM
t b a - phyoical facility for lba
of tba ~
Um-.ity in ·Amhent ~ J1ri&gt;- _,. ociaaldoNd • a od hoc
vide ~.., . . . , _ . . . b7 tba !Wac&amp; ~
for aD pula of tho community; 1111111 ~ b7 tbo O'lloa.
121 incnJaoiD1 tba miDority ato.· lD l'eboau7 19'70, • aiJio. cleat ..........tatioa in the Uni- - ~-- -.od by
weni&amp;y -rtioaatoly, aDd not tba ~ eommlttee to EPIB.
-.ly ..-ricelly, ultimetoly aMbslna tba p...w- wt.ich
~-,..'!"*It
of - - - . . 11
-to.the ~ JIIOJectDd OIIIOIJmoiat of aDd I
] - . . . . .
40.000: II) ~ financial fo&lt; . \Ia ' - · - ~
_ . t for tba Bft8 p,__ .., Tba ....,._ al tbaaa -

finanb'!!l.

-yo

on

u

Th:

a-.-

"-="
-..c

Cao~daca

:"'~

-L

had'-

:-m"

early--

......

~w..-• ' ... ... .-•••• •• •• • · - • - ' -• .:. • •

v..- ...........

fice can presumably continue for aaai.atance which may be called
the preaent on the basis of regu- for by tboee in the community
Jar communication.
who are &amp;truggling to correct a
3.. With IW~pect to t.raining for grave aituation.
otalf employmmt, the •tart made
c. Altho·· .... the problema may
thra"£ the Select Committee
..,...
and
OfFwe baa been taken ~o~p~~~
~.Je::rtb
over in the Office of the Vice
~P-ut t f
0po tio
uncle
roapect to higher educational aeren or
ra na
dir vicel. Tbia relates to many other
the imacinative aDd vi..,rauo · •
rectiOn of Clarence Cooper. It
E~~thri~tY
Would eeem. that nothing more miaaiona and the area-wid&amp; eJfort
:..tie:.:t";!.,!:Y~ ~=c :~ to .-rdinate entraace to IJiPer
th the Com education thrauch the ConoortSelect Committee, wi
· ·um. It •••• m··-'~ -~-!!!::.
mittee
and the Ollice
available
to 1being made
~
-·- - a
vide
peciW:
·
to eatebliah
ppra..:Uedhelp on •
.
prajecto erative CoUege to eene in vary·
as
upon.
. eel ing derr- preporatory, rocnut. ·
4. The fourth item mention
ment, and collep pragram neodo.
by P-u!ent Meyenon wu more A
Force bere may also be
far-roaching in ocopo, de a I in I appropriate
with. the ""!'rail potential for U!Ji·
;
ven&gt;ty ~Ia!""' "! c:ommamty
d Cultural activiti · tbe
JI!'"'O: cimty "'!J''Dg .Withu.!'t~ city have been of
to~
t1
·, Knowing
Select Committee oince ita betlin·
nancial of tho Univer· ning. The Task Foroe for U rl&gt;an
oity available for thlo brood~ Arto hu been trying to find oupof . , . . _ could not betlin to port for a weli.COIJOOived aDd ""
approach ~ . DOedo, Preaident
· · , plan f
phi
·
Meye~ JDJtially ~troaaod the atiJia'l'be or a rm c arto cen. - t y of ponuadinc .-..ben
problem of obtaining
of tho Uniwmi~ ~ty- to ....,..ua~ .suP{IOrt for the donate _,.. portioa of thoi1' time aary facility . ,. acute. Other R·
ouch elf0
'l1be role of the ciiin« develC!J&gt;IDO!Ita are taking
to
&lt;!"- • ·
· p1ace· in mUOJe, theatre, and the
.Select OoJnmi~ ID tbia ana 10 dance, aDd beN alao -rdinoompleJ&lt; ~ difficuJL . No com· "'r efrorto will be required to ob- .
~ :::t.::"~~ u'= tain the - - . r y ,_,..,..,... Coavenity community informed oidentioa ia being civen to the
about activitioa in tho city in or· creatioa of a Di'vioioD of Minorder to 1oe ....., that tbooe wbo ity · Cultural Affain .within tho
would be lnterooted will know Olllco of Cultural Allain. And ef.
of tbo --IJ'.
fnrto·aN beinJ
made to aooiot tho
develOJlll*lt
of a Puerto Rican·
' - Mljar ~
Ameriam cultural center lD tbia
Four JDaJOr . , _ of_ OOIJ!'Om field of activity, tho~ are
have. - · ' - idootified fonnidahle, but tho pot.,tial fo&lt;
aDd . ~ efrort 8IIIIODIIed in enridJiDI tho cultural life of
wo~ witldn-. , _ are: W - N- Yolk io limit!- - al ~th ~; ~- aDd ~ chalhmp to the Select
1ar1' .t-tiota ~ _tbo aty;~ Committee io . - L
odaca~ activity .-:sthln. tho
e.
"""""'*Ue procity; 1111111 cultural activity wttbln gramo of opociai ............, to tba
tbo city.
miDority community milbt have
a. Of - . that relal.inl ' - ,_ticmed above In clioto baoltll io tba -..plei. ....me tba EPIB Pzo,ram. .l'Ju·
Tballoellh'I'Mkl'onle,W&gt;dertbo liculady im&amp;&gt;ortant are tbo welldwlmwwhlp of Dr. t.rry G-. advanced Bradt 8~ . , _,
baa fo&lt; tba ... fMf _,tba ' - 1illd tho dnelopl.., Indian aDd
......= , . , . - -- - o f tba ~--p-At.
8 fo&lt; health 8D u . - Sladioo ............. Ill·
_ . - . tba Niltinc doli&lt;&gt; Nody _ , _ , io being .,.__
_..., aDd tba Univenity'o J11&gt;- • eaed. At tbio time i&amp; i1ooo IM&gt;t ·

be

clU::

.!3::

Task

co'::m

r ot

!'1:..

On-,

•

Within the Univenity, minority atudenta and faculty have

been subjected to frequent manifestations of bc.tile or deprecatory attitudes. That they are
probably more olton IIIICOII8Cioua
than ooDKiou. doel not m.ipate
•L-;. ·"oct. It onl~
·
~·
the Univenity•a rea
· · 'ty to
add.- itoelf fo ..... -'-'-Uy to the
problem of atti~~ a-.
pect of the matter il the lailure
of the Univenity to provide
trained help for toacben wbo are
p~""• .whi.te otudeota to wotk "
--~-~
among mmonty. JiOUPI . aQd .to
~nt.a!Jd ~ rote of mmonti81
m Amencan history and culture.
HUIJ!"D. relatioDo ,. an ac:ceptod
~
or
ochofarly
~- It ~ thet
a amvenity .eiJould be able to oet
the
· attaddDc a problem
of J:",.:'~me, aDd the Select
Committee eiJouJd mab tbio mat·
ter one a1 ita priadpal itemo of

=-

.m oae more

bw!!--

• -~
~ -·•• ~- .:yeu a oet - •.,...,..-.
for a Uniwmity C
·
011
Human Ricbla dntft.ll to
deal with •.Peeific -..u;nta
about
-L
The project ~
of ........... t1tott with . . . . - to tiJe ....... al
......... aDd t1Je al tba ..
...,.. • . - ,

ctioc:rimiDa....,.

~~

ila aellftty
to lldudo
lba . . , . . _ ,
to ,
incntue - - tlnoa11toat
-itioaU-..;ty
a1
the
~wt.lch a c.-it.
to ..__._.__ _,..., of
· ·
· - _ _..
tM U.u...l&amp;y lba
incnJaoiDI .........._ a1 ,;.,ti.
.._t - • a ......... wt.ich tho
Uniwnity ·- &amp; ..... A&amp; tho
Yilry r.-t, - . . . . I&amp;- mab
aVJI'O,_olfur!f!!,..,.lto-'
~ flib'. lra~-aDd ........ ~
to tha . _ ...._...,._~ Jlapefaily it , _ a1ao ..... ..........
to - . . . 1 . . . . . ...._,
oc:balal!!loiP baa • ..._ Ia tha
wq a1 ........ willa . . . . . attl·
ooald ha·

a1.......,..

""li:!:i!"".;,

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

al-·
han altha u - . . . ~ty
wbo..., &lt;law
.,_ ........
obip.
..

~

�3

~2:1,1910

'mmder Time

Task Force on.Community Relatio~
Begins a Probe of Complex Concerns
By STEVE LIPMAN
Hoping. to find solutions to
problems of "complexity and

concern," President Ketter's

Task Force on Community Relations met for the first lime
Mondlly nighl The mooting,
led by oo-cbainnen Dr. Richard
G. Brandenburg, dean of the
Sd&gt;ool of Management, and
Reverend Ralph I.oew was held
in the Holy .T rinity lAJtheran
Church. Alternate meetings
· will be beld on campus and in
the community.
Moo of the evening was
spent identifying problems to

/:r

!n.:'~ ~~:':~ coU:.
duct an informs! poll in the
cormiluirlty to identify · major
problems was opposed by Buffalo Couni:ilrnsn William Hoyt,
who felt that the members represent a wide enough scope of
the community to speak for it.
Dr. Brandenburg cautioned
In a memorandum -to- pro- the members "not to try to do
V1lllts, deans and department
'-do, Robert E . Hunt, director Erivironmerital Health and
' Siilety; and Kenneth P. Glennon, director of Security, discouraged any "tendency toward complacency wben the
!alae alarme are frequenl"
Despite discomfort and anA plan. to form a student
noyance in such csaes, they union on campus-much like
said, Campus Security sbould any labor union-to bargain
collectively with the U / B ad·
ministration on "breed and -butcurity will then evaluate the tar issuM" could result in the
threet on the basis of available first such organization of stuinformation.
dents in .ltii! nation.
U Security reoommends evac·
Mark Huddleston, Student
uation of the threatened struc- Association president, has
ture, it will notify the depart,. asked Preeident Robert L Ketment head or building manager tar to "sit down with student
concemed. Tbat individual will -tatives" and work out
announce the threet and the the framework under which a
recommendation to evacuate, union would operate. He said
• "the building's staff to such a &amp;yBtam would facilitate
= t h e recommendation.
·~ raolution" of stu8talf members in ouch an cleDt grievance8. At Reportu
I!W!IIt are ~ to look for deadline, there was no adminis"uJwaJal objecU" in t h e i r tratM! responee.
areas, to report any such ob- 1 ~ that" might be negotijecla, or unuaual ~ or ated, said H~, include .
activities to . the department such, things aa clasS size, markbead, to d..a window&amp; and Jock
doors~.... the bulldlna, ::C.~-~!'~
pendinc .... ill ~r - who fail to meet their
Cool:una2tly, Security will ~ iDdependent study and
-with the ~t head ~ ~llludant "wortting condior buildina and Cllft- ..,._
cluct
• .-reb for the bomb.
HucldleBDl said thet the
"Whaa" the threat includeo • Studart "-oc:lation is .w-ly
bullciiDa IIIPIIIId far unioniza- '
t1m1
111uc1anta ........ labor
...... and poUtlciana in the
real U...t," Secartty ..,. h
Bldl'alo -.iualty, althouch
buildina lhauld ..
DO Je. than 16 miautal before ha ""-1 to diYulp.....,.. of
the lime ..t and aaarchara 8llppllrthJc lndl¥idaiiL
He .US ht IUdJ a mowl" is
lhauld - - at . . . fha
_ , . ....._ ,.__.. in ·
lllinulM
to .h .......
'lbe
lhauld
. _ _ all)' . . . um-.Jty docu:aled - ' Y . If h tlllla - ' . . . &amp;.. tt... alit one
..t II Je. than 15 mlnutaa" atatemHt ..tnmcbiiiDc etuaway, cw H ~ tla. II let.
--~ S&amp;udant ..........to,

All Bomb Threats Serious,
U/B Security Force Warns
Bomb threels are serious

matters far Campus Security

whether made "with intent to•
follow throuch" or "ali a prank
or . . · . form of barassment,''
Uru-s;ty officials said this
week.

Times DeliVery
To Profs Cited
A Caltral Park pharmacy
has pined national attention
with its system of merchandis!!!J the Sunday New Yor~
Tllfla, primarily to U/B ..pro'-'n.
Dru, Topictl notes that Zimdahl'a Pharmacy ol Buffalo,
unlike druptores, reprds the SwodiJy Tima (and
the chore of puttina it topther) sa "anytbinc J;iout . hother-

-~

Aa olher
ZimdUJ'I
t.8
its J&gt;harmacles.
Jist of .,..,.:
..._. who want a Tima
......t for them -=b Sunday.
But Zlmdahl'o ,..... one step
furtber than just savinc the
r.. Its customen. It cJe.

=

8Jiplalninc thet the store delhwa h pap!IS to shout 28
'-ilitoa -=b week, pbannaeiat,.
-Terry Edpll pointed out
tbllt- ol the people ..,uinc
the .nice are JDSDbers of the
Slate U nlveralty at Buffalo
faaalt;y. .
Mr- Edpll admits thet many
. . - - _ . _ . to cliotbllt they am _pt home
dlll-:r ol the New York
........ and they put their
011 the TU!Ieo delf_,lllt, they -ny become

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

'

'lbe ciiiiY caldJ II )'011 loawt
to lhlll wllbla • ODHDIIe ....u..
ol Mala and AIDboNL

more than we are asked to do.
We are asked to submit pro-

objected to the oo-cbainnen's
pro~

use of subcommittees
to investigate individual problems, fearing that peraonal bitionships."
ases would unduly influence
"We are not brought togeth- the decisions. ' He favored the
er to .approve or condemn. We group mooti:ni as a whole.
are here to recognize a situaTbe members -finally agreed
tion and to suggest the positive to the formation of five substeps by which this can be rec- committees. Tbeee subcommittified."
tees and their heads are: MiCouncilman Hoyt noticed nority Relations, Frank J.
that William McKibben, ala· Corbett, Faculty of Social Scilion manager of "WBEN-radio, enoes and .Administmtion; Powas not present, and neither litical Issues, Marvin Zimmerwas any other representative of man; Educational Responsivethe "Buftalo media. Several ness, A. John LaTona, Citizens '
names of possible members in Committee on Intermunicipel
that area were suggested, in- Aftairs; Establisbment Responcluding Jim Brennan and Mike sibility; Dorothy Haas, Student
Jackson, .editors of Spectrum Aftairs; Media, RObert Convisand etho&amp;, respectively.
sar and lAJcian Parlato.
The group agreed to put off
Subcommittees will report
consideration of benefits the their progress at plenary sescommunity gets from the Uni- sions at two-week intervals.
vemity until a later mooting.
The final report will be delivDr. Marvin Zimmerman, as- ered to President Ketter thu
sociate profeeeor of philosophy, week of December 22.

posals for consideration in developing new and proper rela-

Student Union llbuldBe Local &lt;?SEA
. heN
. .
Awards.Four
The 1st m t
ution SCholarships

~~:~ -~~

~~J:~:.r.a:
-w

=

ar

he said, exist at the will of the
administration and faculty, and
have no real power.
. Huddleston feels that a union
of students would have some
power, and give students "the
same democratic right accorded all campus grou-that of
good-faith collective barfB!ning
with the University adm,inistralion, with neutral thiid-party
review."
The union idee was endorsed
early this summer by CAUSE
and was proposed by Norman
Goldfarb, an NLRB official
and a member of CAUSE.
Goldfarb suggested that the
Taylor Law- which providee
for collective barpirung for
State employees-be amended
to include legislatiwly-de6ned
student barpin!Dg rights and

~~~ti~~o~f~

lence of the extzeme !ell
At u.a't lime the pw"; drew
no ofticial Univenity ft!1!P0D81!,
although a spokesman (or the
Erie County Conservative Party called the proposal"abeurd."
"H anyone should take this
~ _...... - 1·t milbt
well lead l to ,......!;.t demanda
.. . that ·the Stata pey them to
atteiid school," Mrs. LYnn J.
Dane, ~ chairman of
Party ·oaicl
Sbe aaid H llludants are PWID
status llllder the Taylor Lew
U.. tu;paye,a should ha""
equal slatuo to striP "apinat
~- their ~ tuas."

*"

The Civil Service Ernploya.
Association ( CSEA; on campus has selected two colle&amp;e
students and two U/B employees to receive its 1970 educationscholarslups.
The student recipients, who •
will receiw $200.eacb,.are children of CSEA-member .emp_loyees at the Uni-mty. They
Joaephine R. Psnowicz,
dauabter of Stanley Psnowicz,
Buffalo; and' J08eph A. Calabotta, son of Dololes Calabotta,
Bul!alo. Miss Panowicz is a
freshman at D'YouviJie.Collep

are:

~ea~f.ri~~-%:.,~::.,'":':
selected on the t.aio of their
high school --.uc n!CIIrds

and

their · ~.-d.

'Th8 emp~- who are both.
enrolled in couroM in the Univenity's Millard Fillmore College (the eW!IIint division).
awarded $50 each. They
are: Mn. Joan E. F..U.., _,_
. atanopaplwr -th Millard
Fillmo.., l:»lleae; ~ Mn. Re.
Kociecki, aasistant . to the
~ Occupational Tber-

apL.x..un. to Edward G.
Dullek, )JI'I!IIidont of the Uni,..,._
olty'o C8EA Chapler, there are
approdmately 1,900 in CSEA
on the campus.
HELPI
- T o lilt I t LIBRARY HOURS
Loc:kwoocl MemoNII Ubnuy, Ext.
36111

�"REPoRTER..,

4

Senate PI~ May Seem~head of Its Time, But ...

.....
feel"'i'i: = ,

By OONAID

w.

~,...-

ten·replies, n.oiming' two to one
in favor of a repreoentative

RENNIE

I
s~te­
DBDIB should l'l!a!ive "publication in COIIl&gt;8Ciion with our Bylaws OOilSideration.

model and many . sugaestions
about such a model. (A subsequent survey by the Executive
Committee verified a 3:1 majority among 540 respondents

In view of the conoern and
uncertainty ~ by some
faculty about ~ procedures to
be followed in obtaining ap-

~~tings

...

in favor of replellelltative _govwere held with
small groupe of faculty sensiuve to a wide spectruin of facUlty opinion.
3. Mailings and phone calls
were made to off-campus ronaultants in faculty suvernance.
including tbe former chairman
of the Bylaws Gommittee re"aponsible for our present organization and the chairman of the
Governance Committee of the
SUNY Fllculty Senate, whose
responsibility it is to review
and make recommendations to
the Chancellor conoeming the
byfaws .of individual campuses.
As a ..._...,..ce of these
three 80UIOI!8 of in_put plus individual --.xt&lt;, the Bytaws Committee coucluded tbat
some repreoentative form of
~for an enfarged vot11111 faculty ..... W&gt;qUestionably
the desire of and to the advantap of tba r-.lty and tba University. We furtMr felt It to be
the legitimate responsibility of
a Special Committee of the
Senate, not an ad boc faculty
group, to a recommendation of tbia .......,__

pmyal or diaapproYal of campus Fllculty Byla:"r. or Amend-

ments to Byla..S, the Bylaws
Committee of the Faculty Sen-

ate feels the followini proced~

---ures

out by Etn.t L

Boyer - (DOW Chancellor of

SUNY) on July 23, 1969,
should be known:
"L Fllculty bylaws or amendmmts to faculty bylaws will be
forwarded by tbe campus presidmt to tba' vice chancellor
bavini liaiaon ._...n,ility for
his ......... 'lbe prEdent will
""""- with tba bylaws any
Ia, 8Ugp!ltions or rectlaaa he may have
dan.
.
:'2. 'lbe vice chancellor recelvipa tba bylaws will be relpCIIlidble for reviewina tbeoi.
Aa a put of tbia review, he will
camUit the University counsel
IIDd tba (SIDfY) Fllculty Senate Committee on Govemance.
U I t - appropriate, the vine
c:bancellor ma,Y mranae for roneultatiaaa inwlving members of
tba campuo' adminiatmtive and
instzuctional r-.lty. members
of tba Fllculty senate Commit-tae on Governance, and mem·
ben of the Cbencellor's staff.
n. i11opa1W
"3. Upon the campletioo of ta . , . - a forum 'for lile_ uthe staff work indicated in !&gt;8f· . -,..of·on a - Vartety
agraph 2, tba vice c:banoelaor of lila _.,. lila acoclamlc
will ,forward the proposed by- communltr. We ·~
laws or amendments to bylaws poo111on paporo and - . . u

._on--

GVIEWPQINTS.

~u.:....c:~ther wi~ ---'
---perm--Its.-·______

"4. The Cbanoellor will present the propc&amp;KI bylaws or
amendments to bylaws to the
University's Trustees for their
approyal or disapproval."
· T6e present Bylaws of the
Faculty Senate have not been
awroved or disapproved by the
~ and to our knowledge
only step #1 of the above procedure hiiB been rompleted.

Accordingly, our report to
the E:recutive Committee on
January 28, 1970, inc I u de d
these genera I rerommendationa:
1. That an amendment to the
Bylaws be prepared enla!'ging.
the membership of the voting
faculty, and establishing -'! representative legislative body of
tbia .v oting faculty.
·
2. That the Executive Committee appoint an appropriate
Special Committee of the Faculty Senate charged with drafting tbia proposed amendment.
3. That the Executive Committee establish a timetable for
tbia Special Committee tbat
would enable Jull and open
discussion of tbe proposed
amendment before final action
was taken by tbia plellellt body.
'lbe Executive Committee
adopted all amendmen.ts unanimously (as moved by Professor Hal Segal and seronded by
Profi!IISOr Bruce Jackson) -&lt;me
of its few unanimous votes all
year. The Special Bylaws Committee was reappointed and
charged with preparing such an
amendment, and you have the
product of nine months of oogitation before you . . • • ·

...

The Bylaws Committee
should preoent a brief summary
of the seneeis and aubetanoe of
it&amp; proposal .. . .

.

- n.a..o~s.

L!lBt December the • Execu-

tive Committee referred to us a
~ amendment, accompanied by over 100 faculty signatures, tbat would have created a representative body to
trinaact the aftaira of the votinll faculty.
ln I'IIIJIOil&amp;e to this, the By.taws Committee undertook
three OOUI'8Md action:
·
1. 'lbe ~ - amendment
was mailed to each .member of
tba votina faculty tb solicit his
or ber reactions to ·a repreoentalive
body and his 'or
ber
critic:isma of the
~ amendment. We received ....,..,.;m.teb 100 writ-

=t

~PORTER.., .
.&amp;

_ _ ....._~ ~~ ..

-

•. r.
_,_

...

...::;'::

I

IGJ._

,).

a.:::.:u:::::,
r..-.,
,.._-.._....,a._
fill I f -

u...

~-;;:,. . . .. .
JU~ UO ......_.-A.,_

a.lhltti,

.

'lbe document UDder diacu&amp;sion. therefore, coocems ilaelf
specifically with "'~
faculty f0vet11Gt1Ce, 118 was our
cbarge, DOt Uniwrsity-w ide
govemai.oe, DOt faculty~t
gqyemanc:e, not faculty-DOnteaching profeosiooal sta1f suv·
ernance. It is a~ of the
:pecial B laws
..._ DOt
f 011e 1 Y
.._,

out some UDderstanding of our
preaent sub8laDCe. '1'be Uylaws Committee of five yeara
ago whidt was respoosible for
propoamg our preoent orsani·
za~t
tbat ontwo~pa~
--....
~
gradients went into the batch
for elfective· fa cuI t.y aowrnanoe: (1) • policy-recommeod·
s
;nv bodies W h i C h did their
and (2) an inIt hiiB been influenced by the formed faculty cleciaioo-makin
.suggeStions of literally hun- body whidt gave these .-.ndreds of faculty and, in ·the mandations a fair '-ring. 'lbe
opinion of the Bylaws Commit- former, the ··~tors" of poltee, hiiB &lt;been mudl improved icy moommandation, are our
by aging. It is now ready for committees, fully staffed tbia
tasting.
· year with some 60 faculty. 'lbe
~ of . . . _ . .
latter, the decision-maloer, Ia
Now as to the aubsl4nce of our "town-hall" body . . .•
the proposal. 'lbe voting faculIn the preoent .JIIOty would be broadened to in- poaa) . . _ intact our pOlicyelude all ful.t-time academi c reco,unendinl mach i" e r l•
staff with academic rank as which, when it wor1ui at all,
well as tt-e members of tba worlui remarkably well. 'lbe
adminiUralive and . llOII-teacl&gt;- plellellt proposal would CJGbt
infprofusionalataffwho ~ the dec;.;.,..,.,...
chooee to join and- whose pri- fUIICIUm to the tepi~live
m.arY 'responsibility is the initi- • Senate.
.
.
ation, development or impleI ,shall DOt cataloc tba teamentation of educational ,pro- 801111 why the Bylaws ~
grams. Overall Senate repre- tee·feels the lacUlty 118 a wbale
~tion woUld derive entirely hiiB ~mtured to the point wla:e
tiQp, tbia voting faculty. Repre- deleption of its authority is
oentation would be~ timely and wise .•.. However,
87 per cent to the
-time aca- I · would point out . ·. . lhat the
demic staff with
·c rank, two great mater .institutions
10 per cent to the administnl- who served as our "town-hall"
tive stafl and 3 per cent to the inspiration and model ooly fi•a
DOn-teaching profeosiooal stafl yeam ago, 'lbe UniversitY- of
who are members of the voting Wisconsin and the Berkeley Difa cui ty. Proportional repre- vision of tba California Senate,
sentation would be provided have alsd. J11!1tured and have
from faculties based 70 per cent adopted repreamtative Senatea
upon faculty numbers and 30 -the Berkeley Division by an
per bent upon student rontact 84 pel' cent majority of 972
hours within faculties - with responding facUlty as recently.·
the proviso tbat no · single fac- as tbia JUII8 4.
ulty be represented by more
The present proposal may be
than 20 Senators.
an idea whose time"hu not yet
. To accommodate arguments rome on tbia campus, or whidt
that special_interests and view- will not be permitted to come
poin_ts within faculties may ~ot !'t this time. 1'-hope the latter
reoe•ve ad"''W!-te representation lB not the "C8SI! "'!d tbat YI'U

~r :SU: =v~ ~

:':nan;,r=.';g,::~•t!'J;

U:.:d:c:=. GR.EPORTS
GI:'D,QM

!~:'~t,

or acrording to sex or other
criteria as they see fit to do.
The form of faculty represent&amp;tion is legitimately the business
of the faculty itaelf.
To provide some stability to
the decision-~!! process, we
PJ:QPO&amp;e tbat decunona amved
at by 2/3 ma.i9J:il;Y &lt;J! the tatal

.r
.
GREADERS

total Senate would be subject
to referendum.
To provide tba broadest poasible advisory base, we propose
that each committee of the Senate include students · 88 voting
~ and we ellllOI1r8llll the
inclllBIO!' ol. other ~ of
the.
propca! tbat ·a ny
member of tba Uniwrsity Com-munity be alaldecl floor privilegas of the Senate, l!lldllBlve of
wtin&amp;. upon written J:eq~MSt to
tba ~
'
To ~t. tba IIDOOtbest poa-.
Bible tranaitioD from our pnsmt arpnizatlon to the prOpe-r cqanizatlon .., are ~

EDITOR:
Tbia ilo in reopo...., to Profeooor
Berlowilz' letter which ap_....t
in tbe October 15 edition of tbe
8
be notecf tliat the
United Fund of Buftalo and Erie
. County. like similar orpnizain .mut 2.300 other communit&gt;eo,

.

lo'

• ••••--: ..

t•:' t~".·· . ;).-~~

•/

~

U~~~t: f::t!:'~r:.,..·f~r\~:
~
inc. hMitb and ;youth oerviceo.

dtanM

mthe

Tbe decioiono re1ardin' ouch

~"!!l!~re-=

-

!':of ~~"i::
local impor-

Ower tbe tbeie - - cliocu.ioao ' * - tbe
lMdem ol both lbe United Fund
and tbe PlaJmed Pan!Dtbood Center, tbe - t being apbiuic ~ - :r-n • · Aa a

s..-

=~':,..g
~--tab..,::"=~

of glass inatrumentll--..tanting tubes
'th liquid" swiftl "'ahmv through
WI
•
Y r.--:-7'
them; delicate rourid globes whose
liquid slowly drips into the top ol
a distillation column; roils, manometers.
&lt;
·
Your 8cene willp~ly be populated by scientiata and students in
white roats and goggles, peering at
the
scratdling their heads
and g&gt;aking. notes.
•.
Not once m a tbouaand such VlSlODB
would you be likely In dream up a
glassblower. Yet without one, much
of the scene would not. be P!JIIIIible in
reality
·
In the U/B Chemislty Department
glassblower Gus Kline helps translate such images into reality.
'file glassblower_'s o8lce in the basement of Acheson 18 a -small unassuming room whidt looks just like the
many other labs tbat litie both sides
of the hall on tbat floor. Inside, however, a difference begins to· show.
Glassware ia -ttered all over tables
and shel'le8 t..Jters, broken burettes,
_.__~
--~
of tub;nv are
PlllOIII
...., ·

glass_ware.

!-

fi"z.r.M

lerwt, .., - -

By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Picture a c:t.Diatry fab and you'll
probably conjure up an · image ol
strange-smelljn cbemicala and lots ol
~-- A
1 te

_ .,__,_ ·
==--"""

.:=.,-:=

powwa 11D11 clutles of tba
:'tu~~~:di;.';~l
ata, llO clttlqe in tba '-'lty ~ntatino ol tbe Center
.._..,_..,lp or charp of our
·
,.,_ ~ 111ey
, _ committee 1, na tboir decloiooo .., lbe prodtanM in our oftic?en and tba .iocted rata ol ~ flo:ial lbe

~ ~t ~

'1\lic;k
you
think Kline 18 a c:bemist--be s short,
slightly balding and you can tell bis
wife's a good rook. But his blue-tinted
safety gfaasea and strooa staady hands
auggl!8t he's special
His Work ~
His gfaasea are made fromra special
material, Mr. Kline eoplalna. They
filter out harmful ye0ow light from
the sodium 8ame that his bit beoch
l&gt;urMr produces. 'lbe gfaasea alao have
plutic flapa lhat fit ckaly to the
side of his eyes, pooCiac1in1 him from
work whidt literally aplodes in bis
hands.
bends beer tba iiDpM:t of bis
25 ye&amp;nl of ~- with 11-- They
. - -...._· mAD.Y
are filled with tiny ...,. ........
accidents, IIDd !IN IIIIQib from lbe
YeatS of ~ bliat tbBy've heal

nx-

eq&gt;cad tn. KliDa.,... .-his hand
throuih the llo&amp;tioR ~ of"bia beoch
l&gt;urMr and DOt leel a llliDI,
'lbe Cllll8laDt blue 8ame of that
burner Ia tba
of the lab.

........m

SUNY ~--=t-laqe, :&gt;"..::..~ anala';!!i~ It buma 'frca lba time -tmt.
and no c'-le in our ..-ance .their..._~in tba ........,
be 1eaws at
;:'~":'1: or our ~t
~ ,_.,
' nicbl 'lbe .,....._ ..elmaleB tbal
n........a..... .
-:.:::..:-~ be . . . tllnalb . ...... qiiDder8 d
n.. ~ . mattara ,. ._ • . tW";;'f..,..... , I"'U-J., .'II!IIlllk·
w·us~~_,_, ~~~ .......·~Jfrlllh,.,.t-&lt;l~.. ',.~....•.•~~4•~•
··••··~·~ ·h.-u~lliiav...:
'.llllit..U. pi.l$ 'f!

..w

---

a»JWJW..umar• ~. lf.

-

Fund SaYS .PPC
~=:~=~~"',!;·
Did Not Apply
by less than 2/3 majority of the

........ llO

,.,. .,_,-£.- ·z:..· -·

~a;o~!.Jl:'To':~ C:.t~i

member of a faculty is allotted missed opportunity at t h i s
votes equal in number to_the juncture may be crippling and
representatives to be elected the . hostilities generp.ted not
· -from his faculty. 'lbese may be worth the prize.
cast en· bloc for a favorite son,
In any case, tbia Committee
or distributed among candi- feels it hiiB fulfilled its charge.
llates, as the voter ~ ~t, We
•
turtbef propose tbat ll)divtdual
f!'culties ~ocate rep~ta-

---

.

~ ;,_.~~ ,....,~··"

....... ,.: ,....,... _

......w .-

.

....

..n-

�~22,J910

5

Center May Be
The Answer
To
Open Admissipns
·•

.

Some are calling it Western New
York's answer to "open admissions."
Othenl, like Dr. Arthur S. Anderson,
are calling Buffalo's newest institulion of higher education "a link between the .urban. area that bas been
educationally deprived and !hi! eotablished educational institutions."
Cooperative Colleae Center (CCC) ,
located at 465 Washington Sl at E.
Mohawk Sl, downtown, opened its
doors three weeks qo to some 550
students, all high school graduates
who fall into the soc:i&lt;H!ClODOIDic disadvantaged category. Dr. Anderson is
its director.
With the Stale Univemity of New
York at Bullalo acting as the fiscal
and administrative umbrella, the faciin chemistry and be hasn't studied
lity's main thrust will be to prepare
the romposition of glass but worliing
students to do college work, and Dr.
with it for 25 years bas taught him
Anderson thinks it will be going about
exactly what you can and cannot do.
its mission in innovative ways.
.Slcns
Where did it all start? State UniYou might say Kline apprenticed
versity bas opened or .will open a
for the first 15 years-making neon
number of cooperative college centers
signs. which is more difficult than
across the State. Located in Rochester,
might first appear. Quite often, Kline
Syracuse, Wyandanch (Suffolk Counexplains, most of the sign is one long
ty), Roosevelt ( Nassau County). Mt.
piece of glass tubing. With large or - Vernon and Yonkers, some of the
especially_ long signs, you have quite • centers will concentrate on developa lot of glass to keep track of.
ment of special programs wbere such
'The neon lights are fashioned from
programs · do not exist. In Bullalo,
a pattern. Glass tubing is measured
.where SEEK and U/ B's EPIS alto the pattern and is bent in the
ready exist, the Center will ronoenproper plsces. Of course, it's not quite
Irate more on remedial or "developthat easy. Every time you make a
mental" programs.
bend in the glass, the tube closes up
Sevenol Institutions Portlclpote
slightly and would restrict the flow
"Cooperative" comes into the title·
of neon. To open the bend, molten
because at esch center, a number of
glass must be blown out until it's the
ares institutions of higher learning
same width as the glass on either
cooperate to provide stslf and fill
side of the bend.
teaching functions.
But, agsin, that's harder -than you
At this point, two institutions are
might expect. Factors such as best of
actively involved bere. At Erie Comflame, type of glass, weight)md degree
munity College, about 65 students are
of expansion desired are an things to
taking regular course work. Another
consider.
60 are doing the same at Bullalo
KliDe, of course, applies the lecbniState. A similar program is being
QUM perlected in years of signmaking
negotiated with U/B. Cooperative Colplua len years of blowing glass at
lege is also " talking". with Niagara
LiDde Chemical Corporation . to his
Community Colleae.
work here at U/B.
Students at the Center will conBut his skill utends also to "tiny
centrale on developing skills in areas
delicate ~ which are a hobby
where they are presumably weak-in
with him. His replica of a u.n-ne
soCial science, or bard science, or
lamp, for example. is scarcely an inch
math, or reading,' or language. arts, or
hich but is an exact duplicate. of the - a rombination. Teaching is performed
laraw oricinal, rigbt down to tbe open-· on a "team" basis. Wlwt the student's

Glassblower Gus Kline Is
Both Craftsman &amp; Artist
Gf'EATURES.

--,......
!:! ::: =:.::: .::::.~
.
,&gt;:::. tbe ·workint model
oaaditiaao,

iJ\

of his work
but people
tbe a-tilllry DepartmeDt - "
Kline • Dllft tben a tecbniciaD whe

blow . . _

•

..;J

MaR of the time tbe cbaDisla know
exactly whet they wmt In tbe -Y of
- - Kline aplaiDL "But-.
tina I haw to belp u-."
8udl tbe a . - a y Wbm
Gary &amp;.ln. a d*D lll*f. otudent.
wuled a 111JP8Nb deoiped.
lfa kMw ""+t be wuled ft ID do but
dllin't Nally kDoof whet It abould
loak IDle.
'
'lbla II wbere Kline ..... liL

,,.

He~·~ .~ .~~ .~·::.

-::,.~·:.-~declare.
the : :
--:ill be ...,.otiated with

:::;se'y: ,
dent's entrance

•

i

Rican, and one admlnllilmtor -.ya.
"Something Ia- ti&gt;l111 to hlhe to be , •
done to balaD&lt;e this out - to help
disadvailtqed while )'OUD8IIIeni.• Dr.
Anderson says that CCC .._._ 110
racial distiDctlobs • . • our '-rt Ia
open to everyone."
Unlike SEEJ{ and EPIS studoata,
students at the Cooperative CoiJep
Center do not receive fuDda for llviDc
ezpenaes; only a few aet any fiDaDcial
help beyond boob and tuition, wblcb
are provided for all
,
One of the "critical QUMtions" still
to be answered in the program i8 ·
whether students who are declared
ready for college entrance can be
guaranteed a plsce. One spobsman
for the Center says, " We have commitments that our students will be
placed in university settings - both
in Western New York and elsewhere
in the Stale." Dr. Anderson feels that
because CCC will tum 011t a "superior
product," placement will not be a
problem.
While"much of tbeir work iS "devel:;
opmentsl," some students may earn
college credit at the Center. 'lbe
amount of credit must be negotiated
with the institution the student eventually enters. Jn Syracuse, several of.
the 25 students who rompleted the
program found that they could l!llle&lt;
college as third-year students.
Theoretically, a student will take
thres semesters of work at Cooperative College Center before he is ready
to · do colleae work. Some will go
longer, some 11!118. 'lbe aoai is a zaro
attrition rate for academic reasons.
'Numbers _ .
That is probably idealistic. Nationally, 60 per cent of tJ..- who start
college actually finish. Dr. Albert Barrian, assoc:isle vice president for - · demic development at UtB, tbiDb
that 50 per cent of thoole mlerinc tbe
program bere will actually aet decreeL
But he points out that oiJ1y 1.2-15 per
cent of the students project """""'"'
on standardized tests. And he adds:
"'Ibis says something about tbe individual attention the students l'fiCIIhe,
it says something about tbe .total educatiooal system. Per.'- 80 to ao·per
cent of tJ..- who .,._ oallep abouJd
be getting decreeL"- Dr. Anderson cfia1ibs such "Dum-

=~ =-~ :::.::~~

:.c:

to CCC will be earicbed by their aFor both the ..w-ble and the
participatina co~ and uniwnities.
perience whether they . , ali to a twodecorative, tbe of glaaablowing
'lbe teachers - about 35
year or four-year i!Jstitution, 'wbelb.
Ia llimilar. Pint, tbe glass be
- ciJme from uniwnity or public
or not they IM!Diually CDIIIIilete a
bested to a llowiDI yellow - . Upa
acbool backgrounda. 'lbey will be
degree.
be ............._ 'l1wl, a ll!he is
aided to some depee by tutorial as''We will have no fallurelllae,• be
bloom iDto ud alowly tumed iD order
aistaniL
.
says. ''We will not reprd tbe student
ID aet a unifonD bubble from the
WI- tbe CoUep is in full opmawhe dos --not CliJIDI)Iele a depee a
.._ It _... juot Lib b1aorinJ uP
lion, tbe State baa .authoriJed"PPias
failure. We l!llvioioa tbe
a
a baJJoap ud tbe is 81iihtly
for 1,026 full-time otudents, or more
plsce wbere all work i8 de.- • a
llimilar. A balloaD i8 first ..,- bard.
tben that--up to l.,&amp;(lO--H a lbare of
lelun - wbere tbe atmoopbon II that
to blow IIQII t'-1 qodle _,_ 'l1le p..
the otudenta are pan.t1me.
:
~.
of a happy bame, wbere otudenta .,_
Lib that aiiD, but, UDilJoe lbe
Students ..,teriiii tbis . fall · ~ what they are"clofnc."
b"aiJOOD, ft ... no
drawD primarily from a beddog of aplfa poiola out that penmal
lilolpe; that depeado .., tbe artillry of
plicaDta to SEEK -s BPI8.
...,_ .~ will pla,y a bi&amp; role,
tha .,.....__
,_ Diu• ....... - . T•
adil that follow-111&gt; lltudiea will taloe.
ADd UIB'• Kline is 1n1Ji both ... . ¥1* af .tbe ~ ~ adva-.. _. plalje.;'t¥ ~ that_ ~ ~ ~.....
-~·~- ~.:.::~: ~. :.~ ··-~··~··· '·&gt;·· !!"'."'f.~~triii.61Mi&lt;~~.· .aM·~.tbay ~ . .. . . . . ., .•. · .&lt;.•.•

~tly

c:ou- •

_.....,jrw! ·
... ..

a

.....·.

�'

.. .

)

Ot:tob« 22, JJ70

June Grad
Job Market
IsfTight'

Senate Group
W1nts Students
The Fac:ulty Senate Commit- .
lee on Student Afl'aira Ia looking for students to their cbnmittee. Dr. Larry
Green, dvlirman of the c:ommit..
tee, ' - asbd ' that all interested s t u d e n ta atleDd the
~2.'s first -m.g, NCM!m""'
The c:ommittee is , _ . . , . ,
for reviewing Um-.ity policy
on studllata and ia 8leo __.m,
as 1111 advisory Ollllllllittee to
Dr. Ric:bud A. Slgaelkow, viae

Gym·Is 'Busier Than Ever'
As 1Wc' Prograin Expands
More basketballs are ~
ing, more rackets swinging, and
more water splashing tban IMlf
before in the history of aeneral
recreation at Clark Gymnasium. And, there is a 1888011, the
Athletic Department 811Y1L
'Throuch the cooperation o(
Dr. Harry G. Fritz, U/B's new
director of physical education,
recreation, and athletics, and
his aasistant in chanre of the
''1'811!' PI'Oif8ID, Irv Wrilht. 1111 _...ted service for the Unive}sity community ·is under .
way.
Wright recently llllDIIUIIC8d
both u.cr-1 hours of _....
tion and the fact thet attendants are on duty during all

~~ ~!&gt;!:=·

dents, fsculty, and staff, the
A~tic Depar!ment 8IIYIL The
mam J1YD1 18 open every 8Y8ning except n-t.y !rem 9:30
on. '1\-.lay is ~ "for
women onlY."
The small 11YD1. weichtroom.
handball and aquaah courta, preaidont b llludeDt daiiL
WJ'8IIt1ina room and appuatua . ...,_...._ ol the~
room are open !rem four o'clock lee are quite open." Dr. Gtee
each aftarnooD until cloainl
time at 11 p.m.
·
The Saturday schedule ineludes all iYm facilities, 111art..
inl at 9 a.m. until5 p.m. Sun&lt;lily's hours are noon to 10 p.m.
Pool hours are DMlle divided,
but
swimming ia avaiW&gt;Ie
nilh'3;"frcm 7 p.m. oa. -.pt
'1\-.lay, ..on-•8 nilhL

Weekend pool hours run
in the ~tus room during . !rem 1 to 3 p.m. on-Saturday
• and !rem 2 to 5 p.m. on 8uJ&gt;..
U~tea have gym lilly.
privlleps throulh the atudent
There are two pneral .,..
athletic fee. Graduate llludents quirementa to comply with for
may -utY for the , . _ eched- uae of the facilities. RM.vaule ol evoata by IIUina • $3 tiona must be made in penon
fee aach ...-tar. Facufty and for ~the handhall and
atalf are ~ $5 per pencft ....... courts; one lilly In adfor ._ _ . privilefoL
YllllCe ol a ~ date. And,
1be IIYDl l18elf aDd the pool m carda mu..t ~ P...,led for
are the . - papular with 11tu- the uae oluy faCilitY.

'open periods.

em-

points out and 111811)'- are
under . Ita .luriadlcliaiL
Any studllat may 111tw Clll
the c:ommittee, not ,iwlt ~
graduates, Dr. Gr-. 8IIYIL - ,
The fust maetinl will be on ·
Nov. 2 at 1 p.m. in 148 Capen.

Apathy(eo~~~~llf-_

pie had a table," YO!un-...t
a ' aeoond Goodell
.Jelfrey R. Osinaki, 18, ol Bu11aJo.
"But they _.. only t.e lor
about a lilly."
He said thet some atudenta
~ he worldna for Ric:bud
~. Goodell's Dllmocratlc
ClppOIIIIlt, out ol 0"'--'a Butfa1o hMdqauten.
Ia "Do
..........__ - · ~......,..... Clll ~

.....ur,

:n,:;;

�we is to inform the alleged of.
leader of the verdict. either
tbat night

H -,

01'

the next dol.y.

IIOC!III'dinl to their
olfic:la1 NJes,' the Committee
may have ten claya to debate
the matter.

This system far hMring stu- uted to keepU., the campus
dollt dealinl with campus quiet this falL
disruption '!"" or i 11 in a II y
Faculty membe.rs of the
started because "some degme Hearing Committee are: Glen
of discipline is 1111 unavoidable Thurow, pbiloeopb,y; Jobn Perpart of the broader objectiv... of adotto, classics; H o w a r d
the Uni....aity." One of its pur- StnlU88, engineenng; Geor1e
is "to giYe . the alleged Huaco, IIOCioJoiy; Sara Cicalelolleoder a bearinc which is fair li, medical tecbnolocY; IUld
in e....ry ~ sense of Powell.
the word, fair to the individual
Staff members are: Ruth
student IIJld fair to the Univer- Bryant, counselor education;
sity."
·
Jerome Fink, student poraooDr. Powell believes ·that the nel services; Andrew Holt,
Heetinl Committee at U/ B is Graduate School; Ed Dudek,
. civil engineerins; IUld Judith
"fair in eYery reasonable of the '!0&lt;11." IUld he tskeo Dinp!ldey, School of~
pride in the """"" already menl
hmdled. The actin~ chairman
Student members are Maitin
of the Committee feels that the Ma""'-ter, Thomas Rozek.
board is an important-JiliN of Spencer Schofield IUld Bill
the Urii-aty IIJld bae oontrib- Neft.

Dent Center
For Amherst?
The UniYeraiq ean build iD.
Ambent the nation's lint Jlllr·
tidpatina ceater far catllnuinc
dolltal ..auc.tion "if - pt ....
m, ,.,.,," Dean William M.
Feapna of the School of Dentlatiy told the ~ ....tine .
of the School's alumni this
moa.th.
"We JIIU8t be ~ and
buildinB In the "70o If We to be ...ty for the '8011," the
deeD aUd.
"' ean ..malaD a ceater fully
~h!&amp;:•d to. .._ chairaide
iD.- tmnpeulic ~
oedurea far hofh the doatal ~
te.ianal and the -~
sianaJ.
-w be: leclme
hall facilitiee available far pnimd oontiD.uiD.c education :•

n-

pr'Oin:IDI; conference .. ..,...
IUld !abe for study c:lul.; .....
night ~ diD.inB
facilitiee, a reference Uhnry.
n- could be CCDalltatioo fa.

c:ilitiee boalrad ID.to an elaborate
ll8twOft via camputera, '*-~­
circuit TV and AV oamanmicstioas.
"' aile this as the conter far
orpniJJed dentimy in Western
New York by providinc facili.
ties far all compolll!lllt profes- .
siona1 -=ieties. . . • You hne
a ouce-ID.+lifetime opportunity
to establish the prototype for a
unique professlonar '-'urce
conter IM1'8d to your needa."
U "1.&amp;00 dolltists iD. Western
New York IUld neichborlnl
areas ......,.t to contribute just
IIIM!Ial bu ndred dollars .ch
year fOI' unlimited uee of the
facilities IUld part;cipa.tion iD.
the pro1rams oft81'1&gt;d," Dean
Fe&amp;~BDB aaid, "in fiYe years
that would give you over $1
million to work with-md to
talk to fouJ•ldations with."
'"This is your opportunity,"
Dean Fe&amp;~BDB challenged the
alumni. "And I am not here to
ask yo(J for JDODey4\lt rather
to ~St you thinldni aboUf whet
you all can do together in the
next few years at U jB IUld to
indicate my willingnees to serYB
as the liaison boltween the practitioners IIJld the University.
Think it over-but not too

10111-"

Dean Fea1ans also asked
alumni for help in workini out
propams fOI' m8etinc the needs
of dentistry _..uy- pertic.
ularly in defining the tasks of"
dentel paraprofessionals, in
workini out ~tal prolfBMB to lnlin theee therapists.
IIJld in- evaluaq their effec&gt;
t i - ... the job.
Relieved of routine duties by
therapists, Fea.&amp;ans said. the
dolltist CQUid "'eun about
the full of dentimy from
sinlle . - ma1111__.t to CDII&gt;munity dolltal health needa. Aa '
a .-.It, be would place primary emphasis .... - t i w
dentiatry - be would be a better~better.­

manacement plam.r - IUld
would ftiCI!ive -ter peraanal
~r&amp;tiAcstian by hem, able. to
olfer a more comprehenaave
health service to all "his patients."
.uoiiO TIIOU8I.Dl
U/8 II - , . an $8.8 mtUian

--""' budlllt 1....- for the

,... bellnnlnc April 1. 1971,
--L-IDidthe
f~ _ , . - - But. ...
- . the 11 meldnc a - ·
mlnad to hold the budlllt
-- . .·- ulclthe
II ''lllhtbucl&amp;et
-mlnars H

partlculllrly IMpticsl -

flicuiiJ

are ltiU IIUchlnc tun 1oac11 . the four·hotlr, four-coursa ~
ulcl, may- a ..
ductlon In facull;y ala. n. prali--·-··-the•
formed coursa load and lnclaparl'"
study are Vllluable ltltpa and
-"lthlnl&lt;--afalrchanoa

The-· ...

·or IIMtinl'' eny ...,_ _.,. cut· -1« Hna-bolcll111ln- _or fac:ull¥ - .
.

�&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
~CIION, - Ha-. 11 a.m.
mo&lt;:IIIIIOBfti samr.ut: Dr. Ed-

THURSDAY-22

=.-.

=

~~r!'.i~~- .:J.!~~~e~ ~H:'!tu,.
~..:!!'t1.-:
'l'1uuulh Saaday.

=..n:=-~~~

~.:~

'

G-22 Capen.. p.m.

~-.-..... samr.ut: =::.'!'~by~
partmont of ~S.
_,._

a - n d by lbe NatioDal Ac:ad·
ol Sciences Interacademy
E&gt;dllm&amp;e Procram. Dr. AJes.
N. v~ Inotitute of
ft8dio Enp-..m. aDd EJeetron.
i&lt;o, M-:tJAA.R., ..,.. llftiiC.
ftOJI AII'D ....ao111'D!fo or Kllr

chair,

Dr. Wilbert J . McKeo

""'!'&gt; Departmeo_t o_f

Pay

UllM!IOity of Michigan. 6
aon. .f p.m. _Ref!eshmenh, 108
Parker E-':'1'&amp;· _3:SO 1'-"'Dr. McKeachie. will revHJW , .

~.on dala mze.

Llll&amp;!'8R AND BU8111LLIK&amp;T&amp;R

lecture

~

wA...; 134 Parbr Ez&gt;P-riJII, 2

dioc:ulaioo metliocls, '!~ medta
aod studt!nt cbaractenatiao affact-

aioo.m.T ....nr.ut: Spoaoond' by
ibe Venom R.eorch GJUUp and

mg launmg.

p.m.

IN'm8NATIONAL POLK DANCING : Jn.
otruc:tion in basic otepo durinc
lint bour, SO Diefendorf Amtex.
8 p.m.
~~-===:-:-=-::-:---

~t. Dr.

BioloKY

H. !illot.ir Beed, O.B.E ., Liverpool
School of Tropical MediciDe,

~ 01t UOPICAL SHAD·
1~ Capen. • p.m.

SATURDAY-24

~=:·:mo~F!r:i:'~

violin; Henry Meyer, violin; Peter

Kamnitzer, vinla; Jack Kiralein,
ceUo. Worb by Lutoalawald, PureeD and Lipti. Baird, 8:SO p.m.
General Admission $8, Faculty
aod Staff $2, Students $1.
The LaSalle Quartet was form-

SCHOOL OP HEALTH DL&amp;DD 1'80PI:IIIIIONB OUTING: Students, facu).

l'oliey 8tuc1ioo, Brookinp Inotitu·
ticm (indos&gt;eDdoDt reM8Idt cen:

ty, and staff; dates, huobaDda/

=era~~= "r'

tar.), Washincton, D.C, JmDCB

each. children under

AND POU'IIC&amp; &amp;&amp;IPONBIBJLI'I'Y , .

12

:!"'m
free.

For

.::=,ey~ more informatioD, contact your.
~ reaeon:h · _d epartment.

:!~J~!':.:ll:.f~~:

Corbett

Colorado Collep. In 1968, tbey
moved to the CoU--Conaervatozy of Muaic of lbe University
of Cincinnati where lbey remain
in residence. They tour annually
throuchout lbe United Stat.. and

4244
~

Dr. Adrian

·~~t;~•F::= ~=r:: INTERVIEWS

pbyolciot. ...._ ....., Sciootcs Lab-

oratozy, Na~Ino&amp;ituteo of
Healtb, onaKIUICIJLAII PO&amp;CU
AND 'IIIOLOOICAL ......... Room 29,
4248 Ridae I - , 4 p.m. Refresh-

n:N10N ~

-·=

spent four yean in reaideDoe at

Sundown, ao Iroquois ~ and
·s~ ::'~__!!_ cbieand
' f ~t'!"r

Tonawanda ~

1_.,

of ibe Longbouoe, ma J:aOQUOIB

mentil 8 : 30p.m.

LONGBOUSE R&amp;UGJON. Fillmore

Methodo are heine developed
for calculatinc electrootetic and

=

CLUSION- A COMMON m:NOMINATOil OP DENTAL PRACTIC&amp;. morning

JAMIS A.. ENGLISH

ll~~t:IY~·sr...':!n":"~

-tzy.

~f ~~:...~~~~=
will diocuao his new plan ID form

FRIDAY-23

BIWlCB. afternoon eessi.on. 14.6
Capen. 9 &amp;.m.•5 p.m.
Dr. M . ear.
· meli, Aerooparw Reoearcb Labora·

a union of students on eampua.
And you will bear statements

Amico.
Tbis i&gt;rocram is c:anied by the

foUowinglocal otetiono: .WYSL at
7 a.m., WMMJ at 9 a.m., WADV
at·8:45 a.m. and WKBW at 10: SO
p.m.
BALKAN FOLK DANCING: Fillmore
Room, Norton, 8 p.m.

MONDAY-26
MONDAY NIGHT MOVD: : To be annquaced., 147 Diefendorf. 8 :30

p.m.

House ,.Restaurant, Main and

COK'I'IN"UlMG ImrTAL IDUCA'DON

Hich Streets, 11:~ a.m.-1:SO p.m.

Single luncheons on a non-re-aerwd buio are $8.00.
...,._,UIIIII, 146 Capen. 9 a.m. •
5· p.m. Cotuae &amp;!!!! olrend Satur- , .,.. MOYD:: &lt;!21'1ZEN 1UN10 (1941,
day.
',/':'
.
Oroon Welli!e), 147 Diefendorf, 8
8C)(21X.[NGUIB'I'IC8 P AN8L. DISCUSand 8 :SO p.m.
, . ·
BION: Wolf- Wolck, SOCW. ...
~

BIUNGUAUBJI;

. WEDNESDAY-28 .

Dr. M-..me Mathiot, a.ociate

ti&lt;o, AMALU. OP SOCW. INfta-

Eccles Named
Task Fbrre Head
~ ....... ibe oriciDallY·
appointed chairman, Dr.
H.
Eba1, who baa

a.-

v.

.

TBJ:OBJ:TICAL BIOLOGY BDONAB !

Dr. Lenard R Troncale, Interdiaciplinazy Communications Procram. Smithaoninn Institution, ..

:P088lBU: CONTIOL 81ft I"'B DIPnll·
ENTIAL DNA-BNA 8YNTIII:S18 AT THE
NUCl&amp;AII IONiELOPE, Room 29, 4248

Ridp Lea, 4 p.m. Refreshments
3: SO p.m.
BI:ETBOVI:N SONATA PllOOilAJI••:
Featuring Marvin Morgenstern.

_

.WJ:DNIOSDAY-28: American

Tel-

rep.....,tetiveo. Candidates hom
aU decree levels are invited to in·
terview whether' tbey will com·
plete their c;,u.ne work in January or May 1971. Registration
forms and additional information
are available in Hay• C.
PBIDAY-23: W•tvaco; Atlantic
Richfield (Products DivisiOn);

Control Data Corp.
711U118DAY-29: American Telephone and Telecraph Co.; Combustion EJlliMeriJII, Inc.
·
PaiDAY-30: West Seneca CeoInti Scbool District No. L

Note:

FaJDAL BII:RVICZ KN"!'RANCZ

will be civen on Saturday, October 24. at 8:30a.m. in
I Diefendorf Annex. This is a
walk·in eum with no application
neceooary. Please contact University Placement and Career Guidance, EzL 4414, by Friday, October 23, if you plan to !eke lbe
£XAK (na:)

exam.

.

WBFO PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
TIIUBBDAY-22
6:30 CONCIIIT ~tb

Madeleine Saltmao
Bach, CCUll&lt;ll&lt;t No. 211 "Coffu"; Gonzales-Zuleta. Symplwny
No. 4 "Coffee"; Prokofiev, " LoiN! for Thne Oronseo'' Suik;
Sibeliuo, "Belolwzzar'• Fea.t" Su.iu
9: 00 WHAT'S NEW-The beat in newly released Europaan and Amer- ·
ican claaaical recorda. Your boot is Larzy Bocue
10: 00 BOOK BEAT-,witb Robert CJOmie, book editor of ibe C~
Tribune-radio venion of the award-wi.n.ni.nl television propam.

PlliDAY-23

•

6:30 coNcmr ~tb Henry Tenenhawn
Anonymous, TM Birth of God; Brabmo, Lullaby; Mendelooobn.
TM War Man:h of the Priata; Faure, R eq..Um; FJ'IlJld&lt;, JU.
tUmption

9:00 BBC WOIIU&gt; TIII:A.TD-Kinl Lear by William Shakeopoue--fea-

11:00

turilll Sir John G;elgud

JIINI&gt;-A cuual look at folk muoic and ita 1bemeo
and lyrics. witb David Benders

III:I..U YOU&amp;

violinist who teaches recuJarly at SA.TUitDAY-24
.J'
SUNY at Alhaoy and who comes (Propamminc onpnateo at lbe WBFO Satellite Studio at 1203
to Buffalo once a week to teach . Jeffenon Avenue)
our violin students, aod Stephen
Manes, a..iatant profeuor. muaic.- 11: 00 WOJIUN ON ma oo-JWlllibl Younc
BeetboYen Sonata No. 1 in D Ma· 12:00 B.utLOw"8 BLIJIII-Bobe Barlow
2:00 PJ.'o IAZZ COIIl&lt;IO&gt;-Paul J . Smitb
8 in G Major, ()pus 30. No. 3.
Baird, 8:SO p:m. General .Admio·
sion '1.50, Faculty and Staff
SLOO, Stuclenta $.50.
J&lt;Aciomt•: SUNYCoUeceatBuffalo's Shakespearian pioduction,
directed by Studio Arena's War-

.,::m.,:;.t=: ~

~Eutero,_witb

IND~

~~. !;-.:s..Y:,n:, ART EXHffiiT
~ATION COJIPOIJJfll8, 70 Ao-

heooo. 4 p.m.

-

.

PllOG&amp;OJI POa I'IIACII·
aNO PIIAJIJIAaB'I'l .......... AND
ma I'IIACTiaJfG ...........aJIT, Spun·

ooradbylbeSdtoolof~.

~~ ~~

.

tPlLIJ, 111 Hocb·
atetter, 4 p.m. Refreshments 112
Hocbatetter, 3: SO p.m.

I'BYIIICAL·INOaGANIC CHI:KIBUY

The ....... cleolinc witb CJP.!dhlol.... bem ....-1 actiDa deaD . micf care and - - t , wiD-al ._ DiYilllaD ol UIICierllmd- oiat ol live weaidJ ......__ we_.. ........ Dtr. ~who ..... ~: Rol!ert Cocpr,. . 1888 NolieJ PrDe iD ~. ~ .......
aad medicine,
1D 191&amp;
22 a.-, a p.m.

·a:nJL.

8YMMETIIY OP DIE

DliUl, Departmeot.. of Oral Diacnoeia aDd _RadiolOKY, DIAGNOSIS
AND 'laA'I'JBN'I' or OOLLAI'D IN
~:!.. OPPICB, 146 Capen.

clt!ili·

Dr. David G. Hayo,
Lincuio·

cbairman, Dllpartmeot of

Sir- .Jolm Ecclea, distinl1lill&gt;ed pnif~ of pbyaiolocy
aad biopb·yaica,· luis best
....-1 cbairman of lbe Task
......... University ~ Dr.

tozy, Dayton,

G&amp;AYIUTIONAL

Holly ~mel. Will be performed tbrouch.November 1, Up-• .
ton Auditorium, SUNY College '
at Bull'alo 1300 Elmwood AV&amp;nue, 8 : 30 ~ Admisaion ia free
but re.ervationa required (862·
5631 or 862-4631) :- ·

CONYINUING ~~ II:DUCATI'?" •
COU1181:: Dr. Alao Drinnan,

prot-J,r, ~ rtJNCI'IONB
01t LANOUMa;

PIIYBJCB COLLOQUIUM:

(CPA) .

TUESDAY-27
~~~a.!' /;~N~. r:oN~. ~ !
=.-G~~~~a~'i:: ';--:!: E ~t- Major, Opua 12, No. 3; No.

· oou.a: Dr. Bemard Garliner.
Buf(alo dentist, C.OWN AND lliiiDCZ

AL8CTOLOOY

the opportunity for individual in·
terviewa with eclucatiodal. buai-

BIIEAJtTBJWUGBS IN DENT.AL 81: -

made by Dr. Snell· at a recent
pre&amp;~ conference in answer to the
recent cbarces made by Sherilf

·

BIIUES :

seeeion. Dr. Seymour J . K.reehover:, director, National Institute
of .[)ental Research, IJIP.~ BTIAL

De,an. u.ociate librarian aud

University archivist, will speak to
moderotor Ruth Blakel=t
woman'• rilbta and what
are
doinc for women witbin lbe 8

I..i)C7UB

~:aw:::-.8r~i~iG,;~~

mode by Erie County SbOrift Michael A. Amico.

and traeaialor of traditional Indian
Fillm:ne Room, Norton. 8:SO p.m.

:

n. ., indllltrial and covemmental

brazy, SUNY Collep at Bulfalo,
1SOCrEimwood A-.ue, 8 p.m.

~ -=--=arne!~.~~:
and .Jerome Rothenherc. editor

ruruiinc

to Deceml:er 18 in lbe faU _

~·:"the'-.'~~ :l."!

chairman. Department of PeriodontoloiY, Tufts University, oc-

INDIAJf POimn' I&amp;ADINGB: Featur-

'l'be ON-CAMPUS ~J
PllOGil.OI".
from October .:;

THURSDAY-29

.:1-l:"p::~-:: :=: :.tr. ~'i!"l'h?'= :f.rr:;
brane .-biy.
~ ::..ng:}n~8.~ f!':
cu.iDg" the recent allegation•

f.:/t M~;;.,~n~~t~J:!'.:il ~~

~~=n!'~~;~' til!;:.~:'..~e~~i!':~

Radio procram featurilll the State Univer-

men

U.S. Forest Service; Hamilton

Central Scbool, N. Y.
II:ONDAY-26 : Texaco, Inc.;
Xerox Corp.
TUJIII)A.Y-27: Tesaco 0 Inc. ;
Americao Telephone and Tele-

Placement. .

::fcte*r
a::'r!} ~m:~~
to.

U/ 8 NEWS AND VIEWS:

CAUCUB OP WOKEN'S KIGBTB AT
8UNY JII:&amp;YING : 313 Butler Li-

Pit()..

The staff of lbe University
Placement and Career Guidance
Oflice welcomes all etud ents in
lbe University community to !eke
part in the various ca.reer programs offered thia year: Career
Guidance, Pan-time and Summer
Placement, Coli- Wodt-Study,
8e1ective Service Counaelinc.

SUNDAY-25

Room, Norton. 7:SO p.m.

· elec:trod)'DIUilic fona in order to

cleitc:ribe and pndict lbe orpniulioa of matter at the bioJosical
level. Dr. Paroecian will obow ez.

ON-C.UIPUS INTaRvu::WING
GII.Ul:

Clanmee n&amp;-.1; Co. (CPA);
U!S. Dept. of Healil!, Educoticm
and Welfare (Audit AcencYYf

~ exhibit hom lbe New Yodt
M - = of the American Indion
will be 'in Norton'• Ceoter Lowtce
tltroqh Saturday, October 24.

POETRY EXHIBITS
.

~

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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

.VOL 2-N0: 6

.--

By~W,MILBRATH

J.:.:'t~

_.t
SUNY ' 88aale, I A8t the
lllll8 110 . . _ 1boaibts
witti my ~ 011 the pneral IIUbject of deliberation and
dacision-IIIBkilla in the kind of

institution we DOW inbaliiL
First of all, it 110 me
that the IR-' Bylaws revisions do ~ little 110 - . ,.
line our decisional or
110 make them more rational.
The commit~'!" of the
Senate is -tially JJOCban&amp;ed
and I think it prettY "clear that
the JeYiaed Senate" Will still
veoy mum be nm by; the Executive Committee. --~ oolv
sil!llificant propoileif dianae IS

that our pn!lll!llt deliberative
Senate will be replaced by a
deliberative body Which will be
selected by ooe or another representational scheme.
It is my 8IJ'!IIII that the pro~ representative body will
not.act subetantially diffenmtly
from the full Senate and will
be just as llllhldy- and un~
satisfactory as our p r e s e n t
mode of deliberation.
To put it another Way, we
do not pin in _responsiveness
or efficiency; we may lose oome
good ideas by excluding tl'iose
who did not happen 110 get
elected, and we lose any educative value that may derive
from pofrticipation in such a deliberative .body.
In IIUIIl, I believe the quality
of" decision may suffer rather
than be enhanced bv the pro~ change in· the Bylaws.
-Having
· A - romes,stem?
110 that judgment, I decided we needed a

better invention. I asked myself, "What system requisites
must we attempt to orovide so
-that the faculty of this University rould produce better de~r

.

Ideally, persons in • a deci-

~

G:rari.t of $500,000
Is UIB's Top Private -Gift
• The Iarweet individual grant
from a private fOUDdation ever
reoeiwd by the State UDi--

=~~"'t,:.,=:i

ucational activities all across
the nation aimed at ·the piepatatiqn of more per&amp;G.IIlll!l to
\'!jth ~!'ntry's ~g

of Health Related ~ .
by the
K. KeiJaa Found&amp;The purpose of the project is
lion. Battle Creek, ,....,.,__
to develop a center in which
allied beoilth
ahd•
Doml J. Wanal -.Peny; proj- educa
willpractitioners
be I
ect dilector, - IIClllllll8d the .
tors
_..... tO
llft..,eu-' m f i " - t . .....,.. tMchina"""" in · ~
of $600,497 far tba &lt;&gt;Jtablilb. ~ end ........~ m.tiluli!lm.
- o f · Health 8ciel.- Bdu- In~ ~iaocaa '-lth
eation aDd Bvallation Cllllier ............ WIU lie tnlilied to
110 ........
: . = e n d adllolnJ.. role&amp; of lMdenbip ..
tnltMt
. in tba allied ~........_end,.
'-lib
MD.
kip admlni*ative pooita. in•

w.

P.~---~ ~enda..-r-taofal­
lied lieaUb at two-_ye.,...

a.lslant ........ of tba _,.
~of HMkb 8ciiDOI,w
BdiMation Evaluidlon, will
_,.. as project CIHiiledar.
l)r. Robert E. Kinalger,
vice Jlll*ldeDt, ~
dation, • • tbal tba
- t of tblo at
''•rill be of 1reat
nalioDally in ~ ed-

'!-..,_ colfeaos and ..........
tieL

_,the _ _

-

CaMn.-- ..... - ·

a-taa----

microphone), hulls a
~ P'raaldant L
(aaatad-A..oclatlon Jalln

~

.......) ......., Mondar'•

Mtr

_ . . _ Ona....,_caladthe

=·:=-J..::.::
-r........---.
. . . . . uld, _ _ _

---

.......,.._______
..
...._
....... the ..... Spaolllc ........ ...-ct IIOIC, the

~ ., a pollcl .,.__ on
a--ta~ at tbe UDi. ..........
...- . , _ , far ...
....Uy of .tiJe Department "of .......,•••-a..tllastu·
Hilher Education. Paculty. of

...,_~ Studies, and the
8chool of Nllrlliq, Paculty of , . _ on W!r - . - · .,.
Health Sclenceo, will play a .... ....-. conllnl .....
a.jor role in tbe J1101f111D.
theiUp" r-.
.

OCTOBER 15, l970

�Octalloir

~·

2

15, 1970

_WBFO's Si~ering Gets~~;- The Arts &amp; The People
National Network PoSt ~~~- PlagUed (People Arts'

~ liD IIDilOUI'III8 __ .
"l'be "People Arts '70" Oril!ll- the scape ol liB ~ for
:.""-.tthe ~ ~-tatllst · tatlan for ne'W• studenta bad students, that's a different
on
rna
came tiOuble both with- the people illory, Dale I8YL "Free liD the
~ ~~~ anCl with the ar18. but student peopJe."" Ciblalm In the latter
Campus Disorders. At that activities ooordinalior Edward Cllle.v
·__ ,._,_ ,____,the "UVE
·.
..
time. Ketter'ISid he 'Viewed the Dale would -do it a,aln any
.........., _ _ ,
pre9ent '·llown meeting" Sen- time he gets the chanoo.
show by desboylng the large
· which ch
We were trying liD develop a . balloons which were Jllll't'Of the
ate, m
ea faculty mem- "creative. tingling abl;loBphere," bouncing-&lt;~~~-tbe-matln!ss-thlng
ber ~In·--'
has a vote,
BS umfieldy.
· _,....,, and by s t ea II ng th e s h oes,
He
out that
an aver- Ed Dale says, and, m
age 'iJ 0~ 220 faculty of an we learned a lot about our- I!W85. watdJM, etc.. of those
eJimbJe 1300 attend most meet- se1Tvesheandtwoour-weperobk!~_
attending. (You bad to remove
. •· And
•
.
........ ~..._ these In order to hounoo and
portanmgs
. t" h,.n".?lati'!"""onShasiOO. been
" un- complete with a music festival, crawliii'OUDd the exhibits.) StupiSSed with •,;;; few 88 80 facul- art and pbotogrsphy exhibits dent aids were hired to helP.
• ty in attendance, he sajd.
. ::,
eoene but that didn t
for the nation's appro:lirnately said. He will also hire the staff.
'The two campus faculty "oo- tion" experience for "everyone." Four-t.-. Semi
100 public radio stations.
Siemerlng points out that alitions"- the Committee for a It had today's music, today's
~textended to grsfSiemerins's selection, accord- NPR will be deoontralized to a Univendty, "a coalition of mod- light shows, today's lilms-&amp;ld fiti. At one of the ediibitli, parIng to Don Quayle, president of degree, with member ststions erstes," and the Faculty-Staff· today's problems.
_ ticipants were 'eiieoQraaed to
NPR, re11ec:ts the WBFO man- oontributinf programming 88 Caucus ( FSC), representing Trouble Wllh 'UVE'
write·lbeit COIIIloenla Gil a wall.
ager's standina as "one of the weU BS taking iL For example, the "liberal viewpoint" - are
'The eye-popping way-out en- However, DI!Ui&gt;lwya! eVen the
leaders in public radio" in the he said, we might ask WBFO on opposite sides of the issue. vironment exhibit "I,IVE" WBS '"reallY turned-on lllilsts" asooU.S. today. Not only has Siem- to supply a segment on what's The COmmittee for a Univer- t he focus for most of the cia ted with the sbow were
erlng been a prime spokesman happening in Buffalo on. say, sity favors the proposal and · trouble, Dale reports.
amued by the four-letter
few the phUooophy or purposes air pollution BS part of a na- 'urges a full-faculty turnout to'The trio of European artists scrawl. '" Free to the people"
which NPR hopes · to develop, tiona) survey.
day to insure PISS8ge (see sep- in the Hans RUcker Co., the wBS also written repeatedly.
Quayle ISid, he has also dem"The network's live program- arate story); the FSC is not so · group which created " UVE,"
Thr,eat'll were made that
onstrated (at WBFO ) that be ming, he says, will begin with sure.
"broke up" before the exhibit " UVE" would be "trashed" if
can trsnalate this philosophy approximately two hours servAlthough s 0 m e individuals arrived. Although the;. orients· it wasn't tsken out ol the Fillinto IIISBiliriBful service . "He ioo weekdays and r.,ur hours on among the FSC are known to tion planners had bo1lked the more Room and tbere were sevhas the creative insight to make Will!kends. .
.
view the reorganizational plan "'!tire ·~· . catalog along eral bomb acares which caused
it work."
i emertng emphasiZeS that IS a blue!&gt;rint for a ·'oonserva- With the serYices of aU the art- disruptive evacuations of the
April Stout
his departure from WBFO. in live takeOver " the group has ists and several technicians , building.
According to Quayle, NPR n_o wa~ reBects anr ~tisfac- not taken ..;, official public only one artist, one !'romotio!'
Finally, under pressures of
(a separate independent non- · bon With the station s present stand other than to urge "cau- person, one electronic techni- the threats, the thefts and the
profit corporation recently ere- status within the Univ ers i ty. tion."'
cian and something like half scares, the insurance company
ated with the aid of the Corpo- WBFO could, of course, make
W~ter G Rosen cl\aiiman the pieces made it to campus. that wBS covering the sllow for
ration for Public BroadCBSting) intelligent use of a larger ~ud- of the FSC · Steering Commit'The complete "UVE" pack- $100,000 in liabil.ity and propbopes to begin its interconnect- get and staff. But, he thinks tee said this week that the mat- age wBS to have cost $8,500 for erty damage dropped the ooved live service next April with that ~ present a~trati'!n ter' of changing the Senate By- ~ 11Hiay ~ In the ~~ '!( erage and' ' 'UVE" had to close
Flyhead,
Elect rtc Skm,
one day early.
a daily current alfairs magazine has ev1d.enced more mtereSt 11) laws is "of grave oonoom" and
t:!"' s tation and. a stronger de- that it should be expected that "Eat Our Idess," and other
A note on one of the Norton
"':"" to support 1t than any p re- the Senate will proceed care- pieces,, Dale is now seeking_a bulletin boards trumpeted " We
YIOus' one.
fully. The FSC, he said, while recfuct\on to $6,500 - .the o~1g- told you We'd free the Fillmore
WBFO Hl&amp;hly Recorded
granting inefficiences in the mal pr1oo for that portion which Room and we did!"·
WBFO, Siemering feels,- has present town meeting format, showed up. When they told us
Dale feels that the problems
reach e d the po i n t of being also recognizes some advan- t hat for anot!&gt;er ~2 , 000, "!e with '·LIVE" are representative
highly regarded both nationally tsges. FSC "insists" that alter- could have the entire _exh1b1t. of the problems facing NQrton.
By STEVE LIPMAN
and locally because of: (1) its natives be very J:Qrefully ex- naturally we grabbed 11, Dale
The Union's facilities are not
Recent price hikes by the inner-city satellite project; and amined before the pre5j!nt sys- says.
. . .
large enough to accommodate
University Vending Service (2) its role in covering the ma- tem is discarded or replaced.
Ne~tiatiops for the refund
its huge and growing clientele.
The alternative schemes ad- are bemg conduc te d through And even if there were room
have brought about a boycott jor campus disturbances of last
of affected machines in Ache- spring.
vancedthusfar Rosen said do the Au st nan Consulate. The f&lt;&gt;reveryone, there's notenough
aon Halt. Organized by the
'The satellite operation has not provide for.;, equitable 'dis- "uyE" promoters, br the way, money to present eve~y.t h i n g
Graduate Chemistry Club, the reooived funds from the Cor- tribution of v 0 t i n g p 0 w e r real~ the shortoommgs of the free of charge.
·
boycott is aimed at the ice poration for Public Broadcast.- among faculties and for the . exh_lbl_t and offered to make Greyhound St.tlon
cream, soft drink, hot food and ing (CPB) and luis attracted staff.
restitution.
Also, parasites plague the
sandwich machines, the oon- · visitors from several foreign
Apart from these formal or- Gate-Crashers and Vandals
Univers ity', Dale ·says, and
tents of which underwent a five- countries to view its operations. ganizations, s o m e individual
~t part of :~'.' .which
there is no way Norton can
cent prioo boost the first week
(WBFO, incidentsUy, has prob- faculty are suggesting other al- survtved the artisbic criSIS WBS screen and keep out those who
in September.
·
ably reooived more funds. from tematives. A proposal for " mail further plagued bJ! other prob- do11't l!elong and may be po'The purpose of the boycott, CPB, Siemering notes, than baUot" . S e n ate deliberations ~ems - ga~hing, vandal- tential troublemakers. It looks
according jo Pat Gallagher, any other educstional station has been advanced by Profes- lSI'D, thefts, . ~d _threats.
.
like the Greyhound Bus Sispresident of the Club, is not BS in the nation.)
sor Lester w. Milbrath of Po- . Ga~J;ririg IS a
of life lion over here at times, be says.
much to have the prices lowA CPB survey, recently oon- liticsl Scienoo (see separate m the hipp1e-panhan~mg cui" Amico is always talking
ered, IS " to find out where our eluded, found !hilt one-quarter story).
.
ture, Dale says. Anything that's about shutting&gt; down Norllon."
monel( is going."
of FM radioe in the Buffalo
A group of "oonroemed staff not. "b;ee ~
peo~le" ~ a
Dale says. "Perhaps one of the
"H they can show us that 15 area were tuned i nto the members," including Marilla csp1tslist p1g affair whic:h answers would be to open more
cents is the minimum prioo we WBFO coverage of last year's Giles, policy sciences, objects 1 has to be crashed. When tlrls Norton&amp; throughout the comhave to pay for a Coke for the campus demonatrstions. Also to the number of represents- happens. Dale says, Norton is munity - plaoos where young
machines to break even. then according to that survey, 83 tives aUoted to this segD\ellt of helpless. "We don't want police- people can go tQ see conoorts,
we'U psy. But if they can't per cent of those who listened the University under the pro- type aecuri~ in the building do crafts and take-in cultural
justify the increases, we'U con- found the station's coverage to posed reo!ganization.
"!'d we don t want confronts- exhibits, plaoos where youngtinue the strike."
be "good to exoellenL"
A proposal hacked b this tiona."
sters in trouble could go for
Gallagber 88id the boycott
Siemerlng is leaving "only group is expected to beYintroDale notes that most of the help without community .sanehas the support of most Chem- because of the· unique opportu- duood at today's meeting to orientation programs were. in tions." Right now young people
· istry students.
nity" which the Washington change from three to ten tt;e fact, "free to the people," in- in au.alo have little to do but
"And people aren't buying assignment provides. He would number of representatives al- eluding over a dozen concerts. get .in trouble, hlicfeel&amp;.
sandwiches. 'The sandwich rna- not · have gone to any other located to non-teaching profes- 'The events were underwritten
But while o1!,'tri11!ero are a
chine used to be empty after Univendty or any other radio sionals. These ten would be by an orientation fee assessed problem, Dale OO.O't '80eiD to
lunch. But it's been pretty full station. he aays.
elected "by-and from the entire to each new student- but tbey think that keep in'I everyone
lately. Just come hack at 2
WBFO's p,_,t staff of four non-t eaching professional were open to everyone on cam- but. students out is the answer.
pus and in the community. '
'The CCII1C8Pt ol Norton BS a
o'clock and see if the machine professiooals and a career-fel- stsfL"
isn't full."
·
low ( funded also by CPR) is a . 'The "concerned staff" group
Fees were charged only for student union Is deed, be feels.
I came. It was.
far. cry ~ - when Siemerlng attempted, "'.but failed, to · wio ~."for. movies and for bus It should be a Unilllll'llity oon'The effect of the boycott WBS arnved eight years ago as part. endorsement of this move by trips to N~agara Falls. Dale ter conii'Oiled by students for
verified by Roger Ftieday, di- time advisor to a completely the local State University "Pro-· says. 'The orientation sponsors students, but ._;dng the
rector of Vending, wbo said student:nm operation. He was, fessional Association {SUPA)
did hope that the fees 'would tsstee o~ otMiL including the
that "the boycott has reduood · at the same time, adVisor to the formal organization of
return a portion of their outlay oommurutY. ~ ~ ·.. ..,......
·
sales, but n o E U y."
S~clr_um and a student ooordi- non-teaohing profesaional staff. ( to~ costs exceeded the funds
We have baerJ working with
1'be prioo ·
to be in- nator m Norton.
SUPA ts1tes the position ijJB.t der1ved from the orlentstion the Urban Affairs 08ice, with
sti tuted, be
lained, for the
WBFO is now a unit of the Senate reorganization is a mat- fee). But the primary reason American Indians, with the
vending servioo to break even. Division of Continuing Educa- ter intemal 1.0 the Sena t e. forcl"!rrinrWBS "control" 'The Spaniah-speaiJ:.ingandblack
'fl&gt;e following are lhe Vending tion and is ~ted BS an edu- SUPA has not been consulted Conference Theatre holds only communities to c,. 11o get them
Ser"ices' profit and loea figwes cational radio servioo with a on iL
286; the Fillmore. Room's sU.e onto lhe campua, Dale says.
foe the IBSt few years: 1967-68, strong commitment to UniverMoreover, the SUPA Exec- would psnnit only a few people " We want to Include 8Jie'Y·
1'1,500 net loea; 1968-69, $4,000 sity-oommunity interchange-a utive Committee aays that Fac- at a' time to indulge in "LIVE" one."
net l"":b~ 1969-70, $1,000 net dinoction Siemerlng bopes it ulty Senate reorganization is {by bouncing on the giant rubIt ca.- problema and. perloea; first quluter, 1970.71, $(23 will oontinue under h i s _ . not the..JUiner to problems .of ber mattress, etC.) . •
·
~• .we'll have to be more
net income. 'The totel loss.over sor.
Univenolty governance.
~ members of lhe pte- cautious about the ty_pes of
throe Y"""! was $7,500. .
'lbat 8IIOOIIIIsor will likely be
SUPA points out that a pres- craShing cult feel that use of prDgrama -'ll undertake. he
''The pnoo of food has IIOIM&gt; named by Cont:inulng Educa- idential task force has been set the Filln)pre Room .for money- aays. But despka the ladt ol
up, and the..J&gt;ric;e of lahar has tion Dean Robert F. Berner. up liD CCIIIsider the pro1&gt;1erJ1 and IDilking rock OlliiOI!l1B, for hail ''YMCA and Boy Soaut be. gone up,'' Frieday contiliued. ' State Univend~ew York that "at the a~te time" lunda, and oimilar .,.,_, Is hl!vior," be ian't juot *-PlY II'&gt;'
'1'he ·sub-board (in charge of is the actual •
· ol. ttie· ' It wiU submit 1ts own proposai,; entirely aPIJlOiii;afe. But wbon ing to QUit.
\-ending ) also agreed to a price otstion, but dalepies reaponai- for II'JYI!fiiiiDCl and for non- a fee ia ~in order for
"SamebodyonCillllpUasbouid
• raise for oolfee, but we didn't . bility for its oper;ations liD the • teaching profassional, staff rep- the Union to keeP ordQr and re- befeelsd.oinl_theae tbinp," Dale
' lind that.,..........,....
local CIUJ!pus.
raaentation.
'
coup~ and thus en1arp
•

·

'The nation's first live net- featuring,_. backgrounCI and
work programs for public radio cultural segme.n ts. Special
stations will be directed by events such IS eon,r-;on.l
William Siemerlng, now gen- · beerlngs and college and unieral manager of WBFO.
Ye!Sity colloquia of importance
Siemerlng will become pro- will be broadcast live also,
gramming director for National Quayle said. NPR will. In addiPublic Radio ( NPR) In Wash- tion, provide a :rr·-lldeli.ty
i,ngton, D. c., effective Novem- tape servioo which · include,
lier 9.
for example, a series of conceris
In the poaition, considered to by the Los Angeles Philharbe the . top programming post monic.
In public radio In the nation.
Siemerlng will be responaihand
.
1e
Siemerlng wiU be the key per- for full ,development
_unp1e-

=-~ ~=~!~~ti~~

=

-..ft.

•..._

:.::

~~n~s~~:;J;

~~=

Vending Hit
By Boycott

war

!hl',

u,.;

:I~'"'~

�0t:t«- IS, 1970

3

UI13W»nen
Hold First
Local CauW;

SPA, AFT
- .
&amp;thBusy
Both tbe Senate~
Association (SPA) lind tha
~ Fedenltiall ol-re.:b(AFT-SUFI') AN Olllltinu-ing their ...,._ ClliiiiMilne for
~tiall 88 collecliw! barpimng apot for the fao;ulty
aDd non-teaching ,profiBicDal

'l'be tint Buffalo mi.eting of
tbe Caucus of Women's Rillbta
at SUNY, a State-wide women's liberation group with
CBIICUIIOII in over 30 SUNY
units, drew more than 40 men
aDd women last Thursday

~

.

.

. Oae barpining apnt to rep-~ both groups must be se-

ni&amp;bt.

!:l:".:.:..,..,~SUNY-

Dr. or- o - cbarpd
that tbe SUNY oystem "doesn't
rebabilltate tbe culture that
discriminates apinst women,"
aDd that "UI B cbannp1s wo=-·~to tbe 'proper profe&amp;.

o-

Dr.
claims that tbe
Plac:emeo)t Service on campus
lists Oll&gt;plo)oment ~ties
by ''male" IIQ!I "female". in yjo.
latioo II« tM&gt;rQyil Risbta Act
of 1964. lnA!!Iditiooi!. one of the
in a =eioUP .which accompanied her on a visit to the
Service was denied access to
the "male" belp.wanted lists.
She expJained that the State·wide women's rights group
started because various local
college administrations claimed
Erie County Sberiii Michael
their "bsnds were tied," and Amico's testimony befort- the
they couldn't change things Senate Internal. Security Sub"because of Albany." '1'11us, the conunittee in Washington this
women decided to tske their week bas drawn campus · reaccase to Albsny and "get a man- tions ranging from concern apd
date .there, so the local admin- puzzlement to charges that
istrations couldn't p&amp;ll8 the Amico acted irresponsibly and
buCk:"
for political gain.
However, Dr. Gessner
-A mico said that students,
poirited out that local support faculty and other individuals
is also needed. "We want sup- on campus last spring engaged
port to show Ketter our de- in a variety of illegal activities
mands are not just a reqiJeSt against law enforcement offibut a mandate."
cials, including plots to kill
This summer, the meeting policemen.
ED!cutive Vice President Alwas told, three women from the
SUNY Caucus went to aee bert Sornit 'said the testimony
President Ketter. The women '1las raised most serious ques- Dr. Daphne Hare, represeDI.- tions for the citizens of Western
ing faculty; Peggy Rabkin, rep- New York in general and the
resenting students, and Sally State University of New York
Majewski, representing staff- at Buffalo in particular."
"These charges are of deep
came away feeling that · the
president "didn't comprehend concern to all of us," Somit
the problem." They discussed said.
"The Sheriff bas never called
the University's "discriminatory practices" against women these matters to our attentioiL
and presented several demands. We must assume there were
One was that 50 per cent of new valid reasons for his failure to
faculty positions should be do so. We would hope that he
filled by women and another bas brought this information to
was for active recruitment of the attention of the District Atwomen students. The group torney, and that if this bas not
feels that "women are in the been done, it will be done imsame position as blacks and mediately.
need incentives." Pr!!sident Cha1J80 Don't Help University
"Included in the testimony
Ketter reportedly promised to
was tbe allegation that six of
~ to them again by September 15. However, Dr. Hare our faculty members actively
claims, tbe group bas not '-rd participated in these illegal acfrom him ·and .bas been unable tivities. TIWJ kind of charge
against unnamed individuals,
to get an appointment.
Alao diacusaed at tbe '!burs- many months after the fact,
day night meeting were the 14 he/pi Mither the Univerait;y
clemanda adopted by the Cau- nor til£ community to solve th"U
cus of Women at SUNY at ~!e;t.., to stress that the
their State meeting CSee Reporte Oct. 1). In ru-ing University is anxious . to coopu-e, Bollhial Zimmerman, a erate with res~le liiw enstudent,-60uilh&amp; up eil!ht more. (orcement officials in this matShe aullllfMed that tloe Univer- ter. Now that the iasue bas
sity eatabliab a self-defense been presented in an open for- claaoi for women, an abortion um, we are confident that the
clinic and a women-&lt;XJI\trolled University will be provided
with this evidence. We are ful-a demand - that
She tbe
alao University
- t e d ly prepanid to take whatever
stop war-related researd-o and mMSures are necessary in this
cotmter-insurgency activities regard through our established
aDd .._, a- funds to end the University mechanisms," Dr.
Somit concluded.
~of women."
Accordinr to the Courier-Ex,.._ domanda will be
,u.,
Amico said be was going
-tad to other c au c u~ to turn
evidence over to the
lhroucbout the State for their Distriet Attorney
but "acolfed"
consideration.
at lbe idea of providing inforA ~tatlve of the Am- mation to the University.
erican ~tlon of TeaChers
'!bat Would be "'udicrous "
( AFT} U.O present at the Amico is quoted 88 111lying. He ·
meetinl aDd talbd to tbe said
the Unii!h\s,bas
poup .tlaut tbe platform tbe ' shownthat
t.d faith by
tO
AFT lo
to the UDi- "mlpend or lire" tbe Hay!!!!: 45
vaslly far .......... '!be pro- aDd by failing to cooperaie in
pam bduaae ~ care CB~tera d~IJlniate-aome more of
.md abaliiiiDIIat ol dloc:rimlna- Wblch, he 8IIIIUied the press;
tory blrtnt..,....:Ilea
would be loaalilli' ......
'!be ...... eaded their twoCalling thellllciCMIIIJ
Allllao dlaraas
Jrhour . . . . .
to
Mxt ••
at ........... aplaitation ~pub­
BuiWo llla1a.
lic ...... I'Nd ... 8nell of Col-

The loc:al-&amp;a:utive Committee of SUPA (State University
~ Aaaociatiall) baa
enilorsed SPA 88 the pnJpi&amp;CI
barpining apnL 'Ibis l!lldorae.
ment is ""-! on revisions of
tbe constitution and by-lawa of
SPA approved at a State-wide
meeting-in Syracuse, Sa~.
The ED!cutive Committee
"supports fuJI cooperation in
·regard to SPA membership recruiting elforts and u r g e s ·
SUPA memben! to join SPA."
Re{'-ting the local .nonteaching professionals ·at tbe
State SPA meeting was Leonard SnYder, chief accountant.
and Amico's charges that 40
Snyder reports that SPA is
offioel6 have been hospitalized very near having tbe State-wide
this year as a result of student total of 1,200 bargaining desigactions " represent half-truths at nations necessary to petition
the bes t to per j uiy at the the Public Employment Relaworst." Hoopital records do not lions Board (PERB) ' for a
bear out these reports, Snell place on the ballot to elect a
said, and " no indictments have bargaining agency for faculty
been returned for assaulting and other pi:ofessionala
police ... among all of the stuSPA will attempt to aet up
dent and faculty arrests made." two units at U ,(B, Snyder ssys
No indictments have been re- -one for tbe Health Sciences
turned on most of the other Center and another for .the Unicbarges, either, Snell pointed versity Center.
oul
At present, SnYder SBYS. tbe
"Finally," Snell said, "it is non-teaching professionals seem
well recognized that undercover more interested in forming tbe
agents often assume a dual role, SPA
but Dr. Gordon
that of an observer-witness and Harris,
• try, and Dr. Althat of an actual provocateur. bert Rekate, medicine, are re. . . It i8 clear that t!WJ role cruiting members on the lacis not only used for entrapment ulty side.
purposes, but to actUDUy proThere was no U /B faculty
uoke disturbances so as to gain representative at the State
public sanction to further meeting in Syracuse which
strengtMn til£ law enforcement adopted the SPA constitution
agencies as an end in th£m- and elected State ollicers. Howselves."
ever, there was faculty repreRepresentatives of College F, sentation from other SUNY
the other storefront college, units.
said only " Mr. Amico's VJlgue
"Collective bargaining is delallegations cona:ming the col- initely coming to our campus.
leges are !alae. Representatives one way or another. The SUFI'of College F aee no need to AFT bas the kind of program
discuss them."
and support to win election,"
Folse Cho1J80
Henry Fries, visiting associate
Konrad von Moltke, director professor of industrial relations
of the Collegiate Assembly, and an AFT organiJer, toll! a
said that intensive investigation departmental meeting of Induson his part bad convinced him trial Relations, reoanO.y.
that Amico's charges are falae:
Fries also report.ec! that a
"I have been assured that at no State-wide meetmg of profe&amp;time were weapons of any de- sionals who are not faculty will
scription made in the store- be held October 24 to update
fronts under the auspices of aDd complete SUFI'-AFT proany collegiate unit, nor were posals. Dr. Gene Welborn, restudents ins true ted in their giona1 director, ~ propospreparatioiL No activities took a1s to be printed and available
place which were designed to . within ten days of lbat conferprepare an assault on police ence.
offioers."
•
"Tbe intereet in c:bartering
The Assembly director alao an SUFI'-AFT local is (IOOCI,"
said he knows of no faculty reports John Peten, Ullistant
anywhere in the University pro'-' of social welfare, actwho advocate or support pb.ysi- 111f lnllilwer of tbe poup. He
cal attacks on police as Amico said that luncheon ..-tinp on
charged.
both Monday aDd Friday at
von Moltke said Amico's evi- noon in the l1loculty Club prodence either must have been vide an opportunity for , . _

Amicos Congressional Testimony Viewed as
(Puzzling, Irresponsible &amp; Very Damaging'

-un.

'3. ..t:'t;l

-

a...

lege A (and Willard Myers m,
a Buffalo attorney representing
Snell ) issued a statement charging that: "The techniques 'that
Amico has used, the innuendo,
the exaggeration, the half-truth,
the extra-jud"icial approach to
gain political publicity, the lack
of substantiating facts, and, in
fact, statements contrary to
that of public record, the generation of an atmosphere of
guilt, and the reliance upon an
informer · to lend credibility are
all too reminiscent of a period
we went through just two dec,
ades ago."
_
For example, Snell pointed
out, neither the Niagara Liberation Front nor the National
NO RESPECT FOR GLENNON
As a follow-up to his charges of
last week,. Erie County Sheriff Am·
ico said in a TV interview Monday
that "I have no respect for the
present-chief of (U/8) security."
Security Director Kenneth P. Glen·
non, Amico said on WNEO-TV's
"Man In The News," has stated
"in effect" th8t he does not agree
with the Sheriff's policies. "I'm
sure we wouk:l not be compatible
in our efforts," Amico said. Amico
said his na ti ona l testimony was
"for the gmatest overall good." He
indicated ear1ier i n the day he was
seeking a meeting with University
officia ls.

Committee to Combat Fascism,
both "fingered" by informant
Kevin Cafl'ery, existed on campus last spring.
A University spokesman also
pointed out that Caffery himself bad been enrolled at the
University only in the summer
of 1968 and was not a student
during the period in which he
was sup~ly a party to student subversive activities.
. Snell further said that weapons displayed at the hearings
as examples of t.bo6e alleged to
have been made by "radical
students" were similar to t.bo6e
brought to the College A storefiont last year by warring high
school gangs. The so-called
"radicals" of College A. Snell
88id, persuaded the hil!h schoolera to leave the weapons outside and come in for a "friendly
rap," at which time the police
probAbly &lt;X&gt;nfiacated them. College A. Snell aaid, worked to
dispel the hostility aDd rivalry
amo"l the ganp.
It 18 absurd, he continued.
that Amico could even auggest
that "radical professors" in·
otzucted ''radical students" on
bow to bombs at "radical lllon!lraDta...

cba.J'!:::;.

::,u,:~r,:~l~~~l~~i.~~: ~ ~el:....~

important facta from the appropriate local authorities.
"Tbe testimony by Mr. Amico and his associates," von
Moltke said, is disturbing for a
number of other rea.ooos. '"lbe

~J:.;Pru:lku~~~

Speakers from SUFI'-AFT

are alao available for departmental meetings. Fries (En.
5011) or Welborn (877-M23}
should be cont:act..l for ~­

ers.

'Moderates'-

such as some of the eolle&amp;'es and ( eontinued from I , col. 6)
certain faculty members - and crease the alienation of the
linking- tbem by innuendo to University from the community
either Cmrelated or wueliable and feed tbe fiiJ!B of tl..- who
information, thus aeekini to eo- cbarae that tbe faculty bas not
tabllob-a form of guilt by _,_ , fulfilled ita proper educational
ciation."
,_. ,
&lt;!bJtptions. It can only give

Holf-Trullla.-~
"I cannot see tllat this ........_, Saell aald, Caf- any ~ but to attnct Pill!:
fery's testimony that inotruction licity to the Ollice of the ~
was liven Oil bow to JUll police . iff," von MolIke aid.

fW1iier 81'J11111811t to tbaee who,
out of daopalr aDd - , AN
app8ftllltly now prepaed to restrict or repreos the University."

�~

4

~U,-1P70

Needed: A Definition of Conditions for
Collegiate Success
.........,,_

By J . J . MUUIERN

~l'rol-oll'ltiJI»ophy

'The idea of developing a
colletliate system at Bulfalo is
more than four years old. In

=~:~

the = - t y by transfer of
certain functiODB to coll~te
units appeamd as a ·means of
achievinJ academic excellence
-of mamtaining or even raising academic standards. Since
that time, """"'-· suCh decentralization bas come to be
viewed l&gt;y many members of
the University, r i 11 h t I y or
wrodgly, as btinlinll with it a
decline or even an abandonIJII!IIt of academic standards.
Events of the last r- weeks
· 8llftl!llt that a return to the
earlier view may be in the offinc. One is led to this belief,
for aample, by oome remarks
ol Ilia Collegiate Aaeembly's
cllrector quoted in the 17
8epCamber issue of this paper.
'·I belieYe," he is reported to
ha.... said, "that to be innovatne Ia not justification in itself. 'The Clllly justification for
being is to be demonstrably bettl!r."
'The older coiJeciate univeniiormed by collegiste
inltlau-.
The present attempt at coiJeciate decentralization, ' - · comes from
the Uni-.ity'a Bide; and the

~venitt ~~ ':;;d!':

which Its inltlati""' Ia most likely to .....-r. DefiDing these
coaditioao requires, first of
that decisions be made on the
allocation· ol functiona-oome
to the collepa, oome to the
Uni...;ty. QuMtians of organization, In both the colleg&lt;!s
and the Univenity, then must
be ~ In Ierma of the
functiona which ~ organizational unlta may be de-

an.

ei.-1

to......._

The parqrapba which follow
are caatributioao to the d.i8cusaion ol funclion and orpnization. 'l1ley will -

their pur-

facilities. For all these reesons, what it means to transfer
instruction to the colleges
needs to be clarified.
At pre s ent, mbst of the
course offerings of the collegiate units ·are undergraduate
courses, and "Jnany of these are
at the 100 level (according to
the listings in this paper's fall
extra edition). This is not surprising, for severiil reasons. In
the first place, nearly half of
Buftalo's total enrollment is undergraduate. In the second, undergraduate students have been
more conspicuously interested
in · the colleges than have students in other divisions of the
University.
Again, many graduate and
professional students are too
fullY occupied wt·th Jndepend •
ent research and acquisition of
skills - even leaving peraonal
commitments, such as those to
their families, out of accountto devote much time to collegiate activities. Further, it may
be that the faculty proponents
of the collegiate syaleQI believe
that their system is best fitted
to undercraduate instruction.
Whatever the actual reasons
for the prepooderance o( 111&gt;dergraduate c o u r s e s in the
present collegiate units may be,
it is wnrth remarking, for fu.
ture reference, that the present
bent of the collegiate system in
Buftalo is rather toward undergraduate than toward graduate
instructioll. U this is to continue, it is foraeeeble that graduate and prof81!8ional members
of the colleges who do not hold
faculty rank in the University's

~~~:::
:::=
~ !f'~~e:!:

eral ~ts and schools.
Thus not all instruction would
be transfened from the University . to the coUeses, but only.
for the most part, undergraduate Instruction. ·
U the collegiate units are to
justify ~lves by being
"demonatrably better," t h e y

If
illll.- ..a- mem'*"
ol the Uni...;ty to
their view&amp; on tbeee topics.
::::r..
~!ts..u.:,to~.::...~
which tbeir
_
,
.
to J.ie-.....underll&lt;&amp;duate inOf all the functiona which struction.
It ls likely to be
milbt be tnD8femd to
~

tbey

after

-··CIIInpla-

greatest strength

collegi-

ate units for '!CCQIIIplisbmet,
the one on which thare _ , .
to be the ""-~eat base of
yreement Ia instruction.
"lbaulb their may dif... - . y partie&amp; in· the Uni-.ity IIIJparattly belieYe that
the ~ oolleps would do
bettl!r with inatruction than the
U..n..~ty 00. at presenl
Wblle tbl8 belief DI8Y be justifiable In 81111111 it is well
to '-r In mind that the notion
ol iniCruction Ia a OOIIIpiel&lt; one.
Illllruction DI8Y be carried on
In dllllnmt ~va, may be adlllinlmnd by crur.-t aorta of
people to crur.-t aorta of
..._ - - . , may deal with a
wide ....... at dllhent sub.iecta.
111111 may require many dlffelaat lllnda ol equipmslt and

many yean~ before a colle'!iate
system will be capable of absorbing all the Uruversity's undergraduate instruction, if indeed one ever daM; during the
phase-in period. the present
system and the collegiste one
will ha.... to ..-ist under the
001181ent ~ _,oted by
Dlllllp&amp;riaan.

J;n order to give the colleps,

wbom . the burden of .proof
a chance to demonatrate
their superior potential, it may
be beat lor 1bo! Univenity to let
them accept only tbose student&amp; who ha.... proven that
they are aood risks for the Intimate ' inatructional format
whidl, one Ia led to believe,
will cbaracterfae the coiJepe.
This would limit the IIClOpe ol

' 011

re8la,

!..

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•. r . J~ . . . . . . . ._... 61 ~JU. 210 .........

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

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,...-..

.

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CW'IWIIWU a:Dn'ODr 1 - L ...:..., c::a..,f ~• ..._.

I'W

............ ~..~ ............. ""'--·

\

The~

of-

Discuasion of colleges fre.
quenUy brings with it d.i8cussian of residence. even when,
as is the case In the Stern ProspeCtus, it is denied that col-

GVIEWPQINTS

'

.

a.

Certain aubaidiary funclious
... Jilr.ely to be tranaferred to
~
..... along with underlnalnlction and the
functioas connected with residence. At present,' the Uniftr·
sity caa- admissions for ita
various diviaionB, and 110111e
might belieYe that the Uriiversity sbould have exclusive control over admission to collegiate units as well There is
aomethinc to be said on both
sides of this question. 'The
UniVersity awards degrees, and
so ought to have oome say in
the choice of those who will
take them; and, if the University daM not require the same
minimum standards of collegiate applicants as it does of
non-collegians, the standards in
one part ol the U.niW!fllity are
likely to suffer. But on the
other hand, if the colleges are
to acoept responsibility for
seeing that their students are
instrocted, they ought to be
able to cbooee those they fmd
moat instructable, just as the
•
Univer11ity does I)OW.
One solution might be to .
leave the ae.ting &lt;&gt;&lt; overall admiasions stanuarda to the Uni·
versity, Wbile allowing the colleges to ae1ect lliDOIII those ap.
pucants already found to be
qualified by the University. At
present, the University bas to
reject. ,_,-Jy three-quarters of
iiS qualliied applicants; if the
co~ have to reject a few,
their doing ao is unlikely to inaeaae the meana quantum of
disappointment on campus very
mucb. Whatever the formula
ultimately turns out to be, it
is bigbly likely that the collegiate units will have ~ role
to play in the admission process.
As functioas connected with
admiaaion were subsidiary to
the college's irislnlctional func.
tiona, certein other functioos
would be subsidiary to its residential ones. In a summary
way, these may be grouped under the beading '·budget managen&gt;ent." Maintenarx:e of Iacilities is a costly affair, and,
as the ..Upply of funds for the
colleges is not likely to be WI·
limited, carefnl attention to
their administration might well
make the diffenmce between
prosperous and faltering collegiate units. It may be that some
P--ta of ·the colledate

legiate units must be raaidential When residence is mentioned, it often is clear that
those who mention it have living in college rooma in mind;
yet, if they were questioned,
many of them might agree that
residence includes both more
and less than simply living-in.
It include&amp; more, because liv,
ing-in ·provides only the setting
for the common life of scholarabip, with its asaociatiODB between students and their tutors, w'-e actuality is the goal
of the collegiate system; it includea lesa, because these asaociatiODB cari be enjoyed in a
considerable degree by students who ~ residence outaide the college walls. For
these reeaons, it may be beet to
.-rve the expression " residenoe" l or the' state-of conducting cine's studies for a University degree under the direct
supervisiOQ, of a college wboee
fellows have acoepted r:esponaibility for one's ·progreos.
Residence is not itself a
function; but, on a definition
of ·'residence" such as that proJQ8l here, it would make
to ~ of a colleae's system JOOU1d . prefer to I.e..,
performing .~;ertain function&amp; mana_.t functions remain
for students wbo are ita resi- a UniW!fllity .._,aibility; but
dents. The first of these func. functiona fall ~ in .....
lious would be instnJction. A stellations, and 1t may be unsecond might be advisement. reeliatic to mr:pect that axJiloi
Under the collegiate system, {unctions would be transfened
the college fellows might take to the coiJeps from the Unithe plliiiie of diviaiona[ or de- W!fllity without those oa~tal advisors. for their more mundane functions on
own aludilnts. In this way tho!.-- which those of responsible caafuDctiaua ol advising student&amp; llol depend
.
about their propams and inThis Ia not to say, of courae,
structiDg them or arrandna for that the ~ · would became
their illlllruction would De-..... llii1D8prially isolated. The Uni~lmted ~ one person at a
-..i!'Y ~ bas a ClOiliPI"time; ordinarily, a student holllive orpruzation for dealwould ha""' Clllly one or two inc with matliora ol _ ___., it
~
• him in Ibis cap- bas an 8llCOIDltlni ~
acity ~ '!"tire period !' cenlnl store, a date ~
ol ........,__ ·
IIIII centa-, a houoinc alliCe, ...,"""'-'- ol l.ivinc. din- lnmuctional mrmnunialtioao
iDI. 81111 ~ facllltioa, both cenllllr, a malnteaance depart_._.,and~ Ia, ....~~~clepertDaot,
tbaulh -'-'- not the a P vw!icww ..vice. To aadilllport.it, lllllla ftm.ble fuao. die ~ ~_!'nit with the

~a:::--i'~
==.::-e-.;':.::.

- r. IIUIIU!T

•

lnslnlction to upper-division
• undercraduate co u rs e s for
third- and fourth-year llludenta
who already had above a...,_
reCords in tbeir Univaility
courses. After the .,.,;~ organizatiODB bad become reasonably well esteblisbed, lndividUal colleges would be able to
dad.VI8l'!".tona stupedenrcer:!""'wt.thouof t'~:
1
~
"""
ing unfavorable compariso'i's
with the extra-collegiate syatem.
•
To sum up: when and if colleges are esteblished in this
Univer11ity, the function they
seem- most likely to take on
from the University, at least in
part, is undergraduate lnstruction; and it seems that this may
be what people have principally in mind when they speak
without qualification of trans!erring Instruction to the colleges.

poW ol . . ol ~. the
~ wlildl ..... Ita 11tu...... .... appcliCoadQ&gt; to u....
. loo,- If It be far aDI7 • Mt.
ollblir.........., . _ llleill' a
lllilhl;r
ra-;
___
_ ........
........... the
ol

.. -

.......,

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

"C?'-a.

_ . . . , . . filldl- I ..._
_ _ _.

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

l::'ti' -~

~~~alao~.._,aibility {or

par(..=

them.
There are ~ than
one to acoamplish the transfer
of these hmctions. One way is
to delepte them to 888igned
groupe under certain coaditiODB
for "'-t periods. Sametbing of
this' sort Cllm!lltiy to be
in favor, since, becaua of the
volatility of the colleces (cf.
Stem _pr:oopectns, Ill, 1 ilnd 6),
there rs no -'lri!it)' ol vesting
functions in them with any ·, expectation olpenn&amp;n~~~~Ce. Un- ·
der this plan, the collegiate
units would " -. In l'lllponsible'

~~ --

-

..... JII'Cibiiiii.Y would be rather
a lllllltllllr ol ....., the 8llppilrt
arpailatiaa ol the ~
~ thU ol clowl!dnl a

~ fiJliiiCift ~

Tbe fubctiaaa ill . - ..........
~~

-~...... to
the t1111..atr, -s !hi' o'ai-

il....
Jrr, them
aat • .. far \:MYol .... 111111 the
ol - -

-:r-w:o"w._

in

C::
:=:rau~:. .,_
the .......,;, ol the88~

could be gained If the colleges
were to be less volatile and
more permanent, 'l1ley might,
for example, be establlsbed as
c:orporatiODB for inslnlctional
and · reaidential purpoaes, organizationally distinct from the
University In their dlac:barge of
the cort'ellpOl1din functi o n s.
Corporate status - brinsing
with it legal responsibility-might well be the key to genuine autonomy in internal· matters. Indeed. corporate statUs
for colleges is 110 important in
the older collegiate universities
tliat it was taken for granted in
the exton! Report of Commission of I nnW[y. (1966) : "'The
dis~ "feature . of the
colleges is their status as legally independent and autonomous corporations." (Paragraph 25. )
In a system of corporate collegea, it is .likely that any. college officially aanctioned by the
UniW!fllity to perform Instructional and raaidential ~
would be left largely to ita own
devices in P"''!'Uini its students for dtopel!s. Under such
a p1an, """"'-• the University,
since it would caatinue to
award degrees, would require a
mechanism for determining eligibility for tbeee ....,__ Thus
there are certain func tiona
which would not be ~
to the colleges and whicili 'the
Univenity would retain. •.
Chief lliDOIII tbeee functions
might be the evaluation and
chartering ol c:orporate societies -'&lt;ing colleliate status.
At _ , t , collep8, uniW!flli.
tie&amp;, 81111 acboola d universities
all ..... the illlld be ...,.
credited by atate and rePanal
bodiaa before tbey are panted
~ recopdtlon In the ..,..
demic COillllltll1ity• . Aclftditetion ' - the value ol prolecting
the public r_. ipCnipulous

enll6jli........_,......_.ua!rtit':.,~ ~...,.l.lrlllic

.Of...:... r=:;':'t;;
no~tlonto~

from oflorial ~ or
reeidentlai -w., ..,...._ or

:,:r:,te.-= :! :..::..•tt":Ai
....... ....,_, 111111 ...

jiClWI!If

would edlnl 1D per-. . .

ceiyinc imlnlatiaD In aalleldate

""*' PIWMbb• • ..n ..

== slbd

::m_~,~~

-.it)'

era! public ........,mg bodies. lt
is to be expected that collegiate units ~ not wish to
aocept tbeee I'IBittians from the

~ .. the
Uan..tty'e otas-......_ U
the c:orporate clallel8 .,.....
to be adaplad, It lllilbt

to the

well

uait8

•

-'.Y . .

.admlttad · lo

-..............
................
...................
_........................
....,c~epee

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

(~P.~7.~7f '

.

·"·"·'" M6u'r ..,..,.

.

_..
..........
,_a.._ .........,
..

.,

c•••~altr.

~

w. ..._ ....

�Oamllerl5,

,,.,q
Gf'EATURES
puts it - "languase is limited by
biolOSY."
.
.
Becall8e ol all the biological dilferenoe that could e«ect rommunication.
Dr. Garvin bas devised four categories
ol possible modes of "rapping" witb
interplanetary travelers. Tbey are,
· acoustical. visual, electric, and telepatbic.
Visual is perhaps the most limited
category, Dr. Garvin aplsins. There
are many problems encountered when
tbis method is used. For ezample, it's
ma1nly a directional mode-you bave
to be facing someone to see what the
serulur is
There's also the
problem-you csn't
catch someone's attention by blinking
a light if be, abe or it is not looking.
Tbe other tbree forms are more
optimal in tbeir operation, posing no
such directional or attention-getting
problems. However, an aroustic rommunication could operate only on
planets that have a certain amount of
atmospbere and not all "beingS" may
live on planet.! that have tbis. Not
a secret transmitter.
all such bypothetical "beings" may
His interest in talking to aliens was
"hear," either.
_.-ked by bla love of science fiction;
What about the telepatbic or eleca
in 1966 about oommunitrical? Tbeee ·seem to be the most
catiO!l witb other wort intelligence
realistic for communication between
enftamed il
.' \lie short gray-haired linguist soon ' planets. And scientists are currently
aploring
radio waves as a possible
disc!overed that it wouldn't be easy to
means.
speak witb people from anotber planel
Then, of ·course, there's always the
In tha first place, could they •even
possibility that the extraterrestrials
" speak"? You ooed a certain type of
will IJ8e some medium that we don't
vocal cords just to be able to comhave the physical equipment or ability
municate verbally. Or, as Dr. Garvin

He ·Tiilks to Other mr~?
By

--

SUSAN

GREENWOOD

's "llatecl
In tbe
'

University's

~«Wr­
ing ... "Communication witb Extra-

s.-Dn' Bwellu Directory as

terrestrials" and tbat'a eactly what
Paul Garvin doM. Of ClDWII8, not as
part o( bla clay-to-day activities Ill!
1-.1 of tbe ~ Propam but
as. an ."extno-emricnlar activitY."
Aclually what Dr. Garvin .._ is
tJUM about how to communicate witb
extraterreatrials;. be doesn't - ' furtive signala to tbe planets through

...,erence

to deal witb, Dr. Garvin II!IIJlin!la.
But Jet's !bat tbe beiDp
do liSe some form of communlcatlaD
that - csn handle witb our - - .
Now- have to deal witb tbe -..1
part of the JXOblem - dilfereat pbiloeopbical or pbysical orientalio(la. Dr.

Garvin illustrates the problem by - plalning that something as amall as
different-sized brain ~ oould
cause insurmountable dilicultiea.
Suppose an alien would have a lupr
memory bonk 'a nd a smaller Ward eombination ......,_ tban - do? Hill approach to and capsdties for a .......,
languase would be completely dlll'erent 1han oura.
'Then there's the 1U111U111J11ion that
JllOIIt of Earth's ~ ere t-1
oo - tbat beings COMianily coil an
object by its """""""'IJ:J de8iplalled
name. Ear1hmen·caiJ a chair, a chair,
and don't &amp;pMk of it 111 a ball em alternate referencea. This, ~of course,
,doesn't mean tbat all beings do tbia.
Moet Earth languapa, Dr. Garvin
aplains, ere also vmy complez. "You
· ooed botb a grammar and a diclionary
to correctly speak or write a lanpqe;
one is not ""'!'18h." be "'-rves. 'lbia
is becall8e languages ere madi up of
sounds and meanings and letten and
all tbree ere pnBmt In almost .....,
toJ181111. It's possible that an alien
Janguase may not IJ8e tbe aounds/
meaningsjletar structure but may
rely 00 another baae.
Witb all these problems and dillculties, what procedures would Dr. Ga...
vin follow if aliena landed em Earth
tomorrow speaking a dilferent tm~pe?
How would be atart communlcating
witb them? "That's tbeir '-Iache,:
be 8lly8, "they were the ODS wbo
landed bere."

I

tResearch Increase' Story
Was tDeceptively Simple'

Good Intentions
Not Enough for
Troubled Times

Biology Prof Charges UGF
Ignores Most·Urgent Need

EDITOR:

EDITOR:
We ba. . recenttr. been infonned
that oolicilalion will soon be Jllllde
for tbe United Fund. Appanmtly
this is tbe one charity appeal
that il aanctioned. in some quuioJ!icial way by tbe Uni..,roity

1n your October I , 1970, iasue
it wu reported that "a coalition
of moderates" called tbe U/ B

~~l!:ea!~~~:navei:it,~

of tbe two Campus Policemen
who were recently injured in the
line of duty.
I think of myoelf as a moderate
-1 am in Cavor of workina' within
tbe ayatem, I have faith in democratic Pl"'Cleele&amp;. I oppoee violence,
especially -on campuses. and 10 on.
But eYeD u a modenlte it aeem1

!'~ ~.!..!:.E;'C:::,~~~~

Since tbe two policemen we~:e
employ- of the University, it
...,._ to me that """'!'""""ti.on

~

li:"' oren::~ ~':')~:!f...£

special reward for takinc opecial
riak to protect the Univenity
community) io clearly a Univer·
aity reoponoibility.
U the Uniwnity baa already

inoliluted pf!!llOdunoo for dil&lt;harl:·

inc tbla reiJ!Oniaibility then "" ouCh

~r ~~ria:f.u!;.;~

:!:

:;.rat!?yet:n.':"-=:~r-=
-.Jd be to -

to it not

':!: .::t~J:::.T~~:...~

:.~ =~~ dl8lmelo

,.... FOit 8MMI
The....._ Un- Fund cam.,....
to call the ·-.uon of the
U/8 _,111\Y to tlpo on

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

~-.tty. The..U·

de .._....s 10 ..... c..t o f -

unlled._... ............. ...............
-~
-.--..-.......
of-·
.....
,_,.........,._.,...
11111oo1.
the
to .... tMt
to -the
- -tiver
· · -strive
- · ·for
...,._.

of tlie moment" llftll, - -

-

-..,the~

•nd u.,ed

----··~-

pe~ment II~

�~ 15, {!170

6

FSC Plans to Foster
Liberalism on CaniPus .
The campus ·Facul ty.-Staff
Caucus, a spokesman said last
week, bas ·been organized to
promote the cause of liberals
in campus elections and to
foster at the University a spirit
of toleratioll toward change, of
encouragement toward innovation, and of openni!ss in exdvmge of views, values and

go8Js.

.

Negative reactions toward
change_"by faculty and adrninistraton are a major contributing factor to .. . unrest," Walter Rosen; chairman or the
Steering Comroittee of the FSC
and professor of biolOl)', ~d
before the Temporary Legislative Commission on Campus
DisOrders (Henderson Committee).
""Change and unrest are virtually s y nonymous," Rosen
said in the statement which
was endorsed by the entire FSC
Steering Committee. " In tbi8
sense, unrest is the healthy
symptom of constructive
change - the intellectual ferment and the experiments to
which such ferment !pads: experiments with curriculum,
credits, grading, governance . •.
indeed, experiments J!Vith life
style itseU."
In another 8ense. Rosen said
-the sense in which the Hen.derson Committee was created
_ ..unrest means violerwe."
Vi- Recrett.oble
Violence is " regrettable to
say the lesst," Rosen argUed,
"and we (FSC) are dedicated
to its avoidence wherever possible. But we feel that destructive unrest is largely brought
about by the suppression or
denial of constructive unrest
. . . emanating from those wbo
strive to maintain the status

Rosen used the issue of ecology and the colleges as representative of the present campus
situation.
'Ibo6e "fearlul of dvmge"
have become "enraged at the
actions and the rhetoric or aome
of the people associated with
some of the colleges," R.-n
charged "and have uaed tbi8
as a guide to undermine the
entire collegiate system."
''The departments prevail,
mostly doing things in old ways,
while the colleges wither on the
vine for lack of encoura~nt
and of financial support. '
Despite the fact that "the
environmental crisis lhi-eatens
the very existence of the human species," Rosen said, · and
despite the fact that many
campus departments and facul- ·
tiPS "have a life-or-desth personal and professional stake in
the problem," the University's
only action in this ares came
from the new colleges, not the
traditional departments.
Ecology College bas developed a true, interdisciplinary
ad hoc major in ecology on a
prirnsrily voluntary ~ Rosen. pointed out.
"The College bas no money
to hire its own teaching stalf
and the departments cannot
donate theils.
CollopsSbnwd

''The greate st instructional
need at the moment is for
second and higher level specislty courSes, truly interdisciplinary and tailored specifically to address some of our
uniquely non-disciplinary environmental problems. There is
no present indication that th is
need will be met" '
''The starvati~n ~f the Ecology College," Rosen said, '' frustrates students' concern about
quo." "I am not saying that every- tbi8 technological and cultural
thing that is old is bad, or that problem which they did not
· everything that is new is good," produce, but want to solve."
"The starvation of the enRosen continued. "I do not
wish, as would a revolutionary, tire collegiate system," be
to throw out the baby with the argued, "means the frustration
bath water. I -am . •. in favor of numerous related needs."
of changing the bath water more
" Meeting these needs, refrequently and more willingly. 'C sponding to change and -the
Turning to specifics of the need for change, JOOanS creaU /B campus scene, Rosen said tive, ·healthy unrest. Denying
that the adrniniatrative action and suppressing change (while
in reprd to the "resignation" at the same time insisting ·that
of former Undergraduate Dean you support it), elicits doetnloClaude Welch "typified in both tive unrest. The FSC stands for
constructive unrest. The cboice
~7~:~e·~ must be made, and time is de·
to negative unrest." President sperately short!"
Robert L Ketter's "proteataR.-n said the FSC includes
tions to lhe contrary notwith- "a group of people who felt
standing," R.-n charged, the that electioos to the EDcutive
only conclusion to be drawn Committee of the Faculty Senfrom the action is that "be ate were being won, by narrow
(Ketter) wants to stop the margins, by persons who were
process of change and to move often intolerant toward change
from a relatively open style of . . . and . . . openness." It inUniversity govemance to a tends to be heard, be said; "on
'tight ship' run by a small those issues in which the liberal
group at the top, cloae to the philoeophy ... bas an interest."
and ~picked by

::=.:tent

l.JIB Prosecutor

As evidence or Con.tl'Uclive
cbanp on campus, the FSC
The University bas named
spokMmancited: '"!be demand an independent attorneyr.. a day care center, the EPIS · Howard L Meyer- to serve as
C""Ri:. :;:d!_~j:: a part-time ~tor, direct.___, - · -. etc."
ly responsible to the president.
uuouu ~· Mr. Meyer, ' an al.umnus,
of ConCern
s~ that his role as proeeAmonc issues •'of ooncirn," c:xrt(jf.lwouJd in no eenae be a
he lisle!!: reorganization of the full-time aliBignment. The job
Faculty Senate; administrative will include gathering and prepersonnel changes (rumored or senting evidence in inetances
already acco"!plisbed) , and an where . University ~ . have
expanded role for the U/B been VIOlated and individuals
Council in University alfairs have brougbt complaints.
(wbicb, be said, is favored "by · The IIJ&gt;poinm..t
the
SUNY Cbulcellor Boyer). The concurrent establilhment or an
IaUer cauJd be "1100&lt;1 or bad OtriCe of Public: Adweate unclelieDdllq oo the composition · der Profes110&lt; Robert Fleming
or· -the Couacil," Rosen indi- are in line with •I!CDIIIIIIellda"The ~~ Council by tiona or an intemal committee
ac1 1arp iwllectB • fear or ~em . tbe omce of Uniwr.,..... illld ,......_ to il," sity Advocats, outlined in the
be .ud.
,
Rl!porUr last weeiL

and

..w.

Gounty limlth Offioo
~ Day Care

Center

;~'Ti.e Erie County Depart- the Univwalty ·c- 8nd addiment' of Health baa ruled that tioaal IIDtlJ the Cooke

-

-

Blat:k Artist

Plans Show

the lllly Care Center now operating in Cooke Hall muat
be ph-' out by Friday. And
. it cannot ~ until it has
met aU or the requirements
and regulations of the New
York State code for day care
centers. Mr. Cbarlee Lauricella, ~ for the Health
~t, toured the Center
facilities eerly Tuesday moming along with Mr. Robert
Hunt, director of environmental aafety, and found that the
Center is not meeting State re-

~!

Hall beamleot .,_ ~ ..vated to ....t u.ltb llipertment sllmdarcla. Aa It lllaDda
now, Lauricella 1111y11 that tbe
Center "doesn't comply wltb
the n:uQor facilities requirements." The areas not ,_ting
approval are toilet facilities,
sanitation facilities, ventilation,
staGing and fire protection.
LaUricella saya that tbe code
requires two -toilets f.. exclusive uae by the Center, and that
the main~ of the area
isn't up tO .stai&gt;darda.
- .

gi~ ;:Yfr!!~~
meet.

where the Center• would go were discuaaed at a . L Kettj!r stating that the Vni. "tual "tality f the parents·-ting n-lay nigbt. versity wou!A ~
· . fl!cilisp~
v•
o .
The group is now investipting ties . to
s ·
.. .Howb~ck race m my co~try, !" the poesibility of re-locating in ever, Lauriceha ·
that the
sp!te of adv~':"" cond1ti~, m the University' Presbyterian Health" Department ·requires
spite of political pe_rsecu~ons, Church directly across the specific completion dates .for
bas alw~ya asserted •!;'&lt;'If man street from U/ B. They were these changes or reassurance
astoundmg way. ' · ·
..
-m contact with the church be- that the contracts for changes
~o ~ ays the Afro-Brazilian fore school started but no defi- have been lel •
a~t, author .and teacher, AI&gt;- nile plans emerged. Mrs. BB
The closing of the Day Care
di8S do N8SCllll&lt;!nto, currently Walker is now re-negotiating Center by the Heslth Dei&gt;artRi::,~~ ~~~rto with the church. about various men! was in ·the interest of the
The , f N .
to bich poesibilities. However, time · children involved, Lauricella
.., sr. '- . ~ • w
poses problems. With their Uni- stressed. ''We want to provide
WI " be on display m the Nor- v~ty space closing after Fri- . aafeguards for lbe children, to
ton Center Gall~ry, Novem~r dily, they need a new room on see that they are being fed and
3;14,_ addresses ' tself to tb1s Monday. Mrs. Walker is quite supervised properly. We know
v1tal1ty.
pessimistic about the possibili- the need for day care on this
The ~me of the Nascimen- ties of 1!9ing the church that campus and will cooperate . in
to show IB "The Candomb le, soon. "It takes a meeting of ariy way poesible when proper
The Cult of the Orrxas."
the whole church and all its facilities are found."
·
He says, "My art is tbe fruit committees to decide this" and
This, however, stilllesves the
of my attempts to deal with the the chances oL an emergency 60 parents who use the services
problem of the restoring of the meeting before Friday are slim. o,f the Day Care Center a t loose
va lues of African culture in
M rs. Walker is hOping that ends.
·
Brazil- and a natural result
of my own reflections on that
problem. I am not solely pre.
,
occupied with aesthetic forms,
but of primary importance to
me are the spiritual events of
the Afro-Brazilian. The mytha,
the religious history, the fables,
the ritualistic signs, the dance,
By STEVE UPMAN
the songs, the poetry, the colTwo black coaches, the first.
ors, · the rhythm, the worship.
. . . The religion that slaves in U/ B'• histor y, give the
brought with them from Africa sports stalf a new 1-2 punch.
They're a couple of " good
still exists tod4,y."
Nascimento, who was respon- Wrights." More exactly, they
sible for establishment of Bra- are Ed Wright, first full-time
zil's Black Experimental The- hockey coach in that sport's
IEdWatre (1944 ) and its Museum of eight-yesr campus history ; and
Black Art (1968 ), ,..m aJao Irv Wright, new football assis- fafo from Boston University,
present a dilicuasion of the his- tant.
where
he
starred three seesons
Ed Wright, 26, llomes to Buftorical, socia l and aesthetic
as a winger for the Terriers.
background or his intensely colHis aenior year he was named
ored acrylics on the night of
the player who best exemplithe ubibit's opening ( Millard
fied the spirit of BU hockey.
"'Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.) •
He incurred just eight penalty
A press release from Earl
minutes bis last two .-sons.
Sinclair in Norton Hall. pbints
College D haS decided to
As far as be knows, Wright
oot that "few Americans seek to change its name to Clif- was the country's first black
are aware of the degree to ford C. Furnas College, in college hockey player.
which the Y orube culture of honor of the former U/B chanWright is a native of ChatNigeria and Dahomey baa pre- cellor and president who "died ham, Ont., where he played
~ Itself, even grown in last. yeer.
minor league hockey. A 1969
Biazil," in tsrms or "the culThe College, whose "thrust physical education graduate of
tural.core itself, the cosmology,
BU, he is now working on his
pbiloeopby, theology, and psy- is scientific and scholastic," master's thesis. He has worked
wants
to make the change to
chplogy or a mnfound-and comwith
the ~ilepcfY.,..th
"show
appreciation
for
Furnas'
pie&gt;: reli . ...--of Boston. He was married in
Cen~ tbi8 religion, the services to the University."
August
Dr. David Evans, senior tuCandombk, Sinclair explaina,
Unlike Ed, Irv Wright, aJao
"is the cult of the Ori:aul. OJo. tor of the College. pointed out 26, ' is no stranger to UtB. He
nun created the universe as that Furnas College is "interwas
linebacker for two - unity. This unity "9'~· and ested in scholastic and aca- aons aunder
"Doc" Urich, after
tbrougb his aon. ODJa, com- demic Pursuits ratbar than po- his transfer from Dodae City
litical
aspirations.
..
Dr.
Furnas,
prised of ~ and female( Kansas ) Community Colleae.
....... bMven and eerlb, came who was known for bia interest
Wright received his B.Ed.
the coupling from which tha in academic matteia, is a ach&lt;il- here in 1969. He was most reOri:aul aiven birth to re- ar of "some national repute " cenUy a pbysiea) edua~tion inplace_ the lost un1ty . In the accordinlf to Evans, and ~ structor at the local Build
suggested for this reason.
art or N-=imento. the
Academy ..
•. . . aren't immobilized in time
A gradt~ate of Norristown
'"!be Colleae felt a need for
an identify other than a letter ( Pa. ) H.S., Wright pIa y e d
or a subject," ·Evans aays and football t aU-atsts), t.sketbalJ
Brazil and tbe United Stslall. 80 "one or the fellows suggested -ued, and. ran tracJ- as
. . . They .... f..- in tbe pre&amp;- Furnas' name."
student there.
H is lingle.
The decision c8me last
BUth coa&amp;ee asree that tbe
Thnnlday
night
at
a
,_ting
or
undertab
or
reactione
of tbe players and .
the fel1011111 who are tba teaching staff of tba Collep.
~~ has been '"-&gt;'
....... hne bnn held at.'the
To make the cbanp official,
They feel 1bay ...,;;, hinid
Harlem Art Galle:ry (New approvlll must l;&gt;e .liven both liY
York) , MalcDim X Hou., W• the l d U /B ~lion for tbei{ abllitleo, not becal..
of
.~-"' ~·t ba
leyaa Unlnr~Cannectl­ anitby the Stste Uruvenfty in baretheir
if I lboalbt they hired.....,
c:ul).
of Afri- ~....
Colleae Master Lyle lle&lt;:a-..e I .b Ia c k," Ed
can Art, ~lllhlaalaa. D.C.
Wrilbt aald.
-

''Tbe

New 1-2 $ports Punch:
r2 Wrights,' Ed and Irv

Ccllege D SeEks
Furnas' Name

o..u...

=; "l:ix~as~

~c.r~..:.t.~
the..,._
~~~ablbi-

and;t:

a

�Oollol&gt;or 15, 1910

Mail BaUot Idea P r e f e r r e d - - - - - - - (.,.,.,.._ fJvM ,...1, co12)
dac llu. ialarmation into the
..... ol tlie voting faculty 90
tbal tbey C11J!. cat an intelli-

May liiiii&amp;'Oet tbat been culture-bound .

iDg that deliberation :

heve

:=:

amentary body is essential before we can vote on a policy
p._t. Perliamentary delibln tbe pat, - heve used the - eration is not, when you axne
mecbaDilm ol the , _ Senate right down to it, the only or
meetiJ11 as a device for accom- best device foe helping-particiPli&amp;bina thia. 1bia device is pants to come to a rational deimsafWactory in oeveral re- cision. Let me suggest, rather,
specta: 1) the meetings are that good oommlttee work as
often poorly attended; 2) per- outlined above W!)Uid enable us
11118Sive attempbJ often are ac- to U8e mail ballots as a devi&lt;e
oampanied by intimidatioo and for eliciting votes on policy
emoUoaa1 overtma; 3) good proposals.
ideas may be fondoaed or' shut
Please keep in mind that I
off by ~tary maDellvel· am not talking about a refering; 4) the IM8IiDp are time- endum, but rather about a mail
()(III8UJIIinc and often are down- hallot in which alternative SO:
rilbt painful Sbifting to a rep- lutiona to a. policy problem are
reBI!Ilt.ative Senate d.- not sub- posed in writing with full !&gt;aCkstantially alter !bat Jist of dis- up materials to support the aradvantqes~~ red11Cl08 the guments · on each side of the
number of
on which p~ alternatives.
~ ""' •
• There is no
In oonsidering this novel, yet
basis' tOr ·- ~ that the not "" new, mode of decisionqualitf iif '~ -will be im- making, I tried to articulate the .
proved if ..,; shift' to a repre- advantages and disadvantages.
sentative SeDate.
.
•
It seemed that one clear ad-

liD&amp; vola.

•

. . _ . . , _ Unoo'lldocllllry

.

Collegiate Definitions.- - - - (c&lt;&gt;ntinuell {rom- 4, coL 6)
in the University would. be able
to offer their students for degrees; only students of thoee
units would be ellle to claim
that they bad fu.lfilled residence requirements and only.
they would be permitted to take
the degree euminations reserved for students of .recognized oolleges.
The procedure used for evaluating new · societies oeeking
oollegiate status might vary
from !"""' f? case, but probably
always W?lild be of a long-term
nature; 1t would be romparable !'&lt;&gt; proced~ used .by
estaJ;&gt;hshed a~~t.ing ~1es.
Durmg '! new urut s .1~robat10na_ry penod, superv•saon very
h~ely would be close and detailed. .

gians here and with the na-

tiona! standard; the GRE's
would provide one input for
this sort of oomparison, RDd
their inclusion would be a
highly predictable option {or
the University. Another input
for oomparison with the ila· tiona! standard oould be obtained by havir&gt; ~ experts from
leading institutions elseWhere
assist in the preparation 81\d
sooring of essay JUld problem
sections of the examinations.
Tbe University might wish
to have other public examinations, in order to provide an
eailier check on the progress of
students, especially during the
initial years of any college's
membership in the University.
It might be advisable, for example, •to .... c one such examUnrveroity Eumlnatlono
ination for the end of the stu_Another ftl!'cti&lt;?n tD _remain dent's first year Of residence, in
w1th the Uruvers•ty m1ght be order to determine whether he
that of review. At present the · had made a successful transiUniver:sity not only reviews tion - to University life and
oollegiate an _d departmental whether he was prepared to foloourse olfermg~ · but ai":D low the - demanding program
screens them pnor to - theu which would lead in two or
being given. -It is not .unlikely, three years,
h;,; University
however, that the cumculum of degree.
developed eolleges would be
This account of the allocamore flexible in BOrne respects
than that of the University tion of functions-transfer of
now, inoorporating more pri- certain instructional, residenvate and independent study, tial, and subsidiary functions
'more seminars, and other de- to oollegiate units and retenpartures from the oourse sys- tion by the University of evaltem, even though many col- uative functions and functions
legiate students probably would o( review-represents only one
oontinue to take courres in the of many J&gt;O!!Ilible sets of alternatives. It offers only one ar~~~~~~rits·,~.: rangement for safeguarding the
might have Ieos to do with the interests of many of the parties
e&lt;lucational 1ealities of the ool- concerned, and it is only an
legiate system in futu!" than outline. Yet laying out some
of the University's options in
they would with the rest of
Unhreraity. Some method of this matter appears to have a
review f"!j "JN.s more 0•-.ihlo r,erions claim to utility, since
the University will have to in~;R .not based directly 'On: -1M •Coun.e system, itiate some definite allocation
then would have to be de- of functions if a oollegiate system of any recognizable sort is
veloped.
One such method of review ever to be installed at Buffalo.
~t be the ~t of
Uruversity degree eumina- EC'-'f"
tiona, for
students only.
:tal
nu
~ would be examinations
Tbe Committee on Eligibilof record and probably would
bave to be cumulative in na- ity of the Eastern College Athture, alnce they would be tak- letic- Conference IECAC l has
ing the _place of course exam- ~led that Robert Williams and
inations. If cumulative, how- James Freeney_ have exhau&lt;rted
~. they would have to be their elillibility for varsio/ ba&lt;:quilB Utenooive. 'They might in- ketball, Dr. Harry C. Fntz, didude, for instance, oeveral ad· rector of recreation, physical
YIIDOIId Graduate Record Ex- education and athletics, anaminations for each candidate, tlOUDa!d Ibis week.
aupplemented by books of es• Both players were part of a
1111)'8 or lahoratory problems,
and, for hodedine cases, oral black boycott of U/ B ~
hall
last -.n. 'Ibe ~
eJIIIIilinations on the eoaaya &lt;N 8Mior8-played
ooly thrOugh
~
!he
Cli'St portion of the season
. AlthDu!Jh 11111111y diftereaJ; forDeoember.
,
for depee emminationa m "AithDu!Jh · the committee
milbt be~ it is likely
tbat 11oe u~ ......td wisb aiemben 8SPJ18&amp;Sed sympa-to...,. _ _
tbetiC axocom .,.. the c:mmninl tbe perfOIU&amp;IOB oi
'. 8lancM" it ruled apinst Mr.
WillJama and Mr. Freeney.
.... students with

to

col•

Saystli.T_-'

ol=

vantaae woiild be !bat it would
save the time ol ....-y busy
people. Tbe information about
the altemativea could be speedily and tborougbJy d.ipsted at
the roovenience of the voting
faculty member. 'He c o u I d
probably dipot IIOd vote on all
of the ~ policies that ·
rome up at a Senate meetin1 in
a half hour instead of $he oor-

=o:f:ar'::e~

=d

of time

Furthermore, those who

GREPORTS

ON
GJ&gt;EOPLE
-;;.;;::;~~~;;::===

-:NEW CAMPUS

APPOINTMENTS
8\'ZPII.UOII: B. BENNBTr, media

pro-

~t~=~.,.:'t =~ c,.::,.;toJ~~e~Mt

decisional prooeos. To be sure,

SUNY at Albany.

:::OO.,.disin~~ ~a~ =':."~a';.:::~ 'I:=:!!'.':;

to the hallot; but, if they are· Columbia Univenity; master'• in
not interested in baYing their ~~.o~:=.J..oJ~~~~:
say on the question, they prob-' M Do
f0
11o
ably also would fail to atteod wi~ tlie~~CP ~
the Senate meeting.
Fund. will be the tint full-tm.o
minority faculty member in the

tar:

Not More nme.c:onaum~nc
This mode of presenting al-

ternatives to the faculty would
require a giXJ(I deal nf care and
time by Senate oomrnittees 90
that alternatives would be ClUefully posed and backed up by
solid information and good argument. While Ibis would be
costly of aomeone's time, it
would be perhaps the most efficient way to approach the
topic when we oonsider the
time of the entire faculty. 'l'he
task would not significantly be
.more time-&lt;:onsuming than current oommittee activity for the
Senate.
Furthermore, I would argue
that the requirement that oommittees thoroughly and fairly
lay out the alternatives oould
prove to be an advantage over
the present mode of oommittee
reporting. Mail ballots might
cost the Senate a little more
for paperwork and processing
but I would argue that the improved q u a I i t y of decision
would be well worth the cost.
It might also relieve valuable
faculty talent ior scholarly pursuits instead of draining it orr
in frustrating meetings.
For such a system to work,
it would be essential to find a
mechanism to insure that differing points of view are
brought to bear on a policy
question. This might require
the development of semi-institutionalized caucuses or factions within the faculty which
would automatically be heard
on any major policy question.
Thill would not be a major in·
novation in that we already
have a substantially institutionalized factional structure in
our Senate.
·A M•jor Dludvantllge

A major disadvan~~e of the

ball~t metho!l for d8C1S10n-mak-

Law SchooL

·

:i.~~ ~:

::= &amp;:::!e-;

sity. Miu Girth. wbo joina the
Law School in January, will be
the on\y woman member of the
faculty.
JA-'\0'.8 P. MANAK, assistant Pl"':

feasor, law; LL.M., Northwestern

Univeraity.

THOMAS G.

&amp;ICKE&amp;T~

profeaeor, law;

LL.B., Cornell Univenity.

usociate pro-fessor, law; LL.M., Northwestern

U!Z E. ftn'LEBAUM..

Univenity.

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
11RED£1UC FLERON, associate profes-

sor; political acience, appointed
editor of Newsletter on Comparative Studiu of Communism (sponsored by the Planning Group on
Comparative Communist Studies
of the American Council of Learn-

ed Societies).

BUNT, director, Environmental Health and Safety,
elected to three-year term on the
Governing Council of the Ame ri-

ROBERT E.

can College Health Association;
appointed member of Environ-

=~ o~e:/.~ NS:~o!:/e~n~~:

mental Health Association.

PRESENTATIONS
DR. DAVID A. CADENHEAD,

associate

~b~e:::u~rJT:t!~~~~~o~~~~:

omoJecuJar Films," 8th lntema·
t i o n a 1 Biochemistry Congress,

Switzerland; "Surface Chemisky

and Membrane Structure,"
American Chemical Society, Chicago.
DR. LAJUlY B. CHURCH. assistant

~f~~~~=~·~~

Ratio of the 197 Au (p,pn) 191!

Au Reaction at 400 MeV," Amer-

ican Chemical Society, Chicago.
OIL PHUJP COPPENS,

a.uocia.te pro-

ferraor, chemiat ' "RecentStudieo
of Ezperimen:Z Cbarie Distributiollll by Diffraction Methoda,"
Univen~ty of Albus, Denmark;
"Tbe Eztended ' Alpha-Shell and
Double-Atom Refinement Methoda and t,he .Siil!fy ~! MoleculM
Charge p..tributions, Umvero1ty
of Gro!WII'!n. Holland.
lliL 1'III&gt;ODOa: D. ~. asaociate
~ean, Sch~l of Social W.,elfare.

PUBLICATIONS
OIL THEODORE D. ERNST, UIOciate
dean, School of Social Welfare,
"A Linkage Point for Health and

Social Services," Th• 'Chrontologiat.
DR. PEnZ K. o.£SStiat, aasociate

~~d! e~fs ~ ~~~o'!i ~
Mr'~ti~fE~~Hofd~'i..T=
Ethanol" and ''The rG::etics of
Chloral Hydrate Metabolism in

Mice and the Effect Thereon of

EthanoL" Journal of Pluurru=&gt;l·
of)' and Erperinuntal TMrop&lt;u-

tlcs.
chairman. I)&amp;.
partment of Pharmaceutics, "Orientation of Monola.yen of HalfDR. MILO GIBALDI,

Esters of Poly-Methyl Vinyl Eth-

er Moleic Anhydride," Journol of
Colloid and Interface StUnce;
"Hydrodynamic and DiJiuaiODal
Considerations in As&amp;eaainc tbe
Etrecta of Surface Active Afon the Dissolution Rate of
Drop," Chemical and Plr&lt;lrmacological Bulktin; co-author with
DB." DONALD DAVIDSON, Uliatant
clinical ilwtructor, medicine; llR.
MARTIN E. PLAUT~ auiJtaDt

prof8110r, medicine; and OIL MICHABL A.
SCBWABTZ,

dean, School of Pbar:

~~~i~ti'i8i::!ht::::l::;

u•g .18 that if we do not heve
Probenecid." lnt&lt;malional Jourparliamentary debate we may
nal of Clinical Pllormoco/Dgy and
foreclose some personal learn- ·
Toricology.
·
ing and some new ideas that
DUNSTAN L. ~.
may arise in that oontext. Movdoctoral candidate, counaelor eduing to a representative Senate
cation. "Control of the Counaelbears the Same kind of cosl
or'a Role," Journal of Cowoadinl
I would suspect, however,
P•ychology.
that if ballots are mailed out to
the faculty it would generate. a 1:,.~
~~~ :=.;;.~oc':~~~
0
goo&lt;! ~ of small group. ~ atitute of Chrontol&lt;&gt;p'. Univenity fUJion of Evaluations:.. Pattem8
cuaswn m departments, insti- of Michialm: "Cl~ a Policy- . of Cu&amp;-Takinc in the United
tutes, etc. There would be Servicelr Gap in Se"'cea for the Stateo Houae of Rep._ta~"
learning at that level, and even AciD(," N'ational Conference on doctoral diuertation at the Unithe generation of new ideas; Social Welfare, Chicago; "Tbe versity of North Carolina.
surely more than we would get Role of the Social Agency in Soin a 90-man representative cia! w_qrlt ~uca!ion," Waterloo RECOGNITIONS
c:er,ate
Lutheran Umventty, Ontano. ~
~ Anoiher rna · r disadvantage lliL IIICIIUII A. PINNIIJAN, profeO-" DA v~D ENG""""'' · unde~llllte,
is that a mail~ot would be ~r, medicinal cbemia~'!?'-!· ~"':icalO:!'\" ,~ved8:_
a ~tively slow decisional pro~ ~ndecaphy
•
ld
!'8J8duate
p in Cbemooss, normally two weeks for a and NoUlolbam. E~; "Pbolin.{ ($1,000) for the
routine vote. V'e ooul~, how- toc:t.Diatcy ol Aryl Eateft." Im- 1970.71 acadOIIIIC year.
ever, call special meetings. ~ perial Oclllorce. x.-lon; "Strw:- Tbe following is tlie Scbolanbip
the full Senate to meet CriSIS twe and ·s)'ll- of Hiplqin," wt from the WOIIII!n'a Club ol
decisional needa; and we bave Inatitut fur ~tiache An- the Univenity: IIUJlY ANN ooNX, the ooaoinl E:recutive Commit; · oeimiUellehre, Unive'"'s·ty ol Munf- LIN, aenior, hislor:;v: CAIIOL ..,.,..
... to handle the most urseo• id1, ~: ~ ~~ ID&lt;ZUU. oenior, hlatory ; M.liiU!&gt;m
deci8lons.
Ka~" -~ • .,_,..,....... &gt;W1111 ltOZUCHOWIIKJ, a en I~ r,
M ·
to a mail ballot re- Inati-. Uru~ty of V ' - ph.ysico; MAJ1C14 lltll: PAGET, aeruor,
•
minimal
Auotrla; "Stud•'!.• on T - II800IIIIuy education (math811111t10
qutn111
Y
· s~ (c.teatOil," ASTRA
a)· ........, _._ I'IIUNBlLI.
the ~t alzucture ·
our AlB PM-dirai Co., Soder· ·uaior Alia ·a nd Letten· c.wYL
Senate. It mum more t.olje, ~
·
·
8CHWAIITZ -uor,' apeec11
pi'OIIIillint of rilllvina liOIDe of I&amp; Ci.a pt0~·
lOIW.Ul -D&lt;A -OK,
-the major~ ol our larae DCrllti&lt;al .c.-; ~- JUDior,
: DAVD&gt; S'I'UimiT,
SeDate
than claM tlie . _ 'cl Rrrro&gt;twtatioo ia tbe II!ODior, pa
. OCY.;.,c;~~o:.d...t ~Ia~ body.
Colaallilm N&amp;lioul J.ecialalan,• .,..,...,., aemor,
·

...::!

=.:!.

::."::3

..-a.

:!-.1": ·

-t

lm-a

_

�~­

8

Fee Review
Under Study
Local implementation 'of the
SUNY Trustees' mandate that
eac:b campus' c:biel lidminiatrative o~r...,. aball "develop aod
utifu.e apprapriate procedures
. . . ho) review and certify"
student goyemDIIIDt fee appropriations ...... still beins disCWIBI!d at Reporter deadliDe.
Students ,and administrators
field I!I!Y"ral meetmp on the
matter this -k.
Vice President for Student

=: ~~w!.t~lkow

' '"'

"Any policy c:baqe that sud.
denly results in peatet administrative control after a J!!!riod
of obvious non-involvement,
poses oerious problems. We are
dealing with student monies,
voted upon by the Student
Asoociation, and pem&gt;iwd by
students as an area over whic:b
they believe they sbould e&gt;rert
freedom of decision. Tbe
c:ban,., in policy creates an un-

In • world wbln ~
lation baa - become tbo rule,
one developing CXJUDtry may
bave tbe opportunity to avoid
tbo - " " population .,._-e.
. A pcup from tbe Um-.lty.
baa been aelected by tbe Alency .for In...,.tional Ilev'81opment (AID) to receive funds
to study population and family

Jlaflna.

Tbe lllllt ,.,. of tbe

project is ll:llPected ~o cost
about $250,000.

In deacriblna their pro~
the team noteil that Afghanistan oilers a unique opportunity for .........men. It may be
poeaibl&amp; to introduce population contml CDDCUr-

rently with mortality cxmtrol
planning in Afghanistan
and, thus, avoid population
The program, designed by the p._..... which uauafly result
U /B Population Studies Group, when developing nations begin
baa three pbaaeo, eac:b of wtiich = l e m e n t sc;ientific adwill require about three years
to complete. AID has olfered to
Later aspects of tbe project
fund the initial pbaoe, 8 sample planned by the. team would insurvey of population c:baracter- volve: a -.ond pbaoe in "'fhic:b
istica designed to furnish basic • the team would advise the Afinformation for planning and ghanistan govi!mment on ways
for population control cam- of population control and then

~EEKLY

Kerr, UllataDt ~ of at&gt;cioJosy, is tbe fteJd director .
u~--.. to thP prqiect include: Dr. Ba,y.lllllllld EWell, Vice pnaldet iOr ~­
Dr. Robert 8. PIM. PICleiioar
education; Dr...... Uppee, ....

SO-

a-nn .

oi

Tbe first, or interview, pbaae
will oeek information oo current cbruacterlatic: of tbe population, including their aocioBCiliiiiiDic status; it will aJao
provide "fertility cxmtrol d&amp;ta

soc:iate. ~of ~;

!!'.i~-~=--

ec..J::

ventive medicine; Dr.
tioe -y:
• prof-.r of

80-

=..W::!:fl: =~~

cio&amp;oi!Y~. aod
Dr. Pied G. Burloa, dean of In-

Dr. Ssmn Graham, P""-&gt;r

Dean,y Will be administrative
Bllllistant, aDd Mr. Mebdl Kiailbaah will be a -.c:b aaaociate with Dr.,..Kerr. in Afghani-

public heslth, agriculture aDd
otber fields.
·

ternational 8tudiea. Mr. Kevin

of sociology and social and preventive medicine, will be proj-

IY to

•Opon to public; no cMrp; ••Opon to public, • - elY,..

Aft AXD U:VOLUTION, 23S

2

Mattachlnes

Norton,

\t.U::.

five

aria

from

-~nvll~~

m:l~ for

ment ol an
Cial and Ecaoomic

stan.

-

bN_u liful dyi.oll Europe.

PoLLtrrJON

Allen, profeuor of Afro-American literature at Weoleyan
Univeraity, will present a •ries
of
lectures on tbe1&gt;laclo:
thia aemester. Former co-direclor
Tbe Halloween danoe of the •of the Afro-American Institute at
Bulfalo Mattachine Society Wesleyan, Mr. Allen ia the author of hia 1 own book of -try.
will provide the first outing for
the new l.epJ pbservers Corps Ivory TwQ, and article. on the
relationahip of Africano and Afroorganized by the Concerned
Americana and translator of
Law Students for Peac:e. '
French West African -try. A
· Tbe Corps plans to bave its former student of diplomak-t
obeervers "on tbe spot" for ex- · .James Weldon Johnson, be baa a
peeled or actual problems or bacbelor'o degree
Fiok Unidisorders in order to provide

mittee of tbe Erie County Bar
A.....tba.

ect dlnlctar aad Dr. Graham

~~_....t,but~

COMMUNIQUE: l,U:::sa~8~~·J!~~:
the Office of Culturul ABain and
the Native American Cultural
Awareneaa Organisation, will be
held in 231 Norton follO'fing the
pe~ormance.

=~.J've~ty~~n~

at the Sorbonne in Pario.
IIJOCliDQIITIIY DMJNAJt: Dr. Mic:baal Laoltowalci, .Jr., ~~
of &lt;homiatry, Purdue Uniwnity,
CIIDIIB'ftY or m&amp; aACIIft ...,.
OJ' I'IIO'n:IN P&amp;O'I'.IHAB. INBDI·
'1'0118, G-22 C.pen, 4 p.m.

DANciNG: Fillmore

Room. Norton, 8 p.m.

AN £VJlNING OF JNDU.N SOCIAL
DANC!S: Fillmore Room, Norton,

8:30p.m.

c8.Uoma

THE NEW YOilX
BOLOIBTS'
PllODUC 'I' lON OP ' ' ACIB 4HD GALA-

TEA"• •: A Sere nata by Georp

Frederick Handel with a Concer·
to for Harpsichord. Spon.10Jed J:I_

~~~~-i{r!~t~nrlall~:~~tor:

;'1!!,:~:.;'-::f Acis and Galatea ia
not of ancient Greek but of Neapolitan origin. Mount Vesuvius
itself is in reality one of ita cba:ractera; and what prompted the

..=;

to win Galatea, cruabea her lover
but mWit yield him to immortal-

~:!/~U:!t~~en~-:;

tempts to interpret human activity on the acreen rather than

=~ept':tolfi:p! ~~~

Bay Territory to advertioe a Iur
finn, built up a dramatic picture of the· strucgte· fOr life m· a
hostile environment ~ careful
obeervation and aensitive recordins of hunlinc, fiohing, the construction of shelter; and the relationship between the individual
and the family and community.
Not entirely faithful to the facta
of Eokimo life, the ~ ia
neYertheleu an ez.traordinarily or-

~
rend:~-:'~ ~t!:

of primitive h~ eD11teoce.

NJGHT ~i_l986. Hemy Watt
and Baoil W~t): Tbio....U...t

:Fthe~~ s37romiooj:

don to GIMiow. By intimate ob-

oei:wtion of the -tal worbn at

their iobo. it

.,;c:m- 1M dipity

of ordinary labor, wiWo the po-

~ 7.J:J ":"'~...:: :-:;

and a.thelic Jadmuk ill iloeumentary and, iDdaod. in the
tory of the ......... 11m ltoelf.

~

DIDLUf 80N08 AND IJT08-

ms, •'eawrinl: Henry and r-.
ard Crowdoc. Sioux .-xine"""'
and oinpra, 1lDd • miud-amdia
abow. P&amp;I80NEa8 IN YBJi:la OWl(
LAND, F~ Room, Norton, 8
p.m. A

co«• - . --:&gt;......,.

Addonmakethlollma~

m.-

TUESDAY-20
1970 QU_..,. a.UJI wai&lt;LY
!!081'-o.uo: LUII'CimO...., Towne

Bouie Restaurant. Main and
Hilh s-.u:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Binlle
lwx:t- &lt;P a non-re_ _ buia_$llllr.'

~..:.;. ~ ~

Le&amp;, i-5 p.m.

Chun:heo of Buftelo and the Center for IDtemational Con1lict Studiee, Eroeet Lefever. eenior fellow,

~f:.lit:'~~ 1~;';.'!'i""!

... reb center), Wuhincton, D .C..
ICTWC8 AND POLITICAL IEBPONBIBILITY. Room 14, 4244 Ridge Lea,

.umJUCAN INDIAN FILM a:&amp;IES:
Conference Theatre, NortOn, 6--11

'

4 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-2i

PHYSICS

OOu.oQUIUM:

Profeaor

Ralph D. Amado, Univemty of

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY LUNCJIIlON:

Pennsylvania, T B &amp; THUZ-80DY
PIIOBLEK. Ill Hochstetler, 4 p.m.

Kenneth Terhune. Bell Aeronautical Laboratory • WHA.T l8 TJU

Refreshments 112 Hochatetter,
3:30 p.m.

Room C-34, 4230
Ridae Le&amp;, 12:30 p.m.

TORY

· Span-

;:..Jed~~n:r:t:.F~~i

ClkW:.te~,;; ~=t ~:

p.m.

I

PHJLOSOPBY OOLLOQU(tJ)( :

ency, cooling towers, ...., of waste
beat; and projection of ·future
problem trenda.

STUDY,

TIIEIORZ1'ICAL

BIOLOGY

SDUNAJt:

Dr. Adrian Panoegian, Phyaical
Bcienc:eo Laboratory,.National IDalituteo of Health, INTDI&lt;OLIICU-

~~tn£tal{i~PY~i~rat!:y .!~

LU. P'OitCD AND BIOLOGICAL MAT-

nounc:ed, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.

- . Room 29. 4248

Ridae Lea,

4

p.m. Refreshments 3: 30 p.m.
RBF1U!:BBIB PROGRAM POR PII.ACTICING PBAitlUCIST8: TID: &amp;YD AND · INDlA!t POC'I'1rY ll&amp;lDINGS: FeaturSpon-

PBI:E MOVISS: 147 DiefendOrf,

.

IIDUCATION

9 a.m.-5 p.m.

tilta. Topics to be CO'ftred in·
elude: problem definition; elfeda

aiat of five weekly lecturea.

N""OOK OP THI: NORTH ( 1922,

DII:NUL

oou.s: Dr. Alan Drinnan, &lt;bair-

NOBIS AND O&amp;AL """'ICINI: POll THE
DENTAL BYGJI:NJ8T. 146 Capen,

~~i!hw.!lfn~~

THI: PRACl'ICING P'II.AilKACIST,

Robert Flaherty) : Thia study of
Eokimo communal life made mo-

=

CON11JIUING

~~ o:e~:B.':..~P~ ~H~~~~·~ ~

.::ity~·:___M_O_ND
__A_Y
__1_9_ _

SATURD~Y-17

ti/B va. Syra-

~'!,~f U~~. E~

OIGANIC CHE:MJ81'1;y COLLOQuniK:

=:...t. The complex miDDa of
:::=.:;;"!;. ;·~"W. 'r

Rotary Field, I :88 J!.m.

EnP&gt;eerinr and Cbaitman. De-

cano. With touching poetic imagination the ine:a:plicable ia explained. The catastrophe ia turned
m~ ~~ ~otion: the ~-

Itruction in baaic a tepa duriDc'
firat bour, 30 DiefeDdorf AnDes,
8p.m.

-

C. Ford ProfeMOr of MechaDical

GENERATION GAP?-AN EXPLORA-

have been an eruption of the vol-

8:30p.m.

THURSDAY-22

~~J,jj!" .t~:tre:":i::·

~~1."a~!a~~ ~Pt'~m':!

IN1DM'AftOMAL POLK DUfaMC: ID-

1"101111 rocmJ,AU.:

Sponoored

eoceo Laboratory, FIICUlty of En-

Acbooon, 4 p.m.
Dr. "Moore will pJ.ce the prob-

SUNDAY-18 ~POLK

sam&lt;AJt:

by the Fluid and "'l'bermal Bci-

. J'OLLtrriON, 862

~0~07x:.e.~~ ~ain..!~ -!':;:' ~~~=. :'h~

bappened."
Made up of about 35 selected
law students, tbe l.epJ ()!,
servers will be avaihllale at no
cbarae to groups in'Eliii County Wbo feel a need for and reqwst their preaenc:e. as did the
"""-ual group. Tbe Corps
baa ' - ' Organized with the ....
~ of Herman Schwartz,
!~""- of law, and William
tl. Myers Ill. a 1ocal attorney.
Aaxlrding to Rlc:bard ~ ­
the .... Mudent in cl)arae,. the
poup will fbiJow 6t:ricit rules of
prooedure 110 insure their ellect i - - ' Impartiality.

evaiuate their~; aod
a thir!l phase, a continua-

, . _ MOVIE: G&amp;AMD 1LLU810H

Auocialion

w i " - to clarify "exactly
who ...... involved and .what

15,1910

UIB Team to Study A{ghailiston Famil;y Planning

desirable adVersary relationTHURSDAY-15
ship be~ the administration and the students that can MOvm: POPL Conference Theatre.
hardly fail to increase preaent Norton. Through Sunday.
misunderstandinp.
HOUII: Sponaomd by the
''Ratber than build another cornz
India S dents
and
roadblock to administration- the OllloO of ForeiJD Student AIfaculty...tudent oommunication fain, IO'Townaend, 3-5 p.m..
and cooperation, it would bave THJ:O&amp;ETICAL BIOLOGY SDIINA.a:
been preferable not to bave the Dr. P. Demetriowo Papabadjopouadministration faced with an
additionsl burden of denying ~C:ti."t:'Rt~-::tiP! rkM:O~
or supporting expenditures that Institute, 8TUDII:S WITH PHOSPHO·
will inevitably result in greater LIPID MEM.BR.AN&amp;B: IN'nZA.cnON
confiict and even more misun- WITH PROTEINS, CALCIUM, AND
denotandings by the outside BOlli: LOCAL ANJ:STIIETICS, Room
29, 4248 Ridae Lea, 4 p.m. Reoommunity.
·
frosbmenta 3:30 p.m.
"'The most important point to
make is that the c:ban"' in
FRIDAY-16
SUNY policy now means that
the pn!Sident of this institution CONTINUING DENTAL &amp;OUCATJON
is beld responsible for the ~ COUUB: Dr. Bernard Garliner,
view and certification proced- Bufl'alo dentiat. CROWN AND BB.mGE
ures. Tbere is c:ertsinly no way ~c::; ~~~9 (k~~
b which the president can abla.te this responsibility and 17, 23, 24.
be can not delegate that aspect DCNTIBftY LIIC'!'tiRE: Dr. Thomas
Lehner, profeuor, oral medicine
to students. Na~ our and
pathology Guy's Hospital
hope is to make it
le for London,
....W..owcnc.u. INVI:II'ft:
students to aJJocate financial OA'I'JON OP PDlOOONTAL DI8&amp;A.8E ,
r:eoour&lt;l08 in aroordanoe with
the needs and desires of the
students whom they repreaenl in the aftemoon at The Buftalo
Tbe new element of responsi- General Hoopital, IIIOllJNOPATH·
bilii)Y placed upon the adminis- :"i!'!:-.t.~~~~h
tration makes it """""""' to . Building, 8 p.m. .
.
establish machinery whereby
administrative _..."bil- LINGtJIB'DCB taCTUal:• : Dr. Charles
H.
V.
Ebert,
dean,
Division
of
ity and obliptions are .,.,t apUndersrac!uate Btudieo, Gm00a4propriately.'
PBY : P8011t&amp;MS, 00Naa'1'8. ID"J'B008, 402 Hayeo, 11 a.m.
BLACK A&amp;T8 U)CTt1IZ NO. 1•: Samuel W. Allen, viailinc profaoor,
Black Stuctieo, liiANZ F""ON ON

Observers
To Oversee

~

-Ia.

ing J . _ Wek:h and Bimon ,Ortiz, contemporary lodlan •
and Jerome Rotbenberw. ~ editor
and tranabotor of traditional'•lndian poetry, Fillmore Room, Nor-

oomd by the Sc:hool of Pharmacy.

-:::;:::!~~~!ill'~:LIIC-

TUIII!: 3: Dr. William Barr, aoaiatant profeuor, phannaceutica, will
d iiCUSI preacription and non-prescription eye preparations. G-22
Capen, 8 p.m. '
1

CIJ&amp;A.TJV&amp; A8JJOCJA'l'l:

ton, 8:30 p.m.

. INDIAN
-..
ART EXinBIT

ucrr.u. n• :

SPACE AND ACriVI1'IJIJJ, featuring
~~ Fulkenon. II a i rd. 8 : 30
PKIITON LIICJ'UD - • : John .
Vance, one of the five COJDmia.
aionera on the lodlan Claims
Commission in Wuhinaton. a

An nhibit from the New York
of the American lodlan
in Norton's Center

=

Mwoeum

will open

~~~::.. 15,

POETRY EXHIBITS

r..ra:~ ~:;:::rlio:': p~f= ~fG',.~
..;. · · , of' -:roy~

sor of law at the Univenity of
North Dakota, Jma)(INA1'JON BY
·Fillmore Room. Norton,
8:30 p.m. A coffee bour, apon'l'I:BATY,

:-r ~ ! by W.
S. Merwin
·
want Dom.
Poetry Room, 'JJT1 Lockwood Library, 9 Lm.-5 p.m. -

TIDOUGH

WBFO PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1380440">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1451099">
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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                <text>1970-10-15</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1380426">
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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                    <text>' I

STATEliNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO'

VOL 2- NO.

s-

- _~OCTOBER

8, 1-970

.

{

Repo!i Urges PUblic Advocate Post,
Says Someone Else Should Prosecute
Supplan~ of the present
Office of Uruversity Advocate

by estab1isbment of a Public

Advocate's Office- without a
prosecution function- is the
primary recommendauon 'of the
second part of the report of

U!BtoSeek
Changes in
NCAA Rules
President Robert L. Ketter
this week instructed the Athletic Department to initiate
procedures to "effect a change
in the National Collegiate Athletic Association rules which
will recognize needs of students
froln financially and academically disadvantaged backgrounds."
At the same time he announced the University will adhere to present NCAA rules,
pending .such a change.
In a letter to roncerned members of the csinpus community,
Ketter said :
"On August 23 , 1970, the
State University of New York
a.t..Bulfalo... notice from
the National Collegiate Athletic Association that it had
been 'reprimanded and oenYive lectUres on.the theme of sured' and placed on 'probation
'1be American Indian," will for a period of one year' · for
make· up the University's an- four financial aid violations and
nua.l James Fen ton Lecture seven acadeiJlic prediction vioSeries this fall.
lations. All of the cases in quesTbe lectures, Scheduled for tion dealt with students enrollOctober 12-24, are being held ed in the University through
in ronnection with a number of our special programs for the
other events focussing on Amer- disadvantaged - EPIS and
ican Indian culture.
SEEK. Since that date I have
The Native American Cui- sought opinions within and out1 A
Eide our immediate University
~~CAO~ J:g~ti'::f family concerning possible

~ Jndirui IS-Theme

Of 2~ of Happeriiilgs --

' Cultural Affairs are co-sponsors
. of the two-week program which
is designed "to invite the Indian and white communities to
share an experience in Indian
life !llld to view together some
of its accomplishments, problems and aspirations.'!
_
IU
c_o~rdinators~ are Barry
White, a student, president of
T ,._,.,_ ~
NACAO, and Esther Swartz,
.l.Jf::{;f,UI
05ce of Cultural Affairs.
B
On the Fenton rostrum durCHERYL HAlfGESHEIMER- ing the program will be:
-~Harold Cardinal, presiiYent
LimiB G. Paulini;""'~~- of the Indian Aasociation of AIdaaall,y-lmuvm danist and berta, who is author ot Tlu! Unpecifiilt and winner of ~ No- jut Soc~ty lind is active in
bel l"rii8a, will 1M! four lee- Indian rights neaotiations with
turea at U/B this fall u dis- the Canadian federal governtinpiabed Yisitina lecturer in ll*lt;
.
the ~t)( at Natural SciRupert Coato, a Cahuilla Inand Mallanatics. Dr. dlan, who is an historian and
Paulini ia~at
· • . prllllident of the American Inuala to be
the
Historic:al Association as
bel Priaa
• (Marie Curie
• fqunder of the Convoalao ....., two
).
cation of American Indian
Tbe ledureohlp, wb1cb Sc:holan;
illitialed ad
orpni..t
William Fenton, -.cb
by Dr. WidiMI Ram, .-.....t pro~_,. at an~, State
~ bf ~ h88 .._, Um-.ity at ..........,., who ~ to~ -....-- rar-ly
mmmiaoim-.t iD the acio1Ma: It •-~ • at lila N- Yod&lt; 8tat.e .Mu.u..t thouuP a pu&amp; fiGa the and ~ Service and
eoa.ittee far · the. Allileation ._ .._, a llfe-lau, student at
atlllltllutialllll ...._ ~- the lroquoia people at New
CNdld, It JriJ1 be c6o..a a.d. Y-od&lt; State and CUada;

.Itmling Wi':ll
e Jlere

ill....,

.-....m

Alf:A

co~o:'i'i:
d=?:;;. · cl,;n •
"ties its rules concerning financial aid, making it clear that
such rules apply only to 'actively recruited' student-athleteS
and not to the so-called 'walkon' student-athletes . It alao
.,.US it clear that any stu:
ilent-athlete, whether actively
recruited or not, must predict
at least a 1.6 average upon entry into the freshman class on
the basis of his high school performance and/or SAT srore.
"Our decision roncerning
lhese matters sets two courses
of action. First, we intend to .
comply with NCAA rules as
they are now constituted. I am
nancialins~ctinAi'douCommir
U";itteeversithatytFil:t0

m\l&amp;t operate within the limits
of the NpAA rules in inaking
full or Partial awards to student-athletes idi!ntified by the
Athletic Department as 'actively recruited.' In addition, I am
asking the dean of the Undergradual~. DiviBibn of the University to limlt acadenric eligibill!.}' to students with a 1.6 or
bettir avmqe.
"'Jbe - . I _,.,., of action
"' mare important. Today I
have inotructed Dr:· Harry
Fritz, m - a t phpical edU- ,
cUiaa, ..,....tion and athletial,
to lnlli8te the JIIOC*Iuree re-

,... to 1111 ,. 1 11a,. .-..
.1a1m v--,- o1 the e..
tiat who will .... fDoa' f1111111c
- lllliNd to .._. a .a-. · - ·
..,.._
...,.. wm a.. ...,_ cw..I ·oI - Clll1 theiD IDdlllll
....._ lt • •
~Dtoo~t~on to petition
I

I

llil:l8d iD 'IP •• 1 :I laaD.
( _ _ _ ,._.1);

........ a

JII8IIIJaiaJ

attorney

( - - - - 31eol.2)

the Special Committee to Re- -and (3) the public advocate
view the Offices of Ombudsman shall provide "legal first aid"
and Advocate. released this services to members of the Qniweek.
versity community.
&lt;The ombudsman phase of
The public advocate, the rethe report appeared in the Re- port urges, should foreilwear
porter, September 10.)
being the principal "actor" or
Elimination of the prosecu- "participant'' in a University ,
tion functiQil ~-of__s!!ch_ilnport­ dispute: "Rather, he is admon- .
ance, the report said, "that ished_to perform the duties of
should the president decline to his Office only on - behalf of
adopt t h i s recommendation," other persons within the Unithe Office of University Advo- versity rommunity, and only
cate should "be abolished al- alter having been approached
together."
by such persons. Additionally,
If the recommendation is ac-- unlike the practice during the
cepted, the report says, then past year, the public advocate
the Public Advocate's Office shall not a s s e r t jurisdiction
should function, Its does the over matters which are within
Ombudsman's Office, "free of the dQmain of the Office of Unidirection by the president or versity Ombudsman."
anyone else.''
The President Should
Official administrative re- Be Prosecutor
sponse to the report had not
''Prosecutorial duties" the
been announced at Reporter report recommends, sho~ld be
deadline, but unofficial repor ts the responsibility- of the Presindicated that it would likely ident's Office, to be undertaken
be implemented.
as that Office sees fit "except
Fleming Recommended
thnt thnse dut~s shnU· not be
Prof. Robert Fleming of Law, assigned or dele{/{J~d to tlu!
who has served as University Offke of Vice President for
advocate, is recommended for Student Affairs or to th£ Public
appointment as public advo- ·Advocate."
cate for this year:
The Committee also recomThe Review C ommittee mends that the Task Foroe on
reromends that the Public Ad- University Governance ug i v e
vocate Offioo have -these duties the most serious consideration
and responsibilities: t 1 ) in his to the matter of adequate fordiscretion, the public· advocate ums within the University to
may serve as amicus curiae in hear charges, grievances, etc."
r;ending campus litigation on
In some cases, it said, " it
behalf of individuals or groups may not he out-of-order to dewithin the University ; (2 ) the centrali7.e the prosecution and
public advocate shall perform hearing functions and to return
as "public defender" on behalf at least some of the disciplinof persons within the Univer- ary and correctional duties and
s ity community who are responsibilities to the levels of
charged with violations of in- department chainnen, d e an s
ternal rules and regulations; (contin~ ed on ptJ~e 6. col. 1)

far ..,. i -~ at the .Juw. ary 1971---- . .."

The-_.,.., ........... _ ......................... _.,_
.UO· ,_.

.... .

I

-TIIIa .............. -....-..,_.,- • . . - - - _
~I

•

\

�~

TaskFbrres

Wmt tnflror
Individuals

6l!IB Staff Members Or~ CoURge·Z
Airs Plans
National Group for AdministratOrs At~y ::

'The suggestions, opi nions
"Tbe ·administration of high- Center for Research and Develand observations of i.ndwi.dua/8 er education has changed. 'The opment in Higber Education,
rather than special interest faculty emiJre who, as 'first Berkeley; Martin Meyerson,
groups are wbat the Pfi!Siden- among equals' performed ad- president, University of Penntial !ask foroes want to hear,' ministrative functions, was fre- sylvania; Hugh Gloster, presiaccordiog to a statement issued
quenUy able to combine both dent, Morehouse CoUege, and
this week following a meeting careers; however, the size and Ralph Tyler, Science Research
between task force chairmen complexity of higber education Associates, Inc., Chicago. More
and President Robert L. Ket- today requires administrators
ter.
with a central commitment to ~ted40ininsu:tu=r":em~
ship. One college president has,
An opportunity f9 r such in- a"!'demic a~t:rati!"'put, the statement said, "should
"There are mdications . . . in fact, called the orgllnization
of the most pressing needs
be open to any student, any ~
~ f':":.ca'd::lc one
in higber education today.
faculty member and any elnAcceptance
of the AAUA
ployee, as well as to :Oterested career administrators to concitizens of New York."
tinue their personal and profes- idea, its organizers say, "has
indicated that it is now time to
In recopition of the fact that ::~ti~gb organi- . direct eftO&lt;ts to enlarging the
working committees must have
Based
this statement f membership."
size limilations, the group of the probw':, a group of prot!
Formal incept ion of local
task fO&lt;oe chairmen, or Steer- sioila.l administrators at U j B andj or regional chapters must
_ ,· r
neg
c oCommitteetheas
mmended
it ism.caltmenledt, have begun a national move- await an organizational meetappo
ment which they h&lt;;&gt;pe will ing of charter members in Deof a larger. group of task force "provide that means."
cember. But in. the meantime,
associates wbo could be called Pn&gt;mota Perpetuate
information sessions may be
on by the individual chairmen
The American Association of held for , interested administraas special resource persons or University Administrators tors on this campus and eJae..
- to sit on sub-committees.
(AAUA), as the movement is where, Mrs. Mix and Dr. Holt
President Ketter made it -called, will seek to "promote say. Those interested should
clear that the task forces are• and perpetuate the · profession contact AAUA at 831-4228.
Eventually, AAUA hopes to
in the bands of their chairmen of administration in higber edand that they may deal with ucatioh,'' mllih as the &amp;neri- eslablish a national office and
their respective charges as they can AsSoci.ati&lt;m of University slaff which will work with .local
see fit.
Professors (AAUPJ promotes and regional chapters and will
serve as a clearing-house for reIn order to eslablish the !ask the "profession of professor."
force associates, the Steering
Its membership would in- search and information . It
Committee suggested that two elude those wbo bave hoen ap- hopes to provide a national foravenues of action be followed . pointed to administrative posts um both for members and for
'The president will request each on the basis of special training other specialized adrilinistradepartment bead to recommend and experience (and who ~r­ tive organizations now in exisa balanced number of students
form at a level of .responsibility tence, through publication of a
faculty and slaff for each task that requires knowledge of and journal or newsletter.
Membership · in AAUA will
force. In addition, any mem- concurrence with academic valher of the University commun- · • ues ). Those academics who not preclude or curtail affiliaity may volunteer a8 a task bave moved froin their fields tion by administrators with
force associate by sending, in temporarily or permanently groups of special interest-such
writing, his or her name, tiUe
I and wbo in their new roles as the National Association of
and department, University ad- bave a commitment to adminis- Student Personnel Administrators- just as AAUP does. not
dress and phone, and if a stu- tration) are equally eligible.
dent, his
her
demi
AAUA will attempt to define preclude indiviauaJ facUltY Parjor, to theorOfficea;: the
the rights and responsibilities ticipation in tlie Americah SOdent, 108 Hayes Hall.
of institutions and administrators, to eslablish a re&lt;:ognized
system of ethics and slandards,
and, eventually, to asaist in the
definition of terms and condi(continued {romfXl8t. I , col. I)
tions of employment.
Fred Hoyle, direcror of the
Ir hopes also to educate othInstitute of Theoretical Astron- ers to the role which profesThe major emphasis in the
omy at Cambridge UniVersity, sional administrators play in School of Pharmacy's courses
will be the 1971 lecturer.
higher education. Too often, is being shifted toward profesDr. Pauling will speak on the the AAUA organizers feel, the .sional practice, Dean Michllel
following subjects : Monday, administrator is looked upon as A. SChwartz ss}d in. .a recent
November 16, ug c i en c e and an arbitrary decision-maker or Jetter to the more than 2,000
World Affairs;" November 17, as a .. serviceman" by other pharmacy alumni.
" Molecular Disease-'Ibe Hem- m&lt;!lnbers of the academic comCommenting on this shift,
oglobin Molerole;" November m'1iZ;,rganization which was the dean appealed to graduate
18 "Orthomolecular Psychiain New York Slate pharma
ed ?"!" to ""?&gt;me more intr"§;" November 19, "Vitamin chartered
hopes to become national in vo1v m Jmprovmg. the slandC and the Common Cold."
scope and has attempted to as- IJ!&lt;Is of pharmaceutical educa. All lectures will be held in semble a matrix of charter tion.
147 Diefendorf and will start at members which will represent · "The direction which pbar8 :15p.m_
all regions, typeS of institutions macy practice will take in the
Pauling wrote the definitive and C!'iegories of administra- 70's and 80's," the 'dean prework on bow atoms join to live Ye&amp;ponaibilities. . I'
dieted, ·~ be de~ by
fonn molecules and has also
· Six members of the U / B the quality of. educa!':qn ;,our
studied the structure of the staff conceived and bave begun future pharmaCISts reoe1ve.
complex molecules that make to implement the !&lt;AUA ideaS 11. yin g that "significant"
up living tiasue. In the early Andrew Holt, 8SSJStant dean of changes
were currenUy being
1950's he was one of the first the Graduate School; Marjorie made in the School's philooe&gt;to suggest that protein mole- C.
Mix, asaislant provost, Fac- phy, Schwartz described the
cules ~ arranged in helioos ulty of Educational. Studies ; new educational approach as
and he inlzoduced the notion of Jerome S. Fink, COO&lt;dinator of being more concerned with
a molecular disease, that is, one student affairs, Student Persoo- drugs and the ways they all'ect
caused by the abnormal stnJc- nel Services; Albert C. Berrian, patients rather than with drugs
ture of a molecule.
associate academic vice presi- as product entities.
At age 70, Pauling is known dent ( 80011 to become associate
Consequently, be aaid, "the
commissioner for hilher educa- School will need to de;veJop
tion of New York State); new teaching facilities
stance on American foreign nnl- 'Ibomas J. Schillo, ~ssistant oor stud&lt;!nta can baYB greater
icie8 and his campaign
,..vice president, operations and conlact with pEople."
nuclear proliferation_ ~ sy§lemol; and· Stanford M. LotOther needs ol the School,
An active ~ce advocate, tor, 8881111Dt dean, School of Dean Schwartz pointed out, inPauling has aaid that he values M...._.t. 'They atarted this volve the neoeBty to recruit
his Nobel P..,., Prize more summer by soundina out more -stndents and more faculthan his . prim in_ cbemistey. frieads and .-ciala&amp; ~ ty.
Among his _.., efforts was a
out the nation &lt;Xl the valjditr,
To provide the School with
1947 pledge he made to him- ol their JII'OII(a1 for an orpn1: a s tea d y input of commenta
. aelf, that in every public Jec. zatbL
' and suggestions, the dean an~
ture he would include a -~ a - pounced tbat he will 80011 be
plea "for the neoeBty of world
Many eotw.tional lldminia- appointing an advilfory board
and againat the ios&amp;nlty tralion ~ lntermt and made up of practiCing pbarmaol nuclear warfate." In 1980, beclme c:t.tar IDIJIIJbera, in- cists. The board, he oaid, would
be ~ted a petition to the c:ludlng G. Leeler·ADderam. di- give lhe School guidance on
United N•tliliuJ Bi1nec1 by 11 - rector ol the Cin ter for the ways ol "cleclding upon DO!I!ds
021 ecientista urJing 1111 in~­ Study ol Higher BdueatiOII at iit continuing educatioa, in denational 9"81"tion of nuclear
Pam Statek:;;:,~:.n.. Bamls; veloping internship '-"' ll!atin&amp;.
Harold L
ol the an&lt;! in exploring means o1. im-

'!i:,

J..:::

Pauling-

=~f%:US.::O~

ciological Association, for
ample.

ex-

~Identity

C01Ieliate AMmnbl

~ .~: ...... ~::::;
The

.sentaaon on a -~ collegeAAUA will emphasize overall College Z; a plari for organizaprofefl!lional identity, Dr. Holt tion of the collegjate system·
and Mrs. Mix point out-&lt;lome- its director's stand ... tbe pres:
thiog that is seriously lacking idential tasll; f""""'; a report of
at present. In a recent survey of registration l'l'Oble!ns. and news
administrators at 20 coiJeges of some chi!Nes in operations.
and universities, every adminisThe new oaUete Pft!llelllation
trator conlacted listed as his was made by Willaid H. Myers
" professional affiliation" a spe- ID, a 1967 U/B law School
cial interest group. We llel&gt;d an graduate wbo was recently
"umbreiJa orgali.ization" that named ";\\umnus Qf the· Year"
can speak for all• adminisqoa- by the Student Bar•
. tors, Mrs. Mix · a.nll Dr. Holt
Myers ezp1ajnacj F1hat Colemphasize.
.
Many professional a&lt;imini&amp;- ~ Z WOuld. haYB lOUf objec..
trators feel they lack a real tive&amp;-&lt;lducation;.defenae ot the
voice in ·policy•making, bave no '·Jegall,y alienated'" legislativ
job liecurity such as that -af- ~ '!"'~ 8ft/u;J;tive
forded both professors and cJer.. tion. He said the CoJieaoe would
ical penionneJ, and really are a develop ·in p""-, the first
"forgotten" -segment of Ameli- year _.,.,noentrating on teaching
students · to serve ·para-le~al
can higner education. • .. :
AAUA will also address it- functioos; ..,. be par&amp;'lecaJ 10sell to these pl9blems.
· . structora.· ·
· Af~· ther COllegiale Assembly' did not ·act· on the Colnext level of those wbo must lege Z ptopolia)C-:and probably
implement, communicate and will not witil it baS worked out
defend administfttive decisions. a structure '10&lt; accepting new
units-Myers aaid be is "dead.
ly serious" abottf ihe propooal.
Myers, - well-krioWn for his
.
..
.
leg8) ·worli:· for sttidenls; Said:
· The Gniduate 'Sc!&gt;ool wisl*; ''Jt's _t.Qe ;fltSt ' legaJ . approaCh
to call the a'ftenqon of students that ' offe.is' more -!bait being a
working toward M.A., M.S. and kind of irarbaae collector for
PhD. degrees to the require- - the problems of our society."
ments for submission of pro'Ibe collegiate organization
grams of studies:
·
proposal, drafted by · Steven
Ph.D. programs must he sub- Siegel and Jeff Fagan, outlines
mitte&lt;f to · the Graduate School a committee structure as well
two acodem.ic· se~Msters prior as duties and responsibilities
to anticipated receipt of the for committees and the direcdegree_ ·
·
tor. The Assembly was asked
Ma,ster's programs must be b~ Dr. Konrad vgn. ¥oltke, disuboutted OIU! .acodemr.c semes- rector, tO ~hldll pjj&gt; p.t;(ip/,sa)
· lef P.rior· ro '!Dticipated ' receipt an&lt;i _tb.. 'btlllli - Bil.,~ll!if\\1;9· ff:vi:
or the degree. ..
Sioni' ib tlie .ilext · :0,\i~ embry
meeting,· tomorrow. '
College A informed 'the AsHembly that there was a need
for more class registration
cards and that Dr. Daniel Murray, acting vice president for
a"!'demic development, has ordered
1hat no more College A
proving pharmaceutical education and practice.,
cards be distributed. Six hunReferring to the turbulence !1."'!1' cards Weltl gi~en. College
which . swept the Buffnlo cam- A at .the oulfet dJ regJStration,
College- A's Fred · SQell
plained, 'but: ·oQI.v. &amp;bout ' 375
hilve·
b,eeri :tettirned to Aainisof Phennacy was qot irivolv.ed
in any of the disorders. He sions ·and ReCoi-dS, · Dr. Snell
specula
tOO t 'h a: t the unused
expressed his confidence that
"olli students and faculty will. cards had been destroyed.
von
Moltke Said that the
continue to exercise profession~
aJ responsi\&gt;ility in dealing with present regisU.tion proci!dilre
may
be
"inappropriate" for colsimilar problems in the futUre."
legiate units.
.
He
&amp;nnounCied that alt:hougb -the J&gt;re!'ideq!'i task
foriles . h!lYB ' - ' 'set up under
"moot curious circiunstanoos,"
he has agreed to sit on the University 'Communitr Task Force

a:.

bo~O::,bs':f~~i~~~~

Degree Deadline_:

School of Pharmncy Shifts
Its-E~ to Practice

where

:ex-

~l·:h!.a"f=t!tJ:..~

Spring Trip ::
Now Bodring ·

A spring recess excursion to
Spain and Portugal, April 3-11,

1971, is being offered by the
Creative Craft Center for studenta, faculty and .staff · and
their immediate families.
Transportation ($193 roundtrip ) will be via DCa jet from
Niapra Falls non-etop to Barcelona, Spain. Pick-up for return is via Baroel011a or Lisbon,
P o r t u g a I, ll&lt;¥lOI'ding to the
choia~ of the traYBier. 'There
will be complimentary catering
and an open bar in lligbt.
An optional hotel paclcaae
will be oftered approXimately
six ........ prior to de!laiture.
. Reservations w it 1 be .,._
firmed on a first-come basis. A
~t of at least S50 is re~for each seat on the

""!1;,';

further information, contact Cri!a~ C r a I t Center,
Norton: Mr:"'.Joe ' Fiacher (8313546); or Univaalty Travel,
Nor ton, Mr. EdWIUd Illiloi
\.831-3602) .

·ar.o·

~~~~·

"I - the 'I'm .Forces in the
present. situation ot 11&gt;!1 collegiate system u - t i n g a
oertainr clanpr . 10: 1Js;~ be explained. He .Mid be Woold attempt Jo "pft!lect, the collegiate
system .api1!8t -~- with obvious ~as a .-nber
of the Task Force.- •
. -\Dr. von Moltke 8IIDOUiillll
that Col)egiste ~- meet­
ings will- be held w.Jdy this
semester, lrom ~ p_m. Fridays
in Diefendorf 146. Ha aJao announced. that Keith Klopp bas
been. nanied ·~ assistant
to !b!! ~. Olfille."' where
he will be. amCemed with. dissemination...~ info,rmaqao.8bout
the ~ behoaeit the colleges and tb8 birect.ra Ol1ioe
and be--.· !be C8IDIJ'II! , and
tlie communil)'.
'
Ha aaid that all callegiste
g&gt;oDey ' - ' - t put into one
8c0ouitt, aild that all money

~~~~u;.

all unita bad ..,arala _,.,.,ts.

�3

Radio Club
Ready For

GSA Elect$
Reform Slate
Of Officers

Emerge~es

· Amid c:aJJB for reform and
...... responsible ollioeni, the
Graduate Student · AssOciation
(GSA) elected new o6:ials
MCJDday niJbL The , _ ollicers
pledpd to stop praetioes that
Jed to . . - $16,000 of non-ap. proved spending last January
- tbrou&amp;'b Mercb..
. The new ollioers Me : Mlcbael Rc.m, ~icel J&gt;liarmacolotDr. cbainnan; Paul Wharton, ...............~. vice thairman · Barbua Falsotti, 8IIMCh.
t~ec;etary;' and- Sam ~awn~

metb,-.

By RICK SCHWAB

Uttt-raity lnl-"ort .s.-ion

When natural or "man-made"
disasters occur, ham radio operators are usually there- passing along information, establishing emergency communica·
tions, helping agencies such as
the Red Cross and · Civil Defense.
If trouble breaks out on the
nation•s campuses during the
year, W.A2NPQ, U /B's Amit.;ur fladjo Club, will be "!:' the·
llll".

.

Two of 1be new olicers, ~
sen and ~ active last
sprina iD ~ the aiJo.
Clition of lunda by treasurer
•• Jolm ea. that bad been
oomoctly approved. Fe.- funds
to be allocet.d by the GSA it
iR . _ . . y. for .the -Council,
&lt;lOIIIpCII8d of elected - ~
mentel reproisentetivee, , to app....., . . After in~tin,. .the
metter, Rosen and J;ojwn. found
that many alloc:aliona during
the January" to April period
had not gone through thia
channel.
.
•
Mast of MOI!Iky's twp.hour
~pee~inJ was ~- with
queationing"the~ve can4klates. 'The twO noinlhees' for
each ollloe we., ~- on everythin"g from the Day Caie
Center · to their feelings about
arms on campus. In general,
questions centered around
wbether all procedUres of the
organization should be open to
the public and what ts the
GSA's relationship with the media. Charges of being "too cooperative witJ:a the _preiS" were
leveled 8J8i11st l.a!V11 ·Who )las:
been 1i"i:tin 'tnolsure "liina! last
1.iaY. u~-~ w.J'quo~ in
several news" articles, claims
only to have .aninvered' questions and explained GSA prooedwes.

Other metiers diacuaeed were
control of Ieee, graduate student housing and stipends paid
graduate students on assistant-

shi&amp;:a.,.

and his alate of ollicers
took the stand of "adjusting
stipends Iii Jll8l"8Diee a deCent
standard of liVing and illso tO
include"a c:ost of ll · ibchlase
to m8intein"this ~'The" OJ&gt;::
pcisiitg alate com~ of Sui!
Ell loU, P.t!loeophy, ~oni Buchanan, po li tl ca I science, Joen
Hart; humanities, and Jell"Fagen, poyc:bology, asked for a
stipend of at ·leoiat $3,0!JO_ for
eac!t ,srad':"'le student . on an

Pub ·.DiJwu· v ,1 , eezes wUBS fior Cold S'-'-~:...1
u:ia,~
D,..~_',] TT.-.h.

" .'S R.
Say.

b
.
li
: .t i
. •C
.
s

-

-

• _,..

n't.!JTtflue-nee· Hbklhat:k

.D
·
i
•d

Cold S~l's fwtd&lt;l were ·,;,..
frO%en and recognition of the
CaiDiyat ...... temporarily removed at the meeting of the
Publications (Pub) Board last
'lburaday niahl The Board in
a rguJar oeosion also listened
t.0 requests lor ftinils from Til£
Aduoccte, the yearbook of the
Law School, and Til£ New Veteran, a , _ newspaper desigoed to help recent veterans.
Much of the meeting was devoted to discussing Cold Steel
and its relationship to the Pub
Board. Don Bergevin, treasurer
of the Board, had frozen Cold
Steel's account becsuse of financial' questions be had.
• Cold ·Steel's' s.!plember issue
caUsed great deal of cori:unent
in the community due to its explanaqon of how to build a
Molotov cock1ail and how to
sue. Bergevin claimed this
Tbe issue was also the target
of an editorial by WGR' TV
about im!sponsjble spending of
student fees . A week later
WGR-TV broadcast a second
editorial stating that Cold
Stul'a funds were frozen by the
Pub Board due.to the irresponsibility of their .September is·sue. Bergevin claimed this
~asn't true and that his freez-

a

ing of Cold Steers lunda was
"purely a fillancial move - I
don't know where (Henry )
Marcotte got his information."
He also indicated that the Student Association had asked for
equal time. to refute the editorial, but was refused.
·
'The financial questions Bergevin had that led to his cutoff of Cold Steel's funds were
based on keeping of books.
Nancy Clark, treasurer of the
paper, explained that the activist publication had never
kept books before and that "all
the money went into the till
and was taken out when need·
eel" Bet:~evin explained ·to her
that "records and vouchers were
neclded and that all monies and
allocations must go through the
cashiers in Norton.
Steve Clark, editor of the paper, was also questioned about
his affiliation with SDS but answered, "I- don't think that's
~evanl" Another question
concerned Cold Steel's association with the Niagara Liberation Front ( NLF). Clark
claims that the newspaper's not
"formally associated with the
NLF,'' however, on ·the masthead of the September issue
was the phrase, "voice of the

Niagara Liberation FronL"
Another question asked about
the purpose of the paper which
Nancy Clark explained was to
"establish a better relationship
between the University and the
community." She elaborated,
"Cold Steel is the voice of the
University talking to high
school kids, speaking to their
needs."
Discussion ended with Fred
Emmings, chairman of Pub
Board, stating "after we approved them, - what they ( Cold
S teel) print is no longer any
concern; our purpose is not to
censor."
The meeting of Pub Board
ended . with a discussion of allocating funds to have Spectrum micro-fi.lmed for the University Archives.
~GRE£

APPLICATIONS

In order to be considered for grad·
uation, each student must file with
tt:e 0 f f i c e of Admissions and
Records....an Application for Degree
Cent The ·deadline date for filing
for February Commencement is
October 30. Application for Degree

Cards are available at the Office
of Admissions and Records.

'~Jndian'---------------------------------(continued fn&gt;m fKJIJ• 1, col. 2)

who is on leave from his position as profesecir of law at the
University of North Dakota ;
88818tantship.
. ani!
'
•
'The ftnaf• Vote tOt'! IS
eo~· sundown , 8n Irochairman: Roaen ;11, Elllo~t 21; quois leader and spokesman,
vice chairmen: Wha;ton 33, ·who is chieFof the Tonawanda
Bucbanan 19; ~tary : .Fa!- Senecas ani! .sp~.a·ker of the
setti 30, Hart 20; and treasur- Longhouse.
er: Lawn 34, F...,. 17.
The-lecture schedule is as
follows:
Monday, October 12, Cardi, .....,.or-:"
naJ, "People to the Power,''
Fillmore Room, 8:30p.m.
.
•
Thursday. October 15, Costo,
Tbe ·International Studies ·"N- Horizcns in Education:
Aaaociation and the" Stele" De- 1lte Native American Caa,"
partment have annoUnoed se\1· FiJlrnore Room. 8:30p.m.
eral Scbolar-Diplainat seminars
Mooday, October 19, Fenton,
to be held in W811hington, D.C. "The League of the Iroquois: A
at four-day intervals, beginiting~.P State," Fillmore Room,
in November. The lll!lnlruirs me 8:30 p.m.
.
delipBI eapecjaJiy for_ 'YOUDB
"Wednesday, October 21,
Ph.D.'s wlio-haw bad little ett- Vanm, "Extermination by
........,_with·-~ gov- Treaty," Fil1more
8:30
......._t aDd ' will co"Dttn .oe p.m.
.•
~t tl!e ~71 .ac:adOmSaturday, October 24, Sunwill be . ailable down, ~ ·The Iroquois l.oac·
0
kll' trutaportat.lcb a~WI!aubais- t:to..e Reli1ion," Fillmore
~ ~ bollpitality at ~ 7;30 p.m.
the hoate8" of W~ pat·
A Ion 1 with the 8uDdown
lidpenta mey be'erraiif&lt;ii.
leclunt, a cultural ~
Pw1lwr 1nforaatian and ap- with North A-an IDdiane,
. JJIII:atiant are a...o.ble Ill the ~ by '"lbe White &amp;ola
061e of tbe Dbe!:1or of
of .,_," II edleduJed. Tbla Is
"--omic •J'racraml. 301 .-cribed .. 811 llltapretaijaa
'J'oWMmd ~'
' of "ttl8
Indian .

were

Sclrlar..Ilir.hnstt

Series Slate.d

Fzl-...1~

..

a-.

&amp;:'-iuniis

o--

..-m.

ment as well as of traditional a mixed-media show, "Prisonvalues and ways." ers in Their Own Land,'' SaturPeople who expect to ••see day, October 17, Fillmore Room,
lots of feathers and to fulfill 8 p.m.;
tbeir. stereotypes of the Wild
·'An Evening of Indian Soe s t or Hollywood Indian" cial Dances," Fillmore Room,
wlll be di51!ppointed, a White October 18, 8:30 p.m.;
Poetry readings by James
Roots spokesman says. "We
come as people, of the same Welcli, SimOn Ortiz, ana. Jerheight as you, as we are in ome Rothenberg, the former
reality."
being contemporary lndian poTbe name, White Roots of ets, and the latter, an editor
Peace, is pert of the symbol for and translator of traditional
the first United Nations, an.....Jndi!wj]g!!J:ry, October 22, Fillevent usually neglected in more Room, 8:30p.m.;
A dinner of American Indian
American history books, according to bead singer Karonhiio. food, OCfOber 25, 6 p.m.; and
"'The Iroquois Confederacy was
An exhibition from. the New
united under a Great Tree of York Museum of the American
Peace, 1with four while roots" Indian, Thursday, October 16,
going out
80 all peoples could
through Saturday, October 24,
find their way to peace in the ('.enter Lounge. . Norton.
shade of that tree. Since then,
Ali events are free of charge.
. we liave conaidered an aggres- Because of space limitations,
sive pursuit of peace as the the dinner will be by invl~tion.
mission of the People of the Voluntary contributions at. the
~"
"~ of Indian Social
Q the r events" for the two- I&gt;aftaeo(' will go to the Pine
....,.. pro1ram include:
Tree Culture" Canter, an AmeriAn American Indian 7 i 1m can Indian-heritage· facility for
Series, October 13,3:30-11 p.m.; urben dwellen located at. the
and October :In, 6-11 p.m., ~ Unitarian-Univmaalist Cltwd\,

•

The club, which was formed
last spring, now bas allout 35
members, three-f&lt;&gt;urths of whom
have general operator licenses.
Already, they have beeit itistrumental in passing along to
the University community informationabouteventson ·other

~J'=J.::ct:~~:

sion
and the
SteleBuffalo,
deaths.
Edward
R.Kent
Mellnik,
club president, Tecalls , "We
had an eyewitness account of
the Kent State shooting within
two hours of the event.· We
taped it and had it played on
WBFO," the University's FM
radio service.
Student lnlonnatlon N -

"We became part of the Student Information Network mo"l than 150 campuses participated - and we were on the
a ir for 24 hours a day for a
week following Kent State."
While the Amateur Radio
Club is ready to spring into action again if conditions warrant,
the club's main purpose is to
"help students who want to gel
amateur radio licenses with the
theory and code and help guys
with licenses o-p erate while
away frorri home."..

Not .surprisingly - becau se
"ham"' radio is a hobby, or an
avocation to most - the club's
membership is quite diverse.
While Mellnik is a junior psychology major, the club's other
founder, James Welch. is an
undergraduate in electrical engineering. Welch. · inCidentally,
is the "trustee,'' ~_person zoe"
sponsihle for W A2NPQ as far
as the Federal CommunicatiOns
Commission is concerned. Both
Mellnik and Welch work perttime in U/B's Instructional
Communication (ETV) Cen- "'
ter.
Room In Norton Wom.d

The station is presently headquartered at 124 Winapear Aveuue, using facilities loaned by
the American Studies Depertment. But club members are
trying to get a amall room in
Norton Hall 80 they can be
close to the student newspapers
and WBFO if they are again
called upon to quickly relay information.
With $750 from the Student ·
Associa lion last spring, the
club bought a transceiver
( transmit(er-reoeiver) which

:d""isO.:::t!"~ ~ ~ ~

Jar
tshle
So
ge rote
antenna.
me
of the club members brought in
::Yir =eqw~p·=ior~ ..._..
very band available to ameteur radio operators (except six
and .160 meters l ·
Plans for the fall include setting up a daily student information network as well as enlering ·some contests in which
hams try to make as many contacts as poesihl'!- ~ f~ as
~away as P088•!1!.e. m a JllveD
. _time
_ _span:..__
· -"--,....----

fereoce '"'-Ire;
Elmfoood and W. Ferry.
HELP! •
uSonp and nan..," A&amp;The JIIOI1IUD haa been "in,ade
To ~ I t litany
8inlinJ
Society
October
.,...;J:tle.
by
,.
from
tbe
- · FOR INTRA·
!.4, FiJimaie~a-_ 8;30_jl.m.; "l!ew.Yodt state CounCil on the GYM AVAILABILITY.
Songs and 11tiar1M by Henry Arte and by contributions from MURAL ANO RECREATIONAL AC·

and Leonard c.-doc; SioiDt
medidne men and a1npn. and

UIB'a Gnlduate School~ Tt\'ITIES
·
Millard F1J1man Collep.
Rm . 5, Clol1&lt; Gym, Ext. 5238

�+

Racial Factors Seen Affec$g us. ;Both at ·HQme and Abroad
face IIDd the feelinD ~
iD hia aculpture and her pamt..lnp lpOb eloquanUy
than IIIQ' warda of the bond he-/
~ .._ I wmt .., bioi&gt; 11!"'8·
IUCIIIII to .a eondomble, re1.1Poua
- t h a t . . . , be I I - '
bed&lt; to the Yorube people. I
felt very mudl at ' - . I ex~aof historical
con'iinuity. I falt that I, too,
have a culture! memory.
Yet, when I 'Yellt on to Rome,
Milan, Paris IIDd London, I
....-1 a greater air of iJidjf.
ferenbe, coldness, or even P"''"
haps hostility than I recalled
having experienced in 1961 It
wasn't that I felt ashaJne.i of
being Black, it was tb&amp;t I felt
ashamed of being an~
C~ge i~ up to imagination or
projection, but, nevertheless,
my feelings for me weie real.
Leaving the Vietnam engagement aside, this is what comes
across in a random sampling of
the New York Times over the
span of one Week:

Unhwaity cOuld sd1l be pomt,.

EDI1'0IrS NOTE: Tlaio - r

Zd~~ryM':f :J:' o':=io~
eel up 81 an ~ pi
·-·
monumental pooportiaa. And

- ......

-~.':!}':~::::u.s~~~

UniWnity oDidd dJ&amp;.
play in a major l1niYeJsity pub.
lication theadminiatzationt8cea
of 1970 with not one ain,le
Blad&lt; ~ in a policy-making
. role.
,
·
5. In our communitie&amp;-Blad&lt;
communities, that is-an un·
armed Black Panther leader
can be sbot to death in Chicago
and his murderers go scotcfree.
Two Black students can be
killed at Jackson State College
in Mississippi, and the polioe
involved exonerated . And Ln
Hou&amp;ton, a. young Black militsnt is allegedly sbot -down in
cold blood, and the polioe in·
valved cleared of any charges
connected with the shooting. In
contrast, Cleveland Sellers, a
Blad&lt; civil rights leader in
South Carolina, received the
maximum sentence of one year
in prison and $250.00 fine for
"participating in a riot." No
evidence was .presented that
Mr. Sellers actively participated in the riot; he was ·seen
moving back and forth .among
some groups gathered in front
of a bowling alley in Oi-angeburg, two days before " riot
broke out.

Policy. Mid at lM Taft Hot• l in
Nau YorA City, October 1·2, Ull·
du ,.,.pica of the Nati · c.l

Cowu:il of the Clwrchn of
in the U.S.A.

chri.t

B JAMES

..,.'!_•.,_:-_.Mf!!!!J.,.
'?- .,,.__, 5 .,.._

About three years ago. a
group of us assembled ·in Coloredo to discuss the subject that
is tha theme for this ~
meeting. At that time, Professor Hugh Smythe and I read a
joint paper on U.S. racial im!'8"" and American foreign pplley. I su~ then I had a
more optimistic faelina about
the possibilities of Blacb play!nf more meaningful roles in
bringina about changes, abort
of. revolution, Ln the i r racial
status both here and abroad.
As I reread a paper which I
p._,.,a fer a aimilar meeting
a year and a half ago for the
Denver Race Center, entitled
"Civil Ridlts and U.S . Foreign
Policy," I detected a growing
sense of cynicism, if indeed not
~. at the nedilrihle elfects
tbat preachmenbi; l&amp;w, educa·
lion or organizational activity
have had upon substantially al- AoNutto Upon American Bloc:b
tering the ~onception that
Social, cultural, economic and
White Americans have of physical assault upon AmeriBlacks and their relative sig- can Blacks by the system far
nificaooe fer any asp e c t of trsnsoends the "benign" limits·
American life, including U.S. tiona suggested as strategic or
foreign policy.
~&lt;?lerable by Mr. ~oynihan in
I come beck for a third time · his now famous memorandum
in almost as many years to re- to the President over a year
view "Racial Factors in U.S. ago. It seemS almost as true toForeign POlicy" and DIY oboer- day as when Henry Turner utvations and thoughts indeed tered these words 75 years ago:
are not pleasant ones. I have - "Tbere is no manhood future in
been asked not to give an ad· the United States for the Medress but to make some re- gro. He may eke out an exismarks and that is precisely tence for . generations to come
what I shall do....,.. no more, no but he can never be a man _:
less.
full, sy m met rica~ and-un·
What has happened in the dwarfed."
intervening period?
Thus, out of physical bond·
1. '!be l'r1!sident of the Na- age, we have witnessed Blacks
tinnal Aasociation .for the Ad· attempt strategies ranging from
vanoement of Colored People segregation to integration to
bas described the present na- separation to fragmentation
tional administration as o~ employing means both violent
_ cqmpletely unresponsive to the and non-violent. And what we
~te plight in which Black
have left is a country torn asunpeople find themselves i n derby racial hate, on the verge
America.
of a blood revolution and cast2. Under the mantle of "grad- ing tbeee same shadows of hate
ualism," a process of "reeepe- · around the world.
galion" of schools is occurnng,
What is our image in various
makinir mockery of the historic parts of the world? I am sad1954 Decision of the Supreme dened by the reality of having
Court declaring segregated s o often to go outs ide the
schools UDOQnstitutional.
United States to capture the
3. Unemployment for Blacks dignity and humanity of being
soared to its higbest point this Black. In 1961, it was in Ghana
year since the recession in the that I , for the first time, felt
fifties.
like a man. In 1970, I had to go
4. Under I'"""'"'"B from Black to Brazil- indeed to Bahia,
students, coiJegl! and university where African culture! inberi·
administrstions opened wider tsnce is so richly · and deeply
their doors to Blacks, but de- imbedded into all aspects of
spite their eftorts, at the close Brazilian culture. It was Ln that
of last year not more than 150,· country where two Black artists
000 of 6,700,000 American stu- and I felt our kinship and our
dents Ln predominantly White · brotherhood without being able
colle1ea are Black . The ap- to understand a word ~­
poln-t of a Black as the between us. My absorption in
president of Michigan State tlJeir work as expressed on my

~~

" · r . ,..,..
c - 21211.

GVJEWPQJNTS;
September 'J:1: At a meeting
in Fiji for a conference of
South Pacific peoples, the
United States is scored because
of its lack of concern • for the

!:"~~~:='~::!!
their strstegic import.sooe mill-

....-..~Ul.ftT _._
... c::tDCmU

_,.,., -

-

,_ -

Mmn• -

• • •· -

•·-

·

•
·

.,_,.

·

-~·

IUJ::IIL."·
· •

W'hat
.About
Mediil
Needs?
··
.
·
.
.
. . .. .
..
Dr.

=i.Je

but do.truclioG of u-M.· available Ln the "8tuldanla for ·
thus, they turn in violence 8obool Media ~ pubeM!h ott..
liabed by the American Aaaoei- .
Slmnl"'-'f thrae ...,.. ation of 8obool Libnriani ud- · four JMeiLnp inwlvlna the nes-r-t of Audiovioual,
lbe atruule· tot llberatian Ol InatnJclion of the Natioual Bdtakinc place ucalion ABiciation Ln 19811. at dlflenmt llpOia in thia COUD· _ YIJD: radio
"'DDartrym-.:'4the~ ' - . IIDd ...,. ~ Ln
Caa..- of AfricaD People
the . talk force appomto.~ts
IIDd ftiiiiOIIIIibiltlee point to a
---

~a::r..o.,
-

Pres:..J~-4-

sliiht .me;._ in a.;...,.....;,. of

!'dmr.:i.:":O~Dr. theDrinnanformeJS_r
one of the feW faculty to be
actively involved in media in
Bullalo, and his school does
employ televiainn and film
more. utensively than elsewhere on campus. But I do not
see any overt demand on your
Pl!rl 011 •the facul•~ ""d .librari-tO 'improve ~th·
ods and 1..;~;nv materials m·
--,
terms of todaY-'s needs. U/ B is
a media' gbettn. Until" some:.
thing iS done about' this the
"silent majoritY' will ' be with
the few who have the nerve
and anRer (whatever the rea·
son, political or otherwise) to
break windows, scrawl on walls,
or tesr up the status quo.
1 hope the '' task fon:es" ex·
amine the budgets, alloca~ to
ICC. and think -'-··t . Uie fact
that' ihere .is 00 :::::tr.ty"for ·rae,
wtY to niQ&lt;Iiaize~- iCC
cafoi.a withtbe UbiaiyJ .is the
renter for - " ' age communi·
toonthe~Amhepus.!,t1 camis~
P. us m· 1979! ·a~--t p'--::'•-- 'or
· - ..,.......,. ' '
the canter of a MW campus.
Sincerely _;_ ~
- Don ~.: - .
AaWtant Pro(a«H" •

an.

:::!:'

I=matioll
tut4 , ,
SUulia

. ·

P .S. The report of the Pres;.
dent's Commlarion on Campus
Unrest is dominated b,y the
same establislmient "rhetoric''
that """ prevailed "in earlier
responses by daclaloo malrars in
" reaction" to problems. Para·
:U-·Y
. ~t~
...~fewof .
.... ....
.....,
c l - - . imlrucdob IIDd the
~ &lt;JIIBIIeiiel!l Cllllter
(ICC/Library) !MY bll a ._,• .
tral cau-. 'l'llore are a couple
of little lll8lltimw of a "neW"
culture, "m8D,y defecla of• the
uni¥etai"'- .. ,
to black
~-~-._.~-.:_~:t-a _, .__

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

,.... '"'

more ~ ald. But

=.,..,t~:"'me:.!r= ~i!:.."F~)ee,; ~t:!..~~~

..., - -

~ ~ 1 - ..

Open Letter fo

"'!=

"-

.._ .

,..v.-'a

rn::i

.,...,. ~"'t =-~llrfiMlfr UF.&amp;Bfl .......,., -

were

kins

..~~

-

u

J U'!;

......
..!;;:;;;:"_ _
·-.... - - · - · - - -

Jle, h m . .. ,. . 9lad&lt; OCJID.
munlty. At a time " ' - . - . .
' - - ill the__, leabint
of· all Black-paople lD the
Unilad 8lalel, one Wllllden
""' ...,.aJIQrd the • - · .-~, --'~-,...,.... .. ,...._...
. · IIDd ~-..

.unified actiaD of~
in Africa, .I..tin
IIDd
the United States. ADil in Pb11adelphia, that same """""-'d,
the Black l'llntbem holding their~ fer the pir- • "ffY '
· · ·•
of drafting a C01181itutbl .
'lbla latest develapment tbat_would guarantee the rilbtB broulbt home 1o me dramatlof all minMities Ln the United ~ at a ~ - t l y
States, racial, ethnic, sama1, he....~ABBarbadoa. convened by
8 ~"'.' B to fadlltate oommuand political.
In Mohile, ••-'-- ...__ ,..._
mcation and j oint projects
. . _ , ......,..... 8JIIOIIg a llllDiba- of race telagresa of Racial ~ty ailled tiona oentll!r8 ln the world. Moat
~ complete eoononuc and ~ of thoee ·atten"din(l
non~ti~ au~t:.!:or ClOIIIIDUDl· White, ad it ' Willi" lhil • factor
~~
~--~Je~ tiall~ ~~ boped would lui.
. ·
. llnally, ~
Y
COIIIIDOII frame
~~ ~
~ r~':; of reference. 'Such Willi not tlie
· ·
t
• f Iibera"-- case.
~
J&lt;lj"~rategtes or
.....,
I n - 8118Picion. . distr-Ust
co .
peopl"!' !dill under.,.,. and hatred of anythjng under·
~~~-~tical j:fpreaalon takan thro u j!lh American or
......,.-.~~ m
wor · '
wMtem ini'hative transceDds
can We A11on1 Fr..P,-t.tianf
IIIQ' unity around the iasue of
The national conventions Of raoe or oolm;. Political ideology
both the NAACP aDd the Ur- · assumed Pf1II1!ICY uver racial.
ban League, having taken place ethnic and sOmetimes . nationai
earlier, demonstrate a'll too identities. As a .resuJt. of the
clearly the abeenoe of 111Q' sin· (conlinu•d o n - 7; coL•S)

tar~~ 28: Leaders of Dear
Ketter.:
three Black American activist
I would like to respond to
s oldier organizations in Ger- ~tt:,'::!, S.:.,.W:::r
~· ,;:r==~=:~ University community. First of
all, I want to wish yoo well
country, are protesting racial with the super human task
di scrimination both in the ahead. It seems like.a combina·
United States and in Germany. lion role for Don qwmte and
TheY further charged that dis- Sisyphus. I was mterviewed
criminatory treatment shown last spring by the editor-intowards them by Germana in
public accommodations was chief
of about
the Reporter;ltoberl
Marlett,
my views
con·
brough t the re and encouraged cerning campus disturbances
by White Americans.
and poasible solutions. A few
29 ' Mrber. oRo!'YarJlia~: faculty ~nded . . . no one
Se•p~bourr mem
P
from administration did. I
ment and fonner chancellor of would like to repeat some of
the exchequer, urged Britain to thoee thoughts noW.
look away from.America for in·
You mention the "varied ODD·
spiration and guidance . Describing America as "almost en· stituency" in the , _ academic
gulled b&amp; her appalling domes- Year. The constilnency has
tic pro lema, some- of them ~ve~=J'es
an~
caused and exaceri&gt;ated by her
involvement elsewhere in the multiply. An article in a recent
world," be sees this country's educatioDal journal called for
energies absorbed for a long the integration .of oontemporaiy,
: . : . ~':..'::. her domestic ~:"~~
The u.s. lo tion.• Without this we can exDuring my trip abroad, I saw pect more and more turmoil on
nothing tl&gt;at led me to alter the ~ua. "Scbolarahip" is im·
conclusion reached in my paper possible fi»: the young today
a yesf ago that America has with !he slateboard (Ed gar
ean1(ld for herself the unenvia· ~ several yeu8
ble positiO{I of being one of the- ago
greenboard Willi
m~ hated nations in the the greatest f!Mllution to be
world.
introduced into education lil
I think an unanticipated, if 500 years), lecture and printnot unintended, consequence of oriented backup whlch dolniJr.
the racial quagmire in which ates our campus. ·
we presently find ourselves is
You ask for "relevance" "in
not only the polarization b&amp;- terms of understanding the 811•
tween Whites and non-Whites- vironment in whlch we l i for that is all too obvious. What . . ." Youth lives in an e1ecis even Dionl tragic is the way tronic communication environin which the hate now conodes, ment. Any mention of acbolarsplinters and fragmeilts IP"OOP8 ship and au-tt without ' the
within both W)lites and Blacb. cognizance of m e d i a in the
White CDIIIItruction worbra are clasaroom IIDd library is aimply
pitted against White students, facetious. The evidence ill fN·
and Black, intecrationisiB are erYwhere. The "illlicial" word
pitted against Blad&lt; aepara- is contained Ln the McMuriln
tists. Both ~·- are __ __. Commlaaion 0 n ...... _., __ ,
-~
-.,..................
IIDd outnpd by the depriva- !~ Report IIDd Ln the
tiona of a ....mpy unyielding """""""" Study for the" Car· ·
ayBiem. 1bey lmow that con· Jl8iie CorpontiiJn. Library

u.r.::., ':/"':':r-::t
.~ "J.it".r::::f.:. ~f.::
'" 2u, uo _._ ,._

Ul""'"' ..,.., -

~ fQr the PIIJIO!I! of
adllptinl a pao-Atrican ldeol·

lilY to .._t !be denwlda for

,

-

..

Black---

~

undontanding" and · "-&gt;·
mendatious. ~o.t..,
." .
rule ~ ~· u
.
18
~tbanil,
,ll!la~
....
t the panel j1ilt ....... ~
~t doum to taDdna 110 lll:udo!als
and~ .........

:4:~are.:tr:::.:
with ....ar..ai. me11&gt;oc1a IIDd
~ ud" llb it. Lots
of . · • . • ,
•

�~ --

1.nw
608' E -- . ~
~ - -. .- -' XOJrl1!1!!lg
The Urlx:m ainditinn
' ·. By

SuSAN bREENWOOD

• ·'

--

&lt;iFEATURES
/

specifically about black problems. As
the first black mayor in Gary, Indiana,
Hatcher told of being handicapped by .
lack of power. He pointed out that
today's mayors have littie leJitimate
powers. MOI!t of their int1uence oomes
from the wielding of infQnDBI persuasion. The building up of such infoimal.
power is the most important thing to
be done in the black movement today,
Hatcher believes. Citing C h i c a go's
Richard Daley, Hatcher si:reesed the
enormous personsl power Daley holdsr
alld said he's "cashed it in for nationsl
power and funds."
Tlie deveiopment of black poli~
unities has . been hindered by many
blockades, Hatcher · asserted. A surprising one was the effect tbat the '
expressways serving downtown areas
have had on ghetto politics. Haicher
·pointed nut thAt the super-highways
'are built mainly through ghetto areas,
causing the dem!&gt;litipn of homes and
thereby breaking up the political unity
of the ghetto. "This has served to fragment the black community," Hatcher
claimed.
Another block has been what Hatcher terms "the political philosophy of
'law and order.' " Hatcher claims tbat
u 1aw and order' is just another way
to say nigger," and tbat tbis has contributed to keeping the black man
down.
Certainly the problems of the black
man are p8rt of our current wban
c r i s i s, along with fiscal, environmental, heslth and ·safety difficulties.
And it's tbis total package tbat Mrs.
Sims and the students in Law 608 are
examining.

able would be to bring in distinsuiabed
~· - ·· ··
. . black attorneys to lectun!. Hyman
·' Ms.Yot'Ril!hal'd Hll fclle r of Gary, _ alifeed 10 8asiat and Law 808 was bam. ~
ib IJidral!i·liuit Friday
The current llend toward releYance
noi 16 c:ainPelcD 'tor :Deinoc%aiic csn: il) education was Mrs: Sims' besis for
didala or to 18i8e fands for party cofcboosing the couise topic. And ber
faa but to ..-It to a claas Of 40 Law
idea initlally was to eelect the lecScbool llludenta
turers on the besis of acsdemic as well
Tbe ~ Qf' 'a . nationsl figure
as practicsl qualiflcstions.
isn't Ullli8U81' for the taw 608 ·class.
Finding the 16 lectun!rs proved to
In - t 'leeks the claas has beard
be cballenging. As Mrs. Sims points
the aeqe_tQy. p!llel1l) of. the United · out, bistoricslly, blacks have not been
Nations' ~ Aaaembly, the comencoura.,.t to flO into the legal pro~ til the Woi:bnen's Campenr-rions. Once in, they were disrour·
•tiob Board, in New York City and a · aged from pursuing academic careers. •
.,..,r- fi-om • thl!' Harvard Law "As ·a result, many black lawyers
Sc;hool.
wound up doing mortgages." So ber
All this is par!; of the COUI!I&amp;-"Le-search involved looking for men and
gal RIBIIIrcesb'Current Urban Probwomen who are actively practicing
lems"-ta\llht by Mrs. Barbera Sims,
rather than contemplating theory in
a' Law Scboollectun!r, and Jacob Hyuniversities. The resulting selection of .
man, farmer bead of the School. The
speakers reftects these conditions. Few
course is designed to give students
of them are law professors, most of
botb ~ and practical insight . tbem work for governmental agencies
eight .problem areas ·common . to
or are.in priyate practice, but ll_ll are
wtiaft cbmmunities, such as taxaprominent and black.
•
and -urban eCanoinics or educaThe fact tbat the speakers are black
tion and educatiooal facilities.
has had its effect on the class. About
The course meet&amp; twice a week, once
one-third of the students enrolled are
for a lecture by Mrs. Sims on the
black and they think i • ;peat. One
theory of a problem area and a genstudent explained, "seeing-these black
era! review of available literature, and
profesaionsls gives me someone to
theo for a guest ·lectun!r wbo presents
identify witb."
the practical l(iile,Of !he
White react_ion is mixed. One stuThe idea foi the lx&gt;Urae oriiuiatecf
aent romplaihs of the ' "constant -mealast year dll!inl the&lt; search; by Mrs.
sage of ·black unity and importance."
Sims, for :,.,;., black law· School fae..
Others feel the experience is valUable
ulty. Difticulties encountered tbeQ
bOcause tbl!y are hearing first-hand
made it evident tbat not many coul&lt;!_
about the treatment of blacks in the
be found. Mrs. Sims decided, a flOOd
cities, rather than reading about it.
way to use some of the money availLast Friday, Mayor Hatc\ler spoke

'eame

~

....-;e. . •

:·

....

. ;: lf~"lJiljpff~:~~- 1§ :.$.?.!/l¥!frlfl_ in, As~ and African Studies
8;' Gk&gt;liaE ·F. ri{o~

lems ;,f Southeast Asia, the
Arabs and Israel, but they are
not going to cease to -concern
About five .Y_ear&amp;. &amp;flO tbere us for tbat reason.
~- 8 "!""grution. m our_ adBut the more permanent jusmlDISinltion that mtemationsl ti6cation for these studies does
studies in the University were not depend on· particular crises
week and ~d be ~- but on constanUy increasirig
1be Council on Intemationsl communications witb the most
S~dios was created to f~ P,pulous srea&amp;'of the world and
this develop..,Ot. _the CnficiLI on the necessity of having all
~Dr ~~f'rd~ W!"'.. set3. the Q&gt;S.jor Civiliza.ti&lt;ins of the
uz
, • .
a ,.,.._ p&amp;st represented in' the• Unistalf' appo , ~til ":"""' ~&lt;!" \11r&amp;ity spectrum. · The most for """'!' Of 'Asia , ,nd Atrica, populous countries today, as we
and_. more .- t l y , an Inter- • all know, are China and India. '
~ti"""!. College has been pro- Among the major past civilizajected. • .
tions are those of Chins, India.
All ~ creations have_been the anci'l"t Near East and Isvaluable m themaelves, • but lam. 'l'ha.e are simplified statemay ha~ produced a compla- ments meant as t:eminders only;
cent feelmg 1110011(1 many of the in a roore detailed accOunt we
faculty _that•w.: now have ade- fll!ould be !'hie tO niake the case
~te . m~tiooal . pro_grams. more 8tzoricly,.
_
This 18 po8111biy true m our ~ 111u11ano
long - establisb8d J;;uropean
Some illusiolis tbat are quite
studies, but we 8re still very wid"!!Pff!!ld stoiio.: in the way of
far ~ our f!l'eds in Asian furtller development on these
and Afriam studies.
·
areas.
The
above
One is old-fashioned: that
amount tD little in tarme of tbere is little tbat is worth
con ten l The Council ' is a studying in them. Of course no
- . y CJI'IIIIIlizati but dQes 0111! asys tbis out loud anymore,
not have ttie f1inds or autbority but old prejudici!ll due to igto malre IIC8demic appolntmeots ,_..,.,e die hant and continue
for ll8rliculu .~ ~disci- to operata in llDIIpOken forms,
pl!noBa. _ Ciltbl ~-ill especially wllen they coincide
an ~~&amp;dive a)'III8D 'toi -=tUng witb profeesional interests in
aome laDiuqee but not otbers. the establlsbed' areas, Americsn
and in aU a.ilo doee not te.dl and E~
li.,.._.._ 'lbare are atilleDOrAnolber ~ enjoys wide
....,.. PP8 in atd. And the - current favor in the aocial ,
Inl8rnatiaul Ctlllele t.. appar- ecienliea:. the view that by
. ent.b', beinl pi--.1 around ~ the disciplines
um-.1 1ounum. U.O.. mU. . (spciolocy,_ politicsl acience,
thaD
etc.) in lb8ii universal '- " !
A...,.....,........,. . • .• :-• • we csn ~- elredive ~
'llie al!ed
~ ...-:Ia •li&gt; Problems in any
. , . 8bldieli -- - well ·uDder- part of the wadd aDd ~
Blood- In A-x. hi fbe llfties witb tba, oiled lor deep area
W to ~ ........,._ SPeCWiiatiaaa. It ill true that
lllliilt
~ at otber unl- II- dlaciplines are ~
- - - . - . . perbapo, thio p-at.-.lts,andtbattheaociel
1-.1 hal ~ JII'O'I8II qa1n iil 8Cielllillt c.a lnvel in moet
tba dilfamt baliaaal mood of cauntrieo talJdai only EDPiah
the emty ?O'a. · n.nt ill a feel- IIDd c.a ...... IP*t quantilieo
in&amp; of ~ of tbe pial&gt;- of ocioaWic lllerature in ED&amp;·
,.,.._ ct ~..., co.;,...
ct IIJddlo_ a ... 5 ' · """""''- •

·':"'rman.

...m.-.deacribed

....-.u-..
rw

a

!JI

f

lish. Still, I find it hard to ac- history and civilization are
cept that he 'or she could apply taugbt by a fully qualified
his discipline effectively to West s c h o I a r, but on a half-time
European problems without any basis. Modem Near Eastern
knowledge of French or Ger- history still lacks a full-time
man, or to Soviet problems instructor competent in langwithout Russian, and the same uages of jhe area. Arabic is
is true for Japan and Japanese, being tsught on half-time. Hethe Near East. and Arabic and brew is popular 88 a Criticsl
so on.
Language, so tbat many stuBut-the third illusion is tbat, dents by now need an instructor
if only a student can he taught for literature. No African langto speak a foreign -language in usge is yet being taught by an
its modem colloquial idiom, instructor.
he will tben be in a position to we Are for Behind
communicate meaningfully witb
its speakers in their own counVery little ·non-western art
try. Of course there is great history is represented. The sovalue in learning to speak, but cial sciences are generally weak
two qualifications must be made. in these areas. PhiloSophy alone'
The first is tbat langua&amp;e does has staff for the major tradinot open the door to under- tions of Asia - Far Eastern,.
standing unlessaccompanied by Indian 'and Islamic - but des~y of thyalltu're .that goes gree programs are limited by
wotb it, eSpecially the liters- the lack of supporting studies
ture, history ani! antbi-opology in languages and civilizations,
of the area of use. The second 88 explained above. The total
is tbat for . certain important impression from tbis rapid surlanguages, particularly Arabic vey must be tbat we are far
and Chinese, the colloquial ap- behind other leading universiproach does not give much of
an entry into the -culture, for
reasons tbat cannot be gone
into here.
Spsclflc Sho&lt;tcomlnp

We have no !lcholars special-

ConcerJl!
. ed Member 0 f WJ.l ,
Questions
' Senate Prqx&gt;sal

Membership of-~he SetllJU
(b) Senate lllemberahip
Section vi Three (3) membets of the non-teaching proto-ibe proposed changes in the fessional staff who are memFaculty Senate Bylaws . The bets of the voting faculty, to be
sections pertsining to the staff elected by tb&amp; entire non-teschreed as follows:
ing profeesional staff of State
Sectinn 1. Membership of the University of New Yo~k at
Volinf FacuUy
Bufialo.
.
(e) Members of the full-time
As the staff emerges as fullnon-tesching pro(eesional staff fled~ members of this Uniof the Diviaion of Student Af. versoty community any prema
fairs wbo hold master's or doc- ture move at representatio.i
torate aegn., and jRldo other ought to be e&gt;gllllined carefully:
full-time non-teaching members I am directing an effort to cooof tbe ~ staff~~ tact every staff member befor-e
b;e recomnwvled ~time to ... October 15, to solicit their
time by tbe Pieaident or the vieWs about the IJ¥ltiw sections
Emculive Committee and ~ ~levarit to us. .__
- Marilla Giles
, _
pi'OYI!f! !»' the. Senate..
Section 4. Funct•on and
'831-1661
As a concerned staff member

izin1 in 0&lt; teaching the lengthy at the SUNYAB I would 1ilce
and rich histories and civiliza- to direct the attention of all
tions of classicsi China · and non-teeching professional staff

India; they are covered only 8s
brief introductions ·to the mod·
Cbineee lana:usge and literature have made
a faltering start witb one junior
appointmeol Japanese is tau;ht
by \apes and tutors as a Critical 'J:.anausge; t&amp;e method is
said to be elfectivi., but doee
not attempt to te.dlliterature.
Ssnskrit ~ and lilma·
ture are o&amp;red mtennittently
by a ~ of ClaMic:B. ~
mentary history of the anciellt
Near East Ia liwa, aphr b)' ·
staff in CIMiial, bUt without
the requisite - - In, m
teac:bing ot, . . . _ _ hlamlc

em countries.

•

ties in non-western ~tu_dii'S,
To tbe argument -that Buf.
falo cannot be expected to support area studies for all parts
of the world in depth, the answer is: We are very far from
that, nor does anyone expect il
What can be fully justified is
a minimum program for all the
main· areas, and by " minimum"
is meant, roughly speaking, sufficient to support a B.A. major
and an M.A. in each area, in
a few departments of Social
Sciences and Arts and Letters,
as well 88 to serve the needs
of doctoral students and faculty
in related areas, such 88 medieval Western Europe and modern Russia.
Finally, if we are to maJc..
progress we must set up a policy of develop!QeDt. witb certsin priorities determined by
rational criteria of importance
and interest, rather tban by the .
amount of pressure exercised
by tbis or tbat organized group.
Only tbus can we make a great
University.
s~~.CC

�6
PuJmc Advocate-----(~ f m • - 1 .

....t pnMI8Ia."

col. 6).

Tbe ~ IIJ'IOd, too, that
rules and retiiJ)ation&amp;, procedIIN6, etc., be publiabed and cir-

~

Tbe ReView C o m m i t t e e
calJecl for another committee to
study tbe matters in its report
be appointed DO later than
May 1, 1971, and to report DO
later than JUDe 1, 1971.
·

~ ~

Tbe Review Committee was
critical or tbe nature or tbe
Advocate's 01fice during tbe
past year:
·
'1"he first year's esperience
'Vith tbe 01fice clearly indicates
that tbe Oftice's actual -a&amp;e
ol. jurjadictioo and authority
bas .,Ot - n l y coincided
with tbe preoidenra orUinal
JI1Uit of authority in bla October 14, 1989, -..dum. On
the basis ol. tbe informaliaa
available to tbio Committee, it
appeors that tbe Um-.ity adwcate did not 'Provide counoe1 for
n...tJer or tbe

any

um-

ver&amp;ity community a&gt;mplaining

or or cbaraed with violaliaa or
Ullivenlity Ruleo of Conduct or
Standards or Adminiatntive
JtJdcmenl' (ln this confat,
the term 'oounoel' is dean.~ to
actual 'delenee ......-1,'
and not merely 'advice.')
"As for the 'J&gt;""""""torial'
porlion of the imtial JI1Uit or
power to tbe advocate, it appears tbot out or 240 'intemal
complaints and pro b I ems'
bendled by tbe 01fice during
· the past year only 35 individusia (embraced within somewbat lliss than 35 'complaints')
bave been p,_.,.,ted before
various tribunals within tbe
Ulliversity.
''With respect to bla power
and responsibility to 'initiate or
request appropriate authorities
to take action to prevent or
mitigate violations,' the · advocate bas undertaken this responsibility in 'very few instanoee,' namely, 'in the cases
of the ROTC. tbe Philosophy

past year, Ibis Cammi- am!'hJdes that lhae wu... mud&gt;
which ~ am. the orUinal CI'Miiaa ol
~ of tJIIi""""ty ~
cate. Contzary to the ad-.
cate's own ....,..me COQIIDIIIliB
and monm.......t•tion&amp;, t b i 1
Committee is convinced tbet
tbe jo. .
or the advocate'&amp;
P""""""~ functions with bio
otber (unctions baa ~ and
will necessarily be, patently unsatialactory. It is a fair admanition, when disparate role8 are
reposed in a aincle of!ice, tbot
tbe ollio&amp;-holder is likely Ill
oonoentrate on only one or tbe
ro1ea. The reliability or this
admonition bas been strenJtbened by this past year's uperience with the Office ol. Univenlity Advocate. . : .
'1"he Committee remains unper-suaded by tbe advocate'•
stotement tbot 'tbe premise or
rotec:tina tbe rights or all,
n i ve r s i ty
individuala
alib, is valid. . . .' Whether
tbe conflicts o1. intera~t iJlber.
ent in tbe current affloe be
tecbniall and clear cut, or
wbetber tbeoe c on I I i c t s be
·spiritual' in the eyes or tho.
victim and tbe accused, DO ODS
baa borne · tbe burden· or pzoving to this Committee the willdom or, or tbe ......:! for1 imposinJ tbeee ~ or
est upon a sinJle oltioe wbich
- n l y must be manned by
mere human beinp.''
•J.opl Flm Aid'
The r e p o r t was eepecially
complimentary or one phase or
tbe Office's activities-tile assertion by Advocate Fleming or
"a prerogative to provide 'legal
first aid' services":
"The Committee considera
this to be an admirable e&gt;a~~~~ple
of an office's recognizing and
seizing an opportullity to embellish the office for the commullity good. A University
wbich baa always provided a
variety of medical, nuraing and other services can · reasonably
be expected to provide minimal

f:

ana

...mtor-

L.a.-

Homecoming

~~~~ ~~~ ~if:.!.t""f"~ a aimilar formOftice baa 'acted as amicu1
"This UnivelSity and otbera
curiae' or asaiated otberwiae in bave too long been content
- - . '70 • wtkl windy
eicht tenure disputes.
with the baphazard and accicloy
flold. Althoulh the unpleas''Quite apart from what tbe dental availability of legal aeradvocate bas dcme or baa not vices for constituents. When
ant • momlnc rain hold the
fomlly .,._..,
dcme with respect to tbe fore- these services are present at
coing original ~t of powers all, tbey bave tended to be proba _ . . , to thlnp flop
phalo):
The
had
......-.
tao. but the
and responsibilities, bla Office vided eitber by a law aobool
did
baa undertaken duties and aer- ·\ when tbere is one) or by valvices as follows:
unteer 'downtown attomeys'
for . the foaiW - ·Philbin
- and- Willlom
u (1) "The" Office baa 8l.eo
(when they exisf) . It is sugllolnl to tho U/1 Atlllatlc Hall of F - .
done some ombudsman-! ike gested tbot the public aavocete,
work, seeking to asaiat in im- in undertaking his 'legal first
proving procedures and ar- aid' duties, seriously consider
r~ts within departments
encouraging this University's
or ollices.' This function was law School (including, eapeciundertaken 'in order 1o im- ally, its law students) to parptiwe our image in light of our tie~pate in this program in a
p,_.,.,tion role.' ( 2) "The Of. formaliz.ed fashion, possibly as
lice has come to be prime dis- part of an official Law School
penser or legal first aid, for all activity. (Similar use of tho
pen10118, jlrimarily at u dents
law School's resources might
baving legal problems, off cam- be undertaken with respect 1£
pus for· the most pert. We ~ the public advocate's 'legal d&amp;·not actually rep""""'t such per- fender' role.) "
80118, but very frequently give
Members of the R e v i e w
them immediate advice and, as Committee were David lt.
. - r y, refer them to attarKochery, cbairman; William
neys In the city.' (S) ' ... giv- Baumer, Thomas Connolly,
ing _ , . ) Counsel and advice Edward Dudek, Henrilt Dullo adminiotrators, ataff, facul- lea, Mark Huddleatoo, John
ty and students, on a variety of Leach, Philip Leaf,
A formula for a meaningful - legislative relations, admia- lenrea demand wideo pertidpematten, wbich do not relate eli- Marlell, D. Rudyard Memam,
rectly to complaints or to Roosevelt Rhodes, Walter Ro- alumlli program was preeented sions, commullity relations, tion,~ •au~~~~be~
_,.._
Chutloa or mOOonduct.'
aen, Richard BiJgelkow and to more than 400 University commullications; national pro- ing by a)....__,
graduates I a a t weekend by crama, etc.
·
tter also poeed and an- ';..~of ot11ce ~
David Tomei.
By way of rec:O,nition, be swered the OUMtion, "What
"Given what the advocate
n- who ap_.ad before Preeident Robert L Ketter.
Speaking at the Homecoming said, ''both the Univeroity and .does the pre8l(i;Dt do in bill
htu " - ' doing this past ~~ ~ Committee included: Advoand given whet the oris...... ,....._., F1erninJ. Ronald Stein Dinner-Dance at tbe EliiiCUtive the Alumni "-'cialiaa should ru-st 95 days?" : .
"Makes clear his priorities
presidential '""'t or power u- and Norman "Elfman, 811110Ciate Ramada Inn Saturday night, cite in many diffeNnt ways
pect:ed him to be doing this University advocate and ...,_ Keu... aaid bill formula, ICIR, - !hoM alumni who are maldng a and,~~V18o
.nibleman!_'.!"'attersvail-;
• contoilluliaa. . . ."
......,.,.._
......
tont Ulliversity advocete, re- "otanda for Identification, Commifment, lnvolVI!DIOIIlt and Rec-_ ~ pnGdimt noted t bat able to as many ClllllpU8 liixl
HEAT FOil~
r.~w:;w~
ognitlon."
•
"pure
rutaiPo
-and
(un
and
comiDuDitY
tlrOuPs
as
poaoillJe;
The stne Uniwrslt)l Constnlctlon
'J!be Ulli""""tr. must, he aaid, pmM" are no lonlsr contJil · "Aaoniblea an adminlati-aO'Neil,
fund hn oworded ·Meyor SFS and syatema; Robert
il*olify
among
1to
10,000
alumto
alumni
activity,
but
tbet
the
tive
team
which
ill
·· ti&amp;le
Ntopra a $51,296 controct for prof- ol law at Balbley,
~ the ~ both the ~ and
......-~ to Tbe ~" ni !hoM who are CODCI!rlled; it Ulliveroity tmpovwmont of
for !OUr and
muot
aok
for
a
commi-t
or
time
it
.
.
_
ito
INdusia
to
Ullivenlty
pia;
.
or Um-.lty Goals and Gover~ buttdlnp on the Main
,... ol tbe Anabn Acad- leedenbip, time and dollars.
spend in more d&amp;"Moveo to OBlabllilh worldng
-campuo- • project to litO emy or Artll lind l!cienla; An81nce
aJumDi
relatioiJB
..
~
mandlng
punuita.
relations
with
fllculty,
student
completed by Jonuary 4, 1971.
ua lpBCtajlor llpGrt," Ketter
~- ......... atudent and CIIIIIIIIUIIity ............
The bulldlnp _ . . . . . . ara . . _ thony F. Lonnaetti,
"c- liD p-q. with tbe
vice president for atudoDt .t- uqod ~delfp inval_.t at the .........t, ............tty c:rltlcilm,
A, 1 and C and " the Lockwood
fairs; and Donnlo Amold, ... aittiDc- .... ol t1m-.ity pol- powtb and ........... llnan- • ._. po'llllllmo- tbooe which
icy and fuoctiam," including ciaJ d~tiea, and "!"" chaJ.." . . _ w_alt for.--.~-"
dent ricbto ooordinallllr.

at _,
..--·at--

--on,
--Gettyao u.·..........--

Ketter Gives the Alumni AssOciation
E....- A-Formula for a Meaningful Program·

-,

r

-1111

-

ana

-a-te

�UIB Stars
Can't Play
At Brockport

(contiluud from pase 4. coL 6)

By STEVE UPMAN
Roo Gilliam 8lld
Vic&gt;-

J:r

t=:::::d

~
Uru-.lty

~l:k

to
Collese at BroCkport foUowlns last year's boycott - . . will DOt be eligible to
compete thia )'8111', according to
a declaion ll8llded down in New
'york
by tbe
Eaatam
Athletic Con-

Ci= . . .
&gt;.

ferenoe CECA

•

Transfen DOnDally must sit
out oll;e year under NCAA
(National Collellate Athletic

GREPORTS

ON

GJ&gt;EOPLE

AnPtJ:i:.~.:.. '!:.m~;.! NEW CAMPUS

Brockport Athletic
DUector untley Parker, who
claimed "atenuating circumstan&lt;-..• Parker said that Gilliam 8lld Vldan "would risk
penonaJ . •
if tbey remained at U~Gilliam, then a
sophomore, and Vickers, a

~~..!::"~b~

ini~demands for equal treet-

ment were met.
Gilliain averqed 22 points in
15 ~ while Vickers averaged 17 points in nine games.
Beca'* they played, Brockport Coach Mauro Panagio
claims, "Gilliam IUld Vickers
were subjected' to threateriing

APPOINTMENTS

1Wo auiatant deana have been
named in the SeboOI or Health
Related Profeeeiona, DL .fOS&amp;Pa £..
N.ciiAIIat. u.iltant profeuor_. and
DR. VAN DON ••

PAt'IUClA

I!:BI:IlU:[N,

a81ociate

WHITE~

auociate

pro'-&gt;r. Dr. Necbaeek received
hia Pb.D. from SUNYAB and
baa been an aaaistant to Dean
Perry airu:e 1967. He will coordi-

nate teachinc and community sci·
ence projecta with local health
Nrvice and planning agencies.
Dr. White receiv d bia Ph.D.
from Purdue Univ.tJ:*itY and
comea to Buffalo from Southern
Univenity, Baton Rouge, La.,
where he baa been chairman or
the a.-istry Department since
1961. He baa co-authored two

4

ealJs 8lld eventually

~~~~y~~~~:

trol of MovemenL"
JliL.--PAUL &amp;HRUCH, professor, Cbem·
ical engineering, $6,335, PRF

~~· ;:j!~~~~:t

Liquid Mixtures Near the Criti·

cal Locus."

assistant

DB.. MUJtlt.A.Y J. ETTINGEB.,

profeaaor, biochemistry, $24,273,
NIH, "Bu-Cbolineateraae Activa-

tion by Morphine Congenen."
M. G.UUU:CK, pediatric•. $2,100,
NIH, "Molecular Basis of 'Differ·
entiat Gene Expression."

t!so~~e~i~=-· SaT,:~tJrH~

"Eeythrocyte Membrane Sulfhy.
dry!. and RH Activity."

director,
Westerri New York Regional

OIL lORN .R. F. INGALL,

Medical Program, $17,500, NIH,

boo~ow

to Solue Elementary
Che..U.try ProbuMII and Laboratory MGIWCI for General Chem-

er Dan, who is also a very good :.l:vi:! 'l:"ea~~'!=r ~ci
player, on a par with Ron, is medical care organization. He
coming here. I think that had al110 bolch a muter'• in city plansomething to do with it"
ni,ng from Harvard University,
Panaggio, wboee team opens wber:e in 1969 he received the
its season December 1, was dis- -.l'Outatanding Theaia" Award for
atudy o[ the deliveey of mediappointed by !lie ECAC deci- :hlo
cal care aervices Bhd ita relevance
sion.
to uiban plaunin_g.
Brockport's record was 17-7
last year, 8lld Panaggio feels GRANTS
the addition of Glllia' m and - ' - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - Vickers-''W!iWd lll8ke a bjg dif. . ..... 12l90N ALBUQUERQUE. aaaociate
ference. n.a~- caliber of ball· profeaaor, pharmacology, $20,278,
player can carry us to tbe next - NIH,. "Repneratinc Mammalian
level of basketball."
Neuromuocular Junctio1111."
Deepite their year's ineligi- 0&amp;. ROBE&amp;T D. AU&amp;NDOIIlF!B., U·
bility, Panaggio is still glad to aiatant profeaaor, chemistry, $3,have theln:
000,.PRF (ACS) , ENDOR Stud, "They're fine young men. I leo of Free Radicala in Solution.
wish I had 16 more like them. .._ NATHAN BACt&lt;, Department of
Their attitudes are great, and
so are thoae of their teammates. ~J.~~~ :~~~~:
ton in Tumor TI.ue. ••

}.:f
/B

=

~:.::. ('f:.=

8lld Brockport) when weplay thia year. It's just another
t&gt;anafer." •
U

1&amp;. LOUIS BAJUY, profeaor, aurpry, 14.0 ,197, NIH, Study of
Blood-Brain Barrier with Radioactive Iaotopea.

Debuts 'f&lt;mjght

"The Uni..aity and You,'' D8. DAVID K. .........,N, professor,
a WMidy half-hour radio series, electrical ~ring. $44,000,
premieres tcnilht at 9 p.m. 00 N$P, "forced Convection and
WEBR, 970 on tbe A.M dial.
~o!~dsc:_nA!t:tf!:!Y
Participants on the first . na. · · - · - c
·
broedcast
are President Robert
·-- ·
auoo~ Ke""!', Philip ~. first mr.~= ':,tip!~:! 1!;
Ylm president ol the Student
E-rimental Hypertenaion.
"-ciation, and M . Robert
&lt;,.
Koren, chairman of tbe Alumni ~ANWl' IIIIUCDN.,.,, pro•---'-"'-' Comm"ttee
In
feuor, cbemiatry, $62,303',
~·s
I
on • AFOSR, Rotatin1 Rinr Diak
..,...,....,..
•
Elec:tmcle Studieo Applicable to
Jadt Sharpe, _ . director of CorrooioD p,_w...; Fuel eau.,
WEBR. will be moderator for and Batterieo.
the filrmat of Whi&lt;:h I&amp; P.lUD 1L CALION, auociate
will Yary ac:cord.iDC tO partici- prole.or. Jeoto,ieal aciencet, _
pomta 8lld topiea.
· $11,000, NSF, Glacial a-.or"E_,...,e to agree @bic~lerpNiatiollofRapid Echo
that a comple6e ladt of under· I:lopll!·lloaaodl,. ~ta from Vioatouadlna a 1;1 d communicatloo . Ioria Laad, Antarctica.
eadsta lietween Jarae _ . t s - I&amp; W.U.ft8 D. COICWAY, -.t&amp;nt
of boda Uni...tty 8lld COlli- prot-. ~tica, 120,217,
munlty,"
aaya. "Tbe NIH, Aulytica1 MetboclolosY for
purp&lt;a of thla aerIe a Ia to ~ ,......._, 8tadloo.

...,...,.m,

the--.

m-·

~the

IIIIP

• :muda • JKI8-

DR.. .I..KIIlA ISIRAilA,

000, NSF, "Membrane Shells Re-

inforced with Cable Networks."

=~. .!!:fJn~~ ~u:Xif.Cff::
8

ical Undergraduate Training Pro-

gram in Cardiology.
Dft. Fftlt.NK A. LOEW US, professor,
t~:a~~,263, NIH, lno aitol
OIL ROBERT T. MCCLUSKEY, chairman. De~ent of Pathobgy,

~!::~..rismsIH;;. -~.!f'Dl:~
Dll.

RUTH

T.

dean,

MCCROREY .

School of Nursing, $102,177, PHS,

Professional Nurse Traineeship

Program.

DR. JAMES W. MCIVER, JR.,

8.Siistant

profeuor, chemistrY, $2,500, PRF
(ACS), "Molecular Orbital Calculations of Charge-Transfer Complexes.''

~~~b~a:;;: m~~~trfrH:

Chemical Studies on Choline rgic

Antaconists.

DR. CEOBG£ N . NANCOLLAS,

profes-

!'¥i.e
~:l~n ~l~;.,w~~~
Scale-Forming Materiala."

New Radio Series

c_~ 00::~=:'~£:

TIMOTHY

WILI.lAMS,

auiAtant

StudY.."

.._ lORN C. IDOCUIB, diatinguiabed

Project #10-Tumor Registry
J?rogram.
.
professor, physhad· to move oil campus."
ics, $24,400, NSF, "Sta tiatical
Hence, tbey transierred.
Utry. D r. White will concentrate
Mechanics of Interacting SysBut why Brockport. of all on student. affaira and develop tems.'
scbools?
lcience oOunes and tutorials for ·
DR.
R. LAUGHERY, associ·
Panauio feels tbere are two health science students who enter a te KENNETH
professor, psychology and in·
UI B throuch the EP!S program. dustrial
reasons.
engineering, $23,763 ,
"'Ibree years ago we recruit- GICNIC A. BUNNELL bas been ap- NIMH, .. Computer Simulation of
ed Gilliam; we thought he was pointed aeeocia te for planning Memory Processes"; $9,798, U. S.
coming here. Then he di!Cided . with the Regional Medical Pro- Department of Justice, " Human
to go to Butralo.. But, he was cram for Weet.em New York. Mr. Memory and the Identification
Bunnell Ia ·a recent craduate of Rroeeu: '
~~~f!.~i~ Q.U
4 "'
..
l!Jnivert"t.ty of MfciUta'n
oa... "JOHN
w. LEONARD, a ss o c iate
. "BesideS, his younger broth- School of Public Health; where profesaor, civil engineering. $51,telep~

DR.

pro!-.r, biology, $12,695, NASA.

~~~ufo ~"'::.:-ri!\ 1'::
ear Alge~a and Combinatorial ;.?~ MW.:fo~ &lt;tpe~
Theory."

Aaaoclatioo) rula

tbe
ECAC

1&amp;..

r:-try~~~;'M(1~:·~:

tron Transfer Processes in the

Excited State."

OR. GAIDlY A. RECHNITZ,

professor,

r=.:~.:~~!~ "b~.!Jn~:

alyais.

:,'l'.;gy~:;,iJO':'"':iJ.ro!.~~~

Reaponaes to Alterec! Endocrine
Statea."
OIL CIDIU.C M . .BMlTB,

profeuor,

pharmacology, $37,851, NIH,

OR..

.nwu

YANC,

a..sai.atait

profes-

sor, mechanical engineering, $52,000, NSF, "Heat Transfer in oiae can meaningfully ,..,.,.,...m
Non-Parallel Rectangular Ducts." into and programmatically -plan
for objective changes in the staRECOGNITIONS
tus of minorities witho11t: 1)
involving in all stages of tbe
OR. NAmAN BACK, chairman. Department of Biochemical Pharma· process, tbe victims of appression themselves, and 2) ac=~ ~tGe~:. e~:J th~ _counting for .tbe political faccovet.ed'l:.K. Frey Award for out- tors which support and sustain
standing research in a baaic sci· racism as an institution, and
enoe discipline. The award was without which any permanent
establiAhed to h on o r Professor structural change may not be
~~ ~~; sci~n::S~~~a:ur~ possible.
Finally, we feel it necessary
explore the extent to which
:~r:=e ~n~bi~~ ~a~~; ato country
so plagued with ra:!:::~o!r;~cu~::!cl:~~h: cial ills as America ..can with
selected Dr. Back as this year's integrity and honesty give lead·
awardee on the basis of hi.s ership in the task of investifundame.ntal contribution to the gating the roots of and possible
pharmacology or proteue inhib- solutions !or countries elseitors. The award which --t:onsistea
of a special imprinted medal and where in the world.
scroll was presented to Professor University Tol&lt;eniam
Back at the 34th Congress of Qb.
With race as the number one
&amp;tetrica and Gynecology and com· domestic problem, I am not
p:fes:~"Jre~~ 80th
of aware of a single American uni·
versity lhat seems prepared to
DR. ANTHONY S . GUCINO, who has devote more than a token share
taught in the School of Dentistry of its resources to the urgent
for 48 yean, has been named need to understand and to reprofessor emeritus by the SUNY duce the violence and tension
Board of Trustees. He joined the
bred by racial antagonisms in
~~~~ Sr:h~fi~~~~ i-:~:a. this country. Nor do we seem
he was appointed professor of willing to provide the requisite
dental anatomy, a position he moral and financial leadership
held until 1968, when he was to this crisis at either the state
named professor of operative den- or national level.
tistry and e ndodontics. Dr. Gugino is a past preiiident o£ the
~~g!J:!:'te :Hughe s ,in the
Dental Alumni Association and
Negroes
in 1960 was named the associa·
t.ion's De ntal Man-of-the-Year.
Sweet and docik,
He is also a past president of
Meek, humble and kind
the Erie County Dental Society
Beware the day
and the Eighth District Dental
They change their mind.
Society.
And indeed, they have
ERIC LAJUtABEE. former provost, " chailged their mind." In a
Faculty of Arts and Letters, on
leave to devote full time to the s even-day perind in Buffalo,
New York State Council on the two Blacks physically assaultArts, was elected 8 trustee of the ed W h i t e campus police; a
Museum of Modem Art, New Black student physically atYork City.
tacked a White administrative
KURT E. RUSK£, a member of the officer and an alleged Black ..,
dope pusher who refured to step
~u::!'n ~i~ ~;n::a/uinrfvcErn: selling drugs to Black youth
ployee Suggestion Program. Dr. was killed when his house was
Ketter presented Mr. Ruske a bombed . And in the nation as
$100 check. a wallet and a Cer- a ' whole tbe rate of suicide of
Black males is almost
~nc:i~tedfor:~~J!T M~'R~~ young
devised for back lapping a riding- twice lhat for Whites in tbe
type lawn mower, permitting the same age category. Indeed, we
mower's drive chain and power are ..reaping t.l\( wild wind."
to effect a self-sharpeni.ng operaIf in surveying tbe racial
holocaust in this collntry, we
~~~
sU~~o~ =v:~e:; cry
out as did one of tbe early
three to eight hour&amp; whenever the
abolitionists, .. The nation is
~~~~ M~. ~u ilierre:iv!tha~ mad," what are we prepared to
award on October 2, the 14th an· do about it? Don't we first have
to admit our madness - our in·
~=~ta~ %:~~0::. sanity? It would seem then that
East· Prusaia. He has been em- no palliative, legal, social or poployed at UIB since March 1957. litical, will sullice. Nothing
sbort of a basic restructuring
REPORTS ON PEOPLE
and reorienting of our society

birthday

19

z-;e

~v: ~ -~n:r. b~ ~

" Reports on Peopie" is the former
News of You,.. Colleagues section
Blacks are demanding of this
of The Gazette with the addttio.n country. Some are even beginof student· and staff news Items. ning to direct tbeir thinking
Students, rend us news of honor's towards alternative political aryou have received • . . graduate rangements should this country

""Druc Bft'ecta on Muacle Aft'erent
Syo-."
DR. GLDfN a SNYDBa. profe.or,
political acience; $100,000, NSF,
"Tbeoey of Nesotiation and Bar-

ltudents, the articles you haVe
published . . . stat!, the commu·
nity presentations you have made.
"Reports on People" is open to

profMIOr,

Students, be sure to include your

pining."

anyone with University affiliation.
B:r.D:a.Y.

...

llJLIAif

OC)O,

Eatabliahment o[ the

chemical eacineerinc. $26,000,
N.Y. Stale Science and Technol·

c. c.

Furnu Center for l!'rooe. Metal-

luqy.
D&amp;.

.

DAVID

I.

ftaXJU:, prof_,r,

biochoailall pbarmacolosy, $24,-

Barbados &lt;mperioioce, we are rethinking our Jx.ition on tbe focus, structure and sponsorabip
of comparative race relations
centers.
·
We are 45king questionS, for
example, as to what extent race
andjor ethnicity is tbe salient
varaable in marking off populations- and subgroups as powerless within and between DB·
tiODS- To what extent ate
youth, women, political cli.oae1&gt;t·
.ers and economic outcasts: as,
if not more, YUinerable to oppression than thoae marked off
by race or religion?
We need also to boldly deal
with the question of whether

yur and major.

ports to

Send your - Re·
Otroce or

Caron~eodsole,

Ui'iiwrs~ Publ~ns Sennces,
250 Winapear Ave. Report .fonns
are available ~ calling 2228.

continue on its collision course.
I suppose it would do DO harm
if race relatioos specialist&amp; begail also giving eome cerebral
attention to tbe kind of America we should be fashioning for
this country if all men are to
be treated ~th equal concem
and equal justice. Since the
preaent racist system seems so
mtent ui&gt;oo holding its own until Ita death, we may have no
otftiir choice. Or, is too much
laaowledae a dangerous thing?

�~ Jam e • Kandorfer, CIDidniiiMr,
and Ronald Riobudo, oboe.

Worb by--~
Sdmt:z.~
~
ud Pun:ell Baird. 8:
p.m:

0eDeraJ AdmiooioD IL50, FtiCU!ty

POETRY EXHIBITS

and Staff ILOO, Stoadenfo f_50.

Pe.....- esbibit of ......U by
Robert GnWio and J - Joyce.

- MONDAY-12
PDITON u:cTUa - - • :

~~oc•=•o:.:.::= ~!

Ha.rold

Cardinal, ~t ' of tbe Indian
~tioc of Alberta, ...,PUI 'rO
THS POWD,

Poetry Room. 'JJJ7 Lockwood Library, 9 Lm.-6 p.m.

Fil-.e Room, Nor-

~:~_::,; ~~~on~

INTERVIEWS

devoted to "Tbe American Indian.")
..... KOVII8: 147 Diefendorf, 8:30
p.m.

ON-C.UlPUJJ fNTEIVIEWJNQ 1'110GIWl: The· otaiJ of tbe University

P - . . t and CaNer Guidance
08loe all otudents in
tbe Uniwroity community to take
part in the various career pro--

mB CA8IN'ft OP 18. CA..LIGARI

.=.-

(1920, Robert Weine): Thill moot

~spe,~tal~

~~ep-:trt-~~':J's=~

~~to IrJ::"":"'/!:!;
.:;m,:e~

Lt~\~~~e ~~~

==..:,:"
THURSDAY-S

renee A. Schneider. asaiatant pro-feuo.t,
L£1(8,

M.OVI&amp;; CAN BEBONIMUS· IIIIZKJN
EVD. POIIGI:T ld8CY HUIIJ'I: AND

FIND TIIUE BAPPINE881 Conference

,_tie, Norton. Throuch Sunday.

history,
CONCEPTS.

HlBTOBY ;

.P'ROB-

METHODS,

402

Hayes, 11 a.m.

Dr. C. E.
Helmstetter, Roswell Park Memorial Institute., Rmtn...A.T'ION or
BJOCBDUSTRY SEM I . AB:

CHROMOSOME &amp;EP'LJCATlON IN BAC·

Dr.
TERU., G-22 Capen, 4 p.m.
Yehed&lt;OI Dror, RAND Corpora- INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: lntion. APPLIED POLICY REBEA&amp;CH:
&amp;truction
in basic steps during
PllOBUal8 AND~. Room.
first bour, 30 Diefendorf Annez,
H, 4244 Ridp Lea, 3: 30 p.m.
Yebe&amp;kel Uror was born in Vi~ 8 p.m.
enna in 1928 and has livtd ~ Israel since 1938. He received his
SATURDAY-10
POLICY SQIENa:&amp; LECTl!IE• :

!fi.~ H~re:~~raiturisandfroJ!

L.L.M. and S.J.D. degrees from
Harvard Univenity. Since 1957
Dr. Dror has taught at The He-

F'OOTBA.LL* *: U/ B .vs. Villanova,
Rotary Field, 1:30 p.m.
An all-student-produced halftime abow will be presented as

~': o~~:li~ ~ie~c!. ~~d ~.1!~~~ ~~ =~ ·~~

of the Public Administration Division, and in 1967-68 as head of
the DepartmenL He has been

:O~':"':I.::.i!i~r,.t

ministratiOn at univenities in- the
United Stateo, Puerto Rico, Italy.
Denmark, Tw-key, and the Netherlands, and a senior consultant

::::7c!:me~tJ~inc. (o~
tions in Israel In 1962-68~

a fellow at the Center for AdYuced Study ~ the Behavioral
Sciences, and in 1965 won the
Rooolio Award for the greatest
contribution to the advancement
of the study and practice of public administration in Israel. He

~ifDn~~r!:7o in at 8 ~~

Monica. California. o

a seruor

,r:!:-r:r: Th~etir:!'~r;uV:r~

sity of JeNS&amp;lem. Dr. Dror's
main interests are policy sciences.
study and improvement of pulr
lie policymalting: and small-

power strategy.

He has written numerous journal articles on the sociology of
law, public ad.m.inistrat~on and
political science, planning and
policymalring, and . is the author
of Public Policymakinl Reexam•
ined (1968) and the co-author of
IV-a&lt;l: Hilh-Pnuun Planning
(1968).

FlUDAY-9
,LDfGOIBTICS LBCTUJtE*: Dr. Lau-

lute to the BeaUes."
Under the direction of drum

!riJorbeT1ea=t~e,d~:n~

drillo p~~such Beatie hits ao,

~~S~b,:,;.i,:.a,:r f.}!;"fn ~~;

Sky With

Diamond.~ .

Music for

~nahp:~r~~Jo:r::~ 3.

ucation major.
Highlj,hting the show will he

:.;,~~~ i:Sk~~ j~~ ~Jfh;

Pride of the Eut'' in singing
Give Peace a Chance.

UN rvEBSITY WOMEN 'S CLUB SQUARE

DANCE GROUP: Faculty Club, Har-

riman library, Beginners 8 p .m.,
AdV&amp;nced 8:30 p.m.

SUNDAY-11
BALKAN FOLK DANCING:

Fillmore

Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
RECITAL • •: Featuring Sq~re Hukin, who will introduce U/ B'a rebuilt organ; laurence Bogue, bar-

~u;.~~U::n~~~~:~~no~a::b

Gearhart and Albert Cohen.- violins; Robert Jeoselaon. violincello;
LANGUAGE LABORATORY HOUBS

Monday-Thursday:
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.; 6: 30-9
Friday :
9 a..m..-4 p.m.

Saturday:
10 a.m. - 1 p.m .

Support United Fl.Dl£1
Dear Colleague:

..,

'Ibe time bas rome for us to participa~ again in the aimuai
United Fund Apj&gt;MI of Bulfalo and Erie County. This is the time
w1w1 we are privilepd to show how much we really care about
lboee wbo are 1M! fortunate than we.

. It is UDI~te that we cannot lndivid"!l}JY. or oollecti~y.

take away the poverty ol tbooe less fortunate t:l\an us, cure the ills
o1. doe_world and ccmpletely relieve the suJfering in this world.
HcM8\ilr we am share in supporting 'those "agencies whiai 888ist
in ~- to aome degree these UDfortunate problema.

'Ibe t-.18 of our community are greaL '""- ........,;ea within
the United Fund operate on budgeta, ~Y arrived at af~ all
t-.18 beve 1-. evaluated and priorities ~ ~ Umted
J.I'IDl Appell! aoal this year is $8,648,642. 'Ibe UD1Y81111ty's_ abue
ill f79.000- 'Ibe least we can do would be to .--:h the aoal which

. . . . . . Mbcioi.UL

. a wm requ1re full cooperation to r-.lU.e this aoat- Each ·.,;

w wiJl law a opportunity to abue in liB ~ I kDow I can
---~.,....at-~
and oupport.
.
·BiDoenlly;
--llallort
L Praidenl

Peace Corps and Viota,-Gnoduate
School Information, and Career

decorative arL It achiewd cnoat
critical aucceoa both at home and
in American and FleDcb intellee.tual ciJcleo, but• it alfected film
production, even in Germany, ) than it. worldwide prestige might
imply.
·

Placement.

The ON-C.UIPV8 DfftaVIBWINO
l'IIOOaAJI, running from ·OctDIJM 5

to December 18 in the fall oemes-

~ ~nd~ru:;;~~~ :~er:
::...=~ty~~~.,!:

en~ ~d ~~n!~~ .!,~

neea. Industrial and ~~ntal

film baaed on the legend of medi-

:.r:::~=~ ;:nu::-~:;:.
:'i!t!~i;:~r: ~~J mw:fan::

aeval PraiDte and of tbe rabbi

who. to saVe his people, bro'!f!&gt;t
the image of the Golem to life.
The aettingo, although t.. stylized than those of Calil&lt;ui, play
an equally conipicuous and dramatic part in this film. which,
despite an air of contrivance,
touches genuine poetry. especially
at the end.

TUESDAY-13

.THURSDAY-15
ORAL BIOLOGY 8EMINAil:

William

A. Miller, usista.nt profeiaor, oral

biology,

DENTAL CONDITIONS IN
MEDIAEVAL CHILD SKULLS FROM A
DIG AT NONSUCH P.Al.A.CE, Room

107, 4510 Main Street, noon.

PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM:·

Dr. W. L.

McMillan. Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray H.iJl. N.J., KOLI)-

or May 1971. Registration forms
and additional information are
available in Hayes C.
FIUDAY-9: Percival G. Bixby &amp;
Co. (CPA).
TUESDAY-13: Lybrand, Ross
Bros. &amp; Montgomery; Yale New
Haven Hospital;. Aetna.. Life and

Ca.sw':~AY-14·: Procter and
London CtiLAR THEORY OF LJQUm CRY8TAL8,
Gralica Arts, Detroit, will he pre- Ill Hochstetler, 4 p.m. Refreoh- G1omble; General Electric Credit
senting a collection of original menta 112 Hochstetter, 3; 30 p.m. Co_;:imsoAY-15: Raytheon Co. :
graphics in an exhibition and sale . FENTON LECTURE SERIEB• : Rupert Oscar Mayer &amp; Co.; Dresser Infrom 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., 233 Nor- Cooto, a Cahuilla Indian, historian dustries, Inc.
ton. Sponsored by the UUAB Art and preoident of the American
f'IUDAY-16: National Steel
E~~~n ~u:m:~ history of Indian Historical ABeociation and Corp.
prints is covered in about 500 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - = - = - - - works, !rom 16th .century manuWBFO PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
script A&amp;ges; 01d masten, auch as
Rembrandt and Durer; 18th, 19th
and 20th century examplao: mod- T~~~~;!Dio .. .
em masters-Picasso. Braque,
6 : 30 CONCI:RT HALL-with Madeleine Sa.ltman
Chagall; and a wide ratlle of conDvorak: Carni.val Overture
temporary prints~
.
· ion.ed
Ketelby: In a PeNiD.n Market
especially for London A , mMilhaud: Carniool D 'Aix
oluding editions by Calde , AleMozart: Concuto No. 26 in D for Piano pnd Orc:he•tra. K . 537
chinsky and Vasare .
.
"Corona.tion"
All the prints
originalMoore:
The Pageant of P. T . Barnum
that is, they have been printed 12: 00 EXTENSION
~
directly from the plate or aton~
that the artist him&gt;elf has done. F6~~Aci,~ ~th Henry Tenenbaum-f~tliring works by

ABT EXHIBITION AND SALE;

p

~"~i:r:'f~ro:,!!2n:ti:·~

8:00

ab:Jut print. Or about graphic arts

11: 00

be on hand to answer questions.
in general.

1970 QUARTEilBACK CLUB WEEKLY
POST-GAME

LUNCJmON:

T oWne

H o u a e Restaurant. Main and
High Streets, 11:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Single luncheons on a non-reserved haaia are $3.00.
FJlEE MOVIE: NJGHT AT TIU OPi3u

(1935, Sam Wood). 147 JP.efendorf, 3 and 8:30 p.m. The Man:
brothen commit mayhem on cuJ.
lure.
AKCBICAN INDlAN FILM SEIUI:B:

Conference Theatre, Norton, 3: SOU p.m.
•
AJ'JUCAN NIGHT•: Presented by the

::::w.=..~ ~~~::,:t;"&amp;.t.
Harriman Library, 8.: 15

p.DL

WEDNESDAY-14

~=C

PHONOGilAPB-with Jerry Fink, Mike Horwood

Steve Levinthai-Th• Sov~l Can1a19
RELAX YOUR KIND--A casual look at folk music and its
and lyrics, with David Benders

~t','!;~!~ginateo at the

.the~

WBFO Satellite Studio at 1203 Jef-

renon Avenue)

~A~: ;:~~=-~~J~'

12:00

OPUS IN KODDH MUBlC-Ed

srw~~C SALON-with Ann

Smith

Marie Pluhell

FredriCk 0 : Sinfonia in D

~=: t::t,:n/or Harp inC

7 : 00

'

KEYBOARD OI)(OftAL8 PLAY AGAJ.N-Recreati~DI ~f perfoi'IDIU\Cel

of tbe world'o~ndary Romantic pw:uats
~O~o~l2A procram of
ic aft'ain and ~ a~
6: 30 OONCDT IIAIL-with Richard Malowiota
Rodrico: Triplic &lt;k M-n Cinlo
Mouoaoroky: So"l• and Danuo of Deolh
Schoenhe111: Four Otdiiotral Sonp
•
ProkofiefF: Fiue Poenu by Anna A~nalova
by -

10:30
11:00

!ks:".;:"...:..[':::.aLaoro!.n'"3::S£rom ·alack communities· tlirough~~~.U:~th Ann

Marie Plubell

Heinrich Shutz '

~SD~-!!·s ~o•~Buffalo'o only claaoical music - t pro-

gram. To make requests, 'call 831-5393 or wnte WBFO, 3435
Main Sueet, Bulralo, N- Yorlf.. 14214.
.
10•00 'rOWH/CJOWH-Hi~hts from ~Buffalo Common Council

=~O:O.~c~~toclc

11:00
WEDNESDAY-14
,
6:30 OOHCDT IIAIL-with John Fanell
8·00

.

.
memory of Sir
John Barbirolli and "Georp S..II-William Steinhe111, ,__

B08TOH BYliPHOHY OjtC.BJI:8T'I.A OOKCZRT-in

~T..!~o fro'rn Symphony No. 3
~3!,:;!;"~ Co,..,.,rlo No. 2 in B flat, Op. 19

in E. f/ol,

- : Ow-.-. "U&lt;&gt;noro No. 3," Op. 72

Beethoven: Sy•ploony No. 8 in F, Op. 93_
11.:00 IIIC1ILAHD WOIIUH-Follt music with Roberta Friedman

~=~
infO'rmaJ ce&gt;m~e~tioc with Unive.Bitv Preoident
·
Robert L. Kellar. Liotenerw may pbcme 831-6393 with _ .
whido Dr. Kellar will ... the air.
.
9:00 WBAY"a DW-'111e boot iD .....ty•......_. E o _ . and Amen..., ...... _.. v...... boot io Larry Jloi-.

10:~......,
'
a-~ : Pitmo5oltai4No.3

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE !.INtV~R~~ AT BUfFALO

VOL 2-NO.

4

OCTOBER 1,1970

�·. ~

2

.~l.lP70

~Rules&amp;.~~ for~ Of PuNic Order
~
-~
~ po.:::e.!r: .=:: !:t =.Ia..:::"!::.tbeze!B
- . a . ....:_may

'l1le faiiDwlalare the "Ruueel
.... Reculallaaa tor tbe Main. , _ cl. Public Order.., tbe
Praaiooa cl. Slate-Op.a~ Inetlt;ullaaa cl. tbe I!Jale UD1_..
litY cl. New York, adopled by
tbe Bomd cl. ~ ol. Slate
Uahaslty .., June 18, 1.9611,
......s.-1 by tbe Executive
Ciamltlee c1. tbe Jloluil, .July
10, 1.9611, ud furtMr ......s.-1
by tbe ~.., April9 ud
~~-]be...._~ oam6 ol .

=

.,... """' "" ~8 cl. tbe "'OIiCW Campil-

atbl cl. Coca, Ruleo ud

Rae·

ulallaaa cl. tbe Slate cl. New

Ycft.R

(OIIIcial Compl)atbl

OODBS, RUIBS 111111 REGULATIONS c1. tbe STATE OF
uwou• YORK. Vol a Educa
" .. " · Addltlaml "'
•
~ l*talaiDc

.WO:, ::!

~ .moe pablilbed In a
~

- . , or de- , or tamliaali&lt;m ol.

._ . wbera
(c) Wilfally-,.. or c1e1tmy
p~ Of tbe iDolitutioo or UD• .
der ilo jurioclictioD, aor ......... or
- oada P-'Y without authoriaticm.
(d) Wi~. pamioaioa, u-·
p.....t or implied. -tar into ally
priftte ollioo ol. aa admlaiotra!Ue .
~.;..:::.or ol the faculty ·or
(e) Enter &amp;Dd remain in
1111¥ IJuiJdi.,. or fac:ility for 1111¥
.,.._ other than ilo aulbpriaed
,_ or in """" .........,r a to obotnact ilo autbori&amp;ed by
(0 Without autborialioa, re..U. .in. lillY boolldiJw or fac:ility
after ll '" ao,_ny Cloaod.
(c) to leMe 1111¥ buildinc or fac:ility after '-IDe required
l:a:'~ !fO:.autbori&amp;ehdmin·
(b) Obotruct lbe foa. ~
- t ol. pe.._ ~
m
1111¥ ~ to wbicb rul..
opply.
.
.
.
(I) Dohberately diorupt or
- ' tbo _.,.rul &amp;Dd orderly
ol. a.-, &amp;Dd
- - o r clelibeNtoly into~re
wilb die ~ ol. 1111¥ P"'":""
II? IUo indudinc m-

&amp;Dd

clioc:i&amp;iliu'7 -

or """" -

pe-

8bd

ID -cbodl for the

·r:,
the-~:.:;:;:u ~
-.
~

lha ..

=~-which-~ !ON~--- adioa the H~

(e) U ho io a .t.fr in
the .-mod oemce o1. tbe cmJ
.moo.
in aec1i1m 76
ol the cmJ Senice t.w, .. cail·
ty o1. llliocoaduct, &amp;Dd be oubjoet
'to the~- ~ in llaid
-.._
·

~ L:.!, d.:fW"~m=

p.-.led. In doiDc oo oada ol.ficer lhaJl WUD """" ol.
tbe ~Of
Ia
the · ~led c:oaduct, ~
their ejecticm foam any ~
ol. the iDolitution wbera their...,.
&amp;Dd cxmduct io in
violatiaa ol -~or. ollbe
:="~=.,line or imp'iDoli!'::

i n c - ruloo).
~~(c) lo 1111¥ .-e wbera . _ .
liaD ol ruleo (or ol the ruloo
•
ol 1111¥ iDdioidual inalitulioo _ .
§636 6 . . . , . . , _ ( ) 'The cbief plemomllac or imp!mw&gt;liric~
or bio de- ruloo) .._ a o t - afler oucb
~- aball info
~ wamiDc &amp;Dd in other- ol
or ili-vitoe wbo
~ 1111¥ wilful ~1!- o! """" ruJeo, II!"
pl'OYioioel or ru1oo (or of cbief oodminiotra!Ue olr'''''" or llio
the ruJeo of lillY indmdual wli- ciaic- aball cauao the ojeclioa
tulioo IRIPPiomonliDc . or imple' o1. the W&gt;lator from any
clmoi- (d) &amp;Dd (,), .. . oubJoet
to cli8aioOal, MapeiiOioo without
pay or ceaMDe.

111C ~ ..........,_ refeited ID, ........ lllltioe to any
ltoldeod, wbo "'"" fldJod to ap.
- · in !be -.mod
in Ollbdiwioioa (c), ol. ita propooeol fllldl,. m.l ltD .. ~ tD. the c:hier
~....., &amp;Dd aballoo
~ : : " : ; .~

~ ~ .aadoDt

P- -

tJtB&lt;!

.=n

:r.':".,:0 :t:ll~te"":i"-==

:::.,~r t':ta:="~ ~:J:.!:;

hoo - ·

"""' for hia
faihue to - · Ia which cue
a date for ......_ aholl be 6xed.
(e) U - a...a..d at 1111¥ lime
t.fore
at tile~ lbO lllucloDl cbupd or b1o - t a lift. duly ~ oMil be lurhiobed a ol the alatoments
taka IU' the ~ llllliliDiotralive
in ralatiaoi lo ...., cbarps
• ..... -

or

~=.-:;"b.~;

shall direc:t him to leave the ~ adii&gt;n a&amp; bereint.fore PIO- tile beariac in _ . - t ol the
or other property or the vided.
.
•
• .
.
~ proftded, hOwever, that
168Ll ~ or ruaroa&amp;.
institution. 1o tbe e&gt;Mtt of bio
(d) Tb8 .cb•e.f adminiotratlw tbio aba11 J!Gt preclude the tatiTbe ............... .,;, .....,._
failure or reflMal to do ao mcb of- olrlOOr or b\0 ~_may apply . moay ol Wl'-!- wbo were unla .....,._ wilb
aball cauae bio ejec:lion r.om f1? tbe public autllori- fo!_IUI¥
bown at the lime ol """" deol. dot~ t.w aiM! aball
a u c b - or property
_ aid wbicb . . - - . y i n -..d.
be filed wilb dot 0
' 1
b
·
cauainc tbe ejecticm of 1111¥ W..
&lt;0 'The cbief_admiaiotra!Ue or.
o1. Ed--. &amp;Dd the o1
.J.I;,~
io"':!i~r~= Iaior of ~ ."'!'- (~r ~ !bo fu:er may, tho aenice or
~ • • or
nq 10,
DOr facully or other atatf mom- rul!O of ~ iodividual inatitu~ ct.a._ ~ the a t.u dent
1989, • llq1liRd by lbat - . . _
ber tho Cllief admmiotrali
·• · aupplementinc or lmplemoatins !W""'1 therein, ~ tbo beerSaid aball be oabjoet to "'"'!' ~
. .
or IUo ciaic- aball ~~ · ruloo) "!"~ ~ may - - me .and ~ therear,
.......tm.t or &amp;Dd aay
~) ~ ~... m J;Ua poa- him lbat be io aot authori&amp;ed to the State l]ruwmty oounael to "'-"""r, m bio ,iudcment, the
a·- • .- 1o or 11&gt;erao1. ~ . P....._ to remain 00 the . . _ or other ~.to. aoy court&lt;&gt;! ~pp..,.riato conliouea p.-..e_ ol. """" stuaball .. filed wilb dot c-;.. wbic:b ~ apply, 1111¥ property of tho in&amp;litulioo aoddi- Jllriocl!clion ro~ an. mjunction to dent wouJc!. constitute a clear
. - o1. &amp;Dd of rifle. abotcun. piotol, ftM&gt;I..,r, or rect him to lea.., mcb ,___ restrain the voolali&lt;m or U...t- danpr to liimoolt or to tbe &amp;afety
~ wilbin •
after other f!reann or "'!"'~ without 1o the .-1 of bio ~ or re- ened violation of"""" l'llleo.
ol P!noo&amp; or p~ on the
adopticm, Nocblaa t.raJa io in- the wn- aulbonatiool of the IIMal to &lt;19
"""" olfi
aball
p . - - ol tho iDolitulion or
~- ollalJ ft b e - - . ebief admlniatrati. . ollicer cauao.bio e~ foom 0' : : , cam- §6$6.8 OOKKUHICATIOM. 1o mat- ~IX*! an immediate tb""'t
to limit o r - the freedom ol or aot a ~ to puo or property Notbiac · tbio ton of tho ·aort to wblcb of dioruptUe interforeoce Witb
_..,.. _.,.rui .......t.l,y. the aame hoo t.eo ioaued to aubdivioion abali be 00 ~ to ruloa are addroaaed, lull &amp;Dd the aormal
. cooduct· ol the in&amp;ti·
P,. . . , . &amp;Dd foa a p - """" pe"!"". .
' aulbori&amp;e the preioonco of
prompt communication amonc all lutio_n'a actmlioa &amp;Dd flmctiona,
""' illciiOf
H
to the objec(k) . Willully f ~to othen ~ mcb poroon at 1111¥ lime prio~ componenlo of the in&amp;litolioDal P""'!~ ~. tbat the chier
tn. ol. a ~ 'educalioDal in- ~led""~.~
. *I!' berem &amp;UCb violation D6r to affect bio ~~.:,!_aeul_ty,~~~Y ~~- ~li"" olfi"!"r aball pant
otitutiool. BiraiJarly, expo- p.,...,.
w~ •J&gt;Ocific mteot to - liability to proooc:ution for - . ..............,_..,
-~ .._..
an immediate -.;.., on request
ba
that the tradi- procaro .lbem to db ao.
or loiteriac u preac:ribed ·
able. To tho erlent lbat lime &amp;Dd of 1111¥ student ao IIUOpended with
lioaal aulonoaly ol. the edacatioo•
•
•
the i'enal Law
_m cireumatancoa penilit, aucb com- real&gt;!"l to the baio for ouch &amp;WI·
al iJ!Oii~ (&amp;Dd the acocJI!l• §636.4 ......... OF •IIPDCII AMD
(c) 1n the .;... or a atudent, munication abould precede thee&amp;· pe!Won.
.
iDolitldloaal ._,...jbil. .........Y; PICI&lt;ftU&lt;G AND IICMOH· cbarpa for Yiol.o.tioll or •nv of erc:ioe of the aulbority dioerelion
(() 'There aball be CODOiiluted
!tY for Ill!' ..U.~ ol.order) .raATIOMI.
u.-, rules· (or of tbe rU'ia or &amp;Dd reaponaibilitieo Panted &amp;Dd at eecb !Jtate-opera_led iDolitution
• bat ouitod to ac:bietoe tbeae ob(a) No a~t, fa cuI t y or aoy iodividual· in&amp;litulion supple- ~-~Stbeaeta~ _ruloo.pe
. raledT?.!'-Ii~·- a Rearm, c-ittee to bear
jectna. 'Thea ...... aball aot be other atafr - r or aulbori&amp;ed menlinc or implemenlinc ends -..
~
-- ~._ apin&amp;t otudeolo of vioto - ' or limit visitor ahall .. oubjoet to aoy rul..) aball .. p,_..led &amp;Dd lion of tbe 'State Uni...,nity aball lalion or the ruloo for maintencommunication between &amp;Dd limitation .P_r penaltY. IOiely for •ball be beard and determined in employ auch piocedurea and anoe of pubtic , order pr-.cribed
faculty, aludenlo &amp;Dd ad- · the exp.-ion or bii view. aor the manner bereinafter provided .._..., formal 8bd informal, a
by or refened to in tiUo Part.
~lion, .or to reliew the "!· ' for baviac with othen in Sedion 636.9 of thia ~
will promo~~ ""'!""unication. Sucb committee lhall ~t or
olitutioo o1 •lo opadal - - for"""".,.._ P - u l picket(d) 1o the cue of a faeulty
tbreo - n of the adminiotrability for aolf-"''UUalioo in the inc &amp;Dd other orderly demonatra- member baviac a continuinc or §636.9 NOTICE, HIWIING AND ..,_ tUe &amp;taft 8bd tbroe - n or
-""tilln of public order. liooo in public areu of pouod term appointment, c:harpo of TDDmfATION or CHUGIS AOAINBT the facull)&gt;, deoicnaled by the
Tboir pu_rpooe io aot to p~t &amp;Dd IJu¥inc will no.t .. inter- miooondgot in violation ol tbeae 8TtJIJJII(TS.
cbief adminiotratiw ollioor, and
or ..train OODlnnoeny aad dio-. fe_red Wltb. Tboae mwiYed in rules (or of the rule&amp; or 1111¥ in·
(a) Tbe term "cbier adminio- · ~- aludenlo wbo aball be des"!"'1 but to .,...._t abllOe ~f tJ;le p•cketing and demonatrationa dividual 'inolitulion supplement- tralive ollicer," u uaed in liJlAied ~ tbe "!"'!"-n. named
ricbla of othen &amp;Dd to mamtain may not, bowewr, • .,.,. in opec- inc rule&amp;) shall be made rulea, aba11 be deemed to mean by the· cbief aclminiatralift offi.
lbat public o~ _approp~ ltD a ific ~nduct In violation of tbe beard &amp;Dd determined in accord: &amp;Dd include lillY penon aulbor- cer.. ~ """" aball aerw
or 1IDiwnity _ _ tb, ProYUIIOilll of tho Preoodinc aec- ance with Iitle D or Part 338 o1 ized to ezerciae the powen of that until bio aucceaor or replacement
oat
tbera caa . . no in- lion.
tbe Policioa of the Board or office clurinc a vacancy therein or lwa t.eo cloaipted. No member
tollectaal freodom &amp;Dd tbl!r -.ball
(b) 1o order to afford maxi- Tru&amp;-.
dtbe~~~ or cliaability of or the coamutlee lhall oerw in
be into~ &amp;Dd applied to mum protecli&lt;m to tbe partici(e) 1o tbe cue of any &amp;tafl
IUIY cae whora . . io a or
tbat -.d.
paola &amp;Dd to the in&amp;litulional - r wbo bolda a poailion in
(b) Wbeneoer a complaint io ,. or hoo ' - - directly lmoiYed
•
•
•
community, each State-operated the c:luaified civil service cleo- made to tbe cbief adminiotraliw in the - l o upon wbic:b the
1&amp;116.2 APPLICU'IOM or IUJUI:I. in&amp;litulioo of the State Univer- cribed in aeclion 75 of ~ Civil otflcer or 1111¥ State-operated in- cbarJ!Io are booed. 1o order to
'Thea ruloo oball apply to all aity aball promptly adopt &amp;Dd Service Law, cbarpa or miooon- alitution or the Univenity of a ..;. provide for whora tbore
~ iDoli..._ ol the
promulpte, &amp;Dd thereefter con- duct in Yiolatilln of thea&amp; rule&amp; olalion by a atudeot or ~ may be """" a dioquali6calioo
Illata
'Thea ruloo tinuo in e«ect u rt!9ioocl from (or or the ruloa or any individual of tbe ruleo p~ in tbio 8bd for ol ....., or dismay · • ~led by addi: lime to lime, proc:ed....,. appro-. in&amp;litution supplementing or ;m. Pllrt (or of lUI¥ ruleo adopted by ability, the cbW adminlotrative
lioaal ruleo-lor the mainteDIIIlco priato to aucb in&amp;.titulion for tbe plemenlinc ruleo) shall be an individual iDolilutillo IIUPPie- · ollioor lhall daaipale aa alterol. public order • - r e or llioinc of reaonable adYaDCO no- made, beard &amp;Dd determined aa menting or implemealinc aucb nate - r. of the adminiatra·
~~-~ !~ ~~ tioo to """" iDolitulioo ol any p~ in lbat aection,
rule&amp;) or ·wbeneoer . . ba bow- tUe atalf &amp;Dd aa a l - mom....,..~ ~ planned . . - ,, pickelinc or
&lt;0 Any other faculty or ata1f ledco that """" a wiolation may ber of the facal&amp;y, aad IUo prioadopled by the State Univemity ~ration upon the pounds - r wbo shall violate 1111¥ bave oa:uned, be aball aa cipal ~ aball cloaiaudie an
,.._&amp;Dd61adwitbtheCom- ol. oucb inalitulion, ilo · p....-ed provioionoftbMerulea(orortbe in. . .tiontobemade&amp;Ddthe altemato atuaoat member, to
......._r of' Education 8 b d - ~ &amp;Dd intoaded .,.._, Pl'll!- ru1eo of 1111¥ iodioidual in&amp;litulion !J!alemenlo of the oomplainanlo
aorw in """" """!"- lizly !We
to the e&amp;· vided, bo;w-r, that the~YUII of aupplomenlinc or imp~== if ....,, Aft!! !'f other bao- ..._....,. ol the
may
lioaal ruloo ouch..~ aball aot 1&gt;e made a rules) aball .. · ·
me ~ ol the faMO re- !"""'uct baa.rlap aad -"e find·
t.rewitb. oondiliaD p - t to lilly """" .,..ponded or cenaured by the ap- duoed to wnlin&amp;. U .. io aatio. _ &amp;Dd r•
• aa
ru1oo .......,. adopted aball a:aa-"'Y· ~ or clemonatra- poinlinc aulbority proaeribed in fled foom llilcb imlealiption &amp;Dd ..relaafter ~
the cxmduct a( - I a , ~n &amp;Dd ~ further, that tbe Polici•• of tbe Board of &amp;ta!emenla that there io , _ _
(b) 'Die ~ c - i -

porw.

looue cl. tbe R~

_(b)

-1111¥- _

::t':.U:J:r~

""bicl•

...,.,-Nio

w-

.!Jid

c:ampu&amp;

fleer

.J:

cer

10

--..,w

col•which

·uniftnity.

-toe

=

= :0 :::.::::...-~
=
~""""
s::::;:- ·

C':

--.

~~ =.~~-:.
::":'"..:.:::..~ ~!'!:'!"
any iaatitadiiJa to
, _ .,. ll{lllli&lt;able &amp;Dd alao
::-,or wilb
r 1-=t "', aayr~

.,._n,, o1 ...., 1aiatltuiiao, ...t
!a Ito - - . , -.dl. adrnia0

~=~at -':' \Mtil:lioo ~ ; -

cilitieo

!~.6~~~....__,k~'!"noo.

...... · -

- -

w
.
ho

=

~~loa:..~~ '

Tru.toea.
§636.7 8MPO&amp;C81l8MT noo&amp;AlL

(a). 'The cbief ~li.., offi.
cer0 aball ... -~ for the

:,! ~':':".'.'"ol.nt :!,~~. (l'~
.~

~ ~--. ~·
~ or jmple.

~ or c;a- to .. prepared

aludenlo
:"b&amp;Wm.::..g~
led """" Yiolation wblcb aball
&amp;tate the J&gt;IV'IillioD p,_;bbtc the
o f f - &amp;Dd aball opocify the ultimate ~ allepd t o - off-.
jc) 8acb " " " - aball .. in
wnlinc &amp;Dd aball lie aoned oe the
~~~lo named there: them
the
~:...if~
. • a """" of.
"""" ..._,... by
mail
:
hio

ol rulooCor ol ~ ~~
1111¥ iDclmdual inalitoli&lt;m supple- ~
~":1..!::~
-tine or ~ tUe ol.!icon wbo ..., autbori&amp;ed
~ Jlllblolic &amp;Dd other -~ ruloo) aball:
_
to lob aclioo in accordance wilb
~~(a) If be ~ a ~ .or in- """" ...._ • • recraired or apwioWioa ol
C'riata to carry them inl9 ol"'!!oa ~ .. ~ ol any - " " witbdrawa llllll ..
(b) It .. aot .iatoDdocl .... 1111¥
- - ......... the direcfad to ..... ~- lo - .......- to ~ the
hohlo
..
debt ol. lladenta, r-Jty or . . - - Ia .. io ... . . - .
_,....
....a.d • a -.laat.
(b) U ho Ia a~ or 'l'io- Wllb
u.u-. 1o the cae &amp;Dd alao to IUo or lbolr1oomo

U.::

- . aonb. caltoual, -

=.-:e.
~.

_...-n!:i,.~ ':. =-~

:n~"::':.t~ l:ter~

fiii,J

~ &lt;X*Iiuct. ·

m.IY
__ ......,alilill:
-

ailhot

(a) WJifuQy -

No
or Ia ...,,

.

.--.Ia-

iuY tD _ , alliar -

-

by the. ~ &amp;Dd

will

wt.a tho "'-'-are_.. J!lAY
_ . by ....r wllb - t a p .
11.- ol. lilo choioa. He eon-,
fooet

=:--.

AD!'

:::!:'

=

examiae

~

":;"'-~

=

in blo boball ~ _. be
. . . - a t the bear:illr. the atu-

~=:-orla-

ruloo ol
- . . . . . . . .)-~
- ) by ..... Ia

(c) U MIa a

the ---.r

: (e)lfM

illolaciDr ....,

matarial

"!'!'tribute to a foiiJ aad fair conaideration ......., &amp;Dd cloliomlinalioo ..,__ A o1a11aoot ap1aat

Joettll .....................
cliaolpllaarJr . . . . - . . ..... ol

~tD..,ooforlho-

._....,.or

~.!me
7"~

ol"::....lhobut-:.:
recoift any
Or

·:;::=r.;:!.,.llla!leeJ'.~
=~...==~-=...~ :'!.~ ...... .tteroti!.-:;;':f. -; ___.,.,..
......,_!_I ·
'd.:~
"(di"n....W:::~~
=.s~~-~.6:":!...~

~--

:!:at-::::..'!

~~. .- ....
--.~aay
- .._
Nbt
to.., or to do•any aot wblob be
..... lftfal dllbt aot to do.

ol

""""

::u.=... ~
:..'!.
~ 1:....
~

..mo-.

.!l~

......:.t't":...,.

- - . ........_

E(Obat}oll. ba al

or-....,.

• ....,._......,...
or_....... ~

~ a .....,_, .. !llllltY o1 .......,_

iluct &amp;Dd lie _,_ to " - '

ao

•lolatioa ol

any

ladmdu~tr~t!t,.

- - ' lhall6x a tWa for baariar
~aot- ...... - flfto.-a . , . ~ the
o1 the cb1e1 ao1m1a- • ~ol.ol-"!&lt;- whlo:b oMII-Joe the

the ~
-.-om..
or IUo . . . _ ,

ol . .
aad, uo-

• .~

-

t.n oltlot

I

!I' 11

I-·

ity_ ....... _ _ ....,_

'!lilY . . ~ ..., . . a.anac
~ A _ . , . ol tbe

-!Jialr ....... _ . . , __._ ..... ...._

dOoa aot ~ aay --......- e&amp;oot hJ ..n. -Falhae tD
(I) Willlla .,_. .,_ after
. _ o1 ~ t D - or ~~-toitlot~ tlot.._.ola~tliellear~
• ...,.. ollloer _, -a oe
6xed for -..u.., .. "---~
a ro........... .-o.t to Joare tho Jo.for ~ hoo"""" a~ -pon ol • ....._ ol. k t ~
ol. the'~ Ia q-.,.
....... ,._, ,..
lloaa lor ~
·
~ to be .,. aob.iaoioe ol the
( _ , . . - - 7, &lt;0L I)

o.....IMoa..,.......,.

�I -

~

-AFT ~· .UndergJ:ad-·Evaluation Office.seeks
~Formed To Imp
-' rove ~The T ~n...-n~-n..Clim:ate'
.lJ..l.l.lf5
A local c:bapter of 3be Amer- ·
ican Federation of Teacbers
(Stale Ulliftraity Federation of
Teaebera) is DOW beiDa c:berll!!red 011 eampaa. AFT; wldch
it . . - t a both professional feculty lind otbe&lt; profa!- ·
........ is Oil tbe beliOt Eeking
:~ ~Iiiii aPDt for

The~~~

cxmclucled- this November on

ali SUNY~.
Until a CODBtitutioft ia appioval and J:IIIU)ar ollicara are

::=..tt;:. ':'...~! :::u'!r

the Federation: John Huddlel'ton, prot_. of encineering;
John Peters, 8111i8tant prof-.r
of aoc:ia1 welfare; and Henry W.
Fries, visiW., IUIIIOCiate professor of industrial !elations. All
haw '-'&gt; actiw in either the
AFT or a profeasional union.
Fries is also active in Erie
Coaummity Colleie Local 1866,
· AFI', is their delep.te to the
Bulfalo and Erie County· AFLCIO Council, and was delepte
to the recent AFT National
Convention in Pi.ltsburgh where
he unsucoessfully sought a vice
presidency.
'lbe Federation, these representati- lilly, offers "De. ROtisting ezperience, political
- · sbengtb, aDd evidence of con-

tinued """"""" where already
established on college and univerlliW camp1181!8." The Federatiol# is ' the neaotisting qent
or bargaining BPDt for college
and university lea
at City
University of N
o , Erie
Community
Cbi&lt;:a110
City
and at aeveral
insti
in Michigan and
Illinois. t is presently organ-

~~~~~~thls

graduate center that the Federation wants eolved aie: "free
tuftion for dependents of all
professional employees (as professionabl at the private U/B
..-1 to get) ; incleaaed summer
echool aa1aries - more than ihe
16 per cent ana at the next
year's oalary •
ratbe&lt; than
the , ~ year's; and a preventipn
overloading classas duri.da summer -ions such as
IJeppened to three School of
Management profi!S80rs last
summer." A Day Care Center
is a1eo -lial, AFT says.
Paculty govem&amp;IICl!!, increased
aalaries and fringe benefits for
all proleeoiaoale, an uppading
where , _ . , , aNI an imPI'II"'8d system of feculty promotloa · and tanure are

or

other

by
-theemFederatiOn
it ·'will
'lll'llrk
with ideas -.and
help from feculty_em
cam-

!:Jiis

pus."
.
"Wdhin hio 'tl'll8b each pro'-ional employee will haw a
copy of the SUFI' poSition pa~and

=

other._,..

The Weelam N- York State
AFT-8UFT coanlinator ia Gene
Wellbam of 1be Btate Uniwrlity C..U.. at Buffalo, DOW on
._.,_surr~

~SPA- ~te

in statinl that- Olll;r poolaBioaal faculty ._, be ...,.-ted IIDIII..._bebe
. . - - . of surr." Welllri'il
Mid. Purtber, be pointed out,
'Mtbe SUFI' -abop in Syra.
...... 19 September
libnriam and other ~
ala. n..e, a ,.._.,.,.. effort
rella8cl and updated ~
SUFI' politioaa." "Of .......,"
be added, "clelmt and ~
... of profeoiUaDal employeM

•

By MANTE ABBO'l'T ,

u,.,_,...,.s,.._

In an attempt to improve
"the cliJnate of learninl in ,the
University," the Division of
Undergraduate Studies bas established an Office of Evaluation which plans "to extend
aDd expand the functioOs of the
present Undergraduate Studies
·Curriculum Committee.''
Under" !hi! .ilirect!on of Dr.
Robert K.- Rott, 88SlStant dean
of the Division, -the Office hopes·
to accomplish three objectives:
..1. Increase instruCtional
quality 80 that it ~ts the
needs of students more fully,
makes better use of faculty energies and creativity, and .relates learning experiences more
meaningfully.
"2. Devise a system to demODStrate accountability in relation to the· quality of instruction, which, in the final
... can be evBluated mainly m
terms of learning op -the part
of students; and
"3. lpstitute the means of
uaing .the fuH
of the

anatr-

,.,uroes

the elecliaD."
Ellclble ·and 1..-ted members of the profeasional .taft
can uk Individual queollioos
about AFt by Cllllina Fries at
831,';011 ar Wellbari at 8776423.

Uniwrsib' in lionpolitical ways
for tbe development of new approaches to instructioo and for
~ting the .-Is for constructive~::

According .to Dr. Rott, several measures have already .
'-'&gt; undertaken to· implement
these proposals.-· Naw course
proJ&gt;0881 forms have been desigiled requesting departroents
to provide ""'""" objectives and
rationale •along with "guesstima:tea" instructional tech~
niques,
i:atalog description,
and the vi~ of the . faculty
member slated to offer the
course. Liaison has '-'&gt; established with· units on campus
•uch as the Office of lnstructiornil Services in 'order to provide a broader base for services
to faculty' and students.
This semeSter, Dr. Rott is offering, for variable credit, a
Seminar on Course and Teach·
ing Evaluation, in which students viill work on the course
evaluation publication, SCATE,
in addition to examining theory
and practice in the area of

a

Faculty-Alumni Center--

.

tained, Carter says, (hrough
membership fees, private donations and income generated by
be built-~
commercial use of part of the
!ecoild
' of the
Thus,Sllrvoy
a second
phase
land. Commercial motel faciliuaer study will take the fonn of ties andfo~. stores and ollices
a telephone survey of a selected could possibly be developed on
sample of potential users--both portions of the property not
faculty and alumni.
l)l!eded for the Center. This
• The survey, to·be conducted land would be leased, thus proby BOSTI, will attempt to viding oontinuing income for
· gather:
the Center. .The Center would
1. Information on whether or also be op"-fated , at Jirst at
not faculty and alumni are in- least, on a basis whiCh would
terested;
proVide income for operations
·2. A fank-otdering of what and upkeep and for the retire-·
facilitieS the potential users ment of any· indebtedriess that
would "like" to hilve included might occur.
and of the three facilities that
Once the Center--is apjlroved
each interviewee feels "must" for construction, ~.ter says,
be included to make member- the plans would be given to a
ship desirable to him; and
.. tunv-key" operation which
3. Information on bow mucb would then be responsible for
potential uaea; would be will-' all construction, equipping, etc.,
~ to pay in initial memberand would presenl the Center
ship fees and monthly mini- to the U / B Foundation · ready
mums.
for use.
'lbe U/B Survey Research
Center has been engaged to Communtt_y and Compus Relations
The Center, Carter said,
"insure the validity" of this rewould 'have two primary pursearch.
- BOSTI, between now and poses: University-community
· January, will also be conduct- Jelations·and faculty-alumni reing: a study of similar facilities lations.
on other camPuses; an analysls
It eould be used for continuof the user .survey; anilllf&amp;es of ing education programs- Unithe planned use of adjacent v~rsity -afllliated conferences, relands and of altematiw land fresher courses, etc. ~for which
use; a study of code and zoiling no institutional facilities are
l8qllirements; a. survey of site provided. It could also be open
&lt;ODditions; an analysis of alter- to Civic groups such 86 Rotary
native su~tions for facilities; Clubs, etC., in an effort to bring
and a financiaJ requirements members of the community at
study.
.
--large to the campus.
INDUCON will provide conAlumni activities - many of
sultant serviCes on the land use'
and alternative 'analyees and on
the productian of a final report. ~nter which would also offer
That final report will in- a satting for 'infoi'mal contacts
cll!de: a) a pba-t program of between al)lmni and faculty .
. development for the site; b) a
ecbematic lite utilization· plan
besed ... tbet5"" program; twJ&gt; -groupa in a casual atmoc) ecbematic
and a finan- fPhere is eiosential, Carter -feels.
cial analyldl
the fllllt pbue·
t One QUMtion in the uaer surd) pro,iectiODI Of COlla and
wy is speci11cally designed to
cane for future~) , help the organizers of the Cendetailed JIIOII'Ul
ts
far . the fllllt pbue
CDild ter understand the perceptions
be Pwo ID a poofe8liODal lrm which feculty and alumni DOW
baw of one another. In addi-.
lion to uldng each group to
llat the faclliUes they want for
- o.- ~ plaalare ~
0
ed (OD . , _ _ , . 12), Caf.. r their use • a p-oup, the survey
- t h e c-u..~ will aok alumni to identify
whether or not, and haW, \o tbaie ojleelal facilities they
lhiDk faCulty will want and vi&lt;:e
pnaed witll the _._.
'
u the OIDIIIr ...........
...:.........
a ........,.
..;;;;iii: T bll will provide an inkling
cin:ulated ID e•l•lbla at-1, of wbere eome of the p._..t
feculty arid ..., witll flo11 in- ODIIIIII~ problems-tie,
formation ... COIIItluetiOD 1ime- Carter •yi. This information
tables, (acllltleo, mealllenhip will 'also be an aid In dewlopf - etc.
.
.
inl the kind of joint-uas Center
The Cental'would most like- . which can help close this comly be developed and ~ !iiaJn- niunications gap, be predicts.
(continiU!d from- 1, coL 5)
port bin.- on the facilities

to

:w

~hi= .J:t'!t~~':h!

~w=~~~u::

m:

'*' rorn=;,

P'Lnot..&amp;:' ~k. ':."?.:

..a...«;a.l

.

(IT

.

--

3
Ebert, \\Wdl-.
( contiluud flo• ,...._ l, e&lt;Jl !J

thelr "greatalt ~- internal and lhlo 111 what'• bold. them bad&lt;." The dMn
the co1leps will haw a
"great ~ .OD the U..n..ity
leaching-Jearninl at the co~ aJid, if they ~ wiB ..,_
level, using their classrooms as it bemsJdaualy." ~. ba
laboratories and reading exper- counsels, in hill JINC!oe way,
imenta~ empirical and plillo- that the college ~ aN
sophical resean:h on the sub- not aware of their lmpiat 011
ject.
the University and
ad-Departments and faculties · ing in line with this ..-palllihave '-'&gt; approached to set up bility.
.
•
a pi_lot stqdy to improve the efAs. new ~ 'dean, Ebert
fectiveness of leaching by· dem- prom""':" to ~ all ~
onstrating the feasibility of lems wtth a wid&amp;&lt;&gt;paJ mind.
gathering ·tangible evidence of Howeyer, be adds tbet '1. lii8Y
good teaching. In addition, pro- do lhinls that a~ cntidam
posals have been made for re-· bUt eye:y admin:istra.lt!"', abou1d
structuril;lg the Division of Un- be willing to fllce en~ or
dergraduate Studies • Curricu- he shouldn't take the.- job." lum Committee to include sysEbert's new ollie!' OD the sec!"ms analysts, learning-teach- on!l ftoor. of Haye's rep181eDts
mg specialists, teats and meas- qmte a d~ce fnim .e.. flat
urements specialists, and com- lands of R1dge LM. There be
munications specialists
beaded the Geography DepartC!---4-·
·
ment with about 120 nnder·
~ . Bylawsgraduates, DOW he will be SU'
pervising the curri·culum for
(continued from - 1 . col. I)
over 11,000 students.
ing faculty-at-large. IU!presen- Wok:h ·-·
tation from the faculties would
In resigning, Dr. Welch noted
be based 70 per cent upon bead- that "New leaders sj&gt;ould secount and 30 per cent upon stu- teet their own administrative
dent-contact hours for each fac- teams" and the fact that when
ulty as determined for the year be accepted the position of dean
prior to annual elections, ex- in 1967, he indicated his prefcept that no faculty can have erence for a three- to five-year
more than 20 nor fewer than term. He said at that time that
two representatives.· Provision such a period "seems the maxiis made to avoid domination of mum for
indiv i dul!l wbo
one faCulty by one departroent wishes to remain actiw as · a
or school, although details of scholar and a teacher."
.
intra-faculty representation will
Accepting the resijrnition,
be delegated to the faculties.
Dr. Ketter expressed deep ap"Elections of Senate mem- precistion for Dr. Welch's 11181lY
bers within each faculty would contnl&gt;ution&amp; 86 dean over the
be conducted by the 'bullet sys- last three years. He said in a
tem' whereby each eligible voter 1 tte to w Jch "
the 1'deas
within a facu-lty is allocated .,'i,d renerg~ w'hi.ch. you luive
votes equal in number to the brought to this position have
Sepate membership to he elect- provided us with new educaed from that faculty in a given tiona! paths of national signiftyear. His allotted votes may be canoe at a tiin!! when innova'1:8st for one or more candidates, five app_r.oachea ar·e clearly
86 he sees fit. This teclmique necessary.':' Dr. Ketler poin!M
provides for r~presentation out in the letter that durmg
fro~ com~tively_ s~ &lt;!r- Welch's term, " . • . undergraduganized constituencies w1 thm ate education here has-seen the
ea~ faculty.
development of widely 'respect-.
Students "!'d ?ther mem- . ed prografns for disadvantaged
~rs of the Uruvers1t~ Commu- students, the creation of tailormty ~o~d have votli!g mem- made individual majors, new
berst;Up m ~ standmg and interdisciplinary courses, fresbspecjal c:om=tlees of ~ ~n- man seminars, bulletin board
ate, whtch are ~ pr~Clpal courses and the development of
pohcy-recommending ~hes, to the 'initial stages of our collesecure the broadest possible ad- .gi.::a:::te:..:s:::ys:::::tem=- " - - - - : - - visory base for establishment of ·
Senatt! policy. Committee recUNITED FUND -1970
~mr;:ntt,fi~":'1~b e : : APPEAL BEGINS OCTOBER 5
tion. Privilege · of tbe floor of
the Sepate, except for voting,
would be available. to all voting
faculty, and others, at the discretion of the Senate. 'lbe enlarged voting faculty would reWill there really be a new
tain final control over actions
of the Senate through provi- "Vf!"?Presi~t for Facilities
sions for referenda
Planning Albert Bush-~
"Amendments to the pro- will outline. plans and tiJne..
posed Bylaws could be p~ tables for the Amherst Campus
by individual voting facufty as and answer ques tiona at the
well as by the Senate and third in a series of orientation
Would continue to require rati- luncheons for new faculty ID be
fication by secret ballot by the beld on Goodyear-Ten Wedneofl!ltire enlarged voting faculty." day,~7.atnomL
Tlie series.- designed to "proDr. IU!nnie says the propooed
scheme of allocation of repre- vide reliable first-hand informs- '
tion-about
the Um-sit)"' -.1
sentatives would ·result in approximately the following dis- to pilt newcomers in touch with
tribution of voting Senators for their colleagues, bepn 8ol&gt;lal!- .
ber 23 with "Mast YClllr .....
the first year: ·
denl" It conlinued ~
with "What Sort of Studellta
.Are _'These?", a diacuaslon. in
(70 PM cent head count/
30 !Mr cent contact hours) . . • 10 which Richard A. Siaell&lt;-.
Arts aM L.tters ··--·-············12
vice presidl-"lt for ....-nt afEd~onal Stucll• ......... --·· 5
fairs, outlined the characterisEnctnMrinc and
_ ........... ................ 6
tics of the U/B student body.
HMittl Sc~ _ ·······-·······17
On Wednesday, October 14,
Law "•nd Jur1sprucMnce .•••.. 2 •
the topic will be "Governance:
N•tu,.l Sd..-.c. •ncl
What Fonn?", featurinc WilM.u...natk:s •. _.....................10
liam Baumer, vi&lt;:e chairman of
Sod•l Science~ •ncl
Admlnlltmlon .....-····~·-...-11
Faculty Sepate; Mark Huda..ourc. .... 2 the
dleston, president of the · Student
Aseocistion; and 'Thomas
Ailrnl~ ............. -·~ ............ 8
&amp; .-...:;~ P!ftident: for
~o, president of the. local
AcaOfmic ~and
State
University Prof~!
AcacHwnk O..ns .......... _ ... _ 4
l\ssociatian.
Prowosts C•l.ct.d) ....... ..; ....... 2 &amp;.Tbe next two weeks will inCol.... Mntera (electl!d) .. 2
At &amp;a,.. CSUNY .......,.) ...........- ... 4
volve separate programs _ar·
Total 17 ranged by the faculties.

l:ts

-·t

an

New Facult:y Hear
New, Campus Pkin

...

----- - ·
u..,. ..................

�CORE~

4

~1,1910

.

SUNY Caucus on WomenS RightS-Asks &amp;me Faculty-Think Thnt
Affirmative Commitment to·Equality rTh£Jre ~ Race Apart'

By GORDON M. HARRIS
LMidn Pro/...or o/ CherniatrJ'
departments deny their own
graduai'IS equal opportunity in Editor's Note:· This statetMIIl,
emPloyment, as discriminatory. wliile prinuuily intended to exThe consequences of this' prac- press only the personal opintice for women wboee 'mobility ions of its author, has been
· is restricted for personal rea- endorSed by the. Executive
sons
are . obvious. The Univer- Committee of the SUNY /Buf- .
Don group.
sity must act to bring an imme- falo chapter of the State-wi&lt;h
Committee for a University.
diate end to this practice.
. To e!iDiinate """ :discriminaFaculty members of Ameri. tion at the State University of
8. .We derqand that .the University expand its policy of hir- can universities in general, and
New Yark, and to affirm women's rights to equal opportuni&lt;&gt;f
our University in particular,
ing part-time personnel. Salties in education and employaries, benefits, and ranks for are a somewhat privileged
ment,, the CAUCUS ON
part.time positions should he group. They are paid fairly well
WOMEN'S RIGHTS at SUNY
determined in proportion to and are · not expected to work
hereby declares ita positi9n and
comparable full-time positions. according to any specific schedPart-time employment must no ule of time other than for their
demands.
longer serve as an excuse for lectures. contrary to the pattern
'lbe Unirl= can no longer
ip&gt;ole or
•
women's de- exploitation.' U a woman works which must he adhered to by
~or equality as it bas in
part.time, she should not he
the put. It must ._.u... that
paid on a lower salary scale;
illl mistrea-.t of women can
her earnings should he com- r.t TID"' I rDI"\TNfS
mensurate with her service. -y ~LVVCV.l
- only """""""' in them a aelfprotective militancy. 'lbe UrnThe same. should apply equally - - - - - - - - - varsity must commit itself to
to men. part.time workers.
an allinnative and inviolable
9. We demand the establish- most people in professional life.
-policy of equal rights for womment of fellowship programs for They are generously provided
en. This is not only the demand
pre-doctoral or post-doctoral with opportunities to take
of tbe Caucus on Women's
women who have been isolated leaves jllld to traye!, and have
Rights at SUNY, it is a pri- men and women in faculty and from an academic environment much freedom w1th respect to
mary aocial and moral man- administration. We deplore- the . or from the labor force while what they can say or do.
date.
uae of women cbiefty ln ancil- rearing a family. Women should · In many instances members
L The University should re- lary positions. And as an iro- he encouraged to l'fH!llter their . of the"7faculty 'have never had
pudiate sexist rhetoric as re- mediate ameliorative actjon, we profession by programs acoom- to experience the rigorous re-.
modated to bridge their return. alities of the "outside world."
ftecting sexist views. Its present demand the University set as a
motto which instructs uLet reasonable goal that half of all Their potential contribution Having been endowed with &lt;Juteach become all he is capable new faculty lines and top ad- should he recognized 8s both a standing intellectual capacity,
they have achieved status iii
of being" correctly reflects the ministrative posts, and half of personal and social value. .
10. We demand active re- the. aa)demic world almost au. present practices of the Univer- all repl=ement openings be
sity and the invisibility of filled by women. We believe cruitment' of women students tomatically and at lUI early age.
to fields presently preempted . Responsibility ond Freedom
women in the University. Wom- that the University educates its
It is axiomatic to say that the
en are not encouraged and, in students by the role it assigns by men, and of men students
the fin.il 8118lysis, are not al- to women in faculty and ad- to fields presently pn!&lt;!mpted more freedom of choice abOut
lowed to become all they are ministration: by keepil!B wom- by wo.men. wit&amp; a long-range his own life a person bas, the
capable of being. Such language en in a secondary place in the gnal of equal distribution. To more responsibility he should
conditions society to women's University, it prepares them for serve this end, the University show to his fellow citizens. This
should establish .a coordinated would indicate ·that university
invisibility. We demand that a 11000ndary place in society.
the University ,_,1ve to aban4. We absolutely condemn counseling eervic:e for women; faculty should he among the
don U.O. of' !Ia practi..., which the University practice of dis- counseling in liigh schools and most responsible people in the
discriminate apmst women and criminatory lower pay for wom· colleges, which currently chan- world. Unfortunately, this does
that, symbolic of this .-&gt;lve, it
We demand not only equal nels women into low~status, not at present seem to be a ·
chanae ita motto to "Let each en.
pay scales, but alao appropri- low-potential occupations, must readily recognizable Cliaracter· become all she or he is capable ate compensation for disadvan- he changed. In addition, coun- istic.
I believe the ~n for this
of heine-"
tageous taJ: rates and limited seling services should he avail2. We demand the abolition fringe benefits which penalize able to women of all ages who faculty irresponsiliility is in
of &amp;el&lt;ism in all OOUftleS. Be- women. AI; a moral stand, we wish to retUrn to the University many cases the lack of understanding some of our faculty
caWIO man have written our his- urge that the University ezert and complete their degrees.
11. We demand that one-half l)ave of the real place of a unitories, their values and stan- leadership in eliminating disdards preyail: the achievements crimination towards ita em- o( all scbolarshipG, assistant- versity in a democratic society.
of women are ignored, deni- ployed women in life insurance ships, and fellowships be There seems to be an idea
grated, or acknowledged be- and Malth insurance policies awarded to women. Awards to abroad that universities are a
women must he compensatory, separate part of the nation,
srudllnBly. We must retrieve and in taJ: achedulea.
from obscurity the contribu6. We demand for all women for women students receive peopled by an elite ·group of
tions of women to the making employ- of the University he lower wages, lesa support from intelligentsia wbo are not neeof QUr culture. Where women they administr-&gt;tors, faculty, their families, and fewer em- essarily governed by the same
have not played an active role, ateft or student aasiatants, six ployment opportunities: conae- laws· as are ordinary citizens.
""' must review the reasons and weeks paid maternity leave and quently, they need larger fel- In. consequence, I thiiik it bas
become essential for universiw-ninate the blame-to alloo- for men three weeks paid pa- ·lowsiiips for their education.
12. We demand campus fa- ties to redefine their role in a
ciety which has set ita pro- ternity leave. Moreover, no emhibitive and
·,;, forces ployee or student abould be cilities to answer the 1&gt;hysical forceful and realistic fashion.
lipan women~rehabilitete made to taJre a leave of ab- needs of women atuilents. This The Moln Pu._
In the first p....._ a univerthe......,., of women and to edu- sence or forieit her job, scholar- would make available complete
caie women to their rights and ship or academic: standing be- pbysiCal euminations (includ- sity is an institution the main
mg gynecological ezams), birth purpooe of which is to provide
potentials, the Univeralty cauaeofPfi!IIIIIDCY.
ahould estehliah eouraea, pro6. We demand aboliticm of oontzol devi..., and counseling. l!igber education. Furthel'lllClfti,
pam&amp;, and worla!boPs em womthe nepotban rule which most -"We eDdOrae the. principle that it is an institution which is IIUpWOIJlell have the right to full ported by the ~yers of the
en, Tbe Univeni!y ahould un- m..r-&gt;tly uildenninea etnj&gt;loy:
• der'IUe the relpoDiibllity of ae- ment opportunitieo of quaJifjed Malth services, and !hit they nation, almost. wbolly if public,
curinl fedora~, state, and foun- women. Tbeir n.hte ahould not cannot be denied ownership and to a large extent even if
private. We therefore must redation funds for ._.m Clll the be jeopardized because they and control of their bodies.
13. As e~~~e~~tialto liberating gard ot1111elves as eervanta Of
..,..;.1 probloml of ........
are married to men in academic
women from tbe ir servitude society, insofar as our wort[ as
a. We daDuld ~-t ~
7. We demand the Uni-.ity and oppreasian, we demand the educaton is concerned. This
of ......... to all levela of r-ition. We eat as a laat-rup 1'IICIIIPiize the practice of 110- establlBhment or a """' 24-bour means to me that all attempts
p i equitable dllllribution of lnbred-birlnl, whereby 1llllllY ·child-care facility for children to transform the university 110
of all to be' 8Y8llahle to tha~ it. becomes primarily an
..tminiatraton, faculty,. ataft, active Instrument of social
and atudeDIB durina their work- chanae are ~ble. 'lbe
ina bounL Untilllllch facllitieo . lq)propriate wa,y in which ooare avaPable.fc the U ni versi ty cial chanae is to he aucoeasahould rovide c:blkk:are u- fully ad1ii!ved in this-- country
1
its democratic pooc~~
lt:t ..'"':::%. "!.;!"..,~ tJ.:; ~ or Um-.it.Y p~~~e~~ts. is throulh
•.r. tGI4• ......., ..._ . . ~-au. uo • ...._. ...._ 'lbe dutieo of chlld-rearinc inwlving government at
(-~~).
wblcb have dewlved almost en- all levels.
dreiy - . to the .coo- - • 'lbe uni-.ity is not an In... IPDftA'I" atiiWLMfD .
_ , . _ of ......,..... alae in- .lllnmwlt of the
dllllinl ~ lllll8t - . ahould it do ~ wblcb
~~
in ..,. p¢, be ~bared
· · willl!md to identify it as a part
....,. r. •.taUn" ..
14. We demand that the Uni- of '!01 ...-..menl Only by re\WIIIty
actina
as a. federal coo- 1ll8lnlnc free of 1lllch entande-~-t=-~-l1bide by the BDCutive DII'D!a c:8n the uni\WIIIty fuiiW
Oriler 11246 as amended' by ita fuDctionas a ceoter of laam-LCUIIIIID
11376 and admlnlatered by the ~ ·and educalioa. Tbe uni-OIIce of FedenJ CoatnlCt Cam- aiiieo lllll8t .....m· havens of
·aDd that In the leMilt- IICllllemic freedom_ This is aaly
..........t .af .• Plan of fllloaible If the unl'veiai~do
live
ActiaD it Olllllldor not become "poiiticDed'r liut
~, ,._,£,..._... ..........
.
the ea- 11!1 Wamilll'i Rlabta ralbw' inoiat Clll their rilbt to
QMJ-IJMO ....,_.., ~ • . - . , .
at SUNY an lnlenloled puty carry out their educatiaDal
------------~------- . Gld.......Wtwilh ltatallatapa. functiona in _lhelr own way.
•

&lt; •

EDITOR'S NOTE: Tile following
;. 1M fuU tc:t . of demtllldl contmnetl in a: procl.cm4tion UB~d by
tM CGUCU on Women'• Rilht. at
SUNY, for'""d recently at a '""etinB in Albany as a StaU-with oc-

....rtt.,.........,. _...._

,· - u=::. ot1rw.

--.
---- -- .. ----·- ..
..

......,

.,_,~

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

..,..,..,_t-

lndlviduol

'llltlhta

I have made a plea so far for
universities as institutions to
avoid engagement in partisan
politicill activities in their surrounding communities. In expressing this opinion, I am, of
course, speakmg only .of the
university as a corporate body .
This is not to suggest that the
individual rights of the members of the university as citizens should oocurtailed in any
way. One need only look at the
list of Senators, ·of the Congress
of the United States, or of members of recent Presidents' Cabinets and count up the number
who are or were professors to
see how active academic people
can he in the political arena, if
they so desire.
But i am firmly opposed to
any attempt to use the university as a total institutional force
in any political campaigil ,
whether it he to elect a member
of Congress, to institute a new
housing program, or to bUild a
county stadium. We would all
he rather surprised if the Buf.
falo Department of Sanitation
were to declare a moratorium
on work during an election campaign so 'that its employees
could give full time to the candidates of their choice. Meantime, the garbage woq)d pile up
and disaster would follow.
Every time a university shuts
down fo~ any reason whatsoever, not related to vacations
or weather,. it simply suggests
to the general public that a university is not a very essential
institution. It seems to me that,
for their own good, the faculty
of a university Olllht to feel .,
that it is just as neceaaary for
them to keep at their buailas,
which is provldina edl!cation,
ail it is for a c:ity depar-.t of
sanitation to keep Ita trucks
rolling on the 111reeta. To believe otberwii1e is to gain fall
into the elitiat trap :::,.. the feelina that univenlty faculty and
atudeata· are a .....,., _ . t and
that ~ have certain richts

~r~~~peo-

V_to,_

E-r larwelnaUtutlaa of this

country is vuiJaable to failure,

whether it I»'the beDbuptcy of
a Pam-Ctbtnl Rdroad, the

~of·~~;

univmai~ failure• can

=~~~
by, all IIIMiben of . . Institu-

tion. 'lbe old-lublaaed .aying
of "a. fair ~· work for aJair
day's pay" • a truilm which
1llllllY uni~-'-lty ......
ban fail to
It in&gt;Ot .fair for " - to take
a position em a unnw.lty faculty em the be* of a CCIIllract to
teach and ....... and ·i n inalancea to belp admlnlater•
8Dd llal t o - their.JID!_,.jty
r-ition for pur.- •tiJelY irreleVant to their"-'---

~1!;.ia~~

qd the AcbiUea' heel which

~ Will .....,. the uni\WIIIty if d....- ill tbia attitude cannot be bmulht aboul

niiY

.

�()t;labe&lt; l , lP10

.5

The Art of·Puerto Rico
Blends Three CUltures
"El Mundo Indio Ameli- "U~rni&lt;&gt; en Ia lslil," a poem
cano," a collection of art from by Tomas Blanco described as
the three blended culturi!s that the "My Count&gt;y 'Tis of Thee"
are Puerto Rico. will be on dis- of Puerto Rico. The lithograpb
play in the Norton Center by Lorenzo Homar presents
LoWJ&amp;I! from 7 p.m. tonisht both the calligrapbed text of
tluoulh October 15.
the poem and the artist's interThe d i a P Ia Y of fiberslass pretation of the Island's "sunsculpture, woodcuts aQd litho- burstins shells," ''beloved seas,"
graphs (includins poster art) and "solden sands" which are
will include uamples of the celebrated in the work.
·- ·--~·• . &amp;"-'-- Indian --~
~
It has b,:;
f'lazaret's ftberglass p i e c e s
brouj!&gt;t toptber with funds
·.~r.:.d~.e in g Carried,"
provided by CIUDpus manliiirs
The
of PODER {the Puerto Rican
noted young Puerto RiOrganimtian fot Dipllty, Ele- can artist Jose R. Alicea is
vation and Respect) in an el- represen"!&lt;f by v:oo&lt;~cut and
fort to capture the artistic "es- Pl;asti~, P•e~.es- "I'he Cock
sence" of Puerto Rico The Fight, and Cuervall"-and by
students Wllllted ~y to a co!ored li~graph of devilappei) to the off-campus mem- . dancmg, a ~·~I celeb_rated by
bers d. the ~ Puerto Ri- ~~.,!:c•ied Afncans of

;;:D.;;;;;;..

-:::d

ca;,:umin~the ahibit will
be works by Jesae Naruet, an
EPIS student who studied in
M
·
-th s·
·
no~cror
m:m:'i
University of MeDc:o· works
from the collection of Mrs. Carmen Rodriguez of . the EPIS
staff, and woodcuts and poster
art owned by Dr. and Mrs.
Abel Fink of Bulfalo. Dr. Fink
is a member of the faculty of
Buffalo State who ia interested
in Puerto Rico.
Jose Pizarro, ~ EPIS
student who 18 ~t or
PODER, and· Miaa Shiiiev Munoz. a ..,..,_lor-teacher in the
EPIS program and a U/ B
graduate student, baft' epordinsted the ezlubil · 'SUn........,. ..
Amons works included will
be a lithographic renderins of
- - - - - - - - '·- - -

W:.,.,

Q:;

FUND FOR I'DUCEIIEN

eom..-

The '-1/B
for a Uni...,rsi1y, • cootition of moderates, at •
meeting held September 25, pused the following ntiOiution: ''We
wish to convey our sympathy to
the two Compus Policemen, John
Bosile ond Donoid J - r. recently
injured in the pefform~~nce of their

duties, ond to coil lor contributions
to • lund on their behalf." Con·
tributions should be lorworded to
Prof. Emit Badian, 390·J Hoyes,
Compus.

•·

. That dan~, or "Vejigante,"·
18 ~ ""';"lied by _one !'f Mrs.
Rodnguezs contnbutlons to
the show, s coconut-mask example of native craftsmanship.
The slums which plague the
Puerto Ri"":" expe~ience are
represented !" two htho~
by Carlos R1vera. Orie depicts the c I o s e I y-dustered r u r a I
slums; ~ other, the IDI!ke-shift
squatters quarters bwlt over
~~r which are common in the
Clties.

'J";? at the BOilec•'
J"?' at the Bodega" is a
stunning study of the·other side
of the coin-San Juan's nightlife.
Poster art has been "Included
in the show because Puerto R ican poster-making is "famous."
The ATENEO, the official
workshop of the state-supported
Institute of Culture, is known
for its meticulous, old-time silkscreening, the organizers of the
show say.
·
MexiCI!ll and other Latin
American articles from the
"Wooly Uama," Elmwood Avenue, are also included in the
exhibit.
Tonight's opening, set fOr 7

p.m. in the Center Lounge. will
feature typical Puerto Rican
mu.&lt;ic provided by Mr. Carlos
Olivencia of the campus Minority Affairs Office.
Exhibition hours will be the

same as Norton hours.
The show has been cxganized, Miss Munoz says, to develop pride in the Puerto· Rican
heritage as well as to foster understanding on the part of English-speaking Americans.
Miss Munoz, boin of native
Puerto Rican parents in New
York City, did her undergraduate work at Rosary Hill College. This semester in the EPIS
program, she is an instructor in
a course which teaches English
bilingually-an EPIS first.

Kent Stole -Its a Series of Miscues and Miszmderstandings
three miles ~way to aooommo- lot on campus ia the electroni- are' ab®t as bad as those at
cally controlled faculty lol U/B.
Well, laat year the students got
• Student lunda- Almost
:t,te1;a
fed
up, and broke through the llObo!IY has questioned why the
•tudenl offoin f!tlilor Suoe Lip- Bulfalo game)·
"""' o/16 .. _ , viMt to the
And to show it didn't play gate. 0ne hundred times within "non-profit" bookstore made
Kenl Stale Unioenity ctllfii&gt;IU.) fAvorites with sparta, the ad- two .....ea. the fence went ftying. more tban $5,000 laat year, «
ministration tore a way the Each time the University re- why the University spent $800,lmasine younelf for a mo- campus soccer field for new placed it. Each time at a cost 000 laat year on a private footment on a univasity CIIJDIIU8 Cl01181ruction. No replacement .of $15.
baiiiJ!'!OSbox, but only $120,000
f"'!r timeo as larp • aura, with · field ..,.. found, the new conAfter hearins these stories, for student financial aid.
twice .. IIWI,Y Ullderp-aduate struction hasn't started, and the
About the only thins followstudoulll, and ....... Irate ~...
. 8 -+·-·ftt
~ you might think that the stu- ed with any· -·'---'ty ia tradiallllDDl," and 100 ..__ • much
'"""'
- - · , _ "'
......
oluah,remams
aood for·nothing
more :ts.:':fedm'!':dupre%:~i tion. Tradi~'lik:, freshman
red
and foul-up..
tban the University's ann ua I with the exception of the band- beanies and the school symbol
ful which revolted laat aprins below the campus gate-which
aa!..t
the year's (the majority, more tban 10,- any underdaasman must ocrub
aity, 11ite d. ._.
r1o111, aociaJ I
students, watched aafely wit h a toothbrush, until it
maat ...._ • ..._at
- - - 18
Aa a -..ice to its many ban- 000
.....,
.......
dicapped and blind studenlll, from windows in the student ileiJII8, if be is caught walkins
a ~ aerie• d. mis- the Univaaity built a railed
union) , nothins happened_
~ - On
~ ~ atairc:ase on a hill in front d. Apolhr
Tftllcol '
Even last year's killings
aoph Heller ("'-......_ -)
"'- ita CIUDpu&amp;. Only tnJuble. tbe
'lbe apathy is typical d. tbe haven't altered the observance
boat
........,. ..,. at .... -~full of J&gt;C!tboles a
iiDqine. To ,et v
--'!1 drop...._ ..... Kent lludeDt body. Aa one dis- of tradition. Picnics are still
an Idea d. tbe ......... IDDOd
"""'
MM . . . . . .~
gusted upperdaaaman remark- · held on· the practice football
on the lmiilllad --..-, coaAnd the ocbool'o 1)'11111118ium ·ed, '"Ibis campus just really field, where the National
aider the laDowiolr.
ia aimply cded M....-ial Gym. OO..'t P"" a damn about any- Guardsmen maaaed 1aot aprinJ,
and Blanket Hill, JeadinJ
to
.~ ae.n ... ti.. the .....,_ It ia alow!ti~::in1 thins."
-the~ baa ....a in- &lt;- CDI8tnlctioft \DlJuot cbeck the followins fiJ- the Oommonl where tbe
................... 81ap. Only dennlaed It) and tbe adminls- urea:
· students killed, ia still
lhkw. the
8lap at tratian OO..'t WliDt anyaae'a
• Studies-Tbe ......U ......, uaed for ita obvious purpose at
the..._, fll. a .... bDJ, and
to aink with IL
point , _ _ li below C, 2.0 DiehL The Victory Bell, aittins
the .......... '-'llltllleded to
And, ftaally there ia the lei- (out d. four) .
In the middle d. tbe Commons,
• Palltici--Ouly three Kent - is atiJI n1111 afte. footbell.....-.
~--·
.. - md.Xthe•pw.•vau-de- IIIII; . . , ltD ......
the 8lap,
IPili. tbe ..... aiae d. the cam- ltudenta have worked em a
Much of this lad&lt; d. otudent
-ID allde
- ......
-a.d.
pua {790 aJIIIIl!U'IId to Kent-Jacbaa State M....-ial invohaneat can· be eqdained
.._, 8nd
olide .._
ap.• - our 180) , the admbiMltration Medic:al Flmd to help -~-!ami- by a laelt d. student .,.,.....
About tbe only detectable
...... . . .....
-to
a "'peccomian" liea d. tbe dMd: and IDjurid stu!'O"W ia In tbe banda d. tbe
Toe&amp;ctdlk,allalu- .......
"' ........ the~- dellt ....... ia ...... .-..lto
• Sportlo-The fooCbaiiiMm Dtlily Kem s"':ti?:....echool
...,._ footbaU ....._. _. the .....U.. llnli mllea •linda juat llllcM 16,000 ,_, which Ia
four
build • ~ ..... .-y. 'lbe -"" ..... a-l!;lal and the aOwda - ad.. . . . . tlm5 weekly. •

By STEVE LIPMAN

=ro..:!'SiJ!lr:r!.Jl:J~

=

=r:WK:

c-;•u'::...~

~evewrtro.~ ,a;:th!

bo&gt;:-sir~isbii'gh~ght,

=:: JI."'L

1

_..,.t

a... '-

'T.,..

...me

n...-..... - ..................

Caae in point: a political
rally Which attracted more tban
8,000 students one night laat
year drew only 300 the next
night after the Sl4ler advised
students to keep aw.y.
'
The Sto!6, incidentally, wu
frightaninsly clairvoyant before
laat year's troubles. It indicated that "politicalized and pe&gt;~" otudents '"WIIIIId "fight
the revolution."
The University has take~&gt;
stepo to that last year's
tJoublea don't reocdir. It raised
the number of campus police
from 36 to 46, arid - t them
to Colwnbus, Ohio, f« State

~to~i:!.;., the echool's
ROTC buildins bumed by students again, the administration
planted tbe University's bonom
ooiJele between two ROTC
units.
And most importantly, and
most publicized, they've .._...t
the annual sprin1 "Think
Week" to the fall - • to
that what b8ppeoed laat year "shall never happen
again."
·
Scbool began Monday .• By
~you can-·
tiELPI

- -·ft.

-ToaotltYOCATdW. ADVICE

-

Cou-"1 Cemv, HM·
ri.,.n Ubrary, Ext. 3717

�',

6 -

AdminiStratiori LiSts
Task Force Members

Giennon Says
wew'Policy
No~

M~ rosters for tbe.
five Univermty taak forcea
diBrpa and cbairlllllll
IIJIIIDUDiliiCl last WMk by
Preoident · Rebert I. ~
olficially relealled by tbe
aclmini8lratlon thia """"-

"Ncct ........ ol • ebaDp.. Ia
bow Keanelh P. Glemdl, ell..... ol oeourit,y, up tha
tooce'a PCIIic:Y ol
~
obaervinl and ,...
........_ lennon claiml that
ibll Ill- "finUY ........ tha ~
lbet'j hem faiiiMed for ,_..,
. and tha aaly cblulp io in for.
JMily llatiniiL The policy inwa-tha c:alliDI ol BU&amp;Jo Polb .... ~-- tbin ia
. . . . . . . .-• •tioo. Routine
. - lllld' o1t.r matlen will
11t111 be bendled entirelY by

wt-e

Loew, ~ ~

Stanley Matowakl, deputy
mayor of Buffalo; Dr. Edward
MiiDmaCil, ,_tly retired
from the U/B Council; Lucien
Parlato, New Yorlt Ute 118Jranc:e Com~; .Judp Wilbur

the~of=t!t~ ~~: ~w!M:.;

-

-

pn!lll8tweiY leaked by E.wett, Rebert Koren; Slllff:
~ore many · John Carter, U/B FoundatioD;

o1 tbe indMduala ooncemed ,...
oeived ofticial invitatiaoa to
asrve.
Tbe confirmed 11ot hes aevera) cholnpa from the rosters
previouily publiohecL
A UnMnity ............., em-

aare.-

Robert

Cooper, Pencmnel;

Diimbrowski,

HDIIIIiua;

Charles F&lt;Jtlt!l, 8Mistant IIII!CU·
tive vioe president; Dorothy, •
Haas, student alfairs; RObert
Lobn, president, U/B Founds....... forces, bowever.
.
tioD; A. Westley Rowllmd, vice
Di!riDI • boolf-bour briaiiDI
studen
lilted -:..o....t, Univeraity relstions;
wbidl Glennon pve eampua
. : thoae E'tb.l'
Sclunidt, Contlnuina Edmedia lalt ........ tha chief . who bed earlier approached tbe ucatioD; William H. Siemering,
ClUiiV ............. bla beadministratioD to · "volunteer" WBFO; Slruknla: Robert ConIW ill "Dot appi'OYinc tha cailytheir aerviceL
viasar, underaraduate; Thomas
lnl olllrelrml llll' campua."
1bat spokesman alao . said -Flood, underllflllluate; Steve
Col.- that membenhip roeters are not Lipman, underaraduate; J . Sci~'=·=·that
.....,.
Ia that 90 , _
"loclted-in." Task Force chair- andra. Millanl Fillmore Col-~old
t~
men will be able to sugaest ad- lep; Timothy Tomasi.
- :-...:.": aecurity ~oocea that
ditional participants,
UNIVEII9ITY C 0 II II UNITY.
The task foroe memberships Faculty: Bruno ArCudi, Arts
follow :
and Letters; Laurence Berlo- ·
U.NIVERSITY OIIGANtzA:J"ION. witz, Natural Sciences ana
. . . . . , tbey "wiil be aubject to U.U t'
U.U,
Faculty: Milton' Albrecht, So- Mathematics; ' C. Perry Bliss,
· tbelr _., ~ and ~ tha
There's a temporary May of for every sa hours of use; for cial Sciences and Administra- Social Sciences and Adminis~ o1 ~~ to come
campus will nt1y 011 tha dill- aoeution for the Day Care faculty and stslf, one hour for tion; Robert Berdahl, Educa- tration; David Cadenhead, Nat.
011
cndca of tha Bufalo P!JIIce!' Center. The doors were opened every four. Various arrange- tiona! Studies; Thomas Berg- ural Sciences and Mathemat.
Monday (not last Thursday 88 ments hilve been worked out' enthal, Law and Jurisprudence; ics; Alan Drinnan, Health Sci"'Il :t.,•ltuatlon that ap- last week's Reporter indieated ) for giving this service. Some MacAllister Hull, Natural Sci- en&lt;es, cluJirman; Berkley EdL,.._., ~"~!;
with 3()..35 children enrolled. parents arranae to pay students ences and Mathematics; Dan- dins, Social Sdleoces and Ad--~
But tha ma~ worries' ot ilpace to put in their hours and others lei Murray, acting vice presi- ministration; Tliomas ~tz,
other more aarioua couae- and funds are still there, ac- do laundry, shopping, or aecre- dent for acedemic a1fairs, chair- Educational Studies; La r r y
~ of bodll;y harm to an cordlna to BB Wallw, chair- tarial work to compensate for man; Myles Slatin, University Green, Health Sciences; Paul
.m.a-1 oGicar, he abould mob man of one-orthe Center's com- their time.
Libraries; John Thomas, Social Kurtz, Social Sciences and Ad....._ obaervations and iilen- IDl'" A similar day care center was Sciences and Administration; ministration; Francisco Pabon,
Wiciltions
he Ia able to.._
"""""'
· -Center is temporarily set up at 1;1\e SUNY campus in Stoff: James Blackhurst, Sum- Arts and Letters; Dean Pruitt,
~
..... _.......__....from
_
The
.....,. -·~--- - nweting in the basement of Albany which reportedly does mer Sessions; June Blatt, un- Social- Sciences and A:dminisand c:alliDI for UBiatlmca. - ~ · Cooke Hall but occupancy is receive S t ate funding and deraraduate advisor; Edward tration; Aubery Roden, Educa'"'be . , . . . _ for wbid&gt; the aa1y two weeks in duration and space. However, no such ar· Doty, vice president for opera- tiona! Studies; Roberts Sip!, /
o6xir abould coli in 8D'f dan- after that the women of Cooke rangements ha ve been forth- tiona and aystems; Neil Goen, Social Sciences and Adminis.....,. oit.tioD ouch 88 IB 1111111- mliat again vote on whether the coming here. D r. Lawrence Budpt; Charles Jeffrey, aca- tration; Sol Weller, Enalneertlim8d above abould come from-. Cauter can oootinue operatina Cappiello, assistsDt to the ex- demic a1fairs;- Richard Sigpl- ing and Applied Sciences;·Stoff:
baCh our own tooce and from there. e&lt;;Utive vice president and ad- kow, vice president for student A. Baxter (or R. Rhodes ),
tbe·Buflalo Police'I)epar~L
The Day Care Center has ministrator assianed to ~Y alfairs; Students: John Charles, Minority Student A11airs; John
It t . alraody hem qreed WJth -temporarily solved its financial Care C en t e r, is aski n&amp;! for undeflll8duate; E I i z abe t h Buerk, Student AJfairs; Pat.
tha Buflalo Police Departlllllllt • pioblems by chariini an hour- funds in next year's budgej but Schacter, uoderllf&amp;duate; and ricia Colvard, Social Sciences
that alliatanoe will he Jhwa to ly fee hesad on parents' income. there are no provisio·n s for Earl Sidler, graduate.
and Administration; J a m_e s
our Ioree, upou~at ,... The fee for mcome below space.
UNIVERSITY GoVERNANCE. Gruber, Norton Union; CarDoehed from any
of our $460(1 is 20¢ an hour, $4600 to
What nerl? BB-Wl'lker is op- Faculty : William Baumer, So- lyn ·Haensley, Admissions and
Ioree, lu ind~vidual ~ $7500 is 25¢ and anyone mak- timistic because the women of cial Sciences and Administra- Records; Charles Jeffrey, Acainwlvinc _,.,.,. crlme ~ ilia above $7800 must pay 35¢ the Center and the parents of tlon and Senate; H . Warren demic AJfairs; Raymond Reinfrom tha appNbensl&lt;m or m- an hour. In addition to the fee, the children want the Center to Button, Educatiorial Studies; ig, Maintenance; Thomas Scbii..tiption stomdpoinL When a tbe parents must work at the continue. ADd they have been Thomas C'.onnoUy; Arts and to, Housing; Students: Philip
111111111 in_trouiJ!e, or wt.l the Center-fOJ' students the able to open- for a while, any- Letters; G 'rdon ~·lll'l'is, Nat- Henr)', undergraduate; S. Murural Science ·· ~d l\lathematll:s; ray, underaraduate; and Suz..
iltuadaa ·~
amount is one hour of aervioe way.
Donald Re
' · dealth -Sci- zanno Rovner, arailuate.
UNIYEIISIT'f · Go.u.s. Faeulty:
enceo, chat • .• an; Howard
Strauss, Enalneerina and Ap- Selig Adler, Social Sciences
~t · abould he called for .
i:UJ.I!
plied Sciences; Community: and Administration; William
Howard Meyer; Stoff: Edward Anaus. Law and Jurisprudence;
Dudek, Civil Setvice Employ- Robert Berner, dean, Continuees Aasociation; Andrew Holt,' ina Education; Albert Berrian,
No definitive stand was taken and Lawrence Chisolm, Paul Graduate School; Anthony Lor- Arts and Letters and AdmiilisGIIIVV&gt; and John Howell, mem- enzetti, Student AJfairs;- Stu- tratlon; Sara Cicarelli, Health
' OD .Faculty • Senate reorpnization at the first meeting of the bers of the steering committee. . dents: Mark Borenstein, under- Sciences; Charles Ebert, Social
The Steering Committee of araduate; Raymond Curtis, uo- Sciences and Adminiatratlon,
Faculty-Staff Caucus last
Thursday. 1ba Caucuil' prime the ~culty-Stslf Caucus has derar&amp;duate; Mark Huddleston, chtJirmiJII; James E-Dafis h,
The EDcutlve Committee of order of bu$iness was to draft coiled upon President Robert I. president, Student Aasociation; Health Sciences; Carl Gans,
tbe :r-tty Senate this WMk . a stand on tbe- reorPitizatlon Ketter ' "to answer promptly Bruce Roberts, Millard Fill- Natural Sciences and Math&amp;·
matics; John Halatead, Social
1llllad tlaat tbe oalilpUa Seconitr
which propose.• ~ and publicly" questions arising more Collep.
CoJOltlNI'I'Y Ra.AnoNS. Fac- Sciences and Admiaistlation;
he armed-a deci- mental representation man from " certain administrative
ulty : Richard Brandenburg, Rollo Handy, Educational
. . . aJr8ady apparently made . ele!:ted· Senate. This would al- actions."
Of immediate concern. the delm, School of Manaptlalt, Studies; Barbara Howell,
.. •. (}"'-iity
. ~- tar the Senate's pr-.t "town
statement said, are "the events CfH!hDir'mtm; Ricbard Bugelakl, Health Scie~M8; Allan Kuntz,
meetlna" Inllkeup.
During tbe discussion follow- surrouodlna the resignation" of Social Sciences and Admini&amp;- Edumtiooal Stujliea- and_ InIn another actiaD. the EDen- ina the report, the poup ex- Dean Claude. Welch of Under- tration; Frank Corbett, Social stntctional 8ervia8; a-.,
tma Committee adopted th!' . ~the ooovicticm .that the araduate Studies. •
Sciences and Administration; K.-s, Arts and .Letters; CarPGiiCJ' for 8llinl -.-ncieB m Faculty Senate shoulcfdalay reA sudden resignation such 88 Newton Garver, Social Sciences melo Privilara, Health Scilto olrn raub:
· ~ orpnization until the Task this, elfective inunedistely and and AdministriltioD; -A I be r t enoes; Joel Rlipor, ~ SciL When a member
Force on University Orpniza- accepted without protest, the MichMls, Social ScierM8 and enoes 8l1d Adminiotratlon; Calwllla- than aiz -tha
• tioD, heeded by Dr. Donald w. ·s tatement ebaraed "is •trona . Adlninistration; Lester Mil- vin Ritdde, Natwal Sciences
.... -lninl, the~ - Rennie (who also '-de the evidence of lilllerences in edu- brath, Social Sciences and Ad- and M a t h e m a t i c a; lrvlnc
' CiilaBfttee or tbe Personnel ~ttee which· is JeCOIII- cational nhl"-nll,y; 88 well 88 Dllnistration; Alleil Sa , Cui- ShouDM, ~ and APOIIIalttee ol tbe faculty inthe Senate cilanps). of .ques~radministrative twaJ AJfairs; Witter ~ plied Sciences; lrvlnc Siael. SO.
..... aball appoint • ~ hes - t e d its ~ The practice..
clinlcal faculty, School ollifed- cial Sciiluces and .Admln~Bbaaatathe ·to fill out the · diocol8aicm o1 alternatM. to tbe
Tbe poup asks:
iciiiil; Constantine Y.......ns, tion; Claude Welch, Social SciIB ol t b e Rennie - ' tabled for
"Why did Dean Welch resian Soai8l ~ ~ Admini&amp;- _ enoes 8J1!1 Adminlatration;
2. .When a member reolpas further study.
·
Why - ::0.,~~~ ~~~~6:
wltb than sa mimtha of
The Faculty.Stslf Caucus at UU,. Jl8l'Pcular.'time?
811
1nat~n accep~ tretlon; Co............,: Edward Hardt, New York State"-&gt;hlo remainina, tbe faculty alao decided to aand dele- W!"' hia 1
. G. - ~ alumnua, Rich blyman; Mra. Gerald Saltareiilwolved muat oooduct an ci1ec&gt;
to - SUNY a..-Bor wtth such ~ty · .
W88 the "'"!1118tion, ~ Ptoducts; Geaera1 Beaa, Buf- II, ihmma: ·SIIIff: Mra. PNnceo
t1oo to nopiMl8 liim.
Jlo)w in ~ to "ex·
by the dean "canot!luencielo? faiO Public Sc:hoola; ' Marian Dietz, Inolitutioual s-rch;
a When a member ..... • cbanp viawa about tha Hayes ad
·
s..a. Buffalo Polioe JJepart,- Manuel Los-, Um-ilty Lileaft o1 ... - " ' &lt; or more, 46 and ott.r ntla~ oubjects." Wflle they COIIIUlted?
"Wbat """' the ~ by ment; Tbomas Blair. Bulfalo- bnariea; Dorothy w~ Uuor Ia ahemt frcim tbe immedi· In otbor buaineai tbe CaDCUS
which
Dr.
Welcb'o
actlnl
11110Police Jlepartment; William derpaduate Studies; Students:
ate for tbe IUIIIIII81', the eleCted a alate of ~ They
~?" Who Hoyt;- ~ware Diatriet Coun-' Deniaa alumenthal; undergradEDcutlve Committee or the are: ~alter Rt.en. ~; ceasor c:onaulted?
·
cllman;
John A. Ulooa, Citi- uate; Donald Lee, graduate;
~ Committee o1 tbe
Marvin Feldman, ~ chejrfaculty invol..,d aball appoint man; ~ Giles, YIC8 cheir-.
Also called for a state- r.ens Committee on lntermuni- a..o.-a- Schellinger, Millard
a ~tive to~ tbe man; Peter Hare, secretary ; men!!?' tbe president on edu- cipa) AJfairs; Charles Lidtt, FillniOie Collep; Judy Silver- ~
member c~ur-~q hia at.noe,
. Donald Flournoy, treasurer; cati
ioals and pbiloeopbies. Chamber of ~; Ralph . man, graduate.

~: ~-

--"'"'"Dar
But
'

-~~~-u:

It's Really Open Now
n~ Center
. s~'~ .Ails

=

::::f:

~:J~by~~ FSC Tr'~-1 es Senate Stand,
-----Asks Ketter for Answers
Senate Says

Wo GU11S'

,._not

P"".

~

C.

�.ocllo6er 1, IP70

COur FUture'
125thTheme
.Havial selected '"11le Uni-

~-Our

aa tba

Llvia1. Future"

u -oelebratloa,
b U!B'• 1261b
tbe

~

Pollcy OaiiJIDIItee b

-

tba

o0-

I a - empbaaizlaa

=.;Km':!.:::31~~
Oamml-'•

c:ipatiall.
.
.
At tba
IIIOIIItiDg .oa. wnLux a. ....,_, profeuor,
last ..... .lollia &lt;Jw:lea, _.a · hiiiDry; Ph.D., Uni..,nity of Minviae llftllidlat c/. lbe · Sludont AsaoCiatiaa,,attacked "ttaaom- ......_ .laOBIU&amp;, - t profeooor,
ism" ID studliDt IDIIOI-..t iD aunm,; M.Ecl, Columbia UniUni.walty alraJn IIDII naipled. venity.
He- ....... to - ' n jill tb&amp; WIWAX .liJIITIN
. , uoiatant to eligroup bat Clec1iDed to clo m.
Policy ~ CbairmaD . - r , ~live Colleae CenA.· Weadey a-ted IDdicaled ter; B.A., S
YAB. .
he would canlllct Martt Hud· .._ IIILUIDl " · AYAD, ·cliniaol in·
dlestoD, pn8Jeat c1. lbe Ullllor- olnlctor, noecoloCY-oboletrico;
paduale -aatiall, to if M.B., Kur El-Aini Medic a J
H~ Ia ia1ae81ec1 ID can- School. ECYPl
tiDuina atudeat putidpatiall oa. WADEN BAUNBitY. uoiotant
on the -all ~ JI'OUP. profaaoor, School of Management;

. .Anniveraary aubcooimilwere ~ aad a deadliDe
of\1lctoller 80 11M b their ep-

Ph.D., C ao -e Weotem Reoe,..,
Uni..,nity.
.....,..... ..._, uoiotant profeo-

=-o~:~.=::. ~=inz;Ed.M.,Uni..,roityof
011 lbeloi poup8 ~be

ship

liOIJiht a1ao, Dean J . w.....,
Perry ol Health Retaled Professioos 111111 Allen s.pp ol lh!&gt;

Ollioe of Cultuntl Alralft urpd"
1be Policy Comml- .also advised that lllaJIY ol U..,
invited to t.DDe lll8lllben of
tb&amp; Community AdYiaory Couacil for the 125th had -.pled.

-.iotant . pro-

RAHCIB IWIAVAK,

faaoor,· '-lib education
and evol.ualion; Ed.M., SUN-

ON CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

WADEN BABBOU&amp;,

lecturer, &amp;Dthro-

~lo&amp;Y aod Black Studino; M.A..

niwnity of Roc!M.ter.
.._ IDTA BOUCHIOl, uoociale profeooor, ouuilt g ; Ed.D., Bootoo
UniYenity ·
LIB'I'Ia BIIEIILAIJEit, library intero,
Uniwni~f Librarieo;· B.A., New
York Umwnity.

:..~ ~...mociate

k=~-=~tial; Ph.D,,
Inotitute of Tech-

a
, oloi
- y•

.

viaili.n« profeoLLM.,

TU.O B.lY.u&lt;.lW.l,

lJ'~ty-~M=·

uoiatant pro~lj&lt;:alocieD&lt;:e; B.A., i'uk

&gt;AMD IIKNI-IIf,

·

'

·

viaili.n« Jectur.
er, llladt Stuclieo; M.A., Howard
Uniwraity.
oa. &gt;OBH ; I&lt;ALBPUI:I8CH. ouiatant
profaaoor, otatiotial; Pldl., Uniwnity of Walerloo.
CIWIUa KJI:IL, ouiatant profeooor,
Americao Stuaino; M.A., Univeroity of Chicqo.
·
VICI'OOIA li&lt;IIIKilAK, .... istant P=
feooor, .Spanioh, ltaliao, and Port'
l'f.:::'~:.-A.•. Joho o Hopkino

.liOIE F . BOUDWAY,

Da........., KITcHIN, visiting ouia-

tant profeooor. bioloay; Ph.D.,
Uni..,nity of c.JUomia at Berk-

Oll&gt;y.

.

assistant profeooor, biochemistry; Ph.D., Univeniity of Chicqo.
""""""-' xaoi.L, library intero,
U ·
·ty Lib ·
BA
....~:'":,! Toro:.":""; · ., UniDL IW&lt;IEL KOSMAN,

80

~
~MflewofYC: ~-=:. ~ ~d=~naad~-ioRec:'J:~ ~ Di~r'~~ltli~':d
llllllimtioDal -'on 'J:uesday

B.S., SUNY AB.

aftemoon of lbia ......
1be Advisory Commi--will
be an autonomous body which
will elect its OWil ol&amp;cers to.
work wilb. the Policy Commit-

Da. K.lB K. CHO, viaili.n« uoociate

~lana lor ADDiWinllll'Y

..:a: =::'

. ·· A cal.endar of events Jrill..be

-~~..!.or88the

.

Scbool of Muoic.

profeaoor. philooophy; Ph.D.• Uniwnity of Heidelberz, Germony.
IONAUl CICHOCKI, lechnical opecialiat, Graduate Engineeriog,
~~Science lootruc.JJR. W&amp;UCE

!IOBERT
LEE. viaili.n« aaaistant p r 0 f e a 8 0 r, mathematics;
Ph.D., Univeraity of Colorado.
1JL strro &gt;IACD&gt;A W , clinical in·
otructor. gynecolog y -obotetrics;
M.D., Univenity of the Ph.lip-

~. lecturer, ~OHN

S~iaiHo~"t~:\l-;..

Ph.D..

A.

oa.

F.

IIAREBSA, ass ista n t

•

vania.

SUNY Rules -

DIL AUGUSTINE C. DALTON,

(contimlft fro"'- 2. coL 6)
of the cha- to the chief admin
i.ttrative olfacer, toptber with ~
tru.cri.pt f tbe- proceed.inp. and
aball
time

at the ume

tran.mit

~c;::t...!!tie:r"'f:" .=.::...-=~

W 'thia leD clayo u,..-. the
~ officer ohall
make hio delei'IDiDatioa tbereoo.
~-or ~rity ID .diomthei• -~t
~-- ciMermine
.~
of U.. apiDot ~ are

chlef

=-~~zl~ b!

..tad in the cib1of adminiotrati..,

~--r~
=..:~
tee ill whole or ill put be abali

!S J:

fi:::r, .:'r"...;::!

~OD

:..:-in~ot"t:~':

terminatioa which ohall be o0nec1
the obldoat or otudeDla with

-

.

~ 'R'::}!, 11~.i-d-

=-. =:t':-..."":f!f r:
and

:=::i. -•Put~- b.~-- •••.9,

reoearch

aaeoeiate profeaor, medicine;
M .D., Tufto Uniwnity.
'*· IUCIWID OUONGB , visiting 88·
1i.ttant profeaor, mathematics;
Ph.D., Univenity of WUoonain.
LOUIS
reeearch aaociate, educatioaal adminiotratioo;
M.S .• St. BooaWODture Univenity.
11\'LVI.l DDOZWfl, ·aooiotant profesM.S., Juilliard School

DiGDrOLAMo,

::•M=;

lechnical Uoio.
taot, Lea ·
C
t
EPIS
M.Ed., sillWAaeo er,
;
oa. B. DIJI'ONT ouur. aooistant
prof-r, chemistry; Ph.D.,- Univenity of MinDesotL
DWIZ ot1!11'1.ft.

assistant to
:~AaNortuo Unioo; M.A.,
Al.-aT lllKAMOVlCB.

oa. ......

I'ZINBLATT,

inotructor,

pec!iatrico; M.D., SUNY AB.

DIL

M.A., Univenity of Maryland.

~~~~ spec-

-....-~~~a~~• foo6.

lllod . . . . . c

I

I

I

of Bd.aMioa llld ...,. ol ..,
..- ~a ·_.._..,..._,

6410 ol tbo ~Law.
\

profa.or, School of M............,..t,
''Or1anizations and Mental
Health," W.Otem New York A&amp;=:_o of lnduatrial Nuroeo,
Dll. a.tCBABD G. BllANDENBUBC. dean.

School of M"""''"'D'nt. directed
&amp;Dd chaired the Corporate Strategieo Seminar, sponsored by Cooperative Management Development in conjunction with the 19th
Aooual loolitute of Modern Management, Minneapolis, Minn.; ·
''The MIUUlgement Decision Making Proceoo." Sylvania M&amp;Dagement Club.

~~"'·e=n!'.~o..fA:o::J:
ies in the Determination of Meetive Diftuoi¥ity by Plate n-ry,"

Americao
Engineero
stitute of
San Juan.

lootitute of Chftnical
&amp;Dd Puerto Riam ·InChemical Engineera.
Puerto· Rico. -

Oil 81'AHLCY ZIOJr.'"TS, aaociate pro-

feooor,. School of Maaqeaent,
"Ao Eli]&gt;OIIitioo· .of the Group
Theoretic Approach to Integer
Linear P~ ... Operations Research Society of America. Wuhingtoo, D.C.

PUBLiCATIONS
OIL PAUL EHIUJCB,

~!WAm~=eatn~i~t~Y!f

of the Free-Radical Polyroeriuti.on of Ethylene," Aduancu in

Engineering, "A Rad 'oactive Peb-

gineers, San Juan. Puerto Rico.
oa. ao&amp;mT 1. GOOD, prof e a 1 o r,
chemical engineeriDg, "The Pre-

~~~n~;~.!':~ 0~ndJ:..."'i::!:

r;

University of Utah; "Aru.otropic
~ee ~f .:

~~~-8'ne~W s p!

Ph.D., Univenity of Minoeoota. -

.._

MILTON PLil8Uit,

....aciale pro-

~ ~:,"·E~i~:tu~s~: Withl;., tt~ 'Jhii~\i:l

SUNYAB.

Health," Cooference on the Preo-

y AB.

Raocb. Calif.

~"- POI8ftiN, viaitinc -pro- oa. w=wo: ICBOTZ, -ist&amp;Dt pro- ~:.e f!';"fb: S':"aZ~ ~
Uniwr- faaoor, otatiotico; Ph.D., SUN- · cratic lootitutiooo, s.... Yoidro

~eoooty!; i'i:i.u~; ~of.!r

waU:Y L. :waD. a • • i 1 tan t
profeu0r, School of~
"Corporate Mao-r l'lamiinl
Bued oo Simulatioo of ·lnclivid,ual Behavior."' Summer Corp&gt;rate Simulation Coilf'erence..

:U.."""rf.;..:;::;r•;:&lt;i '~he'!fc!i

~~. ~o.: i-:!·t::::; ~::..~·u'!ri:en~ty ~{~tal

ve ' ty

;t.::;1.,........,

'"1"(' 1R~o!:.ti:--..!t

DB.. IAliiSB A. ar::LASOO. U&amp;Ociate

~tt!.,~~rec!!~~~

h&amp;Dy.
DB..

profeuor, chemical engineering, ..Fundamentals
POlytni!r Science.

·

assiltant profeaoor, Scbool of M...........,..t.
"The Effect of Size, Growth, and
Industry oo the Fin&amp;Dcial Structure of ManufacturiDg Companies," S uiluppoee Organ.izzaziDM
(Italy).
·
D&amp;.. MANAK C. GUPTA,

DB.. ICENNEJ'H M . KlBEB,

auOciate

.

;...... ;r.:.-....·..:....
by tWo

PRESENTATIONS

reoOuch

Cll.laa .C. TBOK.lll, JL,

- · Weoiem New York NuclNr - r d . ee.iter, " Memuy
Pollutioo of the Eoviro:liaeDt,"

M

...;!!t :a:':::"'#:!

-

.._
-I'BIUP
---11088
--.-p-ro-~-....,-r-.---

of Manqement, $15,li00, Ford
Fouodatioo, "Eirecta of Fedenl
Labor LecWatioo."
·
.._ IJENlrfiS a. 8KITH , &amp;~~ist:aat profeuor, 1 p e e c h communication.
$9,li00, USOE. "Relatiooohip Between Communication Pattern. ~
~~lt'~~ Speech .o f

Studied by Contact Aogle Hyoter- profe..or, C hemical engineering,
"Rate of Spread of Jeto of NoD8lllll£y lltJNOZ, lecturer, Learneti.t and the Scanning Electron Newtonian Flu.idl:' lndultria.l
log Ceoter, EPIS; M .Ed., SUNY
SocMicroocope,d" AmeCanandian
·CIUI Chemical ::~.neerin1 Chemiatry FundCollece at Bulfalo.
;ety 80
.
lootitute
of Chemists, Toronto.
DL A. W. NEUJUNN, visiting auo- ' W. B OWAB:D KAHN, profeuor, law, DB.. KENNETH F. O'DitiSCOU., prochemical engineering,
~~ f;.=t_~IT'~f!~~~~ee!f '"The Lawyer abd His Con~titu- "feuor,
Aoymmetry of Monomer Unit
Main&amp;, Germany.
~~:-;~~tfa'1, ~~.~ ::0~ A..............nt in Multi-CompooOIIIIPII
•
commemorating ConatitutionDay, eot Polymen." JounuJl of Moc..romokcul4r &amp;Unce;' " Copolymer. !.wyot, ~= d==~ Bulfalo.
.
M.Ed., SUNY AB.
DL K. K . s . PILL.lY, oenior research
m~~ :~~.l!iPP=0.:ci::
Da. .....,..,W PAGANO, assistant scientiot, aod CH.llltE8 C. THOJIUS,
"Copolymeriu.tioo with Oepropf
. '
p
&gt;L
rch
W te
~··J.!f!"!""ty;. h.D., Johoo N.;..
Nuc~eoC.: :!ti"'!_' Part IV," Pol.}'"''" JourJ.er, "Determination of the Trace
":'a~·- p~eooori /~ot LeYeh in Almoopheric _ :!J:i~· l!~=
~-"' -' · Be::,_eleyruven•ty 0
J!ollutanto by Neuleon Activatioo for the Eetim&amp;tina
r--rfec--...orrua at
~
·
l\nalyois," . Cooference on Trace tion Deooity by The~

AU&amp; .........,, clinical inotructor,
II'IVIIDf 8BOIIT, uoiatant facili.
POYcbiatry; M.S.W., Atlanta Uni- ' tieo ~...::::. ooordinoto Facili
tieo
Uni:
'"' ·
-n~
·ty. ' ; M.A., otot
oa. TBOII.l8 ,_CB, lecturer, his- •v
~
tory; Ph.D., S~YAB.
G.l8Y 110K11ND, reoideot hall eli............. - - ' wllk:h DOt oa. c...,. .....-ii, - t pro- . - r , Uniwnity H.....U.,; M.A.,
booa ._.,_ ~ witbiD faaoor •. - - ~. D.Sc., Kaat State Uoiftnity.
olzty 'd,;;"'- tbo adoptiola TechDioa Ullivanity, Haifa. lo- ·11010, 'l'ioitinc --=iate pro........,_ wllk:h ~ ohall be .oe- neL .
- . . . American Stuc!ieo; M.'l\..
fernd ID tbo ~ ~- . a. 111U0 "'lft.l. ,;.,;tiDz rwNrch Co1ua11Jia Uaiwnity.
tatoo~ - ' ID oald lleoliaD _,_,_.,, . . - , . ; M.D., K,lolo &gt;OAK,........... -...,1 prolaaoor
1116.1 ... deta..,iaatioa iD ..,_ l!erf-.al Ullivanity.
Iliad&lt; Studieo; M.A. Ho;.ard
~
....~.llld oald .,_for IIIUY G.llft, loctwer, l.earDiDc Ullivanity.
Ceae,r, EPIS; B.A.. SUN_YAB.
oa. , _ lft'IIPON, lectoUer, po................. ......._ ...... .._ ~~--·- -.u,. .....,_.,....litbl ..,._;Ph.D., UDIWinity
talon ar braaltar - - . t . •
~ Sehool ol N - Cua1iu. ~
....._
ol
and-.
-.
'fioili.n«

..., _,ID
6llli by lblo - lutioa aballlllliiiY 1D ~ for

ao

GRANTS
.

y~~r. dentiotry; D .D .S., SUN- ~?.;::tf..;.:::~rsch":.!c!7't:~

!;&gt;le, Chairman Rowiaad Mid, iD &gt;OHN CLOIJTIEil, editorial 111180ci- Oil. ltALPB MASTIIOCOLA, assistant
order to avoid c:onflicte with the . ate, University Publications Ser- profeaeor, den t ia try; D. 0 . s.,
Cenle6nial Of Buffalo Stale 111111 vices; B.F.A.• Pratt lootitute.
SUNY AB.
~!;~~~. ~r: DL BOBEaT caow. aooistant profes- EDWABD KJCHAEL, assistant p..roleswhich are beiDa obaarwd nut Ph:o.Scboo
, uJvec;!ityMaofa~::!nyf: aor, phyaical education for men;
year.

ALlJ( UJtBTSKY. Uli.ttant profsaor. eocial welfare; M.S.W., Uniwmty of Marylaod.

f
~~~ IWIOYee'.,;f:,o ..eM•!?f_•
~~ --~·
aniom of Slq' Formatioo ill Horizontal Two-Phaoe Flow," Fluid
Engineerinl. Heat Traoofer and
Lubrication Coafereace, Amori..., Society of Mechanical Encineera, Detroit.,...
.._ PBlUP 11088• prOlaaoor. Scboo1
: ~;;:=D~=
trial RelatioDo A.ocia~- ol W-m Nf!W y0 ~
""

~u:f..::l'·~~
·~

d Po chcaolo

n::f'

Meaoti,'' M eta.ll.ur1U::ol TI"CCIIIGC-

tiona.

oa. """

B. I'II88TON,

Mel.U. H.

Baker Profeooor of Americao Eoterprioe, Markel$ and MarireW.,:
An. Orientotion.
,.

oa. I'BIUP 11088, profaaoor,

School

of Manqemeot, "Teamotera Reto TechoolociW Chaqe,"
Labor Law Journal.

opoooe

'*-·

C.lVOIBL

IIAL......,.., • a.iatant

profeuor, ind1.11trial encioeeriD&amp;';
"Raokin« of Mechanical E ' eenn, Ileputmeoto of &amp;:

Univenitieo," Mochanicol E,..U.uf'in6Newa. ··
•

RECOGNITIONS
,,_.., DiNAIIIIO and

.

-u
·
La ~- Noa~tad-:''t.w ,;.'k:"):~
Ma- aad IIUticil&gt;anto . . .
t h e _.. of _tbe _ludle .in

~ • • ~ b.ti~ ~ -~ ~ .iudicial ~­
___..lft'W........,
tute of Iaduotriai E.,.m.ra. ~~ Tbio oicz&gt;a!o • ~"
._A.._~ a,.....,_ fi:ae.oJ· tJ::ri; Pb;D.._. ~ ~~mr:_~ ...-~~ 'j=.,u:;t;t

Comoll
-. , _ - · . . . . . . , . .

u......

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

l'lo.D. SONYAB.

~-

- · ~ ..,.;-toa;l'b.D.

-...--:,

u...t.ueo:

~· v8eloDol•. oll·l
,.__
.. "
- " - ott·
·

Seloctioa of ~ OparaU - t y ol Mjchipa.

.._ .._.__.....__"""-•·
-

ol M·

t, ~Be-

tina aod
rof-r Herman
Scbwart&amp; of
Sehool ...

=.

:!f,Law

.

jlldpom
· a ... ,.!:"..a~.!~
~-

ohip.

,

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odo ot opbu.Jmle- G-22
~8-

CWEEKLYCOMMUNIQUE
FRIDAY-2

eru

ANNa

diredo~ nunialc
Wa~m

=·

w.· •••a•uaca. ye..

~: ~"""".l':'l.l:.!!r
mwnaw

proJram•.
~n

for Hieber Edu&lt;atioo,

A

vmw or

MUDINO DUCAnOlf' Df TID tJHIYJa8ft"Y TODAy AND 'I'Oif0880W .

Faculty Club. Harriman Library,
8 p.m. Reception followillc.

THURSDAY-8 -

SUNDAY--4
JIALKAlrf JOLit IWrfCIN'G: FiiJmoN

Ropm, Norton: 8 J1-11L

MONDAY~
, . . _ OOIU'8 ~...... : The
~ Corpo bM o~ owr-

=-

for

crach!ata. While otill

~ ~r~=~ ~r::

. - ; there are opec:illc noeCio for

t ' - with

~ ill ...,;.
-ms, math,....,.,. ud edu&lt;atioa. The Corpo rep-tatiwo
wiD. bo on . . _ - . , throu&amp;h
the 1Mb. For furthor illformalion
Art Bwb ill the Place-

-

Olloo, 881-4414.

WEDNESDAY-7
AH.U.YTJCAL CB8Kl1TKY

OOU.,O..

Qt1IUJI: Prof-r 1.8. Butler, McGill Uniftnity, Topic "' bo anDOUD&lt;:ed, 70 Aa-.., 4 P-IlL

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

VOL 2-NO. 3

SEPTEMBER 24, 1970

Ketter Names Task Force Heads, Issues Charges

.W ewLeft'

Turns Off
SomeFrosh
U/ B freshmen who attended
planning conferenoes this summer didn't like the "intrusion"
of " New Left" elements into
their small discussion groupe.
At least that is the conclusion drawn from a random survey of 150 of the 1,500 students

Campus Police Resume Patrolling
WithOut Authorization for Guns
With the reported assuranoo
that Bulfalo Polioo will be available to assist them " if and
when needed to deal with
felony crimes," the Campus l.'olioo voted Monday night to resume . patrolling "under protest."
(..,

The University made no official statement on the reported
agreement or the return to work;
nor was there any policy announood on who will decide
wben outside polioo are needed.
A University spokesman said
only that 811Y assurances given

who attended the July conferenoes.
A report issued by J obn
Buerk, chairman of the University Coordinating Committee
for Orientation, says about ten
per oont of the respondents in
his survey referred to the New
Left's presenoo. ·
•'It was unfortunate," one
student commented, "that at
the small encounter groupe the
various elements of the leftwing tried to sell their political
pbilooophy."
Another wrote : ''During one
of the afternoon sessions our
group met with a representative
from the Niagara Liberation
Front. His speech left me discouraged and a bit angry for
wasting my time on something
that did not interest me. I am
more interested in the scholastic program of the University
than the political groups."
Foul.....,._ •

A third complained that
"some student activists held a
pessimistic view of everything
at U / 8 .. - (and uaed ) surprising . . . foul language in the
presence of females."
Among the students who responded positively to the politicslization of encounter groupe
was a freshman • who wrote:
"Student diasent in the small
groupe was especially interesting. Even though I diaagreed

~

r: =.,v;:tosai~

their views before entering the
Uni.......,;ty."
A opokeoman for the Niagara
Liberation Fnmt---a ..,._ coalition ol radieal
. tions in
the City of ~led the
survey results ''manipulative"
if not an "outright lie." He said
NLF representativeS' were
bested oo.rdially by freshmen.
allbougb some hMted &amp;rRUmenta developed. He also
su-I that what they talked
about, and whetla- they spoke
at all .._ up to the group itaelf. U they aslred us to leave,
- ~ to leave. . .
it only happened twioo all sumIDill'."

.

The NLF opokeoman estimated that 1,000 freshmen
hMrd one of tbelr 2D ...tath• durinaJ odentation.
He aaid ''relevant • - wme

~" incllldi.;J!~

imperialBn and boor they ·re( - ... 3, col. J)

reflected no ••drastic change" in

University policy.
The vote to return to work

followed a four-hour meeting
between University officials and
the security force which was

supposed to have dealt with the
Campus Polioo's refusal to patrol without guns. That refusal
followed an assa ult and knifing
incident on ca mpus late last

Chairmen of live task foroos
which will study major issues
facing the Uni,versity and specific charges to esch of the groupe
were announood this week by .,
President Robert I. Ketter.
Ketter bad indicated on takr
ing office this summer his irttention to establish oorn.m.i&amp;sions to grapple with and make
recommendations on questions
facing this and other universities.
''None of these questions is
easily answered," Ketter said,
"and the answers to one will
affect the answers to all. But
they aU must be answered and
we must begin immediately a
process by which we can seek
those answen-. ·
"I am asking the live task
forces . .. to consider how we
must lind answers .. . and to
suggest answers . .. for the University's consideration. I shall
ask the chairmen of the task
forces to function as a general
steering committee and to inform me regularly or the progress of the different tssk forces
and of any needs for information they may have. In addition, the steering committee
will prepare and forward to me
the final re ports and recommendations or the tssk forces."

week.
No mention was made of the
a rms d ema nd followin g the
meeting.
Community Reletions
(·:Sri ~'~ Grey, ·an officia l of
Named co-chairmen o! the
the Wtion represen ting the camr 'f ask
ForO? on C ommunity
pus officers, outlined the agree- Relations are Richard G. Branment on Buffa lo Police a id and denburg, dean o! the School or
a lso sa id that, in the future, Management, and Dr. Ralph
"Security officers are not to be W. Loew, pastor o! the Holy
involved in a situation where Trinity Lutheran Church o!
their lives would be in danger.
The security force's principal Buffalo.
Brandenb•Jrg csme to
job is to patrol , observe and ,..._ theDean
University' in 1968 from
port, not to get involved."
( '.amegie-Mellon University in
The events leading to and .Pittsburgh where be was a lacNurrounding the difficulties with ulcy member and administrator
the ClllTlpus Polioo have been lor six years. An industrial conpieced toge the r from va rious sultant and author, the 34-yesrNOurces as folio~ :
old Brandenburg has frequently
s:poken of his concern for eduWented Jobs
cational programs "that will
On Wednesday, September meet the needs "of society" and
16, four men entered the offioo has fostered increased particior the U/ B Foundation at 250 pation of Management students
Winspesr Avenue and asked to in community activities.
"""Dr. Robert Loken, the FounDr. Loew, pastor of Holy
dation pres ident. When Dr. Trinity sinoo 1944, has been
. Loken's secretary ssid he was active in the City's civic and
not there, one of the men left religious life, havmg served as
u note reading: "Kauherum Al- president ol the Ministerial Aswakeel to see you in regards sociation. of the Bulfalo and
-to jobs 894-9436. 856-8894 ." Erie County Council of
They told the secretary they Churches and -of the Commuwanted jobs by Friday. She nity Action Organization. In
added that to the note. The 1968, he Was coordinator of Progroup then left.
ject Good Nrughlx&gt;r, the openThe same four returned occupancy housing drive for the
!!hartly after 5 J!.m. on Tlmrs- City o! Bulfalo. At present, he
day. They walked directly to is a member of !he boards or
Dr. Loken's offioo. Sinoo most directors or the DeaconeSs Hosof the office crew had gone pital, the Bulfalo Council of
home, the front receptionist World Affairs, !he Community
,...,.,t back and asked if she Action Organization of Buffalo
vould help them.
and Erie County, Niagara FronThe group asked again to aee tier HousinJ, and the Empire
Dr. Loken. When they were state Housmg F o u n d a f f i
told he was not there, they New York. He is president o
argued among themaelves, ~ap­ the boards of directors or the
parenUy became angry and left. Pastoral Counseling Center and
The four. then, "reportedly, the Lutheran Cooperative Min
walked around to the rear of istry of Bulfalo and is chairman
the Service Center Building or the Youtb Program, Bulfalo
whore they encountered Mr. Chapter, American Red Cross.
James Hurley, who bad picked Sinoo 1952, he bas' contribjlted
up his wife at Diefendorf An- a weekly column ""From My
nex. Mrs. Hurley works at the Window," to the Bu1falo CouRidlie Lea Campus and tabs rier-Exprus.
'
the ahuttle to Main Street.
'The president's charge to the
Mr. Hurley, who bad decided Task Fon:e on Community Reto taJoe a abort cut to Wilispear · lations foil"-"''"
in order to avoid . tral6c, was
" No matter is more urgent
driving eastward behind the for tbsi.University, the Niagara
Servioo Center Buildinir - the Fnmtier, and the State than
four men who bad just left the the establishment of coun;es of
( contiluu&lt;l ..,. 6. col. 1)
(eontbwed
7 . cili..Q.._

___ .. ___ _
Fall Enrollment Is 22,941
At Close of Registration
'The University's fall enroll22,941 as of the
last week,
aocordin to imoalcial filures
released
the Ollloo of Admissions and Records.

ate enrollmeht is up more than
six per cent over last year:
'The ·professional schools of

men~cbed

cl~registration

Dentistry, Law and Medicine
have a total registration of
1,322 - Dentistry,_302; La"!.
567, and Medicine, 463. The
- n inc:reoiae is aimoet 10

f,y

'The ~ ~~~~ a 7.78
per cent incrMM over the
21,286 who Biped up during
regular -registration last fall .
.Undeqnoduate studenta ..,_
count for 11,168 ol the ~
(up 4.67 per C81t) . :J1we are
5,338 ...,...... .tudenta .,_
rolled, ~ - . followa:
Graduate Sdlool, 2,1190; Mllll- t , 367; Education, 1.887;
. Social Welfare, 110; Graduate
Library 8tudloa, 134. Gnldu-

perC81

Total day registrations are
17~1 • up 5.57 per cent from
last rau's 18,935.
Retular .tudenta in Millard
Fin- Collete ~ 5,053a 16 par cent u.cr- .o'ier last
year'a4,351:
'The filwa include 1,918 etudeuta .,taring the Uni.......,;ty
directly from high acbool and
~

1.251 tranafenl.

on-

�~

2

Bush League Image, Students' Needs
·Affiong Conrerns of New tSports Boss'

Student Bar Group H_onors
Able Prof, Activist Abon .
'l1ie U/B Student Bar AtJ8c&gt;.
ciation has presented iiB 196970. "Professor of tbe Year"
award ID a faculty member
noted for "hia concern for and
bia availability ID StudeniB"
and iiB "Alumnus of the Year"
citation ID a graduate who "'has
made it bia taak ID represent
the liDPOPill4r dissidents, the
friendi&lt;HI who seek justice and
tr.dom. ..."
Recipient of the faculty
award ia Steven L LanKm who
w8s cited also for "bia ability
himseU and his ma-

:J:.i.ject

Lanlon, a graduate of the
University of Minriesota, came
1D U/ B in 1968 aa an associate
prot....,r in criminal Jaw and
criminal procedure. Before
that, be was a member of a
Jarwe Chicago Jaw firm.
The award ia partiai.Jy baaed
:m student evaluations of pror-&gt;rs made at the end of each
school year. Previous recipi~.nts
. of the faculty citation, first
P...,., in 1967, are Harold L
Kom and J.-pbine King.
Willard H. Myers ill '67, the
• Alumnus of the Year," ia the
yDI1Ilpst graduate ever ID receive that award.
Robert Penny, president of
-the SBA, aaid that the selection of Myers represents "a reetatement of the roncem of studeniB for the protection of the
rigbiB of individuals-''.

u_..-ca-

Students DizM and Rosche
say that not only was the arrest of Myers on tbia charge
"unfounded," but also "that
(Police) appeared ID chase
through the crowd in an pbvious attempt to arrest and injure this attorney!'
The students quoted former
American Bar Association
President William Gossett who
said, ''The lawyer who delends
unpopular causes, always a
rare person, is especially to be
protected by all."
" As students at his alma
mater," Dixon and Rosche ssid,
"we should not merely 'protect'
this courageous lawyer, we
should honor him. _ _ ."

Regan Given
SUNY Post
Tile University's former act·
ing president was appointed tc
a top post in the administra·
tion of new SUNY Chancellor
Ernest Boyer. The State University Trustees made the appointment yesterday.

Peter F. Regan, acting president during laat spring's campus crisis, will be vice chancellor for academic programs for
the SUNY system. Regan, a
psychiatrist who joined Ul B in
the ·early 1960's as vice president for health sciences, had
earlier resigued from U/ B .irdj~~tration in order to pursue
~-~chingand ~

"Buffalo is a bush league
place to play coUege football,"
the Roanoke ( Va .) Time•
snapped ills! fall after the bijltime Gobblers from Virgirua
Tech played UjB's "Golden
BuUs" in War Memorial Stadium. "Less than 2,500 saw the
game and- that includes second
and third string footbeU players, 25 policemetr and 13 pigeons who came only ID look
for peanuiB."
It stings local pride, but the
barb from Virgirua is near the
mark. Less than 10,000 turned
out for the Ball State game two
weeks ago and the attendance
for Toledo was 7,500. Both figures are very minor by standards applied ID "major" college football, the circle in which
U / B is supposed ID travel.
You'd expect Dr. Harry Fritz.
new director of the Division of
Physics! Education, Recreation

&amp;! A.::cs~r ~B d~;.:

by the local press, ID be concerned.
And be is. But be's not full
of panaceas. In fact, be's mystified by the lack of student and
community interest at the gate.
The classic way. to build support for an intercollegiate athletics program, Fritz says, is to
have a good program. And be
thinks WB football, in particular, has been good. (Or at
least be thought so before tbia
season got underway.)

Tbe DOmination citation for
Myen, presented by students
'You Build Attendence'
William P. Dixon and Dick
·So 11ow what? You try ID
Roocbe, called him "an almost
build attendance. And there are
unique phenomenon in tbia or
some ways that haven't been
8lly' 9,ther city todal(-"
'
tried here yel
"A\ eoormous personal sacri'For example, Fritz suggei!IB
fice," the studeniB said, Myers
that reserved student seatinghas "usually at no fee . . . dein blocs or on an individual
Dr. Robert I. Ketter will be
fended studeniB, blacks, dralt
basis-might help. This would
IMIJIU,.ted H president of
resiaters and numerous others.
encourage fraternities and resiS - University of Now YD11&lt;
Despite a very fine Jaw school
dence haUs to attend en masse,
record. _ _ be has chosen a way
be feels.
ot Bufllllo Fobruory 15, 1971
of life of hardship and idealSome schools also go into
In Klolnhons Music: Hell.
imn!'
"package weekends" with the
''In the early 1960's be was
pros in-order ID build commushot at in Mississippi when be , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - went ID work on voter regiatration. held incommunicado in an
Alabama jail for many days,
though no charges were ever
laid, and the bouae be waa living in waa dynsmited. Since
becoming a Jaw student and
lawy...- be has been subjected
ID difficulties of various kinds,
including beseless charges of
subfersive associations which
delayed his admission ID the
bar, newspaper rnatigoinils,
claims that be was misrepresenting bimaeU aa an attorney,
physical threaiB and aassuiiB."
"Among unpopular defendants," Myers has represented,
the students listed Bruce Beyers, Mark Rudd, the Hay..,
Hell 45 and student witnesaes
ID the "Kent State murders."
His Supreme Court ''victory"
in gaining a reversal of a Court
of Appeals ruling on bail for
Bruce Beyers, the s t u d-e n t s
IBid, waa of extreme signifiCIID&lt;le-

_.,tho __

Myen, the studeniB said, ia
in demand nationally aa a
~ and aa an attorney for
the "unpopular." "He hair .a,..
cently been aaked to part!Cj- pate in tbe defense of tbe
Weathermen in their fortboom~~~ before Judp
Myeis, the nomination
charged, has been the subject
of "baseless" conduct hearinp
by tbe Erie County Bar Association and faces chargee of "inciting to riot and obstzuetinl
- t a l administration. - for bia part. in attempting to
~~~
....,_ ........... ---'"
,-euerst tbe throwing of Molo11 . _ ,_ - -._......,_ ........_ 11t-p1ont
tov cocktaila by . . . . stuID o1x of • dents," durinr a campus dem- ......... ...., .
_
IUNY
'
the
pnrject
....,
- . . . , be ....tntion Jut ,..._
.. - .

=.

s.,__ 24, 1910

--....,

mural sports for the benefit of
the maas of .the student body.
He en~ the appointment
- of a full-time career speciaiiat
who will work with club sports
and other activities. This ia a
"critical" need of the University, be sayB---&lt;1 need which be
!~til~·t be ignored
. Since student fees underwrite the recrea~ program
(the mandatory fee goes for
both intercoUegiate and intramural programs), Fritz speaks
of ' an "acoountabili_ty" to stu,..,. dents. Too many athletic dinity interest, be volunteers, not rectors, be says, make . the misindicating whether or not that take of taking a "high-banded"
might be done here.
approach. He wanls ID mainThen, too, you might play a tain a "full dialogue" with stumore uattractive" home sched- dents, to "merchandise" the
ule 1 provjded you had a suit- program for them. Among sevable place to play it in-and enil reaaons for tbia might be
War Memorial Stadium, in his that a student happy with the
view , is clearly not such a recreational aapects of the proplace ). Many major schools gram will probably be a lot
have responded favorably to more responsive ID, and enthuthe idea of playing in Buffalo siastic about intercollegiate
if there is a domed stadium, sports.
Fritz also has hopes of evenbut, of course, there isn'l Despite · that, Fritz feels that the tually offering an acsdemic rnamove can and will be made to jor for the professional preperainclude on the u / B schedule lion of recreational and park
institutions "like us." Who ~:~tra!}~~~~ure scien~£'~: t i : ? a ~e';,.~ers and
At present, however, the UrnHowever , when you talk versity's professional programs
schedule upgrading you're talk- in health, physical education
ing late 1970's and 1980's be- and recreation are not aligned
csuse the gsme is booked solid with the Division of Physical
that far in advance these days. Education. Coaches and other
And when you talk 1970's and professionals are trained
1980's in terms of U / B, you're 3::".;.g~~~_!''!.,culhichty soharesf
Edubcauttalking with uncertainty. The
base of the interroUegiate ath- one faculty member with Fritz's
letic budget here is student fees division. The Division's only
and th.-, in the past, at least, "acsdemic" programs are the
have been a "sometimes thing." physical ed~cati,on "service"
Why Bother!
courses for students in UnderThe cynic might ask, "Why graduate Studies.
bother? If so few people are inAlthough be was formerly
terested in U/ B foothall, why dean of a "school" at Western
have it? Maybe it's irrelevant" Illinois which combined the proFritz blanches at tbia one It f!!§ional preperation with in·
terrollegiate, intramural and
hits him where be lives
Not that be doesn't thinJr. it "service" functions and alshould ,be discussed. "Just be- though many universities orcause we've had college foot. ganize it that way, Fritz isn't
hall for 100 years," is no$n about ID suggest that.it "ought"
ID har an examination
.~ !&gt;" ~~ w~ here. There are
we should continue to have ·t; ;v!lJid. h1stoncal reaaons for
be ssys. "Any program in' a k~ping interrollegiatf; athletics
university should attempt to d1vo~ ~m professional prepresent 1ts objectives and ex- peration, JUSt"!' !here are other
plain its place in the frame of reaaons (combmmg of personnel, pooling of faci).i~. etc.)
things."
Fritz considers it "given" that 8!~ for oombmation. ~t's
that athletics are educstionally !' decu;10n_ tha~ rests elsewhere
sound.
m the Uruvers1ty.
Sports help develop menial Outside Support
health, morale and maturity,
Returning ID the interroUebe contends. They build values giate aspects of his Division's
-such aa "discipline, sacrifice program (for which be hopes
8fl!l loyalty." He notes with ID name a director before the
pnd!' ~~ athletes who uaed ID year is out), Fritz looks for a
be giSmistled as prankster panty buildup of alumni and commu·r&amp;lders 81\' now considered very nity monetary support for cer"esta~lishmcnt," a .word be lain thinP. lgrants-in-aid and
doesn t use as an ep1thel
other incidental expenses) not
The values of intercollegiate funded by StatP .or student
sports, be feels, go beyond thMe monies-funds which are neco~~red 1D the relat,iv.ely few in- esRary, to keep the program's
dlVlduals who partiClpete. ''I've budget balanced The $100 000wa~. what happened to the plus pe)!IDe!lt f.,;. televisini the
Uruvers~ty .of Chicago and the home Holy Cross footbeU pme
many Jeswt schools that have tbia year will help in that redrop~ football," ~ says. gard, of rourae, but that can't
They ve lost somethmg that be counted on every year (alprovides "a ~ force" on cam- though TV might become ....
pus and a focus for alumni-a frequent if the caliber of titt/'"
way I'! develop school pride tesm and of the schedule pick
and brmg people together.
up). The Alumni Asaociation's
Tho Gym Should Be A Centetnew Golden BuU Fund (with a
!)n the. intramural side of full-time director) is
step
thinga, Fritz says, a weU-man- toward developing tbia neoesaged ~roperly-eqwpped campus sary outside supporl There's
athletic center can become a an interested active group of
hub of student activity-&lt;limilar potential al~ donors who
to a student uniorL A gym or · really "love" the University
con~ recreational facility Fritz points oul Bu~U. any
ouglit ID be open around tbe such funding efforiB right noW
dock. he {eels, offering a variety are "hampere&lt;J. by campus
of alternate options for "letting eveniB." "People Just don't unoll ~·"
.
··
derstand," be says.
He s delermined ID fix-up the
Even schools with phenomen- t a t gymbe tilcilitr _(inade- aUy successful footbeU proqua 88
. , . _ It 18) and
grams (whaM incomes . - ! 1D
to 1188 imqination to ""'l'U'd '-cs.-ry /1. number o1 other cam...,..,.tiona! opportunities and pus activities) are fee!in, a finfurtb. dewlap club and intra- IIDCiaJ piai:b, Fritz -

a

�S.ptermer 24, 1970

3

RightB Group
Foriried By . .

Levitts Fund Fornrula
Draws.Ire of Stu~ts

SUNY~men·
State University stall', faculty
and students formally banded

together last weekend in Albany to form the Caucus on
Women's Rights at SUNY. The
group, wt.c- purpose is to
equaliZe the status of men and
women in the State system met
to elect a steering committee
and adopt a policy statement.
The Caucus, composed of representativt!!l from 30 units in
the State system, first met last
June to begin organizing. 'Ibis
process was completed last week
when they eleoted their first
seven-member steering committee and began formal incorporation proceedings.
The members of the steering
committee are: Roberta M. Ot-taviani, assistant professor of
speech, State University College at New Paltz (oo-dlairman ); Peter K. Gessner, associate professor of pharmacology, State University of New
York at Buffalo ( oo-dlairman l ;
Irma Gray, assistant to the
president, Ulster Community
C ollege, Stone Ridge; Jblbi
Hold Miller, administrative ,._
sistant, Department of R&lt;&gt;rnanc:e lAnguages, State University of New York at Albany;
Sandra Nied, student at Monroe Community College, Rochester; Joan Schulz, associate
professor of English, State University of New York at Albany;
and Shirley Wurz, dean of students, State University Agricultural and Technical College at.
Alfred.
The steering committee_plans
to meet with the chancellors of
bath the SUNY and CUNY
systems to present their -views.
Plans ate also being· made to
meet with gubernatorial candidates in order to assess their
Stance on women's rights.
The body of 70 representatives also adopted a 14-point
proclamation dealing with the
major areas of discrimination
in the State education system.
The proclamation included demands of a free 24-hour childcare center for children of stall',
students, .administrators and
faculty, and paid pregnancy
leave of three weeks for both
parents. Other demands are
equal pay for both men and
women and an end to discriminatory hiring practices.
In light of what they term
the imba1anoe of hiring practices in the past, the group is
asking that half of the new
faculty positions and half of the
replaosment positions be filled
by women. The Caucus is also
asking for extensive counseling
programs for women to help
channel them into high-potential positions and to re-introduce women into the job and
education market after they
finish raiSing their children. Presently , the Caucus on
Women's Rights bas organizations at half of the 60 units in
Abe SUNY system. However,
1aooordlng to U / B's Dr. Daphne
Hare, active member of the
Caucus, they soon hope to have
ca...,._ in all units.

--.u.T

SENATOR

llollob 'fOrelectlort of 1wo SUNY
by tho U/ B non·hNith
oc:iencel flculty end profeulonal
ltlfl how been clrcuiltod by the
1oc11 Foculty Slnltl oflice. C.ndi-

-..o

d8t81 for a one-yen term to re·
.,._ - Wlllilm Beumer, who hn
becornl vice chllrmon of the local

Sonota, ore: ca~ Pepls, Goorae
Hochlllld end LMWr Milbrath.
Rumlng for a-twO-yeor -term, to
...,._ UKutlve Vice President
Albert Somlt, ore: Howard :j'iecl&lt;el·
mann. Malrvin Feldman and Her·
mon Sc:llwo11z. llollob lhould be
returned to tho Slnltl Office no
illar thin October 2.

Fredonia, New Paltz, PlattsBy STEVE LlfMAN'
New York State Comptroller burgh and~
Levitt aociJsed the student
Arthur levitt's recommends·
tion for the control of student body of Buffalo State of allowactivity fees by the SUNY ing "an aggnissive minority" of
Board of Trustees, and the sub- students to control annuaf fees
sequent passing of a court order of more than $400,000.
Speaking to the question of
to that effect at the State University at Albany have met control of funds, Mark Borenwith strong student opposition stein, U / B Studen( Asaociation
treasurer, said that all control
on this campus.
Levitt based his recommen- over the 'more than $700,000 in
s
uch fees annually colleoted
dation on the complaint of Albany student Kenneth Stringer here is now held by students.
The
actual power is in the
that student funds are being
spent for upolitical"' purposes hands of the Student Coordinating
Council-a body of 12
and on his audit of student
activity fees at seven SUNY elected undergraduates, eight
uni ts. In addition to Albany, · coordinators-at-large and four
those units are Buffalo State, officers-and the Finance Comthe Agricultural and Technical mittee of the Student AssociaCo ll ege a t Canton and the tion, composed of five underState University Colleges at graduates appointed by the Coordinating Council. Bc-renstein
is- head of the Finance Committee.
Figures for the 1969-70 fiscal
year compiled by Borenstein
show that of tl)e 570Q,OOO, about
$200,000 went to the Student
Monday night's first-of-the- Association for operating ex·
yea r War Rally held on the penses; another 5222,000 was
:ileps of H a rriman Library was allocated to Sub Board I which
unusua l in a number of re- controls the Uruversity Union
spects:
Activities Board, the Publica• No police or administra- tion Board, and the maintentors were visible. Meetings of ance of Norton Union; and
-Seventy-one per cent of this sort usually attract many 5250,000 was given directly to
the students said they devel- police officers.
the Athletic Review Board. The
oped a more realistic view of
• No violence was called for, remainder of the funds, bethe University than they held nor did any occur. 1n fact, " no tween $100,000 and 5200,000,
prior to the Summer Planning trashing," was the byword for went to student organizations.
Conference. Twenty per cent the meeting which was held to Of that total, S66,457 went to
did not.
· acq uaint newcomers to campus lhe c a mpu s' 12 politically-Of those who developed a politics, and to explain plans oriented clubs which include
more realistic view, 82 per cent for a community-wide revolu- the Arab Cultural Club, Stusaid their view was "positive," tionary movement. The finit dents for Israel, Black Student
18 per cent were "turned off." siBtement the leader of the rally Union, SDS, and the Bail Fund.
Significantly, twice ~ many made, after reading messages
. The s ingl~ l'argest expendiwomen as men developed a from Bruce Beyer, draft·resister ture·\YaS for t he B.s.U.'s Bi-eaknegative view oJ U/ B, and now in asy lum in Stockholm, fast for C hildre n Program
nearly all those with a negative Sweden, and from Dr. Timothy which received 821,300. This
view were from the New York leary, was, ··we don't plan to sum was made possible by a
City area.
bum the University and (Presi· student referendum which aldent ) Ketter down, we don't located the program an unde-Twen ty per cent were plan to kill a ll the E. J . Burke fined
amount, although not the
bored with the orienta tion, 80 security guards."
828,000 ~hich was asked for.
per cent were not.
• No marches or demonstraStudent reaction to I evitt's
-Students were essentially tions occurred. An end-of-the- proposal for trustee control
positive in their feelings and meeting proposal for a peaceful of funds was overwhelmingly
views about their conference ex- demonstration around campus negative. or the students quesperience and the University as was defeated by a chorus of tioned by the R eporter, alm!&gt;St
boos from the 500 onlookers 90 per cent opposed the action.
a whole.
·
who quickly filed back into A typica l reaction was that of
Norton Hall for a rock concert. Jeff Lazroe, 1968 Buffalo grad• The flyers announcing the uate, who said, "I'm against it.
rally fully identified their pub- Studeni,S pay the fees, students
lishers as YA WF, SDS and the spend the fees, students should
Niagara Liberation Front be able to decide where they
Many flyers in the past carried go."
scientists and by committee no identification.
Similar sen timet~ ts were
members.
·
Aside from the above, the echoed by sophomore Dan Cook
The committee, composed of rally was like all the others on who said that ~vitt's proposal
Professors Peter Lansbury campus during the last few "is full of s -- -. I don't think
( chairman), John Brodie, John years. Protesters marchep anybody in Albany could justify
Isbell, Daniel Murray, Werner around with Viet Cong flags, controlling student money."
K. Noell, Kenneth Paigen, and rag torches, and banners proDarold Wobschall, el~J)ects to claiming "Support Mid-East
meet frequently in the next Liberation," and "Free the N.
four to six weeks.
Y. Panther 21." leJ!.ders of the
'"Nominations will be received rally wore sca rve s on their
gladly, p~eferably in writing faces, so they could not be
and containing such useful in· identified and "later arrested."
The · new system of handing
formation as biographical data,
Most of the ~ers were out Buffalo parlting and moving
recent publications, and a brief applauded, especially by the vi olation tickets on oampus
statement of the nominee's cur· rally's organizers sitting on the ( Reporter, September 17) is
rent scientific activities and grass in front, but some speak- much more equitable than the
their significance,'' the Office of ers were booed. Especialfy an one it replaces, Robert E . Hunt,
the Academic Vice President Arab representative of the
says.
Palestine Solidarity Committee ~~r::~~:~~~health
"It would be especially help- who, with a turban-like towel
Under the old system, he said
ful to have an assessment of draped over his head, told the there was a lack of "account;.
how the nominee would 'fit' crowd that "the Syrian troops ability ." Ticket fines were
into, and be attracted to, one are fighting for the Jewish known to have totalled as much
of the- Unive-:sity's scientific people."
as several hundred dollars. And
salients and vice versa. In conThe Arab also attacked the while the student had. to pay
sidering potential Einstein American press, saying " the the fines in order to get tranChair nominees, it is felt that American media lies to the peo- scripts, register • or graduate,
'Molecular Biology' should be pie, and it's foolish to believe etc., anyone else receiving
interpreted in the broadest what the _pig press says about tickets on campus (including
sense, a more important con- the Mid-EasL"
faculty, stall' and guests) did
sideration being the unquestionA member of the Black Pan- not have to pay.
·able merit of the individual and ther Party drew laughs when
Now everyone must face the
the pro&amp;pee!s for his continuing he told stories of the Panthers Buffalo Police.
exoellenoe and productivity.~
outsmarting police in La;
A third type of ticket-for
Nominations should be "'!Ub- · Angeles. His sllouts of "Power towing-is also part of the new
\nitted by October 1, 1970, to to the People," and "Death to system but will be issued by
Mrs. K. Flickinger, Office of the the 'Fascisll.l&gt;igs" were answered the University. Cars which are
Academic Vice President, 201 almost religiously with re- towed will be impounded at a
Hayea.
8pOD8e8 of ''Right-on!"
special facility on campus.

War Rally'
Is UnusUal

New L e f t - - - - - - - - (con tinued from page 1. col. 1)

late to the University, and the
coming Fascism in America."
The spokesman a d d e d that
group leaders sometimes asked
them to leave, or attempted to
"change the subject when we
were really getting into things,''
but "we ignored them."
'They Were Not RefllctJve'

Mr. Buerk conclud ed that
"although• the sudden• and •unexpected intrusion of the New
Left element into some of the
small groups made us all ·angry
and uncomfortable, the net effect was 09ntrary to what the
New Left apparently intended.
That is, they were either argued down or rejected because
they were not reflective. FreshJ;neD do not like to be talked at
aitymore than upperclassmen."
Among other results of
Buerk's survey were the following:

Waddington to Leave U/B,
Einstein Nominees Asked
The Einstein Chair of· Molecular Biology, presently occupied by Professor C. H. Waddington, will become vacant
after the 1970-71 academic year,
the UnM!isity has announoed.
In order that "an active scien·
tist of the highest stature may
be chosen to fill the chair after
Dr. Waddington's departure,''
President Ketter bas appointed
a search committee to spearhead evaluation of candidates
recommended by University

Baird, Philbin

To Be Honored
~~;!.~~- ~~d":~Ge::~

U/ B's Athletic Hall of Fame
October 2 during the 45th AnnuaJ Homecoming ceremonies.
Baird, Williams College '28,
bas been close I y associated
with Buffalo's interalllegiate
athletic program for many
years. He iS chairman of the
University at Buffalo Council
and recently served on the University's Presidential Search
Conunittee.
Philbin, an All-Pro defensive
end with the New York Jets,
c:unently on the injured
list, is one of twO ex-U / B players active in profeMional football. The other ia Jolm Stofa of
Miami.

"""rve

NewTagSystem
Said 'Fairer'

�If the University Can't Run Itself,
Others Will -Provide the Governance
f.?;23R!J!~ci.J:~~~

.,....,._,. iD the &amp;poi'Ur (Sep-

- r 10, _L970)," Dr. Warren
Bu.llotl writa, "it OCCIIlS to me
that the clooiJur broadoide from
the entwhi!e "l'"emporary Execu·
liw CouDCil (TEC) mil!ht juot
~Y be wortb considerinfl for
publioolion. Styliotically, I otill
like it. Ud · it was unanimously
by the CouDCil members, iDcludinc studento, spread

•PP""""'

R:i:f muc.h ~ our local
. Dr.

S.ptember 24, 1970

~

-4

~aa

po-

8

a member of

~io·~~ Jaat_ap~r.

dent run the campua~d­
ed wben P!Mident Ketter took

oftice tbio summer.
In licbt of - t media charges
that the Uniftnily ia adrift upon

~~f :~~::.id-=:

Ketter baa indicated that a reinternal orpnilation and govemanoe is a major conciem of hil
administration, the TEC statement rer:lAins pertiDent.

vampinc and clari6cation of

...

The disturbmoes of this winter and 8pl'inJ . haw shown,
among other thinp, organizational and policy failwes within the University. These have
furtheled the disaffection of
students, Bl.,.,,O the response
of administrators, and cauaed
the of members of the
faculty.
Orpnizational failures cannot be compensated for by the
appeamnoe of a new president.
We should not in any eveot depend upon a Mooes to lead us
out of the wilderness. Therefore, we must tum our energies
to the conection of these flaws.
While we oarmot e:&lt;pect an untroubled University in a
troubled society, tbi structure
of the University should not ex= t e and CDmJlO)Uld diffiAXIOMS

L We would not eipect our
own or any other policies to be

invariably correct. We are all
familiar with shortcomings in
planning, but in general we
would e:&lt;pect an unplanned fu.
ture for the University to be
Ieos pleasant and less predictable than a planned one. We
are obligated to tske part in the
:::'opment of plans and poli·

n. As its title says, State
University of New York at
Bulfalo is a state university,
suPported and, therefore, to a
degree controlled bv the State
of New York. This control
predicates 80IDe sorts of accountability w h i c h, bowewr
~le, must be kept in
mind. The Ol1!y "free" university is an unhmded university.
Any other supposition is naive
0&lt; hvpocritical.
.
State University of New
Y orlt at Buffalo is in most ways
n!l8p0DIIIble for its internal organization and local policies.
This is 88 it should· be, and in
aome IU"e88 local aut·o nomy
ahould be~. Not deny-

m

ing the authority of Albany,
nor the competenoe of officials
there, in most matters Buffalo
decisions will tend to be better
than Albany decisions.
.A. a correlate, the \ocal'
formulation of local policies
must not suffer neglect. Not to
exercise autonomy is to allow
it to die.
IV. As with Albany-Buftalo
relationships, so with the Buffalo Council-&lt;:amptJii relationships. Matters of academic policy should be treated as primarily the concern and responsibility of the on-&lt;:ampus administration, faculty, and
(where appropriate) student
body. Even in the selection of
a president, the vital jnterest of
the campus oommunity must
be recognized through appropriate procedures for consultation and oonaent.
V. Policies formulated and
decisions made on the campus
will haw a greater likelihood
of adequacy if they are made
on the basis of advii::e and consultation with..Jbose concerned.
It is impossili to have complete concurrenoo in any mat,..
ter, but- not impossible to elicit
objections, and so predict consequences. Many have chosen
not to participate in campus
_gnvernance. T h i s dereliction
has in its way been as expensive as wdhinking dissent.
VI. It will sometimes be
necessary to implement policies which seem imperfect,
• even while reconsideration is
soughl By now it is clear that
our failure to act will not prevent action, but lead to action
by others who are less sympathetic and less well informed.
We know the argument that
some actions are morally objectionable, and that this moral
objection should override statute, regulation, or policy. We
would not completely disagree,
but do note that such responses
may produce pain and, more
importantly, be counter-productive, or even (perhaps rare-

qTIEWPOINTS
ly ) wholly disproportionate to
the original objectionable action.
IMPERATIVES

L Rational planning is probably our most important task.
Input from appropriate constituencies must be the basis for
deciding University ·policies.
The policy formed or major,.di!'cision takeo without this advice
arid consultation has a congenital handicap. There is a need
for this advice and consultation
not only by University-wide
legislatiw bodies, but also
within faculties, schools, colleges, and departmeota. Cumulatiwly, departmental decisions
probably haw much more ef-

feet upon the live&amp; of students
than tboBe of larger OQI&amp;Dizations do. For these reasons
departments should encourage
wide participation in policy

making

II. Timeliness is a necessity.
An action long postponed is
often little better than no action at all Tlie proposal detained for months or years depreciates during its detention.
For administration this may require clarification of roles. For
facUlty and students it will require that major governance obligations be giwn a higher priority and explicit recognition:
They cannot be something relegated to the time remaining
after resellreb, teaching, and
study.
m. Executive powers should
also be specified. The location
of responsibility for execution
of policy should be specific and
well-defined, though local policy making should be the
concern of many. There is
undefined or overlapping responsibility in many areas,
most obviously betweeo Council and Seoate, between Albany
and Buffalo. This can result in
conflict and indefinite postponemeot or a hiatus in which
no office is responsible.
In the best of all worlds, no
decision would be punitive. In
this particular world it is necessary to enforce compliance
with regulations. The responsibility for this musi be accepted and fixed , and acted
upon.
CONCLUSION

Although it is, no panacea,
governance is a necessary condition for maintaining and improving the University. The
process of governance has suifered from neglect and has been
damaged by the stress of
events. On this campus nothing
more urgently requires attention. -We urge, as ooncrete
steps, to be taken concurrently:
Facutty

The speedy reconsideration
of the By-Laws of the Faculty
Sens,te. This should not be further postponed, &lt;t&gt;ither for convenience or in the hope of
perfection. ( NOTE: The Seaate meeting on this topic is
scheduled for October 15.)
StuEarly development of a constitution for a new form of
Student Govemmeol
Faculty and Studenta

The development of .procedures to assure student input
into departmental and college
policy and decision making,
and otherwise to maximize participation in governance. '
Our geoeral concern is for
function rather than form in
these matters, and we acknowledge that the form is the prerogatiw of tboBe immediately
involved. U these matters are
giveo a fraction of the time
they deserve, modifications of
organizations or reorganizations should be completed in
1970.
latal Admlnlolnltlon-lluflalo

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H•,..,.._, Robwt S.

Iriiii&gt;edia:tely upon the arrival
of a new president, a review of
the University's internal administrativ~ structure. A lad[ of
clarity as to the roles of chairmen, provOsts, deans, and vice
presidents has impeded decision making and in some an:ax
the development of the Uni\Prsity. (NO'l'E: This is the conoem of one of the new Uriiwrsity task foroee.)
The apecillc matter of responsibility f&lt;&gt;&lt; t1ie direction of the
security foroe. demands immeOiate attention. (NOTE: 'lbe
Security Force ' - """" ....
sipled to the eac:utiw vice
· (co~ on P&lt;JII' 6. col. 2)

'"You ·Can Feel

T~e

W

And Know ASk
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Reporter SUJ/1

Taking and printing quality photographs is slightly out of style today.
Oh, everyone admires Ansel Adams
and his prints for their clarity and
sjuu-pness. But very few people ,are
willing to go to the trouble to actually produce prints like thal One of
the few meo who does is Milton R&lt;&gt;govin, now exhibiting photographs in
the Center Lounge of Norton.
Iri Rogovin's prints you can feel tbe
woodgrain and know the texture of a
skirl You can see the smudge on a
child's cheek or flick olr the chipped ·
paint on a bike.
'F.,..attan "*&gt;ppe'

The title of the exhibit is Appalachia but the subject matter is the "forgotten people" who live in the hollows
of tbe region. Rogovin's mission in
photographing the area was not to
show poverty or backwater ways but
to "show the region as it is." As a
result, the pictures of the hill people
preseot a certain dignity and pride
in life. The poverty is tqere but so is
the love of a father for his son, and
the comfortable familiarity of a long
married couple.
Not all the pictures actually have
individuals in them but. the feeling is
that tbe people just left the room or
will arrive shortly. One picture is a
simple part of a living room with an
old chair iii the corner and a gun on
the wall. The photograph shows the
creases of long wear on the anns and
seat of the chair and the ·circles made
by gun oil on the wall. You can almost
see the man whose favorite chair that
is and the woman who is his wife.
This picture doesn't need a person for
you to know about the human presence in the room.
The power so evident in the photographs isn't inunediately evident in
the photographer. A quick glance at
Rogovin doesn't engrave his face on
your brain. He's a smallish man whose
balding bead is circl.ed by a fringe of
white. tlis manner is that of a kind
grandfa"'her whom you could trust and
the eyes, sheltered by ihin glasses,
are kind.
But the lines of his face and the set,
determination of his mouth betray a
man who has a purpose that can't be
put off. Perhaps it is this tenacity
that makes him such a good photographer. His whole method of attack
in "his work," as he calls pbotograpby,
is one of dogged IJ"rs.iatence until be
geta the desired resull
'-..HT-Yaaro'
Many times the result talu!e years
to obtain. His first photographic series
on the storefront churches in Buftalo's
black ghetto took O\ler thn!e years to r
complete. He spent all his free time
in the area and, though not a religious ·
man, spent Saturdays and Sundays in
the churches pbotograpbinc the worshippera.
His current aeries on Appalachia
again reflects this driw. His interest
was first sparked when 78 miners were
killed in a mine explooion. He then
began to look fO&lt; people he might
know in the area and to ask friends
if they knew anyone in West Virginia.
Through ,rus proceas, be met l)r. Donald Rasmuaaen, a doctor whose practice is in the hills of Kentudty and
West Virginia. Dr. RasmU88ell was
able to take Rotovin and his wife to
families, far back in -the hills. They
met and p'ho~ families whose
11008 and h~ W..re dying of black
IUD( ru-; &lt;&gt;&lt; met ~women
with , . _ lilra Ivory La
. Eodl
ol the· ............... in~··-­
hibit -has a story. to it and .m of the

.----=--;_-----

�5

Septeai&gt;er U, 1910

people pbotegraphed is now a friend. ·

'oodgrain,
:irt's Texture'

-ltUkeltll
,
~gavin's pbfi0010phy-of photography

-is to seek out what is there and photograph it. He simply asked the people
of the bill$. to show themselves as they
wanted to. He had them sit on their
porches as they always do and took
their pictures ·as they told Anne, his
wife, about their families.
•
Rogoviit now bopes to pass on his
techniques and philosophy to students.
His desire is to take a small group of
students and encourage them to photograph their neighborhoods. "I want
them to look and say things about
what they see."
But even if Rogovin doesn't get to
teach photography on a formal basis,
you can Jearn just looking at his work.
You Jearn not only about Appalachia;
you also develop a#deep sense of wonder at the images that can he captured
by a camera when time and care are
taken.
Rogoviri's exhibit will he at the Center Lounge, Norton, until September
30th.

., .

A.New Voice for The Black Man's Civilization
and, more important still, black intellectuals want to reclaim their lost ,
rights."

A quarterly P.Ublication devoted to
"the defense and edification of the
Black Civil~tion in all its dimen·
sions and variations" has been launched from a Buffalo base by Professor
S. Okechukwa Mezu of the Department of French who came to U / B tast
year following diplomatic service for
the now-defunct Republic of Biafra.
Known as the Blnck Acodemy Review, the quarterly is interdisciplinary
and "non-protest" in outlook. " It is
Black," Dr. Mezu says, "to emphasize
its primary but not exclusive orientation and control. It is Academy to un dersoore the honesty, excellence and
high standard envisaged. It is a Review that will thoroughly examine all
sides of issues and events."
· Although Dr. Mezu views the publication as an extension of his academic work, he emPhasizes that it is
.. an independent voice," not funded or
controlled by the University.
The journal and its parent publishing house, Black Academy Press, Inc.,
are the outgrowth of the determination and ded ica tion of Mezu and some
of his associates who were willing to
spend their own time and money in
an effort to foster positive intellectual
contributions to t h e ongoing blackwhite dialogue.
There were other precipitating fac·
tors also.

Six·W- Experts

Moreover, Mezu and his associates
felt that black African writers, driven
to European white houses to publish,
have trouble breaking into print; "Often mediocre works by 'experts' with
six weeks of heavily financed helicopter research experience of Africa and
the West Indies are preferred to the
sincere and serious analytical effort"
by Africans themselves."
" Not that foreigners are incapable
of accurately interpreting African and
black cultural values," Dr. Mezu feels.
but the native ought to have an opportunity to present his own interpretations.
"The blacks and those genuinely interested in their well-being must rely
on themselves if they want to correct ly inform the world about their
problems;• Mezu said.
Dr. Mezu sees his movement as being similar to the kind of black consciousness which in 1948 Jed to the

Gf'EATURES

A Redolmlng of Rights

In an introductory annollf).cement
tast spring, Dr. Mezu - who is-both
editor of the Review and president of
the Press -explained that the Press
iH associated with the move by "~
black intellectual . . . to reclaim his
rights in a multiracial society and affirm his responsibility io his people in
our complex pluriverse.,.
"Black Academy Press, Inc., is
unique," Mezu said:
"It will he the first publishing bouse
ever that will give writers and scholars
direct opportunity to own shares in
the corporation and thus have a great
voice in its management.. ..-......"~uae also of the great boom in
/1!lllCir studies programs, there is today
a proliferation of books in : this area.
Quick financial remuneration with
flashy titles- not excellence and honesty - have guided several publishers
in their produCtion of books dealing
with' black culture;"
1be intellectuals grouped in Black
Academy Press, Mezu said, "will do
thejr best to protect a public lp!Xious
for honest and accurate information
from being unduly exploited )&gt;y authors apd ~concerns whose primary interest aeema to he money. ...
Buffalo Aaodemy Press, Inc., ia ~
..... to the ..,;....J
ol the ......
fCiriii8Doe artist qainst l!lllll!lllliW COD·
trol by ~-artists. Now, intellectuals

.....,t

1

establishment of Presence A(ricaine
by francopbone . blacks in Paris with
the help of French writers and intellectuals including Jean Paul Sartre.
1be Review was the first activity of
the Press. Its initial issue appeared in
the spring of this year with articles
such as "Poetry and Revolution in
Modern Africa" by Mezu; "Minority
Programming 4!h- American Commercial Television Networks" by Arnold
Gibbons; and "White Elq)erts, Black
E][pertS and Black Studies," by Pat
M . Ryan-"a series of scholarly topics," the editor summarizes.
In the second issue, Sununer 1970,
specific programs for blacks in American universities were considered along
with similar projects on the high
school level. 1be slant, Dr. Mezu says,
was an examination -or "what's happening." Articles in the issue sought:
to determine what's behind such programs, to examine critically the resistance of traditional disciplines to
"encroacbment" by the -programs, and
to assess reactions of students who often are not happy with the "special"
tag applied to them.
A'Flnt'

This,· 'Mezu feels, ~luted both
the first practical examination of the
and the first publiabed reo•
' liaaa m ...,. !My may be
impnwed in practiao, rather dish .in
"theory.~

-'

This interest will continue in the
next issue of the journal with an examinatiOn of the timely topic of special legal education pro g rams for
blacks. Also to he included in the fall
number are articles on West Indian
and black American literature, and a
piece on Martin Luther King.
The Review f which sells for $2 an
issue; $7. a yea r ) has a present circulation of 5,000 and is di, Lributed in
the U.S., Canada, the West Indies,
Great Britain and Africa.
Its contributing editors (those who
have agreed to suppl y articles over
the course of time ) · include colleagues
and friends of Dr. ~Jezu a t U / 8 , at
other American colleges ,and un iversi ties, and abroad. U/ B editors include Dr. Albert H. Berrian, associa te
vice president for academic affairs;
D ea n Fre d Burk e ·of lnternat!onal
Studies; J ames Miller of the Black
Studies Program; and Dean C l aud~
Welch of Undergraduate Studies.
Three Books

In addition to the R eview, the Black
Academy P ress-in its first six months
- has published three books; ' The
Tropical Dawn by Mezu, ..poems witl,
an introductory piece on poetry pnd...
revolution in modem Africa;"' Alien
Cultures by Amechi Anumonye, M.D.,
director of the Department of Psychiatry, Martland Hospital Unit, New
Jersey CoUege of Medicine; and Nigerian Vignettes, a collectio.n of essays,
photographs and drawings. More
books are planned.
Dr. Mezu, educated at Johns Hopkins rPh.D. J and Georgetown U niversity ( undergraduate), blends his
publishing activities and his professorial role in French with still another
academic interest. This ear, he is
serving as chairman of the University's still embryonic Program in African Studies, a consortium of some 30
faculty members interested in Africa.
We are trying to sell thi. University on
the idea of bringing together and supporting expansion of the various African-related courses throughout the institution, he says, noting that tast year
these couraes registered approximately
900 students. While African Studies
have points of convergence with Black
Studies l which are primarily American in outlook /, Dr. Mezu explains,
they also have areas of divergence
which distinguish them as a aeparateaca~c~t.
'
In eoiSence, Dr. Mezu says, all of his ·
~ ·acti.v ities have two common denominators: to ClOIDbat "ttle "Tarzan and
the Jungle" llJil!.IOilCh to understanding of the black world, aDd to ward
all the leDdeacy to exploit and then
focget about the important issues of
black culture.

�I ··.
s.ptember U, 1910

6
.Canlp_l&amp;Police~~·-.:....._

Are Named

Spotted Neor HQes

:::.,~L,~~Ti:;

two were Maoed and then ran
from the building.
The officers in the building
screamed over their walkietelkies that the men were running from Hayes.
~Comot..t

About silt officers aooompanjed by Security Director
Kenneth P. Glennon cornered
tlie two suspects where Hayes
"B" and Hayes "C'" meet.
Campus Police stood back . as
one suspect threw a razor-like
knife to the other, who threw
it back. As the knife hit the
ground the Campus Police officers ~ed in and frisked the
suspects, placing balidculfs on

•vo-S.Ifll

Campus Police ahnounoed that
as of 7 p.m. that evening
(Thursday. Septe~r 17 ) they
would no longer patrol the campus without firearms.
They made it clear that they
were not on strike. They would
report to work, but would remain in their headquarters at
196 Winspear.
At 6 p.m. the following evening (Friday, September 18)
the force again confirmed this
position by voting unanimously
not to patrol the campus without firearms.
Police Statement

At 9 p.m. Friday evening,
William Robertson, president
of Local 1792, Council 82 of
the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees l AFlrCIO ) , issued
this statement:
_ "~1 ,William Robertson, am
SpeaJUng
as president of Local
1792. This local includes the
State Universities at Buffalo
and Stony Brook and also State
Colleges at Buffalo, Brockport,
Oswego 'and Farmingdale, just
to mention a few.
"The rank and file has decided to accept the direct order
!TOm the administration to work
tomorrow's football game, but
under protest.
"The administration of the
University at Buffalo has assured the University Police that

One of the suspects screamed
to bystanders that they should
notify hie Embassy, the name
of whicb was not distinguishable.
The two men arrested were
identified as Ameer Albark and
Kauberum Alwakeel, also
blown as David J. Wilaon. Neither is known to bave
ollicial
connection with ihe University.
Sbortliafter the incident, the

an

'

(continued from page 4, col. 3t

ident.)

Ill!!''

~ Counpl and campus

A clear statement or reiteration of the responsibility of
the local University Council
vis a vis faculty and student
A review and clarificeti?ns of

P~ures for the selection '!f

a pres&gt;dent,_ to assure appropn&amp;!".faculty and student consultation.
. c.ntr.1 and l.oc8l Administration
A systematic review and perbaps oodificetion of the authority of the trustees, the Cbanoellor's office, and the local
campus.
As a general task, the formal

euaoa&lt;muu

·-=--~~
"=='~: -=--~~

.

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

TO IIID8E LEA
7:4S AM
7:55
1:15
1:25•
1:35
8:05
8:15
1:4!5
8:25
, 1:~
8:35
8:45•
2:05•
8:55
2:15
2:25
9:05
2:35
9:15
2:45•
9:25•
2:55
9:35
9:45
3""
9:55
3:15
3:25•
1o:o5•
3:35
3:45 •
10:15
10:25
3:55
10:35
10:45'!.
4:05•
10:55
4:15
4:25
, 4:45
11:05
11:15
11:25•
5:05
11:35
5:45
11:45
11:55
6:25
12:05 PM'
12:15
7:05
1.2:25
7:45
12:35
12:45'
8:25
12:55
9:05
9:45

MAIN CAIIfiUI
1:05•

.,.,.
1 ~15

8:15
8:35
8;45
8:!55

1:35
1:45'
1:55
2:05
2:15
2:25•
2:3!5
2:4!5
2:55

A new ombudsman and an
9:05•
'acting provost for the Faculty
9:1!5
of Arts and Letters were among
9:25
9:35
new appointments made by the
9:45'
University this week.
9:55
3:05•
Meanwhile, unconfirmed re..
10:05
3 :15
ports continued to circulate that
10:15
3:25
10:25•
3:35
the search committee for a suc10:35
3:45•
cessor to Provost Douglas M.
10:45
3:55
10:55
Surgenor of the Faculty of
Health Sciences is looking for
tl:os•
4:15
11:15
a "vice president" for that area
4:2!i'
11:25
4 :35
rather than a provost. U true,11:35
4:45
the change in title would serve
11:45'
5:05;.
11:55
to significantly alter the seven12:05 PM
5:25
faculty organizational structure
12:15
12:25'
introduoed by former President
.~' ~~~~
12:35
Martin Meyerson.
12:45
12:55
7:25
Named University ombudsman · is Professor Robert H.
8:05
8:45
Stem of political science, a
member of the University fac9:25
ulty for the past 20 years.
10:05
In making the appointment,
SCHEDULE-Thou buHs
President Robert L. Ketter 'SATURDAY
martled with an a5t•rlsk will run on
said, "The office of the ombudsSaturdays.
SUNDAY-No busas sehedul•d .
man, in its first year of existence on our campus, has proven Bu• Stop-a:
Main StrMt C.mpusto he invaluable in the fair
Oiaf•ndorf Annu (loop)
and speedy resolution of indivRid&amp;• L..Bulldina 4236, Interim C.mpus
idual grievances. To maintain
ACTUAL TRAVEL TIM E ONE WAV
'its remarkable effectiveness, the
IS APPROXIMATELY 15 MINUTES.
office must remain independent
and he respOr1l!ible to the Uni- MAIN CAMPUs-ELMWOOD OFFICE·BELL
versity community in general.
l .. ln Ca=~~:::r Fri~1• to
l. .ln
''I fully intend that everyone to Elmwood Offica
in the University administra- ~~M
~~:~~M
C::~M
9:20
9:30
tion will cooperate fully in ap- 9:00
10:20
10:30
propriate ways with Dr. Stem 10:00
11 :00
11:20
11:30
12:20 PM
12:30 PM
in his new role and hope for 12:00 PM
1:00
1:W
1:30
a similar oooperative spirit 2:00
2:20
2:30
· throughout the faculty, student 3:00
3:20
3:30
3:55 Goes Di rectly To Bell 4:20
body and steff."
Bypaulna Elmwood
Stem, 50, a native of HerkiOffices
4:45
5:05
5:15
mer, N .Y., holds an A.B. from
the issues of weapons and re- Syracuse University and three Bus stops:
Mai n C• mpus-Oi•fendorf Anno
classification will be resolved degrees from Harvard - an
Elmwood Officn--ln Perkin&amp; l o t ,
Ju5t ·North of SUNVAB .Offices
no later than 6:00 p.m. Mon- M .B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. He
Bell Facility-In Parkin&amp; lot Di rectly
day, September 21, 1970."
joined the University in 1950
Behind SUNYAB r.cilltles - •
At aboot 10:30 that same eve- as an assistant professor of gov- •THIS SCHEDULE IS- IN EFFECT ONLY
ON THOSE DAYS THAT CLASSES ARE
ning, President Robert L. Ket- ernment.
BEING HELD.
ter issued this statement:
Named acting provost of Arts THERE WILL BE NO BUS SERVICE ON
Private Security Fo~a~
and Letters is Professor SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS OR HOUDAY&amp;.
PfeaM CMclt Bulkttn
Peri·
"Effective immediately, the Thomas E . Connolly of Eng- odtCIIIlJ
For Any Chanps In The SctMdMain Street c:~~mpus of the Uni- lish. He succeeds Eric Larrabee ule ~ Mllhf Rnurt OU. To Chanctna
N-.
versity will be patrolled by non- who resigned from the UniverUniversity security personnel sity September 1 "to take a
on 8 round-the·&lt;:lock hasis. This more active role in the New
patrol will remain on duty un- York State Council on the
ti l our own security staff re- Arts," as the official University
sumes normal functions. This announcement put it. A specu·
action has been taken to en- lative article in the Buffalo Evesure the safety of our Univer- ning News last spring indicated
'Sity community."
that Larrabee was to he named
The "non-University secu- director of the Arts Cow&gt;cil.
rity'' agency was E. J. Burke Tbat report, however, was never
After many struggles, the ..,
Security Systems, Inc. Their confirmed. Last Saturday, a Day Care Center will finally
patrol began at approximately News story about an Arts Coun- open ita doors today. However,
cil action referred tO Larrabee the Center will be given only
11:45 p.m. Friday evening.
As announoed, Campus Po- i:.,~':,~trator" of the organ- a two-week trial period in the
Acting Provost Connolly has basement of Cooke Hall dormilice did patrol the football game
on Saturday. Several police been on the University faculty tory as stipulated in a vote
by the residents. .
dogs were also on band.
since 1953. He holds a B .S. Tuesday
Tuesday's vote determined
; Sunday afternoon, a group of 'degree from Fordham Univer- whether the women of Cooke
the wives and children of the sity, and an M .A. and Ph.D. would temporarily give up their
Campus Police began picketing from the Univer.ity of ChiCBI!O. only basement lounge to acHayes Hall carrying signs with He is author of several books commodate the Center. The
sucb slogans as: "Mrs. Ketter, and articles on James Joyce other lounge is already being
Will My Husband· Be Next?"; and hie works. Connolly eerwd used for offices.
"Law and Order on Campus"; as chairman of the Ela!Ciltive
The Day Care Center people
"Silent. Majority ' Where Are Committee of the Faculty Sen- haven't given up the fight, bowYou?''; ''Wake Up Albany." ate and as vice chairman of the ever. They are now inspecting
The picketing las~ from 2:00 Senate, from 1968 until this Macdonald Hall, whicb has ari
p.m. until shout 3:30.
, spring.
identical floor plan to Cooke,
John P . Sullivan, a . faculty as a possible permanent site
profe&lt;ISOr of arts Md letters, for the year.
and Byron J. Koekkoek. l)roWhen they do find a permarelationships between Student lessor of German and Slavic nent location. their only reGovernment, Faculty Senate, languages, have been named maining wm.ry will be money.
and administration will nlquire acting associate provosts of the Hopefully. this immense huldle
both initial and subsequent at- Faculty of Arts and Letters.
will be leaped by a Jetter from
·
tention. Their jurisdiction and r
President Ketter to the faeulty
re&lt;ponsibilities for governance
NO TIME FOR POLITICS
askioJ for funds. Dr. Lawrenoe
must be fully formulated and "BeCause there ore many new Pea- Cappiello, assistant to the emcwidely understood.
pie at our University, because utive vice president, is workU • we ca.nDC?t govern our· many of the older ones are in ing closely with the women oo ·
selves, others will go~m .us. . · ,_ positions and because this Is this project. Ca ieUo hopes to
-Temporary Executil"' Council an electio·n year," E. W. Doty, vice approacb Dr. ~tter about the
president for operations and sys. matter soon. ,
·ABOUT VIEWPOINTS ·
Delays have occutred while
terns, said this week, '"the etten·
tton
of all concerned (shoul6· be Cappiello is waiting for a reThe lleportor ' - on this to ~ ·• farym for the u- directed to) th6 fact that It Is Im- print of one of Gov. Rockefeldulnp of· .on .• .,.... variety ProPer (and a vlolatlbli of·several ler's s~ oo ·day care oenof tho fad"' tho .-...., laws) to use State supplies or ters g&gt;ven several months aao.
community. We - . . . ~ funds or the time of State em· 'I1le administrative aide believes the ~ will be a vital
'*'- for partisan political pur· part
of the prllpllfBtioo of Ketpooes."
·-permits.
ter's letter.

....

liN,.

Care Center
Opens Today

If the lJniversity Can't------

governance.

them.

.L~ .

Ombuclsm3n

(conlilwed from-~. col. 4)
Foundation 08ic:e were walltins
.....tward. Tluee of the men
mowd to one side of the narrow driveway 8Dd the fourth
mowd to the driver's side of
Mr. Hurley's car. When that
man said something, Mr. Hur,
ley rolled down his window.
At this point, · Mr. Hurley alleges, the man reached in 8Dd
cut him on the neck with what
Was described as a sharp piece
of wood. Mr. Hurley said the
instrument looked lib a piece
of'broomstick.
Mr. Hurley immediately accelerated hie car and pulled
around to the front of 250 Winspear where he and hie wile informed a secretary leaving the
building of what bad happened.

Seeing two Campus Police
- oflioers, they relayed the information to them. At 5:15p.m.,
Officers Brown and Lawler radioed that they bad spotted
four males matching the description of the group walking
on the lawn in front of Hayes
near the Townsend Parking
Lot.
As officers began to question
the four, two of the suspects
are said to bave pulled knives
and knocked Officers John Basile and Donald Jaeger to the
ground. They allegedly slashed
Jaeger silt times on the face
and twice on the legs. Officer
Basile was cut on the beck and
legs.
All five officers on the scene
were carrying night sticks and
cheinical Mace. They sprayed
Mace during the confrontation.
When the officers were
slashed, a call for help was
issued to the Buftalo Police.
The cell was made by telephone after the ofticers involved
in the scuftle radioed Campus
Police headquarters.
One group of Buffalo policemen from Precinct 16 went directly to the C.ampus Police
headquarters at '196 Winspear
Avenue, but refused to go onto
the campus.
Another Buftalo patrol car
carrying five officers and followed by a motorcycle patrolman came directly on campus.
None of the officers left the
car as it stopped in front of
Hayes. They did bave a conversation with the Campus Po);.., at the scene. However, they
were ordered off the campus by
radio.
The four suspects meanwhile
ran toward Hayes Hall. Two of
them entered the building; two
ran around to the rear.
The Campus Police entered
Hayes and discovered two sus-

_ _--:--:-:-:--- l\.T=-· ProvOst

_.__.net __

�~24,1970

7

~

Ketter Names Task Forre Heads, Issues C h a r g e s - - - - - - - - - - - -(~from-

I, coL 6)

action wblcb will make the relationa between the University
aDd its communities continuously fruitful for both. Our inu,
tuaJ ~ is itself one
of the causes for the lladitional

~..=u...-whi~= C:i

and wbic:h we must acknowledtle must not be permitted to ·
deallOY· or impair our value to
ead1 other. Tbe University can
ooly be valuable to the ~
community if that commuruty
under&amp;tands aDd accepts it; the
Uni-.ity can only contribute
to that Jaraer wmmunity if the
University in tum understands
and accepts the rommunity:
"~tly. I ask this
Task Force to suggest proposals

:u:a~'4:..iu=~~e~~~

tuaJ understanding aDd acceptance of ead1 other, even tolerance, that will allow us to enrich each other's livel!. Such proposals must reoosnize the wide
varieties of groups and their intef'!lBts in the University and
the community, and be mind:::' .;;th.the changes taking place

"Since this matter is urgent
foe us aDd the Niagara Frontier community, I request a progreas report from the Task
Focce by November 15, and its
final report by December I 5,
1970."
Un'-wlty Community
Chairman of the Task Force
on a· Sense of University Community is Dr. Alan J . Drinnan,
professor and chairman of
U / B's Dental Department of
Oral Diagnosis, Radiodontics
and Clinical Pathology and
chsirman of the Dental Department of Buffalo General Hospital Dr. Drinan, who joined the
University in 1962, is a native
of England. He has gained a
wide reputation as a television
interviewer on WNED-TV's
''Viewpoint" series and also has
moderated a University television series, 41lialogue..,
This is the charge to Dr.
Drinnan's Task Force:
"Probably the greatest disadvantage of large size in a
university is that students and
faculty alike lose or never develop a sense of common purpose. Rather, we tend to develop loyalties on some basis other
than the greater community, or
even worse, DO feeling of be-

lo~~JV::~h!~!:"i,...dition-

ally been known as places where
people of divergent and even
hostile views, could work together in the search for truth
as members of a community.
My own feeling is that we are
close to losin~ this strong sense
of commumty. U it is not
strengthened and restored we
shall no longer be able to tolerate diversity and independence
as we learn and teach.
, ''We must find ways of reestablishing and re-defining this
sense of communitY through all
aspects of University life.
"I, therefore, ask this Task
.Force to identify the most important University activities
wbic:h can aasist in re-aeating
a sense of community; to suggest roles wbic:h existing campwo ooc:iaJ. J?Olli.ical. and academic orgaruzations can effectively play in strengthening the
University ·a s a community; to
suggest new groups or programs
wbic:h may be DeClBI88fY to help
us achieve this goal; and to suggest ways in which even our
inevitable differences may be
woed to atzengthen Our familial
sense and our common respect
for ead1 other's integrity and
priW.... aa -'&gt;en of the
om-my family.
''I ask thla Task FOI&lt;le for a
report ... this di6:ult
problem by NOWIIIII&gt;er 16, aDd
a fiMl report by ~ 15,
19?0."
"'

p-

--Dr. Daaald

w. RemUe, pro-

lessor· of p~logy, School of the goala of this Uni-.ity and sure and yet
'this goal we advantaged; faculty...wdent ,...
Medicine, will head the Task ita instruments of public service. have made our strongest com- wards; continuin1 ecluattiall
aDd extensioo -..ice respolllli"Any c:banP.s m our adrnin- mitment.
Force on University Governance. Dr. Rennie was chsirman iatrative structure must, of
''Intelligently to detenninP. bilitieo· evaluation of atudent
of the Faculty Senate By-Laws c:ourae, comply with the lega.l our future and respond to and ra'cinty per{ormance; the
Committee which drafted the _(IIIII policy requirements of the change, we need to make our place of gi:aduats atudenta in
reorganization proposal to ~ Slate of .N-: York and the plans and goals explicit and under~uate teaching; relatoken up by the Senate in Qc. Slate Uruverl!lty. But further, public. We also need a means tionships ~ nB!IU'Ch aDd
toller. That Committee studied any such changes must provide of evaluating our successes and teaching.
not ooly various proposals for lor the approp"'!-te ;,nvol~t failures.
·
"This task Will not -be
Senate organization but also o! affect'!'l parties .m the dect"I am, therefore, asking the However, it is extno~
''the ~k of University "!On-making and =PierrleD;tl!- Task Force on University important. I must therefore ask
governance mto which the Fac- tion processes, must provtde Goals:
that the preliminaty report of
ulty Senate now fits and into effective information to those
• to summar'ize and publish this Task Force be available by
which it will have to fit in the parties, and must be responsive the University ' s long-term November 1, and ita·fin81 report
future."
to the changing needs of the plans which have been accept- available by Deoember 1, 1970."
The charge to the Govern- University, the educational pro- ed by the SUNY Board of
Full meml..irship rosters of
ance Task Force:
oess itself, and to society. A Trustees·
''We have nearly universally proposal to change or strength• to determine the extent to the task forces will be an- ., ·
agreed on the need for new gov- en ~ present stru~ must which these plans and goals, so nounoed soon. It is expected
ernmental organizations at vari- specify the roles and mterre- far as they can be expressed in they will include faculty, staJJ,
ous levels and in various units lations of the major adminis- quantitative terms, have been students and, in some CIISE!S,
. of the University. Our existing trstive offioers of the University. met or are likely .to be met on alumni and community leaders.
governmental .units are not well
''We must move as quickly schedule·
• to s uggest wbether some
coordinated with each other. as possible in ~ matter. I ,
FSC TO MEET
Tbe. frsgmentstion and lack of therefore. ask this Task Force of our broad purposes should
agreed-upon areas of jurisdic- to make a progress report to me be changed and the appropriate The Faculty·Staff Caucus, a group
of
liberal
faculty and staff memtion makes it nearly impossible by November 1, and a final re- bodies within tbe University
to reach agreement on basic port to me and to the Univer- which should be involved in bers, will meet at 4 p.m. today In
Room
110
Foster Hall to " plot
matters of University policy. sity by November 15, 1970."
·discussions of such changes.
Tbe fact that substantial seg- Unlve.slly Goals
"I am further asking tbe strategy on the upcom ing FaCulty
Senate
reorganization."
The Sen ments of tbe University com· . Dr. Charles !f. V. Ebert, pro- Task Force to suggest means
munity are not now participants lessor and chsirman of the De- by which we can strengthen ate meets October 15 on the issue.
in existing governmentlil slnlc- partment of Geogrsphy, will and improve our ways of mea- Also on FSC's agenda are elections
lures and have no separate chai,r the !iftb study committee, suring the quality of our vari- for a chainnan and an add itional
structures of their own means Umverstty Goals. Dr. Ebert ous programs and activities. To member of th.e steering committee.
that they are not represented joined the University in 1954. do so, we will need the help of
in decisions affecting their lives A researcher, author "!'d speak- the Task Force in defining the
and their professional interests. er, he has been active on a general criteria and procedures
TUTORS NEEDED
''I, therefore, ask tbe Task wide range of faculty commit- to be llS&lt;ld in determining. ex- All students (undergraduate and
Force on University Govern· tees.
cellence in teaching, learning,
ance to determine the status
The president's charge to the research, public service, and graduate) interested in tutoring
of existing proposals for change Goals Task Force:
administration. ·
~~!~i~e 5~~uu~~n~o~:ct ac~:e~~~
in local University governance
"For the past several years,
" Many cross currents are at M
and of propos&amp;la for changes tbe University has been in con- work in shaping an institution's
aas at 111 Townsend Hall, Ext.
affecting our governmental tinuous discussion of its future. goals. The 'l'ask Force may wish ;;~!· :tt~~stw~i~ ;~~~ t~~
structures now being considered Our decisions are embodied in to look into such matters as: three hours in addition to attend·
by the Board . of Trustees of our commitments to the Slate, the size and make-up of our ing a Tuesday 4 p.m. staff m~et­
State University. I also ask the to our students, to ourselves. enrollment; student admissions ing in Diefendorf 146. Interested
Task Force to suggest means Our most ambitious goal, the criteria; faculty hiring practices; students should pick up an apof Creating an appropriate body achievement of excellence, is g r a du a te-undergraduate mix; plication in 111 Townsend Hall as
for presenting a proposal for our most important. It is the faculty-student ratios; educa- soon as possible.
tbe establishment
a . coordi.
·o:n~fo~r-the::_ed:::u:ca::ti:o:nal:::ly~d:i:s-~============
nated
governmentalofsystem
for _..mos=~t=difli=·:cul=t:..:to~d=efine==an=d~mea==-~~tl=
the University. Such a proposal
DR. NORMAN HOI...LAND, professor,
must preserve necessary and dePRESENTATIONS
English, .. Freud et H .D.: femme
sirable autonomy and control
poete psychanalysee," Etudes
for various units and sub-units
oa. PIER&amp;E AUBERY , profe ss or, F reudUm nes.
French, "Scholarly Criticism and
of the University; it must enDR.
1EBOME MAZZ.ARO, professor,
Popular
Reading
of
Ltterature,"
able us to deal, as a University,
Ecole Libre Des Hautes Etudes Engli•h. " Of Love, Abiding Love,"
with matters which aft~ us all.
(French University in New York
"It goes without SBying that
~~:;ep;!iry~i~;~~otnerCrit:i!~~
City) .
any structures proposed must
" A Checklist of Material&gt; on Rob.JOHN BARTH , professor, English,
recognize the importance of inert Lowell 1939-1968," Rob e7 t
readings at Goucher College, Can- Lo~ U : A Portrait of the Artist
volving students, stsff, and faciBius Co II e g e, Michigan State in His Time; "Integrities," Kervulty responsibly in our govUniversity, University of South yon Reuiew; ''Literature," The
ernance. It must also define
Carolina, Reed College and the 1970 Compton's Yearbook.
their rights , obligations and ON CAMPUS

to

GREPORTS

ON

GJ&gt;EOPLE

~Jf':!""il!"'~i~:.Jl::~ APPOINTMENTS

pleted last year, 'A Proposal
For University Governance' and
'Proposals for University-Wide
Judiciary, should be, of course,
token into account by the Task
Force.
''I request a preliminary
report from this Task Force by
November 1 and a final report
DO later thait December 15,
1970."
Univefslly Orpnlzation

Heading the Task Force on
University Organization will be
Dr. Daniel H . Murray, dean of
the Graduate School and acting
vice president for academic sffairs. Murray. formerly dean of
the School of Pharmacy, ·has
been on the University faculty
since the early 1950's.
Tbe Murray Task Force is
charged as follows :
"M~ of us have experienoed
the· ~ties involved in the
creation of new organizational
forms within the University in
the past few years, as we ~ve
attempted to find new ways of
administering and governing
ourselves and our activities. We
have seen ·the dif6cultiea involved in making changes in so
intricate a structure. All of us
are aware of advantsges and
shOrtoominp in oUr present
structure.
"A careful evaluation aDd
emendation of our administrative patterns is needed to
achiewl a ma-w structure
,mich more ..rectivety- 811ists
us in the ~. learn!,.., .....
aearch, aDd creation which are

admissions
coordinator, graduate education,
appointed registrar and aBSistant
to the dean, School of Medicine.
DR. .lORN A. RlCHEKT,

University of Wiaconsin.

DR. NEIL SCIIMITZ , assistant proCessor, English, ..The Paradoz of
Liberation in Huckleberry Finn/'

RoBEBT caEELEY, professor, Engli• h, lectures at Sir George Wil·
liams

U ni ve rai ty, The

New

Texas Studies in Lan.f.:uage and

School (New York), and SUNY
College at Brockport.
DR. NOitM.\N BOLLAND, professor,

~t!:n~'~ ·~·*'~,:[~~~

.Midcontinent American Studies
Journal.
STUAKT 8CIIN'£IDEilMAN, assistant
profeseor, Eng 1 i • h, " Blake' s
Prophecy: The Plain of the

~h=y;;~e~~:"T"!'~W~
University.

JOHN LOCAN,

OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DB. LYLE GLAZIER,

profea.sor En·

gliah, visiting profesaor of En·
gliah, Hacettepe University, Ankara, India; con1ultant at the
~~f:"w!:tudies

Centre, Hyder-

Dll EDWARD P . MARRA, chi.i~

Department of Social and Pieventive M:edicine, appointed to
the E. J . Meyer Memorial Hoe·
pita! Advitory lloaJd.

PERFORMANCES
LAUIWICE

BOGUE, usittsnt profes0

\Y!;.=~r~~. tv~~~t!!
Church.

profes·
music,. performances w i t h

DIL &amp;OBIRT MOLS, ueociate
~r.

Buffalo Philharmonic. one at ded·
ication of N~ra Frontier Per-

~~o!~ ~tr:~.nute solo-

auiatant pro[es . .
10r, muaic. conductor U / 8 Choir
psrformance with Bufra!u Philharmonic OrcbMtra: U/B .Chamber Choir concert, Albnpt-Kno•
Art a.Ilery.
lAM WIU.I.UIB, a.inant profeeeor,
muoic,· participet in American
Aria F eo t h a t. Saint Paul de
PETD VAN DYCK.,

v-.rn-.

profeMOr, Enalish,

poetry readinp at SUNY Col-

Weste.m

~~~:tr::.\j~~~w!fitrndi~

profes-

TM

WuUm

assistant professor, Englioh, " Going to Aliimira," Anon.

DR. BOWA&amp;D WOLF,

of Desi&amp;J&gt;.

DR. MICHELE RlCClUDELLl,

Gate,"

Gote.

ana and the Rhode bland School

·

:~~~~ ~~H:!, ~ot: RECOG~ITIONS

f:~:_taliun." Sweet Briar Col- :::.=~~~=de...:ntis:.::PO:.:::U:.=-':;;J'~•:.:ec.:":..t::f_.,:_od_o_~-,ti-~!--

&gt;l1Jlt114Y scawA&amp;T&amp;. a.istant profeuor. Ellllith, "Tbe Curftnt Po-

litical Situation at Buffalo," Uni-

;:.!n:•f ~.,!jr;~~
for Women (NOW) . Butralo.

PUBLICATIONS
DR. IOHN M. oonz.a, . .a.&amp;ant
profeaoor. E.,.Jis!t. "Samuel a....
kett et lea tentations du atyle,"
Sam.ul Bec~ttt; "Ale• Ia Guma
and tbe Responaibilities of the
South African Writer," Journal

of tM New Africon Lito tun.
·DB.. Vlct'Oa DOYNO, eaoclate pro·fesaor, Englilh, PortMnophil and
Partheoope.
DR.. RAYMOND PEOERKlN, profeuor,

Enclilh;- "Jean Genet ou ft!' Thela haine," E•prit; "ln the

5i
.

," 1 - d WoNII and

Worded_...
IKVINO

Pm.DKAlf,

profeeeor, En-

clilh. "Tbe Warrion and tbe

ldiOto," Harper'•. .

received the 1970 Dean'• Award
for his devotion and undentand-

m, for atudenta,,.patienta and

fac-

ul!y memben.

io~uU..,'(l~~~~ l;d,~=
awarded annually to craausu.;
who a1e outotanding in both
l&lt;"holarahip and athletics. lAMES
" - · a U/B medical student
and recipient of the lint scholarahip awarded in 1968, will receive $1000 of that three-year

S3000 riant. He ·was an undergraduate member of the football

and track teams. 1 un:s MOE, a
three-year vanity awimme r, will

..er:v:tJ~./oRe:r.~~rp:t;:

technic Institute; B'I'EYEN wro&amp;8ID.. a tennia atar. $1000 for
busineaa adminbtration studies at
Col~ Uniwnity, and RJCR-

~- S500nio~t=:'e:n.~!?!

trq,tion at Syraeuae University.
The three a~e Moy 1970 cradu-

atoo.

�,,

8

SPA &amp;eking Members,
Plare on PERB Ballot
Tbe Senate Profeasional Air
sociation (SPA), an organization oC Slate UniYersity faculty
and profeosioual staff which is
seeking to become the olliciaJ
b a r gainhig 8ji'I!IICy for tbeoe.
groups under the Taylor Law,
baa l!egun aoliciting memberahip on the U/B campus.
Serving 118 interim campus
• representatives (until a local
chapter is formed and elections,
held} are Gordon M. Harris,
Larlrin profesaor of cbemist&gt;y,
Albert C. Reb.te, p~fesaor of
medici,lie, and Allan Canfield,
assistant to the dean, oontinuing education. Drs. Harris and
Reb.te are cunently aolic:iting
U/B faculty membersbipe by
letter. :o..- are pro-'rated by
annual base salary.
Tbe membership drive 1111101111
the campus
profeasional sta1f is btdng· conducted tbrouah the b:ar State
UniYersity ~ ,._,.
ciatiml (SUPA). ~individuals in thia may
contact Canfield or Raymond
CbamiJalain of the Do.ta Pro.-ing Center.
Incarponton ol. the""" SPA
orpnizatiml include memben
'o f the Slate-wide SUNY Faculty Senate Emcutive Committee and memben of the ExecutfW, Committee of the Slate

---bing

~~·

. _,

SPA is a coalition of the
"faculty" and the non-teaching
profesliionals "wbo want the
oollective bargaining process to
be controlled by members of
SUNY 'Without allegjances and
alliances to non-professional
organizations," as the incorporators describe it. The Slate
Public Employment Relations
Board (PERB) has, under the
Taylor Law, mandsted that faculty and other professional stall
be considered one unit for bargaining pUJ'p08eB. (SPA incidentally replaces .n either the
SUNY Senate nor SUPA; it is

o(

tbeoe

OJ.I!ized

b8s already been reoby PERB 118 .an eli-

gible con~.
. OriJinally the Slate-wide
SUNY Senate waa the fourib
contender approved by PERB.
Thia is one of aeveral pointe ·
' being disputed in the courts by
AFT; the grounds being that
the Senate receives funds for ita
operations from the Universi!'r
'and should be declared ineligible to represent employees.
Tbe SPA aet-up avoids this orgument, organizers of the group
aay.
SPA baa pointed out to the
non-teaching professional stall
that it provides a dual "academic-professional structure"
that neither AAUP nor AFT
can offer because of tbeir nationa! charters. CSEA meanwhile baa failed to provide nontaoching professionals with cerlain guarantees. Tbus, it is .,._
peeled that SUPA will ollicially
eudorae S'fA at its State-wide
-

---

lbMtre of Haltem, Inc., ~ lor performances last

lila -

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
FRIDAY-25

~ling.
.
On the faculty Si4e. the SPA

"Phase I"-You'RE
A am BOY NOW; am BAND roa THE
KIGHT FILJIB:

incorporatQrs feeiJbat the dualstructure provideli 'fill' ~um
un-1 representation With staff
pr8Cribed b PERB AAUP
AFT ~d not do this,
they aay, and negotiations between the Slate Faculty Senate
and CSEA did not prove fruit-

LlnUI LADY; STOP THE WOIIW, I
wANT ro GEr ow; IUIIIIIAGE oN
TB£ IIOCKS. "Phase U''-'l'IIE COOL
ONES; K.AUm&gt;OSCOPE; DL\BOLIQUE;
NIMIIl '100 LAT&amp;. Conference Tbe·

=..t

~:::;;.,::.rtr! ~ Norton In·

CONTINUING DE N T AL EDUCATION
COUIISE: Dr. Harry Langa, visit·

~ Neptlati-

In tbeir membership letter to ~d~~::" ~o:,I&lt;.,;;!r· ~:
the fa'Culty, Drs. Harris and TIC£, 146 C!wen, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Rekate describe the SUNY · eour.e a1ao offered September 26
Senate negotiations with and 'n.
CSEA: ''Over a Yt'&amp;r ago, the BIOCHE&gt;08TBY SEHINAB: Dr. GorUniversity Faculty Senate and
the CSEA entered into a Mem- ~'!.it~.;;J:"'t'!f.:':!i;~
orandum ·of Understanding PHYSICAL CHEMICAL STUDIES OF
which W8S .intended to specify MODEL MEMBilANES AND MEM·
the means by which the two BBANEil. G-22 Capen. 4 p.m.
organizations would work joint- !N'l'ERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Inly to represent the professional atruction in basic steps during
stall of the University in col- first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
lective negotiations.
8 p.m.
.. Sincere efforts to work with
,CSEA in establishing an effec- DOMlJB THEATRE PRESENTATION• • :

~o~:·JI~r ~~~i-

tive cooperative enterprise were

=~~:')for barpining pur- ::~=·~:t:;;.;.":::!g ~ J~::y =~~~.::.~ r:o;::;.1695

SPA locally is in the process 10, 1970, withdrew its support
of Jin.ing up 25 charter members · from the Memorandum of Un-the number neceasary for a derstanding. At that time the
recognized chaptbr ; it bopes Senate authorized its E~ve
eventually to line up 10 per Committee to aplore i~\5
J'•wn
cent or more of the U / B faculty resoirrces and perhaps
lace
and non-taoching professional the Senate itself as a oon ndstall. Representatives of this ing organization. Subsequently·
still-formmg chapter will attend the Senate authorized the forma State-wide meeting in Syra- ation of the new membership
cuse on October 10 to consider organization which we are now
proposed by-Jaws and a slate of inviting yo:u--to join."
State officers.
SPA, its ~presentativ~ say,
Interim State officers are: both reco~ the du,aJity of
president, Robert Hart, pro- the barg.atlU!lg gfO}JP It seeks

Elm-

College at Buffalo, 1300 Elinwood
Ave., 8:30 p.m. Tickets on sale at
Norton Union and Bufl'alo State.
$.50 students, $1.50 general admiuion. (See feature article on
Mr. d'Amboise in last week's Repoi'Ur.)

SUNDAY- 27
Seminar in Con·
0
:'.:::rtyM~~rt!.'!.~C::fs "':';:
Statler Hilton Hotel, 10 a ..::.1i'.:g.
BAND SEMINAR:

~::::h'·~=raff.,';;,!~nuea

The purpose of this seminar is
to provide the basic concepts ol di-

seases and injuries of ~ hand
so that the physician and surgeon intei'OBted in the care of
the hand can better diagnose and
treat such patients.
JACQUES d'AMBO!SE OF THE NEW
YORK CITY BALLET: Sponsored by
the UUAB, Upton Hall, SUNY
College at Buffalo, 1300 Elmwood
Ave., 7:15 p.m. Tickets on aale at
Norton Ud nion 80d Buffalora!Stal;j8
5m·50
,.. . 8ntu. ents, 5 1.50 gene
10

BALKAN FOLK DANCING:
8

THE SABBAT. N:o .w. Repertory

len Sigel, clarinet Works by
Dussek. Reger, Hoddinott and
Baird, 8:30 p.m. Tickets available at the Baird Ticket Office: general admission
$1.50, faculty and staff $1.00, students $.50.
Allen Sigel is professor of mu·
sic at U / B and prior to ~oining

wood Avenue, 8 , 30 p.m.

~~ttre~~dr ~ille~r 1~g ~~=

MONDAY-28

' Milhaud.

aSEUPing the basic rigbts of both
groups by, among other things,
a representative council, equal-

Fillmore

:::~ ~=.:;;., ~TATION••:

KUBIC ucnAL••: Featuring Ruslana Antonowicz, piano, and AI-

~t =~ :u!~~ Bu~t':.i~

Philharmonic Orchestra. He iB
the author of "Tbe 20th Century

Clarinetist" and "A Comp&amp;.rative

fB":"J,..::!~,ep~~n~t' tolhisred="tytin:~ c::.~~~Sel~ ~~peanuaic ~=~':.,~~

Robert Granger, registrar, ~late
University Agricultural and
Technicsl College at Alfred;

- ..also

iea of Music." He spent this awnner in Englan~ on !' Unive~i~~
aponao_red proJ&lt;!Ct, 'The ~n~h
0

FILM: BlRTH OF A NATION, Conference Theatre, Norton, 8 : 30 p.m.

TUESDAy- 29
EIGHT FD..MS: "Phase 1" -BPABTA-

~~; =,;~N,;.u~~
~~
DABK INTRUDEa;
I'LL NEVER PORG£T WHAT'S HIS
NAME; NIGHT •'F THE .OLLOWING
DAY. Conference Theatre. Norton.
Check Norton L'lformation for

-THE WAB LORD;

times.

~:, ~"!!J111~ta~~:l: ~~c~~l:%1:':.~ ".:f J: ~ !,&lt;;.,~ P;"~ib~d- ;:a.:,~·· b~~~':J ~
versityCo~atOneonts,and

terms,"academicjprofessional."
At the same time' the -"ti'on
reo:tgnizes the n~k;;j majority &lt;&gt;! fa?Jltr _in
total
unit which l8 divtded mto appi'Oldmately 8,600 faculty and
3,600 professionals Slate-wide.
For both groups, SPA pledges
to "work vigorously to improYe ·
terms and conditions of em~- ~~ ~loyment."

· ~--- William B B
by
w;;:;:,•Of busiDess,
P
versity Apicultural and TechnicaJ College at Cobleskill.
Once SPA is organized Statewide and baa received repreaenlation autborizatiml cards
(and/or memberships) from
1,200 membenl ol. the 12,000-

Sta:1Jru:

,:;;r*'~t;op

a

it
PERB for
plioce on the fortbooming ballot
to elect a bargaining ....,..t.
Tbat ~baa~
beld__up by the CXIUI18, peudiDg
decision 011 a swt by tha State
UniversityFederatimloCTI!IIdoera (AFT)-is DOW~ to
be held this winter.

O!Nr-

Alao oil the ballot to pin lhe
profeasional bargaining deoignatiml will be the ~
Aasociatiml ol. Uru-.ity Pro• , _ (AAUP), the Civil
~ ~ .A.odation
(ClmA,) and the .-.ri'.. Bacb

u_.e

wf:my

COMMUNIQUE
COPY D£ADUNE
To register even1s contact Miss
C.rol :loodlole, University Publica·
a- Services, 250 WI-t A....,
ext. 2228. Copy will bo due on
an laue dlstrtbutad
on Thursday and coveril'lll of Friday thn&gt;Uih Thursday.
NOTE: Any -lear
ldantffied Is a member of the fac.

~ - lor

not--

~ted

from the.~Y of MuVJeDna w.th big_beat honors
and bu toured ~·vely m this

SlC 10

~;!~~ ~~~

MAN AGE MEN T OP

IDIOPATHIC
5

~t'J! ~T;J'~~il;!'!~

era! admiaaion $3, faculty and
staff $2, students $1.
Tbe Claremont Quartet w a a
formed in 1958 and made its New
York debut in Town Hall in 1954.

Since then. performing and teach-·
ing activities have t a k e n the

~t.:d'S!:~. ~~~~

ka and Hawaii, as well as to Canada, Europe, the Near East. Australia and . New Zealand. The
group has held residencies at
Pennsylvania S t$ t e University,
the Univenity of Delaware and
Goucher College. At the present
time the Cl&amp;J"emont Quartet is in
residence at the North Carolina
School of the Arts in WinstonSalem.

WEDNESDAY-30
DIETITIANS" TELEPHONE

LZCfURE:

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Panel membie.n of the
Western New York Hospita.J Personnel Directon Association; coordinator, Richard H. Waring,
SELECTING

EMPLOYEES

AND

PRE·

DIC'I'lNG PERFORMANCE, 5 1 Partici-

pating Hospitals, 2 p.m.

ANALYTICAL CliEMIIITBY COLLOQ·
UIUM: Professor G. H. Morrison,
Cornell University, Topic to be
announced, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m.
CROSS

:.::a,

COUNTRY: U/ B

~!~f!ndtp:J...e4d

VB.

SUNY
Grover

CREATIVE ASSOCIATES si:YENTB 8&amp;\-

SON OPENE&amp;• : Three aimultaneous mus.cal events in Norton.
FILLMORE ROOM (:.Ogina at 8
p.m.): Live electronic music per·
formed by the Creative Associa tea, S.E.M, Ensemble, guest 118{·
ticipants and the audiences.

~~':,"ri~&gt;:=~~["&amp;,,!:~

Cardew.

CONFERENCE THEATRE (begins at
8:30p.m.) : Performances by erealive Associates and guests.

:~r:e~~,~~~::~.:.·~~~~

Mozart and AJcidea Lanm.
("'-'
t 9
BAAS LOUNGE .,.,..... a
p.m.) : Mamtli Bhargava sinp,
playa the sitar aud introduces

3

~~d':'~r!;'b.!'.:,~~t

The Creative ABBOciattoo, mem·
be
I the ~--te f •L - C ti
n o

'-'CD

r o w:.-·

~ ve

s:;::'~::,.,"J!•&amp;r~:":,: :.=;;·~:~~":f'3o ~~rtici- ~Y!:';~..!i:"..;,t"':.~

to Buffalo in 1968 U . .iotant
prof_,r of muoic ohe taucbt at
the ~Y eo-rw.tory of Mu-

li!' and at v_-ar Colloae. _S_be
!'ill
~ ~r EW'OJ*D otiea
10
1
.l'llllaary

. I.

SATIJRDAY-26.
IUGBT PILMS: - . , _ "Phase l"
and "Phase U" from Friday.
-~ by
xmm•• : IWI1IDfl, . _ . _
the iDdia S~t "-'Mation,

~ ~":;! ;;:!.£~

Tbe ....- deaJo with the iii-

clo!-laaoe " " ' - t i n iDdia in

1970 QU.um:aBACK CLUB WEEKLY
roST-GAlll: LUNCIDON: !J' own e
H o u a e Restaurant, Main and
High Streets, 11:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Single luncheons on- a non-reserved basis are S3.00.
NUUES' TELEPHONE LI:CTUIIE:

the UIJO'o and 80'L

3_.

~ ~::;ro~t.':l;' .::::t"'pe~

form new muoic, mind-media
and
Tbe Cen
f
~tre9tu 'th
Fwaa
.:;::;' All.::: ~PP ~ co-directo~
Since 1968, Lejaren Hiller, a pi.
oneer in computer muoic. baa

r..J:

~~ C?a :t"f."a_' ~:~ bee~Zn"'::r~""8!..:!:· ,:;."':;.,

R.N., aaaiatant prof....,r, nuning, 1970·71 l!elliOD include: Douc
• NUBSING, 51 Dma, cellist; J.-ph Dmm, tbeParticipatina Hoopitals, 1:30 p.m. -atre director; Stu.ut Fos, ,WtarTlmOIIII'I'ICAL BIOLOGY/CBBIIICAL
iot; ~r.S~ ~ ~rk
I:NGINIIIWIG' SD&lt;JNAR: Dr. Jan - !?&lt;'koL oriolinlat; ~- Levine, ~­
NORMAL -

~Sci~~~: ~tJ~~~· =;::t

olaiY. Prasue.

A 8TUDY or ZftA

·
POmmALS or QUAilft, Room 29,
DOIItJ8 TB£Aft8 ,_...i.TION .. :
4248 Ridae Lea, 4 p.m. Refr..hTB£ KMI'ft. lf.O.w. Repertory
meDia 3:30 p.m.
"
'n-be. UDder director and play
·
•
ulty, stall or student body of U/8. -..ricbt Gerald ~. 11196 Elm: -~.,!~M qu~-;:::-•.•:
110
•Op_en to the public.
aclmls-' wood :A-8:80p.m.
n:~V:rtanarc~
••
public. d ' . . - or TtD: JmV viol~; Jerry Homer. violist;
_..,._
·
Ya.K arr uu.ft: s--..t by lrrilll( Klein. celliot. Worb by
tbe UUAB. Upbo Hall, SUNY Haydn, BariDit and BrabmL

=.,ct;:'-:,;.

et;'lh,.lled the

..-.c
......._ · - - of campus dance enthusiasts with Ito master cia- In Norton's Haas

..:::d

compooer; Petr Kotik, Dutiokam·
p~r; F r ~ n k Parman. . play·
wricht; Julilll ~ pianlot-

com!"'""r; ~rae .Ritacher, elec:·
troruc enpneer; and J1111 WUliaoqs:.- pe~r.

THURSDAY-I
""'--~ ::=:.;:====---"--BT Pll.lll: - . .. . "PhaR r•
and~ U" from~-

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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                    <text>STATE ·UNIVERSITY AT 13UFFALO

SEPTEMBER 17, 1970

VOL 2-NO. 2

Colleges Alive and Active
After Week of Controversy
The Collegiate Assembly is
alive and functioning, though
the scars of recent controversy
may be a long time healing.
In a unanimous vote on Monday night the Assembly voted
to " resubmit to the administration the name of Konrad von
Moltke for oonsideration Rs Oirector."
The motion presented by D r.
Elizabeth Israels of Vico Col-

oon Mo!JRe Says Due Care
elm ave7rome the Problems
Konrad von Mol tke, di~tor
of the Collegiate Assembly, explained why he reconsidered
his Sunday resignation and
clarified his position on a number of iinportant issues in this
statement:
"In the last 24 bours many
M - - . . a ~ ot VA Hoopltol, Is a robld Bulls
people wbom I respect and trust
too - - .wry homo pmo l..t yur and k,_.
lhe numbor, Mi&amp;l&gt;t and hel&amp;ht of overy player. Mr. Bloom
have urged me to reconsider
"jolnod lhe Bond" lost Sotunloy ID - r on his - • my resignation of yesterday. At
It
holp, but ho .,jopcl IL
their urging I find myself willing to do so. There are, however, some points which I must
clarify.
'~~!WCX:Ltl..i.s summer has
been crisil;-ridden and while the
external pressures have been
great, the most important source
of' difficulty has been internal.
I believe that we have suffered
from our inability to faoe some
,.
very important fundamental
'When the rumored disrup- York at Buft'alo and its prede- facts.
"I believe that to be innovation of Saturday's football game cessor, the University of Bufwith Ball State failed to ma- falo, for the last H years. Dur- tive is not justification in itself.
terialize, the campus grapevine ing that period he has been un- The only justification for being
began moving the story that £tinting in hie; service and de · new is to be demonstrably betthe would-be protesters had votion to the University. Since ter. We have failed to prove to
been dissusded because of an 1966, initially at the request of others why we are excit ingly
impending accommodation on the late Chancellor Furnas, D r. innovative. The measure of sucthe issue of Coach Len Serfus- Serfustini has represented the cess is not our satisfaction with
tini- whose resignation as bas- Faculty of Educational S tudies, ourselves but some vi.f.ible sign
ketball coech has been unrelent- the University College and the of bei ng persuaded on the part
ingly demanded by the black Department of Athletics of the of others.
"Specifically, we have treated
University in oompiling a prodisputants.
The University's oonfirma- jection of facilities, stall and the creation of new oolleges as
tiolr'bf a change in· role for program for the Health, Physi- an internal matter, thus violatSerfustini for the coming year cal Education, and Recreation ing our responsibility to both
-coupled · with a statement Departments of the University students a~dacuity. The crealeges is a matter
clearing the · coach of any at the contemplated Amherst tion of ne
verybody on this
Campus. This major piece of of oonoem
charges of biss. or racismcame on Tuesday with no fur. Work bai; been done by him campus a nd I think we must
ther reference to the dispute, withou ~ diminution of his other ~d mit that our actions in creating new units without full , open
other t h a n "Serfustini con- (conti.nu.ed on page 7, col. 1)
ducted himself admirably and
cooperated with the administration and with all ooncemed"
during "the difficult period of
tension . . . in the spring of
"On the · UIB campus as on 7BE~
1970."
many others it is clear that stuFrom 78 eyewitoess accounts,
Serfustini, the announce- dents must fear for their lives medical reports, perf ora ted
ment said, has been named to since police can now mete out windows in Norton, metal pel'-d a prellidential committee punishment in the field for lets and shotgun shells recovon pbyBical education facilities tJ..- who dissent~ without ered on the campus, photos of
on the new campus. This year fear of official sanctions.
wounded! students and of the
be will be ' "released from all
other responsibilities, taking ~ becomes difficult in such vehicle from which one shotgun
was fired, the concerned groups
drew these "valid conclusions"
~~~.~rich- ~~~:U.co~l=
·"An acting buketball coach ~can system will besr concerning the ni~t of May 7:

. BuDs' BooSter

-·t

Cleared of Bias Charges;
Serf Takes Planning Job

discussion of what was proposed
was inoonsiderate of faculty and
s tudents ~a tike. The issue of review is probably subsidiary and
would not have been one had
we proceeded more openly in
admitting new units.
" What irks me most is the
opportunity we have missed.
The creation of new oolleges,
the development and careful review of nt:w oourses, oould have
provided one of "the most exciting educational experiences,
for many more than have been
involved.
"I believe that we must ac-

--

cept the fact that this Assembly
operates under SUNY policies.
There are some which in our
view will need to be changed.
Unt il we have s ucc essfully
changed them, however, we remain bound by them.
"I do not expect ~ all members
( continued on page 2, co_l. 1)

Police Fired Birdshot, Students Say

s:;;;

for the current aea4em!c year,"
will be named shortly, the Uni......Oty o t a - t oaid.
Ed Muto named to the
JX* that .ttamoan.
Tbe C11B1P1ete tat of Pnaidont KM!ei'a - t .., the
..tter ...._:
~ .....
"Dr. 1-.1 ll8lfuotild . .
._. . ......... "'tbe "-by
al. 8' ............. . '-it
.....................
at lila Slate~ ol New

This is the oonclusion of the
Concerned Law Students for
P.oe. a Uni......Oty group, and
the Niagara Frontier Chapter
of the N- York Civil Uberties
Ualoa, drawn from their inwotiptioD"' thio "..n-1 ~hot,..,.. lncidaat ... compul M8y
7 the aft=lal&gt; . . . . - to
tbat.
..... -bold
-.t'Die~
a .,._ _...,_
at

lhe Law 8o:baal ~-

"Four separate shooting incidents occurred that night on
the . . . Main Sll'eet campus.
The firing .-.lied in the destruction of ~ windows
in Norton Union and in wounds
inflicled em at least 12 students.
Tbe .,....,. of the firing ....
m-el in police uniforms
and with Bu«aao Police riot
,....and- ................. rid.... In wbile alation..,....
with Nd bubble ' - and such
muldnp - "I'ral6c Dlvlaiaa'

week of vigorous activity (or.
the Assembly-a week which
brought confrontation with. Academic Vice President Dahiel
Murray over Rosa !Anemburg
College and course approval
procedures, a split within the
Assembly over IAlxemburg and
the subsequent resignation of
von Moltke.

lege originally had a second
part stating: " for the survival
of the system we urge Konrad
to reconsider his resignation
that we consider to still be in
effect."
This section .was withdrawn
by Dr. Israels after much debate over wording.
Mond ay night's reinstatement of von Moltke and his
agreement to return capped a

and 'Buffalo Police' on the vehicles. M embers of the Buffalo

Police Department were re-

L.uxembur&amp; In Umbo

.

Monday's action, however,
did little to resolve the basic
issues. Appai'enUy, Rosa Luxemburg College still hangs in
limbo-approved in one version by the Assembly but disapproved in another by the administration. Originally, the
prospectus for Rosa Luxemburg
declared that "each study collective will be encouraged 1o
relate ils theory to a community organizihg project." 'SbJdents would be "provided with
a wide range of radical theory
and political experience," and
grades would be given by the
group for this political practice.
Murray took a bard stand
against this " link.-..ge between
theory and practice," and rejected the College. A spokesman for the College then ileolared in a press oonference last
Thursday, that "credit would
not be given for political acts."
According to von Moltke, this
is the basis on which Rosa Luxemburg stands approved by the
Assembly. The administration
has not yet ruled on Luxemburg
on this basis, and, apparently,
some ronfusion exists in the
College itself. A pamphlet description, now being circulated,
fails to emphasize the division
between theoretical study and
political action.
The colleges' hectic week
began last Wednesday when
the Collegiate Assembly was
informed by Vice Presidenl
Murray that Rosa Luxemburg
College as described in its prospectus (and approved by the
Assembly ) is "unacceptable"
and will not be funded. He said
a lso that any proposal for a
collegiate offering (or for lillY.
new University program) is
subject to his review, not just
to that of the Assembly and/or
the curriculum committees.
''It has become abundantly
clear that the required process
of responsible prior review of
all proposed course offerings
has not been ' adequately attended to in a number of instances," Murray said in a
memo to von Moltke, Undergraduate Studies Dean Claude
Welch, Aasistant Under&amp;raduate Dean Robert Rott and A&amp;sociate Dean Theodore Hullsr
of the Graduate School
Citin1 Regents' and Board
of Trustees' policies, MlmiiY
urpd "that groups charged
with the ._...n.i!ity for eva).
uating p . _ t courae offerings. pay particulsr attenticm
to: (1) the validity of the educational Objecti- of a proposed courae relatl-.. to the
- o f the Um-.i&amp;Y; (2)
the -a... ol. cluplicatb. ...
..-lap with u-dy
..,..._ in the ... aclla&lt;Blt field;~ (8) tbe ...............
of tile propoeed u..tnictloaal
staJno offer ln8tructiaD in tbe

sponsible. There is no evidence
of either civilians or students
firing weapons that evening.
There is no evidence of provocation by students immediately
preceding the shootings. Tbe
police were using a hit and run
tactic to fire on def...-less
groups of sl\ldents."
Altbouib the lsw students
and the NYCLU feel their evidence is substantial enouch for
these C)llDC)usioDs, they indicate
" it is not -adequate for a criminal court since DO individual
patrolman .... identified."
'
"We bad hoped," the IIOU,P"
aold, "that the .various ..,....,_
-.bad cxmtac:ted eulcl CODduct a more inlaiBive in..Upticm, with ..Wts. a -.
our ' - did not 11111t.erlelize
(.,.,.,.,_ oro 6, col. 1)
( - .... - 3 . - l )

...a.m..

�.;,

~
\.

2

Situation Still Uncertain
For Campus Day~- Center

R.esrordl,Funds

Slnv lncrmse
Over Last Yror

assigned the matter to Execu. By SU~~R~NwOOD
tive Vice President A I be r t
The University in 1969-70
''No space, no money. and Somit who, in tum, gave it to recorded a "small but signilots of children" sums up the his assistant, Dr. Cappiello. Be- ficant" increase over the previ·
current situation of the campus fore delegating ·the matter, Dr. ous year in grants. received and
Day Care Center. Started last Ketter made a personal plea to in expenditures for sponsor;ed
March as part of the Women's the alumni women that they research and training programs,
Caucus of the Strike, the Cen- take on the Day Care Center according to Research Vice
ter bas had its ups and downs as one of their projects.
President Raymond Ewell.
but recenUy bas taken a sbarp
This matter is still pending,
Ewell reported these comdownhill tum.
but according to Howard Flas- parative figures for five cateThe · Center hopes to open ter, director or alumni pro- gories of r·esearch activity:
this week, according to B. B. grams, the women will probably number of proposals submitted:
Walker, one of the directors, offer their time as trained s!B.ff 554 11968-69) and 527 ( 1969but there's no operating money but not give money.
70); dollar volume of proposals:
0&lt; space. The Center's going
Future LOOks Better
$31,350,000 ( 611-e ). and $32,ahead with registration though.
The future does look a little 160,000 (69-70); number of
The women behind the Cen- better. Dr. Cappiello bas asked grants received: 479 ( 611-e)
ter's establishment are pinning for money for a Center in the and 431 (69-70) ; dollar value
their hope on a vote of the 1971-72 budget. This would be of grants received: $17,620,000
women of Cooke Hall on the for a facility for the children ( 611-e) and $18,080,000 (69question of whether or not to of students only, and not for 70); actual expenditures: $14allow them to use the basement those of staff and faculty whom 800,000 ( 611-e ) and $16,170,000
there. As Cor money, well, the Center currently serves (69-70 ).
they're thinking of charging a also.
The figures include grants adnominal fee.
Of course, this still leaves ministered by both the SUNY
Even· these hopes may be the problem of this year. The Research Foundation and the
daslled because of State regu- official administration stance is Ut B Foundation as well as
lations. According to Dr. Law- one of "considering the Day New York State grants which
rence Cappiello, assistant to Care Center a benefit to the are administered directly by
the executive vice president, · academic pursuits of students." the University. They do not in"we're legally prohibited from Dr. Cappiello Says that "we all clude fellowships and traineeusing State funds and facilities would likl&gt; to see a Center on ships administered by the Gradfor the Center." This is be- campus.•
uate School.
cause of State regulations that
Ewell finds the 1969-70 record
However, the matter was not
require the legislature to vote given top priority and so B. B. ·for U/ B "remarkable for these
on how funds are used, Dr. Walker and the other women times and quite different from
Cappiello claims.
in the Center are still like the the experienoo of many instituActually, the picture for the ola women in the shoe with "so tions in the U.S." Many uniDay Care Center ' bas never many children, they don't know versities have suffered declines
been too gnod. Last spring wbat to do."
of up to 20 per cent, both in
they operated out of the lounges
new grants and. in actual exin Goodyear but conditions
penditures, he points out.
were poor. There weren't .
The average size of grants reenough toilets for the youngceived in 1968-69 was $65,500;
sters and there were no faciliin 1969-70, $74,500, Dr. Ewell
ties to provide a hot lunch.
said. "This increase." he exThese two deficiencies put the
plained, was ·'in spite of budCenter in violation of the State
get cuts in many grants. What
code for child care facilities so
this indicates is that the averit was forced to move.
By
age grant request bas gone up
Funds Didn't Appear
CHERYL HARGESHEIMER substantially."
The situation was supposed
u,.;.,-.;ty lnlr.nnalion .s.n....
Dr. Ewell's figures for exto ease this SU}D!Der. The CenTo Bhupen N. Mukerjee penditures include both direct
ter had space . in Cooke Hall. who heads a 6000-student law costs and "overhead." The
And the Center's organizers school in Calcutta, U/ B's "overhead" generated by U / B
say that Vice President Albert School of Law with its 540 stu- in 1969-70 was approximately
Bush-Brown of Facilities Plan- dents must seem very small. $2.1 million of the SUNY total
ning indicated that there-would Mukl&gt;rjee, who will be teaching ot"$5.65 million, he reports. Of
be funds. But once the facility here t)lis academic year, is the th1s, $955,000 went for operaopened and full-time staff was School's first visiting foreign tion of the SUNY Research
hired, the funds didn't appear. scholar to come with a full fac- Foundation (including the
Finally, after a long struggle, ulty ranking.
Washington office); $540,000 for
a personal loan was secured
"Principal" (dean ) of the research administration exfrom Allen Sapp, director of University College of Law in penses at U/ B; $250,000 ·for
the Office of Cultural Atrairs, Calcutta, India, since 1966, he summer fellowships and facility
augmented by a loan from the presides over what is probably grants-in-aid and $255,000 to
Graduate Student Association the I8J'I:est law school in the the Chancellor's Innovating
and money from a parent-spon- world. It is one of more than Fund.
sored book sale.
100 law schools in India.
As the sununer wore on,
Although the American legal
problems increased: The wo- system is unfamiliar to him,
men wanted to buy a dishwash- Mukerjee will be teaching
er for their kitchen. Dr. Bush- American and comparative In·
Brown, who was· then working dian-American law courses such
with them, put the dishwasher as partnerships, agency and
U/ B football players are "exup for bids. The lowest bid was
1
comparative enviro~ntal =:oom:::d~n!a~ =t
over
$300,
almost
planning
and
developmenl
He
with
sideburns trimmed to a
as much as-a diahwas
uld
explained
that
there
are
two
·
the
lobe
·
cost from a discount
ear
IS atreasons why this unusual situa- l:'~!'/"'re
Yet according to State regula'Theoe atyle guidelines were
tions, the dishwasher had to tion is possible. The primary
be bought on the basis of bids. ~cantba~.!"'l:'..v!:'~~ revealed this week in a notice
Witb the change in adminis- the same common tradition to U / B Quarterback Club memtration ·carne a change in per- from the British. Added to thia bers. The Quarterback mailing
s6nnel working on the Day baae bas been a similar mechan- said that the rules are part of
Care Center. President Ketter ism in both countries throtlllh the · "Fqotball Squad's Agreement On Athletes' Obligations."
wb:ichtedlaw tbastbadtevehe!~will··8 Heti.ll . The guidelines also note that
pom
ou
"facial hair will not be alb;ave some homework to do, , lowed."
(co~d from 1&gt;01• I, coL 4)
smce caae law alfecta ~ ac"Failure to abide by this regof the Asaembly to agree with tual d&lt;;veloiJIIM!Dt .o~ law dilfer ulation," the statement aays,
JDB in everything I ~said.
~~ m the mdiv1dual coun- "will result in dismiasa1 fn?m
and I cannot ask you
in uthe
d f
the
any way on what I
ve pre- · n;,.., William K Anlus of
&lt;&gt;&lt;
season mlll!llted. You. must realize, bow- the Law School noted that Mu·
ever, that I cannot aerve in the kerjee waa invited to the Uni- - - - - - - - - - - - capacity of director of the A.- versity to provide an added
CITY TIIAFFIC TICI&lt;£lS
sembly ·if y&lt;&gt;U are unwillinc to dina&gt;sioR to the School's pro- City of B""-lo troflic tap (for all
act in llClCClldaooe with the spirit gram in environmelltal law. The non-moving violations such u II·
of t t - remarks.
program began in 1966 and bas 1-1 parldng. no ponnlt, using un·
"In reprd to the events ol sr-n rapidly. Mukerjee's ape- usi&amp;ned lots, etc.) and unlfonn
yeaterday (Bundav), let me cial interest is in the &amp;eld of troflic (for all mcwtna vlo·
point out that the I8dt ol trust . environmelltal planninc. He bas lations) will be I~ on campus.
which ca.-! me to reaisn can- been conductinc nlllearch and boalnnlnc October 1. 8oth tap
not be .....,.vee! by a simple teaching in thia ...,. (&lt;&gt;&lt; oev- and will be rwtum.~ble to
vote. I bollew, '-'w, that mal )'Mrs and since 1966 bas City .of l!uflalo courts.
if "" "c onduct our alfaira with been a 1epl COIIIUitant to the · tickets · are belfll until
due cue, the problem lD8.Y be Ford Foundation at the Cal- Oc:mber 1.
--"
(conJiJul«l .... 6, ooL 1)

Indian Dean
MightAsk -

rWhySoFew'

=·

Keep Hair Cut,
Gridders Told

vonMoltke-

vol.,::r.t'

CIJII....,.

~J7,JP70

Management Realignment
Creates 4 New Departments
Reorganizati~Hi of the School
of Management into four departments and four program
units bas been announced by
Dean Richard G. Brandenburg.
The revisions are the results
of a faculty-student review of
organizational -structure undertaken d,uring 1969-70.
New departments established
include Environmental Analysis
and Policy, Management Systems, Operations Analysis, aitd
Organization and Human Resources.
Eliminated are: Business Administration~ Financial ArJ.
counting, Finance, Industrial
Relations, Management Science, Markl&gt;ting and Organization-all the traditional '"business-sounding'' labels.
•
As described by Brandenburg, the new departments relate to the fonner structure as
follows:
Organization and Human Resources will be responsible for
studies enccmpassing behavioral sciences, organization theory, manpower planning, labor
relations, personnel management and closely related areas.
Joseph Shisler is chairman.
Operatwns Analysis will provide lhe setting for studies encompassing quantitative methods, cos t-elrectiveness techniques, accounting, marketing, finance, production, and related
subjects. Frank C. Jen is chairman.
Environrrumtal Analysis and
Policy will be responsible for
studies encompassing economics
and public policy: those aspects
ol the legal-ecological-socialpolitical environments that have
consequences for management.
Lee E. Preston is chairman.
Management Syst·ems will
embrace studies in integrative
management policy and strategy, design and application of
comprehensive planning and
control systems, and associated
managementinformation systerns. Edward L. Wallace is
chairman.
_
Each of the four programsundergraduate, masters, doctoral and urban alfairs management--has a faculty chairman,
responsible for the development, performance and academic integrity of each. The
faculty chairmen are C. Carl
Pegels, undergraduate; C. Perry
Bliss, masters; Philip Ross, doc!oral; and Stanley Zionts, urban
allairs management.
Each program chairman bas
an administrative Counterpart,
a director, -who is responsible
for promotion, scheduling, advising, student records keeping
and other activities.
Accordin!l to Dean Brandenburk, the director of undergraduate )tudent alfairs (James H.
Campbell) should be contacted
on all administrative matters
pertaining to the bachelor of
science degree program. The assistant dean-director of graduate student allairs (Sanford
M. Lottor) and the assistant to
the dean (Judith A. Dingledey ) should be contacted in
matters pertaining to the day
M.B.A, evening M.B.A ( graduate management . pr·ogram) ,
and Ph.D. programs of the

Schindler, resource managemenl
·
• ,
At J;&gt;re&amp;ent. the School of
.Management 1las more than 40
full-time factilty, 10-12 part.
time faculty, nearly 350 undergraduates, 400 M .B.A. students
and 50 Ph.D. students. Ita name
was changed officially from
School of Business Administration to School of Management
on January 1, 1969, baaed on a
charter endorsed .br its faculty ·
in t:b&lt;Lprevious apnng.

Alums' Role
Is Enlarged
Alumni, "the largest (ap"pro:rimately 40,000) and most
permanent of all the U 1 B constituencies," have been "assured
of a voice and a plaoo" in University decision-making, John
M. Carter, emcutive director of
the Alumni Association, said
this week.
.
In annoUncing a membership
dues program of $10 per year
for Unive~ity graduates, Carter
said the key to rejuvenated
alumni activity is the ''University administration's promise,
made first by Dr. (Peter F.)
Regan and substantiated by Dr.
(Robert L. ) Ketter, to involve
alumni in the decision-making
process."
Alumni- with paid memberships, said Carter, ''will be actively concerned with policymaking and will bave an opportunity to work with students,
faculty and administrators on
programs which help link the
community to the University."
Thisall!lllniparticipation-to
be channeled through a new
Committee on Ir.volvemen~
"will makl&gt; the dilference between a university that is simply growing larger and one that
is growing in academic excellence,'' Carter said. M. Robert
Koren, immediate past president of the General Alumni Association, is chairman of the
Committee on Involvement.
The Alumni Association
plans both luncheon meetings
with community leaders and the
establishment of "closer contact
with local and state legislatori;,''
Carter said.
Alumni dues, Carter; pointed
out, will support a " wellrounded many-faceted" program of activities. A new fiveman staff of professionals (the
executive director and the directors of alumni programs,
publications, constituent societies and flthletic funds ) will
work with 1,000 alumni volunteers. On the expanded alumni
agenda for paid members are:
continuing education for business and professiooal members;
seminars on tal&lt; problems, insurance and pollution; scholarship and awards ~tations;
s~ f1!III!8ICb and community ~;the UIB Alumni
News and a new special publication which will report fastbreaking campus , _ immedi.ately and will offer alUJP'!! the
chance to respond to.,..... on
campus.
.
·

- ~ding out the new admin- ~ :u:'~~~:

istrative alignment are a director of development (for
alumni alfairs, community service, publications, publicity, development projects and proIIJ:IUI18 with other parts of the
. University); an a.:miniatrator
of practicing ID8JUIIBT PTOir&amp;fllll
(f&lt;&gt;&lt; continuing education) and
an IIIIIOCiale dean for resouroe
m a u - t (budaeta, pen!Oil·
Del; acbedulln,, etc.) .
'1'1.- "'Ddivlduala are Crail:
L. 'l'bnloba, clewlapaart; Nef-"'
... K. Up~~m, pnclicinc ......
JIIOir&amp;llll. and , _ 8.

tion, ~ aaid, will include:
the privilel8 of uainc a new
Faculty-Alumni Club Which is
bein1 planDed few a site adjaoeot to the , _ Amhent campUB, and reduced ran. on foreign poup trips.
"Alumni orpnizationa which
are fortunate SIOillh to rely on
support frod:l theit aaaben are
in a better position_to belp their
uniVWIIitieaand have IDOI'IIaed·
lbillty than a1uami ~
which are totaJI,y clependellt
lq&gt;Oil the inalitutiall," Carter
ald.

�3

........,_ 11,1910

~Afire&amp;~~--------~------(colltilwed from - 1 . col6)
President Kette~ acknowledged
subject field or fields with the official staniling of the As!.wbich the pro~ oourse is sembly but called , its approval
ooooemed."
•of Roes IAnemburg College a
Juot F8aii!J
"reoommendation" to the vice
Murray emphasized that biB president for academic aftaits.
point (3 ) is ''not to be
~eu:~m:a:"t.~n'!
&amp;trued ati mMDing that only issue of who, in theory, has
facu]ty members can be ad- final say on approving wbat
judged competent. Certainly. for whom by wliich processes
there are otbers· than facnlty, was sidestepped in the statefor example,,;~ grad,~te ment. But the President did
students. . . · 'However, be seem to undersoore Murray's
oontinued, "the kay point .,.. stand that, in fact, ultimate apmains that an evaluative group proval (that is release of funds
should be ·satisfied, by appro- and granting of credit) resides
priate documentation provided in Hayes Hall.
or 'other information, that whoSaid Ketter:
ever are the instructional staft,
"(1) It was Dr. Murray's
· they be . Competent to the par- oonclusion from a review of the
licular instructional purpose."
supporting papers (for the LuxNothing, in biB memo, Mur· emburg proposal) that althougb
ray said, was intended to stu!- an orientation toward the study
lily educatinnal innovation or of radical political theory is set
in I or m a! styles. Fresb ap- forth within the proposal, its
proaches are welcxime, be said. principal thrust appears to be
_ "Nevertheless." be continued, that of establishing pollical ool"it remains true that evalua- lectives within the oommunity
live groups, while cocltina a for action purposes.
sympathetic ear to innovation.
"(2) Inadequate information
should do so via a oonsidenid was provided on the specific
and responsible review pro- members of the faculty and
oess."
graduate students scheduled to
Noting that biB memorandum serve as instructors or ~ion
was addre&amp;seil to the Under- leaders in tbe oourses offered
graduate Studies CurriculUm by the College&gt; To lha best of
Committee as well as to other my knowledge, Dr. MUIT!ly did
evaluating groups, Murray con- not bave before him the oomcluded, "I reserve the right to pleted set of curriculum vitae
review aU courses that bave and other appropriate supportbeen approved by such oommit- ing dOCUJDe!lts for a review of
tees and (to mske) ·a possible this aspect of the proposal."
hich
recommendation to the presideilt or the Faculty Senate that
In the statement w
ap.
peared first in the Cour~rspecific offerings not be gtven ErpreJJJJ, Ketter rejected the
academic credit."
notion that the Murray action
In response to the Murray
ted b erternal
notice, the Assembly ...-! a :::,romp
Y
presresolution insisting •·on the:
uA free university must be
right of oollegiate units to offer able to devote its attention to
a-edit-bMring oourae&amp; on an ex· any subject. But if it is to reperimental one semester (or main a university with jntegone semester equivalent) basis
.
with approval within the Col- rity, that attention to oontrolegiate Assembly only," as out- i:~=:d.::s~iU:,::;
lined in the amended Stem scholarship, research and inProspectus for the c 0 II e g e s struction which we demand of
which was adopted by the Fac- our traditional offerings. Free
ul~~Ysp~i' that it and thoughtful criticism is ceojudges oourses on uniqueness tral to our task; sloganeering
of content and!or methodology • and propaganda are nol
stall qualifications (either tra"Academic freedom is a !unditional or special) and pro- dsmental part of the civil libpoood evaluation processes. erties we enjoy ~ citizens of
"This review meets the policy this nation. The defense of acso! the Board of Regents." the demic freedom, however, does
resolution stated. Tbe Assem- not require adherence to the
bly granted; however, t h a t ooncept that any and all activi"continuing offering of credit ties have an equal claim to· the
bearing oourses requires review resources and legitimacy of the
of appropriate other bodies as University. There definitely
noted in the Stem Prospectus." :'Jrinbe ~ tl~~.,"~i:' ~~~hiO:
Ctau C.rcli o.mandrld
examination atid critical an·
Tbe Assembly further "in- alysis of subjects such as posisted" on the release of class litical anarchism, the history
registration cards for all oourses of radical labor struggles and
approved by its Program Eval- organizations, the causes of inuation Committee- including Bation and many others. But
those for ~ Lu.xemburg such proposals would bave to
which ~"!' ~ WJthbeld by go through the critical subthe administraFr.~~ the dmin , stan live review required for all
a
. • oourses, departments, programs
. By. iday, w•~•
IBtration rel_u&amp;e!l to alter •ts and oollegiate units. Dr. Murstsnd on re)eCting _Rosa.~- ray has suggested that the pro!'Jilburl \Jecsuae, of ~1aent spectus set forth at this time
information on evaluation pro- for the Rosa Luxemburg Colcedures, the : A.sse!"!&gt;ly ap- lege does not describe such a
proved a resolution m~~ vehicle-«nd 1 en®rse his poby James Crotty of Social Sci- sition."

con-

..

:t.::..Coc!t'!i. f~the~~
director to immediately transmit to the administration full
particulars of the methods employed by it .for oourae evalualion. Tbe motion again requested that ciaao cards for aU
olrerinp approved by these
methods be reieal;ed before registration.
A -live respo~ by s,dministration. the motion said,
would lead to a call for , an
emeraency ...,.;on of tha Faculty Senate. referral of the dispu~ to _.;ate ~t
bodioa, and an informal regtStration procedure for aU oollecl.ola unlta.
.

~---...
Ia ... ...
'

Suaday,

oovered, be said, thai Luxem:burg students bad misrept&amp;sented facts to him and to the
Assembly wben tbey reported
they bad a faculty memberThomas Rainey, assistant professor of history - who bad
agreed to serve as master. Von
Moltke said that Rainey bad
told him that "at no time" bad
be agreed to serve.
• Von Moltke said further that
be bad made it clear to Luxemburg that the involvement of
faculty members was critical to
the ability of the Assembly to
make a full case for its admission. "Tbey bave lied to us,"
the Assembly director said. He
asked for "the abolishment" of
the College "because they have
misused the trust we bave given
them."
"We are being undercut by
both sides in a fashion that is
designed to destroy the oollegiate system," von Moltke
charged.
Tom Bucbanan--.a graduate
student in p(&gt;litical science and
a member of Luxemburg College-replied that a lack of information had occurred but
that charges of misrepresents- ·
tion were not warranted. "We
didn't clear it," be said in reference to using the name of
Rainey as master, adding that
dealings with Rainey bad been
"ambiguous."
'A lot of Bunk'

Fred Snell, chairman of the
new oolleges oommittee of the
Assembly, said that Roes Luxemburg had been exemplary in
"its openness." ult's quite clear
wbat they were all about," he
Said, adding that the need for
a master is "a lot of bunk."
Masters are not mandated by
the Stem Prospectus, he said.
After further discussion, the
Assembly failed to vote on a
resolution to .-ecommit Rosa
Luxemburg's approval to the
Assembly for further consideration and calling for clarification of Assembly procedures for
admitting new coJieges and approving courses.
Instead, a resolution reaffirming Rosa Luxemburg's
existence, intrOduced by Snell,
was approved by a vote of 169.
The Snell resolution accused
the administration of infringing
upon the rights of the Assembly
in publicly disapproving Luxemburg. ''This itself is an infringement of the academic
freedom voted on by the student body and the Faculty Senate in accepting the Stern Prospectus," the resolution said.
Tbe resolution also urged
Roes Luxemburg to continue
working with the Assembly's
Program Evaluation Committee to gain oourse credit aPproval and enoouraged it to
register students "internally."
After passage of the resolution, von Moltke said it was
clear that be had to resign as
Assembly director.
Following appeals that he
stay on and the introduction of
a motion to that effect by Bu·
chanan of Roes '&lt;J,pxemburg,
von Moltke said, "Sl(,p playing
games, damn it," and lefL
'lunm'-- Ita Lied'
AU Collo&amp;es T1Heaienod
In an emergency session SunThis action broadened the
dsy, the Collegiate Assembly administrative rejection of Rosa
beard von Moltke relate an Lurembwt into a threatened
".Re.''?~ from President Ketter rejection of the entire oollegi~statement on Roes Lux- ate system.
efnburg had appeared in the·
'1lle absence of a director,
~per before it reacbed the Vice President Murray said in
~ly.
a letter prepared for distribuVon Moltke said be aooepted tion at registration on Monday,
the Ketter statement as beinc "violates the key requirement
in good faith and addressing it- that the ooUegiate system bave
. aelf to academic freedom, even a responsible director aooeptthough be felt its release vio- able to the president,"
If the Assembly failed to
Iated agreed-upon procedures
for the release o.f oommunica· elect a new aooeptable director
·tiona.
by the end cl. recistration an
Tbe Assembly director said W..m-lay, Murr&amp;¥ wamed,
that Roes l.uD!mbilrr Collep, oolletdate oourtlllfl• tor credit
~.- gtJilty c l . - coald not be offered 'In tbe fall
-""'" violatlaaa. He had dis-

-·

r .

Senate Executive Group
Sets Grievance Procedure
An interim solution to the
problem of handling undergraduate grading grievances
was adopted this week by the
Executive Committee of the
F~ culty Senate.

Training Slated
For Managers
A Management Work s hop
Series for lower, middle and
upper leveJ managers within t.J:te
University will be offered agam
this year by the Personnel Department.
Clarence Cooper, University
training director, has invited
administrative officials to nominate individuals from within
their departments for attendance at se s sions to be held
monthly from October through
April.
Topics to be oovered include :
" Management Responsibilities
arid Guidelines for Health and
Safety," scheduled for October,
"The Youth Nation-Myth or
Reality?" ''Data Processing
Systems at SUNY/ B," scheduled for November, "Personnel
Policies and Procedures," ''Theory and Practice of New York
State Budgets," "Budget/ Acoounting-ReportinR Systems,"
"Purchasing- Policies and Procedures," "Accounting- How
We Can Help You."
A session oombining "Equal
Employment Opportunity" policy and the organization of
SUNY/ B will be developed for
newoomers to the series, Mr.
Cooper says.
Tbe 1969-1970 Management
w ksho Se .
ttracted 84
~pus .::,:,::;: ~at least one
of sir sessions. Forty-two attended at least four sessions
and received oertillcates.
·
to Cooper the
A ccor d •ng
•

~~! ~~ ~~0 " :

'1lle monthly seesions will be

The approved procedure calls
for such disputes to be first
negotiated between the student
and the instructor of the oourae.
If the matter remains unresolved, it goes to the department chairman for referral to
an appropriate departmental
committee. If still unresolved,
an appeal may be made to a
committee designated by the
executive or policy committee
of the faculty involved. Final
appeal msy be made to the
dean and policy oommittee of
Undergraduate Stndies.
In outlining this procedure
for undergraduates, the Senate
Executive Committee noted
that "grievance procedures (already) seem to exist at the
graduate level."
The Executive Committee also confirmed that the full Senate's first regular meeting will
be held October 15 (147 Diefendorf, 2 p.m.) to oonsider
amending the current By-Laws
"by implementing a represent.ative faculty senate."

Not Your Call?
Tell Acrounting
Although abandonment of the
"Q" oode system for University
long distance telephone calls
has resulted in some unau~
rized toll call charges, there's
no real problem, Charles Balkin, assistant vice president for
operations and (ystems, says.
According to Balkin, unauthorizeil calls. cbarged to a department sboUld simply be reported to the Acoounting Department (ext. 4039) wbicb will
take action to obtain credit from
the telephone oompany.
Balkin exj&gt;lained that the Qoode system bad been replsced
by use of ertension number for
long-distance billing in onler to
avoid an anticipated increase
of $20,000 in annual talepbone

restri~et1i~"":t""'U: ~·=~·~

~ to three bows in the by the telephone oompany
afternoon. Most sessions will be which recently biked til8 rate
beld in the training ~ for suCh calls by eight per cent.
Room 104, 1807 -Elmwood Av8,_ Balkin a111o said that "a mo1
Far additional b..~tion. equi~~ ~or"~
oontact the Persoanel Depart.. for __...,., JS """
molll

~

�cn,...,.~ ,i·

4'

~11,1wo

-nr..run• r.n..:&gt;
.
.

Whose Side Is God Oil? The Students' or the Establishments?
remembered
cJU.
,_ """' ..

.......X..., and he was .not primarily a vocational orientapermitted to skip portions of a tion, and their behavior manior to present his ma- . fested it. Rowdyism, of rourse,
terial in any unsystematic man- was still occasionally to be
Student Activism has almost
ner. As one migbt guess, the found, but riots and rebellion
replaced black activism on the
professors reacted to the stu- disappeared from view.
-of~ Andif
N ow, however, scholarsbip
dents in kind, and soon, they,
eYIIIII"lieals are not C81efui,
too, had organized themSelv.,. and scholarly credentials such
tbey
find themselves Olllle
as
the Ph.D. began to displace
for various p~ such as
more
in a mistake
establishing and enforcing cri- religious piety and ministerial
which has frequently cbaraoterteria
of student admissions. But training as criteria for faculty
ired. their response to race canthe University of Bologna, appointment. As the scholars
D.iot.
nonetheless, was run esse':'tially took their work seriously, inTbe ehor of which I speak is
vestigating the world arounil
by and for the students. . . .
that of dragging God into the
them, industry, rommerce and
Orthodoxy Is Hot Christllfray, of asserting ex cathedra
One frequently hear ~ tha t government attracted their
that in any ongoinJ struggle his
most rolleges in early America piercing attention. That atsympathies rest with """ side
were established .as institutions tention, of rourse, society ,.._,
~ tbe other (that side, of
of "Christian" higber learning. paid sevenfold. The rollege
&lt;XJUr&amp;e, which has elicited the
In a sense it is true that "ed- professor became not only the
sympathies of the eelf-&lt;q&gt;ucation in colonial America butt of jokes and sarcasm but
pointed prophet). But God is
was the child of religion." But the object of much rollective
DO - - of persoos. His
as evangelicals are quick to wrath and even of many a rejudpDeniB in human aJrairs are
point out, one must be cautious prisal through business-oribeaed not upon who does wba~
never to ronfuse religion with ented, business-con trolled
but upon what it is 011e does
discipleship, nor orthodoxy boalds of trustees.
and wb,y be does it.
· with Christlikeness.
Ultimately, however. two
No evanplical would deny
world wars sandwiching a
that there is a dil;tinction to be
great depression induoed radimade between judpnents beaed
G1. TTEWPQ~"NTS, cal social change, not the least
upon the rigbtness or wrong- V .l
'.l
of which was the widespread
, _ of an act and judgments
public rerognition that out of
beaed upon wbo the parties
ivory towers inhabited by scholmay be that are involved in a
Tbe typical American rol- ars who rould not· be underdispute. In recent practice,
lege, from the founding of Har- stood (and perhaps also by
however, the distinction bas
vard in 1636 until the middle busybodies who did not undercommonly been neglected. And
of the 1800's, served to perform stan~). many rontributions. of
the neglect bas caused no liton behalf of parents the trans- genwne value to _the nation
tle embarraasment. Many rour~~.::~~~ ':'~= f\';'~ ~!.m peaoe and war bad
ageous individuals, for example, have publicly sympathbe leaders in the yet untamed
New World. That any individ· The Silent Generation
ized. with the black man in
ual should partake of a higher
In the late forties and in the
America; but often they have
education was by no, means fifties, probably the most thoralso unfortunately identified
solely a matter of His own oughly vocation-oriented crop
with the blaclawll rather tlum
against the oppression which
choice; he was, in fac~ simply of students in the U n i ted
a party of the third part in a States' history flocked to the
the blacks have sullered. Concontractual arrangement be- nation's institutions. These
sequently, when sin has been
tween his parents and the students ronstituted the Silent
disrovered in the blaclr.. campschooL
Generation and many a romas inevitably sin is disrovered
Institutions, therefore, stood
everywhere-the sympa4hizers
encement speaker of that era
have found it necessary either
squarely in loco parentU., with urged UP.On his listeners a ron·to repudiste the behavior of
their rules· and regulations and, sideration of the scholarly life
their black friends or to stand
even more fundamentally, their or of social involvement (or of
repudiated themselves.
harsh puritanical administra- both) as a career. Btit in the
Precisely the aame experition of those rules clearly in- sixties, such speeches were obdicating as much. . . .
viously no longer necesaary,
ence, of rourse, has befallen
But young men of that time and no examples are required
sympathizers of the white man.
Tbey have lauded the achievewould respond no more graoe- , to prove that a large number
ments and - piety of traditional
fully to oppressive rontrol t1um of rontemporary college stuwhite America and they have
woUld young men of any other dents are "involVed." The 100indicted evils well documented
day, and the students took part year interlude of relative calm
in the black rommunity. But
in ronduct equally as unrom- in higher education (which
sooner or later they have bad
mendable as that of their eld· many people today mistakenly
to face the observation that
ers. . . . In one institution believe always to have preblack behavior is in part pn&gt;three students were expelled fo; vailed ) was drawing to a close.
voked and stimulated by wbites,
drunkenness and insolence to
As yet there is no definitive
that such evils are known
professors, whereupon the stu· explanation to be given of the
among whites as well as among
dent body protested, the faculty causes of the new student activblacks, and that, in addition,
met concerning the protes~ and ism. But certain observations
whites are guilty of some very
to the crashing of windows and can be offered, and once again
special kinds of avarice and
the ripping of stair rails, the they suggest that no one side
• chicanery all their own.
faculty suspended 125 of a stu· in this more recent ronflict is
All Mon Sin
dent body of fewer t1um 200. wholly pure.
In sbo~ neither side is pure;
At another school, where stu·
The typical student today is
all men sin. God, moreover,
dents rioted because, they said
much more informed about a
despises sin, and no man nor
the mathematics Jlroblems we...; great many th;.,gs tlum were
group ever enjoys his blanket
too difficult, the professors who most of us when we departed
approval of their attitudes and
were authorized to ente( any high schooL A recent review,
deportment
studenl's room at any time of lor example, of the achievement
But if I sense the wind of '
day or night, came to investi- srores of children in a certain
popular evangelical sentiment
gate-and were met by flying Midwest school system, many
rorrectly, we are responding to
rocks. One of the faculty, a of whose parents bad attended
the rontemporary campus turWest Pointer, drew a sword and the same system and bad been
moil in the aame fasbion we
charged. Tbe remainder helped given the aame achievement
responded .to the civil rights
batter down a door and togeth· tests, indicated thaL the avermovement. 0 u r sympathies
er they suppressed the rioters. age srore of today's children
ale being polarized, with the
The historian Schmidt aptly was well above that which the
describes those 200 years as a older generation bad earned.
time of "autocracy tempered
Related. to the increase in
by rebellion."
knowledge among students to.
Extensions of
day is the particular way in
Educotionol Opportunity
which they are taught to think:
A '*",_ oommunit, --~ publiMed er«~~ Tltwllllry by ,,. DW~Wn o1 unJ. t
~ 1862 the Morrill Act was
No longer is a student eXpected
~ R~riotw. Stat• U~,., ol N- Yorl: •' 8 -'1213
~• ' " ' ' ltl•in St., Butlalo, ·pasSed by Congress and the ' to accept a notion simply be:',;,.,;..z;:~:j. UltorW oil~ JoceNcf in R_,
'
Winlpeat A""•
land-grant colleges were cause a teacher or a textbook
~~- ·a.;.,
hom. · . .
says it is so. Rather he is .,._
.._ wasrUY ROWLAND
America was leaving bebind pected to check it out to see
TH.:~v~RJIO
its period of establisbmen~ and · if it is so. U it is not, then he
.-...a.w
was entering its time of devel- is expected to bring it clearly
R081iRT T. Jl.uwn'T
opment and ezpansion. U an to the attention of others, a
,._,. ~ ':::' ~'::&amp; ...._ ,......
individual were brigb~ diligent social irritation perhaps; but
.., _. ,...._._
and very fortunate, he just an intellectual nece£Bity.
JOBtr ,._. cr.ormJrR
millbt riae to a position of
Through u... mass media,
......._ .-...
great wealth and power. U, on young -17'today may see
SUSAM O~lfWOOD
the other band; ligbtning did alflueooe and poverty, privilege
~,...,.==. ~' 1 - R. .,.._,.,; .,_,., " " - -· , . _ , s. not &amp;trike and he were pos- and injustioe, joy"and ...,wah
- . 1 of not more-tlum a nor- -aD. in ~. aftemoon. Most of
. .~' z. , _ s.,. B . u,.;.
mal intelliaeooe.' then without them have -ienoed little of'
CMi&gt;,.,&gt;JHO ........,., 11• • • •·
· a formal "e ducation be was like- the inlleauity which ha)mts
ly to 10 nowbere. Studmla ..,_ a- wbo lived ~
tered colleges, tba-efore, with thirties, and little of the revnl-'

By WALTER C. HOBBS
~~.~~ -

·~.:::: ~....:..­

"':'.a...a

majorify of us. on the side • (as
usual ) of "the !luthoritiea" and
an almost inaudible few occasionally championing the stude.lits. U history - t s itaeU,
the next act in the drama will
be for various 'spokesmen to
demonStrate, with proof texts,
thet God bas a special .view o.f
the whole affair of which men
bad best take notice. Tbe final
act will be for us all to discover (again) that given our
performance, no one is paying
attention to anything we have
to aay, even when we do in fact
speak legitimately for him. It
would be a pity were we to
rontinue in such a regrettable
and unnecessary repetition of
enor.
One possible antidote is for
us to recall repeatedly the
Biblical truth that God seldom
stands fully on one side or another in any dispute among
men. A second rountermeasure
is to review and to ronsider the
nature and history of the current dispute, 'of those who are
involved, of their strengths and
frailti..,, with "an eye toward
determining just bow right or
wrong may be the various positions which the different
parties have taken. It can, I
think, be · demonstrated that
neither sin nor righteousness
bas ever been the sole preserve
of any persons in higher education, whether they were students, faculty, administrators,
trustees, parents or the society
at large.
Universities first emerged in
the late eleventh and twelfth
centuries. ...
One of the' best known and
most eminent ... developed in
the city of Bologna, Italy,
where hundreds of scholars
(that is, students) rongregated
to pursue studies with the
masters. There, despite today's
popular opinion which holds
that student activism began in
the mid-1960's, the students organized a protest. Tbe towns·
people of Bologna were cbarg·
ing exorbitant rents and high
prices for necessities, and the
students, free as they were
from any ties to ·a campus (for
there was none ), challenged the
towns-le by threatening to
vacate the area. A lower rent
was better than none at all, and
the students won their demands.
Victorious in that struggle,
the students turned on "their
other enemies," the professors
(or masters ) , whose livelihood
depended entirely upon stu·
dent fees but whose behavior
would imply it were the other
way around. To guarantee that
they received their mOney's
worth, the ' students permitted
the professors no absences from
classes and no departures from
Bologna without a deposi t to
insure their return. A profes.
sor was obliged to begin and
end his classes on time, he was
not permitted to put off difficult questions till the end of a

uo

cow&amp;e

m

sion which is
by
ttx.e who lived daily with the
name of Hiller. But they do
sense somelhinl of the plisht ·.
o, ff thetheAf~- ~ oinftheAmerica,Asian'.
·~·"""

0

Tbey are keenly aWBI'e of the
vast discrepancy between their
lif&lt;Hityle and that of others in
this world. Moreover, they recall-with a measure of genuine pride- the position their
parents affirmed at Nuremburg: A man must do rigbt;
no matter what the social or
politicill circumstances may be,
he cannot abdicate his own ·
moral responsibility. ·
Thoy Don't Buy It!
Brigbt studeiits that they
are, they look about them to
ascertain whether prevailing
practioe matches any of the
preacbing. All too frequently,
they find the answer is no.
Tbey find precious little toleranoe of anyone's suspicions con~
ceming, aay, the morality of
the war in Vietnam, let alone
of anyone's active opposition to
that war. Indeed, they are told
by many members of the older generation that such opposi. tion and even such moral reservations are basically immoral
because they violate their roun:
try's official position in the
matter. Not surprisingly, the
students do not buy it.
They turn instead to the university where free inquiry and
scholarsbip are allegedly · the
chiefest of values. There again,
too often they find only further
disappointment. The faculty,
who earlier dissected, exposed
and even roasted powerful ele~
ments of the larger society,
have in many instances sold
out. Government grants, industrial research rontracts and
all sorts of ronsulting oppcrtunities receive more attention
from many professors tlum do
students who wish to make intellectual aploration their way
of life. At bes~ the students
are. expected to berome what
their professors have become
"servants of power" in ~
"military- indU~Jtrial romplex."
At wors~ they are expected to
do their assignments like good
little boys, to romplete their
degrees, and to slip as quickly
and quietly as possible into the
manpower pooL
There, however the student
Jinds he has leverage. College
is no longer a one-waY street
of benefits. Obviously it still
holds rewards, at least for those
who aspire to an upper middleclass way of life. But just as
importantly, rontemporary society absolutely needs rollegeeducated manpower, able to respond continually and adaptively to rapid change in a rationa! purposive Wll)'• . • . And
alert students know· it.

llolocn•

Revisited

_ But too few faculty today, .
and even fewer laymen, appear
to rerognize the major distinction between the learning of
skills and the development of
the life of the mind. Consequently, just as the students of
Bologna ,.._ up against their
unprincipled landlords 8lld pn&gt;lessors, and just as the ~ts
of colonial America a~
their inordinately domineering
faculty, students in this day-of
social hypocrisy and educationa!
also rebel.
However, allhouJb """ can
oertainly- appreciate the students' goals, 0118 canDOt always
endorse their style. Frequently
their behavior is incamp&amp;tible
with the free and c1evo1ec1 iqquiry they claim is their quMl
Their IDIIIIMr is often arropnt
and uncivil. Their moti""" often appear more to be ~ of
/ spoiled and petulant ehlJdrm
than of the IJISiuiDe acbolar.
Clearly-and Cl!JI!1!jM!Idah-

inillevanee

(C&lt;Hililwed.,..- 6, to1, 6)

�(

GD~ t -T '· .

. , . . _ _ 11, 191(1

·

5

.1.~1· ~

d:AmhOise is
a hip.hippi£
By -BARBARA GAIL ROWES
JIICQUM d'Amboiae is either a really
hip danEur or a hippie who happens
to dance. POOBibly be is both.
He describes his career with 'The
New York City Ballet as a 21-year:Oid
ody'aaey which baS taken him from
one prima ballerina to another. Ask
him about tbe sirls, be'U flip : Which
one?'' 'lben offer a detailed commentary on ~ muscular movement of
each.
He regards his audience with about
as much individuality, and in spite of
his eminent position on tbe cultural
front, be has choreographed his steps
for royalty and revolutionary alike.
"¥ou Inlet people as tbey Inlet you,"be says to explain his aociaJ versatility.
"When you start to pigeonhole them,
you've pigeonholed youraelf."
Actions speak louder than words,
and d'Amboiae has done more than
spout pbiloeophical dictums at his
crowds: that is, be has gathered a
crew of New York City BaUet girls,
and together tbey have performed at
college campuses around tbe country.
It developed at tbe University of California at Santa Ba!bara, where last
year be danced in tbe midst of tbe
riots. "Who said ballet isn't relevant,"
d'Amboiae smiles, "I'd say it was right ·
in ihe middle of tbe action."
"It" will be at tbe State University
of New York at BuJfalo wben d'Amboiae aod female company arrive on
September 26 and 2:1 to give two concerts at Buffalo State's Upton Hall. at
8:30 p.m. and 7:15 pm. respectively.
Tickets are on sale at Norton Student
Union and Buft"alo State. Admission
charge is 50 cents for students; $1.50
for general admission.
No Mlnii-Uned

!l&lt;mP.......Pione

"They're informal concerts," d'Amboiae says. ''I · don't want students
coming in mink-lined dungarees and
diamond-studded loafers. I want tbem
to come as if tbey are going to a
movie: free, natural, popoom..oriented
so that tbey can respond to tbe movement with tbe same comfortable reaction. People still see ballet through
a champagne film with a nineteenth
century vintage. That's ridiculous. It's
a bore. I want tbem to come to watch
our boilies, to see tbe infinite possibilities of human movements through
space. Actually to admire tbe girls.
You know, •they're getting prettier

forced to tum students away at the
door. d' Amboise attributes the success
to tbe girls. But tbe girls admit the
credit is all d'Amboise's. "When he
tslks about ballet, you'd swear the
muscle was the key to world power,"
says prima ballerina Kay Mazzo. "It
is," d 'Amboise says, ..but nobody realizes it yet."
He luu, siilce age 15. Now at 35, he
recalls: "When I was a kid, after a
performance I'd rush into the subway
for reaeation and jump across the
tracks ten or 12 times to keep in
shape." Tempted by Hollywood following his enormous success in George ·
Balanchine's "Apollo," he took off
for tbe movies in the early fifties but
Quickly returned. ·~n you're trained

· cool. It caught the impulsive 10ft oboe
of his personality. {e'U perform it In
Buffalo . But whon? "Couldli't tell
you," d'Amboiae sa~ ''l'lanninc a
concert prior to tbe evening Ia a aublle
hypocrisy. A concert abould pow out
of a theatre's music: that is, tbe audi. ence. It should be cbOreograpbed 1i1re
a ballet, and its rhythms abould spring
from the audience's reactic:m."
."We'U spend tbe day of a concert
doing between two and four hours of
exercises, then we'll sit down for a
chat, deciding our moods, tbe moods
we'd like to evoke. But we don't really
map out a curriculum. We bang I&lt;Xa!, '
so that we can sway with tbe response."
'Therefore, d'Amboiae doesn't put on
a concert. "It's actually a happening,~-.
he says. "I give to an audience, and .
tbey give back to me. We csU it balleL»
In addition to tbe two conceits,
d' Amboise will also be giving a free
lecture under the auspices of tbe University's English Department on Monday, September 28, at 8 p.m. "When
tbey called to ask for a title, I almost
died. A title! I can't even plan a day.
Everything I do is spontsneoua. It
borders on the illogical which I prefer
to call spontaneous. I choreograph my
lectures like ballets also: that is, to
the a udience's music. What other
dancer choreographs his lectures?" For
that matter, what otber dancer can
leCture?
But the evening wiU basically revolve around d'Amboise's knowledge
of George Balanchine, tbe artistic director of The New York City BaUet
who has really nurtured d' Amboise's
career.· 11 He owns 60 per cent of my
mind," d'Amboisc says.
Wife Carrie and his children, whom
he calls his four posterity, seize tbe
otber 40 per cenL
Balanchine is the choreographer
generally credited with giving classical
ballet its modem form. "But his work
·has uniformly been described as an
abstract modem art, so much so that
critics pave forgotten to look for its
meaning. When I dance his ballets, I
study them for hours, I put my mind
in tbe movement, and ask why, why.
Why this movement? Why this expression? Why this music?"
"Sometimes I really wonder bow he
picked me for his choreography. Professionally, I stand in awe of tbe man.
A few of his 117 ballets actually move
into the music with a perfectionistic
mating. When I perform tbem, I can't
express the bonor, and I ask myself
why did he pick me?"
Perhaps d' Amboise has forgotten
that he is generally regarded as America's outstanding danseur.

GFEATURES
all your life as a dancer, you want to
dance. It's a compulsive drive." But
_ d'Amboise recollects Hollywood as a
place where r ncers earn fantastic
sums to sit around. "It drove me bats,"
he says. "I had to get back to New
York. It's where the muscle action is."
Astaire·Kelly Cool

This year George Balanchine choreographed a new ballet for d' Amboise.
It's called "Who Cares," 17 Gershwin
tunes arranged for classical balleL In
it, d' Amboise romances three different
girls with a Fred Astsire- Gene KeUy

every year."

At Santa Barbara, d' Amboise's natural approach to dance caught on to
such an extent that last year he was
ABOUT MISS ROWES
Barbara Gall Rowes, a Ph.D. candidate at
U/ 8 , is chainnan of the UUAB dance
commrttee and a prol ific, tllented writer
about dance and other subjects. One of
her recent non-dance subjects was John
Be·r th (the article reprinted from the
Rochester Democrat end Chronicle in ·lest

week's

Reporter) . ~

Miss Rowes currentty is attempting to
foster 1 new burst of dance activity i n
Buffalo. She became interested In ballet

while studying for her bllchelo(o_ d011ree
ot New Yof1&lt; University. "The drug-oriented social life" so turned her off that
she spent most evenings watching blillet
. . • •nd doing 'physics homework
intermiuions. She flunked
leorned • lot lbout do"ilt:e.
ina on her M.A. at Johns Hopkins. · she

d iscownld thlt she hid pined onou&amp;h

expertise to write lbout .billet.

tho -.
--.....-.R-1-and.........,,
Sho became otlicl1l donco "Writer for
lho lllltimora SUndly Sun 1nd 11t.r becomo I writer fo&lt; lho
P - , oho for
their

W-...,... -Sho Is donco
-:
and a

for
"'-"• o
--for-.-......
to-...
critic
the To/onto ~for-

"1.1110.---

. tho---·--donco." oho explains. "It -

formll, IIUt -

-·

to be -

&amp;..Ina.':__.,.

At U/ra ............ I t - -..NY to 11111oo It-...,_ The
1
at tap lho man With tho bltef caoe had to ao to
-~ · -just to find I.,._ t o -. 1....... .• lib to pt lho rW"rl c:laAclnll.

-

~·

�Septembe&lt; 11, 1910

6

Whose Side?-

~~.----~--7------

....)

·~

(confiniid from- I , coL 4)
The repor\ continues:
since all agencies failed to ;re- • '"The Governor of ·New York ·
spond adequately."
and ·the - State Police ·were
Among individuals and agen- prompt in their r_esponse to our
cies contacted were: Govemol'l · request for action. However,
Neillon Rockefeller, the New afler receiving all our evidence
York State Police, the FBI, the State Police warned us
Erie County District Attorney that 'they would not duplicate
Dillon, Senators Goodell and federal efforts.' The State has
Javits Rep. Richard McCar· not been heard from since then
thy, New York State Rep. Blu- and initiated no further probes. menthal, the President's Com"The J u s tic e De~t
mission on Campus Unrest and and the FBI were our pnme
various news inedia.
hopes. We felt that the ·federal
'Stone Woll'
government had th:e cai&gt;l!cit:( to
Despite promises and some conduct a full mves~gation.
Jle1!IS reports, the groups main- Ou~ hopes were not fulfilled for
tajn, "we collided, at every w!&gt;lle the FBI accepted our eye-corner, with the proverbial w1tness statements and a f~
stone · waU;" in temis of initi· personal reP&lt;?rts by eyeWit·
atinK "real investigations."
nesses, they d1d not take to the
At their press meeting, the field to in~rview or discover
students cited individual re- any other witnesses or ev1dence.
sponaes from some of these As of this date no reports have
agencies and individUals:
come from the Justice DepartMayor Frank Sedita, while ment, nor coul.d any accu':"te
stating be had not seen the stu- reP:"~"! come •!nee they_ fall~
dents' evidence, said in July on to J!Utiate any m-depth mvestiWBEN-TV· ''Tile Buffalo Po- gation of the event."
lice deported themselves really
''The situation could be remcommendably."
edied," the . st~~ent-NYCLU
Police Commisaioner Frank group mamtains, 1f those agenFelicetta said in a UPI story in cies responsible . we~ to ~ut
June: "I would just as soon adequa'!' effort m!'&gt; such mforget what happened at the vestlgations ~d if all con·
Buffalo campus that night. . . . cerJCled realized that it is highly
There are more important unlikely ~t an ag~cy acthiugs going on than that. 1 cused of. DUSOOnduct wtll ':'d~
don't think we should revive quately mvestigate and dlSCl·
the ·
"
pline itseU." A~g to the stUdents,
While they say it is '.'tm.fsir"
Felicetta also claimed in. a Buf· to conclu~.e from ~ne mmdent
(a/o Evening News story on that the system lS unresponMey 14 that "shotgun pellet' sive to legitimate student re-ammunition was not used or quests," the group feels that
possessed by any Buffalo Police it is becoming clear, based on
officer assigned there."
experien~ here and elsewhere,
"However" the student.. that official response to such
NYCLU re~rt continues "a requests will be "to ignore and
lawyer and University a&lt;hnin- repress them."
istrator have signed statements
that state they heard police on
the police band radio on the
night of May 7 request that
buckshot be brought up from
Main and Niagara Falls Boule-vard onto the campus."
(Police "w""" equipped with
12 gauge pump shotguns used
to launch gas but also capable
of firing birdshot," the report ~ Fourteen student publications
says.)
will be funded-in whole or in
Felicetta is also charged by ~y the Student Publicsthe concerned groups with t.ell- tions BOari:l this fall, according
ing the New York Times that to Paula Brookmire, secretary
"a civilian, a resident of the of the Board. The most popular
neighborhood near the Student among them, ethos and SpecUnion . . . had fired some trum, resume publication next
shots... .''
week; ethos, on Tuesday, and
Spectrum, on Wednesday.
'Whot Noighboli&gt;oodl'
According to Miss BrookThe report asks "what neighbomood" is near the Union and mi..J'e, tb! publications listed are
why that "resident" has not "supervised" by the Boardwhich means " that their consti·
been arrested.
The Erie County District At- tutions have been accepted."
torney, the report states, also The Pub Board is, in turn,
failed to initiate any action un- under the supervision of Sub
til prodded by law students one BoardAssocialtif&gt;ofn.the Faculty-Stud~
month after the incident: "The
Man y of the publications,
D.A. while indicating he would
review tbe evidence, has thus Miss Brookmire pointed out in
response
to a request for infar failed to initiate any meaningful action . . . while at the . formation by the Faculty Sensame time zealously proeecut.. ate Publicstions Committee ,
have advertising and sales in·
ingstudents."
come that augment Pub Board
allocations. Spectrum, for ex·
ample, receives only oQe--third
(contiluud from fKlll• 2, coL 2}
of its income from the Board.
cutta Metropolitan Planmllg
Publications presently funded
by the Board include:
Organization.
Author of three legal texts,
The ActiuiBI---&lt;&gt;ditor: Dsniel
Mukerjee has been on the Cal· Bentivogli; sponsored by Youth
cutta . faculty since 1953. He Against War and Fascism;.
has been chief law officer~ room 5, Norton Hall; dist;rib-the Corporation of Calcu-ttlt' uted free on campus; monthly;
and w8s vice principal of the Pub-Board budget:-$5300; cir. University College of Law for rulation: 15,000.
eight years before becomi.n g
Cold Steel - editor: Laura
principal
_
Davis; a newspaper that wishes
Mukerjee received 4 diploma to increaae the communication
from the Imperial College of between the community and the
Science and Technology in University; no campua address;
London in 1940. He was award- monthly; distributed free on
ed his doctoral degree from the campus ; Pub BOard budget:
University of London in 1940 $1,500.00; circulation: 5,000.
and his master's in scienci. from
d/ws _:_ editor: •Michael J .
the University of Calcutta in Jackson; a newspaper/ news
1934.
·
mapzine gMred toward~.He has come to the United · ing in-depth, feature articles in
S&amp;ateo witb his -wife and eon J!IBthetic settinc• witb good
wbo io ~lied at U/B as a !&gt;hotollraphy; room 346, -Norfriolbman for the 'coming year. ton Hall; 83.1-2819, 4214;

4, col 6)

• Where Does God Stand?

Alley Action
Between bounclne ot "LIVE" ond rocking with the llkos of
Mondo Blzzoro, students portlclpoting In this yeor's oriento·
tion may al50 lndulee themselves durtne free game hours.
out the Norton bowline olleys.

This trio Is trying

Pub Board to Fund 14 Publications,
Spectrum, ethos Resume Next Week

Indi8n Dean-

from-

(contilaued

tliey are radically b&lt;mest surveyors of the social and academic IICI!De; willing to call an
inconsistency an inconsistency
and a . hypociite a hypocrite.
But just as clearly-&lt;md objectionably- theil' actions
( thoud&gt; quite effective, and
many of the effects are good)
are sell-centered and insensitive
to -others;-they are even violent,
deserving of forthright condemnation by all WI&gt;!&gt; witneas them.

weeklY ~n Tuesdays; distributed free on campus; no longer
sponsored by the C ommuter
Council; circu latio n : 15,000;
Pub Board budget: $24,500.00.
Medenti&lt;Jn - editor : Howard
L. Prankoff; Medical and Dental School yearbook; no campus
address; yea rly; circulation:
900; Pub Board budget: $3,000.
Millard Fillmore College Stu.
dent Association newsletter I
Midnight Oil- room 215, Norton Hall; monthly; mailed to
MFC students.
New Student Review - editor: Brian J. Marsh; room 302,
Norton Hall; 831-4305; twice
yearly; Pub Board budget:
$2,080.00.
The Opinwn - editor: John
Samuelson; no campus offire;
monthly; Law School newspaper; distributed free at Law
School; circulation : 3,000; Pub
Board budget: $1,200.00
Script- editor: Gail J. Guz.
w ; no campus address; 8315314; Pharmacy School magszine; monthly; Pub Board budget: $700.
1
Spectrum - editor: James
Brennan; room 359, Norton
Hall; 831-2210; three times a
· week; newspaper reaching a
large percentage of the University community; 15,000 distributed fle\l on campus;- Pub
Board budget: $30,506; also
operates a ·print shop.
Telos ~ editor: Paul Pic' cone: sponsored by the Graduate. Philoeophy Assoc:iation ;
Philoeophy Dept. on R1dge Lea
campus:- twice yeerly;· budget:
$7,500.00.
·. ·
U"4ercurrent---&lt;&gt;ditor: David
JaoobiB; room 342 Norton Hall,
SUNYAB; _..,.mat of an lllf.'
deJ'pound type of _ ,
tariesmapn~_}e~~~n~.:...
.... ,_.....,
-Cillftlllt isouos; montbly.; efreu.

lation: 5,000; Pub Board budget: $5,500.00.
Uniuersily Calendar - a
colorful calendar featuring de-tails of the University and its
organizations offered to all students at registration in the fall ;
circulation: 20,000; Pub Board
budget: $5,456.00.
University Press-members:

~=~;~aa.i=,;

Hall; 831-4214; publishes and
prints books, newspapers, pamphlets, etc.; budget: $14,500;
operates a print shop in its
offices.
WBFO Program Guide-edi.t or: Madeline Saltman; WBFO
offices, third ftoor of Norton
Hall; 831, 5393; monthly; distri·
buted free; budget: $5,340.00.
Buffalonian -editor: Liz
Schectner; room 356, Norton
Hall; general University yearbook; is not funded by Pub
Board but is under the supervision of Pub Board; finds its
own income.
The Catalyst is no longer
funded by the Pub Board and
may resultihgly not publish this
year, Miss Brookmire said. She
indicated also that some of the
information about the individual publications is incomplete
and/or subject to _change.

What tt..iii is to be said of
student dissent? Is God resolutely 'Op~ to the students'
efforts? Does be take; the side
of the ,.authorities,. against
whom the dissidents have set
themselves?
'
Or is he -perhaps using the
students -as a scourge ·in judgment against others, against
say, a materialistic and permissive society; later to tum
upon the students also as he
did the enemies of ancient Israel?
Or does he actually favor the
students, perhaps only tolerating their more extreme tactics
but strongly approving their
goals? Where do his sympathies lie?
To the limited degree that
the questions may be appropriate, they happen also to be unanswerable. We simply are not
privy to the general pi!lce of
higher education in God's c:os-.
mic design. But for the mo6t
part, the questions . are misdi·
rected and thus are meaningless. They are phrased y if
God must be taking sides in
this issue, when in point of
fact he is the judge of all sides.
They speak as if he cares who
wins the struggle, when all that
we can be certain be cares about
is why and how one behaves as
one does.
The history of higher education, like that of every social
institution, is a history of talented but sinfnl men, found DC·
casionally to be performing
their various tasks well, but
virtually always caught in the
trap of their defective char·
acter. In Scripture, God has
made it abundantly clear that
he is vitaJiy interested in such
men as candidates for holiness
(although most often he is dis-appointed by them). _But we
gravely err if without additiOIIai
scriptural warrant we impute to
him any particular institutional
interests or preferences. And
especially do we err if we think
him necessarily and always to
be on one side or the other in
higher educational conflict
(~lid

t:1o.:roftl.

aad nPf'Uit.d witb permia..
Clviatian HwUJ, July

tbe

Travel Office
Wlll Send Checks
Trave). advance checks for
University peracinnel may now
be picked
and signed for at
the Office o Student Accounts,
Hayes A, if the trsveler de--

u'f

sires. -

. .

'""'

When the check is read • ~
Travel Office will notify
in·
divi4uru_concerned, asking if he
prefers picking up the check at
1807 Elmwood or on campus.

:h:,

U/ B COSTS MORE
All c:hecks for campus pick·
Basic costs for a student attend- up will .be sent each IDOI'IIing to
lng the Upiversity are above na: . Student Accounts and shOuld
.tional and region• I •verages for be available the same afternoon.
public co-educational schools, a U an individual cannot claim
survey. by the Lifo lnourance Aaen- his check before Student Aecy Management Assoc:iotio.n re· C?unllf f81!u1ar i. p.ni. cloaipg
veoled lost - k . The Association time, special 811111l18D*lts can
reports !hot tuition, !Ms. room be made for pick-up ~ 4
ond bolrd he• · tob!l $1.540 for and 6 p.m.
the oc:odemic yeor os comporod to
",{ trsvel ,sending
$1,324 for public Institutions iL aentati to idt
and
tho NorthMit ond tho nationol .,. a ~is ~ ~ send also~
,,... of 51 •234·
writtiln authoriJatioll.
•

er

a,;:::'"

�s.,-

11, 1910

7

Serfustini Takes PJanning Job-·- - - - - - - - (contitwed fro.m pGie' l , coL 2)
.responsibilities at the Univer-

sity.
''During the difficult period
of IBnsion at the University in
the spring of 1970, Dr. Serhlstini conducted himseU admirably aDd coOperated fully with
the administration imd with ·a ll
concerned. 'lbe mediation
boanl•appointed by former. Acting President Regan · unanimously found the entire Ath-

and Athletics. 'I'be
actual building of the new facilities at the Amherst Campus
is imminent. Much remains to
be done to implement the projection of the facilities lor the
new campus.
·

" Over the past year, in addition to his other duties, Dr.
Serfustini hal; served as facilities coordinator for the ·Faculty
of Educational Studies and the
Division of Phxsical Education,

His Eiperielice Neodod

~-

Profea:aor Slater . . . offers an up-

GREPORTS

ON

and the present unsettled cir·
cumstances which f i n d Bosch
back in Santo Dom.ingo gather.
ing his supporters, on President

THE THING CONTAINED:
T"-Y of the TrtJ11ic-by L&lt;Ju.

Bloorninlton.

'U=~yof p~

PubLication date:
Ocftr~9~ $7.50.publi
word: "In t.hio ~reand ~~

ative atud.y, Michel formulate. a
theory
defming it
in tei"'DD of content ("a bard core

new

ing of American forces and the

~=J:n ~b~S~t~

::f;tab
lj:a:~~
ex-dictator ~jillo's supporter,

GBOOKS
''iJ.;:" ~

dated picture of the Dominican
Revolution that led to the eend.

of trqedy,

Kenned.Y's miscalculations and

~ :!,':,"' {{. ~ ~BJ"J!

:::ru::

&lt;REPORTS

Reaeatio~

letic.Department, includmg Dr;
Serfustini, free· of any charges
of bias or racism. A review of
the underlying facts supporting
the findings of the mediation
board sustains the board's fmd-

ON

ROBERT C.

w..,.

~.,.=t· c!f~~.::f

s;=:

cer to Scbopenhauer, from N1etzocbe to Murray Krieger. He perauui.Yely defends the view that

MARTIN

~~Jl. ~'=n~o~k~%~~:
2JUJ:~ugh

he is not affiliated

!:'!o
~ ~~! :~!:U:t~:ter" In 1968, Martin Sostre. black

revolutionist. was sentenced to 30
~=-d~~~~wi8ic,~~ to 4~ yean. in prison for selling
though it appears unde r herom. ~18 book c:ontends that
the •Apollonian overlay' of dra- he comm1tted no cnme-at l~t
matic form. . . '.
none .Je~y. defined a. such. H1s
"Rio analyoia of Shakeopea-.. true. cnme: Mr. Copeland . tells
trqedy • .with iia emphasis on the - us, ts that he ad~tes :B" 1_ndepoet u 'inquisitor and critic' not pendent .blac::k repubhc, w1th hber:
only illuminates th~ t~es but ty and JUStice for black people.

•ian:

;:,:.::-:f ~ri:;:in:;-d
eonnetl u well.
" In IUoceeding chapters, Michel
turnJ his attention to Conrad and
Faulkner. · · · Using Lord Jim as

~radit!: {for!:f.~ =~

and hil romantic ethw: interact
to rod
0ve1 that 18
· tra ·
in

:he d~~tneeue. . His sea~~

inc 1 tud.i81 of Faulkner'• work
fuid the
of tragedy in his
minor, oetenlibly comic writing as

-..ce

h~Uma~~~- ~~! a;o~. ~

tbe wordl of otte advance reader,
(il) 'in the vanguard of a significant new ~t.of c~ticiam.' ••

INTERVENTION AND NEGO·
TIATION: The United Swuo
and 1M Dominican Republie-l&gt;y
Jerorru Slour, oaociat~ profeaor,

~ ~"$'f.:s. Harper, New

97

.. Drawinc on interview. with
of the participants and h is
extemive 1tud.y of the 1ubject,

~Y

"BOOKS BY THE FACULTY
The otllce of University Publica·
lions Services (UI!S) is Issuing
"Books by the Faculty," 1 compi·
latlon of - . published by_ fie·
utty and lttff since January 1,
1969. Acconlin&amp; to the introdUC·
tory note In the booklet. "only
thole bn&gt;u&amp;ht to (the Of·
fice'l) attention by individuals or

their depoutments:• are Included.
.. Synopses and reviews were also
chDMn on the basis of availability.
We are _ , . that the books -

rep- only o 1roct1on of the
actual publishi"' ac:tivity of ""'
faculty." The otlic:e thet
campus authofS send Information
· synopoes)
about fulura publications
as they
ore durin&amp; the comlna
l!Mr. . . _ by the Facully'' hH
~an- -pub!- and
the Olica ......... It ..
(book jack8ts, -

"All in aJL the picture we get
from this book is of a dedicated.
idealist ic revolutionary working

!rid:. bei!h~o'!:~ti~lac~.:~;

seems preposterous, an obvious
frame-up.
"For any a dult Americannot just student. of penology.
political science, and l'Ociology-

Year" by the Knights of Columbus and " Co a c h of the
Year" by the Western New
York Coaches Association. He
was also cited by the Kiwanis
Club of Buffalo in 1963 for
"Outstanding Public Service in
Support of the Boy's Club
Movement."

ci~~d ?;~a::nC:~~~e~~~U::;

stories, e:r:oeuive bail. an all-white
jury, denial of freedom to find
witnesses needed for defense. The
account of brutality and repres-

Combined Degree
Business
,-:-.:einall~"i!:!lia~~ ~ be· . In Law,
"As one reads this book, he
thinks not only" of Sacco and Van ~
zetti but of othen who have suffe red o r are suffering appare"ltly
unjustly. H e thinks of . . . Edgar
Smith. whose book Br~f Agaimt
Death r e counts his ex ~rienoe

~~_:j'.~r ~:;tic;~::

andma:}

=i

&amp;'
"J:::":D:•M~= S!.t::
like Malamud's poor Jew, suffer0

io

not

"One should note that Mr.
Sostre hu f.,...ltt his battle aJ.
moat. but not quite.. alone. We are

told lioN. a Bulfllo law firm
'dro~ ca.e after two or
thtee ditys' worli on it . . . be·
cauee of political pre~~ure and re.
fuled to return the $550 • • •
raioed at ~t ellort' by stnd•.nb

~:::.._us:::"r,.te!.uR~~
tee and the NAACP haw pro·

:=s--:t ~d'.:.l au:: =.:.

=

can Ciftl. Uberti• Union mentioned.

~Thlo-=
:!:.=:
=~=-d='!i.

-r -....
2228.)

CT........... 831·

....... 11do book a.y lA

IHllcro.

~S~~·t~s~!:~:.;Jy ~:~:
~ate

professor, social welfare, $73,157,
N IM H , ·Graduate Training Program in Social Work- Psychiatric.
DR. GUSTAVO CUDKOWICZ, professor,

g::!'t%c;g;g ssg·~hf.!~· l:~C:~

tions.
associate professor,
medicinal c hem j s try, $18,753,

DR. LEO FEDOR,

NIH, Metal Ion-Catalyzed Hy·

DR.

J . DAVID SCRNATZ, &amp;IIOCiate

professor, medicine, $1.(,300,

~:r:::us"!:~ ~~Y:~:

1de.

:io~$;.~W,arJIH~Gr!d~~

Training Program in NeurOlogy.
DR. GLEN N H. SNYDER, profeuor,

poli tical science, $ 100,000, NSF,

"Theory of Negotiation and -Bargaining."
DR. LA. WRENCE SOUTHWICK, .JR..,

as-

sistant professor, and DR. STANLEY
ZIONTS, associate professor, School

of Management, $42,515, Ford

NlH, Separation of Blood Pro·

OiL D. KENNETH WILSON, professor.
speech communication, $15,900,
USOE . Preparation of Profession·
a l Pe rsonnel in the Education of
Handicapped Children - Speech
and Hearing.
DR. JDUtOLD WlNTER, assistant pro·
f e s s o r, pharmacology, $24,607,
NIMH, The Behavioral P harma·
cology of Tryptamines.
DR. SUMNER YAFFE. professor, pedj.

atrics. $26,955, NIH, The Regula-

tion of Drug Metabolism During
Development.
professor, sta-

DR. MARVIN ZELEN ,

tistics. $42,114, NIH, Statistical

Models or Biomedical Phenomena.

RECOGNITIONS
DR. ROBERT GUTHRIE, research as.
sociate professor, pediatriCI, received the Science Award for 1970
(rom the American Association on
Mental De6ciency, Washington,
D.C. H e was honored for the development of a simple- blood tat
that can be performed on newborn babies to determine whether
they have an inborn disease called
phenylketonuria, or PKU, which
causes mental retardation.
DR. CLAUDE E. PUFPDI., who retired
as vice president for businell affairs · August 31, hu been named

;'UiJY&amp;a~mo1 ¥r!:~ ix~
tive Committee.

LOIS A. STOCKWELL,
oi~, award!"~ a

freshman, biUnivenity of

r~.=-~~~~~ W.':..~~~~~~~

Environmental Toxicity.

To qualify for the program a DK. L. &amp;u:ON GIWL\M, professor,
student must meet the entrance ~· /!~;,,P~~':\~
requirements ~d be accepted ciology.
by both the SChool of ManageDR.
llOBICRT MCISAAC, profeuor,
men t and the School f Law. pharmacology, $1W,962, NIH,
'Though he must take 72 hours Training Procram in Phamuicolin the/ Law School and another ~·
48 in \ the School of Manage- DOL PHILIP liOIES, uoociate-profeo.
ment, the student still has a oor, biolOCY, $16,700, NSF, Mordesree
of llexibility that per- boge · 0 f ... ,........ "'·--'
milll him IP tailor his program p
......
._..r
to his particular ~- 'The GI&amp;W&gt; llllllAil, uoocia1e prof...
~ of study which !- "-' (Ji;:~~uew!:·~
trimmed from the required work and the Development of Com·
includeo twelve hours in man- . munity Health Servieeo for the
aDd nine hours in law. ManlallJr Retarded.

°

E ........

._.t

PUJrfK MO~,

u.istant profMIOi•

~;;--~·~~Ti.'!:

Graat.

.._ _ . . , . PAt&amp;IUDI-

It

;::u;;=::cu:=,;.
-;f~:
Bat

associate

administration program. Beginr!so~= ~iEJ;:y. m~::a:.ttrnt
ning this fall, students can re- Antibodies
of Saliva and Other
ceive both Juris Doctor and Secretio!l&amp;.
master's in b~ administra·
tion degrees in four years, in:::~.the fiv@_Jears nonually NIMH, Patterns of Drug and

- - - ' b l o o f l a c· ......- .... tUe pa- ia Am·
., publ~
.. -~
.. UPS.
.. _
'b, lila Facull)o," &lt;2!10 Win· ........ h a w _ a _

ulty
- .
.
._

-ilbert Space Theory.

DR. ORVILLE T. BEACHLEY.

drolysis of O:u.thiolanes.
For the student who has his DR. LAWBENCE FB.OHMAN, asSociate
eye on a career in business and professor, medicine, $24,387, NIH,
N ervous System Control
law, the University has oome Central
of Blood Gluoose.
up with a joint law·business

ing dreadfully under cruelties and

humiljations that co u I d
qUftCh the human spiriL

r!sa~m~~~.ANSs3~~~~~ NIH:

Gradua te Training Program in
Allergy and Immunology.
DR. EIUC BALSLEV. visiting associate
professo r, mathematics, $12,600,
NSF, Differentia) Equations and

A popular speaker at many tuted Borzines.••
area events, Dr. Serfustini hal; UASELTI.NE CLEMENTS ,

per t on several television programs.

~::;,~~:to~ ~em~ ·~·

aliution and Quantitation of Hu·
man Myoglobin.
:'
DR. W. C. SCHENK, IR. , profe.or,

teins by Ultrafiltration.

GRANTS

In 1964-65, Serfustini was
named " College Coach of the

REICHLIN, . &amp;IIOCiate

visiting investigator. Returning to
Laboratories.

current academic year."

MORRIS

professor, medicine, $12,000, Muscular Dystrophy AooociatioD of

Foundation, "The Effects of Var.
ious lnco~tte Maintenance Proposals on the Incentive of Poor to
Work."
DR. CAREL VAN OSS , associate professor, m i c robiology, $33,721,

~r:s~!-~~~~t::n\: ~~Jsa~th!

...........

~~~ S::C.tt:.~l.If!

tectioh and Monitoring of Water
Pollutants with Ion.selective

Electrodes_

awaQ:I of a Ph.D. in 1951 in medical microbiology from the Uni~
versity of Pennsylvania, Dr. Rose
came to Bulfa1o to work and to
study under Dr. Witebsky. Before
earning a medical degree in 1964

and will shortly appoint an act- Buffalo, he became hea.d of the
ing basketball coach for the Erie County and Meyer Hospital

f~g~ tukps~fct~beo~~~ re~: also served as a commentator on
local sports telecasts and ap:~r;:, :!~:ti~v;,~:ti~la~ A8~ peared as a physical fitness exinvolved. But much of the material would apply ~ually to ~r

Title IT-A. Higber Education Act of 1965.

surgery, $114,201, NIH. Regional
Metabolism Studies in Surgical
Stress. ·

~h~o'Jiedt{o~9~r F~~~n~~

with the Unive,.ity. Mr. Cope·

CoUege Library Raoweos Pro-

search associate in, the Acoustics
and Seismic Laboratory, University of Michigan. From 1960 to
1969 he was project · representa-

dis=~Jrp!f::!~ ~i~~

~defini~=y ~ f'::o"! Publi8he.rt~' W~ekly.

viJor, with referenoea .ranting

clirecto:r,

DR..

~f~drc~chnt~r!:iondi-a~!

0

?: ~~!:~~ui=t' :mre~

aucriate

PIZIZ,

School of Information and Li·
brary Studies, $22,469, USOE,

geophysicist by profession.. Mr.
Fitz-patrick comes to U / 8 from
tile Datamax Corporation. Ann
Arbor, Michigan, where he was
manager or marketing research.
His former positions include thoee

University of Michigan.
JAMES A. MICHIELLI, formerly 88·
sistant to the dean of international studies, has been named to the
new post pf director of overeeas
a cademic programs.
DR. N OEL R. ROSE, professor, microbiology, and assistant professor,
medici ne, has been named direc·
tor of the Center for Immunology,

continuing crisis, and

0;

assistant

b~5:PW':S:Cht ~~~~~~:

over was imminent. A soui'Hl. Qb.

THE CRI•M;

FITZPATRICK,

vice president for research; B.S.,
M.S., University of Michigan. A

~n:=•) =~• ~ =~:~tu~!::·~A!te~Jo~::~
:=~ :.~ro~tedd~~ff~

IRWIN

gram

!~tb:t~~J:srl! :.1:ebJe~:
8

provement Grant.

ON CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

"Dr. Serfustini's background
and experience are needed for
this purpose lind I bave asked
him to bead a presidential committee concerned with this
problem. Dr. Serfustini has
agreed to accept this assignment. He will be released of all
other responsibilities for theremainder of the year in order to
take a ricbly deserved sabbatical, during which time he desires also to complete two books
he is writing on basketball and
physical fitness. Dr. Harry
Fritz, director of physical education, recreation ,and athletics,
has been advised of the above

~::::.bl~ reo~~- oi.:b':::~~ .
~und to

DR. I . WAIIB£N """""• deon, School

of Health Related Profossions,
NIH. Allied Health Prof818iom Educational Baaic Im-

$81,066,

Gf&gt;EOPLE

of ·troopo and American support
to Dominican militarists as the
Martin that a Communist

Molocular Mecbaniom of Manbranea Function.

-

-

W

1

.-rc:h IJI'Ofe-r, IJio.

A'.:...!~:t:&gt;·at!:;•:i•,;:

W,~g~~o~~

(our-year scholanhip will provide
between $250 and $1,600 par year

($1,000 to $6,000 ower four yean)
depending on ber need.

DL SUMNER YAPn, profe110r, pediatrics, elected to MZ'Ye on the
Committee of Revision of-the

United S ta tea Plwmaoopeial
Con~tion, Inc. This Commiof HeNion io the body primarily
..,.ponsible for IIOiectinc drup deemed to be ~ the!'

r=n~
!fo~e-:ct~~
them.
;
OFF CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

�8

Seplemb«

tare be bold
aftemoon
and will
clmded
into - the
ou!Hpecia)ty . . . . nf potroentsr-

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE

:=.-·info::~
~
ru- and paiDmary

artery

CONTINUING

IOLTON ROCO V IN 'S APPALACHIAN

PHOTO &amp;XlliBlT can be seen in the
Center Lounge of Norton through
: September 30.

MOVIIB . . : CALCUTI'A, Conference
Theatre, Norton, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. ;
LION'S LOVE, 9 p.m. and 11 p.m.
PllA&amp;lliActsTB'

TELEPHONE

UX:·

TUB: Sponsored by Recio n a 1
Mediaol I'Jognun. Dr. Kenneth I.
Letcher, a a 1 i at ant professor,

pharmacy,

" WELCOME TO BUFFALO" PICNIC:

Sponeored by the Newcomers
Group of the Women's Club of
the \.Jniversity for all faculty and
sta1f families new to U / B, Park
School ground.J, 3· 7 p.m.
It is hoped that m embers of
the academic community who are
not new to Bufl'alD will come and

a.ASSES• : Featur-

ing Arthur Mitchell and The
Dance Theatre of Harlem. Inc.,
Hau Lounge, Norton, 4 p.m.
Dr. J . M.
Brookhaven National

PBYBICS OOLLOQUIUK :

Hutinp,

t.boratoriea,

CBJTICAL BCA.TI'ERING
OP NEUftONS P R 0 M RUBIDIUM
MANGANESE FLUORIDE, 111 Hoch-

aletter, 4 p.m. Refreshment. 112
Hochstetler, 3: 30 p .m.
(freshmen
only) : Recreation Area, Norton.
6-Sp.m.
FREE GAME

HOURS

~~ue:e a~ PBu'frat~)~~ r;t
0

Brown,

director, ~

Norto~

7: SO p.m.

BOB

AND

IUN

Haas Lounge,

SOUL

REVIEW• :

Quadrangle Area, Cooke Roof,
8: 30-11 p.m.
PHOTON FACTORY SHOW (electric
light aound sys tem)• : Haas
Lounge, Norton, 9:30 p.m.

LYTE (folk-blues) 4 : Raibskelle.r, Norton. 10:30 p.m..-1 a.m.

BLUE

FRIDAY-18
MOVIES• •: CALCUTTA, Conference
Theatre, Norton. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.;
LJON'S LOVE, 9 p.m. and 11 p.m.
MA811:a DANCE CLASSES•: Featuring Arthur Mitchell and The
Dance Theatre of Harlem, Inc.,
African Culture Center, Norton,
4 p.m.
..
PUB GAME HOURS (freshm en
only): Recreation Area. Norton,
6-Sp.m.

suPPALO SYMPuoNETTE•: F r e d

R e 11 a e 1, conductor; Ann Marie
PI u be II (WBFO), announcer,
Fountain Area, Harriman Steps,
7-8 p.m.
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: lnstru~on in basic steps during
first liour, 30 Diefendorf Annex,
8p.m.
ORIENTATION PROORAM FOR NEW
FACULTY: Welcome for new facul ty and their spouses, Faculty Club

Dining Room, Harriman Library,
8 p.m.
MONDO BIZZABO ' (pe rcus sion
rock) • : Fountain Area. Harriman
Steps, 9:30-11 : 30 p.m.
PHOTON FACTORY SHOW (electric
light .Ound ayatem)• : Haas
Lounge, Norton, 9:30 p.m.

&amp;NVJRONMENT.U. H 1: A L T H 'l'ZL&amp;-

PBONE UlCTUU: Spo...Ored by
Regional Medical PtOgnun. I. Arthur Hoebtra, POLLUTION - IN'~

HOSPITAL WAST&amp;, ..61 Participating

Hospitsls, 2 p.m.

THURSDAY-24

EMEII:GENCY DEPAlrTMENT NUBSING

WORKSHOP: Co-oponscred by tha
School of Nuning, the New York
State COmmittee on Trauma of
the American College of Surrecns, the E . J. Meyer Memorial\...
Hospital Eme rgency Department,
!be New York and Brooklyn Re-

available for children, and tenn.i.s
for adults. The Newcomers Group

will offer cold drinks, as Well u
barbecue fi res for cooKing "bring·

a:~'ifutr~~~~~~=
of the American College of Sur-

~~~Th~~i~~ d~ give =~=:

ilies an opportunity to meet one
another as well as members of
the Newcomers Group, and is the
first of a series of planned events.
Co-chairmen of the Group are
Mn. Lee Preston, 836-6448, and
Mn. Stephen Humphreys, 8390258. Anyone wi.Bhing further in{onnation about the picnic or the
activities of Newcomers i.a invited
to telephone either chairman.
GET-TOO'£THEB FOR NEW INDIAN
STtfot:Nrs AND FACULTY : Coffee

hour sponsored by the India Students Association, 340 Norton, 46 p.m.

THE DANCE THEATRE OF HARLEM ,
INC. ••: Upton Hall Auditorium,
State University College at Buffalo, 1300 Elmwood Ave., 8:30
p.m.
Arthur. Mitchell and his Dance
Theatre of Harlem have been
bridging aU kinds of gaps - the
communications gap, the generation gap, the cultu ral gap. Consider :
- The averag_e age of Mitchell's
dancers is 19.
-M itchell is proving that blacks
can indeed dance classical ballet,
given the training.
-Mitchell's Harlem company
is " turning on" the younger g~neration to classical dance, evokmg
a new enthusiasm for ballet every where his young company ap-

~':lli,· 9p w:rbh~·co~=
through Saturdsy, September 26.

:r!.k

(satirical rock) •: Fountain Area,
Harriman S teps, 8:30-11 p .m.

TUESDAY-22

SUNDAY-20

PHYSJCIANS' TELEPHONE LECTURE:

Fountsin
Area, Harriman Steps, 1-4 p.m .
NIAGARA. FALLS AREA TOUR (including Power Vista, Floral Clock and
Gardens, Aero Car and Niagara
Falls,· Ontario) • • : Dinner and
night light., 2-11 p.m . $.50.

COLD

OOAST

MOVIE • • :

(roclc) •:

ALICE'S

RESTAURANT,

Conference Theatre, Norton, 3
p.m.-1 a .m.

MONDAY-21
U/ B VB. St. Bonaventure,
Audubon Golf Course, Amhers~
1 p.m.
BIOLOG-Y SEMINAR: Warren Gibbs,
D epartment of Molecular Biology, Univeraity of California at
Berkeley, MORPHCK;ENESIS A N 0
GOLF :

TB.A.NSCRlPTION CONTROL rN SATEL·

237 Health Sciences, 4 p.m. Re[reshments 101
Health Sciences, 3:30 p.m.
LITE PHAGE P•,

WORKSHOP IN SHAKESPEAREAN PRO·
DUCTJON: Gordon Rogoff, visiting

professor of theatre, will hold auditions and interviews fo r his
course THEATRE " STUDJO (Theatre

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program. Dr. Stephen Wittenberg, Basistant professor, medicine, CORONARY CARE UNITS, 6 1
Participating H ospitsls, 11 : 30
a .m.
1970 QUJ.RTDWACK CLUB WEEKLY
POST-GAME LUNCHEON: T 0 w n e
House Restaurant, Main and
High Streets, 11:45 a .m.-1: 30 p.m.
Season ticket for 11 luncheons is
$30; single luncheons on a non·
reserved basis are $3.00.
NURSES'

TELEPHONE

LECTURE:

Sponsored by Regional Medical
Program, Dr. J ohn Flynn, clinical
0

~h~ieygy&amp;~~R'N. =:,~

OP AMNIOCENTESIS IN RHESUS SEN·
SlTIZED P!lmNANCIES, 51 Partici·

pating Hospitals, L: 30 p.m.
PUYSICAL-rNORGANlC

CHEMISTRY

COLLOQUIUM: Dr. M. C. Phillips,
Unilever Research Laboratory,
SOME PHYSICAL STUDIES WITH MODEL MEMBRANES, 70 Acheson, 4 p.m .

WEDNESDAY-23
coNrrNUrNG

PROGRAM:

MEDJCAL

TRENDS

IN

EDUCATJON
INTERNAL

~"t's Mitchell trying to prove? ~~~i:.t ih:·:-or~h~~ ~~r~::r ~!;~~-c f"~~~~~ ~~:,'":~

"We'nt building a black classic- op a performance a r o und the
al ballet," he says. And with fi. theme of the 'rulers and the ruled
nancial support mustered last fall in Shakespeare's plays, songs a nd
from the Ford Foundation, the sonnets, rather than devoting itNew York State Council on the self to a single play. The performArts the Gimbel Foundation and ance technique will evolve from
pri~te dono~. ht:'s done a great the ~tenals at hand .fl!ld _the
deal of buildmg m a very short capacaties of those part1c1pabng.
time.
.,...--..Initially , the course will meet
The Dance T heatre of Harlem Monday and Tuesday from 4 to
.. i.a actually growing out of the 7, but later shift to an evening
H a r 1 em community," explains rehearsal schedule. Public perMitchell, who has been with the formances will be Dece~r 10New York City Ballet for the 13. Mr. Rogoff, an actor, director
0
p8!1tpo1!.!reabnu.t
_:ety~~coi.;
c~titl;e
o'fn::!:
tem

';&gt;:r

d:n

--J

~=~A~f!. S::~i

CINERATOBS AlfD TO DISPOSAL OP

:~ n~~;~,~:d ra~~i~W::

4

SATURDAY-19
a.m.-1 a.m.

=~~~:::

a...nable for each partidpent an
outline of each lecturer'• talk.
C8088 &lt;lPllNftY : U/B vo. CleoeJand Stste, G r o v e r Cleoeland
Park, I p.m.

!JLJ!!on~~~C:.to~~~~~ (~~

NON·I"BESCCUPTTON DRUG

11 :30 a.m. and 10 p.m.

' !!?on
·c edtrabdiy.tiM
o"f~:ll,e :h~Lco~
ebisn
._..
~0 ~ no;,.C::;.::W\,:rerle of

Y"!.! Scl:.;!J

Th~. l}nZnacoR:i~:,~J.for't.!~Pr!~

gram~ Th~tre~he ~ a~ ol[hr
:eell, ~ continu~ to ~tab'li.1; Historye~TI:.treseG~; {The~

it. own flavor.

Tbetr repertory atre 481 H) .
J'i.Ay 4UDmONS: Tbe Program in

:.::::r.n4~:". ~r-~

compoeitions.

~t-intbe

knowledge of basic mec:baDiomo of
these ru- and their cummt

where
last weekend) and that
the Bulls really are candidates
for a bowl game. Come see.
NIAGARA FALLS All&amp;\ TOUR (includ·
ing Power Vista. Floral Clock and
Gardens, Aero Car and Niagara
Falls, Ontario) •• : Dinner and
night light., 2-11 p.m. $.50.

P80Ducr8 USII) IN ALLERGY CONDI·
TIONS, 51 Participating Hospitsls,

liiAS'!Ia DANCE

ru-.

FOOTIIALL• •: U/ B va. Toledn, Rotuy Field, 1: 30 p.m.
Toledo, w ld c b last weekend
..whomped" Eaet Carolina (a
team suppooed to be of bieber
c:aliber than Ball Stste) comes to
Rotuy Field Saturdsy loominc
invincible.
Bob Deming and crew, however,
will make a stand. Maybe we'll
disccver that Ball Stile is really

:fse

THURSDAY-17

11, 1910

0 n e, " Rhythme- Tl:le,.tre will bold audition~ for ita

Hospital , 8 : 15 a .m. Registration.
Sym posium continues through
Friday, September 25.
This year the University celebrates its 50th ;vear of continuing
medical education. In the ~f
l 92 1 th Medical Deparlai t f
the Uni~ersity of Buffalo--!:' e
s c h 0 ol of Medicine was then
known-announced a program of
postgraduate courses for physiclans to keeP abreast of current
developments. The fust programs
were arranged by 8 seven-man
committee of which Dr. James E .
King was cbairma.n and Dr. A.
H . Aaron was secretary.
Initiators of the program knew
that physicians bad the opportun!:iteto :Ottend lo:tg=r~
school:: ~they felt that "few
physicians could alford the time.
So they planned a general aUJ"Yey

~ t,rroJt"~·w"~ ~~~~~~~';,ci"¥;?~Y Jn~hl d~::,-..;;r;w~andtbe':~':":~

fo~ti:'~r":!:fedwi~:~~~
nurses employed in emergency

~~~e~a':t~ :-:::
physicians and nUJ'BeB on the _program faculty.
The fint seuion opens with Dr.
James H . Cosgril!, Jr., -istsnt
clinical professor of surgery, mod-

CJ::!fi
M~Sh!t::~~rD!f
surgery, Downatate Medical Center, Brooklyn ; George T . Heise~
executive VJce president. National
Ambulance Service, Rochester;

~~c~nom F.ca~fo:; ~r-'u!

Meyer Hospital and on the faculty of the School of Nursing.
Other topic:co that will be disCUlled include : shock, l"eCIWICilation, . chest trauma, the burned
patient, eye and spine injuries,
poisonings a n d overdoses, and
emergency meas\ll"eS with alcoholics, addicts and psychotics.
PHYSICUNS' TELEPHONE LllC'rURE:

Sponsored by Regional Medical

~:;:f=:. ~~::~ ~s= J:O

NECK Tl.SSUES, 51 Participating Hospitals, 10:30 a.m.
GOLF: U/ B YB. Canisius College
a nd Gannon College, Aud~
Golf Course, Amherst
SOFT

PHYSICAL THERAPISTS' 'I"CLEPHONE

~.:;=

::';:,.·-:·\r: ~"n".l

Gicewicz, clinical instructor, surgery, ATHLETIC INSUJUES, 51 Participating Hoepitala, 1 p.m.
PHYSICS COLLOQUIUJtl: Profesaor
Vernon Hughes, Yale University,
Title to be announced. 111 Hocb·
stetter, 4 p.m. Refreshment. 112
Hocbetetter, 3: 30 p.m.
PSYCHIATRIC GUEST LIX;T'UD• : Dr.
Albert J . Silverman, chairman,
Department of Psycbistry, Univenity of Michigan. PEII&lt;ZPTION,
ln'DSS, AND BODR.Y CIIANGI:S, 140

Capen (Bvt!er Auditoriwn), 8:30
p.m.
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
. COPY DEADUN£
To reaistor events contact MI.,-

7
0 ': ~
~=.,style
or~ I would like to ~production
J/::~ ~ ~"J;":h~ ~.fod':f ~':· ~ ~: ==~:·~';=~::
.
deYelop for tbio ~Y·
will be eli~by Dr. jects covered in tbe 72 bcun were

be::!_;n:t

=-

=:
= :r.:..
=
=·

~~a:Uce~..!J::
ualib

~CO:ty;,:...~ ~
....u

~~

!':!i""youillba~

Saul Ellcin who diJec:ted last - eon's production~ of no: SlaPENT

~J.: X:u.:-'t~':'n~:;

ClOIIIIIIWiity.

""bio~~ ;,-::

:::-::.wry esciti-.: ballet

'lllo Bdfralo perfo.__, -n.e
JUoe ol the limoiblo D.oon," ol

ii.n~:i;redCUJ~

~~~.!:-""·~

W - zatiollllliom. Uad,like

= -«;:p.::"n.s:" It :

· ~aDd the UUAB. Tldoola.,. Josie that io perfect ll1ocic aDd

otudoiita. ~

=
::=

:0/~i!: .":'!t"J..!0~~

axt. 2228. Copy will bs duo on
Monday tor en Issue distributed

on Thursday and coveri1111 ovonts
be observed tbio week in the pro- of Friday throuah Thursday.
Trenda in lntemal Medi- - NOTE: Any speaker not - -

.:.J=
=
:=.-which

This propu&gt; io deoiped to

3i.!..~•!'!t"':li

:.==:

conf.._a A !fUioty of -u
dinical lkauW will be
will p!OWido 11111111e

ldontlfiod II a member of the fK·
ulty, - o r atucl!tnt body ol U/8.
•Open to the
lion cha ....

pu~lc:.

no -

cloala.
••Open to the public, ~m=~/~ ~ ~ z..;n::~-wt Oil tbe miDd ~tJ:~
~~ --__cha_.....
_ _ _ _ _~---=~
11 fw

for - --

that 1o the
ol ·~-t.
'lllo- play~

medicine, surgery and obstetrics.
Tboee attendi.na moved from one

· ·

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                    <text>STATE UN.IVERSilY AT BUFFALO

SEPTEMBER 10, i970

Colleges Move to Ouripus
As An_l\ccommoQation;'
Luxemburg Stirs~

lfull Agenda

Fares Senate
ThiS Fall

A reor
. tion plan, first
p~ '\'!:""year, and a aew
Umvenity ealeDdar are among
priority ltans likely to be din- .
8idencl bY the U/B Faculty
Senate this fall, aocordinc to
Dr. William H. Baumer, Senate vice ehairman.
.
AclmissinDs policies and the
general area of edu&lt;ational
Planninc and policies are a1ao·
expected -to receive Senate attention, Baumer says.
· Under the broad latter category. be lists sueh concerns as
independent study; evaluation
of the four-course plan which
was introduced last year; consideration of the University's
role in mnl:inuing education; r1\ T.

VOL 2-NO. 1

Off Main Street and onto the Townsend and ~ office in the
campus is the way the collegi- trailers. The Black Studies Colate system is moving this fall. lege will also be in 211 TownThe largest grouping of the aend.
Ecology College will be opcolleges will be in the trailer
park near Bailey with the
others. scatteo:ed about campus
DEADLINE DEVElOPMENTS
and town.
As the Reporter went txi the
The move to campus by Col- Collegiote Assembly - In - .
leges A and F was '·demanded" ond further - . . . , . by President Ketter prior to hod occuned. In o memo tD Asthe release of funds for collegi- · oembly Dhector Konrod _, Moltlce,
ate operations this fall.
Adlnc Acodemlc VIce I'IMiclont
The displaced units were Donlol Murroy oclvlsed the Aaem·
given space roughly equivalent bly thot, on the bnls of Its ~
to what they had in their Main opec:tus -(os c:ontolned In the You put on a ......,_ and koll like a fly • ••
Street storefronts. This space los -.:ription further .....,. In the
is in trailers 7, 8 and 9 in the oa:omponytnc story), ...._,_
'
trailer park. Trailer 6 is on burg College has been ''rwflded''
1
temporary loan from the School by the UnfrenitY os "...,_tof Social Welfare and will also oble." Yon M - lndlcoted, .__
unlimited-enrollment c o lleges
"''n,
11
be used by the collegiate sys- over, thot Iince ...._,....,. hH
- now beinc developed fit in with
t-UI
tc;, lY.lj
tem.
provislonol opprovol from the Asthe primarily residential colleges of 1,000 capacity heine
Eatable sculptures, " Mid- described as "a pneumatic mat- Looking for Spoce
oernbly, Its stotus romolns uri·
In some cases, specific loca· cMnged.
constructed in Amhersl
night ~y," a country-rock tress made out of perlon-reinThe Senate's first meeting - group called ''The Manson foroed vinyl, supplied by an tions Cor various oolleges have -....;;- - - - , -..,-,,--:::,--:.,will probably be beld October Family,'' and ski lessons are aggregat which produces con- not yet been .decided. Some of erating out of John Howell's
15, to consider the reorganiza- among "People Arts '70,'' the tinuous air pressure." Giant in- them .are looking for extra office on the UUrd floor of
tion plan. Under that plan, a University's "noW'' orientation flatable balloons (3,0m. in di- spaoo- in in d i vi d u a 1 depart- Parker Engineering and wbersmalle.r repreeentative body or for new students whieh opens ameter) are also included. ments, others are hoping to ever else they can find space.
Also operating out of offices
\You bounce on the mattress, share space in the t r a i 1e r s.
council of repr esentahves tomorrow and runs through
baby, and shove the balloons However, the majority of col- will be C. P . Snow College in
elected by the -entire ·Senate September 20.
leges
now
have
definite
locaW.
P . Smith's office, 156 Parkaround.)
member&amp;hip -would be eotabNowhere on the program are
er, and Law and Society in AI
Next., there's "Pneumacosm " lions.
1~ ~ function as the central the traditional speeches by asColleges
A
and
F
will
be
in
Katz's
office on Eagle Streel
billed
as
a
"pneumatic
dwelllqislative body.
sorted prim deans and proud
'the plan. widely circulated' administrators Instead, it's ten ing-unit in a vertical urban the trailers with New College 'Not • Repudi•tion'
Konrad von Moltke, director
and discusaed last yeu, was left days at Global. Village and Fill- structure," also with "vinyl of Modern Education and 8&lt;&gt;balloons." 1You get inside this cial Science College sharing the of the Collegiate Ass em b I y,
in abeyance in the spring on more East.
grounds that !be Senate, as
Higbligbting the happenings business that looks like an elec- space. College B will operate says that the move of Colleges
preeenUy constituted, was the will be "UVE " an "environ- tric light bulb screwed into the out of Allen Sapp's home, 605 A and F is a "major accommoW. Fe rry, and the Office of dation" which "in no way reponly legialative. body fun~tion- mental !'CUIPIIIre" exhibit of side of a building.)
" Mind-Expander 2" is a seat Cultural Affairs in 143 Hayes. resents a repudiation of the
lllJ _on campus m that penod of mind-boggling proportions. Put
Cl'lSI8.
• •
together by the Hans-Rucker- for two people with a plexiglass College D will be in 211 and academie programs of these
Before t b a t ~1on was Co, a far-out trio of European helmet featuring audi&lt;&gt;-visual 213 Hochstetler and Cassirer units!'
un must be recognized," von
made, ""--• a special
artists, "LIVE" will "be" in effects. I You and your chick College 1College E ) in 108
1
- inc to COI18ider the proposal Norton's Fillmore Room (and snuggle up on this couch, pus h Winspear. Vico College will Moltke said, ' that the move is
also
be
on
Winspear,
176.
in
response to the wisbes of
was cancelled Jor lack of a qu&lt;&gt;- wherever eLce it may spill over) your heads up into an oversized
Communications College will the immediately surrounding
rum. Some faculty at that time from September 11 t h r o u g h hair-dryer and see and hear
be beck at its old location at community. It was not -.easy
called the _projected Council September 20, from 9 a.m.-12 God knows whal )
uRoom scraper"' is a ..canned Walnut Court in the Allenhurst for either of the units to move
""t-up a "plot. by conaervative midnighl Tickets, obtainable
faeulty" to gam control of the at the Norton Hall Ticket Of- pneumatic lamp" that looks Apartments and Modem Col- in view of their strong desire
like a botUed giant finger ; lege will again be at Domus, to develop continuing interac=~..fice, will be required.
" Battleship" is an "ondulated 1695 Elmwood. International tion with the community. It
·The new University cal- You Bounco, Boby
mattress with pushbottom play- College will be split between is important to realize that ineDdar, deYeloped . bY . James
Among the "L I V"E" "ex- device for two persons" (It's Townsend and the trailers with teraction which is not always
a I o u n g e and classroom in (continued on page 3, coL 2)
BlackhW11t of the Summer Se&amp;- hibits" will be "Giant Billiard,'' (continued on~ 3,' col. 1)
sioaa, would divide the Univer/"'
sity year into three 16-weelt
periods, roughly equival... t to
the prMent ~ and the
aummer.-iona.
The fall period would begiit
scholars be allowed and, in fact, encouraged. It is out of sueh
,
earlier in Seplember than the Dear members of the University. community : .
Last year at this time, the functions of the Office of the mutual criticism that improvements come. Every point of view
and
would
be
completed, eDminations a n d President of the University were the furthest things from my should carry with it the rigbt to be beard, acknowledged and
,
aU, bolore Cbriatmas. 'lbe - - mind. Havinc spent appro:rimately eleven years in faculty and observed.
ond, or aprinc period, would administrative roles of this University, I was ''happily returning"
I IIC&lt;lept this as a standard by which to JDe881.!ft! our policies
run from early JIIDIIIII'Y to the to the life of a full professor.
and objectives over the coming months. But this standard has
middle ol May, with the sumThat picture has certainly changed, and rapidly. The re- another aspect which must not bej{orgotten. The rigbt to speak
.,_ period betinnina Immedi&amp;poll8ibilities of the President's Office are very real and very carries for the listener a correlat'lve _rigbt not to be convinced,
ately tt..fter.
as well as a rigbt to bear other ideas and to pursue other
d
to me.
The plan would abo make
One of the more pleasant du!ies is to welcome beck all of cems.
pcaible on a year-ruund basis
· ConsequenUy, destruction and violence have no place in a
the concentra.led pa~ the· members of the University community wbo are returning for
-ther year. I am espeeially happy to welcome the students, university. While this University will do all it can to maintain
ltUdy available onlY
aummer. Tbat ie, -=b 16-weelt faeulty and staff who are joining us for the first time. The the freedoms requisite to scholarship, it will, at the aame time
period could be divided into monlhe ~ will be the most ehallenging in the University's and for the same reason, do all it can to maintain the integrity
"""' ellhHNek .-iona with history, and I uk, and will Mod; the support of all of you in of the University. In the final analysis, those wbo dissent must
illudmlll taking and 00111pleting the de.ya to come.
be cognizant of the rigbls of others.
·
.,.....,_ in -=b. sua-n--It
This University has made great achievements in its now alBeginnina a new academtc year 1008118 many things for
......- would abo be available
most 125 years and has tremendous promise, both immediately
and a third OW!rlappinc term our varied constituency. Primary among our concema are those
could still be offered in the of acholazahlp. Some may suppoee that this suggestion consti- arid in the future. We can develop here a university whieh
tutes a cardinal ain of irrelevance. But relevance must truly be recognizes our graduate and prof...,ional degree responsibilities
BWDmer period.
The calendar plan .,... con- defined in terms of understanding the environment in which we while· simultaneously offering to our undergraduates oppootu11idered by the Senate E18e11- IM&gt;--eo lbat we may deal with it wisely, uiulerstanci ourselves nities for not only traditional scholarship but an experimental,
and otbeni more effectively,'and more-humanely, and alter it,.il individUally ,tailo~, · problem-oriented invol,vement in learning.
I ask you to join us in developing a university of which
qecllllllllry-«Dd this is the task of. ac:hoUlrsbil&gt;- Through it it to the full Senate this fall may attain the ability ID contribute to and guide cultures and our generation, and genera~ to come, can well be proud.
with a ~mendation for civilizations which are both complex and teebnical, gaining an
'
Very truly yours,
adoption.
is nqt known, bowIIDdentandin&amp; of man which permits us to pwsue a humane
insti"":'ted.the change culture more effectively . .
It is part of the idea ol scholarship that dissent .among
(continued on 12, col. 1)

:r~ ::-~~::;

.
. . Offi
vow 0 nentatron
ers
riJVE' Scu/p-1-.
A:USlC•

mee"

-

1£fs Build A

-t-

University~ Can Be Proud Of'

clJll.

m

~=~:::to~

!:id l:'"'

\W .~o

�2

Somit Wades Into
~A_ . Impossible
~'
.n.u
!I!

~
GoodWUl Is
·&amp;st Remedy

For Tension

~JO,J970

The Typical Frosh
.Has Q¢te a Reoord

- . - n.c.
u~~~Univeraity to admit more
.._. , . _... ci ...,.
.,.__ typical .,.........
~... WNY students as well as..more
._...._
.,._
man
·
•""at
....
_
State
u"":;:::..:="'"at
students
from .other aactions of
Early tbis summer Albert
The presldlmts 8Dd other ex....,
the State.
Somit padoad bil boob, sold color8.
Somit's
uniform
is
tbat
of
the
ecutives
of
the
nation's
state
Bu1falo
this
fall
is
''baH
male,
OUt~~
• - ~bia ~ 8Dd prepared to lalve
- "-'half female," ·was in the top
....---.- ~
colleJeblue.... ~_1m~!'~ a ttie,!"..-..-b,
__; uniY8111ities 8Dd land-grant rol- fiw or six per cent of bis gradOut.'bf-te anil forelcn stu~., -•u,..._
leges are CXlllvinced tbat DO taoof
den~ ba
--'--~ t abou
8Dd gray Hushpuppies. · tic designed to esse campus uating claas, BO&gt;red 1,200
a
~
w ...,..._,._ a
t
off 8IIIII8Wbare else, 80 be re- glasses
His IIII11IP"f is ·one of studied · tensions can ~ unless it ~ 1,600 on Scholastic 2.5 per cent of.admissions over
aicned from the Political · Sci- cssuaJness
and aloofneas. But is founded on g0011 will.
Acbiewment Tests and re- the pilst few yems. "Some
~t 8Dd accepted behind- bis bandlebar mous·Dr. Richard A. u--~" p~ ceived a BO&gt;re of 212 in the Re- states haw five or ten or 20
8llllllmr poaition.
cent of their students rom'lboa President Ketter sur- ta_cbe, there emerges a man ident of the Natic~;;,r~ 'gents Scbotarship EDmination.
Wltb
a
fi!Y
""""'!
of
humor
tion
of State UniY8111ities and · 1bat's the wotd from James. ~ oul.ofofltate," Mr.
prised the 60-yeiii'-Oid social
commented, and
ecieutist witb a requMt tbat be 8Dd a mind tbats aware. of Land-Grant Co''-- (NASU- C. Si:hwender, aasociate dibe executive vice presidenL what's baPJl8!Uilll around ~- LGC), 8.1l1110UD08d"""this ronsen- rector of admissions and rec- ~'have ewn legislated a limit on
~ """""""' the tens1ons sus foUnann• a ........:.1 meeting ords.
the percentqe of out..ofofltate
Somit's immediate response:
be~ students 8Dd of publk~~executives
Between 1,850 and 1,875 new students admitted. There is no
"A m:m would haw to be crazy eDiting
freshmen are expected to· enter, limit . ~ New York State. It
to accept . . . . It's an impos- the rommuruty and wryly sug- in Chicago in August.
5
sible job."
1"!'18
Tbe meeting, attended by adN~ Somit aooepted
~r
students
would
be
"to
ministra~
~
~01
state
and
mitted
tbrough
the
E&gt;&lt;perihas more students going out..of8Dd is DOW the Univermty's
." bas . roming
II8CIJI)Ii in command. He stayed, paas out forged Canisius identi- ~-grant mstitutions, was de- mental Program in lndepend- sfrotamte otbertban sStaUNYtes
fication cards."
Signed to produce ptans for ent Study (EPIS) . Another 35despite llliqivings, because of The
l'nllklent iS ·~ble'
keeping
the
lns?tutions
open
non-whites
wiU be admitt~d
Theonly
tbing drasticaUy
a "certain attachment to the
Somit is also aware of the dunn_g ~ commg year, Dr. . tbrough the Student Tutorial changing-&lt;md it's due to tbe
UniY8111ity 8Dd to Buftalo," and
Program (formerly known as "lid" tbat has been put on adbecause of bis desire to "help changing role of roUege admin- Harvill sauL
While stressing the establish- Upward Bound) and about 35 missions because of space limget the ' University going istration. "Today's presidents
are dealing witb problems tbat men: of trust, be added,
more wiU be admitted tbrougb itations-is the number of apwere inronceivable five to seven pres1dents and other adminis- SEEK- students who have . plicants who have to be turned
~;;.,.,.,.,, Somit, a veteran Years
ago. They're beld re- trators 'recol~Diz!! the facts of rompleted a pre-admission pro- away.
oiMelver of the University,
About 12,500 students apsponsible
for tbings they have life.... To this end, they dis- gram at Buffalo State Univerknows tbat getting U/B going
plied for the 1,500 freshman
again wiU be a tough task even no actual responsibility for. cussed p Ian s for -tightening sity CoUege.
~t
to
t.be
rommunity,
the
lines
of
rontact
witb
security
Many
non-whites
are
a
Is
o
slots
tbis year. A&lt;Xeptances
for the tesm of engineer and
the University resources open to them, on being admitted tbrough tradi- were mailed out to 3,500. As
I political scientist. He candidly , president of
niWit
be
responsible
for
what's
campus
and
oft,
including
state
tiona!
admissions
procedures,
usual,
only a percentage of
admits tbat the University has
Scbwender said.
tbose a&lt;Xepted elected to atjust rome tbrough a "had year" happening in the donns, in and local police forces."
Norton
and
in
places
tbat
be
Harvill,
who
is
also
president
Tronsfe&lt;
Increase
tend
the
University.
8Dd tbat the future's bue isn't
has no real control over."
of the University of Arizona,
An increase in transfer stu.Schwender called utragic"
rose. Anotber change, Somit emphasized tbat "No univer- dents is also expected-from the fact tbat about 80 per cent
Yet, the bespectacled vice claims, is the attitude of the sity administration can create about 900 last faU to about of the more tban 8,500 who
president prefers to "focus on faculty toward the presidency. an atmosphere of trust by it- 1,175. Tbis is in acrord witb were turned down "can handle
the more COI18tructive tbings" "Back in the 'good old days,' sell; neither can faculty mem- the State University "Master the academic work bere."
protaini!Jctedan ~-~eCY
and refuses to be intimidated professors used to tug at their bers or students acting alone- Plan" which calls for a mix of ooui''Wde'vmame
60 per cent upper level (junior
owuv
by rumors of planned campus forelocks every time tbey saw nor can the National Guard."
"Students and faculty must and senior) students to 40 per average," Scbwender explained.
violence. Somit has faitb in the the president. Now there's a
reVersal
of
tbat
relationship
begin
to
realize
they
have
a
cent
lower
level
&lt;fresbmen
and
"Some
people
have
suggested
University's abilitY to make it
and answers friends' reports of tbat's probably 'to the good." rommitment to the university" sophomore) students at U/ B. establishing random admissions
impending disaster witb "we'll As ": former ~r of the Ex- be added. 'We already . ha~e The goal. is ~ J?8l&lt;e room in -putting the names of aU who
ecutive Coiiiiillttee of the U/ B seen evidence of this kind of four-year lDStitutions for gradu- can handle the academic work
survive il"
The price of survival may be Facult:Y ~nate and U/ B rc;pre- rommitment during the past !'~ of the State's two-year or into a big bowl and drawing
names. But tbat is not easy to
heavy, though. Somit rommon- sentative on the State Uruver- spring on our campuses We )uruor coUeges.
However, · ouly half of the do. at a public university. Perly is found in bis Hayes Hall sity Faculty Senate, Somit is a believe students and faculty
office 12 to 15 hours daily. keen supporter of an active fac- barred by a cynical minoritY transfers are romiilg from sons would naturally, probably
During this late afternoon in- ul~ voi!&gt;' in the running of the bent on manipulating them and junior rolleges in New York rightfuUy, romplain if their
preventing them from pursuing ·State. The otber half are from child were denied admission
terview -witb him, be'd been Uruver&amp;lty.
Somit believes tbat ~ '!'"-ior tbeir work, have realized tbat four-year ~Is: ll!""Y from witb a higber average and betthere for ten hours and still had
tbree more people waiting to task of the Ketter admmiStra- their own interests are at other SUNY mstitutions. Some ter test BO&gt;res tban a neighbor
tion will be "to clarify liw!s of stake"
are New York State residents kid who was a&lt;Xepted. It is
see him.
.
P.,;.ident Harvill said there who found going to school out- much easier to fall beck on DbThe pace has been too beetle responsibility and authOrity"
to aUow for decorating, so the within the University. One of was 8 consensus at the Chicago of-state prohibitively expensive. jective criteria.''
walls are bare and the windows ~ f~t steps to implement meetin~ for clear statements 'by
In addition to _the f~
are without drapes. The only this pobcy was to transfer "'!n- university executives regarding and ~fer. stud"!'ls arnvmg
physical evidences of Somit's trol of the • qunpus. '!""""ty the rontractual relationship for the first time, aoout 7~ stupresence are a set of the Inter- forces to SoiJ!It's ~!lice. The tbat exists between the student dents . "!l!'er are returning to
naliDnal Encyclo~dia of Social head of security wiU now re- and the institution.
the D1V1s10n of Undergraduate
,
.
. :
Studies after a leave of abeence
Science and h1s high-back port directly to Somit, thus
'We bebeve this mvolves. a -rometimes due to early grade
orange-brown leather desk placing in tbe vice president's
The National Science Foundchair. The chair dates beck to hands the final decision and cl~-?'t Sl!'tement tbat the m- difficulties-&lt;&gt;r are transferring
the days when Somit was chair- responsibility for caUing in out- s?~tion wiU stay open to ful- from ·another division of the ation has ii'nnounced NATO
man of Political Science and so side law enforcement agencies. fill 118 en~ of~ ~tract and University, usuaUy Millard senior and postdoctora\ leUowto meet lis ~liga~ons to • the Fillmore CoUege.
ships in science for 1970-71.
has become known as tbe Suppose You Got Mugedl
The political scientist is ron- stu~~t as outl_ined .m the cataApproximately 500 of the Science faculty and senior post"chairman's chair." Except for
structing new policy guidelines log, Dr. Harvill &amp;ald.
1500 new freshmen admitted doctoral feUowships are also
'!be administrators also ~der regular admissions cri- ~ailsh~ overseas study
for the securit). force as . well.
Wben questioned, be would not vo1ced . roncern about the dan- teria are from the local area,
reveal what the new guidelines gers 10 students and faculty as are the approximately 350
The closin~f date for submiswill involye.,.g;, prefers to ask members when· an institution is disadvantaged students.
sion of applications for tbree
the questioner 11fhat he tbinks forced to shut down. They exWhile the ratio of Western programs is October 5, 197.0.
· The University opi,ns its in- should be !'&gt; them: "Suppose . Prefl!"'d the opinion tbat a uni- New York youngsters to total Applications for NATO senior
terO&gt;Uefiate atbletic year on you were m Norton late at vers1ty shut-&lt;!Qwn clearly University enrollment has feUowship8 will be re-v iewed
"probation," as far as the Na- night and got mugged, do you ~tens hard1Won student dropped- since 1962 in &amp;beer periodicaUy d u r i n 1 1970-71.
~-Co
tbink .the Police should. be credits and, f&lt;;&gt;r. faculty mem- numbers, more w..rtem New Detailed information is avail• ~~tbletic Asso~ 18
csUed m tben?" The tech!llque be~ and administrators, regu- Yorkers are being admitted. able in the office of the •DiThe probation is a mild one, demonstrates the rompleJ:ity of Jar moome.
T-he reason is tbat total class rector, Oversees Academic Pro~~ ~or ,.'n'refrpanmanc·
tl'ondsandof the problem. while . allowing
President Harvill said NAS- size has increased aUowinJ the grams, 107 Townamacl Hall.
-~g
Somit .not to ~t himself to l!LGC mem!&gt;er roUeges are
.
•
NCAA rutes involving acs- a particular po&amp;tion.
· firruly COIIIIII1tted to the prindemic eJisibility and financial
Dealing carefully witb such ciple that students and faculty
..;~
aids to atbletes attending the complex and rontroversial sit- members must have a stronger
rro~"
UniY8111ity under programs for uations is certainly oot new to voice in the decision-making
.
~
the·disadvantqed.
Somit. And yet, even after ten process.
Acoording to the NCAA, the years of admiilistrative exper'·Students who are aware of
University$
. · self "diBO&gt;vered ieDiie, the executive vice presi- this and who are participating
and repo
violations and dent has bad to face some new in the process are not likely to
A net il}ciome (or profit) of cal year which began July 1
p~ its a
tic program into and harsh realities. He's found strike," be aaid. "It would be
CXlllformity" witb organization tbat "solving problems is a lot like striking a g a i n s t them- $87;575 or 1.8 per cent of total and ends June 30, 1971.
sales
has been projected for opA~ to Thomas J.
rules.
rarer tban most people tbink seiW8."
·
erations of l.&lt;'aculty-Student Asassistant. vioe ~t
Fourba- ~~~~".!'!..,~aid . 8Dd usuaUy the solution lieS in
Tbe~tors also dis- sociation Enterprises (Book- Sehillo,
for
aUJ:iliary enterpriSell, the
•g ......,...,.. - · g
a variety of relatively unattrac- cuseed ways to keep cbanDeJs
to
and sewn received aid lllld'par- tiw altemBtiW8."
open to the maas media and the store, Food Service, Vending FSA Board of Directors has apSomit'a studied O!'timism III!OOIIIIity to· define limits so and Servioe Center) for the fis- proved tbese budpt figures:
ticipated jn at hIe tics even
~ tbey did not meet acs- also nms tbin when discussing tbat everyaoe in tbi; campus
demic requirements.
·
the problems of his office. Per- community unilerstanda what
Prior to the NCAA action, bape, bis haribest discoYary wiU bai&gt;Pen if tbeoe limits
54.027,600
$2.146.000 - $2,179,450
President Ketter appeared be- was tbat, "even after president- eJ:Ciiedlid.
are
...,;::. $old ·- · 2.m.aas
1,656,710
924,725
20.000
37,700
213,000
1.254,725
fore officiala o1. the organiza- watching for 20 yean, y 0 u
Considerable time was -.Jso a,_
""'"'" .... 2,054,715
488.210
9
tillll tout IIJlPI'OY8I of the Unt- qu)ddy leem thet you really • devoted to a dilcuaaion of ways ~ o;,:,::..
l,K7MO _
- ....
1.226,170
..,.;ty's finaDcial aid 8Dd ath- don't !mow how bad tbings are · to IICCO"'IDCCdale atudtmt desiree
~ 7J1
27,155 letk ~ poljcies for the until you'"' in the administra- &amp;. 111111'8 uni...ntY involV&amp;- Not 1_,. .._ ,;;:_•.O
•2.no
• dialldwm
tiolr and bebind the deek."
in 80clai iEues.
:: -.::.~~
1.1
2.0
2.7
By su~~~JCID

tbeoe few peraoo8J toucbas, the
oftioe is tba standard' sterile
modem witb conect doc:cxator

-·--·s

=~~Is~~

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=...wen~ ":""~l:f~ ad~

!:.' .:U~:W PY!t'g~';;

:·t!'e .

----It' .

NATO Grrmts
Now Offered

University On
NCAA Probation
08

.

FSA
. n....
. Enterpnses
Net Income .of $87,0&lt;Xr

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s.,.temiJ« 10, 1970

--

·.a.~-·r..l\.:)
~-

-

'Now OrientatiOn'------&lt;_,.,_,_from_
-

1, coL 3)
through • w...ine.clay, Septemlike Cftwlina into a steam- ber 17. ':Photon" moves to the~ madline.); ''Eat Our • Haas Lounge for t111e periorm- . - loob like a beeping ance niJhtl¥ (9:30 p.m.),
lllble of treats from the Park- Thursday and Frid8.y, Septemolde and is billed as "urban ber 18-and 19.
~ eatable mepstruc- · an· screen, Ratao Rizzo and
lure.
('JWo pe~an sit the Cowboy, can be -yiewed all
dori and help
to _d8.y Sunday, September 13,
wafen, waflle..tubeo, cones, throuJh TUM!8y, the 15th,
1111118bmallow8- ~. ~ startinJ at 11 a.m. 411 the Cor&gt;pod cream and ICing.)
fenmce 'I'!M.tre. Olber films to
Alao inaluded are "Balloon be shown include "Story of a
for Two," ''f'lybead" (You pt T'luee Day Pass," "Calcutta,"
into a haiDiet that mabs you "Alice's Restauran£," and
look like a fly.), "Electric "Uon's Love." .
Skin" (You "put it OIL"), and
ComplelinJ the visuals will
CXIIII1tlla otber ..........._
be "Miners," a photo exhibit of
Tile 1Jt11e1 Tile Ap~ by Milton Rogovin
. While "UVE" u..,. in the which runs from Monday, SepFillmore Room, lhilre will be a tember 14, lhrouJh September
oonlinuinJ OoalinJ music festi- 30.
val elaewbere. Be aides the Coel Mlnlnc " - Manaons (Rathabller, 8 : ~
WBFO-FM (88.7) will
midnillht. Saturday, September broadcast a series of programs
12), you can catch Jepberson related to the exhibit during
a.-, Lucky Peterson Blues the week of September 14. Dr.
Band, the Ugly Brolbers, South Donald Rasmussen of West
Happiness Street Society - VirJinis will discuss diseases
Skiffle Band (jup), the Buf- related to coal mining and Presfalo 8ympbonette, Mondo Biz- ident Robert Ketter is slated to
ZIIJ'O (percussion rock), the Jeflolk about his experiences as a
feraori'lbomas Show from Fair- young man working in the
banks Alaska Review (satirical mines. ·
rock) or who c a n - who or
Skiing instruction (courteoy
wbat 'else. (See Weekly Com. of Bluemont :Ski "'""!') "{ill be
muniqu.e pqe 12, for the com- held on ' a ski eck m back of
plete ~schedule.)
Baird on Sunday, Monday and
Rounding out the "in-per- Tuesday, September 13-15.
oon" portion of the events will
Also part of the Nortonbe "the Swan)p FOJ: Theater staged "'}d sponsored extravaGroupe-in-residence." Appar- 1J1U1Z8. will be master classes
eoUy they just roam around and a· performance by the
and make thinp bappen. One Dance Theatre of Harle m,
of this "Juerillo theatre band" tows of Niagara Falls and free
said recenUy: "thev don't" like pme botiiS.
us much at U / B. We used to
•Undergraduate registration
disruot things- meetings and ( sometimes a show in itself)
stuff."
• will be sandwicj:led in during
An electric light sound sys- University business h o u r s,
tem show, "Photon Factory,'' Monday_ through Wednesday,
will also be offering three per- Seplem!i&gt;r 14-16. If anyone~
formances nighUy in Norton the s t r e n g t h, Classes begm
233, Monday, September 14, Thwsday, September 17.

PlwneBookB
To Be Merged
TOJethemess on campus this
fall will be a telephone directory.
n.e traditionally separate
Faculty-Steff and Student directories will· be merged into a
University-wide Directory
which is scheduled to appear in
mid-October.
As bas been the procedure in
tf.e psst, University faculty,
staff and student offices will receive office copies of the directory free of charp, in sufficient
quantities for departmental peroonnel. Pemonal-use copies can
be purchased in Norton Union.
n.e combined book will offer
departmental, faculty and steff
listings with the same information as in previoiiB years. Campus mapa, administrative and
student officer rosters will also
be included.
Faculty-ataff and departmental information is being

~ 8ffiee~tu~U:!:

mation will be _,m,led from
cuds filled out durinJ reJistration.
Computer prin~IB for the
individual faculty lis~
be supplied by the u .
GomputinJ Center. n.e student
prin~ta will be supplied by
a commercial firm.
~
Production 1llld desil!ll of the
Dbec:tory are under the supervlsioit of. Univeroity . PublicationS Servloos,. in cooperation
with the Student A'IIOciation.
u.P.8. .. also abdinatiJui 011. , . _ dlottlbutioD to l'lli&lt;Appnmimataly 15,000 copies
of the Directory will be printed.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
- B.oneS
1 ...,...
Ed.- 2103 Ollie»,

Colleges Move, Luxemburg D e b a t e d - - - - - - - - - - - - ~t~Jro::n
r:!ntful.»
"As be(ore, all of the collegiate units ... need and request
the interest and the participation of the public in their activities. ·we welcome all inquiries from persons interested in the programs and activities of any of the collegiate
units."
...

P"ftiJ{'J:L

eatoloc Held Up

Some of the more recenUyinstituted of those collegiate activities were outlined in a proposed catalog for the system
which, it was hoped by the colleges, would be published in
early September. However, the
administration test week halted
production of the booklef "in
its preeent form:"
n.e manuscript for this first
dermitive st8.temen{ of the colleJiate programs lists 17 operational units: the five lettered
colleps (A, B, D, E " or Cassirer, and F or Tolstoy) ; eight
colleJeS identified by subject
matter: Black Studies, Communications, EcOlogy, International, Law and Society, Malhematicsl Sciences, New College
of Modem Education, and Sc&gt;cial Sciences; and Modem,
Rosa lmlemburg, C. P. Snow
andVicocolleges.
· Rosa Lwamibur:g, apparenUy
deistined to be "coli• of the
year," appears to have precipitated the stop-publication order. n.e Buffalo Evening
NeiDI, upoo ..nehow IJI!tting
bold of that portion of the man:
uacript ct.crlbinll LusemburJ,
. played up ita radicsl bent and
ad.n-1 in ~int type, "ICill
It; u 18!" n.e administzation
._..ted t h a t LusemburJr
..,...._ .., DOt for credit and
that its ilistructon are DOt paid
by the Unl..sity. It baa DO
"ol.6cial stetuo,• tbey ald.
Acoordinc to ita ..talot! description.

I..JmDburl eoue..,

will offer an educational cadre
who will provide "An Introduction to American Rad icalism,"
focusing on '"The New Left
and Lenin; T heories of the American Working Class; and U.S.
Monopoly Capital and Its Imperialism,'' among others. The
cadre, the catalog says, is "an
educational ann of the Niagara
Liberation Front."
Sod•llst Change

Luxemburg contends t h a t
"U.S. fascism is accelera ting''
and feels that education "needs
to be changed from the bottom
up." " Most classroom experiences are usually boring, alienating situations for most students, especially those in the
social sciences,'' t h e college
says. It proposes to "actively"
recruit those "willing to study
and work for changing our
country to a better, socialist
society."
"Allentowo, West Side and
North Buffalo community projects, student housing, working
class factory ortplnizi.ng, high
school and · community college
organizing, film projects, two
newspaper collectives ( CQLD
STEEL and the New Age ),
draft, welfsre, and gang organIzing projects will all be choices
.available · and integral to the
lbaoreticsl attempts" of the
members of each class section
.or "collective."
-According to the catalog,
"the NiaJara Liberation Front
. . . bas already initiated contacts ancl discussions -with
teamsters, engineers, ·and
skilled professionals around the
"""- of the wsr an4 campus
resistance. Armed "with concrete information direcUy related to the corulition of~
advanced 1)10rkers and tMir
Wnilies, sfudeota can '-ne
more direcUy relevant .to the
large JHOieterian base in this
city." .

Modem Education

Also interested in the form
of education today is the New
College of Modern Education,
described as "a group of people
who are thoroughly d issatisfied
with the current institutions of
'education' and who have visions of entirely new forms, new
ways in which education can
occur." T his group seeks to
"study the past and present attempls at schooling in other
countries, to investigate the
currently burgeoning move-ment in alternatives to official
education, to imagine new alterna tives and to help put into
practioo these ideas." The free
school movem e nt will be
among special areas of seminar
study.
The new Vico College is devoted to the interdisciplinary
study of the history of ideas; ·
its program focusses on classical human problems seen
through the "humanist tradition." C. P. Snow will attempt
to bridge the interdisciplinary
communications gap in tbe realization that "most issues • • •
fall into interdisciplinary clust~mcco..:~o!:!ft!,.~ scienModem Colleae will place ita
emphasis on dance and •body
coMciousness; Law ana So-ciety, on the interdisciplinary
view of law as "literature, philosophy, ' and soc i a I institutions,'' and International ColI.,..,; on "the art and science
· or beinJ human" in a cbanJinJ
transnstiooal world.
·

~c:=~lieJe

effecls of 20th century civilization."
The Black Studies" College
will be just that (with an added emphasis on closer community ties ). Other subjectmatter colleges are also engaged in -the studies implied,
and the lettered colleges, of
course, oontinue with the projecls with which they bave become indelibly identified.
n.e exception is College · B,
not too well known test year,
which is offering work such as
arts management (an internship program in cooperation
with area cultural institutions),
musical theatre, bearing and
tistening in music, and·the noncredit, "Instruction in Keyboard for Adults." n.e latter is
open to " University faculty and
steff who wish to study keybOard and keyboard harmony,
and their wives or husbanda. A
service to the University internally by specialists in adult
teaching."
PERIOiliCAL HOlDINGS
PUBUSHED
The . University Ubraries have just
issued the first edition of a combi ned list of periodicals for,_ au

parts of the Ubraries system . . , .
Contalinlng entries for over 19,·

000 periodicals and showlna hokl·
ings and locations, the list is In·
tended to assist users in flndlns:

the resources of the Ubraries
more easily and quickly.
Copies of the 730 page volume
may be purchlsed for the Individual use of faculty and

-nts

at the• Main Circulation Desk In
is l..od&lt;wood. The price of $2.50 hn
emphiuDzinJ w o r k i n g with been set u low os possible ond
banda and bodies as """ as cowrs the printing oneS blndi"i
''brains." LearninJ and IMch- costs.
ing Cftfts, media and music are
Copies are •vellable to •ru II·
included. k-inedia-craft 'Mirlt- .• braries ond other lntarwst8d lndlsbop is planned for ita Allen- viduols throuaiHhl W-m Nand there will . . York Ubnuy Reoou,.,.. Council ot
1 price of $5.00 per copy.
to

=r=

""""-""fl"'.U:C,."'.:'i'r,

�~

4

~10,1970

Ombudsman Committee Recommends Offire Be'Continued
TO: l'relldoat ~ L Ketter ' Part n ia devOted 10 tbe UniCommunity \llll'lllty Ad¥0Cilte.
FROM: 8peciaJ Committee 1D
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The
Review thii 08lcaa of Ombuds- Adii()C(Jk ~port. ni&gt;t yet .,.,,;._
ma.IIDd Achoc:ate
'
pleted, will ~pear in a fu.lui'e
IliRvld Koc:bay, Chairman
iuue of the Reporter.)
WDIIam Bann&gt;w
!WIT 1
Coanolly
THE UNIVERSITY
Bdwud Dudek
OMBUDSMAN

....t tbe Uni..aity

n--

~~

A.

Jollll I..ch

s,;r:
October,

~0

The

and .IW"iodittion of
1969, pretidenlial

clemaDdod; be hu eu.a-1 bio
~by t ~i_"""nt 0°rl clib·y;;-,;;;- wiu.f,;'tb;"'u,;,e..;ty
community; ODd be hu ~
and foftiiW'Om juri•diction.- or

poolpoDecl the exercite thereof,
witb a . . _ of deW:acy ODd
a recoplition of the . - for accommodation amonc ·all•ub-

•u: ;!~n!';:r~~;'';!~
wbole, be hu _,. his role u

:b.""~b~,!:;~-~ ~~mlJ'"~'ft'~&lt;"-...:

Pbilip LMf

~

followinc atate-

commendaNe that the current

"'l'bouP botb o16oeo baw been
created by pretidenlial authority,
each olr1e0r will esen:ioe bio Own
judgment, fru of dinction by my-

a-vio admini•trative ol6oeo and
adminittraloD within the Univertity. Tbit it particularly important lor at 1-t two reuono: (a)

man conta.iDed tbe

~t ru.:..erriam

=~~ !!:t,.,:n~ ~o=-u:~o;s:.::

Wallar Rmm
Rlcbard 8iaelkow

IliRvld Toai8l

IN'IRODUCTION

:"..~ri:f"';; ~~;,~:Uow~ ~~olii!~· .1:'..':~ :

On October 14, 1969, acting

~;r'!'::'ntlnagjoJ::~ :ff;,~w;/.Y"~t::J.':fu~ ~ !~u~ ~ ~;

clmta, fllo:ulty ....t atd, Acting
l'lellident Peter F. Regan an-

our ability fairly ....t elfectively ID bandle complaints, of~ and disputes
arising m tbe life of our Uni·
=:a~~ni'::u~~

ra-,

added)

of tbe adininittration .. . of tbis
Univenity of the reopontibility lo

venity community on how lo teek

tangle the ombudtrnan u a parti-

resolution or adjudication of com·
plaints and grievances;

cipan.t in subaequent action or inaction. thereby dilutinJ his ..indeJ.

ancea;

a complaint or grievance there-

t~;; ~;'='pf~f~:U:d~~: l:llc:;~ ~.=~~

=d

appropriate parties on the ruolu-

quire ''advisory opinions" prior to

ate advocate. to whicb was ap-

"6. Make recommendation~ to

must seek and find such counsel

P~A=~!'a:'O:iliate

com-

"•· M&lt;JM ruommendotiono lo

~:.=a~b:;:.=~ ~~~

complaints and

~~~

from the matter in

U particultr adrninittralors re-

~~~ ~~~ran~:S~~!;
80

M,{ir~o"f'-~:!i ~=ria;!"~"':,";.:!~
!d. ~f:he J.:iv':r:te~~~
0
-~,...,!=i~"o:: ~=t~ a.foi~n::~:rga~t: ~ ~~~ :::;;rl~~b:'=
=te

~to ~~lain.:!u:nt:eJe~e:= ~~~=d~e~t"i!t:~~e ~~

All

and fairer treatment of members

the teaching faculty. And, of

of the

course, the ombudsman acta quite

.~niveraity

community."

(empbaais added)

fn~~U~:1:1tyatCab:!t .

mendations to administrators

ed in the University ombudsman
carried the risk of conflict be-

filed. Most oe:iainly, he should
not illitiaU complainta.

immediate creation of appropri- cate, as well as a risk of 'potential
ate offices and the vice presi- oonOict between the ombudsman's
dent for student affairs strongly · operation and the traditional rePndorsed this action. In addi- sponsibilities of other offices and
tion, the creation of these two individuals within the University.

must, in this Review Committee's
judgment, be preserved. Of necessity, and particularly at this point
in time, the boundaries marking
the scope of authority of the om-

=

0

~1dri:~"~f~~: ~
~=- ft"~ ~~ ~~b, ~
President's statement of October precise linea of demarcation will

dorsement of the Faculty Senate Executive Committee.
The October 14, 1969, creation of tbe two offices was accompanied by tbe following
stipulation:
"Tbey will continue in existence
until August 31, 1970. I propose

14, 1969, contained the (ollowi~:
" .. . for the time being, it l8
bett lo leave such conftictt 1o be
reoolved by the advocate and ombudsman m the exercise of their
discretion as needed to insure

~!'J:i,h't,a:~~~~

~t fu!cti~~r~ 0==~

new offices will not in any way
replace or encroach upon our existing tribunals and bodies re-sponsible for th\_ resolution of
disputes and administration of
justice. Nor do they relieve any

eprina and make whatever changes
eeem appropriate in view of their
·
d r
~
:cceby~no in~~ ~:!:i
system of gowmance."
Consonant with the spirit of
the foregoing stipulation, Dr.

=

=t:~d~~e ::c.m~.;r~~if~

University o! the reapontibilily lo

{i~":1ul~~g1~ ~~cyau!dri~ ~ ~=

appointed . . . this Universitywide SpecjaJ Committee 10 lleview the Olli&lt;e8 of Advocate
and Ombudsman. President
Ketter views the review of these
two offices "aa a1fording an opponunity for the suggestion of
any ~ which seem ap-

We

_,tinua,::u:;.m:::::_

:~~~~J:: r;o&gt;~"t..~~

me." He furlber atatat tbat "the

ing tbat bio '"PPOin-t may be
allloo hu been 6nanced at a •tit- renewed for an additional year
factory Wtel."
. Tbit ••
W
tarm(t) oi
Thil Review Committee haetens o«Boe ia made after only one
~: ~!.r:::::Jo:f
year•• eQ)erienoe with the oftioe
-on the nett ombuclaman or his ~U~oit:r ~and
suoceatOn and assigM. Rather, ecience im:r:"~t lo ~t:_~~
the Committee recommendt tbat Not later than ait moatbo r:;,r

.!hf.J{:C

f.::d~~ ~~e!f~ !:;~

6ce be negotiated anouall' witb
deference to the incumbent'• rear
sonable notions of the needs of
the office. As for atalling of the
office, tbis Cotnmittee particularly
recommends tbat the ombudtrnan

:t:r

-:.:..:r-tb.'f"• ....;

Review Committee be formed

which will ccmaider, amonc other
matten, the 8Ubject of the term
of ollice of the ombudoman and
tbe maW!r of nornineet for tbat
o!1ice. We aloo recommend tbat

The ability lo appoint a policy

:_~~edb~~~~t'~:'~

should clearly be among the pow-

~:!i~. ~~"t.~eo~tt!::
contiders it of the highett importanc:e tbat the future funding of
this office make ample provision
!or advertiting and for publicizing
to the entire University community botb the elristence of. and tbe

~7:.~u:ri:!~~n%;.~~~

order to ensure the ombudsman's
independence and freedom or action, the Univenity ad.m.i.n.istration should give the most careful·
consideration to the ombudsman's
requeolo for funding or pbyaical
facilitiea, with denial occurring

Neither does this action (creation
of tbe two new offices) involve
any change in the rules and eub-

d~~ve.!tU.:~caC~n=

mulated, tbis Review Cotnmittee
has
to endone in princi~·hl::ec = t ~~~~~
lin~ted in bio June 10. 1970, "In.te~ ~~ tbe ombudsman,
certain criteria should be kept in
mind. Thoee ~JUQe~ted here re6ect tbe prejucli&lt;:et of tbe preoent
ombudsman.
"Fint, he tbould bave all of tbe

decided

r:-=r:fob. i~~:~;!ee:,

balanced judp:nente, patience in
listening, etc.
..Second. he ebould be a ..memher of the faculty, because certain
k;nds of sensitivities are most
fully acquired by teaching eoperience, the mainstream of the Uni-

at- ~~~ d~~~ell~O:t :,r;!'~'bl~ ve~·ni,

:ei;r!!.d:.:~ra~~~:!:~ !e~~~iai:~:~ ~ri=~cti~ f::

i:g s:a~O::J:;, 1i:· :~~'::i . :,:e;ti:e :not':!.~~:: ~: th!::.~ti:·~~m~;·:r~ &gt;;,(~
Coordinating Council requested tbe new office of University advo- 6oe o! the University ombudsman

new oflices also received the en-

mend .tbat the new incumbent of
tbat allloo .-Jd lor one

properly when he makes recom-

From the very inception of the

formed pursuant

tllllblvl-n

will forewr be celebrated herealtar, the cunent - - . , "re-

0

1o

and Un.iveraity ombrvfsman
Prafesaor Robert B. F1eming
was appointed University advoca~cd Prof""""' Artbur D.
-Bu
was appointed Univer·

a.ted.
three appointees
had been among the nominees
recommended by the joint committee.
.
'lbe original joint oommittee had been
to

~~the

unique mocleaty which cloubll.-

~ = -c=t~.':·::.:l

s~~t:m~t:pS:t ~ ~~~~~
appointment&amp; will doubtleu ere· committee dutiee- as may be com·~~=.:o:.r.!;;~t.: :81'.=.·~1!1.:!' ~0:1~~ ate a need for adclilionallacililiet, patible witb the olllce and witb
~Ybe~~:the Univer- :=ae~~~.J~~ 0 ~,! ~n:tf:: :n:a'cii~nal~-= the man.
wt~rapi:h!r~::tL; ~
"1. Advioe memben of the Uni- minittralon it lo involve and en- assistant ombudsman.
imk!"'n&lt;knl f.....W,.." (empbuit

:::::=...u;.~~ :,;:::

....eu:.:. ~wi~
~~~:'~
~

emerge only after several yeaN~'
experience and development, if
ever. (Witb this thought in mind.
timid souls who are clist.-....ecl
when working in "gray areas''
should never be appointed Uni:i,i%:.~~-) ~! 7uri:k:
tional boundaries circumscribing
the ombudsman'• operations must
be drawn somewhat short o( his
becoming an "actor'' or "participant" in any initial act or initial
activity which arguably may give
~~=enUy to a complaint
It hu been llUI&lt;gested tbat the

=7hl.mi~vi~l!:g:. tb~

embrace the direction of a rumor
control center and the provicliog
o! an election oervioe available 1o
:hit!:~ ~rb!~d:t e'i!:ocyn
conducted ''by an impartial of6oe." (Ombodsman's memo 1o tbe
Rev'ew Cotnmittee of July -n
1970J Tbit Review Cotnmittee,

should be reduced lo writing.
B. TM EffectiveneBII of the Paot
Year's Perfortn4nce of tM Of-

he should be an indefinite appointment, preferably
at lull rank, ao tbat he will be
aible to make decieions without

~~ of tbat which pertaint lo ~~~!:::U,~u!':~;:~:::!,~.!fci
~,!!'t~';,£"~ ~~:cC!:.:S~~~ ::o;!~ile~d'n:t ~i=:~

fi.ce has necessarily been d.iseuAsed.
above.
In tl}e 112 cases which were

~. ~~Re~~=:=

is unanimous in its concurrence

thtt tbe office more tban.aatit6ed

being the ombudsman for an indefinite period nor tbould be look

~ ~e~C:n-:n~ ~t;==~~=

position.
"It is desil'able for the ombuds·
man lo maintain his liet lo his

~ec=~i::! ;:!~P~~~ ~[~!~~~~u~!!: ~n":

sole matter which this Committee
considered with regret was the information that a mere 112 complaints or grievances had been
presented to this office since its
c~ tion. Given the be~lingly

~7n!de:~~~~ ::£

the failure of more eligible complaina.nts to take advantage of the

nominees for the G(fice of the Uni·
versity ombudsman from among
whom it is urged that the presi--

1

ti~~C:.~r:~ b!m:edby

WWi: !:~er:oJ!ftru. non-

:::nb'!t!etoo~ ~ci~
which bas herelolore been given
lo the e&lt;itten&lt;e and oervicea of
the office. It ia for this reuon that
this Committee urgeo tbat the
funding of this ollice include am-

· G~~unt ~~~':~~
course. the o8ice must exercise

part-time basis, and should inelude being excuaed from most
deparbnental committees, ,uiding
Ph.D. clitaertationo, etc."
With this in miDd. this Review

dent~ r.&amp;'!:U;:
William R Greiner

~r8i.H~

Habert H. Stem

·c. Peny B1ito
Charlet H. Ebert

=..!'\/~~

Irvine H. Shames

~~~:lod~~~=m:
Security Asks
a1: a ~=~ •:,•-:_~U: !t;e~­
fu~ :lttt.;ea~~·t:·
What's Strategic?
::'~!'in':dTur'fn:e~ P~~ of all the informs- :.,.,:.~li~~ 0~:.=
:..u.r:::li~ tbeot'tl!ty~
Uni\llll'lllty vice presidents,
~~.,::a-.;.:~ ~~~ ~ ~ ~ ::,:i!":~~ ~m:!. ~0 oc: in the office. ~ithout the qualitiea .provoats
and depar-.t '-Is
cootinued, the president bas in- opinion tbat the current ombudt- liont. The benign character of tbe potsetted by Profeuor Butler, tbe
vited this Review Committee 10 man hu ethibited during the put ollice of Univemty ombudsman precedents eotablithed for tbis 'of- have t-o asked ~ provide a
list
of
'....w-able
....... within
submit ID him nominees for year an adminoble perce~n of, tends lo be compromited if this
jwiaclicDon" 1D Kenneth
:;:: "" eve:;!ij'~~~7 .!:',; o111ce i• lo be hei&lt;I ,.,.ponoible for !f.,it~d~vec!':::.m~: !: their
e:tuiYOC&amp;'ly ezpreues ~th ita P. Glennon, director of secur""j! ~- tbe fore- o~~~ce".""trthe current ombudsman !:n~8t..e-:;.:,~w:. ·~ ·
ity.
and adminittralion at our Univenity. Sucb changes mWit await
all our efrortt lo improve University governance generally.~ (em-

goiJII ezpec:tations and grant of
authority, this Review Commit.-

hu acted (or failed to act) im~.:lL:.:"::..::.,:nft Y/::

oii!Similarl"!'
ioyan,.:~~~-lioCommin
cen~~=
"""'

::!,.:::.=..,~'rO'i'j;,=;

been an eriremely ._. occur-

~
·~
==r~.:.!1
~d1: ~.!:

scope
J~....., . . . . , .
qwstioa; • (b) . an inquiry intO
the ellective.- of the past
year'a performance of tbe of-

the atatwe of the o111ce.
By ntle....,.,. ID the pidelinet
CODtaiDad in the preaideilt't Octo-

out of which llllknown ~ of
complaint. or grieoancet may renit. U rumor control canten or

£~J.!~ofoftbe~

d~7Url.
~ ~:~
~
valuable 1-.no OJJd inWI

~m- padual
=~~~
~ ~ 1':;1!:::,.~~~· . ~~rf~~~
powtb ODd evOlution of pant in the conduct of electio..; of Univenity ~·n but for

&amp;.mi...:...~.re(cc)om~m- eReriewnda.ta·~

~
. for

=

~~~~oprof:!,~~-=:. j/1;

8PPQin-.t by

tbe lll'8lidmt ID 11.- ...._ . . .
'1111a report il divided• Into
• _._ Part I il cleiuiBd ID
ltie Univa&amp;it;y Ombudaman.

·

!:t
~S:b~\!'".,.;C:S ~ ~~:!
the authority ·of bio ...,.,.;biJi... of . . . .. other ~-- •

=-

the ....... be tho allloo.,
......
~ wi~..,
'ahJe ,.... . .......::: of the U'Ji!enity - - - . ...... ~- i:louThe "' the .................
lY adftoallle; be hM ...... tlllbold· -.mo. hM a ell.- bauinc ..,
.....t ID. act. ~ ~ the allloo'o r.dlllioo, ~ &amp;1111

lba

improving aU inttitutiont within
the Uniftrtity ODd for improvinc
Univenity gove.....,.,.. pnerally.

~ COR(J'atuJ.atiODI aDd appreci
ation we alto-eztend lo Mn Louito BU.., wbo hu aerved .; com-

~O:Z,:~c;:'dt,ro:,.
On the . . . of tbi-to....uur
N~

- . - ... tbebMioiilall

The request, iaaued by direction of President Ketter,
asks also b a list of "stntegjc," "danprous," and "valu-

able materi8Ja." their aact ~
cation and tbe e11ecta of their
looa or deatructiaa,
•
A memo making tbe request
8)leCifiea DO ....... for it but
tbe aiinpua bas undarJoae a

==

:'!ive.n':!i~
..........
The
poliQI NpGr!ed
C8lllpU8

18 such ..... In

...IIIUSl

0118

..It- in

�5

SoptwniJer IO, 1970

8enate:Askl;
Excuses-for
Campaigning
By
CHERYL HAMGESHEIMER
~ ~';"""Commi~ of
the U1B Faculty Senate has
~ a na&gt;lution reiterating
the State University Board of
Trustees' maDdate tbat the normal academiC calendar be obOKW!d this fall," bot at the 8IIIDI!
time urging faculty to pennit
. students who wish to participate in the J&gt;!llitic:al camJ&gt;IIigos
to do so WJtbout "peculiar or
unusual academic penalties."
The resolution SUii'"'IB tbat
instructors in the University
provide normal pattems of remedial study and testing for students who are aboent for political campaigning purposes during the petiod. October 2ll
through November 3, according
to Dr. William H. Baumer,
chairman of the Senate Emcutive Committee.
In the statement on pre-&lt;!lection --activiti&lt;O!, the Committee
ssid it inle!prets the Trustees'
resolution to require adherence
to the University calendar for
the benefit of tho&amp;~! students
who do not wish to interrupt
their academic work this semester. ·'We recognize, however,
tbat receiti ellellts bave cauaed
many students to express a desire to be free to participate in
State and local election campaigns this fall In our opinion,
it is appropriate for the University to recognize the interest
of some students in participating in the pre-election political
campaigning."
The resolution urges tbat,
"students who wish to participate in the election campaign
shonld be "pet'mitteif to llbeent
themaelves from clasees during
the two weeks preceding the
election." It also SUU'"'ts: tbat
instructors provide an opportunity for students who are absent during tbat period to
make up the work as in the
normal esse of an excused . absence; and tbat, if poesible, examinstions not be scbeduled
~thethe~w.:_kB before
Finally, the resolution ssys
thnt "If the nature of a particular course makee it imPG'"'ible
for the instructor to follow the
preceding recommendations,
the instructor should inform
his students of his intention to
adbere strictly to the nofmal
academic calendar this semester," before registration and/or
in the first week of clasees.
The Board of Trustees' """"'
lution of July 16 stated tbat
"the State University of New
york will during 1970-71 hold
to its regular academic acbedule and remain open during the
pre-election period," however,
it also stated tbat "the separate
campuses of the University
may wort. out arrangements to
amommodate those lllud&amp;ts
wishing to participate in political campaigns or other public
alfairs . . . (on] an individual
and DOt an institutional
(basis)."

•

CLASS IICtiE8UJ,£
The otllcllll Unive~ll ClaB8
Schedule, for U88 In N&amp;)stratlcin,
publlsbod a on extJa edition
of the .......,., esl11er this - .
Copies _,. dlstrtbuted In bulk to
on compus bulldlop end to off·
compus loCitions end "'-lei be

OYOIIeble In the ume locations a
........ Reporter Issues. tJttr.

cap1e1 arw on hind In the . . of E d - Stlldlas
t h e - School (230
Un~ Col.... 01(106 ~.the " -·
Hall I~ (tnaln
lab!&gt;r) end the ~ Lea Campus
~. (Bulldl. . 4236).

&lt;'-"·
"-&gt;·

-New·StudenJs
ToldtoLook
Form&gt;rst

Dust and Dreams

The ,New Direcj.or of Campus Security Says
He's Cautiously Optimistic, But Ready
By SUSAN GREENWOOD
Reporter St.lf

The house at 196 Winspear
looks just like many of the
other buildings on the street,-two stoey, wooden, with a wide
porch. Yet, tbe porch ligbt is a
stark blue bulb tbat burns constantly and an American flag
waves from one of the porch's
pillars. Only these subtle signs
mark the building tbat houses
the campus Security Force.
The building is unobtrusive.
The Security Force's presence on campus wli8 unobtrusive, too, until last spring wben
ita very existence became a
major Issue.
Since then, a Jot of discussion and water have gone over
tbe dam and the force has been
reorganized by President Ketter. He appointed a new director, generated more funds
to enJanre and strengthen the
force and placed the entire operation under the COIItrol of Executive Vice President Albert
Somit.
The whole move was,! in
President Ketter's words, "to
maintain a high degree of skill
and prot..;n...Jism within our
campus Security Force." .
Wbat the new director of oecurity ia really like only time
and, perbaps, • crisis will tell.
His c:radaatiala are easy to .,..
his ~ty much
harder.

Kenneth

P.

Gierman has

._. In lllli:urify-related jobs lor

.... 30 yean, yet bia only reCI!IIlt oontact with the collep
.........lion bio- _.,;...
last )'Mf 81 ' - ' of the Erie
County Blaiff'o T r a i n i n 1
Aaclomy. Howev.; he does
bald a Bacbelar of Law and

Juris Poctor degree from CoJumbus University, now part of
the Catholic University of America, and is vitally interested
in the continuing education of
the members of his Security
Force.

more years were spent in the
Army working on security, intelligence and counter-intelligence. After 30 years of govemment service and a year
with the Sheriff's Academy, he
became a security officer for
Westem Electric last January.
This varied background has
~:~ ':"w!.'lfi:t ~~.!! ~
eniorcement set-up. So he's
well aware tbat U/ B's Main
S~t location leads to dual
jurisdiction on . the part of law
eniorcemenl The Main Street
campus is within the Bu1falo
City limits so tbat it's under
Commissioner Felicetta's jurisdiction. At the ssme time, it is
in Erie County where Sherill
Mike Amico's men hold sway·
·~uf!alo Po I ice or County
Sheriff's ~can come.on ~-,.
pus ~Y time to exen:LSe ~
a.uthonty even over the. ~J"Clions of campus administmto_rs." Glennon points oul
q1~nnon, however, d.-t't
anliopate any clasbes between
the will of the police and tbat
of the administration this fall.
His prediction is cbaracteristic
of his bard-to-analyze cbaracter. He's cautiously optimistic," but "prepared for the
worst."
PARKING LOT KEYs
Campus por1dng lot gates will be

Glennon, who thinks of himself ·as a "Joe Friday'' type of
cop, is just as cauti01!9 and taciturn as the "Dragnet'' character and yet tbere can be a
pronounCed lriab twinkle in his
eye.
He describes himself as a
law .e niorcement officer--&lt;IOJDeone who "eniorces the law" and
ia ioot the originator of lawmakina policy. "It's DOt Up to
the otfici.r to decide the guilt
of a penion," Gleonon asserts,
but to ''p,_,t both aides of
the facts even if you bave per'1011111 prejudices." Presenting
''both aides" "includes "report- ~~~~2.
~'::::
ins mitiptifts cirrumstances faculty and staff who hove not yet
"'-the officer knows them.~
stickers and keys for
The new director's ide as · 197Q.ll should file porl&lt;ing pannlt
~ lhe "IIOO'i. offtlle&lt;"the
Ia come appllcotio.S os 10011 11 .-.lble
......, Ions years m
W·en- with the 1"-rwonnaf op;ce 1807
~th
~jif:"' ~ ~ Elmwood A...,ue, In onTif t~ ovoid
doing -=urity work.
bel,. Inconvenienced.

=e

:,;;t

27

n.n:e

Students new to the um--oity this year bave 1-. informed by Jetter to apect "a
dazzling array of fractured fao.
ulty, asinine adininistnltora,
senseless secretaries and prrulous gueriJias."
The letter, written by Mark
H\!!Jd)eston, presideat of the
Student ~tion, is addr&lt;O!sed "Dear Incoming Inmates," and is described as a
tongue-in-cheek plea for support of the . iJndartlraduate student governmenl
"Tbe A,isociation is primarily involved in waging a. constant . battle for truth, justice
and the American way," writes
Huddleston, "especially pertaining to student life in aU
fields---academic, social, political and amoral.
"The slave status of students
will not cbange, however, without the fuJI participation of aU
students. We are presently
looking into the feasibility of
student unionization, University-wide governance and other
fascinating subjects. ~our help .
in this and other aspects of
University life would be beneficial, particularly if you display marked masochistic tendencies.'"
·The Jetter concludes by offering interested students ''free
of charge" a. copy of the Student Association Handbook
"complete with accompanying
constitution" and an invitation
to the Association's Norton
Hall office for a "crash course
in student impotence."
Huddleston says he wrote
the Jetter to evoke reactions.
"I wanted the freshmen to be
interested in student government, even if they thought we
were being funny," be explained.

Law School Has
20 Black Frosh,
J\ T.
T T. ba Co
1 vew vr
n urse
Between 2ll and 35 black
are expected to enter
the Law School this week under a program which allows an
extra two years for completion
of the normal thiee-year oourae.
W. Lance Tibbles, assistant
freshmen

~':'!:ill"=~~:!:·

WBJ'ved .--~ will be '"ven •1,200
...._.
•
annual worit-&lt;1tudy grants. A..
lawyers and Jaw firma COIItributed 2ll per cent of the hmda
for the program, witli the federal ~ernment providing the
remainder.
In a related move, the Facul
ty of Law and J~
has announced a new courae em
urban problems featuring nationally-pr&lt;IIDil*lt lecturers.
Said to· be
·
for
Jawwuque.
~

~~~=

'cal
· ti
-de th of
ti
exllJD!II8 011
P
general prOblems "'?'!""""' ID
ID06t urban commuruties.
Visiting lecturers will inelude M a yo r Richard G.
H a t c h e r of Gary, Indiana;
James Farmer, aasistant secretary for administration, HEW;
Robert C. Weaver, former miD
secretary, and Miss Angie E .
Brooks of the United Nations
General Assembly.
. The course was orpnized by
Mrs. Barbara M . Sims, lecturer
in lilw, with the aasistance of
law profeBIICl&lt; Jacob D. Hyman.
It will be open to about 40 Jaw
students and 25 undersraduates.

�eRE~

6

A Prescrjption to Minimize Unrest:
Fair, F~,V~le Administration
· By CLAUDE WELCH

ciEs? How might the many pri- . o..,_ _ s...._
· orities of the University as a
Campus traDquility . and whole be clarified. rank-orof itaelf. doM DOt ~y ~ 8Jl!l ~~
entail the most J&gt;.ltby situa- cu.~wve JU
tian; oompla universities such applica!&gt;le !'&gt; all mem!Jers of
aa Bulfalo must expect the ten- the Uruvei'Sity .oo!""'uru!'Y, &lt;:""
sioas born o1. .:.. fD&lt; we con- oompleme~t e:llllting legislative
· .
~
.
f and executive mechanisms?
atitute DOW a oommumty o
Tbe University at Bulfalo is
30,000 ~
will complex and interdependent.
Conf1ictiDa pressures
Several Its to '~ equili"bn"um
.mst, l'o&lt; universities, as insti•
tutioas, aeel&lt; to foster the de- rather t h a n basten salutary
velopment of individuals 1ar =~·
re~m"'t&gt;fe. a~t,;
more than the ~p~t . of growth and acceptance of the
the total oommuruty-i!- ~- collegiate SYStem likely were
deed. ~teterm oommuruty 18 bel.d hack-for the colleges beBPP"!Pn&amp; ·
.
came linked in the minds of
It IS my strolll! feeling, how- many (particularly of those
ever, ~t the stri!e of the _past within the lar r society that
academic year 1eoP.ardtzed llurrounds the i'fniversity) with
many recent academic reforms types of change bel.d contrary
!"'&lt;~ weakened ~orts at foster- to the "normal" pattern of
mg Uiiiveftllty-w•de awareness problem resolution.
and consensus.
.
Tbe history of · tumultuous 'Normal' Pottem 111-Aapted
events-those initiated in late
Tbe "normal" pattern, I beFebruary stemming from black lieve, bas· become ill-adapted to
athletes' concerns and proper- the organizational realities of
ty damage, culminating in a the multiversity. New entities
court injunctiorf and heavy po- and educational ventures have
lice p~ce '?n campus; and been ~ to, _not_integrated
those uutiated m early May by into, ow orgaruzation. Paths
the 9&amp;!!tbodian invasion and of decision-making and responthe killings at Kent .sta~ "'!d sibility remain unclear - and
Jackson State, culminating m nothing can be more sapping of
the acting president's decision morale and efficiency than not
to. enooura~e students to leave understanding who d e c i d e s,
wttbout bemg· sub]&lt;!Ct to aca- with what infonnation for what
de!Jllc penalt!es-does not re- constituencies. It is n'wwestly
qwre recounting.
inappropriate to press all isLonc·Simmerinc eausues upwaid for presidential
Tbe pro:rimate causes of the settlement; however, such tendFebruarY and March distw'lr em:ies will continue, unless the
ances had been simmering for responsibilities of several levels
more than two months-and re- (the students; the cbsinnen;
gretfully reflected one of the the provosts and Universityfew occasions when the Univer- wide deans; the Faculty Sensity administration d i d no t ~l:,;r~ s~~; ~'i_ cetera) are
rapidly resolve an issue vitally
Let me cite grading problems
affecting minority students.
Tbe proximate causes of the arising at the end of the spring
May tensions lay far from our semester as typical. Direct recampus, in the paddies of Indo- sponsibility for assessing stuchina and in Washington's cor- dent performance rests with the
ridors of power- and the Uni- faculty of each course. Condiversity at Bullalo could only tions on campus early in May
seek to weather the crisis that endangered personal safety,
brought the closing or suspen- and since the semester was
sion of almost ali comparable nearly at an end, it appeared
appropriate to the acting presuniversities in this country.
Tbe ivOrY tower image of the ident (in consultation with the
University at Bullalo no longer vice presidents, provosts and .
can be applied. Tbe tensions of University-wide deans ) to en.Ame&lt;ican society are reflected, courage students to leave camindeed amplified at our cam- pus, indicating they would not
pus. To pretend that such ten- suffer academic penalty. In alsions do not afflict the Univer- most all instances, faculty
"t ru · the f
f reality
members cooperated rnsgnifi·
s• Y es m ·
ace 0
cently, grading on the basis of
Given this current reality, and
, given the distressing events of work completed by May 7 or
1969-70, what lessons should be on the basis of take-home
drawn?
papers or examinations.
Of prime importance; it Academic Freedom?
seems in retrospect, are willA few instructors,_..bowever,
ingness and ability to resolve- insisted that fmal e:rRminations
both equitably and swiftly-- be held as scheduled on camqueati0118 related to University pus, arguing (in effect) that
purposes and patterns of gover- their academic freedom ennance. In what ways should abled them to bold to "normal"
faculty members of the Univer- expectations. Litera By hunsity link tbemaelves, in their dreda of students were affected
research and teaching capaci- in this way, though it seemed
· ties, with governmental agen- reasonable to them to expect
JO
.

'W:r

0

A. _,.., c:omm..Uty ,........,.,. pablw.d -.ell T'--tlq by U. Dhoidon o/ Vnl-

.,..;ty R.J.tbv, Stlllte Vnirenity ol N- Ycrl: et Bullelo, 3435 Jl.m St., Butr.Jo,
N. Y . 14214.

( n - . 212'TJ.

Joe.tMf in R_, 2J.J, 250 Wimpe• Annue

Bdltoriel oll;c.. -

~ a~

u;_

A. W&amp;STUY ROWLAND

~~-­
..........:c..w

TEUODOU V. PAURNO

R:OBaRT T. IIARl..lfTT
.td L,roru On ,._.. Bditor
CAROL .t. OOODSOU

W.-A:~Jr ~

.,_,~

.._...,_

JOBII A. CLOUTiaR

•

SUS.tll GUalfWOOD

- 'if$!:!.~~ =~ 1 - R.

0.S.S.. •O..,.J Bar,..,.._, RAbwt S.

niOfOOilAI'HY: ...,._,.. L. 11-.k, Hqo B. V~.

OOifTIUBUTIJIIO AR"''IST:

s-

II. ,_,_.

Seplamloer JO, 1970

Campus Stargazers See -

Dearth of Aqixfrian Love

but as PODER states, "if violence 1s necessary •.."
•
that the acting president's
Of course, most speculation
p I e d g e indicated University
centeis on the new administrapolicy.
tion. As Paula Brookmire, ·
In. order to belp mediate
former editor of ethot!, puts it,
such issues, I urged the Facul"the pollllibility of trouble dety Senate, through its Eltecupends on boot hard a line Kettive Committee. to sanction the
ter takes." And as Ketter goes
establislunent .of a University·
so goes Somit. Munay, Glen:
wide committee. This recomnon and the rest. ·
mendation was rejected as inSome people, bo!oever, h&amp;ve
appropriate, in part pn the
already made up tbeir minds
ground that each instructor rehow theY'll respond to the Kettained academic responsibility.
ter leam, Mark HUddleston.
Where did responsibility lie?
Student
Association president,
Exclusively in the chief exeCubas embarked on a road marked
tive, seeking to assure personal
"careful
consideration." T b
safety? Exclusively in individstudent leader wants to ~
ual instructors. assessing stu~ or hat ..ter7
viewed
as
a "sPokesman for stu&lt;lent performance they individWhat's going to happen on dent opinion rather than an inually deemed appropriate? In
termediary· between students
· some undefined entity t h a t . campus this fall on the stuand administration." His redent front?
It would take the hippest cent refusal to appoint any stustargazer of ali to predict, but dents to a committee that
most of the .rumors and opin- would "develop 8n ROTC proions are hardly in the Aquar- gram acceptable to both Air
ian directions of love and broth- Force and academic communwould try to resolve concerns erhood.
ity," may be an indication of
raised by students and faculty?
The strongest rumor ·is the how that policy will work.
Whatever the answer (if there one
General student opinion, as
that
proclaims
the
campus
is one!), the start of the fall will open and shut the same usual, is sharply divided. The
semester oould witness un- day.
reasoned opinion of MFC stuThe
local
Y
A
WF
declares
necessary tensions arising from that "it is our job to disrupt, dents seems tp be, "No one's
unsettled questions of responsi- stop and smash the functions going to stop me from going to
bility.
of the fac torY (University ), not class!" Others aren't so sureMinimizing Campus Unrest
modify it in some way."
"lf the oops come on again, I'll
No easy set of recommendaVarious minority groups are go out on strike."
tions can end the current wave also unhappy about the way
Many, however, Seem tired of
of campus unrest. Events at things are being done, a big is- the whole thing and want
Buffalo were not--and will not sue being the still unresolved things back to normal : "All
be-unique. Disruption, polar- black basketball play.ers' dis- that violence last year didn't
ization, ferourse to violence: pute with Coach Len Serfus- change anything, anyway. I
these are tendencies now wide- tini. They're going to the dis- just want to B!'t my degree and
spread internationally that an cussion table with the issues- get outa llera"
individual university can reduce but not eliminate. My
suggestions for minimizing
campus unrest in the near future include the following:
1. Development of judicial
systems, speedy and equitable
in their decisions, that wiU help
resolve issues arising in all
dissonant with any shabbiness
parts of the campus communBy ALLEN D . SAPP
ity.
Muter, CoUe4&lt;e B
of mind or action, be bas the
2. Continued wiUingness to
As a college master at SUNY respect · of all members of the
experiment responsibly w i t h at Bullalo and the earliest ap- collegiate system who support
new educational formats, recog- pointed member of the collegi- him without reservatioiL
We know him to be fsir and
llizing that responsiveness 1.&gt;e- ate system, I am writing to
tokens University willingne!!S speak of the many excellent we are glad that be is an able
to maintain a creatively open reasons why Konrad von decision-maker, unafraid to say
( if at times chaotic) education- Moltke is the best direci:Qr of _no and unbiased in his views
al atmosphere.
the colleges we could have . . . . of the capacities of the collegi3. Recognition and reward of
Von Moltke is already a dis- ate system to add e:rtraordin·
faculty and staff members who, tinllttished historil!ll of univer- arY dimensions to the Univerin their teaching .a nd personal sities. He brings to his · new sity .
It is time for the community
contacts with studenL'i, reduce assignment a rich mind, full of
the misperceptions that plague the cycles of university e:rperi- and for the University to grant
hoth sides of the generation ments to remain strong and to a _11.rovisional peace-,to the colgap.
become stronger. His views are legiate system. to pennit it un4. Recognized accountability not limited to American educa- der . its exceHen t leadership
of major University officers for tion but include European sild based on legally-constituted
their actions, including exten- Continental experience-of authority to grow with a min·
sive discussion prior to the crucial significance in the imum· of sniping and with a
making of significant decisions. building of a superior collegiate marimum of support.
5. Visibility' and openness of system at Bulfalo. As a scholar
Over the recent spring, the
rnsjor University officers well he bas a deft and supple feel. collegiate system nas shown itin advance of possible crisis sit- for evidence for fact, as op- self capable of organizing itself
uations, in order to build trust posed to opinion and for real- and meeting oonditilms and reand cooperation with the many ity, as placed against fantasy.
spondin~ to limits oet by the
segments of our community.
At Bullalo he bas been deep- UniveTSlty administration. It
G. Clarification of adminis- ly committed to the collegiate badly needs to devote its entrative responsibilities, to re- system since 1968 not only as ergies to its grand educational
duce the confusion and ' delays a pivotal member of a college designs and to have surcease
that attend a poorly-articulated devoted to the historY of ideas from pettiness and ill-&lt;:Onsidbut as the principal tbeoreti- ered attacks from outside and
system.
During the crisis of early cian and staff writer in the inaide the University.
May. members of the Division Office of the Vice President for
Let it make ita record; let it
of Undergraduate Studies stall Academic Development as- attempt to tranafO&lt;m ita dreamS
bent their major efforts to an- signed to developing a strong into the educational and culswering student and faculty legislative baae.
tural objectives it eslliMoes. It
concerns: How could equity be
With PrOf. C. J . Barber, von will. be reviewed, atdlliid, anensured across the University? Mol.tke can be regarded as the alyzed · and formally examined
What criteria mil!ht be used in strongest faculty voice in pre- Ullder procedures clearly estabassigning grades? What were ~g the first- major Iegishi- lished by our faculty.
the precise implications of en- tive proposal (the so-called
I know I speak for every
oouraging students to leave Bennis Prospectus) for Univer- collegiate unit. . , .
witbout subjecting them to ac&amp;- sity-wide consideration. All
CWrittea • • '-ttft to tt. BulJ#dO Endemic' penalty? Few tasks were · tbiough the recent academic nh14 N-. ia rebuttal to • ~ut
IMd bannful" lettw •bout u.. eou.p.te
morethewa""ysmmple:r.wbiich'!!"mePmroubersd ooff ·year, von Mol.tke bas been ~,.. - Pral. S.pp dolec::ribll. it.)
~ ~ lml': other person dethe Office of Advisement C181Ve m savmg the colleges
ABOUT VIEWPOINlS
worked with various depart- '!""' being discredited, by pamenls and individual students, tience, by a firm but touJb- The lllparW ......... """'
far ""' e:rto- reduce the oonfOsion wide- minded tolerance. and bY
t to pnMdi • spread at that time o1. ·tumult. dlpkmaJ:il: skill.
grea
vertiiY
a- elforta did M&gt;t-and "By tlllture bia brilliance .. af ""' ...... f8clnlllle ecedemlc
cOuld·~ve all qumtiona caat in a spirit pf gen~ comniunltr. We woli:ome both
from the Jl8l'8lf8IJb! and ........u-. lhten&amp;o~Un his
above.
{lrinciple8, fierce in debate, and

CVIEWPOINTS

Lets Grant the Colleges
~ Provisional Peace'

n.at
roue-

..._ ol-.., •-

_.........._
...........---··

�7
their scholarly implications. His undergraduate education at Jolms Hoplrins? "Entirely over my bead. C average: A's and Fluriks. For instance,
I flunked political economy. I didn't
understand a word. I ._ted it,
pasoed it, and still didn't understand
a word."
But the intricacy of political economy hardly mattered; be decided to
become a creative writing major in
his junior year: "'Ibere wasn't anything else to•be. r wrote a story every
two weeks.. God knows where I derived them from, but my teacher
Robert Jacobs was meticulous, word
by word patienoo. They were aU very
encouraging. They. even published my
first story in The Johns Hopkins ReuiLw; it was an act of kindness. I had
been rejected from everywhere else.
But it's strange. One half of my head
was still confident, or maybe it was

Barth
By BARBARA GAIL RO~ ·
lloc6MMr ~- .,., ~

~ year Wt..;.;, the royalties on his
sis 1iove1a equalled his salary as a full
prof_., Jobn Barth Jlliiht have
dropped his leacbina load at the Sta,te
University at Buftalo without decreasing bia income.
"But IMcbiill was too importaDt to
me. It's my basic contact with the
world," be- aaya.

'1"-e have been few interviews of
Barth. Even less criticism of his six
novels. In fact, there baa been a conspicuous una.....,._ · of an autho•
twice nominated and onoo a winner of
the ·National Book AW&amp;M (for Giles
Goolboy ). -

" Moat of us don't understand him,"
aaya a coUeague. " We meet him in the
mailroom, see him at meetinp, chat
in the halls. But . you:re asking if I
know him. I'd say the only person
who knows Barth is Barth."
Another add&amp;: ''Do I · understand
Jack Barth? No. But I can,'t even
clarify his work. He's doing something really different with words, perhaps initiating an entirely new liter'"
ary era. Tbe man's a genius. But I
don't understand him anymore than
his work."
Yet Barth command&amp; an inordinate
respect in
department in which notoriety is almost a prerequisite for admission.
"As a creative writing instructor
be's scrupUlously conscientious," says
a student. "He alwa)ls find&amp; something good about a siudent's stOry,
even if it's the typing. When be begins to criticize, it's detailed, word by
word analysis, with an enthusiastic intensity. In class 1}1! demands complete sobriety, complete attention.
Afte.W&amp;Ms, be'U bang around and
chat. But onoo be leaves the campus,
be's gone. Nobody knows about his
personal life. His phone number's not
listed. His house is about an hour
away from the college. Barth the man
is a myth."
"I'm a writer," Barth says. ''Maybe
because I like words, written words.
It's a1moat as if it's aU a flirtat.ion
with written words. I think writing is
never innooont: that is, it's always
conscious of itself, of its historical
p~eoosaor.
Literature exists in a
vacuum. Yet it requires an acute
awareness of history. 'That's the dilemiba nowadays. What form wiU
the future..take? It's foolish to speculate. I'm tempted to aperiment."
Although his latest novels have created interpretative confusion, "Barth is
clearly conscious of his craft. Asked
to describe his art, be aays: "Anec"dotal. Ord~. I'm alflicted with

a

t

planning, p:anning. When I work, I
Pictures of
what. sfulpe the thing's gonna be,
maps, action. It's choreography, stage
directions, structural diagrams. I do
homework_ research for my writing."
He keeps his published novels at
band : ·'When I get an ides, I check
to make sure I haven't used it before."
Despite rising income and improv- .·
ing mechanical facilities, Barth refuses to automate a 20-year ritual of
longhand creation in a loose leaf
binder he bought as a student at the
Johns Hopkins University Levering
Hall Bookstore. Asked to describe the
relic, he says "non-descript black. It
started out blue, but every year that
damn thing shreds. I'm a sentimentalist"
.
Tbe rigor of exoollenoo is a four
or five draft prooodure: "I've been
working for years on a new novel.
I've got the midpoint finished, but it's
the beginnings and end&amp; that - are
hard?' Like the most professional
writers, Barth adheres to a religious
schedule which restricts his Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays 8 a.m. to
3 p.m. to the study of his lakeside
home. "Even if I'm hung up, I sit
here in still frustration." At 3, though,
he'll run the fourth of a mile to his

need """" to spread.

Gf'EATURES
mailbox or climb a couple of trees to
relax and "clear my head."
He's described that head as a casual
commodity: a mind - in love with
words, but unequipped to deal "'ith

J(etter Uses 71 Quiet Days
.

Wlal Robert L Kette. took. view was "clearly unqualified"
his place behind the presiden- for ihe poal He lacked the
tia1 desk in the north bay win- .trust and conrldenoo of a large
dow of Hayes Hall's first floor portion of the University, they
last July 1, there _ , thoae maintained
.
who thought the Tower ·clock
John Charles of the Student
would .top 8lriking, or, at lh@ -Aasociation agreed that the severy least, that the presiden~ lection tended to "downgrade
carpet would be waist-deep in U/ B's position as one of the
the ~ bodies of the moot _...nve universities."
militant opposition.
Charles said further that the
. ~ tho! chimes kept new president waa "jammed
nngmg out the hours and the down our collective th.oats"
opposition seemed to capitulate IIDd that his "reputation alone
with a~.
.
.
wiU instipte violence."
Before the State Univenity
'lbat---&lt;md a feW letters IIDd
~ mtified his lllllliina- editorials in the student
lion by the Uni-mty Council, - - - about tha - t
20 faculty- poup said tO in- visible oppOsition.
elude two deana IIDd 16 departIt was, ol cowae, more than
mont beads . w'-e ldmtitiM bad biion said publicly
""'"'not made~ about a ~teat
SUNY CbaDeellor s.mael B. U/B, but it fell far alat ol the
Gould that ~Ketter. In their ............. -

.J'd':

extra work done at home." But wl8l

some of his colJea,... ._.. ..._....
during recent campus UDI"IIIIt, Barth
pitched in with the faculty IIDd o&amp;nd
to give a .eading to raiae moaey 1m
the caUM. '"lbeno AJ"8 IOIIIetiJia )'00 .
have .t o think about wbat'a happeD-

inc."

.

But Barth seems to be .,.__dy.

thinking. His novels .... raputad to
illuatrata a periect sympathy with the
application of die 18th century picaresque novel in a pay flannel 20th
century suit. His d&gt;aractars appear

to revolve in history despite their
modern situations.
But Barth's major intereat seems to
be linguiStic: in fact, altbolqh approached to write the ...-play of
his novel, The End of The Rood, be
refused, settling for five per cent of
its gross: 'I was occupied with other
things at the tinie," be says. Asked
about his .esction to the film, be says:
arrogance.''
"Whenever the plot 'lOt in trouble,
Around Johns Hopkins, the Barth
they played Bach. The. "best thing
legend is starting to grow. For inabout
the movie was the music."
stanoo, there are stories about his
reading of classical books as he
The best thing about Barth is honworked for his scholarship in the liesty, a blunt propriety which is bored
brary. "But it's not as scholarly as it
by fronts. For instanoo, after vacation,
sounds," Barth says. " We Were enone colleague greeted him in the haU
couraged to read on the job. There
with: ''Well Jack, bow does it feel to
were more scholarship library shelvers
be hack in the real wotld?" Barth rethan there were books to shelve. I just
plied : "Oh, is that what .this is?"
happened to work in the classical seCIt's a philosophical candor complition, so naturally I read classical
mented by an Eastern Maryland casbooks."
ualness. Asked about his involvement
There are also stories about a colwith literature, he says! ·~ don't read
lege hand career. "After high school
enormously, I iead passionately." He
I saved money aiid spent a summer
baa a half dozen authors he'd swear
studying the drums at The Juilliard
by, and he displays press shots of
School of Music in New York. !"didn't
John Hawkes, Bill Gass, Leslie Fiedhave the talent to make it professionler, Richard Brautigan, John Updike,
ally. I went to Hopkins as a last reNorman Mailer and Joseph Heller in .
sort. But I continued playing drums
his college offioo, although his own
with local hands, and here in Buffalo,
prefe.ences lean heavily toward CerI'm the drummer in a faculty combo.
vantes, Samuel Beckett, John Hawkes
We meet at each other's homes and
and Jorge Luis Borges.
jus\ play for fun." His fellow musiThe office, which is a crowded twocians report that Barth is so serious
by-four cubicle, hold&amp; some two hunabout his playing that it's hard to de~ books: " But you sbPuld never
cide his involvement "He puts everyjudge an author by the books on his
thing he has into every beat," a colshelves. They've probably"been given
league says. But Barth implies he has
to him by someone else,'' he says. ''I
to in order to keep up. "I enjoy it but
can't hear to throw a book oul"
I'm the group's weak link."
In Buffalo, Barth baa managed to
In 1953, after earning a Hopkins
build a creative community in which
master's degree, he began teaching · his fellow authors have participated
English at Penn State, on $3,300 a
either on the faculty or through guest
year. •"'be crisis came when the prolectures. AI though he brings novelbation period was up. Either publish
ists to his campus, he also read&amp; his
or get a Ph.D. I had been shot down
own work at other colleges : " And I
at every publisher. sO I packed up
think I do it very well." In fact, rethe family and prepared to return to
sponse baa so proven his self-evaluaHopkins for a doctorate in aesthetics,
tion that this year be ~ a lecture
although I knew I'd never make it. I
agency. "But next year I'll do it myjust don't have that kind of head."
sell again. I .miss the direct corresSuddenly he reooived an acooptanoo
pondence."
from Appleton Croft for his novel,
"I enjoyed reooiving the lelteni."
The Flooting Opera. Asked for his reIn fact, letter-writing is a favorite
action, he says: "At 24, every thing
Barthian hobby. He reserves two
seems surprising. By 54, nothing will."
hours during his teaching days to
At 39, he has "no reaction to stuff
keep up a sizable conespondenoe.
going on today." Marijuana? "I tried
''The letters. are ingenious," says a deit onqe as a college student. It didn't
partment secretary. ''I Xerox them
work. I couldn't roll the thing." Stuand take them home. They're easier
dent strikes? "That's the time many
to read than his novels."
of us traditionally seek to get · some
(R~rib~

to Begin Task of

('Consoliditting~
,

solved everything, but there is
After aU, Ketter baa asked
a feeling of movemenl Even that students and 9thera judge
some of those wbo wept the him "for what I am rather than
bitterest or: tears over the ap- for what they think I am." ,.
pointment have adopted the VIsible Style .......,_
'
" let's give the guy a chanoo"
"Visible," is the word Ketter
attitude.
baa used to describe his ·pro- '*The guy" may need more posed administrative style.
lence."
than that if the wide1y-rumo~ '!bat and "blunt." "You don't
Senate Vioo Chairman Wil- registration sit-down material- make promises you can't deliam Baumer went even fur- iz.es, or if ~. militant, as the liver," Ketter baa said. A ·laother: "l've·never seen anybody student underground also sig- ulty member baa agreed that,
who c:ould generate more loyal- na1s, throw themselves in front "You'll never have to ask yourty than- this guy. He baa a good of buUdoilera on the Amberaf self where you stand with him;
idea of ed.u catiopal develop- campus site. But thoae l:ontin- be'U make it very cktu." Anment IIDd lmows how to evalu- J"""!es are in the future-noth- other baa added : "His ~litics ate procnms."
mg is "supposed" to happen milbt be a bit to the right of
Now 71 !:quiet" days have until at least later today.
what we'd like .~.. but be's' ao
pe8d-days in which aome of
Richt now, the Kettet admin- completely honMt and open,
the "..nr-.lved illsum" of lbe istration," ~ at least, isn't I'm awe we am live with that."
Univenity. haw at least ' - ' talking "rumor, oi "what if."
. Ketter am also .,.Plain the
faoed.
It seems- intent upon talk- University to the community, _
Admittedly not a "Solomon," inc pbiloaapbY and p 0 8 i t i 0 rl- IIIIOther prot_,. baa observed.
Ketter baa certainly not re- IIDd about dB record to date.
(~Oil- 9, coL 1)
F....tty~

On the other band, the Executive Commitk.ee of the Faculty Senate telegriophed its support and its anticipation of
"working with you toward our
common goal of making this
University a plaoo of excel-

�~

8

New University Programs Range froni Ecol&lt;gy

·New Groups:

To Research ori Alooholism and the Disable&lt;f

SASUFSC

·Sevm , _ Uniwftdty pro-

sramo. IUIIiDI flam ecolosical

·studies to a - . : h and d&amp;-

~~~
tbla 8IJIIIIII9r.
•

Aloo included are a projected Institute for European
and Russian Studies, a study
of merauy contamination in
Lake Erie; a center for Prooeos
MetalluriY, activation of the
Alcoboliam Reeearch Institute,
and hospital clerkship training
· for dental students..

..

Tbe rapid growth of the ecol-

~""':':;.1." ~·'fnP~

form of a major in ecology.
The new major bl.-xnec!
• ../ out of interest within the Ecology College and is the first approved major to emerge from
the collegiate system.
•
Tbe new field .of study will
use the ·systems approach to
tackle the coooepts of ecology,
according to Dr. Jobn Howell,
its director. The study of man's
environment. has been broken
down into four major areas:
cultuml and social; geological
or pbysical; technological or
:·made; biological or natA Student electing the major
must develop two of these areas
in depth, taking at least 32
hours of upper level courses in
each of them. With this beavy
course load, the student must
maintain a 2.5 quality point BY•
erage in his ecology courses.
Requirements of the· major
are rigorous and 'only a limited '
number of people will receive
final approval, Dr. Howell exptsined. However, students interested in ecology can still get
another major..,_ with ·an area ·o f
concentration m the new field.
In addition to taking over 90
credit hours, students in ecology will also be involved in independent study and special reaearcb projects. It's Dr. Howell's idea to organize task forces
of students, faculty and staff
around a pollution problem that
someone has brought to their
attention. "We would provide
advice and ~ to the
communitr thiS way," Dr.
Howell said Preeently, though,
funds are lacking for ·any intense or long-term research.

...

U/ B and Buft'alo State are
e.'_~~~!- the joint Institute of
~~ and Russian Sf;udies,
combining U/ B's stren8th in
· Russian with State's Polish and
Hungarian interests.
Tbe Institute would involve
research and undergraduate
and graduate degree programs
In the history, politics, Jan.
guage and literature of Europe
east of Germany,
This largest_cooperative venture yet tmdertaken by the two
acboola is subject to ap_proval
at both Institutions and by
State University in Albany.
A four-man committee-two
flam each school-is DOW drawIng up a formal propooal. U/ B
members of the committee are
Dr. Karel Hulicka, profeseor of
history, and Dr. Pierre Hart,
assistant prof- of Russian.

...

Tbe study is ezpected to go
beyoad the ....... testing Of fish
........ whidl bas beaJ dOae
by State and faderal qeucies.
. 7 1be UIB project will inwlw
lest8 at ~t 15 or 16 poinll!

SASU and FSC ' ' the bur-

pbysicsl diasbilities. Devioes
perfected In the laboratory will
"be inanwactured 1n sheltered
workshops f&lt;&gt;&lt; the handicapped,
according to present plans.
The rehabilitation medicine/
engineering laboratOey, under
the 8egis of the University of
Buffalo Foundation, lnc., is
headed by J. Sam Miller. Ari
assistant clinical reseiu-ch professor in rehabilitation medi·
cine who holds a master's degree in electrical engineering
from Polytechnic Institute of
Brooklyn, Miller will continue
wo&lt;k on an exoskeleton ·which
began at -eornell Le.boralory
ten years ago. Worn over the
body, this device would be capable of duplicating the full
· · ranie of body movements in an
unrestricted manner.
. ,._ ......_ o1 ..,__ ..,. U. ~
·An exoelbow or myotron, as
along Lake Erie for mercury
As one of its first functions, ·, it ~ called,. ~ already been
in sediment, algae, water ·a nd· the Center will sponsor a con- devised to duplicate ~ moveplankton as well as in fish.
ference on blast furnace tech· ment ?f the arm \llexion and
Atomic analYsis techniques nology on campus,.Oclober 18- . ~tonsh0aultderellx;&gt;~ tan)dWrohenta·
• JOID • •
will be used to examine the ~0. The conference will honor
. ,
•
samples which will. be. collected the late Chancellor Clifford C. a patients arm 15 placed UISlde
with the aid of ,the Great Lakes Furnas.
~ open sleeve structure and
Laboratory al Buffalo State.
Establishment of the center, dials on a COI)trol board are
The study WID also probe the Dr. Szekely said, gives (prmal turned, the P'!ti~t can dooany
question of whether, if all re- recognition to existing metal- 0 M\'j;r of ~gstbe
.
leases of mercury into ~ ~e lurgical training and reaearcb have ~ ~rk.:d wfth~(h,f­
=:u:~oJ:!'r~~Y ~n:,n~ tos:£ at U/ B.
versity, Meyer M~or~ Hasfeet fish over the next few
The Alcoholism Research ln- pltal, and ~ UruversJty of
years.
stitute, announced for U/ B in ~e\V BrunsWick (Canada), to
Included in the project are 1967, was givep its first full- mstrume!'t a powered a r m
Charles C. Thomas, research time director in June - Dr. bra.ce Wlth a oontrol s.xstem
manager at the center; Dr. K. Cedric M. Smith, former chair- which responds to a patient's
S · Pillay senior reaearcb scien- man of the Depa rtment of weak muscular efforts. An exliSt, and' Dr. Edward J . Mas- Pharmacology.
P!'r~ental model of this desaro, pror;ssor ~f bi~hemistry. · The lnstitute is expected to ~~': i:boU:.:~;-:'::'~:Jo!:
0
The Center for Process Met- ~nd~ct n;r"rch
the ';'~· brace to enable certain PBra·
allurgy has been established to ho~ :;;d ,!';";;;:~ ~f
lyzed patients to make voluritrain graduate engineering stu- ing and rehabilitaliijg the alco- tary, coordinated arm motions.
dents in metals technology.
holic.
"
,. "With just bit of residual
Under the direction of Dr.
Initially, the lnstitute plans muscular effort, many patients
Julian Szekely, professor of to define the positive and nega- suffering paralysis from either
chemical engineering, the cen. tive aspects of medical and so- stroke, some type of muscular
ter hopes to train engineers to cia! care provided for alcoholics dystrophy or spinal cord indeal with the environmental while _determining the effect of juries, as well 86 post polio vicproblems of the metal industry. alcoh9l on brain cells.
tims, would theoretically be
These include grappling with
It will be located on an in- able to produce desired motions
the pollution created by metal terim liasis in Meyer Memorial through use of such a powered
processing_ and the need to re- Hospital. •
brace," Miller says.
claim such produc)S as cans
In the new laboratory, which
A new reaearcb and developand car bodies.
'The - center is being sup- ment laboratory located at the will serve In addition as an ed·
ucational
facility for the Health
ported by the New York State Bell Plant will develop diScience and Technology Foun- agnostic, therapeutic, and orth- Sciences center, work will also
dation, the American lron and otic devices. to amplify the proceed on instruments to
Steel Institute, Union Carbide weak muscles of the handi· measure more precisely the conCorp. and the A. E. Anderson capped and will also provide dition of joints and muscle
Foundation.
employment for persons with functions. The use of driver/
trainer simulators by the
physically handicapped will
also be Investigated.
.

tl

U:

a

Incoming Foreign StudeniB
Fare Housing Shortoge
Buffalo's s~vere housi'fi'k
si)ortsge will hit the University's 300 incoming foreign students particularly hard for several reasons, according to Joseph T . Williams, director of
Foreign Student Affairs.
Many of them are complete
strangers to the United States
and most are graduate students

:ho~a~~~i;

Tbe Office of Foreign Student Mairs has attempted to
alleviate the problem in several
ways this year. 1n addition to
warning all incoming students
of the housing problems and
suggesting that they come 86
early as poesible, the Office has
appealed to the 700 returning
foreign students for assistance.
It is also working with the Uniwrsity's Off-Campus Housing
Office to find IIJ&gt;'!""·
A newly arnving student receives special aasistance. U be
gives the · University advance
notice of his arrival place and
time, someone will pick him up
and bring him to the campus.
Once on campus, an American
or a foreign student familiar
with the ·aree is aasigned to
help him In Seeking housing.
A special ~ aasistance
center alao is operating iJ). Haas
Lounge of Norton Union
through tbla Sa~. .
~'~!nons interestecl In rentiJil
a room or ~t to foreicn

Senior dental students DOW
have "hospital clerkships" at
the Buftalo General Hospital
~bere the Depar~:me!&gt;~ .of Den!!"try has n!'W facilities,. ten
times tbe Size of previous
spa~- Alan Drinnan .d that
stud.;nts from the
will
=e an opportunity to work In
expanded depart;m&lt;&gt;nt '!"!i
I? a~d ot!&gt;er hosp!tal actiVJ·
ties, mcluding medical ward

sJ:.1

geoning ranb of l.fm"'versity or-

ganizations. this fall
SABU-the Student Aaloci·
ation of State Universitr--was
formed In New York m Au·
go¢ to represent SUNY's 250,·
~ts on fr1 csmpuaes.
i'rim8ry reasons for its organization are said to be the cur·
rent move to limit and/or control uae of student fees and the
SUNY Trustee-mandated hear-.
ing commissions established
State-wide last spring.
FSC-the Faculty-Staff Caucus-was formed on U! B's
campus in August by what was
initially described · as a group
of; "liberal" members of the
University comni\mity. That
label was dropped after the organizational meeting w h 1c h
issued a statement saying the
group shaied a "common belief
In the need for democratic University governance, academic
excellence and participation in
community a1fairs."
SA:SU says a current law suit
against the SUNY-Albany student government, alleging. use
of student fees for "political
purposes" and. seeking a· ban
against such use, could result
in loes of student control of
lees. Some State legislators
have joined In urging that control of such funds be wrested
from students. SASU will fight '
this as. well as the concept of
tbe be.s:ring commissions which,
in their view, replace student
judiciaries With faculty-administrative panels, further diluting student control of student
affairs.
The local FSC was reported
to be interested in such matters
as greater faculty and student
participation in decision·mak·
ing, support for the ' colleges,
and the case of the Hayes 45.
Mrs. Barbara Sims, elected
chairman at the f i r s t FSC
meeting, declined to serve because of heavy academic and
administrati-;e· commitments.
Prof. Marvin FeldmaD is vice
chairman.

Orientation for
·u;B ·Newcomers

President Robert L Ketter
will welcome new faculty and
their spouses at an orientsijon
program, 8 p.m., Friday, September 18, in the Faculty Club
Dining Room, Harriman Li·
brary.
- Greetinp will also be offered
by William C. Baird chairman
of the Council of the Univer·
sity.
'
Provi~ information on .,...
peels of the University and
community will be Dr. William
H. Baumer, vice chairman of
~SWty ~te, Dr· Albert
facilities~n:J:,P:;j~~-W
~e Barnette, professor of
psychology and director of the
Vocational Counseling Center.

~i::mnnan is profeeor and B:a~s ~ic will be "Orchairman of U/ B's Dental De- !I""'ZAtion of Higher Education
partment iof Oral Diagnosis, m ~I!W.York and at the S~
Radiodontics and Clinical Umvenu"ty of New York
Pathology and chairman of the BuJfalo; Bush-Brown's, '
booi&gt;ital's dental ~t
SUNYAB Campus- Today
'"rbis new program will pro- and . Tomorrow," and Bamvide an opportunity for dental e~'s, "Cultural and Rec:iee.students to become familiar tional Opportunities In the
with hospital routine and pro- Community and University."
tocol Tbe students will a1ao
At the conclusion of the ,
eee pa~ts suffering flam di: meeting, '! pac;bt of materials_
they haw previously on the Uruvennty and the Comonly read about or heerd dis- munity will be available fm:
cu-.J In lectures."
each new faculty member.
Monday
8 30
8:30
Tbe .facilities consist of
T-.y . •. ~30 ::::::: 5~ ::~:
two fully«&lt;Uipped ~ting )(lJiliC _...,......y :IWLDfC .Lift:
-~ 8:30 a.m .. 5:00 p.m.
rooms ~!'&lt;. ~ aDesthesia Allyone wbo wiobN 1o be p1aeec1
Thunday .... , ~:30 a.m.· 8:30 p.m. ~lp ""'!Wd
~ cases, lhlee cl(atal _operatories, oo ~ liot l~r a n n - t o of
friday ........ 8:3!1 a.m. · 5:00 p.m. ,
-48'l'3"~
COD(.....,.,. rooms, · sur1eons' ~muoical attractiooa call
63
63
Saturday .... 11:00 a.m.. 3:00 p.m.
~
H..:U.. ~~-~- : _ waiting_room and ~ Olfic:e, 1~r=~lbe Concert

boualng problem is i:omplicated
because they lack cars and must
live as cloee to the Universi9'
as I!OEBible. Further, many like
to retain their native diet by
Tbe Western New York~ cooking at home and would
cleer Reaearch center plaDs a like-to have rooking facilities.
· fivl&gt;-year study of meraDy COD·
lamination In Lake Erie, WilIIOOKSTOII£ HOURS
liam F. Hall, director, bas an·· The Uniw-"" Bookstore will open
DOUIIO!!d. Tlie U.S. Bureeu of
·-··
Sports Fisheries has granted ~m~· p~~ :;.;..rom_;~
-1 $28.000 for the fiJSt year, but doy hou"' will be In etfec:t for the
:!!:,~l!nal funds are · being fitst three - k s of the semester.

-,

~10,1970

"·

•

=t

�~10, 1910

Ketter Begins Task of Consolidating-~-----~
..
(corttilwed from._. 7, coL 6)

And, aurprisingly, a large camfaction bas decided that
~ lhiB is what bas ~
in recent years. (Even
many of
same indi uals were in the vanpaard
of 11.- who IICCl.-l Pete&lt; Repn ol ']&gt;luiderinc" to the oomm~ty lut sprilla.) For e&gt;:·
uilple. tlie Cc!J.Iegiate Aaaembly
is oonvinced that community
naiataDce to the colleps stems
from a Jack of understanding.
Similarly, local pressures for a
"Spiro ApJew" adminislmtive
Oil campus Are received
DOt as the claa&amp;ic Midmerican response to
, "wbat'a bappenilqr," but u the
fruilll of faulty communication,
peculiar to U/B.
WbiJe be bas obviously DOt

=

u-

~J.,.":""'..=..::i" .c~

community. Alumni, in particular, have ~ aslr.ed "to find
out from the . mmmunity what
types of thinp are tzoubleaome and . . . what we at the
University can do about them."
It's no &amp;eeret that one thing
that was troublesome was that
Martin Meyeraon was seen by

~:i:f.,~.~~.. ~aJ~!~~

practically intellectual" Tbe
image was unfair but it was
there.
'NelllhboriY' Quollt}'
Ketter- falls at the opposite
end of the personality spectrum. And, unlike a dean wbo
wanted himself billed u a
uformer auto mechanic" during
Jut spring's jockeying for presidential position, Ketter is-,.
without any contrivance on his
part.-the kind of man Bullalo
lilces. Much bas already~
written about the "neighborly"
quality of his family life, biB
farm and his West Virginia
background.
'
Tbe Ketter academic inte&lt;est&amp;-while sound arid e&gt;:tending to tex!A&gt;ook authorshi_P:again have that almost "neighborly" quality. He bas worked
on nuclear reactors, on deepsea diving vebiples, on the
pedestrian bridge across Ellicott Street which joins the two
buildings of the Bullalo and
Erie County Public Library,
and on the .,.ploratory problems of man-made structures
for the moon.
In the same mould, his public stale&lt;nents to date have
come down bard against "permiaaiveness," overblown ideal
and faculty who "use" the University and its students.

Oppoeed to "permissi....-......,"
and ,promising "OI'der," be bas
at the 8ll.tlle' time allirmed the
right of disaent. llowevj!r, that
"doesn't mean you throw am-.
monia on a professor's Door becauae you disagree with his
views."
HI! bas empbaaized that no
pledgee were aslr.ed by, or given
to, lhe SUNY truatees in regard to "clca. CQDtro)" of students. His responae to disorders, be b8s aaid, will "depend
on the situation at the time."
He will first of all be "very
responsive" to proleators in an
effort to dele&lt;mine sources of
diaaatisfaction.
ln,unc:tlon Nat -

si~~~~':i
to seek a renewal of the State
Supreme Court le&lt;oporary injunction against campus dis-

ruptiona. "As matte&lt;s presently stand, there is no need for
an injunction and we hope
there will never again be a
need," a
kesman said
In ano:l:r move of amity,
the University also 1'eQU!i!Sted
and gained dismissal of charges
against faculty and studenta
arrested for demonstrating at
Commencement. This, incidentally, led to the firat•community
sniping- at Ketter. A legal official haS suggested that . the
action offers carU! biD.nche for
future disruptions.
•
Somewhere s hort of carU!
biD.nche, however, Ketter bas
put faculty and students alike
on notice that' they will be
more stricUy responsible for
their actions. However, he bas
spoken also of the importance
of due proooss and bas warned
against '1ooae charges."
From his experience with the
Hearing Commission be is also
convinoed of the necessity to
promulgate the possible consequenoes of disruptive action.
Some of the students before the
Commission, be explained,
"said they wished they bad
known beforehand what penaltieil they could be subjected to
.them
. • _,\t might have dissuaded

ment on campua, be said, bas
come to be something of a
myth. Tbe prl!sent Senate, be
feels, is too large, too open to
haraaament and intimidation.
Under
oonditiona, ooly a
few people have bothered to
attend.

u-

The ROTC

o.-

Wbile personally not oppoeed to ROTC, Ketter bas
moved ·to, in the worda of the
Buflolo Evening Newa, reckon
with a campua sentiment whidl
predated his appointmerit "in
preference to risking a confrontation on a decidedly provocative issue.''
Carefully explaining that
ROTC, u presenUy constituted, is simply not attracting
students, the President bas an.nounoed that the current proIii-am will OOaBe to e&gt;:ist on
Commencement Day, 1971:
Under an agreement w i t h
the Air Force: 1. No freshmen
will be admitted this year into
ROTC; 2. The sophomore
phase of the e&gt;:istjng program,
invol~g six students, will be
BUBpeDded; 3. Junior ROTC
students will be offered a condensed program allowing them
to complete both junior and
senior requirements for an
ROTC commission during the
INAUGURATION SET
The inaugur ation of Robert L
Ketter as thi rd president of State
University of New York at Buffalo
Is set for Monday, February 15,
1971, at 10:30 a.m. in Kleinhans
Music Hall. Further deblils will be

announced later,

coming school year; and 4.
Seniors will complete their reguJar program.
This however, ud o e s not
close the door to ROTC on the
U/ B campus."
A six-member committee has
~ appointed to negotiate
with the Air Force, and perhaps other service branches, to
formulate an ROTC program
"acceptable" to the University
community.
Dr. Albert Somit, the reoont!y appointed executive vice
No linen FO&lt; RodicBis
president, will chair the comA8ked if be plans to weed mitlee. The other members are
out the radica)s, Ketter empba- William c: Baird, chairman of
sized that, contrary to opinion the University Council; Dr.
in aome quarters, Ut B bas not Gordon M. Harris, professor of
become "a haven for radicals." chemistry; Dr. Daniel H . Mur"'lbe ones that are vocal hap- ray, acting vice president for
pen to be .the ones .that rub academic affairs; Dr. Thomas
people the wrong way. I don't T . Frantz, secretary of the Facthink there are any enormous ulty Senate; and Dr. Joseph L
numbers."
Fradin, associate chairman of
In his view, it would be "un- tbe Department of English.
healthy," for any administra- Mark Huddleston, president of
Com~~
While lt cannot ret be said lion "to even consider the pos- the University's Student Assothat Ketter bas, indeed, .,.. sibility of limiting the selection elation, was invited, but deplained the University to Buf- of faculty members on the basis clined to either serve on or
falo, be does seem to have cap- of political belief or ideology." name a studen_t representative
tivated the community, not a Rather, the question should be, to the negotiating committee.
mean BCaJIIlplishment for 71 "Are they competent-To carry HuddlestOn called the action to
days. Whether it's permanent or out the work in their particular appoint the group a ''breach of
~there's a new feeling ~ a~~l' responsible faith" with the decision to abolOn Project Tbemis, be bas !!'!_.!&lt;&gt;;!;,C.ili~· will, he said,
Tbe Couiiu-Expreaa, which
only Jut .spring gleefuJJy in- said simply-and apparenUy to Tuk F...Other committees, or "Task
cited the most """""""' of let- the point.-that it bas "contribters sug11"81ing that Meyeraon uted to aaving a large number Forces" are also being formed
get out of town, bas applauded of lives of children with pul- to tackle the University's major
the new Pftllident's "proper at- monary disease."
concerns (five areas which kept
titude." Tbe Buffalo Evetlinf
On campua governanoo, be recurring to President Ketter
N-. finds Ketter "a brisk, in- bas indicated that "at the m&lt;&gt;- during a sleepless night).
Tbe areas are: 1. Academic
telJectually broad-gauge, f a s t- ment" be favors a bicameral
thinking, plain-taJkint, DO-DOD• form of University legislature Excellenoe; 2. Community Hewith separate houses for stu- . lations; 3. University Goverdenis and faculty . But, be· nanoo; 4. University Commun:::irty"":i:'teU.;ct-=
· acter 1-*1 to fac:e -¥1' to the bas cautioned, "new govern- ity; and 5. Uni~ty Organization.
.. . make-or-break~ 80 anoo requires careful-study."
. plainly c:onfrontinJ liim."
.
This J-.itlon Oil governance
In line with his pledge to
A polip ol State legislators is a vanation on a theme from build "a feeling of participation
his e8riiest preaidential atate- in the definition of priorities at
menta. We muot, he aaid on ttie University." u- will he
tratiari Lut spring-came away taking olfice, try "to bring bad&lt; faculty and student groups.
from a ..-ling with Ketter, the ....,._. ol the Un~IY· Alumni will be involved in
"~" as .the Courie :':::t~~:ve~ =~
"community reladeBcribed it.
No"-.aw
feel they are pullina topotla-."
On the canlzoversial matte&lt;
On campua, Ketter bas atFor the faculty portion of .a of c8mpua aecuritv, Ketter bas
• tempted to abed the imBge of du8l legislature, Ketter favors lt!ID , ved the ....i!- from the
m.olute ~ which the ........,U.tion ol t h e = .iurllldiction ol"QP.;ations and
hla ....... with the 'J'empoNry
elected
~ OwmnWim llllnl8d far
him lMt aprlnJ. So-called Soaate Council (the plan still KMllh and estahli8bed it as a
"tou,b" atande ha'lll '-&gt;
=..=er.!rty~ :-::" Zni!.a~ to
iempered with~-

=.~

=

=

r ..:.t7:

"!

.:::,:a

~tyt s:".""

""= ~

~881ety

.Civic Group
rn Advise"
::en~ a;tthu:..,f~= 1.0
on
A new chief of aecurity bas

of an aaaistant director, five auperviaors and five inspectors.
The C"'.
Tbe major confroittation of
the Ketter administration to
date bas been that with .the
Collegiate Aaaembly, that body

125~1..

'U.l

PJans

&gt;

A Community Advisory
Committee or Council far the
125fh Anniveraary ol the UJII..
versity will 800il be named by
se~:S~":ri- the Policy Committee for the
o~Jeenoance.
mony - u the coordinatinJ
A. Weatley Rowland, vice
agency for the college expenpresident for uni-mty relament.
From the beginning, the free- tiona, is chainDan of this policy
wheeling anything-goes "up the group which is made up ol fao.
rules and regulations" attitude ulty, staff, student and Univerof many of the colleges IIBeDllld sity Council -latiws.
destined for a collision with the
Tbe Policy Committee, Rownew Hayes Hall leader.
After some preliminary land says, is also .-ring a deskirmishes in. the early summer, cision on a general theme for
colleges were ~-w arned" on the events Which will be held
August 14 to comply with cer- next May and, again, during
tain administrative conditions the faJJ of 1971.
or face the loss of funds for the
Fifty individuals in the axnfall semester.
munity "who have had a CQD·
The' conditions were:
tinuing interest in ~ Univer1. Colleges A and F would sity" will comprise ltie advisory
have to leave their sfo!;clronts group. Categories of individand return to the main campus; ~ to be included ""! cultural,
2. A director of the Collegiate busmess and alumru leade!J3
Assembly acooptabli to the and _past lilelJ!bers of the UmPresident . would have to be • verslty Council.
~ (Fred Snell, the first
From an initial field of 65
choice , was not acceptable); suggestions, these themes are
and
.
still under consideration: "Re3. A; satisf~ctot) mechanism conciliation and Progress,"
for pnor review of courses of. ''Roots Both Wide and Deep "
fered by the colleges would "Progress through Particip;..
have to be establisbed. The tion " "Our Heritage Is Our
~tate University .r equire s CbaiJ.enge," " . . . but we must
some system of pnor approval sail and not drift, nor be at
~f C01;li'OO off~rings," the ad..m:ID- an~hor" (Holmes ), ''In the
lStration pomted out, adding S earch for .Understanding"
~t if ever ~ colleges should "The Space of 125 Years:"
think of awarding degrees, both "Honor the Past.-Build for the
the SUNY Trustees and the Future," "The University--Our
State Education Department I;iving Future," and "Univerwould have to approve.
sity in the Community."
Some members of the CollegCurrent plans call for openiate Assembly called Ketter's
action ''blackmail" and "cava- ing the observance on May 11,
1971,
(University Founders'
lier," and urged the colleges not
Day) with possibly a luncheon
to ''knuckle under."
on
campus
and a banquet in the
However. Ketter let it be
known that .compliance was community. SUNY Cbanoollor
Ernest Boyer and Nelaon Rock"imperative."'
"There is no getting around efeller have ~ mentioned u
this," be said when asked par- possible speakers for the banticularly about Co I I e g e A. quet. The Policy Committee
There will be "some very bard reports, however, that other
"categories of possible speakdiscussions."
After much discussion, delay ers" have also ~ discuaaed,
and the abortive naming of a including "educational statesdirector who chose not to serve, men from outside the University, . .. distinguished profesthe colleges complied.
Ketler accepted the subse- sors inside the Univers1ty, or
quent election of Konrad von possibly someone wbo would
Moltke, assistant professor of be distinguished within some of
history, as director of the As- the professional areas, such u
sembly and announoed that medicine, pharmacy, law or enother conditions for release of gineering."
funds bad ~ met.
In addition to Chairman
Rowland, the Policy Committee is compoeed of: William C.
No one believes that the col- Baird, chairman of the Council
lege , matter is setUed, or the of the University and member
ROTC question, or anything, of the Board of Trustees of the
University at Bullalo Foundareally.
No one believes, either, that tion, Inc.; William Baumer,
this year at U/ B is going- to be vice chairman of the Faculty
a lot different from Jut.-in Senate; John Carter, uecutive
director of the U/ B Alumni
terms of unrest and tensions.
But a couple of things, most Association; John Charles, vice
agree, have ~ setUed and president of the Student AaaoC!iation; James DeSantis, direowill be different
Like it or not, Ketter be- tor of University Information
lieves "a President should take Services; William Dock, edit«
stands," be seen, ani!, in the of alumni publications· Rollo words of ethos, "ameliorate. Handy, provost of 'the F.;;ity
many of the rigidities and of Educational Stud.ioE.PhiiiD
formalisms which tended to r ear, vice president ot'Uie StUsurround the office . . . in the dent Association; Robert ~
ken, president of the U/B
past."
As Warren Bennis put it, Foundation, Inc.; Mrs. Juanita
"Dr. Ketter bas a number of Monteith, administrative aaalsvery important ·characteristics -tant to the vioo preaident for
which are needed at this Uni- university relations; Theoclore
Palermo, director of Univeraity
versity at this point in time.
' "'bere are aome people like Publications Servicea; J. War- Meyerson who unfreeze and ren Perry, dean of the School
unsettle. 'lben someone is of Health Related Profeaaions;
Allen Sapp, director of the
needed to conaolidate."
Office of .-Cultural Allairs, and
Leonard Snyder, chief IICCOUJlt$ 1 1 - -- T O ant, Operations and 8yatema.
~D. MacH· Surpnor of tho
'I1li.-. aubcommitte. far
Faculty of Heolth Sciences 'tills
•nnounc:ed his intaption to such as communi~¥ relations, fina1MB and ·onginal
....... from post, "Mactive .....a
and fine ar111 are a1ao
Febfuary 1, 1971.
being eatablillhed

:1::: .=.,

·

�~

10

~IO,WIO

Changes Announced for University Administrative Roster -

-t

DONALD P. HOLMWOODJ..l'
part.time coordinator in tbe lnllce of Credit-Free PropauiO aiD&lt;:e
1966, of
buthe- Di-.iaio.n
named
clein
of Continuing Ed-tion and diNctor of tbe
Ofllce or Credit-F..,. Procra~~RGE- C. ~7
Civil ~
for the comi.nc ·a cademic year.
Loa, who baa been profeoaor of

g::.,._4"::1

:f:;

:ilt =~R~::it

&lt;'w ho will be 011 sabbatical

GORDON F . LILLY bM ' namod diNctor or the Ofllce of
Computer Services. Lilly bad aaistant director of the Compull!r
Centar at Camegie-.MeUon Uni-

"";h~RT

J . MciSAAC ia acting chairman of the De!l4rlmeDt
or PbarmacoloiY in the Schools

=

of Dentistry and Medicine. Me-

1~ !:r'~nbe\!rtbe~

of professor of pharmacolOIY aince
1968.

CEDRIC M. SMITH_ chairman of the Department of Pharmacology- since 1966, hat been
named first director of the University's new Alcoholism Reaearcb
lnstituta.

of~=~.\::f=

appoinllld diNctor of a """' Cenll!r fo• Proc:eM Met:alluqy.
WARREN H . THOMAS ia tbe
chairman of tbe Deputment
of Induotrial EnP-riDc- T!Mma who bM ' - a.ocj.ollld with
tbe de.,.-t aiD&lt;:e 1963 bad
-1969. actinc
chairman aiD&lt;:e July
He will be on lea.., cluriDa
11170-71 with Dr. r-ia H. Geyer
oervinc ao actinc chainDan.
KONRAD wn MOLTKE, Maistant profMOOr of hiatory, bu
been named diNctor of tbe Collegiall! Assembly . (See relallld
stories.)
EDWARD COLE, a doctoral
candidata in poycbology, baa been
named IO&amp;IOCUlte diNctor of the
Office of Urban Affain. He wu
formerly ezecutive director of the
Manpower Advancement Program, Cl...,land. Ohio, and of the.
Buffalo Urben Centar.
DOROTHY M. HAAS, director of Norton Union eince 1.946
and a University stafl' member for
36 yean, is now asaociate director
of placement in charge of career
planning and placement for liberal arts students. a new poeition.

JULIAN 8. PEASANT, director of tbe EPIS Procram. baa

~p':;'!.7~~~

of J{;:~to~~baa 'been
appoinllld p - of the
Faculty of Social Seioncoo •and
Adminiotration.' Popp cam, to
U/ B from AUeshenY CommUnity
CoUop wbeie be wa clean of the
School
Social - profeoaor of
PAULof REITAN,
geolocical sciences, bae been
;ty

~=:.J~:: ·

Mathematic~.

ROBERT K. ROTI', aaistant
dean or Undercraduata Studieo,
bu ' - named diNctor Gf evaluation. He will tbe eBectiveneu of instruction in the Division.
JAMES H. RY AN'ia now a.ociall! .director or the Ofllce of Urban Affairo. He wu formerly director or ofl-eampuo housing.
HARRY G. FRITZ baa been

::;:.~~. ::.:~:~ :J~~~

ics. He wu for seven years director of athletica and dean of

=uca~'a:J =tio!.~~

em illinois University.

-- --EDWARD

MJCBABL,

wioo-

~eo$!==

::..of

.

~p~m"\:!:,

-

ucl

=.=,.

in man'• pbyoic81 e c l - .
ED WRIGHT b. ' - eppoinllld tbe U.U..nitQ lint full-

e~tbe~

a-·

stall', will aJ.o .ene .. an m.tructor in- pbyoical e c l - . Ho .
boldo
from BodoD Uni..,nity whe!e be a bod&lt;ey
JeCU!!Ir a an underaracluato.

.

JAMES HANSEN,- profoooor
of counOolor education, il tho new
chairmaD of tbe Faculty Senall!'o
Commitll!o on Athletic~.
ANDREW · HOLT baa been
elecllld SUNY .....tor to ropreoent memben of -the non-bealth

;.1~m=~.~

ciall! director of tho Data Proc-

-ing Center, il the altamall!.

ALLEN H. KUN7Z,aaoociata

proffliiJOr and director of i.ns1:nJo.
tiona! aerviOM, bas been appoint~

ed chairman of tho Faculty Senate Ac:lmisaions Committee.
·

Administmtive Leaders '70

JOSEPH A. BERGANTZ will
be actinc p...- of tho Faculty

~~~~"f.•::!l~li~i

=t

WILLENBROCK is on leave as
special advilor on engineering to
the SUNY cbanceUor. Appoinll!d

t:..rot:, ':'l..!r:~:

ber Iince 1961.
GEORGE H . NANCOLLAS

~~o~P~=P=~r!;d

ALBERT SOMIT
Eseeu.tive VIce President.

Mathematics. Currently professor
or physical chemistry, be bu been
on the faculty since 1965.

GEORGE S. BOBINSKI i1 the
new dean of the School of Information and Library Studieo with
pror.... rial nmiL Bobinski W1lfl
formerly aaistant dean and proleuor m the School or Library
Science, Univenity or Kentucky .
WILLIAM A. T. BYRD baa

been appointed director of the
campus Upward BoiUld Project.
_ He was formerly director of
school-college relations for the
National Scholarship Service and
Fund for Negroes m New York ·

~~~~~EL--------------------

HENRlK N. DULLEA

Vlce President

President

RAYMONDEWELL-------------------,

.........

Vice Pn.sdm.t

DANlEL H. MURRAY - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Aetin&amp; Vice Presldent
Academic Allain
Dean, Gzaduate Sebool

CiWRANK J . CORBETT. lor:
merly usociate director for com·

muruty development here , has

been named director or the Office
of Urben Affflira. An associate
professor in aociaJ welfare, Cor·
bett came to Buffab from social
service work in New Haven, Conn.
ROBERT C. DOMBROWSKI
is now director of off.campus
housing. He w8s formerly 8JI80Ci.
ate director of student allairs.
GERALD P . FRANCIS baa
been appointed to a three-year
term .. chairman or ti)e Dep&amp;rtment of Mechanical Engineering.
An aaociate profeseor. in the de.
Francia came to U/B
in 1966.
.
PAUL L. GARVIN, professor
of linguistics, baa been named

.,.-t,

~ ~~ tga~v1ir~

HAYS who baa reaicnod aa
chairman but will continue u a
profeoaor. Garvin, on tho U/ B

faculty aiD&lt;:e 1969, will ...... ..
chairman pendinc oelec:tion or a

.economics,
pe~.M~~ profeooor or
will .ene u acting
chairman of that department dur-

~Dm&amp;'t -~~~~~

on a leave of aheeDoe in Italy.
Dr. Go~baa prof_,r of
OCOnouUco he
1963.
KE
~GLENNON , a
former (1938-al) mtmber of tbe
F.B.L and former diNctor of tbe
Erie County Sberill'o Academy,
. baa named diNctor of oe-

""tl&gt;'~R
~:o&gt;appoinllld chairman &lt;I the De-

partment of Phyoical 'lllerapy
with the rank of full ~··
He came to U/B from tbe Unl..,,.;ty of P-loania Sehool of
Madicino whore be laulht for 17

'j"Ai,ms

i

J. GRUBER, ..tine'

diNctor of Norton UllioG . _
Mudt and a . - r of the Nor-

· ~~Jr~belal

_..._._

GEORGE 8. BOB.IHSIO -------===~:::;::.,-1

--

ta.A. la!mmadoa

IAaoY A . I'UCH __;______________

~tto\be

�s.pNml&gt;or 10, 1910

.,._. -.m..· -

GREPO~~

=~ ~;

Howazd

~

WJIUAII ~.

hiotory;. M.A.,

ni-

DOifAUt DtJ'IIOf,

='T~_ ..,,Pt.:D~s- .

-t

=. 'lr=t.';

.NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

~

-~.-tpro-

&amp;ICit IICRWAB.

...
-~r.
. li&lt;LOCD,
oiotant
mecliciDe;

SUNYAB.

-u-

, . _ , prof_,r,

-pro-

.
-

SUNY
ter.

J&gt;IOI-&gt;r,

M.!&gt;., UDlftr-

mecliciDe; M.D.,
Medical Cen-

~te

.._ Bo-t&amp;UNO PUMO,

Ulliatant pro.

feooor, pharmaceutics; PhD., Univenity of Ka-.
KEN1fm'll CJOEIIW, aaoiotant to the
chairman, Depa.-nt of Microbiology; B.A.,
AB.
IOM.U. ..OO....ow, lecturer, oocial

foundationo; M.A., Uniwroity of
Wyoming.
IIJ1Wf e-.wooo, editorial ...atant, Uoiwroity Publicationo Serviceo; B.S., Iowa Stole Univenity
of Science and Toclmology.

..a.tani ~r,
"'-ks; M.Pbil., Yale tfoiwnity.
ra. BOWMD BKN'ATOVICII, c:linical
iaotnldor, dentiotry; DD.S.,
Geoqetown Dental 8cbool.

TBOIUS &amp;laY,

DL LAWJII:Nal GmaDLUI, U&amp;Ociate

profeooor, oocial welfore; D.S.W.,
Columbia Uoiwnity.
'I'B.OKAS 0 . OU'I"'laaDG&amp;,

lecturer,

..,...........nt; M.S. Purdue Uni.enity.

~~~· O:J!:{y_muaic;
usi.ltant profeooor, Enclioh; M.A., Uni.enity
of Dlinoia.
oa. JOCB.ii:L 1. IUit'I'L&amp;Y, asaiatant
profe.or, economica; Ph.D., Univenity of Pennsylvania.
aJLt&amp; AMK IU.Wlti:B, inatructor.
pb.Yaical education for women ;
B.F.A., Univenity of Uteh.
DESKOND IIAKlm,

DL ULPB BLOCH,

Uliatant profel-

oor, French; PhD., SlanloJd Univen!ty.
IIUTII llllYANT, uoiobmt to lbe

chairman. ~t of Counoel-

or Education; A.A.S., SUNYAB.
... IIUCIIIR, ..U.tant pr&lt;if8110r, Fnmch; doctorate, Umw:roity of Dijoa.

DL ROBDT HAYDEN,

director, Sur-

vey - C e n t e r ; PbD., Uni-

oludent actmtieo - t cfuector, Norton
Union; B.A., SUNY Coli.... at
Fradonia.
Alft'IIONY CAXPAK&amp;LI, oollep aoCOUDtant, Badpt Olllce.
1oi.rmx. CAPUAif-'t .dYDor, Divioion of Unde,.-uate Stw:lieo;
M.S., SUNY at Albany.

OOIC8UICCII 8IJPJI.U[,

a.ociate,
ed.-tional admiDiotralion; Ed.
M., SUNYAB.
VJCrOa CBiaA, ..moor DmoioD of
U~ Studieo; M.A.,
Univenity of RocbMter.

...,.CII CAllY, -

=·

~M_.::-= d'~

kino Univenity.

wnity of. PeDIIOylvania.
.Ulll8 BaiSIMOJ:Il, instructor, clasoial; M.A., SUNYAB.
ANALilfJ: mc;KS, student activitiea
a..aistant director. Norton Union;
Ed.M., SUNY AB.
C. DAVID HONEYCUTT. lecturer, ele-

~~ o~=:lined=~

Central Stote College.
lOBBPII IKACI, reiearch aaaociate,
educational administration; M.S.,
SUNYAB.
D&amp;. &amp;OOIR IB.UCS, uaiatant pro-

~'r"~~~t ~'Uni.e~ty

lecturer, ec,o..
nomico• M.A., Yale Uni...,nity.
COllY l.lCI&lt;BOM, teclmicalopeci.u;.t,
Experimental Procram for Independent Study (EPlS); B.A.,
)(JLTON JYORA ,

concordia eon...,.
JB&amp;.UID(

lDOUL, a.ociate pro- •

f_,r, architecture; Muter of
City Planninc, Uniwnity of
PIIDDO)'Ivania.
I&amp; II08Df IOYlft, clinical inotructor, dantiotry; DD.S., SUNYAB.
I&amp; I ....... K. IUDIBCII, aaoiotant

G:':U~~: M.D.,

Iowa

CBIIIftiiiS ....... teclmical ..;tit:

alit. pbyaical ed.-lion for men;
B.A., SUNYAB.

-t
-=

B.~I.~~=
~; M.A., UniYOroity ol

C. .OI/Df lllUCB'IItT,
to
lbe dinocilor, ()j&amp;ce ol Equal Op-

~: M.S.W~ SUNYAB.
IU&amp;1' . .~ .........

--.ado-

II.&amp;, Alabama .,. 6 M

........,u___..

M.D. S..

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

'-'r.~ PILD~ N-Yodt

um:-ty.

. . . . . . . . . a:.&amp;Pl.llf, in.truetor. DDICDioo~bstetric•;
M.D. UDIOenity Ol Fnnltfort.

~=~·,~=:
ollideDce.

.._ WII.U.lll •OOSAu, -

.__r, ...s.:a..;

inotructor, inotruction; M.Ed., SUNYAB.

/

.a.-~lectmer, ed-~'
; Ed.M., TDfto

u .
I&amp; COIIOUI

~.-

'"'7 ~

~~ Unhenity

- .

...... nr.._

_.....

~-. =·t;~:rr·

.... . ,.......- . dialcal ID.-

otnactor, mecliciDe; MD~ SUNYAB.

aaoiotant to lbe
deon, urban alfairo; B.A., Rooary
Hill eou...,.

8KIJIUOY loOm,

feMor, political -tcieDOB; Ph.D.,
DONO )l.US, technical •oeciaJDt.
Indiana Uoiwnity.
Experimental Procnm for tooe:
IOIIN B. f'&amp;UfCia, lecturer. education; M.A., Uoiwnity of DetroiL ~,:;tys~d~!:,lf!l ;atBi!;
DR. liiJTCBa..L PSANKLIN, profeuor,
Anpleo.
.
pbibopby; S.JD., Harvard Uni- KOIOOII K01180UD, lecturer, finanveni.ty.
.. cial accounting; M.B.A., New
York Univenity.
KJ:LVIN F&amp;&amp;J:DJ(AX, inltructor,
bealth ocieDoeo education and Oft- D&amp;. CA&amp;LOS" KATnOLl, reeearch uluat.i.cm; M.Ed., Univeraity of siatant profeooor, medicine; M.D.,
Toronto.
Univenity ot BueDOe A.i.ra.

w-...

I&amp;IIIICII.&amp;IL ...........

t

IIIDII: - .

Jefferoon

.a-tary and remedial education; PhD., -r-ple Uniwnity.

CTH!'BU. ....SON, i.Ditrudor,
~ education for - ;
·~

AB.

aaoiotant cfuector,

... ..-...c n.Gif, MIOCia&amp;e pro-

.._

a.istant for com-

....:O.
~=.~'7e~:u~.'·~tJY': ~""t'-""Z;'te.2'u
Uoiwnity ol MloblpD.

DR. TBOIIU81 • .,.....,, profe.or,

.D.,TebelUI

M.S., Unhenity of

MD.,

oludent pe-...1; B.A., SL Bona_ . , Uoiwnity.

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

..-.....&amp;

pro_foooor., a . - 111111 8lalle;
~ Claremont Ora4aa~

Welfare;

PhD.,

.......
~~~-M.D.,_
CLAIDICII DYE,

DL OOJUr&amp;lftlllll ~•

auiatant to the

trn:A.~AB.SociaJ
- .._ ·sou ..._...,

.

a - ~­

DR.-L'I'IILKIII...-

-te ~
~~,.._Librarieo; M.L.S.,

ON
GpEOPLE

~~

rr-

BOOBil &gt;UYN£,

lecturer, mechani-

cal engineerin&amp;; M.S.M.E ., Georgia Inotitute of ToclmoiOf!Y.

FRANCIS MEYDt. sa. , technical
specialist_ facilities planni.n&amp;''; B.S .,

SUNYAB.

~r:.:~;~~~

College of London.
·
.JOHN JruBPRY, research associate,
educational administration; MAT,
Wealeyan Univeraity.
C£KAU)IN£ MYCIO , instructor,
tl!acher edw:ation; Ed.M., SUNYAB.
NICOLAS NABOKOV, Slee Profeuor

of Music; B.A., Pa..ril University.
DR. BOBBY 0. NASH,

IUJiiltant pro-

fessor, computer science; Ph.D.,
University of Waterloo.

clinical uaociate
profeaor, pediatrics; M.D., Univenity of Dlinoi&amp;.
DB.. BBUDA 81'&amp;1lfBACB, reaearch
assistant profeeaor, medicine ;
MD., Jobaruleo Gutenberg University.
DL BENaY 81'.&amp;.UB,

aussa.t. 8TONE, lecturer,10cioloc:Y;

B.A., McGill Uniwnity.
ateistant pro-

BICIIUD BTU888UBG,

~'r"~~::,.U.:i :-~~nity
instructor, inatnaction; M:S., SUNY College at
Pot.dam.

JtONALD STROH:

DR. NA.RAVANASAMI SWAMINATBAN,

instructor, biochemistry; PbD.,
Cbriatian Medical Colloge.
DR.. BALPB swANK., asaiatant pro~.;..·'Co'J'l~. M.D., Jelfenoon

DL K&amp;ZUO &amp;UO, profe.or,

eco--

nomico;· Ph.D., Yale Univenity.

REPORTS ON P£OI'l£
"Reports on People" Is tha former
Nawo of Your Collequel oactlon
of Tha with tho addition
of atudent and ltaff ltams.

p-

-. -

uo - o f honors

ha
_
- .t
.....
- a_
. ._
. ll'*!uata
publlshad ••• oatl, tha commu·

)'OU haw macla.
"Reports on People" 1s cipan to
anyone with U-.slty afllllatlon.

nlty

- . ba oura to lncluda ]lOUr
liM' and major. Sand JIOU' Reports to ·C.IIII Goodoola, ~of

un~wnlty -

-.
250 W l - r Ava. bport fonnl
ara ...uabla !If can1,. 2:228.

~

~~e•-=~i:lo·~~;ntJ£:.

DL .JON~ WDla.

--.u.t

~h1&gt;":"tl':u~'b!':/~f. ~

I&amp; V.lNDOif wmn:,- clean,
Scbool of Health Related Pro!.siono; Ph.D, Pwdue Uoiwnily.
Dll. &amp;ICHM:D w. WllUAKB, Uliltant
profeooor, ourgery; M.D~ SUNY-

AB.
DB.. RlCJlAKD WOLIN,

c1inic:aJ. a.iA-

~"fs.eooor, poychiatry;

THOMAS ~· p~o~rammer

ant, WBFO.

~o!;,P~;ge.bw

gy; B.S.,

uaociate pro.
fessor, law; L.LM., Northwestern
Univenity.
ELLIOTT TROMMALD, instructor,
LEE

TEI'l'ELBAUM.,

M.D.,

reeearch .-id-

OIL BICBAIID ~ l'eleU'Cb asiltant profeeaor, Center for 1m·
munology; PhD., Uniwnity of

lliinoia.

!..ur':"~'!i.!:il'o'!.~~r'"::

Women's Club Planning
Coffee with Mrs. Ketter

DR. BRUCE OLSEN,

IU.BGAUT a:BC'I'ENWALD, assistant
cfuector, student penoonnel; B.A.,
SUNYAB. •
HAROLD BEIBB, instructor, pharmacy; B.S., SUNYAB.
TBOKAS G. &amp;ICXI:BT, profeuor, law;
L.L.B., Cornell Univenity.
DIL CAllMEN &amp;ODIUGUJ:Z, lecturer,
Leaming Center; cloctorote, National 1Jniwroity of Mexico.
IUAl&lt;lfA . -. ~r. elementary and remedial edu&lt;ation;
M.A., SKramento_ S - College.

pllyoi-

SUNYAB.

.TUANIT4 YOUNG,

Morning coffee with Mrs.
Robert Ketter tops the fall
&amp;ebedule of events for the U/B
DR.. LOUIS a. NELSON, ~istant pro- Women's Club. Other schedfesso r, laboratory animal ICienoe; uled activities include: a late
D.V.M:; Auburn Univenity.
September membership luncheon, a November panel discusDR.. RUSSELL Nl.S£NGARD, asaistant
f&gt;':'f~ i~tistry; D.D.S., Ph. sion of women's rights &lt;X&gt;-5pon-

fessor, curriculum ~lopment;
Ed.D., SUNYAB.
IUlJUS PLAD!, technical specialis~
speech communication.
LeONARD POPP, lecturer, elementary and remedial education; Ed
M., SUNYAB.
DB.. BRU&lt;Z BABIN, research assiat~.b~~=AG.'thol~gy; Ph.D.,

calecl.-lionfor,.._;
SUNY.AB.
.'

programmer
analyst, Computing Center.

SUNYAB.

DR. ALBERT PAU'I'LER, associate pro-

~

M.S. L.S~

.,._... -r.

S~ Uoiwnity. "

WlN1PBED BWA'YZE,

!~~~Nfo~:U~~~~~§'.~

visiting asaiatant
professor, mathematics; Ph.D.,
Columbia University.

:..~=:~Jtt:
SUNY eon.- Ill a.-.

...._
......... -~
Uoiwnity · Lillarioo;

W&gt;rkshop Offers
Fariiily Help
Is your elementary schoolage child having nroblemswith discipline, wfth school,
with friends, with himself?
Would you like an opportunity to participate in an innovative venture in family understanding aimed at belping you
to get in better touch with the
way your child feels, at opening up communication between
you ·imd your child 80 that your
child feels really underatood?
Muriel Santilli, assistant professor in the School of Social
Welfare, says that a new Parent-Child Communication
Workshop spoosored by the
School olfers such an opportunity.
'lbe Worbbop, sbe says, baa
been dalisned .IN' a new approach to hejpihg parents and
children who are uperiencing
problems. 'lbe aim is to d&amp;velop, through regular 8M8icms,
"mutual lnl8t and c:loeeneos
... a tzue ~limacy 80
that l.amily
can be a
direct-....., ol help to one anott- in worldnc out problems."
"YCIIU child will be clirec:tJy
involved In the helping process
with you," Prof. Santilli says.
Anyone lntereotad in partioipatina in the Worbbop or in
~ additional ildonnalion
JS ubd to oontact Prot Santilli at 831-1526,- 1162-&amp;15, or
884-49al•
Worbbop poupa will 118
fannlnc 80011. 'There is DO fee
lnwhecl

80red with other area clubs,
a Deoember scholarabip

:ll_

The coffee will be beld an
l
September 15 in the bouse d&amp;·
signed by Frank Uoyd Wright
l
at 123 Jewett Parkway. 'i'be - -·
Tuesday function, lastjng from
10 a.m. tc 12noon, will bODor
Mrs. Ketter who is honorary
president of the Women's Club.
'lbe Club is also sponsoring
a membership drive headed by
Mrs. RiChard Koehl 'lbe 01'ganization is open tc wioes of
faculty or staff members and to
women faculty or staff lllll!lllbers. W o m e n interested in
joining may contact Mill.
Koehl at 63-t-0470. Currently
over 500 women are members.
Members can ct.oc.e from 20
difterent interest poups llpollaored by the Club, a m o n c
them: ~Stability,
Flower and
Square
Dancing, French ( th betlinDing and advanced), and Art
Appreciation. · These 1r0'!{1B

meet on a ....akly or moalbly

basis with more than 200 pcticipatina, aooardlnc to .....
Leo Katz, co-chairman ol the
inlereotiP'QIIPII.
~ forward tc d.
spring, lbe
Club Ia
planning a ...U..tastiDc party
m February, a polpouni ol
parties for the moath of Al!lil
and, "' end the year, a . . . .
luncheon and lnatallation ol
officers.

.w -·a

EACH 11fiiii!IIIAY

With this \SlUe. tha .,...... ..
1e11Jiar ~ p u b i Copleo are dlltribirtad In bulk - "
Thursclay momlna to all ....._
bulldlnp and to oll..,.mpuo locetions. ~ons concaml,. dlotrlbutlon. may ba dlractod to
ally utenslon 2127. The uma
numbar may b a - for adltorial lnqulriea; for "Rolpoftl on

SUIMS

Un-- -

People," •ncl "Weekly Com·
2228. Tl)a .....,...
ar'o mam,. add,.. Is UnhMnlty

.'fTIUnlque," caH

P u b l - SaMcao, S.Mc:oa
ler Bulldlrw. 2!50 Wl-r.

ca...

�s.,.- JO, 1910

12

lletPmaina Wa,v, WBPO (88.7
~ a •rieo of

FM)- will

&lt;WEEKLY COM~NIQUE
REGISTRATION
DATES

The
1aat -

!;.,~the~::.:.=
·

able at the Nortoa
Deok.

sun.. fourth in the Datioa

LUCKY PS'ID80H

~tiov:f~~ .::'b.,..,oo-ca.::;:
RoYel. Jo,_ (260) aDd Barry At-

~!,ac:;.,t ::.!!'::t"-be~

~~~~~ltto

tained at the Norton Ticbl Oflice.

ecore apiDat. the BuJ&amp; were ai.J:th
in the nation in paM defeDN aad

THURSDAY-10
JOit

aDifta

TJmODI'ICAL BIOLOGY

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

~~~~the

TUESDAY- 15

Buf/aiD
Ev&lt;!ning News ..yo that record
will be "bard to duplicate, but the
manpower appean to be preeent

11ovt1:••: KID!OGBT COWBOY., Con-

ference Theatre, NOrton, 11
1 a.m.

- ~B"!R~~= :re~~i'l"'..!.t. !':~tf.O&amp;tion
of Mplecular BiolocY, Uni..,nity of EcliDbuqh, Scotland,

8TUDIIB OP 8YNTJiftJC POLYNPTIDIII IN 1112.4TION TO TO MONoU.Yia 8TATE, Room 29, 4248 Rid,p

Lea, • ·p.m. Reln!obmenla 3:3o

t::: P~ooolayen

of synthetic polypeptide. spread at the air-water

interface can be investipted in
tilu and iod.irectly on apecimens
removed !rom the surface. At~ to relate indilect methods
layer :.&amp;ro:~.the monoEVENING PBE88 OOHP'EilENCZ FOR

EXHJBJT ..LIVE''•:

Fillmore Room.

Norton.

FRIDAY-11
OPENING OF " Live"• •: Em.ibit will
run tbrough September 20. Fillmore Room, Norton, 9 a.m.-midnicht claily. $.50 .tudenta, SLOO
non-Kudents.
. M.OVJ&amp;. . :

STORY OP' A TllltE£ DAY

PA88, Conference Theatre, Norton,
6 p..m.-1 a.m. $.60 etudenta, $. 76

non-student..

SATURDAY-12
rooTa,u.,.••: U/B ..._ Ball State,
Rotary Field, 1:30 p.m.

Bob Deming hu a b - oicn in
the coaches' otrlOM on tbe eecond
floor of Clark Gym: "BALL
STATE. Tbooe who don't remem-

ber the put are condemned to

relive it"'
Ball State, of courae is that
"bulb league" team from Indiana

which •poiled Deming's debut u
head coach last September 13.

This September 12, Deming wants

to~ are that be willaed that the Bullo will tum in an

overall eeason record even better
than the 6-3 mark they tallied to
achieYe last year. Some e.nthua.

~i:W~re;e~~~n. ~l

l'llllkin&amp;' in the ann..W Eaatem race for the lAmbert Trophy.
1, ut. a high

lUlL·

LErUai:

PBY81CWf8' ftt8PBOHK

~~ ~m:;u A.M=

wJ?"..:==ki~~ ~

. .istant proftWtOr, mecliciDe,

~u%.ing1e'U P~~ J'!t:~':t
~:L~U: ~= to lack

CARDIOLOGIST

TBB
CARDIAC,. SUR·

AND

51 · Parlicipatin&amp; Hoiopitalo,
11:30 a.m.
.•

OOBY,

Fullbaclt Joe Zelmanski aDd
halfback John Faller are back:
The twp · of them accounted for
1

POST-GUOr: LUNCHSON : Towne
H....., Restaurant, M a i n aDd

er

Seuon liclret for 11 luncbeozuo is
$30; sin&amp;le luncheons on a non·

1970 QUAB'I.'I:UACJt a.UB Wlaa.Y

'0J!orh=re""'~N~tce',"brot,.
Boston Patriot Jim Nance,

High Street», 11:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m.

;.!:."~eth:r:!~~ ~~~

reoerved basis are $3.00.
BKIING DEMONSTRATION•: Compli~

able for backfield action.
Co--captain Chuck Donnor at
center il the keystone of the offensive line where lecl: of depth
poses the major qUil:ation mark
for the season.
If the Bulls can avoid major

menta of Bluemont Ski Area, Ski
Deck, Back of Baird, noon-4 p.m.

T.BE

::Jn~hlsS:~ ':nu!ui.=t

Nuasas:

MOVIE* • : MIDNIGHT COWBOY,

Con-

ference Theatre, Norton, 11 a.m.1 a.m.

MOVIE*• : MIDNIGHT COWBOY, Con-

To register eventS contact Miss
Carol Goodsole, University Publica·
tions Services, 250 Winspear Ave.,
ext. 2228. Copy will be due on
Monday for an issue distributed
on Thursday and covering events
of friday through Thursday.
.

Theatre, Norton, 11 a.m..-

SKIING DEMONSTRATION•: Compli-

MANSON

FAMILY

(country-

SUNDAY-13
UNIVDSITY BOOKSTORE 0 PEN 8 :

Norton, 11 t...m.-3 p.m.

WEDNESDAY-16
WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
COPY DEAOUNE

MOVIE**: STORY OP A TB~ DAY
PASS, Conference Theatre, Norton, 6 p.m.-1 a.m. $.50 students,

p.m.-midnighL

race, Norton, 8:30-11 p.m.

MONDAY-14
1 a .m.

ments of Bluamont Ski Area, Ski

Deck, BaCk of Baird, noon-4 p.m.

FREE GAME HOUB.S (freshmen
only): Recreation Area, Norton.

6-Bp.m.

BOWLEBS

WANTED:

SUNY A B

mixed 1 e a tc u ~men, womenfaculty, staff, studenb. Norton
Lanes, 7: 30 p.m. For. information
call Fran Jackson, 896-3279, or

from_. I, coL I)

~~~~;;~nr. ·:-~~~.;~to~':";;.':

rear

KOVlES••:

CALCUTI'A. Conference

n-tre, Norton, 11 a.m.-9 p.m.;
and 11 p.m.

LION'S LOVII, 9 p.m.

PREE OAIIK HOURS (freshmen
only): Recnation Area, Nort.ln,
6-8 p.m.
HIACARA PALLS, ONTARIO T 0 U 8

&lt;nici&gt;t licbta)•• =

s.u

p.m. 25¢.

ulty, staff or student body of U/ 8. ~ISTS' 'f"'U:PBO~ LECTU~S:

•open to the public, no 1dmis-

~D.oredDbyWRecionalilliam
. "' Medioal

.. Open to the public, admission

~~ P=~raliKe~ry~

sion charge.

charge.

Tbe Athletics Committee determine the availability of • campus. The Committee may
Approval by the Senate (James Hansen, cba.innan) is such aids, bow they are coor- be apanded to inclUde a reprewould, as in the C888 of all Sen- involved with the University's dinated, and how better -stu- sentative from each facUlty, in
ate actions, not be legally bind- difficulties with the National . ~t support might be pro- order to facilitate articulation
ing, Baumer said-at the same CoUegiate Athletic Association, ,...vided. The poesibility of sup- among the faculties, the librartime making it clear that the a matter which aftects the ex- port for graduate students on a ies and the planning olfices.
"will ol the faculty" is not tent of financial aid which can basis other than teaching lis- stole FI.Oida fDI: SUNY ,.,_
without impact in University be granted to disadvantaged sistantehips is another concern.
The Publications Committee
dec:isioo-malring
students participatilig in inter- The Committee may also take (Laurence Michel, chairman)
_,... c......,._
collegiate sports. The Commit- up the question of support of is probing the question of inThe otbw maUers libly to tee will be seeking to develop EPIS students.
creased State funding- of the
tum up before the Senate this relationships both with the
The Information and Library SUNY• press and maUers reyeu can be' identified in terms Athletic Department and with Services Committee (Sol Wei- garding publications-emanating
of the"""""'""' of the orpniza- students participating in the Jer, chairman) is dealing prin- from this University.
lion's standing commi-:
program. It also wishes to pur- cipally with planning for the JiThe Reoearch and Creative
The Amdomic Fre.lom and sue u.s.- Jeprding SUNY brary facilities on the Amherst Activities Committee (chair• · Reopoaaibility . CommIttee policies oo athletics and athmanship vacant) is expected to
(Berkley B. Eddins, ebairman)
Jetic procram support.
address iteelf to increased State
is curreoU dealing with two Clddlnc PD1iCJ
.
BELl. ADMINISTRAllVE Of'FlCE
funding of reeearch, the role
~
"-n.s is- _ The Educational Policy and
of centers and institutes within
,._of policy."
"""''-is- .,Planning Committee ~Carmelo An adm nistnltive,ollice for the Bell the University '(with particular
,._ CIOlter around ~ail,btr-i"Mvitera, chairman), in addi- :.n:,:.c'!:'bl:~":r : . : : emphasis on their educational
broadly be dea:ribed as the uae tion to toping with the aca- of the voce P - t for Opera- goals and benefits), and the
of billa-institutional char' e s demic coocems identified by tions 1 nd sy 1 t~m
1 , h Roser funding of res ear c b in the
and Maring bodies for actions Baumer, is considering issues F~, admlnl
·
- n t . "bard scieac:al," an area hardailet!!'d to be disrupti-ve of Uni- placed before it by Undergrad- In chlrge. F~ 11 be located hit by cutbacks in federal reV8111ty operations.
uate Studies- acti0118 to be In Room 0·154 of the Bell Plant, ~ Sbudpts.t ••-•- CommitThe Admiaiions Committee taken in reprd to the emergen- dallY from 8:30' a.m. until noon.
• '"' tuden .........,.
(.Allen H. Kuntz, chairman) is ey grading prooedurao of last The phone number is 5350. Mel- tee (l.any 01'81!11,. c:hainnlm) is
dealing with undergraduate ad- spring, the fuDction of self- sqes ""'Y be left at th1t extension said to1le working -.rd d&amp;mlarions problems, principally grading in the Uni-versity, and. In the afternoons; In urgent cases, vel_.t of better facultya,._ concernm. enter in J ~ible "''tablishment of a Frieday m1y be reached at 4342 studeJit relationshipa, a goal
freshmen. -A--po"'liey is being d&amp;·
po~CY!OIU!Iittee to
which many feel has not '-'&gt;
veloped to provide for acfmis. look into the •
•ty in grade during afternoons. According to given proper attelltion in the
sion of"'.part ol · tbe Fall 1971 levels indicated y a survey of ~~~·:~o,;;.~:.d ~ ~OU: iNt&amp;l
-.
.claE on the basis of Faculty the pa3t
of grading in vir- provida 'fiCUity, -nts and ad·
Other Senate standing compreference, A almilar plan for ious ~of the University. minlotrathle-croupo at the Bell mittaes ·are Economic Status
admitting some ~ under-The Financial Aid Commit- Plant 1 central point of contact for (John Drotning, chairman)
graduates on the baaia of Fac&gt; tee (Henry F. King, chairman) pouible solutions to ..nrice prob- and Faculty Tenure and Privulty selection by appliamta is is interested in III11'WYinB stu- lems which may orise."
ilege (Solon Ellison, chairalso liiely to be propo8ed.
clenta recelvinll financial aid to
nianl.
.

l:.vo1.nn.
n;;;..,

~H:~~oi: ~::eabmen

SOUTH BAPPINEBS 8Titi!ZT 80CIETY
SKIFFLE 1W&lt;J&gt; (jug band) •: Ter-

lEPHERSON GREEN (rock) • : Haas
Lounge, Norton, 8 : ~11 p.m.

ference

rock)•: Rathskeller, Norton, 8:30

...._

~- Scbwender, 831-2102, 834- only) : Recreation Area, Norton,
6-Bp.m.

SKIING DEMONSTRATION •: Compli-

mission this Saturday.

THE

~ ~ Kl~

Baker, PULMONDY NUUING CAB11:
HAS NO BOUNIWlY., 51 Participat-

ments of Bluemont Ski Area, Ski
Deck, Back of Baird, noon--4 p.m.

proof of student status for ad-

$.75 non-students.

TELEPHONE ux.."''URZ:

Sponoored by Regional Medical
Program, Joan Brownie and Kay

it achieved last November, the

and are usually admitted by ID
card. are asked to show some

(rock)• :

1-4 p.m.

seuon should be bril!bL
As for Ball State, they are said

to have a "talented and solid football team." At any rate, no one
this year is asking "Ball Who?''
This il ~ the first of five home
ball games; the Bulls play sis on
the rood.
Uptlght? Catch Saturday's Bull
FighL Ticket prices are $4.50,
$3.50 and $2.00, available at the
Athletic Ticket Office in Clark
Gym and in Norton.
Because
registration has not been completed, underpad students and
othen who pay· the athletic fee

UGLY BROTHERS

Fountain Area, Harriman Steps,

FulfAgenda Faces S e n a t e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (~d

&amp;UD UXD•:

Rathakeller, Norton, ·s:•n p.m.
m~M P~ mow (~
qbl oound ~)•: Sbow..,..
tluouP ~ 18. 288 Nor-

in defenM apinot

::.._~~.~~

Program.

~ter, _....

r.

CAVITY, 51 Participating Hoopi!Bbl,
~:! p.m. Also ,Thuraday, 1:30 ...
(jazz-rock) •: Fountain Area, Harriman Steps, 8:30-

'UIIJ: lAVEN

11 p.m.

THURSDAY-17
11.0V118••: CALCVI'TA, Confenmce

Tbaatre, Norton, 11
LIOM"B LOV&amp;, 9 p.m.

PII.ADUCIBTI'

a=-~

p.m.; ·

and 11 p.m.

T&amp;L&amp;.PBOHJ:

LIIC·

~~~r~~a~

Letcher, a 11 i 1 tan t prot_,r,

•uc

pharmacy, HON·raaauP'tiOH
P800UCT8 USI:D IN Al.loaaY OOlCtH·
TIONS, 51 Participatin&amp; Hoopitala,
11: 30 a.m. ~ 10 p.m.

MA.81Wa DAK&lt;Z CLUIID• : Fe&amp;tur·

Har.-

inc Arthur Mitcbed aDd 'lbe
Dance 'I'bMtre of
Inc.,
Haao Lounp, Norton, 4 p.m.
PHY8JCII cou.oQUIUK: Dr. J . M.
Hutinp, Brookba'oen National

Laboratoriea,

carnc.u.

ICA.T"&amp;'W81H~

or I'RU'TIIONI P a ox aUBIDJUil
"""...,._ ,.UO&amp;llll, 111 Hocb-

•tetter, 4 p.m. Refreobmenla 112
HocbatetteJ-,8:30p.m.
raa&amp; GAME aouas (frMhmen

only): Recreation Area, Norton,
6-8 p.m. .

-

~

GOBP&amp;L

CHOIR

(SUNY Collep at Bulralo) •: A.
BI'OWil, clirector, Haao Lounp,
Norton, 7:30 p.m.
801 AND 1UN BOOL IBYD:W* :
QuadtaDcle Area, Cooke. Roof,
.
s :•11 p.m.
PHOTOir FAC'I'Oft IBOW (electiic

IiCht OJ&gt;Und- oy.tem)•: HMa
Lounp, Norton, 9:30' p.m.
ILUJ: LYTIO (!olk-bluaa) •: Rathskeller, Norton, 10:30 p.m.-liLIIL

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSIJY AT BUFf~lO ··..

MAY28,1970

VOL 1-NO. 19

Colleges &amp; University
·Seen Sharing Problems.
By JODY SCJn,flTZ
Ulllherrltyl.tJionNttloa

s.mc..st.11

"Tbe problems of the collegiate system are the problems of
the Univen~ity at large."
So says a report preaented
this week to the Temporary
El&lt;ecutive Council (Cohen
Council) by the eDiting colleges at U /B.

Berrian Now
Associate VP
Dr. Albert H. Berrian, who

3,600 Cartdidiites Expected To PartiCipate
In 124th Annual.Commencement Exercises
Tomorrow. Is

eonu...ce-.

- t J)ay-tbe Climu .... poslihly, antldimu of tbe academic year.

~~~
(mel lhelr amilles and

oapectad to tum
l!'Wd for the
!24th ~ of the annual ceremonies. A hrilbt
CII"IIIIP printed prDiflliD--&lt;I .......
cMputwe this. yeeJ'-WiU add
8Jl atra dash of color to the
crowd.
.
In addition to the recognition of bacbelor's and master's
candidittao and the p-tadan and hooding of doctoral
. . _ , recipieniB, the PfOiliiD1
wili feature an adclraB by outaoinl U/B President Martin
Meyer-. &lt;ill the ~ic of "Justice," and the ~tation of
the UniYBniJl!-= special"
boaor, the
s Medal,
to "an oUtatandlng citizen of
Buftalo."
'l'bme students graduating
with boDoro will be f8CIOIIIized
frilllds) -

oat at

~

Blurbfield, journalist David television by 9 a.m. tomorrow:
Lawrenoe, musician Joeef.
In addition to the overall
'
architect Gordon Bun-· Commencement exercises
and former U/B p~­ (which will combine both FebClifford C. Furnas. The ruary and May Jll'llduates) ,
ocbools will 'be boldina
~~~t.~~tdis- ae.....ai
individual convocations 'imd
m c:aee of inclement weather, award ceremonies, as follows:
alternate ComlnenQement asSchol&gt;l of Medicine, Thurssemblies will be beld as fol- day,
28, Kleinhans Music
lows: Faculty of Arls and Let- Hall, May
3 p.m.
ters, Clarlr. Gymnasium; Faculty of ...Social S¢ences and AdSchool of Dentistry, Tbursminisf1atimi, Clarlr. Gymnas- daJ&lt;, May 28, Butler Auditorium; Faculty of Educational ium, Capen Hall, 8 p.m., speakStudies, Dielendorf, Room 147; er: Dr. Basil G. Bibby, direcFaculty of Health ScieDces, Ca- tor, Eastman Dental Center,
pen llail, Butler Auditorium; Roches.t er, N .Y.
Faculty of Natural Sciences
Faculty of Law and Jurisand Mathematics, Hochstetler
Hall, Room 114; Faculty of prudence, Thursday, May 28,
Kleinhans
Music Hall, 8 p.m.,
Engineering and Applied Sciences, Acheson Hall, Room 5; speaker: Senator Charles E .
Goodell
(R.,
N.Y.), topic:
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence, Norton Hall, Conference "Cambodia."
School
of
Pharmacy,
Friday,
Theatre.
U the weather requires the May 29, luncheon, Fillmore
shifts, an announcement will Room, Norton Union, speaker:
be made ov~ local radio and (continued on page 2. col. 4)

u=\";,.!:"S~ .To The Clnss of 1970:
later. date.
.
'1118 adiln. by Meyerson,

: has been . assistant vice presi. dent for academic developmentspecial programs at U/B since
September, will become asaociate vice president for the same
ares, eftective June 1, acoording tO an announcement by Dr.
Peter F . Regan, acting president.
Dr. Berrian will continue to
report to Dr. Warren G. -Bennis, vioe.president for academic
development, lllld will be
............ with the direct respon;;bilit; for coordinating all
special programs in the University.
• 'llae Include EPIS (El&lt;perlmenial Prosram in Independent Studies), SEEK, Upward
Bound, RAD (Regular Admissions-Disadvan••-'), and the
pending ins~ Ieeming
center approved last week by
the Faculty Senate. Financial
priorities for these programs,
each of which has its own director, will be set by Dr. Berrian in cooperatiDI! with University-wide deans.
Dr. Berrian came to Buffalo
from Hampton Institute in
Hampton, Virginia, wbere be
was dean of the faculty. !hom
1961 to 1963 he was representative of English Language Services in the ·Congo government
and director of the USIS/ AID
English Language programs in
Leopoldville in the Congo. Before that he bad been chairman
of the Department of Foreign
Languages at North Carolina
College, Dwbam.

TM Whlto B -

The docu....t which-marizes the history of the calleges and analyoa their ing pains is upected to proride
the basis of a report to be
suilmitted by the El&lt;ecutlve
Council to the SUNY Board of

Trustees.

The SUNY trustees n!QI.-ted an eDIDination of the collegiste ayst.em, apeciflcally Colleges A and F , on March 25
after weeka of unrest on the
U !B campus. The original April 15 !leadline Was eztended
=n~ br the El&lt;ecn~toAienn

The document openly states
in its introductory pages that it
is not just a presentation .of the
plans of the collegiate system
but a "response to coastemation and alarm about the aotivities of some of the collesiate
units."
\
.
"Whatever the reasons for
the vehemence and m&amp;Jplitude
of the reaction to CoJJege A
and College F through the
1969-70 academic year, there
can be no question that it ' since el&lt;ten·ded to the entire
collegiate system," the report
says.
'
~ document IIUIIIID8riJlal
the charges most frequently
made against the colleliate sysLAST ~EPORTER OF YEA11
This is the last regulolr issue of the
Reporter until September 10 at
which time - will 111SUme -kly
pubUcation. To keep abreast of
campus activities this summer,
consult the Weakly Communique
which will continue to be published
as a "-"'te flyer, the Spacbuin
which will appear w,ekly starting

Friday, June 12, and WBFO.

In answering
charge of a
''lowering of academic standards through an ahendonina
of any recogniW)le role· of the
teacher as judge or authality,"
the report calls attention to a
''nation-wide debate about the
classic relationohip of teacber
and student" and points out
that many collegea, indudlnc
A and F, reftec:t this debate.
'"I'he Uni
·ty thmu..t. ita
ocbools and '=!.~t&amp;."'-the
report says, r.ooDtin--;;;; to . . .
a huge variety of familiar -aYenoes to understending and .._.
tery of technique and data
while ,t he colleges motivata s¥!dents by leal - t i a l ~-

You graduate at a time when established instituti~;~
~the~~~~ ideas are being questioned as they have never been questioned
ft11ia in September will be his before in our histor:y. Much of this questioning is being done by
fiNt forme! Um-Sity app.r- the members of your generation, and it is your generation which
of the year and )JOIIIIibly • ultimately will have to provide most of the answers to tboae
Ilk rm.l oae befON moving to questions.
PlriJaclellll&gt;l Meyanon has
I hope that as you look for thoee answers, you will reme~
.._ • leaw this year IIOIVing the obligation of every educated man and woman to draw careful
• ehalrman of the ~ly distinctioas between tboae ideas which must be readjusted and
~~of.:: thoee ~ f!hould be P"!""'~ed. The _fact that many acoepted
and
nationwide ~ys ?f thinking seem~ and unJUSt does not warrant the
atudy of the future dli'ectioo of rejection of all established standards. Nor should our proper
hip. education.
respect for the peat and our legitimate desire for stability lead
Tbe -m of the Chomcal- ua to defelid thouibtleealy that which is outmoded and obsolete.
ences. H
lor's Yedal will be the 43rd
Your ~ will be that of reoonciling continuity and
llinm l9U wt.. the boDor es- c:banp, of livinl new applications and fresh apressions to our
The charges of the Buftalo
community "rellect the peradmr
~ bequ.t of fcirm- tmdltiooal valueil- eapecially our coocem for the dignity. and
of
ever greater noied f&lt;lr the
er
Charles P . NQr- integrity of every individual. By meeting tb&amp;t challenge you can ANNIVERSARY THEME WANTED
laD, ~ted· to Charles meke this time of rapid change a time of substantial growth and The Genel81 Polley ond Founclors University to help aol"" the
manifold
within the
~.:-"t, blsbo!&gt; of the fulfllbnmlt- for youreelves, for your community and for your o.y Commm. for the University's rcommunityproblame
the simultane~ of Westem na....,_
125111 -Anniverury, which will be oUs Ioor.ae1IDd
of
fear
at the abe
Grit. UDder of the
Ao I ~ to you my penonal congratulations and t-t next year, is -kina • of the UniYBnity, ito poamtial
=rr:'!~_t. thet • .....Wti wloheo I look to the future with ..-ter ~because I
tor the Anniverury IICtM· ~ of the retPoa. the
mel vl9lfJea ....... ~~
of the ~ QU1lii11Caticina you bring to the """"Ptiooal tiel. s....-,. fii&gt;m any mam· _ , of a new poup of stuu.
of Buf demands of our time.
ban of the WnlwrsitY community dents and faculty who are not
~
·
may be fotwa- tD A. Waotley of this re1ion, a mounting
falo. il" ~n.........
recipienta
•
- n d v1ca
for Unl·
chasm between 'middle AmarCcaell,
1'111)'
.... 186 . . . . Hall. .
(continu«&lt; o n - 2, coL 2)

=

-of~-

.=.r-,:

"l:

-=a:.::t

imc&gt;W'.-

~

.

.

..

~

p-

�~­

2"
· FilmFac~

Rich .Source
Of Data
The Documents and ~
ft1ms Department of the Uni_,;ty Ubraries bas recenUy
aoquiied Facta on Film, "ooe
of the least known and richest
bodieo of aouroe material and
reference data oo the recent
historY of AIMrican ram relatioos." The ooUection is a file
of data accumulated since 1954
by the Southern Education Repo&lt;ting Service.
.
An
• lion of newspaper
editon
~education leadera, SERB was formed at the
time ol the Supreme Court
ac:boo1 ~tion decision
to -m&amp;e and make available
to ac:boo1 administrators, editon and othon, facts about d&amp;seJretJation and other civil
ritJb.ts developments in the
South.

rVizzjs Vandals' Have~ the BlueS . Aluins Cite
But Man 'fll,n-\, Ain't Like Sad 'Cheplove,
"
., LJ~J
·
·
Karr Parker
By JOE D SCHLITZ
""' _. ~ ..,_

·

''Vizzy Goth and His Vicious
Vandals" have the "Hayes Hall
Blues,'1 but they'll "dance the
jurisprudence 'til" they're .IOIM'So sues the new 45 rpm reoord of the ''Hay'"' Hall Blues"
cut by Vizzy and the Vandals
and now sometimes available in
Norton Hall. whenever someone feels like manning the sales
table.
Proceeds from the sale go to
the Faculty Defense Fund, the
Student Defense Fund and the
Black Panther Defense Fund.
A faculty member told the BuffolD Evt!nillg News that more
than 150 copies bad been aold,
but in an ezclusive interview
with WBFO last week, Vizzy
and his sidemen put the number at 46 - one each to the

SERB collects J&gt;ooks, pam- =ri~zerinw~ l~~~t.
phlets,and
reports, newspaper clip- The ""th. v ·
·c~, IS
· acpinp
statistical data and
-.u
1ZZY S8l
indeD!s a 1arp part of it in a counted for br one of two occ:ard catalog. The miCrofilm re- curreooes- either one of the
produces aJ.i of the non-book · IJfOUP bought two or somebody
material as well as the card ~ ~ record for a "licorice
catalog and. is supplemented P~th disclosed in the intersupplement covers view that he is a native or the
the yeer ....,.Ina June, 1967 An Buffalo area, having been born
annual ~ a1ao JJUblli.bed on a raft in lake Erie. He said
which covers material such as !he ''Vandals", ~ ~ country
lettars to editors, newspaper m search or 'histoncal paraledit.orials and cartoons from 1~" and _have found here disacroM the nation, not included tinct remmders of the Fourth
in the catalog.
Centur);.
..
The documents librarian at
Desp1te the presenm of outLockwood says that while Facls side. agitators," dw:mg tho;, inon Film is not the most con- terview, Goth and his men put
venient body or source mate- the hatchet down" long enough
rial in the Library, "in its field to rev~ these details or their
it is almost certainly the most mercurial career:
comprehensive." Students, after
• The V~ala plan a new
receiving a special introductory LP record With the 'Hayes Hall
explanation, "have been able to Blues._" s!Jt times on one side
find what they wanted, and this ,and SIX ~ on ~- o!her;
is about all we could BBk."
• A proJeCted 'g1g' at the
Fillmore East fell through when
the Vandals and the Fillmore
management had a slight disagreement over funds. The Vandals wanted $25,000 but the
Fillmore offered 39 cents and

annn'!"'iest

State Offers

free beer.

A-VGrants
An Instructional Development Grant Program "to develop pro to ly pe instructional

applications of communications
technology" bas been establiabed by the State University
Office of Educational Communications.
Accorcl.intJ to the current
newaletter of the campus Instructional Communication
Center, the grant program, beInc operated in eo&lt;&gt;pntion
with individual campuses of the
State system, will provide funds
rr. projects ''litely to be r&amp;plicable on a number of campuses within the Uni-.ity."
1be 8Cille of projects may
I"IIDIJ8 from materials or sys..
tams tr. a single unit of instruction to thme to support an entire """""'The campus ICC says it will
work cl&lt;a&gt;ly with departments
in~ in developing such
proposals.
ICC bas alao announoed a
computer propam to provide
campus instructors with a d&amp;scriptive.Jistin~J of films available inA!Ii'M8dia Library. An
inatructor may reQuest .lista of.
films by both sub)ecW.rea (the
Media Library 1ista 203) and
""' level, ICC says.
ICC will provide a printout
'llhi&lt;h will be an annotated listInc ol films mee&amp;, the criteria
specified by the instruCtor. .
system
devised
byThe
lawrence
C. ·eoz,
.an intam With ICC and a paduata

atudont in the 8cbool ol .Man......l
A doject .,.,.. indoD: and de~ lilltiap ol films are
awLble from 22 Fll8ler AnneE.
&lt;

. ... . 1!1711

• Definite negotiations are
now going on with the Rainbow
Room, the Plaza and the Top
of the SiD!s-about what was
not made clear.

vtzn GOnn
"Commlsalon' TNnb So

Colleges and University( contituud from P"/1&lt; I, coL 5)

ican' attitudes and thme of the
concerned intellectual and
young."

c-£Aiucatlon

units, the search for clear sanction of the collegiate system
continued throughout a year
and a half of debate within the
University, confined at first,
and then in the fall and winter
of 1969-70 broadened to become
one of the e...ential -controversial questions on campus,'' the
document states.

Creative education and innovation arl!"'essential to the collegiate system, the report rea11irrns.
From the debate and diaIt asks: "Should there be re- logue throughout the Universtrictions on subject matter? sity ''the most evident change
New modes are eme.-ging in in attitude toward the collegihigber education. To suppress ate
system in the 1969-70 perthe means of effecting change iod was the marked acceptance
is sbori-sicbted" in a 1arJe and .of it by the student body which
comprehensive University. A began to think of it as 'ours'
severely disturbeil campus: this indica&amp;,
initial success of
sprintJ with a virtual halt in the originalan concept,"
accordUni-..ity instruction bas not ing to the report.
been unique to Bulfalo and bas
not baeD ca.-1 by Colleges A ~·· -.u.s
and F."
t
The report sues on to discuss
In runnintJ down the history the residential asplict of the colof the colletliate system from leges, their academic programs,
the propcal stqe " " - it ...... faculty alliliation, _ ... assignan intepal part ol the restruc- meots'ind bud~·.
.dent in
turinr of the University, tal &amp;treniJiba
through the-early planning by
U /B's collegiate
a &amp;y&amp;a committae chaired by Dr. tem which the report notes is
Claude welch. dean o1 Under- ooly in the ''talkinc'' stage on
cnduate Studies. to the ap- other cAmpuses, are enumerpoina.-t ol the first Council aterl in cordusioll:
. .; "Hope for motivatintJ stuof Masten, the report ~!bows
the CDII8lan~ f!uctua&amp;, ap- dents, for giving them a new
orientatioo to the diaciplines_"

""'= ':t.ne ~=

1artJe
Jllllllber ol poupe t.d baeo.autborbad to procieed with the
clevelqlmoat and wtin&amp; &lt;1- speci&amp; ~ tr. colletiate

mc:."!.~~i~:!,~

system for a IliOn! humane education, a IliOn! peraooal experience."

• Kate Smith, and not Bob
Dylan as widely rumored, played harmonica on the record.
"Man, she's beilvy," Vizzy discloeed.
Asked if the vandals could
confirm reports that several administrative and other ol6cials
mentioned in the "Blues" lyrics
planned to seek equal time under the "fairness doctrine," Vizzy replied &lt;;eautiously, " Man,
ask them."
Ignoring s"outs of "this
,.
building is cloeed," another of
the indicated that be bas
it on niliable authority that the
administration plans to use "all;
the media" to answer the SODJ.-'
"Man, I hear ~ a~ pre81dent's constructing a gumt peak
out of paper macbe," be said.
Although Vizzy and the Vandals cl~ their wa&gt;; !Jtrollgh
the annous crowd waiting out.side WBFO after the interview,
reports that the University
photographer's camera was
smashed are highly exaggerated, a University spokesman
said.
At any rate, following hours
of screening videotapes, movies
and still photographs of the
event, Vizzy was positively
lingered by a Special But
Temporary Looking Committee
on Campus Recordings as the
fonner English undergrad in
the accompanying sketch which
first appeared in Colleague
magazine in May of 1967.
The complete back files of
Colleague and the forwarding
addresses of every one wbo
might still have a copy have
been subpoenaed by the William Morris Agenoy.
Missing the point completely, according to infonned campus sources, was the BuffiJlo
Evening News which reported :
" 'Hayes Hall Blues' is perfanned by Vizzy Goth &amp; His
Vicious Vandals, a makeshift
rock IJrOUP composed of members of the (Hayes) 45 and
students.
"The name 'Vicious Vandals'
is a reference to a speech March
1 in which Dr. Regan blamed
the destruction on campus on
'a bunch of vicious vandals
roaming the campus.'"

-

Dr. Mu Cbeplove and Karr
Parker, Sr., ....,. haoored by
the u /B General Altllllni Asaoci&amp;tion at its 31st annual
Installation and Awards Banquet, Saturday, May 23, at
Goodyear Hall.
Dr ....__,__
'ved" the

...,........,.v

•
recm
P. Capen Alumni
Award; Mr. Parker, the Walter
P.
COolie Alumni Award, both
for services they have reodered
to the Um'--'ty
the
·-years.
The Capen Award, Damed in
honOr of the &gt;former University
cbaDcellor, bas been ~ted
annually fc.- 21 years to a University graduate. The Cooke
Award, honoring the late Waltet P. Cooke, a University ben- efactor is ~ted at irregu1ar m'tervals to non-alumnL

Samuel

cr.:er

Dr. Cbeplove, Erie County
Family Doctor of the Year in
1968, is a former president of
the New York State Academy
of General Practim and the
Erie County Medical Society
which- be belped organize. His
long-time efforts to enhance the
stature of general medical practice were culminated recenUy
when the American Medical
Association endoraed accreditation for the specialist in· family practice. The · 67-year-old
Cbeplove was among the first
physicians in the nation to pass
the two-day accreditation examination.
In addition to his private
practice, Cheplove is chairman
of the Department of General
Practice at Millard Fillmore
Hospital and chairman of the
Medical Advisory Committee,
Erie County Community College.
.
,- · ·
He is a clinical assistant in
medicine at the University.
Karr Parker, Sr., a graduate
of the UniVersity of Dlinois,
bas been in Buffalo since 1914.
He is still active as chairman
of the Buffalo Electric Company. In 1966 Parker, now 78,

~s.J..:~M!i...~

~ for his contribu-

tions to the ....,n-ring and
constn.K:$;ion of power plants
• "Changes in curriculum in and .steel milia. .
traditional areas of the UniverThe COolie Award recognized
sity."
Parker's contributioos to the
• "Joint educational missions Uni-.ity ~ 1945 aDd
at points wbere art and tech- 1962 when, as a member of
nology interaect."
the Council and ctWrman of
• Opportunity for faculj;yJlts Committee on Buildinp
from "widely different ~ and Grounds, be wu respoasitJrounds" to work together
ble fc.- the ....,.-rw crimple• common ventures."
tioo of DeW facilities then WI• Recognition that studeiits ued at $S5 million.
''no longer come with a ~le
J?aul J. I..ang, Jr~ was preeducational and cultural bl88, aented the Alumni Aaaociation's
but are shaped by tl!ievisioo, Scbolarahip Athlete Award at ·
mass media, magazines, cinema the bauquel A history major,
and a wbole~of influ- 1.antJ participated in. foothall,
ences which
uced a wrest1iDtJ and bMebell during
restive, critical you "
his intercollegiata career. He
will probably sip a professiooal foolhall ..- biaeba1l contract
followin\r.raduatlon this
month. T
award Is 1.-1
(continued from paje I, coL 3)
UP&lt;Xl aca emic and athletic
Dr. J . Warren Perry, ~ achievement 8ild ia wiled Oil
School of Health Related Pro- by the Alumni Committee Oil
fessions.
Athletics.
School of Health Related
Installed as poaddent ol the
I'!"ofessions, Friday, May 29, U/B Alumni Aaaociation at
Fillmore Room, Norton Unioo, the banquet was Robert E.
8:30 p.m., spealter: Dr. Frank Lipp, a Buffalo altiDnley. He
~· ft8!10Ciate dean of the suoceeds M. Robert Kana. another lawyer.
Seven vice preoidmts ol the
BLACK STUDENTS
General Alumni Board for
. Nepo ~ta haft ze~y.: J.97G.71 are: Mra. Bather Kratanc- hNviJ,y on c:ommtutity col- , . ~ G. Beary 0....
Jeceo._ac:conlinc to a otudy by the Morley ~ .lobn J.
.Amencan
"-&gt;ciatioa
ol J ·
Starr J r., J erome
A. "
--"Collepo. The
&lt;~tioa
.,..........,.,
been urc,ed by mlnority-poap Jobn G. Romhotulb. G. William
11r beJi&gt; ead "raciom · Roee. Dr. Harold. J. levy Ia
edw:atioa.•
m u-nw and Dr. EcbDond
Gicewicz is President-elect.

3,600 Grads-

-n

i:!

'

�11., 2&amp;, JJ70

Undergrad Studies Seeks
lblicies-for Transfers
By MANTE ABBOTI'
.,..,..._ ot

u..,.,.,._

~

A -~ for Transier Admialiaas Policiei for the State
Unhwaity at Bullalo baa '-n

=-

~~"tt...~ ~rir.

s;,:

~ ~~:r..,
ulty Senate Admlssioos Committee (and other interested
parties) for .action early in the
fall.
Authors of the draft were
Robert S. Newman, assistant
prof-.r of English; JIUMS S.
Schindler, c:hainnan of the Department of Financial Account..

Boddy Named
AAUP :Prexy
Prof-.r Ray Boddy of Economics has " - ' named president of the State Univemty at

Buffalo Chapter of the American Association of University
Prof-.rs, for a two-year term.
Other ollicers 011 the two-year
slate unanimously elected May
18 are: vice president, Mrs.
Shonnie Finnepn, Uni~
archivist; _,..,tary, ProfeSsor •
la~Jre~~Ce Michal, English; and
treasurer, Prof-.r John Sulll-.
van, Claasics.
A1ao at iiB final membership
meeting the: AAUP:
1) Unanimously adopted the
report of Presiderit Marvin J.
Feldman on the year's activities, with particUlar emphasis
on the eftorts of the Executive
Committee to repair the damage to academic freedom and
the breakdown of University
governance since February 25.
2) Unanlmously adopted the
followin-g resolution : "Resolved, that the membership of
the SUNY at BulJalo AAUP
urges the Executive Committee
to continue its eftorts to remove
from jeopardy the 46 of our
colleagues now under judicial
consideration, and to maintain
an equal vigilance under any
comparable circumstances in
which it may be required."

Irnrrum.ology Meet
The Center for Inununology
will hold its Second International Convocation on Inununology June 22-25 at the Stat..
Jer Hilton. These biennial
convOcations bring together scientists from around the world
to discuas current status and
future tzends in various areas
of immunologic reo8arch.
. The program committee is
chaired by Dr. Rotiert T . McCluskey and !c'\clndes Dr. Stanley· Cohen, Dr. Gustavo Cudkowicz and Dr. JIUMS Mohn,
all of the School of Medicine.
They have ""'-" as the subject of this year's program,
"Cellular Intarsctions in the

~"t.~~~

new clieooveries ""' rapidly be-

•

made.

""0: Center .... established

in 1967 under the direction of
Dr. Ernest Witebeky, distinorGIII.or of bacteriol"b6muDology' to foster
and - . c h in im. This convocation
will be dedicated to Dr. Witebalry, who died 011 December 7,
1989.

'IIAIIUEUI ON AMHERST
-~~~ J.•
c:endidate tor
the Detnocnt IPibernatorial noml·
nation, q - the concspt of
U/B'o billlon-&lt;lollar Amhent cam·
puo, at it _ . cdnfenlftCS on Cllln·
puo ....t~y.
csntr.lt..d complex'' mlaht not be the
a - r to the of Uniwrslly
~· Samuels said.

sem-.

"A.,_-·

ing, and Robert H. Gumtow,
instructor in pharmaceutics .
The committee was c:baired by
Dr. M. Frances Kelly, IIIIBistint
dean of IIIIderp-aduate

!:..tt.

Transfer Studenla""' coming
to the University in increasing

!':l:!n~ alread~~

GREPORTS. Librarians ~n:t No ~ore
GFROM. _ .Faculty Or Crtsl,S Duties
CDEAD;DRS u~
.
.--.luticos~
owrr RESOLVED:
--".

IJalance Wanted
EDITOR:
I attended the u~ Alumni
Association Women s I5ay program, and I was very mum disturbed by Prof-.. Marvin
Zimmerman's speech. He was
giving the point of view of the
extreme right wing ·among the
faculty, without there being
anyone to answer him. His
point of view is so extreme and
so unre!&gt;reaentetive of University opinion that I think he
should be aaked to speak only
as part of a panel an which
other points of .view ar8 represented. You may answer tha~
logicaJly this should apply to
the extreme radicsls too, and
as a matter of fact I agree.
The basic ·theme of Prof-.r
Zimmerman's presentation was
that the University is unable
to solve its own problems, and
it needs intervention from out..
sid&amp;-police and political pressur&amp;-to cope with the "hardcore revolutionaries." He con·
tended that the internal processes of University aell-gover- ·
nance have failed, and that the
only hope for the University is
a strong-man presidenl He
urged the audience to write to
the Governor and to their elected representatives urging them
to follow a hard line toward the
University to prevent concessions being made to the radicsls. He is perfectly entitled to
his opinion, but I do iiot believe that he should appear
without there being anyone
present to give another point
of view.
-A FACULTY WIFE

student body~ndergraduste
Studies notes. In the fall of
1969, for instanoe, 931 tnmsfer
studenla (roughly one-thin! of
all new studenla) were admitted, out of 3400 applic&amp;nla. According to the director of
admissions and records, theee
applications will probably continue to incresae at a rate of
15 to 20 per cenl
The 1968 Master Plan of the
State University of New York
states: "Every quslliled graduate of a two~year program
should be assured of the opportunity to continue his education within tbe University."
The authors of the proposal
suggest that this policy
&amp;mQUDts to an informal understanding that students from
:1\Jro.year colleges who wish to
er 1o a particular state
college or university center
should receive some preference
over thoee students who took
their first two years' work at a
four-year institution.
Admitting that neither the
University at BulJalo, nor any
other college or university center in the State system can accept all tnmsfers who apply,
the co~ttee recognized the
need for developing guidelines
and policies more comprehensive m · scope than thoee currently in use.
Pointing out that existing
policies are neither fully devel,oped nor formally approved by
the Faculty Senate,' they recommended continuation of their
use with the following clarilicstioh and amplification: 1 ) some
form of departmental, school,
or faculty approval for transfer
applicants with three semesters
prior work or more; 2 ) solicitation ·of additional evidence beyond that of transcripts or test..
scores to evaluate academic potential; 3) priorities iri tnmsfer
admission, with highest priority
going to SUNY junior college
students who will have completed requirements for the
A.A. or A.S. degree; 4) specific
guidelines for evaluating transfer credit; 5) clarification of
the roles played by the Faculty
Senate Admissions Committee
and the Committee on Admissions Resouroes; and 6 ) specific responsibilities for tnmsfer
admission ftlrthe Faculty Senate, the Office of Admissions
and Records, and the Division
of Undergraduate Studies.
In connection with this last,
the proposal recommended that
the present ad hoc Faculty
Transfer Committee become a
permanent standiria committee
of the Division of Ondergraduate Studies, charged with the
responsibility for reporting to
the Senate on current lnmsfer
policies and problems of transfer students. The Committee
would also establish on a yearto-year basis, with the approval
of the Senate, broad peroent..
of tnmsfer students to be
~tied to each faculty within .

a pven Yf}C·

Additional activities I of the
Committee .......JJI inc!~ promoting articulation be~ the
faculties of this Uni-.i~
other universities or co
and conducting statistialllltudies of a follow-UP nature 011 the
perforinance of transfer Studenla enrolled at this Univer-

si~ inleres1eci in the full
draft ~ should contact
Dr. Kelly at 278 Hayes, 8313517.
.

'..[J

The cempus Association of
ity Librarians baa

paased
refuiing to further assume or

continue

"~ty

obligaticos"

and_2) ~ f~ the complete
of l.ibrsries and. the "'!cuamg of
durmg sen-

cl"'!""

Jl8!8!ll""''

~~

0118

to the recently~~
University salary plan for Wl·
classified professional emplOyees, is as follows:
"WHEREAS: the lihrsrians
have '-n l'Jaced in the professional 88lary acale counter
to the decision of the State
University Board of Trustees
:::ited them acedemic

:O:u':.

poasibly become involved in a
"l
''BE
"When
dlslmbancas
require ~ on or
,_.. the Uni..aity, of police.
Natiooal Guard, or any anned
security force that:
"1) The l.ibrsries be cbed
and. no iongoJr ~ as first aid
staf:ionS. ~ or o681lTt~~ post. to report C&lt;JIIIIH"

court

actwtty.

•

"2) The librarians be ezcused
from their duties if tbere is
any' possible clanaer to themaelves or the libnry.~

PreS1J•dentia}
S Asked
.

"WHEREAS:· that profes- N
' ame
.
sional salary is discriminatory,
obliterating all differences between ranks, responsibility, and
The Temporary
experience on this campus, and Council (Cohen Council) isin comparison to our sister in- sued .the following statement
stitutions.
concerning the aelection of a
"BE IT RESOLVED : . that president for the University
the Ubrsrians refuse to further after their Tuesday (May 25)
assume or continue any of their meeting: "After making infaculty obligations. Specifically, quiries of a number of bodies
all librarians should refuse to concerned with the presidential
participate in or give courses selection process and in view
in any department or school in of the fact that no final aelecthis University or any unit of tion has " - ' made, the Counthe State University of New ciJ would like to rea1firm that
York.."
names of outside as well as inThe resolution on disorders tarnal candidates are still being
outlines the problems which li- received and ""' welcome.
brarians faced during the most
"The appointment date of
recent disturbances:
September, 1970 is not to be
"'Ibe librarians of the Uni- taken as a limiting factor.
"We have also received asversity Libraries have been. assigned extra duty in the librar- surances that before any final
ies during the campus riots determination is made, any
which have subjected them to prime candida""' will be meet..
fire bombings, tear gas, and ing with selected faculty and
intimidation by the Buffalo student groups."
Police, and
At present the Council is
"WHEREAS: they have " - ' working on a report to the
placed in positions of grave re- State University Board of
sponsibility for the safety of Trustees regarding the colthe library's clientele, its cleri- legiate system (aee separate
cal staff, and student assistants story) and on recommendsin situations of escslating phys- tions concerning campus seical violence including the use
•ty
EDITOR:
of firearms, and
cun ·
In the belief that a scholar"WHEREAS: similar funcshiP would be a particularly tions and responsibilities have
xpe
'
appropriate memorial ' to the not - . . assigned to other aegfour students killed at Kent mente of the University comState University on May 4, munity, i.e., the faculty or the
The University has expelled
we proposed earlier this month professional stalf, and
two students and suspended
that members of the SUNYAB
"WHEREAS: 1he medical four in line with recommends- _
community establish a fund in and security facilities of the tions from the Temporary HBI\f·
the name of those students, the University have denied their ing Commission on Campus
money to be used to enable one as8islance to the librarian on DisruptiORS (Ketter Commisor more persons to attend our duty, and
sion).
University. The subsequent stu"WHEREAS: it seems unTwo others were placed on
dent deaths at Jackson State reasonable for the University to probation, one was given a
College now tragically require require extraordinary efforts on warning which will be placed
that the roster of thoee mem&lt;&gt;- ~ part ~f. the librarians while on his permanent record and
rialized be expanded. The name 1t IS unwilling or unable to su~other for whom expulsion
of the fund has therefore " - ' ' port and supplement that efrecommended has been
changed.
fort, and
granted a reopened hearing.
" WHERE;AS: the lib~
NIUMS of all 10 students
Please send your contribution
to Spring 1970 Student . Me- are not trained to cope Wlth were withheld.
morial Fund, and mail to 155
:., in:
The actions were~
Cleveland Ave., Buffalo, New ~~~~
jured, and
!sst Thuraday by Acting Pre&amp;York 14222.
''WHEREAS.: the University iden.t Peter F. Regan. • '
.

Executive

Memorial Fund

2 E lled
4 Suspended

Dr. Bruno A. ArciJdl

Eight of. tl:_le csaes mv_olwd
Advocate cannot or will not
state the JegaJ situation re- ~ ans1nc from ~­
fiarding liability involving a t!ons . of cempus RCYI'C. actiytlul&amp;t Bianchi
suit brought against a Univer- ti~ list October, the UJUvelll!ty
Or. Edward J. Buehler
sity employee acting outside said. One of ~ other l"'! m:
Uny cancte.
Dr. Lewrenca W. Chl~m
of his professional capacity, volved ~ of '!"Pl081ves,
Thorn11s E. Connolly
i.e. a librarian applying first the other, ~-throwing.
Mra. Ubi...Un D'Ambrosio
aid' or exercising his judgment
The -~ ~ts
Dr. l.. rvln O'L.uco
John Deredfta
concerning a medical situation are barred "fioon . re~ .to
Or. JuefP" H~
-this is or is not a hospital campus, the Umvermty said.
Dr. W.rcua Klein
Byron J. Koetkoek
caae--&lt;md
E.n\llnuele LiCII.tro
"WHEREAS: the University
CITY SUED
fUc:hllrd R. Meftn
Advocate has said the Univer- Robert L Chou af Englewood Ave·
Albert L MlchMJs
sity will provide an attorney nue, a U/B art student from Tal·
Dr. FrandiCO Pabon
for a University emploY.ee when wan, has filed a s:;Q,OOO suit
he is being sued in an outside qoinst the City of Bullalo, thalli·
Dr. ~ RolcYn ~
Dr. a.otp 0. ScharaMr
court for actions or behavior
MN. Fred M. Sne.ll
within the scope of his respon- in!l thlt Police attacked him and
l&gt;r. Robert H. St.m
aibilities. It should be noted broke his ann during a disturbthat the individual, not the Uni- ~ a nee May 5. Chou, who said .he
Thoma Walker
versity, is being sued. and,
=lea=.,~~~~
"WHEREAS
· the l.ibtarians
I AM EMOTIONALLY UPSEt
• should
not be ~
to be- avoid a disturbance on M a 1n
,
__
,
_
_.
•.•
the
._..,_
Strwt, chal'llH thlt loss of the
University ltielth Sarvlos cants~
MichajJ Hall ....__,
came ~-.... m
•
"'!'"' usa of his ann "at lust IBmpor·
Ext. 3316 (24-bour ssrvtos)
• their oompession_ and lf· arily" has hampered him In his
Dr. Seymour Azelrod

Mrs. wa,.,.n Bennis

Mrs. Jaaon Bera•r

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

, ..........

- . . Cou-inl

c.m.r,

Harriman Ulnry, Ext. 3717

;::;:::,ts~~t:ril:!u~ .
to the injuries inwlved and

sculptun1 - " ' In Uniwrslly art

·,...---·- - - - - - - -

�4

__

~

lt6qU,lll70

·_ Radical.center Needed-1b Defend Liberal Democracy·
..
..m,
die

8)' PAUL JruRTZ

=.:

=

Wbat -

..... ml&amp;ht hap-

lY. lbe'rflbt

elzuelure, 111111 he is willing to

c:aaliptee

Ideal. 111111 this lncludell the

lllionl for lbe - t elate ol funetioa - a YIIIICWifll elite .-1 for aslf-diacipline 111111 for
daira. Llbenl ~ to brina this about.

Tbe current linluiotic poiam.
inp ol lbll' weUii must he r.

~~ol~= ~lost'":.old-~~

(2) 1be liberal believes that
k!Oitl
democratic rights sbouJd DDt be Ia committed to standards ol ez. erala are ~ by
ceiience in art, morality, eduea· of militant _,.,.., wbic:h , .
olutionary strategy. Remem- lion and life. Tbe militant r. ducea tbem to "~tive,.. bering the fate of liberty in to- jecta tbe besie value struetpre ·~."or "faseist pif."
taliterian "socialistic" societies, of "bouraeois eociety" and aup- Tbey are eMily WOIDlded by
he will allow 110 abandonment porta a hedonistic counter~- psyebologieal ~ for they
of civil liberties, from either the ture that prizes an anarebistic · have always CCID8idoired themleft 0&lt; the righl Tbe militant ideal (in drugs. ~ dress, selves to be authentic PlOIPeBbelieves that civil liberties are ,m&amp;nDem and morality) on the sives. To be called the op.
dispell88ble tenets to be sacri- one band, and the virtu. of the JO':!te is difficult to aasimilate.
ficed where necessary in the
not be
struggle for revolutionary justioo. He insists that they are mal standards that he thinks times liberalism must adopt a
radical PfOII'8ID. but 801Jlenot genuine in bourgeois so- are imposed from witholil
cieties, but only masks for ren- are only some of the times it ,must be prepared to
pression.
differences between present-day defend and OODIIel'\'e values that
liberals and militants. We must others are all too reedy to
DDt, however, overlook the fact
to the winds of lashthat there are aome real simi- ion. ·
Iarities; both groups indict the
We bave been inundated by
shortcomings of our mciety and an irrational cult which allegTile Rapotter . _ . on this to .,....,... • forum for tho U:· wisb to build a better world. edly worships "innovation" and
dw1p of on • vorloly Yet there are enough eontmsts which ooosiders ~change"'-any
of tho ...._ fodna tho ,-~c: ., that the wteritical identifi- kind of cbang&amp;-to be good in
community. We welc:ome cation of liberalism with mill- itself. Many liberals believe
pooltlona ...,..... ond .. tant radicalism is mi.st8Ium. that, sinoo the radicals stand
Many liberals still fail to see for ehan&amp;e, they must be on the
ponnll8.
that this is the ease.
side of virtue and progrESS. Liberals wbo stand fO&lt; due proeTbe liberal believes that unin.
-~
of
1.11ess, civil liberties, rational diaversity academic freedom must
be defeDded. Mainteining the • Tbe l'reeent situation urgent- Iogue and standards of eueJ.
ly
reqwres
a
redefinition
of
Jib.
lenee need not make apologies.
political and moral neutrality
Tbe point is that not all
of the university is vital, if uni- eraiism and an historic shift in
ita
focus.
Tbere
have
been
other
change
is for tbe better. Inversities are to be preserved 88
bastions of free mquiry and periods in the past when this deed, the liberal must bas
oocurred.
If,
in
the
ninetimes
be
prepared to resist vig.
critical dissent. Tbe militant
century, liberalism •
orously p._ts for change.
ww- to restzueture the uni- teenth
feoded.
laissez
faire
ecanomie
For
ei:ample,
in Faacist Italy
versity and to use it 88 a base
for the revolutionary overthrow liberty, in the twentieth Cllllllury or Nazi -Gem!any in the -twenit
moved
into
a
defense
of
the
ties
and
tbirtie8
one beerd a
of society. Henoo, academic
freedom and neutrality, for
hlm, must be ~oo in
economy to belp the disadVan- tion, the necessity fO&lt; violenee,
th&lt;:n:v~=.iZue"!:'~i the teged and the unemployoo. If, intoleranoo and hatzed. ParliaBHI of Rights and legal and~·u­ in the nineteen-fifties, liberal- mentary demoeraey and libenlism needed to defend 'freedom ism were eonsidered· to be dedicial protections alfordoo
lhe Constitution are """"" · . against Mc:Cartbyism of the c:ayed and hypocritical, and a
He reoognizes the need for ,.,_ right, today it must defend free. New Order was 'p romised. Toform of the oourt system, es- dom against Mc:Cartbyism of day there is a similar 8888nlt
pecially for the blacks and the the lefl n is clear that liberal- upon democracy- and reeson
poor-yet he insists that the ism cannot be identified with and a demand for change, and
legal system of justice ub.der a single policy or platform,· and . · many liberals are confwied -tielaw be respected. n.e ·inilitant that its prograni must be mod· cause this time the demand for
change oomes clothed in libbas little use for the oourts or ified in f1V8fY epoch.
Liberalism is co m 111 i t t e d era!, humanistic and Man:ist
the system of jurisprudenoo,
and be is willing to show total ~~": ~
ne;:y
f!"~~t we ought DDt_.to
contempt for its .opo!111tion,
since be thinks it is a legalized aoeial prOblems; it is an ez. A Coli For A Radlc:al Centar
perimental
approach,
re&amp;pQII·
It is time, then, that liberals
justification for plunder.
( 3 ) Tbe liberal believes in sive to the needs of new scxiial atand up and be counted, that
situations,
111111
based
upon
an
tbey
inaist upon the preservaequality of opportunity and
oonsideration for all men in- inquhy into conditions, alter- tion of the principles of ethical
cluding blacks. Therefore, ra- · natives and eonaequenoee.
(continued on 6, col. 2)
cial equality and integration 88
aoeial ideals still prevail. Tbe
militant, impatient with progress of the blacks, baa g~ven
up on integration. He demands
black power and is willing to
opt for separation.
(4) Tbe liberal is oommitted
By MARVIN RESNIKOFF
to r a t i o n a I discussion and
thought 88· the basis of individ·
lQJOil a time there was
usi aoeial involvement and ac- a Once
his
being .. light it
funding agency ealled the could float bMebbaUs 111111 rubtion. Tbe militant foeu.s on
Provisional
Revolutionary Gov- ber
passion, and be deplores the
Beside&amp;,
Prostitute
use of thought 88 a substitute . emment, PRG, whose mission ... a developing institution, Oil
for commibnent or action. Tbe was the trashing of banks and ita way to lleademlc Gllellence.
liberal is willing to find a rom- aasorted mayhem. Tbe funding Tbe PRG bad DMty aociaiistie
promise between contending director, Defense Minister Left- OW!l'loDM, but - lbe good pro.
points of view 111111 to work out wing, bad an intereet in hiJh feseor ezplained, '"They're only
an elleetive mu:- paying me to do my own
the beat program in the light ezplosivesture, light 111111 eesily portable,
of a realistic aPPraisal of alter- but
111111 A. Moralle's col·
be
didn't
know his tri-nitr6 thin&amp;"
......... nodded Ia
Datives. He is patient and talks
about an evolutionary process Jlyaorine from his jello.
To make a loni atary abort,
He
managed
to
serape
some
in buman history. Tbe miliProfeseor A. Moralle ieosived
tant is unwilling to. compromise bread lotletber from lbe People
bis grant, pub~...Ipawith what he canaiden to be an lind oeilt out l!1lide1u-. A
pers vi DOle,
"
pr&amp;IDljust society which be abbors. -.bed Pror-or A.
vi
ol Prostitute
111111 ""- be printa, ol courae, to
He demands immediate change ~-sed
aummer aalary, a ll&amp;d· AMMOPAP1 111111 rePrlniB to
be baa little patience or histor: uate student
lbe PRG WilD were duly aoor
two,
and
ez.
~~~~..:::, ~:::........-: =.-::u~-= ieai
manory. Tbe liberal at- P8lldUlle 8UJIP!ies to
l&lt;nowledted in a fooblote. After
•
. I U , - . . _ · - - io1J.
templa to be tolerant of other
his "academic "--am,~ the appropriate ~ in
polnta vi view. Tbe militant
Ia this Cll8e io 8DIIIelhing to do lf&gt;e pro,:J~ction ~ the
lerwa.tly believee in lbe super- with
rapid ct.nieai NIICiions PRG .,.. indeed able to manuiority ol bill IDIInl principles
facture that bllh explo8ive 111111
r. -.....rr
111111 that be can be intolerant ol 111111 lbe quick ....... of ...... . . it in a nilbt raid Oil the
.
he eiprly ..I;:
u- 8DCial , _ 111111 ideaa milled.......
·-~~~..._his ~
' Monetary Through and lliiMidonld to he ~
Aa a eblld, Prote.w Moralle Throuch boinlt. Howe.., the
or
"'mmaral•
~-t.~
bad ~ llooved Oil eta_. 8lllloaM .. ~ it
(6) Tbe liberal believee that
DDt only trabed tbe bank, but
lbe Jaw lhoald DOt duly 1'&amp;- 0118 daDicala 111111 bill 8ludiDuo lbe adiacmt ~of_ Prosti...... ~:7:ni..o
lllrict IDIInl "--am. Hmce be • devotiaa to IIIia bobby led hlm tute U. • well, illcludlnl our
1-;- ,._~-.;:.~:r--,_,, a . , t worb lor lbe 1a-tion ol in- to elll"-ce Ia bill 8eld. - reo- JOOd ~.....
. diviauaia from arcbolie ...... He cu!W by lbe Amaicim lim
~ Pap. 111111 Peadl. AMMOMoral: he wbo playa with
io awmnitled, ....__, to lbe PAP.
WliliAiiiMi ~~a.-M.-.,
Of ooune, nfmieroua pro.
dlpdty. ol the indMdusi • an ~ arrived oa .Leftwin1'• fire .... bumed, or be wbo does

it io held, io ._,aible for lbe
to.r::;:; impeadiDc dialolulion ol lbe
.
111111 lbe illitial ...... ol npre&amp;- American way ol life.
m-tive ol lbe dciubJ&amp;.
lliaa. Tbe - - ol lbe p.t 'flanked attadt lQJOil the liberal
_ . IIICIIllbe ... fulfilliDc
Cllllller Ia lbe fact that lbe of.
IINdicliaDa lbet a rilbt .
&amp;. of THE HUMANIST
~would be lbe .-.~"':'::5 mapzine
recently were sublbe pallcy ol dloruption 111111
........ adapted by 1101118 Oil jected to bomb threats by militant
revolutionaries,
both in
·lbe New Left. 'lbln is 110 . ~about aU .ollbe ... - Bulfalo 111111 San Francisco.
Fortunately,
the
files
were ,.,_
of lbe - t aUis. An Asian
... lbet -.liDue8 to drain lbe moved in time. Yet the fact
that
this
mapzine
should
beD&amp;liaaal IUb8laDoe, to sap' ita
IDIInl fiber, 111111 to distort D&amp;• come a taraet of the revolutionliaaal priaritieo ill a baaici ... ary left is paradoxical, since
......tine But .. is lbe THE HUMANIST had also
relucluce ol lll&amp;lly wall-in-- suffered devastating criticism of
tioned / ln..Ja to ~ out tate from the ememe right by
qjoinat ........ IIIICf ........ lbe Rafferty fora!B in California.
-Oil um-.lty .
111111 eloewbeo- ~
~dane in l b e - ol ~­
Tbe outright rejection of Jib.
aJOOd'l'lle- Ca~.- · oltlle- eraiism by left militants is disTbe .-.118 ... lbet lbe dem- beartaning to many liberals; for
oentlc CB&gt;ter baa lost ita c:red- liberals have .tended to identify
lbilib' - a viable nalraining romantically with radical
manl bee. Wbelberr or DDt ..- . Although liberals ree..... ill 81111 time to retrieYe otmb.. that there are serious
lbe 'llitualion 111111 ftllll&gt;an llllllity ~ with lbe radieals
ill· becaallq ~ JJr06.. ~"tactics," still many
....tic. Tlie cxmtinaed adobo- beliiwe that these may be rec. ........ 111111 impoteDce. ol lbe oaciled bec:au. they share
ll.al Can only '-1 lbe fires commoo humanistic v a 1ues.
ol ............
UnfortUDately, d ial.o gue beJ:)urjq a JOOd ~ ol the mllltanla 111111 liberals is
-.tiedi. caitury a
beocJmiq ~ly difficult,
bad devel9ped in for the &lt;lift_,.,. that have
~---lbem-1 ...,.....t DDt only pertain to
...... ol aplziion tiom left.&lt;&gt;f. taeties, but ideal ends and
well. Tbe wantoo
- - to npt«..-ter, 111111 it valu.
laduded an hilplici t Ullder- bombinp of banks,
.eudini. by ln..Ja 111111 ...... tioao, court bouse&amp;. 111111~
llirvatiWs to abide by tb8 rules· in Sante Baibiu8; Bulfalo; N!!W
ollbepme.
York and eisewbere vigorously
Tbe two ~ palltlcal part. drsmatize a besie antegonism
not only about meens but about
-olm'
- .........t
broad colilitioao,
wbic:h
lbe -m,tul. ends.
ebo6ca to lbe ·voters, 111111 were
What are 1101118 of these dif.
cleriodvely c:alled "tweedledee" ference8?
(1) Tbe liberal believes that
111111 "tweeddedum" by / litieraJa. Yet what - DOW face the method of ratiooal persuasIa Ia far mare ominous: ion is the most reliable way of
lor it portend8 a poBble break- achieving aoeial change. Tbe
...... ol lbe 8yBiem of demo- radical militant bas given up
...tic valu. that baa tabu on the democratic proceos and
. . . . . to adlieve. Few abould be is cxmvinced that fundabe t..ppy at tbelr lbzalened IDental aoeial change may be
dem!ICiion for lbe otnoncth . adUeved only by meens of vio111111 vitality ol American ... lent dioruption-eome are now
cilety io due in ~ to the will....,_ to compromise differdemns what be c:alls "institutiooal violeoce," wbic:h be beIievea justifies his own resort
to violence. Tbe libenl is UD•
lbe l8dic:al left canaiden the
liiBaJ, DOt lbe ~tive, to
be 118 mala --,.y. .Jeny Ru- iied violence" is equivocal.... hero ollbe New l.e(t, in a fN8fY modem stete baa an
- t opeech at UIB called army 111111 polioo force-and
lbe cbW.appllllellla oflbe mlll- this fact c:anDDt be used to
t.lt radicala to be u- lib- ratiooalize destructive violence.
. . "wbo compromise with
Tbe libenl ~ that COD·
tbe rilbt ..m,... Tbe libenl atant reform is """""tisl for a
bee """'-' ol lll&amp;lly dynamic society, but this be
llllllilll out lbe vat... believes must come by wodclng
ol bunwdty by camplieity in from within the 8yBiem and by
lbe VieiDuD war, permittinc
- ' - to cxmtinue, failiq to
......... ~. defendinl aisl8 that fundamental revolution is lbe only IDMDII a...rtable
to blm to move the Establishtile 'I1!frd World, etc. Similar- ment and destroy the aoeial

undermined at the alter of rev-

=:.W: ~~!:; :rfJ:

--

~tooC!f~ :::

=

abandon

GVIEWPOINTS

.-....u

a

:' =
-.n:.:..u:..'C.= =:.
..

·

=talstet:=.ti~ ~

::.:ueo::::~ ':1 =

so'iv':

!ii..,em,!!~fc,l":'~:

- --~

:.~~

A Fable of Free Academe:
The Trasher Gets Trashed
........,....._,_
:t-~.J"'~=
u.

en-:

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

=...~~~

·-----"""- ...... - ·.. GREPORTER,

--·-L.--.
. . . -.
.

.,._,l

u.

M:

... ...=r;=...n.

CWIW»UJ:::.,ar=

.

lnliilelalnlbed.

�5
BDITOR'B NOTE: Tile lGk Clifford
c. .,_, c1lanceUor and praUimt
of lite Unillenity from 1964-M, ....,
for _ , yeara adioe in tile lhpart_, of De(.,. ar "" adoiM&gt;r in ..:iaJI4 ~- He .erved cu
...,;.tmlt wcnlllry of fk(mN for reMVCA' Gild tkue/opmelll from 1955-57
~ tile
of tile inilitJtWn of tile
. IIGliDK• lptJCe aatelljU profram. In
ti!U arlide, written alwrtly before loU
tktiJ4 for tile ~ Trends , . , .
zine 6f Cornell Aeronaalical .Laboratory Gild publiahed thio month,
FU1'111Ja teU. of tile motivation behind,
Gild of ..,,... of tile od...UU.trotive ind«Won Gild in-fiflaint_thot· p/Qgued,
tile early U.S. aptJCe effort.
By CUFFORD C. FURNAS
In the first part of the year 1955
the rather elaborate plans of the International Geophysical Year (July 1,
1957 to December 31, 1958) were
widely public:iJlecl. There were to be
many IIIMIIUft!III8Dts throushout the
world on geological, oceanographic,
and atmospheric phenomena. 'The hope
was ezp.-1 that it might be Jl08sible to launch at least !&gt;De man-made
satellite during this period for ~ti­

80ill8

d

era

_Space History
Might Have Been
Different

fic~

Uodar the able leadenhip of Dr.
lloyd Berimer, the general program
OI"JIIIIIized and both the
United States and RIBiia, with many
other countries, laid out major programs in the. various fields. It was a ,
fine emmple of 1n1e international cooperaticm b pMCeful purpooeo.
At that time I was inYOived ~th
committee activities similar to ~
of the former ~ and Developiuent Board in' bo4h -...autic:s -and
guided· missiles and, hi!rice, naturally
bad a stroDg peraonal interest in the
prcliiC..t buHiot.finDJy«beduued sat,.
ellite program.
......... flwn;.U..CIA
In the spring of 1955, the Central
Intelligeooe Agency presented informaticm to the National Security Council that the ~ were well along
in the satellite -~\ and that
they were very aerious about lluncbil!g :a satellite durinrtbe International
Geopb,ysical Year, with owrtones to
the effect that they hoped to beat the
Americans to the punch. 'The CIA
appai'ently1boughtibat.tbis was a serious matter, especially in terms of intematicmal prestiae, and strongly
"" • """ oWl that the United Ststes
initiate and expedite a serious satellite program.
:
During May 1955 I was requested
by the lite Mr. Donald Quarles, than
8111istaot secretary of the Department
of Defense b ..-reb and development, to be a IDI!IIIber of an Ad Hoc
Advisory Group 011 Special Capabilities, the title being a polite masking
of the 1n1e subject, that is--a satellite.
In the beginning the project was eo
hicblY dalllifiad that e\'ell the ~
tence of Jbe Ad Hoc Group was kept

was well

llllder~ Tbe group was duly
establiabed and w.tt to work vigorously. 'J'be llll!llllbers """"'
Dr. Homer J . Stewart, chairman,
Jet Propu1aion Laboratory at California Institute of Teclmology; the author; Dr. R. R. McMath, Uniwrsity
of Michigan; ·Dr. c. laurilaml, California Institute of Technology; Dr.
Joim B. ~. Comell' Um-sity;
Dr. Ricbanl W. Porter, Geoeral Electric CclmpaD,y; Dr. G . H. Clement,
Rand CorponuiOD; Dr. Jaaepb Kaplan, Um-sity of Califomia; Dean
A. F. 8pilbaua (altemate to Dr. Kaplan), Um-.tty of ~
During May, J - and July 1966
the Group met 88Yera1 timel at fiiiV· ~
the Jet Propulaion
0

-' .... ...m-

t.baoatory, tba Pmtqm and Bed-

.....,._..

atoae.A._t

.

~ '

0

Deopite the fact that this sa!'&amp;llite
- t o be far .,_.tul ~ I t obrioaa that tbe work wauld ~~aw· to
be curied out wiflliD the framoiwark
of the ~ of rw.-. Sec&gt;
. . . , of Delima CbedM: Wl18an ClllmidonbiT- tba enthuslaatlc
abODt tbe project but, - - be bad
' - ~ by Prelldeat ~

-------------- ~

GFEATURES
"""""' to explore the Jl088ibilities, he
p~~e his tentative blessings to the program. One of tbe difficulties, of course,
was that of financing. In its original
remmmendat.ions the CIA bad indicated that appropriate funds would be
·made available from some indefinite
aource, but that prospect quickly
faded. It became obvious that .the
funds would have. to be found in the
cummt Department of Defense budaet · Wilson indicated that be could
make $20 million available, but that
would be the upper limit
'The assignment of the Ad Hoc
Group was advise Secretary Quarle&amp;

the earmarked $20 million would be
totally insufficient ($100 million was
considered to be a minimum), but
recommended that the project pi:'Oreed
with the realization that further funding would be required.
Although there was unanimity on
the above two recommendations, the
group was split in its recommendationa as to whether the Army or the
Navy project sl!ould be i!elected. 'The
majority, even though a new rocket
of increased thrust would ba11e to be
developed, recommended the Navy
program which would be known as
Project Vanguard. A minority, includ011 :
ing this author, stroDgly recommended
L 'The technical feasibility of
the Army project for technical reasons
· 18ui.cbing. a small satellite during
based on tbe fact that the Redstone
IGY.
was available and sufficient for lluncb2. Recommending a program that
ing a small satellite. 'The report was
would invol~~e a minimum of interfersubmitted to Quarles in draft form
ence with ongoing military programs.
during the last week of July 1955.
Tbere was a newspaper release on
3. Define administrative responsibillties of the program.
Saturday, July 30, 1955, which was
&lt;&amp;. Indicate whether or not the availheadlined in the New York Timeo as
able $20 million would be sufficient.
follows: U.S. TO LAUNCH EARTH
6. Make tentative recommendations
SATELLITE 200-300 MILES INTO
on ongoing programs beyond the first
OUTER SPACE: WORLD WILL
satellite.
GET SCIENTIFIC DATA.
Tbe Advisory Group bad extensi~~e
'The newspaper re~ did not inbriefinp from each of the three aerdicate which program would be imvioes-Army, Navy and Air Forceplemented as the fmal decision was
and many discussions with their top
not made at that point
technical people.
During the last two weeb of July,
'The Air Force; which bad the Atlas
the minority concern was discusaed
booeter under development, was the
with ~ Quarl.,.. During this
service which could provide the llrgperiod
of Quarles' assistants reeet booster rocket However, the Air
ported by tier that Quarles".. . d&amp;Foroe was very much involved and
finitely believed the cbanoes of suebehind ocbedule on its deYeiopment
cess in --~fie required time scale are
and decided that it should not combetter with the Redstooe booeter."
mit itself to take major responsibiliQuarles p11e all indicaticm that, aince
ties in the program.
the final decision was up to him, be
would cboose the Army project.
- 'The Army,
Olfwed
W•'th •L'under the leadership of
....,. in{·---·
"""'" inbmaticm in
Dr. warm- von Braun, . was very
the beclqround, the minority memanziowl to reoeille the assipunent with
ben of the group wblcb lltrOilg1y
the ~,&gt;roject based on its IIUCClOII8fu1
,.,.,.,..,mended the Army program were
Redstooe rocket
very much surprised and cblgrined
Tbe Navy equally interested
· wt.l the 811Il01111CS1l*_L was made
and pl'OPf-.l a program based 011 the
about Autuet 16, 1966:""&amp;at Quarlell
bad designated the Navy Vanguard as
deYelopment of a new booeter built
upon the doBign of its eDiting ~ ·
the satellite project.
rocket. 'The Vikinc. a c1eve1opment
That the same day that Quarlell
of the Naval a-icb Laboratory,
left his Jl08iticm sa usistant -=retary
bad hem hichi.Y IUIXlellSful in inatruof ..-reb and ' ~t to be
lllllllted 8Dillldinga of the IIPP« atmo&amp;swom in sa secretary of the Air Force
pbere. ~. the thrust of the Cllf'o
-aDd thereby baDp the nat of the
nnt Viking Wa&amp; admittedly toe? llDaU
tale.
.
b theJauncbinl of a satellite.
Harold Talbott bad hem secretary
Dudnc the delllaationl, the Comof the Air Force. There bad hem conmittee bpt Quarlee' a6le tborouchiY
aidenble c:riticilm of Talbott Oil the
informed • to Ita ~ It ClaiD8
bsalo of posible conllicta of fioancial
to the condusiOil that 1111 American
inla-est in hill pGIIitioa. It Mmllld that
•tellite clurinl tlllt'Inlematiaaal 0.0..
thill- quletinc clown until a npori
pbyalcal y.,. indeed r-lble, al- V ...-nod in a Drew PM.-. tbauib It wauld require a ~ lllorl
·coJUDlll to the e&amp;ct that Talbott
u a11o
the convicliOil that
bad U8ed Air Force statiaaery to ciYe

to

..-w

~ adrioe to • frllaL

Tbe PM.-. oalumn built tbillap • •
~ ODIIflict of~- tboulh
the letter ltaelf appemed to be quite
innocuouB. AI tbe .-It of thill aiticiam Talbott 10011 reaipled. hill ......
secretary of the Air Foroe. Quarla.
was tapped to """'-1 him.

AnrrJ . , . _

A fsw weeb liter I bad the oppor- tunity of ~ the matter with
Quarles and be told me what bed happened. He bad carafully studied the
report of the Advisory Group Oil Baf-.
ellites and bad clec:ided that the Army
proglan, ,was the t..t. It - obvious,
however, that there would have to be
major cooperaticm lllllOill the three
services for the project to succeed in
any reasonable length of time. He
'bad decided that his last act as a&amp;sistant secretary for reoearcb and development would be rendering his d&amp;cision. He called a meeting of his advisory stall', consisting of both civilian and uniformed personnel of the
three services, on the morning of
August 15. There was long and beated
discussion with no evidence of any
- true consensus forthcoming. He was
committed tO be in Secretary Wilson's
office at 11:00 a.m. to be swom in as
secretary of the Air For&lt;:e. Hence, at
ten minutes to eleven be called for a
vole. 'The Navy won. ''For the first
time I can recall, the Air Force and
the Navy got together on something
and outvoted the Army," Quarles said.
Because of the intense pressure of
time and circumstanoes be abided by
the majority opinion.
History would probably balle been
different if Mr. Talbott bad not writ,.
ten that letter on Air For&lt;:e staticmery. I am not sure it would have hem
better, but I am quite sure it would
have been different
'The reason for the difference is re· vealed by the ·~ent chain. of
events. In November. 1955 I found
myself as the successor to Quarles
a8 assistant secretary of defense for
reoearcb and development and, benoe,
bad the satellite program in my lap.
The Navy was pursuing its Vanguard
Project vigorously, but it was plagued
with a number of problems in dl!veloping the new rocket as well as with
inadequate funding. There was progress, but it was slow.
Sputnik Launched

' .

.

On October 4, 1957, America was
truly sbocked with the announcement
that the Russians bad beat us to the
punch and bad launched Sputnik L
'The public was made well aware of
the fact that this was not mere Russian propaganda because the tumbling
booster of the RU&amp;Bian satellite was
readily visible crossing the sky 150
miles up, night after night 'The impact on the All!erican public was very
profound. There was a t.oemandoua inaease in military reoearcb and de~~elopment and also major impetuo for
revising our educatiOaal system.
On October 1, 1957, Mr. Neil MoEiroy ~ Charles Wilson as
Secretary of Defense. Hence, be bad
hem in office ODiy four days wbon
Sputruk I began going overt-d. AI
a result of the .,._al furor there
seemed to be a pub~ cry of "DOil't
just sit there, do 80IIIetbing," to MoEiroy.

eo.-quently, be made the deci&amp;im to remove the previous restriotioua on the AnDy's satellite ambitious and be ano-1 Weml:a _,
Braun and his able crew to try their
band at putting up tbe first American atellita.
naturally aood
..,... to the peniinne1 at the RedaloDe
Arseoa1 and they WMt to work or laB around .t he doclk. At 10:48
p.m. on January 31, 1968, the Army
Ezplorer I did ao into odlit and b&amp;ceme the first American aatellita. That
ODiy abODt IW days after von
Braun received the IIIHI'-i from MoEiroy. It is quite evident, 11-. that
if the Army project bad ' - ap.
proved in AuguR 1966, the United
Stalel would cedainly have...oucceeded
with a satellite belanJ
And hiatory Ulldoubtedly would have

'Ibf

._Rialans.

hem'1Hfferen1.

�~

6'

Social.Science·Measurement Center
Seeks 'lb End Confusion in Research
3) 'lbruulh develqment of
tbe acience of _ . . _ t itaelf. Seminars, .-reb .....
poria, and a program of ocbolars and policy-makers in resif.:u~ ~jen,.,:. ~
are projected in this
proved ~t, standard4) 'lbruulh tbe traininl of
lzatlon and evaluation al r&amp;- ocbolars for measurement, in...-ch inotrummta
• duding not only graduate stuAcoarding to n.. Lester w. dent traininl but also updating
Milbrath. ....:iate provost of sessions for PhD.'s.
~~
A J:,roject currently being

To aambat lbe • ...,.,..,.
wblch canentJ.y retarda developDODt al theory in tbe aocial
.......... a recaatly-epproved
~ &lt;Mlter, within

!':t

...tcfu:

tor al the &lt;Mlter, another
facet al !Ill work will be tbe
training al graduate atudeata in
tbe UDdiJntanding of measure1111111t. Moat graduate echools
are poorly equipped to pve
them thia trainhig, he .,._
Milbrath empbasbes that no
current ataadardized insbu:"a -:::ty~ttb,';!
and otudiea in tbe aocial sci-

=Ia
u::':~"":f:n.::;r.

haw t.en devoted to the evaluatlon of instrumenlll that are
.-1.
.
n.ua, Milbrath aays, the individual beginninl ll
ject
(IUch as a graduate litudent
worldng em a tbeais) faces a
welter of competitiw measuring instruments, publisbed in a
variety of places and with no
supporting data to aasist him
in making a selection.
Current measures are also
time and rulture-bound, posing
great handicaps in comparative
studies.
As a .-.It of all this, Milbrath says, "data are not ·comparable (from study to study) ,
fmdings do not aocumulate,
iheories are slow in developing.'' Bec:ause concepts which
are relatively easy to measure
pay-off in quick public:ation, be
aays, a forced simplicity and inadequate conceptualization of
difficult concepts plague tbe
field.
Sustained attention and reaowces must be devoted to the
problem, be urges, using tbe
·~ and D perspectives which
have made for progress in tbe
natural and engineering sci-

=:e

u:

~tiooalred~'F~"L.

f_,.,. (including Milbrath,
Richard Warnecke, David
~ Tai K"'ng and Brent
Rutherford ).
It will functloo with an adviaory oommittee CDIIIIioting al:
Hubert M . BlaJocl&lt;. Jr., profesaor of sociology, UniYI!ftlity of
North Carolina; Donald Campbell, Northwestero UniYI!ftlity;
Charles Cannell, d irector of
field work, Survey Reaesrch
Center, UniYI!ftlity of Michigan; Kenneth Janda, professor of political science, Northwestern University; Robert McGinnis, profeaaor of sociology,
Comell UniYI!ftlity; and Murray A Striius, professor of sociology, University of New
Hampshire.
'lbe Social -Science Melllllll&amp;ment Center will work closely

_ , as an important first step
in estab~ tbe Center. 'lbe
project, submitted by Milbrath
and four graduate students,
would examiJie tbe measuremont of four political acience
~":fdthebesrC:tera_ll
·we anticipate that similar
propooa1s will be going to NSF =alo=.,::~o~~
tute- tbe Computer· Applic:a=.thergro=, .:::~:f..::d tions Group, in developing comother professors who are mem: , puter propams and data man· bers of tbe Center, Milbrath agement techniques; .the Survey Reaesrch Center in field
IIBYIJ'lbe concept for the Center work ·and coding, and the Data
was developed over a period of Archives, in collecting raw data
years by a group of U/B pro- from a variety of sources.

Radical Center(contiluud from 1JG1&lt; 4, cot 5)
humanism. One of the unfortunate errors of the liberal of
tbe past dec:ade is that be has
been willing to overlook or condone lawlessness, which is now
""'ching epidemic proportions.
Sensitive to aocial injustices,
tbe liberal had sought to explain why violence, disruption

Pay Rate Now
On WorkDay

and anomie develop; and be believes that, if we can attack
the c:auses of poverty and alienation, we can eliminate violence. Yet violence has been
higher during a Period of unprecedented affluence than during previous times of economic
hardship.
Law and order should not
be a monopoly of tbe "conaerv-

~ve;;;.:~:' "J~

• . , 26, J.nO

Rzculty Senate Approves

Permanent EPIS Program
By a UII8Dlmoua voice ...te,
tbe Faculty Seuate lut 1bursday II&gt;IMJd to mab tbe ~
rimeotal Protlmm in IDdopmdent Studies ('EPIS) a perman- ent part al tbe UniYI!ftlity a1nlo-

twe.

-

L ()()ks
At Society,
Religion

n
raper

A new newspaper, The
Bridge, publisbed by tbe Inter-

faith Committee of Laymen
and · Clergymen in Westero
New York, appeared in pilot
form this week.
'lbe Committee printed 6,000
copies which are being circuIsted throughout tbe area together with a questionnaire to
determine public sentiment regarding such a public:ation. A
favorable response, tbe Committee aays, could .._., regular weekly or bi-weekly public:ation in tbe near future.
Tbe paper's focus will be
dual: ''One, questions of faith
and belief and tbe important
issues alfecting tbe ch"""- in
Western New York, and sec&gt;
ondly, issues involving race ~
lationships, poverty, tbe campus, and war and-,-oo, to cite
a few, especially as these all
relate to tbe Western New
York commtmity."
Thlee of tbe members of tbe
Coinmittee are: Dr. David Cox.
executive secretary of the
Council of Ch"""- of Bulfalo
and Erie County; Edward
Spector, • · Bulfalo lawyer; and
Dr. willilm JL Jarrett, cb&amp;irman of the Department of Socioloq and Anthropology,
Canisius College.
-

ciety. Surely tbe liberal is correct in arguing that law and
order without justice means ,...
'lbe daily pay rate for an- pression. But be needs to :- ,
nual salaried University em- in
reverse, that there carl be
ployees has been changed to a
In tbe pilot iasue: "Amico
work day rote, effective with no justice without certain el&amp;mentery
rules of decency: a does his own thing," a commenthe first payroll period in fiscal
1970-71, Helen R Walsh, pay- community in which citiz-ens tary; an anti-war editorial;
walk without fear, can- "ACLU aays police lenient to
roll director, announced in a c:annot
not speak without insult or ob- brutal cops," and stories conrecent memorandum.
scenity,
c:annot teach without cerning tbe grape t&gt;oycott, alSince each bi-weekly period
has ten work days, the daily disruption, is far from being a leged Catholic diocese discrimences."
just society. Respect for tbe ination against tbe inner city,
rate
will
now
be
obtained
by
'lbe new Center will aprights of others is at the very modem church music, a disproach this work in four ways: dividing tbe bi-weekly rate by heartofahwwmeaociety. ~ senting review on tbe Koten, Miss Walsh said.
I) By providing a clearing
era1s
ought to make this point pechne ease and an article on
'lbe work day rate will now
house function. 'lbe Center will be used to compute salary for loud and clear: it is not either "Daring options for tbe fu.
obtain, for example, full, current less than a full bi-weekly pay law.and-order or justice we twe,'' by U/B's Paul Kurtz.
infonnation about measures period.
want, but both.
available for a pven problem.
We need to be rid of inLost-time deductions, firet
Its focus at tbe outset will be paychecks for new employees, justice wherever it exista. We
on areas such as alienation and pay for full-time employees need to fulfill tbe American
community participation wbere working part-time and pay- dream: to satisfy the long overm o r e adequate measures are ments for accrued leave credits doodemandsoftbeblack~
needed.
upon separation from Eervice to rebuild our inner cities, to
2) Through measurement will..illl be made acrording to overcome pollution, io reorder
U jB was featured iii ~t
processing. This will include
w'ork day rate, Miss Walsh our national priorities, and to Associated Press nati~-;,w...
reduce our large military es- vey on tbe "Sex Revolu~ an
computer evaluation of instrument reliability as well as supSalary charts issued by tbe tablishment to reasonable pro- Campus," which CODcluded tbet
plementery evaluations on ade- Payroll Department may still portions. But theie can be no "while talk and attitulles have
quacy for a particular purpose be uaed to obtain tbe bi-weekly lasting justice without at the h'beralized dramatic:ally .•• beand for validity acroas popula- rate, she aaid. ''In place of aa""' time a commitment to havior has yet to match tbe
tion&amp;.
tbe ooe day rate llhOWtl, YO'~ SQcial peace and harmony. To provocative words." ·
may move tbe decimal point fail to 80 ~ is to invite
''There may be lots who sing
ooe place ·'.o the left in tbe hi- further repre8lllOil fnJm tbe New of free love, but many more
DEMONSTRATIONS
weekly rate to obtain the work Rillbt.
think twice befOre tbey really
liberalism is oommitted to
~· CllllpUO clomoDOtratio"" day rate."
their tune," the AP
tbe method of intelli&amp;a&gt;ce. 'Ibis
oa:uned at a rate of· about ooe a
1
may not have romantic appMl
day in early 1970, reporia the Urstory noted that U /B
in an ...., of ,_.Manist and has'lbe
alternating coed suites in
~':='t!!
Robert Collen, . UniYI!ftlity right-wing ldeological fervor.
leat u 1aot year'L • . . Coaoul- graduate sfudent and teaching But in tbe lut analyais tbe some dorms, and that Tom
tanto hiNd by tho Micbipn leciofellow and ooe of tbe atudeata commitment to """""' may he Schillo, director of housing,
thinks, "it's unrealistic to thhik
~--it DOt to crack suspended and reinstated earlimoat radical al - - . that some bois tnd Jtirla don't
~ ~ P-.._ . · - er this !lpring during tbe block- tbe
An ~-~ opirit aPPM~a lo be . ade of Hayse Hall, has report- for if Ollll8istaltJ.y -lied it liw in tbe aame rooon. We DillY
deoelopinc padaate otu- edly submitted his
'
tlon would mean tbe moat funda.. bear about it when a disposmental chanae in human ... ~roommate decides to
=.t~ ~U: as a part-time ~ra:dety. 'lbe Vital ceDter, tboae
'l"boy waot tho prote.ion to tate
.In a letter to Dr. William T. still in-.ted in reBpoll8ible take action."
0..., Bullalo student, also
on 110Cia1 - . • • •
Parry, chairman of~. liheraliom, muat be prepmed to
quoted in tbe C0111Vr-E-. ...... tbe llllldl.- of tbe tim&amp;
-1 WAHLHElP AS A ~·~~a
Colal aaid he came tO Bullalo We Med a rodil:tJl cmte&gt;- preSTUDENT
·~-~
fnJm Wlacousin, hoping to find
survey: "Why is evmybody 80
to defald the valuoi a1 wo.tied about our aex )ivea?
, _ or Sophorncn.
"an a~ more OODduciw
domocracy, . . . . . . Why ..., all tboae silent maDlwlllan of u-......uat.
to revolutionary politic&amp;. I haw dlalogue and
toleration. Indeed,-lhia is the on!)' iatiai!U op- jority - l e out there 110 CXJD·
ClllrDed about how - low each
tlon-u.bie to ..-tolt&amp;Y. yet 10 blind to tbe
of
t'I"Wt . . . . . . ~ . . . - - ...
ty of biaotry, lampr,
3517
Cohen has'- a grad llluIIUMAJIISr . . . .
and
an obecme war?"
dODt here two - -

UIB Featured in
AP Survey of Sex

::Jf

:=

~~~

""rl::n·
Olllcf=""o.!'.t_

0Z

'i!:f.'

Cohen 'Resigns

:::!...":'t~~....=
-ioooed.·
'

:r~=."t.~

C

=. . . . . ,
I

=

'lbe wte aloo called upail the

Uni-.ity to provide 8P8C8 and
pei'MmDI!I far a propam al
remedlal instnJctiaa in baic
amdemlc aldlla far atudeata in
special ~ and to llllo-

c:ate fuDda far Giber .apparthoe
and -"-t:iaD81 plaD.w.,Within EPIS.
A ....mtiaD 011 a ~
pollcy in to _ . ad-

.moos

1t':'
•.::.t""::;;rt~
Uni-mty to eelabllob lnin:fl~ -_)e "'J::
'or ..

educ:a~~~
"at all 1ew1a 1ram aura.)'

tbrouch oammunity college_" 'lbe reoolutlon a1oo called
for an inaauoe in le80UrC08 lex
improvement al tbe current Jev.
e1 of .mstlni ~tal propams for educ:atlooally diaad·
vantaged, rather than tbe expansion of such programs.
scbool

'Crisis Leave'
Not Chargeable
.u

University ·employees are
required to vac:ate a building

bec:ause of tbe possibility of
personal d a n g e r or bec:ause
work cannot be performed, tbey
s h o u I d be releaaed without
charge to time accrual-if tbey
cannot' be asaigned to another
location-according to Harvey
Randall, director of personnel
for SUNY.
"Other employees who are
not adversely alfected by tbe
emergency contiilue in service
but receive no 'compensa~
time off merely bec:ause certain
employees are releaaed with~
to accruals." ~

'!"":.

Randall lists the followin
''typical oituations ~ -~
permit the excusing of emplOyees without charge against at&gt;
cruals:" 1. power failure; 2. loes
of water or heat; 3. unsJlfe_
building conditions; 4. fire; 5.
student activities.
'lbe policy, he aays, applies
only to releasing people~dy
at work. ''It does not provide
for tbe granting of leave without charge . . . to persons who
were otherwise absent under
approved leave, or who did not
report to work."
HEADS PHAIIMACY AWMNI
;TJ1eoclo"' E.
Is the MW
president of the School of Phann-

ou._

acy Alumni Aaociatlon. Mr. Dun-

soy, a

1921 Pharmacy

Sclioo1

sroduat., auccaeda Myron Wold·
man of Cla,.,nco. Other offlcero
elected at the 30th annual Spring
Clinical and Alumni Day at the
Charter HouM recently we~"'o!rs.
Elaine lankeo, first vice p~
Timothy F. Collins, secretary; and
Mrs. Mildred Tom!&gt;lne, tiNsu,.,r.

2 Convicted
Carl Kronberg, 23,

rm Elm-

wood Avenue, and Manhall
of 311 Landon
s~·CXJDvicted
this week

:..~~==
pus lut October.
'lbe pair were found guilty
of disorderly conduct followina

trial before City Judge Ann '1':
Mikoll who diamiaaed charges
of fourth-degree criminal In!&amp;-

-.

Maximum sentence is 15 days
in tbe penitentiary ai&gt;d a $260
11M. Jud_p Mikoll ordered Prohetlon Department inveatigaw.. befani llllateDcing, June 8.
'lbe District Attorney's Ollico
~ tbe CXJDvictlooa "sicnill-

�• . , 21, 1!110

7

Palermo~ Paintings
An allllllllon of polnllnp .., ~

v. - . -

- ·July
.....
a.a.... Juno 211 tllrouch
14. A-BFA .....Inof- U/8

lltJ -

It- hlwl-

-1Hl-

of ~

Ted ' -

c:.-.11r

polntlnp ICCepliod .., tho Alboflhl1&lt;- .-,.
The l8cl1nlque to be fMturecl In tho of ..... _,tic .,......,.lnfonno-lholr~to--.
_
_
.
.
,
.
_
_
.......
..,__...,
_
_
tho
crlbeo
ftJ: "I
to point ._ . _ CW-.., 1 .....

-II-,.,...

II--

.-!J _.......... At .....,._ If 1 II
_ _ tho _ _
__
_
·-tho.._
ara
_lllhll
• .t h o
-

IUbject II nat

to .......,_ ...._, to lpiiCitlc ..-.to - - t o ....... lpiiCitlc - "

•

\

Grads Study the Disadvantaged &amp; Institutions
Among lhoae ecbeduled to
leCOive degrees in tomorrow's
emrciaes will
be: a doctmal candidate in
~UCition who fOUDd in his
dissertstion study that tlle di&amp;advantsaad studimt is signifiClllltiy slower to develop vocation-eelection ability, llild tbe
'- ~~,tbe new policy

abilities are given more weight
and job requirements, including
training, are considered. During
Failtasy .Stage, occupational
ciiOioe is still a matter of pure
fantasy which . based
individual ~
upon
Elahtfl -...
Mr. Ansell ~gested tbe
seriOUSDil88 of tbe Bltustion. " In
..............
tbe public schools where this
In testing and cl:m~ tbe investigation was undertsken,
vocationsl maturity of lowe&lt;- cuniculum selection is made
claas white and Iowe.-dass during 1he second semester of
bladt and micldJ&amp;.daE white tbe eighth grade. 'Basically,
youths in pades 8 thrcJush 12, students are 110t suiBciently voEdpr M . An8I\U of tbe Depart- cationally mature to make a
"*&gt;t of Coomselor Education decision of such magnitude."
!OUDd that .._,tloual maturHe added tbe furtber impliity doea me.- with aae for cation that if high school counalll&amp;l!daats _..n- of aocio- selors direct their advice to
....miilic status. ~. tbe middle-dass students, tben ''a
lower-due Cioucaaians and Ne- . considerable injustice is forced
croea. who primarily involve upon tbe disadvantsaad when
our diaadvaritsaad population, tbey are 'dlrected' into an adare maturfnc at a rate appnni- UCitional ~.""~""" before tbey
mataly - , ~ levels siowe. are readY.'
than the. mjdc!Je..da.- CaUCI·
For 6is study, Mr. Ansell
....."
randomly selected 376 students
He polnfa aut that this me&amp;DS in pades eight through twelve
"whom: mjdc!Je..da.- Caucuians in two Pannsylvania urban bigli
f!llla the elilith ll8de, tbey are scboola. A total of 26 students
ID the c.p.dty 81aae. Mean- _... taken from each JIBde
while.. ........-dass Caucuians level from three liOCioeconomi&lt;;
and N..,._ are otill in tbe poup~. 1.._-dass . -students
!"_antuy Stqe of ~t." _.., ldenti&amp;d u participating
He cleaclbJil c:buacllllisliea of in tbe free IUDcb IJl'OIIBIII. Midthe Capacity 8lqo .. involving dJe.dass students identitha in wiUch indi~ fled by adclresL

eom,_,.,t

Economic llacqround

His tests &amp;bowed that economic background seems to
play a much greater part in the
~Cipment of vocational maturity than racial background.
He tound in his t..sting of tbe
lower-class whites and blacks
and tbe middle-class whites
that "both instruments used to
.._vocational maturity, tbe
Readineo8 for ¥ocational PlanDiD, and the Attitude- Test,

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

al maturity between lower:-elass
Caucasians, lower-dass Negroes
and middle-class Caucuians.
Of tbe three groups, middleclaas Caucasians excelled in
vocations! maturity, followed
by Jower-dass Caucasians, tben
Iowe.-dass Negroes."
.
He DOted that tbere _., no
significant difterences between
tbe Jower-dus whites and lower-due bla&lt;b. ·
Mr. Ansell feels that it is tbe
vocational OOUJIS8Ior who is in

medial approach to oocupation
exposure beginning in priJ;qary
grades as well as ~dy
on why lower-dass whites and
blacks remain in~tesy
Stage of vocational ·
turity
longer than middl
whites.
A former teacher in tbe Penn-

P.:=a:.:.f"'..Tib ':;

~is
Psychology Department of Edinboro State College, Pennsylvania.

Pllllc:ySclencesGrld

'lbe first policy sciences doctoral grad IS Rolf P . Lynton,
currently 88110Ciate prof""""',
n..n............ t of Mentel Health,
U~ of North Carolina,
and faculty 88110Ciate of tbe
Carolina Population Center.
He is also chairman"of a minority rela~ committee and
acting directo&lt; of an Office of
Economic n...v-..~•ty project
involying ~ bealth

'ifi.
.....u-is ..as~ ~.Consul~
~U:.~:!.d':'!
~=
~~~3:.::t'::i his
peiiiOII8l ~ u a
developaalt of .the disadvan; · COIIIIultant in India for 12 years.
taaed.befeels,tbecp1118!1lor

miisr"tab a ......., aareaBive
role in developing pro-

=~:.=!'se~

IIII&amp;II8Bt&amp;

~t of

a

r&amp;-

'lbe policy acienoes PIOIIBID.

sterteda ~~~ ·~~
~ f;;:..-raocial instituti&lt;ms.
now bal I.22 individuals enrolled.

GREPORTS
ON
Gf&gt;EOPLE

�8
PRESENTATIONS

apolia, Milm., a¢ GeDeNI SyaIaotilute, Denwr, Colo.
r&amp; Olio.a. &amp;. 8KU'I'&amp;O~ .-iataDt

~~.'riw~ ~'""=
6:~~t!r"~.~
N.Y.
~~'o/-n!rof...,r,

ueociate profeooor, clinical dentistry, and DIL

..... IAJO:B COLLOID,

·IOSEPB C. LIIZ, auociate prof.-or,1.
anatomy, and aaoc!ate reeMI'Cb

lhr:rmo·
M~z:.ru.e~~
yearbook of the Scboolo of Dentistry and Medicine.

-

J:

lilical and Pbilooopbiaol~-~­
tioDO of Two
~­
ocieo.• World Futureo -..:11

Emersmi'

ConfeleDOO, Kyoto, .Japm&gt;.
DL a.AU. &amp;. WJ:LCB,

a.ociate

proftuOr, political ecience, and

dean, Division of Underxraduate
Studiel, "Africa in Woild Poli~!~o World Hospitality
1&amp;. AUIDT L Wllt'J"BBDDO:a

usia-

taut profe.or, pharmacy, "Geo'"'phic Pharmacy 'l'radinc Pat-

lerDII" and "Piwmaceulical Pat-

ent Uoenainc, • American Phann_,tical .AooociatioD. Wuhinaton, D.C.

:...":.".:...~·

-tant-

"Heeoodynamjc E~:
obeadine on holated Perfnaed
Doc." Acoodemr of
Plwmaceulical Sci-. Waah-

Orpna of tbe
~D.&lt;J.

.

PUBLICATIONS

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE·
FRIDAY-29 ~
INTEil.NA'!'ON:U-

PQJ..][

[Wrf

c• :

Instruction m basic etepo awing
fint hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex

8 p.m.

•

SATURDAY-30

~~ ;::N=~~;~ Fill~
SUNDAY-31
BALitAN POLK DAN,CINC• : Fillmore

Room.

Norton, 8 p.m.

TUESDAY-2
.PBYIIlCUHB' Ta.D'BOHI': I.-crUD·

Sp6neoled by Resional Medicai
Procnm. Dr. Boyd Terry, .um-

BIOftCB

IN

TBJ:

'I'Bl1'IDift

or

lllJI!'ICAL llOWlTIONII, 61 Partici-

patinJ_Hoapitala, 11: 30 _a.m.

WEDNESDAY-3

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO -·

-·

VOL 1 ·NO. 1s·

MAY21, 1970

State Asks Bids on $3- Million Lake.for AmherstAn~J-iversary

Celebration
&amp;tfor '71

I
"-

/

The General p 0 li c y and
Fauuuder'o Day Committee on
the 126th Anniversary of the
State University at Bulfalo has
lli1iiOilii08d that programs and
~ uuuauting the occasion
will take place from Founder's
Day, May 11, through May 30,
1971, and from. La b o r Day
thloulb lleceunbe&lt; 31,- 1971.

=t:t.~nu.~~~ .

development of the North Lab
and approximately haU of the
South Lab, lying in the northem portion of the Amherst
campus. The location and allocation of land haw ' - developed as part of the Comprehensive Site Plan for Amherst,
in which the CXliiCI!pt of lalte

In addition, a number of
. subcommittees for various
pbs-. of the COIDUUieUUIOI1ltion
haw hem! deoipaled
'The subcommittees and their
chairmen are: General Policy
and Founder'a Day, Dr. A.

em.

The State University
stnJction Fund (SUCF) is asking bids on a oantnct estimated
at $3 mi.lliaG cov.ing ! " - I
of the dewJiopment ol a c:ampus
lalte project at the U/B Ambenit _campus, Gow!mor Roclrefeller is acbeduled to 8IIDOUDCI8
tOday. Completion of the ~'Me
I oantnct is acbeduled for November, 1971; but ...rt ... 611
piles, as speci6ed. is to be completed ~ 'J:&gt;eceml.: 1, 1970.
Sasaki, IlaWIIOil, DeMay AB-

:d'i:ru\ s~r;:::
mgned for future construction.

The existence of an ample natural water supply made the
olan feasible, the Construction
Fund aays.
The surface area of the lske,
lXT.
D
when completed, will be approximately 60 acres with over
10,000 feet of shore line. BoundUniversity Commencement monies will assemble in the English, French, German, hu- ing it on the north will be the
e:rercises are still scheduled for buildings noted above. A room manities, music, Russian, Span- anticipated Urban DevelopFriday, May 29, at 3 p.m. in for robing will be assigned in ish, theatre; master of fine arts ment Corporation development
and Loop Roadways· to the
Rotary Field.
each building. Candidates are and PhD. in these fields.
FACULTY OF EDUCA- west will be rolleailite romh · ~t ..;,. ·inclement asked to assemble at the apweather, ...,.announosment that propriate buildings by 2:30p.m. TIONAL STUDIES: bachelor pleXiiii," wliiJ8"1iii!Fii:Wfy of
Under this plan, degree can- of science in education; master Arts and Letters and the Cuian altenaMe 1)lan is in effect
will be . breedcast over local didates of Arts and Letters and of science in education; master tural Center are to the south.
radio and television by 9 a.m. Social Sciences and Adminis- of rehabilitation counseling ; The Loop Roadways will bound
it on the easl Implementation
tration, in Clark Gym, will hear doctor of education.
on the morning of May 29.
FACULTY OF HEALTH of the project has required preAssembly areas under the al- President Martin Meye!1i0n's
SCIENCES:
bachelor
of
sciliminary
exploration programs
address
and
will
witness
the
ternate plan are as follows:
Faculty of Arts and Letters, presentati_on of the Chancellor's ence in nursing, pharmacy, regarding soil, water, and rock
Clark Gymnasium· Faculty of Medal. At the other alternate physical therapy, medical tech- ronSealditiedonsb. .da will be reoe&gt;'ved
1
Social Sciences ~ Adminis- assemblies, candidates for de- nology, occupational therapy;
tration, Clark Gymnasium; Fac- grees will hear the Meyerson master of arts in biochemistry, at the Albany offices of the
ulty of Educational 'Studies, address read by a desigrlSted physiology; master of science SUCF until 2:00 p.m. EDST,
Diefendorf, Room 147; Faculty member of the faculty or ad- in biostatistics, nursing, ortho- June 2, . 1970, at which time
dontics; Ph.D. in these fields ; they will be publicly opened.
of Health Sciences, Capen Hall, ministration.
Degree · candidates are as- doctor of dental surgery; doctor
The capital ronstruction proButler Auditorium; Faculty of
gram being carried out at the
Natural Sciences and Mathe- signed by -faculties as follows: of medicine.
FACULTY OF NATURAL ·Amherst campus is part of the
matics, Hochstatter .Hall, Room
FACULTY OF ARTS AND
114; Faculty of Engineering LETTERS: associate in arts; SCIENCES: bachelor of arts State University's multi-billion
and Applied Sciences Acheson bachelor of arts in American in biology, chemistry, geological dollar physical dewlopment
Hall, Room 5; Faculty of Lsw studies, art history , classics, sciences, mathematics, physics; program. Directed by Dr. Anand Jur isprudence, Norton English, French, German, mu- master of arts in geology, math- thony G. Adinolll, ~ral manHall, Conference Theatre.
sic, Russian, Spanish, theatre; ematics, p)&gt;ysics,_statistics; mas- ager, the suer 18 a ~
H the alternate plan is put bachelor of fine arts in art, art ter of SCJence m natural SCJ~- fit rorporation e&amp;tab
into effect, candidates, marshals educaition, music, music educa- ences, mathematics· Ph.D in · 962 by the Legislature upon
'
·
rerommendation of GovaDd facultY a118nding the cere- tion; master ef arts in classics, these fields.
FACULTY OF SOCIAL mor Rockefeller to expedite
ronstruction of facilities to
SCIENCES AND ADMINISTRATION: bachelor of arts · meet the State. University's
anthropology, economics, geo- Master Plan reqwrements.
graphy, history, lingui s tics ,
philosophy, political science,
Dl ~
psychology, social science, sociology, speech; bachelor of science in management, social weifare; master of f'l'ls in anthro'S
pology, econODllcs, geography,
history, linguistics, philosophy,
Seven deficiencies - in the
political science, psychology, Booz, Allen and Hamilton sal~ology and. SJ&gt;OO!'h; master of ary plan fo ~Diversity nonSCience m social science; master instructional 'lfiofessional staff
of business administration; mas- ( Reporter May 7 and May.14)
ter of social work; Ph.D. in !"&gt;d. five rerommenda~ for
these fields.
118 rmprovement were aired at
'FACULTY OF LAW AND the Annual - Election Meeting
JURISPRUDENCE· Juris of the local char.ter of the St,ate
- University Pro essional AssociDoctor.
·
FACULTY OF ENGINEER- ation (SUPA) in the Faculty
lNG AND APPLIED SCI- Club, Tuesday.
ENCES: hachelor of science in
'The SUPA reactions _..,
engineering; master of science forwarded in a letter to Acting
in engineering; master of li- President Repn by outaoina
brary science; and Ph.D. in chapter president Mrs. J;:tbel
tbeae fields.
E . Schmidt of Contiiwing EduDr• . . , _ . . . _ o1 tile . , ...,.... an
cation. Repn had llllbd for a
........., ......... 1V _......, an ChiQnal 2 . . " ' - ...
HOUDAY
list of items which SUPA felt
...... .......,. ......... . , . - ellooll Go v e r no r Rocllekifler ha on· 1-.Jed apecial attention under
1'1111 8 *t _,...., u I II
\1 'Tile .lkdi8Jo E-.lni
u..t.Ericley, ·.c.y 29, will ~ eicht.-pme Aa I a r y
.._. . . 7~.._ r-:-tu
lie
::_•301tt:JlkWJ In lieu SUPA members find tbeae
....._ *-.'
'-• ·
(~on ·~ f, c:ol6)

~ic~~5 :-Commencement Still On for Rotary, May 29

dean~ School of
. Perry,
~~";)::.;

and Fine Arts, A1Jen Sapp, director of the Office of CUltural
Affairs; Printing and Exhibits,
Theodore Palermo, director of
UniYelillty · PUblications Serv• ...M.; .lahm•tim, ~.J?e. Santi&amp;, &lt;!irector ~ Un:vennty
Information Services; Student
Activities, Mark Huddleston,
p~d_ent of the. Student AB"'?"l"tion; Alumn:, John Carter,
~.of the. Ut.B Alumn:
.A!laociali!"'; ln"':tations, ~
of 11;&gt;e VJCe ~t for !Jn:vemty Relations; H o u 81 n g,
~ Schillo, director · of
~; Food, Raymond Beck!'f, director o! the F"'!'i Serv1ce; Commun:ty Relati&lt;?ns, A.
West I e y Rowland; Finance,
~ Snyder, M&amp;d acrountant, Provosts, Dr. Rollo
Handy, P'?"""t of ~ Faculty
of ~ucati~ Stud1es; !' n d
Basic Publications Comnuttee,
Dr. Robert Loken, preaident of
the U/ B Foundation.

In roming montha, the Committee will select a theme for
the Annivenary ~vities.

...:.~d-y
But Bad. vveather AIternate Plans Are .n.ea

Salary ..r wn
Flaw L LS
• ted

TV Marathon

::'need

•c ......... of:::::::

�-~

2

1

- . Asks .B!.....;J
. . 'L. .....~ Probe ·
_Regan
u~A.J:l,: . : . . ....;·
Officials Doubt:lt=~p~n.ecl:=

Ftosh Makeup -.. ~
Is .Charigin1l
R£pt Says

llllli=-

1be llrilt In tbe aUtb -""'
li ~ coiJectiwly
Fra/uooalo CI&lt;Ja Sttllu.
ltqurl. baa ._, iMued by tbe
06le ol _um-.;ty RMMn:h.
1be cunent 8ludy an -rbe
Oampoailion of tbe Fresbman
~70"
provides CDIII•
with tbe two precedlnc
and the first class
otudied (J.IIIK.) •
Data are ' - 1 an 2006 fres!&gt;men In tbe 1969 ~ 26U m
1968, 2175 In 1967, end 2565 in
1ll6f wbo ~as full-time
. day atudeDta In tbB fall ol tbeir
respectift . .terina:Major 8adinp IDCiude:
L 1n 1969, tor tbe lb:st time,
ol

a-.

tJ!:::

Adiq" Prealdent Peter '·
Repn'a request to tbe Bullalo
PI:J&amp;e QwnmjMjnrw tor a "full
end profeBaaa1 in-aptian"
-· ...... __._. ._ of obotiunB
·~an c:ampus.
'Ibwaday nicbt, May 7, · baa
..Wted 1n dismissal end/or
~tin&amp;of • reports by_.

=

.
''there 110 ...ai eviat the time to warrant a
OODCiuaion that the wounds
inllicled by a ~"

rOOeived
bY. Dr. Peach and• ported by 'Dr. Repn.

=

(~ fro• ;....._I, eol. 6)

aewm

~MIL Scbmidt

said:
•
·&gt; : .. -:
L 0.. 400 .~ lid
llll!lllbaa ol thia UniYa:Sity are
alfected by tbe plan. Mcn then
200 ol these will he placed in
catep&gt;ry one, tbe loWaat categooy. A ~ ~ share ol
these ~ Will occupy
the hottJom ol catetrory one.
2. The mid-point con t r o I
nwNrilam around wblch all
solaries m u a t cluallw within
pY811 ~tloa&amp;, pits pay-.
cbecb
- - paydlecb. For
every pwoan abOve tbe a.....,
income for similar llCCilp8tians,
one person must he below the
averaae. It teada to load ad·

Edward L Koren, staff COUD·
sel to tbe local chapter of tbe
UfB physictan" New York Civil Li6erties Un·
.
said evidence COilllisting of
d':ui:,
liP-' 88 did "a hospital ad- 1011,
cartrid&amp;'es. cartlliinist:rator' at Meyer Memorial Hospital. 'Ibese sources
pellets. pbotoa
were not identified.
• and signed sta-ts had been
............ ~
'Ibese sta-ts are in di· tumecf over to th@ F.B.I. whjch
1n a May 13 letter to Own· · rect conllict with the ri!pOrts had 110 1l011ll1181ll
misianer Frank -N. FeJil!e~
Repn said that after recelVJDI
Initial reports an tbe lalbject !"'
:116. --1-L
tbe nillht ol May 7·, he ':""
formed by Deputy Commissianer Blair that sbotctma 'Ibe foll'f:"f
' •
of temher 1 1969 • February 28, oilmpetiti:ve departmants. .
not '-'- emplDyed and that
"'acuity
1970 is ~eased hv Thomlia J .
3. 'Ibe plan ofters a mini- Sd.illo assistant ;ice president :'Jilum income ol $8,000. SUJ;'A
~unilion had not operations for our " '
.Aasociation enterprises for a·-!"'--·
enterprises: and the SUNY Faculty Sen,a~
~issued to tbe City Police. Student
3
for
the 'six-month period. Sepa $9,000 muu::_:~~:_
~v;~;;;; have supported
mduy.

~Another

~.

FSA Gives 6-1viOTU1£ Report

Fleming, 36 such signed state-

menta have ' - ' collected thus

far.

-

_ _:_._______________

maJea. Last year only 46 per .Flaming "state almost wi~t

cart- lanale; and.in 1964, - l i o n that ei!Mr birdshot
42 pw cent. 1be total number m bucbhot was employed by
ol freslmal Nllisill'ed in 1969 :the City of Bu1falo Police that
- t e d a iiew low for tbe · Disht." According to Advocate

·~ao.:;:..-.=·=..o;;.t

.rt..tement

8

~'Te.i!....*d!:(51
~ita~~~~
pw cart) uceeded that of UniYa:Sity Adwcate Robert B.

fift.year period.
2. 1n 1969, tbe treDd toward
an 1ncreasinf proportion of
freslmal ft!lliding m ~
J.lls and a ~ propi:IJ!&gt;lion living at 1iome and classilled 88 """"'uters was reveraed.
'Ibia year 47 per cent of fresh.
man lived in residence halls;
tbe filure tor 1968 was 51 per
cent.

~ :Plan:..

~ s;~a ·$0id·· .... .
IIOOICSTOIIE

$1438 236
$1,579.500
1
. .'-_!,1:~12~4:~34~7_ __..!1"l.2iij

-

~141.2"

6.230ffir--:-::-'ii.!f.i=iif1

fJ:m
57476

S 114,770

~

•1
··············~ •282•301
15

$1,538,ooo
650,000

-

G..,.. , _ on Saln
Operattnc Expenses . ·······-········.
Net O~tJnc Income .......... .... .....
FOOO some£
Not ..... --··'· .......

mum

,,_

~~k£~~ ~~i::..

~!:A
~
735 369

m;'Jll

_

2,001
57,294

~......
m,149

~~:m immediately. While it was in"ln addition, Dr. leRoy A.
~ .l4,9lO tended to he retroactive, it will
Pesch, dean of the School of Opo&lt;OUn&amp; ExponHS ·
8 •081
•
$
•
not he eft'ective until 1971.
Medicine and director of Uni- Not opo,..lna Income - ·-·-·--· $
versity Hospitals, has been in- YENDINQ
$ 306,000
~ 54,691
6. It ·ignores the crucial fact
formed that patients were actually treated at the University
$
Health Service and at the Mey21 000
11 970
·· ·· ···· S
•
•
faculty or the classified staff,
er Memorial Hospital for in· Net Dperatina lncorM
juries ..Wting from shotgun
$
$
':::!
.IJIILIGATIONS CITEQ
pellets," Dr. Regan said.
Prvflt on S.l" .
~:::~
~tggg
::=~ viously moved into the-~~~
::'!,t"'::"':!n:::-~ Fie~"::.·~ 1:fe continued, ·:in view of the Gross
Operatlnc: Expenses
OOO
+ S 1.620 ified staff from the ~
2•6 20
1•
from SUNY Chonceilor Sllmuol B. aenouaness of this matter, the
N.t Operatl~-tncome ...... .. .......s
service have suffered economic
Gould, Moy 12. 1970: "It Is the !100&lt;1 ~or ~ ful! and prof""'!1onal
policy o1 state U~iversity to re- • mveotipt:ion 18 clearly evident,
v~~ even i1 immoin open. Faculty members ore and ~ ,..,..)d request that you
plemented, c.'!. ~· p a r e poorly
.-ponsible for ..-;ng their edu- I!DIIllD8 these events "!' rap~y
with lh!l proV1810DB of the poCltional obligations to tho stu- 88 poesihle. The U!l1vers1~y
sition paper developed by the
dents. This ototoment should be , . ~ fll8!IY ,t,o ~ you m
Economic Statu,s ColDl!'lttee,of
communicotod in an ' appropriate this m-?P.tjon m ~ ~: D
the Stste.Faculty .Senli_te _(. ,..
. ·•t o ~·r teculty"
- ·
• .u ·shotJ!uns were employed,
·
ctilling · for a· 4() -~ ·· cent m.=;..::,...·:..:.:--~~.:;-·
wbe!Mr by 9rivate' indiviiluals,
Students appointed to teach- Sble by ·u,., s~t does not crease in income for l:he un3. A noticeably peater .,er- police "o l andlher ;uriadictii&gt;n,
aSsistantships or Graduate exceed $100 a """""'ter, the classified profeSsional stalf) .
of cummt freshmen · or by City Police, then these .
feUowships which pro- law provi!les that the st:udent
'Ibe pian "should he 1m(23 per cent) than -previous.. facts should he rqade known to
vide tuition waivers will he in- shall reoe1ve no scholar '!'cen- proved m the following ways,''
-freshmen · (10-13 per .cent) de- · ·the general public."
layed enrollment in SUNYAB
Felioetta responded by say. eligible for Scholar Incentive tive . "!"'i&amp;tance. 'Ibere ~~ SUPA feels:
proV181on for payment of ~1. Provide immediate equity
a year or more after high school 1ng he would ''review- reports" Awards eft'ective July .1.
Acco.:mng to Dr. Andrew W. ar incentive assistance for'!""~'· by eliminating category one.
of the incidents but that prior
sradualion.
4. Bennett and East' high · ·~ study" of Police ac- Holt, assistant d e a n of the t.enance costs, for educational AU professional stalf memhenl
schools 8000tDlted for 46 per tivity did not even "suggest" Graduate School, the change in fees, or for any o!Mr ~· would occupy a category ·no
li results from new "Guide- no matter how defensible, if lower than category two.
cent of the 1969 City sraduates that such a thing had occurred.
cy on Tuition Remission," the student. ~oes not face a
2. E I e v a t e all previously
· .m,; entered SUNYAB 88;freshAno!Mr reaction · to the Heissued
b): the State Education bona-fide tuition charge ol at downgraded positionS to theu
-- , Witli the · proportion of·· ian statement came from Comleast $100 a semester.
original status.
. Bull'aiO emi&gt;lleeof from East in- man Council Minority Leader Deparl:merll
Partial text of the new guide"Accordingly, if the collep
3. Re-evaluate the legitimacy
.,_m, from.8 per cent in 1967- William A. Buyers who augpoI icy in elfect constitutes of the use of a mid-point con·
to 19 per cenl
· gested that the acting president lines follows :
"By law, ~Jar incentive elimination of tJ;te ~ u ! t. ion
~the ~ moe!·
6. In 1969 a treDd toward a and the University should
.. r w.uu
decreasing proportion of fresh- speod more time finding which assistance is limited by the ac- charge for oertsin.. indivtdual
immedi·
men from Erie County high students threw bricks and rocks tua1 amount of tuition payable students or categories of stu- ificstions of this p
schools was rev.,._j while the at ''innocent" Police and civil- . by the studenl This program dents, then it must he consid· ately by providing the neoes:
tnmd for· an increasing propor- lana and whidl: ones tore down· is designed solely to help stu- ered tluit •tMre is in fact 110 sary f u n d s incfuding thoee
lion from the New York Metro- the flag at -st.. J~'s School. · dentit meet the tuition costs tuition ~: by these stu·. ~required 'C! ~ tJ;te plan
: troa&lt;;t~ve 88 ~ mtendpolitan ·Area high schools COD· • Mr. Buyen wbo indicated he . that niight otherwise constitute dents, within ·the ll!tent of~the
·
·
•tinued. SO: per cent more fresh. hadn't 111'-l any of the dem- a financial harrier to coUege law, any more than if they
5. Consult with 81Jll1'0P11!'te
men ( 46 18'- cent) came from onstrati01111-.aid "at no time did -stUdy. U the tuition charge pay- attending a tuition-free inati
· lion. Since ·there is no tui~' S U P A per8CliiD8i CODCernlDII
high schools in the Buftalo I . aJiy Polioemon with a
oost to the student, the
the adequacy ol any forthcom..
Area in 1969 than in 1968 and shoqun loaded with buckshot...
of the scholar • ·
tm. ·
modiflaltioas ol tbe plan.
there were 2 18' cent more enHe suggested that students
C""bave
,.,otheractioasattbeSUPA
roUees from the high schools in milbt have had shotguns.
and tMre is 110 justification for meeting, the poop caa8nned a
tbe New York Metropolitan
Meanwhile the Courier-ExArea (36 per cent). •
..
press "crw doube' an the shootJ81De8 H. Blackhurst, director payment of a scholar incentive slate of new alllcen for the
- ·
coming y e ar 8iid received. a
6. There was a noticeehle m· ~ in its words. Dr. Paul F. of Summer Sessions and special aWard. . : •
''It is not the intent ol tbe ranae of annual reports.
•
. , _ from 1967 to 1969 (30 H-.m, director ol the Uni· assistant to the president, is the
per cient to 46 per cent) in the versity Health Service who ._:president of the tJ/ B Fac- law to 'discourage==~
ftM!Dt
'IbeTbomas
new alllcen
are:
preslt·
the
college
fnim
·
tdent,
Scblllo,
8111istan
proporlion ol Erie County high -"p8raanaaly" t.-eated two .stu· u1 Club
scbool graduates who were dents ol the nine wbo reported
• ~..;,., offioers, announced ing the State a
with a vice. president. housi.ng '1!1'1
from Buffalo public high lllJIIIhot woundS, was quoted 88 this ......t, include: Dr. Ci)arles grant from colleae . funds, 88 auxiliary enterprises; ~
. .of a financiaf eid peckqe ident, Mrs. Schmidt· .~ .......
schools . A compcsatory de·
H.v. Ebo!rt. prof-.r and cbairdesigned to meet
creue (56 par cent to ;13 per
man, ~
, vice presi· • ·
finan. I.ensing Cllliilinator,
•
cent) '11188 "'-rved in the~
. lEU' WITH
dent Dr
Holt, ·-'-t- the student's
porlion from Erie County high
PAIIEICT.ctiiLDl PROBLEMS
;
·
ciaJ JMed, 88 de~ by the ing ;,¥! publicatioos, Edu!:&amp;·
schools~ Bullalo.
· - ...,, ~J- _..._._ with ant dean, Graduate School, aec- college. Hence a grant or award tianal Sludies; oonesponding
. ~·
..--- ••n·~ ,.._.. _
retary; and Dr. J. Warren
. 7.
per cent of the your - r y school' ... child! . Perry, dean, Health Related of this typa is not considered secretary, .Judith ~
. to reduce the tuition charp aasistant to the dean,
.
1969 freohmen, CXIIilpered with Would you Iiiia an _.tunity to Prof.-ions, tzeiuwer.
79 per cent in 1964, resided in pertk:ipoto in • (peront) &amp;JOUP
Named to the hoard of di- payable by the student Simi- of Manqement; tr e a .s u ra r,
ei!Mr the Bu&amp;lo Area or the limed at helplna perents .to be rectors are: Dr. Olive P. Lester, larly, a grant or award by tbil l81De8 -Andaralu, technical apecollege that COIIStitutes apeciai cialist, Communicatioas HeNew
York
_ Metzopolitan
•
of Area.
1969 more- in .._ling with the1
-.., I!!'Y.............,.; Dr• A.
8· .....
• ..., proportion
~their childNn ,,. having
estley ~ ~ ~ recognition !Ill academlc ~ sources; delegate to St&amp;;te
freshmen wbo ......, residentll of Alit. Prof. Muriel Sllntilli, of the f - . and ....., president for other~ or a fellowship SUPA, Lawrence Drake. 811818the Bu&amp;lo Area (51 per cent) · u/B School of Social Weill,., Is uniwnity ~tioas; Thomas award tliat does not entail em- tant to the dean, School of
far ....acled the- p&amp;l'(ll!lit..,e of -nizlnc -~ pe....t aroupo. Scb!llo. aasistant vice president, ployment by the """-- is not Dentislzy.
A compJete list IJf SUPA tbe total N.Y. State J&gt;OIIUlatlon tor the fill. ChildNn of pe..ms oi*al:ioas and systems; Dr. COilSidered to ftduoe the stu-,
(9 pw oont) wbidl the in the , _ w1n be dlrwctly in·
Bevwly P . Biohop, 1181lj&gt;Ciate dent's tuition liahility. It is committee chairmen 8PIIMf8(i
wbether such aup- in the Rt!porkr, April 30.
compriios, A:ltbough the New in the ' CheiiMIII) ~. ~Dr. \!- imliiaterial
The an1;y c:baqe in that list
York Metropolitan Area llDID- .,.__ If )1011 . . . . lnterool8d in Lealie~
, poy- piemontary financial a I d or
tbe naming ol Marjorie
prilos a1moet 1U pw cent ol the perticipatlll&amp; contact Prof. ' SontiiH dloloiY; end Dr.
E. 'Molm, iluch hooanuy ,_,....t is giY8Il State's.populalion, only 88 pm at 862-6315, 831·2526 ot 1184- • ..,.._,..,
bl.eugineer. in tbe fonp ol a Dlllh grant or MD ol ~lional Studiea as
in tbe fafJn ol credit towud chairman of the Grie9ance
cent
ol tbe 1969 a.. resided 4110 - - No ... Is , . . - ,
lng.
In that-.
tbe
college .ccount." Committee.
. \atudoat'a
.
.

/

=-of::,s:~··:·:·::::::::::....

•

_ 4. SUPA members are aware
that some positions within the
Unl-mty were downgraded ·
within the Director of the
Budget's Oflioe in Alheny.
5. Tbe plan- is now out of
date. No monies are guaranteed
to implement
even the
desirable
aspects of the plan

188.000

a::·::

-

. . . m~m

ii~;

~ :!~ :t~~~~=:sr~~

~:m

~:ggg

.. ..

f

1a:m :·1t!..~ ~ ~":

No More Incentive Awards

--.---::::-·

amt..,e

. t an_t s .'
ror rn
·J:each.mg ASSIS
s:too1

!:...

troJ.

Blackhurst Heads
Faculty Club

~been~

~Y

tVe!

secretary,~&gt; !.i~t

-'-'-·

n
_ wfv
. m

.

]

_____

�r

~= t

t ~

~

· ,

• • 21, 1910

.Flowetb,g Crab:Applels~ Star of Spriftgtime ori-ciJinpliB__~
•

.

•

-

---

.

•
.

-

. . .. .. ..
.

•

~of blaoin, ~ 'babit ol poWib
-tbe P~ - P"&gt;-

were worked Into

gram.

..

.·

•

~ -

-.-

'lbrouch tJie 'yf,ais. .... ~

Mr. Edward Michael, long-time
chairman of Buildings and Grounds,
in the first decade of this century,
was responsible for acquiring the cam-

With ~~ FloWerU., Crab Appla in

bloom 'tutd "the~ ropidly

w.u.,

the finDl .-fi6ea of iU faU,winter Buffalo rrey, the Reporter a./ted. Unioerlity horticulturi.t Richard A. Sebian
to leU .,. «&gt;mttlhins about lhe Unioeraity il:uldacape, iU hUior)!, and his role
in m&lt;JinUJininf and improuU., it.
ThU u hU reptXI:
By RICHARD A. SEBIAN

a..-.-

Most people bave to become bomebefore they really appreciate
tbe 6ora around tMm. Graas, shrubs,
buobM and bave always been a
part of tbe aoenety and are usually
ta11en for panllld. Tbeir esthetic value

OWDefll

pus .from E rie County.
Mr. George D . Crofts (comptroller)
,
in 1936 donated 8,000 evergreens to
.
the University. These were, for the
is ep.iil~ acoeptm: but :if ~ oondi- . : . most
set out' in a nur!lery liehinil
tion deteriorates, ' then mliny people
the houses on Wjnspear and' the presbeCome aware of the ihobnvenienoe
ent · EngiDeering Parlririg LDt. ·Many
they offer.
of these have been transplanted around
Patha or ruts across lawn areas turn
the campus and some are still in' evi' ·
to mud during time of rain; broken
dence. Of course, expansion of our
branches or oft-colored shrubs are discampus and tree diseases- mainly
pleasing to the eye and dead or broken
Dutch Elm-have cut deeply into our
branches on larger trees are considshade and evergreen tree population.
enid dangerous.
Dr. Claude Puller, vice president
for business affairs, and a committee
Shade are planted to be enof two others, (in the 1950's) felt a
joyed at their best by the following
new position should be created and
generations. We, bere a t the Univershould carry a prerequisite of a B.S.
sity, can be appreciative because secin horticulture and two to three years
tions of our campus were well planted
practiced experience. Having been
byour~rs.
graduated from Ohio Stale in 1950,
and having worked several years in
nursery-oriented positions, I was selected from a 6eld of candidatee. In
the initiation of a new department,
I bad to st&amp;rt out slowly. But over the
following 17 years, the department bas
been built into a 22-man crew. We
maintain not only the 176 aa-es on
this campus and the Ridge Lea camPUS. but also 33 parcels of property
the Stale either owns or rents.
I was very fortunate to bave the capable services of Mrs. Frances Kratz,
a landscape architect, to belp in all of
our design problems the first eight
years. One of the first programs initiated on the campus was that financed by the 8th Federated Bislrict
of Women's Garden Clubs. The planting of three hundred (300) Flowering
Crab Apples was started and continued until 19 varietiee were incorporated up to that "Dumber. Many of
thelie · are developing into mediumsized plan18 and in May, each year,
the color display of blossoms is enjoyed by thousands on our cainpus.
'llle varietiee Hops and Red Crimson
are two well-known and perhaps the
most showy ones on campus. Some of
the other varieties are:.. Arnold, Carmine, Floribunda, Tea, Eleyi, Midget,
Sargent, Cut-ll!in, Beauty, and Red
Vein. Like . . -, the varietiee of Ci&amp;ti
~pples are so numerous, it isiilillicult
to keep track of all of them. Conaequentl:y, OQ).y the .,._ ~t offered the
~ in Bower color, suitable Size. uni-

Part.

land!M'&amp;ped ...._ they CIOIDpleted and planllld to repl8ce
dead 0115, ... In wbere sary. In the selectian ol any - .
Bhrub or evergreen, lllllle are IIIIIDY
dillerent factors one abou1d . consider
before planting, .llotJ:I!'. _of.·-~ main
fealures woulc! be ~ u!U...te
sfze, bl~ fruit, leaf. size,· .abape
and texture and winler a~
All of the above bave to be oonsldered
before the judicious planting of any
material on campus.
·
While all p)ant maleriala are lifO'!"·
ing they ~ve f.o be aued for...,.- trimming, feedilig, fungus and insect &amp;praying, and maintenanCe In aeneral, all
apply to good grooming and health.
There are some and shrubs
that don't do well for us bere on the
campus because of winter conditions,
winds and beavy alkaline soils. Consequently, we bave incorporated those
varieties that do well with the least
amount of maintenance. We bave, at
the present time, at least 48 speciee of
trees on campus. A few of these would
be : Japanese Maple, Hornbeam, Hophornbeam, Katsura, Redbud, Rivers
Beech, Ginkgo, Butternut, Goldenrain,
Goldencbain, Amurcork Tree, Tulip,
Little-leaf Linden, European Lareh,
and Japanese Zelkova
..
During the coming spring and suplmer, take time-fer -a closer look at the
trees on our campuS and enjoy the
fruits of people who bave labored for
you in the past.
Miss Emily Webster, assistant vice
president for business affairs, who was
a student bere when the only landscaping was a cabbage patch and who
remembers belping Mr. Crofts place
.Jiis' evergreens in the 1930's, offered
this further historical information:
Mr. Edw:.ro Micbael was a member
of the Council of The University of
Bu11alo from 1~1947. In addition -to
being the moving force behind the
acquisition of the University property
from the County in 1909, be became
in 1920 the first chairman of the Committee on Buildings and Grounds, and
was responsible for all constJu.ction
and remodeling that. too~ place on. the
campus frOm -1920 unlil his retirement
in 1947. It was his imagination which
foresaw the ~tal setting for the
beautiful Albright balustrade which
adorns the quadrangle in front of
Lockwood Memorial Library.
Wben the Uiliversity too~ over the
premises from the County, the
grounds~ Jaraely .farmland, potato
and com fieJda A cabbage patch
stre~ aCI&lt;llll the Main Street frontage, a ig pen; li..mck hams and
other
t;.buildings situated to
the rear of the rambling almobouM
and hospital
Mr . George D . Crofts who waa
comptroller and treasurer of the Unir versity from 1921 to 1961 was Jaraal,y
responsible for converting tbat rouch
farmland into a campus of beautifully
landscaped lawns and waJka. WIIh
limited funda at his dispoeal. be created with the belp of~ and
day laborer, approzimale)y 100 acres
of lawn. He could afford to do only
a piece at a time, 21&gt;-30 ·scree a year
over a five-to-ten-year period. Many of
the shade trees·on t1ie almshouse p,..,P.
erty were beautiful enough to be left
untouched in their natural setting.
To these, be added other _flowering
plants and shrubs- a row of forsythia
bordering the adjacent church property, lillj.cs, peonies and iris beda tp
surround the newly constructe4 Foster
Hall. The 8,000 evergreen seedlings
which lie contributed were ooquired
from tba New York Stale Conservation Com!nission. The eight elmo (one
.or. which ·bas died ) in front of HarriLibrary were also his personal

man
iifi.

�~

4

Student Is- J!shamed Of'
Serving on Ketter Group
sY JAMES F.

BYERS

"'~ .,...,_, __,_. ol

'"!

T~B~

As aon~ of a (X)OliiJi.s.
sian that bas been replaced as
the lepJ tribunal for the administration, I would like to
take this opportunity to ex-

press a few thoughts.* =

I would like to apt&gt;Mfille to
my fellow students for .m~ P!"''ence on such a OOIDID188lon.
Although I bad received a few
~ to"""""" myself from
the commission, I did nol Not
because of an ego trip, nor because as was stated earlier, I
was one of "Regan's nigger&amp;"
- but more because I felt that
by serving on the commission
I rould offer a student's opinion. I felt that through a united
effort (students, faculty and
staff) we rould deal with a relatively large prolllem. I felt that
"sticking your head into the
sand" about the validity and/ or
right of the rommission would
not make it go away. I further
felt that unless a student's
opinion were represented, the
rommission would herome the
proverbial witdlhunt that it WM
called. Much to my disappointment, rny goals were not
reached.
Originally the rommission, I
believe, was instituted to fill a
void. A void brought by the
rontroversy over the existence
of a student rourL This is the
focal point, I feel, of the rontroversy. For it iS here that the
faculty and staff enter as judicial members. But this is a ,
matter better left to the members of the student court and
the Ketter Commission to debate.
I wish to discuss some of the
more immediate issues. Let me
again state that I do believe
that the rommission originally
tried to insure due process. But
a number of problems arose. ·
· · 'lbe uJoint Statement on
Rights and Freedoms of Students," as published in the College LtwJ BuUetin, Vol. )! •. No.
6, February, 1970, and
lated by the Advocate's Office
states:
... . . each college and uni~
versity has a duty to develop
policies and procedures which
provide and · safeguard · ( this l
freedom. Such policies and procedures sbould be developed at
each institution within the
framework of general standards
and with the broadest possible
participation of the members of
the academic community.''
And further:
''Disciplinary proceedings
sbould be instituted only for
violations of standards of ronduct formulated with significant
student participation and published in advance through such
rneB!f' as a student handbook

=-

at registration, there was no
student participation in tbe!r
formulation. Although this
more b8sic point was overlooked, one might feel this
justifiable for "law and order"
-but I would ask my fellow
students, hasn't this been the
pattern?
Additional questionable iteml!
would include: How the nonadversary type of bearing rommission, originally conceived,
gave riae to an adversary rype
of rourt (The mere fact of 1ts

GVIEWPOJNI'S
Tho ~ ' - " on this poae

to prcwide • fonlm for the ex·
chllnp of . - on • wide vorlety
of the iss- faclnc the ocodemlc
community. We welcome both
positions p8pers •nd fetters es
spoc:e pennlts.
adversary nature, points out its
lack of objectivity.); how the
legal officer, who originally was
'to be a parliamentarian, became a judge, passing on what
was to be presented as evidence; how the Advocate's Office was originally not to act as
prosecutor, but later became a
very viable force doing just that
- prosecuting.
But rather than these items,
it has been the anecdotal romments of the members of the
oommission that have forced me
to reronsider my position. To
the question of whether there
was a way to decrease the confrontations on campus, this
· reply was given: "No, Jim,
there will be a showdown here
on the grounds, if it has to

=~~·i~u:~o: :v:f:~~

ary leoder or just a . follower
received this reply: "Well, hell,
we know the.:e people are the
same ones in every demonstration, so why worry whether he's
a leader or not. u
As a result of these-and rnsny
other incidents, I feel ashamed
to have served on such a commission, and would reoommend
that no other s tudent serve in
a comparable position - for
even in its creation, there is
injustice: ''The president shall
appoint five faculty members
to the commi ss ion, who, in
tum, will appoint the s tudent
representation." ·
ZIMMERMAN ASKS ACTION ·
The Buffalo community must assert itself against both " unfit intellectuals" . who indoctrinate

Mq 21,1910

Campus Offers LessOn for the. Nation
EDITOR'S NOTE: Helbert S.

Levine. visitinl Uliatant profeeeor
of history, oncl one of the ~eo

~·1S?i~~r ~": tit;;~Di-~

or Anarchy: Common Front at
Bufralo,'' opeab of the campuo
situation earlier this spring u
one "which mUst es:cite the im~tion of anyone concerned
With preservin~ meaningful

&lt;!io·

sent in a penod of mcreasmg
anarchy and repreesion." We pick
up his article as he concludes a
summary of events from the night
of February 24 to Wednesday,
Man:h 11, when the Faculty Senate called for the immediate removal of police from campus.

By HERBERT S. LEVINE
Vitit~

.A.Utant Prole.- o/ H iattW)'

With the police on campus,
further violence was inevitable,
and general rioting broke out
on March 12. So long as student groups persisted in a
policy of violent oonfrontation,
and persisted as well in lumping faculty together with administration, there was no real
chance for a oommon academic
fronl But on March 13, after
the sobering lessons of the preceding night's rioting had been
absorbed, the word went out
from the strike meeting to "roo!
it!" And they did. Rock throwing, police baiting and occasional bomb planting gave way
to sound politics! planning and
long-term strategy. The administration's summary arrest on
March 15 of 45 faculty members, who were holding a pesceful and nondisruptive meeting
in police.:OCCUpied Hsyes Hall,
rompleted the picture. The faculty had been directly attacked,
and all notions of academic
freedom had been violated. The
Faculty Senate rejected a motion of ronfidence in the administration, and met one of
the original strike demand s
halfway by voting an end to
new admissions in the ROTC
program. Mutual faculty-student mistrust did not disappear
but, so far as was posSible, the
University oommunity united
against the cries for retaliation
coming from public authorities,
civic groups and the local press.
The administration, by pressing for maximum legal prosecution of the arrested faculty,
while at the same time denying
that it was doing so, rompletely
discredited itself. Bail and defense money poured in for arrested fa c u I t y and students.
The enemy was exposed, a line
was drawn, and a front was
formed.
A Lesson for the N•tion

partisan

&lt;iREPORTER:,

oil._ - .._,.., _, I"-*.,-..-. 3U§--.

.1:-_..,.,

_.....,

done nothing men than take
some of the ~ o« the
blacks.
Whether they like it or not,
and many of .them in Bulfalo
do not like it, 1lbarals and radi-

~-

=

cals have become involved in
the same war, and on the same
side. Neither JI'ClUP has entered
the struggle in the proper frame
of mind. 'lbe radicals, wbo
seem to have taken nothing
from Marxism except a cheer-'ful assumption that history is
·on their side, apparently believe-that they cannot lose. The
liberals, hamstrung by devotion
to misunderstood principles,
believe that they cannot fight
A fight is inevitable, and defeat
is possible, if not probable.
.
A large_section of faculty and
~tudents m Bu!faio have real~ that the .time. for a fJlssy
chm~ of alhes !n tl!e fight
Tf!:!'s! ~e:=~n
taken assumption that, because
persecution is evil, those who
suffer under it are good. The
persecuted take romfort in their
own moral superiority and may
even claim that -suffering and
defeat are themaelves good, or
that decent men are inevitably
defeated. It would be well to
remember the words of Bertolt
Brecht, written after the Nazi
triumph in German y: ''The
good were defeated, not because
they were good but because
they were weak."

Enemy Is Old ond Fomlllor
Elsewhere, matters are not
so simple. Liberal inhabitants
of Lindsay's New York are
unde1standably more OOna!med
with radicsl bombers than with
the possibility of political repression. But the enemy has already revealed himself nationally, at the trial in Chicago,
and in the statements of high
public figures. The enemy is
an old and familiar one, in a
slightly altered guise : the Fascisl There are those who reject
the use of the term, which is so
bound up with a specific defunct histories! situation. This
rejection is mistaken. Fascism
is as much alive today as socialism, and this heromes clear if
we take the trouble to examine
the thrust of both ideologies.
Socialism, in the broadest
sem:e, is the direction of political anger created by eronomic
tensions at economic enemies.
Fascism is the direction of this
anger at irrelevant enemies.
Socialism tends to destroy or
radically alter the eronomic
system which produces it; fascism, by misdirecting the anger,
preserves the economic system
while failing to solve its genuine problems. Both Fascist
and Socialist responses to
eronomic ai£ficulties are possible. and have occurred, on
both sides of the iron curtain.
The roots of modem American Fascism lie in the failure
of modern capitalism to p;;:/
vide general economic sati8f.lc..
tion. It is no accident that twlp
of today's key political ~
pollution and ~ion,
are at
their heart anti-capi
t, since
they attack the free
· of
the profit motive. Nor is it any
accident that angry Buffalo has
notably failed to get its share
of American prosP&lt;',rity, while
suffering all the disadvantages
of the American economic system. This situation ·has created
in Buffalo, and is creating ·in
the nation as a whole, a mass
of proto-Fascist political energy which only awaits effective leadership. Emotionally
tied to a system which is itaelf
creating their distress, enraged
citizens search for an irrelevant
enemy - black, effete, Red or
longhaired. It is unnecessary to
liat the attempts that are being
made to establish a suitsble focus f~ public hatred.
Tho

maY

,
..
,

a~~~
.,.....,._ •.., ~have

warfare were ex·

No Enemies on the Left!" .,,.,
reconciliation was not only belated·, it was insincere in both
camps.
Liberals and r a d i c a 1 s in ·
Americs today are still at the
stage of mutual, name calling,
Liberals fail to distinguish between "extremists on both
sides,'' and radicals l_ump &amp;!I
those who disagree With their ,
methods into one "Fascist pig'' ·
Establishment The moment
for a Popular Front has not yet
arrived, but such a~nt was
formed on the Buffalo 'Campus.
The very ronditions of struggle
improved the chance s (or a
rommon front, as liberals were
radicalized, and , r ad i c a Is
abandoned nihilistic ronfronfor political common

or oam .• .., .,_

cist, in the 1aat """ will al~

changed for "Popular Front!

Events in Buffalo were purely local, and their effect' was
possibly temporary. The police
revolutiooary students at U/ B. were removed from campus on
Marvin Zimmerman , associate pro- March 26, during the spring
fessor of philosop!"'y, told an vacation, .and the strike is virAlumni Women's Day· gathering tually over. The University will
this week. A strong president is perhaps return to its normal
an urs:ent need . Zimmerman said, •ituation of fraternal warfare,
that " the greatest tragedy which seems to be the very sub· ·i would like to point out that adding
that hit the University was the stance of education today. But
the only regulation that the stu- president who ;oined us three the court trials of students and
dents were aware of was "2.10 years ago." He said it was police faculty will drag on, and the
-picketing and demonstra- who had restored academic free- citizens of Buffalo will demand
tion," Although the "Rules and
dom to the campus this spri,;g.
vengeance. The administration
~tions" were banded out
and the public authorities may
be rounted on to provide new
reasons (or academic unity in
the f a c e of repression. The
strike committee rontinues to
exist, and it and faculty groups
A. ~__.,. __,.... ,....,.., ._. .,...,..,. . , .._ JlrihoWa. ., u•
are planning Cor a long political
......,. ........., su. ·v.._., o1..11. .
sc.. ~ struggle. The moment of soli11. r , 14214. IU#twW
lN B.,_ Ball (,.,_ 4$01) -.1 . _
darity- will not be forgotten in
2U, 2.10 . . . . . . . A...- (,.._. 2127J.
Buffalo. For IM nation 01 a
whole, IMre i8 a Ieason to be
... IRSTUI' ll.&lt;1frUXD
letuned. The history of radiCal disaa..arr. ~
sent teDds to be cyclical, and
an analotiY with the situation
.,...,.~";!W.:..."'a-o£. the 19308 is relevant Faced Mllltont Are One Solution
.JOmiLCLOCmml
Aif.,. ...........
with the threat of Fascism, the
The m iii tan t radic:ala
Left, particularly in. Europe, ha'Ve provided one solution to
split into two groups, OQp:e- . the aearch. Certainly liberals
~~spoading- rougbly to .COmmu- are loud in their complaints
.atarrOaS:
1o
- Jt.q
.,.._..,
s_
- __
a-t...........
,..,, c:llllr7f n i s t a and llOil-Communists. that the~resent move toward
-OOII'f'lll.unlfO
.. . .- J
_J
_
n- poupa labeled each repressiOII' is being ca..OO by
~~......, L. ,.,.,.... . . . .. "-'-·
olher "Faacista of the Left" ~ of radical ru-tt.
CIOin"JWrunMJ ~~ . _ "'· . . .....
and "Social ~" The Ia- Thill is plainly not llue, whatrather than teach and lawbreaking

evercals' ~~ ~tyof ~ ~-

be1s were crippling, for no fight
against F&amp;Ecism could be sueoesSful which failed to distinguish between genuine Fascists and Fascists . by discourtesy. Only when it was too late
the rommon danger was realized and the bitter slogans of

a!d

=

"A fighl

Tension~

�• . , 21, 1910

5

. '
1\1~ Sees Students ~Flunking Courses,
Says ~Dig Deeper' for the -~Best Power'
.·

EDITOR'S NOTE: AnonymoWI
viewpointa and !etten to tbe edi-

~!po~r.O:e ~~eve~!:

•ider rwmin&amp; letters from writers

--

--:k. . ~
.

\},_\

h~ '\\J:e-n!n~~ ::fU:.e.,o~:J:~

lint time tbil week-reluctantly,
because the writer wishes to be
anonymous but with the realization that the . view expressed is
germane to d.Ucuasiona elsewhere
on today's Viewpoints page -

RTM.

"Many of you have been lied to, misled and misdirected by 'false prophets' . . . You are forgetting
the main purpose of your attendance at coUege."

AN OPEN LETTER TO
STUDENT DEMONSTRA TORS, "FOLLOWERS ," &amp;
" INNOCENT BYSTANDERS."
From: Alum or Ex-Journalist
or Conoomed Staff Member.
Although your privilege of
attending college represents a
considerable investment of
hard-earned dollars and sacrifice On the part of many of you,
and your parents, and of all the
taxpayers in the State, your
"ooncem for the evils of the
day" is manifesting itself in unreasonable and senseless waste
of your own mental,· emotional
and physical strength as well
as financial resources. Furthermore, your actions are causing
hardships to your fellowmen,
regardless of your intentions.
Certain departments on this
campus and practically every
campus in this great nation
have been dedicating their efforts for many years to improve
your physical comforts while
attending college, as well as to
provide the most modem and
improved scientific equipment
and teaching methods in order
to prepare all of you for a better, more meaningful life for
yourselves and for all mankind.
The aim is to make it possible
for you to prepare yourselves
for better service to your communities after graduation... .
Every window you break, every room you deface or damage
will increase your taxes and the
taxes o f all yo ur fa milies,
friends and neighbors for years
to rome. Funds which could be
used for community betterment
are required to repair or replace the damage you have
done, or failed to prevent.
Banks •nd Interest Ch•rges

Window s broken in hanks
will be rellected eventually in
increased cost of student loans,
interest and insurance charges.
The results of student violence
will make it more difficult for
aU students, now and in years
to come, to rent off-campus
hous'mg and to obtain service
and credit from neighboring
stores and businesses. You are
making it more difficult for
your kid sisters and brothe'rs to
gain a college education when
their chance comes.

h.t is inevitable, and defeat is possible, if not probable." ·

,s Committee Asks ·where Do Me

'i!tbJct~U::,vee~W:r"'~~

peaseu:wmt mUit come to an end"
He .dvioed ooll- to enfon:e
clear rulee for campus conduct.
"with immediate ez~on tbe
penalty for eerioul VIolations."

GNATIONAL
GREPORTS

011-

led
oc t

- I

please stop and think before
you act!
In our travels, - welltmated by everyone met.
Wernmene
hadt noleacandertacts- wiVthT lf1V_,s.p .'11
Our contacts were with the
" little guys"-tui drivers,
waiters, hotel and restaurant
personnel. airline stall, store
clerks, etc. Even though were hampered by the ''Ianguage barrier" - felt IIIOIIt
everyone tried very hard to
UIL

......

~ uswi~.=.,ti!,~
~~~ne embarraesed us with
~~~~!iti~o~d :-~~~ .. Q\leS~ons a~out Vietnam or

Many of you have been lied
to, misled and misdirected by
" false pr~p~ets:• - leaders

American way of life. Many of
the words and tactics being

used by these S&lt;H:ailed leaders

are the same I was exposed to
as a college student more than
30 years ago, but learned to
evaluate and set aside as untrue and untenable. Our nation
has rome a long way since then
in improving the lot of all our
citizens, and it is incredible to
see how the seeds of Communist propaganda have brought
such violent and destructive resuits as we have witnessed in
1969-1970.
This writer has recently returned from almost four months
touring among the peoples of
Asia, India and Europe. We
saw many modem metropolitan
areas with high-rise buildings,
overcrowded urban oonditions
with ever-increasing traffic and
pollution. We also made the
effort to search for evidences of
older ways of life, dating back
several centuries. Although favorably impressed with some
technological evidences of prog•ess made to improve the lot of
uthe common tnan," we were
convinced more than ever of
how fortunate we are to have
been born and raised in the
United State s of America.
Truly, it is wonderful to be
hack home!
Troubled Times

In troubled times like these,
we were very fortunate escaping a ll the man-made and natural catastrophes that occurred along our itinerary, either
just before or shortly after our
various stops. Student and ' labor strike violence, bombings,
avalanches, even an earthquake
caused oonoom to our family
and friends for our personal
safety.
We do not know why the
Good Lord spared us from aU
these disasters, unless it was to
tell everyone hack home that
the U.S.A. is still the best plaoo
in the world to live and work
and enjoy the freedoms we
granted. All of you out there
who are still reading this,

Go From Here?'

offered his o w n proposals for

~~.

You are forgetting the ~
purpooe of your attendance at
college. which iS to learn from
the lessons of the past and in
the light of new scientific discoveries, to communicate with
your fellowmen more effectively for the good of aU mankind.
So far as your actions show,
many of you right now are definitely "flunking" your courses
in logic, · applied psychology,
philosophy, political sciences
and history.

.

Foreign P&lt;!licy. Many of our
oon_tacts ~1stfully declared
theu longmg to come to Amer1C8. In fact, some hof:el sta!f•·
members w1th tears m their
eyes ur~ us to take them
home WJth us. qr course _we
ooul~ n~t do this, no~ bemg
milboll!'~- We had difficulty
e~platntng we were only a
m1ddle-aged _couple on a fourmonth unl"!'d l"'!ve of ~ce
from our nuddle-moome Jobs.
Many of _you young people
do not realiZe how ~popular
and scorned we Amencans were
111 our slowness to oppose the
German imperialist regime before we eventually entered
World War I, and again in the
years preceding World War ll
when we sat back passively
while the Nazis overran Holland, Belgium and France, and
the Mussolini regime oppressed
the Italians. We were also criticized in many circles far not
springing to the defense of the
oppressed in Spain following
World War ll.
Stars and Stripes

It is a vital part of our U.S.A.
heritage to be actively concerned for the welfare of aU peoples
everywlw!re. To most of us. our
Stars and Stripes is the cleanest and most-admired flag in
the world. Let's keep it that
\\"Sy!

-

If you students had been
spending as much time and energy on your college courses in
reoont weeks as you have been
dissipating in these senseless
·•strikes" and "confrontations "
you would have a good unde~­
standing of these su bjects
which will stand you in good
stead in lhe future.
In a ddition , let us recommend that each of you, if you
are not now studying a foreign
language, try to include one in
future. U you are planning
trip, · arm yoursell with a
pocket dictionary so you can
speak and understand a few
phrases of greeting and thanks.
It will be most rewarding. We
learned that many other nations are now requiring their
schoolchildren to Jearn a_l; least
one other language besides
their own.
.
Please stop this senseless
waste you have been indulging
in, and rededicate yourselves to
concentrate on the fields of
knowledge spread out for your
informationr .Some sage has
warned ' A 4ftUe knowledge is
a dangerous thing," although
we also recognize the truth of
the saying that ''Knowledge ia.
Power." So, ilig deeper, and
enlarge your knowledge, not superficially, but in depth. sci that
you may participate in the Best
P010rr!
J1 ;t sign me-"Al~" or
"E1 Journalist" or " Concerned
Sta.i Member."
P.S. U any of you readersthink there is one nation in•the
world offering more ''life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" than the U.S.A., the rest
of us would be grateful if you
would 10 there and tzy it. '""'
rest of us will be better olf without you(

�6

Officially Neglected,' Journalism Is Taught Informally · •~
By

LOUIS

VIU.ANO

aw.t Copy &amp;411«, N,..,_ ,_. 0.-t,.
At Aiioe•s Restaurant you can get
anything
want And so can you at

You

the State University at BuJialo-even
to a smatterina of joumalism.
Largest of the Stale University's
centers, .. . the Bulfalo campus offers
no organized journalism program. This
is an ~g .111)8~nism in view of
the crucial ·role of ciommunications in
·a society growing increasingly complex.
Nevertheless, on their own initiative.
students have produced some courses
in joumalism outside the established
curriculum. 'These are knoWn as ''bulletio board" colll'8eS, taking their name
from the fact that students desiring a
·program not in the curriculum invite
others to join them in a particular
~ course of study by postiog a public
· notice on the campus. H enough students subscribe to the course and a
teacher is obtained, a syllabus is submitted to the University's Curriculum
Committee, which approves the offering and grants credit for it, if it is
desired.
This is the way the University's
Division of Undergraduate Studies describes it:
"This is a special student-initia'ted
program designed to allow students to
initiate and participate in courses they
would like to see offered. Students
andj or faculty will have an opportunlt(Y to find-other persons who are intereSted in lesmirig and organizing semester courses in subjects which are
not presently being taught."
0

Rrot Course: D'Amico's

The fin;t bulletio board course in
journalism was taught by Mic.hael
D'Amico, editor of the campus newspaJ'8r, The Spectrum, in 1967~. It
offered an introductory look at the
principles of newspapering. D'Amico,
a Jaw senior at U / B, taught his fourth
class this semester, " Principles of
Joumalism 211." This course, with an
enrollment of 26, deals with the baSic
concepts of newspaper production and
-?includes exercises in writing news
stories, features, criticism and headlines, plus layout and design.
_
Apart from the pragmatic aspects of
jouma1ism, the students disCuss edil!&gt;iial policy, the'rishts and responsibilities of tbe preao and - in an area
where D'Amico as a Jaw student is
particularly knowledgeable-the Jaws
of defamation, libel and slander.

---

Another hulletio board course was
initiated in the fall aeme8ter of 1969
by Paula Brookmire, supervising editor of ethoa, a weekly campus newspaper, and was taught by this writer.
This course had an enrollment of nearly 00 and covered elementary principles of newspaper writing, copy editing, headline writing and design and
layout, in addition to classroom discussions on the social role of the press.

For the 1970 spring semester,

a new

oourse was offered, "Joumalism Work-

shop 311,.. combining both classroom
d.iacuasions and actual newsroom in~truction, with the idea that a _newsroom setting would make the work of
the class more tangible.
The Jacilities of the N iagaro Falls
Gazette were made available to this
class by Managing Editor Donald
Johnson. At its fin;t session at the
Gazette, Mr. Johnson led students on
a tour of the Gazette newsroom, romposing shop, stereotype department,
pressroom, the new photo 'COmposition
department and advertising and business offices. Johnson wound up the
tour by describing the operations of
the newsroom in producing a daily
newspaper and the problems involved
in news coverage.

wbo took them on a tour of the photo
lab and discusaed some of the problems in handling photo assignments
and his long experience on the Gazette.
Most of the students in the two
bulletio board coUrse. are drawn from
the campus publications and from
WBFO, the University's FM radio
station. Since the courses carry four
credit hours, the work of the students
is judged by the instructor, who hands
out letter grades at the end of the
semester.
Third Course

A third journalism course is offered
at U / B, but not for credit. This is
taught by Lee Smith (an editorial
writer for the Buflaw Euening News)
in the evening school, the Millard Fillmore College - Division of Contiouing
Education:
Monct.ys and Wed-.lays
A good many of the s tudents in the
On Mondays and Wednesdays from
bulletin board courses are interested
4 to 5:30 p.m., the class, with an enrollment of- 37; met on the Buffalo . in oommunications as a career. Others
want to acquire facility in writiog
campus for d iscussion of newspaper
skills as an aid in pursuing varied protopics and to hear guest lecturers.
fessional objectives.
Among the· latter was Ben DeForest,
in charge of the Buffalo bureau of The
Undoubtedly, a newsroom atmo-.
· Associated Press, who described the . sphere in which to work helps to m&amp;ke
manifold and far-ranging operations
more ooncrete and stimulating the
of the world's largest news-gathering
processes involved in producing a
organization.
daily newspaper. For members of the
class who are on the stsffs of the stuOn alternate Tuesdays, the students
dent newspapers, this brings a new
made the 20-mile trip from the Buffalo
dimension to their experience. .
campus to the offioes of the Gazette,
where they held a three-hour session,
The three student papers on the
writing news stories, editing copy,
Buffalo campus are lively, rather well
writing headlines, familiarizing themwritten and well edited, with striking
selves with AP copy as it comes off
innovative design in layout. Experithe teletype machines, and engaging
mental techniques in news presentain layout of _pages and handling of
tion are widely used and compel readWirephoto&amp;.
er interest. During the student turbulence on the campus in late winter,
&lt;lf11anlzation and Headllneo
the newspapers provided good, deTwo aspects deserve special mentailed coverage. . . : Tiwi campus metion: The organization of the day's
dis performed another valul.ble servjce
news report, involving judgment in the
by, bringing to the fore the many isselection and play of stories, and the
sues which precipitated the outburst&amp;.
stress laid upon writing heads. The
latter is particularly important beWherelo Journalism~~
cause it teaches students bow" to anaThe bulletin board courses, neceslyze the elements and structure of a
sarily temporary in nature, raise some
news story and pick out the salient
questions. Where are they headed?
features to compress- into a head, so
Will they be integrated into the reguthat it captures the basic meaning of
lar curriculum on an organized basis?
a story.
In describing these courses, the Division of Undergraduate Studies aays:
Apart from the workshop sessions
at the Gazette, students were required
''This project offers faculty and stuto submit papers on assigned topics
dents a unique opportunity to initiate
or topics of their own choosing, prefthe courses they feel are imPortant
erably the latter, and were encouraged
and relevant to their learning interto engage in news projects involving a
ests. It will alao afford students and
team approach. One of the assignfaculty the opportunity to pre-plan
ments, for example, was to carry out
the semester's OOUJ'8e and requirea survey of student attitudes on the
ments. Hopefully, this bulletin board
draft lottery. Another was to analyze
and similar projects will become a
the complete contents of selected
permanent part of our academic innewspapers in terms of hard news,
struction for students and faculty to
soft news, features, editorial coiDID&lt;Ult,
direc:Uy affect and inlluence their acapictures,~vertising and so forth.
demic expe~at the University.n
As an accompaniment of their newsWhat then are the prospects for the
room sessions, students got a practical
establiahment 'lf a department of jourlook at newspaper phOtOgraphy from
nalism at U / B?
Joe Ognibene:..a Gazette photographer,
This question, which has been raiaed

Dental &amp;hool Pioneers Teaching Method
theU~s :t:•.:~::J:
without lectures the rubber dam
tecbnique basic to '\'8DY dental
procedures.

Dr. George W. Ferguson, prof-.r and cbairliilla&amp;. of operative dentistry; ~d the "de&gt;-ityouraelf" program was initiated
Jaat fall with 75 sophomore student&amp;. Each student receives a
170-p&amp;ge programmed, illustrated workbook designed to
tMcb terminology and tech-. hique needed for the clinic. A
14-minute • color movie, slides
~~ps supplement the
•

'Ibis new teaching technique

~ IJIOIIllliDID8C learning - bas
.....w.f adYIID~ and m.,,.,..,_
-teristial, IIOCOidina to nr-:'Peler

RJ, Cnnninpm, clinica1 aasiat-

ant professor of operative dentistry and endodontics:
Each student is on his own.
He studies at his own paoo and
tests himself. The ins~ction
is faster and more enjoyable.
It is cfuected toward a specific
objective, is adaptable to individlljl} differences, and the
knowledge is retained longer.
There is alao immediate student response and feedback.
·The instruction bas been designed so that more than 90 per
cent of students will correctly
answer at least 90 per cent of
questions. In contrast, only
·about 30 to 35 per cent of questions asked following a good
lecture will be correctly answered, Dr. Cunningham aays.
The rubber dam, a thin slwet
used to isolate teeth in the op-

0

emting field, promotes e&gt;:cellency in operative dentistry, ·
according to Dr. , Ferguson .
'"lbat is why we want to teach
its use to our dental students.n
"Most dental schools teach
the technique. But only a small
percentage of dentists use it in
their practice_ We just haven't
done e. good selling job within
our own profession," Dr. Ferguson aaid.
Also involved in the preparations for this special ,teaching
program are Dr. John W. Osborne, assistant professor of operative den tist ry and dental
materials; -Dr. Taber A. Razik,
associate professor and director of curriculum ~ment and
instructional media, and . Mias .
Loretta A . Kaye , technical
writer.

over a number of years by stUdmits
and professional newspapermen from
the Nisgara Fiontier, wu IIIPiored
last lall,with the University by a committee from the Greateso Bulfalo Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi headed by
Managing Editor Johnson_ The committee emerged from a session with
U / B officials greatly heartened by
promises of support for steps to establish a joumalism program.
As far back as 1966, Dr. A. Westley
Rowland, vice president for university
relations, had reoogn_Ued the need by
drawing up a proposed program in
communication arts for the State University. Itt a seven-page memo introduced by a quotation from Dr. Ashley
Montagu, the., famed anthropologist,
"Communication iB the essence of the
human condition," Dr. Rowland set
forth the imperatives for tbe creation
of a School of Communication Arts,
to be accomplished in phases over a
period of years. Among its seven divisions would be a department of journalism, covering newspaper writing,
reportiog and editiog, magazine writing and publishing, and photo-journalism.
No Procresslve Course
The bulletin board courses, constrained to limit their enrollment,
have found a wide response and testify
to the demands of many students to
institute joumalism on an organized
basis. Since they are simply a stopgap,
they suffer from inherent handicaps,
such as the fact that they are designed
on a one-semester basis and don't afford the student contemplatiog a career in joumalism a progressive oourse
of studies leading to his goal.

Because there are no requisites for
the coUI'S,!l"~arying levels of experi'enoe or non-ezperience are represented
in 'the clasaes, with some frustration
for the instructor in trying to communicate both with novices and thoee
who have had some elemental familiarity with the gathering and writing
of news.
The neglect of joumalism within the
State University system was underscored by Dr. Rowland when be pointed out that the University : " . . . is
the public center of learning for the
State with the greatest concentration
of the nation's communications industry.... Yet, within State University
there is no formal communications
program. None is p~Uy projected
for any of its graduate centers, the
most logical settings for a comprehensive in-depth study of a field of 8IICb
wide and vital significance."
-:

ea~val

The
""' -are living
for quick steps to develop widel the arts and skills ol.
communi
na.
through

�• . , 21; 1P10

GREPORTS
.ON
.&lt;¥EOPLE

~~ ==..~ ·~.....-.a-- .an~

Foarin

.

o~&lt;v.

PUBLICATIONS

~:s.- 0-~
P.o.-~~

ia . .
Manner olS_.t. Procladlollander No.-I aDd Delayed Auditory Feedb.ok," Speed&amp; M-- -

NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS
DL IUOCS DGLIBB..

f="r~v::.:. ~c;:t

former dean,

Scbool of Den!Utry, aDd profeoaor,
onol bjoJ.ocy, $171,500, NIH,
Health ProfMOioDII ' Educational

tern aDd

lmp._..t Program-IDOiitutional GranL

IlL CA11L

cwra, profsoor,

~

Data He-

~~':/"~A......,._
IlL

DmliO

muaic, two
~

biolOCY,

$23,000, NSF, Functional MorpboJ.ocy of SqWUDIIte RepliliL

PI'Of-r,

CII8Rift,

EDidiah

Modripla ar-

for choraa, orcbealm or

:!,.,IIADY~~ 1;;...""=i
~~·~~~

w. aamm. sa.. cbairw
man. Depaltmenl of Oral Path-

Da. 0110101:

:::.~· NIH, Clinical Can-

lueae. Kinetic ~- aDd

"n.dialion Initiated Side Chaia
Chlorination of Toil-- Continn- oua Reactor Deaip," Indlutriol

~"//~r:::J D~!:~a';=r

OIL TBOKA8 B. II'OJU.BI. 1&amp;., ~

~tiamo;~~ti!!_6·~rihritia

DL P.A.UL

JDOIIE . BOLLAND,

-

D&amp;.

P~RFORMANCES

&amp;urwel Beckett Now; "Lume
Concrete," Adam.

IAYKOND niJIZKAN, profMBOr,
Ftench, "Becketl:i.an Paradox:
Wbo Ia Telling the Tnlth?,"
DL PE'I'I:It H. IIAB&amp;,

clinical profeBBOr, psychiatry,
$40,802, NIMH, Teaching Depreae.ion and Suicide in a General
Hoe pitaL
D1L

ANDREW

W.

BOLT,

~~~; ~~~~~te;"~'; i~
0

~~nalG:!.'11~P:;,J:n. ~~:

~'f'Y#?"'Pl~::!~·.:19}f~J'o~
Methods,- $17,920; Project
Core Program, $52,604.

IOHN IIAN8GATE, programmer an·
alyal, Compilling Center; B.S.,
Geo~wn Univeroity.
&amp;rrA PICCOLO, tecbnical apecialial,
M.S., Caniaius Col-

r.::.-IOCY;

director, Minority Sludenl Alfaira.
loa. JOOa, tecbnical apecialial,
~ = = t y.Center; B.A.,
aooanELT I.Bom::B,

#9,

DB.. EDWIN P. 184C80N, asaocia.te

~~.~~Nu\~let:""~i
Immune Reactiona to Cutaneous
Neoplasia.

~~~~=·
=~.teJffi.
~=live Neural RNA Me-

DeEXHIBITIONS
parbnent of Microbiology, $66,·
DONAUI BLUMIIDO UIIOC:iate pro-856, NIH, Characterization of
f..or, photopaph.y, repreeented Some lmm';lllolotdcal Phenomena
ia the Group Show, "Recent A.c r- Aocompanymg HomotraDIIplantaq~tioua.'' Mueeum of Modem
tion.
An, New York City.
lliL 1 ~ M1'rc11Eu., profeoIW!Yn" 1 . .........,., prof..aar,
oor, ·matbematico, $15,000, NSF,
~-:,' ~~~"E""'mtht
Analyaia on Symmetric
tion," Evenon MWJeUID . of Art. 011.. ALBatT PADWA., profeuor, cbem.$8,250, PRF, ACS, Electron
~;~~=~!:"~: iatry,
tiona" (invitational edtibition) . Tranafer Processes in the E:.:ci.ted
J-w!f Gallery, Ulliwnity of State.
Hartford, Conn.; "Mainalreams D1L Lil BOY A. ,..,;.,, dean, School
'70" International Paialing and of M e d i c i n e, $230,000, NIH,
Scalpture Ezhibition, Marietta Health Prof-iona Educational
Collep. Ohio; Bell State Uniwr- Improvement Program - Inatiluaity, Indiana, National EdillJit;.n; tional GranL
one-man ed&gt;ibition of 25 paiatALta 't. ~. profMBOr,
iap, Schuman Gellery, Rocbeoter. DL
elementary aDd remedial educa-

g:,:_

D&amp;. mBIN

~

II.U'flflali.&amp;N. ueociate

~~~~~
Medical Genetica.

=

IlL. ....... c . ...... aaaiatanl pro-

feaaor,

mechanical

:Crillll•

!j:Oin~~~rcbthe

1-.. Amplifier,

niL ...

L. __ , . . _ ,

clinical --

::rnMt.~~t
a.id the Hypothalanw
... ~ c. -.oncm, __,;.
ate 'llmf-r,

~.

$80,-

110

PRESENTATIONS

'!12fO.. usol.wt'?ni, f.l:

guiatica a n d t Childhood Ed-

ucation (Project Dewlopmenl) . ·

pro-

s.!themve%~~~·~:J:.:,~"!;;:
DR.

lOBN

asaiatant

HOWJLL,

A.

nam," Sludenla for Peace and
Involvement. Canisius College.
DB.. GABIUI:L KOLKO, profes8or, his~· .. Power in America in the
Lnive~~~::.. Pori! and State

profeuor; DIL lUB.A'I"SUGU IZU, usiatant for curriculum develop·

DB.. ORLAN LEE, visiting assistant

DB.. KENNETH M. KIBIIl, 8880Ciate

ia the Hialory of the Reform of

can Instituu of Chemical E116ineen Journal.

ment. and DIL

K£lrrflrriftB ·p.

o'I:818-

00LL, profeuor, chemical engineering, ''Copolymerization with

Depropagalion III," Applied
Polymer Science.

DR. SELIG ADLER, professor, history,
"The Aftermath-Resurgence of
Isolalioniam," Symposium "The

~f~ ~~~·ta"~~tiL~ru:. P..n!:Eir~~=~
Righla" and ..f.?1ividnal ~Ia Hot-Film Anemometer Reaponae•
VB. the Righla \of1he Collective
in Viscoelastic Fluids," Ameri-

Stroudsburg State College.

AMINTAPKIL,

~~!:~d~:'.U:~r:NE~:

•=

DR. .JOSEPH G. AGNELLO, assistant

professor, and D1L ROBERT
GLONE, associate professor,

E.

Mc-

~m.:dt!=ti~~?s:~~n°t:

tween / p/ and / b/ ," Acoustical
Society of America, Allanlic City,
N .J.

~':L~:: ~.piHK.E:~;. :-ry~~~ctr.:~':;

ical Studies of Vaccinee.

IlL I"£LLX MILGBOM, chairman,

~RANTS

:ey~~ His~ ~=-:~·v~

assistant

Chemotherapy Treatment for Precancerous Lesions and Cancer of
tbe Slrin; $40,246, PHS, InformatiOn Dissemination Service; WNY

u.ociate

feoaorA!.hiloaophy, "Propositions

aaeociate

dean, Graduate School, $182,544,
NSF, NSF Graduate Traineeahip
Prpgram--1970.
011.. JOHN B.. F. INGALL, director
Resional Medical Program of
Wealem New York, $197,108,

Jlr.

N:ti'o!!1~~o':: f!:\!!·~

Humanitieo, Viaual Aria Program_

D1L

UIOCiate

uracience Encyclo
· of Polymer Sc~nce and echnology.

chair-

DB. J . BENJ~ TOWNSEND,

"'m.ucs:,

feeeor, cbemical enaineertnc.

"Photooonducliw~" In-

Clinical Reaearcb Center.

the German Criminal Code,"
American Section of
the International Association for

Philosophy of Law and Social
Philooophy, Rulgen University.
DR. HERBERT B.

LEVINE. visiting lec-

turer, hialory, " Local Authority
and the SS State: The Con11icl

W:!tpP'::!!:~n~~:isi5,.P:vrJ~

Conference of European Hiatoriana, Caniaiua College.
·

Philhelleniam a n d R&lt;olpolitik," DB. GD'lBG£ )(.UEIIXA., uaistant pro.
Louise T a f t Semple Memorial feasor, hialory, "Rusaian Roola of
Lecturea, Univeroity of Cincin- Soviet Anti-Semiliam," WNY
nati, 0 .
Committee in Defenee of Soviet
Jewry, Bulfalo.
DIL l.UUS IIELABOO, cbairman, Department of Organization. lliL IIINRICH &gt;Wn'ENS, aaaociJite
"School-Community Relations: A profeuor, electrical engineering
Systems Penpective," "Commitment and Alliludea" and "Inftu- ill!:~~aMQ;'n':;L::~:
ence and Participation," Ameri- land Univeraity, Rocbeoter, Mich
can Education Research AaaociaDB. 8. OKJ:ICBUitWU JOZU, visiting
tion.

a.aaocia.te profeuor,~ "Afri-

Dlt. niiiEIUCK BETZ, llllistant pro- can Literature iiiid Ontario
feaaor, organiution, "ldeol&lt;&gt;fY and Scboola," Ontario Teachera of
Syatema Ileaign" A..ociation of Engliah A..ociatio
Toronto,
Humaniatic l'oycholoiY Conler- Canada; ''The Bladi Intellectual
ence, Univeraity of California at aDd a Progreaaili\. Pan-African
Loa Angelea.
Sludieo PF&amp;" Howard Univenity, W
'
n, D.C.; "RevGI008GE L. IIIWJLKY, lecturer, apeech olution and Re. volution in Modcommunication. .. Confrontation: em African Literature." SUNY
Executive Committee on African
Sludi.., Renaaelaerville.
New York City.

~':;"!':r~~ ~~~

WlNll'llm BIIOWNa.L, 111"1uate atudent, speech communication, "A

aearch,.. Speech A..ociation of
the Eutem Statea, New York

City.
aaaiatanl

~rofeoaor, iaduatria! eqiaeeriDJ,
J:w~o~·~~
-~"

A~PJ?IOK:u ; w

.·1 h

l

DB.

WILFBa)

w.

ax:KIZ,

asaiatant

~=i·cat~~~~

Dimensional ~lema· ia ' Dynamic Elaalicity," .lournol of Applied Mechanico.
D&amp;. Bl:RIIDT

profeMOr,

IZIBIOJrrflr(,

eleclrical engineeriq and eaci-

neeri.og ecienoee, ••Forced MotioDa
of ReCtannlar Piatea," ne ..lopmenu in t'heoretictll and A)&gt;p!U:d

Mechanico, Volume 8.

DL BILVIANO BAlfTUQO,

a.ociate

profeuor, French , 0 Banquete

(Rio de Janeiro).

,

RECOGNITIONS

IUCIWID A. BOUT, a 111"1uate atudenl al U/B, haa been awanlecl
the Carbonmclum Compomy'a C.C.
Fumaa Graduate Fello-bip for
the 1970-71 academic year_
Mr. Bora!, wbo ia wo~ towarda a doctorate ia O!"'raliona
reoearcb iii the Ulliwmty'a De-~nt of Indualrial ~
in&amp;. will receive 16,000 w6ich i8
lo be divided
DR. PAUL ,. arrAN, . profeeeor, geoezpeo.aee
and a between
atipeud. losical ocienceo, aDd IlL 1tJLW(
Aoco-''-~ to D AndJew W
BZBKJ:L~ profeoaor, cbemical en- Holl,
~·of the Gradu:
Jineeriq, "Material Emplace- ate SchooL the G..duate Scboo1
menl Modela for Dikoa E~ aelecta fellowahip wianera on the
lo ~ Manlle," American Geo'..,-.,..;a of academic aDd prof-..aai
~~~, :m.
.·h•~glo,,P.;;!,~_: ~li=ona, prov?aed iltudiea
iadualrial
A Multi
The Carbonmclwn CompanyMedia
haa aponaored the fellowohip aiDce
App~ to the~ of Manu- 1966.
fac:turiD« Syatema, 1at Intema- Charlln noGm.inDealwins_ B~,~~rDorf.
tioual Conference on Production
00
·
aJd, U&amp;n:ll,.-ul

=

:;.ri~ ~":.t&amp;Jo~

lliL CIWlU:II DB WAUl,

DR. CBAI!LE8 R. PlmiiE, ~

Department of Speech Communication, '"The First Course in
Speech: A Survey of U.S, Colleges and Universi.ties," Speech,..._
TeocMr.

,
.L 0 OOIOt'oa,

.;.;;;:.,1

.r::='!:i

=~1o~~aen~~~ -.rm,

LearnU.i

BirmiDcham. Encland-

timal Tranaportalion Networka ; - II08DT sw~ 111"1~te ,atuwith IL cmar- aludenl, "'nne s.d&lt;- dent, apeech communJcalton,
lrac!lliaa M..thoci of SomDo: the "Confrontation: The Sludenl'a
. General Mullicommodity Ylow ViewJ&gt;o!!!l,'i' Speech A..ociation
Problem," Operationa BM.n:h &lt;&gt;.t: the EMtem Sta~, New York
Society of America, WMhinlton, City.
DL Ha&amp; a. .a.. prof_,r, miao- D.C.
"
.._ w.....,. IL mcnua, -.:iate

::'t"~ -~ ~

aaid, "He peraonilleo the ..,ry beol
ia peraonal chanocter aDd acadamic develo-L" AI p._t~
Bora! ia an inalructor ia the umo
p11duate program ia which be ia
enrolled aa a faD-time atudehL
He haa maialaiDed a 8.8 e-M

=~:"'~ ~- !?~t!::'!!t ~ J&gt;!OI~~~r:.ttr:~ will
-u~
the ieoow.h;p Mr. Borat
be -~
hia diaaerta-

m &lt;ntrn.
tal Deaip, • AN- a~-- Need- ;~ "Opelatioaa ~SoDL IIILLU IIOIKIOU'l"''--llml, pro- . ed for MaD," N- Y~
~ ~~ America, Waa~Jiaiton,
1-r. atalialica, $12,800, NSF, of 8c:ienooa.
D.C.

011

lion which be ho!- to oomplelli( contillued on B, coL 1)

�-.., 21, 11170

8

6Artists
Win '(]rants
RJrTravel

&lt;WEEKLY COMMUNIQUE
Four ocboola in .the Heolth Scieuc:e. will honOr 88 aeniora at

'lbree • students in _the Art'
Depariment of the State Uniwrsity of NI!W Y orlt at Buftalo
have receiW!d fellowships for
8IIIIIIDer travel from the Evelyb
Rumsey Lord Fulld.

'lbe students, all of them
juniors in the art program, eadl
receiW!d $1000 and haw vari·
ous plaDs for summer travel
and .-reb. '!bey are: Roy
Anderson. Coustance Foy and
Rita Mandelman.
Anderson, who m a j or s in
sculpture a n d psinting a n d
plaDs-to enter graduate school,
will'travel in the United States
observing c:ontemporary a r L
His work is currently on exhibit in the Young Collectors'
Room of the Gallery West and
in the Membenl Gallery of the
Albright-Knox. He is-also plan-

=

~Gall~':"'rk

in the

Miss Foy is the first art history major to reoeiw ll trawling fell()W!Ibip. 81¥&gt; is interested
in primitiw arf lqJd M e s aAmerican ( Indian) art and will
travel and study in Mexico.
A communieation des i g n
major, Miss Mandelman plans
to specialize in photography.
Sbe will ·bawl in Italy and
· G,_., on her fellowship. Sbe
currently bas her work on exhibition at Both Ends Gallery
and won an honorable mention
in. the 1970 CoUeP.e. Competiti'!!'.of Mademoiselle magazine.
OVERSEAS FLIGHT BAGS
The Council on International Stu·

dies, 107 Townsend, e.xpects to·
day (May 21) to have available
from Albany a ftight bag for each
U/ 8 student, faculty and staff

member who has a

reServed seat

on one of the SUNY...arranged summer flights to Europe via KLM .
Those members of the U/ B com·
munity with reservations are asked
to contact the · Council to check
on arrival of the_bags.

=

The new conlnlctual agreement betyieen the State of New
York and the· Civil Service E'm ·
ployees Association provides
that any Civil Service employee who works on one of the
11 State holidays sbllll receive
an additional day of pay.
However, the employee may
waive holiday pay and aa:ept
a compensatory day off instead
- provided that the waiwr is
in writing and applies to all
holidays that the employee may
be required to work iri the fiscal
year ending April 1, 1971.
According to the U / B Personnel Office, the same is true
for tboee employees who have
to work on a holiday when it
falls on Saturday. Employees
not scheduled to work on a
holiday Saturday must also receive a day of compensatory
time.

'

Horwraria Policy
A new SUNY policy announced thiS week by Chancellor Samuel B. Gould adjusts
the ceiling on honoraria payable from State funds to professional employees of the University for services on sister
campuses to $100 per day, in
addition to ewenses.
Past policy limited such honoraria to $25 per day (or $40
when an ~ght trip was involved ) , with normal expenses
payable in addition.
'nle new policy was effective
May 1.
.

~ni':r:fu~!n r!~tbeheC:: ~H:::,· J!.~f!:;d~:!,= M'-:f!l:.

borundum Company. From 1967
to 1969 he worked at Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory 88 a
physicisL He began hio graduate

Gregory S. Parnell, Dou~las H.
Altherr and Michael R. DeBatt:
Daugbteu of the American Revolution Medal, Ronald J, Elardo;

work in 1966

Reserve Officers-Association Med-

tilt
int:sm: ~~~~rin:S ! .r!!e!~rinH~g~eci':~~Fie~~tt.ev::
full-tUne
8

inln

doctoral student.

director,
Information Services, won the
Page One Award from the Buffalo
Newspaper Guild for a headline.
" CBS Abbreviates Smoo. Bros."
Frey wrote the headline while a
member of the staff of the Buflalo
RANDALL FR.£Y, associate

~fu':e4o=• ::eUm~rsi':.ked \
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY of

~nee

J . Klementowski; Reserve
Officers Association Capt. Philip

Healy Award for Outstanding
Contribution to the Cadet Corps,
Kenneth J . Adams; Sons of the
American

Revolution

M e d a I,

Daniel Woodard; The 914th Re-

serve Officers Association Silver
Medal, Wayne R. Williamson:
The Buffalo Evening News Tro-

:=fi;
E~~~\.~tr1!~J:.~
Legion Trophy, Franklin G.

~h:';l!.~i'i:'~n~!t"th":rsRe~~ll': !dh~~gaD..!t~J;rol)\i.
Student Conference at the Uni-

versity or Pennsylvania and won
the following awards: $60, RobScesney, 3rd prize in otudent

~

--

~per

contest, "Roll Eliminator·"

$25, Largest Attendance Awa.d.
wcm. for 2nd consecutive year by
SUNYI B; $100, Bendia Award,
won for 2nd coneecutive year by

- •t

SUNY/B; Man-Mile Trophy,
wo.n by SUNY/ B every year oince
the foundinc of the Section ezcept
...... ocbool in 1jl68.

IICIWID ~-. $.

r, Dethe
·
top awud in tlie container
·
~tion
red by the L
RaP Paper~~- He reciei•ed a medal ~1600 awud
while the Art ~t .-iv-·
., ad ...,v!:'tio:.":::.u~
~tofArt,waaa

·

Room, Norton, 8 p.m.

124111 Annual Commencement, 3
~~ld. Friday, May 29, at Rotary

8YKP08JUI( OH ~OLIN'IaOO

c~~ -~o:

b:U~·d:::; ;~~eiCl~!~~ ~~~":fedat~l. ~t!c:roK.

a part-time stu-

epecia1 cOnvocation-awards pro-

On Thursday, May 28. the
School of Medicine will honor 19

Holiday Pay Now Available

abled American Trophy for Moot
Initiative and Competence in a
Staff Position, Dennie W. Hes~nk ;
National Sojoumera Medal Will.iaJD Welser ill; Veterans of Foreign Waro Medal, Franklin G.
Baehre; Legion of Honor Trophy
for the Outatlqtdina Prof-ional
Officers Co~ Drill lnotructor.

=e~phy~=n~.A~

RESIGNATIONS . .
who hu di·
rectad th8 Continuing Medical
Ecfucation · p_...., at ~
IlL 11UKr 1. ALVIB,

=

!!:"
.=::r~~ M.
Bcbool to .,__ director

of
medical eduration at Millard Fillmore Hoapital In that capacity

The University requires that
offices remain open with at least
skeleton stalls on many of the
State holidays, when classes
are in session.

45 Deserve Aid
Editor:

:.:n.KJ~·~~

Thursday, the School of Dentistry
will honor 22 .enion at 8 p.m. in
Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
The Dental Convocation speaker
will be Dr. Bui1 G. Bibby, di-

rector of the Eaalmaii Dental
Center, Rocbeater, Neoi York.
The School of Plu!rmacy will
honor 16 graduatina' aenion at a
luncheon Friday, May 29, at the
Millard Fillmore ROOm, Norton

:!rnitf!

GREPORTS
Gf'ROM
.GREADERS

~lV::rn!'JJ:~::i

~rofessions,

speaker.

·

will be the main

~~ Fll'l!.d:-!a~~jm~ lt:
30

School of Health Related Profeasions will · honor 26 graduating
oeniors. Dr. Frank Husted, as·
sociate dean and uoociate prof....,r in the School will be the
main speaker. Dr. Husted will be
the new dean of the Col.leae of
Allied Health Prof-iono at Temple University July 1.
The School of NursU., honored
~~efi:A~ eenion at a ban-

The Punishment Does Not
Fit the Crime.

THURSDAY-21

Undoubtedly, many colleagues have felt that the in- CONPERBNCB ON &gt;mOCBON.JIUAL
tervention of the "Hayes 45,.
PUNCI'ION AND DEVELOPMENT:
ha~ bee_n an unwise ~tion - = r e d1:\'[ V;;.fl:~.,!.:~
~hich! m eff~ consti~ted a 1: 30 p.m. Conference continues on
v!o~t10n leadmg_ to thetr con- Friday at 9:30a.m.
v1ction. The purushment, however, to be meted out does not
fit the " crime" and further .escalates divisions with i n the
academic and Urban community. Therefore, efforts to aid
their appeal merit support. I
am sending my contribution to
Norman Holland, 131 High
Park Blvd., Buffalo, N.Y. 14226
marking my cheek with the CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
a bove motto and hope others COURSE: Dr. Herbert Schilder,
professor and chairman of endowill do likewise.
dontics ani! head of School of
George 0 . Schanzer
Graduate Dentistry, Boston UniProfessor of Spanish
versity, COMPLE'l"E ENDODONTIC
1'BEIW'Y, 145-146 Capen, 9 a.m.-6
p.m. Course a1ao offered Saturday.
FILM* •: The India Students Association &amp;nd the UUAB present
CHARULA.TA, directed by the inter~
he will plan the educational program and service
for
medical students and interns in the Boot Direction Awud at the
consultation with the chairmen Berlin Film Festival (1965) and
of the various departments. He the Presidential Gold Medal
will al&amp;o interview students who (1965) .
wish to work at the hospital as
The movie will be shown in
"student ederns," intern s and
residents, counsel them about
their careers, assist in evaluating
May 23, 5 00, 7:30 and
their performance and serve as Saturday,
10:00 p.m.; Sunday, .a~ 24, 6:00
liaison betwen them and the Hos- and 7: 30 p.m. A
ton $.50.
pital ad..ministration. Dr. Alvis Tickets available a
orton Ticket
wiU
to serve
volun- Office, Buffalo Stete College (862teer member of the Medical 6511).
Canioius College Student
~=s~h:r;~y~ri:n~i=ci~! Center (833-7000, ext. 687·) , D '·

assignments

Sa~~Iu~~=~i~

~e 6~ote7":~ ;;!d'~tli'{~o~

continue

as a

~ 1):-mS'ta~~efiili~J~·ti~~
~~:i c:r:: i~;~:Sc~~~~it Ticket
Office, Mr. Bhagirath Bi-

0

of Social and Preventive M;edicine.
DR. ALBERT BUSH - BROWN, vice
president for facilities planning,
has resigned from the National
Council on the :Arts near the end
of his tenn 88 a protest against
the Nixon administration. The
National Council advises the
President on national policy for
the a..rta and presides over the

~~ !~~~!:

::J'i8r.9f'M:

Pandit (836-S246).

:rf~of":'at!!!
dream of national a c h i - t in
which ·America would be ceJe.

.~orated ror berdedil!lition-to build-

Ad·

MONDAY-25
lN"ISIIACl'IOKII:

LllA!fD

Spo-red by the

g:n~t~~~

the Schoolo of Medicine and
Pharmacy. Conference Theatre,

Norton. 9:15 a.m. Sympoaium
contin us on Tueeday at 9: 30 a.m.

TUESDAY-26
PBYBlCIANS' ~ONK UIC!'OD:

Spo-red by Repmol Medical
Program, Dr. Ben Fiaber, 81·
sociate clinical profeaoor, medicine, DJ808DIIl8 OP CLO'I'TDfO, 51
Participa~

a.m.

Hoapitah , 11:30

NU&amp;S&amp;B' T&amp;L&amp;PBON&amp; I.IDCI'UB:

Sponaored by

~Medical

~'W'J~rey.- ~o~i
:!c:t!:,.~:rMeO~u~· .':i

Dr. Dorothy Novello,

TBJ: F4CTB
ABOUT YOU&amp; PIWPB8SIONAL OIIGANtZATION, 51 Participa~ Hoopi-

tala, 1:30 p.m.

8P11C1AL DKIN.U SEIUI8
RONJBNTAL POLLUTION:

ON

BNVI-

Preaented

by the Center for Theoretical

=r'&amp;ci:!.the.J"Af.t:..~

~~be=~~i

Commerce. Room 29. 4248 Ridp
Lea, 4 p:n,. Refreabmenta 3:30
p.m.

WEDNESDAY-27
GERIATJUC

MEDICIN&amp;

BYKPOSitJ)(;

Sponaored by the Reeioual Modi·
cal Program for Weatem New
York in COiljunction with The
Roaa Coplon Jewioh Home and
Infirmary and U/B'o Continuing

='C!W::.!u!t~H=t

8: 15 a.m. Symposium continues

on Thursday at 9 a.m.

I

CONTINUING DENTAL EDUCATION
COURSE: 'Dr. Robert DeFranco

and Dr. Georp Smutko, aoaiotant
profesaon, removable proetbodontics, COM:PIZI'E DCN'TUIIB PK08TBB-

145-146 Capen, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Course a1ao offered May 28 and
June 3, 4, 10, 11, 17, 18.

BIB,

BOSWELL PAJlX STAPP SEHJN.U: Dr.
Arnold Mittleman, uoociate n&gt;aean:h professor, experimental
pathology, BTUDD'8 OP NORMAL AND
NBOPLABTIC BUM4N t -aN4, Fourth
Floor Auditorium, RooweU Park
Memorial lnotitute, 12:30 p.m.

PBYCHIATKY RESEARCH OOLLO-

Dr. Elliot N. Gele, aosistant profeuor, Department of

QUJU)(0:

Behavioral and Related Sciencea,

PBYSIOLOGJ~ IIKAsuaB DU&amp;ING
8YS'l'ZK.4.'1'lC DBBI:N8JTIZAnGN', wrrB

8PSCIFlC III:PI:RDfCB TO ?BJ.&amp; OP

DBNTiliTRY, E. J . Meyer Memorial
Hospital. K Buildinc, Conference
Room (Baaemept), 1 p.m.
ENVIRONMENTAL lmALTB 'IZLBPBONB LBCTUB:I: : S~onaored by

:!".fo~t':f.,r, ~

of Security, Environmental Heolth
and Safety, IIAftTY IN TBJ: POOl&gt;
SERVICE AJ111A, 51 Participa~
Hoopitala, 2 p.m.

THURSDAY-28
PBYSICWis' TBUII'HONB LIICl'UIIII:

Sponaored by Regional Medical
INTEKNATIONAL POLK DANCING•:
lnstructiori in basic steps during ~~~ ~NJ:BRIM ~
first hour, 30 Diefendorf Annex, 't:JlaEN IN l'LA8TDI CASTS, 51 Parti8 p.m.
~ting Hoopitalo, 10" 30 a.m.

SATURDAY-23

8PECW. BElliNA&amp; 8E1UB8 ON &amp;NVJ.RONMEHTAL POLLUTION: Preeented

diotribution of funda for the aria INTEilNATJONAL CLUB PICNIC: Free
voted by Congreoo. ln a letter to food and drink, Letchworth State
President Nixon. Dr. Bush-Brown Park. A bus will leave Norton at
wrote that be wu resigning "as l~ a,m. for the _Park. During the
:ru~k~~r
f:!:terou; ~~
of thooe who are now dia~ Club and how it relatea to lnterabout America'• future." He a1ao ~.::f o%~:= a Foreicn
• wrote of beina: diatuibed by "evi·

wiif

~

vanoement (PI!EA) Of India.
Fillmore Room, Norton, 8 p.m.
BALKAN POLJt DANCING*: Fillmore

~M.,;;.:l.;'!!:e~!!l:ru:

~~f,~!!!! 7~~ple-

88

Front for Rapid

CONVOCATIONS

=
POLl&lt;

~t..=.!ir:te:~

IW&lt;CI:

0
WOUIIIIOP •

Fill-

more Room, . Norton, 2-6 . p.m.

SUNDAY-24

· inc a no1J1e en-rinmment, both
~ and social, tiuoach aa: ~ II'I'UIIuft ...octlftON 81&gt;:.~ aenaitivity of her aioo ':..t~d~ ~

by the Center for Theoretical

='&amp;ci~cesthe.J~t.::!.,:C::

Topic 8: I'IIOIINCTIVI:I, Dr. Walter G. Roaen, J.&gt;~feaoor, bioloey.
Rm. 29, 4248 .Hid&amp;e Lea, • p.m.
Refreahmenta 3: so p.m.

boJITINUJNG

WOIIKSBOP IN
&gt;mRCAL
II:DUC4TION: PIIYBlCAL U4JIJN4·
'nON OP Till: C.lRDUC PAftiiNT.

• S-red by the H - "-ociation of W - N- YOlk, IDe..
{ and U/B'a ContiJmina: Medical ,
Education ~ Tapic 10:

srnouc

-l1mlU!ft

...,..,._

Palmer Hall, '@ialen ol Charity
Hoopital, 21S7 Main Street, 7:80
p.m.

~ --~-

�</text>
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                    <text>MAY 14,1970

_ VOL 1-NO.l7

STATE UNtVERSilY AT BUFFALO

·EPIS, OpenAdmiSsion8
.On U/B Senate -A~nda

.

•

-

to -

-

-

Civil Engirreering Sttulents Design Bridge
F't.or ·n,.,:],..,__;,..n Tral'ic tei Vi
. n;,~f.t.,. R•l--£C.L;a.l,

The University's E acuIty
Senate will meet Thufsday,
May 21 · (2 p.m., 147 Diefendorf), to consider the education
of .dvantsged students and
a response to open admiasions. •
Also on the agenda will be
announcements by the acting
president; approval of minutes
of the meetings of March 11,
March. 17 and April 10, and a
report by the vice chairman.
Tbe Advisory Committee to
the Experimental Program in
Illdependent Studies (EPIS)

~~;:'::

Permanmt ·EIIIII&gt;Io-11

'Ibe•,efiect of the .-.Jution,
according to ·Trudi Lucaa. as'sistsnt prof~ of polilieal aci~-andte~'~the
.....,_
.....,..""' ...
..,.....,
of Urban Aftairs, "'will be to
estsblisb as a pel'1118111111t ~
of the U .
'ty u ~
which
from .
~~~ - diaadvantaged

....:::W""::' stud!..lli

:.:=:; :: ~e:~j;i ·

recommends that the administration: ·
T~,, (.U,
'/JI
~1 OIWJ
"(1) Aooept as a pennanent
A pedMiriaD. bridl8 JlDkiDg tial ~of the project.
would provide no major inoon- component of SUNY/B the
U/B and the Um-.ity Plaza
Altematiwa IIUch as 1unnels, venienoe to traffic or parlring. • EPIS program as dos:ribed in •
' - b.., n cleaipled by m
elevated roadway&amp; and traffic ·
Only one form would be re- the Report of the Advisory
lll!llion In the ~t of re-routiDa were coosidered be- quired for ooilstruction of two, Committee to EPIS;
be the poup clec:ided on the identical wing-ehaped sec:tions
" (2) Provide space and perCivD ~
- Wblle-- ol the m ...,. tJricll'
•
wbicli would join over the ceo- I!OI1Del to develop services witb· laJowledpe that the I:Jridll8 will
ODce !bet decided, the ter of tbe streel Tbe · form jy ~ Learning Center for tbe
poobably l!e- buift; the m aolected the best site for would be assembled first on tbe ""Qeve)opment of basic academic
•.Ia fUlly cleaipled and IXIIIBirUCtioo. Stsndilll at that large support&amp; on one side of sldll8 for students in special
• could ba ~ from the site, they ~a poll to if tbe street and the wing pawed programs;
llludmta' plu.
tlie pq)&gt;lic would aCcept the in place. Tbe process would be
"(3 ) Allocate adequate lunda
'llle ~by .Joeeph· ldaL ~Mire da- repeated on the other side. At for supportive services and eelGraaloD, 8lapbE LIBup. Mar- sigDecl
~ the'plan- all w.-, tbe forms and tbe ucational planning witbin EPIS
pn ~-~ ·~. X.. .....,. to c:atecurUa ~ as (co-d on - · 2, ~ 3)
and the Learning Center aoBUlB mel . . - y Gaeddlnz- to ...... the indiYiiiUal ~
-.
.
.
.
. -

--111tot.
•·:-t
:e-w•
ctJ.;!:;!l·. ::a.:':

cording to the IIUideliDes ...t
fOrth by the SUNY ' Faculty
Senate Committee mi Full Opportunitj."
·

te degree." Tbe
t
:a~frecrui-tintoCgram is about 270 students a

year.
Introduction of the ,_,lution follows publication of a
OO.page report cleacribinl EPIS ·
plans for next year. Tbe report
Was unanimously adopted by
the Faculty Senate Eia!cutive
Committee. (Tbe full is
on reeerw in Harriman Library •
and a summary prepared by
tbe Advisqry Committee ap'peuecl in the &amp;ptJf'fe, April
2.) ,

(co..w....d on -

.

.

II ,:coL 4)

.

of~ "-baeu~=~s;;L
::.. ~ 'C!~~~ (1\.f'~..l . T\!,
.......:..., ' • . ~;~T ·
a lii'ldl&amp;. etc. ,.._
-.
~ - !'Y.Iw.&amp;; LUSpll)pOJ;.,WUU... ~ •·-~Jt.•.Js:;~.Y'

·~=~.,.:~
taldJII

to JJ..

inlo
lora~ lepJ, ~and con~~~·.....,...: ""•- r -

~- ~ ·

=-=:.

bad as tbelr orisinal p i ""!''
~ l8fer we,y to en&amp; Main

....__t

......'!_

,.. -

t;:;:;: :7:: .Cites
~Urgent' Need To SolVe Problems Now
warren

=~ ~ wl&gt;etber City aiid State
~liall fao. ~ 'IOOUid ~ ~

IDiai

If it -

·

~..,:etta

bad bam reoardecl In the· area
witbln a m-1110111h period undencand, they felt, the poteu-

.. ·thon
.Mara
Set for TV
~m

=~.....:1m."'4::7!

~t:'::.=~.!."~

A mmatboll
boiu and
tony-five minute television pro- · rula aDd Blnldur8l code books.
poom, "tJ/B OD 'l1le Air," po&amp;- A IIUIII"''IIIec bridae emerged as
aib1y the lint -ture of its the beat poesibility ~ span ~
ldnol by tu!Y lllli--"iY in the required dlstsuce 'ilitb a DIJDl·
...... will ba ~ ·tbla &lt;1IIUID of coat and• desree of
SatuntQ- and eeily Blmday, ~ a.tlietic t.llty.
Ma.J 18 and 17, on WGR-TV,'
AA GreaiiD aiq&gt;laina it, tbe
a.8anel2, in liD elbt to bridllo walkway .... tbe street 'IOOUid
the IIIP b e ' - Um-.;ty uld be ~ from a cai1ins
CliMiiiiaiouib
.
.
wbleh ~ covw the bridae• - 'l1le blaidc.t will ba mod- 8ecliall8 wbleh span tbe. plus
. .ted by Dr. WUI'IIl G. Ben- and Univeraity- puldns "??a
nil, . . IJNiidct
'IOOUid be IIIIPI!Oried by -

----" =•ill

for_.....,

"'lw" lram u.

run
to 8 a.m.
.&amp; ...... of
foam
the cillllmulllb and UDhaaity
wlll.U.CU. the cmapua....ts
pl . . . . . . mel w i l l caJJed-ln qalilliaaL
A llJw .........,, the pro. . . . . . . .. people ...., Invite .
~ and ~ I D t.o
tWr blaasio dllela 1M eem;q.*-lionmel to
. - , _ ...., wlobae to balp
. cxpai8e ex .... put In the '
~ II ..._. to . -act

_:; tn.

111&amp;...._.._,~.,.

' lbo ........... , . .-Iamie
' de•elopment; at811-IIM6
(..,..) ar 8IN.Iill'll (.-lnp).

·

you bave only to open your violence. Tbey are rio ti !' 1
daily '. newsp&amp;pers. More tban a"':""!' the nat i !' n, buminl
. ~ of ~ a bridge.
once m · recent weeks, the front buildings and closing ~
- ~ ~wba~ ~pful ·
page, the beadljnes. seem like
We fe!ld of a crouP !"New
~ pom- ""~
.~;
some nightmare edition cast by York City dem&lt;mstratinl for
-bad ~ ~.COIDJ&gt;!iecl Wl~ ·
a mad typesetter, giving Public · peace that is pummeled by conGft!!*o said. and m makinl
view to his most aberrant and struction WO&lt;kers while the Po~van:::~-~
secret terrors, but it is all real, Pee stand idly ~·
.
!Ill
•.....-- "'!' r·-·
all too true.. . ·.
We read of NDIIlll wbo lriM
jected plans for tbe area. Road
Blzana I'DotrJ
to end tbe war in Vietnam by
clearances, removal and reAnd the newspapers them- unleashinat a new one in Cam.P~t of ~~istinJ traffic
, •
••
•
•
selves beQome a bizarre poetry bodis and !Ma We refld: of
;.sip&gt;ala and utili9' poles, and
Once -you had to. go to in which one only need oelect the young ldiiecl by the Natioustzuctural. -~~te allandbadCitoty - dreama. to the literature of fan- here and ~ for tbe oompon- ~ ~ in ~ and ~
WI
•
tasy, for images and symbols ents of a gnm collage.
killed m ~'!"Sf m ~ China.
-.
.
that would stagger tbe imaginWe read of students desper"'There 18 just no logical~~~~~raaid, -~·~~= ation br chill the bearl Now ate for peace and fa&lt; an end to (co..w....ci "" II, ~ I)

bcecl~
COIII28Ia
columna.
Tbe
bridae'"1"''
~
ba of ·
rainforcecl I!Dd paet.lilnliaDec

OODCitl1e. ~aida elinsof~~­
Ill-· 'IOOUid be ~t,

Cndpooof, -td!pooof. - wmplns mel~- "all·
the iequh&amp;J&amp;da _ _ , . for
lllzuctla. wbich &amp;18 CID e x a ca11ete emapuo." GreaiiD ~

. .-;,.keep
.

-~:.:=
u- -

..

fNe In

..mt.. To coal dminland to elialln.ta.._ . . .
foamtalle,m....._,_.,.

-.....a

.... -.111 ba
at the
- ' - o f the ............. ~
OouolndiaD
1lle

"! ·

-.e

Dr.
G. Bennis, vice
preeident for academic developrnent, told a Buffalo Peace
Council rally at Delaware Park
last RnnrlAv that a "mad eli&amp;pro~--;;;;;t stalks our society
and that we face an ''urgent''
need to solve our political .problema now·
.
E&gt;rcerpis from Dr Bennis'
remarks follow ·
·

�~

2

'

-

.

-.z~i910

'!Significant Hazards' Prompt Policy · UIB PositiO~ rpif!ieul~~:=:·~--:
' No Penalt.Ies 10r
£.
T ,.,., • ' /"1,...;.,...
As SUPA Hits Fhy Policy ~vmg \.Au.upus
s&gt;
plan-simp~
Of
~: ~
·~· quo ·&lt;~
The Booz, AlleiLand Hamil·
·The ID8Imctioual. portion of sible.
to down'-'&gt; and back. !'&gt;" ' i'eclo!"mendations
tba troubled apring ....,..,.ner
7) No student aball be pen- ~t hUDdred U/8 students mg ~ ol Stste UJ)lvermtY
CIIIDe quietly to an o111ciaJ end
alized in terms of the 25 per joined -students from Canisius professional e~p)oyee~ and
~; eamlnations, wbeJe cent restriction on StU courses and Bu1ralo Stste downtown. . ""'!"'!' ol tbe allClOJIJIIIliiY '!'"
lllill ecbeduled, nm from May because ol S{U grades assigned 'The U/8 IIIIUd&gt;erB bad Police stric:tiona, bave put_ SUI_!~) m
15-25.
durinlr this 81!11108ter.
eax&gt;rts and were ..~railed b !' very cl_i8icult pomtion, Act.The · "oicniflcant bszard to
8) 'The Division of Under• more, than 30 Police-cara whi~ "'f ~~ Petsr F. Rep.n
public and penoonal safety," re- graduate Studies sbsll insure attempted to sp8l!d up the re- said m a recent letter to t.h!-'
au! tine from last WM!&lt;'s p.-t that the genuine concems of all · turn mard&gt; to aui&gt;pus, causing campus urut of the State. U:mdomoastralions and police and students. s t a f f, and faculty tensions. Some bank windows versity Professional Association
"viciJante" reaclions, prompted members few (llarity and fair- down'-'&gt; were 1&gt;rokeiL
(SUPA) .
.
tbe Uni-mty to ....,... with- ness shall be satisfied:
. Skirmish.- on and near camBooz, Allen and Hamil·
out -*nic ~ties "those - - I 1on11 - .
pus early Wednesday evening ton study resulted in the eightstudents who wish to leave. ..."
Dean.' Daniel H. Murray of followed the pattern of student level profassional emnloyee salbefcwe the end ol " ' - and/ the Graduate School said May advance-Police ' tear gas coun- ary scale announced last week.
or - .
7 that his School "urges that terattsck which bad developed 'The salary system recommendAl:tinJ President Peter F. no graduate student be required Tuesday. Estimates are ihat ed in the study bas drawn fire
~ m CXJD8Uitalion witb the to attend .!be . .. ~1)1 from 100-300 students were in· from both the . State SUPA
Emeutive (Cohen) Council, acbeduled eamlnation period. volved. Some high school organization and from the camtbeJ110Y081;aandtheUniwersity- Rather !t ~that, in those youths joined~ fray, pelting P'!" ~lion of University
wide deans, announood the pol- courses m which a final emm- U/8 students WJtb rocks; oome Libranans. (See separate story

n,;,

That tba
the
~ t. do an.Ythinl for anybody. ) , and
•
. •
4) That the plan JII!OI"''the
.-1 ~few
..........., IDlpi'Ove""!"t m.
atd _ael·
....,..
hal been~
by tbe Stste-wlde Faculty Sen-

ate.

. •
•
.
ActinC l'nllidmt RePn told
SUPA IOc:ally that~ for
a c:banle are belnc madi!. but
we have no ~ as to
w'!;t
happen.
__ _., __ the your ~tus ~
.,...~
8CDDIIID1C
.,
~~"~~In
emptoloy""!'·-,...- --..
answer
an m::~ ~ J:lan
SUPA local ~E~
Schmidt. "They ba
been

=.a

~~~-= :OO~=te~rfa: =:;'!t..:"en'::. \l::'n,~::!: fors~~~ z::~etter · ::m~:!rzencthf~ urri~

•..-.~ students to boyoott class;:.-.but to remam· .._ to -·'._.,
........,
!mown ~ views on '!-~· mil1tsry 8l_ld mten;Jal policies.
Housing olllcials 881d Monday th!'t only about. ~ ol

approxunately 2,~ re&amp;ldenoe
Bludenl8 bad lefl
Ur_p_ -

M a n y undergraduate stu·
denta are ending the semester
. under tbeas policies "urged7
by tbe Division ol UDIIerll-ad·
uate Studies on May 7:
1) Aa1demic Cft!dit aball be
liven on tbe~ ol work...,_
pleted to this date. by tli"e use
ol tbe grade ol "S." by letter
~"! by tbe grade of "I."
m ..._-where a fail.
ing "!'Jdent mil!'* have paaeed
by virlue

o!

his performance

on an ~lion paper or
other device.
2) Students who wish letter
grad_es i n " ' - in which tbey

~ llr&amp;des ol "8" or "'"
sli o ul d 'make arran&amp;ements.
f'l"!!~ _by mail, witb l ~
in!li'!idual -.ctor&amp; f~ .!'11""
1ll188lOil ol . - r y additiimal
work. 1be Diyision of Under~te Studies stronciY urges
aU ~ to make s_ucb
1'l!ql1lnlllll!ts cleer as rapidly
as pcaible.
•
S) ~ ~nisms.

"!' eotablisbed

wi!J

Within the indi·
~~. and/or fa~~~ ~~ iMtsnces m
......., '!"""""18 may feel that
amdemic performance ' bas not
been =~Y assessed
'l18enlfiiiV! ~ .be coanllnated ·bY. the DiV181011 ol
UDder!lraduate Studlea
4) G..duatlnl !"'niors will

lla1e8t from spacial arrange.
mmts, Where ~~ ooordlnated by the ~VJII!OD pf
~'!"'a~ m 0011janctioll WJtb tbe VI!"""" deputualta and faCulties.

6) _Honan for paduating

~~ be calculated on

...,. ol _ , _ _ .
-.
•. .
.. _!L~_lettoraballllliPbelaining tbeas
.mt to all
lliudent8 enrol}ed in tbe Univwalty, at tbair J1!'11D8118Dt adm-. Grades will be .mt to
. _ . ~ as 10011 as pas-

ulty permit students to tske A "oonciliation" meeting witb
tbe emmination ei~ at the the hjgh school students was
~ly acbeduled time and
~d m Norton Thursday eve!'~ or as a talr.e-bor:oe emm- rung.
1D8tion, or by appropnate other
A fire set in CIa r k Gym
~18 between student about 12·15 am Thursday was
and_ mstru""'r. One such ar- quickly .;m,Buished ..,. was a
· I'IJII8eiD&amp;Dt.. if acceptable to stu- small blaze, apparently the re- .
dent and mstructor, would be suit of e fire bomb, at Baird
Joe the emmination to tske Hall at 1 a.m. thA same mornplace In the first week of the ing.
:rfall -ter."
Thursday night about ~
Other graduate and . profes- students engased Poll
.
sional acbools have similar poli· · nmn1ng batt 1e fromce
cies: Law, reported c:kad down Street to Norto .a
the
last week, deniecHbis on Mon- campus. Police n, · c;::d tear
day ol this week, saying that gas and someone~ birdsbot
exams are up to the individual -Spectrum said it was Police
instructor-''be may decide on and/or E r i e County Sberift
take-homes. adhere to the deputies; Police said it was not.
acbeduleor re-ecbedule·" Social ' Two (Buffalo Evening Newt~ )
Welfaie · whi!'b ended' dasaes · or· 20 &lt;SP«trum ) students
early also 881d that exam&amp; are were treated for w 0 u n d s at
up to the individual instructor; Meyer Memorial Hospital At
Pharmacy is having exams as least nine students were treat~. _b 11 t is permitting ed for wounds ,in improvised
(11t the' ~s disc:retioo)
first-aid beedQuarters in Norl!ll1lre-ups prior to fall .,.;... -.ton. ·Gas . ''peJmeated tbe entire
trillion for those who left early· campus." Spectrum reported.
Medicine is pennitting ·~ • Friday- morning; windows in
up work and elllliiiB" for first Norton were discovered broken
and second-year students who and the building was closed be. wish to leave the campus. Ex- cause of fumes. Some furniture
ams in Nuraipg are "volun- bad been dragged out and there
·tsry."
were evidences of attempts at
Before the announcement of araon.
University policy, the Law fac- · -.. T..noto'
ulty.. exp.-1 "respect end
On Friday, two youths from
admiration for those students Connecticut were arrested on
· who are wiUing to 8SBI1IDI! the campus and charged witb disoost of interrupting their law orderly conduct, Ioitsring inacbool careers to tske aftirma. citing to riot, po68e88ion of dantive,- CllllStructive action. . . ." gerous weapons and resisting
I~ said it plans to "legally II&amp;' arrest. Earlier Friday a battersist" the,, right to dissent and ed. black car was ..,.,;,_ circling
'
would tske every step com- the campus, the American flag
mended by reason to 811pport~ ·- flying from ita r ad i 0 aerial.
individual students against anv Placards on the side of the all:
threats and cballenges to tbel'r warned "traitors" that they
~ standing or profes- · "milbt be next." On the beck,
siona1 careers. . . ."
a sign read ''Bomb Hanoi, Win
-lllbatlcw• Corltlrlu.
'The War."
s. t u d en • d e m o n s t r a _lions
Saturday, groups of students
agamst the ~ m Cambodia were down'-'&gt; In the heart of
and tbe killing of four students the sbopping area witb placat Kent Stste (wbidl began ards inviting sboppem to stop
I as t ~) 0011tinued on and tslk to them ebaut the war.
Wem-lay and Thureday ol Many did Hundl!lds
~ week. An Intensive educ:a- . students went to W ·
n
lional propam was a1ao 0011- for tbe national demonstration.
di1Cted In tbe Union and elseArrests durinlr t1ie U/8 dem'llrhere, with faculty· ~
onstrations w~ .and
. Wem-lay ·a most1f 'lburaday are estimated at more
JX!I1C1!Iful mard&gt; from tba cam- · than 50. (Nine- were ar-

M'.b:

J!;.,"!l:

_ _...__.,_r_., ___ ..,_

A-~---"""-lr · •-otrw.

-__

•· r.
au.----2J#).

1014.........., . . _ . . ......,.,,. . . _ _ . . .

a..- UDJJ..,-

.&amp;. IIFai2'Ur _ ,

-...a.w
__
. r . .IIUI1UIT

,
---~-:r~--

-.&amp;.-

~~

rested n-iay.) There were
15 reporlbl injuries .on '1'1-.
day, at least two on WednMdav
and 35 (at both U/8 and Bulfalo Stste) Cl!.' Thursday.

• Bridge

("""""-'from- 1, eoL 3)

said that the new salary Jillan
does little to correct inequities
which now exist, and creates
"new and entirel unpiecedented inequities" ;1 ita restriction
tha the
0 f salsries of
in,Jviduai's""f!";. 'ven grade
may not ~
mid-point
of a
de. .
"--a.u o1 Cantin
·.
~
u~g Education, local ('jf.resenl!'ti~ to the State S_ A, 881d
this week t!&gt;at. while beof basthe
not _Yet received a copy .
official State _SpP~ ~
the SUPA ~lion IS eeeentil!lly that the.~ Allen, Hamil·
to~lan ,'!' completely UD·
sa SUPctoryA,
ciumeJd sava ob.......,

AU:'

u!:

~~

..--

least 28 feet
Cll1l8inc

ferenca.
"Tbe laq
.......,. ovw

recent ~ of unrest."
"You ba\le

our

"
""f:ti"'
wt!:'verP~
t d .::J\"
.
are ma e

Re

,_._, ~

8

•

sb~..:.::, 1f~rovement of

m:;

!'

extent __ ,!!_,thehv
unum
..... ~- ~~

rules.

¥

tbere ~ particular
pomtions or 1"!'-

"!'tegories. of

t!c:ular 11!"18 that your ~-

tion. believes need special _at-

tentio_n, I "! o ul d appreC18te
your in!ormmg me about them.
we will proceed as
b;est ~ can, a~ the '9'PfOI'riate
time, '!' Cllll8ideration of all
professional employees."
.
·~~ ~ SUPtheAUfo_r liB

OtberWJse,

"""ooncem ,or

mver·

on several ooun~:.
·
1) That the lDlDllDUID salary
established ($8,000) is . ,.....,.
than the $9,000 figure 9011ght
by SUPA; .
. _2) That portions ol tho! original Booz, Allen, Hamilton
riloommendations were downgraded by the Stste budget di-

sity ~few "tbe ~pful ~
resulting from this ooncem.
'The. Issues and Grievance
Committees and the board of
directors of the SUPA local
are _meeting. toclaY to draft_ a
_ . . . , to Rejpm's. ~ for m-

J:&amp;Ctor;

tioll.

formation on "pertirutar units
~ positions" .-ling atten·

Librarians J:&gt;in Protest
Against SalarY Schedule
1be Aaoociation of Ubnuians at U/8 "strongly_pppoees
the new (professionalj salary
acbedule" which will go into
effect July 1, 1970 (Reportu,
May 7).
In a letter from the Aaoociation to Cbarioellor Samuel B.
Goul!l, signed by Donald C.
DiGesare, president, and 14
members, the ' group says that
the plan (already being 0011·
tested by U/8 according to last
week's memorand11m from
Harry W. Poppey, directOr of
personnel) "can hardly be 0011sidered as an advance for the /
library atd, and In fact d05
a great deel towards cancelling
all of the advances which have
been fought for and WUl over
the past nine years."
"Not only d05 this acbeduleplace the stall In_a poor' position for future raises," the lette&lt; aaya. but it "also jeopardizes the continued stalling ol the
Library. 'Ibis can
to undermine the
and
development of the
and
ita services 90 vitally . - r y
to an l!lljl8nding and important

=

ac;t:.:;.."i:J:')!n~lle

0011-

structure itaelf would be at

way,

~ durin~~ was

particu1arl

tsins the "following negative
above the road· features," the Aalociation says:
no trdlc ina"1. Removes all diStinctions
betw&lt;aliiiii!Ociate and aBstsnt'
borimntsl pase- librarians belied on type ol job
JIOlrldnl Ioiii can ~ lenctb ol __,_

"4. Insures that when a -iob
is vacated it must be relllled
at a salary of between $8,000
and $10,000 and that filling \
above $8,000 must have prior
local approval
"5. R8isliil are governed by
the principle that all pcl!litlons
in the aame grade on. a cantjlUS
must haw an a_..., salary
not hil!ler than tba mid-point
on the new acbeclull!-"
~sal&amp;_!}' scbedl1le also
the Llbnry atd witb
-crade ~who
a,.. non-taacblnll and ipJIJres:
"L that tba Board ol 'J'rus..
bas poupad tba librarians
with tbe teoll:binl faculty as
llll!lllbenl ol the aCademic 8talf,
and
•
"2. tb8 Faculty Senata of
both Stste Um-aity ol N""
York and ol tba Ststa Univeraity ol N"" York at Bu&amp;lo
have IUIIIICiried 111111 ~ted tbe -Boerd ol ~ decisioD."
. ,..
Proapeeta fcill"l97l lncremmta are cicJariderahly reduced
by tbe plan, tba A81ciatlon
saya, "and there is no way ol

~boor it wW be lniple-

"'f our salary is above the
mid-point In tbe scbedule," the
statement saya, "it appMD~ unlikely" that lncnmalial .U.
will be an.-!.
· "In e!lect," tbe llbnrianB

=

:.W~~::
~orr:=.~===~~=~~
tlal pl8cing tbam
tWr aup- t - . Blillf mombera having a "theY bid uDder tba old Civil ·
pol'lll at a lima. Tbla -will ~ depee and tlae who
C: j!tbal;: ,; ·
01;1-

==:::...~1-:-,..,Dr!,•. -=..~~-·~ · · =-to~n:tC:«!.:::.r:-: · ~~ pade
,..., &amp;. &amp; -lite with only a day o1 lnta- chan 1• )li-lbAW. aucb as
- • m ...,_.. - - . ,_..,.to -"'-in iba·pct. ~ from an -..:lata
---------------....:..
· '! ......-'-- illllota," Q-m 'ioaya: ., · · librarian I· :to D, ··etc.•

atlalnmint

~ ..r.mc

r8qk

-~ ~ In tbe fact .
that llbiadluiB- .till ¥Ole I!' .
tbio FacutV" e1mata."
· ..

�Mq 14, I91D_

By ANN SCOTT
Chairman, N:ational Campus Coordinating eommittee of the National Organi- ·
zation for Women (NOW) and Assist- ·
ant Professor, English

A LOOK AT SEX DISCRIMINATION IN THE UNIVERSITY

my

~.....

11

~ ~

./0

• •.

··1''

~

•

J

..

For . the first time in
life I think I ~ begin to understand
what it must feel like to be a woman.. .. To have to wangle favors
from more powerful people, like nurses. To be dependent on brisk,
competent, thbugh inferior, attendants. To be hemmed in, robbed of
· au~omy, ~use ~ , You ~~e people they. ~ j~ physiCally
&lt;iverPc&gt;wer you arid. put you baCk in your place. This experience h!IS
changed my whole· personality. . . . I was never condesceilded to,
patronized, before. I have to resist the attitude of the nurses or I
become like a child. I become devious. I have to ·outwit them bY-straiegy, since I don't have either physical strengt,b. or hospital rules on
my side. The whole situation has affected even my relations with the
two other men in the room. We feel and act like conspirators. Even
our logic; was affected. The nurses behaved according to the logic of
hospital rules, which seemed to us to be all in their favor. If a few
weeks of being without superior strength and the support of the rules
can do this to a man, what can year&amp; of it do t.o a woman?

•

- -

.

(lntervi~ with a male patient recuperating in a hospital, quoted_
from Jessie Bernard. Academic Women, PennsyJvaniil State Uni)
versity Press, 1967, 168-69.

Statistics gathered by Mary Lee Geisser.
·Aualyaed by Jane Faulman.
Graph d~ CODBUltant, Tom SCOtt.
mained a man's world from wbi&lt;;h

women were ,_,lutely barred, aDll
the 'CbaDp came about ao1y • because

-

tbeaa!l- insisted on their

richt to 1eam. Yet .,_, as late as
190'7, tbe Germ... IICientiflc encyclopedist P. Moebi.ua could atate ' that
"~ importlmt parts ol.
the brain . - . y for opirltual ·life,

the frantal CXIIlVOlutioas aDd

the ........

.-.llobM. are loa well deYelopad in
- . aDd this dlllennae Ia inborn
.• • That the acimcoa, in the atrictalt
- . baYe I8CIIiYed DO ~t
from aDd llball Ia tber&amp;fore ~... .But Moebiu8'

view that ....... biaqy aDd leuDinc
are by zature incampatible aat
ccaidlnd the wad: ol a c:nlllk; hia
~eeboed eoleamly by a ....
aatioD ol.- ............. DDt to,;.. .

_tba.....

We are - . ol coune, in 19'10, DDt

190'7. B Ia. DD... . . . ~that
~will illjaN tba .......... cWIcate~~- .tbat

......, aar ..U. lnD ill~
will- up tba blood~-far~

.

'Struation; leading to aDII!IIIia aDd 11101'bidity. Yet the·sad fact is that in 1970
...,._, are still not afforded eqwd
status with men in the world of the
univasity, neitla- in amdemic: employment nor in educatioaal oPPar·
tunity. This state ol. ~ doM DDt
,.,._roy """"' deopicable plot
on the part of academic men t,o deprive their _ , collequM of eqwd
status or their _ , studeniB of
eqwd I!IIU&lt;ation; ratlier,' it atteate to
the low estesri in which our culture
. boW. ........, - an attitude. ariain&amp;
from the immemorilol aet ol. our ~
ciety toward the traditional roles of
the-.

mmen as a

Minority:

Covert versus

OVert.DilcriDiiDation
Althoulh ......... COIIIIIdoe 51 per
CBit ol the JICIIliUiadiD mel 63 per CBit
ol lbe wile, ill IICiuality - eiblbit all
' ~ cultural ldiplata ol • miaari1;y-

�..,. 14, 1170

4
- - ...elimilod
to wbi.... _Bodo--N•
--=-=-to
..r .:.=:
=:...,
~::.::...::. ;.·i(y, "ill:.~wbit.ofalk.
. '--· _.. ill
pm;c.

oibllity, 'Ud oeiority at wodt. Noitbor
--~to-wbi

dida't- .. .

=

jobo

oeKually

-

piOUII of outwiW... lboir meJ.tfolk or

Tbe dllaimiuatian apiDst .-

my - - opecial - - wbich make it
uJarly dlffiallt to combat. Anti-femilllsm is a cultunl lceberc: for fiW1rY
0118-lellth wbich Ia overt, or abowlna.

tiOII. w...... .... told in all IQOd
faith by men wbo """""" he u-lted
at heine called anti-lanlniat (''But I

-·t

~ - ' " l that.._
a
IQOd ~ No matter how
brilbt they are. they all drop out 8Dd
set manied.· ha111! behiel, ... fal1ow

their huahanda. if they're ~
nieae "'-- broucht up in infmmerable od feminturo 8fiUII*IIII, are, of
course, sometimes true. Mare - than men do drop out of faculty aDd
of paduallo J&gt;IOif8ID8, leading to ' - ·

knows that society will .-ani him,

whereu a woman feels it will punish

'-·

Inevitably women internalize lheee
- . with an equally inevitable
elfect 011 "production." Tbe farther
aDd hiaher a woman mo1leB in-a man's
world, the greater the p.-.res
apinst success. In a man:a world
like the unl111!r8ity, a woman must
make an utra effort merely to survive, let alone aucceed; at the same
time she must filht ' - own intemal
directi111!B in Order to demand hillher
salaries, or promotioDa or appointments, to submit material for publication, to put herself in the position
• "of being judged at all
I say all this with some trepidation:
these observations can be construed
too easily u lypicsl female ciomplain. irii or apologizing, or even, I as a subversion of my own purposes
--fl good argument to keep women
right Where they are at the bottom of
the academic world. But it must be
said, for any ·number of imperatiVe

ered expectation of women's 111JCDMo
leading to more women· dropping out
the oU.. niDe-teuthe ue ~
they are ~ to. Rank reveals an inverae. spiral: the bqlwmeqed in • 1arply IIDqll5tioned trathe aalllemic stnltum, the lower the
ditiau of u inferiors. This co01lerall percentqe of women, until at
dllaimiuatiau .-Is itself moot
the SUIDDiit women aiinply 8\'11p011lte.
strikiJIIIy in sucb placao u statistics
Since women he11e a visibly lower
011 ~t aDd edUcation, arthcbance
of .....,._. than men, fewer
ritic law&amp;,_ stereotypes of folklore
women are inspfred to try, lowering in
(abrewiab wife or dumb blonde
tum the numbers ol women .avallable.
jobs), or a _.,.;ty to treat the
This ereates a laclt in the academic
pmuine anpr of .....,_ u a source
world of what sociologists refer to u .
of ci&gt;Mp """- about leabiana or sex''visible life models," or 11role models."
ual atarvatiau.
reasons: as academics, we musl exWomen in the uni111!r8ity do not Allhouch diilcriminatiau is
amine the nature and mechanism of
dramatic than overt, ita cost to . enough succeeaful women. or eYeD
women
treated
as
equals
by
their
male
the preeawea that discourage women
in c:lamqed self-esteem, wasted
from academic _ success. If we are
poteutial, aDd IIUPII.-I ....... is too · col.lesguM. for women are the "invisible men" of loday's college&amp;-inaepever to afford women the equal emhiih ....... to be - - ' - This diaarate, but unequal. The role models
ployment pl'EIICrihed by law and the
criminlltiOII is our· culture's oldest,
offered to women students, not just
equal opportunity pl'EIICrihed by the
moat subtle, moat ~ aDd,
by tbose convenient villains the mass
thereby in the long run, moat widely
nature of taK-61JPP(&gt;rted education, we
media but also by much of their
must eliminate these pressures. The
deatructi11e antqonima; cuts directcourse content from muaery school
ly 8CrOE all politicol, 8uc:iil, aDd ecouni111!r8ity must take the lead in
through
graduate
school,
are
almost
breaking this self-fulfilling cycle, or it
nomic boundariea---pe to. the
totally of the traditional homemalr.er
cannot justify its own emtence. We
reason that women lhemeel""" do the
and mother, while the converse imal!l
must not allow either complacency,
aame. Sbort of fleeinJ to Mount
of the succeeaful career woman (.the
Alhoa, a man can no more avoid deepor refusal to recognize the problems,
type Joan Crawford played in countto for&lt;:e the ·needs of 80 many down
~ly in~ving his life in some way with
less films) nearly invariably preeents
women than he can avoid participaton the list of priorities.
her as frustrated, miserable, bitchy,
ing in the attitudes of his culture.
semally starved, masculine and casof course, .... the trating. Even the aocial sciences ha11e
more unfortunallo
victims 'Of an histended to look at career women as detorical caoditiauing desiP.&gt;ed to. conviant or abnormal or in the throes of
vince them from cradle to bed to
''role conflict. ..
pa11e that they cannot aucceed in a
Cynlhis Epstein discusses the posman's world, nor abould they 81leD
sible repercussions of the paucity of
want to.
At the risk of seeming to climb onto
women role models in the university&lt;:
Cultunl inertia being what it is,
the current bandwagon, I should ijke
11te lack of motivalio"'!l modela for the
covert attitudes are .e&amp;p!l(:ially liable
to
discuSs women's .role .i n any long
girl
.
••
bas
become
a
matter
of
concern
to -tuating thelmel.les unieM vigto educaton. aome of whom have begun
range solution to the ecologicsl crisis.
orously cbalJenpd. Finally, afllor a ·
El&lt;perts
agree that at the heart of
tacit moratorium of fifty years, wo::::U~t':
~tecl~~rf~~~
that crisis is the growing danger of
tiona are accurate that women are and
men ba11e begun to contest their secoverpopulation.
For centuries, every
will be needed to 611 aociety's needs for
ond claaa status, and will continiJe to
IUghly qualified talent, it may be the
culture in the world has been encourdo 80 until, hopefully, their goals of
university will have to live more tbou.dlt
aging women to stay bome and multilepl, 8conom.ic, pqlitical and aocial
providing ,mod•la (or_1M wuhrtroiluply, while at the same time systemate women oy emplo)flnl more women
equality are woo, and until both men
atically discouraging women from
faculty
memben
in
pruent
pcMitUm•
to
aDd women can ~t equally 011 the
denwutra~.e that •ucla. /il!lth an open to
seeking any other means of achievepounds of their shared humanity.
quali/l&lt;d women."
ment. Now, however, we learn that
But the reasons go much deeper
uncontrolled childbearing is no longer
than the rewards or t;he visible chance
c,lesirable, and may even threaten the
for success. Like other minority
survival of ourselves, our children, our
groups, women internalize the cultural
unborn children. At the same time,
attitudes that tell them this is somefortunately, the technicsl means of efPerpetuation Through Apathy
one else's world. Academic women
fective birth control are either availshow up with significantly higher IQs
A sad fact is that while universities
able or on the borizon.
at rank than their male colleagues,
· ba11e made genuine effort&amp; on behalf
Reversing the population growth
and yet their "production" (publicsof the other minority poups, they are
rate, however, implies a revolution
tiona, research, pants, etc.) is lower no freer of the traditional attitudes
much more radicsl than the subeti-.rei women than any. other group
in both rate and J!ignificance.' ''IQ
tutioo of one politicsl system for andoesn't mean a damn thing,'' says a
in our society. We are berely Pf'8111!!ltother. We are talking, instead, about
man. ''It's only, what you produce!"
in the facultiSs of coeducational instia profound change in our moot basic
Granted. But what strikes me here is
tutions, and 81leD in women's colleges
aocia1 attitudes -.rei the role of
the limited definitinn of production,
are coocentrated in the lower levels.•
women and childbearing. (Politi
the evidence of wasted potential in
That this discriminstion is J8raely
systems have come and gone throughwomen, the need to eDmine its
out history, without ever effecting any
aDd reflects pneral aocial patcauses, assess its 0011ts, and, above all,
llorna does not, however, emnerata the
real chanIll in these attitudes.) But
· the need to do something about it.
university from allowing it to emt.
as long as society continues to dis·.Recently, ·women lhemaelves ba11e
On the contrary, today's university
courage women from assuming any
abould be the. lut place to tolerate
begun to look at bow the self-fulfilling
roles other than tbose d.irect1Y condiscriminstion of any sort, either ...m
prophecy tniadmiU wOrks a g a i n s t
nected with their reproductive lives
their sex. Tbe poison in the system,
or by the -tuation of deatructi11e
(being pretty, deferential, sezy, nice,
of course, can he identified u the
aocial attitudes throuih sheer -thy.
a good bomemsker, cook. mother) and
In fact, the uni111!r8ity's educational
cultunl attitudes both men aDd wo. until it can offer women alternate and
reopoaoihility requires it to be particq81 ha111! swallowed and digested like
genuine ways of achieving cultunl$lDDT without .,.., i1:nowina it.
ulaQy Mllliti11e to such attitudes. In
teem, there will be no compelling mitr1!iijlecity u a teat lab fcir ideas,
A - t study by Matins Homer
centive for women to limit their childshows that _n ot only are women conthe uni-.itY must maintain a
bearing significantly enough to make
los Pl'OifiiiD of aelf-&lt;!Valuat:iob, ftir, . ditianed not to- compete., but, more
the di1rer-ence that will ensure surif it does not, it risb depriving ita
Important, not to IIIICX-t.• Her work
vival.
students of c:boice by paasing on sucb - indicates, in fact, a distinct conelaTbe responsibility of the uni111!r8ity
attitudes- ~
tian: the more a woman wanta to
to aasume a leading role in this should
~ the more l1kely she is to fall
be clear. w...,.. will never become
·'f'he,
lbroulh Allldety that ....,._ can be
procreationally underemjiloyed until
only at the price of aocial !heY can become otherwise and elaetzecilm aDd ... of ~aoininity.:...C, IJ&amp;.
where ereatively emploYed--until they
comint that 8DCia1 11101181er, the ...
are -.red an equallhare not just In
Why Women Iroo
..-...---~ And the . . . . . the
. the ~ilitiea of working and
the Strike Ia Hot
1D our wurld, hut alao In the
~
ol - . the - - the
~ n..laN, P.,. 'equal or
rewanlo work1nund leelmDg can lelld
In lla:J ...... m..rimlnatian 0011..._llbilitMa, a mail '-a hetto.
When
the .w-aty can say, aDd
tlnuauii.Y - t e a Ita own·.laMifkalllrabaaoeat-'--ehe
tbonby tlllach IDdety to say, 1D - -

And -

llbmen,The
Uriiversity, and The
Ecological Crisis:

:!:

to

Academic Bias
Against Women:

ee.ae-

&amp;Jf-Fldfilling
ProphRcy Routine:
While

'boulht

leerJirDC

men, ''You are valuable bumu heinp
wbo are - . " 1--.s ol "'You ...,
valuable • _ . . , who 111111Y 'be human helnp," d-. IDIUih- may
be 8llllOIUql!d to quit work in the
maternity ward aDd the nur.ry to

guarmtee the child of the future a
wbole
of pOuad to 8lud .... insteed of just liz faet to be buried in.

acre

·The WJmen8 Mooement
-In the UniversitiR,s:
In 1964, Betty Frieda puhUabed
-TM Fel'lliltiM llyalique, a book that
bas chanaed AmedaL - - since,
baWl '---~ to demand change alid equality. Academic
women ue no eDlllpticli.
In the last Year both faculty aDd
stUdent ......... from Calllomia to
New York ha11e becun to call their
imi..aitiea to account. 'lbe llaldemic
prot--...; aaioc:iatiana in 80Ciology
niodem laniualaa. payebOiogy and
academic scieDcea all the targets,
at .their annual meetinp, of demands
by women members anrqed at being
invisible men to their male colleagues.
Campus croups, u well - profeesil'Oai croups, have started making
demands 011 their Ullhaslties. The
Columbia Women's Liberation aDd a
women's faculty group at Maryland
ba111! both iasued well...........med re·porta on the status aDd ecarcity of
their female faculty. Cornell hu several women's poupa from WITCH
to NOW, wbo ba11e 8UCOOIIBfully demaDded a program-til Women's Studies and several reforms.
Two weeks aao in New York, a
Professional Women's Caucus was
ganized, tentatively entitled Professionals Organized for Women's Equal
Rights (POWER), of. which one of
the functions will be to in111!8tigate
and report on. discriminstion against
women in the Profeesiooa, including
in the universities.
SUNY/B hu a Women's Liberation
Group and a Uliiverai"ty Committee
of NOW (National Organizatinn for
Women), both of wliich are well
aware of the Uni111!r8ity'a failure to do
anylhins about" the status of women
on campus. To attest to their interest, women themsei111!B have organized courses, including an enensive
accredited Bulletin Board Course and
a program of Women's Studies under
the American Studies Program. The
Women's Liberation Group has
started on its own responsibility a
much needed free child care center
staffed by volunteers.

or-

WEAL, OFW, and
Executil:e Orders 11246
fmd11375:

�5

Because Harvard at first refused to
make its records oonceming -women
available to the Federal government,
one suspects that the policy/ plan will
have to be its coUlSe. Yet, to date,
Harvard has stated neither policy nor
plan, nor, in fact, has any other university, including SUNY.
According to the Federal Register
. (Vol 35, No. 2Q, Tb.,..... Feb, 5, 1970) ,
an aftirmative action program is "a
set of specific and result-oriented proCedures to which a contractor commits himself to. apply every good faith
effort. The objective of those procedures plus such efforts is equal employment opportunity . . . An acceptable
aftirmative action program must include an analysis of areas within
which the contractor is deficient in
the ut:illiation of minority groups and,
further, goals and timetables to which
the contractor's good faith efforts
must be directed to correct the deficiencies and, thus, to increase materislly the utilization of minorities at all
levels and in all segments of his work
force wbere deficiencies exist" ( Subpart 8 , 60-2.10) .
Further, affirmative action plans
must contain the following information:
1. (60-2.11) An· anolyaio of all major
job cateaorieo at tbe facility with ~­
atio• if miDoriU. are cunently
·

UDder tbe LUor ~· own
...xw-,
Fedenl .....-n with 50

or more employea, and a contract of
~.000 or more. IDUit clnelop a written.

:n.:L..-::-..:: o:'!:, : .....e:r:r~
MX. or uational ori,pn. I

kDow of no

~J:troJ..~ ~ '!lr"F~:

eral CODtractora, iDcfudiq .wi.iwnitiee. ,..

=.~.we:.. ~m:.-:: ~ ~r:
for the
well •

lloo

ol "miDority

~-.

•

opociJic: ~ cmd limelableo for

ezlotiD&amp; diocrimination.
Later in "ber ~ Mrs. Griffiths
read into the Record .. letter from
Bernice Sandler of the Women's
Equity Action league (WEAL) to
Secretary of Labor Geolll8 P. Shultz,
dated January 31, 1970, demanding
the enforcement of ED&gt;cutive Orders
11246 and 11375, and that the OFCC
institute "an immediate 'claa actiDn'
and compliDnce reviaD for all universities and collegee receiving Federal
con-. We aak that as stated in
the ED&gt;cutive Orden, universities end
discrimination and take affirmative
action 'to eosure that applicants are
employed. and that employees are
tr.ted during ~t, without
._.-.:1 to ... BilL
Dr. Sanjllilr's letter, accompanied
by impressive ~tation, signaled out .the fol1owinc five areas of
discrimination:
1. AdmiMion quotas tp undergraduate and paduate ecbools; 2. Discrimination in financial help for grad-

co~

~t art,

tbeaT.I.inguistics and medi-

cme; all de~ts, figures m t...ure except ..-d'e n t is tr y. From this
information we prepared the tables
... pages 6, 6 and 7.

::J;.. ~==·in·.==

Analysis
Rudimentary as this study is, certain features will be familiar, for the
status of women on the campus Is.
merely a carbon copy of the ~
employment patterns of women in the
United States. In the lenguaae ol the
OFCC, women in the University an1
"underutilized," or less "adequAtely
repnanted" in oeriain job categories
than would be "eq&gt;ected by their
availahility." The OFCC defines
"availability" by a number of facton,
incllldini: 1) the minority population
of the labor area, 2) the ~ availability of akiiied minorities, 3} aYilil-.
ability of promot:ahle minority employea This dinlcts ' our att...tion
particularly to ~ 1, wbkh
shows that while WOIJ!I!Il comprise 60
percent of the fresll"**, they _ .

TABLEt

N-aad-olW_aad_bJ_._

~pec":!T.:~~~y

be
2. (60-2.12) Iletoelo-t or reolBm&gt;atioD ol tbe . . . . . -... eaual employment
rluDlly po)jcy in all pe_...t ...
FonDa! intemal cmd ediraal eli.
- l i o n of tbe CODtndor'l policy.
IdontillcatioD ol poblem .... (dellcien·
cia) bY o,..m.aWmai UDito cmd job

=-

.

w....,

I

complainta from" apec:ific uniYenitieL
The OFCC cbaae to ·review • its tint
complaint ..... filed by the Harvard
Chapa of NOW. The ~Ianoe .
review i8 under way, and the OFCC Is
witbboldiDc $8 . mllliae in Cllllinlclll
until el1b. Harvard can poove it doM
not dilcriminate apimt '"*-'. or
until it . . . . . . . 1111 IIII&amp;HtiDimlaa"-7 policy and .... - NqUirad by
law of IIIQ' Flldlnl oaatnetor, - ceptable •.mm.t~ve - - ,..,.....
to ead di8crimlnatiaD apimt -

"-.
What all this ~ is th&amp;t the &gt;
State University of New York, as a
Federal contractor, must comply with
the law by filing" an affirmative action
propam, as well 'as by dewlopinJ a
stated . policy to be "diMmninated
formally both intemally and atemally" in ._.-.:1 to cliacriminatioQ apinst - - It ha aot dCIIIII this, DOl', indeed, has it- doae, - ·my. knowledae.
the preliminary required pouDdwork
of "8Mlydna "major job
in nepect to ~tilizab--of

........

ca__..

'lbloi article will I.y the crucle
pocmdtktk for lbat ~an-

U'llo(lUI)

.,.(1101)

4CHio(lU1)

1011o(lM0)

I&amp;NIOU

n•taHJ

.... (1'710)

GR.ADUAT&amp;

11.. (111)

'tHo(-U)

IOPHOMO&amp;U

.......

SiDce ~ Griffith's
~ 1he National Orpnization for

(NOW) t.i ...-1 at its annual conwotion to CIIIJI88te with
WEAL in .,.,.,.....m, the filinl of

Method : Because we wanted data
more accurate and complete than ·that
offered by the £acuity Directory, a
questionnaire was aent to every department in every faculty, aaking for
the numbers of full-time men and
women according to rank (from full
professor to instructor) and to tenure, aDd the numbers of men and
women full-time graduate students
currenUy enrolled, and cunenUy suJ&gt;..
sidized. A final sectilln requMied
tenured and non-tenured faculty by
""" and length of service. We had an
extraordinarily high cooperation on
returns: all departments but medicine
aent the faculty figures;. all departments aent ;::-'..:::'L,uate student figures

me ......

uate etudy ~acbolanlhips, felJowsbips,
pants, teadilnl assistantetc.); 3. Hiring practices; 4.
Promoticias; 6. Baluy differentials.
In its complaint, WEAL arcued
that _ , students are tmtitled to
PIOiediaD from ,_ discrimination
under the apprtmu-bjp provisions of

sbli&gt;o.

IUidelines-

Preparation

UDderutilised in any ODe or more •
coteaorieo (job "coteaory" herein. - or • .....,
of joiJO
-lar CODienl,
rateo,
cmdhlrriDc
opporluDi-

-rm

the OFCC

alysis by emmining the "major job
categories," and by "identifying tbe
problem areas" (deficiencies of women) by "organizational units" (faculties, departments, administration,
·staff) and " job categories" (faculty
....,... tenure, and graduate and undergraduate students considered as apprentices) .

~llsl8- ........ tsbll from~ . . . . and
lists. The lnh• Md!m CID the .........
istration from the r-tt;y Directory. Btudtmt figures .uppiW
by the Olllce of Admlodaa8 ~ Rae&gt;
orda.
Di(ficultia: CompiJiDc the a.terial for this article ~ -.h
to ....... that furu. . - d l will
have to be olllcially Initiated. Same
eDsting data not made 11911ilahle, such as a parcelllap bnoalrdown
of aalery acales by ou IICilllrdina to ·
rank and faculty, beca1me of: 1) the
'COSt of a computer -nm or a c:lerl&lt; to
compile the figures, and 2) becauoe the
small number of w&lt;men on the faculties might make individual aalarie8
public. (This diJIIculty, ." """-• can
be avoided by having .....,... look up
the few women's as1aries invol~ and
compute them on a percl8lltqe rather
than a dollar basis in comparison with
the aalery scaies ai...ty availahle on
the faculty as a wbole.)
In o t h e r casea, the information
simply doMD.'t edst, &amp;ppiU'I!llltly . .....
cause it has never betm !bought 1II'Orth
recording. We ...,.. told, 'for emmple,
that the University keeps no recorda
by which to compare in numbers or
amounts the ratios of .,_ to ...,....
receiving undergraduate scbolarship
or loan assistance. Nor, I was told,
are the iecords ol graduate ~
awarded by this University analyzed
by sex. And we have virtually no
information on the sta1f by rank, aalary, title, or sex, other than what the
Faculty Directory can suggest.
This, therefore, is oot a definitive
analysis on the status of women on
the campus. In the tint place, I am
not a sociologist eq&gt;erienced in CIOIDpiling and interpreting data Second,
I am a woman, with an admitted, and
often heated, bias against anti-feminist attitudes. Even this preliminary
and CWIIOly look, however, sbould
point out the .-:1. not only for full
scale reeesrch, but for some careful
and ..._...,-meditation ... the part
of the University about what it oilers
the women it hiraa and ~

• IUMIOU

ITUDCDn'l
UfiT&amp;UCTOU

~

' a•uu

.... .
(

)

LOCTtlll. . .

Utlo(T)

16.. (H)

AUiftAICT

IOWo(Tl)

1011o(IT~)

..........,.
nn.L

lT'IIo(M)

.... ,...,
. . . . (Ill)

�6
.;.,t ODiy 21 per cent ol tbe paduate
otudollla, 14 per coat ol tbe laeuU;y,
apd ODiy · 6 p e r - ol tbe fuJI ~ .
f-.,..that, in 1 a e t , - ara·pro.,_mly aad 11101'8 II8YWIIIy UDdllratilbed - tbe)' up lbroalh tbe
educatioaal· job c:alepies.
In DOD8 ol tbe faculties doM
tbe~ o l - .... equal tbe
lllllllb. ol ...... eltbor ........ llllacbon
or paduate otudollta. (Tables 2, 3 aad
4). Of tbe ~ ~ta. acboola,
aad faculties for which ..., list separate filurea. 17 have DO women faculty, 25"DO tenwed women. Only_tbree
abow more women than men: u-ln!,

nlllllinc.

JM.lth related profesaions.

(fible 6)
T ..... t

It "' inlenlltlnl 110 ~ tbat
tbe eoc:lal ........ wbkh lncludoi tboee
~ .... ~ 8IJIIPC* 110 be
~ COIIC*DIId with eoc:lal
cbanp.aad lllbdty prableaJ8, . - 1
a oipUfiamtly lower percmt:qe ·(90
per cent or 811 men 110 10 per cent
or U
ol faculty .......,._
tbe lllbdty IDD8t ~lied in their
own .............,. tbe Uahw81ty • a
whole (88 per cent , _ 110 14 per·
cent WOI!IIin). Tbe SodolaiY Dopertment illoelf is lower in .....-t:qe.fac..
ulty ~tatlon ol women (89 per
cent or 25 J;DOD 110 11 per cent or 8
........e..). than ~ Univmaity as a
whole. Even in tbe Scbool of Social
Welfare, traditimally a women's pro-

-&gt;

.._...._
... .,.. ..,._.,.,._,.
..
T.W.Ot

--

te.ioa, fllculty Ql1tDumber faculty ~ 28. 110 16.
Nor doM tbe Faculty ol Arts aad
LatUn, which includea ~ ol tbe
cil8cipliDM in wbkh tend 110
c:ooceatrate, . - 1 allY pattern fawnble 110 In fact, tbe tolai
.....-t:ace palleme ol Arta aad 'Letten is emctly tbe same as tba Uniwislty'.._. per cent or 1'19 , _ 110
14 per cent or.28 - . Ad, ciMdal,
Encliah aad lllll8lc all, "'-wwr, haw
facilltles 90 per cent or ovw mala,
and in tbe entire ten departaalta
(Enalish and comparative Ullntme·
ara Q(lllibined), there is at~ DO
sinPi' _,.,., full prof--.
On tbe other band, Arts and l.ettenl

-

H. . . . . oi.W

~.,

~-~..,.·­

-

- A&amp;TS6

LOTTtU

.........

KDUCATtOMAL

j
-~

DfGlNU&amp;lHO
.AI'f'L.scta:NCU

.:

~

HEALTH

.....

scwocu
WIUSI'aUDI:HC&amp;
NATURAL .ciUfC£1
•MATHEM4Tt~

• ADWIMin'&amp;.ATtOM

-~

!.l.

iii .II

..

•• .:

~

...

TOTAL

:,:

.....

roLL
1'/t.Or .

-·-~~

"""

-~

..::.. ..
.. j
I

IOClAL acu&amp;Naa

d~

0 I

1 ••

.

.

.:..;,

..

I'

0 I

j

;I

~

~

"''
,

... ::i
i I ...,_
......
...... ru•••
I'ROr.

r•or.

IN~:uc:

'

TABLES
Numbers and Percentages of Women and Men Faculty, Tellllft!d Faculty,
Graduate Students, and Subsidized Graduate Students in Eacb Department
1
. . . Total

�• . , 14, 1!110

...mi

'lll'hich edllbit IIUCb discrimin-

sraduate aludeota who are llliliildiaed. hlrinl policlea, aud tha tillliie syatem
(51 per cent) to tha poro1111tqe a1
are 8JD0111 d..- that perpetuate dl&amp;· fal:ulty who are teaund (32 -ariininatmY hiring '81111 firing patlenla
per cent). U tawre, lilre aubaidy, ia
aud are CODinlry tQ tha apirit of
awarded em merit, tbm .we IIDd spin
Eacutive Orderll 11246 aud 11375.
• • al ..., Pllduate ·aludeota wbo are
that women are· laB _ _ . t e d in
. •Nq&gt;DIUm: We haw .all baud tha
tha blat- job caleplry.
·
aubBidiald to that al ...,.tuate
arpmenta that tha nePotism r u I e
aludeota who are IUbeldboed. While
Amlq tha fal:ulty _.n,.; we
(DDW called tha "faYOritiam" rule, aud
- . D _ _ . . Clllly 21 per cent of
IIDd that""""*' Clilalpl'iae 20 per ·CIIIt
r e C&amp;ll tl y reallrmed by Cl&gt;lmOeuor
tha toiU paduate aludeota, lltnu!aely
(72 of 276) of tha 88llialaiit profeaGould) ..arb apinst .... 88 well 88
eDIIIIIh ... identical ~tap (51 - 801'8, 17 per cent (54 al 258) J1f tha ...,.,_, that it iB a dead letter, that
. pllr cent) of ..., aud _ , are
associate profeaoOn, aud 5 per cent . it will prevent a hypothatical departIUbeldboed.
( 15 of 2116) ol tha full pralaan. In
...,t c:bairman in a bypotbatical coltha Uni-.ity, tben, ' 88 e1aeWbeie,
to ....... al thii?
leae from hiring biB hypotbatical wife
""'"""" are 0111100e111ntted iu tha loware, al ClDUIII8, witbaut iulormation ...
to create a bypothetiCal voting bloc,
payin&amp; low-I'Billdna jobs wilb tha least
wbieb to oompare IIIIIOUD18 o# aubaidy,
or that it providee a aocial .conveniBI!ICUrity, aud are llllilher- hired 1111r • '!!!C" for a c:bairman reluCtant to tum
IIUIIIbenl of appliceDta, aud ratea al
pnJIIIO!e4 accord.il)a to "availability." . down ooe of a couple. But cbaniing
rejectioo, eo: that au,y eanc~.-..
.Ff!r "availability" iB not simply. concan oll'er are bqbly - t i f t . Yet, if
the IIIIDie dOM not change the rule,
w e - that llllt.idbation ia awardfined to tha """' already work
aud dead letter or DO
do have
in tha Ullivaalty, ~ al8o,-IICCilrllinc
ed ... .t.IJH¥. a'ad DOle that I!IDdly
couplee am:vin&amp; in tha departto tha OFCC, to tmlDed .....,_ in
thaaame~al-aud
ment em .this campus· by dispensation
.... gradullte sludenta &amp;bow subsidfrom above) , tha nepotism rule was
instituiAia against tha hiring of wives
izable merit, Ibm tha """' d!&gt;
tha Uni..,...;ty arl&gt;ilnlrily reatzicta itDIIIIJIIIIB to become Kreduate aludeota
and remains to penalize women.
aelt f r o m cxmsidering "available"
do not a e e m to be discrimiDated
Since it· iB culturally acceptable for
WOD&gt;e!! -~Or hiring aud prOm..tion.
apiDsL 'lbia would IIJII!I!8t that tha
· husbands to put their careers first,
Uni-mty'a elforta .would be best dibut not for wives DO matter how qualified, any forced choice ·between which
rected tonni recrui1:iq """""'
into llllllw!te acbi&gt;ol, at least to
partner is to work finds the advantage
IICIIII8IhiD, Dearw the i r peramtap
almcet entirely with the husband.
~ 8IDOIII tha uudersrad:
Thus the many academic women who
.usfelt
many academic· men are forced into
having to decide between career and
A II800IId Qlll!8lbl iB raised when
we oompare tha pera!!ltaae of woman .
marriage; their -rtunitjl!s for com~ nepotisin rule, tha- no-inbredbining both at what lllliY'he tha best
or even the ooly uni..,...;w in the
area are denied them by iln archaic
nepotisoi rule.
Further, in a di!Y of growing numTABLI6
N..._ olW~ aad .._ hll·n.. CJmdu&amp;.e 8tNeota ia -.ell hel&amp;1t7
bers of academic husband and wife
teams, especially in the eciences, the
rule's very presence on the books can
discourage ~ couples from applying. Conversely, having no nepotism rule can work to keep faculty
teams from leaving for other universities where the wife can't work.
Clearly the costs of the nepotism rule
to the University are far higher than
the advantages.
No-inhred-hirU., policies : The widespread !X\Iicy of "no-inbred-hiring" by
which a de~t or university reEnrollment fii!WW ~ as fuses to employ any person wbo holds
a degree from that university, works,
o1 Fall, 1!169. H.. lth Sc:ltlhC. like the nepotism rule, to deprive
l i p - do nat ·lnducle Medl . . l women of equal_ opportunities in employment.
M BD
Sc11oo1 Fecutty fieu- or Dental
Women wbo marry faculty men and
Uclly patlenla to start bifina their ......

-

Jlllliuates.
A furtMr ~ quMtion ia
...u.d by CIJIIIIIIlriDI tha p&amp;r\Bltap

Wb&amp;im-

w;.

-

&lt;-

~co;::m=:.,~~

A Mi.scidlaJzy·of
Discriminato
.
ry
Practices

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

...

•
TABLE?
A poup of Actmilliltn.tift s.JariM b7

move to tba 11111-atiea ...,_ tb8ir
huoiJands haw '-a binld iaq Wlllll
to start or caaq&gt;We their IIIQJate
studio&amp;. oD bainl .-rdecl their"&lt;~&amp;- .
."'-'w, IIIII)' I liDd that tha
uni-.ity-will not hire tbom. 'lbla •
also true al tha ..-inl ~ fll
graduate atudada wilD-~ fMulty
. menibenL . The policy also diacrimi-

nlltea apinst -

"""' -

t he i r huabanda cannot or will not
move, tbaM are dlamouapd
~no uni-.ity job will be_.
to them, if thiy do their
degrees. Finally. tha "1»-inbred-hiring" rule, by ita vwy eDiteuce, discouragee many trom• CXIIIIinc
back to. degrees at all, bacauee there
aeems to be simply no """Y of 1lllinc a
long and Upensive training. ·
The "no-inbred-hirlnl" policy establisbad aud 'Widely -..ptec~·in an
era of academic life vwy .wr...,t
from today's. Uni-.it;ee, :facult;ee,
aud student bodies '""" smaller;
there was much leal movement from
campus to campus, much laB variety
in subject, discipline, approach. ~
day's uni..,...;ty, however, ,_&lt;Js no
such discriminatory reetrict:ions; it is
to the uni..,...;ty's best interesta to
interview aU applicants, including its ·
own, and to choose from the widest
field possible tha best it can get. Any
policy based on exclusion helnlys the
university's principles and restricta ita
well 8B those of any person,
choices
~Y a woman, seeking a job.
TelllU'e-Write on: One of the most
powerful and unpxamjned areas of
discrimination against women in the
university world resides in the arteriosclerotic tenure system.
A glance at the tables and graphs
ag'"'! shows the familiar pattern.' Tenured Women represent 5 per cent of
the total faculty (51 of 1099), while
tenured men repiesent 50 per cent
(502 of 1099) of the total faculty.
More ..aipWicant, of all tha ......,
faculty, 32 per cent (51 of 158) are
tenured; of all tha men faculty .53 per
cent (502 of 941 ) are tenured. Seventeen of 42 de~ts have no women; 22 have no tenured women. Sijrnificantly, when we consider length of
service 88 a tenure requirement, we

as

o.,_, Ap. ltDd. Sex

,

110
116

r

Ul
110

XlOO

..
..

TABLE9
Num.ben and Paeentac- of Women and Men eiUORed u

Full-Time Und.poduateo (Day School)

..
•

.. .. .. ..- . .

troD&amp;OaD

UTJ

. . . .0 .....

--

8ACR&amp;LOU
(17)

io

.,!!'

.. .. ..

.....,_.

..,,

T : _!OTAL Aft&amp;AO&amp;

L.

AY•

/!t.V.

AV.

1/J e
j

z

to

return to padtiate ll&amp;udil!o! after marriage to mali """' ......w-ty eal:eblisbad in tha IXIIIIIII1IDity - ~

�8 .
cliooovw IbM of flpllty 'IIPbo """" " - '
lae from ~ yeua, 38 per CBlt (189
of 41!0) of the-"""" .......... but
only 'l7· per CBlt (8 of 47) · of the-At l&gt;-10 yean of .mce, - fiDd
88 per CBlt of the men have 11mure,
but only 58 pei'CBlt of the women (16
of28) .
.
8-. . . _ the tenured fac:u)ty,
......, tend to ClQilCI!Jltrate at the lower rant of ..nate~- or tenuied IDOil (502). 296 .,. 59 per CBlt
are full prof_,.,; of tenured women
(61), 16 or 90 per cent are full pro' f - . All tbia '!tloDIIY augpsiB disparate eelection rates of women.
'The oricinal pu!pooe of tenure was
to ......., fac:ulty of their jobs after a
oulteble pzobatioaary period of service
aDd amount of "production." It can
become, bawevw, -tbinl very diffen!Jrt-DO loaller a disinterested
means of,judcinc - · s worth in
the academic COIIIIDunity, but, in effect, aDd at its worst, a mechanism
which can b8 ' - ' to J:ei!Ulate fac:ulty
size in line with the pnera1 economic
situation. 'Ibis practice can enswe uni-.itiea of: 1) a low level turnover
aDd a ct-p demancUabor BUpply; 2 )
a meana &lt;ff weeding out "tzoublemakers" aDd 3) a IDMDII of rewlllding
the aafe dull -.her 'IIPbo has the safe
dull book. Pedlaps the mosf diatasteful aspect of the syatei;D the way ·it
operatea: a periiDil's fate is decided by
a COIIIIDittee which doesn't know bim
or ber, in a clcad aession in which he
or abe ClliiDDt be present and cannot
Mar the evidence or plead in his or
ber own cue, and which increasingly
deniea tenure over the more informed
...,.,.....,.tioas of his or ber own
~t. Often the criteria are unclear; altbouch the moat commonly
cited oue is publication, in some """""
people c:im be rranted tenure for
"service."
All u- conditions militate against
women; aU create a oompetitive situation in which - cultural conditioning
puts b« at the greatest disa,dvantege.
Wby publication ill more dilllcult for
women than men needs to be explored,
but the fact is that it erdsts. Further
studies indicate that because the profeMiooal work of women, regardleas of
quality, is rranted less aedence than
'7 that of men, publication is pzobably
harder for women lb achieve even
wt&amp;l they do produce, especially in a
world of mala dominated editorial
board&amp;." 'The publication criterion,
therefore, is inherently favorable to

a-.

atandini COIIIIDi- ~ In the

Reporte- llbowB aome atllmpt to in-

clude - · total of a.,., ... faur of the nina ammltteee.
No cOmmitlee, bawevw, ia cbialred bya _ . , aDd DO 'llli&lt;IIDIID appeus ..,·
the Economic Status, EdlMsliaaal
Planninr aDd Policy, Library, Publication, aDd Student Alfain Commlu-.
No 'llli&lt;IIDIID em the SUNY/B

CounciL

'The newly formed Faculty Grievance Commi.t tee, and the Medicsl
School .Atlmisaim Committee ~t
special CIIIII!IL V\lomen serve on them
only by virtue of !iilving insisted on
repieoentetion. A 'November demarid
by NOW (the National Organization
for Women ) to Dean Ped&gt; of the
Medicsl School which was tborooghly
covered by press and television re-,
suited in the promiae of three women
appointees to the Admissions Bosrd.
To date, ~. only two of thoee
appointments have been made.
When the Faculty Grievance Committee was formed, its first grievance
csme from a faculty member of NOW
who complained that there was no
woman on the Grievance Committee.
An extraordinarily sympethetic oommittee chairman argued for and got
the appointment of a woman. largely
through pointing out that be was
already receiving gr ievances from
women.

Stapus of Women in
Administration, Staff,
and Student Body
Adniinistration: Room at the Top!

pnera1 pollcy, _ , avaU themaelW!S of wha- limited opportunity
there ill nearly twice as much • men,
suneet1n11 that no-pert-time policies
are particularly diecriminalory against
women. Women also avail tbellaliW!I
more often than men of the limited opportunity for full-time noo-oedit enrollment, esPeciallY in the lower dlvision, where they outnumber the men
by a stertlinr 203 to 12.
Somehow, tqen. we are doing two
things-allowing women to drop out,
to BUccumb to the ~ to quit
school to work or marry at a rate much\
'faSter than men, and we · are limiting
ihe part-time and non-credit ~
tunities women seek more often ~
men. We are, therefore, as a Umversity, as guilty as everyone else of not
moving to counteract the social pree8W'86 which discourage women from
achievement-the same pres sures
which relegate women to minority stetus in the first place.
.
To repair the effects of its omission,
. the University can undertake a twofold responsibility : 1) of encouraging
women 119t to drop Out before completing t)&gt;eir degrees, and to go on to
gradu_ate school, and 2 ) of creat;ing
genuine opportunities for women to
return to com_plete their · degrees or
enter graduate echool after time out
for marriage, work,- or childbiming.
The very fact that so many women do
come beck, even in the -face ol BUch
discouraging conditions, memly argues
the need. U the University is truly to
provide equal educstimuil opportunity
for women, encouragement can. and,
· indeed, must be -provided by three
methods: 1 ) the abolition of aU nopart-time student rules apd the esfab.
lisbment of part-time echolarships, 2 )
the esteblisbment of free, professiooal
child aue. and 3 ) the undertalrlng of
compensatory recruitlnr programs for
women students, especially in traditionally male-oriented professions BUch
as medicine, law, engineering, mana gemenl

haw appiOIIriatled eo IIIIIch IDODII,J, . .
quires .. 6+w!.wwlly trained .......
1181. M...,.,_, ~ child eue
·

o«...

the Jll*lbillty of a job
market for - ; the University
could very elleclively couple its child care center with a oartillc:ati\111 procram f&lt;W trainlna auc:b penllllll8l.
1
8) Compensatory J8m'llitinc pro•rrama far - . as for BIIY olber
·minority, are requjnld by the principle
of ata-.pported edlxstioa, eapeclally in the male-Grienled proleMions. .
'The p....-1 OFCC Guidelinee em
sex diacrimination are very speci1lc em
the Jlllltler of recruitlnr (60-20.2 "Recrui-t"). For ina1ence, "recruiters
must include In the itineraries of their
recruitinr trips, women's collepa, and
the female atudenlll of coeducstiollal
llll1iepB, technical inlllitutea, aDd hilh
schools. . . . WriUen advwtieements
sbould be desipai to attlact women
'by specifically invitinr them to - l y
for thoee jobs where they are DOt typicaDy repreeented. . . . Aftlrmative acsbould include a careful 8lllllllinalion of the compeny's 'IIPill"k needs so
that U.... women may not be excl'!ded from job opportunities."
. For example, until NOW .made its
demands, the Medlcsl School bad no
policy of actively recruitlnr women
students, in '!Pile of the fact that of
over 2,200 BI!Plicants last year, only
105 were women. Signi11cantly, as a
group the women proved better quali.
fied than the men: 28 per cent of the
women, as owe-d to 8 per cent of
the men, • were admitted, suggestinr
that women feel they have no Chance
in medicine unless they are better
qualified than men.
N 0 W charged· that wtiile there
seems to be no diacrimination in admitting qualified women once they applied, ~-. the Medicsl School
bad avoided its responsibility to pro-

lion

The s tatus of facul t y women at
SUNYfB is merely one episode in the
continuing story of discrim inatio n
against women on the csmpus; the
pattern is even more pronounced in
. vide equal educational opportunily by
the administration. A single glance a t
11\'t undertalrlng an active oompeoaapage vi of the current Faculty Directory recruiting prorram for - .
tory listing the University Administra&gt;'IIPbo are too -often diocouraled from
tive Ollicers reveels lhllt we have DO
1) Thi!'abolitiDn-orau~U&gt;-part-nme
apPlying by bad counaeling, by an
women among the nine eD!CIItive a&amp;student rules speaks for itself, on aU
impression of the medical profaasion
' sistents, assistants, or advisors to the
levels and in aU poesible depertments.
hostile to women, or by faolr of be88
president, DO woman among the 26
Even a t part-time, many women can
go only if pro v ided with echolaripg unqualified because they are WOODvice preaidents, (University-wide)
ships _ and there are none.
en. .NOW demanded that the Medicsl
deans, .provoets, masters of the colSchool recruit women as it has ~
leges, one woman among the 12 deans
2 ) Free child con is at the heart
to recruit other minority groups, and
of schools (the dean of the School of
of aU women's demands for equal'
rights. We cannot seek equal educawhile Dean Pesch ~ at the meetNursing) , ·ancl one-half woman among
tion until we can get out of the home
ing to do 80• nothing I can leem of
the numerous directors of councils,
without being penal.it.ed, and we can~ to eztend the program
services or offices - - Barbara Sims,
who is the part-time director of the
not do that without child care. Every
.....__ aame old familiar' ........ is true
women's
group
from
the
YWCA
to
•...,
•~3
csmpus
Office
of
Economic
Opportunmen.
NOW to the Radicsl Feminists is deof. the Engineering School and the ·
'Iboulh .mce, the other poesible
ity.
manding tbia -tial, and it is up to
School of Managemerit, other tradi·
Staff: · StartinB at the bottom and
criterion, is DOt 80 well establisbed, it
the University to provide it.
tionally !hale profeasioaa. Engineering
is equally male m..-1, for men more
stayinB there. The FacultY Directory
· Further, child care CBDDDt be offered
has very recently establisbed an ambloften than women are appointed to
also shows us that while service and
on
a
volunteer
or
cooperative
beals,
tioua
minority recruiting procram,
the COIIIIDiU.. or positioas or adadministration depertments are overwhelmingly beaded by men, they are
but must be prOfeasiooal and· paid. for
~ as usual. simply iiDDftll the
ministrative jX8I8 which will enable
by the Uni-.ity, because we will DOt
existence of women. nae lAw Sdlqol,
largely stafted by women. While DO
them to fulfill tbia criterion.
· fi(uree are available on Ienrth of
'The Uni-.ity clearly canoot take
be offering w&lt;imen equal educationsl ~· has ~ to talk to NOW
opportunity as lona as women are still
t ~ recruitinr propam: I do DOt
any c6::ial action wtilcb will auto- , service, rate of ~ and qualirequired to pay in any way for having
know if the Scbool of Mana...-t
matically repeal cultural oonditioninc....-- fications, again a familiar pettem
has a minority recruitinr JIIOirBID, but
but in the matter of tenure it can efemerree: staft women In the Uni..,- children, either by , _ or by wlunleer aervic:e. Fees would be merely anI do Pow that of 32f paduate stu-·
fect aome reforms to bleed the system
sity perform the, traditional o6ice
other extension of our discriminatory
dents, only oue ia a ........a.
of aemt biaa. It can adopt a broaderhouEkeeplnr chores, and baw small
baaa of tenure criteria to include emchance of promotion to the Poaitioas
tulawswhic:hreatrictawoman'sricht
W~-tl1e content• of tlli•
pbuie .., t.cbin(, _..a to the Uniof beada of divisioaa or oftlcea.
to deduct child ·care from ~ tams,
CDU1'IIe IIIGY be in i uriou• to me1ll4l
versity aDd the oommunity. aDd the
We do, however, baw information
altbouch the only way abe can 10 out
heollll. Warnm are discriminated
. - i t y of women ao Nisible lifa
frpm 1968-611 em a J10UP of adminietrato earn the mouey to pay thoee tueo
apinat in the lllbject matter
model&amp;. s-.- tenure means prolll!&gt;tive salariea. Table 7 analyeee 76 reia by hirinr child care. Nor can volunthey stucb',_lar couna mataiala olllm
tioa, aDd t.ecu.e the petterna clearly
lated adminietrative c:ale(ories by 8811:
leer _..a be required. Our cultural
perpetuate the~ cultnmlat...... that .. ~tly practiced it
attitudea haw too lmr tabn the a.vtitudea toward
as lnferion. In
aDd --.uc decree- Apin, - the familiar pettern: ......... In the
dlecriminelea apinot
as a ee:.
)!- of fqr rranted-especially
tbia aopbiatic:aled are. """""- the1181118
job
csteaoriaDd
with
the
1181118
lectioll
the 'IIPbole tenure pro( ~- volunteer services. In aettllnr far
"Woman'o ~ ia In the home"
cedure llbDuld be oubjecled to a validelreM as men rBilllive COIIIIiderably
volunteer child care the Uni-.ity
ment has lf'li! -.y to U. blatant but
dation 8ludy ... tbia basis aloue.
lell8 money as a J!OUP, aDd 'as the
would
~· its own nllpoDDO leas
dine "as JDUCh •
sa1ariea
80 dam the pp.
sibillty. while perpetuatinr the uoual
wet to be rood ecientlata aDd
~-: Diecrimlnatory petdlllcriminatory
attitudes
that
chlldrc
·
....,;--.
lbey
WilDt
llrst aDd fore.
terDil- alainst women are atrmrly
Anlong thoee with DO depee, the · - ap difr1!rence ill $200 men a· year for
are eatirely the woman's respmslbilmoot to be wmnan1y oompenione 01
..,..ted wiMm ..,; look into auc:b .
men; with a .bacbelor'a depee, $400
ity, DOt society's; laYin&amp; in eftect,
men aDd to be JDOiben.""
- - ~t cbeinls&gt;Uid the
men for men; aDd with a IIIMie&lt;'a
........, must DDt Upect to qualify far ·
MaDy diacipllnea perticuJuly In
appointmmts of to COIIIIDitequal edlxstion until they can llrat
the social . . . _ ,
the tndidepee, a aboddna $1200 ""'"' "" 1M
..... Nurainr. traditioaally a - · s
~far
men
than........_
polelalaa. "ia the oilly department
IIDIYe their raapaaiiihlllty ... thair
tiollal 8811: roles .. if they holy
own- but we WGl't help them.
trutbe
than the -.It of cnlSlllllmU: Tables 8 lll!d 9 ~
dlaiNd by a woman. Cbaln are, ol
In o1ber _..., the attitude ia aDd
tural CCIIIdltiaaint. By tbia I do oot ...,
that
the
Uni-mty
ia
oot
atranely diMcult ... ~ has hem that ,...... are enmean to _,. that the ideM of Bruno
Inc to ..... edlxstioaal opto attain,
but many COIIIIDittee liP"
portunity"" equal with men. While
titled
Intellectual tewarda, only
Bettelhelm or Erik ~ or Bil14 1 ,._,.....by-'hect.
. . . . . . . . . prejudice ...... _
men aDd WOIDIIIfare DIJIIiaric.n)' equal
.tter tl!eY haw paid the prioe of their
mund FNud llbDuld DOt be ~
biolol&amp;.
,..
but
that their _.. oriaate.tion muat
• fnllllaal. • ....., men •tuumIll, 8 l!*•loua ..... could be-Plnally, - must NlliJII'Uo8 that the
be clearly labeled, .., that ....... her· tliio to 'The .,._t.
.-.lib'
1118 drop i n - ............. year by
JBor-iaual child ah .0 deaperately
men as well • ......... -will . _
ptbenod, ~
year. l'urtmr, ..... the 'Uahalit:,y
_,. a.Jly, . . . . . . .em COIIIIDiU... A . .
.-led In tbia oountry, aDd ... which
that they beinl ~ tbearilll,
both
.
.
.
.
~ JfedeNl ......-&amp;
not f8cla.
.
cf!ennarar'
~..a-t-.
... ....... of ..... nina fac:ult.f \

"'*m,

!:"

"""*'

"""*'

u.a-.

simJ&gt;!Y

;.,.u_

ann,.,. •

b.m

rau.r

to'"""*

..-...s.

w. .... -

�-~
-'

,.

such a plan. it puts ifloelf In tbe plSilie n!piiJ:t on tbe Uni-.ity's pmgreas
tloa of den.Yina all it baS fondly hoped
on its AftinnaliWI Action Program in
it 8IDod .....
•
mnfarmance with tbe ~ OFCC
GuideliJ¥8 (Sec. 60-lii.S). 'lbe Ol6ce
.
SUNY is ~ -larpst unhwllity ayawill submit tbe report to tbe Olllce
. in tbe world, amd Bulfalo. its
moet diverse amd lnfl-aat campus.
of Federal Contmct Camplianc:a as its
and Program
Campliaqce RevieW Report. 'lbi8 re' - achieved a ~ natloasl role
Tile Ulli...Uty am becin tbe dilliin tbe clevelopmmt ol academic pollport sball be made available to tbe
'$ cult . . . ol admiUU.. ...,....; to equal
cia! d
desip. 'l1aefole, tbe UniChancellor, 8 UN Y trusteea, U/B
lllatul by lint taldDc tbe imperatiw
...Uty must decisl¥ely !Ue~tbe lnitiCouncil, president; faculty amd students. The Ol6ce will ID'JII&gt; that its exleplly noqalnd st8p ol commit. _, ati¥e In e&amp;ct:lni refonus of -auch importance to - 80 many. Moreowr, tbe
tial- u.lf in 10011 ~tb to. a 8boall
perience and tecbniquSs. be uaed as
Uni...Uty milfit as well """'~Dim twO
guidelines for tbe entire Stele Univerlitaled policy to - - all In
tbe' trlli...aty-fac:ulty, sbdf, amd
paramount factors: 1) women are
sity of New Y oriL
sludada,-equal apportuDitle8 ip. fdu_{lnally out to win equality, amd 2) it
catloa d
employment.' In addition
would be a sorry dsJ( ind8ed if -this
to . . . . policy, h UIIMnlty must
Ulliversity abdicated its poaition in
ftiCCJIIIbe that, aa an ~tallab­
tbe academic world _6y any means 80
orator;r b aoclal propeM. it Is reshabby as. des!yins tbe ,..,.,_ who
spaaalble . . UlldartakiDI tbe strong- - teach and study amd work in it tbe
. Because tbe tzadilional male/ female
est pcaible reform pnllniiD. This, of · overdue recognition of their equal · · roles
~te 1!0 ·much of our thinkcourae. _requima" understandinc tbe'
worth with men. . ~
ing,
- must be careful not to extend
pecullar paRtiaa of ......... in this
To stele a general policy and tben
tbe tzaditional• penalties our aociety
world- tbet In apite ol jleinr' a mato wait for tbe Great Administzation
emciB for being a woman to our womin tbe Sky to do aomething is, bowjority In tbe population, - occupy
en students. In its mmplaint to tbe
ever, WOI88 than doing nothing at
minority ~- tbet this in tum
government, WEAL ( Women's Equity
mall8a tbe elfort to raise us from
'lberefore, !Uiving compl.aineii of tbe
Action !Aague) points out that "adminority 8latus imperatiYB.
mm, I p.-:ri!Je. tbe plaster in tbe
mission to undergraduate-graduate
What tbe Ulli...aty dearly needs,
form of tbe following, (and only livprograms are akin to tbe apprentioeing) Affirmative Action Program as
then. is a ~"" "alllrmative
ship programs of industry." Under tbe
called for by tbe Department of labor
8ction propam" tO end """ dlscriminsprovisions of the p r oposed OFCC
tloa. If tbe Uni-mty does not adopt
guidelines.
Guidelines (Sec. 60-lll.2), tbe University must make mmpens&amp;tory efforts
to recruit women to enter any profession, especially tbe "male oriented."
On principle, it must also 888UI8 them
the finsncisl aid to make equal education possible regardleos of aex. or of
marital or . parental grounds, Central
As called for by the Office of
to this purpoae are the points outlined
Federal Contract Compliance
under the goal of freedom from bioto meet the conditions set out
logical penalty, _especially tbe requirement of free child care.
in Executive Orders 11246 and
1. Tbe University sball extend all
- 11375. Proposed for adoption to
minority recruiting programs to in, tPe State University of New
clude women in .each category, espeYork at Buffalo,
cially in the tzaditionally ''male" professions, such as medical, engineering,
en's Program of the American Studies
law and business managemeilt, in ronProgram.
formance with p~ OFCC Guidelines ( Sec. 60-lll.2 a and b) .
. b) It sball review for inequities all
Tbe University sball adopt an afsalaries, rank, appointments, and ten2. AU a-rtments sball be required
. firmati&lt;&gt;e" poliey-•in• respect to· Women
ure among women faculty and-stalf.
to abolisb any. · "no-part-time enrollthat sball - -- all wOmen In tbe
c) It sball review aU major job
ment" policies at every level of study
University-laculty, sbdf, and stu.
classifications for adequacy of repreas discriminatory to women whose opdeniB--«jua) opportunities in educaaentation .of women. Wbere disparity
portunities for education are limited
tion and empioymen'l
of representation is determined, mrby family, in mnformance with the
A. Tbe Uni-mtY must """'~Dim
rective action, described in terms of
proposed OFCC Guidelines ( Sec. SO(as does the Federal government)
specific goals and timetables, sball be
lll.2c). The University ·sball establisb
that dlscriminstion against women
Immediately _authorized.
·(
part-lime scholarships to enmurage
relegates us to. minority status.
d ) It sball review all selectwn syswomen to return to achool.
B. Tbe University must establisb
tems (including admissinns, promo3. Because the University trains
immediately an - AIIlrmatiW! Action
lion criteria, hiring, mmmittee apwomen into professions in greater
Program to rid ifloelf of dlscriminstory
pointmenta leading to tenure, tenure)
numbers than it is willing to bire
practices apinst women In mnforin aU 'major classifications for cmparthem, departments sball be required
mance with tbe proposed guidelines
ate sekction roles of women. In job
to bire women up to the minimum of
of tbe Olllce of Federal Contract Comclassifications wbeie selection rates
the levels of their reJ!resentalion in
plianc:a under ExecutiVe Orders 11246
vary from the level of adequate repregraduate programs, if not from outand 11375. 'Ibis Program must include
sentalion, ( Adequate representation
side tben from tbe ranks of their own
goals, an implementing' body, amd a
sball be defined 88 the employment of
graduate students. ( Cf. Goal I, pta. 1,
clearly daftned time ecbedule.
women in each classification in numd and e.) This practice will belp keep
C. The Uni11jitaity must estimate
bers equal to the proportion of the
women from being discouraged from
amd estabUah a budpt and approprimmbined faculty, sbdf, and student
finishing ~
- ' dies by the limited
ate all~ - . y to enable tbe
women to tbe University population
job oppor unities, or the minlmsl
implemimting body to cany out ef88 a whole.) by 10 per cen~r more,.
chance of a vsncement open to them.
fecliW!Iy the Amrmatiye Action Proan Immediate validation
sball
4. No wo
sball be denied equal
pam.
.
be undertakeil into tbe
ility of
scbolarsbiP or finsncisl aid on tbe
D. Tbe University must commit it.
that selection system.
grounds of aex. llllll'risg8 or possible
aelf to cany out tbe spirit as -u as
e ) It sball initiate and maintain
IIIBI'l'isge, pregnancy or poasible pregreview and reaearcb
the- granting
nancy.
tbe !etta cl. ExeculiW! Orders T1246
amd 11375.
of all scbo
assistantships, and
5. Tbe University sball establisb a
finsncisl aid
women students.
plan to coordinate counseling services
2. AduiMN-y:
tlif---, to include ollering advia) Tbe
sory munseling in high schools and
bank to
elementary schools as -n as ml.leae
aidered for ·
with a. view toward enmuiaging womtions in the ni-.ity.
.
to enter tzaditionally);aple profesb) It sball be responsible fOI: tbe
sions, and increasing ·~ to
mordinalion of munseling objectives
women of all ages who wish \o return
for women as outlined UDder tbe ae&lt;&gt;to tbe University. · •
lion "Equal Educatloasl Oppor:tuni6. Tbe University sball establish a
ties," point 5.
\
, policy amd a PfOirB11l ~yit sball
c) It sball undertalre a mordinated
rempJize the concrete value of the unPf01r&amp;11l of vocational COIJI&amp;Iinc d
paid _.vtoes of women in volunteer
cl. developinr tbmucb cooperation
..o.t. amd community aervice by'grant.
with local indu8try and ao-nment ing valid' credit fOI: such .-vice, past
11e111 employmen·t opportunilja amd
. 01: ~t, tbet sball count toward an
tnining '"" ~ including job
appropriate . depee. .
~ 'Ibia sball Include a con7. Tbe Ulli...Uty aball Include tbe
amtrated &amp;((art to diMollip part-lime
Cont:inuing Educatloa Propwm In its
...QIIIICiftUl&gt; at ..U ..,.. in local anown propam ol atady, -m, from
ployaad .. - - In tbe ~ ' it tbe burdm ol beint ..U4IJIIIICII'tiq.
OFCC Guldellnaa on cli8crleln&amp;- ' 8. 'W'-- disparate selection
tiaoL
rata ol women iniD an;, levoll 01: proPublication:
....,. otllludy ..,....., ftlidalion RudTbe 011ae aball !.ue a ~ ~
t. a hall be· undertek'en lnlo tbe

The University's
.Responsibility to~:
Policy

Goal: Equal
EducatWnal Opportunity

A Pion for.AflirinatU)e Actron 1b

End DiscriminntionAgainst libmen

en

a.

Goal: Ereedom from
Biologirol Penalties
I will not beie go Into the llfiUments apinst tbe "lrinlkr, lwche,
· kirche" theory, on the assumption tbaL
any institution dedicated to lr:nowledge and the future sbould not need
to bear them. Tbe UniYI!rBity oi!rtsinly would not officiDily subecribe
to a principle that a woman's unique biological ability to bear children eD.Iitles ber to only partial education or
aecondary employment status. But
this very principle is at the iMm't of
the cultural attitudes that depriW!
women; by not moving to combat it _
within itealf, the University does, in
fact, subecribe to it. 'lberefore it is
tbe University's particular respciosibility to initiate any experimental propam. ..W matter how expensive or farreaching, wbich can poasibly relieve
women o( the penalties their biology
exacts.
·
1. Child COI'e: Tbe University sball
eetsblisb a mmplete child care facility free to tbe children of all faculty,
stall, and students of children from
birth to 12 years, to include educational programs, and to be in opela·
lion at aU times that tbe l.ibrsries and
other facilities are open, c1asaes are
in session, and women are .working
at the University. 'Ibis child care facility sball be operated in mnjunction
wit4 a ,P.IIrlifjcation PtQ111'81J1 for tzaining professional child care personnel.
2: Maternity lea"": AU faculty
members must be granted six weeks
of paid maternity leave; aU staJf muat
be granted paid maternity leave of
six weeks with no loss of job, status, ~
benefits, or seniority, on mntracting
to return to work for an agreed upon
• minimum period of lime. No woman
student sball be denied scholarsbip
benefits, fellowships, academic standing on the grounds of marriage or
poasible marriage, pregnancy or possible pregnancy.
3. Population control center: Tbe
University sball expand its medical
services for women to Include gynecological examination, mmplete birth
mntzql munseling aDd prescription,
and with tbe repeal of alxwtion laws,
prepare for reslistic unwanted pregnancy counae1ing amd all related medical care all~ within tbe law.
4. Mediooll118U1'a11Ce : Tbe University sball not subecribe to or require
or encourage its employeM 01: students to subscribe to any medical in' surance plan which: a) does not ensure equal benefits such aa life inaurance or llllivivor's benefits to women
employees or their 8pOII8I!8, 01: which
b) takes a moralistic 11ts.- discriminatory to women on maternity 01:
. pregnancy CXIVI!fllge\ such as tbe 270day married maternity benefit policy
-. or 'refusal 110 mW!f lepl abortion 01:
umiwried maternity.

Goal: Academic Reform
EXIsting curricula are partic:ularly
responsible for perpetuating tluoucb
apathy tbe deroptory attitudes ol our
culture toward women, by simply not

a:amininr course material lor sulst .. ·

biB~~- Part of tbe cause for this llee
In tbe lack ol -liP.tened -..:b.
. . existing -..:b. done moetly by
is too often suuaUy biaaed it- ae1t Tborefore, - call for a tm.
point CID'riculum reform pro1ram _
aimed at: 1) developbir c:urril:ulum, ~

2)

UlldartakiDI ~ in - · ·

1

�.~

10
.............. 3)

«
Ia

llbalilbiJal _ . . ....

--.mc..--w b

ailtlai-

L The .&amp;--.

w-··

llllmal ....

Sludile\.l'lapat

............ a pilot ......... ill
llludioa to iDdude -

llaled In aoc:lakv. El:qliab
LIWature,• aociU wort.. Uld bialory.
'l1da abaiJ .. ~ by the lm....... lllrilll ol.a full-lime- to
the faculty to lad the .......... Uld
ol ..u- full.time faculty to -.b ill
it.
2. In oaoQuDclian with this pro.
1ft1111o lhl! Uni-mty aball Mmhliab
1111 adequately..flmded cenlier for currieulum dew!lopnMmt 81111 ,.,., .-rc:h
Into all ~ ecooomic,
politleal, paycboJopca1, educatioual,
lit.nry, hiBtoric:al, medical-to do
with - · · place in aoc:iety. 'Ibis
.-rc:h cenlier aball .. available to
all studenta Oil aunpus wishing to uae
It ill CCIIljuuction with cowae work in
lillY collep, faculty, department or
JIIOiflllll; to U1Y studenta in the Uni..mty who wish to Ullder1ake inde..1 pa&gt;dent .-rdt projecta for credit
IIDdor the J&gt;10111UD ol........,.,'s studies.
All departmenta aball inform their
_ , 8Dd studeniB of such research
Uld .-rc:h facilities.
a All record bepina divisions, all
departmenta 81111 facilities of the Uni..mty aball be directed to cooperate
with the w........·, .frolram ri!eearch
cenlillr by: a) bepiJJa all ..,.,.,...js to ilo
with hiriD&amp; promotion, rank, salaries,
fiDmcial aid, ...,._ awarded 81111
otJ.- ~t materials coded by
- . 8Dd b). lllllkiDg tt-8 records

available.
.
4. Evwy relevant department, especially in the maJe.oriented prole&amp;..... abaJI .. directed to consider e&amp;·l:abllablDjJ witbiD their currie. ula clealiDc with
studies.
(So_....,, Law SchDol: w........ 1n ·
the Lew; P~ Department:
Male .....tatioa in paydJolocicaJ theory 81111 testing; Antltropa/Dfy: Tbe
fullclian o1 c:uJtural oaoditioninl·
male Uld female role&amp;; Etl&amp;u:ation: HelMICh into tnditiCIIlal .,. """" ill .
elommtary testboob.)
li. All cowaea wbicb pn!llellt a sub-w.nt or delraded imqe of women
~ aboliabed, ~ or cles{l)'

-·s

u.

Yloal:EqufilEmplayment
Opportunities
In IICCOI'daDile with the ~
OFCC Guidelines UDder ~me Qr-

1lll7&amp;, tile um...lty ...... illllloadlately to -..It -

faculty, to e&amp;ct ............. Uld to
appaiat ... bilb ......, admlnilllnltlve 'pasiL It abaiJ - ; . to all
In the Uni-mty: 1) CIPPOI'
tunltiea ,.,., ~t to tap poeiB,
2) - - - - ol ~ ..... 3) the
llbolilion ol all ruJiDp, polldee, 81111
crilioria wriU.. 81111 umrritllm, iJitri..
..-Ia! to the omploymmt flalua ol

--

w........

..

aball no Joaaer be aduded
from the posilions ol ~ Uld decision 11111kiDa in the Uni.....-sity. 1f
that ezciUBion is .,_ to diaappMr
from American aociety, _tbe University must encourage all women
tbroulh eDmple, ..... lhroUih the
presence of life models.
1. New Facully Una; Iri conformance with the present policy of the
standing committee Oil minority hiring, to reserve a certain percentage of
new faculty linea to minority groups,
one-half the new lines and of replAcement lines shall be reaerved lor women.

2. Correcting lneqWtiu: 'The University shall establish a program and
timetable to investigate lind correct
inequities in tenure, sataries, teaching loads, benefits, assignment of assistsnta and office belp. ( Cl. Implementing Body, point 1 b and c.)
3. Com...Uues: · A determined effort by the University, the Faculty
Senate, and the separate departments
to place women on all committees,
according to an acceptable timetable,
shall be undertaken.
4. NepoU.m rule: 'The president of
the University and lhi&gt; Faculty Senate are urged to make the strongest
poasible representations to Ch&amp;ncellor
Gould and the University Trustees for
immediate ·removal of the de facto
nepotiam rule as contrary to the spirit
of ED&gt;cutive Orders 11246 and 11375.
5. Teruire: 'l'be tenure system aball
be reformed to lid it of oezist bias by
broadening the baae of tenure criteria
to indude -.bing, amvice to' tbe
University and the community, 8Dd to
take into account the value of faculty
women as life models. 'The tenure
sy111em is CCIIltrsry to the spirit of
ED&gt;cutive Order 11375, and sball J1!1t
ba uaed either to reOect the economic
condition of the Uni.....-sity nor to per,
petuate the employment patterns un.:lavorable to women in society at large.
'Therefore, tenure sball be subject to
'review lor disparate ae1ection rates
of women and to a validation study

.

Into Its ~ - a eeieclian ay.
.,.....
Tbe ..,Jdelba ol appi'CIIlriate Federa1 bodies Ulil the N- Veri: State
CCJmmW!on Oil H , _ Rilbta aball
_be ~ ,applled to the "lf'UiliDI" ol tenUre. Decrlliaall llball ..
made in the ~ ol the f*:ulty
.......... 81111 in ol diapute, the
Btata CCJmmjaoinn Oil HlmWl Rilbts
sball ba aaloed for a ruJina J.aed Oil
.... ol ~y "panted" tenure,
·.-villa, however, the faculty membar's rllbt to COUD88I 81111 riP,t to appM! to a hiat- court-ell in U1Y extraUniversity c:ase.
6. Tbe Faculty Senate Presidential
Search Committee ~sball be din!cted
by Chailcellor Gould and Governor
Rockefeller to give priority consideration to the appointment of a woman
as president of SUNY/B, wbo will
be the first woman president of lillY
. SUNY aunpus. Presidency of a SU- ~
NY aunpus is a major job claasification.
7. A University-wide, specific, stepby-step program shall be formulated
under which women in administration
and staff can be assured of the oppor-

One Final Plea:

IIIDft)o to . e - to tbio tap ~
In tbeh ...... ctr ..... ~
'l1da ......... lbaiJ iDdude ... .-p&amp;:
able ~ ·

·~

·8. A minimum ol the .-t 1i ol 10
IQJPOID"-"" to adminlltratlve ~
aball ... to - - . eltt. flam aodalae'
the Uni-mty « flam ..-&amp;aid«
faeulty. 'l1da wDl -ututa tile tint
slap in ~ ......... ol the npid appoin-t ol to all levela ol
the adminisllatiCIIl from pa~Bidmt,
vice' pn!&amp;ideDt, Uld . . dowD, to ellect.
adequate .....-talion ol among the r,culty, &amp;taft, and atudomts.
In the caae 'of appointed from
&amp;taft to adminiotratlve poeiB, - reo&gt;
ommend 8: CCIIltractual J.sis Oil 1be
grounds that no oae who Is without
job security will ba abiB to take
chances.
9. All.departments shall be ._ued
to abolish restrictive ''no:inbred:biring" policies as discriniinaliii to women.

10. All departments shall provide
part-time opportunities for women
l and their husbands) as called for
under the prc&gt;p&lt;ad OFCC Guidelines
(Sec. 6().20.2&amp;).

Freeing the

'

Opp~

Frees the Oppressor
I bave described the costs of .discrimination to women tbemaelves, but
I wisb to make my final point by
urging that the hidden cost to men
is equally high; being favored puts
men in the position of ·profiting at the
expense ol women. No .Profit could
ever justify such a cost; no one is
equal until everyone is equal.
·

Men, too, are the prisoners of their
cultural status, foroed to maintain a
aociaiiy determined auperiority which
is defined by woiDen's inferiority. I

c:annOt aariously believe that any man
worth his aalt wants to be defined
as a man by bow much better be is
than a woman. I think too much of
men to believe that, and I believe and
hope men think too ;much of themselves to allow it. For neither men
nor women can ever define tbemselves
fully as human beings until they can
define tbemaelves entirely on peraonaJ
grounds and not,· however obliquely,
as an adjunct of their BeL To resist
the logic of. equality is to be deprived
of ita rewards.

Grimd Jury May See Fac~ty Records To Check on Oaths

COMMISSION ~
Activrion of the ~ Commission on campus
Unreot
w111c11
_to.._
__
byDoan

-

William B. of the NoiN
Deme ~ School ............
......,., Will the

.....

IUNY......,._

.,..,......

Special ~)

Oollvnlaaiall ......

�. . 14, 1910

~Mad Disproportion' ~.

.

.

EPIS, Opeil Admissions.;..

-~-----.---------------------------DO ~ way, to eq&gt;re111
What is to be clooe?
'
(continued from _ . I , col. 6)
allV." Carl~ said in.yes- theatEivell. She ftlllOilted being
PJOQPie i.ii c:riais aJwaY,; dam.
Lucas I1Dd Corbett say that
lllldlt.Y'• paper, "in a l'reaide!&gt;t ulJed a bum. ~ she dis- extnme ~- But I think
talliDI 0118 poup of )'OUI1II AiD- qnied with' else's there is a -1 dod of urpacy rilbt the preoent "notHlontroversisl
eriaiDB tbtt tbey have some opiniaas. She tboucht the. war oow to our politieal ~ stetus" of EPIB is in contrast
noble llllllldate to -bum, plun- in Cambodia)IJVI18 WIUll- Ia this that we IOOI!Dtly .....u-J. waa -with the level- of debate in
(~from - 1 ,

col. 6)

cler, malm I1Dd ldll in Iudo
Cblna far what tbey believe,
,_, as be teUa other AmeriCllll8 that if tbey throw lor what tbey believe, tbey run
the risk of "f.. on-th&amp;&lt;lpot execution b~he National
Guard." .
We ...ad .. b o u t the w a r
am-I I1Dd !Don I1Dd
more that we are ~
one rilbt here at i&gt;ome.
~ DOted yesterday in ·
the 11111118 colimm, :'the rhetoric
of this administration plus the
rhetoric of alienated campus
groups add up to a declaration
of war and the violent repres&amp;ions at Kent may be only the
besinninl of other . . . brutsliliea all over this land"
It is hard to find caberence
Of. sense or in~ anywbere. One article m the New

York Timu yesterday reported

that, "A Cllll8truction worker
and his wile who spoke about
~ '!'!,~-tha•ntg thet
h een1.r. .
~

~

dalqlhter was dalinl an or:pmimr of Vietnam Moratarillln.
'He csme. into our 100111 the
other night yelling about ~
and love,' said the husband.
'Too many groups are coming
mthe·~t!Je.l!'is militant talk,' said

--ean.-•
wu

But it isn't only the CXII1IIIruclion workars who have peculiar
ClODvers&amp;tions. ·VlCe President
Agnew in an intemew with
David Frost : .. said (llDd rm
quoting an excerpt froro themtarview) : "'One of the thi.nl!B,"

::.=~ ·;::t·J:'t ;

WBI

a crime? Ia this a .......,_for • pftlllOilt in our ecolotlical ~
·killiDg her? Have we mme to !ems.· ADd if we don't qujddy
8IICh a stele - in this c:ountry work some of this lllroulh. the
that a,YOiall Jirl has to be obot shoot fuao&gt; ~ is on will~
because abe diaqrees deeply work its way tO the barrel aDd,
with the acliOIIll ol her gowm- then, there won't be time far
ment? I want something to be anything.
·
•
done. What I would like to see
How do W.. make the instihappen is tbtt my •dalqlhteo:'s tutions of our society t'espond
deeth U!'f ~ of the other to the ._.m of the people? How
three children as well as the do we make them respond to
wounded DOt be in vain."
the basic csuses of oub:age and
- : . It is all there in what be frustration with some speed
said. I think of the mad dispro- and sanity? How do we ease
portion. After every campus off in the·situation in which left
eruption, there are statements is ready to blow its sleek and
~~how the taxpsyers' money
right is ready to squash every"! bemg wasted. True, but con- one with savage repression?
Bider for a moment what pro- SOmelhlllfl Must Be Done
du01!8 theee eruptions.
We all know something must
Octopus Flllfi'I'S ·
be done about the war, about
Even Jack Anderson, Drew rscism, a b o u t imperislism,
Pearson's former partner, and about p 0 11 u' t i 0 n, au those
c;ertain~Y DOt a bleeding beart things. Why can't we · moYii
!fueral, but a muckraker, said our institutions? If you have
m yesterday's paper: "'The tax- araenic in your flour, you don't
payers have apent a breath- have a phased withdrawal of
taking trillion dollars for na- the araenic, you dump it out
tional defense since the end of and start anew. And if you're
World War IT. U.S. co~t playing poker you don't have
fomis are now fighting in Viet,. to· stsy in with a bad hand just
nam, Laos and-Cambodia. They because you've already got a
are P'!'tecting a i&gt; r e carious lot in the pot. If you stsy in,
~ m Korea and ~ peryou'll just loee more.
ilously cloee to military inWe must teach our governvol"""!""t in half a dozen other ment such simple logic. We
countries. Truly• the sun never must force our industries and
aets on Americs's' bewildering schools to- realize such simple
military entanglements. For the thinp and not permit them to
Stste· a n d Defense Depart- drown themselves in their tslk
menta b ave WD&lt;ked steadily of liberation and false and irI1Dd
to build a net,. relevant aolutions. We spend
WD&lt;k of_ allianDI!8 until Ameri- $30 billion a year in Vietnam
cs's octopus !ingers reach into to stsbi!ize a military junts we
about every trouble BP&lt;!t in the don't even like. Two or three

~Y

:;"~~tY~&amp;;= =yo~?i':.~:"uld save the

dent' is thet the IIUI1fdamen are ""'!' Wlth tts
)'011111

pepple, too. They are

DO·older fO&lt;. the most part thati"'
the students I1Dd if tbe student&amp;
are DOt c:barJed with a high
leYel iJl ._..ntillity in their

~DOttbenm;,::h~ :.:

guardsmen a higher ~

Bfe~!-t might ~
~ are o~ prioriliea?
nations-democraci and dio- .Wiler!&gt; 18 the saruty? It talu!s
-rsbips 8like. American mill- · no )reat mind to see that the ~ missions have also become
more we spend for defenaemvolved in the defense of an- a trillion dollars since World
other 26 nations, yet the
War U-the less secure we are.

J:"ges
~ryo?"na~~
~~ 'WL,~ou~~~~ siatement
tbemaelves mill- made the other day by Mark
o~-extended.

.I pnsume D a v 1 d ~s tari!Y -:- nations that spread
their ~ and manpower
mme die[.. The VJCe President, - too thin. A staggering $82 .bilhowever, watt on: "It seems to lion has been apent and· more
me that had the rocb DOt been than 41,000 American I i v e s
thrown, there 'Would have been have been lost, for -~pie, in
~ c:hanoe of a killiDg." Frost
faraway Vtetnam. Thanb to

1968-69 wben it was fimt inalliiUfllted. "Enthusiasm a n d
._...,t," tbey say, "seem to
have followed changes in the
PlOiflllll'S structure which have
occuned under 1M dimctorshi
of Mr. Julian Peasant."
P
However, they point out,
problems remain, primarily due
to the UniveJSity's inability to
fund the instructional program

-in Ierma vl special facllitieB
and paamnel
.

EPI8_ .....

-

The two, .,.p.-izi"C tb{

avowed acailomic KiJiol. defil&gt;iencieo of EPIS IIIUdeata 111111

the lack of fuildll far ......._

~~~
the diatrlbutlon of
stu-

d,ent padee (on an . - , e·
load of 4.3 cxoun. this fall)

with the lll8dee of studenta in
Millard F iII more ·llDd day
school : (The day achool flpuea
include graduate students_who
pt mostly A's I1Dd B's.)

14~% 1o.'i% •.f% 7~% 7~%

.:% u~7%

flllmo,. ......15.0

26.0

Doy School ... .23.9

25.3

EPts ................14~%
Mill•"'

~::'J~~donts)
•v.~....

23.7
14.9

5ll
3.4

2.6

• 3.5

.5

4.6

1.5

11.4

.3

u

11.0
1u

,....,. ., ............. ,
( For next year, EPIB plans
intensive trai,ning in oommuoicstion and academic · sIt ills
through the projected Learning
Center and an active community lisiaon program,
visiml of adequate
,

'RIDGE
GLEA
'REPORTS
THE ENVIRONMENT.

--

Early

~~ RiJ;*'i.eatheea'::
the

of

pus wu moo:e in keeping with an
abandoned wareboWJe ania thao
·a rmivenity 9'-Dlpus, aaya . Paul

A. Bacon, uaiatant vice preoident
for buoineoo alfaino. In fact, Bacon aayo, many were complain-

~· (:1 ~~~~

affectint tbc.e aulfering '&amp;om hayfever. However, Bacon sayo

~~;u:' b!fiooo.t~ort 0 .;

ES·

~
~.

sifu'J:-

space and personnel

·

':.'~';:

~3e~!

i:ur:f.le=:
direction of Mr. RiclWd Sebian,
the aolire ares took on a more
pleaaing appearance." During the
montha of April and May a great
deal of work must be , done_ to
clean,:j,the c;ampus. This opnng,

=

~~e~~~

has been attempting to take full
advan~ of the warm dayo for

A strong endoraement froro
the Faculty Senate, Lucas and.
Corbett say, w iII "hopefully
• • • guarantee the funds to
translate plans and bopes into
reality."

Open Admlalonl

The following recommendations on open admiaaions hom
the Senate Admissions Committee will be considered:
"1. The establishnient of
trai,ning and.research

- to des[ with problems~
educstionally disadvantaged at
aU levels from n...-y school
tluOugb community co II e g e.
One of the things the' University !ll&gt;peitrs best ~- to
do is. to train peopfe wbO will
train people, and to evaluate
. critically and cOnsistenUy those
educstional efforts. It is envisaged that such a progr&amp;m miiibt
be sponaored by the Facu1iy
of Edllcstion, in collaboretion _
with such faculties as Social
Sciences a n d Administration
and Natural Sciences I1Dd
Mathematics, a n d would involve development, evaluation,
and continuous modification of
teaching methods and supplementary instruction in the el&amp;mentary and bigb schools of
core areas. In addition, joint
projbcts could be undertaken
with regional two- and fouryear colleges to study the kinda
of pre-university remedial work
1-.ied to improve the chances
of the educstionally disadvantaged to complete ~y
a university educstion.
"2. A shift in empbasUj of
the current experiments! programs 80 that t he y becOme
truly experiments! with constant cbanae as a function of
critics! ev&amp;luation. An experiments! PlOifl1ll1 fof the educs-

Huddleston, presic;lent of the
Student Assoc1a tion, on efforts 'to beeutify the campus,"
WYSL: "Not only our govern- Bacon says. "It is aoticipated that
ment but much of the r.oedis is their_ con~ efforts '!ill recontrolled by tired and fright,. ~1.~
surroundinp at
ened older men. For some reaaon, tbey deny the reality of AIR CONDITIONING m LodSIUd, "ADd I 8UP(IOB! had the this tremendous outlay, the things that bother us. But we den propped against varioua
lear gas DOt, been thrown, the U.S. f!OY'!lDIDe11t has succeeded know that .if they are at ·all building&amp; during the past week or
rocb ~·t lla_ve been _in~ the&lt;ltreets of Saigon sane, they must be as horrified tw.o indicate that Mr. Vem
~ Agnew said, ""'bafs safer tb8n the stroets of Wash- as we are at what our goVern- HaYDM..r.oJfoeMammothM·-L-" Co
f~rarmaltion
•...,... ,And had the buildintls ington. Ma,.t young people, if mentis doing abroad and bere and~
-·~ 0 pie
no~ beiin bumed I1Dd the threat,. my campus discuasions are at at bome. But those old men in Components Corporatiol!111 are
0
~
enmg -ooly DOt been con- all representative, believe our the government and in the ~ ~:,"4enoer 11!"
dueled, tile lear gas wouldn't tax money could be better apent r.oedis . . • are not aent to be HoP'!~ co tbe air~ndi~':.!
have been lluown." Frost: "I . fil!l\linl ~. pollution, an~ . maimed or killed in Vietnam the b.:tf!;};! at Ridp r- will
suppoaethe '!"' could go on. Had cnme and D1JU81ioe at home.
or Cambodia. 'lbey are DOt be imp;;;;;.;;rthis oummer~r
~t not IU1DOIIDOed So ~ack Anderson/
• ordered to ldll and malm others '1wo p....Wua aummero, Mr
the exaumon into Cambodia,
We can barely generalize with whom they have DO argu- con oaya.
maybe the demoastrations froro this. news. Any forecast, ment. So how do we tslk to
.
•
•
•
~·t baw . tebn place." however apocalyptic, seems you? How do we pt you to .wJE~ .c~RlA wi1i
. Mr. ,..,_ ""!'&gt; always ' !~&amp;ted by tbe time one delivers .listen? We arer;t't even allowed _ be opera'iec!''l'..!, Ma.Y 25 to Juoe
has tbe t.t Wlll'd aaid, "'Wdl, 1t. . . . Events accumulate ao to vote. Our letters to your 5 &amp;om 9 a.m. to 2 -p.in. the DDr!""' you're ~ bad&lt; into an fast that any pftlllOilt deacrip- newspapers are buried under mal oummer bowa. A limited
m~ l1ftiiL
Very inter- lion becomes history within th8 piles of hate man and hate· menu of aalada, aandwicbeo, bevereatin&amp;. lbdeed, bot the Vice bours. But just 1et's review the editorials. The more you re- ...,., ,!1nd
will be oened.
Preaiitom· didn't 'think it very .last weak.
fuse to listen to us, the more On Mil.)' 29, when there will be ~ ~~ loclflld
relevant to tbe killinp at Kent
One dey ago, 'JZ1 schools desperate our attempts to make only • eke!""'! fotp fuoctiDilin:J. Wl~ a umversitj-, has the
State.
.
,..,... shut completely; 337 you bear 118 bemme. 'lbare is the c:afetena will b8 clooed. It will umque · opportunity to malre ·
Is 1* A - - fDr
"'-rving lbe strike. In the
•
· breaking- wiDdow8, allo be u U1UA! on Satur- both ·the 8UClCe8lle8 I1Dd failmea
1 could not, while reading .. State of a.-., only the most : ' ~~ lear ~ or being day and_s~• .Ma~ ao and 3L of the students involved lzan&amp;own lives, 80 that all
the Viae Pn!aldoomt's remarlls, radicsl collep was~ obot py Police. We want that INTERIM BUS .SERVICE. Du:r- oi!rul their
of. b 0 t h students I1Dd
bop froro my mind tile an- . Collep. In Buffalo, just about no more than you. All we ask ing the II1ID8 period, the Ridp effort"
~in the propam can
guiotbed I1Dd llfiOIIizinlly con- every ooe of our scbools-U/B, is that your gowmment-your Lea " ' - will opsrate on an
have impact on remediation at,.
~fanent ...ad a few State, ' Canisiua-had some gowmment, it isn'Louia, we abb~"t ~ between ·8 tempts with other students' at
days t1iiiUer by_ tile falh. of kind of demonstration.
have 110 voiarm it-obe 8BDB a.m. .
Prior to ~ 25, other institutions. It s e e m s ~
!11'8 of tbe Jirl8 ldDed by the
. At U/B m 'lburaday night, I1Dd human I1Dd that ·we be ~ and
be · wiaer at this time to U.C...
III1UdlaBt at Kalt State. I · I tslbd - with four students beard. ADd after all, it's our
•
•
•
. the .--nll'CeB of lh!' ~­
want to lead to you . . . the wounded by sbotgun blasts I1Dd lives, you're wastina- ADd we EARLIER BUS? At a mee1ina tsl programs to ionable !him
followlu -..r&gt;froro what be &amp;a'!' ........, ovaoome by gas. are your childr!m-"
· of the Ridae Lea Admi.oiatrati.., to deal more adequately with
deeply inter- I watched Police fire - in an
We c&amp;nDOt iplore atatemoats A&lt;hioory Ciommiu.e, it men- problema of evaluation I1Dd resaid: '"8be ested in halpina people. She unprowlceo1- m top of like that. We m...t listen. You - t h a t the eu1ieot bus leav- mediation of their current
. lnlly Cllllld ibout people· I1Dd a Prl'• dormitory building.
'stsrt·where you can. You ......t&lt; inc 7 the Main Street campuo is student load, than to incieaae
· life. On SaturciV .......m,, abe Anlor- Oulrl.with what 'yoli bave. We bow at 'fi!i Ll!l and that tbio ~ a that· load: Additiobal students ·. •
. called 1:- to tBU me tbse
Anpr I1Dd out.rqe 11101111t b&amp;- _.. .., II1U8t conw- our inatitu~rocnu:" par- should be admitted to Mch
- - tl-aalile in ·the busl- .,.._ ferribl,y little-. to be ~ lions. We II1U8t delelop waya -n:
8 ~~~ propam &amp;&lt;!lOfding to the dem. . . -=doD vl Kalt. 8be told producdve. Studoata protest for -thMn to bebaw lll1il waya •11M .... that • bao 1ea-.e onstrated ability of tbe . prome llloite ._ - ~ war I1Dd ~ •••• go out ..., ean COIIaider aiDe aJ111 re- the Main s~
7:"~&gt;
de-..
ad ... apinBt I1Dd braalr. triDdowB- ~ . malre ipoaalljlla. But amDI;t af- 'a.m. that the
- - :is::::ru- ~ ....
that 8be Willi DDt lmohed in their paiat aid eoaldently in- ford to Wliit far than to catdl !tied 7:66 bao be
1booe
'Die camplete report of tile
that. Bat lbe tloaldd they W
Jure people with , . - . tbey up-with ua. o-,_ wbile wait,. m~ in tbe """'- ue Mbd Admioaions Committee is also .....
· ~:ctc~omomtrate. 8be felt tbey hue 110 ~ I1Dd U.. far them...., lear 0118 m- :,_ ..,.l'J..~..::""..t': ~ aYIIillible in tbe ~ Room
to do thll . _ _ thse malre. than their. - - - •. - otfa .,n.
'
deputme waald be belplaL . .
vl Harriman l.ibney.

m!nd ~ tbel;e aslniich as

-g f.::."• • •

.-n.

-..r

g,:-

=-llle

=:at :C..-

:iiat

s.

�• ., ~JJ70

li

'W&gt;rds and Music':.

.Friedenberg ~rt Firids

Proves En.P:ftzble
And Profitable
B JODY SCHMITZ
u...!....-s~ •

A 1Wl Scene' at Buffalo
Sociolotliat Edpr z. Friedenbsc. clepartinc the Uniwrsity 80011,_ JXfllll!llted a full · report 011 "Trouhh8 at Buffalo u."
In the MaY 7 iasue of TM New
Yon\ Reviao of Book.
In providing a ' 8lliiiDllll'Y of
the c a m p u s coofrontations
through April 8, Friedenberg
sandwiched in theee "'-rva-

on~ oiMr cam- today.
Tbey have · 1'81180ll to be: 'lbe
authorities ol the City ol But·
fa1o are CXIIllinuously aDd unAn enthusiastic audience of
ri!mi"'boslile..nnn;n~to them -·-aDd. many community people as .....t1
..._..:~...........
""""'
w-~3 - - ....,._as University faculty and stutions-&lt;&gt;f the W.deroover agents · dents &gt;yerit borne M.....t.y evewho infiltrate student poupe to ning 1 r o m Kleinhans Music .
search for pot and sedition." 'liall happily filled with the
• "But with whatever justi· best of words and music.
fications,. the student activists
, AB a result of the ,_,. ca~:
. .
• Millard Fillmore "would in Norton have recently oome pscity audience of 900 people,
to
ronstitute
a
bad
scene;
in
the
coffers of the Faculty 45
probably cany Buffalo if" he
......., nmning today. aDd would style the most articulste of Defense Fund the cause for
lhem
lack
not
only
civility
but
which
the ~fit conoert was
cartainly make a popular presioriginality. T a k 1 n g part in held, were also considerably
dent of the University" in a psnel
discussions with Buffalo's 61Jed.
oommunity in which " 'know
·
·
A
nothing' strains have oontinu- new left and faculty rolleagues ~ 'lbe prognlm opened .with a
bas gotten to be a real ~ : selection of art songs by RichTHURSD Y-14
ously nm bigb."
• By going "State," U/ B, c!iche abus!veness from the I t, ard Hundley sung by eoprano BlocsmomrY .......,.. ., Dr. John
"under an ideology of eq&gt;and- ntusl uptightoess from Pie Gwendolin Sims who was ac- T. Edooll, profeeeor emerituo, b!·
·
rompsnied by Hundley bimseU ological chemistry, Harvard Uru·
ed educational nnnnrbm;ty, re- rigbL"
• Nonetheleas "radical sfu- at the piano. "Dwellers Near veraity, BrllUCTlla: :1.!11&gt; KINEt'ICB
white
duced its avan;bili'i;.
are more ,_,.ly rorrect . the Stream," besed on a poem or CAIIBON'IC AN'IIYJIKASD, G-22
'middle Buffalooians' as it de- dents
in !heir mora! appraisa! of our by james Purdy, and "Maiden Capen. 4: 30 P""veloped a social dimate they
""""!.ty thaD 1ts apologists are. Snow," from a poem by Kenfeel to be profoundly oboox. . .
netb Patchen, opened the musSATURDAY-16
• :'President M e Y e r s o n.- ical part of the program. The
""The prospect ol building .
questioned ahorUy after the af- duo Perfonned three more oRADOAft ..:rr:I.L•: Fealurinc ~uthe campus, and perhaps fray, (of February 25) observed songs ending with the amusing dith Sbel'lllllll, eopNDO; ..mted
gettiiif a job tbere--fO&lt; U/8 ~t . be . would have. handled "Postcard from Spain."
~~n ~i~t. J = :
as projectsd wuuld have become things differently, but that the
Referring to the reoent cam- bon-. Worb by LepenA, _MoBulfakl's 1arpst lnduslly-bad acting ~dent bad ~ him pUB
tunnoiJ aDd the distress of zar1, CaJdua. Hanael, VItali,
OOIIIIIituie virtually the
sole utility of the instituticm to not to mtervene; he did noL academiC communities all over Cap and u.st. Baird, 3 p.m.
.
the oounlzy, poet Robert Creethe white ~ class, which . . · ·"
• " . . . 'lbe bricksbit stub- ley introduced his three poems
SUNDAY-17
otbenriae bated 1L"
·
academic ooollict is as
of vanous
·
-'-·---~~~
. • " .. . U/B e&amp;mf.'llnadicals """"'-of
like a genuine neurosis. It is oes .
feelings ''not neoessar- mmaarrr ~ CHOIR CONhave become &amp;telldily bamber~ not
the result ol anybody'&amp; ilythesameaslhoeewe'rebere CDT 0 : Peter Yllll Dl!ck. oooclucmore hlllllCirte., strideut aDd simply stalling, or of inrom- this evenjng to aclmowledse." tor. Worb by W'd!Wm, Byrd,
hoatiJe cluriq the p a s t few pstenoe. . . . It is, rather, eviDenise Levertov, who came • Ro.el, Kotbe and !Jrahmo. Scu}~
yeous, aDd are 011 the whole denoe that the real . interests from Boston for the reading, ture Court, Alb.rilht-Knox ~·
raU.. more doctrinaire and in- underlying the con11ict are pro- stirred the audience with a new Gallery, 4 P-11'tOlerant aDd COilllideral&gt;ly less
and the conllict genuine. work, entitled "I Tbirat," which
paceful thaD their counterparts found
The best of our students and abe WJOte af'ter her trip to
MONDAY-18
faculty simply want a better Wasbington last weekend. Re- PIN:I.L AAUP MDIBDIIIIIP. JOZI'ING:
and more hooonlble .instituUon ferring to the Black Penther Report. from olri&lt;en and electhaD their co~ of either who hung ·on a cross at the tion of officeD. Faculty · Club,
status, want or even think they clemons1mtions in the capital Harriman: Library, 3 p.m.
oould survive in; and one that aDd to a 9011g by folksinger
wuuld threaten the political Judy Collins celJinll for.J~
TUESDAY-19
vested in~ of the city aDd MiaaLevertov endea the puem
the nation.
-with the Jin'e, '"nlere comes a PBYIIICW&lt;8'Spo-~ ~~ ~
'lbe Ezecu tive (Collen)
MEDICAL COUNCIL
time when only anger is love."
- = ~, ~.....,..='
Council ol the Uni-mty bas
Mos t of Miss Levertov's Plo«ram. Dr. DaW:I Deon, ..;....
~ the following .-.lution
ofbee~hel,;,:;~ :: poems were from her books, bmf prot_,r, medicine, JW&lt;.-.
reprdiDg the 45 Uru-aity detl!nnlne ell&amp;ible . voting faculty "Relearning the Alphabet" and =0~ ~~':"'~
faculty arrested 011 March 15: and to noml...te and elect appro· . "T ypescript." Her opening pitala, 11:30 a.m.
'"Ibe E&gt;oocutive Council "'ding
the
. . '"1\
SUNY/ B have aougbt for some priote numbers of represein: c h s!:"~ts
BIOCBDOII!IIT ....,...,., Dr. Eliao
time an appropriate oontaxt in ~,:~;~·d;on~ toFo!"J;~:: people
'b&lt;lt listening, not ~':e~\~~~"'f.;:
.which to ezp.- their oonoem of the 'School. The new Council listening" to the sounds of war. olitute, Till: ~ICAL DIHillthat the broader oommunity o~anlutlon, 0 ~-...o .... I ratlo .
After the int.ermis&amp;iog, Nor- CAHCK or Imamllla.lft JOOLtmHunderstand the llllbstantive 4if·•
,.,..v•-1 v'
man Holland, prof.,....,&amp;! Eng- D&lt;S, G-22 Capen, 4:30 p.m.
1
fenmoe between the ~ ~~~~~. nW:: a,;..:' ,;~c::
1isb and
of the treasurers
WEDNESDAY..:._20
~ mounted by the Hayes time, June 4 ot 4 p.m. In 139 of the Defense Fund, thanked
45 aDd violent· protests which
the artists and assured the audpr-sed .their actioo. We are Copan.
ienoe that tbefr. cOntributions &lt;XlHmllJD&lt;G DKNTAL KOUC:I.'ft()l(
adviaed by the ,_ly ~
were safely deposited "in the ~~;. ~i.e~1c~
~ '#,~ !!m:a~=
~=: ~niy':; prof_,n, -"'--illproothodona t a - t at tbia time we will
~
checks COIIli. beck smemn~ of ti&lt;o, ..,........... ._,..,.. - . .
"·"'- "·- _..,_._ triala
'II '---· wh:;:::'ll
BIB, 146-146 Capen, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
not Pre~~
~
U~
leer gas, you """""'
!f:·
Coureo aleo oll'ered May 21, Zl,
~~ bas been widely
tOr .c~.n::
ar!f~,;:,
28, lllld June a."- 10, u , 17, 18.
II8IIIJlDed thet the action of the
The University Commi""" ized the program, Dr. HOllaDd ~
~.w&lt; .8'fliPOIIlU)( ON
. 45 involved -.a! or· threaten- for Minority Facull! and Staff · noted · that ~Y have "~
~
ed violeooe aDd 'IriS
Recruitment, oo-chaired by Dr. . that they can rollect more kind RoyRonalllal ~~L~~~~n·
ed with the violent acts
~-Berrian,t
fo.
~t,antdevevioel people mp li'!"" Forceroom"thao .t he ~ya!
J ~'0~·earlier days. such an -.mp- ,_.~
r a......,....c
- . Buffalo o oe
.
Floor A--~~n·um,-=:
lion is in no way supported by opment, and Clan!noe Cooper,
NoveliSt John Barth 'read a
~
._.
the facts of the event Dr the training director in the Person- section from his unpubliabed well Parlt MftD&lt;Irial Inolitute.
bebaviar ol the part,icipants. nel Department, bas urged novella, "Perseus,•: wlili:h he 12:30 p.m. Dr. H111Dp~ Kay,
It is of the utmost importaooe. State and U/ 8 Council olliciaJa • introduced as "~.akin~ up Per- ~~ ~~~ ~ •
~t -~-distindionly.
mam
• • :_ ~.~~ to consider the criteria of "vis- seus' atopy where the Greeks Me:;rcal Raiearch Council.
.....,....,.
....,..""""' ion" and ~'humanism" in select- tactfully put it down." Using don. .,...1'JII:HT or cau.uua D&lt;peaceful and DOIMibetructive ing. the . oort president of the yisual aid_&amp; 811!1Bartha
polisbed ~~ lllOO:
1: 46 p.m.
.,...,-. hiMevw cbamatic, aDd Umwr&amp;lty.
_ mg ~
rocked ..., DDmi'LU&lt;S' - . . o n ....,...,..
=~~~~
=~last week, the
~ter.,.:.:: Sponeored by ReP&gt;na1 Medicai·
violence. U the distindion is
'"!be ~t of U / B muet 1aticm p_,. narrating .thor ~.![· fi":"~~ ~~
not made, the conclusion will be a man of viSion. He must myth.
liamo, IIROIIT o&gt;r '
BOUII:
be drawn that Iince ~ . be a man who knows that a'The prolram ended with a ..,.....,ca oM
, lfll'lllmOH
protest leads to jall as surely pandina edumtional opportuni- performance ol Mozart's Piano :1.!11&gt; JWLm, 61 Puticipstiua
as does violanoe, then violeooe ties fO&lt; minority poupe has Quartet in G minor by Lukas Hoopitala," 2 p.m.
sbould be l*d if it appears many di81culties, but who is FooS, piano, Charles Haupt,
'
effective.
.
preperec~ to pus11 011 aDd find violin, J - Levine, viola. aDd
THURSDAY-21
"The ri8bt to m-.t in tbia eoluUonL
Wolfram Reutbe, cello.
ODUillzy is prolecled by law aDd
"Ha nmst be a man who real. Tbe mood
the audience ....,...:I.L CDKillllrr .-.-ox:
custom. u • -u.~ that t~Je.....JVa that the uru-mty has might have best._ reflected ~, :.::I.L~

PII.IDUCifta' 'I' 8 L 8 P B 0 ft' a 1&amp;-TUD· s__...r. by RePR&gt;a~

MedicaJ ProJ-, Dr.

'-

~~~~

a.m. and 10 p.m.
.........,.. - . . o n LKCTuaa:
S-red by 8~ ~"::1
Progrmn. Dr. .,.., H~ .....;.....,..,

= · !.:t'::s::tico;e,:
~

0

C:l....,.,.._,.

..._.,OHI:

Modiall PrOcram. Jolm N-...t,
Dorothy E. Shaw, Richud M.

...

~,;"::".U:;::.z.;..!!.:"" ~~

TLH """ D..,.,_,N o&gt;r IIV:I.LUA·
TION or 61 Participating

Hoopitala, 8: 30 'p.m.

Natural .so- and Malliematico. Topic 6: Alii POLLUI'ION
......,_; BOW BlllJOUB 18 rrf Dr.
lAuren B. Hilchcock. prof_,r,

~~f':.m_~

3 30

~~

~~~
···-·
Sponoored
by
tbe- Heart "-&gt;cialion of Weofem N- York, .IDe.,
and U/B'o Coutin.W.. Modiall
Education Progrmn. · Topic 9:
IIYIITOLlC IUal!'ION IIUUilJ8IL

COMING ·
ATI'RAC'fiON
J'ILK•• : 'The India Studenlo
A.oooc:ialiotl· and tbe UU.AB p,...
oent C1U8ULA.TA. diNctOof by tbe
intematioDally r.- director,
·Mr. IWAfit Ray. Moot of tbe
:r"m~~Mr. RoJ:J:::,
PAli'CBALI (ii:f' Fibi1,
c.m- Film F - _ 111615; 'J'r.-

PATIIII:K

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

ideDtial Gold Wedal, 11&amp;) ; APAIWliO (Goldoa UO.. o1 Sl Mark
from tbe 18111. ID-ticmal Art

~~- v-.ma
· ~-~Film).;
BeotFeo~~n. IDle
........
tMII, Ben Francioco, 1.9611. Hio

::t.

~e~~.;.::=.'"~

oeleded for tbe
Mooc:ow IDlernational Film Feot:ival (1.968), Lcmdoa Film FeoliYB1 (lllllOl, nth Meiboame Film
FeotiYal (1962)i and tbe Berlin
Film FeotiYal ( 963) .
ClU8ULA.TA """'""" tbe Beot

KABAlUO.U. were

one

::..

t!;.,

Urged

coonlina.!f

1

==

~

==:

t!.Jwud

at )tbe~BedU:

~;.; ~U:..w

(lli66l.

~-~:"'~

.,_..!3

1D ClU8ULA.TA tbe cii.-r t.liioDed a oceuario from a otory by
Nobel La a reate ~th
ita iJapeaUie -.._ -.:: receiwod- -rid-wide ai1c1a1aL •To

n::n!..r ;::,::;

~m~"';~~'r;!a..

!&gt;roicleNcl.a ~flOor _o1 qa&amp;
~ WJth ~ - 1ty He baa a1eo ----'-' 1111
· ~t muoicaJ ....
~ two
vocal lnterludoa.
• "A fllocinatiua otory of _,...
riap in 19th ...,tury. CaJcatta"-

t..,.

c.:.!'ft='

Pal-

mer Hall, Sioten of Charity Roopita!, 2167 Main Street, 7 : 80 J!.DI.

=:::...,

Humanist

PliY8IC:I.L UAK·

~---.. or ~ -·-·- • · · -.

45 Norwioient
Council
. Says

fl':;

n&lt; . &lt;XlHmflliiRl IBDI·

C:I.L KDUC:I.TION:

':f'

1

ON ...,.

8PilCIAL .......,.. . -

VlllOJOmNT:I.L POLLtmo&gt;r: Preeenled !c&gt;r tbe Center fOr 'l'Moret1ca1 ~and tbe FII&lt;U!ty or

x.u:-

are

xn ro

IIUCCI:a8 D&lt;
ICNDODOift'IC TBIUPY, 61 Puticipatiua Hoopltala, '1: 30 p.m. .
PIIYlliCAL ~
uocroa:: S-red by Recionol

to

b':e"

Roboilt M.

Cooper. -a.taat profeaaor,

8

N - t . · "AD utiotic: - .
piece•.....;N.Y. ~; "A om.ct
work ot art,~o beot film"-

""'"'"""CY,

::"/~;~~c...::.~

:C'i:'~u~~·:c,~

than a ""-" . . _ of
timlnc. tbe ,_ ollilbt 111111 ..-.
and a ,_ Of dialiipe io
evideace of Ray'o utlolic - bility"-Tilc Tilioa, .c-dooo..
'The 1n
tbe eom.....,. 'l'llMtN, ~
Friday, Ma7 22. 11:011, 7:811 ....t

wm ._ .-...

«

A~Jo~ 7~~~---~S.::

=r
rviolen~~
~

ilmi~..::r""'.=!Y~~
'= .~c;=.
byol~ =-~-~u'Z ~ ~:.011~30.=:
~ the
• ol edum- cational 8
as tbe poup a-a.tiy, 8ebool o1 Pbarmocy. able at No- Tloloot (lllloo,

.._"

-x:

diMslt be caasis-

teDtly undanlood in order to tioa, ~ .-u_,. ol he a It h protect the tr.bus ol all ol . aeMoell aDd the creation ol . ton

f WAHT REGISTRATION
lflfORMATlON
_ . . . , . - - 011ce,

1 ...,.. B. £l!L 2103

lllinl out ollha Mary Sea- Clwter I t - Hotel, 6648 Tre.
Prledoabac Mid: oit a-t. 9 ~ S)'IDPOOinm a1eo
opportunity in the ' '7bia ·the 'best -a., I FddQ and ~. 9 a.m.
inner city. w
In Ballalo..
OOift'DfUDIO DKJfTU IDOC:I.ftON
"He lllU8t be ... lllllll who
liar tt... who milled it, "the ro.- Dr ~ J · din
!mOon t h t the. Uruv..ity'a -m,'ai"Wonlaand&lt;MW icaJ
.,...,_~lud
l!lllllbaola ...at be.011 ~ . . . tillledandwilld,le'--k:Mt proothodoatlco, alOWJf .um
tnilition ...S tbe punait ol a- by WBJIO lhil SiijM!q·. at 10
cauoc - .o P - A ..u.-_ .. ,•
p.m.
ftOJf OOU.., 146-146 ~ II

Bulblo State CoDoop (811U511),
CaDioNo CoDoop Slndoat ea.t.r
~~ ai. _,.), D'Y-'lle ·

s-.

-=

...;,_;,t .

.

~~.~)bl:
.. __, • -

Mr. ~Jt!:=!·

::rt._ H. M.l'mldlt ~eae.e4el :
.._ - . . -

...,.._

IICT •

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>MAY7, 1970

VOL 1-NO. 16

- STA'{E; UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

lVB Conoorn ~er CaJnbodla,
Kent Expressed Differendy
..
Both Uai-mty adminiotratlao and llludento this Tuesday
....-1 .,..._., ....,.. tbe el[•
...... ol u.s. mili~ in·
""'-&gt;t in Cambodii and
over what has come to be
known as tbe "Kent State Masaacre...

AdminiBtraU...

snokesmen,

as is tbair fashion,

"""'-t atat&amp;-

mento; Adinll Pn!aident Peter
F. Regan also ~tched a
taleiram !&lt;&gt; the White House,

....~nn, . Pr..siden't

bM?

Nimn

"to. Hertel

intenlection where a PO:

lice line had formed, a amoJl

=

nHGas wafted acrooJB the ",...

~...::!:"~==

blue' W8ll oet. Some reports
aay CJil8 ·. ,;,.,. showered· with ',!'mg about t 1;1 e i r routiiJeB;
....and children
atra"~ 0~~ m_the .~ Some women
em
~·· ..._....
Main Street gaaaed uninjuries. Police ~ ccm..,..tiaaaf. with motoriato in-tionslly.
'.
tear gas and at least 15 arrests. about tbe war. ·
·
At cme point in the afterStudent demonstrators ralAfter Police moved up Main noon, demonstrator&amp; bnJb Winlied at nocm in the Norton to Winspear, charges ~ coun- dows in Clarli Gym wlae a
Plaza, then apilled out cmto ter-charges betwee!' studeJ;lto student CRic:bard Creelimore)
Main Street in numbers eoti- · an4 tear-gas spraymg Police was injured by a 1.-1 rock.
malad at 2,000. Near tbe Main· ccmtinued during ~ afternoon. 110
~"d':!-l 11 amo11 rubbish
fire was started ,_. tbe 'lb&amp;mio Project. Reporta were that
"authorities uaed tear gBI/' to
d.isperlle a crowd of about 300.
Students, as , is IMir fashion,
took to tbe streets. S o m e
omaahed bank window.s and
threw rocks, causing two ·

u.........,

All·Professional Staff
In Lin.. e .for ()0;(, Pay Hike

p~ ~~~ed..a"'=.:

'. .tl otbor.
As a Uni-mty, with the depth
ol atills and llilowledle- . - . we .-1 to ......, in the
fullest and most .... JJUbUc
eDJDinatlao of theae-....
Such aaminatiou8 m u s t lndude participatlao by our fac&gt;.
ulty aDd stucloD"' and tbe full....
est)', and faith in

~~ ~u..:i

;

lit.icalleaden who are c1c.ar to

the ocene than ...,_

"We must also ........., the
oublide community in 11.- a:aminotlaoo in the fullest . Bible fashiou, ao that the countzy at I a r 1 e can hear and ·

~

m,tbe=
faculty and student body. 'lbe
and community information. A system in wbic:h we J.iw must
sit-in at Selecti.., Sefvice doo!n: learn to be responsi.., to tbe
FridayRegan's
noon.
1. n formed en'"-'- ...... , .....
A.; WJis
tin ilet-tor·
President
~ w ......
tatement 1~0 u
springs from aamination and
s
ows:
education.
''OUr country bas been
ca"-"t in the trap of a widen·
"As a Uniwrsity, we can
ing"""war. I am appalled at tbe unite to develop aolid , _
toU of pain and -death which to the problema. By doing ao,
Iii!&amp; abead, and I -share the we can help our government
anguioh oY the families and ... and ouraelves . . . to renew
friends of the students Whoee the peaceful aociety we aU
lives ...,.., loot yeot.erdgy at ~·s telegram-to President
Kent Stote.
Nimn:
.
"As a nation, we must rome
,..,.__ ~-u... of this-·~.
together in this crisis. 'lbe caae
• .., ~
~
for ~n•i~ does not seem try's W8! in Inc»China, &amp;;lid
to ha~ demonstraled to ~ tmgic oonaequences which
reasonable this bas wr&lt;JQ8ht on our na
the 88tiafaction of !IY. '!bed: tiOIJ'8 c:liiDpiMa, ~
delall8- ~ ·.r-;ny-nmJ
'lbe- pJili;'1iirOiiron-&amp;Fr.cr;,ey · -- - - ·- - -- •
• - - • ·"""" .....,...tbe..~.
· • n-1 ror tbe fullest analiioat
aalarieo are a:peclied in a r- of PersoMttl Ad...UU.tration
What may be President
M'~~~
!'P"" aamina~ of natlaoal
.........._..
anrl ComprMation, dated June Martin Meyeraon's farewell ad- inside and oublide tbe academ- .....-. lnc:rMsingly, faculty
Ciradated alcmg with the 1!, 1968, by Booz..AUen lc dress to the Uni..,rsity com· ic community.
~ studeots, and o~
~ memo is tbe ta:t of a
F amilton, In c., Manaaement munity will highlight tbe 124th
Ameri
who ha
ume
rathiar lliiiD)Jia: aalary plan, re- c onoultants, eotab~ a min· Annual CoJJUJ&gt;el1(le)Delt exer·
"Wha~
cJ,ivision ClOIJCenJ
cans
about tbe
iaoueo
leaaed to campus Pl'l!llidellto em i num annual aalary · rate for cis&lt;ls at Rotary Field, Friday, ~notiu!' ~~
fee~ cJr!wn to protest beca'!""
April !!.19701 by SUNY Chan- • ach of tbe eight grades ( tbe May 29, !'t 3 p.m.
President, in entering a war of tbeir VJeWB are appareitly II·
cBllor tiiiiiiU8I B. Gould.
! 3Wat amount to be paid to
Approzimali!iy 3,600 candi· this aort?
nored.
Poppay notes that tbe plao
• fully-quallfted incumbent per- dates for degrees will be l'fiCIOi''To . . b a t - t wiU our ex"J_t is my h!Js!o! that_our Uni"is Dot ..Utable for Uni-mty :arming tbe full duties of tbe nized during tbe coremoniea pariding · vo1
t · tbe verBJty cammumty wiU a:am. Centers. ·we are preparing ap- P!)8ition), a ~or m a I" max- which will be the 6mt cXxnbin· War hell m yemen m ·
ine oonotituticmal, IIOlitical. and
peala for re-coaalderation. ..." imuin annual aalary (the llich- ing both those completing Uni- ~t U..,~:: v~ auatepc 9'-ti!'l11lin a full and
Under tbe plan, aU non-in- est amount to be paid to an wrsity requirements in Janu- looked for?
open fashiou, With as much help
atructioaal (non Civil Service) incumbent), a -mit/point (the ary and those finishing in May.
"How.,.;.. tbe naticm reorder and infonnatlao from !'AtiaiW
positiono, with a r- ~ annual aalary rate ~~ by 'lbe exereiaeo wiU be by far ito priorities ao. that we. can. ~thaast ~-~ =-~
ha.., '-&gt; all~Mated, with tbe dividing tbe sum of tbe mim· tbe 1arpat com""""'""'Dt in
• _ _.. 801
the
t.ical ......,
......,.
......,
· - • of tbe ~ of the
and
·
by
) U ·
· ,.,_._.
turn
~...... vmg
"'}
can "-'-about a ...,_ ·-"....... ~~
mum
muunum
two
mverBJty
prob~ that wrac:k U.. mter- .........
::::;-ol natlaoal ..;.,.;~
~- ol eight graded andn:..:·=~~~: m!:"~'r.. ~~ad· ~
ticmo wiU not be ~:YOWII ~~
Gndea for...., positiou8 eo- low (NOTE: This does not
Meyeracm who bas hauled
quos
tlao to achieving JI08itl"9 pritabliabed or ehanpd after July . re6ect an upward adjuobnent, th8 Uni-mty ainoo September
wiU"1..,.cou;:.; orities. Oaly in tbi8· -.y mn
1.968 haw not ._, determined~;.;.t;.., July 1970) :
1966 is ... lea.., this year 88rV· . answmed by demands· wialllm tbe - t lzald ol .._..
~
'inc as chairman of tbe Aaaem'
alieaatlao be . . . . - , with
bly em Goals and Governance
can tbey uni-mties ol tbe IJ8tiaa•milkestablished by lh!8 American
"I . ·
that our studeota, inc their fullest -tribution to
Academy of Arta and Scionceo. fa cuI t Y
adminialraton tbe well-baing ol aU.
-Tift--1-:10
Hatbe u··m·~~ofpreoidencyl-~?! stand
in voicing our
"I \Ifill you t o - - c!Mr,
·--v
Permayl..._ ooaoem .,..,. tbe internatlaoal by dec:Watlao and ecticm. that
in ~.
and domestic criaea which con- these ,.._ and - - will ha
Alao oil :tbe ~t frontlJII. We . - 1 - . hem- heard by oar Pr.ldlet."
U-14
• 111,1100
1
•u.ooo
-wru~ta­
U-11
IS,OOO
111,1100
12,1100
11,710.
~21
by a
a M~
u...
16,!100
15,ooo
u.s
u.ooo
1-f - Chancellor
P.
23,000
11-M
U-37
21.000
11.000
Norton and flnit awarded in
23,000
1925.
5
1-Coll8idered tbe most opecial
....\
14.oool
.....r-".s.
of lJOIJi:Jnl tbe Uni-m;ria:: ·
41...,.j".s.
17
14.000
..-., it is [livaJ. in com •
.... 7 27.000
with Norton's lnstructioaa, "to
I
110.-1
t
.14.000
cltil18n who performed
greet thing whldl is ideoNo
"""""- -.ltr ....
"*"...._nortified with Butralo. It ma,y be
e greet civic or political ad,
. a greet book, a greet work ol
art, a peat ecloatifil: achieveer-~~=r,.._ wMa tat.a _..17 wilt ,.... In • ....,_
ment, or any otbar thing wblch
of S20.DDO or ,....
• •
in itself. Ia truly greet imd ...
.
vnotJllDg an d Wtlicb dignlfiea
BuiWO and tbe ....,._ in
u;. ..,. a( tbe ~..
.
Name ol tbe ...:ipimt Is not
&amp;niiiiUIICed in a d All ~ U.:;.oteMioo- by the SUNY Central Office,
al aervice poiltiou8 Will reoei.., the P o p p e y memorandum
a .........tory Bill per cent
states.
merin July 1970,
• . Escluded from the plao are
in• to a llll!lllllr8ni! clrculat- '-~·ctional ~itiono (includ·
~this _ .. by u--· W . .,__
mg!'~YL._~t..... _, ___ ) and
ed
·-•3 •..,...
-.-~· ,...,.........,..
pey, director of perscmnel.
• "opecial groupo," including, but
'L'bca in U padeo "will also not limited to, "residents, inreoei.., an i n c r e m e n t of U temo, traineeo, technical aaoisgrade, if eligible ..." Poppey tants, teacbing assistants and
wiU be an additlaoal graduate assistants." However,
1.5 per cent of merit IIIOIII!Y ~-==J:titi~
to be distribuled within the ties (such as prof_,r and
__ ,....,,_ ol
__._.._,_
"" included
·a .............. director) are to ""
•
tnltive a a I a r Y plan, ~ as are libnlry, student peraon·
l
8llid, adding that "this is Jill Of nel a n d similar profeooional
the information reoeiwd from positicmo whldl may ha.., aca- Co~
Alhan,y at this time. Further demic rank.
.
.

___._ ·

=:

·

""!J!i.....,

a program· of peaceful action

·-n

Meyerson Js
Speaker fi0'....

h

:::i!

U,:

ioa!!:.froper

!:

':.or"

--3·

::.=Wei::'*

:=$'::"';.;ad":

~

- -·-- - - ........... .......-...::• '
•
• ,_.._
•

-

......

-.

.......,

...-

...oool

......,

----,-·

::W'11:

~leo

Quo-...,. .... new...-.-

·"= rz=,t::=."'"'"i'\..,.. ·r::: ;;-.-:.-...
. . . .=...- .......
=:-= ....
=::..a;-t:=::.:....

-

=..r:..a:.
y,_ ...

-

I

..

(_,.,_, .. ,.,.. J, ool .l)

=~Jr~;;;t
HaroldB. · ~,.=..·~W'.!:~
Ycd. .
/

.....................................
___...- ...
........ lilt.._ ....... _ ................

I'

�' PB¥Hike- .
( - - - , _ , . . . '· ... J)
~ to the pic. mill-

C'.

.......=--...,.Ill
.. - ·
:;,:
.....:=-...:.r.:

a-

,JulY 1971.

•

:oau.. for the ~
will be ....-....cl from time to

~

cl all 'alaries .
c1 IQIIIIIiDteoa In e a c h pade
wltbbi each . . . _ Ia DDt to
_ _ . the ~t cl each

~-= paailiolll~::.;

~ Ia aae poiDt at wliil:b
UIB talla """"''tioD to the
pIa 11, .........0.., to PCJ111187:
"We are trying to pot tbla
.......S to a unit (l'lovS) m
funcl1oa . • • ratbw then Uni-.ll;J at Bull'alo . _ " ·
he ald. ~. the llfllcl thou~ In
a...- 5, 8 and 7 Ia -...........
the midpoint. 'lbe - - cl
. _ In Gnode 4 Ia ju8t below
the midpoint. 'lbe - - cl
eM. In Gnode 3 Ia a ohade
above the midpoint and Gnodea
1 and 2 ... well below.•• ·"
"For ,July 19'10," ~
aid, "thaee In
...--WiiJ
pt at leat an n.:.-t cl
the u ........ If eliPble. but
DDt to _ _ . the maimiDa

~~~~"
~.=-.=.:
(or -..ice . _ _ In IIIIIDUilt

In

_ . to u... - cmt cl the
Mluy) lhall be,;_, annually
ot . . . _ _
to each appointee who ... .,..... ----------~.:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
plated ..........., « .......
.
. ..
clatiafacllary -w. In a paai·· ·
·

;::~t$~ . ~ Holds Off on
~ ~\nu;' 3! s~·\...poena.
IUU ·
· T\...,.,..!;...!0'"
~RSJ! !l...l

lnl:umbalt above "normal"
merinu!!!W
Par . _ In Grades 1-4 who
are IIOIHIIatutory (N-Sl,

the SUNY C...tzal 08ice Wll1
.-..,aU pade for 19'16-7L
Poafliolll In u ..... and
allocaled to Grades 1-4 . will
Clllltfnue In that u ......
Poaitloae N-8 In Grades
6 and above will CDDtinue with
that deaipaation. Tho a e In
Gnode 6 and above wbc&gt; have U ....- will be c:hanpd
to N-8.
Accordlna to Chancellor
Gould, ''U ....- IDlEt contfn..
, . for a while because they are.
ape c if I e d In the Education
Z.W for Um-aity --instnJc.
liaaal paGtlaaa. We will pl.out the U
the Law
CBD be amonded, and ewmtuallY ... oaly Gnodea 1 to 8 cl
the admiJU&amp;trative alary

....-When

t::.m. ~ -

pro-

In April 19'/Q, an Adult AdviamDmt Center' waa aateh-

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

llahed with a fuD-tlme cliNctur
and put-time OOIIII8IIlon.

The Division cl Continuing One cl the pars- cl the AdEducation, under the leader- vm.-t c...tlor Ia to caamel
ahip c1 Dean Robert F. Ber..r, and advlaa men and women
consista of aeveral ~Is, who are CXIIIIIIderlng a clumge
viz., Millard Fillmore College. of careers « a return to wodt
which - " " - credita -.rd or ac:bool. 'lbe c...tlor !lrill DDt
a Uni~~
degree; the Olllce replace any cl the filiating adfar Credit-Free l'rotlnuns; Ra- visanent ...._ nar will it COD·
clio Station WBFO; the Adult
ltaelf with the student who
Advisement Center; Olllce for is curnmtly auolled at SUNConferences and Inatitutea, and YAB, 1D1!11!Pt If that atudeat is
an 0111ce for t.]rbBn Extension. refem!d to the C...fer .far CDUD·
Probably the moat widely l!8linl, and,tor teatin&amp;. .
lrinown component of the Divi- ., At the c...tlor, die atudeat
&amp;ion of Continuing . Education will be able to pot ~t
Ia Millard Fillmore College. It ~about career opportunitiea and
waa eatablished In 1923 aa the · educational opportuniliea, aa
eYeDing division of the Univer- well aa, pereonal couneel.lng.
alty of BulJalo with the general 'lbe Center will aiiM8!l i1aelf
aim of providing service to with the adult atudeat, and all
adult sbllenta fn the OOIDJDU· functiana will be orimted fo.
nity In the ·form of part-time ward the adult. Because ~
and edenalon educational pro- C...ter pew aut cl • _,;al
grama which gave University prilpllm cl COIJDIIIJng and adcredit.
~ for - . - . will
Beca.- MFC nilpooded to CDDtinue to "*- 8lllpbas!a on
individual and community thia pl.-~ C...ter activity.
needs, it baa supported _,;u u~ . - CommuniiJthe tion
~.--tinl on
•-..up
projects, eome of which served
as the foundation for newlY- tha~ tho! commun~tY. and the
tablished departmenta and/or Umve~~~~ty muat Gist m a symechools In the University. Thus biotic state, an Ol6ce for Urban
the college became the p..,..U· Extension .... eatablished "'
tar of the School of Nursing, wodt wi,th CDDUmmity ~
the School of B....n- Admin- -both m
IIJ!d m
istration, the School of EnP· minority
am...t&gt; ~
..aring, and the Scbool cl So- tioDa cl th!' city. ~.,::
cial Welfare.
ollioe, ~the
......... • busi
Port- ......, for Adulta
• arranged ....
ft8Pili:.DC
•
Wlal the University cl But· III!BIIIli8J1 In the Inner caty. Too,
falo became part cl the State credit ~ ha_ve hem olf.-1
University oyatem In 1962, Mil· In local CXIIIIIIIIIDlty CODtera !""~
lard Fillmore Collep became ...,....._ on ~ ralaliolll
part of the Division of Contfn.. .have hem aatahliabed.
uing Education with the main
Enrollment• In both the
objective and responaibilitY for credit and the narH:redit areas
providing credit ........ lead- of Continuing Education have
ina: to . - , _ to an adult ~- iDCft!ll8ed over the years. In the
Jation lnter.ted In a part-time . fall _ . . . . cl 1989, MI"C. fll.
atudy program.
fered 173 with about
· The 0111ce for Credit-Free 4778 sludl!llta enrolled. The
Programs waa established to Credit-Free Office ran 88
provide educatiollal opportuni- c o u r s e s with '1392 atudeata.
tiea to adulta on a refreaher and 'Ibis IIUJIIIDI!I', MI"C plana to
updating basis. Coumoa In thia offer 82 ~ while the
oftlce do not cany credit -.rd Credit-Free Ol6ce plans to
a degree. Faculty and prcl- offer 24..
·sional stall have the opplll'ill· ,._ for the , _
nity to develC!J&gt; imaginative ap- - Continui!ll Educ;a~ Ia COD·
pioacl&gt;ea to subject mattar atantly demoaslratinl 118 adaptand new approacl&gt;ea to eome of ability and ita vielon. Both
the traditional clisciplinea. Most MFC and the Credit-Free proClOW88B are offered on the 118UBI
grama are striving ·to keep proonce-a-week, 12-15 times a ae- grama timely and relevant.
meater fonnat, hut there are. MI"C Ia, cumintJy deiJIIniDII a
many conferenoes and one-day new depee JIIOiftliD, a -Baobeseminara offered for business lor cl Sclance In Gmanl Stud·
and profo&amp;ional groups ln the iaa, "' ~ the llllique needs of .
community. In cooperation with adult atudenta. Sum a degree
other educational enterprlaes 'IIOuld maloe the collep ~
on thia campua, the Credit-~' to the plllllllical deOffice baa been responsible
cl an adult clioalele In
many amferences.
a DDt ..-lble UDder

cem

u

=

By· DONALD P
HOLMWOOD .

=

-

In Uni-..ity-related court
action a tbla _.., County

=·Ron~':.u:

Mekina ~ of a Grand
Jury subpoena of U/B recorda
and a atudeat arreated In Norton pleaded innocent .to a camp~m diaorder charp.
Attomey for the lfllyea 46,
Herald P . Fahringer, had
sought the CIUII8hinJr of the subpoena on the . ~ that It
violated the clelenilanta' COD·
atitutiollal rlghta.
Alan Sappol. 21, a junior,
pleaded innocent In County
Court to 88CIIIld-dep-ee criminal misehief cbargea In Cllll·
..ction with dealnJction of a
radio """"' vehicle on campua
March 12.

au!i-~~..cner~

hiB

'~~rile,

City ,Judge H. ' Bua-

well Roberts handed Fiedler a
six-months penitentiary _,.
tence and fined Mra. Fiedler
$500 on a CDDviction for maintaining premises where IDirijuana waa uaed.
Fiedler is free on $500 bond,
pending appeal.
In passing the stiff sentence,
Judge Roberts charged Fiedler
with abdication of his responsi)&gt;ility aa a profeasor with "enormous influence."
Mrs. Fiedler IBid the sentence waa lndicatiw of a political war on dissent in the
local community.
OMBUDSMAN MOVES
The Ollica of the University Om·
budsmon hH I110'&lt;Ied from Heyos
Hall to , _ qU8rters In 10 Dlefen·
dorf Annex. The talephone exton·
"""' rernelns the ......-103.

Dental C/irrie

..,_....,..,t

&lt;._

"-:..:!b.=

of the Divi
sian of Continuing Educa .
Radio Station WBFO. WBFOFM broadalBta from the third
floor of Norton Hall, with a
haJanced program of MWS, music, and diaJosue. Ilinina the
recent campus di_porClers,
WBFO hreadJed the communications gap by ita rational and
timely traalment of the subject.
· New equipment is being fn.
stalled to en1ib1e WB'FO to aen·
-orate a BBCDDd signal which can
be received through _,;al remi--. 111ia aide c:hannel micht
be uaed for broadcaating both
credit and c:redit-free ........
with atudeat "call.badt" poleDliaL Oppartunitiea for the educaliaaal .., of thla addiliaaal
tool In ContiDuing Education,
coupled with indepmden~ atudy
and IJIOII8DIIlled tat type oaropportuniliea, are

Appradmaliel,y 80 palilllla
..........._ . _ t e d a t
the nellbbarliood deatal
clinic at 808
(88CIIIld
IIDar cl Marine Midland Bank)
wbidl Ia ~ by the
Um-.i=theErie
ErM County
s.lth
t.
Dr.
D. Arcla, dlnlcd
lnalructar cl as-aU.. cleldfD.
ry, and Dr. Bait K. . , .
....... pn6aaar cl dealialry,
- In dllqa ellS .........
tal . . . . . . who- partidpJd-

a-

~~-dally.a­

aept IJaada,y--e a.lil.1D 1 1'.111.

em Tu.l8,y, Wedneaclay, Friday and Saturday; 9 a.m. to,.
p,m. ... ~ and 2 p.m.
tO 6 p.lll. and 8:30 p.m. to 9

p.m.....:::=·--·

..................... -....
.................
,__
....................
.................
........ L.JIIIIIar . . .·a ......
~

advocated that a _.. fal:ulty
be Mlabllabed b the DiviaioD
of Continuing ~ 11lia
faculty would be Clll • par with
the daytime atd ralalhe to ...
ary, ~ teaure and -..:h

_ _._. .
-In the

.

!~Die 1J8PR Eli~

Te11-Y...,. CaiRpua AcaclfliRJC
Plllla, Dean Bemor ,__..stial.
ed t h e = = cl NBidea
type b
for a Continulnl
Echx.tion
wbidl would
•olala at la8t 800 ,_..
nillbt 'particlpala.
ln order to ...... Continulnl
Education a viable and ct,Dan&gt;ic activity, It needs the cammltment and •apport cl the
.
, - - . . r.c..liB • well •
'l1le DlviaioD cl Contlnninl their wrdaa~We bape
Education indudea a oaafer.. that tbla brief. ~!kG cl
..ce ooardlnatar. 'l'brougb tbla the DlviaioD will piO!IJD a betc61e, olta di&lt;rislona cl the a. •m~ ~al the fuaf&gt;
U~aftll..,.._ tioncl _ _ ~
cl the .ntc. cl a apec:laliBt at the 91ata ~ cl Neor
In -.fnlaadaw ,
Yadtat BdiiD.
·•

:=:" •

dade4 In the fadli\y.

~~~~

from tbla and Jlllilbbariua ~
atituliolll cl hflla' Jeaming 1B
hecolning ~ clilllcult.
In a 1J8PR _ . . . . In .Man:h
1966, Dean-RGI.t P. ller1a

�"3

~

,._, '1, U'IO

'lbsk F()1'(2 on Reform Disbands,
Says It Has Acromplished MlSSion
CHERYL a&amp;'GESHEIMER

u_,,_ ...._

---JlaDiel A. Roblin, Jr., pn!lli·
cleat 111111 dlaiiiMil ol RabUn

=~~.::::

Tbe Taak Force 00 Academic
Reform passed a ._.tution to
disband on Thuraday, April 30.
.Tbe Taak Force .had t-Il
eatablished iD March by Acting

~ E:;;~,:l{y-~eci~

•
important issues and to
::,Yp accelerate reform:

ol die y_.JMt Saturday nilbt
by the Sdloal fll ..............t
Aluami Awrietlon
'lbree lludiDIB w a r e · alao
dted: Jalm c. H8mmaad. wbo
I8Cihed the .......... etudmt
-..1; Paul ll.. Wallalbant, · =-.~and tbe ~
wbo WOn the ~Ia
t nmaiDil ooocamad for tbe
-..1; 111111 Geaqe St. Georp, Naolution of the ql15tion Of
wbo ..-hoed tbe WoU Street 801118 form ol University-wide
./lNiniiJl a tudan t ..me.-t laPalative process on Univerawmd.
sity-wide questiooa. In view of
active ~ iD the Stu·
Mr. Rablln ill .t he 21at wiD· deDt
AsaOc:iation, the lndependDar ol the Niqara ,....,tier
ent Worbbop on Government
of the Year and the Faculty Senate on the
Award. He died for llriDI(·
tba Task Force COD·
m, bill C1J111118DY from a post· ql15tion,
its work
and
t1on 88 a ft!lliaDal procluca of aiders
·
issu·
ac:rap ~ to tbat of BD inter·· di!Bolves itaelf,
BDCB of a final ~"
national manufacturer of a wide
At the meeting, Mark Hudvariety of builcliDg, COIIIIUIMf
and iDduatrial producta. Rablln dleston. president of tbe under·

,_,r,:'tioas

==:

a ··-··

IDdwltriaa
-- 111111
iDmme for -the
year
111611other
iD ol $70 million.

21 Transfers

-~plans
a::::!d
:..,~ ~:~ ~1:.ki~~:
to convene a group_ made tive-executive ann of the
up of members of the Univer- University responsible to the
Sity commUnity to work on pre- collective will; disestablisbment
paring a plan for Univeraity of the Ketter ,... __ ,_,_ and
~·
governance.
tbe Task Force; insuring stu·
"I will convene a group of dent advice and CODMDt on
repreaentatives from all iden· ·selection of a new president;
tifiabla constituencies on cam· eatablisbment of a summer
pus, as well as interested com· ecology program to be kn&lt;lwn
munity members, to design and as "Survival U ;" full collqiate
accelerate tbe institution of a ati~ontonomto!::.,.~,~~~ "tia",:
new,
and
"'This IJ'OUP will act to secure largement of the aoope ol the
input from all sesments of tbe U~uate Raaaarch ComUniversity by preparing an an- JDJttee.
alyais of alternatives and pre- _ Member&amp; of Huddleston's Aosentinl them iD discussion ...,. tion Group ticket ( dubbad
sions with all alfacted groupe." "moderate" by !l!e local P""!")
In commenting on the di.&amp;- won avery posttioo for which
sol tion 0 f tbe Taalt Force Dr
they ~. wi~ the ~
• • ,
•
·
u
of academic aifain coordinator.
Cohen said. · 'We are P~ Miss Janet Coben, elected to
to. see .tba~ ~ Student Associ· tbat post, was a Procressive
~lion 18 willli.&gt;&amp; to take on tbe Unity Party candidate. PUP
job of tackling tbe. problems was aaid to rep.....,.,t the "radi·
of governance and tis success cais .. .
~ depend U!&gt;OJ} tbe .,.,._aoiber"winoing Action Grouptioo ol ~ constituents on the en1 were: f"trSt vice president,
campus. ·
.
Philip Leaf; aeooad' vice preaHuddleston, named pr8Sldent ident, Jolm Cbarleil· treasurer
of the undergraduate Student Mark Borenstein· pit,lic ~
Aaaociation iD last m o n t h's coordinator ii,i, Conviaaar·
elaction with a total of 818 student ..:mces coordinator'
votes, ~paigned on a plat- . Fred Averon and student righu;
form wbich c a II e d for the coordinator Steve Strahs
Univeraity "to experiment with
Inde~ts won three P.,..ts
new sys~ and non-sys~ not contested by Action Group:
of education" to solve the alien- new student aifairs coordinator
~tion !""f frustration of Amer- 1ra Gla,)lber; national affairS
tcao life today·
coordinator Marcia Friedman
Other planks iD his platform and mtem:.tional student afcalled for : adoption of Univer· fair&amp; coordinator, Edgar Rojas.

~b~'d!..,; ~:!,V::~;,~t~f .:d:

ment, and Dr. Ira 8. Cohen,
IJIOII08t of tbe Faculty of 8ocial
Sciences and Administration, ·
baw t-Il co-c:t&gt;airmenTha motion to dioband, made
by Dr. ~ Friend, pro- ·
r - ol history and member
of ~ Taak Force, reads as
foiiOwa:
'-rbe Taak Force on Aca·
demic Reform bas &amp;alOIIIpJisb.
ad a ma. miasioD iD accelerating
of two oulstand·
•
U •
"ty-wide academi

Med toAdmit

di..;;;;.,"';"'~

InnovalDl.

e:_

,-

A 1939 paduate oi ~
Universi~ with . a ~ru:

i:~ ~aalliDc

of llUCill!8llful CXJIDPIIIIiaa_to outof.-...... and ._ worked to
establiah more bom&amp;-baaad iDduatry iD Bulfalo.

Mra. Roblin is a faculty memSchool.
Tbe student award wiDDera
were saluted for their combined
academic a n d extracurricular
records. Hammond, currently
aaaistant to tbe director for reg.
istration at tbe UniYel'Sity, was
president of the Graduate Man·
agement .Association: Wallen·
horat, wbo will begin paduate
work tbia year, will_ be a parttime ad.n- to undersraduate
students iD the School ol Managemenl 8L Gaorp is a past
president of the Undergraduate
BusiJaa Aaaociation.
Approzimately 100 people attend8il the anuual lllumoi..tudeDt-fac:ulty diDDer at Leisure
Land iD Hamburg; William B.
Caat.la inatalled 88 new·
pn!8ideat ol the ..............t
AJumoi, .......m., 8lapben c.
Ana.

~a Jl!lrl :n~-::

weeks to":lmentinl 011 the
physical .nature of ...,_tric
desiKD. two weeks to the poaai.
bilitiea of computer JJI'OiflliDming iD aolving design prot&gt;.
-... the lolndl ......., • ,....... ..... Iems lind two weeks to wortdna
Domini tried out of . . ......, . . . . - In the with Wines iD creatinl a work
-.Gald
~ -- _ , . . , - - ..
.._" 211-14.
. - · or a aeries ol ....-b ol an ....

~~~envbul-

t

UIB:Yust in SUNY To HaVe Full-Time Counsel
1 1 BM!Iapl~"
The appnin- of Job&amp; E .
1.-h, - - partner· iD the
Bulfalo law linn ol B r ow n,
Kelly, Turner, ~- and
1.-dt, Ill aid to ful8ll .......
lltBDdlnl clelira ol Iocal admlnistratiall to ...........~
le.al...-011 a J'l!lllla
•t.ie,• ..._.._ Nlyincupoa
the .... ol the c-.. ol the
8lata . um...lty eaan..l In

.

A special design workshop
to be sponsored this summer
by tbe Department of Art and
Modern College will feature
the Americao seulptor Jamea
Wines.
Wines is head of tbe New
York IJ'OUP of environmental
seulptora known as SITE. He
is a winner of the Prix de Rome
and of Pulitzer, Guggenheim
and Ford Foundation grants.
He is repreaented iD collections
the Whilney iD New York
the Chicago Art Institute and the Los Angeles Coun·
ty Museum.
Tbe deaign workshop, wbicb

ber of the Department of Psychiatry iD the U/B Medical

U/B tbia ..tt beaune the .
ftrat unit ol SUNY to baw its

u.s.

Environment'"
Workshop

Active iD community idfalra,
Roblin is vice chairman of the
Uriiversity at Bulfalo FOUDda·
tioD,•'IDc.

.--. own fuD·time IDIIIIm8l for "ax·

'l'wmty.... American students wbo baw "-1 aliMblnl
madiciDe abroad will be ~
tad 88 . ~ llludomta" to
tbe junior .u. In the Sdloal
of Medicine tbia 8eplemla.
"'Ibis will be a triill piOirBDl
for students wbo miabla
to get Into BD ADaicaD Medical Scbool 88 fralbmen," ~
LeRoy A. Pacb said. All .....
students plan to pnldice mad·
iciDa iD the
Tbe tnulllfen must haw completed the equivalent ol the ftrat
two .,._,. iD BD Ameril:an Mad·
ical"'SdiDot 111111 ~ Put I
of tbe Natlonlll Madiclll Bomd
daminatioa.
•on- studeDia are tranafer.
rin• to B u f fa I o for elioiall
imlirlng that ill 80 important
to their car.ra." Dean Pacb
said. '"The fact tbat they willing to atart their medical
education abroad DIOV88 their
strol1l motivation...
Dean Pacb bop5 the step
will result iD a graduatinl cias
of 121 in 1972. "''bis is a IIIDall
step," be says, "but we will be
able to see the results iD a few
months, rather than yaara."
Several waab ..... the dean
IUU10UDCl8d that the freshman
ciaas this fall will be increaaed
from 104 to 125.
Sixteen other American medical schools are acceptiJ&gt;I 130
Americao junior tranafar stu·
dents from foreign uoiversitiea.
M o s t schools are aooeptinl
from two to five students. Tbe
U / B commitment is the largest
iD the program. followed by the
University of Texas Medical
School and the New York Mad·
ical Qollege, each of which is
accepting 15. ·
Most of the transfer students
are f r o m medical scbools iD
Mexico, Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, Germany ~ Spain.

~tiall for~

Mr. 1.-cb came"from the State
Um-aity eou-1 Jcibn .c .
Crary, Jr. and from SUNY
CbBDceUor 8amual B. Gould.
Accardinl to BD olleial Uni·
vera i
aDD(II!'
•
•
t, "Mr.
the~the=.
at Bulllllo, ~..:r..J;; pol.
icioa eetaN!ohad by the Stale
um...lty and the Stale ol
New yen.•
AdiJ!I Pre.ideDt Peter P.

!fiJ

!:;"'.,

Repn ~ " - t· •tiefaction" at Mr. 1.-cb'e willing.
naaa t o - ".A, 'Iarp Uoiwlrsity 01111ter lib -our&amp; Ia 0011tinually 8llll1llad iD ·many complic:atad I e 1 a I va-clioas,"
said Rean. "and I am pateful
to a.uicellor Gould and Mr.
Crary for autborizini Mr.
1.-cb'a ~L It will a~&gt;-:

l::
est-:.=,
-Oilthat~
tbia

=~ ~~

to
with
and totllllnvol-t oaly 1M»lliblafor
the~"

A UniYel'Sity apobsman said
tbat the naming of Mr. 1.-cb
umelatad t o - t AAUP
sta-ts ~ concern
.,.._ acti&amp;::.t the State Uni·
&gt;'Bnlity
In relation to
court ca.. bMJiving Um-aity
.........t. AAUP a18o callad
lor _ . t ol aanbera ol the
Counael'a ataif from the U/B

C!I!!J!!!8.

v

wHEN ARE \HE UllltARIES: OPEN
~ ....,_ Ullniry,

__
ExL_36_19
_ _ _ _ __

mental
either for the
University aunpus or the city,
Will evolve.
In addition . to' Wi
tbe
workshop faculty will~:
Sbeldon Barlyn. asaoclata pro, _ of art, the workshop director; Jolm 8. Hale, director
of the Computin1 Center;
Donald Robartam, aaaodate
prof-.r of art; and David
Gairison, paduate studilot "'

oo;c
~ UDderpad.
uate 111111 graduate students will

~~~~

be made to the Art ]Jepartmenl
.Aix:epl;a.- will be t-1 011
BD interview with the workshop
director. ••

�~-

.,__

'4

. . '• 1!170

Let
__Those
. Opposed to DOD Pay .Research Bills
.

By' ROBBRT .J. GOOD

'lbonl are two objectiolls to
· lhl! propooaJ ·til bmisb DODaupported .-rch that baye
DOt 1-. a - . 1 ., far. I
would lite to diacuao them, and
olfer a posaible """"""·
The
objectioo is that scientiflcaJiy and socially important .........m would ·be prevented, and the support of worthy
....,duate students would be cilt
oft. The other ROWrJIID"'lt&amp;gencies ought to pick up these
projects - but tbe necessary
funds have nqt been appropriated. HW&gt;dreds of projects are
being terminated cunently, because of the Mansfield amend·
menl
It was reported in Science,
March 13, that "some 50 milJioo in .........m support will be
cancelled . . . far above . . .
original estimates that only $10
or $15 million might be aff&lt;&gt;Cte!d . ... Meanwhile NSF has
bud(ll!ted 110me $10 million to
take care of some of the in..........t propoaal pl'I!OSUle...."
1bose who now have propc;168)s
. of any kind before ·the NSF
have been told that
prospects for funding are .f at dimmer this ye8r than in any previous years.

&amp;mi

A Cloolnc of Mlndo

(I have '-rd that there are
some on campus who think
there must be something intrinsically bad about the projects
tlllit the QOD now supports;
otberwiae why .wouJd the DOD
support them? I'bave afBO '-rd
that there is Rome hostility
against any al;;,tUic research
or teclmicaJ development effort
on campus. I certainly hope
there is no b'uth in these re- ·
ports. 88 they would indicate a
moet unfortunate closing of
minds that is not consistent
with intellec:tual honesty.)
The MOOIId objection is more
compl&lt;m. The purpose of the
ban is, we are told, a protest
against tbe Vietnam war 8Dd
against tbe military in general.
(To quote Science again,
Cbarle&amp; A. Mosber, ranking Republican on tbe House SubComm·ittee on Science, Reaean:h and Development, aays
"tbe Mansfield amendment
sprang from Mike Mansfield's
apeciaJ feeling about tbe
:'illtary and the Vietnam
war.") 1bose who .propose to
ban DOD-flupported research
jlmjects do not, themselves,
haw projects; and for tbe majority, their departmeolB do not
haw any such reeearch.

Britain or South Vietnam. to
lilbt its ODOIII,Y1 say China,
while America ada
out tbe war.
Or, 88 a colleague has IUg(ll!flted, it is ljlre_a &amp;G-~d man
in Amherst aaying to.a ro.yearold a:um. "We must lilbt Communism; you so to Vietnam."
·The protest against tbe war
is being miaed 88 a high moral
issue - 88 of courae it is. But
if one layman in a church
orders another layman .to give
to charity, what moral virtue is
there in it for eilhe?
Now, as to the question ·of
effectiveness: Would the banning of DOD-supported research from this campus stop
the Vietnam war? I have asked
many of those who advocate
the ban. and the answer is always the same: "No, but if we
!eke the lead, and if other universities foUow . .. maybe there
wiU be some effecl . . ."
Now this simply won't do.
The initial "No" is valid· but
the •'but if .. ." carries no' con~
viction. Indeed; those who know
tbe ways of tbe military know
one thing unequivocally: There
would be no effect on the war,
even if aU DOD-supported research on aU campuses (MIT
includ!!&lt;i) were stopped. And, ·
indeed, the military ' prefer to
have their research aU done
"in-house"; that way, they have
real control, and would be under no pressure to support pure
resean:h. So the pure research
simply wouldn't get supported.
If tbe holders of DOD grants
thought that relinquishing them
would stop tbe Vietnam war, I
am SUl'\l they would do 110 at
once. If I thought a hunger
strike would accomplish that
end, I would start ·one today.
But since there would be no
positive effect coming from tbe ·
ban, I see no reason why I
should undertake a quixotic
pro- that somebody else
urges but does not take part in!.
IAt n - Who Object to DOD

..., the Bill

Now for a positive proposal
-and I ask the reader not to
take it as a tongue-in-cheek
one: Let tbe funds to P'IY for
the research which would be
prevented by a - ban on DOD
grants be provided by those

=~to~==
of protesting the war.

~Oil~

taken, and a majority Of the
faculty 'VOted' for ·it, I would
per!IOIIII)ly join in, and take a
proportionate deduction from
my aalary.)
The estimated coat of plan
( 1), baaed on $600,000 (a realistic figure) and, say, 75 departments, would be $8,000 per
department. ' For plan (2),
based on a clear majority of the
faculty, 750 people for convenience, the cost would be $800
per person. If students were included, the cost would be less
than $40 apiece.
MlchiP,n Profs Poy lor lllacb

I have been told that I should
title this plan "A Modest Proposal," and sign "J. Swifl" But
I have le&amp;J'!HlCt from a Michigan profesBOr just how tbe University of Michigan is proposing to meet tbe cost ($2400 tuJtion per student) of bringing
their student body up to the
level of10 per cent black: Tile
profesBOrs are to forego the
cost-of-living 18ises they would
receive this year. So perhaps
my plan is not pure fantesy after all.
Tbe alternative to my proposal is for the faculty and students to act with consideration
for thAir affected coUeagues.
Let me first recaU that, 100
years ago, Gresor Mendel had
. his great research which founded genetics suppressed because
research involving tbe breeding
of mice was lewd! (He repeated it with sweet peas, and decades later was allowed to publish. ) It would have been just
.as ridiculous to have suppressed his research on tbe
grounds that it was done in a
monastery and that his scien-

:c~=.,ti:,".,~J:=

dogma.
The analogy between tbe pioposal to banish DOD-grant research and the suppression of ·
Mendel's work is a close one.
(Indeed, the word "obscene" is
sometimes uaed to describe tbe ..
war in Vietnam.) We aU abhor
war, just as Mendel's superiors
abhorred lewdness. But Mendel did not breed mice for a
U::,.~~ any
search to aaaist in
propagation of Christianity. Tboae who
do unClaaaified eciePtific reaean:h with DOD ailj)port do
not do 110 88 "part of the war
efforl"

tf:"'

J!.o::

There are two poaaible methods of implementing this proposal, one department-wide and
one individual:
(1) Eada department shall
poU ilB faculty on tbe PJ'OP&lt;E8L
'fb&lt;a&gt; departmenlB that vote Spiro . . .. - Rop. Ford
If a professor is commisw. Muot fll,llt. You ao
for a ban on DOD research
Thus. tbe prohibition against shall' make available ·propor- sioned to do an eaaay for tbe
Evergreen
Reuiciw, should be
tiOoately,
from
their
own
budDOn.a-ted research is being made by people to whom II"IB. sulllcient funds to support be blocked from accepting the
that protest costa nothing. all tbe projects that are cut oft. commission? How· about the
Tboae who will bear tbe cost Support would include aU proj- 1lDuley Barb? 0r Playboy? 1a
are . to be OI'Ciered to do 110 ects that have been submitted lil8 ...... tainted by lbe IIOUI'Ce
of funds? Only Spiro " wbelber or DOt they want to, before-March 30, 1970.
would say that; and indeed he
and wbetber or DOt tbey think
(2) Tbe poll shall be ClOiltbe protest will be ellective. ducted on an individual basis. and Rep. Ford did make just
of Mr.
'Ibis reaemblea one nation, aay· Eada peraon voting for tbe ban that kind of criti .
America, telling ilB ally, aay ·shall ...... deducted· from his J~ JJouslaa. CI8DI,
'Ibis principle of
reasion
of work for .-eaao~aving
~
nothing to do with. its artistic,
aoc:iaJ or acientUic merit is the
~le which - . WIIUkl he
.
! .
. .
establishing, if we were now to
A. ~........,. ~ .... ,...,.... 11r •
Dlrillaa ot u-.
banish DOD grants from this
.....,..--........, su.tr. u~ c l l f - r_..., ..,.,_ 3US . - . sc.. • ...,.,
campus. It cost Mendel's suIf. r . 14214. ~ a1nc.. - ,..,_, ~ IU B~ B.Jl (......._ 4MIIJ ..t R -

GREPORTER,

2U. 2.50 • ...._ A..._

--___

en.- 2J21J.

... li'D1'UI'

.

-Ills

AMICO 0111 ROTC
, "H- ..n - - like the
lor. Domocratic: Society,

~

._.,.,

JlOIIDI'

r.

IUJU.&amp;T1"

_,~~~-.-

=:

-

.

... CI.OCIIUII

~.::.,~~=.'f,.~ .~~~~,.,.

::=.:L.:..--:::;: B. U....

which are on the FBI's IUI&gt;verolve
lilt. tha Youth Aplnst War
and Faoclom maintain their pool·
tion iJn the campus while the
tralnlnc ground for our future

-

- ~~

.. - t o ......, ... Sherift

Michael Amico aded In clelefldlnc

t&amp;t7l

:.:'W"c::::

aalary a proportionate amount, ·
to make up lbe fundil to support lbe research that is cut world decades of delay ......
, off. (If this latter courae were tbe Mendelian theory of inheri-

~at the IIDUP'I ballliuot ' leat
Saturday. He also oald a major
drug rold lnvolvlnc 11 up-

. CDmiiiJ.

•

tance was published. It would
coat me. a sCientist, nothing to
fight tbe war against, aay, drui
addiction, by closing down
some other department or college. But I do not propose to
fight_drug addiction in that
way, because I have extreme
doubts that that method would
be effective - and if there were
any effectiveness, tbe 1068 would
certeinly outweigh the benefits.
I have in the past (Reporter,
March 19) pleaded for a constructive decoupling within ·the
University, e.g., that indiVidual
faculty members should retrain
from unposing their own standards on others, If ~ do impose
our own policies one on another regardless of artistic, social or scientific merit, then we
are inviting tlie imposition of
arbitniry policies upon our-

selves. _

·

A Dancer to F - . ,

So here is my conclusion 're- ·
garding the objection that those
who propose the DOD ban are
merely fighting a pro&gt;;y battle

GVIEWPOINTS
against tbe Vietnam war, etc.:
Let those who would oppose
the war recognize that this
method of doing 110 is an ineffective method, and that for
them to impose their will on
others in this way endangers
their own freedom.
Let us employ other ways of
protesting war, such as the
highly effective McCarthy campaign in 1968, and tbe impressive October 15, 1969, Moratorium turnout. And Jet us
a'J'Iid methods which do more
h&amp;rm than sood.

~n. ....-. -

-

adapllld

the - - Council -

-

- . . ...

F. lllpn an T.-,, M1J

-

.----1970: "W. al , _ . , the -

af I

-

,...,., at IW
alii t o - - ·- - ...

IIIJ----~

Profs ReJease Data on

Colleges, .1.DrYTYl
Suroey
"-'.1. v

From: Robert Scigliano (Political Scieooe); David Smith
(Geosraphy); Ray Hunt (I'By'
cbology); Samn Graham (Sociology)
We ,_,tly submitted tbe informal ballot _...tuoed below
to aU of ~-!.~92 fuU-time
faculty of I&gt;Ul'l X/B. Various
reactions have been ~
pro and COil this •
· . Many

~cri~.==~
792
,Y .'l':j

lion 2.
in this
of ' tbe
ballots
haUota.

persona

survey, 53.1cent
fuU-time fa
. All
were lleated 88 secret
The numbers and pro. portions giving various answers
ilre shown below:
· Three of the oentml issues to
come before tbe University this
year concern ROTC, CoUe(ll!a
A and F, and tbe Senate structure. We have decided to obtein a larger expression of faculty opinion on them than has
been obtainable at tbe Faculty
~te meetings.
.
We ask you to indicate your
choices below, and return your
ballot i!' a aeaJed envelope with
your SlgD81ure on tbe outside
to Room 56, Building 4224
Ridge Lea
BaUota will
be rii!'OW'ted on ,Wednesday,
A P 29, 1970.
·
Should ROTC be continued
on this campus, or should it be
ah!&gt;lished (either at once-or-by
be~ phaaed out)?
Con~ued
430 - 54.3%
~
334 - 42.2%
0
.
.~ were ·
bY
28 - 3.5% ,
~ CoUeges A and F
contmue to operate pretty

eam.Pua.

•ven

much free of ClOiltrol by tbe
University, or should tbey be
browdtt under firm ClOiltrol, or
shoufd they be abolished?
~te pietty uch
free of
211 - 26.6%
Brought under
.
firm ClOiltrol
403 - 60.9%
Abolished
91 - 11.5%
No answers were
si_, by
87 - 11:0%
Should tbe Faculty Senate be
ClOiltinued in ilB present form.
:, ~-tative body

coatzo'r

Should be
. ClOiltinued 88 is 229 - 28.9%

A-tative

body should •
be established 524 - 66.2%
No answers were
given by
39- 4.9%

Dr. Konrad ...., Moille of
tbe ~t of HiaiiOry last

wee!&lt; aaaaiJed tbe four

profea-.

~ 88 an attempt "to undonnine the Faculty Senate by l8llplllling is"'-"already voted OIL He felt
it afBO undermined "
lion
of due•prooaaa on this~.
And nOne of. us can afford its
further erosion."
The dra'lltillg ' upon of tbe
scholarly tool of opinion aampiing, with uae of "heavily
biased" queatioas, ...., Moltlre
said, · "li!)JnRDIB an implicit
abuse of acbolarJy privilege."
In light of "the _.,.. cliviaion of opinion" on c:ampua, he
said, ''1oe really cannot afford
any ~le and _ .
aary emcerila~ of a dillicult
sib!&amp;IWn."
.

�~

,.., 7, IP70

HoW.Abrut
City Laws
For 'Praffic?

-·-·-

By ROBERT E. HUNT

Committee for -a lJnirersity CallRd
FTustratirl, 'FragTrll?lfed, Insecure
--~~~In tbe April 16 iaoue of the

Reporter, tbere appeered 1h11
foil-ing article: "S~-wUk
Campaign Seeks End lo
Anyone can that illegal Thntll &amp; Demmads." It aeemo
parking is a serious impediment to llaffic ftow. Parking on that the point of this article
roadways is not just a matter wao to: a ) make public the forof _.., not being available in mation. of a group of 'people,
lots (which woUld require a signatories co1led tbe Commitshort walk ) , it's just more ron- lee /Qr a U niver&amp;ily, and b ) ·
......Uent to be at the "front make '!J'ublic its rather unfinished, tentative summary statedoor'' of. one's destination.
ment describing "predominant
At this time, regulations ap- attitudes,. within the commitproved by the Board of Trus- tee. •
- . in accordance with section
'The purpose of this essay is
162a of the New York State to introduce the arguinent that
Vehicle and Traffic laws, are the purpose of this group is
being used on campus.
oelf-&lt;lDntrodictory. . . .
·
'The following is a list of criti-.
Penaltiel!, set by students,
are quite severe. Even so, they Cisi'DH:
t. ) 'The tentative purpose of
are ignored because tbere is no
"immediate" elfect. Eventually this Committee " is to regain an
payment must be made to tbe atmoopbere in which the rationbursar; but, that may be oever- al consideration and discussion
al months front the time a tick- that ought to be at the heart of
et is actually issued. Although univeraity education may again
·
hundreds -of tickets are written take place bere."
we e Jd y tbe concept of "it
a .~ This expreooion tacitly indoeoil~ .matter" seems to pretroduces by preocription a defi• vail "Park any place" is the nition of what is rational conpractice.
sideralwn, which may or may
'The prohibition of parking not be supported by empiricol
no roadways w8s establisbed confirmation. It posits a conunder authority of. State law. ception of reason which is in
'The rea s o n is that certain fundamental agreement with
widths are required to provide tbe values, concept ochemsts,
...,.,.,..W,Je fire lanes. Cars can- judgments, intereots of the peonot be permitted to park no the ple making the statement. The
narrow roadways and meet this literature of philooopby exhibits numerous examples of what
requirement.
differing human animals, in difViolations of campus rules ferent aocio-historic periods, in
.-, .,.
alao occur because of tbe in- dill'ering behavioral and psyequity of ftPlllication. 'The rules chologicol contexto, hove judged
___
_,....,....,..._
student to define 88 reason . ... Given
. . . . . , . _ -- They
do not are
applybasically
to all persons.
tbe initial assumptions of Ad-......, .._.,_ No pu1111c- 11;11es. Students are not the only olph Hitler, the consequences
of his oyol!m&gt; were logically
.., ............., ewaate ID violatora.
Julllfr· - . . . . . . . - of .....,_
'lbere is a way to provide consistent and perfectly reasonable. 'The point to be made is
...-."
011e equitable, more uniform,
less aevere and more easily en- . that tbe defining of reason is
forcmble llaffic regulation sys- not a neutrnl, d ispassionate
tem. That would be to adopt, proces s, although some a~
with Buftalo Common Council- tempts at empirical scrutiny
approval, tbe Buftalo city tmf- appear to be more objective
111: tsging syatem.
than othero.
b.) It clearly seems that in
It would be equitable in that
it would eppJy to ..-y person this case tbe people calling for
analySis
under the guise of reaon tbe aunpu&amp;-eVeD ~BOll are calling for a re-turn to
. It would be uniform because tbe type of compartmentaliza...., would uee applialble city tion, professionalism, in lihort,
ordinances and Stele Vehicle recoon, which has made them
and ll'rallic laws. Acceptable oecure and f.rogmented scholars
practicea in tbe city and else- or whatever "er'' or ''ist" in tbe
where in tbe State would be
This means that tbere is
EDri'OR.I
acceptable on campus.
really very little interest in
One man's quiiJble is anoth'The Buffalo tnlffic system pursuing
critical, oelf-&lt;lDrrecer'o infamy.
· would be. less aevere for parktive; empirically locuaed scien1 just lookins throu8h ina fees are one-hall tbe rote tific inquiry. . . . 'The fact that
tbe April 9 '
of R
of campuo fees. (That is, if
defines what is 1'11·
and noticed
{~ paid immediately/ Court costs this - conaideratwn
and what
believe: a c:aptian that aid, for iporing tickets could make alional
univeroity OUJhl to be does
"Shepp ocallinl at
oym- it more ezpensive.)
nothing to empirically oonBrm
pooium." It .....,•t until I read
'The system would be more ouch a claim for tbe present
tbe article you cribbed from tbe enforceable primarily because and especially,- no crucially, for
Po.t that I UDdentood what ..-yone underotsnds tbe sig. tbe futun.
happened; you picked up nificance of a city )la8ic tick2.) "Education, involving
Archie ~·sword "8cag," et.
··
knowledge, rational thought,
lllmalated 1t "dope," and 80
o-·•·tion of "'·-•, tnlffic investigation and judgment, is
thOulht my druc sympaaium ~parking
streets . eSsentially concerned with the
a ~ aympoaium.
and on tbe oervice driV&amp;I would devel.-.t of the individual,
You betllllr fiDd out what carry .,_ to tbe parking lots. as our own Univeraity motto,
~·,. printing before you
With tbe exception of Monday, Let Each Become All He Ia
1t. Scu is black Iaiit ~ heroin; Weru-Jay and Friday morn- Capable of Being, implies. Atand a borain aympomum, pals, inp tbere is ou8icient IIP!.ltle for tempts to view 'the univeraity
I did not have and Archie all CUll. Parlrlng• lllll"V8)'8 hove as PrimarilY a aocial conglomShepp did not ocal::@.
•
. been made by State Univeroity erate are in our opinion speciYou may thinf it'S a omaJl of New York at Buffalo and ouo. A univeroity is not a -...
point. I dail't.
· ...., are alao contributing to our- ohip or housing eotate, in which
people are cast'logether indefi.
· U "'-_ _,_,
veyB being made by Stete Uni1......... ...... an ,..-v on veroity of New York. Addition- Dit8ly for tbe variouo normal
~ counts. one, ~t- al apace requirements ...., being activities of Jiving. It is not a
1111 tbe ~'IIYJIIP."''l'D and OOIIIIidered. Until ouch· time as community in this - . for it
two, stupid jOurnalism.
apace is available, corefuJ at- eD!to for a particular purpose:
It ...ny cute.
tention Would be pven to wt· Jeoming on tbe part of tbe otu~y.
au~ puldna in student deats, lellching and nBllln:b Oil
Mllre Aldrich
and faculty- Iota. .
tbe part of tbe faculty. 'The
Anti-Scag Warra
· we would be moot ·
· - concept"of tbe univeroity as a
&amp;litor'a Notf!~ 'The' Poet ....,_ live for student, ~ community on which v ariouo .
forma of partkiipatwy 10\WD·
vided tbe definition, but olatl
to this propoaaJ · meiit are hiaed is falae."
irs inllccurete,. - are Pad and
will COlllllluni1a.) What is tbe meaning of
to be lll!t atrailbt. We do not cete with this ~ or drop a
....f to mlorepreoeat anynote to "l'arlrlng, Room 204 tllis Btstement? It daimo that
edualtion Is for tbe individual
&lt;ine or IID,)'tbina.
Michael HaiL"
Beeltlt...,~

......, ... .....- - !...........:.
GR.EPORTS
Gf'ROM
GR.EADERS
Scag It \¥.isn't .

~~

:UW,.

-e

;;:.u;

JW!nt

~

5

long 88 tbe individual doeo
not ~ that type of in-

CC!DlrUY. tbe more li-o,
tlie more 0110 am Jeem. Oae am
dividual which questions tbe unleem - - . -.... Old
aDd .....
foundations of his or her in- bahito ...... 00 laac dividuality or tbe Jack of it in habib!
remaiDLcreated
.Tbat •reater
......
an integrated dynamic oenae. which """" imputed to tbe
Furthermore what does it """"' old oollllillled not in tbe deto write that tbe view that tbe - i t of yean. but in ~and
~
univeraity is primarily a aocial penpective, aDd in · ·
quired
more
to
leun
·
in
conglomerate is specima_? If tbe
havinc bad more time to leam
meaning of specious 88 defined
aqd
to
"leam
.
"
..
.
(p. 19)
by the Random HoU8e Dictwnd.) If Perry'a Btstement can
ary 0( The English Language
l Random House, 1966;,. un- be judged to be hiiJhly probable
abridged edition ) is accepted, by emprically grounded meth" apparentl y good or right ods, then. tbe p&lt;alibility followa
though lacking real merit," it that peopte'who write that "stuis poor expression to state tbe dent/ faculty relations ohould
ides of a social conglomerate 88 be based on mutual respect bebeing specious on one hand and tween learner and ~ enfalse on the other. The fact that gaged in a common educational
a statement is judged to be true enterprise," are not educatiollor false has nothing to do with ally competent to be guardiano
do ouch
wbether such an existing state of tbe young: not
of affairs has or has not (that people lack tbe inotght, tbe
knowledge, and tbe wisdom to
is, is judged to hove ) merit.
'The statement that "the con- define the ~of education,
cept of the university 88 a com- to underotand tbe prooell8 of
munity (a social conglomerate) education, but furthermore ouch
in which various forms of par· people hove ·adopted """""Pts.
ticipstory government are based a value schema, which does
is false" implies assumptively anything but lead tbe students
that such a state of alloirs could in the direction postula.ted by
never exist and therefore be . Perry, that is what he calls
judged to be true. Su'ch a state- ''breadth, flexibility, and freement attempts to forward tbe dom."
values, the oughls, of tbe group
3.) ''Nothing should be alby stating that which is a fact lowed to interfere with tbe or(that is, that in the! past the derly processes of tbe Univeruniveraity has not been such a sity."
. community ) and then illicitly
What is tbe meaning of ouch
confuses th is state of affairs a statement which· seems nothwith speciousness which in- ing less than Fichte'o ego positvolves the group's own values, ing front a naturalistic perspeo.
conceptual ochemsts, and judg- tive? It seems that such a statements.
ment represents tbe view of a
. b.) This statement alao for- g r o u p of compartmentalized,
warda the at-times assumptive profeasionalized, figurines so
dichotomy between tbe otudent permeated by pragmatic techand tbe faculty . Historically nolopcol ezpediency, that even
speaking many of tbe new and when their navels ache from
bold exper i ments , theories, such omphaloobpsis, gas-masks
methodologies, hove resulted in place, tbe O&lt;Upul must confrom the work of bright young tinue. Such a statement comes
students. 'The fact that fai'Uity from human animalo who are
are not viewed 88 students in- frustrated, fragmented, probabtroduces tbe possibility that ly insecure, and afraid of
such people may hove stopped chanae; and on a most funds.
learning after tbe time-honored mental level of value, -...ldprofessional gymnastic rituals view, COIICleptual sclanats, are
and furtbera the view that ouch afraid of Peirce~ of sciindividualo hold a monopoly on ence being 8'1iit ~
creativity. More accurately
4. ) When human animalo
speaking, ouch individualo hold start using ouch emotionally
more of a monopoly over tbeir ........_. wordB as .......,., ....,_
professorial chaira and cubby- ;t;"'ml::"':'tnedom. '8.lld academic
holes than over tbe accumula- ut:e~nce, tbe critical inwatition of new knowtsdge.
gator ought to"bet!in ..........
c.) In Israel Schelller'o \look ing: what is at tbe foundation
PhiiDsophy And Education of the thing? Doeo it make
(Allyn and Bacon, Inc., 1958). to talk about ot:lllllemie
tbere appeara an appropriate (:edom when (realom for moot
J&gt;888llll! from Ralph Barton
umsn ~ni:ldJato~inC:
Perry's buok Rmlma of Value,
entitled ''Education And 'The
arbol 8DUp to awallow,
Science of Education." Perry
accalerator pedal, 110 liswrites the tollowing:
knob, to cbooae t h i 8
• 1ct?i~'C':i t!:!~s!.rli~:J:: ythis •time; t~to-­
in abort, wbeD and
and contribution.
where what toilet howl is to be
It ia quite ClOI&gt;COiveble that lillY flushed: Viebwn, Black AJMr.
0110 of lhMe elemento ahouJd be
80

onJr

accentuated a to exclude or
obecwe the other two: u when
education ia ocmcieived u a mere
depooit and p.-rvafion of the
put, or u a mere fittinc of individuala to 1111 ~ oooiety, or
u a mere prepuation for the
yean to come, wbether io lhia
world or the nezt. Ito full oipjfi.
C&amp;IICO -*" upon the idea of human life u a coinc boncem into
which ~ve pnerationa are
initia"'!!, in which at any · pven
time, they _pley their roleo, and
to which they ci.., a hMh im-

10

pu)ae of cl'fllitiw inwntiveDeM.

'rhia atetement ahould oerve to
correct the abotract, accidllllta,

and oMOidecl- bY which the
role of education io human life
ill belitded. (p. 15)
.. . But facto ha.., led to
1111 - t i o n of tbe dill'ereDCOO

~c~hj!~:;.:.=..=
at Ill -

l:i.!:t?opeoiee homo ...,._
Whenouchpeopletalkllbout
academic freedom what 818
they 1.-ying to what
past? FurthermOre when OJie
stsrlll worryina about academic
~

........... wbeeher

ouch a Btste of alllli8 aistsd in tbe firBt place. Si:bolan,
artiots, ~talists, U...
reticiona, do' things ...ny do
not hove
time to worry
about academic eo:cellence
when tbey are being edlilaroted, consumed by their work:
no Mann'o endlees - of notes
,and combinations.

::::f.

Jlfi/OUf VIEWPOIHT1I
Tlle .................... thle_
.. . . . - • forum far

tile •·

• aDd it ia 0110 of the . . _ " ' - ......... wrlet.J

=::,_'i;:..A~~

"'tile--.
_.,..__

!liecommunltJ. We welcomalloth
ill not • limited ....... .. thouch.
end lattare ••
haYioc fliled in euly yeen, ....-.. no room a left for more. On the

�6

A 'SOcial' Brand of Footha/1 _
A "sociaa" brand of football in which
toudJdowus count three is becomina a
aunpus fa-"e.
ADd, IICCOrdlua to Buffalo RlJiby
Club PreaidoDt ADdy Smitb, the aport

is a fast..II'O'rinl ...., t!uolqbout the
United Slates with dubs em "most

every college aunpus and in

most

....... cities."
1be Buffalo Rugby Club, Smitb
. lilly&amp;, fouDded in the fall of 1961
by a poup of students and faeulty.
"SiDoe ita inaeptian, it has become a
member of the Eastern RU1bY Unicm
and a powet""'- dub in the Northmst," be adds to brins tbinp up to
date.
1be team consists ol underpaduates, paduate students, medical and
dental students, faeulty, students fliJIII
otber acboola in the area and "any
.olber in-...cl parl:iql," Smitb says.
o- the lour years, the Buffalo
Ruaers bave become .....U known_in
the u.s. BDil in EDsland. Smitb 88y8:
"We are the sole '""-'" of the Awan
'Trophy giYI!D to us by the Osdensburs
RUibY Club tbis year." Jn·the summer
- .of 1969, Smitb and HoWie Peerlaon
represented Buffalo 88 members of the
Pbiladelphia tourins side in their trip .
to Eng1and and Wales.
4-1This year's Buffalo Club record
slllnds at 4-i. A ''8" or seoond squad
is 3-1. Bulfalo has beeten Toronto Barherians 16-14, Osdensburs 22-8, Kitch. ener 14-8 and Syracuse ~. while losins to John Carroll 22-14. 1be ''8"
squad holds wins aver Ogdensburg 9o, Syracuse 11.{), Kitchener 11-8.
Tbeir Joss was at the bands of Toronto
Barbarians, 21-8.
Later' tbis montb, the Club will be
one of eight competing· in an invitational tour:nameilt at Cornell. ''Bulfalo
stands a good cbance to walk off witb
the championship,'' Smitb predicts.

Originaled in EnsJand by w~
Webb Ellis in 1823 at RlJiby School,
played by teams consisting
ol 16 players- eight forwards and
seven bacia!.
1bere is no spec:iaJ equipment otber
tban rugger boots and various bee
and ankle braces. Tbere is tadding,
but no bJO&lt;ting. Despite the abun-· danos of contact and shortage ol. Protective padding, Smitb 88y8 serious injuries such 88 · broken hones are a
rarity. However, bruises and abrasions
are not so unheard of.

RUibY is

of comradely ~ the game's
social aspect is not -.fined to the
field. "After each match," Smitb aa.ya,
"the home team tbiOWB a '' - party
for the visitors where tbale is plenty
to drink and Jots of RUibY scmgs to
sing. ~ partie&amp; and - bave
become II)'IIOII.YDIDU witb tbe _......."

Gf'EATURES

No-

AU ball passing is done laterally~
the forward peas is ouL A side may
adYBDCe the ball by ~•. passing
or kickiilg. 1be ball is in play at aU
times otber than when carried ·er
kicked out of bounds. Two 30-46 minute hslves are scheduled witb a fiveminute intermiasion. Further emphasizing the necessity for endurance,
tbere are no substitutions or time-outs
otber tban for injuries.
Scoring can be done in a number of
ways:
a) By canying the. ball into the end
zone and touching it to the ground.
Similar to American football's. touchdown, this maneuver gains tbree
points.
b) By successfully aecuting a "try"
(conversion kick) which follows the
touchdown. 1be kick can be attempted
fiom anywhere on the field on a line
from where the ball was touched down.
To gain the two points, the ball must,
as in American football, pass tbrough
the upright gosJ posts. ·
c ) By successfuJJy making a penalty
kick, wortb tbree points (a place kick
from the point of infraction ) .
d ) By scoring a three-point drop
goal (a drop kick anytime, anywhere,

anyplace).
While Rugby 's "serum" has the look

Board.Urges UniverSity To Ifue at _Least 2 -~l\fulority~
By RANDALL FREY

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

At least two minority roaches will be hired under remmmendatiolls of the Universit1.•
Mediation Board em minority
atblatic problems ~ 8ndings were reJeaaed tbi8 . . t
by Acting PreaidoDt Peter F .
Repn.
·
Acting Atbletic Di!ectar Robert 'C. Deming has confirmed that ...., new JJuUet line within the Atblatic~t is
available for a minority roach.
The Permanent Committee· em
Minority RecruiU...t 111111 Hiring will m a k e another . line
available. 1be Atbletic Departmentis actively .wing Qualilied individusla 88 footliolf and
~ Coaches. Ccmtacts
have aJN.dy been made and
~ intaviewing for tbe po•itions will be scheduled abort- ·
Iy.

7

.Ou!IIW!II fill ...,..
The Medlatlall Board W8B
~'.rmed • . , oalpowtb ol a
"'"""' boyoott fll UIB black
•-..tball ~ IMt Decem-

ber 19. 1be first bo Y. cot t
and fresh.
man teams occurred on Noveniber 10 of last year, prior
to the start of the basketball

against the varsity

season.

Following a meeting of the

Select Committee em E q u a I
Opportunity and tbe canceUation ol a J.sketbaJJ pme witb
8tdly 8nlilk at CJarlt Gym,
FebrUary U, Repn 111111 the
Select Committee aet tup the
Board to deal witb tbe iasuM

~ted by minority athletea.
Ita tbree llll!lllbeq are: Barbara
M.E*Ieclmer in educationaJ
also ol tbe Olllce
o1
Opportunity; Robert
Fleming, prof_
_in.'tbe 'U!B
Law School and University
advac:alle, and . J - L Map-.a, a...c:iate prot_, of,

Jaw.
1be Board lmmadlately instituted ubltration. Out ol
·IIIIIII,Y ........ o1 clelibelatillli. tbe

the tights and ._...n,mties
First, the University adminis- of ....,Q party.
tration and faculty should take
'Ibird, representstiVI!S of tbe
immediate &amp;tepa to. integrate Athletic Department and tbe
the Atbletic Department more administration of tbe special
cloeely witb the broader UJli- academic programs shoUld meet
.versity community. A spec:i1lc regularlY- so- tbat each .cro6J!
i:mprovenwlt would be to make can understand tbe working of
tbe atbletic dinlctor a ~ · · tbe other.
of the Academic Council Of tlie
Fourth, two minority poup
Univallity. Addilianal 111J11011- should be addecJ to 1he
tioaa would be lltuclent an d AtbletiC JleparjuMmt stall. Tbe
AtbJetic ~-- recommendaf.ion inchJdee a DDil' tation em tbe
sCab- tinuinlr .....,....;bili ol ....,
izl!'t and Clll tbe Select CCIIl&gt;- coa~h m ~ a,nd at
1111ttee em Bqual Opponpnity, least oae penGD from tbe stall,
8ecaad, ~AthletiC Depart- or hired em a part..time basis,
ment should PJ'IIP8I8 a hlmd- to JIIOride CODtinUDUB advia&gt;bOok or lliiDil.r doeunalt to be ment to minority or other atugiYI!D ma1bleticpniiii!IC:tawben_ dent atbleta ,
noc:ruiled 111111
Fifth, tbet tbe A:tbletic D&amp;.to
.
,...,.._, atblelea. partm.,tcaaaiderC8nllullyand
'lbia
. Cl!llltain. among lonnulate lor Its llleDibln proother bdidwlioa, llpiiCi&amp;c lacta 1ft11111 cleaigned to meet tbe
em tbe ~flrwneiel bum8ll relations .prableom •.aidaadGDtbe
1;;. tbe ~t eli&amp;~ at~~~e~~c
ana
five - -

=beillg

be- ·=.;::

following-.datiaas · .._iMQI2wwblda
Board alao' uall!d 1be
.....,..... In a report JIIUVide
Unhermliy to _!!Pin e&amp;.ider
dated Y8rda 12 and Nriled atblelic aalde_.~ aplaln M18b!W.U.. a Ulihalllty-wlde
M8ldl 17:
....,.....,_.. ...tlal!lblpa aad lllmwn ....... board wblda

n.-

would provide aJ•Mchanism for
bandlinB such disputes.
In 8UIIIIII8rizing its ......U
impmBioaa ol tbe problems,'
the Board staled: ~·
- believe tbat tbol
•
problem bafore us
from
a failure ol tbe ODtire
sity to """'~~lim 111111 atlanpt
to meet in a 8)'818matic wq a
caa8ict " " ' - c b.e pe~a~ptioaa 111111 wJ... o11111e Athletic
JleparjuMmt em ...., bad 111111
tbe minority atbletes ..,, tbe .

um--

otber."
'Q, ,'n

~ '"6'

Thefts
·

Tbeft of a 6-by-10-foot ·aold
...... from Gooc}ya8r Ten J.s aesuited in tbe arrest o1 tbree
students,
·

.AcCUaeil in tbe "tbeft are ADDetleB. Kunin,liO,olYaabn;
Pearl, 20. ., 46 AJJm..
hurst Road,; aad Rabm Weit.-

s..-

man, 19, 01 8688 Main BINet,
1be trio are dwrpd with baralary 111111 petit larialy.
\

·

�7

. .. , '1, ll'/0

..

College Plmi: Flexib1e, Stable, Communal, Private

m.,.

-------

in which be outlinm the hoped. for
• cbaracter of the futUre University and

establishes a basis for llaible and
c:ilaDiinll clevelopaalt be demaDds a
'aapbiaticated coping with paradoDcal
requirements (which often means pro..
...... for both ends of the par&amp;.·
dax).'"
" - - is aaid to "beliew" that
the Davis, Brocly. and "-&gt;ciatas CXIIDplaz for 8,000 students (2,400 residents and 8,600 llOIDIDUiers) is "an
emollent and bicblY eDCilUl8lling ex·
ample ol what be is after."
'lbe JII8IIIZine sums up:
"In this c:omplex, the fonlis are
lleDble, but the lilbtweilht steel con·
structioo, the overacale tan bricl&lt; fin.
a-, the other materials choeen, as
well as the methods of detailing, are
all consistent and unchanging. 'lbe
basic manner in which .dormitory, din·
ing, Jilinry, claMroom, IOUJllll. com·
munal and cireulation facilities are in·
tepated, is stable and conatant, yet
lleDble, -table and 8x1ensible in
many variations. Opportunities far
group activity and expresaiOII as well
as informal student-faculty encounters

intiniie, yet there are where
each student may find privacy and
quiet.
are

t..ndmllrlt T -

"'lbe architects have found an ...,.
thetic in this usotfblness, llexibility
and c:onsistency. the towers which become landmarlal identifying their col·
1 - are handsome. Well......Jed _ .
space within the colleges is free, a
gift of the intricate and inaJenjous
plsn. A man-made lake, tM aolution
to a drainage problem, will greatly
enhance the same."
According to the magazine, College
A (not nea918rily the ~tal
program of the same name) will be
the first of the six to be built in the
complex. " Also scheduled for early
CODBtzuction will be the library-daasroom wing . . . (which) will link Col·
leges A and D with B and E . . . ."
A two-lane roadway below the main
plaza level of the complex will provide
service aCCI!lllll and will also serve-as
an automobile and bus road. Also on
this level will be libraries for Colleses
A and F, arts and crafts -studios, a

---

CXJIIIPUter c:enier, classrooms and a
book shop.
.

CoJJe..,. D, B, E and C will have a
two.story library space with claasrooms and oaic:es located at the mezza.
nine level. At the plaza level will be
a leclme ball and drama workshop fDt
the use of all six ~
'lbe plaza itaelf forms a continuous
pedestrian link fDt all six ~ .

•. - - . - v..... ..,_

Architectural Record finds that the
complex "will be quite an interesting
and vaned apace interrupted by over·
bangs, broad steps and terraces, and
oftering good views of people, activi·
ties, bqildings and· landscspe. J:ndoor
pedestrian ~ benMth the
plaza interconnect the coUegea, ~
mitting comfortable cireulation in all

-tber.

"'lbe dormitory floors are based on
three typical 10-&lt;ltudent unit plana
separated by stairs and entrance balls.
Each unit bas a common bath facility
and lounge ..,.,... Room sizes vary
and some Binlle 10011111 are provided.
Students can aaranp furniture to suit
"-!WIS."

2 Denns Named, 3rd &amp; a Prexy EXpected
;

ate prof-.r of anatomy in
1966.
.
Dr. F.......,. holds the DD.S.
from the University ol Maouri
8cbool of Dentistry (Kansas
City) and the Ph.D. fnim Med·
ical Colle!le of VirJinia.

--Provoat

am- died F...,.

".....uent reputation for
teacbinl ability and his contri·

anti

butiaall in

Ill-'

-m.."

-~

and

8:1:·

be "will be

anou~"
·
FcJrua· deu .James A. Bna:·
lilb, in that Post .._ 1960,
will CliiDtinue .. prolaasor ..
on! bialcv.
.
'lbe l'l!_aimacy deliil&amp;hip awarded to 40-yeu-old Dr.
MicbMI A. 8cfnrarlz, a ...,....
her ol the &amp;bool'a faculty sinae
M§ 1168. Bartier, Dr.
Scllwarta bad hem Jll'lliDCited
to tan . . - . - o l ~

...sL!.:":.o.;!.

Sur..-~

•a
- - •..::::and lid~
.
llaldiDI the .......... fraa:D
'I

�·~ 7,1170

8

TUESDAY-12

THURSDAY-7

GREPORTS

ON

GpEQPLE
NEW CAMPUS
APPOINTMENTS

PRESENTATIONS ·
-want reIAUPIY. and

....,r-r,

~~·"E:~:.
ol
Sulfate by Mam- .

-

c.-

!_UI7.
and Ito aiDi&lt;al
lmpll&lt;a~ Sympooium ''Pie_&lt;!!_~toc.-r

'lllempy," W'dliamlbuqh. VL
...O.te

I&amp; ...a.Kr .. IIIIJINS,

C:::=.~·u~

-

SIDdioo, '"llle Freach En-

ticbteameat: Maine tream or
- t e r ? " and "Jacobinism

N.::.a:; :'7:\:. J.:-!!u~.ec~weo.

liVI8KCND CbHP&amp;R&amp;NCJ: TB&amp;&amp;.!a
P'ILK Slall&amp;: Featurinc .,.._

IIUft's BABY (U.S.A., 1987). DiJeeled by Romon Polanoki and
olarrinc Mia Farrow, John Cu- . Ruth Gordon and Sidney

=rira~~r=r,.~

eeller of ·the ume title. Confer~
enoe Tbeatre, Norton, check the
abowcue
for · Unleoo otberwioe DOted, otudent ticbto ue
60¢ lond r-dty and otalf are
$1.00. Film aloo obown Saturday
and Sunday.
"
PHYSICIANS' TI:U:PIIONJ: ~ :

aeoc:iate

~rr-... ~&amp;.,;;,~..

Spdnoored by Recional Medical
Plogram, Dr. Sylvia 0 . Richardeon, DY8t&amp;XL\ AND l&amp;UlNING DIB-

1970 Atllmta" C . t e Medical
Aooombly, Ga.

AIIILITIBS Uf CHIUJBEN, 51 Partici-

I&amp; IIILTON PlatJa, ~te

VIBrA: A VISTA

I&amp;. ~~ T. OUCS, 1&amp;.,

prof-r, hiolory, "Cunpua Unreot,"
Natioaal c 0 "n c il of Jewiah
W""""''o Clabo and St. Mark's
Qmreb, Bulfalo.

--

F-!{IDAY--8

Da. TBOJUa L. DAD,

-

pating Hoopitala, 10 a.m.

U/B BI- and Baby Blueo.
Goodyear Cafeteria, 8 p.m.
UNt'9'D8I'I'Y WO~B a.ua IJQUAB
IWI&lt;Z OIIOUP: Collen: . Mike and
Betty Stark. Foculty Club, Harriman Library, 8:110 p.m: .

SUNDAY-10
OONCERT• • : Featurinc The Uni·
veroity Cboiro with the Bullalo
Philharmonic Orcheotra and Mau-

Gh.'::k~o.u;,~ ~ B~~..':;:i

Brahms' "Alto Rhapoody." Kleinhano Muoic Hall, 2:110 p.m. Porfoi1D8DCe aloo Tueodoy, May 12,
8:110 p.m.

recruiter will be

:e~lrid1;o: ta:,.m.N:on::.m.

IN'IaNA.TlONAL

FOLK.

DANCINc • :

Instruction in basic atepe duri.ng

=

lint hour, 110 Diefendorf Annex,
8p.m.

PUBLICATIONS

PACULTY COKP08E&amp;8' OONCEKT • :

'&amp;ri.;'li~to;;a&amp;"i&amp;ren~

lu, William Koth!o, John Tbomaa
and Robert MoJo. Baird, 8 :110 p.m.

SATURDAY-9

=.,efi~f :-byHal,'!~!;. t.,clmJ:.;

DJVAJUO CBAIDID ENSDIJIUI OONCDT0: Fea~ Mary Beth Pie~

Bullalo Foculty Defonoe Fund at
the door: pneral $3.00, student.
$1.50.

eoprano; Chari• Haupt, violin;
Jerry Kirkbride, clarinet; Stephen

~:t~.:=: ~~by~~

=-11w::;

~~!~
Auditorium, 8 p.m.
IIJ'IIINQ 8UfG

BI'OIQ'I ON I'ED'U
op-Mpie" Is the fonner

____ ___.,..._
Newl ol Your canoo.- ol'llle ...... _ t h e _
ol etudont end ltd ........

......... ...c~ .. - o t. honan

_

- ·you..,__......you-.......................... ...
..........,. - t o _ - your

......... the
pulllllled - . . ..... the - -

...,.. ... """'-"r - ·

, . , . . . . . . . . Send ,...., ...
...... .. Cllnll .......... ~· ot
.,....., l'lllllcllllanl .......

2111 . . . . . . Rlpolt fonnl
- ~ ........ by . . . . 22211.

Edward AJbee•a WHO'S
will be
p...,.nted at the Harriman Theatre Studio at 8 p.m. for the
APR.UD OP VlaCINU. WOOU'?

FOLK

DANC&amp; WOIXBBOP•: Fillmore Ruom, Norton, 2-5 p.m.

"Report~

VJJIGOfiA WOOLP TO BENI:PIT HAYES

45• •:

OUT" :

Fea~

the

Bill Mye rs U Georf!. Teu

Span_l)er is Martha, Darid Lamb
ie Nu:lt, and Roea1ind Cramer ia

~o~.E~\!.Y l',.!l"r:f ~':!:

dent in theatre, who is reloted to
one of the 45 !!Y marriqe.
8D1101t ..:rr.u.•: F~ Am-

-a-torr
ron Cbodoo, clan-t. Worb by
Brahmo, Mondel-.lm, J:&gt;ebu.Y
and Gena. Baird, 8:110 p.m.

MONDAY-11

�</text>
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                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>VOL -1 - NO. 15

STATE UNIVERSITY-AT BUFFALO

APRIL 30,' 1970

CUNY-SUNY .tUnfair Policy' Cited

-SUPA·Taps Schillo;
SeEks Salary Policy

f:£ $;...8

n.- 8ahlllo, aule~at
vlce prealdeD" -..... aad
AIDilllll7 ................... a
._...s ..... -fllollbnaad

As Siggelkow Resigns

A "Ccmfenoce ~ New York
. State Faculty," comprisina
............ ~ tbe faculty~ City
Um-a;ty ~New York and Ill
....._ ..... wWIIe.-1
StaiB Univenity, was formed
UJXIIl at tile lllllll1 Slate Ullhw- •
at a ..-'ina beld April 23 at
..,. Pl F
wl .At a
lbe Graduata Faculty Ceata
" - ! Bleelha lleallat. To.
Ill CUNY in New York City.
•
AccordiD&amp; to U!B ~
Club.
.
P!lul Kurtz, lbe Stata Unhasity . Ill lbe &lt;XIIllereDce ia
Ia ...,_ Ill tbat llll8llaa.
~ tbe "Committae ....
Clllnld SUPA loml .,......_
a Um-a;ty," CJl1lllllbed earlier
BW B. 8dBidt baa asked.
thla manlh.
~ U•lnralty I'Naldmt .
Cb11iJman of tbe aew poup
~
~~is John· Sherwi1, formerly
..... .-~- Clll
c:bairman of tbe Faculty Senate
~-~~~~1'a~~~Ill SUNY and a faculty_
Ill• ~ JNIIIIIIt
.·
• her at New Paltz. Olber mema ....,. plaD tar
..,.. ere: ......, Edward Gmy, taa Ill tbe ~·· EDcu- ·
·
ta.l - - PclllillaliL liD. tec:llllicm ~ Commmil- tiwl Coimcilere ~ Aldo
8dBidt IliaD 8lillllll lar darifl- catiaaa Reeourc,s; Pablldty, 8aDardo Ill BiDcbomitdl and
'liU:::.l.
~ to (liD.) .PIQ&gt;llle ~ ....._ Professor 'Kurtz, fc.- SUNY.
• "111 ~ llilldt iliaD- ,.fD tbe ........ CrelliUa. Pro- . 'Ibe CUNY -tetiwla ...
- . . . . .._. lie ....... to ~ ~ ~; lbe Colmcilere Prof_,._ Louie
tbe un lwfRM .....,__.
~ Ra,yiDaDd et.n- Heller Ill CCNY, vice preaila addilialliD ......,.. - - berlaiD, cltildar, . ,_.,._.~ dent, Prota.Jr Edw8rcl Ficbt.
.
lnatila•...........,tlleSUPA s,.tan&amp;; ~ MarpnJt .-of~Colletleandl'lo'Ibe. ~emporary ~
Naaliaalllll c-.~t~ae·~ pro-· ~..:t.'~podaS....uel Abrahamsen of =-'("~ ~.2!)
lfllcArtbar,'mtstent
cmtinuaa to bold juriadiction
...... lar ..... ...-&amp;. Arts and letters; GoYThe purpoea of lbe faculty ..... lbolle C8IJI!8 clpenons who
. - - .................. CCIIltllluDr. ADIINw l{olt, ~~to coordinate eftc.-ta of ~"':! ~
~
iDJ ~ ~
deaD, Ondualie School; ~UNY and CUNY faculty re- pr&gt;o&lt;
April 9 '
•
tal)l
and:Cabetltuth!a.
a:ardina comman problema in · the SUNY. Trustees (which
!ICtiichaJtat
11111,. dlreciDr, U~ P1am- New Yolk State. In particular, created ~..~~~court)
p•
h 'Iliad 111111t.
.
Dr Kurtz 8IIJII, the~ _ayatam _..,..._.
, a
• m
~ NclliiiDilili1ii81iiiD 'tfie-lliiOr~
~ ''to"'Protect ·t ie·. Ul!i,'[I!!Nity !P'!!&lt;l!B!;D~· '!hi
•
ry, will ..., be· .......,a. at Tus- .........., J110C011B apinst vii&gt;- n-cJaY.
· ·
• ....._ to clay's llllllltinJ.
· ~ aniJ · timidation and to "lbe Ketter Ccmmissioo will
tile .......
Ill .._..,
U... Scbmidt off1!1recJ four acliieve
of acadomic ex- cmtinue to have juriadiction
~-~~ JM1inte Ill Information " - - ce8enoe in the face of cmtinued for 60 days fnl!n the date of ~
Reaourcee; dele- tial" to ftepa's adjpl;lication of · eftc.-ta to ,lower educational ~-~ ~ ~
l8lie liD 8lata SUPA, l.ewralce the -ttaa .........U., uncJaa. atendanla.
here -~ did
.
Draloe, . . . . . _ liD Ilia ..__ sif"l8d ~ alaff:
The Conference issu.ed a w
s
ta •
not ~·ve
&amp;hDol
· •1-'Ibe llooE, Allen, Ham- fla""'-t ClOIICeming the cur-. a . 8UIDliiOJIB pnor to_ April 9
Ill Deatilolzy.
iltdl study (Ill aaJariea) was nmt emergency at CUNY, ~be ""!'n! by lbe new bear"cci-~Ciolll.-..
autborbodiDcOrraetanobvious which is undergoing a student ~A~- 0 _ _ ~ ..
••
-.lttae dlaJr.. ("""""""".,. ,.;. I, eol. II) atriloe. Among the deaw&gt;ds of
~~ ..._._.t • ..,...... wu.o
tbe miljtant students is "50/ a~po_mt lbe new IMming COID·
fH' panty in goyernance and a IDIBBIOII of. ~ faculty and
clemand .tbat the leliure of each three administrators, as preprofeaeor be reviewed every "!"'"bed by the ~- These
three years. The 'Confer ence su: appomtees will, m ~
views "with ,grave alarm the be- select tiJn!e _students to SJt on
Jinning effort to UDdermine the C01DD118S101L
tenure, as a aafeguanl fc.- acaNO FACULTY HEARIdemic freedom.· It deplores the Actinti PrHklent I'Wier F. Repn
attempt to iudae the aimpe- has announced. In - - to on
of profellllOIS by tbe cri• terion ol political relevance." . ~:~.
If what .bas emerged at inp oplnit ony foc:ulty
n
· CUNY is 'erierali~ed, Dr. befo,. the Temporary Hear na
Kurtz says, 1t would mean that CommisSion on c.mpois
pno professor would be secure
·
5

I

, . . . . .-

=-~atJ~

-.-.=
...

_

Ke++,.... QI"'Up
Still' Active

c.::.z:hfw

.......

~;:::m=:

• a,...w;:-:=•

(v.;)......,... ·

to~ ~...=-

:C:::t"

;

._Mer-

...m

....::is

:U.....

.

:::..u:- ...

(eolllilwe"" -

3, eol. l ) t i
_o_ns__:(_Kette_r_Com-,---m-lsalon:..:....:._:&gt;_·_ _

·,UIB Gains AAUP &amp;cognition for Salaries,
But Is ~ to Reuieiv,Faculty Arrests ·
Conditione at U/B CIDie in
for both praise and proliest 'at
56tb~annual meetinl of lbe
Ameriaui A.oc:iation. of Uni-mty Profeaaors (AAUP) in
Ia AnpJea thla ......... .
On lbe credit aide, tbe 198910 - - - faculty Olllllpi!Matiag.cl $17,723 1'1-' tbe Uni-mty 29th in the nation and
8ret within tbe Stalie UniversitY- Ill New York fc.- a__,.
full-time aalariea and countable
. frinae ............ It DOled
tbat ~ avepp Olllllpi!Mation
11tunt placed the Univenity in
• tbe . . _ IIIJIII!" as Ivy I.eque
8Cboola. .AAUP said that the .
indicalied tbit tbe ULB
..._,. dlualbi "is outete11dina
Ill at least - - nepect... In
retard · to tbe _ . . t i o a

•t6e

-.m-

..,._,AAUP~thet

tbe -

Ill · ~·

t.cbint

aaaistante at some univenitiea
tends "to overstate lbe typical
remuneration of.tboae canyin£
the teadling burden." Such ....
sisteota ere not included in the

a-.
Fitures fc.- average comi"'D-

sation at some of'.otlier-SUNY
unite are aa follows: Binlbamton, $171453; Stdly Brook, $17,374; Aloany, $16,993; Buffalo
Stell!, $14,1166; Erie Commu-

::!tt~$~

On the debit '!ide. •AAUP
deleptas - t .... nicord IJll·
int 1be U/B adminlatration to
"'eriowtbe-taand~

inp related to tbe arreata" Ill
the Hayes 45 and "to take all

, _ . , . ...... t o - that
the academic fr-.lam and
tanae rilbla Ill tbe mlllllban Ill
tbe t.cuJty - DOt in dapr...

- The AAUP ~ aad Incoming presidents !!~of

Ralph 8.

:Vale and 8anfanl H.

~

Berkeley - and
three staff members aleo
planned to .... a telepam Ul
~ Attomey Mic:mel Dillon, ezpreaainJ "deep OODCBl1l
Over tbe pave tbreet to tbe
....U-beinf Ill our coJleeM and
univera1tiea crealied by tbe
broild scope Ill ~ ....
cently issued for ~t
and other ._.... • . • 'I'bwe Ia
"no clemcmstraled .-1 to compel poocluction of .. broad a
range · of 8S181tiwl materiala,"
the poup said.
As far .. poeaibla ........ Ill
U/B ia - - . 1 , the AAUP
ataff
tbat ~
- - - atap Ia tabD ...., after
ezhauatlve inveetitatiaiD. 'l'bil

....,..sed

(~011-J,eol.l)

�=-

2
New state.Travel PolicyIncreases Allowed Rams
. . "'-'cb&amp;
inabolloi ... IIIOIIII_.be~

from bla . . . . ,... tbNe .......

..
,...The
w follaorinl
tine.::.......
.....IDd-

U~ ....,._.. from
lbe . . . . a(~. mt. pbllae.,.. ...SC
be ,__
..... on lbe. UIB At.ml Aa......... Aianual W_.a
lliQ- . . . . - at u. IIMrtb19.

w--...

Puffer Fete

lolled ..... lodlinl wil
data. are t.eken in apart·
_..,
tiJuriat This SlJTI!lay
. _ . , ....
rea1o1o1aa,
ott- u.n
al .........
A ~lion bonorlnc Dr.
....
.._,.........,,May allbe trawler'•
a. u. .,.....,.,...._will. OriiiMlloclilq
""' Claudet•orEb.=' -~-~;
in lhe Faculty Club,
~~'=L!; ~~~ o:- be
May 3,
6-7
llilkllr. PlliliD C. . . . _
"'\Vi,;; an....,_,.. il in trav~

--·
.
.
.
.
.
=

proZim-

...uipa ....._
~

Janet~

family.
~

illlltalal . . . _ u.n. full day,
al ....
iDeun aal ratea wllf be
and Allm D. SQp,
lbe loiiDwinr
":itbe
al CUI- . allolled: breallfallt, $1.66; lunch.
tural A&amp;ln and ........ ol $U16; dinner, $6.31.
llllllic.
.
'n. policy p r o v i d e s
Dr. Adler Clpllll8 lbe day's . . _ liberal" "lra..,. advaDces,
ac:bedule at 9:30 a.m. wilh ..,.. lbe announcement aaya. "'f
mub on "'l11e BMic Causes food and Jodlinl" ""' CMll' ·per
a1 8tudoat u~ Hlslor- diaD
•
· ·..- lhe
ian'• Villlr;" Mr. BlliaU will mui~~C&amp;Il· be ..,.
.... "How c.oa.nu..-tiw ia ~"
Modem Artr at 10:60 a.m.
Remalninc aa tbey wae are
Aftor ,.lunch. Dr. Zilnnaman lhe paljciee _..tina: taD fare
will a--1 bls tbooqbta on ( $8 IIIIDiimum) time al depar"'llle Putnre ~ 111e Um-.ity ture &lt;to quaUiy f... aa~ ...
!n AnaicL" Fi&gt;llcJirin« a mus- lolrance) and ~--.
ical inlllrlude, Mr. s.pp will . For additional information,
!A'~ "!e "lue Going CODtect lhe Tra..,. ~t
m Prioe for lhe
$6.26 per at 2329.
includina refreebments,
'"-r al art; llr. lfamn

c-.

r.::::......

..,lodlinl...._,

=ill

,all leclun!s.
For ~tiona, CODtect lhe

Atu.U &lt;Mio8, 831-4121.

$6QO,OOO Tah
For Phmes
-w.e.

.,.__._,...-_
... b)'

-.q appio.

cd7 ~ A ....._ poo· .....,...., _.... ..,toin-

-

that ............ -

I.ciCd,y, tbe AAUP U. llllpl wilblll --.._,..._.
....... a l - - .. "''iblY llmila ........ Ill!&amp;~ ....
to lia ~"' !' ...tiaa81 - ~ to our- .....,.....llliw.
pncedoot far edenliWI ..n:b m..-fty.
·.
al canfidentlal ...u-.ity ..,.
We illao NQIIII&amp; lhU :JOU
--b)' (lbe) polltieally moti- follolr up - , _ iDIIW Jioti...llllllN , •
ficaliaD al ......t illlllivltluU
Reaanla IUbpoenMd ""'' 1) by ,.,... illlllrmlu .... af•
niCarda "iDdudina fecled . , . _ .· ...... IIPIICific
but not limited ·to letters cil riiOQida al tbella ...aut to
.....,....,.,.lion and corre- be tumed _ . to tbe ·Grand
~ wilh previoua em- J.., .. that ...., taka appJo&gt;:en!.. ol 64 DIIIDIItl .......... prapriate . . to defeDd themlncludinl tbe 45 (wbo are sel-.
faciDI ~ and additional ,
. 8DBelY )'01118,
cbltrple al criminal CODiempt
-Marvfn J . Feldman,
.... Criminal tl!oiPUB in City
.........

.........,_.t

wil -

diJntal 8IIIJINM
be eJ..
lolled:
(a) $2' in N- Yolk~
.... ~ Roc:klud,

OountiiiL
·
{b) $19 "'-b!n in NYolk Slate.
c) $31 outaide N- Yolk
8lale t.....,&amp; trav.el outalde
U.S.).
_ A per diaD al $1lhrill be al·

ol UIB Ia

Leeal.,........_

employee -

mid

,._~I. ool. IS)

·zr t illlid;J
· ,.

• To qadfy far . ; per ........
lbe - t . . . , . . "the

Alumni Plan
-~Day

-·

uiB aacl AAUP--

deo ,,
held
Sunday,

- - . ww

from
p.m.
· Dr.' Puller wbo will retire
from lhe University on A\IIU&amp;t
31 · of Ibis, year has been a
IIIO!Illla of lhe faculty since
Sepliamber 1938. He has serwd
lllldot&lt; all lbe full-time c:banoellors or praoidents, from Samuel P. Capen through Martin

Meyerson..

·

Holding lhe B.B.A. and M.A.
from lhe University of Iowa
and tbe Ph.D. from Stanford,
Puffer taltlht at lhe University
al Pittaburgh before COIIlinl to
Bulfalo At U/8 be baa been
an instiuctor ~ an aasistant,
~and full professor of
-~-•-'~tive _,.,.;_

His ......,....""
~·
ence at lhe University has induded: assistant dean, Scbool
of B_usiness. Administration
(19U-42);acting~; ~

•

=~:.:.~

~f&amp;AfUP

c:urrlcula, student .....,u;,.,t, Mr. Jobn Crai:J, Jr.
teachin&amp;,.~ admlnialratiw ·.eow.el b 8lale Um-mty
staff ill
A, B and· F;" . al N- York
.... 2) financial recorda al .... Dear Mr. Clary: .
Fai:ulty Student Aasociation·
It lwB CDDe
oar attentiOn

tbe Student Aasociation ;;;;{
tbe Student Publications Board.
~ Cllllmellor . . ....
45 baa obtained a court order
directinl tbe District Atliarney
to &amp;bow came why lhe BUb~!'*"' abolild not be aet aalde.
Se,ys lhe AAUP local c:bepta-,
"tbe 'COIIIIiderations dted . • .
ue preciae!Y tboae wbida Uni·
Yerllityatudentaandstaffmilht
ezpect ita ......,. and oounael
to raise: lhat tbe aubpoena
vinlatee tbe First, Fourlh. Fifth
and Fourteenlh Antendmoala
to lhe . Consljtution; lbat -tbe
recorda are inelevant and in.
competent to tbe Grand Jury
in-u,ation; lhat
liance
wilh 1be _,....._,=create
irreparah~ to tbe COD· •
fldential relatiooi¥P. be'-t
lhe University and tla faculty,
and in eame Cllliea tmCI'Otldl
upon lhe proprietary interest
in reoan1s voluntarily aupplied
to .lhe inatitution; and .fltrlher
-ttia.t _oampliance , would violate
tb&amp;Stat.e Code" of Ethics." ·

to
actin&amp;--

that your aaa~H:ia&amp;ea, Mr .
on- Win8eld and Mr. law-Doolittle,
sel to memben al oar atalf,
beve KI-t -lepl advice wbida
.is at beat ~tent apd at
worat unelhlcal
'lbey ._ve Informed IDIIID-

bera of our atalf, lnduding Provoat Ira ~ that in ll!etifyinc ' liefan lbe . Brie County
Grand Jill)' they muat sign
waivers of Immunity on tbleet
of cliacbarae from -lheir State
poaitionL ln tbe liabt : al lhe
Perla caae 81111 tbe· ..-leota
~ in tbe Staa.Y Brook
Marinp. :your -.ciatee oertainly abould bow . _ misguided tbeil advice Ia.
Furtber, 'in. a telepbone COD·
veraation wilh .Actiq Preaident
IIepa a few d.aya aco. be assured me lhat your ollloe was
seUin&amp; up I8Yieor procaduna to
prOtect tile inatltution from inappropriate_ ~Ia upon · ita ~•.,we. find in·
&amp;teo!d lbat
111e
• t.ellini our "ljtidf ........._ auCb
aa D,etui .Claude Welch. .to be
y ·unqlective aa .tp
which .Ncorda ""' to be .....
leaaed.
.
•
"We would lib a clo&amp;dtion of
1be role al :your o111oe. We apact you to ...... a flduciarJ ..,_
~tionohip to die t1nivallity, in·

."""",...,..*

of Bustness Administration
(l!M2-45) ; acting cbairman, · LM~~ft trom"AAUP
• • ·
Department al ~
The Esecittive _
Committee al
&lt;.l!M2-45}; dean al admin181ra- lhe csmpus AAUP. Chapter has
tion (1946-51); - . . . . . ~ •r81eaaed tbe following three poTelepbane
for lhe complloller
(1~1-65); V!C8 sition letters relateil to lhe
University's 2,0.'U office In- ph!Sident .for ~ daira, Grand Juzy investigation of
will cost an estimated $605,800 ~95lk&gt;reaenl ~ serwd as act- campus disorders and .the actidlllinl fiacal ~71, a memo- 11111 ~ ID 1956-56.
vities of lhe staff of lhe Uni-randum from the Chief Ac!lity Coimael's Ollce:
countant's Office ail;ya.
Dear CbanoellOr Gould:
dudin&amp; fiB ........UCatall Thus
The IIJIIIIlal cost per line ia
The tw6 enclosed letters, it Is IDII8t cliaaluinll to . find
$298. WATS line -..ice will
t.eken together,~ au. member&amp; al :your'oAla acting
be $37,800 for five linM-thre8
BdwaM Albee's play, "Who's deep ...... ol _._,.about -th'! lib tbey- ...... far..tfle Disto 'be added in May.
AfNid of VlrPnia Woqlf?" will subpoena.
and lhe ·ft'IIIICIIIie, al - trii:t Attomey'a ..,_ f
Under lhe University .b e preaented at 8 p.m. Sunday, Mr. . Crary's o11ice to il We
In tbe lilbt al tbe Joiecoinl,
May 10, at lhe Harriman Tb&amp;- think you should be aware al - request ..._ you nilnoolle
atre Studio for lhe benefit of !he-potential damqe to -lhe Mr. WiDiald and Mr. Dilallide
not cowwed by WATS -w.e. lbe Hayes_ 45. AdmisaiiJn wiD Uni-.!ty lhitt can ..Wt from from 'tbe lk6lo OllllllliL• We
""' .......... - l e a l Such be by a $8 donation to tbe Buf. tile behavior of Mr. Craiy's lnlald to bdnl lbla ~
lon1 diatance calla are' now falo Faatlty Deifeuae Fund -at "&amp;taft. We do not bow, but aloaal bebaviarr tD ~ aUadiaD
billed by atenaion DUIIlber lhe door. Studoala will be aslred suapect U.t u- actions al al
tbe 8lale A1tant1iJ o.laal'a
ralbw U.U "Q" coda -·
to· donate $Lii0.
lhe Slate'• Counael ...., not 1n .,.., .... ~ am Lib-

•

e
.
zln!mel

We&lt;M'for45

=~~
r-

U/1 All•i II IIIItH States (36,562)
a,ru 1, 1170

·would ,...
---~~---~
~~Feldman.
:a=
bncllaL

yet, lhelr actions in
to lhe aubpoena and Indeed In
Jll!f8Uinl a bald line at tbe CODt trial of 45 Bull'alo faculty
m8mben will ultimatel7
adyeraely upclll :your ....._

L NtlaEI.

..

• .

~

Prealdont

SUNYAB A:AUP

• • • ,
...... Dear Dr. Rapn:
·•· ......,., . ,
The~ Committee a1
or·-&lt;-~' -. -· •·•·
SUNY/at Bulralo Cbapter ol
. ..
1 tbe American AMoeiation ol

•

u~

Pr--..la claeply

about .... aubpoiinit
a-1 _!o _you b)' Dilltrld At·~~~n~ey Dillon on April10,·19'10.

The ted .... ecape al ..........
.......... . . , . and .far..-...

MUP

011.- ~

'
In addltba tD IIIII ......_ tbe
U/B atlpl8r ........ Clam-

mittee·- - - - • PllllliaD
~ on acall.-to ........,

u-ta.-cl . . . .
ln,luaadila.F:...,__.s
-altial -......._aftbe

...

I

I

~I
~ af ....
paaitba al tile .
.._..
al U. ~
.that. ~
-~
:::..
........
in
....-.
· ~

....our-Uiliveal(tyl.
..,..·u..-,...e-....
· · . -•. -~ ........ _-iiiill. f!l tiP• 'Ttie -::\'.:!
........
l PGIItiill tD .... 0/B.OiiiDdf•
-•...,
Will
·CIIIIF
IIi•..
clealloY _.._.,within
::=,at;::\~r;!:~ cr;SiO t:o~~
alflimk, ailical.._."'
_... .., raoau,
......................
tlli

~

not

and

praalDI.,.._ .
at
~•aftlle'W

~

aeipl

Flrlip c.trlls (441)

. .

=...tan
immedia6e •~· GD. lbla
impclrtaDt ....,.,
•
~
..,..,_, --

m

to_......
,.
==..c:..~:,
17!
="='=...:.
...
•..,. ...........
~

It .. dllloalt

--~

aa.~

-~

...

1az tipM\ We • • tz.li.," ..._.. at 801ft· M ~
tution lllaald ..... .... ... . . . . .... .......,.,

�&lt;;

Books

frir Asia

-2 More Profs Receive Cootempt Senteni:es

�~

-~ .

W/ty Not Have tlie.Hayes Hal145
Reactim frOm Rochester:.
~.
.
.
·. , ,
· . 'Revolutionaries MuSt Go' ·
Form 'Center of ldentifjcation -at .Pen? sniTO!rs
w.
~BOrroR'S

Nom:

p1a .., -

the

Ia Gordaa

:IJ!:'.:.:=-"a.n~

';::
jail

-':-I'• --

1odD a
- I a ....... 11o Vloo Pnoi- w- G. a-IL
DMr Warna:
TlyiDc delpenllely to fiDd
.OV. 1iD1D1 iD the douds
that have awep'"\ over the
~ HaD 46" iD c a 15
. Mardi, It - . a d 8to me tliaC
tbere
educational
value
It Ia toward tumiDI
positive
_ . . _ thati- write you.

"reddaU

NOTE: ......

~

whale Ia 8ldBcioati.Y
As
an llllVinlammt," the jali 18
hmcliolull iD the ~at tradltiOD
ol modem arddtecture ....t the
pi08piiCt ~the. ~ ........
caaloured by 'the buB 18 surely
derivatift ol MondriaD.
·

f-Pti"'-

!:i

wardeD are aJf mote vlslbla.
U the ~ um-aity is
!'t.Jast IIIDYiDI "!to a decell~izlid. wbaD eDYll'CIIIIIII!Ilt (~.e.;.
110
ol bmd (which show&amp; to pre- the umer eity shlitto), t1*1 we
ciaeJy what exteDt we have ad- must .puah ahead. beyond that
aflarWI!vaDCed beyond the suburban half-way bouse, ll!" ~!ton! f"'!'t
uniYeftlity), and no mainte- collep,of ~deep mto ~ J!n&amp;nance ew security start What I .., Jl!l1lliD8 open admissions'
I ............S=~· of ClOW'III!, is tbat the rather than all this foolilqJ
lt7 ol the
•
45 set- jail_ is the ultimate iD a ''total
tiDI up a
m the Erie eDYll'CIIIIIII!Ilt" learnins sitUa- C1.~ll.ror\T1\J'T'C'
· County Penitentiary durlns tion which combines UvinJ with -!I J.J:., YY C VJ.J." J. v
~ anticipated 30-da,y . stay lleatm,. Whereas most coUeps
this IIUIIIIDI!r. Surely, this would are bsvins difficulty &amp;eCUriDI
be - the best IIIIJIIlP)e of com- the atlantion of students our around with ClOW'III! canis.. We
munity .-vice to culturally de- prospective rollese would 'have might use the rourt system as
priwd dtiJlens ....t iD the best a truly "captive" audience-not our sole screeniDg devioe; it has
spirit of Martin Meyeraon's meDtally but phyaically where the JUise' of objectivity but aC:
""""ters of ideDtificstion." No it rounts'•
· '
tually all the cards seem to be
one needo ideiltificstion more
New ~d there be
dif- stacked iD such a way as to 8.1than thoae with niJII!bers. a trait ficulty over the tenu~issue most insure open admissions.
shared by both pnsonen1 and .which has already besun to We must push education ahead .
students'!- _the m&amp;J!'Yeftlity.
Pique the other rolleses. All and stop mourniDs over the
Recotlnizinl, as did you, that a&amp;ipoiDtmeDts are tenn ( though plight of the 45. They are on
auniversityundeurestrainins tlie student p""""""'" at his the~ld.ofatrulynewed~ ....t ~ stress of daily owri sj&gt;eed) and ·faculty and 'ucational experience iD the long
VJeWins rioklad policemen Ill! students are all on probation for evolution of the modern uniJU8Ids was DOt far II!IIICI\'ed varyiDI periods. A CIHIUthor of versity from ivory tower to warfrom a penal environment any- The Temporary Society should daD's tower. All that is needed
way, the relsticJas'!ip of such a recognize the advantaps iil- is JM!l'SPe..-ti ve.
,
oollese to the Umversity as a herent iD a lfOUP of faculty 45 -Available
·
w f 1 tall
Ulllib most other~

per-

we ...wei be requestiDg 00
IDIIDBIIt atructure,
1arae plots

baa_,-

dlaater--

.uu. w·

~;. . _'_- ~ .

.

!

1

I

.

.

u· .~ .·~
-

·

....... iD

....t etuaoata tbat caatiDuMiy --=~lliollw~i;' :I: ~":::r~
c:blulaaL Same Jeaft,- to . ~'{y~~~ - ao 011 ....t 011 to the -..am.
·retum to their cultural· booae, · of April 18 • • • - .
tumiDI paiDl
whereas oti&gt;. milbt feel a
'Olere are ~at the
The ~ ·apiD, .Ia DOt
~--- ol ~ty to AD top olthe State UlliWinity o1. just OD a .c ademlc theory but
iDstitutiOD wbere tbli IIQ!Il'Cia, N- Yod&lt; (SUNY) ....t Ito alao 011 ~ ~the restraiDiDir order, aDd the bill branch at BUifalo. 'lbey tiOD ol studeDia •
qmts ol
must be filled by au,MII. petriotic 1111!11 Who will sweep StatesuppOrted cam~ dean of
revolutionaries.
·
CbaDcellor Samuel QOuld of
SUNY reBipled last week. The
p~ of State UniYeftlity
of BUlfalo (SUNYAB) baS
beaD vacant since the January
resignaticm of Martin Meyerson, ....t ActiDI ~deDt Peter
F. Repn now ssys he wants to
return to teoic:bins.
r These maD aren't necessarily
to blame for the radicsls at
SUNYAB and elsewhere. Perhaps they didn't even know
what was soi.ng on.
·
· But their suooessors should
know, and they should stamp
out the tiix-suf.ported teachins
of violent re;vo ution.
•
•
•
_
'!fe offer .as.Exhibit A the official description of 45 courses
iD ·~Social Chanse iD America
302.'' taught for the first time
this year at Buffalo (a copy
came to our attention this
week).
These courses and their
teachers-at least five of Whom
were arrested !of tryins to take
wi":'l:le~ over the SUNYAB adminiatra45 felfows and feel confideDt tion buildiDJ- are not merely
that there will be a continual providiDJ instruction iD ·ab-

. star&amp;. 'i:., :n..s:

cbaqe." The

-n

prospec-

·~-~- baldly: ~ will be courae. ....t

a riiilicat

we aball
a t~empt to renew the limehoDanod dialectic fusiDg &lt;of)
· tboulht· ....t lll:tiOD."
;And who is PBYiDB for all
this..!_ _
.... tupayers of the State
of Ne.w Y~ the majority of
yd""!' ~- ~- as
~white Americans"- a
loathincly cleacribed by
, ~ iD this way:
'1¥ J8 inclivldualistic, ronfonnistic; racist ....t anti-&lt;l!&gt;m_ munist, and. I!" u- bis life
boned dowil m the often un"""""'""Y and ha·rmfu1 rommodities lie has beaD forced to
produoe.
.
. "Meanwfl!le. ~ produoe of
hiS ~~. alienated labor
. JOE;&amp; mto the bands of a &amp;rJl!ill
• rull!'J class, who rule Amenca
( ariii m~ &lt;J! ..the world )

C

through

u:'perialism."

anes.

-

We..don t contend that all or
even many of the courses at
SUNYAB or other units of the
State l:TniYeftlity are I!Jte. this.
Nor are the sreat IDIIJOftty of
the 22,000 stud&amp;Dts at Buffalo
or the 136,000 011 other SUNY
""!"pwii!S potential revolution,. ·

·~
- ·.· ~~f::r~me::i$ ~;;~;;; ::;~:~4

/L ..·. . : . .;·. '. ·. .

on o mental iilstitutions declines, the population of prisons
must proportionally increase.
In short.
are soiDI to be
wbere "it's at, baby." Of course
oertain restrictions prevent ..;
from entertaiDiDg the lhouiiJ,t
of ROTC, DOD contracts etc.
but also broken windoWS: em;
sloJ&amp;D will be ''Up AJainst the
Wall, Mother--" and we entertaiD _your suggestions for
support of CUiriculum iDnova-

we

~ion.

,THE PRISON &amp; SOCIETY
PriJJon Li.U!rature and Music
Mallory to Pound and Ken
Kesey
_
MoCashnk's Music to Johnny
. Grapphiti and Pornography
(Private Spaces Into Public
Places)
Epistemological I mpriJJonment
Eidetic Reduction iD Husser!
Real Decor and Perception
i;n Merlau-Ponty
•
Bnooleur and Briccolage iD
Levi-Strauss
·
Grammatical Impris onment
iD Wittsenstem's Trac/4tus
The Psyclwlogy of SelfImprisonment
Sartre ,
R. D . Laing
Slater

.

Guntrip ·
L Binswanser
-R. May
Our· architectUre fellows as- sure me that lliey will have
110
·trouble
· ·
·
·titled ·~~;::;.
Biln" ..... Fred SneJJ _, .....t
talk f · ~-"ular
......,.. ·
o m......,..
movemenl
..,_ plans are very tentative,
!"' CO\!lll!i. but we ask your help
m ~ ottier admini&amp;tratula o1 the uniqueoess of DIY
propoaa1.

·

B. •
~
•

' •liD

student assiJDm&amp;Dts i,n raisiDg
general hell with ''The Establishment."

the SUNY tz:uatees of just what
revolutionary TNT is beiDg
taught eJaewbere..
It bardl
ineiden
For a .. I me~ view of "SOda! that ~t~
boy00 ""
Chence 302," the
'broke out at'B'uNYAB ;,
Januery 29.
year. that "Soc:ial Change ·in
America 302" ·was first o1fered.
We offer some spine-dUlling And _anyone who .would dismiss
samples from the rourse pJ"O&amp;- revolutionary stud&amp;Dts and
pectus:
teachers as an insisnifiamt miRevolutionary Anarchism: Its nority should remember that
His tory and Practice - ''The LeniD only needed a relatively
Bourgeois State is force in the few followers to ta1re over Rushafids of the Capitalist RuliDg sia.
•
•
·•
Class. Marxi s t-Leninist&amp; and·
ACADEMIC FREEDOM is
Anafchists have beaD agreed iD cme tbiDg. TMc:hinJ reVolution
smashiDg that state. . . .
· ' and helpiDJ stud&amp;Dts to trsns''They might iDvestiJ&amp;te the late it iDto -action, on and oft
rank and file movements iD SUNY campuses. is quite anunions of this area; they can other.
write leaftets exposing the tyrThere is Jib reason why the
anny of centralized power
taxpayers of this State sbOOld
whether it be iD the courts,
finanoe the destruction of the
lioe, reform schools, regular capitalistic system that enables
schools, churches, etc:
most of them to earn their Jiv''Hand oui"- the Je&amp;llets and iD1 and pay thoae tuos, as well
see· what reaction you set. In
of the JOV·
otJ:ler words, utilize an anartal structure that fosters
chiStperspective to attack oenuniversity iD the first
tralized authority. All Power to
the People ... Right?"
York must-liave a chan·
The Ethit;ll of Anarclw-Com- oellor of SUNY, a president of
munism: Toward a Functional ~ SUNY AB and administrators
Future; "Given the neoessity of . at !'Yei"Y o~ State University
n;volutionary struggle against · un1t-who will not rest until the
p1g America by any means nee- revolutionaries are out of the
~, we must discover )1&lt;1!' classrooms.
to translate our ideas (antiAnd the Sta1e Li1islature
8 !'t!&gt;ori~. "!'ti-msle chau- must. DOt vote another dollar
V!"'_801. '!ftti·r&amp;C18111, anti-impeto any SlatHiuppPI1ec! campus
rialism ) mto effective social ac- that tolenl• such aubvilrsion.
tion.
.
•
. . ,............. - .,..,• .,•• ...
·~ will center o1t R-. .._.,...,. _
revolutionary violence and peofl..Mio'1JAfiNI l:llllnED
pie's war, women's liberation
Question• the clllp!lly of
and ·
ti It&amp; rels!ionship to. revolu- flap or ben..,. on the eallljiUHS
onary chaiise · · . and ·the of smte U.v-.tly.,. .._...t In
French revolt of May, 1968." . • .-rt policy memo frDm "Chan·
~ bookll of ll!" world's most cellor Slmue111. Gould: '$818 Unl·
110
• torio)l8 revolutionaries-.Uv- verslty -.uotJatlve ~ II as
1111 and dead, black and whit.. follows: The u........., f!llll clilplay
fomiJii and ~-are
on lis_,..~ ntlllal or
teUs few theee COIIr8e8. •
benner tlllln the Fill of the
Claal subjects covered iDclude u
Fill of the smte
of ...... Yllllo, .the ~ " fl.ll,
the
lied
FllloAmedam youth,." "the dynam- the u........_. will c.nat permit the •
ial of. 'settiDB your mind l - clilpl8y of .lilY ·8ill:lf ather ftC or
over' in a un·ivera~-" "the -~the- of public
tiqeat of laCe ...... bi 1 ' _...._
eitios," ''nlvoluaooary ~ - ~ or'~ of the Unl·
of the whits worlr.ins" ~"

:.:1

~.

po:

lf:lfnderminins

tbi

~the~~·::

._,the

J!:

�E
. · . Exhibits
- ngr;neermg
...

lligm1-Sees University Balanced on a

~Tightrope'

EDITOR'S NOTE: ~ 'Pieoident Repn p,_ted lhil of aaiwonilieo ~ lw im·

stable In order that the classic
Theoretically, there are a to engage in revolutionary tac- the University system can he
IMals of society can he met. H number of ways in which we tics aimed at bringing down the ground to a halt by this kind
you look at our University at am do it. We can extend the present system.
of change.
~t ~~: Buffalo, this · means stabilitY frontienl of knowledge by the
At . university .after unjverDDal Medicol Abmmi SpriDc am. ' few ~000 ~18, 1,500 fac;- . classical means of research. si!Y, it seems apparent that the
a~ o.y. earlier lhil month.
ulty, and 4,000 staff. The-Uru- This, of oourse, in our Medical determination and fanaticism of
versity, as an ll8SI!Iltial part School, is a way in which we've these people can he dealt With
The seoond internal threat
By PETER "F. REGAN
of the hiiher educational net- made enormous ooritributions- only by the forces of law and that we face goes back to the
The : ' ~t I ba _ work in this State, has" to- he hyperbaric medicine and a by whatever neoossary help is notion of experiment that I
• WIU'
• ve maintained in a stable situa- whole series of surgical-medical called for_ from police agen- talked about before. Esperif~ to 4i&amp;e!a ~8 11'11'1111 ·tion. 'lbat's one side. of the treatments in these last - 124 cies, from oourts and from the mentation Wil4out evaluation
.&lt;JD m ~ 18 to start
tightrope. ·
·
years.
•
•
other reSo'iuCes"thal society has Produces- a shainhle8. H 1-do
out by ~ DOt to heoome
The
side is that status
We also have to establish with which to preserve itself.
something malicious, irrepreoceupied With the symp- quo and inflexibility cannot he new bonds between the professponsible, eaprici.o us or destrucb:l':""~:t.,:; tol~ted. Change .is necessary sions, and between the disci- Taken~n By 5enutlon
tive-and claim that my,eD:USe
basic problems wbich eJdst. .
and unprovement IS~- plines Within the University,
These are a very small num- for doing it is that Yin esperi.
All aaoos this nation and the W'! ~ . racked ~'!-Y w1_thin bringing together lawyers and lier of _peo~le, ~ver, y.oithin menting . . . if you allow me·to
•
"liEs
ha .
uruvers1ties, and w1thin SOCiety, -sociologists architects and en- any uruvers1ty. Their tactics are . experiment Without asking me
~ld,
sensational tactics. And I would how rm going to evaluate this
1_.'!"'y:' find~"': by IIII!"Y• many _problems. !'JI giOOers. '
~
t the U .
"ty of us m the medical profess1on
We need to undertake esper;.-wager ~t ~rs of the experiment, what are the oon.f!OJ!'ll. on a
nlvel!"
reoognize that we )Ulue to de- mentation. We need to bring ~pie. m this room have _been trois that I have posed on this
&lt;?f Dlinol8 m. U~ at Mlch· termine II!!W and better ways, new groups together within d is- talf~-m by .these sensational eiperiment;. you have given me
1111!"o at Ml~ Bl'!te.. at for example, of delivering ciplines. We need to undertake tact1cs. That IS, Y!&gt;U. reac:' about license to do almost anything
~ton, at pnvate mstitl,l· health care. We have to deter- things I ike the ooUeges as the hubbub and lliff~eulti!"' that under the flag of experiments~ fi:ke Stanflikeon!Hun,at pubColilc mine new solutions for the means of experimentation.
we have at our Umver&amp;~ty. At tion. Esperimentation without
mstit1!tions
ter · · problems of illness. The engi- .
.
·
~ts worst, a oouple of b4ildings evaluation is a real danger.
were closed down for a · oouple
The"' third danger we face
lege, m Fran~. . neers have to find new ways An Expe~ment Is Not Etema!
.In everythe oneleof_ thesei·-"Situ· of transportation, new ways of
But "!hen "!e expenmen~, of days. For a oouple of days, within the University is a uni~tions, • peop mvo '"" are moving around masses of peo- whether 1t. he. w1th ~ Themis classes went dOV(Il to about 60 formity that does not reoognize
like ~tients who are -desp_er· pie. The social scientists have ~)OCt, ~1th mternational edu- per cent attendance. But for -the inherent diversity of a uniat:eiy ill. They_ are preoceupie!r"" to determine ways in which the eab!'n, With ~th related pro- almost every day for the last versity structure. Our UniverWith ~ _partic;ular !'Y"'Ptmfis whole society we live in can fess1ons, or w1th the ooUeges, . oouple of months, there has sity is a city of over 27,000 peo- ·
that ~ illness. ~eats. . , avoid being toppled by one we ~ve to _reoognize ~t an been ~ver 00.95 ~r oe_ilt atten!· pie. The , _ j s of the Medical
rm sick and tired 0~ gomg group or.,another which chooses experunent IS an expenment. ance m the -Uruverslty. H . School have one set of c:haracaround Buffalo and ha:vmg_ e~- arbitrarily to go on strike. We It is ~ot an eternal oommit- ever, · t!&gt;is publiC;itr ·a bout
teristics; the ,_js of the Eng~y ask me. "Well, 180 t have all seen in these last mcnt.
revolutionary activity leave!!
lish Department have another
all this the result of the fact weeks how one group or anWhen you .s tart out in a awful lot of people-;my ne • set o\ .!harai:teristies. Each of
that we have. ~ ~le f""!' other can virtually bring soci- laboratory on an experiment, bo!" .and,. your ne1ghbors- the professional schools has dif.·
New..!_~t Cofltythe
. ~ tthaallt this ety to its knees. In one fash!on you '!".t up a certain n_umher of ~I!· ,My God, the whole fef'!D~ needs, diff"J"!''It c:hsrae·
the ...,... ·
'""''
we ew andther, we have to fmd oonditions, you examm~ these Uruvers1ty s beep· closed down terJStics. Yet. there 18 a teoden·
have~ X or Student Y answers to these problems. And oonditions, you work through for . the past. month." The sen- _ cy to bring all problems to a
onT::'C·of the
tter . that yet, the stable university ~t your experiment·and you evalu- ~tiona!. tactics can create that central body which then llll1kes
.
•
rna
· 18
we need doe!; not have mec:h- ate the results. H your results I'!'P""":'on of total chaos and. uniform rules on admissions, on
the diffiwllios. we have aT.!Ju!· anisms right now to addrel;s it- are good, you carry on your d'"";'ption heea"!"' ' of the at- curricula, on faculty -intfalo ha~e d1ffere~ self to these problems of so- experiment further. H the re- tention they rece~ve.
ments and promotions. Such
~'"!':~::·a~
other uni!':' ciety.
·
sultsarebad,orrequireclilmge,
The real _things we want to centrally agreed-upon rules, .
sitlas but tile root f thi»e di/. A lhwinl Taplher·
you have to he prepared to watch, however, the real threats _wbile they 11117 be very IIOCid
fil:ultia · ~ idenlkaL •
If --you want to understand bring about those changes or to walking along this tightrope in ll'!llel'lll-pnnciple, can do
~
· few example, '!fllan poverty ymi modifications.
between stability and c:hanae. great hallll"" to the constituent
All ~ these ~ can't do it bY studying' ecoWe need change, therefore, ""!"".much more from shallow units Within thr; University.
!II" waiJt!!a a tilbtrope. ,..... nomics alone. Urban poverty ia and we also need, to go back to ~ "!'d. from ~ . ' I think these are the threa
It's ~-~ char- related to lniowledge and skills that other side of the lilbtrope, thinking Within tile Umvenuty. basic c:hallenges that threaten
~tio~":'
from more than a bali-dozen to Pl"!l!IOfVO the stability of the ·
One of the major threats is to push the University olf the •·
profeEions. To deal With it, claasi'c unit.
.
change that is not an added, tijlitrope em wbich it walb.
aallae' what 1be ..,........_ 18 requiJes the . contributions of
Now, here are on the improving element, but wbich H we want to maintain stabil•
_._...,..
I!CCIDIIInists, of Ia~ of soci- lilb~ty and cbanse. des1nlya wbat is IIOCid Within ity and also to c:hange in ·a
about;
·
oJoPI!!,.of hUmanisl8, of ardli- What 18 the lbraat? Well, there the Univenity - c:hange that -rational fasblon. .we must keep
111e ...._ a1 tile ...............
tecta, ~ and othi!lll. All are a lllllllber. _,..
·' ·
may he imqmativ.e and ~DiCit- change from destroying. We
On the aide, mii..,.uies thoae poups have to he drawn . 'lbe one that - .-I about ina to 80DI8 but change that can must make sure we do evaluate
are villll JllrucCuna in aociety. lopthar to find, throuih re- mast. in the DeWIIpiiii8IB js the destroy the iirtepity ew the ezperiments and we must make
'~bey ,~ at the mast ad- se8rc:b, to the prob- thieat of revolutionary activity. stability of other peoJ.&gt;Ie «
sure that we IIJ811UIIee the
YIIDOed ...... of._...._ . . leQJa'tbat face IICICi!ltY.:
All around Ibis CDUD~, th;ere UDitB within the Univenity.
right of faculty meiilhera ud
c:iety - - ' -alaUe to. flmo.
'Dills, can deoicribe the IJn!, at .wry major ~ty;,
We haw- initiated at one llludmts of sc:hools and units
tiaD witiJaul llilm. '~bey haw ~ all the .-1 ·.for . eta- a hlmdf)lt' of people ·.mo; as
after IIIIDda ~ to be free from arbitrary, Ullinto
....-- in bOity a.. the one" bad and for DMdy as IIIIPod.Y can judp, wblc:h
• I'U tbis II DDt formed « overly._a! leli&amp;crilr to ediDa tbe ..,_... IDDovatiaD and cbanse ... the are lallatieally clel8rmined that viewed
, ~ ud latiall.
• ~wboiD,::::..~ Gila-. How am acbieYB the.~t ayllem ill aociety is corrected, .If the ~
How do ·- do this?•
•. _ . _ tbis?
bid. .n - ~are willina JIMIINnlame 8nl
built Ia, (_,.,_ o a - 6, col.' 6)

=--Without

:::;a

Other

:::...: J:'

P"fil8t:

...m ...._

. J:

'5 'e"

fd-

...

~:_

�~

6

(JhRmistry./Mtrihut£s '!fOcts' on ~ ResearCh.
Tbe Ds I -•1 ol ~
·· 117 .. _ ......-!'~'~ lilid 11 diltrllallal a "Staa.-t ODD_ . . -Departmaut ol Jl&amp;.

~-

=-.:1!.-:.f:r.'·
---·I. . _
eol.l)

,.,.,_,., fit C~r
Tbe . . . . . .
A: Tbe fundi caatribate to ill, tbe ..,.._that ..... at110
p1iduate iiludent atipmdo, re- ~ to fallolr at _ u~•
ec1ii lllppOitad In tbil way 011 -.:h equipmeut aDd auppliol,
....._a-di,"wlil&lt;h-dilthil CU111J11L
publication-. fliculty. eumty,..,. tbet- .... ~
~ wllb ........,. at opal
• 3--Gnmlee-iDIIialed •raub mer aaleriee, udibe bawl ex- ~ ol all, - ...._
.-IDpODAallil2&amp;111Aallil
(arCDDbacta).Tbiliitbeb)&gt;e -to~JiU(ea8iaoai11111811Dp.. ~aDd u.IDIUa a raliabal,
8.
ol 8UppCil't fouDd Oil Ibis cam- Ill addltloa, ol tbe - - ... .......rul*- with~to
IIDwpus,- there beiDII about teD '-1 IniaiiUCb IP'IIDIB... IIi .......... be ..............
ard 'l'lec:blmmm, tbe Deput..
tive ....,ta at the . . - t time ..-! to llilppart -m., both
---.
._.,... cllllalbutioif by
(lhree · ID Chmiiatry). CEmct scientific aud ___,tilic, In _ , . . ud ...-lupm.
a Wile 01 17:a,. wllb 10 .......,_
cletaill! have beau- bard to a- tbe farm Of a-rdi Foimde~--drDtiaaa.
certain ......_ ol tbe per- tlon - t a aDd fellow:ablps.
~ tbe ~ .,......
a-pta ffta tbe qoatiaDtiueut fila~t,ere stolen ffta Dr.
Q: Whot ;. the "lltiiU(ielll ~ tbebe m-.ity 10 that
. . . . . , _ ......._. loUoor:
Ewell's office durin~ tbe stu- ArMndmentr
.1 ....., at tbe ~Bttrailevel
~: Ia it poaible to
dent occupation ol Ha,yas Hall,
A: Sec:tion ·203 of tbe Mill- a liable, ...,._telive form of
-...e_in doai/W -..11 al
Friday, March 6.)
taJy ProcureiD8Dt Auu-iza~~~-':""". a)sot
SUNY-Bu/f111Dr
Cln .-reb of this type) tbe tion Act, P.L 18-121, 81&gt;P10V811
. . - - - •m• •
011 that IBltrai J!8118le.
ANSWBR: No. RaaolutiOD
p..,_, ~ a .-reb November 19 1969 proYidao a
·
88-.21111 ol tbe Boud otorn- vii.)
.
speclfyiJII tbe ac:ien- followo ·
•
'
Tbe third pomt is thet ol Slate Uuiveraity ol NQ: BUl why ~of '-ie tirJC rekMinca, J&gt;1'11Q111 meth' k 203 None of tbe lurid. ·- provide autonomy to tbe
Yen iillll8a:
raeoreh by the nUUtoryt Why od of atl!d on tbe prOOJem, aull&gt;ori&gt;al
be IIPIIftlllliate major liliita of tbe Uui--'ty"'RBSSLVED thet 8DY re- doan't UU. oupport e11l0110te .budpt, etc. Geuarally, tbe pro- by this Act III8Y be" Ueeci_ lio' au lilltlaliaaiy which IIJ8l8Dieao
- * ar -.:h-relaled pro- entinly from civilitm fl#llciu ' - ' r will submit tbe
carry out auy .-reb project that tbe 8Cboo1o, IUCb as !he
.,._ CliDdDded by ~ of the
JXM&amp;ito 'aeveral a......::""~ or study UD1eao such project ar ~~I Sdltbe~'orth fac:ultiea;
of Stata Uuivwalty of New
A: Theoe are CXJIIII))ez quae- aDd otherwiae, iilialiil8liaou.Jy study has direct aDd
t ....., •
...,
Yon, ..mad out bi Slata-clp- tioDo which con't raally be llil- in tbe hope tbet one of them relo~ to a ~ C8DIIOt have their edUcational
~ -tered dowu or dearaled am-.w. ar callaaeo owered satisfactorily In a few will have tbe fuudo to 8UppCII't laly fwJCtian or ~tioa."
or ou Slate UulvaroRy-0011- parapapbs caee s~ R.,_ iL Tbe various DOD .-reb
Q: How &lt;loa u.;. olfect fund- stroyed by uuiuf"!"""' ar..artnillad ....._ ebel1 be uure- ,. -.:Ia in American Unioeni- offices beve evaluation panels U., by the DODr
bitrary IBltral deciaiOD.
,
llrictad • to tbe dialomiDatiOD tia, cited above, aud tbe mauy of conaultauta, conaiotiug of
A: It is too early 1o tall far
FiDUJy, - have lo aot up a
publicly ol tbe eoaduct, JIIOI· relerencea PYeli tbere ao a lead praotiPoua leaders In their re- oertalu· liowew&gt;r it Jib. ~)'Stem which doE DOt lliGIIdote
. - aud reaulta olauch re- 1o further atudy)
·
spective fields of research ly t h a i - of the re-m- cbuipabute~poaitiw
- * ar awdHelated pro- · I t . . _ thet.mililaly IUP- (Chemistry faculty _... on within tbe ~t which · c:baaip-a .,...... wbicb will
.....,; aDd be It furth.
part far beoic .-reb otemo such panels) . which rate tbe has been 8IIJIIXWiied by DOD -.do for example, tbe Madi. "RBSSLVED that auy PIIDJ:. ffta a combination of bistorica1 _ . . on their scientific will -DOt be funded upCJil aqXr- cal Sc:boo1 ao it Into beteclii wbidl milbt be Clllllildond .,;,.,-.,_ aDd political e:a:- meriL
ation of ~ pauto.
ter aplondono of bealth care
.iullifilillia e:a:ceptlouo to this pediency. Immediatelyafter tbe
Tbe rating aud tbe avBiloble
lt is dear ~ thet re- distribution, ao it ·IIIIo olbpalicy ar milbt require reYiew Second World War it obvi- bud,et tbeu determine· which -.ch con be reloted to tbe • eap8cta of .-reb: that will
•......, ol ......ling factan ous lo 80IIIe astute ~ that ~ is fuDdad. Tbe I¥J&gt;e uational defense without relo~ ~ it for 1lllinc. ito !""' inebell be oubmlttad to this Federal oupport ot lnotitudono of .......m, mothod, biriDg of ing to syatamo, etc. Jtiative aDd puriiUiDC •te owu
Boud ol '1'iulteao for . reYiew of hicla Jeomiaur would be staff, aDd importaut of all, 'Jbua, tbe U. S. Army R8Jaan:h ab~ i D aD imqiuative
ud liDal deciaiOD."
- t i a l to help tian I'I!CIMir -the decision to publish resulte Office funded .-reb 011 auti- ~ liifonued "'9'• rather thaD
Q: Wliat -u lttlppea if on ffta tbe ueglect of tbe war are left'completely lo tbe pro- malarial&amp; clwiJi&amp; aud after telliail tbe Madiail Sc:boo1 ar
a:iatinl -..11 IJIO!«!! 011 UU. yauo aDd to _...t to meet f_,r. Tbe Reaaordl Foimde- World War n.
8DY olbw liliit bow it .-11 to
1
...,.,. """"cltuai/ialr
tbe adllC8tional e:a:pectadono of tion of SUNY takea care of
Sauator Mausfia1d (Congieo- 10 abcJut.lt.
A: 'l1iat project could DOt tbe post-war _.tioa. Yet business matters in CODjuuction sioaa1 Record, S16928, Dec:. 6, ~- _ _ ,
Clllltillua Oil thil &lt;miipUL
tbe•CDDiemporary politicill di- with govemmaut auditoas. ·.
1969) states, "Section 203 diJE Di MID I lllililllll. ·
Q: Wliat ;. the CU17'elll Unt- mate was IUCb that -direct FadQ: Wliat u the 11&lt;1ture of the DOt beD tbe -~ Dos!art"l1aao Uiilveiaity'a Medical
,_.uy ,..;tiooJ ,..,..un, the era! aid lo hillher aducatiOD was re-.:h OtJTTied old in the De- ...,t tram ~ ......,;,m Sc:boo1, for aample, cau be
occqtriiJCe of -..ol .apport DOt yet~ was uo partment of Chemi4try wliU:h In illiivenitiea, or ill DOt-for.. COII8iilared • 1IBynaaa ol tbe
for -..Ar
HEW, for e:a:111111&gt;1e.
u apoMOretl by the DODr
profit .-reb iDatitutiono. Tbe whole Uiilvenit).- --oot ODiy b&amp;A: Tbe hculty Sauata, at ita
Becauae of ibe popular eaA; Tbere are at preoent three Defense, JJesmtment retains co,_ of ita W yaaril ol exiatmaatiug o~pril
24, 1989, · teem tbeu mjoyed by tbe sci- .-reb PfOillliDI! oupportad by ample authority to fuud re- eli!"' but~ ollta obe aDd
J-.1 tbe
• .-.lution: ..,tific COIIIiiiUiiity- result ot DOD. Tbeir titl8s ue: ~ -.ch by Uiilvenity acloatialii a:a:nUeace ~ au~
"DB IT RBSOL
• tbe Ito CDDtributians to tbe war ef- Reactiouo ol oi-paiObaron Com- wbo Wish to apply tbeif tolailta UDit. 8ueh a uiait - Ciiily ._
palicy ol tbe hculty Sauate ol fort-it was decided thet uui- pounds With. Y1ldo," '"l'be Nu- to 10Jvin&amp; problaiDs 'o f·uational au IICIIilemlc iDtepity ol Ita
SUNY at Buffalo that tbe Uni- ..,.;lies could be oupportad in- cleotion aDd Gaowth of Calcium def8118e."
•
·
but eaablbuteo to the - -mty aud Ito fliculty adbere directly by .......... at llpOiiiOr· Pboepbate iDd other BiologicalQ: Wllo ;. to judie the ,.._ ~ iDtaDitY. ol tbe Uuhwto tbe fclllowiq priDcipleo re- ship of scientirJC ._.m ..,. ly lmportrmt -Miuerals," aDd tionol &lt;k{eM&lt;! ,..,~ of.,..,_ !"ty· Wba~ hal to be dilae with__..__ tbe ___,._ ol ex- "'-~"- •- tbe ....,..___ -'d "Electaocbemica1 Sk·~•-u ·
Ia
m tbe Um-.1._ II thet tbe
~~~:
;;-;;;, ~.,;-.;,;,.,tive tbe Rototing Ring ' I ; E'f:!
~~
Madiail Sc:boo1'"'....t be m- "1-Tbe ~don ola fao. to thisidea.TheOificeofNaval trodao.» Projects oupported by f.....;, David Paebnl }.a • ' - COiirlillld to - a . i t o -·
u1ty .....,._ with a .-reb ~ chartered by Coo- DOD ID tbe past iDcluda "Di- ad (~ Record, s, 111111'. aud ito illtemal daclldoaJiftlldlil muat be-made by bis - i n 1946,- "tbe first of electric 'Conotant of Hydrogeu- 15929, Dec:. 6, 1989) that tbe ~~-lqldcboioe.
.
a kiDd of Federal ....,..cy bonded Liquids,» aDd financial National Ac:adem.y ot 8c:leDcao ''""'
"'3-AD apaaaaoad research dedicated to tbe _..........,.
support for tbe "Symposium on . has been luvlled ·to joiD tbe
It
tbilldiid ol JII'OidiDUiidertUal ebel1 CDDtributo lo
iD tbe intereot ot ReluationTecbniquaoinCbem- DOD 1D t!118ii1i11iJi1 all
:i@cla tbe - a . at tbe four POinta
tbe Um-.ity's pis ol tbe a DB •
' mission . . . What ica1 Kiuetics" bald here 1D 1965. aDd otudies wbicb ~ re- that I'w iadicoted-tliat-x liaaeadon aDd dileemlnotion of took
in ONR stood ao a
Q: Doea the DOD llobe a garded ao 1ii8111iDa1 iiudar tbe U... loob IDIIIInl i:. poail!ve
laioorleda
modal for tbe . ~ ea- ~in chemicol --.:laY
proviai(!aa of 8ectiOD 208.
,. forward thruot a - loeap 011
"8-All penGiiii8) 88Jciatad tabliabed Office ol Scientific
A:. Most certainly-aDd not
.
·
.
. . . . "'llaom tbe tiPtl'ope: We
with tbe research J1101i8iD Research of the Air Farce merely for warlike """tureo. S t. u d e n t
aoUal to lOt olf tbe
~l!_~~ tbe beoia ·(AFOSR) aud for tbe Office DOD is raspouoible for tbe
~_; ~ Butllta_ _ _ , ..........-tiono.
of ~ ReaMrch of tbe well-beiq of mauy - 1
~a
. "4-AD .-reb resulta
Army. AIIO, tbe policies tbet 1u
Armed f...,.._ Tbere -;, Told. ~
1t _ ,
c:ludiDa ---"bb) abell be tbe National Scieuce Foimde- therefore, a lltr'oq beali!Hiri~
.
dllidl710 that tbe ~- ·
)dlllallabla. • daiiennined by tion ~ill ito support of "''ted direction ID their relfilblilhllna tbe~
I·
tbe 1reata1t ••..,. ol tbe f8culty ,_._, iaMJhed, mathouiiitical (aDd- aU -other) -.ch IDiereot.
'
N~ Ragiaaal
t lmowlea•e at tbe liill8t adIn tbe opal !f&amp;arature for tbe .-rdlowemucbto (tbeotalf Q: Can the~ apon- Cont....-· ol tbe
. . - J leNI that llllilllt--cml

a..m.....

-.:h ill AIIBba am-.!t1oa, a we laiDw it
oired by war ·aud -w...l
lbroiqb lldoleacs&gt;ce by ,_.
~ olwer, it
quinld a life ol ita that
~Tbetholieeerly~
·Federal ............
....t 11M ..... aiDce CXIIICiuded
-doopite periodic~ to
thet ~t to 1UPpon, tbe .-reb e.pMililies ol
jnatitutiollo ol hicla leemluc
••• is t o - - . . aud _...r a
precioiM uatloual . .ouroe."
(8~ Rea«sreh in .Amerialll U~ ond Co/ktta,
E. Stricldand Editor, AmoriCazi
CoomciJ on Eduoatioa, 1968, p.

II Utde illllnll ill tbil type ol
todlo.Y,- 8UppCIIt
In tbe.um...ity oamllllllliV lilid tJ.e ue
proj-

11M--

='L,

1

to

,,,.,.,,_ntr

-r. ----..-J ......_ :&gt;&amp;:

basicm

oi

Meet

ol

PJan

u..

&lt;In-

-~ur~TH~R ~ =.~.k?,~~J~t- ~DOD
be~ by
A: lDdaad it con. Further-

SOLVED that tbe ll'lieUlty SeaQ: . HOU1 doa DOD _,x&gt;IUOf
ate ol SUNY at Buffalo reat- -..1tr
·
_
&amp;m. ita cammitmaut to i:mA: DOD mailltoiuo a WilY
Cllllbacta aud 1o Iaraa aud camplei: .-reb aud,
te-*tbe
b
davelopmeot p'rogr_am 8iiCDiDfulflll a
foleaoiDc
tbe pb,y8icol, bioloPca1
pia"
aud aocial ICioDcee, mathoimatQ: Doe• oll l1p(ltli8(iial re- leo, aDd all ........._ ot 8llgi-

=..toe-*

8UppCIIt;:::: .-ms

:a~ :TC'~
-

.,_

1/Wa t:rileriot

A: Ya

Q: ~"-- •
DC1L lrllllf

,.· • -~~~ ..,.

..,
..:.,.:::;--- · .
~
A: "Frca a fradlaMl part

.,

}~.,!~ ~

moae, t e - *·apaaaaoad by all
tbe civil CJrlllllir.atioai, NSF,
HEw, etc., con a1ao be .-d at
8DY time by tbe miUialy.
.
Q: Haue aay of the lfOtluole
auuknta in the De,_.,_ IDito
~ ~ {J'OWI. BOD

=:atJt!'OOrJ:'

=.=. ~
·ea
laot

w.dd w~.
a. ......

~.Utbe

,

PridoiY ••_.

_ , , au addreaa by Albert J.
Kullao, vice poeoidobt 01 tbe
Yikinc ~at WartiD Mar-

ietta Corp: • :oeu.w~DIYiaiaD,

aDd tbe ...-to ·
awards lo ........,.
teclmica1 .........,

-&lt;II CMb
tbe 1al

=--:r

~-= ~

ol-. • • •
.
8litJIIa quo II 110t tbe rJiht
lhlaie-w will topple olf tbe
tl•htropa tliat -,y. a.iap
wltliaut thluk1D1 II 110t .._
rilbf tliiq-..we will lopple olf
tbe tiPdriipe.
·

~~~a: ~

.

to o _poaltioa
...J.... AL--J
'
tia Nadonol~""Fouuda
A: No.
riewed l*t. . . - t aDd fu- ..._ ~ nutlJUU
b -l'ubllcatii!D. NSF 112-87 &gt;- Q: Ha the lkfJfllfrttenl of lure U. 8. plaDs far viaito by Dr. PIG. Bodle, ..._. ot
Thera ue three priucij,u C~ t7ainai OilY ,___ UDIIi8iiDad ...,..,. .,...._ to '
8taadll.; In
-u.odl b7, which DOD .... ltd f!- t1te DODI .
~Maeury aud v - ill ~ ~ Ap1i1 JS.
: : ; , research aud cla9elaP~; ~ 1/iere .. . .
, He ......,...,.. .W ~ a;y. 27-30 ~~

JaWaw••-a ·

l'fDil-;::::;;
':,J;;•

..

z:a"',;_

=...""ni, -:.....,~ !':.!::.-'..:It'.=:..::; ~"':i't:t't.':!f:aud. ~

eluded ....... tm. a-lla!ir&gt; olbll .....-I - . t L Tbe
-•
o l DOD~thata~ll 11~1)!111--811the
llfllav Jlill&amp; ao JIOIIW-.._..
~~ ol -.:Ia .....,.. a. iD tbe
1 f11
~ .................................................. ~wliilb ~'Iii$

a.m.

I

........ •

~~~

.

a 'b.....

.,._

tt.!

~DOD,_._., ,ti~De- CMb~lar~
\.

ti)a\1i

tdP
=:.~~-

==i=

.
a.m.-;:..,
'-1: --•-•Nilltli
lillllll. :a
lia!lvllle.
.
~-- .....
teailiiiiLolllfa.
At..,...
ID -

r.-;:R~ ......
t ... .......
=!:.t':~·z:.=""~,............. ollt ' q:,.......,.,.IIII!P*aot .a
- &amp;~~
.... ...........

:.::r-~
·

- ·..- -

1---ID-Iiame ............. UD-• attocltal to BOD
~~== don l'lallloD ol ·~ q.,.,_
dar tbe direct caatrul Of DOD. tA&lt;rll Ill.
NIH or, : . tlae .
~
udtbeto ~....:elf.._.a-......- . ~ coutraclii NSP, for
:·
,;.. wiD' • iakW 1aiDO . • North •"--'- ~ Uiih .
ci
·,•ad-* ~ wllb aaliilda ....-. 8Ucb a A: No. lildeoid, NDI ~ ..... 11&lt;1wan1 biB aftimaioi .... ~"'B:i. 11
· ·

=.= ::a:::!.•'!!!"!...,~
f!::

=

... -

Alric8, botb tD

ow

~
~~

tbe

.

�Thll ~ chamber
wblcb will tie .,.n of tbe IIIIW
"Piojod Tbllmlil" Wxatory Oil
CIIIIIPIJI. will be "the ~~
~ -.....,• por-

miUIDI ......._. . _ up to

the wiirld'a - . 1 ~ of
171Hlllnallpbol-, ,._.....,.
111111t 8lld ~ Saatt Carpeator _,. m a by.tined.artide
~.!-. · April 18'10 PopultJr &amp;:;,.
~Ollly ODe divint-- cbamber
in the -"1-CIIIl attain a_pn!llsure nearty a peat_,a tbeplannad for U/B, ·carpenter

a

~-

OBDt azygen 8lld 3'n per cent
nitmpn. Helium ps makes up
the ._ming 95 per" OBDt. ·
"BUt belium, too, ~becoine DIII'OOtic at aome '
th.
Beyond l,liOO~the
avy
f . . - the
• 'ty of tum-

ina to a

by
gen mixlure whidl, in U.8.1alla, bas
pennittod taking IDOIIIreys to a
~~.~ of ~~offeet.ex....., ......... "" 00 · llloaloa. the Navy aay8, becaiiBii
Of the low azygen content.
Fluid . . - - .

..-..ten

"At Bufralo,"" eleewbere, ill.-

faciil- .

:P~a 'Jolbcirataiy-m ~
In the United Sla.... ·a ttaee:

will be looking into
'an' . r - l l f t tliat'aounds ua.
a:ioiiiOe fiction- 'fluid breath-

8lld out, It does not harm frqi1e orpna. But are there limita
to Ibis baJaDcinc beyCllld whicb,
for example, rising pressure
micht crush the IJoa5 or impair the 'delicate nerwus ay&amp;tom? Tbe answer is still far
from clear. . ·

'*'-to n.ue

''Tbere is 'considerable' evideuce that living tissue
be
damaged by 100-a~ .._ t11U'1'0MU YMIDfUJU, ·pressure (equal to 3,3(i&amp;:'{;;;,'t U.trudor, I)'DOCC&gt;Ioo- obotetrico;

depth) or Jess, tbe Buffalo M.D., U - t y of1'okyo.
group says. Yet, it notes, goats EXHIBfi'IONS
have reached 100-atmospberes
in the Chouteau laboratory in
France. 'The"'rate · of applying
pressure may well mab a dif-

"'=.;

=~t::,t!b:dC::.~ h:: ~:;:~~~u.!":"'0::..~ re~·.:!., ~~
Uni..alty. Tbe l,(lOMnot marl&lt;
is al8o tbe ft!IOOI'd in the _ ,

-.

· 'J.be U/B facility, €arpentor

wntos, can !'9Y_al the water
at 5,000 feet of _ ,
depth-more than live time&amp;
a ...., a any diver baa l'l)lle.
Mell liave ' - t thani before,
ear-tor ·_,., but only "in
stool ...,_ md __.;,nv ar-

-

mand •.._rtn..,...He quolel Dr. Edward H.

t.nphllr, _ , . . ...,r- of
md dbaclar of tbe
. . - . ..- . . . . . . . .

.,.._
"If deep divint cap
bli • • . . . . . Gllbr in . . .
_...,........._to-'&lt; at
peat ....... w1111ie IDIIe liYinc
cwa autb wllhDat ..... aut of

:raar ,..• •

. . , . . . . Daapr

Auwer:,a,.:he queatlou,

"Wh.J Ill .,
:P" Caqlalilr
palula aut
to bs ..&amp;vqed, ...._.. ric:l8 Oil tbe
- t1oar, ..S ..t&lt; ...-. OD

......n

......... oil wella. llllll pq.
U...•

.'l'£:J:.:.~~~

Ja18lwllh~ ....... . _

atod JiQuld inatead of a I"" mix- ·
lure? Some contend a man
- might thus dive freely 10,000
feet deep or more.
_
"Tbe far-out idea bas actually ' - t tested with animals.
Dop have survived breathing
CJIYgenatod water for 45 minutos, 8lld mioe for up to 18
bours. Dilllculty in- em.UIIW.,
aubOD diodde from the lungs,
ratt- than in supplying enough
azy- set theae limits. One
8IJIIII!8tod answer: Replace wa-

chamber will test animalS un-

der peat pressure. Remoteoontzolled ~will take
blood sampleS from an animal's
body or adminiSter drugs 8lld
intravenous fluids. '1"- trials
will Jay a firm groundwork of
known data, before any otberwise-risky ezperiments with human aubjecta will be ventured.
"AIODI the way to ex1ri!me
depths 8lld ~ the studills at BufraJo will investip.to
many current 8lld urgent diving
teo- with a- substance- aay, a problema.
JiQuld fluoroearboD- that dis"As depth increuas, the-aolYM carbon dioxide more er .,..._a... of ca:ygen in a
,_wy.
breathing mix bolcoaa 80 -n
'"l'be . . . , _ . . l!&amp;ct of as to bs hard to meaoure ~
~ itaelf OD
aDd ani· aJDtrol: By far the most critical
mala is called by tbe Bulfalo need' of a modem diver, to 110
wc:has their major 'new' deePer and atay loapr, is a
prahlem.
device that automalically ......
"Deep m-. can with&amp;tand tiola the bratblna-caa ClllllpOhill&gt; ~ ainqily t.ecm.e llitiaD. At tbe Butilo flldlfty,
lbilda 8lld ...._ ua-dt it Dr. l.eDpbier will have at his
md ...,.U.. It throalhout the - ....,._. tbe tools to advance
body. &amp;inl balauced inllde its ........,.._.t. ..." .

"*'

Mali-lb.

mTTV"-..D
-~

md....,...,.. to 111e ~~eep a
A
..... l&amp;wllllllll!aat~ -.&amp;...tl::ln
~
:=.:r:rd '
" - - " - . . . . . . tbe Baf,.,...--, • Ia deW!·
;:;,..,.,. . lilt cl thou- ~

u.-.. ..,.,.,.,

.-......&amp; JIIOf..,r, llllllic. .-..oloiot. 8daala
Cu..,_ IIDil BulrUo l'bilharmoaic perfo......,. o1 IIIIDdel'o

"laraol ha £opt.•
w. WDT-.. - . . . -

::.::~·· =~·

falo
""'
o1 To

Mn. Waunlta1lownli:lob, An6-4i42j Mr.

~·a-u

.wa.

.

..;.--:,-.... to be AD~ISOBY OOIIMITTBB.
. . . t II .._ to ...... at ~ ...... ...,. tbe __..

=:. . . . . . . _ .

1 t

t

t..,":,""...ri .1•~

u.-....
ina Yal-

•

Mn. Holly ~ Po~
Utical 8c:l8oM.. a-u ID-4218; :::-.;~~ ... ::· ~
Mr..... . . . . _ , Art, a-u - - ... ~ Teoolla ad In81-dtll; Mr. Cheater Meek, --....,. ........._ o1 ,..,_
(lcwapuW&gt; c.dlr, a - Ul- .._. y~ ~ r..i4218; Dr. BIIJt.:rt L Millllor, fi!!B." B1j1o ~ o-w .uo-~
OonwwJcwtion,
lWai.

GREPORTS .

#':

-

=...:r-E·"a.:!i:
ADill.n8·.:3

Roo111 26-4U&amp;; ' :

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n

.

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.

=

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...._ ••P•·l:'::'~ .trrr:-t.-:l~~ - ~..w Ball ;;-~=..?~

..... s.:::--=: .,.....,.......... ~.

~W:£:5== :~

~,.....,.-~. IIIII
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-ur:._oQ'palae ....-.~ ............... ·

......-......__&amp; ==.:::: .
................
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.
lhw~
·a; Ill T...,_ ._ 1170."
...... llr
~· ......
=~•e
e~-a- ·::....-=:::..:=~~
IJhilll
Mr. lluu
Call
...........
ftii
......
- - · ---~
_
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•
. . ..
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Ill ............
41101
..................
- . ..........

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.

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..

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�MFC SPRING
WEEKEND

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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    <collection collectionId="166">
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        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1379774">
                  <text>The UB &lt;em&gt;Reporter&lt;/em&gt; began publication on January 22, 1970, a time of tumult at the University. It succeeded the newsletter, &lt;em&gt;Colleague&lt;/em&gt;, and to this day, serves as the official source for "in house," internal news. The first issue included an editorial, "Why The Reporter?" explaining the rationale for the newspaper: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The feeling was that the University lacks a sense of community—that communication is too helter-skelter—that too many groups feel alienated, apart. Somehow, it was felt, if these groups—faculty, student and staff—could come together on the commons and share their concerns and ideas, their activities, their aspirations and whatever else they have to offer, community and communications would result…But it will not produce instant community. Each of us will have to work toward that goal.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Reporter ceased print production in May 2009 when it became an online only publication; in Spring 2016 it became a daily publication.  The Reporter was re-named UB Now in Spring 2016.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA043</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1380208">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="1451089">
              <text>Microfilms</text>
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1380189">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo &gt; Faculty &gt; Periodicals. </text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1970-04-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1380194">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1380195">
                <text>en-US</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1380196">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1380197">
                <text> Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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                <text>v01n15</text>
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            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
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                <text>8 p.</text>
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            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text> New York</text>
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                <text> Erie County</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1380207">
                <text> Buffalo</text>
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            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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                <text>Reporter</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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